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                  <text>Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

.Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thuraday, August 22, 1

Questions answered about Health Insurance Act
' I

By ELIZABETH NEUS
provide you wilh coverage no matter word "portability" implies someGllllllttt News Senlce
how many jobs you had beld in that thing they don't really mean. The
coverage itself is not ponable, you
WASHINGTON- Heallh insur· period.
ance coverage became a near-sure Q: Caa states change these require- cannot carry it with you. You'll have
to take what your new employer
thing for 25 million Americans IDtllts?
Wednesday, the day PresidentOinton A: A state can shonen the eligibility gives you. What is portable is your
signed into law reforms gumnteeing requirement - for instance, requir- eligibility for it.
that people can change jobs without ing only nine months of continual Q: Does this law belp small busi·
employment ralher than 12 - but nesses or the selF-employed?
losing coverage.
A: Yes. Self-employed workers will
Here are answers to some basic can't make it longer.
be able to deduct even more of their
questions about the Health Insurance Q: Who would benefit?
Portability and Accountability Act, A: An estimated 21 million Ameri- · health insurance costs from their
passed earlier this monlh by Con. cans now denied coverage for pre- income. !aXes. Currently Iiley can
gress:
existing conditions could get insur- deduct 30 percent. By 20061hey'll be
QUESTION: What does tbe aew anee. Another 4 million stuck in jobs able to write off 80 percent. The
they don't want but stay on to keep deduction will be phased in: in 1997
law do?
ANSWER: It offers government bealth insurance could change jobs the deduction ·rises to 40 percent; to
45 percent in 1998; 50 percent in
prQtection for workers in danger of freely.
losing insurance, such as those wtio
Tbe biggest beneficiaries would 2003; 60 percent in 2004, and 70 perhad illnesses before !hey started new ~ working Americans who could cent in 2005.
Small businesses that have trouble
coverage and who cannot get insur- change jobs and keep coverage no
buying insurance because of their
ance as a result. It also helps people matter what
wbo lose coverage for such illnesses, Q: Would It help people without size can no longer be turned down by
called pre-existing conditions, wben lnsuranee?
, insurance companies. The law
they change jobs. ·
· A: That depends on why they don t requires insurers to sell to companies
Q: How does tbe law offer protec· · have it. If it's because of a pre-exist- wilh between 2 and 50 employees.
lion?
ing condition, !hen yes. If it's because Q. Does the law provide any
A: PClQple with a pre-existing Iiley can't affo!d it or their employer options for people who aren't hapmedical condition diagnosed within doesn't offer It, then no. Insurance PY with traditional bealtb insursix monlhs before their new insur- compan1es may be reqmred to sell to ance plans or HMOs?
ance plan takes effect would not be people, but lhey're not required to A: Republicans were successful in
getting a pet project known as medcovered for that condition for the first make the plan affordable.
12 months. But they would be cov"It does not address the question ical savings accounts included in lhe
cred for it after lhat and for as long of lhe uninsured, so tbere 's more bill. Companies wilh 50 or fewer
as Iiley kept their insurance.
work that certainly lies abead," White workers and lhe self-employed will
People could buy insurance on ijouse Press Secretary Michael be able to test MSAs from · 19972000.
!heir own (not through their employ- McCurry said Tuesday.
The accounts, similar to individer) as lonll as they had insurance Q: I already bave insurance. Wbat
ual retirement accounts, pay for roulhrough their job for at least 18 happens to my premium?
months. They also must have A: If you have group coverage, prob- tine medical expenses and come wi.th
exhausted coverage under COBRA, ably nothing as a result of this law. If . high-deductible policies to pay for
a federal law lhat allows them 10 keep you have individual coverage, the serious, unexpected medical prob!heir insurance for a short time after issue becomes more complicated. lems. Those who choose to use them
leaving a job. They also cannot be eli- Studies done before the law was contribute between bS-15 percent of
gible for coverage under any other passed predicted increases of the amount of !heir deductible each
health plan, such as a spouse's or par- between 2 percent to 30percent. Indi- year, and can allow the money saved
ent's.
vidual premiums go up between 8 to accumulate from year to year.
Individual policies for catastroph-_
Insurers would have to renew pen:ent and 15 percent a year anyic care would have deductibles of
policies as _long as lhe premiums are way.
paid, unless the policy holder com- Q: What happens to my insurance
mits fraud .
If I quit or lose my job?
Q: What If I do temporary wort or A: If you can afford it, you can keep
am a job hopper?
"
it. Insurers would be required to sell
A: If you have a pre-existing condi- coverage to anyone who had employlion, you would not lose coverage er-based coverage for at least 18
because you changed or lost jobs. months and has used up COBRA
You would get credit for time worked coverage.
on jobs held for less than 12 months. Q: Do I get to keep tbe same cov·
And once you had worked 12 months erageand health plan when I move
straight, an insurer would have to to a new job?
A: No. Insurance experts admit the

between ·$1,500 and $2,250, with
maximum out-of-pocket expenses of
$3,000. For families, the deductible
.would range from $3,000 to $4,500,
wilh out-of-pocket expenses limited
to $5,500.
The pilot program would end
with lhe year 2000, anless Congress
votes to keep it going. Anyone who
starts an MSA would be allowed to
keep it.
Q. Does tbe law help people witb
chronic or terminal illnesses?
A: The law will allow people wbo are
paying for long-term care expenses
lhemselves to include !hem as a
standard itemized medical deduction
on their income tax returns beginning
next year - if lhe expenses amount
to 7.5 percent of their adjusted gross
income. People who cash in !heir life
insurance before they die - an idea
gaining popularity among the terminally ill - will not be taxed on tile
prooeeds as they are now.
Q. Wbo will pay for tileR new tax
provisions?
A: The new deductions and lhe
MSAs - tax breaks that result in $20
billion in lost laX revenue to the treasury- are paid for by closing some
tax loopholes, including one that provided a tax deduction for loans attributed to corporate-owned life insurance policies.
Q. Wben wUI tbe new law take
effect?
·
A: The law itself will become effective on July I, 1997, allhough people
can begin collecting credit for time
worked with a pre-existing condition
immediately. Some states may want
more time to develop plans to gllllfantee coverage for people wbo want
to buy insurance on lhek own. In
those states, the law may not talce
effect until 1998.
The MSA provision will become
effective on Jan. I, 1997.

Reds edge·
Atlanta 3-2
in NL action

•

I

, I'

I

'We'll all benefit'

.-

Weber.

,.

•

1995 ••• ,
CHEROKEE
4 DR.

1995
GEO
TUCKER

V-6, auto., l air cond.,

4 cyl., s speed, air
cond., PS, PB, AM/FM

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Ground was ceremoniously broken Thursday morning on the new
Great Bend Industrial Center 'corporation in southern Lebanon Township
in Meigs County.
Approximately 80 people attended the ceremony held in a soybean
field located off State Route 338 near
the William Ritchie Ohio River
bridge. The location was marked by
a sign proclaiming it a future industrial site.
The company. owned by Jim
Kessinger of Oak Hill, will include a
: trucking company and specialize in
· metal handling, trading and storage,
· according to general manager Ed
: Carr.
Kessinger owns a trucking company in Oak Hill that will be moved
to the Great Bend site.
Meigs County Economic Development Director Julia Houdashelt
: introduced dignitaries including

cassette.

ONLY
12,000 MILES

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IAL

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cruise, caaaette.

V-6, auto., air
AMJFM stereo, CD,
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PDL,

MUCH

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MOREl

1995 FORD
MUSTANG

1995 PONTIAC
FORMULA

Model Home Vie.win&amp; Houn I:00 - 5:00 p~n.
Tue.· Sill. or by appoinlment.

automatic,

V-6,

cond., AM/FM cassette, tilt, cruise,

-RED I

T·TOPS

Y.-8,

automatic,

conditioning,

AM.IFM

c:aaette, PS, PB,
POl, power 1881;
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MOREl

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conditioning, AMIFM
ca..-tte, PS, PB,
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1995 FORD
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350 V-8,

I~DUSTRIAL

"This is a bright day for us, a
bright day for Meigs County,"
Kessinger said.
"This is the first step in a journey
of many," he said.
Carr c~mented : ''I'm excited
about the opportunity to create jobs,"
adding that holding a job is often the
first step in improving a community's
family values.
It is estimated that approximately
I00 people will be employed at the
facility.
"We hope to be l,lOOd neighbors,"
he said.
McDade, a Meigs County native,
said the facility will be good for all
of Meigs County.
"We're standing here in south
Portland, but I see Racine, Syracuse,
Pomeroy, Harrisonville, all of Meigs
County. We'll all benefit," he said.
Cremeans told those present to
look for less government , smaller
government, and more self-reliance.

Dur·able
goods·

B END

BREAKING GROUND - The first industrial
venture In Meigs County'a Great Bend area got
undirway Thursday with a groundbreaklng cer·
smony attended by approximately 80 people,
representing local, state and federal governments, bualne1111 and other Interests. From
left are American Electric Power Gallipolis District Manager Ron McDade, Point Pleasant real·
"It's good for Meigs County." he
said.
"I feel the Sixth Congressional

G EN

r LH

tor John Wiseman, Home National Bank Pres. ident Tom Wolfe and loan officer William
Neese, corporetlon owner Jim Ke18lnger, U.S.
Rep. Frank Cremeens, corporation general
manager Ed Carr, Meigs County Economic
Development Director Julia Houdashelt and
State Rep. John Carey.

District's future is much brighter
than it has ever been." Cremeans said.
"The hest days arc ahead."

Chillicothe Transit S~stem ~huule
can be reserved by calling the headquarters. 17 4-2215. There wi II be JUSt buses ..will pi ck' up''and drop of(citione public and one handicapp&lt;;d- zens at parking Jots al the Super
accessiblc entry to the site, which Kmart Center and the Pickaway-Ross
Vocatimial Center.
opens at 3:30p.m. Sunday.
"We ' re also looking at additional
Both Sulzer and Barnhart stressed
the importance of car pooling and. off-site parking and shuttle services ..
even better. using a special shuttle Barnhart said .
Barnhart said he 's happy with the
service to the site.
While cars can be parked on the site and the plan s, but stressed the
left and right hand sides of North importance of people using the shut·
River Road , areas closest to the site tie locations. " It 's for their own con will be reserved. "We' re trying to venience."
One person who will hcnelit from
keep in mind those with special
needs and the elderly," Barnhart the Clinton trip is Democratic consaid.
gressional candidate Ted Strickland.

Kyger Creek station employees
·injured in switch-gear malfunction
Two employees of the Kyger Creek station of Ohio Valley Electri c Corp.
at Cheshire were airlifted to the Caheii-Huntington Hospital Burn Unit in
Huntington. W.Va .. Thursday after a switch-gear malfunctioned.
Brent Love, 30. Carman Drive, Gallipolis, and Jim Slone , 46, no address
available, were listed in good condition today, according to a hospital
spokesperson
Kyger Creek station manager Ralph Amh~gcy said that the mal funt&lt;tinn
was caused when a switch-gear failed, creatin)l a llash.
·· )
Amburgey said that the injured were within the vicinity of ihc hrc~kcr
where the malfunction occurred, which created a great deal of heat.
Both of the injured were immediately transported to Cabcii -Huntington's
burn unit for further evaluation.

stop
idea draws
fire in Ohio

~aarge

Blindness offers no barrier
Visually-impaired Reedsville youth recognized
for accomplishments in field of artistic creation

PB, PW, PDL,
seat, red.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Being legally blind and doing
outstanding art work hardly seems
compatible. but Shawn Marcinko
is proving that it can be done . In
fact, done very well.
In recognition of his accomplishments in the ans. he was presented the R.A. Hom Outstanding
Achievement Award last week in
Columbus, one of two students in
tbe state to be honored in the area
of an .
Several of Shawn's paintings
were included in a display at the
Concour5e Hotel , where the recognition program took place.
Sixteen students with disabilities enrolled in regular schools
were recognized by 1he Ohi o
Department of Education and the
State Superintendent's Advisory
Council for Special Education in
seven areas: academics, ~ · athletics, community service, employment, extracurricular activity, and
independent living skills.
In announcing the ~wards, John
M. Goff. Ohio's superintendent of
public instruction, said that tbe
winners "(!emonstrate the qpalities
required for success in school -

1995 FORD
TAURUS SE
V-6, auto., air cond.
AM/FM cassette,
cruise, PS, PB,
PDL, power seata.

UAIIIIIIIMMII

IUCim

.e ..

:IIU'

(!MIIlt SNet11futi·'P-

BRIIIO YOUR LAWif CHAIR A1ID :UJOY
THE SOUIIDS OJ' TIUt
BIG BElfD COIIIIUinTY BAJm
AT 6:30 P.M.

J

'

..

perse verance, commitment and
enthusiru;m .' "
"These arc the best learners in
Ohio." commented the superintendent.
"This is a time to recognize
exemplary collaboration in integrating more children with disabilities into the regular education
environment," said Goff.
The son of Mr.lmd Mrs. Joseph
Marcinko of Reedsville has a
genetic visual impairment called
rod and cones disorder, and is
legally blind.
His vi sual acuity is 22/40, and
he is very light sensitive.
At Eastern High School, Shawn
is enrolled in what is called cross
categorical classes.
"TIIat," he explains, "means
taking regular subjects, but not as
much of a work load."
Shawn bas a reader-guide wbo
assists him with a few of his class·
es each day. Next week, he will
begin his sophomore year at Eastem. Next month he will turn 16.
Shal"~ says that as he gets Ql~­
er, be finds be·is better ~le to dis·
tinguish "contrasts in color,
although not shades, some shapes,
although not ~nough to identify

persons or objects, and can make
out letters if they are enlarged."
With the exception of lhree
years, third through sixth grades.
Shawn has attendeJ school in the
Eastern Local School District.
Those three years he went to special classes for the visually handi ·
capped at the University of Rio
Grande.
- He has always had an interest in
art. according to his mother.
"Everyone else would be
out playing ball. and he would be
inside drawing - motorcycles,
cars. trucks, the thing s that boys
like."
Most of Shawn's art work has
been with acrylic paints ~nd pencil. His interest now has extended
into model cars, which he constructs and then paints.
Mrs. Marcinko is quick to
praise Shawn's art teacher at East·
em, Lolita Morrow, who encourages and challenges Shawn and
then provides opportunities for his
work to be displayed.
It was Morrow who nominated Shawn for the Southeastern
Ohio Special Education Resource
Center arts award in the spring. At
a ceremony held at the Ohio Uni·

ACHIEVEMENT IN THE&lt;ARTS- Shawn Marcinko of Reedsville
received the 1996 R.A. Horn Outatandlng Achievement Award at
ceremonle1 held lilt week In Columbu1. He waa one of two In
Ohio to receive recognition for art work. Hare ha dlaplaya a aeH·
portrait In acrylic and a JMncll aketch of Sacrwd Heart Church.
versity Inn in May, he was singled
out for special recognition for his
achievement in the arts and presented an engraved plaque.
Earlier, the teacher had entered
some of Shawn's work in an art
show in Kentucky.
Accompanying Shawn to
Columbus last week for lhe Ohio
)

•·

Carr said work on the site. which .
was purchased from American Elec tric Power, will begin soon .

Chillicothe mobilizes
for. Clinton
'
whistle stop slated for Sunday

By JOHN D. McCLAIN
interest rates to keep inflation at bay ~~~~~~~~ ..... ~YNNDUCEY
Asaoclated Preas Wrlt•r
~
if t!t~ ;conOf,DJ_.~.!'tin.l'!~ to grow
-Chillicothe Gazette
WASHINGTOJII ·t-:-' 'Ordei'S~.I.\l i''ll ~lilly. ~r next mtl!tmg is Sept.
·. The presideni's visit to Chillicothe
U.S. factories for big:ticket dulilble 24.
should go off wilhout a hitch if resigoods rose 1.6 percent in July, the
Although there was an increase in
dents lend a hand and take advantage
second advance in three months. orders for motor vehicles, it was offof public transportation, planners
Demand increased for all major cat- set by a large decline in shipbuilding
say.
egories except transportation, which - and tanks. Transportation orders have
With the formal announcement
was unchanged.
fallen in three of the last four months.
that Clinton's train will stop near the
The Commerce Depanmem said
Excluding the transportation catformer site of the Fiesta Drive-In
today orders totaled a seasonally egory, orders jumped 2.1 percent, the
Sunday night, Chillicothe Mayor Joe
adjusted $172.7 billion, up from fourth consecutive advance.
Sulzer led the· cry for manpower to
$170.0 billion in June.
Orders for electronic and other
help prepare for Clinton's visit and
Many analysts had expected a 0 .5 electrical equipment posted the
crowds to attend Sunday's event.
percent gain after a 0.2 percem drop largest gain , up 4.7 percent after a
"I take geat pride and pleasure in
a month earlier. Orders had shot up strong 3.9 percent advance in June.
announcing to all of Southern Ohio
4.2 percent in May.
The increase was led by communi·
that this Sunday. Aug . 25. for the sec·
· Orders are considered a key gauge cations equipmj.nt.
ond time, the president will be back
of the nation 's manufacturing sector,
Orders foflndustrial machinery
in Chillicothe," Sulzer told a crowd
which had been in a sluggish state for and equipmem and for primary met·
at lhe new Ross County Democratic
most of the year. Other than July and als both rose 2.1 percent. And orders
Party Headquaners at 36 S. Paint St.
May, only March posted a gain in for nonmilitary capital goods exclud· percent increase in June .
Sulzer's news was greeted by the
1996, a 1.5 percent increase.
ing aircraft jumped 3.6 percent, the
The backlog of unfilled orders cheers of a packed house.
Continued .gains could mean second straight gain.
increased I percent after advancing
"We need 200 volunteers. We
increased production and more jobs.
These orders often are a barome- 0.7 percent in June. It was the lOth need you here on Saturday," Sulzer
Many analysts beli&lt;vc the ovcrull ter of business plans to expand and increase in the last II months.
said. "We ask everybody to bring
economy will slow during the second modernize and have been a major
A growing backlog suggosb busi- your fri ends and your family."
half of the year from a torrid secqnd source of economic strength during nesses may have to increase producVolunteers will do "everything,"
quarter. when it grew at a 4.2 percent the current expansion.
tion facilities and manpower to meet including answering phones and disannual rate .
Reflecting the weakness in ship- demand.
tributing tickets, county Democratic
Although they did not act earlier building and tanks, orders for military
Shipments also advanced , a 0.7 Party Chairman Tim Barnhart said.
this week , Federal Reserve policy equipment plunge,d 36.5 percent. percent gain that erased a 0.4 percent
The event is free to the public, but
makers arc committed to raising This volatile category posted a 26.4 drop in June .
tickets arc required for entry. They

Andcrlm 1\k WindoWI

V-6, auto~ front &amp;

Kessinger, Carr, Meigs County Commissioners Fred Hoffman, Janet
Howard and Robert Hartenbach ,
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce President Horace Karr, Meigs
County Community Improvement
Corporation President Paul Reed,
U.S. Rep. Frank Cremeans, R-Gallipolis. and American Electric Power Gallipolis area manager Ron
McDade.
Houdashelt said the Meigs County Board of Commissioners. in cooperation with the chamber of commerce, communily improvement corporation and AEP, have been studying the site as a potential industrial
location for three years.
"Job creation doesn't happen
overnight," she said.
Kessinger directly credited Cremeans for his help with the project.
"It might never have happened
without his aid," he said, also commending lhe olher dignitaries for their
assistance.

Gains in factory orders
spur hopes for 'growth

&amp;....,... . • Stanley Doon

1995
MEICURY
VILLAGER

GREA T

Ceremonial groundbreaking welcomes initial tenant
of Great Bend Industrial Center Corporation site

~

•countlrY Edition"

Model Home Located at
lntersedlon of Rts; 7 &amp; 33
Pomeroy, OH 614-992-2478

35 cenll
AG1nnett Co. Newap~~per ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, August 23, 1996

2 Sections, 12 Pages

A GIFT FOR KATHRYN- Thla restored 1839 Model B John~~
Deere tractor wu a gift from Dale Hart to hla wHe and first ~
appeerwd In the July 4 pal'ldl It Racine. During the fair It waa ,
faatured In the Antique Fann Equipment Club' a Display. Green }·
with yellow spoke wheela, the tractor waa restored by Dallas -~

4z4

FAMILY HOMES INC.

•

Vol. 47, NO. 79

PS, PB, PW, PDL, Pwr.
seat, tilt, cruise, casa.

• 2&amp;6 Ealerior Wall._ 16ln. On Center
• Annstronasolarian.Fioor111e
• Mlrillale Cablneu
• 8 Foot Celltna
• 2d0 FloOr Joint, 161n. On Center
• 52 Olllon Water Heller
ril ~1 .
·
• Shaw Carpets
~
• Delta FIIICels
CGMPOIII ASSURED.
• Muter T·lock Vinyl Sldina With Liretlme Wamnty
• 25 Ye. Wamnty Asphllt Shlnlla
• 10 Year SlntCiunl Wlll!lllty On The Home
Our Prkes Are The Lowest In The Area.

MOstly CIOIJOY tonlijiiit;
chance of ahowera
thunderstorms. Lowe
the 6os. Saturday, partly
·cloudy. Highs In the BOa.

en tine

AFew or Oar Home Standard Features
0

Pick 3:
6-4-5
Pick 4:
7·1-4·3
Buckeye 5:
4-6-7-16·21

Sports on Page 4

Meigs land transfers posted
The following land transfers were Deweese to Brenda L. Saunders,
recorded recently in the office of Letart;
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene
Deed. Frank H., Judy. Keith M.
Hamilton:
and Darrell Lee Krautter, Sheila D.
Deed, Edna M., Edna Mae Ables and Larry R. Patterson to Larry R.
to James K., James Keith Ables, Sut- and Sheila D. Patterson, Chester, .622
ton, 2 acres;
acres;
Deed. May Bonnaud to May L. 1'4.- _ Deed, Frank H.• Judy, Keith M.
Bonnaud Trust, Scipio parcels;
and Arlene Krautter, Sheila D. and
Deed, Anita J. Metheney to Jim- Larry R. Patterson to Darrell Lee
mie R., Jim R. Metheney, Salem Knutter, Chester;
parcels;
Deed, Judy A. ,Brooks to Lucanis
Deed. Robert L. and Deborah K. M. Brooks, Columbia;
Lawson, Michael D. Sr. and Macie K.
Right of way, Marvin Lambert to
Salser, Rutland parcel;
Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative,
Deed, Jerry R. and Donna J. · Salem, 1.149 acres;
Aleshire to Kenneth E. and Freda I.
Right of way, Dan and Kim JarWilson. Syracuse;
dan to SREC. Columbia, 5.973 and
Deed, Robert C. and Hazel M. 5.768 acres;
Grate to same, Salem parcels;
Right of way, Mark A. and NanDeed. Ernest L. Damewood, cy S. Grueser to BREC, Bedford,
deceased, to Calhy Smith Crow, 11.59 and 1.55 acres;
Syracuse;
Right of way, Stanley R. and LauDeed, Ernest L. Damewood, ra Starcher to BREC, Rutland, 2.54
deceased, to Oris L. and Patricia acres;
Smith, Syracuse;
Right of way, Linda J. Frechette to
Deed, Charles W. Jr. and Beulah BREC, Bedford, 24.989 acres;
G. Cornell to Barry and Melinda
Right of way, David McDonald to
Smith, Sutton;
BREC, 67 acres;
Deed. Owen and Lora DameRight of way, Carol Cline to Tupwood to Frank Herald Jr.. pers Plains Chester Water Distric~
Chester/Orange tracts~
Olive, 78 acres;
Deed. Flossie Hysell to George 0 .
Right of way, Todd H. Reitmire
and Dorothy E. Turner, Rutland;
and Kim Cremeans to TPCWD, BedDeed, Donald •Ill! Lenora McK- ford, 7.433 acres;
night to same, Pomeroy;
Right of way, Neil and Julie MayDeed. Wayne W. Little Jr. to nard to TPCWD, Letartsville, 1.06
Debra Little. Pomeroy;
acres;
Deed, Kenneth E. Newland to
Right of way, John and Sherrie
Glen R. Bissell, Chester;
Roush to TPCWD, Orange, 10.50
Deed,. Jarrod and Leigh Hill to acre;
Terry L. and Darla Jo Tucker, Letart,
Right of way, Johnny L. and Sher1.5695 acres;
rie Roush . to TPCWD, Orange, 78
Easement, Guido J. Girolami to and 58 ~~:res;
Ohio Pl)wer Company. Pomeroy;
Right of way. Raymond M. Miller
Easemen~ Jennie Bowles to OPC,
to TPCWD, Orange, 4 acres;
Rutland;
Right of way, James and Connie
Easement. Joseph A. Wilson and Osborne to TPCWD, Orange, 27
Maureen Hennessy to OPC. acres;
Pomeroy ;
Right of way, Pauline Wolfe to
Deed, Delbert J. and Laura E. TPCWD, Letart. 61.65 acres;
Mitchell to Thomas E. Mitchell,
Right of way, Frank Herald Jr. to
Lebanon ;
TPCWD, Orange, 26.211 and
Deed, Albert R. and Macie 131.2801 acres.

Ohio Lottery

Department of Education recognition program were his parents, his
sister. Mary, also visually impaired,
and his grandmother, Winifred
Marcinko of Long Bottom.
Shawn was the only Southeastern Ohio student to receive a 1996
R. A. Hom Outstanding Achievement Award .

CHESAPEAKE IAPJ - A proposal to park hargcs along the Ohi o
River would damage the shoreline
and create too much noise, city and
Lawrence County official s said .
Kanawha Ri ver Towing. of Point
Pleasant . W.llit .. has applied for permiS sion to park 90 empt y barges
along the shoreline in Huntington , '
W.Va., ac ross the Ohi o River from
Chesapeake.
''I'm opposed to it ," Mayor Jimmy Justice told The Herald-Dispatch
in Huntington lor n story published
Thursday.
" I worked on the ri ver for 10
years and I know the ktnds of damage those barges can do. There 's
noise and dust and bank erosion," be
said .
A tel ephone message seeking
comment was left at Kanawha
offices.
The Lawrence County commissioners last week voted to request a
·public hearing be held on the application.
" I don 't lhink it;ll stop with empty barges," Commissioner Carl Baker said. "It may .start as a parking lot
for barges. but it can become a loadi~g facility or a repair facility over
ume.. We should ob;cct now."
)

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Commentary

P&amp;9e2
Frid._y, August 23,1996

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friday, August 23, 1996
•••
• OHIO Weather

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••'

The Daily Sentinel American retirees build.bridges in Mexico
'Bwl!wfid in 1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fu: 992·2157

.2r

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

"""«'

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

If,.,.,.. .,..

to tN Hlitor .,. • r'cD'II'M. n..y mu.f M laa tMn 300 word.. A
.ubj«f to editing 1nd muM 1M •9*1 Md Include .m~,... •rrd tMephone number.
No untign«tletter8 will,_
Uftwa 1/Jould bflln gOOd ,.,,,, Ndreufng
iJJIJft, not,.,.~

pub/,.,_,

Driving on the other side
of the (political) road

By Jack Anderson
and Jan Molter
AJinC, Mexico-- More than two
years after the controversial NAFTA
agreement lowered trade barriers
between the United States and Mexico. at least one American import is
thriving here: people.
A large expatriate community of
Americans has put down roots in this
scenic town on the shores of Lake .
Chapala, where the cost of living is
low and the golf season never ends.
Not long ago, many Americans
here flaunted their wealth, ignored
the local culture, refused to learn
Spanish and had little contact with
the local populace exceptio employ
them as maids and gardeners. That
has changed ·· radically, and for the
better.
U.S. Embassy officials told our
associate Dale Van Alta during a
recent visit that American expatriates
have made a concerted effort in the
last decade to reach out to their Mex-

ican neighbors.
"Sure. some still don'! learn to
speak Spanish, siiiCe they're part of
mostly English-speaking communi-

•
"Everybody
has a home there,"

laughed Guanajuato's governor.
Vicente Fox, in an interview with us.
"Beautiful homes in San Miguel.
Very strong, sophisticated prominent
people come_ there. I meet there with
By Jack Anderson (U.S.) Ambassador (Jim) Jones, with
Lady Bird Johnson and with Ted
and
Turner. You come down to relax . You
buy ·an old home there, and you
Jan Molfer
rebuild it. "
The largest group of Americans
ties , but that doesn't mean they don "t living outside the United States ..
help out where they can, and attend about 40,000 .. are clustered in the
Mexican festivities and functions," a corridor between Lake Chapala and
U.S. Embassy officer in Mexico City Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest
told us .
'
city wbich siiS 35 miles to the nonh.
All told , there are between
Authorities cite three primary rea350,000 and 400,000 Americans who sons for the migration, which has
live part time or permanently in , been increasing in recent yean .
Mexico. They cluster in certain aneali: ' 'There ·is the weathar. which is
the coastal areas of Baja California; internation)lly recognized 'as among
the resort community of Cuemavaca the most perfect on Ean h. The Lake
outside ,Mexico City; and the high Chapala-Guadalajara area enjoys
mountain vijlage of San Miguel de year-round temperatures in the 7Qs,
Allende in central Guanaiuato state. , broken only by* scattering of after·

..

