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12 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Delayn to perform at
Jackson County fair
Meig s Countia ns ca n see
'Jas hvi llc singer Shee la Delay n
perform at th e Jackson County Fair
Sa turday where she will be openi ng
twl\ shows f()[ Terry McBrid~ and
the Ride.
Shee la wil l perform at 6 and
L10 p.m. do in g I 0 numbers in
Jh uu t ·HJ mmute.;; u ~mg her ow n

h.md
The for mer Sheil a Fell y who
~rcw up 111 l.an gsl'l llc and graduated I"'"' ~k • gs I ltgh School, liVe s
111 Nas hvtllc with her hu sband.
Ch n s Napper. ami their two chil drcll, Kri sten and Cory.
Whil e Dclayn ha s hccn m and

nut of Nashvi lle for more than two
yt·; Jr -, gc l!Jng her career o n trac k ,

the fanuly moved there onl y about
thn.·c months ago.

Dcl:l yn·s career IS being handled
hv World Class Tale nt and she is

n~"v dn1ng l nts of pcrfo rmin $
.truund Lill' c~wllry, JnusLJy in casJ·

nns ,

:H

-:omr rounty fa irs, and pri -

' :uc panic . . .
She n.'(l'nlly wen t LO Mi nncsoopl'ncd at a casino for

Lt \\ hcrL' shL·

R.11 Pncc . She Ita., been booked for

,c,:cn dJ}s , Se pt. 19-25, at a Las
\' c~Js hill el. And then there have

Thursday, July 21, 1994

Society Scrapbook

booking s in Mi ssissippi, Florida
and other slates.
Now that she is on the move so
much. Dclayn has purchased a 40foo l lOur bu s which her husband
drives when they're on the road .
This makes iL poss ible for the couple to rake Jheir children on some
of the short stintS , she says.
The band and backup singers
travel with Dclayn in the bus which
has a lou nge. bunk bed for sleepmg. and in the rear what is call the
"star sec tio n" with space enough
for Sheela and her family .
She recorded her ftrst compact
di sc and cassette, "Heart's Still on
th e Border" at Masterlink Studios
m March and reports that it is being
play ed all over the United Slates.
On th e CD she dedicates the song,
" War Betwee n th e Sexes" to her
SHEELA DELAYN
parents. Other selections include
"Honeybee" "Baby Why Not You
a nd Me", "Once in a Lifetim e
Lov e" and "Broken Heart and
Faded Dreams".
Sheela says that she has a growing fan club an d appli cations to
jot n ca n be sec ured by writing Dy MIKE DR AGO
Sheela Dclayn Fan Club, P.O. Associated Press Writer
60k96, Nashvt llc, Tenn .. 37206.
SPACE CENTER, Houston
(AP) - Columbia' s astronauts
conducted a final round of laboratory experiments today after paying
tribute to the astronauts of Apollo
II and their historic feat 25 years
report on health car . A donation
ago.
was made 10 the grange 's deaf proAstronaut Carl Walz sent down
gra m following a report by Golda
a
message
on behaH of the sevenRee d. Reponed ill were James
member
crew
at 10:56 p.m.
Weber, Leo Story, Ruth Frances,
Ella Cullums, Bernice Hawk , and Wednesday .the moment Neil Arm strong took the fl1'st human step on
Wallace Bradford .
Eighteen members from Albany the moon.
"This occasion was unique in
Grange and one from star Grange
human
history, the fulfi ll~ent of
vist ted at the meeting which hcgan
one
of
humanity's
oldest destres: to
with a potluck dinner. The group
explore
to
the
limits
and then to go
sang "Battl e hymn of the Repubbeyond,"
Walz
said.
"It buoyed
lic". Arrangements were made for
the
spirit
of
the
entire
world."
Hemlock 10 visit Racine Grange on
He added that Columbia is rakAug. 4.
ing
"its own small step" on the
The le cturer from Albany
14-day
science mission , which
grange presented the program
focuses
on·ways
humans could live
which included a hillbilly wedding.
penmanently
in
space.
There was group singing of "Amcr"We hope that our research ...
ica" . and a reading, "Ragged Old
and
the international space station
Flag."
will continue to buoy "I' the hu~an
spirit and capture the tmagma110n
of this generation and generauons
to come," Walz said.
Columbia is the fl1'st shuUie to
be in orbit during an Apollo II
NatiOnal Forest, 219 Columbus anniversary.
Road, Athens and the public is
Astronaut Leroy Chiao tried to
invited to attend.
replace a blown fuse on equipment
for the 82nd and final experiment
The open house will begin with of the mission today, but he found
a short ceremony at I 0 a.m. fol- a different electrical problem inside
lowed by tours of the office.
the unit and the plan was scrapped.

Columbia crew
pays tribute to
Apollo 11 flight

POOL PARTY
A party at the London Pool was
enjoyed Sunday evening by 35
members of the congregation of the
Syracuse United Methodist Church.
Swimming was combined with a
picnic where members grilled hot
dogs and had other refreshments .
Chris Weaver, assisted by his
mother, Jean , gave a demonstration
on scuba diving and explained all
the eqUipment.
EAGLES CLASS
Plan s to start quiltin g and
sewin g carpet rags in September
we re made when the Eagles Class
mef recently at the Asbury United ~
Methodist Church.
Al so disc ussed was a bake sale,
a soup sale and baa mr to be held in
the fall. Irene Parker presided at the
meting which opened with prayer.
Beulah Ward had a re ading,
"Another Day" and devotions \llere
by Bob Smith were entitled "Now
is the day of Salvation." A card for

Mary Cundiff was signed.
Al!ending in additio~ to those
named were Wanda Ri zer, Jean
Stout and Elma Louks .
UMW PICNIC
Syracu se Asbury United
Methodi st Church held a pt cmc
recently at the hom e of Mary Lisle.
A carry-in dinner was enJOyed at
noon with the Rev. Deron Newman
giving the ble ssing. Dunng the
busin ess sess 10n , an offenng was
raken. The mini ster played several
selections on the piano. Ten membcrs and guests . Rose Ann Jenkms
and Freda Wtl son, auended.
Methodi st MUA son g fest and
carry -m dwner were enJoyed by
Uni ted Methodt st churches of the
Syracuse charg e at the Asbury
United Methodtst Church.
Solos, group smgmg, song s
the charge chotr , the Asbury cho •
and the Rev. and Mrs. Deron New man were mcluded on the prognam
arranged by Denms Moore.

Meigs teams
advance in
KC tourney

..

-~5

Co 11t c." '

w1 nn c r s

were

llll!.

'c old Reed. Eva Robson , and
\Ltrs arct lla ning were ~1 c j u~ gcs.
\\'11mcrs we re Rosalie Story, dress
.1 ,lnll . patrio ti c pic lure, pillo w
''-"''''·and toy; Lcow Smith, echoes
&lt;&gt;I the pas t; Bob Red, bird hou se;
\lu ne l f\radford , a quilt quilted by
one p ~ r so n, and Sara Cullum s, a
quilt quilt ed hy a group.
During th e meeting tile charger
'"'' dra ped for Eli zabeth Roberts.
~ I rs. Bradford gave the home economics com mittee report s. and
pi ems were made for a picnic at the
n c:~~t

ml:Cting .

Ztba Midkiff

~av): ~

legislative

... -

Pick 3:

/,

009
Pick 4:
2001
Buckeye 5:
1-11-17-18-29

Page4

'I

•

en tine
Vol. 45, NO. 56
Copyrlght1994

Armstrong's
words cause
controversy
By The Associated Press

A or nay?
Twemy-five years after Apollo
I I. the controversy continues over
the word s ul!ered by Neil Armstrong as he stepped onto the
moon.
"That 's one small step for a
man, one giant leap for mankind,"
he says he said or thinks he said on
July 20, 1969.
Wh at was heard in Mission
Co ntrol was, "That's one small
step for man, one giant leap for
mankind" - no "a" before the
" man."

Arm strong later wrote that he
thought he' d included the "a."
" Although it is technically possible that the VOX (voice-operated
transmitter) didn 't pick it up and
transmit it, my listening to the
recording indicates it is more likely
that it was just omiued," he wrote.
For the record, NASA goes with
the "a." So does Bartleu's Familiar Quotations.
Still, it continues to appear both
ways.

grand champions; and back, Jessica Arnott,
reserve; Jeanie Newell reserve; Crystal Smith,
grand; and Crystal Bennett, two reserve champion awards.

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

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91 Mill Street • Middleport, Oh. 45760
614-992·6250

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'/r; ct tw ............................ $249
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2

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GUARANTEED BEST BUY IN AMERICA

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THE CHAMPIONS - In 4-H demonstration
projects held at the Meigs County EKtension
Se rvice last week, these were the grand and
reser ve champions. Front seated they are Josh
llager, Vincent Broderick, and Michael Leifheit,

Tonight, partly cloudy .
Law In 60s. Saturday, chance or
rain 30 percnL Hlgb In mtd..fiOs.

-·

t;{

Stock ~4528

,

. .--... . . ., . . . . . . -

Sectiono, 14 Pogeo 35 cento
AMultimedia Inc. Nowopoper

Eastern school
district seeks
renewal levy

Wayne National Forest to ·
celebrate opening of new office
Tl1c USlJA Forest Service will
host an open house on July 28 to
celebrate the eslablishment of the
new supe rviso r's office for the
Wayne National Forest
The ce lebration will be held at
th e hea dquart ers of the Wayne

~-..._

(}hio LothT¥' ,l

Hemlock Grange announces
winners of recent contest
.lllllO II nvc cl followi ng judge held at
tit ,· I kml o&lt;.'k Gr&lt;mgc's recent meet-

~·---

EXTENDED SERVICE PLAN

LOOK OVER DEBRIS - Workers look over the debris of a
three-story senior citizens apartment building under construction
that collapsed Thursda;r in _Wellston, Ohio. Three construction

workers were trapped briel'ly though they escaped wi.th mi.nor
injuries. The building apparently was blown down by htgh wmds
in a thunderstorm. (AP)

Winds blamed for collapse of
Wellston construction project_
WELLSTON, Ohio (AP) Winds are blamed for blow ing
down a three- story apartment
building under construction, causing minor injuries to three workers
briefly trapped underneath the rubble.
The workers were preparin~ to
put a roof on the building when it
collapsed at about 4 p.m. Thursday.
said David Frame, who works at a

Gulf War
vets to
receive
benefits
WASHINGTON (AP) - Legislation unanimously approved by a
House panel would pro~de disability compensation to s1ck Perstan
Gulf War veterans even if they cannot prove their ailments result~
from service in the 1991 war w1th
Iraq.
Under the bill passed Thursday
by the House Veterans Affairs
Committee, thousands of v~terans
suffering from mysterious ailments
thought to be link~d .to Gulf War
service would be ehg~ble for benefits.
Currently, veterans cannot
receive benefits unless they can
prove that their disabilities are service-connected.

Man struck by
automobile, dies
A man was killed early Friday
morning when he was struck by a
vehicle on U.S. 33, between
Hartfond and New Haven, according to a spokesman for the Mason
County Sheriff's Deparunenl
William Emmett Anderson, 25,
address not given, was transponed
to Pleasant Valley Hospital after the
I :45 a.m. accident by New Haven
EMS. Anderson was pronounced
dead on anival.
The sheriff's spokesman said
Anderson was struck by an
eastbound vehicle on U.S. 33. Apparently there was a westbound
vehicle stopped in the eastbound
lane when the other vehicle, traveling east, went into the westbound
lane to avoid a collision. The
vehicle struck Anderson, who was
laying in the 101dwar..
'The accident is sbll under investigation.

store across the street.
'' The wind picked up real
fiercely, " said Frame, 40. of Wellston . "The wind kind of pushed the
building over, and it aU happened
in about 10 or 15 seconds."
The National Weather Service
slation in Huntington, W.Va., could
not measure the wind speed in
Wellston at the time of the collapse.

"They did have some real good
activity up there," said Stan Smith,
weather service specialist.
The three workers were freed
from the rubble within five minutes, said Police Chief Mark
Jacobs . No other injuries were
reported.
Jeff Savage, 33, of Radcliff; J.R.
Milliken, 24, of Wellston; and John
Paul. 22, of Zanesville were treated

at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital in
Athens and released, said a nursing
supervisor who declined to give her
name. They suffered cuts, bruises
and some minor fractures, she said.
Well ston Pnd e Manor, a $1.4
million, 42-unit apartment complex
for senior citizens, is in downtown
Wellston, about 80 miles southeast
of Columbus in Jackson County.

irl Scout tradition continues

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Stall
Residents in the Eas tern Local
School Di strict will be asked 10
vote on a 4.4-mill ren ewal levy,
following the vote of the Eastern
school board Wednesday.
The two-year levy will raise
$154,689 - which will not
increase residents' raxes, said Ron
Minard, Eastern superintendent.
"The last time we had a levy on
the ballot two years ago it passed
by one percent and it was also a
renewal," Minard said. "We need
to go out and justify many of the
things we've accomplished in the
last two years."
The current renewal levy is a 5milllevy, but the next levy will be
rolled back so it raises the same
amount of money, he added. The
board voted by a 4- I margin to put
the issue on the ballot, with board
member Ron Eastman dissenting.
"We're not trying to fool anybody . We're trying to keep the
same amount of dollars," Minard
said. "We need to show we are not
wasting any money and if we are I
don't know where."
During the year with Minard at
the helm, the district has tried to
hold down salaries and has tightened its belt - trimming costs, he
said.
Currently, the school is operating on 24.4 mills . The district
spends each year about $3,400 per
pupil which is jus~ above the state
minimum. Minard said. The state
average is $5,024.
Since the district must resolve
insurance. open enrollment and
changes in personnel, the district's
financial situation at this time is not

lieasurcr.

"The only wa y we could get
through the end of the year is by
using the cash balance," Boston
said . "We'd be living beyond our
means this year and spending our
savings."
Boston added that the district
has sav ed $28,980 by inslalling a
new heating system in the district,
but this money will be applied as
payment for the construction.
In other action . the board:
- signed one-year contracts
with nearly all the same carriers as
last year. Contracts included: a tire
contract with D&amp;J Tire and Supply
Co., Ashland Oil for grease and oil
products, BP Oil for gasoline and
heatin g oil. Storck Bakery for bakery goods and Broughton Foods for
milk products.
- will spend $437 to mainlain
membership in the Coalition for
Equity and Adequacy and $250 for
the Coalition of Rural and
Appalachian Schools. Their membership has helped get equity funds
for the district, Minard satd.
- tabled action on the salary
schedul es for treasurer' s and superintendent's sccrcrarics and principals ' salaries. The board had made
several proposals that died for lack
of consensus, Minard srud.
- hired th e following individu als: transferring Tony Deem, junior
high science and math teacher;
employing Cindy Chadwell as head
teacher at Rivervi ew Elementary;
hired Melinda Barr, junior high
cheerleader advisor; Ron Thompson, substitute mechanic; Brian
Durst as part-time maintenance and
Continued on page 3

Chemical fire reignites
near Parkersburg
WILLOW ISLAND, W.Va.
(AP) - A fire that was put out
after five minutes at a factory 's
chemical unit reignited today, and a
firefighter ~l)d contract worker
were injured, the company satd.
About a thousand residents were
told to stay indoors for five hours.
The ftre-occurred outdoors at the
urethane chemicals unit of the Willow Island plant of Cytex Industries Inc., the company said in a
news release issued today.
Willow Island is northeast of
Parkersburg along the Ohio River,
just across the border from Ohio's
Wayne National Forest
The frre was under control but
continued to bum this morning, the
news release said.
The company said the burning
material was a polyurethane type
polymer and was nontoxic. However, the smoke was "irrilating and
noxious.''
Cytex, with headquarters in
West Paterson, N.J., uses urethane

About 40 Meigs County Girl
Scouts participating in the
scouts' annual camp at Royal
Oak Resort Park are taking
part in a wide range or activities rrom making crafts, above,
to campfire cooking, canoeing,
swimming and rishing. The
scouts are being assisted by
area establishments including
Royal Oaks Resort Park,
Krogers and McDonald's and
by volunteer instructors.
Troops participatin~ include
1276 Middleport Jumors, 1180
Pomeroy Cadets, 1261 Southern Cadets, IllS Meigs Cadets,
1042 Racine Juniors, l2S9
Pomeroy
Daisies,
1309
Pomeroy Juniors, 1290 Letart
Falls Juniors, 1271 Pomeroy
Brownies, 1039 Tuppers Plains
Juniors, lOIS Middleport
Brownies and 1004 Letart Falls
Brownies. Bottom left, 9-yearold Becky Al,ley or Letart Falls
proudly diSplays a largemouth
bass she caught on a plastic
worm Tb ursday afternoon.

cenain , said Eloi se Boston, district

to make automouve partS, roollng
and other coating materials.
The fire started at 10:40 a.m.
Thursday but was put out by 10:45,
plant Manager Richard Barnard
had said. The fl1'e retgmted at I: 19
today during cleanup, the n·ews
release said.
A member of Cytec's fire
brigade was raken to a hospital for
evaluation and then released. A
contract worker was sent to a nearby hospital and then released.
The news release did not identify the workers or describe their
injuries. Barnard dtd not return
phone messages today.
Residents in Belmont, population about 900. and Eureka. population less than 100, were told to
stay inside, said a Pleasants County
sheriff's representative who
des; lined 10 give her name.
The Willow Island plant
employs about 400, including
about 30 in the urethane chemicals
unit.

Local briefsFood drive set for flood victims ·
The Meigs County Chamber of Commerce in cooperation with
area stores and the Meigs Methodist Cooperative Parish is conducting a food drive from July 25 to Aug. I to aid victims of recent
flooding in Georgia.
Drop boxes including lists of needed items will be placed at the
followmg establishments: Pamida, Powells. Big Bend Foodland,
Vaughan's Cardinal, Waid Cross' Sons Store and Kroger's.
Needed items include toiletries, insect repellents, cleaning materials, bottled water, ready-to-feed baby fonmula (no iron) and juices.
For more infonnation, contact the Meigs County Chamber of Com. merce at 992-5005 .
The Meigs County Cooperative Parish is providing a van to
transport the goods.

Water boil order lifted
The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District has lifted a boil order
placed earlier this week on sections of state Route 7 between
Chester Agri Service and south of Baum Addition, Wood Road,
Pomeroy Pike Road between Epple Road back to south of Chester.
The results of the sample taken Wednesday indicated that the water
is safe to use.
Continued on page 3

'

�,

Friday, July 22, 1994

Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Friday, July 22, 1994

Showers
expected
to continue

OHIO Weather
Saturday, July 23
Accu-Wealher" forecast for
MICH .

Banks hoping to force credit unions to pay

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS,MASON AREA

~MULTIMEDIA, INC
Rt lRERT L. WINGETT
l'ublisher
CIIARLI&lt;:NE HOHLICH
Gt:n~ral ~· tanagt:r

/

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

A MFMBER of Tht' Associated Press. Inl and Daily Press Association and
the Amc1 ican Nt:w spapcr Publi~hcr Association .

LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome . They sho uld be less than 300

words long _All leuers are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
adJrcss and te lepho ne number. No unsigned le tters will be published. Letters
shuu \J he in goo d taste . addressing issues, not personalities .

Where there is
health-care agreement
Bv .JOliN CUNNIFF
Ai' Business Analyst
NEW YORK - While discussions of a broad-based health -care plan
see m to spew more conflict than agreement. support does seem to be
build ing for one specific idea, that of Medical Savings Accounts.
MSAs , also called medicallRAs and Medisave Accounts, would allow
work ers and employers to make tax-free deposits to an account controlled
by imlividuals and used by them to pay some of their medical expenses.
Money wu ld be withdrawn without penalty or taxes only for medical
expenses or health insurance premiums. Money not spen t would grow
with interes t, and be trans fermble to a retirement plan . The decision
would be the individual's.
Acceptance of the concept seems to have swelled from below rather
than descended from above - from elected officials and public policy
advocates.
It has considerable bipartisan acceptance in Congress, and has won
favorabl e notice from the House Ways and Means Committee and Sen.
Ted Kennedy 's Labor Committee. Several states have adopted the concept.
Agreement of that sort suggests an idea with merit, a natural rather
than a contrivance.
Whatever becomes of it in Washington, the concept already has developed support in the private sector, and not just from corporations. Among
others, the United Mine Workers agreed this year to a plan based on the
MSA philosophy .
The concept represents a departure from traditional health insurance in
which monthly premium payments are made by an employer or individual
to an insurers such as Blue Cross, which pays medical bills as they are
incurred.
In an MSA, individuals could reduce costs by limiting health insurance
coverage to catastrophic illnesses. Generally, this would be accomplished
by raising deductibles to cover only expenses over a set figure, perhap~
$2,000.
Whatever money is saved by so doing could be deposited in the MSA.
where it would be controlled by the individual and used to pay small bills
for routine services such as annual physicals and minor illnesses.
In short , insurance would pay for costly treatments that occur irregularly, infrequently or unexpectedly. The individual would pay the small bills
with deductions from the MSA.
Where will the savings come from?
If experience is any criterion, savings will come in at least one way
from the usual prudence of individuals in handling their own money.
They won't waste it; they'll save it. It's a little bit easier to SJll:nd someone else's money.
'
Additional and larger savings would come from a reduction in administrative costs. Knowledgeable researchers suggest it would be in the very
high billions of dollars. Less paperwork, less stress on the system, less
administration.

Today in history
By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Friday, July 22, the 203rd day of 1994. There arc 162 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
Twenty-five years ago, on July .'l-2. 1969, Apollo 11 astronauts Neil
Annstrong, Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin and Michael Collins, safely reunited
aboard the command module, blasted out of lunar orbit for the start of
their journey hom~ after the ftrst manned mission to the surface of the
moon.
On this date:
In 1796, Cleveland, Ohio, was founded by General Moses Cleaveland
ln 1844 , 150 years ago, Anglican clergyman William Archibald
Spooner - whose slips of the tongue caused words and syllables to be
transposed and gave rise to the term "spoonerisms" -was born in London .
In 1916, a bomb went off during a Preparedness Day parade in San
Francisco, killing ten people.
In 1933, American aviator Wiley Post completed the first solo flight
around the world in seven days, 18 3/4 hours.
In 1934, a man identified as bank robber John Dillinger was shot to
death by federal agems outside Chicago's Biograph Theater.
In 1942, gasoline rationing involving the usc of coupons began along
the Atlantic seaboard.

Berry's World

"Look, Dippy, nobody SAID living with your new
identity under the Witness Protection Program
would be a piece of cake!"

WASHJNG1DN - Some of the
best sma ll -loan bargains in th e
country - credi t union s - are
being challenged once again by an
old enemy, commercial banks.
With less than a 7 percent share
of all deposits in the country , and
relati vely untainted by scandals or
bankruptcies, credit unions rarely
rece ive the media attention that fol lows the cojnmercial banking and
thrift indt6_Uies. But so urces on
Capitol Hill are predicting that this
relative anonymity will soon come
to an end .
According to several congressional staffers, banking interests
arc once again gearmg up to convince members of Congress to tax
credit unions. Helped by a powerful lobby, bankers are seeking to
end a tax exemption that they claim
is depriving the U.S . Treasury of
hundreds of millions of dollars per
year.
Co mm ercial banks have been
trying for years to end the tax
exemption that credit unions traditionally have enjoyed. Since 1980,

•
•

'

-

'

'

activism of credit union members,
these small institutions may have
been taxed years ago. Several years
ago, when banks were lobbying
members of Congress to reg ulate
and tax credit unions, the industry
By Jack Anderson responded with "Operation Grass•
roots ," which collected 6 million
and
sig natur es and put 15 ,000
on th e National Mall in
Michael Binstein protesters
Washington. Although the protest
Since credit unions are depositor- will go down as one of the worstrun, non-profit institutions, mos t timed demonstrations in history credit unions arc able to offer better the march on Washington took
rates and lowe r fees than most place on the same day that the Gulf
co mmercial institutions. They're War began - Congress heard the
also less regulated than banks or message nonetheless. They left the
thrifts.
credit union system intact.
·'The bankers have gone overThis time around, so me co nboard lately in fingering the credit gressional staffers say, banks are
unions as the enemy ," a source on seeking to capitalize on the record
the House Banking Committee told turnover that Congress has seen in
our associate Dale Van Atta. recent years to plead their case to a
" They are constantly visiting com- new crop of lawmakers. Since the
mittee members (here) and over on banking committees of the House
the Senate side to talk about credit and Senate arc norm ally staffed
union s, about taxing them and so disproportionally by younger members, it makes even more sense for
on."
Were it not for the political bank lobbyist s to renew th eir
credi t union deposits have
increased sixfold, eating up an ever
larger share of the funds that would
otherwise go to banks and thrifts.

....

•
•

~

•

•

efforts to tax credit union s. This
year, 25 of 51 committee members
are freshmen. Next year promises
another large turnover.
" It will be the second straight
Congress with another fairly large
turnover." sa id a staffer on the
House Banking Committee. "So
some of the banking (industry)
complaints are going 10 stick with
some of these new members who
aren't as familiar with the issues."
House staffers have told us that
banking industry lobbyi sts have
made the rounds trying to find a
sympathetic soul to carry their
message on the credit union issue.
While several freshman lawmakers
are intrigued by the idea, bankers
would prefer a mo re seasoned
Democrat to do their bidding.
Bankers might have to wait a long
time, however, because many
staffers and memt-ers of Congress
already bank at their own federal
credit union, which offers cheaper
ioans and higher rates on deposits
than otherwise available in Washington.
For bankers, who tend to resist
any government attempts to tax or
regulate, the issue is one of fairness. Many credit unions, bankers
say. have expanded beyond their
original charters to take on new
customers. Although credit union
membcrs,Ne supposed to be bound
by a "common bond" - a place
of employment, a neighborhood or
a rural district - bankers complain
that these rules have been set aside
or ignored in many cases as some
credit unions expand to include
several companies or operate in
several states.
So far, their argument isn't winning many converts on Capitol
Hill. " This is one issue that never
goes away," complains credit
union expert Mike Welch. "There
is an ongoing effort by the banks to
get the credit unions taxed . The
bankers are having a rough time
getting Congress excited about it
since the banks themselves are
making obscene profits compared
to the credit unions. It's hard for
them to convince any congressman
that they're suffering."
JBck Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers ror United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Clinton a prisoner of black caucus
The co"ngressional black caucus
has been showing its muscles this
year, and they are impressive. On
one major issue after another Haiti, the crime bill, health care the tail (i.e., the black caucus) is
wa~ging the dog (the Democratic
maJority in the House of Representatives).
The con!P'essional black caucus
is the ooaliuon of black Democrats
in the House (congressman Gary
Franks, the only black Republican,
doesn't participate). They total 39,
but several arc too independent to
be reliable; congressman Kweisi
Mfume. the chainnan of the caucus, can usually count on about 25
solid votes for any piece of political blackmail he wants to pull off.
With the Democrats holding 257
seats in the House, any threat by
those 25 to withhold their support
from a measure favored by the
Democratic leadership or the president brings the Democratic margin
perilously close to the 218 needed
to pass it
The danger of the black caucus,
therefore, is not that it is black, but
that it is a caucus. There are, to be
sure, other special-interest caucuses
in the House - the Hispanic cau-

cus, the women's caucus, etc. But Mr. Clinton's spokesmen (specifinone has shown the cohesion, the cally, black fonner congressman
discipline or the determination dis- William Gray, whom he appointed
played by the black caucus.
to oversee our policy on Haiti in a
desperate attempt to appease the
caucus) have sworn that Haiti
William A. Rusher black
is absolutely crawling with AmeriAt the moment, the black caucus can vital interests. In truth, there is
is grimly holding President Clinton none whatever.
to a pledge he made last year to
But the new White House chief
insure the caucus' support for his of staff. Leon Panetta, sneaking on
budget (which, you will recall, "Meet the Press" on July 17, laid
passed by just one vote): namely, down a rule that makes Mr. Gray
to restore President Jean-Bertrand look positively cautious. RemindAristide to power in Haiti, whence ing the audience that Haiti's junta
he had been ousted by a military had seized power without the
junta.
slightest democratic justification,
Mr. Clinton bas tried, at one be thereupon proclaimed the Panettime or another, just about every ta Doctrine:
conceivable policy toward Haiti
"This country has always taken
except denying his pledge (which the position, in that situation, that
is plainly impossible) or invading we are not going to tolerate that
the country. He now seems gloomi- kind of leadership in a country, that
ly prepared to invade, and his we are going to try to restore
spokesmen are doing their best to democracy."
pretend there is some valid diploReally? In Cuba? In North
matic excuse for such an action.
Korea? In China? In Iraq? The
Historically this nation has Founders declared that America
never asked its soldiers, sailors, air- was "the friend of freedom everymen and Marines to lay down their where, but the defender only of its
lives, if necessary, unless some own." You are going to be a busy
"vital interest" of the United chief of staff, Mr. Panetta!
States was at stake. Predictably,
To appease the black caucus,

young Americans are shortly going
to be asked to risk their lives to pay
off Mr. Clinton's debt to Kweisi
Mfume &amp; Co. To his credit, Mr.
Clinton is apparently at least
unhappy about the necessity. When
the black caucus tried to insist on
writing into his crime bill a provision for racial quotas in executions
(the "Racial Justice Act"), Mr.
Clinton, evidently calculating tha.t
he had tbe votes to pass the bill
without them, told them to j!O fish.
But at last report negotiations
between Messrs. Clinton and
Mfume are under way again.
The only way to keep the tail
from wagging the Democratic dog
is to elect a Republican dog this
November.
CORRECTION: Last week's
column stated incorrectly that
Alger Hiss was convicted of espi- ·
onage. Hiss was convicted of perjury.
William Rusher is a syndicated writer for Newspaper Enter·
prise Association.
(For information on bow to
communicate electronically with
tbls columnist and others, contact America Online by ailing 1800-827-6364, ext 8317.)

Promoting saving pays off for Clinton
If President Clinton is serious
about promoting "personal responsibility" - one of his most popular 1992 campaign themes- he'll
back medical savings accounts as
part of health refonn and go on to
support expanded IRA accounts
and consumption-based tax reform.
All three ideas are designed to
boost America's worsening- and,
ultimately, menacing - savings
rate, while also lowering government deficits and providing individuals with the power to guide
their own future.
Polls indicate there's a potential
political boon for Clinton in the
ideas, too - a chance to capture
the allegiance of voters who distrust the government's ability to do
anything right, especially deliver .
on Social Securit •.
At the rate things are going,
today's disaffected cynics are
~oing to be proven exactly right
Just after the year 2&lt;XX&gt;, as the huge
baby boom generation ages, federal
deficits balloon, medical costs
surge, and fewer'IUid fewer young
workers are responsible for fmancing the retirement of more and
m~n retirees.
Fixing the problem will require
either a significant increase in the
personal savings rate, vastly higher
taxes, deep slashes in government
spending (especially on entitlements), or some combirullion of the
three.
Increased savings is tbe least

painful, the most voluntary, and the
least likely to victimize tbe poor
(who will lose jobs if taxes are
raised and the economy stalls).

scious.
or its proceeds be exempt from
Pushed primarily by conserva- taxes.
tive Republicans (though Indiana
IRAs were substantially elimiDemocratic Rep. Andy Jacobs is nated in the 1986 tax reform act as
also a supporter), Medisave has an unwelcome "tax shelter," but
it into the House Ways and since then the U.S. personal SBvMorton Kondracke made
Means Commiuee version of health ings rate has plummeted from 8
If Clinton gave Americans an care reform, but not the Senate percent of GDP to less than 4 peropportunity to expand their sav" Finance Commiuee version.
cent.
ings, he would be doing far more to
Whether it will make it into law
A new survey by Merrill Lynch
earn the allegiance of the middle is a major question. It's opposed by indicates that the average married
class than he would by creatin!! a the administration on the grounds couple making $50,000 per year
new health care entitlement or gtv- that young, healthy workers will will need to accumulate $170,000
ing people spending money in the opt for Medisave, forcing insurance in SBvings by age 65 to nulintain its
fonn of a tax cuL
companies to cover older and sick- ·-standard of living, even with a penYet the administration opposes er workers with reduced premium sion and current Social Security·
the medical savings acwunt and is revenues.
benefits.
at best just thinking about expandThat objection, howeve~. su~­
The average baby boom couple,
ed IRAs and consumption taxes.
gests that the administration ts however, is saving less than 40 perThe Medisave issue arises fJrSt, more wedded to the establishment cent of what it is likely to need for ,
assart of this summer's health care and financing of a .government retirement, according to the study.
en game.
health entitlement system than it is
The Breaux-Roth bill would
Under Medisave, employees to the "choice" and "personal cost the government $24 billion in
would be given a choice of accept- ~ibility" ideas that tt touts in tax revenues over five years, but·
ing their employer's health insur- other contexts, including abortion might generate up to $45· billion
ance plan or taking a low-cost, and welfare.
per year in new savings, which
high-deductible catastrophic plan
Not only is the administration would help lower interest rates and
and having the premium savmgs opposed, but so is Selll!le Mlljority spur economic growth.
·
put into a tax-exempt account they Leader George Mitchell, D-Maine,
In the longer term, Congress and;
could use to pay their own medical and the U:ouse Democratic leader- the administration should strongly'
bills. What they didn't spend, they ship. Probably, though, Medisave consider taxing consumption rather
could keep accwnulating for retire- will be IIIIPI'Oved by amendment on than income in order to encourage ·
ment
the Senate floor.
savings. Sens. Sam Nunn, 0-Ga.,'
The key virtues of medical savs~ from the health debate,
and Pete Domenici, R-N.M., have ·
ings accounts, according to their Sens.John Breaux, D-La., and Bill introduced one plan to do so, and:
chief promoter, John Goodman of Roth, R-Del., have a plan to re&lt;reSen. Bill Bradley, D-NJ., is work- ·
the National Center for Policy ate IRAs so that all working Amering on another.
:
Analysis, are that they allow wort&gt;- icans (including homemakers)
(Morton Kondracke is execu- ·
ers to pick the medical care they could put away up to $2,000 and
tive editor or Roll Call, the newswant and mate them cost-con- have either the annual contribution
paper of Capitol Hill.)

