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                  <text>Page-12-Ttie Dally Sentinel

Raging floodwaters
drag 7 to their deaths
AM ERICUS , Ga. (AP) - Raging floodwaters turned towns into
" bnds, swept people to their death s before helpless witnesses and
ld t S()O ,OOO people wnhoul safe drinking water in central and
~n utlwrn (~eorg iJ .

Sew n people were swal lowed by floodwaters Wednesday near
t\m cncus, whi ch got 23 tnches of rain in less than 24 hours, said
Sumler Count y ,Coroner Lynwood McClung. At least 13 deaths over
the past Lhrce da ys have· lxx:n blamed on flooding caused by heavy
rams from the re mnants of Tropical Stomt Alberto.
The lloods forced hundred.s of peop le from their homes. washed
uut " ""'' and bridge s and sent flash flood s racing across the sodden
c:trth . (;o, . Zcll Mtlkr dec lared 30 of the state's 159 cou nti es disaster ,u\·as More min was CX Jll'ctcd toda y.
D~u n a gl' to go \' Crnmcnl -0\\'ncd stru ctures such as water planLS,
nwl s :tnLI hridges was estimated at S'lR million. There was no csli matl' l&lt;lr hlllll CS nr bus messe s.
In Amni,· us, "' sout hwest Georg ia, helpless bystanders watc hed
a sm:an11n g woman clutchmg a baby slip into the rumbling Town
C' fl·ck.
Tit,· hmlg,· had

wash,:d out , and the woman stood '~tOp her
ca r as 11 ' lowly slid down the bank . She and her child were still
rm-.s mt: today.
" rt was ltkc the Atlanuc Ocean ," said Catherine Andrew, who
watched wtth several others from across the creek . She said a man
m another car al so was swept away .
"Pct&gt;pk arc wandering around aimlessly," Americus Fire Ch ief
Steve ~ l o re n a. " In a few days real it y wi ll set in."
Mor,' no " '"' ft ve people &lt;!t ed when their cars were swept off
bridges. li e 'predi cted that fi ve to 10 more bod ies would be found
JU S!

wh en th e w :..~ tc rs recede.

" We' re sort of ltke an island," sate! Dean Whitaker, a state
troop,·r at the Americ us barracks.
.
Ah&lt;Hll 76 miles sou theast of AtlanL1, the Ocm ulgcc Rtvcr overflow ed its banks 'md rolled down interstates 75 and 16 into Macon.
Water nn the highway s was 4 feet deep in places.
The 30-foot-tall earthen levee protecting the city of 107,000 was
br eached Wednesday night. Prisoners and volunteers worked
overni ght to rcmforcc the mile-long levee with sandbags.
As wa ter llouJcu 40 bl ocks of the central Georgia city, hundreds
of people !leu frqm their homes and up to 6 feet of water flowed
into sorn c businesses.
" You can watch it ri se. You can go down a street and then when
you come back up it , it'll be flooded," sa id Connie Howard.

Jury convicts
family friend
in abuse case
RIVERHEAD, N.Y. (AP) - It
took a JUry just 1-1/2 hours to convi ct a family friend of sex ually
abusing Katie Beers, the httle gul
held in an underground bunker for
16 days by anotltcr family friend.
The jurors ignored defense argumcnLs that Katie' s testimony about
abuse hy Sal lnghillcri, the husband"
of her godmother, was "based on
the memory of a child who went
through an extre mely traumatiC
experie nce."
The lnghillcri case is not related
10 the 1992 kidnapping hy John
Espo sit o, who held Katie for 16
days in a cell he had butlt for her
under his garage. He pleaded guilty
June 17 to kidnapping and will be
sentenced July 26.
lngh illcri, 4 1, was found guilty
Tuesday of two counts each of sexual abuse and of endangering the
we lfare of a child. He remained in
jail thi s moming in lieu of $10,000
bail.
He cou ld face up to 14 years in
jai l when he is se ntenced Aug. 9.
Hts auorney, Thomas Klei, said he
planned to appeal. .
. . .
Kati e. now II. •s thnvmg m the
home of an unidentified foster family . Suffolk County District Attorney Jam es Caucrson said he spoke
wi th her by telephone after the verdict, sum moning her from a netghbor's sw imming pool.
Katie replied, " I like it ," when
told of the vcrdict ' and "Good,"
when told lng hill eri was in jail ,
Catterson sa id.
Ingh ill eri was charged with
abusing Katie in April and December of 1991, when she was 8 years
old.

O.J. 's friend
set to return
to L.A. court
LOS ANGELES (AP) - AI
"A.C." Cowlings is expected back
in cou rt Jul y 15 to learn whether
prosecutors wi ll press charges
against htm for helpmg hts fnend
OJ. Simpson elude police.
Cowlings drove the white Ford
Bronco seen by millions of people
on national TV during a 60-mile
police chase J unc 17. Simp son
cowered in the back, holdmg a gun
to his head at times.
Simpson fl ed after learning that
he was about to be charged with
murdering his ex-w ife and a friend
of hers.
After the chase ended in Simp·
so n 's drivc't"ay, Cowlings was
arrested for investigation of aiding
Simpson's escape and freed on
$250,000 bai L
Simpson attorney Robert
Shapiro has said Simpson planned
10 go 10 hi s ex- wife's grave and
commit su icid e, but Cowhngs
talked him out of it.
When contacted by telephone at
his Pacific Palisades home, Cowlings refused to answer questions
and hung up. His lawyer did not
return calls Wednesday.
Simpso n and Cowlings are
childhood friends wHo played college and pro football together.
Cowlings has made at least one
public appearance since the chase.
A week after the incident, he
attended a banquet for the adult
fi Im industry and was pho tographed dancing with a porn
actress.

Thursday, July 7, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Mountain wildfire kills 11 firefighters
GLENWOOD SPRINGS, Colo.
(AP) - A swtft wi ldfire whipped
by high winds roared over a steep
mou nl1in side, trapping 50 ftrefig hters . Eleven were killed and three
were mi ss ing today in one of the
country's deadliest such disasters .
Th e firefighters were trapped
Wednesday about 7, 000 feet up the
rugged slope of Storm Kin g Moun tain , wh ere the rough terram left
them no place UJ flee, said Garfield
County Unuershenff Levy Burris.
The survivor s esc ap ed tn
humcd-over ground where the fire
could not take hold , then strJggled
out wh en the dange r pass ed, Gov.
Roy Romer said at a new s confer-

enc e:.

"They have counted II bodies
at tht s point, " Romer said. "At
daybreak there wi ll be a helicopter
search for the three still mi ssing.''
Rom er cal led for an mvcs ti gation .to Llctcrminc why so many

lives were lost. Wea ther forec asters
had predicted hi gh winds. but firefighters were left in the fi clu .
A G lenwood Sp rin gs fire
department uispatchcr and a gov ernm ent source who spoke on condtltnn nf anonymi ty said 13 rircfi g~ t crs were dead , and an earli er
report from th e Garfield Cou nty
sheriff's office sa id 34 firefighters
were mi ssin g. The discrepancies
couldn't immediately be explained.
Fire officia ls said some of the
victims apparently had tried to
cltmh into their fircsh eltcrs, shin y
blankets used as shields during
flarcups.
The lightnmg-sparked fire began
Sunday, fiv e miles west of Glenwood Springs. The mountain resort
of 6,000 people is betwee n Aspen

and Vai l ·about 180 miles west of
Denver.
The ftre had lxx:n confined to 50
acres until high winds fanned it out
of control Wednesday afternoon.
Within fi\'C hours, it grew to 2,000
acre s.
Thi s morning, firefighters were
following instru ctions to monitor
the blaze, not fight it, unless it
threatened houses.
When the fire came within 300
yards of a subdivision of 50 homes,
many rcstdents fled . Others were
still there at midnight, dousing their
hou se s wi th wa ter from ~arden
hoses and waiting to sec tf they
·would make it.
''I'm going to wait until the last
minute, ' ' Ben Tipton said. "I' ll
keep my motorcycle pointed downhi ll."
The three mjurcd firefighters
were taken to Valley Vtew Hospi tal in Glenwood Springs, a hospital
spokeswoman said. One was treated fo r smoke inh alation, one for
burn s, and one wa s trea ted and
released.
The dead. who were not identi fied, were be lieved to be from fedem I agencies. The state forest service and scveml local fire dcpanmen ts also had crews at the scene.
In August 1937, 17 firefighters
were killed battling a forest fire 15
mtlcs cast of Yellowstone National
Park in Wyoming.
The National Interagency Fire
Center in Boise, Idaho , sa id
Wednesday that ftrcs in nine western states had sco rched about
150,000 acres of forest, bru sh and
grassland . More than 30 homes and
outbuildings have been destroyed,
said spokeswoman Pat Entwi stle.

About 7,000 firefighters, 17 5
fire engines, 38 helicopters and 32
air tankers were on the fire hnes m
Arizona, New Mexi co, Colorado,
Wroming, Montana, Idaho, Utah,
Nevada and California.
• In Arizona. firefighters battled
a 10,450-acre ftrc west of th e
Grand Canyon; a 3,500-acrc fire in
the Chiricahua Mountains; and four
fires ncar Tucson. A spate of 21
fires that began last week ha s
burned 53,3 18 acres.
• In Utah, eight fires burning
across grass·· and sta nds ol cedar
about 50 miles west of Salt Lake

City had scorched some 28,400
acres: The fight continued against
desert fires spreading over more
tltan 14,000 acres in the northwestem part of the state.
• A series of li gh tn ing-ca used
fires have burned more than 75,000 .
acres in New Mexico ncar Capitan,
Carlsbad and Roswell.
• In Ca liforn ia, crews fought
back a 19,900-acre blaz.c ncar Palm
Springs that forced the evacuation
of 500 homes, and an II ,000-acrc
fire 60 miles to the north west in the
San Bernardino National Forest.

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•

en tine
Vol. 45, NO. 46

By JOHN CIIALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMilUS - A gtoup of afnucnt school distrtClS agrees wi th Gov .
George Voi novtch that the sL1tc should appeal a Perry County court ruhng
that overturned Ohio 's sy&gt;tcm ot fmancm g educattO~:
The Alliance for Aucquatc School Funumg satd I hursday such a dcct swn was too important lO rely solely on a co mmon pleas cou rt opmton .
"To have a court that represents less than one-half of I percent of the
students in the sta te of Ohio make a deci sion that tmpacts the consmuuon
is inappropriate m our opinion," said Keith Richards, a member of the
group' s executi ve committee.
. .
.
" If it's going to be dec lared unconsutuuonal , the Supreme Co urt IS the
only place that should be detcnmincd,'' he said. .
.
Richards spoke at a news conference as rcacuon contmucd to Judge

Linton Lew is' ruling July I that the stale system for financin g education
was maclcqualc. mequitablc and uncomututlonal.
In related dcvcloprncnL' Thursday:
.
.
• The Ohto Public Expend iture Counctl. a nonpartt san tax Stud y group.
sa id rai sin g per-pupil spend in g leve ls for all dtStn cts up to the st;.He average would cost at least $750 mtllton '" slate and/or local tax "revenu e.
"This would be a major tax increase, and there wo uld still ?~a S6 ,1XXl or
$7,000 gap between the highest and lowest school dtStrt cts, s;uu Donald
Ilcmo, coun cil president.
.
.
. .
• Rep. Michael Shoemaker, D-Boumcvtlle, sa td a btparusan rally was
planned at the Statehouse next week to urge the slate drop tts appeal. and
to ask the Genera l Assembly to immediately stan . ':"ork on solvmg the
problem. Shoemaker is the only legislator who lesultcd agamsl the state
in the Perry Co unt y case.

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OVP News Editor
JACKSON - A state education
official believes the current learning system for students s hould be
revamped to cmphastze sktlls
applicable UJ the futurc workplace.
Dr. Darrell Parks, director of
vocational education for the Ohio
Department of Education, told the
Southeastern Ohio Regional Coun cil's summer meeting Thursday
that without strong academic skills
in mathematics, science, communications and technology, high
school gmduatcs will be "seriously
impaired" when they seck jobs.
The current instructional system
of what he called "!cam, feed back
and forget," designed to elevate
students into higher education, or
the "college mentality," must be
replaced with a "success in living
mentality," he added.
To underline his point, Parks
said only 50 percent of high school
graduates in Ohio go on to college
and only 25 percent actually obtain
a degree.
"If we believe in these facts,
then I think it is incumbent upon us
to raise the question, 'what about
the other 75 percent? ', and what is
it education need s to do to assist
that 75 percent," he noted.
The future worker will have to
utilize knowledge gained in the
schools for a varied number of

The Mctgs Local Iloard of Education htrcd Medical Claim s Service of Co lumbus as th e hea lth
in suran ce ca rri er for di stri c t
employees at th e board 's regular
meeting Thursday ni ght.
The co mpany will administer
the di stric t's self-funded insurance
plan for a start-up fcc of $2,500 ,
"p lained Superi nten den t Bill
Buckley . Since it is a se lf-fund ed
plan . th.c actual annuli cost
depends on the number of claims.
he added .
The board also met with Jud y

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- A federal judge says it will be at
least 30 days before he holds a
hearing to finalize a settlement
between Ravenswood Aluminum
Corp. and 17 I fanner replacement
workers.
U.S. Di strict Judge Charles
Haden said he will not hold the
hearing until all the p~rties are
given at least a month s noocc,
either through a leg~! advertiSe·
mcnt or by telephone calls: . .
In a class-action lawsutt filed m
!992, the replacement workers

LowPrieeOf

•Rent Free Tank

Williams, representing Wtlliams &amp;
Associates In surance of Pomeroy,
to disc uss a health insurance proposal.
In personnel mailers, the board
hired William T. Musser as
cvcntng custodian at Meigs Junior
High School , effec ti ve July 11.
In addition, the board hireu Sara
M. Oxley as IMPA CT teac her at
MJJ-IS on a one-year contract, Scot
F. Gheen as dcvclopmcnt;tlly hand icapped teac her at Bradbury Elementary School on a one -year contract and as assis~mt varst!y foot -

ball coach and head varsity base ball coac h for the 1994-95 school
year , and Jcnif~:r Morton as assis·
tant band direc tor for tltc 1994-95
sc hool year.
In addition UJ Buckley, also presen t were Treasurer Jane Fry,
Boaru President Larry Rupe , Vice
PreSident Randy Humphreys and
board members Roger Abbott, John
Hood and Scott Walton.
Th e board 's nex t mcc ttng is
sc heduled for 7 p.m. on Wednesday, July 27 at the board's central
office in Pomeroy.

Board hires new EHS principal
EDUCATIONAL TALK- Dr. Darrell Parks, right, Ohio's
director of vocational education, discusses issues with Bob E,·ans,
president of the Southeastern Ohio Regional Council at ,the coun cil's summer meeting Thursday. Parks urged a reshapong of !he
educational system lo emphasize skills applicable to the workplace.
tasks in a business community that
is increasingly technology-oriented, Parks explained.
"If business , organized labor
and the community at large create
the standards the educational community is to address - standards
that arc specific and measurable and conduct authentic assessment
of those standards, I will suggest
that good things arc going to hap pen," he said.
" If that were to happen on a
wholesale basis, the schools would
be good, lhc business community

would be satisfied, and job creation
and expansion would increase,"
Parks added.
Such action is critical to continued economic growth in the southem Ohio, which "has everythingwater , land, roads , a strong work
ethic and the educational opportu nttics afforded by the public and
private schools," he continued.
"lf that were brought into sync,
you would enjoy the benefits for
years to come, if the various community leaders come together for a
common mission," Parks said.

RAC, ex-workers reach accord

All Ft~r The

• The Cleveland Board ol Edu calllln dropped a simila r !Jut separat e
lawsuit against the fundin g sy st em tlt:H was set for a November tnal. The
board s:llll it had spe nt more than S333.QC¥) on the lawsuit since tl was
filed in 1991. and would nc,·d another S500.000 to prepare for In a! " In
ltgh t of the dt strict's ftnanc"tl conchlions, we diun ' t belt eve that wou ld be
prudent ," saiu Lawre nce Lum pki n, boaru president.
The all iancc is made up of about oO of the state· s 612 dlStrtc Ls. Aboul
500 dtstricts arc memba s of the Ohio Coalttion for Equtty &amp; Adequacy
of School Funding, the' group that filed tltc Perry Count y lawsutt.
Richards is superin tendent of Olen tangy schools in Delaware County,
a diStrict with abo vc-a,·cragc real cs t;,ne val ues. Identical tax rates would
generat e more mone y there than di stricts with less valuable property .
Alliance distril'ls worry lltat legislators may try to take more of their
money for rc&lt;listn buuon !rom a central pool among poorer districts.

Employee insurance carrier
approved by Meigs Board

Hy KEVIN KELLY

Over 40 Years Of Dependable Servite

contended their dismissals were
illegal because Ravenswood Alu minum classified them as permanent employees.
The company hired more than
I ,000 non-union workers to run its
Jackson County plant during a 20month labor dispute with the United States Steelworkers. The
replacement workers were fired
when Ravenswood Aluminum and
the union agreed to a co ntract in
June 1992.
"We prctty well satisfied the
judge . We were close enough to
meeting his requirements for settle-

ment that he called the trial off,"
said Fred Holroyd of Charlcston,,a
lawyer for the workers.
'
Some details of the settlement
arc incomplete , Holroyd said. For
example, Raven swood agreed to
pay a sum "in the millions ," bul an
exact figure probably won't be
reached until nex t week , Holroyd
said.
Ravenswood
Aluminum
spokesman Pat Gallagher declined
to discuss the deal. The company's
lawyer in the case, Ricklin Brown
of Charleston, did not immediately
return a phone message Thursday .

Clayton Butler has been hired as
Eastern High School principal on a
two-year contract.
Action on the employment of
Butler, who has been principal at
the Switzerland of Ohio Schools Ill
Monroe County, was taken at a
special session of the Eastern Local
Board of Education Tuesday night.
Butler has been in sc hool
administration since I% I and prior
to going to the Switzerland district
was principal. al Fort Frye Htgh
School. He began his teaching
career in 1958.

In ot her personnel matters, the
board accepted the resignati on of
Debbie Wcbef as head teacher at
Ri verview Elementary and the res ignation of Amy Allison as a developmentally handicapped teacher at
Chester Elementary School.
Approval was gtvc n to Ute transfer of Rebe cca Edward s from a
teaching po sition at the Eastern
Junior High School to th e fifth
grade at Tuppers Plains Elementary .
A proposal from Dennis Park

Construction to repair and replace
the sidewa lk in front of th e high
school, and also to complete some
tile work. was accepted by the
board.
Current maintenan ce projects
being carried out in the buildings of
the di strict were di sc ussed by the
board.
Attending the meeting were Ray
Karr, president; Jim Smith, vice
president; and board members Greg
Bailey, Ron Eastman and Mike
Mar~n.

Syracuse~cil

mulls rates
for out-of-village water us,rs
By KATHRYN CROW
Sentinel Correspondent
Syracuse Village Council was
informed Thursday night oy members of the Syrncuse :&gt;oard of Public Affairs that water meters have
been installed at the residences of
those customers who live outside
the corporation limits, but use
Syracuse water.
Board members Gordon Winebrenner and Larry Ebersbach met
with council 10 discuss water rates
for those customers.
'
Rates proposed by the board
were discussed at length by counctl
and the board members, with no
decision being made at the meet ing. Arrangements were made for
Council members to meet w1th the
board on Monday for further discussion and 10 establish rates for

those out-of-village customers.
sa ry stree t signs. He was also
Malcolm Guinther reported to authprizcd to proceed with necescouncil that lxx:ausc of some work sary res troom repair.
done by a village contractor, Home
The mayor' s report showed
Creek Enterprises, hi s vehicle was rece ipts of $968.
damaged.
·
Janice Lawson, clerk-treasurer,
Malcolm claimed that he hit a reponed balances in various funds
ditch created by the work at Cherry as follows ; general fund,
Street and Route 124 , resulting in S 16,392.77; street construction,
the damage. The matter was tabled $24,459.98; htghway, $7 ,041.82;
for further consideration.
fire department, $10,817.16; water
A 1995 budget of $208,090 was department , $10.021.34; pool,
approved by council.
$11,825.14; guaranty meter,
It was reported that work on a $2,75 148; and cemetery, $82.44.
ditch on Worch ester Street will
In executive sess ion. council
begm soon.
discussed several legal matters with
At the request of Councilman Village Solicitor I. Carson Crow.
Larry Lavender, Scott Walton was
Attending were Mayor James
given permission to rent the pool Papc, Clerk-treasurer Law son,
for scuba diving instruction.
council members Lavender, Dennis
Council heard complaints on Wolfe, Bill Roush, Shaffer, and
cable service reception, and autho- Kathryn Crow; and Police Officer
rized Don Shaffer to order neccs- Ryan Hall.

Judge approves disputed Simpson evidence
WitH APPROVED CREDit

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, July 8, 1994

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State vo-ed director
tells·SEORC learning
system must change

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WHAT HE SAW- Brian "Kato" Kaelin, a friend of O.J.
Simpson's ex·wife who Uved In Simpson's guest house, used a diagram ot Simpson's Brentwood mansion to deserlbe what he saw
tile nlglat Nk:ole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman were killed.
Kaelin testlned during a preliminary hearing for Simpson Thursday in Los Angeles. (AP)

••

By LINDA DEUTSCH
Ap Special Correspondent
LOS ANGELES - With a preliminary hearing ncar conclusion,
prosecutors must directly link O.J.
Simpson to two l:tllmgs 10 support
holding him for trial. Blood analysis may be their key.
"We're not at the end, but we 're
getting close," said Loyola University Law School Professor Launc
Levenson. ''What they have to put
on now is blood typing and the
coroner 10 tell us about the wounds
and how the killing took place.''
Levenson a former prosecutor,
said the co~ner also could link a
knife Simpson bought 10 wounds
on his ex-wife and her fnend.
"They have put on fairly strong
circumsiantial evidence," she satd.
"Now they have 10 get down to
hard physical evidence."
Some of that physical evidence
will be allowed even though dctec·
tives didn't have a warrant when
they found il at Simpson's estate,
MuQicipal Judge Kathleen

Kennedy -Powell ruled Titursday.
The defense had sought to bar a
bloody right-hand glove found on
the estate, blood spots in the driveway and a blood spot on the handle
of Simpson's Ford Bronco. A lefthand glove that appeared to match
the one found at the estate was
recovered at the crime scene.
Simpson, 46, is accused of murdering Nicole Brown Simpson, 35,
and Ronald Goldman, 25, on June
12 outside Ms. Simpson's condominium. Tite preliminary hearing is
to dctennine whether he will stand
trial.
On Thursday, Detective Tom
Lange testified that five droplets of
blood at the crime scene failed to
match the blood of tbe victims. A
police expert on blood evidence
was preparing 10 explain how he
compared the blood of Simpson
and the victims to the droplets
when court recessed for the day ,
If Simpson's blood matches the
droplets, prosecutors could argue
that he cut himself fi~hting with the

victims, trailed bloOd mi his way
home and dropped the bloody
glove at his estate.
Simpson had a cut on his left
middle finger when he returned to
Los Angeles the morning after the
killin gs. He said he cut it on a
drinking glass in his Chicago hotel
room when he received news of the
deaths.
The lead investigatnr, Detective
Philip Vannatter, acknowledged
under cross-examination that there
were no cuts on the left glove to
match those on Simpson's hand.
But he said the gloves could have
lxx:n dropped during the struggle.
Vannatter testified that he
believes the killer lost the lcfl glove
at the crime scene and that the right
,lllove was dropped at the estate.
· A witness who lived in Simpson's guest house testified earlier
that he heard thumps the night of
the slayings in the area where
detectives found the glove the next
morning. Vannauer said he though
the glove was dropped by the per-

•

son who made the thumps.
Levenson said prosecutors may
theorize that Simpson scaled a
fence, bumped into the guest house
and dropped the glove in his haste
to return home and be ready for a
I 0:45 p.m. limousine ride to the
airport. A trace of blood was found
on top of the fence, according to a
search warrant affidavit.
Simpson left for Chicago before
the bodies were found. His lawyers
suggested Thursday that someone
clse could have dropped or thrown
the bloody glove on a pathway.
"The defense strategy seems 10
be to throw out any kind of doubt
and hope it stick~,'' said Levenson.
In their motion to suppress the
evidence, defen se lawyers said
police violated Simpson's constitutional rights by scaling hi s wall
without a warrant
But Kennedy-Powell said police
clearly were trying to notify Simpson of his ex-wife's death and
ensure the safety of those inside.

�Commentary
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF T HE MEIGS -MASON AREA

~MULTIMEDIA, INC
ROBERT l. W!N GI:T r
Puhlish&lt;r

G• n•nli

1\ I,\ R G,\ KET I. Etn: W

Cuntrulkr

1\lana~ rr

r\ MI. MOE. R o f The Assou atc d PH:~ -. lnL1nJ D..ul )
the Ame n . an :Sews paper Pub!J shcr A ;soc La lJ\111

l ' n: \ ~ i\ s~o natJO n

an d

Ll. rt I. RS or Ol't NION • rc we lc o me lnCJ should oc l" s than 300
wo rds long All let ten :uc su bJe&lt;.:t to cdlttn g and mu \t be s1gncd wtlh name .
addr c ~s an d u:lcphom: numhc r No un s1gncd lc th:r.. wdl be puhh'&gt; hl.'d Le tt ers
should t'IC 1n good t..lste add ressmg tss ucs not pasonJit ttc'

Letters to the editor
ACS gearing up for annual fundraiser
Dear Editor,
The Mcrgs Co unty Iloard of the
1\ mencan C an c~ r '\oc rcty rs makrng plans for JlS annLJJI coumywrdc
door-to -door dnvc to rai se fund s
for pro vrdmg servr ces rn Mer gs
Count y and to ard rn res earch
efforts so that som e da} we can
say, "cancer has been crndrcated "
Toda y we no longer ha;c the
outbreak s of polio , smallpox and
other dread dr scascs we once had .
ThiS IS due \0 dediCated SCICnllSIS
and researchers, but these persons
cannot do thcrr work unless you
and I support therr efforts The
government supports cancer
research, but to a smaller extent
compared with other causes
i am sure each of us m Mcrgs
Count y has bee~ touched by cancer
m some way . Swustrcs show one rn
every four persons wril have cancer
- thrs could be you, a loved famr ly member, a close fncnd or ncrghbor
Each year there arc more and

WA SHI NG TON - Sen. Wendell Ford , D-Ky, has grv en new
mcanrng to the phrase "ovcmrght
dclr vcry ."
Unrt cd Parce l Scrvrce recent ly
told Ford that 11 abso lutely. posr trYely needed a lcgJSiause lavor to
kee p pace With rrv al Fede ral
Ex press Ford - the wil y. old deal makcr - delr vc red
Ju st before nudnr ght on Jun e 16,
Ford !.I t ked a truckrn g pros " "'n
onto. an .urport bill Crrt rcs ) 3)
Ford s efforts wrll lead to a wrnd tall for large wmpanr es, lik e UPS
ami FcdEx , at the ex pense of small
lmn s.
The late-nr ght vorcc vote on the
prov rsron was ~re lost 111 '' scrrcs of
man e uvers Fo rd und ert oo k for
UPS. who se PAC has contrrbuted
over Sl .mr_llr on to v_anous members
of Congress th iS ye.IJ" - more than
any other corporate PI\C rn Amen
C.! Amrd th e rece nt clamor .1 hout
co ngrcss ron.tl rclor m, one so ur,c
lamrlrar wrth th rs c.rse call s 11 · ' 3
pcrfed exampl e ol how the msrdc
~.1m c IS strll bcrn g pl.r)ed "
fl.llk rll 1991. th e Nrnth US

C rr c urt Co urt ol App eal s ga ve rn SiO,OOO, whrlc UPS contnbutcd
Fc dE&lt; cxc lu s•vc rr g ht rn c rght 59.000.
states to tran sport goods between
UPS rece ntl y aske d Fo rd to
a n) ' "" po rnb Ill a sr nglc state aut hor le gr slatl on ex t ~{ldrng th e
spcc ral st atu s FedE x enJ oys rn a
By Jack Anderson fe w swtes to several co mp.tn•es rncludrng FedE x and UPS - 111 all
and
') 0 st at es Ford qur ctly rn se rt ed
.. Sec ti on 21 1" 11110 th e Federal_
Michael Binstein Avratron Admrnr stratron Act ~ I
1994 It will el•mrn ate a stat e s
"llhout hern g suhJeC t to rts truck - nght to reg ul ate the rates. rout es
rn g regulation s The Court ruled and servrc cs of tru cks tru ve llrn g
thm FedEx rs an a1r cargo earner betwee n two pornts Ill th e sam e
"hose rntrast:Jtc ground trJn sporw- swte . In order to qua1rfy , ~1c truck
uon " rnCillcnwl to Its marn busr - must belong to a sh1pprng company
ness and should be protec ted from whrch rs affllrated wllh or uuhzes
stJ\ c cc on omr c reg ula tr on UPS an arr carrrer " at least 15 ,fXJO tun es
sou ght rectrcss of what 11 clarmcd annually."
"as favorru sm toward FcdEx
"It ha s th e a biln y to to tal IX
UPS, a Kentu cky- ba sed fnm , change L~ c motor carrr cr rndfistry ,
tound a frrend 111 Ford . Srn cc one congrcsswnal sourc~.told our
becomrng charrman of the Senate rep orter Aaron Karp . Small er
Subeornmrttcc on Avrauon 111 1987 com pan res arc con cern ed that d
Ford has opposed mcrcascs 111 avra~ you pre-empt state regulatron, brg
Iron t.axes ami pushed for awardmg companres wrll swoop 111 and put
fe deral grants to small aJTport s th em out of busmess."
based on cargo mstcad of JU St pas Such conc ern s arc normall y
scnger trallrc When Ford ran for addre ss ed dunng con grcssronal
re-clccuon 111 1992. FedEx pl\chcd hcanngs, but Ford refu sed to hold

&amp;N~ ONE \lAY ll-\EY WEf::E BUSY
STUP'IiNS T~E.IR CH/\1&lt;'\S ANI"

more su n t\Ur s l.hanks to ad vanced

mcdll.rl tec hn olog y, but th ere rs
more ye t to be done What c:rn we
do to help fr ght the battle agarn st
l ancer') Dunng the cance r dn vc m
July, a soluntcer wrll be knoc.krng
on your door Please gr vc as generously as you can.
Members of Preceptor Bet.a Bct.a
Ch apter ol Beta Srgma Phr ar c
assrsung wl\h the countywrde cancer drrvc as one of thcrr communrty
sc rv1cc proJec ts, and for thcrr sororrty sr stcrs who have been touched
b} th1 s drsca sc. Volunteers arc
needed to help canvas door-to-door
throughout the county . Anyone
wr shrn g 10 help may call one of
these serv rce comm1t1CC members·
Donna Jones, 992-3726; Carolyn
Gruc scr. 992-3853; Ma1da Mora.
992-3885 , Neihc Brown , 9925414.
Eleanor Thomas
Sen ice Chair,. oman
Pomeroy

G~l'tl~ ..

