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                  <text>•
Page 16 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio-

Rio professor says
Simpson case raised
major trial i$sues
RIO GRANDE - Throughout t tion during sequestration;
the long year of jury selection and ,
• media agenda setting;
• shield laws; and,
trial in tbe O.J. Simpson double '
murder case, memben of the media
• cameras in the courtroom.
and legal experts routinely referred
As this century's most recent
to the proceedings as the "Trial of candidate for tbe 'Trial of the Centhe Century."
tury" designation, the Simpson
Since Simpson' s acquittal on case stands against some strong
Oct. 3, television and newspaper competition, with the earliest
coverage continues to daily docu- (1906) being the Harry K. Thaw
ment th e immediate aftermaih of trial for tbe murder of architect
the trial. The long-range impor- Sranford White (beuer known a~
tance of the case, however, will "Tbe Girl in the Red Velvet
likely be determined by students of Swing" case).
the press and tbe courts.
In the 1920s, during the John T.
One local scholar believes tbat if Scopes trial (a.k.a. Monkey Trial)
you look beyond the hype and sen- intensive media coverage helped
sationalism and focus instead on polarize the nation as scientific and
the issues raised by the case, the religious theories of creationism
0 .1 . Simpson trial may well came to blows in Dayton, Tenn.
deserve to be considered among the
• As far bact as the Lindbergh
century's most significant.
kidnapping trial of !be 1930s, fair
"Many bave referred to the O.J. trial debate ensued wben the press
Simpson case as the 'Trial of the became involved," Dailey said.
Century'," said Nita Dailey, Ph.D.,
"During the trial of Bruno
professor of speech communication Richard Hauptmann - wbicb lastand journalism at tbe University of ed a month - there were someRio Grande.
times 700 newsmen at the site of
"Usually this pbrase means that the trial," she explained.
se vera! issues were involved," DaiAs a result, an IS-member comley said. "And, there is no doubt mittee declared Hauptmann's trial
this trial raised a number of social, was "t]le most spectacular and
legal and constitutional issues."
depressing example of improper
Dailey's communication and publicity and professional misconjournalism classes routinely feature duct ever presented to the people of
the study of major American court tbe United States in a criminal
cases.
trial."
"There is no better forum for the
Dailey also pointed to the murstudy of communication and per- dec trial of Dr. Sam Sheppard in the
suasion," Dailey explained. "In a 1950s as a example of a "carnivaltrial, the effectiveness of the rival like" atmosphere created by masat.tomeys' persuasive messages are sive press coverage.
immediately determined by the
"As a result," sbe said, "trial
jury."
judges were instructed to conttol
"As for the study of joilrnalism. theircourtrooms."
the controversy over media coverProf. Dailey attributes !be conage of the judicial process never tinuing controversy between the
seems 10 go away," she added.
courts and the media to the "inherAccording to Prof. Dailey, the ent conflict" between two amendSimpson case brought to focus a ments to the Constitution: the First
number of important issues that - with its guarantees of press free·
relate to America's often conflict- dom- and the Sixth- which
ing guarantees of both a free press protects a defendant's right to a
and a fair bial.
speedy and public trial by an
Those issues include:
impartial jury.
• pre-trial, trial, and post-trial
"These two constitutional provipublicity;
sions reflect a continuing dispute
• the public's right to know vs. between the news media and the
the defendant's right to a fair trial;
j1•diciary," she said.
• juror access to trial informa-

COLUMBUS (AP) A
spokesman for Gov. George
Voinovich said be saw no contradiction in abolishing a state agency,
laying off !50 people, while the
administration is trying to create
private sector jobs.
"We're not in the business of
providing jobs for government
workers. We're in the business of
serving our customers," Paul Mifsud, the governor's chief of staff,
said Wednesday. "If they're better
served by our competitors, so be
it.
The Ohio Student Aid Commission planned to vote itself oul of
existance today.
·
" This is a bureaucracy that is
abolishing itself because it does not
see it has a clear purpose to exist,"
Mifsud said.
The governor has been aggressively trying to eliminate as many
state boards and commissions as be
can to cut payroll and government
bureaucracy.
However, eliminating the com·
mi ss ion will not save Ohio any
money because the jobs are federally funded. Since the commission
10

was created by the state, and the
governor appoints commission
members, the state can abolish it.
Tbe commission now competes
with two companies to handle federally guaranteed student loans. ·
The companies are Great Lakes
Higher Education Corp., based in
Madison, Wis., and United Student
Aid Funds, beadquanered in Indianapolis.
"I see no qualitative difference" among the three competitors, said Rosie Kaedam, a student
services counselor at Toledo's
Medical College of Obio. "There
really isn't any difference."
Kaedarn said students getting
the loans cannot tell who the guarantor is unless they default, and .
officials are convinced tbere will
be no reduction in the number of
available student loans because of
lbe Obio commission's demise.
Rae Ann Estep, tbe Ohio Stu··
dent Aid Commission executive
director, said increased competition
and cllanges made by lbe Clinton
administration bad reduced the
commission's market share.

AEP reports 10.2 hike in
third quarter earnings
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ameri·
can Electric Power Co. bas reponed a 10.2 percent increase in thitdquarter earnings.
AEP reported Wednesday !bat it
earned $154.2 million, or 83 cents:
per share, in the quarter. cmnpared.
with $139.8 million, or 76 cents per
share, for the third quarter of 1994.
For the 12 monlbs ended Sept.
30, earnings decreased 7.3 percent
to $501.9 million, or $2.71 per
share, from $541.2 million, or
$2.93 per Share, for the comparable

period one year earlier.
E. Linn Draper Jr., chairman,
president and cbief executive officer of AEP, attributed the increase
in !bird-quarter revenues and earnings to unseasonably warm weather
in the summer of 1995.
AEP is the parent company of
seven electric utilities providing
service to 7 million people in Obio.
West Virginia, Virginia, Indiana,
Kentucky, Michigan and Tennessee.

Pick 3:
5-0-7
Pick 4:
0-4-3-5
Buckeye 5:
6-10-13-15-22

Sports, Page 4

Low tonlghlln 40s, periods or.
rain. Saturday, rain likely. High
In the 4115.

•

en tine
Vol. 46, NO. 123
Copyright 1995

PRESENTED TROPHY - Taking first place In tbe urban
land judging contest of tbe Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District were vocational agriculture team members from tbe left,
PbUip Hamm, Jessica Sayre, and David Rousb. They were present.
ed a trophy •t Tuesday night's annual meeting of the SWCD at
· Eastern High School.

WINNING TEAM - This Southern Higb School vocational
agriculture team took first place In tbe county In agriculture land
use in tbe SWCD contest. Picture~ with their trophy are, I to r,
Matt Hill, Tracy Card, and David Roush. The team was recognized at the 52nd annual meeting of the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District On the team but not attending was Nathan
Haines.

mittee on Resources on Oct. 12 by
a 27-17 vore.
Tbe council views Republican
reforms to the act, .however, as an
- ~ffort .!o allow . ~•g busmess. to
. dodge tbe proviSions of the existmg..law.
.
.
Congress IS .rollmg}ack the
Endangered Speetes Act, Buckeye
Forest Council coordinator Jason
Tockman said, "and Rep. Cremeans is leading the pack."
Supporters of HR 2275 argue
the proposed legl~lauon w1ll
enhance !be preservauon ofendangered spec1es b~ 101provmg Its support by the public.

Student aid commission
plans to abolish itself

Ohio Lottery

Bengals hand
Pittsburgh
27-9 defeat

Environmental group
blasts Rep. Cremeans
ATHENS - An Athens-based
env ironmental group has blasted
Sixth District U.S. Rep. Frank Cre·
means, R-Gallipolis, for his suppon
··f legislation it claims is designeO
to roll back provisions of the
Endangered Species Act.
The Buckeye Forest Council
issued a statement Monday labeling
HR 2275 (The Endangered Species
Conservation and Management Act
of 1995) as the "wholesale repeal"
of existing legislation.
The legislation, which reauthorizes tbe Endangered Species Act
with GOP-sponsored "reforms,"
was approved by lbe House Com-

Thursday,~ober19,1995

Disputed Medicare
overhaul bill passes
By DAVID ESPO
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Ignoring a
veto threat and Democratic predic:
tions of their political demise,
Republicans cheered as they passed
a Medicare overhaul bill, their !atest triumph in the conservative revolulion launched last winter.
"This is a very, very great victory," exulted Speaker Newt Gingrich, architect of the measure that
squeezes $270 billion from the program over seven years While offering senior citizens a menu of heallb
care choices.
"lt's a ~real victory of courage
over fear,' Gingrich said shortly
after the 231-201 vote Thursday in
a politically polarized House.
"It's a great victory for fact
over fiction, it's a great victory for
being positive over very nasty, dishonest and demagogic attack ads
and it's a great victory for believing you can tell the truth to the
American people."
Democrats, who spent the day
charging Republicans were cutting
Medicaretopayfortaxcutsforthe
ricb, thought it might be something
else - mass political suicide by
the conservative GOP majority tbat
tookpowerin1anuary.
As Republican lawmakers
cheered !heir handiwork, mocking
Democrats stood on their side of
the chamber, waving farewell and
mouthing !be word "bye."
'IUnfortunately, it's another day
of infamy for 40 million Americans-.
who depend on Medicare for their
health care,'' charged Rep. Sam

Gibbons, D·Fla. They will be squeeze tens of billions of dollars
"herded into managed care," be in payments from physicians and
said, and the "money saved will be hospitals to belp achieve the GOP
used for an unconscionable tax goal of a balanced budget by 2002.
cut."
Republican leaders said their
The measure now beads for the changes would buy nine years of
GOP-conttolled Senate, where it is life for the Medicare hospital fund,
expected to reach the noor ncxt~ow in danger of drying up by
week as pan of broader legislation 2002. They acknowledged that
to balance the budget over seven more will need to be done to keep
years while providing a hefty tax Medicare going beyond 2011 wben
cut.
tbe huge baby boom generation
Even as Republicans were begins reaching retirement age.
muscling the measure through the
Rep. Bill Archer, R-Texas,
House, President Clinton issued a chairman of tbe House Ways and
stem veto lbreat.
Means Comminee, ·called the meaThe measure "will eviscerate sure "lifesaving legislative
the health care system for our older surgery,'' and bailed passage as a
Americans," he told reporters at "great and historic occasion."
the White House. He sent this mesGingrich, wbo began work on
sage to Republicans: "I will not let the measure 13$t spring, labored to
you destroy Medicare, and I will build support to the end. He signed
veto Ibis bill.' '
off Wednesday night on a change
In the House, just four in the bill to provide more funds to
Democrats joined 227 Republicans rural regions, fuming up votes in a
in favor and only six Republicans bloc of about 30 Republicans.
sided with 194 Democrats and an
On Thursday, hours before the
independent in opposition.
final .vole, be agreed to seek several
Republicans said their measure cbang~s sou~ht by. New ~~rsey
was designed to save Medicare Republicans, mcludmg addtUonal
from bankruptcy, while opening funding under Medicaid in legislatbe way for senior citizens to tion due on the House floor next
choose alternatives, sucb as bealth week.
maintenanceorganizatioDSIntheend,thougb,fourofNew
Sucb plans might offer expand- Jersey's eight GOP representatives
ed benefits, sucb as eyeglasses or - ~rank LoBi~ndo, Ji~ Saxton, _
prescription drug co'ilerage, that quistopber Sm1tb an~ Ricllard A.
aren't available under tbe current Zunmer- voted agams~ the meaprogram, sponsors said.
sure. Tbe other Republtcans wbo
At the same time, the measure oppo.sed u were Reps. Peter G.
-would raise premiums for Part B ~ork•!dsen of Massachusetts and
coverage of doctors' bill higher J101 Lightfoot of Iowa.
than current law anticipates, and

Increased provider payments
spared by sweeping legislation
PREsENTED PLAQUES - Roy Holter, left, and Blair Windon were presented plaques for winning first place awards In bay
exhibits at the Meigs County Fair bay sbow at tbe annual meeting
ofthe Meigs Soli and Water Conservation District.

Jury finds Lukens innocent
WASHINGTON (AP) - At
least three of the cbecks !ben-Rep.
Donald Lukens accepted in 1990
were not bribes, a U.S. District
Coun jury bas decided.
Lukens held the edge of the
defense table with both bands
while the forewoman announced
the verdicts Wednesday : "N~t
guilty. Not guilty. Not guilty."
The Middletown, Ohio, Republican remained stiff-backed while
Judge Gladys Kessler ordered more
deliberations on two other counts
on wbicb the jury couldn't agree.
Then Lukens took off bis glasses
and briefly rubbed his eyes.
The eight women and four men
discussed tbe evidence for five
hours over two days before
announcing verdicts on the lbree
bribery counts.
Afterward, tbey deliberated
another hour and 15 minutes with-'
out resolving whether Lukens is
innocent or guilty of one other

bribery count and one conspiracy
count. They were told to report
back to court today.
Jurors maintained poker faces
during both of their appearances
before the judge.
They showed little expression
while the partial verdict was read
and became animated only at the
end of the day, when the judge
noted they'd been working bard
and looked tired. Tbey responded
with smiles and vigorous affmn.ative nods.
After ordering tbe jurors to
watch no television news and
releasing them for the night,
Kessler estimated that "by lunch
time they'll either bave a verdict or
be unable to have a verdict."
For Lukens, tbat ended another
day of tension.
He bas remained in the courthouse throughout the deliberations,
sitting a little and pacing a lot
while waiting for a knock from !be
jury room door.

Meigs property transfers
Deed, Grera M. Suttle, Greta M. lots·
Deed, Cbrisiopber E. and Jena
Brown and Sheridan G. Brown to
R.
Tenaglia to Sharon M. Knight,
Frank G. and Carolyn S. Gilmore,
Pomeroy
lots;
Lebanon parcels;
Deed,
Sharon and Charles H.
Deed. Middleport Housing Corporation to Elizabeth T~tlloh and Knight to Cbarles H . and Sbaron
Stephen M. Oiler, Middlepon par- M. Knight, Pomeroy lots;
Deed, Lee and Cberry Cadle to
cel;
John
M. Rousb III, Rutland tracts;
Deed , Anna L. and Jeffrey
Deed,
Henry Jr. :;md Hester M.
Warmke to James Warmke, Salem
Eblin
to
Eblin
Family Trust. Rutparcels;
land
village
tracts;
Deed, Roger L. and Linda StoDeed, Nancy Holsinger to Debra
ban to Theodore R. and Betty Jane
Kay Meadows , Sutton/Letart
Woods, Salisbury parcels;
Deed, Robert and Linda Stobart parcels;
Deed, Nancy Holsinger to Vickto Ernest and Juanita McClung,
ie J. and Donald E. Smith, Letart;
Salisbury parcels;
Deed, Jack W. Carsey and
Deed, Eileen Agnes Welker to
Christopher 1;:. Tenaglia, Pomeroy , Roben E. Busb, Middleport.

Rural coalition
negotiates plan
with Gingrich
In !be last 48 hours before the
vote, the Medicare Preservation
Act was twice changed to increase
payments for rural health
providers.
The minimum guaranteed
monthly payment to HMOs and
other health plans in rural areas
was finally set at $300, up from
S200 wben the bill left committee
last week and $250 agreed to on
Tuesday.
"This is a ttemendous victory
for rural areas like southern Obio,"
said Sixlb Disbict Rep. Frank Cremeans, R-Gallipolis, one of 30
affected members of a rural bloc
that negotiated with House Speaker

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

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, October 20, 1995

Republicans gath.e r----.

"1

About 130 Republicans gathered at the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center Thursday night
for tbe second annual bean dinner hosted by the Meigs County Republican Executive Committee.
Entertainment for the social event was provided by Sweet Mountain Sounds, Roger and Mary
Gilmore. Seen with the Gilmores are Charles Barrett, left, and Eugene Triplett, chairman of the
executive conunlttee. (Sentinel photo by Charlene HoeDich)

Radl·oactl•ve waste Sl•te spl.ltS
•
eff ort s t 0 get ISSues
on baII 0t
.

B LAU~ MECKLER

~ociated Press Writer

COLUMBUS _ An unusual
opportunity to bring environmentalists and businesses together
could die because of continued
fighting over a low-level radioaclive waste disposal site, a state legislator said.
State Rep. William Schuck,
chairman of !be House Energy and
Environment Committee, wants to
create an environmental bond fund,
which wolild allow the slate to borrow money tti pay for a variety of
projects and cleanups.
Schuck, R-Columbus, wants to
put the issue before voters in
November 1996.
At the same time. a coalition of
environmentalists wants to amend
the Ohio Constitution to keep the
regional disposal site out of Obio.
They, too, are shooting for the
November 1996 ballol
In a memo to environmentalists,

Newt Gingrich Wednesday night.
The reimbursement is based on
"The agreement will boost the the adjusted average per capita cost
Medicare payment formula for (AAPCC) which is a relative mearural communities," Cremeans sure of the amount of money an
said, "which tend to bave a much average senior citizen in a county
lower rate than urban areas."
would consume in a single year.
The new formula sets a floor of Tbe AAPCC varies across tbe
$300 per month next year and country on a county-by-county
increases to $320 per year in 1997. basis.
·
"No Medicare recipient would
"Currenlly, the AAPCC rate for
receive less than that amount per each of the 14 counties in Ohio's
month to contribute to a so-called Sixlb Congressional District is less
MedicarePlus plan, whether a !ban the national average of $392
health maintenance organization, per month', in most cases about 30
COLUMBUS (AP) -The Ohio
provider service network, or medi- ·· percent less than the national averDepartment of Transportation bas
cal savings account," Cremeans age," Cremeans said.
said.
"Without this change in the cut back spending on bigbway
"By establishing this formula, AAPCC, many of the options for resurfacing and other programs to
Medicare recipients in rural areas seniors created by MedicarePius pay for a few major new construewho have historically received the would not be available to recipients _. lion projects, the Ohio Contractors
short end of the stick wben it in rural areas,'' be added. "Rural Association said.
Clark Street, executive director
comes to Medicare dollars are hospitals benefit from tbe new
guaranteed to receive competitive AAPCC formula because they will of the industry group, said Ohioans
reimbursement rates," be added.
receive more accurate reimburse- need to know that until legislators
ment rates."

Schuck warned that "dueling" said.
environmental issues on tbe same
Some environmental activists
ballot would be unworkable.
said the two issues are unrelated
Schuck helped write the legisla- and said !bat Schuck is trying to
tion that sets guidelines for estab- use the bond issue to persuade
lishing the disposal site, and be lbem to drop tbe challenge to the
said it is the only responsible disposal site.
option for Ohio to deal with its
"The bottom line is there is not
low-level waste.
a tradeoff," said Vicki Deisner.
By taking in radioactive waste executive director of the Ohio
for 20 years, Ohio would fulfill its Environmental Council. Too many
responsibility to the Midwest Com·· · people oppose the disposal site to ·
pact, which includes Iowa, Indiana.' keep the issue off the ballot, she
Wisconsin, Missouri and Minneso- said.
'Ia. After 20 years, another state
Deisner and other opponents
would take over, with the site rotat- contended that only a few sites are
ing every 20 years.
needed nationwide and tbat if Obio
If the plan is challenged on the builds one, the state would become
ballot, il will be difficult to fmd lbe a national dumping ground.
resources to promote the bond
Supporters responded that Cederfund , Schuck said.
allaw allows only states tbat are in
" If we have to spend all our compacts to restrict incoming
time explaining what we did, there waste. They said if Ohio is not in a
won't be be time and energy to compact, it will have no control
promote something positive. I tbinlc over incoming waste and would
that would be a real shame ,' bt end up a dumping ground anyway.

Contractors decry cutbacks by ODOT
provide more money, the state will
come ·up short in both highway
maintenance and enhancement of
the existing system.
"They need to be told that not
only does ODOT need funding for
new construction projects, but that
there is a monstrous shortfall for
system maintenance and preservation," Street said Thursday.

Student aid panel
abolishes itself

Mid-American limits use
of Gallia County's landfill
While the capacity for refuse at
tbe Gallia County landfill is
"quickly diminishing," Galli a's
county commission bopes that
issuance of a state permit will
allow the facility to continue operations.
Citing potential problems for
ttasb disposal in tbe Gallia-Jack·
son-Meigs-Vinton Solid Waste
Distric~ a siory published Tuesday
in !be Athens Messenger said that
- beginnirig yesterday - tbe Gallia landfill would be open only to
small haulers from Gallia and
Meigs counties.
According to the story, other
haulers will have to use other facilities. The Gallia facility is the only
operating landfill in the GJMV dis·
triCl
Lan~e Wilson, director of tbe
waste district, was notified Monday
by Mid-American Waste Systems
Inc., operator of the Gallia landfill.
Mid-American will in~tall a ·
trash transfer station at the Allied
Landfill in Vintlln County for use
by residents in Jackson and Vinton
counties.
. According to Wilson, a report

..u

requested by tbe Gallia County
Health Department could reveal
that the landfill is full and that the
facility wili be closed.
Gallia Commissioner Kenneth
Farmer said Thursday that wbile
Gallia landfill space is "quickly
diminishing," the county is seeking
an Environmental Improvement
Permit from the Ohio EPA that
would allow for opening another
section at the site.
"Commissioners are aware that
capacity is rapidly depleting," be
sa1d, adding that a meeting with
OPEA bas been scheduled.
In the me·antime, Wellston
Mayor Martha Deck said the city is
considering the most economic
way of disposing of trash, including the use of disposal sites in Pik'e
County.
·
Deck said there should be no
additional cost to the city by using
the transfer station at Allied Landing.
Construction at the Beech Hollow Landfill in Jackson County is
complete and operators are awaiting approval of the OEPA.

,

PROGRAM COMPLETED -Installation of
a dry lire bydrant In Olive Towmhlp Thursday
completed a two-year program of dry hydrant
placement throughout Meigs County. Tbe
hydrant Is located live miles ead or Tuppers
Plains, along State Route 681. The pro11ram,
funded by a $6,400 block grant through tbe
Melga County Commissioners, placed 10 new
. hydrants In Bedford, Sdplo, Columbia, Sale!p.

He testified before a House-Senate Commiuee reviewing the state
highway financing system.
The department acknowledged
during previous testimony before
tbe committee tbat it bad intentionally reduced the amount of money
spent on paving to meet demands·
for major new construction.
(Continued on Page 3)

Olive, Letart, Chester, and Rutland townships,
according to Opal Dyer, District Program
Administrator for tbe Meigs County Soil and
Water Conservation District, administrators of
tbe program. Pictured are OUve Twp. fireman
Frank Bise, property owners Barb and Terry
Friesner, Olive Twp. VFD Cblef Dale Smith,
and Olive Twp. fireman Jack Niday.
1

COLUMBUS (AP) - Another
entity will take over lbe activities
of the Ohio Student Aid Commission, wbicb bas voted itself out of
existence.
.&lt;.: Commission members voted
unanimously Thursday to close the
agency, saying it no longer should
try to compete with the private sector for management of student
loans.
Closure will take 12 to 18
monlbs, said the agency's executive director, Rae Ann Estep.
Once the U.S. Department of
Education chooses a successor
negotiations will begin for a transi:
.·lion between the commission and .
the new company, Ms. Estep said. . Although the commission is a ·
state agency, money for it comes
from the federal government
wbich benefits from any profits th~
commission makes.
Estep said the commission bas
been losing its lnarket sbare and no
longer serves a purpose. As a state
agency, it bad to comply with rules
for budgets, contracts and appropriations and could not respond to
demands as efficient! y as the pri- : vate sector could.
-

.

.. ..': ..

�- · .......

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LEITERS OF OPINION arc we lcome . They should be tess than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must he s1gncd WJth name.
address and telephone number. No unsigned tellers will he published. Lcuers
should be in good laste. addressing issues. not personalities.

•Deadline for publication
•of election letters Nov. 1
The Daily Sentinel welcomes letters regarding the Nov. 7 general
•election. However, in the interest of fairness, no election letters will be
:accepted after 12 noon on Wednesday, Nov. 1.
..
. Individuals should address Issues and not personahbes.
Letters purely endorsing candidates will not be used.
· Letters should be 300 words or less, preferably typed. AU letters
:are subject to editing and and must be signed with name, address
·and telephone number. Telephone numbers will not be published. No
unsigned letters will be pubHshed. Letters should be in good taste.

Page2
Friday, October·2o, 1995

Sentinel recently concerning the
sale of the lnfJJ1113J'Y.
· 1 agree with many things that
have been said - I, too, would like
10 keep the lnfJ.Clllary so that residents would not have to be relocated to another facility and employees to other jobs.
: But Jet's look at a few hard
facts:
· 1)Is the Infirmary out of date on
fire and State safety codes which
all other long-term care facilities
are required to have? Does thts
make a safe "home" for the residents. 1 certainly would not want
one of my loved ones in such a
structure, no matter how nice the
help nor how long he or she has
lived there.
2) If we keep the building as is,
will we someday soon either have
t6 spend a Jot of money on it .to
tnake it safe, or wtll our Comnussioners be told that it would be
•beaper to build a new facility .
Either way, where will the money
come from? Will all of you who
have wriuen or called the paper andCQmmissioners be willing to support and pass anoth~r tax levy ~o
have this done? Me1gs County ts
(lot noted for its overwhelming
support of taX levies.
Dear Editor,
. First of all, I consider the three
commissioners as good friend&gt; and
do not want to give any unjust criticism or muddy the waters any furtiler, but I don't accept their solutioos to the problems.
: 1 can't get a handle on what they
e~pect to accomplish in helping the
Vilterans Memorial Hospital stay
s61vein. We have a fine hospital,
well equipped, staffed with dedicited nurses and employees.
Ai:ross the street is a medical complelt. Down the road a piece are
two practicing doctors. I don't
~liQve we need any more nursing
ho111es, hut what we do need are
doctors who will utilize existing
fl(cilities with their patients and
hospital need~ .
: Tbe infirmary was built in the
!~50's with the intent to furnish a
home for the people who bad none
atid unable to provide for thems~lv~s and I think this has been
dono admirably.
letrer io the editor:
: · Webster's New Compact Dictioparr describes tbe word "infirmary" as a place for treating the
&amp;iclc. It also describes the word
~inflrm" as not in good health. First
of ali the Meigs County lnfJ.Clllary
Js not a place for treating the sick,
sinef no professional certified nurslng ~taff is rendering care within
()lis facility .
Secondly, the facility bas no
bndicap access nor meets certifi¢ation criteria as a place for treatment of the sick or as a nursing
tiome.
:: The Meigs County Infirmary
bas operared for many years on tax·
payer dollars with costs of operation far exceeding the millage
'l'()ted in by taxpayers. The infirDiary is a continuing financial drain
ori our county, as the coupty commisstoners can atrest
·· Meigs County' s only hospital
bas a future problem of housing
pllysicians to serve Meigs County
residents. The hospital employs
.pproximarely 150 and bas an esti~ted annual payroll of in excess
of-$2.6 million. Much of these payro)J dollars are spent within the
oo,mmunities of Meigs County as
well as local income taxes and
other supply costs. I believe the
hospital is in the top five employers

~

...