IMansfield 179' I•
IND.

63'

•

W. VA.

Ice

&amp;.my Pt Cloudy

Cloud}'

Weather
South-Central Ohio
Tonight ... Mostly cloudy with a
50 percent chance of showers and
thunderstorms ... Mainly before midni ght. Low 65 to 70. Southwest
winds around 10 mph becoming
west by morning.
Saturday ... Partly sunny with a
30 percent chance of a shower or
thunderstorm . High ncar 35.

Extended rorecast
Sunday ... A chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Lows 60 to 65.
Highs in the lower and mid 80s.
Monday ... Fair. Lows 60 to 65.
Highs upper 70s to mid 80s.
Tuesday ... Fair. Lows mid 50s to
lower 60s. Highs mid 70s to lower
80s.

--Area deaths;:,--~June Cantrell

Ellis English

June H. Canuel!, 74, of Gallipolis, died Thursday, July 21, 1994 at
her home. She was a member of the
First Presbyterian Church and the
Veterans of Foreign Wars Auxiliary.
Born Nov. 24, 1919 in Middleport, she was the daughter of the
late Homer and Eva Hartley.
Survivors include her husband,
Owen 0 . Canuel! of Gallipolis; one
son, William (Carol) Cantrell of
Gallipolis; three sisters, Sara D.
Owen of Pomeroy, Ida L. RoUer of
Upper Marlboro, Md., and Nancy
Cooper of Liberty, Mo; three
grandchildren and several nieces of
nephews.
She was preceded in death by
her parents and one son, Thomas
Allen Cantrell.
Friends may call 6 to 9 p.m. Saturday at the Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral Home where services will
be held 2 p.m. Sunday with the
Rev. Al Earley officiating. Burial
will be in Mound Hill Cemetery.

Ellis Rual English, 81, of Route
2 Ridge Road , Coolville, died
Thursday, July 21 , 1994, at Camden Clark Memorial Hospital in
Parkersburg, W. Va
Born on Dec. 9, 1912 in Little
Cypress, Ky., he was the son of the
late Newton Joshua and Emma
Cornelia Larimer In~lish. He was
raised in his parents home along
with his grandfather, Benjamin
Franldin Inglis, a Confederate soldier.
He retired from Union Carbide
of Marietta, and had also worked
on the railroad. He served in the
South Pacific during World War II
and was a member of the Meigs
Chapter 53, Disabled American
Veterans.
He was married to the fanner
Freda Florence Blake Pullins on
June 9. 1951 at Paducah, Ky. She
preceded bim in death on Jan. 25,
1973. Besides his parents and his
wife, he was also preceded in death
by his brothers, W. J. Inglish, Alma
Inglish, Mervin lnglish,_and Luther
Inglish.
Surviving arc four daughters
and one son: Emma (Mn. Keith)
Ashley of Rock Springs, Pomeroy;
Myla (Mrs. Dennis) Rllndolph of
Belpre; Jerri (Mrs. Michael) Jones
of Mineralwells, W. Va.; Katherine
at home, and Ellis English of Gallipolis.
Also surviving are three stepchildren, Mary Arlene Coy and
Nancy (Mrs. Paul) Blake of Youba
Ridge, Hockingport; and Roy
Pullins of Coolville; five ~dchil­
dren, and 11 step-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Sunday at 2 p.m. at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville. Burial
wiU be in the Stewart Cemetery at
Hockingpon. Friends may call at
the funeral borne Saturday from 7
to9p.m .

Mary Johnson
Mary E. Johnson. 71, 3338 State
Route 141, Gallipolis, died Thursday, July 21, 1994 at ber residence.
A 1944 graduate of the Holzer
Hospital School of Nursing, sbe
was retired from the nursing services of Planned Parenthood. She
was also a member of the United
Methodist Clmrch.
Born Oct. 15, 1922 in
Charleston, W.Va., she was the
daughter of the late Gea-ge and N.
Margaret Saunders Ehman. She
married Clarence E. Johnson Nov.
7, 1945 in Gallipolis.
- Survivors include one daughter,
Kathy (Michael) McCalla of Gallipolis; one son, Bill (Janet) Johnson of Gallipolis; one sister,
. Dorothy Nibert; five grandchildren
and several n.ieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by
ber parents, her husband, who died
March 14, 1979, and two brothers,
Albert Ehman and ~ames T.
Ehman.
Services will be held 2 p.m.
Sunday at the Centenary United
Methodist Church wilh the Rev.
Harold Benson officiating. Burial
will follow in the Pine Street
Cemetery. Friends may call 6 to 9
p.m . Saturdal at the Cremeens
Funeral Chape .

By The ~ociated Press
Partly cloudy skies are expected
across most of the state on Saturday. A few lingering showers are
possible across extreme eastern
Ohio. High temperatures will gen eral ly be in the lower 80s.
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was I 04 in 190 I. The
record low was 50 in 1966..
Sunset today will be at 8:55 pm .
Sunri se Saturday will be at 6:22
a.m .
Around the nation
Showers and thunderstorms
developed over the East and West
coasts today while fair wea ther
spread across the country's midsection .
Widely scattered showers and
thunde rstorms will be pos sibl e
today from New Mexico and Arizo na to Oregon , and from central
Texas through the Southeast and up
coast.
There was a risk of seve re
weather and rainfall up to three
inche s from eastern Texas to
Alabama to the East Coast
The remains of a tropical
depression that hit the shores of
North Carolina on Wednesday was
expected to bring soaking rain to
northern New England and thun derstorms to the Tennessee Valley .
On Thursday, thunderstorms in
Ohio and Texas downed trees and
power lines and dropped large hail
in some areas.
The Plains were expected to be
sunny and holler as western winds
bring heat from the Rockies, while
cooler air was pushing southeast
from the Midwest into the Great
Lakes.
Record heat was predicted in the
Pacific Northwest with temperatures reaching into the 90s and
I OOs in the interior. Temperatures
were expected to reach into only
the 70s in the upper Great Lakes
region.
Elsewhere, high temperatures ·
were expected to be in the 80s in
New England, 90s across the
Southern tier and reaching 100 in
parts of the Southwest.
The nation 's high temperature
Thursday was 115 degrees at Death
Valley, Calif.

EMS logs 5 calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
reported five calls for IISSistance
between Thursday and Friday
mornings. Units responding
included:
MIDDLEPORT
'! 1:54 a.m. Thursday, Overbrook Center, Elizabeth
Ohlinger, ·Holzer Medical Center;
1:32 a.m. Thursday, Overbrook Center, Marie Dudding,
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
POMEROY
10:31 a.m. Thursday,
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, Betty Callahan,
VMH.

TUPPERS PLAINS
8:43 p.m. Wednesday, volunteer frre department and squad,
state Route 7, structure fire at
John Logan residence, Bernard
Bobo, VMH, Pamela Logan,
treated at scene, Pomeroy and
Coolville VFDs and Reedsville
squad assisting;
5:34 p.m. Thursday, Chester,
Joann Baum, Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital.

Stocks

Merrill M. Taylor

Merrill M. Tayl~r, 82, Pomeroy,
died Thursday, July 21, 1994 at
Overbrook Center in Middleport.
Born March 12, 1912 in
Pomeroy, son of the late Hollis and
Ada Rusll Taylor, he was a coal
miner, an electrical construction
worker and a member of the
Church of Christ
Surviving are two daughters and
sons-in-law, Dorothy and Dominic
Perma of Chicago and Ruby and
Ben Rife of Middleport; four sons
and daughters-in-law, Charles and
The Dally Sentinel
Taylor of Newark, David and
1 Betty
Mary Taylor and Ronald and Bren(liSPS lll-Mt)
da Taylor, aU of Fostoria, and Donl'llbUihed oYay lll«Dooa, Moacloy lllroutlh
Friday, Ill Court St., Pomoroy, Oblo by lllo
ald and ~ Taylor of Coolville;
Ohio Valley l'llblllhlaa ~yMilllmodla : 15 grandchtldren and 22 greatIll&lt;:., Po......,y, Oblo 4l769, I'll. 99:1-2156.
s-d elMo (1011110 pold II Po.....y. Ohlo.
grandchildren.
Also surviving are sisters, Marie
_
, 1bc Aooodlliod l'raa, ucllbo ob., l
Ricketts
of Columbus and Doris
NewoplpG' "-illlioo, Notioaal M-Ile ·
R-llllllW, Bratwn N..._ Soloo, . Bradford of Marysville; sista'S and
733 lblrd A•eaue, New York, New York . brothers-in-law, Ada and Fred
10017.
Canaday and Margaret and Harold
POS'DIAS'IEt' Sead oddrou cha.,.lo 1bc
Covreu of Delaware; several nieces
Dolly SoatlDol, Ill C - SL, Po......,, Oblo
and nephews.
4S769.
.
He was preceded in death by his
SIJIISCRIPI10iliA1U
wife, Barbara Mlly Harper Taylor;
a brother, Wayne Taylor; a sister,
Reva Taylor, and a granddaughter,
SINOLBCOPY
Lisa Tarlor.
Pilla:
Scrvtees will be held Sunday at
Jlolly...................................... --3! Call
3 p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in ·
SubocrtbniiCJidolirl.lo por ... - . . ,
Middleport with burial following in
romll la .._
dhet to 'Jbo Dolly Selllaol
Meigs Memory Garden. Friends
... ..... i2-boiii.Credllw1Ube
may call Saturday from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m.
No IUbacriplloM .., 111111 ....tted Ia . . .

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Welldy lnt'L -~-----15 1/4
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Stotk nporll are the 111-.30 a.a
quote&amp; provided by Advest o

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Fo ur unions representing state
employees said they are going to
court to overturn the state's new
sick-leave policy.
The policy, which allows repri mands or fines against employees
who use sick leave more than five
times a year, violates due process
guarantees, tlje unions said.
The Ohio Civil Service Employees Association, the Fraternal
Order of Police, the Ohio Education Association and the Service
Employees International Union
were to announce their plans today,
The Columbus Dispatch reported.
State officials contend the policy is needed because of abuse of
sick leave. State employees average 8.5 days off sick a year, compared with an average of five days
for workers in private business, the
state said.

ab"se and makes legitimate users
subject 10 discipline if they have
recurrent health problems.
Th e state first tried to impose
the rules March I, then temporarily
suspended them because of union
objections until July I. They were
re imposed with so me modifica tions.
The policy includes an oral reprimand for an employee using sick
leave for the sixth time in a year, a
wr itten reprimand for a seventh
time and suspensions without pay
or "working fines" for eigh t or
more times.
"Working fines" amount to
docking pay. A ninth usc of sick
leave call s for two days' suspension or I l/2 days work without
pay . A IOth or subsequent sick day
can be punished by three days of
suspe nsion or two days work without pay.

Gretchen Hull, spokeswoman
for the Ohio Department of Administrdtive Services, said the policy is
a proper Iy negotiated part of the
contract.
"Both sides agreed on an arbi lratoir, both sides prese nted th eir
case to the arbitrator and the arbi tratu dec ided the state's plan was
the st solution to a very serious
prob lem'," Ms. Hull said.
The use of sick leave fell 25 percent in March, then went up again
during the tim e the pol icy was
withdrawn, she said.
Peter
Wray,
OCSEA
spokesman , said that even though
members approved the contrac t, the
state cannot enforce ille gal rules .
"The contract does not override
either federal or state law."
Wray said the policy does not
address the problem of sick leave

Governor signs eight bills into law
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)Auto insurance. Soft-serve ice
cream. Speed limits on Lake Erie.
Those subjects and others were
included in a package of bills that
Gov. George Voinovich signed into
law.
Most of the legis lation th at
Voinovich signed Thursday will
take effect in three months.
In the case of Lake Erie, the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources is counting on the 90day delay . That is because the bill's
imposition of a boating no-wake
zone was an error.
Legislators in June mistakenly
approved the zone as part of a bill
that otherwise was intended to help

curb auto thefts.
For ano ther, the depa rtm ent
The fa"lty section was supposed docs not mtend to enforce the law
to establish a no-wake zone only
that would require boaters to travel
between two Ohio River bridges in at a s low , idl e speed along the
downtown Cincinnati to promote length of the lake shore.
boating safety . Somehow, Lake
Zo dy que sti oned whether
enforcement could occur unless the
Erie was included.
Scotl Zody, leg islative liaison area first wa.s marked with buoys.
for natural resources, sa id the
''T he way we mark harbor
dcpartmenl hopes legis lators will entrances and areas around marinas
repeal the Jake wake ban in another is with buoys. Boaters know once
bill th1s fall.
they get past that buoy they need to
In any event, the errant Jegisla- reduce their chop," he said.
.
tion will have no effect on boaters
Zody does not want to thmk
because of the 90-day delay .
/~llbout enforcemcn~; "It would be
"For one thing, the boating scll'- ai'W"ully expens1ve, . be srud ..
son will be C(!!!ling to an end by
Another btll Vomov1ch stgned
then. You're into October," Zody into law will slap tougher penalties
said.
against motorists who drive without insurance.

Bloodmobile collects 83 units of blood
The Meigs County Bloodmobile
collected 83 units of blood when
the American Red Cross visited the
Meigs Senior Citizens Center on
Wednesday.
Multiple gallon donors were
Harriet Friend, one gallon; Loretta
A. Brown , four gallons; Kathy
Cummings, five gallons; George L.
Harris, Jr., six gallons; Donna
Davidson, II gallons. William C.
Cook, Alita Billingsley, and Jesse
E. Morris were recognized as ftrst
time donors.
RSVP workers at the site were:
George Nessclroad, Jack and Joan
Sorden, Helen Bodimer, Jeanette
Larwence, Ted Hatfield, Peggy

Harris, Alice Globokar, Dorothy
Long, Velma Rue, Mary Stobart,
Belly Spence r. Gay Perrin and
Susie Drehel served as donor attendants and helped with the canteen
which was served by the Trinity
Congregational Church.
Donors by community were:
Pomeroy - Harold Norton,
Walter R. Couch, Debra D. Mora,
Lois Wyant. Janet Pcavley, Jody R.
Smith, Barbara Crow, Cyndi
D.King, Jason Witherell, Ann Cottrill, Phyllis Witherell, David M.
King, Mary K. Spencer, Jared
Ridenour, Alita Billingsley,
Bernadette Anderson, Opal

- - Local briefs···

cominufd rrom page 1

Gallia man to face grand jury
A Crown City man who allegedly used a riOe to hold Gall ia
County sherifrs deputies at bay for several hours June 13 w,ill await
the next session of the grand jury from a group home in Piketon.
Following a psychological evaluation Thursday. Otis W. Wells,
49, Garland Creek Road, spent the night at Woodland Centers mental health services, Sheriff James D. Taylor said. He was to be transported to Piketon today.
. .
.
Taylor said Wells was released from Jail on his own reco~­
nizance under·the term that he remam at the Piketon home. He will
return to Gallia County for the next session of the grand jury to
answer to a charge of felonious assault.
If Wells is indicted by the grand jury, Taylor said he will request
that the court evaluate the suspect's ability to stand uial. The sheriff
said he believes the court will order Wells to be confined to a mental institution rather than have him stand trial.
Wells reportedly fired a .22-calibcr riOe at deputies from his
trailer last month wben they came to arrest him for allegedly shooting twice at his brother. Evert WeUs, Jr .. 52. same address. .
Firing through the doors as well as the walls of his rcs1dence,
Wells held off deputies for ftve hours. Authorities were finally able
10 rush the residence ~.fier his gun jammed.
Wells is descrited as a hennit who dealt with visitors by either
talking to them through a curtain or hiding in another room. Family
members and neighbors had not seen him in years. the sheriff's
department reported.

Grueser, Rebecca New eii, Margaret Harris, Brad Anderson, Paul
F. Marr, Jesse E. Morri s, Janice
Davis, Bryan Shank, Belly J.
Lowe, Deborah J. Haptonstall,
Debra L. Folmer, Daniel R.
Folmer, Aladine J. Baker, Patricia
J. Barton, Stacey Shank, Gerald
Rought, James Stacy, William W.
Radford, Timothy M. Hall, Linda
F. Eastman , Vicki A. Warner,
Mindy K. Brinker, Loretta A.
Brown, Donald R. Smith, Jack
Stanley, Gloria Kloes. Harriett
Friend, and Drema S. Bnlley.
Middleport - Rhonda F.
Grover, Billie Fitzpatrick, Patricia
A. Weaver, George L. Harris. Jr. ,
Sam Rayburn, Allyson McBcnge,
Jennifer Fink, and Timothy H.
Baker.
Rutland - Mary E. Davidson,
Marta Blackwood, and Donna
Davidson.
Mi n ersville- M~ L. Voss.
Shade- William C. Coole.
Long Bottom - Lawrence L.
Driggs, Keith L. Spencer, Ruth
Karr, Susan Pigou, Laura Hawley,
Bruce Hawley, Henry Bahr,
Charles J. Moore, and Oris J.
Smith.
Racine- Charles W. Bush,
Marie Bush, Valerie K. Patterson,
Mary E. Curtis, Danny J. Terzopplous,and Harry Holter.
Tuppers Plains- Chad E. Griffith.
Mason, W. Va . - Brian E.
Johnson.
Langsville - Ellis E. Myers,
and Alva Clark . PORTLANDMichael Duhl, and Diana Duhl.
Syracuse- Shirlev Lude and
Kathy Cummings.
Reedsville- Linda M. Barber,
Brandy S. Barbcr,and Howard B.
Caldwell.

KANAUGA DRIVE-IN

Eastern board...contlnueu rrom page 1
full-time teacher at Tuppers Plains
Elementary sixth grade; and Jane
Collins, Chester Elementary fifth
grade.
- learned that Chester Elementary needs to repair drains to keep
water from flooding into the gym,
Minard said.
The board's next meeting will
be at 6:30 p.m. Aug. 10 to steer
away from the county fair and
allow time for hiring three teachers.
Minard said. The teachers that arc
still being interviewed for are a
kindccgarten and DH positions at
Chester Elementary and a high

FRl, SAT., SUN.

school social studies teacher.

COLONY THEATRE
FRI. lHRU THURS.

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Betty

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Hospital news
Thurlday admission -

Unions head to court
over sick leave policy

Am Ele P010or

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s e~~:_:::::~:::::::.::::::::::::.::::::::::::::!i

~

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

Callahan,~
Thursday .
- Marilyn
Moore, Hartford, W. a.

I

'•

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Friday, July 22, 1994
Page-4

In the Kyger Creek LL Tournament,

Tuppers Plains
nines enter semis
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
0 VP StafT Writer
Following their victories over
Green No. 2 and the Middleport
American Legion White Sox in the
Kyger Creek Little League
Tournament's first quarterfinal
games Thursday night, the teams
from Tuppers Plains were assured of
a head-to-head encounter to decide
which one gets into Sunday's
consolation game and which one
goes for the championship.
Tigers 11, GreeD No.l-0
This four-inning mercy-rule
decision was the third consecutive
victory of its kind for the veteran
Tigers, who used long-ball power
with a vengeance against Green
hurler Mike Barry (five strikeouts,
three walks) .
While Bany, the leadoff hitler
whose 2-for-2 effort at the plate
made him the only one who got
satisfaction fromTuppers Plains
pitcher Kirt Spencer (JOKs, no
walks). the Tigers wasted little time
getting ahead. In fact, Barry's third
pitch of the evening and rust 10 No.
2 hitter Mall Bissell was a two-run
shot prdpclled beyond the center
field fence.
The first of only two Tiger runs
that didn't come home because of a
homer also came in the rmt. when

•

Mall Edwards' grounder to
shortslOp was muffed by shortstop
Derek SICvens. The error allowed
Spencer to 9COI'C and Edwards to get
to rust base.
With cleanup hitler Wes Crow he reached on a single - at third
and Edwards at second, Barry's fust
offering 10 No. 5 hiller Eric Smith
was deposited in nearly the same
place as Bissell's shot
Following a scoreless second
inning, two-run homers by Bissell
and Smith in the third - Green
cenler fielder Bobby Angel injured
his back on the fence while ICIIping
in an auempt 10 keep Smith's tworun drive in the part - sandwiched
Edwards' back-to-the-mound
sacrifice grounder that got Spencer
home.
Green got only two runners to
second base - Barry in the fust and
Jake Richie in the fourth - and

.,

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CELEBRATION TIME comes early ror tbe Tuppers Plains
Tigers, as Matt Bissell (upper lert) is greeted by teammates Kirt
Spencer (33) and Josh Will (11) following the former's two-run
homer in the first Inning or Thursday night's Kyger Creek Litlle
League Tournament quarterfinal game against Green No. l, which
the Tifers won 11-0. Tbe blast, one or four hll in the game, was the
none farther.
first
o two ror the Tigers' No. Z hitter. (OVP photo by G. Spencer
The Tigers' hillers were Spencer
Osborne)
(3-4, double), Crow, Smith (both 23), Bissell (2-4), Edwards (1-3) DRd
Wcs Shafer who reached when he
Pintes 8, White Sox S
Josh Will (1-4).
After scoring in the first, both was hit by i.P. Staats' second pitch
InniD1 &amp;oeals
to him, got to second on a wild pitch
Tigers ..................... 6050 = Il-l 0-0 leams SI8J'ted the second inning of during Dustin Kebler's at-bat.
the
nightcap
in
the
same
place
as
Green ......................O!m
0-2-3
Shafer taking advantage of
they started the fame - tied.
WP-Spenccr
second ~eman Kyle Smiddie's
The
Pirates
made
their
move
LP-Bany
toward gelling their rust run when holding the ball after taking lhird

=

.,

BAKER SCORES - The Middleport White Sox's Seth Baker
trots In from third base on J.P. Staats' double to right to score lhe
tying run 111 the nrst Inning or Thursday ni~ht's Kyger Creek Lillie
League Tournament quarterfinal game agamsl the Tuppers Plains
Pirates, who responded witb a ro01r-run outburst in the next inning
thai helped them wiD 8-5. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
basemim
Derek
Johnson's
prevention throw to keep Kcbler at
first, scored after beallnJ catcher
Bnmt Dixon's throw to third on the
wild pitch that abo pvc Kdllcr his
ticket to first. Kcbler later scored on
a wild pitch during Corey

Whitlach 's at-bat
The White Sox, like the Pirates
before them, saw their leadoff hitter
(Smiddie) record the rust out But
James Stanley, who doubled and
moved to third on Eric
(See TOURNAMENT on Pa11e S)

On the NFL camp scene,

Shuler holds out for more cash; Steeler vets get more time off

.
"The negotiations didn't. wor.~
Heath Shuler and Cory Flemmg out and we had depth at rece1v~,
tmght be able to sell themselv~ as Sa.n Franc1sco coach George Se~fert
. an act in the NFL. They certamly smd,.addmg that the move g1~cs
haven't had much lock as mdiVIdu- Flemmg a chnnce to catch on With
als.
.
.
another
Shuler, Tennessee s mulutalent- ~
That s eas1er sa1d than done,
cd quarterback who left school a ~owevcr. Ask . New Orleans
year early to .Jmn the NFL, remams hneba~ker Sam Mills.
.
inacuve whtle h1s .agen.t and the
He s on~ of the top ~n m ~e
Washmgton Redskms dither ~ver league at. hiS craft, yet he s making
money . As a h1gh draft cho1ce, nothmg like he hoped to be making
Shuler would figure to get a huge this season, thanlts to the cap.
contract, butthesalarycapchnnges
He.was a free agent, but got no
all that.
realistiC offers.
Fleming, Shuler's favorite target
"I guess that's what the 11181ket
and Tennessee's career leader in has to o.~fer me. Th~~·s what my
touchdown cat~hes, became a value 1s, Mtlls sa1d. So oflen we
sa lary cap v•ct•m .on Thursday look to. see what Y.our value as DR
when the San Frnncasco 49ers ~ur- athlete IS out th~ m the free a~ent
rendered thetr nghts to the thud- market. It d1dn I have as ,"!IUC to
round draft pick. It was simptr a offer as I thought it would.
matter of numbers, smce Flemmg
. w~e.n July 15 came and w.ent,
was asking for $250,000, but San M1lls ngh:s bel?Dgec! 10 the Samts,
Francisco, sorely strapped by . who were ~ffenng ~lfR the ~at 10
money limits, was reportedly offer- perc.ent ra1se requared ..H~ II be
ing only $125,000. .
making a shade over $1 million.
Ily The Associale•i Press

!CB"'· .

.

.
Redskins
.
Wh1le Shuler rema~ned a
stranger, second-round p1ck Tre
Johnson reached agreement on a
contract and was expected m camp
today.
Chiefs
Kansas City has taken "go
deep" to an extreme in scheduling.
Before wrapping up training on
Aug. 20 at River Falls, Wis., the
Chiefs will hustle back home for
the debut of Arrowhead Stadium's
new grassfacld, travel to Tokyo for
an exhibition against Minnesota
and head for Washington for a
practice game with the Redskins.
Giants
Left tackle Jumbo Ellioll broke
his left ring finger and will be out
indefmitely. V'k'
1 mgs
David Palrner,the do-everything
threat from Alabama, worked out
with the team for the first time
Thursday, mostly as a kick return
specialist. Palmer, a second-round

draft ch6ice, was the last Vikings
player 10 sign a contract.
Eagles
Rookie enthusiasm gave
Philadelphia a scare on Thursday
whe.n free-agent defensive ~ack
Jam1e Mendez la1d a hard hll on
wide receiver Fred Bameu, returning from reconstructive knee
surgery. Barnett caughta pass from
quarterback Randall Cunningham
over the middle. When he turned
around, Mendez was there waiting
for him.
"I thought he knocked my leg
off," Barnell said. "Somebody has
to tell these young guys it's just
training camp."
Falcons
Safety Scott Case, an 1!-year
veteran, signed a one-year contract
believed worth $250,000.
Seahawks
Defensive end Natu Tuatagaloa
didn't respond to Seattle's offer of
a one-year contract for $162,000,
and the Seahawks virtually wrote

him off. Tuatagaloa started 15 of training camp in keeping with
games for SeatUe last season.
the labor contract stipulation that
Packen
veterans can't be required to report
Fifty-four rookies, free agents more than 15 days before the first
and selected veterans worked out exhibition game.
Thursday in jerseys, shorts and hcl."Hey.• i! ,didn't bother me a bit.
mets. There were no holdouts, I hked 11, All-Pro ·center Derwhich pleased coach Mike Holm- montli Dawson said. "I took a trip,
gren.
took some time off and relaxed .
Cardinals
You can't do that in camp."
Coach Buddy Ryan gave the
.. Oilen
.
players three days off. but
Lee Wilhams, expected to start
promised to put them through their at left defensive end, reported '
paces Monday and Tuuday. From Thursday ni~ht, four days late .
the way Buddy is talking, it could Williams sa1d his absence was
be quiiC a workout.
because of his worries about an ·
"The players, because of their injured knee.
bargaining agreement, have got to
Rams
get three days off. If 1 could, I'd
Los Angeles pulled a surprise
make them practice Friday and Sat- move as training camp opened
urday,too," RyDR said.
Thursday night, culling running
Steelen
back Russell White so they could
Vacation is over for Pittsburgh. sign running back-kick returner
The vetcrnns got DR extra week off Johnny Bailey.
when the club pushed back the stan

Meigs County football notes

DieHard 500 stage for Gant's quiet farewell
By PAUL NEWBERRY
TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP)Harry Gam was resting in the back
of his trailer. The commotion in the
garage seemed 10 have litUe. effect
on him . Neither d1d the s•gmflcance of his final race at Talladega
Superspeedway.
Gam is going out on his terms:
quie~y.

/,'

I

"I've never been able 10 win a
championship, but I've usually
been competitive," said Gant, retiring at the end of the NASCAR
Winston Cup season. "If I had the
whole ballyard 10 do over again, I
would do the same thing. I'm
happy with my career."
The Harry Gant Farewell Tour
hasn 'I exactly been a rousing success. Heading into Sunday's
DieHard 500, the 54-year-old from
Taylorsville, N.C., is 29th in the
points standings, behind such nondescript dnvers as Hut Stnckhn
and Joe Nemecheck.
Gant has cracked the top 10
only four times in 16 races, and

continues to seek his first win in
nearly two years.
"It's been very ~inting,"
GDRt said Thursday. ' The whole
deal is to win a race. But if we cnn
stay up front, it would make it a
worthwhile last year.''
GDRI showed signs of breaking
out of his season-long slump last
week at Pocono. He was running
near the front during the Miller
C.enuine Draft 500. but a broken oil
fining knocked him out on Lap
I I 1. He finished 38th in the 42-car
field.
"I thought we had a chance to
do it last Sunday," he said. "At
least we were competitive. That
meant a lot''
Gant began his Winston Cup
career officially in 1979 - the
same year that Dale Earnhardt and
Teny LaBonte joined the circuit.
He was part of a wave of talented
drivers who picked up the banner
from Richard Peuy, David Pearson
and Cale Yarborough.
Gant never won the Daytona

500, the biggest race of all, but he
did cross the line first 18 times. He
never won the points title, but he
did finish second in 1984. He may
not go down as one of the all-time
greats, but he'll be remembered as
the oldest driver (52) 10 win a Winston Cup race.
"I've been through the good
and the bad," said Gant, who has
won more than $8 million in his
career. "I'm used to all of it"
Through the good and the bad,
Gant remained a gentleman in a
sport where 1empers seem 10 narc
every week.
"He's one of the nicest men
you 'II find around here,'' Derrick
Cope said. "He's always got that
same coosislerlt attitude. He 'II race
you hard, but if he doesn't have the
car, he'll move out of the way and
let you by. I hate to see him go."
Not that GDRt didn't get DRgry
once a' twice over the years.
"I've seen him ticked off
before," Michael Waltrip said. "I
remember we were at Bristol in

I987 or '88. and he got taken out
by a lapped car. Man, he was hot.
He has the potential to go either
way. Harry is really one of a kind.''
Gant is retiring from racing, but
he's not retiring. He has plenty to
keep himself busy: a steak restaurant he owns in his hometown, cattle to raise and a pond 10 build at
his farm, plenty of sponsor appearances still to make.
He's heading back his roots,
leaving a sport that was a regional
attraction when he came along, a
national phenomenon as he leaves.
"It's more big lime now, but it's
not nearly as much fun as it was,"
he said with a sigh. "There's a lot
more attention, especially in the
last couple of years, nnd a lot more
pressure. The drivers don't move
around like they used 10. People arc
more confined to their cars and
their crews."
Still, GDRI hates 10 pvc up racing.
"I'm going 10 miss it a bunch,''
he said. "I don't biow nothing but
this."

Alfredsson's 8-under-par 63
new Women's Open record
lly HARRY ATKINS
.
LAKE ORION, Mich. (AP)Who could blame Helen Alfredsson if she just stayed away from
work? There was almost no way
she could duplicate the job she
turned in the previous day.
The native of Sweden shatlered
the U.S. Women's Open record by
1wo strokes Thursday with · an 8-

under-par 63 in the oilening round
on the Old Course at lndiDRwood
Golf and Country Oub.
"I have no 1dea what I might
shoot in the second round,"
Alfredsson said. "That's my
moodiness coming out. We'll go
out and see how it goes."
For one day, at least, it went
very, very wdl

w...

Helmet fitting for Easlem junior
high DRd varsity players will be
held on Tuesday, July 26 at4 p.m.,
according to Eastern head coach

Dave Barr.
Barr asks that all junior high
players report rust.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St.

Pomeroy, OH.

SPRING AND
SUMERHOURS

$500 OFF

By The Associated Press
Unfortunately for Albert Belle
and the Cleveland Indians, one
man' s hot streak can't beat one
team's hot streak.
Belle homered for th e third
straight night, but it wasn't enough
to prevent the Indians from falling
another game behind Chicago. The
White Sox beat Cleveland 6-5
Thursday night in the opener of a
four-game series at Jacobs Field
between the top two teams in the
AL Central.
Frank Thomas hit his 35 th
homer for the White Sox, who have
won 17 of 2 I ovcral and II of their
last 12 on the road. The Indians,
meanwhile, have lo~l four of five.
Chicago now leads Cleveland
by three games, its largest lead
since May 30.
First baseman Eddie Munay's
throwing error led 10 Chicago's
tying and go-ahead run s in the
e1ghth inning. The White Sox, trail ing S-4, started the eighth with singles by Julio Franco and Robin
Ventura.
Murray then slipped as he fielded Warren Newson's bunt and
threw wildly past farst, leuing one
run score. Mike LaValliere's sacrifice fly made it6-5.
''The grass was wet, and when
Eddie tried to make the throw, he
was off-balance," losing pitcher
Dennis Martinez (9-5) said. "You
cannot blame one guy. With the
kind of team they arc, in a situation
like that, they find a way to get the
runs in."
Wilson Alvarez (11-5) gave up
five runs - four of them unearned
-and six hits in 7 2{3 innings. He
retired the last 14 hillers he faced.
The game was bereft of any
allegations of cheating or corking.
It was last Friday night, when

Vanlnwagen's sacrifice grounder 10
third, scored on a wild pitch during
Seth Baker's at-bat,&gt;Baker later
scored on Staats' ground-rule
double to left
The Pinltes sent one more bauer
10 the plate in the second (seven)
than in the first, but doubled their
opening-frame offensive output in
part because they capitalized on
walks to Mall Grubb and Ben
Wolfe.
David Rankin and Brian
Cowdery, whose singles got Grubb
and Wolfe home with the go-ahead
and insurance runs, respectively,
scored when Dixon's attempt to nail
Rankin coming 10 third resulted in a
throw that ended up in lert field.
Two and one-half scoreless
innings followed before Middleport
roared back into contention in the
firth. Stanley cracked a one-out
homer to center field. After
Vanlnwagen struck out, Baker
duubled to right center and scored
when Staats lined a 1-1 pitch past

Big lead Youth Football League

Is Orgaalzlag For 94·95 Seasoa.
Purpose: To teach basic skills and to develop an
understanding of basic football rules for 5th and
6th graders. To foster good sportsmanship and
poaltlve attitude.
Structure: Develop as many teams as there Is an
Interest for.