.

'Wt1EN TriE fArA ECONOtvW7T
7AI~" ·
THE

E(ONOMY

IS 6ROWtNG

~~p

-rt~E

E(ONOMY

!$ 6l?OWING

'ire@

Think before you drink
Dear Edrtor,
I am 12 years old and a member
of the County Shamrocks 4-H
Club. Thrs year I am t.akmg Alcohol Dccrsions as one of my many
orOJCClS and I am supposed to wntc
you a letter on my feelings, as a
concerned student. on alcohol.
Many people who dnnk thmk 11
doesn't affect k1ds, but it docs. If
you arc dnnlung and driving, there
arc k1ds m other cars, nding thcrr
brkcs along the ro~dsrdc, walking
or even playrng in therr own yards.
And rf you lose control you could
hll, lllJurc or even k1ll these krds or
another person who hasn't been

dnnkmg. The chance rs there when
you choose to take the frrst dnnk.
Even one dnnk affects a person's
rcactron s. You could even hurt or
kill yoursei f.
I've learned a lot of drffercnt
ways to say 'no' to alcohol and
drugs. All krd s and even adults
need to learn thrs . Because we, the
kids arc the future and everyone
play~ a very rmportant role in 11
Please thmk before you dnnk
and drive. Protect our future. Wrthout us there is no future .
~essica Barringer
Reedsville

Disappointed with police
Dear Edrtor,
I attended the Mrddlepon Founh
of July Celebration and was drsgusted by the behavror of the Middleport Pollee Department. I
behevc that the police owe Paulcttc
Harrrson and the Shady Rrver
ShufOers an apology for drsrupong
thCJT fmal performance.
Hundreds of people were watchmg their show when the police
made a large poruon of the crowd
move. I understand that for safety
reasons people could not be close

to the river bank durmg the frre-

works display, but the area should
have been secuoned off pnor to the
entertainment or after the show was

over
The latter would have been
more appropnatc since the interruption occurred a half hour before
the frrcworks began. I feel it is a
shame that such a mce evening was
marred bv such rude and drsrespectfui bChavror
Becky Baer
Pomeroy

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today rs Fnday, July 8, the !89th day of 1994. There are 176 days left
m the year.
Today 's Highhght m Hrstory:
On July 8, 1896, William Jennings Bryan captivated hsteners atlhe
Democrauc National Convention in Chrcago with his famous speech
denouncmg supporters of the gold standard, saying, ''You shall not cruci fy mankind upon a cross of gold."
On thrs date:
, In 1663, Kmg Charles II of England granted a chancr to Rhode Island.
In 1776, Col. John Nixon gave the first public reading of the Dcclaratron of Independence to a crowd gathered at Independence Square in
Phriadelphra.
In 1889, The Wall Street Journal was fust published.
In 1891 , Warren G. Hardmg mamed Florence K. DeWolfe m Manon,
OhiO.
In 1907, Florcnz Zrcgfeld staged his first "Follies," on the roof of the
New York Theater.
In 1919, Presrdcnt Wilson received a tumuhuous welcome m New
York Crty after his return from the Versailles Peace Conference m France
In 1947, dcmohtron work began in New York: City to make way for lhe
new permanent headquarters of lhe United Nations.
In I950, Gen. Dou~las MacArthur was named commander in chref of
United Nations forces m Korea.
In 1975, President Ford announced he would seck the Republican
nomination for the presidency in 1976.
In 1986, Kurt Waldheirn was inaugurated presrdent of Austria despite
controversy over his alleged ties to Nazt war cnmes.
In !986, Adm. Hyman G. Rickover, widely regarded as the father of
the nuclear navy, died in Arlington, Va., at age 86.
Ten years ago: John McEnroe defeated Jimmy Connors m stnught sets,
6-1, 6-1, 6-2 to become the fust Amencan man in 46 years to capture
back-to-bad: Wimbledon tenms lltles.
Five years ago: Carlos Saul Menem was maugurated as president of
Argenuna m the country's first transfer of power from one democratically
elected civihan leader to another in srx decades.
One year ago: Leaders of the Group of Seven, in the second day of
thCir Tokyo summit, warned agamsl the dismembenng of Bosma but
backed away from a threat 10 use force. A JUTY in Boise, Idaho, acquitted
white separatist Randy Weaver and a co-defendant of the slaying of a federal marshal in a shooiOut at a remote mountain cabin.
n

,.

-Flooding
shuts off
highways

Trucking provision hits tur~m~I~~F~s~vy-

The Daily Sentinel

CIIARI.E,I·: HOEFLI CH

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, July 8, 1994

....

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

handed tactrcs, several DemocratiC
se nators pnvatcly tncd to throw up
1 road -bloc k Dunng a policy Jun ~ h co n among Senate Democrats on
the eve ol the Section 211 slfowdow n, several senators mounted a
ra re chall enge to on e of Capitol
llrll' s power barons
Sen Bob Kerrey, D-Ncb., com pl.uncd about the lack of hearrngs
"''d co mm 1ttcc revr cw Then Sen.
ElMbara Bo xe r, D-Cairf. , and a chorus of other se nators gnllcd Ford
about ho" tru c krng lcg 1siauon
wound up 111 an avrauon bill Boxer
demanded to know exactly how the
legrs lotr on would change current
1w
a Ford was funou s about the nack 1
!rom JUnror coll eagues. Accordmg
10 our sources. Ford rose from hiS
seat and angnl y declared that he ·
wasn' t gorng to make any apologres for Scctron 211. He dared col leagues 10 li ght h•m on the Senate
noor
A Ford spokesman says the leg rslauon wa~ 011 the noor for more
than a week after the lunch grvmg
se~ators ampl e trme 10 ame~d SecIron 211 . But Sccuon 211 dHI not
appear anywhere rn the brll voted •
out ol Ford 's s ubcomm1ttce. It
wasn' t even noted m the commrttcc
report that accompamcs the brll to
the Senate noor.
"Thrs sort of came out of left
f• cld ," say s Kenneth Kessler, an
anorney wrtl1 Ruan Transportatron.
" It mel the reqUirements of law but
ethrcally rt wasn't very farr."
Perhaps in anucrpation of the
truckrng fight, UPS's PAC has had
the largest mcrcase m contrrbutions
tn thrs year's electron cycle compared to the 1992 cycle - of
any PAC 1n Amerrca. Through
March 31 of thrs year, UPS's PAC
had grvcn more than $I million.
Two years ago, UPS had contributed only $439,673 at the same point
m the clecuon cycle.
"We thrnk it's a wonderful
example of the government system
at work, " UPS spokeswoman Gma
Eilnch said of the passing of Section 21 I. "We contribute to members who understand and supiJPrt
rssues whrch are 1mporwm to our
busmess "
(Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are nationally-syndicated columnists.)

By The Associated Press
Thunderstorms dumped heavy
rainfall over most of north east
Mansfield
OhiO, causmg Ooodrng problems
\NO
throughout the area
Flood waters tcmporanly closed
'
the rnterchange between Interstates
'
77 and 76 and Ohro S Thursday
evenmg, Akron police officer Paul
Columbus la2•
Gnffith sard.
Gnflith sard the rnterchange was
closed for less than a half-hour.
Akron frrefighter s evacuated
e1ght to 10 people from homes
along one street. sa1d frrc Lt Tom
BlasdeL
WV/&gt;,
Two famrhe s were evacuated
after the' basement walls of therr
homes collapsed. Other families
were asked to leave for fear the rismg waters could cause someone to
be electrocuted, Blasdel said.
In southern Summ11 County,
hghtrung struck an mi tank , shootmg Otl hundreds Of fCCtllllO the air,
a fire dcpanment sard.
About 2,500 gallons of oli shot
out of the tank and settled 111 a iowiymg flooded area, the Coventry
Township Frre Dcpartmcn! said.
No inJurrcs were reponed lrom
the lightning-strike or the flood, lhc
department said. It also said no fire
Weather forecast :
Ily The As.&lt;iOCiated Pres~
was reponed.
Today Partly cloudy wrth a
Scattered thunderstorms rcmam
The oil -laden water was expectrn Ohro's foreca st for tomghl and chance of thunderstorms. Hrghs 85
ed to drain into the Tuscarawas
Saturday, but temperature s wrll to90.
Rrver, the department said.
Tonrght Mostly cloudy wrth
stan getung cooler.
The Summrt County Shenff's
The Natrona) Weather Scmcc scattered showers and thunderDepartment
reported one road in
storms. Lows around 70.
s a~d hrghs on Saturday will be rn
Coventry
Townshrp
was flooded .
Saturday ... Partly c loudy . A
the low to mrd-80s By early next
on
that
road
were almost
Three
cars
week, h1ghs rn the 70s wrll be com- chance of thunderstorms matnly
submerged.
but
no
injuries
were
cast half. Hrghs in the lower and
mon .
reponed,
deputies
said.
Meanwhile, ram wtll contmue mid 80s.
In other northeast Oh10 areas,
Extended forecast:
here and there through Monday,
than four inches of rainfall
more
Sunday . .A chance of thunderforecasters said. Then, a penod of storms Lows 65 to 70. Highs 80 to
occurred JUSt to the west of
farr weather wrtl begi'n on Tuesday
Alliance 111 northern Stark County
The record-high temperature for 85.
and
from Roam to Rock Creek in
...Farr north. A chance
this date at the Columbus weather of Monday
Ashtabula
County, an official of
thunderstorms south . Lows in
stauon was 102 degrees m 1936
the
National
Weather Service in
the lower and mrd 60s. Hrghs 111 the
whJie the record iow was 49 m
Cleveland sard
1984. Sunset tonight wrll be at 9.03 80s.
Portage and Summrt counties
Tuesday ... Farr. Lows 60 to 65.
p.m. and sunnse Saturday at 6: II
received
between three and four
Hrghs upper 70s to mid 80s.
a.m
inches, said Frank Kieltyaka of the
National Wcalher Service.
No severe flooding or injuries
were re.pprted in ei1her county,
according to shenrrs deputies.
Units of the Meigs County Rutland to Salem Street lor Bury!
The storms also caused power
Emergency Medical Service repon- While who was transported to
ed nine calls for assistance between HMC; 3:06 p.m. Scipio Volunteer outages throughout northeast Ohio.
About 5,000 Oh10 Edison Co.
Thursday and Friday. Units Frre Department to Kmg Ridge
customers 111 Summrt and Ponage
rcspondtng included:
Road for a couch fire at the King
counties were without power, pn·
Thursday - 9:24a.m. Racine to property; 4:44 p.m. Pomeroy to
mariiy because of lightning, said
Hill Road for Pearl Norns who was Pomeroy Prke for Jessie Jarrell
transported to Holzer Medical Cen- who wa~ transponed to VMH; 7:42 Ohio Edrson spokesman Ralph
ter; 10:30 a.m. Pomeroy 10 Over- p m. Mrddieport to North Third
DiNicola.
brook Center for Cora Webb who Street for Jonah Carmichael who
was transported to Veterans Memo- was transported to VMH; 8·41 p.m.
nal Hospllal; 12:29 p.m. Middle- Syracuse to Pomeroy Nurswg and
port to Third Street for Mary Fetty Rehabilitation Center for Mary
who was transported to VMH; Jones who was transported to
12:38 p.m. Pomeroy to Overbrook VMH.
Center for Sarah Congo who was
Friday- No calls reponed.
transported to VMH; 2:47 p.m.

I

Blacks, 13 percent of the u .S.
populatron , account for so percent
of the nauon's murder vrcums.
They_also are drsproportionatcly
the vrcoms of other cnmes. Yet the
CongressiOnal Black Caucus rs
blockrng. passage of Congress ' s
most ambrtrous cffon ever to com bat cnme Presrdcnt Clinton needs
tu step m.
Besides convincmg the Black
Caucus to quit holdmg up the bill,
Clinton needs to mtcrvcnc to save
the Police Corps, funding for Which
has been gutted by a House-Senate
conference commrttcc currently
working 011 the crime package, and
to preserve Ihe ban on assau It
weapons, whreh 1s opposed by the
conference chmman, Rep. Jack
Brooks, D-Tcxas.
Crime is the No. 1 domestic
concern of Amencans, black and
·
d th 1
.
wh1te, an
e andmark br 11 pro·
$30
vrdcs
brllion over srx years for
·
·
po Irce, pnsons, tnme prcvcnuon
and drug rehabilitation. If Congress
fails to pass it, rt will stand as a
major failure for both Clinton and

c

.o~~~s~lack Caucus and other

·
House I1bera is arc thrcatenrng
to
vote agamst the cnmc brll unless it
contains a provisron allowing convicted murderers to challenge their
death sentences based on the racial
makeup of ktllcrs on death row and
the race of thc1r vrctrms.
Cirnton needs to tell advocalcs
of the so-called Racial Justice Acl
that they arc srmply wrong on their
numbers: Whrtcs actually outnumber blacks on death row, whereas
among persons arrested for murder,

56 percent arc b_lack
He n~s to cali conferees to get
And while krllcrs arc more like- them to mcrcasc fundrng for the
ly to rccerve the death pen~lty rf ROTC-style Police Corps, whose
thw vrcllm s arc .whrtc, that s not fundmg has been whac_ked m confcrencc 10 the pomt that the corps
Morton Kondracke 111would produce only !,700 recrurts
J
frve years, as opposed to the
an excuse for ictlillg ml!Jrlerers off, 80,000 approved by both the House
but a reason for catphing more of and Senate.
.
them .
But the Racral Jusoce Act rs the
The legislatrve srtuation is this: maJor suckrng pomt for the cnm,e
The Racral Justrce Act survived m bill, and Cimton reponediy hasn t
the House by one vote but rs even made up hrs mmd yet what he
adamantly opposed by Republicans thmks about rt.
and moderate Democrats in the . On the ments, he should oppose
rt. The facts arc that, natiOnally,
Senate.
Whrte House and Justice whrtes are more hkeiy, to be senDepartment rudes arc working with tcnccd to death than blacks. In
the Black Caucus and Senate 1992, 31 people were executed in
Democrats to frnd language that America, mcluding I9 whites and
might make the Racral Jusocc Act II blacks. Of 2,575 persons on
acceptable- for rnstancc, makmg death row, 40 percent were black
it clear that the brli does not require and 56 percent were white, accordprosecutors to seck death sentences rng to the Justice Department.
according 10 racial quota.
At the same time, of those
But Republicans arc still irkcly arrested for murder 56 percent
'
to filibuster on the grounds that it were black and 40 percent were
will simply provrdc convrctcd white. If dealh penalties were drskrllers with yet another means to tributed by quota, in other words,
appeal and delay their sentences. more blacks and fewer wlri'tes
Now, it takes on average eight would have to be executed than
years from the lime a murderer 1s now is the case.
sentenced for him to be executed, rf
It is outrageous that people of
he ever rs.
both races are more likely to be
Cirnton should grvc hrs ardcs a sentenced to death for krlling a
shon shot at fmdmg a language fix white than a black, mdrcaung that
for the Racial Justice Act problem, socicly values a black murder vrcbut if none can be found, he should tim less than a while vrctrm
personally step m to convmce the
If death sentences were meted
Black Caucus to back off.
~ out equally for krllrng blacks and
So far, whrle Clinton has made whrtes, though, rt would also lead
one speech urgmg swift passage of to the execution of more blacks.
!he crime bill, he hasn't engaged m Ninety-four percent of ail black
personallobbvm~.
vrctims were killed by other blacks,

"The evrdcnce is overwhelmrng," sard a front-page story in
USA Today, "that America is
going to hell in a handbaskeL''
That rs hardly the way we would
expect hellbent societres to make
their descent into the nether
regions. In a dump truck maybe,
loaded with sins the size of boulders. But how many big sins can frt
in a handbasket?
We forget that whal is mainly
responsible for the moral decline or
the country is not public wickedness and vrce, the kind of sins we
go to jail for. It is the secret sins
that we hide in a handbasket under
a white napkm of respcctabrlity.
The problem with us is nol a
surfeit of gross evil in our individual lives but a lack of ordinary goodness, what we used 10 call a lack of
character. The vogue word for
character today is vinue.
Vrrtue 1s the qualrty Wrlliam J.
Bennett rs speaking of in his
unlikely national bestseller, The
Book of Virtues, a collectiqn of

herorc and moral tales from literature. The book may be the final
wake-up call for an _America that

George R. Plagenz
has been sleepmg through three
decades of changes which have
reduced us, m the view of many, to
"a nation of slobs."
''Culture is looking up from the
trough," srud the British journalist
Malcolm Muggeridge. We, conversely, find our pleasure in looking itown into the trough. Wi!ness
our language and manners, both
unspeakably uncouth. Wi!ness the
TV and movies we watch.
Whlic it is ni,ce to hear people
talking of virtue and old-fashioned
character, a danger is lurlc:in~. It is
that the "vrrtue movement ' will
become "just another example of a
leading American character trait:
talking a •good game," as
Newrweek magazine said in a cover
story on "The Politics of Virtue."
We love to talk about the lack of

character in people today - by
which we mc.an "other people."
Another danger is lhat lhe vrrtue
movement will be ignored by the
people it is primarily directed at:
the book publishmg mdustry, TV
and the movies. These regulate the
quality of the cultural arr we ail
have to breathe.
One way 10 get society to look
up from the troullh may lie in the
expedient of pubhc opprobrium what we are usmg to get people to
quit smoking. It is a form of what
the Amish call shunning.
Anyone who falls from grace in
• the Amish community is shunned
by all members of the church who
have nothing to do with him.
At family gatherings the ostracized member is either served hrs
meals at a separate table or at the
end of the table, where he must sit
with a separate tablecloth. It places
a heavy moral stigma on the one
who is banished.
Could we try a variation of this
r

so that anyone who diSplays offensrve manners or conduct would be
shunned by those around him?
Ellen Goodman said in a recent
column that if OJ. Simpson's
friends had shunned him after he
was charged wilh wife-beating we
may not now be witnessing the
tragic fall of this American sports
hero.
The best idea of all for getting
America back on the stmight-andnarrow might be for each of us to
go on a character-building program.
Charles Lindbergh was said as a
young man to 11ave drawn up a list
of 59 character traits. He would go
down the list every night before
bed and grade himself on each trait
- cheerfulness, no fault-finding,
perseverance, politeness, self-control, etc.
Next to those traits he had fulfilled satisfactorily he would put a
red X. Those he had failed on
would get a black X.
'

~'

•I

Stolen truck
recovered in
Meigs County

Voinovich signs into law
new legisla'-ive ethics bill
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov.
George Voinovich has signed into
iaw a bill thaif grves the public a
limited look Inside a commrttec
created to police icgrslative ethics.
The law took effect 1mmedtately
upon Vomovich's signature Thursday.
As a result, a new Joint Legislative Ethics Commrttcc will have to
hold open meetings when adopting
rules, handimg budget matters, or
talking about proposed lell•slatron
However, mvesugatrons mto
complaints against legislators and
advrcc the commrttce offers to
them would remain secret.
Previous attempts to let the
panel operate m total secrecy drew
f~re from governmcnr watchdog
groups: newspapers and broadcasters.
The new law also wrll allow lcgrslativc lobbyists to contnbute to
political campaigns of House and
Senate members w1thout vrolatmg
a ban against lcgrslators accep!ing
grfts worth $75 or more from lob·

The Daily Sentinel
\USI'SZJJ-!160)

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EMS responds to 9 calls

1

Restoration of virtue critical to nation

~

Weekend to see slight
cool-off in temperatures

accordmg 10 the Jusucc Dcpartmcnt, while 76 percent of whrte
vrctlms were killed by a whrtc and
24 percent by a non -white.
It ' s undoubtedly true that in
~orne iocai Jurrsdrcuons, rac•st
prosecutors w11i seek the death
penalty against blacks more readrly
than against whiles, but the f\iltion ai frgures suggest that thrs rs not
the ovcrwhclmrng problem that it
was when the U.S. Supreme Coun ,
tcmporanly shut down usc of the •,
death penalty in 1972.
It would be a tragedy rf a mis- .
guided civil rights fight sank the
cnmc bili and It w ld be
te
'
ou
a
grea
tragedy for blacks than for wh11es r .
· ,
bl ~ut of fb~rythl,OOO_pcrsc&gt;ns, 44
ac s wr
e VIC!Jm o a VIO·
lent ~nme each year _rn fl.menca,
compared wrth 30 whites. A black
male rs seven trmcs more likely _lo
be
d
1
h
h
a1 murd cr bl
vrc rm
k f t an1a w 1rte
mae, an a ae ema e rs 1vc
J'k i
be k 11 d h
Urnes more ' e Y to
I e 1 an
a while woman.
Race and the death penalty
as1de, Amcnca needs more cops,
more pnsons, and better prevention
programs. The ternblc fact rs that
i half fall
1
near Y
o
vm ent cnmes m
urban areas never get solved, and
only a tmy frac_oon of the perpetrators ever go to Jarl.
Amencans, black and whrte, are
fed up with the err me err sis .
They'll be equally fed up with .
Congress and the President if the .
federal government fails to do
somethmg aboutrt.
(Morton Kondracke is execulive editor or Roll CaD, the news- . .
paper of Capitol Hill.)

;
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Publ"hed every afternoon, Moaday lhroug.h
Friday I I I Court St , Pomeroy, OhiO by the
Otuo Valley PubhshiD8 Company/Muhamed11
Inc , Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769, Ph 992 -2156
Secood class postage paad at Pomeroy. Oh1o
Member l'he Anocaaled Press, and the Ohao
Newspaper AuocaatJon, NatJonal Advert1s10g
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POSTMASTER Send address ~ha.o.11ea to The
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Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Thursday admissions - Mae
Ketc,hka, Pomeroy; John Lascar,
Coolville.
Thursday discharge - Thelma
Ripple, Racine.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges July 7 - Isaiah
Caldwell, Robert Dyer, Alfred
Young, Mrs. Johnny Pearson and
.
daughter, Mollie Logan.
(Published with permission)

Stocks
Am Ele """•• ·--------.291/8

~ ~:::::.:::::.:.:: . :. : :::::: :.:: : ..:::.40

SIGI:k nporta In tbe 10:31 ....
quotes provided by Advest o
GaWpolll.

sn.:g

Deputies of the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department thrs morning
recovered a pickup truck reponed
stolen from Fort Worth, Texas.
' !J!!puties on routine patrol spotted the blue Chevrolet, belonging
to Jeff White of Oak Harbor,
Wash ., in Rock Springs Cemetery
around 4 a.m., Sheriff James M.
Soulsby reported.
Officials in Texas were contacted so lhc truck could be returned to
its owner, Soulsby said. The truck
was not damaged.

Announcements
Clinic dates announced
Immunizalion climes will be
held by the Meigs County Health
Department on July 21 from 9:30
a.m. to I I a.m . at the Tuppers
Plains Fire Department headquarters, and from I to 3 p.m . at the
Reedsville Fire Department The
July 28 clinics w1ll be held at the
Racine frrehouse from 9 to II a.m.
and at the Chester firehouse from I
10 3 p.m.
Senior Citizens Center dinner
A roast beef dinner wtli be
served Thursday at the Senior Citizens Center from 5 to 6:30 p.m.
Cost of the dinner with beverage
and dessen is $4. Music will be
provided by The Classics who will
receive a free wrll offcnng. The
public ts invited.
Racine cleanup day slated
Cleanup day for Racine has
been scheduled for Thursday.
Appliances will not be picked up a!
this time. No tires.

---------.33
---------21 COLONY THEATRE
FRI THRU THURS
------.35
----15

Akm--------------.5411l
Asbland OU
Ill
AT&amp;T.-------------.5311l
Bank One.----------.34 Ill
Boll Evus----------11518
Cbamploo lad.
Chl11'1111"8 Sbop---------9 518
City HoldlDa----------.32 Ill
Fedenl MOI_ul.-------.30 1/4
Goodyear T&amp;R
314
K-mart
7/1
lAndi l!.:od-19 314
Limited Joc.------17 314

Su-e
~.'.'~

13 Weeki....
...... IJ . $21 84
26 Wee\11...... ........... . ... ........ ..$43.1:
l2 Wee\11 ............ ··· ······ ····· ··· ···•· ··· ...$14.7
Oultlolt Molp Couftly
13 Wee\11.. .......
. . ........

''

byists.
Legrslators tacked the ethicsrelated provisions on to a bill Rep.
frank Sawyer, D-Mansfield sponsored. Sawyer's brll otherwise
requires that mail-in voter registration booklets be mcludcd m state
income tax forms every two years.
Vmnovtch signed six other bills
that wiil:
• Exempt prison architectural,
engineering and constru~ti_on diagrams, and hostage ncgouaoon, not
and other sensitive plans, from
public release.
.
.
• Rcqurre ccrtam state agcnc1cs
to reduce paperwork . The tax
department is exempt, and there rs
no penalty for failing to comply.

MuJtlmedla IK------..29
Polot Bucarp --------17
Roll•- Eledrk-----11 311
RobbiDIA Myen
-.19 314
Sboaey's b. ------15 1/8
Star BaDk
7 7/8
Weady Iot'L
15 112
WortblqtDII lad.
.JII/4

rctrut 1a ldvo.ce direct to The Daily Sellllllel
oa•ttne.sixor 12monthbu1s Cred1twtllbe
pven earner each week.
No aubacnptJoDJ by rrwl pernuUed in area~
where tNme earn« aaV!ce 11 av11lable
Mal!

· ,

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leo• I•

•

Clinton needs to stem _t)ill opposition

--

The Dally Sentlnel-Page-3

GOD'S COUNTRY -"This is God's Country," proclaims the Forest Run United
Methodist Church float entered in Racine's

Fourth or July parade earlier this week. The
Forest Run UMC entry won third place in the
reli~ious category in the village' s annual parade.