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~iN'T

D4HDCRaC{

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - Reading left to right, President Clinton 's stlnature&gt;
on three campaign-issue bills- minimum wage, health insuran ce and wel fare - are emblems of the New Democrat message he is taking to the VOl·

~F\IL,

Fo.LK$?

crs.

He is aiming at the political center.
One bill was of Democratic design. one was a Clinton compromise, one
a largely Republican measure he is signing to redeem an old campaign
promise, despite welfare strictures he deems too harsh.
His campaign now claims them all as pan of his agenda, while Republicans complain that he seeks credit for what they did in Congress to overhaul the welfare system and broaden health care coverage.
"The only play in Bill Clinton's playbook is fake right and run left," said
Haley Barbour, the Republican Pany chairman. But the Republicans have
yet to perfect their defense . Bob Dole. who has been calling Clinton a copycat, said at the GOP convention that he was surprised the president hadn''!
shown up there.
But with the White House as his political stage, Clinton can and is putting
his stamp on the bills Congress passed in a pre-convention burst of legislation, Republican evidence againsl Democratic com plamts that the GOP
majorities couldn't deliver.
"A minimum wage increase, portable health care, pen sion security, welfare to work opportunities -that's a plan that's pulling America on the right
track," Clinton said of his bill-signing sequence, White House ceremonies
Monday through Wedne~ay.
The health care bill came in the middle, appropriately enough. since thai's
where Clinton found himself on the issue ~fter the oft-year election landslide that put Republicans in control of Congress. It entitles people to keep
coverage when they change or lose jobs, even if they have preexisting medical conditions.
But it does not deal with the broader coverage Clinton had sought in his
own health care bill, after threatening in 1994to veto any measure shon of
universal health insurance. He got no bill at all, but the Republicans got a
big-government issue they turned against him in the elections that followed.
Republican presidential nominee Bob Dole stuck 10 that track, say ing the
bill the president signed could have been law three yean ago but for his insistence that partial steps would not suffice. Dole said what Clinton wanted
then was "an overdose of government control on health care," and Republicans said he will seek it again should be get the opportunity.
"There 's more that must be done ," Clinton's spukesman. Mike McCurry said. He said health cate would be an imponant facet of a second tenn
agenda because the bill doesn 't deal with the 40 million Americans who now
are uninsured.

{ __,.. 1

·

Clinton stuck to the positive. "With this bill we take a long step toward
the kind of health care reform our nati on needs," he said in signing it on
Wednesday.
In hi s 1992 campaign, Clinton told his ralites that he would "end wel fare as we know it," presenting himself as a new kind of Democrat. But he
delayed a White House proposal on that front, and the Democrats lost Congress before it came to action.
Twice, Clinton vetoed Republican welfare measures tied to other issues,
including curbs on the budget for Medicaid, which provides health care for
the needy. Then they sent him a single issue version. and he accepted it. In
signing it, Republican Barbour said, he renounces "the Democratic Pany 's
fundamental principle that the right to welfare should be a government entitlement."
The measure required work for welfare, as Clinton advocated, but it also
fimits benefits without the safety net provisions he wanted for children, and
it denies most aid to legal immigrants who are not U.S. ctltzens.
Liberal Democrats wanted another veto. They got only Clinton's promise
to go back to Congress to changes in provi sions he found objectionable . He
won't get them unless Democrats wrest back control. a long shot prospect
at best.
,
The bill increasing the minimum wage to $5.15 an hour in two steps, the
first about one month before the election, was the clearly Democratic measure among the three, and as he signed it, Clinton praised labor and liberal
groups that worked for passage. Among them arc some of the people who
opposed him on welfare. and there could be ripples of resentment at the
Democratic National Convention.
But this is the president who deeljU"Cd the era of big government to be
over. And the three-bill parlay fits the message.

,

EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears; vice president and columnist
for The Associated Preos, has reported on Washington and national pol·
ilks for more than 30 years.

Berryls World
•

., nHd your Mlp to fix it so you can't get any
dlity .ruff on the lntemet. •

•

Nannie L. Fox

Then there is the low cost of liv.
ing. which is at least 25 percent
cheaper than in.the United States. The
difference was much greater 20 years
ago. but t~e gap is closing . That's
panty because the influx of Amencans has caused housing and rental
prices to rise.
Nevertheless, Social Security and
pension checks stretch much further
in Mexico. In the communities along
the lake , Americans can live high off
the hog on S2,000 a month. which
buys a beautiful three-bedroonl home
with a lake view, a swimming poOl
and domestic help. Live-in maid.s.
cooks and gardeners average about
$5 a day. Socialized health c,are: even
· in quality hospitals in Guadalajara,
comes to 1ess than $250 a year.
Finally, there is the culture. Americans who choose to live here these
days are more adventurous and less
cloisl'ered than their predecessors.
Many ret irees appreciate a societ y
that tends to revere il$ .elders.
, Stephen Cole, a local resident and
president of the Lake Chapa! a Society, says that the increasing interest
in reaching out to this culture has
done wonders for American-Mexic1n
relations.
Sure, he admits, ex patriates still
congregate on the same golf courses
and eat at the same restaurants. ~y
come to the soc iety headquaners to
" among the 20,000
.
browse
English
books in the lending library. and
2,000 videos without subtitles.
But more ,}'e. learning Spanish
than ever, ajlij many are "sponsoring" Mexic~ families they discover
in need.
Such concern and outreach h3s
had positive ripple effects in a country whose people often view Americans as arrogant invaders and aggressors, as they're often portrayed in
Mexico 's history books.
•

.

~

Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are ...-iters for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

Campaign a brand new ballgarrie
By William A. Rusher
What a difference a week can
make 1 As August opened, the Republican delegates preparing to go to
their convention in San Diego felt, as
Cokie Roberts rightly remarked afterward, as if they were going to a funeral. Bob Dole, their inevitable nominee, was more than 20 points behind
President Clinton in every poll, with
no evident means of catching up , let
alone winning .
Moreover, if the media had their
way, the convention would feature an
all-out battle over theit:.favorite topic, abortion, with blood all over the
place. Then Pat Buchanan and his followers would walk out of the convention hall and either absll!in from
voting in November or actually try to
launch an independent Buchanan
candidacy. By the time the conven·
lion adjourned, Bob Dole would be
little more than a grease spot on the
floor.
·
·
It didn 't work out quite that way.
First, several days before the convention opened. Dole unveiled a
breathtakingly bold set of economic
proposals,· including a 15 percent
acro~s-the- board tax cut, a $500-per·
child tax credit , and a 50 percent cut

in the capital gains tax. This instantly shifted the focus away from the
side issues in which ·he had allowed

William A. Rusher
the media to mire him (Is tobacco
"addictive"?) and squarely onto the
issue the Republicans want to debate:
the size and role of the federal government, and how much it ought to be
allowed to wrest from the American
pe\}ple in the form of taxes.
Then, as the convention opened,
Dole surprised the daylights out of
everybody (including, let it be said,
me) by choosing Jack Kemp as his
running mate. Everyone assumed
that Kemp was out of the question
because he would constitute, during
the campaign, far too vivid a contrast
to the saturnine Dole, and would, if
elected. be far too likely to tum the
vice presidency into a bully pulpit for
unapproved ideas.
But Sen. Dole simply rose above
such negative considerations. No
doubt the grim poll results played a
part in his decision , but he also displayed the self-confidence and innovative flair of a born leader. His

selection of Jack Kemp was the
political equivalent of an Inchon
landing.
It absolutely transformed the convemion. Kemp brongs to the ticket a
series of attributes (vivacity, imagi nation, compassion) that perfectly
complement Dole's own (maturity,
steadiness and realism). It's a whale
of a combination.
The convention itself was
superbly planned and run . The prochoicers were kept firml y in hand,
and settled for a kindly nod .
Buchanan wound up not even getting
:to speak. but ruefully recognized his
own miscalc ulations and .wisely
endorsed Dole. The media all but
wept with frustration .
Meanwhile, making a brilliant
best of the charade that modern conventions have become si nce the
advent of presidential primaries. the
GOP staged one fascinating event
after another: Colin PoweJI's thoughtful explanation of why he is a Republican and will vote for Dole; Nancy
Reagan 's emotional talk and the
videOiape of her husband 's great
days, which brought tears to many
eyes; Susan Molinari's pert, family -

oriented keynote speech; the soaring
preacherly oratory of young blac)l
congressman J.C. Watts; Elizabeih
seemingly effortless 201 Dole's
,minute stroll through the audience,
making point after point without· a
note in her hand ; and finally Bob
Dole's own deeply impressive acceptance speech. He will never be a natural orator, but with themes 1/.S profound and appealing as thi: ones he
_invoked in that speech, he dllcsn 'I
need to be.
All in all, it's hard to imagine a
better-run convention, or a more dramatic turn-around in Republican fortunes. Now the campaign will begin
tn earnest. Mr. Clinton will undoubtedly look more formidable after his
own convention and renOmination,
and even today he still leads (albtit
'far more narrowly) in most polls. .
But is it possible that Dole and
Kemp could actually win this election' You'd better believe it.
William A. Rusher is a Distin·
guished Fellow of the Claremont
Institute for the Study of Stal~­
manship and Political Philosophy,
and a writer for Newspaper Enttr·
prise Association.

Value of enchantment in daily life
By George R. Plagenz
What we are missing in our lives
is enchantment, says Thomas Moore
in his new book, '"The Re-Enchantmcnt of Everyday Life ...
Enchantment is something that
delights, gladdens. captivates and
enraptures us. It is the opposite. says
Moore. '"of li vi ng a mechanistic life
that has lost its soul."
To be enchanted is to live in a
world with Wirinie-thc-Pooh and his
c~er-preseni t.:unipanion, Christopher
Robin . It is to be a fly__on the wall
when Christopher Robin has the
"sneezles" and to watch the frantic
activity of that day :
... They bundled him into his bed.
They gave him what goes with a
cold in the nose, and some more for
a cold in the head . ... '
They examined his chest for a
rash, and the rest of his body for
swellings and lumps.
All sons and conditions of famous
physicians came huriying round ala
run . They all made a note of the state
of his throat. ...
(The day continues in this fashion .
We next look in·on Master Robin the
following day.)
Christopher Robin got up in the
morning. The sneezles had vanished
away.
And the look in his eye seemed to
say to the sky, 'Now hOw to amuse
them toctar'r

Kurt Vonncgut suggests we bring
enchantment into our lives by believing in superstitions. In a commencement address, the novelist tells his

George If. Plagenz
audience of • gradual in~ seniors,
" Superstitions. like astrology and
palmistry, are good because they
make people feel vivid and full of
possibilities. "
Take someone born on Aug. 8. His
life seems drab. There is nothing for
him to look forward to. Then he reads
hi s horoscope: "A career in sales
could hold new appeal . Your warm
personality charms people. Taking
pan in community affairs adds to
your prestrge."
This had never occurred to him.
But ifit's written in the stars, maybe
there,is something to it. The future is
looking brighter already.
Born Dec. II? The stars have a
special message for you on this day:
"Evening is the best time to touch
base with a loved one and enjoy some
tender moments. Show your thoughtful side."
Now there's a prospect to delight.
Where 's the Aqua Velva?
· Moore, author of the best-selling
"Care of the Soul," also proposes
"rediscovering asii'Oiogy" as a source
of enchantment. Whether astrology is
true or not doesn 'I matter, he says.

Enchantment used to be the
trademark of childhood. That was
before we took the innocence and
wonder out of growing up. Today"s
ch1ldrcn resemble nothing so much a.'
adults in little bodies .
How many children today know
the story of Pollyanna. the 11 -yearold orphan girl who comes to live
with her Aunt Polly in Vermont and
changes the heart of an entire town
with her happy outlook.,
She does it by leaching the townspeople to play "the glad game." This
involves finding something to be glad
about in everything that happens.
When old Tom, Aunt Polly 's hired
hand, can't find anything to be glad
about, Polly reminds him he can be

glad because he doesn't have to
stoop so low to do his weeding :.
·"because he was already bent part way over."

The word Pollyanna is useiltoday
mostly in a di sparaging sense, refer' ring to someone whose irrepressible
optimism fails to take account of the
hard fact s of the real world.
Instead of warning of the dangers
of li\'ing in an unreal dream world,

1

~oliyan na ' s critics ought to be help·

mg to build a world that will again be
safe for the enchanted dreams o(
childhood.
··
George Plagenz is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
·

(f . ' .

[~:i~~~=]

•leolum~usl84·
I

•

I

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, W.AIIoclilfad p,... GrriPIIIcSNot

Nannie L. Fox, 79, New Haven, W.Va., died Wednesday, Aug. 21, 1996
in Holzer Medical Center.
Born Aug. 19, 1917 in Bluefield, W.Va., daughter of the late Henry C.
P,eery and Nannie B. Harrison Montgomery, she was a retired psychiatric aide
at Lakin State Hospital, and an auxiliary member of American Legion Smith·
Oapehan Po~t 140 of New Haven and Point Pleasant Moose Lodge 731.
She was also preceded in death by two husbands, James Rothgeb and Roy
E. Roush; a stepfather, C. C. Montgomery ; two brothers, James P~ry and
William Peery; and two sisters, Margaret Roney and Virginia Bonham.
Survivors include a daughter, Carolyn (Jerry L.) Keyes of Letart, W.Va.;
a son, William J. (Peggy) Roush of Pomeroy; six grandchildren and three
great-grandchildren; a brother, Henry C. (Marguerite) Peery of Hudson. Aa.;
and several nieces and nephews.
A memorial service will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday in the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, W.Va., with Rev. Art Lund officiating. There will be no
visitation.

Raymond E. Manley

W.VA.

Raymond E. Manley, 60, Middleport, died Tuesday, Aug. 20, 1996 at Veterans Memorial HospitaL
Son of the late Lawrence S. and Julia Marie Casto Manley. he was born
Aug. 8, 1936 at Hobson, and was employed by the Athens Mental Health
Center for 25 years.
·
He is survived by his wife, Selby McKinney Manley ; a daughter, Cathy
Haning; two sons, Joseph R. Manley and Kevin E. Manley; a sister, Rose
Mary Hysell; and two brothers, Roger Manley and Lawrence E. Manley, all
of Middleport. Also surviving are two grandchildren and several nieces and
nephews.
Services will be 3 p.m. Saturday in the Fisher Funeral Home. Middleport, with the Rev. Roy McCarty Jr. officiating. Burial will follow in the Mid'
dleport Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and
the reconl&gt;illw was 46 in 1952. Sun- ·7-9 p.m.
set tonight will be at 8; 18 p.m. and
sunrise Saturday at 6:52 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight...Clearing north. Mostly
cloudy with !ihowers and thunder·
storms central and south. Lows in the
upper 50s to the mid 60s.
WILBERFORCE (AP)- Central gesture.
Saturday... Partly cloudy south. State University's board of trustees
"They got to satisfy somebody,"
Mostly sunny north. Highs in the
has fonned a search comminee to Hudson said.
upper 70s and lower 80s.
lind a new president.
Ransier said it was an appropriate
Extentled fo~ast:
Trustees said Thursday the com- action considering the school's
Sunday and .Monday ... Dry. Lows
mittee will work with an outside con- indebtedness.
in the upper 50s to lower 60s and
sultant
to ~ompile a list of candidates.
"It's a revenue source and it's the
highs 80 to 85.
The committee will include two obligation of the board lo address
Tuesday.. .A chance of thundertrusiees, two faculty members, two those obligations," he said.
stonns. Lows 55 to 60 and highs 70
administrators, two students and one
As a representative of Barnes &amp;
to 75.
alumnus.
Noble College Bookstores was telling
Appointing the committee is the the board that Central State owes his
first step in finding a Sl!ccessor to company $490,000, the room went
interim president Herman Smith Jr. dark.
whom the university's new trustees
"The fuel bill is first on the list,"
fired after it became known that Cen- Ayers deadpanned.
tral State is about $8 million in debt.
That bill, apparently, had been
al mosquito nesting areas near the
The board fonnally rescinded the paid. Dayton Power and Light, which
lsons' home. Crews will return later authority of any previous adminis- provides electricity to the school, said
to kill more of the insects.
trator to write checks on the unive[- lightning strikes knocked out power
"There's an ongoing investigation sity's bank account. Sole control to the campus for about 15 minutes
to eradicate any and all breeding sites over expenditures was given to on Thursday.
in that neighborhood," Trapp said.
George Ayers and Anna Moore,
The lights came back on as Ayers
On Aug. 13, the depanmenl sent members of C~ntral State's emer- was telling trustees the U.S. Depan·
a letter to residents of the rural gency management team.
ment of Housing and Urban Devel"This is one step in trying to draw opment had authorized $250,000 in
neighbortiood about75 miles south of
Columbus, recommending they also a line between the old b\ljll"d and community development grants for
regime and the new ' b'oard and the university.
take steps to eradicate the pests.
The Ohio Department of Health regime," said Frederick Ransier,
Central State, 17 miles east of
en ·Thursday issued a public health board of trustees chairman.
Dayton, is Ohio's only state-supThe board also said any profits ported, traditionally black school. It
advisory warning residents to clean
up possible mosquito-breeding sites. generated by the university's football owes hundreds of thousands of dolDr. Peter Somani, state health team this fall should go toward the lars to vendors and faces expendidirector, said that from 1963 through school's debt. Athletic Director Ken tures of $71 million to replace and
1995, Ohio reported 780 cases of Hudsorl called the move a political renovate nine dilapidated dormitories
encephalitis - more than any other
state. Five of those cases resulted in
death.
Seven c&amp;Ses have been reported in
Units of the Meigs County Emer- Jenny Hall, VMH;
Ohio this year, with Brittany's the
6:50 p.m., Pine Grove Road,
only fatality. The other cases were in gency Medical Service recorded 12
Champaign, Cuyahoga, Fral.klin, calls for assistance Thursday, includ- Roger Dillon, St. Joseph's Hospital.
RACINE
Loram. Muskmgum and Wayne ing two transfer calls. Units respond9:01 a.m., Racine Fire Station, Joe
ing included:
counties.
Gray, treated at the scene.
MIDDLEPORT
Instances usually occur from midREEDSVILLE
4:58 p.m., Riverside Apartments,
August to mtd-Seplember. Vtc11ms
I0:03 a.m., Bahr Road, Charles
are usually under age 15 and average Melinda Justice, Veterans Memorial
Hines, dead on arrival;
Hospital.
8 years of age, Somani said.
7:28 p.m., State Route 248, Stan·
POMEROY
12:14 a.m., Butternut Avenue, ley Wells, .St. Joseph's Hospital.
RUTLAND
,
12: 19 a.m., Meigs Mine 31, Salem
·Portal, Marvin Wolfe and Max Whit54.50.
latch, Holzer Medical Center;
Fund-raiser canceled
Sows: steady to 1.00 higher.
The Meigs County fund-raiser for
5:09 a.m., Depot Street, Tammy
U.S. 1-3 300-450 lbs. 43.00- Democratic Congressional candidate Searles, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
47.00; 450-500 lbs, 47.00-51.00; Ted Strickland set for Saturday has
I: IS p.m.• Palmer Street, Dorothy
500-650 lbs. 51.00-5~.00. few 52.SO. been canceled due to President Cl in- McCloud, HMC;
8:05 p.m., Haning Road, Clara
ton's Chillicothe visit. The event will
Haning, O'Bieness Memorial Hospibe rescheduled.
tal.
Wute district board
Am Ele Power ........................42
The board of directors of the Gal Akzo .•~ ....................................511
lia-Jackson-Meigs-Vinton
Solid
AlhlBnd 011 .......................... .37~
Waste
Management
District
will
meet
AT6T .....................................54',1,
Bank One ...............- ............ .38'!. at the district office in Wellston on
Bob Ev•n• ...........................13'- Monday at 4:30p.m.
Borg-Wemer .................,......38'!.
Champion •......•....................... 20 Rutland Garden Club
Chinning Shop• ....................7'4
The Rutland Garden Club will
Cltv Holding ......................~ ..•.23
POMEROY
hold
an open meeting Monday, 7:30
Fede!al Mogul .......................17'4
Near
Pomeroy-MeBridge
Ge~~~~:······················ .........&amp; 8~ p.m. at the Rutland United Methodist
eta-2588
Coou,... .............................. n Church. All dubs inv·ited. Janet Bolin
VINTON
K-mlr1 ...................................10'.\
will present program on flower
Gallla County Dllplly Ylnl
Lindt End ...........•.................21'!. ll!"an gin g.
151MIIn8t.
Umited ...................................181
Ohio Valley Bank ...................35
One Valley .............................35~
People• Bencorp...................22
Prem Flnl ................................. 13
Veterans Memorial
Rockwell ...............................53\
Thursday
admissions - none.
Royal DutchiSIMIII ....... :...... 153'!.
Thursday
discharges - Darra
ShOMy'l ............................... ;-:.&amp;~.
,Star Blnk .............................. 78'4 Yahya. Middleport.
WBndv's ............................... 19'.1
Holzer Medical Center
They deftnHely hive their
Worthlngtort ..........................20~
Discharges Aug. ll - Hazel
pl-...bul
surely
lunellll
Herdman, Mrs. Thomas King and
sei'VIce
Isn't
one
of
them.
. Stock reports ere the 10:30 son, Patricia Monie, Prudence White.

!'Stormy skies·set to give
.!way to pleasant weekend

:By The Aaaoclated Preas :
' A cold front will push all of the
: stonny weather out of Ohio tonight.
:Just in time for the weekend, fore;¢asters said.
~ . Pleasant weather will be the rule
;on Saturday as a high pressure sys' iem builds into !he state. Afternoon
':highs will be comfortable, ranging
J:rom the upper 70s to low 80s.
~ The high will allow the dry and
;inild weather pattem to continue on
§unday. Lows Saturday night will be
~n the upper 50s to low 60s.
·· Temperatures should warm into
80s on Sunday.
::. The record-high temperature for
;!his date at the Columbus weather
.Station was 95 degrees in 1959 while

:lhe

Centrai .State launches
search for new president

.~oungster's death blamed

·:on case of encephalitis
i

PORTSMOUTii (AP) - A 7:1 ear-old Indiana girl pas died of
·encephalitis. apparently aftet being
;:tJiuen by an infected mosquito at the
"l.ucasville home of her great-grand:parents, a health official said.
:; Brittany Salem of Kokomo, Ind.,
3lied at I : 3~ p.m. Tuesday at ChitJlren's Hospital in Columbus. She had
:;t~een visiting Devon and Martha !son
.for three or four weeks, Mike Trapp,
:c!irector of environmental health in
:"SciOio County, said Thursday.
:_. The girl apparently was bitten by
;a treehole mosquito carrying La
;~rosse encephalitis, a viral infection
:Jhat inflames the brain, Trapp said.
~Symptoms usually stan to appear
~within three to 14 days of infection,
~ut the disease usually is not fatal.
:_-. On Aug. 2. Brittany started vom::iting and said she had a headache and
~ stiff neck. The next day, her grand· parents took her to Scioto Memorial
:.tJospital. She was transported to
&gt;Children's last Sunday.
::· Although encephalitis was sus::pected, it will be a couple of weeks
3efore authorities know for certatn
Jhe cause of death, Trapp said.
~ The Scioto County Health Depart~ent on Thursday eradicated sever-

~Od&amp;y'S

:::; COLUMBUS (AP) - lndianaJ:)hio direct hog prices at selected
~uying points Friday as provided by
;:jlc U.S. Department of Agriculture
~arkel News:
~ Barrows and gilts: fully steady,
:=:.tstances 50 cents higher; demand
::itoderate on a moderate movement,
~ U.S . 1-2, 220-260 lbs. 55.00··~6.50, few 54.50 and 57.00-57.50;
plants 56.00.57 .SO, few 58.00.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 48.00-

..The Daily Sentinel
!USPS JiJ.MI
,.bUohod every ollenoon, Monday

dlrouah

' Mioy, Ill Cout St. Po"""'l', Ohlo. by the

.QIIIo Yollov Publlllinl a.-~ Co.,
.........,.,-t.;. 4;769, I'll. 092-2156. Socond
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~

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•

Southern Board moves
on personnel matters
Route 124 open by Monday, meaning
buses may not have to make time ·
consuming detours .
In addition, the board approved
posting a reserve volleyball coach
position and approved allowing FFA
members to attend the national FFA

The Southern Local Board of
Education took care of last-minute
personnel matters before the 1996-97
school year begins next week during
a special meeting Thursday night.
The board hired substitute bus dri vers Charles Lawrence and Scott Hill
as full-time drivers due to transfers
and retirements, and accepted Melinda Nonnan, Heath Savage, Craig
Wright and Kristy Skinner as substi·
lute teachers.
The board had considered cancel ing a bus route, but declined because
it would result in· children spendin g
more time on the buses, said Superintendent James Lawrence.
It was noted that the state hopes to
have the closed section of State

convention .

Present were Lawrence. Treasurer Dennie Hill and board .members
Susie Grueser, Dave Kucsma, Many
Morarity and.C.T Chapman. Board
member Bob Collins was out of town
on a busine ss trip and unable to
attend.
The next meeting is sci for Sept.
23 at 7 p.m. in the high schoo l cafeteria.

Road closing scheduled
Meigs County Road 26 (Flatwoods) will be closed Monday and Tuesday
on the portion between State Route 7 and Pine Grove Road.
The road closing is due to state paving work on a new section of road at
Five Points that will reroute Flatwoods Road to Wipplc Road, said Mcig&gt;
County Engineer Robert Eason.

Dl NIRO

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(Published with permission)

KANAUGA DRIVE-IN
COLONY THEATRE

.

I'JIDAY TllfiU lltURIDAY
,IOHIURAVOLTA

n-...._____................-.'12
•
••

He also reiterated that it is not
realistic to expect recovery of all the
missing bodies. Another body was
found Thursday, bringing the total to
209.
The TWA Boeing 747 blew up II
112 minutes after takeoff from John
F. Kennedy International Airport to
Paris on July 17, killing all 230 people aboard. If it is declared a crime it
would be the most deadly criminal
act in U.S. history, surpassing the
' April 1995 bombing of the federal
building in Oklahoma City that killed
168.

Hospital news

Otll ~ IHOW7:10

.,..

area."

47

PHENOMENON

~-........_--T--"1'~...

the AP on condition or anonymity,
however, said the Times account
was "kind of exaggerated in saying
we're down to two options, either a
bomb or a missile."
"All three of the theories, including a mechanical accident, are still
being considered. None have been
, ruled out. No great comer has been
turned in the investigation," the official said.
Asked about the report this mom·
ing on the NBC "Today" show,
National Transportation Safety Board
Vice Chairman Robert Francis said
" I don ' t know anything about
PETN."
"I'm not going to comment on
speculation" by unidentified sources.
he said. "We're going to continue this
investigation . .. . We need more evidence .... If it is a criminal act, there
are people who are expert in this

SMITHTOWN , N.Y. (AP) Traces of a chemical residue that may
have come from a bomb or a missile
were found on wreckage fragments of
TWA Aight 800, a source close to the
investigation told The Associated
Press.
The traces were "certainly consistent with a bomb or missile ,"
according to the source, who spoke
on the condition of anonymity Thursday night.
The source cautioned. "but
whether or nqt a bomb or missile
brought down that plane at this point
we don't know for sure."
A senior law enforcement source
in Washington told the AP that investigators still haven 't ruled out other
scenarios, including the possibility
that a mechanical failure caused the
explosion that downed the plane.
The sources were reacting to a
report in today 's New York Times
that said investigators found critical
chemical evidence that an explosive
device detonated inside the passenger
cabin. The newspaper said chemists
at the FBI lab in Washington found
traces of PETN , a component of
some plastic explosives .
The Times said the investigators
were not yet ready to declare the
TWA disaster a crime because they
were not certain whether the explosive was a·bomb or a missile.
The senior law enforcement offi cial in Washington who spoke with

Announcements

Stocks

:II---··-··---..-·-··-·$UU
52----·--·- - SIIIS-'6
-o..MoMolpC..,
13 _ ____
•.:••_.,., •.;..,.....- ••S»-25

Residue trace re·news
speculation TWA jet
was blown out of sky

Squads answer 12 calls

livestock report

5 ~::::::: : :~: ::::::::: : : :·: : : : : :i;S:S

, m
·
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PA. .