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CINCINNATI~
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Calral Dl•llloa
OW:aao................. .SI 36 .617
CLEVELANIL ... .St ll .SI7
Kuuu City ...........49 46 .!116
Milwlllkoc ............ .4S SO .474
Minnoocaa ..............4l 5I .457

Willen Dl•llloe
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Ook1and .................42 53 .442
Cllitomio ...............42 SS .433
S..ule .................... 31 54 .41]

tandem ~ starter Brad Willford and
Shafer - combined to strike out
four and walk three. The Middlepon
pitchers - Staats and Stanley combined 10 strike out five and walk
as mnny.
·
The Pirates' hillers were
Cowdery, Kebler (both 2-4), Rnnkin
(1-2), Whitlach and Willford (both
1-4). The Sox's hitters were Staats
(3-3, two doubles), Stanley (2-4,
homer and double) and Baker {1-2,
double).
Inning totals
Pirates .................240 002 • 8-7- I
White Sox ...........200 030 = 5-6-5
WP- Willfocd
LP-Staats

-·-·-·-

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MUFFS CHANCE- Chicago White Sox
'hortstop Ouie Guillen commits an error after
misjudging the ball and losing the handle on it
while the Cleveland Indians' Tony Pena slides

safely into second base in the third inning of
Thursday ni~ht's American League game in
Cleveland, "·here the White Sox won 6-5. (AP)

In the NL,

Braves beat Cardinals 6-1;
Astros down Pirates 13-6
By R.ll. FALLSTROM
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Nobody has
ever won three Cy Young Awards
in a row . Not Tom Seaver, not
Roger Clemens. not Steve Carlton,
not Sandy Koufax, not Jim Palmer.
Nobody.
Greg Maddux is lik ely to
change that, however. Maddux
threw a five-hiller and lowered his
ERA to I. 71 - more than one run
per nine innings lower than any
other starter - as the Atlanta
Braves beat the St. Louis Cardinals
6-1 for a split of Thursday night' s
doubleheader.
It was his third co nsec utive
crmplete game, his major leagueleading eighth, and his I 3th victory, tying him for the league lead
with Montreal 's Ken Hill. And, for
him , it was no big deal. As usual,
he was in low -key form after tl•c
game.
·'When guys make plays behind
you, it helps,' said Maddux, who's
one of only five players to win consecutive Cy Youngs. "The guys
put up some run s early and that
helps, that really docs."
The Cardinals, however, knew
they'd seen somebody special.
- "ll's obvious he 's going to
win the Cy Young," Tom Pagnozzi
said. "It seems like he never
throws the ball over the plate.''
-"He's obviously the best
pitcher in both leagues," Gregg
Jefferies said. "I've faced those
guys over there (in the American
League) and Maddux is the best."
- "What he docs •s the art of
pitching,'' Cardinals manager Joe
Torre said.

Maddux (I 3-5) struck out eight

run -scoring single in the second off
John Smolt&gt;. (6- tO) .
ters in a row in one stre tch, as the
In six inmngs, Smoltz allowed
Braves snapped a three-game los- six run s on II hit s to spoi l his
ing streak and dropped into a first- 200th career start.
place tie with idle Montreal in the
In the only ot her National
League game. Hous10n bcal Pius.
NL East.
Maddux's only rough spot came burgh 13-6.
in the fourth , when Luis Alicea got
Astros 13, Pirates 6
The way Pete Harni sc h was
a leadoff single and scored on Jefpitching, he didn't need many runs.
fcries' double.
But the host Houston Astros
The Cardinals won the first
game 6-3 on a three-hiller by Omar provided them anyway, beating the
Olivares, but virtually conceded the Pinsburgh Pirates 13 -6 Thursdav
'
second by matching Maddux with night.
Harnisch
(7-4)
won
his
fifth
John Frascatorc, making his majorconsecutive game, going seve n
league debut.
Frascatore (0- I) was called op innings and allowing just five hits.
from Triple-A Louisville on a one- After starting off 2-4 this year, he's
shot basis due to the rare six-game unbeaten since coming off the disse ries necessitated by consecutive abled list in June.
rainouts in April.
"He had good stuff. He moves
Frascatore gave up all six runs the ball in and out real well. Of
on seve n hits in 3 1/3 inning s, course •. he had quite a few runs
including a two-run home run by early that gave him a lot of breathFred McGriff in the first and a ing room. That makes a pitcher's
three-run shot by Javier Lopez in job easier," Pirates third baseman
the fourth. Then he was sem back Jeff King said.
to Louisville to make room . for
Astros manager Terry Collins
Tom Urbani, who was scheduled to agreed.
start the first game today.
"He's been throwing great. He
Unexpectedly, Olivares (2 -2 ) got a lillie tired after the seventh,
was nearly as impressive as Mad - so we got him out of there. The last
dux in the opener. He gave up all thing we need is a recurrence of his
three hits and three runs in the ftrst shoulder problems," Collins said.
two innings, then retired the final
. ''As the game went along, his
16 batters to win for the fim time shder got better. But what he docs
in eight starts.
is make good pitches with the fastJefferies was 3-for-4 with ~ucc ball. He moves it around and then
RBis, Ozzie Smith had two hits when they're looking for the fast and an RBI and leadoff hiucr Ger- ball, he comes in with the breaking
ald Young was 3-for-5 and scored ball.
twice in the opener. Olivares,
Astros catcher Scou Servais said
who's 5-for-20 at the plate, added a
(See NL on Page 6)
and walked none, retiring 14 bai -

florida {llapp S·S) at Colondo

(Piia. . l-3~ 9o01 p.m.

CLEVELAND INDIANS, Plocod

Mart am, phdl•, on 1bo IS·d•y ~il­
ablod liiL kocalJod Jerry DiPolo, piLCbU,
from ChuloUc of tho latemalionll

La.
SEATILE MARINERS' Ac~uirod

Shnm Booltie, pilchcr, &amp;om the Pltiltlk'l·

phia Pltillioo f .. I ...... ploycr k&gt;
... .......! ....... ~ .... Mili ltiU.

13.5

IS

pilcbar, dolftld waiwn and wu _, outri&amp;}ll 10 Jlck•onvillo of tho Southom

Loa4
5

Su PnncUco (BuB• 6--7) •• New
Yod&lt;(R..._O.l), I&gt;IOp.m.
AIIMu (A- 6-l) • SL ....... (WOI.... 6-4).~1lp.m.
CINCINNATI (llaalott 5-5) II Otia1"
:1-3), 2:20p.m.
Dlop ~ 1·2). - phla~ (i:~~ •
al tFu-1"7-6), 7:35 ......
.

.:.n-4)•-

Pitubuqb (Cooke 4-7) al Holllloa
(WIIIiatoa s:S), am p.m.
flod4a (SdtoOIII-1) II C........ (Ft-.
-a-:1), t:QI , ....

National Lui"•
CINCINNATI REDS' Recoiled Scou
........ """' lndianopolio ol the

6..!

American Auorillion. 1&gt;-i.J;IWGd llK:b

Thursday's scores

-r
IJ

aua.,

Oollind 4, Bahimon&gt; l
6, CUlVEU.ND 5

Tormw 9, T0111l

Milw••• 7. Miruaola 3

New Yodd t. California 7

Dot.uoia,
-·
for aaipttaL
FLORIDA
MARUNS
: Placed Dno
Maaadan, infielder. oa lhe IS-day dUabled lia...
ST. LOUIS CARDINAlS : Smt Jot'll
Fraa&lt;:aton, pilc:h•, lo LoWavillo ol the
AmaDn ANoQaUoa. Rccall.cd Tcm Urbuli, pi-. ftun Lwiovi1lc.

BosketbaU

Today's games

Nollooal ......baU -'-'lalloo

S..alo ~- 111-5) • Bm~m~ (Sole

7-5), 5:!15 p.m.

aua,._

01... til-:!)" !l.ll\'llUND
(Mom. 1-6), 7,()!1 p.m.
Tcau (R.-.10..5) "Toronto (Scowan 6-1), 7:35p.m.
11n1u Clly (O.bi&lt;U 6-1) al DolnJil
(Moan 1-9), I :OS pm.
M i . - (Ouardado ().2) II MiiWIIIkee(Scanlan 2--5).
p.m.
New Y ock (IC.anbariai 6-,, It C.lifomia (Lanaino 0-0), I 0:0S p.m.

am

a.biman {MIIUina 13-4)
(Mdllor0.0), 10:05 p.m.

al.

o.kland

Saturday'agom..
DR Scoulc (FiomUoa '-10 .... 0..millp 1·•) !t Ba.wxa (HIIIIkdb 5-S and
V~ll-3~ I:Oip.m.
·
ODoaao (Sandenm l·l) •• CIJ!VE.
LAND (Orimaloy t ·I), I :OS p.m.
T01U (llolunon 0-0)
(Uil•4-5),1,35p.m.
... (Funandot 6--4) " Ooklaod
(V.,I'Oppii5-J),4m p.m.
Kan111 OlJ (Coae I )..4) at Deuoit
(On1Uchm4-4). 7:m p.m.
v dl (hlido U) ., ~. . . .
{Mir8lda 1-2),1,()!1,....
Now Yod&lt; ~ 1-1) 11 Colli_..

"y.....,

Saturday'sgUII..

·

hua &lt;I olte Sou..... Leo.... Bu.runpam
tdouod s- Toddoto, oulficld..

l
9.S

Bolten al Seattle. ppd., ....nwn dim-

I~

Pi111burah (White 2·S) at Houaton
(Dnbot IO.S),IoOI I'""

a-s..

.442

•ao

oia~6o4~10:Qip.a.

SullcbJ'I pmel

ScoaloaBMm,I;Gl p.m.
Q~cqo .. aJlVBI.AND,

'm p.m.

laRa C1t:J a Daonli&amp;,l ,15 p.m. ·
TaaoaT--.t:35p.81.
5' • Mil1rl*el.. 2.:05 pm.
NrwYIIIIII:MC.W :, ~p.m.

'5

rx

Anyone Interested In helping with the organization of

thla yew's season, please feel free to call.
Dave Jenklne- President 992·2117
Llae Rouah - Secretary 992·3486

Toom&amp;o ..................-44 SO .441

Tb1U'1111ay's....,...

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

716 NORTH SECOND • MIDDUPOIT
250 I JACKSON
AVE. • PT. PUISIIT
•
364 JACJSON PilE • GALliPOUS

3j

r ........................46 o19

Dll: SL ...... 6, Alllru l; Allanl&amp; 6,
Sl.l..cuiol
U.U...l3, Pkul!uqb 6

···························-------·-

•

•

.606
.606
.474
.448
.4!3

GB

WtllknDh'W.

aOaldaM,4oO!p.a

-

BOSTON CELTICS: Extondod dlo
&lt;ICit!U Punl,DeTROIT PISTONS: Homed BIUy

McKinney rico preaide~~t or bld:elblll

~NGELES LAIU!RS , Si1nccl

r ..... Rttflin. DOJd.
SEAlTLE lUPERSONtcs, Nomed

....

Transactions

--

AL·standings
W

L I'd.

EDWARD W. EISSMANN, M.D.
Board Eligibility
Orthopaedic Surgery

MALCOM W. LENTZ, M.D.
Board Certification:
Orthopaedic Surgery
General Surgery
Thoracic Surgery

HOLZER· CLINIC
ORTHOPAEDIC SURGERY
,.'/

.

Wolly Woll&lt;•pooaided and .............

FootbaU
NadoMI FOCilbaU La&amp;•
BUffALO BW.S: Waived 0..1 Po·
lam, Nlllirc baolt, and TCin Dohrina. d·
t.m:ive liMman.
aJ!VEL.o\ND. BROWNS: Ret cooed
Gn~a Briap, tafet)'; Joe Montford .
±x; ond D-o L~NMittl
~·
Dl!l1tOIT UONS, '
Shone
bam, dlfBve aad.
·Toay

""*

Sea~.

Holzer Clime's Board Certified and Board eligible Orthopaedic Surgeons offer
the h1ghest standard of patient care and prov1de swte-ofthe-arl Orthopaedic
techniques such,as ARTHROPLASTY (Jomt replacement). Our orthopaedic
physicians stud1ed in nationally recognized trainmg programs. 1hey perform
;oint repmrs and replacements wl/h an expertise usually found only m large
metro med1cal centers, but they main/am "hometown care and convenience."

aua:RI!EN BAY PACII!U: Rei.....S
~
.......
.. - . aod
Uontl C.wf..t,
wide ft~G~i\w.

-a..--..

HOUSTON OILERll: ..._.... dte

- INDIANAPOLIS
d Mlk• - ·fS:
.,...!.Plo&lt;od
COL

Addtltonally. Holzer Clmic's Rehabilitatwn Facilittes provtde all neces.mry
rehahtlitatton and therapy. both before and after surgery

-All!d-.wi&lt;lo-....

catdtoinaclivo

li&amp;
LOS ANOI!I.I!S IAIDERS: Simocl
Doul
wide receiver, and \c.au

n...-.

Ellio\t, oR••ive lillem•n. Cut Ke1t.h

Franklia. r .

L•·

LOS ANOILES RAMS, ll.eluood
Ku.ueU Whl&amp;e, NMinl back. Sipcd

..J-,

Bolloy, _ . . . - - - - MIAMI DOLPHINS, Buoade4 the
.....- "'Doa llltola, -.~~uo~oF

tltot\196- ... lldiiol-._.t

,._

I

!'do

CoolnlDICINCINNATI .........I6 ll .!1!'6
................ .!5 41 j7]
l'llulllqh ..............4.5 49 .479
Sl. .......................44 49 .473
Cbieop.................41 52 .441

MAIL TO: B.B.Y.F.L. BOX 190, POMEROY, OH. 45769

Telephone No. ________

L
37
37
SO
SO
!2

B ...................... .!l3 :19 .!176
Doavit. ...................42 Sl

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

TW
Adlnl&amp; ...................S7
................!17
Phibdoljml ...........45
Now Yodt ..............44
...................0

Pl!te In this yew's football season.

Age

&lt;ContinuedfromPage4)

Here is a peek into the future.
Today - Racine Athletics vs.
Rutland Reds, 6 p.m.; Gallipolis
Yankees vs. Syracuse Hubbard's
Greenhouse, 7:30p.m.
Saturday - Tuppers Plains
The Tuppers Plains pitching Tigers vs. Tuppers Plains Pirates, 6
p.m.; IOIIight's winnezs, 7:30p.m.

B -....................45 o11 .4...

NL standings

F...: Fen for each player Is $14.00 membership and
$36.00 equipment use.
1 em Interested In having my son or daughter partlcl·

Adm·-aa·~------------------------

Whillach near second base.
Staats, who moved to second
base on the relay back to the infield,
got to third on a wild pitch during
Adam Walker's at-bat before using
nno~1er untamed offering to beat the
armor-wearing Cowdery in the dash
10 the dish. Walker struck out to end
the inning.
The Tuppers Plains sixth began
with a walk to Jeremy Connolly.
After Wolfe was hit by a pitch,
Cowdery got an infield single and
mdved 10 second on an errallt throw
from second to the plate that also
allowed Connolly 10 score. Cowdery
came home on Kehler's ground
. single between new third baseman
Max Bratton and the third base bag.
The bouom of the sixth saw
Middlepon get Branon to third on
Scouy Jolmson's sacrifice grounder,
but Stanley popped out in foul
ground to end the game.

NewYod&lt; ............. .!l7 36 .613

Baseball

1994. Copy of birth certificate required.

With Coupon at Your Fruth Pharmacy's
In Middleport, Pt. Pleasant l Gallipolis

The Dally Sentlnel-PaQe-5

Scoreboard

ftl
GRAIIJ.Y

FUI FOR KIDS

Dick Schofield added a horn er
and an RBI sing le and Pat Hcntgen
( 12-6) gave up eight hits in 6 2/3
innings for the wto, striking out 10
for the third time this season.
Texas starter Tim Lear y ( 1- 1)
went 6 1/3 innin gs . surrend eri ng
seven runs on seven hits w i~l four
walks.
Yankees II, Angels 7
AI Anaheim Stadium, Jim
Leyritz had three RBls, Mtke Gal lego drove in two runs with a
homer and a double and Jimmy
Key (15-2) became the winningest
pitcher in the majors.
New York moved 21 game s
over .500 for the firs1 time since
Aug. 8, 1987 and opened a 3 1/2 game lead on Baltimore - li s
largest in IBdays.
The Yankees scored fi ve times
in the fifth agains1 Chuck Finl ey
(7 -9), who had his worst outing or
the season. allowing eight runs and
10 hits in 4 2/3 innings.
Athletics 4, Orioles 3
At Oakland Coliseum, the A's
rallied from a 3-2 deficit in the
eighth, tying it on Mike Aldrete 's
sacrifice fly, then won it in the
ninth on Geronimo Berroa's single
up the middle that scored Mike
Bordick from second.
Dennis Eckersley (3 ')pitched
the ninth for the vi ory. Mark
Eichhorn (5-4) took e loss for
Baltimore.
Brewers 7, wins 3
At County Stadium, Milwaukee
scored all .of its runs with two ouLs
and Bill Wegman (7-3) brok e a
personal three-game losing skid.
Jose Valentin hit a three-run
homer in the eighth and fellow
rookies Mall Mieske and Mike
Matheny hit consecutive homers
off Jim Deshaies (5-10) in the second.

Cleveland opened a series at Chicago, that Belle's bat was removed
from the game at the request of
White Sox manager Gene Lamont
The bat was found to be doc tored and Belle was suspended for
10 days, but he has continued to
play - and play well - while
appealing.
,
''The bottom line is, we have 10
win the series, and the bat situation
is out of hand, " Thomas sa id .
"The guy's a great hiller, corked
bat or no corked bat. He came out
and showed us what he could do ."
So did Thomas.
His two-run homer gave Chicago a 4-0 lead in the third before
Cleveland rallied.
"They can use all the corked
bats they want to. but I don't need
a corked bat. That's why I work so
hard in the offseason," Thomas
said.
Cleveland tied it 4-4 with four
runs in the third, all of them
unearned because Chicago shortstop Ozzie Guillen mishandled the
throw at second on Kenny Lofton's
potential double-play grounder. Jim
Thome doubled home one run, and
Belle hit a three-run homer on the
next pitch .
The Indians took a S-4 lead on
Alvaro Espinoza's RBI grounder in
the fourth .
In other games, Toronto beat
Texas 9-3, New York defeated California 11-7, Oakland edged Baltimore 4-3 and Milwaukee downed
Minnesota 7-3. The Baltimore at
Seattle game was postponed
because of ceiling problems at the
Kingdom e.
Blue Jays 9, Rangers 3
At Sky Dome, Paul Molitor hit a
pair or two-run homers and scored
four runs .

Kyger Creek LL Tournament...

MON.-FRI. 9:00-$:00
SAT. 9:0CI-12:00

SYSftll

Ohio

ChiSox's Central lead grows
after 6-5 win over Indians

Location: Strike Zone on Front Street, Pomeroy
Pleyers: Cannot be 13 years old prior to September 1,

ON NEW PRESCRIPnONS
AND TUNSFERS

Pomeroy-Middleport,

In theAL,

Slgnup Dates are: July 16, 10 AM-1 PM;
July 21, 6 PM-8 PM; July 28, 6 PM-8 PM;
August 2, 6 PM-8 PM.

9tlut '11ie Singiilg Sigrist 1'tuni!y
Today, WU. G~~~pelolnpn oa nery llaad,llll'lfndl. . to..._,
a group wit.. more tUD jut a rew "'oop to 1lag." 'Be 5itP'W
Family exp&lt;Mtadl die Golpel wltla every llber ol dlelr It! ..,til ud
abiBty.
_
fie Slgrlat Falllily .-cb aad travell -ny mllM - - ...
cauntry, willa i dellnlte pi; to- Jolt-~~ - to Cltrlll _. ...
c1o- trodden Ul'ted In ..-wed r.Jtllll dlelr LonL
Tiley bYe beeD daulbed 81 "'MMIRaadlllt', "¥ti'J lah t r, IIIII
dlelr ruorlte compllmeat II "Mwt Splrl...-r. If J• _ , •
Golpel Group to merely eatertala Ill' live • "ffmcy ,..rw
¥',
cloa't a~u thll ram11y.
If JOII nat 1 siDcenly ~plrltul prc~~nm, yo• wll -Joy IIIII'. . .
Jerry, Eule, Marcie and Larry.
c.J1: 99l-53l6 Fw lafo.
WiU k III',_,.,K llll..tlluwl CUff F'tw M1liuNIUI
J Z3nl1111 .. 1.2..0. .. ,....
SWr.

Helmet fitting will be held for
all players in grades 7-12 inleresled
in playing football at Southern
Junior High School DRd Southern
High School on Wednesday, July
27 at4:30 p.m.
The fittings will be done by
Jerry Newberry of Newberry's
Sporting Goods. For more information and DRY questions, call T!Xnldo head coach Joe Hemsley at 304773-5483 (home) or 992-2611
(home).

Frl&lt;!ay, July 22, 1994

IDIIlll• llld utcUUv• Yiw pnlidGD\o

tltmoP 1995 -

u oplioo f• 1996.

Sipo!c.triow-,..,..-.
NJ!W OILI!ANS SAJNn, """"''"
- - Slttt .... DaMaod w...
- . . . "e

OOidriQU.

NEW YOIUt nrn, Apleoi 10 1am0
t

-

...,_

Holzer Clinic
90 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio.

Orthopaedics Department
446-5401
Genera/Information
446-5411

widll.au Booro111, dof'!'"iw 1~lo.

Ill

I

•

�•

.

Page-6-The Dally Sentinel

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, July 22, 1994

Pomeroy

Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel

Page-7

Comet fragments stop falling on Jupiter today
I

lly PAUL RECER
AP Science Writer
GREENBELT, Md. (AP) Comet fragments complete their
bombardment of Jupiter today, but
the scorched marks may remain for
weeks above the cloudtops of the
solar system's largest planet.
To as tronomers, the comet
shower on Jupiter has been more
than just a light show.
The comet fragments provided a
natural probe of Jupiter's atmosphere. By penetrating deeply and
then exploding, the space rocks
performed a sort of chemical analySIS. Astronomers can use measure mcnts of the light spectrum to iden-

(

t

Shoemaker-Levy 9, was to collide
with Jupiter about 4 a. m. EDT
today .
A day earl ier, the comet hit the
gmnt planet with a duster bomb _
four fragments that sma shed in
nearl y at nearly the sa me point over
a 20- hour period.
Fragments Qi, Q2, RandS all
exploded within about 60 miles of
eac h other, sa id Mord aca i-Mark
Mac Low, a University of Ch icago
astronomer.
"T he fireba ll s all ove rl ap ped
eac h other," he sa id . "Eac h impact
dredged up more and more material
and mad e it (the impa c t point)
hnghter and brighter."

The joint area where til e lrilg ·
mcnts smashed 1nto the cloud tops
of Jupiter turn ed into "~ rc:ll h•;.:
blobs" of bright infrared . or lll':ll.
recorded on a telescope 111 A n~CII L II ·
ca operated by 1hc tJ n 11·,'" '' Y 11 1
Ch 1cago, said Ma c Lo~&lt;. 1 he
lllStrumenl, callctl Ihe South l'ok
lnfrarctl Ex pl orer. c: 1n """ " 1,,
Jupllcrconstantly 011 , unw "' )'""
Juptter co 11 Jd poS\ ih ly lx· lnt h)
more th an th e ltlr ccast 2 l 1 rag men ts, "'"ll:ugenc Sh&lt;lc'lllithCI ,,.
discoverer of th e comet at1&lt;i" l '.S
Gcolog1cal Survey sc ient ist.
He said I here co uld he 1111 ,cc n
pieces within the co met tr:nll lh:ll
hav e gone IIll o th e Jupll c·, cloud

turs.uudctcctcd unul im1)act. .
Co mets can become IIIVISihl e to
tel esco pe s al ter th ey ex hau st the
loll\L" '""'"""! tltal crc:11cs til elf
'' """·or d11s t clo11d, wlllC h rcllccb
''"li•glll. ho:ud .
l on1ct SIHlCII~&lt;tkc r · Lc vy 9 w;"
tl ISCII \' C rc1l 111 March 199 1.
l&lt;c·sc:ll cliers hacktrac k11 1g Its orbita l
path kamcd 1ktt 1t had pa"cd ve ry
clllsc '"Ju piter Ulc prcv•ous year. It
" heJ, c vcd the immense tidal
l11r ces of I he plan e t cau sed the
Cc&gt;IIKtlo hrcak apart.
I he· pieces lin ed up l1 ke a seri es
ol fr eight cars, looped far back out
11110 space and then raced back
to\\;utl co lli SIOn wit h Ju]llter.

'Hurtin
in Canada' wants to understand his lovers loss
...--..;::;..--.

,

CANCER TOURNAMENT WINNERSFourteen under was good enough to take home
the top prize in the American Cancer Society Golf
Scramb le. Flankine Pete Rademacher (center),

the Ohio i\CS tournament coordinator, are championship team members Jack Ritchie, Chris Stout,
lien Ewing Jr. and Jason Shuler (L-R).

Salary cap griping will end: Tagliabue
By DAVE GOLDBERG
AP Football Writer
NFL commissioner Paul Tagli abue is convinced that once the
1~94 season begins, all the griping
about the salary cap will stop.
"By opening day, the cohesion
and continuity of teams will be
striking and the carping will end,"
said Tagliabue, who two months
ago felt it necessary to order club
executives to stop their public complaining about the $34.6 million

cap. in usc for the first time this
season.
The season that begins
will be the NFL 's 75th. And
abue, as he docs every year,
di eted 11 would be "our best yet.
He predicted, for e&lt;amplc,
end of the 9-6 fi eld-goal contest
the kind that predominated
last season. And he suggested •h~.-..:-;
once teams become used to frer1i
agency and th e salary cap,
will be less movement.

WASHINGTON (AP)- No.2
seed Stefan Edberg headed the list
of eight remaining players as quarterfinal action started today at the
$650,000 Legg Mason Tennis
Classic.
Edberg and No. 8 Aaron Krickstein were scheduled to face orr in
one match. No . 14 Jason
Stoltenberg of Australia, the only
other remaining seed in the field,
was to sq uare off against Brett
Steven of New Zealand.
Steven knocked out fifth-seeded
Andre Agassi 6-3, 3-6, 6-4 Thursday night to close out a day of
upsets.
"I'm frustrated, because I didn't
feel like I was going to win on my
baseline points," said Agassi, who
convened just 33 percent (27 of 81)
of his total return points. "I only
really feel comfortable losing baseline points to a couple of players,
like Chang, Courier or Sampras. I
have to take advantage of that
against players who attack the net,

and I just didn't do it."
Steven, who entered the tm••~ ••-•
mcnt ranked 74th in the world lOio.-11!
Agassi 's 20th, had a simple extJia-JliJ.ll
nation.
''I think I played abo
myself," he said.
Agassi, No. 4 Marc Rosset,
6 Jaime Yzaga, seventh seed
Lendl and 13th seed Henrik
were all losers in the third round.
Lendl's defeat to Davirl :;.~
Wheaton was particularly stinging, t;:J:
as he doubl e-faulted with
lead in th e third set ti•h··•olver
Lcndllostthc final three points.
Mats Wilander ran into a.;~.;'"' "~'-~
problem in his match with
stein.
..J&lt;:rickstein fell behind 5-3 in tne C::JII
third se t and trailed 5-4 in
tiebreaker before taking the
three points to wrap up the match.
"He always seems to find a
to win close matches," Wilanide•r r
said. "He never gives in."

Browns plan to experiment
with radios in QBs' helmets
By PATRICK DOLAN

"From a player's standpoint, as
(the quarterback's) trying to call
the play and run the play, if you tell
him to do 71 things, he probably
won't get anything done."
Belichick said he would only
use the radio. whicb will be
equipped With a scrambling device,
if starting quarterback Vinny Testaverde wants to use it.
"We are just going to have to .
start working with it and see what
Vinny feels comfortable with," he
said. "We don't always want him
listening to it. We want him to get
it, absorb it and call it instead of
having someone constantly rattling
in his ear."
Meanwhile, Belichick canceled
the last rookie practice on Thursday to prepare for the arrival of tile '
veternns. who must report today.
"We felt after practice
(Wednesday) that we have done
just about as much as can with this
group," he said. "They worked
hard and we got a lot out of them,
so we're taking the day off (Thill&gt;·
day). This way they can rest their
legs and relax a little bit before
everyone reports."

BEREA, Ohio (AP) - The
NFL enters a new world this sea.
son: the world of modem technology.
Say goodbye to coaches yelling
at quanerbacks from the sideline,
and say heUo to coaches talking to
their passers over radio waves.
Radio receivers installed in the
quarterback's helmet will allow
coaching staffs to send in offensive
plays to the quarterback from the
sidelines.
"Hopefully it will be a timesaver," Cleveland Browns coach
Bill Belichick said Thursday. "It
will eliminate the communication
between the coach and the player
who runs the play in."
Even though he's not sure how
much his team. will use the radio,
Bel1chick has scheduled the team
to practice at Cleveland Stadium on
Tuesday in order to test its effectiveness.
"Obviously, if it breaks down ,
you have to be able to run your
plays without it," Belichick said.
"So you can't depend on it.
"We are just going to have to
experiment a little bit," he said.
(Continued from Page 5)

NL games...

Harnisch has firmly established
himself since coming back from
the shoulder injury.
" He's pitching as good or better
than any time last year. He's got a
cut fastball working that helps him
against left-handed hitters. Going
on the DL gave him a chance to
step back and work on some things.
He's mixing his pitches better now
than he ever has. Pete is taking four
or five pitches out there with him,"
Servais said.
"My arm's feeling good and
I'm in a groove mechanically,"
Harnisch said. "I think I'm throwing as well now as any time last
year. My changeup is better and
my slider is better. And the way my
arm has felt , I've been able to go
harder."
The Astros have scored an average of 6.75 runs since the All-Star
break. They've pla yed the P~ratcs
five times in that span, racking up a
total of 39 runs in those games
alone.
"It's going to happen once and
a while," Collins said. "Were a
team that can score five or SIX runs
a game, but I don't think of us as
I

having a high-powered offense.
"We have a good offensive
club. Big hits are the key to openin~ up high-scoring games, but you
thmk of teams like the Tigers or the
Rangers as high-scoring teams
because they have guys who get a
lot of three-run home runs.''
"Th 1s team ha s hcc n hitting
good," said shortstop Andujar
Cedeno. who had a home run and
two singles. "If we keep l)itting
like this and playing good defense,
we'll catch the Cincinnati Reds
before the strike.''
"Somebody will get them out,"
Pirates manager Jim Leyland said.
"Just not us tonight. They've got
an awfully good club. They have a
lot of weapons and Terry is doing a
good Job with them. They have a
lot gomg for them."
Pirates starter Zane Smithslipped to 9-8 as he lasted only 3
213 innings and gave up nine runs,
six of them earned. "It was one of
those n1ghts he just didn't have
anything," Leyland said.
"That happens a few times a.
year and tonight was one of them.
But Zane Smith is the least of my
problems."

SECOND PLACE- The foursome of Scott
Wickline, John Hoback, Dorothv Karr and Bob
Hysell finished with a team score of 12 under par
tn take second place in the Ameriran Cancer Society Golf ~cramble, held Thursday at the Meigs
Count~ G.olf Course. Pictured from left to right
are W1ckhne, Hoback, former Olympic champion

Ann
Landers

and professional boxer Pete Rademacher, Karr
and Hysell. Rademacher is the golf tournament
c&lt;K~rdinator for the American Cancer Society for
Ohio. Unavailable for pictures was the third place
team of York Ingles, Steve Bachner, Roger Hubbard and Rich Follrod.

"1994 . Loa Aflije~s
T1ma Syndicate and
Crealora SyndiCII IIB'

Dear Ann Landers: I am a 45·
year-{)(d widower currently dating a
40-year-old divorced woman . The
problem is, I don't think "Amanda"

DON TATE MOTORS, INC.

has ever recovered from the loss of
her fu-st uue love -· the young man
to whom she lost her virginity. He
died 12 years ago in a small plane
crash, and the trauma devastated her.
I understand how such a tragedy
can leave scars, but Amanda stiU
goes to pieces on his birthday, the
anniversary of the day they met and
tile day he died, and so on. She keeps
his picture in her bedroom and
makes no secret of the fact that she
is stiU mourning this loss. She also

POMEROY, OHIO

[I]

Edberg, Wheaton advance
to Legg Mason quarterfinals

•

t1fy molecules in the black paoches __currents of Jup1ter._
left by the impacts.
,,:J As the marks d1lute and cvcntuAlready they have found su i- ally stream away, they ' ll ac t rather
phur, ammonia and hydrogen sui - lik e a wmdsock , tclhng the spccd
f1de. They arc still lookin g for and d1rect•on of atmospheric llow
water.
l11 gh above the planet.
.
The planetary pumm elmg has
Ast ronomers worldw1de also
also allowed experts to verify their ha ve honed skIll s of track1ng a
ability to gauge the si&lt;e of comet comet ~nd prcd• cung 11s ultimate
fragment s based on the apparent path . Calculat•ons, so me made
brightness. They used this scale to month s before, have proven accujudge wh ich pieces would be the ra te to_ w1th10 m1nutes. ThiS could
large st and the impacts have come 10 handy 1f ever a com et or
proved their calcu lation s correct.
ns tero1d IS detected speed ing
By watching how the black through space toward an ultimate
1mpact marks eventually dissipate, 1m pact w1th Earth.
planetary scientists could also learn . And those calculations saw that
more about the weather and wind lragment W , the l;tsl p1ece of co met

1

GeCiiiJ

GMCTRuc:K~

1

j

(~

I

has frequent bouts of depression ,
which I believe stem from thi s
unresolved trauma.
I have suggested to Amanda that
she see a counselor, but she insists
it wouldn't help and says I should
accept her the way she is.
Ann,llove this woman and would
gladly jump in the lake if that would
bring back her lost love. It hurts that
she shuts me out and accuses me of
being insensitive and unsympathetic.
After all these years. do you
believe it is normal for a person to
be so depressed? Should I walk away
from this relationship? Is there any
hope that Amanda will get over her
griet'l No name, no province, just ..
HURTING IN CANADA
DEAR CANADA: If you want to
spend the rest of your life with a
woman who ' is severely neurotic,

stick with Amanda.
Granted, she experienced a lcrrible
tragedy, but that was 12 years ago.
The fact that Amanda refuses to seek
help for her depression should tell
you something. If you marry tllis
woman, I'm afraid you'll end up
needing counseling.
Dear Ann: My 5-ycar-old nephew
is very cruel to animals. He choked
a little rnbbitto death and set ftre to
our cat. His parents think he'll
outgrow it. What do you think? ..
SAN ANTDNIO
DEAR SAN: I think that child
should be evaluated by a
professional and watched carefully.
His sadistic tendencies indicate that
he is extremely troubled. He should
certainly not be allowed to have a
pel.

