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Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Alter diet to prevent irregularity
By PETER H. GOIT, M.D.
DEAR DR , GOTT: I have a
great deal of trouble with constipa·
tion , Nothing I use seems to belp.
What can I do to get back on uack?
DEAR READER: Difficult or
infrequent evacuation is a common
malady that may be helped by
dietary ,changes: Eat bran with your
breakfast, drink more fluids (an
additional three 8-ounce glasses of
water a day), try hot prune juice
once a day, eat more salads and
roughage . Resistant cases may
require occasional use of mild laxatives, such as Milk of Magnesia, or
prescription stool-softeners, such as
Colace,
Remember that changes in
bowel function, such as the development of new constipation, can
renect serious problems, including

colon cancer and thyroid disorders.
Therefore, if you have recently
experienced constipation, you
should be examined by your doctor. Otherwise, try the dietary modifications I mentioned .
To give you more information, I
am sending you a Free copy of my
Health Report "Constipation and
Diarrhea." Other readers who
would like a copy should send $2
plus a long , se lf-addressed ,
stamped envelope to P .O. Box
2433. New York, NY 10163 . Be
sure to mention the title .
DEAR DR. GOTT: I suffer
from corns and calluses. Is there an
answer to my dilemma?
DEAR READER: Corns/calluses are merely accumulations of
hard, dry. dead skin that appear
over pressure ppints between the

OU studying
headache
treatment

OU to battle
Kent at home .. ~
this weekend ;}It: ·

DR. GOTT

bones of the feet and footwear, In
simple terms. calluses form in locations where the skin is irritated ,
usually from shoc:s that are too
tight.
As the layers of dead skin build
up. they exert pressure on the
underlying tissue (usually the toe
bones), leading to pain. Corns can
also form between toes, from ill-fitting shoes that squeeze the toe
bones together.
These common afflictions are
easy to cure.
Use fine sandpaper, an emery
board, or a pumice stone to reduce
tbe size of the· callus or com. Sand
away the dead skin until the soft,
underlying, healthy skin appears .
This will take care of the discomfon.
However. to prevent a re-accu-

PETER
GOTT,M.D.

Page 5
mulation, you'll have to modify
your footgear. Choose shoes that
are comfortable and don't pinch
your feet . Using a combination of
prudent sanding and shoes that lit,
you should be able to avoid tbe discomfort of corns and calluses.
Copyright 1995 NEWSPA·
PER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
(For information liD bow to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, con·
tact A""'rlca Online bv calling I·
800·827-6364, n:L 8317.)

•

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Vol. 46, NO. se

Copyright1995

New leader tells customers

BREC will improve Service

The five-year study includes
tests to determine the effectiveness
of stress-management methods both alone and together with various prescription medications - in
alleviating headaches.
Test subjects are taught how to
identify and deal with situations
and ~vents that cause tension
headaches.
Ken Holroyd, an OU psychology professor who heads the study,
said Wednesday his researchers
examine individuals who experience tension headaches more than
15 times per month,
Tension headaches are characterized by a tightening in the forehead, temples, neck or shoulders
that lasts from a few hours to a few
days.
.
Tbe university conducted a preliminary study of 41 chronic
headache sufferers and found that
56 percent of those who used stress
management techniques reported
significant relief.

\
HAVING A COW • Patrolman Dnld Carr
leans on a nberglass life-sized, black-and-white
cow at the Howland Township pollee department Tuesday In Howland. The bogus bovine,
discovered on a road berm was arrested for Iol··

lion,
Carr. Called by a resident
who said the boosted beef was dlslra&lt;llng
motqrists, Carr sold standard-Issue handcuffs
did not nt. (AP Photo)

Police bust bogus bovine for loitering
WARREN, Ohio (AP) -Police We read it its rights. We took it
in Howland Township are having a :,1\aek to the station," deadpanned
cow.
Officer David Carr after Tuesday's
Someone deposited a life-sized, roundup.
black-and-white fiberglass bovine
Tbe cow could no~ however, be
along a road, and patrolmen bad to cuffed. Standard-issue handcuffs
haul it to the police station.
did not fit.
,
"It was arrested for loitering.
Carr was called by a resident

who said the boosted bogus beef
was disuacting motorists, The cow
was placed in tbe back of a road
deparunent truck and taken to tbe
police stati6n, where officers suggested it be displayed as a lawn
ornament.

TOPS members write 'Dear John' letters to obesity
whose clothes fit best. Members
were a.l so told to write a "Dear
John" letter to fat or overweight.
- KOPS members will be honored
on Sept. 19.
Virginia Dean read a letter from
Kay Sage, area coordinator. Nancy
Manley read an article about water
and read "What does diet mean to

me" wrote by members, The ~e­
tary's report was given by Linnie
Aleshire and the gadget gift was
won by Maggie Biggs.
A skit called "A Day in Court"
was performed by Nancy Manley,
Maggie Biggs, Janice Curry, Margaret Henderson, Linnie Aleshire,
Virginia Whidatch, Phyllis McMil-

lan and Virginia Smith. Nancy rea!l
two sayings.
A birthday party was held for
Ola St. Clair and a weight report
was given by Jeanette McDonald.
KOPS best loser was Linnie
Aleshire. TOPS best loser was
Juanita Humphreys with Margaret
Henderson as runner up. Members
sang to tbe queens and dismissed.

.Progress of contest projects reported at grange meleting
Hemlock Grange #2049 beld its
regular meeting Sept. 7. Master
Rosalie Story opened with song
"Whispering Hope" by all. ·
Tbe flag was presented with the
pledge and song "Battle Hymn of
the Republic,"
Women's activity . commiuee
chairman, Helen Quivey. gave a
report on contest projects being

a

Barn Raisin'
'95 scheduled
•

A collection of artists from
around Ohio will be selling and
exhibiting their art work during
Bam Raisin' '95 at the Dairy Bam
Cultural Arts Center in Athens on
Sunday.
Thirty-one artists from the eastem half of Ohio will sell jewelry,
ceramics, printmaking, bandwoven rugs, watercolor clocks,
clothing, sculptures, paintings and
baskets. Seveml local artists will
. also demonsuate their craft in the
Ann Howland.Arts Education Center inside the Dairy Bam throughout the afternoon.
·
Barn Raisin' '95 is a day-long
community event that will run from
II am. to 6 p.m. on the grounds of
the Dairy Barn. offering entertainment ranging from country line
dancing to blues guitarist Jorma
Kaukonen, horse rides, children's
activities. and the Second Annual
Homemade Ice Cream Chum-Off.
Ice cream contest judges will be
State Representative Mary Abel; ,
Athens Mayor Sara Hendricker and
Athens County Commissioner Broc
Irwin.
Admission to Bam Raisin' is $3
for adults, $2 for students and'
senior citizens, and free for chil·
dren under 6. Free parking and
continual shuttle service will be
available at Peden Stadium on
Richland Avenue.

News Hotline

992-2156

2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September .15, 1995

ATHENS , Ohio (AP) - An
Ohio University professor and his
research team want to find out if
stress-management techniques can
help tension headache sufferers.
· The school received a $1.2 million grant last fall from the National Institutes of Health to study
headache treaunents,

TOPS #OH570 of Pomeroy met
Aug , 29 with the meeting opened
in prayer by Phyllis McMillan. The
KOPS (Keep Off Pounds Sensibly)and TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) pledges were given ,
Members were told to wear
something too small on Sept. 5 and
then wear it again on .Dec , 5 to sec

Low lonl~ht In 60s, doudy.
Saturday, partly cloudy , Highs
In the 80s.

judged at Pomona Grange. Most all
of Hemlock Grange's projeciS were
sent on to the state. Hemlock took
first place at the Meigs County

Fair.
Legislative agent Ziba Midkiff
talked on several projects being
discussed in the legislation. She
also reponed that wheat production
was down this year by more than 6

percent.
Observing a birthday in Septem·
ber is Leota Smith. Cleaning for
the October meeting is Hilber
Quivcy.
Reported sick were Etta Cullums, Bernice Hawk and Leota
Smith who is improving after 17
days in the hospital.
Lecturer Jessie White discussed

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"September and School" .and
." School Boys" was sung by the ·
audience. Readings were "The Piddle" by Jessie White, "Teach Him
Gently" by Golda Reed, "A Dream
for Education" by Muriel Bradford
and "Let's Have a 'Little Fun" by
Bob Reed.
The skit was by Helen Quivey
and the quiz, given on weather, was
won by Vada Hazelton.

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HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
VEHICLE PRICE
514,900
(Capitalized Cost) ·

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GD~D JEWELRY

Sum yoo•

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'
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(Lease Depreciation) ·

Sale Prices Good 9/16
until9/30
•
Stop by Saturday and See
Grandpa Grape and Receive
.
.
a free Balloon for the Kids
beginning at 10:30

·Over 40 Ford, lincoln, Mercury
Cars &amp; Ford Trucks eligible in
stock to choose from!
'Lease end 1esidual value {Purchase Option Price) is based 'on t5,000 mi~s per year ,
fo12 years.
'*Plus taxes, lease
•slate
\axes &amp;license. Due. a1
' - .

Bring Your Camera

Ylcquisitions :Fine Jewe[rg
• Fine Jewelry
• Repair Available

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"4-WHEEL DRIVE"

1994 IAURUS GL STATION WAGON ·

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Middleport

91 Mill Street

992-6250

By K£VIN KELLY
OVP News Staff
The new general manager of
Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative wants to establish a "service·
minded mentality" to lift the eightcounty rural electric service above
member dissatisfaction and make it
what be called "the utility · of
choice."
"We're ttying to build a positive
perception," James J. Weaver said.
"h's a tough task, but we' ve made

has worked in the utility business
for more than 20 years, acknowledged member unhappiness by noting BREC's past performance was

"second-rme.''
Steps are being taken to improve
service, reduce the incidence of
outages at the source and check
expenses. he added.
·"We are focusing on our customers and listening to them," be
said. "We arc putting priorities on
the entire gamut of the electric utility ... We've got a ways to go, but
we have staned on that journey."
Controversy has surrounded
BREC since early this year when
member frustrations spilled over
due to a new billing procedure.
The procedure was dropped, but
the cooperative ' s board of trustees
fired then-General Manager Walter
V. Truitt Jr. under a cloud of questions over B REC' s finances, while
a member group, Buckeye Rural
Members for Change, is seeking to

a start."

ANSWERING QUESTIONS - Buckeye Rural Electric General Manager Jame~ Weaver,. left, reviews a rate schedule with
BREC member Robert Muller follo"'ing a meeting with members
Thursday In Gallipolis. Weaver has pledged to Improve the coop·

erative's image and service record.

Weaver, who joined BREC
Aug. 7, mer with around 20 members ·Thursday at the Gallia County
Senior Resource Center in one of a
series of meetings to a'\Sure members that management is more open
and responsive to concerns.
The first meeting was held Monday at Symmes Valley High
School.
Weaver, who previously managed two electric companies and

unseat the board.
Responding to a list of oftenasked member questions, Weaver
said an ongoing investigation over
the handling of finances launched
last March has been turned over to
the U.S, Inspector General's oflicc.
A special audit that was performed is currently part of the
probe, Weaver explained, but will
be open to member inspection
when the investig~llion is completed.
Weaver said he hopes to shift
away from "personality conflicts"
and focus more on issues, problems
and solutions, He suggested creation of a member advisory group
to educate members on how the
cooperativ~ is operated.
Charlie Freeman. the Scottown
area member who heads Buckeye
Rural Members for Change, objected to Weaver's comment aboul
"personality conflicts" and .acl'Uscd
him of anempting to blame the ·

•

Ravenswood Aluminum's
open house set Saturday
RAVENSWOOD, W .Va. Ravenswood Aluminum Corp.
employees will welcome community organizations and residenl&lt; to a
full-day open house celebration
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m, Saturday,
"Our employees have dedicated
an enormous amount of work to ·
this effort and are looking forward
to welcoming the community to the
plant We look forward to Jalking
with visitors about the 'work we do
and how we
do it," said Gerry
Meyers, president of RAC.
The event will feature walking
tours of tbe 105-acre interior of the
facility. Both the fabrication and
reduction plants will be open to the
public. Signs will be posted in key
areas, providing information about
plant processes and providing
directions to visitors.
More than 75 customer product

displays will be on exhibit. ·including a U .S, Army helicopter and
tank, boats, trucks, sports equipment, automotive parts. aluminum
cans and other prOducts manufac·
turcd from the aluminum sheet and
plate produced at the Ravenswood
plant
Entertainment will be provided
by local high school musical
groups, plant employees, and community musicians and dancers .
Free health screenings and health
information will be offered by
more than a dozen local health
organizatioiL~.

Plant gates will open at 9 a.m.
on Saturday for the festivities. Visitors should follow signs to parlc:ing
and tours.
For more information, contact:
Dolores Kinder at (304) 342-0161
or (304) 353-9651.

ac1ion."
Other members noted com~
plaints with the board - from
unresponsiveness to closed-door
monthly meetings which
Weaver said he is working to
change, suggesting Umt mail-in l:&gt;ai-

Contlnued on page 3

after parking ·
lot shooting
in Columbus

•

WORTHINGTON (AP) - A
man accused of shooting at a for·
. mer girlfriend in a school parking
lot, following her inside and threatening an administrator was arrested
at a hospital hour.; later. authorities
said_
No one at Griswold Christian
Academy, including about 75 students, was injured Thursday.
School was back in session today.
Ronald E. Thompson, 22, 0{
Columbus, wa~ charged with two
counts of attempted felonious
assault. and one count each of
attempted murder, kidnapping and
aggravated burglary, Lt. Bob
Oppenheimer said.
.
Thompson was 10 be arraigned
Saturday in Franklin County
Municipal Court, said a sheriffs
deputy who would not give his full name, The suspect remained in the .
.
county jail this morning.
Thompson went to Grant Medical Center in Columbus at about ,
6:30p.m. to admit himself for evaJ, ·
uation . perhaps because of emotiomd problems, Oppenheimer said.
The hospital staff found nothing

A 30-day, limited public com- tion level must be used for compliance.
The third change is that the
company must contiibutc $20,000
a year during the life of the permit
-to conduct a DEP administered fish
tissue sampling and monitoring
program on the Ohio River, Also.
·the funds will be used in conjunction with the Ohio River Valley
Water Sanitation Commission· s
Ohio River Watershed Pollution
Reduction program. In addition to
sampling above and below the projccted mill site, samples will also
be taken above the connuence. on
both the Ohio and Kanawha rivers.
The fish tissue sampling propos.
al will be presented for public comment annually, during the life of
the permit.
The final change addresses
sludge monitoring for dioxin and
dibenzofuran. This monitoring
condition was relocated within the
permit itself, from G.4(c) to G.4(a).
Public comment should be
specifically targeted to these four
issues. Additional concerns cannot
be considered relevant during the
comment period, according to ·
McCoy, Written comments should ,
include the name and address of the
writer and a concise statement of
the issues raised regarding ~ pulp
milL
Comments should be banddelivered by 4 p.m. or posunarked
before Monday, Oct. 16. They
should be addressed to Chief.
Office of Water Resources. DEP.
Attention: Jim Waycaster, Informalion Representative, 1201 Greenbrier Street, Charleston, W.Va.
25311-1088.

·mat

RuNandpawng------ Man arrested .

0

Comments are sought
on proposed changes
·for pulp mill permit
ment period for the proposed Apple
Grove Pulp and Paper Company's
wastewater treaunent facility has
been announced by Division of
Environmental Protection Director
Eli McCoy.
According to a legal advertisement received by the Point Pleasant
Register, and published in Friday's
edition, tbe public comment period
began today ·and will close Monday, Oct. 16. It will provide an
opportunity for all interested parties to submit their concerns
rcg,arding tbe proposed changes in
the pertnit before the agency renders its decision on the propos'ed
permit modification.
Proposed changes in the permit
include the compliance point for
dioxin being moved from tbe Ohio
River outfall to inside the mill at
the bleach plant.outfaiL According
to McCoy, this change wa~ Inserted
because, if dioxin is produced by
the facility, it is most likely to be
detected at the bleach plant outfalL
Wastewater from the bleach plant
outfall, an internal outlet, will be
routed into the facility's wastcwa, ,
ter treaunent units. A requirement ,
has been added to measure the
bleach plant discharge twice per
month, in million-gallons- per day
(MGD),
.
The second change is that the
dioxin compliance level at the
bleach plant be established at nondetect brat the current technology
detection level of I 0 parts per
quadrillion. During the life of the
pcrmit, if the detection capability
. improves and drops below the current detection level, the new dctcc-

membership for the controversy
when the problem, he said, lies
with tbe board.
"All we're asking for is to be
treated like human beings," Freeman said. "I'm here to tell you that
I don't believe a few of your
smooth words will heal the wounds
have been opened up."
"It's not a pe~sonality problem,"
he added. ''The board has refused
to meet with the members."
"You say I insinuated it was the
membership's fault - no way was
it the membership's fault," Weaver
responded . ''For people willing to
give us a chance. it's not just
smooth words - it's backed by

Work continues oo a $1.1 mUiion, eight mile
paving and catch basin replacement project
along slate Route ll4 from Its junction with
Route 7, through Rutland and west to the june·
tion or Route 325 near Danville. Above, paving
crews from the Shelly Company or Thornville

place new asphalt on the roadway, two miles
west or Rutland. According to Ohio Department
of Transportation spokeswoman Nancy
Yoocham, the projected completion date for the
project is·Oct. Jl .

Mi~dleport River Festival begins tonight
By TOM UUNTER
Sentinel News Staff

Post 128.
Saturday Sept. 16. a big day of
entertainment gets under way with
a full slate of kid's activities, staning at II :30 a.m. with the Meigs
County Humane Society directed
pet parade. The parade will organize behind Fisher Funeral Home
at II a.m .. then march down First
Street along the river and stop
when they come to Dave Diles
Park. Prizes will be awardoo .
Kid's activities continue at
12:30 p.m . when a pizza eating
contest, tug-of-war, and sack race
take place. From 2-2:30 p.m., the
Mark Wood Magic Show will take
place on the main stage, with the
Mark Wood strolling magic show
occurring throughout the festival
from 2:30-3:30 p.m.
At noon, the mmual River Festival Queen Contest takes place, with
young ladies from the !lend Area
high schools competing for tlle title
of queen. At 12:30, an exhibition
from the Dazzling Dolls baton
corps lakes place. The llig !lend
Ctoggers wi II perform at 3 p.m.

Middleport's riverfront will be
the center of attraction, as the
annual River Festival begins its
two 'day run this evening. A large
lineup of entertainment and
exhibitors will be featured throughout the festival.
All entertainment and activities
will take place in Dave Dile~ Park,
along the Ohio River , A food coun
will be located along Race Street,
leading to ,U1e park. Several local
organiz.1tions arc setting up shop at·
the festival, as a part of fund raising efforts for Ureir organizations.
There will be a wide variety of
food and plenty to drink, with picnic tables to located along the food
court .
The festival will kick off tonight
with performances by the Big !lend
Ctoggers at 5:30, and CJ and the
Country Gentlemen at 6:30. Free
hot dogs , snacks, and soft drink
will be provided, courtesy of the
American Legion, Feeney Benneu

Artisan demonstrations will
occur from 1-4 p .m. wi~J demon strations of line Appalachian folk
art, including basket weaving, claywork and wood sculpting. along
with scat weaving and chair caning.
At I p.m. the annual river festival
horseshoe contest will ~'lke place,
The crafters will be all be locatoo
under one roof, in tlJC Depot building at the park.
Musical entcrtainmeut at this
year's festival kick.&lt; on at I p.m.
with Kim Batey. Roger and Mary
Gilmore with Sweet Mountain
Sound will perfonn at 2 p.m, Dec
and Dallas, veteran performers at
the festival, will perform at 4 p.m.
The Old Timer' s !land from
Mason, W.Va. will perform at 5
p.m .• and the band White Raven '
will perform their blend of classic
rock and contemporary rock-n -roll
at 6 p.m.
The Middleport Community
AssocJauon has brought in big time
professional wrestling to wrap up a
terrific line up of entertainment at
this year's festival, starting at 7
p.m.
··

1 Undin.g to bill
\ adds chi.l d care
Senate
I
II
1

WASHINGTON (AP)- Senators agreed to pump billions more
dollars into child care assistance
for welfare mothers required to
work under U1e nearly completed
historic overhaul of the nation's
welfare system.
The agreement worked out
Thursday by Republican and
Democratic negotiators was
expected to paiS today during votes
on a string of amendments further

refining the bilL A vote on final
passage of the overall bill was
planned on Tuesday.
After a day of backroom talks,
Republicans agreed to add $3 billion to the $5 billion already ·authorized for child can: aid for welfare
mptbcrs who would be required to
get jobs under the legislation,
"It's a great victory for us, $8
billion over live years," said Sen,
Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., leader

~~.'~u~~~~~,~~;~:~~~~~~

him and alerted Worthington police
shortly before 10 p .m., Oppenhcrmcr
·
·
sa1'd .
Thompson is accused of con, fronting his former girlfriend in the
parking lot in this Columbus suburh at about 2:30 p.m. She refused
to get into his car.
Thompson tlueatcned to kill her,
s hooting at least once, Oppen.hcimcr said, The woman was not
hit and ran into the school, where
she works in the day care center.
She lockoo herself in an office.

in the push for U1c child care

a~sis­

tance.
The welfare legislation. written
by Majority Leader Dob Dole, RKan .• sends federal welfare, job
training and child care programs to
the states in block grants. curbs
spending by S70 billion, and ends
1\.id to Families with Dependent
Children and the federal guarantee
of cash assisumce.

Central Operating
seeks to modify
Sporn flyash dam
Central Operating Company has ·
submitted an application witb the ;
\Vest Virginia Division of Environ- ·
mental Protection, Office of WaJJ:r :
Resources, for approval to modify ·
the Philip Sporn Plant flyasb dam, .
according to a legal advertisement :
published in today's Register.
:
The d;un is located on the Ohio :

~~::ril~~~p~u~~nu~~~~~i~~o~ :

construction, the dam will be 65
feet in height measured at the ·
downstream toe, and will have a
maximum capacity of 2,520 acrefeet of water.
Sp_ecific objections can be
directed, in writing, to the Division
of Environmental Protection,
Office of Water Resources, Dam
Safety Section, 1201 Greenbrier
Street, Charleston, W.Va. 2531 11088, Attn.: ID # 05312 . Comments will be received through
Sept 30.

I

•

•

I

�'

•

,

Friday, September 15, 1995

Commentary

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

Page~

Satunlay, Sept. 16

Friday, September 15, 1995

Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures
MICH.

The Daily Sentinel
lll Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

•

MULTIMEDIA, INC
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CIIARLENE"HOEFLICH
General

Mamt~er

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

FBI doctored evidence in Peltier case
WASHINGTON While
Congress investigates government
abuses in cases ranging from Waco
to Randy Weaver, it is also time to
· reopen the 20-year-old case involving Leonard Peltier.
Pellier is an American Indian
serving consecutive life sentences
for the murder of two FBI agents
on a Soulb Dakota reservation in
1975. Over the course of our long
investigation into the Peltier case,
we bave uncovered evidence that

Specter, R-Pa.. who is in the middle of high-profile congressional
hearings into the Weaver case, told
us last week lbat Peltier isn't gcner-

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein ·
ating much interest.
Our investigation suggest• that
even if there isn't enough evidence
to free Peltier, his ca.o;e merits congressional scrutiny for many reasons:
- The FBI doctored evidence
in its aggressive attempt to convict
Pellier for the death of their two
colleagues.
or the four suspects in the
killings, two were tried and acquitted, and charges against a third
were dropped . Only Peltier
remained as a means of av~ing
the agents' murders.
·
Fearing that he was b ing
unfairly targeted, Peltier fled to
Canada after the murders. It was

the FBI doctored evidence in the
case
against Peltier.
L ETTER S OF OPI NION arc welcome. They should be less than JOO
The
same congressional Repubwords long. All lcncr" arc subjcc r tO cc!i1ing and mu st be signed wilh name,
licans
who
have been so zealous in
address and [cJcp honc number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
their
in.ve.
s
tigalions of the Waco
"~n uld he i n good 1astc. addressi ng issues, no: persona lilies.
and Weaver cases, haven't said a
word about Pellier. Peltier's supporters argue lbat the only reason
his case has not received similar
scrutiny is that he is a minority.
Peltier has been denied parole
until2009. leaving him to apply for
executive clemency in November
1993. But it's highly unlikely that
By RITA BEAMISH
President
Clinton will grant Peltier
As.'iociated Press Writer
clemency
without political cover
WASHINGTON - Now that Colin Powell bas finally admitted he is
considering a presidential bid, he enters a mine field that no doubt will · from Capitol IIlii. Sen. Arlen
boost sale.• of his memoits but may give him pause aboul actually laking
lbe plunge inlo politics.
As a prospective candidate, the retired general's every book interview
and speech will be scrutinized for policy and political leanings.
Powell himself has indicated 'be wants to reveal more of himself to lhe
1
Americ:m people as he weighs his decision. But many observers believe
. he may not be. ready for lbe attendant microscopic scrutiny of everything
· from h1s role m V1emam and the Iran-Contra affair to his views on race
:' aod welfare. ·
·
The more he reveals, the more he will open himself to losing some of
the bountifully high approval ratings he enjoys. If Powell chooses to'
stonewall on issues, he risks appearing unprepared to be a political leader.
Already, when he lifted the curtain a bit this week to reveal that he
supports abortion rights and some gun controls, he drew fire from conservatives. And pundits speculated be could not make it in lbe Republican
primary process where conservative activists hold sway.
Powell's line so
is that be doesn't yet feel "a calling'' 10 run but
nonelbelcss w11IIook mto the prospects. But a casual approach is not good
enough for someone to survive !Oday's presidential campaign climate.
"You have to want it more than life i1self, because that is in fact what
you trade to get it," said Mark Goodin, fonncr consultant to Vice President Dan Quayle who now is infonnally advising Bob Dole's campaign.
Powell.' s prospective rivals - should he decide to run as a Republican
-arc trying to warn him off.
Dole pointed out that political life differs from Army life: "You don't
give orders in politics. You lake a lot of questions.''
Sen. Arlen Srx;ctcr of Pennsyh:ania noted that "campaigning in Iowa
and New llampshi!C and South Dakota is a lot different than being in govI
enuncnt. especially the military."
Others whq could have tried for the GOP nomination this year- Jack
Kemp, Dick Cheney. William Benneu- ultimately decided against it, in
large part because they did not wam to endure the non-stop fund raising,
personal sacrifice and just plain unpleasanmess of the campaign.
Powell, whose career so far has been that of an exalted military leader,
may find it distaSteful to have his statements and background questioned.
In fact, one friend who had ruled out the possibility Powell would run said
he is surprised to even sec him now actively exploring lbc idea.
Although media coverage of Powell so far has been positive, the focus
will get sharper if he enters the race.
'
Some poking already has begun.
The Wall Street Journal took a swipe at Powell in a recent article highlighting criticisms of Powell's risk-averse command style when he was
chainnan of the Joint Chiefs of Staff- that despilc the fact lbat Powell's
·approach won the Persian Gulf War.
"The guys who have never run the gamut of presidential politics or
Excerpts from Colin Powell's who will eventually pay the bills. I
elective politics at all have never really felt the sting of media aucntion,"
memoirs are now being published, questiOn the priorities of those libGoodin said.
Powell :md his wife, Alma. both have talked about his race as a factor and it seems dishearteningly evi- erals who lavish so much attention
dent that the popular general is on individual license and entitleof his potential candidacy.
. She doesn't '.&lt;ant him to run and worries for his safety as "a black man preparing to march into politics,
and if possible into the White
in this s.ocicty."
William A. Rusher
House, by coming out foursquare
·•A lot of crazy· people out there," she said.
But Powell told ABC's Barbara Walters that the very fact that there is for molberhood.
On the one hand, he makes it ments that little concern is left for
so much interest in him raises the possibility that "the country may well
lbat be simply can't abide the the good of the community at
clear
he ready for a black man."
?
sort
of
forthright conservatism that large.''
Race apl)ears to be nol much of a problem for Powell, said Linda
bas
been
the dominant tendency in
Surveying this unsatisfactory
DiVali, a pollster working for GOP candidate Sen. Phil Gramm, in part
state
of affairs, Gen. Powell allows
American
politics
for
the
past
15
l)ccause of Powell's strong military profile aod because "he brings such
that
perhaps
it is time for a fresh
years.
His
misdescription
of
it
adds
strong credentials to the table in terms of his leadership and the trust facforce
to
his
point:
''I
am
troubled
"I
distrust
rigid ideology
approach:
tOr."
by
the
political
passion
of
those
on
from
any
direction,
and
I am dis: In fact, Powell's approval ratings - 71 percent favorable in a U.S.
Americans
feel
.
covering
that
many
the
extreme
right
who
seem
to
t:~ews poll this month - arc considerably higher among whites, 73 perpolitical
as
just
as
I
do.
The
time
may
be
at
claim
divine
wisdom
on
cent, t11an blacks, 57 percent, mostly because many blacks are unfamiliar
major
party
to
hand
for
a
third
well
as
spiritual
mailers.
God
pro~ili~m
·
: This period of cx~lor~tion for Powell is certain to bring greater atten- vides us with guidance and inspira- emerge to represent this sensible
tion to hlS neVi autObiOgraphy, but it also will give him a window into the tion, not a legislative agenda. I am center of the American political
disturbed by the class and racial spectrum."
life of a presidential candidate.
·
If this sort of otherhandedncss
: Said former Sen. Paul Laxal~ R-Nev., who managed campaigns for undertones beneath the surface of
tbeir
rhetoric. ~'
familiar, that is because it
sounds
~onalt.l Reagan: "The answer lies in his stomach. Docs he have the
is.
On
the
other
hand,
he
at
least
It
is,
in fact, the mating call of
;~rcnglh to do it?''
tries to sound equally contemptu- the Political Bird of Paradise,
; EDITOR'S NOTE- Rita Beamish is standing in for Special Cor- ous of the liberal alternative, which polititus equivocus, and it is
has dominated the Democratic summed up in that old political
r:esrondent Walter R. Mears, who i• away.
Party for more lban 60 years: "I aphorism: "There are two sides to
am put off by patronizing liberals everything, and if you want to be
who claim to know what is best for popular ~'lke both.''
society but devote lillie thought to
In nonnal times, there would be

Powell's predicament

GHINA ~ GUIVELINES ~;Uret WtiLD

the FBI's task to produce sufficient
evidence for his extradition. An
FBI report on a meeting of federal
prosecutor~ and top FBI ollicials in
August 1976 stated that lbe decision was made to drop the charges
against the third suspect ''so that
the full !frospectivc weight of the
federal government could be directed against Leonard Peltier."
A persuasive part of the FBI's
extradition case was affidavits from
a woman named Mynlc Poor Bear.
She made three sworn statements,
but the FBI only sent the second
and lbird up to the proceedings in
Canada. It's not hard to sec why.
In her first affidavit, Poor Bear
claimed to have been Peltier's girlfriend , and she said Peltier told her
h~ had killed the two G-men. Peltier and other witnesses testified at
·his subsequent trial that lbey had
never beard of Poor Bear.
Poor Bear's second affidavit,
obtained by the FBI two days after
the first, was identical except for
the addition of two significant sentences: "I was present lbe day lbe
Special Agents of the Federal

CONffREOCE tm WOMEN ...

ra:

Bureau of Investigation were
killed. I saw Leonard Peltier shoot
the FBI agents."
The third aflidavit, obtained still
later. was a lurid account of the
shooting by Poor Bear. The affidavits obviously contained .serious
contradictions. Was Poor Bear an
eyewimess to the shootings, or did
Peltier make a confession of the
sbootings to her?
At Peltier's trial, Poor Bear
recanted all of her affidavits.
She claimed the FBI had threatened her, and she said she hadn't
even read the statements before
signing them. But the trialfrjudge
refused to allow Poor Bear's testimony of FBI abuse to be heard by
the jury.
.
- Documents obtained by this
column also show lbat the FBf and
the prosecutor, then U.S. Attorney
Evan Hultman, may have suppressed some important information about anolber so-called "eyewitness," an FBI agent who
claimed to have identified Peltier
through a telescopic rifle from 800
yards away. Hulunan did not disclose to the jury, or the defense, the
existence of an FBI test lbat raised
serious doubt about the possibility
of such an identification.
In a memo to Hulunan; lbe Fill
reported that its expert re-created
the situation and found lbat he was
"hampered by extreme mirages at
ground level."
-FBI documents show that the
agency suppressed lbe result of initial ballistic tests, which said the
shell casings found at the murder
scene were "not identifiable" with
the rifle that Peltier owned.
- The FBI and federal prosecutors also "shopped" for a friendly
judge in Peltier's trial. FBI documents show that lbe agency insisted ·an a particular judge for the
grand-jury proceedings, and latet
tried improperly to influence the
trial judge. ·
·
Despite lingering questions, the
FBI doesn't want a post-monem on
the Peltier case. A 1992 article in
the bureau's in-house newsletter
was headlined, ':Keep the Vigil:
Peltier is a Murderer."
It accused Peltier of being guilty
of ''cold-blooded execution.''
Even if Peltier proves to be
guilty, the '"vigil" against FBI
abuses must he maintained in a free
society.
Jack Anderson and Michael
B·instein are writers for United

Feature Syndicate, Inc-

Marching down the middle of the road
'

a good deal to be said for following
a leader who has made a distinguished career for himself outside
of politics, who disdains lbe grubbier aspects of the political arena.
and whose attitudes, insofar a.• they
can be identified at all, are highminded and judiciously centrist.
But these are not nonnal times.
In the modern conservative movement, Americans have found aod many have endorsed - a serious attempt to save this natio,n from
destruction. Conservative principles worked, and worked brilliantly, in the field of economics, and in
the long cold war against the Soviet
Union. Now they arc being applied
to the still deeper problems reflected in the collapse of family values.
the loss of individual self- discipline, and the confusion between
libeny and a self-indulgentlibertinism. On the outcome of that effort
depends, quite simply, our survival
as a society.
It will not be enough for Gen.
Powell - or President Powell to reflect the standard American
vinues in his own life and conduct.
He is going to have to be ready to
lead a troubled nation back: back to

its roots, wherein reside its funda. mental strengths. And of such
readiness I find very little evidence
in those of his views that have thus
far been vouchsafed to us.
If lbat is all we are being offered
- a smiling, self-a.'8ured practitioner of the conventional political
arts, able and willing to preside
serenely over the nation, split the
difference on any really serious
issues, and paper over the widening
cracks in American society - then
I feel safe in predicting that the
conservative movement will
decline to compete for the privilege
of carrying his train. Leave him .to
the Tsongases, Rudmans and
Bradlcys. We ha~e come too far to
settle for a coffee-colored Eisenhower.
· William A. Rusher is a Distinguished Fellow of the Claremont
Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy.
&lt;•'or lnrorrnalion on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact America Online by calling 1800-827-6364, exl 8317.)

