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•

Page12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thunlday,SephHnber26, 1998

Breast Cancer Awareness
Day to be observed in Meigs

Georgia Tech
rolls over

' An observance of Meigs County
Blust Cancer Awareness Day will
bj: held Monday at noon at the
Meigs County Courthouse.
~ A wreath will be placed at the
c\lurthouse as a reminder that October is Breast Cancer Awareness
l'lfonth.
The ceremony, according to
Molly Varner, field representative of
the Southeastern Ohio Breast and
Cervical Cancer Project, co-sponsoring the e~ent with the Meigs
County Retired and Senior Volunteer Program, is being used to show
a commitment to fight the disease
that has claimed the lives of so many
women.
This year, an estimated 2,000
Ohio women will die from bn:ast
cancer, and 8,900 women will be
diagnosed, Varner said. "Our hope is
to increase awareness of how early
detection can save live, as many as
one-third."
Residents of Meigs County are
invited' to attend the wreath ceremony which will take place between
noon and 12:30 p.m.
The Meigs County Commission-

Duke 48-22

ers will sign a proclamation for
Breast Cancer Awareness Month. A
breast cancer survivor will speak
about her experience with breast
cancer and other speakers will
include Norma Torres from the .
Meigs County Health Department
and Lenora Leifheit from the Meigs
County Council on Aging.
Literature on mammograms and
sellbreast exams will be available.
Pink is the color of breast cancer
awareness and pink ribbons will be
available to anyone who would like
to wear one to further promote
awareness.
1996 marks the 21st National
Breast Cancer Awareness Month.
The goal of Breast Cancer Awareness Month is to increase awareness
of the importance of early detection
of breast cancer through public and
professional education outreach
efforts, said Varner.
She stressed that to find breast
cancer early, women should do
breast self-exam every month, have
a health professional check their
breasts every year, and have regular
mammograms.

GIANT VEGETABLES- Although the majority of vegetables at the Alaska State Fair tend to be on a bigger scale the atlffeat competition Ia In the green cabbage catagory, the unofficial state vegetable. Two participants ready their cabbage tor judging.

Alaskan gardeners mad
over monstrous vegetables
By T.A. BADGER
Associated Press Writer
PALMER. Alaska (AP) - John
Evans is one serious gardener.
Five years ago he moved to
Alaska, but not for any of the typical reasons - the snow-topped
mountains, the abundant wildlife or
the miles and miles of wilderness.
Instead, he came north dreaming
of what big things he and 20 hours
of daily sun could create in a halfacre garden.
Evans lives to cultivate vegetables of unusual size. Like a 71 pound Swiss chard, a 45-pound red
cabbage and a 35-bunch of broccoli, all world records.
"It's always been a bit of an
obsession," he said.
Plenty of Alaskans share his
passion in a land where summer is
brief but intense, as a visitor to the
Alaska State Fair soon learns.
Walking around the fair 's veggie
display is like cruising a roadside
fann stand, except that the producelooks like it was grown on steroids.
There are stalks of rhubarb like
vaulting poles, broccoli tall and
broad enough to shade a family picnic , and beets bigger than basketballs.
Alaska's competitive gardeners
harvest their crops mostly for fun,
!hough there is some profit out
there for those growing the unofficia! state vegetable - green cabbage.

Since 1941. the cabbage show- entrants.
down has been held annually at the
"That's a lot of coleslaw," said
state fair in Palmer, a town 40 miles one impressed visitor.
north of Anchorage that was foundJust what it takes to grow a
ed some 60 years ago
a New monumental cabbage is open to
Deal agriculture project.
debate.
The first winning cabbage
Gene A. Dinkel, patriarch of the
weighed in at 23 ~nds . The cur- clan and perennial winner, insists
rent record is 98 pounds, set in that it's not much more than dig1990 by Lesley Dinkel, a member ging a hole in the ground, throwing
of the family that has dominated in some seeds and letting the sun do
the contest for years. The world its thing. So far as care aod feeding
record stands
goes,
he
at 124 pounds. - - - - - - - - - - - - - o f f e r s up litIn
past
Alaska Is known for Its mam- tie but the
years,
the moth Cllbbage entr/e1 Into the most basic
biggest Alaska Alaska State Fair. The •current guidance.
cabbages
record Is 98 pounds, set In 1990
"While
earned
$50 by Lesley Dinkel, a member of the they're growand mornen- family that has dominated fhe ing,
you
tary statewide contest for years. The world don't touch
fame for its record stsndl af 124 pounds.
them,"
he
grower. This
said. "If you
year things got
squeeze
more interesting when the purse them, you break the ribs and they
was boosted to $4,000. Half went split." Split cabbages are ineligible
Jo the winner, who was, of course, a for the fair.
Dinkel.
Dinkel said members of his famGene S. Dinkel grabbed the big ily are gardening hobbyists, while
prize with a sprawling leafy head Evans- who holds 20 Alaska size
that tipped the scales at 90 pounds. records but shuns cabbage as being
Second place, worth $1,000, went too popular- approaches the field
to his uncle, Gene A. Dinkel, at 82 as a self-proclaimed "nutty profespounds.
sor."
The mega-cabbage exhibit was
He does e~tensive botanical
one of the fair's biggest attractions. research and experimentation and
After waiting in a long queue . mentions such concepts as biocatadevotees gaped and gasped and lysts and hormone treatments. He
grabbed snapshots of the elite works to fine-tune his plants to

Hysell celebrates first birthday
and Carolyn Biggs; Vinda Biggs;
Harold and Twila Hysell: Nathan
and Bette Biggs; Sha Biggs; Don,
Deb. Don, Lindsay, Gary, Sandy,
Amy and Brittany Hysell; Sue Bays;
Kim, Amanda and Andy Blackburn;
Carlos McKnight; Bonnie, Patty and
Samantha Miller; Okey and Sharon
Meadows; Tony and Colcna Shoemaker.

stand up to· disease and excessive
sun. He would like to stan his own
seed company for mega-vegetables.
Rocco Moschetti, a federal farm
agent in Palmer, said vegetables in
Alaska are in general slightly bigger than produce in the Lower 48
because of the longer summer days. ,
But not all vegetables are monster
stze.
The competitive gardeners have
their techniques, Moschetti said.
They use special seeds, start their
plants indoors during the early
spring. and feed and fertilize them
intensely...
It's also necessary to protect
their giant vegetables. "Lots of
people have lost their prize cabbages to moose that find their way
into the yard to have a meal," he
said.
A few weeks ago Evans held an
open house at his garden in Palmer,
and the tourists thronged.
"It was like a rock concert," he
said. "lbe ladies were screaming
when they saw the giant vegetables
still on the vine."
Dinkel said he's often gotten a
similar response of amazement
from people who don't see kingsize crops every day.

Recliners
and
Rocker
Recllnrs

Living Room

...

TAYLOR HYSELL
Taylor Nadean Hysell celebrated :
her first binhday with a swimming
pany at the home of her parents,
David and Penny Hysell of Rutland.
A Winnie the Pooh theme was
observed with cake and ice cream.
Attending in addition to her par- :
ents was her brother. Tanner: Bill .I

sta:ng

Dining Room
Suites

$12995

•

1
FORD
BRONCO ILT 414

auto., air cond.,
caaa., tilt,
cruise,. PS, PB, PW,
POL

V-8, auto., air condition, power steering,
power windows, power
door locka,tllt, cruise,
AM!FM cassette.

MOREl

LOADED!

6,

AM/FM

1994 FORD F1 SO FLARESIDE SUPERCAB
XLT, V-8, auto., elr cond., AMJFM ca...ue; tilt, crulu,
leather. LOIIdtdl

1994 LINCOLN
MARK VIII

1994 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL

V-8, auto., air cond.,
AMIFM cassette, tilt,

V-8, ·automatic, Climate Control, PS, PB,

cruise, PS, PB, PW,
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PW, power door locka,

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TWO IN STOCKI

POWER
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1993 BUICK
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1991 CADILLAC
ELDOUDO

V-8, auto., air cond.,

V-8, auto., air cond.,
AM/FM caaa., tilt,

power atHrlng, power
windows, powar door
locka, power seat, tilt,
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MORE!

,~

Vol. 47, NO. 102
2 Sectlona, 12 Pega

AMIFMcaaa.

LOW MILESI
MOREl

House
OKs tort
reform bill
COLUMBUS(AP) - Ohioans
may want to wait a bit before thinking up ways to spend all that money
they' II be saving on lower product
costs and insurance premiums resulting from the o~erbaul of the civil justice system.
The House on Thursday approved
the Senate-House conference committee report on a mostly party-line
53-41 vote.
Next stop is the desk of Gov.
George Voinovich, who is expected
to sign it into law.
Then, both supporters and detractors agree, the courts.
Roger Geiger, president of the
Ohio Alliance for Civil Justice, predicted that the law eventually would
work its way down to consumers in
the form of lower insurance premiums and product costs, and would
help companies better predict liability costs.
. For the past year and a half, proponents have warned of the "tort
tax" - the extra SI ,200 a year they
claim each Ohio consumer pays in
higher prices attributable to corporate
legal bills, insurance and other costs
of frivolous lawsuits.

crulae, PS, PB, PW,
POL, etc.

SHIRPI
LOW MILESI

Plelna, Oh.
Tuppn Pltllna, Oh.

Mon.·Thurs. N
Fri. ~. Set 9-4
\

\

Awarded $26,750 grant

Meigs program
will continue
•

·
I

Part·tlme Malg1 County re1ldent George
McClintock Ia putting the finishing touche• on
· a boat to be glvtn away at the annual Big Bend
Sternwheef FeltiYal which will be held Oct. 3,
4 and 6. McClintock 11 ehown here working on
a detailed model of the Juanita of Lekln, W.Va.
The Juanita was built In 1954 by O.F. Sheerer

and Sona and wae uaed and owned by the
American Electric Power River Tranaportatlon
Dlvlalon between 1977 and 1994. The boat Ia
now owned by Tqm and Lekln Cook of Dunbar,
W.Va. McClintock has built 1lx boats for the f tlval alnce 1t1 Inception.

Regional airport's prospects improve

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Victim's Assistance Program has been granted continued funding for 1997 by the office
of Ohio Attorney General Betty
Montgomery, with the awarding of
additional $8,000 in state grants for
1he two year-old program.
A $26,750 grant award was
awarded to the program, which provides direct assistance to victims of
crime through advocacy services,
referrals to counseling and mental
health service providers. The program also assists victims in completing financial reparation applications
for the Attorney General's office,
according to Connie J. Dodson,
Meigs County victims advocate.
The program is funded through
the State Attorney General's Office,
and is administered and instituted
through the office of Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes.
The Mf:!!s County·Victim's Assist~ce Program was first established
by Prosecuting Attorney Lentes in
1994, using local forfeiture funds. At
the time it was· established, the program was the first such program in
Meigs County.
The Victim's Assistance program
continues to receive partial local
funding from Lentes' office. In its
first year of operation, the program
was funded directly by criminal forfeiture funds, and was funded last
year through local funds and grant
dollars.
.
According to Lentes,. over 600
victims have been served directly
through the program during the past
year, and $220,945 ·in criminal repa-.
rations have been received by victims
since the program's inception.
The most common cases which
are seen by the victim's advocate,

according to Dodson, are those who
are injured in violent epi~odes :
domestic violence cases, rapes, and
assaults. The program also offers ser·
vice to other crime victims, however, including those who are victim·
ized in robberies and cases involving
damage to personal property.
"It has beeh rewarding to work on
behalf of these victims," Lentes said.
"When I first assumed office, the lack
of any organized proaram for these
victims was a glaring problem, and I
resolved to establish one as soon as
possible."
"So often, the victims of crime are
forgotten in the process, and they are
left emotionally and financially
wounded by a situation over whieh
they have no control," Lentcs said.
"This program helps victims form a
closure of the incident that effects
theJD and .get on with their lives."
A weekly supPQrt group, which
offers emotional suPPort to victims of
assault and domestic violence, is an
important part of the Meigs Co~nty
program. The group, directed by
Dodson and officials with Serenity
House of Gallipolis, was organized in
January and has provided a beneficial
means of outreach to vict,ims of
physical and mental abuse, according
to Dodson .
"The support group has been
extremely beneficial in the way it
allows women collectively and openly discuss their options in dealing
with abusive situations. It has also
particularly been a great benefit
locally, being the first group of its
kind in Meigs County," said Dodson.
For more information on the
women's support group and the Viclim's Assistance Program, contact
Dodson through the Meigs County
Prosecutor's Office at 992-6371 .

Support sought for

rene.wal of five-year,
.50 mill TB levy nov. 5
tion. The current levy expires this
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
year.
Sentinel News Staff
According to Karschnik, a clinic
"TB is out there and on the
has
been operated in Mei gs County
increase worldwide ," according to
Connie Karschnik, R. N., Meigs since 1952 from proceeds of a halfCounty TB nurse, who says the goal mill levy.
This amounts to 50 cents per
of the local Tuberculosis and Health
Clinic is to eradicate tuberculosis in SI ,000 in property valuation.
"Because the residents of Meigs
Meigs County.
County
have continued 10 vote 'yes'
She noted, however, that the work
for
the
tuberculosis
levy renewa l, the
can only be continued if voters supagency
has
been
able
through the
port renewal of a five-year .50 mill
years
to
provide
numerous
services
levy in the November general elccwithout additoonal cost to residents,"
said the T. B. nurse.
These services, Karschnik noted,
include tuberculin skin tc stmg, chest
ing progress," said Coffman, who x-rays for all positive reactors , labodidn 't give specifics on her income. ratory procedures. medical evaluation
"Even in little towns like Hannibal, by a qualified chest clinician, all TB
drugs as ordered by the clinic's chest
if you look hard enough and want it
bad· enough, you 're going to make clinician or the patient's private
physician; monitoring procedures, at
it."
Median household income for least monthly or more frequently to
American s was $34,076 in 1995, up ·detect possible adverse reactions for
2.7 percent from the year before, the ·patient's on medications, education
and literature on tuberculosis for
Bureau said.
Median household income for patients, their families and the com,
Ohio was $34,941 in 1995, compared munity.
Karschnik emphasized the imporwith $32,758 in 1994.
tance
of making the public aware that
The number of poor Americans
tuberculosis
remains a health probdropped 1.6 million to 36.4 million
lem,
that
it
is
on the increase worldfrom 1994 to 1995, the agency
wide
.
reported, citing findings in the CurThe offi~.:e located in the Meigs
rent Populatim Survey, a monthly
Multipurpose
Building on Mulberry
study of about 50,000 U.S. houseHeights
is
open
8 Lm. to 4 p.m. Monholds. That resulted in a decline in the
day
through
Friday.
For infonnation
share of Americans living in poveny
may
call992-3722.
residents
from 14.5 percent to 13.8 pe~Vnt.
The imponance of controlling
The poverty threshold for a family of
was emphasized by
tuberculosis
four in 1995 was $1S,S69.
Karschnik
in
a
history which she pre1be share of Ohio households livpared
on
the
disease
entitled:
ing in poverty in 1995 was 11 .5 per"Have
You
Heard
About TB?"
cent, down from 14.1 percent in
"Many
people
in
Meigs County
1994.
may
not
be
very
familiar
with TB
"Today it is clear that more and
which
stands
for
"tuberculosis.
•
more of our people are shatina in that
"Although the name "tuberculoprosperity. We are growing - and
growing together," President Clinton sis" is relatively recent, the diSease
Continued oa pap 3
Contlnaed oil paae 3

Census reports Americans' income up, poverty down
By JIM SALTER

Coffman hit bottom.
"I was on welfare. food stamps,
lived in
, the projects, no car, no way

'1990
MERCURY
COUGAR

to make ends meet," she said. .
Government aid amounting to
less than $700 a month barely bought

l.~

V-6, automatic, air
condition, AMJFM,
caSsette, tilt, erulse.

, _ "po~lenl
1996
1996 11»4

Ala.

I

I

QUALITY
FURNITURE
PLUS
Street
TuPPII'I

60s.

35 centa
A a.nnen Co. Newapaper

...---Final details----.

Effort to override late-term abortion veto
fai Is to get necessary votes in Senate

2S,991
. AJulte 47,9S4
Art&amp;. . 30,863
Art.
CalH.
37,009
Colo. 40,706
Conn.. 40,243
D1L
34,9211
D.C.
30,748
29;745
Gil.
34,099
.....I 42,851
ldllho 32,676
Ill.
311,071
Incl.
33,38.5
loWi ':. ·J!!l519
Kan.
30,341

I.

WE HAVE
PRIME STAR
SATELLmS

Tonight, ehowers, thunderstorme, loW In mid 60s.
Saturday, r1ln, high In Jl)e

en tine

the cost-savings will not come By PAMELI! BROGAN
"The Transpark will be at the ceo- House approved a House-Senate cooovernight.
Gennett Newt Service
ter of economic and transportation ference report on water resources legNot at all, counter opponents.
WASHINGTON- Prospects for _activity in West Virginia's future, and islatio~ that includes language spon-~.ty'J -/:.:· ~!.·llnes
.!~!.~P.IX"..J!I. •· IIIW"I!fgiQIIal., airporUn West ,Vir- ·is pro,il~ted to. dirJ~ctly cre11te J ,700 ' "sored by Rahal! to create a new partO,.,........,
u
""" 1\..ospitall ginia.' possibly' to"be lj)Cited i&amp; Lin· jobs," 'said•·Rep; Nick ~hall , D· nership between the U.S, Coil's of
and other major Republican con!fib- coin, Put118111 or Mason counties, took W.Va., who announced \he grant Engineers and Marshall University's
utors to evade their reaponsibilities to a key step forward Thursday when jointly with Rep. Bob Wise, D-W.Va. Center for Environmental. Geotechprovide safe goods and ser:'ices.
the U.S. Department of TransportsWise said the airport, if approved nical and Applied Sciences.
. They scoffed ~t the idea that _~ lion approved a $2 million grant to by the federal government, "will
The legislation is expected to be
msurancc compames and corpora- seleci a final site.
allow West Virginia companies to approved by the Senate and signed
lions will pass their savings on to
The regional airport, dubbed West export products to billions of new into law by President Clinton.
· consumers.
Virginia Transpark, would serve customers around the world."
Marshall University's Jim Hoop"This. bill is for. big busi~ss, Huntington and Charleston.
"The Transpark will create new er; director of the cent~r. has said the
The last phase of the study, includ- opportunities for economic develop- new alliance will allow the universitobacco tnterests,. lymg execuu~es,
governmcnt officaals and hosp1tals ' ing an environmental impact assess- ment and growth generating annual ty to offer cutting-edge training to
who do business in secret, smoke, lie, ment, will take about two years to payrolls of $68 million," Wise said. small companies and spur jobs in the
pollute and have no guilt," said Rep. complete.
In another development, the region.
Robert Hagan, D-Youngstown, as
dozens of lobbyists looked on from
the chamber's packed visitors'
gallery.
'
In another ~otc, the House
approved 8.5-10 a bill requiring crimWASHINGTON (AP) - Oppo- through the birth canal and the doc- ities or the woman has serious health
inal background checks on prospecnents
of a form of late-term abOrtion tor kills it by removing the brain.
problems. Abortion foes dispute that,
tive 'employees of companies that
vowed
to
prevail
at
the
polls
after
the
maintaining
that the procedure is
The
Senate
decision
negated
a
pro~ide direct care to older people.
Senate fell well short in an attempt to 185-137 vote by the House last week common and often elective.
Republican presidential nominee
The bill, which also now goes to override President Clinton's veto of to override.
Clinton,
in
vetoing
the
legislation,
Bob
Dole has criticized Clinton for
bill
banning
the
procedure.
a
Voinovich, would affect home l!ealth
said
it
failed
to
provide
an
exception
Democratic
support
for
the
presi•
waging
his veto power. and Dole
agencies, hospi~ care, nursing and
for
the
health
of
the
mother.
The
bill
dent
generally
held
Thursday
as
the
spokeswoman
Christina Martin said
rest homes, county and district
does
allow
a
doctor
to
perform
the
Senate
voted
57-41
to
reject
Clinton's
Thursday
that
"every woman and
homes, homes for the aging, adult
procedure
if
there
is
no
other
way
to
v.eto
of
the
ban
on
so-called
partialman
in
America
should demand that
day care programs and adult care
save
a·
mother's
life,
but
Republicans
birth
abortions.
That
was
nine
votes
Bill
Clinton
explain
his defense of
facilities.
rejected
an
attempt
to
add
a
broader
short
of
the
two-thirds
majority
needthis
barbaric
procedure."
·
Applicants convicted of certain
health
clause,
saying
it
would
open
ed
to
override.
crimes such as robbery and drug trafDole's running niatc, Jack Kemp,
1be vote ended, at least for the the way for the practice to continue.
ficking would have to look elsewhere
Opponents
of
the
legislatipn
say
said
he is sad that the Senate did not
moment,
a
yearlong
attempt
by
Confor jobs.
•
the
procedure
is
rare,
and
used
only
override
the president's veto, but he
gress
to
ban
the
grim
procedure
in
It was the third time around for the
when
the
fetus
has
severe
abnormalsaid
that
is not the end.
which
the
fetus
is
partly
delivered
civil justice bill.

I

IZJ

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 27, 1996

Auoclated Pres• Writer
ST. LOUIS - A year ago, Fay

cruise, power seat,

from Fel'!llef'l Bank,

Pick 4:
5020
Buckeye 5:
5-13-16-20-31

ft

V-8, auto., air cond.,
PS, PB, PW, POL, tilt,

Across

245

l!!. 1

1990 LINCOLN
TOWN CAR

42123 St. Rt. 7

Pick 3:

Sports on Page 4

Ge;~e~s'!r;,~~~~":~~~~;

Bedroom
Suites

PRACTICE OPENS
Dr. Satywan Chhabria, internist · and
family practitioner, has opened offices in
the Meigs Medical Building, adjacent to
Veterl[lns Memorial Hospital.
For an appointment residents may call
992-3632. Dr. Chhabria's office hours are:
Mondays- 1 to 5 p.m.
Wednesdays - 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Thursdays- 1 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Fridays • 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Dr. Chhabria is also working in
affiliation with Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

1994 FORD
EXPLORER 414
Sport Package, 4.0L v,

"You can talk about it all you
want," Dinkel said, "but until they
see it, they don't realize just how
big big is."

FAL:t HARVEST SALE

Ohio Lottery

:zs.s••

20.1
7.1
16.1
14.9
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8.8
9.7
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22.2
16.2
12.1
103

14.,
12.4
9.6

1,2.2
10.8

Ky.

16.4
10.2
tS.9
U.J
17.9

La.
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Md.

......
Mich.
MIM.

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10.8

83
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14.9
14.0
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12.4
13.7
10.7
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Mo.

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. ftK
N.H.

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utah
Vt.

Ya.

29,089
34,941
26,311
36,374

34,.524
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t 7.1 16.7
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food and paid rent for Coffman, her
three young children, and her mother, who moved in with the family
after suffering a stroke three years
ago.
"It was hard, and it was very, very
depressing," said Coffman, 26.
But Coffman's luck improved,
' and judging by statistics released
Thursday by the Census Bureau, so
did the luck of thousands of others,
especially in the Midwest.
The Bureau's annual economic
report said Americans' real income
increased in 1995 for the first time in
six years. The report also found a
decline in the number of poor, including the first time that the elderly had
significantly less poverty than working-age Americans.
·
Coffman 's success was more
1 determination than luck. She began
doing volunteer work last year at a
self-help agency in her hometown,
' Hannibal, Mo., about I00 miles north
· of St. Louis. She did so well she was
· eventually hired full time, with ben. efits.
Today, Coffman owns her own
house, a car, and no longer worries
about where her kids will get their
next meal.
"'111• ore doing well - we're mak-

.I

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•

Commentary

Friday, September 27, 1996

PageA2

Friday, September 27~ 1996

OHIO Weather
Satunlay, SepL 28
AccuWeather• forecast

The Daily Sentinel Debates should include Hagelin and Perot
r

'Est@fi.md in 1948

By Jack Anderaon

111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

.2r

By Jack Anderson
and
Jan Moller

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Ma111ger

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Letters to the editor
Cremeans should debate
Dear Editor,
I do not see why there can not be
a debate between Congressman
Frank Cremeans and Ted Strickland
in public and in Meigs County. Having attended two debates in Mariet. ta in 1994, I understand Congressman Cremeans' reluctance to debate

candidate Ross Perot can parttctpate.
and Jan Moller
Hagelin •s the presidential candiWASHINGTON -- It has come date of the Natural Law Pany. His
down to this : Stx years after the dis- name is on the ballot in 45 states and
solution of the Soviet Union, the
d~mocratic process in Russta gives
ctUzens more choices than what is
available here at home.
,
Just weeks before the histone
presidential election in Russia last
June, Alexander Lebed was a pohti·
cal unknown. Then came a national- the D1strict of Columbia. He's cultily televised debate, which gave mil- vated enough support that American
lions of Russtans a first-hand look at taxpayers are funding his campaign
the candidates. Lebed's perfonnance to the tune of $600,000 in federal
on television led to a surge 10 his poll matching funds . Perot, meanwhtle, ts
numbers So popular was the former receiving $29 million in matching
general that President Boris Yeltsin funds. Yet neither candidate has been
named him nattonal security adviser deemed worthy of sharing the podiin an effort to court his voters.
um with Bill Clinton and Bob Dole
John Hagelin often reminds peo- when the two meet in Hanford,
ple of what happened in Russia. It Conn., and in San Diego.
bolsters his immediate goal, which is
The courts are expected to lump
to be mcluded in the upcoming pres- both cases together for convenience
idential debates, which are set for purposes. This has Hagelin elated, as
Oct. 6 and Oct. 16. A Jawsu11 hetng he hopes to capitalize on the publicheard next week in U.S. District ity that follows Pef&lt;!l. Refomn Pany
Court m Washington will dectde officials are somewhat less excited at
whether Hagelin or Reform Pany the prospect.

m public I would hke all Meigs
Countians to have the same e&lt;perience. Also Meigs County is pilrt of
the s1&lt;1h congressional district of
Ohio.

The decision 10 limit the debate to
Clinton and Dole was made by the
Commission on Presidential Debates,
an organization made up of equal
parts Republicans and Democrats.
Perot and Hagelin both say they have
met the four "objective criteria" set
by the commission. To be allowed in
the debates, candidates must be born
in the United States, meet the constitutional age requirement, be qualified
on enough ballots to have a mathematical chance to win, and be qualified for federal matching funds. But
that wasn't enough.
In excluding Perot and Hagelin ,
the debate commission instead relied
on a far more subJecliv~ criteria. Who
has a "realistic" chance to become
president. As some have dryly noted,
this formula could have been used to
keep Michael Dukakis and Walter
Mondale out of America's hvmg
rooms·in 1988 and 1984, respectively.
;"\_
Instead, it's hemg used to depnve
voters a close-up look at the candidates 'Yhom their dollars are helping
to fund. h also stines the voices of

David B. Sayre
Racine

%

Republicans liberal in their
usage of 'Liberal' lab~l
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - The L word is back.
But Bob Dole's effort 10 label President Clinton an old-style liberal is
going to be a hard sell against a Democrat who has carefully chaned his way
to the center.
Ltberallabehng worked for the Republic;ms against Michael Dukakis in
1988, when he eventually accepted the description. Not this time. Clinton
dismisses itas an unfounded charge, saymg hts record proves it isn't so.
H1s tennmology tells how far the political spectrum has turned smce the
New Deal and Great Society Democratic eras. In those days, most Democrats dtdn 't constder tl a charge to be called liberal.
'
Dole no": ~ontends that Clinton is a closet liberal, or perhaps a rampant
one, JUSt wattmg to spnng b1g government plans and higher taxes in a second temn.
The Republican challenger said Wednesday in St. Louis that he can't wrut
for the first of the two prestdential campaign debates, on Oct. 6, so that he
can go after "liberal, liberal, liberal Bill Clinton."
It has become pan of his GOP camprugn scnpt this week. He told Illinois voters to beware "this liberal m the White House who now talks like
a moderate or a conservatiVe or a Republican."
That was the warmup.
. "President Clinton came to town a liberal, he's still a liberal, the only
thmg that stopped h1m m h1s tracks was electmg a Republican Congress in
1994," Dole said later
Then he called Chnton "an old-style, dyed-m-the-wool, big-spendmg liberal '~ who would revert to form once-the spo!lighl of the campaign was off.
. V1ce Pres1dent AI Gore, campaigning in New Orleans, said Dole is "draggm~ out this epn'!et, liberal, h~ral, liberal" as RepubHcans have fdr 30 years.
. . They don I reahze they ve dramed the meamng out of it and that it
does not apply to the centrist approach that Bill Clinton and 1 represent,"
Gore satd.
·
Clinton, leading in the polls, regularly ignores Dole's accusations but he
satd he would "answer the liberal thing," and po10ted to his record o~defteil
reduction, crime legislation, the. death penalty, trimming government payrolls, and the welfare reform btll he stgned Qver the complaints of other
Democrats.
"The record doesn't support the charge, " he said.
It ts an undermi~ing accusatton in these pohtical times. The Republicans
succeeded 10 deptcUng Chnton as a b1g government liberal in 1994, and won
control ?fCongress. He moved toward the maddle 10 response, declaring the
era ofb1g government to be over, a hne Republicans said belonged to them
Chnton won m 1992 as a New Democrat, a centrist, and no hberal. That
tmage began erod10g soon after he took office, and halfway through his temn,
he looked hke a loser. H1s move to the center, and his success in depicting
the Republican Congress as extreme, changed that and began the revival that
now has him favored for re-election.
.
That meshes w1th the polls showing that while more voters tend to lean
right than left now, far more of them. 46 percent in surveys dating back to
1984, identify themselves at or near the center.
Clinton satd the claam that he'd tum liberal if re-elected is convenient
for Republicans but "11 doesn't fit with what I did as president and as governor and won't fit with what I'm planning to do 10 my second term."
While Dukakis complained regularly about the hberal tag, near the end
of the 1988 campaign he declared. "Yes, I am a liberal m the tradilton of
Franklin Roosevelt and Harry Truman and John Kennedy " By that time,
the polls had renected a steady mcrease 10 the number of voters who conSidered him too hberalto be a good presJdent.
Ironically, Bush had h1s ~wn labeling problems when Ronald Reagan
chose ham for v1ce prestdent 10 1980; ardent GOP conservataves complained
that he wa.&lt; too liberal for the ticket. There was a fierce Republican labelmg war in 1964, conservative Barry Goldwater over Nelson A. Rockefeller,
the New York governor who led the liberal wmg of the pany, and tried to
define that as the mainstream.
It wasn 't. Liberal Republicans smce have chosen other terms - moderate, or sometimes progressive.'As the political spectrum t1lted rightward, so
d1d Democrats.
They m1ght borrow a hne from the late George Romney, who ran brieny
for president in 1968.
''I'm as conservative as the Constitution," he sa1d, "as liberal as Lincoln,
and as progressiVe as Theodore Roosevelt."
EDITOR'S NOTE - Walter R. Mean, vice president and "olumnist
ror The Assoc:iated Press, lwl reported on Wuhington and national pol·
ldc:l ror more than 30 yean.

