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Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Thursday, July 25, 1996

'

Little Hocking,
Point Pleasant
teams advance

4-H livestock champions posted
Grand and reserve champions in
pion; Alban Salser, honorable men· reserve champion; Meghan Avis,
H11rses
4-H livestock projects were
lion.
Michelle O'Nail, Billee Pooler,
Basic 4-H Horsemanship: Jessica
announced today by the Meigs Coun· Janey, grand champion; Kacy Ervin,
Raising Fancy Poultry: Alban Rebecca Scott, honorable mention.
· ty Extension Service.
reserve champion.
Salser, grand champion; Edward Dill,
. Winners in their respective proBasic 4-H Horse Science: Jessica reserve champion; Brent Butcher,
Sheep
. Jects were as follows:
Sheep Breeding · Beginner:
Wheeler, grand champion; Candace Jessica Justice, honorable mention.
Cattle
Bunting,
reserve
champion;
Turkeys: Alban Salser, grand Theresa Baker, grand champion; Ash·
Beef Breeding 1: Cheryl Jewell, Stephanie Story-Schwab, honorable champion.
ley Hager, reserve champion.
grand champion; Sarah Clifford
Sheep Breeding · Intermediate:
mention.
Ducks and Geese: Alban Salser,
reserve champion.
'
Horseless Horse: Cinda Bratton, grand champion; Carrie Wiggins, Patty N'ally, grand champion;
Beef Breeding II: Julie Brown grand champion; Beverly Burdette, reserve champion; Matthew Salser, Michelle O'Nail, reserve champion.
grand champion; Jeromee Calaway; reserve champion.
Sheep Breeding . Advanced:
honorable mention.
reserve champion.
Rebecca Scott, grand champion; Riki
Light Horse Selection: Whitney
Feeder Calf: Julie Brown, grand !)arr, grand champion; Candace
Barringer, reserve champion.
Rabbits
champion; Brent Buckley, reserve Bunting, reserve champion.
Rabbits 1: Courtney Kennedy;
champion; Chance Watson, Josh
Basic Horse Training: Jodie Ihle, grand champion; Billie Jo Welsh,
Swine
Hager, honorable mention.
grand champion, Lisa Stethem, reserve champion; Bethany Cooke,
Squeal Appeal: Elaine Putman,
Market Steer: B. J. Ervin, grand reserve champion.
John Cooke, Elizabeth Smith, Robby grand champion; Matthew King,
champton; Brandon Buckley, reserve
Learning To Jump: Susan Smith, honorable mention.
reserve champion; Jeremy Gillilan,
champion; Marcus Branon, Wesley Grassier, grand champion; Candace
Rabbits II and III : John Sheena Gilmore, Jessica Justice, honKarr, Joe Dillon, honorable mention. Bunting, reserve champion.
Krawsczyn, grand champion; Julie orable mention.
Dairy Market Feeder: Rachel
Horse
Nutrition:
Danielle Spaun, reserve champion; Sari Put·
Hamming It Up: Billie Jo Welsh,
Chapman, grand champion.
·
Grassier, grand champion; Sara man, honorable mention.
grand champion, Glenda K. Hunt,
Dairy Calves and Heifers: Alyssa Craig, reserve champion; Lisa StethAdvanced Rabbits: Michele reserve champion; Jennifer Goeglein,
Holter, grand champion; Kristie em, honorable mention.
Hupp, grand champion: Amy Smith, Lester Parker, II, Carrie Sheets, Hon·
Warner, reserve champion; Adam
Conditioning the Racehorse: reserve champion.
orable Sheets.
Chevalier, honorable mention.
Matthew Milhoan, honorable men·
Going Whole Hog: Leslie Parker,
Dairy Cows and Management: lion.
grand champion; Alyssa Hoffman,
Lambs
Rachel Chapman, grand champion;
Trail Riding: Holly Milhoan,
Market Lamb 1: Travanna Moore, reserve champion: Travis Lodwick,
Tricia Davis, reserve champion; grand champion; Lisa Stethem. grand champion; Sarah Yost, reserve Aric Patterson, honorable mention.
Chns Parker, honorable mention.
reserve champion.
Swine Production • Advanced:
champion; Ashley Rupe, Alan
Moore, Stephanie Wilson, honorable Chris Barringer, grand champion;
Goats
Poultry
mention.
Andrew Rollins, reserve champion.
Angora Goats: Patty Nally, grand
Poultry Production . Raising PulThe Normal Animal; John
Market Lamb II: Christiana
champion; Beverly Burdette, reserve lets: Sarah Houser, grand champion; Kennedy, grand champion; Cinda Krawsczyn, grand champion; Jessica
champion.
Melissa Houser, reserve champion; Bratton, reserve champion, Theresa Barringer, reserve champion;
Goats: Danielle Grueser, grand Matthew Salser, honorable mention. Baker, Derrick Bolin ; honorable Meghan Avis, Riki Barringer,
champion; Erin Bush, reserve cham·
Poultry Production • Raising meniion.
Michele Hupp, honorable mention.
pion; Ben Crane, Brian Hupp, Alban Broilers: Melissa Guess, grand cham·
Animal Disease: Kindell Brown,
Market Lamb III: Jamie Drake,
Salser, honorable mention.
pion; Matthew Kirk, reserve cham- grand champion; Kelly Dalton, ·grand champion; Tricia Davis,
reserve champion.

. Sports on Page 4 ·

•

.l

•
\ ~

Historical

Walkers will be promoting the
goal of increasing the incidence and
duration on breastfeeding worldwide.
Walkers are expected to raise over
$120,000 for breastfeeding outreach
programs, exceeding last year's figure
of S I08,000, as well as making communities aware of the importance of
breastfeeding for the children of the
. world.
La Leche League International is
a nonprofit organization that offers
breastfeeding education and encouragement through mother-to-mother
support groups, telephone counseling
and extensive interaction with physi·
ctans and health care providers. More
than 100,000 women in 60 countries
are assisted by La Leche League pro·
grams every month.
Those interested in participating in
the World Walk for Breastfeeding or
in sponsoring a walker may contact

SQGi~ty

The Meigs County Historical
Society is taking orders for a cover·
let commemorating Morgan's Raid
and the Battle of Buffington Island.
The 46-by-67-inch coverlet will
dcptct scenes a.~sociated with the July
18 and 19. !863 ratd and battle as it
took place in Meigs County.
Pictures used tn the design are of
the Langsville Mill and Dam where
Morgan first entered the county and
found the bridge burned, the first
bridge burned by local militia to
delay his forage. Near this site a
young Confederate so ldier was shot

LLLof Point Pleasant at 675-5 142 or sary of the signing of the Innocenti
675-4439.
Declaration on the Protection, ProTheme of the celebration is motion and Support of Breastfeeding
Breastfeeding: A Community which was adopted in 1990 by 32
Responsibility.
governments and 10 United Nations
World Breastfeeding Week ts part Agencies. The Innocenti Declaration
of an ongoing campaign to increase recognizes the importance of breast·
public awareness of the importance feeding to infant and maternal health,
ofbreastfeeding. La Leche League is as well as the social and economic
11 founding member of the World benefits it provides to the family and
Alliance foP Breastfeeding Action society.
(WABA) global alliance of health
La Leche League International is
care providers, non-governmental a nonprofit organization that provides
organizations and mother support breastfeeding informatton and
groups. lbis year's goals include edu· encouragement through mother-to·
eating all sectors of the community to mother support groups and interaccreate a supportive breastfeeding tion with parents, physicians,
environment. Families, schools, researchers, and health care
churches, employers, the media, gov- providers. The organization reaches
ernments, stores and eating places are over 100.000 women monthly in 60
all encouraged to remove barriers to countries.
breastfeeding.
Local LLL groups can be found in
Aug. I marks the sixth anniver- Pt. Pleasant and Gallipolis.

t

I

Springs is pictured . Historians report
that Morgan stopped here, probably
at the springs. While in this locality,
Confederate sol&lt;)iers shot and killed
Isaac Carleton.
The raiders continued on to
Chester, where they burned the
bridge and mill. A photograph of the
rebuilt Chester mill and bridge are
used.
At Portland, Morgan headquartered in the William Middleswart
home . This house, along with the
James Williamson house, used as ·a
field hospital during the battle, are

incorporated in the design . Finishing
out the portrayal is a gunboat, cannon, sword, gun, bugle, drum, both
Confederate and Union nags, and a
cavalry battle scene.
The coverlet will sell for SSO and ·
is being offered only in cranberry
with cream. Orders must be placed by
Sept. 15 . Due to the investment
required. there is no guarantee that
any extra coverlets will 'be ordered.
Proceeds from the coverlet will be
used to cover costs associated witli
the annual reenactment of the Battle
of Buffington Island.

Society
scrapbook
CHESTER COUNCIL
Remembrances of Ada VanMeter
were given at the recent meeting of
Chester Council 323. Daughters of
America, held rece ntly at the hall.
Plans were made to drape the
charter for her at the next meeting.
Members were asked to wear white.
· Erma Cleland thanked members for
attending the servtce for her at the
cemetery.
Goldie Fredenck. councilor
opened the meting in ritualtstic form:
Balloting was held for Whitney Ashley who will be taken into the order
at the state session. Thank you note
was read from Helen and George
Wolf for nowers on their 50th
anniversary. A practice for state ses·
sion will be held at the August meet·
mg.
CHOICE SUPPORT GROUP
CHOICE, a home school suppon
group. held its first meeting at Star
Mill Park in Racine recently with
plans being discussed for the upcoming school rear.
Next meeting was set for Aug. 6
at !0 a.m. at the Meigs County Public Library at which time John
Costanzo, elementary coordinator for
Meigs County, will be the speaker.
Refreshments will be served at that
meeting, and parents, relatives and
other interested individuals are invit·
ed to attend.
Plans were also made at the meet·
ing for a kick -off picnic on Sept. 3 at
10 a.m. at Star Mill Park.
.

Vol. 47, NO. 58
1 Section, 10 Pages

Filii ......, kpll tM

Sentinel Classifieds

1996 MERCURY

SABLE LS
4 Dr, V6, auto, air
AMIFM Cl18, tilt, ..,.., ••
PS, PB, PW, POL,
seat.

V6, auto, air cond,
PB, lilt, cruise, A ..I/FI•
call, SLT

1995 PONTIAC FIREBIRD FORMULA
350 V8, auto, air cond, AM/FM cass, tilt, crulscf.

199S FORD
WINDSTAR
V6, auto, · air cond
AM/FM c11s, tilt, cruise .·•
PS, PB, PW, PDL., more. .

1994 FORD
RANGER 4X4
V6, auto, air co
AM/FM caas, PS,
short bed, XLT.

r

TWO IN STOCK

LOW MILES

1993 CHEVY
ASTRO
V6, auto, air
V6, auto, air cond, AIIIJFJII
AM/FM Clll, tilt, crulseJ,c J CD, PS, PB, PW, PDL,
PS, PB, much more.
cruln.

EXTENDED LENGTH

to LEPC members, from left, Ohio Division of
Wildlife Officer Keith Wood, Meigs County
Sheriff's Deputy Ralph Trussell, EMS Director
Robert Byer and Syracuae Mayor George Con·
nolly.

DIVE TEAM DONATION ·The Meigs County
Underwater Rescue Teem received much·
needeclltema earlier this weak at a meeting of
the Melga County Local Emergency Planning
Committee. Diver Brent Zirkle shows the Items

Meigs County's water
rescue team ~well-suited•
By J.IM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
The next time members of the
Meigs County Water Rescue Te.1m
have to dive into cold water, it will
he a mission for which they are wellsuited ... literally.
The team received new articles in
its arsenal this Tuesday in the form of
much-needed equipment including
_ -~~.lt su!~, s~ill)ly design.ed fo~ cold
...,atet..dtvmg . .,
,
.
The suits, called dry suits, differ
from the more customary wet suits in
that the diver does not make direcrcontact with cold water. This enables
divers to stay underwater longer in
frigid conditions .
One of the suits is cnvironmen·
tally sealed for usc where hazardous
materials may be present.
In addition, the team purchased
three masks with underwater com·
munications and a surface-to-diver
communicator.
The ability to communicate will
be an asset to the diving team ,
according to diver Brent Zirkle of
Pomeroy, one of the team's original
members.
Not only will the ability to com·
municate make for hettcr coordina·

tion underwater, being able to talk to
each other can make the missions
safer for the divers.
In addition, the masks can also be
used in confined space rescues, Zirkle
said. Adding that the masks arc sim·
ilar to those worn by rescuers in the
Oklahoma City bombing.
The underwater rescue team
received funds for the $5,000 pur·
chase from a V@f.ieJv of sources
il!~luding the Mason. W.Va., Veterans
of Foreign Wars Post 9926, the
Meigs County Sheriffs Office and
Prosecuting Attorney's Office and
from · the Emergency Manag~ment
Agency/Local 'Emergem:y Planning
Commtttce from the county's share of
funds from the now defunct MidOhto Valley Planning Council,
according to Meigs County Emer·
gency Services Dtrector Robert Bycr.
Almost unique for thi s area. the
Meigs County Underwater Rescue
Team is on call to assist neighboring
counties that do not have divers or
only limited underwater resources.
To date . lhc team has recovered
the body of drowning victim from
Forked Run Lake and assisted in a
search in Jackson Cnunty for a per·

OUTDOOR GOSPEL SING - TIM! 11th annu·
al outdoor goapel sing will be held at the Carl
Gorby Farm, Saturday night at 7 p.m. Singers
will Include the Addlaon Choir pictured here,
the Narrow Way Slngere, end Joy Slngara.

Those attending are to take lawn chalra. A conceealon atand will be In operation. The farm Ia
loc:etecl two miles west of Langavllle on Route
325 off Rout8124.

Students named
to dean's list

RE-ROOFING SALE
Corrugated Asphah Roofing

Three area students received academic honors at Miami University,
Oxford, during the second semester
of the 1995-96 school year, accord·
ing to Krista! Humphrey, university
spokesman.

•Fast, easy Installation
oGoes directly over old roof
•Won't rust or corrode
•Reduces noise
•Provides added Insulation
•Lifetime limited warranty

Crystal Vaughan , Langsville, and
Mason Fisher; Syracuse, were named
to the Dean's List for achieving
above a 3.5 grade point average dur·
ing the semester.
Michael McKelvey, Syracuse, as
named to the President's List for
achieving a perfect 4.0 grade point
average during the semester.

Sale

SJJ ~!;,.
.,_cas
'!'-[)o.IC:. .Ir11U4UIOI
111. • a1eo, a '\ • 101\.

Vlfllr L..- l..,., Co.

.. .. ....

'llROWN
'GRAY

11~1

8q. A.l

'REO
'GREEN

'IN STOCK COLORS

... :!''-.....J

1990 TOYOTA
CELICA

V6, auto, air cond
2 Dr, auto, air cond,
AM/FM ceas, tilt, cr~~ae, ttl AM/FM Call, till, PS, PB, .
PS, PB, PW, PDL,
more, ST Model.
Hal
.

LOCAL TRADE

Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - A leaner $1 55
million budget for the Appalachian
Regional Commission was approved
by the House Thursday - $15 mil ·
lion less than last year's spending levels of $170 million and President
Clinton's budget request for lise a I
i997.
Unlike last year's budget debate.
no lawmaker proposed to kill the
commiSSion.

Since its creation in 1965. the
ARC has spent about $6.5 billion in
impoverished areas in 12 states and
all of West Vi'llinia for roads. sewers.
education. health care. johs creation

en tine
'

35 cents
A Gennett Co. N-opeper

and small busine.&lt;S development.
The leg islation still must be
approved by the Senate before it is
sent to Prcstdent Chnton. The Senate
bill earmarks $165 million for the.
ARC.
"Clearly. there's. a lot of impor·
tant infrastructure. roads. sewe r and
water projects that arc uncompleted ...
said ARC spokesman Duane
DeBruyne. "Obviously. we prclcr the
Senate bill ...
In lisca l year 1996. which ends
Oct . I. area stales among the 13
receiving ARC fuQding arc West
Virginia ($21 million). Ohio ($ 11.7
million! and Kentucky ($20.3 mil·

By CAROLYN SKORNECK
Associated Prell Writer
WASHINGTON - Congressional negotiators agreed to a four·
year te st of tax-exempt medical savings accounts, removing a major
obstaCle to a bill that would allow
workers to get new health insurance.
even if they ·have pre-existing illnesses.
Thursday's agreement by Sen.
Edward Kennedy, 0-Mass., and Rep.
Bill Archer. R-Texas. chairman of the
House Ways and Means Committee,
also freed another popular electionyear measure - a bill that would
raise the minimum wage .
The minimum wage bill had hccn
held up in the fight over medi t'al sav ings accounts. whtch an insured per·
son could usc 10 pay routine medical

expenses.
The House and Senate hoth have
passed dillcrin~ versions of the health
insurance bill . the mam thrust of
which provides that anyone who
changes or loses ajoh would he able
to get health insurance. even with a
pic-ex isting medical condition.
Arter the agreement was reac hed
Thursday, the Senate choose confer·
ces to work out a compromise health
insurance bill with House negotiators.
"The health insurance hill "will
allow American worker. the securi·
ty of knowing that they will not lose
their health coverage if they chan~c
their jobs." President Clinton said in
a statement. "Raising the minimum
wage fm millions of America's hard·
est workers is al~\' the right thing to
do."

hecausc we're going to move with
this health r.cfonn hill and there 's no
reason why it shouldn't· pa" holh
houses.",

Kennedy h:td hlnckcd pro~rcss on
the health insurance legislation.
whtch he had co-sponsored with
Sen. Nan cy Kassehaum . R-Kan .,
hecausc he ohjectcd to R~puhlican
aucmpts to mcludc mcd irul savings
accounts in the hill.
The minimum -wugc hill got

caught up in the dispute when the
assistant majority leader of the Sen·
ate. Don Ntckles. R·Okla . said he
would hhx:k Senate ncgotintors from

sitting down with House lawmaker;
on thi.t issue as long as Kennedy
blocked the health care wnfcrenec.

Dole urges tax breaks for small firms

At Hope 's Country Fresh Cookies
By JUDY KEEN
here. Dole noted that lounder Hope
USA TODAY
Spivak Flickc had three employees
KING OF PRUSSIA, Pa. water, icc and swift water rescues as Republican prestdcntial candidate when she started the firm in 19X5.
well as on search and rescue mis- Bob Dole on Wednesday promised She now employs 60.
sions, Zirkle explained.
Dole said he 'd convene a White
tax breaks and castng or lcdcral reg·
Divers will demonstrate the ryt':" ulations for small businesses.
House conference "on how we can
equipment Tuesday,· 6:30 . p.m .. at
In campaign appearances at a make the drc~m of owning :1hus ine~s
Lon(ton Pool in Syracuse .
cookie factory here and at a wire the dream for more and more AmerThe team will demonstrate ha.,ic plant in McKees Rocks, both owned ican women." There arc 7.9 million
usage and benefits of the equipment. by women, DqiR sought to demon· female husinc ss owners in the nati,m ,
possibly showing a mock drowning, strate his coirl!l'iitment to helping Dole said.
Zirkle said.
At Ace Wire Spring &amp; Form Co.
small firm s create jobs.
The team was formed about two
Inc.
in McKees Rocks. Rep. Susan
He had broader goals, too. Dole
years ago by divers Zirkle. Scott and wants to avoid reacting to President Molinan. R-N.Y., made a surprise
Gcri Walton, and Dana Aldridge. Clinton and curtail controversies lhat appearance with Dole to decry the
Since then the team has expanded to dominate news coverage by focusing ge nder gap.
about l 0 members including Tommy on specific issues and proposals.
" It would take me days tn talk
Werry. Doy Nitz. Brent Shuler. Dnug
almut
what Bob Dole has done for
And Wednesday's appearance'S
Lavender. Eher Pickens Jr. and Chris were designed to illustrate his con· women:· said Molinari, who wtll
Weaver.
,
cern about women. with whom polls deliver the keynote address al ne&lt;t
Zirkle pointed out the team is show Clinton has a huge edge over month's GOP wnvcnlion.
more like a family of divers, rather Dole . .
"There is a gender go p (for
than a strict organization.
'"We're not a company of divers.
we're a family of divers," he satd.
'"A family that dives together stays
together."

Heat sickens
Olympics staff,
spectators

improvement or consuuction is rom-

ATLANTA (AP) The
South's punishing heal has
already made nearly 400 people
sick during the Olympics, but
most visitors are coping by
drinking lots of water and using
cooling aids, such as gel·filled
bandanas ·that slay ice-cold for
hours.

pletcd.
By the end of 1997, the ARC esti·
mates that 2.230 or about 74 percent
of the highway will he complete .
Jesse White. the federal co-chair·
man of the commission. has cstimat·
ed $4.5 billion is needed to complete
lhe highway hecause the remaining
roads must be constructed through
mountams.

The Centers for Disease Con·
trol and Prevention said Thurs·
day thai 372 spectators and
workers were treated for heal·
related illnesses between July 6
and July 23 - S4 of them dur·
ing the July 19 opening ceremony in a packed Olympic Stadium.
Nine fainted from the heat.

lion).
This year. the ARC spent $1 07
million for improving and building
the ARC highway - the commis·
sion' s largest budget item.
About 2, 177 miles nut of 3.025
miles authorilcd by Congress for

Archer said. "The American peo·
pic arc going to he th e win ners nnw

Republicans) thin shows up in poll
after poll. " she sa td "T he fact
remains thai some Rcpuhlicans anJ
some Democrats deserve to have a

gender gap. But not Boh Dole ...
Dole also met with Gov Totn
Ridge, considered a pos.,ibtlity . for
Dnle's · runnin~ mate.
The U.S. Cham her of Commncc
endorsed Dole's small hustnc"
"opp&lt;trtunity plan ...
Highlights:
- Elimin:tlc lcJcml small·husi·
ness rcgulatitm\ th.11 ; 1ft.' not co,tcllct.:tivc.
- Enact an csrutc-tax exemption
for family -ow ned small hu.,•ncsscs.
- Restore homc-o flit:c &lt;lcdut.:tion

in the t;u code.
-

Increase

hcalth -insurunrc

deduction forsclf-cmploycJ from
percent to IlK) percent.

~0

Former Meigs County
attorney seeks new trial
A fonncr Pomeroy attorney cnn- tlcm:c would li kely L:hangc the n.:sull

of gtving drugs w two girls in of a trial if granted.
In his mot ton, Mullen states he has
1993 has filed a mutton for a new tri·
discovered
the identtt y of the person
al. stating he has new evidence prov·
who
gave
the
drugs to om• of the
ing someone else cornrniucd the
girls.
L:fiTnC.
The mo110n also t..:ontains I 0 ani D. Michael Mullen, now a Mid· davits from nine different people.
dleport resident. was lound guilty of including Mullen hirnscll. ·Snmc of
eight charges of corrupting nnothcr the rcoph: dallll to lmvc seen anoth·
with drugs. and one count each ol er man actually gtve the drugs to the
aggravated menacing and c.:ontrihut- girl or to have 'cen lhc girl with the
ing tn the delinquency nf a minor.
man in a har dunng that time .
A Meigs County jury found that
Mullen was scn tcn~ed to prison
on March 12 and 13, IIJ93. Mullen li&gt;llowing the trial hut was rcleused
. gave drugs to twn Pnmcroy girls, on Aug. II. 1'195. Since his release.
aged 13 and II at the time .
he has hecn invcstigmmg the incl·
Mullen filed the motion last week dent, he wrote .
in the Mei gs County Court of Com·
He is servi ng as h1~ own counsel
mon Pleas, claiming the new cvi· and investigator.
VICICJ

Bomb may have blown Flight 800 out of sky
By PAT MILTON
Associated Preas Writer
EAST MORICHES. N.Y - A
mysterious split-second sound fol·
lowed by si lence: The final recorded
moment of TWA Flight 800 has
brought investigators closer to concluding that a homb hlew the jet lin·
cr out of the sky. a source told The
Associated Press.
"' li was considered a 20 percent
possibility that the explosion was
caused by mechanical failure. now
it's down to a 5 or 10 percent possi·
bility," a source close to the investi·
gation said.
. 1llc source. who spoke on condi·
lion of anonymity. added that "inves·
tigators are holding out for physical
evidence before they declare the
probe criminal."
· 111e remarks late Thursday came
hOurs after a preliminary study of the
so-called black boxes - the night
d3ta and cockpit voice recorders.

~~!:,Ohlo~~---...!~~~~:··:11~32:.:oqo~·::::!"':.:·~'

'

son that was later found murdered.
On Sept. 14, 1994, divers swam
onto the wreck of the sunken stern·
wheeler Jean Mary to help stanch the
escape of diesel fuel from the slricken boat.
The team can also assist on high

House approves leaner ARC budget

Investigators concluding

1990 CHRYSLER
NEW YORKER

•

Deal paVes way for
health insurance,
minimum wage bills

lo plac• •• ad, call
99 2·2156

1996 DODGE
DAKOTA 4X2

Clear tonight, low In
50s. Saturday, sunny,
high near 80.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, July 26, 1996

GRAND CHAMPION -Jodie lhle of Pom«oy took grand champion In her project of bale horse training. She 11 1 member of
the Pleeaure Rider• Club, and Is pictured here •• her project work
waa Judged by local horae breeder, Karen Griffith.

selling commemorative coverlet

and killed by a local restdent and
buried near the site of his death .
While no picture is used to portray
the killing of civilians Dr. Hudson
and Holliday Hysell by Confederate
soldiers near Bradbury, the accom·
panying narrative will include this
information.
The Meigs County Courthouse in
Pomeroy and the original courthouse
in Chester are pictured as they
appeared in 1863. Union troops were
in Pomeroy July 18 as Morgan passed
behind the town.
The Jenkinson cabtn at Rock

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Local La Leche League walk set for Aug. 17
Thousands of breastfeeding fam.
iltes, their supporters, and health
care providers arOU!Jd the world will
participate in the sixth annual La
Leche League International World
Walk for Breastfeeding, being held a
various locations from June 15 to
Sept. 15.
The Point Pleasant area walk will
be held Saturday, Aug. 17, at Krodel
Park with a potluck picnic to follow.
Registration begins at 10 a.m. at the
.gazebo at Krodel Park and walkers
will walk a symbolic one mile, join·
ing with women, children, and families around the world to demonstrate
the importance of breastfeeding.
World Breastfeeding Week, Aug.
I. 7, was proclaimed by the World
Alliance for Breastfeeding Action
(WABA) along with the World
Health Organization (WHO) and
UNICEF

Pick 3:
125
Pick 4:
4103
Buckeye 5:
10-21-25-31-36

Federal invesu~ators said they
detected in the voice recorder a
'" fraction -of-a-second sound,"" then
silence. II 1/2 minutes after the
Pans-bound Boemg 747 took off July
17.
Robert Francis, vice chairman of
the Nattonal Transportation Safety
Board. refused to speculate about
what the sound was, or what it
meant. He said both tapes would be
subjected to more detailed tests .
The data recorder's tape was con·
taininated by water, but Francis said
its information probably could be
recovered with time. The data tape
records speed, engine functions and
other details that might provide clues.
Francis told CNN this morning
that the abriipt power cutoff could be
"a wire being cut for some reason, a
loss of power. There are obviously a
number of ways you can lose connections between a source and some·
thing that is driven by electricity."