Panama backs out of agreement
to provide Haitian safe havens
By RITA BEAMISH
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - The Clrnton
admrmstration is struggling to sal vage its battered Hartr pohcy fol iowmg Panama's surpnse wrth drawal of an offer to prov1dc safe
haven for 10,000 boat people.
While House press secretary
Dee Dec Myers, traveling wrth
President Clrnton m Europe, sa1d
Thursday the admtmstratron was
diSjiPpointed by Panama's reversaL
She sard discuss1ons would continue with other countnes rn the
region m hopes of estabiishmg safe
havens.
Clinton ' s spccral adviser on
Hallr, Wriham Gray, sought to put
the best face on lhe latest setback
to the adminrstratron' s attempts to
restore democracy '" Hart• and
stanch the flood of boat people
0eeing their 1mpovcnshcd and VIO·
lencc-plagued homeland.
"We wrli continue forward wrth
our policy," Gray said at a news
conference Thursday. "We wrll be
able to provrde for those that we
thought were going to Panama.''
''Our efforts to rccognizeo.l_hat
thrs is a muionational pr&lt;lblcm that
affects the entire hemisphere wrll
go forward," Gray srud.
He said Grenada has agreed m
pnncrplc to provrdc temporary protectron for Hartran refugees . Two
other Caribbean islands, Domrnica
and Antigua, earher offered to pro-

vrdc sale haven camps, but detail s
have not been frnalllcd
Admrm stratron
offrual s
announced that the U S na v;li hasc
at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, would
be expanded from Jts capac rt y of
12.500 refugees to 20,000. As of
Thursday, more than 10,500 boat
people already were wartmg there
for processrng Refugees al so arc
bcmg processed off Jamarca and
the Bnush Turk s and C a1co s
Islands.
They now will be screened for
temporary protccoon status but w1ll
not be allowed to apply for asylum
rn the United States under the
admimstrauon poircy announced
thrs week.
Some 15,600 Haruan refugee s
have been plucked from boats by
the Coast Guard smcc June IS
when the Unrted States announced
rt would bcgrn processrng asylum
clarms on a U.S. shrp.
The Pentagon ,' meanwhile,
marntamed contmgcncy plans for
an invasion or Haiu rf rntemational
sanctions fari to cvrct the mrlrtary
leaders who overthrew elected
Presrdcnt Jcan-Benrand Aristide m
September 1991. Two thousand
Mannes from Camp Lejeune, N.C.,
sh1ppcd out Thursday to stand by
for the possible evacuation of some
3,000 to 4,000 Americans in Hartr.
Under the latest twrst in adminrstratron pohc.,y. announced Tues-

ALBANY, Ga. (AP)- The four counties. Gov. Zcll Mrllcr has Thursday rirght. "You can stand in
surging Fiinl River spilled over declared 43 counucs disa~tcr areas.
one place and your feet will be
homes and hrghways, forcmg resrD1vcrs and volunteers continued under water in 10 mi nutes."
dcnts to race for h1gher ground as to search for bodrcs rn Ameneus,
The Flrrtt R1ver, which cuts
caskets floated tn cemeteries. Huge where at least 10 people have dred
through the middle of Albany, was
sections of central and southern Four people were sull m1ssrng 19 feet above flood swgc Thursday
Georgia remained submerged today today, mcludrng a man who was mght It was expected to crest at a
in a sea of muddy nooct waters.
swept away along wrth hrs tractor- record 45 feet on Saturday - 25
feet above nooct stage.
Four srraight days of rain - the trailer.
remnants of Troprcal Storm Alber"All the mam roads arc blocked
Thirty-five miles to the south,
to - have left at least 18 people about 15,000 people fled Albany as by water," said Ms. Creech's
dead, 300,000 without safe drmk- the Flint River rolled into town. brother, Greg. "It's like you're on
mg water and caused more than Enure ncrghborhoods up to a m1lc an rsland. You're trapped ."
$100 million in damages . More from the river were submerged up
Those who were fled were stayto the rooftops.
mg m makcshrft shelters or fnends'
rain was possrble today.
"It's just risrng quicker and homes. Power companies cut off
Rivers and streams have flooded
more than 400,000 acres of crops, quicker," said Colleen Creech, clectrrCily to Oooded areas and the
broke through 31 dams and spilled watching water creep into her yard town's three maJor colleges and
over 45 olhers. N1nc city and coun- as friends packed up her furniture several large pianL' closed down.
ty water systems have been
knocked oul.
1I •
President Clinton declared
PRirARI\0 Bl AW[\)'
I I!! IION(J-.., lq TRI Ur.l r ll
Rlillll~
Ntl!H
authonzed federal disaster aid for
....., .. ...... . . ..

ff

~

Film, TV star
Mitchell dead

Th

DaD_,.~. .

~

-~--·
--·---..
.11--One Evening Show 7:30

............. " "
ll H

LIONIGIKING

l:rO,':t:JO DAIU
MATIM~!S SAT l SUN

1 : 00 , ):)0

LOS ANGELES (AP) Cameron Mitchell, the rugged actor
best known for his role on TV's
The mgh Chaparral and the movie
Death of a Salesman, died of cancer Wednesday. He was 75.
Mitchell played tough, harddnnking Buck Cannon on NBC's
The flzgh Chaparral from 1967-71.
In Arthur Mrllcr's Broadway
production of Death of a Salesman,
Mitchell played Happy, one of
Willy Loman s sons. He reprised
the role m the 1952 frlm.
His other films included They
Were Expendable, /low To Marry
A Millwnaire, Monster of TM War
MUJeum and My Favorite Year.

I' -· -1M
'""'
........

f

...... .

7·00,9:00 DAILY
NATINtltS SA~ I SUN

'
SPEED

·-·""'

.

"" """.aTSia/~.1:10,1;)() 11'1
7:10,9:Xl DULY
rRIDAY, JULY 15TH
"AJIGitLS 1M TH!t OUTl"Jin.D"

ST~RTS

IUDIOLD sctniAIIZRIIIGD In '"'niUit

Lns•

Glt=T CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE I

KANAUGA DRIVE-IN

•

~D•n-n

.

chance to wm asylum m the Unncd
States For those alread y at Guan wnamo and any others pr cked up at
sea. the chor ce will be to return to
Hartr or apply for the new temporary protectiOn statu s rn a thud
country untri the Hartran pohtrcal
Cri SIS IS resolved .
Panama's reversal came just two
day s after th~ admrnt strauon
announced that country' s aft er LJf
safe haven and dc sprte efforts by
Vrcc Presrdent AI Gore to persuade
President Guillermo Endara to
honor the deal. Whrtc House olfr crais sard the two had a lengthy
telephone conversatron before Gore
relayed the news to Clinton , who rs
attendrng an economrc summrl 1n
Naples, lt.aly.
A While House offrcral , wh o
spoke on condruon of anonymuy ,
characterized Panama's dccrsion as
"some funcuon of Internal poh tlc s," apparent! y rcsulti ng from
pubh c pressure wrthm Panama
ag:unst acccpong Haruans
There had been no drsagrecmcnt
wrth Panama over terms of the
arrangement, the off1cral sard. The
Unucd States was willing to usc
U.S. bases in Panama as tcmpomry
refugee shelters pendmg locauon of
a more permanent camp m Panama
or usc the bases as permanent
camps rf Panama preferred.

Georgians flee rising waters

Ma-uley Culkin

aqNa
eVeN

day , only apphcants wh o go to U S.
procc ss mg ccnl c:rs m Ha111 have a

GENERAL TIRE SALES
COMPUTER TIRE BALANCING

1614-992-71611

IHours M-F 8-5 Sat 8-121

465 North Second Avenue Mtddleport, Ohio '-5760

Admission '2.00
446-0923

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Friday, July

The Daily ,S entinel

Sports

a, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

In the AL,

Rangers ~eat Indians 6-4
to susta·in three-game lead

Friday, july 8, 1994
Page--4

In the NL,

Reds edge Pirates 8-7 in 11 frames
lly HANK KURZ Jr.
Associated Press Writer
The Cincinnat i Reds were beat,
and the gam e hadn't even started.
An all -ni ght !light from Miami
sapped them of their energy, and it
seemed th at thi s nig ht would be
one to writc.off to travel trouble.
RED AL ERT' RED ALERT'
Demonstrating a resiliency not
seen in Cin connau since the mid 70s and a figh ting spirit that would
make Pete Ro se proud, the Reds
rallied three times Thursday night
and beat the Pitll burgh Pirates 8· 7
in II innings .
Ke vin Motc hell s1ngled home
the winning run with one out in the
lith .

Reds manager Davey Johnson ,
who let his tired team arrive at the
ballpark two hours later than usual
after th eor 4 a.m. return from a 10day road trip, said his t.cam 's wake up call came in the sixth inning.
"We were kind of ilJ{ the whole
for st part of th e game." he said.
"We were tired from getting in at4
a 111 . , and those I 0-day road trips
wk c a lot out of you. In the sixth
inning , we rcalo zed we were at
home. "
Pott sburgh took a 5-3 lead into
VARSHO SCORES- The Pittsburgh Pirates' Gary Varsho slides
the eighth, but lost it on Tony Fe(home to score past Cindnnati catcher Eddie Taubensee in the lOth
nandez's RBI single and a bases·
inning or Thursday night's game in Cincinnati, where the Reds won
loaded walk to Hal Morri s.
8-7 in II innings. (AP)
They took a 7-5 lead in the lOth
on RBI singles by Carlos Garcia
and Jay Bell, but saw that margin ·
evaporate when Mitchell doubled
and Morri s hit Bias Minor's first
pitch over the wall in right-center
CINCINNATI (AP) - A federThe federatiOn said that for hi s seventh home run.
After Johnny Ruffin (4 -0)
al appeal s court Thursday rcjtXted Reynold s tested positive for a
sprinter Butch Reynolds' request banned substance, Nandrolonc, blanked the Pirates in the II th,
for a full-court hearing of his law - during a meet at Monte Carlo in Minor (0·1) gave up a pair of walks
suit seeking damages from th e August 1990. Reynolds was and Mitchell's single just inside the
International Amateur Athletic banned lrom competition f(}r two third -base line.
Elsewhere, it was Montreal 7,
years and four months, which
Federation.
San
Diego 0; New York 3, Los
"The panel has further reviewed meant that he was not allowed to
0; San Fran cisco 5,
Angeles
run
in
the
1992
Olympic
Games.
the petition for rehearing and con·
Philadelphia
4; Houston 9, Chicago
Re
ynold
s
contended
that
the
eludes that the issues raised in the
petition were fully considered upon drug test was faulty, and that he 3; and Colomdo 2, Florida I.
Expos 7, Padres 0
the original submission and deci - had not used the banned steroid.
At
San
Diego, Ken Hill pitched
sion of the case," the 6th U.S. Cir· The former Ohio State star sued the
a
five-hitLer
tc;&gt; join Jimmy Key of
cuit Court of Appeals said in its federation, and a U.S . District
the
Yankees
as baseball's only 13Court judge in Columbus two-paragraph ruling.
game
winners,
and Darrin Fletcher
Reynolds has until Oct. 15 to Reynolds' home town - awarded
hit
a
three-run
homer.
him
$27.3
million.
file an appeal with the U.S.
Hill (13 -3) pitched his first
The federation appealed the rulSupreme Court.
shutout
and second complete game,
Reynolds. the world record ing, and the 6th Circuit panel constriking
olll eight and walking one.
holder in the 400 meters, sued the cluded in May that the federal
Fletcher'
s lOth homer gave the
international track sanctioning judge in Columbus didn't have
Expos
a
3-0
lead in the first against
body in a drug test dispute and was jurisdiction over the international
Andy
Ashby
(4-7), and Cliff Floyd
awarded a $27.3 million settlement track body.
hit
il'
two-run
d(}uble ill a thnee-run
Reynolds
then
asked
for
a
.
by a U.S. District Court judge. But
fifth.
rehearing
before
all
the
active
a three-judge panel threw out the
Mets 3, Doogers 0
judges of the 6th CircuiL
award earlier this year.
At Los Angeles. Jason Jacome

Federal appeals court rejects
Reynolds' hearing request

blanked Los Angeles on stx hits in
hi s second major-leagu e appearance.
Jacome (1 · 1), who joined th e
Mcts' rotation when Dwight Gooden was suspended for violating his
substance abuse aftercare program.
did not walk a batter, struck out
four and allowed fo ur hits in the
final 8 l/3 innings.
He allowed only one runner as
far as third base.
Todd Hundley hit his 13th
Ioomer Lo spark a three-run fourth
against Tom Candiolti (6-4 }, who
gave up six hits m eight illnings.
David Segui hit an RB I
grounder and Ryan Thompson had
a sacrifice lly.
Giants 5, Phillies 4
A L San Franci sc o, Mat t
Williams' 31 st homer highlight.ed a
three-run sixth.
Darryl Strawberry, robbed of a
homer by Milt Thompson in the
sixth, went 0-for-3 with a walk in
his debut with the Giants and first
major -league game since June
1993. He underwent treatment for
drug and alcohol abuse last month .
Bud Black (2·0), making his
fourth start after off-season elbow
and knee surgeries. gave up two
runs in six innings . Rod Beck
closed for his 16th save.
Darren Lewis hit his third
homer in the third against Shawn
Boskie (4 -5), and Williams con nected after Barry Bonds' RBI
double .
Astros 9, Cubs 3
At Chicago, Craig Biggio had
four hits against Chicago for the
third time this season and drove in
three runs.
Steve Finley and Scott Servais
added three hits apiece for the
Astros, who finished with !7 hits
and sparkled defensively, turning
five double plays.
Darryl Kile (6 -3) won for the
first time in four career decisions
against the Cubs. He was backed
by four double plays in his six
mnings.
Biggio drove in the Astros' first
run with a two-out single in the
first against Willie Banks (8 -7) and
added a two-run single in the seventh. Banks lasted 5 1/3 innings,
allowing 12 hits and seven earned
runs.
Servais hit his seventh homer.
St.eve Buechele hit his lOth for the
Cubs.
Roc:kies 2, Marlins 1
AL Miami, David Nicd retired
the last nine batters in a seven-hit·

Scoreboard
.

Baseball

Weatern I:Nwlllon
Tuu ................... ..41 43 .4U
O.U.Iand ... ........... 31 46 .4l2
Seonle ................... 36 48 .429
Califomia ............... 36 50 .419

NL standings
KulenDiwllloa
Ttu11
W L PeL
Allu!oa .................. .5! 31 .622
M..-J ...............SI 33 .6117
Pbiladclphio ...........4t 44 .412
New Yod. ..............39 45 .464
Aorido ................... 31 41 .4&lt;7

Central Olwllloll
CINCINNAll. ...... .SO 34 .59S
Hou.tan .................49 36 ..516
SL t..w. ................40 41 .494
l'lwbwJI&gt; .............40 43 .412
Olicaao.................. 34 49 .4to
41

4S
50
51

.511
.413
.419
.4ITI

CB
I

I 15
13

145

15
85

95

ts.s

3
15
95

Thursday's S(QI'a
s. Fllil""''phi• 4
Colondo 1. Flocida I

CINCNNA11. I , Pl""""ab 7 (II inn.)

""""'"'·CU..J03
New Yoolt ), Loo 1\n..... 0
tdon!rW7.San!Mao0

AL: Announc6J that Eric Anthooy, .
Sc.ulc Mariner&amp; out.ficldcr, haa wilh ·
dnwn tUI apPeal ct a fow--pmo IUipC&amp;

Thursday's S(Qres
New Y01k S. California 2
OUcago 9. Detroit 5
Torm10 .C, Minnelou 3

aion.
MILWAUXEE BREWERS: Ploced
BJ. Su.rboff, "tchcr-, on &amp;he Is-day cU·
abled lin. Called up Mike Mathea)',
catdlcr, Cmn New Orlcana W lhc Amai·
can Aaociation. Optioned Tmy O'Lury,
outfielder, ID New brtou.. Purchued the

S..lllc4, u.-, 3 (IOU...)
Oakland 6, Baltimore 4
Kanlu City I, Mil.waukot 3

Toolgbt's games
Seattle (Flmllns {,..\0) at
holz ll-2), 7,05 p.m.

Ro.l~K~.

(Nab-

California (Andc:non 5-4) at New
York (Perez 1 -l), 7:05p.m.
Tc.au (Fajardo 4-4) at Detroit Bdchcr
(6-9), 7:05p.m.
Od:land (Witt 1 -1) at Bahimore
(Mu.,ina 12-4), 7:35p.m.

O!;ie~ao

(Maraan 1-9),3:20 p.m.
(Painter l -2) at Florid•

(Wea11Mn7·7), DS p.m.

Pit.. bur&amp;h (Ueber 4·3) at ONON·
NATI. (Smilioy 1-1~ 7::U p.m.
St .•laW (fewkmury 9-1) at Allan1.1.
(Maddua II~). 7:40p.m.
New Y.a (Smilh 4-1) " Loo Anp
(lknhilor ~). IO:Ol p.m.
McmtrN.l (RI.lOlor l-2) at San Diqo
(ll«u•'-9), t0:05_p.m.
Phibdtlplu. (Va~ 0.1) n San
Pron.... (l'unup6-6~ 10~ p.m.

Saturday's gam..
Hounon (William• S-4) at CbiQao
(Y..... 3-6), 2:20 ,....
Ph.Hadclp~ia (Jackson 11-2) 11 San
Fraaciaco (Vanl..aodinpam 3-1), ":05
pm.
Colorado (F~an 7 ·I) at Florida
(Kapp4-5), 1:05pm.
Piu.bunh (Ncaalc 1-1) al CINON·
NATI. (Rijo"7-4~ 7&lt;1'1 p.m.
St. Lo!,aia (Olivlftlli 1-0) at Allanu,
(GiovDe9-7), '/:IOp.m
•
New Yoolt (bnlinJer 0-2) a Loo An·
"'"'(ll. -1·5~ 10~ p.m.
MGilueal (Henry ~ 1) at SUI Diqo
(Saadon 3- S), I0:01 p.m.

Sunday'aaames
New Y.a tllAo .......... 4:01p.m.
J.loafnlll II Sin llieto, 4:01 p,jPbiladelphia at Saa Frue•~ 4:~

.....

.

Colando .. Flcoido, 6:01p.a
.. Cllicoao. 1:01 p.m.

ALstandings
r-

lalloniM-

WLrd.GI

New Ycd! ..............49
Bollimono .............41
a-. ...................40
Dolood. ............ ....:31

r-.. ..................36

33
3S
43
46
41

591

.57!
.412
.452
.434

C•lr•IDiwWc.
'9 32 .605
Cllicoao.. ....... ... .. ..•9 34 .590
Kmou Oly .. ............. 40 .l24
~ ..............41 42 .494

l.l
9.l
12

n.l

CIJNELAND,

Milwo"'""' ............. 39 4S

.464

I
6.l
9

diu.blod Wt and Pat Mahomea, pi.lc:hor, 011
the IS-day diaablod liiii"W"OICbYC kl Jllly
6. Activucd Pat Meara, 1hort1top, fnn
the I S·d•y disabled !ill
'

NEW YORK YANKEES: Activated
Pat Kelly, aeoond bucman, from the 15d•y diublcd WL Placed K.cwln Elala-, Ul·
fielder, on the IS··clly dilablcd U.L

01!VELAND (Orimaley 1..0) at Min(fopan~ 1-S), Ull p.m.

Aiel Rodriguu:. thort~;top, from Jackamville of the SGJtt.cm L..eapc. ()plimlod
Rich Amorol, infodd..-, ... &lt;:&amp;lillY of !he
Paci&amp; Cout Lcog.c.

Seattle (Bolio 3 - 1 0) at Bouon
(Ocmmu 1-4).1 :OS p.m.
Teu• {R.ogcn 9-4) at Detroil (Dohen.,
6--6),1 :1Sp.m.
Kuua Cily (Milac.ki 0-3) at ToiOfllo
(lleottgao Ill-S), t 'Jl p.m.
Califomia (Ld\:wich 1-7) at New York

(l(amiaie&lt;.ki S-4), Ul5 p.m .
Oakland (Onlivtrol .S-2) at BallimoR

(FomondCl s-1).7:05 pm.
0\U:a.ao (Sandersm 1-3) at Milwaukee
(Bcnca 7-6},11:0S p.m.
a.EVE1..AND (~ 7-4) ll Min·
n-.. (Erid&lt;ooo 1-6), 1:05pm.

Sunday's games
Soatlle II Bolton, I :OS p.m.
TCUJa10droit.l:l5p.m.
Califomillat New Ymk, 1: 3~ p.m.
Oakland at Baltimore.. I :35 p.m.
Kuau Cily at Torun~ I :lS p.m.
Oticaaoat Milwaukee, l:O.S p.m.

a..EVEI...AND at Mi.nnOIOI.I, l:OS p.m.

SEATTLE MARINERS ' Recoiled

1n th e eighth and Walt Weiss
walked. An out later, Galarraga hit
J11 s gam e-w inn er off John John stone (1 - 1).
·
Florida 's Rich Scheid, making
his second major-league start and
first since 1992, allowed five hil s
and one run in seven innings.

Gallipolis, Mason County
split American Legion DH
The Gall ipoli s Pos t 27 Am ero ·
can Legion base ball team split a
doubleheader with Mason County
Po st 23 Thursday ni ght, wi th
Mason County claiming an 8-4 win
in the opener and Gallipolis posting
a 12-3 victory in the ni ghtcap.
In the first gam e, Joey Ma yes
led Mason County in a compl ete·
game pitching effort that included
seven strikeouts and se ven walk s.
Bobby Haislop, the losmg pitcher,
and reliever Bobby Fink combined
to strik e out one and walk three.
Post 23 's hitter s were Dale
Johnson (3-4), Frank Cummings
(2·4), Greg Archer, locy Mayes,
Ke nny Sw1 sher (all 1- 3) and
Tommy Mayes (1·4). The Gallipo·
lis hitt.crs were Chad Duncan (3-4},
Andy Grue scr, Ryan William s
(both 2-4}, Trent Thomas (I :2) and
J.T.Nonhup(l -3).
'
The second game, like the first,
saw the winner take the early IC&lt;Id
ami retain it. But unlike Mason
County in the opener, it Look only
two innings for Gallipoli s to sur·
pass its first -game ofl'cnsive total .

Starter Chris Toler, suffering
from a mononucleosi s infection ,
gave way in the early frames Lo
Grueser, who got the win. The pair
combined to strike out eight and
walk 10. Ryan Roush, the losing
pitcher. combined with Swisher ,
and Arche r to strike out 13 and
walk II.
Lcadong the Post 27 offensive
attack were Wiliams (4 -5), Nonhup
(2-2) and Eric Humphrey s (1-4).
Ma son County' s hitters were Andy
Catcher (1-2) and Roush (1·4).
In weekend doubleheader
action, Gallipolis (12-15) will host
McArlhur Saturday and Athen s
Sunday. Both twinbills will start at
noon.
lnnin~ totals-first game
Gallipolis: 001 -001-2 = 4-9-1
Mason Co .: 300-032-x = 8-8-1
WP-J. Mayes
LP- Haislop
Inning to!als-second game
Gallipolis: 230-210.0 = 12-7-2
Mason Co.: 002-000-1 = 3-2-2
WI'- Gruescr
LP- Roush

_ _ _ _ __;:,Sports briefs----Basketball
MIAMI (AP) - Miami Heat
center Rony Seikaly told the Sun·
Sentinel of Fort Lauderdale that the
team wants to rework his contract
in an effort to trade him to Chicago
for forward Scottie Pippen.
Olympic festival
ST. LOUIS (AP) - The broth er-sister team of Tony and Julie
Goskowicz of New Berlin, Wis. ,
finished the U.S. Olympic Frcstival
short-track speed skating competi tiqrywith eight gold medals.
Tony Goskowicz , 16, Look the
the I ,000 meters in a Festival record time, won the 3,000, and
was part of the 5,000 relay team
that broke a Festival record . He
won the 500 and I ,000 on Wednes·
day.
Julie Goskowicz, 14 , won the
I ,000 and was part of the 3,000
relay team that set a Festival

record. She won the 500 on
Wednesday.
Baseball
HOOVER, Ala. (AP) M1chael Jotdan was 1-for-2 with an
RBI in Birmingham's 4-2 loss to
Huntsville in the Southern League
to raise his average to .195.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St.

Pomeroy, OH.

SPRING AND
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MON.-FRI. 9:D0-5:00
SAT. 9:00·12:00

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FootbaU
Nadon.l Foolblll Lcq•
ARIZONA CARDINALS' Woivo4
Keith Rucker, dcfallivc lineman.
BUFFALO BILLS : Sianod T0111
Ooluirlg, clfCNive lineman, and Loonanl
~ ftOIC tackle.

CHICAGO BEARS : Ann'"'nccd lbo

Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy

Green Beans
Roll
Coffee or Small Drink

$

CHOP.

99

game against the visiting Cleveland Indians, who
lost 6-4. Palmer was responsible for five of the
Rangers' runs. (AP)

By ~IKE HARRIS
LOUDON, N.H. (AP) - Rusty
Wallace has Midnight, Midnight
Run and Captain. Mike Wallace
has Reba.
"Rusty has always believed that
if you gel a car that feels good and
races good, you should stick with
it," said younger brother Mike.
whose two Busch Grand National
victories this season have come in
the car that owner Barry Owen
buill this spring.
''He has done that with Mid night the last two years, and on the
Busch series. we're doing'that now
with Reba. And we're trying to
find that kind of car in Winston
Cup.
"We're building a couple of
new cars with the belief that one or
both of them will be our Reba or
Midnight," he added.
It will be about another month
before the first of the new Fords is
ready, though .
"h doesn't matter," Mike Wallace said. "We 're1t:tll making
progress and we're just going to
keep on getting better."
Although, he hasn't come close
to ~ualing the three straight wins
that his older brother carne up with

last mon(h, going into Sunday's
Slick 50 300 at New Hampshire
International Speedway, the 35ycar-old racer is definitely heading
in the right direction after a so-so
start as a Winston Cup rookie.
Mike, the middle-man of the
three racing Wallace brothers Kenny is the youngest - has been
racing Ford Thunderbirds on the
Winston Cup circuit since March 8
for noted driving mentor Junie
Don Iavey.
Wallace, who Qlready had one
ARCA stock car victory to his
credit, won his first Busch Grand
National event at Hickory, N.C. ,
earlier this season, and added
another Grand National win last
Sunday at Milwaukee.
Perhaps more important,
though, Mike had his best Winston
Cup resul,t last Saturday at Daytona, where he finished 12th.
"What a great Fourth of July,"
Wallace said. "To run as well as
we did at Daytona shows the
progress we arc making with the
Hcilig-Mcyers team, and then to
come back a day later and run as "
well as we did at Milwaukee. "
Sunday will be only the 19th
Winston Cup start for Wallace,
including nine this_season. Before

By CHUCK MELVIN
promoter, International ManageCLEVELAND (AP)- Paul mcnt Group, to any driver fulfilling
Tracy would like to set the record four criteria:
- Victory at last month's
straight: No maucr how it looks, no
mauer how dominant Roger Detroit Grand Prix, which IMG
Penske's racing team has become, also promoted.
- Vtctory at the Cleveland
it's not all that easy to win ~eek
aft.er week on the Indy-car circuiR race.
" You can spend lots of mone
- A pole position at either race.
but to get things done, it takes a lot
. - A It me-of-race record at
of effort," said Tmey, who will be , e1ther rae~.
.
.
Tracy s onlr vtctory of 1994
driving his Hmor-powered Penske
racer in search of a $1 million came m DetrOit, where he set a
bonus this weekend at the Bud· track record. So a victory fmm the
weiser Cleveland Grand Prix.
pole Sunday would clinch the extra
Penske cars have won each of $1 mtlhon.
the last six races in the PPG Indy. "With thi~ incentive and extra
Car World Series, including four dnve - ~~t s very u~por~nt to
victories by AI Unser Jr. and (}ne the team, Tracy satd. That
each by Tracy and Emerson Fitli· money broughtmto the team he.lps
paldi. The Pcnske drivers had 1-2-3 us get along further wtth testmg
sweeps of races at Milwaukee and and development. It all compounds
tts~lfPortland last month.
Have other teams who are jeal· .
Every member of the team,
ous of the Pcnske success begun to mcludmg secre&lt;anes, gets a pergrumble about falling so far cemage_ of all the pnzc money that
behind?
comes m. So an extra mtlhon doi"Y~u heard a lot of that at Indy Iars, that's a big bonus at the end of
(which Unser won)," Tracy said. the year. That's a lo! of extra
"We had a very competitive pack- mon~y tn a mechan!c.~ pocket.
age but you have to realize what il They ne exctted abouttL
took for us to pull that off. We
The race Sunday race willbe
were running all winter long with Tracy's th!fd as an Indy-car driver
one package for our regular racing, on the temporary 2.4-mtle_ road
: and at the same time we were course at Burke Lakefront Airport.
· doing a separate program ... to get He prevtously won m Cleveland on
: ready for Indianapolis. A lot of the.~n~y Ltghts ClfCUtl.
· teams have trouble gelling one
I ve always run prelly. well
here," he said. "I think this ts one
: package ready.
: "A Jot of people don't realize of the ~astest road cour~es any: how much work we put inLO that to wher~ lD the world. It s wt~e.
· make it work. The guys in the There slots of room to p_ass. Its ,a
engine shop were preparing two httle btl rough,_ ~ut I Lhmk that s
different types of motors, worlong good, because tt s a c~alleng~ to
24-hour shifts."
get the car workmg nght. It s a
Tracy has a chance to bring demandmg track to get a car to last
more resmm:es to the Penske team the full length of the ~e. 10 get a
if he can win both the pole and the balance and suit be qutck enough
race at Cleveland. The $1 million to win."
bonus has been offered by the race

Nallonal Luaue
NL : S1111pendcd Bob Braaly, San Fran·
ciK:o coach, fm"" 14aamc:a and Mel Roju.
M~ pilehcr, for four Jamm for 1bcir
p&amp;J\IIn a bau:h-clcaMatncidcnt du.rinJ
the July 2 Gianta-Etpoa suno. Su.pcnded
GetOnlmo Pcna, S1. Louia accond ba1o·
man, ~or fi,-o pma, ~oaive July 14, for
dtllJlllgthc mound l l d\c June 30 aamc
•aaintl Coiando. Fmod Brfnly, Jtcju and
Pena undillou.d amounta. RociPCod the

BAKE~ORK

TROTTING HOME- The Texas Rangers'
Dean Palmer trots home after rounding third base
following his second homer in Thursday night's

Tracy seeking triumph
in Cleveland Grand Prix

bod.