...

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1

WASHINGTON Some which passed with bipartisan sup- policies in areas where hurricanes
Republican lawmakers have appar- pon when Congress wisely decided are common. But since many
ently decided that the drive to cut it was time to get goverrunent out homes had already been built along
government down to size shouldn' t of the business of issuing nood the coast, the new Coastal Barrier
Resources System, which encomapply to their own backyards.
Alabama Sen . Richard Shelby.
passes areas covered by the act ,
who bolted the Democratic Pany By
only included areas that had not yet
for the GOP last November, wants
been developed. Those who had
the government to provide low-cost
already built in these areas were
nood insurance for 320 "pristine"
. allowed to keep their government
acres along the Gulf of Mexico.
flood insurance, which usually
The land is currently owned by a insurance for hurricane-prone costs less than $1,000 per year.
local developer, Larry Drummond, areas. Before the law passed, any
"No one is saying you can't
who wants to sell 70 lots on the developer who built homes along build (in coastal areas)." said
properly to go along with a golf the shore could take comfort in the Melissa Sagun of the Coast
course be recently built. But Drum- knowledge that the Federal Emer- Alliance, a conservationist group.
mond bas a problem. His property gency Management Agency would "The law just says that the federal
is in an area that's prone to hurri- pick up the tab if something went government won't giv~ y~u backcanes, which produce nooding. So wrong. Liberals liked the law ing if you want to butld tn these
be wants some help from Uncle because it would help protect pris- areas.··
Sam.
tine coastlines from new developThe act worked as intended until
Drummond is also a big Shelby ment. Conservatives liked it last year, when a group of Florida
supporter. Since 1991, he and his because the government would no lawmakers helped pass a "technifamily have given $18,000 to Shel- longer be stuck with a huge tab cal corrections" bill that removed
by's campaign through personal every time a hurricane hit.
certain Florida properties from the
donations and political action comNot sutprisingly, FEMA's flood system. Afrer looking at a number
mittee contributions.
insurance is far cheaper than any- of properties, the Fish and Wildlife
Standing in Drummond's way is thing available from companies Service admitted it made some
a 1982 federal law called the operating in the open market, mistakes when it originally mapped
Coastal Barrier Resources Act. which ~enerally refuse to issue out the system. As a result, some

h&gt;r dayli mc conditions and high 1empcra1UJts

Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

•

..IToledol49° I

areas bad.their designation changed

•

as a way of correcting the record.
This year, some of the same
lawmakers decided to try again .
The Florida delegation, led by Rep.
Tillie Fowler, R-Fla., again sought
to get some local property owners
exe mpted from the act. Only this
time, the Fish and Wildlife Service
didn't buy their argument. In the
Senate, meanwhile, Shelby introduced a bill that would get Drummond's property removed from the
act's jurisdiction and into the federal nood insurance program.
" We understood that there was
a factual error that occurred in the
mapping of that property," a Shelby spokeswoman told our associate
Jan Moller. Still, sbe added, the
Drummond biU is not a top priority
right now given the other budget
issues to be resolved. "This is
going to be in the han~s of the
(Environment and Pubhc Works
Committee) to decide, and we'll
accept whatever they say."
Dut Shelby apparently wasn't
too concerned about ''factual
errors" in 1990, when the Drummond property was entangled in a
legal dispute. Back then, be wrote a
Jetter to the Enviroruncnt Committee asking that the parcel be included in the coastal barrier system
because some of bis constituents
didn't want development in the
area.
As it happens, tbe Fish and
Wildlife Service couldn't agree
more. "In Alabama, there is no
question (the land) was mapped
correctly," a Fish and Wildlife
t official told us. "What the property
owners want is to be taken out of
the system, so they can apply and
receive federal development assis-

REASONS
•

O,J, SIMPS~
~~QIT'a=
'1lte
Jmav&amp;W~

Nee

H~'u. BE 'PLA"TING GOt.;

I

~U...R IN~IC~,
~~A '$lei&lt;~ LlfT
~ RCfA ~lS'..Jel'Jtr ~

~S 'PLAN~I~GP CN TAkiNG

A. ~p A~P ~·u. ~J.'Y
~LQ;p,

George R•.Plagenz
nouns and pronouns.
A gender-neutral word is one
such as "they" that is neither male
nor female. It is inclusive because
it includes both men and women.
An example can be found in the
modem revisions of Psalm I where
" Blessed is the man" is replaced
by "Blessed are they."
Not many would bother to find
fault with so minor a change. But
so far dnly t.he camel's nose was
under the tent
When you come to Matthew
25:40 ("As you did it unto one of
the least of t.hese my brethren")
what are you going to do with
"brethren"? One of the "inclusive
language" translations makes it
"one of the least of my family
members.''
Now we arc trespassing on hallowed ground . Long usage ha~
atluned our ears to the Bible's
familiar cadences and rhythms of

tance.''

;;x:ech. These put us in touch with and bow it says it."
Stripping God of bis masculine
the Infinite Presence when we arc
designations is only one of the
at worship or at prayer.
To tamper with the language of transformations the deity has been
the King James Bible (and, worse undergoing. Addressing God by the
yet, to replace its majestic phrases familiar "you" instead of the oldwith words as wooden as "the least fashioned "Thou," we have
of my family members") is like brought the God who is "high and
adjusting Big Ben to somebody's lifted up" down to eye level at a
consequent loss of bis transcenown private watch.
But it is what the genderless dence.
The churches have moved the
translations have done to the deity
communion
table as close to the
that has most people upset. Both
pews
as
possible
to creare a "cozy
"Lord" and "Father" are out The
little
circle,"
as
Joseph
Campbell
Wall Street Journal editorial says,
says
disapprovingly
in
"The
Power
''The big question now comes in
of
Myth."
bow to deal with God. The Oxford
Preparing communion in full
editors' solution is to ban mascuview
of the congregation, the clerline pronouns for God and to Iceep
gyman looks, says CampbeU, "like
repeating the word 'God."'
Using this method, John 3:16 Julia Child giving a demonstrabegins, "For God so loved the tion."
The churches are speaking a difworld that God gave God's only ·
ferent
langu~ge and we are losing a
begotten child (the masculine 'son'
lot
in
translation.
must not be used) ... "
George Plagenz is a syndical·
But do such language changes
ed
writer for Newspaper Enter·
make ·any difference? Kenneth
Woodward, religion editor of prise Association.
(For information on bow to
Newsweek, says they do . The
Oxford translation, be says, is "not communicate electronically with
merely cosmetic. It represents a this columnist and others, contact
fundamental reinterpretation of America Online by calling 1-800827-6364, ext. 8317.)
what the New Testament says -

struction.) The rest are despondent, notorious feature of life in the
or at best resigned. They voted, in PRC, will inftltrnre and overwhelm
recent elections, overwhelmingly the new acquisition. AU that will be
for the few brave political leaders left of Hong Kong wiD be a dried
who are sliD speaking up for free- husk of the city it once was - still,
dom. But docs it really matter?
no doubt, clogged with tourists, but
The best guess is that, immedi- increasingly of the downscale sort.
intention of abiding by these ately after July I. 1997, what will
Is there any hope? Oddly, yes.
promises. It would be greatly in happen is ... nothing. The Commu- The Beijing regime is just a clique
their own interest to do so, because nists will take everything over, then of bloody gerontocrats, ready to
Hong Kong is the goose that lays spend some months just pinching kill u( preserve their power.
the golden egg: a source, as themselves to make sure their fanBene~them, and all around them,
presently managed, of enormous tastic luck isn't simply a wondetful pres
upward and inward young
profits to the Communist regime. dream.
and ealthy forces that long ,for a
But do the Communist bosses in
Then, slowly, inevitably, inex- freer d more prosperous China.
Beijing recognize this? And even if orably, they will begin to impose When the old men die, there wiD be
they do, have they the seJf.restraint their will, in a thousand ways, great sharp and perha~s protracred strugto leave Hong Kong alone?
and small. They are, after all, Com- gles over China s future. In those,
Tbere are almost as many views munists, and not accustomed to there may be quire a lot of wiggleon this question as there are people being contradicted. As Robert room for the people of Hong Kong.
in Hong Kong (6 million). Many Byrne once wrote of playing chess
WiUiam A. Rusher Is a Dlstln·
famous Hong Kong busine'Sses with Anato!y Karpov, "For a while guished Fellow or the Claremont
have already transferred their nothing much seems to happen, and IIIStitute for the .Study or States·
domiciles and their movable assets then you slowly realize that rigor manshlp and Political Phlloso·
to Bermuda, or elsewhere. Hun- mortis bas set in."
phy.
dreds of thousands of people have
Gradually the Communists will
(For information on bow to
either managed to arrange for legal freeze the freedom. and hence the communicate electronically with
residence abroad and departed, or . life, and finally the wealth out of this columnist and others, con•
are banging desperately on to for- Hong Kong. Corruption, now a tact America OnUne by ealUng 1eign passports.
800·827·6364, ext. 8317.)
Of the rest, the relatively few
who have forged ties with the
incoming Communists are underTodar's Birthdays: ~o-ICtevision personality Arlene Francis is 87.
standably optimistic. (lbeirs is the Colummst AI:' Buchwald IS 70. Actor William Christopher is 63 Actor
money behind all that new con- Jerry Orbach IS 60. Baseball AU-Star Keith Hernandez is 42. . -

Today's livestock report

Hospitaf news

Stocks

Announcements

William A. Rusher

I

....

.The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

offers a considerably bigger reduction for businesses, senior citizens
and recipients of capital gains.
The Senate would limit eligibility for the full per-child credit to
single parents earning up to
$75,000 and couples making up to
$110,00. Tbe House bill would
extend eligibility to families earning up to $200.000.
Both bills contain a reduction in
the·marriage penalty, which result&gt;
in m.any couple~ paying higher
taxes than they would if they had
remained single. Senators also
included a $500 credit for student
loan interest payments.
Democrats hammered at the
fairness of the tax cu~ particularly
when combined with separare legislation squeezing $43 billion in
savings from the earned-income taX
credit for working families earning
less than $28,000.
A new Treasury Department
analysis, dispured by Republicans.
said households earning $30,000
and less would see their tax liability rise under the Senate measures
while families making more than
$100,000 would get 48 percent of
the tax cut.
"We are reducing taxes on all
people wbo PJIY taxes. One of the
things you have to understand is
that it's the middle class and the
upper class that are paying the big
taxes," said Finance Committee
Cbairman William Roth, R-Del.
Congress' analysis of the measure shows 70 percent of the benefits going to bousebolds earning
less than $75,000, be said.
Republicans bad worked out
their differences on the tax legisla. lion in private last week and spent
Thursday's public session formally
rejecting Democratic amendments.
Democrats attracted a GOP
defector on only one

TP-C Water issues boil advisory
The Tuppers Plains-Cb~ster Water District bas issued a boil
advisory for Olive Township .
The area includes roads and areas of State Route 681 southeast
of the elevated storage tank ncar county road nine, including that
road, Hudson Street, and all residents within three-quarters of a mile
of ReedsviUe.
Customers are advised that the boil advisory affects any water
used for human consumption. The water must be boiled for three
minutes, said Donald C. Poole, general manger.
Poole said that a main line leak on SR 681 required the company
to depressurize the area

Middleport to begin village paving
The Village of Middleport bas announced that paving wiD begin
in the viUage on Monday.
Paving work on South Fourth Avenue wiU begin Monday, Oct.
23 at 7:30 a.m. Paving work will begin on South Fifth Avenue
Tuesday, Oct. 24 at 7:30a.m.
Village crews asks that all residents on these streets have their
vehicles moved from the streets by 7:30 a.m. on the designated
paving days.
·

Accident causes minor injury
A Pomeroy woman was slighUy injured Thursday in a coUision
between a car and a Meigs Local School District bus on Bedford :
Township Road 145 (White Oak), the Gallia-Meigs Post of the ·
State Highway Patrol reponed.
Vera M. Hook, 30, 39158 White Oak Road, was transported .
from the scene by the Meigs EMS to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
She was later treated and released, a hospital spokesperson said.
Troopers said Hook was southbound, 1.5 miles north of County
Road 18 (Kingsbury) at4 p.m. when the northbound bus, driven by
Katherine L. Deskins, 48, 1900 I Buck Lake Road, GuysviUe, went
left of center and collided with Hook's car.
·
Damage was moderate to Hook's car and slight to the bus.
Deskins was cited for failure to yield.

Motion filed for declaration
of Sheppard's innocence

CLEVELAND (AP) - The son
of the late Sam Sheppard on Tbursday asked a judge to formally
declare Sheppard innocent of murder and wrongfully imprisoned.
In the motion, a lawyer for
Samuel Reese Sheppard suggests
that a man named Richard Eberling, who currenUy is imprisoned
on an unrelated murder conviction,
committed the crime for which the
elder Sheppard was blamed.
After a sensational 1954 trial,
Sheppard was convicted of bludgeoning his pregnant wife, Marilyn. The case was similar to that of
OJ. Simpson: A prominent man
suspected in the death of his wife,
largely on the basis of circumstantial evidence, in a trial that drew
intense media scrutiny.
Sheppard's conviction was overturned on grounds that pretrial publicity might have tainted the jury.
Sheppard was acquiued in a second
trial in 1966.
F. Lee Bailey, who assisted in
the Simpson defense, handled
Sheppard's second trial.
Although Sheppard eventually
was acquilled, the state ''never
seriously entertained the notion" of,
looking for another suspect in the
case, said the motion filed TbursOLIVETWP.
day.
.
9:36p.m., State Route 124,
"The not guilty verdict in 1966
James Catlet~ Selby General Hos- should resolve the question of
pital, Marieua.
innocence, but in the minds of
POMEROY .
·some people, it only means the evi4:05 p.m., volunteer ftre depart- dence wasn't there to prove guilt
ment to Mulberry Avenue, grease
fire at Opal Whitlatch residence,
ftre out on arrival;
4:12 p.m., volunteer ftre department and squads to White Oak
Road, bus and car accident, Vera
Hook, Joshua Hook and Diane
Hook, VMH.
RACINE
7:54 am., volunteer fire department and squad to State Route 124,
motor-vehicle accident, Ralph
Fowmer, treated at the scene.
RUTLAND
10: 19 a.m ., Ash Street, Jobn
Hite, VMH.
SYRACUSE
8: 11 p.m., Carmel Road, Mary
Rousb, VMH.
'
TUPPERS PLAINS
10:57 a.m ., Arbaugh Road ,
Ethel Arbaugh, treated at the scene;
12:02 p.m., Eden Ridge Road,
Mike Smith, St. Joseph's Hospital.

beyond a reasonable doubt,'' said
Terry Gilbert, a lawyer represeating the younger Sheppard.
.
"This is an effort to declare his
absolute innocence," Gilbert saKI.
That in tum would be the basis {or
demanding compensation for the
years Sheppard spent in priso'n,
Gilbert added.
·
The elder Sheppard died in 1970
at age 46.
.
Cuyahoga County Prosecutor
Stephanie Tubbs Jones has said she
is reviewing the new evidence. .
Gilbert, the younger Sheppard
and aut11or Cynthia Cooper have
collaborated on a new book,
"Mockery of Justice: The Tr11e
Story of tbe Sheppard Murder
Case." The three said Thursday at
a news conference that several
pieces of evidence point to Eberling.
The elder Sheppard said be
awakened on the night of the murder and discovered a bushy-haired
intruder with whom be struggled
briefly. After the intruder fled;
Sheppard discovered his wife.'s
body, he said.
Although the killer apparently
left a trail of his own blood at lbe
scene, Sheppard bad no open
wounds, Gilbert said. But Eberling
did - a cut he said he received
while washing windows at tbe
Sheppards' home several days cartier.
·:
Eberling is in the Orient Correctionallnstitution near Columbus_

EMS units log 10 calls

foreign policy) independently and
democratically.
The real question, of course, is
whether the Communists have any

t

Scaled-down version of tax
cu.t moves to Senate floor

Contractors decry cutbacks

As Hurricane Opal proved earlier this month, Florida and Alabama's Gulf Coast remain vulnerable
1 to violent acts of nature - even
though Drummond's property was
spared this time. Shelby, who
switched parties as the political
winds changed last November,
should be wary of opening the federal treasury to a developer who
might one day be in the eye of the
storm.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binslein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc. '

Hong, Kong braces itself for .1997

in Meigs County. Without the continued operation of the hospital, the
HONG KONG - The provereconomy of Meigs County would bial visitor from Mars, looking at
be further reduced.
Hong Kong today, would never
Employees of the infJJ1113J'Y wiD suspect that anything was amiss.
continue to be employed within The incredible harbor, surrounded
county positions if the infmnary is by mountains and teeming with all
sold. The residents of the infJ.Clllary soris of activity, bas never looked
will be placed within certified lovelier. There is new construction
bealth care facilities.
everywhere, and tourists throng
The questions county residents what must surely be the world's
need to ask are:
largest collection of shops. This
I) Do we need jobs, economy, unique city - for a century and a
and a continued health care facility half a British crown colony, but
in Meigs County; or do we need a with an overwhelmingly Chinese
infumary wbicb is facing porential population - looks, at first glance.
liability if it continues to operate almost arrogantly sure of itself.
with annual operation costs far
Yet there is only one subject of
exceeding the millage passed by conversation in Hong Kong today,
this county('s taxpayers.
and it is murmtired more often than
2) Does our county bave so • shoured: ':.1997" -or, specificalmuch economic growth that it does ly, July l''bf that year, when the
not need the inflUJf of the b hospi- Union "Jack comes down and the
tal's employment ilollars for Meigs red nag of the People's Republic of
County businesses to survive.
Cl\ina goes up. What will happen
Maybe some of the residents of to Hong Kong then?
this county need a reality check to
Under the so-called Basic Law,
determine which of these questions negotiated between Britain and the
are more important and have the PRC, Hong Kong will pass under
greater value to the stabilization of Communist control, but Peking's
the economy of our county.
official policy wiD be " one country, two systems": Hong Kong will
Sincerely
be allowed to continue its freeGeorge A. Hoffman
wheeling capitalist ways for at least
Middleport
50 years, and to govern itself (save
in matters "such as" defense and

John Davison Watkins, 85, Honeybrook, Pa., and fOIUlerly of Gassaway, W.Va, died Wednesday, Oct 18, 1995 at bis residence.
Born June 12, 1910 in Sutton, W.Va., son of the late John H. and Mary
Elizabeth Sutton Walkins, be was a former teacher, serving 13 years at
Wabama High School and 25 years in Braxton County, W.Va.
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Josephine Bail Wa!kins .
Surviving are two sons and daughters-in -law, Paul E. and Junie
Watlcins of Galltpolis Ferry, W.Va. and John Davtd and Barbara Walkins
of Hobart, Ind.; two daugbrers and a son-in·law, Marilyn Kay and Jerrald
Murphy of Vienna, W:va., and Susan Lynne Watkins of Honeybrook;
seven grandchildren and seven great·grandcbildren; a sister, Winifred E.
Butler of Morgantown, W.Va.; and four brothers, Paul A. Watkins of
Charleston, W.Va., J. Herben Watlcins of Miami, Fla, Felix S. Watkins of
Fairfax, Va., and RichardT. Wa!kins of Orlando, fla
Services will he 10:30 a.m. Monday in the Crow-Hussell Funeral
Home, Point Pleasant. with Rev. Louis A. HusseU officiating. Graveside
rites will be beld at 2 p.m. Monday at the Mount Olive Cemerery, Strange
Creek, W.Va. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6'9 p.m. Sunday.

Mild conditions will take
a powder. this weekend

'Inclusive' Bible goe.s a bit too far
and publishers of Bibles, prayer
books and hymnals to get them to
usc gender-neutral (or inclusive)
language in place of masculine

John D. Watkins

WASHINGTON (AP) - A
scaled-back version of the " Contract With America" tax cuts,
Showers
including a $500-per-child credit,
is beaded to the Senate floor next
Via Assocrated Press GraphrcsNe /
week as part of a massive budget
bill designed to eliminate the
deficit by 2002.
It would cut taxes $245 billion
over seven years and, in addition to
the per-child credit, would dramatically expand eligibility for Individual Retirement Accounts and slash
By The Associated Press
and a cbance of showers wiD con- taxes on estates and on capital
What a differl:nce a day malces tinue. Temperatures won't differ gains.
- when it comes to the weather in much from tbe overnight lows.
. "This is a very good day for
Ohio.
Some sleet is possible.
taxpayers who want to see a balTbe record-high temperature for anced budget and also want to
Forecasters said the warm and
dry conditions of recent days will Ibis date at the Columbus weather spend more of their own money,"
abruptly change to cold and wet. station was 84 degrees in 1953 Sen. Don Nickles, R-Okla., said
weather.
while the record low was 24 in . Thursday.
By tonight, blustery winds wiD 1972. Sunset tonight will be at 6:45
The measure was adopted by the
be whipping the rain to make the p.m_ and sunrise Saturday at 7:48 Senate Finance Committee on an
40-degree conditions seem even a.m.
11-9 party-line vore after RepubliWeather forecast:
colder, the National Weather Sercans summarily defeated dozens of
Tonight .. Periods of rain. Heavy amendments offered by Democrats,
vice said.
On Saturday. brisk conditions, rain and tbunderstorms possible who con\end the GOP is robbing
unseasonably cold temperatures east.
the poor to benefit the ncb.
'
Senate Majority Leader Bob
Dole, R-Kan., told reporters be
planned action Wednesday by the
(Continued from Page 1)
such programs was one reason full Senate on the budget legisla"OOOT is leaving It up to you ODOT repaved fewer roads even tion, which also would save $270
to read between the lines and deter- though costs of installing asphalt billion in Medicare spending over
mine how really bad things are," were unchanged from a decade seven years.
Street said.
ago.
President Clinton bas threatened
"How eflen should a pavement
Rep. Ron Amstutz, R-Wooster, to veto it unless Congress wrings
be resurfaced7 Since 1981, the appeared unconvinced.
substantially less from Medicare
"I think we need to look at the and reduces the tax cut. His own
answer to that has been, on the
average, every 10 years. OOOT is numbers. I don't think they're proposal would cut taxes $105 bilnot maintaining the system in a going to add up. I know we've had lion over seven years and focus the
manner that is representative of this some increase, for example, in the benefits more closely on the middle
need," Street said.
state patrol drawdown . But there class.
Most Senate Democrats, howevMoney for ODOT operations was a substantial drawdown 10
er, declared their opposition to any
· comes from stare and federal gaso- years ago, too,'' Amstutz said.
line taxes.
Senate Higbways and Trans- tax cut as long as the budget deficit
Street said $216 miUion in Ohio portation Chairman Scott Oel- continues.
fuel tax money that could go for stager, R-Canton, said there was no
Tbe House tax cut package,
state highway work instead was question that the highway patrol $354 billion over seven years. i&gt;
spent for non-state road purposes, budget bad grown.
less generous on retirement
.'lith a large chunk going to th~ - ':It is an active discussion in the accounts and estate-tax relief but
:.tate Highway Patrol.
· Legislature to take a look at the
The $216 million was the equiv- funding of the highway patrol to
alent of 4 cents of the state's 22 see if there's another way to fund
cents per gallon gasoline tax.
it," Oelslager said.
Street said use of the money for
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
recorded 10 calls for assistance
Thursday, including one transfer
call. Units responding included:
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs., country .
MIDDLEPORT
COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana·
· 37 ()() •2 00
·
10:17 a.m., Rocksprings RebaOhio direct bog prices at selected pomts
... · 500
· Ibs. 1.00 to bilitation Center, Martin Woodard •
Sows:· under
buying points Friday by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture Market 2.00 lower; over SOO Ibs. 2_00 to Veterans Memoriai.'Hospital.
2 50
News:
" lower.
Barrows and gilts: mostly 50
cents to 1.50, instances 2.00 lower;
VEfERANS MEMORIAL
demand light to moderate.
Thursday admissions - Bertha
U.S. 1·3, 230-260 lbs., country
Bing, Pomeroy.
points 42.50-44.00, few 44.50;
Thursday discharges - Reed
Am Ele Power ........................38 314
plants 43.50-45.00.
Will, Pomeroy; Lloyd Johnson,
Akzo ................:.......................51 314
Middleport; Louise Burbridge,
Ashland on .......................-... .32 518
Albany; Glenn Young, Racine.
AT&amp;T .....................................61114
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Bank One ................................J6 518
Trick-or-treats set
Discharges OcL 19 - Edward
Bob Eva11.1 ............................... 16 J/4
Trick or treat will be observed
Kirby,
Diana Hurdman, Leonard
Borg-Warner
.........................
.lll
J/8
in Portland and Reedsville on Oct.
Greer,
Patricia Martindill, Tracy
Champion
Ind
.......................
.21114
30 from 6 to 7 p.m. In Reedsville,
Charming Sbop ....................... .lJ/8
Herzber,
Melisa Pace, Emily
the siren will sound to mark the
Clly Hokllng-.................. _...... .25 114
Kemp,
James
Krecker, Delsie
beginning and end.
Federal Mogul .............................. 19
Burgess, Wayne Dodson.
Gannett ........,,...__ , ............-.... _..,,55
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Free clothing day
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................... .39 518
CoUey,
daugbrer, Bidwell.
K-mart .......................................... 10
Free clothing day will be held
(Published
with permission)
Lands End .................................... 15
Wednesday by tbe Community
Limited lnc. ........................... .lO 718
Action Agency at the old high
Multimedia Inc......................44 118
school in Cheshire. Anyone in need
People'• ................................. .22 114
of clothing is welcome, officials
Ohio VaUey Bank .........................J6
said.
One VaUey ..............................34 1/8
Cuckler Consulting Inc.
Roc:kweU ................................45 718
RobbiiiJ &amp; Myen ...................JJ 1/l
The Daily Sentinel : Royal Dutcb/Sbell...-·-..-·...-..122 1/l
Retirement
Sboney's Inc.............................9 314
(~SPS 113-%01
Planning
Star Bank ......................................S8
Wendy Jnt'l........................... .20 1/8
Published every afternoon . Monday ttu"ough
Friday. Ill Court St .. Pomeroy, Ohio•.by l'!t
Wortblnatoo lnd ........-........... 17 718

~--------··-------~-----,--------~

"The King James Bible bas
never looked so good,'' said
Newsweek magazine's reviewer
after reading the new "inclusive
language version" of the New TesSincerely,
Bill and Betsy Weaver, tament and Psalms published by
Middleport Oxford University Press.
The Wall Street J&lt;lumal, seeking
There is more here than meets to find a word for lbe reasoning
the eye. It's not just locking the used by tbe editors to justify this
latest job of Bible deconstruction:
doors and selling the building.
We are talking about disrupting ism, came up with the unbusipeople's lives . Ones who have nesslike but marvelously descriplived here for years, living with tive '~hooey."
Darkness, in the Oxford volume,
each other like a well-knit family
has been jettisoned as a metaphor
and calling it their home.
I do not believe these people for evil because it might give
could adapt to a new bome, differ- offense to people of color. The
ent people to associate with these " right hand of God'' bas been cut
people are elderly and it would be off so as not to be unfair to lefties
among Bible readers. It is rer.laced
difficult for them to adjust.
I don't believe this is a fmancial by the "mighty band of God. '
Other changes that will jar the
problem, at least I have not heard
the commissioners state it as a sensibilities of the traditional Bible
reader are the substitution of
problem.
I do not think we should make a "Father-Mother" for "God tbe
rash decision which later we may · Father" (the Lord's Prayer begins,
regret and which would be irrevo- "Father-Mother, hallowed be your
name") and "the Human One" for
cable.
I would like for the commis- "the Son of Man."
What's happening here is that
sioners to take a second look and
the feminists arc continuing to sic
go in a different direction.
Virgil Walker the language police dogs on editors
Racine

PA.