Today in history
By The baocbded Preae
Today is Friday, Sept. 27, the 271st day of 1996. There are 95 days left
in the year.
Today's Highlisht in History:
On Sept. 27, 1964, the Warren Commidion issued a report concluding
that Lee Harvey Oswald had acted alone in assassinating President Kennedy.
On this date:
In 1779, John Adams was named to negotiate the Revolutionary War's
peace terms with Britain.
In 1825. the fint loromotive to haul a passenger train was operated by
Georse Stephenson in Enslud.
In 18S4, the ftnt pat diiiSter involving an Atlanuc Ocean liner occurred
when the steamship Arctic upk with 300 people aboard.
In I 928, the United SIIICI said it wu m:ognizing the NatiOAalist Chinese government.
·
In 1939, Warsaw, PoliDd. IUII'endered after weeks of resistance to invad·
ins forces from Nazi Germuy ud the Soviet Union durins World War u.

I

millions who signed petitions to put
Perot and Hagelin on the ballots of
most states.
All of this has Hagelin feelin g
understandably frustrated. " When
you become involved in third-pany
politi cs, you qu1ckly learn that it is
not fairness . It's not ethtcs. It's not
democracy •• fair and open democracy. And its not even legality that
determines the outcome of such deciSIOns," Hagelin told our associate
Aaron Karp "It's politics. And the
only recour.;e that a candidate or a citizen of the country has against powers as large as the Republican and
Democratic establishment is the legal
The four objective criteria are
enough, by themselves, to disqualify
nearly all of the dozens of candidates
who throw their hat into the presidential ring every four years. Ralph
Nader doesn't quahfy; Howard
Phillips of the U.S. Taxpayers Pany
doesn 't qualify. Lyndon LaRouche
doesn 't get invited under those crite- .
ria. But Perot and Hagelin do.
It's hard to feel sorry for Perot's
predicament. After all, the pint-sized
populist ducked hts own challenger
for the Refomn Party nomination,
Richard Lamm, by refusing to debate
him earlier this summer. But when
you're bankrolling your own pany,
you get to make the rules.
The Clinton campaign lobbied
for Perot's inclusion not because
they like him, but because they think
he'll Siphon votes from the GOP. The
Dole campa1gn. fearing exactly that,
worked Just as hard to keep him out.
Apparently they feel Perot is good
enough to steal issues and ideas
from, but not good enough to debate.
As for Hagelin, he believes that
his presence in the debates might
work against President Clinton.
We've never been fans of Ross
Perot, having had many differences
with him over the years And we
don 'I know enough about John
Hagelin to say what kind of president
he'd make. But we do believe that in
an election year that's generally
devpid of new ideas, the voters of
America deserve to see what choices are available outside the two
major panies.

Jack Anderson and Jan Moller

Two major Senate races looking g.ood
erals, espeCially media liberals, tend
to make the mistake of assuming that
just because they detest some panicular conservative intensely, the pub-

Republicans discouraged by the
poll results in the presidential race
ought not to forget that the debates
are still ahead -· two between Clinton and Dole, and one between Kemp
and Gore. No doubt Clinton's famous
glibness makes him the favorite, but
these debates are notoriously tricky
things. Just one· blunder by the Boy
Wonder and it could suddenly
become a brand-new ballgame.
Meanwhile, Republicans are entttled to take very considerable encouragement from developments tn two
crucial Senate races
The Democrats' hopes of taking
control of the U.S. Senate aren 't realIstically very high, but such as they
are they depend on ousttng vulnerable Republicans who must run for reelection this year, while holdmg on to
the seals that are now held by
Democrats.
In panicular, they hllve hoped that
Republican veteran Jesse Helms of
North Carolma could be toppled by
Harvey Gantt, a popular black politician who ran against him unsuccessfully SIX years ago and won thiS
year's pnmary in a second b1d . Lib-

William A. Rusher
lie at large can't possibly like him
very much. Senator Helms has headed the liberals' senatorial Hate List
for decades, and was therefore
assumed to be a pushover whose
defeat would narrow the gap between
the pantes in the Senate.
But the good people of North Carolina have a different view. They
know that their senior senator is one
of the powerhouses of the U.S. Senate, and by conservative standards
practically a national treasure. They
have elected him to four six-year
terms, and recent polls indicate that
they are about to elect him to a fifth.
There could he no better news.
Meanwhtle, down m Louisiana,
longtime Democratic Senator Bennett
Johnston is retiring. Much, therefore
(from a Democratic standpoint),
depends on holding onto that seat.
Alas, thetr prospects have JUSt gotten

substantially dimmer.
Louisiana has a peculiar primary
system, in which everybody -Republicans, Democrats, even David
Duke -- run against each other, and
the general election in November
becomes m effect a run-off between
the two candidates who emerge from
the primary with the most votes.
This year JUSt two Democrats, but
seven Republicans, were in the primary. The belling was that the
Republicans would . spht their vote
seven ways from Sunday, leaving the
two Democrats -- former State Treasurer Mary Landrieu and Allorney
General Richard Jeyoub -- to face
each other on Nov. 5, thereby guaranteeing that a Democrat would hold
the seat. The polls confirmed this,
showing the two Democrats comfonably ahead of the Republican
pack.
Butlo and behold, on primary day
(Sept. 21 ), one of the Republican candidates -- State Representative
Woody Jenkins -- outpolled both
Democrats, winning 26 percent of the
total vote to 21 for Landrieu and 20
for leyoub, with the rest of the
Republican field bringing up the

rear. So it will be Jenkins vs. Landrieu on Nov. 5, and Republican
chances of capturing the scat from the
Democrats have suddenly improved
hugely.
As it happens, I have known
Woody Jenkins for over 30 years. He
ts tremendously impressive, solidly
conservative, unbelievably persistent
(he even challenged the fonnidable
Bennett Johnston six years ago),.and
has the cutest and smartest wife in
American politics. My guess -- based,
I admit, on instinct rather than polls
or inside knowledge •• is that he is
going to run rings around Ms. Landrieu .
The prospects for the Senate races
in North Carolina and Louisaana
make it far harder for the Democrats
to pretend they have any serious hope
of taking control of the Senate this
year. And that fact means almost as
much to the determination of America's future course as the battle
between Bill Clinton and Bob Dole.
William A. Rusher is a Dittlnguished Fellow or the Oaremont
Institute for the Study or States·
manship and Political PhUosophy.

Modern.Jonah mirrors Bible ta.le
By George R. Plegenz
The story of Jonah m the Bible is
a whale of a story. But is that all it is?
Rev. C.G. Bellah, pastor of
Memorial Seventh-day Adventist
Church of Omaha, Neb., was one of
those who was determined to refute
the critics who said Jonah could not
have survived in the belly of the "big
fish ." (The Bible does not call it a
whale.)
.. _
A diagram Bellah drew to illustrate his sermpn on Jonahappeared'in
the American Weekly of May 29,
1927. It showed there was space for
a four-room apartment inside a 90foot sulphur bottom whale.
The skeleton of. such a whale -and a life'~ize reproduction -- were
on display at that time in the National Museum in Washington, D.C. The
drawing was to convince doubting
Thomases that "Jonah had plenty of
ajr to breathe, could move around,
stand up if he wished and had a soft
bed to sleep on," said the minister.
Drawn to scale, the sketch showed
there was room enough inside the
giant mammal for a bedroom with
bed and chair, dining room, kitchenette and bathroom. Jonah is shown
relaxing in the bedroom, stroking his
beard.
Bellah went on a lecture tour

defending the biblical story after
Clarence Darrow, the famous Scopes
monkey trial lawyer, poked fun at the
Jonah tale, callin~ · it " fool's reli-

George R. Plagenz
gion.··
If Jonah was swallowed by the
great fish, be may not have been the
first man to e&lt;perience such a fate:
- and live to tell the story.
According to a pamphlet distributed by an evangelical group m England, a man named James Danley
was swallowed by a whale in 1891.
He was a British seaman and the official records of the British admiralty
provide documentary evidence of
the incredible saga, the tract says.
"It was on a whaling expedition
east of the Falkland Islands in the
South Atlantic where the story
unfolded. A huge sperm w~ale, spotted and mortally wounded by the
whalers, upset their boat, throwing
the seamen into the sea
"When the survivors were picked
up, two men were missing. One of
them was James Bartley, age 21.
"Just before nightfall the same
day, the dying whale floated to the
surface. With their long flensing
blades the tnen removed the thick

I

blubber which would be cooked into
oil.
"Shortly before II that night,
working by lantern ltght, the tired
crew removed the stomach and the
huge liver. As they did they were startled to notice movement anside the
great paunch -- a slow, rhythmJc
movement that looked hke something
breathing.
"The 10aptain called the ship's doctor and a great incision was made . A
human foot became visible -- shoe
and all. A few moments later they
pulled James Banley out He was
doubled up and unconscious -- but
alive!
"For nearly two weeks he lingered
between life and death. Gradually be
recovered his senses, but it was a
month before he was able to tell what
happened.
· "He n:membered being nung into

'

the air when the whale crushed their
longboat and, as he fell back-into the
sea, he saw the great mouth open
over him. He screamed and found
himself being swallowed."
Then oblivion.
"He had been inside the whale's
stomach for 15 hours. As a result he
lost all the hair on his body and he
was almost. blind for the rest of his
life. which he spent as a cobbler in his
native Gloucester."
James Bartley was visited by
medical men from many lands, or so
the _story goes. He lived 18 years
(until age 39) after his unbelievable
adventure. On his tombstone in
Gloucester are the words:
JAMES BAR'ILEY 1870-1909
A MODERN JONAH
Geoflle Plagenz II a aJIIIIIcated
writer for Newspaper Eaterprlse
Association.

One y~ ago At theO.J. Simpson trial . the prosecution and defense prc~nted duehng summations. The gove~ment unveiled its redesigned $100
b1ll, featunng a larger, off-center portrait of Ben•amin F kl '
• B'nhtla
.,
,
ran tn.
li'-Auuay s I
ys: ronner Sen. Charles Percy R-Ill 1·s 77 M · d '
"- IS
· 74• Actress Sada Thompson is 67
' Actress
·• J{athl
· ov1e Nolu
treetor.Anhur rcnn
is 63. Actor Wilford Brimley is 62. Author B~ How · 6~~
caster Die~ Sc~ is 6_2. Singer-musician Randy Bachman;:~.=~
er Overdrive) ts 53. Smser Meat Loaf is 45. Singer Shaun c 'dy · 38
Smger Mark Calderon (Color Me Badd) is 26.
asst ts ·

Emma Maye Cumings, 97, Pomeroy, died Tuesday, Sept. 24, 1996, at
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.
Born Dec. I, 1898, in Burlingham, daughter of the late Servetus and Ella
Whaley Han, she was retired from Oh1o University and anended Carleton
Church.
She is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, Durward and Nina Cumings of Pomeroy; a daughter-in-law, Gladys Cumings of Pomeroy; two grandchildren; four great-grandchildren and several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded tn death by her husband, Victor Cummgs; a son, David
Han Cumings; a sister, Leona King; and three brothers, Glenn, Ernest and
Dale Han.
Graveside servJces were held th1s morning at 10 am . in Carleton Cemetery, Pomeroy, w1th the Rev. Keith Rader officiating under direction off wing
Funeral Home, Pomerov.

IMansfield 164• I•
• IColumbus loo· I

Hilda M. Mollohan

.recourse."

are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

By William A. Rusher

Emma M. Cumings
1

W.VA.

Today's weather forecast
Southeastern Ohio
Highs remaming in the 60s. Chance
Today... Breezy and warm. Occa- of rain 70 percent.
sional showers or thunderstorms. · Extended roretast
Sunday... Fair west with scattered
High m the upper 70s. South wind 10
to 20 mph ... Gusts over 30 mph. showers east. Lows in the 40s. Highs
in the low to mid 60s.
Chance of rain 80 percent.
Monday .. Panly cloudy with a
Tonight...Showers and thunderchance
of showers. Lows in the 40s.
storms. Rain could be heavy. Low in
Highs
tn
the low to mid 60s.
the mid 60s. South wind I 0 to 20
Tuesday
...Panly cloudy with a
mph ... Gusts around 30 mph. Chance
chance
of
showers
nonh ...Otherwise
or rain 90 percent.
dry.
Lows
in
the
40s
and highs 65 to
Saturday... Rain likely m the
70.
.
morning . Breezy and cooler in the
afternoon with rain ending early.

Cold front moves across Ohio;
rain expected through Saturday

Hilda May Mollohan, 46, Middleport died Thursday, Sept. 26, 1996 at
Charleston Area Medical Center.
Born Feb. 6, 1950 in Rutland , she was the daughter of Nola Shaffer and
the late Homer James Bradshaw. She was a homemaker.
She IS survived by her mother, Nola Shaffer Bradshaw of Middleport; a
brother and sister-in -law, Art and Callie Bradshaw of Middleport; three SISters and brothers-in-law· Lucille and Harold Gilmore of Pomeroy, Mary and
Ron Jones of Racine, and Bessie and Jack Hollon of Greenville; a spec1al
friend, Roger Deem of Mtddleport; and several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by a stster, Betty Jean Bradshaw; a brother,
Howard Eugene Bradshaw; and her husband, Eugene Mollohan.
Services will be held Monday, I ~ . m . , at the Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, with the Rev. Leslie Hayman officiating. Burial will follow in
Letan Falls Cemetery.
Calling hours will be observed Sunday, from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m., at
the funeral home.

Woman cited in accident
A Syracuse woman was cited fol lowing a two-vehicle accident at the
intersection of Fifth and Broadway
streets in Racme Thursday around
3:30p.m.
Shirley Y. Beegle, Racine, was
eastbound on Fifth Street and stopped
to make a left tum onto Broadway
when her car was struck by a fol lowing van dnven by Patricta Stru·
ble, Syracuse, that was unable to
stop, according to a Meigs County

Sheriff's Deparunent report.
A passenger in Beegle's car, Cora
Beegle, was examined by members
of the Racine squad of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service.
Damage to Struble's van was listed as moderate while Beegle's vehicle sustaJned light damage, the report
stated.
Struble was ticketed on a charge
of failure to maintain assured clear
distance.

70s and low temperatures tonight will
be mainly in the lower to middle 60s.
The rain will end Saturday once
the front passes through the state.
state representative Jeff Fowler. and
That will allow cooler air to move CbUi cookotf
local cand•dates.
Those
wanting
to
partJcipate
in
the
into Ohio with high temperatures in
Big
Bend
Sternwheel
Festival
chili
the 60s.
cookoff on Oct. 5 can register up until Gun shoot planned
A gun shoot will be held at I p.m.
the time of the event. For more information call 992-3756 or 992-3679. Sunday at the American Legion Post
~ontinued from page 1 Proof of a negative TB skin test is 128 Farm, Bailey Run Road. Sponsored by Feeney -Bennett Post 128
required for entry.
itself is believed to have afflicted e&lt;tract made from tuberculosis bacSmorgasbord planned
mankind for many hundreds of cen- teria (1890). This soon became the Democrat rally slated
The Long Bonom Commumty
A Democrat rally and press con~ Juries. Hippocrates, in about 400 basis for· the TB skin test which
.' B.C. called the disease "phthisis", remains, to ,!his day, an it;nportant ference will be held Tuesd~y at noon Assocation wil hold a smorgasbord
· • from the Greek word meaning "to dry diagnostic tool.
on the Pomeroy Parking Lot regard- dinner Oct. 5 beginning at ~ p.m.
up" or "to waste". Up until the 19th
"The "X-ray" was invented in ing the proposed Republican budget. Several meats, lots of entrees, every• century, the disease was often 1895. This discovery led to the devel- Speakers will be Congressional can - thing included. Donation, $5 adults,
.. referred to as "consumption."
_ opment of the chest r~iograph . For didate Ted Strickland, candidate for $2.50 chtldren .
"At the beginning of this century, tile first time, disease in the lungs
tuberculosis was so rampant that it could be visualized.
was thl: leading cause of death in the
"Amore reliable tool for diagnosUmted States. Since the cause of the ing TB was found in 1934. The P.P.D.
• . disease was not known prior to 1882 (purified protein derivative) skin test
The foHowmg land transfers were Emma 'Reibel Ogdin and Barbara
. ~-and it was not known how the disease was introduced. This is the testing recorded recently in the office of Reibel Delong, Salisbury;
. "was spread, no specific methods of method used by the Meigs Co. TB Meigs County Recorder Emmogene
Deed, Ernest E. and Wanda J.
lm1&gt;9&lt;Jen
to Victoria J. Imboden,
· ~. treatment or prevention were possi- Clinic today.
Hamilton:
Salisbury;
· · ble.
"Prom the mid 1930's into the
Deed, J.J Detwtller Enterpnses to
....; "Many of our county residents 1960's, mass chest X-ray surveys of Patricia Oxyer, Scipio;
Deed, James Roy Frecker,
deceased,
to Nichols Metals Incor:~ may remember a family member, the adult population were conducted
Rtght of way, Wayne L. and
porated,
Middlepon/Pomeroy
tracts;
~· friend or loved one being placed in a to detect TB in the lungs. Perhaps
Junice K. Adams to Buckeye Rural
Deed,
Carole
A.
Painter
to
;·: special hospital called a sanatorium at many of you remember the mobile X- Electric Cooperative, Rutland,
. :, that time. TB treatment m the sana- ray units that were used at that time.
Right of way, Michael and Nan- Thomas R. and Marilyn R. Anderson,
M1ddlepon;
: torium consisted of bed res~ good
"Effective medicine for the treat- cy Norcia to BREC, Bedford ;
Deed, Margaret Weber to duane,
..; food, and fresh air. isolating the per- ment of TB was not available until
Right of way, Angela S. and
·: . son from their family and the rest of the 1940's and early 1950's The Unit- Robert Lemaster to BREC, Colum - Dallas, Denms and Dean Weber,
Donna Jenkins, Rutland parcels;
..: the community was the only known ed States Health Service conducted a bia;
Deed, Lola I. Bright, Lola I.
· ~ way to control the spread of the dis- sertes of tnals tnvolvmg nearly
Deed, Phyllis E. Monis to Walter
·.-: ease.
70,000 persons. A substantial Morris and Janet Manuel, Salisbury, Bright Living Trust to John and Lisa
"Many people died. and many oth- decrease in TB deaths was demon· 38 acres;
Knisley, Salem parcel ;
'
Deed, Charlotte A. McGowan to
Deed, Jackie Ray and Diane
· ' ers stayed years or even decades in strated among infected persons taking
the sanatorium. Some fortunate indi- daily med1cation for a one year periRoger and Yvonne Young, Bedford ; Robinson to W1lliam Eugene and
Deed. Ray E. Wellman to Andrew Charles Wesley Cundiff. Rutland
vJduals were cured by their natural od of time.
village;
body defense and were able to return
"Despite all of these advances, R. Eggers, Bedford parcels;
Deed. Wilbur H. Sr. and Maulda
Deed, Larry 0 . and Phylhs Y.
to their homes. The sanatorium tuberculosis remains a public health
remained the centerpiece of tubercu- problem. Millions of people world- M. Rowley to Danny K. Harnson. Hudnall to Con me M. Manley Trust,
Salisbury;
los•s control efforts until the late wide are affected . In the Umted Salisbury, .80 acres,
Deed, Steven H and Wanda L.
J;leed, D1ana L and Dav1d R
· ' 1960's and early 1970's. By that time, States TB is far from uncommon w1th
several landmark events had occurred over 20,000 new cases reponed year- Eblm to Mildred Jr. and Anna M. Thomas, Michael L and Debra A.
Bowen, Salisbury, .993 acre;
Rose to Tracy R. Hem , Sulton,
which enabled people with TB to be ly
Deed, Milfred Sr. and Anna M
Deed, Robert I. and Donna R.
treated primarily at home.
"Have you had a tuberculosis skin
Bowen 10 Pamela A. Amoll, Salis- Knapp to Robert I. and Donna R.
In 1882, Robert Koch, a German test recently? If you are a poStUve
bury, 993 acre;
Knapp. Chester, I acre;
scientist discovered the bacteria that reactor, when did you have your last
Deed, Angela and Robert Wayne
Deed, Gladys Reeves to Mary K.
causes tuberculosis. Kosh was also chest K-ray? If you are in doubt we
Duckworth, Middleport, .321 acres; Greer, Salisbury.
the .first to prepare tuberculin, an suggest you contact the Meigs Co
Deed, Emma Reibel Ogdin to
T.B. office."

By The Associated Pres•

Meig~

A cold front will bring rain and
thunderstonns to Ohio today, according to the National Weather Service.
As much as 2 inches of ram is e&lt;pected in southern parts of the state by
Saturday morning .
High temperatures will be in the

announcements

Support sought..

Land transfers posted

The Daily Sentinel
Published rvcry afu:moon. M onday through

Friday. Ill COW1 Sl . Pomeroy. Ohm. by lh&lt;
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Pomeroy. Ollio 45769. Ph. 992-2156 Second
clou postage ppid mPomeroy. ONo
Mta~bm

The Auocilled PreP. and the Ohio

New~ A UOC:UiliOfl

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when home: arrlcr terricc it available.

MAILSUBSCRtmONS
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26 ...................................................$53.82
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'2 Woeb............................................ SI09.71

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

County Court .
cases resolved
Followmg is the continuatmn of a
list of cases resolved last week m the
Meigs County Court of Judge Patrick
H. O'Bnen.
Fmed were: Katharine L. P1ckens,
Pomeroy, speed, $21 plus.costs; Todd
C QUJIIen, Pomeroy, seal belt, $15
plus costs; Gerald L. Taylor, Patriot,
overload, S827 plus costs ; Staley M.
Staats, Syracuse, seat belt, $25 plus
costs; Nathaniel W. James,
Charleston, WVa., speed. $21 plus
costs; Ryan K. Rowe, Middleport,
assured clear d1stance ahead, $30 plus
costs; Rebecca A. Foley, Pomeroy,
speed, $22 plus costs; Nancy L. PetIll, Middleport, speed, $22 plus costs;
seal belt, $25 plus costs; Tony J.
Rood, Reedsville, domestic violence,
$100 plus costs. 10 days jail suspended to three days, one year probatiOn, restrammg order issued;
Jason T. Han, Rutland, dn v1ng
under the influence after underage
consumpllon . $295 plus costs, three
days jail, one year probation; speed,
$100 plus costs ; seat belt. $25 plus
costs; seat belt, $25 plus costs; neeing, costs, on e day jail consecuti ve
with DUI; possessiOn, $25 plus costs;
Mary A Taylor, Pomeroy, domestic
vtolence, $1UOplus costs. 10 daysJa•l
suspended to two days, one year probation ; Terry Reynolds, Portland,
DUi, $850 plus costs, 30 days jail
Suspended to iOday s, one year operators hcensc suspen saon; Thomas
Grady, Pomeroy, dnving under suspension, $100pluscosts,Jl}d~ail,
one year probation; no InSurance, '$50
plus costs,
Douglas W. Orrick, Racine, criminal damagmg, costs, I 0 days jail suspended, two years probation, restitution; menacing, costs, 10 days Jail
suspended, two years probation ,
restraming or~er; Debra Henry, Mmersville, domestic vJolence, $100
plus costs, two years probauon ,
restraming order issued, SIX months
Jail suspended to two days; resisting
arrest. $50 plus costs, two years probation, 90 days Jail suspended to two
days; Danme Bulfington, Pomeroy,
failure to control, $35 plus costs,
speed, $41 plus costs; Jeffrey D.
Newell , Long Bottom. speed, $30
plus costs;
Carne A. Gtlhlan, Pomeroy,
speed, $30 plus costs, Carl B. Hell ,
Middleport, seal belt, $25 plus costs,
Robert N. Speuce, Dunwood, Ga ..
speed, $30 plus costs, Jam1 son S
Profflll, Portland, seat belt, $25 plu s
costs; Timothy C. Gaus, Rutland , seat
belt, $25 plus costs, Carl B Hetl ,
Middleport. speed, $30 plus costs.
Jonathan W. Miller, P~ek cnngton ,
seat belt, $25 plus costs, WtiiJam J
T1pp1e, Belpre, seat belt, $15 plus
costs, Lmda Montgomery, Racme,
fa1lure to control, $20 plus costs.
Mubank A. Khan, Huntington,
W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs: Barbara
A Buc)&lt;bee, Cottageville, W.Va.,
seat belt, $25 plus costs; stop sign,
$20 plus costs;
Timothy A. Wilson, Portland, seat
belt, $15 plus costs : Shawn G. Teets,
Marron, speed, $30 plus costs; Fauricetina Cole, Lake Wynn, Pa. , scat

Meigs EMS logs 7 calls
Units of the Meigs County Emer- Hosp1tal.
gency Medical Service recorded sev- RA CINE
en calls for assistance Thursday
3:28 p.m , Elm Street. Cnra BeeUnits responding included:
gle, treated at the sce ne.
MIDDLEPORT
6:03 p.m. , Trou ble Creek Road,
6·59 p.m.. South Fourth Avenue, Damel Good, Jackson Genl'ral HosBetty Ohlinger, treated at the scene. pital,
POMEROY
11 .11 p m . M orn 1 n~ Star Road .
3:48 p.m., volunteer fire depart - Jean Cleek, Camden-Clark Mcmon ·
ment to 104 Condor Street, false al Hospnal
alarm ;
RUTLAND
7: 10 p.m., Overbrook Nursing
11 ·22 a.m . Ovcrhrook Nursmg
Cen ter, Fred B1as, Ple asant Valley Center, Ethel Snedegar. i'V H

Hospital news

Veterans Memorial
Thursday admi ssions - none.
Thursday d1scharges - none.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Sept. 26 - Cora
Rardin, Mrs . Btlly Patterson and
son. Brooklyn Sn ouffer, Stanl ey
Ba1les, John Johnson, Clarence Freeman.
Sandra Renea Han, 27 , both of Port(Published with pennlsslon)
land; Gary Neil Curtis, 26, and
Amanda Dawn Wells , 21 , both of
Reedsville; Henry Mi chael Hoppe,
Meigs County Economic Devel40, and Mary Lee Hudson, 44, both
of Pomeroy.
opment Director Juha Houdashelt
was incorrectly tdentified as Juha
Thornton
in Tuesday's Daily Sentinel
~:dnued rrom pace'

Couples issued marriage licenses

Stocks
Am Ele Po- ....................... 40'4
Akzo ...................................... 59'4
Ashland 011 ........................... 39:0
ATAT ....................................... 52
Bank One .............................. 40'1.
Bob Evan• ............................ 13'1.
Borg-Wa..-...........................35
Champion ............................. 18'1.
Charming Shops ..................... 8
City Holding ............................23
Federal Mogul ....................... 21'4
Ganllllt .................................89'0
Goodye~r ..............................47\
K-mlrt ......................................11
Linde End .............................21'1.
Umlted ..................................11'1.
Ohio Velley Blnk..................35'0
One Valley .............................38\
Peoplllt IJancorp.................23'1.
Pram Flnl ............................... 12'1.
Rockwell ...............................58,.
Royal Dutch/Shell ................155
ShOney'e .................................e~
Star S.nk ..............................84\
Wencly'a ......- - .. - - - .. - -.21'1.

·~--...- .............11~

' StOCk

-·-·,.,na .,.

~

tile 10:3C!

:f'"J;!:.provlded by AMII

The followm g couples were
issued marriage licenses recently m
the Me1gs County Probate Coun of
Judge Roben Buck:
Ryan Michael Evans, 25 , and

Correction

Census reports.
swd.
But Nelson Warfield, a spokesman
for Republican presidential candidate
Bob Dole, sa1d "economic an&lt;iety ts
real in America today " and the sta---~

belt, $15 plus costs; Carl Edward Van
Kirk. Booth, W.Va., seat belt, $25
plus costs; Steven L. Skeens, Wayne,
W.Va., seat belt, $2~ plus costs;
Latrisha L. Jackson, Wellston, seat
belt, $25 plus costs; Robert L. Hawk
·Jr., Athens, failure to display valid
sticker, $20 plus costs; Rudy R.
Mus5!lr, Pomeroy. seat belt, SIS plus
costs; Jeffrey K. Arnold. New Haven,
W.Va., seat bel~ $25 plus; Jennifer L.
Southworth, Reynoldsburg, speed,
$30 plus costs;
Jeremy B. Smith, Racine, seat
belt. $25 plus costs; Oeorge L.
Gtlmore, Arlington, Va., speed, $30
plus costs; William H. Terree, Virgima Beach, Va., speed, $30 plus
costs; Jacqueline M. Vanderberk.
Charlolle, N.C., speed, $30 plus
costs; Jeremy A. Geiger, Marietta,
Ga., seat belt, $25 plus costs; Michael
T. Musser, Columbus, seat belt, $15
plus costs; Lawrence W. Bl ack,
Orma, W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs;
Ralph E. Collins, Nashpon. seat belt
and speed, $85 plus costs; Michael P.
Leggeu, Pullman, W.Va., speed, $30
plus cos1s; Carl T. Fluharty,
Zanesville, failure to display, $20
plus costs;
Amy M. Smith, Pomeroy, speed,
$30 plus costs; Jennifer A. Kozak,
Charloue, N.C., speed, $30 plus
costs; David W. Sm1th, Pickerington,
speed, $30 plus costs; Lisa M. Price,
Columbus , speed, $30 plus costs;
Jonathan M. Ferrell , Coolville, seat
belt, $25 plus costs; Edwin J. Bock,
Strongsville, speed, $30 plus costs;
Paula A. Brown, Millwood, W.Va. ,
se~t belt, $25 plus costs; Joy'?e1E.
Waugh , Shady Spring, W.Va ., seat
belt, $25 plus costs; James M Smith ,
Wmston-Salem, N.C., speedmg, $30
plus costs; Rtchard P. Dm1cglio.
Charlouesville, Va., speed, $30 plus
costs; Thomas D. Seward. Newport
R1chey, Fla , seat belt. $25 plus
costs, Ronald Steven Haggy,
Pomeroy, overload. $800 plus costs;
Michael D. Kemp , Paden City,
W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs; Kenneth L. Fought Jr., Coolville, seat
belt, $25 plus costs, Fred C. Polk II,
Hopewell. seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Chri stmc A. Sayre, Pataskala, speed,
$30 plus costs; seat belt, $25 plus
costs; Janet E. Christie, Troy, speed,
$30 plus costs; Erik P. Kadon ,
Cmcmnati, speed, $30 plus costs ; seal
belt, $30plu ~ costs; Dana P. Loomts,
Durham, N.C., speed, $30 plus costs;
Judith A. Fowler, Ravenswood ,
W Va., seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Wesley J. Peterson, Athen,&gt;, speed ,
$30 plus costs; Pamala D Brownlicld, Powell, speed, $30 plus cos1s;
MarJOrie R. Prince, Columbus, speed,
$30 plus costs; David J. Helmers,
Laurenceville, Ga., speed, $30 plus
costs, Paul F. Vjln Cooney, Long Bottom , overload, $434.50 plus costs;
Rob W. Locke, Albany, speed, $30
)!Ius costs; Jerry L. McWilli ams.
Barberton, speed, $50 plus cos ts,
Craig -D. Wilding, Loram , stop SJgn,
$20 plus costs; Bradley R K1phart .
West Chester, speed. $30 plus costs.
Kimberly J. Felly, Pomeroy, scat
belt, $2 5 plus cos ts

Correction
The Breast Cancer A•:arcness Day
observance will be held Tuesday at
noon at the Mc1gs Count) courthouse, not Monday as was earlier
announced.