Positive attitude goes a long way

Berry's World

. TRIAL

ar

me . .
Whenever he visi ied Boston, W.
In a few minutes the waiter was
Clement Stone would go to the
back
at our table carrying Stone's
Parker House for lunch, so that is
order
of Boston scrod with cheese
· where he and I decided to go eat on
this p;uticular day.
When the waiter came to our George R. Plagenz
table, Stone ordered what be
always ordered at the Parker House sauce!
Stone was pleased but not sur- Boston scrod with cheese sauce.
"I'm sorry. sir," said the wail· prised. He had long ago come to
cr. "we no longer serve the cheese expect life to do his bidding when
sauce with the Boston scrod." he applied PMA. To Stone, PMA is
Somewhere along the line, it symbolized by such words as faith,
appeared, the Parker House had integrity, hope, optimism, generosity, tact, tolerance and kindness.
changed chefs.
"To ·get what you want out of
"The ragout is excellent," I
volunteered at Ibis poin~ hoping to · life, it is necessary to.apply PMA."
interest Stone in another Parker says Stone. It seems to · have
House specialty. But he chose to worked for him.
Born 93 years ago on Chicago's
try a little PMA instead. PMA was
a Stone trademark, standing for South Side, where he was raised by
Positive Mental Attitude. You his seamstress mother, he sold
could look it up in Stone's book. newspapers at the age of 6 and at
"Success Through a Positive Men- 13 owned his own newsstand.
Before he dropped out of school at
tal Attitude."
"Tell the chef," Stone instruct- 16 to become an insurance salesed the waiter, "that I came all the man, he had read dozens of Horatio
way to Boston from Chicago to get Alger books. As he s~'II'Cd out the
another taste of his delicious classroom window. he would
cheese sauce." A• the waiter head- dream of emulating the ags-toed for the kitchen, Stone winked at riches exploits of Ragged Dick an&lt;)

Tattered Tom.
By the time he was 20 he had
scraped together $100 to start his
own insurance agency. He rose to
president and chairman of the
Combined Insurance Co. of America. a director of many other corporations and one of America's richest men.
To help show his appreciation to
his Maker, he gives away much of
his weallb.
Stone's own technique for
developing PMA is to memorize
PMA principles ood implant them
in the subconscious by repetition.
He recommends pasting sayings
like these on the bathroom mirror
and repeating them over and over
again:
''To be enthusiastic, act enlbusi- .
astic" and "Every adversity carries
~th it the seed of an equivalent or
greater benefit''
Stone is a disciple of Napoleon
Hill, whose book "Think and
Grow Rich!" has sold millions of
copies since its publication in 1937.
A new biography of Hill, "A Lifetime of Riches," by Michael Ritt
and Kirk Landers, says Stone made

Hill's book required reading for his
insurance agents.
The philosophy of bolb men is
based on a principle laid down by
Jesus: "The kingdom of God is
within you ." This kingdom, as
they saw it, is located in the subconscious mind.

The subconscious is like the
soil. Any seed (!bought) put into it
will grow. A good, seed will bring
forth good fruit. A bad seed, bad
fruit. The secret then is to plant
.
only good seeds.
"Your subconscious mind has
ways you know not of," says
another exponent of this philosophy. "Give it the idea of prosperity
morning and night, when·you wake
up and before you go to sleep, and
it will do the rest."
Or as Clement Stone c.plains
PMA, "Whatever ilie mind of man
can concei vc, the mind can
'!IChievc." Whether it's a lifetime of
riches or a cheese sauce for your
BOSIOn SCrod.
George Plagenz is a syndicated writer for Newspaper Enterprise Association.

PA.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

--Area Death-- Dealings for bridge
Neva Ator

property to begin

• Neva May Ator, 94, of Albany died Thursday, Sept. 14 1995 at ·~
0 Bleness Memorial Hospital, Athens.
'
'
Born April I, 1901, she was the daughter of the late Grant Morris and
Nona ~ay Suu.on. She was a retired cook from Ohio University.
She IS surv1ved by her husband Conand Ator: one daughter, Emma
Whutmgton of Al~y; one sister, Myrtle Stanley of Albany; one sisterm-law, Rutb Moms of RuUand; four gmndchildren; 8 great grandchildren; and four great-great grandchildren .
s~: was .rreceded in. dc;.atb ~r three brothers: Earl Morris, Gerold
_Bud ~orru, and Melvm John Manis; two sisters, Hazel Meeks and
Edna L1ttle.
Service.s will be Monday. I p.m., at Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home
Albany, w~th Rev. Arthur Crabtree olliciating. Burial will follow at Bate~
Cemetery m Athens.
Calling hours will be Sunday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral
home.

.

Edna V. Mattox

'""
Today's weather forecast

S111ny : Pt Cloudy Cloudy

Via Associared Prlfss Gr11phicsNet

C 1995 AccuWea.ther, Inc.

South-Central Ohio
Tonight ... Becoming mostly
clout.!~. Low 55 to 60. Light south-.
cast wmds.
Saturday ... Variable cloudiness
wiili a 40 percent chance of showcrs or thunderstorms.' High around

80

Ef tended forecast

Sunday ... A chance of showers
or thunderstorms. Lows 55 to 60.
Ilighs 75 to 80.
Monday .. .Dry north and a
chance of showers south. LO\j'S 55
to 60. Highs 75 to 80.
Tucsday ... Dry. Lows in the 50s.
Highs in lhe 70s.
1

.Ohio skies will turn
dismal on weekend
By The Associated Press
Ohio skies will tum cloudy and
rainy on the weekend, the National
WcaUlCr Service said.
'
Gusty winds are also predicted
for Salurday as a warm front moves
through the state.
lnlermittent rain, with scattered
thuderslorms, likely will coQtinue

into Monday, the NWS said.
Highs on the weekend will be
around 80 degrees. Overnight lows
will be in the 50s.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 97 degrees in 1939
while the record low was 40 in
1923.

BREC will improve...
Continued from page 1
lots for the board election be instituted .
· Other members said they were
pleased with changes lhat have
occurred in the cooperative's service area.
. "I was i,~presse~ wilb the way
thmgs arc bemg done m lbe organi7.ation," said Raben Muller of Bidwell, who noted that Weaver took
time out from_supervising repair of
a substauon breakdown Tuesday to _
keep an ap~ointment .

"I think some of lbe problems

ste~ from us because we weren't
as mvolved in the co-op as we
should be," Johnnie-Russell of Bidwell said: "It's imperative that the
people m the co-op become
mvolvcd, and that tile board be
more responsive to the members."
. · Weaver has scheduled another
member session .for Sept. 26 at tbe
Jackson County Agricultural
Exte~sion Service. BREC's annual
!ll~eung w11l be Oct 13 at Buckeye
H1lls Career Center.
.

Pomeroy mayor's court
Lance llennan, Pomeroy, disorThe following cases were proderly
conduct, $63 plus costs:
cessed Monday in the Pomeroy
Michael
Sherill. Columbus, speed.
court of Mayor John W. Blaetmar.
·$48
plus
costs: Rebecca Cherry,
Fined were : Roger Jordan,
Middleport,
speed, $56 plus costs.
Letart, W.Va., driving under the
:
Forfeiting
bonds were: Tin~ L.
influence, $375 plus costs, six
Williams,
Racine,
speed, $65:
months operator's license suspenE.
Clark,
Middleport,
speed,
Grace
sion, three days jail; operating
A.
Wade,
Kindleville.
$67;
Teresa
under suspension, $63 plus costs;
expired plates, $63 plus costs; Ind., speed, $65: Cunis Williams.
Robert Dickens, Pomeroy, assured Hilliard, speed, $67: Dixie Flowers, Letart, speed, $64; Donna
clear distance, $43 plus costs;
Patrick McGuire, Pomeroy, Knapp, Pomeroy, speed, $65:
Vickie McKinney, Middleport,
speed. $49 plus costs; Robert
$69,
speed; Ronald Robinson,
McDowell, Pomeroy, DUI, $375 .
Reedsville,
speed, $69 plus costs;
costs. six months OL suspension,
Shirley
Lute,
Syracuse. failure 10
three days jail; expired OL, $63
maintain
assured
clear distance .
plus costs; failure to control, $43
$63;
Angel
Lee,
Middleport,
failure
plus costs: Mary Kirby, Bidwell,
tO
yield,
$63;
Donna
Buffington,.
driving under suspension, $63 plus
Pomeroy, expired plates, $83,
cos ts; speed, $47 plus costs;
· Victor Coates. Long Bouom,
traffic light violation. $63 plus
costs: Jay D~y. Pomeroy, speed,
$45 plus costs: Dennis Boyd,
Am Ele Power ....................... .34 3/4
Pomeroy, expired tags, $63 plus
Alao ..............................................58
costs; 'lllomas Grady, Middleport,
Ashland OU ...............,........... .33 518
AT&amp;T ...................................,.58 l/8
speed, $46 plus costs; no insunrnce.
Bank One ................................35 314
$50 plus costs; Rhonda,Jcwell,
Bob Evans ..................................... 18
Gallipolis, speed. $5 I plus costs;
Champion Ind ........................23 3/4
Charming Sbop ....................... .S 114
City Holdlng ...........................l6 Ill
Fedenol Mogul ........................ll 314
Goodyear T&amp;R ......................40 Ill
The Daily Sentinel
K-marl .................................... l4 314
I USI'S 213-9601
Lands End ..............................17 114
Llmlled
Inc............................. 183/4
l'ubl1~lwJ I.'~Cr) ofl~r n oon , Monday throup,h

Stocks

Mul11medla Inc ......................43 3/8
People's ..................................23 1/4

h 1d,1y. I ll Conrt Sl . Po meroy Oh 10. by !he
Uh1,, \o~ l ley Puhl1 shing Company/Mulumed1a
In,: . Pom~wy , Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2 156.
Sl'lund d ii\' ro(tal!c p:ud at Pomerny. Ohio

Ohio Valley Bank .........................36
One Valley ..............................33 118

Mr mhtr: fhc A~(OCin!Cd
New ~ p.l]ll."r Aw&gt;e1ation

Rockwell ................................ 47 1/8
Robbins &amp; Myers ...................%7 3/4

P res~.

om.l !he Ohio

I'OS 'I \I1\ S'flo: R: Sen d nd drc.~~ corre cti on ~ IO
'l11e Dnily Scnllocl, Il l Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohl i1 4'&gt; /otf

S\lllS CRWTION RATES
lh {':t rr irr nr Motor Rout~
$1 7~

Om· \\cd, .

. ..

011.: M&lt;H' Ih

.. .. .... $160
,.... $9100

OneYI!ilr

Royal Duieh .......................... l%1 118
Shoney'slnc........................... 11318
Star Bank ...............................53 718
Wendy 1nl'l............................ll l/4
Worthln,lon lnd ....................19 518

-·-·-

Sio&lt;k reports are lho 10:30 a.m.
quotes proYlded by Advesl o

Gallipolis.

SIN C:U: f' OPY PRICE

,... 35 Cents

D ~ 1lv

Sut·"l n her~ 1101 dc~ 1r111 ~ lo pay the carrier moy
rcm11 111 n , lv&lt;~n c (' dlrl'l't to ·n~e Doily Seminel

on ,1thrct•, ~~ ~ or 12 mo nth bas1s. Credit will be
lP' cn c :.mcr~&lt;Jch week

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St.

No \Ub~ c nptwn h)' mni l pcrn\I Ued 1n areas
.,..I It'll' hom(' c:1mcr ~ rv1i:c • ~ nv;u lable.

Open Mon.-Fri. 9:D0-5:00
Saturday 9:D0-3:00

\ IAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inside
11

i\l~igs

County

w.·dc~
Week~

.... .. Sl.l 92
16
·
$47 ()6
'Sl \\'('Ck~ , ... ... .................. .......... $92 56
R:u u Out~id t Meigs County
1.1 \Vcek~

·

16 Week~ ............. , . ..

52 We&lt;k• .... . ....... , ....... ...

...... $2.5 61

.$49 66

.. .... ..... 196 20

Pomeroy, OH.

STARTING APRIL 3
SPRING &amp; SUMMER HOURS

~

a

THE
GRAVELY
SYSTEM

Edna V. Mattox, 93, of Point Pleasant clied Thursday, September 14,
1995, at Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point Pleasant.
She was a member of t11e Trinity United Methodist Church in Point
Pleasant; a member of the Pleasant Valley Hospital Auxiliary; and a former member of the Ann Bailey Homemakers.
Born December 13, 1902 in Oak Hill, WV, she was a daughter of lhe
late Elmer aod India (Honaker) Ord. In addition to her parents, she was
also preceded in death by her husband, Carl W . Mauox; two sons,
Lawrence E. and Leonard W. Maltox; six brothers and two sisters.
She is survived by a daughter, Bessie Mattox Wilson of Point Pleasant;
a son, Walter Otho Mattox of Point Pleasant; a sister, Kalbryn Hudson of ·
Henderson; seven grandchildren; I I great-grandchildren; and two great·
great-grandchildren.
Funeral service will be at2 p.m. Sunday, September 17, at the CrowHussell Funeral Home with' Rev. Steven E. Dorsey officiating. Burial will
follow in the Suncrcst Cemetery, Point Pleasant.
Visiting hours will be held at the funeral home Saturday from 6-9 p.m.

Meigs annQuncements
Square dances scheduled
Tuppers Plaips Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 9053 will hold a
square dance Saturday from 8-11
p.m. and agaiQ Tuesday from 7-10
p.m. featuring the Smoky Mountain
Drifters.
·
Southern homecoming parade
People wanting to enter floats in
next Friday's Southern High
School homecoming parade should
call the high school at 949-2611.
Rally day and revival
Rally Day will be held Sundayr
12:30 p.m. at Rock Springs UMC

RADFORD
Pat Pliilson aod Phillip Radford
were recently recognized with the
Cal Ripken "Going the Distance"
Personal Commitment Award for
contjn uous service to the United
Stales Postal Service and their
communities.

Local News in Brief:
Cremeans slates live radio address
U.S. Rep. Frank Cremeans, R.Gallipolis, will address the Sixth
Congressional District with a live five-minute radio broadcast discussing Medicare preservation at 8:05p.m. Monday.
The address will be carried locally on WMGG-FM (101.5) Gallipolis; WKOV-AM and FM (96.7), Jackson; WMPO-AM (i390)
and F,M (92.1), Middlepon; WAHl-AM (970), Athens; WMLVFM (107 .7), Ironton; WZIO-FM (94.9) and WJOI-AM (1010),
Wheelersburg; and WNXT-AM (1260), WPAY-AM (1400) and
WPAY-FM (104.1), Portsmouth.
The congressional Medicare preservation plan is to released
Monday ami Cremeans said he wants "tl1e people of southern Ohio
to know exactly what the plan to save Medicare is from day one."

Carey slates open door sessions

with carry-in dinner at 12:30 p.m.
and 2 p.m. program featuring •
God's Kidz under direction of Connie Little. In addition, revival will
be held Monday lbrough Wednesday with the Rev. Mel Franklin
preaching each night at 7:30. Special singing nightly.
Southern hoard to meet
The Southern Local Board of
Education will meet Mon'day, 7
p.m. in the high school cafeteria.
The district's architect will discuss
where the district is in its school
building program.

Philson, Radford honored
by U. S. Postal :Service

PHILSON

The West Virginia Department- of Transportation, Division of ·
Highways, will begin negotiations to acquire properties needed for :
the construction of the new Shadle Bridge near the end of this
month.
:
Negotiations will begin on or before Sept. 29.
:
The DOH has a relocation assistance program to advise the occu- ·
pants in th~ area of lbeir eligibility to receive moving and replace- :
ment housmg benefits. Any occupant contemplating moving f'om .
the projectarea should, to ifll!urc eligibility for moving and replace- :
~ent housmg payments, noufy the DOH to be eligible for reloca- .
tmn payments benefits.
·
No person will be displaced by a federally assisted construction ·
p~oject unless and until .adequate replacement housing has been pro- :
V&gt;ded or &gt;S bu&gt;ll, accordmg to DOH officials.
·
Relocation brochures and listing of propenies for sale and/or for :
rent arc available at 600 Holloway Stree~ Henderson, or by phon- :
·
·
ing 675-0886 or 675-0887.

by Baltimore Orioles shortstop Cal
Ripken, Jr. when he surpassed the
ml\ior league record of 2,130 consecutive games played.
.Just like Cal Ripken, Jr., Pat and
Phillip have gone the distance,
through sickness and personal setbacks, to provide personal service
to their customers, according to the
postal service.
Philson. a clerk for the Syracuse
post office, was recognized for 630
hours of sick leave. This translate
into 6 years of continuous service
to the community. Philson was
nominated for the award by Postmaster Tom Bennett.
Radford, a rural mail carrier for
the Long Bottom posl office, was
recognized for 3,764 hours of sick
leave. This translate into 38 years
of continuous service to the community. Radford was nominated for
lbe award by Postmaster Jim Hud-

The award, and similar presentations made at postal facilities
throughout the area, recognize
postal employees for their commitment to their jobs. The award coincided wilb the milestone achieved son.

State Rep. John A. Carey Jr., R-Wcllston, will conduct an open
door scss1on on Wednesday, Sept. 20 from 10-11 a.m. at tlle Meigs
County Courthouse, and from 2:30-3:30 p.m. at lbe Gallia County
Counhouse.
Anyone with questions or concerns about state government are
encouraged to attend.

Pomeroy Police seize pot
Officers of the Pomeroy Polioe Department seized and confiscated 40 marijuana plants from a hillside on Condor Street around 4
p.m. Thursday.
No arrests were made and offiCers arc inyestigating the find said
Police,Chief Gerald Rought.
'

.·

Deputies probe farm vandalism
Two rental .trucks were vandalized over the weekend at tbe
Tyrone Brinager fm1n near Reedsville, according to Meigs County
Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
One truck had a tire punctured while the other truck's windshield
was broken, a repon sU1ted. The building was entered and several
empty boxes nnd crates were stolen.

Owners of missing items sought
The Meigs Counly Sherifrs Department is seeking the owners of
two items recovered recenUy.
.
A cased snare drum with a stand and practice pad were found in
August lying in a field in Chester Township. In addition, a 10-speed
bicycle was r':C~vcrcd in Racine, Sheriff James M. Soulsby said.
Anyone m1ssmg a snare drum or a 10-speed bicycle should contact the sherifrs office.

Water outage planned
Water service will be off Monday between 4 and 8 p.m. for Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District customers from Route 7 north on
Aatwoods Road to Pomeroy Pike; Pomeroy Pike from Aatwoods
Road to Meigs High School, including Crew Road in Chester.
Township.
The interruption is necessary in order for the district to install a
valve and relocate a portion of line, according to district manager
Donald C. Poole.
·

Meigs EMS logs 11 calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
recorded II calls for assistance
Thursday including four transfer
calls. Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
5:38 p.m., volunteer ftre department and squad to Bradbury Road,
carbon monoxide alarm at Bernice
Jeffers residence, no injuries.
POMEROY
7:28 a.m., Maple Drive, Louise
Gloeckner, dead upon arrival.
RACINE
4:01 a.m .. state Route 338,
Ralph Hutton, Veterans Memorial
Hospital;
10: 10 p.m., Bashan Road, Betty
Friend, Holzer Medical Center.

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Thursday admissions: Ralph
II unon, Portland; Vera Hayman,
Racine; Reva Smith, Middleport.
Thursday discharges: None

GENESIS
BIBLE STUDY CLASS
Every Sunday Morning ·
10 am· II am

Ash Street
Freewill
Baptist Church
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
G.R.Q.C. Accredited
Diplomas Offered
Teacher, Les Hayman ··

992·7410 .

1"'

_·;t?·)"~ . I';

THE TIE

~SENIOR THATBINDS
TRIP
' " '~ "" "'"" ' '"'"

RUTLAND
2:34a.m., Meigs Mine 31,
Roger Lude, VMH;
5:06p .m., Barefoot Hollow,
Hugh Thompson, Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
SYRACUSE
6:29 a.m., Pine Grove Road,
Vcra·Hayman, VMII.

t

·,.
•
. .j ·
,.

"""""' I JI&lt;IJo•PIIrl• k&lt;I 'H

'"' 'DAll.Y
1 : 20,&lt;t:20
MATJN~r.S

1111 )

SAT/SUM

1: 20,} : 20

FRI. THRU THURS
KEVIN COSTNER IN
WAUl WORlD N-13
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
'446-0923

HOLZER CLINIC
Welcomes

Wilma A. Mansfield,
M.D.
.
arid

James E. Witherell, M·.D.
Meigs Health Services will be oper.ating
as Meigs Health Services of Holzer
Clinic. Drs. Wiiherell and Mansfield will
conlinue lo praclice from the 507
·Mulberry Heights location in Pomeroy.
Together with Hol zer Clinic of Meigs
Coun1y in Middleport , we will continue to
provide the high quality medical care our
community has grown to know and trusl!

MEIGS HEALTH SERVICES

OF
HOLZER CLINIC
507 Mulberry Heights ·
Pomeroy, Ohio

(614) 992-6601
Holzer Clinic
Here for Your Health. ..
Here for Your Lifetime!

·
·
·
·

�The Daily Sentin~~

Sports

"'" Friday, September 15, 1995

Mets, Phillies and Reds tally wins on short NL docket
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
NEW YORK {AP) - With 2 1fl weeks left in the
season, the Houston Astros have settled on a wildcard strategy: Win two of every three games, try to
stay close and make a big push in the fmal week..
On Thursday night, they vcen:d from the :SCript.
The Astros lost 4-2 to the New York Mcls on a
night when they bad a chance to gain a half-game on
the idle Los Angeles Dodgers.
Houston's loss. combined with Philadelphia's 7-2
victory at Piusburgh, left the ASiros 2 In games
back in the wild-card race and just a half-game in
front of t.he Phillies. Cincinnati beat San Diego 8-1 in
tlle only ot.her NL game.
"When !.here were 20 games left in the season, we
told ourselves we had to win series, two of three,
another two of three," Houston manager Terry
Collins said.
''In the last week or so of the season, Los Angeles
and Colorado play each other six times. There's no
question that if we can stay wit.hin a game or two of
them, we 'II have a chance in that last week. But if we
don't win when they're playing each other, it won't
matter."
Of Houston's 63 losses. 33 have been·by two runs
or less.
·
The Asuos, who dropped the final two games of

the three-game series at New York, open a threegame set at Montreal 1onight. They'll be trying to
shake off a horrendous display of clutch hilling
against the Mets.

After getting drubbed !0-5 Wednesday night,
Houston went just 2-for-15 with runners on base
Thursday night. The first three hitters, John Cangelosi, Craig Biggio and Jeff Bagwell, were a combined 0-for-ll , and Bagwell made the last out in
three innings.
"Last night we stunk. Tonight we dida't get any
big· hils," Collins said. "Everybody makes it sound
like you should walk right over teams like the Mels
and the Expos, but that's not true. They still want to
heat you, especially because you're in the playoff
race.''
Rico Brogna broke a 2-all tie with a two-run
homer in the fifth inning, his team-leading 19th. The
420-foot line drive to straightaway center field also
gave Brogna a team-high 61 RBis.
Dave Mlicki (8-6) allowed only four hils in seven
innings before Paul Byrd worked the eighth and John
Franco pitched the niQth for his 23rd save.
.
Shane Reynolds (9-11) took the loss for Houston.
allowing seven hils, four runs and three walks in five
innings. The Astros have scored only 21 runs in his
II losses.

In the AL,

" It' s always hard to play catch-up, but that's what
happens when I'm pitching. I never gel to go out
there and coast wifh a lead," said Reynolds, who is
among the lead leaders in ERA (3 . 2§)0'5trikeo~ls··
(157) and fewest walks per nine innings {1.53)
despite his losing record.
"I feel I've let the learn down the last month- in
fact t.he last couple of months. I kind of pride myself
on conuol and hitting my spots. but the last five or
six starts I've been erratic," Reynolds said.
·
1 The victory for New York, ils 17th in 27 games,
gave t.he Mets a split of the 12-game season series.
Tim Bogar had two RBis and Carl Everett. Todd
Hundley &lt;~md Ryan Thompson each had two hits.
ll]ey open a three-game series against Philadelphia
tonigh~ ~1king an 0-3 record this season against the
Phils at Sbea Stadium into the game.
Phillies 7, Pirates 2 ~At Pitlsburgh, seven consecutive Philadelphia hitters reached base in the fiflb
inning against Paul Wagner (4-15), the losingest
pitcher in the league.
·
Andy Van Slyke singled in the first run in a threerun fifth inni.ng and Charlie Hayes had a two-out,
two-run single with the bases loaded.
lim Eisenreicb led off the Phillies' second with
his eighth homer and his third this season against
Pitlsburgb . .Eisenreicb's groundout
scored another
.

run in the seventh.
Kevin Stocker's two-run triple in the ninth was
the Phillies' 14th hit of the game. .
Paul Quantrill (11·9) worked 5 113 innings, allow·
ing seven bits and two runs and shaking off a straight
steal of home in the fust inning by Jacob Brumfield.
"It's got to be the right pitcher. the right situation
and there always has be two outs. Everything just
seemed right. Charlie Hayes was playing back at
third and (Quantrill) was in a wind-up, and he's not
real quick to the plate to begin with," Brumftcld said
of the fiTSt steal of home by a Pirate (other than on a
double steal) since 1987.
Reds 8, Padres 1 - At Cincinnati, David Wells
{5-3) allowed a triple and a double in the fi111t inning,
then allowed only two weak singles and a walk in
throwing his third complete game since being
acquired by the Reds on July 31. He struck out five.
"After the ftrst inning, everyt!Jing was working,"
Wells said. "I felt as strong in the eighth inning as I
did early."
Eddie Tau ben see drove in two. runs with his
eighth homer, Thomas Howard tripled in two and
Jeff Branson bomen:d," his 12th, as the Reds n:duced
their nwnher for clinching the NL Central to five.
Willie Blair (6-4) took the loss for San Diego and
stayed winless since Aug. 20.

I

.

Yankees, Rangers, Indians, Royals &amp; Brewers post wins
By Tht Associated Press
With all the veteran pitching the
New York Yankees acquired this
year. who would have thought that ·
a rookie would be a key man in
their drive for a playoff spot? Especially a rookie who struggled earlier in the sea~on.
Andy Peuiue is that man right
now.

" He doesn't look like pressure
bothers him. He looks pretty cool,"
Baltimore manager Phil Regan said
aflcr Pettine pitched the Yankees to
a 5-4 victory over the Orioles on
Thursday night. "I think he's going
to be one of the top young left-banders in the league."
Suddenly, Pettitte has become
as important as Jack McDowell,
David Cone or John Wetteland on
the Yankees' pitching staff.

~~He

was outstanding again,"'

manager Buck Showaller said after
Pettille won his fourth straight,
helping the Yankees tie the idle
Seattle Marinelli for the top,spot in
AL wild-card race.
Pettine is 4-0 with a 2.38 ERA
in his last four staru after going six
straight outings without a victory.
He won for only the third time in
10 road decisions, but his 10 wins
are the most by a Yankee rookie
since Ron Davis went 14-2 in
1979.
Pettine (10-8) allowed four runs
and seven hils in 8 113 innings. The
rookie came out in the bottom of
the ninth _after Rafael Palmeiro's
two-run homer, and Wetteland finished .for his 25th save.
·
Bernie Williams homered for
the Yankees, who won for the

Scoreboard
LouU (MorKao 6- 7), 8:05 p.m.
florida (Burkett 13-11) at Colorado
(Swift 7-2), 11:05 p.m
ChicagO (Ciistillo 9-9) at San Dieao
(Dishman 4-7), II :O!i p.m.

Baseball
Major

leagues

Salurday's games

AMERICAN LEAGUE

, Ium

Eutern DlwW-

.ll I. fd.