WVA

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

•'

--Area· Death-- Local News in Brief:

Saturday, Oct. 21

Gulf Coast is eager for FEMA dollars .

More about the Infirmary

3) I, personally, would like tc
see Holzer Hospital and Clinic buy
this site and build a new clinic
there. This could not but help the
hospital to survive. How many of
you are aware of the .layoffs and
other cutbacks the hospital has
made in recent 5 months and years
just to keep the doors open and services available to area restdents.
This affects many employees,
many of whom are the main breadwinners of their families.
Let's support our Commissioners
in this project and give them credit
for considering all aspects of this
issue. They, like you and me and
all others who have spoken out on
this issue are only interested in
what's best for the residents of this
county, not only now, but in the
future as well.
You can go forward and you
can go backward, but you cannot
stand still. I believe that the sale of
the lnfJ.Clllary to Holzer, for exampie, would lead to the solution of
many problems- safety for the restdents although they would be relo· cated, retaining and rec~lling
employees, and added frnancial and
other resources for the C'Ounty.

..... ...

OHIO Weather
Accu-Wea ther• forecast

Letters to the Editor
. 1 have read many Jeuers in the

~

MICH

The Daily Sentinel
f)MULTIMEDIA. INC.

~

Friday, October 20, 199S

;Commentar
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

.. .... . .

_.,_.

-•-•-

Ohio Volley Publishing Company!Multmw:dia
Inc ., Po~croy, Ohio 45769, Ph . 992-~ 1 5 6 .
Secood class po smge paid at Pomeroy, Oh1o.
Member: 'file Associated Press. and the Ohio
Newspaper Association.

1

Stock reporll are tbe 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Advest o
Gallipolis.

POSTMASTER: Send acktress corrections 10
The Daily Sentinel, 1I 1 Court St .. Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

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Subscribel'1 nol desiring to pay the carrier may
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on 11 three. si~~: or 12 month basit Credit will be
pven carrier each week.
No subscription by mail permitted in
where home carrier service is available.

w. Tad Cuckler

llf'CU

PICK UP HOURS
,.

FRIDAY

·Nov. 17., 1995

3 p.111. to 5 p.111.

•'

/

1-1100-361 -9392

BULK PACK FROZEII FRUIT &amp; VEGETABLE SALE
for your home freezer processing

8: ::~:::::· :::::::::"'""'''''' ::. ·:·:::.:::.::::~i: ~
.

Bulll'ltll Ptlone 614-992... 216

MEIGS COUNTY 4·H

S~BSCRIPTION

One Year ........

H

42994SR 124, Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Octo6eris
('~espect Life
Month''

Order forms may be picked up
at the Meigs County
Extension Service
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy
Returned in person or by mail
before Oct. 27.
Telephone orders accepted
614-992-6696
Pickup Nov. 17 at Extension
Office
Next sale Spring 1996

Pfease j(espect Life from
Conception ti{Veatli.
Sponsored 6y tfze

'lvleigs County
!Rjglit rro Life
.for 'lvlore Information
Ca{[

992-5898.

I

�Friday, C1ctober 20, 1995

Sports

The Daily Sentin~!

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Meet the Tornadoes

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Meet the Eagles

11

1

Friday, October 20, 1995

Bengals beat Steelers 27-9
By ALAN ROBINSON

PITTSBURGH (AP)- The
Pillsburgh Steclcrs almost were a
Super Bowl team last season.
Thcy"rc making nearly every opponent look like one this year.
Jeff Blake and his cast of acrobatic rccei vers resembled a fleet of
Supermen in pads to the Steelers'
suddenly suspect defense Thursday, leaping over and flying by
them for three touchdown catches.
And, no, the Three Rivers Stadium scoreboard wasn't short-circuiting when it flashed: Cincinnati
aengals 27, Stcelers 9. U the Steelers thought that 20-16 loss at Jacksonville on Oct. 8 was an anomaly,
the Bcngals brought them back to
reality.
"Tbis is big, this is huge," Bengals tackle Joe Walter said. "This
was our biggest win in I don't
know how long . To win on the
road , to win in Pittsburgh, this is
big time."
It had been a long time since the
Bcngals beat Pittsburgh- 1990, to
be exact, or eight games ago. The
Stcelers' domination of its AFC
Central rival was so overwhelming,
the Bengals (3-4) didn't score more
than 16 points in any of those eight
lt&gt;sses.
· Now it's the Steelers (3-4),
losers of four of five, who can't get
i)lto the end zone and can't keep
the opposition out. They couldn't
score a touchdown in six trips
inside the Bengals' 20-yard line,
and now have only one in their last
13 u-ips there.
·
This wasn't the 49ers they were
playing, either, even if the Bengals
nave answered San Francisco's
much-copied West Coast offense
with a much-different East Coast
~crsion that is as unconventional as
the 49ers are conservative.
~ If the 49ers are dink and dart,
~ith screen passes and high-percentage throws, Blake's Bengals
ue flash and dash, a high-wife act
~n a 100-yard field.

"That's what we do every
game," )llake said. "It doesn't
matter who we are playing."
But it did matter who the Bengals weren't playing- namely,
Rod Woodson, the All-Pro cornerback who is mending from knee
surgery. Without Woodson, the
Steelers simply couldn't keep up
with Bengals receivers Darnay
Scou, Carl Pickens and Tony
McGee, who combined for 14
catches, 210 yards and a touchdown apiece.
"All three guys did a gre&lt;.t job
getting into the end zone," said
Blake, who has 15 touchdown
passes and only four interceptions.
"Darnay used his speed, Pickens
used his height and Tony used his
jumping ability to get into the cntl
wne. They were all great"
Scou made a game-breaking 47 ·
yard scoring catch over Alvoid
Mays, Woodson's replacement, in
the second quarter. and Pickens
answered with a 41-yarder follow ing McGee's leaping 12-yarder in
the third quarter. Pickens bad eight
catches for 108 yards.
"Even if Rod Woodson were
playing, we still would have gone
deep," said Blate, who was 18-of-

22 for 275 yards and no interceptions. "We worked long and bard
to pick up Pittsburgh's blitzes, and
everything worked to perfection.
Even If they had stopped us and
stopped us, we would have kept
going deep."
• .
The statistics - Pittsburgh led
468-368 in total yardage - didn't
reflect Cincinnati's domination or
Pittsburgh's frustration.
The Steelers moved the ball at
will between the 20s, only to constantly self-desu-uct inside the 20.
Norm Johnson, wbo bad made 25
consecuiive field-goal .atlempts
inside the 40-yard line, gave a hint
of the night to come by missing
from the 39 and 36 in the first quarter.
"We're just showing up and
going through the motions,''
linebacker Kevin Greene said.
"It's just not happening for any of

JESSE MAYNARD

Jesse Maynard, Jamie Evans and Michael Ash
are members of tbe 1995 Southern football team.
Maynard Is a 5-8, 156-pound junior quarterback.

MICHAEL ASH

STEVE DURST

MIKE SMITH

·Evans Is a 5-11, 160-pound junior taUback. Ash Is
a 5-7, 160-pound sophomore fullback.

Mike Smith, Steve Durst and Brian Bowen are
members of the 1')')5 Eastern footbaU team. Smith
is a S-7, 165-pound senior llnemanllinebacker.

BRIAN BOWEN

Durst Is a 6-1, 175-pound sophomore quarterback/linebacker. Bowen Is a 6-1, 180-pound senior
quarterbacklsaftly.

Meigs County teams see eight
golfers receive all-TVC honors

us."

"It's everything," said quarterback Neil O'Donnell, who bad
been 7-0 against Cincinnati. "It's
what we're doing, who's doing it,
bow we're doing it. We're great •
between the 20s, but we just can't
get it in there."

SLIDES FOR FIRST DOWN - Clnclnnall
quarterback Jeff Blake (8) sUdes under Pittsburgh
linebacker Jerry Olsavsky (SS) for the first-down

four serving. Carissa Ash scored eight for eight serving and bad six
nine points and was 15 for 15 serv- points and Valerie Cundiff was
ing. Tracy Coffey had six kills.
four for five serving with four
Against Belpre, the Marauders points.
won tlle first game 15-10 and overThe Marauders then defeated
carne a 11-1 deficit to win the sec- Federal Hocking. In the flfSt game
ond game 15-11.
Stewart scorched the Lancer
Fackler's 10-for-10 serving defense witb seven kills, while
included the match-winning ace, 10 Clifford was eight for eight serving
points and six assists. Cotterill was with eight points and Fackler added
three for three serving and had five six assists.
kills. Stewart was four for four
In the second game Stewart led
servin~ with seven kills. McElroy
the way with eight for eight servwas e1ght for nine serving with ing, four aces and seven points.
seven points (all in the second
Others contributing to the win
game) and six assists. Ash was were ConeriU's 6-for-6 serving that

Conference champion Meigs
dominated the all-Tri-Valley Conference golf selections by placing
all five of its golfers on this year's

yardage In the first half of Thursday night's AFC · ·:
Central bout In Pittsburgh, where tbe Bengals ;
won 27-9. (AP)
;

gave her 435 su-aight serves without a miss. McElroy had four
assists. Coffey two kills, and Tonya
Miller three kills, while Ash had
five points and bad 8-for-8 se..Ving.
Meigs will play in the Division

The Marauders, who won their
sixth su-aight TVC championship,
placed one on the fmt team, three
on the second team and a fourth on
the honorable-mention team.
Southern's Jason Shuler was
selected Jhe conference's Most
Valuable Golfer with a conference
scoring average of 38.4 for nine

.

•
'
II sectional volleyball tournamen(.:;:

on the University of Rio Grande. •
campus. The second-seeded· :
Marauders will play Gallia Acade- .
my Saturday at4:30 p.m.
·

------Sports briefs.-----HONG KONG (AP) - Austtalian teen-ager Mark Pbilippoussis continued his bot streak, beating
Richey Rene berg 6-1, 6-4 to
advance to the semifinals of the
Marlboro Championships.
Pbilippoussis, who upset thirdseed Richard Krajicek m his first

team.

··~

Meigs spikers beat Trimble, Belpre &amp; Federal Hocking to end season
The Meigs volleyball team
recently picked up three more wins.
The Marauders defeated Trimble
15-7, 12-15, and 15-1, Belpre 1510 and 15-1 I and then defeated
Federal Hocking 1~-3 and 15-7.
In the game against Trimble, the
Lady Marauders were led by Emily
Fackler with five points, three aces,
two kills and nine assists. Cynthia
Cotterill scored seven points, was a
perfect 13 for 13 serving and six
kills, Stephanie Stewart scored l4
points on 18-for-18 serving and
nine kiUs. Jessica McElroy had I 0
assists. Jenny Clifford was four for

JAMIE EVANS

DAVE ANDERSON

JrfiCKBARR

holes. Joining Shuler on the first
team were Belpre's Kent Garrett
(39.0) and Matt Nolan (39.1),
Wellston's Pat Riepenhoff (39.4),
Southern's Ryan Nonis (39.6) and
Dave Anderson of Meigs (39 .8).
On the second team, Trimble's
Kyle Patton led the team with an
average score of 40.56. Others
earning second team honors were
the Marauders' Clay Crow (40.7),
Southern's Matt Bradford (40.9),
Belpre's Cliff Daugherty (41.0)

and Marauders Mick Barr (41.1)
and Sieve McCuUough (41.2).
.
Honorable-mention selections
were the Marauders' Jared Warner
(41.25), Trimble's Jonathan Kasler
(41.33), Wellston's Corey Smith
(41.5) and Thad Smith (41.7);
Alexander's Andrew Brooks (41.8)
and Matt Robertson (42.8) and
Federal Hocking's Jason Ball
(42.8).
The conference did not select
coach-of-the-year.

a

MATT BRADFORD

match here, reached the final last
week of the Seiko tournament and
has risen to 32nd from 60th in the
world rankings.
Stefan Edberg beat Paul
Haarhuis of the Netherlands 6-7 (2!S), 6-3, 6-3 and won tbe Gold .
Group.

CLOSEOUT

Scoreboard
Baseball

EASTERN CONFERENCE
AIIMic Dlritloa

Ium

World Series slate

ll! L I lb. GE

New Jency .......... S I 0

Pllillldclpilla ......... 4 0 I
Wuhioatoo .......... 4 2 0

Saturday

ClEVE~ (Heralul&lt;f 16-6) II Allillto (Maddux 19-2), 7o20 p.m. (ABC)

Suaday, Ocl. 22
ClEVELAND (MuHoez Il-l ) 11 Allanta (Glaviae 16-7), 7:20p.m. (NBC)

Tuesday, Oct. 24
Atlaat1 (Smollz 12-7 ) 1t CLEVE~ (N'I)' 11'&gt;6), 8o20 p.m (NBC)

florida ................. 4 2 0

N.Y. R1111m ....... l 2 0
TampaBay .......... l l I
N.Y. !Jiaadcn...... O 4 I

10 21
9 20
I 16
I 24
6 II
l 16
I II

sa
10

:r.- o2 o2
I
l
2
4

I
0
0
0

• u
6 21
5 20
4 14
4 14
8 4

: (ABC)

9
26
16
15
15
20

Thursday, Oct. 26

Ium

Solurday,Cki. l8
ClEVELAND II Atlanta, 7:20p.m., if
...,......,. (NBC)

EST, if'"""""~' (ABC)

: AMERICAN CONFERENCE
EMICI'D DIYIIIoea

ll! J. I lla. fl'. f6.

• BuiTiio ................. 5 I 0 .Ill 136

•
•
'
•
:
•

C.aluiOhW.
CLEVELAND ..... ) l 0 ..500
ONCINNATI ..... ) 4 0 '.429
PiillbWJh ............ ) 4 0 .429
llouaioa ............... l 4 0 .313
J~eta...llle ......... 2 5 0 .216

2 0 .6£1 128
2 0 .6£1 175
5 0 .167 69
6 0.1&lt;3103

124
163
147
105
108

9l
121

110
160
204

107
ll4
167
119
147

"
Wn&amp;naDhtlloa
• ~City ........ 6 I 0 .8l7 178 Ill
• OUIIDd ............... l 2 0 .714 Ill 106

• Denvcr ................. 4 3 0 .!571 161 JJ6
: SUDieao ............ l 4 o .429 113 137
, Seattle .................. l 4 0 .lll 106 140

: NATIONAL CONFERENCE
..

[•tern

• Ium

Dlwlllion

ll! L I lb.

• Dallu ................... 6
• Phil.:lelphia ......... -4
• Arizooa ................ l
: N.Y. ~iant1 .......... 2

I
7
7
l
4

1.o1 Al!aela ........2 o 3
Ylllall.IY• ........... 2 1 2
Calpry ................0 ) )

1
6
l
2
2
2

29
24
18
23
17

28
21
17
21
IS

20
21
2S
15
12

22

9
20

tl

22
22
II
29
27

Tbursday'1 lmi'U

: NFL standings

lodiltlapolia .........4
Mionti ................. 4
Now EnaJaad ...... .l
N.Y. Jeu ............. l

2
1
I
I
0

Aulldm .............. I 4 0
EdtmDIOD ............ 1 l 0
Saalooe ...............o l 2

Football

•
•
•
:

2
3
2
3
2

'

CLEVELAND at Atlanta, 7:20p.m.

· Ium

.w 1.2 I2 &amp; I ·m
saI~
2~

Detroit .................. )
WiDDill&lt;&amp;· ............ l
Cllie~ao ............... l
St.l.ouia ..............l
Dallu ...................2
Torooto ................l

PMIIIcCol .................... ) l I
7

Sunday, Oct.l9

'

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Dlrillcm

Atlanta at CUVru.ANI&gt;, 8:20p.m., if
; ,,,,...If)' (ABC)

f[ f6.
I 0 .8l7 201 Ill
J 0 .!571 144 173

Ottawa -4, CaiJifY l
New Jcney 4, Detroit 2
T....,. Boy 4, Oli"'i" I
Saa Jooe l, WloDipeal (lie)
Dalilll, St. LouiJ I (lie)

Toalgbt'•gomes

PIUJbotjlo atllartConf, 7 p.m.
N.Y. Raol"' at Bullllo, 7:30p.m.
Mootrealli N.Y. lalattdm, 7:30p.m.
Calaary ll Ta-oato,7:30 p.m.
loll ADaela at Wuhiqtoa, 8 p.m
Philadelphia 11 AnAheim. 9 p.m

Saturday'&amp; games
Boston 11 Detroit. 1 p.m.
loll Anaela at Pittsburafl, 7:30 p.rn
Toronto at Montreal, 7:30p.m.
Ottawut New Jeoey, 7:)() p.m.
Hartford at Aorida. 7:30p.m.
T1J11:11 at Dallu, I p.m.
Cbicaao at St.' Louil, 1:30 p.m
Vaocou_ver at Edmontom, 9:30p.m

Suadoy'a games
St Louia 11 BuCfaJo, 7 p.m.
OUaw111: N.Y. Raoaen, 7:30 p.m.

Rliheed Wallace of the WMhiDI'DD Bul·
leta $5,000 for tltrowioa tho ball II LoDtley ia the ume pme. Suapended Oliver
Miller of the Toronto Raptors for one reaular-seuoa aame ud fined him ss,ooo
for leavia' l.be beach aad coafroaliaa

t9

14
19
24

Wodnesday,Oct. 25
Atluta at CLEV£LAND, 8:20p.m.

fiahli~l ia 1n Oct. 17 aame. Fioed

Transactions

4 "
II

Nart..l.,.- DI.ilioll
llartlord ............
8&lt;0ioo .................. 2
PiillburaJI ............1
Botralo ............... l
Ot1awo ................. 2
MoDireal .............. 0

1....

WiDDipea at Anaheim. a
Philadelphia at OUc.ao, :30 p.m.
Sao Jo~e at Edmonloa, 9 p.m.

Philadclptu•'• Sh1wa Bndley duriDJlD
Oct. 14 11mc IDd tiDed lhe RtplOfl
SS,OOO ror Miller'ald.iou.
CHARLOTTE HORNETS: Waived
Duane Cooper, pvd, and Dtve Johnloa,

Aulorodag
N.UCAR Wlftlloo Cwp

RICHARD CHILDRESS RACING:
Named David Smith tnck opentioru IU·
pervilar and Bobby Hllldle111 team ahop

forward.
NEW JERSEY NETSo Wal•ed lobo

aupeniaor ud U..:k operalioDI 111iaaDL

Belt, forward, ud Ondy Uvia..,Wn, CCD·
ter.

BuebaU
Amtrk• Ltape
BALTIMORE ORIOLES: Nomed Paul
Fryer westeR ICOIItiaiiUI*"ilor.
MIL)V AUKEE BREWERSo Named

FootbaU
N•llonal Football

•

Jim GaotDcr r.nt buc coach.
TEX.U RANGERS: Adivlled Dllreo
Oii10r, pltdur, from lito 15-day dilal&gt;led
lilt attd Dao Smith, pildtor, from tbe 60day diubled lial. Auouru:ecl Joha
Marzao,o, calehcr, ud Sam Horn, deaiaaated b.iUcr, have refwed ualpmcnc and

Presideut,

2 0 .714 106
2 0 .667 169
2 0 .661 133
J 0 SOO IJS
4 0 .333 133

arc free aaeatl.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS: Named
Ricllie Hebner IDIDIJer ud Joa WoodWorth traiDer of S)'tK:Uie of the Iaterutioaal leal\le: Omar t.blawe maaaaer,
Oarth IClrJ first bue coach, and Scott
ShaaaOA trainer of Knoxville of the
Southera l.cquc: Deallil Holmbcra DU·
aacr, Scon BrcQa pitchia1 coach, aod

Open Tuesday-Friday &amp;:oo-5:00
Saturday 9:00-3:00

Cloeed Monday

Marty Peny coacb or Duoedio or the

Miani II N.Y. lda, I

•

p.m.

llckloaYil!e II CLEVELAND, I p.m.
New Orl- II c.. u.., I p.m.
Detro~ at Wllhlolioll, I p.m.
Atlanllalll Tampalby, I p.m.
Su Franciam If: SL l.Duil, 1 p.m.
Kuul City II 0cava", 4 p.m.
hfiDDCIOtiiiGreeu Bay, 4p.m.
l.adl11110p01ia II Olklaod, 4 p.m
SID Dieao 11 SeaWe, 4 p.m.
()pea dale: Atlzcoa, DaliM, N.Y. Gi-

•
: lOll, Pbilldelpbll

M.....,,Oco.IJ
B11tralo ll New Eqlud, 9 p.m.

Hockey

•NUL standings

~I

I

:I'

231 E. Second St.
Pomeroy, Oh

I

i
'

Nalloroal La...a
WS ANGELES DOOOERS oNamed
Eiubwo Kohroal wistanl to the pral-

......

PIIILADEtJ&gt;IIIA PHILUES: Elleod-

ed tbo coatnct or Jim FRpl, maaager,
throup the 1997 leuGD. Named Butcb
Hob10a, maDaaer, IDd Din Cub, fuat
bile COICb. Scraalon-Wilba-Bwre of
the Jolertllliooall.eque.

or

. BukttbaU

•

in conjunction with the

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:
:

CARDIAC
REHABILITATION
DEPARTMENT

:
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:

•
•
:• CARDIAC SCREENING PROGRAM :•
••
••
Including an Exercise Stress Test
••
••
•
•

Natlooal B. .rtbaU Aa.oclalloo
NBA: Suapetlded Chril Webber of the
Wuhinaton BulletJ and Luc Lonaley of
tbe; Ch.icaao Bulla for ooe retulw-aeuon
aame and fined them $7,.500 each for

•

IS OFFERING

•

•

A

•

•
•

Testing is being provided at no cost to the patient. Costs not covered by t!JE p!Jtient's insurance will be
offset by the Holzer Clinic Foundntion Grafit.

•
:
•
;
•
•
: .

BATTERIES

SNOW TIRES
NOW IN STOCK

•

Program eligibility is based upon meeting a minimum of two of the
following risk factors with no pre~ent cardiac symptoms:
* Blood pressure greater than or equal to 160/90
* Cholesterol greater than 240
*Diabetes Mellitus
• Males over the age of 40
*Smoker
•
* Family history of cardiac episodes

• ,
•

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•:• .CONTACT HOLZER CLINIC AT (614) 446-5137 :••
TO DETERMINE IF YOU ARE A CANDIDATE.
: ~
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:

I

HOLZER CLINIC ...Here For Your Health, Here For Your Lifetime!

•

JARED WARNER
·'

Two Brooks
and Milhoan
among Bald
Eagle victors
In the Bald Eagle Raceway
standings from Stockport, several
local racers posted some very good
showings, including locals S~eve
Milhoan, Roger Brooks, Pb1lhp
LaComb and Jason Brooks.
In the rookie division, Tanner
Dunlap was first in the points
ahead of Davey Dilley and Darrin
Deaton. In lhe over 40 division,
Debby Anderson placed first over
Herb Chidechester, Roger Brooks,
Bob Harris and Robert Spero. In
the Stock Heavy division it was
sa·m Brooker over Bob Harris,
Jason Yerian and Tad Halley.
The junior lite title went to
Jason. Brooks, followed by Robby
Alexander and Nathan Allen. Jim
Eichmiller. took first in the twocycles with Tuppers Plains' Milhoan second, followed by Steve
Plum, LaComb, Matt Plum, John
Burchard and Ed Plum.
The Stock Lite crown was taken
by Wayne Anderson over Anthony
Brooker, Thad Haines, Lance Ralston and Terry Halley. Jason
Brooks won the Junior Heavy division over Robby Alexander and
Nathan Allen.
The u-ack would like to honor
the 1995 champS and all competitors for a great year. Racing
resumes next spring.
NEW YORK (AP) - New ,
York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner will meet today witb Buck
Showalter to, for a change, ·try to
get the manager 10 stay.

'

I
1·.

IN 3 DAYS

AI Nalural C.H. 2001

wnn Chromium Plcollllllo

MONEYBACKGUARANT!E
(S2.00 OFF COUPON. LAliT 1)

----FRUTH PHARMACY

i .Middleport

JASON SHULER

:·····································
:
HOLZER CLINIC
:

• Sao Fr~nci5CO ......4 2 0 .667 I .54 86
: Carolina ............. :.! S 0 .167 lOS lSI
• NewOrloaos .... ... l l 0.167 Ill Ill

SuacbJ,O.I.lZ
Houtoa II OUcqo, I p.m.

:····-- iii .........
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' LOSE ;&amp; 10 LBS. :

Leaaue; lim Horr roviaa ·illf'ieJd iDilrUc-

tnialaa ud cquipDat C(Qdiutor.