D'Hart performed ·
Robm D'Han, country singer, pcrfomled at Expo '96 over the weekend.
Dancmg and prov1ding backup for
D'Han were sweater g ~rls, Donita
Sayre of Maso n and Kelly Winter of
Middleport. Her name was unintentionall y ommcd from the hst of
entenamers

tistics " do nothing to comfort a
homemaker trying to buy grocenes or
a wage earner wonied about the next
paycheck."
Isaac Shapiro, a senior staff member at the Center for Budget and Polacy Pnonties. an advocacy group for
the poor, noted that problems remain:
Mill ions of Amencans still lack
health insurance, the economy did not
improve for Hispanics

POMEROY
Nelr Pomenly·MIIon Bridge

1192·2588
VINTON
Glllllt County Dllpllty Ylfd
155 Mlln SL

388 8603

VAN DAIIME IN
MAXIMUM RISK •
OHE EVENINO SHOW 7:30

448.-3
, I

�i

'

Sports

_Friday, September 27, 1996

The Daily Sentin.,!}

'

The Dally Sentinel• P~g~l

Pomeroy • Middleport, Qhlo

--Meet the

Marauders-~

Friday, September 27, 1996

First-half scoring flood helps
Georgia Tech beat Duke 48-22
By TOM SALADINO
ATLANTA(AP)-It wasn't supposed to be that easy for Georgia
Tech.
Freshman quarterback Joe Hamilton led an offense that scored four of
the fir.;t five times it touched lhe ball
and the defense chipped in with two
more touchdowns to put the Yellow
Jackets up 38-0 by halftime.
Duke never saw them coming.
Coach George O'Leary gave his
starters the entire second half off as
Tech (3·1, 3·1 in the Atlantic Coast
Conference). eased to a 48-22 victory Thursday mght over the outmanned Blue Devils (0-4, 0-2ACC).
'' It was obviously a good football
game by the offense and defense in
the first half," said O'Leary. "We
had an opponunity to play a lot of
players in the second half."
Duke linebacker Billy Granville
put it more bluntly.
"They just kicked our butts. They
just jammed it down our throats. It
wasn 't very complicated," he said.
Hamilton made it look easy. He
completed 15-of·l9 passes for 2fJ7

yards and touchdowns to Harvey
Middleton of 19 and 63 yards in the
opening half.
Before Duke knew it, Tech had
blown it open, taking a 38-0 lead 25
seconds before halftime on Middleton's long touchdown catch and run.
Tailback C.J. Williams ran for
103 yards on nine carries, including
a 32-yard touchdown. Linebacker
Jimmy Clements raced 60 yards
with a fumble for another score, cornerback Nathan Perryman returned
an interception 30 yards for a touchdown and Brad Chambers kicked a
43-yard field goal for the other firsthalf scoring.
"You don't expect the defense to
get points," said Clements. "That
just happens."
"We came out to play, and when
we do that, it's going to be hard for
any team to play with us," said
Hamilton.
"It was a disastrous first half,"
said Duke coach Fred Goldmsith as
Tech outgained the Blue Devils 310
yards to 95 and didn't punt once.
"There's a lot of work that needs

to be done," said Gran;ille. "It's not
easy to just come out in big time college football in our confere11ce and
win. We have to find a way to get it
done."

Playing against Tech's secondand third.team players, Duke fared
better in the second half.
"We didn't hang our heads in the
second half and come out there and
go through the motions," said Goldsmith. "I was proud of that."
Duke scored three touchdowns
after intermission.
Quarterback Man Rader had a
three-yard touchdown run and threw
a 67-yard scoring pass to Corey
Thomas. Kevin Thompson tossed a
touchdown pass of 14 yards to Richmond Flowers and the Blue Devils
added a safety irf the closing seconds.
Tech's backup quarterback, Brandon Shaw, played the entire second
half. He thew an 18-yard tou~hdown
pass to Chris Myers, 'Yhile Chambers added a 37-yard field goal for
the Yellow Jackets' other points.
"I told the second string: Now
(See FOOTBALL on Page 5)

Local volleyball crews and
Caldwell get latest accolades
the basketball coun, he has also been
successful and claimed titles in girls'
softball and volleyball - not the
sign of a specialist in just one area,
but of a good "coach."
Congratulations to the Southern
girls' volleyball team!
Last night was Southern's first
loss, a hard· fought three-gamer to
undefeated (league) Belpre. The
night before Southern had defeated
a top Division IV team in Waterford
to remain undefeated against schools
in the same division. Overall, Belpre
is 12-2, 9-0 in the league.
Eastern's volleyball team, after
dropping ' some early games has
come on strong to take a tie for second in the tough Tri·Valley Conference race at 7-5 and 5·5. Still Eastern is four games out of first, but
gains credit to achieve success above
the .500 mark. A mix of seniors and
youth has been Eastern's key to win·
ning under coach Don Jackson.
·
Racing
Tonight, the All-Star Sprints are

TVC CHAMPs AGAIN- The Meigs Marauders
nailed their. Mvanth atraight TVC goH chempl. onlhlp Wadneedey. In front ere (L-R) Zach
: Maldowa, Josh Price, Mlck Barr, Jared Werner,
Dave Anderson, end Seen O'Brien. In the' beck

SACKED - Georgia Tach defender~ Relph
Hughes (46) end Derrick Sheperd (bottom) Mck
Duke quarterback Matt Rader1n the first quarter

at West Virginia Motor Speedway
and Saturday visit KC Raceway in
Chillicothe.
The Sprint cars made their dra·
matic return to Skyline Speedway
the past two weeks and have made a
great impression to the point that
they may be the top billing next year
at Skyline on Friday nights. Owner
Lou Hubbard may run an October 5
sprint special, so keep an eye out for
details.
The last two winners have been
Jason Dukes from Findlay and Jim
Nier from Piketon. lim Tonn of
Lakeville flipped his car violently at
the last meet and suffered a .severe
concussion. The flip left many of the
non-sprint car fans in awe that any·
one could survive such a crash.
Hubbard says he may even sell
his Late Model and get a sprint'
Clarincation
In all respect to the officials and
the feelings of the Wahama fans, Fri(See CIRCLE on Page 5)

The Meigs County Chapter of the
Izaak Walton League will sponsor a
day·long observance of the 25th
annual National Hunting and Fishing
Day Saturday from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.
at the Izaak Walton Farm on Scout
Camp Road near Chester.
Nationwrde, the theme of this
year's National Hunting and Fishing
Day is "Celebrating Family Outdoor
Traditions."
Locally, the Hunting and Fishing
Day celebration is for youngsters
ages si&lt;.to 16. Admission is free and
lunch will be provided.
Throughout the day. demonstrations will be held in canoeing, fly
fishing and fly tying. muzzleloading,
trap shooting, hunter safety, hunting
movies, .22-caliber rifle shooting
and archery.
Children will also be awarded
prizes. Registration is from 8-9 a.m.
Ohio Governor George Voinovich
proclaimed Saturday as "Hunting
and Fishing Day" in Ohio.
National Hunting and Fishing
Day wa&lt; created by an act of Congress in 1971 to recognize the
nation's hunters and anglers for their

204 Condor SL

AL standings

6
6
I0\1
I~ ~

EtlttHn Dhilion

:r..m
.1!:
•·New Yor\ ...... ... 91

68

.lll

...... 87
.......SJ
..... 12
. ......~ J

72
7b
87
106

547
522
45'
JJJ

Balli~

Bosum ....
T&lt;wonlo ..
Dt1roil .. .

I. l'sl.

li.ll

•

8
19
Jg

Culnl DhWon
~-CLEVELAND

Wattm Division

Los Angeles ........... 90
San Diego ... ..... ..88
CoiOflldo .............. 82
San Frwisco ........ 66
x-clinched division title

.620
. ~28

14 ~,

Milwnukc:t .. ..
71 R2
Minnesota . . ..... 76 8J
Kanllll City . .. .. 7J 8~

484

21 '!,·

478

22'1:

.462

H

- ~~J

.. RK 71

~32

Ookland .. ...... .... 76 8) .478

California ..... ..... 69 89 .m

.1'-:
12
18'•

a-clinched diVIsion title

Thursday's scores
Oakland 7, Seoetle 5
Boston .\. New Yort .1
Bailirnon:" 4, Toron1o I
Tcus 6. Cnliromia ~

p.m.

Chi caso (Fcrn11ndcz l~ - 101 at Min·
(Rudkc: 11 -15), 8 :~ p.m.
CLEVELAND (Hc:nhiscr 15 -8) at
KilruQ.s City (Rosado 7-6), 8:o.\ p.m.
Ciildornnt (Dicluon 1-4) at Texas (Hill
16-lOl. ~ J~ p.m.
S(':\ll lc (Mulholland 5-.1) :1.1 Oakl:and
IT&lt;I8hr&lt;lr• 1. 7). IO:Itl p.m.

rtt'~ot o

Satunby'saalllfs
New York (Mendoza .1 -S) 21 Boston
(C\e11"1('nii()..1 1). 1·0Sp.m.
B :~ ilmne iMuunt:. 19-11) 31 Toronto
IHwon I'-171. 40Spm
Scauk (H11chnx:k 13-9) at Oaklnnd
(Wasdm 8· 7). 4 OS p m
M1lwaultcc !Eldr ed J-4) :u Detroit
(Mothlcr 0-0). 7 0~ p m

Oucago (Ainrn 15-lOl at MinntiOCa
,

&lt;M•tln 1·21. s·w pm.

CLEVELAND (McDowe ll IJ -9) at
Knruu City (8ev1l 1-0), 1 :0~ p m.
Californ1 a (F1n le y 1 ~-1~) at Telu
(Oliver IJ-~). 8 · '~ p.m

New York 11 Bouon. 1:05 p.m.
BaJfimore II Toronto, I : ~ p.m.
Milwaukee at Drtrui1, I I~ p.m
Olicqo at Minnesoco. 2 .0~ p.m.

CHARLOTIE HORNETS: Signed

f

Malik Rose.
CHICAGO BULLS : Rc-signrd G-F

DE

Jud Buechler.
PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS '
Named Elston Turner assillonl cOACh and
Ron Adams scC'ul. Re -siJn ed Buck~

GRAVELY
SYSftll"--'

Bud.waller, Jeruor 5courin1 consuha.nl, to
a oot-ycl\rcontrac1

5 spd, 4 cyl, bed liner, rear step bumper, AM/FM cass.
NADA Book Price ........ $7075
Special on approved credit.
NADA Whole Sale....... $5225
. No Money Down.
ICu.stom1er Price $4800
48 mth'a $123.38 +lex, title

Today's cames

Ji
.547

.................:19 10 .4'rl
. ,.Now Yort ..............'IO 19 .440
A2 $ 'i ' II ·-··-... 65 94 .409

Saturday's galllfs
CINCINNATI (MOrJmn 6-10) ut S1.
Louis (Jackson0-1), ~: 25 p.m.
Snn Francisco (Sodtutrom 1-0) :11
Colorodo (TBA)..1 : ~ p.m
Pilllburgh (Schmidl 5-6) at Chicago
(Tr:N.:h&amp;eiiJ -9), 4·05 p.n1.
Philadelphia (M.o.duro 0-0) ~~ New
York(Pmoo1·5). 7:10p.m.
AIIIIIIID (MIIdd11A 15·11) al Mon1n"l
(M.t..ilcr8·11). 7J~p. m.
Florida (HellinJ 2-1) a1 Houston
(Darwin 2·21. 8 :0~ p.m.
S:an Oiqo (Ashby 9-~) at LOJ AnJt·
lcJ (Nomo 16- I II. IO:()j p.m.

Sunday's

regular-season nnales
Atb.tua Ill M0111rml. I : l~ p.m.
Pttibietphia at New Y0111. I :40 p.m.
CINCINNATI .. St Louis. 2:ll p.m.
Pilb""'"' • Cllieqo. 2:20 p.m.
Florida • Howton. 2 : )~ p.m.
San ManciJCO iM Colondo. 3:0.1 p.m.
s..
l.oo .......... 4j)l p.m.

o.c,•..

--

........

~~irfation of Fr~at White. lint buc

-

TEXAS RANOERS: Si1nc:d LHP

K.tiidai Kojima.

NLstandinp

1991 CHEVROLET CAVALIER/IS

Col-

San Dicso (Sanden 9-5) 31 Lo1 Angeks (Valdes 15-7). 10 : 0~ p.m.

...

c.tifomia 11 Tau. J:05 p m.
SanE Ill o.klu:t. 4:0S p.m.

--

1U

orado (Reynoso 8-9), 9 : 0~ p.m.

........eiJIII

Cars

SALE

4 Sedan, power steering, auto. air, AMIFM stereo, sport wheels.
NADA Book Price........ $4975
Spacial on approved credit.
NADA Whole Sale .......$3600
No Money Down.
48 mth'l $92.29 + tu. title ....

• BUMPS IN A CROWD - lin the upper photo, Eutam's Mindy
jampeon bumpe the beU u taammetae Meredith CrOw (1~). Petey
~lker (t1) and an unidentified Eagle to Sampeon'lllft watc:}l dur·
lng Thuraday night's TVC match egelnlt VInton County, which the
llost Eeglas won. In the lo- photo, Southern's n - Turley •••
fuln a bump •• taemmlte Amber Thomll (far right) end t,wo oth·
er Tornadon watch during • TVC match agelnlt visiting Belpre,
Jrtlfllch handed the TornadOU. their fl,.1 lou of the y.ar after 12
~lght mach wlna. ,(Scott WoHe photol)

1989 Dodge CaravanSE Loaded ............ :... $3295
1989 Buick Skylark custom 4 dr, 4 cyl, auto.$1995
1988 Olds Cutlass Supreme
loaded, Red ...................................................... $2995
1987 Ford Tempo 4 cyl,

s s~. alum wheels .. $1295

1986 Ford Tempo 4 dr, 6 cyl, 5 spd, real nice.$1895
1988 Monte Carlo SS vs,auto ..................$4695
1989 Lincoln Mark

7

LSC ...................... $6395

Trucks
1994 Ford Ranger Extended Cab,

1990 CHRYSLER LEBARON
4 sedan, auto, elr, AMIFM cass, 3.0 V6, luggage rack, power
.
window, power door locks.
NADA Book Price........ $8175
Spacial on epp10ved credit.
No Mo'.ley Down.
"38 mth'a $165.10 + tu, title

XL'r' loaded,

V6, auto, Best of Everything .................................. $9495
1983 Chevy S-10 4x4,1ong bed, ve. auto ... $3295
1979 Chevy 314 ton, 350 auto ................ $995

NL: Suspended Montreal Espos

~
1

ll
24
l9

pi1cher PMo a.tllltiaez for
pmes
ud Philadelphia Pt.Jiliu pitrha Mike
Williaa for Iii .... rot llleir roles ia 1

..._10_....,. __

HOUSTONAST'IIOS:
~11m
btoc:l&gt;&lt;lolri.,
· · · ,.,

David Lalebu':u=::ctor of acouliiJ.
I&lt;IIIIOd lim

de ..........

director of player

I. MEIGS-42
2. Belpre-35
3. Weliston-2 I
4., Vinton County-11
S. Nelsonville-York-1

'Victory Circle'..•
(Continued from Page 4)
day's officiating crew at the South·
ern-Wahama game will not be the
same crew that officiated last week's
loss at Rav~nswood . This will be an
entirely different crew and a well~spected group among the football
ranks.
Speaking of football, both South·
em and Eastern are 1-3 but both have
played well lately. Eastern has a
young crew and seems to be getting
everything soned out quite well
lately.
Southern has been, with the
exception of the loss to a premier
team in Fon Frye, so very close. In
fact, just four points and some luck
is the only thing that separates them
from a 3-1 season. Southern will
have a tough opponent tonight in
Wahama.

SCORING

P117er · - · · ···-·------ G Pta An

Bryan Mutdoch, Wells................ 4
Vemon RCIIIII, B.. .. .. ... ....... .... .. ... 4
Todd Cutin, W ...... ..................... . 4
Nathan Stalder, N· Y .................... 4
Jaime Evana, S ............................ 4
Shane Wolford, J.......................... 4
B11nclon Chun:h, W..................... 4
Brian Camechis, T ....... ............... 4
Zach Miller, T ............................. 4
Justin ROIOSh, Meigs ..................... 3
Ryan Bulthcr, L........................... 4
Sam Scchku, f .H. ....................... 4
Chris 1\!t&lt;k, Alea......................... 4
Nal&lt; Dailey, Alex ........................ 4
Todd Braden, V.C........................ 4
Michael Ash, 5............................ 4
Eric Mildlell, N· Y ....................... 4
Mike Our. V.C........................... 4

62 ll.5

SO

n.5

18

4.S

18

4.5

18
Btn Robey, N·Y ...................... 4 18

4.S
4.S
6.0
3.l
3.l
3.S

Ryan Caudill, V.C. ....................... 4 16
Lance Roalton, Alex. ......... .......... 4 14

Bryan Murdoch, Wells. ...... .. ..
Nalt Dailey, Alex ....................
Nathan S111dc1, N· Y ................
Justin Roush, Meip .................
Todd Braden, V.C....................
Mike Our, V.C.......................
Adam McDaniel, E..................
l\lan Goodwin, Alh............ ......
Heath Howdyshell, Mi. ............
Ryan Bulcher, l ..........-.............
Todd Caslin, W........................
O.ris Meek, Alex.....................
Eric O.C.alicr, 8 ......................
l\latt Willi11111, Meigs ..............

83
88
72
47

J.l
l2
3.2
3.0
4.8

J.O
J.O
3.0
3.0
3.0
3.0

J.O
3.0
3.0
2.l
A¥t

7.t
6.9

m
483
444
424

l.S

6.2
9.0
S.t

72 370
J64 11 .7
JOO 6.3
292 4.6
7:17 4.S

31
48
64
62
l6
2S

Jaime Evaaa, S ........................
Mall Boley, MlricUI ................
Sam Secllbr, F.H ....................
BJ. Grody, Pl. Pl .....................
Adam Cummlnp, $ .................
Eric Olua, N·Y ........................
QuillOn Evaaa, L .....................
Dusty Higenbolbom, Pt. Pl.
Robbie Cooper, T...................
Juon Brown, F.H.....................
Lince Rabton, Ale&amp;. ...............

42 t0.5
38 9.5
J6 9.0
J6 9.0
·30 7.5
30 7.S
24 6.0
24 8.0 Buu Fonner, Wella.................
24 6.0 . Nalin Artllur, Wetla .................
24 6.0 Shan&lt; Wolford, !.. ....................
22 S.5 Ryan Bobb, V.C ......................
20 s.o J.D. Ousley, V.C. ....................
18 •.s Brian Clmec:llil, T ...................

Dan or..,w~t. w ....................... 4 t4
'
As most of you know, two weeks Jeremy Rickard, Pt. Pl................. 4 14
ago my dad and best friend, Hilton Eric Gtw, N· Y ............................ 4 14
Wolfe, Jr. (Big Foozc) had a severe Andy Perry, Alh .......................... 4 13
O.C.al~r. &amp; ................. , ..... 4 13
heart attack and was lifelighted to Eric
Man Ooodwin, Alb ...................... 4 12
University Hospital in Columbus.
Matt Williams, Meigs .................. 3 12
Because so many people have Heath Howdyshell, Mi.. ............... 4 IZ
inquired, Dad must rehabilitate for Johnathan Oga. l ......................... 4 12
I I weeks then undergo bypass Puker Elli01t, N· V .... ..... .... .... ...... 4 12
. Arlthooy eon .... r ...................... 4 12
·surgery once he is strong enough.
Mike AndciiOft, 1'1. Pl ................. 4 12
Dad is at home now, but still 1\1111 Boley,,l\larietta ....... ............ 4 IZ
needs your prayers and suppon as Keith Sears, F H........................... 4 IZ
...... 4 12
they have made all the difference in Soon Roberta, B .. ..
the world. The address is box 181, Jeremy Thomas, W...................... 4 12
Juon Writcsel, 5 .......................... 4 10
Racine, Ohio 45771 .
RUSIDNG
Until next time, I'll sec you in the PIIJer .._ ........... -............. All Yth
victory circle!
Vernon Reanu, B..................... 82 SSO

closer, but Caldwell (23 points over~1) posted five straight serves for a
5-0 EHS lead. Vinton County
scrapped away at the lead and tied it
at 5-S, but Aeiker put• the Eagles
ahead 7-6. VC tied the score, then
Eastern got down to business. Angie Wolfe had some good floor plays
as did Meredith Crow, Stepahnie
Evans and Kim Mayle.
Marauders omitted
Caldwell made it I0-7 after Hay- from leader board
man had added a point and Eaatem
rolled on to a 15-10 wjn as Crow
Two Meigs players were omitted
se_rved up the last three points for the ,
by
mistake in the area receiving staWID.
tistics.
Behind Caldwell, Aeiker and
They are Chad Hanson with four
&lt;;row had three, and Hayman had
catches
for 38 yards and Jeremiah
one.
Bentley with three catches for 12
Eastern also won the reserve
yards.
match to go to 9-3 overall.

BRYAN YOUNQoT
5-loot·11, 2111-pouncl junior

area football leade.-s

4.7

262
201

8.0

4.2
5.3
3.9

4S 189
3S 187

48 t86

Belpre
spikers hand
Southern
first loss

1992 NISSAN PICKUP TRUCK

DH : Pinsburah &lt;Loiselle 1-0 and Cordova 4- 7) al Chicnao (Castillo 7-16 11nd
Campbell J.t ). , o~ p.m.
Allanta (Smollz :D-8) al Montreml
(FOJscro 1~· 10 1. 7,Js p.m.
Phil adelphia (tAimbs J-9) at New
York (Harnisch 8-12). 7:40p.m.
~INCINNATI (SmUcy IJ-14) 31St.
Loots,(Pcckcvsck 11 -2 ). 8:0.1 p m.

BOSTON RED SOX: A....,occd lbt

p.m.

~a ..............l J;
...............rr n

Auoclation

Ohio Division
(Rnal standlnp) .

FRANCO ROMUNo-FB
5-foot-8,17Q.pouncl sophomore

23 1'10
41 IS6

7.4
3.1
7.3

ll 154
l5 15~

6.1

31 147 ·4.7
19 146 7.7
33 141 4.3
17 132 7.1
17 131 7.7
21 123 U
JO 120 4.0

9 111 13.4
5.7

21 119
17 116
17 111
16 IJ
14 IJ

U
U
5.3

5.9
PASSING
CP All ... Y•

Ploytr
Den Robey, N-Y ................ 46
Lince Ridlardl, F.H. ........ 21
Jwc Maynard, $............. J4
Natlwl White, Ad1. ........... :ZS
Zach Miller, T .................. 20
Shawn TayiO&lt;, W.............. 18
Lince Rotatoo, Alex. ........ 10
Matt Lyo111, B .................... II
Sieve Dunt, E .................. IS
Jeff Maibach, L ................. 16
Milt Halem, V.C............... 9
.l&lt;•i Weppler, Mlrietll..... 5
B~ent Rollins, Pt. Pl.......... I
Brad Dayeaport, Meip .... 9
Austin Penrod, l ............... S
Daany Meade, T................ I
Adam O.nuk, Marietll ... 2
Arllhony Riley, Mi .............. 4
Joe Sparhawk, Alii. ........... 4
Brian Shaw, W................. Z

16
60

3 .60
3 407

32

3 312
1 :145
S 321
I 3Z2

37
J4

3 :1011

~

42
62

3 221

1 190
37, 3 173
%7 2 161
2.4 I 111
t2 0 106
24 I II
II 1 64
1 0 SS
10 0 52
28 2 41

40

t4
6

---·---He.

I

40

II

31

RECEIVING

Ploytr.-...
·y..
Ryan Caudill, V.C...................... 9 212
Milt Weaver, Ath ...................... 15 lfl
Brian Camcchia, T ................. .... 1 171
Keith Scan, F.H......................... 7 1'10
Puker Elliott, N· Y..................... 13 . 157
Brandon O.un:h, W ................... 6 156
Eric Milchetl, N· Y..................... 6 . J:D
Steve O.a, B.............................. 5 109
Jamie Evans, S .......................... 1 10'7
lonathan Og, L......................... 1 90
Dan Greenwalt, W..................... 6 16
C1vi1Shafer,T .......................... 3 611
Nal&lt; Dailey, Alex ...................... 4 67
Diad 'l'holnu, Atli. .... .......... ...... 4 • 65
Adam CotlviYit, Maric!Ui .......... 2 64

A\'f

23.5

14.1
lOA
2.4.3
12.1
21.0

20J
2U
15.3
I:U
14.3

22.7
16.7
16.3
310 .

Next week's slate has Eastern
going to Trimble Monday, to Alexan·
der Tuesday and ncturning home to
host Snuthern Thursday.

Montreal5, Philadelphia 2

liMeball

CLEVELAND 11 k.ansu Ci ty, 2:H

..

:,: P'O

San Francisco 6. Los Angeles I

Transactions

Sunday's
reaular·Hason Dnalos

Eastern's vmity volleyball team missed serve for VC, senior Minday
went two games above .500 and Sampson notched two big scores for
.,moved into a tic for sei:ond place in the win.
ihe Tri-Valley Conference's Hocking
Marty Holter continued to have a
· Division with a 15-0 shutout and I 5- massive number of good sets, while
::'0 tally over the Vinton County Sampson posted several key saves
;.\likings Thursday night.
and volley-saving digs. Jessica Bran": Vinton County served firs!, but non, Valerie Karr and Juli Hayman
.had a side out in the first game, then also had good floor games, while
Michelle Caldwell rolled up 13 Patsy Aeiker joined Karr and Samp,.ftr1!ight points to give the Eagles a son with a great one·tWQ punch at the
. •
· ·
··a'dv~ntagt. Aftef · aMther · n«it .
The second ga~~~e was a lillie

••

Aorida (Hunon 4- 1) a1 Hotuton (Kilc

Tonight's games

~-14), 7 :.'~

24

NaUon~lllukttllall

the Riverside Invitational Saturday
and will hit the tournament trail by
taking part in the . Division n sectional at Oxbow on Wednesday, Oct.
2 with 10 teains participating and
three teams advancing to district
play.

EHS varsity spikers beat Vinton County

Houston 6, New Yort 2
f-lorida 7, Atlanta I

12-1 0). R : O~p. m.
San Fruncis co (Rueter 6-8)

New York (0ooden 11 -6) :u Boston
(Sele f&gt;.ll ), 7:0~ p.m.
Milwaukee (McDonald 12· 10) aJ Detroit (VM Poppel J·8), 7:M p.m.
Ballimore (Erickson 13-11) 1111 Toronto
(Quannill

. 41~

·-

Oxbow, Trimblem which won with
a score of 165, was followed by
Southern's 168, Alexander's 171,
Federal Hocking's 182. Eastern's
203 and Miller's 224. No other
information was available on the
Hocking Division match.
Dave Anderson led Meigs with a
41. Steve McCullopgh and Joe Hill
added 46s. Mick Barr added a 47,
Clay Crow added a 48 and Jared
Woods added a 50. Todd Knotts of
Belpre was match medalist with a
one-under-par 35.
Meigs (101-37 overall &amp; 42-2 in
the Ohio Division) will take pan in

CINCINNATI 12. O.icogo4

Wntrm Di,lsion

Seanlc . . ... ...... IW 74

9J

2
8

25th Anniversary • Sept. 28, t!l96

The M~igs Marauder golf team,
under the direction of coach John
Krawsczyn, won its seventh consecutive Tri-Valley Conference championship by winning the Ohio Division title Wednesday at Oxbow. '
· The Marauders came in second in
the match Wednesday to secondplace.finisher Belpre, but Meigs had
too much of a lead for the Golden
Eagles to overcome.
Belpre won the m.atch with a teiun
score 'of 158, followed by Meigs'
.180, Vinton County's 198, Wellston's 199 and Nelsonville-York's
213.
· In Hocking Division play at

Pomeroy, OH.

Thursday's scores

... 98 60
Cbicoso .... ....... li4 H

Tcx;u .

69 .S66
71 .m
77 .s16

wild turkeys.
This year, Ohio will receive over
$3.6 million for wildlife restoratiM,
$1.2 million for hunter education and
over $5 million for sport fish stock·
ing, habitat improvement, research
and aquatic resource education from
taxes paid by hunters and anglers.
The state has about 530,000 res·
ident hunting license holders and
more than one million resident fishing license holders.

Meigs golfers win seventh
straight. TVC championship

SPRING &amp; SUMMER HOURS
Open Monday-Friday 9:00-5:00
Saturday 9:0().3:00

Basketball

Cmtr•l Divbktn
11-St. Louis ......... 86 7J .541
CINCINNAn ... 80 79 .SOJ
Houston ...... "~" ""· 80 79 .50:\
Chicaao .......... .... 75 8~ . 47~
Piusburgh
70 88 .44:\

contributions to wildlife conservation.
"Conserving our state's natural
and wildlife resources is one of the
most imponant responsibilities we
have to this and future generations of
Ohioans," Voinovich said. "Hunters
and anglers were among the fir.;t to
realize this responsibility nearly 100
years ago. The conservation pro~
grams supponed and financed by
Ohio hunters and anglers have benefited hundreds of wildlife species,
from deer, wild turkeys and otters, to
bald eagles and song birds -- wildlife
that all Ohio can enjoy."
Since the 1930s, excise taxes paid
by hunters, recreational shooters and
anglers have been largely responsible for funding the recovery of
many wildlife species including
white-tailed deer, wood ducks and

row are Tommy Rouah, J.R. Scarberry, Jamea
H11dlon, Joe Hill, Jared Wooda, Cltty Crow and
Stave McCullough. Not plctureclls coach John
Krawsczyn. Melga (1 01-37) will taka p.n in the
.Aiveralda lnvlr.tlonal Saturday.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

Scoreboard
Baseball

of Thursday night's ACC contest In Atlanta, Ga.,
where the Yellow Jackets won 48-22. (AP)

National Hunting and Fishing Day
observance scheduled for Saturday

In this week's 'Victory Circle,'

By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
How about that Southern Local
volleyball team, who cracked the top
twenty in the state last week and
until last night was currently undcfeated . The Tornado gals can really
play the nets and good all-around
team play in all aspects of the game
have made them the team that they
are.
I was really impressed with their
hustle and willingness to dive into
the splinters to make the save when
the ball seemed beyond the limits of
recovery. Southern is now 13-1 overall and undefeated in the league at 90 to take a stronghold in first place ·
of the Tri· Valley Conference Hocking Division race.
Although often modest to the
point that he often says, "Scott, you
don't even need to mention my
name" in the write-up, there is one
common denominator in Southern's success: Coach Howie Caldwell.
Known mostly for his success on

STEVE THORTON-C
5-foot-10, 1~nclaophomora.