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I
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$33,995

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21,495

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USED CARS

1993 Nissan 4X4 Pickup Extended Cab ••• s13,99S
1993 Chev. '12 Ton Pickup....................s1 0, 995
1991 GMC 'h Ton Pickup••••••••••••••••••••••••s999S
1991 S10 Pickup ..............................._$4995
1993 All Wheel Drive Astro Van ••••••••• s1 5,995

1986 OLDS DELTA 88 ........................................... '3995
1986 BUICK LESABRE .........................................'3995
1993 EAG.!,.E TALON ..........................................112,995
1989 CHRYSLER NEW VORKER ........................ $6995
1992 BUICK REGAL ............................................. '8995
1990 CHEVY CAPRICE only 28,000 miles .......... '8995
1991 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD BROUGHAM .. "14,995
1989 PONTIAC GRAND AM ................................. '3995

All Payments Subject to Credit

Ope.Sundays

DON TATE MOTORS, INC.

308 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

Hours:
Mon •.frl.
8:0114:00
S.Lt:l»-4:00

Sun. 1:00--5:00

1·800·837·1 09.4

Dear friends:
It has come to my attention over
the years that Hell has become
insignificant and unreal in the
minds of most, and I mean most.
individuals. I think that Revelations
14 and 15 are the most crucial verses in the word of God. In Revela·
lions 20: 14, and death and hell
were cast into the lake of fire. My
friends, stating the fact that if a per·
son is alive and he still has a conscious where he can understand
things, where he can know and feel
things and that he be cast into the
lake of rue for eternity. The Bible
teaches that this is the second
death. In Revelation 20:15, and
whosoever was not found written
in the book of life was cast into the
lake of fire . We also are told in
Romans 6:23, for the wages of sin
is death; but tile gift of God is eter·
nal life through Jesus Christ our
Lord. The wages of sin has never
decreased. It still stands, if a man
Sins he dies.
I would like to ask the educators, politicians, and the mothers
and fathers of this nation why is it
that hell docs not mean anything to
you anymore? Why is it that there
is no fear of God before your eyes?
You need to understand there is
going to be a time when you will
personally have to stand before
God and answer for your decision
.of rejecting His Son. If people
would only open their eyes and see
what God has for them, they would
not hesitate for a minute to cut
away aU that the devil offers them
aud the way of life he has set
before them . They would take up
the path Christ has given them to
walk. We see the devil has blinded
the people and in their blind state

I

they. are. lost without Christ.
Being a grandparent that loves
my grandchildren. I feel that the
grandparents of today have let one
of the most important jobs of their
life slip by them. They have failed
to carry out the command of God
and pass on the plan of salvation
for an eternal life in heaven with
our Lord and Saviour I challenge
you to tak:e a look at the word of
God. Grandparents of today cannot
seem to take the church and the sal. vation of God serious. Why are
they allowing their grandchildren
to go to heU without trying to rescue them? believe it is because they
d1d not take the salvation of their
own children serious. Mothers and
Fathers of today say they love their
children, but they very seldom, if at
. all, consider the fact that if their
children die without Christ they
will be placed in an eternal hell.
Many people try hard to get the
message out to the public by going
house to house and person to per'
son. It appears to me that in our
society, which used to be known a~
a free America and a Godly and
religious America, has now slipped
way beyond the imagination of its
people. The church has slipped out
of existence loosin~ its voice. The
cry still needs to nng out, JESUS
SAVES! The Bible says, whosoever is not found written in the lambs
book of life will be a cast-a-way
and these are going to be the found
nots.
What can we say to get people
to think about an eternal hell and
help them realize that damnation
Iies at the end of a heart beat?
When that soul lifts up his eyes in
Hell screaming for help, there is no
way to rescue him from the pits of
Hell.
So friends, please consider the
word that is on the lips of millions
of people everyday, HcU. Why do
you choose to go there when God
has made a way for you to escape.
John 3:16 For God so loved the
wotld that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth
in him should not perish but have
everlasting life.
Why would you let your family
go to Hell. why?

ou~

but all the inmates I knew who
had contact with women on the
outside were trymg to get something
out of ~1cm, and they bragged about
it. I thought your readers
shou ld know ... EX-CON IN
SACRAMENTO
DEAR SA C: Thanks for the
warning. It brings to mind the old
adage: "None is so blind as he who
will not see."
Feeling pressured tc have se:c'
liow we/1-informi'd au you7 Wme
for Ann wNun' book.Je1 ,"Sex and
1he Teen -ager." Send a self-addressed, long, business-size envelope
· and a c!Jeck or money order for
$3.65 (I his includes poslage and
handling) 10: Tuns, c/o Ann Lantiers, P.O. Box I 1562, Chicago, 111.
606/J -0562 . (In Canada, send
$4.45.)

WE WILL Not BE UNDERSOLD
ON ANY ITEM AT ANY TIME

Hell: the price of sin
Dr. James R. Acree Sr.
Hillside Baptist Cburcb
Romans 6:23 For the wages of
sin is death; but the gift of God is
eternal life through Jesus Christ our
Lord.
Revelation 20: 14 And death and
hell were cast into the lake of fire.
This is the second death.
Revelation 20:15 And whosoever was not found written in the
book of life was cast into the lake
of fire.

Dear Ann Landers: I spent some

time in prison recently and was
incarcerated with a man who, like
me. participated in an outside work
program. At one of the first places
we worked as laborers, "Sam" met a
veryattractiveolderwoman
This woman and her husband were
having marital difficulties, so Sam
seized the opportunity and became
friendly. The lady was quite
influential and arranged to have Sam
transferred to a work facility closer
to her home . She visited frcqu cn~y
and bought him expensive gifts.
Sam did a lot of bragging about
his conquest. He told everyooe that
life is much easier if you can get a
rich woman to "fall for you." When
he was released from prison, the
woman met him at the gate and
drovehimtoherhome.
I don't lmow how this affair turned

32!!

59!!

39!~

JCt ) .....
lllbrltll '
Oualletm~r\81 Ba1t11ri&amp;$

Dl , Ill' .,lloljllli,...IIIPnce. good 'llrl'ilh eiCchange
Everyct.y Low Price

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Pnce good

w~h

exchange

E~r Low Price

UffTIMf WARRINIV

Society scrapbook

MADD MEMBERSHIP
Membership dues for the local
chapter of Mothers Against Drunk
Driving are payable now and may
be mailed to MADD, P. 0. Box
587, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
The dues are $20 for the the
1994-95 year. According to officer
Pat Thoma, there is a quota of 20
paid memberships required to hold
a.chapter. "We are .an active chap~ and are involved in the community. We have made the public
aware of the drunk and impaired
drivers in our Countr., and our victi{JI advocate is available to assist
the survivors/victims of crashes,"
Thoma said.
Meetings are held on the fourth
Tuesday of each month at 3l0 East
Main SL, Pomeroy. Meetings start
at_6p.m.

· SCHOLARSHIP RE,(;JPIENT
'C'uistina Pooler of 'Pomeroy, a

'

second year student in Hocking
College's ceramic engineering
technology program, has been
awarded a $625 scholarship. It was
funded by the Canton-Alliance
Section of the American Ceramic
Society.
COMPLETES COURSES
Robert J. Hall and Wesley S.
Gilkey have· completed a series of
courses at The Hobart Institute of
Welding Technology.
HaU of Pomeroy has completed
the Institute's combination/pipe
welding program, and Gilkey of
Middleport graduated from the
combination/pipe welding pro·

~he Hoban Institute of Welding

Technology located at Troy is the
largest institution in the U.S. dedicated to the training of welders and
technicians. Since its founding in
1930, more !han 75,000 have completed courses at the school.

1 YfAR WARRANTY

I VfAR WARRAN1Y

-·
A

• • lEPI

=·

GALLIPOLIS
•

OPEII SEVEII DAYS AWEEK
StoN Houn~: 8 1.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Frtdav,
I 1.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday, 1nd 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday
- . . . -...... '17.1 ....

209 Upper River Road
446-3807

�Friday, July 22, 1994
Page-8--The Dally Sentinel

heavy pan . Whisk unlll the mixture is
l1ght and the sugar di sso lves

FOOD

Add the hot mtlk slowly, whroktng
untll :-;mooth . Heat over low hl'at. sl!r-

nng constant ly. until

th1cken~d

The

mixture. now a cu stard . will co at the

back of a spoon rsee note r DON'T
LF.T IT HOII •. Stram th e miXture tnlo
a bowl and coo l Add the vanilla and

CALTA

cream .

Chil l mixture co mpletely Put in
your ice-cream machine and contin -

lh !\1arialisa falta

ue
lik~

to write about

Note : A home economist at the

rec1pes that call for a speci fic piece
II

IIIli

accord ing t o manufacturer's d1·

rect1ons .
USDA Meat and Pou ltry Food Safely
Hot Line 1 t-800 -535·45551 said that

of equipm1: nt . for the obv10us reason

that

don't own the equipment,

cooking egg yolks 1n such a manner

thl· n&lt;ipt.~ ."i will be useless . But I'm
mak1ng an t'XCL'p tio n for icP cream
Honu: mJde icC' cream 1s such a won derful trcd t - and so far superior to
t'Vl' n the s uper prem1um ~lure ­

1s co nsidered sa fe To be doublv sure.
you may want to use a mea t or candy

thermometer to make sure that the
mixture reaches 160 degrees

Yield t quart
- Rec ipes fro m "Home -Cooking
Sa mpler." by Peggy K Glass IPren
lice Hall Press, 19891
VARIATIONS:
Chocolate Stir the scal ded milk

bought brand s - that it's worth ac
qurring equ ipment for.
If vou want a co nc1se history of

wh;i is arguab ly Americas favorite
desse rt . I rrfer vou to John Mariani 's

"Oi ctionary or"Amencan F'ood and
Dr~nk" l!~ e ars t Books, 19941 . a won ·
derful food reference which devotes

int o ·~

cup un swee tened cocoa powder

and whisk unt il smooth before addmg
to the eggs and sugar
four p&lt;.tge~ to th e confec tion . Accord Coffee : Add t to 2 tablespoons m·
in g to Mari;wi, ice crea m has its ori - slant espresso powder to the hot milk
gins in a ncie nt Gree k and Roman
Choco late chip Add I cup m1n1
time!-i. and was popular1zed in Amer- chocolate chi ps to the ch illed base
ICa bv the t 700s. I George Washin g- before making it into ice cream
ton . Mariani reports, spent $200 on

Mmt. Substitute

'1

teaspoon mint

1ce cream in the summer of 1790 extract for the I teaspoon vanilla ex tract.
for Maki ng Ice."1 The first compact
Maple -Nut Sub stitute •, cup maple
1ce-c-ream mach ine was invented in syrup for the sugar. Add •, cup rough 1846 in New .Jersey. By 1850 the ly chopped walnuts or pecans to the
de sse rt was no longe r a no ve lt y, chilled base before making it into ice
prompti ng the editor of "Godey's cream .
Lady's Book" to write that "a party
fru1l &lt;Strawberry, Blueberry ,
wtlhoul ice cream would be like Peach!: usc o nly ~ cup milk to make
breakfast without bread or a dinner the custard. Wash fruit Hull straww1thout a roast." And by World War berries or peel peaches Sweeten to
L writes Manani. ice cream wa s de- taste. Add 2 cups crushed &lt;or peeled
clared an "essential food stufr' so and mashed! sweetened fruit to th e
that its ingredients were not rationed. ch1lled bas e before making the ice
alone. and ow ned a "Cream Machine

In 1991 , Mariani writes, America

cream .

produced t .48 billion gallons of frozen
Gin ger : Heal milk with • cup
desserts. a category which includes chopped and peeled fresh ginger root.
frozen yogurt. And the country's fa - Stram before adding to lhe egg mixvorite flavors of 1ce cream. wntes ture .
Mariani. a re vanilla. chocolate, straw-

VANILLA SNOW

berry and butter peca n.

=

BASIC ICE CREAM

3

1-~

= r (see note)
Pinch san
cup milk, scalded
,,.peon vanilla extract
cups heaVy cream

.
d It
Combine volks. sugar a c a o

1-~

cups

2

cup half-and-hall
181'1 !P'" 15 sugar
VIKlilla betwl, 1-inch piece
large egg whites

~
7

milk

In a small bowl, combine the milk,
. half.and-halfand 6tablespoons sugar:
Cut the vamlla bean '" half length
wise. and scrape oul the tmy black

A hou se-to-house fund drive for
donations to the Meigs unit of th e
American Cance r Society is underway.
Canva ss ing of commu nit1 es
began earlier this month and wdl
contmuc through Ju ly.
J1m Thomas, chairman of th e
local unit 's fund drive, announced
worke rs in the various communitics.
They arc:
Pomeroy - Carolyn Grueser,
Ann Rupe, Jane Wa lton, Ellie
Blacttnar, Carol McCullough, Carolyn Thomas. Kathy Price. Ne llie
Pnoto by Pavl 0 Bo1sve rr lor New E ngland Cu,'mary ln srdu!e
Wr~ght, Gertrude Cas to , Frank
PEACH ICE Crt•atn won'l last long om·c it n •ac ht•s tht• tab lt'.
Vaughan, Hop e Moore, Jane
Snou
ffer , Barbara Fields, Barbara
Yield.
I
pi
c
seeds inside Add the bean and the
Logan , Mary Morris, Jean Powel l,
- Thi s is rnv owu creation . which
~crapings to th e milk mixture Stir
Apn l Smit h, Do nna Carr, Vera
with a spoon until thf' sugar IS diS · I 1nvented in . de speratiOn fo r my
daughter's btrlhday pa rty on a day Crow , and Joan Corder.
so lved.
Rutla nd - Su1.y Ca rpente r,
In a clean metal bow l, bea t egg we had a power outage and I nN~drd
Penny Dewhurst. Lill y Kennedy,
whit es until they form soft peaks . Add a no-bake cake ·
' l~H NE:WSI 'A.PEH E NT ERPRI S ~ ASSN
Edi th Hubbard, and Brenda Bolin.
re maining tables poon of sugar and
Racmc - Jane Beegle, Mar y A.
beat some more until whiles form
Huddles ton, Li nd a Hill, Carolyn
sllff peaks
Remove the v&gt; ntlla bean from the
Powell, Chris Harris, Jcan e ll c
milk mixture Add the egg whi tes lu
Lawrence. Julie Randolph ,
the milk mixture, and fo ld the two to\IIddleport - Judy Cowa n,
gether. freeze in an iee-cream maker
Sarah Fow ler, Mary Grim, Adam
according to manufacturer's directions.
Grim, Ida Co unts, Sharon Wise,
SNYDER
Yield: 3 cups .
Dest ··: fl rlant s or Char les and Kathy Hood, Pau l Casci, Teresa
- Recrpe from "Fan ny at Chez
Alm a 111nzman Snyder gathered Carr. Kathy Wilfong, Bob Freed.
Pan isse." by Altce Waters I Harper
recently at Star Mill Park in Racine Debra Roush, Caro l Harper, Erin
Collin s, 19921
for a reunion . A covered dish din - Harper, Twi la Child s, Pat Carson,
ncr was enjoyed by the 62 descen- Ve lma Rue, and Mcron Grucscr.
HOMEMADE ICE CREAM PIE
Syracuse/Minersv ille - Martha
dent s and guests attending.
Crust:
McPhail
, Donna Bye r, Julie Hubhmes Teaford pre sided at a
bard,
Jo
Ellen Roush, Kathy Cum chocolate wafer cookies
short meeting with officen&gt;' reports
ings,
Carol
Adams, Dorothy Sayre,
cup butter, melted
be ing given. Elec ted officers for
Debbie
Lowery,
Randi Hill, Jan
teaspoon cinnamon
the 1995 reunion were Pete Snyder, president; Evelyn Manuel, vice
Filling:
president ; Carolyn Robinson, sec- Matthew and Kayla Salser, Ken retary; and Joe Holman, treas urer.
net h Snyder, Eloise Eblin , Terry
quart ol yoor lavorite home- ·
Recognized and presented gifts and Barbara Le wi s , and Ky le
made ice cream
were Troy Zwilling, oldest man;'
Toppings (i.e.: sliced frurt for Clara Powell, oldest woman; Ri ggs.
Out -o f-town family memb ers
lrurt ice cream, chocolate chips Daniel Lawson, youngest boy;
and
gues ts attending were Harr y
or candles for vanilla or choco- Olivia Murphy, youngest girl; EveVcrd1na Snyder, Delaware;
and
~ate ice cream, candied ginger
lyn Man uel, larges t family; and Kathy , Roy. Sa ndra, Jimmy ,
for ginger ice cream)
Ralph Shain, traveling the farthest.
Richard Olivia Murph y, Love ly,
Anending were Carol, Carolyn Ky.; Robert Lawson, Jr., Deborah ,
Put wafers in a plastic bag. close
and crus h with a rolling pin, to make and Nikki Robinson; Evelyn, Joan Jeremiah , Nico le, Daniel, and
crumbs. Put crum bs in a bowl. add Jill and Jenn y Manuel; Dave and Ali sha , Citronella . Ala .; Patsy He lmelted butler and cinnamon and mix . Jane Graham, Harry and Clay ton to n, Delaware ; Conn ie Ransom ,
Press into a 9-inch pie plate Refrig - Shain, Sheila Long, Jani ce and Marengo; Joe , Joey, and Bobb ie
David Lawson, Troy Zw illing , Holman . Westervi lle; Ralph and '
erate about a ·, hour.
Mean whil e, make the ice cream . Arnold and Ruth Johnson, Wilda Marlene Shain, Lake Wales, Fla.;
When set. spoon into the crust-lined Scarberry , Crystal Barnett, Ruth Rita, Robert and Tina Trav is, Jackpie pan. Top as desired, cover lightly and Sam Shain, Luci ll e Lawson son, Mich .
with plastic wrap, and freeze. Remove and Earl Holman; Charles Shain,
The 1995 reunion wi ll be held
from freezer a few minutes before Jessie Jar"eli, Jane Teaford, Jean on July 16 at Star Mill Park.
serving so It Will be easy to cut
and Sampson Hall, Kathy, Mike,

Family

Reunion

mmunity calendar---

SUNDAY
FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM Joy
MIDDLEPORT - Rev ival ,
Mt.
Olive
Singers
performing
at
Ash Street Free Will Baptist
Church, Middleport, Friday, Satur- Community Church Sunday at 7
day, Sunday, 7:30 each evening. p.m.
Evangelist Clovis Vanover.
POMEROY - Biggs reunion,
Sunday, home of Nathan Biggs.
SATURDAY
RACINE - Fun match dog
POMEROY - Singer reunion,
show, free of charge, Saturday, Star
Sunday,
noon, Senior Cjtizcns CenMill Park, Racine. Registration, 9
ter.
to II a.m.; judging at noon .
Plaques and ribbons to be awarded.
MONDAY
Call Meli ssa Holsinger. 949-2487
POMEROY - Patti and Scott
for more infonnation. Amberwood
Anderson, featuring Lenny, will
and Horizon Kennels, sponsors.
conduct Bible school at Carleton
SYRACUSE - Meigs County Church on Kingsbury Road MonLi tter Conuol Recycle Day Satur- day through Friday, 6 to 8 p.m. For
day from 9 a.m. to noon in parking tran sportation call 992-7690 or
lot across from Syracuse Municipal 992-2384,
Building.
TUPPERS PLAINS - VacaRACINE - Racine First Baptist uon Bible school, "Code Jesus",
Church family picnic, 6 p.m., Star theme at St Paul United Methodist
Mtll Park.
Church. Monday from 6:30 to 8:30

each evening through Friday. Three
years of age through six th grade .
Evcryonc welcome.
POMEROY - Train s how al
Meigs Library, full week through
July 31, noon to 9 p.m . Monday
through Friday, noon to 5 on Saturday, and I to 5 on Sunday. No
charge.

Edgar Velez, OhiO Humanities
Council program officer, will be on
the University of Rio Grande/Rio
·Grande Community College cam:ous from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. July 29

Danielle R. Kennedy

:Kennedy family
:announces birth
Dr. and ~ . Larry D. Kennedy
:Of Middleport announce the birth
-of a daughter, Danielle Rosaire
:Kennedy, on June 10 at the Holzer
:Medical Center.
• The infant weighed eight
pounds , one ounce and wa s 21
jnches long. Dr. and Mrs. Kennedy
have anorher daughter, Erinne
Nicole, age five.
· Marerna' randparents are John 1
and Anne Leahy, Hilliard, and
paternal grandparents are Lawrence
and Eva Kennedy, South Point.

io lead a workshop on how to
sec ure OHC funding for special
arts projects and/or events. The
workshop will be held m the Fme
and Perfonning Arts building.
Velez will discuss the criteria
for OHC funding eligibility. Any
non -profit organization in Ohio
may apply for funding, whether the
organization is planning a. book
discussion, public leclllre sertes, or
larger educational program that
calls for humanities speakers.
The OHC representative will be
available to have lunch with worlr:shop participants in the Student
Center Annex dining room on the
Rio Grande campus following the
workshop . l'anicipants must pay

Sofa&amp; Loveseat

POMEROY - Meigs County
Vete ran s Service Commission,
Monday, 7:30 p.m. at Mulberry
Ave. office.

Queen Mattress Set

Wing Chairs

SYRACUSE - Syrac use Presbyterian Church VBS, Jul y 25-29,
10 a.m. to noon.

Set

for lunch.
Past OHC awards have ranged
from $600 to support book dtscus·
sions to $1500 for a scnes of leelure panels, or smgle Stle pro~s.
and up to $15,000 for mulli·Stte,
regional or statewide programs.
The Counctl has awarded grants
for proJects smce 1972 that focus
o~ top1cs of pubhe mterest, such as
history, phtiOSOIJhy, hterature, and
other human1t1es fields. OHC
rece1ves liS fundmg from the
National Endow!"enl for the
Humamues and pnvate donors m
Ohio. A volun~r board of 25 govems the counciL
Those needing to register for the
OHC workshop may call 245-7360.

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9

Cutler said, " I'm confident we're
go in g to get a fair hearin g," but
adm inisuation spokeswoman Dec
Dec Myers said Republicans may
try to Iurn next week' s events V'to
a political spectacle.
" If the past is prologue, I'm not
sure that" a fair hearing is "going
to happen," Myers said.
Republicans countered that they

By MI CHELLE FAUL
Associated Pres.s Writer
GOMA, Zaire (AP) - Bodies
li e everywhere. Deadly cholera and
other diseases run rampant. Food is
scarce and water polluted.
The steadily deteriornting conditions in the sprawling camps that
sprung up here have driven many
of the more than I million Rwandan re fugecs into despairing passivit y a nd pu shed others to the
edge.
" What do you mea n I mu st
make sure to boil th e water?"
Dafrosc Kabutumwa asked incredulously of a reporter Thursday.
"Can't you see we're all going to
die here anyway?"
Weakened by exhaustion, malnutrition and terror , the refugees
arc dying from cholera at a rate too
fast to count, relief workers say.
Others fall victim to dysentary,
dehydration and starvation.
At a mass gravesite, a uaffic
jam built up as trucks loaded with
bodi es waited their turn to dump
corpses.
"It 's been like this all afternoon. There arc atleast40 (bodies)

in each truck ," said a French soldi er at the scene.
In Muni gi, one of the several
refugee camps around Goma, there
was one cholera case on Tuesday.
By Thursday, 250 people were
dead .
"We had ma ybe 10 cases
repo rted yesterday , doz e ns
ovcrnighl, today hundreds, and it
will continue," Isabelle Pardieu of
Doctors Without Borders said.
The humanitarian agency said
it s doctors reported 800 dea d
before they stopped counling the
bodie s on a five-mile stretch of
road from Go ma to the Munigi
camp.
Cholera most commonly
spreads through water contaminated by excrement. The U.N. High
Commissioner for Refugees said it
needs governments to help build
60,000 lauines and provide clean
water to try to get the epidemic
under control.
In the meantime, some despairing refugees are beginning to crack
under the stress.
A crazed woman gyrated naked
down the middle of the road lead-

wi ll evenhanded - but won't hesi tate to ask difficult questions.
At the hearings, "you will sec
some very decent people who may
have stepped over the Iinc to prote ct the pre siden cy," Rep. Jim
Leac h, ranking Republican on the
House Banking Commi ttee, sa1d in
an interview.
Cu ller - who IS l1 ke ly to be one

in g from town to Goma airport on
Thursday, shouting expletives at
the apathetic crowds of refugees
and continuing when she stopped
in front of II bodies wrapped m
mats.
French troops who ar ri ved last
month on a controversial miss ion
to save people from slaughter have
had to divert their attention from a
sa fe zone they set up in sou thwest
Rwanda 10 help with the chaos created by the ref ugces across the bo rder.
The refugees belong to R wanda 's Hutu majority, whose militias
arc accused of slaug hterin g hun dred s of Ihousand s of minont y
Tut.si people since Rwanda's president, a Hutu, died in a my sterious
plane crash on April6.
They ned advancing fighters of
the Tutsi -dominat cd Rwandan
Patriotic Front in a wave that has
grown to L7 mill ion people in Jhc
past I0 day s.
Pasteur Bizimungu , th e new
president of Rwanda in stalled by
the RP F, said in a n int erv iew
broadcast Thursday by the Briti sh
Broadcasting Co rp. th at innocent

Old enemies tread friendly path
agreeing on a plan to develop a
desert valley along their border.
The plan is expected to be present·
ed at Monday's summit.
Few Jordanians had ever dealt
with Israelis until this week's dramatic events, which set Jordan and
the Jewish state on a solid course
toward peace after 46 ye:m of connlcL
For them, lsrnelis were the ulti mate enemies, a ruthless people
born to oppress Ihe Arabs and grab
their land.
But if anyihing, the session here
attended by Peres, Jordanian Prime
Minister Abdul Salam Majali and
Secretary of State Warren Christopher was more like a meeting of
future in-laws at a marriage reception than an encounter between
foes.
Majali himself set the party in
inotion by warmly welcoming
Peres and escorting him around by
hand. The only gesture missing was
a warm em brace and the traditional

A statement issued by the
Defense Information Systems
Agency descri bed the Milnct sys tern as having been "minimally
affected thus far" by the ha&lt;:kers.
The break-ins have increased sig nificantly since February, when the
Co mput er Emergency Res pon se
Team, a quasi -governmental orga ni zat ion financed by th e Defense
Department and based at Carnegie
Mellon University in Pitt sburgh,
reponed that unknown Intruders

·fl ROBERT GREENE
:A~ Farm Writer
- WASHINGTON (AP) _Raw,
]Inshucked oysters like the kind at
'Seafood bars may become harder to
:l'ind from April through October
l&gt;ccause of health concerns.
:.. The Food and Drug Administration says it may urge Florida,
l.ouisiana and Texas to impose an
ll nnual six-month ban on raw ,
llnshucked oysters h~rvested off
1hcir coasts and reqUJre warmng
~abels for the shucked ones.
: In a letter this week to the Inter:State Shellfish Sanitation Conferoence, a group of state regulators
end indusuy representatives, the
l"DA suggested the ban as a way to
~uard against a form of bacteria
hat can be deadly 10 people with

of the ear ly witnesses when the
Hou se Banki ng Committee opens
heari ngs Tuesday - sent a letter to
Capitol HJII asking that a requested
ethics investigation of Whitewater
leaks be expanded.
T here had been Whit ewate r
leaks earlier in the week. promptmg a request for an ethics inquiry.
In th e latest instance. compla1ncd
the Whi te House, Newsweek mag-

Hutu civilians need not fear
reprisals for the massac res or Tutsis by Hutu ex tremi s ts . He sa1d
those responsible for th e killings
would be brought to just ice, and
urged refugees to return home.
A million refug ees ca me to
Goma, an eastern Zai rian front1cr
town thai normall y supports 80,000
people.
Most carry plastic cans and form
a procession blocking the four-mil e
road to Lake Kivu, where they collect water slim y and thick with pol lution.
Relief agencies hav e been
promi sing to provide food m four
refugee camps being organ1zcd
within 30 miles of Goma, hoping tu
attract people away from Jhe overwhelmed city.
" We would go if we had th e
means. But we' ve walked for four
days. The children arc sick and
coughing, everyone has diarrhea,
we' re living on sweet potatoes, we
can 't do it, " said Abraham Ndayisaba, who grew the potatoes on his
plot across the border and carried
them over when he ned.

azinc had information from a

Whitewater deposition given by
se ni or presidential advise r George
Stcphanopou los.
As a Whitewater witn ess.
Stephanopou los woul d be asked to
explain his conversations with fed eral regulators. One focus of his
contacts: hi s unhappiness over the
hirin g of a Republican to handl e
civil cases ari sin g out of the col lapse of Madison Guaranty - the
savings and loan ow ned by the
Clint ons' Whitewater partner,
James McDougaL
Cutler and fanner White House
co un sel Bernard Nu ssba um arc

$48881

'

.• ,.

Kim's death .
White House press secretary
Dee Dee Myers said on Thursday
the date for resumed talks had not
been set because the agreement still
had to be confinned by both governments. U.S: sources in Washington, speaking on condition of
anonymity, said they were expected to resume in early ~ugusL
North Korea's official news
agency, through a Foreign Ministry
statement, announced today the
talks would be held Aug. 5.
The date was agreed on during
Thursday's low-level talks, the
Korea Ceoqal News Agency said.
North 'Korea denies il is developing nuclear weapons. But it has .
refused for 16 months to permit
international inspections to verify
its claims.

•

•••

"A - Cut - Above"

.

Perm Special - $30.00
Highlights - $30.00
Mini- Makeover- Shampoo, cut, style,
facial or manicure- $14.99
Come In and see
Owner &amp; Operator Tracy Norris Hupp
Operator Beverlee Wickline
Phone- 949-2817
Also nt~edlng part time help/
Call from 9:00 - 7:00
'·

and read aloud.

No bidder may wllhdraw
hlo bid wllhln thirty (30)

to all

of

the

requirement• contained In

tho bid packet, parUculorty
to tho Federal Labor
Standard• Provlelona and

Davh - Bacon

Wagea,

varloua
lnaurance
requirements, varloue equal

opportunity provlolono, and
the requirement lor a
payment
bond
and

performance bond for 100%
of the contract price.

bid formo may be aecured
al lhe office of lhe lllelga

daya after the actual date ol

County ComrJJiaalonera In
Courthouae, 200 E. 2nd
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio.

Commlaalonera reaervea

Each bid muol be
accompanied by ellher 1 bid
bond In on omounl of 100%
of the bid amount with a

lho opanlng thereof. Molgo
County
Board
of
the right to waive any
lnformallliH or lo reject any
or all bldo.
(7) 22, 29, (8) 5, 1994; 3TC

aurety aatlafactory to the

Public Notice

aforeaald lllelgo County
Commlaalonera

or

by

corllfled chock, caohloro
check, or teller of credll
upon a oolvent bank In the
10% of the bid amount In
favor of lhe aforeaald lllelgo
County Commlnlonero. Bid
Bonde
ahall
be
accompanied by Proof of
Authority of the offlclal or
agent olgnlng lhe bond.
Bldo oholl be oealed and
marked aa "Bid for Racine
Sidewalk Repair, CDBC
ProJect , Molgo County
Commlaalonera"

and

mailed or delivered to:
Molgo
County

Commlaalonen,

llelga

County Courthouoe, 200 E.
2nd Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
Allonllon of bidden lo

PUBLIC NOTlCE
Tho following were
received/prepared by tho
Environmental
Ohio
Prolecllon Agency (OEPA)
laal week. Effocllve dalaa of
final acllona and laauance
datea of Propoaed Acllona
and of Draft Actlona are
alated. Final octlona may be
appealed, In wrlllng, wllhln
30 daya of lhe date of thla
nollce, lo the Environmental
Board of Review, Rm. 300,
236 E. Town Sl, Columbua,
OH, 43215. Notice of any
appeal ohall be filed wllh
tho director wllhln 30 daya.
Propoud acllona will
become final unleaa 1

wrlnen adJudication hearing
requaat Ia aubmlned wilhln
(Continued on Page 111

Acquisitions
Anniversary Sale
Sterling Silver Jewelry ·25%
Brass &amp; Crystal Giftware· 20%
Pulsar Watches· 30%
Cross Pen &amp; Pencils -30%
Special Selection gemstone &amp; 10 &amp; 14K
Gold Rings &amp; 14K Charms

50% Off Retail Prices
See Our New Summer
Sale Merchandise

News Hotlin

SUMMER SPECIAL AT

called

Plana, apeclflcatlona, and

to peace

J

20.