8

DETROIT (AP) - Randy
Smith, who recently resigned as
general manager of the San Diego
Padres, appears set to replace Joe
Klein as general manager of the
Detroii Tigers.

.

.

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·· ·- .- -~- ~

..

. HEW FULL SIZE '95CHM 4X4

. )~: ,: . . PICKUP '

RYAN NORRIS

......... sports briefs--

coach of Medlciae Hal of lhe Pioneer
tor,lUII Bucber mvla, hiUina: lutnlctor,
ud Bob Didier roviaa catcher lllllNctcw
for the mi110r 1 - attd Raady Hollattd

STEVE McCULLOUGH

ST. PAUL LUTHERN
CHURCH

SYSTEM

Wtlltrn DIYiidon
• St. Lo11-i1 . .. ..... S I 0 .Ill I Jl JO.S
' Atl.nta ................. 4 2 0 .667 122 126

Futuno games

.

CLAY CROW

The public is invited.
A free will offering will be taken

THE
GRAVELY

Florida State Laau&lt;; U. CUooo 1111111&amp;·
er, Dann Bal1ley pitchlaa coach, and
Rolaado Piao co.da ol Jfaeentowa of the
Saulh Allaolic Lea,ue; Roctd Wheeler
mtDaaer, Rudy Phillip• eoadl, and Pm
McMotnn tralocr ol St. Calhtrloet of the
New Yort·Peaa Lnaue; Paul Ellioll

•

Thursday's score

eDd.

FALL 8t WINTER HOURS

lOS
13.5
116
lzj
137

CINCINNATI 27, Pitubotjlo 9

~a.hl

LOADED,
PROGRAM
CAR

Sunday, October 22nd
7:30pm

I.e••

GRAVEL,Y TRACTOR
SA!-ES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St. . Pomeroy, &lt;&gt;H-

Cenlr-1 Dl•l-'on

Tamp• Bay ... .. ... .S
O.icago .............. 4
Greta Bay
.4
t.tillnCIOla ... 3
Detr01t
2

in Concert

CHICAGO BEARS: Slaned Aodre

.5 0 .286 114 ISO
!5 0 .286 11!5 U6
• Warhmatoo ......... 2 5 0 .216 Ill 161
•
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:
•
•

Bruce Stone
:' '

17,995

$13,995

1994 GEO METRO

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9112-1481 •

'

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Rt:St!f\'e vour nc\\' 1996
Pol~ris S'L iOO, SLTiOO,
SLiSO. SLTikO, SLX,
SL900. SLTX or Hurricane with
a S200 non-rdumlahlt: dt:posit
hv November 22. 199:'. Polaris
\\;ill guar:tillcc :ll':tilahility ol the '--)
.
. ..
model \'ou choose.
' ~·"
Tal1e deli1·er~· hy Fehruar~·~ .,.
2H, I CJ&lt;)(, and get S21lll in \'.::"··
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FREE clothing and accessories
'~·
PLUS two FREE periorm:mce lile,·ests when
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you complete your purchase .

Offer good October 6 - November 22, 1995

PDLARIS' Believe

1

t

RIVERFR~NT

HONDA/YAMAHA
POLARIS

Gallipolis, Ohio
All Used Cars &amp; Trucks Must Go.
Taxes and title fee not included . .
All payments subject to credit approval

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.
ITS WORTH YOUR DRIVE!

prices include
rebates to dealer.

• All

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�Friday, October 20, 1995

· Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 20, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel• Page_7

Cordless phone shouldn't be used to conduct business
Ann
Landers
"t995, Los Angeles
Times Syndicate and
CreatOfl Syndicate·

Dear Ann Landers: Since yoor
column is a good source for useful
information, I decided to write and
tell you what happened to me
recently.
1 was talking long distance on a
cordless phone when all of a sudden,
I could hear another conversation. It
was between a man and a woman,
who was apparently handling his
investments. He gave her his ftrst
name and then told her all the

necessary information •• account
numbers, numbers or shares and
dollar amounts. She conf11111ed each
account, the financial inst,itution
handling the transaction and gave
confirmation numbers for each
transaction. She then said, "Thank
you, Mr. Doe," and hung up.
I was stunned that anyone would
transact financial business on a
cordless telephone. I now lcnow the
man's full name, his telephone
number and some vilal information
concerning several of his invest·
ments.
Sorry to say, but there are too many
crooks out there who would be quick
to use this information to their
advantage. So, Ann, please. tell your
readers to be aware. They should

never uSe a cordless or ceUular phone
when conducting business or relaying
personal information. -- AREADER
IN FLORIDA
DEAR FLORIDA: I printed a
similar lettecAuite a while ago, but a
second warning won't hurt, and it
might help. I might add tbat
traditional phones are not 100 percent
1;ecure either. Although wires
rarely get crossed. it can and docs
happen.
Dear Ann Landers: Can it be thai
my mother-in-law is addicted to
shopping? "Pearl's" husband has a
successful business and provides her
with a lot of spending money, but tbe
only time she seems truly happy is
when she is shopping. Most other
times, she seems somewhat

Swann
marks
birthday

professional help, and I hope she gets
it soon.
Dear Ann Landers: Our 2-yearold daughter has a very rare scalp
disease. No one seems to know what
can be done 10 help het We have been
to two dociOrs, and they say tbey have
never seen anything like iL
I am not writing 10 ask about aewe.
Wlw I need to know is how to deal
with people who make rude remarks
and ask hurtful questions. Our
daughter is aware that she is being
stared at, and she hears them ask,
"Why ~'t the child have hair?"
or, even worse. "How come the kid
is bald?"
-We would appreciate some
answers ... AUGUSTA, GA.,
PARENTS

~

DEAR PARENTS: Simply say,
"She has a skin condition, • and
nothing more. I hope you have taken
her to a dermatologist. One option is
an auraclive little bonnet. If the
condition cannot be helped, consider
a hairpiece.
I hope something turns up that can
help your daughtet Good luck, dear:
Whal can you gi~ the persot.-who
has everything? Ann Landers'

booklet, "Gems, is ideal for a
nighlstand orcoffee table. "Gems" iJ
a collection of Ann lAnders' most
req~sttd poems and essays. Send a
self-addressed, long, bllSiness-sizt
envelope and a check or money otdtr
for $515 (this includes postage and
hondling) to: Gems, cloA!ur Landers,
P.O. Box II 562, Chicago, Ill. 606110562. (In Canoda. send $615.)

Apostolic
Church of Jesus Christ Apostolic

VanZandt and Ward Rd.
Putor: James MilJer
Sunday School · 10:30 ·a.m .
Evening · 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Assembly of God
Liberty Asscmbly or God
P.O. Bo, 467, Dudding Lane
Mason, W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sund•y Services· 10:00 a.m . and 7 p.m.

H

Thursday Prayer Meeting . 7 p.m.
'

Baptist
HojH! Uapllst Churd (Suulhcrn)

570 Gram St, Midd lcpon
.
Sunday school . 9:45a .m
Wurship · II a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scr.icc - 7 p.m.
Fr('e Will Uaptlst Church
Ash Street, Midd letnrt
!)astor: Les Hayman
Sunday Service - 7:30p.m
Sunday School - I 0 a.m .
Wcl.lncsday Service -7:30p.m.

Oh-Kan Coin Club plans for open house

Kyrie Jordanne Swann celebrat·
ed ber fiJ'St birthday recently with a
pany at the borne of bee grandpar·
ents, Ann and David Zirkle in
Racine.
A cookout was followed by tbe
serving of ice cream and a Winnie
the Poob cake. Attending were ber
· parents, Brenda and Bryan Swann,
great-grandmother, Roberts Swisher; Terri and Travis Hysell; Debbie,
Cecil and Amber Maynard; Susan
Sisson, and Keith, Kim and Derek
Rhodes. Sending gifiS were Vicky
Kern, Wendy Long and Sheila
Cozart.

IN APPRECIATION-Mrs. Jessie C. White, right, was presented an engraved plaque from members ofthe Women's Auxiliary at
Veterans.Memorial Hospital in appreciation of her 27 years of volunteer service with the organization Tuesday. Presenting tbe
. plaque were, I tq r, Mrs. Abbie Stratton, auxiliary president, and
Mrs. Helen Hill, recording secretary. The Inscription read: '1t is
with deep appreciation that we express our sincere thanks to Mrs.
Jessie C. White, long-time volunteer at Veterans Memorial Hospital. Jessie bas completed 27 years of volunteer service building up
· over 15,000 hours In performing many dulles with the hospital's
· Women's Auxiliary. Over the long years, she bas been an excellent
: leader and an Inspiration not only to other members or the AuxilIary but to hospital personnel and members of the community at
well. As you leave us, Jessie, to begin Ufe In a new community, we
Join In wishing you the very best in life. May God's love continue
to smile on you and your loved ones. Our heartfelt tbanks to you".
Mrs. White is moving soon to tbe Zanesville area.

depressed.
Pearl's home is cluttered with all
sorts of decorative objecrs, but she
continues 10 buy more. I have noticed
that she is on a real high when she
comes home with a carload of
shopping bags. Her euphoria is
usually short-lived, however, and she
sinks back into a depressed state until
the next shopping trip.
I love my mother-In-law dearly, but
I am worried about her. Is there
anything I can do to help? ..
WORRIED IN FENlON, MO.
DEAR MISSOURI: Shopping can
indeed be an addiction, and it sounds
as if your mother-in-law has iL Pearl's
uncontrolled passion to buy things is
her way of lifting herself out of the
dumps. The woman needs

~ ··

Plans ror an open bouse to be
beld Monday at 7 p.m. at the
Downing llouse in Middleport
were made wben The Ob-Kan Coin
Club met there recently.
Tbe open house is free and
open to the public. Those under the
age of 18 must be accompanied by
an adult. Soft drinks, cider. and
donuts will be served.

•

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.

""'·

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KYRIESWANN

See Us For All
Your Cover Crop
Seeds

Computer
class to be held
A class on bow to utilize Hyper·
studio for CO-style projects with
the Macintosh computer will be
held Tuesday, from 4 to 6:30 p.m
at the Meigs High School library.
Follow-up classes will be held on
Oct. 26 and Nov . 2 at the same
location, with only one to be
auended.
Hyperstudio bas a clip an
library, sound library, and readmade card templates. Registration
is being bandied by Wendy Halar,
Meigs Local School District, 9922153.

How to allract new members
was discussed, and particularly
how to increase youth membership.
Vice-president John Furst suggested the club begin handling
sports cards on a monthly auction
sheet. Input on this issue and others
will be solicited during an upcoming open house ..
Tbe club meets on the fourth
Monday or eacb month, except on
holidays. At each meeting there are
door prizes, an auction and refresh·
ments.

Rutland First Bapllst Church
Sunday School · 9 :3 0a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy 1•1nit Raplist
Pas10r: Paul Stimon
East Main St
Su ndity Sr.:hool · 9 :30a .m.
Wonh1p · 10:30 a.m.
First Scmlhcrn llaplisl
41872 Pomeroy Pik e
P~t s t or: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School . 9 :30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m . , 7:00p.m.
Wed nesday Scn~ 1 ccs · 7:00p.m.
Flrstllaptist Church
Pas10r: Ma rk Morrow
6lh and Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Worship · 10:15 a.m., 7 :00p.m .
Wednesd1y Serv ice- 7:00p.m.

$weetest /)"Y
OCT. 21ST

For Your Sweetheart On
Sweetest Day Send A
Gift Basket Of Half Fresh
Flowers &amp; Half Gifts.
ALLURING SCENTS
271 North Second Avenue~

Racln(! First Baptist
Pastor: Rev . L1my Ha ley
Youth Pastor: Aaron Young
Sunday School . 9:30a .m
Worship · 10 :40 .~t.m . , 7:00p.m .
Wednesday Servtces · 7:00p.m.
Silver Run Daptlst
Pastor: Bill Litlle
Sunday School. IOa.m .
Worship - lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wctlncsday Services· 7:30p.m.

Middlepon, Ohio 45760

992-4548

See Our Selection of Fall Farm Seed

Mt. Union Baptist ~
Pastor : J~ N. Sayre
Sunday School-9 :45a.m . .
Evening - 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Servi ces · 6:30p.m.

SUGAR RUN MILLS

RdhleherD Baptist
Rac ine, Oi l
l)as10r : D11n icl Berdine
Wonhip · 9:30a.m. Sunday
11iblc Study · 7:00p.m. Wcl.lnesday ·

Mulberry Ave. Pomeroy

Old Bethel Free Wlllllaptist Church
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sur~day School - 10 a.m .
Evening · 7:30p.m.
Thursday Services · 7:30

992-2115

Hillside Bwptlst Church ~
St. Rt. t43 just off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School - 10 un .
Worship · II a.m., 6p.m.
Wednesday Se rvices -7 p.m.
Viclory llaptlst lndepend:.nt
525 N. 2nd St. Middl cpon
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worsh.ip · IOa .m., 7 p.m .
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m .
Faith Baptist ChuHh
Ra1lroad St., Mason
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m., 6 p.m .
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.
Forest Run Raptis!
!,astor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School · to a.m.
WotShip · 11 11.m.
Mt. Murlah llaplisl
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middlcpurt
Pa stor: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr .
Sunday School - 9 :30a.m.
Wors hip · 10:45 a.m.

mM PEDEN SMARHEASE IS THE WAY m GO!

Antiquity Rapti!'t
Sunday Sehoul · 9:30 11.m.
Worsh1p - 10:45 a.m. ·
Thursday Servi ces· 7:30p.m
Rutland Free Will U:tpllsl
S:J icm St.
Jlustur: Rev . Paul Taylor
Suml:ly School · 10 a.m.
Ev~.:ning · 7 p.m.
Wet!nc sday Services - 7 p.m.

Catholic
Sacred Heart Cathulk Church
161 Mu lberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992 -5 898,
!)astor: Kev. W11her E. IICinz
Sat. Con. 4:45·5:15p.m.; Mass- S:30p.m.
Sun . Cun. · R:45 -9: 15 a.m.,
Sun. Mass · 9:30a.m.
Duilcy Ma s~· H:30 a.m.

For Only
24 Months
BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY G-20 3/4 TON
CONVERSION VAN
• Drwer Srde Atr Bag
• Antt-Lock Brakes
• Air Cond1tlon
• AutomatiC Overdnve
• V1sta Bay Windows

• Power Steenng
• Power Brakes

• Power Wndows
• Power Locks
· nu Steenng
• Cruise Control
• AMJFM Cassette
• 4 Captarn Chars
• Sola/Bed

• lndrrect LJghttng
• Premrum Wood Pl&lt;g.
• Full Conversion
• Alum1num Runn1ng Boards
•Loaded'

•

• Does 1l011rdloe hcense and title lees. sales/use tax , insurance. personal property lX tax on capitalized
""' cedu&lt;1ooo
•• V&lt;Wies by vetlr::lt! model. usage ard lefgtt1 of lease. Lease 1s subjtd 1o ~at by GMAC. Leassee is
r~ 101' excess wear ard use and has an wtOO to Pllchase the vehiCle a! lease eM.

For Only
30 Months

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY G·20 3/4 TON
LONG WHEEL BASE CONVERSION VAN
350 V-8 P0WEM1EAR AIR &amp; tEAT

• Driver Sde Air Bag
• An~·Lock Bral&lt;es
• Air Condition
• 350 V·8 Power
• Rear Air/Heat
• Automat~ OllerdrNe
• Vista Bay Windows
• Power Steering

Nurrber of months 24 Month~ lease payment $298.88 •. Refundable sea;rity deposit $300. Total cash
due at beg:n!lng of lease $1 .598.88' . Total of monthly payments $7, 173.12'. Pt.rthase oplion price

$16,056 15'' Total raleage aJk)wed 30.000. M~eage charge ov~ 30,000 miles, 10¢ per IT'ile.

For Only
24 Months

• Pow.,. Bral&lt;es
• Pow..- Wmdows
• Powe-Locks
• Tilt Steering
• Cruise Control
• AM/F!-1 Cassette
• 4 Captain Charrs
·Sola/Bed

• Vacuum Cleaner
• Indirect Ughtrng
• Premium Wood Pl&lt;g.
·Full Conversron
• Fiberglass Runnrng Boards
• Loaded'

Nub of months 24. Monthly _lease paymm $338.88' . Refundat:Mi securily deposit $350. TOlal cash
ciJe at begiming of lease. $1,688.S8'. Total ~ roontht~ payments $8, 133.12' . PU!chase option pnce

$16.563.20". Total mileage allowed 30,()'X). Mileage charge over 30,0Xlmles, 10¢ per mile.
·Does no1 include license andjitle fees, sales/use tax, iflSI.lance. personal prq&gt;erty 01 ta~ on capitalized