1973 lnternatlonal1/2 ton ve. auto ........... $495

~ollf'B'

fpotbail, .. (Contin~ from Page 4)

~ know w~y

NO REASONABLE OFFER
REFUSED!!!!

rou are second... Slid

o·~· :•'fhon:

wenc just too many

~nllti~s (1\'Jch had 14 for 117 yards
ovcralt, 9 fpr 7~,yanls in the second

half). But I thought they did e good

..

joll. Clwlie

tionel joll...

Roim did

an excep-

.

Rogers, a sophomore tailback;
had 112 yanli on 18 CIITies.

The Southern Tornadoes fell out
of the ranks of the unbeaten with a
disheartening loss to powerful Belpre Thursday night. Southern won
the first game 15-10, but fell by I 5II scorC$ in the next two games.
(Official slats of this match will be
released later.)
Despite the great effon, SHS fell
to 13·1 and 9- 1 in the league.
Southern was tired and coming off
a big non-league win over super·
tough Waterford on Wednesday.
Waterford went up 6.() before Bri·
anne Proffitt put the Tornadoes on
the ,boards at 6- 2. Amber Thomas
maile it 14-8, ·but Southern fell to 815.
In the second game, Southern was
fon;ed to play comeback in a tough
road game.
Again, Southern fell early, but
came back to tic at 8-8 on eight
straight Turley serves. Thomas put
Southern on top 11 -8 and Southern
rolled on to a big I5-10 win.
In the rubber game of the match,
Sllu\hem won a hard-fought 16-14
win . Thomas had scveri j)Oints in that
game, the llriannc Proffitt added the
final to markers to break the 14-14
tie and win tilt game.
Thomas had 13 points, three aces,
14 assists, and two kills; while
sophomore 'Kim Sayre had six
points, one ace, and 12 assists.
Brianne Proffitt had six pohtts,
one ace, five kills and thlee blocks;
Turley had 10 points, seven kills, and
five blocks; Kcri Caldwell two
poinls and three kills; Cynthia Caldwell two points and two kills; and
Emily ·Duliltwo kills.
Ianetta Kins led Watqford with
ll points, Tammy Huck had eight,
and Katrina Greene had nine.
The Southern ncacrves dropped a
three-game metch 8-15, 15-12, IS· '
II. Sllq Lyons and Melissa Layne
led Southern with seven-point

1996 NISSAr 412
Driver side air bag, 5·speed, lull bench aeat, 1400 lb.
payload. all season radials. 3 year 36.000 bumper to
bumper, plus 5 year 60,000 power train warrantv.
MSRP ..... $11,668.95
...,..,....,,.
Discount ... -2,673.95

MSRP ...... $15,128.95
pscount ..... -2,1
SAUPRICE
SPECIAL
Plus Tax
mo. 36mo.
plus lease

or
LEASE FOR

spec\a\

sate

.1' ' ' NISSANe

Discount.. ... -2.552.95
SALE PRICE
SPECIAL

or
LEASE FOR

PlusTex

Dtacount ..... ·2,818.95
SALE PRICE
SI'ECIAL

per mo.36 mo.

....

PUTax.

par mo.12 mo.

lease

efforts.

.

.

�•...•••
Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

......
••

•
Friday, September 27, 19$)

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~rogram

Stealing sister-in-law wants back close relationship with brother ~...
same size).
Sharlene bas been stealing from
her parents for years, but they
choose to ignore it. My in-laws say
it's more important to keep peac~ in
the family than to worry about possessions. So last week, I wrote Sharlene a letter saying we need to
bridge this pp and work through
our differences.
When Sharlene received my letter, she telephoned my husband, in
tears, refusing to take any responsibility for what she has done. She
focused all her anger on me. My
father-in-law says she is jealous of
the relationship I have with my husb'and. Before we married, she and
her brother were extremely close.

Ann
Landers

,.,.. s,...

199S, Lot Aftrckl

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Mar~ SpdicMc.

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: I have discovered that my sister-in-law, "Sharlene," has been stealing from us. My
husband defended her and refused to
believe it until I presented him with
the evidence. We went over to her
house and demanded that she give
back the things she took -- pictures,
videos and even some of my underwear (we 're nol anywhere near the

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich

Longevity is "in" these days and
among !hose enjoying life longer is
Mrs. Garnet Ervine who will
observe her 95th binhday.
In celebration of the occasion a
public open house will he held from
2 10 4 p.m., this Sunday, Sept. 29, at
Garnet's home in Racine. Cards will
reach .~r at P.O. Box 547, Racine.
Rod Pullins has given me a wellpreserved copy of the program dealing with the second annual minstrel
show sponsored by the Meigs Counly Chapter of the Izaak Walton
League of America, Inc.
Rod got the program in with
other items while attending an auction--an out of cou11ty one yet.
The show, produced and directed
by 1he late Ed H. Condon, was
staged at the Middlepon High
School on Feb. 12,1947, and at the
Pomeroy Junior High School on
Feb. 13, 1947--almost 50 years ago.
Rod says he enjoyed looking at
the ads placed by businesses in the
program book. Most of them aren't
around today. A lot of the cast members are not around anymore either.
The show was staged in the traditional minstrel show fashion and
interlocutor was Lee Smith. Premier
end men were Charles McMaster
and Eddie Romine with Polly Morris, Jr., John Slivka, Claude Grimm,
Kenny Sauer, Trefl Schoenleb and
Brad Maag taking the other end men
roles.
Ballad singers were Aaron Kelton, Charles Stanley, Ben Philson.
Grafton Stout, and Frank Cheesebrew and Charles Wildermuth, AI
Reuter, Hany Wehrung and Ben
Neutzling made up the Old Timers'
Quartet.
Lillian Sticff, who could knock
the ears off a piano, was accompanist and making up the show band
were Paul Haplonstall, violin;
Chester Tannehill, trombone; Paul
Davis, drums; George Dallas, trumpet; Dan White, trumpet; William
Beaver, guitar, and Bill Anderson,

Now that I'm the No. I woman in
his life, she resents it.
My in-laws and my husband are
100 percent supportive, but I don't
know how to get past this rift with
Sharlene. I don't trust her and probably never will, but I don't want to
cut her out of our lives completely.
How would you handle this? -Stumped in San Bernardino
Dear Stumped: You have offered
Sharlene the opportunity to be pan
of your lives in spite of the fact that
you know she has been stealing
from you . I'd say that's pretty
darned generous. If she rejects it, the
onus is on her.
Invite her to your home soon
(lock up the valuables), and hope for

shi

the best. If
helps herself to your
pantyhose, tell your husband that
from now on you get together elsewhere. (Sounds to me like Sharlene
cou.ld use some professional help.)
Dear Ann Landers: My wife and
I are writing in response to "Too
Well-Rested and Would Love to Be
Exhausted." She said you print only
letters from people who get too
much sex or not enough. She asked,
"Aren't there any married couples
who enjoy sex with each other and
aren't out looking for someone more
exciting?"
We can answer her question
because we are one of those couples.
The secret is that first, you have to
be in love with the person you

many. Then, you must keep the
lines of communication open. Too
many couples don't really talk to
each other. It's easier to turn on the
TV. Do ihings together, even if it's
just the dishes. Husbands, take your
wives away for a weekend. A suburban motel is fine if that's all you can
afford. It will be fun .
. My wife and I have been married
for nearly 18 years. and we have
made love almost every night (or
day) -- even when I didn't think I
Jell like it. You would be surprised
what a little tender touching and
kissing can do to get you in the
mood. Somelimes, it takes more
energy than you think you have, but
it's worth the effon. This is our

secret fonnula for a successful mail:
riage. Spread the word, Ann. --Jacto
sonville, Fla.
~~

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Send questions to Ann Lao;

den, Creaton Syndicate, 5777 W:
Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los'
Angeles, Calli. 90045

Take the plunge and bathe the birds this fall
ByJEN BLAND

saxophone. Quite a group of talented
musicians, I'd say.
Among those presenting specialty numbers were Alice Nease,
Tommy Reuter, Manha Jane Karr,
Martha Terrell, Hazel Hawkins,
Chet Haddox and Clifford Beaver.
Hope you enjoy a look at the
past.
And about the future of "show
biz."
The Big Bend Minstrel Association is in the process of preparing to
ready a fall musical under the sponsorship, again, of the Meigs Division of the American Hean Association and the River Bend Arts Council.
Some new talent is expected to be
presenled along with many of the
regulars who appear in the musicals.
Sandy lannerelli, even though
she is no longer serving on the local
hean association board, has graciously agreed to serve as chainnan
for the board in handling the many
details that must take place in the
background for the show lo get on
stage and Mary Wise, capable president of the arts council, who has
"been there, done lhat" will take care
of background details for lhe council.
II helps so much to have people
like Sandy and Mary who know the
ropes in charge of helping get it all
together. Busy Jennifer Sheets will
be accompanist. It's amazing that
_Jenny is never too busy 10 jump in
and help carry out these projects.
The show according to plans will
be staged on Friday and Saturday
following Thanksgiving, a traditional time for the musical.
And the Cash Explosion Show of
the Ohio Lottery will be taped at the
University of Rio Grande on Oct.
25. And here I've been thinking that
we were]l't really a pan of the state
in Southeastern Ohio. Do keep smilmg.

CHESHIRE -- Hunting and Fishing Day observance for children 6 10

PARKERSBURG
John
Elswick, speaker a1 Labors with
Christ Church, Parkersburg, Friday
and Saturday, 7 p.m.; Sunday, 6 p.m.
Sunrise of Chester, singing.
SUNDAY
RACINE -- Homecoming at the
Eagle Ridge Communily Church.
Sunday, Sunday school, 10 a.m.; ·
carry-in dinner at noon, afternoon '
service at I :30 p.m. with special
singing.

COSI on Wheels coming to
·Meigs County Public Library
What has a snare drum, alarm
clock and wheels?
It's COS! on Wheels -- that's 1he
center of Science and Industry -and it will be at the Meigs County
Public Library, Saturday, Oct. 5,
from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Library walls will come alive
with the soubds of science when the
"Good Vibrations" show arrives-pan of COSI'a traveling science progrJIII called COS! On Wheels.
"Good Vibrations" stimulates
learl)ing and exploration_ in the
exciling world of the science of
sound. The COSI prog11111 allows
children to explore the physics of
ho'w sound is procluc:ed, transmitted.
aniplifted and reflected.
Meip County Library pations,
students, teachen and volun~n
can learn how the four componeiiU
of sound - pitch, rhythm. volume
and timbre • are manipullled to

make different sounds and types of
music. Several students are invited
to do "digital sampling" - making a
computer recording of different
instruments such as a trombone,
snare drum, electric guitar and even
human voice.
Through the suppon of the E. W.
Ingram-While Casile fund of The
Columbus Foundation, COSI is able
to provide a unique science learning
experience for Meigs County
Library patrons and sludents. The
COS! On Wheels program travels
throughout Ohio and surrounding
states to libraries, schools, and special events to funher first-hand, seience leii'Jiing experiences--COS!
style.
For more information about the
procrarn, residents may contact Ruth
Powers, library director, at 992-

5813.

SHADE -- Homecoming services, Sunday, Graham Chapel,
Shade, Russell Spencer and the
Gospel Tones. Dinner at noon; afternoon program at 1:30; John Elswick
preaching.

TUESDAY
ALFRED -- The Orange Township Board of Township Trustees
will meet in regular session Tuesday,
at 7:30 p.m. a1 the home of Clerk
Osie Follrod.

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MONDAY
POMEROY -- Meigs County
Veterans Service Commission, 7:30
p.m . Monday, Veterans Service
Office, Mulberry Ave. Pomeroy.

POMEROY -- Open house Tuesday, 6:30-8 :30 p.m. at the Meigs
County Recorder's Office in the
Meigs County Courthouse. Open
house will showcase recent renovations to the office.

Accepting
Appointments

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WeAre Now

KEITH ASHLEY
Keith Ashley of Rock Springs
was a finalist in the Ohio Stale
Gtange talent contest held at the
Ohio State Fair and now advances to
the National Grange talent finals .
He earned this honor by winning
first place in the southeast district
finals in June in the adult division of
the piano solo competition. He
played a Chopin Etude Opus 10, No.
I 2. He then won first place in his

Society
scrapbook

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John F. Wiltz, M.D.

o/ictory 'Baptist Cliurcft

Practicin1 General Pediatric•
And Adolescent Mtdicint

SepteTTiber 29 to October 4
Sun.10:00 am &amp; 11:00 am &amp; 9{iglitfy 7:00pm
'})r, Cummons preadiing

in a[[services

Dr. Bruce D. Cummons is the founder of tbe Massillon Baptist Temple
of Massillon, Ohio, and pastored that church for forty-five years . He
also founded the massillon Baptisl College and 1he Massillon Christian
School, and served as president of the college and administrator of the
Christian School for twenty-two years . Upon resigning the pastorate of
the Massillon Baptist Temple to enter the field of evangelism.

Special Mwic

e

A -nursery will be available

Victory Baptist Church
Pastor James Keesee
525 N~ Second SL • Middleport, Ohio 45760

CaD for Transporatlon: 992-6772

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Wt Acctpt A••ilnmtnt From
Private lnsuronct And Mtdicaid

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Public Notice

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PUBLIC NOTICE

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111t11rUy, October 11,
''"· 8t 10:00 a.m, the
Home N8tlonal Bank will
offer for •••• at pulltlc
auction on 11M lhnk partdng
1Dt 11M foUDWing:
liD Fofll Bronco 8et'tllt

.,,

THE

HILDREN'S
CLINIC

HERE FoR YouR CmLD WHEN You NEED Us

When using public reltrooma, nearty al ac:lu«s eay they .llways waah their handl.
When obeerved, the percentage II mucn k)wer.
Percem.ge ol IJ.8. Mtutte who•.•
•

say they wash their henda
( 1,oo.t eurwylld)

• re~~·~~rved)

Men
Women
Total
Percentage of people obaerved w•llhlng

their h•nd• In public reetrooma

By cHy •nd gender

93%

•M•n
lS Women

B9%
78%

74%

Chicago

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calling Margie West or Lee Lee.
West Ohio Conference UMW
Annual Day will be held in Columbus Nov. 14 with several Racine
UMW members to attend.
Meetings at the church on Monday mornings are continuing for
sewing and craft making in preparation for the bazaar. All church members are invilcd 10 panicipate.
The nominating committee comprised of Chris Hill, Etta Mae Hill
and Alice Wolfe will meet 10 elect
the slale of officers to be presented
at the November meeting.

Refreshments were served by
Lois Bell and Marilyn Bogard. Get
well cards were signed during the
socializing.
'
Next meeting will be Oct. 21,
7:30p.m.

Atlanta

San Francleoo New Orteane New Yor1l

Amanda Brinker of Pomeroy and
Jamie "Jake" Kennedy of Harrisonville announce the binh of their
daughter. Sariah Lee Ann Brinker,
born Aug. 28 al Holzer Medical
Center.
The infant weighed seven
pounds. I 0 ounces and was 22 inches long. Maternal grandparents are
Butch and Penny Brinker of
Pomeroy, and maternal great-grand parents are Mr. and Mn. John Bacon
of Cincinnati, Mildred Hubbard and
Carl Hubbard of Syracuse.
Paternal grandfather is Perry
Kennedy of Harrisonvi lie, and the
paternal great-grandmothers are
Margaret Kennedy of Pomeroy and
Jane Williams of Langsville,

w~

at the Ohio State Grange talent
division.
At the end of the competition. the finals at the Ohio State Fair in the
panel of judges chose Ashley as the Ashley family was Whitney Ashley
most outstanding in the talent com- of Star Jr. Grange in the piano solo
petition and advanced him to the division (ages 10-14) who perNational Grange talent finals. Ash- fonned a Chopin Prelude.. She is the
piano student of Sharon Hawley of
ley also received a cash award.
This will he the founh time thai Middlepon and was coached for the
Ashley has been in the national competition by her father.
Rachel Ashley won the instrufinals having competed in 1975.
1977,.1986 and I993 -- the last time mental solo division (teenage divihaving won first place nationally al sion) with a saxophone solo,
Cleveland. This time he will auend "Presto." She is a member of the
the finals in November at Spokane, band at Meigs High School. She also
won the vocal solo (teen division)
Wash.
Ashley studied piano locally with the song "I Have Dreamed" by
under Ann Johnson of Middlepon, Rodgers and Hammerstein. She was
LaVerne Powell. of Racine, Ruth accompanied and coached by her
Stearns of Racine, the late Bea Kuhn falher. She is a member of Racine
of Pomeroy and the late Gerald Grange.
Whilney and Emily Ashley won
Hoffner of Pomeroy. He has acted as
pianisl for many local and state the vocal duet division (ages 10-14)
with the song "Can You Feel the
organizations and local weddings.
Ashley is a 21 -year veteran Love Tonight". They were accompateacher in the Gallipolis City nied and coached by their father.
Schools. Besides his private piano They are members of Star Jr. Grange
training, he received musical train- of Salem Center.
ing in the now-defunct marching
Receiving secon~ places in the
band program at Racine High state were Rachel and Whitney AshSchool, and the Ohio University ley in the vocal duet (adult division)
Marching Band, and is now a lifer in with "Alexander's Ragtime Band" .
Other Meigs County winners
Civil War re-enacting. ·
Also winning in thei,r categories i~ded Constance White in the

adult vocal solo division singing "I
Pledge Allegiance"; Kyle While in
the vocal solo division singing "This
Land is Your Land"; and Chelsea
Montgomery, daughter of Larry and
Linda Montgomery. in the miscellaneous category (ages 10- 14) with
her clogging.

SARIAH BRINKER

DAV observed birthdays

were
Quancrly
birthdays
observed when Chester Council 323,
lasl monlh of what people had 10 say Daughters of America, met recently
with 89 percent of female fans .
Diny hands are an extremely about their hand-washing habits. Of at the hall.
Celebrating birthdays were Laura
common way to spread diseases, 1,004 adults, 94 percent claimed
Nice,
Lora Damewood, Mary
ranging from common colds to a they always wash liP afler using
Holter,
Jean Welsh, Elizabeth
variety of bugs that cause diarrhea public restrooms.
Hayes.
A
birthday cake baked by
and other digestive unpleasantness.
Joann
Baum
was serv~d. A potluck
The survey, which had a margin
In restaurants, one food handler with
supper
was
held.
dirty hands can make dozens of of error of plus or minus 5 percent,
Goldie Frederick, council,
also found that about 80 percent
patrons sick.
at the meeling which
presided
contend they wash after changing a
opened
in
ritualistic form with the
People probably know better. diaper and before eating or handling
pledges,
scripture
and singing of the
Winhlin also did a telephone survey food .
National Anthem.
It was reported that Leota Ferrell
suffered a stroke in Georgia. Jean
Frederick and Ruth Stethem were
source: Wlr1hln

The new UMW structure to stan
in January was explained. Opal Diddle and Lee Lee reponed on the District UMW Annual Day meeting
which they auended in Logan Sept.
21. Lee was installed as continuing
newsletter editor.

Brinker birth announced

Dirty hand•

reported home from the hospital. A
card of than.ks was read from Scott,
Darlene and Kallyn Frederick for a
baby gift.
Esther Smilh and Joann Baum
were esconcd to the altar where
Esther Smith and Goldie Frederick
read poems and presented gifts to
the honorees from the good of the
order committee. Helen Wolfe sang
"I Believe" to Smith, and "In the
Garden" to Baum.
Lora Damewood, who is moving
to Springfield, was presented cardr
from the members.
A silent auction will be held at
the next meeting.

----News policy---In an effon to provide our reader- aniclcs in the society section must
ship with currenl news, the Gallipo- be submilted within 30 daH of
lis Daily Tribune and The Daily occurrence. All birthdays musf be
Sentinel will not accept weddings submitted wilhin 42 da'}ff of the
after 60 days from the date of lhe occurrence.
All material submitted for publievent.
All club meetings and other news cation is subjecl lo editing.

Send Us llonr

favorite Recipe
THE POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
will be publUhing a

HOLIDlJll
COOKBOOK

.•

RECOGNITION
Randy King of Pomeroy was one
of live to receive excellence in
instruction awards .presented by
Hocking College at a luncheon at
Quality Inn Hocking Valley. The
recipients received plaquts and
checks for $1,000 each.

~

(304) 675-4107

was

Included;,, the cookbook wiU be recipes from Mason,
Meigs &amp; Gallia Co1tnty residents, at rw cltarge.

CHATI'ER CLUB
Isabelle Couch of Pomeroy was
hostess for a recent meeting of the
Chatter Club.
Dinner was served and games
were played. Gifts in celebration of
binhdays and anniversaries were
,
exchanged.
Plans were made for a dinner at
the "Outback" in Parkersburg.

•'

Coming%

The survey was sponsored by the
microbiology society, the country 's
largest organization of microbe
experts, and Bayer Corp., the aspirin
maker. The ligures were gathered by
Winhlin Worldwide. a survey firm ,
and released Monday atthe society's
annual infectious-disease conference.
Among the results:
-The country's diniest hands
may be in New York City. Just 60
percent of those using restrooms in
Penn Station washed up afterwards .
-In Chicago, hands are reasonably clean, relatively speaking. The
watchers saw 78 percent take the
time to wash after using the bathroom at the Navy Pier.
-Seventy-one percent washed
up at a casino in New Orleans, 69
percent at Golden Gate Park in San
Francisco and 64 percent at a Braves
game in Atlanta.
-Women are cleaner than men.
The survey found 74 percent wash
after using the toilet, compared with
61 percent of men. Only in New
York and New Orleans did men use
soap and water slightly more often
than women.
- The most slovenly men were at
the Braves game. Just 46 peicent of
the guys stopped to wash, compared

,
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16 at the Izaak Wallon Farm on
Scout Camp Road, 8-3 p.m. Free.
Lunch will be provided.

The latest public hea~th
worry: Dirty hands

meetilll! whicb opened with leader attended the Festival of Sharing
and members repeating the litany on Ingathering at The Plains Methodist
Church . .They delivered five boxes
the UMW Purpose.
The secretary's report was given of school health and layette kits for
by Chris Hill. A thank you letter was the Festival of Sharing to be Sept. 28
read from the Racine Fall Festival in Springfield. The kits are for needy
Committee for the monetary dona- children.
It was noted that since a di'nner
tion and one from former member,
will
be served to Delta Kappa
Lucille Cardone, for her going away
Gamma
sorority Oct. 28, 6:30 p.m.,
gift. Sbe is now residing in Orlando.
Oara Mat Sargent gave the treasur- the next UMW meeting will be Oct.
er's repon and the penny fund col- 21. An Rlcction Day dinner was
planned for Nov. 5 and the annual
lection was taken.
It
noted that Opal Diddle, Christmas bazaar was set for Dec. 7
Martha Dudding, Etta Mae Hill , in the church sociai room . Craft
Margie West and Lee Lee recently tables may be reserved for $I 0 by

Ashley ·advances to Grange talent finals

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-----~Community calendar----The Community Calendar is
published u a free service to nonprofit aroups wishing to announce
meet1D1 and special events. The
caleadar Is not designed to pro_., sales or fund raisen of any
type. Items are printed as space
pennia 111111 cannot be guaranteed
to run a specllk number of days.
SATURDAY
STIVERSVILLE -- Revival,
Stiversville Community World of
Faith Church, 7:30p.m., located on
County Road 31. Lois Hoshor,
speaker.

on women•s issues presented to Racine UMW

By DANIEL Q, HANEY
AP Medical Editor
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - A
group of researchers has discovered
a diny little secret: Millions of
Americans routinely don't wash
their hands after using the john.
The situation has gotten so bad,
contends the American Society for
Microbiology, that it has teamed up
with a drug company to teach people
how and when to wash.
. "Hand washing in this country
has become all but a lost art," said
Dr. Michael T. Osterholm, the Min.nesota state epidemiologist and head
of the society' s public health commitfee.
•
The unsettling news was gath.ered by watching people in public
restrooms. The researchers hid in
stalls or pretended to comb their hair
while observing 6,333 men and
women do their business in live
cities last month.
The public health campaign,
dubbed "Operation Clean Hands,"
includes such tips as: Use warm running water and rub your hands
together for at least 10 to 15 seconds
- about how long it takes to sing
one chorus of "Yankee Doodle
Dandy," Osterholm notes.
Another hint use soap.

The Rockford Register Star

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Chris Hill presented the program · titution. Members expressed con''The Season is Now" at the Septem- cern a\lout the issues ' and the
ber meeting of the Racine United women and children from around
Methodist Women.
the world who are involved .
Two silk saris were displayed on
The program leader described _a
a table representing the silks worn woman of many seasons from New
by women from East and Southeast Delhi, dressed in a red silk sari
Asia.
"shining as a symbol of hope
Scripture was read from Ecclesi- through all the hours and days and
astes, the well known "For every- misery of her life."
thing there is a season and a time for
"Kum Ba Yah" and "The Voice of
every matter under heaven."
God is Calling" were ~ung by memListed as concerns of women bers. The program concluded with
from 40 different countries in Asia all members reading a Ne_w ·Delhi
and Southeast Asia were population, prayer.
~ealth, environment and child prosLee Lee presided at the business

Dear Jacksonville: Consider i!
spread. I can tell that you and yo"!:
wife have a healthy relationshiP!
Congratulations, A good marriage
these days is not a gift -- it's aii
achievement. The key is in your let.
ter -- dg things together, keep the,
lines of communication open and
accommodate one another, even i(
you don 't feel like it.

Birdwatchers have known
for years that birdbaths attract
the most beautiful bathers flocks of cardinals, ·chickadees, robins or blue jays that ·
add colorful splendor to a
back yard.
In fact, "back-yard bird- '
ing" - feeding and providing water for birds - is one
of the most popular hobbies
in the United States.
Birdbaths attract types of
birds that might not frequent
feeders, says Stephen W,
Kress, an ornithologist and
author of "The Bird Garden"
(Dorling Kindersley; $24.95).
"Almost all birds bathe.
Therefore you can attract
almost anything," Kress says.
"I think they enjoy (bathing
together). If one bird is
bathing, it attracts others."
Birds bathe regularly to
keep mites from getting into
their feathers and keep oil
glands primed, says Cathy
Mitchell, owner of the Wild
Bird Center, a Washington,
D.C., franchise of a national
string of stores that sell bird
baths, houses and feeders.
Also, "birds need to
drink," Mitchell says. "Some
birds like to wash !heir food
BATHING BIRDS • Blrda bathe regularly to keep mites from getting Into their futhera and keep oil
c w
d
glands
primed. Moat birdbaths hold 1 to 2 gallons of water such •• the one above. Water Jn the birdbath
ro' lls are hvery c1bean, an basin should not be deeper than 3 Inches. HIt Is, place e rock In the middle for birds to perch on
you see t em was mg nuts
•
and seeds."
birdbaths.
such as plastic, metal, ceramics, range from $5 to $200. Fountains
Neighborhood birds seem to
Here arc some things to consid- 1erra cotta, concrete and concrete- can cost $100to $SOO. '
remember their favorite baths and er when drawing a bath for the plaster, are used to construct the
A good, year-round birdbath is
migrating birds look for wat~r as birds.
_
baths.
one made of plastic, which is Jess
they head to winter vacation spots. Where to get birdbaths
Most birdbaths hold I to 2 gal- likely to crack in the winter. Con"Moving water is more visually Any sto~ that has a lawn and ~ar- Ions of water. Water in the birdbath crete birdbaths can he used in the
apparent, and the noise of it will den s~ct10n hk~ly stocks a hmited basin should not be deeper than 3 summer, but should be stored durhelp to attract birds," Mitchell says. selection of birdbaths. Wal-Man inches. If it is. place a rock in the ing the winter.
·
middle for How to maintain
"A fountain is good. Birds seem to sells plasuc
like misters and drippers a lot.
ones that sn
"Almost all birds bathe. There- birds
to
Keep the bath full daily, because
Winter is a particularly impor- on
the fore you can attract almost anything," perch on.
birds are more likely to visit a bath
tant time to fill birdbaths.
ground.
Stephen W. Kress, an omltho/oglst,
Birdthat always has water.
say•. "/ think they enjoy (bathing baths are
Clean the bath once a week with
"It's almost more imponant to Hardware
provide water in the wintenime stores also togetiMr). II one bird Is bsthlng, It designed to a-garden hose. For a real dirty bath,
than food," she says. "There are ' offer limited llttrect• others."
attract all use a water-bleach solution and a
heated birdbaths, and birdbath selections of
types of brush.
heaters to keep the water from birdbaths.
birds.
Place a raised birdbath ncar
freezing."
What to look for
Some features attract specific vari- shelter such as trees or brush, of by
The variety of baths available
There are three main types of eties. Misters, for instance, attract a birdfeeder. However, birdbaths
can boggle the mind. There are up baths: ones that stand in the yard, robins and hummingbirds.
that rest on the ground should be
to 60 choices of hanging, ground, hanging ones and•those that lie on
Cost is detennined by the type placed away from brush, where
standing, concrete, plastic or heated lhe ground. A variety of materials, of bath you are looking for, bu1 can hungry cats can hide .

Friday,~ernber27,1996

The recipes will be catego1Ued cu follow•:

Appeti:ser•IBeveragea • Bread/Craw
• Cak6•1Pie• &amp;: Cookies • Pork • Poultry
e

• Salads &amp; Vegetables
· e Soup• and Sandwichea
::~d. 5spd, PS, PB. stereocass, custom

$6995

81 CHEV BLAZER- 4 Dr, 4x4, Tahoe Pkg,
$
4.3 V6, auto, loaded with all options.......... .......

10, 900
8
a~t~~~=~~~~~:.~.~~·-.~~:.~~~: . . . . ... ..~1 0,900
4
'~!'~'!~!~ .:ac!:;_.'..~~: ~.~·..... 56,995
=~=~:-~~~:-~~~:.~~':.~·. ~~:..... . . . 54,995
11
~o;:.~~~ • .-.:.~.~:..:.~:-~.~:.~i-~·.... ..... 55,995
3
'!t~~~ ~~~~~~. ~-~~- ..:.~: ... ~13,500
80 FORD PICKUP XLT LARIAT:4x4, auto, . ss
alr, new tires, loaded with all options ............. ,... , 995

.