' 8or;ton: ................... 77

Philadelphia (Greene 0·4) at New

lil

!il

.602

: New York .. ............ 67 62

.S19

lO.S

.457

18.5

, Baltimofe ............... 59

70

Detroit ................... !iS 73
· Toronto ............. .52 n

.430
ll
.403 . 25.5

CenlnJ Dh·lllon
' l-CLEVELAND .... 90 39 .691
: K.aaw City .........64 61 .SO.
, Milwauk~ ., ...........61 61 .477
. Chicago .............. 59 61 .465
· MlnDe&amp;ota ............ 4&amp; 78 .381

25

28 .5
JO

40.5

Yorlc (PerioD 0..0), 1:40 p.m.
. Allanta (Maddux 16-2) at CINCINNATI (Portu&amp;:a19-9), 2:1S p.m.
.
Florida (Banks 2-~) ai .Colorado
(SaberhaiCD6-6), 3:05 p.m.
,
Sin Franciaco (uodccided) at Piltsbwah(Neagle 11-7), 7:05p.m.
- Houston (Brocail 4-3) at Montreal
(Peru 10-6), 7:3S p.m.
Los An~~:ele. (Candiotti '1'--12) at St.
Louis (Pettovselr: 6-5), 11:05 p.m.
Oticaao (frasehel 6-11) at San OiePo
(Aibby 9-10), 10:05 p.m.

Wut..rft Di,.bion

: California .., ........... 71
. Seaulc ....................67
Tuas ................. M
• OakiUid ................. 61
l&lt;lipehed diviaion tiUe

57
62
63
68

.558
.519
.512
.473 '

5
6
II

HoUlton at Mootreai, 1:3S p.m.
San FraocUco II PittJbutah,l:JS p.m.
Philadelpbiallll N"' Y&lt;~'k. l:40 p.m.
U. Anaela II Sl Louil, 2: IS p.m.
Florida at Col&lt;ndo. 3:05 p.m
Chicaao at Saa Dieao. 4:05
Allaotllllll CINCINNATI, 1: 5 p.m.

g·"'

Xanlas City 5, Oallaod 4
CJ.,EVELAND,5, Boston 3
MiJwaW:ee 6, Detroit 3
TUM 6, Toronto I
New York. 5, Baltimore 4

Football
NFL's Week 3 slate

Tonight's games
Seallle (Ben~ ·, 4- 1) at Chica1o (Brre
• 7-12}. 8:05p.m.
'
Boston (Hans on 13-H at CLEVE: LAND (OI!.ea 1-3), 8:05p.m
• Texas (Groas 8· 14) at Detroit
• (Sodowak.y 1-0), 8:05p.m.

•
Milwauk.eC (Karl S-5) at Turonto
• (Hentgen 1~11) , 8:05p.m.
New York (Hitchcoct 1·9) at Balli •
: more (Ertcbon 10-10), 8:05p.m.
•
Minnesota (frombley 3-8) M Oakland
. (Stotllem)le 12·6), J 1:05 p.m.
• Kan&amp;a~ City (Appier 13-8) at Caliror: aia(Abbotti0-7), 11 :05p.m.

B,aturday's games

•

8o11on (C\emen11 8-4) at CLEVE-

•

Milwaukee (Scanlon 4-5) at Toronto

• Minnesota (Radke 10-12) al O;~klud
: {0ativeroa9·5), 4:05p.m.
·
• Texas (Roaen 13-7) at Detroit
• (Nittowaki 1·2). 7:05p.m.
•
New YOC'k (McDowelllo4-l0) at Balti·
• mare (Muuina 16-8), 7:05p.m.
• Sealtle (Belcher 9-10) al ChicaiJ(J (Fer: naodez 10-8}, 7:05p.m.
• JC.DIBI City (Gordon 11 ·1 0) at CaH·
·(Ofnia{Boatie '7-4), 10:05 p.m.
.

Sunday's games
Bosc:on at CLEVELAND,! :05 p.m.
Milwaukee at Toronto, I: 35 p.m.
New York at Balli more, 1:15 p.m.
Seattle at Chicago, 2:05p.m.
Kansll5 City at California, 4:05p.m.
Minne&amp;Ola at Oo:~khmd, 4:)5 p.m

NATIONAL LEAGUE
)&lt;1m

Eutrrn Di.-l•lnn

• .ll L &amp;J.

,x-AUanta ................ KI
,fhiladelphia ...... :.... 65
·Montreal ............... .fil

48
64

.628
.504

'florida ................... SB

67
69

.477
.457

York .............. 58

70

..tSJ

~cw

CtnlraJ Oi'Wiaio•
i:INCINNATI........78 lO .609
.floL~Jton ................. 65 63
508

16
19.5
22
22.5

.496

13
14.5

St. Louis ................ 56 12 .438
~ttl.burah ..:............52 76 · 406

22
26

Cbic&amp;J0 ............ ... ... 63

64

W111rrn Dj,.J...!un
Colorado ................ 6S

59

535

Loa Ansete&amp; ........... 68 61

.527
.4K4
.417

San Diego ............ ,.62 66
San Francisco ........61 61

, • ~-clinched divl1ion Iitle

,

I
6.5
1.5

Thursday's S':-'IJfCS

• CINaNNATI 8, San D1ego l
' 'Ptll!adelphia 7, Pilbburg/1 2
New Yorlr: 4, Hou5t0n 2

Tonight's games
Houston (Swindell 11-9)

al

Montreal

{falletO 13-12). 8:05 p.m.

Phll.delphia (Mimba 8-5) If New Ynrk
(briaJha.UKD 6-2), I :OS p.m.
Atlaota (Smoltz J0 ·6) at CINCIN·
NATI (Burba 9-·3). &amp;:OS p.m.
SllD Francisco (Mu llb olland 5-10) nt
PitlJburi.h (White 1-1), 1:05 p.m.
Lo5 Anaelt!i {Candioni 7-12) 111 St

Times-Sentinel

Baums &amp; Venoys ·
among local drag
racing
. winners

In recent local drag racing
action, Tim Baum of Chester won
big in the quick 32 field.
Baum drove his Baum Lumbernfot Springs Spas/Toro Wheelhorse special to the big win.
In the Junior Dragster division,
young Derek Baum posted a big
win and posted a third behind Dave
Gandy of Nitro and ·Brandon
Skeens of South Point.
Other recent winners from the
area include Kevin Venoy of Long
Bottom and Bobby Ritchie of
Racine. In the street division, Brenda Venoy of Long Bottom took the .
win in her 1979 Chevy. She is a
contender for the street points divi- .
sian.
Sheldon Gerlach was also a big
winner in the Pro-Division, while
·Max Hill placed as a semi-finalist.
Other area racers placing recently
include Justin Hill, Andy Patterson,
Lee Floyd and Marshall Roush.

CLEVELAND at HOI.Kion, l p.m.
St. Lauil at C.Uiina, I p.m.
AUanta at New Orleau, l p.m
Ariz.ooa at Detroit, 1 p.m
N.Y. Gianb at Green Bay, I p.m.
New England 11 SID Frudaco, 4 p.m.
ONCINNATI .. Seattle, 4 p.m. .
Jac\tloavil\e 11 N.Y. Jees, 4 p.m
Wuhintfon Ill Denver, 4 p.m.
OtiCMIJO at Tampa Bay, 4 p.m.
Dalla~ at Mitmaot.a, 8 p.m.

.

'

•

Pitaburgh at Miami, 9 p.m

Transactions
BasebaU
Leaauc

BOSTON REO SOX : ' Reca lled Ken
Ryan. pitcher, from Pawtucket or the hr

ternalional Leaaue. Activated Chris
James, outfield~ . from the 15-day di•·
abled lil t .

KANSAS CITY ROYALS: Senl Phil
outfield~. to the Detroit Tigen to
complete the Sept. 8 trade for Juan
Sanvel.
·
Nlflonlll.eq:ue
NEW YORK MEfS: Recalled Robert
Penon and Pete Walker, pitchers, from
Norfolk of the lnterlliltionaJ l.eque.
National Fuothall LntUt
ODCAGO BEARS: Agreed to twm
with Richard Oenl, defen1ive end, on a
oo&amp;-year contratt.
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS : Placed
Flipper Anderson, wide receiver, oo injwed I'Cia'Ve. Si11.med Bobby Olive, wide
receiver.
.
NEW YORK JETS: Siped Alan AileD
aud Tyroae Da\'is, wide receivers, to the
practice squad. Waived Alu Young, dofe~~sivc end.
PITTSBURGH STEELERS: Re -

sisncd Corey HolJiday. wide receiver, to
the practk:e ~quad .

Hockey
Natloaal flocke7 Lnpr
' LOS ANGELES KINGS : Signed
Phlllppc BouCher. defen.eman. to a oneyear conltact,
NEW YORK ISlANDERS: Altfled to

terrill with Den.oil Vuk.e and l110a Holland, defe111emea. Acquired Alexander
Semat:, center, from the Tampa Bay
Light Dl DJ; for I 1997 nrlh-tOIInd dra(t
pkil:. Au.ianed Jcby Meuhr, defeoaeman,
and Barry Niect., left WIDJ, to UWI of
the lnteruationa\ Hockey Leque.

College
INDIANA: Named Kella WhlttiDJIOI
WOmtD'I IIIUillaDI b.;te(baJJ cow;:h.

MIOIIGAN STAtE: Announced that
cornerbal;k A.Il'lJ Campbelllw been ruled
ineligible to play for the seme~ter.

·

.

OU's and Kent's progress to show in Saturday encounter

By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports Writer
The season is young . Most
teams still have visions of being
contenders.
At Ohio University and Kent,

the most important thing is
progress. For teams scrambling to
avoid the second division, if ant the
Mid-American Conference cellar,
the method is the same.
"The way we have to approach

it is we're going to have to play ou.
best football to beat anybody on
any Saturday," OU coach Jim
Grobe said. "No matter who it is."
On Saturday, the Bobcals open
conference play against Kent in a

-

In Gallipolis Cross Country Invitational,

·

showdown of young teams hoping
to win a game that matte111.
In the only other MAC game
Saturday, Akron is at Bowling
Green. Non-conference play
includes Ball State at Minnesota.

_

Two Meigs harriers finish among top 20
Gallia Academy's cross country
teams won three of the five races in
Tuesday's Gallipolis Invitational
on the University of Rio Grande
campus.
All runners are identified by
school (G·Gallia Academy, MMeigs and R·River Valley).
J unlor high boys' race
In part because of to~20 finishes from Brian Sims, Derek Baker,
J.C. Ohlinger and Lee Earley. Gallia Academy outpaced South Wcbster 43· 76 to win ils flfst race of the
day.
.
The rest of the oontenders were
Miami Trace (79}, Logan (84),
Piketon {94), Portsmouth {112),
Meigs, Jackson, Zane Trace, Ironton, Russell, Western, Fairland and
Warren Local (no team scores).
Piketon's Brandon Hammond
(II :47) was the best of the 68-runner field that ran the 3.200-meter
race.
Here are the local runners, listed
in order of finish.
3-Brian Sims {G), 12:06; 4Derek Baker (G), 12:07: 7-Ryan
Well {M), 12:47: 8-Adam Thomas
(M), 12:56: 14-Lee Earley (G),
13:38; 22-Kylc Smiddie (M),
14:08; 23-Tim Mahan {G), 14:10;
41-Mike Williamson (M), 15:47;
52-David Miller (G), 16:34; 58Jason Wheeler (G), 17:27: 63-Graham Woodyard (G), 18:23.
Junior high girls' race
Gallia Academy outlasted
SEOAL rival Logan 45-52 to win
ils second race of the day.
Also running were Portsmouth
(79), Western (90), Russell (110),
West Union (147'), Warren Local,
Zme Trace, Piketon, Meigs, Jackson, Ironton, Piketon and Miami
·
Trace (no team scores).
Logan's Heather Mace {13:.11)
was the fastest of the 67-runner
field running the 3,200-meter
course.
Here.are the local runners, listed
in order of finish.
3-Katy Henson {G). 13:44; 9Pam Smith (G), 14:56; 10Stephanie Liule (G). 14:59; 15-

Emily Shoemaker (G), 15:26; 17Shannon Price {M), 15:48; 20-lulie
Fiseo (G), 15:56; 21-Kim Woodward {G), 16:01 : 35-Ashley Hannahs {M), 17:24; 37-Kelsey Willey
{G), 17:36: 38-Renee Wilson (G),
17:39; 43-Ariel Pratt (G), 18:13 ;
44-Heather Grimm (G), 18:14; 50Leslie Linder {G), 19:29; 61-Katie
Ingles (G), 21:16; 62-Christine
Vaughn {G), 21:32.

-·-·-

Gaines (19:28), Gallia Academy's
Jeremy Pratt (22:55) and Tyler
Burnell (22:59) linished 18th and
19th, respectively.
Varsity hoys' race
Two Kentucky teams - Russell
and lloyd County - had 79 points
to lead the 22-team pack, but Russell's S.J. Carter, who has his
team's sixth runner to finish, came
in 30th. lloyd County's Calib
Stewart, his team's sixth finisher,
came in 49th.
Miami Trace's Chris Paisley
was the fastest of the 129-runner
field with a 16:25 finish on the
5,000-meter course.
· Behind the Bluegrass State
entries were Gallia Academy (108),
South Webster (150), Warren
Local {164), Piketon (174), Logan
(179), West Union (238). Belpre
(265), Coal Grove (2'78). Meigs

(280), Miami Trace (297), Chesapeake (298), Zane Trace (325),
Western (350), Ironton (363), Jackson {400), PortSIDouth (460), Fairland, Wellston, Unioto and River
Valley {no team scores).
Here are the local runne111, listed
in order of finish .
5-Eddie Nebus (G), 17:27; 13Bo Davison (G), 17:56; 18' losue
Davison (G), 18:34; 21-Aaron Sal-.
isbury (G), 18:42; 48-Colhn Rousli
(M), 19:43; 49-Adarn White (M),
19:44; 57-Chris Vernon (G), 19:58;
58-Jake Davis {M), 19:58; 62-T.J .
Davis {M), 20:05; 64-Kevin Walker (G), 20:06; 75-Tim Peavley {M),
20:33: 85-Mikc Fisco (G), 21:20;
103-Charlie Curnutte (R), 22:21;
112-Ian Smith {R), 23: 14; I 14Cbris Chapman (M), 23:15; 129Monty Hunter {M), 29: 17.

Central Michigan at East Carolina,
UNL V at Eastern Michigan, and
Miami of Ohio at Northwestern.
Last week's 14-6 victory over
Illinois State was anything but a
show of sucngth for Ohio. It came
against an NCAA 1-AA opi&gt;onent,
at OU' s Peden Stadium.
"We're a long way !rom where
we want to be," lirobe said.
On the other hand. they may be
a long way from last year's 0-11
disaster. The next game will tell a
lot.
For a ftrst-year head coach and a

Varsity girls' race
llehind top-20 finishes by win·
ner Erin Neb us, Becky Knight,
Theresa Davison, Jencie Haner and
Sara Walker, Gallia Academy outpaced Southeaslern Ohio Athletic
League rival Warren Local 42-56
to collect its third team victory or
the day.
Behind them were Logan (75),
Russell (Ky.) (82), Miami Trace
(Ill), Jackson (165), West Union
By beating Eastern in two games,
(188), Piketon (202). !ramon. Latham Western, Portsmouth Notre
Dame, River Valley, Porlsmouth,
Unioto, Wellston. Chillicothe
Huntington, Frankfort Adena,
By. SCOTT WOLFE
fallered to 10-5 befo(e Southern
broke it open to win 15-6.
South Webster, Belpre, Meigs,
Southern looked a~ though they
Zane Trace, Chesapeake and South · Sentinel Correspondent
The
Southern
Tornadoes
kept
would
run away from the night cap,
Point {no team scores).
their
perfect
mark
intact
by
defeat.
taking
a
4_o lead on Sisson serves.
As the fastest runner of the 91
ing
the
Eastern
Eagles
in
two
sets
Eastern
{4-3 overall) came back
·running the 5,000-meter course,
15-6
and
15-12.
J .
Nehus, a freshman, was 58 seconds
Southern (6-0 overall &amp; 5-0 in . to tie it at 4-4 on serves by ess1ca
ahead of Jackson's Kasey Hoover,
·
Brannon, then after an S HS time
the Tri-Valley Conference's Hoek- . went ahead 6-4. A couple Proffit
who took second place, and I:05
ing Division) was led by lenni serves made it 7-6, then after a
ahead of Knight and Logan's
Cummins'
10 service points {one missed volley by both clubs, Cum.Colleen Ward, who edged out
ace
included)
and was 11-17 · mins had a good dink to preserve a
Knight for third.
Sammi
Sisson
had
live and one ace Sisson score which made it 8-6.
Here are the local runners, listed
going
9-9,
and
Kcri
Caldwell had
Scveml good volleys highlightin order of finish.
five and one ace while going 8-8.
!-Erin Nehus (G), 20:13; 4- Tassi Cummins was 5-6 with an cd this portion of t.he game. Another good Cwnmins dink gave SHS a
Becky Knight (g), 21: 18; 8-'lllere~
Davison {G), 22:08; 15-Jencte ace.Jenni Cummins was 11-14 spik- 9-6 lead, then Brannon got the volHaner (G), 22:57: t8-Sara Walker ing with three kills, and llrianne ley for Ea&lt;tern, but ncued the serve
and Southern again took over,
(G), 23:13: 30-Liza Holeski (G),
Proffitt was 6-13 with six kills as
24:03; 33-Jessica Roberts (R), both had great frontline play. Sam- adding a single point for a 10-6
24·25; 47-Rachele LaBello (G),
mie Sisson paced the Southern -set- tally.
Michelle Caldwell had a nice
25;35: 60-Susan Facemire (G),
ting game with a 21-for-21 night, dink that recovered the serve for
27:30; 69-Jessica Johnson (M),
while Bea Lisle was 9-10. lonna
28:48: 73-Carrie Holeski (G), Manuel and Jennifer Lawrence Eastern, allowing Rebecca Evans
to reel off five straight poinls (1129:22.
each bad two kills each.
,
JV hoys' race
In the first gmne, played before 10) with Jess Karr making a great
In a race won by Russell's Dane a noisy, cheering crowd, Eastern save. Southern· called time. Both
dropped to 6-4 in a close game, the· clubs lost a serve then Martie

son opener.
Kent has taken the opposite tack
from the Bobcats. Kent opene) ·
with an impressive 17-14 victory
over a 1-AA opponent - dcfendi~g
national champion Youngstown
State. The Flashes followed with a
dismal 39-0 loss at home to Mianii
last Saturday. ·
" I don't really know wbiltto
expect when they come in," Grobe
said of the Hashes. "They played
great against Youngstown and t.hen
seemingly didn't play as gooil
against Miami .''

Grobe said his te:un still hasn'-t
welcome. Even if it di&lt;ln't stamp · come around to a new option attack
the Bobcats as contenders, it ye~ despite the win. He said it was
nonetheles.&lt; got the attention of the "like pulling teeth" to get the
playe111 and fans.
players to believe in the switch
"I thought we might have a from a dropback-style pro attack to
chance," Grobe said. "We're play- the run-oriented option.
.
ing so many young kids, you just · The Bobcals have been led bY.
never know from one week to the quarterback Kareem Wilson, a
next what those guys arc going to sleight-of-hand artist who has led ·
do. I knew we had a pretty tough the running attack with 126 yards.a .
team mentally and I knew we were game. He has attempted only 18 .
in good physical condition. I knew passes (completing seven) in two ·
we could beat people. The thing I grunes.
worried the most about wa&lt; confiAkron tailback Asuon Whatley
dence.''
is averaging 98 yards a game on
OU was in the game at Iowa the ground.
·
State in the fourth quarter, but
In the latest MAC action Thurs·faded fast as the Cyclones pulled day night, Toledo beat Western
away to a 36-21 victory in the sea- Michigan 31·21.
bunch of new faces , any win is

Southern varsity spikers remain undefeated
Holler put EllS up 12-10.
The next serve was out of
hounds ami Southern took over for
a victory parade, despite a time out
by Eastern with the score 13-12.
Tassi Cummins went on to complete a suing of five straight for the
win, 15-12.
Eastern s~1tistics showed Rebecca Evans with eight points on an 810 outing and two aces, whi.lc
Brannon had live points, going lOll with three aces. Patsy Acikcr
had t)"O, Mindy Sampson one, and
Martie Holter two. Caldwell was 8'
16 selling with two kills and five

DAN'S
Ladies Summer Wear,
Coordinates, Tops, Some
Shorts ect. ..

S0°A»'off

Meigs golfers still ieading TVC after seven matches
llradford added a 41, Kevin Fields
By DAVE HARRIS
a
45, Chris Ball a 46 and Jason
Sentinel Correspondent
Lawrence
a 50.
Meigs continues to hold the lead
after seven matches in the TVC~ · Meigs scores included Ste~e
golf race. The Marauders are going McCullough's 40, Jared Warners
for their sixth straight TVC cham- 41, Clay Craw's 41, Gary Acree's
pionship and hold a four-point 43 Miele Barr's 44 and Dave
advantage over second place Ande111on's 46.
For Eastern, Matt King led the ·
Southern.
way
with a 48: Behind him were
Meigs owns a 76-40 record .
t.eammates Robert Harris (50).
overall and 55-5 in the TVC.
On Monday evening Southern Ryan Hawley (54), Radley Faulk
won the tournament at Fairgrecns {56) and Andy Reed {58).
Belpre's Kent Garrett was
witl1 a team score of 162. llelpre
match
medalist with an even par
was second with a .165, and Meigs
36
.
.
·
caine in third with a 166, and Wellston came 167. Trimble finished
On Wednesday at the Meigs
fifth with a 172, folldwed by FedGolf
Course, Trimble won d1c TVC
eral Hocking (183). Alexander
match
with a three stroke victory
(184), Nclsonvi!lc-York (186), ·
over
Meigs.
Vinton County (187), Eastern (208)
Trimble posted a team score of
and Miller (211).
146,
followed by Meigs (149).
Jason Shuler and Ryan Norris
Wellston
{150), Belpre (152).
led Southern each with a 38, Matt
I

Southern {154), Alexander (158).
Federal Hocking (178), Vinton
County (185), Eastern and Nelsonville-York (192) and Miller
(198). Eastern won the tie breaker
with Nelsonville-York to take ninth
in the tournament.
Crow led Meigs with a 36, followed by llarr's 37, 38s by Anderson, Acree and Warner as well as
McCullough 's 4 I.
For Southern. Shuler and Norris
paced the Tornadoes with 37's.
Other Tornadoes included llradford
(38), Fields (42), Travis Lisle (43)
and Sail {44) .
·
Eastern scores include King's
44, Andy Reed's 46, Sis by Hawley _and Faulk, Harris' 52 and
Aaron Will's 53.
TVC standings
(after six matches)
I. Meigs-55

dinks and a block. lloltcr was 7-10
setting with one dink, while Bran•
non and. Karr had two kills. llran-non had two blocks and Evans
three.
Sout.hcm won· the reserve match
15-9, 15-D. Kim Sayre, who drilled
all 15 points in the second game,
ended the night with 19. Jayme .
Miller had five, Cynthia Caldwell .
had four, and Ranetta Wheeler and '
Jenny Friend each had one.
For Eastern. Jess llrannon had
five, and Juli Hayman had two,
while Stephanie Evans and Valerie .
Karr had.one each.

2. Southern-51
3. Belpre-48
4. Wellston-40
5. Trimble-38
6. Alexander-29
7. Fedcr.U Hocking-24
8. Vinton County-17
9. Nelsonville-York-16
10. Eastcrn-7
II. Miller-4

290

Middleport

North Second
992·3684

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Fisher .among K-C Raceway winners

MOnday'• game

Amerlc~~n

In the Mid-American Conference,

•-·

IDdianapolU 11 Bufflllo. t p.m.
OaklaiKI al KaD~a~ City, I p.m.

Football.
Jill

Crow's on top of things.
Hoeflich's 'round the bend.
Sands' in the past.
Freeman's out in the woods.

snapped at five.
Sparks {8-9) allowed five hits
and four walks in 7 1/3 innings.
Mike Fetters pitched the ninth for
his 22nd save. Sean Bergman {7·9)
was the loser.

Sunday's games

Hiau,

Telt81 at Detroit, I : 15 p.m.

blown saves in 35 chances this
year, walked pinch-hitter David
Howard and Keith Lockhart to
begin the ninth. It was the f!Tst time
Eckersley walked consecutive bat· .
ters this season.
Both runners advanced on Greg
Gagne's long fly to center and
scored on Tucker's shot over right
fielder Jose Herrera.
Jim Converse 0·3) got four ouls
for the Royals. Jeff Montgomery
pitched the ninth fllt' hjs 29th save.
Brewers 6, Tigers 3
Rookie Steve Sparks struck out
a season-high 10 and John Jaha and
Fernando Vina. homered as Mil,
waukee defeated Detroit for the
Brewers' flrst win in six games at
Tiger Stadium this season.
The Brewers. 5 1/2 games out of
the wi)d-card lead. have won just
three of their last 16 games.
Chris Gomez homered for the
Tigers, who had their victory string

San Diego at Philadelphia. I p.m.

.. L.ANo (Ciart 1·6), 1:05 p.m.
• (M~rjwrt l-2),1;35 p.m ..

22 games and recorded 90 victories
in a season for the fust time since
tbey won 93 in 1955. They can
become just the ninth team to play
.700 ball lor a season by winning
II of tl1eir remaining 15 games.
The Red Sox, whose magic
number remained at six for clinching the AL East over New York,
lost for the sixth time in seven
·games. The Red Sox are 1-7 at
Jacobs Field since the park opened
last year.
Hershiser (14-6) continued a
strong second half that has seen
him go 9-2 in 12 starts since the
All-Star break.
Royals 5, Athletics 4
Michael Tucker's two-run double off closer Dennis ECkersley in
the ninth lifted Kansas City to victory at Oakland. The Royals
remained fourth in the wild-card
race, two games behind the leaders.
Eckersley {4:5), w~o bas seven

Best Wish·es To All Our
~eigs County
Fall Sports Program$

Sunday's games

Thursday's scores

.

eighth time in 10 games. The Yankees broke a 2-2 tie with two runs
in the fourth against rookie Rick
Krivda (2-5).
The Texas Rangers, meanwhile,
pulled within one game of the wild-.
card leaders with a 6-1 victory over
Toronto.
Elsewhere in the AL. it was
Cleveland 5, Boston 3: Kansas City
5, Oakland 4; and Milwaukee 6.
Detroit3.
Rangers 6, Blue Jays 1
In Toronto, Bobby Witt pitched
seven-bit ball and struck out 12 in
·eight-plus innings for Texas.
It was the fifth straight victory
for the Rangers. while the Blue
Jays lost their·sixth in a row.
Witt {3-2), who struck out 12 in
July as a member of the Florida
Marlins, set a Rangers season-high
with his strikeout total. Witt, who
didn't walk a batter, left after giving up the Blue Jays' seventh hit
starting the ninth. Dennis Cook finished up.
Juan Guzman 0·13) was the
loser.
Indians S, Red Sox 3
Ore! Hershiser won for the sev. entb time in eight decisions and
Manny Ramirez reached 100' RB!s
as Cleveland beat struggling
Boston.
·
The Indians, who rested several
regulars, woo for the 18th time in

The Daily Sentinel • Page S

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, September 15, 1995

• MEtG·S MARAUDERS
• EASTERN EAGLES
•SOUTHERN TORNADOES

Rely On Us For
~omplete
Coverage
Of
.
Your Favorite Sport and Team
.

THE DAILY SENTINEL

'
Seasonal points leaders Charlie
Fisher and Mark Frazier won the
sprint and Late Model portions of
the S-eason championships at K-C
Race way in their respective divi- ·
sions.
In the sprints, Fisher had to
chase down early leaders Chad
Kemenab and Nick Naber.
Naber jumped out to an early
lead. but jumped the cushion and
banged the wall, losing the lead to
Kenemah, who led until the lith
circuit when Fisher got the jump on
a caution. Kemenah was on hts
way to lapping the field when the
caution slowed the pack and h1s
tires did not recover once they had
cooled.
Fisher took over and charged to
a big win over Kemenah and
Jimmy Stinson. Jtm N1er, Rob
Chaney, Dave Dickson, James
Fisher, Sarah Fisher, AI Roepke
and Bill Knisely rounded out the
top 10.
. .
Gary Rife, a local connection, ts
the COL licensed truck dnver for
the Fisher rig. which hauls both
Charlie and James' sprinters and
many extra pans. He is the brother
of Joan Wolfe of Racine.
The Fishers are an uncle and
cousin, respectively._to Sarah Fis~·
cr, whose feature wtll conclude m
the Sunday-Times Sentinel.
In the late model division, the
early portion wa&lt; close and Light,
but Mark Frazier blew away the
competition in the finale.
At the drop of the green, Skip
Watennan took the lead and led the
first 14 laps. On lap five, Mark Frazier moved into secon.d, where he
and Racine driver Scott Wolfe in
the McDonald's! Mason Furniture/
Eber's Citgo #14 pulled into third.
After several cautions, that trio .an

side-by-side. sometimes goin,g.
three
abreast.
Wolfe s
McDonald's/Precision Automotive
#l 4 moved into second behind Frazier when Watterman's leading
mount blew an engine.
On the 21st lap, Dean Osborne
came off the tail to pass Wolfe for
second, then on the final lap, Clark
Van Houten won a drag race with

Wolfe down U1e front chute dropping Wolfe to U1ird.
.
Charlie Fannm ·followed wtth
.Ken Compton, Rob LeMastern,
W'll'
ll' h
C .;g Gt'bsotl and
1 1e mg am, r~
D'tc kG runm
·
re
we 1·n tow .
Heat winners were Craig Leist,
Frazier and Jeff Houwer in beat
one and Ken Compton, Skip
Watennan and Wolfe in heat two.

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�Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-

Friday, September 15, 1995

Friday, September 15, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Women shouldn't have to play to audience during birth
Support These
Fine Area
Businesses!

Football '95
Catch All The
Excitement!

Dear Ann Landers: I want to add
my two cents' wonh to the subject of
"birthing as perfonnance an." That
reader from Louisiana took you to
task for saying the woman in labor
and no one else should l!ecide who is
allowed in the delivery room. The
idiot thought it was terrible th~t a
woman would want her mother
present and exclude her mother-inlaw.
When, exactly, did women lose
their right to privacy ? The Supreme

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13

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Wearero Ken tuCl!.~
W•lhom &amp; Mary

·Yale
• YOlln~ stown Slate

992·3322
NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Wheel Horse
TRACTORS and
RIDING MOWERS.