..

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__ ..... .._

.........

He added that while the recorders
were gelling investigators "closeno
bei ng able to determine what happened,". they may not turn up any·
thing conclusive.
Asked on ABC's "Good Morning
America" whether mechanical failure
was ruled out, he said, "absolutely
not. "
Divers retrieved the black boxes,
which are actually orange, from the
ocean noor early Thursday, the same
day President Clinton consoled griev·
ing relatives tn New York and
announced new safety measures for
airports.
The tighter security, which is
expected to add as much as 30 min ·
utes to boarding time, includes more
questioning of passengers in check·
in lines and more inspections of car·
ry-on baggage. Also, curbside bag·
gage check-in will be eliminated on
international night.;.
Investigators suspect the explo-

. sion on Fli ght XOO was caused hy a
homh. missile or mechanicallailure.
All 230 people ahoard were killed .
James Kallstrom. the FBI agent in
charge, said investigators were com·
paring the Oight data to that from
black boxes in crashes caused by
bombs, such as the explo~ ion .of Pan
Am I03 over Lockerbie, Scotland.
Vincent Cannistraro, the man who
headed the CIA investigation inlo the
Pan Am bombing, said descriptions
of the TWA tape resembled findings
from the 1988 disaster.
"I got goose bumps because il
reminded me so vividly of Pan Am
103." Cannistraro, fonner CIA chief
of counterterrorism operations, told
the AP.
He said that on the Lockerbic tape,
there was a normal conversation and
"then a crunching sound like the air·
plane breaking up. That was the
bomb."

I
CHECK RECORDER • Prlv1lte contrtctors eboercl the USS
Glllap check Ill MR-2 ret'mlll CCIIII! oiied Undet WIW rtCOIIIet thllt
Ia uNCI to verity TWA Flight 100 wreckage on the ocean floor lit
the craah alte off Flra lalend; New York. (AP)

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Commentary

l
~

friday, July 26, 1996

Pegei.2
-Friday, July 26, 1996

--Local brief-----.
Man who admitted ·
wounding cops found. Youth cited in wreck
innocent of assault

OHIO Weather

I

The Daily Sentinel Boutros-Ghali reneges on one-term promise
sively through Africa, Britain, China promised to deliver half of every
and the Uniled States, he met wilh lop speech in French and half in English.
He was also more acceptable to
UNITED NATIONS -- The man officials everywhere he went to ask
who became secretary general of the for their support of his candidacy.
the United States than the most likeUni1ed Nations by promising the
ly alternative at the time, Salim
Uniled Slales he would only serve
Ahmed Salim of Tanzania, the head
one five-year lerm is doing everyof lhe Organization for African Unithing he can 10 backtrack on that
ty, who had been a candidale for the
promise.
job a decade earlier. U.S. officials had
Boulros Boutros-Ghali is as
not forgiven him for literally dancing
obsessed loday with keeping his job
At home, his candidacy received in lhe aisles when China's U.N. seat
as he was in securing thai job in the a boost from Egyptian President was shifted from Taipei to Beijing in
firsl place.
Hosni Mubatak, a pivotal figure in 1971 over America's objections.
In 1991, he was lhe darling can- the ongoing Mideasl peace process.
Nevertlleless, American officials
didale of (he Organization of African Mubarak promoted him to deputy only signed off on Boutros-Ghali 's
Unity, which was pushing lo have an prime minister, giving him a more appointment af1er he persuaded them
African nalive lake charge of lhe visible post from which lo campaign. thai he would serve only one term·,
Uniled Nations. Under the informal • The French, meanwhile, played an ke}1'1U.N. sources told our associate
rules I hal govern such appointrnenls, equally pivotal role in securing the Dale VanAtta. American officials had
il was Africa's 1urn lo have a secre- job for Bouuos-Ghali. Long con- wanted a younger candidate lhan the
lary general. Boutros-Ghali, an cerned about !heir country's dimin- 69-year-old Boutros-Ghali, so he
Egyplian, was its mos1 qualified can- ished importance in world affairs, would be able to use two full terms
didate .
French officials wanted a secretary to implement badly needed reforms
Bouuos·Ghali himself said he general who spoke their language. A al the world body.
was "born" for lhe job, and openly Europeanized Arab, Boutros-Ghali
For two years after his appointcampaigned for il. Travelling exten- speaks fluent French, and secretly ment, Boutros-Ghali told anyone

By JKk Andtraon
•nd J.n Moller
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fu: 992·2157

By Jack Anderson

!1

and
Jan Moller

A Gannett Co. Newsp._per
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

•,

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General MIMger

..

. MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

llle--

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a ·: o"'· l'lloy IIIUIIIIIe -!!len JDO _,., AlllotiWo n
l1lfl#eCf ID ......,IIWJ_IIe.....,IIWJinc--IIWJ 1111~ ....,. ............

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J

Letters io the editor
Sewers of:sutnmer, part II

'i

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Dear Edilor,
Last year you read of the uoubles
my neighbors and I had with lhe sewer syslem on Union and Mulberry
avenues. There are of course two
sides to every story: l will tell you
whal was told to us al the last council meeting my friends went to.
We mel wilh Mayor Frank Vaughan, lhe village council and John
Andrrson of the Pomeroy Water
Depanment. Anderson told us lha1
Pomrroy has a five-year, $11 million
work projecl and lhat of the $11 million. Pomeroy has to come up with 10
percent. or $1 . I million.
He said we are in the third year of
this work projec1.
My neighbors told of finding
every1hing in or around their drains,
of a solid iron bar, 10 one man finding 40 tires . One lady 1old how her
neighbor had dumped garbage over
lhe side of their hill .
Mayor Vaughan slaled this is illogal and thai anyone seeing this can
swear out a complaint against lhem
wilh lhe village police. Anything thai
yov do nol dispose of properly will,
wilh lhe nexl heavy rain, he washed
inlo the drnins 10 cause another flash
flood .
All of us have wen I through the
anger and fruslration of watching our
h&lt;lmc.s, propcny and cars engulfed by
1he filth and muck of a flash flood .
L~t time. Patsy Ward and her family had three feel of lhis crud in their
basemen! which they had to shovel
oul by hand.
Virginia Hoh's basement floor has
hooved up and she cannol gel it dry.

Other neighbors have had rals and
snakes in their yards. The smell is so
suong at night that they cannot sil oul
at night. Anderson told us that lhe
sewers must be completely dried oul
before inspection.
II is already lhe middle of July.
How long before the repair and
replacement work begins? How long
can we wail? What happens if we
have a severe winter? We know that
lhese sewer problems are the result of
countless yean of u~. We do nol
expect Anderson to pull out a magic
wand and perform miracles.
These repairs will take years and
millions of dollars. If Anderson needs
more money, men or equipment.
then tell us so, so we will know. We
must all stick together to get these
problems solved.
We mus1 all write and call our
congressman and senator and tell
them to support. these projects. It is
your votes that put them in office and
your tax dollars that pay their salaries.
And you, the local paper can help.
Pay some auention 10 us and our
problems, come to the 'meeting on
Aug. 9 at the village hall and hear our
side.
These problems affect us all . The
sewer problem is everyone's problem.
There is also the problem of what was
said at the village council meetings.
We should bring a tape recorder so
there is no doubt who said what.
Mosl councils now videotape their
meetings so that future generations
can see and hear them .
David Ed-rds,
· Pomeroy

Rf!publicans, Democrats
await Dole's economic plan
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Specilll Correspondent

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WASHINGTON - A Democratic wall poster in the last campaign for
the While Hou~ read "The Economy, SIUpid." lest anyone on Bill Cliotoo 's team stray from that issue. Now Republicans are aimin~ a1 1he same
t~t from lhe opposite direction .
But their message has been blurred for lack of a clear game plan from
the GOP presidential nominee. Bob Dole's economic blueprint is said to be
coming soon. but it is coming relalively late. He ·s still working it a tax cui
will be the centerpiece of wha1 Dole said will be a comprehensive proposal .
That leaves little mor. than three months for his effon to convince the
vocers thai they ough1 to change course, while Clinton boasts of growth. new
johs. lower unemployment Niles and reduced deficits on his waich.
The GOP reply is that growlh is puny, tues are too high. and they could
.Jo far ~uer in a Dole adminisuation. Clinlon had an easier case to argue
against Presidenl Bush. who suffered for the lingering impacl of 1he 1991
recession, and for lad of comeback proposals until the dosing weeks of the
campaign.
Dole has had more than 15 months as a declared candidate- more than
four as lhe chnched nonunee - 10 senle on whal he wants done about rax
cuts and • broader economic pack~ . his n01 new business; Dole was chairman of ttl( Scna1e Finance Committee before becommg Republican leader
in 1984. "The senator knows this subj«l inside and out." Donald Rumsfeld, a ~noor campaign advisor. said &amp;I a l\iesday GOP conference on taxes and growth. "He is deeply involved in the Jli'OCC-\S of fashioning a growth
plan and 11's gorng to be a good one."
Rumsfeld's role al the forum on taxes and growth was lo demonstme that
the con~ss1onalleaders and tax-cutting advocates were wort.:ing wilh the
Dok campa1gn. But they clearly are restive at the long wait.
Dole wants tax cuts. but he is at best skeptical of the economic theory
thai sharp reductions will so spur economic growth as to inctease revenues
and curb deftcits. Jaclt Kemp. former oongressman and Cabinet member. and
a leadinr advocate of that premise, engineered the GOP conference.
Despite ritual denials o( an intent to press= Dole. the hi~profile push
fonntjOf tal cuts. from Republican cong=sional jeadcr:s and from the chairmen of tax committees ornainly sent him a message.
Howoc Speaker Ne"1 Ginsrich said he would like to set Congress "jump
Sllllt with President Dole" next year with across-the-board tax cuts befcn
Apil IS. and a more comprchensi~ ovcrbaul to follow laler in 1997.
Sen. Ttenl Lon.. the ll\ljorily leader, said cutting taxes would be "just the
boost this cronomy needs."
!AU said it was nolan lt1ernpC to nudge Dole onwes, but "a teat~ effort"
in lllldem ..-ith the nomiace.
"Well, it's kind of backwards," said che H - Otrnocntic lcada',Jtcp_
Ridwd A. OeplllrdL "I would think che canclidMr would be pullinJ ClUI pro.
poa1s. l!lld che pMty would be ll~CiCGD&amp; to he. those proposals."

ThM is d e - cusromary plllem.
Akllll&amp; with ~heir tax cut fli!¥Mb. the Rqxablicans lllckled Cinroa's
cllriiM dill his ecoeomic untqy has sucoeetled, and tlutt • ·i ll clcliva-caaritluitll JIVwdt widllow inllation IIIII 101a1rploymcot mes.
1,
The - ' ;s lllnll)' validate the Demoai!IK pbd'om1 cllim eo "aii ~

--td

am.

sioll'' of job JIV"'IImd caJOOrllic l'CIIewal, buldle ll'ald.s ll'e up. to
_ , ... d . .
Tb dill. IIIII GOP
diM ic is hollow popess. wi111 hi&amp;her taus
_. tl
r-ib •cncs They cmtrd !My could p;oc1uce &amp;r bealr

rrt
. . lilt 2.3 .- . . . . . . . . ollhtf'1Wre,an. '"lHaa.SaxidOnD
will.. I 1 •owlli."SIIid Rep. Di1:t Armcy.dle Hoac IIITjGritJ tcm.
~C~~~~Pc:llld ......!lk •ts&gt;ii~e:... said Rqluhlic:asCIOalddo.
bleit.

IS Dll1VIN6 To
TIE 614MES

.

CDf61MP AN

OlYMPIC EVEIIT?

,; Q

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By Gewge R. Plllgenz

English aulhor Maude Pelre tells
our young people, which have produced in tum many of the social evils a story about a talk her sister once had
with her little boy regarding angels . .
now plaguing us.
"Po angels have REAL wings?"
To put it in the colorful alliterative
he asked.
"Not real, like birds," she replied.
"Their wings mean they go swiflly
prose of a Georpa judge, "This mon- wherever they will."
"Then are they REAU..Y white?"
key mythoiDgy has been lhe cause of
permissiveness, promiscuity, perver- he next inquired.
"That means," replied his mothsions, pregnancies, pornography and
er, "that they are pure and holy."
proliferation of crime."
There was a pause of disillusionWhether or not that is an overstalement, many people who agree ment and then, desperately this lime,
with th;: judge want creationism. lhe he asked one last question, ·"Then do
Bible vcnion of how the universe and they REAlLY shine? Oh," he said,
mankind began, 10 be taughl in their almost piteOUSly, " they do shine.
children 's classrooms along wilh the don't they?"
At lhis his motber threw all her
"monkey mythology."
science
overboard and her answer
The objection to that among ccrwas,
I
think.
more hones; than all her
lain educatoo is !hal creationism is
other
attempts
at the trulh.
not screntific and should not be
"Yes.
liule
boy."
she Wd, " they
included in the curriculum side by
do
shine
REALLY."
side with evolution. The basic conYou may think that 1hc motber 's
siden~tion, however, should not be,
first
1wo answen wen: bcuu. lbey
" Docs creationism pass the scientifwere
trulhful and even spirilual. You
ic tes1?" but " Docs il pass the truth
might
even say her last aniWer miotest?" Th inswer that we must ask.
led
lhe
boy and was therefore wrong .
"What is truth?"

Fifty years ago illooked as if evolution had WOil the minds of the country except for the Bible Belt regions.
Thai has changed. Today there are
more people who believe that "God
crea1ed man preuy much in his preseni form al one time wilhin the lasl
I0.000 years, .. which is the creacionist view, than believe that " man has
developed over millions of years
from less advanced forms of life,"
Darwin's theory lhat rocked a Biblebelieving world in the middle of lhe
lasl cenlury.
·
Explainin@ this shift away from a
~cientific outlook in his book
" Beyond Science." British scientist
Denis Alexander wrote, "Many
~licve iLis necessary to deny man's
reason in order 10 resl&lt;n his humanily. They see man losing his humanity in a technological society."
Mos1 schoolchildren, it is poinled
ou1 by unhappy parents, are exposed
to nmhing bul a "Godless" nco-Darwinian philosophy regarding the origin of life. This, they say, accounts
for lhe "deadened spiritual lives" of

George R. P/agenz

·sunny, cool weekend
~ forecast for Ohio
· By The Auocllted Preu
" Sunny skies, cool temperatures,
. low humidity. 'What more could
Ohioans want for the weekdnd?
The National Weather Service
· · ~aid a high pressure syslem will keep
· Ohio's skies fair on Salurday and
Sunday with temperatures unseawnably cool, with highs in the mid-70S.
· , Some showers are possible Satur. day night.
· Ovemighl lows will be 55-60.
' The record-high lemperalure for
. lhis dale at the Columbus weather
station was 102 degrees in 1934
, while lhe record low was 50 in 1946.
' Sunset tpnight will be al 8:51 p.m.
. and sunrise Saturday at 6:26 a.m.
Across the nation
. Misl and rain dampened parts of
. ~he Easl before daybreak today, while

to be sure, are hardly in a position 10
get sniffy about this. bul they can and
will assuredly encourage: stonelhrowiog by peq~le who, unlike

choice for the Republican vice presidential nomination before lhis column can get i11to prinL But 011 the
assumplion that then: is still time to
consider the questioo, let me gi~ it
• final whack.
Usually you can f~ about the
vi~ ;nsidential nominee adding
strength to the ticket. Polls diK:Rclly taken 10 lest all of the possibilities
ordiBirily indicate dui just.,.. •r
giYen choice actually deaeascs the
presidential candidate's drawi11g
power. ThM may 1101 be uu. this ,.-.
pvcn Dole's dismal ratiags ill ~
polls, but the likeliest e•oepi&lt;lllm lhe
rule -- Gen. Colin Powdl- has firmly ruled OUI his 0W11 candidacy.
lA a.y ~lei's awnne dw. Dole

William A. Rusher

Robert J. Siders, Jr.

Robert H. Siders Jr., 79, of Point Pleasant, W. Va., died Friday, July 26,
1996, at his home.
He was a retired pilot for M&amp;G Towing Company, Gallipolis, and a member of the Henderson Church of Christ
Born November 4, 1916 in Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va., he was a son of lhe
late Robert H. Sr. and Jennie (Willen) Siders. In addition to his parent!!, he
was also preceded in dealh by a daughter, Nina Ele.anor Eads; grandson, Jack
.f!dwards Eads, Jr.; an infant grandson; ~nd a granddaughter. Sandra Gayle

But our passion fiK scicntitjc precision and exactiiUdc in these mancrs
is open 10 question . Symbols, such ll'
angels and lhc Bible story of cn:alion.
express trulhs that •annol be ad&amp;qualcly apprehended in any other
way. For some peoJ&gt;Ic, as for the Iiitie boy, these symbols have to be
believed literally in order for lhcm to
.have any reality. Bul this is beucs.
isn't it, than for lhcse people 10 have
·nothing that stands 10 them for trutlt?
Science of course must be true 10
itself. It must deal wilh only scientific
evidence. But it musl not. on that
account, rule out all otherexpn:ssioos
of truth. Unless we leU schoolchild·
ren that truth has this dual nature, as
educalors we will be failing them.
h is nOI that the monkey slory is
necessarily untrue. II is just lhat, if
man is a special crca1ion of God, the
artist -- which the author of Genesis
ccruinly was -- may do a better job
than the scientist of gelling us 10 SC!Z
lhis truth.
Georce P1acenz is • syndleated
writer for Newspaper Ea~&amp;erprist
A ssociatioa.

- He is survived by his wife, Nellie (Spears) Siders; two brolheFs, Worthy
Siders of Gallipolis and Eli H. Siders of Henderson, W. Va; seven sisters,
Emma Lee McCarty of Point Pleasant, Jessie Rulen of Teays Valley, Jennie
Stewart, Ruby Huddleston and Hazel Siders, all of Henderstm, and Nannie
Bonecutter of Gallipolis Ferry, several nieces and nephews.
· Services will he held at lhe Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, Point Pleasant,
'at 2 p.m. Sunday, July 28, with Sam Gwinn, minister, officiating. Burial will
follow in the Austin- Hope- Mcleod Cemetery, Henderson.
Visiting hours will be held at the funeral home Saturday from 7- 9 p.m.

Two die in home fire
COLUMBUS (AP) -Two people were killed and anolher was
~lightly injured in an early morning
house fire on the city's southside.
. Fire Baualion Chief Howard
White said Bwbara DeLong, 71, and
her brother, Westley Morris, 83, were
found in lllc living room of the ranchstyle house, apparently trying to

escape.
While said DeLong's son, William
Delong. 52, was awaken by a smoke
detector around 3:30a.m. and called
911 from a neighbor's house. He
apparently tried 10 get back into lhe
house but doors were locked.
While said a smoldering cigarette
is believed to be ihe cause.

Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) -:- IndianaOhio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Friday, as provided by
the U.S. Depanmenl of Agriculture
Market News:
. Barrows and gilts: 50 ce 115 to I .00
~igher; demand moderate t good on
~ moderate mo:vemenl.

thcmsel.-es, don' t live in a glass
house.
So the bidding is srill open, and I
have come to die conclusion that
many people (myself 81110118 tbcm)
have beeJI overlooking two senaitn,
eitha one ol' whom migltl fill the bill
handsomely.
One is Senalor John McCai11, the
- and p-andson of Navy adminlls
and ooc of the true hcroc:s ol the VICIIWII War. A decarlied Navy pilot
himself. he was sbot dowD ova
•
waDIS a IWIIliJI&amp; INiie as atttaaive as VICfJWII and spmt five yars as a
possJIJie, pro'Yidcd he docsn'HIIIi· pliw of-· Elcacd to CoiiJIRSS Byl'-AIIGCIIUII PNu
:I
slUe Dole himself. Beyond lhll, he ill 1981, he was ~ in 1914, . . Today is Fridly, July 26, the 208th day of 1996. 1bm are 158 days lei\
siKMcl be broldly ~ with damoveduptodle~illl986. ID dJc JCW.
•
Dole Oil policy issues, ...t - P- He was re elected baDdily in 1992.
Today's Highlip in HiSiory:
•
lhe dyaaDics of the CUI-a. Oa the issues, McCaia's "lifcamc
~ July 26. 1947, President Truman signed the National Security Act, ;
pro-life IIIII .ac obeoltious .tJou1 it. nlina" by die Americaa
aab11J1 the Depanment of Defense, the National Security Council. die Ccft.. •
The lm1 time I iddiesad Ibis ti~ Union ;. 1994 83 ClUI of a
Agtxy and the Joint Otiefs of Staff.
'
Oa this dale:
.•
quesnoa ill a column (m catty Apil). possible 100. lA 199S, die OwisriaD lrlllnldlqmcc
I reviewed all the possibiliQes dial a.Iition lllllled him •• aool 100 for
In
Benjamin Franltlio became Postmaster Oenenl.
.:
Ulldor dioo!Ssitlit and ~ 10 die the ,__(His OWII fnt cboioe for the
In 1788, New York became the lith s1a1e 10 l'llify the U.S. Constitution.' ;
COIICiusion diM MictJipl 10"1:11101' pe sicleMill ~Ibis,__
In 1156. pia~ GeoiJe 8emarrt Shaw .was born in Dublin, Irdand. ·
Joha Eqlcr Mrt die 1.-pt I!IIUibcy Pbil Gramm.) I wiD admit dial be
lill&amp;94, Eaalish novelist Aldous Hllltley, author of "Brave New w...u " 1
of pluses. I Slill dUit he t.s a lot of Wl1iildled my.p a bit wheil he came - ben in Godalmin&amp;.liD&amp;land.
""'"" ' :
tbc;m, but we blft ...tcs:q
ly Olll b iliplo •Mir NCr I itjc= of
.111
191!'
U~.
~Ga.nl
011rtcs
J.
8onapne
i.sslllldu
Cllderae·:
~
a.~•~~re-tltktatma111c Vi: . • ady lllis , . ,. . hrill abo • • • aaft:!b~~b~ ..-cy tlutt a
folenaftMr
of'
the
FBI.
·
.
!
draft by bis local bolid duriq . . . . . . . eullociJ ... bealr.
lill~. Willllpu Oturdliii miped u Britai•'s prime miniSief lftet hiS" :
,ID (aaiw ..t foqa 111811 he does. c - lilbwe$ ~ toUndly defeMed by the Labat Plrty. (C~t Aulec' I
Vielnlm
he two
.~
JIOI-'1 ~The Dr ....... Jhd-1,- ofMd&gt;ie's llllljor*- h&gt; •uc die new prime millis.11:r.)~

·The Daily Sentlti'el
(liSI'S 113-MO)

'

Publiobed nety oflemoon, Monda,...UVOOP
Frida~. Ill Coon St., Pcmoroy, Ohio, by !he
Ohlo \l!lky Publllllln; Cotlpooy/0.,_ Co.,
.,..,....,., Ohio 45769, I'll. 99'2-2 IS6. Second
j ! l l a - poi&lt;! 11 Pcmoroy, Ohlo.
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The Allocilled Poeu, Olld lhe Olllo
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Send
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The
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Battle of Buffington Island events
The following events have been planned for thi~ weekend at lhe
annual Baltle of Buffington Island Reenactment at Portland.
SATURDAY
I 0 a.m. -- Company drill, camp opens to lhe public.
12:30 p.m.-· Musicians concert.
I P·rll· -- Inuodu&lt;;Jion of dignilaries.
I :30 p.m. -- Program presentation.
2:30p.m. -- Children's program.
3 p.m. -- Saxton's Cornet Band c&lt;incen.
Twilight --Reenactors dance beneath the stars. Music by Saxton's
Comet Band.
Demonstrations will be held all day along· with suolling musicians
and unscheduled mini-concerts by Saxton's Cornet Band.
Plans also call for a cavalry ride from Chester to Portland wilh a
skinnish along the way .
SUNDAY
9:30a.m. -- Camp opens to the public.
10:30 a.m. -· Saxton's Cornet Band concert.
II a.m. --Church service on park lawn.
1:30 p.m. -- Reenactment of the Battle of Buffington Island. Music
by Saxton's Comet Band.
3:45p.m. -- Break camp .
Demonstrations will he held all day.
Food concessions will be available both days.

One Weel:.................................................$2.00

I= ~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::i'i:~

Suboc:ribm 001 deolrin; to poy die Cllrier "'"J

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ms.

.