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
Sealed propooalo for the
repair of 7,500 oquare feel
of sidewalk In Racine, Ohio
will bo received by the
Malgo
County
Commlaolonero at their
office In the lllelga County
Courthouae, 200 E. 2nd St,
Pomeroy, Ohio unlll10 Lm.,
Auguol12, 1994 and then al
1 p.m. at oald oHfce opened

amount of not le11 than

liver disease or weakened immune containers ~ould have 10 be industry will fight the n~ion.
systems.
labeled warmng that the oysters
The proposal seems r~ther farOysters from the three Gulf should be eaten fully cooked.
, reachmg m tenns of restncung the
Coast states are marketed throughFor the ban to be approved, It usc of a product b~ people f~~
out the counuy . Those harvested would have to be formally pro - whtch 11 has no parucular nsk,
from April through Ociober, how- posed at the conference, With FDA satd Lee J. Wedd~g, executtve of
ever, may contain vibrio vulnificus backmg, and that hasn t occurred the Nauonal F1shenes lnsutute.
bacteria that the government esti- yet:.
,
,
mates claim 151ivesayear.
We hope thatth1s years conAlcoholics with damaged livers fcrcncc_ will constder our ,recomarc vulnerable. So are people on mcnct:!tton and adop~effecuveconchemotherap.y, as well as .those trolsFo "f!'o ~fi J_ B~~·j::;tor 0
wtth AIDS, diabetes, liver disease, the
A s .!ce o e.
• sru
certain blood disorders or low tn the leuer. , The acuo~s of the
stomach acid.
·
conference w1ll dctermtne wiha~
If adopted by the conference at addtuonal s~ps~~ ~afirlohns je
its annual meeting next month in tn ?,ur mutua g o s e lS s e·
Takoma, Wash ., the ban would ty. C r S th D W I d' ec
allow for the sale of only shucked
aro me ntl
e aa • 0)!' oysters from Gulf Coasl waters tor of food safety for the pJ1vate
during the warm months. And the Center for Sctence 10 th&lt;;. Public
Imerest. called the letter a huge
Tribune 446-2342
shift for the agency." DeWaal's
group obtained the letter and disSentinel992·2155
tributed it to the news media .
Early indications are that the

expected to be two key witnesses in
the heari ngs.
Nusshanm was bncl'cd about the
1nquincs federal reg ulators were
mak 1ng 1nto Madison Guarantv. He
rcsrgncd amid the fl ap over co ntacls between the Whi te House and
the Treasury Department concern ing Madison Guaranty ,
It is Nussbaum' s successor, Cut In, who was hired to come to the
;tdminis tration 's re sc ue after th e
res1gnation. Cutl er wi ll present the
result s of Ius own eth ics inquiry
in to th e White House -Treasury
contacts. which number more than

Public Notice

Public Notice

novi ch, Isra el 's ambassador to
Middle Eastern kiss on the cheek.
It would have been too much for Washington, as both men stood at a
Jordanians watching the scene on corner of th eir confere nce room
live television, two days after they sipping coffee during a break.
" It is very exciting for me to be
saw Israeli officials crossing into
their southern desert border in here," came the genial response
Wadi Araba for negotiations on with a warm handshake.
In another corner, security offiboundaries and water rights.
But off-camera, Israeli and Jor- cials from bolh sides were mindanian officials made up for Ihat gling with each other as they
lapse, hugging each other, recalled wars that had made such
exchanging gifts and nice words encounters impossible a nd th e
and ~erving coffee and soft drinks peace process that brought them
to each other. They even shared together.
The fervor even spread to JOurfood and telephone hnes.
"Here is the lasl bottle of cold nalists . Outside the meeting rooms
water I found," Abdullah Touqan, and under a blazing sun, Jordanian
a Jordanian ne~otiator and king and Israeli reporters stood together
Hussein 's brother-in-law, wid an discussing politics , cracking jokes
Israeli official under the scorching and taking pictures together.
"I never thought the y could be
sun in Wadi Araba . "Let's share
so
wann," said Abeer Qaraeen, a
il."
Similar scenes were repeated on reporter with the Jordanian dail y
Akher Khabar newspaper. "They
the shores of the Dead Sea.
"It is nice to have you here," want to be friends with us and
Fayez Tarawneh, Jordan's chief many Israelis invited me to go visit
peace negotiator told !tamar Rabi- Israel.' '

0

weregalllenng tens ofthousand&gt;of
suppo sedly secret computer passwords .
Assessing the magnitude of the
intrusion is difficult , th e Pentagon
acknowledged .
"Unless the intruders arc appre!tended and datJ arc scilc cl ind 1cat ing t!I c nalltre uf tllc acti l'irics thai
took place, the tlcparuncnt 's ahil ll v
to assess th e seve nt y of thi s 1nclden t is limited." the Pentagon said .

of leaks in Whitewater case

Despair grows in Rwanda refugee camp

.: SEOUL, South Korea (AP) The United States and North Korea
will resume talks aimed at ending a
M-moqth nuclear standoff on the
torean peninsula on Aug. 5, the
ISorth announced today.
• The agreement on the Geneva
iencs which were suspended after
W.e death of North Korean Presi!tent Kim II Sung, was reached
(fter discussions at the United
Nations.
: In another sign of easing tenlions, Soulh Korea announc~d
(Dday it will lift an order that put us
~O.OOO·member military on high ·
ilert because of Kim's death.
: Defense Minisuy officials cited
(De absence of unusual troop move·
Q)enl!l in the North. South Korea
!tad ordered the alert because it
!eared instability in the North after

Oak
Daybed

u.,. $19888

By PETE YOST
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - With
Whit ewater hearings looming ,
h1 gh-level Clinton appointees prepared for the glare of the national
spotlight and the Wh ite House fired
off a lcucr to Congress complammg of leaks.
White Hou se Counse l Lloyd

complain~

ongoing, incident," the Pentagon
sa id in a statement today . The
intruders, the Pentagon said, "had
the ability to steal, alter, or erase
information on the affected computers and to shut comp ut ers
down."
In addi tion, th e hackers, both
from the Uni ted States and abroad,
were able to guarantee their ability
to gam later access and to keep tabs
on passwords needed to get Into the
system .

V.S.-North Korea nuclear talks
1o resume Aug. 5, North says

$24888

u.,. s15888

White house

1

Beige
Vinyl Sofa
Jhr•

ar weapons and the movement of · . Andsofar,thePentagonhasnot
troops and slups. .
ftgured out how to stop the hackBut
Betsy
McDonald,
crs.
spokeswoman for the Defense
The Internet is an international
Information Systems Agency, srud
col lection of 2.2 mi lli on linked
th e compromi sed syst~ms mcl ude
computers at universities, corporathose used for balhsuc weapons
lions , and govern ment agencies and
research, arrcraft and ship design,
used by more than 20 million pcom1htary payroll , personne l record s,
pie. The Department of Defense
pro c ~rement, e lectron rc mali ,
Milnet system is linked to Internet
supercomputer modeling of battle''The DOD, alo ng with many
f1 cld envlfonments and compu ter
other governmen t and commercial
secunty research.
entities, is treating thi s as a serious

:f DA suggests six-month ban on raw oysters

44

,..,, $38888

Oak Fllllsh

Associated Press Wnter
WASHINGTON (AP) . Intruders hav,e been tappmg mto
the Pentagon s unclassified computer system through the Internet
f~r the past seven months and some
have stolen~ altered and erased
rccords, offictals 5ald today.
Inv es tigators have found no
1nd1cat10n that the hackers have
entcredclassified systems that controt cnucal funcuon s such as nucle-

By JAMAL HALABY
Associated Press Writer
SOUTH SHUNEH, Jordan (AP)
- For many Jordanians, the
·Israelis standing on the roof of the
-Dead Sea Spa hotel here appeared
~o be dancing. Few knew lheir
'swaying movements were part of
Jewish prayers.
A Jordanian army officer helped
'!In elderly Israeli journalist into a
·helicopter, a small act but an exam.ple of direct contact that would
'have been unthinkable only a week
ago.
:. Everything has changed now.
· The historic visit Israeli Foreign
;Minister Shimon Peres paid to the
"kingdom on Wednesday, and King
,Hussein's upcoming summit with
1sraeli Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabin in Washington have changed
::¥csterday's enemies Io today's
friends.
Negotiators wound up a week of
:fleace talks Thursday by discussing
'fi proposed free-trade zone and

Bunk Bed
, 1,,, s14888

8 pc. Solid Cherry

$

''

Solid Oak Table

ALL YOU CAN EAT

Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Green Beans
Hot Buttered Roll
CoHee or Small Drink

Lavcndar, Margaret Stewart, and
Mary Byer.
.
Chester Township - Ma1da
Mora, Don Mora, Charlotte Elbcr fcltl Bob Elberfeld , Clarice Kraut te r.' Lmda Faulk, Norma Custer,
Judy Bunger, Mildred Gaul , Patty
Pickens. Debbie Chcvalter, Gold1c
Frederick , lnzi e Newel l, Peggy
Harri s, Debbie Drake, Pat Smllh,
Oris Smith, Wilma Ballard, Ralph
Ballard, Jo sephine Osborn, Harold
Osborn, Susie Karr, Heidi Elbafcld, Selma Call , Barbara Crow.
Sutton Tow nship - Will1am
M1ddleswarth, Leann e Beegle, Bil l
Downi e, Linda Hamm.
Bedford Town ship - J ean
Werry, Janet Pcav lcy, Ol ltc Sin ·
clair, Sharon Johnson, Holen Qu lvcy, Marlene Harrison. and Brenda
Roush.
Sctpio Town ship Eva
Howard, Mildred Lee, Pamcl;1 BarIcy, Li sa Workman. Mildred Work man, Kathy De skin s, Ro sa li e
Sayre.
Lebano n Town ship - Jo yc,·
Quillen, Kay Proffitt , allll Du'""'
Rose.
Letart Town s hip - Mary
Shuler, Ranclla Wh ee ler, and
Vanessa Shuler.
Olive Town s hip - Theresa
Church, Nancy Was htcr, Grace
Weber, and Debbie Gilmore.
Orange Town ship - Gay Ann
Burke, Bi ll Ca rr . Am y Hendrix .
Meli ssa Guess, Marlene Donovan,
Ne lli e Parker, Faye Watson. and
Susan Pullin s.
· Sa lem Town shi p - Lin da
Montgomery, Ca th erin e Shenefield, Nellie Hatfi eld , Elea nor
Thomas.
Rut13nd Township - Margaret
Kennedy, Janet Bolin, Shirley Simmon s, Jeanie Cremean s, Charlollc
Harper, Jane lhle, Brenda Handl ey,
and Anita White.
Columbia Township - Donna
Faccm yer, Beulah Perry, Freda
Smith, Marilyn Ray, and Gloria
Hutton.
Salisbury Towns hip - Ruth
Rifne, Gcri Halley. Zora John~o n ,
Donna Jones, Nellie Brown, Agnes
Dixon, Madglc Sm ith, Laura Harriso n, Diana Coates, Martha Vennari, Scoll Dillon, Juli e Dillon,
Sheila Harris, Pandora Co llin s,
Fra nc es Shrimplin, Lenora
Leifheit, Jeannie Witherell, Sandi
Hanning , Maxine Little.

HOT SUMMER SIZZLIN' CLEARANCE
Blue, Green, Mauve Floral
Not $1999.95

TUESDAY
RACINE - The Racine Area
Community Organization (RACO),
6:30 p.m. Star Mill Pail&lt;, Tuesday.
New members welcome.

ByJ~HNDIA~ON!J

EMPIRE FURNITURE'S
Thursday, Friday,
&amp; Saturday
July 22nd, 23rd &amp; 24th

Velez to lead workshop at URG on
OHC funding for special events

f

The Dally Sentinel

Hackers infiltrating unclassified Pentagon computers

Cancer society kicks
off local fund drive

Getting the scoop on
homemade ice cream

I usually don 't

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, July 22, 1994

Rings from $39.00
Diamond Heart- Hugs &amp; Kisses

s599 1/2 Ct.· T.W. Marquise
&lt;)11;/) Anniversa~ Band
,. ~

. ~x~~· ,\l
Hugs &amp; K1sses
~·:: 4{'-,
.l.~_,-yj, Diamond Bracelet 1/4 Ct. '199 ~.._~
""

Mothers Rings from '69

-Prize WinnersSterling Silver Necklace &amp; Bracelet
Jeannie Allen
Cross Pen &amp; Pencil Set
Vicki Adams

Next Drawing for Mickey Mouse Pulsar
Pocket Watch - s200 Value

.9lc.quisitions ~ine Jewe{ry
91 Mill Street • Middleport, Oh. 45760
614-992·6250

.

Ananclng Available

•,

;..;

�Page-10

The Dally Sentinel

Apostolic

Church of Chnst
Pom..-oy Churdl ul Chrllt
212 W. Main SL
Pa&amp;IOr. And,.w MiJCI
S'-"lday Scl&gt;ool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdnt:sday

Service.~ -

7 p.m.

...........,, W-eChurdt uiCbrllt
33226 Otildren'• Home Rd.
Sunday Scllool · II a.m.
Wonhip · IOLm., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servia:• - 7 p.m.
Middleport Church &lt;I Chrtll

5th and Main
PallOr: AI Hartsoo
Yoolh Minister. Bill Frazier

Ropo Baplilt c~~:J~~l
S70Gnnt S..,
Putor: Rev . David

Sunday ochool - 9:45a.m.
Wonhip - 11 Lm. and 7 p.m.

Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Free Will Baplilt Churdo
Ash S&lt;n:ct. Middleport
Paa10r: Lea HaymUI

Sllurday Service - 7:30 p.m.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.,
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.
,,, RMtlaDd Flrll Bapllll Olll'do
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip- 10:4S a.m.
Flnl Baplilt
Paa10r. Paul Stin1011
EutMainSt.
Sunday Scltool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
Flnl s-bom Bar.lllt
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Panor. E. LomarO'Bry111t
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip - 10:45 Lm., 7:00p.m.
Wednelday Service~ ·7:00p.m.
Flnl Boplilt ChMrdo
6lh and Pllmer St., Middleport
Sunday School - 9: I5 a.m.
Wonhip- IO:U Lm., 7:00p.m.
A.B.Y.- 5:30p.m.
l..onfa Supper hi Sunday of every month.
Wednelday Service-7:00p.m.

p,......,,

Racine Flnl Boplilt
Youth PallOr. Aaron Yoona
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:40 Lm., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service~ . 7:00p.m.

SU••
a.. Boplilt
Panor. Bill Linle
Sunday School- IO..m.

Worship - II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wodn..day Savicea- 7:30 p.m.

MLU..._Ba~
Sunday Scbool-9:4 a.m.
Ev..un,- 6:30p.m.
·
Wednc&amp;day Servic:a • 6:30p.m.
Pulor : Joe N.

lloiN.. _

Old -·Free Wll Bopllat Chlll'&lt;h
2IKIOI S.. Rt. 7. Middlopoft
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
E...un,-7:30p.m.
Thu..day Service&amp; - 7:30
HUIIIdt Bapllat Chlll'do
St.RL 143jwtoftRL 7
Pa-= Rev. James R. Aarl., Sr.
Sunday Scbool . 10 Lm.
Wonhip -IIL~.,6pm.
Wc:G!e&amp;daySemcea-7pm.

~-~~=PallOr. James E. KeeWonhip -IOa.m., 1 p.m.
WeGteaday Servicea -7 p.m.
Folllt Boplilt Olll'do
Rlilrood S.., Muon
Sunday School . 10 Lm.
~-IIL.m.,6pm.

W

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service• - 7 p.m.

Keno Churdl or Chrlsl
Wonh;p · 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sehool - 10:30 Lm.

s..........,. Ridge Churdl or Chrlsl
Putor: Jack ColegfO\Ie

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonltip - 10:30 a.m .. 6:30p.m.
:r Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m.
lJoo Church or Cbrbe
Pomeroy,llorrisrnville Rd. (RLI43)
Pastor: Roger Watson

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 un., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday ServiCCI - 7 pm.

Tuppen Ploln Churdt or ChriSI
Pastor. Bill Winu

s...day School- 9 a.m.

Wonhip. 9:4S a.m., 6:30p.m.
Bradbury Church &lt;I Cbrlat
Pastor. Tom Runyan
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonh;p - 10:30 Lm.
Youth Meclifll- 5:30p.m.
Evonin&amp; Service - 7 p.m.
Wednesday, Bible Study · 7 p.m.
RuU.nd Churcll &lt;I Chrbe
Putor. Eusme E. Undr.J'wood
Sunday Scl&gt;ool - 9:30a.m.
Worlltip. 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Bradford Churdl of Chrbe
Comer ofSL RL 124 &amp;: Bsadbury Rd.
Evanacliat: Derdt SlUmp
YOUlh Minister. Mark Notter
s...day Sdlool- 9:30a.m.
Wonltip - 8:00 o.m., 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wodnadty Service• -7:30p.m.
Hickory Hllll Churdl ul Cbrlsl
. Pu10r. Jooeph B. Hoakino
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednadty Service~- 1 p.m.
Uborty Chrllllaa Chord!
Dater
Pas10r. Woody Call
Sunday EV&lt;Ilin&amp; ·6:30p.m.
Thu..day Service - 6:30 p.m.

Bapllat

Racine, OJ-I
Putor : Rev. Hart Shuler
Sunday Sehool - I 0:30 a.m.
Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
Thu..day Service&amp;- 7:00p.m.

y Servicea- 7 p.m.

LanpYUit Cltrlsllaa Clturch
Sunday Sdlool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdnelday S.rvi..,7:30 p.m.
RBDlor:l&lt; Gro .. Ourdt
Putor. Gene

z-

Sunday ochool- 10::!0 a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30a.m., 1 p.m.

ML-Bopllol
-... A Main St., Middlopoft
Pa-. Rev. Gilbert Cnia.lr.
Suodoy School-9:30a.m.
Wunhip- 10:45 Lm.
~ully Bapllat

Sunday Sehool- \1:30 Lm.

Wanltip- 10:45 Lm.
Thunday Servioea -7:30p.m.

b - Jl'ne Wll Bopllat
Saltm s..

-Rev. Paul Teylor
Suaday Sehool - 10 Lm.
l!vonina-7 p.m.
WeGteaday Servic:ea - 7 p.m.
Catho lic
Bocnl Rout~ ChMrdo
161 Molbary Ave., Paneroy, 992-5&amp;98
Pa-. R... Waller B. Heinz
Sol. Coo. 4:45-5:15pm.; Mus- 5:30p.m.
Sun. c.... -8:45-9:15 Lm.,
Sun. Mul - 9:30 Lm.
Doiley Mua -1:30Lm.

Episcopal

Main SL, Pane"')'

326 E.

Rcc1or: Fr. Bill Lyle
Holy Eucharist and s...day Sdlool IILm.
eotr.. hour followina

Holiness
Danvlllt Holbt- Clturdt
31057 Swe Route 325, Lanpvllc
Putor. Rev. Rid&lt; Maloyed
Sunday achool . 9:30 Lm.
Sunda,Y wonhip - I0:35 Lm. A 7 p.m.
Child= 1 church · 10:35 a.m. Y0011h 6 p.m.
Wednesday prayer aervioe - 1 p.m.
R- u1 Slun111 Hull- Churdt
Leading cn..a. Rd .. Rutland
PaJU&gt;r. Rev. Dewey Kina
s...day school· 9:30a.m.
S&amp;mday wonhip -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meetina-7 p.m.

Ryltll Run Rolin. . Cltorcll
Putor. Roben Manley
s...day School . 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thu..day Service-7:30p.m.
l..allrtl CUff Fl'ft Mdllodlat Cburdt
Pa110r: Pc&amp;cr Trembt.y

SW&gt;day School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - I0:30a.m. and 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

SL PaUl Lulllenll Churdt
Come• Sy&lt;:11111010 A Second St, Pane"')'
Putor. Dawn SpaJdina
Sunday School - ~:45 ....
Wonhip - II Lm.

ML Oll•e V - Mot-at
Oft 124 behind WiiWvillc
PallOr. OwJeo , .....

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonltip - I0:30 Lm., 1 p.m.
Thunday Service~ - 7 p.m.
MtlpCoop&lt;nd.. Parllll
Nor11JeutCI.....,.
Alfred
Putor: Shtron HauliiWI
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhif - II Lm, 6:30p.m.

Cit-

PallOr. Shtron HauiiiWI

Wonhip - 9 Lm.
Sunday School- IOLJD.
Thu..day Savicea - 7 p.m.

Panor. Rev.Junes SlliCifidd
Sunday Sdlool - 9:4S a.m.
E..runa · 1 p.m.
Wednesday Servica · 1 p.m.

Joppa
Putor: Bob Randolph
Wonhip . 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.

RutlaDd Churda fll God
Putor: Groaory L. Scan
Sundty School- 10 LID.
Wonhip- II Lm., 6 p.m.
Wcdneoday Servica - 1 p.m.

I.Gnt_...Putor: Rev. l'hillip Scuheny
Sunday Sehool -9:30 Lm.
Wonhip- 10:30 Lm.
Wednesday Servioea - 7:30p.m.

a.....u..

SJ-0Mrdtu1Ged

Apple and SeaJnd Sta.
P11110r: Rev. llonid R•aell
Sunday Sehool and Wcnhip- 9:30 LJD.
E...un, Serviceo- 7 p.m.
Wcdneadey S.rviooa · 7 p.m.

Pas10r. Rev. Atillip Scubcny
Wonhip - 9::fo UD.
Sunday School- 10:30Lm.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
,._,..... Plolal SL Pootl

Cllurdl "'God "' ..... ..,
0.1. While R4. orr St. RL 160
l'lllor. I'll Henaon
Sundty School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m.
Wednelday Scrvi.,.. · 7 p.m.
Now Lite Ovdo fll God
O...ter
Panor. Gary llinea
Somdey Sehool - 9:30 Lm.

PallOr. Shtron Haulllllll

Sunday School- 9 Lm.
Wonhip- 10 am.
Tue&amp;day Servica -7:30p.m.

c-..o .....

A....l'J(SJ,.._)
Panor. Dam Newmaa
Sunday School· 9:4, Lm.
Wonhip - II a.m.
Wedneaday Servic:ea - 7:30p.m.

"~~

. C\"i((

S,.w (B.,.,r.,
a

GRAVELY TRACTOR -SAlES

CLASSIHED ADS
asupermarket
for everything"
SNOUFFER
Rrisht Ideal

New ROYtn Chur&lt;b ultlle N.......,.
Pastor. Glendon Stroud
Suoday Sehool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - I0:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wodnadty Service&amp; - 1 p.m.

Sunday Sehool ·9:30a.m.
Worahip · 10:30 a.m.
Mlnanlllt
Putor. Deroo Newman
Sunday Scl&gt;ool - 9 Lm.
Wonhip · 10 a.m.

FIRE &amp; SAFETY

LooaBotwm

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.
l'Gmeror
PallOr. Rohen E. Robin1011
Sunday Scllool - 9:15a.m.

Tile Belle•ers' FtOOWiblp Mlnllll')'
321 Med!Uiic St., Pomeroy
PallOr. Rev. Marp,.. I. Robinaan
Services: Wodnadty,7:30 p.m.
Sunday' 2:30p.m.

Wonhip - 10:30 Lm.
Bible Swdy "Tuesday - 10 a.m.
Rod&lt; Sprinp
Putor.Keith Rader
S&amp;mdav School- 9:1S o.m.
&lt;ll'llli(&gt; - 10 Lm.
YOU1h Fellowlltip, Sunday · 6 p.m.
RuUoad
Pu10r. Allltur Cralllree
Sunday Scllool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30Lm.
' 1lalrtday Scrvioea . 7 p.m.

RaniJonvllle Coon01unlty Churdl

w

Putor. Theron Durham
Sunday - 9:30a.m. and 1 p.m.

Wednesday · 7 p.m.
(&amp;I

'SAliS &amp; SEIVICE

992-7075

I 7t North Se&lt;ontl A•L
Middl-t, Ohio

s.~-c•ror

Sundty School - 9:15a.m.
Wonhip -10:1, Lm.
Sno...Ule

Panor. Flormce Smith

s...day Scllool - 10 a.m.

2114 South 2nd

Middltporl

Pastor. Rc:v . Phillip Ridenour

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonltip · 10:30 a.m.

Res;eive 20 Free Channels for
1 year wrth purchase .
For delails call:
ELLIOTI APPLIANCES
446-SC151- 1-800-377-2532

Wednetday Servia: - 7 p .m .

Falnlew Bible Church
Letart, W.Va. RL I
Pallc.: Jamct Lewis

Sunday School - II a.m .
Wonhip - 9:30a.m.. 7:30p.m.

Free Estimates

Before 6 p.m. leave
message.

Aller 6 p.m.

614-985-4180

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.

2

In Memory

Fallb Ta.......- Churdt
Bailey RUII Road

P&amp;llor. Rev. EmnM!It Rawaon
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Evenin&amp; 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 1 p.m.
SyrocuJOMI1411 Bridgeman SL, Syncuae
Paator: Roy (Mike) Thompaan
Sunday Schooi-IOa.m.
Ev..un,-6pm.
Wodneoday Servioe . 7 p.m.

Eut~rl

Pastor. ICon Moker
Sunday Scllool- 10 a.m.
Wonhip- 9 a.m.
Wedneoday-7p.m.

Ruel Communi(J Cburdl
Oft Rt 124
Putor. Edael Hut
Suoday Sehool . 9:30 Lm,
Wonhip- 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.

a.....

Pulor. ICon Moker
Sundty School- 10 t.m.

Wonhip- II a.m. and 7 p.m.

IN LOVING

.

MEMORY OF MY

Fallh Fellowthlp Cruoade for Chrl.d

WILLARD
LUCAS

Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
Harriaoovilk Road
Pu10r: Rev. Victor Roush

Sunday Scl&gt;ool9:30 a.m.

ON HIS 74TH

Worship- II •·~·· 1?0 p.m.

Wedn..doy S.mce · 7.30p.m.

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

Cltrllllu Fel-lp Cenle'
Salem SL, Rudand
Pa-= Robert E. Muaaer
Sunday Scbool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip- 11:15 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wodne&amp;day ServiiZ - 7 p.m.

Belltel Churdl
TOWIIIhip Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip. 10 a.m.
Wodneoday Service~- 10 a.m.
Hoc:liDIJ)Oft Cburdt
GnndStSundty Sehool- 10 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.
W......,lday Service~ · 8 p.m.

M- Cbopel Cburn
Lany Faw, Superinlenclent
Sunday Jdtool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 7 p.ot.
Wodneoday Service · 7 p.m.
FLIIII GGiptl Chordl

Looalloaom

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:4S Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

T-QIII'do
Co. Rd. 63

-y,.,;.,SehoolhlP~ - 9:30 Lm.
!0:30a.m.

ML Olive C..IHioliJ Clturdt
Pulor. Lawn:na: Blllh
Suoday Sehool - 9:30 Lm.
Evenina · 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service - 7 p.m.
Uolled FoiCit Ourdt
RL 7oo Pamer&lt;&gt;)' By-Puo
Pa&amp;IOr. Rev. Robert B. Smith, Sr.
Sunday Scbool -9:30 Lm.
Wonhip- 10:30 Lm., 1 p.m.
Wcdnelday Service- 7 p.m.

Mlddlepert Cllerdt o1 tilt Nuanu
'"-:~A. Cundiff
Sunday
-9:30a.m.
Wonbip- 10:30 Lm., 6:30p.m.
We*leaday Serviceo - 7 p.m.

Stlvenvllle Word of Faiiii
P&amp;&amp;IOr. David Dailey
Sunday Scl&gt;ool9:30 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.

JULY22,
My Darling Willard:

Q-fllllltN_,_a
Putor: '"'"' w. Dou....
Sunday Sehool - 9:30 a.m.

Today Ia a very spec:lal
day
h'a another year
to wleh you Happy
Blnhday
And . .y I love you dear.

ReJoicing Lift Church
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Putor: Lawrence Foranan
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

I can'l hold you In my
arrna
Or gfva a gift to you
Yet, there Ia nothing In
thla world
That I would rather do.

Cllft011 Tabtro11&lt;le Church

Oilton, W.Va.

Sunday Sehool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 7 p.m.
Thunday Service - 7 p.m.

QUALITY WORK
GOOD RATES

Pentecostal
..... leCOSiliiA..,.blJ
SL RL 124, Racine
p.,..,., William Hobad&lt;
Sunday Sehool · 10 a.m.
Evenina - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

So Happy Birthday
darling
You will forever be
Wanted,
needed,
deeply loved
And, oh ao dear to
I love and ml11
you eo much
Your wife,
Jerry

Sunday Sehool - 10 a.m.
Evmina - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service&amp; - 7:00p.m.
Presbyterian
Syn&lt;UR Flnt UnKtd Preabytetton

Pastor: Rev. KrilCia Robinlm
Sunday Sehool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - I I a.m.
Horrilollvllle Preobytettu Chord!
Wonhip - 9 Lm.
Sunday Sehool · 9:45 a.m.
Middleport PreobJterian
Sunday School - 9 Lm.

Wonhip · 10 a.m.
Seventh - Day Adventist
Stvmlii-Day Advttitlll
Mlllbeny Hu. Rd., P...eroy
PallOr: Roy Lawinoky
Satwday Services:
Sabbalh Sehool · 2 p.m.
Wonhip- 3 p.m.
Umted Brethren
Ml Rerra011 Uolled Brtlhr111
In Chrllt Church
Texu Community off CR 82
Pu10r. Robert Sanden
Sunday Sehool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -10:30 a.m.,7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service• -7:30p.m.

(Continued lrom Page 9)
30 doya of the loouonce
dole; or the director
revlau/wlthdrowa the
propoaed action. Any
penon may oulimll
comment&amp; ondlor a meeting
regarding any droll acllon
wllhlrt 30 doya of the date
lndlcoted. "ACTION", ao
uoed obove dooa not
Include r-lpl of • verllled
complolnt. If algnlfloont
J!ubllc lnlereal exlale, •
public meeting mey be held.
Ao to eny oclion Including
recelpl
of
vorlfled
complaints, ony peraon may
obloln notice of tunher
acllono, ond addlllonol
Information.
Unleaa
olherwlae provided In
notlceo of putlculor
. acliona, all communlcallona
. · ahall be . .nl lo: Haorlng
Clerk, OEPA, P.O. Bo1 1049,
Columbuo, OH, 43266.0149
PH. (814) 644-2115. Con.aull
ORC Chap. 3745 ond OAC
Chapa. 3745-47 ond 3746-5
lor raqulromenla.
, :· _A_P_P_II_c_a_•_•_
on-:-l_o_r

11

Eciea Unlled Brethren In Chris
2 112 milet north ol Reedsville
on Stale ROUie 124

Paator: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday Sehool · 10 a.m.
Wonhip . 7:30p.m.
Wednesday &amp;rvic:ea -7:30p.m.

t:telp Wanted

&amp; COAL

Reasonable Rates

&amp;

Joe

DAVID ARNOLD

N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING

(614) 992·7474

614·742·2138

POMEROY, OHIO
1112&amp;'TfN

Wanted to buy·
Standing
timber. all hard
wood &amp; pine.

HEATING &amp; COOLING
RSES &amp; EPA
Universal
Certified Sales,
Service &amp;
Installation
Free estimates.
992-7434

Call

lost~ Wtl~

lla •eruy"

D. GEARY'S
AUTO BODY

Guaranteed

Lose Pounds and Inches

982-2096

Natural Helbal Tablets

550 .,... Bt, Middleport

Fr•EaUm7121Atn

Public Notice
Certlflcallon
Hunllngton Dlatricl Army
Corp• of Englneera, All OH,
Receiving Walere: All
e1cepl Ohio River, Pertalna
lo 401 Certlflcallon Public
Nollce (H) 94·34, proaed
regional
permit lor
temporary conatructlon IIIla
wllhln lhe Huntlnglon
Dlatrlcl In Ohio.
Drall NPDES Permit
Renewal • Sublect to
Rovlolon
VIllage of Mlddleporl,
Board of Public AHolra, 237
Race Street, Middleport, OH,
Public Nollcs DaiS 7/14/114,
Receiving Water•: Ohio
River, Facility Doocrlptlon:
llunlc.• 0.1 lo 0.5 - Pormll
No. OPB00025'CD
(7) 22; 1TC

11

Help Wanted

PICKERS NEEDm
Tomatoes &amp; Peppers
OiHord HOI Form
247·2063

WANTED:
COMMUNITY
SKILLS
INSTRUCTOR needed lo teach eommumty
and personal skills lo an adult w1th learn1ng
limitations in Middleport. Hours: 8 a.m. Sat.
thru 8 a.m. Mon; sleep-over requ1red. H1gh
school degree, valid driver's license, QOOd
driving record, three years licensed dnv1ng
experience, and adequate automobile
insurance coverage required. Salary: $5.00/hr,
to start. Vacation/sick benefliS .. Tra1mng
pro11ided. If interested contact Cec1ha at 1800-531-2302. Equal Opportunity Employer.

71

Autos for Sale

Puaa., a.ct. of~ N..,..e
Pa-. ROY. Thanu McQ,q
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.

AGENl'i

Nationwide Ins. Co.
of Columbus, 0.
104W.Maln
992-Ull Pomerov

BILL QUICKEL

CIECI ,

OUR

1551 NyC. Ave.,
IIOP
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769 UD

PRICES

(614) 992-2148

1985 Plymoulh Horizon
Power steering, delay wipers. Only
85,000 actual miles.
11187 Plymoulh Rellanl LE
Auto., air, Am/Fm, delay wipe.,, rear
delrost Only 87,000 aclual miles.
1986 Pontiac 6000 SE
Multi-port 1/6, air, aulo., Am/Fm, cass.,
cruise, rear defrost Only 84.000 actual

COIIMBI
Was
Now
1195

8115

Now

Was
2495

21e5

Was
2895

Now
26115

miles.