(f

SUJBCIUi'TiO" RATU

By The Associated Press
•
Today is Friday, August 23. the 236th day of 1996 There are 130 day~ ;
left tn the year.
·
•
Today'sHighlightinHistory:
:~
On August23, 1927 Italian-bo
h.
.
·I
~
.
•.
m anarc tsts Ntcola Sacco and Bartolomeo 1
anbberyzeiU (wSere exandecu!~ •n Boston for the murders of •wo men during a 1920 :
ro
acco
•anzetu we ·nd ·
•
"!fichaei S. Dukakis.)
re vt tcated in 1977 by Massachusetts Gov. :
On !his date:
·" ·
·I
In I 754, France's King Louis XVI was born at Ve .
11
In 1785, U.S. naval hero Oliver Hazard p
rsaJ esbom. · S th. ',
Kingstown, R.I.
erry was . 1n ou •
In 1838, one of the fi~ colleges for women M
H I ok F
Se .
·
· S th Hadl
• ount o Y e e e mmary tn ou .
ey, Mass., graduated its first students.
·

•

·IMgnsfield le2• I~

BrConloror--

Today in history

•

IToledol84• I

noon downpours during the rainy season .

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.,

PGo13.

FRI., SAT., SUN.

KURT RUSSELL
IN

ESCAPE FROM L.A. R
AND

WOODY IWI"I SON,
8IU IIURIIAY IN

· KINO PIN PQ.13
4-e-1011

Instead of following set
procedures, we always respect
1he Individual wishes of the
family.

CREMEENS
FUNEWHOME
949·3210

PROUD SHOWING OF AREA
~ at 4:00 ft.'*·
s~ 1ltitlt. iZ''"'
BRIKG YOUR ...W!f CHAIR AND ENJOY
TBB 801JifD8 OF TBB
BIG BBifD COMIIUIUTY BAND
AT 6:30P.M.

S«t.

�..........................~&amp;..............................~......~----~--~~--------~..---.--~~--.------~~----~· - -- -

Friday,
. August 23• 1996

The Daily Sentin..!}

·Sports

~

:on the NFL pre-season scene,

Reds ed·ge Braves 3-2 in 13
fraines; Pirates beat Astros
Atlanta Braves

And even after Barry Larkin's
solo homer in the 13th inning Thursday night gave the Reds a 3-2 victory over the Braves, Cincinnati barely had time to celebrate.
After beattn g Atlanta for only the
second time in 16 games and stop·
pm g the Brav es' six-game winning
streak, the Reds had an early-morning Jlight from Atlanta to Miami.
They were scheduled to meet the
florida Marlin s in a doubleheader
thi !.- afternoon
.. We 'II go down there and sleep
as late as we can, take the bus to the
hall park as late as we can, then get
d1e.» cd and play two more games,"
Cincmnati manager Ray Knight said.
But sc heduled starting times did·
1d mean much Thursday. The game,
slated to start at 7:40p.m. EDT, was
pushed into Friday by a rain delay of
2 hours, 26 minutes at the beginning
and four extra innings at the end. It
fi nally ended at 1:47 a.m.
Leading off the 13th, Larkin hit a
2· 1 pitch from Joe Borowski (1 -1)
uvcr the center-field fence, his 24th
homer.
" I was just trying to hit it hard
and get on base." Larkin said. "I did-

n 't think the ball would carry that
well."
Cincinnati snapped a three-game
Josing streak. Hector Carrasco (4-3)
earned the win and Jeff Brantley
pitched the final inning for his NL·
leading 34th save.
Nineteen-year-old outfielder
Andruw Jones hit two solo home
runs for the Braves off John Smiley.
Jones, who began the season at
Class A Durham, now has three
homers in his brief major league stint
and 37 for the season, which
includes stops at Double-A
Greenville and Triple-A Richmond.
"I was just trying to malce contact
on a good pitch," Jones said. "I had
two good pitches."
Marquis Grissom's leadoff double in the first pushed his hitting
streak to 26 games, second in baseball this season to 27 games by San
Diego's John Flaherty.
In other NL games. Colorado
clubbed St. Louis 10-5, Pittsburgh
beat Houston 8-6, Los Angeles
defeated Philadelphia 8-5 and Montreal rallied past San Francisco 5-4.
Rockies I 0, Cardinals 5
Andres Galarraga homered in his
first two at-bats at Coors Field, ·giving him 38, amtdmve in five runs to
take over the major league RBI lead
with 120.
Colorado swept the three-game

In AL action,

series and improved to 8- I against
St. Louis this year, including 6-0 in
Denvtr.
Colorado starter Roger Bailey (22) walked three of the first five Cardinals hillers he faced, but seuled
down for his first win since July 15.
Mike Morgan (4-7) gave up eight
runs in three innings.
Pirates 8, Astros 6
Houston tied a team record by hitting five home runs, but all of them
were solo, so Jeff King's grand slam
on Xavier Hernandez's first pitch
with one out in the ninth at the
Astrodome gave Pittsburgh just its
third win in 13 games.
The Astros went ahead 5-4 in the
seventh with home runs by Craig
Biggio, Jeff Bagwell and Bill Spiers
off Francisco Cordova.
Billy Wagner (2-1) all!! Alvin
Morman combined to load,;\Ke bases
before King hit his fifth catber grand
slam and second this seasbn. It was
his 25th homer.
. Marc Wilkins (3-0) pitched one
mmng.
GETS DOUBLE- TheAtlanlll BI'IIIIM' Marquis
fll'lt Inning of Thwlday night'• National League
Dodgers 8, PhUiies !!
game In Atlanta, where the Recl1 won 3-2 In 13
GriSBom arrive• at aecond baM with a IMdoff
Los Angeles center fielder Wayne·
double while Cincinnati eecond baSBtnan Brat · lnnlnga. (AP)
Kirby preserved the victory with one
Boone wahl for the relay from the ~laid In the
out in the nintb, the bases loaded and
the Dodgers leading 8-4. He made a
Alou was sidelined with a stom·
Pedro Astacio won his fourth
Los Angeles staked Astacio (8-7)
leaping catch againslthe wall to tum straight decision with the help of
to an 8-0 lead by battering Mike ach virus in the fifth.
Scou Rolen's bid for extra baseS into two-run homers by Eric Karros and
Jeff Fassero (I 3-7) scattered I0
Williams (4-12).
a sacrifice fly.
Raul Mondesi at Dodger Stadium.
Todd Worrell got his 32nd save hits to win his fifth straight decision.
Barry Bonds aggravated a hamdespite needing Kirby's help.
string injury in the third inning, and
Expo1 5, Giants 4
Sherman Obando replaced an ail· his consecutive games played streak,
ing Moises Alou and broke a 4-all tic currently at 1111 NL-high 3~~. is in
in the eighth inning with a solo jeopardy. H&lt;. was scheduled to
homer off Jose Bautista (3-2) as vis·. undergo an llRI e~am today, and his
iting Montreal rallied from a four- playing statls was to be determined
after that.
the
team
today.
run deficit.
matching a career-high by allowing
Rangers
II,
Twins
2
10 runs.
Texas leads the majors in hitting,
For the sixth straight game in its
didn
't need to swing the bat too
homestand, New York trailed by at
much
at the Metrodome. Instead, the
least two runs before its first bauer
Rangers
won by drawing a seasoncame to the plaie. The Yankees have
been outscored 21-1 in those open- high II walks from Minnesota pitchers.
ing innings.
Ivan Rodriguez hit his 43rd dou·
Gary DiSarcina, 0-for-27 lifetime against Rogers, hit a two-run pie, setting a major league record for
double during California's five-run most doul&gt;les by a catcher. He broke
the mark shared by Mickey
first inning.
90 CHM IWIR-...,...._ .._ .._,,_,
Cochrane, Terry Kennedy and Brian
Mariners 10, Orioles 3
4.3 V-6, llr cond., 5 apeecl. Sharp.
Jamie Moyer, released by Balti- Harper.
Ken Hill (14-7) pitched his si~th
more after the 1995 season,
improved to 3-0 against the Orioles complete game of the season. Paul
this season with a win at Camden Molitor of the 'IWins celebrated his
40th birthday by getting his 2,96Sth
Yards.
Moyer is 3-1 since Seattle got him career hit.
Blue Jays I, White Sox 0
fro!!' Boston on July 30. He took a
Toronto won its fifth in a row,
two' hit shutout into the ninth inning,
and left after home runs by Mike tying its longest streak of the season,
';
Devereaux and Brady Anderson, his in a game stopped in the seventh
inning because of rain.
38th.
,.._"""'~'"'"'-'-"'-~-"""'u:c.. -~ ·)_~:: . ·-;~·&gt;··,:~·;,~~-~.".\'~~The Blue Jays were batting when
Paul Sorrento hit his third grand
93 FORD EXPLORER 4 DR. 4X4.......................115,900
slam of the year, highlighting a sev- the game at Chicago was halted, and
en-run fifth inning. The Mariners it was called after a wait of I hour,
4.0 V-6, aulo. tl'lins., loaded wHh extras. Excellent wnd., 69,000
59 minutes.
lead the majors with nine slams.
miles.
Erik Hanson (Il-l 5) pitched a
Orioles manager Davey Johnson
91
FORD EXPLORER 2 DR. SPORT 4X4 ........... $9995
was hospitalized with an irregular three-hiller. Jacob Brumfield hit a
4.0 V6, 5 speed, air cond., stereo, cassette.
heartbeat. His condition was not seri- sacrifice fly in the sixth off Alex Fer90
FORD F150 4X4 XLT LARIAT .........................$8995
(See AL on Page 5)
ous, and he was expected to rejoin
300, 6 cyl., auto. trans .. II~. cruise.

By The A11oclilted Preaa
Jim Miller replaced Neil O',Donnell, who replaced ·
Boomer Esiason.
All three 9uarterbacks have something to prove
to01ght tn their final exhibition games.
Earlier this week, Pittsburgh Steelers coach Bill
Cowher announced that Miller, a three-year pro who
has never started an NFL game, had won the starting
JOb over Kardell Stewart and Mike Tomczak.
· "I don't know if there was any real clean-cut winner," Cowher said. "I don't think it serves any purpose
to be specific because really it was a decision where
all three had justification to say that they could have
been the guy."
Miller has tonight's game against the Eagles in
Philadelphia to prepare for the Sleelers · season opener Sept. I at Jacksonville.
. O'Donnell, Miller's predecessor in Pittsburgh,
s1gned wtth the Jets in the offseason and has put up
good numbers in tbe ftrstthree exhibition games. He
has completed 23 of 31 passes for 201 yards, but he
has yet to lead New York to a touchdown.
The Jets play at Oakland against the Raiders .
Esiason, whose departure from New York led to
O'Donnell's arrival, has struggled in Arizona. He has
yet to lead the Cardinals into the end zone, and they
are averagmg less than nine points in three exhibition
games.
·
Arizona visits the Atlanta Falcons.
"Boomer is a guy that's been very prod~~,~:tive in the
league," coach Vince Tobin said. "He's won games,
he's been to the Super Bowl. I tiJink the demeanor that
he brings to the huddle is very good for a football team
in the position we 're in. lhat hasn't had a lot of success on the offensive side of the ball."
The final exhibition weekend opened Thursday
night in Chicago, and the game between the Chiefs and
Bears was called off in the third quarter when a thunderstorm sent lightning crackling across Soldier Field.
Tonight's other games are Baltimore at Buffalo,
Detroit at Cincinnati, Miami at Tampa Bay, Carolina
at the New York Giants, Jacksonville at Denver, Minnesota at New Orleans, San Diego at St. Louis, Washington at New England and San Francisco at Seattle.
Dallas plays Houston at Orlando, Fla., and Green

p

constant grind. Now, it's gQing to be
tough to creep above. We'll find out
what kind of guys we have here."
Clemens (7-11 ) extended his
scoreless streak to 27 1/3 innings
before the A's scored in the ninth.
Pinch-hitter Matt Stairs tripled with
two outs, and pinch-hiller Terry
Steinbach followed with a single.
Clemens, who struck out II,
carne close to his 38th career shutout.
which would've tied Cy Young for
the team record. Instead, he's won
three straight starts for the first time
this year.
Mark Acre (0-1) relieved Ariel
Prieto to start the ninth. After retir·
ing the first batter, O'Leary homered
9ff the foul pole, only 302 feet away.
"Any other park other than Fen·
way and that ball stays · in and is
caught for an out," Acre said.
'In other AL games, Toronto edged
Chicago 1-0, California defeated
New York 12-3, Seattle beat Balli·
more 10-3, Texas topped Minnesota
11 -2 and Detroit downed Kansas
City 10-3.
Angels 12, Yankees 3
Kenny Rogers became the latest
Yankees pitcher to get roughed up in
the first inning, and wound up

414 SPECIALS

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. 89 FORD F150 4X4 XLT LARIAT ......................... $8995
302 V-6, 5 epd., air cond., IIH, cruise, PW, PL, dual tanks. Extra

Scoreboard

OTHER TRUCK AND CAR SPECIALS
Culiforni11 uc Baltimore:, I J~ p.m.
Oak land at New York. I:J~ p.m.
Toromo ac Olicogo. 2:05p.m.
Texas 111 Minnesota, 2 : ~ p.m.
Oecroil a1 Kan~ms Cicy. 2:35pm

Baseball
AL standings
E11sttm Division

l!: L 1'.&lt;1.

Iwn

'12 ~·

Nt:w York

. 67
64
59
........ 45

BaiiLRlllrt!

- llol&gt;l on
TuwniO

Oe tro1t .

59
64
69
tl2

-~71

5JZ
:'iOO
.461
.J:'i4

Ct'ntral Divlslon
CLE VELAND
16 l l .l98
Clm·agn
69 60 jJ5
Mm oe.wLa
6_\ 64 496
M•l'-"·aukee
KnnsasCny .

60 6R
.:'iR 71

469

.4~

!ill
5
9
14
27 'h

14 54

51S

... 6.S 61 5 16
.62 ()8 .4n
. . :'i ~ 68 .465

1

14 11

Thursday's scores

.617

Momreal .............. 68 58 .540
New York ........ ..59 69 46 1
. . ~8
..... .'i2

4~7

69
76

406

lLII
II
21
21 ":
28

C~nlral Dh·i~ion

Houston ...... ... ... ftM 60

. ~ .l l

S1. louiS

bO

.527

O.k:~.go ........ .... ... 6.l 62
CINCINNATI ..... 6."\ 62
Pinsb\lrgh .......... 54 1]

504

Y·,

.~

Y~

.425

D '•,

..... 67

Western Dh'lslon
:\9 .'i4J

San Diego ............. 70
Los Angeles ........ 67
Colorado ............... 66
SnnFrnnds,o ...... ~4

60 . ~2R
62 ..~16
71 4J2

2
W
14

10, S1. Lo\Jis ;'i
Pinsburah 8, Hous1on 6
Monntal :'1. San Frnncl$co 4
Los Anaeles R. Ph1ladelph1a :r;
CINCINNATI J, Allanla 2 (IJ)

Cl E VELAND 1H enh 1s u 1.1 -?L 7 : 0~
pm

Oakl:and (Wengen 6-8) a! New York
(Gooden 1 0.. ~ ) . 7 :t~ pm.
Cah(ornill tBosk.ie 11-6) at BoJrimcre
(Wells ~ -I I ), 7:JS p m.

Torontu (Hentgen 1.5-7) at Chica&amp;o
[8crc 0-1). 8 :0~ p.m

Teus (Qhvtr 10-5 ) ;u Minnesota

Keaale 3·6)
Kansu City (Appttr 11 -8), 8 : 0~ p.lfl.

Qf

Saturday's pmos
Scalllc ((Am'IOI\3 6-2} II Botton (EaM"ITT\Iln6-.1 ). I :O~p. m.

Milwaukee ( Karl 10-6) •' CLEVELAND (Oge:a 7-4), I :0!1 p.m.
California (Harri• 0-0) 111 Ballimore

p.m.

Toronto (Williams 1-1) 111 Chlcaco
(Baldwin !J-3), 7:0S p.m.

(Telahtder 1-4)- New

L 1'.&lt;1.

Thursday's scores

Tonight's games

O&gt;kh"'d

l!:

AIIOmla ............. 79 47

Col~

Seaule (Mulholland 1-1) ~ ~ Boston
tGo1don 9-61. 1 0~ p.m.
M;!;;,. ;w lo o:;: ( M~D o r. ~ !d !C !'!; ) ::.

(MUP IBil 16-8), 1:05

I1aJn

8

n

Boston 2 O:.kbnd I
Callfornu 11. Nl·w Yort J
Senule 10. -Bah•more J
DctT OII 10. Kansas City .l
Tell.U I t . Mtnnesotn 2
Tommo I, Ch1cago 0 !6 1nn.- rainl

( AJi!utltra6 - ~J . 8 - 0~ p.m.
Delron ~Sager 2-2 or

E1Sicorn Dhillon

8
16~
19

Transactions

'

Phil:wklph~&lt;L

Wuttrn Dh·is4on

TeA as
Scalllc'
Onk land
Cnhfomm

NL standings

Aorida .

l.l

New York at los Ansek•. 4:05p.m.
Philadtlphiol ;u San Diego. 4.0:'i p.m.
Montre.. l ill San Fran~:is~o. 4:0:'i p.m.
CINCINNATI 111 Florida. 4::U p.m.
S1. Louis a1 Hous1on. 8:0:'i p.m

Yort

(Penine 18-7). 7:33p.m.
Tuu (Pavlik 1._,6) II MinntiOU (Ro-

dri&amp;U" tl -10), BoO.! p.m.
Dc1roit (Oiivnt 7-8) al Karlus City
(Rosodo 4-l), 8:0.1 p.m.

Saaday•a..Seonle 0111&lt;11100. I:dl P'"'
MUwauke&lt; a1 CLEVELAND. I :05
p.m.

Today's games
OH: CINCINNATI (Conam 0-0 WK1
Jarv11

6·5 ) 11 Aonda (A. IJ1ttr 12· 11 and

Valdc5 ().I), 4:'0 p.m.
Ch i ~:a1 o (Tn1~:h stl 11 · 6~
( MIMktu~~o

m At lanta

I 1· 10), 7:40p.m.

Sr. l.oui1 (Osborne 10.11) Ill HOUIIOn
(Kik 10. 7), 8:0.'i p.m.
Pinsburgh (Lieber 5-4) :u Colorado
(Rilz 13-9), 9:0:'i p.m.
New York (Cl¥k 12-91 a~ Los Anae·
let {R. Martinez 9-6). 10 :0~ p.m
Philadelphia (Hunter 1-4) n1 San
Dieao (Tim WIHT~117 - 6) . 10: 0~ p.m.
Monlreal (M . Lril~r 7-10) :u San
Franciuo (Gardner 10-~ ), I0:05 p.m.

Saturday's pmes

Chi~aao

(Nanrro 12· 9) a1 Atlanla
( B~Iec~ 4-2). I :05 p.m.
St. Louis (Stonlemyrt 11 -8) a~ HD!.It·
101\(Reynold$ IS-6). \:0S p.m.
New York CWihoa 4-91 a1: Los Anae·
let (CandiCtlt• 7-9), 4:1M j).m
PhiladelphiA (8~e c h 1- 1) at Sa n

Oieao (Hamilton 11 . 7). 4:05p.m.
Monireal (PJ . M~inez 10-8) Ill San
FrlftC.itcO (Eifel 2- J), 4 :0~ p.m.
CINCINNATI (Salkeld 6-41 ~ Flori·

da (Brown 12· 10), 7:05p.m.
Pinaburah (Peten 1· 2) a1 Colorado
(Thonopon 6-8), S:M p.m.

' Sunday's pmH
ChieoaoaiAllalla. I: IOp.m.
Fill1lMutfl 11 Colonodo. ) :0~ p.m.

Auto racing
NATIONAL STOCK CAR RACING
COMMISSION : Upheld a $20.000 fine
•1ga in s1 Rich Burgus. crew chid for
Rkhard Ch1ldrtu RuclnJ. a nd dnver
M1ke StinDtr and :1 Sl:'i.OOO fine against
Barry Dodwn. crew chtef for Smith Rae ·
1ni!. :.nd driv~r M1kt Bl1ss fOf failing post·
rat:e IR5J'I(~" Iions.

Sedri c Clark orf waiven from the Oak·
land Ri!.idc:rs.

91 FORD RANGER XLT.......................................$5915

Hoo:key

5 &amp;peed, long bed, drivell great.

Nllli&lt;~nal

HockeJ Lr11ut
CALGAR Y fLAMES : N11m1.'11 Kevin
Conslanline IISSistanl coa~.:h.
DALI.AS STARS: Sianc&lt;J D Ricluinl
Jackman to a lhr~ - y~ar con1rac1 .
LOS ANGELES KINGS: Acquired
LW P~lr Klima h om lhe Tamp• Bay
lightning for a 1997 ..:ondilional draft

94 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX 4 D...........................$9950
Loaded. All options.

89 BUICK REGAL 2 DR.......................................$5995
V6, auto. trans., air. Sharp.

ch&lt;l i ~:e .

91 MERCURY TRACER 4 DR .............................. $5995

NEW JERSEY DEVILS, Traded RW
S1ephan!! Rich« to 1he Montreal Canadi·
em fOf 0 Ly~ Odek:in.
NEW YORK ISLANDERS: AJ""d
to t~nn s wi 1h C Claude l.aplif\lc.
NEW YORK RANGERS · Numed
R:.y C l~arwnter

.

89 GEO SPECTRUM 2 DR. HATCHBACK.......... $2996
4 cyl., 5 &amp;peed, new tires. Excellent condition.

5(001.

tk Mt.tincn.

SEAlTLE MARINERS: Si&amp;ned OF
Cl01udio Liv.:rriani to 11 min9t-leaguc con1~1 .

TEXAS RANGERS: Sianed 28 Wotren Morris.

Nal- .......

PHILADELPHIA PHfLLIES: Avoed

lo 1emu with 28 Mickey MotUDdjni on a
1hree-yur controcl . Placed C Mike
UebathD.I oo 1~ 1.5-day disabled li11. Recalled C Gary Bennel1 rrom Scranton of
the ln1ernaliontd Lenaue.

Basketball
Nalional -01\lall A-Jon
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS: SiJned
G Regie Qeory. Renounced 1he riilJIS lo

GO;nyiJollnson.

PHILADELPHIA 76ERS: Si&amp;ned c.
F Mi&lt;hlel Caae.

FootbaU
NatJonaiFooiiJoiiLaaw
CHARLOTre PANTHERS: Wai•ed
WRite . lora.
KAirsAS CITY CHIEFS: Rele.ued

K Bjora Nitnno.•

PHILADELPHIA EAGLES: Sianed
QB T.J. Rubley and 0 .Guy Mctnlyre.
Waived RB Vaua.t.a Hebron aad WR

G,.a Srnilh.
.
ST. LOUIS RA~tS: Placed LB lito ·
Matt on Injured n•erve. Claimed LB

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AnEMPTS EVASIVE MEASURES - Kansas
City'• Greg Hill (27) trie1 to elude Chicago
defendera Marty carter (23) and Vlnaon Smith
(55) In _,e aecond quarter of Thuraclay night's

NFL exhibition game at Chlcego'1 Soldier Field.
The conteat waa halt.cl In the third quertar
becauM of lightning. (AP)

NCAA total offense (297.97 yards
per game) in 1995. to prove tbe odd·
smakers wrong.
The senior passer from Torrance,
Calif., respects, but is nut awed bv
the Aggies. Sarkisian sees them a's
only the first hurdle to reviving a
BYU program that missed bowl
play for the first time in 18 years
after finishing 7-4 last season .
"Granted, they arc a very good
foot hall team. but they can't just
come up here and step on the field
and expect to beat us," he said. " It's
going to be a batt!~ . We· rc not overmatched by any stretch of the imagination .
" This· is our year," Sarkisian
declared. "I think it will show on
Saturday."
His targets arc all veterans, wide
receivers K.O. Kcalaluhi and Kaipo
McGu1rc and tight end hula Mili .
Kealaluhi pulled down 28 pa.,.,cs for
483 yards and three TDs last year,
while McGuire caught 24 for 35\1
yards and two TDs. Mili rinishcd
with three scores, 36 receptions and
440 yards.
James Dye, whose 21.\1-yard punt
return average l.cd the nation in J&lt;J\15,
also will get a shot at tight end. That
excites Edwards.
As a punt returner, Dye "is the
best in the counlry, perhaps the best
I've seen," Edwards boasted. "He is
cx~ tting when he gets his hands on
lhc ball. He can really make things
happen."
An experienced secondary and
linchackcr corps also returns for
BYU, hut the Coug;lfs have only one
defensive and two offcnSJvc slarti ng

U.S. female driver/owner

: ·· By MIKE RECHT
: , LOUDON, N.H. (AP)-Lyn St.
: . James has been selling standards for
: women auto racers for years, and
:·. she's.ready to do it again. She plans
•. to become the first woman driver: . owner.
:
"Drivers with any business acut :men want ·to be in'l:ontrol of t~eir
:· own destiny," she said.
• · "I've · formed a company, the
: ·business plan is in place, the finan; · cial projections are in place," she
t said during last weekend's IRL True t Value 200 at the New Hampshire
: International Speedway, ."1 hope to
; have it together by October."
. The IRL race at Orlando, Fla., in:
: January would be her team's first
; race.
.:
There have only been a handful of
\,. hands-on women owners in top lev~ el racing, and a handful of top level
: women drivers.
~
Owner Bessie Paoli won a Triple
• A championship in the 1950s and
: . Rose Wysard played a key role in a ·
~ . husband-wife Indy car ownership
:.team in the laic 1970s. Janet Guthrie
: is lhe only woman driver who
: ·reached the same heights as St.
: James, racing in three Indy 500s in
!.the late 1970s and finishing as high
•·as ninth.
: : There arc few others, and St.
::James hopes her new mcing role will
:speed the process for women.
:. "My te.am will have a female
~ focus, but it is not meant to be an all~female team," she said.

"There are other women drivers
competing world wide, " she said.
"I've already submitted four of
them as possible contenders for the
(IRL) rookie program.
"I've kind of designated myself
as being one who is open to that. I
read the results. I know there are just
·so many young girls and women passionate about this spOrt."
Although owners are more open
now to hiring women drivers, St.
James remembers the days when that
was oot the case. She knows the
struggles of any young driver, particularfy a woman.
·
"In 1988, when I decided to go
into Indy racing, lhere were probably few owners who would consider lP woman," she said. But Dick
Simon gave her the chance.
" If it wasn 't for him, I might still
be walking around looking for a
ride," she said. " It took until 1992
before we could get it together. I was
persistent. I was not going to give
up."
St. James, 49, won her first cham·
pionship in SCCA stock A in 1976,
was the first woman to cxc~ed 200
mph in 1985 at T~lladega, was the
first woman to win an IMSA GTO
race· and was the first woman to win
a road race solo at Watkins Glen.
She also has set several closed·
course speed fccords for women .
Racmg for Simon, she earned
rookie of the year honors in the first
of her five Indy 500 appearances,
fini shing II thin 1992.

night's Goody's ~QO al Bristol Motor
Speedway.
Everyone who races here understands that Bristol. which recently
changed its name from Bristol Inter·
· national Raceway, is a brutal comhination of speed and tight confines
with ~ .53~- mi!e , high- t•ank~d &lt;'On·
crete oval.
It's. a place where you can get

sailing along without a problem and
suddenly be ~aught up in somebody
else's accident.
"Sometimes you can focus as
hard as you want, and it doesn't
make any difference." Gordon said.
"You sti ll get caught up in things
hecause thev hannen so fast here il
-

- •• -.