••nd

_Bring your recipe· into OIU' oJfke or
it to:
Holiday Cookbook
c/o The Daily SeDlinel
Ill Court Street, Pomeroy, Oh 45769

Pletue, inclade your name orad
phone # Tllith recipe.

Deadline for aU recipes
il October 31, 1996

Your LMt Stop c::ar Shop

RIVERSIDE MOTORS
AcniU from aup.r Amarlcli In '-Oy
Jlmnty Deem
114112 UIO
Cecil Bo.gl~t

from ........ ...,ttme.
(II 27.

ao: (10) 2, 4; ...

_________________________

....._

•

)

___ ____

...___

~-- -

--·-

�l.
•

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~rlday,

Friday, September 27, 1998 , .
0

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•

September 27, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
10

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-•.-•
•

0

0

....'

Church Directory

Pomeroy,
·Middleport

&amp; VIcinity
Garage sate, September 30th ,
Octaber 2 &amp; 3, formall y Jo·s Gifl
Shop in Syracuse, 3 !amity, raJn or
shrne , Bea r- cat (crystal tree)
sca nner. what -nots, pictures ,
sheet sets . gtau what -not cabi net, children &amp; orcnm-up cloThrng

I

Church of Chnst

ro

Ootll'dl or cutA
212 W. Moin Sl
Puror: Neil Proodr001
Sunday School . 9:30 a.m.
WoBhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdnelday Senicea- 7 p.m.

" - : Jamea Miller
Sunday Scbool - t0:30 a.m.
Evenint -7:30p.m.
Wednelda,Servicea 730

A ss embly of God
lJtMriJ ...a :abiJ of God

P.O. Box 467, Duddina Lane
Muon, W.Va.
Pulo&lt;: Neil Tennanr
Servicea- 10:00 a.m. and 7
-1

,.

510 Onnr St., Middleport
Sunday oc:hool - 9:30 a.m.
Wmhip- II a.m. and? p.m.
Wednelday Senico- 7 p.m.

free Will Bapllol Cllun:k
Asll Srreer, Middleport
Pastor: Let Hayman
Sunday Service -7:30p.m.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wednesdoy Scnice-7:30 p.m.
Rulload Flnl Bapllll Cban:b
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy t:Jn1 Bapllol
Pasror: Paul Stinson
F.asl Main St.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Flror Snalh.,. 8a!"lll
418n Pomeroy Poke
Paslor: E. l..ounar O'Bryant
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servicea -7:00p.m.
F1nl Bapllll Ooon:b
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St, Middlepon

Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Worship - IO:IS a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

RadH F1nl Bapllll
Pastor: Rev. Lawrence T. Haley
Youtll Putor: Aaron Young
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
WoBhip - 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.
Silver Rua Baplllt
Pastor: Bill Uule

Suoday School - IO.m.
Worship · llo.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.
Mr. Uaioa Baplllt
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre

Sunday School-9:45 o.m.
Evening-6:30p.m.

Wednesdoy Services - 6:30p.m.
Belblebem Bapllst
Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Berdine

Wor&gt;hip · 9:30a.m. Sunday
Bible Soudy -7:00p.m. Wedroc:sdoy
Oltl Deibel Free Will Bapllll Cburcb
28601 St Rt 7, Middleport
Sunday School - 10 o.m.
Evening-7:30p.m.
Thursday Services - 7:30

llllbld&lt; Baplbl Cbrcb
Sr. Rt 143 jusr orr Rt 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - lta.m., 6 p.m.
WeOOesday Services -? p.m.

Vktory Baptbt lad&lt;peodaal
~l!i N. 2od Sr. Middlepon
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Woohip - IO..m.. 1 p.m.
Wednesdoy S&lt;"'ices . 1 p.m.
Follb Baptbl Cbrc:b
Railroad Sr., Mason
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II o.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesdoy Sc"'ices - 7 p.m.
FioreJIRooBaplbt
Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School- 10 o.m.
WODhip - 11 a.m.

ML Moria~ Baplbl
Founh &amp; Moin So .. Middleport
P.aor: Rev. Oilben Craig, Jr.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - I0:45 o.m.
AallqaiiJ lltlpllll

Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Worship - 10:45 o.m.
llouBday S&lt;rvicco - 7:30p.m.
Rotlucl Froe Will Baplllt
Salem St.
Pastor: R... Poul Taylor
Sunday School - 10 o.m.
Eveni,. - 1 p.m.
Wednadooy Servicea . 7 p.m.
Catt10I1c
Sacnd Hart CoiMk Qtll'dl
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pl!tor: Rev. Walter E HeiftZ
Sao. Con 4:4S-S: ISp.m.; M-- 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -S:..S-9.15 a.m.,

Triaii}Cb....U
Second .t lynn, Pomeroy
Putor: Rev. Roland Wildmon
Sunday scloool ond wor&gt;hip IO:l!i

G)

M~

Tappers PlaiDs Sl. Paul
Puror: Sharon Housman
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wor5hip - 10 a.m.
Tuesday S&lt;rviccs - 7:30p.m.

GnKC Episcopal Cburcb
326 E. Moin Sr., Pomeroy
Rector: Rev. D. A. duPianlier
Holy Eucharisland
Sunday School 10:30 a.m.

Sundoy School - II o.m.
Worship - IO..m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday S&lt;"'icea. 7 p.m.

Coffee hour followina

Mlddkpoa I Oooardo of Clu1ol
Srh and Main
Pastor: AI Hortaon
Youth Minisrer: Bill Fruier
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdnelday S&lt;"'icea - 7 p.m.

Children's church - 10:35 a.m. Youth 6 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service - 7 p.m.

Beorwodlow Rlda&lt; Oo..U of Christ
Pastor: Jack Col~grovc
Sunday School -9.30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 o.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesdoy Service&amp; · 6:30p.m.

Sunday School 9:30a.m.

-

.,.,..

Pastor: Keith Rader

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
WoBhip - 11 a.m.

Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush

fol'fiiR•a

Worstlip - J t a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service ·7:30 p.m.

Zloa[OollJ'do of Oortst
Pom&lt;roy,llarrisonville Rd. (Ro.143)

R• of Sbaroa lloliafll Olun:k
lnding Creek Rd., Rutlond
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school- 9:30a.m.

Paslor: Roger WaliOn

Sunday worship -7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesdoy Services - 7 p.m.

Wednesday prayer meering- 7 p.m.

Putor: Charles Neville

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

llouBday Scrvicea- 6:30p.m.
Bulb (Middkpor1)
Pulor: Vemapyc Sullivon
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
WOBhip- 10:30 o.m.

•

Pl.. Oro•• Bible Iloilo. . Cbun:•

1/2 mile orr Rl. 32!i
Putor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneoday S&lt;rvice - 7:30p.m.

Rutlaad Cllun:~ or 0oJ1st
Poslor: Eugene E. Underwood
Sunday School- 9:30o.m.
WoBhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

HyHII Rua Hollaaa Oourck

Bnodforol Clouda of OoJ1st
Comer or St. Rt 124 .t lkoodbury Rd.
Evanaelial: Keith Cooper
Yourh MiniSier: Micboel Teoaorden
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:00 o.m., 10:30 o.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesdoy Services -7:00p.m.

Lorurol Clltr F.-.. Melbodbl Cburch
Pastor. Peter Tremblay
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
WDBhip - 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesdoy S&lt;rvice - 7:00p.m.

Polllfi'Oy
Puror: Robert E. Robiason
Sunday School - 9:1S o.m.
Worship - 10:30 o.m.
Bible Srudy Tuesday - 10 o.m.

Pallor: Roben Manley

Rock Sl'liii(IS
Pastor: Kt11h Rader
Sunday School. 9,15 a.m.
Wonhif. 10 o.m.
Yourh Fellowshop, Sunday- 6 p.m.
Rullud
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Tlouooday S&lt;rvices - 7 p.m.
Sole.. c.....

Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:4j o.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7:30p.m.

Rullaod Commuaolly Cllun:k

.=..

llkllery Hills o •
of Clarlst
Ev110geli11 Joaeph B. Hoskins

Roy

McCany

Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School · 9: I5 a.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Sunday Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedroc:sdoy S&lt;rvicea - 7 p.m.

Wonbip- 10:15 o.m.
SaoWYIIIe
Sunday School - 10 o.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

De Iller
Pastor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening -6:30p.m.
llouBday Scrtice - 6:30 p.m.

Bethuy
Past9r: Kenncrh Boker
Sundiy School· 10 a.m.
WoBhip - 9 a.m.
Wednesday S&lt;rvices- 10 a.m.

Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Janice Danner

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday ~rvices -7:30p.m.

J.,upyille Cbrlstlaa Churc:b
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
WMhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30 p.m.

Cormel

ne C~urch of }HU
Cbrbr of utter-Day Soiata
St. Rt. I(,(), 446-624 7 "' 446-7486
Sunday Schooll0:20-11 o.m.
Relief Sociery/Priesrhood II :OS-12:00 noon

Hemlock OroYO Cburch
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school - 10:30 o.m.
Worship- 9:30 o.m., 7 p.m.

Sacramenl Service 9- JO:lS a.m .
Homemaking meeting, I at Thun. - 7 p.m.

llltdsvllle c~.,... of c~rtst
Pasror: Philip Stunn
Sunday School: 9:30 a:m.
Worship S&lt;rvice: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Sludy, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Lutheran
Pine Grove
PasiDI: Dawn Spalding
Worship-9:00a.m.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.

Hor1ftll'll c•urc11 or Ckrtst ho
Cbrlstlaa Ualoa
Hartford, W.Va.
Sunday School . 11 o.m.
Wonbip · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneoday Service&amp; · 7:30p.m.

East Lela~

Pulor: Rev. James S.Ucrficld

Pastor: Brian Harkness

St. Paul l.ulbcraa Cborcb

CooiYIIIe Uolled l\lelbodbt rartsb
Pulor: Helen Kline
Cool•llle Ooun:k
Main &amp; Firrh Sr.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
WO&lt;Ship - 9a.m.
Tucsdoy S&lt;rvicea- 7 p.m.

United MethodiSt

Sunday School -9:45a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Onbam Ualled Mclloodbl
Worship- 9:30 o.m. (hi&amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 41h Sun)
Wednesday S&lt;r\&lt;icc - 7:30p.m.

Ratlaad Ciourck of God
Puror: Raody Burr
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worahip - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesdoy Services - 1 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spirea

Syrac... firll Ooor&lt;b or God
Apple and S&lt;cond Sis.

Suoday School - 9:30a.m.
Worshop · 10:30 a.m.. 1 p.m .
TlouBday Services - 7 p.m.

Putor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evening ScrvK:ta- 7:30p.m.

Mtlp Cooperative Portsb
No~btasl Cluller

Wednesdoy Services - 7:30p.m.

Alrnd
Pastor: Sharon Hausmljn

Cburc:b of God of Prophecy
O.J. White Rd. orr So. Ro. 1ro
Pastor: PJ . Chapmon
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Sunday School- 9:30 o.m.
Worshop - 11 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Worship . 9a.m.
Sunday School- 10 o.m.
lloursdoy Scnicea - 7 p.m.

J-

Portlaod Flnl Ooarc• ofllle Nuarcac
Puror: Mork Matson
Woohip - 10:30 p.m.
Sunday School · 6 p.m.
Wednesdoy Sen~ic.. - 1 p.m.

Cbrbllaa Fello.,..lp Cealcr
Salem St., Rurland
PastOf: Roben E. Musser
·. Sunday School - 10 o.m.
Wonhip - 11 :IS o.m., 7 p.m..
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Sunday ~I · 10:30 a.m.
LoaaBottom
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
WoBhip- 10:30 o.m.

Pastor: Robert Buber
Sundoy School • 9a.m.
Worstlip- . 10a.~. , 7 p.m.
Wednesdoy S&lt;rvoce • 7 p.m.

COISftiUCftOI
Realdentlal - Commercial

Carleton Jalfnlooemlaolloaal Ckurck
Kingsbury Rood

Roofing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downapoute
Complete Remodeling

Pastor: Jeff Smith

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip Service 10:30 a.m . .

No Sunday or Wednesdoy Nishi Services

Decka - Bltttroome - Kitchens - Siding
35 VNrs Experience

freedom Gospel Mlslloo
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31

(614) 992·5041

Pastor: Rev. Roger Willford

Fallb FuU Gospel Cbar&lt;h
LongBollom
Paslor:

Stc~e

Wblle's Cbapel Wesleyaa·
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30a.m.
WcdllCsday Service - 7 p.m.

'l'llc Belleven' Fellowsblp Mlablry
New lime Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev ." MargareiJ. Robiruon
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

Suoday, 2:30p.m.
llurlsotrvUie CommuaUy Church
Sunday - 9:30a.m. and 1 p.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.
Eadll... llouse or Pnyer
(al Burlinaham church off Roure 33)
Pulor: Robert Vance
Sunday worship - I0 a.m.
-Wednesday service - 6 :~ p.m.

Mltldleport Commoulty Cburc•
575 Peorl St., Middleport
Pasror: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Wednesdoy S&lt;"'ia:- 7:30p.m.

Palntlat. lldlftl

·-····

1·100-470.2559

Computer Quot es

10llo Ofl•ll qullllfylng bldt

(614) 992 -6677

u~.~~u~.~

IN1mo. Dd.

Calvary Bible Cbon:b

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE

Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pa:iilor : Rev . Blackwood

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Woohip 10:30 a.m., 7:311 p.m.
Wednesday S&lt;rvice- 7:30p.m.

SYRACUSE
•Hardy Mums
•Fall Pansys
•Fancy Gourds
•Dwarf &amp; Large
Pumpkins
•Winter Squash
•Hanging Baskets
Open Monday-saturday
N; CloMCI Sund•y
9/1211 mo.

SUvenvHie Wonl of Feith
Pastor: David Dailey

Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
RejolciDI Ufc Cbunh
Pastor: Lawrentc: Foreman

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Chun:b of Jesus Cbrist,
Aposrollc follh
1/4 mile past Fort Meigs on New lima Rd.
Suoday-7:00 p.m.
Wednesday-7:00p.m.
Fnday-7:00 p.m.

WoBhip- 10:45 o.m.. 7::10 p.m.
Wednesdoy 7:30p.m.

Torch Cbarc:b
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday Sehbol - 9:30a.m.
Woohip · 10:30 a.m.

MI. Olive Commuolly Cburc:b
Pa!ilor : Lawrence Bush

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Evening-

7 p.m.

Wedneday Service - 7 p.m.
Ualted Faltll Cbarcb
Rl. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Puror: Rev. Roben E. Smith, Sr.
Suncloy School - 9:30 o.m.
WOfOioip • 10'..30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Service - 7 p.m.
f•b GoaptiUakilroule
3304S Hiland Road, Pomerqy
Puoor: Roy Huntor
. Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evcnin&amp;7:30 p.m.
. Tuesday .t lloursdoy - 7:30p.m.

About Ufe?
Relltlonehlpel
Clreert Moneyl
Lovel Talk to
Peyhlce Uvel

Cllftoa Taberaacle Chun:h
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 1. p.m.
Thursday Scrvie&lt;: - 7 p.m.

1·90()..484 1020
Ext. 1384

New Ul' VktOQ C..ler
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gollipolis, OH

$3.99 per min.
Muat be 18 yrs.

Past01: Bill Staten
Sunday Services · 10 a.m. &amp;t 1 p.m.
Wednesdoy · 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

Serv-u (61t) 645 8434

Pentecostal

Public Notice

(Uine Stone-

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

WICKS
HAULING

PeolfcOihol
Third Ave.
Pasror: Rev. Clork Baker
SundaySchool - IOa.m.
Evenina ~ 6 p.m.

Wed"!"'oy S&lt;rvices -7:00p.m.

Presbyterian
Synnue First Ualled Presliytorlaa
Rev.

W.t:
s.ltr OllzHS 'S.!)ff
'lllln.: Fhl Gru1rl111
....... Prkt Stcottd
Gr1 Ia ~Price
C.H t.r oilier spec•l•
614-992..244
ly .... ~··-1 Orrly

(No Sunday Calls)

614-992·3470

Krisana Robinson

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Woohip- II a.m.
llorrtsoavllle Pnsbytcrbo Cllurc:b
Worship - Q a.m.

Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Mloldlcporl Prabylerlaa
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
WoBhip - IOa.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist

5-yur porta

:~:~II4,TECS

1-900-476-3131
Ext. 4300

FUIIIICEI

Saturday Services:

"LAROE INVENTORY FOR
IMMEDIATE INBTALI.AT10N8.

Mill Work
Uh1ntl Mak o n~
Srr•cuse

K&amp;C JEWELERS

llll QUICII1
-992-6677

You Don~ Have ToLoolcFar
To Spy the Best Buys In the
Classifieds

FISHER

212 E. Main S~
992-3785 Pomeroy

.,

992 -)918

~

RAWLINGS-COATS

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

FUNERAL HOME

MOR.iGSTAR
EXPRESS
GROCERY
SHOPPING/DEUVERY

'

ERRAND SEIYKE

AUTO

992-8141
264 South 2nd

Middleport

REPAIR
31801 Amberger Ad.
Off Forest Run

m., &amp; Willi liMn
m6. pd.

pd.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

Howard

L. Wrlteael

1m1101..m1101

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

FREE ESTIMATES

Gutters

IIIII ........... ..

p~l1tl•l·

fer

Let us llo It
yoe.

VERY IWOIAIU
IIAYE llfiiiiCIS
614-915-4110
4/31/1 mo. pd.

JACK'S SEPTIC SERVICE

LUCKY J. TOWING

10% Discount for Sept. &amp; Oct.

&amp; GAUGE

Evening ·and WHktlld NO X·Charg•

St Rt. 124,
Racine, Ohio

1/~mo .

Painting

5111/1111

UC.IMWII CUIIC arovan-warner
'nllr JIStiJI ·· ·IIIIII

Mt-211t

GRAVELY TRACTOR MU~
204 Condor St.
~.OH

192·2175

'

Vet......

INSURANCE
SERVICES

·Memorltl Ha.pitll

· 214 E. Main
882-5130 Pometoy

614-949-3117
W21/1 mo.

tWilk-l&gt;lbo.&lt;&amp;n
Meo 111u ilrc Ill bll..eedol)'l
. . . CJIIJII(iall.

P. J. PAUUt AGENT
Nationwide '"'- Co.
ofCoUnbul, Oh.

804W. Maln
882·2318 '"-or

r)

EAST MAIN POMEROY, OHIO
992-2258

115 E.

Memorial Dr. Pomeroy
892·2104

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
Presc:riptiona

EWING FUNERAL HOME

SNOUFFER

. "Dipty 111111 Ser'iicdlwqr"
&amp;lablisbed 1913

FIRE • SAFETY
8" ES • SERVICE

992·2121
llull1ny Ave.

·a
•

992-2955

We will work wnhin your budget

lhlnglft u requl~.
Ph. ITJ-9173
FAX ITJ-5861
3. Repl•c• exletlng eoflta
108 Pomeroy Slreet
Muon,WV
•nd t ..clo with new ,.,.
5318RYAN PLACE
pine bo•rd•- Note- •II
MIDDLI!PORT
npoeed wood on building
11112-2772
eh811 be CCA tre•ted. All
8:00
•.m.-3:30
p.m.
npoeed wood eh•ll b• ,
primed ond polnltd white.
•R......t Wllldows
St. Rt. 7
Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
ln•toll llthlte ol~mlnum 5"
•lllldGarages
614-985-3813 or 614-667--6484
guttering oround perimeter
Plastic Culvert - Dual wall and Regular 8' thru 36"
•S..,.Deers&amp;
with two downapout•
4" S&amp;D - perf. · solid pipe
4' &amp; 6" Flex pipe
dl•ch8rglng on concrete
WW.ws
4' &amp; 6' Sch 35 pipe
'/." &amp; '/." C.P.V.C. pipe
epl81h blocke.
4. 1Wo of tho four ortgln•l Hquee, 100 bet Second ..... AMtlols
1'1." lhru 4' Sch 40 pipe
column• rem•ln on thl llrtl Slrtlt, Pomeroy, Ohio
'1." &amp; 1" 200 p.s.i. waler pipe (100' rolls lhru 1,000' rollS)
noor. Thl• column• .,. to 4571t.
'I." U.L. approved Conduil
Public Notice
b8 dupllc•JIId •nd lhl two . Arr•naementa · for ella
8' Graveless Leach pipe
new column• eh•ll be vl•lto un be m•d• by poaolbly jaundice, end any Gas pipe 1" lhru 2" - fittings - Regulators - Risers
lnot•ll•d In their orlgln•l cont•cllng the M•lgo eaoocla..d headache• and
Full assorfme~l of P.V.C. &amp; Flex flnlngs &amp; Waler fillings
loc8tlone, under the eecond County Camm11alanera lotlgue. These •ymploml, Full
line of Cislem, Septic &amp; Water storage .lanks
floor columnl.
OffiCI 8t 1·11 .. ·112·2815. however. are not juet
E•ch bid mutt b• Technlc•l queetlone eh•ll · etooclated with dleeeae80comp•nlod by either • bid be dii'ICiod to R.G. Brtech, caualng organlama In
bond In •n •mount with • P.E. at 114·448·1130. All drinking water. USEPA hea
eurety lllltfiCIOry to the work ah•ll be pelformlld In 1et enforceable requireefor11tifd Melge County • qu•llty, workm•nllkl mente for treating drinking
Commleelonero or by manner with provlelone weler to reduce the rlak of
Industrial • Automotive ·
certified check c .. hler• mode to prevent weoother theae adverae heolth
New Radiators • Re-Cores
check, or latta; of credit d8mqe to the lnelde ol the effect•. Treatment auch oe
upon • eolvent b1nk In the building •nd th81( 111 filtering and dlalnlectlng the
A/C Condensers/Hose Assembly&amp;
•mount al not 1... lh•n •ubject
ta
water remove• or destroy•
10% of the bid •mount In lnepectlon/opprov•l by the microbiological conllm·
·
f•vor of the •foreuld Melg• proJect engl,...r.
lnonte. Drinking woter
No bidder m•y wlthdr•w which I• treoted 1o meet
County Commlulonert. Bid
30 AnnouncementS
II on d I
8 hall
be hit bid within thirty (30) USEPA requirement• Ia
•ccomp•nl•d by Praof or d•v• •H•r d•t• af the lltOCI8ted with IIIII~ lo
Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding
Authority of thl offlcl•l or op8nlng thereof. Melg• none of thla rlak and ahould
Forked Run
County Comml . . lonere be coneidered aele."
agency ~gnlng the bond.
74~·3212
Blda lh811 be 1181ed end reeerve the right to w•lve
LCCO II doing the
Sportsman Club
m•rkad 11 "Bkla for Old •nv 1"'-lllltiU or to rtltc:t following to bring the water
Shooting Match
Ch..ter Courthouee", •nd 811J or •II bld8.
1yotem Into compliance
'
F~ Holfm8n, Prt81dent
m•lled ar delivered to:
Frl, Sapt. 27th
with lhell ruleS:
Melge Caunty
Melg•
Counly
1. Two of LCCD's water
6p.m.
Commla~oruort
Commlltlonara, Court
wella which are conaldared
(11) 20, 27,(10) 4, 3 tc
by the Ohio Envlronmenlal
Protection Agency (OI:PA)
Public Notice
as ground waler under the
Influence of aurfue we .. r
· CALL
PUaUC NOnce
and which hove not been
Publlo water •yetem• ueed for any w•t•r
1.~
which obtain their water production alnci July 4,
321241Uppy Hollow Rei.
_. , : EXT. 3801 ,
•upply from eurf•ce water 1996, will be dleconn•cted
Mlddlepolt, Ohio 45780
•ourc•• •ndlor ground ond no longer uaed lor
Danny a Peggy BriO-lea
......- under the Influence of water production. Slnoe the
b;11~
aurfllce w1t.r •re required exletlng w•ter treatment .; .,
614-742·2193
by ruin 3745· 81-72 •nd plant maeti the requlrel1/1l/111 MO.
~. (8'!~ -6~11 ·,~·~~
3745-81-73 of tha Ohio men11 lor ground w•ter
Admlnlatrootlve Code (OAC) trutment, no modlllcatlona
to provide IJMCiflc tre•t· will be required •• thl•
m•nt to damonetr••• facility lor producing potremovt~l •ndlor ln•ctfv•tlon oble water from the roof Glordll Lormbll• Cyela m•lnlng wello.
and vlru•u. L•dlng Creek
2. LCCD will begin •Residenllal Remode(ing
Body work, car, truck
Conaernncy Dlatrlc1'a production .lrDm o new •Additions
Bake &amp;Miscellaneous Sale
6 truck palnUr~~~ ,
(LCCD) exl•llng welllleld wellllald In which oil walla •New Conslruclion
h .. two ...n. which 111 oro claeellllld by the OEPA
minor
JMChlnical
Tues., Oct. 1
coneldered by th• Ohio 11 ground w - .,.lla. Thll oQver 10 Yrs. Experience
repair.
9:00 AM-4:00 PM
Envlronm•nl81 Protection welllleld 11 expected to be •Low Rates
Tllne-upa,
Oil Change,
•Free
Estimates
Agency
(OEPA)
••
ground
In
operation
by
the
end
of
Harrisonville PI8SbyleriBn Church
,...., under the lnflilence or October, 1996.
•All Work Guaranteed
Wax, Butflntl
Sponsor: Lend-A-Hand
•u"- ........ LCCD'I w LCCD expecl81o raturn ro
814-982·111 0
Long St, Rutland, Oh.
tre-1 plant, which II I lull compliance by Sop• "-tSK ABOUT OUR
742-2935, Aak tor Kip
ground weter tre•tment limber 30, 1996 when the
ROOF SI'BCtAI."
7/lllotfn
MIKE MORRISON
piant, did not provide thle exlltlng ground wooter under
1ev11
o
i
n
t
during
the
the
Influence
of
ourf•c•
Appearing Fri. 8:()0-12:00
montht of January through w•ter w•ll• ••• dlaconSat. 9:30-1:30
. Auguet, 1998.
nected from the exl•llng
YOUNG'S
"lh• United Sill.. w•ter eyttem . For more
Pomeroy.Eagles Club
EllvlronrMnl81 Protection lnform•llon conl8ct Brant
-Room Addlllone
Agency (USEPA), 11t1 A. Bolin, Generol Mlln•ger,
lAAtnblln: and Guest Invited
•New
Ganlgea
drlnldnt .,..., ellnd•rd• (614) 742-2411.
·Electrical • Plumbing
and 1111 clltemllnlld that the (t) 25, 21, 27 3tc
..-nca of mlcroblologiCIII -1--:=":'!=::-::::::-;;:-- •Roofing
contamlnanll Ilia • health
Kt .,.._ DllfAft
•lnllrlor I Emrtor
II - I n level• of
HI ..,.. lm'Nl'
Painting
Sat.,
28
:
~·ll.rnte!'
lllnadeItt
Aft
Alao CVIICI ... Worll
Leaving Pomeroy parking lot
'quetely lrtat.d, mlcrobl·
"'"" ""
(FREE EITIIIATU)
at 1 p.m. Band starta at 5 p.m•
ologlcal contamlnenll In
V.C. YOUNQ.
11111 w•t•r m•y c•u••
The
Hole. '
Utlllln. 1... 8arv-U
882-1215
dlllall DleMN lyrrrptofM
. (111) 141 ...4
,._roy, Ohio
may Include diarrhea,
IWIVI-pd.
crampa, nlu . .a, and

G&amp;W PUSTICS AND SUPPLY

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

CARPENTER SERVICE

&gt;

Meigs County Bikers
Toy Run
Sept

Pomeroy

112-70711

1n Nor11l '~lflt.
Mldtlejl 00'1, Oh

0

0

WIJH .....

·-

I

•

.

"No Job Too Large or Too Small"

COLLINS

We F'rll Ooct018'

2 Kinena- 1 male, 1 female , long
haired, both yellow, 6 wee~s old .
304·075-6779.

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Toql Dressing • Ornamental
Steps .• Stairs, Railings, PAtio Fumiture, Fireplace
Items, Planter Hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuHII

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSUUTION

Public Notice

2 Adoratxe Tiger Sltrped Krnen s
Need A Goad Ham&amp;, Good Out ·
door Pets flitter Trai ned , 614 ·
.. 46·4907.

0

•

•

----------1
2 Playful Kittens One

Whit_
e

One,

Sil~erad o

8t ...

245·9577.
J &amp; D's Au to·Paru . Buying' sal ·
vage vehicles. Sellrng pane. 304 ·

773·5033.
Junk Cars 8 Tru ck Va rrous Runn•ng Vehrcles &amp; Car Parts, 8 1•·
446·4539
Top doll ar · an tl quos, furnitu re,
glass, china, cloc k s, gold, silver,
cains. watches, ostates, old stone
Jars, old blue &amp; white drshea, old
wood bo ~ees, milk bottl es, Meigs
County Adverlls ome nt, Osby
Martin,814·992-7441.

4987 .

Motor Club

949-2168

Pick -Up S1,SOO ,

3 Klnens To Giveaway, 1114 ·446·

AAA &amp; All State

FREE ESTIMATES

Insi de Door P•nel Orlvera Side

One Orange , 614-44t ·1764

. Minor Repairs
24 Hr.
Towklng/Rollblck
Service

Downspout•
Gutter Cleaning

G1oy /Black For A 19'9 Chevy

Giveaway

614·992-7378.

Aeration Repair or Replacement

. M.T.S. Cotn Shop, 1!51 Second

Avenue, Gatlipotis, 6t4-.. AS.2842.

40

1 female Beagle pup to give awa,,
brown &amp; white, (not good wrkicfs),

FAI.I, CLEAN·UP

Rtngi, Pre-1930 U S ClJrrencv.
S!erhng, EIC Acqu tllltons Jewelry

Piano letJQns for boginners . Call

304-675-7058.

992·7119

:-:
Absolute Top Doll ar : All U.S. Sil ~J&amp;r And Gold Cotn!i , Prootsets,
Dtamonds. Antiq ue Jewelry, Gold

Clean la te Model Cars Or
Trucks, t900 -..od el s 01 Newe r,
Smith Buick PanUac, 1900 .Eas t·
ern Avenue, Gallipolis.

lordalaHo, Kim :Jl4-675-576t .

