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~

..... 12 • The Deily Sentinel

I

I

·Minersville United
Methodist Church
to mark 125th
anniversary
On Sunday, Sept. 22, the Min·
enville United Methodist Chun:h
will bold its annual homecoming
and Observance of the 12Sth
Anniversary of the church. Schedule
of services includes Sunday School
(9 a.m.); Wonhip Service (10 a.m.)
Carry-in Dinner ( 12 p.m.); and after.
noon service (I :30 p.m.)
The Minersville Methodist Epi:r
copal Church was founded and built
in the year 1871, on ground that was
donated by Daniel and Elizabeth
DeWolfe. Lumber for the building ·
was from the Inman Mill near
Racine, and hauled by Joseph Hood
and Adam Roush (great-grandfather
of Mary Benz and Kenny Wiggins.)
The original entrance for the
church was on the side facing the
Ohio River, but in 1927, because of
the hillside slippage, was changed to
it's present location. In 1937, a bell,
originally from Midway School near
Rutland, was donated by Mr. Late
McKnight. The Bell Tower was built
by Pomeroy Cement Block Co. at a
cost of $306.60. Shortly after the
bell was installed, it developed a
crack, and replaced by the bell from
Calloway School, in upper Minersville. It was installed by Bradford
Maag and his father, Theodore, and
is still in usc today.
In 1939, a basement was built at a
cost of $570.88, with much labor
donated.ln 1942, the interior of the
church was completely remodeled.
While the work was being done, the
congregation held services at the littie German Church on Minersville
Hill (Dutchtown). In 1959, a Ham-

mond Organ was
purchased, and in
addition to the reguJar organist(Mary
Bentz), were very
fortunate to have
four teenage youth
in the congregation
who played the
organ. The were
Eddie
Grueser,
Myrna
(Maag3
Graves;
Vicki
(Brown) Cummins;
and Paula (Sayre)
Welker. The boys
and girls of the
Junior and Sunbeam
classes taught by
Mary Russell and
Zana
Withrow
helped greatly in payment of the
organ.Jn 1967, the lots adjoining the
church, were purchased so that
restrooms could be installed. KarlGrueser and son, Larry, donated and
installed the fixtures, with finishing
work by Bill Russell, Herbert Pugh,
Brad Maag, Clifford Phillips and
Charles Grueser.
In 1953, S.S. Classrooms were
built by Earl Renshaw; Church pews
were purchased from Pomeroy Federated Church; and carpeting
(Donated by Elberfelds Dept. Store)
was installed.
In 1980, new vinyl siding was
installed on the building, and during
the 80s and 90s, several church faroilies dedicated items to the church in
memory of loved ones. These
included a piano; a public address

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich

---Community~ calendar------to:
The Commlllllty Caleadar II
publlslled • a free satice to-·
profit croups wlsblq to a n meetlq and special eveDfl. The
caleadar is not· desipled to promote sales or fund ralsen of aa-/'
type. Items are priatecl • space
penillts and caaJIOt be paraateed
to run a ~Ilk number of clays.
THURSDAY
1 POMEROY -- Child Conservation League, Thursday, 7 p.m. at the
Rock Springs United methodist
Church. Norma Torres to talk on the
WIC program.

ities will mcel Thuraday 117:30 p.m.
at Culeton School.

POMEROY -- Rock Springs Better Health Club, Thursday, I p.m.
home of Dorothy Jeffers.

RODNEY -- Revival at the Rodney United Methodist Chun:h, Sunday through Tuesday, 7 p.m. Rev.
Melvin Franklin, speaker.

RACINE -- American Legion,
Racine Post 602, Thursday, 6:30
p.tn. with dinner to follow.
SYRACUSE - The Meigs County
Board
of
Mental
Retardation/Developmental Disabil-

system; a solid-wooden cross(built
by Ron reynolds) ; completely new
church pews; and stained-glass windows. Until 1964, the Minersville
United Methodist was a part of the
Chester Charge. Rev. Robert Card
was pastor, and other churches
included Chester, Alfred, Rocksprings and Aatwoods. The following year Minersville and Forest Run
(from Racine Charge) were placed
together, and were joined by Syracuse (Asbury) from the Rutl~nd
Charge to form the Syracuse Charge
with Rev. Wendell Stutler, Pastor.
Pastors in recent years include
Richard Jarvis; Harvey Koch, Carl
Hicks, Stanley Merrified. Steve Nelson, Kandy Burch, Wesley Thatcher,
Deren Newman, and our present
pastor, Rev. Charles Neville.

SUNDAY
MIDDLEPOKI' -- Homecoming,
Hobson Christian Fellowship;
Church, Sunday, 10 Lm. Sunday
school; I p.m. covered dish dinner at
old Legion hall in Middleport; afternoon services at 2:30 p.m. at the
church. Special singing, Duncans of
Columbus; evening service, 7:30
p.m., singing, Evelyn Roush and
Sandra Keescr and preaching, John
Elswick.

EriTJone Wekome

. . ... .

•

TUESDAY
POMEROY -- State Representative John Carey (R-Wellston) will
hold an open door session Thesday,
2-3 p.m. in the Meigs County Courthouse for anyone with questions or
concerns with state government.

directed by Toney Dingess.
A fifties show of song and dance
featuring poodle skirts. bobby socks,
and hits from the 50's including the
musical "Grease" will be presented
at 3 p.m. Sam Cowan and B. J.
Smith are in the lead roles with other
vocals and dances being \!udents of
Sharon Hawley and Paulette Harrison.
The program will conclude at 4
p.m with the "Gentlemen Four," :Q
French City barbershop quartel
composed of Denver Rice, Gerald
Powell, Mike Wilfong, and Job~
Anderson.

5-10-16·23·27

•

ent1ne
Vol. 47, NO. 97

35 cetlla
A Gannett Co. Nft81181*

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday,' September 20, 1996

2 Sectlono, 12 Pageo

·Late-term abortion ban action
passes House,-goes to Senate
: By JIM ABRAMS
: Aaaoclated Preas Writer
. WASHINGTON- Opponents of
: so-called partial-birth abortion face
, tough odds in the Senate after celebrating a House vote to reverse Pres• ident Clinton's veto of a bill banning
the procedure.
"We have an uphill battle in the
Senate. I don't think there's any
: secret about that," said Rep. Charles
· Canady, R-Fia., an abortion foe who
led the 285-137 vote Thursday to
override the presidential veto.
· The vote, four more than needed
for the two-thirds majority required
for overrides, was a major victory for
'\J ...
anti-abortion forces who have made
••
the drastic form of late-term abortion
their key issue this election year.
Republican presidential nominee
Bob Dole, who supports the ban and
has criticized Clinton's veto in campaign speeches, said Thursday that as
Americans learn details of the procedure "the president has been left
almost alone, defending the indefensible."
Last April, Clinton, surrounded by
five women who had undergone the
ABORTION BAN DISCUSSED- Rep. Thomaa COburn, R.Oklll.,
right, accompanied by Rep. Chrla Smith, R·N.J., geatured during
procedure, vetoed the bin, saying it
a Capitol Hill newa conference after the Houae votad Thuraday
failed to make an e~ception when the
to override Pmldent Clinton'• vm of a bill that bene a form of
health of the mother is at risk.
lat•term abortion. (AP)
Opponents of the legislation say
the procedure, known medically as
late in her pregnancy that her baby's
intact dilation and evacuation, is problems.
Viki Wilson, a registered nurse brain had grown outside the head.
used only rarely when doctors disShe said Thursday that normaloilr
cq,v~r .seye(C ~~bro~lili~~ in .~~);., fr~pt f'rc;~no. ca.W,1 ehad the prsx:e- · Ynducea labOr; would have 'rupiuied
·· fetus o't'ihtrrioilier lias·sen01ik1iruth dure two yearsilgo after she learned

.

..

.
By ANDREW SELSKY
Aaaoelated Praaa Writer
KUWAIT- American soldiers fanned out across the desert for live-fire
exercises near the Iraqi border today, and more troops headed to join them
the United States kept the pressure on Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.
The confrontation between the United States and Iraq has eased in the past
week, but the Americans continue their military buildup in the Gulf. ·
Two planeloads of U.S. soldie.rs arrived in Kuwait on Thursday from Fort
Hood, Texas, and more were expected over the next few days. Some 3,500
soldiers of the 1st Cavalry Division were ordered to Kuwait by President Clin!On to augment a forct of 1,200 who have been conducting war games in the
desert since August.
· "The bad news is that we have to do it," said Anny Col. Robert Pollard.
He said Saddam "continues to flex his muscles, therefore we have to con-

as

TWO

2400 Eastem Ave. (Across from K-Mart)
Gallipolis, OH •

446-1711

(1/4 mi. north of Pomeroy/ Maaon Bridge)

••

Mason, wv

• 773-5721

FREE

-Canine

caper-~

ADMISSION

----Lamps installed----.

her cervix and probably crushed her.
But Republican sponsors of the
legislation won 70 Democratic supporters for the override by insisting
that the procedure is often elective
and is particularly off~nsive because
the fetus is partially delivered feet
first thtough the birth canal before the
brain is removed .
It will be more difficult to get
bipartisan support in the Senate;
where the bill passed last December
by 54-44, well short of the two-thirds
margin needed to override.
Senate Majority Leader Trent Lett
promiSed a vote, possibly next Thursday, but acknowledged. "I suspect it
will be hard to override it."
Sen. Don Nickles. R-Okla., the
GOP whip and chief vote-couhter,
e~pressed \loubt they could change
enough votes for the override .
"That's quite a few votes (to get), but
we'll be working at it."

Even with those prospects, abortion foes claimed a major victory. "It
will mobilize millions of evangelical
and Catholic voters who will go to
the polls in record numbers in
November," said Ralph Reed of the
Christian Coalition.
"This was the most historic vote
since Roe vs. Wade in the House, "
said anti-abortion leader Rep. Chris
Smith, R-N.J ., referring .to the 1973
S!llltwJlle Court ruling Jhat gave
women the right to have abortions.

1 ·

Meigs Councy Fairgrounds

~-

i.

.

The flrat of 60 new lamps were lnatalled Thuraday afternoon
In Pomeroy aa part of the vlllage'a downtown revitalization projact. Pomeroy Councilman George Wright and elactrlclan Claude
Neaae lnatalled the new lamp with plenty of asalstance from the
Melga High School welding claaa. The Vlctorlan·atyle lampe ara
dealgntcl to be remtnacent of the 18901, and w111 be lnatallecflllong
the promanade In the parking lot and along the atraeta. (s.ptinel
pholottylillmi'raeman)

Intersection of US 33 &amp; SR 7 (Nort.wcst Corner)

SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
Sunday, September 22od .

1:00 p.m. • Canine Good Citizen Test Demoaatration
1:30 p.m.· Ten Caney Lone Oak Farm
·-···
Horse Demonstratlo• Meigs County F~irxrounds ·.,·
1:00 p.m•• Antique Tractor Pull
L
3:00 p.m•• Kiddie Tractor PuU
6:30 p.m. • Belles and Beaus Square Dancers
Closing at Dark

• New Can &amp; Trucks, Quilts, Flower Use, Pettbag ZGo, Worldal Forp, M~el Tralas, Weavlq, Creatiag
·
~~
Dried F1ower Arrbgemeata ud Alldqae Can.
-

_ _

..... . , ..

~ .......... ~ ....

..-

...... ~ "'--··-· . . .... . ~ ·- "' ........ ~ . \-. .. ..- .._ - •

'

,..J~

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

- __ .. , _ ..
.,

..---

~.·~

•

"

'

...

..
Everyone geta Into 1 tight aqueeze ocCitalonally, 11 thla most·
1y black beagle Cln attaat Oltey Maadowl of Stile Route 124
heerd the clog barking and found him lodged In a hot. between
a rock and the dirt, according to Melga Sherttra Qeputy Mony
Wood The county clog warden, Bill Dye, arrived and fllhed the
dog ~ by putting a hOOk around hla collar. Wood aald the dog
probably chaled.lomething Into the two-to-th....toot-deep hole
and was then unable to extract ltaelf. TM gm.ful canine waa tak·
en to the Metga county Dog Pound, where It Is .hoped Ita owner
will clll\ft It Alao raaponcllng to the ecene wu Sheriff Jamea
Soulaby and Mlclclteport voh.t.,._. flreflghtara. Dye dlaplaya the
·
friendly dog, abOve. (Sentinel photo by Jim Freeman) •

U.S . troops revved up tanks and other annored vehicles that ha.d been
h d
stored at Camp Doha, outside the capital, Kuwait City, before ea mg out
to the site of the war games.
.
. .
.
Nearby, another contingent of U.S. troops were at a Patnot mtssllc umt,
its desert-brown launchers pointed toward Iraq.
. .
Most of the U.S. personnel arc deployed on about 35 ships tn the Gulf.
d h USS C 1 V
including two aircraft carriers. the USS Enterprise an t e
ar mson.
d
In Washington, CIA Director John Deutch said the urdish factio. n 1ca er
1K
who forged a temporary alliance with Saddam Hussean to rout a nva urdish faction is now seeking U.S. protection
.
"Mr. (Massoud) Barzani is urgently asking for our assi~t·~~ to make sure
that he doesn't become too dependent on Saddam Hussetn, Deutch said .
Barzani met with U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Robert Pcllctrcau m
Turkey on Wednesday.
K
.

Rutland council member must resign seat

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
Rutland Village Council member Gladys Barker has been asked to step
down from her council seat because of failure to have the proper restdency
requirements to set on council, according to a opinion issued late this mom·
ing by Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes. .
.
Lentes' opinion comes more than 30 days after a heartng by the MeigS
County Board of Elections. which detennined that Barker was not quahf1cd
to sit as a council member in the village of Rutland because she was not a
legal voting resident of the village.
.
.
The matter was brought before the election board by Rutland res1dent Kimberly Willford, who challenged Barker's residency because she was reportedly living in Athens County.
.
. .
An allotment of 30 days was given to Barker to file an appeal1n the Mc1gs
County Common Pleas Court to challenge the dectston of the board of elections. The Friday release of the prosecutor's legal optmon was a fonnal notice

I

10:00 a.m.· Town &amp; County Cbun:h Senic:e
10:00 a.m. • 5:00 p.m. All Oay
Demoustratloall/Activities•
12:30 p.m. • GardeaTrac:tor Pull
1:00 p.m. • Bia Bead Cloaers
1:30 p.m. ·Antique Tractor Games •
'tat Your Skills
1:00 p.m.· TriDity Hand Bell Claolr'
1:30 p.m. • Bia Bead Community Band
3:00 p.m. • 50's Show or Soagaad Daac:e
4:00 p.m. • "Gentlemen Four" Barberslaop Quartet

·
tinue to deploy our forces, first to keep the peace in the reg10n and secondJy 10 protect national inlerests in the region."
The latest crisis in Iraq erupted Aug. 31 when Saddam sent troops to help
the Kurdistan Democratic Party take control of the Kurdish safe haven in
northern Iraq. The Americans responded with cruise missile strikes on military targets in southern Iraq.
Iraq has been using radar to track U.S. aircraft patrolling the "no-ny"
zones over northern and southern Iraq since then, but it has not fired on any
planes in the past week.
The zones were established at the end of the 1991 Gulf War to protect
Kurds in the north and Shiite Muslims in the south.
More than 30,000 U.S. military personnel will soon be in the Gulf- compared to fewer than 20,000 before the crisis began three weeks ago . Kuwait
and Saudi Arabia are the only Gulf states hosting large numbers of American forces, with several thousand U.S. personnel in each country.

Prosecuting ·-attorney's
opinion upholds claim of
non-residency in village

. .
'·, ~·

.,

·-- · - · - ... ~ .... -

Sports on Page 4

lncreaalng cloudlneaa
tonight, Iowa In the 50a.
Saturday ,occaalonal rain.
Hlghaln the 70a•

U.S. continues flexing its muscle in Persian Gulf

'

.....

...

At our Gallipolia Garden Center:
Fall decorotilllf items and croft•
FaU Ribbona ·already mode bow•
- or molce your «HDR.

10:00 a.m. • Ribbon Cutting Ceremony
10:00 a.m.· 7:00p.m. ·All Day Demonstrations/
Activities •
·U:OO a.m •• Midnight Cloggers- Junior Team
ll:OO Noon- Largest Pumpkin, Sunftower, Ear of Com
and Stalk of Com Judging Contest

"r' " - -

Pick 4:
2-8-6-5
Buckeye 5:

~

POINT PLEASANT •• Annual
railroad picnic/reunion, Sunday,
11:01 a.m. with picnic at 1:01 p.m.,
Krodel Park, Point Pleasaill. Take
covered dish. Meat and soft drinks
provided.

Saturday, September 21st

at

7-8-3

•

Come On ·over To Bob's......
Now
ForP

~~/

Rev. and Mrs. Hilbert Miller have served
s Nazarene missionaries in Swaziland,
Malawi and South Mrica since 1962. They
are furloughing during 1996 and will be
spealdng tbe Chester Nazarene Church
this Friday Night at 7:00pm.

Pick 3:

Florida State
beats North
Carolina

MONDAY
•
. MIDDLEPOKI'
Middlepori
Community Church, S15 Pearl
Stteet, Middleport, Monday througll
Sept. 28, 7:30 p.m. Different spe~
ers and singers each evening.
•

A variety of entertainment will be school fashion show will be presentpresented at Expo '96 to be staged ed by 4-H club members under the
on Saturday and Sunday at the direction of the 1997 Fashion Board,
Becky Baer, extension agent, adviMeigs County Fairgrounds.
Sharon Hawley is chairman of sor. ·
entertainment. Performers will be on ··· At 6:30 p.m. the Belles and
the hill staged. Saturday's schedule Beaus square dance team will give a
will include a performance by ' a demonstration on square dancing.
group of 10 junior dancers from the
Sunday's entertainment will get
Midnight Cloggers at II a.m. The underway with the Big Bend Clogdancers are a part of the group gen. directed by Vivian May, preformed many years ago by Bruce ~ting several clogging numbers.
Wolfe, co-directed by Beny Smith, Trinity Church Bell Choir will perMiddleport.
form at 2 p.m. Di~ie Sayre is direcRobin D'Hart of Racine who has tor of the handbell choir, a first for
performed at the Meigs County Fair t.l~igs County.
for the
two years will sing at I
Performing at 2:30 p.m. will be
p.m.
that a back-to- the
Bend
Band

The Reedsville United Methodist
Women voted to send five blankets
to the Festival for Shsring at a recent
What a difference a day or two healthcare for homebound patients meeting held at the home of Nancy
makes.
in the comforts of their own homes Buckley.
Plans were made for the annual
Racine residents involved with in conjunction with the current phipecan
sale to be held in November.
staging the annual Racine Fall Festi- losophy of keeping people in their
Named
to the nominating comminee
val found this out Saturday. They own homes for as long as possible.
were
Nina
Boston, Frances Reed,
had a beautiful--just about perfect
Refreshments will be served durand Regina Reed.
day--for their festival, not to hot, not ing Friday's observance.
Grace Weber opened the meeting
too cool with plenty of sunshine.
with
the reading "23rd Channel."
Dale and Kathryn Hart who are
How did you get along with SatEmma
Durst read "I Thank The
among the promoters of the event _ ~rday night's Miss America
Lord,
Do
You." Forty shut-in calls
were well pleased with the large Pageant?
were
reported
for July and August
crowd on hand and the success of
The pageant has millions of
and
cards
were
sent to several
the venture. Entertainment moved viewers across the nation despite the
friends.
constantly on and off the stage to fact that it has been held for over 70
Gladys Thomas and
Durst
provide music for those anending years. At our house we were rooting
thanked
the
members
for
rememthe festival.
for Miss Alabama who came in as
Thankfully, the Racine residents second runner-up. We thought she brances while they were in the hospital. Weber had the closing prayer.
didn't get the kind of day that Mon- "looked" the part. Oh well.
Refreshments were served to the
day turned out to be--cold, hard rain
above
named and to Pearl Osborne,
all day. Now that could have ruined
Mrs. Mildred Shuster has been
Young, Debbie Weber,
Rosemary
their efforts.
returned to her Lincoln Heights,
Delores
Frank,
Diane Jones, Ann
Pomeroy, residence after undergoing
Lacomb,
Susie
Mash, and Lillian
You can look forward to seeing surgery at the Holzer Medical Cen Pickens.
The
door
prize was won by
the queen contestants for the upcom- ter.
Osborne,
ing Big Bend Stemwheel Festival.
You might want to drop her a
The ne~t meeting will be held at
There are 15 contestants and each cheer up card. Incidentally, she's
the
Frank home.
of them will be wesring a Victorian doing well. ·
costume created especially for the
festival. The costume is required for
Jack Greenaway. who is recuper- I
participation. You'll see the group in ating from major surgery performed
ADMISSION
the festival parade and, of course, at University Hospital in Columbus,
there will be the traditional ceremo- comments that the two gazebos on
ny to crown the queen and her court. the Pomeroy parking lots are excelThe contest is such a nice addi- lent.
tion to the festival.
Jack has built several of these in
his day and says the ones in
And let me remind you about this Pomeroy are excellent and well
Friday.
designed.
From 2 to 4 p.m.. an open house
By the way, Jack is able to be out
for the public as well as employees and about some these days. In fact,
of Veterans Memorial Hospital, will he and wife, Martha, are in the
be held in the quarters occupied by process of getting back to some of
the service in the Meigs Medical their bridge games so things are
I
Building adjacent to the hospital.
returning to normal for them. They
The service is holding the open love the game.
house to celebrate its 25th anniversary and you're more than welcome
And the question of the day is: to
to attend. In fact, the pleasant, genial tum on or not to tum on the furnace?
staff will be glad to see you.
Decisions, decisions. Do keep smilThe home health service orovides inR.

REV.&amp;
MRS.
HILBERT
MILLER

'~
POMEROY -- Rally Day, Rcxic
Springs United Methodist Churc~.
Carry-in diMer at 12:30 P,.m. will!.
program by Sharon Stewart on tn(!:
to Africa. Quartet to sing. Reviv»
services, 7 p.m. Monday, Thesda)i
and Wednesday, Rev. Brian Hart:
ness, speaker: special singing night;;:
ly.
:

Entertainment announced for Expo '96

Area UMW
,contributes
to missions

Ohio Lottery

111urlday, September 19, 1916

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

that an appeal was not filed and the hoard of elections' dccisi~n is final.
Barker filed a new voter registration fonn on Sept. 4, hstmg a Rutland
address as her place of residence, according to the Meigs County Board of
Elections.
·
Attempts to reach Barker for comment at that residence this morning were
unsuccessful.
"The fact that Ms. Barker may be residing within the village at this time
docs not affect the significance of the hoard of elections' decision, " Lcntcs'
opinion, submitted to Barker and Rutland Mayor JoAnn Ead s, read . .
"If Ms. Barker docs not resign ·from council at the next regular meet mg.
the council must infonn her, in confonnity with the content.' of thts letter.
that she can no longer sit as a voting member of the village council," Lcntcs
added.
"The village council docs not l'Ced to take any fonnal action such as a
motion and a vote to enforce the removal of Gladys Barker from the vtllagc
council. As a matter of law she is not qualified to he a village council member because of the fact that up to the time of the Aug . 8, 1996 hearing, she
was not a qualified elector within the village," Lcntes said.
Lcntes emphasiud the importance that the council take action on Barker's resignation immediately, because any council issue that Barker would
vote on is subject to be challenged later on.
"Barker's vote could be voided and any action that council took based upon
her vote could be overturned," Lcntes ·said.

Stricl&lt;land tells audience he won't
promise .not to vote against tax hike
. MARIETTA (AP) _ . Congres- · middle class. I will work to give the
sional candidate Ted .Strickland working middle class a tax cut.."
refused to promise that he wou.ldn't
The Democrat said a remark he
vote for any taX increase iflie:\were rnade about taxes·I wo years ago d urelected 10 th~ u .S. House froin the ing a debate with Rep. Frank Cre6th District.
means, R-Gallipolis, and his current
"The easiest thing for me to do opponent, may have cost him re-clec-.
would be 10 make such a pledge, .. lion to Congress. He served from
•
·
Strickland said Thursday during a 1993•9J .
town meeting. "I don't think we need
He had responded to a question
raise
taxes.
1
don't
want
raise
.
·
about
~ow to pay for a health care
10
10
1program by saying " we may have to
taX~·~ut we need taX fairness. The Wt raise some taxes."
burden has been shifted from large
Cremeans and Strickland had been
corporations and the wealthy to the invited to • debate Thursday in this

Ohio River city. Strickland accepted
but Cremeans declined, saying Congress still was in session and he had
· W h. mon
to be '" as
The House adjourned at 5:24p.m.
Thursday and had no legislative busi·
ness scheduled for Friday.
Organiurs then changed the foru· g w1'th panelists
mat to a town mee n •
asking Strickland questions. About
180 people attended the meeting.
Strickland had challenged Cremeans to a public debate on March.
20. the day after the primary. He said
Cremeans had rejected the idea long

'"e· .

before Thursday' s event wfas .plan~
and accused Cremeans o ustng w"' ~
as an excuse .
Cremeans spokesman David
Payne said the congressman had proposed a ~~Cries of three radio debates
geared to specifiC to reach as many
people as possible.
Strickland, of Lucasville, said he
was given a iii'iday deadline to
respond to Cremeans' debate requat:
"He's in no position to aivedeld·
lines,\: Strickland said. "I've been
after him since March 20 and he's
setting deadlines."

..

�.Friday, September 20, 1996

Commentary

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page2

Local News in Brief:

OHIO Weather
Satunlay,Sept.21

Friday, September 20, 1996

AccuWeathe~ forecast fQr daytime conditions and

MICH.