HOME

..
Rusty Wallace's brother pushing
for victory with 'Reba' in Slick 50 300

retircmcn1 of Neal Andenon, ru.nnina

8&lt;. LouiollA!Iaooa, I:IOJ&gt;.m.

PiaabuiJb "CINCINNATI., 2:15pm.

contract or Riclr. Wruaa, Clkhcr, frum
New Odtll\l.
MlNNESOfA TWINS : Placod Dave
Winfield, clalignated triu.er, on the IS-day

K.anau City_(Cone 12-4) at Toronto
(S1ew1rt S-1), 7.3S p.m.
OUca_so (Rae R-2) at Milwaukoc (Mirondo 1-0), B:OS p.m.

Saturday's games

Today'• games
Color~do

BasebaU

6

Tu.•• 6. a..JNELAND 4

San -

Houaton (Swindell 6-6) at

3
l

A....tcaaLe.ope

w.... D&amp;.w...
LooAnootoo .............
co~onG. ................42
Sanftoociooo ........ 36
San,IM&amp;o ............. 3S

Transactions

tcr and Andres u atarraga hot a ticbrcaktn g sin gle in til e eig hth
inn ing.
Nied (8-4) retired the last nme
batt.crs in his third strai ght victory
and seco nd co mpl ete ga me. He
walked fo ur and struck out five.
Eric Young reached on an error

CDL LICENSE AND
HAZARDOUS MATERIAL
QUALIFICATION REQUIRED.

RUTLA,ND FURNITURE

- - - . . . . - - Sports b r i e f s - - - - -

RUTLAND, OHIO
742·2511
1·800·837·8217

Tennis
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) - See- and-seeded Jason Stoltenberg of
· Australia beat Vince Spadca 6-2, 6: 2 to advance to the quarterfinals of
· the Hall of Fame Championships.
:
Tennis
:
BASTAD, Sweden (AP) : Top-seeded Andrei Chesnokov of

115

I

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Russia defeated Lars Jonsson of
Sweden 6-1, 7-5 in the second
round of the Swedish Open.
Tennis

GSTAAD, Switzerland (AP) Top-seeded Sergi Bruguera of
Spain beat compatriot Alex Corret·a 7-5, ~ 10 advance to the quar·
icrflnals of the Swiss Open.

Daytona, his best !mtsh had been
13th at Dover and he had failed to
finish eight races.
After the uplifting holiday
weekend, though, Wallace is feel ing confident and ready for the SlX·
ond half of the 31 -race schedule.
"We have had an up and down
season so far, but this is definitely a
high, and one we can build on and
make the second half one that our
team will .be proud of.
"For most of the tracks, it was
the first time I've ever driven a
Winston Cup car on them . And ,
believe me, there is a big different
between a Busch car and a Cup
car," Wallace added. "That couple
hundred pounds and extra horsepower - a couple hundred there,
too - really makes a difference.
"Bill now we can begin putting
what we learned during the first
half into use."
Wallace also will compete Sat·
urday on New Hampshire's onemile oval in the Busch North race,
driving the Ford named Reba.
Practice and qualifying, begin
today on the New Hampshire track,
where Rusty Wallace and Midnight
won the inaugural Winston Cup
race a year ago.

lly The Associated l'ress
Halfway to the expanded playoffs, th e Am e ri can League has
ahrce pre11 y dece nt -lookin g dovisional races.
Th e Cleveland Indian s became
the last AL team to play their KI sl
gam e Thursda y, los in g to the Texas
Rangers 6-4 in a matchup of fi rst·
plac e teams.
Texas maintained its three-game
IC&lt;Id in the AL West ove r Oakl3ml
and Cleveland saw iLs AL Ce ntral
lead shnnk to on e gam e ov er
Chicago.
"h would be nice 10 be in their
division, but fir st place in any divi sion is still first place. I played here
for a lon g tim e and I know if
there' s a pennan t Oying in Te xas,
thi s place will go crazy, just Iike it
will in Cl evel and ," said Indians
manager Mike Hargrove, a member
of the Ran gers from 1974-78.
No t.eru11 has been abl e 10 coast
this season, but the Yankees ha ve
been in forst longer than the Indian s
or Rangers.
New York mov ed into fir st on
May 9 and has been there for the
past 60 days. Cleveland has been in
front of Chicago for 27 days and
the Texas has held first for 39 day s.
Among the three. Texas has the
biggest lead.
The Rangers kept th eir advan tage at three game s over Oakl and
by gelling anoth er s urpri singly
good outing from Tim Leary , one
of baseball 's biggest retreads.
In his stXond appearance - his
first start - for the Rangers, Leary
, left after 5 2/3 innings with a 6-4
lead and got the victory tlwnk s to

ping a 2-2 li e. Rand y Yclanlc had· a
homer and Paul O'Nei ll drove 10
the final run wtth a p10ch-sin glc.
Athletics 6, Orioles 4
At Baltimore, Geroni mo Bcrroa
singled in two runs to cap a three run sixth inning.

Scott Brosius had three hits and
scored twi ce for the A's.
Todd Van Poppe! (5 -7) go t th,·
v1ctory despite allowing seven h1 Ls
~mJ four runs in fi ve innings. Mark
Eic hhorn (5 -2 ) had hi s 20 2/3
scoreless inning streak ended and
took the loss.
Mariners 4, Red Sox 3
At Boston. Brian Turang SID glcd
in th e winning run in th e lOth
inning as Seattle overc ame a 3-0
defi cit.
Randy Johnson ( 10-4) struck out
nine , walked three and allowed fi ve
hits in nin e innings. Th e Mariners
got three runs and six hits in the
la st two innings off reliever Ken
Ryan (2 2).
Royals 8, llrewers 3
At Kan sas Cit y, Mike Macfar·
lane's three -run homer climaxed' a
s1x -run seventh inning againsl Cal

Eldr ed (9 -9), the pitcher of th e
month for June.
Tom Gordon (9 -4) won hi s
rourth straight. givin g up fiv e hits.
walkin g three and stnking out a
season-high nine in eight innings.
Dlue Jays 4, Twins 3
At Minneapolis, Rick Aguilera's
two -out, ninth -inning wild pitc h
scored pinch-runn er Rob Butler
and gave Toronto the win.
White Sox 9, Ti~ers 5
At Detroit, Chicago won for the
I Sth tome in 19 games.

OSU trustees considering new baseball stadium
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP} Ohio State University trustees have
decided to build a new $3 million
haseball stadium capable of scaling
at least 3,000 spectators, a newspaper report.ed today.
The Columbu.&lt; Dispatch said the
announcement would be made at
th e board of tru stees ' month I~

meeting today.
The stadium, with dugout s.
locker rooms, a concess ion stand
and a press box, will be situated
ncar Olentangy River Road and
Lane Avenue. Light s arc not
included m the initial plans .
The current baseball fa cility ,
Trautman Field, has been con sid ·

cred inadquatc for years, with only
I ,ROO scats. It couldn't handle the
crowds thi s past season, when the
Buck eyes pos ted a 49 -9 record,
winning \he Big Ten regular season
and tournament titles.
Ohio State was climinat.cd in the
fir st round of the NCAA Lourna ·
ment

IN TOM PEDEN COUNTRY!
84 Month.
fiNANCING

Bidwell beats
Mason VFW
in Hubbard LL
Tournament
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
The 1994 Bill Hubbard Memorial Little League Tournament continued on Thursday evening with
Bidwell advancing to second round
play. Only one game was played as
Kyger Greek #2 failed to show up
for their game and Tuppers Plains
was declared the winner by forfeit.
Bidwell scored five first inning
runs and held off a Mason VFW
comeback auempt to post a 6-5
win. It appeared that Mason tied
the game m the sixth inning, but
the score was wiped out by an
appeal play as the runner missed
third base and was called out for
the second oot.
Bidwell jumped on top on the
strength of a strong .first inning.
Four walks. a Mason error and
doubles by Steven Connoly and
Nicholas Fisher plated the five
runs.
· It remained 5-0 until the fifth
inning, when Bidwell scored a solo
run to increase the lead to 6-0.
Craig Swisher reached on a Mason
error, and Aaron Sullivan singled
before Mike Stephens doubled to
plate the run.
But Mason started its come back
in the bottom of tlte fifth. A walk, a
fielder's choice and back-to-bad:
doubles by Mike Northup and
Rocky Kearns made it a 6· 3 game.
In the sixth inning, Joey Divincenzo singled to lead off the
inning. Trenton Roush followed
with a walk. After an error, Jed
Johnson doubled to pull Mason to
within one run, but once again the
potential tying run was called out
on an appeal play at third base for
the second ·out The threat and the
game ended with a pop up to the
plate.
·
Bidwell will advance to secondround play on Monday evening to
play the winner of Saturday night's
first game between the Gallipolis
Yankees and the Gallipolis White
Sox, set for 6:30p.m. Syracuse will
tangle with Racine in Saturday
night's second game at 8 p.m. Tup·
pers Plains will take on the Middle·
port White Sox's at 9:30 p.m. in
the evening's third ,game.

De an Palmer's two- run homer in
the fourth that tied th e game 2· 2
and h1 s three-run , 438-foot blast in
the fifth th at put the Rangers ah ead
to stay. () . 3.
It was Palmer's third two-homer
gam e sin ce Jun e 18. Sin ce th en,
he's had II homers, givi ng him 17
for the season . Hi s hatting avcraec
also ha s skyrocketed, go in g from
.229 on June 24 to .26H follow ing
Thursda y's 3-for-4. g:une.
Leary, pitching for hi s seve nth
different major-league team, is the
12th different starter the Rangers
have used thi s season. In hi s fir st
appearance for Tex as, he allowed
only one hit and struck out live in 4
2/3 innings .
Tom Henke pit ched the ninth
for his ninth save , qn k1ng out J1m
Thom e with the ba se s loaded to
end the gam e.
In th e AL Ea st. New York
in cre&lt;~scd its !cad over Baltimore to
I l/2 games by beating Cali fornia
5-2. Th e Orioles lost 6-4 to the A's.
In other gam es. Seattl e beat
Boston 4-3 10 10 innin gs , Ka11 sas
C1ty beat Milwaukee 8-3, Toronto
beat Mmne sot a 4-3 and Chicago
beat De troll 9-5.
Yankees 5, An~els 2
At Ne w Yor k, J immy Ke y
ended th e Yankees' three -ga me
losin g streak and became th e fir st
13-game winner in th e AL.
Ke y ( 13-2) allowed six hots in
seven innings, with Bob Wic kman
and St.evc Howe finishing up . Mark
Langston (5 -5) took the loss.
Two-out singles by Wade Boggs
and Danny Tartabull drove 1n a pair
of runs in the seventh innin~ . snaD-

VANS
~0 488**

'

BRAND NEW '94
PONTIAC GRAND AM SE COUPE
Dnver S1de A1r Bag, Anti-loci&lt; Brakes. 2.3 Wlel Quad
OHC L4 Eng1ne. PISteenng, PIBoakes. A~M Stereo.
P/locl&lt;s, Custom Cloth lntenor. ReaoDeck l1d SpOiler.
Well Equ1Jlj)ed'
·· 5ale Prt:e lrdudes P()1!iac
Urdw 30 11100111Ml II 0Jal1fied.

Dlmi'IIIDI
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EkUNDED CONVERSION VAN
Exterded Chasls, Driver Side Air Bag, AntHcd&lt; Brakes. A•
Co00it1011. A1rtmrnlc OvenJnve. PIS. PIB . Toh, CruiSe, AM!FM
Cass, Plll&gt;rOOWS, P/Locl&lt;s. 4Capt ChairS, Sol&lt;&gt;\loo.
Fllerg~ R"mng Boards. loorect Lgllhng. Prernm Wood
Pad&lt;age.F"II ConvefSIOn loaded'

f'.kl Doc Fees. Oeli11ered'

~Dxfees

7,98Btt

1
IRANI NEW '94
OlDSMOBilE CIERA
Dnver S1de A1r Bag, Ant1-Lock Brakes. Automahc, Air
CondlliOII, PIS. Pi9, AM!FM Stereo, PIDoor locks,
PIRecl1ners. Custom Cloth lnteoor, Front &amp;Rear Floor
Mats, Steel belted tires, Well Equ•Jllled'

IHI All NIW '94
CHIVY ~SIRIIS PICKUP

~7,888
BRAID Nil '94 BUICK
CENTURY SEDAN
Automatic, Air Condition, Power Steering, Rower

Brakes. Custom Cloth Interior, Front &amp; Rear Floor
Mats, Steel Betted T&gt;res, Driver Side Airbag. Well
EquiP!l!'d'

~4 Ton Chasso, v~ Powll', S~Jn Berdl Rl!';lm'!J Seat

Rear Jumpseaf. PIS. P/8. Full !lze Spare Tre,
Well Equwe&lt;J'

I~
Waf

·

�,./

\__

Page-6--The Dally Sentinel

I

""

Friday, J uly

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

8, 1994

J'

'

.
Apostolic

Church of Christ

Episcopal

Pumeroy Church of Ch.-lst
212 W..\-lain St
Pastor: Andrew Milea
SWlday School - 9:30a.m.

Gran Epi.Kopal Cburdl
326 E. Main SL, Paneroy

Worship- 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servio:t - 7 p.m .

Liberty Assembl y of God
P.O. Bo• 467, Dudding we
M-11011, W.Va.
Paator: Gregory A. JohnKWJ
Sunday School- J(}.OO a.m.
Children'• O.urch · II a.m.
· I I a.m. &amp;. 6p.m.

1luusdov Bible

-7
(Sou ther n)

SL, M!ddlepon
Pastor. Rev. David Btyan

Sunday School - 11 a.m.
Worth1p - I Oa.m , 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servi~Xs · 7 p.m.
.

'

Mid dleport Church ~ C hri st
5Ut and Mairl
Pastor. Alllart soo
Youth Minisler. Bill Frazier
SW1d1 y School - 9:30a.m.
Wo"hi p- 8: ll, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneida)' SeiVIceJ - 7 p.m.
Keno Chu r ch or Chrld
Wunhip- 9:30a.m.

Wonnip - 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 10:30 Lm.

Ask Street, Mjddleport

Pastor: Le1 Hayrmm
Saturday Service · 7: )0 p.m
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - I I am.,
Wednesday Scrv•ce -7 ·10 p.m .

Rutland •1r~1 Bapllst Church

Sund.y School - 9JO o.m .
Wonlup - 10 .45 a.m.
Pomcruy F irst Baptist
Pastor· Pa ul Stinson
East Main St.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wo rdup - 10:30 a.m
BapU~

First South ern

4 1872 Pom a-oy Pike

Pu tor: E. Lamar o· Bryant
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 a. m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00p. m.

flrst Baptlst Church
6th and Palmer Sl , Middleport

Sunday School - 9: I 5 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:15 Lm., 7:00 p.m.
A.B.Y.-5:30 pm.
Lonfs Suppe r ht Sunday of every month.
Wednesday Service- 7:00 p.m.
Racine flrst Baptist
Youth Pastor: Aaron Young

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Won~ -

10:40 L m ., 7·00 p.m.
Wedncaday Service•- 7:00p.m.
Sliver Run Baptlst
Pastor: Bill LiuJe
SWlday School - lOa.m.
Wun hip - lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.

Barwalluw Ridge C hun:h ul C h.-lst

Pastor. Jack Cole:grove
SWlday School -9:30 a.m.

Won hip · 10:30 am., 6:30 p.m.

31057 Suu: Routs: 325, wg" U.
Pauor. Rev. Rick Maloyed
Sunday oebool - 9:30 Lm.
Sunday wonhip · 10:35 Lm. 41: 7 p.m.
Otildren's church - 10:35 a. m. Youth 6 p.m
Wednesday prayer service -7 p.m.

Pomeroy, Harrisooville Rd. (RL 143)
P11sl0r: Roger Watson
Sunday School. · 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Se rvil%1 · 7 p.m.

Pine Gro .. Bible Holltle!ll Cburcb
1/2 mile olf Rt. 32l
Pa1tor. Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 am ., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30pm.

Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Hysell Run Holtn ... Church
Putor: Robert Manley
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - I 0:45 am., 7 p.m.
Thunday SeiVICC · 7o30pm.

T uppen Plain Church W C briJt
P~ts lor.

Bill Wine•

SWJday School - 9 a.m.

Worship · 9A5 a.m., 6:30pm .
BradbUrJ Church of C hrl~
Pu tor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonh.ip - 10:30 L m .

Pastor : Jar. N. Sayre
SWlday Sohool-9:45 a.m.
Evening · 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

Betblmem Bapllst

Racine, oi-l
PasLOr : Rev. Earl Shuler

Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Won hip · 9:30 a.m.
Thursdiy Servi(%1- 7:00.p.m.

Old Belllel Fret Will &amp;pUll Chur&lt;h
28601 SL Rt. 7. Middlepon
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening · 7:30p.m.
Thunday Service.~ . 7:30

VIctory Bapt1511ndependant
52l N. 2nd SL Middleport
PalLOr: June• E. Keesee

Wonhip - IOLm., 7 p.m.
Wcdrlcaday Service• - 7 p.m.

Faith Bapt151 Chur&lt;h
Railroad SL, Masoo
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 11 Lm., 6p.m.
Wednesday Servia:• · 7 p.m.
Forut Run &amp;ptist
Pa110r : Ariu• Hurt
Sunday School - 10 am.
Wonhip · II Lm.

ML Moriah 8apt151
Founb &amp; Main SL, Middleport
PaJIOr.

Rev. Gilbert Crai&amp;, Jr.

Sunday School· 9:30am.
Wonhip - 10:45 Lm.
AnUqully &amp;pllll
Pu10r. Kennelh Smilh
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 Lm.
Thursday ServiOCJ - 7:30p.m.
,.,

Rudand Free Will &amp;pllll
Salem SL

Putoc Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School - !Oa.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Service~ · 7 p.m.
Catholic
-- · Sacred Han CallwiJc Churdt
· 161 Mulheny Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pastor: Rev, Walter E. Heinz
5'at Con. 4:45-5:15p.m.; Man- 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9:15am.,
Sun. Ma11 - 9:30a.m.
Dailey Man • 8:30 Lm.

BradiiH'd Chun:h of Christ
Comer of St RL 124 41: Bradbury Rd.
Evangeliat: l&gt;erek Stump
Yout.h MinUte.-: Mark Na.~er

SIUiday School ·9:30a.m.
Won;hip · 8:00a.m., 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service• · 7:30p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
R&lt;OrJianl:red Chur&lt;h II Jesu• Chriil
or Lauer Da7 Salata
Portland-Racine Rd.
Pu1or. Janice Danner
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 am.
Wcdncoday Services-7:30p.m.

Hickory Hilla Church oi Chrlsl
Pastor. Joseph B. Hoatins

Lutheran
St. John Luthenn Chrch
Pine Grove
Pa1toc Dawn Spalding
Wonhip · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wonhip · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Ub&lt;rty Christian Cburcb
•.
De.ts:r
Pastor. Woody Call
Sunday Evening · 6:30p.m.
Thunday Service - 6:30p.m.

Langs•llle Christian Chorch
Sunday S&lt;hool · 9:30 a.m.
Wo.ship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdneaday Servia: 7:30p.m.
Hemloct Grove Chur&lt;h
PallOr: Gene Zopp
Sunday achool - 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 9o30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Reodmlle Church o1 Chrlol

s...day School: 9:30am.
Worahip Service: 10:30 Lm.
Bible Study, Wedneaday, 6:30p.m.

Our Sa•Jour Lutlleran Churcb
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.VL
Co-.,uton: Revs. Ridlard 41:

Sl Paul Lutheran Chur&lt;h
Comer Sycam~ &amp;: Seccnd Sl, P&lt;llleroy
Pa110r. Dawn SpalcJina
Sunday School · 9:4~ am.
Wonhip · II a.m.
United Methodist
Gnbam United Methodllt
Worship · 9:30Lm. (hi il2ud Sun).
7:30p.m. ('Jnl 41: 4lh Sun)
Wedneoday Service-7:30p.m.

Christian Union
Hartford Church of Chrlllt In
Christian Union
Hartfonl, W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. David McMania
Sunday School · II a.m.
Wonhip · 9:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wedncoday S..VK:es · 7:30p.m.

ML Oll•e United Mctbodlll
Off 124 behind Wiltcsville
Pastor. O.arlea J..,..

Sunday School · 9:30am.
Wonhip- 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Thunday Suvioes - 7 p.m.
Melp C-ad•e Parbh
NortheaiiCiuller
AItrod
Putor: Sharm HausllWI
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • II am., 6:30p.m.

Hob..., Christian Union
M!ddlepolt, Ohio

Sunday School, I0 am.
Simday evc:ninc, 7:30 p.m. •
W..m.aday,7:30p.m.

Joppa

Pasto&lt;: Bob Randolplt
Wonhip - 9:30 1.m.
S!Diday Sohool • 10:30 a.m.

Rutland Chorch ol God
Putor: Gregory L. Sean
SIUiday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II Lm., 6 p.m.
Wedncoday Servicca · 7 p.m.

I

LultllloiiGm
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Scarbcny
Sunday School -9:30am.
Wcnhip- 10:30 a.m.
Wcdneaday Servicca- 7:30p.m.

Sync... Cburdt of God
Apple and Second SU.

Reedsville
Putor: Rev. PhiiJjp Scarbcny
Wonhip . 9:10a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30 p.m.

Pastor. Rev. David Ruuell
Sunday School and Wonhip- 9:30a.m.

Evenina Servicca· 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Servicca - 7 p.m.

Tupptn Plalo1 St. Paul
Pu&amp;or: Sharm Hausman
Sunday School - 9 Lm.
Wonhip - IOa.m.
Tuesday Servicca - 7:30 p.m.

Churcll of God or Ptopbeq
OJ. While Rd. olf St. RL 160
Putor. Pa Hernon
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.
Wedneoday Servica - 7 p.m.

CenlraiOw&amp;..A,.,ury (SyracUIO)
Putor. Deron Newman
Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Wonhip · II am.
Wedneaday Service• · 7:30p.m.

New LlteCburcb of God
Oletts:r
Putor. Gary Hines
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 6 p.m.
Wcdneaday Serviceo · 7 p.m.

0\\if( S,rul !Boof.s
93 Mill Street
Middleport, Ohio 46760
16141992-6867 - 199B -OOKSI
CHURCH SUPPLIES • BIBLES

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

CLASSIFIED ADS
asuper market

Rrighlldea!

for everythingp

Putor: Theron Durham

Sunday · 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wc:dneaday - 7 p.m.

Pastor. A.flhur Cralxree

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

Enddme Houoe or Prayer
(II Bulfinaham &lt;burch olf Rouu 33)
Pu10r. Robert Vance
Sunday wonhip - 10 am.
Wedneaday tcrvice - 6:30 r-m.

Thundty ~rvic:et . 7 p.m.

Salem Center
Paator. Ron Fierce

SLUlday S&lt;hool - 9:15 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:15 Lm.

Trlnlly Coovegad..,al Chur&lt;h
Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Olurch · 9:15a.m.
Wonhip - I(}.30 a.m.

SnuWYIUe

Pu tor. Aormce Smith

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 9 a.m.

Tbe Salvallon Anny

Bethany
Putor. Kemelh Balter
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9a.m.
Wedncoday Service~ - 10 a.m.

liS Buuemul Ave., Pomeroy.

· SIUiday School - 10:30 am.
Wonhip - 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Middleport Communlly Churdl
575 Pearl SL, Middleport
Pull&gt;r. Sam Andei'IClll
Sunday School 10 am.
Evl&gt;ling · 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Cannel

Put.oc: Kenneth Baker
SLDlday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 Lm. (2nd 41: 41h Sun)

•

Mornlq Star
Putor. KtDtelh Raker

Fallll Tabcrnade Cburdl
Bailey Run Road
Putor. Rev. llmmeu Raw~
Sunday School · I 0:00 a.m.
Evening 7 pm.
Thunday Service · 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm.
Thunday Services - 7:30 p.m.
Sull&lt;ln
Putor: Kemelb Baker

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 1(}.4~ a.m. (ht il3rd Sun)

SJraeuM Mllllil011
1411 Brid&amp;cman SL, Syncutc
Putor. Roy (Mike) Thompoon
Sunday School · I 0 a.m.
Evening · 6 p.m.
Wcdneoday Service - 7 p.m_

Eul L&lt;lll11
Putor. Ken Molts:r

Sunday S&lt;hool · 10 a.m.
Wonhip -9a.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.

Hazel Commualty Cloun:ll
Off Rt. 124
Putor. Edael Hut
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30pm.

Radne
Putor: Ken Molter
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m. and 7 pm.
CoolvUie Uolled Melllodlit Puilh
Putor. Helm Kline
Coolvlllt O.urdl
Main il Fifth St.
s...day School • 10 a.m.
Wonhi~ - 9 a.m.
Tuesday SeiYWU • 7 p.m.

Dyesvllle Community Church
Sunday School • 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip · I 0:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Christian Fellow!llip Cenw
Salem St, Rutland
Putor. Roberti!. Mw1er
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 11 :15 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Service • 7 p.111.

Bethel Churctt
Tow111hip Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip- 10 a.m.
Wedneaday Service~ - 10 a.m.

M- Cbapel Cburdt
Faw, Supairttatded
Sunday l&lt;hool- 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Service • 7 p.m.

CaU Westent Auto

992·5515

Hockl-" Churdl
Gran&lt;Js.Sunday School · 10 a.m.

Wonhip • II a.m.
Wedneaday !lem.., . g p.m.

Flllll~un:ll

Sunda~ool - 9:30a.m.

Wonhip • 10:45 a.m., 1:30 p.m.
Wedneaday 7:30 p.m.
ML Oll•e Community Clturdt
Pastor. Lawrence Bush
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service . 7 p.m.

Rae flnt Cburdl ollbc N.....,e
Putor. Muk Shg11
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 un., 6 p.m.
Wcdneaday Service• - 7 p.m.

Unlled Fallll Church
Rl 7.., Pomeroy By-Pa11
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
SWiday School - 9:30 Lm,
Wonhip - 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Service · 7 p.m.

Mldtll..,n Church of tile Naurene
Paotor: G"'IOI}' A. Cundiff
Sunday School • 9:30 1.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedneaday ServiOCJ · 7 p.m.

Full Coopel Llabtbooae
3304~ Hiland Road. Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School - 10 Lm.
6vening 7:30p.m.
Tueoday A Thunday . 7:30p.m.

Rood..tlle Fellowlltlp
c•urdolllbc N_,..e
Puu: Jobn w. Dau&amp;Ju
Stmday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip. 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Sei'Yicco · 7 p.m.

The Southlork Inn Sho~ Bar
Point Pleasant, WV ·
Open at 4 P.M.Tues. thru Sat.
With the Ho Hest Dances in
Town - (304) 675-5955

Fairview Bible O.ur&lt;h
Letart, W.Va. RL I
Pastor: Jamu Le wis
Sunday School - II a.m.
Wo11hip · 9:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wedneaday SeiVice · 7:30 p.m.

Public Notice

tfarrisonvillc Road
Paa10r: Rev. Victor Rouah

s...day School9 :30 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednu day Service· 7:30p.m.
SUven &gt;llle Word of Faith
Pastor: David Dailey

SIDiday School 9:30 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Rdoklng Life Churcb
lOO ~- 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor. Lawrence Foreman

SIIJlday School - 10 1.m.
Wedne&amp;day Servicea- 7 p.m.

Chur&lt;b of Jesus Christ, , ,
Apostolic: Faith
1/4 mile paal Fort Mciga on New Lima Rd.
Paator: William Van Meter
Sunday-7:00 p.m.
Wcdnwlay-7:00p.m.
Fnday-7:00 pm.
Cllnon Tabernade Chun:h
Oiftcn, W.Va.
SIIJlday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 7 p.m.

Thunday Service - 7 p.m.
Pentecostal
Panleoostal A.,.mb!J
St Rt. 124, Racine
P11110r: William Hoback
Sunday School · I 0 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Mlddleporl Pentec:OSIII
Third Ave.
Pastor: Re•. Clark Baker

Sunday School · I0 a.m.
Bvening · 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Service• · 7:00p.m.
Presbyterian
Syrawse First Unlled Ptesbylerlan

RAWUNGS.COATS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.
Harrisonville Ptesbyt&lt;rlan Church
Wonhip · 9 Lm.
Sunday School · 9:45 a.m.