""'-·
resp:!OSbe tcr

•• Viries by v~ide rnOOel, usage ilf)j length of lease. l~ is sub,ed to &lt;ijlpfOVal by GMAC. Leassee ~
~~~cess wear am use an:l fias an option 10 poo:hase the 'o'8hicle ar IeiSe eno

Church of Christ
l1omcroy Church of Christ
212 W. Main St
!,astor: And rew Mtlcs
Sunduy School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

BRAND NEW '96 BUICK RIVIERA
SUPERCHARGED 3800 V-6 EIIGINE

• Air Cond1tton
• Dual Airbags
· 4 Wheel Anti·Lock Brakes
·Supercharged 3800 V.fJ
• Power Sleenng
• Power Brakes
• Power Door Locks

• Power W1ndows
·Power Mirrors
/
·Power DriVer/Passenger Seats
• AMIFMCassette &amp; CD PI aye• Trlt
• Crurse Contr&lt;&gt;
• Rea• Defogger

Pomeroy Wtstside Church or Christ
33226 Children's !·lome Rd
Sunday School ~ II a.m.
Worship · l011..m., 6 p.m.
Wedn es day Scrv~ccs · 7 p.m.
Middlcpurl Chunh uf C hrl~1
5th Hnd M~t i n
P ~s tur AI I (an son
Youth \'lmJ '&gt;Ic r: Bill Fr:w cr
Sund:J)' Schnol · Y:30 a.m .
Wursh1p· K: 15. 10:10 a.m., 7 p.m.
W c dn e!Hb y · Scrv i(."C ~ · 7 p.m.
Kl'llll Chun:h ui' Chrlsl
W[)l'ship . 9:30a.m.
Sunday Schou! · 10:30 a.m.
Pa stor-Jeffrey WaUace
l st and J rd Sunday
Hcarw&lt;~llnw Rid~e
l'~ s tor : Jack

Churrh of Chr,ist
ColcMrovc
Sunda y School -9:3() a.m
Worship . 10:30 u.m., 6: 30p.m.
Wedn esday Servi ces · 6:30 p.m.

Ziun Churl'lt uf Christ
l,umcroy, llml slut vlll c Rd. (Rt.l4 3)
!'astor: J{ugl! r Watsoo
Sunday Schoo l · IJ :30 ll.m
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wcc.Jnc sday Scrv1ccs · 7 p.m.
TupplTS Plllln Church of Christ
Pastor : Stanley Mincks
Sunday Sc hool · 9 a.m.
Worship · 9·45 a.m .
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
lh:uthury Chunh ul' Christ
Sunda)' Sc ho~&gt;l · 9:30a .m.
Wllrship · I 0:30a.m
Youth Met: lln g · ):30 p.m
Ev e nm~ Serv 1;.:c · 7 p.m.
Wcdnes1iay, lidllc S1udy · 7 p.m
Kutland Chun:h ul' Chrisl
Pa ~ lm :

1-:ug.clll: E. LnderwouJ
Sunday Sc hnnl · 9:30a.m.
Wor ship . I 0:30a.m.. 7 r -m

Bradford Chun:h or Christ
Comer or St. Rt 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd .
Evangel ist: Keith Cooper
Youth ~ini s t cr : Mi ch:td Teagarden
Sunday Sc hoo l · 9:30a.m.
Worsh1p · lUX) a.m., I 0:10a.m., 7:(X) p.m.
Wednesday Scrviws · 7:(X) p.m.
Hickory Hills Churl·h ut'Chrlsl
Pas tor : Ju,.eph B. Jl mkim
Sunday School · 9 11.m.
Worship . 10 11.i-n ., 7 p.m.
Wcdn c ~ day Scrv1r.:cs · 1 p.m.

Llhcrty Christian Chur&lt;h
Dex ter
Pastor: Woody Call
Sunda y Evcnmg ·6:30p.m.
Thursday Service · 6:30p.m.
Lan~S\ ' ille

Chrl.o;Uan Church
Stmday School · 9:10 a.m.
Worship · 111:30 11 .m ., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Servi ce 7:30p.m.
Hl'mlul·k Crewe Church
!'astor: (ic nc /opp
Sunda) s~.:huol · JOJ() a.m.
W l1 r~ hip IJ J O a.rn ., 7 p.m
Kcctlsvlllc (:hurdt ttl. ( :hrisl
Pa stor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday. 6:30p.m.

Christian Union
Hurtford Churdt of Christ In
Christian Union
Hartford, W.Va.
P~t s t or: Rev . David McManis
Sundity School · I I a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m ., 1:30 p.m.
Wedne sd!ly Services · 7:30p.m

Church of God
MI. Murhlh Church of Gud
Racine
r11stor: Rev. James Satterfield
Sunday School - 9 :45a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
Rulland Churt:h of Cod
Pastor : Gregory L. Scan
Sunl.lay School · 10 H.m.
Worship - 11 a.m ., (. p.m.
Wcdncsd11y Scn~ices · 7 p .m.
Syracuse Firsl Church of God
Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev . David RusseU
Sunday School and Worship- !Oa.m.
Evening Services - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services' · 7:30p.m.
Chunh ur God or Prophecy
OJ . White Ro off St. Rt. 160
Pastor: J,_J. Chapman
Sunday School · IOa.m
Wtmhip · \ I ~a . m .
Wednesday Serv1ccs · 7 p .m.
Chester (:hurch of God
S. R. 24M &amp; R1ebc l Road, Chester
PaslOr: Hev . Wi ll iam D. Hinds
Sund111y School - 9 :30a.m.
Wurship · 6 r..m.;
•
Wednesday , 7 p.m. Famdy Training·Hour

Congregational
Trinity Church
Second &amp; Lynn, l)omeroy
Pastor: Rev . R o l ~tnd Wildman
Sunday school and worship !0:25

Episcopal
Grace

Epi.~t:upal

Church

326 E. Marn St., l'omeroy
Rector: Rev. D. A. duPlantier
Holy Eucharis t and
Sunday School I 0:30a.m.
Coffee hour following

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

cost redliClon
.. Vanes by vehrcte rrodel, usage ard ~"l~ ot ~ase . Lease • stJi!e&lt;t to iWOVat by GMAC.Leassee •
~lor eu:ess wear aM use and has ar~ opt(ln to ~rchase tl'le vehicle at lease end.

Walker Alley,
608EAST

RACINE MOWER CLINIC

344·5947. 422·0756

Monday - Saturday: 9 am - 9 pm
Sunday: Noon - 6

Sall'lll Cl·nk r
ltm1 h c r..:e
Sunt!ay Sdmol · 1} I .) l m
W(Jrshlp · 10.15 am .

Latter-Day Saints

Snuw\'illc
Sunday St.: hool - IOa .m.
w(lfship . 0 a.l!l .

Brl11• &amp; Straito1
Master Service Tec••lcla•
KEROSENE HEATER REPAIR

• TiUin, Tag&amp; Title Fetn tulia. AetJate irduded in sale price of new vehicle ~Sled wt1ert appliCable. On appro...ed etedil. Not re~ lor typographical erroo.

't

Racine, Ohio

992-2804
SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
992-7075
172 North S.Cond Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

•

P:~s t( 1r :

Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ
of LaUer Day Salncs
Portland -Racine Rd .
Pastor: Janice Danner
Sunday School · 9:30a.m
Worship - 10:30 a.m .
_Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

w(lr ~ hip .

9

il.rll

W cJnc ~ du y Se rv i tc ~

Lutheran

· 10

C&lt;trmd
l'astor: Kcnn t: th lhk er
Sundt~)' Sc hool · t) 10 a.111
Worshir · 10:45 a.m. (2nJ &amp; 4th Su n)
\'forninJ.: St:1r
Pas tor: Kcnu cth 1\;tk er
Su nd ay St:huol · 9 .:1 5 a m
Wm~ h l ll · 10:30 a.m .
"lllU m l::i y SC rvl l:C~ . 7 10 pIll
Sut11111

Pas tur: 1\r.mnclh Ji .J~a: r
Sunda)' St:hnul · lJ 10 J rn
Wursh1p 10:4.1 .1 .m ( 1 ~;~ &amp; ) rd S1111 )

Our Saviour Luthcr11n Church
W11lnut llnd Henry Sts., Ravenswood , W.Va .
lntrim pastors: George C. Wemck
Sunduy Schoo! · 10:00 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

Sunday Sdtoul · I() a .m
Wursh1p · 1) :1.111
Wednt,lla) . 7 p.m

Graham Unlled Methodist
Worship · 9:30a.m. (15l &amp; 2nd Swt).
7 30 p.m. (J rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Sc n~ic c · 7:30p.m.

Mt. Olive United Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
P11s tor : Rev . Ralph Spires
Sunday School · 9:30a .m
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service s · 7 p.m.

Meigs Cooperatlvt! Parl.~h
Northcasl Cluster
Alfred
Pa stor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · II a.m., 6:30p.m.
Chester
Pastor : Sharon Hau sman
Worship · 9 a.m.
Sunday School . 10 a.m
Thursday Services - 1 p.m.

Joppa
?astor: Bdb Randolph
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Long Bottom
Pastor: Rev. Charles Mashj
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - i0:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.
"Reedsville
Pastor: Rev. Charles M11sh
Wor&gt;hip ·9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m

Tuppers Plains St. Paul
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday S~.:hool · 9 a.m.
Worship · IOa.m.
Tuesday Services · 7:30p.m.
Central Cluster
Ashury (Syracusl')
Pastor: Deron Newman

Sti' l' T~\· illc Wurd ut' F;~ith

Faith Full r;ospcl Churdt
l.u n ~ Hotwm
l':1qor: Sieve Reed
Sund:1y Sc hn1l 1):)0 &lt;t.rn
· Wor,hip · 1) 1f l it rn . and 7 p .m .
W e dnr.:~ Ja y · 7 p rn .
l·nd .1y · k llu\\\ lllp \l:TV H:e 7 p.m.
Thl· lldit·\ cr'i' Fclltruship :vlinislry
'\ ~.:,, l.llll l: Rd . KL
1lland
l'.a-h•f 1{,_.,, \!lar~arel J. Ruhm sun
Scr.l\l"' \Vr.:dlli.;\Liil)' , 7.3 0 p.rn.

!B....r.s

E;t~l

l .l'tart

I' ;J ~ lm . !lmull ; l r ~ll l:''

K:tdrw
l 1 i!~ I\Jr. Brian lb r~rJ c'~
Sunda y ~d11u l · I 0 il rn .
Wor ~ h1p · II :un

HciiH'I Chnrrh
Tuwn , hip Rd ., 46XC .
Sund:1y Sdluo l · 1) J m
Wu r~ htp . J(l ;uTl
Wcdn c~ d : 1 y S l: rvi Cl'~ · J(l am

Hut·kinj.!purl &lt;:hurl·h
( inmd St reel
Sunday Schuol · Hl :un .
~or~ h1p · II :t .lll
Wednc,.day Servitc~ · Kp.rn .
Turt·h ChuHh
Cu. J(d. ()1·
Sund&lt;1y St:huul · 1J:10 a.m.
Wursh tr, · \11:30 a.m.

Nazarene
Racine First Chun·h ul" lhr \;azurcm·
l'a,wr :

Swhlii)'

RAWUNGS ·COATS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992·5141
264 South 2nd

Middleport

Clii'IHn T;~hernat: lc Churr h
Clifton , W.Va .
Sunday Sc hool · 10 a.m.
W ors~ 1p · 7 p m
Thursday Scrvtcc . 7 p.m.

Harri'iul\\ ill~e Cum1nunily ( ' hunh
• l';l,tlll' . Thcro11 Durham
Sund a;' . 9:10a .m . and 7 pIll.
Wcdnc,d :.y - 7 p.m.

Pentecostal

(:ll Burl 1 n ~ ham ~ hurc h otT Route

33)

Pcntctostal As.~~mhly
St. Rt. 124, Rat:1nc
Pa stor : William Hohack
Sunday SchlXJI 10 a.m.
Evcnm g · 7 p.rn
Wcdne•da y Sl'T\IJCl'~ . 7 [UTI

I';Js!Dr: Ruhcrt Vance
Swulay wor ~ h1p · 10 a.m .
W cdn e, day ~e rvH.:c. · ft :3(] p.m
Thl' .Salv~11iun i\rmy
115 1-luucnwt /\\'C .• Pom emy.
S;tlmda y · I 0 a.rn
Thu mby · 7 pm.
Su nda y · 7 p.m.

\1iddkptlrll'cnll'Ct1Stal
Ttmd Avc .
l'a ~JO r : Rev. Clark Baker
Su ndit y ScluM.JI · 10 a.m.
bcnm g · 6 p.m.
Wedne sda y Se n~1ces . 7:00p.m.

\1iddll'pc,rl Cumntunlty Chur&lt;:h
'l 7:'i Pearl ~t.. \11 1ddlcpo n
JlJ , hH : Sam 1\ndl: r'Wil
Sumb y School I 0 11 m .
Evcnmg ·7 :30p .m.
Wt.:'l.ln~o: ~ d . t y Scrv~~.:t: · 7:30p.m.

Presbyterian
S~r~t· uw

Firsl Luill'd l1n ·sh, h·rb n
l'&lt;i &lt;iln r: l&lt;c' Krh:ut:J J(ohu~ ~u l
S1mJ.1y St hul,l · lOa rn
\\'d r.hlp . II :t !11

Faith Tahcrn&lt;~dc Churdt
lh iicy Ru n Ro:.~ d
Pw•lor: Rev. hnnt l:ll Ra wwn
Sund:t)' S~.:hoo l · I O:fX) il.m.
J:vcntng 7 p.rn .
lhur ~ d : J )' Serv1n· · 7 pIll

Harrisun\ illl· Pn·sh\'ll·rian ( 'hurd1
\\',H;, h!p · i-) ii .ITI
Sund:11 S... houl · 9 45 ,Jill

S\Tu~· us c \·lissiun
1411 1-1~1 dg cm :-1n St .. Syr:u:u ~c

\I idtllqHirl l'rc~h\ tl•ri:m
Sun do~ ) Sdtuul · •) .1m
\\'ur, hlp · 10 ,Jill

l• a~Jur · l&lt;o r ( M1~ c) Thump ~on

S11ra iJ ) Sd1uul · l!l ;1.111
F vc nw ~ · 6 p .m.

S~,;11\l

l{u..;r,;

· ():)() u.m
Wor ~ hip . I O:Jil 11.111., h p.m.
Wcdn r.:-; d;ty S..:rv Jt.:C\ · 1 p.m

Hat.d Curnmunlt y Clturl'h

Seventh-Day Adventist

Off Ht. 124
Jla , lm: l :d~ cll l:tr\
Sund :1) Sdwol · t) J() a.m.
Wor'h1 p · 10·10 a.m.. 7 30 p.m.

St&gt;\l'ttlh · lb\ AdH•nlisl
V1ulhcrf) I 11 , .l{d , 11om em)
l1.1'lPI Ho: l..l\11111 1-. 1
S:1lurd .J\ Sl·n Ill', .
SJhhJth S~·hu11l · 2 p.m
\Vor..;h1p · 1 p.m

'

llyt·sl illc Conununity Chun·h
Su11da y Sthool · 9:30a.m.
W or~ h1p . I 0:30a.m., 7 p.m.

United Brethren
MI. Hermon United Hrcthren
in Christ Chun:h
Tc:-.a ~ Cwnmunn y ort CR X2
P. 1 ~ 1or : l{ubc n Sa11&lt;Jcrs
Sunda y Schno l . 1) :30 :un .
Wor ~ hip · If)-)() am ., 7:30p.m.
W cli ncsJ &lt;~ y Scrv 1c1.:\ ·7 :30 p.m.

\1urs~·

ChaiH'I Church
Sumby ~1.: hnul · ]() a.m
Wur~ tup · II IUTI .
Wednesday St rvi cc · 7 p.m.
Fitilh Gospt.'l Chun:h
long Bollom
SunJ11 y School · 9 :30a.m.
Wurshtp · 10:45 a.m .. 7:30 r .m.
Wednesday 7· 30 p m

Eden Cnill•d Url'lhrl·n In Chris1
2 lf2 nulcs rwnh ul l ( cc d ~ vl ll c
un SJ:m: J(ow e 1:!4
l'&lt;~~ t ur . lh :v Ruben VI:Jrkl cy
Sun. b y S..:h,,ul 10 .1.1n .
Wm~hq) · 7.J O p.111 .
Wcdnc •d:1y S..:rv lt.:i.:' · 7·10 p.m

Mt. Oli\'c Cmmnunily C hunh
!'astor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School · 9 :30a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m
Wcdneday Sci'\·ice · 7 p. m.

Sd~ml

Middlcpurl Chunh or lht• \:tz~,rcne
Pastor : Grcbory A. Cu ndifr
Sund;1y St.: ht ~l l · 9J O a.m
Wor sh1p · 10:30 ll.ltl., (l:]() p.m
We d n e~ da y Scrv1ccs . 7 p.m.
Rct'&lt;lsville Fl'lltt \vship
Chun·h uf I he ~;l"l.~lreuc
J la ~ t or : John W. Douglas
Sunday Sr.:hoo l . 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10.4.) a.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdnt:sday Scrvt &lt;.:c~ · 7 p 111 .
Syrat:usc Churrh 11f Utl'

1\':l~. armc

Pas tor: Hill Stires
Sunday School · 9:30 ~:~. . m
Wor sh ip - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.rn .
WcJncsdiiy Services . 7 p .m
l'nmrrny Chun·h of the "'az&lt;~n·nc
Pa stor: Hcv . lhoma s Mt:Ciung
Sunda y School . \J JO a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servu.:c~. 7 11 .111 •

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

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE·
PHARMACY~
204 Condor St.
992-2975

Chun:h of Jesus Chr ist,
Apostolic F:tilh
114 m1l c pa st Furt Mc1g s \Jll New L11n&lt;t Rd .
P&lt;t ~tu r · Willi am Van Meter
Sunday -7:00 r m
WeJncsday -7:00p.m
Fnday -7 JO p.m

\\'cJu n J .1y Sl'rv lL:C · 7 p.m
Cocth•illt• l.! tlil l' d .\ 1dhtlclbl l':trish
l';1.~ wr IIL- It:n 1\ llllc
Cuulvilk Chun-h
.\1:un &amp; ht lh St
Sumh1 y Seiluul · Hl a lfl
Wnr sht p · 1} a 111
'I u c~ da y , S crv l t:C '- · 1 r m

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

Pomeroy, OH

Rt•juidn~ Lil'c Churdt
)00:\ 2nd Ave , M1dd lcpon
Pastor: l..awrc ncc fon.:man
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wednesday Str"\'ICC~ . 7 p.m

Sunda )' , 2J fl p.m.

United Fallh Churdt
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By·Pa ss
l,as tor: Rev . Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wmship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedne sday Service . 7 p.m.
Full C.ospcl Lighthou.'tc
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School · I Da.m.
Evening 7:30 p.m.
Tucsd&lt;ty &amp; ·rnursday . 7:30p.m.
South llcthcl New Teshuncnt
Silvcr•Ridgc
Pastor: Rohert IJarbcr
Sunday School · 9 ~~o . m .
Worsh ip - to a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service . 7 p.m.
Carlclon lntcrdcnomlnallunal Chun·h
Kin-gsbury Road
Pa stm: Jeff Sm1 th
Sund11y School - 9:30a.m.
Worsh1p Service 10:30 a.m.
Worsht Service - lsi and 3rd Su nd ay, 7 p.m.
No Wedn esda y Even1ng Ser.'lcc

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Str((f

l'as1ur: lhvuJ IJ:tdq ·
Sun tlay School () ]0 ;1 m
Evcn111g 7 r rn .

~ m.

St .John Lutheran Chun·h
Pine Grove
Pastor: Dawn Spalding
Worship · 9:00a.m.
Sunday School · I O:OOa .m.

United Methodist

Ca l\'ary Hlhlc Ch urch
Pomeroy P1k c. Co. Kd
l'a~ lor Rl'v. l!ladwooJ
Sunday Sc holl! · 9 30 am
Worship I 0:30a.m., 7·30 p m.
Wednesday Sc rv1 cc 7:11J r m

Encllirne HuuSl' uf'l•raytr
lll'fh:wv
P:~~ tor : Kcnnr.:lh Bak er
Sunday S~.: hoo l · I 0 a.m

The Church or Jesus
Christ of Laller-Oay Sainls
St. Rt 160,446-6247 or 446-7486
Sund11y School I 0:20 -11 ·a.m.
Rehel Socrety/Pnes!luxxl II :05 -12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9 -10:15 a.m.
Homemaking meeting, 1st Thu rs.· 7 p.m.

St. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St. , Pom ero y
Pastor: Dawn Spald ing
Sunday School - 9:45a.m
Worship - II a.m.

Faith Fellowship Crus;~dc for Christ
l'a stor: R C\ ' . Fra nk.lm D~tk c n s
Servtee: Fnd ay , 7 p.m.

Hullson Chri'ili:l n Fdlrmshijl Churth
Rev . Cl)dc ll endenon
Su nda y \crvu.. c, I ll 00 a.m., 7:30p.m
Youl h 1-'cllows hip Su lldiiy, 7:00p.m.
W r.: Jn c~ d ay ~c rvKc, 7:30pm.

Uullaml
Sulllby Sd hull · 11·10 &gt;1 rn
Wmshq1 · 10 ) 0 a Ill.
Thur sday s~ rvll. C ' . 7 p l11

Rutland Community Churrh
Pastor: Rev. Roy McCarty
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Sunday Evening · 1 p.m.
Wednesday Serv ices . 7 p.m.

icw Uihlc Chun- h
l..t:un . W Va . Rt 1
J,a:ilor: Rankm Rl&gt;at..h
SLJnda)' Sc hool · IO J O a.m.
Worship · 9:)0 it.lll. , 7 :00 p.m.
Wedn esday Sc rv~ cc · 7:(XJ p m.

Other Churches

l(ltl"k Spriiii!S
Pa , t11r !\l: 1lh lbdl'l
Su11,by Sd1""l IJ I ~ .1 111
W" r' hiJl II! .1 111
Youth l·e ll ul'' hlp , Sunt b y h p r11

Loaurcl Clifl"l-'rcc .\llclhudisl C h~n: h
l,a~ HH ' Pete r Tremhla y
Sun llay Schoo! · 9:30a.m.
Wur ~ h1p · 10:10 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wctlnc ~ da y St.:rv~ec · 7:m p.m.

F~in

Chr'istian Fdluwshijl Ct'nt cr
Sa lem St. Rutland
Pll~ hH : Rnhcn E Mu sse r
Sund:~y Sch1l1ll · 10 a.m .
Worsh1p · 11.15 a.m , 7 p.m.
W e dn e~ d o1 y Scrv 1ce · 7 p.m.

Pc:•rl Ctupl•l
Su ndi.l y Sehoul · ') iJ 111.
Wor sh1p · 10 ;u n .

Hysell Run Hnllncs.-, Chun·h
Jlilslor: Rohcn Manl ey
Sunday Sc hool · 9:30a .m.
Worship · 10:45 ;un ., 7 pm .
' lhursday Se rvi ~e . 7:3 0p.m

While's Cha pd Wcslc}'Oi n
Coolville Road
Pastor: Hev l'hdlip HHknuur
Sunday Schoo l · LJ :31! a.m.
Wursh1p · HJ:31! i:l 1r1
Wednesda y Scrv1u: 1 p m

\c,, Hll\'l'n Chunh ur llle N ;u-. :~n.:nt•
Pa ~ lor : C:ilcndor1 Stmud
~undHy ::Sc hool · 9:30 a.r tl
W o r ~ hip · 10:30 a.m ., 7 p.n1
Wc;J ncsday Se rvi ces · 7 p.m.

\1itH•rs,·illt·
l•:l, lllr· I) ~ rO ll \ o.: V.II\:111
Su1Hb y Sdwol · ') a 111
W~n ~ h lp · 10 a 111.

J•tlllllTIIY
]•a stor: Rohcn E Ruhllbllll
Sunday Schoo l . 1) I) a m
Wursh1r 10:10 ;u11
]i,hh.: Suuly "! llt:, ,I:Jy Ill ;1 t11

nutl:~nd

l'urll:md First Churl'h ul" lttc N~z:1 renc
I'.J, Inr. Juhn W. Doug I ::~.~
Suu(b y Sr.: huol - 10:00 a.m.
Wursh1p · (1 )0 p.m.
W et.J n c~ d ay Scrv1ces · 7 p .m .

llt·:,th {MiddkJ,Clrl)
Pa stor: Vcmagaye Sulli v11n
Sund&lt;~y S&lt;:huo l · 9:30a .m.
Wm shtr · J() J O;un

Wcsh!yllin nihle Hulincss Churfh
75 Pearl St , Middlepon. .f
()astor : Rev . Jotm l'\evi llc
Sunday school · 9:30 b.m .
Worshtp . 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m
Wedne sd11y Service· 7:30 p.rn

FrL'\:dom Gospel Misslun
Bald Knob, on Co. I{ d. 31
lla stur: Rev . Koge r Willford
S und~~oy Schoo l · 9:30a.m.
Worsl11p - 7 p.m

Chunh nf lhc Na1.anne
Samuel Basye
Suml&lt;t y Scl1ool · 9:30a .m.
Worsh1p · 10:30 a .m . . 6:30p.m.
W cd n c~1.b y Scrvtce s . 7 p.m.

Forest Run
Pastor : Deron Newman
Su nday School · I 0 a.m
Wor ship . 9 a.m.
Thursd ay Services · 6:30p.m.

Piue Cruve IUhle Holiness Chun·h
1/2 mile off Jh. 325
Jla ~ tur : Rev . O'De ll Manley
Sunday School · 9 30 a.m .
Wor~ h1p - 10 : 30a . m . , 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30 r.lll.

Cht.:'Sh:r Churt:h of I he Nazarene
Pa stor : l{ ev. ll crtx!n Grate
Su nd :ty Sc ~ ool - 9 :30a.m.
Worship · II a .m., 6 p.m.
Wednesda y Service s -· 7 p.rn .
l'a ~ t o r :

Flatwoods
)&gt;astor: Keith Rade r
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · II 11.m.

H.osc ttl' Sharun Holiness Church
Leading Creek Rd ., Rutland
Jlastor: Rev . Dewey King
SLmday school · 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wcd nc sd&lt;ty prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

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

• Does ll)( indude lk:a'lse and tilfe lees. sales/use tat, insurance, personal propert~ or tax on capta~zed

Enterprise
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 9a .m.

Cil h'ary J•ili!rim Ch11pcl
l l&lt;l rri sonvJIIc Road
] 1i1ShJL Rev . Victor R(Justi
S11nda y School9:30 a.m.
Wor ~ hi p . II a.m., -7 :30 pm .
Wedncsd!ly Scrv1ce - 7:30p.m

&lt;.\\\~((

NlfTiber or IT'Ollhs XI. Monlhly lease payment S488.88' . Retun!lable securlty deposrt $600. T01a1cash
due a1 beginml'lg or tease. $3,008.88'. Total of monthly payments $14,666.40 • Purr:hase oplion price
120.264.77". Totat rroteage atklwed 30,000. M~ge cllarge over 30,1100 ~~~~s. 111¢ per n;te

TOLL FREE 1·800·822·11417 • 372·2844

Danville Holiness Church
31057 State Route 325, Langsvlle
]Jastor: Rev . Rick Maloyed
Sunday school -9:30a.m.
Su nday worship · 10:35 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Children's church · 10:35 11.m. Youth 6 p.m
W cd n csJ~y p r~tye r se rv1ce · 7 p.m.

a~

• Leather lnter•or
~ .Aluminum Wheels
·Traction Control
• u~versat Transmrtter
• Security Pacl&lt;age
• Prestige Package
• Loaded'

Sunda y Schoo l ." 9:45a.m
Won hip · lla .rn
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Holiness

We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy
~

Adcl,..,u.,- a cl1an,U'I tc10rld lt'Uit.

~

pro/eulo11alhu• ruul UJiepil,,

Cuckler Consulting Inc.
429M SR 124 Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
Bua. Phone 614-992-4216 or

1-800-861-9392
W. TAD Cuckler Presid,ent

I

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE

POMEROY, OHIO • 992~n
BILL QUICKEL

Homelite Saws

1

Crow's Family
Restaurant
"Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken"

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432

EWING FUNERAL HOME
"Dicnity and Service Always"

Established 1913
992·2121
106 Mulberry Ave.

Pomeroy

214 E. Main
992-5130
Pomeroy

00
---

Veterans
'C5' Memorial Hospital

,
115 E. Memorial Dr. Pomeroy
992-2104

�Page

8 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page g

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, October 20, 1995

------------Community calendar-------------judging at6:30 p.m.

FRIDAY
RUll.AND - Revival services,
Rose of Sharon Holiness Church,
Friday through OcL 29, 7 p.m. each
~vening. The Rev. Billy McCoy
and family, evangelist and singers.

p.m. at Star MiU Park. New members welcome.

SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Special sang
service by BiU Ward Trio at Hobson Christian Fellowship church,
Sunday, 7:30p.m.

HARRISONVILLE - Har·
risonville Senior Citizens blood
pressure clinic from 10-11 :30 a.m.
at the town house. Public invited.
Club meeting afterwards for members with lunch to be served.

SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778, and Star Junior
Grange 878, regular fun night and
potluck supper, Saturday, 6:30 at
fiall ncar Salem Center. Costume

Auxiliary meets
Lewis-Manley Auxiliary, Unit
263, American Legion, met at
Dale's Restaurant recently. Margaret Bowles was the hostess.
Lorrene Goggins presided at the
meeting with Helen Culmer as act·
ing chaplain. Materials were distributed to the chairmen. The news
bulletin from the Eighth District
president, Diane King, was read.
The fall conference held on Oct. 12
was announced with several membCrs attending.
A prayer for peace by the chaplain, singing of America, and
remarks by the president closed the
meeting.

Military news
Cpl. Jason E. Smith
Marine Cpl. Jason E. Smith, son
of Harry S. and Janet L. Smith of
Albany, has returned to Norfolk,
Ya. after completing a six-month
qverseas deployment ab'?ard the
amphibious assault shtp USS
Kearsarge, which included duty in
the Adriatic Sea near Bosnia.
Smith was one of more than
2,400 sailors and marines aboard
the large-deck amphibious ship
who completed the 15,000-mile
voyage. Smith's ship was the lead
ship of the tnree-sbip uss
Kearsarge Amphibious Ready
Group, which also included the
amphibious transport dock us_s
Nashville, the dock landmg shtp
USS Pensacola and the 24th
Marine Expeditionary Unit
' Smith is a 1992 graduate of
Alexander High School, Albany.
He joined the Marine Corps in
Aj&gt;ril, 1993.

POMEROY - Weekend services at the Red Brush Church of
Christ, Saturday, 7 p.m. and Sunday, 10 a.m .and 6 p.m. Denver
Hill, Foster, W.Va., speaker.

992-6311.
POMEROY - Revival' services, Calvary Pilgrim Chapel,
state route 143, Pomeroy, Tuesday

TUESDAY
RACINE - Racine Area Community Organization meeting 6:30

Swisher

&amp; Lohse

20% or more on

your prescriptions. Just show your current
American Legion or Sons of the American
Legion membership card. Spouses and
dependents are eligible. Cannot be used with
questions, please see Chuck, Ken, or Ron,

Ohio Power Siting Board
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
180 East Broad Street
Columbus, Ohio 43266-0573

&amp; Lohse Pharmacists.

SWISHER LOHSE

AMP-Ohio
60 I Dempsey Road
Westerville, Ohio 43081

Pharmacy
Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph. Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Ronald Hanning, A. Ph.
Mon. thru Sat. 8:00a.m. to 9:00p.m.
Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992·2955
E. Mafn Friendly Service Pomeroy, Oh.
Week
'1119

Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Records) end lhe Meigs nd July 14, 1995. Bearings
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
In accordance with County properly (Volume are assumed and are
INT 1200 series dullle 1
Resolution No. J20P218, · 55, Page 312 Meigs County intended only lo express ton 4 wheel drive, 7800
Deed Records) bounded angular measurement.
adopted September 28,
actual miles, $1,000.00 Min
1995 by the Board ol and described as follows:
Said public auction will Bid . Reserve lhe rlghl lo
Beginning at the take place on Friday, reject &amp; receive any or all
.OQunty Commissioners,
Meigs County, Ohio, lhe intersection ol Mulberry Ave November 10, t995, at 9:00 bids. Motor 304. Open bid
following real estate, and Hospilal Drive, said a.m., on the front steps of Nov. 6th, 12:00 p.m., Bids
commonly known as the poinl being north 57 the
Meigs County can be dropped oil al Civic
"Oounly
Infirmary degrees 20 minutes 56 Courthouse, Second Slreel, Center or to any fireman .
Property'\ shall be sold to seconds Easl 2586.92 le~t Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Can be seen al Rulland Fire
from the southwest corner
t~e hlghesl bidder at public
TERMS OF SALE: A House.
au·c tion. The subjecl. real of Fraclion 25, thence along deposil of 10 percent of the (10) 20, 27; 2TC
the center of Mulberry lotal purchase price will be
estate is described below :
The lollowlng described Avenue and Highland (sic) due on the day of sale In
real estate siiUated In the Road lhe following:
or certified check only.
North .34 degrees 53 cash
!Hage of Pomeroy, Meigs
Balance will be due in 10
. 1unty, in the State of Ohio, minutes 01 seconds West days pending the Issuance
n Fraction 25, Township 2, 16.58 feel,
a quit-claim deed as title
North 31 degrees 45 of
.~a nge 13, of the Ohio
to said real estate.
Compciny Purchase, and minutes 37 secon~s West
The Board of County
b.eing a parcel created out 45.09 feel,
Commissioners of Meigs
North 27 degrees 41
ol tho Meigs County
Ohio reserves thel~~=~~~~~f:J~
Commissioners' property minutes 20 seconds West County,
right to refuse or reject any j11
(Volume 148, Page 356 39.85 feel,
bid for any reason, and may
North 23 degrees SO readverlise said property
M~igs
County Deed
In Memory
·In Loving Memory of
my Husband,
CHAS. R. MASH, JR.
who passed away
Oct. 21 , 1982
If I had all the world to
give,
I'd give It, yes, and

more,

until the property Is sold.
No
warranties
are
expressed or Implied as to

31.45 feel,
Norlh 22 degrees 19
mlnules 30 seconds Wesl Iitie ol properly.
47.531eel,
Board of County
North 32 degrees 05
Commissioners of Meigs
minutes 58 seconds West
County, Ohio
50.96 feel,
Gloria
Kloes, Clerk
North 52 degrees 59 (10) 6, 13, 20; 3TC
.
minutes 51 seconds West

42.28 feet,
. North 71 degrees 25

minutes 04 seconds West

minutes 01 seconds West

99.71 feel,
To hear your voice, to
Norlh 75 degrees 53
.see your smile
minutes 59 seconds West
And greet you at the
136.36 feet to a railroad
door.
spike sel by lhis survey In
God saw that you were the center ol Highland (sic)
Road; thence South 01
weary,
degrees 03 minutes 52
So, he did what He
seconds West 517.07 feet to
an iron pin set by this
thought best.
survey; thence South 88
lie came and stood
degrees 31 minutes 13
beside you
seconds East 75.88 feet to
And whispered, come
an Iron pin set by lhis
survey; thence North 57
and rest.
degrees
28 minutes 01
1t broke our hearts to
seconds Easl 249.75 feel. 10
lose you,
an iron ptn · set. by this
But you didn't go
survey; thence North 57
degrees 28 minutes 01
alone,
seconds East159.75 feet to
For part of us went
the point ol beginning,
with you
containing 3.3105 acre.
Subject lo all legal
The day God called
easements.
you home.
The above description
Sadly missed by wife, was
made in accordance
Ann, children and wllh an actual s urvey
grandchildren. conducted by Eugene
Triplell P.S. 6766 on June 29
Real Estate General

SUNDAY, OCT. 15 &amp; 22
1:00·4:00 P.M.
v,

SPORTS
POINT
SPREADS
AND MORElli
1·900-884-9204
Ext. 2912
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required
Serv-U (619) 645-8434
&amp;'14195 2 mo. pd:

1~1

BULLETIN BOARD
1

7°0 column inch weekdays
1 00
9 column inch Sunday

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·~ 155

O'DELL LUMBER CO.
POMEROY, OHIO
NOW OPEN SUNDAYS
10A.M.-4 P.M.
STARTING OCT. 21st

(6 t9) 6~S· 8 43 ·1

UCINE
FIRE DEPT.

(lime Stone Low Rates)

GUN SHOOTS

HAULING

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

Shotgun, Factory
Choke only.
Starting 1 P.M.
Sundays
'Beginning
Sept. 17 817111n

Take the pain out of
painting. Let ue do It lor
you. Very roaeonablo.
Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
Aftar6p.m.
614-985-4180

138 N. 2nd, Middleport
(Acrou from Johnson's Video)

15" LARGE

PEPPERONI
Only s6.99

INTERVENORS: Any served agency, County Commissioner, or person residing in Meigs,
Gallia, or Wood counties may become a party to the certification process by filing a Notice
of Intervention or a Motion for Leave to Intervene with the Power Siting Board. The filing
deadline to intervene is December 8, 1995. All notices or motions to intervene should be

992-6344
Dine-In or Carry-Out

sent to tbe following:

W2211

Ohio Power Siting Board
Public Utilities Commissioo of Ohio
180 East Broad Street
Columbus, OH 43215-3793

mo.

ALL YOUR BOW
HUNT;NG NEEDS.
•Bows •Arrows

eOeer scentll
•Deer calla

PUBUC HEARING:
The Power Siting Board will hold two hearings on the proposed project. A nonadjudicatory
liearing will be held on December 13, 1995 at 7: IS P.M. at the Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, Ohio.

.Clothing and much
JOE'S .
SPORnNG GOODS
WOLFIE'S POOL naLu
Oh.

An adjudicatory bearing will be held on December 14, 1995 at I :30 P.M. at tbe offices of the
Public Utilities Commission, 180 East Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio.

Rcquircd.Scrv- U

614-742·2138

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT

PIZZA • ARCADE

consulted and served with a oopy of tbe application.

S2.99.'rnin. 18+
Touch-To nf.'

WICKS
(Speclllze In driveway
spreading)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

614·992·3470

9127195 t!n ·

THE REC ROOM

Wood Co\Uity Public Library
3100 Emerson Avenue
Parkersburg, West Virginia 26104

Meet Your
Special
Someone
Today!!
Call the dateline
1-900-255-1515
Ext . 9789

SAYRE TRUCKING

Factory Choke Only
Bashan Bull•lna

1-800
650-1234

Interior &amp;
Exterior

3124114

Round
Bales of
Hay for
Sale.
Call
614-949-2512
Are you looking for
love?
Longterm
relationship?
1-900-255-1515
Ext. 1064
$2.99/Min.
Must be 18 Yrs.
Touchtone Phone
Requirecj Ser-U
(619) 645·8434

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
• Room Additions
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
112'lln

••••••
DATES

?ifOMANCE

c~i,-~nionship
1-900-255-1515
Ext. 858J
J.tt per rnin. Muot lie 18
y,.., Toucft..tone phone req.

f

S.rv-U (6ft) 645-8414

J&amp;L INSULATION
539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT ~-2772
Office Hours: Mon.-Fri.
8:00 a.m. -3:30 p.m.
VInyl a Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.
Free Eatimates
1/19/tfn

SERVICE LIST:

Meigs County Commissioners
Meigs County Courthouse
Second Stteet
Pomeroy, OH 45769
(614)992-2895

HOCKINGPORT

Richard P. Buckley
U.S. Anny Corps of Engineers
Hlllllillgton District
502 Eighth Stteet
Huntington, West Virginia 2570 I
.Kent Kroonemeyer, Supervisor (304) 529-5629
County Commissioners
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Director
Wood County Commission
6950-H Americana Parkway
Ohio Department of Development
Ill COW'\ Square
Reynoldsburg. OH 43068
77 South High Street
Parkersburg, WV 26101
(614) 469-6923
Colwnbus, Ohio 43017
(304) 424-1984
William A. Tolin
Acting Supervisor
Mr. Peter Somani
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Deputy Director
Rennick
Wc:l. Virginia Field Office
Ohio Department of Health
IDeot~tvDirector
P.O. Box 1278
246 Nonh High Street
·
Ellcina, WV 26241
Colwnbus, Ohio 43215
Square, ;~~atural Resources (304) 636-6586
Director
OH 43224
Ohio Department ofTransportation
Bennett
25 South Front Street
Virginia Dept of Environmental
Colwnbus, Ohio 43215
Prooaion
of Water Resources
Director
1201 Greenbriar Street
Ohio Department of Agriculture
Charl~on, wv 25311
65 South Front Street
(304) 558-2108
Colwnbus, Ohio 43215
J110es W. Rawson
Martha J. Raymond
SupcrviMDepartment Head
West Virginia Division of Natural
Ohio Historic I'I=crvation Office
Resources
~------~
Ohio Historical Center
P.0BoK67
1982 Velma Avenue
Ellcins, WV 26241
Columbus, OH 43211
(304)637-0245
~~~ -'
(614)297,2470
Gallia County Commissioners
Loc:ust Street
Gallipolis, OH 45631