The Daily Sentinel · Counterfeit U.S. dollars pour into Russia

Oscar Lee Leonard
Oscar Lee Leonard, 75, New Haven, W.Va. , died Thursday, Sept. 19, I 996
~in Holzer Medical Center.
•
""·
Born Aug. 28, 1.921 in Logan, son of the late Floyd and Mary Reynolds
~~~~;r~]
Leonard, he retired after 35 years of service at the Philip Sporn Plant in Gra1,
1 ham Station, W.Va.
· A World War II veteran of the U.S. Anny Air Corps, he was a member
of the Chester Methodist S:hurch, the Shade River Lodge 469, York Rite and
Comrnandery, and the Drew Webster Post of the American Legion,
Pomeroy.
He is survived by his wife, Faye Marie Rhoades Leonard; a daughter and
son-in-law, Lea Kay and Gene Willoughby of The Plains; a son and daughter-in-law, Nicklois and Eleanor Well Leonard of Pomeroy; five grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren; two sisters and a brother-in-law, Opal and
.A Dorel Griggs of Columbus, and Mary Lou Harrison of Gallipolis; a broth~
er-in-law, Howard Rhoades' Jr. of The Plains; sisters-in-law, Dorothy Van
. Dyke and Mrs. Ed (Theron) Hurst, both of The Plains; and several nieces
, -'f and nephews.
W.VA.
Services will be--,2 p.m. Sunday in the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
with the Rev. Brian Harkness officiating. Burial will follow in the Vinton
Memorial Park. Friends may call at the funeral horne from 2-4 and 6-9 p.m.
Saturday.

'Esta6fislid in 1948

By Jack Anderson
Treasury Department to give them
and
J•n
Moiler
more resources to fight counterfeit111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
WASHINGTON .. An internal ing. A June 1994 memo from Secret ·
614-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157
' memo from the U.S. Secret Service Service chief Eljay B. Bowron to
contradicts previous claims by U.S .
officials about the amount of counterfeit American currency circulating
in
the former Soviet Union .
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
In public testimony before Congress,
American officials have denied
ROBERT L. WINGETT
persistent
repons that Iranian-made
Publisher
SUpemotes" have created a coun- Ronald K. Noble of the Treasury
terfeit crisis in Russia. The super- Department spells out the details.
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
"In (fiscal year) 1993, the United
notes, first discovered in 1990, are
General Manager
Controller
near-perfect copies of American dol- States Secret Service reponed a total
lars believed to be printed on press- of $1,049,000 in counterfeit notes
es given to Iran by the U.S. govern- detected in Russia, the first year that
Uft.,. to ,_ Rlltor ,,. n~. They mu., be,_. than 300 IIW'd1. Aftl.n.n .,.
ment in the late 1970s.
such information was disclosed by
'"11/«:' to ldiUng 1nd "'"" bo •lgnld .,.,lncllldlmmt,...
Russian authorities," the memo
Last
February,
Theodore
Allison
No unolgn«&lt;loltlfll will bo pullll1h«t. 1.1,.,. • boln flOOd 11111, - - l n g
,...... not ,.,.on.~~t~
of the Federal Reserve tried to down- reads. "The Secret Service believes
play the problem in testimony before that this amount represents a small
a House Banking Committee panel fraction of the overall counterfeit
chaired by Rep. Spencer Bachus, R- activity in Russia and neighboring
Aia. According to Allison , the Fed Independent States.
has found an average of only 55
"Secret Service intelligence concounterfeits per I million SIOO bills f~rn~s that Russian organized crime
that come in from outside the United syndicates control the distribution of
States.
United States counterfeit currency
hard and if elected commissioner I'd
Dear Editor,
Nearly two years earlier, howev- throughout Russia, the Baltic States,
In response to a letter to the edi- work hard for the whole county. I er, Secret Service officials were Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovator that the president of the Meigs know the facts, the people involved, already urging "their bosses at the kia and Ukraine and traffick it into
Commissioners Fred Hoffman wrote and God knows, and that makes me
about myself. Alii want to say is that happy.
P.S. l will not respond to any more
I don't like the way a lot of politicians
of
your
letters, Mr. Hoffman.
run their campaigns. It's. time for a
Jelf Thornton
change!
Racine
I'm a very positive person. As
rna&gt;:or of Racine I"ve worked very

!1

By Jack Anderson
and
Jan Moller

11

...

.,.,,.ophono

Letters to the editor
Candidate responds,

Western Europe. "
An investigator for Bachus, who
chairs the oversight subcommittee of
the House Banking Committee, told
us the Secret Service has a history of
reluctance in discussing counterfeit
issues. "They did everything they
could to dissuade us from holding a
hearing," the investigator said. "First
they denied that supernotes existed.
Then ... they said only a few supernotes had been printed. Give me a
break! You don't go to the expense of
making intricate engraving plates to
only print a few notes."
The 1994 memo also supports
controversial statements made last
year by Viktor Melnikov. the director of foreign exchange control for
the Russian Central Bank -- Russia ·s
equivalent of the Federal Reserve. On
Sept. 13, 1995, Melnikov met with a
U.S. State Depanrnent official to discuss the counterfeiting. A State
Department cable, marked '"sensitive," summarizes the conversation:
'" (Melnikov) reponed that over
the last two years, over $40 billion
had been imponed into the country,
a large part of which he suspec ted
was being used for il!egal purposes.

HURRICANE
.SEASoN?

·Plans can unravel
despite rtaggling
about debate details
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - For all the habitual haggling about rules and details,
the lasting images in presidential campaign debates have defied attempts by
rival handlers to gain advantage by design . Unexpected words and
unguarded moments often undo the game plans.
But competing negotiators keep lrying to shape schedules and settings
to serve their candidates, as those representing President Clinton and Republican Bob Dole are doing now. Dole gained the first point with the near-certain exclusion of Ross Perot as a third debater, ruled out by the sponsoring
Commission on Presidential Debates, which said he shouldn't be there
because he can't win the election.
That would deliver the two-way, major party confrontation Dole
demanded, but even so, there could be a price should Perot succeed in stirring up a backlash over his rejection. Even with his shrunken suppon in public opinion polls, Perot's potential voters represent a bloc Republicans don't
want to alienate. and to celebrate his exclusion risks doing so.
Dole's concern was that Perot would cut into the anti-incumbent vote
against Clinton and would wage a su:idJ:nt debate assault against the GOP
nominee's massive tax cut proposal.
·
By William A. Ruther
"I want to reach out to Perot supponers, obviously," Dole said after the
I am getting a little tired of being
commission. which sounds official but isn' t, said the Reform Party enlry didtold, by commentators in both print
n't merit a debate role.
and the electronic media, that the rea"This is a blatant display of power by the Republicans and the large
son Hillary Clinton is so unpopular is
donors who fund their campaigns," Perot protested Monday in San Franthat "American men are afraid of
cisco, saying the voters overwhelmingly favored his inclusion. He blamed
strong women ."
the Democrats, too, although less vehemently for now, calling the decision
Hillary's approval ratings are the
. an attempt "to preserve and protect Wa5hington 's corrupt political practices."
lowest, for a first lady, since Eleanor
Perot said he ' II sue to delay the debates until he gets to make his case
Roosevelt. She is least popular with
for a seat there, but that's been tried before, and the precedents are all against
men, but most women don't like her
him.
either. She also has (and so, of
His debate role four years ago enabled him to revive a campaign he quit
course, did Eleanor Roosevelt) a
for 13 weeks, re-entering just before the debating fl.. zan. He got in after negolarge and noisy claque of admirers
tiators for both Clinton and President Bush agreed to it; by the time the debate
who can 't gel enough of her.
commission said he should be there, it was settled . .
At first glance, the widespread disNot this year.
like of Mrs. Clinton wouldn 't seem to
The Clinton campaign wanted him in and still does, despite the ruling
require a psychoaoalystto explain it.
by the commission, which isn't binding on the candidates, and despite ear- She is a smart and beautiful woman,
lier statements that the president would follow its ground rules.
with a touch of the "Icc Queen" perClinton said he had enjoyed Perot's debate role in the 1992 campaign and
sonality and a domineering manner
thought he made a valuable contribution. Understandably so. since the 19 that she tries, without much success,
percent Perot got as an independent candidate cut into Bush's vote in some
to hide. Her husband, during the 1992
key states. Perot's share in the current national polls ranges from 5to 7 percampaign, carne close to suggesting
cent.
she would be co-president ("Buy
''I'm not afraid of any debate," Clinton said. But waiting, bargaining, and
qne," he wisecracked, "get one
perhaps limiting the number works to the advantage of the candidate in the
free").
lead.
Once in power she wasted no time '
For Dole, the debates are a vital arena for a comeback push. He wants
barging into public policy matters.
more of them, Clinton fewer. Dates and form ats are at issue, too. The president wants at least one staged in the strolling, town-hall format.
It served him well last time, when Bush was set back by a voter lecture
against negative campaigning and by his stumbling, don't-get-it reply to a
misstated question about the economy. Add Bush's on-camera glance at his
watch, as though he'd have preferred to be elsewhere, and it was advantage
By Georg• A. Plagenz
•
Clinton.
"The usual," the man said.
At best, the debates provide a forum in which vast television and radio
Those are words commonly assoaudiences can hear and compare ttie positions of the candidates on the major
. ciated with the regular bar patron
issues, and the commission ruled that they therefore should be reserved for
(like Norm on "Cheers") giving his
candidates with a real chance to win the White House.
order to the banender.
But the memorable moments are often the unexpected and unrehearsed,
Not in this case.
when neither rules nor fonnats make a difference - President Ford in 1976
The man who spoke them was
saying, and then insisting. that there was no Communist domination of Eastresponding to a question from a
em Europe. a misstatement that stalled his campaign when he needed to speed
woman who wanted to know the reait: Michael Dukakis" bland, unemotional response to a 1988 question about
wn the minister at his church had
whether he would alter his opposition to the death penalty if his wife were recently left.
· -raped and murdered; President Carter in 1980, inadroitly quoting his daughWhen he said "the usual," the
ter, then 12, on nuclear arms control.
woman, lacking the bartender's legThe debates usually do more to cement images, plusses or minuses, than
to markedly change them. That will be Dole's challenge against Clinton. The endary omniscience in such situations, had to ask what he meant.
rules won't matter much once the cameras go on.
"Adultery," he explained. What
No more now than 20 years ago, when Dole said in a vice presidential
had once been decidedly unusual in
debate that they were all "Democrat wars." and was called a hatchetman
minister-chun:h relations has become
for it.
the usual.
Ironically. he got the question that prompted that troublesome reply only
The only thing m9re distressing
because his managers insisted on the letter of the rules, precluding a change
than the rash of new revelations of
in the order of questioning.
sexual infidelity involving clergy is
the casual way all of this is being
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mean, vice praideattuld columuill
received by the church laity.
for Tho Auodated Press, b1S reported on WuhillltoD and natlooal pol·
Instead of npressing shock, pc:oIdes roi- more thaD 30 yean.
ple typically say, with a sigh of.resignation, "It just shows ministen are
only human like the rest of us."
Thought for Today: "I believe that man will not merely endure: he will
To say that ministers are "only
prevail. He is immortal, noc because he alone arn~ng creatures has an in~x­ human" can miss the point of wbll it
haustible voice, but because he has a soul, a spmt capable of compasston means to be human. What It meaas is
and sacrifice and endurance." - William Faulkner, American author (1897- that we can rise above the brute ani·
1962).
mal side of our natures llvough rea-

He also noted that of the $15-20 bit.
lion dollars of U.S. currency in Rus.
sia (more, he noted, than the entire
value of ruble notes in circulation).
15-20 percent is counterfeit."
Melnikov' s statement alarmed
U.S. government officials, who fear
for the worldwide stability of the dollar. American dollars are by far the
world's most popular currency and
the U.S. government wants to keep it
that way.
Soon after Melnikov made his
remarks, he was pressured to retract
them by a team of Fed, Treasury and
Secret Service officials who met
with him in Moscow. The retraction
came Jan . 31 , at a news conference
in Moscow to announce a public relations campaign on behalf of the
redesigned, supyosedly counterfeitproof $100 bills.
So far the Secret Service has been
doing a yeoman's job with limited
resources. According to the memo;
which asks for the establishment of
a Russian field office, the agency had
only five agents working out of Paris
to combat counterfeiting in 60 countries . From 1992 to 1993, the counterfeiting caseload in the Paris office
nearly doubled.
"Effective suppression of counterfeiting operations requires an
immediate response and sustained
investigation as soon as the bogus
currency is detected,'' the Secret
Service wrote . "The present complement of special agent resources at
the Paris field office and the heav¥
workload, however, limitS the time
and effon that can bo devoted to.
investigating Russian and eastern:
European finanfial crimes." Yet two
years after the memo, none of the
requested field agents in Russia have
been approved.
When the Secret Service is given·
enough resources , it can be remark·-·
ably effective. Legislation sponsored
by Rep. Bachus. for example. led to
the deployment of several new agents
in Latin America. With the help of
those agents, more than $25 million
in counterfeit U.S. cum:ncy has been
seized by the Bogota, Colombia,
field office. Even so, a request for
more agents in Mexico has been
denied.
·
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller.
·are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

Who's afraid of strong women?
She spearheaded the administration's
drive for a national health scheme
that would have socialized one-seventh of what free economy we have

William A. Rusher
left, and failed spectacularly to get it
through even a Democrat-controlled
Congress. Since then, quite obviously as a matter of White House policy, she has kept a lower public profile, trimming the Christmas tree, visiting day-care centers. etc. But behind·
the scenes one still gets whiffs oJ the
former Lady Macbeth -- in Travelgate, Filegate, the reappearing billing
records, etc.
Why, if many men dislike this
woman (and I am one of them), does
our attitude have to be chalked up to
a "fear of strong women"? I offer
just one exhibit on behalf of the
defense: Margaret Thatcher.
Now there is a strong woman . She
got into British Conservative Party
politics on her own, then married a
wealthy older man who put his money behind her. With just that much

outside help, she proceeded to get that this was "no time to go all wobelected to Parliament, rose through bly." .
the ranks on her own, entered the
A strong woman indeed! And yet,
Cabinet, then ousted former Conser- do you know, if she were constituvative Prime Minister Edward Heath tionally eligible to run, I would push
as leader of the opposition to a ·a peanut with my nose all the way:
Labour government. In 1979 the from San Francisco to Washington to
Tories swept back into control of Par- elect her president of the United .
liament, and Margaret Thatcher States. I don't "fear" her in the least.
became Prime Minister of Great I just admire her enormously.
Britain and Northern Ireland. She
Where is the American equivalent
WO!l the three next elections too,
of Margaret Thatcher? That'sjust the
becoming the only British prime trouble: There isn't any. Among
minister in the 20th century to do so elected officials, there are a handful
four times in a row.
of women in the United States SenNot only that, but sly! proved the ate and four or five handfuls in the
most vigorous prime minister of House, but not one who is a truly
either party since Winston Churchill. major figure . As for non-elected
She took on Britain's powerful labor women, Elizabeth Dole has looked .
unions, and shellacked them. When impressive lately, but even she has
Argentina seized the Falkland more to prove.
Islands, she dispatched a force that
American men don't fear strong
promptly took them back. She stood women. They arc simply unimside by side with Ronald Reagan in pressed with the batch that's currentdisplaying the firm front before ly on offer. Including Hillary.
which th~ Soviet Union finally buckWilliam A. Rusher is a Distln·
led and fell . She buttressed George guished Fellow ol the Claremont
Bush's determination at the outset of Institute ror the Study of Stales·
the Iraq crisis, brusquely telling him manship and Political PhUosophy.

Expressing our finer human powers
son and self-control, those most sublime of human gifts.
Therefore, to say that we are
human should not be an excuse for

George R. Plagenz

ding their congregations to "'come up
higher." The pulpits of America proclaimed the "perfectibility of man."'
That mankind could bring the kingdom of God on eanh was seen as a
real possibility.
Two world wars and a debilitating
Depression destroyed most of that
faith, which may have been unwarranted to begin with . But if once we
npected too much of human nature
we now expect too little.
'
It isn't that we have overestimated the power of sin. Evil is a very real
presence in the universe . Ncvcnheless, after sin, the world and the dev~1 have done their worst, each of us
IS left With a deep reservoir of goodness and vinue that has gone ll!!lCIY
untapped by most of us.
/ ..
A Harvard dean once called a

our own failures .. or those of the
clergy. It should be a reason for boasting. Human beings were made, says
the psalmist, "a little lower than the
angels and crowned with glory arid
honor."
Whether or not we believe that
about ourselves, many of us want to
believe it about our clergy. We want
them to be special. We don't really
want to think they are "like the rest
of us."
If the clergy are not looked up to
A~ialioa.
the way they once were, it appears
they themselves want it that way. A
banner headline in a newspaper reads,
"Clergy Gratefully Step Down From
Their Pedestals."
The reason may be clear. It is lonely up there alone. It is more~
~to be By The Aeeoclltecl Pre11
.
on tem firma with the c mon
. theToday is Friday, Sept. 20, the 264th day of 1996 There are 102 days left ·
throng. Off their pedestals,
cler- . tn
year.
·
·gy merge into the crowd.
y
Today'~ Highlight in History:
become one of us.
&lt;?" on
SepL 20, I5 l9 •fiPonuguese navigator Ferdinand Magel'an set out from
Things were different a century Spatn
a voyage to md a west
.
•
em passage to the Sptce Islands in lndoneago. The clergy lhen would stand on sia Magellan wa$ killed
en route, but one of his ships eventually circumtheir pedesllls above the crowd bid- na~gated the world.

Today in history

•
•

..a .·· Jean McPhail Ranson

Jean Murray McPhail Ranson, 82, of Grafton. W.Va .• died Saturday, Sept.
14, 1996 at the Anhur B. Hodges Nursing Home, Charleston, W.Va.
BornApril29, 1914, she was a graduate of Grafton High School and West
Virginia University. She taught school in the Taylor County system for many
years. She was a member of the Church of the Covenant in Grafton.
She was'preceded in death by husbands Hugh R. McPhail and Edwin Ranson; a brother, William Murray; and a sister, Emily Dougher.
She is survived by a son , Hugh of Syracuse: daughter, Emily Roles of
Charleston; a brother, Dr. Harry M. Murray II of Bridgepon, W.Va.; and a
sister, Esther Faulkner of Grafton; and five grandchildren and one-greatgrandchild.
Services were held at Grafton Church of the Covenant with the Rev. Anna
Beach officiating. Burial was in the Bluemont Cemetery.

.' VIa - 1 0 0 - Clfi/PhiCONtl

:Chance of wet weekend
·increases a~er . tonight

next week.
By The Asaoclated Preea
The record-high temperature for
.. A cold front will bring thickening
this
date at tlie Columbus weather
clouds and rain to Ohio tonight and
station
was 97 degrees in 1895 while
Saturday, the National Weather Serthe
record
low was 37 in 1956. Sun·vice said. Thunderstorms also are
set
tonighi
will be at 7:31 p.m. and
possible.
sunrise
Saturday
at 7: I 8 a.m.
Highs on Saturday will be 65:75.
Weather
rorecast:
Wilma E. Wright, 81, Hockingpon, died Thursday, Sept. 19, 1996 in Lit. Lows tonight will be 45-55 .
Tonight...Inereasing
doudiness.
A
tle
Hocking, as a result of injuries sustained in an auto accident.
The chance of showers wlll conchance
of
showers
west
after
midBorn
in Wirt County, W.Va., daughter of the late Frank and Sarah Richards,
tinue through Sunday and into early
night. Lows 45to 50 east
she was a homemaker.
She is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, James and Sandy Wright
"
of Alfred; two sisters, Juanita Woodford of Ponsmouth, and Jelah Phillips
of Spencer, W.Va. ; two grandchildren and three great-grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Carl Wright; and by two
The following land transfers were Wright to Susan M. Clark, Pomeroy;
recorded recently in the office of
Deed, Donald E. and Ruth Ann brothers and four sisters.
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in the White Funeral Home, Coolville,
·. Meigs County Recorder Ernmogene Shupe to SOCCO, Salem, 84 acres;
Hamilton :
Deed, SOCCO to Jayne Ann Vail with Pastor Mark Dupler and the Rev. Helen Kline officiating. Burial will
be in the Rockland Cemetery, Belpre. Friends may call at the funeral home
Deed, Charles J. Lehew to DaleS. and Jan Louise Holter, Salem;
and Nancy S. Thoene, Pomeroy;
Deed, Ruby Rife, et al. to SOC- from 2c4 and 6-S p.m. Saturday.
I;&gt;eed, Suzanne Wolfe, Charles CO, Salem;
·
Asa and Jane G. Bradbury to Mary E.
Deed, Ernest Holben Calaway
O'Brien, Middlepon;
and Patricia L. Calaway to Ernest
· . Deed, Doris Farley, Doris and Holben Calaway, Orange;
Masonic· picalc
Elliott A. Gottlieb to Southern Ohio
Deed, J.J. Detweiler Enterprise to Grange to meet
Star
Grange
778
and
Star
Junior
Shade River Lodge F &amp; AM 453
Coal Co., Salem, I13.05 acres;
Patricia Oxyer, Scipio;
Grange
878
will
hold
their
annual
will
have a family picnic for mem. Deed, Granville C. and JoAnna
Right of way, Wayne L. and
hayride
and
wiener
roast
on
Saturday
bers,
their families, and invited guests
Stout to Bryan H. Morris, Columbia, Junice K. Adams to BREC, Rutland;
beginning
at6:30
p.m.
at
the
grangeSunday,
5 p.m. , at the Roger Gaul
1.4605 acres;
Right of way, Michael and Nancy
hall.
farm
near
Chester. Those coming are
Deed, Owen A. and Susan S. Nut· Norcia to BREC, Bedford;
asked
to
bring covered dish and
ter to Brenda ,Sue and Gene M.
Right of way. Angela S. and
lawn
chairs.
Clegg, Chester;
Roben Lemaster to BREC, Colum- Planning meeting set
Right of way, Kenneth B. and Bet- bia;
..,
The Meigs Soil and Water Conty L. Young and Tuppers PlainsDeed, Phyllis E Morris to Walter servation District will hold its annu- Tractor pull
A national kiddie tractor pull will
Chester Water District, Orange;
_ l'y1orris and Janet E. Manuel, Salis- al planning meeting followed by the
be
held in conjunction with the
Righi of way, Janet Coomer bury;regular board meeting, 10 a.m.
Meigs
County Stemwheel Festi_yal on
Young to TPCWD, Letart, 1.8542
Deed, Charlotte A. M~Gowan to Wednesday at the Meigs County
Oct.
5.
Staning time will be at noon,
acres;
Roger and Yvonne Young, Bedford; Public Library meeting room. The
and
the
children will pull in age
Right of way, William J. Bias and
Deed, Ray E. Wellman to Andrew public is invited to attend.
groups
of
three and four ·year olds,
Michael Reed to TPCWD, Letan, R. Eggers, Bedford parcels; ,
five and six year olds, seven and eight
.4752 acre;
Deed, Wilbur H. Sr. and Matilda
year olds, and nine and I0 years old.
· Right of way, Pamela King to M. Rowley to Danny K. Harrison, Meeting announced
The Eastern Local Board of Edu- The pull will be staged by the NationTPCWD. Lebanon. 1.50 acres;
Salisbury•. 80 acre.
cation will meet in regular session, al Kiddie Tractor Pullers Association
Right of way, Terry L. and Darla
Tuesday, 6 p.m., at Riverview Ele- with sponsors, Herold's Quality
Jo Tucker to TPCWD, Letan, 1.5695
mentary.
Homes. Vaughan's and the Forest
acres;
Run Sponsman Club.
Right of way, Joseph Gray and
Angela Patterson to ll'CWD. Letan;
CLEVELAND (AP) - Two tick.50 acre;
ets
matched all five numbers in
· Right of way. RobertS. and AretThursday
night's Buckeye 5 drawing,
ta Montgomery to TPCWD, .21 acre:
POMEROY
· Units of the Meigs County Emerand
each
ticket
is wonh $100,000, the
Right of way, Ronald G. and
9:49a.m., Mulberry Avenue, Vicgency
Medical
Service
recorded
I
0
Ohio
Lottery
said.
Loretta McDade to TPCWD, Olive,
The winning tickets were pur- calls for assistance Thursday. Units ki Baker, VMH;
. 3.621 acres;
I I :45 a.m., Overbrook Nursing
chased
at In &amp; Out Man in Toledo responding included:
· Right of way, Linda E. Jurado to
Center, Oscar Qualls, HMC.
.and
at
Dickes
Drive
Thru
in
SanTPCWD, Orange, 200 acres;
MIDDLEPORT
RUTLAND
Right of way, Raymond R. and dusky.
3: 17 p.m., State Route 7, Cody
7:36a.m., Lower Route 7, Marvin
Sales
in
Buckeye
5
totaled
Teresa Cline to TPCWD, Orange,
Davidson, Holzer Medical Center;
Yeauger, HMC:
$374,100.
4. 7890 acres:
. 7:39 p.m., South Third Avenue.
2:48 p.m., Meigs Mine 2, AugusThere
were
174
BuckeyeS
tickets
Right of way, Kenneth Rizer to
with four of the numbers, and each is Kevin Bush, Veterans Memorial Hos- tus G. Thomas Jr., O"Bieness MemoTPCWD, Lebanon, 12.50 acres;
rial Hospital;
wonh $250. The 4,886 tickets show- pital;
Right of way, Eugene and JoAnn
8:44p.m., South Second Avenue, . 6:44 p.m., SR 143, Amanda
ing
three
of
the
numbers
are
each
Adkins to TPCWD, Lebanon, 3
Wooten , OBMH.
wonh $10, and the 45,726 tickets Mary Pickens, VMH;
acres;
10:30
p.m.,
Pearl
Street,
Robin
SYRACUSE
showing two of the numbers are each
Right of way, Roy Edward IcenPridemore, VMH .
10:06 a.m., SR 124, Merle Rickwonh $1.
hower Jr. to TPCWD. Lebanon, 20
el, Jackson General Hospital.
Sales in Pick 3 Numbers totaled .