-

"

0 '

'

By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP) - Baseball
players said no thanks to the owners'
offer of service time credit for all but
the 20 players who need it to become
free agenls this fall .
Owners planned to start deciding
their next step today, when their
labor policy committee holds a tclc phone · conference call. Randy
Levine. their chicr negotiator. is
expected to tell them that he can
finalize a deal only if owners agree
to grant full service time.
"All the owners have to do is say
yes to tbe deal negotiated by Randy
Levine ," said New York Yankees
pitcher David Cone, lhe AL player
representative. "Randy Levine said.

can catch you in a second. You've
got to take the good wi.tl!_the bad and
take what you get."
It seems like Gordon, the defending Wihston Cup champion, has
learned the secret of staying out of
trouble on the dangerous track. The
25-year-old driver has won each of
the
last two spring races at Bristol
The Meigs-Gallipolis varsity foot- steel bleachers ordered last spring
and
finished sixth last August.
ball game will be played on Saturday, have not yet arrived for installation.
all along service time wasn't going
It's
common practice for stock car to be a major issue. Now it's an
Officials plan to set up portable
Aug. 31 at 7:30 p.m. on Memorial
~~
drivers to rub fenders and bump and issue."
l&gt;leachers for the firsl home game.
Field in Gallipolis,
Union
bead
Donald Fehr and
Pressbox facilities will also be bang each olher on the few remainThe game was originally sched·
Levine
held
a
short
meeting Thursing short tracks on the schedule. But
uled for Fri"ay, Aug. 30, but the new makeshift for the first home game.
day,
and
Fehr
went
to
Boston to conthings can get out of hand at Bristol
tinue
his
series
of
player
briefings.
because of the speeds at the fastest
Talks
probably
will
resume
Monday.
(Continued from Page 4)
of the Winston Cup short tracks.
"The baJgaining process is mov·
"If you have the altitude you're
going to retaliate and get somebody ing forward," Levine said. "I think
nandez ( 12-8).
Thompson (1·2), who missed the
·naen 10, Royall 3
1994 season because of shoulder after,something happens, e_ventually we inched a little closer loday."
The llflion has said it won't accept
· · Justin Thompson, Detroit's No. I problems 1!1'1 was sidelined for .1\C81'· he 's going to get you back," Gordon
adealunlessitincludesfullcreditfor
pick in tile f991 dnft. ~ bis lim ly ll wccb this , year because of explained. "That just goes around the 75 regular-season days wiped out
major league victol)'. The Ti~.I'S · shoulder t~uble, pitched ·five and around and te8!S up a lot of race
cars and doesn't do anybody any by the l994-9S strike.
ended ~ir seven-game road losing , innings.
,
;:.
On the JIO§itive side, the union
streal. "
'
• . · Kansas City lost its fifth in a row. good.

Meigs-Gallipolis football
game slated for August 31

AL games•••

mores.

One bright spot there fi&gt;r A&amp;M,
though, is Jlankcr Albert Connell,
who led Aggics receivers last year
with 41 catches, seven or them for
touchdowns.

Players' union snubs owners'
offer of service time credit

as favorite
;to win Goody's 500 Saturday
By MIKE HARRIS
BRISTOL, Tenn. (AP)- Sometimes in racing you have to just steel
yourself to cope with the pitfalls.
"Chances are preuy good you're
going to come out of here with some
dents and donuts and some wrinkled
up fenders, but you've got to~ ~r(!
to win," said Jeff Gordon, who will
be among the favorites in Saturday

linemen back.
Edwards also Jacks seasoned running backs, which could mean added
pressure on a BYU passing allack,
ranked fifth nationally last yenr.
Only senior fullback Mark Atuaia
has any appreciable backfield time,
rushing for 374 yards and five touoll!t.t~~
downs in 1995·.
Atuaia will be pitted against an
Aggics defense that ranked in tbe top
10 nationally seven times in tbe pa.'t
dc~adc. Nine starters return this
year.
The "Wrecking Crew" has been
a key in Slocum becoming the scc ond-winningest Division I·A ~nach
after five br more seasons (6K-I S-2.
or 81.2 percent). Edwards is eighth
at 214-80-3, or 72.6 percent.
Still, Slocum sees the matchup of
Sarkisian against his secondary as a
"scary " prospect. Though he returns
·veteran corncrhacks Donovan Greer
and Andre Williams, sophomores
Toy a Jones and Rich Coady will start
at the safely positions.
"We ' re inexperienced in the sec·
ondary, and BYU is one of the best
teams in the country in checking out
your secondary," Slocum said .
A&amp;M:s offense also must prove
itself. Tennessee transfer Branndon
Stewart will call signals behind a
veteran line averaging 300 pounds,
hut the Aggics' running backs and
re~civcrs arc predominantly sopho-

Except for prospective free agents in need,

~ Gordon . tabbed

I

I ,
' I

By BOB MIMS
PROVO, Utah (AP) - R.C.
Slocum says Saturday's Pigskin
Classic against Brigham Young
might be the toughest test yet for his
"I've proved .myself .on a race
7-0
record in openers as coach of
track. I can get the job done," she
13th-ranked Tc~as A&amp;M.
said. "The credi~ility I've gained the
"There is a risk, especially going
last five years is going to help."
to play at our opponent's home staShe already has .one sponsor,
dium. BYU is a quality team and we
Lifetime Television, a cable network
have our work cut out for us, "
that is sponsoring her as a driver this
Slocum said Thursday.
year.
The Aggies, 9-3 last year, includ"'They renewed for next year,' she
ing an Alamo Bowl victory over
said.
Michigan, arc favored by a touch·
She needs "quite a few more, and .,
down over the unrankcd Cougars.
I'm also seeking investors," sbe
Still, Slocum rates the contest as a
said.
tossup.
The dual jo~ isn't new for her.
" Playing in Provo will be a heck
"I did this in 1981-82," w'hen she
of a challenge," he said. "I've said
wa8 racing in the IMS,A Kelly Ame(lime and time again, Texas A&amp;M
ican Challenge series. ~'I had to worwill play anybody, anytime, anyry about everything."
where.''
Ford w&amp;S her sponsor, and "Ford
LaVell Edwards, marking his
came to me and said, 'We think
25th year as the Cougars' head
you're trying to do too much. We're
going to keep your sponsorship and coach, insists he docsn 't mind the
early opener - the fir~t game of the
let you drive,"' she said.
1996 college football season - nor
With 15 more years of maturity
facing such a tough opponent.
and experience, she thinks she can
"Playing these kinds of teams has
handle it all now.
been the source of some of our greatShe was injured for the True Valest victories," he said, recalling a 21 ·
ue 200, but hopes to rcs~me racing
14 win over Notre Dame two years
at Las Vegas on Sept. 15.
ago and 1990's 28-21 upset of Mia" I, as an owner, have to focus oil
mi. "But then again, they've been
the IRL," she said. "I, as a driver,
•he source of some poundings, too."
can still make myself available to
Amo~g those setbacks were a 44drive something else," such as trucks
28 defeat by Florida State in BYU's
or touring cars.
Jirst Pigskin Classic five years ~go.
It was when she referred to her·
and a 65-14 blowout in 1990's Hoi·
self as an owner that her eyes really
iday Bowl - by the Aggies.
lit up.
Edwards counts on quartcrha~k
"It's a powerful position to be
Steve
Sarkisian, ranked third in
in," sbe said, and added, " It's lhc
right thing to do."

4 cyl., auto .. air, new tires.

Basoball
Amtrkan Leapr
BALTIMORE ORIOLES : Optioned
RHP Rid1 Krivd.a 10 Rochester of !he In·
kmational Leaaue .
CH ICAOO WHIT E SOX : Traded
RHP Luis Andujar nlkl RHP AUtn Hnllcy
to the Toron1o Blue hys for LHP Tony
Ca.~ lill o und INF Oomtn~o Cedeno. An·
noun,tld ,ij'tcl~Tnnnaltun of their ufflliauon wllh S'oulh Bend of the Midwe51
~.,(ague :t.l1he end of this sensoR.
MINNESOTA TWINS : Op t io n ~d
RtlP Sc011 Klin8enbeck 10 S;~ll Lnk~ of
the Pacific Const Leagui. Ra:alled LHP
Tr.viJ Miller from Sail Lake .
NEW YORK YANKEES : Claimed
INF Luis Sojo off waivers from the ScOI-

Bay is at Indianapolis Saturday night to end the e~hi·
bition season.
Chiefs 14, Bears 10- Kansas City was ahead 1410 in the exhibition finale for the teams and was credited with the victory.
The storm began at halftime and pounded the lakefront area for a half-hour before the game was
stopped. Players slipped and fell on a field soaked by
a storm thai featured loud thunder and lightning.
Referee Red Cashion finally sent the teams to their
locker rooms with 4:20 left in the third quarter, lind then
moments later was told by NFL officials that the game
was called off for the safety of the players and fans .
"Very simp!~, from my perspective, you can't go
back tf you err, Chtefs coach Marty Schouenheimer
satd. " If you make a mistake and there is a tragedy, you
cannot gc back and say I am sorry."
Bengals: Cincinnati linebacker Andre Collins ended his holdout and reported to the team.
The Bengals had offered a one-year, $770,000 contract and had t~e right of first refusal. No other tea~
made a competing offer.
Collins contended he was an unrestricted free agent,
but the team won I he arbitration case~ Collins beld ou1
in protest.
·
Collins, a seven-year veteran, started on!~ · five
games last season and wanted to go to a learn ·" here
he would start.
Eagles: Philadelphia signed quarterback T.i ·Rubley and offensive guard Guy Mcintyre, and walved running back Vaughn Hebron.
Rubley spent the exhibition season with the Denver Broncos before being released Monday. He played
with the Los Angeles Rams for the first three years of.
h1s career before spending the 1995 season with Greeit
Bay.
Mcintyre, who has .played in five Pro Bowls, started ·au 16 games for the Eagles last seaso·n after spend,
ing most of his career with San Francisco. He was
signed.to give the Eagles depth on tbe line after Tuesday's release of another former 49er, Steve Wallace.
Hebron made tbe Eagles as a rookie (ree agent in
1993 and appeared in all 16 games in that season and
in 1994. He missed last season with a knee injury.

BYU to .play No. 13 Texas A&amp;M
in
Pigskin
Classic
Saturday
St. James seeking .to become·

BoSox beat A's; Rangers pound Twins
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
A couple of days before the All. Star break. most of the talk around
th e Boston Red Sox concerned
which contending team might trade
for Roger Cleme ns.
After all, the Red Sox were 14
games under .500. showing no signs
of making a move and figured to get
a lot of offers for their ace.
Now, it's late August and
. Clemens is pitching for a contender.
. The team'? Those very same Red
Sox
Clemens came within one strike
of another shutout, and the surging
, Red Sox beat Oakland 2-1 Thursday
mght. their 17th win in 22 games. _
·Troy O' Leary hit a solo home run off
the right-fie ld foul pole with one out
in the ninth inn ing at Fenway Park
. for the victory.
Boston won its fouith in a row
and cl osed within 4 1/2 games of
, Chicago in the AL wild-card race. At
64·64, the Red Sox reached the .500
mark for the first time this season,
and postseason play is now definitely a possibili ty.
"We're happy to be where we're
at now," Clemens said. "But it's a

I

:

ChiefsJleat Bears 14-10 in
storm-shortened rehearsal

Fnday,August23,1996

In NL action,

By MIKE FLAM
Associaterd Press Writer
First, it was the rain . Then, it was
the rook1e. For the Cincinnati Reds,
nothmg ever comes easy against the·

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

dido 't reject the owners' suggestions
of how to structure the union's
option year in 2001, which wouldn't
contain a luxury ·tax. The sides
already have agreed there will be a
lax in 1'197, I&lt;J\IRand 19&lt;J\Iandthcre
""'" 't he a tax in 2000.

"We indicated uur position was
unchanged on service," Fchr said,
adding he lold Levine "we would
consider what they had to say about
the scwnd tax-free year. hut we were
disinclined to upset the previou•
.understandings."

·.····································L-..
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�'.

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, August 23,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

199~

· Friday, August 23, 1996

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

Quiz lets ·children know how insensitive they are ~
Ann
Landers
1995 , l..ol

Ar~Jelu

Tima S)TldK:&amp;IC and Cn:·

aeon

Syndtc~ou:

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Readers: I am on vacation,
but I have left behind some of my
favorite columns that you may have
missed the first time around. I hope
you enjoy them.-- Ann Landers
Dear Ann Landers: I am a mother
of three children and have had it up
to here with quizzes that are supposed to show whether I am a "good
parenl." My answer is " I am as

good a parent as I can be," and I
mean it.
My husband and I love each other
(the Rev. Theodore Hesburgh 's first
rule). We do things as a family. We
take an interest in our children's
school projects and activities.
We don 't spoil them with gifts or
privileges. They work for spending
money. They aren 't disciplined with
a strap. We use the "talk-it-out"
approach.
What then is my gripe' Simply
this: As they get older, they become
more surly, more irresponsible and
more di sobedient. They quarrel
among themselves, whine, sulk and
complain.
I used to enjoy doing things for

them, but now I find it 11either satisfying nor rewarding.
I know we are not alone, Ann.
Our friends tell us, " If you think
they are a handful now, just wait a
couple of years ." Maybe if the kids
would try a little harder, more parents would be able to answer "yes"
to that survey you ran ·- "If you had
it to do over agai n, would you have
had children?" Here 's a qui z for
them -- for a.change:
I. When -did you last hug your
mom without wanting something'
2. When did you last make an
attempt to .be especially pleasant to
your dad without asking him to fix
something?
3. Do you say hello to your par-

ents' friends and treat them with
7. Are you on time when Mom or
respect?
Dad offers to drive you somewhere
4. Do you take pride in your or pick you up? Are you )"here you
home, or do you leave yogun cups are supposed to be, or do they have
in the living room and the spills for to look for you?
someone else to clean up? How
8. When was the last time Mom
about the' yard? Did you leave your or Dad had to bring a forgotten
new football out in the rain all night? lunch or book to school? Do you
5. How about the car? Can a per- ever say thanks for lhts?
son sit down without getting stuck to
9. When did you last do what you
a wad of gum? Speaking of the car. were told without asking why or
when was the last time Dad had to saying, "Wail a minute " or "Do I
pull over to the curb or the shoulder have to?."
of the road because of the yelling or
10. Are you proud of your mom
fighting in the back seat?
or dad? Their manners? Could they
6. When did you last tell your · be proud of you1
mom that the dinner was good and
Please, kids, we love you. We
that you appreciate the effon she could have a wonderful time togethputs into cooking for you?
er, but it's a two-way streel. You

have 10 do your part. -- Florida Moqi
Dear Mom: Millions of eyes will.
see your letter and the quiz. It's sure:
to make many parents feel less
alone.
Your complaints are par for thii
course. It may also connect with a
few million kids out there who need
to shape up. Thanks for the input. •

Apostolic
Clnudl ot Juua Clutst AllotiGU&lt;
VanZandt and Ward Rd.
Putor: James Miller
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Evening·

By BILL ROBERTS
The Idaho Statesman
The way Bobby Ashley figures it, there arc
10,000 minutes in a week.
He's got about 12 of those to give his congregation at St. Paul Baptist Church in Boise, Idaho, a
message that will help them carry their faith through
the next seven days.
So he thunders, and occasionally weeps. He
pushes and sometimes chides.
There is a sense of urgency to his time behind the
pulpit.
"On Sunday, you've got to warn people," he
says.
·
·
But coming before a '90s congregation is different than preaching 30 years ago.
Ministers soon learn many in their flock have
short allention spans, are weaned on sound bites and
retain images beller than words.
They are finding congregations that don 't want to
be lectured to and that are likely to put up barriers to
a preacher who doesn't walk his talk.
No maller where a minister takes his sermon, it
better not veer far from the Bible. In an age when
even the faithful are cynical about their leadership,
the Bible still holds some authority for Christians.
Outward trappings of preaching are changing to
meet the MTV generation.
Traditional oratory - a minister preaching to his
flock - is giving way to sermons mixed with
videos, for example.
Take the Video Illustration Project of Idaho's
Mission Media. It uses modem technology to spread
the Christian faith.
·
Video Illustration hopes to have 50 video clips some original, some from file - ready in a few
months for national distribution . Hundreds more are
planned. The clips run from 30 seconds to three
minutes.
In one clip, Richard Gere is running the gauntlet
in "First Knight," a film retelling the story of King
Anhur. If Gere makes it through the gauntlet, he
gets 10 kiss the queen.
Boise Valley Christian Communion Pastor Montie Ralslin used the clip to underscore a sermon on
keeping your eyes on the goals in life.
"My question was, 'What are you willing to go
through for the goal of having Christ manifested in
your life?" Ralstin said.
Ralstin 's congregation strongly suppons video in
sermons. An overwhelming majority of the 350 who
auended said they wanted 10 see it continued on a
regular basis, he said.
GETTING THE MESSAGE OUT • Bobby Ashley pastor of St.
Baptist Church In
The changing complexion of congregations is Boise, Idaho,thunders, occasionally weeps, pushes and sometimes chides to get his
also producing preachers who spend just a few sec- message across to his congregation.
onds behind the pulpit, just long enough to read the
One ingredient missing from many sermons is guilt and condemnation.
Scripture. Thereafter, they may be bounding through the congregation,
patting shoulders or talking with the folks . People have shon allention People don't gel up Sunday morning to spend an hour being harangued for
leading an unwonhy life.
spans these days. You've got to keep them interested.
" We went through this period when we wanted to scare the hell out of
For pastors and rabbis, sermon writing follows a few basic rules. It usueverybody
so they would live better lives," said the Rev. Teresa L. Fry,
ally starts with a Scripture, with stories and analogies built around it.
Christian ministers will tell you that preaching needs to be Christ-cen- instructor of homiletics at Emory University in Atlanta, Ga.
" It 's gelling back to not preaching at people but preaching with peo·
tered. It's the point of the faith, after all.
pie.'
Sermons at synagogues draw from the Torah and the centuries of Torah
But no ma11er how it is said or who says it, the message must remain
commentaries by rabbis, though Dan Fink, rabbi of Congregation Ahavath
the
same, Ashley said. "We're telling people Jesus is coming back. Keep
Beth Israel in Boise, says sermons " that involve stories and are folksy
it
shon
and keep it simple."
people like the best."

Hope Bapllst C~un:b (So uthern)
Pastor: Richard Oliver
570 Granl SL, Middlcporl
Sunday school - 9:45a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.

College orientations are increasingly being held off campus
By JODI S. COHEN
USA TODAY
Sitting around a carnptir&lt; at 3 a.m.
doesn 'I sound like a way to start col,
lege.
Neither does rock climbing in
Wisconsi n or hiking New York 's
Adirondack Mountains.
But more colleges nationwide are
offering orientation sessions off-campus - more specifically, off in the
woods.
The optional programs, which are
as varied as the schools, complement
the more common on-campus activ-

ities of registration and tours.

---Family

Seventeen students from Miami
University of Ohio "bonded" in July
climbing mountain s in Devil's Lake ,
Wis.
"It made the campus seem a lot
smaller," says Katie Rook of Dayton,
Ohio. "It's 17 kids you already

made a Miami family that week."
Administrators are as enthusiastic
about the camp-like programs as the
st udents.
"You don't have as many people
wandering around feeling unconnected on the first day." says Joe Tolknow."
liver, dean of students at Skidmore
Miami 's $275 trip is among the College, Saratoga Springs, NY.
school 's five wilderness orientation
At Skidmore's four-day orientasessions. Other students backpack 30 tion in the Adirondack Mountain s
miles along the Appalachian Trail .or 220 first-year students canoe, hik~
go rafting in Wisconsin.
and sleep in Ients and cabins.
"Our only job was to go there ,
Tolliver stresses that it's not a
climb rocks and make friends ." says hard-core Outward Bound-type proEric English of Corning, N.Y "We gram where students have to survive
on "sq uirrel meat. " Instead, it's a

chance to learn learn-building skill s
and make new friend s.
Private colleges are more likely to
have the programs. About a week
long, they cost between $150-$300.
The Mtami st-udents learned the
rock-climbing skills of belaying and
rappeling . More importantly, they
learned about themselves and each
other by keeping a group journal.
Hoy t Brown, Miami's director of
orient ation, says the group shared an
"intimate and intense" experience.
"There were some real acts of
courage shown in this group. " he
says .

POMEROY -- Gilmore reunio~.
The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to non- Rock Springs Grange hall on fairprofit groups wishing to announce grounds, Saturday I p.m. luncheon.
meeting and special events. The Take.Q]d pictures. covered dish . own
calendar is not designed to promote table services.
sales or fund raisers of any type.
RACINE -- 29t h annual Samuel
Items are printed as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a Allen Eblin reunion to be held Saturday, Star Mill Park, Racine, 6 p.m.
specific number of days.
Potluck, bring own table service.
FRIDAY
GALLIPOLIS -- Bold Directions
Mental Health Suppon Group, I0 SUNDAY
a.m. to 3 p.m. at Haskins Shelter
POINT PLEASANT -- Annu~l
House, Gallipolis. Covered di sh,
Weaver reunion. Sunday. West'virchips or soda.
ginia Stale Farm Muse um. Picnic ~ t
RACINE -- Students new to I2:30 p.m.
Southern Local School Di stri ct,
POMEROY -- Annual Jeffeis
enroll at respective schools, through
Friday, 9 to II :30 a.m. Take child's reunion, Rock Springs Grange hall ,
binh cenificate, Social Security card, Sunday, I p.m. Covered dish, tal(c
shot record, and legal custody papers. own table service.
New kinderganen students at junior
GALLIPOLIS -- Hcanline , aJl
high school.
interaction and education group will
MIDDLEPORT -- Wesleyan Bible feature speaker, Suzanne Mize, M.O.,
Holiness Church, Middlepon, Bible cardiologist, 2 p.m Sunday in iliC
school underway •this 'week , 6 p.m. French 500 room at Holzer MediC)!
Center. Open to public .
_.
nightly: program Sunday I0 a.m.

Service· 7 p.m.

Rutland Flnt Baplist Chun:h
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy flnt Baptist
Pastor: Paul Stinson
East Main SL
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship ·I 0:30a.m.
Flnt Southern Bopllsl
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar 0 18ryanl
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:4S a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.
First Baptist Cbun:h
Pastor: Mark Morrow
61h and Pal me• Sl., Middlepon
Sunday School - 9: IS a.m.
Worship - 10:IS a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedn&lt;sday Service· 7:00p.m.
Radne First Baptist
Pastor: Rev. Larry Haley
Youth Pastor: Aaron Young

Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Rutlaad Cbun:b of Christ
Pastor: Eugene E. Underwood
Sunday School • 9:30a.m .
Wofllilip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Bndford Cbun:h or Christ
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Evan~elisl: Keith Coopor
Youth Mimster: Michael Teagarden
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wo11hip ·8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesdoy Services • 7:00p.m.
Hklu&gt;ry IIIIIs Cburth of Christ
Evangelist Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servicea • 7 p.m.

Mt. Union Baptist
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9:45 a.m .

RACINE -- Fire Hydrant check',
Sunday, noon to 4 p.m., by Racin~
Fire Department. Water may be di•·
colored at times.
-

Betblebem Baptist
Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Berdine
Worship · 9:30a.m. Sunday
Bible Study -7:00p.m. Wednesday

..

W"::."J;

SUMMERFIELD'S
RESTAUUNT ..

Raila... Fm WUI Boptlal
Salem St.
Putor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evenina • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvic:ca • 7 p.m.

STEVE UUFF=:

Catholic
s.md Hurt Calllollc Chrcb
161 Mulberry Ave., POIIICroy, 992·5898
Plator: Rev. Walter 1!. HeinE

1996 NISSAN® 412

.

6

Trtlllly Clltardl
,
Scconcl &amp;: Lynn, Pomeroy
p_, Rev. Rolllld Wildman
. Sunday achoOiandwonhlp 10:25

CHI&lt;• of the NeaaNH
P111or: Scali Rose
Sonday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Se!Yice• • 7 p.m.

Middleport Ckon:h of tilt N•aa""'
Putor: oregorr A._ Cllndilr
Sunday Schoo - 9.30 a.m.
Wotship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedneoday Sc!Yices • 7 p.m.

Eptscopal

_s,....,... Cb•"'• of the Naurtoe
Pu101: Bill Sti10a
Sonday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneoday Sen~a • 7 p.m.

Putor: Sharon Hausman

Gnct~Cblll'dl

Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
T~~tsday Services - 7:30 p.m.

l26 E. Main Sl., Pome10y
Rector: Rev. D. A. duPianliel
Holy Euchari51and

·

,_,.., Cb1rch oftbo Nuaneo
Putot: Rev. Thomu McCiuns

Senatb· Day Adnatlst
Mulberry Hta. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Siturdly Sc.rvices:
Sabbath School • 2 p.m.
Worship· 3 p.m.

United Brethren
Mt Hermo• Ualltd lret-n•
Ia Cbrisl Cbunb
Texas Community orr CR 82
Paslor: Robert Sanden
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a. m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Scrvicu · 7:30p.m.
Edoa Uolltd Brelhrea to Chrill
2 112 miles nonh or Reedsville
. on State Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sun&lt;hy School • II a.m.
Sunday Wo11h1p - 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wcdncsdiy Services · 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service · 7:30p.m.

1-

Fntdom Gospel Mluloa
Bald Knob. on Co. Rd. 31

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
,i

POMEROY, OHIO • 9t2-t8877

FURNITURE &amp; HAADWAAE
Homel~e Saws

BILL Q~ICKEL

(614) 992-6472

_,

Overbrook Center, a 100 bed long term care
facility in Middleport, Ohio, is seeking a Director
of Social Services. The preferred candidate will
be a LSW and have some long term care
experience. The salary will be competitive as will
the b,enefit package. We have a strong clinical '
and management team and are looking for a
candidate who will help strengthen that team.
Send resumes to Overbrook Center, 333 Page
Street, Middleport, Ohio 45760. EOE

•

Seventh-Day Adventist

Carlttoa laterdeaomlnatloaal Cbun:h
Kingsbu•y Road
Pastor: Jeff Smith
Sunda~ School • 9:30a.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Senicel

~

. •

SynocUII Fin! Unllod Pmbylirtaa
Palor: Rn. K.ri11ana Robinson
. Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m .

Full Gospel IJabtbouae
3304S Hllond Road, Pome~oy
Pastor: Roy Hunler
Sunday School· tO a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; lllu•sday • 7:30p.m.

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nationwide Ins. Co.
of Columbus, Oh.
804W. Main
992-2318 Pomeroy

Presbyterian

South Bethel New Teatameat
Silver Ridge
PaS!or: Roben Balbcr
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 1 p.m.

RtodsYIIIt FeUowablp
Chan:b ot tlie Na..,....
Pastor: Mark A. Dupler
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
· Wednaday Service• - 7 p.m.

T•ppen Plallu SL Pool

~!!.~!~
•

Nazarene
RadM First

R.,.ls•llle
Pastor: Rev . Owlea Muh
Worship · 9:30a.m.
S'unday School· 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30 p.m.
First\&gt;unday of Month - 7:30p.m. aervice

Congregational

Mlddltpon Pontuostal
Third Ave.
Paslor: Rev . Clark Baker
Sunday School • I 0 a.m.
Evening. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.

Morse Cbepel c•un:•
Sunday school • 10 a.m.
Wo11hip • II a.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Ualtod Faith Cbun:h
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

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Middleport

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cloud with the buys
you 'U find in the
·classifieds.

I

Pentecostal

DyuvUie Community Chun:h
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Evening · 7 p.m.
Wedneday SciYice · 7 p.m.

I '

Pentecostal Alatmbly
St. Rl. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
E¥eniilg - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

orr Rt t24

Sunday School -9:30a.m.

;i

.
Now Ule Vktoey Conlrr
3773 Oeorges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
PasiOf : Bill Staten
Sunday Services ~ 10 1.m . &amp;. 1 r.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. &amp; Voulh 7 p.m.