1986 Oldsmobile Della 88
V-6, auto., air, nice car. Only 87,000
actual miles.
1987 Foret Raniiiir
(red
4 cyl., 5 spoe
, sliding rear
window. Only 4
c al mllos.
1988 Ford Ranger (gold)
4 cyl., 5 spaod, Am/Fm cass., chrome
rear bumper. mag wheels, 4 naw whlhl
lettered lires. Only 71 ,000 aciUal miao.
1988 Chevrolet S-10 (bluo &amp; oliver)
4 cyl., 5 speed. noar slap bumper. Only
75,000 actual miles.
1989 Chevrolet S-10 (gray)
4 cyl., 5 speed, rear slap bumper, sliding rear window. Only 77,000 actual

Was
3495

Now
3295
3295

Wao
3795

Now
34e5

Was
3795

Now
34e5

Was
4395

Now
3895

miles.

1989 Ford Ranger (blue)
Was
Now
4 cyl., 5 speed (base truck), rear
4395
38115
bumper. Only 82,000 aciUal miles.
PrlcH good thru July 31el, 11194. Warnnty plano avallabll 01
extra coel. W• only buy vehlclu wllh actual mi ..., leu tlwn
100 000 mil•• with no prevloue 11lv.~ hlttory. Wt only buy

good quality ~are end trucka. Check our prtce1- We work hl.rd
to IIVt you money!

We Want You
Ollerbrook Cetttcr'• uperi#need •ttzff il looking for "
few ,..., ,.,m/nn for DIU' IIUriUrll INUit. Clllltodily to
leam tdloul 0 , . NEW and IMPROVED WAGE tuUl
BENEFITS illlll•ign 011 bonru Jlddtrlle. ,tpply Today!
Cilll MIU'iiJII CotiiiWiiJ, O,O.N.
Motuloy·Fridily
9:00 IJ.Ifl, • 4i30 , •••
EOE
JJJ Prlfl• Slreet, M/JtlktHrl, OIIU&gt; 45761J.992-U11

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
FURNITURE I HARDWARE

Hom@ht@ Soiiws ·

Main
992-5 IJO•Pomeroy

''[)i~nit~· and .'i••rl'it·r .fluvr~·~··

Established 1913

Ill EAST MAIN

992-2121
i

'

rih\

\27

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

115 I. Mamorial Dr.

106 M....rry An.

Pom~roy

-992-210.

•

Apartment
for Rent

NOW OPEN
· 214 E.

EWING FUNERAL HOME

c•...,.\ ow... n.n.,

S- 0.'

rn:l

SHRUB &amp; TREE

llve Hot Girts 1-900.263-tik)OO
Ext 507&amp; $3.gg fMin. 18 + Yre
Proetoll Co. 602-Q54..7420.
Strut Your JNna Pageant Camdan Puk, Augu.t 6. All age
dlvlalona. Nlca aWIIrda. C.U

TRIM11d
REMOVAl
•UGHT
HAUUNG
•AREWOOD
BILL SLACK

MARTECH
· INDUSTRIES

Would Uke Someone To Teach
Me To Read, Eamle McKinney,
614-446- not

Residential
Concrete
and Masonry Work
Porches
Sidewalks
Driveways

2 Manx Klltena, 7 WMke Old,
614-367.()513.

4

614-992·7878
SR 7- Five Polnta
tiUI ....

121311112/Tf N

MAR TECH
INDUSTRIES

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

Backhoe Work and
General Hauling
Limestone ·Fill Dirt
Gravel - Sand
Leach Bed
lnslallalion and
Septic Syslema

Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair

NlW &amp; USED PARIS FOR
All lUllS &amp; MOORS
992-70ilOR
992-5553 OR
TOll FIIII-ICI0-141-0070

DARWIN. OHIO
7131111/TFN

Giveaway

2 atorm window., good cond.,

28xS4 112. 304-675-4085.
2 v.. r Old Male Cit, Good Whh
Children 1 Very Loveable! Sholl,
Neuterea, Leukemia Teet~. 61~

446-7264.

3 puppies, 12 wkt old. Pit
BuiVChow ml•, 614-JII2-3410.
5 WHk Old Pupil Part Syberian
Husky &amp; Cockapoo, Femal.. ,
614-256-6996 Or l.alve Meaaage.

-Bik -' while
- -female
nlet, 304-675-6263.

dog, very

Four Bob tall kitten., 304-t~

6183.
Four Puppl. ., 112 Collie, 1f2
Chow, 5 Montt., Good Wfth
hrm Anlmala 6 Children. 614--

446-41132.

Frw pupplea- COllie/ RottweUer

mix, 6

,..,ka old, 614-m-'ITIIl.

Khtene, 6-8wkll old. 304~75-

2075.

Kittens, To Good Honw, 614-319-2585.
Ml•ed brHd puppies, 6 wka old,

61+p&amp;5-4120.

JESS' COMPLETE
AUTO UPHOLSTERY
headlinen, seal
covers, convertible
tops, Antique Cars.
20 yrs experience.
Boal Seats.
992-7587
41464 Starcher Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45169

Moatly collie pupa, 6 wka. old,
614-992-3814.

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POIIEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
S100Payoff
Thla ad good lor t
FREE card.
Lie:. No. 0051-342
11'"""""'

Pupploo, Chow
eroea.

Daytime

evanlnga

&amp;

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
GuHers
Downspouts
Gutter Cl~aning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES
oCarpenlry
•Palnllng
•Power Walhlng ciaano all el1erlora
with high pra11ura
aprayar
•Reaaonabla Ratu
•20 Years Experience
•Free Eallmalea

S.moyed
Elkhound
Mixed
Breed, Gor~aoue Malt, Approximately 1 YNr Old, Lovn
Attention, 614-388-U1$1.
UMd lumber and one r~llroad

tla, 614-992-6828.

6

Lost &amp; Found

FOUND, Apple Gron, flm.le
dog, pan Collie, blk wlbrown on

Found: Slack Lib, Female, 614-

448-4636.
Found: Blue Tlck Hunllng Dog,
lincoln Pike, 814 416 6&amp;01.

Bulldozing &amp; Bnck hoe
Real Estate General

Service
Complete House &amp;
Tr ai ler S1tes

On vc ways. Sept'c
Systems . Water &amp; Sewe r

L ines , Land Clc Jring
Tr ucking : Limestone &amp;
D~rt.

Top Sod

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
·Room Addition•
-New garage•
·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
·lnlerioJ &amp; Exterior
Painting alao concrel•
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

992-6215
PomerQy, 1(~\e.,

.••

•

Water's EdF Apartments • Syraeuse, Oblo
Over 61, dlllbled or bandla~pped F!DIIA
1 bedroom- Rents for $8 to $415, bMed 08
IDcome. Range, refriFntor, a~rpet, AJC, 011 site
laundry, parking.
614-949-::Wll or 614-992-'419

ron aoo-7~50
FJDHA Rental Alllilsttn&lt;:e
Equal Ho111lng Os!POttunlty

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health
• Accident • Annuity, IRA • Mortgage
205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH
POMEROY- E. Main Street- A 2 atory home with 3
bedroom• and one bath. Full baseman!, front &amp; rear
porchaa.
$26,100
MIDDLEPORT· A historic colonial2 slory brick home that ia
on tho National Hisloric R81Jistry. Maon house fealuraa 4
bedrooms, 1 112 balha, livmg room, parlor, aun porch,
kitchen, brealdasl room, and small den. Haa a coun yard
belween house and 2 car garage, elevator, and 2 rooma
and a bath allachod for businass or rac:raalion.
$115,000
POMEROY· W~low Craak Rd.- Juat off Rt. 7ond 33 cloee ID
Big WhHI, a 3 bedroom ranch with 2 bathe, equipped
kitchen, heat pump and detached 2 car garage on opprox. 2
acrea.
$51,000
MORNING STAR ROAD- A 1 '/, acra lol with brick lomt 3
bedroom ranch homo, I 'ir baths, lui basemen~ Qltllgl and
carport.
Muat- $&amp;11,000

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

~ C~EANING

SPEND $100.00 GET 1 ROOM

L.oet: Billfold, Pt. Pleaeant, haa
NCHth Carolina llce,.a. Plu ..

call304-675-1080.

1344.

• carpet cleaning &amp; scolchgard • drapery
•
fine fabric • general cleaning

DOmE TURNER, Brokar•• ---·------1112-5682
BRENDA JEFFERS ... - ...--··----· .... - .. ,8112-3058
JERRY SPRADUNG .....- ....... .;____ (304) 882-3488
OFFICE ...------··-.. -·........- .........- .. 8112-2888

304-675--1335.

Larry Llvoly. 614-liiS-9303.

Top PrieM Paid: All Old U.S.
Coins, Gold Rings, Si1'4er Coins,
Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Second Avenue, Gallipolis.
WantiKI to buy: UHd moblla
homu. 614-446-0175

Employment Services

11

Help Wanled

AVON

I All Areaa 1 Shlrlay

Spe~~~.

304-875-142Q,
AVON! All arMs. NMd extra
money or want a carMr, either

way--call Marilyn. 304-882-2645
or 1-4100-992-6356.

Aa ptr Article i, Tranlf•n and
Vacanclu, Section B, Post ing,
of the Nogallatod AgrMment
between the MLTA and the
Board of Education, thl Melga
local School Dlatrlct 11 posting
the following vacancies tor 11a
regular teaching staH: Chapter I
Taacher
at Saltm C.ntar
Elementary and Chapter 1
Teacher 11 Salisbury Eloman-

t~ry.

Babyslnor My Homo, M.f, 7:50

·3:30 P.M. Mercarvllle/NO Area.
Bartender

WantNI:

Apply

In

C._nlng P1t80n For Private
Home. 1 Day p.,. W"k.
Referenen Required, 014-446-

PersonaiHy, Good With Public,
Pay MlnlmLm Waga, But N•r.:
tlablt Depending On
xpertence, Brown'1lGA, 8,..........
0818, Between 8 I 3 EdMI

Workman ContiiCI.

loopri-. P.O. Bo• 1152, Applagrove, WHI VA 2S502.

Gallipolis

up 1o $1000 wttkly
mall, atart now, JO.
...,...lance, "-upplltt, frtt~---- 775 E ...... hi 1 Information, no-obllgaUon. Sond
11
3.5
~•
•Pool
•- ,.SUck,
ng• SASE: . C&amp;acada Diopt-50, P.O.
VCR, IleaNlntando,
Good Boyo Clo4hao, Thuro, Sal, Bo1 5421, San Angolo, TX 711902.
U.
Local phyelclon'a ottlco now
Eam

proce~slng

&amp; Vlcl n Ity

cl.

2nd &amp;

July 2
23r
ALL Yard S.lee MuM Be Paid In
Advt,_. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

lht day befo&lt;o Ute ad It to nm.
Sunday adlllon - 2:00 p.m.
Frtda~. Monday adhlon - 2:oo
p.m. a1u rda y.
Friday, Salunlay, 11-? AI InterAoulo 588 And
c.ouoa Stato
Boek Rood, Chltdron,

-•Ion

•,Qols, Book s,

..uon,

Ping
Blk

e.

accepting appllcatlone tor the
position of medea! ani•
1antlreceptlonn1, computer ••·
pertence halptul, PO Bo• 458,

Ractna, Ohio 45171,
N--• p Tl B b
art- me • yelltor Older
p,..,n Ptoo•, ca1 ••• e:oo
P.M. 1--412110, Starting In
Auguel.
N - Now: CornCnlon •o
"
Ltvo In Froo Boord, o Stllngo,
Any •v•. •--3411.
Naeded OTR d11-, COL, haz.

mat., 1yr. vtrHiabie exp •• home
mHt WHkenda. SEnd wort hf•
tory &amp; phone number : Box R-ut,

FIW&gt;Modal .V.'o, Ratrlgantor, c/o Pl. Ptoasanl Ragl&amp;lor, 200
FunWuro, Clothoa, lilac. 3402 M I St PI p•·· , WV
Lllllo Kyger, Choohlra, 814-36'7an
.,
·
-aon,
0211.
25550.
Movt~ Sato: Salurday, Ratn N-d: 2 Satao Po-no Sott
F •
Mollv&amp;lod Some Exporienco In
0 •Y. ... Sund•y.
umnure, Retail SaiH A Plua. , __... Btoo
Ae~rator,
Toys, Clothes,
VUiiJIIII
Stair
r. HouHWarw. 487 Ph•
Comml11lon.
Bring
~
ott J kao
R•ume To: Nolo c..,;;
Kalhy
Jany
ac n munlcallono, 1502 EaOiom
Pike.
Avonue.L _ Golllpollo, OH, No
Saturday July Z3nl, HouHhold Phone wtlo.

:.st:;g....

ltema, Clothll And MlK. ltema,

N

180 O.J. Whlla Road, 8 A.M. To 5 ow occtptlng - - ltom
Claoa "' COL oamlttuelt drlvwa
PM
Servicing Mvon alalo . _ , ou;
locally ....,ad, wv boaed linn
Pt. Pleasant
goto drlv- home lor . the
wllbnd. Send rnume 10 Boa
&amp; VIc' It
n Y
c-11 'II. PI Pit
200 Main
Oallla•· Sato-112ml. on Jericho Sl, Pl. Ptl, wv 2
Rd., Fridoy-Salurday, Juty 224S.
OWnoriOt&gt;lraton
HouMhol&lt;l Homa, aomo tum~ COrdl,_t Fr:-lght Ca....,. 1o

_._.--------I

R:t=:"'·

8

4·7·1 MO

contr~ct.

Wallted To Buy: Junk Autoe
With Or WhholA Motcq, Call

Addrnald, StlltnDid Envelope:
Name, Addr.u to: Hall'a En-

4-6, litalrmaotor, end I.-a morw.

SPECIAL CARE CLEANING SI:RVICE

Want to buy : Homa or trailer on

land

vat-. R.. h $1.00 And A S.W

Yard Sale

lure, raten table I eMirs, Qll'l
baby ctothoa, boy clo4hoa llu

WILLI IILL ROAD- A small home thai calhldral oailing,
largo lving room, dning room, kitchen, 1r11 bedroom, uli~ty
room, newer heat pump.
$25,oo0

Want to buy set ol ltepa tor
moblla homa, 614-992-5053.

E.m Thouaand8 Stuftlng En-

7

'r

(Carpet Cleaning Only-Maximum 240 sq. ft.)

J &amp; O'a Auto Pane and Salvage,
also buying junk cart l lruckt.
304-773-5343.

3644 Aftor 7 P.M.
Doll 6 8akory Wor1tar, Baking
Ter- Experience Required, Evening
Shin 1-10 P.M. Noad Outgoing

loat: Walklf' Coon Dog, Moatly
Whllo I Brown Wllh Black Spat
On Hla Back Anewer. To Name
Of Ouko, VIcinity: Mill Crook
Road, 014-4411-7515 or 114-256-

Etc.

FREE

I'm not all thare, I buy old furniture not all there- cabinets,
cupboards, ale, 614-992-"'M10.

Parson AI Tho Addlaon Club,
114-448-4758.

Movlnt1 Sell: Frl
··• T b 11 E
Pong
•
xerc

SPECIAL

Don't Junk h! Sail Ua Your Non-Working
Major
Appll1ncee,
Color
T.V. '11. Aalrlgaraton,
Freeura, VCH'a, MlcrOW"I\111,
Air
Condltlonara, Waahare,
Dryers, Copy Machin.., Etc.
614-256-1238 .

LDST • Ito. paraon In while truck
who wae ' " " picking up Red
Bone Coon dog next lo Mason

"""'*•

Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 143·5264

Decorahtd stoneware, wall telephonas, old lampe 1 old thermometers, old cloektl, antique
tumlture. Rlvetlnt Antlquea.
Rua .toofe, owner. ti14· 9922526. We buy ..1111a.

614-256-1119 Aftar 4 P.M.

AduM ~·-·

Box 189

Clean Late Model Cara Or
Trucks, l!NIJ Modela Or Newer,
Smith Sulek Pontiac, 1~00
East em Avenue, GalllpoUa.

Found: whtte male cat, Gal·
llpolla Ferry area. 304-675--5361.

Lost: Black &amp; white Boeton
rier, malt. 304--f?'S-1125.

Howard
Excavating Co.

enUre houaehotd, Olby Mar11n,
top dollar pald,6l4-9S2-i'l41.

PuppiH: Mother Border Collie,

Fothor: Dalmallon, 814-448-2218.

Bridge, Tuao, call304-~ .

2J2:tll mo.

g
Wanted to Buy
-:-::---:::-:----:-Antique• will buy one piece or

Shepard

Found: White fac.d Hereford
cow. Call to claim. Muadt pay
tor ad . ~-22411.

915-4111

fi/1"" TFN

Tr.l-5785.

304-675-4461,

tae8 A legs, Nd collar, very

Howard L. Writesel

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pearson Auctioh Company,
full time aucuoo.. r, complete
auction
llr;'ICI.
Ucented
t66 ,0hlo &amp; Wnt VIrginia, 304-

3()4. 576-2281.

trlondly, 304-576-2755.

AMERICAN GENERAl liFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432

~l'L~flltS'

Free Estimales
Residential, Commercia l
and lnduslrial

134 Arlll Avenue, Qalllpolla, 1-1,

(row's family Restaur111t
· "1Nffltltl K1111cig 111•4 Clld11"
W.

8

Sholla Hart, 304-755-0060.

Now

Was
3495

Announcements

3 Announcements

992-SSlS

99&lt;·3838 ' '"'"

44

221

CaU Weste111 Auto

f/1 :Wifh

GOODWIN'S AUTO SALES

Fill THE

lnstalatloo

E st1matcs

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

12/2mo

ClA~tiFIED ADt

Salts tlld

Reasonable Rates

.

2J121121ttn

Decorative

Basic obedience,
law enforcemenl.
personal proleclion,
kennel service. pups &amp;
young dogs for sale .
Ronweiler &amp; Shepherd
Slud Service
By appl. only
61 4-667-PETS

Fill

.t~'"'"'\,..
...........

(No Sunday Calls)

ond

SR 7- Five Polnlo

OFFICE 992-2886

Carleteolo...,._btall011ol Clturdt
Kin ..buly Road
Sunday SChool - 9:30 Lm.
l!..runa - 1 p.m.
Wodne&amp;day Service -7

Wanhip- IQ-.30 a.m. aod 6 p.m.
Wodaeaday Serviaoa -7 p.m.

614·992·7643

985-4473

TUPPERS PLAINS

614-992-7979

'"-: Duane Sy:tJUid&lt;er
Sunday Scbool- 9 a.m.
W...W, - 10 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wednc&amp;day Servioo _.7 p.m.

w.........,

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

hndng Choin
U'*·Wood

614·682·7676

S..tll _..NewT-...
Silver Rid

Wonhip- 10:30 Lm.,6p.m.
Service&amp; -7 p.m.

COMI\IERCIAL and RES IDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Remodeling

USED RAILROAD TIES

'llllllldty..,..,..- 7:30p.m.

Puror. Rev. Rid&lt; Slurp!l
Sunday Sehool - 9:30a.m.

Room Additions • Roofing

•Complele

TRI-STAU K·9
ACADEMY

992-2269

~Y w~- 2:30p.m.:

s,.._o-fllllltN...,.,

a VInyl Siding New

Garages • Replacement Windows

• Garages

314193 I MO

MORRISON'S

1·800·796-6321

Public Notice

Third Ave.
Putor: Rev. Oarlt Baker

GRAVEL

NIMI Setd•eDt Clwrdl

Wonhip- 10:4~ a.m., 1 p.m.
Wcdneadey S.rvi..,. -7 p.m.

New Homes

• New Homes

me.

me.

Middleport Ptnteclllllal

LIMESTONE,

1994

And now my aweet,
aweet Willard
I'll tell you once again
I miu you more lhan
life haeH
And II will nev•r end.

You are forever with me
As I think of you I aee
In your beautiful blue
eyes
Alii he love you have for

Full Gaopel Lllht33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
'"-:Roy Hunter
Sunday Sehool- 10 a.m.
Evauna 7:30p.m.
Tueaday A Thu..day -7:30p.m.

.......... F.......Wp

BISSEll BUilDERS, INC.

CONSTRUCTION

7noJ1 mo. pel.

HAUliNG

ARNOLD'S
PLUMBING,
HEATING &amp;
'
COOLING

BIRTHDAY,

Df...W. c-•ualtJ Church

Coai•Uie Uolled Mtalodlll Pvllll
Putor. Hdm Kline
Coolville Oordt
Main A Fifth St.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhil'- 9 a.m.
Tueaday s.m... -7 p.m.

BELOVED
HUSBAND

Pastor. Rev. Franklin Dicken a
Service: Friday, 1 p.m.

Trialt7 c....,...o~~ aJ Churdt
Putor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Chun:h- 9:15a.m.
Wcnhip - 10:30 a.m.

Somday SehoollO a.m.
Evenina - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

26 Veara Experience

Roofing, Vinyl Siding,
Porches, Vinyl
Replacement
Windowo
For Free Estimate
Call 742-2303

ROBERT BISSEll

Wodneaday Service · 7:30p.m.

Churcll ul J..,.. Christ,
Aposlnllc Faith
1/4 mile put Fon Meia• on New Lima Rd.
Putor: Williun Van Meter
Somday-7:00 p.m.
Wcdnelday-7:00 p.m.
Friday-7:00p.m.

Middleport Communlly Churdt
515 Pearl S.., Middleport
PallOr. Sam Andenon

Price
Construction
Co.

312SJ94

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Tile Salvolloa Army
tiS Bunemut Ave., Pomeroy.
SID:Iday School · 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Wonhip - 9 a.m.

POIEAOY, ottO 417e1
--H44 Griii2-GII

Interior &amp; Exterior
Take the pain out ol
painting . Lei uo do il
for you. Very real·
onable.

Wblle's ChapN Wtlleyan
Coolville Road

Somday wcnhip - 10 a.m.
Wednelday aervioe - 6:30p.m.

...

PallOr. Ran Fieroe

Pom~roy

992-5141 •

Enddme HOUR ul Pnyer
Burlin&amp;ham ehurch oft Roou 33)
Panor. Robert Vance

Pr~scriptions

FISHER
FUNERAl HOME

liNDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

Sunday School · 9:30 Lm.
Wonh•p· 10:4S a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service -7 p.m.

Wcdncaday Service · 1:30 p.m.

Paa&lt;or. Steve Reed
Sunday Sehool ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip · I0:30 Lm. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.
Friday • fellowship aervioe 7 p.ltl

PHARW£Y
w. Fill Do&lt;lo"' -~
~
IAWUNGS-COATS

Pa1Wr: Rev . Roger Willford

Sunday Sehool · 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.

Other Churches
Faith Full Gotptl Church

Paator: Florcn(C Smith

-

Freed,.. Gosptl MISIIon
Bald Knob, an Co. Rd. 31

Panor. Rev. Black.wood

Peart Cluptl

P: J. PAULEY,

93 Mill Slr"l
Mldtleport, Ohio 45710
11141992-1857 -1911 -00KSI
CHURCH SUPPLIES
BIBLES

A

Putor: Vemaaayc Sullivan

RaQne

Wonhi~-.::..m.
Wodltolda)
.
-1

CLASSIFIED!Y

Wonltip ·6:30p.m.
Wednesday Service~ - 1 p.m.

Rea.. (Middii!&gt;Oft)

Moraa,.Star
Pulor. Kmnelh Baker
Sundty School-9:45a.m.
Wonhip-10:30Lm.
Thu..day Servicea . 7:30p.m.
Sutto.
Put«: Katneth Baker
Somday Scllool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:4S a.m. (lot A Jnl Sun)

Our So•lour Lulhtnlll Ourdt
Waln,. and Henry Sta., Ravatowood, W.Va.
Co-poston: Reva. Richard A
l'ltri&lt;ia Bondt-Krua
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip- II Lm.

Putor. Willi~m J\lltis
Sunday School ·10:00 a.m.

Thunday Services - 6:30p.m.

Lutheran
SL Joho Lu...,.. Olll'do
Wonhip- 9:30a.m.Somday School- 10:30 Lm.

Par11and Flnl Church &lt;I the Nau,...e

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

llttllany
Putor. Kmnelh Baker
Sundey Sdtool- 10 a.m.
Wonhip- 9 a.m.
Wodneoday Servi&lt;e&amp;- 10 a.m.
Canntl
PIUIOr. Katneth Baker
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:4, Lm. (2nd A 4th Stm)

Christian Un10n
Hartrord Cllurdt ul Cltrlollo
Cltrllllu Uolort
Hartfotd, W.VL
PallOr: Rev. David McManil
Sunday School- II LIIL
Wonhip- 9:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wcdnelday Savicea- 7:30p.m.

Church of God
ML M...a.b Cit- &lt;I Ged

ForM Run
Put.cr. Dcron Newman

Latter-Day Saints
Reorganlucl Cllurch ol J..,. Chlill
"'Lalla' DaJ Salnll
Portlond-Racinc Rd.
Puur. JUlia: llonn&lt;r
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Worship- 10:.30 a.m.
Wednesday Service. - 7:30p.m.

Pine Grove
PallOr. Dawn SpaJdina

RuU.nd Ourdllll the N_,...e
Pastor. Sunuel Basye
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednc&amp;day S.rvioea -7 p.m.

Putor. Keith Rader
Sunday Sehool - IOa.m.
Wonhip . II a.m.

RuU.nd Communi)J Churdt
Panor. Rev. Roy Me&lt;:arty
s...day School . 9:30 Lm.
Stmday l!venina . 1 p.m.
Wedne&amp;day Servica -7 p.m.

United Methodist
Gnlum Ualled Mtalodlll
Wonhip- 9:30 Lm. (lal A 2nd S101~
, 7:30p.m. (3nl A 4th Sun)
W........y Service-7:30p.m.

R - c - - . Uolort
Middleport, Ohio
Sunday Scl.ool, I0 a.m.
Sunday ......... 7:30p.m.
Wcdnelday, 7:30p.m.

Flatwooda

Plot Grove Bible Roll ... Clturdl
I /2 mile off RL 325
Pu10r. Rev. O'Doll Manley
Somday Scl&gt;ool - 9:30 LID.
Wonhip - 10:30a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.
WaSty an Bible Holl- Clturdt
1S Pearl S... Middleport.
PallOr: Rev. John Neville
Sunday achool · 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedne&amp;day Service - 7:30p.m.

Cheat&lt;r Cburdl ullhe N.....Pa-= Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday Sehool - 9:30a.m.
Worship - II un., 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Servic:ea-? p.m.

Enterprloe
Panor. Keidt Rader
Sunday Sehool · 10 a.m.
Wonltip · 9 a.m.

GractE~Ourdt

ReodnUII 0 - &lt;ICIIrlol
'"-: Philip Stum
Sunday Scbool: 9:30 .....
Wonhip Servioe: IQ-.30 Lm.
Bible Study, Wedacoday, 6:30pm.

Forat R• Baplilt
Pastor : Ariul flurt
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wcnhip-11 Lm.

Friday, July 22, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Oacor E. Click,
l.lcan. I 754-14 I llondod,
11114... . _ .

- - Cot.

--go

hiring experieliced olo'e to Nn

flatbed, aam
of
groao rovonue pulling compony
frallaro or pulling qwn trLllor
haaHh

Ina.,.,_ widontat I

,i!

alon ovolleblo, llue ptatM
avallablo, bob4Lit - avallobll, lllol can1 op~om
-kly
-!o-nto,
rlc1ot
~nm,

',

u.,. ~ton..

·-a.

�•

Page-12-

The Dally Sentinel

1994

Pomeroy-

The Dal

Middleport, Ohio

Sentlnei-

Page -13

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

o~~~F'

*

. (j l !! C WNKED
:us Pltf:TTY 0000,

ACROSS

BIW !

Answer to Pre vious Puu le

PHILLIP
ALDER
54 Mlac:ellaneoua
Rooms

Ownerf()peraton

C.rdi1111l Frolght C.rrlora Ia now

614-446-12711.

3675D

Office Space For R1nt : Owner
Flexible On Term11 &amp; Space.
Toeat Sptco 3,600 Sq. Fl. Aval~

AN pot,ltlon

814-1192-aeoe Of' apply In at !1179 Roc:kopringa lloood,
Pomofoy. E.O.E.
RIVen.wood

c.,.

Center, 1113

Waohlngton St., Ravo-.
WYo. M184 lo curNnlly OCCOIIC·
lng oppllc.otlonto lor Nurwlng A.
alatanto (Will Train) Applleollono
may bo oblalnod lllondoyThurodoy t-4. Rolerwncao ,.
qulrocl. No phono colla 1'1-·
RESPIT£
CARE
WORKER
NEEDED: Would you bo wilting
to core lor _ . wttll loomIng llmllotlono In their home on
an •u noodod" balo? Salary:
sa.OOihr., high oehoot dog-

able. Good Loca tlo.~ 1 CioN To
Brtdge, C.ll Dive WIHman AI

Wlaoman Aool Eototo. 614-4463644.
1ll

31 Homes tor Sate

35

3br., 1 t.th houH on quiet
dMd-end ro~~d, Haven Helghta,
lot wlhouoolo 10011105', w,soo,
wlld)olng 1501112' lot U2,SOO.

8 Adjoining Lots. 2 Acre1. All To

flat land. 304-482-:1323.

8 Roomo And Both, Fuol 011
Furnace; Rural Water; Hook..Up
For 2 MobUe Hom11, Good Size
Garden, 1 Acre MIL Clark Chapel

Naw ranch lfyll home P1an11

WANTED: RESPITE
CARE
PROVIDERS Aro You WIDing To
Bhoro Your Homo WHh Pe....,.
With ~·• Dlaobllltloo.
If lnt_.od In Providing A
Stoblo And Supportlwe Homo On
A Umftod -pita Boola, Contact Cocllla At 1.-s31·230Z.
Equal OppaftuNiy Emptoyor.

oul&gt;dlvlalon, 3br., 2 both, atono
on front &amp; ct.ck, alttlng on 2
Iota. 814-448-11433.
ThrM

bedroom

houu

on

Sp&lt;lng Ava, - . . . , . wory good
CC&gt;ndmon, largo lot, O'Brillln i
Crow
R•ltv, 814-1112-:~no ,
ovontngo 1114-0iZ-31181.

WANTED: RESPITE
CARE
PROVIDERS AN you wMIIng to
llhora your 1ano wHh po....,.
wHh dowolopmontol dlaobllltloo.
H lntoroatod=n ldlng •

••'*' 1nd

au

ve horrMi on

o llmHodl- to buloL contact
Cocllto 1.f00-531·2302. o.OE.
Wort&lt;or Noodod F« B..l,_ I
Small Tralllr Perk. Drivoro
Uconoo A 11..1. Soma Ex·
portonco In llochonlc, PlumbIng, Corpontry, Rant Pluo Hourly
Wlllgo, 814-388-1881.

18

Wanted to

All real ootate ect.lor11stng In
this newopoperls oub)et~ to
tho Federal Fatr Hooslng Act
ol1988 wlllch makes lltogat
to II&lt;Wor11se "any prof.....,.,

Do

Corpontor _ . -~ doclta,
odd orw, ate, lrM oollmolao,
114-1192·2322.
Pelntl
- 1 llalntono,_,
·-:ngl
Yard Work W I - Wunoa
Outtoro Cloonod Light Hauling,
Comrnertcal, ..-cteralal, t•evt:
114-448-4141·
111&gt;1 Sa
Ill don1
=.rv-'.J::,;.p~ t.:"m(l )uat
1-t~Sl
coII
·

Lots &amp; Acreage

Go lo 1 ~~~~- All Utllltloo
Anll•ble, 6
3657. .

a

Rentals

r~tarences.

614-25fHOU.

44

Apartment

f~
whl&lt;l1 lsln violation o "~ 11w.

2 otwy, 2br. all oloctrlc opto.,
corpotod, •tpllanc.e fumlahed,

rr.. w.ter,

.. traeh pickup, on
aHo monagomont, holiday oc-

Ml11 Paula'e Day C.N Canter

are avalabte on an equal

111-f 1 A.ll. -1:30 P.M. Outlhy
Lowing Cora For All Chlldron
OUt' 111 Qool. Port·Tlmo, FullTlme hd. Aleltltlnce Avelllbll.
~-a •:: lnlonnallon Or Vlolt. In~ ror
font /Todclltl 114~48-1227. p,.
Set-',
!lchoolol.o,
BU
Set-', 114-441-4 22 ·
-"
N ~hoot
Su n V-OJ
u
·
Chlldcoto M-F lom-6:
Agoo
2-1(, Young Set-' Ago Du~ng
Sum-. 3 Doyo par WNk lllnlmunt 114 441 3657.
Child In M
Will BobyoH
Ono Aroo, Elt·Y
Homo,
Rodnoy
oorloncod
24U8f7.. With Aofw- 814-

Oj)portuntty basis.

1210/rno. Laureland Apartmentt,
lith &amp;• 0oorgo Sl" Now Hovon,

WY. 304-182-3718 ~OH .

:Z

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
'JII VonDyka, 2 bodroom, t both.

bd

rm. lp1a., Ioiii a

1oc r1
1 c, lp-

plloncoa lumlohod, laundry
room tociiHioo clool to ochool
In •-n. Appllcallono ovoltobll
at: Vlllo111 Groan Apto. MD «
coli 1114-0112-3711. EOH.

