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•

·-·t:'llge 18 • The Dally Sentinel

{

Thuntday,Juna15,1115 ,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

·Powers

105-year-old woman takes
oath to become
U.S. citizen
..

•

WinS

By NANCY MAYER

pinnacle
Se~te Bob Taft presented RJtJI Powers, Meigs Coun·
ty. with a Pinnacle Award Friday in
recognition of exemplary service to
Ohio's elections system.
Powers is a poll worker and
director of Meigs County Public
/
Library. She is pne of seven recipients of the award, a new program
announced recently in Columbus
dudng the summer conference for
the Ohio Association of Election
Officials.
Eac.b award recipient represents
one of seven districts. Powers is the
. recipient for the southeast district.
She has served as a poll worker for
Meigs County for more than 25
PINNACLE AWARD WINNER - Ruth Powen was redplent
years. She makes sure that the polls
of the Pinnacle award for tho southeast dlstrid. She receives the
are set up and readY to go on elecaward from Secretary of State Bob Tall.
tion day,
·
Powers was nominated for the
As director of the Meigs County to lbe Meigs County Bo61cmobile. ·
award
by Rita Smith, director, and
Public Library, she has registered
"Ruth is always willing to do
Jane
Frymyer,
deputy director, of
numerous voters through the whatever it takes to make election
the
Meigs
County
Board of Eleclibrary. She also extended the · day go smoothly," Taft said. "She
tipns.
library' s voter registration services is ready to tackle any duty.''

.Uiocillted Pre. Writer
SAN FRANCISCO (AI&gt;) - It
took more than 3S years, and a
meaPtre denying state services to
Illegal inuiliJ111Dts, for lOS-yearold Wc:u Tei Yue to become a U.S.
cilizen.
Yue, who may be the oldest person ev~ naturalized in this counlry,
Willi honored with a special presentation Tuesday at a ceremony for
1,500 new citizcus.'
·
In a setting replete with stars,
stripes and poetic speeches about

America's cu1tun1 mosaic, die Olioese W0018Il was given an American flag 11181 wiD be flown over die
nation's Capitol and lben retumC:d
to bee.
·
It was die lint lime a new citi·
zen bad been so boaored, said San
Fmnci~'s lmmiaralion and Na!u·
ralization Service direcror, Thomas
Schiltgen. "Nobody could remembee wben we bad someone older,"

be·said.
"I'm just proud to be a U.S. citizen," the rosy-cheeked m8lriarcb
said throush an interpreter as she ,

'

'

'

leaned on a wooden- CliM' outsidelbe auditorium.
:
1
Yue was born in Olina' s Canton
Province in 1889. She moved tci
San FrBDCisco to join ber husband:
and two sons - already cilizens _:
in 1959.
:
· For more than 35 years, Yuewas satisfied with her status as
legal pennanent resident But pub-;
lie rage at immigrants tbal fueled .
lbe passage of California's Proposi..:
tion 187 last year changed her:
mind.
'

deem pedicure - part of a two- · find that infonnation they need is
week elephant-handling scho&lt;;~l ·harder to come by. At lbe Riddles'.
hosted by Scott and Heidi Riddle · the elephant handlers·can talk shop,
on their 33-acre elephant sanctuary exchange stodes and ideas.
inlbe Ozark foothills.
''Elephant handling is a dying
Unlike dog,ocat or horse owners, art," Scott Riddle said. "We have
who can go to bookstores or knowledge we'd like to share."
libraries for infonnation on caring
Th_e farm bas seven elephants.
for their animals, elephant handlers On thts day the students are groom-

ing Betty Boop - known as
"Booper"- a 23-year-old, 8,000·
pound female Asian elephant.
Booper stands on a pair of stands
shaped like inverted washtubs.
Her two front feet are on one
tub, her baek ones on the other,
allowing the handlers to go under
and around the elephant's feet

Scou and Heidi take turns showing the shape of healthy nails and
bow to use tool~ and salves to ereate them.
•
Boo per responds quietly and
quickly to each command, geuing
off the tubs and back up as quietly
as a Cal getting on and off an easy
chair. Excused from her duties for
'

dlepon lot;
Deed, Louise Bartels to Ivan L.
Comer Jr. and Cheryl L. Bethel,
Salisbury, UJ4 acres;
Deed, Robert Bruce Titus fo
·Alfred 0 . Roush, 2.808 acres;
Deed, Dav-id P . and Erma J.
Neville to Marty L. and Tammy M.
Cline, Salisbury, 1.079 acres;
Deed, Victor B·ahr and Jane
Estep, Chester, 1.172 acres;
·
Deed, Paul Black to Ray R. Sr.
and Sheila Ann Proffitt, Sutton,
6.003 acres; ·
Deed. Charlotte A. Willford ,
Charlotte A. VanMeter and Melvin
VanMeter to Micht~et" A. Willford,

Rutland parcel;
Deed, Paul Strauss, Lee 0 .
Wood II and Beatrice Wood to
Mason D. Wood, Rutland, 3.247
acres;
Deed, James and Marjorie A .
Satterfield to Jjlllles and Marjorie
A. Satterfield, Sutton parcels;
Deed, Bradley B . Johnson to

Christine M . Dull, Bed'ford, 80
acres;
Deed , Alexander and Nancy
Couladis to Paul E. and Carol J.
King, Chester parcels;
Deed, Wallace P. and Donna J.
Hatfield to Wallace P. Hatfield II,
Salisbury parcels;
Deed, James B .. and Phoebe B.

Wright to James B. and Phoebe B.
Wrigh~ Lebanon; ·
Right of way, Jaymar lncorporated, Jaymar Coal Company to
Gasco Distribution System, Interstate Utilities Company, Pomeroy
parcels; I
.
Right of way, Jaymar lncorporated, Jaymar Coal Company to

~

Stat~

r

·:
1
a few moments, sl!e wanders into·
the high grass, trunk swinging,:
seeking a snack. She returns at a'
call from Heidi.
r
Boo per came to the Riddles,
from a circus, where an injury to
her right hip prevented her from ·
performing well. She also came
with a tough repumtion .

~~s~~~.~~~ !~~~~~~pes, local trade .. . .. . ....... $4995
~~o~?t~?.~~c:!~e~~:S~enger, local trade ................ s5995
~i~ ~?.:. !t~~:e~ocal trade .............................. $6495
~~o~~i~~~r~A?/~~G~~:R~es. local trade ................... $6995
~!a~!:e~~w ~~!?~,!~:x4 ..'....., ..................... ,.. $6995
5
.;~p~e~.~i~ c~!~?,~l~y~~!ls .................... : :.......... 6995
;;?, :~rr~~d~JsH&amp; ~o~k~~i~;~s;,~ ..........: ............... s5995
~i~, ~~e~~~ni~~~JoRm~es! .. .. ............... ,............. 56995
;~o~~~~~~!~.~a~t~~!~a~c~r ............................... $8995
~Lrt~~-~~ c~!!~.~~~~. low miles.. .............. . $8995
;~o~~~~~t~~~i!~~s';!~~....: ........ _. ....................... s9995
e~. ~e~~~ir;l~!~~~~ssette ....... ... ..... .. ....... 59995
;~o~~~~!r~i~~~s~~~sette, lOcal trade .............. $1 0, 995

e:

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JUNE
16-17

.

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Sofa Sleepers In-Stock
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All Lamps &amp; Accessories
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All 3·5 &amp; 7 .piece wood &amp;
metal dinettes In-Stock

.... SIDEWALK DAYS SPECIALSFour Drawer Che~t $49
Wood Swivel Bar ~tools $50 &amp; up
Two Loveseats $325 ea.
Five Piece Trestle Dinette $149
Zenith 25" Remote Table Model $399 Twin Miss Match Bedding $59 ••·
Wood Rocker- Oak $69
Wing Chairs (Color Choice) $169
• Drawer End Table (Solid cherry) $140 Night Stands $39 &amp; up
5200 BTU Gibson Alr-Cond $279
Tappan Microwave $125 (1 only)
2 Position Recliner (2 only) $99 .
Gibson Built-in Dlshwi!sher $229
Oak Door Cocktail $59
Vanity Stools $39
Twin Metal Headbo~rds (3 colors) $29 Eureka Corvette or Broom $35
Bunk Bed 2x6 $169 .

(304) 773·5592

80s.

.

Mason,.'Wv

2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 centa
A MuHimedlalnc. Nowopaper

awards more road repair funding
replace aggregate and base loss, the Highway Department's Dave Spencer
sa1d.
1
• Early e_stimates for county Highway damage exceeded $700,000,
Spencer satd. .
.
.
·
. Bob Byer, d~rector ol the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services,
sa1d total flood damage has been estimated at more than $4 million ,
mcludmg damage to county and tOwnship roads, along with private homes
aud cars.
.
. .
. .
B~e and surface reprur proJ~ts totaled:
• Tttus Road, $50,426. 77;
• Lasher Road, $54,305.75;
• McCumber Hill Road, $34,910.84;
• Mallons Run Road, $31,419.75;
• Prunter Ridge Road. $10.473.25;
:Peach Fork Road, $13,964.34;
Red H11l Road, $10,473.25,

This 1978 Oldsmobil~ was consumed in flames early Thursday,
to
Police
Department report&lt;. Christina Haning, of Grant Street, Middleport, had been sleeping in the car
with the motor running while it sat In front of the Court Slreet Grill, police said. She .Scaped the
vehicle without. injury. A nearby car and the bar had some, smoke and water damage . .Pomeroy
volunteer firefighters doused the blaze that started about 6:30 a.m., according to report•. (Sen·
tine! photo by George Abate)
·

\

• Star Hall Road, $10,473.25;
• Hysell Run Road, $2,094.56;
• Pomeroy Pike Road, $1,199.22;
• Strongs Run Road, $6,892. 17;
• Beech Grove Road , $2,396.12;
• Briar Ridge Road, $10,473.25; and
• White Oak Road. $7,882. 17.
The total miles of road to be r~paired could not be calcu lated. but cost&gt;
usually are about $12.000 per mile.
·
These emergency granL~ from the Ohio Public$orks Commission_
more comm on ly known as b suc II -will not have to be paid back
Spencer said. .
.
·
. This grant requires a 10 percent local match, Spencer said. Dut. these ·
lunds can be matched with in-kind labor. ·
" lt .. would have ·P~.obably taken three to four years to recoup these
areas. Spencer srud. It also allowed us to replace the inventory,"
Eason suggested that county res•dents be palient with ille work crews.

I

The vi11lage is near sign ing a
By GEO~GE ABATE
contr,a ct wah Dav1d Reiser, an
Sentinel News Staff
Middleport bas been awarded a Athens ilrchi.tec~ Horton said. The
$60.000 grant to refurbish the vil- plans will take about a month to be
linished.
lage swimming pool.
"We'll try to get (repairs) comThe grant is one of the first of
$44.6 million in state NamreWorks pleted this summer." Horton said
grants that w1ll be funded during a adding the P.oo r will be ready to
Jour-year penod by an Ohio Parks open next spnng.
Money not use&lt;l for pool repairs
and Natural Resources bond issue.
Announcement of the award win · he diverted to an interest· -"llll·
came this morning from State Rep. ing fund for future maintenance
, and repairs, be added.
John Carey, R-Weltston.
The pool had been losing about
The 42-year-old, above-ground
$12,000
a year, llono'n said.
pool had been closed since spring
A new (1901 ha&lt;l been estimated
1994 due to repair demands.
a t $350,000 . The curren t pool
Pool repairs had been expected
·
could
last at .least 10 more years
to &lt;:OSI about $80,000, but vi llage
W~lh
the
rcratrs, a Stale in~pector
residents had committed about
S;l)(l,
$50,000 in donations. labor and
. Last year, following a tour. the
supplies during the past year. Midmspector ordered new steel supdleport Mayor Dewey Horton said.
port&gt;, e lectrical system upgrades
"It really makes me happy,"
and
re~lacement of wood steps
Horton said. " It 's been a lot of
work raising the money."
(Continued on Page 3)

White House rallies to defend budget plan
ByALANFRAM
Associated Press Wriler
WASHINGTON - The White
House is rejecting Republican
charges that President Clinton's
plan for balancing the budget miss es the mark by hutidreds of bill ions
of dollars.
After exrunining details of.thc
president's outline for eliminating
federal deficits by 2005, congressional Rcpublicatls say U1at for now
they will probably rysume writing •
their own· plm1 without him .
While no final decisions were
made, House-Senate bargainers
seemed likely to try to complete a
compromise seven-year plan for
balancing the budget next week
that rellects only GOP priorilies,
said Republican congressional

actual cuts in taxes and spending
- ·measures the president must
sign.
"The president has reached out
·his hand to Republicans and we
take tl1 em on their word that U1ey
want to work with us. " said
Lawrence Ha&lt;lS, spokesman for the
White House Office of Ma.iagement atld Budget.
·
Republican budget aides met
privately in the Capitol Thursday
with OMB officials to analyze
Clinton's plan. Afterward, Repulili·
cans said little new was learned,
hut they askec) the nonpartisan
Congressional Budget Office to
produce a report on Clinton· s plan.
perhaps by the weekend.
Clinton's budget was based mi
assumptions about economic
sources, . speaking on condition of growth and spending for Medicare
anonymity. Clinton docs not have · and Medicaid that are slightly more
to sign the budget measure.
optimistic thru1 U1e projections the
Negotiations with the president CBO uses . But over 10 years those
co~ld take place when Congress
differences compound quickly.
begins writing bills cunt.aining tbe
As a result, the CBO report

Key piece of evidence fails
to fit Simpson comfortably

40% off ' list price

MASON FURNITURE CO.
2nd Street

. Ray referred to a ruling l"st July
·in Perry County Common Pleas
Court that found the current statelocal ·system of financi1•g schools
was inequitable and inadequate.
The case is pendin g before the
· Sill Ohio District Court of Appeals
in Canton.
"The bottom line still is if we
don't do someU1ing in the lormula
or to llw formula we· re going to
have a big mx increase," Ray said.
Defenders of t11e current funding
system con tend that would happeu
if the SL1le loses Uw lawsuit Umt a
coalition representing more llmn
500 of Ohio's 611 school districl~
filed against it.

list price

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Saturdoy,ouDDf· HlcJisiD the

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, June 16, 1995

COLUMBUS (AP) - Senate
Republicans are willing to compromise qver their proposed changes
in the school funding system, a
Senate leader said. However, they
still want to move loward compliance with a pending lawsuit.
Senate Finance Chairman Roy
Ray, R-Akron , acknowledged
Thursday there were some problems with a school finance overhaul contained in the Senate's pro' ·
posed $33.5 billion, two-year state
budget.
· One problem: a Senate proposal
that would require county auditors
to update real estate values annual~ ly instead of every three years.
Ray is one of six legislators on a
joint conference committee working against a July I deadline to
resolve differences between House
and Senate versions of the spending plan .
"We know there are some
adjustments that are going to have
to be made so we're spending a
great deal' of time and effort ri ght
now to take a look at that ," Ray
said after a conuniuee hearing.
"Maybe th ere's a · middle
ground that we can get at lllat will
m ai ntain th e integrity of the
changes in the fonnula t11al could
still get us off this court case,' • he
said.

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92
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Gasco Distribution System, Inter·
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.
Deed, Charlene Wallbrown to
Wendell C. and Mary E. Dunn,
Lebanon;
Deed, Roy and Ruth Virginia
Kesterson to' Raymond R. and Joy
E. Combs, Rutland.

11e

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6-7-3-27-29

Changes .---Mornin blaze uts car---. Middleport given
in store
$60,000 for repair
State Senate looks
to revise overhaul
of swimming pool
of school funding

Just a sampling of the many s uoe~-:-~u'll find at
Mason Furnit•lr'" ~¥'¥'\ 0 •
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Values to $2799

Buckeye 5:

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Meigs County was awarded anQlbet $307,726 Thursday for base culvert and ditch repairs on 14 roads damaged by last month's flooding.'
Work w11l not be completed on the roads until this fall. said Meigs
County Engineer Bob Eason.
"We'll be able to put them back in good condition," he said.
'
The highway deparunent will start wiljl county roads 12, 13 and 4,
because they were the mo~t damaged by the stonn.
"It's been a team effon by everyone," Eason said. "We couldn't have
gotten a gram without everyone's cooperation."
Last w~k. a County Road 25 bridge 1/2-mile north of County Road 26
was replaced using $45,000 in Ohio Public Works Conunission funds.
· Au additional $1.5,000 helped pay to replace culverts on county roads
·
28, 352. 174 and 36.
Also. $25,000 was sent to help repair a slip on County Road 3, and

Savin s Sa e

Every·Day
S ale Priced At
T aylor Motors .

9-5-2-4

Vol. 46, NO. 34

six spaces left and those appoint-:.
ments will be given to the women•
calling fJCSL
.
: ·
Appoinunents can be made by~
calling 992-6626 between 7 a.m.;
and 3 p.m., Monday through Fri-;
day. For women making appoint-;
ments and then finding they cannot·
keep them, Torres asks that they ;
contact the Health Deparunent as •
early as possible so that someone:
else can take advantage of the time!
slot.
·
.

MA ON FURNITURE S ·. ECTA

B etter Vehicles

Pick 4:

Copyright 1995

----------------~ -----Landuansre~--------~,--~---------

Thc following land transfers
were recorded recently in the office .
ofMeigs County Recorder Emmogene Hamilton:
·
Deed, Adena Higgins to Joseph
Higgins, Betty Wells, Bruce Higgins and Dan Higgins, Columbia
parcel;
Deed, Kelly B. and Melissa J.
·Chapman to Donald A. and Shirley
A. Jeffers, RuUand, 1.3839 acres;
Deed, Ellsworth J. and Ann F.
Holden to Don v.: and Bonnie G.
Burke, Salem parcels, corrective
deed;
Deed, Terry and Kimberly
Smith to Gregory A. Taylor. Mid-

2·1-6

Sports, Page 5

They're packing their trunks and heading to elephant school
By M.E. FREEMAN
Associated Press Writer
GUY, Ark. (AP) - Today's
lesson: How to trim an elephant's
toenails.
Using a rasp, nippers and a
hoof-c utting knife, 10 students
from as far away as Australia are
teaming the finer points of pachy-

Pick 3:

a·

Free mammograms available
, Free or _low-cos~ mammograms have a ~imlted income, and not ~
WID be available Fnday, June 23, at on Medicaid. A woman may qualithe Meigs County Health Depart- fy if she has bealth Insurance and
ment.
.·
has not met the deductible. She
· The Columbus Rivenide Hospi- may also have Medicare, and
tal's mobile mammography unit · would qualif~ if this is not the year
will be on the Health Department Medicare will pay for a mammooffering mammograms by appoint- gram.
ment all day on June 23.
If a woman does not meet lbese
To qualify for a free mammo- requirements; 'tbe service will cost
gram, a woman must be at least 50 $60.
Norma Torres, R.N., nursing
years old, live in Meigs County,
direcror, reports that ·there.are now

Ohio Lottery

Meigs loses
in Legion .
action

•
•

LOS ANGELES (AP)- It was his arms towMd the jury box.
eit11er an actor's pcrfonnance of a
When Simpson walked back to his
lifetime, or an innocent man's sin· seat. several panelists began writcere demonstration that he doesn't ing in llleir 1101ebooks.
have the hands of a killer.
The demonstration came at the
Either way. O.J . Simpson's request of prosecutors, who had
effort to put on gloves that prosecu- just elicited testimony suggesting
tors say he wore during two mur- that Nicole Brown Simpson bought
ders was one of dle most dramatic the unique gloves during a 1990
moments of his trial.
trip to Bloomingdale's in New
Jumrs were wide-eyed Thursday
York.
as
a
grimacing
Simpson
But Simpson's s upporters were
approaChed U1em, struggling to pull ecstatic after court.
on the left glove that was found
"You see. those gloves don't
near the mutilated bodies of his ex- even fit," said a beaming Canneliwife and her friend. He tugged at ta Durio, Simpson's sister.
the tops of the fingers to show that
The. glove testimony was to conhis hand wasn't all the way in.
tinue today. folloVfed by a hearing
He appeared to have less !rouble this aftemoon on a defense request
getting his hand into the infamous fnr the judge to stop dismissing
right glove, which was found on jurors until Ole panel starts deliberhis estate and DNA experts say is ating.
stained with the blood of both vicThe defense also presented a
tims and Simpson.
s tatement from a passed-over
Jurors followed Simpson's potential juror. Brenda Postellc,
h(\llds with their eyes as he tumed :ovho claims she was told by a sherhis wrists at different angles, lfr s deputY. tlJat police were inves• extended his fingers and stretched tigating jurors. The defense bas

co uld show thm Clintoi1 fails to
b.; ~ance the budget by hundred s· of
billions of dollars.
Clinton already has infuriated
many congressional Dcmocral' for
joining Republican s jn proposing
cnls in Medicare and other social
programs 1i1ai Democrats bold
dear. Being accused by Congress'
neu\fal budget scorekeeper.&lt; of not
climinatitlg iJ1o delle it al ;~I would
add to Clinton's political dileuuna.
The differences hetwccn the
Whit e House and congressional
-~co nomic .mtLI spending assumptions are shghl. and bmh are within
range of foreca s ts by private
economists.
The White House tlunks the
economy will grow about 0.1 percen tage point a year faster than
Congress estimates. Jt also believes
spend ing on Medicare and Medicaid will grow about 0.6 percentage
point a year slower than Congress
docs.
With the annual federal budget

approaching $2 trillion over the
next decade. such seemingly small
differen ces add up- in tlte admin-

istration's favor.

·

In fact, Republicans said that
when measured by the less optimistic yardsticks that Congress
use s, Clinton's plan would mean
deticits of more than $200 billion
for every year hut 1996.
Meanwhile, Clinton and tile
GOP remained divided on another
budget question : their effon to
write a compromise measure cutting $16:4 billion from current ·
spcm.ling.
A week after Clinton vetoed tlte
first version of the hill because he
Said il CUI too deeply llliO SOCial .
programs , the chairman of the
House Appropriations Commiuee
said hopes were fading for a deal.
"It's a patient in critical condition." said ll1e chaim1an, Rep. Bob
Livingston, R-La
·
If a dcai ·is not struck by next
week. the spending-cuts measure is

PRESIDENT CLINTON

-.

dead·. Livingston added . And if that
occurs. he wamed U1m he would try
to extrac t th e lost ;avings from
spending legislation for 1996 that
lawmaker~ an• bcginniilg to write
- rarl_!cting some of Clinton's
fttvoritc

progrmn~ .