MAIL~

t-...,~

~ =:::::::..":::::::=::::::.."::::::::::f:m~
11

5'1--·-·----..-~-·--. ---·' ~-"
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..................................- ..SIOJ.n

J

directly connected with the AEP sys;
tern (firstlier) and lhose directly connected to lo the first tic (second lier).
AEP Power Markeling will nol sell
power and energy produced by AEP
withoul specific au1hori1.ation by lhe
FERC.
"In previous decisions. FERC has
allowed power marketers affiliated
with regulated public ulililics to sell
power and energy at markel-based
rates when lhe marketers demonstrate
lhey don'l have an unfair advantage,"
Falcone said.
"AEP Power Marketing docs nol
own generation, 1ransmission or distribulion facililies and has no franchised markel area," he added. "By
limiting ils market area lo third tier
and beyond, we have further demonmated that the new company will
meel FERC's guidelines."
For a year-long ~riod ending in
June 1996, AEP sold 109,000
gigawatllhours lo its native load customers and had additional wholesale
deliveries of 30,000 gigawau/hours.

l

GPLA livestock report
Auction resuhs from WednesTmal head: 370.
day's (July 24) Gallipolis ProducHOGS - 50. Bu1eher hogs, all
ers Liveslock Associalion:
· weighls: SS0-55; · sows, $38-44·
boars, $36-38.25. N/A.
'
CA'ITLE • 307. $2, lower.
COWS • Slandard, $22-$31.50;
utilily, $16-$22; bulls, sleady. $32.service arc required to oblain yearly $37.75;
skin lcsts. This will be lhe final
FEEDER CATTLE. 162;. Price
evening clinic before the 1996 Meigs s1eady. Slccrs, $45 -53, heifers, $44Counly Fair.
53;calvcs, Slcers, $38-45; heifers,
$38-44.
Parade scheduled
SHEEP- Lambs, 10.
The Southern Local Building
GOATS· 3 head. price per head,
Commiucc will hold an "old-fash- $36-47.50.
ioned parade" Tuesday al 7 p.m. 10
FEEDER LAMBS • Aged
campaign for a proi'Oscd building slaughlcr sheep, $2~ and down .
projccl in the distri•l. Participanls
Special feeder caulc sale Wedneswill meel nl 7 p.m. allhc junior high day, August 7, I p.m.
school and lhcn proceed lhrough the
village.

Scramble postponed
The Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce golf scramble, scheduled
for Thursday, August I at the Meigs
County Golf Course, has been postponed. The evenl will be rescheduled
for a later date this fall .
Clinic Monday
A free skin testing clinic will be
conducted by Connie Karsctmik, RN,
Meigs County Tuberculosis Nurse, at
the Reedsville Fire Department on
Monday, from 5-7 p.m.
All individuals who are in food

Meigs EMS logs 7 calls
ment and squad, motor-vehicle accident at 5th and Vine streets, Bernard
and Hope King, Clinlon Hom, Daniel
Hysell, treated at 1he scene.
REEDSVILLE
9:22a.m., Forked Run State Park,
Richard Haynes. Vclerans Memorial
Hospital.
RUTLAND
II :42 a.m., Salem Street, Bury I
While, Holzer Medical Cenler.
TUPPERS PLAINS
3:52 a.m. , stale ltoule 7, Francis
Martin, HMC.

FRI., SAT., SUN.
HELEN HUNT, BILL PAXTON
IN

TWISTER ..."
AND

ARNOLD
SCHWARZENEOGEA IN

ERASER•
446-1088

You have to mMI funeral
III'IWIIIIfllliltl. You're nor·
mal.
It's not unu!IINII for people
to feel UI!Niy when tMy
Ill out to make funlntl
..,...lflllllntl. But pttrt of
our job •
funenl
clreceora II to ~ them
feel more Ill ....

CREMEENS

Holzer Medial &lt;:eater
Dllcbarpl July l5 - •Jeremy

FUIEUL CIIIHL

King, Todd Handley. William Arthur.

t:

446•6133

)'dn. David Bush and daughter.

~=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::1: I

w. ""

COLUMBUS - AEP Power
Marketing, a new corporation, has
filed wilh the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission seeking poweJ
marketing stalus. The finn is a subsidiary of American Electric Power.
Powu marketing status will allow
AEP Power Marketing 10 purchase
. electricity and re-sell it to ulilities and
other wholesale energy users al markel-based rall:s .
"Our · induslry is changing and
becoming increasingly competitive,"
said Charles A. Falcone, senior vice
president of syslem power markels
for AEP.
"
"Gaining power markeling status
is important since it enables AEP to
expand ils participation in the competitive marketplace," he added.
In its filing, AEP Power Market·
ing defined a restricted market area
for its wholesale marketing effort.
The new company would market
wholesale power and energy only in
· the "third lier" markets and beyond.
This would exclude customers

Meigs announcements

U.S. 1-2. 220-260 lbs. S8.0060.00, few 57.50 and 60.50; plants fo!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!l!""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!j'l
59.00-61.00, few 58.75.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 51.0057.50.
Am Ele P -............,.. ,_ .......2~
Sows: 1.00 to I.SO higher.
Units oflhe Meigs Counly EmerU.S. 1-3. 300-450 lbs. 41.00- Akzo ......................................~\ gency Medical Service recorded sevAlhland 011 ............................31'1.
43.00; 450-500 lbs. 43.00-45.00;
AT6T .................................;.,.51\ en calls for assistance Thursday
500-650 lbs. 45.00-47.00, few 48.00. Bank One ..............................,.34 including one 'transfer call. Units
Boars: 36.00-38.00.
Bob Evan• ............................13'1. responding included:
For the week: barrows and gilis Borg-Warner .........................34'.4.
Chitmplon lnd.........................18 MIDDLEPORT
s1eady to 50 ~ents lower; sows finn
II: 13 a.m., Long S1ree1, Aloysois
Chitrmlng Shop ......................ell.
to 1.00 higher.
Grueser,
Pleasanl Valley Hospital.
City Holdlng ..........................21 \
Estimated receipls: 35,000.
Ftdenll11ogul.......................18\ POMEROY
Prices from . Tbe Producen Ganrwtt .................................14\
II: 10 a.m., Rocksprings RehabilLi~atock A.uoclation:
Goodyear ..............................43\ itation Center, Rachel Robinson,
Canle: ste(ldy to 50 cents lower.
K-mart .....................................10
Linda End............................ .20'.4 O'Bieness Memorial Hospital.
Slaughter steers: choice 62.00Umltld Inc ...............: ............ 18\ RACINE
68.75; select 56.00-62.00.
3:01 p.m. , volunteer fire departOhio Valley Bllnk .................... 311
Slaughter heifers: choice 61.00One Yllley............................, . \
67.00; select 54.00-62.00.
P~l Bllncorp.................. .22
Cows: steady; all cows 38.50 and
Pl'llll Flnl ...............................12llr
down.
Royal Dutch/Shell .............. U7'J.
SPRING VAllEY CltJII'IIIl
ShoMy'e .................................et.t.
Bulls: sleady; all bulls 50.00 and
Star
Bank
..............................
72\
446·4514
down .
Wendy'
I .....:.......................... 17'To
Sheep and lambs: 8.00 to I0.50 Worthlngton .......................... 1a\
~
lower; choice wools 85.00-93.00;
choice clips 84 .00-92.50.
Stock reportl 1r1 the 10:30
1.m. quote• provided by Advut
of Qalllpolla•

StOCk.S

Grady, Racine, failure to comply, $63
and cosiS; Gary Jones. Pomeroy : no
insurance, $50 and costs; failure to
assure clear dislance. $43 and costs.
Ralph Fowler, Middleport, fictitious tags, $63 and costs; Angela Halley, Bidwell, speed, $48 and cosls;
Eugene K. Reeb, Bridgeport, speed,
$72 and costs; Jenny Hall, Pomeroy,
no insurance, $50 and costs; Don.ald
K. Goheen. Middlepon. speed, $49
and costs ; Glenn E. Hudson, Jr.,
Mason, W.Va., speed, $50 and cosls;
Mark A. Parson, Racine, f11ilure to
comply, $63 and costs; Thomus L.
Fe lure, Pt. Pleasant, W.Va., peuy
theft, $213 and costs;
Timothy Taylor, Gallipolis, no
insurance, $50 and costs; Charles Jernagan, Pomeroy: DUI, $375 and
cos1s, lhree days in jail, three month
license suspension; reckless operation, $63 and cosls; speed, $57 and
costs; operating under ALS suspension, S150 and costs.

Power marketing enterprise
seeks federal approval

Thursday admissions - none.
Thursday discharges - none.

No subocripdon b}' moil penaii!OII Ia . . .
. , . homlconier- u ...._ •

·

purchase and sales contracts. The balance of the gain was related to commodily contracls used to lock in conversion margins for fabricaled product sales.
Current accounling standards
require that these contracls be marked
to markel and not be matched to the
related fabricated product sales. The
first six months of this year included
an after-tax loss of$1 million (5 cents
per common share), from marking
such fabrication-related commoduty
contracts 10 market.
Ravenswood Aluminum is Ccntu·
ry's principal subsidiary.

The following cases were resolved
in the Pomeroy Municipal Court of
Mayor Frank Vaughan earlier this
week.
Posting bonds were:
Christa Rose, Long Bottom, failure to assure clear distance, $63;
Mary Hudson, Given, W.Va., speed,
$66; Jennings Beegle, Racine , seat
beh, $45; Carl Meredith, Pomeroy,
failure to appear, $45 ; Helen Hood,
Pomeroy. failure to appear, $63;
Cynthia Krauuer, Rutland, speed,
$69; Roger Jordan, Letart, W.Va.,
failure to appear, $45; Cynlhia A.
Thodos, Pt. Pleasanl, speed, $67.
Fined in court were:
Harry Barton, Pomeroy, DUI,
$375 and cosls, three days in jail,
lhree month license suspension; Roxanne Miller, Texas, improper transport of a firearm, $50 and costs; Terry D. Moore, Syracuse, speed, $25
and costs; Keith Davis, Roan, W.Va. ,
expired lags, $63 and costs; Thomas

news
""be Hospital
Vetcn111 Memorial

1
..mil In "'"'""12
dlrul
.. bulL
The Dolly
mondl
Clodil- ·

&lt;01 1 dm. oi• 0&lt;

PACIFIC GROVE, Calif. - Century Aluminum Co., owner of
Ravenswood Aluminum Corp.,
reponed .sec011d quarter 1996 income
from continuing operations of $6.4
million. or 32 cents per common
share.
Second quarter ineome·from continuing operalions in 1995 was $14.2
million, or 62 cents per common
share.
For the first six months of 'this
year, income from conlinuing operations was $15.3 million (71 cents per
common share), comparable to continuing operalions of $37.9 million
($1 .64 per common share), during lhe
same period last year.
Sales revenue was $166 million in
lhe second quarter of 1996. compared
lo $193.5 million during last year's
second quarter. Flat rolled sheel and
plate product shipmenls were 148.2
million pounds, compared 10 146.1
million pounds in the second quarter
.of 1995. Primary aluminum shipments were 31.3 million pounds,
compared lo 47.7 million pounds in
lhe second quarter of 1995.
The first six months of 1995
included an after-tax gain of $8.9 million (38 cenls per common share)
from marking aluminum commodity
contracts to market
Part of the gain .,-- SS. 7 millionwas the resull of a series of forward

Pomeroy Court news

·-·-·-

IINGLI COPY PRICE

Dolly ,.,,_ ........................................ -,.35 Ceoll

o..-

second quarter results

A Coolville you1h was cited following a two-vehicle accident at the '
intersection of Fifth and Vine streets in Racine Thursday around 2:55
p.m.
Clinton L. Hom, 16, pulled from Vine Street into the side of a 1990
Ford truck driven by Bernard R. King, 82, of Bidwell, who was southbound on Fifth Street, according to a Meigs County Sheriffs Depart·
ment report.
.
Allhough no injuries were reported, the Racine Volunteer Fire
Department and squad responded to lhe scene. Damage to King's truck
. and Horn's 1986 Chevrolet truck was reported as heavy.
Hom was ciled for failure to yield.

7

SUIISCRii'TJOI'I RATIS

lyCintot«--

j

•

-

~.

acteristics is a son of crusty inde- agrees. giving him an imprcs.•ive lifC:
pendence rare among senators, mosl time 111ting of 95.
As for military service, Nickles
of whom (like Bob Dole) prefer to
travel in company if possible . joined a Nalional Guard infanll'y
McCain will tum 60 on Aug. 29.
unit in 1970 at the age of 21, and
1be other senator I overlooked in remained in i~ while employed in lhc
April is youngtt. Don Nickles of family machine business, until lie
Oklahoma is only 48 (two years became vice president and gcnern1•
younger than Clinton. eight months mana&amp;cr of the company in 1976. :
younger than Gore). yet he has
So there you have it. Either ot!
already scrvaj 16 years in 1hc Senate lhese men would be a superb choicc'l
and is atrttntly the majority whip. for vi&lt;-e president. (I would dearly
Handsome, smooch of manner, love 10 sec Nickles debalc Gon: 1) ; I
Calholic, married and lhc father of
W'lllilua A. Rusher i1 a Dislia-!
four, lie is described in the Almanac paisbed Fellow ol tile a.rem.tj
of American Politics 1996 as having Institute for tile Study of Sla~
"one of the mosl conservative voting mamhlp and Polllical Pbilosoplly. l
I'CCOids in the Senate." The ACU

Today in history

skies were fair in the Midwest, and
the West was bracing for another hm
day.
Upper-level disiUrbances could
dump scattered showers and thunderslorms in the central and soulhern
Plains today. Some of those storms
mighl be severe in parts of Colorado,
Kansas and Oklahoma. Isolated tornadoes were also possible.
' Scattered thunderstorms could
develop in Virginia and the Carolinas
ahead of a cold front pushing eastward lhrough North Carolina and lhe
mid-Atlantic states today. Two inch- ·
es of rainfall might fall in some areas.
Behind the front, cooler and drier
air was expecled to push through the
Ohio River Valley and lhe Great
Lakes region .

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Officer Matthew D. Montoney
ProsecuiOIS and police were incensed was wounded in a forearm, and a bulover a jury's decision lo acquit a man let grazed a shoulder of Sgt. Michael
who admitted wounding two police Carlisle outside.
officers during a drug raid.
Bolh officers were part of the divi"It's open season on cops, I sion's Investigative and Tactical Unit,
guess," assistant Prosecutor Robert which had a warranl to search lhe
Krapenc said on Thursday after house for drugs and weapons.
Roger D. Ford, 38, of Columbus, was
"The cops did the right thing,"
found innocent oflwo counls of felo- Krapenc said. "They never fired a
nious assault
shot, and they bring him lo the court.
Ford had testified on Wednesday The jury puts him back on the street.'·
he didn't know it was the police
Police found more than Qn ounce
breaking down the fronl ~oor and of crack cocaine, S1,200. a small
lhought his friend's home was being amount of marijuana and drug pararobbed at about 10 p.m. on Jan . 17. phernalia. No testimony in the fourHe said he blindly out the window in day trial linked the drugs to Ford, a
self-defense.
forciJI&amp;n of a company that installs
Ford said he did not look . to see high school bleachers. Ford has no
who he was shooting al, but reacted criminal record.
instinctively with three quick shots
The tenant of the house, Shannon
ilfter he dove to the floor and landed Meadows, 21, was charged with
on a loaded pistol he said he had nev- three counts of drug uafficking. He
er seen before.
is free on bond pending a trial scheduled for Sept. 5.

!D.~ N~tices ICentury Aluminum reports

Two who could be Bob Dole's running mate
By WIIIIMI A. Rusher
Senator Dole: may announce his

'

W.VA.

Attitudes change in origin of life

(

•

who would listen that he only
planned 10 serve a single term. It was
precisely because of this pledge,
Boutros-Ghali told friends, that. he
was the perfect person to reform the
agency's torpid bureaucracy. Since he
wasn't running for re-election, he had
no reason to kowtow to the myriad
regional factions and inll:rests lhat
often get their way at .the· U.N. He
•called his self-imposed 1erm limil his
"greatest strenglh" as secretary general .
As recently as !ale 1993, BoutrosGhali was still telling interviewers
that he would forsake a second term.
By his third year in office, however,
all that changed. Any zesl he may
once have had for reform was for-·
saken in the que~t for a seco.nd,term.
A prominent Belgian U.N. iliplomat
told us in 1994 that lhe appoi!ltrnent
of an American to head UNICEF -when it was a "European's tum" -was proof lhat he was seeking favor
with American diplomats for a second 1erm.
It was not enough. The Clinton
administration has spent the last two
years in a losing battle to gel Congress to appropriate overdue p~ ·
ments to the U.N. If Boutros-Ghali
slays pul, all hope of securing this
money will be gone. Republicans in
Congress view Boutros-Ghali as an
ineffective leader whose efforts al
reform and cost-cutting have been
half-hearted a1 best
'
Still, Bouuos-Ghali will not gi~e
up. And his chief promoters, such as
French President Jacques Chirac.
aren't scaling back 1heir efforts cimer.
Sources say thai Chi111C took up
valuable time in the recent G-7 meeling in Lyons, France, to push for
Boulros-Ghali's reappoinlmenl. ·
The United States has made it
clear, meanwhile, that it will velo any
reappointment for a new five -year
term. He could lhen go to the General Assembly lo ask for an override.
bul that would amount to full-scale
diplomatic war wilh the United Sta~
-- a bad idea for an organizalion that's
critically dependent on American
funds.
•
Jack Anderson and JU! .Mollfr
United Feature Syndic.ale, IM.
•
•

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

7llrlfllt.

Birth - Mr. and Mrs. James
Westflll, daughter, Gallipolis.

(Publllllecl with pennillloa)

.

..

�Il

Friday, July 26, 1996

Sports

l

The Da~y ·Sentip.~l
Friday, July 26, 1996 ·

In the Kyger Cre.ek L.L. Tournament quarterfinals,

Point Pleasant Hardware &amp; Little Hocking tally victories
By Q. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Wrltar
In the commencement of the
Kyger Creek Little League Tourna·
ment quarterfinals Thursday night,
Point Pleasant True Value Hurdwaro
got past the Mason Athletics 2. I
before Lillie Hocking Quality Fur·
niturc Plus hapded the Gallipolis
Yankees an 18-3 mercy-rule lo~s in
the nightcap at the Kyger Creek
Employees Club near Cheshire.
P.P. Hardware 2, Athletics I
In the lop of the first inning, the
Athletics' Brandon Hankinson, their
No. 2 hiller, got a one-out single to
right, moved to second on a wild
pitch and moved to third on Ryan
Roush's groundoutto second. Han -.
kinson scored on a wild pitch during
Adam Rickard's at -bal.
TVH, which left two runners on
base in the first, cushcd in on errors
by ce nter fielder Alan Barnitr. and
third baseman Heath Rkkard in the
second .
Burnitz, who was less than four
feet from Seth Matheny's two-out lly
ball to center field, mi ssed the hull.
Matheny, who moved to second on
thai error, used Ryan Peters' bunt and
Heath Riekand's errant throw past
lirst baseman Jared Long to score I he
tying run . However, Peters was
stmnded at second when Ashley
Pyles struck out swUiging to end the
lrumc.
In the next four innings, the clos·
est Mason got to scoring again was
in the fourth, when Roush reached on
an error and moved to second on a
wold pitch. That half of the inning
ended when he was thrown out try ·
ong to steal third.
In the TVH fourth. B.J. Smith,
who walked, made it to thi.rd on a
wild pilch and a steaL In Hardware 's
fifth , Pyles, who also walked, arrived
at third in the same way. In hoth cas-

'
' l

'

b61~ runners were stranded.
After TVH pitcher Seth Hatfield
N!llrcd the side in order on strikeouts
in the six th, TVH started its winning
rally when Ryan Hodge was hit in
the bullocks by Adam Rickard's 1-0
pitch.
·
Alter Hodge walked off the soreness, Steven Blazer used Adam
Rickard 's 1-2 pitch to get hi s club 's
only hit of the game - u double to
right field that helped Hodge score
from first.
The numbers: Hatfield 's complete-game effort was purtly traced to
his striking out II , walking none and
giving up three hits, which went to
Long , Roush (both were 1-2 ) and
Hankinso n ( 1-3).
· Adam Rickard struck ou1 three
an d walked three in a complete-game
effort.

cs.

Hudson and Brandon Holley.
The Yankees hurt themsel ves by
leaving the bases loaded in the first
two frames and not scoring in either.
Gallipolis, facing an 18-0 deficit
in the bottom of the fi&gt;urth, avoided
the shutoul when Holley's two-out
single to left scored Chris Bias and
Angelo Hardy.
·
Holley later scored on a wild
pitch during Bobby Woodward's atbat that. because ofWoodwand's pain
in his right shoulder, was completed
by but boy Justin Bias. But cleanup
J,T.
lined out to Moms at

second to end the game.
Hardy 's defensive play - he
caught Morri s' Oy ball at the end of
a 20-yard run to end the Little Hocking second before catching Chris
Lyons' liner on a 10-yard sprint in
lhc third - qrew applause from fans
of both teams and from both dugouts.
The decision left Rio Grande as
the on ly Galli a Counly rcpresenlative
left in the tournament
The numbers: Hendricks and
Ben '"the Hammer" Gum combined
to strike out six and walk six.
The Yankees' pitching relay team

-·-·-

combined to strike out two, walk five
and hit two batters .
Little Hocking's hit parade saw
Ron Delancey. Gum . Hendricks,
Lyons, Morris (all went 2-3), Sayre
(2-4); Brannon ( 1-2 ) and Gabe
Humphrey ( 1-3) participate.
The Yankees' hillers were Chris
Mullins (2-3 ), McKinniss, Spe ncer
(both went 1-2) and Holley (1-3).

Quarterfinals continue
Here is what 's on the weekend
agenda.
Tonight: Rio Grande vs. Huhbard 's Gree nhouse at 6 p.m.;
Coolville vs. Rutland at 7:30p.m.
Saturday's semifinals: Point
Picasanl Hardware vs. Lillie Hocking at6 p.m.; IOnighi's victors at7 30
lnnlna lDJall
. p.m.
lillie Hocking .......... 922-5= 18-14·0
Sunday's Onals: SaiUrday 's
Yankees ..................... .. .lX){)-3=3 -5-3 losers in the cortsolntion game at 5
WP - Hendricks
p.m.; Saturday's victors in the chamLP - Wheeler
pionship game at6:30 p.m .

ll1llloa lsl1all

Athletics .................. 100-000= 1-3-3

P.P. Hardware ........... OI0-001 =2-1-0

WI' - Hatfield
LP - A. Rickard
Little Hocking i8
Yankees 3
In the first inning of the noghtcap,
Lillie Hoc king's nine-run riot set the
lone for what hccamc the third mercy-rule decision of the tournament.
Lillie Hock ing sent 13 hillers to
the plate . The first two hillers in the
lineup - Meie s Countian Bradley
Brannon (he walked twice) and Curt
Morris (he singled twice and
knocked in three runs) - scored four

...., .

runs.

Chris Hendrick s, the guests' No .
3 hiller, also had two hits in the
frame and knocked in three runs.
This and QFP's continued insistence on scoring runs in the follow ing inning s meant short stints for
Yankee starter Cliff Wheeler and
relievers Travis McKinoiss, Ryan

Maaon Athletlca' Brandon Henkin·
aon (left) touchea the plate ahead of the throw from Point Pleaaant . ·
Hardware catcher Ryan Hodge to pitcher Seth Hatfield (with glove),
who threw the wild pitch to Initiate the flrat·lnnlng play In Thursday
night'I Kyger Creek Little League Toumement quarterfinal game. The
Athletlce, whoae 1.0 leed laated one Inning, aew their neighbors
crack the tie In the alxth and win 2·1. (OVP photo by G. Spencer
Oaborne)

BRANNON SCORES- Little Hocking's Bradley Brannon makes
headfirst elide Into the plata on a wild pitch by Gallipolis pitcher
Ryan Hudaon In the fourth Inning of Thursday night's Kyger Creak
Little League Toumamant quarterfinal game. Brannon'• run was one
of live the eeat Washington County crew had In the lrame en ·route
to an 18·3 victory. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
1

Belle's homers propel Tribe to 10-7 victory over Orioles
By DAVID GINSBURG .
BALTIMORE (AP) - One ,Jf
these duys , Alhcrl Belle might feel
inclined lolellihc world what it feels
like to he the most prolific home run
honer in lhe history of the Cleveland
Indians.
Belle shattered the frnnchise
record Thur;day night with one of
the ronc sl games of his career, hilling
two homers and driving in_five runs
in the Indians ' 10-7 viclory over the
slumping Baltimore Orioles.
Belle has 34 home runs this season and 22H wilh Cleveland, two
more than Earl Averill , who played
for the Indians from 1929 to I'JW.