Baum
Lumber
CHESTER OHIO
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Chester, Ohio

•

Kent ~y

' Iowa State
Te11111!1 Chnst1an

Southwestern LOUuirana
'Boston Co lleg e
'LOUISVIN6
,
Ball State
'Bay-tor
Arizona State
'San J ose Sta te
M ia mi (Ohio l
Vanderbilt
Ke nt
Wash 1ngtoo
Soutnern MethOdiSt
Southwest MiSSOUrt State
'U .C .l A.
"North Texas
Temple
Tulane

Na'Y
l OUISIIII'\8 Tech
Hou ston
"Utah State
Prn sburgh
Tulsa
MISSOUri
"New MBIIICO

Paso

Georgia Tech
Cincmnati
"Maryland
Toledo
"StantOOl
Hawa11

Alatllma Stall
'Nortn Cal Oil!'! I --.&amp;T
Sam Hou110o Sr ala

··~

' Forof'llm
Monllna Stare
' RIChmono
lll'!lljlr'l
'Ha!Yir d
Central Connectc ut Stale
Ma r yv~lt fTtnn)
\l iiii-I\O'o"l
'\l rrgrn~ lolr~lll'y

Tannan•·Marun •
Cal Slate Sa cr~m~o
JactSO'l Sliila
Wollard
GramOlrng
1

33

27

39

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BuNIIo U.
Glen1111t Still
'Alabllfii•BI•mir9Jim
Morgan Stala
O.Ot~l Solllliarn
HOlY ten
"Jam11 MICSIIOn
• Moleh&amp;ad Stala
FlhoOt 1$11nd
Ab1ieont Chnll,.n
Della Stall
Oawn cultl
Cornell
TttnneiiM Tid\
Cl1ar' "lon Soulhtln
• MYnav State
Prarr•V-A&amp;M
=
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nt-Coolr.man
' Southwtlll T..aa Stat•
' 01'1'101"1
'N.c;~HI Stall
St. Ma1y·s (Cald )

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Artzona

"Te~~:a s- Et

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14

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• Sourh Carollftl Star•
56
Sourlel$11 Mlstour• State
'SiJoJiharn-Balon Rouge
'Srepnan F Aushn
· Tenn'!ss-Challa!l(l()QII
28
Ta11al A&amp;M·KIIIgSVIIIe ( Ttturs I 23
Towr1o011
20
T1~1a 1e

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New Mex1co State

Iowa

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San Otego State
'Wake Forest

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12
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Ak ron

30
30

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36
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19

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• Sprnghakl
• S uaquehilnna
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• WI$/W\01on &amp; JeltilriiDI'I

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' CtnUIII Olol.lhoma
• Conecrclla (Neb.)

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Norhrn Mlctl9at1
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Nortnweuern !10'11111
• P•nsburll State
• Sagrnaw IJaley Stilt
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' SouiPiwtalem tKan.)
' St. Cloud Star.
Wl'lllton
W~llft· SieYef\1 Point
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• Aban~ Stale (Ga .)
Cat&amp;an·Nawman
Calholoc
Central Ar~ansu
Cllll'ion

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'Norrnwooa
SO!f th,..sr Bapt•51
• Mllll\liiClta·Moms
Central MIIIOUI'I Stare
WIJ yntJ Slillll IMICh 1
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Cumberland (Tellfl
• HertOIIISon Stall!
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Southem Oregon
• W.atern N- MeXrco
'Y'leatern WIJs/1111Q1on

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' WII'Ioa,le
' MOIIII Brown
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f:lllltle1h C tl~ Slata

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HEATING AND COOLING

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NOf1oll! Stttl
• Cata¥oba

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HOWBIO Payne
'Wes11Jug1n•a Weste~an
We st Alabama

Monday~

Far West
Whl~llill

• Chapman
Mila Stall
Humboldl State

• PomMa · P~ter
N'ew Me•ICO Hrgl'lla n!IS
WhrtwOrlM
'R&amp;diii'IOS

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Edinboro
• Puget So ~d
Ad ams Sial&amp;
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Betieve me, I've been there. ·
Hen: is some advice for that man
in Louisiana (I'm assuming it was a
man because no woman would write
such nonsense): Geta vasectom)\and
invite )I.Our mother-in -law (and
maybe two or three of her friends) to
drop by for the show. -- FURIOUS
IN PROVIDENCE, R.I.
DEAR PROV.: Wonderful
suggestion. I second the motion. All
in favor say "ay~."
.
Dear Ann Landers: Please help
dispel the myth that people always
~come jaundiced when they get
hepatitis. Most people are shocked to
learn from a doctor or blood bank that
they have or had hepatitis B or C
because they don 't recall being sick
or turning yellow. Hepatitis can lead
to cirrhosis and cancer of the livet

Fony percent of the people diagnosed
with these viral infections have no
history of exposure and don't know
how they acquired lhem.
Hepatitis 8 and C can be spread
by sharing razors, toothbrushes, nail
files and needles used by an infected
person . Hepatitis 8 is frequently
transmitted lhrough various sex acts
and is 100 times easier to catch than
AIDS .
You can't tell by looking at people
that they are infected, Many infected
people don't even know themselves.
Unfortunately, the liver is a non complaining organ and doesn't give
any warning that it is in trouble until
the damage is far advanced.
We need your help 10 stop the
spread of these two treacherous
diseases. Hepatitis tests are not

included in a routine blood test and
must be specifically requested. Safe
and effective vacc mes for hepatitis 8
can provi de protec tion fro m,
unexpected exposure for 10 years or
more. Newborn s , infants and
especially adolescents should be
vaccinated according 10 recommenda(ions by the Centers for Disease
Control.
Please tell your readers that they
can get more infonnation by sending
a self-addressed, stamped envelope
to the Hepatitis Foundation
International , P.O. Box 222, Cedar
Grove. N.J. 07009-1423.Thank you.
THELMA K1NG THI EL,
CHAIRMAN AND CEO, HEPA TlTIS FOUND!Xf10N INTERNATIONAL

DEAR THELMA KING 111IEL:.
Thank s for your informed inpul.
What you have written is sure to save
some lives.
Gem of the Day : Sign in .a
wallpaper and paint shop: "Husban4s
choosing colors must have a note
from their wives."
An alcohol problem? How can you
htlp yourself or someone you lov~?
"Alcoholism: How to Recognize It,
How to Deal With It, How to Conquer
It" will give you the answers. Stnd a
self-addressed, long , businus-size
enYtlope and a chtck or money ord8r
for $3.75 (thi.&lt;includes postage and
handling) to : Alcohol, c/o All'n
IAI!ders. P.O. Box Jl562, Chicago,
l/1. 606JJ -0562. (In Canada, und

$4.55.)

Business clinic slated

and opportunity to render service.
· Rotary is an international organization with programs to develop
peace and health throughout the
world. Rotarians are able to make
up attendance at any club throughout the area or world .
The largest example of Rotary
programs is the polio immunization
program with the goal of a poliofree world by the year 2005.
Hayes said Rotary gives members the opportunity for personal
growth and development and to
build social confidence and
improved comm~nications skills.
Of course, Rotary is fun, be
added.
Rotary membership is based on
a cL1ssification system, but ibis system has a wide range of classification, he said. Nonnally, two businesses which are highly competitive arc not invited to membership,
but additional membership is available on the consent of the first
member.

The Women 's Business ,
Resource Program of Southeast
Ohio, in conjunction with the
Meigs County Economic Development Office, announce s a three session business plan writing clink.
The clinic is de signed to offer budding entrepreneurs the instruclion,
allcntion and advice needed m pul
together a successful business pi:Ul.
The first session is "hands on"
and will help those aucnding pull
their ideas and goals together into a
plan they will actually begin to
write:
The second session provides
participants wilh lhc personal anention that will help them to pert'ect. ·
revise, and discuss their plmf. Participants will even have the opportunity to have their plan reviewed
by bankers and other financiers at

ROTARIAN - Kristl Eblin, assistant director of the
Meigs County Public Library, was welcomed as a new Rotarian at
Monday's Rotary meeting. Club president Lloyd Blackwood, left,
welcomes Eblin aboard while Chuck Blakeslee look.&lt; on. ·
Gene Riggs, who is chainnan of
the Rt&gt;t.'lfy Foundation commiuee,
and who recently auended a district
meeting on this subject, promised a
full report at a future date.
Kristi Eblin, assistant director of
the Mc.igs County Public Library,
was introduced as a new member
by senior active member Charles

Blakeslee . S)le comes from lhe
Samuel Bossard Memorial Library
in Gallipolis.

The Meigs County Division of . "We arc expecting a great
the American Heart Association turnout," commented Debbie Hapreminds everyone of the Healthy tonstall, event chainnan, "Over 30
Choice American Heart Walk
teams have registered so far and
scheduled .for Saturday, September numerous people are walking on an
23 beginning at I p.m. ai the
individual basis."
The walk route is 1.25 miles and
Krogers parking lot and proceeding
walkers are urged to go according
on a marked route through
Pomeroy.
to their own ability and not a pre-

Those having anniversaries and

For more infonnation or to register, contact the Meigs County
Economic Development Office at
(614)992-5005.
1 ltrl};

11 d it/111!1 1111 w"rfd wr lh

Jl'"'i•·•'"""''""''' uml 1/1/t'}Vil\ .

Cuckler Consulti Inc.·
REAL ESTATE
APPRAISAL
4 299 ~ S r.

124 Pomeroy, Oh 45769
Phone : 614 ·992· 4216

)

r

·-----··II
•·

·I LOSE ~~

10 LIS.
IN 3 DAYS

Ame~can H~artAssodatio~.

Thts year s event ts betng held
in memory of Robert Tcwksbary
and tn honor of Carolyn Korn.
For more infonnation about the
walk or to receive materials for
registration call Haplonstall at 9926078.

I
I FRUTHPHAWCY I

..... ., .._..

-----·- -·-..........__ ..
ej

C't:RTI ~I(',._ l"f, (If" I."UMPIJANI "1:

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Middleport

I

Business

1-B00-861 -9392

The classes will run from 6 to 9
p.m. m1d will be held Sept. 26, Oct.
3, and Oct. 24. The first session
witt be held at the Chamber of
Commerce Office, 238 W. Main

birthdays during September were
recognized by the club. Ladies ol
the Heath United MeUiOt.lisl Church
served the dinner.

detennined distance. A water station sponsored by The Peoples
Banking and Trust Company will
be set up at the registration area for
people to get.a drink after the walk
or in between laps.
Funds raised from the walk suppan education and research of the

St. ; UlC oU1cr two sessions will be
held at the Meigs Cu. Library, 216
W. Main St . The cost for the clinic
is $30 and registmlion is r¢quired
by Sept. 19.

tJ1c final session.

Healthy Choice American Heart Walk set for Sept. 23

. '

6

~"'"="'"'-·=

--· ~ G· ::::.:::::

RAWUNGS-&lt;OATS

,/
Fisher Funeral Home

,g

18
26
20
20

Bruce Fisher · Director
MIDDLEPORT

""
,,
"'

""
•
"",.
10
"'
"

James R. Acree Jr. Director
992-5141

THE NEW GOLD STANDARD IN
CHICKEN TASTE

(row's Family Restaurant
228 WEST MAIN
992-5432

Sept. 17-18

**BUFFAL0 ............. 28
INDIANAPOLIS .. 21
In 1994 the colts finish ed ahead of the Bills in theAFC East for the first time since '87. and beat them twice-27-17 and 10-9-- for the first lime since ' 80. We still like Buffalo at home.
CHICAG0 ................ 20
**TAMPABAY ..... I6
Erik Kramer led the Bears to one '94 win over the Buccanners in Chicago, 21 -9·. then Steve Walsh took over in
Tampa Bay as Chicago won 20-6. With one QB or the other, the Bears should win.
CLEVELAND .:........ 30
**HOUSTON ........ 13
The Browns didn 't need much offense to' edge the Oilers li -8 in their first match up last year, and got more than
they needed in a 34-10 second win. Houston needs Steve McNair to learn fast.
DALLAS ................... 26
°*MINNESOTA.... 23
A potentia l great game; The Cowboys live by the run, which the Vikings defend best again st. Minnesoto loves
to pass-- Dallas's defensive strength. The Cowboys beat the Vikings in '93, 37-20.
•• DENVER ........ ,.....31
WASHINGTON .... 27
Speaking of strong defense , neither I he Broncos nor the Redskins have ne, so this may be an aerial circus. In
'n , the last time they'played, Washington won 34-3.,This one will be closer.
**OETROIT............. 21
ARJZONA ............. lS
The Lmns Won two from the Cardinals in '93 to increase their lead in this series to 27-16-5. The only offensive
punch is Detroit's running game, but the Arizona D should keep a lid on it.
** GREEN BAY ....... 27
N.Y. GIANTS ........ 22
Despite a lack of tal en led receivers for Packer QB Brett Favre to throw to, Green Bay should ·outlast the injured,
Overworked Giants. The Packers have lost their last three games against N.Y.
**NEW ORLEANS .. 29
ATLANTA ............. 21
In ' 94, for the first time in eight years, the Saints finished with as poor a record as the Falcons, though they beat
them twice along lhe way, 33-32 and 29-20. Don ' llook for defense here.
•• N.Y. JETS ............ 24
.JACKSONVILLE 12
After lwo early but big AFC East baltles with Miami and Indianapolis, the Jets venture outs ide .the division for
the game they 've been looking forward to--and clearly can 't afford to lose.
OAKLAND ............... 28
•• KANSAS CITY24
The Chiefs shut the Raiders 'down in their first ' 94 meeting, 13-3, then kep·t I hem oul of the post-season with a
second win, 19-6. But Oakland should end ils losing streak to K. C. al four.
ST. LOUIS ................ 19
**CAROLINA ..... I?
This could--could--be an interesting match up, between teams thai will likely fight for last in the NFC West bul
may show s'igns of future life. Can new coach Rich Brooks make the Rams work?
SAN DIEG0 ............ 32
•• PHILADELPHIA. 26
The Chargers·' off~nse is solid, but if Randall Cunningham gets comfortable in the Eagles' new short-drop,
quick-read offense, they 'll stay very close. These two teams haven't met since '89.
**SAN FRANCISCO 31
NEW ENGLAND.24
Winners of six of the seven games they've played against the Patriots, the 49ers look less than super in only one
category, pass defense, and New England's Drew Bledsoe should air it out.
•• SEATILE .........-.. 17
CINCINNATI........ 13
Ten weeks into the '94 season, the hapless Bengals finally won a game--in Seattle, 20-17, on Doug Pelfrey 's
field goal eight minutes into OT. The Seahawks probably haven't.forgotten it.
(Monday)
** MIAMI.. .............. 28
PIITSBURGH ...... 25
We may be getting ahead of ourselves, but here's one possible AFC Championship matchup. In a drama lie game
last November, Mike Tomczak
led the Steelers to a t 6-13 OT win over the Dolphins.
I

1

Pomeroy, Ohio

2Q

I

26

We have the Serta
you want In the size
you need at a price
you'llllke.

992-3671

9

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ANDERSON'S

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THE HARMON NF~ FORECAST
Sunday and

5

j,11

20

• Elmi'! UJSI

Randy Hayes, chairman of the
Rotary conuniuee on membership
development, addressed members
of the Middlepon-Pomeroy Rotary
Club at their meeting Monday
night.
·One of the goals for both International Rotary and Disuict 6690
for the coming year is to increase
membership by six pereem, he
said.
District 6690, which covers
roughly the western and southern .
three-fourths of the stale, was second in the zone in the increase in
membership with a 5.12 percent
increase. Total membership of
clubs existing in 1991 is now 3,695
which is also second in the zone.
One of the reasons for lack of
·increased membership is that
prospective members do not understand the benefits of Ro~'lfy membership, Hayes said. Some of the
benefits, according to Hayes. are
community education through
speakers, fellowship and friendship

··rllori,UU•
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20

Kong 1 (Pt. I
nnaca

JO

22

·w~Salem

19

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'Mui'I'-"DIIIQ
• Fr am.,~hilm Stal it
• Rocl'le!t&amp;r
Wtstarn M&amp;r'flana
N- Ha....
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Other Gamu- Soulh &amp; Southwest

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Wntern Conn ec::IO(; UI Slate

Other Games - Midwest

7

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Coun has ruled that a woman's body
IS her own and the constitutional
right 10 privacy applies to reproductive issues. So why is it that a
woman's body becomes community
propeny as soon as she becomes
pregnant?
You were right on target, An~.
Except for the mother-to-be, it is
nobody's business who is allowed in
the delivery room. That decision
should be based on the value she
places on her privacy and her ability
10 deal with the stress of the process,
which can be considerable. Every
person in lhe delivery room should
be there for one reason only •· 10
suppon tile person who is coping with
lhe most difficult job in the room.
Giving binh is tough enough without
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Rotarians discuss
membership goals

221 W. Second, Pomeroy, Ohio
992-2136

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Sunday: Noon - 6 pm

•

�Friday, September 15, 1995
Friday, September 15,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9
40

Three Barred Rack Anc:l Thr e e
Wh ite Roc: k YtHi f1 g Ro o s ter s ,
614 -256- 1399 .

Church Directory
Church of Christ
Po m~ruy C hurch or Christ
Apostolic
C hurch ur Jt.'SUS Chri st Ap(lsl olic
Van/..arnh and Ward Rd .
Pastor : James Mtlle r

Sunday School -. 10:30 a.m
Evening · 1 :30 p.m.
Wednesday Servi ces ~ 7;30 p.m.

Assembly ol God
Lib(!fty Assembl y of God
P.O . B o.1. 467, D uddmg Lane

Mason, W .Va

Pas !Or. Ne Ll T cnnant
Sunda y Sc rva ccs- 10:00 a.m. ill1 d 7 p.m
• Thur sday Praye r M ccllrlg · 7 p .m.

Baptist

Holiness

5th and YLm1
PastOr Al ll art sun
y ,)U\h \t1 uu~ t c r lhll Fu1.1Cr
Sund.ty School · 1)30 lim
Wo rsh1p· 8: 15. 10 )U a m , 7 p m .
Wednes day So,:rVJccs 7 p.m.

Su nday schoo l · 9 45 a m

Wo rshi p - I I a.m . and 7 p.m
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m .

ll e~f\\:IU o"' H. hiL:l' ( 'hun h ut' ( ' hr i~t

Free Will U:apllst C hu rt'h

Jllo,J , Cv lcgruvc
Sun day S...:ho..J I (J 10 a m
Wur ~ tup - 10.30 d m, 6 30 p m
Wc.dncsll d)' S1:rvKc• (dO p m

Ash Street , Middleport

Pa stor: Les Hayman
Saturday Scrv tcc - 7:30 p.m .

D :t~ n l-·illc Holin ess C hurch
3 1057 State Route 325, Langsv Ue
Pa stor: Rev . Rick Mal oyed
Sun day schoo l - 9:30 a.m .
Sunda y wursh1p 10 35 am . &amp; 7 p m
Child ren's chu rch 10 ~ 35 a.m . Yuuth 6 p.m .
Wednesday pra ye r sc rv 1ce - 7 p.m .

Worshtp 10:45 a.m
(»om t•r ily F ir st llapl h•l
Pastor: Pau l S11ns6n
Eas t M at n St
Sunday Schuo l · 9:)0 am .
Wo rshi p - 1'0:30 a. m.

Tuppers Pla in C hurch of C hri !l1'
Pa stor · Stanl ey iv1incks
Surllh y School - 9 u m.
Wt lriih ip ') 45 am
W&lt;!dni;\d,ly 7 p.m

Rutla nd 1-i r sl Ha pl b t C hu rc h
Sunda y School - 9:JO a m

F irst So ulhl'l" n Jl;~ p ti si
4 1872 Pomeroy l'1kc
Pastor: E. Lamar ll ryant
Su nday School - 9:30a .m .
Wu rshtp · 10 :45 a.rn ., 7:00 p,m .
W ednesday Scrvu;;cs · 7;00 p m.

o·

t"ir stllaptis l C hurch
6th and f, ~ ls n c r S t.• ~1dd l epo n
Sunday S~.: h ool 9· 15 a.m .
Worsh1p - IU.I 5 a.m., 7:CXl p .m
A.B.Y.· 5.30 p.m.
Lo rd's Supper I st Su r~ day every mu nth
Wnlnes llay Sc n.·1cc - 7.00 p.m .

ur

Radnc FirSt Bap list
!,astor. Kcv . Lany llaley
Youth Pa s1o r: Aaroo Y0t,1ng
Sunday School · 9;30 a.m .
Wonh1p - 10:40 a.m ., 7:00p.m .
W [;dncs1iay Ser.'iccs · 7{l0 p .m
Sil ve r R un lbpt is l
r as tor: Bill LinJc
S unday Sc hoo l · lOa ni
Wo rsh.Jp · l l a.m ,7J0p.in .
Wed ncs d&lt;~y Scf\'I CC§ · 7 10 r m
VII . l_. ni un lhl JII i-&gt;1

l'a,.tor Joe N Sayre
Sunda y ~ c h Ot ll -9 : 4 ~ a.m
Evcmng - 6 30 p.m
WcJncsdH y Serv i(;CS · 6.30p'. m .
IJcthl ehe m lbpti st
Racine , 0 !1
Pastor : Da niel Be rdine
·d~~~~-~ip - 9 :30a.m . Sund ay
B i b ~ )' · 7:00 p.m. Wednesda y

Old IJ eth cl Fr~ Will Gaptl st C hurch
2H&amp;Cl l St. RL 7, Middlcron.
Sunday S chool - 10 a.m .
Evcmn g - 7 :30 p.rn
Th u rs d &lt;~y Scrv tces - 7 ~ 3 0
Hillside Rapti s t C hurc h
SL l{t 143 JU St ofr KL 7
] 1asto r: Rev . James R. . Acree. Sr
Sunday School - 10 a.m .
Worship · ll a.m .,6p.m .
Wednesday Service s -? p.m .
Victory Raplistlndepcnd a nf.
525 N. 2nd St . Middleport
Pas to r: James. E Keesee
Worship - IOiLm, 1 p.m .
Wednesday Se rvices - 7 p .m
Faith llaplist Church
l{ allroa.d St. , Mason
Sun day Schoo l · 10 a.m .
Wors hip · II a.m., 6 m .
Wedncsda)' Scrv1ccs - p .m .

r;

Forest Run Hapti.d
Pa stor : Anus llurt
Sund ay Si:huul · 10 a.m .
Worship - II a.m .
Mt Moriah U;~ptist
r ourth &amp; Mai n St., Middl c pon
l1asto r· Rt:v. Gdlx:n Craig, Jr .
StH)II ay School - 9:30a .m .
· \Y,mship - 10 :45 lUll .
Anliquil }' Ha111is t
Sund ay Schoo l 9.:10 a.m .
Wor; h1p - li] :45 a.m.
Thursda)' Scr v1ccs - 7:30p. m .
Rutland Fr~e Will Ua ptbl
Salem St.
r as tor: Rev. Pa ul Tay l o~
Su nday Sc hoo l - 10 a.m .
Evenmg . 7 p.m.
W ~dne ~day Scrvtccs - 7 p.m .

Ca thulk Chunh
161 Mtllhcrry Ave, Pome roy, 992 - 589 ~
Pastor: Rev . Wa lle r E. ll e nll.
Sa t, fon . 4 : 4 :1-.~ ; 15p.m .: Ma ss· 5 :30 p .m.
Sun . Con. -8 :45·9 15 a .m .,
Sun . Ma s~ 9:30 a.m.
Da lley Ma ss - lDO a.m .

C:d va r y Pil gr im C hap el
llarri sonv illc Road
!~a s t or ; Rev . Vt ctor Rou ~ h
Sundfly Schoo\9 :30 a.m.
Worshi p - II a.m., 7:30p.m .
Wedne sday Service - _7:30 p .m.

P :~\lo r

Ziun Chureh ur Chr i..;l
Pomeroy, HarruorlV! II c Rd (RL143)
Pas tor: Hoge r W !i t ~on
Sunda)' School - 9:30 a m.
Worship - 10 :30 a m , 7:00p.m .
W ednesday Serv1 ccs - 7 p.m .

Sunday SL hoo l - 10 am

Wcd ncs d11 y Scrvi cc -7·'W p m.

'

Grace Episcopal C hu n ;h
326 E. MaUl St., Pome ro y
Rector: Rev . D. A. duPianoer
lloly Euc harist and
Sunday School 10:30 a.m.
Coffee hour fo llowing

ur Christ

C hun:h ur Ch ri-..1
Worship - l) 30 am .
SundJV Sc hool · 10 30 un .
l'~~ i. &gt;r Jcfl rcy Wallace
l ~ l Jnd 3 rd Surr \hly

·'

Episcopal

Poml'rll) \\'cst...id c C hun:h of Chrl~o~t
33226 Children·, Home Kd
Sund.~}-' School
I I 11m
\\&gt;'ursh1p lOa m , 6p.m.
~: cdn e q l a } Sc fVI (;C'i 7 r m
~-1iddlcpurt Chun:h

Reeds\·Ilie
Pastor: Rt: v. Cha rl es Mash
Wo rshi p - 9 :30a.m.
Sunday School 10:30 a.m.
0 1YF Sunday 6JO p rn

s _y ra("USe C hun h or the Naz&lt;ircnc
l1 asto r: Re v. R1 ck SturgiU
Sunda y School · QJO a.m .
Wo rship - I 0:30a .m., 6 p.m .
Wednesda y Se rvi ce§ - 1 p.m .

Tuppers Plains Sl. Paul
!•astor· Sharon !l au ~man
Sunda y School - 9 a.m
Worship - 10 a.m.
T ucsd!l) Se rv1ccs · 7 :30p.m
Centra l C lus ter
Asbury (Syracuse)
Pastor: De-ron Newman
Sunda)' School - 9 :45 a.m.
Wo rsht p - II a.m.
Wedn esday Serv1cc: s - 7 :30p.m.

Entt'rp rlse
Pastor: Ke1th Rader
Sunday Sc hool ~ I 0 a.m
Worship - 9 a.m.

Ruse uf S h:.r un Holiness C hu n ·h
Leading Creek Rd,. Kut.l anJ
Pa 5tOr: Rev. Dewey King
Sund ay sc hoo l· 9 :30a .m.
Sunday worsh1p -7 p.m .
W c dn c~ day pra yer meet mg.- 7 p.m.
Pin e C r u,·e llibl c ll nlin ess C hurch
• I f2 mdc off Rt 325
Pa stor . Rev . O'Dc U Manley
Sunday Schoo l - 9 :30a.m.
WOrship · 10:30 a.m., 7 :30p.m. ·
Wednesday Serv ice - 7 :30p.m.

'

W c.~lcyan

Rlbl c Holiness C hu rch
75 Pearl St, Middleport.
Pas tor: Rev. John Ne vill e
Su nday school - 9;30 a.m .
Worshi p · \0:30a .m., ?JO p,m ..
Wedne .~day Sc N icc - 7 :10 p .m.'

Bra dhur ) C hurt·h ul' Ch rl !11
Sun dav Sc hool . C}:)Q ;un .
W9~~ h1p - 10.10 a.m.
Youth :vl ee un ~ .. .'i :30 p.m.
J :.vcnm g Sc rv~ cc 7 p.m
Wc d nc.:'id t~ y , fl,b lc Stud~ 7 p.rn

Hysell Run Holi ness C hurch
IJastor· Kobcn Ma nl ey
Sun day Sehoul · 9:30a .m.
Worship · 10.45 a.r'n ., 7 p.m.
'lhursday Scrvi \:C - 7:30 p.m.

Rutl a nd Church ur Chr is t
Paslor: Eugene E Underwood
Sunt!H)' School - 9 :30 a.m .
Wor'ih1p - 10 10 a.m., 7 p.m.

L~ urd

Bra drurd L hu r t·h niT hri st
C'omc r of St R. t 124 &amp; 1\radhury Rd.
E van gcl 1 ~ 1 · Kc11h Cooper
You th ~ ~~~~ ~ 1 c r· \1i c had Tc agurdcn
Swula y Schtlul . 1) 30 a.m . ·
WorS'I-1 1p - H:lXl x.m , 10 :30 J. m., 7:tX) p m.
W cdnc~tldy Se rv1cc' - 7 : 00p . m ~·
Hic k.or)' HillsC hurt·h 11f C hrisl
l'a-• tur: Jo,c ph B. ll o'i klll s
,"; unda y Sc htxll C) ~ . 111 .
Worship - 10 a.m ., 7 p.m .
..; Wedn esday Se rv1ces - 7 p.m .

Reorganized Churc h or jcsus .C hrlsl
of LaUer Day Saints
l •o nJand ~ R a c ine Rd .
Pasmr: J aruce Danner
Sunda)' School - 9 :30a.m .
Worship · I 0:30 a.m .
Wednc.sd ay Se rvices - 7:30 p.m.

The C hurch of J esus
Chrisl of Latter-Day Saints
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 o r 446-7486
Sunday Sc hoo110:20· 1l a.m.
H. e l1cl Soc Je ly/Pne slt'lood II :05- 12:00 noon
. Sac ramcnt Se rvi ce9- J0: \5a.m.
Horncmaki.ng meci.ing, I st lhu n. · 7 p.m .

l.a n ~.-tv iiiC C hr isti a n Chun:h

Su nllay School · 9:30 .1 .m .
Wtlr5h1p 10 ;30 ~ . m .. 7: 30 p .rn .
Wt: d rl t~ da y S..: r-.-1 CC 7:30 p.1_
n.
Hcmlu ck C ru \l c Church
l'a ~ t.nr : Ccnc Zopp
Sund ;~y ~choo.l l - 10 30 a_m:
Wo r&gt;hl p - 9 :30 a.m., 7 p.m .

Lutheran
St. John Lutheran C hurch
Pine Grove
Pas tor: Da wn Spaldin g
Worship · 9 :00a.m .
Sunday School - 10 :00 a. m.

Ree dsville C hurt'h n( Chrisl
Pastor: Ph ll 1p Stunn
Sund ay &amp; hool: 9:30a m.
Worship Serv ice.: 10 :30 a.m .
Rihlc Stud y. Wc dn e ~ d ay, 6:30 p .m .

Our Saviour Luth e ran C hurch
W alnut and Hen ry Sts., Ra'o'enswood, W .Va.
·
lntrirn ~ tors : George C. Weinck
Sunda y School - lO:(X) a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

Christian Union
Hartford C hurch of C hrist In
C hrisllan Union
1-ianford, W .Va.
Pas10r· Rev. David McMat1i s
Sunday School · I I a.m.
Worship - 9 :30a.m ., 7:30 p.m .
Wednes day Service~ - 7:30p.m .

St. Jlaul Lulheran C hun:h
Comer Sycamo re &amp; Second S1. , Pomeroy
Pa ~wr: Daw n Spa lding
Sunday Sch ool - 9 :45 11 .m.
Worship - II a.m .

United Methodist

Church ol God

\

Goo

Rutla nd ( :ummunity C hurch
Pastor: Rev . Roy McCa n y
Sund!i)' School - 9:30 a.m .
Sunday Evc nin &amp; · '7 p.m.
Wedn esd ay Services - 7 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Lihl'rry Chrlsrlan C hun·h
Dc,11 tc r
Palllo r: W()(){]y CJI I
Sund ay Evcntng 6 :30p.m .
Thursdll y Scrvtcc -· 6J Op.m .

Mt. Moriah C hurch of G od
Ra ci ne
Pastor: Rev. Ja mes Sa ue rftc ld
Su nd ay Sc hool - 9:45a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesda y Services - 7 p.m.

C liff free M cthudi sr C hurc h
\'as tor: Pete r T rcmblay
Sunday School · 9 30 a.m.
Wor sh1p - 1O.JD am . an d 7 p.m.
Wed11eS1lay ScrvicC - 7:00p.m.

Graham United Methodist
Worship - 9:30a.m . ( I st &amp; 2nd Sun ), ,

7o30 p.m. (3 rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Scrvi'&lt;c - 7:30 p .m.