Livingston told reporter; TIJUrsday that 1f the measure dies. more
than S7 hilhon in extra spending
the b1ll cnntams also would have to
wntt fo r the 1996 bills .

Militias clash with senators at hearing
WASHINGTON (AP)- It was
an extraordinary scene: The wit·
nesses. some decked out in military
camouflage, used words suc h as
"tyranny" and "'servitude" to
describe government encroachment

ber of the Michigan Militia who
was wearing rnili~try fatigu""· told
the senators.
Jatnes Johnson , a member of tltc ·
Ohio Unorganized Militia. said the

into ordinary citizens' lives. Sena·
lOrs fired back , describing the
views of U1ese self-sty led citizen
militiam.en as "extreme" .and

and regulation w the point of leading citizens " down the road to
involun~-uy servitude ... ·
" WiUl tl1e increasing polarization between the tax-paying citizens and government. th e only
thwg tlmt stands between what is
going on now and armed conflict ''
time, .. Johnson s.'lid.
''We stand against corruption
and !be tyranny of government,"
Olson told Specter. 'We're coming
to believe you all smnd for that cor-

"abborrcnt."
·
The seuing was n Senate subcommittee heating Thursday called
TIGHT FIT- Murder def~nby Sen . Arlen Specter, R-l'a., in the
dant O.j. Simpson grimaced as
wake of the April 19 federal buildhe tried on one of the leather i.ng ()ombing in Oklahoma Ci ty .
gloves prosecutors claim he wore
Specter, "'ho's running for presitbe night hts · ex-wife, Nicole dent. said he wanted to determine
Brown Simpson, and Ron Gold· whether the burgeoning militia
man were murdered . ·The ·· movement posed a threat \O safety
demonslralion occurred Thurs· and the federal goverrunent - and
day during Simpson's trial in Los to what ex tent. the government
Angeles. (AP)
might pose a tbreatlo militia members· rights.
. Some of the verbal exchanges
sug.gested that, p!osecutors , using
were
sharp.
pohce or shen ff s deputies, have
''The
federal govemment needs
tried to ~ig up din on jurors sympathetic to the defense to get them a good spat:king to make it
kicked off the case. Prosecutors behave,·' Nonnan Olson. tl1e me111·
deny U1e allegations.

•

government was increasing Laxc!i

ruplion.' '
·
· Specter's reply w&gt;rs iesty : "I
don ' ttakc that lightly, your com-·
ment that I represent corruption.
And I'd like you to prove iL"
Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif.,
asked UIC five mllitia witnesses if
there ever were circumstances
under which people could ~"lke the
l~w intn their own hru1ds. Each 'said

no.
"Absolutely 110t," said Robert
Fletcher . a mllit'" reader frnm
Noxon. Mont. "AI no lifJlc have
we espoused any such action. We
are a defensive conc-ept ."
There are more that• 220 militias
nationwide, Specter said. The militias operntc m about 40 states, said·
Rohert Bryant. an assistant FBI
&lt;.1 inx tor.
Law cn'forcemcnt ofllciuh also
te.&lt;tilied before tlte Senme Judiciary
subcomm11tee on lerrorism, tech ¥
nology and govemmcnt information thm Specter c~~~s. All agreed
the m1httas were disturbing and
dat1gerous."
" FederiU at1d local .enforcement
r ersonnel have been threatened.
ha_r;~ssed , assaulted atld sliot" by
m1litta memhers . said James L.
Brown, deputy associate director
for criminal enforceme.nt at the
Bureau of Alcohol. Tobacco and
Firearms.
The lawmakers said they felt
· current laws were adequate to hand I.e violence on domestic soil or
investigate threats of violence .

'·

�•

Friday, June1a, 1995

'Commeiita
The Daily Sentinel

.'

Friday,June16,1995

WASHINGTON - Sometimes
big mis1akes have very humble ori. gins.
1
Republicans in Congress are try·
ting to cut nearly $3 billion in for:eign aid - one of !be least popular
1items in the budget, and one of the
·
most misunderstood. President
ROBERT L. WINGETT
:
Clinton
has promised to veto the
Publisher
·: measure, clatming it represents a
. return to "isolationism" wbicb
! would tie his hands in foreign poliMARGARET LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
' cy. Yet some public health advoController
General Manager
. cares see a far greater da11ger in
cutting off aid to impoverished
: countries around the globe.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
A reduction in aid could result
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
ln
''a man-made disaster of enor1
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
mous
proportions that would put
shou'ld be in good ta~tc, addressing issues. nol personalities.
millions of lives at risk aod under' mine our nation's position of lead·
ership around the world," one foreign aid official told us . Witbout
America taking tbe ,lead, officials
fear. other industrial countries will
also begin rescinding their foreign
aiiJ.
The GOP bill barely touches the
By WALTER R . MEARS
two biggest recipients of American
AP Special Correspondent
aid: Israel and Egypt, who also
WASHINGTON - So far, the balanced-budget debale is about
happen to be generous purchasers
proutises, n~t proof. That's to be delivered later, over seven years or 10,
of American weapons. The bull&lt; of
· aod while today's government leaders can set the course, tomorrow's will
be in charge when the fmal bills come due.
·
And they will be costly.
. So when Republican leaders say, as they do, that Congress already bas
· produced a balanced budget by 2002, there's some political poetic license
· involved. They have drafted twoJ'Ians to be melded by Ute House and
· Senate. They're two mo11ths behin schedule.
.
With Presidenl Clinton's rival proposal to balance the budget in 2005,
lhe top echelons in both political parties are commiued to shrinking the
federal govemmen~ alU•ough they still collide on how, where and when.
Whether the break-even date is 2002 or three years later or something
between, U1e call from tbe Democratic White House for culs, in spending
and necessarily itt tbe federal role, is change in the pauem . Indeed. while
Clint&lt;m pressed his own deficit-reduction program in his first two years
-and got no Republican help tben - his new-look budget is a sharp tum
from tbe one he sent Congress only four months ago.
Thai break with Democratic ortbodoxy is drawing prorests from within
the president's own party, and not only from ardent liberals.
"I don't believe it's right for the Democrats to kind of overreact to tbe
last election," Clinton said Wednesday. But to Democratic critics, he's
· tbe one overreacting to the Republican takeover of Congress, with a budget plan tbey deem lilted the GOP way .
The president suid be isn't yielding on priorities .like education, won't
let Medicare beneficiaries suffer, won't acccp1 Repuhlidn ~1X cui plans.
"In a sense, he's created bookends with U•c Republicans," said Senate
Minority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S .D., who wanted him to wait longer.
: ll•e budget resolution Congress is 1rying to complcrc scls guidelines
for action tbere, and isn't subjectw a Clinlon veto. " ... He's got a veto on
everything else that lollows," said Leon Panetta. tbe While House chief
of staff.
Republicans scoffed at the Climon· propos:~ as a belated non-starter, a
flip-nop tbat will have little m no impact. That's politics; some of the
same Republicans had been dem:mding for weeks U1a1 Climon weigh in
wilh a new budget, since his original was scrapped by Congress. He'd
said that one would continue his coun;e of delicit reduction, but il showed
imbalances widening by the year 2000.
For weeks, Clinlon refused to move, saying he would wnit muil tbe
Republicans seuled on a plan. He said he'd work witl1 lhcm for balanced
1Judgets, and would s;\y how nt tbc proper ume.
. He decided il1n1 was Tuesday night, altbough Democratic congrcssion~ at leaders wanted IQ wtti~ and said so, before :md afler his five-minute TV
budget message. He'd been assailing GOP curs as Draconian and menacIn tbe years 1961 -64 tbe trajecing 10 popular programs, particularly Medicare. Now he's for Medicare
tories
of 1wo very different lives
·cuts, too, altbough more modest ones. And that cedes hack an issue.
intc!e ted, with historic conse· 11 also pUI both parties on his case, ~ven tbough House Speaker Newt
~uet~
· for American polit~.
Gingricb said it may include some good ideas Republicans can accept.
--:JJl
y Goldwater was urn scion
Sen . Pete Domenici, R-N.M .. chainnan of ll•c Dud get Commiltee, said the
of
an
ti,zona merchant dynasty
new Clinton plan showed ''that he agrees with Republicans on many
.
..
who bad been elecled to tbe U.S.
iJ ungs . ...
'·
Senate and become the chief politi·
' "II is prohahly the only time in hisrory !hat Congress has produced a
cal' spokesman for the growing
balanced budget while lhc presidemsat In ~1e sitlcline,." . Domenici said
conservative
movement. F. Clifton
in a tnoming-aflcr TV , inlervicw. ''We've proven we can do it in s~ven
While
was
a
gangly upstate New
years," House Majoriry Leader Dick Anney, R-Te:«lS, said in another.'
Yorker
who
had
carved out a career
But designing a balanced budge! and delivering it are different mailers.
in
tbe
engine
room
of Republican
Budgets are based on fVOjcctions, on scoring, in U•e congressional parpolitics,
as
a
manager
rather than a
lance. They include assumplions on economic perfonn;mce that arc bard
candidate.
In
the
early
1960s White
to projccl for une year at a time, lei alone seven or 10. The biggest oneput
together
a
national
organization
year cut' in all tbe proposals come in. the Iauer years. In Clinton's version.
that,
to
general
aslonishmcnt,
sucIt would be 2003, well pasl the end or" second lenn if be gets one .
ceeded
in
giving
Goldwater
Lbe
The federal budge! l)asn 't been bal;mced since 1969. and thai was a
Republican
presidential
nomination
break in a deficit pattem. Detore rhm, il was 1960. Clinton boast\; that he
on U•e lirsl ballot at the convention
is U1c first president since Harry Trum:tn to reduce deficits for three years
of 1964.
in a row.
After that," the two men went
Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan both came to the While House
~tcir separate ways again . But tbe
promi.,ing to balance budgels within a tcnn . Ncitber cmnc close. Dut until
Goldwarer nomination, tlcspilc his
George Bush's ,Jast budge!, lhe wmual message to Congress always had
projected balance ·hy the end of tbc live-year projections presidents are· subsequent defeat by Lyndon Johnson, permanently shifted control of
required to issue.
U1c Republican Party imo conservaThai points to the gap between plan and ,pcrfonnance. It's still ~Jere 10
tive h:U1ds, and led by clear! y !racehe brid ged.
able s1cps 10 tbe election of Ronald
'
Reagan and tbe current conservaEDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columtive uominance of American polil&gt;ist for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
·
·
tics.
nalional politics fnt more than 30 years.
,
Now, by coincidence, the memoirs of Clif While, who died in .
1993, and the best biograp.hy of

·pro.m ises and proof

the cuts will affect poor nations
with far less political clout and
where lbe meager foreign aid dol·
Iars ihat now from America can

By Jack Anderson
'
and. ·
Michael Binsteln
spell the difference between life
and death.
All told, Republicans want to
cut $800 million, or approximately
35 percent, in direct development
assislance. Preventive measures the most cost-effective way to curb
disease- will suffer the most.
First on the list of casualties will be
vaccines.
Why does, this matter? On
humanitarian .g rounds alone, the
lac)c of American aid means .4 million children each year will go
without vaccines for preventable
diseases like measles, whooping
cough and diph~heria. At least
I 00,000 children will die of diarrhea and dehydration, and another •
I 00,000 children a year will suffer
nutritional blindness. The AIDS

epidemic, which is already rampant
in some African coumries, would
get worse witb tbe loss of preven·
lion programs.
Some public health officials
argue that scaling back Third
World prevention programs would
haye implications for our own safe·
ly and security. The rise in intema·
tional travel means a viral outbreak
in Africa could reach Kennedy Airport in New York within a maner
of hours. The recent Ebola oul·
break in Zaire, for example, could
have reached epidemic proportions
if one carrier bad stepped on a
plane bound for overseas.
"Microbes have no boundaries,'' says Stephen Morse, a
virologist at Rockefeller University
in New York and author of
"Emerging Viruses." "They are
citizens of the world. They have
discovered global travel and are
doing it."
Funding for disease prevention
has already been cut back severely
ftom its high in the 1970s. This,
says Frank Lostumbo of the
National Council for International
Health, has helped weaken the
healtb infrastruclure and hindered

c.;

).t_
0

__--...

-

our ability to J)revent diseases that
arrive fran abrood.
. "Policy makers bave forgotten
the adage about an ounce of prevention being worth a pound· of
cure,' • Lostumbo told our associate
Melinda Maas. He points to the
$84 million provided by .the United ·
States In the 1970s to help eradi·
cate smallpox. As a result of that
investment, Americans are now
saving $200 million each year in
vaccination costs.
Other effortS could yield similar
results. Polio, for example, has
been largely eliminate~ from ·the
Western Hemisphere by tbe availability of vaccines, though it is still
prcvalenl elsewhere. If funding
dried up, it would cripple lbe effort
to eradicate polio altogether by
2000, a goal that scientists now
be.lieve is within reach. If polio
were eliminated, Americans would
save $300 million per year tbat is
cumlnlly spent·on vaccinations.
"We don't know what else Is
out there," says Morse. "Many
viruses are i'solated at the moment.
Some of tbem may have the potentialto become the next AIDS virus,
but we just don't know. Ebola is
unlikely to spread to America, but
that doesn't mean thar tbe nexlene
won't."
DRUG WARS - An unintentional loophole in the General
. Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
could cost consumers as much as
$6 billion In higher prescription
, drug prices if Congres.1 doesn't act
quickly.
The loophole was created by a
Food and Drug Administration ruling last month that will give a
lucrative windfall to brand-name
drug ·makers by extending their
paletlls . After complaints by pharmaceutical giant Glaxo, lhe FDA
ruled in late May that a 1984 drug
pricing law precluded generic drug
makers from marketing lower-cost
drugs during an extended patent
period esmblished under G{\TT.
The ruling undermines lhe intent
of Congress, which included a
clause in the GAIT legislation that
would.'allow generic drug companies to inlroduce competing dru.gs
as long as they pay compensation
to tbe original patent holder.
Sen David Pryor, D-Ark., has
introduced legislation thai would
close tbe loophole - and save consumers an estimated $6 billion in
unnecessary drug costs.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writerrs for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Paths of tw~ GOP ·movers reconverge

,
imo a powerful political force .

Goldwater yet wrillen (and -indeed
the only one in 30 years) have
appeared almost simulumeously in
bookslores.
·

happened to Richard Nixon when
several low-level agents of his
campaign broke into llte Watergate
offices of tbe Democratic National
Commiuee in 1972 . Dut Edwards
repons that in 1971 J . Edgar
Hoover told assismm allomcy general Robert Mardian U1at the FBI
Lee Edwards' ·~Goldwater" · bugged Goldwater's campaign
(published by Regnery) is a com- p.lane in 1964 on tbe direct orders
prehensive,
meliculously of Lyndon Johnson!
· researched .life of tbe Arizona senaOn the later Goldwater, who ha&lt;
tor from his birth on New Year's at one time or anolher taken
Day in 1909 10 his current crotch- squarely conlradictory posilions on
ely retirement on a hill oulside everything from abortion 10 Nelson
J&gt;hoenix . It is a s1range yet inspir· Rockefeller, Edwards properly
ing story. Goldwater didn't want maintains · a critical distance ,
the 1964 nominarion, correctly sharply condemning (for exrunple)
guessing. that he would lose lhe Goldwater's lame excuses for
election. But he had become lhc backing Ford over Reagan in 1976,
chief symbol of 1be fasl-growing Wilen the !rUth is tbat he was Simconservative cause, ami was loo ply jealous. ·
loyal 10 tbe young entbusiasls who •
Dut Edwards' linal evaluation of
had rallied 10 his banner to let tbcm tbe craggy Arizonan is on bai[IIICC
down.
favorable, as of course it ought to
Edwards, as a political novice, be . As he writes. Goldwater's
worked for the Goldwater cam- "candidacy marked tbc true beginpaign, and his account is 'nalurally ning or a cectonic shin in American
livciiesl when he is uescril]ing tbe politics." .
various triumphs ami disasters llmt
It was, however, C lif White
he witnessed personally. Dut he whose polilical expertise brought
misses nothing imponanl, and has the pressures generating that shift
tumed up some brand-new nugget&lt; to bear on lhc nuts-and-holts
of swggering size.
machinery or tbe Republicru1 Party,
We all know, for example, what and converted an idcalislic dream
'

The title of While's memoirs,
"Politics as a Noble Calling"
(Jameson Books), sums up 1hc
respect he felt for his profession,
and its text recounts a life that
combined matchless political skills
with a quiet dedication to the
Republican Party and the conservative movement.
As executive direc10r of lhe
Draft Goldw.~ler Commfllee, as
manager of botb Reagan's fatally,
belarcd bid for the 1968 prcsid~n ­
tial nominalion and James Buckley's historic victory in New
York's 1970 Senate race, and as a
senior adviser to campaign manag ~
er Dill Casey in Reagan ' s successful 1980 bid for the presidency,
While seemed 10 be wherever rhe
action was . His book is .. musl"
reading for anyone seriously interesred · in how American politics
really works,
William Rusher is a Dis\in·
guished Fellow of the Claremont
Institute for the Study of ·statesmanship and Political Philosophy.
.
.
(For information on how to
communicate electronically with .
this L'Diumnist and others, con·
tact America Online by calling I·
800-827·6364, ext. 8317.)

William A. Rusher

.Is it too dangerous to trust other-s·?
11 was Monday, my day off more like me," ·she says. She ha~ a
(church editors must work on Sun- gun in lhc house and a German
day), and I was 1aking a morning shepherd.
Butler, sometimes referred to as
stroll in the quiet neighborhood
where I live:
I struck up n conversation witb a
lad of about 4 who was pushing a
toy lawn mower around _in his "America's hometown," is 1,000
fenced -in front yard . We weren't miles from Oklahoma City, but tbe
very far along in our friendly ;:hal ripple effect of April's bombing in
whe n _the .y oung fellow's mother which 19 children were among
appeared at the front door. "Come , those killed, is being fell tbere as in
in now , Tyler, your lunch is other cities and towns across the
ready."
coumry.
1 looked at my watch . II was
A nurse in Duller told tbe Jour10:15. too early for lunch, I said tn n:~ she ·now locks the doors of her
myself, even for litlle boys who arc h11Usc and won'tlct her children
always hungry . But parenL~. aJraid ride !heir bikes down the rural road
for th eir children's sa(cty, will tu their grandparents' house,
mak e up ~ny story to gel the
Our country hasn't been this
s tranger LO keep moving . Nn nervous since 1961 .
Tha! was a time when the. Cold
longer, I reflected a&lt; I resumed my
walk, can we adults stop ,an(! pa~s War rensions between tbe United
tbc time of day with the Tylcrs of Stmes and tbe Sovicl Uriion were
!his world . We are the feared reaching a climax. During U1e earlier Eisenhower administration the
stranger.
" I regret teaching my son to government introduced tbe subject
!rust everyone," says a motber in of family bomb shelters to protect
Buller, Pa., quoled in a front-page Americans in the event of a nuclear
Mory in The Wall S1reet Joumal. ot1ac~ But people weren't IJUying.
Her son is now 21. "I wish he was Now in 1961, "with a noose tight-

George R: Plagenz

4$
cs;;:st '

.

. ·'

\

'

ening around Berlin, it wa~ time 10
lltink ll1e unll•inkahlc," said a story

in the Smitl1sonian magazine.

.

President Kennedy went on
nalional TY on the night or July 25
and warned tbe country to srart digging bomb shelters. It set off a ·

craze.
Manufacmrers with munes like
Pea ce- 0-Mind Shelter Co . and
Lancer Survival Corp. couldn't fill
orders fas1 enough. Some models
sol!) for ttl much as $20,000. There
were families who dug their uwn
shelters an!) stocked them with
canned ~oods, sleepin~ bags and
board games.
Unlike the terrorist enemy today
who may be peering out from
behind closed curtains in a bouse
on the very street where we live.
the Cold War enemy was not "of ·
our own household'' but a foreign
country. But ·there was an enemy
within too - an imagined enemy,
at at).)' rate.
It was a man's neighbor who ,
having failed to provide a falloul
sheller for his own family, might
try to break down tbe door of the
shelter nexl door and take up his ·

abode there until tbe danger was
past. To guard against Ute unwel come neighbor without, some
equipped their shelters witb sho!·
guns or a .357 magnum . Was U1is
Christian'!
While some churchmen, the
Smithsonian reponed , couldn't
imagine Jesus gunning down a
neighbor ra1her tban share his
house and provisions. otbers said
s uch an intruder would be an
" unjust aggressor" which, they
said, could juslify tbe use of what·
ever force was necessary to keep
him oul.
.Fortunately, before a shot was
fired in anger, Kennedy and Russia's Kltrushchev bad toned dpwn
the rheloric and, tbough the Cokl
War would go on, it changed froOI
a cliffhanger to a nail-biter. Tbe
fallout shelter craze was over.
:
George Plagenz is a syndical·
ed writer for Newspaper Enter~,)·
srise As.(iociation.
(For information on how to
comm.u nicate electronically with
this columnist and others, fOR•
tact America Online by calling t·
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
.

Satunla:r, June 17

•

IToledo 192" I

·•
IND.

'•

~

~
, I

!83• l•

~

~

'

Mansfield

.,,

•

M.

"'bungstown

~

Vivian Caldwell

Vivian Caldwell, 75, 15 vi~J: Street, Gallipolis, died today, June 16,
1995 at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W.Va. She was a
homemaker and mCOJDber of the Gallipolis Garden Club and Gallipolis
Emanon Club..
.
.
Born June 12, 1920 in Harrison Township, Gallia County, she was the
daughter of the late Hobart and Retha Elliot Foster. She married Robert L .
Caldwell in Aprill939 in Grayson, Ky., and he survives.
In addition to her husband, sbe Is survived by two'sons, Gary Caldwell
of Goshen, Ky ., and Jay Caldwell of Gallipolis; two sisters, Margena
O'Donnell 'Of Palos Verdes, Calif., and Virginia Cremeens of Clayton;
ooe brother, Hobart Foster, Jr., of Gallipolis; and five grandchildren.
The service will be held 2 p.m. Sunday at Cremeens Funeral Chapel
with the Rev. Bruce Unroe officiating. A privale graveside service w·ill
follow . There will be no visitation.
·
In lieu of nowers, contributions may be made to tbe St. Johns Uniled
Methodist Church Building Fund, Highway 42, Prospecl, Ky ., 40059.