,_ wafl::rcpaI paint. wtohor/ Fumlllhod EHicla1165/Mo.
·-•
~r,
oondhlon, $4500, UtiiHioo Pold, Shorw Both, 807
I llt2 40.
!locond Avop_ Gtlllpolla, 814-448121115 Aluminum TrwUor, 2 Bod- 4416 Altor 7 .II.
roomo, Sorno FumHurw, Unrlor- Fumlahod EHicloncy 101 Founh
~nl-,
__ .;;!. Goo F.. nor:o Or Avonuo, Golllpolla, $220/Mo.
C.,-=:-::-'-mor
'-:::' _N_Ico_ $-:3,-,500
- ,-:::1-14- 7UIIIHioo
P.M. Paid, 114-4411-4418 Aftor
11 378-25M.
Will mou olgnt of ol ldndo tm Now lloon 121180 2 Bod- BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
8 ~~-•-- ft"-h" ~ roomo, Goa Hoot, Now C.rpat, BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
"SSttno '. Y - - ' Ulto Now Through Outf ~~ ESTATES, 538 Jocltoon Pika
11Ht14
!tom $222 to $285. Walk to ahop
Will otoorn ciNn corpoto choop :Ot=7ll:=."7.- = =- -- - - l &amp; movlaa. C.ll 11-4--441-2588.
to ftnlol1 my poymonto on 1f75 2br., 52000 or trodo lor EOH.
- · 814-8112-4531.
Bluor "' 4WD. 304-8i5,. Counll)' Sldo Aponrnont 5881_2
W- lllto to do cloon3357.
Bodroom~ CA, WID Hook-up
lng, Oolllpollo FMY I PI 1110 141110 Ubortv, 2 br, AJC $350/Mo. ""pooh Aoqulrod, 114Pt- - · 304-8""-2110 oak W/0, 111100, 114-ltli-111111.
' 446-4222.
lor T..._
A - 14r'ftl Goo Fur. Fumlahod 1 bodroom opor1,_, CA, Whl~pool Both, 2 mont, oil utllltlta lumlllhod,

Opponunlty
INOIIC£1
OHIO VALiiY PUBLISHING CO.
_
... that you do , _ . .h - ' " you lu»w1 and
HOT to aond mcM10J througn tho
tMit untN you hovo lnwooltgatod
1hoo~

d

3;

lldi'OOine. 2 a.thl, Potchea

-=

:::,r
•r:,.,.
1
nw .-:.,or = .·mauaga.

33

31 Homll for Sale
211r.I2WgantDe--

ln llkiii1P 1&lt;Jllii:too, ..., lor
.....................alO.
I I · - Ranolt, 1 Iaiit, AI....... ~IUnonaollod
lld-

=r..:r..:::=:!....

oUI!•• I ....... II~
ffOf'l n.aaan ,.._ -.-v.
11U7N240.
J I J

llodom 1 BR opt. 114-441-03DO.

am. &amp; Ac1'811ge

·--

21 Ao:roo AI. 211. 2 lllloo From
lttnton L.oko, Ad(olne ·Notional

304-411-.

eomrr-tolllulldlng lor In
llldllllpad, tho old llo/111 Willforo building, 114 - :Hili.

35

~· ·~

U2 ...... $13,1110. 1.14 ocroo,
$14,510.
Rayburn
Rd,
-ilctlono. lnforo
motion mollod on roq-. 30417H253.

8112-3210.

rior, $1800 OBO, 614·1X12-li511. ·

HOC Water StNm Haat HouH
Radlat0f'8. AMortld Slzn, 614448 ·1423 luve M.... ge.

1gn Hond1 Goldwtng 1000, A-1
cond., 29,000ml., $2000, lake
gullli or CJ Jeap on trade. 304-

-....__
Cl 1994

EHicloney
11120.

Apo~mont,

114-441-

Nlco S llr. opt. In lllddllpoot,

...... lumlohod 1111'.. ...... lit.
Vomon An., ground IIOar, no
polo, no HUD, 1250 plue
~ _!_ll_!o,.._

45

I clopooll,

SO:.

56

AKC Yotlow Lobo Wonnod Firat
Shots. Will bo Roady 715, Taking
Smallllopoo/t C.ll Ahor &amp;p.m.
814-~.

miUage.

Roopoctlvaly, _814-245-114411.

HAPPY JACK FLEABEACON:
Electronk= Device Control•

1985 Chavy Chovotto, $1,200;

Fllu In lha Home Without Paa

1i85 Ford Tompo, Moving Muat
Solll $500, OBO,It4-44t-0257.

Sun.':lo &lt;l••

Showcue

Jackson Av1. Point Pl11aant,

tlcldoa.
Potantod
Doolgn
C!Watoa Burwt Of Light Fluo
Can't Rnlat . Rnutta Ov~r;lth~ .
J D NORTH PRODUCE 61
•
1933.
One yAr oki CockaUel, ca91
1nd all accauorln. ~751626.
Pur~brwcl

GrN1 Dana Pupplel,

Fawn In Color, $100, 114-4466543.
Reglat«ed Rottweller puppl•
for aolo, $250, 614-1112-2516.
Schnaurer puppiH, mlnature,
Nit &amp; pepper; also toy poodlaa,

AKC, champion bloodllnaa, 614-1167-3404, Cootwlllo.
.,..,
Musical
~·
Instruments

Booutltul Tum Ot Tho ContiW)'
French PrOYantlal, Rnto~
~no,

Pariof Orand
1214.

Pold $1100 Will Socrillco Ouozor
FIDOf' T.V. $150, 1150 II Ilk Cratoo
$1 Each, 814-!117-~0t.

Kimball Plano, Excellent

Ouoon Slzo Watorbod._Excollont
Condition,
l'ookCIII,
Hotdboord, All I Hootor
$100, · -·1607.
RCA camcorder, whh $400 axtraa Included, lika new, mull
aocrillco, $600 flnn, coli 814-1148285i.

Cond~

tlonl $200, 814-251·17&lt;47.

58

Fruits

&amp;

Guard

Station,

55

Building
Supplies

....... br.... - · .._. wtn-

dowo, llnlllo, ole. CloiHjo Wln-

toro, Rio Orondo, OH Call 114245-112\

;;56;;;;;;-:P;;et;ds!fi:o;jiriiiSa;-ileu;;j;:p;j
Groom and Supply Shop Pel
Groom!Julio Wobb. 114--441--r

,-=::.
·.-,-::----,,..-,~--;""mporocl Polo by Sonya, dog

='lt:JO~hlng, oil broodL

--··

Ooodl S1,D50, 814-3711-21118.

1i88 Dodlll Chargor, Good
Condhlon, lluat Soo $950 OBO,
814-446-ai55 If Not Homo, 814-

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock
61

Fann Equipment

8' Rototlllltl 3 Pl. HKch Ulto
Now, $1,300, 814-'141·1312.
Chtln Saw bora &amp; cholno to tn
almool any oow. Boot prlcM In
aru. Sldera Equipment, 30411'5-11121 or t-II00-277-3D17.
John Dooro bockhoo, 1a. OMC
t ton 4x4 truck and '1owboy
trencher, Davia 25.4, call 11+
1112·2833, t2pm-llpm, lllondoy
thru Saturday.

1D87 Pontiac GIWnd Am LE, olr,
un, crulaa, auto, 4cyl, aport
whMia, new whhe pelnl, $2500.
304~75-4530 .

ex:hauat. $2500. 304-871-1158.

1D89 Dodao Shtclo!rJ. $1,1100,
814-318-V!ft, 114-441....,5.
1989 Ford ll ..tong Convorta!H
OT, 5 S..d, Stondard, Dartt
Blut I Croy. EICOIIont Condlllonl 114-448-oltS.
1989 Uncoln Town Car $111. 304::1711-1::.:::111::1:__ _ _ _ __
1D89
Pontiac
Fonn~~j
Automatic· Air: T·T-; 44,11UU
MIIMi POLi PWi Rldi Onr lft.torlor 11,1100, 114 411 11208.
tiiiO Cavotlor Z24, auto, tlntod

PW, POL, air, ornlfm 011-0,
.unroof, rww tlrwe, $6500. 3044611·1771.

tHO Cllov Luntlno Equro
$6,8111. 1881 Chow 810 $4.250.
1D89 Coralco LTZ $4,2115. 11187
Orand Am 12,7115. 1D87 Chow
Blozor $41~. tN8 Fonl ~
f2,8115. 11NJ1
Ford F-150 $3 5.
1i8t Buick $1,M. 1188
C.VIIIIr SW loodod .. ,285. Now
63
Livestock
Volloy Oootto Nack Stock Trol'-.
Scalty'o Uood Coro ...., , _
1 paint ltalllon; 1 aornl walking mono- Pell Ohllngor,
miNi 1 larga ponyi 114-74~~ New Raven, WV. 304-182-3712.
2078.
1Dtlt
Codlloo Bowlllo, tufty
1 9moll Gantlo Pony, 114-446- loodod, CO, uc. 304-8""-

2 nanny goats, $25. Pot-belly
pig, $50. 30Wtl2-3750.
.
4 bull colvoo lor brooding pur2 block ond whHo raco,_ z
potlod horolord; oloo cowo wnh
cot- !&gt;J oldo; 1114-8112·101511.
Baby BuN Colvott For Bolo Two
Holatoln, Ono Jonoy, 114-24111557.

For Solo: Pollod Horolord Butlo,
BIOI Bloodlnoo, Raglotorod,
Twoln llontho And OldOr, Startlng At $1.200. Wrlto Or Col:
Lynch And Forma, 110 W.
4th Sl., Chllllootho, OH 48801·
:I20fl 114-771-2311 Or 114-MlL
4035.

LDw llllao, For Solo Or Tolto

Owor Poymonto, 114-311'-1111

C.

moro Z-28, ltDd~l M:,
PO, PWS,~Ioo,
CO 21~"3.""•
1· 304-871block, 1
·
IIIIlS OEO llolro lllto ,.. otiA
undor wonnty. Gnat goa
A.~,o~yrwot
w~oodmlloogoooll:
·-_,.
dlo, brl a,
, 114-1112· "t
114 Camero, roc~, ucelllnt contltlon, tow ml•, ftluol oall,
64 Hay &amp; Grain
$15,1100 lt4-llt2-254D or •-75=-=~==-:-~=~
- . . . r:uttlng hoy, rounc1 or I5CIIl=::1:_______
oqun boloo, ao bolod , _ 72 Trucks fOr 8ale
llold on wagono, 114-MW571
1111 OMC 11:1 Ton U' BtMI
~'"!..'":301.oolo, $1.110 por bolo. Fromo 814-'1411-3243 Aller I P.ll.
-~•..-.

71

Autos for Sale

:::1H'I=eonwo=--=nso=oa=o-=lt::-4-:-:44::-1
4021.

Bulcll Sllvlork. 2DA., HT,

IIIIlS

---

17'
1888
Bayllner,
Inboard/outboard w/ trallar, call

7
L:.:·.:;
ll:;___ _ _ _ _: --

F~ANK

140 HP1 Trim, llorino ~~
Walk Tnru
Opon Bow
Condition, 814-441-11568.

".. •

a...

$300. Phone •.-..a cn1no
sao.
304-171-1441.

•c.

an-

Computer 14C Cornmodora
With Prfntor, Exlroal UOO, 114441·1312.

-------------------

1183 Ponflao Orwnd Prix, "-fJ
robuln VI onglno, auto,
loolto/1'1110
good, $1800. 112-2141 ,_,,
....

Wonlod to buv: 2WOhp oul··
board motor. 364-1711-21181.

76

o

L___:~:!~:::::____

UP ··'ITu

F/l~~

YO U "A
()
7
I

V"

vJ ll...l-,

TLl'-'(

r"

vi

P

OUI...f:&gt;

·

BORN LOSER

Auto Pans &amp; ..

Accessories
350 "' 400 turbo tranomlulono

Wed or ovorhoulod, gtMrantiiiil
I • 30 doyo. 304-815-48110, Rl "

Plaaeant.

Fo..- Yokohama 215160HR11 '
opood ratod blackwall
~~ :

11-,

than SOOml. waar, $160. 814-44'JI. .

0131.

BIG NATE

lutly Mll-contolnod, ~onoratw,
air,
rwfrigeratorffrMzw,
microwave. mauv• Interior,
lli,OOOml, rudy lor rood, $6500.

SAAA.I"-'&lt; 1 '-'""T "S

EAT SANt&gt; , '-'11"1P 1

P&gt;AP&gt;E LIKE '/1)0
A RUNT LIKE

W'CA 1'\flt. HA AA IIA ItA

s ign

11 Pros pectors·
finds
19 Permi ts to
21 Goals
23 1rrltate

25 Part of
hammer
26Bohomla n
27 Space
28Aclor Krls toHerson
30 Ne rve network
31 Press

32Numbers
35 Of the da wn
38Actor -

.

Services

ll9BOTMAN

I. CAI-I'T BEli~IJ£ 1-\0'NCOM~T\1\V£..
SP£(0 WMl&lt;I~G IS. THIS YAHOO'S
IRVING TO PASS Mt. ON /&gt;. TURN'

Home
Improvements

!
ll

!!!!!=~~=;:::~~::~Malchmaker inslantly reveals

Cu~la Homo lmprovomonto. No
Job Too Big Or Small, Yoaro Ell·
Pilla,_
On Otdor
IN-r
Homos. Arld~lono.
Fo&lt;.Mottono.
Roofing,
Khchono
/Botho,
Roplocamont Wlndowo, 1.. ui'O!I,
FrM Eotlmotoa. 1114-3117-. ·

ASTRO-GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDE QSOL

'Your
'Birthday
'
Salurday. July 23, 1994
His1ory sometimes has a way of repeat·
ing ltseH, and this could be true for you in
lhe year ahead. Persons who were lortunate for you previously could be so again.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today you could
be luckier than usual in unique shuations
where a major portion of lhe spadaworl&lt;
has bean done by someone else. You
wQ/1'1 look for a free nda, bul you mighl
get one. Know whereto look lor romance
and you 'll find 11. The Astro -Graph

Refrigeration

tt2,500 3tiW78-2:3Is.

F . . _ lloator Eloctriclon ·
~··~·4~4~1~1~1~3oi~-~·'!:-~::217~'1~301~=·
1H4 Chivy 4.3 lcyl., 2WD, 1;
• ·
11t01t bod, lui g,_, $14,7110. Rllldonllol or oom...,.lol
!104-411'5-7888.
•Iring, , _ or
Mo- U - tloct clan •

m'"- .
.: .

j

"

you than you can do unaided .
are romantically pe~ect for you . Mail $2 AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) You 're in
10 Matchmake!, c/o lhis newspaper. P.O. a cycle that could produce favorable influBox 4465. New York. N.Y. 10163.
ences that will enhance your material
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) You'1e in a well-being . Vou might not gel rich
favorable cycle lor working out arrange- : overnight. bul avery liHie bit helps.
ments . agreements or c onlracls that ' PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Something
could produce mulual benefits for the • 1n which you ' re presenlly ~nvolvedhas
part1es concarned.
potential. bul it should be •eorgamzed
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Two of your property. You'relhe person who can do 11
besl assets today are your tenac1ty and better than any of lhe other panic1pators.
logic . These are lhe elements lhal can ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19) Make it a
help you successfully ach1ave your obtec· poinl today lo lry lo flnaltze mailers
tives. Something of significance IS poss1· • ; important to you financially . You know the .
ble.
' ones that have priority . and you know
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Be on your , what needs to be done .
best behavior today a1 social gatherings. I TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Usually it's
and take time to be friendly whh as many : unwise to 1UOQte several ventures simul·
persons as possible. Your chart indicates taneously. but today could be an excep- '
. something of importance might resun.
tion because of how they Interact With .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23:Dec. 21) one ano1her.
.
Devote your eHorts and energ1es today to GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Somelhlng
enterprises or endeavms lhal could gen· constructiVe could result today H.you try
erate additional earnings. They are near- to rectify an account where what IS _owed
er lhan you think. bul you must uncover you is long overdue. The prObabilnles of
· lhem yourseH.
collecting look good.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Usually CANCER .(Jun:e 21-July 22) Do nol treat
you don't feel very comlortable when indifferently or 19nore b~ghl ~as you get
you're put in a position ol having lo . today that come to you In a nash of lnSp!·
depend on others . Today, however • . ration. Pullhem lo lhe lest. They
I
friends o~ who"! you lean can do.more \·~O!'&lt;,
r
""'
)

I

11418C:iri·cll• ports
Italian monay
unit

50 Unclothed
52 Pour
:sJ Bronte's
Jane ·54 Re main at
ease

'57 Mis demeanor

CELEBRITY CIPHEn
Celebnty Ctpher cryptograms are crea ted !rom quota toos by ramou: •eople pasl and
Eacn tetter 1n 1he c1pner stands tor anomer TOday s ·rue v ~ B

Y ' N

·

y

BGAKZB

WGD

F S E A

CZA

EYB

FHKD

H D

p r e~n t

GDN
G

vy

A .

A K Z

CY &lt; RCSN

PREVIOU S SO LU TI ON: "Wha t offends me rs a nythm 1 tha t messe s w1th the
nnoce nce ol ch ildren o r an tma ls·." - (Comedian) Cha ri s F l e tsc h e r
1

'~~:t~~, S©\\~lA-LGtZ"~®
- - - ldltod by CLAY I . POLlAN -

- - --

Rearrange letters of
0 four
scrambled words
low

fo

form four words

Gu L J E G

I I

II

2

1

WORD
GAM I
- - -- -

the
be·

I
I
,.

AL DE I

......,w_O"'"l'::R-,N_D~-ij· ..

l" I
.

:N
,'

.
Is
I. I.

~

I

·yes, I want lo live a long
life," one nol so smart cutie
said to her friend . "But." she
added. "I sure don't want to
reach . - . . . •I '

IG

L EKET T
~-~,6~,~--,~.-..,..,-r,--i

.

N l

WHDCBGASRGAVHDE
XGEA . '

UHBI

E AYRR

A KG D

BGAKZB

_

23, 1994

OSWK

E K HU

r

1846, philosopher Henry David Thore ·
au was briefly imprisoned for refusing to pay a $1 tax, in protest against
slavery and the Mexican War.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS; Raymond
Chandler (1888-19591, writer; Michael
Wilding (1912·19791, actor; Gloria De·
Haven (1925 -), actress, IS 69·

tf78 Wlldornooo C.mpor 24' Air
CondHionorlo Roll Out Awning,
Folr CondH n, $2,500, 814-388111118.

=-~rlcal, wv

BEplc poem
9 TaVern s
10 lrrlt ale

East
Pass
All pass

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in

1m 2~h. Clmpar, "" conlalnod, 8 bodo. 304-773-5244.

Oonorwl
Home
llolntena,_ wollpopor, otonn
doon, rooflng and complato
homo ropolr, comploto window
ropalr, ....,_,.. wuhlng ond
mobllo homo rwpo~. For !roo . .
tlmoto coli Chat, 814-8112-1323. •

North
I t
4 "'

Today is the 204th day •
of 1994 a~ the 33rd ·
day of summer.

:t04~711-2114i.

CI.C

tor s hort
7 Intersectio n

Ope ning lead: • Q

July

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANQ
UneondHionol Pfotlmo guorontoo. Loco! roloroncoo tumlohod.
Coli t.soo.w-om Or 814-2310488 Rogoro Wolorproollng. &amp;toblllllod 1m.
••

Wes l
Pass
Pass

TE B

1111t 27ft . lhan mGilor home,

81

6 Machinery oil.

4 Ac1or Estevez

SDine

Yes terday I gave a deal in which
th e de fe nde rs could pun ch - or
tap or force, according to choice
declarer often enough that he lost
trump control. More often, though.
the defende rs threaten to Ioree declarer to lo se co ntrol , but if he
du c ks - or s id estep s - a t th e
right mom ent , he can stay on hi s
feet and ma ke his contract.
In today's dea l, West leads the
diamond qu ee n again st th e con tract of four heart s. How should
South plan the play•
You might not like North's rebid
of lour he arts with s uc h· wea k
trumps. But it doe s have th e often
underra ted advantage of simplici. ty, without necessarily sacrificing
accuracy.
_::!:~~~
When you have a trump suit like
th is, it is often ri~ht t o du ck th e
firs t round. plannmg to cas h th e
ace next. Maybe you thought thi s
was another e xample . We ll . tha t
line will work lin e if th e trump s
split 3-2, but not if th ey a re H
Here We s t win s the heart tri ck
with hi s quee n and forc es Sou th
· with a diamond. South cas hes the
heart ace, receiving the bad news.
Now the contract cannot be made.
South plays three rounds of
spades, ruffing the last in the dummy. He ruffs a diamond tn hand
with his final trump and th en he
starts on the clubs. But East ruffs
the third round and claims.
The right line is to lead a heart
to the ace at trick two and then to
play on clubs. The defende rs are
welcome to three trump tricks , but
that is all they will get &lt;unless the
hearts are 5-0) .
True, this line might cost an
overtrick, but that's a small price
to pay for ens uring the gam e
bonus.

N• "" lanka, one ton tn~et :
wt..li, ndlatore, floor rn.t4. •
ate. D i R Auto, Rlploy, WV. :J04. •
372·3i33 or t-II00-273-1132D.
.:

79

lotlone

2 Formerly Persia
3 Title

Take precautions:
duck

•

Ron'o TY Sarvtoo, _...lzlng
In lanfth oloo Mnllclng moet
other llranda. Howo ca11o atoo
~lonoo
f11101ro.' WV
304
115 Ohio 114-441-2454.
82 Plumbing &amp;
Heating

:=.ro':.!O::·
~..:"'.:'=.
!104..7U281.

L--------....1

18110 Yamaha Wovo Runnor soq,.
!Dual Trwltor, 11-4--4411-8314.
••

,... l i d - Codllao 12,100, co~~, 3111 ......
Iu:::--::::=:-:::~~;;:,;,..._;
good IIMpa, :t04-I"IW• •
gotliCII .kolll, - . ; lift, utroa, Hoot Pumpa, Alt Concl~ .
1183 Oltllntobllo
71,000
llllaa, 11.1100, 1114-448$14.

-----'

lhepe,
• 304-805-3335. • ~
1D87 21 Ft. 4 Win,. Cloood Bow·
305 Chevy Motor, Plua All ,._:
- . ..4.300, 814--441-.
3040.
•

1ND Volk_owogon Dlckup, 4 cyl.,
will troclo lor firgor truck, 114-1112-1197.
1D811 Nlooon Truck, Automatic 4
Spark Plugo With Air, Now Tlroa,
Good Conalttonl '*251-1840.
tm
Dodao
Do~•m..._,
,
_ tlraa,
lopd.,
304-175-

43.-.

~

1088 Pr~Malter
boat,·
1088 11:~&amp;::trcury motor, ext:

AE Homo llolnt....,_ point·
lng, wtnyl oldlng, rool1nG and
~11'!111- Fraa Mlfmotoa, 11WII24ZI2, oak lor Joo or Earl.

·" " Chov. a n - - utondocl

0

~

ru~y·vc: (,OM~
rt::
~
t::

Vt:
J UJ&gt;"T Llr&gt;t:

0
"'

1J

- ~

TtiE- TI'IWPY Of

1D85 opaod boot, $8!500. FoatMI
boot on Rlvor. 304-875-5200 r1r
175-1878 after Spm.

---. 0

0

&amp; ERNEST

W"' 1...

:::::---..

--=:::::::---

S

•1

~;&lt;.o.e....__.J....... "' L" •

for Sale

AKC roglotorocl 2 yr old rralo ·
PB, D3.00Cfml, illce lor Ito
now,-.114-1112-2014.
ago, $1500. ~21.
• -ntry
Antlq.. chino coblnot wlglooa - · 1100. 21141'
Froaman'o Haatl!lg And Coolna.
- . 1200. Draooor I dro_,
1m 0oc1go c - 111, VI.
I mlnow SUO. a.d t.M AKC lloglol- Houtd IIDcl. otoi\dord, 48,000 ootuol 1N8 Dodao 1).100 V-t, LWB, lnlta11aUon And ........ EPl
Pllpploa, • -ka Old With
Alllo. M:. -.-. Cuatom T- Corllftod. Rooldontlol eo...-.
...... tiiOO. 304-175-11114.
- llhala, S121,114 441 1114.
por, 75,000 llllot. Er....eni dol 114-2M-181t
•
lop toblo hood
w/4 board.
cltolro ·$71.
Pent_,.o m l - $71.
~lon. $7,000, · - 1 12111
Wlckor 3pc. couch 1 c11o1rw,
Aftor I P.ll.
84 Electrical &amp;

w--

- - ··--·-

q\..VNK .'

75 Boats &amp; Motors

1ND ~ Plck.Up WH11 T•
por, 4 SDHd, Thla Truc:k 1o E Nicol$2,000, 114-378-251111.
4 op, "!500 "'

·~·

minor rwpalro, $350. 304-ll82·
3438.

©

0 -...._

~

Hondll 125 4-whHiar, naeda

=U=D=~~--~----~---

1i8t llonto Corio, IIOW ohopo,
$45011. 30W7W2011' or~
anor tpm.
till2 4 o-, Honda Acconl, Ex·
col lint Conclftlon, I Bpood,
AIM'II Sl"'"" C o - . AC,
Now Tlrw, 31 IIPO, l7,000
Hlgh-y lllloo, 114 4 41 0021. •
1DII2 Hyundollonoto Very Ctoon

-=::....

CondHion, Whh 3000 Actuol
llllot, 614-258-85111.

11183 11 112 Rlnltor More CruiiMir

1987 Chov Colobrltv wagon, AC,
UK, crulao.t PS1 !B, 3 _..,
$1,800. OBu. :10""'715,.2371.

_

Rackl, In Good Condition; 1082
XL Hondo S t - Troll In Good

614-et:l-3132.

4411-11800 or 1-aOG-272-11~ oatt
lor Pam, bot-n Bom-Spm.

PEANUTS

lDIIO LT 160 Suzuki 4 Whoolar,
Eloctric Sta~ . Front l Bock

1088 Unc~n Town Car, exc.
cond., loldad, full power,
moonroot, only 65,000ml. 614-

llooooy Forguoon sa Troctw
With IJuoh HOa I Bladoc13.~.800;
2020 John llOoro Wlln 11uoh
Hoa, S6,D50; 850 Ford WHh Plow
Ana CuHivotor, $3,750; 114-2861622.

8981.

:.

441-41144.

1D88 Pontiac Grwnd Am Turbo,
AC, outo, now point, brokn &amp;

256·1353.

Sooro Lll•atr,lo 2100 troodmlll,
Huffy """' ao blko. Con bo

Colli
HondorooiL

1988 Cutlaaa 307, Broughman,
AMIFM C.IMtte, PS, PB,
Au1omatlc, 102,000 MIIM, Runa

1 Setting

By Phillip Alder

1i8i Hondo CRI25, runo groat,
ore cond, St1 ~ . 304-882-2020
boiOf'OD:OO PM.

Pick; cabbage. You Pk:k, 114w

And llryoro, All Rocondltlonod
And Courwnloadl 1100 And Up,
Will Dollvor. 114-81D-614t.

from

avary opt, 67,000 mlln, 305 V-8,
$2800, dt4-IXI2-0?ti.

1i87 PonUoc T..bo Orand Am, 2
Vegetables
Door-'- Loodod, 10,000 MillO, 114448
C.oolng tomatooo for tolo1 pick .:~·n
cc8'-'9::.·:-:::--::--:-:-:-:your own, Hrirry Hill, LMar1 1881 Marti Ill CUI1omlzld Van,
Ftlla, 814.:!47-2142.
low mllogo, Z· BART DIOioctod,
WhJie 112 RuMer Beane, You =~ll:c. concf, $'11,000.

Refrigw1tora, Stov•, 'Nahan

...n at:•Y brick hoUie acrou

1085 Olde O.ha 88, 4 dr. Mdan,
one owner, buutlful family Clr,

1i87 Clvoylor l..oBoron 2.2
814-256- Turbo, Good Condhlon, 12,700,
114-388-8725.

Woohor
"O!li Frfgldolro
Rolrfgorolor "ou; 2 Now Ou

Haa1are 1 Van111d 1 Unvanted

1985 E1e0r1 $400, 614 446 &amp;325.

PARSON!! WOULD YOU
GO IN AN' GIVE TATER ONE
OF YORE LITTLE TALKS ?

I BEEN TRYIN' TO
GIT TATER TO
SLEEP FER
TWO SOLID
HOURS 11

1985 Suzuki RMt25, llko now;
$900 n~~goCiabla . 304-882-34111.

304-8711-2063.

•

Nu

1984 llo$~ Cougar, good
work car,
. Call 8f4-371-"2371.

Flott Ttnlt &amp; Pat Shop, 2413

Plutlc loHoro lor porto!H
tlano, S5Mtox, bo• lroo.
UA Slgno. t-4«»-1533-3453
anytime.
OuMn Slzo lod Now Hoodboonl
And Frwmo $ISO; I Ft Antktuo
•75;
OVon 2 Yooro Old
· GE

I "'

WHAT' S WRON G,
LOW EElY?

1gas Hond• 4t;pencada, loaided,
Iota ol chroma, new 11re1,
. atr1pn end murtela, 29,000
or1glnll mlln, call 614..V92·7803
after Spm .
·

Large S.go Palm (Fem Palm)
And T111 Cactua Trwe for Buel-

AKC Cockor Spaniel pupplel, 10
Aluminum
toppor, tuU o1u
8' bod, $100; trucll bod lnor I', '::-a~ --.~, StDO.
StOO; tromDOIIrw wipodo, 1St/2',
$150; Wuribzor tun mokor .... AKC Dolmotlon r.uDDioo. 1
lorn organ, modoll451 hoo buill ~ ......... olMito.-In c. . .n. recorder, aoubla ker

Autos for Sale

5330.

TransportatiOn

tnrc'

71

1D87 Suzuki 300, $1750. 304-8~ .

50 Whfto Olk Logo, 1D"It8" 12
10.10.1 dati ltooool, $ttiii.D6.
·18 Fl. Long, 114-3114720, Aftor PolntPIUa,~ .
I P.ll.

Rooms
114 4 -.eeao.

Pets lor Sale

23!17.

CondHionor, $125i Sofo'o $7!;
Entertalnmenl: center S80i
Woodbumor $100; Antiquo
lloytog Wrtngor Wuhor, Buill In
lite f100; 114-378-2720 Ahor 8
P.ll.

'"'

BARNEY

baga &amp; extra exMuat. 13,700.
304~82·2647 tftor 5:00PM.

1985 Chovy C.moro, lcyl., auto.
304-8711-ts&amp;O attar 5pm or loovo

Nlco Kftchon Tobia I Cholro
$125; Nlco Hutch 1221; Nlco Air

S outh

1984 Har1ay Oavldaon 1000 cc,
low miiNge, ••tra . .t., Nddla

1fter lpm Qr 304-882-2a41.

White tlwn bed eulle. cheet,

Furnished

R_,.l., ront · or month.
Stonlngol $1201m0. Collla Hotel.

loc

1085 C.maro, Nd, v-e auto,
wHh olr, oaklng $1800, S14-Jit2·

drM""li8J'" otond, 2 bodo, nc
oond,
· firm. 304-17~ 8 ·
W-umor; 11188 ollvor truck
t . _ ; truck tool box ; 814-61185345 ·

Norrie .,....,

~ E A.

:1

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

Tlrn. Low MIIH, Excellent
Condition! $1, 200, 6\4-.US-4525.

Coppar-noeed Baaglaa, 11wka
old, $50. ~7!.:!075 .

Both helM, 114-441-2214.

boo~;

L Afl-~'""'
W\2- llr'lt'l

4 1-3224.

2 atoll horoo trolllr, $1,000; robbHo and 011goo, mlxod I
purwbodo, 114'it2·7288, 114it2-715D loavo moaoago.
S Ton lloblll Pack Alt Condhlorwr lnatollod, Flnonclol
Avolloblo, 114~41-41308. 1 287-1308.
!loore Tobia Saw $178; 12" S.Oro
Bandoow $1110; I" Ryobl Rocllol
Sow "50· I" Sooro JOfntor $t7ll;
100'o 01 Olk Rolood Ponol
C.blnol Dooro .. Eo.; 3,000 R.
Walnut Lumbar sus To 12.50
PT.; 1188 Dodao Comol
Now llot«
1'rono,
Shooto
411 IV4"
Olk$1~:.0..
1115 Eo. 1114-441-4311.
4 window olr oondNionoro. 304773-6141.
.

Motorcycles

Wlndohlald, Soddlo Bogo, Now
1 "

s

SOUTH
"' A 6 4
¥A 5 4 2
t 4
• KQ1094

1981 Honda CB 800 Cu11om

J

Mlc~~af Hutch, Dook, 11 Ootl

Lota Of MI.... ~z• 8 Clothing,
Alao Some 12 &amp; 14 Size. F1brlc:
By Tho Yard, Othor Houoohold
"=-=0.:.•:.:14-.:,:.24=·~~=064
=.- -- :
Matching Etriy Amortcon couch,
~YMN1 and chair, S125i cott.
tobll and 2 ond toblot, $30;
dining taba. and 3 ch1lr1, $30;
!!:!~~~ ohor 5pm or

t K 9
"' 5 2

67$-1564.

KtnfT'tON WUhll', Gu Stove,
Tra1h Compaclor, 011'1111• Set

n- Or Lorgt Homo 146 i $15

.. Q .J g
¥ KJ I 09

'87 Yamaha four-wh..ler War·

vno.

___

qulrocl . 8~338.

Grocl- living. 1 and 2 bodroom aponmonta at Vlllogo
Form, 31 ICfH, Crab Croolt Rd, llonor
ond
Rlvorolrlo
aulloblo for houooo, firming &amp; Aponmonlo In lllddloport. From
huntlna. Bmatl cabin. 137,000. 1232-$344 . C.ll 614-it2-Bae9.
384-JIIS.388s.
EOH.

Buildings

74

King Slzo Wotorbod, Gloao
C.blnata,
Mirror,
Ughlod
HNdboard tAOO. Ou. . n Sl:za
Waterbad $200. Fr.u.w 175.
Sofo, Rocllnor Rocking Choir
814-&lt;167-5245.