'

Rutland Church or
Pastor: Gregory L. Sea rs
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
1
Worship - l l a. m ., 6 p.m.
· Wednesda y Se rvi ces - 7 p.m.

c'qd,

SyracuSl' First C hurch of
Apple and Second Sts.
!)as tor: Rev . David Ru sse ll
Sunday Schoo l and W orship - 10 a .m .
Evcnm g Services - 7:30 p.m 11
Wcdn c~ d f! y S c rv1 c c ~ · 7:30 p!m
C hurch ur G ud or l'r u ph~c:y
O .J. Whuc Rd . ofr .Sl. l~t . 160
PJ stor: I'.J . Chapm an
Sunday SdnJvl · l 0 a.m.
W o r ~ tup - 11 a . m .~
Wcd ncstlay Serv ices · 7 p. m.
C hl'St('r C hurch of God
S. R . 24M&amp; Riebel Road, Chester
Pastor: Rev. WiJ ium D. ll mds
Sun day School · 9:30a. m.
Wors h1p - 6 p.m.;
·
Wednes day, 7 p m FamLl y Traimng Hour

Mt. Olive Unitlod Methodist
Off 124 behind W ilkesville
l' a~ t ur : Rev . Ralph S pue ~
Sund a)' School · 9 :30 a.m.
Wo rshtp - 10 :30 11.m., 1 p.m.
Thursday Scrv1ces - 7 p.m
Mei~s

Coopcrath·e 1•arish
Northcasl C luster
Alfred
P.as tor: Sha ron Hau sman
Sunday Se houl - 9 :30 a.m .
Worship - II a.m ., 6;30 p.m.
C he&lt;iler
l'astor: Sha ron Hau sm an
Wo rship - 9 a.m.
Sund ay Sc hool - I 0 a.m.
Th ursday Serv ices · 7 p.m .
Joppa
Pas tor : Bo b Rand olph
Worship - 9 :30a.m.
Sunday Schoo l - 10;30 a.m.
Long Uollom
!•as tor ~ Rev. Di aries M as h
Sunda y School · 9 :30 a.m .
Worship · 10:30 a.m .
Wednesd ay Services - 7 :30 p.m.

Mill Work

C ~h111et M~k ·n~
Syracuse

•

992 39 / 8

K&amp;C JEWELERS

t,.•,;· '·~ i'•l

I

212 E. Main Street
992·3785 Pomeroy

ILll

r- ·

II ·~c:·IT;s~

Furcst Run
l'a stur: De ro n Newman
Sunday School - \0 a.m.
Wo rship - 9 a.m
Thursd ay Services - 6 :30p.m.

l' urlhllld Firs t t: hun: h of the ;\' ._ zarcnc
Pa ~t or . John W. Doug ! ;~ ~
Sunday Sc hool -JO :OO a.m.
Wu rsl11p - 6 :30p.m .
WeJ nesday Services - 7 p.m.

H c:tt h (:\1iddl c purt )
Pasto r Vema gayc Sullt\liUi
Sunday S chool - 9:30am.
Worship - I 0 :30 ~ . m

New H aven t:hunh orth e Nazare ne
Pastor: Glendon Stroud
Su uday School - 9:30a .mWu rslup - 10 :30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ccs · 7 p .m .

'-i inl'r s\-·lll e
Pa stor: Dcron ~cwma n
Sund ay School - 9 a.m.
Worsh ip - 10 a.m.

Other Churches
C hri s tian l·'dluwshlp Center
s ~lc m S1., Rutla nd
P ~ s t u r : Robe rt E. Musser
SUnd ay St h(X)I - \0 a.m.
Wo rsh ip -· II : 15 c\.m., 7 p.m .
Wedn esday Service· 7 p.m.

1\!arl C h a p el
Sunday .School - 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.
Pome m y
['astor: Robe rt t. H.ob1ns0n
Sunday Sc hoo l - IJ: 15 a.m.
Worsh1p - I 0 :30a.m.
H1hlc S111dy Tuc ~ d uy · I !I a.m

Hobson C hris tian Fellows hip Chun·h
Rev . C l)'de ll cnd ers:;w
Sund ay serv ice , 10 :00 a.m.,/:30 p .m.
You th FcUowsh.Jp Sunday , 7 :00p.m
Wed nesday service, 7 :30p.m .

Rut·k S prings
l'a stur : Kcn h Ka de r
Su nday S ~.: h~ J I - 9: 15 a.m.
Worship - !0 a.m.
You th Fe ll ow ~ hip, Sunday - 6 p.m.

Fa ith Full Gospl'l C hurc h
Long Bottom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Su nd ay Schoo l · 9 :30a .m.
Worsw: - 9 :30 ll .m. and 7 p.m
cd ne sJay - 7 p.m.
-Fn day - !c llow sh1p servi1.:c 7 p.m

Kulland
Sund ay School - 9 :30a.m .
Worsh ip - 10 :30 a.m.
T hursday Services • 7 p.m.

The

Fellows hip Mlni!'lry
New Lime Rd., Rut land
Pl!stur: Rev. M1t rgarct J Rohin son
Scf\'i c cs: Wedn esday , 7:30p.m
Sun da y, 2JO p .m.

Sult•m Center
Pastor: Ron Fie rce
Sunday Sc hool - 9: IS a.m.
Worship - 10 :15 a.m.
Sno w vill e
Sundxy School · \0 a.m
\V o r~ h ip -

IJ

H a rriso nvillr Communil y Church
\'a~ t m : The ron Durh am
Sunday - 9 :30 a.m . an d 7 p.m .
Wc dnc &gt;tlay - 7 p.m.

u 11

lk than y
Pastor: Kenne th Uak cr
Sunday Schon \ - '10 a.rn
Wo rs hip - l) a.m .
Wcdncsdil)' Servicei 10 a.m.
C arm e l
Pastor: Kenneth Bake r
Su nday Sc hool - 9 :30 a. m.
Worship · 10 :45 a.m . (2nd &amp; 4th Sun )
Mitrning Stur
Paslor: Kenne th Baker
Sunday School - 9 :45 a.m.
W m ~ tup - )():31) a.m.
"lhursd ay Servi ces - 7 :30 p.m.

lhe

AVIS QUICKEL

AGENCY INC.

WANT ADS

rsf!.!lA!ff.f
QUICKEL
. 992-6677
ll[i\~

lll"-\&lt;.i

CHURCH

•

BIBLES

m\;(( Stm• Q)o.. r.,
93 Mill Street
Mlddlepon. Ohio 46 760

FISHER
FUNERAL I'IOME
992-5141
Middleport

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992·5130 Pomeroy

BILl

GRAVELY mACTOR SALES

~

aaavu v •

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH

'

Sutlon
l •a ~ t o r : Ke nm~ th Baker
Sund a)l St: ht,._, ] - ·,):30 a.m
Worsh1 p " \0:4511 m ( 1 ~ 1 &amp; 1rd Sun )

f:itst Letart
!'as tor: Ke n Moh er
Sunday Schoo l - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wcdm:sdily - 7 p.m.
Racine
Pastor : Brian Harkness
S unday Sch0&lt;1l - 10 a.m .
Wor~ hip - I 1 a.m.
Cooh•lllc Unil('d M~lhudi.'t1 Parish
l\1sto r: Helen Kline
Couh'ille C hurch
Ma in &amp; 1-'l flh 'St.
S"und uy School - 10 a.rn .
Worship - 9 a.m.
Tues day Serv1 cc s. - 7 p.rn
Ucthcl C hun:h
Tow nsh1p Kd ., 468C
Sund a)' Sc hool - 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.
'Wedncs da)' _ScrYiccs - 10 a.m.
Hockingport C'hurr h
Grand S t reCI
Sund ay Schoo l - ][) a.m
Worsh1 p - 11 a.m.
W edn e~ da y S e rvi ce ~ - 8 p.m
Tnrd1 C hurch
Co. Rd . 63
Su111.li1y Se houl - 9&gt; 30 a.rn
W ursh1p - 10:30 a.m.

Nazarene
Racine First Church of the Nazarene
~Pa sto r : Scott Rose
Sunday School - 9 :30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m .
IWednesday Servi ces · 7 p.m.
M idr:fleport C hurch ·of the Na 7.arcnc
Pasto r: G regory A. Cundiff
Sunday School · 9 :30 a.m.
Wors hip - 10 :30 a .m ., 6 :30 p.m .
Wednesd ay Services .· 7 p.m .
Rel'dsvllle Fellowship
r Churc h uf' the N01urene "

992-2975

Endlim l' Huusc of llray" r
(at Hurllngham church off Rout e 33)
}la~ t o r : Rohc n Vance
S und ay w orship · 10 a.m.
Wednesday se rvt cc - 6 :30 p .rn.
Th e Salvation Army
11 5 Huu c mut Ave., Pomeroy.
S ~LUrday 10 u.ni . .
Thursda y - 7 p.m.
S !-inday - 7 p.m.
Mlddll'pnrt Community Church
575 ~eur) St., Middleport
Pa stor: Sam Ande rson
Sunday School lO a.m .
Evening - 7 :30 p .m .
Wed nesday Service - 7:30p. m.

Syracuse Mi ssion
1411 Bridgem an St. , S ymc u ~c
Pa ~ tor : Roy (Mik e) llt omp~ o n
Su nday School - 10 a.m .
Evening - f1 p.m .
Wednesday Se rvi ce - 7 p .m .
H:.rzcl Community C hurch
Off Rt. 124
Pastor: Ed s~ l l lan
Sunda y School - 9 :30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 :30 p .m .
D)·es ville C ummunlty C hurch
Sund ay School - 9 :30a.m ,
Wors hip - 1():)0 a.m., 7 p .m .
Morse Chapel C hurch
Larry Faw, Superi nt ende nt
Sunday school - 10 ~ . m .
Wo rshi p - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m .
F allh Gospel C hurch
Lou ~ Bot tom
Sund ay School - 9 :30 a.m . •
Wors lu p - 10:45 a.m .• 7:30 p.m.
Wed nesday 7:30p.m.
.Mt. Olive C ommunity &lt;:hurch
Pastor: Law rence Bush
Suml ay School - 9 :30a.m.
· Evenin g · 7 p.m
Wc'dncday Service - 7 p.m
Uniled Failh C hur,·h
1 Rt. 7 011 l'omeroy B y - i'a~ ~
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Sm ith, S r.
Sunday School · 9 :30 a.m .
Worship · 10:30 a. m., 7 p.m .
Wedne sday Service · 7 p.m .

CONSTRUCTION

F ull G ospel Lig ht house
3:304 5 Htl and Road, Pomero)l
Pastor: Roy Hunl e r
Sund ay School - I 0 a.m .
Evc nm g 7 ~3 0 p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thurs day - 7 :30 p.m

Custom Buildmg &amp; Remodeling

• NEW HOMES
• ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
• RE MOD ELING
• SI DING
• ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992-5535
(61 992-2753

~use

Se ttlement C hu rl· h
2:30p.m.:
Thursda y se rvi ces · 7 :30p.m.
Sunda)' Worship

Suu th HClh l'l New Test a me nt
S tive r Ridge
Pastor: Rubert Harbc1
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wo rsh 1p · 10 a.m ., 7 p.m .
Wedn esday Se rviu: - 7 p .m.
Carlclon l ilter dcmnn ln a tion a l &lt;.:hurch
Km gs hury Road
Pastor: Jeff Smi th
Sunda y Sc hoo l - 9 :30 a.m .
Wnrsh1pServicc !0:30a.m .
Worshi p Service -1st and 3 rd Sunday, 7 p.m.
No W cdnc ~day Evcfling Service
Fn •cd om Gos pt." Mi sslun
Ba ld Knoh, on Co . Rd. 3 1
P.'i stor: Rev . Koge r Wtll rord
Sunda y Schoo l · 9 :30 a.m .
Worship 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service ·7 p .m .

profes.riunalism and inltgriry.

Crew's Family Restaurant
"Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy
1050 Caner Road. Shllda, OH
Business Phone 614·992·4216 or
, -B00-881 -93r.!

Pomeroy Flower Shop
I06 Butlimut Ave.

992-6454

992-5432
R~~

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

115 E. Memorial Dr. Pomeroy
992·2104

EWING FUNERAL HOME
"Dignity and Service Always"
Eslablishcd 191 3

EAST MAIN POMEROY, OHIO
992·2259

992-2121
Mulberry Ave.
I

Pomeroy

Imperial Tire
Service
Mason W.V.

304-773-5533
-September SpecialWith the purchase of
a set of struts Of
shocks get FREE

Wh ile' s C hapel Wcsley.~t n
Coolville H.uad
l'aslOr: Rev . Phillip ~itl cn ou r
Sunday Sc hool - 9 :30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wedn esday Servi ce · 7 r .m .

i nsla~at ion .

Bill Orrick's
Home
Improvements
Additions - ·
remodeling roofing - siding
-plumbing , etc.
Insured,
call Bill Orrick
614-992-5183

Tony's- Portable
Welding

DAYS
CAR WASH

Stick/MIG Aluminum
Complete Radiator
Repair Service
New Radiators &amp;
Recore&amp; Available

128 Mechanic St.

742-3212
Turn on Depot st In
Rutland 1.2 miles.

1 ,~, li]' rr· - r, ..._,_. 1 , .. 'li:II'J

SPORTS
POINT
SPREADS
AND MORE!!!
1-900-884-9204
Ext 2912

F.aith F ellow ship C ru sad G ror C hrist
Pa ~ l l ir : Rev . l;ra nklin Di\:ke ns
Sc rv tce. Fntlay , 7 p.m.
t ; ah·ary Uihl c Church
l•omc roy l•ike, Co. Rd .
t•astu r: Rev. Blackwood
Sund ay School - 9:30a .m .
Worship 10:30 a.m ., 7:30p.m.
Wednesda y Service 7:30 p .m.

· $2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch·tone Phone
Required
Serv-U (619) 645-8434
91 14/95 2 mo. pd .

ALFALFA

Stivcrs villc Wurd uf Faith
Pastor: David Oatley
Sunday School 9 :30 a.m
Evenin g - 7 p.m.

AND MIXED

HAY

Rejoicin g Life Church
500 N. 2nd Ave ., Middlepon
Pa stor : Law rence Fort:ma n
S unda y Schoo l - I 0 a.m
We dnesday Servi ces - 7 p.m.

•

Ra vensw ood. WV
Mr,r.rl:lV i\ ~lJI" ,· il'l rJr11·

Shotgun, Factory
Choke only.
,Stinting 1 P.M.
Sundays ·
Beginning
• Sept. 17 917ntn

\NU1!11'11~,

Wt.•dr!w;d&lt;tV Yo1rt•l .~ ~,11~• -·d
Thwsrttv ~;1k. M••r1:.
Sundiiy Nih! rv11XH I
Fo~ ntnr•' l rLfurmo~r~r ·-n
Call Ra ve n Lanes

304·273-44 75
or He rs h ['! &amp; Don n,1

304·273-3285

FOR SALE
BAILED

To

Buzz's Cal]let
Installing, fnc.

· • .-; ·. t ·

I

"I

Gall ipolis
&amp; Vicinity

:

Emergency Phone 985·3418

Portable
Han dsaw Mill

18 19 Ches mu 1 Street. ~ A M To
5 PM . Fnday 15th. Sa turdav 161h,
So methtng For E \ler~n e l

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles
614·742-2193

All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance. DEADliNE · 2 00 p.m
the day be fore the ii d 1s to ru n.
Su nday ed11Jon - 2 oo p m. F r~ day
Mor1day edmon - 10 00 a m Saturday.
Big Garage Sale: S ept 14th, 15th,
16th , llll l&amp; Ky ger Road, Bacll.
Road A.cr os s Fr om Kyger Creek
Plan l
A. ll Anh(lue D1she s Re du ced .
Dolls Reduc ed Clothe s 10~ Otd
Tools, Old Cream Seperato r, Old
La ~ ps , Salt And Pep oer s , P il ls
bury Dough Boy&amp; And G~rls f low er Pots .10¢ Corn Jobber.

81t 211 mo.

One Step Complete Auto Body Rep1lr

(I.Jmntone Low Rates)

. , WICKS
HAULING

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work
_..,. Welcome

Fnday, Salu rday 9J15th , 9J16 1h,
lnsrde Rod ney Grange Bldg Nea t
Bod1me rs Truck Sto p, Cl ot hes .
Appt1an ces And Lou 01 Cra ll
Stu!! Bags Of Yarn For A!gtm ns .&amp;
Etc. 9-4 Oa1ly.

(Spe&lt;;lallze In
driveway spreading)
. Lin:~estone,

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

State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

Sa!urday 16th Se pt 8-2. 486 Ann
Drive, Gall!polis.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

18 Years Experience.
Hours
Monday lhru Friday
. 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Saturday
8:00a.m. lo 12:00 p.m.

949-2512

Oirtnn Tahernal"lc C hurch
Clifton, W.Va
Sundu)' Schoo l - IOa.rn .
Wors hip - 1 run .
T hu r s d ~y Se rv ice - 7 p .m .

S'I'O-A-WAY
STORAGE

DAN'S WATER
REFINIRG INC.

Pentecostal
Pentecostal A~embly
St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor : William lloliack
Sunday School - 10 a.m .
Evenin g · 7 p. m.
Wednesday Servi ces . 7 p.m .

Estab. Over 25 Years
Sales, Service, Parts
&amp; Installation
304-882·2996 111811 '""

Get Your Message Across
With ADaily Sentinel ·

Middl epurt l'cnl ec•tSial
'lll ird Ave.
Pas tor: Rev. C lark llakcr
Sund 11y School - 10 a.m .
E ve ning - 6 p.m
We d nesday Services · 7 :00 p .rn

BULLETIN BOARD
16° column inch weekdays
18°0 column inch Sunday
0

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·21551

Presbyterian
S!racust• first United l,re!t' hytc rlan
I•Hstor: Re v. Kri sana Kobinson
SundtJy School - I 0 a.m .
W ors h ip ~ 11 a.m.
H~rrls•mvilh· Prl'sh v t e rl&lt;~ n C hun:h

W or~h1p - 9 a.m
S unday Schnol · ~ : 45 a.m .

Midd.lept lrt Pres h ylcrla n
Sunda)' Schoo l · 9 a.m.
Worsh1p - 10 a.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Sc\·c nth -nay Ad\lenllst
Mulberry HK. Rd ., l'omc roy
Jla~ tm ; Roy La win!iky
Sa turd ay Serv ices :
Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
Wor~ hip - 3 p.m.

Check Out Empire
Furniture's
Unadvertised
Red Tag Specials

EMPIRE
FURNITURE

41960 Kaylor Road
Reedsville, OH 45772

specifleationi , and

Bonds
shall
be
a c companied by Proof ot
Authority of the otflcial or
agenl signing !he bond.
Bids shall be sealed and
marked
as
Bid
for
Middleport Boa1er Parking
Facility and ma'iled or
delivered lo :

CALL

992·2156

No Cover Charge
110

AMVETS SQUARE DANCE
· LESSONS "HOEDOWN"
Sunday Afternoons from
I :30 to 4:30, Kanauga, Oh•o
Lessons by Howard Meadows
Everyone welcome No alcohol.
Info. Call446·6188

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC
Walker Alley, Racine, Ohio
949-2804

AMVETS DANCE
SEPTEMBER 16
7:30 to 10:30; Adm. $3.00
Square Dance, Round &amp; Clogging
Music by Howard Meadows
welcome. No alcohol.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors '

NEW~ABPET&amp;

FURNITURE.
AU~TION

Sunday, September 17, 1995
1:00pm
llc&gt;caled at the auction center on At. 33 in Mason,
rolls of carpet. new L.A. suite, new di nets.
new misc. items for more information
130,4·773-57E!5 or 304-773-5447.
Auction Conducted By
Rick Pearson Auction Co.
Mason, W.V.
Auctioneer: Rick Pearson #66
TERMS: Cash or check wilh I.D.
Not responsible for acc idents or loss of property.
17&lt;.- ' nn

Prescription s

Pomeroy

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
992-7075
172 North Second Ave.
Middlepon. Oh

I

WAYNE'S PLACE
Middleport, Ohio
Welcomes Back
WH ITE RAVEN
Saturday, September 16
9:30 pm·1:30. $2.00 Cove'r

Public Sale
and Auction

.
'

80

90

Decor e le d s tone ware, wa ll to ld
phones, old lamps, old thermome
tel' s, old ' cloc ks, antiqu e fu rn itu re.·
R1v orln e AnfiQues . R~ ss Moor e.
owne r 6 14 -992-2 52 6 ~ 9 bu y
estates.
J &amp; D' s Auto Part5 . Bu y1ng sat -.
vage \l&amp;h1cles . Selli ng par1i. 304 773-5033.

J ur1 k c:ars or will ptck up gtveaway
·cars, 61 4 · ~2-6 0 69 all)' umo.
l a nd , 5ac r&amp;s or more 304-5624198.

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

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE

Top Pnccs Pa id : Old U S. Coms,
S1 lve r, Gol d , Diamo nds , All Old
Co ll ecll bles. P aperwe1g ht s, E tc.
M.T. S Cam S ho p, 1St Soco nd
Ave nue, Gollrpolrs. 6 14-446· 26 42.

House Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; f¥th
Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Rooting, Patios
Re8aonabla

614-992-7643
( No Sunday Calls)

Used !urmtu re - an T1ques. orl c
p1 lJ ce or complete e s ta Tes. Osb y
Ma rnn, 611\·992 -74 4 1
Wan ted lo Bu y J unk Au!os W1th
Or Withou t Moto rs Call Larry
Ll\lllly 611\-388-9303

tnaure1 - Experienced
211219211tn

Call Wayne NoH 992-4405
For Free Estimates

Scuba Classes Now Forming
·Open Water
' Advanced Open Water
• Rescue Diver
• Di ve Master
· Assistant Instructor
• Specialty Classes
Scott Walton
Open Water Scuba Instruclor
614.-992·3314

i'di) .

4J13195

I

HAULING 4
EXCAVATION
'
•·

Umes.tone &amp;GIJIYtl,
Seplic Systems, Trader &amp;.
House Sites.
•
Reasonable Rates
·Joe H. Sayre ·• •

8-11-1 mo

•Complet~

Take the pain out of ·
·I Am Looking For wa rd To the
pelnt(ng. ~et us do It lor
Day We Can Meet: Hop6 For The
you. Very reasonable.
Best

7/22194

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
11 o

VICTORY E&gt;PRESS
Is Ho st1ng A.
FREE SEMINAR
To Hire EX P &amp; lne'xp,
Cand1datos For Ava1lat)e·
PosiiiO ns As OTR Drivers
Tu111M -Froo ISalarrcs
TrB1mng Fo r
Oval1hed Cand 1d8 tes
{l1m1ted T1ma)
Be Our Ouest At

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Interior &amp;
Exterior

005

Free Estimates

THE HOLIDAY INN
5 n St At 7 North
Ga lhi)Jhs
Thurs. Sept. 14th
t0A M , 2(l6P M.

Personals

Thelma
S WF, ago 29 , see ks SWM lor
lrrend , companron , a nd poss 1Di y
mora Reply 10 PO Box 182, Po1nt _
1
Pleasant, WV 25550.

Befor~ 6 p.m. leave

message.
After6p.m.
614-985-4180 312 .....

~--------~- ~~~--~~

3·D ARCHERY
SHOOT
Forked Run
Sportsman's Club
Every Sunday
Starting
September 1Oth
" 8:30am to
11:30 am
$7 sign up, children
9 &amp; under $4.
SO% pa'y back.
Children must be
accompanied by adult.
11/811 mo

.

40

Giveaway

Help Wanted
200 NEW JOBS
HIRING EVE NT

.614-742-2138

LINDA'S
'AINTING &amp; CO.

985-4473

Wa nte d To Buy Moto1 Scoo1 er.
Se nd Replies To CLA 307, Clc
Gallipolis Da11y Tnbune, 825 Th11 d
Avenue , Gall1 poi1S, OH ~563 1 .

SAYRE TRUtKING

Rt&gt;BERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
• Garages
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

Wanted to Buy

Clea n La le Model Cars Or
Trucks , 1987 Mod els Or Ne wer,
Smilh Buick Po n!Jac, 1900 Ea s!·
err\ Avenue. Gallipolis.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

..

Public Sale
and Auction

Atck Pearsor1 Auct ran C o mp~ny,
lull 11 me a uc tronee• . c o mp le le
auc tton
servtce
L1c &amp;ns e'd
#66 ,0h io &amp; We st V1rgm 1 ~ . 30 4773-5785 Or 304-773-5447.

Everyone
Welcome

REfiL

EVERY WED., 8:30

Ya rd S ale. Sa t u r d~y Sopt 16th.
26 10 J ac kson A11e., PI PI

Every
Wednesday Nlte
5:30p.m.

(9)15, 22, 29 ; 3TC

SAVeRS....

&amp; VIcinity

GUN CLUB
TRAP SHOOT

days arter the a c tual date of
the opening thereof. Meigs
Counly Commis s ioners
res e rves th e right to waive
any Informalities or to rejecl
any or an bide .
Fred Hoffman , President
Meigs Counly
Commiss ion e rs

TIME

Pt. Pleasant

RACINE

Com 'missioners,
Courlhouse, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769

POOL
TOURNAMENTS

P~ACE

· 992·2772

Free Estimiles

in a hurry... TRY
CLASSIFIEDS

KARAOKE
FRIDAY, 9:30

Doug Crites
614/667-6825

Public Notice ·

bid forms may be secured
a1 lhe ofllce of Meigs
Allentlon of bidd~rs is
County Commissioners . ·
called to all of the
Each bid musl be requir e ments contained in
accompanied by either a bid lhls bid p~ c ket, parllcularly
bond in ·an amount of 100% to . the Federal Labor
of the bid amount with a Standards Pro11lsions and
Wages,
surety satisfactory to the ' Davis-Bacon
vari o us
Insurance
aforesaid Meigs Counly
requirement s, various equal
Commissioner s
or by
opporlunlly provisions , and
cerllfled · check, cashiers
check, or leiter of credit the requirement for a
b o nd
and
upon a aolvenl bank In th e p a yment
performance bond for 100%
amount of not less than
10% .of th8 bid amount In of the contract price.
favor of tho aforesaid Meigs
No bidder may withdraw
his bid wilhin thirly (30)
County Commissioners. Bid

Mutt1 fam1 ty, Frtday &amp; Sa turday.
2.5 mttos out Ba shan Rd. H1U re SIdence . cunams, throws. be dd1ng ,
n1ce la rge e loth rng . 3 p1e cc htilfl
Tyke ll.1tchen center &amp; accesso
nes

Roofing, Vinyl
Replacement,
. Windows, Blown
Insulation, ·Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, 'Garages.

In Memory of
My Mother
HILDA V. SMITH
Who went to be
with God
Sept. 16, 1994
Sadly MissedJ

THE
WATERING HOLE

Eden Unit ed Hrelhren in C hrist
2 1/2 m lk '\ nurt h or J(ccdw ll lc
o n Stat e ROlll c 124
Pastor: Re v. Robe rt M:trkl ey
Sun d ay S(;hool I 0 a.m.
WQr,ship - 7:]0 p .m.
Wctln csd &lt;~ )l Se rv1 ces 7: 30 p .m .

~larnso nv 111e .

8:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
Vinyl &amp; Aklm. Siding,

Replacement

•loud ."

County

Frida y, Sai\Jrday, Sunday, bun k
beds, mise fur mture. m1 sc kll iC ~ ­
knacks, Route 11\ 3, 1\5 m1lc s !rom

· OHice Hours: Mon.-Fri.

G utters Sidewal ks, Porches, Tcar~·ou 1 and

10:00 a.m., Oct 6, 1995 and
then .at 1 :00 a .m. at said
office opened and raad

United Brethren

539 BRYAN
MIDD~EPORT

Dri veways, Palios, Slabs, Parking loi s, Curbs &amp;

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for the
Middleport Boater \Parking
Facility wlll ba received by
t~e
Meigs
County
Commissioners at their
office at ·the Courthouse;
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until

Meigs

All Ya rd Sal es Mus! Be P a1 d In
Advan c6 . Dead\lne ' 1 ·OOpm th e -.
day before lh a a d is 10 run, S un day 6dition - 1:OOpm Fr1 da v. Mon ·
dav edit1on 10:00a.m Satu rday. ·

J&amp;L INSULATION

Commercial and R esid ~ntial

Public Notice

&lt;3ALLIPOLIS, OHIO

MI. Hermon Unitt•fl llrelhrcn
in Christ Chunh
·1c:\a~ C om rnunny ufr CR. 82
l'a ~ l ur : l~ohc n Sanders
Su nda y &amp;hool - () 10 a.m .
Won h1p - 10:30 a.m., 7·30 p .m.
Wedncsd a)l Scrv1 ce ~ 7:30p.m.

Abiding Concrete
Construction

In Memory

Services.
Hom" Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking· Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

Plans ,

6 lamtty 1n51de yard sale, September 1 Sth , ou t SA t43 , Du dd 1ng
res1dence.

8121m"n

"

Bill Slack

m1sc., Thtrd St, RaetriEI.

•Room Additions
•New Garages
•Eieclrtcal &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Oh.

Chris
Scherfel

110\\ \IW
1-:\C \\ \TI :\ 1;
Bulldozing, Backhoe,

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

3 ta m t l ~ yard sale. Sepl. 15th ,
16th , re cords. go,od cloth 1n g &amp;

CARPENftB
SDVICE

949-~1_6~1 . . . TFN

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

992-2269 or
304·773-5960

YOUNG'$

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter C(eaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-3379.

YOOR NEEDS

304·882-2996
Comparable Prices
&amp; Sizes 9/811 ""'·

ijoward L, Writesel

We ~Viii install carpel
and floor coverings.
Give us a call al

C hureh o~ Jesus C hri st,
Apostolic Fairh
1/4 mile p ast Fo n Meigs on Ne w Lima Rd
Pas to r: William Viln Mete r
S unda y-7:00 r.m.
We dn esda)' -7 :00 p.m.
f-rida y-7 :00 p .m.

992-2955

Forked Run
Sportsman Club
Gun Shoot
Starting Sep.(. 17
1 p.m.
Fac tory choke
gu ns on ly.
Will shoo t th ro ugh·
Marc h '96

=•••:.•

~92-3954

9:00 - 3:00

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT

Raven Lanes

:. 1 :• ~

Open Saturday

Yard Sale

SAWMILL

Pomeroy, Oh.
992-4081
Week Day 8:00·5:00

70

H&amp;H

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally,
rental rates.

Complete
Detailing

Call for Low Prices

ATTENTION AL L
BOWLERS

·MODERN SANITATION

- ···-· )

F air view IUhlc C hurch
Lcta n , W .Va . R.t. 1
\'as tor: Rankin Roach
Su nday Sch&lt;x11 - 10:30 a.m
Wo rsh ip - 9 :30a.m., 7:00p.m
Wcdn c,da y Service - 7: (X) p.m

F aith Tabernal'le Church
ltaile)' Run Rua d
Pas tor: Re v. Emmett Rawson
Sunday Schuo\ - \ l):(K) a.m .
E\lcnin g 7 p.m . .
Thursday Service - 7 p.m .

Lost and Found

loti. One Pair 01 Glas ses , Dowr'l·
town Ga lllpohs , Fr1day Afte rno on,
61 4-44t-Q.OO

Addressing a changirtR world with

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

Beli('~· c rs'

60

al"ea merchants

RAWLINGS -COATS

264 South 2nd

C hest er C hur(" h or th e Nau r ene
lla stor: Rr.:v . Herbert Grutc
Sund ay Sc hool · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedn es day Sc.rv1ce1 · I p.m

Fla t woods
Pa stor: Ke ith Rad er
Sunda y School · 10 a.m.
Wo rsh1p • l l !i .fll.

Church announcements
RACINE PLANING MILL

l)omeroy C hu rch of th e Nua r ene
Pastor: Re v. 'Iboma 5 McC lung
Sunda y Sch ool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10 :30 a.m. and 6p.m.
Wednesday Se rvtces · 7 p.m.