~ Clarence E. Gilmore
~W.VA.
tbe
~ Citations issued in wreck
bad
4,tiA,--~~~
~-.
r-s""Z = e:=t
Cincinnati

"

Services for Oarence E. Gilmore; 70, Middleport, wbo died Wednesday, June I4, 1995, will be beld Saturday at I p.m. in the Fisher Funeral
Home in Middleport, with
Rev. Theron Durham officiating.

KY.

R.oJn FlutriH Smw .

. Sho..,.

Jt:.
-

Ml' tonc'n' tP,...~«
4

Pl.

C181SAa;v--'WMiher,lne.

. Weekend forecast appears
· boring, but pretty pleasant
• By The Associated Press
Ohio's weather would be boring, if it weren't so nice. Forecast·
; ers say today's sunny and warm
conditions will be repeated every
day through next Tuesday.
Mostly sunny days and clear
nights will prevail, the National
Weather Service said. Highs will
be 85-90 and lows around 60.
A high pressure system covering
· much of the eastern half of the
· , United States is responsible for tbe
nearly perfect weather, tbe NWS
said. ,
Tbe record-high temperature for

tbis date at the Columbus weather
station was 96 ,degrees in 1957
while the record low was 43 in
1969. Sunset tonight will be at 9:02
p.m. and sunrise Saturday at 6:02

a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonigbt...Mostly clear. Lows 55
!060.
'
Salurday ... Moslly sunny and
very warm. Highs in Ule up]Jer 80s
to around 90 nortbwest. ·
Extended forecast:
Sunday tbrough Tuesday ... Dry
and very wann . Lows .in the 60s.
Highs 85 to 95.

··Middleport gets pool funds
.
'

(Contiliued from Page .l)
witb cement steps.
:
Tbe estimated cost of repairing
, tbe 60,000-gallon pool includes:
, ~ $25,000 for the elcclrical system;
~ . $10,000 for wall reinforcement;
,. $10,000 for noor sleel; $10,000 for
'·. deck cleaning/cover; $7,000 for
' new stairways; $2,000 for new rail·
, ing; $10,000 for engineering; and
• : $6,000 for contingencies. .
:
Tbe most important repairs
; ''include removing the electrical 1sys' tCIII fJOm undemeatb to keep water
,; : from leaking from the pool onto
~ eleclrical lines, the state official
. said.
Middleport Council President
Bob Gilmore. who with other coun-

~Meigs

cil members solicited donations ,
said he is gratified by the grant.
"1l1e numerous donors that have
helped and all the people who have
offered 10 work on it and otovide
free labor and expertise is what
small town life in the United SUites
is all about," Gilmore said. "I'm
just so delighted to live in a community where they put their community and their children first"
This grant was one of the grants
selecled from 550 applications. The
deadline for the next round is Aug.
I.
I
Two specialized categories of
grants will be available for bank
restoration and boating access
along Lake Erie and Ohio River. ·

land transfers posted

The following land transfers
·:were recorded recently in the office
of Meigs County Recorder Emmo·gene Hamilton :
Deed, Myrtle Imboden to Anna
'· D. Frair, Middleport lot;
•·
Deed, Nursing Corps lncorpo• · rated to Bertba E. Halfield, .Salis· bury lots;
Deed , Ray E. Wellman to
'· Robert and Lisa Coe, Bedford
· ·'parcels;
· · Deed, Ocel J. Sears to Ann L.
·,and Jrunes A Rife, Middleport lo~
Deed, Ellswortb J. and Ann F.
Holden to Viola Savetski,
Columbia, 5.300 acres;
Deed, Ellswortb J . and Ann F.
Holden to Clarence E. Jr . and
Peggy A. Owensby, Co lumbia

parcels;
Deed, David E . Ellis, Rebecca
Ann Kloes, Rebecca Ann Ellis to
David E. and Rebecca Ann Ellis,
Pomeroy lot;
Deed, William M . and. Deborah
Jones to Vera M. Price, Sutton,
.832 acres;
Deed, Gregory G. King to
Nancy J. King, Salisbury parcels;
Deed, Guy A. and Evelyn
Spencer to Larry Guy and Palricia
Ann Spencer, Olive lots;
Deed, Marion Klein Fugate and
Eleanor Fugate, Eva Mae Stoecker,
Eva Mae Emerson, William A.
Emerson to Robert E. Ball, Olive
parcels;
Deed, Geo.rge W . Miller,
Ronald L. Miller Jr., Shirley L.
· Miller, E. Joyce Miller, Nancy N.
Deaver, Lowell A. Beaver, Donna ·
J. Stewar~ Raymond Stewart, Ray· VETERANS MEMORIAL
mond A. Stewarllo Carol W. and
Thursday admissions - MarPhyllis J. Manley, Middleporl lots; .
garet Metcalf, Racine; Martin
Deed, William Emmeu D.
Woodard, Pomeroy,
Larkins and Helen A. Clevenger 10
Thursday discharges- none.
Shirley V. Hoover, Lebanon , 41
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
acres;
Discharges June 15- Janie
Right of way, G. Brucy Teal'ord
·Hatfield, Jennifer Pugh, Patricia 10 Douglas W. Liulc and' Jennifer
Thomas, Christi Reynolds, Ken- L. Sheers.
netb Burton, Erin Milchell, Mrs .
Daniel Woodward and son, ·Mrs.
Steven Newton and son, Erhel
Ewing.
. .
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Pomeroy, Ohio

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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COLONY THEATRE
FRI. THRU THURS

SANDRA BULLOCK
WHILE YOU WERE
SLEEPING PQ
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:'30
4~23

Five cars were damaged in a
Thursday evening series of accidents, according to Pomeroy Police
Department reportS.
Ivan L. Groseclose, 68, Windsor, Mo .. pulled from a parking lot
at 5:25 p.m. Thursday near SuperAmerica along West Main Street,
according to police.
Groseclose· s 1988 Ford truck
had light damage 10 the front end
. after he struck another vehicle,
rewru said.
.
Groseclose was cited for failure
to·yield and no .seat belt.
Donna M . Powers. 53, College
Road, Syracuse, was driving easl
on West Main Street when her
1980 Cadillac collided with Groseclose's !ruck, police said. The car

Meigs EMS runs
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
recorded 16 calls for assistance
Thursday including five transfer
calls. Umts responding included:
CHESTER VFD
4:36 p.m., motor home fire on
Locust Grove Road, Glen Young
Sr.
MIDDI"EI'ORT
7:11 p.m., Beech Street, Kim
Miller, trealed a1 tbe scene.
POMEROY
3:31 a.m., Point Lane, Bobbie ·
McPherson, VMH;
6:35 a.m., volunleer fire department, auto fire on Court Street,
Christina Hanning;
5:28 p .m ., VFD and squad to
West Main Street, motor-vehicle
accidcm, Leo and Betb Groseclose,
refused lreauncnt; Donna Power,
VMH ; Rutland. assisted;
· 11:51 p.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, Ida Paugh, Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
\
SYRJ\CUSE
6:37 ·a.m., Bashan Road, Margaret Melcalf, VMH.
RACINE
1:05 p.m., Adams Road, Fred
Miller, YMH.
RUTLAND
12:44 p.m., Edmunson Road,
. Cliflord Might , HMC;
5:21 p.m. , Mulberry Avenue,
jarrid Eskew, HMC; .
6 p.m ., Hysell Rm1 Roap, Martin Woodyard, HMC.

heavy d:unage 10 right side and
sbe was transported to Vcterans
Memorial Hospillll, )Vhere she was
larer treated and released.
Powers' car hit three parked cars
at Riverside Morors, reports said.
Meanwhile, no citations were ·
issued after a truck bumped a
parked car in dowmuwn Pomeroy
Thursday morning, according 10
Pomeroy Police Department
reports.
, Jeff Barnitz, 27, of Letart,
W.Va., bumped his 1991 semi
truck illlo a parked car al "II :30
a.m. Thursday in front of Martin's
Furniture, records show.
Damitz truck - which was traveling wesl on E.1s1 Main Streethad light damage, records sbow.
Kenneth E. McCullough Jr., 30,
of Pomeroy , reported mod e rate
drunage to the door and -rear quarter
panel of his 1984 Buick, repons
Sla!Cd.

Bookmobile on vacation
Tbe Meigs County Bookmobile
will be on vacarion from June 20 to
July 4. Regular schedule will be
resumed on July 5.
Car wash set
The youth of lhe Faith Fellowship Crusade for Cbrisl will hold a
car wash Friday at Taz · s Five
Points Express , II a.m. 10 6 p.m.
Donations. _
Reunion set
The annual re union of tbc late
Albert and Eliza Hill will be held al
.the R.1cine Smr Mill Park June 25.
Covered dish dinner at I p.m. All
relatives and fricnus invited.

Tenni..;; program to slart
Junior tennis pmgrarn will starr
Saturday al 9 a.m. ut the Syracuse
Communily Park . The progrrun is
sponsored by Mei gs County Parks
and Recrearion .

GENESIS
· BIBLE STUDY CLASS .
Every Sunday Morning

10am- 11 am

Ash Street
Freewill
Baptist Church
Middleport, Ohio
G.R.Q.C. Accredited
Diplomas Offered.
Teacher Les Hayman

992-7410

A Pomeroy woman was cited foDowing a two-vehicle accident
on State Route 124 near Syracuse Thursday afternoon .
Norma J. Mills was westbound in a 19n Oldsmobile owned by
Susie Pierce, Racine, and ran into the rear of a 1988 l'&lt;lrd pickup
!ruck driven by Matt Morrow, Syracuse, and owned by National
Gas and Oil, according to a report from Meigs County Sberiff
James M. Soulsby.
Morrow was slowing to ml!J,e a right tum, lbe report said.
Tbe Oldsmobile sustained heavy damage while no damage was
reported to the pickup.
Mills was cited for expired li~nse and driving under suspension .

Vandalism, theft reported
A number of mailboKes on State Route 338 were damaged late
Tuesday or early Wednesday morning, Meigs County Sheriff James
M. Soulsby .reported.
In addition , a· Portland man who reponed the tbeft of a boal
motor earlier this week reported anotber theft Wednesday - his
boat.
Lee Allen said his 12-foor fiberglass boat was stolen from a dock
on the Ohio River near Locks Run, according to a sheriffs report.
.
Also,ll)e window s in an auto owned by Mark Compson, Racine, .
were smashed.
'

Area woman in fair condition
A Pomeroy woman remained in fair condition this morning in
Ohio Smte University Hospitals. Columbus, with injuries suffered
in a two-car crash late Wednesday at tbe inlersection of slale roures
14:} and 684.
.
Katherine T. Weaver. 80, 38400 SR 684, wa~ initially 1aken to
Veterans Memorial Hospiml by the Rutland EMS and was later
transferred 10 OSU. a hospital spoki!Sperson said.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the Slllle Highway Parrot said Weaver
was stopped -easlbound a1 the stop sign on 684 al 10: II p.m. and
thenpulled across 143 into tbe path of a soutbbound car driven by
Jim E. Weese, 46, Third Street, Syracuse.
·
The resulting cpllision slightly damaged borh cars, tbc pa1rol
said.
.

A WONDllt'U~ AND
Nl.t.GI(Al COMIDY

MBKIIX;f:s.
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Announcements
Gillilan family reunion
The Gillilan family reunion will
be held Sunday, June 25, a1 noon at
the Kyger Creek Park . Those
atLending are lo lake a covered
dish.

. Woman cited in wreck

For Only

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PRE·OWNED CARS (I TRUCKS

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1991 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME ....................................................................s7995
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1994 FORD RANGER Sspeed,cass,groundellects................................................. 5899S
1993 CHEVY S·1 0.BLAZER 4X4 Tahoe,air, auto., slereo...............................s1S, 99 S
1994 JEEP CHEROKEE 4 Dr., 19,000 miles, auto., air, 4X4 ..................................s17, 995
1992 CADILLAC BROUGHAM VB, leather, rear whet! drive, low miles ........ s17,49S
1984 OLDS 88 2. Dr., V8, auto~ air, sterta. Runs good .................................................... s2995
1984 fORD LTD Loaded! VB. Nice C~rl.....................................................................;..... s249S
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"'All pnces mclude

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Taxes &amp; lees ~ot
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�•

•

•

Friday,June18,1995

•

The Daily S~!.~,~
Page4

Sports
•

in theNL,

.

~irates top Dodgers·; Cubs beat Giants to trim Reds' lead
By The Associated Press

dence back aher undergoing knee iQnillgs. Astacio has won only once
in 19 starts since last Jm~e 25.
: A switch in the field gave Car- surgery last win~.
"Some innings be's outstand"He's
been
more
aggressive
lOs Garcia a boost at the plate.
ing, but be's giving up too many
· Moving from second ba·s e to and be's geuing better swings,"
unnecessary runs,:· Dodgers man'hortstop to replace stumping Jay Pirates manager Jim Leyland said.
Bell, Garcia drove in six runs "I also think he feels good physi- ager Tommy La&amp;orda said. "He's
got to have better control of bis
thursday to lead the Piusburgh cally."
pitches."
.
·
Bell was 0-for-21 a11.ainst the
Pir~tes over the Los Angeles
Elsewhere,
Chicago
beat
San
Dodgers
this
season.
Dodgers 11-7.
Francisco
3-1;
Atlanta
downed
Mark
Johnson
hit
a
three-run
: Garcia, who entered the game
t;ith only II RB!s in 126 at-bats, horner for Pittsburgh, which also Montreal 2-0; Philadelphia defeat·
hit a lbree-run homer and a bases- · was helped by the eight walks . ed Houston 4-2: New York edged
Florida 5-4 in 10 innings; and St.
foaded double. The six RBis dou- issued by four Dodgers pitchers.
Denny
Neagle
(6-3)
went
6
1/3
.
Louis
beat Sao Diego 2·1.
~Ied his previous career-high for
PbiUies 4, Aslros 2
innings
for
lbe
victory.
He
had
a
ene game.
At
Philadelphia,
pincb-hitter
slmtout
until
the
sixth,
when
a
pair
: "Finally, I'm gettitlg some timTony
Longmire
won
it
with a (woof
Pittsburgh
errors
and
Tim
Waltng a~/lbe plate and I'm sUtrting to
out,
three-run
homer
in
tbe
ninth.
lach's
two-run
double
cut
tbe
see pitches the way I should," said
Varsho
and
RaJtdy
Ready
Gary
Pirates'
lead
to
S-4.
Garcia, wbo went 2-for-3 to raise
Pedro
Astacio
{1-5)
lost
his
single(!
off
Jobn
Hudek
(2-2)
his average to .248.
fourth
in
a
row,
allowing
eight
bits
before
Longmire
lined
a
2-1
pitch
: Garcia, who played shortstop in
and
four
earned
runs
over
four
I
over
the
right-field
wall.
It
was
bis
Che minors, is gelling his coofi·

In theAL,

second pincb-homer of the season.
Phillies starter Tyler Green
struck out a career-high nine in S
113 innings. Ricky Bottalico (3-1)
got two outs in the nintb; for tbe
win.
Cubs 3, Giants 1
At Chicago, Fr:jnk Castillo lost
his bid for a perfect game on Mike
Benjamin's one-out single in the
seventh inning.
Castillo (5-2) allowed four bits
and one walk in eigbt;nnings, and
matched bis career-high with 10
suikeouts. Randy Myers got bis
15th save.
Benjamin, wbo set a majorleague record with 14 bits in bis
three previous games, wentl-for-4.
Mets S, Marlins 4 (10)
At'New York, Joe Orsulak singled home tbe winning run in lbe

lOth for tbe Mets, wbo thought
they sbould have won it an inning
earlier.
The Mets scored three runs in
tbe ninth to tie the game, but it
went into extra' innings alter a disputed double-play call.
Bias Minor (2-2) worked out of
a two-on, one-out jam in the lOth
for the victory.
.·
Braves %, Expos 0
At Montreal, Greg Maddux.scattered seve11 bil~ for his first shutout
of the season .
Maddux (5-1) walked none and
struck out three. The three-time Cy
Young Award winner lowered his
ERA to 1.91 with his 18th career
shutout.
Marquis Grissom went 4-for-4
with two doubles and Mike Kelly
homered for the Braves. Pedro

Martinez (5-2), who gave up seven
bits and struck out nine in seven
innings, took the lollS.
Cardinals 2, Padres 1
At St. Lf,luis, 29-year-old rookie
Mark Petkovsek pitched eight
strong innings and Ray Lankford
bomClted for the Cardinals.
Lankford's homer off Scott
Sanders in the sixth inning ended a
14-inning scoreless drougbt for the
Cardinals, who were limited to five
bits by four San Diego pitchers.
St. Louis added a run in tbe.
eightb on an infield hit by Tripp
Cromer. San Diego scored with
two outs in the ninth on Robeno
Petagine's RBI groundout off Tom
Henke, but Henke got the final out ·
for his 14tb save in 14 cbances.
Petkovsek (2-1) gave up four
bits in :tbe longest outing of his
brief career.

.

Royals blank A's to shrink Indians' lead; Angels &amp; Tigers also win

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) i:an&amp;as City manager Bob Boone
J)Jst laughs when asked about the
novelty of his four- man pitching
rotation.
: "For 100 yefii'S, that's the way
it's been done," Boone said. "I fell
it sbould have -been done more
Qften, but I was never in control of
k before. Problem is now, (the five·
than rotation) has been in place so
lang, it's the thin~ mat fired man·
agers are made of. '
· Mark Gubicza, one of Boone's
tour starters, pi tchcd the first tme·
liitter of his I 0-year career Thurs·
(,lay to beat the Oakland Athletics
7-0.
: Gubicza was among baseball's
~ardest throwers in the 1980s

before rotator cuff surgery · set bim
back in 1993. He started this season 1-4. and Boone bad a one-toone talk with (jim about a month
ago. Since then, Gubicza is 3-1
with a 2. 11 ERA in the five sUlrts.
• 'He basically told me to go
after people," Guhicza said. " He
believed in me. It built my confidence."

The Royals' foursome of
Gubicza, Kevin Appier, Chris
Haney and Tom Gordon have all
contributed to the team's seasonhigh six-game winning streak. The
strealc' has helped keep Kansas City
within seven games of the AL Central-leading Cleveland Indians, who
bave basebail' s best record at 33·

II.

"He· just keeps getting better
and better every time out," _Boone
said. "Now he's even throwing
harder, maybe because of (the
shorter rest between starts)."
Gubic.za says .the short rotation
keeps him alert.
"I don't have enough free time
to let my mind wander between
starts," Gubicta said. "And being
a sinkerball pitcher, it kind of helps
me not to overthrow the ball as
much."
Oakland manager Tony La
Russa might be swayed to switch to
a four-llllUl rotation alter what happened Thursday. Ron Darling had
another bad start, allowing seven ·
runs in only 2 i/3 innings.
La Russa declined to talk much

about either starting pitcher,
instead focusing on the l)ig picture
of being outhii and outscored.
"I don't have any comment
about Gubicza," La Russa said.
"They just outplayed us. They outeverythinged us."
' Boone said Gubicza "is probably throwing harder than he has in
tbe last live years." Combine that
with some off-speed pitches, and
you have tlte makings of a near nobitter.
"He was throwing sinkers and
sliders, which be throws all the
time," said Oakland's Mark MeGwire, whose single with one out in
the fourth was the A's lone bit.
Gubicza (4-5) walked one and
struck out five, pitching bjs 14th

career shutout. His last sbutout and
complete game 'both came. in May
1992.
Vince Coleman led off the game
with a double off Darling (2-3) and
scored on Wally Joyner's two-out
single for a 1-0 lead. Coleman's
two-run double in the second keyed
a three·run rally to make it 4-0.
Darling lasted only one out int?
the third, leaving alter the Royals
scored tbree more runs . He has
made it past five innings in only
two of his 10 starts. His ERA is
6.75.
.
In other games, Detroit defeated
New York 9-2 and California beat
Chi,:ago 5-l.
S, Wbite Sox 1

1988, a game at Analteim Stadium
was delayed by rain. After the swt
was held Up for 44 mhmtes, Califemia went onto beat Chicago.
·
Rookie Garret Anderson, wbo
bad three hits, and J.T. Snow, who
homered, each drove in two runs.
Lee Smith lied his major league
mark with a save in his 17th
straight appearance. Smitlt got his
16th save last Sunday, and it was
(See AL on Page 5)

""I!""

Riley steps down as ·Knicks' head cqach
iJy HAL BOCK
·
·
• NEW YORK (AP) _Pat Riley,
unable to lead the New York
J(nicks to tbe NBA title in four
years as coach, resigned today
effective July 1.
· In a prepared statement, Riley
said, "While the decision was
extremely difficult and was made
with great soul searching and sadness, 1 am convinced this is in the
best interest of both parties."
. The Knicks would not confirm
ihe resignation, with spokesman
Dennis o· Agostino saying "if and
when we have anything to say,
we'll say it."
~· Riley, who carne to New York
after coaching the Los Angeles
Lakcrs to four titles in his nine
.years there, had a y~ar remai~ing
on his contract. He s had a ftve~car, $15 million extension offer
pending since midseason.
. "I emphasize mat the decision
to leave the Knicks had absolutely
nothing tn tlo with money," Riley·
imid. "The financial package which
)Ve had he en discus sing was
extremely generou.s . Regreuably
ihere were serious differences and
~Juestions about authority and linal
decision making. "
: When Dave Checkett s, who
hired Ri Icy in 1991, moved up
f(otn president of the Knicks 10
head Madison Square Garden
Corp .. the front office operation
was tumetl over to Emie Grunfeld ,
Ute team's general manager.