Belle, as is his custom , refused to
talk to the media after the game. But
teammate Brinn Giles had plenty lo
say ulloutlhc Indians ' cleanup hiller.
"If we get men on !lase with
Alllcrl coming up, most likely good
things arc going to happen ," Giles
said . "He kind of sets the lone fur us .
He's feared a lot around the league."
And not just by pitchers. Belle
has proven 10 be dangerous on the
hasc puths, too, us evidcn,cd by the
forcunn he used 10 strike Milwaukee
second baseman Fernando Vina cur·
lier this season .
Thursduy, after llcing struck hy a
pitch hy Baltimore reliever Garrell

Stephenson, Belle slid hurd and
wide into second husc in an cllortto
hrenk up u double play., Baltimore
second baseman Roberto Alomar
had to leap high in the air to avoid a
possible injury.
"I told the umpire that (Belle's)
inlcnliun was to knock me down and
into left field ," Alomar said.
Asked lly reporters if he thought

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NL standings
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Sunday's .:ames
Y1uk ,11 CINCINNATI. !
at St Luuu. 2:l.li

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In the left·hand photo, u.s:·;;;ftballers Dlonna Harrl1 (wearing helmet) and Laura Berg 11mbraca after their club's rain-delayed 4·2 win
over Canada In Olympic action early today In Columbus, Ohio. The

emotions were substantially different with gymnast Dominique
Moceanu, aa she gets a hug from coach Bela Kerolyi following her
per1ormanca on the vault Thursda~ In Atlanta, Ga. (AP)

around . But the ondividual all-around
iurncd out to he a disaster for the
Americans.
Dominique Dawes. leading after
the first two events, went skidding
OUI of hounds in the flo11r exer( isc
und wound up 17th. Miller's routine
was ruined when she hnrcl y stumbled out 11f hounds.
The 111her Americun, Dominique
Moccanu, suhhing for injured Kcrri

ishing the KOO-mcter frce,i ylc ncar
the hack of the pack, more than II
seconds hchinJ I~ -year-old winner
Bmokc Benncll.
"Even 20 years down lllc mad ,
cvcryhody 's going to rcmcmhcr
Janet," Ben nell said. "I think Janel's
always going to~ the queen of di ,.
lan~.:c swimming
The U.S. haseballteam hopes In
fare llcncr as it heads toward an

Strug, fini ~hcd ninth in an c~cnl ":t~n
hy Ukrainian world champoon Loha
Podkopayeva .
"I tried my hardest tonight ,"
Miller said. "We won the gold and
were so excited. we lost locus. It 's
hard."
More hiuers wccl than disap·
pointing for the Arnerkans was Lhe
sight of Evans, a lnur-urne g~ld
medalist at Seoul and Barcelona, hn-

IOt:VI tUhlc "o howLJown YoJ\h tlu,;

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crhou..,c C.:uhan . . . 1\ n.:~.:c:ru 11 \l llr-. tinning homer.., pc ,v.cn..: d th..: i\nl \:' 11·
~,;an~ to a 15-5 wtn IJ\'Cf Jaran :tnU

equaled Cuha·, 4-0 '""!.
In Columhu,. the w11mcn ' " "' ·
hall team fared hcncr at the end .
scoring two run ~ in the rinal inmn g
to heal Canada 4-2. The game Jod ·
n't end untii nearl y 2 a.m. toda)
hccuusc of a min Jt:lay.

R~;ld~s, Braves and Cards lose; Dodgers beat Marlins
By BEN WALKER
AP Baaeball Writer
The Cuhs scored in the first
inning. So did the Rockies.

The
inning.
The
inning.

Cuhs scored in the second
So did the Rockies.
Cubs scored in the third
So did the Rockies.

hoard," Colorado manager Don Baylor said Thursday night. "Once one
of these kinds of games get&gt; staroed
here, you can only sit hack und hope
you get sometoody nut. "
The Cubs also scored in the fifth,
but the Rockies did not, leaving the
game tied at 8.
Somehow, the score remained
even until the ninth, when Chi,ugo
hrokc through for a 10-Mvictory that
ended the Rockies' 11 -game winning
streak at Coors Field.
"I'm JUS! glad to get (lUI of here
with a win," Cubs manugel\l im Riggleman said. "I've munagcd too
many games like this against them
without II lot "f success."
Mark Grace drove in four runs
and also scored the gQ-ahead run in
the ninth on reliever Bruce Ruffin 's
second wild pitch of the inning.
"As a hiller, you've got to love
!his place," Grace said. " You know
coming in you arc going to have the
chance to improve your statistics."
Vinny Castilla homered twice lor
the Rockies, giving him 24 this season - 17 at home. •
All-Star pitcher Steve Trachsel
slruggl~d for the Culls, givmg up
eight runs and II hits in 3 2/1
innings. He did hctter with the hal.
however - an .081 hiller, he singled
to sttlrt a two-run second inning.
In other games, San Francisco
dcfc ,lled Atlanta 4.3. Montreal

The Culls scored m the fourth
inning. So did the Rockie s.
"I didn 't know if we were ever
going to have any io.crocs on · the

Ooevcuc, while Middleport\ Ken
MtldJen Jr. wus third .
In the Junior Drugstcr Division,
Ciji Casto of Mason , W.Vu. won .
Davey Muthcny of Point Pleasant
look secohd. T.J. Snodgrass of Gal·
lipolis was 11 scmi·finulist.
TOURNAMENT CHAMPIONS- The first place
team In Thursday's American Cancer Society
Golf Scramble at the Melga County Golf Course

flnlahed with a team score of 11-under-per. From
left to right are team membara Jim Thoma• Jr.,
Ron Tolar, Ben Ewing and Joe Kuntz.

There will he an orguni1.alional
meeting for uny girl entering grndcs
7-12this full interested in pinyin~ for
the Southern Tornadoes on Monday.
July 29 at 5:30 ul Southern High
School.

stopped St. Louis 4-2, Pillshurgh
Ileal Philadelphia ~-4 and Los Ange·
les downed Florida 6-3.
Giants 4, Braves 3
Allen Watson outpitchcd Greg
Maddux. taking a one-hit shutout
into the ninth inning m San Francisco.

Watson (7-H J. hack from un clhow
injury that had sidelined him since

July 2, gave up Marquis Grissom's
douhle to start the game and tllcn
retired the·· next 20 hallers.
Chipper Jones hil a three-run
homer with one out in the Atlunta
ninth, and Rod Beck relieved fnr hi s
1'Jth save.
Burry Bonds hit his 26th h11mer in
a three-run first olf Maddux ( I0-H).
who had won cighl struighl against
San Fntncisco.
Expos 4, Cardinals 2
Rookie Ugucth Urhina. whose
worst outing or the season t.:nmc
when he faced St. Louis last month.
got even with s~vcn !\(rong innings
at Busch Stadium .
Urhina (5-3) gave up three hit s,
and relievers Dave Veres and Mel
Rojas did not allow any. Mt~nlreal
improved to 7-2 agninsl the Cordi ·
nals.
,.
.
St. Louis, w!lich had Just two hots
in Wednesday 's loss to Atlunta,
dropped its fourth in a row.
Dodgers 6, Marlins 3
PcdroAstacio made a nifty ,·atch

on a line drive thai hoi h" lrll wri'l.
highlighting hi s won at Joe Rohhoe
Stadium.
Aslacio turned hi' had on a ion ·
er up the middle lly pondo-hotleo
Quilvio Veras in the seventh . II hot
him in the wrist, hut Astacio hu ~ged
the hall to ht s chcsl antl &lt;.Jid a n .: k ·
orat ion dan( c.
Eric Karros hit a thrcc -runlh;lllcr
for Los Angeles. Bclo'" the g;unc.
the Dodgers signed third haseonan
Tim Wallach to replac e Mi~c Blow crs, recently losl for lh..: 'L'iiSIHI
llccausc nf a knee injury.
Pirates 6, Phillj.,s 4
Orland11 Merced homered an &lt;I
drove in three runs'" Pinshurgh "'Ill
Philadelphia to its 12th l11ss on 1.1
games. The Pirates won their fourth
in a row.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.
SPRING &amp; SUMMER HOURS

Open Monday·frlday 9:00·5:00
Saturday 9:()().3:00

TIE

GRAVELY

SYStEM

Ht·:~~­

SAN 1-'KI\Nl'ISC.'O (iJI\NTS

lklhn~hn tll lll lhc Nt~tthw~·~t 1 -~.·u)!Ut.'

1996 NISSANe 412

f&lt;Hitball
Ll'll[lUI

I'A&lt; ' KI~MS : Si~'"-'11 (i

JAl'K SONV II.l.l'. IMJUARS Ao.
tMinn•d OT Omnn Mnnjtnlnl hn• l ~o~ n 111..l~·n m
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MINNI ~ SO'I'A VIKINOS Attf\'l-d 1r1
termt with 1.0 llulllltl C'knmn• 1111 11 llvll•
Y~'lU' l'Ofltnk.'l, SiJOCJ Lll ll;IITyJ Tnlltl)l hi

: off for second place In the American Cancer
' aty Golf Scramble held Thursday afternoon at the
: Meigs County Golf Courae. Member• of the team

acore
ware (L·R) Shelly Hasklna, Bill
Tackett and Benny Ewing.

Driver side air bag, 5·speed, full
bench seat, 1400 lb. payload, all
season radials, 3 year 36,000
bumper tb bumper, plus 5 year
60,000 power train warranty.

111111l'· YI!IIf ' lllllrLK.'I

PHILAUI:I.PHIA 1:1\GI.FS S 1 ~"'-'J
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Mslk.'r. f Rn.•nt HuJ!hl!~ ulllt F 0.1vc M\·LI..,:un
N EW YORK RANGERS : Stt~nc\J

Naltonal

Ouc.lltl a1 Color.adu, .l o;l p.m.
1\tlamot a1 San fnllk.'i~'O. -I:O!i p.nL
San Dica:o al Aork1a. 4 : J~ p.m.
l'hil*lphi• 01 PlnsburJ(l. M~ p.m.

Transactions
BaR ball

A-a~

BALTIMORE ORKIUS, Pbcod OF
Muk Smith on rlw I ~-day diJ.abled lisl.
rnroacriw lo July 2l R«alled RHP G;w.
rnr Saephtnson fmm flome:Aef of riM: lnrrrn :uion:.l LnJue. SiJ•e~ l HP Mall
Grou :uw:l LHP Will Aynt 11nd ~uisned
1ht·m1o A:~.

CLF.VELANO INDIANS: Activakd
IN F Julio Fr01n..:o from the 15-day dis·

KHt Mc:n:ker 10

Bufr:llo ~tf the Amrrican Auocia1ton.
DETRO IT TIGERS: A,rivated INF
Alan Tt;wnmcU and RHP Grq Gohr from .

MSRP ........... 11,668.95
Discount ......... 2,673.95

st'o~'

LW Dante I Gmw:MJ

l.c'' Ani!d,.-s * Hou5tun. 2:. 'r.m.

~IN lut. Qrlioncd LHP

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Hockey

+-..JI ;u CulorOO.o

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career hi gh.
Charles Nagy ( 12-3) allowed li1Ur
runs unJ nine hits in 5 Ill innings lt11
his first vi~tory in seven shills since
Juue 15 . The right-hander struck oOI
IWII and walked IWO.
Alomur hau four hit., , including a
pair of homers. Brady Anderson hit
his 32nd home ru ~ for the Orioles,
who huvc lost four Slr:oight

SHS volleyball
meeting Monday

'

~.

\IJ,llll'tJ Ul.'lhn~tlllllll mm;ltll'f Ol.lll' V1r~1l
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h'lllll Nnn11.•J Sh,lnl' Turnvr IIUII III~l'r ul

Olti!HN 111\Y

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Mtlfllr~.&amp;l

Sh&lt;x&gt;tout, Will Brogun ofChurl~slon,
W Vu . took the win in his Cumaru.
In the Pm.M&lt;xl Quick H, Burton
Auxier of Dixie, W. Vu. took the win
in his 1995 Camuro. Freal Mizc of
Beckley, W.Va.linished second . Ruy
Livingston of Point Plensunl, W.Va.
was u semi-finalist
In the Pro Division, Rick Hall nf
Marmet, W Vu . took first in hi s
Corvcnc. Kentuckian Louis Reese
t:amc in scc.:ond in his dragstcr. Hur~
ry Hollhs of Burhoursville, W.Va.
fini shed third.
In lhe Modified Division. Tim
Buunoof Chesler look the win in has
I968 Cumuro. Greg Fowler nf'Point
Plensanl finished second in his 1966

~

( ' t~liltll'llill IA.'UlJ;IIt'

Juc ~III)'NIIII1~

Nl'W 'Yurk iClnrk 10-711U CINCJN .
NATI (StllkciJ ~.\) , 1 - 0~ Jl.lll.
Athtnlll (Wuudttll 0- 1)111 Sunl:rand ~ ­

N~'N

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!.OS ANGIOUS llOllC;t;RS . 1'1 '~'~
ttHI' 'J'um Cnntl11"11un th ~· l~ · t.ln~ tli~ ­
tthlct.l h ~1 . R!lrni"'II Yl' tu July 20 Rl.'c:~lk:tl
RHP IJarren l&gt;n•tfnrt lrnm Alhuttul'rttuc
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Ju~tttnl'J 111111 tu San lkrtl ut!.lwn n l lhl'

Ntlkm•lt'uuii~U

Saturday'aaame•

C1u~at-:tl CTcknlal.'tl

visittu the truck.
Wise passed through the pit qrcs
and spoke with various drivers and
thcirrfamilics about drug racing. Lut er he made a pass riding with Pro
driver Charlie Arrnsteud of Clen denin, W.Va .
After the 5.94-secund, 1/8-milc
ride, KVD representatives presented
Wise and his daughler with Kanawha
Valley Dragwuy 1'-shirts and a
plaque naming him an Honorary Dri ver.
The truck featured a Quick H
Street Car Shootout and u Quick H
Pro Mod race as well us the normal
hracket schedule.
In the Quick 8 Street Car

CHICAGO l'U US · l'wnullc\J RHP
Jnin• Dt;a;t rt(ln\ RIII..'ULIHI ul' 1111: MiJwc~t
1•...-:tpUl' Ill Dtt)'tnnu ul' thl' l-'lo11\Jo1 ~lUll'
l..t:UtJ.UC

l'rnn·

Sunday's game•

'.

luJt•lln nl lhc lnfl'rn:tltonnl ltiilttiC
KI\NSI\S CITY ltOY 1\l.S. 1\Jn.'l!d to
ll'rtm wtl h Rlll 1 Kl'\·tn 1\rflkr t\11 .1 thl\.'\.' ·

lllfaho:l. .J-11. M·O:'i p m.

Saturday's gamts

By PAUL NEWBERRY
medals in individual events when she
ATI.ANTA (AP) - There was hlew away the field in the 200-melcr
Janel Evans, chugging along at the hackstrokc.
bnck of the pack. If only she had
And Russian Alexander Popov
stopped to look , she cou ld have seen proved once agnin that he ts the
the newest darl ing of Amcriran fastest man in the pool. outstretchi ng
swimming up ahead - way ahead. America's Gary Hall Jr. in a sti rrin g
There was Shannon Miller, tears 50-meier freestyle .
streaming down her face after a dts" If you win first Olympics. you
astrous misstep on the gymnastics hecome famous," said Popov, who
repeated his douhlc-g old medal permut.
Two American women who stood fonnanc.:c of Ban;clona with wins in
at the pinnacle of their spmls in the 50 and 100 freestyle. "If you win
Barcelona four yean; ago were also- seco nd Olympics, you become
rans ut these Olympic Ga mes on grca l "
The greatness of the U.S.
Thursday.
"I don't really have any regrets, " women's llaskethallteam is llccnm·
said Miller, who broke down as she ing more and more apparent. The
spoke about her eighth-place finish Americans whipped Zaire 107-47
in the women's all-around. " I'm still ocforc a Georgia Dome crowd of
going horne with a (team ) gold 11 ,230 - the largest in the history
of women 's hasketllall - ami appear
medal."
One of the Olympics' glamnur to he an unstoppable as the other
events, track and field, was gelling Dream Team.
" II was really exhilarating
started today w11h final s m two
events as well as several prclominar- llccausc when you walk out, you feel
ies. Swimming was sc heduled to like you're at a men's game," said
wrap up with the Americans trying Carl a McGhee, one of seven U.S.
to huild on their impressive medal players to score in douhlc ligures.
haul, which included an Olympoc "There were so many people. We
record by the women's KOO freestyle were really pumped up."
Overall, the Americans remained
relay 'learn Thursday. The Dream
atop
the medal ~ board with 32 ( 12
Team returns to the court tonight,
gold,
16 silver, 4 hronze), lollowed
against China.
hy
Russ
ia with 25 ( 13-7-5) and GerWhile Miller and Evans &lt;lumhlcd
Thursday, two other slurs from 1992 many wilh 22 (3-8-11 ).
Miller, who won a total of live sil are still shining brightly.
ver
and hronzc medals at Barcelona,
Kriszlina Egcrszegi of Hungary
became the first swi mmer in finally won her first go ld Tuesday
Olympic history to win five gold noght in the women's team all-

t'alk:t.l tUIJl Mnrk Smtlll tn11u Tu~MIII

NI\ IIC Stnt~r K-' 11 7 l'il1111
Mttlllhltt ll ·au l' tn 1 ·11nt Sl l.uu1'
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Evans and Miller
among also-rans;
U.S. softballers win

----~----Joy and pam

tiOUSTON ASTMOS : t)pJiunctl RHP
Jnh11 Hulk•k 1n Tul.'~ un nl tiK." J)('l. Re-

FridMY'J M•m••

l~tu r h INcu ~ c I ~ - -11. 1 \~ 1'111
N ~· w Ytlfk IWt i•Hn 4 -'ilnl

the I \ .day dhnh li!lllnt Oplwned ltHP
kll M~Cuu~ tllld INJ: 1 : nu~tn Cru z lu

l'lllltklnlll Lclllll&amp;f
ATLI\NTA OM AVES Uull'll'III.HI'
Dcnn H :1rt5nlv ~• utr wn tvl'n from the

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ThurlidMy'o "''nrts

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TCJ,IU 4. Chtu,:n .I ( 121

ToniKhl's

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'l'buncloy'a "'"""

Kan.~aK Cit~

46&lt;

Wt•ttrn Ol"ldun
,, -IK .~ l~

Colom1111

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12'

Tuwnrn ~ - U·ofklund \

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11111 -hlll jth

411

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U.:.lfr~ruc
lutr,nlfl

41

Ct ntr~allll\ldun

AL standings
HrN

.

47 '4

New Y111k
l'lnltllk lphl n

Bci'lc 's homers in nddition to a two·
run single .
"The first at -hill, I hung u .slider.
The second was a high fasthull over
the plute," Coppinger suiu. " Be's a
good hitter. You make 11 n11stale anJ
he makes you pay for it."
It Wtls the l't,urth twt1-lunncr gaJIJe
for Belle this scuson anu the Hru of
his careen· The live RBis lieu a

In the Olympics,

Baum, Casto and Brogan .stand as KVD's latest victors

Scoreboard
Baseball

the hard slide was intentional, Alo·
mar replied, "Whul do you thinl '1 .. .
I respecl him us a player hut I dbn'l
respec1 what he did ."
Alomar has played against Belle
for years, but Baltimore starter
Rocky Coppinger had never llcf(llc
faced the slugger hcforc Thursday
He won't soon forget the experience.
Coppinger (5-2) yielded tooth of

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Soccer

s•"

MoJo&lt; Lfti"C Soccu

COLUMBUS CREW' Added G P"

Haninaton to the nt~ltt. PIOK.'Cd 0 Shane
lbllek Ofl injumJ rtKtvc. -

S·TARZ! During the frP. e Preview
and Receive o FREE INSTAL LA TJO~

Order

Colloe&lt;
BIG EAST CONFERENCE Named
Tmnvny Gm :WISianl Wm1or o( media
relllf1ons.
!NOlANA rouwtATE A11fl£T.
It CONFERENCE: Nomed Lci1b Aao
Darucy direclor of informatiOfl for men.'

~

1996 NISSAN• 412
IE KING CAB•
With optional Value Truck Page Sport
wheels, tilt, cruise, AMIFM cassette, rear
fold-down seats, power steering, rear
sliding glass window, sport stripes,
delay wipers and a whole lot more!