acres;
$1,300,786, and winners will receive
~ight of way, Raymond and Helen
$384,060.50.
L. Barber, Gregory L. and Ann PolPick 4 Numbers players wagered
lard to TPCWD, Lebanon, so·acres;
$329,004 and will share $131 ' 100.
__ _!)eed, George I,..~d . Nelle L.
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaSows: steady to 1.00 higher.
The jackpot for Saturday's Super
Ohio direct hog prices at selected
U.S. 1-3 300·450 lbs. 42 .00Lotto drawing is $20 million .
buying points Friday as provided by 45.00; 450-500 lbs. 45.00-49.00;
The Daily Sentinel
the U.S. Department of Agriculture 500-650 lbs. 48.00-51 .00, few 52.00.
(USPS 21:1-960)
Market News:
Boars: 40.00-42.00.
Barrows and gilts: steady 1.00
For the week, barrows and gils
PllbliJhed every Gflemoon, Monday lhroaJh
. friday. t II Coun SL, Pomen&gt;y, Obio. by !he
higher: demand moderate to good near steady. Sows unevenly steady.
Am Ele Power .......................41'/o
.Obio Y•lley Publilhina eo..,..y/OanneU Co.;
Akzo .............................:........
Estimated receipts: 37,000.
with moderate offerings.
l'l&gt;menly. Ohio 4~769, Pit 992-2tl6. Second
Aahlend 011 ........................... 39'1.
clw fiOIIII&lt; pll4 11 Pomen&gt;y. Obio.
U.S. 1-2, 220-260 lbs. country
AT&amp;T .......................................57
[!!lints 52.50-54.00, few 52.00; plants
titnotom The Auodated Preu. and Jhe Ollio
Bank One ..............................40'1.
. -NewspopetAuodllion.
Bob Event ............................ 13\ 53.50-55.00.
U.S.
2-3,
230-260
lbs. 46.00Veterans Memorial
Borg-Werner .........................36'1.
rarntA11111R: Scld oddra• coil&lt;cdoos 10
52.00.
The Olily Seoliael. l1 t Coun St . l'tlmeroy,
Champion ............................. 1~
Thursday admissions - none.
Ohio4l769.
Channing Shope ................... 6\
Thursday discharges - none.
City
Holding
............................
24
Holzer Medical Ceater
SUISCRJmON IATU
Ray Ewry of the United States
F.._l Mogul .........................21
.,~
Dlscbaraes Sept. 19 - Bryan
Gannett ......................., ......... 65'1. won eight gold medals in track and
One ................. ................................. 12.011
ODe Mondt ...:......................................... $8.70
Goody81r ..............................47'1. fie!~· in the Olympics despite suffer- Howell, Howard Barnett, Myron
.0..Yesr .............................................. SI04.00
Lucas, Edith Odell, Lisa Loar.
K-mert .....................................10 ing from polio as a child.
Landt
End
.............................
20'1.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Holly
SINGLII COPY PBICI
Umlted ................................. 19\
Dllty ................................................... ;5c....
Anhur, daughter, Wellston; Mr. and
Ohio Valley lllnk ..................35'1.
Mrs. Randy Jordan, daughter, Point
s.b.m~~m nol'delltina 10 PlY Jhe ..1ta my
One Vel ley ...............................31
Pleasant, W.Va. ; Mr. and Mrs. Kevin
r0ni1tn odv- direct 10 11te Doily SC111iDOI
PeopiH Slncorp................... 24
oo 1 dne, lilllf 1 2 - IIIII~ Ctedll wiD be
VanMatre,
daughter, Pomeroy.
P...m Flnl............................... 12'1o
(Publillled
with permission)
RoclcMU .. .:........................... 54'4
~~----Royal DutciVShell ..............151$'1.1
No sublalpcioll by 111111 pamllled II IIUI

Wilma E. Wright

··Land tra_nsfers·posted

Meigs announcements

Two tickets win
Buckeye 5 prize

EMS units answer 10 calls

Today's livestock report

problem student into his office.
"John," he said, "have yo~ ever in
your life done anything as well as you
possibly could?" He put his finger on
what had been holding John back all
along. It is the same thing :that has
been holding many of us back all our
lives.
What the dean was asking of John
was not something superhuman. 11
was something uniquely human. He
was asking him to express his finer
human powers.
That's all we ask of our clergy
(and of ourselves). We may· be-"only
human," but what higher privilege
could there be than that?
:
. George Plagenz is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper EntatrPrbe

f

The Dally Sentinel • Page .3

Citation issued following accident
A Middleport man was cited after a one-vehicle accident on Leading
Creek Road Thursday around 3 a.m.
Gerald M. Mohler was eastbound in hi s 1987 Chevrolet Blazer and
reponedly swerved to miss an ·animal in a curve, according to a Meigs
County Sheriffs Department repon. The vehicle we nt off the right side
of the road and struck an embankment, sustaining heavy damage.
No injuries were reponed and Mohler was cited on a charge of failure
to control.

Jurors need not report lor trial
A jury trial set for Monday in a civil matter in the Meigs County Commom Pleas Coun has been canceled, meaning jurors need not repon,
according to Coun Administrator Paul Gerard.
Another workers' compensation case set for Sept. 27 will he proceeding, Gerard said, and jurors should plan to repon. Jurors are asked to call
the coun at992-6439 after4:30 p.m. Thursday to hear ,a message and learn
if the trial will proceed, he added .
Judge Fred W. Crow III expressed his apprec iation to jurors for their
cooperation.
"We realize that jury service is sometimes a hardship and inconvenience
to those who are called, but it is a necessary in our system of justice,"
Crow said.

-ObituariesObltu8rlee ere pold onn....-1118 orrengld by 1-' funentl hom•.
Obltu8rlee ore publlahld u req~~Mted to OGCommodatelha.. dHirfng more
lnfarmoUan thon Ia provided In the •ccoRIJIIIIIJintl o.th Notlceo.

Oscar Lee Leonard
Oscar Lee Leonard, 75, of New Haven, West Virginia, died Thursday
morning, September 19, 1996, at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis, Ohio.
He was born August 28, 1921 , at Logan, Ohio, the son of the late Floyd
and
ReyRolds Leonard.
He married the former Faye
Marie Rhoades in Gallipoli s, Ohio,
on August 21, 1948 .
He is survived by his devoted
wife; a daughter and son-in-law, Lea
Kay and Gene Willoughby, of the
The Plains, Ohio: and a son and
daughter-in-law, Nickl ois and
Eleanor Well Leonard of Pomeroy,
Ohio; five grandchildren and I 0
great-grandchildren : two sisters, •
Mrs. Dorel (Opal) Gri ggs of Columbus. Ohi&lt;r. and Mary Lou Harrison
pfGallipolis, Ohio; a brother-in· law.
Howard Rhoades, Jr. ; and two sisters- in-law, Dorothy Van Dyke and
Mrs . Ed (Theron) Hurst, all of The
Plains, Ohio; also several nieces and
nephews.
Prior to World War II , he was
employed as a steam locomotive
fireman for the Pennsylvania Railroad.
During the war. he served as a
night instructor, and then , with the Eighth Air Force. as a B-24 heavy
bomber pilot, flying 32 combat missions from England over Germany and
other Axis countries. He. subsequently flew material and supplies to George
Patton's army.
Following an honorable discharge from the United States Anny Air
Corps at the end of the war. he taught flying at Ohio University in Athens.
Ohio.
He retired from the Philip Sporn Electri cal Generating Plant at Graham
Station, West Virginia, as a shift engineer with 35 years of service.
He enjoyed camping with his grandchildren, fi shin g, lurkey hun ti.ng and
golf. Following his retirement . he and his wife trave led ex tensively throughout the United States. He attended antique power and steam shows. where
he operated an antique gas engine for the family grist mill.
He was a member .o fthe Shade R1ver Masonic Lodge No. 469. York Scottish Rite and the Ohio Valley Commandery. He attended the Chester
Methodist Church.
·
Funeral services will be Sunday. September 22, 1996, at 2 p.rn . at the
Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with the Rev. Brian Harkness officiating.
Burial will be at the Vinton Memori al Park .
· ·
Pallbear~rs will be Daniel Leonard, Keith Young. David Will oughby,
Roland Barr, Steve Harrison and Larry Harri son.
Honorary pallbearers will be Mark Ward and Eldon Clevenger.
The family will receive friends during calling hours, Saturday. Scptem·
ber 21 , 1996, from 2-4 and 6-9 p.m. at the fun&lt;·ra l home.
Military graveside rites will be conducted by the Drew Webster Post.
American Legion, Pomeroy.
Masonic memorial servi ces will be Saturday evening at 7 p.m. by the
Shade River Lodge No. 469 at the funeral hnmc.

lAc~
I PC 1 )I

J : OO.t:JO Uo\ I LY
MT ifii !U SAT '
I : 0 0, J: JO

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M'flfil l•a U.t' I S UN

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1: 10 , ) : 10
COM I IfC 80011 1 HUGH GllAJI'I'/ CI'!tlfl 11 '-&lt;' II.MI'I

I n 'I!JTia.: lllob.tltlllf!S'

Gl " ClltTit' ICATI!:S AV.J t.AJU,I! I

Stocks

sn.

Hospital news

...

--.

----b. . . ..
MAIL suascaJmONS

~:

52 -

13 l6 -

1-Mtlpc-,

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
: : ::::::::: :
............................................ 1111:1-'6

--MIIpc-,

...........:...............................S2U5
.............................................$36.61

n -........................................ Sf09.n

Sh0My'a .................................8 4

Star Blink ..............................82'1.
Wendv'a ................................21 '1.
Worltllngton.......................... 18'-

_._._

Stock ntporte are thl 10:30

a.m.~ provldtd by Adwll

of Glfllpolle.

POMEROY
Nllr Pomeroy-MIIon 8l1dgt

1192-2518
VINTON
011111 CoiiiiY D111111Y Yn
155 lllln St. 388 81108

IIUN

SPECIALS
ON ALL FALL PLANTS
WINTER PANSEYS· MUMS
HOURS: MON·SAT H; SUNDAY 12-6

KAREN'S GREENHOUSE
AID COUNTRY MARKET

.)

�Sports

.Friday, September 20, 1996

The Daily Senlin.,!}

-: on Saturday's MAC agenda,

~ Miami

to host Bowling Green;
Ohio to take on Northwestern

Friday, September 20, 1996

In Top 25 college football,

Florida State hands North
Carolina State 51-17 defeat

•

By The Associated Press
So early in the season and already
it 's a key weekend in college football.
No. 2 Tennessee is at home to No.
.J Florida. No. 9 Notre Dame travels
to No . 6 Texas. No. I Nebraska is at
No. 17 Arizona State .
Toss in No . 21 LSU at No. 13
Auburn, and the national title chase
is in full sw ing. And it's only September.
" I can' 1 remember when we had
so many games so early that will
have a rippling effect around the
country," former UCLA coach Terry Donahue said. "There's a lot of
preS&gt; ure and huge ramifications.
The lose r of Florida-Tennessee, for
example . wi ll have a very difficult
t1me winning the SEC title. There's
JUs t so much at stake ."
The big weekend got underway
Thursday ni ght when third-ranked
Florida State crushed North Carolina State 51-17. But despite the big
score and 527 yards in offense,
Florida State coach Bobby Bowden
wasn 't happy.
" We' rc got so much skill we
don't know what to do with it,"
Bowden said. "We've got inside
receivers, outside receivers, runners,

fullbacks. quarterbacks and we're
trying to do just so much. !just don't
feel like we're exec uting good
enough. We'l l lind it. "
Rarely have so many college
games meant so much so early in the
:-;cason .

AI Kn ox ville, an expected
NCAA -record crowd of 107,000
wi ll be at Ney land Stadium as the
Volunteers try to reverse last year's
62-37 loss to the Gators. It was a
game Tennessee led 30-21 at halftime.
"E veryonc 's excited," Tennessee
runnin g back Jay Graham said.

"That's all you hear about, that's all
anyone's talking about. We've been
talking about the game for a long
time."

Florida is taking a m&lt;n businesslike approach, although two of
its players criticized the Vols' offensive line, and defensive end Tim
Beauchamp said Peyton Manning
gets "rattled."
"I don't get into word games,"
said Manning, who was 23-of-36 for
326 yards and two touchdowns in
last year's loss. "We don 't need
words like that as motivation. We ' ll
speak with our actions."
Danny Wuerfh:l, 29-of-39 for
381 yards and six touchdowns in the
'95 game. direcls the high-powered
FSU attack.
In other Top 25 games Saturday,
it's No. 5 Penn Slate at Temple
(Gianls Stadium), PitiSburgh at No.
7 Ohio State, Boston College at No.
8 Michigan, Georgia Tech at No. I I
North Carnlina, No. 13 Alabama at
Arkansas (in Little Rock), No. 15
Southern California at Houston, No.
16 Kansas State at Rice, Rutgers at
No. 18 Virginia Tech, No. I 9 Iowa
at Tulsa, No. 20 Virginia at Wake
Forest, No. 23 Syracuse at Minnesola, Arizona at No. 24 Washington and ~- 25 Oregon at Washington State. ·
No. 10 Miami, No. 12 Colorado
and No. 22 Kansas are idle.
In Raleigh, N.C., Thad Busby
tossed two 29-yard scoring passes
anbd Warrick Dunn rushed for 108
yards in Florida State's rout.
Busby hit E.G; Green on the last
play of the first quarter to give the
Seminoles a I~ lead, then found
Andre Cooper wide open for an
over-the-shoulder touchdown pass
midway through the third quarter.
Shevin Smith's 51 -yard interception
return five minutes later increased

the lead lo 37-3 as the Seminoles (20) won its second straight Atlantic
Coast Conference game.
Busby was replaced in the fourth
quarter by Dan Kend01, who also
threw two scoring passes.
N.C. State (0-2, 0-2) hasn' t lost its
first two games since 1987. when it
finished 4-7.
At Austin, Texas, the Fighting
Irish (2-0) face an expected record
crowd of ·more than 83, 100 at
Memorial Stadium. The Longhorns
(2-0) boast a pair of offensive threals
in quarterback James Brown and
running back Ricky Williams.
The Irish are led by a defense that
has allowed seven points in two
games and an offense sparked by
running back Autry Denson.
Texas has a score to settle after
losing to the Irish 55-27 last year in
South Bend. In that game, Texas led
20-19 midway through the third
quarter before mistakes led to an
Irish rout.
In Tempe, Ariz., the Cornhuskers
return to Sun Devil Stadium, the site
· of their 62-24 national title game win
over Florida in the Fiesta Bowl. The
Huskers are shooting for their 27th
straight victory.
"We feel like we've got our
hands full , but this is probably something we need if we can find a way
to get by," Nebraska coach Tom
Osborne said.
The Sun Devils, led by quarterb'ack Jake Plummer, were embarrassed by the Huskers last year 7728.
"Nebraska is like a different kind
of speed," ASU linebacker Scott Von
der Ahe said. "You've got to be on
your hoise and running, or you're
going to be on the ground somewhere. You' ve got to make quick
decisions. "

In NL action,

Padres' loss and Expos' win
puts San Diego in dire straits
By The Associated Press
Montreal's Andy Stankiewicz. who
Now the San Diego Padres have tied the game in the eighth with a
somethin g to worry about other than sq ueeze bunt. "There are 10 games
their division battle with the Los - left tQ play and the Atlanta Braves
Angeles Dodgers - their wild-card are the premier team in the Nationrace with the Montreal Expos.
al League. Realistically, We're lookThe combination of the Padres' 7- ing at the wild card."
0 Joss to Los Angeles and Montreal's
Meanwhile, the St. Louis Cardi5-1 victory over Atlanta on Thursday nals reduced their magic number for
has suddenly put San Diego into a winning the NL Central to five with
tough pos itton as the baseball races a 5-4. 13-inning win over Chicago.
head toward the final days.
Elsewhere in the NL, it was San
Playing in playoff-like surround- Francisco II. Colorado 4; and New
ings at home, the Padres had a York 7, Philadelphia 2.
chance to overtake the Dodgers for
Dodge!'!&gt; 7, P!!dres 0
first in the West. Bul atthe end of the
Eric Karras' two-run homer
day, they not only dropped I 1/2 helped limit Fernando Valenzuela to
games behind L.A ., but also a per- just I 2/3 innings and Ramon Marcentage point behind Montreal in the tinez was masterful for the Dodgers.
,battle for the NL wi ld-card spot.
Mike Piazza added a first-inning
" I was just hoping we could get sacrifice fly and his 35th homer, a
into ourstyle of play, which we nev- two-run drive in !he ninth off Dustin
ergot into," said the Padres' Tony Hermanson.
Gwynn. "They got into theirstyle of
The Dodgers jumped on Valenplay right away."
zuela ( 13-8) so fast that they quashed
In beating the Braves, the Expos the expected playoff-like atmosadvanccd on two fronts. Not ·only did phere for the crowd of 41,287. The
they move ahead of the Padres in the teams play seven times in II days,
wild-card chase, but also moved closing the season with a three-game
withtn five games of Atlanta in the series at Dodger Stadium.
NL East.
While Valenzuela lost for the first
"We've ~ot t o be realistic ," said time since July 14, Martinez (14-6)

~

won his sixth straight decision . He
struck out a season-high 12 and held
San Diego to six hits in his second
shutout of the season. He walked
one.
"I ~auld say !his is my best game
this year," said Martinez (14-6). "It
keeps the team in first place."
Expos 5, Braves I
In Atlanta, David Sequi hit a tworun single in the ninth and Moises
Alou followed with a two-run homer
as Montreal beat Atlanta.
The Braves, whose four-game
winning streak was snapped, still
have four games remaining in the
series with the Expos.
Montreal is 85-67 (.559), just
ahead of the Padres, who are 86-68
(.558). The Expos, who have won
seven of eight, have I0 games left
and the Padres have eight
"I don't think we took our eye off
the top of the division," Segui said.
"We're shooting for the top but we'll
settle for the wild card. If we gel our
foot in the door, that's fine, too. The
bottom line is getting in."
Cudinals 5, Cubs 4 (13)
In St. Louis, Tom Pagnozzi sin~led home the winning run in the
(See NL on Page 5)

By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sporte Writer
When is a rivalry not really a
·
rivalry?
Coach Gary Blackney said Bowling Green's annual clash with Miami is always pinpointed by Falcon
alums weaned on "the Miami
whammy" · - Miami's knack for
beating the Falcons in the 1960s.
'70s and '80s.
"This game always ·takes on
more implications than just a conference game," Blackney said of the
Falcons' game in Oxford Saturday.
"Miami is a rival_for Bowling Green,
but I don't know if Bowling Green
is a rival of Miami."
For his part, Miami coach Randy
Walker concedes that his schedule is
chocked full of rivals, including
neighboring Cincinnati. Ohio University and Ball State. But he said
that doesn't mean he and his team
are approaching this game any differently.
"I'm nol real big on dictating to
our team what games arc important
to us," Walker said. "Every game's
important to us."
Rest assured, both teams and

CAN'T GET AWAY - Florida State's Wayne
Meeaem (89) find• hie ankln Wl'llpped up by
Nor1h Carolina State defender Rodney Read dur-

Scoreboard

'

Oakland (Wcns~rl 7- 10)
( Tc ~s 2-2). 10 · 0~ p.m.

Baseball

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b/1 84
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Thursday '5 scores
8011on 8. Onmi l .\
OH Nc:YI Yor\i. 9. Balumore 1. BJIII ·
n~ 10, New YIXk 9

CLEVELAND 9. KanliU Cu1 1
Sade 7. T~us6
Chic:t«o I . MnltarWI.l 1

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Sunday's PIIIH

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Califoni1

lllooli&lt;t2-10). 10:05p.a

-

CINCINNATI (Bum 'I-ll), 7:15 p.ll.
Lot

(Candioui 9-9) 11 San

Dieao(Han0hon14-l), 10:05 p.m.
Colorado (Thompson 1-10) 11 San
frMCi.c:o ((i•dner 10..7), 10:"' p.m.

SaiUnllty'l IIIIIH

St. Loolt (III&lt;UOII CkJ) M CINCIN·
NA TI (I'Gnupll-9~ 1: 15 p.m.
Cokndo(W~IItl 4-)) II Sift f'nllo.il-

NL standings
EuumD!¥1M
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~-········ ...... 74
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Pinlburp ............ 67

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71 411
ll ·441

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PractU!i111 lhMral Ptdiatric•
And Adolttcelll Mtdicillt

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Boshm a1 New Yorlr., 2.0:\ p m
Minnc501a ~~ CtuuJO. 2 :~ p m.
Detroit Ill MilwMifl.«. 2:&amp;.\ pm
Tu111 u1 Cahfotnla, 4.cr.'i p rn
Onk.hand ;111 Selllde, 4 ..1 ~ p m
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Green Bay .111 Minnaota. p.m.
Ja:bon¥iUe Ul New EnJiand, I p.m.
N.Y. Gianu II rot :X:. Jet1, I

(loeb« 11-5). 705 p.m.
Houuon (Reyaolds 16-9) :r.l Flor1da
(8retwn l~- 11 ). 7·M p.m. . -~w Yotk (Wi11011 4.12) Ill Phibdclphia (SdUIIinal-9), 7 : 3~ p.m.
~1rc11l fPaniaaua 2· )) al A1lan1a

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Sunday'a pmes
Arir.ooo II New OrlcUI, I p.m.
Denver at Kanw City, I

Ch1caao CFo11er 7-4) a t Piltlburch

CGiu&gt;'IIIO 14-9). 7:40p.m.

Montrul ......... 83 67
Florida ..
... 7J so
New y oR .. ..... 68 8~
Phll~lpiua ...
62 91

NFL's Week 4 slate

4

K;mus C11 y ~ ~ CLEVELAND, 1 · 0~

1\IIIIIMa ..... .. . . 90

Kans ... Cuy (lktll 0.0) •t CLEVE.
8 os1on ( W:ahfi~ld I J - 12 )
(Goodm 11-4),

(Tclghcdcr \ :6) il l Scaulc

! Moyer 12-l J. IU OSp m .

Ium

Tonipt's c•m&lt;S

(C. . . . . . I-6~

Oa kl ~ nll

Football

~

San franl:isco II Carotlna. p.m.
Wuhinpon at Sc. Louil, I r.m.
Saute If Tamp~ Bay. 4 p.m
Cbicqo ill Detroit, &lt;4 p.m.
Dlallu ar Buffalo, .. p.m.
S.. DicJo 11 Oallud, 4 P·"'
Philadelfibi• Ill Albnta. I p.m.
Open date: Bllti ...... CINCINNATI.

lloulloo. Piu...,rJh

(304) 675-4107
Wt kctpl A.tigllmtlll From
Priuatt llllura/lct And MtdicoitJ

Moaday'a pme
Miami II lodi-Uo, 9 p.m.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES It SERVICE
204 Condor It

Jl9mlroJI Ott.

SPRINQ I SUMMER HOURS
""'-llonclln• .,.....,..__.:00
,,..., WtUU'V
~,,..

...
,
IYIIIM

8IIWdly t:OIH:OO

THE

HILDREN'S
CLINIC .
HEal Fo11 You11 CHILD WHEN You NEED Us

don't think the negativity of '95 is
motivating us any more."
Bowling Green is I- I heading
into ils first MAC test of the season,
giving Alabama a tussle before
falling 21-7 at Legion Field in the
opener and then beating Temple 2016 last week.
Miami (2-1, 2-0 in the MAC) has
backed up iiS preseason status by ·
battering Kent 64-6 and winning at
Ball State 16-6 in league play and
then taking Indiana to .the final minutes before falling 21-141ast week.
Blackney, more than anyone,
knows that it won't he easy.
"I don't see a weaknes~... he said
of Miami.
Sam Ricketts is completing 60
percent of his passes (for 319 yards
and four touchdowns with three
interceptions), while Ty King has
already gained 420 yards and scored
four times. The defense has surrendered an average of five rushing first
downs and 84 yards a game on the
ground.
Bowling Green isn't exactly an
offensive juggernaut, with Counney
Davis leading the way with 169
rushing yards and Bob Niemet com·

--Meet the Maraude

Tony Dugan, Brad Davenport and A.J. Vaugh·
are members of the 1996 Meigs Marauder football team. Dugan Is a 5-9, 187-pound junior
pleting just 47 percent of his passes.
But the defense has been solid, giving up less than 100 yards rushing a
game and punter Andy Pollock is
averaging 44.4 yards a kick :
"If we can play like we played in
our first two games, we'll be very,
very competitive," Blackney said.
In other MAC games Saturday,
Toledo ( 1-1, 1-0) is at Eastern Michi -

guard. Davenport Ia a 5-8, 150-pound Junior quarterback. Vaughan Ia a 5-8, 180-pound junior fuiJ.
back and linebacker.

gan (1-2, 1-0) and Western Michigan
(0-3 , 0-1) is at Central Michigan ( 12, 0-0). Independent contests find
Akron (G-3, 0-2) at Illinoi s, Ball

State (0-3, 0-1) hosting Central
Florida, and Ohio (2-1, 1-0) playina
at Northwestern.

-----Sports b r i e f s - - - - - Football
TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) - The Arizona Cardinals signed cornerback
D.J. Johnson to a one-year contract,
and waived defensive back Ben
Smith.

A 1989 seventh-round pick by
Pittsburgh, Johnson started 90 of94
games since his rookie year. He left
the Steelers in March 1994 to join
the Atlanta Falcons and has 431
career tackles and 19 interceptions.

The win puts the Tornadoes at II Bobo tallied four' overall to take
their top 20 the score to 6-4. Kim Sayre mad it
ranking in the state polls.
7-4,1hen Proffitt sandwiched a strihg
Against Alexander, Southern of shots around Alex's Jont Grubb's
picked up 15-13 and 15-12 wins. poim for an 11-j tally. .
Southern's Amber Thomas pui SHS
Good front line play by Lynn
up 1-0, then Brianne ProffiU' gave , L:He_ureux ~et the stag~ for Lorena
SHS a 6-0 lead hefore Natahe Bobo Ltevmg's stnng of pomts to pull Alex
ut the Spartans on the board.
back close at 11 -9. Cynthia Caldwell
p
boosted Southern 10 13-9. then

o overall and supports

ers. .
.
A•ded by five stra~ght markers
from Renee Turley, Southern w~nt
up 11-7 and coasted to the 15 10
wm. In the second contest, Southern had an easler lime. as Thomas
gve SHS the 10111_al I-O~ead. Vane~:
sa Shon !led the score I I, then Bn
anne Proffitt and Sayre gave SHS a
3-1 tally. Gwen Montgomery lted the

game at 4-4, then Thomas put her
Tornadoes up 6-4.
.
Short rall1ed South Galli a to ~ 76 advantage beforfe Proffitt tted tt at
7-7. Sayre and Cynthta Caldwell dtd
the rest of the damage 1n lcadtng
Southern to the 15-7 wtn. , .
Southern was led by Sayres mne,
K. Caldwell's five, Cynthia Cald-

well's four, ProffiU~dd Thomas four
each and Turley With five .

South Gafiia was led by Short's
five, four each from Gina Davis and
Mooney, two by Queen and one each
by Montgomery and Rachel Ward.

NL games ..

sists of some I 2 sophomores and tent. Make no excuse aboui it, we've
seven freshmen.
· got to come out and do thC job for all
The lone seniors are six-fool, 200 four quarters. Last week we wen:
pound defensive tackle and offensive outsized and played a superior footlineman Chad Smith, S-11, 160 tack- ball team.
le and lineman Dennis Maze, and 5· They came out and jumped on us
9, 155 pound linebacker/ running quick," Coffey said. Jeremy Calaway
back Jason Hutchinson.
was the Eastern defensive player of
Defensively, Wirt runs a 40 !he week, posting I0 tackles for the
defense with multiple fronts and the third straight week .
Tigers are known to stunt frequentAfter going down 29-0 last week,
ly, a key to past Win County success. Eastern got a spark when Adam
"These two teams are very even- Sanders n:turncd a kickoff to midly matched. Wirt is young and inex- field, then after a WHS penally was
perienced like us and we match up a..scssed, the Eagles began to march
well size-wise. We've got to gel on deep into Falcon territory. Eight
them quick and can't let them gel plays later, senior fullback Adam
excited or it could be a long evening. McDaniel capped the s.:oring drive
They have very good talent, but they to put the visitors on the scoreboard,
are young;" said Eastern coach rhus cutting the lead to 29-6.
Casey Coffey.
After a fumble rucovery, Eastern's
Adding insult to injury, Eastern McDaniel scored on a four-yard
was left without the services of quar- plunge to trim the WHS lead to 17.
terback Steve Durst last week. Durst That was as close as Eastern came,
suffered a partial separation and lig- as the White Falcons blitzed Ia a 41ament strain in his passing ann, but 12 final.
will return this week in some capac- _ Eastern had only 70 net rushing
ity other than quarterback.
yards after sustaining several sacks
Sophomore J.T. White will lake and lost yardage plays. McDaniel
the reigns at Durst's quarterback spot had 56 yards overall. PatAeiker had