Checkens, now president and
chief executive officer of the Garden, said last month he would press ·
Riley for a decision on me contract
extension.
Riley's resignation came after
another disappointing finish for the
Knicks, who were knocked out of
the playoffs in seven games by the
Indiana Pacers in the Eastern Conference semifinals. They lost in the
final ga_me at home wh~n a lastsecond huger-roll by Patrtck Ewmg
bounced away.
.
Rtley coached the Kmcks to the
NBA Finals in the 1993-94 season,
when mey lost in seven games to
the Houston Rockets. The RockeL~
repeated as champions with a fourgrune sweep of Orlando completed
. Wednesda~ night;
. . ..
· Alter thts years clunmauon, the
Knicks gathered for a final meeting
at their practice center in Purchase,
N.Y. At that lime, Riley cited a
lack of harmony, not talent, for the
disappointing tinish to the sea.,on.
Asked if his desire to coach had
been drained, Riley said, "No . It
fonines it even more. Not. reading
an Orlando scouting report nght
now, getting ready for the game,
infuriates me."
The Knicks had been expectetl
· to contend for tlte title al'ter coming
so close a year ago. But t11e team
struggled throtigh a difficult s~ason, complicated by injuries and
team turmoil.
At one point, Riley suspended

forward Anii,Jony Mason for five
games followmg aconfrontallon on
the bench. He also suspended
Mason for three games at the end
of the 1993-94 season. Mason, now
an un,restncted free agen~ won tbe ·
NBA s Stxth Man award mts ·sea- ·
son.
The early washout from the
playoffs angered Riley. "It makes
my stomach turn," he said. ''We
bad a team that was good enough
to win. It was !milt to win.
"You can blame finger-rolls
being missed, you can blrune free
throws, a lack of rebounding, losing close games in overtime. But
we should have •been on the
upswing this year as a learn that
was totally together. For the majority of the season, we were pulling
apart. And you can't put. that stuff
behind you."
Riley said the Knicks had failed
this season "because internally, we
broke down . It went on all season
longh. It manifested itself in selfdestructive behavior."
Riley started his coaching career
· with the Lakers in 1981. leading
the team to the NBA charnpi onship. His LA teams also won
NBA titles in 1985, 1987 and 1988.
He lert me Lakers following the
1989-90 season and spent a year
working for NBC Sports before
Checketts hired him to help in the
reconstruction of the Knick s in
1991.
The team respondetl immediate-

Scoreboard
Baseball

Milwaukee :u Bos!tm, !:OS p.m.
Baltimort 111Detroit. 1: l.S p.m.
Texilli at Toro ntv, I:J.S p.m.
Kan.sllS CttY at Oak land, 4:05 p.m.
Ch!Cllgtl al Coliforn ia. 4:05 r .m.
Mtn neso la al Se&lt;~ Uie , 4·]5 run
New York at CLEVELAND . 8.05 p. m

Major leagues
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Easl erh Divl5iun

l£ L l'tl.

fum

Bos wn .. , ............. 27

17

.6 14 ·

[ktrOIL .... , ........ .'. 21

26

.447

BaJLi morc: ....
... 19 2j
Toronto ..... .
18 25
New Yf! k ........ 1.8 26

.432
.4 19
.409

.Gil
8
8.l

••I.

II
Ill

.20
!6

24
17
13

Mtlwau ~~... ,...
Clu c:niJo.. ..... ..

MinncM•la

._:.

. I~

.750
.591
.455
.372

.2 83

1
13
16.5
21

Wucrr n Divildll ll

Calirofnia .......... 21l 19
Te ~IIH ... "..........
21 I'J
Oat land ......~ ........ 25 22
Seatlle
23 22

596
.587
532
.5 11

.l
J
4

Thursdo1y '.li scores
Kanu.s C•t y 7. Oakl und 0
Detro it 9, New York 2
California S. C h ic::a~:~o l

Tonight's games
New Yurk (Hitchcock 2· 4) 11! CLEVE·

LAND (l ier&amp;hllic:r ~"2), 7:05 pm.
Dalt unorc: (McDun:t ld 2-J) 1:11. DctrQII
(L1ra 2- 1:05 p 111
Mllwouk:c:e C Mlr11 o d~ 3·2) at Dnlitn n

n

(H :~ru~oo

6-0), 1 ~ 05 p.rn

Te1Bi8 (Tewbi bury 4·2) at Toro n10
{Oarwtn 1-6), 7:3.5 p.m.
Kanw Cit y (Gordon 4·2) Ill. Oakland
. (S!Oill ~ myrc S- 1), 10:05 p.m.
,
Chica go (Abb1.1tt 3·2) 111 C•lifnrn1a
(Lang•ton 5- l ). I O:OS p.m.
M iDn no tu ( Rodke 2·6) a! Sea u le

(JohnHOn 6-0), !O·JS p.m.

Saturday's games
'Mtlw Buk ee (Spark• 1·2) at Bo•to n

(Ciemenlil 1·0), 1:05 p.m.

New Y or k (Pett1Ue 1·3) at CLEVE.
LAND (B lack 2•1),1 :OS p.m.
TU llio (ROgm-7-2) at Toron to (Cone
4-3).1 :3' p.m
Kansu C1 ty (HMey 3-ll at Oakland
(Ontiwtos 6-2). 4 05 p m.
Balt imore (B rown S-4) at Uetr01t
(Well• 3·3), 1 as p.m
Mi·nne•ota (Tro mbley 0· 1) at Srattle
(Bo•lo -4-0), IO:OS p.m, ·
0\icav:o (Bete 2·5) at CaHforoia ·(Fin·
ley-'·~) . 10:{1~ p.m.

l'tl.

.Gil

.ss:-

4
4

l£ L

....

M u ntre~t l

29
•" 25
... 26

16
20
21

New Ynrk ..
Florido ..

.. IK

28

.39 1

II .S

.... 14

30

.318

14.5

Phi\ad e l ph i ~

Atl ant;;.

...

.644
.556

~ un

Fruociscu (8uutir;ta l- 3) at SL
Lou1s (Watson 1-2). 8:05 p.111
Atla nta (Av ery 1- 4) at Color ad o
· (Acevalo 3-:'i), K:OS p.m.

.

Sunday's gamc!i

Aorida at Philadelphia, 1:35 p.m. ·

Monttenlat CINCINNATI, 2: I ~ p.rn.

•: ll~ lle rn Oivl~iun

fum

bll'gh (Lei ber 2·6), 7:05p.m.

San Diego at Pitt&amp;burgh. I :35 p.m.
Houston i.t New YOt"k , l :40 p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUll

?.~

Crnlnol Ulvl.don

CLEVELAND ..... 33
Kansas Cth' ....... 26

San Diego (Valenzuela 2-2) at Pitts·

Sunday's games

San F~nd•oo at St. l..cuis. 2:IS p. m.
Lol!l An~el~ Ill Chicago, 1:20 p,m.
Atlanta at C~lorado , 3:0S p.m.

Transactions

Ccntnl Dlvl.&lt;iion

CINCINNA11 ........ 29
Chicago .................. 24
lloustoo .
. .... ,21
St. Louis ............. 20
Pt tt~h uq,th ............. .17

16
21
23
'l7

27

.6 44
.533
.477
.426
.386

Baseball

S
7.5
10
I I.S

Amerk:UI Lugu~

AL: SlL~pended Calilornia 1\njlc.l!i outfielder Tony Phillips for three games for
in li tlj~ating

a bc nch· clearing in ci de nt on

Jun eK at B011 ton.

Wc1lern Di,-IRon
Colorudo ................ 27 19 .587
Snn Frnnmco ....... 25 22 .532
Los Angeles ...... 22 2-4 4711
Snn Otejill ...... , 21 24 .-467

N~&amp;~lonallA:agut

l.l
5
5.5

Thursday's scorc.c,;
OIICDgo 3, S:m i"ranci,&lt;;eo I
Atlant o 2, Montn.•.al 0
Plul .:~tkl ph iu

4, H nU~o"ton 2

Pt t111hurgh I I, ltl ~ An g~ l es 7
Ne w York S, Florida 4 (10)
' St. L.oui5 2. San Diego !

Today"s games
Los Angeles (Candiottl 2-!i) at Chlca·
go rrroct\Jiel 2-4), 3:20 p.m.
Florid a (Rapp 1·3) at Philad elphi"
(We~t 1.0). 1:3S p.m.
Montreal (Henry 1·4) at CINCINNATI
(Sn uley !1-0), 7:35p.m.
Sao Oit:!go ( Bene ~ 0-S) 111 Pi tt.. b~ rgh
(LotllZB 2·2). 7 · 3~ p lit
.
Houston {S windell 3·1) at New Yurt
(B. Jones 4·3), 7:40p .m

San Fran cisco (VonLilndln gham 0~0)
at Sl. Loui,; (Palac::io' 1 ·2). 11 : 3~ p.rn.
A tlan ta (Gia v1ne 4-3) s.t Colora do

(Swi fll · l). 9 :0S p.m

Saturday's gante._41ij
Housto n (Drabek: 2- 4' at Ne.w York
(Pulsipher Q·O), 1:40 p.m.
Loa ~na eles (R. Mart tn e:r. 6· 4) at
Ch.lcago (l'ruchel2-4), 2:20 p.rT).

Florida (Weathers 1-2) It Philadelphi a
(Mimbs4-I J, 7'05 p.m
Montrea l (Heredi a 3••4) at ClN ClN·
NATI (Rijo 3·3), M5 p.m.

NL Su&amp;pended Chi cago Cub.!! , hort·
litop Shawon Dun!lton (or two gamN (or
insllgatlng a bench-dwring ind den.t last
weekend against Colorado.
CH!rA GO CUBS : Pla cet\ Larr y
Casia.n. pitcher, on the 15-day di11abled
l il t. Activated Chrls Nab hulz, p itch er ,
from the l!l·d ay di11ahlcd l!st.
C0l..ORAD0 ROCKIES: Sent Mark
ThOmpaon, pitcher. to Culorado SprJ n~
or the Paolfk Coast League.
PJ.O.LAOELPIUA· PHI LUES: Plnccd
Dave llollins, riut ballemao, on tl1e I S·
day disabled list. Recoiled 0 11ne Scha ll,
hrst ba se man , from Sc ranton-Wilk:esOane Or Ule lmernatjunal Lenyue.

• GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St.

Pomeroy, OH.

STARTING APRIL 3
SPRING &amp; SUMMER HOURS
Open Mon.-Fri. 9:00..5:00
Saturday ?:D0-3:00

ly, winning 51 games in his first
season: then 60, 57 and 55. That
gave htm 13 stnught 50-plus wm
seasons as an NBA coach a nd
pushed htm past 750 career _vtctones.
.
.
The. Kn~cks won two strat~ht
Atlanuc Dtvtston champtOnshtps
and reached tlte NBA Fmals for tltc
fnst um~ m more than two
decades. Rdcy w,as NBA coach ol
the_ ~e-~r Ill 19~2-93 .when the
Kmcks 60 vtclones !ted a club
retard.
.
... .
.
Wttb ~23 vtctones m four seasons, Rtlcy was the thlfd wtnmngcst coach m Kmcks htstory,
tratlmg Red Holzman (613) and
loo Lapcluck (326).

RITE AID PHARMACY
300 EAST MAIN ST.
POMEROY

Send.Us liour
favorite Recipe
THE POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
will be publishing a

HOLIDdQ
(00~1)00~
Included in the cookbook will be recipes from
Meigs County residents, .a t no charge.
The recipes will be categorized as follows:
• Appetizers/Beverages • Bread/Grains
• Cakes/Pies &amp; Cookies • Pork • Poultry
• Salads &amp; Vegetables
• Soups and Sandwiches
. Bring your recipe into our office or send it to:
lloliday Cookbook
c/o The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Oh 48969
Please, include your name and
phone # with recipe.

Deadline for aU recipes
is October 20, 1995

t J;~~:;h:~I:~~~==~=:;:::~:-----------------~P~o~m~e~~~y~·~M~I~dd~l~epo~rt~,~O~h~lo~----~--~----------~Th~e!D~a~I~~Se~nU~n~e~I·~P~~~·!s·
_: In Amer~can Le!flon baseball action,
.

~ Galhpohs

-

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Stan Write
I~ w.as a pitc~r's duel _ for 1
1n mrungs
.
In Tb ..
Am .
.
w .....y s
en~ Legion
b~seball game at lhe Umversity or
R.to
L. Evans
Fteld, Galhpohs Post 27 pitcher
Gary Stanley and Meigs pitcher
Brett Newsome, wbo one month
earlier sat in tbe same dugout as
Meigs Marauders, struck out eight
' of the nine batters they faced
between tbem. No one reached base
in that span of the contest ·
But Gallipolis tallied three runs
in the bottom of the second and
never looked back en route to an 112 victory.
In the Gallipolis second Bobby
Fink grounded Newsome 's 2-0
offering past shortstop Ryan Martin
mto left center field to score Cbris
Toler and Stanley. Then with one
out and Jason Dailey at tbe plate,
Newsome uncorked a wild pitch that
got Fink home ahead of catcher
Cass Cleland's throwJQ_Newsome.
../ Whtle Gallipolis was putting runs
on the. board, Stanley didn't allow a
baserunner until Chad Burton got a
walk on five pitches with one•out in
the fourth.
Missed chances hur.t Meigs
Burton got to second when he
took advantage of catcher Er(c
Humphreys' jogging to pick up the
ball after a wild ball four. But
Burton's luck ran out when he wa.~
nailed at third by Stanley's throw to
Flllk following Mike Wolfe's
sacrilice bunt.
Cleland, who walked after
Burton, got to third on Woife's bunt
and a steal, but di.ed there wben
· Newsome struck out.
In the liftlt, Meigs got in scoring
,
~. position again when with one out,
..Tyson Rose, pinch-hitting for
:;..Donnie Phillips, singled and stole
:;s~ond alter Scott George flied out
~to right field. However, he was left
r lhere when Josh Merkle popped out
=: to shortstop.
·
The Gallipolis defense c:une 10
:
,:;Stanley's rescue again in the sixth
:'":'hen Williams (he joined right
• hellier D Brunton ami first sacker
~ Chris Toler in failing to catch
; Cleland's flare to short rightlield),
~from his God-given seat, fired to
~ s hortStop Wes McCorkle to get
~ Martin at second for the second out.
;
Williams, whose two·run homer
· in tl)e fourth put Gallipolis ahead 6·
• 0, got anotlter chrutce to keep Meigs
~ from reaching second in tl1e fnunc
~when he fielded Wolfe's fielder's.
.choice gro under and flipped to
~ McCorkle at second to hail Cleland
and end the threat.
Williams, who switched places
with Stanley 10 start the seve nth,
didn't allow a Meigs man · past
~second in ' his two-inning stint.
Meanwhile, Gallipolis, which rioted
for five more runs in the sevenUt,
~aw Humphreys as the instigator
~ith a three-run double into left center lield ot'f reliever Travis Rice .
: Meigs. · facing McCorkle (he
~witched
places
with inWilliams)
tlte board
the lop ol
Jinally
got on

..:.A. •

Grand~'s ~tanley

)he ninth when Chad Duncan's
j'ielder' s-choicc grounder, which
resulted in Rose's retirement at
second, scored Rice . But the pitch
after Andy Wamsley's scoring on a
\.vild pitch uuring Malt Aull's at-hat
resulted in Ault strikin g out
.swinging .
' Gallipolis (5-4) is scheduled to
,bOst Pickerington for Saturday
;twinbill SC\ to start at noon. Meigs is
•slated to hnst Athens today at 6 p.m.
:and Logan for a Saturday
doubleheader set to stan at I p.m.

.
,
n- ...................2 0 0 I ·Jamie Gruber-pblc .......... l 0 0 0
35 11 10 9
J~H~reys-c ..........3 I I 3 Total&lt;
Pitchers
•
ey-cf... ............ 2 2 I 0
Buck Reynolds-pb .......... l 0 0 0 Stanley (W, 2-0): 6 ip, 8K. 3BB &amp;

Eri

Cory Wilson-ph .............. ! 0 0 0
Scott Gillian-pb '
1
Mark Burns-ph .::::::::::::::o 1 0 0

oo

°

RIDING
MOWER
6o2oo
•......... ,

~

,..,,711'1 ,~~~;

.

6o2o1

Economy
2x4's

'\

I

"' ..1··
•&gt;

~.

$270°

•,

GOOD DRIVE, RYAN!- Gallipolis Post 27 manager Torn Meadows (left) congratulates Ryan Williams a.&lt; he rounds third and heads
home following hi&lt; two-run homer in tbe fourth inning or Thursday's
game against Meigs. The shot, the first for the Southern High School
graduate and the third for Post 27 on the season, kept the pressure on
the guests and helped Gallipoli&lt; post an 11-2 win. (OVI' phntn hy G.
Spencer Osborne)

0

$189

I

•

•S·POS1110n ad[usters
~or~ve

AL ·g a m e s . ·.&lt;C.ontinued
fror_
n __:::.,_...:._
Page 4) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
____
_
announced then that he had set tlte
record; tlte next day, however, fur·
ther research revealed Smith
reached 17 in a row wiUt St. Louis
in 1993.
Mike Bielecki (3-3) took a
threc·hit shutout into the seventh
inning: Brian Keyser (0-2) left in
the fii'lh.
Tig•rs 9, Yank&lt;« 2
Cecil Fielder hit his 14th home

Ne\v

York

Ori :111
Boehringer's wildnc" at Tige r Stn ·
dium.
Boehrittgcr (0- 1). makin g hi s
first major lcngut: start , walke&lt;l
se ven i1l (our~ plus innings. Five of:

C795450

the walks fi gured in Ute scorin g.
Chri s Gomez also homered for
Detroit and Todd Steverson had
tluee hits. Sean Bergman (3-4) wnu
his second straight sllli'l.

3.5 HP CHAIN ·

DRIVE TILLER
ONEINSTOCK
'

. Inge·rs. Carpet

@
®

-Summer Carpet Safe

~

Outdoor Carpet

'

6.

95

Sq .
Yd.

Expert Installation Available
In-Store Credlt ·Prograrn
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I I 2

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@ Middl~port, Oh
@ M·T· W·F 9-5

®

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Sat. 9-2

Now

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70609

.

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$21·9...-""-

2Cubic Ft. Spagnum Peat.••••·..............................s4.99
70612 40 Lb. Bag Composted Manure ........................... s1.89.
70015 2Cu. Ft. Pine Bark Nuggets ........ ~ ...................... s2.49
72940 2Cubic Ft. Pine Bark Mini-Nuggets ................... ~. s2.49
70622 SO Lb. B white Marble Chips .................;••••••••• s2. 99

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$349

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@
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18 HP 46" CUT
LAWN TRACTOR

4 Colors In
Stock

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Commercial
Carpet

Briggs &amp; Stranon eng1ne, lull baffles
8-m whee.ls, morel
C489t38

Front wheel dnve . tull baffles, 8-1n
wheel$, morel

rookie

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Kitchen Prints

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21" 3.75 hp Sell Propelled Mower

run ancl Dctroil look advcmtage of

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COMPLETE KITS START AT

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LOWEST PRICE THIS YEAJI

'I

•

VALLEY LUMBER .&amp;
SUPPLY CO • Friday

@

'

Every~ay Low Price

., .

[ ,JJ. hl

Planning

4x8

$119

•

•'

18 x18 Brickface .._1
Gray Patio Block

V.." Aspenite

EverydDy Low Price

lliL~

Retirement

HOMELITE

STRIN«rTRIMMER

TOUGH ON HIS NEIGHBORS - Gallipolis Post 27 starting
pitcher Gary Stanley, one of two Meigs County residents on hi.&lt; cluh'.&lt;
roster, pitched six innings of shutout, one-hit ba&lt;ehall in Thursday's
game against Meigs. His efforts, which included allowing only one '
runner to reach third base during his administration, helped push
Gallipolis abovo the .500 mark witb· an 11·2 victory. (OVP photo by
G. Spencer Osborne)

HOMELITE

$119
$179

HOMELITE GAS

so2o3

NOW

599

STRING TRIMMER

•Rice: 3 ip, 2K, 4£J B &amp; 5 hits

••

HOME LITE GAS

STRING TRIMMER

•

:th · r h hi
Ryan Martin-ss .... ........... 3 0 0 0
Chad Burton-rf... ............ 2 0 0 0
Cass Cleland-c ............... 2 0 0 0
Mike Wolfc-cf.. .... ... ...... .3 0 0 0
Brett Newsomc·p ......... .. 2 0 0 0
Oonnie Phillips· lf .... ..... .. l 0 0 0
'Ricky Boovcr-lb .. ....... ... 3 0 0 0
'Scott George-3b ............. 2 0 0 0
Josh Merkle-2h..... .......... 3 0 0 0
Travis Rice-ph/p .. :.......... O I 0 0
Tyson Rose-ph/lf.. .......... 2 I I ,0
·Jeremy Grimm-ph/c .. ..... 1 0 0 0
!Chad Duncan-ph ....... ,.... I 0 0 0
:Matt Auh-ph/2b ........ ..... 1 0 0 0
·Totals
·
26 2 1 0
l,jtchrrs
'
Newsome (L): 5 ip, RK. 4£JB &amp; 5

•

JUNE 25, 1995

$

One In Stock

C2'45362

Meigs

; Cuckler Consulting Inc.

~'DS

1s HP 43" cur

..

'
Gallipolis
.l'layer.. vos.
ah
,Ryan Williarns-2h/p/ss ... 5
Trent Titomas- lf ............. 3
'Wcs M cCnrk lc-ss/p.... .'... 4
;t:luis Tol er- I b ............... .4
Oary SL1nley-p12b ........ ,3
)3obby Fink-3h ............... 5

v_

lhit
Williams: 2 ip, 2K &amp; 3BB
McCorkle: I ip , 2K &amp; 3B B

SALE STARTS TODAY-

·Meigs .. ..........000 000 002 = 2- 1·1
.Oallipolis.. .....03l .200 SOx =7-10· 2

•• P!~y•r-vos.

Valley Lumber &amp;Supply Co.

D Brunto rf

')nnjng~

filE

ORADLY
SYSTEM

downs Meigs 11-2

I

992-7028

Mondaythru

Visa, MasterCard
Accepted

Iii

~~®~®~®®®®@~~~

~

I

555 PARK STREET .
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

7 PM til5 PM
Sat. 7 to 3
Closed Sunday

992-6611

~----------------------------~
'

�Pt~P

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

8 • The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, phlo

Friday, June18, 1 •

-

·~

,

.