~

LEASE
FOR ONLY
12/fiONTHS

ARMY: Norm! Rob llondaJI wi...,.
""'"'·
/

~~~h.

CINCINNAn A....,...., rbo oaiJ·
111ion or Mike Li•p:nftlltf, voUeyNII
CG.1C.b. Nmntd K11ie McFarlud inlerim

...tleyboU coadl .

.

SAINT LOUIS ' N.,.ed Jeffrey

Wiaea

..U•• miner.

TULANE, Na~ Kellie Keoi1Cdy
women's auiaant bMicctbaiiL-ocdt.

Pt. Pleasant 675-3398

Surrounding Ar•a•

·766·0553

,
I

'

. . ' ... ....

., . . . . . . .

'

... .. .

�•

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

P~)lneroy

Friday, July 26, 1 •

• Middleport, Ohio

I

\'

'

r
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

,-Friday, July 26, 1996

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7
Public Sale
and Auction

ApostoliC
Cll_. Ill J - Cllriol Alf '
VanZancll Uld Wud
Poolor: J..,... Miller
Sunday School • 10:30 LID.
Evenilla • 7:30p.m.
S...ICM 7:30

w...-.

Ass embly of God

Hope &amp;pllll
(Soolllln)
~70 011111 St., Middleport
Sund.y school - 9:($ o.m.
Wonhip · II a.m. ond 7 p.m.
Wednesd.oy SeN leo · 7 p.m.

rm ww Bapllll Cttam

Alii Srne~ Middleport
Pastor: l..a Hay011n
Sunday Senlico - 7:30 p.m.
Sunday Sehooi-IOo.m.
Wcdnesdoy Service-7:30 p.m.

R••'-•d flnr Bapllll C~W&lt;II
Sunday Sehool - 9:30 o.m.
Worship - 10:4~ o.m.
Pomeroy Flnt Bapllll
PISior: Pout Stinson

Eur t.toin St.

Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Worship - 10:30 o.m.
f1nt Soolllenl Bapllsl
41872 Pomeroy Pike
PUior: E. lamar O'Bryanl
Sunday Sehool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 o.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.
f1nt ..,.... Cltlrdl
PoOior: Mort Morrow
61h Uld Po)mer St., Middleporl
S"unday"Sehool ' 9:15 o.m.
Worship· 10:15 o.m., 7:00p.m .
Wednesd.oy Service- 7:00p.m.
Roclat Flnl Bapllsl
PUior: Rev. lany Holey
Youth Putor: Aaron Youna
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip - 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednelday Services - 7:00p.m.
Sliver Rua llliJ&gt;Ilsl
Pulor: Bill Lillie
Sunday School · IOa.m.
Worship- llo.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sen~ ices- 7:30p.m.

I

''

I '

MLUnloallopllsl
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre

Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evening- 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Sen~ias · 6:30p.m •

.'
.''I

llelblebem llllpllsl •
Racine; OH
\
Pastor: Daniel Berdine
Worship - 9:30a.m. Sunday
Bible Srudy · 7:00p.m. Wednesday
Old !Ieibei Fne WIU llopU.I CIIWdr

28601 St. Rt 7, Middleporl
Sunday School · 10 o.m.
Evenin&amp; - 7:30p.m.
Thursday Services- 7:30

. I

'

Hillside Bopllsl Cbur&lt;ll
St. Rt. 143 jusl ofl Ri. 7
Pascor: Rev. James R. Aaee, Sr.
Sundoy School - 10 a.m.
Wonhrp · llo.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
Vklory llllpllsllndepellllul
S2S N. 2nd St. Middleporr

i ..

Pastor: James E. Keesee

j

Worship - IO..m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sen~ices · 7 p.m.
Fallb liapllsl Cllon:ll
Railroad St., Muon
Sunday School· 10 o.m.
Wonh1p - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

.' ''

Fon:sl Rua llllpllsl
Pastor : Arius Hun

Sunday School- IOo.m.
Worship • 11 a.m.

MI. Moriah llllpllsl
FouMh &amp; Main St. Middlepon
Pulor: Rev. OilbeM Craig, Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10!4S o.m.
Alrllqully 11ap1111
Sunday School- 9:30 o.m.
Worship - 10:4S o.m.
Thurodoy Sen~ices - 7:30p.m.

I

' .•

,,

'I

l.

Rallaad Fn:e WUlllopllll
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Poul Taylor
Sunday School- 10 o.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servicea · 7 p.m.

d

Catholic
Sacred Hurt Calloolk Clton:ll

161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-S898
PUior: Rov. Woller E. Heinz
Sat Con. 4:4S-5:1Sp.m.; Mua- 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con . .S:4S-9: IS a.m.,
Sun. Mus· 9:30 o.m.
Dailey Mua - 8:30 o.m.

Church of Christ
, _ , , Clt•n:• or Cltrlol
212 W. Moin St.
Pulor: Neil Proudrooc

'-m:g:,=..=~
Sunday Sehool - II a.m.
Worshrp- IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday SeN ices· 7 p.m.

Mlcldhpcrrt Cllan:ll or Cllrlll
51h and Moin
PUior: AIHanaon
Youlll Miniller. Bill Frozier
Sundly School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 8: IS, 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Sunr!Oy Sclrooito-.lO a.iri.
Coffee loovr followina

Hol tness

c.!Yai'J l'llptm Cllapol
Honisonville Road
l'lllor: Rev. Viclor Roush
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Wonhtp · 11 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdneldoy Sen~ice • 7:30 p.m.

Bft.....U.w Rldp Cllurcll or Cbrlsl
Pastor: lack Colepove

Rnae ofS._ HaUooeoa Clton:ll

Zlooo Cllon:ll or Cllrtol
Pomeroy, Hmisonville Rd. (RI.143)
Pulor: Roaer Wolsm
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

1'1rppen Plaia Cbun:b of Cbrlol
lnalrumcotal
PUior: Scol Brown
lp Service · 9 a.m.

t.

munion • 10 a.m.

S

y School- 10:15 o.m.

Bndbui'J Cllan:b or c•r1o1
Pulor: Rick Snyder
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 o.m.
Rat...d Cllan:ll or Cllrlsl
Puror: Eugene E. Underwood
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Bndtonl o .... or Cllrlsl
Corner or Sl. Rt. 124 .t. Bradbr.wy Rd.
Evan40liat: Keilh Cooper
Youllr Minrater. Michie! Teogarden
Sundly School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesdoy Services - 7:00 p.m.

"

u..rt7 Cbrtst'-a Cbron:b
Dex(Fr
PUior: Woody Call
Sundly Evenina ' 6:30p.m.
Thurodoy Senlice -6:30p.m.
LaopYIIe Cbrlsllooo Cltarell
Sunday School . 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdneldoy Service 7:30 p.m.
Haakxk Grvn Clrron:ll
Putor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school· JO::!d o.m.
Wonhip - 9:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
RftU•IIle Cit art• or Ctrrlsl
Paslor: Philip Srunn
Sundly School: 9:30 o.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wedneaday, 6:30p.m.

Christian Union
Hartl'ord Citron:II of Cluillla
Cllrlsl'-aUHIIIIord, W. Vo.
,
- Putor: Rev. David McManis
Sundoy Sehool • II o,m.
Worahip . 9:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sen~iceo - 7:30p.m.

Church of God
ML Morialr Cltan:ll of Gnd
Racine
PUior: Rev. Jomes Sanerfleld
Sunday School - 9:43 a.m.
Evenina • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
Rallud Cllron:ll ofGnd
Plllllf: Randy Bon
Sundoy School - 10 o.m.
~;;r.:r.·llam ., 6 p.m.
W
y Services- 1 p.m.
SJncUH nnt Cllorcb or Gnd
Apple ond Second Sis.
P111or: Rev. Dovid Rusaell
Sundoy Sehool ond WonhiJ&gt;- 10 o.m.
Evenina Sen~icea-7: 36 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

r..'"""'"

Cllaoter Cllan:llol lilt N-.e
Puior: Rev. llatretl oStmday School - 9:30 a:m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesdoy Servicea - 7 p.m.

Poolor: Kerlh Rader
Sunday School - IO..m. ·
Wonhip - 9 • ·Ill·
. Paalor: Keilh Rader
SUnday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.

FonaRu
Pulor: Clwles Neville
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Thursday Serviceo - 6:30 p.m.

Leordina Creek Rd., Rullll!d
Piltor: Rev. Dewey Kina
Sunday school- 9:30a.m.
Sunday worohip -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meelina- 7 p.m.

MJ.erniDe

, _ Cllalltl ()pno IIIIIJe Clt923 S. Thin! lit, Middleport
PUior Midlael J'anaio
Sunday aervklc, 10 a.m.
Thursday service, 7 p.m.

r-ny

La....t Ollf Fm MelbNkl Clt•n:ll
Pallor: Peler Tremblay
Sunday Sehool · 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 o.m. Uld 1 p.m.
Wednesday Servico - 7:00p.m.

R•llud
Sundly School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhlp - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Sen~icea - 7 p.m.

R•llald c-uiiJ Cllon:ll
Post or: Rev. Roy McCIMy
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Sunday Evenina - 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

'
De Bellenn' t'ellowtlllp
M......,.
New Ume Rd., Rurland
PUior: Rev. Marpn:l J. Robi.-r
Serviceo: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

SalnBCnter
Poalor: Ron Fien:o
Sunday School - 9:15 a.m.
Wonhip- IO:lh.m.

Latter-Day Saints
Roorprllaed Cltan:ll Ill Jeou Cllrlsl
of Laller Da7 s.Jall
Ponlond-Racine Rd.
Putar: Janice Danner
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
W~~~Ship- 10:30 o.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Soocrnllle
Sundly School- 10 o.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

llurlaoo.W. Coaomully Cllon:ll
P1110r. Theron Durhom
Sundly - 9:30a.m. Uld 7 p.m.
, Wednesday - 7 p.m.

llelba•y
.
PIIIOI: Kenncrh Baker
Sunday School · 10 ur.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Senlices • 10 o.m.

bdllllleiiOUIC of Pnyer
(al Burlingham church off Roule 33)
PIIIOI: Roherl Vance

ear-l
Puror: Kennerh Boker
Sundly School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m. (2nd .t. 41h Sun)

The etr..... Ill J Citrlll or Latlcr-Da7 SaJoto
St Rt. 160, +16-6247 or 446-741115
Sunday Sehool 10:20-11 o.m.
Relid Sociely/Prieathood 11 :0~-12:00 noon
Sacnmenl Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homcmakina meetin&amp; hi Thurw .• 7 p.m.

-Monohoa S..r

Pulqr: Kennelh Boker
Sunday School - 9:4~ a.m.
Wlllllrip - 10:30 a.m.
Thurlday Senlicea- 7:30p.m.

Lutheran

SoliN
Plllor: Kenner• Baker
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m. (Ill .t. Jrd Sun)

SL Jolla IAiberu Cllron:ll
Pine Orove
Plllor: Dawn Spalding
Worship - 9:00 a.m.
Sunday School - I 0:00 a.m.

lntrim pastors: Georse C. Weinck

EuiiAiart
PasiOI: Brian HorkneN
Sund.y School - 10 a.m.
W':l - 9a.m.
Wed
y -?p.m.

Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Worship - 11 o.m.

Raclao
POllOI: Brion lllrltneu

Our Sa•..,.r LatiiHu C••n:ll
WolnUiond Henry Sis., Rovenswood, W.Vo.

Kline

Sunday Sehool - 10 o.m.
Wonhit;r- 9 o.m.
Tueaday Senlrm- 7 p.m.

Graham Valltd Melhodlsl
Wonhip- 9:30o.m. (lor .t. 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (Jrd .t. 41h Sun)
Wednr:sday Service - 7:30p.m.

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

Ni!zarene

om:• or Gnd of"' op~reqo
0.1. While Rd. off St. Rt 160
Puror: PJ . Cbapmon
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Senlices - 7 p.m.

Clmlcr
PUior: Sharon Hausmon
W011hip - 9 o.m:
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Thursday Senlices - 7 p.m.

RaciM lint Cllan:llollllt N . _
,....., Seou ....

J...-

Cllaler Clian:11 or God
S. R. 248 &amp; Riebel Road, Olesler
Paalor: Rev. William D. Hinds
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhlp- 6 p.m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m. Family T11inina Hour

Pulor: Bob Randolph
Wonhip · 9:30 o.m.
Sunday School ' 10:30 o.m.

Mit# pcrrtCIIan:llofllltN_....
PUior: Ortl"')' A. Cundiff
Sundly School - ~30 o.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedneoday Servkeo - 1 p.m.

Congregational
Trtalty Clnu'dl
Second .t. Lynn. Pomeroy
Plllllf: Rev. Rolll!d Wildman
Sunday schoolonilwonhip 10:25

Epis cop al

Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Worship- 10:30 o.m.. 7 p.m.
W...,.sday Services - 7 p.m.

Sundly School · 9:30 o.m.
Worship· 10:30 o.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servkeo - 7 p.m.

IAIIIIIol'- .
Sundly Sc:liool- 9:30a.m.
Wot~hip-

Thursday Service • 1 p.m.

1111o1 c-u117 Cltan:ll
, OffR1. 124
Paslor: Edoel HaM
Sunday Sehool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

MI. Ollvt c...,.•DltJ Clr•n:ll
PuiO&lt;: lawrence Buoh
Sundoy School - 9:30 o.m.
E\tening. 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service- 1 p.m.

TOidrCIIartll
Co. Rd. 63
Sundly School • 9:30 o.m.
Worallip • 10:30 a.m.

Alfred

•

f81 .. o-JCIIrordo
Lonallarrom
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m .

lloctllopJrl Cllllrdl
OrandStreel
Sunday School- 10 o.m.
Worship • II a.m.
Wedneaday Senlicea - 8 p.m.

Melp Coopenll¥t P1rlsll
Nartbeastauster

Evcnina 7 p.m.

Rotdnlllt
PUior: Rev. Orarles Muh
Wonhip- 9:30 o.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 o.m .
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
Filii Sundly o( Month - 7:30p.m. service

•

Veiled Fallh Clt•rdl
Rl. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pua
Pulor: Rev. Rohen E. Smilh. Sr.
Sunday Sehool • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhlp - 10:30 o.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 1 p.m.

614-992-2772
8:30 A....-3:30 P.M.
eReplttctMIII WWows

..lldeinps
•Stri hers &amp; wil.ows
eROOMA••tlea

Ave., Middleporf
PUior: lawrence FORman ·
School- 101.111.
W
y Servicea - 1 p.m.

!.U:UJ.

Cll•rt• or J - c•r111,
Apootollc t'allll
1/4 mile put Fori Meip on New Uma Rd.
Pulor: William Vao Melh
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesd.oy-7:00 p.m.
Friday-7:00p.m.

Cll- Trrlrorude Cltrordo
Oiflon, W. Vo.
Sunday Sehool - 10 •·'l'·
Worship - 7 p.m. ·
Thursday Service -7 p.m.
"Ntw Ufe VIctory C•ter
·3m Geatau Creek Road, Oollipolll. OH
PUior: Bill Stolen
Sl.llday Service•- 10 o.m. rl 7 p.m.
Wcdneaday • 7 p.m. A Youlh 7 f.m.

Penteco stal
PealtcOIIai.U11 I 'IJ

St Rl. 124, Roclne
PUior: William Hobact .
Sunday School - JO..m. ·
Evenina • 7 p.m.
.
Wedneaday Services - 1 p.m.

30

·'

Plllor: Rev. aut Boker
Sunday School • 10 o.m.
l!venina- 6 p.m.
Wcdnesdoy Senlices- 7:00p.m.

Announcements

HELP CHANGE A
tWLD'S LIFE

To place •• all, cal

Senti,nel Classlfieds

Sync- f1nt Volltd PrnbJtert.
Pallor: Rev. Kriaana Rohiaoon
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 11 o.m.

992•2156

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Ha.......,.•lllt l'nlbyttrlur Clton:ll
Wonhip - ~a.m.

...,

Sunday School • 9!(5' e.m.
{
Mlddlepol1 ~
Sundoy School • !I a.m.
Wonhip · 10 o.m.

Seventh-Oily Adventist

·SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

·ea.-en

Open Monday

truck painting, minor
machanlcal repair.
Tun•ups,
011 Change, Wax,
Buffing
Long St., Rutland, Oh.
742-2935, Aak for Kip

nights until

SALES a SERVICE
812·7075
172NorthSacanciAve.

RAWUNGS · COATS

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSIRUCIION
•Ne Homes
•Garag
I
•Compte
'
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985-4473
7

1M

FISHER
FUNERAL-HOME

Yc.u'U be floating f)R a
cloud wilh the buys ·
r.ou'U n:~;.,.J ~the' .

614-992-4025
8am-8pm

l'lllor: Roher! Sondero
Suaday Sehool - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedntaday Services · 7:30p.m.

1122

2 1/2 milea _ . of lloe4aville

--5141
_.,

..,

Public Notice

;teague Final Sign-Up &amp;
· Equipment Fitting for
children ages 7-12,
Sat., July 27th
10 a.m.-1 p.m.
P.P. Football Field.
For more info.
304-675-11 05

•

16 yrs.

FURNIT\JRE &amp; HARDWARE
Homelile Sews

'l--~~~!!~----l_~~:::~::~~~:~:_~--.J~~::~::~~=~~~M=~~~~~-L_

:!J

I

I

rial"'"
115 E. II
; amor
.....

Pomeroy

Rutlend Villege Council
will hold tha public htlring
on the 1997 budget Aug. 6,
1998 •t Regular Muting It
the Rut,.nd Civic Cent111 11
7:00p.m.
The budget will be on
view 11 the VIllage Po11
Olflco from July 26 - Aug. 5,
1996.
Rosem~ry Snowden
(7)2e lTC
In Memory
In Memory of our

beloved husband
end father,
JACOB W. LEE.
We wlll 1Jweye love you.

Wh, Vlnea; aona, Jerry
end Jeflrey.

Ext. 2489

Air Conditioners, Heat Pumps,
Furnaces. All equlpmenlln alack
for Immediate lnelallallon.

Cheater, Ohio

12JB.
Top dollar · an11ques . lurnllurt,
glass, ch1na , clocks, gotd, silver.
co1n s. watches, es!a tes . Osby
Marlin, 814·Q9,·7.U1 .
Wanled To Buy: Junlt Auto&amp; With
Or Without UotOf l . Call larry
Ltvely. 81-4·388·9303.

Will Buy Childrena Clolhlng 0 -eT

One Price For All. 614·448.0364.

EMPLOYMENT

BIIHisaw Mil

Mobile and Manufactured Housing

985-4422

SE RVICE S

32124 Happy Hollow Ad.
Middleport. Ohio 45 760 .
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles

SSSSOancersUSS Need 11ra
money. we need ~ou , So ultllork.
Inn S'lowba•. 30&lt;-675-5955
·

614-742-2193
liN

'ATTN Po1n1 Pleasan t' Pos tAl
POS1I1ons . Porrnanont lull hmo lor
clerklsortors Full Oonol11 s For
exam. applico hon and satory .nlo
ca 11 · ( 708)90G -23 50Ext3670 .
Bam·8pm

ANNOUNCEMENTS
40

Giveaway

1 Beagle dog -8tmo old , 1 Terrier
1 112yrs old , b:nn QOOd wittl chikt·
ren, to good home on!~. 1 Calico
cat 8/mo old , lemale yellow
atfipped ca l 61mo old . 30 4-87S 4650 .

AVON I All Areas
Spears, )104·675-1429.

3 Female 112 Chow, 112
Shephard, 9wk ol~ puppies, very
cute, need a hom&amp; or pound
bound. 304-7735476.

Rep.

.-4 adorable krnens. to oood
homes . liner trained , 614 -9Q2 .

4057.

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling
with rhe parts &amp; service to biH:/f (t; up .
Serving S.E. Ohio &amp; West Vlrgln1a
Toll Free HlD0-872·5967
446-9416

BIB ROOnNG and
COISTR,UC,.IOI
Residential- Commercial
' - Shlnglee Roofing - Rubber

LIVE!
PSYCHICS
1 qN 1
1-900-868-41 00
Ext. 5489

35 Y~tars Experience

992·2364

MATCH MAKING
ISIEADY
NO Will

-

IIJERIOR·EitEIIOI
FREE ESTIMATES

fi

1 ORb~ BREAD STICKS

, &amp; fPEPSI'S $10.99

13
~

18 Yeo,.. you

hove bro.,ht
.

.. DOMINO'S PIZZA
992·2124

·~

·e

f•k• tllepaJ.ovt of
paJ.tl... ltl •• tla It
far
RIO IIASOIIIU
UOIIRUICES
614-tiJ-4110

FACtORY
SILl
30o/o·40o/o OFF

· " 2 MEDIUM '
PEPPERONI PIZZAS

. ',

me joy.
Hoppy Birthday!
Love You,
Cnuulma Fraralc

992-3838

LINDA'S
PAINTING

Ext. 3124

$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procell Co.
(602) 954-7420

r•·

4131 mo pd.

July 16, 1996 to

??????

Drapes By Design
48 Slelt Stlllt

Gellipoh, Ohio 45131
6U 448 •1a

Female riger kirteO to good nome.
healthy and playful , 814 -Q49 299 1,Aac~.

Free k itlens &amp; c111s , 6 1-4 · 742 1410.
Freo Kinens, long Hatred Calico
E•ce llent Mou sers! To Good
Free pupp10s, to good home. part

Dalmanan. 304-675-172fl.

Male Cocker SpameL ~rt old, '-'·
male -Cocker Spaniel, 1y r old .

Cualom Building I R-!Mrg
·New Home•
•ACSdltlone .
•Htw Garegee
•Remodellni
•Siding
•Roofing
•Ptfntfng
FREE ESTIMATES
(814) 112-5535
114 112·27A

H&amp;H
Remodeling
&amp; Roofing
Siding &amp; Some

Park. Call: 614·"46·6862

Remodeling
Room additions
Roonng
GaraJie's, Deck's,

N~W-R~PAIR

PaiJfting, Skiing

Painting

1-IOH7G-2559

FREE ESnMATE8

au quaiHing bids

lktnl41nn4 .....

70

Gallipolis

&amp; VIcinity

....2188
"1.-,.TFM

AI per Article

Q, Trags!ers and
Vecanc!ea, Sectio n B, fRlting, ol
the Negot•ated Agree ment bet ·
wee n the MLTA 1n&lt;l the Board ol
Education , the Ut~g s local
School Olauic t is posting the lol·
lowrn~ vacancy lcr n s regular
teachrng 11all : J un1or H•gh Sci .
once Teacher (Sctanc:e cert thca .
11cn or elementary carulicalton
with prior e•perlonce in prades 7

I 8 and knowledge o middle
se11001

concepr).

AVON $6 ·$1S /Hr, No Minimum

8-!S,

All Yard Sale s Mu sr Be Pa•d In

Advance. DEADLINE 2:00 p.m
the day before tht ad 15 to run
Su nday ed1t1on · 2:00 p.m Fr1day.
Monday ec:hiiOn · 10:00 am . Sat·
urday.

Bally Items. Tors. Krds CtorNel·
gHIS T-12. K1nic.k-Knacks, Some
Furniture. ·Sal-Sun. g. 7. Geofges
C,eek Rd. 114 n11rom R1 7.

Fr1day and Sa turday at lntersectton ol 850 and 554 Brown HouM
1 1·"H O)'t, Clothes aoo Mise:.
Garage Sale . 6 F1. Pool Table ,
Jukebo x, Trea ted Decks, Over ·
nang And Srepa, Appliances And
FUfnllure Acr oss !=rom South·
aas tern Equrpment In Kanauga
Ffl, Sat, Sun, g.g_

Garage Sale: Sat, Sun, Mon: Rain

or Shine H~8S Cutla11 Supreme,
Couch, Chair, love Seat 22a

SkromortRooG
mllltl l 8 -7. Northup, 141 Cent•·

•

Pomeroy _
1
Mlcldlepon
&amp; VIcinity

1100·348-7186 X 1173.

Opponunity Fo r Someone Look ·
ing For Addit ional Income Or
Seasonal Work. To Quali ty Uu11
Have COL, W1tn Hazardous Ma·
terlal Endro!emont . Apply Or
Send Resume To : Ferrell Gas

6255 S1a1o Route 538. GoiiiPOtls:
OH 451131 .
Full ltme SorvtC(] Tochmcran
Praf(]r E•Pot~encod Wilt lr a1n
~Ght Pat-son. Outbo :vd A Inboard
Boall. 61•-:107-7802 .

HOME TYPI ST, PC users nood·
td . $-45 ,000 1ncome potential .

Calt ·800·513·4343 Errt. B·e:l68.

,.

Immediate Opening local bu si ness, Full ·Time Salary Plul Bon·
elus, some Colloge Back Ground
and Selling E.perlenco Requlftd
Sond Re sume· tG PO Ro• S42
Kerr, Otho •5843
lmmed1111 Op on.ngs Ava111ble
Fo1 Cerlrlild Nurse A.1des Com petltrve W1g 11, Orllerental Wnh
E •peritnct. S1gn On Bonu s
Av ailable, Equal Opportunity Em.
player. Cornac1 The • ll•stant 01·
rec:10r 01 Nursing , P1ntcre11 Cart
Cenltr, 170 Pinec:reat Or~W. Gill ·
Mpolit, Otio45e31 614 ·C-&lt;46· 7tl2.

Immediate Optninga Avl illblt
Cenllitd Nurae AldH. Com ·
pttillvt WIQtl, 01lltrtnt11 Wllh
E•perlence. S1gn On Bonus
Available, Equal Opportunity Employtf. Cont1ct The Assistlnt 01·
rector Of Nursing. Pine&lt;:rest Cart
Ctnltf, 170 Pmecrest Drive, Gal·

fOf

ilpolra. Olfo 456l1. 614-4"8·71 t2.
llllly 10 IOVIHn One! Clrt lor tldortr

All Yard Salta Mull Be Pord In
Advance . Deadl •ne 1 ·oop m I he
day belate lhe ad 11 to run, Sunday &amp; Monday td•hon - 1 ·oo pm

Fr&gt;doy.

genllemen. LLQht ~ousework . and
cook one mea l • dar. 1n .. .
change tor room anel .bOifd, f)O ••pentes to pay Call 304 ·8"75·

:1350.

Need t omtant to live· 1n &amp; cart

Pt. Pleasant

lor tkllrly Jjldr. p&lt;olor meluro I*·
son ar_..rJpre, PIIY' I limo-on noo.

&amp; VIcinity
J

Computer Users Needed. Work
Own Hou11. 20K To $50K /Yr. t .

polrs &amp; Pomeroy Area. hceltont

4 Milos out Butav1tle Pi ke,
Ctorhas , CO 's, Cassenes, and
Pla~e' Orange Counter Top,
Treadmill

Gutters
Downapouta

Gutter C..lr!lng

Armed Guards For Gove rnmerv
Co ntract $11 18 Per Hr. Plu s
Bcnelits 216 5l2 75 11 , 614 469

Deliver, Oriv8f'. Part· Time Ferr~l
Gas l ead8f In The Pfopane Gas
lndu llry I t Seeking Delivery
OrJYors To Wofk Part· Ttme Fle•i·
ble Sc hedule. Positions In Galli·

Vard Sale

mo. pd.

ROOFING

dar 7::J&gt;-3:oo

O~M .

narr 2nd Road lolr: Signa. Good
Clolhlng -School. Loll 01 Misc.I

€onstruction Inc.

Ambrosr a Mac hmo Inc. Look1n g
lot mach.nr st, srrs e•pen ence
Ca ll 304 ·675 -1722. Uonda y - Fr~ .

Babysiuer Needed In My Home
Non -Smoktr Would Be Availabl e
To Work Any Hou,s For More In ·
!ormation Call OU ·441 ·0602 Alter

Free Eatlmataa

H-rd L Writelel

Accep11ng Appi1 C81 1on s througt1

July 29th Jor r~1 s1e rcd tong term
core nurstng aSSIStant Wl 1n1nl}
class. M a q or~e Ell•o tt. HN, C t as~
rn structor Po.n t Pteascmt Nur s1ng
8. Rehabilitation C&lt;mtor Jfornmrtr
Carehaven) State Route 1, Oo•
320, Po.nt Pl easant. WV 2 ~550
(30.)675-3005

Found little Key Chath With
Chain Purse . found July In Ctty

July 28 1h ·AUQU II. IOih. I ft ·

711:111

Abl e Avon Representauve s
needed Earn money lor ChrLSI ·
mas bills at hon1olat wo•k 1-800 092 -6356 or 304 -88 2-26 45 . lnd

30-4-675-7495.

Block Work

992-2768
992-3274

Stl~r l ey

Order, No Door To Door, No In·
ventory, 1·800·738·0188 lndlslll
rop.

Sa l ufday 271h,
Something For Everyone!

SMITH'S I
CONSTRUCTION

I

Alter 3:30 5135.

Road,

Tammera

10% oft

800-441..Q3H

~14 - 44 1 - 0940

614-992-7643

All Kinds of Earlh Work

1-900-945-4400

PM

4 Famll r : 232 Georges Creek

Tr11cklngLimestone
Bulldo~ing and
Backhoe
Services
House Slles and
Utilities

EASY

Chrldren.

FOund· male lab mtlll pup, Happy
Hollow v1c.inlty, loun d 7123/Qe ,
814 -7-42-1410.

Howard Excavalin

Serv-U (619) 645-8434

Fema'le
Pan Germ an
She ph erd Pupp1e s. Good W i) ~

l'ew Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
(No Sunday Calls)

1-900-868-41 00
ext. 6495
3.99 per min.
must be 18 yrs.

All

1-SOG-889-3943

BISSELL a·UILDERS, INC.

Psychic Tells you
about your financial
future, love,
success and your
health ill

4 Puppies, Pari Husky, Pan Black
lab 11 Weeks Old, 8 14 · .-4•1 ·
0725.

Home' 614-367-0283

Minor Repairs - Gutter and Downspouls
Complete Remodeling - Decks
Bathrooms - Kitchens - Siding

Mini Blinds,
Verticals,
Pleated Shades
and much morel·

Z:
.~

5 K111ens lo g1ve away. 81 4-,.•e 2303

BENNETTS

•'

11 o Help wanted

614 - 446 · 37~ .

01' older.

Roush Bros. Farril
614-247·2851 or
614-247-4161

___c:~::'~-~~~·----~1~~M=u=lbM:m~y:Aw~.--P_~~~--~~~::-:21~~~----J ~ __

Dirt• Sand

Non. working Wuhen, Dryers,
Stoves, Relr•oerators, Freezers,
A1r Conditioners, Color T . V. ·~.
VCR' s, Also Junk Cars, 8U·25e·

Portable

~

Limestone • Gravel

large Trampoline in good Condi·
lion 614 -256-61100

SAWMILL

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
or 614-667-3484
Plaslic Culven- Dual wall and Regular 8" 1hru 36"
4" S&amp;D - perf.- solid pipe
4" &amp; 6" Flex pipe
4" &amp; 6" Sch 35 pipe
112"' &amp; 314" C P.V.C. pipe
I 112" lhru 4" Sch 40 pipe
3/4" &amp; I" 200 p.s.i. wa1cr pipe ( 100' roll's rhru 1.000' roll's)
3/4" U.L. approved Conduit
ti" Grave less Leach pipe
Gas pipe I" thru 2". Fillings - Regularors- Ri sers _ .
Full assonmcm of P.V.C &amp; Flex fin i n~s &amp; Wa1cr lrllrngs
Fulllineof Cisccm, Septic &amp; Waler "oragc tanks.

711W1 mo.

Crow's Family
'Restaurant

'182-2121 .

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

J &amp; D's Au 10 Pans Buy•ng Ill ·
vage veh1 c1es Selling pariS. 30• ·
7735033.

H&amp;H

6~4,985-3813

114/Pe 1 mo. pd.

-'

Established 1913

.TRUCKING

Clean lat&amp; Model Cars Or
Tru cks, 1G90 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac , 1900 East·
ern Averue, Gallipo ks.

WIM

St. Rt. 7

Serv-U (619) 645-8434

01 Sllre Roulc 124
1'11101: Rev. Robert Maltley .
Sunda1 School - II ..... '
Sunday Worshop- 10:00 a.m, .t. 7:00p.m. ~
Wedocaday Scrvleea • 7:30p.m.
"
Wedneay YOUIII Service : 7:30p.m. ::

Memorlll Hospital

R.L. HOLLON

JamestoWn, OH •5335.

$3.99 per min.
Mu1t be 18 yrt.
Serv-U (Btll~s-8434

I &amp; WPWTICS AND SUHLY

•

RPM Rtcord o, ~lltr eP..I.t. 513·
876-2830. 4339 Jupor Rood.

1 -900-~100

Owner: Ronnie Jones
367-0266-1-800-950-3359
Free Estimates

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs

.... v...... JlnCIInla .. Cllrlsl

•DigmtyandServiceAiways•

992-7696

GaHipollo. Ot4-44G·2842.

Large Amoun11 50't , 80'1 45

about the future Ill

20 Years Experience • Insured

7nllmo

Pick-up discarded,
appliances, batteries, &amp;
many metals.

Mt, He.- Vrolled
.. Cllriol Cbordl
TUII Communily off CR 82

Veterans

Antiques

Diamonds, Anttque Jewelry, Gold
FHnga, Old Glauware, Sttrling .
Etc., AcqulsiiiOnl JeweJry · M.T.S.
Coin Shop, 151 Second Avunut,

614-992-3470

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding

Let a Psychic
Answer your
Questions!

FREE

United Brethren

EWING FUNERAL HOME

e

7/llllln

CLASSIFIED ADS ~ 204 Condor St.
PHARMACY~
8 supermarket
Pomeroy, OH