MOBILE
HOME PARK
Mobile home
sites for rent
614-667-3630
10111/95 1mo.

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
.Solid Vinyl
Replacement
Windows

David Schuetz, Supervisor
Southeast District Office
Surface Water Program
Ohio Envinmmental Protection AgerM:J
Front Street
Logan. OH 43138
(614) 385-8501

PRO.£CT
LOCAnON

LOCATION MAP

Computer Service
Computer
repair/Service, Setups,
Installations,
Upgrades.
Will wrHe'programs
and databases.
Kevin 614-541·1630
Local most area.

DAILY
HOROSCOPE

ROOFING

Up-To-Date
Soap Results

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

CALL NOWm
· 1-900-HS-1800
Ext. 6H5
-2.99 per min. Mu•t M18
yrs. Touch-tone phone req.
Sorv·U (619) 6'5-84J'

Ho\\ \1m
E\C: \\ \TI\C

You Can Find
Your Special
Someone Now!!!

Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.
Home Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking· Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

1-900·255-8585
Ext. 7969
2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Requi red
SeiV·U (61 9) 645·8434
1

&lt;)&lt;)•)
')0')0
--.)0.)0

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped

UCINE
GUN CLUB
TUPSHOOT
Every
Wednesday Nile
5:30p.m.

SusanPiqa:
State Hiotoric I'I=crvation Ofliccr
West Virginia Division of Culture and
1900 Kanawha Boulevard East
Charleston, WV 25305

(304) 538-0220

Everyone
Welcome

8/4/lln

Public Notice

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
PRESENTS
Country Music Featuring
"CHARLIE LILLY:
Fri., Oct 20, 9:30p.m.'-1:30 a.m.
Featuring "BAD HABIT'
Sat, Oct 21,9:30 pm.'t:30 am
$2.00 Cover

~

Call 949-2905

•

. Public Notice

collateral prior to sale.
Further, The Farmora Bank
and Saving• Company
rooervoa tho right to reject
any or all bide aubmlltod.
Further, the above
collateral will be oold In tho
condition It Is In, wllh no
expreu or lmplfed
werrantlet given.
For Further Information,
contact Mike Klooa at 992·
Pomeroy, Ohio, reserves 2138.
the rlghltq.bid althle aale, (10) 11, 12,13; 3TC
· ond to withdrew the abO.ve
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE Ia hereby given
thol on Soturday, October
14th, 1995 at 10:00 a.m:, a
publlc aole will be held at
211 Wet! Second, Pomeroy,
Ohio, to aell lor caah the
following colloteral:
1989 Hyundai Excel GL
1U KMHLD21J1KU313439
· The Former• Bank and
Sovlnge
Company,

ROCK-N-ROLL

KP's CLEANING
Will Clean Small
Shops or Offices
and Homes.
Have 4 years
experience. Call
for estimate Karen .
at 614-843·5327
or 614·949·2632
after 10·10·95

Bill Slack
992·2269

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
985-447.3
7122194

Call your date now
1-900-255- 1515
Ext. 1471
2.99/miti.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone
phone required
Serv -U
(619) 645 -8434

·sMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
Cuotom Building l Remodeling
• New Homes
• Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
• Siding
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992·5535
l614l 992-2753

Cell tor Low Prices

742·3212
Turn on Depot St. In
\ Rutland 1.2 mllel.
&amp;11011 mo.

CLA.SSIFIEDS
IWIL
nMI!

2 Seven Week Old Kinens . 1
long Ha~red S!r1ped, German
Shepherd Pup, To Good Home
Only! 614-256 -1793.
·
3 k1ttens . 2 orange, 1 yellow, to
good homes 304-675-6720.

One Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
Free ~stimates
Insurance Work Welcome
State Rt.

..... . .~.

33

3 Ki!tens : 2 'Males, Yellow ·.&amp;
White, 1 Female Calico Color. 2 11
2 Month Old, To Good Hon1e,
614-446-8824

8

week old Blue Heeler Australoan

cross,male.614·742·1103
9mo old En g1 1sh Se lle r, free 10

good home. 3o..s7s-65ss

Adorable 1 Year Old Grey Tabby

Hae se Cat. Declawed. Spayed, All

Shots, Free To Good Ho me1 614·'

Darwin, Ohio

"Hl214

L...::.:!~====--~~0/2~t/94m~":.!=:===:::J ~olor TV. don't work . console.&amp;
cab1net m good conch!ion. Black
wh1te portable TV, works 3011 ·

Abiding Concrete Construction

F1ve German Shepherd pups, call
61 4-949-3055 after 4pm .

Commercial and Residential
Driveways, Pmios, Slabs, Parking tots. Curbs &amp; Guuers
Sidewalks. Porches. Tear-out and Replacement

M1•ed bre ed male puppy 10 go"d
home, 614-949-2179
·
·.

Mott1er cat With kit1ens. 614-992 -

2392

.

Panason1c console 25" TV, dof'\'1
work -went black, cabtne t very
good condttlon. you haul. 304 -

675-5019 leave messaged oOt
home

Duug Crites
614/667-6825

41960 Kay lor Road
Reedsv ille, OH 45772

Playful Female Tiger Killen 6
Months Old, 614-441-0615

S1amese Cat 1 Year Old, De -

MODERN SANITATION

clawed, ShOls 614-245.'31)60

W1nter on1on sets_304-675-7622
. Young ma le cat, all black and
very fr1e ndly, n1ce pet , 614 · 99~ -

7727

60

• • . • ; : . . . -.

1· .

$50 reward'''' mlormat1on- persons remov1ng e11.1ra heavy cor rugated aluminum from oroperty
Georg e' Holman, Syracuse. 614-

992-2797

·-· · : •:.

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

Lost and Found

.

lost: car keys, w1th a b1g lener A,
color blue on keys, please dill

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

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Lo st: Female Golden Retr1ever,
Spade, 4 Years O ld . We aring
Blue Collar, V1Ctn1 1y Oak H1il .)

Area , (Sard1s) 614-682-6149

lost: Please Return 2 Gray Cats
That Were Taken From State Ao ·
ule 7, 614 -441 - 155 7

l ost : wh1te female Sarnoyed w1th
blue _co fla1, Old SA 33 v1cmit~,
614-992-7476

70

614-992-7643

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

( No Sunday Calls)
21 12192/tln

10119th, 20th, 21-st. 9 ·4. St1.1 tes. ·

When your boat needs serviced•••
Come See The Boat Professionals!
Check with us lor Jetoils.
WHER E

SERVICE 1.3

MC!CILIIS(]I

v -·dvo

EV E~YT H M'

Pcr1!d

OMC

Kat St• .ltsf off Rt. 124, Syt:eKISt, OH
Pltale 992·6520 Hrs. M-5 B.:D0-6:00

R

65 Buhl Morton Road, Furn11ure.
Cloth1ng, Men IWomens Baby
Cloth1ng, Camcorder, Flora:.

Alluring Scents
271 Nflr! h Second Av enu e
M1ddlepor1. Oh 1o 45760

992-4548

Jresh. - Sift( Jfowers
(jijt 'Baskf,ts for a[[ occasions
Stuff-it-'Ba[foons Jlot Jlir 'B(l[foons
Singing 'Tefegrams
!free .Loca[ tfefive'!J

SatisjactWn guaranteetf

1Gth, -2 1st, Rummage Sale, 10 ·6: (Johnson's Greenhouse) Pro:
ceeds Go To : Debbie Dnve
Chapel Carpet Fund.

32 Chillicothe Road, Fnday, Sat:
urday, liv1ng Room Suite, Collee ·
Table , Ourlts, Wallhangmgs, Bar
Stools_
·
ALL Yard Sales Mu st Be Pa1d In .
Advance . DEADLINE 2 ·00 pm
the day be lore the ad 15 to 1un
Sunday ed1110n · 2:00 p m Fndqy. ·
Monday ed1t10n 10.00 a m Sat - .

urday

J.E. DIDDLE OWNER

949·2512

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.
Cheaper Rates

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
$20.00/HR
28563 BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 45771
(614) 949-3013 Phone
(614) 949-2018 FAX
(614) 594-2008 NIGHT

HYDRAULIC REPAIR
$32.00/HR.

Water
1AI'*"" Treatment
Equipment
participate in a free, no obligation, comprehensive water

StlckiMIO Aluminum
Complete Radiator
Repair Servlca
New Radiators a
Recorss Avallabla

Giveaway

614 -742-2277

Beautiful Girls
Exciting!!!
Passionate!!!
Talk To 'em Live
1-900-526·2500
E;xt6113
$3.99 per min .
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-Tone Phone
Req~;red Serv-U
(619 645-8434

4405

Tony's Portable
Welding

40

446-321 0 .

The water treatment company cordially invites you to

4/13/95

Fundraisers: Amazing Profits For
Sct1ools, Bands, G1rlscou.1s.
Boyscouts, Etc _ Free lnlorma110n
Can NOW 614 -245-0030. (A-40) ·

Pot Bell'ied Pig To Giveaway, 614 -

House Aepal~ a
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Bath
Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Patios
·Reasonable
Insurers- Experlanced
Call Wayne Neff 992For FrH Eatlmates

for in private home . Experience«;.
Call 304-762-2:.44 .

Misc. Jobs.

required. Serv-U
(619) 645-8434

....

30 Announcements
ALZHEIMERS PATIENTS cared

and Removed

Ext. 1064
2.99 per min. Must
be 18 yrs. or older
Touch-tone phone

--

.

675-1523

Let A Psychic
Answer Your
Questions
1-900-255-0200
Ext 6993
$3.99 per milt
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-Tone Phone
Required
Serv·U (619) 645·8434

.ARE YOU
READY FOR
ROMANCE

NEFF REMODELING
SERVKE

645-8434.

5/18194 TFN

price

History_/ '
L-_ __;__ __J

Betzing's

Phone Requu&amp;d _ Serve-U, 614-

Howard L. Wrltesel

l-900-255-1515

We have the
best window
and the best

I

GARAGE SALE
SAT.,OCT. 21, 8 TIL 5
Antiques, old bottles - some local,
young boys and women's clothes,
pop crates and more.
Bradbury Rd. near Millie's

Umestone &amp;Grave~
Septic Systms,
Trailer &amp;Haese Sites.
Raasonahle Rates
Joe N. Sayte

12 Guage

Meigs Co\Uity Public Library
Z16 West Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Bossard Memorial Library
641 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, bH 45631

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION

SAT., 6:30 P.M.

WAYNE'S PLACE

Immediate possessiOn, 6 rooms, sunporch, 1
baths. Large lot in good neighborhood. Dry, full
size basement, lorced air gas furnace , central
air, under counter dishwasher, garbage disposal.
Beautiful buill·in china cupboards, mini blinds
and draperies. Close to schools, churches, bank,
post office .a nd stores.
415 Lincoln St., Middleport, Ohio
Or

~-

New Country Line Dancing
&amp; Aerobic Classes now
forming . PVH Wellness
Center. Call 304-675·7222

OPEN BOUSE
Price drastically reduced.

Using the Classifieds
lsas Easy as .. .

Get Your Message Across
With A Daily Sentinel

41.22 feet,
North 76 degrees 12

'll:r

SERVICE UST: The agencies and officials, listed at tbe end of this notice, have been

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE

minutes 26 seconds West

Must Be 18 Yrs. Touch To.ne

PUBUC REVIEW: Copies of the application are available for public review at the
following locations:

other prescription cards. If you have any

1-go0-

255·0200, E•t. 1449, $3.99 !Min.

The applicatioo discusses the need for tbe project, technical specifications, financial data, and
potential envirOnmental 8lld social impacts of the 26-mile route and an alternative 30-mile
route. The transmis.•ion line will traverse both forested areas and pasture land. Trees and
other vegetation will be removed andl&lt;ir trimmed periodically along the route's right-of-way,
which varies in width from 45 to 110 feet. No other significant impacts to the natural
resources of tbe area, including wetlands, surface and ground water, fish and wildlife,
threatened and endangered species, or cultural/archaeological resources, are expected. A
map of tbe general project area and the proposed transmission line routes is attached.

American Legion Prescriptipn Benefit Plan.

your Swisher

Psychics Know All Call

OMEGA N5 proposes to coDStruct 8lld operate a 26-mile-long, 138-kilovolttransmission
line that connects the Belleville Hydroelectric Project powerhouse (currently under
constructioo),located oo the Ohio River ncar the community of Belleville, Wood County,
West Virginia, to an Ohio Power substatioo near the Village of Rutland, Meigs County,
Ohio. The application for a certificate to c:onslruct, operate, and maintain this transmission
line facility, identified as docket number 94-1522-EL-BGN ,is cwrently pending before the
Power Siting Board

Pharmacy honors the

You can save as much as

leassdTapes, 614-448-2501.

The Ohio Municipal Electric Generatioo Agency, Joint Venture 5 (OMEGA N5) announces
tbe availability of its application to the Ohio Power Siting Board for a Certificate of
Environmental Compatibility and Public Need for tbe Belleville Hydroelectric Project
transmissioo facilities.

NOTICE TO
AMERICAN
LEGION
MEMBERS

Personals

Princesa VIdeo, (3allipc&gt;is, Ohio
Has Received 300 Adult New Re-

through ~Jcl. 29, 7 p.m. Evangelist day will be he!d by ~be Gallia'
wiU be the Rev. Paul LucaS, Lima. Meigs Conunumty Acuon Agency
Special singing.
on Wednesday, _from 9 a.m .. to
• noon in the old htgh school butldCHESHIRE - Free clothing ing.

NOTICE .OF PROPOSED
UTILITY FACILITY

HARRISONVILLE- An Ohio
Humer Education Course Tuesday
and Thursday, 6 to 9 p.m. and Oct.
28, Saturday morning, Harrisonville Fire Station. For more
information, call Dana Aldridge,

005

p

Distributed by

TRI·STATE )NATER SYSTEMS, INC.
analysis. WE WILL TEST FOR THE FOLLOWING:
TDS, Mineral Hardness, Iron, PH.
Please call Rairo5oft at 992-4472 or 1-800-606·3313
to set u our free water anal sis. 10/S/Itn

J.D. Drilli-ng Company
P.O. Box 587

Racine, Oh. 45771
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call

949-2512

.R.IASONABLI RAT.U

813mn

BIB ROOFIND and
CONS7RUC,ION
(614) 992·5041
Residential • Commercial • Industrial
ONII CAU. .DOES JT ALL
•Pressure
.Plumbing
•Tile
Cleaning
-carpentry
.Carpet
•Roofing
.Palnll119
•Drywall
•Gutters
•Cabinets
-Masonry
•Electrical
•Siding
•Decks
We Have Emergency Services
7 Days A Week, 24 Hours A Day.
35 Years experience, all work guaranteed.
"Fall Specllrla" Leavea cleaned up and hauled
· away. Most yards $49.00
Outtars cleaned and screened,
moat 1 story homes, $49.00.
OHIO- WEST VIRGIJIIA -KENTUCKY 101511 mo.

Frrday, Saruroay, 1098 Nerghbor- ·
hood Road. Furn1ture. Dressers, ·
Bed Books, Odds 8 Ends, 10 :
A.M ?
l1qL.ndat10n Sctle : Thurs tFr1 /Sat
E nt1re Household. P1a no. Gun
Cabmet, M1crowav e, Furn1ture,
Applmnces, Electronics. Clothes,
Toys, Toots, Collectables, Onen.
tal Rugs, Drapes, Bedding. Everylhmg Must Gol 167 Burkha(l
Lane

·
·
.
.
·
·
·
·

Sa turday, 9 AM . · 5. 15 Ann :
Dnve, Jewlery, Clothes. Appl1anc- ·
es. Lots M1sc. Some Furn1ture. ·

614-446-8508,

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance . Deadline : 1:00pm the
dav belore the ad is to run Sunda~ edition- 1:OOpm Friday.' Mon.
day ed1t1on 10 :00a .m. Satur~~

MOYNG

~
·
·

·

SAJE

Thursday &amp; Fnday, 191h &amp; 20th,
10am.? No early sales.
5 Pi s. t&gt;el"unct 5 Pts. Express
M1rrors. kerosene h~aters, 2 e~ ­
erc1se btkes, yard sale clothes
rac" s. stereo stand, ant1que
kl!chen cab1net, Electrolu•
sweeper, pictures (or1g1nals) gas
stove, relrtgerator, radtos, Royal
ofllce typewmer, mimeograph ma·
ctune, Atan &amp; games, an~que
sled &amp; plow &amp; more, answenng
machines, punch bowl set, new
d1shes. book racks. pona-cr1t1,
10x20 metal build1ng, &amp; loads &amp;
loads more. everything real
cheap, musr sell, mov1ng to
TeX"as.
Thursday, Fnday &amp; Saturday. 105
Spnng Avent.Je. Pomeroy. Lots ol
cheap 1un~t

Pt. Pleasant

ANNOUNCEMENTS
005

Personals

LIVE GIRLS! CALL NOW!
t-900-378·2500 Ext 8325.
$3.99 /Min. Must Be 18 Yrs.
Serv·U (619) 645·8434.

&amp; VIcinity
Yard Sale _
Fri &amp; Sat . 175 Park
Dnve. Rainbow girt's lund rai9er - ·
lor Humane Society.
·

80

Public Sale
and Auction

·Auctions every friday ·8aturday · • ·

7pm, MI. Allo Auction. Rr 2-33

·

· crossroads'". New mercl'landise
· grocenes &amp; lots mor&amp;. Ed Frazie;

·

---------------1· ~9~-------------

"

�Page 1o• The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

October 20, 1995

Friday, October 20, 1995

ALLEYOOP

The Dally Sentmel • Page 11

Ohio

·,

BRIDGE

'

Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILliP

ALDER
Mlsc~llaneous

Merchandise

Gall a Me gs Head Sta t s Ac

cept ng Appl cat ons tor the Fol

ng Pos 1ons
W1ll Do lntenor EX18ftO Pa n1 ng
HOME VISITOR Meogs County 1 Reasonable Rates Expenenced
Full T me Home V s tor 1 Pan
low

Ttme Home Vtsltor 1 Subst tute
Home Vtsl!or Gallta County 1
Full T•me Home V !IIIOr Apphc
ants Must Have a Chtld Develop
ment Assoctate Cntdenual or As
soctate Oeg ee n Early Chtld
hood Educatton W llhngness to

Obtam a COl l cense W tn
School Bus Cerhl cation And Pr or
Ex per ence

W th

P e Schoo

Ch ldren And Their Famtl es Is
P ele red 88Q nn ng Rate 01 Pay
Is $6 75

TEACHER Gall a County t Full
T me Teacher Appltcants Must
Have a Chid Deveopment Asso

Relerences For Free Est mates

Cal 614 245-5755

FINANCIAL
210

Seen c Va ey Ap ple Grove
beaut lu i 2ac lots pu bl c water
Clyde Bowen Jr 30&lt;~ 576 2336

360

Real Estate
Wanted

Business
Opportunity

NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

RENTALS

ecommends that you do bus
ness w th people you know and
NOT to send money through !he
ma I untl you have nve st gated
he olfer ng

Upsta s Furn shed 2 Bedroom
Apa tment References Requ ed
No Pel s 614 446 0284

Educat on Pr or E ~~:per ence W tt1

Rare ol Pay s S6 75

ASSISTANT TEACHER Gal loo
2 Full Ttme Ass stant
Teacher Appl cants Mus! Ha11e a
H g h School D ploma Pnor Ex
pe r enc e W th Pre School Child
en and The r Fam I es s Pre
!erred Beg nn ng Rate ol Pay IS

County 1 Full T me Mob le Un t
Dr ver Appl cants Have a Htgh
School Otp oma Appl cants Must
Possess a Commer cial Dnvers
l cense W th School Bus Clas
s I cat on Preferred Beg•nnmg

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
11 o Help Wanted
AVON

Rate ol Pay s $6 00
SUBSTITUTE BUS DRIVERS

All A eas

Spea s 304 6 75- 1429

Ga ll a &amp; Me gs Coun!les Appl1c

AV ON POS ITIONS NOW OPEN
14 /Hr Full Part Time
No Ooo To Door Benelt 1 800
378 3020 lnd Sis/Rep

ants Have a H gh School Dtplo
rna Preference G ven to Appl c
ants Possess ng a Commerc al
Dr vers l cense W th School Bus
Class f cat on Preleued Beg n

AVON HOLIDAY SALES
Ea n $8$15 Hr a1Work Home

ng Rare ol Pay s $6 00
EMPLOYMENT APPLICATIONS

Sa es sa

s

D scoun s No Inventory or Door

MAY BE OBTAINED AT GAL

LIA MEIGS HEAD START PO
Box 316 3086 STATE ROUTE
160 GALLIPOLIS THE DEAD
LINE FOR ACCEPTING APPLI
CATIONS IS 12 00 PM MON
DAY OCTOBER 23 1995 4 00
PM FOR ADDITIONAL INFOR
MATION CALL 446 6674 8 00

-------~-- 1

AV ON EARN$$$ at home at
wok A areas 30• 882 2645 1
000 992 6356 INDIREP
CONSTRUCTION WORKERS
CHARLOTIE NC AREA
Apa r tme nt renov at on company

4 00

seeks sk• led persons to do nter

MONDAY FR IDAY GAL

UA JJEIGS HEAD START A 01
VIS ION OF ACCESS TO HU
MAN RESOURCE DEVElOP
MENT IS AN AAI EEO EMPLOY

or carpentry sheet rock pan ng
l ghl masonry lor shonterm and
long erm proects For mmed ate
cons1det'a on 704 4 2 0267

ER

EAST COAST CONTRACTORS
Or vers needed Class D I cense
local 304 675 5113
Due To Trem endous Growth We
Are Curren ly Seek ng To Partner

Wth

On Duly Med cal SlaTe Tested
Nursmg As&amp; srants Needed lm
mechtely In Gall polts Area Full
Or Par T1me $7 50 Per Hour
W th Benef ts Call Sandy Or Deb
be 1 BOO 506 6773

5 QUALITY
OWNER OPERATORS
CONSISTENCY !GOOD$
$1 000 SIGN ON BONUS

Part T me 16 32 Hou s Week
Jewe lry Sales Must Be Abe
Work 9 5 Wed And Thurs Plus
Some Saturdays Apply 10 1 Ac
We W I B e In The A ca (HIR
qu•s 1ons F ne Jewelry 151 Sec
lNG ) The Wee I\ 0 1 0 16 95 0
and A\lenue Gall pohs No Phone
Stop By Our Open House On 101 Calls Please
19f95

CHEIAICAL LEAMAN
CHARLESTON WV TERMINAL
1 eoo 258 587&lt; TERMINAL
11034
OR 304 272 2264

Ea n thous and s stu II ng envel
opes Rus h $l a nd self ad
dressed stam ped e nve lope to
Ba bara Sm lh A 2 Box 956 P!
Pl ea~nt WV 25550

All real estate advertising In

this ne""""'per Is &amp;ublecl to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ol1968 which makaslt lllagal
to advertise "any preference
lim tatlon or discrimination

t&gt;ased ort race color religion
seK lamlllal status or na~onal
origin or any lntentloR to

make any sudt preference
llmhation or dlscrtmlnatfon •

newspaper will not
knowllngly accept
advertisements lor real eslale
which Is In Yiolalion ol the law
Our readers are hereby
Informed thet all ct.velllngs
advertised In this newspaper
are available on an equal
opj)Ort011ty basis
This

n

doo lndRep 1 BOO 7424738

PT EMPLOYEES NEEDED
Secur ty Guard Mature ex pen
ence a plus, like 10 work w1youlh
Skate .Uorutor Weekends re
qu red
ConceSSIOn Clerk Weekends re
qu red experience a plus
Housekeepmg A1de schedule
flex1ble
Send esumes and lener of nte
est 10 Bend Area Commun lly
Center Box 206 New Haven WV

REAL ESTATE

Are You look ng Fo
S eady Paycheck?
Ben elts?
Insurance?
Pa a Hot days &amp; Vaca ons?
Ra ses?
Pa a OTA Expenses?