ApostoliC

aom:• of J.... aortot Apoolalk
VanZandt and Ward Rd.
Pastor: James Miller

Sunday School· JO:JO a.m.
Evening .. 7:30p.m.

Wednesda'y Services· 7:30p.m.

Assembly of God
Ubtrty ·Ass&lt;mbly of God
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane

Mason, W.Va.
Pulor: Nell Tennant
S.r•i«s· 10:00 a.m. and 7
t.leeli'ing • 7

Sunday School • 9:JO a.m.
Wonhipo IO:JO a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Pomeroy W..uldt Clolll't~ orCiorjll
33226 Children'$llome Rd.
Sunday School • II a.m.
Worship - tOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 1 p.m.
Middleport Cblll'&lt;h or Christ
5th and Main
Pa.&amp;tor: AI Hartson
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
• Worship- 8:15, 10,30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
Keno Cbur&lt;~ or Cbrist
Wor&gt;bip . 9:JO a.m.
Sunday School· IO:JO a.m.
Pas1or·Jc:ffrc:y Wallace
lSI and 3rd Sunday

Putor:
Sunday
.
Worship· 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
.~nesday Service- 7 p.m.

Fne Willlloptlst Chur&lt;h
Ash Street, Middleport

D&lt;arwallow Ridct Chur&lt;h or Cbriot
Pastor: Jack Colegrove
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Wor.;hip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m. .

Pas1or: Les Hayman
Saturday Service-7:30p.m.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wednesday Service·7:30 p.m.

Rutland Flnt Baptist Cburth
Sunday School· 9,39 a.m.
Worship- l0:4S a.m.
p....,.roy First Baptist

Pastor: Paul S1inson
East Main St.
Sunday School· 9:JO a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Flnt Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O' Bryanl
Sunday School • 9~ 30 a.m.
Wonhip. 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.
First Baptist Cbur&lt;h
6th and Palmer Sl., Middleport
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Worship -10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
A.B.Y.· 5:30p.m.
l..&lt;lrd's Suprxr 1st Sunday of every month.

Wedne_sday Service-7:00p.m.
Racine Fint Baptist
Pastor: Rev. Larry Haley
Youth Pastor: Aaron Young

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wc~nesday Services • 7:00p.m.
Silver Run Bap, lst
Pasto.-: Dill Lilli e
Sunday Slhool - IOa.m.
worship . 11•·'1' .. 7,30 p.m .
Wednesday Semces- 7:30 p.m.

Mt. Union Baptist
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sundar School-9:45 a. m.
Evening -6:30p.m.

Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.
Bt1blehem Baptist

Racine. OH
Pastor : Daniel Berdine
Worship · 9:30a.m. Sunday
Dible Study ·7:00 p.m. Wednesd~y
Old Bethel Free Will Baptist Chur&lt;h
28601 So. Rt 7, Middleport
Sunday School- lO a.m.
Evening-7:30p.m.
Tht.!rsday Services - 7:'30
Uillside Baptist Church
SL Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7

Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School- 10 a. m. ·
Worship- l l[l.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
VIctory Baptist lndcptndant
525 N. 2nd So. Middleport
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship· 10a.m .. 7 p.m.
Wednesday St=rvices - 7 p.m.

Failh Baptist C burrh
Railroad St., Ma:oon
Sunday School - I 0 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serv.ices • 7 p.m.
· Forest Run Baplisl
Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday SChool - 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.
Mt . Moriah BapUst
Fourth&amp;. Main St., M1ddleport
Pastor: Rev. Gi lbef1 Craig, Jr.
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m.
Antiquity Baptist
Sunday School- 9·30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7:30p.m.

Rutland Free Will Baptlsl
·
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesdty Services- 7 p.m.

Catholic
Sacred ll&lt;art Calbolk Church
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992·5898
.
Pastor: Rev. Waller e: Heinz
Sal . Con. 4:4,5-5: 15p.m.: Mus· S:30 p.m.
Sun. Con. -8;45-9:15 a.m.,
Sun. Mass-9:30a.m
Dailey Mass - 8:30 a.m.

Church of Christ
Pomeroy Church of Christ
212 W. Mam S1.
~as1or: Andrew Miles .

Zloa Cbur&lt;h or Cbrisl
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rtl43)
Pastor: Roger Watson
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- .10:30 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Sef\lices ·1 p.m.
Tuppers Plain Churth of Cbrisl

Pastor: Stanley Mincks
Sunday School • 9 a . m ~
Worship · 9:45 a.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

Congregational
Grace !pl. up1l Clt.•rc•
326 E. Main St., Pomeroy
Rector: Rev. D. A. duPiantier
Holy Eucharist and
Sunday Schooi!0:30 a.m.
Coffee hour foll~ing

Holiness

11...,...

Doarillt
C~•"•
31057 Slate Route 325, Langsvlle
Pastor: Rev. Rick Maloyed
Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship· 10:35 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Children's church- 10:35 a.m. Youth 6 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service -7 p.m.
Calvary Pll&amp;rim Chapel
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush
Sunday School9,30 a.m.
Worship · II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ce • 7:30p.m.
Rost or Sharon Hollao,. Cbur&lt;b
Leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
Sundjlly school· 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.
Plat Grove Bible Holloess Cburth
1/2 mile ofr Rt 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School · 9:JO a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.. 7,30 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.
Wesltyan Bible llolllless Cbur&lt;h
75 Pearl So .. Middleport .
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
Sunday scboot ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Se~ice - 7:30p.m.

Rulland Church of Christ
Pastor: Eugene E. Underwood
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Worship ··10:30 a.m., 7 p..m.

Hysell Run Holloess Church
Pastor: Robert Manley
Sunday School ~ 9 :30a . m .
Worship~ 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7:30p.m.

Bradford Church of Christ
Corner of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd .

Evangelist: Derek Stump
Youth Minister: Michael Teagarden
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship. 8:00a.m., 10:30 a. m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ces -7:00p.m.

llickory Hills Church of Christ
Pastor; Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m .. 7 p.m.
Wednesday SerVices~ 1 p.m.
Liberty Christian Cburch
Dex ter
Pas tor: Woody Call .
Sunday Evening-6:30p.m.
Thursday Service-6:30p.m.

Langsville Cbristi&amp;n Cbun:h
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a. m., 7:30 p.m.
Wedne5day Service 7:30p.m.

Hemlock Gro"e Church
Pastor: Gene· Zopp ·
Su ndav school - I 0:30a.m.
Worship -·9:30a.m.• 1 p.m.
Reedsville Cburth or Christ
Pastor: Ph ilip Sturm
SundB)' School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service : I O:JO a.m.
Bible Study. Wedne sda~. 6:30 p.m.

Christian Union
llartford Church of Christ In
Christian Union
Hart ford , W.Va.
Pastor~ Rev. David McManis
Sunday School - II a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m. , 7:30p.m.

Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

Church of God
Mt. Moriah Churth or God
Rac ine ·
Pastor: Rev.. James Sauerfidd
Su nday School ~ 9:45 a.m
E11ening • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
Rutland C hurch or God
Pastor: Gregory L. Sears
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Synacuse Hrst Church or God
Apple and Second Sis.
Pastor; Rc\1 . Da\lid Russell
SundaY Sc hool and Worshi p- 10 a.m.
E11eni ng Services- 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7&lt;30 p.m.
Churrb or GOO of Propht!cy
OJ . While Rd. orr St. Ro. 160
Pastor: P.J . ·chapman
Sunday SChool - 10 a.m.
Worsh1p • 11 a.m.
Wednesday Scrvir;es • 7 p.m.
New Ufe Chbrc h of God
S.R. 248 &amp; Riebel Road. Chester
Pa..:;tor: Rev. William D. Hinds
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
W9rship - 6 p.m.
Trinity C hurch
Second &amp; Lynn. Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday school and worship 10:25

sponsored by these area
merchants.
RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

CLASSIFIEDS
A
Bright Idea!

Episcopal

Bradbury Cbur&lt;h of Ch.rlst
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School · 9,30 a.m .
Worship ·10:30 a.m.
Youth Meeting-5:30p.m.
Ev~ning Service · 7 p.m.
Wedne~da y\ Bible Study· 7 p.m.

£horeb.announcements

608 EAST MAIN

••

.

Walker Alley, Racine, Ohio
992·2804 .
SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
992-7075
172 North Second Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

Laurel Cliff F...., Methodist Cbun:b
Pastor: Peter Tremblay
Sunday School • 9,30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service~ 7:00p.m.

Rutland Community Cbun:b
Pastor: Rev . Roy McCarty
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
Reorganired Cburclt o(Jesu' ChriSt
of Latter Day SaloiS
Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Janice Danner
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship ~ 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.
The Cbu~b or Jesus
Christ of Latter.. Day Saints
St Rl . !60, 446-6247 or 446·7486
Sunday School10,20·11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood II :05· 12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homepiaking meeting, 1st Thurs. - 7 p.m.

Lutheran
St. John Lutheran Churth
"Pine Grove
Pastor: Dawn Spalding
Worship· 9:00a.m.
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
lntrim pastors: George C. Weinck
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.
St. Paul Lutheran Chun:h
Comer Sycamore&amp;. Second St., Pomeroy
Pastor: Dawn Spalding
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m .

United Methodist
Graham United Methodist
Worship · 9:30a.m. (1 st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 41 h Sun)
Wednesday Service-7 :30 p.m

- 'sunday Schooi ."9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Servic.es- 7:JO p.,m .

Worship· i&amp;.JO a.m., 6:JO p.m.
Wednesday Servic:ea • 7 p.m.

RotdsvUit
Putor: Rev. Charles Mash
Worship - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School • 10,30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.

Rotdsvlllt F•-IP
or lbt Nuanoe
Pulor: John W. Douglas
Sunday School· 9:JO a.m.
Worship . . 10:45 a.m., 1 P:m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Cloun:~

r.ppon PlaJu St. Paul

Chester Cburcb of the Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Flalwoocls
Pastor:·Keith Rader
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship - a.m.

•1

New Havea Churdt of llle Nazareae
Pastor: Glendon Stroud
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m.• 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7.p.m.

Mioernllle
Pastor: Otron Newman
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
. Worship - 10 a.m.

Other Churches

Rock Springs
Pastor:Ke1th Rader
Sunday School - 9:15. a.m.
Wor.;hip · 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday - 6 p.m.

Endlime House of Prayer

nl\a
C\\\1((

.

St:nday worship - I0 a.m.
Wednesday service· 6:30 p.m.

The Sal"atioo Anny
115 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy .
Sunday School- 10:3.0 a.m,
Worship ~ 10:00 a.m., 7:30 p.m.

Betbaoy
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School_- 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services- I 0 a.m.

Middlepurt Community Churc:h
575 Pearl St., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
·Sunday School 10 a.rn.
Evening· 7:30.p.m .
Wednesda y Service- 7:30p.m.

Carmel
Pas\Or: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · !Oo45 a.m. (lnd &amp; 41h Sun)

Falth Tabernacle Church
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Re v. Emmett Rawson
Sunday Sc hool~ 10:00 a. m.
Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service- 7 p.m.

Morning Star
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday Schoo! - 9: 45 a.m.
Worship - I 0:30a.m.
' Thursday Service_s ~7:30p. m .
Suttoo
Pastor: Kcnnelh Baker
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m. (1st &amp; 3rd Sun)

sYracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman Sl., Syracuse
Pastor: Roy {Mike) Th,ompson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

dso Letart

Evening ·

Pastor: Ken Molter

0 p.m.

Hazel Commu1aily Church
orr Rt. 124
Pastor: Edsel Hart
' Sunday School • 9:JO a.m. .
Wmship- 10:30 a.m ., 7:30p.m .

Racine
Pastor : Ken Moller
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- I I a. m. and 7 p.m.

Dye$\'ille Community Church
Sunday Schoo l ~ 9:30a.m ,
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday School- 10 a. m.

11 :15 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Worship ~

Morse Cbapel Church

Larry ·Faw, Superintendent
Sunday school · 10 a.m.
Worship .. 7 p.m.
Wednesday -Service - 7 p.m.

Hockingport Church
Grand Street
Sunda y School - I0 a.m.
Woiship- ·II a.m.
Wednesday Services - 8 p.m .

f!lith Gospel Church
Long Bollom
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Tnrch C hurch
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Mt. Olive Communily Church
Pastor : Lawrence Bush
Sund'i.y School -9:30a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wcdneday Service -7 p.m.

Nazarene
R.doe First Cburcb of the Nazarene
Pastor: Scott Rose
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

United Failh C hurch
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pastor: Rev . Robcm E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School · 9,3d':..m.
Wolship. !Oo30 a.m. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Middleport"Church or the Nazarene
Pastor: Gregory A. Cundiff
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

93 Mill Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 992·6657 • (99B·ooks)
CHURCH SUPPLIES &amp; BIBLES

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH

992-2975
RAWLINGS - COATS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

992-5141
264 South 2nd

Middleport

Nationwide Ins. Co.
of Columbus, Oh.
·· 804W. Main
992-2318 Pomeroy

rl.
..
-

~

POMEROY, OHIO· 992·666n

• Dual Aifbags · sr• • 852to
• Antilock Brakes
• Full Length Console
• Air Conaiticner
' Automatic Transmission
• Power Heated Mifr,or.
• AMIFM Cassette
• Cruise Control

Oo~ors'

We Fill
Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy
KVriJ .m#t
,~ A~~(':'.:!:•:.~cloa:;nP\y
•rwl inJqrily.

q,u:k.!:r,£~ns~!~na}~·

'SJS

Penteco,;,tal
Pentecostal Assembly ·~
St. Rt I 24, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback !
Sundiy School ~· 1 0 a.m.•
E'"'ening ~ 7 p.m.
Wednesday _Services - 7 (l.m.

1\tlltk Cl'ntury

now

$199 I mooth for 24 11101tlhs'

s14A88

• 6 Way Power Seat
• Power Windows
STK II tS003
• Power Door Locks
• Floor Mats
• Rear Window Defogger
• Cruise Control
• AM/FM Cassette
• Air Conditiorung

992-5432

.

EWING FUNERAL HOME
"Dignity and Service Always"

'Sl5 hm R,111ger XLT
now

Middleport Pentecostal
Third Ave .
Pastor:. Rev. Clark Baker
sunday School- 10 a.m.
· Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.

• XLT Trim
• AMIFM Cassene
• Chrome Step Bumper
• Sliding Rear Window
• Aluminum Wheels
• Tachometer
• 60/40 Split Benchseat
• Power Steering

Presbyterian
Syracuse First United Presbyterian
Pastor: Rev. Krisana RobiMon
Sunday School ~ 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Pomeroy

I

Toyota
------ --- --

,

.

95 Toyota Camry LE or 95 Toyota ·1 ~1coma 4x4

'95 Bu1ck Regal
now
·Power Seat
• Remote Keyless Entry
• Air Conditioning
• 3.8 V6 Engine
• Dual Airbags
• AM/FM Casseue
• Cruise Control
·Automatic

.

$17,988

sr~ • 1502 '

was$25,244

$10,699
ITJOI 1U I(

·•

YOUR CHOICE
$219 I mooth for 36 .monlh lease

'95 Pontiac Bonne\'ille
SE Sedan
now
• Dual Air Bags
• Anti Lock Brakes
• 3.8 V6

STKO 45001

Subject m priCM saJa. all prices llldude rnanufac1urer1

'95 Ford F150 XLT
4x2 Pick-C J
now
• Driver Side Airbag
• Anti Lock Brakes
• Air Conditioning
• 5.0 VS Engine
• Rear Step Bumper
• Tilt and Cruise
• AMIFM cassette
• Power Locks &amp; Windows

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seventh-Day Atlvenlls1
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School · 2 p.m.
Worship· J p.m.

United Brethren

s16A99

or$229 1moothfor24 monU6'

Mt. Hermon Uailed Brtlhrea
in Christ Church
Texas Community orr CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
W~rship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

l

'Y5 !·on 1·15ll XLI4x4
now

I

Eden United Brethren in Cbrisl
2 1/2 miles north of Reedsville
-on State Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robcn Markley
Sunday School- Ia' a.m.
Worsh ip-7:30 p.m.
Wedne~day Service!i ~ 7:30p.m.

,.

• Driver Side Airbag
• Anti Lock Brakes
• Air Conditioning
• 5.0 yg Engine
• Automatic Transmission
• Tilt &amp; Cruise
• AMIFM Cassette .
• Power Locks &amp; Windows

36 month CIQSed end tease. $1000 down plus !irs1 pml. and secunly clepod lr"ld taxes, 12,000 miles
per year, C&amp;mry option to purchase 112,t87 .59, tacoma option to purctuLse S10,595.82. TotS pmts.
15251!.00.

was 23,131

$18,699

or$2591moothfor24 mond6'
•

'24 month dosed eod lease. S1000dMI ~us firs! month
per~·· opltOO 10 J)Urchue etlease end $14,603.84. Tot

i

• Driver Side Air Bag
• Powerful! Engine
• Power Steering
• AMIFM Stereo
• Sliding Rear Win9ow
• Full Carpeting
; Step Bumper
• Overdrive Transmission

• Dual Air Bags
·Floor Mats
• Security System
• AM/FM Cassette
• Air Conditioning
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Tilt &amp; Cruise
·Automatic Trill1SnjiSsion
~-~

"24 mornn Closed end lease, StOOO down plus first month pmt. secumy depos1t, !Wid 1111, 12,000 mnes
per year, option to purcha.!le atlfl338 end $13,068.80. Total pmts. $5519 76. wnn approvecl etedrt

214 E. Main
992·5130
Pomeroy

ISCOVer·

AUTOMOTIVE~

INC.
the seal of service.

593-6641
I

I

•

$16,399

• Dual Air Bags
• Power Door Locks &amp; Windows
• 4·Door
• Ant1 Lock Brakes
• AuJOmatic Transmission__.-;;~""!!!!!!'!!
• Cruise Control
• AM/FM Casseue
• Air Conditioning
Subiect to pnor iale, all prK:eS rnctl.lde manuiac:lurers rebates; and tneentrves.

off
If The Original
Owner Of

A 85-87 Cadillac

.. sewrity depo&amp;it. !rid twc. t2.000miles
ts. $6239 76, ~lh approved cred•l.

East State Street, Athens, Ohio

Pon\eroy

'95 Pontiac Grand Pnx
SE Sedan
now

Owner Loyalty To Current
Cad.illac Owners

-

Ford • Lincoln Mercury • Toyota • Buick • Oldsmobile • Pontiac • Cadillac • GMC Truck

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

and tnctllllves.

6 TO CHOOSE FR0~1
95 Cadillac Sedan
DeVille

•

DON WOOD_

•

rebate~

was 18,254

was$20A20

Prtsbyterlao
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wors hip- I0 a.m.

$21,688

• AMIFM Stereo CD
• Power Mirrors &amp; Seats
• 4 Speed Automatic
• Rear Deck Spoiler
· Loaded

Sunday School· 9:45 a.m.

115 E. Memorial Or.
992-2104

/rn&lt;nhfor24 rroJIId&amp;'

$
or 129 1month for 24

llarrison-ville Presbyterian Church
Worship - 9 a.m.

HQmelite Saws

$1GA99
$249

·was $19,520

"2' month closed end tease. $1000 down plus first rnonftl pmt., secur1tydepos~ . and lax. 12.000 mites
per year, option to purchase at lease end $8158.20. Total pmts. $3119.76, WJth approv~ ctedit.

. Established l 913

992-2121

'l;lurus CL
now

hll'l

was$20170

was $13~5.97

'f

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

Mulborry Ave.

or

'l))

.

"24 month dosed end tease, 11000 oown plus first month pmt .. security depo1it and tax, 12.000 m1tes
per year, opt!on to purchase at tease endS 11 ,698.60. Total pmts. $5999.76, with a,aprowd credit.

"Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicktrt"

106

was$16,140

$14,699

• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Floor .MaiS
or
• Cruise Con1rol
sTK • 85326
• AMIFM Cassette
• Dual Air Bags
• 6 Way Power Seat
·Automatic
, • Air Conditioning

Clifton Tabernacle Church
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday SChool· 10 a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

Crow's Family
Restaurant

Aoa.3. Snaae, OH 435716

Bu$1nau Pttont 61it-696-1400
Motltlt: 614-~1..()2\)ti, Ff.)&lt;: 614-$Q6-1400

.

month dosed eod lease, $1000 down plus first month pmt. , seturity qepo511, and ta,;, 12,000 miles
per ye&lt;¥", option to purchase a! lease end $10.524,80. Total pmts. $4799.76, with 11Jproved credit

Church of Jesus Christ,
Apostolic Faith
l/4 mile past Fort Meigs on New lima Rd.
Pastor: William Van Meter
Sunday-7:00 p.m .
Wednesday· 7:00p.m.
Friday·7:00 p.m. ·

BILL QUICKEL

PHARMACY~·

CJ

now

Calvary Bibie Chun:h
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
. Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Woo;hip J0,3o a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

W. Tad Cucklei\ Pr11klent

Faith Fellowship Crusade for Christ
Pastor: Rev. FrAnklin Dickens
Servi_ce : Friday, 7 p.m.

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

'

t~ Clltt8f

'll; hllu l'illl illlll'

Middle~rt

Christian Fellowship Center
. Salem St., Rutland

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
5rrttf a3oof.l

was$16,445

Wednesday Service • 1 p.m.

Sunday School · lO a. m.
Worship- 9 a.m .
Wednesday - 7 p.m

General Motors

~-4

(at Burlingham church off Route 33)
Pastor: Robert VMce

Soowville
Pastor: Aorence Smith
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m..

Ford

Fairview Bible Cbur&lt;b
!.&lt;tart, W.Va. Rt I
Pastor: Rankin Roach
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.
Worship- 9":30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Rejoicing Ufo Chur&lt;h
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
We~nesday Servi ces.~ 7 p.m.

Harrisonville Community Church
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday· 9:30a.m. and 7]).m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. ,

Salem Center
PastOr: Ron Fierce
Sunday School -9: 15a.m.
· Worsh!P- 10:15 a.m. ·

. I

•

Stlversvllle Word ofFoltb
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.