for the second week. White did an two receptions for 22 yards, and Caladmirable job in his first varsity start away had two for 12 yards.
last week at Wahama, completing
"In order for us to be successful
five of 10 passes for 37 yards. The in the Tri-Valley Conference, this is
effort earned him "Player of the going to be a big week for us," CofWeek" honors for the EHS offense. fey said. "We have lo play well and
Otherwise, Eastern is healthy. we have to improve each week... not
"Momentum is everything. At times necessarily win, just play well and
we've heen a very good football . play consistent. Making a good
team, but we've been very inconsis- . showing will be important."

St. !Aolis as CINCINNATI, 2:tfp.nt
Colorado 111 S.. Fnn:iKO, 4:05p.m.
Lot An!Cieo " Son Dieao. ,~5 p.in.

1~

Tonlpl's gomes

J· 2) ou California !Ab-

pm
l
II

lt llc

y...

Monn~al ~ . All:wua I
St . louis~- Cbicaao 4(1])
San Franci~eo II . Colorado

bott 2-16). 10 O.li p m

11'·

Wnhm l&gt;i•i§ioo
T~ ....~
M4 b9 .'i41J
Scank ..
Ml 70 ~ ."\6
7' 1«1 477
Ci11rfurm01
p6 8'\ 417

"""'""'

l...ol Anp:kl7, San Dieao 0
Pit11burJh 6, CINCINNATI4
Nl:;w York 7, Philodclphia 2

Boston l~bddtu 2-2) ul New York
(Key 12-IOJ. I J~ p m.
Toronto (Wi lliams 4-Jl af Baltimore
(Kri vda l-41. 7 : 0~ p m.
Octron !Yan PQ(lpel J. 7) n1 Milwaukte

rc,3J (8urt.t1•

2~

ar CLEVE-

(U "Amu.:o ~ -6), 8.0.1i p.m.

Ct"nlr•l Oi\"ision

Mennnot :a
KansaJ ( II )

7 - ~)

7'1!

.-405

Thursday's scores

LAND (H~nhilt'f 14-8). l:m p.m.

'\71

7~

Toronlo

74
So.n Francisco ........ 62 91

. ~58
. ~19

Chk:q,o

10-1~) If

Kansa.' Cuy (Rosad&gt;

68

Colondo .. .. ....... ..... IIO

(Alvarez 1 ~· 9). I p.m.

t:aurru Oi"islo11

Y or~

. San Dicao ......... .. ... 86

Saturday's gomes

AL standings
Iwn

tl Scilllllc

By S.COTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Coach Howie Caldwell's Southern Tornadoes of continued their
dominance of area volleyball opponents by defeating league contender
Alex_ander and . non-league South
Gal ita m a tn -match in Racine
Thursday nig1Jt.

CAP)

WeAre Now
Accepting
Appointments

both sohools are well aware of what;
the game means.
,
For Bowling Green, it could
mean redemption. In Blackney's,
first four years at Bowling Green, he '
lost just two Mid-American Confer,
ence games. Then came last year and
a 5-6 mark tltat wounded Blackney's
pride and his program's respect.
"They· re a proud football team.
and program," Walker said.
"They've been very, very ~uccessful .
Certainly, a large part of football is
emotional. I expect Bowling Green
to be emotional."
A disastrous ·four-game losing
skid was the lowest point of a season of injuries, bad breaks and cQptroversy that left Bowling Gf'Ciln
gasping for breath in sixth place' jn
the MAC.
Now Miami has supplanted the
Falcons as the figurative team to ~at
in the league race, getting the na&lt;l&gt;ln
pre-season media balloting. Blackney said his team is over last year.
"I think our team prepared for
this season by using the disappointment and frustration of 1995, but I
think this team is building on it&lt; own
successes now," said. Blackney. "I

• The Dally Sentinel• P~~ge 5

Southern varsity volleyball crew beats Alexander and South Gallia

lng the flrat haH of Thuraday night'• ACC battle
In Raleigh, N.C., where the Seminoles won 51-17.

Wirt County to host winless
Eastern_in contest tonight
By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
The-Eastern Eagles (0-3), in quest
for their first win of 1996, host the
Wirt County Tigers ( 1-2), a perennial West Virginia Class A power,
today at 7:30p.m. at Eastern's Shade
River Stadium.
Wirt County should matchup well
with Eastern, as veteran coach Mike
Lucas is in the midst of a rebuilding
year in his lith season at the helm
of the Elizabeth, W.Va. crew. The
Tigers feature a wealth of young talent and inexperience, with only
three seniors and five juniors on the
1996 roster.
Last week, Gilmer County, W.Va.
defeated the Tigers for Gilmer's first
win over Win County in the past sev. eral years. Wirt's other loss was to
Doddridge County, W.Va. Last year
in Elizabeth, lhe Tigers defeated a
tough Eastern club 17-14 on a 19yard field goal by sophomore kicker David Drennen with 3:59 remainmg.
Eastern rebounded from the loss,
coming back to post an outstanding
7-3 season mark, en route to winning
the Tri- Valley Conference Hocking
Division crown. Had Eastern
squeaked out a victory against the
Tigers, the mark could have been 82.
Last year's ending has set the
stage for the cross-river rematch, and
perhaps instilled some additional
fire under the Eagles tail feathers.
Eastern followers still have a little
crook in their crawl from the long
trip back home from Elizabeth in
1995.
There are 26 players on Wirt
County's club, which runs primarily
out of an "I" fonnation and runs the
speed option. Wirt lacks experience
and consistency in 1996, but has
shown improvement throughout the
season. The bulk of the lineup con~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

SPIKES ACROSS NET - With teammate Cynthia Caldwell (2)
wetchlng at a distance, Southern's Renee Turley 1plkes the ball
ecroee the net ae an Alexander player rises to meet the chellenge
In Thurlday'e trJ.matc:h at Southern High School. The hoat Tornadoes defeated the Spartans and South Gallla to remain undefeated after 11 matches.

Thompson ripped off four straight
,,_!(~C;!!o!!!nt:!!in!_!!u~ed~f~ro~m!!.!:P!!a'!:e.::4!.)- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - for a 13-13 ue.
. .
h
.
S L · · h
d h'
d
· ht
Sayre and Caldwell had great 13th tnntn~ fort e Cardtnals.
I. outs pile er, a11 owe n 11 an
e1g .
floor games to make several key
St. Lou~s swept the Cubs for the
lwo walks m two scoreless mmngs. ·
The three-game sweep of lhe
saves and key assists. Renee Turley first ttme smce September 1988 and
Mtke Campbell (3- 1) was the loser.
Reds gave the Pirates their longest
added a single marker to give SHS moved fiv~ g~mes ahead of tdle
. Pirates 6_, Reels 4
streak since an 11-gume streak from
the lead, but a side-out gave Alex Houston wuh mne games logo. The
. In Pmsburgh: pmch-hmerNelson
July ·3,9-Aug. 10, 1992.
another chance. The exciting game ·cardmals have won II of thetr last
Lmano had_a t1ebreakmg smgle m
With one out in the sixth, Joy
culminated with a big serve from 12 home games.
the Sixth mnmg . as the Ptrates
Bell, Keith Osik and Liriano singled
Thomas. the Southern serving ace
Corey Batley (4·2), the seventh
stretched thetr wmmng streak lo off'flm Pugh (1-1) to break a4-4 tie.
who gave SHS the game-point and
!he 15-13 win.
A similar battle developed in the
second game, but Proftiu, who
anchors the front line equally as well .
as -!&gt;erving up deadly serves, gave
Southern a 14-9 advantage with an
ace. Lieving brought Alexander back •
to within two at 14-12, but Sayre
sealed the win for the Tornadoes, IS12.
Southern scorers were Proffitt
with II, Sayre and Cynthia Caldwell
six each, Keri caldwell three and
two each from Thomas and Turley.
Alexander was led by Lieving
with seven, Thompson six, Krumme
four, Meghan McCabe four and two
Driver side air bag, 5-speed, full bench seat,
each from Sara Clark and Joni
1400 lb. payload, all season radials, 3 year
Grubb.
36,000
bumper to bumper, plus 5 year 60,000
Southern defeated South Gallia
MSRP
....
SIS,I28.,J
_
_x
power train warranty. _.....__..
15-10 and 15-7.
In the first round, Southern fell
Discount ... 2,133.9S
MSRP....SII,668.9S
behind 6-4 on Gallia serves by LauSALE
PRICE
Discounl ... 2,673.95
ra Queen and Sabrina Mooney. Kcri
SPECIAL
Caldwell had Southern's lone mark-

Eastern varsity volleyball team
beats division runner-up M(ller
By SCOTT WOLFE
Coach Don Jackson's Eastern
varsity volleyball team lifted its
record to 5-4 overall and 3-4 in the
Tri-Valley Conference's Hocking
Division with a stunning victory over
second place Miller (6-4 &amp; 4-3 in the
Hocking Division).
Eastern has waded through o

!1

II

tough part of its schedule and survived above .500 as the EHS gals are
beginning to gel into a good Club.
The Eagles established them selves early, taking a 5-0 lead on five
straight serves from junior Michelle
Caldwell. Miller come back to tte 11
at 5-5, then Valerie Karr gave the
Eagles a 6-5 advantage. Miller knot -

ted the score at 6-6, then Jessica
Brannon and Caldwell added tallies
to raise the EHS advantage to 8-6.
Behind two Patsy Aeiker scores
and a Martie Holter safety, Eastern
doubled the spread at 12-6, but
Miller, utilizing its fine talent, tied
the score at 13-13. Mindy Sampson
came on for the Eagles to pul the
final two points on the board and win
the game, 15- 13.
Both games were highlighted by
several fine volleys, including three
kills from talented sophomore
Valerie Karr, who was 14-16 spiking
with great front line play, her most
aggressive of the year. Sampson had
a great floor game as well with several key late-game saves, and
Michelle Caldwell made several
game-saving dives onto the Eastern
hardwood to keep volleys alive . Juli
Hayman , Kim Mayle, and Meredith
Crow came off the bench to give
Eastern a good boost.
_ Caldwell gave EHS a 1-0 edge in
the second game, but' Miller came
back 2-1. After two fruitless serves,
Aeiker gave EHS a 3-2 advantage.
then Miller went up 4-3. Karr tied
the score at 4-4, then Miller went up
6-4, but Samson reeled off six
straight poinls lo give Eastern a 106 lead and force a Miller time out.
After a Miller substitution, Sampson
~led off two more, then Karr added
the final touches to secure the 15-6
win.
Sampson led all scorers with II
points, Caldwell had seven points,
Karr had four, Aeiker had four.
Brannon had two and Holler had
one.
Caldwell and Karr again high·
lighted the Hoor play for Eastern,
with several good set-ups from Brannon and Holter. Aeiker also had a
strong kill to spark the Eagles in the
second game.

sPfCIAI- sA I.E

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LEASE FOR

1996 NISSAN•
Quest IE

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�I

Football '96
Support These
'.

.

Beat of the Bend ...

Catch All The
Excitement!

Fine Area
Businesses!

by Bob Hoeflich

Lt. Col. Mark Morris, son of Carl
and Janet Morris. Rutland, has been
in Columbus the past few days
working with a movie being made at
Rickenbacher Field.
While visiting here over Labor
Day when the Morris family brought
their son. Brad, to Kent State University where he attends school, Lt.
Morris was contacted by his base
about bringing in a tighter squadron
for the film. Mark who is an F-15
squadron commander was selected
because of his "Ohio connections".
Col. Morris agreed and came in
to Columbus Monday with six
planes from the 59th Fighter
Squadron at the Elgin Air Force
Base in Florida, I 0 pilots, and 23
maintenance men , many also with
Ohio connections.
In case you're wondering about
your tax dollars, the movie company
picked up all of the expenses including pay, fuel and housing. Tile ser·
vicemen stayed at the Holiday Inn
near Ohio State University and a
large tent was set up at the site to
:provide food for everyone.
The movie, I'm told, is to be titled
"Air Force One" and is expected to
:be released in July, next year. Harri:son Ford will be in the role of Presi·
;dent of the United States with Glenn
~Close cast as vice president. Neither
· were in Columbus for the shooting
;there, by the way .
• The planes and Air Force person:nel returned to the base in Florida on
:Thursday.
; Col. Morris is married to the for·
;:mer Lisa Thomas, daughter of Don
::U.d Carolyn Thomas of Pomeroy.
~He came down to Meigs County
: from Columbus on Tuesday evening
•to enjoy the company of family
; members.
·
""e
Meigs County Oerk of Courts
"'Larry Spencer has received a 1912

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James R. Acree Jr. Director
992·5141

Crow's Family

TREASURER'S SEMINAR
Meigs County Treasurer Howard
E. Frank attended a seminar sponsored jointly by the County Treasur·
ers and County Commissioners
Associations of Ohio.
More than I 50 treasurers and
commissioners representing more
than 70 counties attended the seminar dealing with the recent passage
of Senate Bill 81 concerning Ohio
investment law.
The new law sets tougher new
investment standards for Ohio public entities. institutes new investment reporting requirements and

(Sunday)
DALLAS .................. 30
**BUFFAL0 .........27
228 WEST MAIN
POMEROY
The lasl lime the Cowboys and Bills met was Super Bowl XXVIII in Atlanta, won by Dallas 30-13. Buffalo got
off to a fast start, but the Bills are coming off a Monday·nighter with Pittsburgh.
**DETROIT ............. 21
CHICAG0 ............ 20
In 1995 the Lions rang up a total of 841 yards while beating the Bears twice for the Grst time in 12 years. 24-17 .__ _
in Chicago and 27-7 at home. The only edge here will be the Si lvcrdornc crowd.
GREEN BAY ............ 27
**MINNESOTA....23
Here's the second potentially great NFC Central matchup. The Packers split with the Vikings last year. winning
38-21 in G.B. and losing 27-24 in Minneapolis. This scasQn the Pack should sweep.
**KANSAS CITY ... 32
DENVER ............... l9
Winners of three of their last four games with the Boncos. the Chiefs beat them twice in '95. 21 · 7 and 20· 17.
Denver looked sharp early, but K.C. will get a jump on I he AFC West with this win,
**NEW ENGLAND.20
JACKSONVILLE 14
The Patriots are up against it in their own divi sion . so games like thi s one become must·wi ns. Look for the
Jaguars defense- especially its secondary· 10 put N.E. QB Drew Bledsoe to the test.
. **NEW ORLEANS.30
ARIZONA ............. 25
Neither New Orleans nor Ari~ona looks like a con lender· so thi s could be a great, loose game. The Cardinals
lead this series I0-9, but the Saints have won 1hc laS! four. moll recently in '93.
N2nd AVE.
MIDDLEPORT
N.Y. GIANTS ............ 22
**N.Y. JETS .......... IS
992 5627
Speaking of possibly wild games. who knows what may happen when two disappointing cluhs butt heads in a . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .
stadium full of unforgiving N.Y. fans ? The Jets won a I0·~ non· thriller three years ago.
** OAKLAND .......... 28
SAN DIEG0..........21
The Raiders and Chargers played two surprisingly defen sive games last season. Oaklnad wmning 17-7 at home
and S.D. doing the same, 12-6. The Chargers arc the hcttcr team . so call this an upset.
PHILADELPHIA ..... 29
** ATLANTA ........ I7
Unless the Falcons rustle up some defense· espec iall y again st the pass- the Eagles may run away with this one.
Ph illy leads this series 8-7-1, but Atlanta won their last match up. in '94, 28-21. .
.. ST. LOUIS ............ 24
WASHINGTON .... 19
With their defense forcing four turnovers and scoring 1wicc. the Rcdskins came from behind with 28 straight
points and beat the Rams 35-23 in '95. This year St. Louis's D will be the difference.
SAN FRANCISC0 ... 35
•• CAROLINA ..... I4
255 Mill St. Middleport
In Week 10 last year, the Panthers proved they were for real by making the 49crs their fourth straight victims,
992-3345
13-7 in S.F In the rematch the 49ers were back to normal. winning easily 31-10.
SEAITLE . ............... I9
**TAMPABAY .... IO
The Seahawks and Buccaneers have met only three times. and Seattle has won all three, most recently in '94.
The only sign of life on either side of the ball for either team is Seattle's offense .
(Monday)
MIAMI.. .................. 31
INDIANAPOLIS .. 28
This one should be as good as the Dolphins-Colts battles of '95 . which Indy swept for the first time in seven
years. 27-24 in OT and 36-28. Think Jimmy Johnson has reminded his Dolphins of that?
(Open Date: Baltimore, Cincinnati, Houston , Pittsburgh)

....

. Also recognized at the meeting
was the newest member, Rev. Vemagaye Sullivan. Exchange students
recognized were Alma Louiza of
Mazatlan, Mexico, who is attending
a local high school, and Vladymyr
Stefanovich of Lyiv, Ukraine, who
has earned a full tuition scho.larship

DISTRICT GOVERNOR WELCOMED - Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club President Hal KnHn, right, welcomed Dlltrlct RDIIry
Governor Morris Briggs of Walterville to the local club'e mHtlng
at Heath United Methodist Church Df Middleport Monday night

at the University of Ri o Grande and
is being assisted by the local club.
Traditionally the club observes

loud shin night during the governor's visit. Winner of the loud shin
contest was Joe Young and David
Snyder won the loud lie contest.

- - - - -/.Community calendar-----

tensen of Galena; Doris Riggs
Fahrenbach of Columbus; Louise
Riggs of Man:ngo; James Hecken
and Craig and Clark of Ravenna;
Bill and Cheryl Glover ofM Vernon;
Laura Riggs Hoffman of Columbus.
· Charles and Ruth Hugltes of Galloway; C. Michael Hughes of
Columbus; Mary and Clyde Stockdale of Canton; Paul, Lesley, Cas·
sandra and Michael Riggs of De
Columbus; C. Arnold and Thelma
Riggs of Roseville; Downie and
Delma
Riggs
Nelson
of
McConnelsville; Pat Henderly and
Monica Craiglow of Somerset; Don
Pierce of Columbus. Eileen Skivington of Granville; Kim Skivington of
Kenton; Vance and Helen Leedy of
Jackson; Paula George of Pleasa·ntville; Fred and Alice Henderly of
Glouster; Larry and Julie Lynch of
Mineral City; Carolyn, Mindie,
Michael and Brittnee McGuire of

increases the responsibilities in the
investment process. Also contained
in the bill are education standards
for new treasurers and continuing
education requirements for incumbent treasurers.
RECUPERATING
Dorothy Winebrenner of College
Road, Syracuse, is recuperating at
home from surgery. Friends may
send cards to here tht:re.

be observed at the Carmel-Sutton
United Methodist Church Oct. 6. A
group of 10 senior saints. those
eighty and ninety years of age, will
be honored at a potluck dinner to be
held at 12:30 p.m. The meat and ·
dessen will be furnished by the
church. At I :30 p.m. a special service will be held .

....

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SENIOR SAINTS
Plans have been made for Senior
Saints Sunday and homecoming to

_ • ..,.,call

992-2156

OPENS PRACTICE

When The Time Comes
See Us For Your 1997
Graduation Announcements.

Dr. Satywan Chhabria (Cha-bree-uh)1 internist and
family practitioner, has opened his ~ractice in the Meigs
MM!ical Building, adjacent to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Now affiliated with Veterans_Memorial Hospit?l. Dr.
Chhabria is a native of · Pakistan. He received his
medical degree in October, 1990, from the Sidnh
Medical College and interned at University Hospital,
associated with the college. Dr. Chhabria followed up
his internship with a six month residency at the National
Institute of Cardiovascular Diseases in Karachi, Pakistan.
Since June, 1993, Dr. Chhabria has been training in internal medicine at St.
Joseph Hospital in Chicago, Ill.
For information or appointments, residents may call 992-3632.

QUALITY PRINT
SHOP

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RIDENOUR'S

"'lliw II alii

TV &amp; APPLIANCE GAS,SERVICE
CHESTER

tional service," he said. "There are
no bars to restrict Rotary on what it
can do. We must share Rotary with
our community."
Briggs has l)ad perfect Rotary
attendance for 22 years and is a 28year Air Force veteran earning many
medals in World War ll. Korea and
Vietnam. In Rotary, he is a multiple
Paul Harris Fellow.
He challenged the club to
increase its giving to the Paul Harris
Foundation.
Local club President Hal Kneen
presented Briggs with the Meigs
County Historical coverlet in honor
of his visit. His wife, Marie,
received a basket of live violets
from Meigs County.

----Society scrapbook----

Restaurant
992-543_2_

Morris Briggs, governor of
Rotary District 6690, conducted his
annual visit to the Middlep9n·
Pomeroy Rotary Glub at its dinner
picture postcard showing a terrific meeting Monday night
shot of the courthouse in Pomeroy
Briggs challenged the club to
as it Iooked,way back then.
"build the future with action and
The card was sent to Larry by vision."
Andy J. Totin, clerk of courts of
"We must be forward·looking,"
Lake County in Painesville. Ohio. he said. "Vision without action is
Totin's wife found the card while futile."
going through some of her grandBriggs told Rotarians they must '
mother's belongings. The card is must develop programs for young
addressed to Mr. and Mrs. K. W. people.
Farley at Fairpon Harbor, Ohio.
"Our young people are the generLarry has had a photo made from ation that will carry Rotary and the
world into the 21st century," he said.
the postcard.
"As pan of this program we must
As I understand it, we Ohioans put more emphasis on literacy,
will be voting on riverboat gambling health and our scholarship programs."
at the fall election.
He cited several examples of how
You understand, of course, that
the boats will be located near metro- young people in the ambassadorial
politan areas and one of the big program have gone on to become
pushes for those promoting passage leaders in their fields and compliof the measure is the fact that the mented the local club on the student
gambling will create "x" number of exchange program it is carrying out.
"The hean of Rotary is in internanew jobs.
As I understand it also. If gam·
bling is · approved. the boats on
which it will take place will be
moored near the cities. So what is
the point of the riverboat deal?
The Community Calendar is
Looks li.ke they could just put the published as a free service to nonoperations in buildings. Oh--but profit groups wishing to announce
maybe that wouldn't be legal.
meetlne and special events. The
calendar Is not designed to pro·
I visited a bit with Mrs. Dorothy mote sales or fund raisers of any
Roller at her comfonable home in type. Items are printed as space
Middlepon this week.
permits and cannot be guaranteed
Dorothy will be 93 on her next to run 11 specific number of days.
tiinhday. But get this. She has made SUNDAY
some of that great green relish, so
MIDDLEPORT .. Homecoming,
popular, and had baked a batch of Hobson Christian Fellowship;
zucchini bread. She's really a live Church, Sunday, 10 a.m . Sunday
wire and as always, full of fun.
school; I p.m. covered dish dinner at
What was it you were saying old Legion hall in Middlepon; afterabout your aches and pains?
noon services at 2:30 p.m. at the
church. Special singing, Duncans of
Things are really bad at our Columbus: evening service, 7:30
place. The rose gardens are fading. p.m., singing, . Evelyn Roush and
the Jaguar has a flat tire, and the Sandra Keeser and preaching, John
polo ponies are restless. Oh well. Elswick.
You keep smiling.

RIGGS
ing the fanhest was Wallace and
Over 120 descendants of Jeremi· Rose Riggs from TeKas.
ah and Rachel Keller Riggs attended·
A stone monument for Wesley
the annual family reunion held at Perry Riggs, father of Herb Riggs,
Pageville on Sept. I.
Nora Riggs Burson, and Emma
The first settlement in Scipio Riggs Smith, was dedicated at the
Township was made in 1799 by Riggs Cemetery.
Jeremiah who (OI;ated .and b.uilt the
Those attending from out of state
first cabin on section f6, where the included George and Nancy Brawvillage of Pageville Is now situated. ley of Niles, Mich.; Jack and Maiy
The reunion was held at the Tapley of Ozark. Mo.; Wallace and
Pageville Township Building .
.. Rose . Riggs of Boerne, Texas;
A program in the afternoon Ronald and Mary Riggs, Marie and
included informal talks by Eileen Margaret of Vienna, Va.; Raben Lee
Byerly Skivington and her daughter Woodyard of Picayune, Miss.; Mrs.
Kim, who have done extensive Joan Riggs Johnson of Atlanta, Ga;
research on the family; and Wallace and Judith Jacobs Fraser of
Riggs, the only remaining child of Stevensville, Mont.
Herb and Annie Riggs.
Out of county relatives included
Recognized as the oldest person Dan, Shelly and Rachel Riggs of
there was Mrs. Perry. (Gladys) Logan; Ginny, Randy, and Jacob
Riggs; the youngest was Rachel Grueser of London; Mary Lynch and
Riggs, six-week old daughter of Lee Lynch of Copley; Carol Collif,
Danny and Shelly Riggs; and travel· Galloway; Bill and Helen Chris-

Super Efficiency
Chester, Ohio 915-4222

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Sunday and Monday, Sept. 22-23

AMDICAJI

11K1111C
JIOWU

District governor visits
local Rotary Club

RODNEY .. Revival at the Rod·
ney United Methodist Church, Sunday through Tuesday, 7 p.m. Rev.
Melvin Franklin, speaker.
POINT PLEASANT .. Annual
railroad picnic/reunion, Sunday,
11 :01 a.m. with picnic at 1:01 p.m..
Krodel Park, Point Pleasant. Take
covered dish . Meat and soft drinks
provided.
POMEROY .. Rally Day, Rock
Springs United Methodist Church.
Carry-in dinner at 12:30 p.m. with
program by Sharon Stewan on trip
to Africa. Quane! to sing. Revival
services, 7 p.m. Monday, Tuesday
and Wednesday, Rev. Brian Harkness, speaker; special singing nightly .

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT .. Mrddleport
Community Church . 575 Pearl
Street, Middleport. Monday through
Sept. 28, 7:30p.m. Different speakers and singers each even ing.
TUESDAY
POMEROY .. Stale Represcnta·
live John Carey (R· Wellston) will
hold an open door session Tuesday,
2-3 p.m. in the Meigs County Courthouse for anyone with questions or
concerns with slate government.
RACINE .. RACO meeting. 6:30
Tuesday at Star Mill Park. New
members welcome.
CHESTER .. The Chegter-Shade
Historical Associati on. Tuesday, 7
p.m. at the Chester Fire Station.

Regional coordinator, Mary Ann
Reeves of the Ohio Historical Soci·
ety will speak on preservation and
restoration of historical buildings.
Public invited.
POMEROY! .. Meigs Genealog·
ical Society will meet Tursday, 5: IS
p.m at the Meigs Museum.
POMEROY .. A special meeting
of the Meigs County Educational
ServiCe Center Board will beheld
Tuesday at I0 a.m at the board
office. Purpose of the meeting is to
discuss and/or employ personnel.
THURSDAY
POMEROY -- Meigs County
Public Library Board of Trustees, I
p.m. Thursday at the Pomeroy
library.

- - - - - - - - - - - F a m i l y reunion-----------

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The Daily Sentinel• Page 7

Po!'Mroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, September 20, 1996

Friday, September 20,

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

tiDipllll

VETEUNS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
POMEROY

115 EAST MEMORIAL DL

915·3307

r

•

{

Lancaster.
Joy, Matt, Derek and Patrick
Quinn of Stewan: Jeffrey B. Byerly
of Lancaster: Bernard and Donna
Grueser of Trenton; Nonna Magnu·
son, and Dick and Debra Magnuson
of Mt. Victory: Jim and Edith Mae
Hecken of Rootstown ; John and
Twila Jean Romine · of Athens:
Clarice Morse of Albany; ;Rhonda,

Ashlea and Tyler Blankenship; and
Lcs Littlejohn .
Local relatives attending included Dan and Janet King of Shade:
Gary Lee of Shade; Dale and Lucille
Jacobs of Middlepon ; Jeff and Jane
Morris of Syracuse; Danny, Bonnie,
Teddy, and Alison Brown; Marge.
Amy, and Mick Barr: Gladys Riggs,
Raben, Kristen and Amanda Eason:

Charles and Annie Pickett, Joyce
Bowen. Lutchie Riggs. Huey· and
Susan Eason, Robert, Nora, and
Angela Eason, Jack and Dixie StanIcy. Paul McDaniel, Mildred Riggs,
Duane and Hazel Stanley. Guy and
Donna Morris, David and Carol