TEXAS REFINERY CORP Needs
Mature Person Now In GALLIPO
LIS Area Regardless Ot Tra n ng
Wr e J G Hopk ns Dept S
45631 Boll: 711 Fl Wo t~ TX.
76101

WANTED EMERGENCY RELIEF
COMMUNITY SERVICE WORK

I The Answer Is r..E...S Br ng A
Cu re nt MVR And App ly Mon
Fr 8-4 AI

ERS Needed To Teach Commun
ty And Personal Sk lis To An
Adults W h learn ng l m tat ons
In Galllpofts And Btdwell Area
Hours As Schedu led IA.s Need
ed H gh School Degree Val d
0 ve r s l cense And Three
Ye~ s L1censed Dr v ng Exper
ence Aequ red Tra n ng P ov ded
Send Resu-me To P 0 Box 604

SHONEY S DISTR BUTION
CENTER

I a Dead I ne For Applicants 10
26195 Equal Opportun.ty Employ

DO YOU HAVE

Cass

A CDll cense"
Ove 1 Year 1n Ell: per ence?
Stable Work H story?
l ve W th n 75 M IQS 01 R pley ?

Jackson OH 45840 ATIN Coco
eo

l ocated Just Olf I 77
At Fa rpla n WV

{Ex 1132)
EOE
Handyman 10 work on var ous
equ pmenr and do g ounds work
at the WV S a e Farm Museum
Pa d 11ecaton1sck days No med
cal ret rement benelts App ca
o ns after Oct 251h w II not be
cons•dered Conta c t Donna or
Tom at 304 6 75 5737 lor more n
format on

310 Homes for Sale
3bedrooms (1 Master) 2baths
basemem screened n porch/
breezeway lam ty room double
garage 12 54acres 304 675

4575
Beaubful 3 Year Old log Home In
Charola s lake Lake Pnveleges
Must Seel Pr ce $ 169 900 614
446-6800

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1 Acre 2 Bedroom lra ler Deck &amp;
Porch See To App 304 576

3288

Ap~eyrove

WVA

1977 12ll:65 Federal Jbr

ask ng

Blown lnsu laton
M chael Thack91 &amp; KEN n Bed
soe B&amp;B Enterpr se blown nsu
labon Free es mate oo house
614 742 2503

BOO 51 3 •343Exr 89368

Ne ed 5 Lade s To Sale A11on
61-1 446 3358
Needed lmmed1aUy Secretary
O ff ce Uanager Must Have E~p
On C omp ute r And In Sales F
nanc ng &amp; Inventory Control Call
For lnterv ew 614 441 1975

Profess•onal Tree Se v ce Com
plete Tree Care Bllcket Truck
Serv ce 50 Fl Reach Stump Re
moval
Free E s •m a res
In
surance 24 Hr Emergency Serv
ce Ca 1 And Save No Tree Too
Or Too Small! Btdwe I 01"11o

1~~~~~e~1~4~36~7~70~1~0:__

I·

No Exper ence Necessary I $500
To S900 Weekly / Po tenl a Pro
cess ng Mortgage Refunds Own

Hours Call (909) 715 2300 Exl

gg2 4451

Valley

Sun

0 T A Dnvers Needed 1 Year
vanf able Oollbles Endorsement
To F1ll Openmgs On Team Runs
Home Every Weekend Free
Htalthcare To Or.ver Alter 30

Nursery

School

2 K Young School Age Our ng
Summer 3 Day&amp; per Week M n
rrA.~m614 446 3657

-.:..:..----~~--:-:-1 Cllild&lt;;are M F eam 5 30pm Ages

Days

BOO 362 5885

7:Jl4

N ce 3 bedroom house &amp; one
bedroom collage n Pt Pleasant

e 4 992 5858

Small 2 Bedroom Rear 23B F rst
Ave K !chen w th Stove /Retr g
e a tor $275/Monlh Depos u Ref
erences No Pets 614 446 4926

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
10x50 Furn shed Mob le Home 1
M le F om Galhpol s Wa e
Trash Furn sned A1 2 Rental
References No l nstde Pels
$220/Mo S150 Oepost 6 14 446
0761

Like New 814

Rent Lease Warehouse
Also Boar Or VehiCle Storage
Gall pols 304 675 3414 After

PM

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

In cludes Water And Garbage No
Pets 61 4 388 8273
2 Bed ooms Porc h Ya d 5 M les
Souih Route 2 t 8 $27 5 Mo tn
eludes Water Refer ence Depos
I 6 4 256 1337

1br duplell: 2br dupleJI Four 1 br
apts One 2br apt Reasonable

V NTON COUNTY 5 M es North
Of Jackson County Real N ce
Bu ld ng Site On Th s 15 Par fly
Wooded Acres $17 900 Only
$1 900 Down And $ t 98 23 Per
Month 10 Years tO% lnteresL
ALSO Same A1ea 7 Ac es
$ 11 900 Only $1 900 Down And
$132 16 Per Month 10 Years
10% Interest

$2 000 Oowr) Ba a nee Amo t zed
Ove 10 Years 10% lnte est
We G \le 10% 0 scount For Cash
And All 10 Yea Contr ac ts Ha11e
A 4 Yea Balloon

$30000614256141 &lt;
Ch aro la s la ke Beaut l ui 2 25
Acre lor Ou et Des rable Ne gh
borhood Rest cted $24 500 304

136 :ll4 273- 2940

ent 304 e)5 2053 or 304 e75
4100

REUOTE BEAUTFUL LAND
Me gs County Columbia Town

shop Mt Umon Ad (Townshrp Ad
14) 31 acres lor $23 970 nne
lor 183-4 7 18\len acres tor
Owner t.nanctng
ma~

614 593 B545

Call for

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Aepa red New &amp; Rebutll In Stock
Call Ron Evans 1 800 537 9528

WII Delve 614 6696441

Barga ns Brand Names
Low Prces Pont Pleasant Foo
dlancl Plaza Open Oa ly 304 675
4460

Sam Some \1 lies regular Army
camouflage by Sandyv He Post
Off ce noon 6pm Fr Sun 304
273 5655 (Camouflage 1nsula1e0

Kenmo e Washer &amp; Gas
Deluxe Models Good Cond
$300 614 446-0493

New 0 n1ng Room Suttll Pad

$650 G lass lop W th Gold &amp;
Black Chars $250 P ano New
lvores $100 Sola Floral Mauve

Aeguue ed Angus bulls rom 7 24
monlhs old Reasonably pmed
upon 1nspecGon 614 742 3033

ESTATES 52 Westwood Or ve
from S226 to $291 Walk to shop
&amp; mov1es Call 614 446 2566
Equal Housmg Opporb.Jnety

Beech S! Moddleport 1 &amp; 2bad
rooms ut 1111es patd Oepos t &amp;
refe ences. 304 882 2566.
Brooks•de A.pa tmen s Washer
Dryer Hook up 1 Bedroom
Equ pped W lh Relr ge a tor &amp;
Stov&amp; S2571Mo • Oepos 1 614

446 295!1

S d ng g ass door $150 Wood
door 2 8 6"8 &amp; frame S25 Ch•ld
play house plywoodS SO 304

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon

Stove Freezer Washer Dryer
Relr geraror 61 4 256 1238

SWA IN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Ohve St Gall polls New &amp; Used
furn lure heaters Western &amp;
Work boots 614 446 3159
614 446 3158
Oua ny Household FumhJre A.nd
Appfiances Grear Deals On
Cash And Carry ! RENT 2 OWN
And layaway Also Ava lable
Free Del \lery W th n 25 M les

520

Upr ghl Ron Evans Enterpnses
Jackson OhiO 1 800 537 9528
Well Established trees tor sale
Sugar Maple Honey locust Dog
wood Sweet Gum P ne Oak
Scotch P.ne also Yews Reason

ably poced 304 882 3473
Wh rlpoot Washer &amp; Dryer Very
3ood Cond11on $200 61~ 446

Ron All son 1210 Second Ave
nue Gall pols Oh o 614 446

4336

550

Block br ck sewer P!pes wmd
ows 1ntels etc Clauae
nters

Me rat Roo I ng &amp; S1d ng Gee lex
t1le Fab c For Or veways &amp; Etc
Typar For House Co\ler Or T&amp;m
porary Storage Cove • A lttzer
Farm Supply 614 245 5193

Pets for Sale

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Groom Shop Pet Groom ng Fea
tur ng Hydro Bath Jul e Webb
Call614 446 0231

1Sx30 Above Ground Pool 2

Years Old Paod $3 20e W I Sell
For $1 000 Call Amer~can Gener

4113

1993 Sears garden traclo 6&amp;pd
44 • cu t 18hp Khole r motor

Fuel Tank W lh 6 Ft Sand S75

Bog beautllul AKC Chow pupp1es
male lelt $200 6!4 992 7574

N Th• d Ave M ddleporl 1bed
room lurmshed Oeposn &amp; refer

ences

:ll&lt;~-882

2566

New haven 1br furn1shed apt
de pos t &amp; references 304 882

2566

614 446 9708
3 Burne Wall Gas Heater Used 2
Months $150 Caller ID $35 €114

256 8 1C
357 Mag 6" barrel $195 H&amp;R 12
ga $59 22 Rem pump 380
backup AMT $139 Ruger
G P 100 357 Mag e barrel 20
ga Rem 870 Exp 22 Rev $65

814 446 2404 614 44e-ooot
Tw n R vers Tower now accepang
apphcat ons for 1br HUD lllblld
zed apt for elderly and hand

capped EOH 304 e75 6e79

Sho~

8129 SR 7 Chesllre

8hp rear engme.Cub Cadet ndmg

mower $250 A so 4hp walk be
htnd b•g w~eel mower $50 both
run ok 30~ 675 1296
call

1990 Dodge Dakota v 6 au
to mal c low m1les c lean 614
985 4222 between 8 OOam

PEANUTS

500pm

ASK I(OU!i: DOG

TO COME OUT
AND PLA'I' CHASE
THE STICK

1991 Chevy S 10 Blazer Tahoe
Package Fully loaded 614 446

6692
1!)92 Ford F 150 64000 Mlos 6
Cylnder 5 Speed $7999 614
379 2760 Evenmg5

1969
Oldsmob le
4door
30 OOOactual m1les Se I 10 htghest
offer 30,.675 1874aher5pm
1972 Vol~swagen eng ne and
1ransmts11on good 614 992

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
/0 20

1979 4x-4 Blazer $1 200 614

379-2720 AFTER 6 PM

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

ve

$4 000 :ll4 e75-7511

wtfY SO 6LUM1

1990 Dodge Ram Van B 250
72 000 Mtles $6 000 Can Be
Seen At Galltpol s Da ty Tr bune
825 Th rd A¥enue Gall pols

MY POGMA .JUST
Gor ,uN ove~

Ohro

XLT Emend
A 1 cond
$12600 :ll4 675-2118
1993 Ford A.eros tar
ed van 40 ooom

-4.-

1981 Black Ponuac Grand Pm 6
Cyhntler AT PB PS Good Trres
Ask&lt;tg $1 000 614 446 2589
1982 Suburban 01esel Good
Shape t967 Ford Aerostar XLT

Motorcycles

1986 Honda 450 N g h1 Hawk
4000 m le s ex cellen1 cond 1 on
$ 1600 I m 614 742 2153

lac DeV•IIe Call For Pr1ce 614

441 1!51 614 2•55592Aiter 5
PM
1983 Oldsmobole 98 Loaded 614
448 2445 Ask For Pau
1984 Cavalier SW Se50 1981
Granada $850 614 245 5523 AI
tar 5 PM &amp; Weel&lt;ends

1988 Camara Mull Port v 6 5
Speed Z 28 Wheel&amp; White let
rered T~res H1gh Miles $2 000
Frrm 614 441 0668 After 6 30
P.M

1995 Yamaha Blaste 200 cc exc
cond must sell S3 000 304 675
6167 after 6 30pm or leave mes

sage

•5

FISh ts supposed to be good for the
bram But maybe bndge ts better as tl
keeps the mmd act1ve And once you
reach an advanced age you can use
Denms Wolfberg s hne There s one
advantage to bemg 102 There s no peer
pressure
However there are peers who play
bndge Arguably the best Lord Harold
Lever d1ed last August He played to
day s deal m the stxlh match between
the House of Commons and House of
Lords m 1980
If the b1ddmg looks strange !here
was an extenuatmg crrcumstance the
score It was rubber bndge W!lh North
South 60 on and East West 90 So
Lever South r~sponded one no trump
to try to end the aucl!on However Mrs
(now Baronessl Oppenherm West
wasn t gomg qUietly Hence her danger
ous two d111mond overcall
West led the d1amond five lhree Jack
queen A club to the 10 and JaCk WJlS fol
lowed by the d1amond e1ght nme 10
heart s1x West sw1lched to a subtle
spade five After Wlnnmg W!lh the king
East returned hts last dta~nond
Lever went up w1th hts ace success
fully finessed dummy s club queen and
cashed the club ace gettmg the bod
news He contmued With the spade ace
and spade Jack overtaken w1th hts
queen Agam bad news but West had
no defense Her hand had counted out
so Lever had an answer to any diScard
When West threw the d1amond seven
Lever ext led w1th h1s last d1amond
West cashed the club king but then had
to lead away from the heart king Etght
tncks m and anolher rubber won

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Calebnty Ciplle crrptograms a e c eated I om quotalms by famous people past and P!'Menl
Ead letter m the c pher stands 101 anothet" fOday s clue F equats y

p N

p

WLKS

XPUKHP
P R A

XL U L

zv

WLNHKHPR

PN

p

WHTTHVRN

UPAHPZYA

B YU UF

XYRZTYRYNN

(KVTLWRHNZ)

GPUWZS

SHTCLUR
UVCYUZ
PREVIOUS SOLUTION You cant be good tn a bad movre" -James Caan
"I can truthfu l!~ say I wrll never make a bad him - Eddie Murphy

I
I

f}

SENTAR

EBGE!

I

D &amp; R Au10 R pley WV 304 372
3933 or! BOO 273 9329

SCIIAM-I.ETS ANSWERS

SERVICES
810

Shroud Venom Gnarl Intact NOTHING

Home
Improvements

STRI&lt;£ ABLOWN Tt£ WIR ON

HIGH PRICES SHOP M CLASSFED5.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond I onal he me guarantee
local refe ences lu n shed Call

{6141 446 0870 0 {6") 23 7
0466 Roger s ~ite rp oot li'g Es •

IT'S 01&lt; IT'S O-K

labl sl'led 1975

IT'S JUST"~ RIT~TO~Ail

MR PorATOiiEAP HAS
GI'WTW AAJrS •

Appl ance Pa Is And Serv ce All
Name Brands Ove 25 Years Ex
per ence A I Work Guaranteed
French City Maytag 614 446

7795
B II 0 nck s Home Improvements ~
add111ons remodeling roof ng
s•dmg plumbmg e1c Insured call
811 Omck 614 992 5183

!

C&amp;C General Home Ma n
tenence Pa n1 ng v nyl s d ng
carpentry' doors w ndows ba ths
mobtle home epa and more For
lree est mate call Chet 614 99 2

8323

ASTRO-GRAPH

Earls Home Ma ntenance v 1nyl
s dmg roof ng e ~ ter or pa nt ng

~~:~~ 2w;:~~ng

Fr ea Est mates

Ron s TV Serv1ce spec al z ng m
Zen th also serv c1ng most other
brands House calls 1 800 797

w1th Indifference There are JOdtcattons

that they w II be much better than you
think and w1t1 have realrstrc prolrtable
potenltal
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dac 21) You

I
840

18 000 e14 441.0738
t 993 Ford Thunderbird LX low
mtles excellent condn1on aU elec
!riC tinted WndoWI $10 900 fum
814 QQ2 5347
4door Chevy Chevette

auto

good cond asoong 1500 304
C75-t«8

what to do to make the relaltonshrp wort&lt;
Marl $2 75 to Matchmaker c/o thrs news
paper P 0 Box 1758 Murray Hrll
StatiOn New York NY 10150
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22) Do not treat
any money makmg rdeas you gel loday

can advance your personal tnterests

1----------Electrical and
Refrigeration

RSES CERTIFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heal Pumps A Cond 1on.ng 11
You Don 1 Call Us We Both lose
Free Es11mates 1 800 287 6308

614 446 6308 wv 002945
Restdenllal or commercial w nng
new ser\1 ce or repatrs Master L1
censed elec tr c1an Ridenou r

Elec1r cal WV00030e 304 675
1786
\

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

New gac tank s one on !ruck
wheels rad•ators floor mars. etc

002 n78

1gg2 Ltncoln Coni nental Moon
Roof Keyless Entry loaded

0&lt;123

Pass

Budget T ansm ss ons Used &amp;
Rebuilt All Types Access ble To
0\ler 10 000 Transm ss on Also
Parts C lu tches &amp; Pressure
Pla1es 614 379 2935

LTD~;:=·~:-H~~\!~~~::~~~
1

$250 each No Checks et 4 992
2607

eu ue-

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

e6 000 Moles $250 614 256
1233 614 256 1539

1987 Mileage
Butck Century
low
Days 61

1g87 Ntssan Sentra 102 000
miles little bl! of rust ask ng
$2000 1970 12K44 New Moon
mobile home askmg $3500 61 4

Slud Servtce For Boston Temer
$SO AKC Yorksh~re Terrier 1
Yea r Old For Sale

(abbr)

Takes to court
Employs
Method
Ornamental
pattern

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

0015 wv 304 576 2398

Checks scratch ng promotes
heahng &amp; half growlh on dogs or
cats w thout stero ds Ava 11able
0 T C Southern States 304 875
2780

e14-667 3404

2¥

Phillio A In,,..'• book Get Smarter
IS avmlable auto
arc1vn:eu upan request for $14 95
P 0 Box 169 Roslyn Hts NY
1577 0169

1988 Hyundao Excel t9B5 Cad I

Condo!IOn 614 256-8867

Schnauzer pupp es sail and
pepper champ on bloodline
AKC also Toy Pood es Coolville

gy A
ICAirMAI

1994 Chevy Blazer S 10 16 000
M les loaded $15 900 Alter 7
PM 0 leave Mess age 614
446 7321

614 441 1707 Aher5pm

HAPPY JACK SKIN BALM

Registered Shetland Sheepdog
(SheiHe) pups sable &amp; wh te

Lrl"lm

Wrecked 86 Peterb1lt (lrame and
cab) selhng lor parts only must
take truck not parttng our sepa
rarely runs Call 614 742 3129

1987 Chrysler 5th Avenue v 8
Automat c Ful Power Ell:tra N ce

4 10 Stevens pump $169 20 ga
pump $159 loBds of tools toys
and Fenlon Glasa Daves Swap
N cely Furn1shed 2 Bedroom
Apanmenr Cen trally located

1988 S 10 Tahoe V 6 Automa1 c
$3650 1989 Grand P • $489 5
614 446 0103

8899 Evennga 614 ••6-3939

2 Twtn Beds Good Cdnd 1on

Furmshed Apt S295 00 Month
Ullh()' Pad 920 Fourltl Ave Gall
pols 614 446 4416 after 7PM

85 Mercury Cougar bad mo tor
$300 OBO will lr ade for good
black powder nile call 614 742
1 507 afler 5pm

only one blue and one black fe

$&lt;50 614 446 e552
Brown Double Back Clialfs S30

71 o Autos for Sale

1985 Toyoll Corolla good cond

Puppoes $150 e14 379 2ns

students goal

9
10
11
17

1989 Plymouth Eng ne 2 2 Motor

dependable near new exhaust
clutch struts S2 000 304 675
2177 daya or 304 675 1036 after
7prn

AKC RegiStered Cocker Spamel

2 Heavy Duty lra ler Axles W th
4 Good 8 00 16 5 T res $75
Also Good Round 300 Gallon

ooo

760

Actress Pitts
Preas
Unless
Congealed
Striped ammal
In the same
place (abbr)
7 Negative word
8 Certain

By Ph1lhp Alder

1988 Cho11rolet 500 S~ es
63
M les L ke New B14 r44 5
2445 Ask For Paul

TRANSPORTATION

1 g95 Dodge Ares A1r PS Au

1996 Yamaha ltmbe Woll 250
4 wheeler hardly r den $3 500
1981 V1ktng pop up camper
sleeps 6 good shape newly can

vassed S1 200 304 937 2832

last chance lor summer prcesn
Hay rolls altalfa oats grass S25
Morgans Farm 304 937 2018

AKC Dalma ran pupp•es shots &amp; tomat c Good Cond Mn S, 000
wormed 30~ 675-2532
814 448 9552

$1 500 :ll4 675-3196 aller 4pm

FER ME?

1986 S 10 PICkup V6 5spd ac
exc cond S2 800 :rl4 372 3896

1g79 Buck Stat•on Wagon $150

560

~48

Square &amp; Round

Boles Both 614 368-0033

1
2
3
4
5
6

Bndge is
better than fish

l1~e

7473

Build lng
Supplies

6 00 pm 614-992 2526

al Fnance 61&lt;

Ha~ For Sale

1437

....

2•

Openmg lead

I'M TERRIBLE BUSY,
PAW II CAN YOU ROCK
TH' BABY
TO SLEEP

ngs

740

3

DOWN

Vuln erable North South
Dealer North
South
West North East

1995 Kawa sak 220 4 Wheele
New 6 14 446 48 2!)

Hay &amp; Grain

304 675 1700 alter 6pm

w

Buy or sell Rtvenne Ant1ques
1124E Man Street on At 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to 6 00 p m Sunday 1 00 10

640

WHITES METAL DETECTORS

R o Grande OH Call 614 245
5121

Antiques

e14 446 8081

1!)50 Chevy Ford P nto statton
wagen 1g85 Chevy Celebnty

call 614 992 3987 after 9pm.