Tbe Believers' Fellowship MIDistry
New Lime Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2o30 p.m.

Rutlaad
Pastor: Arthur Crablree
Sunday Sr;hool ~"9:30a.m.
Worship~ 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Belbel Cbun::h
Townsh1p Rd ., 46RC
Sunday Sc hool - 9 a.m.
Worship· lO a. m. ·
Wednesday Services~ 10 a. m.

Long Boltom
Pastor~ Rev. Cha~les Mash

Fallh Full Gospel Church
Long Bottom
Pastor : Steve Reed
Sunday School • 9,30 a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday - fellowship service 7 p.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Roben E. Robinson
Sunday Sc;hool- 9:15a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a,m.
Bible Study Tuesday- 10 a.m.

Mt. Oli"e United Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville '
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday Sthool · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 -a. m., 7 p.m.
TI1ursday Services· 7 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor: Bob Randolph
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

I

llobson Cbrlstiaa •'ellowshlp Cbur&lt;h
Rev. Woody "Call, Speaker
Sunday service, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday service, 7:30p.m.

Pearl Chapel
Pastor: Florence Smith
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship~ JOa.m.

Proves ·Buying a New Car or
Isn't ·a Shocking·~erience.

Wbite•s Chapel Wesleyao
Coalville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School. ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday service - 7 p.m .

Portland Fint Cburcb of the Nazanoe
Pastor: John W. Douglas
Sunday School . JO:OO a.m.
Wor.;hip. 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services .· 7 p.m.

llutb (Middleport)'
Pastor: Vemagaye Sullivan
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Don Wood

FI'Hdom Gospel Mlulon
Bald Knnb, on Co. Rd. 31
~astor: Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday School· g,JO a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

.

Forest Run
Pastor: Deron Newman
Sunday School • 10 a.m .
Worship - 9 a.m.
Thunday Services· 6'30 p.m.

...&gt;

In 1995,

· Carleloa lntenleoomlaatioaal Churdl
Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Jeff Smith
Sunday School • 9,30 a.m.
Wotship Service 10:30 a.m.
Worship Service-lSI and 3rd Sunday, 1 p.m.
No Wednesday Even in~ Serv1ce

Rutlpnd Church o(1he Nazanne
Pastor: Samuel Basye
.
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m,
Worship· 10,30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Old Dexter Bible Christian Church
·Sunday Sehoul : 10 a.m.
Morning Worsh1p: II a.m.
Evening Worsh1p: 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Chester
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship- 9 a.m.
Sunday School • I0 a.m.,
Thursday Services- 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Cburtb of tb.e Nuanat
Pa51or: Rev. Thomaa McClung
• /
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship ·10:30a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Ealerprlst
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Coolville UoUed Methodist Parish
Pastor: Helen Kl ine
Coolville Chun::b
Main &amp; Fifth St .
Sunda y School · 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services- 7 p.m.

Mtigs Coopt:rathe Parhh
Northeast Cluster
Alfred
Pastor; Sharon Hausman
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- ll a.m., 6:30p.m.

Soootb D&lt;th&lt;l New THtameat
Silver Ridge
Pastor: Duane Sydenstricker
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship. 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

.

C.ntnll Cluater
Asbary lSyn&lt;UH)
Pastor: Deron Newman
· Sunday School ·9:45a.m.
Worship· II a.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

•

Ben Franklin
·Discovered Eledridty.

Neue Settkm&lt;at C~lll'&lt;b
Sunday Worship· l :JO p.m.;
Thursday services - 7:30p.m.

Syrat111t C~lll'&lt;b oflbe Nazaren&lt;
Pastor: Rev. Rick Sturgill
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wol'!ohip- 10:30 a.m.,1 6 p.m.
· Wednesday Services· 1.p.m.

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sund•y Sehool • 9 a.m.
Wor&gt;bip • 10 a.m.
Tueaday Services • 7:3() p.m.

1752,

Filii Gospel up.._
33045lliland Road, Pomeroy
PutOJ: Roy Hunter
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evenins7:30 p.m.
Tuesday 81. Thunday • 7,30 p.m.

�I

, Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Dear Ann Landers: I am a 52: year-old gay father. I've been
·.. divorced for over 12 years, and my
entire family knows I am gay. My
companion, "Jason." and I live
near my children, and they
often come to our home for dinnec I
; : never thought I had a problem until
·· now.
.
' . My oldest son is getting married
- soon. He asked if l would be able to
· i;ontribute something toward the cost

of the wedding slnce his fiancee's
family isn'table to afford everything.
1 agreed and told ,him that as a
wedding gift, I would pay for the
photographer, and he could select any
photographer he wishes. He happily
accepted my offer.
A week later, my son told me he
did not want me to bring Jason to the
wedding because some of his friends
are not as understanding as he is and
he doesn~ want to be embarrassed on
his wedding day.
Ann, I have never done anything
that could emb8Jlass my son. I am
angry and disappointed. Jason and I
are an established couple and we have
done everything possible to be nice
to my son and his fiancee.
My daughters have suggested that

with~ divorced

I noe .rtend the wedding and thai I
take back my offer to pay the
pholograpber. I don~ want to cause a
major family break, but rm inclined
to agree with them. By the wall my
ex-wife and her boyfriend will be
attending the wedding. I find this·
double standard of treatment
insulting. ·
Should I attend the wedding alone
and pretend everything is fine while
1am seething inside? Should I refuse.
to auend unless Jason is invited?
Should I pay the photograpber? Any
help you can give would be
appreciated. -- FATIIER IN VA.
DEAR FAIHER: Too bad your son
is such a wimp, but it sounds to me
that he's being pressured by his
fiancee. Leave the decision to Jason.

:Local FFA
:-members
attend
convention
L!IITY Willis and David Rousb,
. members of the Racine-Southern
· 'FFA Chapter attended Obio' s 6711!
Annual State FF A Convention,
· beld recently at Mershon Auditorium on The Ohio State University
. campus in Columbus.
'
Delegates from Ohio chapters
voted on items of business,
-approved delegate committee
reports and elected the 1995-96
State FFA Officer team. The two
&lt;;lay event highlighted the achievements or members, while allowing
• tbem the opportunity to visit a
career show. atten&lt;:l various workshops and hear keynote speakers.
· The convention not only recogni ze d the accomplishments of
members during the past year, but
allowed members to display their
' abilities while participating in dele. gate committees, Jbe talent show.
: and the sl!lte band an&lt;:l chorus.
I .
Speakers during co nv ention

·

AT CO~ VENTION - Larry Willis and David Roush repre·
sen ted the ~l. cine/Soulhern FFA at the recent stale convention.

included Dr. Jim Wand, master
hypnotist; Randy Hedge , former
National FFA Officer. Geri Jewell
from The Facts of Life ; and Lc~
Schroeder, past state president and
current Nation&lt;tl FFA Officer. Nine
different workshops were offered,
and profic iency ffnd individual.
award wi nners, team and individu:J!

winners of the siJlte skills contests;
and state and American FFA
Degree recipients were recognized
for their accomplishments.
The H'A is a national organization dedicated to preparing members for leadership and agricultural
careers.

Immunizations
available for free

..•• Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich

Free immunizations for children
from ~irlb ·through middle school
will be given on Tuesday, June 27
from 10 a.m. to noon in Reedsville
at Reed' s Country Store.

In order to fully protect chilGeorge and Kilty Dallas left faith" in air bags. And I'm not fond
Monday for their plush horne in · of tile commercial showing the rab- dren from conl!lgious diseases such
Angora Springs, Calif., after spend· bit with energizers continuing to as whooping cough anti polio, chiling a month here with Kitty's move right along while some dren need a minimum or three
mother and sister, Juanil!l Bachtel winged creatures-! assume they doses of OPT and oral polio vac· and Carol Tannehill, and with Bill arc supposed to be vultures-plop cine by age two. In addition to rou~ Matlack. \plus other relatives .a nd
from the sky onto the ground. And tine immunizations, the ~linic can
. friends ,
the third one witb which I look also administer the Hepatitis B vacGeorge has sold his very prof- upon wilh disdain is the one show- cine series at no charge to children
' '!table business in Califomia and is ing the man hitting himself in the born after November 22,1991.
now intO retirement. He comment- b'ead with a hammer when the
The ~ linic is provided by the
. ed that he wasn't sure bow that was weeds be pulls insianlly spring up
Ohio
University College of Osteogoing to work out, but it is. He's agai n. These commercials violate
pathic
Medicine Childhood Immuplaying a lot of golf and is involved my "something or other". Bet you
ni zatio n Program. s community
. with a barbershop music chorus of have some pet peeves too.
mobile health unit and the Ohio
; some 50 members and is the lead
Department
of Health in coopera- .
· singer in a comedy barbershop
The weather service assured us lion wiU1 lhe Meigs County Health
. ,quartet which makes numerous per- · that we were going to 'have sunny
.• sonal appearances mound the skies all · week. Was Wednesday's Department. When going to the
Angora Hill s area. He's doi11g stonn just a bad dream or does it clinic a child's previous shot
·some choreography for the large ·again prove .that, indeed, we all do records should be taken . For more
information about the immuni zachOral group besides singing with make mistakes? l)o keep smiling.
tion program ca ll toll free 1-800\
the chorus.
M4-2654.
George looks well and appears
to be enjoying life to tt's fullest. He
says he and Kitty enjoy U1eir vtsits .
· back to the "home fteld". George \
was band director at Middl eport
. - - - -. /£~ All ;
~ U~AUT A n i
11
High School and later was an _
I'J " " IIIIII'G
"""'
adm ini strator in the .Western Local
tiiHIItltflltiiHIIIHIIHIIIIIHitnnum!IIIHfiH'"'"NIIHN"'"'"JHtllllltttttiiHHJHIIIJulltuttlltttllt~
·school District in Meigs County.
Then, one day he decided to give
up school business and he and
Kitty moved tu Cali fornia and he
,.

IUJJ

wcnl into business wi lh his Sons.

· Despite the misgivings ol people in
lhe ed ucation field at. the time hti
left the educational field and headed to California, the move was
highly successful.
Guess it all proves that some. tiincs you have to take a chance.
Mary and Walter Grueser of
Lincoln Hill report U1a1 ti1eir son,
Wally, read :!I I ah&lt;lut U1e misery of
Meigs County's Mother's Day
Weekend flood in the newspaper in
Newark. N. J., where he resides
with his family . Sq bad rL~ it might
have been. Meigs did get a lilli e
national publicity as a result:
Tim Glaze, baker who operate:;
the Sweeting Greeting Bakery in
Pomeroy, is looking for a photo of
•·ferdinand, t11c Bull" wbo enjoyed
wide popularity some years back.
Tim thought that, perhaps , some
of your children had books that
showed a picture of "Ferdinand"
and if so. he would rc;uly appreciate borrowing 11. Tim says no hann
will i:ome to the picture and he'll
· see that yo~ it back. You can
contact Ti . at the bakery on
. Pomeroy 's ast Main St.
Is it me, a!lle? Or do you feel
the same?
.
1 hate some of tbe commercials
currently being shown on television. One of them shows a huge
· boulder rolling tow:uds a ve,hicle
but then you are advised that the
vehicle has dual air bags; I guess
you are to asswne the couple in tile
vehicle are going to be okay.
Somehow I don't have "that much ..
•

wounded or OK?
I ~h my bR!ath and realize llll\lll
call the district. The numben--f•have
known for so long will noe come to
me now. 1 must calm doWII, tlke a
breath and remember- but the line
is busy. What now? I page my
husband's beeper and leave a code
number that means • Are you all
right?"
I try the district again. and the line
is still busy. ! pray I don't hear acar
pull up outside my house because I
know that would be bad news. I
finally reach someone a1 the district
and tell him my husband works in the
area of the shooting, and 1 need to
know if he isOK.AIIboughitsecms
an etentity, the man quickly answen

.•

that my husband is fine. I hula up
the phone and czy.
·'
This is what ira like to be a polic:le
officer's wife. - D.C.'S WIFE It:l
TAMPA
DEAR TAMPA: You've apokeo
eloquendy for evczy police olicer''
wife in the world. On behalf of them
all, I thank you.
:
Do you havt qusrions abow se~
but no one to 1/J/Jc to? Ann lmukrs'
booklet, "Sa and the 'll!en-Ager," is
frank. and to the point. Send a self- ·
addrelsed, loflg, busifless-si~~
envelope and a check or money older.
for $3.75 (this includes postage and
hmrdling) to: Teens, ~oAnn !Anders,: ,
P.O. Box ll562, Ch1cago,/ll. (j(}(jJ/-.•
0562. (In CIJIU1IUJ, send $4.55.)
:.

.'

RIVERSIDE MOTORS

Public

PubliC NotiCe

s6,995
88 FORD RANGER- 5 speed, 4 cyl. ..... ................... ,......... '3495
87 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER LE- V6, auto, 7 pass. Sharp ...... '5995
91 CHEVY S-10- V6, 5 spel)d ............................................... '5995
80 FORD F 150- 4X4, long bed, .VB, good tires, runs great.. '3495
86 CHEV BLAZER - Full size, low miles, VB, auto, air, Silverado
pkg ................ ,............................... :....................................... '5995
90 OLDS 98 • 4 DR, loaded with all options, very sharp, one owner
...... ..... ......... ...................................... .. ......... :......................... '9400
89 BUICK LASABRE LIMITED- 4 DR, one owner, loaded with all
options ............. ......... .... :.......... .................... .......................... '6900
90 FORD CROWN VICK WAGON· VB, auto ........................ '4995
88 PONTIAC 6DOO- 4 DR, V6 motor, tilt, cruise, PW, PL ...... 13995 ·
89 FORD TAURUS· 4 DR, V6, auto, air, crulse ................. '4295
85 SUBARU BRA'!: 4X4 PICK-UP· 5 speed, air cond, one owner .
with original invoice .... ........................., ................................. •34g5

Several More To Choose From

Your Last Stop Car Shop

RIVERSIDE MOTORS·
Across from Super America In Pomeroy
614-992-3490
Cecil Boggess
Jimmy Deem

'

Jackson of Ashland, Ky. , w11l he . ,
the guest speaker at ·the Naomi '
Bnptist Church in Pomeroy II a.m.·
Sunday.
.
. :
I

.

'

'

. CARPENTER - Homecoming ·
at Mt. Union Baptist Church near :
Carpenter, Sunday. Sunday school :
at 9:45 a.m. , potluck at noon, ·
singers, The Messengers of Fair· :
mont, W.Va. and Narrow Way of;
Point Pleasant, 1 p:m. Rev. Joe N. ·
Sayre, pastor, invites public.
·

ranties given.
For further information,

contact Mike Kloes at

992~

2136.
(6) 13. 15, 16, 3tc

vs.

CLARENCE LEE, ET AL
DEFENDANT.
CASE NO 94-CV-229
LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL
. ESTATE ·
As Sheriff of Meigs
county, Ohio, I' hereby offer
·lor sale at 10:00 a.m. on
Thursday, July 20, t995 A.D.

and Thelma Herman ,
"Bailey's 1 Acre Lot') as

Sei'Yica.
Home Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic
Syslenu &amp; Drl~ys.
Trucking- Limcston~,

FWDirt

YOUH'S
CIIPEIITII SERVICE
-Room Additions

•

•Etectrlclll r. Plumbing
-Rooting
otnterlor &amp; Exterior
• Painting
AIIO Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-8215
Pomeroy, Ohio

1"'""'

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

-Glassware
Loads of Misc.

Buy-Sell-Trade
tii/IM mo.

'

feet; thence N. 26'15' West
to land now r formerly
owned by Clara M. Dow;
thence South along Clara M.
Dow's line to the

IM/1 mo

COMMUNITY
CAB CO. INC.
Owners: Robert Barton &amp;
Harry Clark
992·9949 . 992-6471
Mon - Fri 8 a .m. - 6 p.m.
Sat. 8 p.m. - 5 p.m.
. Sun. by appt. only
Serving Pomeroy, Middlepon
&amp; surrounding area.

Call for rate sctredule
Min . $2.00

Weal along said corporation
0.25 Acre lot described in
deed frOm Ernestine

Partlow to Velvey Keys
dated October 25 1948 and
recorded in D.B. 162, Pg:
372 of the Meigs County
Deed Records; thence S. 36'
30' East along the East line
of said Keys lotto the place
ol BEGINNING and

'

containing 0.50 Acres 1 more
Or less, 0.40 Acres thereof

being in the Village of
Pomeroy and 0.10 Acres

"B"RINGS YOU
READYnSH

In Memory

SYMMES CREEK
SATURDAY, 9:00-?
COURT STREET
GRILL

'

recorded In Vol. 169, Pg. N. 26"15' West to land now
or formerly owned by Clara
of beginning and passing M. Dowj thence In a North
through property owned by and Easterly direction along
Kathy Anderson as Clara M. Dow's line to a
recorded In Sol. ~96, Pg. point where. a' line running
325, N. 27&gt; 52' w. 12.52 feet S. 26'15' East will intersect
to a 518" steel Iron pin aet; said Chester Road 70 feet
thence continuing N. 27• 52' Northeasterly from the
w. 101.271eet to a steel pin place of beginning; thence
sat; thence S. 62" OTW. S. 61• 50' West along said
N. 27' 52' W. 60.12 feet td a BEGINNING and containing
point located In the 112 Acre, more or less, 114
corporation limo, s. sa• 15' Acre thereof being situate
E. 124.53 teet to a point, In the Village of Pomeroy
being common with the and 1/4 Acre In the
above parties, S. 26• 15' E. Township of Salisbury,
47.10 feet to a 518' steel pin Malgs County, Ohio.
thence continuing S.
FOR LAST SOURCE OF
26" 15' E. 711116 feet to a 5/8 TITLE SEE D.B. 296, Pg. 325
inch steel pin let; thence and D.B. 297, Pg. 50, Meigs
continuing S. 26• .15' E. County, Ohio Records ol
11.77 feet to a point in the Deeds.
Northerly line ol Chester
Parcel Nos. 14-01647, 14Road; thence along with 01648. 15·01963, 16-01964
said Chester Road, S. 67" and 16-01965
t9' W. 70.167 feet to the · The above described
place of BEGINNING and premlaea has an address of
containing 0.265 Acres, 1150 Cheater
Road,
more or less, as designated Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
on "Map Showing Survey
Said real eatate was
for Kathy Anderson, appraised at S22,000.00.
•ltuated In the VIllage of Sale or uld real aatate to be · 1~
1

';j'mJ

'

DARWIN,

WICKS
HAULING "

IMPROVIMifrr
I

Roofing, Siding; Room
Additions, Concr!lte, etc.
P.O. Bo~ 220,
Bidwell, Oh. 45814
(614) 388-9865
24 Hour. PagerAnserlng Servlc
1-&amp;D0-215-2023

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614-992·3470

·

•
•

•
•

•

..

'

,

'

f

I "I

" • t= ;

Must be 18 yrs.
Procall co.
602-954-7420
5/tlti1 mo.

7pm , WI. Alto Aucrlon. Rl 2'·33
-croaaroac:ta•. Hn merc:lla.ndia,
I Iota more. Ed Frazier

Clean Lalt Model Care Or .

Stnlll&gt; Blliclc Pondae,

&amp;

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

Service

•Microwave• •Diapoula

•Thanko Meigs &amp;

'

Surrounding Areal

Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
· Free Estimates
lnsuranc;e Work Welcome
I
-~
State
Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

(614) 965-3561 or
992-5335 1211Wn

101:11 fV.41tfn

'

Ext. 6250
$2.99 per min.
. Must be 18yrs.
Pro call
(602) 954-7420

AB&amp;T .AUTO
3RD ST., RACINE, OHIO
949·2882
Owners: Ed Chaney &amp; Richard Moore
14 Years Experience in Area

•ALIGNMENTS •BRAKES
•TIRES •OIL CHANGES
Looking forward lo seeing oldfriench .
and
new!
5119/tfn

TrainedCaii81H56-1114.

w~,.

larrr

·~~.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

male, . to good home.

&lt;1302 •

614·742·3212
ALFALFA
AND MIXED

Kenny's Auto Rental
Kenny's is the"place to come
when you need a car rental.

HAY
FOR SALE
BAILED TO
YOUR NEEDS

614-742-2193

949-2512

We Have Cars and Varts!
Kenny's Auto Center
264 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH . 45631

11211 mo.

Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE; ESTIMATES
949·2168

1-800-486 -1590
Bus. (614) 446-9971
·
'"'""

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643

J&amp;L INSULATION

•Driveway~

COMPANY

•Patios
---.)
•Porches
•Slabs
992-3265

REFINANCE
PURCHASE
'
CONSOLIDATE
Bankruptcy, Judgements, Slow Credit
Our Specialty

1-800-MERIT-9~

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

Limestone &amp; Gran!,

4 Family.

A\'ON SELLS AT WORK-HOME
Need Addliarel h:ame?

From.

Average SS.$151Hr. Bonollllt
Torri!Of)' Oplional. lndl'ep.

Thur 1 S.Fri 18, On 588
At s339 Radnor. Lola To Solect

s Family Yard Sale. Maternity, 1-1100-H2-4738
Newborn, lnlanl &amp; Preachool AVON EARN $$$ II hamt·at
Clothtt. Men/Women Clothu, wcriL All area&amp;. 304-882-21!1.t5, 1Baby ·AcCOII. , Taya, Baako. Juno l:l0-992-8356. INMEP
10'17, t-4, Jockaon Pike. Behind
III&lt;&gt;Citnl AoltaUfOfll.
Computer u,.,, Heeded , Work
Own Hours, 2DK ·5DK !Year, 24
All 'l'&amp;rd Saloa lolull 8a Paid In

Adnnco. DEADLINE : 2:00p.m. Ht' 7tH49-7&lt;al En 1173.
the da'f betore the ad 11 to run . Country Ban Gu ltarlat. Exptri~
SUnday edition . 2:00 p.m. FriOay. .-K:ed 614-388-8436.
lolanday odlllon · 2:GO p.m. So!Ur·
ooy.