Rutht nd C hu rc h ~If the ~aza rc n e
Pastor; Samue l Basye
Sund &lt;~y S'- huul - 9:3011 m
Wursh1p - ]() :30 ~ . m . , 6 :30p.m .
W ~:dn csJay Sc rv 1lCS - 7 p m

K l' ll U

HO(Ic Bap tist C hurt' h lSOuth ('rn)
570 Gran t St ., M idd le pon
PH tor: Rc"' . Oavtd Bryan

'··

2 12 W MamS t.
l'astur 1\ndrcw :O.hles
Sunday Sthool - 9.30 a.m
Wo rs tup· 10.30111 m , 7 p m
W l!dncsda) ServiceS 1 p.m

Trinity C hur&lt;h
Second &amp; Lynn, !Jomeroy
!)astor Rev . Ro land Wddman
Sunday ~chuol and worsh1p 10:25

I&gt;astor John W Dou&amp; las
Su nday School - 9:30a.m
Worsh1p - 10:45 a m , 7 p.m
Wedne ~ tlay Serv1ccs - 7 p Ill

Giveaway

If lf1terestod. Bul Unable
To Arton{:l. Call
VICTORY £ XPH!:SS
__ .,._ J_·_50_33_._ __

,_.aoo
__

DATA SYSTEMS COORO INA·

TOR For Reg1o nat Boha\lto rat
Healthca re Adm1n1 slra ll ve Au
10 Li ttle Pupp1es. 6 Fe males , 5 thon ly TM Coordm a tor Collec)s.
Ma les. Mak&amp; Good Ra bb i! Dogs. Or ga nt7e s., Anal yzes And Pres 614-361 ·7300.
e nt s S orv1cos Data To A. ss111t
P tann 1ng . Program Dcvel op mant
2 k11tens . 1 blac klwhJt&amp;, 1 solid And Re sou rce Ma nage ri"!U nt
white , 8w kl old, weaned . t1t ter
trained. 304-6 75-1091\.
Must Be Able To I Work WJth
3 mal e part Black lab pupp1e s. MecOS, Mac Networ king A,nd
MBjOr Mae1ntosh Appl ic atio fls
61 4-4-16-6929 afte r 6pm
Mus t Have Oa tabase ExpenentO
3 Month Old Pu pp1es. 614-- 367- And ADilil y To Adm inis le r ' A
Ma naccmenl lnlormat1on Sysre',m,
0539.
Expenen co Ma tn ta1nmg c - ma 11
4 Borderline Co111 e pupp1es. 7wk s Systems A Plus
,
old 304-675-6204
Bac helo rs Degr ee In Co mputer
C ha mpagne be iOe Sh!h · Tzu , Sc1ence Or Rel ated Oog ree Re groomed , s hots, neu tered 304- qUired Sal ary Range $ 18,000 67&gt;·4&lt;150.
$22 ,000 Plus E• c e ltent FrmQc
Coll1e Type Puppy, Sho ts , Ben efi ts Po s rt ton A11a ll abte IIJI Worm ed , Free lo Goo d Ho me . med la\el y
614 -367-9389.
Se ndr Resume Ar1d Loner O f rn
Klncns &amp; a dults ca1s, Frve Pomts te re st By September 18th To ()t.
re c tor 01 Operations, AthtlRS
area. cal1614 -992 6300.
Hockmg, Vmton 317 Boa rd . PO
Krllens To Good Hom e . 614 -388 Box 130 , Athe hs. Oh1 0 45 70~
EOE
9626

�•

Friday, September 15, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, September 15, 1995

ALLEYOOP

BRIDGE
WHICH ONE
01' VOU CAME
UP WIT~ TJ.4E

11 0

BEA ITIE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

Help Wanted

440

ALZEIHME RS UNIT
Jmmed!ate Pos1110ns Open For
:t\ssrstants
1 Full T1me A.ct v1t1es Po511•on
, Part T !IT\e Atlllr'ltlf'tS PcsH on
Please Apply At
Scene H1U N ~ors1ng Certer
:.11 1 Buckndge Road
t