Riggs. and Jeff, Linda, 'Jay and
David Warner. all of Pomeroy.

Send Us llour
favorite Recipe
THE POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
wiU be publishin6 a

HOLIDLJll
COOKBOOK
Included in tl&amp;e cookbook will be recipes from Mason,
Meigs &amp; Gallia County residents, at no cl'arge.
The recipes will be catego.Ued a. follows:

• Appet~ers/Bnerat~e• • Bread/GraiN
• Cakes/Pies &amp; Cookies • Pork • Poultry
• Salads &amp; Vegetable•
· •Soup• and San;dwiches
Bring your recipe into our office or

••rul it to:

Holiday Cookbook
c/o The DaiJy Sentinel
lJl CourtStreet, Porru1roy, Oh 45769
Putue, inebule your name and
phone # 111ith redpe.

Deadline for aU recipes
i6 October 31, 1996

�(

Page 8 e The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

... .- . .

Friday, september 20, 19$6

Friday, September 20, 1996

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

PoiJleroy • Middleport, Ohio

70

Yard sile
Pomeroy,
Middleport
a VIcinity

Apo stoltc
Cll-•tJ-QrloiA/:;&lt; I
VonZoadl and Word .
l'uiGr. IIIIICI Miller
Sundoy School· 10:30 a.m.
· -7:30p.m.
- 7:30

;

,.,..,., woiaowo Cbrl* orQrlol
33226 O!ildmfo Hoote Rd.
Sundof Scllool- II LOI.
Wonlup- IO..m., 6 p.m.
w . - , Servlcca - 7 p.m.

Rollotld Flnt Bapllol Cl•n:•
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wou.hip - 10:45 a.m.

Pomeroy Flnt Baptlsl
Pastor: Paul Stinson

East Main St
Sunday Sehool · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:.30 a.m.
Flnl Soalbua Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike

Pastor: E. lamar O'Bryanl
Sunday Sehool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wcdnnday Services- 7:00p.m.
Flrsl Baplill Cllun:b
Paslor: Muk Morrow
&amp;hand Palmer St., Middlepon

Sunday Sehool · 9: IS a.m.
Worship · 10: IS a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Sel'lite- 7:00 p.m.
Rad.. Fine Boptbl
Pastor: Rev. Llwrencc T. Haley
Youth Pastor : Aaron Young

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship. 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services ~ 7:00p.m.

SOnr Ru Baptlol
Pastor: Bill LiiUe
Sunday Sehool · IOa.m.
Worship · II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Scn~ices- 7:30p.m.
MI. Uolon Bor.lll
Pastor : Joe N. •yre
Sunday Sehool-9:45 a.m.
E~ening - 6 :30p.m.

Wednesday

Services- 6:30p.m.

Betblthom Bo:ftbt
Racine, 0
Pa!i.tor : Daniel Berdine
Worship - 9 :30a .m. Sundly

Bible Sludy · 7:00 p.m. Wedneaday
Old Bctbol Fno Will Bapllol Chon:b
28601 So. Ro. 7, Middlepon
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
E~ening • 7:30p.m.
Thursday Services- 7:30
lllllsldo Uapllsl Chun:b
51. Ro. 143 jusl orr Ro. 7
Pastor : Rev . James R. Acree. Sr.
Sunday S&lt;hool· 10 o.m.
Worship · lb.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
Vl&lt;t0f1 Baplbl ladepeodaol
52S N. 2nd So. Middleport
Paslor: James E. Ktesee
Wonhip · IOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Services · 7 p.m.
Follb BapiiSI Cllon:b
Rallrood So., Mason
Sunda~ Sehool · I0 a.m.
Worsh1p · II a. m., 6 p.m.

W£dnesday Services - 1 p.m.

FonSI Rua Boplbt
Pastor . Arius Hurt

Sunday Sehool • 10 o.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.

MI. Morfoh Bapllsl
Fourth &amp; Main So., Middleport
Pulor: Re~ . Gilber1 Oaig. Jr.
Sunday Sehool • 9:30a.m.
Worohip • 1!1.4S a.m.
Aallqolty Bapllol
Sunday Sehool • 9:30 a.m.
Worohip - 10:45 a.m.
Thursday SerYice• - 7:30p.m.
Rotlud rn. ww Bopllol
Salem SO.
Putor: Rev. Paul Ta)lor
Sunday Sehool - 10 a.m.
Evcnina - 7 p.m.
Wedl1&lt;1day Services - 7 p.m.

Catholic
Sacnd H..rt ~Ciottrdo
161 Mulberry A.... Pomeroy, ~M891
Pulor: Re• . Waller E. Heinz
Sal. Con. 4 :45-S: U~. m .; Mw- 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9: U a.m.,
Sun. Mua • 9:30 a."'.
Dailey Mua- 8:30a.m.

Church of Ch rist

Ctatnl Clttoter

~~Ne":ll~c

Holin ess
Bu-H..... Qud

Mlddh,_t Chrdt ot CloriSI
Silo and Main
Plllor: AI Hartton
Youdo Minlltu: Bill Fruier
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonloif" 8:U, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
w . - y Servlca - 7 p.m.

31057 Slllc R0111t 32S, Lonpvllc
Pastor: Rev. Rick Maloyed
Sunday ochool - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday wonhip- 10:35 a.m. .t 7 p.m.
O!ildn:n'a church - 10:3S a.m. Youlh 6 p.m.
Wednesday prsyer aerviCc . 7 p.m.

"-a..... ot Clutot

Cal..ry Pllplra Clapel
Harrisonville Roed

Wonloip - 9:30 Lm.
Sunday Scllool - 10:30 o.m.
l'utor-Jellrey Walll&lt;e
Ill and 3rd Sunday
Richard
S70 Grant So., Middleport
Sunday lldlool - 9:45a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedne.day Service- 7 p.m.
Flft WW lllpllll Clio...
Ash Street, Middlc:pon
Putor: Les Hayman
Sunday Service-7:30p.m.
Sunday Sehool · HI a.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:.30 p.m.

Sunday Schooll0:30 o.m. ·
Coffee hour rouowina '

Paalor:

Poator: lad&lt; CGiearOYc
Suncloy School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 o.m., 6:30p.m.
Wcdnc1day S.rvlcos- 6:30p.m.

Zloto n .... orQrlol
Pome.Oy, Horriton•ille Rd. (Rt.l43)

Toppen'Piala Chan:b or Christ
Instrumental
l'utor: Scot Brown
W-.ttip Service · 9 a.m.
tainmunion • 10 a.m.
Soi_.y School - 10: IS a.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m.
Rollaod Cloun:to or Chrisl
Paslor: Eugene E. Underwood
Sunday Scllool - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Bradrord Cloon• or Christ
Comer or So. Ro. I:U .t Bradbury Rd.
Evanaclill: Keith Cooper
Youlh Minister: Michael Teagarden
Sunday Sehool . 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Serviceo - 7:00p.m.
Ilk.., IWio Chon:b or Cbrtst
E•aniellll !........ B. Hoskins
Sunday Sehool · 9 a.m.
Worahip - I0 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Servlcca • 7 p.m.
Uberty Cllrlollo• Cban:b
De.:lrr
Pallor: Woody Call
Sunday E..oiroa . 6:30p.m.
Thursd•y Service - 6:30p.m.

M111tn1llle

Neville
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Pulor: Clwles

llnnloc:k Groft Cbun:b
Putor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school- 10::10 a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m., 1 p.m.
Jlftdlfllle Cloon:b or.Clrlll
Pastor: Philip S1urm .
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Wonhip Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Sludy, Wednesdoy, 6:30p.m.

Chnstian Union
Hor11onl Cllon:b of Cbrilllo
Clrlollu IJoloa
Hlllf«d, W.Va.
· Pastor: Rc•. Da•id McManio
Sunday School- II a,m.
Wonhlp - 9:30 a.m:, 7:30p.m.
Wedl1&lt;1day Servkts - 7:30p.m.

Church of God
ML MariU Clo.... oiGed
Racine
Putor: Rev. Juncs Sallerfield
Sunday Sehool - 9:4S o.m.
Evenins • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Ratload Cllun:b of God
Pulor: Randy Barr
Sunday Sehool · IOa.m.
~:=r.- II a.m., 6 p.m.
W
)' ScrviceJ -1 p.m.

Wm~hip • Q •.m.

Wedneaday Serviceo - 10 a.m.

Lutheran

Our Sntu.r Lllllltna Charcl1
Walnut and Heriry SIS., Ravenswood, W.Va .
lntrim putors: Georae C. Weinck
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
W~rship · II a.m.

Chn:b or God or Propbeey
O.J. While Rd. off So. Rl . 160
Pas1or: P.J. Chapman
Sunday Sehool · 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Claeoter Cbun:b or Gnd
S. R. 248 &amp; Riebel Road, O..soer
Pu1or: Re~ . William D. Hinds
Sunday Sehool . 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip - 6 P.·m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m. Fam1ly Training Hour

Pastor: =ndolpl!
Worship- 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sehool - 10:30 a.m.

Congregational

R-•lllo
Paator: R... O!arles Mub
·Worohip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
Finl Sunday of Mondo - 7:30p.m. serokt

Trlolly Cllan:h
Second &amp;. Lynn, P'omcroy
Pastor: Rev. Roland Wiklman
Sunday ac:hool and worohip 10:2S

Episcopal

LoaalloiSunday School · 9:30o.m.
Worship· 10:30 o.m.

Tapptn l'lllu St. I'IHII
Putor: Sharon HtUIIIIIJI
Sunday Sehool · 9 a.m.
Worship ·. IOa.m.
Tueaday Servicea- 7:30p.m.

Sunday Sehool- 9:45a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Thuraday Serviceo - 7:30p.m.

Eut l..owt

Sunday School- 10:00 a.m .

CbHkr
Paslor: Sharon Hausman
Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Sundoy Scllool - 10 a.m.
Thursday Servlcos- 7 p.m.

Momlea:SI.r
Pastor: Kenneth Baker

Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday Sehool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:4S a.m. (hi&amp; 3nl Sun)

SL Joha Lalbono Cloon:~
Pine Grove
Pastor: Dawn Spaldin&amp;
Worship· 9:00a.m.

Mtlp Coopenlln Portsb
Norlbcosl Cluster
AJrrcd
Paslor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship- II o.m., 6:30 p.m.

c.,_l
Pastor : Kenneth B i ker
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:4S o.m. (2nd &amp; •lh Sun)

Sullon

Sl. Paul Lathtna Clur&lt;b
Comer Sycamore A Second St., Pomeroy
Pastor: Dawn Spalding
Sunday Sehool · 9:45 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.

llarrioavlllt Comm•olty Cbonh
PISIOJ: Thrron Durham
Sunday • 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedne.day- 7 p.m.

Belboay
Putor: Kenneth S.ker
Sunday Sehool· IOo.m.

ClriSI ol Loiter-Day Sola Is
Sl. Rl. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday Sehool 10:20.11 a.m.
Relief S«icly/Pricolhood II :05·12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9- IO: IS a.m.
Homemakinc meeting. l~t Thurs.• 1 p.m.

SJncwt f1nt Chord! of God
Apple and Second SIS.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday Sehooland WorshiP" 10 a.m.
Evcnina Senoiccs· 7:30p.m.
Wednaday Services . 7:30 p.m.

ne Bcllovtn' Ftllow..lp MlabtrJ
New Ume Rd., Rutland
Pascor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Servicea: Wcdneaday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30 p.m.

Sttcnnlllt
Sunday Schooi · IDa .m.
Worship • 9 a.m.

RcorpolJed Clon:b or Jnot CUll!
or Lotter Doy Salah
Ponlanci-Racine Rd.
Pulor: Jantu Danner
Suaday Sehool · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

ML OUve IJalltd Mttbocllst
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday Sehool · 9:30 •.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services- 7 p .m .

Faith Full Gospel Ch11rtb
Loos Bouom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday Sehool - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesdor · 7 p.m.
Fridly - fellowship service 1 p.m.

Saltm Ct1ter
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday Sehool - 9: IS a.m.
Wonhip - 10: IS a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Gnbam Ualled Mtlbodlll
Worship · 9:30a.m. (Ill .t 2nd Sun),
7:30.p.m. (Jrd &amp; 41h Sun)
Wednesday Strvice · 7:30p.m.

llobloa CUblila Ftllowlblp Cllur&lt;h
Rev. Oyde Henderson
Sunday Jervice, 10:00 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Youth Fellowship S~ncby, 7:00p.m.
Wcdneaday aervoa:, 7:30p.m.

Rallood
SUnday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Thuraday Servicea • 7 p.m.

Rotlalld Commoally Cbunb
Pastor: Rev. Roy McCarty
Sunday Sehool · 9:30a.m.
Sunday Ever~in&amp; • 7 p.m.
Wednclday Strvices - 7 p.m.

United Methodist

Pomtrwy
Pulor: Robert E. Robi111011
Sunday Sehool · 9:15a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tueaday • 10 a.m.
Rod&lt;Spriqo
Pastor: Kellh Jfaclo:r
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Worship · 10 t .m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday - 6 p.m.

Tht Clwrcb or Jesu

Lonpvllle Clrillloa Clo•n•
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednelday Servia: 7::30 p.m.

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

PISlor: Brian Harkneu
Sdnday Sehool • 10 a.m.
· Worship - 9 a.m.
Wedncsdoy - 7 p.m.
Radnt
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday Sehool· IOa.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.
Cool•llle Ualted Mtthdbl Porloll
l_lu~: Helen Kline
tl;~•lllt Cloan:lo
Main &amp; Fifth So.
Sunday Sehool • I0 a.m.
WOf'lhip- 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services · 7 p.m .
Deibel c..n~
Township Rd .. 41i8C
Sunday Sehool • 9 a.m.
Worship · IOa.m.
Wednesday Services. 10 a.m.
llor;klniJIOfl Clon:b
Grand Street
·
Sundoy Sehool- 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.·
Wednaday Servkts . 8 p.m.
Ton:bCl....
Co. Rd. 63
w.i!!'!Schoolif - 9:30a.m.
~
. 10:30

Middleport Cllon• of lite NlllnM
Pallor: Gn:aory A. CundiO
Sunday Sehool • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.,li:30 p.m.
Wr:Ooelday Servicea - 7 p.m.

R.a.lltF......Ip
Clasd ollb&lt;Nou,...
Pastor: Mark A. Dupler
Sunday School • 9:311a.m.
Wonloip . 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedncsdoy Servicea • 7 p.m.
Syn.-. Clorcb oltbo N...,...
.
Pulor: Bill Slim
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednoaday Servicos- 7 p.m.
Pomtroy Cll•n:• otllte Nuol'ftt
Puoor: Re•. Thomas M&lt;O•na

Fallb Ftllowsblp c..-ror Cbr1S1
Paslor: Rev. Franklin Okbns
Service: Frid•y. 7 p.m.
Coi,.IJ Bible Cbon:.
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday Sehool ·9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Servico · 7:30p.m.

RoJol&lt;laa ure Chn:b
lOON. 2nd A•e., Middlepon
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday Sehool · I0 a.m.
Wednesday Sel"\\ic:cs • 1 p.m.

Middleport PtntKIIIIol
Third Ave.
Paslor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday Se.hool · I0 a.m.
Evcnin&amp; • 6 p.m.
Wedl1&lt;1day Servia:•- 7:00p.m.

Presbyterian
Syro&lt;oH FlniiJalled J'rta~ylrrtao
Pas&amp;or : Rc~ . Kriaana Robinson
Sunday Sehool - I0 a.m.
Worship · II o.m.
llorrboo•ID• Pmbytrrfon Cbareh
Worsh1p - 9 a.m .

Sunday Sehool - 9:4S a.m.
Middleport PmhJitrfoa
Sunday Sehool • 9 Lm ..
Worship ~ 10 a.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Senetlo-Doy Ad•ntbt
Mulbeny Hoa. Rd., Pomeroy
Putor; Roy Lawi""'y
Saourdoy Servicea:
Sabbath School • 2 P·'ll·
Wonloip • 3 p.m.

O,.n•Hio Clllltlllonlly Cllordo
Sunday School · 9:30 1.m.
Worship· 10:30 'a.m., 7 p.m.
Mont C~apel Cbon:h
Sunday r&lt;hool - 10 a.m.
Worship . II a.m.
Wednolday Se"'ice . 7 p.m.

United Brethren
ML He..- IJolttd Bn:l~n:o
lo OriSI Cban:b
Tuu Communi!) off CR 82
Pallor: Robert Sanden
Sunday Sehool - 9:30 o.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Servkts - 7:30 p.01.

Follb C:...l Cbortb

Lone Bot1om

SUnday Sehool- 9:30a.m.
Wonloip- 10:4S a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday 7:30p.m.

Edea Ualled Bm•n• Ia Cbrtsl
2 In miles nor1h of Reedsville
on Stale Route 12-'
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday Sehool · II a.m.
Sunday Wonhop • 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wcdnc""'y Services· 7:30p.m.
Wcdneaday Youlh Servkt- 7:30p.m.

Foft Gospel......,_
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pulor: Roy Hunter
Sundoy ~I · 10 a.m.
Evenina 7:30p.m.
Tucsdoy .t Thuraday • 7:30 p.m.

CLASSIFIED ADS
a supermarket
for everything

MOWEI CUIIIC
lrfnsiStNIIN
...,., SII'Yke Wilda
IEROSEIE IURI UNII
949·2104

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
912·7075
172 Nortll Stconcl Ave.
Mlcklleport, 01110

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH

992-2975
RAWUNGS ·COAlS

FISHER
FUNiifiAL HOME
992-5141
264 South 2nd

Middleport

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

PHARMACY~
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

Yc.u 'U be floating on a
cioud with the buys
you 'U find in.the
clauified3.

·J&amp;L------SIDING' &amp; t
.

IIISULAnON
537 BRYAN PLACE

PAMPERED PAWS

• s,.cJcll s,.w SptcWI
..._.lllllpiCiaiSio-ls

tleplale.at Witdows

W...· Sllllar Otlztll
55 off
n.n. f'nt rrulilg
replar prkt StCI1ttd
,... ' gl/2 pricl

eSfWII Daan &amp;wildows

C•l fw etllar .,.ct.h
614-992-6244

MIDDLEPORT, OH.
614-992-2772
8:30 A.M.-3:30 P.M.

..lid Gcngn

eROIIII ~

Public Notice

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
HomeJ~e Saws

Crow's Family.
Restaurant
"Ft.U.rlnf Ktntu&lt;i] Fritd Clticit••nl

"Dignity IUid StrviceAiways"
Established 1913

992·2121
106 MulbenyAve.

'

Pomer6y

949·2445

985-4473

BONDED

ltta.'lltr..

HI fllere,

SAVE

F&amp;J Curio Barn

l•y Wholesale

Is lack!

TIM'S CUSTOM
CARPET

45633 St Rl 124
Racine, of\15771

10:00 til?
Clothes&amp;
What-nota

COLLINS
CONSTRUCTION

~

• Residential RemOdeling
'Additions
• New Construction
• Over 10 Yrs experience
'low Rates
• Free Estimates
All work GuaranJeed

Wedge

Enclosed

Indoor/Outdoor
Storage
Day or Night

614·992·991 0

1-800-279-3147

214 E. Main
992-5130
Pomeroy

00

--e;

Vaterani
Memorial Hotlplbtll

115 E. Memorial Dr. Pomeroy
992-2104

Public Notice

M ov1ng sal&amp; · Fr1day &amp; Saruraay.
460 Gram S!reet M1ddlepon A
hnle aiiM!'rythlng 19am· 5pm

Painting

lEAl PUMPS

FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

Mal: 614-247-4881
Juadn: 814-247-4t&amp;1
~
: 814-41112-7074

tember 20·21 Swea ltu s. 1nfant
clolhing, tw•n bed and mauress.

i

80

BIS~Ell

BUILDERS, INC.
BING'S
REPAIR

(No Sunday Calls)

Ctean lare Mooel Cars Or
TrucMs . 1990 M oacls Or Newe•.
Sm1 1h 8u1ck Pont1ac . 1900 Easl ·
ern Avenue. Galhpohs

31801 Amberger Rd.
Off Forest Run

.

949·2057

J &amp; D's Aulo Pans. Buymg. &amp;al ·
vage veh1cles. Sell1ng pans 304.

MIKE BING

773-6033.

I..... &amp;Wotlo...tiiMn

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Years Experience • lnswed

Residential b.uld1ng lol. Pre! . Naith

mo. pd.

Pl. Pl .. not rural Wnle P.O BoJC

13069 Pinsburgh , PA 15243.

Beautiful Girls!!
Exciting!!
Passionate!!
Talk to 'em
,liveII
1-900.476-3131
Ext. 4300

Owner: Ronnie Jones
367-0266 - 1-800-950.3359

Free Estimates

ET

Top

pollar · a nn qu e&amp; , lu rnilu re .
glass, ch1na. clocks , gold, strver,
co1ns, walchos. esuw1s. old stono
jarS, Old biUO &amp; WMO (jiShiH , Old
wood boxes. n111K oonlos. Me1gs
Coumy Ad11eri1Semenr . Os oy
Marlin, 614 ·992·744 1

Wan tod To Buy U:.cd Mob1IC
Homos . Cnll 614 J\~6 01'1~ Q,
304·615-5965
Wanted To Buy Ju nl\ Au ros VV11h

Or Without Molars Call Larry
livEHy. 6 141· 38,6·9303

$3.99 per min.
Muat bO 1 B yrs.
Serv 619 645-8434

Wanted To Buy : We Bu~ Junk
Auto' s Any Cond 111on , 6 14 .388 ·
9062, ()f 614 .446 ·PARl

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

ANNOUNCEMENTS

• n•s Waiting
1-888-goNWNET

005

S19o95JMonth

Personals

Guys . G;rls . Fun Call •·900 ·
526· 9000 X 9672 $3 99 PIH

Minute _ Mu st B e 18 YetHs Pro -

a......,:U:::,:n:,:ll:,:m:,:H!:e::d~A::;:::C,::C8;:8::S:.;;,•.:.;N:,:O;,;Se=t:.U:::c:~F,;:ee::.::,_ _, I ca ll Co

' ·602·95&lt; · 7420

lloyd Lmdsey, as ol th1s
•-------------------,Ill,day,Steve
September 6, 1996, no long·

(Urne.StoneLowRatee)

WICIS

2.99/Min. 18+ StrY.U
(619) 645-8434
Wttlt mo. pd.

HAULING·
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,

GRUESER'S
GAUGE

Top Soli, Fill Dirt

Body work, car truck a
truck painting, minor
mechanical rapalr_
Tune-upa,
011 Change, Wu,

..................
_., ....... .
Pkll..,.bc.....

.....

614-992-4025

entitled check , c•ahlera

chock, or 111111 of crodll
upon 1 aolvont bank In tho
amount of not looo lhan
10% of thtt bid amount In
lovor olthto olorooold Molgo
County Commlaalonan. Bid
bonda
tthall
btt
accompanied · by Proof of
Authority of tho ofllclol or
agency algnlng the bond.
Bide aholl be aeolod and
marked •• "Bido lor Old
Cheater Courthouae", •nd
malted or dallvorod to :
Malga
County
Commlaolonara, Court
HOUII, 100 E11t Second
Stroot, Pomeroy, Ohio

992a7119

FAI,I, CLEAN·VP
Evening and Weekend NO X·Charge

:r::;~ng ~~;.~~~~~~··::~~~~~:~

~================9/=412=mo=.~~.I
AuthOriZed AGA Dl8111butor
• Welding Supplies • lnduSilial GaseS • Machine Shop
Setvice!l • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Weldi~
• Alumlnum/Stainleas • Tool Drae&amp;lng • Ornamental
Steps -Stalnl, Railing&amp;, Pallo Fum~ure, Fireplace
Items, Planter hangers, TreliisM &amp; lots of other stuflll

bkll

LlcenHd,

H&amp;H

SAWMILL

"FBIB"

BIIIHI11wMID
32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45 780
Danny &amp; Peggy Bricldes

lOW"

Mixed Sybenan Hu sky Norwagtan
Elk Hound Dog, Approx 2 Years
Old. Male, Good W1tl'1 K1d~. Prefer
Counlry 614 · 256 · 1336. 614·2S6·
1337.

Sm8u

tan &amp; black female dog, er ·
tr emety fnen dly ; brown female
Qacnshund. 614 ·992·5835
Two full blooded malo Austtahan
Shepl'1erd pupp1es. 4 months old.
614· 992 ·2800
•

Used bathroom lllflures. alloy be·
tund Pa1nt Plus.
~
White tong-htlfOd cat, neutered,
dec lawed, one Qr een eye, one
blue eye. to good home onlr. 304 ·
675·3498.

losl: seven mon1h old ltmale
Aust ra han Shepherd , black ancl
while w11h spotted noae. bobbed
ta 1l, dog lag w1th 11410, Rock ·
spr~ngs Ad 1 Cook Rd . v•Cinlly.
61·HI0)'2471
.

70

614-742·2193

,....,.•,

.,..
...
,...
...
..
,............... .
1111110N11'11101
FREE EBTlfiATES

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

YOUNG'S
'(AIIPitmR SERYICI

-ROom Addlllonl

oflewGingft
·Eitctrlcol a Plumlllno
oRoollng

•InteriOr &amp; ExltriOr

hlntlno

AIIO ~ WCirlt

(P'R!E ESTliiATEI)'

V.C. YOUNG Ill

-

lt2ol211
Pomeroy, Ohio

· UMIHIII

. 41J1MO.

•
. '

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

TFN

LIIDI'S

30&lt;~·3 4 2 ·

60 Lost and Found

Pertoble

9-5: Closed Sunday

Yourttelf of Lonoly
Evenlnga ttnd WHicendl

-

4

Grey /White K1l !&amp;n L1110r Tra1ne&lt;1 ,
614 ·446-8390 .

I
... . •

5 F1mily Garage Sale Q22 Jer IChO Road . Ches :re, Septem ber
t9rh · 2111. Ra1n Or Sh1ne
5950 State Rou1e 7 Soum. Satur·
dly, Seplen"ber 21st, G-3. No Ear·
ly Sales, Ra1n Cancels
All Yard Sales ~usT Be PtHa In
Advance . DEADLINE 2 00 p m
Thill day before the ad 15 to •un
SUnciav ldillOn · 2·00 p.m Fndly.
Monday e&lt;l•tion · tO·oo am Sl:r -

ur&lt;lay.
G1r1gt Sale : frtdly, Stturdly,

Sopoomber 201h, 2111. 0:00·3:00
Bora H . Poti1ea H &amp;
01

,._

Mltceltaneoua. 1052

110

Help Wanted

$$f)anccr s$$
Soulhlork Sllowbar. PI Pleasant.
WV Coli al! lil (i 30pm Wc:One$
day thr'J Satu1day, 304 · 675 - 59 5~~
$200-$500 wooll.ly. A ssomblo
producls ar hOme. ~asyr No '&gt;ell
1ng1 Vou ·re pflld d1roc1 Fully gu~r
anrood No e•ponenco n~M
sary. Call 7 days. 407 ·875 ·20?2
uu 05981138
'ATTN Po,nt Pleasanl' Po:11a1
Pos1t1ons Pormancnt lull t1mc lor
clerk/sorters Full B ane ht s Far
exam. apphca!IOrr and salary ·m lo
call ; (708)906 2350Ex! 3670
8am-8pm
AVON I All Areas
Spoa1s. 304 675- 1429

I Sh~rley

100 WORKE RS NEEDED
A ssemble Crarls , Wood Item s
Materials Prov1ded To $480 •
Wk. Free tnlormauon Pkg. 24 Hr.
1·801 -263-4034
Able
Avon
Aepresen rauvu
needed . Earn money lor Chns t·
mas bills at honu){at worll 1 BOO
992·6356 or 304 · 88 2 ·2645 lnd

Rep

Free f~rewaad · you cuUyO!J h81JI.
JO.II-895·3255 Af!er 5pm

614-985-3813 or 61416HI484
Plallic Culvett· Dual walland Regular 8" 1hru 36"
4" &amp; 6" Fie• pipe
4" S&amp;.D- perf. - solid pope
4" &amp;. 6" Sc:h 35 pipe
112.. &amp; J/4" c. ~v.c. pipe
j l/2" 1hnt 4" Sch 40 pipe
314" &amp; I" 200·p.s.i. wa1er pipe (100' roll's lhru 1,000' roll'•)
314" U.L. approved COIIduit
8" Gr.~vcless Lcai:h pipe
"
Gas pipe l"lhru 2"- Fillings · Rcgulalo"- Risen
Full1ssottment of P.V.C. .t Flex fillin~&lt; &amp; Wa1cr lilling!
Full line of Cistern. Septic &amp; Water sin~;:'!.~':. '.:.;,'u.

• Hanging Baskets
Open Monday-Saturday
812 1 f'IM).

Cornputor Software
4298.

Tuppen1 Plains, OhiO 45783

• Hardy.Mums
• Fall Pansys
• Fancy Gourds
• Dwarf &amp; Large
Pumpkins
• Winter Squash

I

Black Male Puppy. App rox
ManlhsOid. 6 14 ·446·3210

M111011, WV

Hubbard&amp;
Greenhouse
Syracuse

Giveaway

Aulo washer (WhHi pool) needs
pump Call 304 · 675-5012 a l ter
2 :30pm exce pl Sa l call before
1.:Klpm

I &amp; WPWna Alii SUPPLY
9t Rt. 7

OPENING SOON -Enchanlod For.
esl Child Care. Pre· Sc hoo ! Pro.
gram, belora and af1er school. Call

40

FAX 77NII81

Street

na1l ~::are lor men &amp; women Ca ll
wonderful-Full line ol sll.m. body &amp;
lor de!a11s. Kim 3&gt;4 ·675-5761

304·675-377V.

"No Job Too Lllrge or Too S"""l"
108 Pome

10% Offill

30 Announcements

~:~?:;~.~·;:~·. .::~~: J;~!

742·2935, Ask tor

Re•otl•ll•g

S...·U 619·845-6434.

10% Discount for Sept. &amp; Oct.

Ph. 77W173

"CALL

Sporr1 Trivia Scorn/Spreads,
More lli 1· 900·255- 2600 En7323
S2.99 Per Mi n. Musr Be 18 Vrs.

Aeration Repair or Replacement

Long SL, Rutland, Oh.

Roo• Atltlltio11s
Rooflnt
hrag11, Decks,
Ptdntfng, Sl•••
1·80G-478-2559

457U.

er take hnanc1al respons,btlt ly lor
any per son and1 or perso ns be·
sides my se ll. Sieve Lloyd ltnd·
sey, and/ o r
w 1l e Chns hna

we will work wrthin your budget

Tam mer•
Construction Inc.

aloruold lololga County
Commlulonora or by

loollld propooalalar Roof vented CCA wood cupola
Arrangement• lor alto
and Framing Repolrllar tho wllllolour-alded motel roof. vlalttt can be made by
0111 CourihouiO ot Cheater, lnatttll 40 Y""' celotox contacting tho Molg'
Ohio, will bo r.cot. ~ d by tho 'PrealdonUal'
, I h o k o County commloalon'ora
M'0 1 g 1
co u n t y ahlngleua raqulred.
ofllco at 1· 114-HZ-2116.
commlaalonara 11 their
1 Raploco oxlaUng aoflll Tochnlcol qutlllona •!1•11
ofllco, Court Houao, ond l10cla wllh new 314" bo dlrocted to R.G. llraech,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45711, until pin~ boord•· Nolo• oil P.E. ot 11•-441-8130. ' All
1:00 p.m., dctobar 7. 1118, axpoaad wood on bulld.!ng I' work 111111 bO porlarmod In
lnd opened ond raed aloud ahall bo CCA troot,ed. All 1 quollty, workmanlike
atlOid ofllco,
e•paood wood alioll be manner with provialona
,.....lcqlt
primed and pointed whlto. made to provant weather
1 , Remove ulatlng Inatal! whlll aluminum I" "'"'ego to tho lnlldo of lhe
rooting ond ahHthlng end guttering around porimator building and aholl bo
raplaca 11 aevorly bOwed with two downapouta • u b 1 o o t
t o
ridge beam, uaing cable dlachorglng on concreto ~on/approval by thl
........ d ......,_ ,.. entire aploah blocltl.
eng~,_,,
...,.••_on •..,. ·-.4. 1Wo of tho four original
o blddor rntty withdraw
lromlng ayatom aholl bo columna ramaln on tho flrlt hie bid within thirty (30)
tightened ttnd nailed/bOiled floor. TheM columna .,. to daya after dote • of lha
1" f.~~lm rooffnmlng
dupllcollld ttnd tho- opening thoroof. Molgo
over tour ulallng columna now columna aholl bo County Commloolonoro
acond floor. Roploco liiitolled In tholr orlglnol -rv• tho rltht to tnlvo
011 11
alltotlllng with 1" x 12" loclllono, under the ~ lilY lilfonllellllll or to Nject
,,ugh cut ook
floor columna.
lilY or Ill bkla.
•
frM Hollmon, Pralldonl
almllttr to ulatlng • .., •.- ... . 1 Each bid muot bo
7/11" OSII aheolhlng o - occomportlld by ellhor II bkl
.Molt• Courtly
t • toam lnaulatlon board. bond in on ttmount with •
Comntlaolonwa
~net~~~ a 24" x 24" x 41" high auroty aotlaloctory to tho (I) 20, 27, (10) 4, 3tc

JACK'S SEPTIC SERVICE

Buffing

Wanted to Buy

Absolule Top Dollar · .&amp;.II U.S. Sil ·
ver And Gold Co1ns . Proolsot&amp;,
0 1amonds. f\n11qu e Jewelry. GQid
A1flQS. Pre · 1930 U.S Currency,
Sterling, Etc . Acqu 1S1t10ns Jewelry
. M.T.S Co1n Shop, 15 1 Second
Avenue. Gallipohs, 614 &lt;~46 · 284~

AUTO

~

THE

Public Sale
and Auction

90

614-992-7643

.. .

end lables.

R1 tk P&amp;arson AuciiOn Company,
lull 11m e auct1oneer , comple!e
auc11on
serv1ce
l1censed
I66 ,0h10 &amp; West VHg1n1a , 30&lt;t ··
173·5785 Or 304 · 113.5-447

,.ew Homes • Vlny' Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

New

MEET NEW
PEOPLE THE
FUN WAY
TODAY
1·900·656·5050
Ext. 3998

Dr•ve. M•ddleport. Sep-

R1v8t'VI&amp;w