985-4473
7/'a/11n

PubliC Sale
and Auction

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lul l time auctioneer, complete
aucUon
ae rvice. licensed
J60,0hio &amp; Weat Virginia, 304·

Independent Conautlant lor Jafra
in your area , now
booking tkln care classes in your
home. Experience something
wonderful-Fun line ol skln, body &amp;
nail care tor men &amp; women. Call

H&amp;H
SAWMILL

,.,,..,.

&gt;

.

992·5432

80

Cosmetics

•NewHomea
•Garage•
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

MIKE liNG .

949·2445

...,_,mo.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

949·2057

CALL TODAY!
BONDED

BING'S

': 1f:~inJ!'- .

"FIIBiuring Kentucky Fried Chlc;ken"l
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

roe IWa Pl. Pleasant WV.

herbai IHI, b.Jik and muscle PfO·
gram . For information call Wendy,

........,Mill'

Crow'• Family Restaurant

shlne-8am ttll ., La1ge prc ture w indow with sto1m !.a!.h ,
some wrndOw aash &amp; Sl01m wrnd·
OWl, plua nlK items. Ieddy bears
&amp; other atulfed items. 2 10 8 Mon~

Aro you olclr and rlrod gl being
olck ond rired? Help youroell 10 773-5785 Or 304-773-5447.
bonO&lt; healrh wllh all narural herb·
al vitamins. weight lou plan . .:..
90=--:--W~a_n-:t::e:::d-::-t_o~B:-u~y~::-.

CONSTRUCTION

RACINE PLANING MILL

Rain or

30 Announcements

BE LONELY
AGAIN Ill

Edcso Ualled Bntlono Ia Clorlst
2 In mileo north or Reedsville
on Slate Route 124
Pasror; Rev. Robert Markley
Suoday School - II a.m.
Sunday Worship- 10:00 o.m. .t 7:00p.m.
Wednesdoy Services . 7:30p.m.
Wednesdoy Youth Service - 7:30p.m.

Garage Sale- Fri 271h &amp; Sat 28th

ANNOUNCEMEI~TS

Air

NEVER

Umted Brethren
Mr. llermoa Ualled Brttlor..
laCbrbiCkurdl
Texas Community off CR 82
Pator: Robert Sonders
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 o.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesdoy Services. 7:30p.m.

Pt. Pleasant
· &amp; Vicinity

Shl~ty Milr.r
36340 FlllwOQCII
Pomlfo Ohio 41141711

...,.,.,

Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
Wmhip - 3 p.m.

Soprtmber 27. 28 &amp; 30. Ocoober
1·5, e&amp;m -Spm . Bea Wood rest dance. 3570 7 loop Rd .. Rolland.
WtEh for signs. 614-742-2790

Ron I

OYIIr-.10 QUALIFIED
BUYERS

$3.99 per min.
Muat bt 18 yra.
Serv-U (619) 645 8434

---:----..,...--1

Senatb-Doy Adnolbl
Mulberry Hts. Rd ., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky

SA 143, Lee Ad

Fill

"'N THE SPOT FINANCING

on

Giant garage sale- Thursday, Frt day &amp; Saturday. Up one mrle on

Pick up dliCIIrded
•pplianCM, battwlft a
rneny rnel818.
014-982-4025 8 am-8 pm

AJr (DI.flDIIrl ..t
Add-. Heat hiJps.

now aqulpmenL

area, 614-992-2475

614-992-7643
MoWle llcNH FWIIICIS,

'f

Garage sate- Sept 27 ·28. rarn or
stune. Wrpple Rd .l Frve Pornts

8t ...gg2-7302.

propciNia for Roof
IHKI Fr•mlng Rep•lra for thl
Old Coulthou. . •t Che•t.r,
Ohio, will be recelvod by tlie
M• I g •
Co u n IY
Commlaalon•re •t th•lr
offiCI, Court · Houae,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45711, until
1:00 p.m., October 7, 11M,
•nd openod •nd re•d oloud
•t uld ofllce.
Jab !!c:ooe
1 . R•move exletlng
rcionng •nd eh••thlng ond
replace • aeverly bowed
ridge b. .m, ualng callll
pull8 ond ltgglng. The entlrt
fr•mlng •y•t•m ah•ll be
tightened •nd ruolllldlbohed
In pliiCI.
2. LlftVIhlm roollrlmlng
ov.r lour nlooting column•
on etcond floor. Reploct ,
eh••thlng with 1" x 12"
rough cut 08k
a1m111r to
7/11" OSB
1" lo•m lneul•tion
ln.1811 • 24" x 24" x 41"
vent•d CCA wood
wlll1• four-eldlld mellll roof.
lnat•ll 40 · y. . r celot•x
'"'"ldenu~·
• h • k•

Mlcldlepo~

Pastor:

Pomeroy

tpnlall tpHitll tpHitl
MIL: 11ft 5plciii'ID-110

Beautiful Girls!!
Exciting!!
PassionateII
Talkto 'em
live II

LowRitH)

Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

0

Unlimited Accen- No Set-U Fee

Se~od

Peatt&lt;OIIal Auembly
Sr. Rr. 124, Roc:ine
PastO&lt;: Williom Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening- 1 p.m.
Wednesdoy Services - 7 p.m.

Sunda~l ~';'30 a.m.

Wontlip . II a.m.
WedneMlay Services · 8 p.m.

Questions

Pastor: William Van Meter

DyHYIIIe c-muolty Cbun:k
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship " 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.

fallb ~ c•un:b

...........

Easy Pay Auto
INSURANCE

larat••• Decks,

Faltlr Fellow*IP C.,...... for OoJ1st
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
S&lt;rvice: Fridoy, 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 10:00 o.m.
Evening7 p.m.
Thursday S&lt;rvice- 7 p.m.

Mono Capel Oourc~

$19..95 /Month
PAMPERED PAWS

Any CJr
Ar1y Driver
DUI &amp; SR -22
&gt; Discount s &lt;

Pastor: Rankin Roach

Paslor: Rev. Em melt Rawson

ll...t Conunually Cllur&lt;b
orrRt. 124
PutO&lt;: Edsel Hart
Suodoy School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m .

ALL OHIO

loe•lddhloas

Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesdoy Service - 7:00p.m.

follk Taberoaelc Ckurtk
Bailey Run Road

SyncKif MlsalOa
1411 Bridgeman Sl., Syracuse:
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Ta11mera

Construdion Inc.

Falnlew Bible Churcb
Letart, W.Va. Rl. I

Reed

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
WOBhip- 9:30a.m. aod 7 p.m.
Wednesday . 7 p.m.
Friday · rellowshop service 7 p.m.

_

. 1•800·819·3941
.........

New World Net - It's Waiting
1-888-goNWNET

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

SilO N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

Hollooa Cllrlstlu Fellowsklp Cburck
Rev. Clyde lltndeBOn
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m .. 7:30p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesdoy servoce, 7:30p.m.

.THE INTERNET

BIRROOnllaad

Soutlo Belllol New T - 1
Silver Ridge

Other Churches
Faltlo Ooapel Opea Bible Cllunb
923 S. Third St., Middleport
PoJtor Miclloel Pangio
Sunday service, 10 o.m.
llouBday service, 7 p.m.

Jllio:klii1J10r1 Cbun:k
Grood Street
Sunday School - I0 a.m.

Middleport Ooan:b of tbe Nuom~t
Puoor: Gn:gory A. Cundiff
Sunclsy School - 9:30 o.m.
Worahip- 10:30 o.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesdoy Service• • 7 p.m.

Pastor: Bob Rondolph
Wonhip . 9:30a.m.

· 8:J0 a.m.

Rudaod Cburck or tile Nuaroae
Puror: Samuel Buye
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonbip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
..Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Sunday school - 10 a.m.
Woohip • II o.m.
Wednesday S&lt;rvia:- 1 p.m.

Roclaoe F1nl C~an:~ of tbe Nua,...
Pastor: Soon Rose
Sunday School- 9:30 o.m.
Wonbip · 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wedneoday S&lt;rvicts. 7 p.m.

Pastor: Sharon Hausman

~or Cllarcl of God
S. R. 248 &amp; Ridoel Rood, Cht11er
Pastor: Rev. William D. Hinds
Sunday Sc~l - 9:30_a.m.
Worshop 6 P.-m.,
·
Wedneoday, 7 p.m. famoly Troinin&amp; Hour

Wednesday Services- ? p.m.

Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
WoBhip· IOa.m.
Wednesdoy S&lt;rvices - 10 a.m.

Nazarene

CbHitr

Worship - I I a.m.

Ooaler Cburcb or .... Nuaroae
Pastor: Rev. Herl&gt;en Grate
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonbip · II o.m., 6 p.m.

Bel~tiCbur&lt;k

lltl. Olive Uaited Melloodlll
orr 124 behind Wilkesville

Wedneoday Services. 7 p.m.

RI&lt;IDe
Sunday School - I0 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Suoday School - !1:45 o.m.
WoBhip - II a.m.

ML Moriab Ooarcb of God
Racine

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
WOBhip - 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 1 p.m.

Worship- 11 a.m.

Corner Sycamore &amp;t Sewnd St., Pomeroy
Pastor: Dawn Spaldin&amp;

Church of God

Moraloa Star
Pastor: Kenneth Boker
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Wonbip - 10:30 a.m.
Tlouooday Services-7:30p.m .

Pastar: Brian Harkness

Our Sovlour l.ulbenra Cbun:b
Walnut and Henry Su., Ravenswood, W.Va.
lntrim pastors: George C. Weinck
Suoday School - I0:00 o.m.

Putor: Rev. David McManis

Paslor: Kenneth Baker

Sundoy.School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m. (2nd &amp; 4oh Sun)

Solloa
Putor: Ken~th Baker
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m. (1st&amp; Jrd Sun)

SL Job l.ulktru Cll•rcb

Christian Union

Pulor: Rev. Thomu McOung

Pastor: Theron Durham

RO&lt;Npalzed Cbur&lt;b of Jesua Oortst
of Lorlttr Da7 Solola

LAN~y~aCban:h

10 a.m.

Peolt Ctuoptl
Sunday School - 9 o.m.
Worship . 10 o.m.

Sunday school- 9:30 o.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Charles Neville
Wor~hip •

Pulor: Rev. John Neville

Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Mlaoen.W.
Sunday School - 9 o.m.

Wealcyaa Bible Holl- Cburck
7S Pearl So., Middlepon.

Paster: Rev.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonbip - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesdoy Services - 7 p.m.

Eaterprtso
Pastor: Keilh Rader
Suodoy School- 10 a. m.
Woohip - 9 o.m.

CaiYary Plllrim Cbapel

Bradhary ChllJ'do of c•rtst
PaSior: Jake Copley
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Pomeroy Ooorc:b of lite Nourooe

Pastor: Olarlea Nev1lle

Wtdnesdoy S&lt;rvices - 7:30p.m.

Kno Ooan:~ orCUiot
Wor&gt;hip- 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Putor-Jeffrey Wallooce
1srand3rd Sunday

SyncUR Chqn:h of tlte Nuanae
Paslor: Bill Slires
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
WoBhip- 10:30 o.m., 6 p.m .
Wednesdoy S&lt;rvices- 7 p.m.

Ceatral Outer
Asbury (Syno:ue)
Worship - II a.m.

Danville Hollofll Cbun:b
31057 Stole Rourc 325, Longsvlle
Puror: Rev. Rick Maloyed
Sunday school - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday wor&gt;hip- 10:35 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.

Instrumental
Pastor: Scot Brown
Worship Service - 9 a.m.
Communion - 10 a.m.
Sunday Scliool - 10:1S a.m.

'

Sunday School - 9:45a.m.

Holiness

Tooppero Pill Ia Cban:b of Clu1ol

Reednlllc Fellcnnlllp

CllarcboftbeNIDrtae
Plllor: Mork A. Dupler
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
WoBhip • 10:4S o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesdoy Services - 7 p.m.

firll Sunday of Month • 7:30p.m. service

Episcopal

p_...,
W-Ootll'dl or0o11s1
· 33226 Olilclren's Home Rd.

Sun. Mau · 9:30a.m.

0JIIey

Rcedavllle
Pastor: Rev. Charles Mu h
Wonhip- 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.

Congregational

Yard Sale

GRIESER'S

GAUGE

MEET lEW
PEOPU TIE
FUN WAY
TODAY
1·900-656-5050
Ext. 3991

3 Kiuena . 2 Gray, 1 Gray/White

Vo lkswagen Sup er Bee tl e Convertible . Reasona bly Priced _304 -

304·895-3013.

675·1272.

3 labs, 6 weeks old, 2 black, 1
black/while, ta good homes onlr.

304·615·4650

30H75-S965

4 Adorable long Harred Klltens &amp;
Mather 614-367 · 7115 II No An ·
swer leave Message.

Au atralian Shepherd To A Good
Home In Coumry, Call Alter 4
P.M. 814·245-5887.
Free Female Brittanr Spanrel Mix

Puppy,

Wcm ted To Buy U se d Mobile
Hom es Call . 614 -446 -0175 Or

614-446·2660.

Free Firewood You Cut Up Trees,
Alr ea dy On Ground, Kerr , Oh io

Wanted To Buy : Junk Auto s With
Or Withaut Mators. Call larry
lively. 614-38ft.ln03.

Wanrtd To Buy: Student Trumpet,
Nice Condition. Reasonable Price
614-446-8890 llelore 9:00PM
Wanted : Used Stackermatic Coal
Stove, Buy Or Trade Call Aller 6

PIA . 614-245-9228.

614·388·6419.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVIC ES

Fr ee Kinens 7 Weeks Otd 614 ·
446·9&lt;446.

Fra. Kruena, Cal l 814 -245 ·
Alter 5.

110

Reo•etared Beagle 5 Females, 1 Male, Born Au ·

Pupptea :

gust26, 1996,614-388-8962.
Rabbill to giveaway, 614 · 085 -

4298.

S$0.0Qrl$$

Southlorll Showbao, Pr. Poeaoano.
WV. Call ene1 e:30pm Wednesday lhru Saturday, :.14-8 75-51155.
$200·$500 - Y· Aaoomble

Seven ca t &amp; killens, to good
home only. 7moe-3yrs. 304 -675 ·

8108 .

Stereo,

Help Wanted

Moeher

90od cond, work s. Sliding

rocker. :.14-882-2392.

60 Lost and Found
Ca sh Reward For lost Female
Golden Aetrie~er Vicinity : Buc k·
eye HWis Road 1S1a1e Hoghway 35,

Near Thurman, 614·245·9065,
614·245·5552.
Found Black Pu"r 1e on
RoadiS1•· ....&amp;-7595

ptOdUCtl II hOme, easy! Na Sell·
ingiYou're paid direct. fully guaranteed. No eJtperktnce neces-

sart Call 7 days, .07-875-2022
. e•t059SH38.

" ATTN : Po int Pleasan t ' Postal
Po sitions. Permanent lull lime for
clerkfllortera . Full Benelrt s. For
e~eam, application and salary rnlo
call : (708)Q06 · 23SOfxL3670

8am-8pm
1ooWORKERS NEEDED
Assemble Cra h s, Wood Ite ms
Malerial s Pro~ r d od lo $480 •
Wit. Free InformaTion Pkg 24 Hr

-;.;;~~;-M;~c;~;.;l -1·-~_1_-~_3·_4~-·---------

found : Black Male
Chinn 1 Eye, Vicrnlly : founh
Avenue, 6 1.. ·4-46-7710, 614 ·4 4 6 .
9753.

Abl e Avon Rcpro s cn1Eltl~es
nee ded Earn mont~y to r Chr ,sl
ma s brlls a1 homotat work. 1 000

992·6356 or 30111 ·862 2645. lnd

70

Yard Sale

Rep
Computer Users Needed Work
own houra. $20k lo SSOkly r 1-800

Gallipolis

348·7186 .11508.

&amp; VIcinity
603 Northup Road, Frrday, Sa tt.Jr day, 10-5, Tupperware &amp; Clothes
01 All Sizes.

All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In

Advanco. DEADLINE 2:00 p.m.
the day before the ad is to run.
Sunday otcfitlon • 2:110
~anday

p.m. Fnday.

editkln - 10:00

a .m.

Sat·

urday.
Friday, Saturday, 27th, 28 th, g. 7
Bulavllle Pike 3 112 Mile s In RA

Trailer Plorll,
September 26tn , tl30 · 4·oo B•d ·

well, Oho 135 Church Soreet Ne•o
To Church. Odds &amp; Ends
This 91271'ii6 · U/28196, From 8:30
A.M. ·5:30 P.M. Will Havel Furni·

turt,

(Couch, Tab!U, Bed s,

Chairs , Etc. ) Home Interior,
Crafts, Clothes. Figuri nes, Etc.
Addreu l 34-43 State Route 141,
Gallipol ll, 8th House Past The
Jumbo In Cenlenary, l eft Hand

-Sidt

'.

Computer Use1s Needed Work
OWn Hours 201&lt; To S50K t Yr 1 ·
a:J0·348- 7186 X 11 73
Cr u r:iie Shrp Jobs! Earn $300 1
$900 Wkly, Yoar Round Posrt•on
Hr nn g BOih Men tWo men free
Roam .4.nd Boaro Wrll lra•n Call
7 Days 407 ·875 2022 ( xl 0526

C37.
Dr &amp;covery Toys Need You . Earn
up to $30rhr, Showrrl(l parentS the
oduca t•on al &gt;~Slue or our toy s
books &amp; computer sofTware. Cali
now lor more detarls 30 .. ·675 576 1 also, bookrng panres.

Earn $1 ,000 Weekly StuHrng Enve lopes AI Home. S!l rt Now. No ·
E•perumce. Free Supplies. Info.
No Oblrgstron . Sen d LSASE To :

ACE. Depo: 1351 . 8o1 5137. Olo.

mond Ba•. CA91785.

Easy Work ! E~ecallant Pay! At ·
semble Product s at Home Call

Toll Free 1-800-•67 ·5568 EXT
12110

Pomeroy,

.

Experrec:e Roolrng

And

Car ~&gt;ent­

er . Uu st Have Hand Toots And
Transpona1ion. 17.00 Hour. 614 -

Mlddlepor1

&amp; VIcinity

245-0437.

All V11d Sales Mu ll Be Paid 11'1

Adva·nce. Deadline : 1:OOpm the
day bctfore the ad is to run, Sun·
day &amp; Monday edition- 1:OOpm
Friday.

HOME TYPIST, PC uaero noted·
td .. t45,000 Income polonr~l.
Col i-800-513tl943 E•t 8·9368.

.HOste&amp;MI Wanted: Earn lree ed·
ucailonal IOJI, booka or C:Oftl&gt;Uier
Uov in~ salt · 81 20 SR 7N,
to'-•· wly not how !hem learn
Chethlft, Friday and Saturday, aa !hoy ploy. Call Mlm loo d&lt;raols.
27·28. Muzzle k)ader wllh scopt,
304-875-51111.
rr.ple dinette 111. Window air condit ioner, amall a•r compre11or, legal SecretlrJ' Po sition . Word
men·• winter coats, 1011 or misc . Perlec1 6.0, Good Typing Skills.
Real Estal&amp; E,perlence preferred.
lllml
Sind Resumo 10: Box CW 14 C/o
Rodericl!. Grimm rllidtnce, 138 PO'nr Ploasanr Rqgja11&lt; 200 Main ·
Broodwly, IUcone. Tuelday, Oct St Pl. Pleount wv 2~50.
111.

Rummooo salt- Sopt-r 28 &amp;
30, Sllurday I -Mond8y, Oclobtr
1 I 2, Tueld•l &amp; Wldntodoy 34705 Whlll'o Hill Rd., Rulland.
Ra in or ohlnt . Woreh lor slgno

118o1&gt;4pm.

0

OFfiCE IIANAQIR fllllilo, Extromoly Oroonlzod, Compuror
Skill&amp; N.. tlllrl. llulll-llnt
Plooneo. Expetlence With PayooM,
Sroto lftdtral T1111, 8WC A
Plio. Submir Rotum.:
P.O.
1lo1C 1538, ~. OH 4!1e43.

sees.

·•

�• •
'

'

...

Page 10 • The Dally Senti~ ..___ .

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, September 27, 1 •

The Dally Slnttnel• Page11

1

NEA Cro11word Puzzle
PHILLIP

ALDER
Mobile Homes

--------------~ ·

Jfr~

AVON I All Areu I Shirley
Spoolra, 304-417!1-1428.

108• Uazda truck. ~ cylindt!f ~ ~;
tpaed, air, amllm cassette. lOPpet, good condition. call 614 -992.
8833 ahor 5j&gt;m

PiiNTtR
EARN WHILE YOU TRAIN For

A Career Aa A Painter. Lnrn
Tho Baoloo 01 Tho Lalft1 loch·
niquu. No Tuition. GED IH~h
School Diploma Program ·AwaJI·
ablt. Houlling, Mtala, Medical
Cart And Paycheck Provided.
Agao 18 ·24. Job Corpo ·A U.S.

Department Of labof Program.
Cal 1-800-733-IOBS, Ell!. 00.
Pa,tt time pooltlono available lor
STNA'o. II you enjoy wor'&lt;ing wilh
lht elderty In a family type environment, our facility is the place

for J'OU . Application• m1y be
completed batween t 2:00pm 10
4:30pm M·f at Arcadia Nurolng
CooM!e, Ohio. EOE

cen...

PERSON WANTED To OWN
And Oparato Retail Candy Sllop
In Gallipolis Area . low lnvell·
ment For lnlormallon Call Mn.
8urdon'a Gourmet Candy Compo·
rot. Dollas. TX 2,.-991-IIZ!ll.

All 1181 estate advertising In
ttis -~~~ IUiljact to

sex lamtllalatalus or national

origin, or any Intention to
make any such proteronco,

TRAINEES WANTtD
EARN WHILE YOU TRAIN For
A Career In Painting, PlunDng Or
Electromcs R8pair. No Tuilion .
GE 0 1H1Qh School Diploma Prog,am Ava1lable. Housing, Meals.
Med1cal Care And Pavcheck Pro·
v1d ed. Ages 16 -2.4. Job Corps.- A
US Oepanment Of labor Pro ·
gram. Call 1-800 -733·JOBS, Ext
90
TRANEES WANTED
EARN WHILE YOU TRAIN For
A Career As An Optician's As·
s1stanr Or In Health Service,
Food Preparation Or Businass/
Cl erical . No Tuition. GED /High
Sc hool Diploma Program Avail able . Housing. Meala. Uedical
Care And Pavcheck Provided .
Ages t6 -24 _Job Corps-A U.S.
Depa rt ment 01 labor Program.
Call 1-800·733-JOBS, Ert. 90.

19017-2 &amp; 3 Bedroom, SIK»S down,
$19Simo. Free delivery &amp; set·up,
only at Oak Wood Homes, Nitro
WV. 304·755·5665.

limitation or dlacllmlnation."
This no-wit not
knowllngly accept
advertiaemontalor r811estete
Wl1k:l1 lain violation ot lhe law.
Ourraoderl ara hereby
lntonnod lhel,U -.g.
adveltiHd In thla 08411Jl8P8f
a r o - on an equal

cqJOI1UIIIIy -

3 Bed·
Deposit

1997 Doublewide. 3 bedroom. 2
balh. $1,595/down, S250tmo, troo
air, with approved credit . 1-800·
89t.Sn7.

or dlacrtmlnlltion

baaad on race, color, religion,

Rock Band looking lor 8111
Play~W 304.SJ5.28U.
SALES REP
w l)8re looking for a profeuional
sales representative who is &amp;net'·
g&amp;IIC, amb1t10US and se/f.motivat·
cd to JOin an expanding home ·
bu1ldmg association. Requires excellent communication skills and
knowledge in home construction.
We otter co mpetitive salary and
cxcelle nr commission potential.
se nd resume tQ : P.O. BoJ 487,
Mason, WV 25260.

1997 t6k80 3 bedroom , 2 balh,
$t,325Jdown, $217/mo. free air.
with approved credit. 1-800-691 ·
87n.

lhe Fllderal Fair Houolng Act
of 1968 wl1icll makes ~ Illegal
to adYertl&amp;e 'any prolorenca,
i~UOn

Allalla Hay Roh-Storaoe and de·
livery •vailable. UorQan Farm
304·1137·2018.

·

limfttd Offer! 1997 doublewide,
3br, 2bath, $1799 down, $2791
month . Free delivery &amp; setup.
Only at Oakwood Homes, Niuo

WV. J04-755-566S.
New 14x80 Only make 2 pay·
men11 &amp; move-in, no payment atler 4 years, free set-up &amp; delivery.
304-75!1-5885.
NEW! Bank Aepo'1, only 3 lalt,
stiM un~r warranty, tree delivery
&amp; IOI·Up. 304-75!1-71 91 .

REAL ESTATE

Sale fRent : Nice 1972 Vindale
Wllh Expando Poosibly Soli On
l,.nd Contract With Down Pay·

310 Homes for Sale
193 lariat Drive (Next To HMC)
Split l&amp;Yel, 3 + Br'a larGe lawn,
814·...-3908.

mon~8t4-448 · 18t0.

Older 10x80 2 bedroom tailor in
goad thape, almo11 new furnace
2 Bedroom house in countrv. 1 $2300 814·245·5003 or 814-441·
acre, Bethel Rd. $35,0110 new aid- 07!i4 must ba moved
ino &amp; shingles. 304-175-7948 ba· Older Schultz homa, owner occu·
lore 9pm.
pied, 2 bedroom, excellent lor
2 Sllry 7tOOm house wlbasemenl young or retired couP'e. priced on
Appro•. 1 112 acres with pond. inapec:tion. 304-875-~.
Located along St Rl 2 near Flat Schult 12x65. fair cond., 2br, w/
Rock. Wit! need remoefeling . Ask· large utilitv room. refrigerator,
ing tu,ooo . Call alter 5:0opm . 11011 e &amp; window ac. S2.800 firm.
_304_·89_5-_3394_._ _ _ _ _ _ 1 :Kl4-67S.3000.
-U-N-BE~L:-IE~V-A~B-L-E-11--AL~L-:-N~E~W
SINGLE WI DES IN STOCK
,ONLY $488 DOWN, ALL NEW
DOUBLEWIDES IN STOCK
ONLY IIU DOWN, LOW
MONTHLY PAYMENTS, FREE
DELIVERY AND SET·UP, ONLY

3-oom House In Rodney, Call
After. P.M. Wael&lt;days, 614·843·
2D::I.:.6·-:--·-:---:-:--::----1
3 Bedroom House, New Havon,
Electric Heat, Central Air, Bas•
ment, City Water &amp; Sewage.
$44,000 30•·882-3772, Or 814· AT OAKWOOD HOMES, NITRO
992·5841.
wv.304·75!1-5685

=

TRANSPORTATION

2 bedroom mobile home in
Racine, no pets, 614·992·5858.

Country Furniture. 304-875-8820.
Rt 2 N, Smiles, PI Pleasant, WV. Warm Morning Gas Heater
65,000 BTU 614-388-8619.
Tuos-Sat 9-8, Sun 11 ·5.

2 Bedroom Trailer For Rem In
Small Tra1ter Park Oeposll &amp; Ref·
erences Rec,.~lred, 614·446·1104.

Floral Couch 2 Ba• Stools $50. White Fiberglau Truck Topper,
Fits 7 Foot Bv 5 Foot Bed, Excel·
614·245-5946 Al1ar 5 P.M .
tent Condition, Hitch And Air
GOOD USED APPLIANCES Shocks For S· 10 Truck, 614·-4•6·
Wash ers , dryers, relrigeralors . 6656 Aner 4iX!.
ranges . Skaggs Appliances. 78
Vine Streel, Call6t4· 446· 7308, Wolfe tann1ng bed, 2 years otd,
new bYibs, riew starters. 11,500.
t-800-499-3499 .
304-882·2068.
Polly's New &amp; Used Furniture l"';.;.,;=="-;....- d-l---8 U 11
2t 01 Jellerson Ave. Pt. Ploasanl 550
Throws Sto.
Supplies

Ertra N1ce : 2 Bedrooms, Good
Loca11on. S325rMo., S250 Deposit, Need Relerencas, No Pets,
614·256·1664.
Nice 3 Bedrooms, In Mercerville
Araa. HUD Approved, 614·256·
657-t.

440

l)g

Apartments
lor Rent

Two piece blue seclional couch
with rec lining ends, StOO, 614·
949·2Q51 atter 4pm.

1 and 2 bedroom apartmenll, fur·
n1shed and unlurnisheCI. security
deposil required, no pels, 614 ·
992·2218.

520

1 bedroom furrished apanmenr In
Middleport, call 614·992·2178 or
614·992·5304.

54 Caliber w1 Muzzle loader wl all
accessonts. new never been
tired. 304·615-1564

1 Bedroom Unfurnished Apartment No Petl $195/Mo., Water
Paid, $100 Doposil614-448·3617.

530

2 Bedroom Brick Townhouses, 35
Wotl Apartments. S2D!illolo.. Plui
Deposit, For Uore Information
614-446-6515, 614-446.0000.