"FfllllltilorK•IIIwl]FrWCitlat.,.•l
~
f Of 8Ve rythl ng
We Fill Doctors'
228 W. Meln St., Pomeroy
::t
992·2975
Prescriptions
&amp;92-5432
. 214 E. Main
;lt
------~----------------+-----------------~~~-~~~~----~P~o~~~~~----------------~~~--5_1~-----P-o~--~~ ~
SNOUFFER
FIRE asAFETY

7:00p.m.
Gifts • Folkart

IU&gt;ooiuto Top Dollar: All U.S. Sit-

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

JONES' TREE SERVICE

Wanted to Buy

. ver And Gold Coina. Proofatta.

Let them tell you

7{1/98 1 mo.

Body work, car truck &amp;

90

Wanlto Help
Yotlll

992-2735
HARTWELL
HOUSE

773-5785 0. 304-773-5447.

LIVE PSYHICS

Heal Pump
Air Conditioning
Furnaces
Refrigenton
We have the new FR12
Low Coat Replacement
.for Automotive R12.

GRUESER'S
GARAGE

·

r-:

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
POIEAOY, OHIO
BILL QUICKEL

•Room Aeldltlons
•New Garages
•EitctriCIII &amp; Plumbing
·Roonna
•Interior &amp; Exterior
P•lntlng
Alto Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. VOUNG Ill
992-41215
Pomeroy, Ohio
t/2111n

MEIGS
REFRIGERATION

Must be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (619)-645-8434

......... , A.tJ.-..
Mullreny H11. Rd., Parrieroy
Rny Lawlnaty
Sllurdly Senlkeo:
Salrbolh School- 2 p.m.
Wonlrip - 3 p.m.

C'o. Football
, Mason
.

~

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

$3.99 par min.

..

· . ··. .,._

941-3013 PhOne
94&amp;-2018 FAX

1-900-868-4900
Ext7625

··''

~

28563 BASHAN RD.
RKine, Ohio 45771

1uct1on
ser~ice .
licensed
f88,0hio &amp; Wea r Vlrginil, 304 ·

WICKS
HAULING

a

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
$20.00/HR.

.full time auctioneer. complete

5 Kinens Giveaway, 8 Weeks Old

•·

804 W. Main
992-2318 Pomeroy

1127fll1 mo

Filii th ..., lllysl1 tH

, _ , Bill Stireo
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 o.m., 6 p.m.
Wtdneodoy Senlleea - 7 p.m.

of Columbus, Oh.

614-985-3982

third Ave.

s,n.- Cltan:ll oltlla Noamoe

Nationwide Ins. Co.

Roofing, Vlnyl
Siding, Garages,
Porches, Sidewalks
and Add-ona.
Free Estimates
Ph.o ne

Foster Parents Needed in
Kentucky and Ohio!!! YDCA will
pay up to $40.00 per day for
keeping a child in your home.
. If you are
interested in
6~oing your
home to a child,
please call _
1-800-331-9989.

&gt;

Tappen Plalu Sl. Pool
PUior: Sharon Houaman
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.
Tueaday Servicea - 7:30p.m.

QUICK
CONSTRUCTION

M~l'ellltcaiUI

tte••llll Ftllo.......
CltudlolllltNuan•
PUior: -Mut A. Dupler
Sundoy School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonlrip • 10:45 l.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Senlkeo - 1 p.m.

10:30 a.R).

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

Presbyterian

M- Cllapel Cllan:ll
Stmday odrool- 10 a.m.
Wonhlp- 11 a.m.
Wednesday Senlice - 7 p.m.

llatMICir•rtll
Township Rd., (68C
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 o.m.

ML 011.. Valltd Melhndlsl
Of! 124 behind Wilkeaville
Pollor: Rev. Rolph Spirea
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 o.m .. 7 p.m.
Thursday Services . 1 p.m.

Faltlr Tabtruclt Cltrm:ll
Bailey Run Road
Puror: Rev. Emmell Rowson
Sunday School - 10:00 o.m.

Dyeo•Uit c-.allyCIIWdr
Sundly School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.

~CIIIIrdl
Main .t. Fiflh St.

United Methodist

Middleport c-••117 Cltortll
S7$ Pearl Sl., Middlepon
PIIIOI: Sam Anderoon
Sunday School tO a.m.
Evening - 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:30p.m.

1411 BridiCman Sl., Syracuse
Sunday School- 10 o.m.
Evenina- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

C..,._ Valled Mtlllodlll Partall
~:_!felen

y aen~ice • 6:30p.m.

S~Mialol

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m.

St. P1ul Luthen• Cborrh
Corner Sycamore .t. Second St., Pomeroy
Pastor: Dawn Spaldina
·
Sundly School - 9:43 o.m.
Worship- 11 o.m.

~-.hip-IOa.m.

W

537 BRYAN PLACE

Rdol&lt;ial Uft Cllwclt

Fallll FaU Geopel ell-

Long Bollorn
l'lllor: Steve Reed
Sundly School - ~30 a.m.
Wonhip · 9:30 a.m. Uld 1 p.m.'
Wednesday · 1 p.m.
Friday- fellowship ICIYice 7 p.m.

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

Tilt-in
• Double Hung
•Insulated
Limited Time Offer
Call today with
your window sizes
for a free quotel

Rick Pearaon Auction Companr.

(Umt StoneLow Ret•)

Replacement
Windows

CHEAPER llATES

We wUI wert within your budget
FAX 773-51181
""· 773-1173
108 Pomeroy Street
Mason, YfV

'FIIIII Fellow lllp Crua* rw Clrrial
Pallor: Rev. Franklin Dickeao ·
Sen~ice: Friday, 1 p.m..

941-2512

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

"No Job Too Large or Too Small"

~ N. 2nd

,:~.

Sundoy School -9:15a.m.
Worsh'f - 10 a.m.
Youlh Fellowshrp, Sunday · 6 p.m.

Falnlew Bible Cit...,
Lelarl, W.Va. Rt. 1
PUior: Rankin Roach
Sundly School • 10:30 a.m.
Worship - 9:30 o.m., 7:00p.m. ,
Wedneaday Service- 7:00p.m. ·

Sll•onviBt Word of Faldo
Pulor: Dovld Dailey
Sunday School 9:30 o.m.
Evenina- 7 p.m.

Sunday School-~15 o.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study 'IUeadoy- 10 a.m.

J . E. DIDDLE, OWNER

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding ~lea • Industrial Gases • MIIChlne Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Siainless • Tool Dressing • Omamenlal
Slepa -Siairs, Railings, Patio Fumhure, Fireplace
hems, Planter hangers, Trellises &amp; lois of other stuft!!

Calvary Bible Cltrordo
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.PUior: Rev. Bloc:kwood
Sunday Sehool - 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdnesdoy Service-7:30p.m.

Hobloll Cllrllllu t'tllo...... Cllm:ll
Rev. Clyde Hende11011
Sunday ,.rvice, 10:00 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Youlh fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday aervrce, 7:30p.m.

Puior: Roberl E. Robi111Ct1

tfte~~ !f~-ta~

W....,..

· CoolviRe ROid
P -: Rev. Pbillip RideSunday School - 9:30 .....
Worship- 10'.30 o.m.
W,.._y Service -7 p.m.
··

Cllriol'-1 F.._llllp Caoler
Salem Sl., Rullll!d
Pulor: RobeM E. Musaer
Sunday School - 10 o.m.
Wonhip -1 1:15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 1 p.m.

PariCIIapd
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip- 10 a.m.

H11tD Ru Hall- Clhrn:•
Pulor: Roben Manley
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- 10:4~ a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service -7:30p.m.

Willie's CllapeJ

.... ....... J1lnl Cltan:llellllt N - Pulor: Mut Mllaon
W...,.ip- 10:30 p.m.
Sundlly School - 6 p.m.
Wednearlrry Senli«ltt - 7 p.m.

OttlCr Churches

PUior: Cbariea Neville
Sunday Sehool - 9 o.m.
Wonhip- 10 o.m.

Waloyaa BIJie H.._ Cltron:ll
75 Peorl SL, Middleporl.
Plllor: Rev. John NeviUe
Sunday school - 9:30 o.m.
Worahip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
W~y Service - 7:30p.m.

I

H..111 IMiclclloPW1l

PUior: Vemopyo Sulliv111
Sunday School- 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 o.m.

!'lilt Grove Bible Hoi- Cltlll'dr
1/2 mile off Rl. 325
PUior: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School - 9:30a.m. .
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30 p.m.

PUior: Rev. Rvpr WiUfoc\1 .
Stmday SchoOl· 9:30 .....
Wonhip- 1 p.m.

Roodud CltWdr Ill lilt N...,....
Pillar. Samuel Buye
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonlrip · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedneay Senllcel- 7 p.m.

rtatwMIIo

Hkkory Hllll Cltordl or Cbrlsl

EvoniCiill Joseph B. Hookins
Sunday School - 9 o.m.
Worship- 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

~"Co"N:l~e

SuDdrry School-9:30a.m.
Wonbip • ICI'.JO a.m. Uld 6 p.m.
w..-...y Servica -7 p.m.

Sllnday School - 9:45a.m.
Wonhlp - II a.m.
Wtdroeoday Services - 7:30p.m.

liM. . H..._CIIWdr
31057 Slllo Roulc 325, Lanpvlle
PUior: Rev. Rid&lt; Maloyed
SUnday acMol • 9'.30 a.m.
Sundly worship- 10:33 o.m. .t. 7 p.m.
Children's churdr - 10:3~ a.m. Ynulh 6 p.m.
Wednesday prayer aervice • 7 p.m.

Keoo Cllon:b of Cllrlsl
Worship - 9:3() o.m.
SondaySchool - 10:30a.m.
Pulor·Jelfrey Wolloce
111 and 3rd Sundly

Sundly School -9:30 o.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Senlicea - 6:30p.m.

Cntnl Clooolor

111 Alto Auellon. Evorr Fridar
7pm. Every Sarurdoy 7pm. At 2·33
·croaaroada". Groctrltl, new
mtrthlndloa. Ed Frazier 1130.

~1""808-2785.

~ ..

•

Netdtd Onvtr: In stale or out of

2220 I 11trson Ave bm·5pm, . IIIII your tar Ot ~ Cd tot
Safurdar, connlne lara. ~·PI•·
304..
back booh. eraaowart, 11141 7
.•
....., llrrr"uro. CI0111n.
Nudlng A Bobrlluor In
511. 271h ACIOII irom Sellt Home In Tho Ga.....it Ar• 0ntr '
Eltm. lollow ligna. awivel rockor, Porr-T&gt;mt O':Jo Coli Bt,_n 8

..,. inror,._

blktl, WOOd burner int•n. cltln

P.M. 1 7 p

- - 7:30-7

1012.

?$:,.,._
w.Zr

,Only, lt4· 448·

.

~.
\

�•

Page 8 e The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel• Page 8

Pomeroy • Middleport, Oh1o

July 26, 1996

OOP

BRIDOJ:

PHILLIP

ALDER

for millie
41 11111111' org.

ACROSS
1 LUncfl lncl

42--.1111

43=11Dor

clnnll'
e Saudi c11y

11~

ICICIItlon
44 Mlelt'NI

riGht (11.)
14 Fruit ripener
13 All

1::

~\'
I

1

•

i

. Please send resume to.
Dernal Hygienist P.O. Box 380,
Mason, WV 252110.
: Overbrook Center ha s
, STNA po sition s for at!
yo ne interested plea se '"'""'' ''

' Jack•e Cremeans at 8 1
: 64 72.

' The Fellowship Church ol 1 Naza rene, Reedsville, Oh iO currently tak1ng b1ds lor post 10n of
clea mng school area·~ on day a
week. For more 1nforma n and

JOb descnpt1on call 6

8-6275

01614·3711-6247.
Wanled: Nature Women To Uvo
In With Elderly lady Ambulatory
With Aulst. Salary Plus Room
And Board With Private Ouortoro.
Nice Homo In Galllpollo With
Pleasant Surroundings. Houae·
keeping And Cooking Required.
References And Background
Check Required Cali 014·448·
9627 Betweor! 5:00 And 8:00 P.M.
Woman-to stay With eldtrty

wom-

an at her home on weekends.
S4 oonv. 304-882-3772.

120

Situations
Wanted

'"

Wanted : Dump truck 10 rent !of 1-

'

2 rronths. Call Johnny 1·800-3183718.

.
,
'

2 gx7 Wooden Garage Doors,

One Good Shape, One Damage,
1 HeB¥ey Duty Mete! Ottice Desk
6 14· 446-7556

·.

.,'''

I•

5e thng My COllection Of: 43 Zane
Grey Handback Books With Oust
C overs. S180 For All or $5 A

'

'

31 o

Homes for Sale

House with 2 extra Iota, at 811
Main St. Pt, PINtanl, for ale ~
owner. $79,000. Shown by appointment tn afternoon only. 3C:M·
875-1206.
Reduced Price, country nome In
town, beautiful 1 314 acres with
woodo, mosdy ilwat, locatad in ,;~
lage of Middleport with 1 lovely
11188 Schulro Spacral Edldon mobile home, beth &amp; a hall with carpatmg throughout, some new,
plus many extra's added to home
tntludes deck &amp; c;emral atr,
phone 814·992-7350 (No SUnday
ca.Us).

Sn roome, new kitchen/ bath,
Piarl Svaat. Middllj)Ort $29,000,
614·992·3749, Lloyd Grimm, no
Sunday calla.

Scenic Valley, Apple Grove,
beautiful 2ac lots, public water,
Clyclo Bowen Jr., 304-576·2336.

Three bedroom home In country,

12 Bedroom House In Gallipolis,

180

Wlilea H•N Rd.. Rutland, one baLi\,
on-ground pool, 614-992-5067.

References &amp; Deposit 614·379·
2400

320

2 Bedroom, deposit, you pay utili·
lies. 304-6 75-2535.

wanted To Do

Care For The Elderly In ThaH
Home, Weekdays Only, 814·446·
2427

Ch1 ld Care Provider Opening

Mobile Homes
for

Sale

2'x6 .
1
5
12'x&lt;l' expando'" LR,

RENTALS

41 0

Houses for Rent

2 BR with Basement Garage on

rer~&gt;odel&lt;&gt;dl 1.41 , $350 plus Deposit 614·o446·

kitchen and bath, $6500, 8
992-6324.
14x70 Mobile Home
1
lot, River V.Mey School

658 6

.:.~-~-------

2-3 BR Carpered Ci~ Sehool Dl&amp;·
tnct, LG Family RM Available August 181$350 Month $150 De ·
1013
posn304- 757 "

Soon In local Area . 24 Houra A
Day, 7 Days A Week, Competitive
Pnces 614-256-6342.

Mile From Cheshire On
Stove, ~errigerator, Washer,
Baths. 2 Bodrooma, Heat Pump,
16xl6 ~rch. 614-367-7043.

GeorQes Portable Sawmill, don't
ha ul your togs to the m1ll just call

1964 Active. 12x60, 2 bedroom,
remodeled bath, eloctnc stove,

Available soon, nice 3 bedroom,
references , depoait &amp; no pete .

natural gas hot water &amp; heat,
good condition , $5,000, 614-992·
6134

304-875-5162.

6 14·256· 1502

•

adverllsad
In 1hla
·
are al'llllallla
onan IIQUII
OJ&gt;POrlurily baa.

2883

lot us do your d11ty workl High
Pressu re deamng Houses Trail·
ers, Porches Etc Also Painting
and Carpetary 614·256·6012 or

'

not

StarttriEiderlyiRental House, 1

304.675·1957

'

-will

bedroom. new roof. carpet. plumbing, wiring, batMitchan. lndudea
6 loot leue, out bldg. nong&amp;'refrigl
c;lothea dryer. lnaulatedlchea-p
::u"::..:'"':ll:.•
:: ::30:.:.H.::7:.:5-.:.74::8::z._ _ _ _

expe r~enced, references avatl ·
able. 304-675-5203 ask br Anna.

' '•

Thlo

ktoOWIIIIIIIY 11CC1P1
adv8rtls8men1alornaal-e
wlllch Is In violation of tile law.
our raaders .... hereby
Informed 111et alt-Pinga

138 Acres Suitable For Building Middleport N. 3td Ave, 1bedroom,
Or Mobile Home Water And Elec- turntshed apt, deposit &amp; reference
tric Available $4,500, 61o4· 441 - required. 304-882·25611.
09:!8.
New Haven: 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom lur·
14 parcels, from 1.2 to 1 t.e acres. ni1had apll. Depcslt &amp; refarenc·
some overlookmg Rac~ne, pa'rual eL 3).4-882·2568.
rtnanctng , 614 · 992 · 7 t 04 after Newly Rtmodltd Furnished 3
8pm.
Room A~rlment At 651 Second
Avenue No! To Bonard library,
80 acres timber/ woods with mln$350/Mo., PIUI $350 lleiJ(IIil R•
erol rigiU, Indian Run Road, Oli¥e qulrod. No Peta Allowed, Ralertownohlp, Meigs County, $60,000, ence Roqul~ Cal Judy Or Deb61H85·3933.
bit 61~7323.
BRUNER LAND
Nice 2 Bedroom Furnished
614-775-9173
Apartment In Galli!JOIIS. Laundry
Meigs County : Hey Hunters Room. No Pets. S3651No .. Plus
here·a 1 lot lor you 8 Acres Oepo~t. 614-446-2800.
$8,000 , I I+ Acres $8,500-both Ntee 2 bedroom, WID hook-up,
Very Remote. Also, 2 lot!l each 5 ground floor. Rtltrtncta &amp; de·
Acrta Ready lor Your Home, or IJ(Isit no pet&amp; ~75-5162.
10• Acres $8 ,500 great lor
HorNs.
Nice Clean 2 Bedroom All Elec·
trlc, Furniohed Kitchen. Cloae To
Gallla County : G~ lllpolis , 2 M1les Spring lfllllty, No l'ell, S3501No ..
Out Neighborhood Rd . g Acres + D.ll R....._, 614-446-41157.
$1.-,500, Or 10 Acres $17,000 .
JJst N. of Huntington, 3 Mites Out Nice two bedroom apartment in
Teena Run &amp; Chambers Rds. Pllmeroy, no poll, 014-992-5858.
'!bur Horses Will Love this 8 acr· One bedroom apartment m Pt.
et With Stream $11,goo, 5 Acr·
es $12,000, Seyerai 10 Acres PleaSMt 814·992·5858.
Loll A -.
One bedroom apartment in Mid ·
dleport, all utilities paid, $270/mo
All abov-e owner Financed with plus $100 depoait. Call 114·992·
10% Down. 10!1. 011 Caoh Pur- 71108 , 6am·Spm.
chalal. Col lor Mapa
Twin R1vers Tower, now accepting
Parcels on Rayburn Rd. Water, apjlllcatlona tor lt&gt;r. HUD oubold·
paved road, reasonable reatric·
lzod apt lor elderly and handl·
tiona. 304·675·5253. (no alngl• capped EOH 304-675-11678.
wide incJJiraa please)

Sohd Oak Table And chairs Paid
$1600 Ask ing $1500, Wedding
Dr ess Sua 12 And Head Pttce
Asi'Jng S375; Singer Sergor 080
Call 614 -245 -5006 or 814-379-

BabySitting 1n my home, mature &amp;

; I

,; naalaslata advelllalng In
lfia . . . _ , Is IIWjecl.,
1l1e Federal Fair Houolng Ad
of I 968 wlllch makes M•agal
10 advelllsa "any p!Wia11111C8,
llmlatlon or dlacr1mlnatlon
baoed on raoa, color, religion,
aex tamlllal-.a or natiOnal
oltgil. or any 1rUnlon to
make any such prelorence,
llmllallon or CI18Cr1mlnatlon.'

P1cce 614 ·245.-5-469

Any Odd Jobs, pa1n!lng, carpentry. lawn care, etc ::ll4..fi7S.. 7112

I'

1 1/2 Acrtl, State Route 180,
13,500 And 2 loll 100x300
living. 1 and 2 bedroom
10,000 Eldl, 614-448-0130. 614- Gracious
a.-rtmenll at Village Manor and
384-8128.
Alverstd8' Apartmanta in Middle·
1 Acre footctrs, water, septic, Ql· IJ(Irl From $232-$355 Call 614·
rage, blacktop road , 1n Addison 992~ 506• . Equal Housing OPP&lt;\
tul'lbet.
..... 614·388-8976.

Now acceptmg appl1 cation s
' lhe po s1 tion of Dental Hygien11t.

Light Haulmg House Wash tng
Home,
Busme ss
Wmdows

Washed, Ya rd Mamtenance Call
Aller 6 P.M. 614-446·8183.
Sun Valley Nursery School.
Ch•ldcare U·F 6am-5:30pm Agee
2-1&lt; , Young School Age During
Su mmo, 3 Days per Week Mini·

mum 614·-'l\6·3657
W1ll Clean Ou t Garages &amp; Basemenls Rea sonable Rates. Free In
So me Cases . W1ll Haul Old Ap pli ances Will Pay For Some, 814-

446·0064.
FINANCIAL

21 o

Business
OpportunHy

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
rec omm end s that you do busi·
ness w1th people you know, and
NOT lo send money through the
mall unlll you haYe investigated
the olfer1ng

Bus mess per son or Bu•lder ; Nallonal Manufact ur er seeking to
qua11ty DEALERS tn some se1ec1
ope n ar eas Stee l buildings u
low as $3 00 sq foot Call (303)

758· 4135, EXT 1503
Bus1 nes spe1&amp;0n, small siza Con ·

tracto r, National Manufacturer
award1ng local DEALERSHIP for
sleet buildings Big Profit Potential
on sa les and con structiOn. (303)
759-3200, eJt 2300.

CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOD
FURNACE Is The Mo st Eflicient
And l owest Emts s1ons Outdoor
Wood Fur nace On Th e Market
Central Soll er Is Currently look
urg For A Ouahty Dealer In Th1:1
1mmec1a!e Area . For lnlormauon
On Becom1ng A Dealer Or For A
Free 81ochure Ca ll 1 - 800 - 2~8 4681 0&lt; 1·21 8- 762·2575.

1972 Flammgo 12r85 3 Bed -

rooms, Very Good Condition, Recendy Remodeled Bedroom &amp;, Full
Bath CIA Deck On Large Rented
LoL $6,900, 814·245-1516 Aller 8
~M. Anytime

w......,,

3 Bedroom With Garage 1053

Route 588 $285 per month SISO
Dopo~t614-446 - 1340

Three bedroom house 1n Chester,

many updates/ remodeltng . De·
p.os1t and refltrences required ,
614·445-9921 aher 6:00pm.
Two or three bedroom house on
beautiful lol 1n Pomeroy, HUO ac -

cepted, $400/mo or sell or lease
'NIIh Of)(lon lo buy on conlract With

10n Homattt 12160 3 Bedrooms. good relerenceli, no pets, 614·
l1ke New Through Out Gas Heat, . 6911-7244.
814-446·0175 $6,45C Air, Under·
p.nnmg
1976 Fleetwood mobile home.
14r80, want payoff of $5400 or

420

take over payments, 614 ·992 ·

3935
1981 14x70 '3 bedroom , 2 baths,
S7 ,500, mcludes sk~rung, porch,
awnmg, 2 ac. new water heater.
new carpet, new I!Jrnace. Uust be
moved out of K &amp; K tra1ier park.
304-875·3000.

·- - - - -

Mobile Homes
for Rant

2 Bedroom Trailer, 8 Miles Route
218, $220tMo + Deposit, Refer·

encea, 614 -446-8172, 614 ·258·
6251
2 Bedroom trailer, reference &amp;
deposit, 1"10 pets, Rt1 North lucas
Rd. on nght. 304-67S.1070

2 Bedrooms, Furnished, 1 Queen
1988 Oakwood 14•72 3 Bed· S1ze. 1 Full Bed , 2 Baths, ClaY
rooms , 1 112 Baths, Large front Chapel Road, 614-258·64C8
Kllchen 8x20 Deck. 6U-448 112S

Two al1d three bedroom mobile

Furnished
Rooms

Circle Motel, Gallipolis. OH 814·
U&amp;-2501 or 814·367-C812. Eflecloncy Rooms, Cable, Aw, Pnona,
Microwave &amp; Refrigerator, Taxi
Service 112 Price For Motel
Guest

Rooms for rent · week or month
Starting at $120/mo. Galha Hotel.
6,.·446·9580.
Sleeping rooms with c:ooklng.
Also tra11er space on rtver. All

hook-ups. Call aller 2:0C p.m..
304-nl-5851, MaaonWV.

460

Space

for Rent

Commercial Space ApproJ:. 800
Square feet Located Corner Of
State S~aat &amp; Tltird Av&amp;nue, Gal·
llpolls. The Former license Bu -

3

Piece Be«oom Suitt, Refrio«a·

tor Frost Free, Small Tablesaw,
P.ropane Heating Stove, Small
Apartment Dryer, AFTER 6 P.M.
6,.·379-2720.
• · 12 Inch Kicker Compet111on
Subwoofers 4 Months Old, Under
Warranty $85 Each, 6 14·446 ·
6n8.
486 OX Computer, &lt;20 HD, 8 MB
RAM, Super VGA Monilor,
mouae and speaker, call 6141·
992·8293.
Air Compressor $711.50. r.r Com pressor $99 .50, Beretta 22 Pistol
$139, Remington 870 Wongmaater
S219, Browning9 M,M. Hypower
S375, Smitn Nickle Plate 44 Mag,
S259, Dave's Swap Shop a129
Stale Route 7 Cheshire 614· 367 7106
Boots By Redwing, Ch 1ppewa,
Tony lama. Guaranteed Lowest
-:-Pr_lce_s_A_t_Siloe
__c_a;..;lo;.:.•.:G.:aHipo:::
' =.='":.·_ _ I
C1nc1nna11 Reds IICketJ tor Au ·
QUit 12th. Parking peas included.
304-882-3261.
Concrete &amp; Plastic Sepdc Tanka,
300 Thru 2 ,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterprises, Jackson, OH

1-800-537-11528.
D1sney Area 5 Days, 4 Hotel
Nights, Use Anytime Value $320
Sell $100 614-823-a490.

~

Three Jack Russell puppies, two
females and one mate, 10 lbs. "'"
grown, $250/ea. 61H42·2050

570

Musical
Instruments

Fender Ba11msn SO Combination

Baaa &amp; lead Amp, 814·4o41 ·0727
After SP.M.

580

Fruits

&amp;

Vegetables
For salt· hamegrown lnc:redi~e
c:orn and tomatoes, Williams
Farm, Syracuse, Ohio, 814·992·
3985 daya or 614 -902-5aea
everings.
Half· runner beant, $ 10/buahal,
you pldt.304-875-2579.
Now picking tan\e blackbernea,
$8/gal. 3:14-882-2744
S18rhng to pck tomatoes, whole·
sale&amp; retail. 304-882-3626.

590

For Sale
or Trade

11o4 Ton electric OYerhead hoist
Budget 110 volts, Sl35. 10" Sat·
elll tt di sh, 3 boxes may need r•
paired, $350 2 Ton hand w1nch,
lots of cable on winch, $135. 304·
576-2e67.
'

chaw. 304-875-45-46.

Scooters
And
Wheelchairs. New IUaad. Van 1
Car lift Installed, Stairglidea, Uft
Chairs, Call For Brochure, 814·
446-7203.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Electnc

Franklin Fireplace

W1th Heat

Shea!, All Accessories. $300; 2
lillie Banary Cars S1so Both,
614-446-3437.
Garden Tiller (Stateman) SHP
$450; ~ow Western Saddle, Bri·
die, Blanket $270 ; 1980 Honda
(Hawk 400) S6QO ·PI'ona 814·388·
9194

Gravely walk beh1nd, 30· dec k,
e lectr~c start, $500, call614·992·
3454 1fttr 8pm.
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired. New &amp; Rabuilt In Stock.
Call Ron Evans;, 1-800 -537-9528

Matching Jenny lind baby btd,

::-:::--:-:--------=I er,mattress,
changin~ table, dressexcellent condlt1on. $300. 30o4·
:510 Household
675-lon
$50 6 I 4·258-6780
~~j~Good~~~S~~~~~ Myers
Deep -Well Pump, 220 V.

Appliance a:
Washers, Dryers,
grators, 90 Day
French City Uaytag, e 14·446·
7795.

Regiatered Weimaraner puppiea.
304-675-7740.

Dreasing table , baby bed, car
seat, stroller, awing, walker, high-

King Wood &amp; Coal Heater With
Blower Used 1 Year Excellent
Trallor lot 1n Centenary 614-388- Condition. S450. 614-446.()516.
6453
lincoln portable welder. Onan
470 wanted to Rant
powered, $QSO : eo• pull behind
mower for Jap tractor, $6SO , 61o4·
3-4 Bedroom house in Pt. Pleas- 992·3981.
ant or Gatlipolis area, prefer out of
town. Contac;t Terri at 304 ·675- Longaberger baskets With every1612
thtng , magazme StOO, setvmg
tray SIOO, exc ollent condition
490
For Lease
~--~~-=~~~---130;..;:....4·
~67~5· 1~07;..;7___________
Trailer alta, rivet access, city wa- Uascul1ne s1yle wood day bed
ter &amp; sewage. Contact Daan with mattress &amp; pop ·out unit.
Srrith. 304·882·2077.
S200. VCR &amp; K~rby sweeper. 304·
675-5091
MERCHANDISE

~

_...;_...;__.:..:.:.::..:..:.:;:_~_, :.-:~=··:....
· -~--~-

reau location. C81814-4oi6-4639.

Queen size waterbtd
With 1 second manress, $175 :
baby Cflb, $30, 614·949-3403.

~.:;..;-~:--:-----1 Refrige rators, S1oves. Washers

i

610 Farm Equipment
I 25 Cub Cadet, 50in. cut. $80C.
304·895-3078
1994 New Holland square baler,
model 565, excellent condi11on ,

lea&amp; then tSOO be"' baled trru It
$8500, 614· 742·2086.
300 gallon plastic farm ch•ml·
ell tank, on sled wilh hose, $75,
614·949-3403.
Drag Disc &amp; Couple Single Plows.
614·379-2720 AFTER e P.M.
HydrauliC Hoses, Made To Order.
S1der's Equ1pment Co :104 -675 ·

7421 .

While 21 Horse 01ese1 4 WO
Ttactor 5 Ft Belly Motor, low
Hours : John Deere 301 With
Frontend loader &amp; Sick le Bar,
low Hours, 61 4·4416-3438

Yardman Tractor Mower 20 HP
so· Cui Hydrostat ic Kohler En·
g1ne, Used One Summer $1,goo,
614·446-0560.

630

Livestock

Black &amp; Whlta Pony With Cart
Harness &amp; Saddles, 1 Quarter
Horse All For S850, 614· 245·
5067 .

One yHr old col\ $600, 814-992·
8313.
Registered Anguo Breeding Bull.
Son 01 Ginger Hill Duller 8D, 3
Years Old , 1,300 Pounds, Euy
Colver 614-388·9706.
Three cowa wlhelfar calves; one
2 year Old brad holler; 814·742·

3033.

640

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dr~en , refrigerator~ , Set ol drums. 3 cymbals. S550,
ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 78 614-902-2756
Vine Street, Call 614 -448 -7398,
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
I -800-499-3499.
Upright, Ron Evans EnterpriSes,
Relrigator and rrelching 30 inc:h Jacl&lt;son, Ohio, 1-800·537·9526.
Qal stove. Both excelltnr condl·
Trestle style d es ~ . west er n bonks
1tOrt call614-446-0350
beds: labia and chiurs : elec tnc
Refrigerator, Freezer, Washer, organ; 614-992·3815
Dryer, Stove, Air Condl~oner, S50
Warm Morn.ng wood stove w f
Each 814-256-1238
blower &amp; pipes, like new, $300 ne·

W1U Haul Fs1r Animals;

Sundar

91180
Hay

&amp; Grain

Allalla Hay 40 Acreo To Be Cut
Around July 28th , Balled Into
Sctuaro Balas, Sonw Round Balot
01 Allalla And Gran Hay Avail·
able Now 814-448-0103.
Exc. alfalfa 1-.y from S6Mon &amp; up.
Morgan Farma. Rt 35. 30•·037·
2018.

Straw, square baled In lield, on
wagons. 30H75-1807.
TRANSPORTATION

gohable. 304-675-5436 .
Washer and Dryar Set $300.00
2-F1ah Tanks + Stand . $30.00.
61 ·446-1230

550

Building
Supplies

Block, br~ c k , sewer p1pes, wmd ·

ows, lintels, etc Claude Wtnter s,
R•o Grande. OH Call 614-245·
5121.

560

~f·
•

1082 lincoln Continental loaded,
E..ollant Condition, Mull Sell I
814·44Hl738.
1993 Gao Metro. 26.00C Miles.
A- I Shape, $4,500: 1988 ChOYY
Aatro Work Van , $2,500, 61-4 ·
367-7755.
1993 Oldo Cutlass Supreme. red.
4dr, auto, V-6, abs, all power, ac.
radiolcassetle, $8,900 304 -6750888 Of 304-875-4257.
1994 4 Door Pontiac Grand Am
SE, Low milage one owner 1 year
manufac:tor warranty Pnce
$11,400 614·446·7283 Day tima

71 o

Autos for

Sale

'76 Ford Ml¥arlck, light blue,
good condition, must •••· new
tiro, new complete exhaust, new
brakes, drum rotan complete,
new seat covers and more. Asking only $850, Pomtroyl CMatar
area, c;afl614·992·4156, you may
leave message.

• 10 5 4 3
• K J 10 6

33 TV ...-t&lt;

and 81~~~127 Evening

1Q04 Ponllac Fireblrd, exc .cond ,
Hop, loaded , 19,500 m1le s,
$13,800 . Call after 5 :00pm 3041·

BARNEY
ENDORSE SOME

I LOVE THIS ENOORSIN'
BIJ:NESS II I ENDORSED

HAIR CURLERS

SNIAIC~ SNIAICiRS

FER ME!!

0

•

0