~~~~~~~~1ltable
and chaHs.
tampa, bedspreads.

JONES' TREE SERVICE

992-3051

FREE

Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. ) 1

EWING FUNERAL HOME

&amp; Coinpare
FREE ESTIMATES
Stop

Sept. 22 Catfish Contest
Entry Fee $25 per team
Two Man Team 8 AM to 6 PM
Check In At the
Dave Diles Park
1st $100, 2nd $75, 3rd $50
Any Questions
Call Chris Gilkey 992-3934
• Sponsored by: Son 01 the
American Legion Feeney
Bennett Pos1128, Middleport

HAYMAN-POLK REUNION
September 22 at President
Clarence E. Hayman Sr.,
Antiquity. Family &amp; friends
welcome. Food-Drink-Games
Start$ at 1o am. Dinner at noon.

Gutter Cleaning

•

Remodeling·

ERRAND SERVICI
CALL TODAYJ

Open

Appearing Fri. 8:()()..12:00
Sat 9:30-1 :30
Pomeroy Eagles Club
Members and Guest Invited

'I.ARCIE INVEHTOin' FOR
..IIEDIA1E INSTALLATIONS.

5116/iol WN

•Complete

&amp;

First ever, 7 lam1ty, b1g garage
aale, Thursday. Fnday &amp; Satur day, SR. 12-4, Racme . last house
belor&amp; Soulhern Jr H1gh School
across from Ebers. Home lnt er~or.
d1shes, k1ds clothes. lurnllur&amp;,
KJVS, misc. 1tems

·Gutters
Downspouts•

BUYERS

1111rmn

•New Homes
•Garages

GROCERY
SHOPPING/DEUV£RY

Rollback ~

r...-~IMiooloa

892-5432

MORNINGSTAR
EXPRESS

IIIVICD

"SINGLED-OUr
Sport and Non-Sport
Cards will be at the
Expo Sat. &amp; Sun.
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade

now oqulpment.

'OH THE SPOT FINANCING
ttvaltoblo to QUAUFIED

ROIEII BISSELL
CONSTRUmOI

!OWING

PUIOr: Jeff Smil~
Sunday Sehool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip Sef\lice 10:30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesday NiJhl Services

228 W. Main St, Pomeroy

742·3212

614-992·5379

"Christmas Around the
World" will be at the Expo
Sat. &amp; Sun.
Hiring Demonstrators
All Areas.

worronty.
•FREE ESTIMATES on

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding

Sal•• &amp;
lastallatlon

GIRLS
Dazzling Dolls Baton Corps
now accepting new students.
Ages 4-7 Only. Join an
award-winning corps.
Call Nan, 992-3796

'fREE 5-yw parta

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

by appointment only

CarinH l•tnlel PllltiHII Cl1•~ll
Klnpbolry Road

POMEROY, OHIO. 992.Q677

Industrial e Automotive
New Radiators • Re-Cores
AJC Condensers/Hose Assemblys

1·800~189·3941

(614) 992·5041

Molaltllalle r-es,
Air Coacltlollers Adchllllat .....

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

Public Notice

Soelh llolbtl N.. f i l i i Silver Ridl'
Paslor: R-. Barber
Sunday Sdo,ool · 9 l.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedncaday Service. 7 p.m.

BILL QUICKEL

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

35 Years Experience

, ............ Allembly
So. Ro. 124, Rac:ine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday Sehool · 10 a.m.
Even ina - 7 p.m.
Wednesday ScrYiccs • 7 p.m.

Syroat~tMIHiott

f).
•••~

Decks ~ Bathrooms ~ Kitchens ~ Siding

Pentecostal

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

•

.
New Ure Vk:I:DrJ Crntrr
.
3773 Georges Creek Rold, Gallipolis, Olf' :
Pa51or: Bill Staten
·
Sunday Services ~ 10 a.m. 4 1 r .m.
Wedne.day - 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

1411 Briclseman St., Syracuse
Sunday Sehool - 10 a.m.
Evenina · 6 p.m.
Wednesdoy Service - 7 p.m.

Paslor: Rc•. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday Sehool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 1 p.m.

Gutters and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling

Clifton Tohtma&lt;lo O!un:b
Cliflon, W.Va.
Sunday Sehool· 10 a.m.
Worship - 1 p.m.
Thuroday Service - 7 p.m.

Faltb Toberaodt Cbon:h
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Re"&lt;~ . Emmell Rawson
Sunday Sehool- 10:00 a.m.
Evcnina 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

MI. Olin Coonmoally Cb11rtb
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday Sehuo~- 9:30a.m.
Evening. 7 p.m.
Wednedoy Service · 7 p.m.

Roofing ~ Rubber ~ Shingles ~ Minor Repairs

Cllun:h or Jnos Chrb~
Apoaloll&lt; Follb
1/4 mile past Fort Meip on New litna Rd.
Pastor: William Van Meter
Sunday· 7:00p.m.
Wcd~eaday- 7:00 p.m.
Friday-7:00p.m.

Middleport Commonlly Cllon:h
S1S Pearl St., Middleport
Pator: Sam Anderson
Sunday Sehool 10 a.m.
E\lcning ·7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Seroicc . 7:30p.m.

UIICed · ·ailb Clinlrth
Rl. 7 on Pomeroy 8~ - Pass

Cloon~ oiiM NIARIIt
Pallor: Scott R&lt;*
Sunday Scllool • 9:30 o.m.
Worahlp- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday S.rvlcos - 7 p.m.

Sunday Sehool • IO:JO a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:00 P..m.

Eadtlmt llo... or Pnyrr
(al BurlinJham church orr Route 33)
Pastor: Roben Vance
Sunday worship- 10 a.m.
Wednolday servkt. 6:30p.m.

IIUtl Comrauolly Cbonh
Off Ro. 124
Pallor: Edael Hort
Sunday Sehool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Residential ~ Commercial

Pa.stor:. Rankin Roath

Sll..nvllle Wonl or Fallb
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday Sehool9:30 a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.

CbriSIIott Frllowablp Cftlrr
Salem So., Rutland
Pastor: Robert E. Muaser
Sunday Sehool- 10 a.m.
Worship · II : IS a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 1 p.m.

BIIIOOniG and
COIIftiDC7101

Folrvle" Bible Cbon:~
Lcoan, W.Va. Ro. I

, .... Cllapel Opn Bible Cll....
923 S. Third l&gt;o., Middleport
Puoor Michac:l Panaio
Sunday aervlce, 10 a.m.
Thuraday aervlc&lt;, 7 p.m.

Sunday Sehool · 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.

Lo- «;~~n Frtt Melbodlll Cbun:b
Puoor: Pcler Tremblay
Sunday Sehool ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Service. 7:00p.m.

Whlte'a Cloopd Wealeyoa
Cool•ilk Rood
Pastor : Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday Sehool -9:30a.m.
Worohip - 10:30 a.m.
Wtdneaday Servkt - 7 p.m.

Other Churches

II•••~ !Middloportl
Pastor: Vemapya Sullivan

n,..u Roo 11.....,. c..,..
Putor: Robert Manley .
Sundoy Sehool- 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thuraday Se"'ice - 7:30 p.m.

Rtd Snyder

Cloelttr Cll.,.. ol tloe N1111not
P -: Rev. Heotcrt Qrsle
Sunday Scllool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Seroicea - ? p.m.

l'vrtlud f1nt Clo.... ol 1M N...,...
Pulot: Mark MallOn
Wonhip- 10:30 p.m.
Sunday Sehool • 6 p.m.
Wodnoaday S.rvkts - 7 p.m.

Paslof: Charles Ncvitle
Sunday Sehool - 10 a.m.
Worship . 9 a.m.
Thursday Services· 6:.30 p.m.

ROM of Sluo""' llollotsa Cboreb
Leadina Creek Rd., Rulland
Putor: Rev. Dewey Kina
Sunday ac:hool· 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship ·7 p.m.
Wedneaday prsyer meelq- 7 p.m.

Pallor: R••· Roser wmrord
Sunday Sehool - 9:30 a.m.
Worlloip- 7 p.m.

RollaodCIIo... olllteNIDrtat
PutGr. Somuel Buye
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Serv~l • 7 p.m.

Fort~tRu

WllleJu lllblo llollltta Cloun•
75 Pea~ St., Middlepon.
Paslor: Rev. Joh~ Neville
Sunday ochool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wedl1&lt;1day Servkt - 7:30p.m.

BrodburJ Clu... or Cbrlol
Paslor:

Rev. Vidor Roush

Plat Gron Blhlo Hollltta Cloon:b
112 mile off Ro. 32S
Putor: Re•. O'Dell Manley
Sunday' Sehool - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhlp · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Servkt • 7:30p.m.

Putor: Roaer WaCJon
Sunday SchoOl . 9:30a.m.
Worahip - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servlcca- 7 p.m.

Eolt~

futor: Keolh Rader
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Flo I woods
Plstor: keith Rider
Sunday Seltool- 10 a.m.
Wonhip . 11a.m.

Sunday Sehool9:30 a.m.
Worship· II a.m., 7:30p.m.
W.....,doy Se"'ice- 7:30p.m.

........... Rldat a..... oiCiutot

Su~ Sd,&gt;ool- 9:45 a.m.
onh1p- II a.m.
Wednaday Servlc&lt;s - 7:30 p,m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp - I0:30a.m. and6 p.m.
W - y Services - 7 p.m.

Babys1t 1or For A 2 Voa• Old II).
Ou r Homo, Ro Grande Area. ncl
orences Requtrod . Sor~ous lnciUI ·
r19S Only, 614 -245-5784
Chri stmas Aroun d The World &amp;
Gi ll By House Of lloyd Demo nslralors Wanted. Earn X· TRA. In ·
come, $300 K11, Call Soon For 0•
IilllS, 614·379·2197
Clfculat1on Desk Clork Pos111an A!
O; Samue! L Bossard Momo11al
libra r y Somo Evon1nos And
Woekenos. Full T1mo 37 112
Hours A Weok. [)onoh rs. Compul
er Ko~bouro Sk•!ls A Mu sl, C:acet
len! C~stomer Se rv• ce And
Ptlone Skllfs Rcquuod Come To
Cucu1a11on DllsK For ApphtaiiOn
And Tes u no lnlormauon _ Call
614 ·oi46· 7323; EOE
Computer Users Needed . Work
Own Hours. 20K To $SOK IVr. 1·
800·3-48-7186 X 1113
Cru1s&amp; Sh 1p J obs' Earn S300 1
1900 Willy Yea • Round Poswon
Hrnng Bot h Mon /Women Freo
noom And Ooard W1ll Tra,n Call
7 Days 407 875 2022 E•t 0526
C31

'i-IELPWANTEO
Ga llla Mc 1gs Communny A.ctmn
Agonq Is !ICCl' PI In Q 1\p(J iiC&lt;l
tiQns For ThO Fol!awn·lQ Po s111()n
tlou5 1ng O(!Vf:lopc• Wdl Bl• llc
SPOf1S•ble For Dc~tttlla~monl 01
Agency t-lous1nQ Prorocls lh1S
Will «""volve Worktng Wrth F•nan
c1al lnsltiUIIOns. local. And State
Governmenl In P•epilling Pro
Formes , Grant App!IC BIIOns. 1\nd
Olher nelated 1\(I IVrheS PoSUIOn
W1ll A l:~o Be Involved In Identify ·
1no Bulld•ng $11es. Prapanwon 01
Feas,blh!y S1ud1es. Housrno Plans
And Rotated B10 Oocumen1s And
Con1racts
Apphean ! Should Posses s A
Bachelor 's Oeoreo Wtth Empha ·
51s In Bus1nes s. Mark ot lf1Q Or
Public AdmJnl!ll, a lton Rel evant
E 1penence W1th H ou~1ng Pro ·
grams, ConstruCtiOn, Or ~ela t &amp;d
f: ,old!l Prolor~&amp;d Aophcants Musr
Have Reltable TranspoJ IQIJOn
Applr~al!Ons May 8e Ob!11nod AI
Th&amp; GWCAA Othtl 8010 North
Stall Route 1, Chet~1re, Oh1o
45820 ·0272 . Subm111•on OtadHnt It • PM . On Friday, October
4,1998.

E"'oJ Oporounty Employef

�•

r

Page 10 • The Dally SenUnel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

;:;;: Friday, September 20, 1996

Pomeroy • Mlddlepo,rt, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

AILEYOOP

NEA Cro11word Puzzle
PHILLIP

ALDER
540
Earn 1COO ' s weekly stuffing en-

velopes a1 home Be your boss
Start now No ex penance Free
supphes 1nlo, no obligation Send
sA s E 10 Nuooel Uml 364 ·6,

trimming, aldewatk edging, com·
plete lawn care, driYewl:ya sallied,
home weatt1erizallon 30• ·875·
7112

10151 Un•vers1 ty Blvd Orlando

Ames-Garages &amp; Ourbu1ldtngs.
cleamng and disposal, for tnfor·
maoon &lt;aH · :Il4 ·89~~36

FL 32814

Flora1 Oes•gner, Fu1I ·T1me lmmedtate Openu"'Q that Spec•al Toucl'l
614·441!-2522

PC users need
ed $4 5,000 tnc om e pot ent ial
Cali 1-800-51 3·'3•3 Ext B 9368

HOME TYP\ Sl

Hostesses Wanted Earn tree ed
uca t1onai toy s bool\s or computer
soltware why no t have them learn
as they play Call K1m tor deta1ls
304 675- 5761
l egal ~ecretar y Postuon, Word
Perfect 6 0. Good Typmg Skills.
Real Esra te E.:penence preferred
Send Resume to Bo.: CW 14 C/o
Point Pleasan t Reg1st er 200 Mam
St PI Pleasant WV 25550
local Company is Seekmg Tech
n1 c1a ns For The Installation
Servtce And Ma1ntena nce Of
Burglar F1re Alarm Sys te ms,
CC TV ~ C lo se d C1rcu1t Telev1 S1on)
Sys tems, Sat eil 11e Tv System s
An d Bus1ness Telephone Sys

'""''
Oua 1,1 1e d Can d1date Mu st Be
Hones t Dep enda bl e Ael1a ble
And 1;-iave Dependable Tran spor
tat10n Wi!h A Good Dr1 v1ng
necord (Absolutely No 0 U I )
Please Respond W11h
Resume To
Northstar Satelltte &amp; T V, Inc
AnN Sam Farmer
240 Upper R1ver Road
Gaihpolts Ohro 45631
Or You May Fa.: Resume
614-446 4001
OFFICE MANAGER Polite, E• ·
tre melv Organtzed, Computer
Sll1lls Necessar y, Mull1 -l1ne
Phones Exper1ence Wrlh Payroll,
State ! Federal Ta~es , BWC A
Plus Subm1t Resume SCCS PO
rlc ~ 538 Kerr, OH 45643
PAINTER
EARN WHilE YOU TRAIN For
'\ Ca reer As A Parnler learn
1he Ba src s 01 The latest Tech lliQ ues No Tu1tron GED /High
Scho ol 0 1p1oma Program Avall 3ble Hou srng , Meals, Med1cal
Care And Pay check Prov1ded
Ages 16 24 Job Corps ·A U.S
De partment Ollabor Program
Ca ll 1-000· 733-JOBS E•l 90

Care For Peraon(s) In Their

Home. Days Or N1ghts. No Even·
•ng Shltt Have CPA a. Aizhe)m8f
Tra1mng, leave Menage, 614·

14X70-$3.200 Senous lnQUIIOI
Only M·F Only 3·6pm Only, Ask
lor Anna 614-446·3n2
1969 121160 Kmg mobile home

With t0x24 add on room. well
mamtatned and •n excellent con·
d1t10n, 16,500, call614-985·4474

441 ·0219

1982 2 Bedroom, 141!56 total
electtle, h&amp;at pump 304-5762048

Georges Portable Sawm1ll, don't
haul your logs to the m1U JUS! call
304·67&gt;1957

1988 Redman 2 Bedroom, Gas
Heat, Central A1r. 614 -446-0175,
304-li 75- 5965.

Homecleamng Windows Etc Call
Anne 814·446-1358
Sun Valley Nur11ry School
Ch1idc:are M-F 6am-5.30pm Ages
2-K, Young School Age Ounng
Summer 3 Days per Week MtnL·
mum 814-448-3857
THE CLEANING OOClORS
Restdenllal &amp; Commerc1al Cleanmg W1ll Cover Surrounding Areas Call Toll Free For Esttmates
1-668·610 -0700, Or 614 -245·
0412 Let Us Doctor Up Your
Housel
Wantmg To Sabys1t In The Bld woll V~nton Area, Evenmgs Pre
!erred, 614-388-8929

FINANCIAL
21 0

Business
OpportunHy

!NOTICE I
OHIO VAlLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bust ness w•th peo~le you know, and
NOT to send money through the
marl unlll you have 1nvesttgated
the dflenng
CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOD
FURNACE Is The Most Elf1c1en1
And lowest Em1ssrons Outdoor
Wood Furnace On The Market.
C&amp;ntrai Bo1ler Is Currently Look·
1ng For A Oual1ty Dealer In ThiS
Immediate Area For lnlormauon
On Becommo A Dealer Or For A
Free Brochure Call 1·800 ·2484681 Or 1-218-782-2575

Mob1le home &amp; extra lot for sale,
102 Smrth St orr Krngstol¥n Ad
$12.500 216 -322-3035
New 14r80 Only make 2 payments &amp; move-rn no payment alter • years. free set-up &amp; delivery
304· 755·5885
NEW I Bank Repo·s, only 3 lefl,
sull under warranty, tree dehverr
&amp; set·up 304-75~7191
Older Schultz home, owner occu·
p1ed, 2 bedroom, excellent for
young or rettred couple, priCed on
tnapec:tiOn 304-675-5394

UNBELIEVABLE! I ALL NEW
SINGLE WI DES IN STOCK
ONLY $499 DOWN, ALL NEW
DOUBLEWIDES IN STOCK
ONLY 1999 DOWN, LOW
230
ProfeSSIOnal
MONTHLY PAYMENTS, FREE
ServiCeS
DELIVERY AND SET-UP, ONLY
==~===-'::':':'~I AT OAKWOOD HOMES, NITRO
HARTS MASONARY · Block, WV. 304-755-5885
br~ck &amp; stone work, 30 year&amp; ex penenee, reasonable rates 304·
895·3591 after 8:00pm, no JOb 10 350 Lots &amp; Acreage
small or to BIG WV-021206
2 Acre Restr~cted Bu1ld•ng Lot
Country Selling, Water Tap Included 614-245-5457

Sal es Person Needed For Local
Re ta1l Store, Send Resume PO
Bo.: l41 , Galhpolls, Oh10 45631
Son·eone lo cook even1ng moat,
an d stay n1ghts with elderly man
Ca ll 304 -675-3350 w1th pay re
qutrements.
Tak1ng appi1cat1ons lor e1perr
ence drtvers and loaders also
pan trme olhce help computer ex
penence needed send apphcatron
to P 0 Box 1 17 Brdweil , Oh10
456 14
Takmg Appli ca tion s tor Reserve
Oll1ce rs Req u1rements, Certtlled
Oh10 Peace Olllcor Trarn rng
CounCil No Phone Calls, P1ck ap
plic a!Ions at the McAurthur Po
hce DePanment
The Me1gs County Board ol Mental Retarda110n and Developmen tal o~ sa b r l l hes ~C a rleton School/
Me1gs IndustrieS) seeks a subStiTute Health Services Coordma Tor (AN or LPN) 10 work wtlh studen ts and adults wtlh developmental d sa bil1 t1es Must be a reg1s
tereo nurse or licensed pracucai
nurse curre nlly lrce nsed •n The
Slate ol Oh10 Pr eferred quahltcatlons expertence tn publi c neaith
nurs1ng ex p e r~ ence wo rk1ng w1th
d11idren and adults w1th develop
rllen lal dlsab11lt1eS Send resume
by Oc tober 1, 1996 to
SteYC Boha, EKecutNe D•rector
Me1gs County Board ol MRIDD
1310 Carleton Street
PO Bo.: 3:17
Syracuse, Otuo 45779
TRAINEES WANTED
EARN WHILE YOU TRAIN f or
A Career in Pa1nt1ng Plumb1r,g Or
E1ect ron1cs Repa1r No Tur t1on
GED 1H1gh Scr'lool D1ploma Pro
gram Available Hovs 1ng, Meals,
Med cal Care And Paycheck Pro
v1ded Ages 16 -24 Job Corps A
US Departmen t 0 1 Labor Pro
gtam Calt 1 BOO 733 JOBS, Ext
go

I

TRAINEES WANTED
EARN WJ-IILE VOU TRAIN For
A Career As An Opt•c,an s As
s•stant Or In Health Serv1ce
Food Pr epar&lt;1! 10n Or Busmess'
Clencal No lu1110n GED IH1gh
School 0 1pioma Program Avail
:tble Hous1ng Meals Med1cal
Care And Paycheck Prov1 ded
Ages 16 24 Job Corps A U S
Department Of labor Program
Call 1 800 733- JOBS, Ext 90
wanted Housekeeper Full Trme
614 256-1 966

2 Acres, surveyed, 110,600, frontage and &amp;Ides 304 -675-1918
cau aftet' 5pm
All real estate advertising In
!hiS newspaper Is SUDject to
the Federal Fair Hooslng Ac1
ol1968 which makes 1111111081
to advertise •any preference,
h"'lallon or dlscnminallon
based on race. color, relfgbn,
sex familial status or national
ongm, or any IntentiOn to
make any sucll preference,
l1mllat10n or dl&amp;crlminatlon.•
This newspaper will no!
knowllngly occep1
advertisements ror real estate
which ~ rn •101a11on of the -.w.
Our readers are hereby
1nformed !hat all dwellings
advertised In thfs newspaper
are avarlable on an equal
opportunity baSIS

REAL ESTATE
31 0 Homes for Sale

Beaut•lul acreage tots, newly developed area, close to town, 2-5
acre tracks 304 675-591 1
BRUNER LAND
614-77!&gt;-9173
Gaiha Co 30 Minutes N 01 Hunt1ng1on Off S R 7, 3 M1les Oul
Teens Run 3 loiS lei! Each, 10
Acres $10,000 + Up Chambers
Ad - last One I 11 + Acres
$11 ,900 GSIIIpohs, 2 Miles Out
Neighborhood Rd Three 10 acre
Lots $17,000 &amp; Up Or 22 Acres
Wilh- $25,900
Me1gs Co Hunters Lots 01 Deer
• Turkey On These 10 Or 12
Acre Ad)Otntng Lots Each $9,000
Together $17,500 Bu1id On Th1s
Remote 5 Acres $6,500
Call For Maps &amp; Owner F1nanc
tng Into 10% Down -t We
F1nanee Balance 10% Off Cash
Purchases•
Lol For Sale Appro• 112 Acre.
Water, Electnc, Telephone, Sepuc
Already There, City Schools.
South 01 Gall•polts, No Restrtcuons Has Storage Bu1ldmg, &amp; Ca
bte Ava1lable, 614-446-2528.

2 Bedroom home on Bethel Ad
Nrce, newly remodeled. new shtn·
gles, vmyl s1d1ng, mms from Pt Lol ~81ife Rodney V1llage II,
Corner lot, $5,600, 614 -245-5926
Pk&gt;asen! 304 -67~7046
After 5 PM
3 Bedroom Home Wrth Pool In
Mot&gt;jle home lot lor rent. ready to
Mercerville One Acre Lot Walk·
hook-up, rent neoo 216-3221ng 01stance Of School, 814·258·
~35
9362
Parcel&amp; on Rayburn Rd Wa~r
3 Bedroom House. New Haven, paved road, reasonable res1r1c
Elec1nc Heat, Central A1r, Base- nons 304 -675-5253 (no smgle
ment C1ty Water &amp; Sewage wide mqUtres please)
$44 000 304 882-3772, Or 614·
992·5641
Scentc Valley, Apple Grove
beaut•lul 2ac lots, public water
3 Bedroom Ranch With garage
and large barn located on C~do BowenJr, 304·576·2338
Geoooes Creek Rd 814-4411-4792
Along the nve, at West Colum bia lhree bedrooms, bath, llvmg
room, laundry room, k•tc:hen wl
buth 1n cabinets, carpet, n1ce fireplace, 119,000 Uust see 10 apprecia te, 304 -773 -5013 or 614949 2671
Chiton, 1 112 story, 3-bdrm, 2 ear
garage , heated workshop, 2.C'
above ground pool $49,000· 304·
773 5134
'
3bedroom, bath, hv1ng room wl
hardwood floors, kiTchen &amp; d1n1ng
area together new roor , garage,
on At 2 304 675 -4139 or 304 675 7326 alter 6 3l
Hou se tor sale by owner 304 882 39 70
Located near schools and hospttal, 4bedrooms LR. DR. 2 baths
family room tn ground pool 304 675-6515 aher 5pm

2 Bedroom Trailer For Rent In

Small Trailer Pari&lt; Dopoall &amp; Rolererces Requ1red, 814-446-1104
2 Bedroom Sandhrll Road 304·
675 ·~

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur·
ntshed and unfurniShed, aecunty
depoatt requtred, no pets, e14·
992·2218.

RENTALS

Furn1shed House
Pius Ut1i1hes 6U --446

lf.~;;,;;;-;h~o~u;.se~m:iPPco~m;.e~ro;;y
op11on to buy on conJ:.;::;;_;.:,pe:.;IS:;.•.:.6_14_·69_c8_
·7_24_4___
3 Bedroom House For Rent,
S37Wo, Plus Unhti8S, Reference
tOepo11~ No Pets, 814·4•6-1734
3 Bedroom, 2 &amp;lory, n•ce porches,
unfurnished 10 Hanford Ntce &amp;
clean. S275 monthly 304-882 -

1=2389=~-----:--:-::N•ce two bedroom home m Po
me::::r.:rll::.·:;no:.pe:::::::IS::,,::.61:.;4:.;·992::;;..;·58:;.58;___
1No Pets, large House For Rent,
OepoSitReqLU,ed. 814-448-4559

West V1rg1n1a Cold Drawn has 1ob
open1ng lor Account1ng Cl erk ,
proler exper1ence. w1ti 1ra1n
Please send re-sume to Bureau of
Employment Programs 225 S1x1h
St Pt Pleasant WV 25550
West Vrrg1n1a Cold Drawn has 10b
openrng lor matenaJ handlers ana
cold drawn mril operator Job requrrements H•gll school degree
or GED. pre assessm ent tes ts.
and mandato rr drug testing
Please submll resume and apph ca!lon to Bureau ol Employment
Progams, 225 S.•th St PI Pleas· Three bedroom home 1n country ~~~~~::_-----:-­
Whites H1ll Ad , Rutland, one balh, I ·
am WV 25550
•n-ground poet, 614·992-506 7
West Vrrg1ma Cold Dra wn has a
JOb operwng tor maintenance poll- 320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale
uon Job requtramems. AI INII 2
year degree {associates) tn rechmcal school, PlC programmmg,
hrd raultcs, mechlntcal, wefdtng
and elec11tcal ••ptrltnca prt·
!erred Mandatory drug ltlling.
Please submit resume and apph·
UU DOWN Buys Any Double
ca t1on to Bureau af EmploJmtnt
3 BadW1de Only At Oak Wood Homeo
Progams, 225 Sixlh S! PL Ploea·
Dtpatlt
Of BartJourSVIIIe. 304· 730·3409
anl WV 25550

a;:y;;;-;:;ii''Ri-;;,T,;;;A;;;;i;j;;;;:l

: :::::!.:::.:::.:..______

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Dnve
rrom S244 to $315 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 614· 446·2568
Equal HouSing Opponmrly

630
10112 Wooden storage bu•tdmg,
assembled on sk,ds 304 ·875· 550
Building
2n2
::....:.c-------------1
Supplies
12 gauge s1ngle sho t, $49.
Bolt Actron, S89 50, 22 Mag
Block, br1ck, sewer ptpes, wtnd Action, $125: 12 gauge Remmg- ows, hntels, etc Claude W1ntera,
ton 870 Exprtts, S179; 12 gauge ~to Grande, OH Call 614-245lingle shol, $59, 20 gauge 11ngle 5121
shot, $62 50, Marlin 30-30, like
new. $195: 22 Nylon Reminton 86, 560 Pets lor Sale
S95; ,giasa top d•nene set and 2 Beagle Pups 5 Months Old, 2
tour chalta, $39 50. several hand
guns This week onlr. mou.ng 10 Adult eagles $50 Each, "II For
F1va Potnts 1n October Dave's St50, 814·388·8932
Swap Shop, 8129 SR 1 N. 6 Week Old Reg1stered S1ber~an
cC_he.:.sh_~re.c._O_H_ _ _ _ _ _ _ Hu11ky Pups Black &amp; White W11h
1 Blue Eyes, 814-446-3889.
1986 Ntssan Truck 4 Cyl1nder.
Runs Great. $400, 18 Ft Ulll1ty A Groom Shop -Pet Groom1 ng
Featunng Hydro Bath Don
Trarler $500, 614-446·4539
Shoe!&gt; Caii614-446-0231
2 Lestroruc Banery Chargers, 24
and 36 volt 1 Hamme, Dnll 304- AKC Regtstered Dalmatian pup 675-4014
ptes, 6 weeks otd $200 304·937 -

Clean two bedroom apartment m
Pomeroy, 01\10, 614·687-6205
Free Rent· You f11 lt up, you can
slay lOt free . Call for delaila 304·
67~2722

Furmslled Apartment, Share Bath
S2251Mo. , Ut1llt1ea Pa1d, 701
Fourth Avenue, Galhpolts, 614 448·3844 Afier 7 PM
Furn1shed Elhc:renc:y 3 Rooms,
Bath, All Ullhbes Patd, Downstairs.
$285/Uo, 919 Second Avenue,
GallipoliS. 614·446·3945
Gafaga Apartment 2 Bedrooms,
Stove Relngerator Furn1she&lt;l,
Water, Sewer &amp; Garbage 614448.0284
Grac1oue hvtn~ 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at V•llage Manor and
R•versrde Apartments m ~lddle ­
porl From $232-$355 Call 614992 -5084 Equal Housmg OpportunHie&amp;