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677
/

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

BILL QUICKEL

(row's family Restaurant
. "Fulutl•l Kllllutig Ftl•d ClrJtA,. ..
221 W.

992-7075

264

992-5141.
South

2nd

Middleport

EWING FUNERAl HOM£

FLORIS '

.. /)i/(nity and St·r~in• :tlu·n~· -• "
Established 1913

OU.o1 Flo..-.

352 EAST MAIN
POIEAOY, OliO 45711

1112-2144 or 112-12111

Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432

Pomeroy

Coun!y~

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Village of Middleport
Ia applying lo tho Ohio
Deportment
of
Tranaporlollon for an
operating ualatance grant
under Section 18 ol tho
Federal Tranall Act of 1964
and tho Ohio Public
Transportation
Grant
Program . Tho grant will
provide llnonclal aaalatance
lor public troneportallon
aervlce lor roaldtrtlo of tho
Mlddltport-Pomaroy area
during 1995.
The aervlce currently
operetea Monday through
Frldoy 8 A.M. to 7 P.M. end
ort Saturday from 8 A.M. lo
5 P.M. Service before 8 A.M. ,
alter 7 P.M. and on Sundaya
may be acheduled. Wheel
chair uaera are provided tho

·oep a rlmenl ol Natural
Resources, Slate of Ohio
and to provide all

aamt eervlct achedule as

a true and correct copy of

all other ruldonto . Foree
ore $1 .20 per one-way trip
lor the general public with
elderly and dlaabled rldtt ol
60 conlt per ono· way trip.
Coplea of the detailed
service dtecrlptlon are
ayallable at the Mayor's
Office, 237 Race St. ,
Middleport, Ohio, between
tha houra of 8 A.M. and 4
P.M. Monday lhrti Friday.
Tho
Village lnvltoa
commenla
from
all
lnleruted public, prlvolo,
1and paralranell operators
Including taxi operators
rogardlng the propoaed
urvlce. •
A Publle htorlng will be
htld on July 27, 1994 117:30
P.M. In the council
ehambera at village hall lor
public comment.
Dewey M. Horion, Mayor
VIllage ol Middleport
(7) 8, 15; 2TC

!he resolution adopted by
the Pomeroy Vlllega Council
held on 20th day of June,
1994, and that I am duly

Mlddleplll'l l'tesbyWian
Sunday School - 9 Lm.
Wonhip · 10 a.m.

Public Notice

Seventh-Day Adventist
s..mth-Day Advmllll
Mulbeny H11. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor. Roy Lawinaky

Satunby Service~:
Sabbath School -2 p.m.
Wonhip - 3 p.m.
United Brethren
ML Hennon United Brethrea
lo Cbrbt Cburdl
T..u Community olf CR 82
Putor: RoheR Sanden
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servicea -7 :30p.m.

~,

Putor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 7:30p.m.
Wcdncoday Scrvicca- 7:30p.m.

South Reibel New Tallmeat
Silver Ridae
Putor. Duane Sydautridter
Sunday Sdlool - 9 a.m.·
Wonhip - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
WOiklcsday Service • 7 p.m.

fl.

ao4w. Maon
99l ·llll Pomerov

llttlfl

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
RESOLUTION 4.94
. FORM N0. 2
. llESOLUTION
AUTHORIZING FILING
OF APPLICATION
Prolecl Tille Rlverlronl
Development
&amp;
Amphitheater
WHEREAS, the federal
Land
and
Water
Conoervatlon Fund Ael ot
1965 (Public Law88-578)
provides
financial
alllllance to tho State of
Ohio tor outdoor recreation'
purpoaea, and
WHEREAS, tho Village of
Pomeroy, Ohio dotlreo
llnanelel aooletonce under
the Lond and Water
Conaervatlon Fund Act
program.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT
RESOLVED by the VIllage
Council 11 lollowo:
1. That lht Vlllogo Council
heroby approves filing an
application lor Land and
Water Canaervatlon ~und
Act flnonclal aaolllonce.
2. That Mayor 11 hereby
authorized ond dlrocted to
txiCUII ,nd file On
applleatlon with tho

1

992-2121

RIDENOUR

'1"

FURNt~~~~~RDWARE II
Homehle Saw'

....-

R~~ER~

~

. 214 E . Main
992-SIJO Pomeroy

•

~

Veterans
. Memorial Hospital
Pomeroy
'•

s aid application lor
subml oolon lo the U.S.
Deparimonl of the lntoror.
3. Thai the VIllage Council
hereby doeo agree to
obligate the lunda required
to satlslaclorlly complele
tho propoaed project and
thua become eligible lor
Lartd
and
Water
Conservation Fund Act
financial aid of up to 50
percent ol the actual

n

N£W &amp; USEDPARISfOR
All MAKES &amp; MOORS
992·7013 OR
992-SSSl OR
IOU FREE 1-ID0-141-0070
DARWIN, OHIO
7131/Q lfTF N

Bl!ll
Tht Big Btnd Firm
Andquta Club apprec:l1111 your help In apo•
aorlng the July 4th

T111Cior Pull II Star MUI
Pllk.
44

41'\:ll trn

MARTECH
INDUSTRIES
Residential
Concrete
and Masonry Work
Porches
Sidewalks
Driveways
SR 7 • Five Pointe
41131~

coat.

Cartlflcote ol
Recording Officer
I, the undaralgned, hereby
cenlly, that the foregoing Ia

authorized to execute this

cenl11cate.
Kathy Hysall
Clerk-Treasurer
(7) II, 15; 2TC ,
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE Is here_by given
lhat on Saturday, July 9th,
1994 at10:00 a.m., a public
aale will be held at 211 West
Main Street, Pomeroy, Ohio,
The Farmero Bank parking
lot, to aall lor caoh the
lollowlrtg eollaleral:
·
1991 Chevy S· 10 Pickup
SNI 1GCCS14E4M2146429
1992 Ford Aeroalor Van
SNI IFMDA31X6N2B26051
1986 Oldomoblle Caiola
· SNI 1G3NT27L7GM337499
Tho Farmero Bonk and
Savings Company, Pomeroy, Ohio, reaerveothe rlghl
lo bid at thla aale, artd to
withdraw the above

COLLINS

ENTERPRISES
.Carpentry
•Painting
•Pow11r Waohlng •
clean• all exterlore
with high preuure
aprayer
•Reasonable Rotea
o20 Year• Expertanca
ofrea Estlmalee

985-4181
212311 mo.

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL

&amp;

COAL

6:45 p .m.
S pac ial Early Bird
$100 PayoH
Thla a d good lor 1
F REE card.
Lie. No. 005 1--342

Golf u u ons
SJNdGI
6 for •75

• F IRE W O OD

SLACK
992-2269

C lub Repair

USED RAIL ROAD TIE S

614-985-3961

B I LL

.

11111 mo.

-~.

L. W r ltese l

ROOFING
N E W - R E PAIR

Howard
Excavating Co.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
· Room Addilions
· New garages
· Eieclrical &amp; Plumbing
· Roofing
· Interior &amp; Exte ri or
Palnling al so c onc rete
work
(FR EE ESTIMATES)
V.C . YOU NG Ill

992-62 15
Pomeroy, Ohio

Wanted to buySta ndin g
wood &amp; pin e.

Call
614·682·7676

Joe N . Sayre

Lose Weighl

SAYRE TRUCKING

No Meetings No We1gh Ins
No drugs or chemicals
All for aboui
one doll~ r a day!

3/4193 1 MO

446-3896

collateral
prior to aale. - - -- - -- - - -- - -- - - - - - fLirther, The Farmers Bank
and savings company
Real Estate General
reserve• the right to reject _ _ _ _ __;.:.;__.:.;__;.::.._::..:__ _;__ _ _ _~
arty or all blda aubmltltd.
Further,
the
above
collalerol will be aold In tho
condition It Ia In with no
expreaaed or Implied warrantlea given.
For more Information
contact Jeff Gilkey, at 9922136.
(7) 6, 7, 8 3tc
Public Notice
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
Notice lo hereby given
that on July 11, 1994 from
7:00 P.M. to 7:30 P.M. e
publle meeting on the
Budget and Revenue
Sharing lor the year 1995
lor the Village of Pomeroy,
Ohio will be held at the
Clerk's Offlet.
Kothy Hyeell
VIllage Clerk
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(7)8; lTC

PUBLIC NOTICE
A budget hoorlng will be
hold on July 12, 1994, lor oil
lntorealed cltlzena ol
Cheater Townehlp. Tht
budgol propooed will be lor
llecal yeor 1885. Tho
moellng will begin at 5:00
p.m. ol the Chaoltr Town
Hall. The regular monthly
meeting will be · held
lmmedlattly following tho
budget hearing.
' Karen R. Smllh
Ch•ter Townahlp Clerk
Melgo County, Ohio
(7) 8: 1TC

Apartment
for Rent

WAIEI'S EDGE APARTMENTS
SYUCUSE,OH.
OPfNIIII Ill Jlltr

OVer 12, dlllbiM or Mndlcllppelil FmHA 1

.

bed-

room. f1Mta .for to to 140&amp;, baled on Income.
"-ttge, refrlgttndDr, 011rpet, rJc, on aH• leundry,

TDD RD0-75C1-07
Equll Houelng Opportunity

Need to eell thla property

eetate. Ha••ina
Open House Sunday, July tO from 2 to 4 p.m.
Locltad behind Rutland Grade School. 3 bedroom
home whh all new carpet In bedroo1Tt8, nice lot In
good neighborhood. Very large garage, big bath,
llll'ga living room. Coma to Open Houae and make
oHer. Phone 614-742· 2620.

L;~~~~~~~~~----------------~

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

Systems. Water &amp; Sewer
lines, Land Clearing

FREE E S TIMATES

Fill Dirl. Top Soil

949·2168

Reasonable R&lt;lles

~1 &amp;94

Estimates

TFN

992-3838 """"

LOST

SUMMER
IMAGES "'
TANNING

Brown and
white Brittany
Spaniel.
Five

NEW BULBS
LOW PRICE

Pt. Area.

Name, Buffy.

REWARD

16 - $25

Phone

992·6597

992·2487

ROBERT BISSElL
CONSTRUCTION

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE

61!111 MO.

61311 mo.

• New Homes

614-992·3470
Llmeetone: 15 ton &amp;
up $10.50 ton; 15 t on &amp;
under $11 .50 ton
Top Sail $6.50 ton
Gravel $11.50 ton · ?
Sand? - Low Rate•
And More

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Slop

&amp; Compare

F REE ESTIMATES

985·4473

10 ton min. on 1111.
6/t 611 mo. pd.

TRI·STATE K·9
ACADEMY

TOP SOIL,

FILL DIRT,

TUPPERS PLAINS
Basic obedience,
law enlorcement,
personal protection.
kennel service, pupa &amp;
young dogs lor sale.
RoUweiler &amp; Shepherd
Stud Service
By appt. only

LIMESTONE
Delivered
Locally
992-3838

614-667-PETS
121?111"

&amp; VIcinity

1- - - - - - - - - - 13 Family
3

LINDA'S

ARNOLD'S
PLUMBING,
HEAliNG &amp;
COOLING

PAINTING &amp; CO.

WORK &amp;
GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD

QUALITY

(614) 992·7474

POMEROY, OHIO

........

Interior &amp; Exterior
Take the pain out of
painting. Lei us do it
lor you. Very rea sonable.
Free Eslim_ates
Be fore 6 p.m. leave
message.
After 6 p. m.

614·985-4180

!1125/94

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

PORTLAND • New Portland Rood • A 2 bedroom home wilh
a nice big y8ld 1111\t is partially fenced.
$28,000
POMEROY • ualey Slreet ·A home 1D grow ln . If you need
mora apace this 4-5 bedroom, 3 story home Is just lor you .
Has 2 ballla &amp; Gas forced air lumace.
$43,500

4405.

ROOM

ft.)

• canlel r.IAAni,ncr &amp; &amp;eolchgard • drapery

fabric '

plecaa, mlec. Rain cancela.

Yard I c .. n S.lo-Rt 35 South,
lml. from tlghl 1rtghl otclll, watch
lor ligna, Sunaay.
_

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Anon ymoua

(Your

Name

•

Never Aeked). Plllnned Paren--

thood ol SouthNat Ohio. fOf an
Appolntmont Colt 814-44lHI166,
414 Second St.~Gatllpotlo. At10 3 family yard aala, Rlggecrest
Available 8t ~~~anntd Paren-- Rd.
al&gt;ovo EaaRom High
thood of Sou!Moll Ohio In Sc hool, ~uly 8th • lith, 1-4,
Athona and Logon. "SSiding Foe t alavlaloo, golf c:lu._, new
Scalo.country crafta, new I uMd
clothu, booke ... cubtl wood,
StrUI Your JNF\8 PlgNnt, July new etutt anlm~~la I much rrtON.
30th,
Krodot Paik, Point
-

PtNnnt. .....,

call Shena Hart

lor OO!IJ lonn, 304-~000.

4

Giveaway

1 ..... Whhe Khten 3 Monthe

Old, 1 Brown Whhe Klnen 8
Wotka Old, To Coring Homoo
Only, I1U48-0311

3 Pft Bull mix pupploo, 3 black

and whh ldtt.,... lo giveaway,
114-M3-$1111.
4 Month Old Fe1T11111 Black I.

Whht Border Cottla. All 1111ota,
Good Homo, Farillly llovlng,
114-446-3QS1.
Ado,.l&gt;lo pupploa, 3 whlto, 4
black, pirt Lab-RetrieveJ·1 304882-3781.

All Condhlonor, 11,000 BTU, 614-

441.0516.

Auolrlllan pulll\::e to . good
homM, 304-67:

.

Froo Kfttonol14-441-0417
lArge Dog 1 Yoar Old NM&lt;11
OoOd Country Homo, a- With
Chlldrw~l

114 311 8004.

lllxocl brood pupploo to good
homo. 304-475-4603.

7

pupploe,

Part Garman
Shepald, pari lAb. 304-176-1103.
PuppiM,
114-3N-2846

All Yard S.loo lluot Bo Paid In
Advanco. Doadtlno: 1:00pm tho
day boforo tba ad lo to tun,
Sunday odHion- 1:CIOpm Friday,
edit~

Mondawo
Saturday.
~uga

10:00a.m.

garage .... July 6-lt..end

ol Sotom St- . Rutland. 1011&gt;J
bod and fumltu,., ping pong
t abla, kMa cf children'• dotheS
12 moe.· .Ua 12. toya and loti

mon.

8

Public Sale

&amp; Auction
Rick Paaroon Auction Company,

tull Ume aucUoneer, complete
aervk:a.
Ucenaed

auction

t68,01llo • WOII VIrginia, :J04.
77W785.

u..... '

Auctlonow Col. Ooear E.

754-114 •

304-IIGS-3430.

9

Click,

8onclad

•

Wanted to Buy

Antique• will buy one piece ot

ontl,. houoohold, O.by Martin,
top dollar paid, 114-W2-lll41.

Ctoan IAto Modo! Cor. Or
Tructca. 1887 Modele Or Newer,
Smfth Buick Pontlao, 1800
Eaetem Awenue, O.lllpoUe.

Docoralocl II0MW1111, wollt.,..
phonoo, old tampa 1 old thor·

mometera, old clocu, ard~u.
Tlr"!J lwr I"LT 21W5 Rl&amp;. Rvo tumhure.
Riverine Antkfuea.
LT O&lt;OII-85 Rll. Good troad, 304- Run Moore,
owner. 814-882175-11110 or 304-illl-3703.
2528. Wa buya.tatn.
To Good Hotnt 11 Month Old
112 Oatmallon i.ltx Famolo, 814- J I D'a Auto Partl and SIIVIgl,
1110 buying junk ct,. l lrucka.
251-141a.
304·7T.I-53U.
Whlto Slbo,.n huoky, 3 Yf. old; Wanl to buy ... of lttpe for
mlxocl Slboran hUIIIJ pupa, mobllo homo, 114-IIG2-5063.
born :J-17-M,114-46WIIOS.
Wantod To Buy: Junll Aut.,.
With Or Without lloton. Coil
6 Lost &amp; Found
Lany l,lvelJ. 114-3811-u:io3,
Found: Black Dog, Uppor
Top Prtcoo Paid: All Old U.S.
Second .I.Yenu., Glllfpolt.,
Colna, Gold Ringo, Sllvor Coino,
441-&lt;I'Ml,
Gold Colno. II.T.S. Coin Shop,
Lo8l: dog: mlnatu,..cotlle, brown 1t1t Socond A- Ootilpotlo.
whh whlta, .,....,. to the name
ol Micky, off a boat 11
llaaon lovoo Sunclay avonlng, Employment Services
ehlklo pat, rowald.
loll: Brown Pari Chihuahua
FamNioo Pot, Around sp;;;;i 11
Help Wanted
OuMn IAundlJ Mat On Eutom
AYIIlut, 114-441•1Z7V.
AVON I All Aroaa I 111111toy
SptaiO, ~7&amp;-142e.
Loll: lllcJ lrlllt Soft• AniMI1I
To Homo Of Ban&gt;n, Could Ba AVONI All ...__ Mood .....
p- Call a14-441- money or want • ClrHr: either
way-call ~~~~- ~-Z645
Ofl-t00-W2
.

•u..

:;.r:.-·

Yard Sale

Accepting IPIIfleottor. tor - vlco otatlon ott.ndtnl, ..n. lettor otatlng q..tlllealtor. lo:
Dally Sentinel, P.O. Box m.a,

Gallipolis

-oy.Oitlo4mt.

Ale JOU lnlOfOotocl In nuralng?
Baa Inning AUG I, HRDE" llitl,
Slzo 3, wltf
_ , _ a d - In ,.tlnl
ExerciM llichlne, Womena
Clothoo, Mono Shlrlo, Slzo Lg. PI-nt to train rou t o a cartlllad Nur.lng AnltlanJ.
Toyo, Etc. Ele. 1:00 A.ll. SotuJ'o Tho training It frat H you . , Onlf, .lu1y 8111, ConlortiiJ JTPA Thto IH gulrlotlnoli a a dJt.
ToimhoUoo.
locatod -'&lt;or or dill=
For mora In
8th, lth, H. 871 Nort ...p Rd, homamakor.
caB collaet, 304-343-&lt;IV80. H
on u.- Pltoo 1n eom.wv. tlon
noanawor,ltavo-.go.EDE
Papa........ Clothing. llloc.
AVON SELLS ITSELFI Polontlal
Extnmaly lArgo I Family: Country Lane.
8th, tlh. 1-4. Eomlnga $200 42,000 Monthly,
M Woflt And llil
160 N. F10111 1.1 lllloo, Sol
.orclar. Froo Trolnlngl , _ _
Righi On Country Lane.
'
Hciullholc!, __Some 'Fumi11Ar'8, 4731.
....
Olt111.........
Clali""''J u .
Gango Solo: July l'lh, 8th. lith, WorUr, Con1r.cted lenfne.
Nloo UMd Fvinlhn, T.V.'o, M. . Have COL Or Ba Wlllna Tq
Obtain COL. OrttNi AlttliiiJ&amp;
CGuchoo,
-har
T - To And F~em AI~
Mal- W
~::.·.JJ.*t,._
~ Ev-,~Jtb!
Alltlotlo Facllhlot. 11uo1
Bulavltlo Tlirn Righi On K- In
Rd.,l14 4.. 4031,114--44&amp;-1004. Ablo To Worli Fiellbtt Houra.
Month Pothlon. No .......
Garage S.to: Thur. l'lh, F~ 8th, Bono!Ko. Bond l n t - J.attOto
Sot llh. WOIIom -._Antiquo And A-me ..,_
Dlahoo,IOdon-CIIum, DoadiiM Of .hiiJ 10, 11M 11
Clothoo, Toolo Dotla, WhaalbiJ'o Phyllo llaMno DJroctor__
- · Lolo Of iliactllanoouol111 Of
Human
ReaousOaa. Uttivoo.Jiri·
Rio Q,.ncla, P.b. Bo1 II
Houoo On LHtlo Kygor Road
Thol o - To Rl- ValloJ High Rio 010ncla, 011 4t111t1. EEOI
Empioyor.
;
School.
lloyo ctolhoo,

J..,

S:t;llol

l

FREE

(Carpet Cleaning Only-Maximum 240 sq.

WOI"Mn'..man a

HIY TOlling and Cou...llng

St-.

CLEANING SPECIAL
1

...,.,

Va rd Sa.._Rt 2 acroee from RolUna Wrecker, Saturday July I , g..
4pm. CIOChlng, baby ltema,
mi.:.

4 Family:

$28,100

GET

Sun.

&amp; VIcinity

Rocly R. Hupp, D.(.U. • Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843-5264

$100.00

I,

Chrlt tla n lady, white, blonde
halr, wt.136, u.kJng lnfllt Chrt.
tlan com~ Ilion 40" to 51 yur11
of age, wrtte to: PO Bo1 728 C,
PomOroy, Ohio 457118.

7

• Accident • Annully, IRA • Mortgage

SPEND

Regl.ter1llon

July 10th, 3pm-duokl agoo i18yra. For lnlonnat on, Sam
Gwtnn, Dlr. 304-i75-611()4 or 175-

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health

MIDDLEPORT • South 4th Ave. • A large 2 &amp;lory home with
vinyl siding and 2700 Sq. Ft. ol living space. Large living
room, huge bedroom downstairs, and 3 bedrooms upstafrl.
Haa 2 beths, lireplaca, wraparound poroh, side porc:h pado,
and hal 2 lots.
$40,000

July

CAMP CA NAAN wiN bo hold clolhoo\ Iota ol potyotor knfta,
July 10-15, Muon Co. ~ droeo I nka, quiH framoo, qulH

- --..!.-=.:.:..:::....._

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

AMERICAN GENERAL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

POMEROY • E. Main Slraet • A 2 story home with 3
~· and one bath. Full basemen~ front &amp; rear pordlea.

Yald Sat.-1 mi. ol&gt;ovo
Glenwood, st. Rt. 2. lhltlolool,

Announc ements

Evening~.

614·992·7643

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

Pt. Pleasant

Announcements

Trucking: limestone &amp;

(No Sunday Calls)

general cleaning

MIDDLEPORT - Corn.- ol Hudaon &amp; tat • A river view and
a log home that ia eute aa a button. Has 2 bedroom•. bath
and • LARGE closet and front Billing porch . Perl9cl • - or
rtttintmant home.
$39,000
DOmE TURNER, Broker..........................1192·56112
8-:.~RENFlRYDA JEFFERS.•- ................ ;...............1192--3056

SPRADUN0 ......... - .............(304)

"Look for t he Red and W hite Aw ning"

992-4119 AI Tromm Owner 1·800.291-5600

Complclc House &amp;
Tr.1iler Siles
Driveways, Septic

D ownspouts

Real Estate General

.11

' VISIT OUR SHOWROOM'
110 Court St. Pom eroy, Ohio

Bulldozing &amp; Backhoe
Service

G utters

I t/214112Jifn

Reasonable Rates

614·742-2138

• Cus to m

Oroundt.

tim ber, all ha rd
HAULING

Made
• Solid vinyl
replacement
windows
• Free Es tim a l es
• $200 Installed
Ca ll For Details

Home of lhe Eaalern
Girls SottbaN Awa rds

HAU UNG

Howard

QUALrrY WINDOW SYSTEMS

COUNTRY CLUB

• UGHT

BINGO
EVERY THUR SDAY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POII EROY

614· 992-7878

allowable reimbursement

FmHA Rent•l Aealalencl

•.,

Specializing in Cuslom
Frame Repair

Public Notice

Bank, Ro11'1 Exc•v•l·
lng, Blum Trut ~UI
Lilnblr, Tht Flrflllrl

.

. fMi'\
II S (. Memorial Dr.
-992-2104

106 Mulbarry Au.

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

614-992 -7878

Information
and
documentation required In

card of Thanks
Tlllnkl To: The llolor
Pllts Co~ HOIIII Nallonal

ol Columbus. 0 .

~i4,.

. _../

Pallor: Rev. Kriuna Robinaon __..,-

Edell United Beelh....,ln Chrla
2 1/2 miles north of Reedsville
on Sw.e Route 124

••d
REMOVAL

TRIM

SA 7 - Five Peints

,/_',

991 l9!S

Bac kh oe Work an d
Ge ne ra l Hauling
Limesto ne· Fill Di rt
Gr a ve l • Sa nd
Leach Bed
ln s la ll ation and
S epl ic Sys te ms

Faith Fello...,lp Crusade r.. Christ
Pastor: Rev. Flllllilin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Thundlly ICrviceo . 7:30p.m.

p: J. PAULEY, AGENl" ~ . T~~~L ~00)
Nationwide Ins. Co.
~ .IJr.~ ·•.,,. , .'

MAR TECH
INDUSTRIES

Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service · 7:30 p.m.

Calvary Pllgrtm Chapel

992-7587
41464 Slarcher Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

CHESTER

SHRUI &amp; TREE

---~-

? utor: Rev. Black wood

Sunday Wonbip . 2:30p.m.;

l'umoroJ Clourch lllbc N...reote
Putor: Rev. Thomas Mc&lt;lun1
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.

&amp;-9- 1 mo

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.

N - Sdllemeet Cburdl

s,.._ c•urdllllbc N.......
Putoc Rev. Rid&lt; SlllrJill
Stmday School · 9:30 IJD,
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Sci'Yioe~ · 7 p.m.

F re e Eslima les
Re s idential, Comme rc ia l
and ln duslrial

Wednetday Service - 7 p.m.

Lany

Pr!\Cription'5.

FIRE &amp; SAfETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
172 North So&lt;ond Au.
Miclttl1110rl, Ohio

Swulay School -9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m.