7 6 2
~AST

446·2342.

color print•, 2 ~k &amp; 1 c ~or rib..
bona, 111 accauon.. , 1 yr old,
used max 15 tim. .. $600. 304-

lrone, 8

oA

Third Avenue, O.lllpoUa, 614-

Howlatt Packard dnk Jot 500c

Antktuoo Apprtlood. Eatolo Or
mochlno worllo aood
Tea 9ale, SIIVIce 21 v..,. Ez- Sowing
oloct!lc chain ..
i2
poilo,_, .loon WhHa, 114-245- $35;
horoo rfdlng mower,
; 11411441.
114D-252tl.
DONALD SMITH ASSOCIATES: Signa: Portoblo llghlod chong•
FINE ANTIQUES- Amorfcon art, oblo loltor algn. Spacial mD.
chino, on giUa, ollvot, lumfttn. Ragular $391.
FrM
lot·
llcCov R-vlllo, ole. COLLEC- loro/dollvory.
1-8(».533-3453
TIBLES- INfnto, pootoro, toolo, 1nytlme.
pottery, clocko, boxoo, torw bot·
Uoo, - - · toyo, oto. ALWAYS STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
BUYING ARROWHEADS. Top Uprf~hl, Ron Evano Entort&gt;riMo,
dollar paid. Ono ploco or ono Joe"-'. Ohio, 1-1101)·637·~28.
hundrod. APPRAISALS, 40
yooro ox...-. PINM coli Toy choot wlhutch choot of
droworo, boby c~b. •rotiO&lt;,
614-11112-2422.
oolng, -lkor, coi'MOt. 304-8754548
54 Miscellaneous
·
Merchandise
Two 12,000 BTU Frldgldalrw Air
..::;,;:.;:;:;.;:.;,;~-:-1 CondHionoro. 114, 814-441·1:205.
125,000 BTU Natural Goa Fur· WATER UNE SPECIAL: 314 Inch
naco, Hoffzontal Typo $300, 114- 200 PSI $1U8; 1 Inch 200 PSI
t41-t3t2.
$32.~ Ron Evano Entort&gt;rlooo,
11185 8-10, Grwvoly, ,..llnor, 11181 114-...,.51130 Jockoon, Ohlo
Ford 414. 304-871i-ln1Z.
Whlto stool l,.utatod garago
2 Rod Wing Bock Cholro $121 do«, llko ,.., olzo e·.r' call
Both; 1 Rod Rocllnor $100, OBO lll2-42l3 ohor 4 pm.

31" K....r Sandor t1,850: 10"

•A J 8

1989 Dodgo Rom Yon 60,000
Mllu, $4,000; C.n Bo Soon AI:
Goltlpolla Dolly Tribuno, 825

central halt, air, rwf.,.nct , .

Fanna for Sale ,

Business

Real Estate

S250Jmo., 814-141-2521.

Si,:JOO, 1~46-2082, 114-31.,.: Fumlahod 3 Roomo &amp; lath,
04e4.
-A.
Cloon, No Pats, Rotw.._ I
11188 Bchultz 141179 ll1iiili1 homo Doposh Roqulrod. 11-H48-1Stt.
w/upondo, :lbr., 2 both, nloa Nlcoly Fumlohod Apo-,
1;~ 1br, noxt to Ubrory, portdng,

1

tumlture, heltara, Watem 6

• 8 7 6 3

1978 Chevrolet 4x4 Pie k· Up,
Shor1 Wheet BaH. Lota Of New
Pa rtal 614.-t46-2640.

Dodgo Convorolon; 1J00r1 oondltlon, 814-tMD-2528.

Wheelchair &amp; Charger, Good
Chair, Like Ntw, 614 -446--8207.

i'eJ.a;

for Rent

pota,l14-ll92·22tl.
t Bodroom Aponmant, Panly
Fumlahod, Gto"· W.tor, Sowtgo
Pold, $250/llo. t'luo Socurity, No
Polo, 814~46-14:n Ahor I P.ll.

adver11semenls to r rea 1es1at e

makM, almond, IXC. cond.,

2 a.drooma Furnlo~ 1 On Clay Wort&lt; boola. 114-44e-3tlli.
Chopot Rood, $3UUIMO. Plua
S300 Dopoalt, 814-256-8408.
52 Sporting Goods
2 Bodroon~o, M:, No Pata, Gotl clubo I bag. Prolooolonol
Dapoalt
And
Aatw.ncaa, ctube, tllto , _ bag. »HJ'5.
$4001110., Wuhl!, Drtor; 2 Bod- TtOD.
room Houu, t'umlahld, No
Peto, 1350illo. Doposh, 114-"IW- Romlnaton 700 BDL, 30-011
4348.
w/recoll
pod
I
owing.
Romlnaton 170, 12 gougo
3 Bodrvomo $250/Mo. • Doposh, w/ahelft. All exc. cond. 304-1~
1 Bodroom, $200/Mo. • Dopoolt, ~51.
114-2~ Dr 114-258-IIIOD.
Two bodroom moblll homo, 53
Antiques
totol oloctrlc, panlolly tumlahod, ;.:,~--:-~.:....:.:-:--::-=
rwfwenco and dopooH roqulrocl, Antlq,. 4 drowor chony
114-1112-2014.
Shorolon choot, nlco oond,
.:.:.;..;....:...:..;....:..;._ _ _ _ _ _ 1 $350. 814-38'-7210.

ortgtn. or any Intention to

kr&lt;&gt;wtlngly accept

Household

$300. 304-&lt;IDI5,.3703.
King Slzo Wotllbod, 1 Yoar Old
__1
41 Houses .for Rent
Rooo Edgod Mirror And Lklhtoa
Cablnett, Semi-Wave Mafh••
2 Bedroom•, Unfumi.JI.t, Ga1 Pold saso Aoklng USO, 114-mFurnace, Rafarwnca, Deposit 2410.
Roqulrod, 814-4111-4481.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
3 bedroom hOUia on Uncoln comploto homo tumlahlngo.
Holghto, 814-IXI2·7889 anor 5pm. Hou!W: llo...Sol, t-8. 814-4411Modul«, 2 e~r gerage, 2 bathe, 0322, 3 mllot out Bulavlllo Rd.
cenlflll elr, nMr Clinter, 614- Froo Dollvory.
1185~286 or t114-11815,.383i.
Rolrlgorator $95; Rotrlgorator
Two Or ltv• Bedroom Houae Froot Frwo $1SO; Rotrlgorator
In Goltlpolla. DoposH And Sldo B'N Sldo Wu S285R Now
leo Eloc1rtc
ango,
Raforancoo Roqulrocl. No Polo, $116;
Sand Nama And Phono Numbor Mlcrowovo OVon On Top, $250;
To: CLA :121, elo Galtlpotla Dolly Eloctrlc Rongo :tO Inch $16;
Tribuno~~5 Third Avonuo, Go~ Eloctrlc Range 40 Inch $125;
Maytog Wringer Wuhor, Nlco
tlpollo, UH 45131.
Squaro Tub, _ $175t'C
· Aut.....atlc
Unturnlahed houae, 2 br, nice &amp; Waeher
'VOi
er
$71;
Now, t
cle•!'1 _ no peU, dep. required, Whirlpool Woohor U
Y•r W.-nnty $205; Gla Ranp
8t4-w•·3090.
30 Inch Sil; Goa Rongo :MIInch
SiS; Skoago Apr,lloncoo, 78 Vlno
42 Mobile Homes
Stroot, aolllpoloJ 114~46-73i8,
Or t.S0().411!1-34Do.
for Rent
----,,...--.,..-...,--,--,I
SWAIN
14d0 2 Br, 1 milo South of AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 12
Euroka, on St. Rt.7. No pota, Olivo St., Colllpolla. Now i Uaod

1 end 2 bedroom apar1mentl,
fumleh«t and unfumlahed,
H do
It
1 od
MC~ Y
poa requ r ' no

ThiS n e - wt1 not

51

73 Vans &amp; 4 WO's

1984 Ford Convanlon; aleo 1m

Electric

••w•,.

Merchandise

Kenmore ,.trtgerator, froet frH,

tlvHy for chlldron, clooo to
atorwo, churchoo, ocl-'d.
Whorw con you got oil lhla for

Buslnen

Jenning•

King lire w.. erbed with llghte
encf mlrTOr, I
undarnHih, new m.n,. .. and llnar,
heater, eomfortM' 1nd curtalna,
$300, will deliver 10 re111onab11
lrM, 814-M'i-2888.

Aultv. 814-992-2720. ovonlnga Mollohan Carpeta.
614-IKI2-358i.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wanted lo bu~ - two or more
acrH, 1uttabla to build on 1nd W1eh ....L. ctryer., refrtger1t~
close to a blacldop road, 614- rongoo. Skaggo Apptloncoo, "'
Vlno St-,.pou 114-446-73il, 111411-2481.
IOO~DB-34w .

· Our "'"""" oro honll&gt;y
lnlormod that atl d"""tngs
lldvor11sed In lhls newspaper

21

l

Ponny comcordorL_ -~50.
Rooy·Boo anoko, $50. ""4-&lt;1 7$-

Goods
Trailer lola I
acrHge In
Pomeroy, prlca 11 negOirable, Carpot $5.00 Up Vinyl S.Ui To
for rant or 1111, 0 ' Brien l Crow $6.50 In Stock, 114-448-lll44,

lmftallon or dlscrtmlnaUon
based on race, coiot', religion ,
SBlllanilal status or national
mak&amp;ll'f such preference,
Irritation or dlocrlmlnatlon.'

:o

Fmancial

Evans

JC

47 Wanted to Rent
Elder1y lady would like a Nee
.mall apartm.,t or houM at
r..ao nable
prtce.
Pra,.r
Pomeroy,
11\ddl•pott
or
SyracuM , 114-tG2-28tll.

We a ther sate lli te ma lfuncl1on

Rood, 114-388-11812.
Eototo Sontornont Soto: 3
- _ A&lt;:roogo, Soto/illo Dlah
-contact Tom LDhla At 1-1100MI-1702 Or 1112·328-11473 Aftar 5
WIUd drlver'e licenM1 good driv- P.ll.
Ing roco&lt;d, 3yro ltc:.naid drt.lng For oolo by ownor· log homo,
oxporlonco
and
odequoto 11180 oq. ft., lUll bilaomont
outomobll lnawonce roqutrocl. wlfamlly room woodbumer, 3
Contact Cecilia t-800-531-2302. bodrooma, 2 kltcho,., 3 botna,
EOE.
CIAI central v1ccum, cathederal
ng. atono f~oplaoo, largo
RESPITE CARE
WORKING call
32151
outbuilding
NEEDED: Would You Bo Willing dock,
work room, 2+ ecraa In
To C.,. For P.,.one WJtfi wlheated
wooded .,.. ck)u 1o town,
Looming Umltotlon In Tholr 11o1111 School District, doytlmo
Home On An "Ao -clod" 1'14-002-2318, avelng l'f4.-082Boola? Salary: $6.00 /Hour. Hl~h
Set-' Do-. Yolld Drl- o 7t33.
Uconoo, GOod Drtwlng Rocanl, Fw !loll By Ownor: 3 BR., 1 1/2
Throo Yooro Uconooa Drtwlng Bo1h, 2,100 Sq. Fl., 1 S1wy 2
Exporionco
And
Adoquoto Flroplacoo, Goat Hoot, Coni. Air.
Automobllolnourone41 Roqulrocl. Laria1 Drtve. Watklng ~11t1nce
Contoct Cocltla At 1.-.a31· lo hoopltal, $85,000. Shown By
2302.
Eq~al
Opportunhy Appointment, 814-446-1208.
Employor.
For ull or poalble land conSmall Local Finn Booking Port· tract, 1mall one bedroom houa1,
Tlmo On Coli Cloonlng POioono. 304-7T.I-5t63.
Sand Rotumo To SCCS, P.O.
..._ for ..... ,$17,000 .... rent
Boxll38, KilT, OH 41143.
$300/mo., 3 Daelroom, tuu
Truck drivoro -ntod to haul lo- buamenl, c.ll 814449-2405 af.
cal, c:oiii14-1112-254D.
tor3pm.
Wanled: Ex,.n.ncecl Fumllure Naw 3br., 2 bath, on 1ppro1.
Rollnlohor, Will Troln, Payo By 5oc, $115,000. 30H711-217a.
Thl Ploco Only, 114 441 41114 8-5
Ill-f.

T~llt

Mobile Hom11 Or lol a For Rent,

Pomeroy.

available at Pc:wneroy Nuraing
and Rahabllltatlon Center on 311 4 11·7 ahlft. Thla poshlon Ia
tor 1 nUI'II committed to
delivering llctipUont~l quality
tt~ra for our geriatric rteldenta.
We ott.r an u:eeltent beneUt
pack.I~MJ•. compel hi"• ulary and
a etab ... aupponlve wort en-vironment. Penone Helling to
Wra on UU tMm of nurs•
commtt1ed to our ••ndard of
poohlvo oulcome, pleooo coli

Suitt Wlth
In Modem Are

Office

Proof Bldg. C. ll Morrta Haoklno
614-446-~ Or 614-446-2512.
Marhar1 Rental &amp; Stor1g1 Unha. GriiYtly Wtth Mower, Runa,
Sx10, 10x10, 10x15, 10x2ll, 10x30. NIOda. Wort&lt; 5325; Small UtiiHy
T,.llar, Homemade S75, e14-2M304~7~2460.
6314.

EOE.
Of'

Room

Private

lion Center Ia accapllng ·~
plication• tor C.rtlfled Nuralna

Pa rt time LPN

46 Space for R ent

Country bhJe couch &amp; recliner,
$250. ~75-6147 IM ve m....
N gl.

Pomeroy Nursing 6 Rehabllh•
at

Ron Ev• na EnterpriHe, J •ck.on, OH 1-800-637...0528.

3

Pt r1 -Tima Line Cook. Aft1rnoon
Shift , A,ppty AI Holida y Inn, Oalllpolla, NO Phorw C.lla Plaa ...

Apply
Rd .,

S6S1,M11onWY.

Call after 2 :00 p.m., 304·f73..

'"''l-

Rockllprlngs

1D84 8-10 TWin C.b • Wrwckocl.
614-441-1205.

SIMplng rooma wtth cooking. Concroto &amp; Ploatlc Soptlc
Al.o tr.liM' apac.. All hook-.upt. Tanltt 300 Thru 2,000 Gallona

hiring In lhl van d lvlt lon pt~ ld
Joa&lt;Jed or empty mil• unload·
lng PlY. lltop pily, heattl"' lnauranc• w/denlal 6 vl'etoo avaU·
.~.. bob-till lnaur1n~
a b~. tuel card l)"'tem, co. PIIY
toll l )'lttm, prompt and acc ur~la weekly a~tlaments , rider
~~r11m , Ume home . 1-800-2»-

Asai l1anta.

Merchandise

d uckle

Comple te the
quo te d
by fol l.n g m the ml)l ln Q words
l........l.-.1.........1-...l..-'--' you de velop from sten No 3 b elow
.

.

~

PR INT NUM BERE D LETT ER S IN

~

.

.

.

.

.

l HE SE SQUARE S

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Wreath - Yacht· Pagan- Relish · HJGHWA Y
Statistics show thai three quarters of the population
live in or near cities. I believe the other quarter is out
there looking for the e xit off the HIGHWAY

�Along the river
Page- 14- The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

'

$1.00

Friday, July 22, 1994

Growing
success in
Meigs County
·Featured on page 81

O.J.: 100% not guilty• -pageA7
1

Major League baseball

Hi : 80s
Low: 60s
Details
on Page A2

res~:~lts - page c1

•

tmts
Meigs sales tax boost:
Voters may decide fate of budget alternatives $300,000 deficit or increase in sales tax in '95
By JIM FREEMAN

Take
Advantage Of
Our Low Low

2.9°/o
1994 PONTIAC
GRANDAM
conditioning, AM/FM
driver s1de a1r bag,
casse tte .
d.
anti-lock brakes , over nve
transmission .

Financing

1994 BUICK REGAL

'

BRAND NEW ESCORT

Air

AM/FM cassette, air conditioning,

rear defroster, power steering.

Power d.
'
eel shift know
1sc brakes
·
steering, body sid ' ra~k &amp; pinion
e moldings.

$

V6.

1994 FORO TAURUS

automatic t
.
conditioning, AM/F~ansm,ssion ,
air
bags, loaded.
radio, dual air

7998

1994
CADILLAC
SEDAN
DEVILLE

1994 FORD F

. ·150
4.9 6 cylinder' ~~:;d.n~e transmission,

1986 FORD LTD
1987 NISSAN
200 sx 2 Door

1992 BUICK
park Avenue

1993DODGE
DAKOTA.

automallc. an....

4 dOOI ............

1993FORD
AEROSTAR.

ggo CAOILV ·.
1
4 ooor... · ·

13,978
$13,978

4 dOOI

4 dOO!.. ......... .

ZdOOI ........ ·· · ......... ..

1990 pONTIAC
GRAND AM.
1991 HONDA
CRX.

$16,995

1993CHEVY
BLAZER,

2 doQI . 4x4.......... ··

1993 CADILLAC
DEVILlE.
1993 UNCOLN
TOWN CAR.

1988 CHEV'I
ASTROVAN.

5

'

$23,478

1994 FORD
MUSTANG,
GL ....... ..... .

6978
$6998

5

7448

$21 ,47 8

1986 PON11AC
TRANS AM,
1991 pONTIAC
GRAND PRIX,

XE .

BRONCO II,
4X4 . .. ......... ···················

19870LDS
CALAIS,

3978

5

NEW 1994 TOYOTA
4 x2PICKUPS

1986 UNCOLN
TOWN CAR,

'8995
$9478

1991 CHEVY
CA\IAUER,

'9878
$9978

DON

$8498

$3888

1988 PLYMOUTH
REUANT,

4 door ..... ····················· ·

1990FORD .
AERO STAR,

$3478

...

1~FORD

8995

2 dOOI ....... · ............ .

. ......

NEW 1994
TOYOTA TERCELS

$3278

1987 NISSAN
SENTRA,

5

1992 CHEVY
CAVALIER.

1995

5

1982 FORD CROWN
VICTORIA,

2 do01 . " .. ..

'18,47 8
$23 478

4 dOOf ..... .. ·· ·· ····•·•··•··

l9e&amp;DODGE
ARIES,

$6978

1989BUICK
REGAL.

$14,478

1993 FORD
F-150 ,
XLT

Power windows &amp; locks.

$5978

1991 PON11AC
SUN BIRD.

3

4dQ0&lt; ....... " ....

DEVILLE,

1990 CHEVY
CORSICA,

~ 13-,978

1993 poNTIAC
GRAND PRIX.

mi los , w""ir . automatic,

11
''
I'B\.l#iifi·
ji IIj.] #;iSl.Z.t.itl

$12,978

1994BUICK
CENTURY.

44000

Financing

1987 GMC
S15,
. ········

······· ······ ············

1985 FORD
F-150,

Available On
All camrvs
In Stock~-

4X4 .............. .......... .

All PfltH IIJe after all rebates and 1ncentlvn . Subject to prior sale and credit approvAl

OOD

"Where Better Really Matters"
East State St~eet
Athens, Oh1o

498

5·93 6641
•

-.!.9% APR for up to 48 montl"lt oo new 94 Ford Escorta ont,&lt;
'""4 9% lor up to 36 montht ol"l Toyota Camry only Dealer contrlbutlo_, may aftectcon•umer cott.

"

By JIM FREEMAN

-

GALLIPOLIS - Unemployment throughout lhe region decreased between May and June, according to a
reporl released Friday by lhe Ohio Bureau of Employmenl Services (OBES).
The reponed jobless rate declined by .3 percent - from 7.8 percent to 7.5 percen1tt~
- l:·n~G~a~ll:ia~C=o~u:nt~y~,w:i~th~I~,OOO~~=~~~~~;~~~~~~
of \he total 13,700 workforce unemployed in June.
.The jobless rate in Meigs Counly fell by 1.8 percenl · from 11 .3 percenlto
9.5 percenl; but, remained among the highest in the slate during ihe period.
According to the OBES, 800 of the county 's 8,600 workforce was JObless
between May and June.
Among the slate ' s 88 counties. the unemploymenl rates ranged from a low
of 3.6 in Geauga to a high of I 1.5 percent in Adams. Overall, rates decreased
01110
in most Ohio counties. The comparable rale for lhe slale was 5.4 percenl. The
U.S. rale in June was 6.2 percent.
Regionally, June unemploymenl rates (May percentages in parenthesis)
were: Alhens, 4.8 percenl (5.4); Jackson, 7.3 percent (7.9); Lawrence, 7.9
percenl (8.3); Pike, 10.6 percenl (11.7); Ross, 6.2 percent (7.0); Scioto, 9.8
percent (10.4); and, Vinton, 8.7 percent (10.9).
Slalewide, six counties had unemployment rales at or above 9.0 percent
during June. The counties with the highest rates, other than Adams, were:
Scioto
Pike, 10.6 percenl; Morgan, 10.4 percenl; Scioto, 9.8 percent; Meigs. 9.5
percenl; and, Crawford, 9.0 percent.
Seven counties had jobless rales at or below 4.2 percent during the reporting
period. The counties wilh the lowest rates, other than Geauga, were: Delaware, Franklin, Hancock, 4.0 percenl; Holmes, 4.1 percent; and, M1ami and
Williams, 4.2 percent.
The OBES attributes June 's figures to lhe following factors:
•Employmenl in the service-producing seclor increased by 3,000 jobs;
•Employment in local schools was higher lhan expecled as work ex.tended
into the June reference week. Many schools remained open 10 make up for
days los\ due lo harsh weather conditions;
Jack8011
•Employment was steady in transponation and public utili lies, wholesale
trade, retail trade, finance, insurance, real eslale, and services;
•The number of jobs in stale
JUNE DECLINE • Unemployment
government, especially in col Q.oltla
throughout southeastern Ohio declined
leges and universities, were
between May and June, according to
slighlly reduced. Scattered inWJ June '94
data
released Friday by the Ohio Bucreases in construction resulted
reau of Employment Services. Above,
Athono
in a gain of I ,000 jobs in goods•
May'94
both Gallia and Meigs counties have
producing industries; and,
registered
jobless
declin~s over the past
in mining and
unchanged. year.

rstes:

by percent

,.,ttiY,',\./,11111

Full size spare

New language oro(ects operatlqn

AEP mines appear safe
from proposed federal law
By GEORGE ABATE
Tlmea-Sentlnel Stan
POMEROY - American Electric Power's mining companies appear to be
safe, following new language in a federal bill that would "grandfather" and
protect existing mines, AEP officials said Friday.
.
.
.
Senale Bill 544 originally would have forced holdmg compames w1th
captive mines 10 sell the coallo itself ~t markel prices, said B.J. Smilh, AEP
spokeswoman. AEP is lhe only holdmg ~ompany m lhe country thai has
"caplive" mines, also known as affihate mmes for 1ts po"':er-producllon.
Two of AEP's caP,tive mines - Cenlral Ohio Coal and Wmdsor Coal.· co~ld
have been shut down wilh the original wordmg of lhe leg1siatJon, Sm11h satd.
These two mines will be grandfathered unlil 2000, Smilh said.
.
The possibility I hat the Meigs mines would be affecled was only a very shght
chance, said Ron Sylvester, spokesman for U.S. Rep. Ted Stnckland, DLucasville.
The congressman had contacted U.S. Sen. John Glenn lo advocale for AEP
on this issue, Sylvesler said.
.
.
This legislation has remained in the Senate Energy Committee smce
November, and has not passed the Senate nor been presented in the House of
Representatives yet, he added.
The bill was expected to pass out of the energy committee Friday and then
move to the Senate Commerce Committee, Smith said.
SOCCO, a caplive mine of AEP, would be exempled by.an amendment th~t
protects companies with an agreement wilh a state comm1sston- the Publtc
Utilities Commission of Ohio.
This agreemenl with the I&gt;UCO lasts for 15 years, but Ceniral Ohio Coal a~d
Windsor Coal may lose their PUCO agreement altbe end of thts year, Smtih
said.

SOCCO has fully complied with original laws and the I~ Clea~ Air ~ct,
Smith said. The company will spend more than $800 mtllton mstalltng
scrubbers at Gavin to reduce local high-sulfur coal emissions.
When the affiliate mines of AEP were established the Securities and
Exchange Commission mandated fuel costs be fixed at the cost of mining,
Continued on pqe A2

fi cials," he co m-

Meigs DHS responds
to court entry, story

-

Regional

Dual air bats, antilock brakes, leather
seats, accent striping.

over 100
NewGM
and Toyota
Vehicles To
Choose From

he said.
"I fee l tha11he peopl e
of Me1gs Counly
should be given the
opporlunity to ass ist
co unt y offi cials in
making a decision between the two alternatives.
"This can be done by
givin g Meigs County
rcsidcnls the opportu nily to vole on a onehalf pe rcc nl mcrease in

Unemployment declines
in Gallia, ·Meigs counties

more involved in the

budge1-ma k1ng de cisiunsof coun1 y of-

"------- ---------- -------1

crease expe nditures,"

Fred HoHman

"If the people decide they do not want the
additional one-half percent sales tax, then the
county commissioners and other omce holders .
will have to "nd ways to reduce expenditures
county-wide by approximately 10 percent."

County 10 become

mcnicd.
Anl iCipating question s on ihe pro budget,
puscJ
Huffman noted that
Commission President
the county permisthe proposed budget
Fred Hoffman
sive sales tax . This
was posted in lhe
would generale apaudiior's ufrice from
proximately $400,000 per year," he noted.
July 5-15 and a public hearin g was hel d on July IS as
"I definitely would not be in favor of levying the sales required by law.
tax unless it was put on the ballot and \he people given the
"No public comments were heard nor ques tions as ked
opponunity to make thi s choice.
of me conce rning the proposed budge\ during !hal time
"If the people a pp~oved ihe addilional one-half percenl period," he said .
sales lax , I wouldal sobe in favor of working ou\ a formul a
"I would anticipale a disc ussion on thi s proposed budwhereby all the townships and villages in lhe county get would be held betwee n the commissioners and the
would ~ ha re in th e amount generaled
budget commiSSion whenever a date is set by \he budge t
"If lhe people decide they do no\ want the addilional commission for thi s hear ing," he said.
one-half percenl sa les lax, then lhecount y comm issioners
The proposed budget call s for estim ated general fund
and other office holde rs will have lo find ways to reduce expe nditures of $3 ,141 ,982 wilh an end-of-year balance
expendilures county -wide by approximalely I 0 percenl ," of $1 24,839 compared to es limated ex pendilurcs of
Hoffman said.
$2,843,388 for \hi s year with an expected end-of-yea r
"I feel this is a good opporlunity fort he people of Meigs ba lance of $136,44 1.

with th e proposed budge t, there are two alternalives , either
increase revenue or de -

June jobless rate:

I

1.994 FORO ASPIRE
Dual a~r bags soft f

· b keyless entry·
onver side aJr ag,
.
floor mats. dual comfort temp, aJr,
·,ndow defogger, \ill, cruiSe,
rear W 15"" alummum
·
wheels ,
ower
3.8 V6,
sound system, P

Times-Sentinel Stan
POMEROY - Meigs Counly vo\ers may play a direct
role in shaping the county 's 1995 budget by deciding on
a one-half percenl permissive sales tax.
Mei gs Counly Board of Commissioners President Fred
Hoffman commented Friday on the recenll y submitted
county budge I which calls for the proposed sales tax ... or
a deficit of approximately $300,000 .
"The proposed budget uses the eslimates which county
offic ials have provided to the commissioners for the
operation of their offices," Hoffman said.
"The anticipaied expenses, as submitted by county
officials for the opera lion of \heir offices fo r 1995, exceeded the projected revenue receipts by approx imately
$300,000.
"As I pointed out \o lhe budget commission in I he nole

r------------------------.

Times-Sentinel Stan
MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs Count y Departmenl of Human Se rvices
responded Friday to a Sunday Times-Senlinel article published July 10
concerning a coun entry ordering DHS lo pa y courl cosls in child suppon
cases.
In lhe enlry, fil edJuly 8, Meigs County Common Pleas Courl Judge FredW.
Crow Ill noted Ihe deparlmenl of human se rvice 's child supporl en forcement
agency has filed motions and cnlries wi thou\ the prepayment of securily of
court costs.
An unsigned letler submittedio The Daily Sen"... to the extent that the Child line! Friday from DHS
Support Enforcement Agency reads :
response to the Jul y
(CSEA) unwisely or inappro- 10,"In1994,
article in the
priately spends its state/fed- Sun day Times -Se ntinel
regardi ng court costs and
eral money, the county will be filin
g fees in child support
cases, the Meigs
(fble."
Counly Dcpartmenl of
Human Services (DHS)
lhoughl il might be helpful to briefly explain lhe ability of \he DHS to spend
its funds and how court costs/filing fees fil into the equation.
"The federal and stale government provide for the operati on of the DHS
including \he operation of the Child Support Enforcement Agenc y (CSEA).
These funds are advanced monlhly and expended during \he year. (The April
4, 1994, expenditure by the CSEA mentioned in the article was for housing and
adminislrative services for calendar year 1993 provided to it by the DHS.) If
the CSEA spends more than it is funded, lhe county would be responsible.
Additionally, if lhe CSEA spends money contrary to slate rules, upon state
audil, \he CSEA will have 10 return this money to lhe state. Again, the county
would be responsible. Consequently, to the exlent lhat \he CSEA unwisel y or
inappropriately spend~ its Slale/federal money, the counly will be li able.
"Siale rules do not permillhe expendilure offunds for payment of court cosls
and filing fees unless a stale-approved contract exists between !he CSEA and
the clerk of couns. Over the paS! few monlhs actions and negotialions have
been lakmg place lo secure such a contract. Hopefully, lhis process will res ult
in a contract approved by the state. Thi s contract would represent a chan ge in
practice . For the past seven years, (since ihe crealion of CSEA) \he DHS has
not paid or been required lo pre-pay or pay court cos IS. Since Ihe counly funds
the clerk of co uris, the payment of co uri costs was seen as taking money from
the right hand and pulling il intolhc left hagd.ln olherwords, since the paymenl
of lhe costs would no\ be allowable by the state, these payments 10 the clerk' s
office would come from counly funds . Thus, the county would be paying itself
and incurring processing fee s to do so. II has been ihe goal of the DHS to
provide services at a minimum expense lo the counly. Reneclive of I his goal,
Continued on page A2

News capsules
Plant workers spray tank,
plot strategy to extinguish
noxious chemical fire

'

GOOD MORNING

I

'City schf1Clules executive sessions
to cll~u,s 'personnel matters'

Today's Times-Sentinel
18 Sections - 158 Pages

Business
Dl
WILLOW ISLAND, W.Va. (AP) GAWPOI,.I$ ..,.. The (ialllpolll CJty CCimmlaalon hn echedCalendars
83&amp;4
Workers at a Pleasants County faclory
u. . two eKK..UV..,..tona thll ,..._~~, l'tlportedly to dlecun
Classilieds
allowed a chemical fire \o burn in a stor- 11\e hlling 01 e ,.,._....nt lor CitY Mlli*V« Glelln Smith, who
03-7
age lank Friday as lhey sprayed the lank aubmltted hll realgnltloll nrllll' thla month.
Comics
Insert
with waler and plotled a slralegy to extinThe 'fiiCial nttetl"" will be held Tllnclay end Thuraday In
Editorials
A4
thl GalllpOIII Municipal Building. Each uecutlvl Millon leeet
guish the fire .
toiMiglnetSp.m.TheonlyapncJeltem.llatedll'tfor'-utlw
l.Ax:al
Two workers at the Cytec lnduslries,
A3
Inc. plant in Willow Island were slightly -.lon(l) on .,.,.onllll mitW!J.•
Obituaries
A6
Smllh'al'lllgnltlon becomii:"'IICtlve on.Aug. S. NNrty 200
injured, lhe company said.
lor the politloll 1114 belli reoehied by the mlddll 01
Sports
Cl-8
The fire slanedat 10:40 a.m. Thursday •PJ!IIc!ellont
laltWetlt.
.
Along the River
in a 100,000-gallon ouldoors tank in lhe
Bl
planl's urethanes unil, said Plant ManWeather
A2
ager Dick Barnard. II was pul ou\ in five minutes bul reigniled at I :19 a.m. Senate panel OKs tougher
during cleanup, he said.
. domestic violence law
Barnard said lhe lank conlained a polyurethane-type polymer. The chemiColumns
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An
cal is generally non-toxic, but when burned produces an irritating and.
upgrade of domeslic violence laws
noxious smoke.
lhal
backers describe as a slep for- FmJCrow
Abouii,OOO people in Belmonl and Eureka were told to stay inside for fi
M
ward
for viclims cleared a Senate Bob HoeDicb
hours early Friday morning.
IU
committee Friday.
lim Sands
The sheriff's department reported no injuries outside of the plant.
1M
In a unanimous bipanisan vole, the Chuck Stone
Barnard said the fire was contained. Workers were spraying lhe tank to ·
M
Senate Judiciary subcommittee apkeep it cool. He did nol know when the fire would be put oul.
·
proved abilllhal designates arrest of ..._ _c_,_
...,_"""
__''-"'-' -" '-""'_"'_•_c_._ ...J
The two workers were senl to hospitals for evaluation Friday mo
alleged
offenders
as
the
preferred
Barnard said.
A member of Cytec' s fire brigade was transported to St. Joseph's H pi tal, course for police to follow in such cases - unless officers have juslifiable
reasons not lo do so.
and later lo Camden Clark Hospital, both in Parkersburg, and releas d.
Police no longer could require that a viclim agree to file a complaint before
A cbntract worker was also sent to Selby General Hospital in Marietla,
an
arrest was made. The subcommittee rejected Sen. Anlhony Sinagra's
Ohio, and released, Barnard said. .The workers, whose names were not
to make arrests mandatory.
attempt
released, were not seriously injured. he said.
Advocates
in the hearing room applauded Sinagra, R-Lakewood, when he
Cytec, with headquarters in West Paterson, N.J ., uses urethane lo make
said
the
way
to end domestic violence was with a strong slatement thai &gt;
aulomotive parts, roofing and other coating materials, the com~ny said.
mandatory
arrest
policy would deliver. ,
The Willow Island plant employs about 400 people.
·

••

,

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