540 Miscellaneous

Merchandise

2 Bedroom, furnished apt br rent.
deposit required. 304-675-6512.
2bdrm _ apts., tota l electnc. ap·
phances furnished, laundrv room
facilities, close to school in town.
Applications available at: Village
Green Apia. 149 or call 614-992·
3711 . EOH.

s Rooms~ Bath, City, Forced Air~~~~~:.__ _ _ _ __
Furnace, Central Air, carpeted
LOIS &amp; Acreage
Flaors, Storm Windows, Doors,
Vinyl Siding, Lot 881150, Priced 1 Acre Water, Septic, Garage.
At:$34,900, 614·448.. 579.
Footer On Possum Tro1 Road.
$16.000 614·388-6978
A-Frame 3 · 4 Bedrooms. 2 Full
Baths. laundry Room. Dining 35 acres. 5 acres field. 30 acres
Room. $49,900 Gallipolis Area. wood. Corweniently located tOmi .
West V1rgtn1a Cold Drawn has 11 614-256-6928.
!rom Pt Pleasant. Ci!y water avail.
able. Ask1ng S30,000. Home 11ght
1ob openmg lor maintenance pos1·
11on. Job requ1roments : At least 2
or hunter's parad1se. 1-330 -877 vear degree (associates) in tech· Bv Owner : 13g Sanders Drive, 9096.
meal school, PlC programming, Ganipolis, 3 Bedroom, Bath LR, M
hydraulics, mechanical, welding /Kitchen, Full Unfinished Base· 53 acrea Harrisonville area, 614 and el ectrical experience pre- ment, &amp; ~ .Car Garage, Citv 742·3033.
ferred . Mandatory drug test ing. Schools, Clost To Town, 6t4 -441 ·
BRUNER LAND
Please submit resume and app~ ­ 0951, leave MessaQe.
.
814-77!1-9173
cation to Bureau of Employment
By Owner-4-5 bedroom, 2 Dath,
PrC'" &lt;~ms. 225 Sixth St Pt. Pleaslull basement, tiv1ng room, dining Meigs Co : 5 Aero Lol $6,500.
am, WV 25550.
room. new kitchen, 2 lots fenced Only S1,000 Down + S102 Per
Woodmen of The World Life In· in back yard, 2 car garage, clo se Mo. For 8 Yr. • Len Than Lot
surance Society now hiring Sales to schools and hospital. 304 -875· Ren11 Also, tO Acres $9,000 ·
Vary Country.
Representatives . Full benefits. 2873.
Salary t commissions and bo livino
room
wf
3bedroom,
bath,
Gallia Co: 30 Minutes N. Huntingnuses. For interview, call Ctav Ro·
hardwood floors, kilchen &amp; dinirio ton 011 S.R. 7, 3 Miles Out Teens
ney 304-67~19 EOE,
area together. new roo!. garage, ~un &amp; Chambers 10 Acre Lois
on Rt 2. 30• -87S -•t3Q or 304 - $10,000 +. Gallipolis. 2 Uiles Out
180 Wanted To Do
675-7326 after 6:30.
Neighborhood Rd . Three 10 Acre
Any Odd Jobs, painting, shrub
lots $17,000 + Or 22 Acres With
Ranch
Style
3
Bedrooms,
2
Car
wmming, sidewalk edging, com·
Pond $26,000.
Garage,
Partial
Basement.
Above
plate lawn care, driveways sealed,
Ground Pool, Building, Appror . 1
home weatheriza110n . 304·875· Acre 5 Minutes From Holzer, Call For Maps &amp; OWner Financ 7112.
ing Info. 10'4 Oown + We
614-148·9219.
Finance Balance. 10% 011 Cash
Altics·Garages I Outbuildings,,
Purchases!
cleaning and disposal, tor infor - located near schools and hospi ·
tal. 4bedrooms. lR, DR. 2 baths.
mation caii-304-89!1-:KJ36.
tam1ly room, ln·gr&lt;n.md pool 30-4 - Lot For Sale: Rodney VIllage II.
Corn&lt;w Lo( $5,600, 614-245-5926
Will Do Housecleaning Relerenc· 675-6515 aher 5pm.
After 5 PM
es. Dependable, low Pay. Please
Three bedroom home 1n country,
Call614-446-4932
Whites Hill Rd ., Rutland, &lt;me bath, Mobile home lot lor rent. ready to
hook·up, rent nego. 216 -322·
Georgea Por!able Sawmill. don't In-ground pool, 614·992·5067.
3035.
haul vout logs to the mill JUSt call Tuppera Plains area- 28 acres on
304·675-19S7
blacktop road . 9 rooms. two Pa1cels on Rayburn Rd . Water.
paved road . reasonable restriC ·
baltll, lovely farm home, large
rage and barn plus smaller barn IIOns. 30-4-615 -5253 . (no s1ngle·
and shop, $130,000. 614-667· wide tnqvirts please)

oa·

33311.

Scenic Valley, Apple Grove ,
beautiful 2ac lots, publit wa1er,
Clyde Bowen Jr., 304·578·2338.

RENTALS

Business
Opportunity

1i71 12160 liberty 2 Bedroom&amp;,
New Carpet, Very Gaod Condi tion, l7,oqo, 814-448·7395.
1878 Commander ClaiiiC, 2 bedroom, air, new windowt, mull
....... 14,0110. 304-458·1877.

tgt8Aflar5~M.

~

3 B d
• room ho~se , ctntral air,
$325/mo + ulilitiel, referencn
$250 security deposit required .
304-773-5ei8.
4 MILES FROM RIO GRANDE
C OLLEGE, • BEDROOIIS, 2

a

a

•

aATHt; fiREPLACE5, fiLIT
LEVEL
2138 1100 MONTH., 114-37..
• OAIIW4fi.M77.
Nita home on lincoln HiD Road
Pom~roy. Two btd rooms, fuli

~!':;~1111trrcfryer hoolr up.
N1ct rwo bedroom home in Po·
814:11!2-5668.
.. ._ ..,
,....., ......,_;.
Pomeroy. two badroom, ltltchon

AKC Regillered Chinese Pug 1
Male. Shots &amp; Wormed, Asking
$400, Will Consider Payments,
614-446-6270.

CHRiSTY'S PETS
271 N. Second AoenJe
Middlopor~ OH
614·992.. 51&lt;.
Monday·SaiUrdoy t0em-6pm
Grooming, kennel, pets; suppliea.
Do the fleas got your ClogQY
down? We dip with Oattr'l Pro·
tosslonal Flea &amp; Tick Dip tor
groomero. With each $25 order,
we sign you up lor a IO'IIo dll·
count card. A pet lo o smile. Do
vou know aomeana who ·nHd•
one?
Datamation Puppy, RtQittered ,
Shots. Wormed , $100. 814-441 ·
1107, 614-4411-3479.
HAPPY JACK S~IN BALM : At·
lievet; hot spott and scratchihg.
Promotea healing I hai'r growth
on dogs I cata without lltroidl.
SOUTHERN STATES 304·875·
2780.

lnsulat10n $60. Goats. Wethers .
$25. 614-256-6504.

20 Aern ol pu1uro

horae born.

510

Pets Plus. S1lver Bridge Plaza.
(10'4 Oft Eve&lt;y ll'i"Q. E""'Y Day!)
614·441.0770.
Puppy Palace KaMela, Boarding,
Stud Service Puppiaa, Grooming,
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade, All Broods.
Paymen11 Welcome, 614·388·
042G. 1
Purebred Cocker Spaniel puppies, very nice, tails done, threa
males, one female, $110/H, 014·
992·5144 alter S(lm.
AKC Registtr.ci Labrador Puppies Born 8110190, Champion
Bloodline, 81&lt;-6&lt;~221111 .
Re'g1stered malt Cocker Spaniel,
buff colored, 1 yr. old, S7S, 0 14·
992·3522.

Musical
Instruments

570

Allo Sex, priced to sell, call
oflar4pm

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa;red, New &amp; Rebuilt In s-.
Call Ron Evans. 1-aoo·S3T-SS28.

&amp;Hi Farm Equipment
Kimball Organ Entertainer II,
Broyhill Oin;ng Room Sat· •Pecan.
Tallie &amp; 4 Chairs, Laminatad Toop,
Hulch · Nice Wooden Bed, Mat·
"ess
&amp; Spr1
·An 11·que Rockl"ng
·n"l
u
•
Chair. 614·4•1 -0441 .
King Wood &amp; Coal ~Stove. Good
Condition. S95. 8t4-448· t451 ,
81 4-448-3055.

lana
•• hat RocNneo &amp; Rock·
er Recliner Blue Hod It 1 Year
Very Good Condition, Call 4:00

~~1':--M-:.·:-7 iXI_I':-.IA.-...:.8:-'•:--·2:.4~!1-~568=:::-.:.5.:__

Household
Goods

M 18
· b d ·
d
ap twin 11 • mclu •s mat ttess &amp; bOx springs, StOO; Broyh1ll club cha;r, 140: small couch!
oncmon, $e0; 6t4-98S.3595.
U 11ita rv wench on Tri -Pod Hyd
•
•
1 0 ·
3 9
rau IC r~ven, 600, u14· 7 .
2730
·

::'35::·- ----,,----·

7I

1989 Chovy Celebrity EuroSpon:
t984 Dodge hall ton truck; both
A-one shape. 614·992·3342.
1989 Eagle Premier ES Excellent
Condition. $5,000. 6t4-245·D449.
1990 Ford Taurus GL Sport
Wagon, PW, PL. Tilt, Cruise,
Racll. 31-d Seal Console Buckets.
loaded, Excellent Condition .
PricedRadJced8t 4.-4-46-64 91 ·
HI90 GMC Jimmy, loaded, runs
gOod, $5500 080, 614·742·2574.
t990 Mazda 626 4 Door Sedan,
Excollanr Condition, Loaded, Au·
tomatic, 118,000 Miles, OwnoroJ
Manual I Maintenance Log,
17,500, 614·256·685•. 614·256·
8329.
1i90 Model Ford TemP9 4 Door,
Automatic, A11, Cassette, $2,300
080, 614·256· 1252. 614·256·
1818.

H•draulic Hosea. Made To Ordtr.
'
s;der's
Equipment Co. 304·87!174 21
'

1.:.~:.·-..,.-.,.-~~--:-.,.-:::-JD 1717 Gtaln Drill Double Disc;
IH 820 Prill Whut 24 x7 .Grain
Dri ll: tO' Transport Disc . All In
Excollent Condition, 814·188·
5101 Ewninga.

I:::.:..::.:::::.::::::.
___-:-_
Lowell prices on an wood cuntr
oupplios. Bors &amp; cholns, oil I
files. Sider'o Equipment Co. 304·
87!1-7421 .

New Idea Corn Picker $1,SOD;
New Holland Dolly WhHI Rako
$t,7SO ; wnotl Dloks s•oo Up;
Plowa 1200 Up. Picl1up Ollllt·$345
Up; Cultlbaclt.ara 1225; Other
Flold Roady Equipment Howa'o

t~~~:~J•:•:k:•o:n:·~O~H~I~1::4·

Llvestocll
Reglotere..· Slmmontal Bulla: 3
Yoar Old Blacl&lt; Slmm111ttl Vear·
ling Black 't'la111n0 Red, 8 Black SimmtntaiBtlll, 814· 21511·
814-4-46-1 ~51.

uo2.

.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

;,, .

Kawasaki KX 80, secrifico at
$850. 614-!m-3522.

It,.'

750 Boats &amp; Motors

for Sale

1988 Ranger 373 V-Boa1 Wilh
150xP Evinrude Moror And 24
Vatt Evinrude Trolling Motor. 18
Ft. Excellent Cdndition With EX·
1ras1 $9.995, 614·1ln·2770.

-.·

• ••

•

1981 Bar.Jon Bass Boat, 85hR ';Johnson motor wltrailer. $1,500.
;;.30;..4..;-6"7"'5--11_7"'6._____- : - - - . ...

...

m,k:.E.! HOW~ ·earr
TmTIN'YaJ~i:.
m "CUP Of -;r;;:.~ -v

Auto Perts &amp;
Accessories

~~"':":~'::'":':"""-~-:--:--:-­
1982 5.0 HO Mus1ang long ~ock ' '·'
-engine, needs minor overhaul.~. J •

:Kl&lt;-675-15114.

THE BORN LOSER

614-379-27'JO.

cellent Condition, All Power Op·
tlons. 4 Door, $7.000 614·379·
2D43. 814-379-2820.
1091 Tempo Gl. 4 cylinder,
.dan, 4 dool', power windows.
locka. cruise control, tilt
· automatiC
. lranomiS!Iion,
wheal , aw,
onlv 21,000 miles, excellent conClit ion, asking S5"00, 614-992·
6G74 alk tor Karl or Mary or 304·
773·5535.
1992 Dodge Shadow
Tirea And Brakes, Good
tion, $5,:nl, 814-44&amp;1418.

....

30
Food~"·'
31 Ita•
r rn

PasS ·

31 P!apllalla

•

37 tprnttsh m.r
.llalll
41 tpur
41AotorDtlul81
Calrallw
... Wild IIUffttlo

..........
12=
"'.....
........
.,co,..,,...
~

Nolln-

111tl8:
111111111

A Dllwtar

__

••• Gt . .

..,

MOidTYIIiow,

CELEBRITY CIPHER
'A H R K

Y KIF

II

H L L

TEPWoiAG.'

'AHRK

P Z' M

ZHH

SPWJKG

PM C' Z

FHHCKQ

PCZKAAKWZEIA

RPMWKFIA.

JKAAO

SWDPAAPM.

'::~:~' S~\\4llA-4~~s·
1tr QAY I. POI&amp;AN .....;;...._ ___

- - - - - - - - IIIIIM

Rearrange . . . ol the
0. lour
ocrambltd - d • bt·

low to

form

lour Words.

MARDYE
2

I 1 I I I
S H I WK

I

I I P I

1

I~ 1 1 1

~--.-N--l_c.,...I_G.........t,.,.:~,

Statues of.politicians don't
look natural because statues
. - - - - - - - - , keep their mouths . ··-- •.
YOUJFL

::.'

L-..1.~-'---..L.-L..--' ..

Budget Price Transm' ss1ons, · ~

I

I

1--.,,.:..5....,.....:..,..,..;...,...'....;.;,..,.'~-4

Flywheels. Overhual Kits. 61-4 24!1-5677

•

•

•

•

•

'--'-...L-L--'--'---'

F1ve Michelin 225175· 16" Truck .
lirts. all season, tess than 600 i
niles on nres. 304-895-3410.
•.

O Compltlo

lht chucklo quoted
by filling in tho mining -ch
you develop from stop No. 3 below.

A PRINT NUMBERED LU'IUS IN

V

New oas tanks . I ton truck ":
wheels &amp; radiaton. D &amp; R Auto, ~ I
Ripley, WV. 30A -372·3933 or 1: 1 ~
800-273-9329.

•

?@}ll

Over tOO la1o Model Low Milo - 11~
age Uotor1 Out Of lnsurance J
Salvaged Autos, Trucks . Fore1gn,
Domestic, New W1ndshietds, Ra·
diators, Auto, Truck Sheet Metal.
Over 500 Cars, Trucks For Parts.

THESE SQUAIES

UNSCRAMBlE AIOVE LUTfiS

10 GET ANSWfl

1111111

•

SCIAM-lm ANSWIIS

!

1992 Hyundai Elantra 4 Door,

(2 wdt.)

Pua

Plua 990 waa worth 97 out of100
matchpointa to North-South.

"

23m:...........
atAraml
17 Pill- Klppl

good8plril

.

400 Small Block Engine, $200 '

llnn'-

22 Computer

·==

What are dummy'a rights? He may
c:beck tltat declarer hasn't rewked. He
may supply infonnation lp answer to
questions from a Tournament Director.
He may lreep traclt of the tricU won anc1
1oat. He playa dummy's eards as direct·
·eel by Ute declarer. He may warn declarer that he is about to lead from the
M'llllg hand. And he may draw attention
to any irregularity, like a revoke, but
only after the cardp~ 1B over.
So, in the normal coune of events,
the dummy cannot decide the outcome
of a contract. However, he did on this
deal, which occurred In thia year's
Alcatel Worldwide Briqe Contest.
Sitting North waa Dwayne Ballew,
who is a vice-president of Aleatel. He
was partnering David Berkowitz In the
beat held In the World Trade Center in
New York City.
Opposite Berkowitz's rebid of one
no-trump, which &amp;bowed 12· U poinll,
Banew'a jump to six no-trump wu opllmlaUc. But he had the chance to jus·
tity his own bidding. ..
Declarer won the lint trick In hand
with the heart ace, played a club to
dummy's jack, returned to hand with a
spade to his ace and led a spade to·
ward dummy. When West played low,
Berkowitz aaked his partner to decide
whether to play the 10 or queen.
Going with the percentagea, Banew
selected the 10. Suddenly Berkowitz
had 12 tricti; three spades, two
heart), lour diamoada ltld three clube.
Alld, 11 this waa more a aoclal ocat·
alon titan a ~~~~ bridge event, Eut
and West took tbls correct aueaa In

THAT's NOT
E)(ACTLl(
WI-IAT I
MEANT..

20-and

2411ecomemore

By Pbllllp Alder

1982 Honda Goldwing lnlerstate, ; .
tu lly loaded, excellent condition, 1
CB. FM caeselle, 614·992·5166

760

ultllllll
11 Dlwn

Mil-

The best
dummy play ever?

Motorcycles

1993 Marada V-~. inboard &amp; oul·
board, 21ft. cabm c:ruiser. 304 -'
675-6359 or 3004·675-2151 after
4pm.

OniCIIIht

Ccclldng

A 8? 2

-----------1
Used /Rebuilt. All Types , Over
1891 Otds Cutlass Supreme Ek· 10,000 Transm1ssions. Clutches

Unfold· Guess· Snowy· Nether · YOURSELF

Happiness is like jam. You can't spread ~around without getting some on YOURSELF

1

PW, PO. AC, AMIFM Cassette, ~~~p~t~!:v~~~r: IMP~!:rs:n~r~e~~ -. ,'
Power Sunroof. Au10ma1~. $5,300.
814·448-3825.
Powerline Auto Systema, Kitts : ..-~ot
::.:..~:..:..=------1 Hill, Ohio 1·600·482·8260 U.S. . II
~~~:
1002 Olds Cutlass Ciif'a 4 Door. Toll Free. 814-532.0139.
V-B. Loaded, 59,000 Mile~ Exctl·
~nt Condition, Far. Quick Sale AI
SERVICES
Loan Value $7,850. 614 ·379 ·
2967

-

I FRIDAY

•

SEPTEMBER 271

"

1a93 Ford Mu&amp;tang LX, automat·
IC, PS, PS, aer, amlfm stereo cas·
selle, 30,600 miles, very good
condilion, $7200 OBO, 514·i92·

.,,,

1893 Mercury Cougar, V8, load·

td, OXC. COnd., $8,700. 304-875·
7514.

•

11g4 Ford E1ploro Top Of Tho
lint Eddlt Bauer Power Wind·
ows, Power Leath&amp;r Seats. Alirm
Syatem. loaded! EJcallent Condi·
37 000 II''· •2 1100 At
tM.
•
•~•. • t,
, lor
5:00 814-448-8754.
CARS FOR S1001Trucks; baatt,
4-whaelen, motor homes, furnt ·
lure, oleclronics, compu10rs etc.
by FBI, IRS, DEA. Avail1ble your
a reo now. Coli 1·800·513· 4343
Ext 5 - C
1 p
Be F
rod · I roblomo?
F u11d E·Z
V h" 1nk Ni·
nanc:•ng. or
e ICes 0
Turn Downs. Call Ruth 014·44G·
289J.

720 Trucks for Sale
1"78 ,.,.._.,. tc®)Ctub \/In,""""
•
-~,
•
cond, S3,750
• 304-875· 1971
or304-87!1-38t2.
tget Toyota Pickup, 814·256·
8551
'
·
ID83 F-150 302 4 Speed, 12,500;
!liDO S·IO 5 Soeed, 4 Cylinder,
12.500; 1877 F-100 8 Cylinder
Au~lic 12.000, 814-37i-2e01 .
1117 Nialln l)iek up, Ssp., llln·
liard.
tirH. callll4-742·
1':7:.:1:2·: _.,.--:----:-:--:--:_d Ra~. Stondord,
1111 For
"I
••
080 8 4
1
10.000 ~•ea. - ·
•
·
•
256-tZIS.
lglt 5-10 v.e. oUIO, oharp. 304·
!1-2Y3.
87

AJC.-

810

..'.'''

Home
Improvements

.'

----:::~:-:::::::;---- "
BASEMENT
·~; 1' :

WATERPROOFING
- 1
Uncondilionat IUeume guarantee.
•
Local references furnished. Es·
;
lablished 1975. Call 1614) 4&lt;6·
0870 Or 1·800·287.0578. Rogers '
Waterproofi"Q.
~1

J

___________________ .,:

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

580

Apples-Rome Beauty, Hardy
Mums, Winter Pansies, Ferns.
Settle Gr. .nhouse-Applegrove
wv.3()4.576-21121 .

':Nrt t11a11l ~--:So:-:-~;:T:--::--:---:'"::~

Now 1,500 squtro lett, 3 bod·
room, t50Ptmo. on operox. 3 ocr·
n ollond.
Fot leue or sale· 1i74 Mobile
home, S2,000 cuh or tease tor
1250/mo. 304-756,1331 .

Kid tHied and OPfiiOVedll
Oel,oMul lab-mix pupeits ~.. to
a good homo. 614·940-3403.

1&amp;88 Tempo, atandard. 304-576,
2578 ahar St&gt;m.

I

At

11

All pass

'TME'lLL 8E TAKIN6 PICTURES
SO '(OU SIIOULD 6ET OUT
AND START FL'I'IN6 AROUND..

-4 Piece bedroom SUit&amp;, including
regular bed rail and water bad.
Good condition . $500 Call 304·
675-1865 alief 5:00pm.

1988 Niuan 300ZX TurbO t06K
T·Top~ 5 Spaid, Loaded, $8,600,
814-446-3481.

I WoociiMNI

Opening lead: • 10

t998 Honda 300 4k4 Had 6 ·
Mon ths, Runs Grtat!! Will Tradtt ~.
For • Wheel Drive Truck Of . ,
Equal Value Or $4,500 Firm, Call '
614·441 ·0996 Prolarably Alter
4:00 P.M. II No Answer laava
Message.

25" RCA lloor model color TV,
oak cabinet , 4yrs old. 304 -875·
5106 anytime.

He it Electnc Furnace Double
Burner Used 2 Winter For Houae
Good Condition, $250. 080 Altar
3 P.M. 614 .. 41 ·0940.

For Lease

•

~.-14

-"---------~I Good Condlion, 8t4·379-22t8.

7 Pull

DO YORE JUMPIN'
OUT IN TH' YARD!!

t990 Dodge Ram Van B· 25o : 1
72,000 Miles, $4,000, OBO Can .:
Be Seen At: Gallipolis Daily Trib · •
une, 825 Third Avenue. Gallipolis_;:

--------------------·
Honda Trail 50 &amp; Honda Trail 70

6 A? 2

• '1'.,.

10 Actrtttf AdltM

Eut

I CAN'T WAIT TO
TRY OUT MY NEW
PUMPY
lUMPY
SHOES
II

'

740

2 Ennet
3 lloun181n IIIII
4 Elpreaa

Seulll

BARNEY

1989 Ford Aerottar lora1n Fac . t
tory Conversion M1ni Van, .4 Cap· • •
tain Chairs Plus Bench Seat, · :
Loadedl614· 448·2300.

Ohio.

6 KI 5
• QJ 7 2
I I I :i

Fumbllr'l
~

.:z:=

•

.r _:

1988 Toyo1a 414, 138,000 Milet:
Runs Great, Rusty Bed, $2,-400
Nogctiable. 6U -256-1S40.

1

• Q 10 7 5

1980 Ford Bronco Full Size 300 6
Cylinder. 4 WD. 4 Speed. LookS-:
Preny Good I Runs Good $1,800, •
61~48-g716.

Eo&amp;

• g. s

Q 10 t 3

•

..

AKC Sheltie pups wuh pedigree,
sable &amp; while, shots, rreles- $250,
lemaleS· $300, 614-696·1085.

One Bedtoom Apartment in Pt. !:--_.:..:.:.:._______
Pleannl, furni1hed , extra nice
FALL SPECIAL
and c..111. No pell. Phone 1·304· 92% High Efficiency Furnaces :
87!1-131111.
60,000 BTU $1,300: 80,000 BTU
1,400; 100 ,000 BTU $1,500
One bedroom •panment in Pt. Above Prices Include Normal InPleoun~ 814-9112-5651.
sulation To Ex1shng Duck Sys ·
terns 5 Year Warranty Atl Parts.
One Room and Bath all Utilities life Time Warran rv On Heat Ex·
Paid 11115. Two Room and Balll all t: t,anger Free Estimate 81-4 --446 ·
UIHitles Paid $200, One Bedroom 6308, 1·80Q.29t.Q09a.
apl all Utililitl Paid $325, 513·
574·2539
FLEA CIRCUS!
ENFORCER8 Flea Products
Three bedroom apartmtnt. eltc· Protect Your Pet, Home And Yard
lrtC baaeboard heat country set· From Re ·lnlestation While Thev
tmg, Kingsbury Rd ., Pomerov. Kill Fleas &amp; Ticks NOW! Guar ·
S27S ' plus secunty, 6U -9Q2 - anteed Elfec!lve . Available AI
421l8.
These ParUC1pal1ng Stores:
Cen1ral Supp~. Odell •
Twin Rivers Towef, now accepting
True Value. Thomas
applications for 1br. HUD subsidDo -lt R &amp; G Food.
ized apt. lor elderly •nd handi·
Browns Trustworth)'. And
capped. EOH 304-675-6679.
Va lley Lu-r &amp; Supply In
M1ddleport
Two bedroom, upstairs, $375tmo,
utilitiea paid , $100 depoait, 2217
Freezer Amana Chesl Type 17
112 N. Main SL 304-f$75-8 t 96.
Cu. Ft $150. 6U· 256·1238.

490

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDs

1'993 Kawasaki 500 EX , n1ce. •
3,300 mOos, 12,500. 304-li75· · •
5010 or 304-675·8875.

Jack Rusaellf Rat Terrier mix, 3
tomales, tst Sholl &amp; wormed, tall
docked S75oa. 304·67S·7D48 ba·
lore 9Qm.

Garar: Space Needed For Aulo·
mo bl e. 814 -448· -4S3t, 814· 2-45·
5G78, 30-4 -736 -9593 Be lore 10
p Pia
.M.- BM.

1988 Ponlloc 6000 STE, 8eyl,
surwoof, am-tm casMnt. ac, loaded, 59,0110 m~es. $950 080. 304·
87!1-n12.

•

. DOWN

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer; Eaet

1968 Lollana S1,1100 nag.
1992 Ford Taurua GL, 58,000 ac·
1ua1 miles, loaded, new tires,
304·882·3745. attar

Rotdgorators, Srovto, Wuhors
furnilhtd, ,.._,dryer hookup, 1~-:--~~.,.-,...-~::-....,..- And Dryers, All Rocondltionod
caM I14·8D2-eeatl batwetn 5:30- (Vonguard Vontltso Firoplaco And Gauran1eedll100 And Up,
8:0Dpm.
Syllems) t Standard &amp; 1 Book· ,~\\I~I~Dtli~-"""~·!8t~4~eet~~8~44~1:.
· __
ceeeMoclttloled Oek \\1111 Laml·
Thrtt bodnlom houee, • - lnd natt 2 Electric Units Wltll Sur· Solo llex, lire new, only 7 montho
rtlrigerator,- ond dryer, no rounde 1 Whitt, 1 Mad Oak 81&lt;· old, paid 11,300 now. Asking
___
._;,__;,_11_4-DII...:..:.;2:..;
·30110;__:_
· - - ·'I ::256-::...:,t
.E;$700:.:.;_
. 304:..;_-6.:.7..:.~..:.11414.:..:.:-· ----

.·

1886 Ptvmouth Reliant $800 lirm.
30H7s-44811.
.

10. 8

: . 8' 2

5332.

10gs Happy Holidays Barbie
$150, 614·245·5513.

Dupont Stainmaster Carpet 12 II
2 x18 Fl. Plus Hall, Mauve S1SO,
6t4·446·3257

-.no-

remodtled. • - ond rtlrigara.,

AKC Reg1stered 10 month old
male Miniature Pincher. S200, call
614·992·7269.

• J OS

•

1996 Chevy Ext Cab, 4 WIO. ~
Loaded. 123,000 080. 30&lt; ·675·

1993 Honda Goldwing, With
Matching Trailer Alter 6 P.M. 6t4·
448·4792.
.

Roome lor ren1 • week or month.
StartinG at $120/mo. Gallia Hotel.
814-448·9560.

21 o

1088 Buick Skylar!&lt;, 4 Cylinder, 4
NewTirvs, $1,200 614-367.0241 .
t98a Moteury Sable PW, Pl., PS.
AUtFM Cauette, Cruise, Good
Condition. 811,000 814-446-2808.

Nic·e two bedroom apartment 1n
Pomeroy, no pets, 814·992·5858.

~~~~~~~~~--3 Bedroom Hom a Sale Or Ron1 470 Wanted to Rent
A'Voiloble Oclobor Slh, 814·2••.
·

1985 Chevy Colebrlty Excellent
Condition, Now Tires SBOO 080
814-448-611811,814-367-7754.

Doberman Pups, 111 Shots,
EJcellent Temperment. 61•·379·
2126.

HAPPY JACK SKIN BALM: re ·
lievea hot spots and scratching.
Promotes healing and hair growth
on dogs &amp; cata without aterolda.
R&amp;G Food &amp; Supply, 8U·BB2·
2184.

2 bodtoom house in Fom«07 lor 460 Space 1 Rent
rent w1th option to buy on con - 1i;;biit"'h;;;;Tc;;;-O;;;'irii;ri,;;;:;ii;;
tract. no pets, deposit. 614-8i8- II
7244.

1984 Oldo Cudau Ciarra 78,000
MiiH, Excellent Condirion, lnslda
And Out tl ,500, 814-379-2845.

A~C

Gr~~cklul living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Rfvarslde Apartment' in Middle· Concrete &amp; Plastic Sept1c Tanks.
port From 1232·S35S . Call 61•· 300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
992·5064. Equal Housing Oppor· Evans Enterprises, Jackson. OH
tur1ioes.
1·600·537·9528.

Sleeping raom1 with cooking .
2 Bedroom Hou&amp;e-2123 Lincoln Also trailer space on river. A.ll
Ave Pt. pteasant No pela S350J hook-u . Call afler 2:00 p.m.,
mo. • deposit. 304-675-27411.
304-

t98t Olds Dtlta 88, 350 diesel,
now tires. 2 new 1000 CCA bol·
terin. SSOO: 78 Nova, 2 door.
85.0110 miles. front damaoe. S250.
614·D4a·28n.

·wen

•

1988 Chevy Caprice Classic V8,
auto, air, $35oo 81-4·140.,.782

---------Combat boots. army camouflage.
rental surplus clothing by Sandy.
v1lle Post Ollice . Sam Somer ville's Friday. Sunday, Noon5:00pm. 30-4-273-5855.

Furnished
Rooms

1880 Pontile Trant -Am Au·
tomatlc, 2 Door~, Sunroof 455,
Good Shape, &amp; Parts Car, 11 ,500
304-4175-4841 AFTER 81'M.

e sa

AKJ

• K J

1995 F-150 Xl 16,000 miles, new · :
topper &amp; liner, ere cond. $t3, 500. t
304-682·2669.
'

AKC Regllltred Ytltow Lab
pupa, firol shots, wormed, dow
claws removed, health certifi· .
catot, 614-!149·2481 after •pm or
leave message.

----,,..,---,---13363.

For rent . (Pomaro_y) pr ivate
rooms tor boarj:ting, cab4e, utilities
Included, refrigerator, bed 1oom
11.1ita, table, chairs, Call 814·992·
451-4 qk b Christy.

196i K1ng mobile homt t2160
Mh 10x24 add on room, 111 excellent condition, 1011 ot new
taaues.l5.500, 614-DS!I-4474.

A Groom Shop -Pet Groom1ng.
Featuring Hydro Bath. Don
Shoots. Call8t4·446.023t .

1976 Thundtrblrd Small V8 351
Englno, Automatic, Good Body,
Runs Good 1600, 814·446·9716
Or Pleolt 1.-. Moaage.

1988 112 Eacort GoDd Condition,
No Rusl, Rune Great, 614·2459402.