Harrlsoa.Uie Commun!ly Church

~~~~! 1~1.

SNOUFF~R .

A

Sunday School -!d:OO a.m.
Wonhip · 6:30 p.m.
Woc:lncad.ay Service• - 1 p.m.

ln1talatlon

.q

0~\a

CLASSIFIEDS

Pu lor: Rev. Phillip RKienour

PaaiOr: Rev. Marprct J. Robi.n100

Paator. Sharc:n Hausman

Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thunday Services · 7 p.m.

Putc:r: Willin Justis

Tbe Belle•en' FeU.....,Ip Ministry
327 Mechanic St., Pome~

Chestel'

Church of God
ML Moriah Church o1 God
Rac:ine
Putoc Rev. James Sllts:lf~eld
Sunday School · 9:4S a.m.
Evenina - 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Servicea - 7 p.m.

Portland Flnl Cburdllllbe Naza rene

White's Chapel Wesleyan
Coolville Road

covers, convertible
lops, Anliqu e Cars.
20 yrs experience.
Boat Seals.

RuUand

'l&gt;atricia Boodi-Krua

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.

Salts Clld

Services: Thunday,7:30 p.m.
Saturday, 7 p.m. and Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Pu1or: Rev. Roy McCany
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Serviceo · 7 p.m.

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

headliners, seat

Roct Sprinp
Pas10r.Kt11h Rader
SLUlday School - 9:15a.m.
Won'"l&gt; · 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowohip, Slalday - 6 p.m.

Rutland Community C hurch

RuUand Chur&lt;h of Cbrbt

I

601 EAST MAIN
POMOO Y, OHIO
n2-22s9

l'mleroy
Pas10r. Robert E. Robinson
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 Lm.
Bible SIUdy Tuesday · I0 a.m.

Wedneaday Service - 7:00p.m.

Pastor: Eugme E. Underwood

Pas10r. Philip Sturm

Hillside Bapdst Church
SL RL 143 jull olf RL 7
Pastor. Rev. lama R. Acroc, Sr.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip · I!Lm., 6 p.m.
Wcdnelday Servia:• -7 p.m.

Putor. Flormcc Smilh

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - !0:30a.m. and 7 p.m.

Wednesday, Bible Swdy - 7 p.m.

IIIII

O.&lt;Orallva

Other Churches
Fallll FuU Gospel Church
Long Boucm
Putor: Sts:• e Reed
Sunday School • 9:30 1.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 Lm . and 7 p.m.
Wc:dneaday · 7 p.m.
Friday - fellowlh!p oervice 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9 am .
Wonhip · 10 a.m.

Pattor. Pea.er Ttm~blay

Evenin&amp; Service - 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip- 10:4la.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdneoday Servia: · 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Won hip · 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service~ · 7 p.m.

Pearl Chapel

Laurel Clllr Free Methodist Church

Youth Meeting - 5:30p.m.

Pastor: Sunuel Buye
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · !(}.30 a.m., 6:30pm
Wedneaday Serviceo - 7 pm.

New Haven «;:burch ol the Nu.arene
Pastor. Glendon Stroud

Mlnen &gt;llle
Pastor. Deroo Newman
Sunday S&lt;hool · 9 Lm.
Wor1hip · 10 a.m.

~

JESS' COMPLETE
AUTO UPHOLSTERY

Heath (Middleport)
Sunday School · 9:30 am.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.

Kingsbury Rood
Sunday School - 9JOLm.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wcdneoday Service· 7 p.m.

Ftndng Chain
Unlt·Woocl

Pu lor: Vem agaye Sullivan

Rose of Shar on Hollnesa C hurch
LcodUlg Creek Rd., Rutland
Paswr. Rev. Dewey Kin&amp;
SWlday achool· 9:30 a. m.
SLUlday wonhip -7 p.m.
Wednesday pnyer meetirlg· '1 p.m.

Wedneaday Servricet - 7 p.m.
ML Unl011 Bapllst

Fornt Rua
Pu tor. Deroo NcwmUI
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonbip - 9 a.m.
Thunday SeiViOCJ - 6:30pm.

Danville Hollnea Chur cb

C•rleton Interdenominational Church

Freedom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Paator: Rev. Roger Willlord

Rulland Churdl W the Nu.arcue

Wonhip - I I a.m.

Holiness

Wesleyan Dible Holiness Chur&lt;h
15 Pearl SL. Middleport
Pastor: Re\1 . John Neville
Sunday 1&lt;hool · 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip · 10:30 am., 7:30p.m.

O.eoter O.urcb of the NIIZIIr..e
Putor: Rev. Helbert Grou:
Sunday School . 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 11 Lm., 6pm.
Wednesd'ay Services · 7 p.m.

flatwoodl
Putor. Kcith Rader
Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Wednesday Servtcea- 6:30 p.m.

ZJon Chur&lt;• ol' Christ

Wodneaday Services · 7 p.m.

Ente'l'ri..
Putor. Ketlh Radtr
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 9 a. m.

Rector. Fr. Bill Lyle
Holy Euch arill llld SWlday School II L m .
Coffee hour rouowq

Pomeroy Westsidr Church or C hrist
33226 Ouldrul't !lome Rd.

Sunday ochool · 9Al a.m.

Fr.. Will Baptlsl Church

,

~uly lth. Groan TorrKI In Col~o CIIIICJ C.. NaiCiod For .._.
1enor1-}r. Slzo Clalhlng. S"-. Sehool
~~
Tetephonee, N.w ~terM, lole
lllaol
Homo, Choottln Alee. . _
Rutland Yald s.to: Bthlnd Tho 0511,
••u I
Gravel Pit, Dopo Stroot, N
~.:.l::::;'ll.':'~ Olt- • Toom OparatJon
lor, ..... 01 Othar Good Stull!

~~r:r...~ -::~~~

:=:...

- .... -

s._, ..

g

8A 7 South, 2nd

"--'
Ctot1t Brtdat. Wotarbacl
fkltte.
llatomlly,

Toyo.

'thllcl"!"'

ctolhll.

Yoly LarGo 4 Fomlly: Antiquo
Sol Of cn.tr. Other Antlct-

1114 1 Butavlllo Pille,
Friday ·7 TIM Rlo All -

SPECIAL CARE CLEANING SERVICE
4·7·1

.

~=~~hT~

'""'-nrll autllna In(
~- 11ua1t tuo And • tlol(

1om

Udr

011 llantlllll ~

......... 1\dit- To: NaA-.
,..,.._, P.O. ._ 112.
llhgow.. W•VAIIIa

tfti.

~

:

.eonw

Eom

Woflt - ·
Top,
ctolhao,
a.._,.,
Dilwllt
Dr, on
ear.

qn;cltlt=!~

aoto To Quail c..oJt
SoturclaJ • AJI. ·7
Ill~

11p 10 110110 ~
ptta1111••lllrt~

;~2\

... AntaJa.~

�)_

Page-8-The Dally

• 1

•

t t

I

I

• t I

.

Classified Line Ads

3 days
6 days
1odays
Monthly

Tribune 446·2342 Sentinel992·21 S6 Register 675·1333
BE .~Trn:

Help Wanted

42 Mobile Homes

Ill. Ill." In llrll&lt;T lltatti&lt;

Trailer tor ,.nt, you ~)' utiUtiN
plu• $50 de~h . 304-675-2535.

I'M:CT:C
ER::-::P-:A-::
RE=:N
-::T:-::S- N
,_E,.,E"o"'E"'0---

44

16 Sto~b la , loving , Ther1peullc

Environment•

H.m••

For

l'l111J rtm Whos• L111as Art In
~"l1s1 a
Tr aining , Ongoing 2f
H,•ur Case M.:wagemenl Sup~ ' • ' •1 . P11r Diem Compens lallon
1 ~w1 -Taublel). Resplle Care A.l
~"'"l•d

Our

polo, 614-1192-2218.

Fo!!ler Families

...•rrn 4 Natural Suppor1 Grou p
'f\ 1:h Su": l.:ll , Ernor lonal, And

\1••

Childre n

S ..lulh uastQrn
nH II Irlr~t s

Only

Com-

For Mol"' Info

C.tll 'Sind Resume To Robin
H.uns. Risldanlral Serv!cn
c..,_,,d. Accusa , PO. B o1 910,
G.rii'P"'"•· OH 456J1 614-446--

2br. apt., Mason, WV, partly fur·

t.i:~ y

nlshed,
utllltl•
Included,
$350/mo, depo1lt ,.qulred. 304T13-5943 aft.r 6pm.

H.Hdware S.:Jiosperson Needed
r ,H Local H ardw:~ r• S ! o~ In

3 Furntahed Room•
Water /Trash Paid,

l;.11Jrpo lr11
l"L A 3!5.

388~000.

l.j.&gt;&lt;..)lr s .

OH

H.trris Fum•
up

-----:c-c
now hiring . Pick

•pphCIII IOn l

during

fJ1y .Jitlrr~ll c tan!;Jsv'l Graz•ng 1n let1 f1eld
c1,~rrn :l thP &lt;&gt;e v~nlh '}3rrlP o l 'h e wo rld senes t"

•IOfe

j-, our•- 10 ooam-!i OOpm , Mond.ly
through Sat u rday 1nd

noon·Spm on Sunday•.

-'---

HElP WANTED

Tractor Tr1iler Diesel Mechank:
Wrth Internal !U:ternal Dies.,
E1parience . Wagea CommenI Unt lt WiTh Ability. Apply To
Truck &amp; Trailer Service Center,
SQ4 19Th Strsre!, Parke,.burg,
W'V 2£11}1 An EOE.

18

Wanted to Do

Max: ·

Shon-Hiul

Operations, 400 Mllea Range.
S6 oo Hr. Apply At Allu Trailer
Rentals
504
29th
StrNt,
Parhrsburg, WV An EOE.
Needed -Full T1m11 Wottera For

Day Cart Cenlor. Must Be AI
L.ea5t 18 Year. Old And HIIJh
Sc hool Graduate. Prat~r People
Wrlh Experlenea Working With
Ctuldran. Send Resume To Gat-.
l ipolit Tribune, CLA 318, 826
Third Ave .. Gllllpolie, OH 45631.

NNded: Someone To Mow
Lawnt Weakly, WlU Provide
Lawn Mower, w..deater I Gla.
It lnterts1ed Call Monday 814441..0748, Can Come &amp; Vlaw Yard
&amp; Wlll Oiacuae Payl1)9nt.

Business
Opponunlty

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
Ncommendl that you do bu.._.
nasa witt-. people you know1 and
NOT to send money lhrougn the
mall until you hive lnvntlgaled
the offering.

VENDING ROUTE: Won~ Gil
Rich Oulck. Wilt Got A Stoady
lnco~.
800~20-4353 .

Ca1h

Priced to Sell. f·

Real Estate

1983 Schult Ux6&lt;4 New Cafl)et,
New Unoleum, New Balh,
$10,500, Call 6l4alti7..0326 Aher

add-a-room, lbr., 2 f\.111 balha
on. wl)acuz.zl tub, new carpl'l,
axe. cond., aaklng $10,500. 304-

675-4640.
t994 14x80 Brandy Wino 3 Bod-

rooma, 2 Full Batha, 3 Ton CA,
WUh HNI Pump, Laundry
Room,
Undarpinnlng,
Tie
Downa, All S.C Up On Private
Rented Lot, ManY Extraa, Immediate PoaMdlon, 814-2*
1357.
A«entton ·16x80 HomN Now
Available In W. VA. ·MI. State
Homn, Pt. PINNnt, W. VA. •

304-675-14(10.

FrM Central Air- FrM Air On
Any Naw Single Section Home
In Stock· Mt Slata Hom11, Pt

PI-nt. W. VA. 304-6JS.1400.
Savo $5,000.00. Norrla 2Bxn
Sectional

Flroploco1
Morning
Room
·Roducoa $5 000.00 • Fronch
Chy lloblto Homoa • Galllpolla,
OH 114-446-11340.

kenderton.

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

5.32

ac,..,

$13,160. 8.14

Rayburn

$14,570.
le

nlring experienced olo'e to Nn

flatbed, um percentage of
grow f'IVtnUI pulling com.-ny
fr~~llerl ot pulling own lrlller,
neanh lrwuranoe w/dental • '11lkm available, bue platM
avallab... bob-tall lneuranc»

ovollablo, floal card oyotom,
wMkly
aettlernente,
rldef'
~~ram, Umo homo . t.-.220-

AU real estate a~er1tulg In
this newspaper ls sut&gt;te&lt;;t to
tho Federal Fair Hoosng Ad
of t 968 which makes nllegol

to advertise ·any praferera,
lrlmttaUon or dlscrtrn6nal.ton
buedon race . cobf, relglon,
sex familial status or natklnal
origin, or any lnentlon to
make any such preference,
limllallon or dlsc:rimlnallon."

0Wner!Operllort

Cordi no! Fralght Corrfort Ia now
nlring In tt-le van dlvlalon paid
~ded Of empty miiH unload-

Ina pay, llop pay, hoanh lnsul'lne• wldtntal &amp; wlslon tvtlf..
able, bob-tall Insurance availa bla, tuel card system, co. pa~
toll Jyl1tm, prompt: lnd ~

eurate wNkly aettlementa, rldar
r~nram, Urne home. 1-800-220-

This newspaper wll oot
knowllngly occept
adiertlsemenls lor real esta!e
wtk:h Is In vloJatlon or the law.
Our ruaders 1re hereby
Informed 1hal all dwellngs
advertised In this newspaper
are avaMabfe on an equal

OIJPOrtunlty basis.

SIImi·Huck wllog t111Uer tDr hlrw.
3114-682'26114 ot882-312t.
Ststt Appro~ed Nurs!ng A.....
tantl : Scenk: Hilla Nurafng c.n-

tar 1a Curronn7 Soaking Tho
5o"'k:• 01 Fill nmo And Port

Tlme Nursing Aal.. anta (FuMnmo, 2 P.ll. ·10 P.ll. &amp; 10 P.ll. •
I A. II.) (Part•Tlmo' 5 A. II. ..
A.ll . • I P.ll. -a P.M.) lntlrllod?

31

Homes for Sale

13 kroo And Bom Houoo 3
Bodrooma, 1 112 Batlto, LR,
Kllc:hon, Utlltty R_,, Dollblo
Garage l Paved Driveway For
Sllle By Owner, 114 4 tl 06:l5.

Appltcotlona Avallablo lloo .f~
8'30 ol.ll.. -4,30 P.ll. 311 Buck·
~dgo Ad, Bid., OH 45631J
"OuaiiiY Coro Thru loamwortt
S.H.N.C. Ia An E.O.E.
TRUCK DRIVERS

3br. homo "-', ,_ FA fur-

Aro vou Looking Fot:
• Stoady Paychock

3br., 1 both, lwgo kllc:hon, fuM

"lnaur1nce

Conley, a ......, Lane. .,...,.
311211.

• Benetlta

• Paid Vocatlona And Hofldoyo
'RoloM

Do You Have:
'CtaoaACDL~

Dtn,

Display,

naco

A AC. Atoo, s Olooy btoc:k
building, lnchodod. $27,5011. 304-

hood, Clool HIIC, t114-446-a415.

r;:::E~nt Hlatooy

Cozy 3 Sr. Ranch. Spaclouo,
IIOdom KHchon1 Family Room,
Buln~n
Woodoumor, Dock,
Pool, 2 Car Garago, 113 kral.ot,
Clooo to Town, 13a Adtlaldo Dr.,
814 446111111 Altar 4:30 p.m.

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

36

Real Estate
Wanted

a Ft.

Ron kvans EnterpriMe, Jack-

Wontod To Buy: Lond tn
Country Galllo Counly, Sand
Ropfloo 'ro: 11510 Old Stolo Llno
Road, Snnton, OH 43551.

Rentals
41

Houses for Rent

I Bodroom Houoo tn Galtlpolla,
4 Whlto Avon•, $1715111o Dr
$2511 Whh Utllnloa Pold, 814-4411-

CIIn.

I br houM, Highland Avo, 150
do-'t, $100 rant, you pay
utllntoa. 304-3510. s:J0.7:30pm.
2 br. houoo In lllddloport, $350
per month ,Mue dtpoalt, calll14-

month + Otllldea. O.po.lt A...
qulrod. U ~":~'l Something

Avaltabto. 81
2157
T- 1 bedroom fllmloltod Kicker CTF opoakar bo1, a 10"/2
apar1monto In lllddloport1 Ol!lo, 8"/ 2, 2"xfl" homo, Olltl In box,
$300, 614-flll:!-41173.
614-11112-5304 or 114-9112-5&gt;25.

45

5?

Block, brick, ooowor plpao. wlndowa, llntolo, ate. Claude Winton, Rio Grenda, OH Coli 6142&lt;S-5121.

llllae Of Rlptoy

023!.

Pomporod Pete by Sonya. dog
grooming, b.thlng1 all bteeda.

304-1182·3730.

t0X10x6 doa .

~rvt_a~L S111U5.

Paint Plue, li)._.,~ -

AKC Goldon Rotrlovor fomalo
Pupploo, Roady July 5th, S150
Each, WI Oopooh Wilt Hold,
614-388-11243 Aftor 0 A.II.
AKC roglato..., 2 yt old malo
SholtloL~oo. noodo • -ntry
ltomo. --675-5(18.
AKC Rogtatorwd Buoolt Hound
Pupploo, 5 Wooluo Old With
Shoto, $125, 614-446-3354.

AKC
RoglotiOIOd
lllnlot..o
Schneuz• Pupp'-•, Call For
Groat Prlc&lt;o, 814-367-o6511, 814367-T.Il'll.
AKC Voltow Lobo Wormod Flrot
Sho4o. Wlllbo Roady 175, Taking
Small Det&gt;OOII Coli Aftar 8p.m.
814-2511-11:138.
CfA roglotorod Himalayan kit·
tent, bOrn S..27·M, $150, 1140112.&amp;540.
'
OalmaUon Pupptoo Fot Sato:
Purabrod,
$100
Each.
a-.poake, Ohio 814-lll7-322t.
Floh Tank &amp; Pot Shop, 2413
JacUon Ave. Point Pl. .unt,
304.07~1183.

Rag. Cockar S50, 8 ,. old
female, c,.am, 8 yr. old male,
buff, 114-66o-3803.

Schnauzw puppla, mlna1we,
oalt • popper; iloo toy poodln,
AKC, champion btoodll,_, 8146417-3404, Coolv!lla.
Musical
Instruments
Plana lor oall, cherry flnloh,
good cortdh!on, $400, 814-11112·
5341.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock
61

Fann Equipment

=

:=.or:

,....,encee,

...::...:.=

~~

-n

mm

•-lvo

yont.

o-.

-

u,..,

37 - GeRrlg
40 Speck

fastener
11 Satellites

41 Attention·
getting sound

t 2 Recently

42 VIet -

(2 wds.)
13- On o
14 Keeping up
with the 15TV host - Hall
17 Grain

guerrillas
430klahoma tow n
45 Wh at ma sca ra
is put on
47 Anniversary
ce1'eb ration

t 8 Small beds

50 Rant and 51 Except if

• (,J B ; ;; .!

-1

Ill 11 j

21 Federak.en 52 French paint er
vi ronment agcy . 53 Fabr ic-coloring
24 Printer' s
method
measure s
541nQu ire s

25Eat out

AQ

DOWN

26 District in
Germany
27 - Tin Tin
28 Like gla ss

1 Perches
2 Ox harne sses
3 Soon
4 Can . prov .

30 Rum drink
33 Com pass pt.

5 AnimEII park

e Medical

6 Money back

pioneer
9 Summer (Fr .)

- - satisfied

t 0 Legal matter

7 Entreaty

11 Comedian -

Cohen

14 Actress -

South

\'\"t•s t

\lurth

fo: ast

I •

Pa s~

I

Pa ~s

I•
J •

l' Jss

Pa ~s

! :'\I T

All

~T

J •

MY MAN SNUFFY
IS SHOPPIN' FER
ME TODAY

Collins

t5 High card
16 Coldness

P &lt;:~ss

20 Three score
and ten

p~ ss

22 - Beta Kappa
23 Part of circle

Ope nin g lead : • -1

25Roman 502
26Hwy.
27 Baseball stat.
29Pen and30 Last letter
(Brit.)
3t Ear (prof.)

Keep your tricks
under control

Autos for Sale
~.,....,,..--..,.....,..-,..---tllfl3 Plymouth V.llanl convortlblo, eom~oly - - . oll

·a'l

mo1or, good condition, $2115·

814-14~2526.

'

t9U S-10 Blazer Tahoe, AC, PS,

PB, 1!8,000 mlloo. $38110 firm.
3114.&amp;7!1-2523.

t0116 Chovotlo lk&gt;dy Whh Now
lk&gt;dy Pone. S7DO, 814-311~.
t088 Fonl Folrlano 1101112 Dr. HT,

10811 Dcdgo Ram Von 611,000
lllloo, $4,000; Con 81 Soon At:
Galllpojlo Dally Trlbullo. 825
Third Avo,_, Galllpollo, 614-

Original,

~-2342.

Winner,

Trophy

Soriouo lnqulrlae Only, $6,000,
814-245-03111.
tm Buick Rogal. v.a, 11,0110,
3114-67~351

1D'79 Z-21 C.rHro wiT_.ope, air,
lmlfm CIIUIUI, n.w .ngl011.

74

Motorcycles
•

- · axe.

cond, $700. or but ott.r. 304882-373!.

t981 Pontiac Grond Prl1, auto,
PW, PB, PS. :104-675-3208.

1081 Cll 400 Honda otreotblko.
3114-&lt;17W2VII.

118t FaJrmonl, Rune Good, New
Palnt, Cruloo, lola Of -

1181 Honda CB650, NMdl AI-

Pane. $1150, 814-441-o847.
1982 Oldomoblto ga Rogancy,
64,000 Mil.., 1 Family O.Vned,
Full Power, Extra Cl. .nl $3,:500.
Wilt Toko Guno Or Boat n Trado.

814-2!ifl.6413.
t084 llolkawogon J -1 4
Spoodil Good Cortdhlon, ,gso,
OBO, 14-367.()4611.
19115 Chavy Camero. tlcyt., outo.
M.t-175-1660 after 5pm ot ... "

rneuage.

111115 Doclgo Omnl, $6011 obo,
814-Ns.36ll5.
19115 PlyiiiOUih Conquool Turbo.
loadod,
power ovarvthlng,
omlfmlcaoo. $35110 obo, 814-0112·
1834.

1981 a.a¥1'011i Cotobrlly, 4 dr.
Mdan, ext,. nice, one owner,
oxcollont condHion, all opllono,
12too, 114-11112.a11o.
t981 Toyola Tan:otl, 1211,000
lllloo, Vary Cloon, Dopondablo
Car, $2~~ OBO, CaA Scolt,
114-446-:son:
1087 FOld EXP, 40 mpg1 _~
Groot. $1800 obo, 814-0112-62111.

1187 lroc Block Whh T·Topo.
E-vthlngl lola Of Ex·
truiiS,OOO 0110,114-3711-2113.
11117 Pontiac Turbo Grind Am, a
Ddor.L l.oodod, 80,000 Ill lao. ·114446-n61.
Toyota
10117
Condition 1 IIR2 Eac:ollonl
- . 114-31J.
7352.
'
::1088::-=:"aa:-n-:otta-:-,-_-,...kod-=-,-wll:-1-.-..
lor polio. 304-ll75-7115.
tOIIII Probo H,IIOII. 11187 Pontiac
SE S1,6lll. 11187 Btazor $3,11115.
19111 Cllev SIO $4,250. 11115
Rongor _1;_21 801, 11187 F180
$3,2116. 1... vw Jolla 11,115.
11181 Cormoro T·Topa 12,805.
CorM
- Scatlto'o
..... Ohlinger
...._.
UaOd ear.,

i-1ERE. YOU 60T A POST
CARD FROM SOME OF YOUR
WEIRD 61RLFRIENDS AT
SOME WEIRD CAMP ..

:t0::80:-:K~---:-k-:,;;:·m~.~
•• - aw.oa

lomafor, $325, 614-446-31140.
1082 Honda Cuotom Exc:oltont
Condhlon, Shaft 1ldvon, Ovordrlvt, S\200, &amp;14-388~.

a-. 11600 firm.

1185 Hondl 250 Four Tru,

and looluo
rn.&amp;lltt.

rune

FRANK &amp; ERNEST
1

304- •

TOl&gt;AY'S

1
1
ru,TLt
POST OFFIC.t 30- 1
SNAI£.

~ACE

75 Boats &amp; Motors

~

tor Sale
1D71 Star-Graft 16ft run •bout ;
boat1 70hp Jollnoon, OIC cond, ,

3114..16-2188.

3
2

VAN

'

•• ,

1181 Four Wlnda, tr,MO hp,
horizon top, $5000, 614-Mt-2127. ' .

11117 tl' Clotlon 11k1 boat, t30 hp, Inboard mere. arulur, good
condition, $8000, 111 coast

BORN LOSER

guard roqulrod oqulpmont, 81411112.&amp;544.
..
Booton Wholor 100 HP Johnoon
17Ft. Trolling llota&lt; Groat Flohlng Boat! 12,200 Nog. 614-4468024.

Wf.\1\\ ) n.\,..J 7

'
~
GL~DYS 1 Tf\E. B»&gt;K.~ Ot-1 1\-\E.
PflONE- .Tf\E.Y ~f\Y WE.'I1£ ~')8

NO, l f\l&gt;il NO

::
.
.
..

rlr:I-._tOVE.RORAWt-1
1)
DOYOU

IOCA. ... LE.T
II'£ f\'.:&gt;1( M.'{

&amp;

Auto Parts

,,

J.lr..IJE AAY

I-IlFE. ..

IDEAWAAI

Accessories

P1&lt;Cel.£lo\

Budgot Prlcod Tronom!aalono, • :
Uud· l Nbullt1 aU typea, atart· , ·

~&amp;fttOC7

lng at Mli owner 6J4..24s.&amp;e77, ·
614-:IN-21136, 614.'1711-2263.

1110 tanka, ana ton lrudl
whoolio. rodlat-. mota.
otc. D R Auto, Rlpfoy, WV. 304372·:1133"' 1-27).13211.

a

79

1

DATE BOOK

BIG NATE

Campers &amp;

~EY,

IT

Motor Homes

•1

1fi7Z Dodgo Corttontlol compor, . ,
211ft., gonorat01, AC.Lrolrlgonotor,
Olovo, 53500. 304-llll&gt;-a44"4.

CHEC.K

ouT'

1 HERE 5

M'o' DAP
POwN 1 HERE '

July

HEE HEE 1 HE DOE5N T
~EE US 0 HE H.A-S NO
IDEI' &gt;JE'RE RIC:,HT
ABOIIE HIS HEAD'.

...;

23 A. P-.tx Compor,

8, 1994

TODAY'S B'IRTHDAYS: Jean de La I
Fontaine 11621 · 1695 1, poet; Nelson
Rockefeller 11908· 19791 , U.S. politi ·l
cian; Roone Arledge 11931·), television
executive, i s 63 ; Steve Lawrence
119:15· ), singer, is 59: Cynthia Grego.
ry 11946·1, ballerina . is 48 ; Raffi
Cavoukian l t948 ~l . children's singer,
is 46; Anjelica Huston 11951 ~) . actress.
is 43.

tll84 :18 R. Nomad Campor, 114- • . '
tl1'4158,

Abraham Lin c oln. in a le tter
writt e n a year befor e hi s a s
sa ss ina lion. ·admi t te d . " I c la im nol
to ha ve co ntroll ed event s. ' but
confes s plainl y th a t events hav e
controlle d me ...
Wh e n jJiaym g in any co ntrac t.
you mu s t ftghl h a rd tu r e t ain
co ntrol. In a s uit contract. at t h e
least you mus t keel' trump co ntrol
In a no -trump co n l rac t. you mu s l
s truggl e to kee p a ll th e s uits und er
control. Th e d ecla r e r failed di s ·
mally to do thi s in today' s d ea l
Again s t three no -trump . Wes l
led a low heart to dummy s s in g ·
le ton ace . How s h ould South have
continued ''
Th e d eclare r s tarted with
dummy's lop clubs. but East di sca rd e d a h ea rt on th e secon d
round . Then So uth cashed ht s
three top diamonds. but Wes t di s carded a heaJ,;I. on the third round
Now de cla re r couldn't recove r.
" How unluck y," grumbled
South . "You 'd think one s uit would
divide evenly."
However, Nor t h had see n thai
South could have ove rcom e eve n
th ese break s. With seven lop
tricks , it is right to start with !h e
club ace. beca use a 3·2 club break
is,enough But wh e n Ea s l c on ·
tnbute s th e qu ee n , South s hou ld
unblock his e ight. Now comes a low
club from the dummy to South's
mne.
If We s t wins thi s trick . in a
moment Soutli will finess e dum ·
my's club seven and win nine tri c ks
by way of two h e arts. thre e di a monds and four clubs So Wes t
ducks . But now South makes use of
his excellent diamond s uit . Care ·
fully, he ducks a diamond. keepin g
communicati'on between h ts hand
and the dummy. South's nine tricks
are two hearts , four diamonds and
three clubs .
01994, NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .

change
36 Plaintiff
37 Units of bread
38 Beginnin9
39 Exclamation

Ol!lo AI- Campground&amp; , _ '
- a n d lor-. !114-t411-2Sa. -,

Serv1ces

ROBOTMAN

SD ~ BuNC\-1 Of BRAINY MICE . 1\~E
RUNNING 1\ROUNO ... WHAT'S \HE.
'I'IORSTTHf&gt;,T CIIN 1-\AI'I'EN? (&gt;.
1-KlSIILE. TAKEmE~ Of C\\t~~

,.

~--""":'------ ' ·

81

Home
I
•
mprovements
::
IIASEIIENT
'
15 Grind Am, AIC, ........ WATERPROOFING
;:
"-· hlah mllae, . . , . - . "'-&gt;dltlonal
Ulatlmo gua...,. o•
$2500, 81l-1112-2442.
.
.... Local ......,... fumloltod. •.
II Bulc:f1 Lolloln, 4 - . CaN 1-287.Q5711 Or 814-237- ..
ou1o~1 11-6, nloo car, high 04811 Rogoro Wot..,_llng.
mllae, MIOO Nog; Cougar, tabl......-1m.
"' '
fino - , N.. jjood OUID, lk
Glnorll
HarM·'•
rolood tollw t!Ni, a,b50; 1041 ~ c.c
llalnl- waltpopor, · - •
· 114-MWIJII
-.... aood
ohapo,
127110;
.. ~-~
- . , roofing and -~· ­
2045.
homo ropalr, ccxnpfoto •polr, ......... WHiling ond
Antlq. . llor .... 1110, 4 - mobflo homo npalr. For trao llmato call Cltol, 114..112-6323.
-~ SS600, 114-0411-2521.
IIERC&amp;DES SCIOD 1112 F1rot Curlla Homo lmpro-••o. No
Turbo, I
Dlaool, ,_ Job Too
Or smon,
111-.Ex_ll
__

of disgust

4t - -walsy
42Sound of
chains

44 Expired
46 God of love
47Stick out

48Half of bi
49Lan9uage
SUffiX

52Pa's mate

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Ce letmly Copher c rypi09rams aroo L'C~I€0 lrur" quotat rons D~ lamo~· S J€'0f)le pasl anc presenl
Eac h helle• '" th~ u~,:to~r 'll.tno&lt;, tor .rllOHtrr r1Xld1· s Clue W f(/ 11 ,'1/S 1

A ' I

E L M

IJ

0 T A L 0

L T Z

HTCKECM

OFZZALO

K A Z S

S X L 0

WAH F

X V

T L

MAPEMUELZEOFP

(MAPEGWFM
CTGFCZ

E B Z T C

CAB$ECM

CFMWAL .

PREVIOU S SOLUT ION ·1 can unde rs1and you wantmg :o wn te poems . but t
don '1 know what you mean by bemg a poet .. ~ T S Elio t

GAlli
'~~:~~~' S©R(l1A-~~lrS*
ld;IOd by CLAY R. rOLLAN - - - - - - 0
of the
be·
WOlD

Reorronge letters
four scrambled word1
low to form four words

L Y NKE E

I I I' I I
1-R,--A,_N----,.O,....B...,....-l,
•·
2
I I 1

I.

Living in a house with five
teenagers I found that they
define things differently than I
do My one son says thai
...---------------...., convenience food is the food 1n
P UF I LT
,lherefrigeratorlhatsoutin -·--·1

~..,.~-,,-,,,..--,r,-T,S--i

Q

C omplele

the chuck le quofed

•
.
.
.
•
by ltllrng tn the m 1Utng word5
L.--L-..L.._J'-........L-.1-...J you de-ve lop from ste p No. 3 below .

8

PR INT NUMBERED lETTERS IN

THE SE

SO UA~ES

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE
TO GET ANSWER

tETTE~ S

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
7- 7 -9 •
Vicuna · Ramy ·Prong· Ethics· PRICE TAGS

I was reading the headlines on the tabloids while
waiting in the check out line While paying my bill 1
decided lhat nothing can be as shocking as PRICE

TAGS .

Dual ~·.

s - e. naoo. o. - _,
Olfw, 5~711-2720 Aftar I P.ll. .
Alllo,

,.

111113 OEO llolro 1.. now 111111
undor wonnty. G- ...
1mllootgo calt: 1!!.
Oodal Doyt- 11011, 114--6442.

OODS

~NT~Y

'

10116 Honda Shad- 700 Low .
lllloo, Now nroo, Shah Drtvo, :
Runo Groat! S1,500, 814-2U. ,
11558, 814-4411-11513.

76

32 Prone to

By Phillit&gt; Ald~r

condition

good

$4200; tll78 Dcdgo von,

7'1

l f10PE

~0\J'R't:

IFRIDAY

JULY 81

COt.\I'~N'i

R\E.\\T .

b-;; ·

Cyfl-.

11f~tlll.

=.......

•Iabn

Oldlt

=

72 Trucks for Sale

11173 Ford ton lruOk- -~~

=noclto, ,:;. '.:'.

~

_.,
!114 1115 3411.
11111 Chevy, 4x4 "4 ton, toot
bo1oe'loddor ,...._ 126110. 114-

· E 110 ton call and
iN4-Ford
wflh " ' " - ond llool
hcl. PS, PI, fill, - , llaioa

·hitch-.......
S30CIOo t14-112-at11.

-~--.

F- bllmot• 814-317.otnl.

out-do,--·--

Plumbing
Heating

f--··

&amp;

And Caa11na.
lnolollallonHilling
And 5orwfca.
Eifl
Cortlflod. Ra-..._ c:ornncloL IIWSII-1B1l

84

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration
1•

_ , ........

ion, · -

wiring.--···=·-·-.
Rooldonllol

--~

..

1171..
.::;,:::.-::~-:::---:-:--::---:--:-1
~~~IHO S.10 Cllevlalol, E x -

Concllllon, 114 ... ....

LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) ThiS could oe a

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

!114.&amp;71-23111 Ohio 114-446-2454.

wltli
1ntartor, ,_ ,..., 14.000

. . - . bod !::.1.14.000 mltoo,

ASTRO-GRAPH

- ropalra.
oolro, -WV '.
-ollwr bronclo.
OIIPIIonoo

~...
~,~··~11011~'"'~11~~~··~:18!0~0~do~
..
ya: IHoot P-.., Certlltl _ ,
.. •tltJt11.
~•11•111•U
F u - llaotw Elool~olon,
IHO Nl...,. 2d, tlroo, I 114 Ill hu1,1~ .
-

Matchmaker 1nstanlly reveals wh1ch s1gns " yoU·rerei'UCiarit io make certa•n dec•s1ons.
41t afe romant 1cally perfect lor you Ma•t $2 to compan1ons mtght do your th1nk tng for
Matchma ke r clo thts newspaper . P 0 . you The answers they der1ve may not
Box 4465. New York. N.Y _ 10 t 63
serve your best mterests

JloE Homo llalnt- paint·
lng, vinyl - . , , rpollng and
drywd.F-oatlmotao,1144a4:132, liok lor oloo"' Earl.
•.
Ron'o TV 11on1co, -'&gt;tllfna ·
In lanlth olio - . a IIIOiill

.... 82

::_c.::--:F:-,..":-d-=F2110==-,-=soo=-:1:-evt.-:-l

1Bot11o,

Kl1chono

Roofing,

':~==~=====~~~~

V••
Ell·
.......,

AddHiono, Founclollono,

m ......,

~"':i.::·:..""!'::

Two 11178 Ford Plck-Upa, 8
Cyllndor, $650 &amp; $650, Good
Condhlon, 614-367·n30.

llrrge

Lot Wlth Total Eloctrlc, l'of flint,
114-387·11138.

-•llo

ARE YOU READY
TO GO GROCERY
SHOPPIN',
LOWEEZ:Y?

1984 Ford, full stu conversion,

IDIIS 26 HP Bolaruo TIKior,
Dloool WHh Uvo Poww, HydHavon, WV. 30WI241&amp;2.
raUlic Connoctlono, 5 R. BNoh Hoa. I 5 Fl Blodo, 211 Hro. tHO N - plcl1 up wlcap a
$6,110o, 811 441 3040.
• AIC, rodlo, $39110, 514-1112.zo82.
AUla QMolmoro 214 twO bottom
IIIII Ponttac Groncl Am ~.:=
ptowo; JO camblno 4400 w/13' llloo,
For lloro lnlo, 1
groin lload .dlool; 111100 FOld 2754 After S P.ll.
fracker wlcab and dualei hay
and grain •mor; 10' wheel lflll:!'llor1da Accotd Cltorry Rod
dtac; 13 holo 011- (llllln driH, 5 Speed, Call Allor I P.ll 114Uka - : 1-ta-1401 oftar 8 4410026.
pm.

,...,MCM.

'"""""*'

Transportation

I ely, 1uto, I'M w/W I~
56::-__P_et-:s--::-fo_r_sa,....l,.e,---...,... orglnal,
t.nor, $8000, &amp;14-Mt.zm.
Groom and Supply Sh"f4~:

Grooming. Julia Wobb. 61

35 Submerged

Nolan 5 Garment

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

Building
Supplies

Loa Sptlt1or Good Condhlon, Choln Saw boro &amp; chalno 1o fl1
11112-11225.
ol.- any oow. Boat prtcoo In
can Allor 5 P.11. 114-25fl.a:llll.
oroo. Sidon Equ!t&gt;ll10rtl. 304B~ng ol Cunonl IIVR And olppty
3 Bedroom Brick In Rio Grande, llorhart Ronlol 6 Stonr. UnHo. llovlng .Balo: Konnooro~Wuhor,
875-11121 or l.atlll'217.31117;
At:
No Poto, Soc:urlly DopooH, Sx10, 101:10, 10115, 10x2 , 10x30. Kenmore Drpr, MtcrOWIIve
Shc&gt;noy'o Inc.
$275/Uo. 114-245-5430.
$51,500.
3114-&lt;1711-2460.
Ovon In Good CondHionl, 114- Oravely attachmenta. mower,
~nE1N 132
n&gt;tary Ullor, plow blodo, oulky,
Folrploln, WV
In GaiMpotlo. AC, Traitor Spaca a 112 lllloo 01111111 446-9887.
uw &amp; olcf1lo blr raowar. 114For
oolo by - · "''I 1tomo, 3 BR 1
EOE
1810 eq. •.• lUll bailment $385/lllo, No PN, DoPDilt, 114- Cnollk Rood, •-·1052.
Now Hot Water Tonka, Gao~ $100 ~wlfomlly room, . - n w , S 44fl..2600 Ahar 5.
Exch, 814-3711-2720 Ahorl ~.II.
lia-r Ferguoon 15 Tractor
bodroomo, 2 kllchona, S bolito,
Ono
F
...
loltod
And
Ono
Unfu•·
CIA, contra! voocum, oo-al
18 Wanted to Do
With a..h Hoa • Btado,
$3,1100; 131 . . . _ 0... With
For Rant, R1 ',
calling, .... llrtplaca, lotgO nlohod Loador 15,350; 1G3 Caoo $4,500,
Day Coro, oll ohlfto. CPR ' Flrot dock,
121151
outbulldlnt Galllpolla UmHa, No Palo, 814Aid quatlflod, hoi 0111to, pion- wlhuted work rootn, 2+ IICI'H Iii 446-24\lt.
114-288 tl!"
nod octlvltloo I looming. 304- wooded .,.. doM to town,
Now HQftand Hay Bl- Rokoa,
8'75-2NII.
llllal Scl1ool Dlotrlol, ~~ 42 Mobile Homes
And Squaro Bolora, 51,000 • Up;
814-tll2.2311, -.g 8
•
Hay T - 15!0; Hay W&amp;gono
Fohh Boplllt lacldtor loch I Ill- 7133.
tor Rent
font ear.. Rodney, Ohio af3SO; IN FOld Tractor, ~.:OOi
lion Thnl Frl 7:00 A.ll. To 4,30 John 0.... 11 A '!l.ng ,..,..
fof Solo In Rio Orondo 141&lt;60 2 Br, 1 milo South of
P.ll. Giving Chrlotlan Caro ~- Dlok, 51,171; Plck.Up Dflk, Tlte Baptlot Cluch. Pit. Eureka, on Sl Rt.7. No polo.
11l'f..,._ Na.t»orn To 11 YMII
114~56-eOn.
I Throuilh 4 lla!tom, Cam Plcll·
=~·
EVM!ngo114.... OtiW Eq"'-"- .......
Old. 114-446-21101.
2 Bedroom Fumw..ct Air, C.ble
Fom llochlnary, oloc"-, Ohio,
Merchandise
Gonoral .........- . Polnt!na, llWie IIM4.
ronch lllylo homo, Ptonto Avollablo, Ovoriooldng Ohio
Yont wortt Wfndciwo W•noa
River In Klnauga, l=oster'e
-·
3br., 2alttlng
both, .on
...
Gllllorw Cloanod Light Hauling, on frclnt
&amp; dock,
2 llobllo Homo Pork, 114-146-1802.
Rtdlng - . , , Runo Good, 114Commorlcal, Roaldontlol, 81-: lola. IU 141 t13S.
Household
a45-11210.
2 Bodroom llobllo Homo, Par- Sf
814-4411-4141.
l&amp;altr Furnlehed, Water Pakl,
Goods
S.IG To- 5100; Brlaao 12 HP
a-gao Portoblo Sawmill, don, boglnnor
8 511111 Dopola~ $225/llo. 814-251-wotor, ·213ec.,
Mka
,112,11011.
_ - - il4&amp;
nnf
1008.
GOOD
USED
olPPUAIICES
Collnt CB $311;- 114-3117haul JDII' to tho mill Jutt
coii304-675-IW.
31131.
Uvestock
2 Bodroom, Hoar Evorgr-, ~~~~=~ 1;ST;;:OII;;;;-;AGE:;;;:-T:;:AN=Ks~s.::-:,ooo=-Go=--- 63
HorN T~mmlng, Ovor SO Voara Two Olooy - . • 114-lN-21171. No Sunday call&amp;
Pony'o
B"""'- 1 Comoa Wlth
Vlno St-. CiU 114-446-73111. 1- Upright, Ron Evono Entot'l&gt;ri- 1
~r:::ICO, QUality Hoof ColO, laundry room and both, 1 - • 2 Bodr-, N:., No Poto. IIOCJ.4811-341111.
Baddto,.
B~cll. 114-245-IIOil
Jocluoon,
ONo,
1.-537-0526.
8
11211.
al ground, 814-11124117.
Dopooh
And
Ra-..._
Toppon
ofoclrlc
otovoi
GE
lloautlflll
pony,
- -·.....
-.
-loaning.
.. Wallpopor,
$400/llo., W."""!, Drvar; a Bod- Grand Oponlng. FumHuro I jlppi!IIICW.
NO lor boln, 114- wlldda, aaklng $710, 11Wtao
Pointing, Corpot and Fumlltn 32 Mobile Homes
room Hou•, ~umlehed, No VI'Ra
7141.
C1oanlng 11WB7-7131.
Pots, S350111o. llopoolt, 814-l'IIJ. llonlh of July. va~ a..
lor Sale
liltte, Webb, IMinDD~ O.E..,
4348.
UGLV
DECK
OR
FENCE?
Holpolnl.
Lfnooln
Pllt&amp;
mlloa
llllitu• lady willing to - . Wll
. .AM
varyOn
Gantlo,
Ha..
Rool--- dw:ka &amp; fanoaelo In 4-H
T•llo.
114-441~ 2 Boddo houM ctoonlng, al1opslfng "' 121160 aSouth
BodPrfvotolalb~:~~M"
llka
now
-'dillon
whhou1
-~Etoctrlc,
Contra!
Air,
U"4110.
218, $200/llo.
• out141. · - ·
ol111ng whh •nloi cltlzon, fOod
ocrubblng . wflh ENFORCER
114-8t'a·2121.
h0111¥1n11Undaf. Ro-.tncludao w-,114coif holtor, $6011;
OECK ClEANER. Avaltablo ot: ......,. pinning,
zae.e7tlt, 814-251-1337.
Thomoo De&gt;lt Cantor, 171 .....,
calf 5111:
lltoo Paulll'a lin Co• Contar
LAYNE'S
fiURNITURI
ll.f I A.ll. ..:sO P.ll. OUo!fty 121160 llklond, 2 II!.. In l.ontl 3 Bod.._..., 2 Bathe,· Hoar Par· Comploto homo fumlohlrtgo. llcCormlck Rd, Golllpollo.
GuornlaJ
to
In
Auguot,
teoo;
114-t4t-2!71.
Lovfna Coro ""' All Child... lloetooo, Ohio IIWiao ...... ~ tor Aroo. On t60, DoDoolt, You Nouro: Ill, N. 114-4-46- Uooct 8afu
114-:JN.
Our 11 Qool. Plri·Timo, Ful- QOOd condition, IA-1114111.
Poy Ut!lhlae, tl14-388-ft82.
11322, I ...
Rd. 2720, Allor I P.ll.
.. NICE HORSU FOR SALE
n-.Fod. _ _ A...- . 1m 12 x 15, 2 br. rooctr to s Bodrooma, Bath 112, 814-281- F- Dalfvory.
Qufolwell .......... ~
Volt llolortzod TroadmW. c- - P o - .
Col ...., In-lion Or VIol!. 111IWMI
doc:f1lna mot., "'.!'J 1857.
putsrlzod P"''lrommlng1 _Adl,.. buclllldM, .... Fer
lattl !Todclor 114 4 411231 .... .......
....
114-lld.a114 l:;ou lb-. aroo, n1oo 3br. lffochod AUCTION • fiURNITURE. a labto Speed And Halii•, U"&amp;c-.
Scflaatogo,
au St650,
pm.
porcl1, yard, AC. ~7783.
Olive 81., Gollpollo...... I Uood NN $300, 114-37N'l~C
&amp;c-.1~thana, OH. I14-IIU7II
1171 14160 Homo. Gao SmaU t Boclr-, In ~~f:' fllmlltn, - - . Waotorn • WATER UNE SPECIAL: :114 Inch orm·ZMt.
200
PSI
51U5;
1
Inch
200
PSI
Hoot p~
IJnM. U111Hiae Paid, - · 1
I·W;..orlt_b_•_••_
.._~--~:-51.-:--Ron Evana Ento...-, 64
Hay &amp; Grain
11406'
52
Sponlng
Gooda
114-- 51130 .~oc-., OIN
. -::--....,.,,...:;.-..,-.,......,..,._,,...
me.
ThrM bedroom, furniiMd, II
KILI.S FLEASI
40 rvuncl olmllod hay lor
Bun VoHoy
Nu-r ~ - · 1ta T_,...._ F -.
good
-ion, Hagan~....... and bog, Buy ENFOIICER F1oo K1t1an lor oofo,
1IOtllbo. _., In
Chlldcoro
lol.f BoM:30plll ~ Mx711, CA, All ....., 01- oyoo atoctrtc,
good location, porch, yonl, off 3 Iron
aw,
than 1 poto, homo '
QUA~ lllddlor 1, 011 N . . 1147.
a-4&lt;, VCMHJg School Aao During 11111 fltrO&lt;Ighout, gordon tub, iOod, .,. child, no polo. abo.. yoor old,
~ lla Boolfll
TEED
A-blo ol:
Summar. 3 Do yo par ft"" front porch. See br IIIPDintment Ha..n, 121Cto'mo. :J04.I82. Drt- t\ 5180; a14-lt:r.a173.
Point Plluont ~ 1111 =~
cuf1lna, 51.0CJ.S1.71 par
lmum 114-446-3857.
24Uonytlonly. I14-31Ntia.
.,..,....ha St., Point 104-4171-ll!ionyt• Uv1 Wllhln

&gt;

w "'-•~
(/l 'flo'ltl~NI: A Inc

KILI.S IIUQS
and -!zoo TOOl ENFOR·

CER
COUNTRV
FRESH
FRAGAANC£ Poat ContiOI
••
GUARANRoome tor ront· S20/nlght, Producto
TEED!Avoltble II: Pt. P I $50/Wollk; 814-114~2526.
Co-op, 1Sit Kanawha !II., Pl.
Roomo for ront • - " ' 010nth. PI-nt.
~:~~~ ot $120/rna. Gatlla Holal.
KILI.S IIUQS
8
11580.
and ~ TOOl EHFOR·
COUHTRV
FRESH
Stooping
-~~~~­ CER
Aioo troller- opaco.with
All hoolc-upo.
FRAGRANCE Pool ContiOI
Coli oftor 2,00 p.m., 304·771- Producll •• GUARANTEED!
5151, MaHO WV.
Avatlablo ot: Thomu [)().It Con••, 178 llceofm'" Rd., Gal46 Space for Rent
llpoll&amp;
3 Room Olllco Slllta WHh Lawn tractor. rafrklemor, 11120
Prlvato Tollol In llodorn Rro corpot • pod, Cravoty, 1088
Proof Bldg. Coli llorrla Huklne Cadillac Dovltto, 1081 FOnl 414,
114-446-2631 Or 114 441 Z812.
1D85 5-10. 304-o75-S182.

BARNEY

Hoodt, 11172 Ford Bod Sharp!
614 446 114411, 814-~8.

""'""1

$450, 814-367-ll506.
15 Metal Door Fram.. 3.2 Inch

Conc:ro1o &amp; Plootk: Soptk:
Tanka 300 ThN a,ooo Gallono

Furnished
Rooms

I

$250 : AeratOf For S.ptlc, New

eon, OH 1.aoo.&amp;37.0528.
GraclCKIO living. 1 and 2 bod- Deep FrMZa, 22 Cu. R. Runa
room apartmenta at VIllage Good, 814-245-92110.
Manor
and
RtveralcH
Apartment• In Ml"'ll•port. From Drafting Tobin, Pro!Molonol
$232-$356 . cau 114-11112-tiiiSO. 51,., Ona Wood, Ono Stool With
I Adiolnlng Lea. 2 Acre8. All To EOH.
7 Lot Drawera, 114-256-&amp;413.
Go lo 1 ~u~:· All UtllltiM
Avallablo, 81
3857.
Nlc&lt;o ' Bodroom, 4 112 1111• Go-«art, S.hp, Brlggo w/alcho4
· Goltlpotto,
Stovo, carb. $150, 814-94~2871 or 814Machine, Auto Shop or F"""
Ratrlgerltor, Water Fumlshld,
WarehouM, (12,000.q. ft cort- 1250/llo. No Poto. 811 U6 BD3B. 1148·2045.
c:rota, 11,000oq ft. building
Good etorm door &amp; 2 etorm
opoco, lac. tolal), good woiJ. Nlco Ono BR Unflomlahod wlndowe, m tor ••. 3~75304-1171-28114.
Apartment.
Rango,
Rofrlg. 4085.
Provided.
Prtwate
ParkJng,
Two 100x300 on SR t60 k r - Wator, Garbogo Pold. Dopooll Homomodo Wolahl Bonch, Wllh
From Old North GoUla H.S. 814- Roqulrod. 1~-4345 Aftor Barbell, Dumboffo, And Approx.
388-81211.
150 lbo Of Wolghto. S30. 614-:JN.
&amp;p.m.
271i8.
Wontod To Buy: Lot I kro Or 0no ~
1
fu
lloro, Colt After I P.ll. 814-4411_,_,, oll 111 thloa r·
nlahod. $250/rno., 814-11411-2526. Hondo 250 ATV throo whaator.,
,
1551.
OIC cond, $750. 304-675-1242.
Sun Volley Apto. 1 BR $251.
MII-2481.

•J 9fr4
;• 8 3
... J 10 t) J

+J

1 Baseballer

Answer to Previous Puule

Vulne r a bl e : Easi -Wes l
Dealer. Sout h

FOld &amp; Chovy Truck Porto~m
Southwee1 C.~, Beda,
a,

t2 Ft. Trallor HI·Top, Carpet
Llghta, Uko Now, $21300; 12 HP
Murny T111ctor NMOI A Pulley

15 Of Lond tn wor,no
County Wool Vlralnla, Pr mo
Hunting, $10,000, R lrtaroolod,
114-256-1008.

Wanted to buy· two or more
acrM, 1uh8ble to build 011 and
close to a blacktop road, 114-

EAST
• A7

• K t0 J
t AK(/;2
• 9 B 2

For oalo or trado,_ 1884 S-10
wnoppor, lnctudoo o.;B. 304-liJ'S.
21181.

6JS.i1113.

175-6253.

30W'Is.:wa.

• 1 , _ Tractor !Troller Ex·

Antique bathlub whh !ega, $100,

614-94~2528 .

Utllltloo Paid, 114 446 4416 Anor Avenue For Sale, 614·256-6180.
7 P.ll.
a t.oxoo of ladloo unllormo.
Fumlahed Efllclency D20 Fourth muol taka all, 11-12 Ufl to 1S-t6
'
Avenu1, Galllpolla, $1951Mo. 614-992-8458.
U111Hioo Paid, 614-4411-4416 AHor 3 Ploco lc&lt;o Creom Sol, 614-2457P.II.
0610.
Air condhloned. Pt. PleaHnt, 3 Ton MobUa Pack Air Con2br., portly flomlshod, HUD ao- ditioner lnatallad, Flnanelat
c:oplod. 304-417S.n83.
Avallabla, 614~46-6308, 1~
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT 287-&lt;1308.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
Usod Brau Colllng Fono Wllh
ESTATES, 536 Jockoon Pika 3Llghto,
814-245-5773.
from $222 to $2115. Walk to thop
11o movloo. Coli 814-446-2568. 50 Whlto Oak ~. IO"ll6" 12
EOH.
·18 R . Long, 614-Jn;zno, olftor
5
Efficiency
apt.,
r.terenca, ::_P._II_. ...,-,,--::--::-:---,-doposlt, no pots. 304-675-5162.
Brunowlck Pool Toblo S150;
Cho!d Froozor $100, 614-44~141
For LMM: One Bedroom Attar 6 P.M. Or On WMkenda.
Apartmont, Socond Floor Cornor Soc:ond &amp; Plno1 Gatdpollo. Cablnat model electric Singer
$210
Per
Montn.
S1ova, sawing machine, like new, $100.
Retrtger1tor And Wtter Fur- 304-tl'S-2161.
nlohed. No Pota, Colt 614-446Callar 10 box, 14 rncnnory, brand
4240 Or 814-446-2325.
new, $43.D5, 814-at2-6166.
Fumlohod
Canning quart )ara $2.00/dz.,
pinto $1.75. Zano Groy booko,
.50oa. BodaptUd, $4.110. 304-

acree,
Rd,

WEST
·• K Q :1

t994 Chovy truck, $14,700. 3046JS.7tl89.
Chovrolot, FOld, Dcdg• pickup
bodo. Short "' long. No Not.
30HI75-e2116.

tound, $1200, 6t4-94~2035.

34 Case tor small
a rticle s

19list of actors

SOUTH

groond ceremonial axe,
highly poii1Md granne. pertect
condition, mu.. um piece,locally

Kltehen Cabinet., 814-446-6308,

fi 5

• fi ~
4 AK7-I:l

53
Antiques
-::----:-;_-.,--314

Thru 40 Inch. Met.l Fram1 Wln-

~}

• A

1092 Chow. 8-tO Tah~ Lo .. ·
Than 211,000 Ill., PS, Pi, PW, p .
Locka, T.W. 4.3 Engine, Au1o
AC, Towing Pkg., Toppor Exco~:
lont Cond, G14-44&amp;-3416.

367-7901.

2 Bedroom Mobile tiorN For
Rent On Bladen Road R~•
terod Coon Ooa Pup ..
Engliah;
tm lfulck \ ark

Fumlahed EHic:laney 701 Fourth
Avenue, Galllpolla, $220/Mo.

for Sale

30H7~7VO.

$1200
Invested will
ueritlc• Of tradrt for truck, 614-

Second Av1 ..L. Galllpolla, 6\4-446-

44t6 Aftw 7 ~.II .

PHILLIP
ALDER

lOili S·tO To,.,., V6, N:., block.

O~er

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

v-o, 6 ·~ ~7,000 mlloo, bodllnor:
6t4-IMI2·1UI4 01614-11112-i687.

tubular atMI conatructioo uaortld welghta, bart, bins.

54

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--9

BRIDGE

1H1 Ford Ranger XLT 414 1 alr

eurt

Utllhloo Paid, Shoro Bath, 507

r.asonable rntrietlone. Infor-

3br. ronc:h, GaUipollo Fo-cal!
for datall&amp;

4 Bodraomo, 2 !llory IJol:. 2 112
Batha, LR, DR, FA Whh ~pl ExtIn Khchon, Doolrablo Noogn._.

prucher

Pomeroy-r,11ddleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

A .l I 0
Bow

Hl00-287-41308.

mation mailed on r.qunl. 304-

458-1841, Steve.

" ' - " ' unflnfoltod, "'""' lol
wlfoncod.ln bockyanl, Camp

deck.

1994

$.30 per wd.
$.42 per wd.
$.60 per wd.
s.os;doy

72 .Trucks

~~llt7.

dowo, Coli Fa&lt; Slzoa, t Sot

Fumlshed EHJclency t1651Mo.

5 P.M.

Now •cuptlng epplleatlone tor
par1-tlme cathl.,, muat be
18yn. old, no rt'ona calla
pltate. Crawford e Grocery,

Ownerl()per1torw
Cardln~rl Freight Carrterw

0542, 614-367.0221.

"19c::87
: :-14
-::x611
:-::---::E-ao_1W
_ I:nd
-- :-w
- /-:
t2x
--38

21

6t~

5 Room Apanmont, Socond
Avenue,
Galllpolll, 814-446-

Mobile Homes
for Sale

cleaner, 614-882-4536 .

Financial

Tractor lrallar Driver• Min. A•
qw1ntments-::- Clast A COL With
Good Duv1ng R.cord 3

32

Dopool1, 814-4411-t340,

387o.

Will cloan houHS, morning•.
304-67S..2983.
Will tlum elun eafl)ett chMP
to finish my payments on

HElP I'IANTEO:

Po1nts

3 Room• Fumlahed, Upstalre
Apartment. No Pete, Utl1111 ..
Pold, G4 Locuot $250/Mo. $100

4')t)Jl

13.00
5
1.30/doy

And Balh,

$300/Mo.
O.posh $250, Porter ArM , 614-

Send RaspOn51J To·
c.o Gdllrpo li t Daily
l 11 txme. 815 Th ir d A\Oenue, G.al-

I

().

pllancel tumlehed, laundry
room hlcllltl.., elou to aehoal
In lown. A.~llcatlone a~allable
at : VIllage rMn ApCa. M8 or
call 814-992·371 t. EOH.

From

Ohio

Crose

5

beneh,eu~ llrt machine, 11-4"

2bdnn. opta., tooot o!octrlc, ap-

89nolits. W• Ser-

Demon

S9.QO

Many btrul $250 oao, 614Pte

1 and 2 bedroom 1panmen11,
rumishl&lt;l
and
untumlshad,
MCurtty depoelt rw,qulr.cl, no

~

l,1u~a l wna l

Apartment
for Rent

Barnett

6.00

KIT ·-; · {',\ RLYLE " h) Larr)· Wri~ht

52 Sponlng Goods

for Rent

5

1Swords or less
15 words or less
15 words or less
15 words or less

8,

IS words

Over

3 papers

...

:

'

I

Friday, July

u.. _ - ....._
Rldonour Eleclrfcal WV

»U71-1711.