A\ION CHRISTMAS SALES
Earn $8 $1 5 !Hr At Wotk Home

2 Bedroom Apartment Trash

800 992 6356 IN[)IREP

~~~;~~~~~~:;~~~~~~~~;;;~d

ECONOMIC DE VELOPM ENT Dt

180

RECTOR Fo&lt; Econom" Develop
ment Programs lf'l Jackson

W

t d
an e

'Ji

D

0

0

Will [)() lntertor Extenor Painting,
Reasonable Rates EKpefleneed
Reerences
For Free Est1mates,
1
CaY 614 24 , 5755
~

County Emplo yed By OhiO State
Un1vers ty Extens•on Salary Ne
90t1a bl e Depend 1ng 0 n E•per 1
ence Ma sters OeQree Preterred
In Appropr~ete F1eld EEO Em
player Contact Daney Jackson
Dtstr~ct D~rector Oh •o State Um
.., 8 rs 1ty Extens;ton, South Q 1str 1ct,
011 Standpipe Road Po Bo•
958 Jacks on OH 45640 Teto
pho ne 614 286 2177

210

Business
Opportunity

INOTK:E 1
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
r(lcommends that you do bUSI
ness w th people you know and
NOT to send money through the
mall until J'OU have tnvest1gated
theotfomlg

Executive D1rector Galha Counry
Children s Servtces Board Has
Opened The Search For An Ex
ecuttve o rector Th 1s Pos 1t1on
Requ 1res A Masters Degree Or
Equ 1valen 1 tn A Related F•eld And
Supervtsory Expenence Must Be
Know ledgeable In Management
01 Stall Operallons 01 A Group
Home Grant Wrmng And County
Serv 1ces Must Al ~o Be Alriallabte
u
For 0 ut 01 Town Trave I must
Have Ex cellent Commun 1cat 1on
Slulls

E~cellent Retail Space Ava•lable
Latayene Mall 513 922 0294
Newly EstabliSI1ed Busmess Of
Inter est To Women Selling Due
T M
p
0
ed•cal
roblems Only
Sertously Interested 614 446
6842 Aher 6 30 PM 9 PM Pr ce
Negocable

Salary Range $30 000 $35,000
Plus Benefrt s Ot fer ed P leas e
Send Resumes By September 22
1995 To
Mel Tabor
Ch tdren s Serv ces Board

83 Shawnee Lane
OH 45631

Gal ~rpohs

Job Oeser pt1ons Avartable U~on
Request By Callmg 614 446 4963
Or By Wrrtmg To The Above Ad
dress

All roal estate advertising m
tl'11s newspaper IS subJect to
the Federal Fa1r Housing Act
ol 1968 which makes 11 illegal
to adverttse "any preference,
hmilatlon or drscnm1natron
based on race, color, relrg1on
sex familial status or nattonal
orlg1n or any Intention to
make any such preference
l•mltalion or d1scnmtnatlon •

E.:perrenced Screen Pnnter
hnmed1a te Pos1110n
SeriOUS Calls Or1ly 614 446 2388
Ask For ChriS
Wa nt ed

Wanted Full Time Truck Dr1ver
COL Class A l cer1se Needed
Gat hpol1s Reduct1on Co R1o
Grand e OH 614 245 5514

Th1s newspaper will not
knowllngly accept
advertisements lor real estate
which 1s In violation of the taw
Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
aelvartlsed In lh1s newspaper
are avallable on an equal
opporlunlty basis

Glass Insta ll er Needed lmme
dla!ely Elp en ence Requ1 r e~
Aulo Cammer Cill Compett11Ve
Wa9es Send Replies To CLA
35 7 CIO Gall polls Da1ly Tr1bune
825 Th rd Avenue Gal11pohs OH
45631
Ha1rstyli st Day &amp; Even ng Hours
6t4 446 9496 Tues Sal 8 5 For

ApptKOSHER VEAL PRODUCER

~·-·----. .

Loo~mg For Elpenenced Feeder

REAL ESTATE

&amp; Manager 01 Modern M1lk Fed
IlEAL Fac tny 614 245 5588

Now takmg apl)licat10ns lor del1\l
erv dr 'oler neat appearance
!r1endty, reliable 1nsured vehicle
anCI knowledge ol Racme Syra
cuse and Mmersville area All a
must Contact O&amp;U P1zza 6 14
992 7287
Q!IICCIMarkellng ASSIStant need
ed tor bus~ PI Pleasant In
surance agency College des red
Send wor~ elpenence personal
relerer)Ces, &amp; satary reqUirements
to PO Box 367 Scon Depot W\/

25560
-Par~ T1me $9 IHr Answer Ta le

,. pllones Fle1uble Hours ! loc;al
Area No E-penence Necessary
Calli f(l9 474 4290EK\ 116
Salesperson OpportuMy w1th es
tabli shod Real Estate Company
Send rttsume to Bol G 9 %Pt
Pleas~nt Reg1ster 200 Ma1n St
Pt Ple~~nt WV 25550
Tank frlver With COliHaz t.tat
1yr •~Aenence PhOne 304 675

4393
180

Two 1979 Chevy Full Stze For
Sale Or Trade For Guns, 614·

wanted To Do

Ace Tree Ser\IIC&amp; Complete tree
care, 20~rs e•p &amp; msured free
esumates 614 441 119 1 or 1

800 508 8887
Dozer Work $35 IHr Free Es!l
mares 814 379 2922
Gener111 Mamtenance Pamt1ng
Yard Work Wtndows Washed
Gutter' Cleaned Ugh! Hau ling
Comm&amp;rlcal Aesldenual Stove
614 44~8861
Geor9fll Ponabte Sawm111 don t
haul YO!olr logs IO I~ m1ll )USt call
304 676 1957
1 W1ll OQ t:lousecleamng Bonded
Call Chns 614 256 g322
hlhehaif~l Thac~er &amp; Kevin Bled

soe BAB Enterpr se blown msu
lat1on free est1mate on house

614 74N503
Professtonal Tree Serv1ce Com
plate T1ee Care Buckel Truck
Serv1c• 50 Ft Reach Stump Removal, Free Esllmatesl In
suranCf 24 Hr Emergency Serv
1ce Ctll And Savel No Tree Too
BliJ Or Too Small! B1dwell Oh10
614 3819643 e14 367 1010
Rub &amp; t)crub Clea"n1ng Servtce
dustlng 1 mopp1ng Windows and
more Complore aerv1ce or touch
ups Relerencea on request call
Terry 1$ 614 gg2·4232 or 614
992 4A~t
Sun V1lley Nursery School
Ch1ldcare M F Gam 5 30pm Ages
2 K Yo"'no Sehool Ago Dunng
Summe~ 3 Days per Week M1n1
mum 614 446 3657
Wan ted To Buy Junk Autos,
Any Cond 1t1on 614 388 9062 Or
614 446 PART
Well expenonced mather of 2 re
liable uustworthy w•ll care tor elderly or handicapped tn your
home 304-675 6183
Wdl Clean Houaes Or Olflces
Weekly Or One Ttme, References
Ava1lat:Me 614 441 0870

310 Homes for Sale
3 bedroom house 1n Bradbury 2
bath above ground pool heat
pump appro~ 2 acres prtce to
sell 614-992 6190
3 Bedrooms ar1ck 1 112 Baths,
Full Basement Central Air 1 t 16
Sunset Ome Galltpol1s 614 446·

1828
3 Bedrooms State Route 141 10
M1tes Out Gallipolis 24x32 Ga
rage New Heat Pump &amp; Furnace
In Ground Pool New Satelhte
D sh Galha County Local Scl'lool
01Sif1Ct 614 379-2410 Alter 5

PM

320

Mobile Homes
fOr 8ale

1995 Close Out Sa te All 1995
Models Uust Go Save $1 000
$1 500 On Singles And S1 500
$2 OOO On Seci!Ona ts Buy Now
Ar.&lt;:l Save At French Cry Homes,
Inc Galhpohs Oh1o 614 446
9340
2acres 1964 Spnngbrook mob1te
nome 3m1 At 2 N on AI 62 304

House for sale 3 acres, 9 room 2
batn 4 bedroom family room w11h
l~replaces 4 car garage 65 foot
porch 2 heat pumps out of s1ght
YI8W, $95 000,614 949 2055

Ktck Olf Sale Btg Sa'olrngs On
Otsplay Models Save $1000 To
S2 000 On All 1995 D splays Call
Cathy Or Sandy At Mountatr
State Homes In Pt Pleasant
WI/A 304-675 1400

730

Sale Or Rent 1977 Duke 2 Bed
Excell ent Cond tto:"'
rooms
Maybe lef1 On Rented Lot 614
446-1610

350 Lots

&amp; Acreage

2 Story Log House 14 Acres
Gallra County, PartJally Restored
Rural Water, Located 8 Mttes
From Gall1pol1s On St Rr t 41
$25 000 614 379 2561 Eventngs
3 112 acres partJally cleared road
s1de lrontage on New L1ma Ad ,
beautiful v1ew, St5000 614 742

2803

-----------1
5 Acr.es For $12 000, Located
Between Vtnton &amp; A10 Gtande
Sa1lor Road 614 388 9737

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1 Acre 2 Bedroom Tra1ter Deck &amp;
Porch See To App 304 5 76

3288 Applegrove WVA
12ll65 Concord 3 Bedrooms, Gas
Heat New Carpe~ EKcellent Con
dt!IOn $7 950,614 446-0175
1980 Wmdsor 14M70 E•cellent
Condit1on, 2 Bedrooms, 1 Bath
Large t&lt;ttchen large LIVtng Room
10:.12 Utll!!y Bu1tdmg $10 500
614 245 9431
1982 Windsor Mobile Home 4
Actes Approx 3 Bedrooms 2
Baths All Eteemc Heat W1ll Sell
On Land Contract Uove In lm
med1atelyl 513 390 9856 614
388 9362

4 Rooms &amp; Bath Unlurn shed No
Pets Water Pa 1d, 91 Cedar
Street GallipoliS 614 3881100

675 5022
A r Hockey Table $75 Gravely
R1dtng Trac tor Mower 12 HP
St 000 Bnggs &amp; Stratton 5 HP
Sell Propelled Mulchmg Mower
$150 614 245-5747

Atum1num Tool Box /Full S•zo
Truck Dual L d! 0 amend Cut,
l1keNew $175 6143792428
Car seal $50 stroller $25 walker
$ t 5 mlant camer $10 playpen
$10 Pr~ees ne9ouable 304 675
2980 alter 5pm
Concrem &amp; Plasuc SeptiC Tanks
300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ron
t va ns Enterpnses Jackson OH
1 BOO 537 9526
Daves Swap Shop now open
8129 SR7N Chesh1re Oh10
Guns tools tOJ'S glassware
m1sc 614 367 7106
EPiJhl p1ec e set o! while T Fa I
cookware new sltll 10 bo~ new
kmg S)Ze cranberry QUi lted bed
spread rw n size whue and gold
French Provmcml bed With mat
tress box spr1ngs and frame sol
td p.ne tr1ple dresser w•th lighted
hutch on top mauve colored sw1
vel rocker mmt green w1ng back
cha ~r blue flowered Broyh1ll club
cha lf lour p ece oak I v1ng room
su1te 25" Magnavoll: T\/ Sill:
drawer dresser 614 985-.3595

One bedroom lurn•shod apart
ment tn M•ddleport ver,. clean
614 446 3091 614 992 2178 or
614 992 53)4
Twm Rtvers Tower now accepting
applications tor 1br HUD subs1d
•zed apt lor elderly and hand
capped EOH ::ll4 675-6679

450

Furnished
Rooms

Etectf1c hosp1tal bed $250 l~rm
elecU!C ltlr cha~r $325 hrm exeel
lent cond1bon 304 773 5038
Etectr~c Wheetcha1rs / Scooters
New /Used Scoorer /Wheelchau
l Its Sta1rway Elevators Ldt
ChalfS Bowman s Homecare
614 446 7283

Ell:erc1se Mach1ne $125 6 14

Rooms lor n:mt week or month
Starting at $1 20tmo Gall•a Hotel
6t4 446 9580

3S8 8293
F1rewood lor sale $40/cord 614
992 6769 alief Spm

Sleepmg rooms with cook1ng,.
Also tra iler space on nver All
hook -ups Call alter 200 p m
3l4 773-5651 Mason WI/

460

Freezer Beef For Sale Jenkms
Hereford Farm 614 256 1335
Fng1da~re

8 000 BTU Atr Cond1
110ner 5 Months Old Ask1ng
$225 19• Color TV W1th Remote
$140 614 446 0792 Alter 5 PM

Space for Rent

Appro• 6ac res flat Ola&lt;k- 10&lt;&gt; 1
2 Tra1ler Lots For Rent McCor
road lrontage 6 112m1 on C
Crook Rd $12 000 llrm 304-675- m•ck Road $1251Mo Water Pa1d
614 446-4491 614 44&amp;3888
2741
Four lots near Racme approK 1
112 acres each start1ng at $5000,
call 614 949 2025
J
REMOTE beautiful r1dge top
land 3 m1tes soutn of Carpenter
Ohto Mt Unton Ad One 9·acte
parcel $8347 7 acres lor $7086
Owner t nancmg Call lor good
map 6t4 593 8545
Scen1c Valley Apple Grove,
beautdul 2ac lots public water
Clyde Bowen Jr 304 576 2336

RENTALS
410 Houses for Rent

Newly Remodeled Small 4 Room
Cottage No Pets Porter Area
6t4386-1100
Small house to r rent no pets

420

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 Bedroom 5 U1 South At 218
Gallipolis $200/Mo $100 Deposit
Includes Water 6t4 256·6769
614 256 1337
2 Bedroom Mob1le Home On Bob
McCormick Road Gallipolis 614
446---9669
2 Bedroom Op~n Kuchen L1v ng
Room FP CA WID Partly Fur
n shed References DApOSit
Rt218 614 256 1044
2bedrQom tr atler References &amp;
depos11 No pets Also trailer lot
Rt 62 N Loeust Rd, Pt Pleasant
304 675 1076
2bedroom wlcentral a•r w1th lliCie
pnvate tot Gathpolrs Ferry area
no pets 304 67S-t226
j Bedrooms 2 Full Baths Depos1t
Required You Pa~ All Utll111es In
Porter Area 614 388 9162

Two bedroom mobile home on
one acre 12K60 all eleetnc $275
per mo $200 depos1t references
Leadmg Cree~ 614 742 1301
I
614·992 2772
Two Bedroom S250rMo Plus U111
111es Oepostt, References Re qUired, Rt 218 Alter 6 PM 614

983·4607
440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur·
mshed and unfurnished secutiTy
depos11 requ~retl no pets 614

992 2218

Frost Free Relngerators $100
Each 614 379- 2720 AFTER 6

Tr811er lot on Braod Run Ad New
Haven $60/mo 304-773 5881

480

PM
Get~alfiC cha1r

used l1ke new
Phone 304 895-3005

Equipment
for Rent

H1 Ellec1ency l P Or Na\Ural Gas
92% Furnaces 100 000 BTU
$1 250 In stalled 1 800 2B7 6308
614 446 6308 Duq Systems And
A11 Cond t10ners Free Esbmatcs.

Good LocatiOn Well Established
Den11st ofhce Dont1st ret11 ng 10
1 95 Off1ce IS set up for new take
over Wtll rent or sell eqUipment
Halls Barber Shop SUIIdtng 507
Man St, Pt Pleasant WV 25550
Call 304 675 3851 or Oenllsl
3)4 675-2239

490

Inser t F•teplace Good Shape
614 446 081 t

JET
AERATION MOTORS

For Lease

Repomed New &amp; Rebu1lt In Stock
Call Ron E'lans 1 800 537 9528

Rent or Lease 100"4 location
store room 1600 sq It Po1nt
Pleasant oppos•re the post ofllce
Call304 675 5733

Lawn Ch e! A1dmg Law n Mower
36 " Cut 1 t HP Fa1r Cond Call
Ralph0 1ler 614388 8472

MERCHANDISE
51

o

Mans New Srze SX W1nte r F11!ed
Jacket W th Hood Never Worn
l1ght Grey /B lu e $75 6 14 446-

Household
Goods

304 773 9192

12x65 2 Bedrooms 2 Ba ths
Calhedral Beamed L!'lltng Room
Large Bedrooms large Bath
W1tl1 Sunken Tub
AC
In
Cheshire 614 367 7671

320

2Rooms Ptus Bath Liilayeue
Mall
No M
K1tchenlDAll Ut11inea pa1d
$
175 00 onth epos1t Aequ~red
614 446 7733

9465
l.tTN STATE MYSTERY TRAIN

Applia nces
Reconditioned
Wasners Dryers Ranges Refr1
graters, 90 Day Guarantee!
French Cny Maytag 614 446

Fall Foliage Tra1n Tr1ps See
WV s New A1ver Gorge Nat1onal
R1ver Oct 6 6 13 15 20, &amp; 22
1 800 347 t231

7795

Needed used Perk1ns Bra11le
Wn!er lor v1sually 1mpa11ed stud
ents Contact T•na Meadows ,
304 675 4540 e:.:t 12

Carpet &amp; \/rnyl In Stock $5 00 Yd
&amp; Up 60 Pa-tterns 01 K•tchen Car
pel In Stock Over 35 Patterns
Vtnyl In Stock Mollohan Carpets
614 446· 7444

New Blue &amp; Whi le Wool Ladles
School Jacket $80 Desk Organ
zer Cab1net $50 614 44fi 0885

Electrtc stove, white, $75 Aelpg
era tor wh1te S 100 both good
cond1110n 304 675 3056 alter
530pm

GOOD

USED

!)atiO lurn!lure wrought lfOniWICk
er couch tables cha~rs, good
coM t1on 304 882 2038 alter

Washers, dryers, relflg&amp;rators
ranges Skaggs App l1ances 76
Vme Street Call 614 446 73g9
, 80()-499 3oi99

&lt;pm
Pea vey XR 700C rmxer 7 m cs 2
Peavey 112 PS speakers 1 Pea vey PV m1c 2 JVC TOW 103
cassettes dual decks cable
used very l1ttle ell:cellent cond1
ton $t 500 lrm614 985 4485

H1de a bed 185, good condtt1on
304 882 3186

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complete home furn1shmgs
Hours Uon Sat 9·5 614 446·
0322, 3 mtles out Bulavllle Ptke
Free DeliVery

Relr rgeratois Stoves Washers
And Dryer s All Recond1!10ned
And Gauranteed• $tOO And Up
W1ll Deliver 614 669 644 t

Queen SIZe waterbed padded
chetry ra1ls and cherry head
board, lull wave $250 Call 304
675 0050

Septic Tank Jet Aerat1on Motors
New &amp; Reb uilt / Installed Call
Johns John 614 446 4782

Sate Tnla Wee~ Only!
Aefngerator Fros1 Free Was
$150, Cut To $125, Refrtgeralor
l1ke New Almond Frost Free
Was $350 Cut To $295 Refng erator 2 Door, $95 Wasl1er Was
$150 Cut To $125 Washer
Whtrlpool S95 Washer Kenmore
$95 Dryer sgs 30 Inch Electnc
Range $95, Skaggs Appliances,
76 Vtne Street GBIIIpOhs 614
... 7398. Or 1 800.. 99-3499

SIGNS Portable lighted changeable lener s1gn $329 free letters
and del1very Plasttc letters $55
(Second bo• free) AAA S1gns 1
800·533 3453
TREADMILL SeatS L•lestyler a 0
1 5 HP Motor Auto Incline F1t
ness Monuor One Year Old In
Excellent Co nd1t1 0n $350 Call
614 446·1537
Wanted tnlormatlon of Robert
SA Jr Adams Family Buned m
Adams Cemetery, Mason C1ty S
Adams 5930 Sycamore Bartle tt
TN 38134

Stove, Freezer Washer, Dryer,
Aefngerator 614 256 1238

SWAIN
AU CT ION &amp; FURNITURE

62

Ol1ve St Gatlipohs NeW &amp; Used
furnnure heaters , Western &amp;
Work boots 614 446-3159

\

r ''

J-t~~o~

Wl4f!nl1

O tiltS ~~yHEA.Irle

540

Miscellaneous

630

Washer

electr~ c

stove dinette

table and cha1rs 614 949 2908

'

Livestock

Merchandise
STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallo n
Upnght Ron Evans Enterpnses
Jackson OhiO 1 800 537 9528
Wooden Dmette Set $30 Con
sore T II $50 l•v ng Room Su1te
$50 614 44&amp;-8627

550

Butldlng
Supplies

Block b11ck sewer p pes wmd
ows, lintels etc Claude Winters,
R1o Grande OH Call 614 245
5121

560

Pets for Sale

2 mare pontes lemate gentle
easy to handle 304 773 5405
2 Year Old Angus Bull 614 379

2682
4 Horses For Sale For lnlorma
t1on 614 388 3658

ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALES
Spec•al Fall Feeder Ca l f Sale
Thursday September 21St At 7
PM Cattle Accepted Starting At
4 PM Wed nesday Also Early
Cons1gnment Of 60 Heael Of Lim
OUSin X Bred &amp; 15 Head 01
800 Pd s Yearling Cattle Con
s1gned For Th1s Sate Th1s Will
Oe Are 01'11~ N1ght Fall Calf Sale!
Hauhn9 Ava1t able 614 592 2322
614 696-3531

Groom Shop Pet Groormng Fea
tuflng Hydro Bath Jul1e Webb
Call 614 446 0231

P1gs for sale 304 675 6490

2 mate black AKC Coc~er pups
champ1on bloodlines $150ea
304 937 2733

Reg1s tered Qu arter Horse Geld
ng 19 Years Old 614 446 1763
Aller 6 30 P:U

AKC Bassett pupp1es seven
weeks old first shots and
wotmed $110 6t46673856
FA Benedum

Seyen month old purebred Stm
mental bull 614 949 2822

AKC Reg•stered Chow Chow
Pupp1es Born 7115195 Papers
I st Shots Wormed $250 Each
Parents On Premes1s 614 245

Hay lor sale round bales
15001bs $15 square bales Al!alla
$2/bate straw $1 50/ba le Ed W
Mauo~ 304 675 1487 call tram
12 12

0613

640

Hay &amp; Grain

AKC reg1stered coonhound le
male 5 yrs old wtll run &amp; tree
$125 oall any!lme614 843-5251

Silage Bagger tor lease 100 150
20011 bags ava1tabte 304 273·
4215

AKC Reg• stared Coc~er Spantel
Puppes $150 614 379 2728

!St5ea

Beagle Pupp1es 1 Male 2 Fe
males Had 1st Shots And
Wormed Mother &amp; Father Can Be
Seen$75Each 614 4469564
Boston Terner Reg1stered lor
Stud Serv1ce 304 675 6328
F1ve Cockate•ts and rwo chmch1l
las !or sale 614 742 2525
Rot\ Weiler Pupp1es $150 Each
Parents Can Be Seen 614 441

0538
570

Square bales $1 $2 Round bfles
304 675 3960

TRANSPORTATION

•Q

71 0

Autos for 5ale

1968 SS Camara sharp $5 500
304 675- 7-'153
1974 OodQe Four Door $350
1979 P lymouth W1ndow Van
S600 614 446 9782

Musical
Instruments

Ant1que upn9ht p1ano w1th bench
$200 You haul 304 675 3383 at
ter 6pm
Bundy II Alto Sax Very Good
Cond1t10n $J7S, 614 446-1610
Bundy II Al to Sa:.: good cond
$500 304 675 4 !60
Bundy II Alto Sax \/ery Good
Cond1110n 614 2~ 5820 Alter 5
PM Days 614 446 4612 E:.:t

1976 Ford Van With New Starter
New E~haust Good 300 Cu In
Motor Auto Transm1SS.ton Good
Battery Good 16 5 T1res On 8
lug Wheels &amp; Cargo Cage 614
367- 0240 Belween 10 AM &amp; 1

PM
1978 Cougar XR 7 clean ms de
now ttres $1 000 t~rm 304 6 75

2550

c,.

t982 Ford Granada PS PB 6
Iinder, Auto 4 Door $900 OBO
614 446 0208

Bundy II sa~ophone exce llent
cond1t1on used very IItie $350
hrm 614 742 2373
Conn Trumpet $100 6 14 388

9655
Conn trumpet e•c cond $350 11
2~arat d1amono cluster r ng $250
304 675 5726

1986 Dodge Afles K staltonwag
on good mes no rust $650
1984 Chevy Celebuty stat10nwag
on good work car $600 614
742 1400

Snare Drum K1t, Excellent Shape
S1lver IGrev Pr~ce $275
14
446---9465

1988 4 Door Shadow 119 000
Mtle-s S 1 200 1992 4 Door Ply
mouth Sundance 70 000 M1les
AutomatiC $5 000 OBO 614
256--1539 6t4 256-1233-

Trombone Fstop Too Or Ltne
Bach /Mercedes $350 614 4469465

1989 Caval er Good Shape New
Alms LoadOO Call Alter 500 614
446 4 737

Trumpet for sate $?50 614 742
350ti

1989 Mercury Grand Marqws V
8 Automat c Loaded Elcellent
Cond1t1on 73 000 Miles $4 900
614 44t ·0414

e

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Farm Equipment

Otsc:ount farm tractor parts for
Massey Ford IH &amp; others
S1der s Equipment Co, Hender
son WV 304 675 7421 or 1 800
277 3917
JO 450 C Dozer ROP Wrenc h e
Way 614 445 8044 Plus 1800
Ser~es Road Tra cker 1976 Low
Milage
John Deere 12 HP A1d ng Mower
$1 200 New Holland 56 Hay Rake
$1 700 Bo th In Excellent Cond1
t1on 614 367 0555 Leave Mes
sage UNo Answer
New &amp; puU ty~ brush hog .$650
3 ~~ hitch potato plows $75 614
843 5216
Two big salag wagons NH chop
per &amp; blower JD gnnder m1"er all
n good shape Other !arm eQUIP
ment I sold my came Ed W Mat
to• 304 675 1487 call from 12 12

630

1986 Honda CA2SO never raced
cond $1 600 1993 Yamaha
Wamor 350, r1dden very li ttle
9.11C COnd $2 800 Xl4 675-5815
~:.c

1991 DodQe Shadow 4 Door Au
tomatlc AC AM tFM Cassetle
Rear Spo1ler 88 000 M1tes $3 800
OBO, 614 256-6169
1991 Ford Taurus SW Power
Everything• Seats 8 Excellent
Cond1t1on 6 14 446 3200 Alter
4 30 PM

Baby p!gs lor sate, $25, 614 949
2908or6149492017
Cochm Brahma Cross Ch1ckens
One Rooster F1ve Hens Plus
Seven Young One:. $20, t Pr Ar·
aucanas S6 1 Pr Black Suma·
tras S6 614-256-1309

~UMANS ~AVE

17 112ft UFG 140hp 10 Wllh full
covers &amp; !ratter open bow good
cond•tlon asking $5 000 OBO
304 882 2326 alter 5pm

GtN~ALoGy
".f£,Rvu;f

6PM

-1t]o
~(

1987 21 Ft 4 Wtnns 215 Sun
Downer ItO Cuddy Cabm AMI
FM Cassette CB $9 000 6t4
44fi-3040

Auto Pans &amp;
Accessories

New gas lanka, one ton truck
wheel9, rad1ators, 11oor mats, etc
D &amp; A Auto, R1pley WV 304 372
3933 Of 1 800 273-9329

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

+

1

Pass

4•

Pass

4 NT

Pass

Pass

5•

Pass

Pass
Pass

5•

Pass

6•

All pass

-·
"TfMc.et&gt;

i~~

vJO,'i&gt;
II l&gt;~ S' CENPf'D II
USED MO~~
APP,OPiliATtL.Y ...

1 SH/11

fAMILY Tl'ffJ'

® '

~\
OlfMI ~CyNEAI.-.:

m

~
~

~

-

,.

-q

11\1~ ~'r ~F»&gt;JU/olt.,ew1\f.&gt;

r fffi. 'IW IIID..I \..liU£. I.E m

I

IT I.JXj(':&gt; LIKE. ~\'£. 5/AK.J.. CN3 1'-1
Ttl£ MID.Xf. cr NG.l~. (dJ.f)(S I

bndgc, Ch1cago

or

tedm

dummy's king Now came the club srx

CARL SAGAN!

flllST OFf, S~L.l&gt;OM tMVt

rubber

Wh en East played th e four. Stansby un
derplayed hts two The finesse worked
so dccJarcr ruffed a di8mond 10 hand
drew East s last trump and cla1med all
13lr1Cks
Note that 1l docsn t help ~:ast lo cov
cr w1th the club queen at tnck SIX
Declarer wms w1th the ace leads h!S
club two t o dummy s five, ruffs a d1a
mond and sl!ll gels all the lncks

\~P..Vfi$

""
1\\IINI(~If(X ~ "-II-lUTE 'I

1116:£ [
~I.£

L C A

N(:ATPG

IZ E G

XZ A W

V C A E

UGMJPG

c

c

XN G I H

I J H

DJ T

VZIIUZIIO

(

BZIIZCNX

PREVIOUS SOLUTION · Amenca may be violent greedy and cotomahst but
my God 11 s mleresttngl - Paul Newman

':~!:t;~' S©~Jtl1A-LGt.lrS·
Edtt•d by (LAY I

WOIO
tAM I

POLlAN

0

Reorronge Ieifer! of
four Krambled words
low to form four ' words

ULEHIM

R E M W0

I'

I

r-11 ~: ,'

f-..,.L_A....I_E,_o

"

'Have you ever nobced
my fnend satd to me , that no
matter what you do there s aiWfJyS s.omeone who knew you

IO

Co mple&gt;e 1he chuckle quo!ed

by fd l1n9 1n lhe mtss1ng words
you devP.Iop fr om su~ p No J below

TO GET ANIWE R

1NC.LUDE.S

'lOUR 1'"0\JTH,
IM ALL

SCRAM-LETS

FOI'. IT

ANSWERS

Warmth · Lowly - Rocky - t'.l/1/e . HOLLOW

We

STRIKE. A BlOW IN THE. ~R ON
HIGH PRICES SHOP Tl-£ CLASSFIED~

IFRIDAY
"DEAR IOONW,
YOUR LOV~ NOURI&gt;H&amp;;

B1ll Omck s Home Improvements
add111ons remodel1ng rool1ng,
Sid ng, plumbing etc;; Insured call
Bill Omck 614 992 5183

Ill£ LIKE THG ~EGUR­
GifATEO CONTEW!'9 OF
A MolllER SPARI?OW~

ilfLLY NOURIS!!ES
~Ell VOUN6 '

C&amp;C General Home t.ta1n
tenence Pa ntmg vmyl s1d1ng
carpentry doors w1ndows baths
mob1le home repa1r and more For
tree esumate call Chet 614 992

HMM .I DON'r
!(NOW AF'TOR

rr ALOIJP
IT J~T DoE~'T
SOVfoill Rlt!lf/T.

R!'AOIIJ6

1'111 CI(()SSIIJ&amp;

our •mcm1~ rz

9PARROW''AND
/NSERrtNG

i'fA~

Ron s 'TV Servtce spectahz•ng 1n
Zenllh also servtctng mos1 other
brands House calls 1 800 797
0015 wv 304 576 2398

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

rioof1ng and gutters comm&amp;rcrat
and res1dent1al m1nor r&amp;pairs 35
years e~pertence, B&amp;B ROOF
lNG 614 992 5041

'TOO NIU"1Y.

•

'IIIOT1!6R.
LIZAFIP '

ern you
the year ahead Send for your
ES (feb 20-Mareh
1 ~:~~~:~J~
Astro·Graph predtctiOns today by matltng you usually treat your guests g
$2 and SASE to Astra Graph cJo th1s today you m1ght nol be your customary
newspaper P 0 Box 1758 New Vorl&lt; cordtal self Tho se you entertatn wtil prob
NY 10163 Make sure to state your zod• ably feel 1tl at ease

ARIES (March 21·Apnl 19) Try no1 lo
ac s1gn
LIBRA (Sept 23 Oot 23) If you la•l 1o worry about th1ngs that may never hap
take care of certain dut1es that you know pen Instead ma1nta1n a poS111ve hopeful
need your attention today you could col attitude Take command and dtrect your
lect so much gUJII that 11 w1ll spo1 1 your own dest1ny

day
SCORPIO (Oct

&amp;

-~
Saturday Sepl t 6 t 995

In the year ahead you mtght have
greater Influence over your peer group
and an Increase m populanty Fnends w11t
become tnterested m anythmg that 1nter
ests you

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) In maners of
1mportance today prepare to fend for
yourself Persons who usually bacl&lt; you
up m1ght sktd arout"'d corners trytng lo
ftnd help themselves Get a JUmp on hie
by understanding the •nfluences lhat gov

24-Nov

SEPTEMBER 15 I

"moTllel2

DRYWALL

A:STRO·GRAPH

had been hstentng to a poltttctan brag about
h1s accomplishments Grandpa stmply sa1d ·G reat
ness wtthout goodness 1s HOLLOW

SPARRDiiJ"
!h.INDS A 611

6323

or commerc1pf wmng
1-le.ster Lt
Rtdenour
I
304 675 -

NT I G

J M

VCOG

H J

WJH

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE i!TlERI

7795

Heat Pumps A r Condit omng 11
You Don 1 Call Us We Bolh lose1
Ftee Est1mates 1 800 287 6308
4 446 6308 wv 002945

D J T

THE If IOUAR£1

Appliance Pans And Servtce All
Name Brands Ovor 25 Years EK
per~ence All Work Guaranteed
French C1ty Maytag 614 446'

COMFORT ASSURED DEALER
lAWRENCE ENTERPRISES

Each leiter

$PRINT NUMBFRED LEIT!RI IN

Uncond111onat hlenme guarantee
Local relerences lurmshed Call
(6H) 446 0870 Or (614) 237
0488 Rogers Waterproohng Es
tabhshed 1975

Electrical and
Refrigeration

by Luis Campos
are c realed lrom quo1at10r1s by IIIITIOU&amp; people past onO prosent
m the crpher ~;t&lt;md5 lor another Today s clue )I &amp;quli/S S

L_.l.-..1.._.!._..!.._.l__.J

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

840

-know?
21 Thing In law
23 Gravel ridges
25 Finnish first
name
26 Use scissors
27 Attentiongetting sound

Culebf~y Cipher cryployr&lt;~ms

WORNNE
1--rl-'-1,.-..,1,.-..,1.,.5--rl~

Home
Improvements

720 Trucks for Sale

19 How WIIS-

CELEBRITY CIPHER

I" I

wrn:, I.Jl)T I

rr• THAT

Plumbing
Heating

10 Advise
11 Howls

30 Leak (out)
31 Flying
saucers
(abbr.)
32 N M. art
colony
35 Water pltchor
38 Curlier
40 Attack
43 Runner
Sebastian45 Norma47 Boasts
49 Campus area
50 Doothers
51 Legal-aid org
52 Photocopy
54 Vagrants
55 Invitation
abbr
56 Largest
continent
59 Test

•J

SERVICES

1786

France
9 W1ld sheep

Pass

1975 26 Foot Holiday Vacat1on
Camper Gootl Shape Everythn1g
Woril.s l614 446 1400

304 S82 3202

B Wa11ers , tn

Pass

Pass

PM

1993 GJ.tC Sterra• 1121on V6
auto ac ps matchmg t1berglass
topper low mtleage e11c cond

1 Impulse
2 Phone part
3 Racetrack lerm
4 Vaporous

6 Eaau' a country
7 Stair post

28 Concalts

1972 Prowler Camper 22 Ft
$2 500 614 379 2220 Alter 6

Plymouth Volare wagon, 6 cyl
614 985 4306

1988 Ford F1SO With 302 atr con
d1ttonet 614-992 5970

5 Take first prize

DOWN

East
Pass

'

Freeman s Heattng And Cooling
Installation And Service EPA
CertJI•ed Res1denua1 Commorc1at
614 256 1611

1986 Chevy S 10 V-6 Auto
Good Cond1t1on, Runs Great!
49 000 Ongmal Mile s $2 500,
6t4 379 2854

North

r

SAID T~AT 7

WllO

BORN LOSER

Electnc Ho1st Incased In Bu mper
For Van Or Pick Up 614 3670240 Between 10 A.M &amp; 1 PM

820

33 Printer 's
36 Couch
37 Hazard
39 Tiers

i

AND '1'00 KNOW

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

1970 Tro1an 28Ft Cabm Cru1ser
260 HP Che--~y Engme &amp; Tra•let
$2,000 OBO 614 379 2220 Aher

Earls Home Ma1ntenance vmyl
Sldmll\ toolmg exter1or pa1nt 1ng
power wash1ng free Est•mates
614 992 4451 or 614·992 4232

t994 Honda C1\I IC EX Coupe,
Auto A1r, Loaded 17 500 Miles
Cam Red Askmg S13 850 614
44fi 8910

A MORAL SENSE TllAT

ANIMALS DON'T ~AVE, AND WE CAN FORESEE
T~E CONSEQUENCES OF OVR ACTIONS

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for 5ale

1993
Olds
1991
Ford

1994 F1reb1rd Loaded, New Con
d!11cn, Pnce $13200,614446
0219. 614 446-3117

mammal

57 Hookhke parts
downfall
58 Aleutian Island
17 Crooner Vallee 60 Navy ship prof
16- Dinsmore
61 Tamarisk
20 Tendersalt tree
(Robert Duvall 62 Actress Ten movieI
63 Roman 1006
22 Excessively
64 Sullen
24 Baseball's
65 Eyelid problem
Durocher
66 Fashionable
25 Adopt
resort
29 Nose
mea auras
34 Wise one

events normally ynu are JUSt trymg to
make your contract You don I worry
about overt.ncks But m a pa1r event or
a board a match tei:\ms wmmng an
overtnck can make the d1ffercnce be
tween a good result and a dtsaster
Today 's deal occurred durmg the
Open Board a Match teams al the F'all
Natwnals m Mmneapolts la st
November
Four no-trump was Roman Key Card
Blackwood the reply showmg three
aces F1ve dtamonds asked lor the club
queen South denymg that card F1vc
spades was a cue b1d North stdllrymg
to get to seven clubs
The declarer lnple world champ1on
Stansby, took the ftrst trtck 1n
wtth the spade ace He played a
d1amond lo dummy s king cashed th e
dtamond ace and n1ffed a dtamond w1th
th e club Jack When West discarded a
heart Stansby assumed. that We st
d1dn't have the club queen However.
JUSt m case West had the smgleton club
seven Stansby led the club ctghl to

Honda TAX 125 4 wheeler good
cond , $1 200 OBO 304 576
2615

PM
Chevy lumina $6995 1992
Cutlass Supreme $6995
Ford Taurus $2895 1988
Taurus $2395 1988 Mer
cury Sable LS $3195 1989 GMC
S 15 $3495 1986 Ford F150
$2095 1984 Pontiac F1ero $1195
1986 BUICk RIVIera $1595 1985
Olds Toronado $1495 Scotty s
Used Cacs New Haven WV
304 882 3752

In

PEANUTS

1994 Yamaha VZ250 614 367
7539 Alter 3 PM

Hang lm1sh rep~ur
Ce1hngs te111ured plaster repa1r
Call Tom 304 675 4186 20 years
expenence

1991 Honda Accord LX 4 Door
$9 400, 614- 256 1533 Alter 7

Friends

53 Horselike

By Plulhp Alder

1992 Yamaha Banshee Excellent
Cond11ton, $2,500 614 379 2561
Evenngs

810

42 Ocular
44 Female
prophet
46 Head {II)
48 River Inlet
49 Society of

One more,
score higher

t991 Honda 4 Trac~s 4•4 Good
Condmon $3 500 6 t 4 367 7025

790

West

Opemng lead

1979 1000 Suzuki motorcycle lor
sale lot of new pari, runs &amp;Keel
lent 614 992·6069 call any11me

760

4 3

1 Ginseng plant
4 Dancer Verdon
B Apparel
12Get-of
(discard I
13 Stall ollleer
14 Locale
15 Wander
restlessly
16 W1nter

Motorcycles

92 Kawasaki KX 250 e:.eellent
eond111on ready to race lots of
new pans S2000 61• 992 3672

Livestock

Baby Ca l ves For Sale Andy
Adams Oa~ry 614 379-2744

BARNEY

1Q95 Ford F 150 XLT 4•4 Blac~
Short Bed Sen For Pa~ 0!1 6t4
742 2241

247
t985 Pont1ac Grand Pm, south
ern car l1ke new cond111on small
v a s2.eoo, 614 949 2877

Soulh

1993 Geo Tracker 4x4 Gooel
Cond1t10n $6 900 1976 Chev 314
Ton 4X4 $1 600 614 446 6958

740

Answer to Prevlou• Puule

Vulnerable Ne1ther
Dealer East

)

Bomber F1sh &amp; Sk 16 112Ft Ex
cellent Cond111on Pr~ce Reduced
low Hra 614 446 1155

1974 V W Bea tles Excellent
Condtbon, S2 750 614 256 1093

Panason1c satellite system 1yr
old 80 :104 695 3284

APPLIANCES

.. 7

SOUTH
•A Q 3
•A J
t I0 5
•AJI0982

1990 Dodge Ram Van B 250
72 000 M1les, $6,000 Can Be
Seon At GalhpoiiS Dally Tr bune
825 Third Avenue Gallipolis
Oh10

P2t51~~======:===:ir-====~~~~~~J
l

6pc Martha Stewart k1ng stze col
tec!lon bedd ng mu1!1 floral, S7S
Cabmet stereo wor~s $50 304

EAST
• 8 6
•KtU9 2
• QJ 7 2

1986 Jeep Cherokee 4J4 Good
Condltton Low M1tes 814 .t46
9664

475R
New
15 Goodyear
MIS T res Rad1al
2 200 M1les

755 5885

N1ce Brick Ranch 4 Bedrooms 2
Bath a F~replaco In LA Full
Basement Carpet &amp; Panled Family &amp; Rec Room 3100 Sq Ft L1V1ng
Space 2 Car Garage, lnground
Pool Wtth Deck Beautrlul Land
scaped For Pnvacy Large Stor
age Bulldtng 3 Acre Wooded Lot
Nea! Green Elem School Pnce
Reduced $125000 3616 St At
141 614 446 1025

Three bedroom home 1n coumry
Whites Hill Ad Ru~and one bath
1n-ground pool, 614-992,5067

6~&lt; 441 o' 49 Allers PM

•K6 5
WEST
aJI09 42
•Q 8 6 4 3
• 9 8

1986 Ford Bronco 6 Cylinder Au
tomat•c 4 WD $4 799, John's
Auto Sales, 614 446 4782

198 7 OMC Cobra scats 8 6cyl
4 3 liter $3 500 as IS Kmg s1ze
waterbed $95 304 6 75 4815

2BR Apl AJOJacent to Ala Rande
Campus 614 245 5858 or 614
245 5992

&amp; 4-WDS

1984 Chavy Blazer V 6 ••4
Auto Trans l-i1ghest Btdder Con
tact Harold George At Holzer
Medal Center 614 446-5347

17 Cu Ft Relngerator Frost Free
Very Good Con d1t1on HarVest
Gol el Reasonable 614 367 7169

3 P1ece Maple Bed ro om Su11e
W1th Bedd1ng S475 614 24592sg, Alter 4 PU

Vans

1965 Wtlly'a 4x4 Very N1ce
$2,850 614-256 1093

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

pt1al'\tes l ur n1shed, laundry roo m
faC ilities close ro SChOOl trl town
Applications available at VI llage
, call 61&lt; 992
Green ....•p1s #'9
~ 0
37 11 EOH

s

Two bedroom house 1n Pomeroy
w•tn opt•on to ooy e14 698 7244

Cu1et country home 1wo bedrooms and bath basement gas
well and furnace salelhte d1ah 38
acres call614 985-4243

-2-bd_&lt;_m_a_p-,.--,0-,.-,-.-,.-,-t&lt;-"_a_p

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Wes twood Drtve
from S226 IO $291 Walk to shop
l 1m1led Ollerl 1996 doubl awr de &amp; mov •es call 614 446 2568
3br 2bath $1695down $259 1 EquatHous1ngOpportuMy
month free del •very &amp; selup
Be
Only at Oakwood Homes N1tro
ech t M•ddleport 1 &amp; 2bed
WV 304 755 5885
room furn1shed apts Ut11it1&amp;S pa1d
References &amp; depos1t 304 682
lunt.ted Qffe.rt New 141180 No pay
2566
ments altet 4yrs Only make 2
Furmshed 2 Rooms &amp; Bath
payments &amp; move n 304 755
Downilans Ut1ht1es Furn1shed
5566
Clean No Pels Reference De
New 1996 141170 mctudes sk r1
pos1rAeqU1red 614 ~46- 1519
1ng steps blocks one year
homeowners msurance and s1x GraCious hv1ng 1 and 2 bedro om
monttls FREE lot rent Only $1025 apartments at V1llage Manor and
down and $207 17 per monrn Call R1vers1de Apartments n M ddle
port From S232 $355 Call 614
1 800 837 3238
992 5064 Equal Hous1ng Oppor
New Ban~ Repos Only 4 lett 304
tunt1es
755 7191
In Pomt Pleasant WV Large At
Pnce Buster I Naw 14J70 2 or tractive 3 Bedroom Unfurnished
3br Ontv $995 down 1195/month
Apartment Upsta1rs $325/Mo -+
Free del•verv &amp; setuJ,l Only at $325 Oepos •t WITh Reference
Oakwood Homes N1tr0 WV 304
61 4 446-0041 Alter 6 PM

Located Hedgemont Or1ve Fur
n1shed Basement 1 112 Baths
Fireplace, CA Garage Carporr
lmmed1ate Possess1on $72,000
614 446·3117

Property lor sale secluded 110
acres With pano ram1c v ew tn
Northup area log home wnh
three field stone fireplaces
S167,500 call 614 Q92 3207 alter
7pm lor appomtment

Mo
No Petsl 6t4 446 2300 614
446 6787

675 6986

Duplex Apartment And Trailer
W1th Paved Onveways And 112
Basement Call 614 256 1591
304 675 257'9
For sale by owner 3 br home 3
outbulldlt;~gs pttme comm land
owner moV1ng must sell call 614
992 6300 1

Extra N1ce 2 BR, Unlumsh&amp;d Ga
rage Apt CA In Gallipolis $3001

NORTH
9 15 95
•K 7 5
• 7 5
+AKG41

3S8 0009

Antiques

Buy or sen R1venne Anttques
1124 E Ma1n Street on At 124
Pomeroy Hou rs M T W 10 00
am to 600 pm Sunda~ 1 00 to
600pm 61 49922526

540

2 Bedroom Furn1shecl Apartment
Ver~ Clean, 614 44 6 2404 614
446 0001

AVON EARN SS$ at home at
work All areas 30"1 882 2645 1

toll Free 1 800 467 5566 EKI
313

s2.soo oeo 30+875 3581

Water Sewage Pa1d , $29 5Jt.to ..
DepoSit 614 446 2481

• Otscoums' No lnvemory Or Door
Door lnd tRep 1 800 742 4 738

: Easy Work I Excellent Pay I As
$Umble Products At Home Call

1984 S 10 Chevy Bl uer •h4,

And Layaway Also Ava table
Free Det1very Within 25 M1 tes

530

PHILLIP
ALDER

381H!353

Cash And Cauyl RENT2 OWN

41 Park I&lt;&gt;&lt; wild
1nlm111

1973 Ford F 250 390 Automatic,
Colorado Truck, $3, 500, 614

614 U6 3158
Ouahry Household Furn.~Jre AM
Apphances Great Deals On

2 1br apts 11'1 Pt Pleasant, $2501
mo 1 month depos tt &amp; references
requ~red 614 446 2200

Shutey

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Household
Goods

vrRA FURNITURE

1 bedroom Extra clean uttl!\leS
garbago p1ckup ac ce1hng tans
garbage d 1sposat relr1gerator &amp;
s1ove 307 773 5352 or 304 882
2827 even1ngs

BKlw~ I 01'1rO 4 56 14

t\\t' O N t All Areas
Spears 304 675 1429

510

1 Bedroom New EKtra N1u A1r
Cond1t1oned Near Holzer s $ 2591
Mo • Ut1ht1eS Depo511 Requ red
614 448-2'957

• 1 Full T~ me l PN
· : &gt;1 Full Trme State Tested Nurs1ng
~

Apartments
for Rent

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

OVEO!F"l.OW
P II"E I 0£A.?

720 Trucks tor 5ale

11

The Daily Sentinel •

Ohio

TAURUS (April 2Q-May 20) It ISn 1 nor
22) You mally m your nature to be stmgy yel

shoutdn t be atra1d to do some prob1ng 1n today when socialiZing wtth fnends you
corrtmerc•al dealings today You m1ght do mtght l&lt;nowmgly try 10 sh1rk your snare of
bustness wtth an lndtvtdual who Withholds the tab
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Your amb1
v1tal facts
SAGITIARIUS (Nov 23-0ee 2t) Stnve lions wtll be eas11y aroused today so
to cooperate today w•th persons who don t waste your efforts pursumg I he
cooperate w•th you However don I wrong ObJecttves Determtne your targets
embarrass yourself by try1ng Ia patromze and keep them tn stght
persons who aren I receptive
CANCER {June 21-July 22) Suffenng '"
CAPRICORN (Dee 22·Jan t9) It mtghl silence wont help smooth abra'S1ve matbe very dlfftc ult lor you to d1stmgU1sh ters today If compan1ons do thmgs that
between construcllve cnt•c•sm and n1t d1sturb you , bnng them out m ttle open so
p1Cktng today Avmd mmtmiZtng the for· they can be resolved
mer and emphastzmg the latter
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) It m1ght prove