Baby bed, .car seat, play pen,
walker, stroller, swmg . 304·675·
Furnished 2 Bedroom Apartment, 4546.
Acroaa From Park, AC, No Pets.
References, Deposit, $350fMo. , Beaulitul Brass Bed Queen Size
614-446.a235, 614~577 .
With Brand New High Quality
Brand Name Ma uress Set And
Furnished Aparrment Near l1 - Frame, Over $600 Value, Muat
brary Sllaro With School Teacher Sell $250, 614·374-4099.
References 6U· 446·4335 (5:00 .
9:00P.M.)
Boots By Redw1ng, Chippewa,
Tony lama . Guaranteed lowest
Furnished Apartment, Share Bath Prices At Shoe Cafe. Gathpol1s.
$225/Mo., Utilities Paid, 701
Fourth Avenue, Gallipolis, 614· Brand New Walker Never Used,
448-3B4ol Alter 71'M.
SSO; 614 ·379·2728 Or 304-937·

450

FINANCIAL

Pets lor Sale

'81 Ford Ftatlva GL, rune good,
excellent shape, asking SUOO,
814-742·1!5011.

AKC
Registered
Getman
Shephard pups, $200 &amp; up. 30-4 675-7495.

19Q3 Ranch King Riding lawn
Uower 12 HP 39• Cut Motor,
Needs Work, $250, 614 -2450717.

Furnlshod Efficiency 3 Rooms.
S.Ih, AJI UtiitiH Paid, Downstal11,
S2e51Uo., 019 Second Avenue,
GallipoUs. 81•-44fi-3Q4S.

560

e

1995 Chevy Ex!. Cab Truck WI 1
Country Coaches Conve rs1011' 1
Pkg . 2 Whtel drive. tow miles, '
very c: lean, two tone blue/gold · :
mu51 see to apprec1ate . $21 ,700. ,
304-69S·3493.
-; ;:;

1987 New Yorker 4 Cvlinder,
Auto, Good Condition, $1,500;
Small 4 Wheel Drive Tractor
$2,0110814-441·0414.

1993 Pop-Up Coleman Camper
AC. Furnace. EKtellent Con.dilion,
$3.200.614 -388-8293.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Oriva
lrom $244 to $315. Walk lo shop
&amp; movies. Call 814 · 448 - 25~8.
Equal Housing Opporrunity.

5121 .

• K

_____ .,

AKC Registered Cocker Spaniel
Puppies, Haa All Shots, AakinSI
$150, 614·446·327S.

12Mx3· Rlol kit wlex tras. $65. :304·
882·2669

456 112 Second Avenue, Gallipo·
lis, 2 Bedrooms, AC, Appliances,
$400/MO., Utilities Paid, $200 0&amp;posit, Relef'erces, 614-446-2129.

West Virginia Cold Drawn has job
opening br material handlers and
cold draWn mill operator. Job re·
quirements: High school degree
or GEO, pre-asseument tests,
and mandatory drug testing,
Please submit resume and applica tion to Bureau of Employment
Progams, 225 S1rlh Sl. Pt. Pleas·
ant WV 25550.

Antiques

Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques,
1124 E. Main Street, on Rt. 124,
Pomeroy. Hours : M.T. W. 10 :00
a.m. to 6:00 p.m., Sunday I :00 to
8 :00 p.m. 614 ·992·2526, Run
t.400fe owner.

1 Bedroom, Ulilities Paid 260
Fourth Avenue. $255/Mo .• 614·
388-1708.

2br garage apartment, fully fur·
nished, real ni ce. S2751mo. plus
utilities. 304· nl-5040.

West Virg1n1a Cold Drawn has job
0 pen1ng lor Accounting Clerk,
prefer erper~ence , will train.
Please send resume to : Bureau of
Employment Programs 225 Sixth
Sl. Pt Pleasant WV 25550.

Sporting
Goods

Block, brick, sewer pipes, wind·
ows, lintels, etc. Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Csll 614·245·

__ _______ .•

Of.J'I·M

• Q 10 8 '

1Q94 XLT Ford Ranger. am. fm '
cauene , air, 5spd, 29,000m t.~ ~
asking
$9,000.304-895-3469.
.'"1
_..:..,-

71 o Autos for Sale

Mobile Homes
for Rent

J'i~

1992 Ford F· t50 5 Speed, Undel '
351&lt;, AMIF~ Cassette. Excetlerlt ,
Condition,
__;,614-24S.Q179.
..:

Appliance Palla And Sanrica: All • ~
Nama 8f11indl OVer 25 Veara Ex- ;- •
pmience All Wotk Guaranteed. ~ •
French City Uaytag, 814 -448· -~ •
7795.
_. I

~

CIC Genetal Home .,ain·
tenence · Painting, vinyl sid1n9, '
carpentry, doCifs, windows, baths,
mobile home repeit and mote. For
lree estimate call Chel 8t4·992· ;:--

=
""'

6323.

ASTR0·GRAPH
·.

-

._r.

.
\

DRYWALL
Hanv, llrisll,
Ceilings re•wrect , plaster repair. f"
Call Torn 304·875-4188. 20 years

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

experience.
Ron·s TV service. apec•aiiZing tn
Zenith ll&amp;o servicing malt P.lhtr
brands. House calls, 1·800·797·
001!.. wv 304-57&amp;-23118.

not Ieithia laaue cllarupllllt afli!lnee.
SAGITTARIUS

-=--Jill

840 Electrical and

Refrigeration

~

RSES CERTF lEO OEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES

Residential or commoreiol wlrl~.
cent•d electrician. R1denour
Eleclrieal. WV0003116. 304-875-

1788.

Advincemenlln

. ......

.

PII
·~

'

Aeaidlntial Or Commercial Wir· ...... ~
lng, Now Strvice Or Rtpeiro. ll· • ; o!
cenaed Electrician. Walah Elec· :"'~ "'
1ric 8 14 · 4•~·8850 , Golllpolis,

Ot'lio.

~

S81Urday, Sept. 28, 199e

Htal Pumps, Air ConditiOning, It
'lou Don'l Call Us Wo Bolh loul
FrH Estimatn, 1-800·2D1·0091.
614-o448-15308, wv 002D45.

new urvk:t 01 repairs. Maslltf' U-

tionolhip wort&lt;. Mail $2.75 10 ~ker, may not ba In a poslllon 1cH1etp oomeone
c/o lhis newspaper, P.O . Box t758 •. who wu eJti)8CIIilg your Uli*lance.
Munay Hill Stalion, New YOlk, NY 10156. TAURUS (April - . . . , 20) Soundariea
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) A contlic! mlgh1 not be u important for you 10dey
mlgltt develop batw"" you and some· as they should be. There wiH bt a line
one wllh wl1ilm you usualy wort&lt; well. Do llna batween being assertive and being

!,OVJIU

youre~~oeen fielll Will be

proiNtbft In the year ahead. Do nol hesitate 10 uatMna ~ rtepOIIIibiNtie

INDY.

23-0.C. 21) You

will not do a Vooc! job today H your heart
In your wort&lt; . lnatnd of performing
Ulignmenta you 1'188111. put 111tm ulde
for 111t moment.
ian')

aggre&amp;live.
GEMINI (llay 21.Junt 20) Your pen,
chant for ereallng problema for yourae11
Will be fl'lkllnt IOC!aY. Before you 110 any·

lhlng ....,, ~ 1l1t penaltltt.

CANCEl! (June 21.Julr 22) Tl'f to-.:·
CAPRICORN (o.c. 22......_ 11) Do not financill de\elopment to yGUf advailtioe
attltdl stringlto fa\101'1 you do for lrlendl today. Houe...,, IIOI'IIIIhlug )f nol ~·
today. Actiona of lhla nature will only lng well, do no1 continue to lnvut your
bi:Hd r8Mnllntnt.
money.
AQUARIUS (.lin. 20-f'ell. 1t) II you art LIC! (oluly U·Atig. 12) In order to
uneure ol youratlf in a sticky altualjpn

acnteve Ill lmpoilant

OI)Jec:llYe todly, •

lildtay. put up a bold lileade. Wh.af yl!Br wil ba - · 1111110 helle full COGperalion
or Plllidpal,e In lrMIIng PIOIJI•ne .
LIBRA (ltpl. 23-0ct. 23) Befort uaum· mind can concei,.., you can achitvt.
from your U8C CIIIII.
ing ·~~n~nc~~~ obllgldollt ror you1 club or ·PIII:I!tlft', all 111nt1! 20) Do t101 ttke VIRGO (Aul. D t P' 12) II you rtqUIIt
group tqday, make aure you hevt lhe yout: bed ri\ocd 0111 on o1htla lodtty; You a lawr t!)day. from IOIIitcnt you
8ppi!MI 'of lilt ,..on In .dtatgt. Trying ~ ~ ~ .. wtlo aleo got ... INn you hid ... ~. hit Ill:
'.
lo piltch-.up a broken romance? The up.OI) ... twrOnO licit ollllt bed.
114!r rtaponM inlght embarlo.u you Itt ·
Aatro-Graptr Matchmaker can help you . . . . (lllrOII 21-Apltl11) Ulultly, you ftortt of olhtla.
Ulldlilllo1d Willi 10 dO 10 make ...... . . giMIOUI wlih frllndl, llullodly you

dldn,

'.

•

�--------....

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

··~~ -.----.--~--

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

Pomeroy • Middleport, O~lo

Football '96
Catch All The
Excitement!

"Support These·
Fine Area
Businesses!

Bowhuntlng's
'draw' on area
-

24 Hour
Banking
Seven Days A
Week

FARMERS
BANK

THE HARMON FORECAST

249 W. Moin St
Pomeroy,OH

614-992-6759

• 4ir Force
' AriZona Stilt
Alkonua
A•my
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• 8ow1ing Gr•n

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108 Mulberry Ave. • Pomeroy, Ohio
992·2121
ESTABLISHED IN 1913

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'Clemson
ColO&lt;ado

· Eut Cll'Q~na
· Fkmda
·Florida Slatt
' Freii"'I Slalt

Dignity and Service
Always

,,

'Georgia T~ (Thurs.)
·Indiana
• IOwa State

24
22

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OFFERING PRE;NEED
COUNSELING AND
ARRANGEMENTS

'L.S.U.

40

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14

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TRACTORS and
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20
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SALES - SERVICE - PARTS

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
Chester, Ohio

5

11,995

Details on

ress nears adjournment • AS

pageA2

: Crnment.
For Cremeans, his political career
: is riding on a platform ofcutting tax. es, less government, and a free-mar. ket and states· rights approach to
~ health care, education, welfare,
: poverty programs and jobs creation.
. .These are many of the same issues
· that voters supported at the polls in
; the 1994 election when a Republican~ · led Congress was swept into office.
;. But now many Democrats, includ; :i.ng Strickland, argue that the GOP
; leadership, is too extreme and is out
; of touch with ordinary, working peo; pie.
~~
Today, Democrats, hoping to woo
back the voters and sobered by their
humiliating defeat, are sounding a
oiiiOre moderate message and many
Jo-e disavowing traditional liberalism.
:Even President Clinton recently
·reminded voters that his own record
~hows he's not a liberal.
, Stt:ickland's message is fairer, but
not htg~er ~a~tes; less wasteful govemJilent, universal health care, and
;~hat he views as a limited but nee- ~SSJIIY 80.~Inental role in educa,tion, poverty programs and jobs ere·
ation.
In conliast, Cremeans remains
unabashedly opposed to big govern-

FINE UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE
Quality to Lmt a Lifetime

ANDERSON'S

14

"12
•
"12
1

10

22

II
1

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"•
0
•
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,,
1
1

992·3671

WARNER
Heotinf! and Coolins, 1n&lt; .

St. Rt. 7 Chester. Ohio

985-4222

11

11
1

Weathertron®
Heat Pump XL 1200
Super Efficiency

20

1

Clttst•, OWo 915-4222

"
•••3
"•
"•
•
1
11

11

20

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10

Rep. C,.,._ns
ment and what he calls governmen·
tal intrusions that require the voters
to pay "more than their fair share" of
taxes.
" No question about it, my constituents want less government,"
Cremeans emphatically said in a
recent intervi~w in his Capitol Hill
office. "They (constituents) want to
be free of making mistakes and the
intimidation of government."
Cremeans, who sits on the House
Banking and financial Institutions
Committee, sa11f an example of too
much government was what he con· .
sidered to be the excessive federal
regulatory requirements imposed on
banks that he believes make it diffi-

cult for his constituents to get loans
to start new b¥sinesses and create
jobs.
J ,
Strickland said his views are distinctly different from Cremeans on
the role of government in peoples'
lives.
"When Mr. Cremeans says, 'We
don't need the government, we can
do it for ourselves,' that's a basi.c dif·
ference between the two of us,"
Strickland said in a recent interview.
"Do they want less government?
I'm going.to hare to give you a yes
and no answer. They want Jess bad
government, less wasteful, insensitive and over-reaching government.
But !think they want better govern-

By The Auoclated Prus
A fanner Ohio congressman has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to hear
his complain! that he was targeted for defeat in 1992 when congressional districts were redrawn due to population changes.
FIJnner Rep. Clarence E. Miller, a Republican. claimed that gerrymandering- the drawing of legislative districts to favor one party's can·
didates - led to his defeat.
Three federal appeals judges threw out his case in May, so Miller filed
an appeal this week asking the Supreme Court to take the case.
Miller's lawyer, David Stivison of Philadelphia, said lhe issue goes
directly to the U.S. Constitution.
"A win here could be the most important voting rights victory in 30
years," Stivison said in a statement released Friday.
Miller's suit contends Democratic and Republican leaders worked in
collusion to give.up one seal each as Ohio's representation in the House
shrank to 19 members from 21 after the 1990 census.
He claimed he was chosen as "a sacrificial lamb" when he faced Rep.
Bob McEwen of Hillsboro in the I 992 Republican primary. Miller lost
by 286 votes out of 66, I02.
"A razor-thin outcome inclines us 10 a contrary conclusion," said Judge
Alan E. Norris of the 6th U.S. Circuit Coun of Appeals in Cincinnati.
McEwen lost in the November election to Democmt Ted Strickland of
Lucasville, who served one tenn before being defeated by Rep. Frank A.
Cremeans of Gallipolis. Strickland is challenging Cremeaos in this year's
election.
Miller had wanted the districts 10 be redrawn before the 1996 elections.
1lle complaint was filed in November 1994.
He was joined in the suil by several unsuccessful Democratic candidates for Congress and the Libenarian Party of Ohio, which contended
the two major parties use redistricting to exclude minor parties.

ment. People in southern Ohio want
roads and schools built, Medicare
protected, jobs, and that oftentimes
involves more activity on the part of
government to accomplish those
things.
"They don't want government
interfering in personal decisions, but
I think they recognize there's a legit·
imate role in government in building
the good life, so to speak. We do not
have the local resources to do thai for
ourselves.,,
The candidates· answers were
markedly different recently when
lhey were asked to list their legislative priorities by Project Vote Smart,
a nonpartisan group founded by for·
mer Presidents Gerald Ford and Jim·
my Carter that provides political
information on the Internet.
Cremct~ns said that taxes and a
balanced budget were his top priorities.
"We must replace our intrusive,
burdensome tu structure with lrue
fairness," Cremeans said. "We must
do everything in our power to help
low-wage earners to keep much more
of their paychecks."
in g.
Strickland said his top priorities
Strickland said he favors getting
were health care and "improving the additional funds, if necessary, from
lives of working families."
"going after corporate welfare proWhen they were asked how 1hey grams and redirecting the savings to
planned to fund their priorities, Cre- pay for targeted tax credits for busimeans didn't reply.
, ness" that allow them to provide
Martin McGuinness, Cremeans' health care, pensions, profit-sharing
press secretary, said the lawmaker and more jobs for their employees.
didn't answer the question because
If one issue defines this campaign,
his legislative priorities would not it mighl be the candidates' views on
require additional government spend· 1a~es .

RAWUNGS&lt;OATS

,,
••
,.

Fisher Funeral Home

1

10
10

Bruce Fisher • Director
MIDDLEPORT

James R. Acree Jr. Director
992-5141

1

•

20

14

1

(row's Fa y
Restaurant
228 WEST MAIN

Steelers, 34-17, then was sick with mono during the 21-7 rematch. He's better this year.
ST.LOUIS ......... 18
**ARIZONA .......... ?
Here's t~e first of two geographically confused pairing; St. Louis is West and Arizona is East. The
Cardinals bave won three of the last four in this series, but the Rams laughed last, in "94.

___.
POMEROY

992-5432

OAKLAND ....... 19

JUST DO IT.

•

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - A 19-year-old Henderson man has
pleaded guilty to murder in the first degree just three days before his tri·
at was·scheduled to begin, according to Mason County Prosecuting Attorney Damon B. Morgan, Jr.
Zenie Junior Myers III, of Redmond Ridge, pleaded guilty late Friday
: afternoon. He was scheduled to go on trial beginning Monday.
Sentencing was set for Dec. 4, where it will be up to the judge if Myers
: receives life with or without mercy.lf Myers is sentenced to life with mer·
: cy, he will be eligible for parole after 15 years.
. Myers was charged with the murder of his grandfather, Zenie Myers.
· 85. also of Henderson, and was indicted in September 1995 for murder,
: burglary, petit larceny, attempted murder and wanton endangennent.
:. The elder Myers was found dead in his residence on Aug. 25, 1995,
; after suffering a single gunshot wound 10 the abdomen. The state med. ical examiner's office reported Myers' wound came from a single-shot shot·
: gun at a range of approximately five feet.

Groundbreaking
slated for Monday
on industrial park

PROJECT
ITE

'

:oooT to close bridge Monday
N2ndAVL

' RIO GRANDE- State Route 325 will be closed starting Monday at
:the site of a bndge about eight mile~ south of Rio Grande, the Ohio Depart·
:ment of Transportation announced Friday.
: The bridge is expected to be closed for at least three weeks to allow
•for the installation of a box culvert.
' ODOT had planned to close the bridge in August, but due to a prob.:1em with the delivery of materials, tbe contractor had to delay the clos·
.;.ing, explained Nancy Pedigo, public infonnation officer ODOT District

MIDDLEPORT
992·5627

' Contractor on the job is McDaniels Constructio11.Co., Columbus.
. As soon as SR 325 is reopened, ODOT will close another bridge on
'SR 233 about one mile wesl of the intersection with SR 141. This is also
:.xpect~ to be a three-week closure to install a box culvert. Pedigo said.
: Both projects are part of the same project. ReJilacing the two spans is
:expected to cost ODOT $279,248.95. Both bridges are expected to be complete by the end of October.
·· The official detour while 325 is closed will be SR 141, 7 and 588.

QUALITY PRINT

.

SHOP

Parties trumpet accomplishments
on anniversary of GQP 'Contract'

255 Mill St. Middleport
992-3345

**SAN FRANCISCO 34 ...........ATLANTA 17
23 .......... N.Y. JETS 16

RIDENOUR'S
TV &amp;APPLIANCE GAS SERVICE
(IUUI

GROUNDBREAKING SITE -A map provid-

•(0.

The Time t:o1rnes
See Us For Your 1997
Graduation Announcements.

After getting pounded by S.F. on the road, 41- I0, the Falcons made the '95 playoffs with a final week
28-27 win over the 49ers intheir own comer of the West, Altanta. But they're back in S.F.
The Jets proved they could score against a real defense two weeks ago in Miami, and they face muc
less in the Red skins, but we like Washington at home. N.Y. won a 3-0 thriller three years ago.
(Monday)
DALLAS ..- .... 28
••PHILADELPHIA 21
Though they blew a seven-game winning streak against the Eagles last year, theCowboys won when it
counted- the divisional playoffs- 30-1 I. Dallas is just too strong on both sides of the ball.
.
(Open date; Buffalo, Indianapolis, Miami, New England)

SPRINGFIELD
TOWNSHIP

Mason County man pleads guilty
to grandfather's murder in 1995

14

: COLUMBUS (AP)- Ohio Democrats got together on Friday to salule
lbeir efforts to stop the "Contract With America" and promote their con,
;xressioual candidates.
·
• Republicans look a different approach, celebrating a job well done.
: The Democrats' rallies in Columbus and Cleveland featured s1x con·
:pssional candidates.
·
.: Fonner Congressmlll\ Ted Strickland, who is seeking to unseat Rep.
:-Frank Cremeans iii the 6th District, said his party had stopped Repubh·
::cans from reducing the growth·of Medicare, cutting education programs
::and undermining environmental laws.
;: "~mocrats succeeded in putting the brakes on the GOP contrac~"
~trickland said.
While the Ohio Democrats were trying to declare doom for the GOP,
:.n Washington, D.C., Republicans were patting themselves on the back.
:: . At a rslly on the steps of the U.S. Capitol, Republican House me~·
!:Jicrs congratulated themselves for accomplishing more than half of thetr
~ ~~Contract with America" from two years ago.
k

·915·3307

-.....
••

..•
·~

...
.

ed by the Gallla County Community Improvement Corporation pinpoints the site of the

Meigs County Chamber of Commerce "Second' Annual Casino Night
at the Rivetfront Saloon," slated 10
start at 7 p.m. at the Pomeroy Fire
Department, Butternut Avenue.
Western, casual dress is requested
for this event, with all proceeds from
the event to benefit the chamber.
Players can "ante up" anytime after 7
p.m., as they will receive $S,OOO in
fun money and vittles from the
Chuckwagon wjth a SIS admission
ticket.
The chamber is offering a reward
of$10,000 in fun money to the lucky
individual who captures and brings
.the "Outlaw," pictured in Wanted
posters which have been distributed
at random business establishments
throughout Meigs County, to Casino

NigbL

,. ..:.....
).

'•

county Industrial park, where groundbreaklng ·
eeremonlea ere set for 4 p.m. Monday.

Pomeroy gears for·Thursday's
beginnjng of Ster~wheel Festival
By TOM HUNTER
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - Riverboat cruises,
contests, and a full slale of enlertainment and activities for young and old
will highlight the Seventh-Annual
Big Bend Sternwheel Festival. which
opens on the renovated Pomeroy
riverfront Thursday.
The festival has blossomed since
i!S inception in 1989, in quickly
becoming one of the fastest-growing
fall recreation events along the Ohio
River.
Approximately 16 boats are
scheduled to attend the festival ,
according to George McClintock of
the Big Bend Stemwheel Festival
Committee.
Feature events during opening
day activities Thursday include the

Strickland lost his congressional
seat to Cremeans in the last election
by only 3,000 votes after he had said,
in response to a question, that tax~
might have to be raised to pay for
universal health care cov.erage.
"It was a hypothetical answer to
a hypothetical question," Strickland
said. "I didn't say I wanted to, or
would raise taxes. He (Cremeans) has
taken my words and used them oul of
(Continued on A2)

Making
progress

SUNDAY Notebook

11
14

Vol. 3.1 , No. 34

Miller appealing dismissal
o~ redistricting grievance-

14

,,"
•

(Sunday)
**BALTIMORE 16 NEW ORLEANS 14
The Ravens have done well as the Browns against the Saints through the years, winning nine of 12
games, most recently in 1993. The key to making it I 0 out of 13 will be Baltimore's pass defense.

••WASHINGTON

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • SEPTEMBER 29 , 1996

''

FLEXSTEEL

14

•
tmts

: By PAMELA BROGAN
: Gannett News Service
• WASHINGTON -In Ohio's 6th
i Congr~ssional District, the race
• between Republican Rep. Frank Crc·
: means and former Democratic Rep.
: Ted Strickland comes down to how
: much government is too much gov-

1627 Murdoch Ave.
485-8541 or 1·800·433·7964

10

It's not just our name,

'"' locll

5 sp, air, cass.

1

HARMO~ NFL FORECAST
Sunday and Monday, Sept. 29-30
•• CHICAG0.24

.. s

12

Peoples
Bank

1-----------------..
ST/H£
....

Buckeyes top Notre Dame • C1

[Sixth District race highlights
!split over smaller government

1
10
1

Baum
lumber

985-3308

I'" • .,. - ... . ,.J

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..

11

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

'I
I

11

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It's been three years since the last Bears-Raiders battle, a 16-14 Raiders win. Both teams' defenses are
better than the offenses, but Oakland will have trouble· stopping Chicago's running game.
DENVER ........... 28
**CINCINNATI .. 17
Since '83 the Broncos have taken five n a row from the Bengals, though for what it's wonh, Denver
hosted all five of those games. Thus far Cincy isn't moving the ball with much consistency.
DETROIT .......... 29
** TAMPA BAY ... 23
Last season the Lions outlasted the Buccaneers in Detroit, 27-24, then won easily in Tampa, 37- 10, for
CHESTER, OHIO
their first sweep of the Bucs since '89.The Detroit backfield will be running un~pposed.
985·3301 or 985-3330
GREENBAY ..... 35
**SEAITLE. ........ 15
-'::::=~---:~---~:----1 Who can contain the Packers' offensive barrage? Cenainly not the Seahawks, whose defense is barely
registering a pulse. Believe it or not, Seattle has won the last three games in this series.
··JACKSONVILLE
24 ......... CAROLINA 21
Call this one the Parity Bowl: No two expansion teams have so rapidly become competitive with the
rest of the NFL. The Panthers won more in '95, but the Jaguars will beat them through the air.
KANSAS CITY.J2
**SAN DIEG0 .... 28
The Chiefs beat the Chargers 29-23 in OT in their first matchup last year, then shut them down 22-7.
This one will resemble the fonner, not the latter- unless the Chargers do the shutting down .
MINNESOTA .... 21
**N.Y. GIANTS ... 16
Though their off~nse should steamroll the Giants, the Vikings can play as badly as any bad team in the
it's u
league. so this may be close. Minnesota was a 27-10 winner of their last meeting, in '94.
Mason • Point Pleasant • New Haven
**PIITSBURGH 26
HOUSTON ........... 24
Oilers QB Chris Chandler was picked off twice and sacked four iimes in Houston 's first '95 loss to the
Member FDIC

1

r·

•I
I

Parkersburg

Othor Gomn - Eaot

· .......,. w.twn Stall

WiltJM!JlPIVallly

"P.Mayl¥.-.a

992·3322
NORTH SECOND AYE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Norlh Carolina State

Miuin•f.i Stare

Soulihltn III'IOil

. LIU.C.W. Poll
· Matthiltl

.

Tulta

·~So~AMrn

S1at1

S~ttwMIIAifto.irl

Euttrn MIChiGan

27

Sowtne&lt;~

· Jadlson S141ta

·

7

20

U.C.L.A.

11

Go
Holst!I "'

·· St.
John'l \"tl.YJ
St. Marya Cal .)

17

Pittabutgh

"' · vrginll
: ~a:.ri·e:,c~.
"'" . , ,
..""'"'22 .'"""'
" .........

· NGn'*n Araona

Queen

Soultlem f.taliuippi

,."',.,.. .:::au!lule

ENtarl'lllinoil

Dairll

Soulhwlsllt'n lousiana

-·-- .... ...
.. .....

OelanrtSWa

. ()uqEat r.,_..._ StAle

"FAMILY OWNED" 797·4092
liD-2131 - HOD-312-5657
f
f
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I
t• '
'

21
8
13

New Ml1ioo Slate

'Yalo

Conl1aelitul
O.lmovth

RUTLAND FURNITURE &amp;
BOTI'LEGAS

'Utlh

9L~•

Central St11a {OhiO)

.....

••

17

Centrll WUhlngton

. c.n ••~

't~a
tncl ~a~~a

14

Northwestern
Missouri

20

' Buc::IU*I

oaor..c

10
3
20
13

Duke

"'" ==-'"
"',.
......,..,
"',,31 -~~~·
",. :~=

· ~SI••

' B01ton U.

40 Gal Propane
Water Heater
Call Rutland
Furniture for details.

"
22
20

WWFOI'III
'TuaaA&amp;M
Cen~ Florida
Kent\d.y
North Cwohna
Hawaii

·
. ••

. BDIIt Stilt

FREE!

Oregon S1a1t

Colleo" - Dlv. 1·AA

Akot'n Stl&amp;l

992-6611 .

12

'Wisoon&amp;~n

••

Wyom~

20

So.nnem MeC•st

9
17

23
20
2S
38
2i
24

'Virginia

~MieN

"

34

Texas-EI Palo

Norlt1 Tun

Colorado SIJie
Kon1
Ttxal Christian
• Nolrw Dame

'Texas Tech

• Toledo

13
8
7
1i

16
7
7
6
20
6

· Syracu"'

'Purdue

• South Caro110a

"

~~ullooitiana

·Cincinnati

28
2•
21
20
26
22
2S

· New Mexico
Ohio State
· Oklahomt
Penn State

R;co

2i
3S
21
31
38

•s

· Nevada

I

-·

SoL, Sopt. 28 -lloJor CollogH- Dlv. t·A

EWING FUNERAL HOME

f

Feature, C1

unba

221 W. Second, Pomeroy, Ohio
992-2136

•

.· . _.. .,.

.

...

1 ':

'

L.----...1

BOW HUNTERS
PAUDISE

•

•1/

Friday, September 27,

'

742·2511
J.ICI0-137·1217

•

..

Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

614-992-7986

-- -·

Entertainmenl on the Pomeroy
levee stage Thursday includes a per·
formance by Paul Doeffinger, a
singer/songwriter from Mason County, W.Va., at 7 p.m., followed by
Karaoke with Jeff North of Starbound
Entettainment from 8-11 p.m.
Ooeffinger performs original
.sonas as well as a variety of countty
and popular music, and has made
appearances throughout the tri-state
aRa. and at Nashville's Blue Bird
Cafe and Stoc~yard Restaurant and
Lounge.
Nonh, a Gallia County resident,
has operated Karaoke shows in
Columbus and the tri-county area for
the last seven years, and lllcently
signed a recordina contract with
MBS Records, with whom be will
(Continued on A2)

.

•

By KEVIN KELLY
Tlmes-51U1tlnel Steff
BIDWELL - Groundbreaking
for lhe Gallia County industrial pari!
on Monday is a signal to the com· ·
munily that 1he project is getting ofT
the ground, the cxecu1ive director of
1hc county's Community Improvement Corporation said.
R.V. "Buddy" Graham said the
ceremony is sci for 4 p.m. at the
induslrial park site, across from the
Bob Evans Fanns Inc. truck garage
on State Route 850.
"'What thi s mean s to us is that we
arc assuring people progress is being
made," Graham said.
The timing of the groundbreaking
is in line with the projected timetable
fur completion of the industrial park,
which has been nearly two years in
development
Much of that time has been caugh1
up in obtaining more than $2 million
10 develop the site. That task was
completed early in the summer when
more than $1 million was received
(Conllnued on A2)

Good Morning
Today'a Cma..:.~
16 Sections - l

Paces

Columns

Jfm 'i'pde

••

Cl

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