•

Saturday. July 9. t994
· d

A busler-than-usual social calendar IS tn •-

-very productive day lor you. pro-v•ded you

AOUARIUS (Jan. 2D-Feb. 19) Tasks that

t can

dedicate yourself to completing what you
start Just be sure your ass1gnment IS
mean 1ngful.

be accomplished wtlh httle lime and
effort are likely to be \lery well done today
Project s that requ•re susta1ned tenac•ty .
however. m1ght not be too tmpre ss1ve

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) Froe nds are

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) With your

prepared to hsten to and beheve what you
have to say today . so state your views and
,JDSii!On with cont 1dence . If you appear
doubtful. you may lose your audtence

older and V'JBII established fnends populan ty and status are tnd 1cated today.
However. these same affections might not
be lav! shed on you w1th your newer

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Your opportuniltes lor personal gam look reasonably
good aga 1n today. yet what you moght get
could have stnngs a«ad1ed. Keep an eye
focused on the small prmt
·

acquaintances.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Before makong any type ol crittcal change today .
weigh tis pros and cons very carefully . Be
absolutely certain the advantages exceed

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) Youo tudg·
caled lor the yea r ahead · New lriendsllops
·
d ment regardong matters allect;ng your
might be established with tnfluentlal In 1- future could be keen and precise today.
111 oua1s, bu! 1t may not prove w1se to
r ersonal but because your thoughts mtght not be
Involve these people In you p
aligned with those ol an associate. you
3mbtllons.
.
h n it l rna doubt their worth.
CANCER (June 21 · July 2_2 1 W e .l sA~ITTARIUS (Nov . 2 3-0ec. 21)
comes to orgamz1ng or assumng manage
·
Beneftts m 1ght come today through a situ·
ment of ·a. ~llcky development toda~, yo~r~ ahon pre-viously established by a friend . If
well quahfted to handle the sttua!lon . e you're let ·,n on something worthwhile. be
~ou mtght no! get !he vote of everyone
.
.
involved. Know where to look for romance sure to contnbute what s expected of you..
and you 'l l fmd it. The Astro · Graph CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 19) Today, tf

ITtsAsUtRooUrtcSom(Aings,. ~M 20) B
prt ~ "''
e sure you
thoroughly understand the :ull effects of
h
t
any agreements you mig t en er m 1o
today . Hasty , unstudted commitments
could g1ve you cause for later regrets
GEMINI (Moy 21·June 20) Owing lo the
f
h
· ht
1 I
help o anot er. you m1g reap ma ena
benefits today . When II comes time to
divvy up. be sure this individual is ade uatel rewarded
q C t~ NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

! ,• .

••

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Child molestation haunts mother
Dear Ann Landers: I nee&lt;! your
help. I just found out that my 29year-old daughter was molested by
my father when she was very young.
In my wildest dreams, I could not
imagine this happening.
I confronted my father. who is
now 74. He did not try 10 lie his
way out of it or make excuses. He
admitted the abuse and begged me
to forgive him. Bu~ Ann, I jun can't
I am simply crushed.
My daughter says she has forgiven
Grandpa as part of her healing
process and she doesn't want me to
tell her grandmother. My mother is
not well, and I'm afraid this news
would JUSt about kill her. I have
talked to my brothers ~boul i~ and
1
we all agree that Mo~ ,should not
be told.
The problem is I can't let go of
this hideous nighunare. When I'm
around my parents, I try my best to
pretend that everything is the same
as it always was. but it's impossible.
I fmd myself pulling away from my
fathec's touch, and I tum my head
away when he speaks to me .
Meanwhile, I am scared to death that

It is imperative that you get some
COIJ!lSCiing at once. I sense your high
Stale of anxiety and am worried that
you will make yourself sick if you
don't
unload your anger. Meanwhile,
1994 Los A.nge les
if there are any great-grandchildren
r, n es
Cre at ors 5 ynd ,cate
around, do notlea~e them alone with
Grandpa. Pedophilia is not
something that is outgrown.
Mom will sense something is wrong. Please mak e an appointment
I'm building up a lot of hostility immediately.
Dear Ann Landers: You
toward my £ather and am tempted
to tum him in to the police, but if I probably think you have heard every
did this, my mother would find ou~ problem in the world by now. Well,
and it would t.ear our family apart. I I have a new one for you.
cannot believe that this terrible thing
I live in Schenectady, N.Y., and I
happened to my baby girl and that I buy The Daily Gazette strictly for
was so nruve 1 didn't see what was your column. Almost every day, my
going on. I hate how I feel, but I boss comes by my deslc and picks
would feel a whole lot worse if the up my paper. He says, "WeD, what
news got out and my mother heard did Annie have to say today?
about it. She is a wonderful woman, Anything juicy?" Then he starts to
and I don't want to hurt her. Please read your column out loud, which I
tell me what to do. -- DESPERATE hale because I want to enjoy it with
IN N.C.
my lunch.
DEAR N.C. : You say your
This morning was the last straw.
daughter is 29 and you JUSt learned After he finished reading your
that she was sexually molested by column, he said, "This one I have to
her grandfather when she was very show my brother-in-law." He then
young.
tae your column right out of the
S ~ n a ,ca t e a r~d

paper. I had to go across the street
to buy another one.
I'm really Licked off with that guy.
and I'd like 10 tell him off, but I
don't dare. Any suggestions? -STD..L BURNING
DEAR S.B.: Prevention is far
bclter than rrying to fllld a cure. Keep
your paper well ditched and out of
sight.
Gem of the Day (Credit Sue Wall
in Phoenix):
011 Judgment Day
If God should say
Did you clean your house today?
I will say, I did not
I played with my children
And I forgot

·Featured on page 81

refreshing a glass of water as ever
Dy AI Hartson
I 'vc had , thank you my loyal subMiddleport Church or Christ
jecL~
."
On e of my fa vorite stori es is
Ev
eryon e was shocked . What
about the little village that learned
th e king was coming for a vt sit. did he mean "glass of water?" Had
They were all in a tetlrcr trying to the king lost his mind or his taste
decide iust what they could do to buds?
The answer was later discovered
m:ike hi s vi sit special. There were
as
one
by one the townspeople conall kind s of suggest ions but none
fessed
that they had brought a
seemed 10 fit. Finally one person
of water thinking that
pitcher
spoke up and said that because
everyone
else would bring wine
Feeling pressured 10 have se~? their area of the country was and their liulc bit wouldn't matter.
known for the fine wine it proHow well-inform£d are you? Write
duced, perhaps they could do Everyone had brought water in a
for Ann Landers' booklet "Six and something along those lines.
selfish attempt to keep their wine
the Teen-ager." Send a self-adA few minutes later they arrived for themselves.
dressed, umg, business-rue envelope at a deci sion : each person would
In I Cor. I 2 the Apostle Paul
and a check. or money order for bring a pitcher of their very best speaks about the body uf Chri st.
$3.65 (this includes postage and wine to the town square on the day the church, being made up of many
handling) to: TetflS, c/o Ann Lan- the king was to vi sit. There they members but that there was only
ders, P.O. BoJC 11562, Chicago, Ill. would lind a large vat which wolild one body. None arc more imporL1n1
606JJ-0562 . (In Canada, send be con structed especrally for thi s than any other. but rather each one.
event. They were each 10 pour their is interwoven 10 form the body. We
$4.45.)
pitcher of wine into the vat and all need each other, we depend
then when th e king arrived he upon one another whether we realwould be served wine which would ize it or not. TI1e hand is no more
important than the foot and the eye
be the very best available.
Finally the day arrived and as is no more important that the car.
DARWIN - The Modern the hour approached for the Kmg ' s Each part has it's place and it's
Woodmen of America, Camp 7230, arrival, tl1c townspeople were com- function, Just as God has placed
will have its annual potluck picnic ing from every direction with a them in the body where He wanted
and community service recognition pitcher of their best wine. The vat them to be . Vs . 27 says "Now you
program Sunday, 12:30 p.m . at the slowly began to fill up and the indi - arc the body of Christ, and each
north bound park. Route 33 . vidual wines mixed. The anticipa- one of you is part of it."
Recognition will be given 10 Ola tion of the town s people was growChristians, we ar_e Christ's body.
St. Clair and Aletha Randolph for ing as the time for the king's He deserves the very best body
outstanding community service.
arrival grew ncar.
possible and you and I make a difRACINE - The family of the
At last a little boy came running ference as 10 what type of body He
Rev. Lubert and Maria Hille Theiss into the square yelling "He's here.
has. Too many think they have
will have a reunion Sunday at Star He's here!" The moment had
simply been saved so that they can
Mill Park. There wtll be a covered arrived. The mayor welcomed· the spend eternity with God. That cerdish dinner at 12:30 p.m.
king and then offered him a glass tainly is part of the plan, but until
TUESDAY
of refreshment from the vat. that time arrives we need to underPOMEROY - Meigs County Expecting the king's face 10 show
Board of Elections, 4 p.m. Tuesday his pleasure at the fine wine, they stand that we have been saved to
at the office on Mulberry Ave., were surprised when he finished serve. Arc you serving in the body.
or arc you dead weight?
Pomeroy.
the
and said : "that was a
~~~~~
~~~~

-----Community calendar----FRIDAY
RUT LAND - The Rutland
Youtil League will hold an end of
year meeting Friday a16 p.m. at the
baseball field. All coaches and parents arc asked to attend.
POINT PLEASANT - Bend
Area Go spel Jubil ee, at Mason
County Fairgrounds , RGutc 62,
Nonh of Point Pleasant, W. Va.,
Friday, 6 to II p.m . Saturday,
beginning at 12:30 and Sunday, 10
a.m. until 5 p.m. Over 40 singing
groups, Free, camping, concession
stand.
POMEROY - The I 75th
Anniversary Committee will meet
Friday at noon at the Meigs County

Muse um .
SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Community Association will
again hold a farmer's market,
beginning thi s Saturday. The market will be open from 8 a.m.-2 '
p.m.. with farmer's allowed to
come and set up at 7:30 a.m. Fcc
for the selling space next to Dave
Diles Park will he $5 . All vendors
should preregister by 992-5458.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers Plains Fire Department
will conduct a door to door fund
drive Saturday beginning at 9 a.m.
in the distri ct served by that fire
department. Donations from those

Double
birthdays
celebrated
A party was held recently honoring Ryan Van Matrc. three , and
Jordan Decker, two, by their parents, Kevin and Ann Van Matre
and Brian and Melinda Decker.
The party was held at the Mason
Fire Station . A monster truck
theme was carried out, and cake,
ice cream and chips were served.
Attending were George and Barbara Van Matre, Don and Carol
Diddle, Sonny and Tweet Decker,
Bob and Jonetta Davis, Rusty and
Rosemary Davis, Tammy and
Brandon Bachner, Nancy and Crystal Muilins, Pauline Cunningham.
Tami. Jessie and Zachary Sheets,
April Van Matre, Jamie Parsons,
June Van Matre, Sonya ad Ezra
Zuspan, Amber Kearns, Chris.
Terry. Christy and Christopher
Neese, and Rainy Walker.
Others presenting gifts were

not contacted may be sent 10 Terry
Deem, department president. Additional information may be obtained
from him at 667-3933.
CLIFfON - The Rollins Family will be the featured singers at a
hymn sing Saturday to be held at
the Clifton Tabernacle Church, 7
p.m . Pastor M.E. McDaniel invites
the public to attend.
SUNDAY
RACINE - Darin Smith will
speak at the Mt. Moriah Church of
God, Racine, Sunday at 7 p.m. A
revival will be held there July 1517 with the Rev. Marvin Cann as
speaker. The public is invited.

Clarke family
holds reunion

RYAN VANMATRE
JORDAN DECKER
Deloris and Fred Taylor, Eulah
Redman, John, Kristy and Bryce
Clark, Kevin and Mandy Grueser,
Bruce Decker, Pat and Zachary
Carson, Benney and Pat Dent, Bill
and Jean Sim, and Charles and
Jcnctte Radford.

CLARKE
The fifth annual Clarke reunion
was held at the home of Dale and
Alice Humphreys and sons. Chris
and Peter of New Haven, W. Va.
A potluck picnic was held at
noon after which the group enjoyed
swimming, visiting and taking pictures.
The 1995 reunion will be held at
noon on the last Saturday of June at
the home of Dr. and Mrs. Greg
Clarke (Lynn) and daughters,
Rachel and Anna of Kenna, W. Va.
Attending were William J.
Forbes and grandsons, Jessie and
Casey Clarke, Charleston, and D.
W. Reed of Sissonville, W. Va.;
Dale and Marjorie Walburn, Middleport; Dr. and Mrs. Greg Clarke,
Rachel and Anna, of Kenna, W.
Va., Don Bailey of South Point;
Amy Roush, Marie C. Roush of
New Haven, W. Va., and the hosts,
Dale and Alice Humphreys and
sons.

mmrm:

GMC:muc:K. ~

Invites You To Help Us
Celebrate Our 3'd Anniversary

'

'

GMC:TRuc:K.,

V6, auto.,
air. 7
pass ..
power
side door,
more.

WAS
$22,141

1991 GMC 1500 Pickup .••.•... $10,200
LWB, V6, 5 opeed, olr.

1993 Chev. 1500 Pickup........$11 ,400
1989 Buick Lesabre ......•..........$6400

Mlddleport-Pomeroy-Galllpolls·Pt. Pleasant - July 1o, 1994

A Multimedia Inc,, Newspaper

Child support cases:
Judge Crow orders Meigs human services
department to pay cost of court proceedings
r

By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel Staff
.• POM EROY · Mei gs Co unty Common Plea s Court
Judge Fred W. Crow III . Ill an entry l'ilcd Fnday after noon. ordered the Me1 gs County Department uf Human

"Any billmgs for costs pre vious ly submrll ed to the
agency , and nul pa1d as of thi s dale , shall be paid wrthm
se ven day s of the JOUrnalr zalr on of thrs entry (Frida~), "
Crow wrote .
In addrtiun . Cruw ordered Meigs County ProsecutiDg

Serv1ccs to pay court costs

Attorney John R. Lcntcs to '' take such me as ures as arc
necessary to collect unpa 1d costs here in ordered, pursuant

1n

child support cases and

ordered other county office holders to insure payment of
costs.
In the entry, Crow ordered DHS 10 comply with rules of
the court by pa yin g costs al the Lime of fil ing of any
pleading or requesting a judgment entry. He also mdercd
Clerk of Courts Larry Spencer to refuse filmg of &lt;lily
JUdgment entry wh1ch doc s not have allached a ce rtifi Cate
of payment or security for costs and to determine how
much DHS owes in court cusls.
Crow said the costs, once determined, will be submilled
to DHS for payment within seven days

to the statutory duties of his offi ce."
"The CSEA files mml of th e cases wherein cos ts are
incurred .
"The Meigs County Auditor's Office records mdi calc
that the Meigs County Department of Human Services. as
of Dec. 31. 1993 had a balance of $239.262 in its Child
Support Enfurc6menl account.
"In addition. the records indicate that un April4. 1994.
the Meigs County Departf11ent of Human Scrvtces transferred $104.768.14 from the Child Support Enforcement

account to the Publ1c
As~ i s tan cc ac count.
"Therefore, 11 ap -

pears that the Mcrgs
Co unty Department
of Human Scrvrccs
ha s had adequa te
funds to pay court
cost s incurred ."

"The fa ct thai the
Meigs County Department of Human

DHS

Lo-. low mllee.

1986 Olds Delta 88 .•.•..•.•.....•.••.$4400
Low mi.., 4 door.

COLUMBUS, Ohio(AP) -Spending on school districts may have to go up
by billions of dollars annually under a judge's ruling throwing out the current
financing system, according to a report published Saturday.
The statewide average in per-puprl spending rsa lillie more than $5,000. The
state spends about $3 .5 billion a year to guarantee all schools at least $2,871
in basic aid per pupil.
It would cost about $1 .85 billion more a year for all drstricts to spend $6,000
per student instate and local taxes,lhereportsaid, quoting estimates it obtained
from the state's Department of Education.
In Beachwood, a Cleveland suburb. the school district spends more than
S12,000 per student.
The cost to the state would go lo more than $13.5 billion to bring all districts
to thai level, the report said.
The debate over school funding follows a judge's ruling on July I which
declared the state's way to pay for public schools unconstitutional. Judge
Linton D. Lewis Jr. of Perry County Common Pleas Court ruled that the current
system creates financial differences among school districts.
Gov. George Voinovich said he will appeal because itcouldcostdistriets too
much money if they are forced to spend the same amount per pupil.
The Ohio Coalition .for Adequacy &amp; Equity of School Funding filed the
lawsuit against the state on behalf of 500 of the state 's 612 school districts.
The group's executive director, William Phillis, said the ruling does not .
mean all districts would have to spend the same amount per student. The
coalition is not prepared to say what the stale should spend to improve poor
districts.
On Friday, Voinovich, House Speaker Vern Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, and
Senate President Stanley Aronoff. R-Cincinnati, wrote a letter to Oliver
OcaSA:k, Stale Board of Education president, urging the board to support the
state's appeal.
The board will adopt its position, possibly Tuesday, and it probably will be
a dose vote, Ocasek said.
Ocaselr. said earlier this week that he will aslr. the panel not to appeal and to
try to withdraw as a defendant. He said appeals would delay resolution of the
problem for, years.

1989 Chrysler New Yorker •.••...$7445
Lollll-.1, 4 door.

·

1988 Chevy lroc Camaro ••••••••• $6995
350 V-8, auto., air, T-topa.

1990 Chevy Cavalier ••••.•••......•. $5980

I

4 Door, air, Milo., low mllee.

1990 Chevy Lumina Euro .•.•.••. $7820
4 Door, air, V-6.

1992 Buick Regal ..................... $8990
Lo-.1-.1, 4 door, VS.

WINNING WING • Laverne Harley, center,
won the Gold Wing Aspencade in a contest
spcmsored by the Ohio Gold Road Riders Association at the stale rally in Nelsonville June 18.
The motorcycle was purchased from Riverfront
Honda whose general manager Tom Lear, Iert,

1993 Nlssan 4X4 Ext. Cab •.•. $13,980

is shown presenting the keys to Harley. John
Stratakis, right, sold the winning ticket. Proceeds from the tickets sold by the local Chapter
c-2 will benefit the chapter's "Santa's Wings"
project at Christmas for children and senior citi·
zens.

HURRYI

1985 Chevy K10 4X4 ••.• ~ ...........$7460
Long bed, auto., 56,000 rallee

1992 Chevy S.10 Blazer ....... $14,950
Sport Pkg., lo-, 4 door.

RACO crime watch signs to be installed
Crime watch signs have arrived the food booth.
Membership was discussed and
and will be installed in the near
a
challenge
was issued to all memfuture it was reported at a recent
bers
to
take
a guest to the next
meting of the Racine Area ComJuly
26,
6:30, at Star Mill
meeting,
munity OrganiZ8liOII.
Plans for a booth at the OhiO Park.
Kathryn Hart, president, had
State Fair were ·discussed as was
the July 4 celebration held Monday charge of the meeting and giving
at Racine. RACO had a food booth, reports were Lillian Weese, secresponsored children's games, and tary, and Melanie WeeSA: who gave
Joy and Aaron Young oversaw the the treasurer's report in the absence
frog jumping contest. Tables and a in the absence on Tonja Hunter.
sign board were purchased 10 use at Thank you notes were received

from the RACO scholarship recipients.
The Rev. Ken Molter gave grace
before the meal auended by 15
members and a guest, the Rev.
William Middleswarth of the .
Meigs County Historical Society.
He displayed and described the
I 75th Meigs County anniversary
commemorative coverlet and pre·
sented interesting historical £acts
pertaining to Meigs County.

1994 Ford LTD Crown Vlct.•• $19,994
WAS $24,275. Loedecl, INU.., 100 111llea.

__ DON TATE MOTORS, INC.

llon..Jil

_.

tOH:OO
l!atOMOO
Sun. 1:0H:OO

614·992·6614, 1·100·137-1 094

'·

.:.:rr '

Vol.
.

28, ·No.. 22
'
' '

court costs: excerpts from judge's entry

In orderlng the Meigs County Department of Human Services to pay court costs In
child support cases Friday, Judge Fred W. Crow wrote:
"It appearing to the court that the Meigs County Department of Human Services/
Child Support Enforcement Agency (CSEA) has recently tiled several motions/entries
or other pleadings without the prepayment of security of court costs, and upon a
regular review of tlllngs, the court has determined that court costs are not being
deposited, collected or paid In a large number of cases filed or brought by the Child
Support Enforcement Agency.
"Further, the court flnds that the agency does not collect or aHempt to collect court
costs In these proceedings upon the conclusion of the case. The result Is that costs
are not paid to the clerk lor which he Is legally obligated to collect, to the detriment of
the Meigs County General Fund.
"This failure to follow court rule causes gross Inefficiency as the clerk must send
leHers aHemptlng to collect court costs, the court has to order Individuals Into court
to explain why costs have not been paid, the sheriff has to make service of process,
a hearing must be had and additional entries must be prepared and served."

Serv ices has not and
docs not follow court rules and pay cit her secunty deposits
or cost s, results in extra work for the co urt . the clerk 's

off1ce and the sheriff' s department ; in .rdditr un, Mergs
County loses money, " Crow wrote.

DH S director Michael Swishc.r was on vacation an d not
ava ilable fur comment. DHS admini strati ve ass ista nt RI chard E. Jones said he had nut seen the entry and coul d nul
comme nt on it as of Fnda y aft ernoon .

Meigs library board
set to open bids for
new Racine branch

Luxur cru1ser:

Report: funding decision
could cost state billions

,·

I

•

School spending estimates vary

1986 Buick Lesabre ............•.... $5250

Chance of rain :
20 percent

tmts -

•

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - Bids fo r construction of a two story brick buildin g in Racrnc
to house a bran ch library wrll be opened by the Mcr gs Cllunt y Libr ary Board
of Trustee s at I :30 p.m . on Aug. 4.
The buard uf trustees Thur&gt;day rcvrcwed fiml plans for the library branch
to he built in R;u.:inc at
the cornc.:r of F1)urth and

Pearl Streets on land donated b~ the Home Na tr ona! Bank of Racrne
Arch1tc t: ts on th e
project ar C R ~.: 1 s cr.

V:denlour and Callahan
of Athens.

J

Mone y for the constructiun cumcs from the

'

buildin g fund es tabli shed scvcra l years ago

by the count y libr ary
ustt:cs. That fund rcpmonie s n:ccivt:d
from the state 1n excess

11

rc~cnt s

LOOKING OVER PLANS - Meigs County olthat needed loopemte
Librarian Ruth Powers,ldl, was joined by Wendi the main libr:rr y at
Maxson, library clerk, to look over the plans for Pomeroy, the branch in
a new branch library to be built in Racine. Bids Middlcpurl . and the
on the construction will be opened Aug. 4 and bookmobi k .
Libraries arc funded 111
groundbreak.ing has tentatively been scheduled
Ohiu hy a port ron of the
for Aug. 16.

person al income tax .

Currently 5. 7 percent of the tax collected is allocated for operation ul lihwi es
in Ohio.
After the Aug. 4 bid opening. the architects wil l re view the bids· and make
recommendatrons to the Library Board of Trustees.
Mcrgs Librarian Ruth Powers sard that a tcnt;rtivc date llf Aug l(r has been
set for the groundbrcaking.
The proposed schedule calls for the budding to be under ruofbclore winter,
to be completed by early February, furnished and stocked with books by
March and in full operation hy Apnl.
The building will be completely hand1capped accessible. acco rdrng to
P.owcrs .

Each floor will have 1500square feet of space. with the flfsl fluor to rncludc
a large meeting room, a sma ll office and a utilit y ruom , Powers said .
Continued on page A2

LWB, V&amp;, 5 apeed, llir.

4 door, auto., llir,lo-.

Low: 60s

•

By KEVIN PINSON
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - At first glance, the Gallipolis Police Department's newest
addition 10 rls fleet may g1ve the impression that the city has experienced a
serious boost to its budget. '
First introduced to the public at Monday's Independence Day parade, the
GPD 's 1988-Lincoln Town Car looks like a luxurious cruiser, complete with
radio, lights and siren.
But Police Chief Roger Brandeberry said the sedan did nol pula crimp in
the city ' s budget.
a
"The beauty of itrs there 's zero tax money in the car - only the gas is paid
for with lax dollars," he said.
Signs on the rear quarter panels of the car allay any fears that the police
department has developed expensive tastes: "This vehicle seized from a
Gallipolis drug dealer."
Before being seized during an arrest, the Lincoln was used to transport
cocaine from Columbus to Gallipolis once a week, Brandeberry said.
Because of its role in the trafficking of drugs. the car was .forfeited to the
police department once the dealer was convicted.
Brandeberry said the department felt using the vehicle for law enforcement
and drug education would be a bigger payoff than pulling the Lincoln on the
auction block.
Using money raised from other seizures, lil.e car was painted and transformed into a fully functional po lice cruiser. )
. TlW lincoln Will be used for public reialrops purposeS, not for rout rne
patrol, Brandeberry said. Be- - - - - - - - - - - - - - sides being on display at local
LUXURY CRUISER - Gallipolis
events, the car will be used to 'Police Chief Roger Brandeberry
travel to state conference and (above) cruises Third Avenue in the
training seminars.
department's newest addition - .a
"I think it sends a great mes- 1988 Lincoln Town Car (right) seized
sage," Brandeberry satd. "II from a cocaine dealer. The car will be
says, 'Galli pel is is going to be used for public relations and drug
Iough on drug abuse and drug education programs, Brandeberry
trafficking. Don't bring your said.
dope to Gallipolis ...

Look for Great Seleetions and
Priees All Month

!Ges l

Death clouds N. Korean talks - page AS .

Addition to city police
fleet seized from
Gallipolis drug dealer

DON TATE MOTORS, INC.

I.

O.J._turns 47 -in jail- pageA7

Mei·g s equestrian
rides into 5th place
in national contest

News capsules
Akzo announces
multi-million dollar
upgrade at Mason site

GOOD MORNING
-

State jobless rate
drops In June

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va.- A
three-year, multi-million dollar upgrade A drop In the state's loblen
and expansion plan of the Akzo Nobel rate last month shows the
plant will improve efficiency and reduce state's labor market Is lm·
proving, but such seaaonal
waste emissions, vice president of phos- drops
are routine, analysta
phorous chemicals Robert Craig an- · slid.
nounced recent! y.
The state's unemployment
The company will invest "millions of rate dropped to 5.5 percent
dollars" to upgrade plant instrumenta- In June, down from 6.5 per·
tion and processes, provide new control cent In May.
The nation's unemployrooms and monitoring devices and improve the raw material receiving area ment rate was unchanged at
and sensitive materials handling opera- 6 percent In June.
tions, an Akzo press release said.
These improvements are in addition to the $5 million recently spent to
rmprove the storage area and add dikes to collect surface water as part of the
company's environmental protection plan.
·

Meigs political subdivisions to recover costs of storm
POMEROY - Meigs County's political subdivisions will receive over
$80,000 in reimbursed costs due to January's snow emergency, Robert E.
Byer, director of the county's emergency services. reported Friday.
Checks will be distributed Tuesday at 4 p.m. at the Emergency Services
office on Mulberry Heights in Pomeroy, but not all checks have been
re~eived, Byer said, adding that he hopes all checks will be received by
Tuesday.
"Villages and townships are asked to send a representative to the meeting
to receive their checks," he said. "Each will receive 50 percent of the eligible
costs for their snow removal work from January I7th through the 25th."
Those receiving reimbursement are all townships, the county highway
department and the villages of Middleport, Pomeroy, Racine, Rutland and
Syracuse, Byer said.

Meigs commission
opens paving bids

Today's Times-Sentinel
t8 Sections- t58 Pages

Dl
POMEROY - Bids for two paving Business
projects in Sulton Township were Calendars
84&amp;6
opened Friday afternoon dunng the Classilieds
03. 7
regular weekly meeting of the Meigs -:::---:-- - -- - ---=:.::....:...
County Board of Commissioners.
C;:;-;o;-:m_ic--:s--:-- -- - - - 'l"'
ns.·•:.:..:
.:. rl
The Shelly Company ofThornville Editorials
A4
submilted paving bids on 7/IOmi leof Local
AJ
Yost Road from Forest Run Road and
County Road 33, Oak Grove Road, -::O_b_it_u-'-a-'-r'-'
ie.::.
s _ __ ___:A
..:6::__
from state Route 12410CountyRoad Sports
Cl-8
29, Bowman's Run Road .
"'AI-=,o-n_g_t"'h-e"'R::c.i-v-e r- ----,B
::..I::...::..
The cost of the two projects as bid
A2
will be $20,659.50 and $64,290.80, Weallier
respectively .
The bids from the Shelly Company
were the only bids received on the
Columns
projects . Commis ~ .ioners Robert
Harten bach and Janel HowartTacken Fred Crow
voted to table the bids pending their Bob HoeDicb
review by Meigs County Engineer Jjm Sands
Robert Eason.
Chuck Stone
Commissioners also approved arequest from the Meigs County Departc ,,.,"""' v.u., PuNobJ., c•.
• menl of Human Services to use ---~$4,745 .63 from the deparlmenl '_ shurldrngconstruction, capital project fund
toreplace a ftve-ton air condtLrontng untt at the department 's office in
Middleport.
In other mailers, the board:
' Approved Ihe transfer of $200 within the Meigs County Park District;
• Approved paymg weekly brlls of $134,536.62 consisting of 124 entries.
Present were Hartenbaeh, Tackeu and Clerk of Commission Gloria Klees.
Not present was CommiSSIOn Prestdent Fred Hoffman.
L._

-------.J

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