AQUARIUS (Jan 20·feb 19) In tlnan unwtse today to 1mmerse yourself tn the
c•al matters today let your prudent problems of a close fnend Instead ol
msl1ncts preva11 U you don t have 11 m the betng able to help you mtght only comph
bank don t charge tl Tht s mtghl keep cate mat1ers
you oul of trouble

t

�•

Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, September 15, 1995

Literacy offers more benefit$ than illiteracy
By RUTH POWERS
and writing; and an aduh can find a
Literacy means that a man is number in a telephone book.
. able to sign his name when he gets
Literacy also means a man can
his paycheck; a man and woman open a bank account; read labels on
waiting on a bus can read the desti- grocery products and add up their
nation sign; a young man can leave cost; comp ut e income tax a nd
the area where he Jives to find Social Security benefits; pass a
work, because he can read street · driver's test; fill out fonns for job
s ign s and maps ; a mother and app lication and Medi caid ; learn
father can read a s tory to their about legal rights; people can learn
child, help with school lessons and to read the Bible, a newspaper, a
demonstrate the values of reading magazme or a reslaurant menu;

More than just a hobby ·c-1

Area high
school football
results

read about one's own heritage; a and women suffer discrimination ;
person lrnows how to use the dic- illiteracy prevents choices of work ;
tionary and encyclopedias, find the prohibits productive income, makes
way around a library, prepare for exploitation possible.
and pass a hi gh school or coll ege
The Meigs County Library syslevel examination, pursue se lf- , tern bas the help needed to tum an
directed independent learning, and illiterate person into a literate perhelp oU1ers to read and write.
son. Help is available by calling
llliteracy inhibits or prevents !he 992-5813. All materials and tutoreffective exercise of human rights ing is free, and the tutoring is done
that are dependent on literacy ' 1lll a one-on-one basis.
sk ills. Because of illiteracy men

Connector work on target. Page A3

TIMOTHY AND AMY HAVES

Wood-Hayes
Amy Michelle Wood and Timothy Paul Hayes were united in marriage on June 17 at the Syracuse
Nazarene Church. Rev. Jan Lavender officiated the double ring ceremony .
.
The bri&lt;le is the daughter of Bob
Wood of Racine and Vickwra
Quillian of Racine .
Guests were registered by
Becky Beegle, cousin of the bride.
Instrumental music was played by
Carla Shuler wilh vocal s by Rita
Kapp and Jean Cleek .
The bride was given in marriage
and escorted by her father. She
wore a white salin gown with a
sequin and pearl bodice . She carried a bouquet of red roses and
baby ' s breath.
The matron of honor was Tina
Woqd, &amp;ister-in-law of the brida.
Bride' s maids were Pe g gy
Caruthers, J ody Harrison and
Angie Connolly, sisters of the
groom. They wore black dresses

and each carried one red rose.
The fl ower girl was Melinda
Barnhart, cousin of the bride. She
wore a black dress and carried a
basket of rose petals.
The ring bearer was the nephew
of th e groo m. He wore a black
tuxedo with a L'lil and black cummerbund, tie and a red rose bouton-

niere.

The groom wore a black tuxedo
with a red cymmerbund, lie with a
·double rose boutonniere . Th e best
man was Chuck Buckl ey. Groomsmen were Charlie Wood , brother of
the bride, and Shannon Riflle and
Tom Barnhart. uncle of the bride.
They all wore black tuxedos with
tails and black cummerbunds ties
with baby rose bud boutonnier~s.
The reception was held at th e
Racine Ameri can Leg ion . The
four-tiered cake was accented by
pearls, ribbons and roses. The cake
!Opper was a porce ta in bride and
groom. The couple resid es in
Racine.

RACINE - Mt. Moriah Church
of God 60th homecoming Sunday,
1:30 p.m. Special guests Patti and
Lennie, and The Ladds from
Grafton, W .Va.
RACIN E - Morse Chapel
Church homecoming Sunday on
county Road 35 near Racine. Dinner at noon with service at I p.m.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Hymn sing in
the Pomeroy Parking Lor Friday, 7
p .m . spo nsore d by the Hillside
Baptist Church.
MIDDLEPORT - CJ &amp; the
Country GenUemen will perfonn at
the old American Legion Hall Fri- .
day, from 8-11 p.m. Admission is
· free. Everyone is invited to allcnd.
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church will host guest
speaker ll;ev. Keth Rashan Friday,
7 p.m.
· SATURDAY
LOTTRIDGE - Ohio Hunter
Education Course at the Lottridge
Community Center Saturday and
Sunday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. For
more information contact Ed Rood
at 667-6348, Bob Pullins at 6673831 or Ed Wigal at667-6657.

Society
scrapbook
will have a special youth night
from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m .. Sept. 27
with the theme "Youth Yardstick."
Brent Baker, youth minister of
Central Christian Church in Ironton, will be guest speaker.
Scott B lout of Old Orchard
Church of Christ in Ashland, Ky.
will be the worship leader and have
special music for the evening.
. For more information call
Denny Cobum at 446-1863 or 4467318.
BOOTH WINNERS
Winners in the Meigs County
Men's Fellowship Booth at the
Meigs County Fair were : Stacy
~rewer, a tape; Ruby King , gift
certificate; and Ben Skinner, a
Bible.

and Their Spouses, Children, Other Relatives and Legal Representatives
and PRICE&gt;'. CIBA -GE/GY, Civ. No. ~4-0647-CB·S (S.D. Ala. l'l'i~).
SE'ITLEMENT CLASS MEMBERS
fUNDAl.' WASA CG.\IMUCIALAGRICl'LU'RAL PESTICIDE WHICH WAS ,\V.RKF.lH) I\
THE l '5. BY NOM ·AM CHt:MICU CO\IPANY. n :NO.o\L · W,\S " OT MARK HEn HIM
Kf.SJU.:NTIAl (JM HOMt: G .~RDEt-iiNG t'SE.

camp and director of camp at Howe lis Mill Christian Assembly and
d1rector of KYOWVA Evangelistic
Association. He has spoke at Ken tucky Christian College, the
Kiamichi Clinic, Ohio Teens for
Ch'!st. and Hillsboro Family Camp.
1 h1s year he went to Russia on a
missionary trip where be taught
and evangelized for three weeks .
He has also been on several trips lo
· Ha111 where he helped build on
orphanage, preached and taught.
He and his wife, Diane, reside in
C hesapeake . They have three
daughters and two grandchildren.

U.S. WORKERS "ITH 0:\·THl-:·JOB EXPOSl 'RE TO FUNDAL' ,\1A~· BE ELIGIBLE FOR FR.:E MEUIC\1.
MONITOJI:l\G AND/OR CASH PAY~IE ~TS L:NDER THIS PROPOSED l.f.(;ALSETILf.Mf.:-11'.

PRICE SETTLEMENT CUSS MEMBER.IARE ALL[.\. WORKERS WITH 0'-THE-JOB EXPOSURE TO
GALECRO,\'"" ~INCLUDING GALECII:ON" AND Fl'NDAL') WHO DID NOT EXCLUDE THEMSHVf-~ F'ROM
THE PRICE. SETII.EAIENt PRJC£ Sf.ffif.MENT CLASS MEMBERS MAY 8£ ELIGIBI.E nlR t'ASH
SUPPI.UtENTS l 1NDER THIS PROPOSED L£GAI. S£TILEMENT.

PLEASE READ THIS ,~OTICE C.UIF.FUI.LV. YOUMAY BELONG TO ACLASS OF PEOPLE COVERED BY A
PROPOSED SETTLBII:NTOF ALEGAl. ACTION !"WOOVW&lt;RV SETTLEMENT'~ THE WOOVH~RI!
SETTLEMENT MAY HrECT YOUR I.F.GU RIGHTS. FOR MORE lNf'URMATION CALL 1·8011·211·691.\

By Order of the Court. a c las~ action ha.~ M«n
condit ion al ly certified for ~c ttl eme nt pu rpose~ . On
Ja nuary 9. lq96 . a fairness hearing will be held ut
the .Courthnu sc. Un1t ed St,Jte~ Dt~trtd Cou rt,
Smfthern Distr ict of Alabama. II ~ St J o~eph
Street. Mobile. Alabama. ~6602. at 9 a.m. Cen tral
Ttm e. so the Coun can d.:tcnninc if the cia'~ ac·
tion should be finallv centfied and if till: Wnod~&lt;mrl
Seulemem. as suminari1.ed in th ts No1 ice. ,hould
be apprO\'ed a~ fair. reasonable a~d udcqu~te. AI·
though participation in th1~ \Cttl cntcnth vliluntary.
all Woodward Senlement Clas~ M e mber ~ who do
nott1mely e~clude thcm..rl\·e&lt;o frnm the l a w~ 1111 wi ll
be bound by the Woml1m rd Se nlcmt•nt tf it "ap·
pro.,.etl .

JIMMY TINGLER
Special music will be provided
by Dan and Joan Shafer. A nursery
w11l be provtded. For more information call Denny Coburn at 446~863 or446-7318.
.

A decision was made for kits to
be made and picked up at the
church, also $5 donations given to
purchase blankets for the festival of
sharing by Sept. 21.
The president appointed a nominating commincc to elect officers
at the next meeting.
It was voted to serve a luncheon
on Nov . 3 to the district superintendent. Jim Waugh, and the Meigs
County pastors at the Rock Springs
Church at noon.
Rev . Keith Rader announced

The new owner, Jrunes B. Sherwood, president of Sea Containers
Ltd . and chairman of OrientExpress Hotels Inc ., said he
planned no changes in the staff.
menu and prices at the midtown
landmark.

(Collectt\·d y "Wtmdwartl Sclllc me nt Clu ~~ Mt:mher~"] . Nolt'.. If mu arl'ran NOR -AM f.'(ptM d
Per.1·1m or ll Ciho Expmt•d Pl'r.\'(111 wu llrt' (J
Woodward Se11/emerrt Cla.u Mmthu .~hrtlh·t· or
no/ Hil l hurt' heen tfiu~no.\l'd ll'trlr "" ill!I&lt;' I 1.
Spmut~. purents. chifdrett. mlrt'r rt•ltlfil'n. Wltl It··
!{al uprestn/uli•·•·\ are Woodward l't•rtlt·melll Clan
Memhn J !mr tht' daim.1 thf\' em• .1'/'rllm)! ltrt• lim ·
llt•d rn thp.\t' urism,.; fmm a NO R-AM F.1p111nl
Pawn vr Cihu E.•r'l!.ll'll Penon\ 1'\fW\tm·

h DEFINITION OF CI.ASS

conlirmation classes will be held .
Sept. 3 for 10 weeks, also disciple
classes will be held on Sunday
evenings starting Oct. I through
February. For more information,
call992-3317.
A thank you offering was collected at the meeting. A Bible quiz
was conducted by Sharon Folmer
and it was announced the next
meeting will be held Oct. 10.
Mildred Jacobs gave the closing
prayer. Founeen members auended.

1

II. l~ti'ORTANT MEDICAL NOTICE
To NOR·AM E.11posed Persons and .clha F.x·
posed Persons (as defined abonl:
You m&lt;Jy havt: an mcre a~ ed ri~k nf dcvcl optng hladder ca ncer if you had on ·thc JOil ex J:Xburc to Ftlhdal"' andlur Galccron~ . Wnr~CI\
c_). posed to Fundal"' ;~ nd/ur Galccron"· should purtt ctpatc m a mL'tlu~a l monitorin g pmgram he·
cau~c carlv detection of bladder cancer can rc·
suil 1n moi-e effc,ti!Je treatment.
II you h~d un·the-job e~pos ure In Fund~ I··
andio r Galecron"". it i ~· recommended th at you
or your doctor calll -800-211-691.1 10 lea rn how
you can o bt~111 funher medical informatton or
enroll in medical monitnnng.

Under the Woodll'ardSeui'ement. Fundal'' ,, de·
fined a~ chlordtmefonn or uny chlnrdimcfnnn·con·1 }
t.atning product, either manufac iUred, fonn ulated.
packaged, di•tributed or ~old b )' or on behalf of
NOR· AM Chem1cal Com pany ("NOR·AM"I or
rel ~ ted part tcs. regardbs of the trade name or the
,product, or an)' metabolite of fu ndal 1'. mclud1ng
the subs tances known as 4·COT or 5-CAT.
Galecron* has the same meanmg as tt d1d m the
PrirP 1·. Ctlw·Cel8\' Corp .. ( t\ , No. 94·0647·CB·
S (S.D. Ala . 1995), Selllemcnt l" Pna Settle·
Ul. PROPOSED SETILEMENT
menn. and ts thus defi ned a~ chlordimcfonn or
The Woodward Senlcmem prov ide~ for the c~·
any chlordimeform·contai nmg produ ~ l. ellhe r
manufactured. formulated. packaged. d1stnbuted 'lablishmem b~ NOR-AM of two fund~ 10 provtde
or sold by or on beha lf ofCtba-Ge1gy Corporatton medtcill bencfib and compcnsoti on to clig thlc
or related pan1es, re@ardle~s of the trade name of Wnod~ard Selllement Cia.~~ Mrmbers or their le·
the product: or any metabolite of Galecronlfl, tn· ga l repre&lt;;entatlve~ . ·This ~ule me m b intended.
el uding the substa n ce ~ known .i~ 4-COT or 5·CAT, where applicable, to work a.~ a complement to the
The Woodward Setlltment Class is definfd a.~: Pncr Senlement
(I J All persons who fa llmto one of the follo w·
The tOial package of benefit, potcn hally avail1ng categories. and who reside mthe Un1ted
able to a ~OR ·AM Exp0scd Per~on ts the ~arne
Stat e~ as of the date of fil mg of the CI J. s~
as the total package of benefit ~ potent1all)· a~· ail ­
ablc tO 11 Ciba E~po~ed Person. Thu~. Wo(Jt/M.·anl
Action Complamt. who ha\C been exposed
Settlement Cl.as~ Member'&gt; may be clir 11C for
1n the ,United States to Fundal 1 only. but not
to Fu nd3.11 and Galecron"' or tn Cialecmnw tue same benefit • whether they were occupatto n·
ally e.11poscd to Funda r~ only, or to Fundal"" and
only (''N OR·AM hpo~ed Persons").
Galecron8 • or to GalecronO\, onl y. ·
a. Fonnulators An mdiVIdual (whether or
not employed by ~OR·AM Chem tcal
(I ) The NOR-AM Medjgl Monitorjoa and
Company ) who 111 the co u r~e of hts or
her employment wa.'&gt;e~ posed to F u nd a l:~&lt; Treatment Fund t"Tbc NQR.AM MMJ FuJMI"t.
while at a plant or .~Jte which was in· If the Woodward Selllementts approved. NOR-AM
valved 111 ml:"lng, blc nchng, packagi ng. will mak.c an mitial de~tl of )).500.00J 111to the
handling or otherw1 se fonn ul atmg pe~ · NOR·AM MMT Fund. and Will thereafter miike ad·
tt c1des which contamed. in whole or m dttional de posit~ on an a~ ·needed ba.'iis There ~~no
lim1t to the amount of money NOR-AM ca n be re·
pa11, Fundal"':
b. AoolJcators: An in diVIdual (whether or qu tred to contribute over the hfe of the NOR·AM
not employe d by NOR·AM Chem1cal MMT Fund , wh~rh will last a mmJm umof 20 yea r~ .
NOR·AM Expo~ed Persons will be entitled t0
Company! who in the course of his or
her emplo yment, was exposed to panic1patc 1111he NOR·AM medJcal monitoring and
FundaJ'Il while 1nvolved m the ~ppltca· 1rcatmcnt progrdm; C1ba Expo ~cd Perw ns may re·
!ton of pesti ctdes which contained, 111 cei~c med1cal monttonng and treatmen t be nefit s
whol e or in part. fi'u ndal". mcluding, only through the Prict Seulement. The NOR-AM
Without 11mitat1on, aerial an d land ap- medical momtonng and treatment program and the
plicators, flag men. mtxers. bl end e r ~. medical monitonng and treatment program provtded
loaders and other tndt v tdu al.~ who through the Pm~&gt; Settlement are ident1cal The
handled such pest1c1de prior to or dur· NOR·AM MMT Fund w1l1 pay for a medical mont·
toring program designed to detect at an early stage
tng the application process; or
c. Other Covered Workers. (i) An indtv tdual the form of bladder cancer alleged to be asSOCiated
employed by NOR-AM Cherrucal Com· with exposure to Fundal"': sprc ifica\1~. pnmary
urothelia\ carcinoma of the unnary collecttng ~Y~·
pan) who, mthe course of his or her em·
ployment, wase~p:&gt;sed to Fundal", (ii) an rem. l.t., renal peJ.,.is, ureter, bladder and urethra.
indJVtdual who worked at Empak, Inc. m The NOR·AM MMT Fund also will pay for all
Deer Park, Te.11as a.OO/or Micro Chemical medically necessary treatment for NOR·AM E., .
in Louis1ana and who 'wa.~ e~posed to posed Person~.
12) The NOR-AM Disease Comoensatjon
Fundal11 m !.he Coune of his or her em·
ployment; {Iii) or an individual who and AdminiSAIJon Fund !"The NOR.AM DCA
worked in a testing or n:search·laboratory IJuld:). If the Woodward Settlement 1.~ approved,
and who was exposed to Funda) 11 in lhe NOR. AM will also make an tnitta l deposit of
course or hisor her employment: .or
$21.1XXl,(XX) inlO !he NOR· AM DCA Fund, up to a
(2) The spouses, parents, children, other rela· required ma~lmumof .$30.COU:ro. The NOR·AM
tives, or legal representatives of the NOR· DCA Fund will mak.e cash payments of up to
AM Exposed Persons described above.
$616,500 oo behalf of a NOR·AM Exposed Person
(3) All memben of the Prict Settlement Class. who, after exposure to Fundal11 only. has developed
The Prict Settlement Class means all mem- or in the future develops the fo nn of bladder cancer
bers of the settlement class certified by the alleged to be associated with Fundal 111 • In addition,
court in Priet v. Cibo-Gtig}' Corp., C11J. No. lhe NOR·AM DCA Fund wtll make cash supple94·0641·CB·S (S.D. Ala. 1995), "eluding ments amounting to 40'l of !he amounts §Cheduled
persons determined by the cour1 to be opt- • for and paid as compensatory payments pursuant to
outs of that class. That settlement class thus the Prict settlement, up to $179,000, on hehalf of a
incl udes persons restding in the ·United Ciba Exposed Ptrson who, after exposure to Fundal•
States who in the course of their emplo~· and Galee ron• or to Galee ron• only, has developed
men t we re exposed to Galecron 41 or to or in the future d_evelops the fonn of bladder ca ncer
Gale.cron• and Fundal* ("Ciba E~posed Per· a.lleged lO he associated with FundaP and Galetron11
sons"); anQ the spouses. parents, children, The NOR-AM OCA Fund will a!~ pay for admin·
olher relatives, or legal representatives of th e isuauve cost&lt;&gt; and das.&lt;i counsel's and administra·
tive class counsel's anomey fees. costs and expe n se~
Ciba E~posed Persons described aoo ...

He said he planned to expand
the interior to provide more space
for dining in the 10,000-bottle wine
cellar and additional banquet rooms
in what now are offices and storage
on the upper floor .
. The price of the sale was not
disclosed.

DAN'S

·"Block Party Special"
FREE Men's Flannel Shirt
with purchase of
men's Levi's Jeans
Sat. 9/16/95 only
Shirts limited to quantity
&amp; sizes in stock- 81 pes.

The Place For Work &amp; Western

=-=--:-:-------,
news

vs. NOR-AM Chemical Company

U.S. WORKERS WITH ON-THE-JOB
EXPOSU~ TO FUNDAL®

SUNDAY
ALFRED - Alfred United
Methodist Church homecoming

YOUTH NIGHT

. The Gallipolis Christian Church

(614) 992-6454.
(800) 433-6203

No. 94-0liO·CB-C

'21' Club sold to London-based corporation
NEW YORK (AP) - The
"21" Club, a Prohibition-era
speakeasy that became one of New
York's most popular dining and
drinking spots, was sold today to a
London-based international hotel
and restaurant corporation.

106 Butternut Ave. Pomeroy, OH

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOuTHERN DISTRICT
OF ALABAMA SOUTHERN DIVISION

Rock Springs UMW hold meeting on 'love'
"Love" was the program topic
for the Rocksprings United
· Methodist Women's meeting held
Tuesday at the church.
Scripture reading from Ephesians 3 was given by Pandora
Coll.ins. Prayer and hymn singing
followed the reading . " The Purpose" was read in unison to open
the meeting conducted by Rita
Radford.
Officer's reports were given and
prayer requests were made for the
sick of the community by Lenora
Leilheit.

FLOWER SHOP

IMPORTANT NOTICE OF PROPOSED SETILEMENT OF CLASS ACTION
AND FAIRNESS HEARING

l ack H. Woodward . et al

The Place For Work and Western
290 North Second
Middle ort, Ohio

e.

MEIGS CO. KARATE CLUB
WILL START
FALL QUARTER
BEGINNING CLASSES
ON SEPTEMBER 21ST
AT CARLETON SCHOOL
IN SYRACUSE

"Say Love With

RACINE Gideon and
Arlemesia Roush family reunion
will be held Sunday at Star Mill
Park in Racine. Pot luck dinner at I

A Multimedia Inc. , Newspaper

Middleporl-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Pt . Pleasant . September 17, 1995

For More lnforrnnlion
c.. u 992-6839

01.~ dctl!rrmn~.-"&lt;1 hy the Coun "Thl' hltJi uttnrn('y fcc
award to tlC £C4UC~led ""til IIIli CXl'CCd 2W.t nl the
hc ncfi t conferred upon tht du~~ - The hcnclil~ of
the NOR-AM DCA Fund 111111 co nt muc a~ long a~
the NO R-AM MMT Fund contmuc ... nr until the
NOR-AM OCA Fund~~ exhau.-.trd If the NOR.
AM DCA Fund1' e~hau~tcd. NOR·A M rna\' con.
ttnuc puytn£ for L'n mpcn,ah l~ ll.um •. If NO R·A M
dot'" nut ~.:onttnue 10 puy lor the . .(' Ci1 mpcn ~ablc
da1 m~. Wood11anl Senlemcm C ia ~~ Member-. wil l
he uhk to opt -outofthe NOR-AM DCA Fund and
r ur~ut· any legul clamb the) may haYC. c~ccpt li.1r
da1111~ for mcdicul mullllnring. m~.-xl a:L~I. trclll tnc nt.
k ar 11!' i llnc~~ 11r cancer. or 111crcao.cd risk (I( tll nc~'
tlrcant.'cr.
(.11 Other ( 'ondilions. The Stipulation nf
Scnlcmcm pre-.cntly pn,v tdc~ for med1cul nwni hJrtng. treatllll'nt ttnd cu mren~.J tinn payment-. for &amp;rt;un meUtl'id t'llndill{ln\ \('I ronh In thh Ntl!lf.:C !n
tht• CVl'nl. howe•·cr. thnt a Court·apprnvo:tl Epi1..k ·
miol11gy Panel dctc nn lll(' ~ to lt rl'lN\flahlc m.:Jtcal ·
~.:cn am1~ th:~l &lt;~ny nthcr 111l'dtcal cunditllln ~,, c au~d
by Fundal · ur GaleLI'IIO · l'x po~urc. that cooditton
wt lllx• det·met.l 01 compc~o;ahlc da1m. and wi ll he
.:hgih lc for medll'al moni ttmng ril lc;•,,hlc). mcdt·
t.·ultrcutmrm. :~nd eu.•h puymcnh,
l4l &amp;k'is. WrH~ti"·lmfSct t lcn~l Cia~' Member~ who do not exclude thc m,elvc., fmm the
Wr.ood11'!1nf Senlement Cia•~ relea~ all past, prc"'!nt
&lt;Jnd 'luturc clium~ (i) relarm g to the cnvcrcJ medical
cond1tion~ li~t cd at.ovc: and {Ill relati ng to a
Wuodll'urd Senlcmcnt Cia.~.' Memhcr\ eKf'Kh UI't:' to
Fundal ' or G&lt;Ji ccrnn~, including all claim~ allegmg
th.l! tln)' uthcr t.·anL't'f!l. pci'S(mal inJII rie~ nr mk.' ttre
.:au).Cd llycxpmurl! to FundL~ l'" tlr Galee ron ~

IV. CLASS REPRESENTATIVES AND
CLASS COUNSEl.
The Co urt h:~.~ J e.-tgn aiCd the followmg
Wuot/U"urd Sellle me nt C la~s Memhef\. lack H.
Woodwa rd . Alta Woodward. Tom Lof!on. Cindy
Lolt un and Rtta Snow. a., d a-.;~ rcprc-.;c m ut!\C~ to
rcprc,c nt al l Klwd1111rd Scnle m ~ m Cia'~ Mcm·
\leT' The Coun htt:; 11i ~ de~ignatcd a~ Cla"' Coun·
~d the lollnwtng mdi~· t du ah : Timnthy E. Ehlc.
S.C. Mtddlehrooks Ill. (lnd Duvtd R. I:Xmald,on .

V.

RtC;HTS AND OP'fiO~S OF

WOODWARD SETTLEMENT CLASS

MEMBERS
Whodward Senlcmen t Cia~~ Mcmho::L you have the followin£ optto n ~:
tl·J You ma y do no thing and remain a
WmJd~~·ard Settle ment Clas~ Member. If yoU ch~
to take no aCt1on. your interests as u member olthe
Wood~wfrd Settlemcm Clns.' will be rcprc;;cnted by
the CloM Rcprc:.cmauvcs and Clu~-.; Cou n ~ l at no
cost 10 you.
,
(2) You may rematn a WIHH.bmrrl Sclllemcnt
Cia~~ Member and eithrr rl'prc'l'n t your.el f or hire
you r own anomcy to reprcliCnt )OU at you r own co~J.
(]I You. may remain a Wn(){ilmrd Sclllement
Cla~s Member and object to the settlement
I4) If you choosr 10 re main a W()(ld\\'a rd Settle·
mcm Cl~~-.; Mcmber (u nd e r op tion ~ I, 2 or 3 abo\le),
you may rt!Ceive the benefi 1 ~ afforded by th!~ se nle· 1
mcnt within ~i x month!. i1f the (nu n\ Order dt rectmg thi ~ Notice.
151 You may requeM e~cluston from this o;cnlc·
ment.
DEADLINES FOR ABOVE OPTIONS The
dcadl1nc fur liling an Emry of Appeanmce 1f you
c hlX!.~~ to rcprc~e m your~ ) f or retain an auomc::y;
for lti111g ObjCCtlOn~ 10 th b ~C!lle me nt ror filing a
N011ce uf Inte nt to Appear at the fai me\~ ,hearing:
or for fihu g ~ rcque~t to be ~~ clu d r: d from the
Wrmdward Settlemt&gt; nt Cla~s i~ DECEMBER I,
1995. TO LEARN MORE INFORMATION
If you are

J

ABOUT HOW TO Fll,E ANY OF THE
ABOVE ITEMS, PLEASE CALL I·I!OO·ZII ·

691J or WRITE TO: WoodiVard Cia.~~ Aclion,
P.O. Box 974, Charle5ton, SC 29402.

PROOF Ot' CLAIM PROCEDURE

VI.

In order for any Woodward Se ulcment C ia~~
Member to receive any of the be n efi t~ oft hi ~ ~ttl e·
mcnt, he or ~ h e mu st comply wuh the proof of
cla1m procedure. To lcurn how you may receive
beneftts under thi s settlement or to ohtDin a Proof
of CJ.aim Fonn for medical monitoring. medical
treatment or disease wmpen ~lllio n . ca111·800· 211 ·
691) 01 write to Wrmdward C ia~~ Attion, Post
Office Bo~ 974. Charl~stbn. SC 29402

VII.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION

THIS NOTICE IS ONI,Y ASUMMARY. If vou
be heve yo u are a Woodward Sc nlr:me n( cia~~
Member you are urged to'a lll -800-lll-«i913 or
wn te to Wood~&gt;. ·ard Cia.'&lt;~ Action. Pm1Office Bo~
974, Charlesto n. SC 29402 lo obtain Further in·
formation regardtng th1 ~ &lt;.ettlcment. how to exclude
yo urself from the cia~~. and how to obtain ben·
ef1ts. DO NOT CALl. THE C! EAK OF
CQ1LRI wtth que~tton~ abuut this Notice or this
o;culemcnt .
Mobile. Alabama
Dated: Augu st 2!, 1995
By Order of the Court
Judge Charles R. Butler, Jr.

fREQUEST FOR INFORMATION FORMI
1

(Th~s is not an Exclusion Request)

1

hke to ha"'e more deta1led infonnation I
I ofI would
the Woodward Settlemen t mailed to:
1 PLEAJE PRINT LEGIBt.r

I N A M E : - - - - - -- ADDRESS: _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I CITY:
I STATE-::::::::::_:::_-=_-z,-p-.:_,-::_-.:_-.:_-::_-.:_-.:_-:::_
I (lncluding"'a:::,.::,:-:&lt;::::
PHONE
od;r;e:;;):_ _ _ _ __
I Mall rhr~ Rtq11~st for lnfo rmarion m:
1

.L _

\lbod~&gt;.·ard Class AcllOn

P~t

Office Box 974
Charle~I0!:_5~9~02 _

~ _

'

. I

At6:00 p.m.

_j

Vol. 30, No. 32

injured," Warner said. " We hope
this will deter reckless publication
of information in the future."
·
"I am very happy and relieved
that this was settled," Mrs. Montgomery said Saturday.
"It was never an issue of money,
but principle," sbe added. "I felt
that the Nortbups were biding
behind the First Amendment and
imposing on my rights, which were
being violated."
. Mrs . Montgomery sued the
Nonhups in November 1994. alleging that a series of letters to the editor published in the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, and the Tri-County
News and River Currents between
March and April 1994 defamed
ber.
The letters, which appeared on
the editorial page and as paid
advertisements, falsely reported her

annual sa lary at the DHS and
claimed she received her job
because of her relationship with her
husband, now in his second tenn a~
a county commissioner, Mrs .
Montgomery claimed in her suit.
The letlers, which questioned
hiring practices at the DHS, caused
injury to her reputation and caused
her to seek medical care and treatment for a "physical aihnent," Mrs.
Montgomery alleged.
In the letters, the Northups
alleged Mrs. Montgomery's salary
for 1993 was $25,356. She actually
earned $20,356 that ~ear, she said.
The trial began Monday and
closing arguments were beard late
Friday afternoon .
Wamer said the main points of
her case were thai her client's reputation was injured by repeated pub- ·
(Continued on All

By KEVIN KELLY
Ttr... s-Sentln~l StaiT
GALLIPOLIS - A five-day
trial in a defamation action against
local government watchdogs Harlan and James Northup of Gallipolis ended Friday when a five woman, three-man jury fined them
$1,000 In damages in Gallia County Common Pleas Coun.
• But because the jury did not
award punitive damages to Sandra
Montgomery, an employee of the
county's Department of Human
Services and the wife of County
Commissioner Harold Montgomery, the Northups' attorney felt
his clients' actions were vindicated.

"I consider this, from the standpoint of my clients, a vindication of
their efforts," Joseph Oths of Wellston 'said. "The imponant part is
that the jury did not find for punitive damages . They were saying
they approve of my clients' eff01ts,
but to be careful with their figures
in the future."
Pomeroy auorney Linda Wamer, who represented Mrs. Montgomery, said she and her client
were "absolutely thrilled" with the
verdict, which came after six hours
of deliberation.
"The Northups were found to
have defamed her and the decision
is recognition that she was

Group seeks
new kitchen
for senior site

,----A day on· the farm

Commissioners eye
energy savings idea
By JIM FREEMAN
Tlmes.Sentlnel Staff .
POMEROY - To conserve or
not 10 conserve?
That's the question faced by the
Meigs County Uoard of Commissioners, who listened Friday to a
presentation by Bill Maynor of
Honeywell Inc ., Cincinnati.
Maynor presented the board
with a study on th e Ohio House
Bill 300 program - which allows
local governments to perform energy-saving building renovations ,
with funding coming from money
saved through reduced e.n ergy
costs.
The program is similar to the
H.B. 264 program for public
schools.
.
Honeywell focused on the courthouse and the Multipurpose Building in Pomeroy, Maynor said.
. Other countr buildings, includmg the shenff s off1ce, mfinnary
and emergency medical services
building, are smaller and more efli. cicnl with less potential for energy
savings, he said.
In the courthouse, Maynor proposed a lighting retrofit - replacing existing bulbs and balla~t~ with
more efficient units - and replacing the existing electric boiler with
a more efficient gas device.
Maynor said administrators at
the Multipurpo se Building have

By KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel Stair
GALLIPOLIS -c- Faced with a
kitchen no longer adequate to meet
the needs of its clients, the Gallia
County Senior Resource Center
aNj the Council on Aging is lookiug for help from the public.
· A ampaign to ralSC $54,000 to
cover the cost of installing a new
meal preparation facility began this
swnmer and will continue into next
year, explained Dr. Howard
Greene, chairman of Kitchen Pro-

jecrCOIJUI\iltee.
"The committee is looking at
this as a community project
because of the benefit a new
kitchen wiD provide to the county,"
Greene said.
The campaign bas notched some
successes in its fund-raising effons
but is still a distance from reaching
its goal, be added.
·The plan is for the kitchen to be
moved from its current location at
the senior center to a site next to
the multipurpose room, Greene
said. Renovation of an existing 450
square feet and building a 750square foot .addition is tabbed at
$150,000, and will include a loading dock, walk-in cooler·and freez er, appliances and cabinets.
Gallia County Commissioners
have pledged $21,000 in block
grant money for 1995 and the
senior center will provide up to
$75.000. Greene rioted that the
Gallipolis Rotary Club, of which he
is a member and its representative
to the Council' on Aging, donaied
$500 this year to the project and
will provide another $500 in 1996.
. The architect on the project is
Ponsmouth-basect Tanner &amp; Stone,
but a general contracting bid has
not been granted. A groundbreaking is scheduled for L1ter this year.
Greene said.
"The deadline to face is that we
need to break ground sometime this
year, because our understanding is
that the county's block grant was
presented with the understanding
the project would start in 1995," he
explained.
The need for a new kitchen ha~
(Contlnued on Al)

BEFORE THE VEROJCI' - While a&gt;\'llltlllfl a verdk:l ""'Liav
In GaiUa County Conunl)n Pleaa Court, WeUston attorney ]OO&lt;tPh
Oths, len, reviewed questions posed by the Jury with his dle1nt.o,
Harlan, center, and James Northup. The Northups were
$1,000 In damages In a defamation suit filed by Sandn Montgomery, a county employee and the wife of County Commissioner
Harold Montgomery. (T .S photo)

Dank s.kles and Intermittent
rain dld not discourage people
from attending Saturday's
annual Farm-City Day activities, sponsored by the Galll11.
Soil &amp; Water Conservation Dis·
trict and several agrlc!llturerelated organizations. Tbe
event, designed to show oir the
latest features In agricultural
production, was held at Rae·
coon Creek County Park,
where various activities were
held. But new developments
used by Gallla County's agri·
cultural community were
shown on nearby farms. Joe
Foster (at left In the above
photo) explained how he uses
new technhJues at the least cost
In raising cattle and tobacco to
a wagonload of tour-goers. on
his farm at State Route 775 and
Northup Road. Back at the
park, visitors were treated to
beverages and f00$1 provided by
. sponsoring groups, as Paul
Shoemaker (right) sliced farmraised beef for sandwiches.
Planners of the event, the 13th
held In Gallla County, said the
day fosters heller understandIng between rural and urban ·
dwellers.

!

already signed a contract with Honeywell to maintain that building's ·
climate control system.
Workers in the building bave
complained about the heating and
cooling system, which Maynor said
had suffered mostly from neglect
and needed only minor work.
He estimated the project would
cost between $80,000 and
$115,000, with savings between
$9,000 and $12,000 a year.
"It's
self-funding,"
be
explained. "The savings pay for the
work that will be done."
The next step is for the commission to agree to go forward with a
project, he said.
Commission Vice President
Janet Tackett said the board had
been considering energy-saving
upgrades .
Tackett said the board would
likely make a decision in two ·
week.&lt; .
Commissioners later mel with
Engineer Robcn Eason and High- way Department Office Manager Dave Spencer to discuss a complaint over t rew Road.
Residents sent the commission a
. letter asking for the road to be
paved. However, the county bas no
conirol over the road , which is ·owned jointly by Chester and Salisbury townships.
(Continued on A2)

August jobless rate falls
in Gallia, up a bit in Meigs
GALi..IPOLIS - Unemployment in Gallia County edged
downward in August, but rose
slightly in Meigs County, part of a
trend that saw joblessness decrease
in more than half of the state's
counties, the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services reported.
Gallia County's rate dropped
from 8. I percent in July to 7.3 in
August, with 12,900 people in the
county's estimated work force of
13,900 employed, OBES reported.
Meigs County's increao;e in joblessness was smaller - one-tenth
of a percent - from 9.4 percent in

July to 9.5 in August. OBES
reported that 7, 700 people out of
Meigs' estimated work force of
8,500 were employed last month.
In surrounding counties, unemployment fell in Jackson from 6.6
in July to 6.2, but posted increases
in. Lawrence (up three-tenths of a
percent to 5.8) and Vinton (also
three-tenths of a percent to 8.7).
Meigs, Vinton and Scioto counties were among eight counlies
with unemployment rates of 8 percent or above during August ,
OBES reported.
.
(Continued on A2) :

Meig~

sheriff's department
patches into data network

GOOD MORNING

Today's Times-Sentinel
16 Sections- 164 Pages

By TOM HUNTER
Times-Sentinel Stair
POMEROY - The Meigs County Sheriffs Department has updated
its boOking system, bringing the department up-to-date with the latest
felon information available on a statewide sheriffs network.
Deputy Bob Beegle said the system allows the department quick
access to .felon photos and records via computer. The system also speeds
up the boOking process, with less filing and better access of criminal
·
·
records.
The computer operates from the Links software system, by Integrated
Dctlletion Systems Inc.
.
Links is a. multi-user/multi agency video mug shot system that maintains its own internal database with information available from an e~isting ·
boOking system at the time of booking an inmate, Beegle said.
·
The computer system interfaces with Lockdown, which is the Buckeye
Sberi.ffs Association-sponsored statewide crime network . This allows the
department 10 now download mug sbors arid personal information on
thousands of felons from throughout Ohio in just a m.atter of seconds.
The new computer system consists of a new laser printer, digital camera and lighting equipmen~ a color video monitor, and a color video print- ·
er. The department saved money by loading the booking program onto its
existing office computer, according 10 sheriffs secretary Lisa Roush.
The program also prints wanted bulletins, with prisoner photo and
information, for facsimile distribution on statewide felon alerts and allpoints bulletins.
(Contlnued on Al)

Busin es&lt;.
Calendars

Dl
C2

Classifieds
Comics
Editorials

03-7
Insert·

Local
Obituaries
Sports

A3
AS
Bl-8
Cl
A2

-

A4

Along the River
Weather

·~

Columns

Deputy Brian Holman's photo, lower rlghl, wu
used to demonstrate the booking card printout
the system will produce. (T-S photo)

l

I

on PageA2

Jury rules against North ups
Local government watchdogs fined
$1,000; spared from punitive damages

Flowers From!" ·

ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
Springs United Methodist Church
rally day Sunday with regular
morning service followed by carryin dinner, 12:30 p.m. and prognun
by God's Kidz, 2 p.m.

Christian church to
.hold five-day revival
The Gallipolis Christiar1 Church
will hold a revival Oct. 15 through
19 with guest speaker Jimmy Tingler of Huntington, W.Va. Services
will be 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Sunday and 7 p.m. Mondax through
Thursday.
Tingler is the evangelist for the
.Sixth Avenue Church of Christ in
Huntington and has been serving
the congregation for a year and a
half. His prior ministry was in ·
Raceland, Ky. where he served for
18 years.
He has held rev i vats in numerous Eastern and Midwestern States.
He has also worked .as dean of

HARRISONVILLE The
Zion Church of Christ, Harrisonville Road, homecoming Sunday with services at 9:30 a.m. and
2 p .m . Lunch at noon. Sharon
Hawley, Debbie Grueser and Dixie
S.a yre will entertain with Dave
Lucas as guest minister.

Details

tm.es.-

PORTI.AND - "No Compromise" presented by the Porterfield
Baptist Church at the Reorganized
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter
Day Saints, Portland-Racine
Branch, Sunday, 6 p.m. Fellowship
will follow .

p.m.

Sunday with basket uinn.er, 12:30
p.m. and afternoon progrnm, 2 p.m.
featuring The Classics.

Chance of
showers

+

-----Community calendar----The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar Is not
desig ned to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type . Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.

High: 70s
Low: 50s

I

'

•

Jack Anderson
Fred Crow
Dorothy Sayre
Jim Sands

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