Director or Nurlilng 10 work at La·

Frl &amp; Sat, 112 Mile On Georges
C~ Ad. On SR 7 Sidt, H. Baakl.

bed cero:lled ICF btcillry. 1rntrtlt·
ftd person1 contact lhe chairman

E-IMI.lachlno, 1.11oc.

kin H••P.illl, lakin, WV,

1 138

of lhe qual1ty council at :J04.87S..
0680 Blt24 . 8am·4prn. Won-Frl.
Toyt, Furnllurt, Olsl'lwul'\er, lakin Haopllal Ia an EEO -lay·
Craftl &amp; 11111:. 242 Mognolla (Bo- or.
tlndco-), .
Oomlno'a Pizza In Pomero)' now
dr ivtrl. Average 18 ptr
largo Four Family Salt, Child· 1'\lrlntil
ren"a Clothes, Toy1, Mlat:. Items. h:Jur.
June 111-201h. Slatting AI10&amp;m-7. Easy Work! Elttlltnt Payl AI ·
Plonll Subdl&gt;lolan, Bulovilo Plloo.
atmbl• Produc:ta At Home. Call

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDlEPORT 992-2772
Office Hours: Mon.·Fil.
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
Vinyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.
Free Estimates

lnttri~r

Toilet. Marble Vanity Top, Some
Fufnl~ure, Children's Clothing.
loll loloral Juno IS, II, 17, llam-

4pm-Rd810

Tall Fr... 1·800·&lt;11· 55ae. E•t

Pallo Door'
Ooon, Gold 313.

Waving Silo. Sliding

Auorted

"U~15.

Houae

cleaning , _ 1 do)' por
week , various hourt. 304·875·
1602 alrM Spm.

Housewivn Or SIUdentl , Do '1bu
17, 5th H01111 Pall Need Extra Income? Can You
Ttnl Road On 58&amp; Baby Items. Sing or Oanct. 1 Call e 14··448·
Brand Name Jeana. MtrVWQn'\en 1502. .
Satutdl~

CIDII'&gt;Ing.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Jo-

llllto e-n. ll9m1. TrolnHt,

c.-a-.,-..,._

EG.
ply Gal.,

Or A -

lola II Rooumo To: P.O.
BM:Iar rv... 'IN, 2510ot.

Or·

Bo1 I D.

All Yard Salta Must Bt Paid In
Advance . Deadline : t ;OOpm tht MMtlcal Attlttllnt/S.Cratary.
John A. wou, 110, Suite 11Z
dar belore .he ad lo 10 run, Sun- PloeMnt Volley Haaplal. ANI~
1
day .Sitlon- ;0Qpm Friday, Mon- catlont accepted Jyne 11·1..

•

&lt;lot odlian •oooa.rn, SallKdoy.

11om l1·31&gt;m, and June 1t I·
Ft.. llnliJ ga 10ge oale- Saturday. 3pm. llo p/'&lt;&gt;no colla eccopted.

MB#0489

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

Toy~.--·'*'-

I Shirley

· Frldar·Soturdoy (9·5) Clolhoa,
211 21'92111n

CHARLIE'S
CONCRETE

2nd HauH btlow Garllold E:otonalon . 8-e Frklay-SalurdiW'- AVON I All Art11
Ciolttea, Furniture, Computer, $poaJo, :JJ«i 7S.t-4211.

~

· ( No Sunday Calls)

•Sidewalks

Bill Shick
992·2269

W.ntod To Bllr: Junk Au10o Will&gt;

~&lt;lttena~ .. Five Week Old. Grai. Or Wllhoul Uorora. Call
Cream , &amp; Black &amp; While. liner 1'--'-- et• ••• ~
Mexican Chlhuahua,

TONY'S PORTABLE
WELDING
Rad iator Repair
Service Portable
aluminum welding
New radiators
available,
recores also.

MERIT

""'-

Eall·

IQOO

Otte Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

5/16/94 TFN

(614) !149-3005

Wanted to Buy

Trucka, 1887 Modtlt Or Newer,

Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles

Diesel Injector SVC
Injector Pump SVC
· Tune-ups
985-3879

Owner/Opr. : Tom Lane
Racine, Ohio

PubliC Sale
and Auction
AucJiana ovory F•ldor·Solurdoy,

Rick Pearaon Auction Company,

•All Makes •42 Year•
•Fast Reliable Service
•Waehera - Dryers • Ranges
•Refrigerators •Freezers .
•Diahwaahers
olt.W. Haatero

1·900·945·61 00
Ext. 1327,
s2.99 per min.

Mobile Welding

Residential &amp;
Office Cleaning
PLUS
Pickup &amp; Delivery
Service

Yard &amp;ate 1 112m! from Union

Ca""round, June 18·11. Fwnl·
IIIlO, c:lolhot. IDOit. Homo lrlloriar,

full time auctioneer, c:omplelt
auction
terilct. Ucenaed
IM,Ohio &amp; Wttl Virginia, 30-'·

4128ltln

GRAY'S

MY BUSINESS

Pt.Pieasant :
&amp; VIcinity

80

I:. I " 1, :.

'

you,

You never would of
died.
In life we loved yo~
dearly
In death we love you
still.
In our hearts you left a
place
Thai no one else can
till.
· Sadly mlaaed by wife,
Eleanor; children: Gay
Ann, Richard &amp; Barb &amp;
families; grandchildren,
graa111randchlldren &amp;
l)ad, Emerson Douglas

:I I

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

•Faclory Authorized Pert•

Just Call

For low income
elderly &amp; ·
handicapped. Family
home atmosphere
wff.L.C.
992•5042 6/9111n

: I .:,t ;

· Mon. thru Fri. 7:00
A.M. till 6:00 P.M.
992·5388

ABigRu,
Could Be Yours!

41131&amp;5

•

....... -.jowoty.

1-900-726-0033

614-742-2193

· lnsurea • Experienced

*rllgn Oft fNiboa.

90

Fat.e Awaits You!

Brickles

Call Wayne Neff 992-4405
For Free Estimates

-._IIUM:IIIIil

su

173-51115 0.. 304-773-51-47.

Portable
Bandsaw Mill
Danny &amp;'Peggy

Houoe Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Bath
Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Rooting; Patios
Reasonable

•clllnee
In ... IHioo
Counrr Scllool DlatrlcL Pl1one

• Lots of Fun and
Learning
• Lots of
Experience

Love &amp;Romance

Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE

-- ....... --...

TAMMY HYSELfS
DAY CARE

H&amp;H SAWMILL
32124 Happy

611311 mo.

•ItH. camS s1tn • Fam'!i Reunion• " Pai

311. Announcemllltl

r;:-""

5118itln

614•992·5291

i

DI'IIPPLIIICE
IERICE

lOIII

(Specialize In ·
driveway spreading)

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanka cleenad &amp; portable tollele reulad.
Deily, weekly &amp; monthly rentet l'ltH.

ThrH family rard oor.- For011
Run Rd., lllnoravile, frldor end

O~J~, ••• . L------..;";.;.1 '"';.; ; .~"

MINJ.IY'S

(Umestone low Ratts)

In Memory of
GERALD (Hank) .
DOUGLAS who
· passed away 2 years
/'llo, June 16, 199,3.
:Ito million limes we've
·, needed you
l' million limes we've
cried
If love could ·of saved

$56.00 .
Ratliff
Pool Center.
286·1553

Everyone
Welcome

MODERN SANITATION

71&gt;2194

In-Memory

Pucks

446-6579

5:30p.m.

not suffer when God
suddenly took you
away, to be with him
forever in His house
to stay.
· Your memories are
mv keepsake which I
will never ever part.
Love,
Pebble

Chlorine Users
25 Lb.
Big 3 Inch

Jackson

Specializing in Custom'
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR ALL MAKES &amp;
MODELS
992-7013 OR
992-5553 OR
TOLL FREE 1·800·848·007

. Every Wed. Nite

· Though you did

NIGHTCLUB
Thurs., June 15th
LADIES NIGHT
.Along with Legs Contest
Fri., June 16
DANCE
With Drink Specials
Sat., June 17 from 7-9
ALL FEMALE REVIEW
For Gentlemen Only

Gallipolis

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

Racine
Gun Club
Trap Shoot

who passed away a
year ago today.

Ladles Welcome After 9 p.m .

of

After 6 p.m.
614-985-41110.......
~------~~" L-~~~~~

MARY "Sis"
EBLEN

CITY LIMITS

to which reference is
hereby · made
lor a
description thereof; thence

.

In Loving Mamory of
My Mother,

CALENDAR OF EVENTS
FOR

being in the Township of

Salisbury, Meigs· County,
Ohio.
PARCEL THREE: SitUate
in Salisbury Township,
Meigs County, Ohio :·
BEGINNING Easterly 150.5
teet along tha Chester Road
(S.R.7) from the S.E. corner
of a 1 Acre tract or lot on
the North side ol said Road
conveyed by Elizabeth Jay
and Martin Jay to George
Jay, September 29; 1911,
Vol. 107, Pg, 157, Meigs
County, Ohio Deed Records

road to the place

riME FOR A· 8-C.
l' WANT AD

Square Dance, RoUnd &amp; Clogging .
Music , Howard Meadows &amp; the
Turntable . Kanauga, Ohio.
Everyone Welcome. No Alcohol.

line to the N.E. corner of a

tnen~~ge.

• NEW GARAGES
• REMODELING •
• SIDING
• ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992-5535
(614) 992-2753

I

&amp; VICinity "

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
985-4473

ELIM HOME H&amp;H SAWMILL
Portable
AdultCare .ltJ.:\
Bandsaw Mill
Facility I 1 I \
32124 Happy

AMVETS DANCE
SAT.. JUNE 17
8:00 TO 11 :00, ADM. $3.00

corporation line of the

Take the p11in out ot
pllintlng. Let ue do It for
you. Very ._an.ble.
Free Eatl!lllltH
Before 6 p.m. leave .

.•Mowing
•Trimming
•Firewood
• Also:
Contract Work

·

SMITII'I
COISTIUcnOI
Cullom Building &amp; Remodeling
• NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS

•

Entert~inment

$2.99 per minute
Must be 18 yrs. old.
Procell Co.
(602) 954·7 420 .

..J •

PAl
l•ttrlor I
, Exterltr

L&amp;W
LAWN CARE

Line
·
1·900.263·1.800
Ext.1986

Public Notice

UIDA'S
· IITING &amp; CO

Give You~lf The
Sports Edge with
The Sports &amp;

North side of said road 87.5

200; lhence from said point

35.00 feel to a point i thence

BuUdodng, Backhoe,

Since the Modern Olympics :
came into being in 1896, they have · .
been canceled thr~ ·times because :
of wars.

Notice

VIllage of Pomeroy; thence

Public Notice
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
MID STATE TRUST, II
PLAINTIFF,

1\t \\\11\t.

•Toys

BULLETIN BOARD
6 column inch week·days
8 column inch $unday

express or Implied war·

110\\ \1:11

One mile out
143 from Rt- 7
Tues.·Wed.·Fri.·Sat.
HI
-craftsman Tools 1

TUESDAY
RUTLAND - The Rutland '
Department Ladies Auxiliary, 6 ·
p.m., Tuesday at fire station. Plans
w be completed for July 4 celebra- :
lion.
.

-

'

rtoe Lookinf-ltt A/fin1JJe wm}!!!:!.

Meigs County Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Ohio,
the
following described real
estate:
PARCEL ONE: Situate in
the Township of Salisbury,
County of Meigs and State
of Ohio: BEGINNING at a
point locatad In the
Northerly edge of Chester
.Road (S.R. 7), said point
being N. 64• 37' E. 152.21
feet from the S.E. corner of
a 1 Acre lot owned by W.C.

V-8- auto trans, tilt,. crusie, P. windows, P. Lo&lt;:ks, Much More

affected by alcoholism, will meet:
Sunday, 7 p.in. at Sacred Heart:
Calholic Church.