Middleport Pn•byterlla
Sunday School · 9a.m.
Wonhip . 10 a. m.

TorchCburcb
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

'I

I' i'

Oilton, W.Va.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship . 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

lluol Conuaually Cbun:b

MI. 011" Community Cb1nb
Pastor; lawrence Bush

I '

Clifton Tobemacle Chunh

Racine
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · II o.m.

Melp Coopentln Perisb
Northeast Cluster
Alfred
Pastor: Sharon HaUJman
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6:30p.m.

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

Church of Jesus Cbris~
Apostolic: Faltb
l/4 mile past Fon Me igs on New Lima Rd.
Paslor: William Van Meter
Sundlly· 7:00p.m.
Wednesdoy· 7:00p.m.
Friday-7:00p.m.

Jlarrtsoavllle Pmbyterlan Chun:b
Worship . 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 9:45 1.m.

Jlocklnlpclrt Cbun:b
Orand Street
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - II o.m.
Wedneldlly Services· 8 p.m.

~andolph

!Wolctaa Ule Church
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middlepon
Paslor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School . 10 a.m.
Wednesday Sel"ices- 7 p.m.

Syr.o&lt;aacMissloa
1411 Bridgeman Sl., SyracuK
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
E"ening- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sen ice • 7 p.m.

Feith Gospel Cborch
LongBottom
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
WoBhip. 10:45 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesdoy 7:30p.m.

t
'l

Pastor : Oa\'id Dailey
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Eve ning · 7 p.m.

Middleport Communi\)' Chunll
S1S Pca1l SL, Middlepon
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evening- 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

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

'

sn ..n•lllo Word of Folth

£oat Letart
. PIIIOt: ~rlan· Horkn,JI
Sunday SChool • 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

llelbel Chor&lt;h
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.
Wednesdoy Services - UJ a.m.

Pas&lt;or:
Worship· 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Calvaey Bible Cbun:k
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School ·9:30a.m\
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m&gt;,
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.'-

Suttoa
Pistol: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:4S a.m. (hi &amp; lrd Sun)

Coolville Uolttd Methodlsl Parlfb
~tot: Helen Kline
;l:"!"l•llle Cbun:lt
Main&amp;: fiflh SL
Sundoy School · IOa.m.
Wonhip · 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services· 7 p.m.

Cbealtr
Paslor: Sharon Hausman
Worship · 9a.m.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
llluiSday Services . 7 p.m.

Fellh FoUowshlp Cn11ade for Christ
Pulor: Rev. Franklin Dickenl
Service: F1iday, 7 p.m.

Faith Tobemade Chun:h
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev . Emmell Rawson
Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.
Evening 7 p.m.
llluisday Service · 7 p.m.

.

reunion-,...._~

The annual Elberfeld family Dolan , Darien and Jerry Dolan,
reunion was held recently at the l Strongsville.
Barbara Stedman Brown. Bill y
Elberfeld Farm near Tuppers Plains. ,
Attending were Sara Deever, Brown , Emily Brown . Bethany
David Deever, Margaret E. Ruhl, Brown, Billy Brown II, Maryland;
Bob Ruhl, Bobby Ruhl and a friend , Alfred Siddall, Gladys Siddall ,
Susan, all ·of Westerville; Bobbin Lebanon, Ind.; Michae l Siddall,
Slagel an(\ Helen Slagel of Nancy Siddall, Mariella; Robert
Lafayelle, Ind .; John Slagel, Joan Elberfled, Charlolle Elberfeld, Julie
Slagel, Raben Slagel. and Stacey and Scon Dillon, Stan and JoAnn
Slagel, Ironton , Kathy S. Plummer, Coates, Josh and Bobby Coates,
Joe Plummer, Cold Springs, N.Y ; Pomeroy ; Allan Elberfeld and Nora
Elberfeld, Barboursvi lle, W.Va.
Virginia S. Elder, Ironton.
Andrea Elberfeld, Columbus:
Mary E. Morris, George Morris,
Steve
Elberfeld, Beverly Elberfeld,
Pomeroy and Bomta Spri ngs. Fla.:
George C. Morris and Linda Morris, Kate Elberfeld, Gallipolis; Barbara
Athens; John Alfred land Joan H. E. Lytle,- Roben P. Lytle, Chilli Anderson, John Hewitt Anderson cothe; Janice L. Mahoney, Peter
and Gretchen Anderson, Jordan Mahoney, Allison Park, Pa.: Rachael
Anderson,
Lauren Anderson , E. Downie, William B. Downie, Jr. ,
Pomeroy; Jim Anderson , Becky Racine; Brad Anderson , Stephanie
Anderson, Jamie Anderson. Racine; Hoffman, Pomeroy.
Barbara E. Dolan, Dr. Gerry T.

'
Momln1S111r
Pastor: Kenneth -Baker
Sunday School· 9:45 o.m.
Worship - 10:30 o.m.
lllunday Servicea • 7:30p.m.

MI. Olive United Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursdly Services - 1 p.m.

Chater Church of God
S. R. 248 &amp;: Riebel Rood, Chester
Pastor: Rev. William D. Hinds
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship · 6 r.-m.;
Wedneldlly, 7 p.ltl. Family Training Hour

W.
St.
PasiOI: Neil Proudfoot
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip- !0:30a.m., 7p.m.
Wednesdoy Services - 7 p.m.

tormel

·Gnham Ualttd Metbodlat
Wot~hip- 9:30a.m. (151 &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30 p.m. (Jrd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service • 7:30p.m.

CbUrth of God of Propllecy
O.J. Whitt Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Paten: PJ . Chipman
Sunday School· IOo.m.
.
Worship· II a.m .
W¢nesdoy Se!Yices • 7 p.m.

Sat. Con. 4:45-5:J5p.m.; Mw- 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45·9:15 a.m.,
Sun. Mua • 9:30 a.m.
Mw - 8:30

i li

Folnlew Bible Churth
ulan, W.Va. Rt I
Pastor: Rankin Roach
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Worship- 9:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:00p.m.

Eodtlme Jloue of Pnyer
(a! Burlinsham church oil Rou!e 33)
Pastor: Roben Vance
Sunday worship · 10 a.m.
Wednesday aervice - 6:30p.m.

Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:45 a.m. (2nd &amp; 4th Sun)

United Methodist

Sync.,. Flnt Cbun:k of God
Apple and Second Sts.
Putor: Rev. Dovid Rwscll
Sunday School and W011hip- 10 a.m.
Even ina Scrvioc:a· 7:30p.m.
. Wedneoday Servic:ca - 7:30 p.m.

Allttqlllly Bopllsl
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m .
lllundoy Services • 7:30p.m. ·

BetbeaJ
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wo1Ship · 9a.m.
Wednesdoy Servicea- 10 a.m.

St. Paal Latlaena Cban:h
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Pastor: Dawn Spaldins
Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.

Rullud Cbun:h of God
Pastor: Randy Borr
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
II a.m., p.m.
Wed
y Services · 7 p.m.

ML Moriob Boptlst
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middlepon
Pastor: Rev. Oilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip- J0!4S a.m.

...

Harriao,.lllt Commonlty Chun:h
Pastor: ncron Durham
Sunday · 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.

Saow•llle
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 a.m.

Oar Sa•loaf i.uthitiiaa clian:lt'
W1lnut and Henry Sis., Rivenswood, W.Va.
lntrim pastors : Oeorfe C. Weinc~
Sunday School - 0:00a.m.
Worship· II a.m.

Mt Moriah Cban:lt of God
Racine
Pastor: Rev. James Sauerfield
Sunday School· 9:45 a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Services • 7 p.m.

Forut Ruo Boptlst
Pastor : Alius Hurt
Sunday School· IOa.m.
W01ship - II a.m.

THANK YOU

...

lbe BtiiOYtn' Fellowahlp Mlolslry
New lime Rd., Rulland
Pastor: Rev . Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Salem Center
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School -9: 15a.m.
Worship • I 0: IS a.m.

SL Jolla Latlaeru Cbarek
Pine Orove
PaSior: Dawn Spalding
Wot~hip ·9:00a.m.
Sunday Sc'""" - 10:00 o.m.

Church of God

Faith Baptbl Chur&lt;h
Railroad St., Mason
Sundar. School· IOa.m.
Worsh p • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Follb Full Gospel Church
l..cng Bottom
Pastor: Ste\'e Reed
Sunda! School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 9:30a.m. and 1 p.m.
Wednesdoy- 7 p.m.
Frid•y • rellows.h•p sen icc: 1 p.m.

Ratlllld Commaalty Cburcb
Pasto1: Rev. Roy McCany
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Sunday Evenina , 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Lutheran

Christian Union

Vlc:lory BapUst lndependllnt
525 N. 2nd Sl. Middlepon
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship · IOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wedn&lt;sday Services · 7 p.m.

RockSI'riDP
PasiO&lt;: Ke1th Rader
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Wo11hip - 10 a.m.
Youlh Fellowship, Sundoy • 6 p.m.
Rutllod
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
llluisday Setvices • 7 p.m.

St. Rt. 160, 446-62&gt;47 or 446-7486
Sunday Schooi10:20-J 1 a.m.
Relief Society/Pritllhood I I :05·12:1JII noon
Sacrament Service9-10:15 a.m.
Homcmakina meelina. tat lllu11. - 7 p.m.

Hartford Ckoan:b of Cllrbt ba
Cbristlan Unloll
Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. Dlvid McManis
Sunday School · II a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Worship- lll.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Laurel COif Free Methodist Cbarcb
Pastor: Peter Tltmblay
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 o.m. and 7 p.m.
·Wedneadlly Service · 7:00p.m.

Tbe Cburtb of JHas
Clutll of Llltter-DIIy Slbata

Reedsville Chor&lt;k of Cbrist
Putor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30 a.m.
WCI!IIIIp Service: 10:30 a.m.
_Bible Surely, Wedneldlly, 6:30p.m.

Hillside Baptist Cbun:b
St. Rt. 143 just olfRI. 7
Paslor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.

,•
Annual p1cnic of the Rutland the meeting.
The Meigs County Fair Odwcr:
Garden Club was held recently at
the home of Donna Jen kins on show was discussed along with
Weber Hill , Rutland, with members, plans for an open house meetin g on.
their husbands, and other guests Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the Rutlanp ·
United Methodist Church.
allending.
An article on pulling ol.d belts in
A tour of the yard was taken by
the group preceding the meeti ng. a garden to di scourage birds who
Members responded to roll call by view the belts as snakes was gi vcn
.by Dorothy Woodard . Usi ng a soap:
naming their favorite plant.
Devotion s included musi cal spray to kill aphids on roses was the.
.,
numbers played on the piano by hint for the meeting.
Margaret Weber displayed an·
Sarah Dawn Jenkins who was then
accompanied by her mother for a arrangement of roses and Queen:
Anne's lace. Lowery and Blackwood:
vocal selection.
Pauline Atkins presided at the brought rose arrangements.
meeting and gave a repon on the .
recent stale convention which she
and five other Meigs County Garden ·
Club merQbers anended.
Marjorie Rice won the traveling
pri ze. Rosalie Story was a guest.
Rice, Atkins, Belly Lowery. and
Clotine Blackwood place flower
For Purchasing .
arrangements in their churches, it
My 1996 Market Hog ~;
was reported.
Lowery sang "How Great Thou
atthe
."
an" with Blackwood at the piano.
Meigs County Fair. : ~
Story sang "In the Garden," and
Jenkins played a piano solo to close

Hobson Cbrlltlao Fellowsblp Chur&lt;k
Rev. Oyde Henderson
SUnday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Youlh Fellowship S~nday , 7:00p.m.
Wednesday serv&lt;ce, 7:30 p.m.

er Latter Dey Slball
Ponland-Rac:ine Rd.
Pulor: Janice Danner
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Hemlock Gron CbuRb
Pastor: Gene lopp
Sunday school - 10::!0 a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Old lletbel Fr.. Will Baptist Church
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middlepon
Sunday ~hoot -10 a.m.
Evening· 7:30p.m.
lllunday Servi~ • 7:30

Pomeroy
Pastor: Roben E. Robinson
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Wo11hip • 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tueldlly · 10 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Lanpvllle Clulltla• Cbun:b
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesdoy Service 7:30p.m.

Evening-6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services.- 6:30p.m.

Pearl Cluipel
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.

Cbristllo Fellowablp Center
Salem St., Rutland
Pastor: Roben E. Mwscr
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 :15a.m., ?p.m.
Wednesday Service . 7 p.m.

Roerplllzed Cla•rtk of J - Clu1ol

Uberty Clulstlan Ch•rtb
Dexler
Pa51or: Woody Call
Sundiy Evening - 6:30p.m.
Thursday Service· 6:30p.m.

Faith Cbeptl ()pn Bible Cbuck
923 S. third S1. , Middlepon
Pas10r Michael Pangio
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Thursday &amp;ervice, 7 p.m.

Mlaemlllt
Pastor: Qarles Neville
Sunday School · 9a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.

llyaeU Raa Jlollltsl Cburdl
Pastor: Roben Manley
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service ·7:30p.m.

While's Cbapel WHie)'JIO
Coolville Rold
PoSior: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday SciYice · 7 p.m.

Other Churches

Hoolh (Middleport)
Pastor: Vemagaye Sullivan
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
W01ship - 10:30 a.m.

Wnleyaa Bible llolloea Ckur&lt;b
1S Peul St., Middlepon.
Putor: Rev. John Neville
Sunday JChool · 9:30a.m.
Worahip • JO:lO a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneldlly Service • 7:30 p.m.

Bndbuey Cbun:h or Christ
Pastor: Rick Snyder
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Cbatcr Cbii'Ch of tbt NuonH

Portll1d Flnt Cban:b of list Naunae
Pastor: Mark Matson
Worship- 10:30 p.m.
Sunday School • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvicea • 7 p.m.

Foroat Run
Pastor: Charles Neville
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wot~hip • 9 a.m.
Thursday Services • 6:;10 p.m.

Pine G....e Bible Hol111t11 Cbarc:h
1/2 mile offRI. 325
Putor : Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School ·9:30a.m."
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service. 7:30p.m.

tDmmunion • 10 a.m.
Su~y School · tO:IS a.m.

Services - 7:00p.m.

Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wo11hip • It a.m.

l..tadin&amp; Cleek .Rd., Rutland
Putor: Rev. Dewey Kina
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Sunday wonhip -7 p.m.
Wedneldlly prayer meetina· 7 p.m.

Pas tor: Rev. Rnaer Willlo1d
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m. .

R1tllnd Cb•rtb ol list Nuonae
Pastor: Samuel Basye
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

fllllwooda

Rwe of Slwva Hollllea Cburdl

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a., and 6 p.m.
Wedncaday Servicea . 7 p.m.
Putor: Rev. Herber! 01110
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneldlly Services- 7 p.m.

Ealt'1'rllf
Pastor: Ktllh Rader
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.

Celnry Plllrim Chapel
HarrisoJ1't'illc Road
Pastor: ReV. Viclor Roush
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30 p.m.

Tuppen Plata Church of Cbrist
Instrumental
Pasrar: Scot Brown
W""hip Service· 9 a.m.

Sllvor Run Baptist
Pastor: Bill Utile
Sunday School • IOa.m.
Worship . I !a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.

...r-

DuYIIItH-CbiU'dl
31057 State Route 325, Langsvlle
Pato1: Rev. Rick Maloyed
Sunday sthool - 9:30 a. m.
Sunday wonhip . 10:35 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Olildn:n'a church - 10:35 a.m. Youth 6 p.m.
Wedneldlly prayer service - 7 p.m.

Zloa Cbur&lt;b or Cbrlll
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.143)
Pasto1: RoJOI Watson
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servic:ca • 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:40 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wedne~«lly

Holine ss

lleorwallow Rid.. Cbun:h or Cbrlll
Pastor: Jack Colepe
Sunday Schoo1·9:30 a.m.
Wo11hip. 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday SciYiceS - 6:30 p.m.

FRo Will Boptlst Cbun:h
Ash Streer, Middlepon
Pastor: Lts HaymaiJ
Sunday Service • 7:30p.m.
Sunday School · 10 a.m .
Wednesday Scrvice-7:30 p.m.

Ceotnol Cluater
Albtoey (SyncUJt)
Putor: Ouirlu Neville
Sunday School· 9:45a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesdoy Scrvicca . 7:30p.m.

Sunday Sc:hOot 10:30 a.m.
Coffee hour lollowlnJ

J3Z26 Cllllclren'a Home Rd.
Sunday School • II om.
Worship · IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Keao Cborch ol Christ
Worship • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School • I 0:30a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
I st and 3rd Sunday

Baptist

Send questions to Ann Landen)
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045
:.

Pomcro1 Wntalde Cburcb or Cbrlal

Middleport Cburcb of Cbrlll
Sth and Main
Pastor: AI Hartson
Youl~ Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 8:15, !0:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Uberty Alatmbly of God
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane
Mason, W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
~unday Services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Thursday Prayer Meeting - 7 p.m.

Excerp ted from Ann Lande~·
new book "Wake Up and Smell thi:
Coffee." published by Villard ali3
avaiJable in bookstores everywhere,

Rutland Garden Club
holds annual picnic

p.m.

Assembly of God

-Community calendar~

SATURDAY
PORTLAND-- Free clothing day,
Ponland-Racine Reorganized Church
of Christ of Lauer Day Saints, Saturday, I0 a.m. to 2 p.in.

7:~

Wednesday Scrvic:ca . 7:30 p.m.

Werln~sday

Religion: Preaching in the '90s

·

.

Crow's Family
Restaurant
"Featuring K1rrtuc/cy Fried Clt1ich11"1
228 Main Sl, Pomeroy

w.

992·5432

.......... !lin_
214E. Main

99;1-5130

EWING FUNERAL HOME
"'Digrrity and Service Always"

Established 1913

992·2121
106 Mulberry Ave.

IG!!•~

Pomeroy

00
--e;

Pomeroy

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

115 E. Memorial Dr. Pomeroy
992-2104

�.

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, August 23,

1~

Politi~al cartQ.onists delight ·in features of t~e '96 slate of candidates
By PATFIICIA EDMONDS
USA TODAY
Let the pundits compare the
Democratic and Republican candidates on !he weighty issues of election '96.
Other observers have more pressing matters to assess: Bob Dole 's
"cow eyes." Bill Clinton's "Opie
smile."
Such are the traits !hat the nation's
editorial cartoonists relish as their
ink-and-acid campaign coverage now
begins in earnest.
Last week, Republicans handed
them their newest victim: vice presidential candidate Jack Kemp- he
of the "helmet hair," "caterpillar eyebrows" and what The Cincinnati
Enquirer's Jim Borgman calls a "nice

elastic face."
"We're really delighted to get
Kemp in !here," adds Richard Crowson of The Wichita Eagle. "We've
had a long 'drought in !he vice-presidency - Dan Quayle, AI Gore,
these guys are just no fun to draw at
all."
The strong-featured Kemp is
anolher story. He's red meat to these
experts at caricature assassination,
whose goal is to distill prominent
national leaders to their most vulnerable, spoof-able parts.
'
Ross Perot's ears. Michael
Dukak.is' eyebrows. Ronald Reagan's pompadour. Richard Nixon's
jowls.
It's a sharp-eyed form of stalking
where every tic, trick and feature is

fair game. And campaign 1996, says
The Philadelphia Inquirer's Tony
Auth, is "a target-rich environment."
Kemp, !he former congressman
and Housing and Urban Development secretary, will be "pretty easy
to draw." Aulh says.
And he comes complete with the
sort of visual props cartoonists love:
trappi ngs of a colorful past (his pro
football career), and eminently mockable physical traits.
"The biggest challenge for cartoonists," says Kevin Kallaugher of
The Sun in llaltimore, "is to make
him not look like Phil Donahue, and
not look like (Massachusetts Democrat Sen.) Chris Dodd."
"And not look like (House Speaker Newt) Gingrich," says the Atlanta

Constitution 's Mike Luckovich.
What do Kemp and !he olher three
have in common? "That feature that
no other cartoonist will mention,"
Luckovich deadpans. "The big Shock
of silver hair. I'm sure I'm the only
one who's picked 'up on that."
To Crowson, Kemp recalls
"Dukakis, wilh that stupid helmet he
wore on that tank ride. But now
we've got !his guy who's got a helmet. He grows a helmet . His hair 's a
helmet.
"And if you look at the two (Dole
and Kemp) together, " Crowson says.
"you can quickly see !he reason Dole
chose Kemp is that they have exactly the same eyebrows. Caterpillar
eyebrows. Supply-side eyebrows, I
guess.''

Oldest Tyrannosaur found in
Thai dinosaur treasure trove
By PATRICK McDOWELL
Associated Prell Writer
PHU WIANG, Thailand (AP)
- With visions of !he gigantic T.
Rex from "Jurassic Park" wreaking terror in their minds, the four
visitors beheld the skimpy remains
of !he world's oldest known tyrannosaur with a twinge of disappointment .
"I lhought !here would be some
. more than this, and it would be bigger," said Dr. Nara Vaeusorn, a
radiology professor at a Bangkok
hospital. "But Thailand can still be
very proud of it."
Staring back from the dry
stream bCd, oblivious to Hollywood blockbusters or national
pride, lay !he tail bones of an ancestor of TYrannosaurus Rex experts
estimate are 20 million years older
than any previously known specimen.
Recent publication of the discovery in the scientific journal
Nature revealed to the world that .
this Southeast Asian country has
proven a treasure trove of dinosaur
fossi ls since excavations began just
15 years ago.
Buddhist monks find bones after
seeing dinosaurs in meditations.
Vlilagers plunder fossils in the
belief they have magical powers.
Few knew much about Thailanp's dinosaurs until the tyrannosaur discovery was disclosed.
"Everybody knows tyrannosaurus from 'Jurassic Park," '
said Varavudh Suteethom. chi~f
paleontologJst ..10 the_ country s
dmosaur d1gs. And smce thas IS _
the oldest kno":~ ancestor, everybody JS cunous.
A geologist uncovered the tyrannosaur fossds 10 1993 at the . Phu
Wtang Nauonal Park, an oasas of
rocky hills and trees some 400 kilometers (250 miles) northeast of the
capual, Bangkok. .
The park hes '" the Karat
Plateau, where fossal-nch MesozcJc-era sed1mentary rock has _been
thrust to the surface. Most That fossil&lt; ha~e turned up there since a
geologJs! seekmg uramum found a
dinosaur thigh bone in the· late
1970o.
.
L1ke most fossa! finds, the tyran nosaurus skeleton ~as only part•al.
The survmn~ portion probably l~y
more deeply vuned !han the rest 10
pnmord•al mud that turned to
stp!JC.
.
'What rema;ned was enough for
Suteethorn and Enc Buffetaut,
ch1ef French paleontologiSt _10 the
Franco-Tha1 team coordmatiOg the
fosstl research projects, 10 adenllfy

Tht educators participated in
Society business meetings, auended
personal and professional growth
workshops, honored deceased members, celebrated the Society's 67th
binhday, and visittd !he achicve.JI)ents of members display which
'"-featured member's publications,
educational and Society projects.

By ANITA MANNING
. .

·

The Food and Drug Admmtstra- :
lion Wednesday approved . a ne~.

I' .

treannent for stress urinary mconu- .
nence in women. The dcvacc, whach
sped throUgh die approval·process in ·
less than 1 yell', ia available only by
prescription, ~ patients must be
trained to use at.
Manufactured by UroMed Corp.

physical needs every Wednesday
night from 7 to 8 p.m. For those who
need rides or have questions, residents may contact the pastor, Bill
Stires.
,
Classes will be Benson Buddies,
four and five year olds; Searchers.
first and second graders; Explorers,
third and fourth graders; and Adventurers, fifth and sixth graders.
.
D OF A CHART[R DRAPING
The charter was draped in mem~
ry of Ada Van Meter when Chester
Council 323, Daughters of America,
met recently at the hall .
·
Goldie Frederick, councilor
i presided at the meeting and intra~
duced Teresa Houdashelt , granddaughter of the deceased. A think
you card was read from the D&lt;in
. VanMeter family.
; The death of Faye Martin. past
:state councilor of District 10 was
' noted , and reported ill were Doris
Koenig, Lillian Demosky, and Margaret Amberger.
Erma Cleland read "Love an&lt;j
Care" Refreshments were served by
Erma Cleland, Laura Nice, and Vir:
ginia Lee.

of Needham, Mass. , !he Reliance Uri- about 44 pen:ent develop urinary
nary Control Insert Device is a sin- tract infections within !he first year of
gle-use device, about one-fiflh !he use . About 78 percent reported dissize of a tampon, which is inserted comfort and irritation, 20 percent
into !he urethra by a reusable syringe. reponed bleeding and in 6 percent of
A balloon at the tip is inflated in !he lhe women, the device moved inlo
bladder 10 block leakage of urine. It the bladder.
can be worn for no more than six
Stress urinary incontinence, leakhours at a time.
age of urine during coughing, sneezA says clinical studies in ing, laughing or lilting heavy objects,
women
o used the device show is !he most common· type

T

..

.

or April. Then move to a warm
sunny location.
Beuy l\1ilhoan gave devotions on
the theme "Chri~tianity and the Declaration of Independence" and ''In'
God We Trust." For roll call mem-,
bers gave a traditional garden prac·
lice .
For a specimen exhibit, Hollo)!_
had an Asiatic pink lily. Mrs. Will
displayed a mass arrangement usinf
black-eyed Susan, purple phlol\,
Queen Anne lace, and golden rod i~
a brow 11 crock.
A dessert course was served by
the hostess.
'

Middleport hosts Qh4rqh Qf,
Christ women's meeting
The Middleport Church of Christ
hosted a recent meetin,g o( the Meigs
County Churches of ehrist.
The meeting opened with si'l!ling
"Glorify Thy Name" and prayer by
SabraAsh. lt was noted that Ash had
arrangements for the booth at the
Meigs County Fair. Joann Connant
sang "My God Is Real" and Eleanor
Hoover of the Dexter Church gave
devotions. "Things In Christ's King·
dom" with scripture from Matt. 6

and two poems,. "Our Purpose" and
"The Sea."
Officers' reports were given. On ·
the prayer list were Megan Venoy,.
Jeanette Thomas, Chris White, and:
Michelle Tipton.
The Men's Fellowship extended:
an invitation to the Women's Fellow-:
ship to join them at the Sept. 23;
meeting. The Ladies Rally was ·
announced for April at Middleport. :
The program included a son~.
"Lord Be glorified," Linda Bates
gave "What We Praise God Foi"
;Coleen Dunfee read Psalm I0 I, an!f
'there readings of other scripturC,s
:before a prayer circle.
Refreshments were served by tlli:
host church.

Public Notice
SIDEWALK BIDS
The Village of Racine,
Ohio will be ~ng blda
for a!dawafk conatructlon.
Some pam naw - aome
parta ramon and replace.
Total: 967 ln. ft., width variable, t.lllokneae - 4".
Contrectora lntereeted tn
bidding thla, proJect ahould
contact Glenn Rizer, Str"t
CommllaiOMr, 941,2120 or
Henry Bentz 949-2803 for
·epeclflcatlone and locatlona. The village ra"rv••
the right to acc:ept or reJect
any or all bldl. Bleil hive to
be received by Racine
Ville· e Clerk, Box 375, by
4:00 p.m. Stplltmber 3, 1996
and will be opened II 7:00.
p.m. Stpttmber 3, 1996.

··'

~-

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

204 Condor Sl
Pomeroy, OH.
SPRING &amp; SUMMER HOURS
Open Monday-Friday 9:110-5:00
'
Saturday 9:00-3:00

tilE
GURLY
SYSftll

.

.~

....

. .. ...

~

. INSULATION
537 BRYAN PLACE
.MIDDLEPORT, OH.

(Limlaton.
LowAMII)

-\o

8:30 A.M.·3:30 P.M.

WICIS
HAULING

....

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

614-992-3470
30 Announcements

ID Loving

Memory of
my son,
JIM EVANS,
wbopaaaed
away8yean

aco.

Auf. 24,

RemodeUng
Room addllions
Rooftng
Garage's, Deck's,
Painting, Sieling

1988.

Sadly mtaaed by

mother,

Domtby E'nlla.