2929

2 Year Old Kenmore Relngerator,
18 Cu Ft Wh11e, $300, 614 -446- AKC Reg•stered Mtn-P•n pupp1es,
1859
all females, ready to go $17Sea
~4-89~306 1. Alk for Rhonda.
3 End Tables, 1 Collee Table,
Dark Wood, Excellent Condmon
AKC Rotlllorod Yollow Lib
614·256-1974
pups, first shots, wormed, dew
claws removed, health carbfi·
5 P1ece Breaklast Set $100, 1 cates, 614·949·2481 after 4pm Of
New Coverall S•ze .C2 Regular
leave message
$15, New .tO Channel Mob1le CB
RadiO $50, CaD 614·446·0924
AKC Rottwe•ier Pups 61 4-256 ·
1651
6" Sl1d1ng glass door, 36" storm
door, 36" wooden door 304-675- AKC Shelue pups With perhgree,
1714
sable &amp; whde, shall, males- S250.
lemales· $300. 614-696·1085
60,000 BTU gas healing stove,
$50, 614·949·2780
HAPPY JACK SKIN BALM re ·
lieves hot spots and scratcrung.
75,000 BTU Gas Furnace, $250, Promotes healtng ancl half growth
614-446-2003
on dogs &amp; cits wnhout sterotds
A1r eond1110ner 5500 BTU, a~r R&amp;G Feed &amp; Supply, 814·992·
temp, e.-cellent condrt1on. $125, 2164
614·985-4474
Pets Plus, S1lver Brtdge Plaza .
(10~ Olf Ev6ty Th1ng, Every Day I)
ArUIICial ltreplace, electr~c, $65
614-4,.1-0770
Entertatnmenl center S~S Black
wrought ~ron for 2 porches, com· Puppy Palace Kennels, Board1r1g,
ptete S700 304-882-2436
Stud Serv1ce Pupp.es, Groom1ng,
Boots By Redw1ng, Ch1ppewa, Buy. Sell &amp; Trade, All Breeds.
Tony Lama Guaranteed lowest Payments Welcome. 614 -388 0429
Pnces At Shoe Cale Galhpohs

Modern 1 Bedroom Apanment,
614-446-()390
N1ce two bedrobm apartment tn
l'amercy, no pelS, 614·992·51156
One bedroom apartment 1n Pt
Pleasant, 614-992-5858
One bedroom turmshed apart·
ment m Mtddleport, ca ll 6U-44e3091, 614·992·2178 or 614·992·
5304. '
One Room and Bath ell Utthlt&amp;l
Paid $185, Two Room and Balh ~ I
Ut1h1tes Pa1d $200, One Bedroom
apr all U11hhes Pa•d $325, 513574-2539
Three bedroom apanment electrtc baseboard heal. country setling, Kmgsbury Rd . Pomeroy.
$275 plus secunly, 814·992·

4286
TWin RtV8t'l TOW8f', now accephng
apphcattons tor 1br HUD subsidIZed apt lor elderly and hand/·
capped EOH 304·87~66 79

Brand New Wal~er Never Used.
$50, 6 14·379 2726 Or 304·937·
3363

Two bedroom, upatatra, S3751mo,
ut1ht•es pa1d, $100 deposn, 2217
112 N Ua1n St 304-675-6108

Central a~r un.t, used 4 months
$850 304 -675-11801

VALLEY VIEW APARTMENTS
Now accepllng applications . lor
•mmed•ate occupancy, tor 2 bedroom apartments apll have ac,
kitchen appliances, fenced 1n
playground laundry tac1111y and on
sue management water sewer and
ti'BSh .pd b)' owners tor more tnfo
call 614·245·9170 Tues., Weo,
Thurs from Noon 10 3 Pm EOE

450

Combat boo1s, army camouflage,
rental surplus clothing by Sandy ville Post Ofl1ee Sam Somer oJIIie's Fnday -Sunday, Noon SOOpm 304-273-5655
Concrete &amp; Plasttc Sepuc Tanks,
300 Thru 2.000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpnses. Jackson, OH
1 800-537-9526
D-2 Ca1erp1llar Dozer S6,500
304 895-3859 atre&lt; 5 OOpm

Furnished
Rooms

D1sney Area 5 Days, 4 Hotel
Ntghts Use Anyt1ms Value 1320
Sell $100 614·823·0490

Rooms tor rent • week or month.
Starting at $120/mo. Gall•a Hotel
614·446·9580

Electr1c Cook Stove S100 , K1ng
Woodburner S75 75 000 BTU
Gas Furnace. $75, J.Aanuel Hospnal Bed sso. 112 Bed. Wnh Mal·
!ross $45 614 379 2720 AFTER
6 P.M

Sleep•ng rooms 'IWIIh cook1n9
Also ualltr apace on over All
hook-ups Call after 2 00 p m ,
304·773-5651. MasonWV

460

Space for Rent

FLEA CIRCUSI
ENFORCER8 Flea Products
Protect Your Pel, Home And Yard
From Re-lnfestallon While They
t&lt;111 Fleas &amp; Ttcks NOWI Guar anttted Effecuve A'lallablt At
These PartiCipating Stores·
Central Supplv. Odell
True Value, Thomas
Do·ll. R &amp; G Feed.
Browns Trustworthy. And
Valley lumber I Suppty In
Middleport

1 NICt mobile home lol , m counlry, with all cny coonvmce 30.C 87~6G84.

Trailer Space For Rent, Add1son.
814-446-3964, 814·367-7438
490

For Lease

20 Acres of pasture W11 111aU
hotoebam.
New 1,500 square feet. 3 bedroom, $500fm0 on appro• 3 acr0101 lend
Fot lease or aale-1974 Mobtle
home, $2,000 cash or lease for
•2501mo. 304·758· 1331.

MERCHANDISE
510

Household

Goods

Reg1atered Boxer pupp111, S250·
male, S300·1emala, had shots,
wormed, declawed &amp; la1ls docked

Livestock

1 Mare Pony Saddle, Br1dle, Cart
$250, 814·2·~5087.
4 Baby Bul C.lwos For Sale, 014·
24~9557.

E1ght week old baby p1g1, $25,
614-949-2908 or 614·94g·2017.

Autos lor Sale

1969 Bu1ck GS 350 Four Speed,
Factory A~r, Ar~zona Car Needs
Resto,.. $3500 814-882-7512
1989 Nova SS. 396·375 Less
Motor and Trans Needs Restored
$3000 814-682· 7512
1979 Honda Ctvtc, many new
parts, runs great. $700. 304-675-

11832.
1980 Olds Omega $800 Neg .
61.;.440.()519
1980 Pontiac Trans ·Am Au ·
tometic, 2 Doors, Sunroof .css.
Good Shape, &amp; l'arll Car, $1,500
304-87H841 AFTER6 PM
1983 Fo,d l TO, "mechan1c's specl8r. $500, 614·94g.2371
1984 Ford LTD Crown V1ctor~a,
automauc, loaded, $1000 OBO,
S14·742·2357
1984 Monte Carlo 305, Looks
And Runs Good, New T~res, Aulo,
Till, CruiSe, AIC, PS. AMIFM
cassene, 12.300. 61H48·7723

Th1s Week SpeC tlll Must Sell .
A~redale, Husky, Poodles. Chows,
Wolf Wybnds, Dalmattons, Boxers. Scon11h Terriers, Puppy Palace Kennels, 814-388-042'1
570

Musical
Instruments

Ludwig Snare Drum For Sale 2
Yearo Old, Bu 1 Not Evon Played
One Whole Year, 014·3118-8815
snare Drum Sel •120, 814·256·
1651 .
.
Used Clar~"et Good Cond!tian
''50 PltaM Apply lmmldlotoly
014·448·31108.

580

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

112 Au"'* Baanl l Silwor Oueon
Corn. -882·3328

Crossbow Wllh OUiver
And fi Mrows, 4x Scope 814 448-9273

590

Have 4 -8 Foot Alummum a·
White Columns. All 4 For SISO,
Good Condition, 61.C-448-.CSSO

1g6o Ford F- 100 Standard
Trans , Na.My Rllbullt Engine, Call
Ahat OPII. Ol .....a-3243.

Hearth Mate F~replace Insert
Black, Excellent Condition , 614·
448-4044

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

For Sale
or Trade

'89 Bronco II XlT 4WO, askmg
$5950,614-843-5151

1973 24 F! Camper Good Shape,
$1,500 080 614-245·1215.

IBM PS2 No1e Lap Top /Compul·
er, IBM PIO Pnn1er. IBM 14' Color
Mon1tor, t850 Neg. 614-245·9248
After 6 P.M. Or 614·379 -2197
Anytima For De!ai&amp;

Carpet &amp; V1nyl In SID&lt;k ta.OO Yd
Mollohln Carl*~. 81.....a-7....

JET
AERATION MOTORS

Rapairecl New &amp; Rellui~ In Stock.
Cllll Ron Evant. 1-ati0-537·8528.

APPLIANCES

Wuhtrt, d,Ytro, relrlgltiiOII,

. FRANK &amp; EARNEST

THE BORN LOSER

.

tSOea. 1 roll 48" wovon wn
W.IOI flllle 1211. $25. 304·

y,,.

1~-34118.

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CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull Campo•
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E1Ctlletter lfl the dphtr ltandl tor lnotrwl' T«My'l due 1'1 ..... C

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Always lo the black splriluals lhere's lhal PfOIJiile
that th1ngs are go~ng 1o be better, by and by.· - Maya Angelou.

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Stup1d - Otter- Quell - Larder· DUTIES

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your nghts you'd better nol fall down on your DUTIES •

Includo your ftiJM,
addms anti ago.
Winning tntrin wiU
appor In a lUtoN • M11 strip
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BASEMENT
1989 Honda Accord, 4 door.
WATERPROOFI/IG
27,000 rrulea, ught lrontlender Uncond1t1onal hle11me guarantee
damage, $4,000, 814 ·949 ·2311, Local references furniShed Eo·
61_4..;
·94...;.,9·.:.2644;__ _ _ _ _ _ ,abhshed 1975. Call (814) u~ ;.
1 0870 Or 1-800·287·0576 RogO&lt;s
W&amp;!erproofing
'

!~~~~~~:~::.:~~Appliance
Parra And Se~ice· All
~
Name Brands Over 25 Years E~­

l9811 Z·2• Cavalier, aulD. V·6. JWI, pe11ence All Wprk Guaronlee~.
pi, ac, tunroal, cruise. OIL $3,500. French Cny May1ag, 614 -441·
:.304:.;...::·5,_-:.;..::..,1,_._ _ _ _ _ _ , 77115.

ASTR6-GRAPH

.
BERNICE
\

BEDEOSOL

e=...
Salurday, Sapt. 21, 1996

You have balrlended a compelanl

ally

who has alwaye wanted to help you, but
waa never In a posttJon to dO so. In lhe
year ahead. your nalalionShlp will produce
mulull benefit~.
VIRGO (Aug. 2S4Iepl. 22) Same form of
IOCill 8Ciivlty should be inclllded in your

you undersland whal to do to make the
relationShip work . Ma1l $2 75 lo
Malchmaker. c/o this newspaper, P.O.
Box I 758, Murray HHI Slation, New Yortc,
NY 10156
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Someone
whose confidence has been diH1cult to
earn m!Qhl shale some socrel intorma110r1
with yoo loday. You Will be SUrprised
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Hov. 22) Your social
IHe will be importanl today However, you
may feel more uncomfortable 1n a small
group lhan you wiN in a big crowd.
SAGrnAAIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Today
you m~ghl PfOiil from something you do
independenlly. H~wev~r. your pnde in
your accomphshmenl Will be worth more
to you lhan lhe rew!lld
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22·Jtn. 18J
Asaociates will be impre11ed by your
ideas and augges110ns loday Even peo.
pie who 888l118d impervious lo your Wlftu·

PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) An old
friend will lum OU11o be a WISO counselOr
T(lo(lay. You will appr8Ciat8i11S or her wis·
· c:IOm and you wrll welcome the chance to
diSCUSS your problem6.
ARIES (Mrrch 21·Aprll 19) Try not 10
make hasly deciSIOnS al work loday. You
can achieve your goals, but you must
proceed one 11ep at a time.
TAURUS (April 20.Miy 20) Today you
mighl rece!V8 some pleasanl news lrom a
special friend who lives lar away . You
have been hoping lo hear lhis announcement tor a long time.
GEMINI (Miy 21.June 20) You mlghl get
an idea today whiCh could lead you lo
solve a problem yoo lhought couldn't be
reeolved. Do not glw up now.
CANCER (June 21-.luly 22) You mighl
leel reslfess loday, and short trip lhat
oil... a change of venue would do you a

ence will hang on your every ~.

COIRI.

AQUARIUS (Jill, »Feb. 11) Someone
wh088 aupport you wil need soon will be
willing lo help, bul yoo'N have to gain his
or her confidence first. Patience and lin·
eerily wiN be tasenlial.

a

world of goad. Do not overstay your wei·
LEO (July 23-Aut. 22) An

8llllnQ8FD8III

which might ilcrease your earnings will
begin loday. It
mpe you rich, but ij
migl1l provide aome addilionallundll.

won'

,

•

.'

now

6--.G_U-r-R-.-T_H....-:O-.:-ij
~-~~~lete
7

agenda today In order to make things
rll()(8 enjoyable. Try to do somelhlnO lun.
Trying lo patch up a broken romance?
Tile Aatro-Graph Matchmaker can help

ranges . Skaggs AppUencu, 78
Suee~ 0111 814·•48· 7388,

North
I ..
3NT

"'*'lllild

22 o.ntlelt
24 Hlllped

r--~~~~~--~---,

Improvements

Electrical and

(2Wde.)

11

L-..J......l--.L...J..--' ..

wv

4 ToDacco Dale boxes •4o.oooa,
2,000 toi:Nicco 111ck1 (. 10 cents
2 Fuoi,IJinka. 11kid I 1 with

West

r pl.

2111Mpnolee
21 - Jollnnyl
27 Flnol

•

Home

..penence.

11 Canlpr
17111gM

1 Poet.d
2 Diet. .
8euonl
34 lualngl..- 3 Cllllled
4 Antenna
35 Colli unit
5 RlquiNI
311 Word liNd

rI I

SERVICES

1990 •Ford Taurus GL Sporl ~C-&amp;_C_G.,--en_e_r_a_l-H-om-e-:M:-a-:u:-1·
Wagon, PW, Pl Tilt, Cru11e. tenence - Pa1n11no. vtnyl s1d1ng.
Rack, 3rd S•n Con•olo BuCkelS, carpenlry, doora, w1ndowo. bath;,
loaded, Ea:cellent Condtlion mobtle home repalf and mote For
B14-44«HH481 .
tree esttmate call Chel. 814·992·
6323
'
10eo Grand (.larqu••· good urea.
loadod, call81•·940·2086.
CONSTRUCTION· mttnor tnm,
1990 Mazda 828 4 Door Sedan, •dd•llons, hardwood f5oors, decks.
Excellent Condluon, loaded, Au - 11d1no. mtnor plumb•ng and tlectomatte, 118,000 Milts, Owners tncat No JOb 100 small, 014 .g92375 1
Manual &amp; Mamtenance Log, 1:.:.;:..::.
· --------$7.50Q, 81•·258·1854, 614 -258·
OR'IWALL
6329.
Hang. finilh, rtpOII.
C&amp;11inga IIXtuted, plllltr ttpa1r.
Call Tom 304 ·67~41118 20 years

DOWN

Tln Roof
33 --forAll

bridge friends have died Ibis year.
Another one, Rlchard O'Reilly, left us
on March 28 at the early age of 47. He
didn't play much bridge in the last few
years, but he had been very successful
in partnership with Chris Duckworth,
winning the Guardian Pairs and
Evening Standard Teams in 1974, both
prestigious events And they finished
third in the Common Market Junior
Teams the following year.
O'Reilly quickly spotted the right
line in this deal. How would you play in
siK diamonds against a heart lead?
North's three-no·trump rebid is aw·
ful . Two diamonds 1s automatic .
However, clearly O'Reilly knew his
partner's eccentrir tendencies, introducmg his diamond suit.
A trump lead would have k1lled the
contrac~ but West selected a heart.
O'Reilly saw that he didn't have the
communications to establish his club
suit. Instead, he won Irick one with
dummy's heart king, cashed dummy's
spade ac~. ruffed a spade in hand,
played a ~eHrt to dummy's ace and
ruffed the heart five in hand. Then
came the club ace and a club ruff with
dummy's diamond five. Having scored
all his low trumps, O'Reilly claimed
five more tricks on a high crossruff.
II is one of the pleasures of life to
make a slam while your opponents are
going down In three no-trump, as happened in this deal. Losing friends like
Richard O'Reilly is at the other end of
the stimulation spectrum. Almost all
bridge players have their aggressive
side. I never saw one in Richard: He
was always happy and enjoying life.

30• lnnsbrook, 2 bedroom, 1895.
304-875-2310 at1er 5p(n •

810

(ebbr.)

It is depressing how many of my

1984 Pace Arrow Motor Home.
30 Ft. Excellent Condttlon, Even·
ngs:614-446-8585

Refrigeration

Appliances:
Reconditioned
Walllwttt, Dryera, Ranges, Rtfn grators, QO Day Guarantee!
French Cit, Maytag, 814-.c.ce 77115.

coela
30 Stupid

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Ron's TV Serv•c•. apec.allz•no •n
Zenuh also terv•ctng most.alhe,
brardt. House calla. 1-800·707·
0015,
00.·571!-23118.

300 t•Uon plaollc 111m choml·
cal lank. an sled with ho~ t75.
114·949-3403.

27Cooko-

By Phillip Alder

Budget Prtce Transm•ssrons,
Used IRebu •ll. All Types, Over
10,000 Transm1ss•ons, Clutch's
Flywheels, Overhual K11s. 61~ 245-5877
.
:

1088 Cuhass Supreme, Sharp,
88,000 Moles, $3,000 614 ·379-

.)

Young and gone

&amp;

1972 Dodpe RV Molor Home
Good Condllion, $2,500, 81.C·U 107&lt;3.

(I

51 Pitcher
SOSixth-

32c.ton--

• 6 2

• K4

Opening lead: •

Acces!lo~les

840

HOSpolal Bed $50. Woman ·~ 81cy ·
Cle$20 614-448·1769
1

SHE ISS

MISSINIIi II

1994 24 Ft. Pon!oon 40 HP Mer·
cury Trailer AMIFM RadiO Cassene Portable Head Bu1lt in 20
Gallon Gas Tank &amp; Extra's Excel·
lent Condmon. Also, Small Sa•l·
boat Needs WOfk, e14·4.C1 -0708

4pm

.. KQ854
• • Q 10 4 2

Pass
Pass
Pass

1988 Range, 373 V-Boat Wtth
150xP Evtnrude Motor And 2.C
Volt Evtnrude Trolling Motor 18
Ft Excellent Condn1on Wnh Ex!rasl $9.995. 614·992·2770

1986 Chevy Camaro, V· B, 305,
New Motor And Trans, Body
Great Condlllon, $1,500, 614-446·
4539.

1988 Cadillac Brougham, 78,000
m•les, cne owner $4,500 304875·1651 or 304·875·6197 Aller

UE PIZZA II

750 Boats &amp; Motors
tor Sale

790

_______

South

aa~ng

Ul80 Chevey Chevone 57,000
m1tes Asking $1.495 00 614·
388-9032

1888 Jeep Cherokee, Standard,
179,000 Miles, AC, 4 wo. AMI
FM Caasene RadiO, $900, 614:..:..:_:
256·6571.

- BARNEY

Motorcycles

1985 Plrmouth Stauon Wagon,
$1,200, not negottable 30.C·67511832.

:~b:.gl.

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

250 Honda, runs petfect, bad
plasuc $1,400 1979 Jeep 4·WD,
19&amp;1 Camara SOO+hp, toy 304578·2541

Auto Parts

1111 High -u

lllll'oMMa

4AJ7632

1995 W1ndS1ar. l1ke now, 7,100
m11es, ac, ps, pb, $10,000 304·
87~1343., 304-67~ 1128·

760

East

West

• 8 3
+KQ 84

1990 Dodge Ram Van B-2'50,
72,000 Miles, $4,000, OBO Can
Be Seen At: Galhpolls Daily Trtb·
une, 825 Th•rd Avenue. Galltpolis
01\10

1981 Bar -Jon Bass Boat, 85hp
Johnson motor Wltr~:uler $1,500
304·675· 1176

18 Retumto
ofllce
18 FeMful
20 By birth
21 SUnrlee
23 Rubblah

South
.. &amp;

1987 Voyager van, front wheel
dnve, wh1ta, 4 cyf•nder automahc,
cola a~r, crutse. lilt, looks and
runa good, $1850, 81•·247·4292

1983 Sea Ray 21 Fl Cuddy
SAV210 V·8, lfO New Camper
Top, Everyth1ng Goe&amp;l E~tcellent
Cond•uon. 614-.C-46·1763 Alter 7
PM.

·~In

SO Moet prlvllle
54 DIM

cllrectlon

48

.. 9!
• J 9 7 6
• 9 73
• Q 1ij 9 5

1982 Ford W1ndow Van, Real
Good Cond1t1on, 302 AutomatiC,
SUiOO, 814-441-0743

New gas tanks, 1 ton truck
wheals &amp; radtators 0 &amp; R Auto,
Roptey, WV 304·372-3933 or) ·
800·273-9329

1986 Ford Eacorl, 4 door, 4cyl,
runs good, needs multler $700
304-458-1783

• AK5
+ A J 10 5

&amp; 4·WDs

1993 Honda GOICIWing, Wlth
Match1ng Trailer Alter 6 PM 614·
446 .. 792

710

Nort•
Oi-20·91
.. AJ1073

1993 5-10 PICk·up, V·6, 4 speed,
auto trans, Tahoe equ1pment, ps,
pb, ac, split bench seat, actual
m11eage 30,337 PhOne 304·8756083.

Pure bred S1metel, bull, 3 years
old. 30~7S.5490

TRANSPORTATION

~I

1993 ford F150 XL 2 WO,
Stra1ght 8 Cyhnder, 51,000 M•les,
5 Speed. $10.000 OBO 304·674·
4855.

Vans

42111ne-

RONIII

1992 Ford f ·150 5 Speed, Under
35K, AMIFM Caasene, Excellent
Condioon, 61•· 24~8179

730

44=ft

..... !181111

1990 Jeep Comanche p1ckup, 5
Ellm~nator package, 1gs1
Chevy pickup; 614·992-2178.

1982 Honda needs some work,
$200 OBO
1983 Honda V-45 Magna. new
banery &amp; brOS, runs QOod. $2,500
304·1182·3841 afler 5pm

Yellow AKC RegiS!ered Labrador
Pupp1es 5 Males. 3 Females.
Born 8110196, Champ1on Blood·
11ne. $250,614-643-22118

::..:.--:=-------·1

a

13 Slippery
14 MleciMde
15 CompoMI'

speed,

Polled Pure Bred Soulh Devon
Bull 3 112 Years Easy Fleshrng,
Also Polled RegiSIO&lt;ed Charolais
Bull 2 112 Years A I 20120 Son
Easy Calv1ng, See The~r Calves
Here 61.;.379·2507

2820

Sh•h -Tzu Pupp•es tor sale. 304 675-478(1

37 Actor
Rlollenl
Food
40 W1lllla I n 41 PNIIx for llleo

llll1lndlr

12~-

198V Dodge 0· 250 PICkup
$3,900, OBO: 18 Fl. Tra~ler Uuhly
$1,095, Now Cond1bon, 8 FL Trtll·
0&lt;$450, 814·446·8588

7 40

~4-67~3868

Fo•l~re

19 Cu Ft Almond Relrlgera!or,
sora, love••••. Swivel Rocker,
Rodin«', 81 ..... 1171

USI[D

Reg•srered AKC Bassen Hounds
Pupptes, Wormed rwo Femates
left, Red Flamed Po•m and Seal
Po1n1 Pers1an kmens 614 ·367·
7705

Heavy duty cham hnk fence, nev ·
er been used, 8'K150', $2 a toot &amp;
250' oln, 614-742·2658

(Vanguard Ven11111 F~teplace
Syo10m1) 1 Standard &amp; 1 Book·
case Model Mod Qak Wnh Lim·
natt 2 ElectriC Units Wnh Sur ·
rounds 1 Whna. 1 Med Oak 814 ·
258· 1135

GOOD

tlydnluhc: HoMI, Uade To Order.

.s

456 112 Second Avenue, Galbpoi•s, 2 Bedrooms, AC, Appit~ncea,
$A001Mo , Ut1ittre! Pa1cl, $200 0&amp;PQSII, Refererces, 614-446-2129

ta-w

• Mlmlce

11183 5-10 Lonsi bid, • cyl, 4spd,
new brakes &amp; linea, new tlrn,
runt good •1.500 080 304·075·
11815.

,__toPioula•.._..

or ned!

4CMrllgllln

Ktng 11zt brase bed w11h Sealy S•der'a Equipment Co. 304-875manre11, box spnngs &amp; lrame, 7421
$275; kmg 11ze qu1l1ed bedsp&lt;ted, mawe &amp; green, $45, au ., lnternauonal Tractor 45 HP Re·
motes. Power Steertng, Syn good condilion, 614·985-3595.
chrontzed Trans . New Ttrel, Roll
Marble top vanity aink, two door Bar G C Zelor 52 HP 4 WD, Wnh
Cab Heat, A~r, Rad10 Remotes,
&lt;abinel $50. caii814-98S..474
G C 614 ·446·1092, 814·446·
Saara Refrigerator $125,
e1
•~- $125080
6808 Ahe&lt; 5 PM
Typo Deep Freezer, $125, 814· Norge octtiC~,- ·
4~·8172, 614-256-8251
Super llnaie wa!Ofbed ' ' 00 080· JD 1717 Grain Onll Double Onsc,
~-~~~~~~--_ci=~~~=7~~=33M~1~-------­ IH 620 Press Wheel 2417 Grain
Used Fumnura 130 Bulav1lle Pike. Ranch living room suit ope, 1 year Ortll, tO' Transport D•tc. All In
Lowrey Organ. What-nots. Type- old. bhHt, asking $600 OBO
Excellent Condition, 014·660 Writers, Cookie Jars. Beds, Road master mens b•ke, asking 5101 Evenings.
Couches, Tables
614 -446·
1oo
082
Englandtr- F~rebnek lined wood lowell prices on all wood cutter
)
VrRA FURNITURE
burner, used 1 wtnter $250 304- supplies. Bars &amp; chains, oil &amp;
ftles Sider's Equtpment Co. 304·
\._
882·3841aflor5pm
614•446-3 158
67~7421
Oual1ty Household FurniUre And
Refngeratort, Stovee, Washers
Appl1ancea. Great Deals On
And Dryers, All Reeondlttoned New Idea Corn P1cker $1,500;
Cash And Carryl RENT·2·0WN
And Gauran!Oedl $100 And Up, New Holland Colly Wheel Rake
And layaway A4so AvadatH.
Will Oeltver 814·669-8441
$1,750 ; Wheel i&gt;11ks $400 Up,
Free 0eiiY8f')' Within 25 Miles
Plows $200 Up, PICkup D1ak $345
Sako D•vers Watch Heavy Stam- Up Cuiubackers S225, 01her
less Steel L1ke New S75, 614- Fte,ld Ready Equ•pment Howe's
245-9658
Machtnery Jackson, OH 614·
286· 5944.
Stanley Home Products-Dale &amp;
Wtlma Wood. Independent diS· NH Super 718 Chopper Wllh 2
lllbu!Drs ~ne 304·875·1090
Row Corn Head Good Condmon,
$1,500 OBO. NH 451 Mower
10 F1 Sanellle 01sh, Sllgh~y Used Good Condlhon; 8' 8' &amp; 10' F1ber&gt;
$800, OBO 614-245-9102
glass Step Ladders 814·889·
STORAGE TANK S 3 000 Ga ltc n 5101. Evenngs.
Uprtght, Ron Evans £nterpnses, Super ·M· Farrnall wide front end,
Jackscn, 01\10, 1-1100-537 9528
power Sloenng &lt;aH 614·3711·9381
Twm Bed Wllh Bookcase. Head1 board, And New Manress Sel, 620 Wanted to Buy
Complole Baby Bed W1th Mal· Wanted to buy on land contract,
lress, 614-3118·9080
house 1n ~u~and 8ft&amp;, 61.C-7.C2·
2856

1 bedroom turrnshed apartment n
1992 Skyline, 14x70, 3 bedrooms, Mtddleport, call 81'-9g2 -2178 or
2 lull baths, front porch, back 1 :6.,:.14;.-99:::2:.:
-5304=;:.·_ _ _ _ __
deck , lennox heat pump, verv 1n1c:e, S1 7,800, call or leave mas- 1 Bedi'OQm Furnished ApattmenL
sage, 814·993-5617
Up01a1rs, No l'atJ, Ulllllies Paid,
References, Second Avenue,
1997·2 &amp; 3 Bedroom, $995 down: GaUipoHs. 81,...48·9523.
$1951mo Free del1v0&lt;y &amp; &amp;el·up,
only at Oat! Wood Homes, Nttro 2 Nice 1 Bedroom Apartments,
WV 304-755-5885
$300 /Mo., Oepoall Roqu~red, U!~·
111es Pa1d, Call Evenmgs, 614 0ue To Illness Must Sell t 982 446-8028
L1beny Trailer And 1 6 Acres
Land, 3 Bedrooms, 2 Bathe Front 2bdrm apts , tota l electriC, apPorch And Deck On Back, Seihng pliances furn1shed. laundry room
As Is SH,OOO 513 Paxton Road, lacllltie s. close to school m town
614-441 0333, George &amp; Char - Apphcattons ava1lable at: Vtllage
Green Ap!S 149 or call 814·992·
lone Hall
3711 EOH.
l1m11ed Offer! 1997 doublew1de,
3br, 2ba!h, $1799 down, $279/ 3 Room Fronl Aparlmenll, Large
month Free dehverr &amp; setup Front Yard, Trash Ptck-Up Patd,
Only at Oakwood Homes, N11ro No Pets, Porter Area. 614·388 1100
wv 304·755-5885

PHARMACY · DIRECTOR
l' nar mac:y Sy stems, Inc A load
, r In Hosp!lal Pharmacy Manage, ,~nl Seeks Ouector Ot Pharmacy
1or Veterans f..temonal Hos.prtal
Support Prov 1ded For Manaaemenl , JCAHO Compliance And
Ctt n1cai Ac1tv1t1es Interested
Pharmacr st Sl'lauld Contact J1m
Ro bert so n.
1-800 -269 -7879
Ext 18

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Any Odd Jaba, pamtmg, ahrub

llefarecut

ACROSS

SEPTEMBER 20 I

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1

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, September 20, 399ft

Adoption procedures need to be a,mended to prevent fraud
Ann
Landers
199:1, Los A.IIJeles

Tunes

S)'ftdW:t~e and C~·

IIDI'I Syndicale.