387 9388

Reg•s e ed Pure Blood Full Blood
&amp; Polled l mousn Callie For Sale

3091

Whole slabs $5 a p ckup load

Sporting •
Goods

2 Bedrooms 2 Balhs K tchen
W lh Stove Retr gerator 15 Coutt
Streel $4 75/Mo + Oepos 1 ~et
erence No Pets 614 446--4!)26

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

able 614 592 2322 614 698
3531

R d ng Mowe 10 Horse
36 Inch Cui Two Forward
Speeds W lh Re\lers&amp; Vandt ve
Control Also A Sears Uti ty Ca 1
Fot Mower W lh A Dump ng AI
tachment All In E xcellen! Cond1
ton Full S ze Mawess And Boll:
Spr ngs Wt th Bed Frame Sena
Ftrm Newly Purchased 614 446
6302 From 6 To 11 PM

614 441 0615

2

2Rooms Pus Bath Lafa~ette
Mall No Ktlchent All Uti t es pad
$175 00 Month Deposit Requtred
614 446 7733

u day October 21st AI 1 PM
Canle Accepted Start ng At 4
PM Fr day Also Haul ng A.va•

Cows lor sale 304 937 2205

675 6 32

Sta nless Steel Two 15 Shot
Mags As New In Bo.x $425 614

371 1 EOH

ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALES
Specoal Fall Feeder Call Sole Sot

-

Rust Colored Couch &amp; Chatr $50
Oak Daybed Wth Mauress $100

Ruger PBS MK II 9 MM Postal

2bd m apls to!al electuc ap
pi ances lurn shed laundry room
lac It es close to school m town
App catmns ava lable al VIllage
G een Apls W49 or call 614 992

Horses 1 Quarter Horse 2
Tennessee Walkers 614 446
4110

• K 9 7 2
•J 9 4 2
•J 8 4
1/oJ 2

• A Q 9 6
1/oB '

720 nucks for Sate

1965 N ssan truck 4 wheel d

- - - - - - - - - - - l c,o::.;v~er..:a::.;lls:..:$::3~51:__ _ _ __

2 Bedroom Aparlmtnt For Rent
Bedroom Apartment Trash
Water Sewage Pa1d S295JMo ..
Oepost 614 446 6856

L lvestock

3

Rel r gerators Stoves Washers
And Dryers All Recond 1 oned
_;_...:..:._:_::..::;._:...._____ 1 And Gauranteed $100 And Up

GOODWILL STORE
DONATION CENTER

Wanted Small M ~ Cooler Tank
Unde 150 Gallons Must Be In
Good Cond 110n 6 14 965 1922
614 965 1266

630

APPLIANCES

614 44e 8221

367 0415

Lot For Sa le Below Ga lli pol s
0 45 Acre 20x26 Budd n; Elec
rr c Water Sept1c Tank Also Ca
ble TV Ava !able 7 M1!es From
Gall1p0 IS N1ce Area $ 12 500

BOO 352 •a•5

7795

614 446 9637
Chesh re Two 60li:T55 Lots Ad
JOn ng lar ge Garage tStoraoe
W lh M n mal Aepa r Sepl c And
Water W lh Two Mob le Home
Hook Ups Curren! Cash Flow I
Great Rental Investment Or
Homes e! Reduced S 19 000 614

Galvalume Steel Roof 15 xB Steel
Sl de 3 Man Door $6 444
ERECTED Iron Horse Butlders 1

Appl ances
Washers Drye s
graters 90 Day
French Ctty Maytag 614 446

VrRA FURNITURE

755 5685

1 614 775 9173

POLE BUILDING SPECIAL
30 X40 X9 Pa nled Steel Srdes

992 2363

&amp; Bue $100 614 388 8557

992 2218

Agoo All s tracton
wtworld
famous a cooled d esel engmes
4yr dnve tra n warranty Example
4660 4wd 52hp fully oaded w lh
6 9 70 hnane~ng $20 500 Keefer s
Serv ce Cenler St At 87 leon

MF comb ne model 300 w/2 row
corn head &amp; 13 gram platform

Chrysler New Yorker
m les excellent cond 1110n

Comp lete home !urn sh ngs
Hours Mon Sat 9 5 614 446
0322 3 m1les out Bulav tie P ke
Free Dehvery

n shed and unfurnished secunty
depos 1 requ red no pets 6U

Ira ler ask ng $2300

$1 500 :ll4 458-10e9

LAYNE S FURNITURE

1 and 2 bedroom apatlments fur

4~9

277 3917

Sears
_ _;__;__:....;....:..:.:_______ 1 Powe

Apartments
for Rent

hog

614 992 2578

garment

20 Being
21 Sp aunt
22 Margm
24 Conned
27 leSS no1sy
31 Dry
32 Pueblo lnd1an
33- Grande
34 Neoghbor ol
Mex
35 Protective
layer
36 Part ol a deck
37 Theater section
39 Women ol rank

Anower to Prevlouo Puzzte

Q PM 614 256

1984 Chevy 112ton Pck up low
mtleage good condton 614 446

Massey Ford IH &amp; others
S der s Equ pment Co Hender
son WV 304 675 7421 or 1 800

Sofa and love seat hke

USED

1069

6 n x 52 It P T 0 Gra n Auger

D scount !arm tractor pans lor

3pc hvmg room su tt e hunter
green &amp; burgandy SBOO Black &amp;
gold d nene sel 4cha~rs "''""'"" 1
table $200 XJ4-6 7&amp; 1~46

2 Bedrooms $285/Mo • Depos

440

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Household
Goods

&amp; Up 60 Panerns Of I( tchen Car
pet In Stock Ove 35 Pa11erns
V nyl In S!ock Motto han Carpels
614 446 7444

Auto loans Dealer w 11 ar ange tt
nanc ng e\len 11 you have been
turned down e lsewhere Upton
Equ pment Used Ca s 304 458

1963 Chev p ckup good cond
350 auto 304 576 2001 even

wv 304005-3874

_

6926

Farm fo sale on Gold R dge Rd
Pome oy 163 aces house ha s
new Windows and \1 nyl std ng has
free gas call 614 992 6950

F rewood $40 A P ck Up Load
Del vered $30 A load P eked Up

Washe s dryers relr gerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
v ne s11 eel Call 614 446 7398
1 800 499 3499

Tra er tor rant n Aulland open
house Saturday Oclober 21st
2 OOpm 4 OOpm call 614 gg2

P •ce Buste New 14~ 7 0 2 or
Jbr Only $995 down S1951month
F ee deh\lery &amp; setup Only at
Oakwood Homes N tro WV 304

Up load We Delvery $ 0 00
Charge 6 144461417

MERCHANDISE

Carpel &amp; V nyl In S!Ock $5 00 Yd

WEST
.. 10 '
¥K 7
•Kt0 752
11oK 9 6 3
SOUTH
.. Q 8 4
• Q ' 3

edl $7 500 e14 379-2238

4 f msh mower 3 pt hllctl excel
len I condll on can see 11 work
wthmanual $400 614 9859822

8N Ford tractor 6 blade 4 brush

20 95

lloAQ1074
EAST

1980 O ld s Toronado 61 000
M les Excellent Cond uon Load

ween 8 A M
6413

t0

• 3

1969 Chrysler LeBaron Con\lert
able 1!)89 Ponuac F reb1 d su
245 9174 614 446 1575

tNT
2NI

e14 379 2758

510

NORTH
AA J 6
•A tO 8 6

Caravllle Ask ng S5g5 1!)82
Olds 98 Regency Negot able
614 379 2935 61 4 245 5677

Clean 81 000 M les $2 zoo Be!

F re Wood For Sale $30 00 P ck

GOOD

614 448 2528

782 (24 Hours)

WtU clea

Newly renova ted 2bed oom
basement garage References &amp;
deposu No pets 304 675 5162

5949

hall down 614 949 2025

Rub &amp; Scrub Cleanmg Se rv ce
dusllng moppmg w ndow s a')d
more Complere sef\1 ce o touch
ups Aele ences on reques l call
Terry a t 614 99 2 4232 or 614

boa d Sequence Recently Up
graded And Serv ced Roland
TR505 0 0 tat Sampled Drum Ma
ch ne Ales s Oa1a0 sk D g tal
Song Sro age System New Ro
land JV 880 Synthes ze Sound
Module 614 379 2879

Suppl es l m ed
Call Ann e 1 600 766 6t 10

wv

2661

Furn shed rwo bedroom ut ht1es
ncluded on he me 6 4 9!)2

F1ve acres
aerator near
Aacne$18000 can finance Wi th

6817

Enson q ESO t Syn!hes zer Key

1988 Ford Escor 1 Loaded E XP

Ask ng 11 595 1987 Plymou h

L ncoln Ma rk V Runs F1ne Ext a

Sleep ng rooms w th cook ng
Also Ira ler space on rver At
hook ups Call ale 2 00 p m
304 773 5651 Mason

~ ke

63 Ac es Wooded l c.nd Co unty
Wale &amp; E lect r c On P rope ty

Home Typ st s PC users needed
S4 5 000 nco me potent al Call 1

House n Rutland to ent wo or
tnree bedroom no pets depos 1
rete ences and te ase requ red
ava a ble mmed ately 614 742

Goes To H ghest Offer 1081
Fa •mont Bayv ew 14x 70 3 Bed
ooms C A Etec Call Amencan
Geneai Fmance 6144464113
Can Stay On lot

F nanc ng On A I Tam W lh

5404

3 Bedrooms Loc ated On SA 218
5 M les F om Ga I pols 5325 Mo
.. Depost61425614 72

$6500 304 675 195&lt;1

Bu ld ng S tes Some Of Tne P c
es Are (2) 5 Acre 1 acts W th
N ce Mature Tee s S 1 1 500
Each 12 Acres 0 d HouseS te
Well And Sept c S1 4 000 Owner

Help needed for doer process ng
Craw fo rd s G oc er y 30 4 6 75

Mus c Bac kup Eq u pmen t For
S ngles G gs Or Small Combo
Wo•k In Any Style Great Sound'

614 245 5682

Three bedroom home n country
Wh tes H II Ad Au!land one bath
rrgouncl pool 614 992 5067

ATHENS COUNTY Real N ce

Georges Portable Sawm ! don t
hau your logs to the m 1 us! call
304 67§.1957

locally Call 1 800 268 e218

Not $t &lt;00 00
Ony
$39!1 00

256 9350

basement phone 61&lt; 992 2304

Screen Pnnter 614 446 2388
614 446.S985 Ask For Chns.

EXPERIENCED
TRUCK DRIVERS

2 Bedroom s Second A11enue
Gall po s No Pet s Rete ences
De pos t $325tMo • Uti! es 614

Two bedroom hollse w th full

25285

Someone To l ve W1th And Help
Care For Elder l y Lady In Ex
chanQe Fo Room And Board
And Modest Salary For lnforma
I on Call 614 379 25 4 Or 614
446 3568 Aher 6 00 PM

For Sale Console Piano Wanted
Aespons ble Pany To Make Low
Mont~ly Payments On Piano See

2 Bedroo m Basement Gall pol s
C ty l m ts $3 75 Monlh Depos 1 Rooms or r ent week. or month
&amp; Rete ences No Pet s 6 14 446
Sla t ng a $1 20tmo Gall a Hotel
0796Leave Message
6 14 446 9500

Cou nty

$5 25
MOBILE UNIT DRIVER Me gs

Cookwa e
Ret red D nne Pa ty lad~ Ha s
Some Beau! lu 11 Pc 7 P ~ Su
g cal ~ta nless Water ess Sets

Furnished
Rooms
, _ _ _ _ _ _ _..:..__ __

Fa m I es ts Preferred Begmntng

Waned To Buy U se d
Home 6144 460 175

Concrete &amp; Ptast c Sept c Tanks
300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpr ses Jac~son OH
1 BOO 53 7 9528

450

P e School Ch ldren and TheH

ASSISTANT COOl&lt; Gall a Coun
ty 1 Full T me Ass slant Cook
App cants Mus! Have a H•gh
School 0 ploma
P elerence
G \len to Appl cants W lh Pr or
Food Serv ce Expe ence Pre
ler ed Beg nn ng Rate of Pay

For Rent In Pont Pleasant Unfur
n shed Apa tment Spac ous And
Au act ... e Must Have Relerenc
es &amp; Depos t Cal Alter 6 00 PM

614 446 0041

c a e Degree n Early Ch ldhood

$6 00

Clo11ng Bus ness Oct 2Sth W II
cons1der reasonable oilers on all
or pa ts ol stock Furn 1ure toys
bOoks smau appl ances cloth ng
!Ires wheels bumpers hubcaps
b cycles racks etc Uason Flea
Ma ket 304 773 6025 or 304
458 1875

Bluish white
metal
5 Sharp flavor
9 Total
12 Seed cover
13 Troptcal tree
14 Gls club
15 MediOCre
16 Robins food
18 Dancers

40 Female
sandpiper
41 Kin of mono
42 Type of pasta
45 Expurgation
49 ActresaRosselllnl
52 Urge
53 Stroke
54 Tackle
55 Poems
56 Body of water
57 Atlanta arena
58 Swelling

today but you mrght have to assert your
I sell a tr!lle more than usual In developments where you must be strong try to
also show tact
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-J•n 10) In deh
cate career srtua11ons today proper 11m
saturday Oct 21 t995
mg w111 prove extremely mportent II you
You could be qurte fortunate rn the year ptay your trumR card at the nght moment
ahead concermng valued relat1onshrps a large wm wrll be poss1ble
When you establtsh alltances they II be AQUARIUS (J1n 20-Feb 19) You are a
of an endunng nature
k1nd and senSitive person and thrs some
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) Your mental trmes leads others to belt~ve they can
atlnbutes and powers ol concentrauon take advantage of you Bull10s will get a
may seem quite strong today Devote b1g surpnse today
your efforts to endeavors that challenge PISCES (Feb 20-Mar'ch 20) Remarn
your Imagination Trymg to patch up a watchful for an opportun1ty today that
broken romance? The Astro Graph could make It poss1ble tor you to part1c
Matchmaker can help you understand 1pate tn something successful that aneth

I

er already has gorng
ARIES (March 21 Aprtl19) For your own
peace of mrnd adopl a phliosophrcal anr
tude today It wrll guard you agaonst get
t ng uptrght ~ven when persons or condr
trons move agarnst you
TAURUS (April 20 May 20) A JOtnt
endeavor you re presently rnvolved rn
shows good probab hires tor success rn
the long run even though condrl!ons
appear crrttcal now
GEMINI (M1y 21-June 20) Measures can
be taken today to strengthen the bonds m
one of your more s gnrhcant relat10n&amp;h1ps
h Will be up to you to cto the 1ntt1al spade
work
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Persons
who dishke you may go out of th01r way
to ass1st you today Do not take their
kindness lor granted Make sure to prop
erl)i acknowledge rt
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) ThiS Will be 8
good day to take a break ~ you re caught
up with your raspons1bllltres and dulles
Do something tun that Includes several

friends
VIROO (Aug 23-Sepl 22) You m1ghl
have a pleasant surpnse today as two s~
uat1ons that lacked promise and luster
suddenly show stlmngs of strength

My Sister 1n law nagged my brother about chores One
mommg he retorted If I were allowed to do everythmg
I would probably do NOTHING I

�.,.,... .. "',..

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. Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel
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Friday, October 20, 1995

,. one-clay
excursion:
Along W.Va.'s
Midland Trail
Featured on page C-1

High school football results

•81
Details

Farm Bureau's annual meeting. Page 01

on Page A2

•

nnts
A Multimedia Inc., Newspaper

Stop by and pick up a
FREE Co""boy White cap!

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GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis area residents filed fonnal
notice Friday with the Producers Livestock Association of ·
Columbus that they will file suit in federal court against
the company if it continues to build its proposed stockyard
at the Gallia County Fairgrounds without water pollution
control permits.
A coalition of reSidents 111 the area took the action after
the company refused to supply them with infonnation
establishing its compliance with the federal Clean Water
Act.
The company intends to build a stockyard within sight
and smell of a long-standing residential subdivision immediately outside the Gallipolis city limits, the coalition
charges.
Some local families say they are concerned about water

Meigs commis$ion
backs down on
sale of infirmary

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RIPLEY
• 372-2901 • 372-9511
.• 342-7571

Sal•smen: Bill """''"
. , Donnie Catalano,
Brian
: l'

Scarberry,
Gabrltsch,

By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - The Meigs County Board of
Commissioners backed down Friday afternoon
from its effort to auction the county home.
In front of approximately 40 county home
supporters in the Meigs County Common Pleas
Courtroom. commission Vice-president Janet
Tackett moved that the board cancel auctioning the county home on Nov. 10 and put the
issue before voters at the first possible opportunity .
Commissioner Robert Hartenbach seconded
the motion with all three commissioners, including commission President Fred Hoffman.
MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONERS were trapped In a two-and-a-half hour battle Friday, facing a
approving the motion.
About three weeks ago. the board had pro- continuous barrage ol emotional appeals and questions !rom supporters of the county home.
posed selling the infinnary in a bid msecureJhe future of Veterans Memorial said ' You don' t have a right to sell it'."
m
which is now enrolled in a partnership with Holzer
"The(re right," he added .
Medical Center. Commissioners said
Although county home supporters would have preferred the entire issue
a new clinic would be buill at the be rejected, they were confident they would be able to prevail if the fate of
infinnary site adjacent to the hospital the home is ever put into voters' hands.
producing jobs along with additional
Petitions containing between 2,000 and 3,000 signatures of people
work for the hospital.
supporting the infinnary were presented to the commission; however, the
However. Friday. commissioners as-yet-unnamed committee is not taking its success for granted.
weretrappedinatwo-and-a-halfhour
"We're having meetings and organizing on gelling voters out to vote on
battle, facing a continuous barrage of the infinnary," said Mary Donna Davis ofMinersville. one of the more vocal
emotional appeals and questions from supporters of the county home.
county home supporters.
"We wanted to keep the grounds and building as it is," she said. "Our job
Outside the courthouse. another 40 is to recruit the public to go out and vote for it."
or SO protesters showed their solidarThe county home employs five ~ople and houses 12 residents.
ity by displaying signs supponing the
Meanwhile. the committee may now try to help the hospital.
"We will approach the hospital to see if there is anything we can do," said
infinnary or calling for the defeat of
commission members in future elec- Davis. "We will have to deal with Holzer Medical Center. We only have two
lions.
more years to see if (the hospital) is going to stay."
Early in the meeting, Hartenbach
"The committee is going to more-or-less stay together to help other
moved that the decision to sell the groups in the county," she said.
infinnary be entirely rescinded. The
The next step for the commission is to continue to try to assist Veterans
OUTSIDE THE
motion
died
due
to
a
lack
of
a
second
•
Memorial
Hospital.
.
40 to 5() protestensdlsplayed signs
"We've put a lot of thought into this," said Tackett. "We are very
supporting the Infirmary or calling from Hoffman or Tackell.
for the de1eat of commission mem- "Politics never changed my mind," concerned we are goi,ng to lose our local hospital... The people of the county
said Hartenbach. "People !talked to · have to support local doctors and the hospital," she said.
bers In future elections.

Jobless rate up slightly
News capsules
~~
in Gallia, steady in Meigs
GALLIPOLIS - The unemployment rate rose slightly in Galli a County and
held
· County during
, according to infonnation
released Friday by the Ohio
BureauofEmploymentServices.
OBES figures show the
Gallia rate increased 0.2
percent - from 7.2 percent
to 7.4 percent - between
August and September;
while in Meigs county, the
rate held at 9.6 percent.
According to the OBES,
1,000 members ofGallia' s
13,800 member workforce
were unemployed. In Meigs
County, 800ofthecounty' s
8,500 labor force were jobless.
Locally,the GallipolisQffice of OBES - which
serves Gallia and Meigs
counties - processed 163
new and additional claims
forunemploymentcompensatlon durin!!.September.
Qrer 400 Jtlbseekers, including 127 first-lime registrants, visited the job service section of the Gallipolis
office during the month. according to Tom White, office manager.
.
A wide variety of job skills was reported by new registrants, ranging from
construction laborer to orthopedic assistant, and from drywall finisher to
college professor.
.
Twenty-four employers placed job orders for 59 openings. according to
White. Skills sought by employers during the month included deliverers, fast
food workers, mechanics, HV AC installer/servicers, receptionists and daycare
Continued on page A2

•
:I

•, •, .· ·' •

"With all the

USDA announces Gallia, Meigs
farmers eligible for disaster loans

WASHINGTON (AP) - Farmers In 42 Ohio counties
will be ellgl~le for emergency loane to help them recover
from June e ff(!Odlng, the Agrll:ulture Department announced Friday.
Agriculture Secratery Dan Glickman approved dlaaster status for Adame, Brown, Butler, Gallls, Knox, Madison, Pike, POI'IIge and Roaa countlee.
Farmens In 33 adjacent countlee also qualify for the
emergency loans If they hava suffered at least a 30
pen:ent loaa of production, USDA aald. ,
Thoaa counties ara Ashland, Champaign, Clark,
Clermont, Clinton, CCI8hocton, CUyahoga, Delaware,
Fayette, Franldln, Geauga, G,_, Hamllton, Highland,
Hocklng,Holqa,Jacbon,Lawrence,Licldng,Mahonlng,
Uelga, llontgomefy, Momlw, Plckaway, Preble, Richland,
Scioto, Stark, SUnvnlt, Trumbull, Union, VInton and

Warren• .
The announcement. of the dtaaatar declaration lncludild a comment from Preelclent Clinton calling the
· dealgnatlon "another ~xamplt of thla act.mlnlatratlon'a
raaponw .to the urgent needa '!Which reeuH from unexpectlld
i Theannounclllllnt-!liadllnW81hlngtonuCIInton
lll'rlVId In Columbw, Ohio; ~ a lllldM!It ICOIIOIIIIc

.,.,..,.1 -.-..--· .

conftNuc...
·
• •'
'

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"We feel that the company left us with no
choice ... If they can back
up their claim that they
don't need a permit, why
won't they share their
proof with the neighborhood?"

confli ctin g 'tate me nts made by

the company and
it ~

pollution that would be caused by animal manure running
The group filed a ' 60 day notice" under the Clli zen suit
off the site.
provisions of the federal Clean Water Act. Federal law
The stockyard, they say . is to be buill on the top of a hill allows citizens to enforce its provi sions by filing sutt in
with a creek at its base - "a situallon likely to create water federal district court. but first requires citizens to place the
pollution which would quickly enter the Ohio River im- company and the slate and federal EPA's on notice of the
mediately downstream."
claimed violation and give them 60 days to come into
· The company has not applied for any water pollution compliance before the court action can be filed
c:ontrol permits and has claimed it is exempt from federal
The notice was filed on the behalf of area residents Ellen
and state permilling requirements, they charge.
Saunders and Ralph Johnston by anomey Christopher
On September 28. area residents requested that the Regan of the Wellston finn of Oths, Heiser, Regan &amp;
company obtain a permit or provide them with infonna- Miller and Columbus auomey Richard Sahli.
tion backing up their exemption claim.
"We feel that the company left us with no choice," said
The company responded on October 4 with a brief leller Ellen Saunders. "If they can back up their claim that they
that merely repeated the claim of exemption while refus- don ., need a permit, why won 'tthey share their proof with
the neighborhood?"
ing to supply infonnation establishing the basis for it.

From auction bloc·k to ballot box:

Vol. 30, No. 37

·

Stockyard opponents notify
PLA of intent to bring suit

\

'89 LINCOLN TOWN CAR

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasant· October 22; 1995

:-.uppurters in

the County Agri cultural Society
about the size of
thi s stoc kyard
and how it will
operate . it now
looks like only a
Stockyard opponent
judge can get the
Ellen Saunders
real fach ."
Tlte Gallia County Agricultural Society oversees the
operati on of the Fairground s and has proposed to lease a
porlton of it to the Produce" Livestock A&lt;'ociati on to
build the stockyard .
Saunders al so said that so farthe state EPA has not been
able to help her neighbors acquire the relevant facts.
"Although the company claims it has convinced the
Ohio EPA that it doesn't need a permit. there is nothing in
the Agency' s files that show s a basis for such a decision,"
Saunders said. "which was why the aeighborhood asked
Continued on page A2

City foresees •gs
carry-over budget
of nearly $400,000
GALLIPOLIS - Spurred by a more aggressive collection of income taxe&lt;
and revenue generated from other sources. the city of Gallipolis may be facing
its healthiest general fund carryover in several years.
And while that 's good news in the face of the rising cost of operating loca,l
government. City Manager Matthew Coppler warned that the projected
$400.000 balance expected for the end ofthis year is not enough to meet all of
the city' s maintenance proj ects.
"The thing you have to watch is, you nevefcan have enough in the carryover,
because that· s your contingency fund." he said. 'T d be more comfortable if the
carryover were upwards of $750,000 to $1 million, because the emergencies
can get you."
But with available fund s this year, the city has addressed needed infrastructure repairs, ran ging from work on the slip-prone Hedgewood Drive to shoring
up collapsing sewer trenches.
With the City Commi &lt;Sion's ap• City manager credproval . $55.000 will be ex pended on
its aggressive income
resurfacing projects, with more schedtax collection, other revuled in the coming years.
"A number of projects have been enue sources, for proable to be funded through the general
jected balance in '95
fund," Coppler explained. "We try to budget.
meet a lot of need. but it will come to
a point where the bigger roads will have to be paved."
Additionally ,the city is still weighing the possible expenditure for a new city
building. which could potentially eat up more than $70,000 per month, while
new trucks are needed for the fire department.
"There's a hundred thin gs you can do, but once we reach a comfortable
plateau with the carryover, we will have to look at these things." Copplersaid.
"But you have to be careful - anymore. $100.000 could be spent very
quickly."
Coppler said increased emphasis on collecting mcome taxes since Tax
Administrator Pat Jell assumed control of the tax offi ce in April 1994 has
resulted in approximately $154.000 more take!\ in so far thi s year. an increase
of 17 percent over 1993's collections and a significant jump from th e
additional $26,000 the city took in during 1992.
Properly. personal and tangible taxes have also accounted for the improved
balance, Coppler said, as has increased state aid and costs from the municipal
court, where State Highway Patrol enforcement ·has brought in more money
through payment of fines.
"Of course, with more of a balance in the general fund, the interest earned
is increasing," he said. "Also. over the past few years, the city has been more
conservative in budgeting. and because of that philosophyand the increase
Continued on page A2

GOOD MORNING
I

Rio Grande's fall •gs
enrollment at 2,057
RIO GRANDE - Fall 1995 enrollment at
Ohio's47 private, non-profit colleges and universities increased for the IOth consecutive year
from 1994's enrollment figures . the Association
oflndej)(!ndent Colleges and Universities of Ohio
reports.
Preliminary total headcount, including full and part-time students earning undergraduate
through professional degrees, is 110.202- a net
gain of 471 students. according to the association.
Twenty-six AICUO members experienced in creases in enrollment.
Figures released last week by the University of
Rio Grande show the institution ' s total headcount
enrollment for the year at2.057 (number reflects
enrollment at both the private university and the
public community college). Rio Grande's total
fall 1994 enrollment was reported at 2,024.
In its 1995 Fact File Update, AICUO reports
that during 1994, 70 percent of all Ohio private
college undergraduates received some fonn of
financi al aid, with the average aid package reponed at $8,427 .

Today's Times-Sentinel
18 Sections - I 92 Pages
Business
Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Obituaries
Sports
Along the River
Weather

Dl
C3&amp;5
D3-7
Insert
A4
A3
A6
Bl-8
Cl
A2

Columns
Jack Anderson
BobHoeOich
JimSands
Dorothy Sayre

A4
~

Q
~

C 199!. Obtt Valley Publi~ hlna Co.

Chemicai leaks at Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant; No injuries reported
PIKETON, Ohio (AP) - No injuries were reported at the Portsmouth
Gaseous Diffusion Plant, where a chemical used to enrich uranium was
released for the second time in five months.
An audible warning system went off at8:37 a.m. Friday, indicating to an
·employee doing routine maintenance that it detected uranium hexaflouride
in the area, spokeswoman Barbara Baker said.
The worker saw a whisp of smoke and was taken with five other workers
to the plant's medical center as a precaution. A small amount of contamina- ·
I

lion was detected on an employee's overalls, but none_ of the workers got the
chemical on their skin. the company said.
Workers in other parts of the bui Iding were not evacuated because they
were not in danger. Ms. Baker said.
Investigators tightened a valve fitting and declared the area safe at II a.m.
Less than one gram of the chemical was released.
An engineering team was investigating the possibility of a valve problem.
she said.

•

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