~~~L-~LL-L~~--~==~~~~~!~o__o~·L-~~~----~~~
PEANUTS
GUESS WHAT, SPIKE ..
I WROTE TO MOM,AND
SHE'S COMING OVeR

1-!ERE ON A TROOP51-ll P
TO SEE 'f'OU ..

1987 BaJa 180 Islander, 130hp1
tra1ler, all ac ce ss, $6,500. Ahor
5 OOpm 304 · 675·7499 or 304 .:
87!'&gt;-1415.
:

875-7702.

1993 Polans Waverunner With
Tra1Ler &amp; Cover, $3,500, 614-448~
1895 Pontiac Trans aport SE 6253 Aher 7 ~M .
•
3800, 11 .000 miles all op11ons,
very clean, ~tertlhz~r overspray on
paint." $12,500, 614·949·231 1 20~ Checkmate Convincer. OPGIJ
bow, stereo, Wtrcru i ser. motor;
days, 614·9•9·26.44 8Y81.

With 50 horse motor,&gt;6U· &amp;•a.

Inch Make Offor, 614-446·7127.

Auto Loans. Dealer wiM arrange fi.
nanc1ng lt'll&amp;n tf you have been
turned down elsewhere. Upton
Equ1pment Used Cars . 304·456·
1069.
Trucks for Sale

f

FRANK &amp; EARNEST .

speed rransm1SS1on, parts only, all

parts ava1!able . 61&lt;4 -949 ·2311
_da..;.Y'..;·_6_14;..;·9_4;..;9·.:.26;..;4_4.:.
"'"".:.:'ng.;::::•_ _
'91 Ford Ranger XLT, 5 speed,
e•cellen1 c:ondmon, $4000, 614742· 1803 or leave mesaaga

5190
BaJa Power Boat. I 994, 180 llarl'
der W1th Only 20 Hrs. Otl Engmf
(Same As New). This New Be~
Has A New $650. Camper Toi
And E.w:cellent Trailer Th11 Beau
Has Clociwd 58+ Miles Per Hou'
You And Family Co~ld Be Havi"l
Countleu FU(I Hp,urs . l:oa~Q
W1tt1 Acces~rle's~turrEint

Bb'o l

Value Is $12.600. Will Sell Foi
MlJch less. Call 614 -446 -20S S.:·'
After 7:00 P.M leave MHsage.

1760

,.

I~ ~'It: Of 11\€. :)Tf(ltel ~

1\N/E. 11\N:.€, ~~IlL 11\11«. Cf l))

1979 Short -bed Chevy p1ck -up
with IDpper, auto, air, $1,000 :30.4675-3889.

1984 Ford Ranger, 4cyl, 4spd,
good cond. $1.500 304 ·675·
2074

790

1985 Ford Ranger , 4 ely, fuel 1n·
JICied, 5 sp, 42,000 actual miles,
cassane , chrome wneels , gnll
guard, roll bar wlth hghts. soma
rust, $1,500, 614-247-4292

THE BORN LOSER

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Wanted To Buy: 10 Inch Stal]
Converter For General Motors,
350 Or 400 T.H.M Automatio
Tran9mils l on ,
614 -446-758'
leave Message.

12 CIIIOIIMI
~­
,,~··

....

Sout~

Weal

North

t•
4•

16

2.

Pass

1111gt.,l.g.
21 EXaminer
22 ......

2fl btllt&lt;ll

Pass

11188 Dodge Dakota 4x4, $3,800,
With air. 304-895-3078.

~~c:m€m!

Logan Pearsall Smith, the Anglo·
American essayist, pcinted cut, "How
many cf our daydreams would darken
into nightmares, were there any dan·
ger of their becoming true."
South found this deal an unexpected
nightmare . Hew should he have
planned the play in four hearts after a
spade lead?
Weal .was thin for his overcall, but
any time ycu can bid spades, it is usu·
ally right because the opponents must
go up a level to outbid you.
Declarer won the first trick in hand
with the spade king and, thinking
everything was under control, played
the heart queen. However. after win·
ning with the ace, West guessed well
to switch to the club nine. Declarer
• played low from lhe dummy, winning
with his ace after East contributed lhe
six. Sou\~ drew the last trump, played
a spade lo dummy's ace and tried the
diamond finesse . However, West won
with the king and returned a club. defeating the contract.
True, declarer was unlucky with the
lie of the minor-suit kings, but he still
should have succeeded. He overlooked
the value of dummy's diamond jack.
Aller winning trick cne in hand. de·
clarer should have continued with the
ace and queen of diamonds. West wins
with the king and switches to a club,
but Scuth wins in hand, leads a spade
to dummy's ace and discards a club
loser on the diamond jack. New South
plays a trump, his losers being only
.,. one heart, one diamond and cne club.
When everything looks cozy at the
bridge table, be especially vigilant .
The moral• Never lose concentration.

31~

llullll dDg

34 tiJCIIIItlll d

31

·=='lt8y
...... lOft

,._

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull Campoe .

'T H J Y

T Y ·Z Z L K Y

PTOPFN

y p z

ZSY

P R Z S V R F

low to

I
I I I~ I I
INSOY

...

RHEBT
1_...=';''
5
I 1 I

_

Tht Treosurt
Sovlnrs You'll FIIMIIn lht

'

trlc 614· 448·111150, Gallipolla

to

_

c~uckle

tho
quoted
by f11l 1n; in the miuing worch
you develop from lltp No. 3 below.

I I I I. I

II

pleases some PEOPLE?"

I FRIDAY

SaltJrcjily, July 27, 1996
ch,anc••• In your sociel lila are
year ahead. ltloOkllike
ocM"II to bl part of thai
you've always admired

v,_.. .,..,,.

R~tlai.Or eomn,.,:e~~~'Wli-"' V

ONe&gt;

what lies before your eyes than
to know in which direction

our

.Closslfltd Stulon.

. 1SUt5 112 Torotl Tacoma 41114 ,
baigo wlgold r im, bug lhield. ax- new S&amp;r\IICa or repa~rs . M1s1er ll· 1
tendtd cab. 31·1050 ttead . load- censtd electr ician. Ridenour
ed. mull MU, S18,900 firm. 304· ~lactrtcal, WV000308, 3C4,S75· ·'
7811, ,
' •
t
••
17s.l1 7.

••-tic.

-~

to see

" Have you ever noticed,' my friend quizzed , "that
there's always something about
su~sses that dis-

JULY 261

~9

'00· N~ Ser'llco·o; ~ ll·
censod EloCirictan. Woloh J:iec·

•

effo,rt

Cobalt - Wheel- Happy - Vesper- PEOPLE

Restdtntl.al or commercial w.rl ng, .~

2 112 Ton CIA Unit, E•collant
Conclltioft. $250, II&lt; 446 11251.

takes less

SCIIAM-LETS ANSWERS

wv

Spor~ loadAlloy whetj l ,
12,000 mill. $19,500,
6 1 . -· 308511W 4pm.

~

f) ~~ic!~~~~ER LETTERS

1092 35' 5th Wheel , excellenl
wil
consulertrade, 614·949·3150.
•

RSES CERTIFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heat Puii'PI , Air Conditioning; 111
'lbu Donl C.atl Ua W..BOI!\. l.oMI :0
FrH h-tel. 1· ilil0·211·0011; •
6 14-44&amp;-8318.
0020o5. I
•

Jooti··C\lir-

It

I

con~ i ti on, bea~:~tiful , loaded,

100 Year old root alate. 12• 24.
304-773-51n.·

~.,,..,entry,

form four worda.

f9 PRINT
NUMBERED tEllERS
IN THESE SQUARES

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

eel,

::::

3

'
''
t 2 FT Camper Trailor 6U - 441 ·
1093

\

1M

ELHRR .

Rearrange ietle&lt;a ol
0 four
ocrombled word•

2583

ASTRO·ORAPH

-

NPTPA . '

'=~~~, S@~~lA~ £~s·
lor CtAY R. I'OUAN
_;;_;,__ _

r

6196,

Anlr 4:30-304-e15-ptil!

AVYNR'Z

_ _ __..;,...:,
• ~ l4ilt4

•

2 Bldroom apl, S3751mo. utilitill
pa1d, $100 dep011t 304 ·675-

or. 300 Walt Amp With Bla•·
bunch CD Pllfor. $!100.00 _c;aH

osv

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I knew &amp;he was deslined for stardom lhe minute 1
saw her teet." - Martha Graham. on Bette DaviS.

114-446-47112.

tW Nisun Pulsar: " Cydindtr ;

VTA

'S .Y

NPFHRK

zsy

lillingroom Suitt, Beda, Chtlll,

SSP. $759.00. 2· I 2' Inch SpoaJt.

zsp z

THMY

OTPRZN

Bunk Beds, Refrigerators, Desks,

&amp; Deacons

H N

NOPRHNS

Ulld Furniture 130 BulaviUe Ptke,

Wi th leaf, 4 Chairs ,

.

c.&amp;.brity Cipher Cl)'ptOOiJrwne.,. creatltd from qucUUona by lamout people, paR and pteMn1
Each \ittef In the ~ stendllor ll'ICICtlei Todly'l au.: L fqUoW U

Pets for Sale

Bench $200: 6' Fiberglall Truck
Topper. Sii¥Or $300, 614 ·245·
5-474

40ao..-

4104111111
41 VDittiNrl

'

17 Cu. Fl. Hotpoint Refrigerator,
Yottow, $1 25; Hotpoint Double
Ovon Electric Range, Yellow,
Uapto Dining Room Table

·=-

r-

~~p6rH-r,-1 -rMI_A,,~-s..,..,..7-ll ~-~~:~,.

11 Ft . Truck Camper S e ii · Co n ~
tained, Exc;etktn1 Sllapet a1.4·.446.1

u... nullln

• --1---l---1 · 311neok (II.)

I

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

m s.

••

27 .._ lrrltlbll

Opening lead: • 6

1993 Ppp-Up Coteman . oampe~
1989 GNC Pick-Up long Bed; Excellent €ondltion ,\ l,814 · 388-1
'
'
I
V8, Auto, 79K, Excellent Condi·· 82Q3,
lion S5895; I 980 S495 Firabl rd
Co!lk Motors 014-446.()103
SERVICES
19DO Ford F-250 truck, reeDY ·
erad lhall, 132,000 m11aa. XLT
Home
lariat, 8' bed Wlliner. 5 sp., extra 81.0
heayy suspen11on &amp; 1owmg
lltiproy&amp;fl:ltl)ts
••
package, $3500, 81&lt;· 949·23 11
BASEI,II;NT -~
,
dayl, 614-949·2644 ....
WATEFI'IlOQFJNG
t
1990 F.· IC Chevy 4 Cylinder. 5 Unconditional lifatjme guaran!H~
Speed; New Tiru, Wheel s, Locol ralt1or1caa lui(ili li&amp;G. Ea.'
68,800 M1IH, Sharp! $4,195, 614- tablia~ 1975. Call &gt;(614) 4461
378-2748.
0870 Dr 1·81l0-287·0576 Rogors
waterproofing.
1992 ISuZU picl&lt;up, 5 Speed, r;c.,
$5000, 614-992-2584 ahor 6prn.
Appliance Parts And Servtct: All
tg13 Chevey Work T,uck, fiame Br.ands Over 25 Years Ex-.
$1 ,500. SSP, Ai r, AMIFM . Tool perienct All Work Guaranteed, .
8o•01. Will oale tor poy oil. 614· French. City Maytaw. ·6'1:(- ua: ·,

446-31188

5

fociii!ICIInl

1966 S- 10, 4cyl , 4spd . $1 , 500
tirm. Call after 4pm 30&lt;t-ES5-3441 .

:.:l':to
• - 8. 01111111
10 llou
_.nlllln

Watching and doing

for Sale

20' 1991 Monarch po~ioon boll)

7~
I

By Phillip Alder

&amp; Motors

Antique Car Spoke Wheels And
Fire Stone Tire Size 4i'5500 19

e lnine
e Ellll'e

:uo- ....

AN' LOOK WHAT
THEY SENT ME !!

Repa1 rs, $300, 814· 446· 17.-i
Days · Larry 6 14·446·6861 Eve,.
lngs.

$17,500. 304-773-8186.

4 Grent'elo.

U!udtr

35 Actor - DuU., • 3 Nellflly (2
37 Lack!n,g•n ur
wdl.)

Vulnerable; Neither
Dealer: South

Honda Trail SO Nt&amp;ds Minimurf,

sporty boat. $4,700. 304· 682'
224t.
..

b8l1lry

31 In cleonllr

• A 72

Honda 300. 4x4. 4-whoelar. 3C4675-1589.

t995 Z- 28 Camara, loaded wittops, all leather 1nterior, black .

II Introduce~!
to
2 BullneuWOIIIIn -

out, • •

•KQ9843
t AQ

94 Suzuki GS 500E, 400 m•le~.
ellcellent condition, must selt
$3,000 , free helmet, 614· 991·
5576.

Boats

DOWN

2fl Colllctton
21 Uklly
2t Mao - -tung

6 K 2

82 Honda CX 500. W11h A v .

750

IMW

• J 9 7
• J 2

Soulb

52 PwfonMd

24 Unfokla

6Q l 0883

K 9 8 2

thll ltCiion
51 PIIW

Mel.

30 Give

t

50 a.cauuof

22~
23
of

Eut

• 9 8 5

$7,000. 304·882·3460,

Motor. low M1les 814-256-1831 · ,

r·

West
• A

1989 Harley Davidson SportSier
1200, excellent condition, 6,000").

1994 KX 125, 01rt Bike $2,000.
304-1195-3493.
'
•

07) 6·96

6 A5 4
• 10 7 6 5
• J 16
• Q43

•

1992 Dodge Oynelly, Loaded
S5,aOC DBO 6 U-258· I 252 or
614· 256· 1618

41 Gannent
-worker

20 Word group

Nonb

1988 Plymouth K Car, like new, FuM alze 1992 Chevrolet van with
17,000 actual miles, automatic &amp; 39,000 miles, new tkes, PW, flt;,
air. $6,000. :I).H17H132.
pl rear seat matl.ea qutten si l e
bod. color TV, VCP. front &amp; rear
1988 Pontiac Grande Am Grey, 4 healer and air, white w/gray
Door, Power Leeks, Windows atripes, like new, llking j 13,sb0
And Seats looks Good, Runs or reasonable offer, call 014-992·
Good $2,500, Aller 4 P.M . 614· 8012ahare:OO!wn ..
245-9657.
88 Btpmvp XLT 4W:O. 814·4{ p·
1988 T·B~rd : 1969 T-Bird Fully 3583
~
Equipped, 614-446-3739
740 Motoli:ycles \
1988 Ford Taurus Sho, maroon
w1gray leather 1nt., 78,000 miles, '89 Bon"""' 350, Nirl ill\"rs. FSf
all options. ounrool. cruiaa. amflm pipes, tw ist thrOtllt, ·bcjied new
call., falteat 4-door madll tires. runs good, 'ext~. Parts,
•
$5,000 or offer• accepted, 614· s3000oeo. 614-247-m l .
949·231 1 day•. 614· 949 · 2844
'Gt Honda CR 125:· tlllcellent condillon, new plaatJC, rUns gra"a t'
1989 Oldl Cutlall Citra Body mar.y extras, $160~ olitl, 814 :
'
Damage, Good Uotar, • Door, &lt;59·5248.
AC, PO, PS, r&gt;t/1, $750, 61 4-446·
1981 CX-500 Oeluxt." 12.50Dml.,
1615, Altars;, 614-446· 1244.
good cond S900. 30&lt;.1112·2299. t •
19119 Toyota MR2 Black with Red
Interior, 5 Speed, AC, Loaded, 1084 Yehoma '200 3•Wheelor
Good Condition 67,000 Milas new tires, atart• r &amp; banery, QQOd
cond. 30H75-1504.
c.
•
$6500 814-446-2510 aher 5 pm
1990 Grand -A"! S800 . 304 -675- 1987 Honda XR80, $7CO obo
614-992-11048.
' ,.
5091 .
1990 Thunderbird, V-6, auto,
loaded, garaga ktpl, 105,000
miles. $5,000. 304·882·2030.

worUhop

1&amp; !'Hoi, e.g.
17 lla1ll llmt
11 Illuminated

damagt~ 1 ~toma~d~c,~au~t~o.~4:W:D:,:~~hoo:kllfiP
$900~.

'91 Ford F250 heavy duty truck, 5

At 2 N, 6milea, Pt Pluaant, WV. Sears room a~r cond1t1oner, 6,000
Tues-Sat9-G, &amp;n 11· 5.
BTU, $60. New Havon, 304·862·
~.

1990 ford F150 XLT lanat,

80.000
mileo.
loll 614-949-2311
rear
very clean,
$950,
cloys, 614-949·26441vanings.

720

July 28th K.W. Failure 814 ·245·

Country Furniture. 304·875-6820.