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: Last year, a
friend of my sister announced that
she was pregnant. Because "Jane "
was unmarried, she decided to allow
my brother and his wife to adopt her
unborn child.
My brother completed all the
necessary legal requirements for the
adoption, not to mention helping out
financially. Jane maintained close
contact with other members of our

family. She even sent photographs Later, we found out she had had a so badly "that she convinced herself
of herself in various stages of her hysterectomy I0 years ago.
she was indeed pregnant and the
pregnancy. We felt the more contact
The emotional damage she has "game" got out of hand. Let 's hope
she had with us, the more certain she caused is indescribable. Although the poor woman gets professional
would feel that her child would have this has not soured my brother and help.
a loving home.
his wife on adoption. I feel someDear Ann Landers: I'm writing in
We were overjoyed when Jane thing needs to be done about the response to "Feeling Deprived ,
announced in her fourth month that adoption laws so this type of fraud Frustrated and Fed Up in Texas."
she was having twins' As her due can be avoided. Perhaps the adop- She was unhappy becau~e her husdate drew closer, she seemed more tive parents or the adoption agency band was impotent and unwilling to
and more remote. In her ninth should have direct contact with the work at a solution. He was afraid of
month, she "disappeared" for sever- obstetrician. What do you say, Ann ? penile injecti ons, and the pump
al days. We finally found her hiding --Faked Out in El Paso
turned her off
in a closet in her apartment. She was
Dear El Paso: I agree .with you -I. too, suffer from impotence for
upset and asked that we leave her especially in cases where the unwed medical reasons. This staned about
alone .
mother-to-be is emotionally unsta- 12 years ago when I was in my late
After being forced to get medical ble, which was surely the case with 40s. Many nights, I was totally frusattention. we learned that Jane was Jane .
trated because of my inability to
never pregnant and that she had been '· Don't overlook the possibility express sexually my love for my
stuffing pillows under her clothes. that Jane might have wanted a child wife.

When I first went to see my urologist and was told about penile
injections, I said, "I'm going to put
that needle WHERE???" But my
desire to make love to my wife again
overcame any fear of the needle. We
have used that method for many
years without a single failure . ·
Recently, I've added the pump,
sometimes using both at the sanne
time .
After 40 years of marriage. I can
honestly say our sex life has never
been better. It all depends on how
determined a man is. And having a ·
supportive wife can make a world of
difference. -- Grand Rapids . Mich.
Dear Grand: Three cheers for you
and a couple for your wife . Your

determination not to be cheated by
Mother Nature's low blow has paid
off handsomely. I'm happy for yoU:

Send questions to Ann Landen,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W_ CeD.
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angela,
Calif. 90045
•

al catering and the development of a
buying consortium, which would
enable area meal programs to buy
food in bulk at a reduced rate and
store it in the warehouse . Additionally, the center has plans to become
a training facility for students interested in pursuing a career in food
service.
The Southeastern Ohio Regional
Food Center is hoping to develop an
increased volunteer base to assist in
the daily operations of both the Central Kitchen and Foodbank.

•

The Meigs Marauder Marching Band won two
first place trophies in competition held at the Lancaster Band of Gold Invitational held last weekend.
In competition with three other Class A bands,
Chillicothe, Warren Local and Wilmington, Meigs
finished with a point total of 242.05, 1.6 polnta .
ahead of second place Chllllc;othe.
Marauder field commander Erin Krewaczyn, pictured left, also took first place In field commander
for the class.
Saturday the Marauders will be at Cambridge for
the Cambridge Cavalcade of Bands- Petformance
time Is 1:45 P-m.
The band Is directed by Toney Dingess, aaslsted
by Dave Deem, Susan Clark, and Joy O'Brien.
Sanlor class band members pictured with the
winning trophy are from the left, front, Erin
Krawsczyn, Jodie Sisson, Whitney Haptonstall and
Tara Grueser; second row. Chad Molden, Chrissy
Williams, and Carrie Glaze; third row, Ryan Baker,
Jamie Williamson, Mlcholle Miller, Stacey Price,
Shaun Fife, and Chad Dodson and fourth row, Paul
Epperson, Taryn Doidge, Beverly Stewart, Anna
Fink, Darrick St. Clair and Adam White. (Photos by
Charlene Hoeflich)

gram.
Scholastic achievement and the
panel evaluation represent four percent of the judging for the selection
of Ohio's Junior Miss. Other judging
is based on fitness, presence and
composure, both 15 percent, and
creative and performing ans. 25 percent. Scholastic achievement is
judged by a panel of educators from
Ohio colleges. The panel evaluation
is an individual session with each
Junidr Miss evaluator who is looking for a sense of values, perception.
clarity of e•pression and concern for
and ability in human relations.
Any girl entering her senior year
in high school in Ohio and interested in more information about the
program should write to Ohio Junior
Miss, Box 306, Mount Vernon, Ohio
43050, or call Christina Coons at the
Mount Vernon/Knox County Chamber of Commerce 614-3931 Ill.

I

Close Out Sale!!!
Don -Tate .

•

'
'

•'

,

Funds raised from the walk support education and rc~h of the
American Hun Assoctabon. Thcs
year's event is being held in memory
of Pat Clifford and in honor of Bill
Matlack. To show lhat participants

tors

308 East Main Street - Pomeroy, Ohio

I994 Cadillac
Sedan Deville

$19,995

1995 Chevrolet
Corsica
No Money Down
1
7999 or
'16900 per month

1995 Olds
Achieva

$10,999

1996 GEO

13775

TRACKER
Convertible
8

II I89

New

$I3 959
'

13702

USED CARS

HEART WALK - Hundreda of dollara are ralaed each year In the
annual American Heart Wslk, whiCh thla year will take place Oct. 5.
Sponsors of the event are The Farmers Bank and Whaley's Auto
Parta. Pictured here displaying a poster of the event are Paul Reed,
bank president and Dabble Hlptonetall, chairman.
are fighting back against this number one cause of death. all people
walking in the event who have hean
disease will be given a red cap to
wt'llr in the walk so they are visibility identified as survivors.

$25, 158

USED TRUCKS

1993 GEO Storm .. . , ...............,,.. $7,999
1993 Mustong-......................... $5,999
.
1993 Chrysler Lebaron-···- · ·---... $5,995
1989 Pontiac Firebird .... ;.... ...... $5,495
1994 Chevy lumina APV ......... $11,999
. ......... .,
,. 2 , 495
,
1985 F or d Crown V1ctor1o
1994 Pontiac Grand Am .. .. ___ , ••. $9,999
1991 Chev Cavalier 4 Dr- .... ·-·-.. 83,999

1995 S-10 4x4 PU ............... $12,999
1996 F ord R anger 4 x 4 ......... •.,17 ,999
1992 Half Ton Chevy
S
n
ilvera~o PU ...... -........... -... $10,99,
1996-Aiitro Conversion
'
·
Van ..................................... $9,999

HOURS:
1--~-------------------------------L--------------------~Mon~y-F~y

Don Tate Motors
All pllcea Include

For more information about the
walk or to receive materials for registration residents may call Haptonstall at 992-6078.

Wao .29,898 Now

rebates 10 deaief.
.Taxes &amp; lees oc
1
•

308 East Main Street - Pomeroy, Ohio

S14-992-6614

111'1 \

"I \ II\\ "" I -,

hm·8pm

s~r:-;..
Sundey

1 pm·5pm

1-800;,837-1 094

CHEVROLET • OLDS * CADILLAC * PONTIAC * BUICK * GMC * GEO

pageA2

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • September 22, 1996

cothe attorney representing the group.
"The issues will remain the same as in the previous
suit," Boulger explained.
He added that rather than file with a large group of
plaintiffs as before, the property owners named will be a
representation of the affected landowners, and the suit's
focus will probably be limited to about three parcels of
land.
"It looks as if this will be ripened again for the court
of common pleas," Boulger added. "It's a nice legal
question raised here that has been dedded in several different states, but there has been no uniformity to the
decisions. It's varied from state to state."
The conflict arose over right-of-way through Gallia

County abandoned by CSX ill 1993. CSX allowed the
right-of-way to be used by the park district for the devel·
opment of a rail-to-trails project from Gallipolis through
the northern end of the county.
But property owners in the Bidwell and Vinton areas
have argued they have agreements from. CSX's predecessor. some dating back to the 1870s, that give the
right-of-way to the landowners if the railroad no longer
uses the line.
The park district has so far developed two sections of
the old line for use by walkers and bicyclists - from
Pine Street in Gallipolis to McCormick Road, and from
Kerr to Bidwell.
'
Attorneys for the park district requested a summary

GALLIPOLIS - Unemployment rates throughout most of southeastem Ohio declined between July and August, according to information
""t:I:I::I:Ttr=:::=:::m released Friday by the Ohio Bureau
'-~
of Employment Services.
Leading the trend locally was
Meigs County, which reponed a 0.8
percent drop - from 9,6 percent to
8.8 percent. According to the OBES,
8,200 of the county's 8,900-member
workforce wore employed in August.
Gallia;County'sjobless rate fell by
0.2 percent durin .the period - from
7:4 pe!to!lt 10 H jlcrcent.
uru·:II!Gwt3a90 ·
I 4;200 wortc' fotce· .
Other reiional
rates for Allgust (l!!.ly ·
parenthesis) were: ..A~.
percent; Jackson, 6., (6:5)
Lawrence, 5.8 (5.8)
8.1 (11.0) percent; and,
.
(8.1) percent.
Across the state, the ,t.ugustllilcmployment rate of 10.2 pe.rce.rit in
Adams County was the highest,
according to the Ohio Bure~\1 of
Employment Services said t&lt;ntqy.
Geauga County had the '""""'"'
jobless rate at 2.6 percent. The
ty rates are unadjusted, meaning they do not take into account seaij)n•al
adjusuncnts in employment.

a

GALLIPOLIS - The chainnan of the House
Appropriations Committee, Rep. John Kasich, ROhio, will be the featured speai,er today at a
. fund-raising event for Rep. Frank Cremeans, RGallipolis.
The Kasich visit comes as part of a full day of
campaigning oti behalf of Rep. Crem~ans.
Kasich will be in Athens at the home of Joe
and Lois
Gerig for
oa early
afternoon
KaaiCh
· fundraiser
from 12:30 p.m. until 2 p.m. Later
Tod8y'•
Ct55 - 134
F ~'"""''
u Sectlolll
Pages
he will be the featured speaker at
the "Third Annual Hog Roast" at
Bob Evans' Farm Historical Village at Rio Grande, from 2:30 p..IJ!.
until dusk.
"I'm thrilled that my good friend ...
is coming to southern Ohio on my
behalf," Cremeans said in a statement released Saturday. "Aside from
being a close ally, RJ:p. Kasich's
work on the budget process has
Ohio V~ky l'llblililiOJ Co
earned him high marks from both
and DemocratS."

Vol. 31, No. 33
. ··. judgment on the
original suit in the
summer of 1995
, from Judge W.
•. Richard Walt!)n of
Lawrence Co11nty,
who sat on assignment in the case. But
. Boulger said he vol. untarily dismissed
the suit so that it
would not fail due to .•
. technical
issues
. before
Walton
'' reached a decision.
· "We wanted to
preserve the issues
for resolution on the
basis of their merit," Boulger said.
The landowners association formed this summer and
has conducted several meetings, mostly at the Springfield Township trustees' building in Evergreen. The
group is currently led by Frank Beach, with Pam Jarrell
as secretary and Herman Sprague as treasurer.

Cremeans sti.cks
with radio-only
debate ultimatum

Town and Country Expo '90 con·
tlnue• on lh1 Melg• County Fair·
ground• through 5 p.m. today.
Emphala ol the -kend event haa
been to ahow ofllhe good thlnga ol
the Bend area - tvtrylhlnglrom
agriculture to antique lrlctora, !rom
From AP, OVP Reports
exotic anlniata to Jive entartalnm•n~
GALLIPOLIS - Ohio Rep. Frank Cremeans, R·
from vintage Clll"lto unu-1 ~Demonatratlona of -lngand
Gallipolis, said Friday he considers the "debate about
craft dlllgn, llltpllya o1 new cara,
debates over." The
he said, came as the
trucke and tractors, have crtll8d
result
of
his
challntera.t, u hu the large dlaptay of
lenger's failure to
antique equipment Including mDI"I
respond affmnatively
than 40 lrlctora. Pictured 11ft with a
circa 11115 two-horae wanting cultito a 5 p.m. d~line
vator 11 collector Data Kautz of
regarding a aeries of
Ch....,,
radio ilebates.
- Shown moving in new John
· "It;s racho... 9r
beer• lrlctora for Expo '90 an M~&gt;
notlling,"
tllO' Repul):..
llllploytli of Cannlchlll'ii·Fpmt?,.
and Lawn of GalUs County_ &amp;epiit~
liCI,Jl!W,~!._~da~. '
ana dlllltrehlpe have new cara,ana
. ~~~~!1\~- ...d
·tru~ on i!I.P.IIY at 1M tal!'g~.·
.
wantS
·stildio il1lr·~~:
• ·Boottnrfor •lft'OfMI'iii"lliil ·· ·
because radio s
aplcea, dried nDI"II matlrlllll, flea
reach all over the
lhlnlllo and Cflllla ~.10
sprawling
district and
·· · · ltldri, -~ 1111irtllt•Nnt"torlhll
beca,use he didn't like .
:Cnoon wHIInclude the Big ltnd
Cloggen It 1 p.m. Trinity Hand Bell
the ttaditional d~bates" he participated in two years ago.
ChOir at 2, 11M Big Bend Community
"We were wanting to eliminate the 35 percent of the
Band II 2:30 p.m., I .Fifllel Shqw It
audience
being from my camp and 35 percent from his
3 •nd a barlleratlop quart.t at 4 p.m.
and
a
very
small percentage there to listen to the
(Phot.,. by ChJIIIene Hoeflich}
debaltl," he said.
·
Challenger Ted Strickland complained that Cre·
means could hide behind briefing books without any
voters observing whether he was thinking on his feet or
merely reading staff-prepared answers.
The challenger said he would agree to radio debates
if then: also wene traditional deba~. but would not give
in to the radio-only ultimatum.
"He wants a setup stacked in his favor," Strickland
said.
·
The candidates in Ohio's 6th Conps~ional District
have been quibbling for months over whether they will "
ever square off face-to-face, and because of their history it is no small issue.
,
... _
Two years ago, when Democrat Strickland was the
incumbent conpssman and Cremeans was the challenger, Strickla~d's comments in a Marietta debate gave
his opposition the fuel it needed for the final attack ads
Continued on page A2

markat

Kaalch to apeak at Cremeans fund·ri&amp;lllr

Meigs County Heart Walk to be held Oct. 5
Healthy Choice American Hean
Walk of the Meigs County Divisior
of the American Hean Association
has been scheduled for Saturday.
Oct. 5.
The walk will begin at I p.m. at
the Kroger parking lot and proceed
on a marked route through town .
Local corporate sponsors for the
walk are The Farmers Bank and
Whaley's Auto Parts and national
sponsors include Healthy Choice
Foods and The Sharper Image.
··we are expecting a great
turnout,"' commented Debbie Haptonstall event chairman. "'Over 40
teanns have registered so far and
numerous people are walking on an
jndividual basis.··
The length of the walk route is
determined by each individual walker.
A water station sponsored by Dr.
Douglas Hunter will be set up at the
registration area for people to get a
drink after the walk or in between
laps. In addition route segments are
sponsored by Robert C. Hanenbach,
commissioner; John Lentes. prosecuring attorney; Howard Frank, treasurer, and Jeffrey L. Thornton, commissioner candidate.

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Jobless rate falls"in Gallia, Meigs

Winners in competition ·

Details on

A big lift -Photo feature on page 01

The old &amp; the new...

New pastor of the Hope Baptist Church, 570 Grant St., Middleport, is Rev. Richard L. Oliver.
The minister, his wife, Lou, and three children, Andrew. Sara
and Rebecca, formerly of Columbus, reside at 12 Lynn St.,
Middleport.
For the past three years, he served a mission pastor in the
Glouster community.
Oliver has an electronic engineering degree from Columbus
State and is now nearing completion of a bachelor of theology degree from Anderso~ville Baptist Seminary. He is a
licensed and ordained minister.
For the past 16 years he has been a service manager for Elec!fonic Manufacturing Co., in Columbus. His wife is a homemaker.
Reared in rural West Virginia, Oliver says his move to Middleport is like "'returning to my roots."' He said he and his family "'enjoy the small town atmosphere, the friendliness of the
community, and look forward to spreading the good news of
the gospel of Jesus Christ."'

teed awards.
The Ohio Junior Miss Scholarship Program will be Feb. 21 and 22
m Mount Vernon. During the program week, beginning Feb. 15, the
ranicipants stay with host families
in the local area and are guests of
various civic and service clubs for
daily luncheons and dinners.
An at-large program for girls
from a county with no local program
will be held at Mount Vernon Middle School on Sunday, Oct. 13 for
the northern half of Ohio and on
Sunday, October 20 for girls in the
southern half of Ohio.
"'We want to emphasize this is a
scholarship program,"' said Connie
Jannot. state chairman. "The Ohio
Junior Miss is in no way connected
to a beauty pageant."' This ts the 40th
year for the program to be presented
in Ohio and the 24th year Mount
Vernon has hosted Ohio's state pro-

onpegeC1

•
ttttts

By KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Landowners whose property
includes former CSX Railroad right-of-way plan to
return to coun to argue their contention that the disputed sections of land belong to them and not to the 0.0.
. Mcintyre Park District.
A landowners association has been fonned that
includes plaintiffs in a lawsuit filed last year against the
parte district. While that suit was dismissed by the plaintiffs' attorney, the association does intend to refile somettine in the ncar future.
The decision to return the question to Gallia County
Common Pleas Court should be made after the association's nettt meeting, said James T. Boulger, the Chilli-

Candidates sought for state
Junior Miss Scholarship Program
The Ohio Junior Miss Scholarship Program is seeking h.igh school
senior girls to compete for more
than $20,000 in scholarships to be
offered in this state program.
The winner at the state level goes
on to compete at America's Junior
Miss in the summer in Mobile,
Alabama. She will stay with a host
family in the Mobile area, be the
guest of Mobile civic groups and
tour the historic Mobtle area.
Ohio's Junior Mi ss for 1996 was
Jill Kuhlman from Kalida located in
Putnam County. Representing Kali da High School as a senior. she is
now a member of the freshman class
auending Ohio University in Athens.
Last year nearly $25.000 in cash
scholarships were presented through
our Scholarship Foundation. while
33 colleges and universities
throughout the nation provided an
additional $3.8 million in guaran-

•Featured •

Landowners returning to court
w~th CSX right-of-way dispute

Hope Baptist Qhurch
gets new pastor

REV. AND MRS. RICHARD L- OLIVER .

HI: 70s
Low: 50s

stone

Dear Readers: Remember the
woman who asked for help with
motion sickness? More than 200
readers
suggested
elastic
"'bracelets" (popular in the British
Navy). They are called SeaBands
and are available in drugstores. They
also help ease nausea during pregnancy.
.. :

New food center opens doors
Tri-County Community Action of homebound elderly and disabled
Hocking, Athens and Perry counties individuals in Hocking. Athens and
has taken occupancy of its new $2.3 Perry Counties.
. million facility, the Southeastern
The 19,000 square foot facility
Ohio Regional Food center.
features a state-of-the-an commerThe center opened in early Sep- cial kitchen and warehouse.
tember and combines the Southeast"'Thts new facility should signifiern Ohio Foodbank, which provides cantly increase our capacity to meet
donated food product to I08 mem- basic food needs of the low-income
ber agencies in Hocking. Athens, and elderly residents of SoutheastPerry. Jackson , Vinton, Washington, em Ohio,"' said Bob Garbo, deputy
Morgan, Meigs, and Gallia counties. director for Tri -County Community
and Central Kitchen, which prepares Action.
meals for children in Head Stan cenOther future possibilities for the
ters. elderly at group meal sites, and center include contracts for industri-

Histol'fl·
carved

Fowler challenges Carey's s.tance on tort reform

Good Morning

By TOM HUNTER
.
Times-Sentlnel Staff
POMEROY - Dcmoeratic State
House candidate Jeff Fowler spoke
out against support by Rep. John
Carey (R-Wellston) on a proposed
ton reform bill in the Ohio House,
which supporters claim will reduce
the number of frivolou~ lawsuits
filed in Ohio courts, dut ing a Friday
campaign visit to Meigs County.
House Bill 350, the ton reform
bill, has passed Ohio Senate committce vote but failed to pass House
committee vote by a 49-44 margin.
Action of the initial House vote on

the bill waS amended
• Punitive damage awards for
by procedure, with
·.
smaller companies, defined as comthe bill to be placed
panies of 25 employees or less.
before House memwould be capped at $100:000 or
bers for another vote
three times the non-economtc dannlater this week,
age amount, whtchever ts less. Pumaccording to Carey.
tive_damage _a~ards for larger comAccording to Rep.
pames , conststmg of more than 25
Carey, the proposed
employees, would be capped at
House Bill 350 would place the fol - $250,000 or three Urnes the non-ecc;
lowing limits on settlement awards nomic damages, whichever IS
by state courts:
greater.
.
• Non-economic damage awards
• If a defendant IS found to_be at
would be limited to $35,000 times 50 percent of blame tn a lawsuit, the
the years of life expectancy or SI court can determme them to be HlO
million, whichever is greater.
percent responstble for payment of

damage awards. Currently, defendants can be found to be 100 (lCrcent
responstble for all damages tf they
are found to be only five percent at
blame. If a defendant ts determmed
to be SO percent at blame, they can
sull be held rcsP.&lt;Jnstblc for payment
of damages awards of that percentage amount.
.
. .
• Statute of repose ts to be hmtted to IS years. For example, a co~pany that manufactured a pr~uct m
1930 cannot be held responstble for
damages caused by that product m
1996, unless gross neghgence
Continued on page A2

Ohio high court ruling impacts on rec,ord-keeping by public bodies ·
~~~~~:J~taff

POMEROY - Local governments across the state
oon find themselves changing the way they record
mars
.
f0 II .
decision last month by the
their meetmgs, C owmg a
Ohlo Supreme oun.
. .
.
. "It is nfo long_er appropbenate m thrsoc rystacteo~:Iu~~~/:
mmutcs o meeungs to
mere cu
I. .. wrote Meigs County
urred
to what occ
at a mee mg.
Prosecutor John R. Lentes in a Iettcf to county officials.
.
·
t 1 reflect each and every
'The mhmuteskemusttheaccura: Yg the substance of their
person w o spo at
mee n •
comments and any and all discussion that led up to a
·~;·
f the
· 1
blic body·
·
ar :ommendlng that focal oftidect ton
0
1 ~~cu
. As a~~~!·
es ts rder 10 record their meetings in
c1als
pure10
......
a tape traditional
reco
&amp;ddition
keeping
minutes. The only alter"alive would be to have a court recorder present at all
n ·
• hi h 0f ourse is economically unfeasim~~Lengs... 581
wdc
c
ble ~e ntcs
•
Ohio Supreme
Court's ultimate principle was
tbat an individual who did not attend a meeting ffiUSt be
able 10 review the Diinutes of that meeting aDd have an

°

.•

:..

tc understandin of

·

"'Indeed, we note that
detailed handwritten minutes
was reached and all of the
were kept of early county
information and comments recordS are the people'S records, commissioner meetings, and
that were used in ultimate- B"d that the off,"c/.al''" In ...hose provtded nch htstoncal detail
. 10 a decision ..
._,
''
""
..,,
without the benefit of current
1
Y commg
·
technology "
LenThtes adSdedup~eme Court CUStody they happen to be are
The M~igs County Board
c
f C
C
·. ·
wrote in pan·
mere/y
_
•r,u
..
•-s
for
the
~n/e..• "
o
oumy omm•sstoners
1
·
·
' ""'r--r t Ohl has a1r~adY m.ade pans
1
to
''The rule in Ohio is that
0
0
public reconds are the peo· •The. Supreme Cou~
record 1ts meettngs, tn con·
pic's reconds and that the
junction with regular minutes,
•
be · ·
the fi
· · ""t be
off'J.Cials in whose custody they happen to be are mere1y
gmntng at
1~1 mectmg m '-"' ~ r.
.
trustees for the people
The board predtcts the change wtll have tulle effect
"Most people's day:i;,_day schedule leaves them with on its meetings. The main difference is lhat thoae who
far too little time to attend government meetings. There- address the boerd will have to state their names.and
•
-'--ord
fore, the opportunity to examine
a full and ~omp 1ete addre sses •aor the n:c
. .be'aore speaki ng.
..
copy of the minutes en~bles the.ctUzens of 0~~0 to stay
At least one c~mmiSSIO~er appr~ves of the deciSIOn.
informed about the acuons and thoughts of thCrr elected
Me1gs Comm•sston Vtcc-prestdent Janet Howard
officials.
indicated recording the commissioners' meetings would
•
. tn
' Iess argument over what
· '1"bc ready availability of tape recorders, vtdeo
c~- be "a ~ ood t"dca ", rcsuIttng
eras, and COmputers provideS go~cmme~t bodtes Wtth Was S81d by Who!n·.
.
.
simp!o means of recording their delibenauons. ·
Metgs Comm•ss1on Pres1dcnt Fred Hoffman satd the

;:~~ particular dec!ion

·--:.J,... - - - -

--

"The rule In OhiO IS that publiC

-

-· -·- -·--· ·- i 't--- --I

·t-

-

-

board will keep the tapes for three years during which
tim~ the public can listen to them or record them onto
the1r own.tapes.
.
. .
In addtUon, Pomeroy V1Jiage Council wtll buy a tape
recorder, II was dectded at a ~ling ew:ly last _week ..
The consensus over the ruling there 1s that 11 constttutes just another bureaucratic hurdle.
"It's idiotic as far as I'm concerned, .. said Pomeroy
counct
·1
G
w "ght
man eorge n .
Howe
..
ve r• some local citize• •applaud the
. rulins· .
It's a great move forward, accordmg to Galha
County governmental watchdog James Northup of Gal("pot's
t I •
.
. . . ,
· James and his brother, Harlan, have betn cnltctZtng
the Gallia Board of' County Commissioners for more
Jltan•five years about the way minutes are kept.
.
1
. ......
· • ""_Y (the rru·nu•··)
.,.. don't go •"nto dew"l ." Northup
sat~

.

.•

. .

"

.

..

.

I think II s a great dectslon, Northup satd. It will
malte people aware ettactly of what is going on."
Northup al so tbi•L.
I WI"II ..._
~ the new rcqwrcmen
""
good for govemment In the long fUR.
Continued on page A2

.
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