FORKED RUII
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
SHOOTING
MITCH
FRIDAY, ,
AUG.23

1·800·470·2559
10% oil all quaiHing bids
~11-M,hMttl

GRUESER'S
GARAGE
Body work, car truck &amp;

Serenity H01111 would like to thank the people
of lltlga County fpr their generous donations
to the Mtlgs County United Fund. A portion of
this monty hat helped provide aafe ahelttr
and aupportlve aervlcee for wome11 ancl
children who are abuaad and/or homeless. We
have been able to provide a claan, dectnt
home, with kitchen and laundry faciiHiea to
WOIIIIrt who are atruggllng to rebuild their llytt
and provide a dectnt home for their children.
When our washer neadtd repaired,
wire
able to hlvt H flxtd due to your funding.

we

Wt hive been able to provide school eupplltl
tor the children and dltpers for the_ btbltl.
With your help WI have a110 provided food for
4,857 meal• during 1995. Your funding helped
an 18 month-old child from Melge County
become a lively, chattering toddler who galntd
wtlght ancl received needtd medical aaal•
lance. Thank you.
~Ill

---

iii i I!!! !l!!!! l !l!!! !l !l IIIIl IIIII II Il!! IIIII !Ill III Ill Il I!;;

-..
----------..-----·-

---------------::-::
---

949·2057
MilE IlliG
111111 mo.

Sunday edition · 2:00 p.m. Friday.
urday.

Ext. 1985

In Memory Of

BESS
HENDRICKS
In .our haartl we like

toatray
Along the road of
yeaterdty
To live again In
memory, the happy
days that Ultd to be
To h•r you laugh, to
- your smile
To t.lk whh you t little
while
Wt love to linger on
the way, that leade
ua back to yestarday
Art, Mary, Art Jr.,

s-a Amanda
In Memory

Q.?

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vlclnhy
All Yard Sales Mu ll Be Paid In

'

'

. Owner; Ronnie Jones .

367..()286 ~ 1-800-950-3359
FrH E•tftNte•

~ew

Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES
(No Sunda~· Calls)

Authorized AQA .Distributor
• Weldlrig S\IPPfiee • lnduttrial 0... • Machine Shop
Sea:vtces • Steal Salas &amp; FabriCation • Repair Welding
• Alll'lllnum/Stalnlea • Tool DI8SIIng • Omamental
Stepa -SIIIrB, Railings, Patio Fumnure, Fireplace
Items, Plantar hange,., Trallllea a lots ol other stuftll
Wa will work within your budget
Ph. '7n-t173
FAX n3-11181
108 Pomeroy Street
Mason, WV

T

. 32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45 700
Damy &amp; Peggy Brickles

New

Publlc.Notlce

YARD

1

614-742-2193
rFN

Ll"\'" ED

POWER II

SALEoSat

Bam-?

On

Rt 2

from Pt. Pleasant 1 riille put Rt
87 on left. Clothes, baby itema,
odds &amp; ends, Regtstered Mintlture Pincher PIJPPMll.

80

Public Sale
and Auction

Mt Alto A.uCI10n . Every Friday

7pm. Every Saturday 7pm. At 2·33
MCrouroada•. Groceries, new

merchandtse. Ed Frazier 930

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 Yrs.
645-8434

R1ck Pearson Auc1ron Company,
full time auctioneer, complete
auction
service.
licensed
166,0hio &amp; West Virginia, 304-

773-5785 Or 304-773-5447.

1Q78-1987 Malibu. left lronr door,
( tor 2 door) no rust . 304 -8755244.
Absolute Top Dollar . All U.S. SH·
ver And Gold Cotns. Proohell,
Diamonds, Anttque Jewelry, Gold

Rings, Pro-1930 U.S. Currency,

70WING

SterlinG. Etc . AcQursitlons Jewelry
· M.T.S. Coin 'Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, c;:;athpolis. 614·446·2842.

SIRIICIS
Rollback - Wedge
Open - Enclosed
Indoor/Outdoor
Storage
Dey or Night

1·800.279-3147
Max: 614-247-4861
Juetln: 614-247-4461
- 4n : 614-992-7074

DON SMITH
992·2735

Mary Kay CosrretJ&lt;a, ""' 1tems.
Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

1-900-255-0500
Ext. 5266

tft;,M~ tlft-ta~

Insured
We have the new FRll
Low C011t Replacement
tor Automodve R12.

August 24th, 9am· 2pm, Beech
Grove Ad., Rutlard, adult ciOII'lt~.

Psychic tells you
things you may not
even want to
know??

614-992·7643

Service.

Friday.

BtnlsawMIJI

·BISSElL
BUILDERS, INC.
'

Meigs Refrigeration
Air Conditioning,
Heat Pump, Fumacea,
Relrlgeratora,
Installation ud

Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day before the ad tl to run, Sun da~ &amp; Monday ed ttion· 1:OOpm

H&amp;H
SAWMill
Portable

20 Years E:rperlence • lrulired

large Amounts sa·s, 60's 45
RPM Records , After 6P.M. 513 ·

675·2930 , 4339 Jasper Road.
Jamestown, OH 45335

Clean late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 ModEtl s Or Newe r,
Burck Pontrac , 1900 East -

em Avenue, Gallipolis.

H1gh cha~ts , playpen's, strollers,
must be ,, good cond•t •o n &amp;
clean , also l11tlo tykes toys, Lt.v•
Strass j
any s•ze , call 614·
10Bm·4pm.

FREE

.,,n.••. , ....Ia.

·It's Wsltlng

Plck..p dlacudllel
c.., ..Herl11 &amp;

1-888-goNWNET
In Memory

Advance . DEADLINE : 2:00p.m.
the day before the ad ia to run .
Monday edition · 10:00 a.m. Sd! ~

"No Job Too U'fl#l or Too Sms/1"

31801 Amberger Rd.
Off Forest Run

All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In

&amp; Stump Grinding

EVEN POLICE
USE
PSYCHICS!!