1988 Thunderbird , V·O, AJC ,

ellc . condition-inside &amp; out, ver.,

John Deer&amp; lnduslnal Mower
F725 54 Inch Cut, less Than 60
Hours. $7,300, 614·368-9349

Bedroom suite, good c:ond. 304· And Dr yers. Al l' Aecondl!toned
675-_1-:-090-:::-:--::------l And Gauranteed l $1CO And Up,
W1ll Oelrver. 614·669-6441 .
:

homes, stallmg at $2.-0 -$300 ,
1gg4 14x 76 Fleetwood 2 bed - sewer, waler and !rash included,
rocm, 2 bath, ElK, LR, all elec;tric, 814·992·2167.
c;ta, appl1ances, skyhghls, garden
tub, many extras. No money down.
pa~otl or take over loan or
S21 ,600. 304-773-5302.
440 Apartments
for Rant
1g95 14x70 , 3 bedroom, 2 full
batha, vinyl aiding , shingled roof, -:-""":'::":'"":'-----""'"-1
ac, garbage d1spoaa1, house-size I and 2 badroom aportments, fur·
ounars, new 8•10 deck. now 8•10 nishad and unfurnished, secu1ity
building, petfect condition. Call depoau requ1red . no pett, 614·
992·2218.
Siclo By Side 3 Door CopjleriOne
304-elS-3124.
Wu $250 Cut To $195: Cold
1995 Skyline, 2 bedroom, 1 bath 1 bedroom apartment in Middle- Spot Relrigerator Frost Free
wlgardan tub, skyhght, bay wmd· port , call 6 14-.446 -3091 or 614 - While, 17 Cu . Ft. Cut To $ 150 ,
Hotpowu Relr1gerator, 2 Door,
ow, Island slave, lots of kitchen 992·2 178 or 614·992-53().4
Froatfrn $150; G.E. Refrigerator
cabmets . n1ce. relmance for pay.
1 Bedroom apt, furni Shed, n1ce ltkt New 1 Year Warranty S350.
ott 304-1115-3573
081Qhbol'hood , pnvate , no pets, rei Wh irlpool Washer 195: Hotpomt
1996 16X80 Commodote/Citallon, &amp; depoSit X)4-67~2651 .
30 Inch Range $05: Hotpomt Dry·
er $95, Maytag Wringer Washer
3 Bedrooms, Front Kilchen. Was
$26,9~. Pnced 10 &amp;ell at 124•995. 1 Bedroom. Super N1ce, S2661 $150; Svlvan1a Conaole T.V. $95 ;
Mountain State Homes-P1. Pleas· Mo., Plus Ullluies, Usually 20,000 BTU Window Air Condl·
ant WV304-67S. 1400.
Someth1n9 Available! Sun Valley lionar: I 1,000 BTU Window Air
Aportmenll, 814-446-2957 .
Condilioner, Uaytag Wa11'1er Uke
Now 1 Ytar Warranty $225;
Skaggs Appllancea, 76 Vine
SVHt, GalhiJ(IIil, 6 I 4 · 4~6 - 7398,
t-800-4119-3499. •

Live ~ lo to the lul-.st make a lor.
tu ne placing ads nationwtde, call
614·68fl·34 75.
REAL ESTATE

450

2 lots in Memory Gardena; 2
in Tropi~al Gulf Acres, Punta
Gorda, Fll.,814-985-35-45. .

l'llppy Pallo. Kennela, Boarding,
Stud Set'vice Puppes, Grooming,
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade, All Breeda.
Fayments Welcome, &amp;U - 388 ·

Altllt'e

47

15 Pefcelva

.

• \
,.,

Matchmaker can help you understand AQUARIUS (Jen. 20-Feb. 11) You do
not like to be controlled. so don't try to
whet to do to mal&lt;a the ralationahip wor1l
mentpulate
tnends today because they
Mail $2 .75 to Matchmaker. c/o this news·
·
might
resent
being used ·even more !han
paper. P .O . Box 1758 , Murray Hill
you do.
Station, New Vorl&lt;, NY t0156.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) If the abra· PISCES (Feb . 20-Merch 20) Guard
sive oulside world doesn't treal you loo against the inclination to deDt&gt;eralely lake
well teday, donl bring your frustratiON to chances with your finances ~ you know
the dinner table and lake them oul on lhe odds are stacked against you.
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll It) Your views
Innocent family membe.-.
and
opiniOnS might bl challenged Ieday,
UBRA (Sept. n.oet. 23) The venomous
even
by Individuals who haven1 done 1tt1a
tongue of someone you dislike might
sling you today If you lake his or her previously . Prepare to back up your
claima with facia.
remar1ta to helrt.
(April :zo.llaY 20) Do nol let a
TAURUS
ICORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) A sly sales·
person might try to sell you somelhing surrogala make financial ccmmltmenta
you do not no8d today. Tttla p8f10I'I will on your behall Ieday without your conUfly.
exert a lot cf pra11ure, but you must sent . The lllualion could
GEMINI (May 21.June 20) People WhO
....... I
IAOITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0et:. 21) Today, don1 know you wei could find you dlffl·
you ~ bl Nddlld with a dilficull com- cult to read loday . Your mood could
panion ·WhO will bl _ln an IIJIUIMRI811ve ewing from tolerance to temper 11 the
drop ol • hat.
trwne of mind. Try to~ petllnl.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jen. 11) Avoid CANCEft (.luna 21-.luly 22) Aclionl will
doing phyl!clltt lltenuOUI lhingltoday. epMit louder than wortll today. Do not
Your mind tnlgltl bl c:omtortabll with lhe aay you will do something unlesa you
c:flllllnge, but your l!llladH IIIII' nol bl truly mun i't. Auoclatee will find thll

oe!

fHdV.

~ IWtllo a•cuae.

,

..
... .
~

..

.

.

�'

-- --·-·'

.

. •,

...

.,. ~• .-·j,.""

I

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

·.

x~

JUDGING FOOD PROJECT - Jessica Dillon's proJect io mini·
meal magic consisting of vegetable soup and a croissant sandwich waa Judged by .Judy Clark, Gallla County 4-H advleor.
honorable mention. '
Quick Meal s: Ashley Boyles,
grand champion; Tricia Congo,
reserve champion; Jamitha Willford,
honorable mention.
Science Fun with Dairy Foods:
Jessica Arnott, grand champion;

Chris Barringer, reserve champion;
Michelle O'Nail, honorable mention.
Yeast Breads : Tara Rose, grand
champion; Cynthia Cotterill, reserve
champion; Jessica Barringer, John
Cooke, Jessica Justice , Stacia Sims,
honorable mention.

RESERVE CHAMPION ••
This attractive vegetable and
fruit nibbler tray prepared by
Jenlfer Chadwell won her the
reserve champion In . Adventures In Food. Jennifer has
been In 4-H for two years.

named to
·honor roll

Community
calendar

:'

POMEROY .. Hillside Baptist
·Church, hymn sing, Friday, 7 p.m. on
'Pomeroy parking lot. Groups scheduled to sing are The Hood Family,
·The Humphreys, Marty Short and
-Amber Johnson, The Clonch Family,
Sheila Arnold, Joshua Jones. Linda
·Workman and more. Take lawn chair.

•

.I

\

I

SATURDAY
CARPEI'1TER .. Gospel sing, 7
p.m . Saturday, Carpenter Baptist
-Church, State Route 143, Carpenter.
True Gospel Sounds of Wheelersburg .

The following area students were
listed among the 5,231 students who
achieved high academic honors during the spring quarter at The Ohio
State University, Columbus.
Those students named to the
Spring Quarter Honor Roll received
a grade point average of at least 3.5
and were enrolled for at least 12 credit hours.
Area students named to the OSU
Honor Roll were: Julianne Renee
Buck. Andrew David Wolf. both of
Pomeroy; Theda Charlene Dailey,
Reedsville; Robyn Ann Stout, Syracuse.
Two area students also received
their degrees from The Ohio Stale
University during Spring Quarter
commencement exercises on June 7
ai Ohio Stadium.
Barbara Joan Anderson, Pomeroy,
received her bachelors of science
degree in nursing, while Tammy
Carol
Clemente,
Middleport,
received her masters degree in sci-

SUNDAY
CHEST.ER .. Chester High
School Class of 1931 , annual picnic,
Sunday. 12:30 p.m. Teachers and
classmates welcome.

POMEROY .. The annual Biggs
family reunion, Sunday, home of
Nathan Biggs. State Route 124. A
covered ,Jish dinner will be held at
12:30 p.m.
MONDAY
POMEROY -- Bible school, Calvary Pilgrim Chapel. Route 143,
Pomeroy. 6:30 to 8 p.m. Monday
throu ~ h Aug. 2.
POMEROY-- Meigs County Vet-erans Service Commission, 7:30p.m.
Monday at the Veterans Service
Office. Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy.

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

I
I

l

Garden club
members
attend state
convention
Eight Meigs County Garden Club
members attended the annual convention of the Ohio Association of
·Garden Club held at lhe Holiday Inn.
·Worthington.
Th~mc for the week was "On the
Wild Side." Going from here were
Betty Dean. Shelia Curtis. Suzy Carpenter, Judy Snowden, Pauline
At!Ons. Gladys Cummins. Janet Bolin
. and Unda Hensler who was the convention chairman.
Region II and 12 were hosts for
lhe affair. Betty Dean conducted a
.clinic for publicity since she is stale
;chairman for that. and also helped set
.Ill' the flower show and placed two
' entries. She received a first award in
.class four and a foOrth award in class
Jwo. J11nct Bolin was lhe flower
,lllow chairman for the convention

lflow.
• Cunis, Cupenler and Snowden
,helped set up the show and assisted
~ith the judging and clerking. Cummins was chainnan of door prizes
assisted by Atkins.
Faye Collins of Minford was
Installed as the new president with
ller tenn to start Oct. I. Dates
J~~nounced were a state tour "Spring- ·
lime in lhe South to be held Apri17j 1. This is a bus tour goinJ to Callaway Gardens and ocher poinu of
jnterest.
·

• ,;.- -· · - .....

·~ -~

1996 PONTIAC
GUN PRIX COUPE

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35 9 37

By STEVE WILSTEIN
AP Sports Writer
A11.'ANTA - Terrorism struck
the Olympics for the first time since
Munich in 1972 when a pipe bomb
exploded early Saturday in the heart
'of the Summer Games. One woman
was lOlled and more than I00 people
wounded, and a Turkish TV cameraman died rushing to the scene.
A 911 call warning of the blast
was received 18 minutes before the
bomb went off, not allowing enough
time to fully evacuate the park,
according to a law enforcement official speaking on condition of
anonymity.
Officers on the scene had already
spoiled a suspicious bag bul couldn't

clear lhe area in time .
"We will consider it an act of terrorism until information should.arrive
to the contrdfy," FBI Special Agent
Woody Johnson said.
As in Munich, when the Olympics
continued even afler terrorists killed
II Israeli athletes, officials in Atlanta
did not hall Saturday's games.
"The games will go on," said
Francois Carrard, director general of
the International Olympic Commitlee.
And so they did, beginning with a
moment of silence and the lowering
of flags to half-staff at all venues on
the day of the glamour event of the
games: the 100-meter dash.
At Lake Lanier, where rowing

$17,995
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1996 GMC ~ TON
EXT. CAB PICKUP
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NOW

$21 869

$

STUMPING FOR CREMEANS - Foriner VIce President Dan
Quayle, right, epoke on several lsauea and expreesed hla support for the re-elactlon of
Rep. Frank Cremeans, R-Galllpo111, left, at 1 Cremeane fund-raiser Friday In Piketon. (AP)

u.s.

1996CHEVY .YJ TON
PICKUP
WAS$18,1~~W

Quayle says Clinton plagiarizing
past speeches on family values

$16·395

PIKETON (AP)- Former Vice President Dan Quayle says the speeches he gave about family values in 1992 are being copied by President Clinton in the current campaign.
"Bill Clinton doesn't criticize that speech. He gives it," Quayle said
Friday at a fund-raiser for U.S. Rep. Frank.Cremeans, R-Gallipolis.
"The intact family should be lhe model," Quayle said. "At times it (a
split among parents) may be unavoidable, but two is belter than one."
Quayle said the Republican majority in Congress needs a Republican
president lo enable it to complete its agenda.
"Congress is a very powerful political institution and that's why there's
goihg to be such a fight in 1996," he said. "Hopefully. we'll get the opportunity to have uniformity in government again."
Quayle's family lived for about 1-1/2 years in nearby Portsmouth,
where he was baptized. The family left when he was about 2 years old.
he said.
" It's nice to be back in the Portsmouth area where they recognize me, "
Quayle joked. •
Cremeans' Democratic opponent in the Nov. 5 election, former Congressman Ted Strickland, said in a statement hefore lhe fund-&gt;alser that
Cremeans w.as ducking his challenge for a debate.
" Instead of the accessibility to their congressman that they deserve.
working women will have to pay $100 jliSt to be in the same room with
Frank Cremeans and Dan Quayle. They'll have to pay $250 lo get a picture and a handshake from them," Strickland said.

Car

1995 OLDS
CUTLASS SUPREME

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1995 LUMINA
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Car

1994 CADILLAC
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1993 MUSTANG
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1993 PONTIAC
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1992 CHEVY
LUMINA .................... $4,995
1992 LUMINA

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1996 FORD RANGER XLT
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Taxes and title fee not included.
All payments subject to credit approval

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All PRICES INCLUD£
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TAXES &amp; FEES NOT
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OPEN
SUND AY 1·5

'

.

Vol. 31 , No. 25

•

aga1n
the lape of the call.
The Justice Department official
said the 911 call came from a pay
telephone about two blocks from the
explosion. The caller spoke "in a
calm voice," the official said.
The call, apparently from a man ,
was received at I :07 a.m. and the
caller said only ttfat a bomb would
explode in Centennial Park in 30
minutes, a law enforcement official
said.
"I felt the ground shake," said
Desmond Edwards, an Atlanta
schoolteacher. "Some people looked
really messed up. There were rivers
of blood. :'
" I thought it was fireworks, like a
(Continued on A2)

finals were being held Saturday, soldiers carrying machine guns patrolled
the grounds. Soldiers - rather than
the usual Olympic security - were
manning the security checkpoints.
The bomb went off at about I :25
a.m. near a sound and light lower at
Centennial Olympic Park, where
thousands of revelers were celebrating at an open-air, free concert.
There was a call to 911 in Atlanta
warning of the blas1 a few min,utes
before the pipe bomb went off.
according to a a Justice Department
official. who requested anonymity.
But the call came so close to the
explosion lhatlhere was not enough
time to notify police in time, the Juslice official said. The FBI was gelling

By TOM HUNTER
Times-Sentinel Staff
ROCK SPRINGS- Construction
of the new U.S. 33/1-77 Connector
between Rock Springs and Five
Points has nol only changed the face
of the territory formerly occupied by
county roads a~J farmland.
The project has created major
changes in the way traffic flows i9to
the Meigs Coljllty Fairgrounds ;c...
changes that are becoming more evident as fair !if~. appro~ches.
Since ~ completion of t~e
Pomeroy State Route 7 bypass in the
early·. 1970s, residents have made
their entrance into the fairgrounds at
the dead end of the former four-lane
near Meigs High School.
Wiih the completion of the fourlane from that former dead end to
Five Points, northbound and southbound traffic on the new road is now
figured into the traffic scenario. creating some confusion for area
motorists in the early going.
Fairgoers coming to the fair- ·
grounds from Pomeroy will now
tum right at the County Road 25 (Old
Pomeroy Pike) intersection near
Meigs High School. Motorists musl
then make a left turn and travel on a
new extension of County Road 20,
(Rocksprings). which lies under the
Reck Springs overpass on the connector road .
Visitors to the fai rgrounds from
the Five Points and Chester areas
simply have to turn right at the County Road 20 intersection.
The large fairgrounds sign west of
the intersection has been changed to

'

TARGET OF TERROR -An Atlanta pollee Clf pe118d I crowd :
at the Centennial Olympic Park following the early &amp;.Jurd~Y bldt-. :
that killed two and lnfured more than 100 people ckwlng 1 con- :
cart attended by thousands of revelers. (AP)

l

GALLIPOLIS - Two cases were heard Friday by Gallipolis Municipal Judge William S. Medley. who found probable cause lo submit both
to the ne•t session of the Galli a Co11nty grand jury.
Testimony was heard from victim Lanna Toles, 756 Third Ave., Gallipolis, in a preliminary hearing for Ronnie W. Morris, who has been
accused of a July 7 felonious assault on Toles .
Toles told the court that after entering the Happy Comer Tavern, she
was approached by Morris, 46. who allegedly broke a beer boUle and used
it to stab ber several times, creating multiple lacerations to her chest, back
and (ace.
The victim was admitted to Holzer Medical Center, where she was treated for 135 stitches followmg the incident
Morris allegedly fled from the scene ofthe attack and was apprehended
in a St. Albans. W.Va .. motel room on July 9.
He waived extradition in West Virginia and appeared on a fugitive of
justice warrant before Medley last week.
• Medley continued bond of $500,000, no I Q percent, before remanding Morris into the custody of the Galli a County Jail.
The case of a Gallipolis man charged with the rape of his 3-year-old
grandson will also be heard by the grand jury, following a preliminary
hel!ring before Medley.
Charles E. Bitonli, 44, 13 White Ave., appeared in court on allegations
that engaged in sexual conduct with his grandson on July 9.
The ftr.;t degree aggravated felony is puni5hable by a life sentence.
Bitonti was returned to the Gallia County Jail, where he remains on a
bond of $50,000.

..
. I

••t

note the new traffic arrangement.
with a new fairgrounds sign to be
installed east of the intersection in the
weeks leading up to the fair, according to Nancy Pedigo, public information officer for Ohio Department
(Continued on A2)

Billy Yank ~nd Johnny Reb began moving into Portllnd Frldey :
In preparation for the annual r-nactment of the Battle of Buff.
lngton Island, Ohio's only Civil W1r battle. Merk Thome• of Frink· .
fort, Ky., a Con!ederate second eergeent with Compeny F of the
1Oth Georgia, drove a tent stake with lllletence from Cole Smell
of Kingston, a Union private with Company 8 of the i111 Ohio
Volunteer Infantry - an genial example of ClvU Wlr frlllmlzl.
tion. Re-enactors said plans to nline grevel from the blttlefleld
have placed this year's event In the apotllghL Evtntl culmlnete
at t :30 p.m. Sunday with a re-creation of the battle. (T·S photo
. by Jim Freeman)
.

Emergency aid period extended for Gallia County
The presidential disaster declaration provides federal aid to rejiair damGALLIPOLIS - A request by Gov. George Voinovich to President Clinage
to publicly owned properties in Gallia, Adams, Belmont, Brown But'
ton lo extend the disaster incident periods for the May floods through June
lcr.
Clermont
Hamilton. Jefferson, Lawrence, Meigs, Monroe. Pauiding
24, 1996 h¥ been approved, the state Emergency Management Agency said.
and
Wi
lli
ams counties.
'
Scioto
A presidenlial disaster declaration for 10 Ohio counties was approved on
Affected
lc&gt;eal
governments
in
these
cou.
n
ties
are
eligible
to
apply
for
fedJune 24, with four more added on July 3, for the limited eligibility period of
eral funds lo pay 75 percent of the approved cost for debris removal, emerMay 2 through June 24.
The extension provides federal aid for public property and infrastructures gency serv1ccs related to the flood and repairing or replacing damaged pubhe facll1toes such as roads. bndges and utilities.
damaged by floods and high waters anytime between May 2 and June 24.
Affected counties are also eligible for fund&lt;to mitigate against future hazGallia County was one of several counties that received severe flood damards.
aging after heavy rains on June 23 forced creeks out of their bank.!, dam·
aged bridges and roads, and washed away crops.

Judge sends 2 cases to grand jury

4X4 ..........................~.. $18,995

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ACHIEVA .................. $6,999
1994 BUICK REGAL.$13,995 1992 CHEVY ASTRO
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GRAND PRIX .......... $13,995
1996 CHEVROLET
199~ CAMARO Z28
ASTRO VAN ..............$18;995
Red .....••................. $13,995

'

c.onstruction alters ,...---Tenting tonight___..
entry to_fairgrounds

NEW

1996 CHEVY
CAVALIER

pageA2

Two dead, 111 injured when pipe bomb disrupts concert merrymaking

13402

1996 OLD. CUTLASS
SUPREME 2 DR.

Details on

Environmental success story • CS

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • July 28, 1996

•

1996 GMC
JIMMY

1996 CADILLAC
DEVILLE

(

Terror hits Olympics

614·992·6614
1·800·837·1 094
CHEVROLET • OLDS • CADILLAC • PONTIAC • BUICK • GMC • GEO

Prograrra

• • \1

tmes

,308 E. MAIN ST. - POMEROY, OHIO
-----~/

POMEROY .. Singer family
:reuni on. Sunday. Senior Citizens
Center. Pomeroy.

. •, ' o' • •
•

•

DON TATE

WAS$2 0,~~W

'. ""

Pro -Football Hall of Fame • 81

An American
tradition lives
• Feature, C1

encc.

·.

•·

' r .. .., .. . .:.
A\.\
_ .. ,

_:: . ,I Students

Extraordinary Eggs: Michael
Leifbeit, grand champion; Josh
Hager. teserve champion ; Tara Rose,
honorable mention.
Food and Fitness for Fun: Jamie
Drake, grand champion; Lisa Snodgrass. reserve champion; Summer
Johnson, honorable mention.
Food, Friend and Fun: Theresa
Baker, grand champion; Melissa
Guess. reserve champion.
Meals for Easy Living: Dorothy
Le1fbe1t, grand champion.
Meals Outdoors: Joseph McCall.
grand champion; Allison Hays,
reserve champion; Jessica Arnon,
Brad Baylor, Amy Lee, honorable
mention.
•
Mini Meal Magic: Carrie Wiggins.
grand champion; Jenifer Chadwell,
reserve champion; Stacey Ervin, honorable mention.
Quick Breads: Riki Barringer,
grand champion; Carrie Crow,
reserve champion; Erin Gerard,
Alyssa Holter. Christina Westfall.

The Community Calendar is
IJublished as a free service to nonIJrofot groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
ealendar is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers nf any type.
Items are printed as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
·specific number of days.
.FRIDAY
RACINE .. Hymn sing featuring
Gabnel Quartet Friday, 7 p.m. at the
Fellowship Church in Racine. Pastor
.Charles Bush welcomes all.

..... • -..po
'"- ·JI •

'•~ •.

'

Friday, July 26, 1996

4-H food projects
·receive honors
More than 80 4-H food projects
were judged Tuesday at lhe Senior
Citizens Cemer. ,
The judging wf;' done by Jan
Burleson, 4-H advisor, Thunnan;
Judy Clark, 4-H advisor, Gallia
Coumy; Becky Culberlson Family
Consumer Science Agent, Gallia
Coumy; and Joyce Brown, Expanded Food and Nutrition agent of
Athens County.
Grand and reserve champions,
and those receiving honorable mention on their projects were:
'
Adventures with Food: Jessica
Boyles~ grand champion; Jenifer
Chadwell, reserye champion; Amanda Gregory, honorable mention.
All American Foods : Billee Pooler, grand cjampion; Barbara Smith,
reserve champion; Ashley Hager,
honorable mention.
Around the World with Food:
Amy Smith, grand champion; Jessica Amott, reserve champion; Bethany
Cooke, honorable mention.

• .,...,.

-

Comm.unity r~llies to help pastor,
wife overcome church destruction
---I

By KEVIN KELLY
Timee·Sentlnel Staff
"/ ·
BIDWELL - If faith is whAt's
needed lo rebuild a church, that will
be enough for Harry and Carolyn.
Fannin.
·
,
In the aftermath of the fire that
destroyed the On Fire for God
Church on Mount Olive Road, an
outpouring of support from the' community, other churches and strangers
have fueled the Fannins' hopes that
lhey will again have a building to
house their ministry.
"I don 't have the money to buih!_
a new church. but God ii God . and I
believe it will be done," said Harry
Fannin, the church's pastor.
Despite sorrow over the lire that
Carolyn Fannin likened to the loss 01'
a family member, the Fannins have
continued their non-d'enominational
crusade without the benefit " f a

'

building.
Two days after the lire. the Fannins and their congregation got permission from the Galli a County Sheriff's Department to hold open air ser,
vices at the church site, with a tree
slump serving as lhe pulpit.
"We had SOJTIC people who just
started wmi ng lo church and they've
been troupers,'' Harry Fannin sa1d.
"They wondered why we couldn 't
meet there .
"I came 10 the church after.J!le tire
and they were waiting on me, and
that helps keep lhe hurt going away.
If anything. it's strengthened our
belie I in the Lord," he added.
Harry Fannin, who's ministered
for 21 years. said that while everything - including the church bell on
the 144-ycar-old building - wtis lost,
items that help them keep their faith
ahd the church together have come in

steadily.
A tent donated by the Young
Marine League of the Tug Valley now
shelters lhc congregrati on. while
Mount Zion Missionary Baptist
Church has gi,ven them songbooks. A
spare Bib,e was given to the Fannins
by another pastor; Mount Zion and
King's Chapa! churches hav~ scheduled a benefit spngfest Aug. 17 at
King 's Chapel ; Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative allowed them to
hook up to a new jJole at the churc~
site: and bake sales sponsored by the
church have brought needed fu nds to
its coffers:
"People
didn 't know came up.
bought Items and didn 't take them
l~aving l'!em for resale ." Harry Fan~
ntn expla.med. "That 's how the Lord
works."
The Fannins, who met and mar(Contlnued on A2)

we

.. -·

Good Morning
Todey'sCtm.-~
12 Sections. 14 Pages

Calendar
ClassiPec!s
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries

D3·7
lwut
A4
A$

Soorts

Bl-8

Weather

Al

Column s
Jack Anderson
Chuck Roeyb
Dorothy Sayrr
Sam Wilson
Jim Sands

M
A4

C3
84
Cl

Ohiv VaUcy Publhhina Co.

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