.
PQMEROY- The Rev. Roben~

Pomeftly,
Middleport

-New GarllgiiB

Pomeroy
Salisbury tor not less than two-thirds Pleas Court, Meigs County;
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE is hereby given Townohlp, Meigs . County; (2/3) ol the aforesaid Ohio.
that on Saturday, June 17th, Ohio, Scale 1' + 40", dated appraised value. Cash In
James M. Soulsby, Sheriff
1995, al10:00 a.m., a public May 21 , 1985," reference to hand on date of sale .
Melga County, Ohio
Said sale Is subject to 6 (16) (23)(30)
sale wiH be held at211 West said map being made herein
.
approval by the Common
Second, Pomeroy, Ohio, to for all pertinent purposes.
sell for cash the following
PARCEL TWO: Situate in-~---~------~~--------:~
the VIllage ol Pomeroy,
• -.-r"
collateral:
1990 Chevy S-10 Blazer
~~~~~~rr,~~~n~w~,N~~~~ ·
Serial Number
at
a point n. 61• 30' east 64
' 1
1G8CT1888F8268962
feet
from
the
s.e.
corner
of
a
The Farmers Bank and
Savings Company, Pome- 1 ac" lot on the north side
Get Your Message A.cross
the Chester road (state
roy, Ohio, reserve• the right ol
route
7)
In
the
village
ol
With ADally Sentinel
to bid at this sale, and to Pomeroy conveyed by
withdraw
the
above
Elizabeth Jay and Martin
•
collateral prior to sale. Jay
to
George
Jay
by
deed
Further, The Farmers Bank
1 00
In Vol. 10, Pg. 157,
and Savings Company recorded
Melga
County
Deed
reserves the right to reject Records, reierence to which
1 00
any or all bids submitted.
·rs hereby made tor a
Further, the above description the,.or; thehce
CALL OUR OFFICE AT
collateral will be sold in
N. 61 ' 30' East along said
condition It Is In, with no

on the front steps of .the

89 FORD FlSO XLT LARIAT

•

Tbe Community Calendar Is
TUPPERS PLAINS - Round
published as a free service to and square dance featuring tbe
non-profit groups wishing to Alvin Chutes Band Saturday, 8·11
announce meeting and spedal p.m. at the Tuppers Plains Veterans
events. The cahmdar Is not - of Foreign Wars Post9053.
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
RACINE - Free music at Sw
are printed as space permits and Mill Park Saturday, 7 p.m. All welcannot be guaranteed to run a come, bring Ia wrt chairs. .
specific numhl!r of clays.
FRIDAY
RACINE - Werry family
POMEROY - Meigs County reunion Saturday, 5 p.m. at the
Board of Education special meeting home of James and Karen Werry,
to discuss personnel Friday, 8:30 Court Street Road ·(Moming Sw
a.m. at the county board office.
area) , Racine. All family and
friends welcome. Rain or shine.
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church featuring special
SUNDAY
speaker Jon Ervin Friday, 7 p.m.
.MIDDLEPORT- Music by
Pastor Steve Reed invites the pub- Mighty Fine Reformulated All-Pur·
lic.
pase Family Band , Middleport
Presbyterian Church, 6:30 to 9 p.m.
- SATURDAY
Sunday, on lawn ..Take lawn chairs.
POMEROY - Eastern OAPSE,
Chapter 448, annual picnic, Royal
MIDDLEPORT
John
Oak, Saturday, 3 p.m.
;~ Elswick of ALhe1is will be guest.
speaker at the Hobson Chri sti an
SALEM CENTER
Star Fellowship Church Sunday at 7:30
.Grange #778 and Star Junior p.m.
Grange #878 will hold their regular
fun night and potfu ck supper at
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
6:30p.m.
·
group' or Ma/Tcen, for teenagers,

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

.
.
,•.

parent's companions

If he is a first-rate fellow. he will
encourage you to .nend the wedding
without him•
Since you offered to pay the
photographer, I believe you should
keep your word. When all the
unpleasantness has blown over; you
will be glad you took the high road.
Dear ADD Landen: I am a police
offica's wife. As I sit in my living
room wllch.ing the news on1V,I hear
that two police officers have· been
wounded. There is no word as to the
extent of the injuries or the victims'
identities. ,
The 1V shows a helicOpler picking
up the victims, and I know it is
serious. I freeze while I wait to hear
the location, and a numbness comes
over me. Is my husband dead or alive,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

---Community calendar---

•
'

:

Frlday,Junt11,1885

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

_Son uses double standard
..

•

June 17. ladles dftss and usual
clothing, men a, teenage, bab~.
toddl•t and mat•rnit~ clolhu.
1tlo11. put~ea , .haulehold ltema

AppUcaUona accepted onlr on
pottld tl)utL

18 an 124, thtit miles abovt
Racine btlore Karen'• Green·

11 RN poaltiont a¥11111b4t, For
more lnfonnldon piM.. DDntacf
.llr1 Ella, 810 etlt 8472.

.i

Outtldt Salta,.:.,, Commerdal

and Oli&lt;:h mare. SA 248, Cheot«. Pnn1ln9 CO. Nteda AQgrnolve
Ohla otlap al hill, John HiU &lt;Ooi- Solf- olarJ~C:,: tuii/Piirt Time:
8lil&gt;5pm.
Cllt
., .... "Ill
Four lamltr garage Ill• Jllne 15- O...IMwi&lt; Cenllr!tu 74 ond a.

Septk Syslems, Trailer &amp;
House Siles. ·

l&gt;aUM, 8onhlpm.

Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

Four llmlly yard aar.- Sal1&gt;rdar.
Juno 17th. 898 laurel Slroot.
loll&lt;ldloport 9:o&lt;llm-4:tJOpm.

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742·2138 . •
L-:.:.::..:...:.::..:.:.:..;;....,.,J

'

Time Bobyaluor Muat a.
To DrM Al1&lt;l 8t Whhln 10

llln. Of -

-Mtrlpm.

. . . . . . . . ._

'

�'
•

' I

•

:.Page 1o • The Dally Sentinel

,frklay, June11, 1 •

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

'

The Dally S•ntlnel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

OOP

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

BaJDQK
ACRQI8

PHILLIP
ALDER
BEA1TIE BLVD.® by BnJCe Beanie

KIT 'N' CARLYI.Etl by t.arryWr!Pt

flllrlc

42 v.,-1

1 llul1lgllt 44 - llld ""
4 liiCIMy 411 Prinll
I I 11t ltiOVe 5 0 , _ _
12-Tlllee13 w'Udlclll ordlf'
14 Poema
11 llwp tum
11 tMnlltan part

54 Actor

..._ 55 ~··
ta.ndaut

11 LIW8rJ- 58 T- trunk

20 ...l 21 Lambllfoo

57 Exlat
58 Equel

23 - - ....
27 Like aomoi

5I Unlock
10 ·Service charge

30~

10 8 7 4 2

EAST
K

•• o 8 5

J 6 3

• 9 8 7

2
•KJJ097

aQ84 ' 2
•J 9 3

K

SOUTH
•Q 9 4

32--ol33 Mordl34 Cr•vtnv
35 Pat gently
36 Fitting reward
37 fll
38 AtiiM
40 Pains
41 Srnthetlc

DOWN
1 SMp

2 OINCtorBunuel

3 E..,gv unha
4
5
6
7

Rotked
Come up
Adept
Make deoigna

on metal

8 Ponable
9 wec~c~1 1111

•AKJ1043
tA 3
.6 5

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South
.West North East

••
Pass

AN' SHE'S·

GLORY BEll

Pass

4•

All pass

lead: • K

. COOKlN'
SUPPER II

TH' NEWLYWEDS
ARE BACK
FROM THE~
HONEYMOON

2• ·

You might
control your fate
By Phillip Alder

PEANUTS
•• THIS 15 A 6REA1" PLACE FOR ICE CREAM
COt-IES .. THE'r' KAVE ALL KINDS OF FLAVORS ..

- FRANK &amp; ERNEST

·····

1974 454 &amp; Turbo Tranamiuian
$500 OBO 814-.441-11009.

""

New 011 tanks, ont ton lruck
wheels, radiators, floor mats, etc.
D &amp; R Auto, Rlplll'f, WV. 304·372·

'-

'

_,

3Q33 or 1-800-273-9329.

SOUTHWEST PICK-UP PARTS
Beda, Caba, Doors, Fend8f'l And
More. 3 Mllea South Of Gallipolit
At Jucllon Rt. 7, a Rt 218, 81""·
446-3787,

Will Install Wlndahlelda S~Op &amp;
Up, 6U·388·9062, Or 6U·448·
PART.

790

woo.

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

11188 31ft Camino Claaalc Yollpw·
atone travel b'aller, f!JIIy tqulped,
exc cand.; .8,600. Call 304·675·

24 Hr. COla For Eldo&lt;ly Or Hondl·
copped Ptroon, In My Homo,
et .. 441-GDOO.

Y.rd Work Wlndowa Wuhad

2e11 1978 Ca•elcado camp)ng
trailer, AC, II II PI 1, 304·882·
2420 or 882-3287,

Commtrlc:al, Rttldtntlal, Steve:
et.t-.&amp;48-8881 .

SERVICES

o.. uert Cleaned l.lgh1 Ha!,!ling,
HH3 Redman Sonant&amp; 3 Btd·

810

rooma, 2 Balha, Newly Rtmo-·
deled, Make An Ollar eU-388·

Small Carpentry And Iliac. Worlc,
c.jn Prvvld• Aef•encu Call AI·

0301.

3br., all alaculc, Gallipolis Ferry,

tee 5pm Aak For Richard 814·

t87&lt;4 Mobile Home, 2 Bedroom,

Newly Aomodoled Coli 814-307·

$250/ma plua utillllta. 304·875&lt;1088.

Will Do lnltrior, Exwlor Plllnting,
R•aonable Ratea, E1perienced,

Rtftrencts, For FrH Eatimatea,

Cll 61 ..245-5755.
Yard I Lawn Care, Reaaonable

71136.

11il77 New Yorker, 1411:70, 3 doora
c1 front 2 bod&lt;), 2bodroom, LP or
Hal Gaa, 3 atta of atepa·treated
lumber, windowe, ecreena. l
doort all new, vinyl und... plnning
goos 110, all appllancH, now WI·
ter htater. Muat havt bonded
mover. 110,000 firm. Cilllucy
Koylot 304-882·37311.
IDQI Flaming, nMfy rltfllOdefad, 3
•ddtd rooma, dtc:k &amp; covered
porch, rotlow Yinyl. 304·578-2057
allot 8pm.
2br., New Moon trailer, S2000,
new gea funnaca, good cond. 304675-6922IJI :llo-773-5357.

Ratti, Fr. . Estlmatea, Satitrac- Limited Olfetl 1 ;;e doublewidt,
tlonGuarantaed, 6to0-256-6224_

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Oppo rtunity

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBliSHING CO.
recomnHIInds lhat you do buti·
ntll with paoplt you know, and
NOT 10 Nnd money lhrouah tho
mt~ll until you hiVe Jnveatfgated
lhoofJortrv,

V .CFYECALO
KAVALO
fAWN

Z MF

WAVPZABN

BECZTL

IF E L P
THH · ZMF

FWEJLF

G T · T P W F C.
PF1EVIOUS SOLUTION: "All muSic's folk music · leaslways I never heard ol no
horse making it." · Louis Armstrong.

WOlD ·

THAT DAllY

IAMI

PUUUI

0

'

A:tarronge leners of the
four st:rambled words M.

low

I

ro form. four words

I

LODYL

-

·

·

.

...:.A~N.,:K:.:....:;E,...T.:..,.;I--..-!1

r

CI\UR UP, Cf\IE.F...
YOO 'LL e£ OUT OF f\fff:
It-1 A. COUPlE. Dl\Y5...

B T .I V E L J

HTC

r---------,

,,

K TIEL ,

PALOWF

I Is I I

People
more
education and want to qu~
work at an earlier age. When
the trend for longer education
meets early reUrement who
will - • the - - • -?

I I I 1I 0

6
Complete the dlUd.le quoted
_.J.
__
..J.i---1._
-.1..-..J.I--l.
by fdlm g in the mis.s•ng words
L
you develop from step No. 3 below .

.:!. PR INT NUMBERED LE TTER S IN
THESE SQUARES

,. L..!!:.L...:~-==I:..i

'1::1'

UNSCRAMBlE.tETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Junior- Amaze- Stark- Donkey- MAJORITY

Small 1 Bedroom Mobile Homt In
t(anauga Ideal For Ona Ptraon
$180/Month, $50 Dopool~ Com·
Jlltraly Furnlahocl eto441&amp;-7406.

1Wo '*l!oom, 14x70, woodod fo~
hundngt flohlng priYIIIgeo, canull
llr, bottle gu hoo~ amall garden~
no poll. no driMing, $380/mo. pfu
$300 dlpool~ 614-384-8655 •nv·
tfmo.

440

Apanments
for Rent

ASTRO·GRAPH

1 and 2 Mdroom apartmantl, fur·
tWahed and unfurnlthed, a~urity
depotlt required, no pelt, 614·
11112-2218.

Jae•t Heme Ualntenanu, vinyl
aiding, roaring, ax1erlor painting,
power washing, free 111imatea,
614-992·4451 .

1 BedroQm Air Conditioned, Near

New 1ggs 14x7o, lnctudoa al&lt;irt·
lng, IIepa, blocka, one J""r
homeowners lnturanct 1n •I"
mor1lhl FREE lot rent. Only $1025
lnd $207.17 par month. Cll
t..aoo-837·3238.
New Bank Aepoa. Only 4 ltfl.
N-liwdln.304-7SQ-71gl,

With ·s tove, Refrigerator, AC
$220/Mo. Oepoail, Raferencea
Required. No Pett, 61w.o&amp;-442S.

820

2 &amp; 3br. apt , New Haven area,
Broad Run Rd .. 1285/mo plua
elec;trlc, rer. I dep. req. 304-882·

Fr&amp;eman'a Healing And Cooling.
lnslallalion And Service. EPA

ll~~~~:&amp;~a:o~tu~p;,~O~n~f,~a~t

I FRIDAY

BASEMENT
'
WATERPROOFING
I
Uncondltionalllletlmt gulltanth.
Local references lurnlshed. Oall
1 (800) 287-0578 Or (814) 2~7·
0488 r:tGgara Waterproollng. istabflahod 1075.

Holzllt'a, $250/Mo. + UtilfliH, 0.
poolt Required, et4-4411-m7.

OAKWOOD HOMES, Nitro, WV.
Oiutct factory tales. No middle
man. Sayo II ,000'1. 30•· 755·

A 8I,(JW IN THE~ ON

HIGH PRICES, SHOP THE CWSFJEOS. '

Home
Improvements

3br, 2bath, $16Q5 down, S2Sgr
month. Free delivery &amp; setup.
Only al Oakwood Homea, Nltro
wv.304-7SQ.S88S.

COUntry Decor Gl~ Shop lor aale,
full inventory, urabllahed ellen- 5815.
tole, 614-Vg2· 4015 or 61.·QQ2· I ~~~~~~;:;~~!:r
5083.
1!
New 14170, 2 or
- . . SIVS/monfh.
II II
I
For
tent: a rtscaur~~nt
VIctor an beaut
decorated
S.atau80Y
non,.., Nilr'o wv. 304·
and como -.ulpped with IMtt)'·
thing you need Including dlllhta,
potllnd big .,r1, 1oo matoar, 330 Fanns for Sale
atafnleao ttHI lrHZOt, rolrfgerl·
tor, deep fryer, convection oven
and n&gt;~ch more. Clll Dotdo Turn·
-~ID-li61HIII2·2lll88.

E

,....,. -0-W_L_E_H_...,I~
..: :,
•~

FW..~nw-1
'(CXJ DO I ;P,~

24 Ft Coachman Travel Trailer.
Warranty, AC, Furnace, MIcroWave, Excellent Condition,
Mutt See To Appreciate Si3DO
614-448-11478

Gtneral Malnrtnanct, Painting,

WIN do illcl&lt;toe work, phone 61 ..
1102·31 T.lot 81HIV2·585&amp;

HTC

18Q4 Torry 32' Queen Bed Ell. Lg.
ShoWor, Bai!l, Sfoepo e, Many Ex·
..., $14,000, e14-245-9511. '

a

QI!Ville, 61 ..256-6910.

by Luis Campos
Celebrity C1pher cryptograms are qeated lrMI quot&amp;hons. by laiTIOt.ls people past and p1esen1
,
EN::h leHer1n the cipher stands tor ~tnolher Toddy 's clue N ~als K

nanclng. 304-675-81103.

Will 0o 'lard Worlc, Waod•t Hlllllidea, Cut Bruah &amp; Work In Hay
Toboocc. et441t-llt T.l.

W91 llatJralt Exporlenco&lt;f, tat Or

TI\E.IR BILL:) I .

18Q4 lnnabruck camper, tully

Cortillld Nurolno Aoolarant Avlll·
llbll For Caro In PriYl!a
Home .. Dltt, Evening&amp;, I WH·
kenda. 20 Yeara Experience, Ex·
_ , , R o - e i .. 25H34~

2nd Shift, Monday ·friday, Mer·

\

...
Rli.:ot\T ... Tf\EY\JE. ~'(SE:£1-\
.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

loadld, lo11 ot exrraa, takt ovtr ft.

8QO.!OUIIII7.

Sun Valley Nuraery School.
C"lldcaro M·F Bam-5:30pm Agor
2·K. Vouno School Agt During
SUmmer. 3 Ot.y1 ptr W•ek Ulnlnun 614-4411-3857.

..

2847.

Ac:t TNt Set'Ytce. CGmplttt trH
cate, 20yra. txp. I lnaur~. fttt
eatlmat... 11~ · 441·1 tQt · ar f ·

37V-225e.

,

-XX&gt;T THiflK, Tf\~ N?.f.ll'PEffllY
. W\5 Of ffilPlE.If.l ~ Wf\0

1N4 Chevy Jamboree 2•rr motor
homo, 18,000ml, YOry good condf.
lion. 304-458-1843.

180 Wanted To Do

LOSER
~

1976 27' Champion, 440 engtne,
good llres, generator, air, riew
front end, new flexsteel furniture,
new carpet, microwave. 54,000
miles, good clean condition, 814·
7•2·21g4,

Diamond &amp; Sapphire Wedding ·
Rilla Stt. Size e. New
Aak·
· lnQ 1300. e1f He e233

GQoro•• Portable S.wmiU, dcm't
haul your logo to 1!lt mlM )uat cllil
304-875-IQS7.

~;.BORN

Lord Nelson once sent this me•noran-1
dum to his neet: ''Something must be
leH to chance; nothing is sure in a sea
fight beyond all others." At the bridge
table, though, this isn't always true. In
today's deal , for example, West has a
chance to defeat four hearts .
South's three hearts was aggressive,
but he felt that a two-heart rebid, which
would have been non-forcing in his
methods, was more of an underbid.
After winning the first trick with the
spade king, We sf could. have sunk ~he
contract without trace by switching to
the diamond jack. Suppose South wins
with the diamond ace and returns a
spade. The defenders take the
cash their diamo.nd winner and
with a trump. South wins in hand
ruffs the spade queen in the dunom~·.J
but then what? He is stranded in
dummy, unable to stop West from
ting a club ruff to defeat the con.trao~t~
However, all three Wests who
this problem switched to a trump
trick two. The first skipper clarer - drew trumps and led a
When West's singleton
app.eared,J
he was allowed to win the
West had to cash the spade ace, to stop
the overtrick.
At the second table, West did Detter. I
On the third round of trumps, he
carded the club king! The pirates
ran South's vessel.
The last declarer led a club imrnecli·
ately, ducking West"s king. He had
the winning voUey.
· ·
· If Lord Nelson had defended this Ileal
correctly before a sea battlt!, would he
have scored a victory on the Victory?

...

·-

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Ron'a TV Service, apaclallzlng· In
Zenllh alao tervldng most ather
brands. Houae calla, 1-800-797001 5, wv 30.. 5111·2398.
~

1 Bedroom Second Floor, Unfur·
nlthed Apartment, '" Galtlpolla,

2221 :

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

Certified. ReSidential, Corrrnerc:iai.

614-256-1611.

2bdrm. apll., lal'al electric, a·p.
pllanc:et furniahed, laundry room
facilitiet, CIOH lO IChool In IOwn.
Application• available a1: Village
Groen Apll. ..g or call et HQ2·
371L EOH_

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
U76 Ford cargo van, 10' bed,
f800, 304-875-SOVI.
Profanlonaf Dog Grooming VJn..
!lrando Area, 20 - . , 18&amp;4 Morcodeo Benz 500SL. 2
Experl•nce For A!)polnrmtnl
Seara, Soft Tap I Hltd Top, lAw
61 H45-SOS4,
' lllleo, Good Condition •18,000
et..-.7821.
·
ton &amp; Rio

1U4 Oldl Delta 88, oatra nice,
2dr, $1400.304-5711-2818.

11181 ChoYy Van (20) Good Con·
dillon, $2400 814-388-&lt;) ,.,._
19QO Dodge Ram Von B-250,
72,000 lAIIta, 16,000, Can Bo
Seen At: Gofllpolfa Oolly Tribuna,
12&amp; Third Avenue. Gallipolis
Ohio.

...

COMFORT ASSURED DEALE!)
LAWREN&lt;!E ENTERPRISES •
Heat Pumps, Air Condltlonlng~ 'U
You Oon't Call Uo Wo Both loNI
Fr.. Eatlmalos. 1·800-287· 8308,
814 .....6308, wv 0021145.
,,
Residential or ccmmercial Wiring
new amic:e or repairs. Malter u:
cenaed elaclrlclan . Rldano'ur
EIOCirfCll, WV00030e, 304-81!;.

1708.

Saturday, June 17, 1995
Your probabilities for success look strong
in two areas lor lhe year ahead. One Is
\)'here your social fiCo Is concerned, . the
other 1S fOCused on your ca~eer.
• GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Keep in mind
' today that give and take is a two .way
ltreet. Try not lo be an enthusiastic
recetver and a reluctanl reciprocator.
.rreal each gesture equally. Trying to
batch up a broken romance? Tho Astra.
?raph Malchmakor can help you under·

stand what to db to make tne relationship
work. Mail $2 .75 to Matchmaker, c/o this
newspaper, P.O . Box 4465, New York ,
NY ,0163.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) II you are
hired tor a specific task today , ask your
employer to put everythtng they expect in
wrlling. U you don 't, there wtll be tr·ouble

-

LEO (July 23 -Aug. 22) Unfortunately .
you can't put too much stock '" the
promises of b1gwigs and holshots loday .
Thetr offer,s might ·have very liltle subseance.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sopt. 22) It will take
more fhan your charm and good looks lo
get you by in contested career sttuat1ons
loday . When ctiallenged, don't underesli·
·mate your opposition. •
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Your slale menls, optntons and postlions wttl proba·
bly get challenged today, so have your
facts ready' to back up what you say. If
you can't, you could look bad.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24·Nov . 22) Double
check all your ledger entries today 10
avo1d possible mistakes. If not, you might
show a deficit where you thought you had
apro/

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Slnve
to be self-reliant today. Persons you can
usually lean upon may not presently be in
a position to help you too much
CAPRICORN (Otic- 22.-Jan. 19) Be chantable' tod ay, but also make sure ypu 're
helptng the right persons for the r1ght r.easons . Do not let anyone take advantage

~~.

'

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) This could
be a very enjoyable day for you •f you
practice moderatton In all things .
Excesses in any form wil! take the edge
off of your pleasure.
PISCES (Feb. :z'o·March 20) Try not to
mai\Jllhtngs unnecessarily hard today by
thinktng that others are geHing the breakS
. den1ed you . You wouldn't want to be 1n
their shoes.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) You usually
hnd braggarts unappealing . Today. how·
ever, your pals might fmd reasons to
think you have become one .
TAURUS (April 2CI-May 20) Unless you
truly know. what you're doing, don'llry to .
manage someone else's r esources
today . You could make some cosily
errors.

..

Gramps and his old time friends think that if fools do not
-run the world it isn't because they are not in the MAJOR-

ITY.

.

JUNE 16l

�•

•
•

•

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, June 16, 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

J

r-----_
Work America~- Arnold

----Society scrapbook
PROGRAM ACCEPTANCE
Anita Calaway, daughter of
Ernie and Patty Calaway of AlliN,
was recently accepted at the Radiologic Technology Program at
Muskingum Area Technical Col·
lege in Zanesville.
Calaway was ooe of the 18 stu·
dents accepted from 60 applicants.
She was will be in a clinical set·
ling for lbe next two years at Good
Samaritan Hospital and Bethesda
Hospital in Zanesville. Calaway
earned enough grades to be placed
on the.dean' s list winter quarter.

named
Officer of
the Year

Arthur H. Arnold, Jr., West
Virginia State Police senior trOOper, was named Bank One a·nd
Blockbuster Video 1994 Officer of
the Year for Cabell and Wayne
Counties at a May 25 banquet beld
.at lbe Huntington Radisson Hotel.
Last year Arnold, grandson of
the late Horton and Rosemary
Arnold of Pomeroy, conducted 85
criminal investigations, made 71
arrests, investigated 37 accidents,
recovered six stolen citatiqns,
issued 1355 warning citations,
recovered $150,000 worlb of marijuana and was also a training officer for part of lbe year.
Arnold's major accomplishments in 1994 included investigating four child sexual assault cases,
. arresting a man from Kentucky
who had killed his wife, investigating a multiple
larceny lbeft
from the
plant in Huntresullied in the arrest of

ARTHUR H. ARNOLD

'
.
DEAN'S LIST
Jennifer L. Lisle, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Lisle,
Syracuse, was named to the Uni-

a security guard and recovery of
$40,000 worth of computer equipment. and arresting a Virginia man
in Culloden for killing another
young man.
Senior Trooper Arnold was also
recognized as the Elks Lodge officer of the month in September.
He served eight years in the
U.S. Marine Corps prior to joining
the WeSt Virginia State Police
Academy in 1990 and has been smtioned at the Huntington Detachment since his graduation.
Arnold resides in Wayne county
with his wife Kelli. They have
three children.

versity of Dayton's winrer semcatr
dean's list
• ·
To be named~ the dean's list; a
student must achteve a grade po111t
average of 3.5 or higher.
Lisle is majoring in general psychology.

FIRE DEPARTMENT OFFICERS
•
New officers were named when
the Bedford Township Volumeer
Fire Department Committee met
recently at the town hall.
Elected .w.ere Dale Bricklef•
president; David Rosier, vice pretll·
dent; Angie Brickles, secretary;
and Debbie Rosier, treasurer.
Trustees elected were David
Rosier, Debbie Rosier, and Charles
Cook.
;

SOCCO to teach area educators :•

Area teachers will learn about
coal mining, electricity production
and the environment during a seminar at the Southern Ohio Coal
Co.'s Meigs division.
The three-day workshop, will be
held July 18-20. The teachers will
tour an underground mining operauon, a coal preparation plant, a
power plant and a river transporta·

No registration fee is required
and credit is being awarded
through Ohio University. ·
· All teachers may apply, but resistration is limited. The seminitr'
will be held at the division office
on State Route 689.
For details or to register, teacft.
ers may call Chloris Gaul l(t
SOCCO at 669-2801.
•

tion

:·

Mitch is in
Control Saturday
at
EMPIRE FURNITURE IN GALLIPOLIS

'
GO-CART TEAM -

Four members of the Work America
a project
In tbe workshop. J, D. Grueser, bandies the controls, while Scotti
Taylor, Jason Fitzpatrick and Johnathon Booth, left to right, pro·
vide tbe push power.
Wood Sbop test drive a standard go ·cart constructed as

TURKEY DINNER

Washer &amp; Dryer
White-O'!IY

Gas or Electric
30" Range

$279

Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Vegetable ·
Salad

.$649 ~orboth :
9

95

Dinner Roll
TRY OUR HOMEMADE PIES
1Open 7 Days AWeek
10:00 am to 10:00 pm

Sectional w/recliners
Green

Undercounter
Dishwasher

$999 95

$269 95

'

Colonial Blue

$449 95

T

N

I

p

M

0

D

E

E

for both.

u

0

N

N

T

y

R

I

•

WEST VI GINIA'S lARGEST GUS M VAN DEAlER!

$17,988
• E•ten&lt;led ChassiS
• Drtver Stde Atr Bag
• Antt-Lod&lt; Brakes
, Atr Condrt&lt;Jr
• Automauc 0Jerdr1ve
• VtSta Bay Wmdows
·PIS, P/B

All New 1894 Conversion
unted SBOOO

· Power locks
· Trh Steenng
• CrUise Contr~ ·
• AMIFM Cassehe .
• Captatn Charrs
• Sola/Bed

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY 314 TON RAISED
ROOF CONVERSION VAN
350 V· 8 POWER/COLOR T.V.

·, Or1ver Side A1r Bag
• Anh·Lock Brakes
• Atr Condttton
• Automatic Overdnve

$10,2' 9
· S300

Ouabl18:1 Buyers

· S500

Tom Peden OISCOlllt

-~ 1

$8 888
'

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY S.SERIES PICKUP
• Dnver Side Atrbag
• Rear Anti-Lock Brakes
• Power Sleenng

ISave $5000 I
• 350 V-8 Power
• Long Wheel Base
· RaiSed Root .
• Color T.V.

USI PriCe . . .
Factory Ret&gt;ate . .

• Po~er Brakes
· Custom Cloth lntenor
• Well Equtpped'

List Prtce

$13,599
. . - S500

Sale Price

Tom PeOen Drscoum

·

BRAND NEW '95 PONTIAC GRAND AM
• Power Brakes
• Power Door Locks
• AMIF~ Stereo
• Steel BeHed Tm

• Styled Wheels
•Well EqUI~

• Power Door Locks
• Power W1ndows
•AMIFM Stereo

•Till Slee1111g
• Oe~y Wtpors

• S~led Wheels
·WeiEqu•~'

ISave '2281 I
f'tl Oo: FM Dl!frvera1'

TOLL FREE 1·800*822·0417 • 372·2844
344*5947 • 422·0756
' rruce; Tag$, r~re Fees e~tra Rebate indtded 1n·sa1e pnce or naw vehdtl hsled where ~t&gt;le On approved credrl. Not responsible IOf typograpt11ca1 ettOrs

'

.

, . ..

. $21 ,309
• • $-100

· $2,421

Sale Price

$18,488
NEW '95 BUICK LESABRE
•Power SteenrJJ
• Power Brakes
• Powl!f Door Locks
• Powl!f Wtrdools
• AMIFM Stereo

Treated Platform
Deck Packages

$,.. I

with 2'x6' Joists and S/4'x6" Decking

18'x6'
(8«&gt;·1Qo99)

Wood Gym Kit
1839 31'19)

Mountajneer .ll

K1t #SO

Wood Gym Kit
(831·36·99) SilO)(!

·l

r ,

0

...,,.s179 .16'x10' ,....,....,'369
12'x10' ,..,.,,_,,s284 16'~12' ,........,•429
B'xB' ,....

Tam Peden OrsciJun

• Atr CoojiiOn
• Automat&lt;
• 8ual A11bags
• 4Wheel Anti-Lock
Brakes

Texan

• lnd1rectlJghtlng

• Premtum Wood Pkg.
• Full Convl!fSIOO
• Alummum Wheels
· Loaded!

CertJIICal&amp;

BRAND NEW '95 GRAND PRIX SE

• Power B1akes

No Ooc Fees Deliver"''

• S1.781

$14,888
• A1r Cond1tion
• Automalle
• Dual Airbag
• Power Steenng

• sota/Bed

• Vtsta Bay Wtndows
·PIS. P/B
• Power Wtndows
• Pow~r Locks
• Tilt Steertng
• CruiSe Control
• AMIFM Cassene ·
• Captatn Chatrs

L&amp;t Price
Bud! Ouahda~&gt;

· $500

Sale Price

$11,688
• 16 Valve Power
• Dn~r Stde Atrbag
· • 4 Wheel Anii·Lock Brakes
• Powl!f Stel!f"9

$17,169

Fae\1)1)' Rebate .

TomPeQenDiscourl . ·SI,411

GMAC.l :&gt;1 TIITlC Ekryer
Allowarce To

Sale
Pnce

No Ooc Fees.~·

• !nd1rect L1ghl1ng
· Prerm.um Wood Pkg.
• Full Conversion
• Alum1num Runmhg
Boards
·loadedt

• Power W1ndows

LJstPrtee
· Factory Rebate

ISave '1331 I

~0,488

• Ttll Sleenng
• Custom Cloth lntenor
• S~led Wheels
·Well Eqoppe&lt;!

Country Clubhouse
1831·37-99)

.

$329

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