7/llllln

614-992-4025
I .... ,_ 1120

$19.95/Month

PUBLtc NoncE
Unlimited Acce11 - No Set U Fee
NOTICE Ia hereby given L,._.:,::::,:.:,:::;:::.:;:;:::::::::...,:.:::,.::;::;:,.:c:.:,.;:::_...,l
Howard L Wrlteael
thtt on Stturdty, Auguat ,,---~~~~~~~~~~~~--...,
24, IIIH, •• 10:00 t.m., • '
• I
D
public 1111 wlll be held et
r.-n
rr•
ROOFING
2t1 Wtet Second Street,
St. Rt. 7
Tuppers PIIIM, Ofllo 45783
NEW-REPAIR
Pomeroy, Ohto, to eell lor
814-115-3813 or 814-667-e484
cuh the following Plastic Culvert- Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36"
Guttera
colltttral:
4" S&amp;D - perf.• solid pipe
4" cl 6" Flex pipe
11M FORD LTD
Oownapouts
Good Usttd Sa1
tFA8P43FOEX131312
4" &amp;6" Sch 3~ pipe
1/2" &amp;. 3/4" C. P.V.C. pipe
614·446·0350,
Gutter
eltanlng
6
I l/2" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
1181 OLDSMOBILE
3/4" cl I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (iOO' roll's thru 1,000' roll'~)
Pairitlrig
CUTLASS
3/4" U.l:.. approved Conduit
FREE
ESTIMATES
t030R11Y4JP32lll41
H" C
1 Le
·
•
The Ftrmere Btnk and
rave ••• ach ptpe
949-2188
Stvln D1
c 0 m pen y, Gas pipe l" thru 2''- Fittings- Regulators- Risen
611&amp;'14 TFH
Pomeroy, Ohio, ,...rveelht Full assor1men1 or P.V.C. &amp; Fle• fining• &amp; Water fining•
rtg~ 1o btd ttthlt Nit, tncl
Full line or (:iatcm, Septic &amp; Water s[Qf!!gc ltnlts.
to withdrew the above
ANNOUNCEMENTS
EMPLOYMENT
collateral prtor to etlt.
SERVICES
Further, Tht Ftrmere Btnk
Jllere;
tnd Sevlngt Company
Yourtelf of Lonely
30 Announcements
roeervet the right to reject
Evenlnga tnd Wetkendl
F&amp;J
can·• &lt;emombo' Jhoso apoc1a1 110 Help Wanted
tny or Ill bide eubmltt~.
datea, I have tN lile-time tolution.
Fur1htr, the tbove
Send name, addreu &amp; phone AVON I All A1eas I ShHit
u.... To 81JII(e Guyelllld
collateral wUI be aotd In the
number to : Box '1&gt;!·22 c/o T~e Speats, 304·875·!429.
"'
Gill
In
YCIIIr~ 10
45833 Sl Rl124
condition lt lt io\, wtth no
Potnt Pleasant Re~tater 200 Matn ..:__:._ ___::;.__ __
80mt0n1 Ulle YIIUI
exprue or Implied
Sl Pt. Pl•untWV 25550.
Able Avon Representauves
Racine, Oh. 45n1
warrantllt glvtn.
Independent
Consullant
for
Jafra
;:~d:~s·~~'nno~:~~~Y
~~~ ~~~0' :
For further Information,
10:00 til?
CosmetiCI In your area, now
w
1oiiOCI-IIIO-I333
contact Dtelrwlllt2·2138•.
booking skin care claases in your 992·6356 or 304·882·2ti45 . lnd
Sz_to per min. 11873
Clothes&amp;:
(II 21, 22, 23; 3TC
home. E11ptrlence aomething Rep.
Mull be 11k1Touchtone
wondef'ful·Futl Hne of akin, body &amp; -:-Am-b-,-,o-,.-m-,n-d-ed_p
_eo_p_lo-,-5,-0-00
What-nots
PhontReq.
nail
care
lor men &amp; women. Call weekly potenl!al Many posn•ons
Serv.U (1118) 845 1434
LATIGO
992-3051
br datlllt. Kim :'m4-875-5781 ·
avail~b! e . Start now, no expert .
1
"'" 11'10.
Would l1k1 10 earn FREE tors. tnce necessary. Call 7 days,
Appearing Friday
books ot sollWirt?? Coil now lor 407 ' 875-2022· "'OSQ8H33.
8:~12:00
delailsll Independent Educeliona!
Consu1t1nt with Discovery Toys. Avon S8 ·SlS IHr, No U•ntmum
Pomeroy Eaglet Club
304-675-5781. Educarional Toys
No Door To Door, No In·
:r TrucklngMtmberltnd Owet
lor children birth 10 teens.
• 1· 800· 736·0 168 lnd/1111
lnvi!H
Umtstont
11111101-1m1101
40
Giveaway
u•• ,. Needed . wo••
Bulldol'!lng and
FREE EmMATES
2 kiRtns, lP9fOK. 4wks old. ·304·~~~~~20~K:2_T~o~S50K-IY_r_.1-·
...----... Backhoe
r.utiM,... ... ., 175-1118.
I·
X117J
Servlcte
7 Laying Htna, 014-4&lt;1·8~ .
CUSTODIAL Polillon · Wiln Bl·
HouaaSitteand
.
aic; Wainten•nc:e. 30 Hrs. Per
Beautiful Bob TaU t&lt;Httnt, 614· Week . Starling Pay $6 .37 Per
Utllltlte
388-8335.
RIY liiiOII'U
Hour, With Benefits . Pick Up Ap.

w.. ·-a ... su-y

.....

"

HI
Curio Barn
Is Backl

..CILLIIW"

,lii£1:'111Jn

In Loving Memory

Of

•

2MEOIUM
PEPPERONI PIZZAS

LINDA'S
PAINTING

Howcrd Exccvctin

...........,...
Let••••h

1 ORDER BREAD STICKS
2 PEPSI'S $10.99

a

DOMINO'S PIZZA
Oh.
992-2124

-

·URIIfiiiiCU
614-ftl-4110

All Kmd1 of Earlh Work

992-3838

.. _.., . .... .-,... ·: .•

•

614·992·5379

• · Top, Trim, Removal

..

$3.99 per minute
Must be 18 yrs.
SERV-U (619) 645-8434

BING'S.
AUTO
REPAIR

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

JONES' TREE SERVICE

·- .

Tun.ups,

HOWOPEH

Sales &amp;
Installation

State Route 850. BidwelL Lotll Of

-Aoonng

•Interior l Exterior
Painting
Al10 Concrete Wcllll .
(FREE ESTIMATES)'
. V.C. YOUNG Ill 11112-e2111
PomerOlf, Ohio

011 Change, Wax,
Buffing
Long St., Rutltnd, Oh.
· 742·2935, Alk for Kip

Tht one we love Ia

gone.

ntvtr
You llvt
on forever In our
htart·al You will
llwaya bt remtmbtrld by IIIOH who
laltw and, lovlcl you •.
SICily ml..ad by

'

Rill, Eric, Tareaa
andllandy

end Frlandl

•

-Room Addltlont
-HtwGerages ,
o£lectrtcal • Plumbing

Find out about lhelr
glltecl Powerll
Call
1-900-484-1515

truck painting, minor
mechlnlcal repair.

- Card of Thanka

Yard Sale

1-900-446·2626

YOUNG'S
URPENTER SERVIa

'

CARPET

Thtngs , August 22nd , 23rd. 211h.

713tl96 t mo. Dd. ·

•'

•

TIM'S CUSTOM

Auvust 23rd, 24th, Teodora Avenue , Of1 Baatiant Ortve, Clannet,
Maternity Clothes, Gtrls Clolhes &amp;
Morel

~

Tanunera
Construction Inc.

Avenue , 614 -446 · 7169 ,

Girls are waiting to
talk to you
LIVE II
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 Yrs.
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

tWt!Gcnps
e5tnllean &amp;wii.IWI

: Female Cal White With
Hair, Pug Nose, Vicinity :

Buy Wholesale

$19500

lnatalled'

Ext. 5843

tllplat••••t Willows

Umlltone,

In Memory

814-892-2772 .

who palled away
15 years ago,
Aug. 23, 1981.

J

Low AI

l•llltriiiiOPIII •1ilf·la
•Double
•Transferable Warranly
35 Years Ext»rlen~
(614) 992·2364
1-100.819·3943 •Up to 84 United IIKhes
Wood Window Openlag
GUYSill
, J&amp;L SIDING &amp;

GEORGE
ALBERT HILL

.

SAVE

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

Residential ~ Commercial
Roofing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling
Decks ~ Bathroom• - KHchens - Siding

OUTBACK PAR'rY
With BAD HABIT
At The WATERING HOLE
Sat., Aug. 24, 1996
· 8 p·.m.-12:00

.

LAURA BROWN
.,
CHANCE WATSON
.
JANET CALAWAY
JAMIE DRAKE
.. •.
"
DAVID RANKIN
OEZ~A WRIK:EMAf«&lt;
. '
'•
ROBERT HOFFMAN.
I'
JESSICA BARRINGER ~
.JEREMY JOHNSON

SnYEUUFF

~__...,

BIB ROOnll aad
ClllftiDCflll

GOING OUT OF BUSINESS
Fashion Beauty Shop
113Y. E. Second Street

·.

J

- -. -..-··- -··-----

..

/

..
-. .

FOR MAINTAIN\I.NG THE
MARKET STEER PRICES

.,,•.

.

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohl~

Pomeroy, Ohio

BOftLEIIS

For hrc•••l•g
My 1996 Market Hog

•

•

Equipment &amp; Supplies For Sale
w~:-i!ll&lt;l&lt;! Wed -

RD,.LAID
FURNitURE 8

FHAHKYDU
· IILL'S
'
CLASSIC CARS

•••• Cou1ty Fair.

•

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
..~
:; 2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!
..--

·tHAI -YOU

FDA OKs device for women's incontinence
USATODAY

SCH(JLARSHIP
Dorothy Leifheit of Pomeroy has
been awarded a president's scholarship for the 1996-97 academic year
at Marietta College. She is the
daughter of Roger and Lenora
Leifheit and a graduate of Me1gs
High School, class of 1996. The
scholarship is worth $7,000 toward
tuition and fees at Marietta College.
WINS DOLL
The doli' from the Christmas
Around the World booth at the
Meigs County fair was won by Bea
Lisle of Syracuse.
OMITT[D
The name of Mildred Jeffers,
grandmother of Amanda Jeffers who
recently celebrated her eighth birthday was unintentionally omitted
from a news article about the celebrat1on of her birthday.
. CARAVAN CELEBRATING
: "Caravan," celebrating 50 years,
will have its opening night at the
Syracuse Nazarene Church, Syracuse, Sept. 4, 7 p.m .
Classes will be held for children
four through sixth grades in a Biblebased scouting program which deals
. with spiritual, socia l, mental and

The group is actively involved in
promoting the professional and personal growth of women educators
and the professional and personal
growth of women educators and
promoting excellence in education
through leadership development
workshops and seminars, graduate
ATTEND CONVENTION - Local educators lttended the Interscholarships for members, study
national convention of Alpha Omicron Chapter of Delli Kappa
stipends that allow members to purGamma held recently In Columbus. Pictured are from the left,
sue research or to attend internationfront, Cindy Bateman, Deborah Hammond, SU..n Will; Judith
al conventions in their fields, and an · Fetherolf, Dian Parlow, and back row, Roeallt Story, Fern Grimm,
educational issues program.
Viola Getttts, and carol Eberts.

· Maureen Barbieri, author of
"Sounds froJn the Heart: Learning to
Listen to Girls" won the $2,000 Educators Award, whach recogntzes out-

~.

-Society scrapbook-

(8) 231tc

standing women authors whose
work may influence the direction or
thought and action necessary to
meet the needs of today's complex
society.

Several Meigs residents attended
the AI phd Omicron Chapter of Delta
Kappa Gamma's international convention held in Columbus recently.

r

to draw."
- Once Crowson gets pa}t
Kemp's hairline, he tends to draw
him "neckless- you know, he 's:a
football player and he's son of a noneck."

But fr6m a cartoonist's perspective, !here's more to Kemp than just
hirsuteness:
-Cincinnati 's Borgman sees "a
great, exuberant personality which
makes for a nice elastic face that's fun

Instructions for making a spring
bulb planter were given when the
Wildwood Garden Club met recently at the home of Juanita Will .
Evelyn Hollon suggested using a
large container at 14 inches wide
and 12 inches deep. She said stones
or broken crockery make good
drainage in !he bottom. After filling
with soil, she suggested planting
daffodil and tulip bijlbs at least 10
inches from the top, then about five
inches from the top add crocus bulbs
and mulch on top . Keep well
watered and protected from extreme
temperatures, she said. until March

Local Delta Kappa Gamma
members attend convention

, .

f,rlday, ~ugust 23,_!~

Wildwood Garden Club
discusses spring planting

THAI RANOSAURUS - Expecting something like the dinosaur pictured above from Juraaslc
Park, viewers of the oldest remalmi of a TYrannoaauru• Rex are a little dlaappolnted when they aee '
the real thing, below. The remalna are eatlmated to be 20 million years older than ·any pravlousllf
known specimen.
a tyrannosaur from the telltale hip
structure.
At 6.3 meters (21 feet) long and
·weighing two tons , the predator
was about half the length and a
third the weight of its monster
descendant, Tyrannosaurus Rex,
but looked very similar.
It lived 120 million to 130 million years ago about 50 million
years before th~ oldest traces ofT.
Rex found in Asia and Nonh America. The find bolsters theories that
tyrannosaurs evolved in Asia and
migrated to North America.
The beast has been dubbed
Siamotyrannus Jsanesis, after Siam,
the old name of Thailand and !san
the northeast region wh~re it w~
located.
News of the discovery has sent a
flood of visitors to the formerly
sleepy national park for an arduous
climb to see the remains.
will bring long life.
clock 10 keep away thieves who
The hip has been removed to
Local and national officials, have stolen bones from some of
arguing over tourist revenue and . Thailand's 25 other sites to make
France for study, but the tail bones
remain, surrounded by chain link
scientific preservation, are bicker- magic charms.
fence and protected from seasonal
ing over which proposed natural
"We try to educate people that
rains by a tin roof.
history museum should house the this is our country's precious herVisitors are allowed to gently
bones.
itage," said Sathathom Poland lam,
touch the bones, believing doing so
Rangers keep watch around the a ranger who guides visitors.

I

SaM. Alitlel
HoUywood', 35
(Ropr Rlel»l)

01

mo.

R.L HOllON [
TIUCIIII

•New Homes

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

oComplete

'

R~lng

a

FrH killona, 014·882·2218
8:00pm.

~

IOIIIT IISSill .
.COIISDumOI
•Gan~gN

At Bo11ad, Memorial liFrH Klnent &amp;. Pu~t. eu-ue. plication
brarv.
7 Spruce Street, Gallipolia,
87.10 Mtr 4:30.
Ot;o. EOE.
.

'

Happy Bil'thdoy
Stop Colnplra : ~
I LoN You
FR'EE ESTIMATES
35 More.
1
-98•51 4473
Robin
•
L---....;;,~.... '"--~--..ali

·.·

aile•

DENTAL HVO!ENIST

llm'Ntone • o.w.t
Dlrt•Sand
1154422

•

�,.

- ---~~

I

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

~ Friday,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

August 23, 1996

The Dally Sentinel • hge t-1.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle .
PHILLIP

ALDER

14~~:52

1988 Redrren 2 Bedrooms,

Has Heat, New Carpet, ExceHent

Cor&lt;imon, $9,900 304-075-51185,
814-«6-01 75
1

Earn Exira US In 'Your Home

You EntOt Increased Ener•gy &amp; Decreased Stressn Call To• day For FREE Aud 1o Tape' t

1 Wh tle

;800·927·2527

E"

4552

I CTA!lltll 009!i4

' Ea rn up to StOU. • weekly srufftng

. envelopes at hOme Stan rtoN, ro
·• eJoer~ence Free suppl.es. tnb
rnabon No obhQatiOn Send SASE

10

B uc~s Dept

77 3208 C E Co

tomal Dr 1tJ08 OrlandO FL

32803

Sun Valley Nu r sery School
Chtldcare M·F sam 5 30pm Ages

2 K. Young Sch ool Age Ouung
Summer 3 Days per Week Mmt -

rrum 61-4-446 3657

Wanted To BabySit In MercerVIlle
Area , lnlanl Scl'1oot Age, 614 -

Earn Whal You Are Woflh l EnJ OY
Lar ge Income Work tng From
Home Toll Free t 888 200 7591
614 446 1236

E•penenced Roo ters

256 6871

Aoo l1 cat10ns Ar e Ava il ab le At
1403 EasTern A"Je . Monday Fn
nay 8 5 Call614 446 4514
rarm NOrk part ttme, e~~:per•ence
w1 1h tarm equ1pmen t necessary
Sumne r Rd area 614 985 3823
arn or614 594 5210 pm

Pre-School e~~:pettence, CPR Cer
tthed , RelerencesAvatlable Call
614·446-8910
WtU Do Babysttltng In My Home,
Btdwell &amp; Addavtlle Area , 5
Mtnutes From Hospital, Certllted,
9 Years Have CPA Tratmng If
lnleresled Call 61.........0-6373.

Wo r k. From Your Home Earn A
Lar9e Income 6141 441 0167 Toll
free 1 888 823 8522
HOME TYPIST PC users nee d
$45 000 1nc ome potential

ed

Lo cal carpet and upholste ry
c eanmg company now accepttng
aoolt cat1ons for Cleanm g Techm
u an To rece tve appltcalton call
61 4 992 6788
Manu fac tured Home Oealershtp
Look,ng For Eipertenced Full
f ,me Serv1ce And Repa~r Person
Excel\ent Opportunrty lnqutre At
French Cl!y Homes Galltpolts.
0~061 4 446 9340
M1mmat ass1stance neede d fo r
fema le '" whOO cha~r short hours,
lig ht l1ltmg 1eOu1red Salary negou
able Call 304 77 3 594 2 dur1ng
rhe day or 304 773 9108 m the
evenrng
Need lmmedtatelyl
Serv 1ce Mpn For Vac cuum
Cleaner Company Must Be Neat
In Appearance And Have Expeti
cncc W dh Eleclt rc Motors Writ
Tra '1 The R&lt;Qfll Pc-r5on Ca!t 614
441 1975

Wellgall Street, Pomeroy 3 Bedroom House, 1350/Mo , Deposn

7•2·3033

1978 Schult2 Mobile Home t•ll65

21 0

$8,000, 614-446-7029
1979 12x60 Ltbeny 2 Bedrooms
New Cirpet, 1/ery Good Condr
tton, $7,000, 814·446-7395

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bust ness wtth people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
matl unttl you have mvesttgated
the oftertng

Dept 614-742-2072
CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOD

W1ll Have 3 Houses For Rent Or

Wanled to Rent Trailer Space tn

Sale In 3 Weeks, Can Be 3 Or 4
Bedrooms, Good Locauons, Pnce

Coun•y Phono6t4... t-0825

Range $500 TO $1,000/t.Ao , Plus
Ullltbes, No Pets, Wrtle CLA 393,
c:lo Galltpohs Oatly Trtbune, 825
Thud Avenue, Galltpolts, OH
45631 For Appotntments

420

Mobile Homes
for Rent

198 1 14x65 Ltberty 614 -446 ·

ences. 6tH46·8t72, 61•·256·
6251
.

2 Bedroom Tratler In Porter Area,
Deposit &amp; References , You Pay

All Unlines, 8t4-388 ·9t6~

2 Bedroom trailer, reference &amp;
depostl, no pets, Rn North Lucas

Ad onught 304-675-1076
2 Bedrooms, Slove, Refngera1or.
Water. Trash Furn1shed . McC \as -

MERCHANDISE

510

Household
GoOds

French City Maylag, at•·UI·
7795.
Carpet 5 Vinyl Sale On Room
Stze &amp; Stock Mollohan Carpets,

61·446·74«
Caumry Furnnure 304·675-fl820
Rl 2 N, 6mtles, Pt Pleasant, WV

lues-Sat 9-6, Sun t t·S
GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

Washe r s, dryers, relngerators,
ranges Skaggs Appliances, 76
Vme Street, Call 614-446 - 7398,

&lt;ey Road $265/Mo , Plus DepoSit,
614 368-9688

oH 304·895·3573

R1dgo Rd S2501mo 304· 516 ·
2241

Used Funtture. 130 Bulavtlle
Prke. Desk, Beds, Cheal, Tll.~ea,
Couches, RelrtgeraiOrs, Washera,
Entar18lnlment cantars 814 ......8-

For Rent Or Sale Land Contract

4782·

1997-2 &amp; 3 Bedroom, $995 down,
S195ml0 Free delivery &amp; set-u p,
only at Oak Wood Homes, Nnro

3 Bedroom trader on Pleasant

70xt 4 Two BR All ElectriC, CA.

wv 304·755-5885

Excellent Condttton, On Rented

55~~:10

Lot. Between 2 To 8 PM 614·
446·2003, 614·446-1409

l 1mtted Oiled 1997 doublewtde, IF111niahttd 1ra1ler 1n Galhpolls
3br, 2bath, $1799 down, S279t
, 304 ·875-4075 or 304 ·675·
month Free deltvery &amp; setup
Only at Oakwood Homes, Nttro 1~:.:..:.:--------­
WV 304-755· 5885
3 Bedrooms, In Mercerv11la
HUD Approved, 614- 256 -

, .6()0..99·341111.

VIRA fURNITURE
614-446·3158
Oualll'f Household Furna.re And
A~lances . Groat Deals On
Cash And Carry! AENT·2·0WN
And Layaway Also Available
Free OeiM&gt;ry Within 25 Miles
VCR .. M•crowava, SSO Each, Ae·
fngeralors.

Atr CondtiiOI)e(_S, SSO
'\

O~ft:e

Ma nage r Computer Proft
c ent Payr oll Accoun ts Payable
Resoonst btltl y App ly AI Tope
Furnitu re 151 Second Avenue
Gallt polts No Phone Calls Plea sa
On Oa1ry Farm, must be able to
operate equtpment, no fteld work,
salary ba5ed on e~~:ptmence, senous tnqurre5 only 304 -675· 4225,
oelore 9 oopm or wnte P: 0 Box
312, Henderson WV 25106
Part Trme Mystery Shoppera
Needed For Local Stores, $10 25
t Per Hour Free Producl, Free
Food &amp; More! Call Now 818· 759-

Sales Rep For Snap On Tools
Ca ll 1 BOO 376 0965 Or Wnta
Bob Delaurentts, 336 Lynn Street,
H.amr.gton Ptke NJ 07640 1123

SPEECH LANG UAGE PATHOL
OGIST NEEDED
Speech LanQua ge Patho logts t
needed to d1agnose aMd provide
due ct serv1ces for !he Ue1gs
Coun:y Board ol Mental Re1arda
tt on and Developmen lal Ot sab rh
ties Mus t have appro prrate It
cense Apphc:att on deadltne
We&lt;ilesday, September 4, 1996
Meigs County Board o! MAIOO
13 10 CarleTon Street

PO Box 307
Syracuse, OH 45779

AKC Oalmauan puppres, ptck of
ltter, llfll shots &amp; wormed.~l150.

AKC Registered Doberman Pups
It • ·046·9968 Days, 6U·256·
11183 EvonlngL .
"
Ausualtan Shepherd Pupplea,

Out 01 Good Wor&lt;mg Stoc&lt; Had
Shots, 814-2511-1360.
BEAUTIFUL MARKED AKC
PUGS. t MALE BOSTON TER·
RIEA, SHOTS • WORMEO.
WILL TAKE DEPOSIT • HOLD
OR IIAKE PAYMENTS. IU·
&lt;MUrnl.

CHRISTY'S PEn
Z7t Noflh Sor:ond AVMIUI,
lllddtoport, 011.
Grooming e:ooam-e:oopm by appolnlment, kennel cart 1 Clays a
week, seed I leocl, AKC reg11·
1ered doga, AKC mtnttture male

Poodle, parakeets I birdS, and
t0am-6pm, Monday through Sat·
urday. 61•·992·451•. after hours,
61•·992·2817.
Thank you, Clvloty
English Coon Dogs I Weeko Old,
S25 Eadl, 114-256-8858.
and litter trained 175 It ~-367·
7123
Groom Shop ·Pet

fee·

1unno Hydro Bath Don

Recogntzed sale effecltve agamst
hoa)l, round, &amp; tape'MJrma m
&amp; cats Avatlable 0 -T-C at

Feed &amp; Supply 614·992·218•
Recognrzed Sale &amp; Ellecuve
Agamst Hook, Round &amp; Tapeworma In Dogs &amp; Cats Avatla~e

0· T·C At BROWNS TRUST·
WORTHY HARDWARE 114·••6·
8828 I J D NORTH PRODUCE I
61 •·•46· t 933

HARTS MASONARY · Bloc&lt;.
brrck &amp; stone work, 30 years e~~: ­
pertence reasonable rates 304 895-3591 aher 6:00pm, no JOb to
small or to BIG WV-()21200

Jac)l Russe ll Tamer pupptes, wtll
show, race or go to ground Mom
&amp; Dad on prem tses House

ra1sed 304-6 75-4206
3 keg beer cooler, $500, can be
seen a1 old Ktngs Ann butldtng,

614-787-2696
35 MM Camera $35, Gas S1ove

$250 4 Load Levers $20, Each,

AU real estate advertising In

thiS newspaper Is subloct to
tho Federal Fair Housing Act

' 330 Farms for Sale

ol1968 whiCh makes lt tllegal
to adver11se wany preterence,

hmltatlon or dlscrlm1natton

oasea on race, color, religion,

40 Acre Farm 800 Pd Tobacco
Base, Drilled Well Prtced To Sell I

614·256-6632

340

Business and
Buildings

sex tamlllal status or national

orlgirf;or11ny lntentloo to
make any such preference,
hmttatton or dlacr1mtnatlon.•

ThiS newspaper Wlll not

&lt;no\\11ngly accept
adver1rsements for real estate
wh1ch Is tn violation of the law
Our readers are hereby

lnlormea that all dWellings
advonlse&lt;lln this neWSj)8per
are available on an equal

Proles!uonalfBustness butldmg lor
sublease located at 509 S Thrrd
Sueet, Mtddleport, Onto E~~:cellem
far phys\ctan olftce or real estate
space Ample s1ree1 parll.rng
Avat lable tmmedtately Contac l

R L Kunz, 614·593-3375 collect
Lots

&amp; Acreage

~24

Acres wt lfatfer on Jerry s
Hun m Applegrove . must see

opport""lly basis.

$10 ,000 Days 304·525 1029 or
304 578 2579

REAL ESTATE

5 Acres For Sale On Cargo Road,
112 M1le 011 Bladen Road 4 114
Acres Fre id , 314 Wooded ,

s, 2,000, 6t 4-388· t 104
310

Homes for Sale

2872 i"htrd Street, Syracuse, 2
lots 112 acre total, 4 BR, LA, FA ,
DR, kttchen, ut1lt!y, new bath, new
plumbtng, overlookmg Ohto Rtver.
avcutable September 1Sl, S45,000 ,
61 o4-992-5006 or 614 992·7496
4 Bedroom Rancll Red Bt~ck
Newly Remodeled State Route
218, Mercerville, OhiO 614 ·446 ·
0418

Home For Sale By Owner 3 Bed·
rooms Wt!h Garage, New Deck
16~~:24 1 Acre MI L In Country,
514·245 5006
New 3 &amp; 4 Bdr Bnck Fenced
Ba ck Yards, 1 112 Or 2 Baths
Appliances Furnrstled Must Be
WtUlln Income Ltsted Below And
Must Have 1- 6 Chtldren For
More lnlormauon , Call 6 14· 446

0251 And Ask For lnlo On 003
lncomelJrro!S, (Anr-..ally)
3 Persons Under S26.650
4 Persons Under S29,600
5 Persons Under $31,950
6 Persons Under $34 350
7 Persons Uflder S36 700
8 Persons Under $39 ,050

BRUNER LAND
8 t 4-775·91 73
Metgs County More ln On ThtS 5
Acre Lot $6,500 Great Hun11ng
11 • Acres $8 ,500 Or 12 Acres
$9,000 Several Lots AdJotn Also.
10 • Acre a Great For Home •
Horses I
Gall1a County Hallway To Hun1
1ngton. 3 Miles Out Teens Run •
Chambers Ads 11 Or 1 • Acrea
Wrlh Pend Chotce $11 ,900
Several 10 Acre Lots $10,000 •
Up Gallipolis 2 ~ties Oul Nerghborhood Ad Just A Few Lelll 22
Acres Wtth Pond $26,000 Or 10
Acres $17,000
10% 011 Cash Purchases Call
For Map • Owner Ftnancmg In
Jormat1on
land for sale One mtle out on 3
M1le Ad oil Route 35 614 382
3660
LOTS P1 Pleasanl 75x 112, some
restr lcltons, all uttltttes 304 ·675-

6884

Parcels on Rayburn Rd Water,
paved road, reasonable reslrrc
ttons 304 -675 -5253 (no srngle
wide tnqwres ploose)
Scemc Va ll ey , Apple Grove,
beaut1lul 2ac lots pubhc water,
C~de BowenJ• . 304-576 2338

Real Estate
Wanted

H1gh Hrll Wttn Onto R1ver Vrew.
Mus! Be Outet . Se,tuded Wllh
Consuterable Acreage 614-446-

3644 Aher 7 P.IA

RENTALS

Baden Rd S60 ,000 30• ·882· 1 - - - - - - - - - 410 Houses for Rent

3839

sale, tO lbs lull grown , $250
each, 614-742·2050
(tO% OH Every Th•no. Every Oayl)
61U41 ·0770

4x8 Utrhly Trarler Wrth Loadmg

Puppy Palace Kennels, Boarding,

1 Bedroom, Super Ntce, $2661
Mo , Plus U!lltttes, Usually
Somethtng Available! Sun Valley

2· 5 Ft x8 Ft Ututy Trailers S495.
080 Each. . 614-446-8568

0.29

Apartments, 614-«6·2157

8 ptece maple d1nrno room surte,

570

2 Bedroom Duplex Near Porter

On State Route 160, $350/Mo,
Plus Deposu &amp; References, 1

year Lease 6 t 4-446·2601
2bdrm . apts , total eleclrtc, ap pltances lurn11hed, laundry room
lac1ltt1es, cfose to schooltn town

Applications available at· V•llaga
Green Apts f49 or call 814-992·
37tt EOH
Redecorated 3 Rooma, Bath ,
Washer t Oryer, Au Condntoner,
Otshwasher, Utthttes Pa1d, Good
Outel Netghborhood, No Pets,
Relerence IOepoatt, 8t 4-446-

1370
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 Wellwoad Dr1vo
!rom $244 to $315 Wal&lt; ta ahop
&amp; movies Call 6U-U8-2588
Equal Housing Oppor!Unrty
Clean, nice. 2 bedl'oom, wid hookup, reterence &amp; deposll. no pels

304-675-5162
F urn•shed ap! 1 or 2 bed room,
Pt Pleasant. some uttllllea patd,
HUD accepted depostt requrred

304-675-7783
Gractous ltvmg t and 2 bedroom
apartments at Vtllage Manor and
Rtvers•de Apar!ments m Ulddle-

port From $232-$355 Call 814·
902·5064 Equal Houatng Opporluntaes
New Haven-2 bedroom, furniShed
apar tmenT, dtpos1t &amp; references

304 862·2566
New Large, Clean wuh Lots ol E~~: ­
tras, 2 Bedroom , All New Ap pliances, No Smokers, No Pets,

$400 00 Oeposu. $450 Rent Call
V•rgtnta at Abbco Properltes 614 -

8M Dewalt radtal arm saw wllh
stand and acceseouea, $175,
teal Lazt · Boy &amp;wtvet tocker,
$100, mauve Lazy -Bor rocker recliner, $75, light oak bedroom suIte, dresser mtrror, bookcase
headboard and footbOard, $150,

614·965-3894.

Hay &amp; Grain

Round Bales Hay For Sale,
Stored In Barn, 814-2.5-5117.

Buy, Sell &amp; Trade, All Breads
Payments Welcome, 6t4-388-

TRANSPORTAl ION

71 o Autos for Sale

Mtles. New Brakes. Transmtssron.
Starter. Aadtator. Very Depend·
able . Sar~tced on 3 000 MtiU,
Only S 1500 or Trade for Four

Tid&lt;e!S. 6,.-446-6726

block, 614·992·7014.

,

1964 Oodge D• plom~t. runs good
&amp; loo&lt;s good, ''' all power. 30•·
458-1541 after 6:00pm.

740

1984 Ponuac Sunbtrd, 4 Door,
Au!omatrc, A1r, 75,000 Mtles,

St,600 OBO, 614·258· 1368 Ask
For Randy Aher 6 PM

Exhaust, Battery, Trrea,

t987 Bu•ck l~Sabre, V-6, 4 door,
good COndiliOfl 304-675· I264
1887 Hond• C1vrc 4 door Sedan,
good condition. 8t•·llll2·386t
uae 1r lOids Cuttaas Supreme
Bough1m, one owner, oeraoe

kept, excellent condition, 307·V8,
loaded. $3,195. ao.-675-2933

1888 Ford Escort LX, lull power
au10 trans, crutse. rear defroster.
wiper, 02.000 mrles, good condl ·

bOn 30-4-773-5835

448·7283

Golf Clubs· Tommy Armour 3
Wood $40 Mtzuno Ortver. G;aph·

574·2539

11e Shall $40 P1ng Bag 304·6751504

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Raparrad, Now I Rebuilt 1r1 S1Ctck.
Call Ron Evans. H!00-537·9528.
Kenmore Atr Condmoner, 2e,OOO
BTU, 814-441 ·0150

450

Furnished
Rooms

R~nker,

V 195, 4 3·V6 Che

580

Fruits &amp;
vegetables

Canmng peaches I peart, no¥t
ava1lable Pluma avatllble neir

18g() Model Muotang GT. Totally
Roller Engine Nurouo Oxide Trac·
!ton Batt, Cu11om Wheels &amp;
Tiroo, 810-~08·•827, 8 u-••a·
9671 Alk For Dave Ru-.

1gn • WD Suzuki Sldaklck,
Labor Day, alao freoh appltl. AulD, AIIIFM Casuno, t Owner,
Bob's Markel &amp; Greenhouses lh $8,000 Nogodable, Excellent ConUason Call lor pnces 1- 800 - ditionl814-«6·81110
447-3760
1992 Ford Tempo • door, 50,000
Cannrng tomatoes tor sale, ptck mlloo, S•5oo 8U·288·6726 or
your own or already prcked. bnng 11•·256·1252
contamers. 81•-247-mt
Cannrno Tomatoes, S•lbushel,
brlng own contatners 304 · 895-

111112 Pon!lac Futbird. V-8. CD
Player. $7,000 304-675- tt 76

Y&lt;X.J'~ 5Tf&gt;.NDIN6

Vol t Evmrude Trolling Motor 18
Ft Excellenl Condtllon Wtlh Ex·

trail $11.995, 614-9112·2770
Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

43 Nesl
45 811111 ahlllll
47 Tiny pMiall

........
51 Boxer Mall-

!10~
~

Budget Prtce Transmtss1ons,
Used JAebutll , All Types, Over
10,000 Transmtsatons, Clutches
Flywneela, Overhuat Klls. 814

l

-

liOn)
54 PrlnW'I

50 !lummllludl

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Cllmpoa

Celebrey Cipher cryplogntml are crealed !rom quotllltana by lamou. ptopM peM and pr...,.
Eacn lener ., !he ophef 11andll01' another Todly s ~ X *JUIIII D

F

WKMJVKE

RC

YREEASt

EMKSKE,

cJ

UAKNKA

A

EMKSKE.

(NAKSMD

NAt DC

XKZJS .

F Z FRS

V F S )

ZKFXASI

Z J G K

WJAK

PREVIOUS SOLUTION ·ro play groat mus•c. you must keep your eyes
dtStant star " -

on a

Yehudt Menuhtn

•

....
WOII

0

Rearrange letters af
four terombNtd WOfdS
~ to lorm four words

1
•
l

1

lho
be·

NA R I P E

I

~~

I

O CompleJo
!ho
ftlltng tn

chuckle quolod

by
the mtlllrtg WOfds
y® develop from step No. 3 below

A PRINT NUMBERED
.
~ LETTERS IN SQUIIRES

~ UNSCRAMBlE FOR
IINSWER

SCilAM-liTS ANSWIU

snap awning, 11ove, furnace, 2

bed&amp; 304-815-2864.

SERVICES

I FRIDAY

Home
Improvements
, BASEMENT
WATERPAOOFING

'

Sonata - Knoll- Vtxen - lnwerd "' ITS OWN
Why 1s 11 that some flowers need slicks to keep them
stratghl but a weed IS able to stand on ITS OWN?

Slid1ng camper br 8h tNck, lldo

810

I

(con..._.

7

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

I

52 -llllor

__.J.,_J.-...1.-~--.J.
L_J1

AUGUST23I

.
:

Uncondttronal ltletlmt 9u1rantn,
Loc:al reltrences lurmahed Ea ..

tabllohad t975. can (at•l •48•
0870 Or t-800·281-0518. Roger'
Waterproafing
,,

'

J

A!IPIIonco Par,. And- SorYico: A~
,Nime 'llfl/'!f~ ~r 25,Yooro'J:x1
perienc.e AU Work Gutranteech

French Clly Maytag, 81•·••al
7785.
·•
''
:
C&amp;C
For ule- cann1ng toma1011 and
green peppers. Willlama F,arm,

tiiV5 J.30 lnflniiY. fully loaded,
Syracuoo. Ohio, 114·802·3185 gold lrim pocllagt, very low miles.
~15-21117.
dlyo or 11~·892·5888 _,;nga.
Hot banont popporo, Popper Muot Sail! 189e Pontiac Sunf1rt,
Loaded, St2,500, 080 at• ·37~·
KJno Form&amp; 30oi-675-2DI7.
Red RaopberriH. Tty!Ofl Bo&lt;ry
Pllrch, 114-2&lt;1!;«147.

2M8.

General Home Mt•n•
tanance- Patnttng, vinyl siding~
carpentry, doors, wtndows, bt.~

mobile horne repa~r an&lt;l moro. Fo
froo "tirnoto coli Cht~ It • . gg2.

11323.

•

OAYWAU

Ha"9- llnilll1, ropoir

·-

Celltngs textured, plaster reparr

Call Tom 30-4-175-•tee 20 yoaro
A C Building

&amp; ' Aomodtllilg· over
10 years experience. tAflordable
Sow prices, lrM . .tirNte. AU work
guaronlted, 814-992-8910.

fARM SUPP LIE S
&amp; LI VESTOCK

Ran'• TV SarviCI, opeeiollzlng in.
Zenith aloo 11r.lclng mo11 odlorbrarodo. Houu caUa, 1-1011'7117·
001 tl, wv 304-57S-23IMI. ..

King wood and coal burner wtth

Double Stroller $?5, 814 -448·

'840 Electrical and

7838

Refrigeration

Relngeralors Stovea , Waahars

And Dryaro , All Rocondluonod
And Gauranteed! $tOO And ,Up,
Willlelver •••.eea.e..t .

RSES CEATFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Httt,Pumps, Air COnditiOning, II
'lbu Don't Call Uo We Both Lou! ~

Cbevy Silverado, IXItncltd

52,000ml., gorogo

kep~

like

con1lder ttade. 304 - 571-

Eloctrl~al,

me.

Malchmaker can help you understand
whal to dO to make the relationShip WOf1&lt;
MaM $2 75to Matcltmaker. c/o this news·
paper, P .O Box 1758, Murray H1ll
StatiOO, New Yor1&lt;. NY 10150.
\
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0et. 23) 'Honor your
'
BERNICE
prormaes today. ewn when~ l'a dilficutt to
so You will be observed by your
do
BEDEOSOL
peera and you wil be 1udged on how well
you keep your w«d.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Look tor
\llrtues in asaoclalaa today. nol weak
pointa. "you criticize othitra, be prepared
tor responses that wiH attact&lt; your leta!han-charming attributefl.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ic. 21) When
you tee! generoya. you will be tKimiled by
,S.iurday, Aug. 24, 1996
others However, when you ara mora
More recognitiOn COUld (ljl In store lor you ooucemed abollt getting than giving, you
at wor1r. in !he year ahead. Conllnuo to wllllliP down a lew categor1ea. , •
learn as much as you can . Th11 wdl CAPRICOIIN (Dec. 22..Mn. 11) In Ofdaf
enable you to b8COIIMI more valuable 10 to tufliH your amblllonl today, you might
be 1nclinad 10 manipulate olhara .
your field.
VIRGO (Aug. 2Mept. 22) .lull becaUI8 Unfortunately, lhla ploy will bacldinl.
a IIUhy 1r1111e1 o1 yours li a big 18111er. n AQUARIUS (..... .,.,.., 111) Do not let
doeSn't fllllln that he or aile 18 allo a an old grievance taint your thinking
wile lnveatmenl counMior. Seek finan- loward an auoclata today . Wipe lhe
relaliontlhlp.
Cial atMce eilewhere. Trying lo patch up state dean and start a a broken romance? The Aalro-Graph You might be 8UfPI'IIed.

ASTR6-0RAPH

~

WV000301, 30•-e 75- Y

.

~

Reoldanllol Or 'Cornmorclll Wlr· lIng, Now Sar.ict Or R. .lil. L~ ; ·
conoed Eloctr~clln. Wtllh Eloc- '
~I t•··~~·9960 , Gtlllpolia,,.

------------------.:..--------

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

..

0'1 MY FOOT I

•

-

31
s~
Mlrkll
41 PampaUII

3626 or 30•·173·5219.

$1,500.

- '~~.~............

..

THE BORN LOSER

t 988 Ranger 373 V· Boat With
t 50xP Ev1nrude Motor And 24

RHrdent111 or c::ammerc111 "!"lno •.,
new aerv~ee or repe~rs Maater U- •
censed eleCinCtln Rtdtnaur '

...

.11

r

Free Elttmates, t-800-281 -0008, c

•

OICAY •. ·.

red I while $7.500 304 ·675
7453

814-4415308, wv 00211o05

For Rent Within City Lim·
3 Bedroom s, Basement, No
Pets, Relerenc:es, $325/Mo , 514·
446-7550, 814-441-16t6

.. . -

\

vy eng1ne, OMC Cobra. ou1 dnve,

760

E::~

Pass
All pass

fore 12pm, Fn·Sun anytime. 304·

T&gt;Mn Rivero Tower, now occapdng Old Oa&lt; Butta1 $200 Ll'l L1ma
capped EOH 304-e7~71l.

t967

-r-

3•

11 Ft Truck Camper Saii·Contaned, Exctllant Shape! 61 •·•'~~·
2583
.

blower, $300, 814-949-:z2g7

applications lor 1br HUD subsidized apt lor elderly and hindi -

,

St,500, 614·992·3650

790

Ftr8¥10od-f ull stze uuck load .$35,
small size truck load $25 . 304·

Ntce 2 Bedroom Furntshed
Apartment , Galhpohs Laundry
Room, A~t, No Pels, $385/Mo,
P1us Oeposrt, 614-448-2800.

Utlhlles Pard 1200. One Bedroom
apt all Uttftttes Pa1d $325, 513-

750 Boats &amp; Motors
Marcyry. 301 thrust troll8f. Shore
Ltne Tratler. lfumbtrd wlde 100

"

U·TUrtN
(AL'- OTtff,
L.fTTirs

~·

$3,500 ao.-675-7453

t 984 Sundownor Tu Hull, 25 hp

do
31 Hiving I

East

245·5677

2788

For sale Tandy 1000 RSX DeskMatt computer, complete wtth
monttor, keyboard. mouse, prtn!er,
and computer center, $500 hrm,
call614 992 7132

Paid St85, Two Room ar&lt;l Both all

-

115-271)8

Newer two bedroom large up starrs apartment, wtth stove and
relngerator, washer/ dryer hook
up, $300 IT'Onth plus Mpost ~ near
Tuppers Platns, 61-4 ·98&amp;-3504

One bedroom apa rt ment tn Pt
Pleasant. 614-992-5858

t998 Four Trax 300, 2WIO, ltke

Concrete Goose Clolhes $10
Each and other Cralt1 614-4,.5-

Electrrc
Scooters
And
Wheetc:hatrs , New /Used , Van 1
Car Ltlt Installed S!Btrgltdes Lilt
Chatrs , Call For Brochure, 814·

NO

$2,500,61.-446-6772

23ft Ledgerwood, loaded, otovo,
showor, to !lat. Call lion·Thur bo·

sell lor StOO 304-347 450&amp;

. FRANK &amp; EARNEST

$4600, 614·992·2049

2728 Or 304-937 ·3383

Onney area, 5Jdays , 4 hotel
mghts , use any ttme. value $320

IT NEVER LISTENS
TO ME!

for 5ale

Brand New Walker Never Used,
$50 , Bedsrde Commode Wtth
Bucket And Ltd $25. 014·379-

Conn Trumpet, Lap Top Compuler, Four 13· TlfeS Wrth Cast Alu mmum Wheels L1ke New, 014 ·
446-1010

I{OU TALK TO IT !

m1les, garage kept, many extra
hrgh performance parts, very
cHtant too las!. book value $4200

Now

33 YoutiiiiiJI.
34 WIIIIIIIION

Last week I dedicated a column to
Irving Rose, lhe colorful Scot who died
last May at the early age of 58 I men·
tioned that he was an imaginative
player What makes someone imagina·
live? He produces bids and plays lhat
most people wouldn't even consider.
and that work. Either they are techni·
cally superior or, more often. they push
the opponents into making mistakes
In today's deal, look only at the West
hand. With the opponents vulnerable.
your dependable partner opens three
clubs After South passes, what would
you do'
Maybe you think this is a silly question. With such a weak hand and no
club fit, how can you do anything but
pass? Or perhaps you would jump lo
five diamonds, trying to shut out North
Or possibly , trying to second-guess
Rose , you bad three hearts, three
spades or three no-trump Those three
actions are Imaginative, but not in
Rose's class He jumped to five clubs'
Now look al the full auction . Aner
North' s double, South migh1 have
passed . But thmking partner was
probably void an clubs, South bid hiS
six-card major. Now Rose bid six clubs
- unbelievable'
Sure his partner had no clubs, North .
bid six hearts, probably wondering i£
they were missing seven
Of course, tt didn't qutte work out
like that. Rose led his singleton club
and received a club ruff at tnck two to
defeat the contract &lt;No, South didn't
drop the king a1 trick one - thai
would bave been his IZth trick.l
You can only sympalhize with North·
South, while admiring Rose's perfor·
mance. The game as much the poorer
without him

'92 Suzu&lt;• 750 GXS·R, 360~

t991 Yamaha 350 W11nlor, Runs,
Looks Great' Many Eurasl

St,500 Firm, Call Mark Alter t,
614-0•6·3849.

or

By Phillip Alder

Moto~ycles

199 1 Honda CR125. eu cond ,
runs "eat 304-675·7917

COn&lt;IIIIOn, $950, 814·«8-2205

21 Aeldyor30 Altllne Info
32 o.nua
rodanle

One of a kind

apeed, arr, PW, POL, 1111, cruts~ .

Fatr

1985 Capt1ce Cfaastc Sedan

.....

21~
_.

42~c1Nrol

1993 Chevy 5-11), 4X4 , low mtla)
~

...

Opening lead: ~ 5

1992 Ford Econoltne Van , c8J1

1997 Ford FtSO XLT 414, V·8

t9S. Camero V-6. Good Condi·
tton. $1.800, 2 Dwtght Yoakam

Nortb

6•

6tH•2·2220
;

West

Db I

!

&amp; oaded, $9,200, 6tH49·22t7

992·68•9

Boots By Redwtng, Chtppewa,
Tony lama Guarameed Lowes!
Prtees At S~e Cafe, Galhpolts

t·60D-537-9526

~RNING?

SHE HAD TO CANCEL
HER TRIP FER
SOMETHIN' TERRIBLE
IMPORTANTU

or reasonable oll8f, call 814-992·
1992 Ford Aerostar XL, pw, p1,
cru tse, mus1sell 304 ·675 1753

5 wal&lt;er 304·675-4548.

Evans Enterpns&amp;s, Jac)lson, OH

LOWEEtY DIDN'T
60 HOME THIS

South

stupes, h&lt;e now. asking St3.000

t980 Ponttac Trans ·Am Automatic, 2 Doors, Sunroof 456,

Baby bed, stroler, car aeat, swtng

300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron

.. BARNEY

bed, color TV, VCP, fron1 &amp; rear
heater and atr. white wtgray

6012 aher 600pm

Good Shape, &amp; Ports Car, $1,500
304-875-4641 AFTER 6 ~M

22 Crier
12 Thtnk well or
13 Rope ci'MIIonl 248oxlngvtctory 111111'.
18Pa
25 HMrlnll
21 C..t*11

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer East

Wheeler 8t4-4•t·t 595

Clannet Wrth Case &amp; ~USJC
Stand Call After -4 PM 61-4--4487496

new,

~

197• Ford Mustang II, runs good, 1991 S·tO P1ck-up Sop, • Cyl
now uru &amp; exhauot, $750 080. 63,000 actual mlleo S400 000
:to..a7s.nn
!990 Dodge Carovan, VI, Auto,
Air, Good Condition. s•oo 000
1979 Oldl CuHao 307 Aulo, AMI 614-«6·81 72 or 614-256·8251
fM, 103,000 lotiltl has Alurronum
Otrec:t Wheels with Fairly New FuM olze 1992 ChiYrolet VIII with
Tires, SSOO, t 987 Capr~ce V6, 39,000 miles, ,_ tires, PW, Pt.l,
Aulo, Stereo, POL, Tilt, 117,000 plrear seat makes queen 11ze

614·992-3242

Alto saxophone lor sale, like

• 6 3

38UIO.C, 11•·367·0513

675-5828 after 6 30pm.

Ntce two bedroom aparlment tn
Pomeroy, no pets, ~-14 ·992 5858

tG78 Ford Bronco ~wd. $5,0
080. To many extrao to hot.
175-5855.

'53 ChiVy Betllr, $150, 61•·992· IQ87 llo&lt;lge Da&lt;ota •x4, V·8, AI
4560.
C, excellent condition, $6,200,
61H49·2217.
'68 Dodge Caravan SE, automat·
~. cold Bir, • cylinder, looks good, 1990 Dadge Ram Van B 250 ,
62.000 actual miles, S2•95; '84 72,000 Miles, $4.000, OBO Can
Nrsaan 300 ZX , automattc, load- Be Seen At Galhpolll Da1ly Tub·
ed, t-tapo, loo&lt;o good, St 595: une, 825 Thtrd Avenue. Galhpohs
614·7•2·3802.
01110

t 965 Dodge Charger

• 5

t K Q J 10 7 4 3. 9 6
.. 5
4 A Q J 10 9 7 6
South
• J 1a
•QJ9842
• 52
• K 3

•:oopm

19711 Jeep CJ7 V-1, 304

4 I 6 4 2

East
• 10 g

Sr&gt;oed. Completely Atltored, ., •.

1988 Dodge Daytona Red, Very
Sharp. Now Brakes ond Exhaust,
AuiOmadc, 112,000 Miles. Excel·
!ant Runn~ng Condition S2700
OBO 6t •-«~~·3334

2 Year Old Clarmet For Sa le, 614446 8462 E~~:cellent ConcliDon

6'xt6' Tu·Axla Tra•ler $500, 11•·
,245-9441

Concrete &amp; Piastre: Sepuc Tanks,

... Ollllllllllmll

_...,u-

• 8 4 2

West

tG78 Chevy •x• 112 Ton Nal.
Straw, 1quare baled on wagons. nret, And Exhaust, $1 ,500 oBO.
30... 75-, 801.
6t.-371l·2666
•

1987 Dido Cudaos Supreme, V·8,
air cond, 92,000 milts, good
cond. It ,800. I t•-«8· 1087

Musical
Instruments

Nort
• A K Q5
• A K 10 7
t A 8

1978 Chevy 314 ton ~x~ truct.
Sl•oo. call 61~-992·2178 ali.r

Pets Plus, Stiver Bndge Plaza

Stud Serv1ce Pupp!ea, Groom1ng,

One Room and Bath all Utrltltes
Ranch Style Home. newly remodeled , double car garage. Leon

Jack Russell Terner pupptes for

Only 4 Bo~~:ed Truck, 61 4-3888835

$795, cal1814·992·528t

640

Brakes.

Ramp $400, 6 t 4-446-94 78

448 2205

360

614 992·6681

1 Bedroom Apanment, Trash
Ptck -Up Pard, NO PETS! Po r ter
Area 814-388 1100

Roglotered Angus llfttdlng Bull, t 990 Dod9o Dakota 5 Speed,
SOn Of Ginger Hill Duottr 89, 3 With Capper lop, Excelont ConYtlll Old, 1600 lbo., Elly talv· dillOn, 614-2•5-5688.
er, at•-386-9708.
1991 Silverado Call 30• ·615·
Special Feeder Call Sale. Satur· 2358 aher 6pm
day August 24th, t P.M . Cottle
Mty Be Brought In After • P.M 19111 'f3yota PIC&lt;·UP 5 Speed, t
On Fuday, •o Head 01 L•mousm Owner, Excellent Cond!lton,
Callie ConSigned. All Conolgn- 52,000 Milts, AC, $5 ,895 OBO.
menta Welcome, Hauling A~atl­ 81•·318-2700.
•
able, Athans livestock Sales.
6tH92·2322, 814-698-3531
730 vans &amp; 4-WDs

1982 Ftrebrrd. 3 8, V-8 au10mat1C,
t-tops. runs good, lt350, 614-

HAPPY JACK TRIVERMICIDE :

Seasona l Del1very Dr1ver FarrellGas A Leader I~;~ Tile Propane
Gas lndu&amp;try Is Seektng Dehvery
Dnvers To Work Seasonable. Chiton, 1 112 story, 3 bdrm, 2 car
Flexable Schedu le Pos rtr on In ga r age, hnted workshop, 24'
Gallrpolts Area Ell: cellent Oppor- above ground pool $49,000· 304 ·
luntty For Someone Look tng For 713·5134
Addt!lonal Income To Oualtly 3bedroom bath ftvtng room wl
Must Have C OL Class B With hardwood lloors, ktlehen &amp; dtmng
1
Hazmat In do rsement A.pply At
h
FerreUGas, 8255 State Rou te 588, area 1oget er, new roo ' garage.
on Rt 2 304 6 75 -4139 or 304
:Ga:'::::""':::::'"::..::O::.h•:o::.456:::::3.:.'_ _ _ _ 1 675 732fl alter 6 30
Someone To Clean &amp; Do Ltght
Outtes &amp; Run Errands In Apart ment614 441 -0509

Pets for 5ale.

HAPPY JACK TRIVERIAICtDE

Professional
services

9099
Recept1onr&amp; l · lor small home
he alth office locaTed tn Pomeroy
Ltght typmg some ftlmg S5 25
nour to sta n , e,cellem benefit
package tnclu dlng 2 weeki vacation alter 1 year, srek pay, health
ms urance Se nd resume wllh
cove r le tter to New Concepti of
Care In c 1400 Colgate Or~ve,
M ar~etta. Ohto 45750

560

Call6t4-446.023t

Nu rse A&lt;de fra&lt;n1ng Pro gram

nocksprtn9S Rehabrlt l3tiOn Cen ter
will be offer1ng tra1n1ng classes tn
tne month of September Applies
nons are now be1ng accepted at
36759 Rockspr1ngs Ad , Pomeroy
Cluss s1ze IS ltm1ted Three (31
refere nce papers a re re quned
'lolt n appltcaTton Apply tn person
between 1oam &amp; 3pm M F Stud
en1s Jnal success fully compte!&amp;
tne TCE class wrll be ehgtble far
employment Absolutely no phone
ca lls EOE

Rio Grandt, OH Call SU· 245·
5121.

Female Siameae Ktlten warmed
Washer, Dryer, Stove, Freezer,

4681 Or 1·216-782·2575

230

Block , bnck, sewer prpes, Windows, l1n1e11, etc Claude W1n1ers,

other IJ11SC ttems Store hours

&amp; Up, 614·256-1238 l /

FURNACE Is The Uost Efficient
And Lowell Emrssrons Outdoor
Wood Fuinace On The Market
Central Botler Ia Currently Lookln9 For A Quality Dealer In Thts
lmmedrate Area For lnformatton
On Bec:omrng A Dealer Or For A
Free Brochure Call 1-800 -248 -

3 All Steel BulldiOQI, Rapoa·
seised, Now •oxeoxt2 Was
$15,250 Now $8,990, 50xt00xt8
Wao $25,900, Now $17,990 ,
60xt20xt8 Waa $38,800 Now
$2• .1190. 1~·145-2685

AKC Doberman Pups, tsl Shots,
Excellent Tomperment, 614:,P79·
21211.

Appliances
Recond itioned
Waaners, Dryers, ~ Ranges, Refnoralon, QO Day Guatanteel

I TIM I

11 NlvlgMIIn llr 113 Fll'~111
130uloi111111111
55 Of tile~
14
....
111 CeNin
lxplllll ,..,.
151nbom
11- Knlevet
55 Cine lot
17 Pair
511Judgel
111 Actor Baldwin 10 Stlllef'lnd20 ,..,..,....
23 Noun aufllx
DOWN
24 Declmlll unn
1 Liver lpNed
27 Pul\llllWI'
2 TtlJlm3 Bt'Oid
211 - Abclul4 F-1
Jabbar
5 S.ult-Marle
31 F1ll1
8 lnflrkl
llrty(al.)
&amp;arvman'l
35 ExDound
clllughler
31 Thlck-akulted
7 Utah akl ' - '
37Relw
8 UHiul
40 Cutting tool
II LUCky numlllr
41 Pekoe, e.g.
10 Build
~.oe.

=-ICI)

30.-675-6591

1995 Skylme, 2 bedroom, 1 bath
w1garden Tub, skyhght, bay wrnd·
ow, tsland stove, lois ol kttchen
cabrnets, n1ce reltnance for pay ·

2 Bedroom, $1100 6 14256-6228 or 614-256-1417

Bustness burldmg tor lease rn Pt
Pleasant acrou from the Fue

470 Want~d to Rent

2 Bedroom Tratler, 8 Mttes Route
216, S2201Mo + Deposit, Reier·

1995 Schultz 14~70, 3 bedrooms,
2 full baths, v1nyl std1ng, AC.new
deck and butldmg . $26 000 Call
304·675·3124

Business
OpportunHy

Requued, 513-57•·2539

Remodafed, New Pamt On Exterior New 2 l'on Furnace, Hea t
Pump, lnstalted 1995, 8x 12 Covered Deck, 411:8 Uncovered, Ex·
cellenl Condruon, ~IUaled On Pnvate Secluded Lot Or Move, 614256-1011

3545

FINANCIAL

Calll BOO 513 4343 Ex t B 9368
lmmedt ate help wanted - apply tn
person. Sun Fun Pen nzotl,
Ractne Ohto

MotNia home lot, equtpped lor 1
electrrc. Harrisonvtlle area , 114-

t960 SkyUne 2 Bedrooms, t Balh,

su tn my nome anyome,
any hours, 61 4-992·5186
W1U baby

Truck 1 Wtll Babysit 1n my home, Days,

Han d Tool s/ Relerer\ces A Mus I
Wages Based On E~per1ence

5128

With 14lle5 Addtbon 3 Bedrooms,
LA . FA, Eat-In Kllchen, Wood
burner, Heat Pump, Refngera!or
Range Wtth Mtc:rowave Good
Condrlion, Rt 1 N Behind Burlrle
Ott In Kanauga On Rented Lot,

surance Btdwell, Oruo 614-388-

9648. 614·367·7010

Two bedroom , basement, $400
month rnc ludes wate r, oas and
trash , 1200 depostt, 614 -843 -

t 888 Sc:hull Tratler, 2 Bedroom a,

$1,500, 61 ...06-0906.
Professtonaf Tree Servtce, Stump
Removal , Free Esumatest In·

One bedroom house 1n Add tson ,
614 992·2178 01' 814·992·5304

Commercial Space Approx 800
Square FHt located Corner 01
State StrMt &amp; Third Avenue, Gallipolis. The Former Llc•nae Bu reau Locaoon. Cal81-4-44&amp;-4830.

10..= ... m....

... ~olllle

ACROSS

- ·- - .

8=.,.

, ..

PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20) If you
more for you today
than you would do tor them 11 lhe roles
were reversed. you coold_bo disappoint·
ed.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll ta) Your lucky
toeling will be tuSiilled today. provided
you don'! push •t too lar Your percoplion&amp; will delineate !he bourldanes
TAURUS (o\pril ~y 20) Vidones ~ro
indicated loday nyou ma11'11810 a posHIVO
altiludo Avo•d negative Individuals,
becau" !heir d1smal parcopt1ons could
disr::ourage you.
.
GEMINI (lily 21-.kl~ 20) Ploceed cau·
tioualy In jOint endeavors today Dosplle
promising lndJCaiiCIIIS on the surface, ellatorted undercurronla could caUI8 compli·
cationfl.
CAHCER (June 21..tulr 12) Friendly die·
CUNionl could tum 11110 heated Clalllles
today H ..tlglon or politicS are div=waed.
Avoid.,_ roplcd posalble
LEO (July 2Wug. 22) Today, Wyou are
-'dng .lltouldaf 1o lhoulder with IUbor·
dlnetes, don't ciiOOH the ~ay allignmenta lor yourMII and leaY8 lite cllltc:ull
onetlor lhlm to do.

' expect others to do

),

\i
..

'

�.......,_

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

- -- -·

.--

.

.. ,...

.' ' -

.

'

'• '

..

' •

' I

'

'

•. . .. ...
~

'

.

'

'.

'

.

•

"'••

-•.•
••

Friday, August 23, 19116

. Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

I

••

•....

On a mission:

M

•
•••
••
•

" Bakery distribution center -Page o1 i:

Details on
pageA2

Pigskin classic -Page s1

Gallia missionary
serves in Amazon Basin

0

HI: 80s
Low: 50s

•Featured on page C1

~

•

••

tmes

•

SCHOOL BUS
Highway headaches

Construction-free travel:
.

'

'

nmea·Sentlnel Staff
'
POMEROY -:- After montbs ~f constructio_n ·r~!ale~
detours and closmgs, area motonsts wtll have a con
struction-free.. ride through Metgs County on State
Route 7 by the end of October•. accordm g to OhiO
. Department of Transportation officoals.
'" From what the project supervt sors have reported.
construction work and paving work along Stnte Route7
should be completed around the ftrst of November. '" saod
Nancy Pedigo, ODOT District 10 public in formation

off~~~e

major highway projects have cau sed traffic
delays and required detours on the busy north-south
·
t onths·
. h
state htg way m recen m
. . .
.
• construction of the $12. 3 molhon , 2.25 omlc fi rst

phase_ol the l 77/US 3.
p J
Pomts.
I"
air ro ect tlllcc
.' -" . $860.732 cmerge~c~s. ' •P rep
P J
nnlcs south ol Tuppers Pia•. . . d surfac ing projec t
! a $1:06 mtl!ton JOII1t rcf~r : n. ~cChestcr and East·
on 4.1. mile~ ol State Ro ute et ce
.
'
ern Ht gh Sc ho?l.
. .
e 500 fouosli dama 'Cd
Pavm g began Thurs7d a~on;h
PI . ·. p ith tc;ta·
sect ton ol State Route ncar upper.' ams. w . , .
ti vc reopcnong of the road set tor the end ofthos v. e~k . f
The secti on of road. located about I mde nortd _.do
Eastern Hi gh School. caved 111 as the result ol a lan s11 c
and has bee n closed since late February. Trafftc~n the
area has been maintamed on Old Seven Road ( rahngc
Twp Road #294) whtlc the scctoon of roadway has ccn
.
. .
.
reconstructed.

Now that school is back in session, it's vital that you exercise additional caution on the roads and advise
your children to look both ways before crossing the street.
It's also important to warn your children against going anywhere with someone they don't know or eating
anything given to them by a stranger.
{/
THIS IMPORTANT MESSAGE IS BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE FOLLOWING SPONSORS:

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 992·2635

The Shoe Place and Locker 219
992·5627

POMEROY, OHIO

K&amp;C Jewelers
992·3715

POMEROY, OHIO

Quality Print Shop
992·3345 .

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Ewing Funeral Home
992·2121

· POMEROY, OHIO

Downing·Childs·Mullen·Musser
Insurance
992·2342

POMEROY, OHIO

992·2.32

992·2556

~OMEROY,

OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO -

992·5144

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992~21 04

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO ·

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

~c-H_o_m_e_N_a_t_i_o_n_al--1-an-k--+-_ --R-id_e_n_o_u_r_S_u_p_p_ly--~~--~F~.~-!-~-!~~~-ro~~-~~~k~~--~~
UCINE

949·2210

SYUCUSE

992·6533

Rose's Excavating

..

949·2493

•,

'•

• ., "I

CHESIERY, OHIO

POMEROY

742·2136

Williams &amp;Associates Insurance Birchfield· Funeral· Home
992·3985

POMEROY, O_HIO

742·2333

3. $1U miiUon 2.25 milt I•
77/U.S. 33 Connsotor project at FW. Potnh .

Tom HilnloffOYP ~

south of Five Points. Aggregate work IS expected to
.
h
hegin soon, with repav ing of the section to fo llow,
Pav in g work is expected to begm Wednesday on t c
to Pedigo.
new secti on of Flatwoods Road (County Road 26) whtch according
"We expect to be have the actual roadwork complet·
tics into Whipple Road (County Road 5:1). accorchng to
ed on the Cllnnector project before the state mandated
Meigs County Engineer Bob Eason. ·
.
date. We will just be fini shin g odds and ends. such as
Grade work is also being compl eted on the sec tton of
Continued on page A2
former State Route 7 know n as the "Gocglci n slip". JUSt
'

go.

-South Gallia H.S. prlnclpal
Tim Scarberry

.

¥~~~~~n~~k~~taff

.

with athletics, and to that end ,
the club made about $5,ooo
with its booth at the fatr. sell ing pi a a and pop," he added .
"They' rc extremely intetested
in the school. '"
. Club members and other
citi zens chipped in Saturday to
· fini sh sprucing up the buildin g
for an open house Sunday
from 2·4 p.m.
The building was closed in
1992 when the dis trict consolidated its four secondary buildings into River Valley. Because
it continued to be used by the
community and served as a
storage area, the HT building
was maintained ·by the d!Stnct.
But under H.B. 264 - a
program allowing rural school
districts to fin ance energy
improvements through future
sa vings on utilit y bill s South Gallia has undergone a
retrofit that yielded new li ght ·
. ing and heating systems . .
Looking to stay wothon the
one-time startup expe nditure.
Scarberry said the emphasis
has been on·creating a learning
environment for the estimated
240 students South Gallia will
house this fall.
BACK TO SCHOOL - Soutn Galli a Htgn School teacher Dafnee
Shopping around allowed
swain put the finishing touches bn a sign 11 the main entrance the school to equip a 16-station
greeting students to the former Hannan Trace High School build· computer center woth new
log, which opens Its doors for classes on Tuesday.
equipment , whole desks no
Club has resulted in its taking responsibili ty for longer needed at Ri ver Valley were shopped
athletic&gt; and other ex tracurricular acti vities at no down. Even some tables were bought at reduced
funhcr expense 10 the district. Scarberry noted.
cosnhrough Sam's Club, Scarberry said.
"lhcy made a promtsc to the hoard l&lt;l help
Continued on page A2

Meigs voters to decide 12 ballot issues in November
rTenbcw~1 11evy opc:a~nu~l~~~~~let~~;~~~~r t~~~it all:~;"cf~rec~~~~ex~n'.:i;l;~;~:~
k';.

!I Clinton's train journey

follow~ time-honored
campa1gn strategy

'

TUPPIU PWI. ;
915·3161

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

UCIIIE, OHIO

----~-&lt;

915·3301

' -- -v/

siasm and crowds. The president is expected to dcvole
his speeches to the Democratic Party platform : oppununoty, rc&lt;ponsibi lity. com munity.
,
.
.
Opportuni ty in the form of economtc growth. JObs
and education ; responsibility for lower cnme and wei. rare reform ; community in " an America that is coming
together around our enduring values, instead of drifting
BY ANNE MICHAUD
apart .'" the party platfqrm reads.
The Cincinnati Enquirer
.
.
In recent years, Democrats Walter Mondale and
As the engine chugs and the brakes g"e way wnh a Michae l Dukaki s and Republican George Bush have
hiss, the presidentia l train will hcgi n its journey lrom~hc copied Truman's 1948 whistlestop campaign and greetOhio River city of Huntington. W.Va .. today. . '
. ed huge. &lt;1doring crowds at each stop. .
. .
A crowd of thousands will look on, kods takong the or
Though Truman is most famo us for It, extens!'e use
ftrst glimpse of a president in person and lay mg coons on of trains began with candidate William Jennings Bryan
the tr::u..:ks to flatten them into instant ~OU\'cmrs .
.
in 1896. said Dr. Bernard Stcmsber, professor ementus
It 's a scene from the past, but also very present as Btll of history at Bow ling Green State Universi t~.
.
Clinton wends hi s way to the Democratic National Con·
Bryan averaged six speeches a day dunng hos 14vention in Chicago aboard what is duhhcd the 21st C~n - week cross-country trip. His opponent. William Me Kin·
'.
.tury Express.
.
Icy. received guests in what was called his "front porch':
The trip will take the prcsodcnt _to Kentucky. Ohoo, campaign .
Michigan and Ind iana. where he wtl l meet convention
No ac coun t in~ for hard work. McKinley won the
co-star Vice President AI Gore The two woll board a election with l'asr .
n worker oaltlona ."Clinton" as he and co-workers decorate an Amtrak boat to cross Lake Michigan and arrive on Chtcago to he
Truman ,·mtK' hack l"rnm far ~chmd in the polls. so his
FINAL TOUCHES - A Clmpalg Prealde~t Clinton for his three-day trip from West VIrginia to the Demo- crowned the Democratic hopefu ls fur No vemhcr
Continued on page A2
train F.rtdly. The train, to be u~: ~~at touches before leaving Chicago to meet the president In Huntington ,
It's a time-honored campaign strate j!'y to buold cnthu·
.
cratlc convention, waa ge111 ng 1
W.Va.
.

Fruth Pharmacy

992·6491

.

'"You get a real fHIIng of thll counlry and the people In
11 when you 're In e 1reln, opeeklng from the back of • treln.
And the further you gel awey from tha~ tile wore• orr you
.,., tho wore• off tho country lo. the ol81er II geta for tho
otufr.d ohlrll and tho counferfell• and the ..tellow• from
Mad/ton A11enue to put It over on the people.
- Harry S. Truman

King Hardwartt

.Veterans Memorial Hospital

.

POMEROY, OHIO

~-------------------+----------------~--~--------------------4"

Fisher Funeral Home

'"""'ilfit 'P!o~

beiwaon Ch..wr 111d Tuppera Pllolns.

'A· ·J/
..
a
boa~d,
.
·
.
·.
..

992·5020

an&lt;!

I

Cr~w's Family Restaurant

Adolph's Dairy Valley

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

CHESTER, OHIO

Middleport Trophies &amp; Tee
992·6128

.

Good Morning

Baum lumber Co.
985·3301

2. $1 .M million joint rapelr

MERCERVILLE - The openong of the Galha
WASHINGTON - The small busmess comm~mty has emerged as
County
Local School District's newest high
one of the most powerful lobbying forces on Capttol Htll and one that
school
has
been m or~ ol u communoty proJect
exerts a strong influence on Tristate members.
.
. • .. .
::--...,
thon
an administrati ve
Small business' le"!i lobbying orgamlatton, the Nattonal Fedctatton
endeavor.
the school' s princiof Independent Business, boasts over 600.000 members.
..
pal
said.
When area members announce theor dcctsoon on an ccononuc.or tax
South Ga llia Hi gh School
issue liefore the Congress, they often give reasons relatmg to the ompor·
.lN,
e
ic&lt;Jmtos
its forst students on
.
tance of small business.
. ·- •. . .
and
has remained
Rep. Rob Portm11,11. R:Ci""innati, has..spectahzed m
the
startup cost
within
addressing small business concerns as a member of
administrators
projec ted.
the House Ways and Means Commottee dunng hos
when
the
Board
of
Educati
on
tenure.
ided
in
April
to
go
to
a
dec
In the 103rd Congress. Mr. Portman and Mr. Bochnili
gh
schoo
l
concept.
twoer. along with Rep. Jim Bun"~ing . R·Southgate, voted
·explained Tim Scarberry.
with the. small business posotton I00 percent of the
"l don't know how to tell
time.
Scarberry
people
that community pride
So far in the l04th Congress, they have voted the
here
is
running
slnm
g."
said
Scarberry, who was
NFIB position on almost all issues. The NFIB..regards
Rep. Cremeans those three as "guardians of small busmcss and IS
named South Gallia's principal by the board last
month .
pleased with the votes so far of freshman Reps. Steve Chabot. R-Cmcm"A gentleman told me that in all of his 65
. .
.
nati, and Frank Cremeans, R·Galhpohs: .
years,
he has never seen it run as h1gh as It IS
"They (small businesses) are one sogmficant part of the Concmnato
now," he added.
·
community. There are lots of sinal! bus_inesses and that's a l~t o l JObs fl)r
Parents and residents in the southern end of the
the people 1 represent," Mr. Chabot saod of why he supports small busocounty who had been concerned over the distance
ness positions.
.
.
traveled by children to Rive r Val ley Htgh School
1be group plans to support Mr. Cremeans and Mr, Chabot m theor rc·
_ and the fac t students were usmg the open
election races.
b 1
11
enrollment option to transfer to schools closer to
And when the NFIB se nds out political signals that spur sma . u~ ·
home - have full y embraced the rcopcnmg of the
ness owners and their employees to get inyolved 111 local congresstonal
former Han nan Trace High School.
races the effect can be significant .
.
· Pri or to the reope nin g dec ision, parents
"Th~y are incredibly influenti al," said Barry ~a'ckso,n . atdc to Rep.
pledged
to reduce the estimated startup cost o f
Boehner, R-West Chester. and chief of staff tbr the House KCI ""'""''Il...I$ 126,000 by volunteering manpower and cqutp·
Cont ercnce.
mcnt . The form ation of tbc South Gall1 a Boosters
In fact, Jackson said, the NFIB
ranks as one of the top two or
three pol itical lobbies in terms of
influence with Re publicans and
the reasons are faorly easy to
ing voters is a 112 mill
fi ve
By JIM FREEMAN
identify.
for the Meogs Cnunty u crcu osos
•
.'
.
l
Tlmea·Sentlnel
Staff
" You can go to any (congrcs:
Cflni c. The only school issue is a 4:7 replacement
lor eurrent expens· yea:~yrac use Village - I mill addi POMEROY
On
Nov.
5.
voters
sional) district in the country and
3 mill uon·ol levy for fire protection for
th roughout Meigs Coun ty will mol\ renewal '" the Eastern Loc.ol es lorRiovlc yel arl~ . ·I .
the largest employer collective ly
•h l D' '•
• U\ an( owns 11 p - ·
decide
12
issues
rangi
ng
from
cemeSc
oo
ostncl.
.
·
·
·
is small busi ness," he said .
· ·I d ·
rcncw ·ol levy lor mamtaon tng and 1·IVe years• ·•
.
bed CCI·dcd me
Issues
to
u
c.
'
· · ··
.
• S · ·usc Vi llage - l moll
tery
operating
levies
to
providin
g
Jeff Butlke, NFIB national
M · . Co unty _ 112 mill npcratmg ..:cmctcncs lor li ve years;
yral: ·
dust control on tow nshi p roads .
" cogs f
h .
..
, Chester Township _ 1 mill renewal levy for current expenses
political director. said the group
.
f c.
..
Thursday was the dcadlmc for fil· renewal levy or. ..tu c1cu 1osts pro- addit unal· levy for preventiOn,
con- or 1tve years,
. .
feels Mr. Portman, Mr. Bunning
1
in
g
loca
l
issues
wi
th
the
Meigs
gramS:air fi vTe ye.orh': - I ' ill addi· tro t and abatement of air poll ut ion
• Eastern Local School Dtstnct
and Mr. Boehner are politicall y
11 .
Count Y Board of Electi ons. Town·
• ·'em owns tp
.
.
, •. .
. •
I) ·
_ 4 7 mtll renewal levy for the pur·
safe.
tiOnal levy for fire protec tion lor fnr ftvc )oMstl.dust clontro , 4 mill poscof providing ror the emerge ncy
·and
vi
ll
ages
filed
issues
for
ships
" If any of those needed help.
• Sutton ow ns up - .
· .
.
. .
.
. ..
current expenses. ma1 ntuimng cc mc· f tve years , 1'
h.
I
·It t·cncwal levy for maintai ning and requt remcnts of the school diStnct
we
would
help
them...
Mr.
Ohio Valley Publi 5hing Co
mo
. .
. ..
cont1nued on page A2
• Letart owns op tcrics and for fire protecti on. •
Butzke said.
renewal levy fm maintain ing and operati ng cc mctenes lor five years.
The onl y county-wide issue fac·

SCHOOL SAFETY- A SUBJECT FOR EVERYONE!

992·6611

Tuppert ''-'"'·

Zanesvi lle based project contractor) hopes to have_the
pav in g work completed by the fi rst ol the wee~ . 1 hey
will thel1 fm ish the berm work .s tnpc ..ll. ami instal l the
guardrail. with opening set tor fnd ay. satd Pcdt go ..
Work on the 2.25 mile [. 77/US 33 Con nector ProJect
betwee n Rock Sprin gs and Five Pot nts m nams nn
sdocdule lo r w mplction by mid-Oct ober. _the rcv tscd
state completion date for the proJeC t, accordmg to Pcdo ·

' Communt"ty pride
... is running strona'

Small business community emerges
as powerful lobby on Capitol Hill
Gannett Ntwl Service

1. $8&amp;0,732 emergency
eltp rtpll("projeCt 110ulh of

Opening SGHS a 'community project'

SUNDAY Notebook

Valley Lumber &amp; Supply Ingels Furniture a.nd Jewelry

on

dealt with aeveral construction delay• o*
the patt te tnontha, Including:
. ..·

SR 7 repair work slated ~~.~~o~.~~.~d! ..~I~~~~~~~.~
By TOM HUNTER

'

Motorists trallillng ' ~~ PomeroY -~~
Tuppers Plains
Ohio Sllte Route 1 hiVe

RUTWID, OHIO

;

.

•

•

. .....

•J

•

t

.

..

-··-

~-·--

,..

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