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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
•

Reds defeat
Pirates with
four runs

Pick 3:
6-1-7
Pick 4:
0-2-0-5
Buckeye 5:
7-13-27-29"35

Sports on Page 4

Warm and
muggy
tonight, chance 9f storms.
Lows In the
ld 60s.

•

ent1ne
'«!!. 41, NO. 86

2 Sections, 16 Poges, 35 cents
A Gannel1 Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, July 18, 1997

C1tt7, Ohlo vanoy Publlanlng Complny

School building projects
taking .shapeI at Eastern

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
A few weeks ago, it was just a
field. Now, walls are going up. and if
you use your imagination, you can
picture classrooms, laboratories and
corridors at the new Eastern· Elc·
mentary" School.
The view from State Route 7 can
. be misleading, according to Tom
Karr, ofWcsam Construction Co., the
general contractor on the project·.
"Driving by the proje~t on State
Route 7, it's difficult to imagine the
size of the new building," Karr said
Thursday. "We're getting ready to
start on one of the gym walls, and
when that goes up, it will be easier to
understand the scope of this project."
Just ne•t door, tradesmen arc at
work installing temporary light fix·
turcs and doing other work as Eas.tem High School undergoes its major
facclift
Things_arc happening quickly on .
the campus of the Eastern Local
School District, as the system' s $7.3
million building project gets under·
way. One reason for the need for

skeleton-like ceilings with temporary
light fixtures. Floor tile in most of the
common areas of the 40 year-old
building has been removed. and will
probably not be replaced before the
school year begins.
Ted Connolly, an electrician working for Pioneer Pip'c, the electrical
contractor who has been largely
re sponsible for in stalling the new
electrical system in the high school.
which will virtually replace the old
system.
Connolly noted that in 1957, when
the high school was first built. elec·
trical systems were not routinely
grounded, so the electrical system in
the "new" high sc hool will be brought
up to current standards.
The old light fixtures are being reinstalled temporarily. until the ceilings can be lowered and new fi xtures
put in place. Those ceiling improve·
ments will begin in the' hallways of
the building, and the new ha\lwa~
ce ilings may be completed by the
hcginnmg of the school year. Con·
nolly said .
Perhaps the most dramatic trans·

expediency is the new school year
looming ahead.
Superintendent Deryl Well said
that the project is progressi ng on
schedule.
"Things are moving along," Well
said. "I'm very pleased witti the
coordination between all the con·
tractors and subcontractors."
At the high school, asbestos abate·
ment has been completed. lca,ing

struction said that of the 28 workers on his
WALLS GO UP - Eastern Elementary
crew, at least haff are Eastern graduates. These
School is taking shape, with the next major
workmen were on the site Thursday.
development being the construction of the
gymnasium walls. Tom Karr of Wesam ConIt is a logisti cal juggling act on the
to keep up with the increase in work:
formation so far has taken place in on Thursday. t.: ustodi ans·wcrc lryiilg part or ~choo l ad mini stratio n and
the gymnasium. The hardwood is their best to seal nff the frc sh\y. staff. and contractors and their staffs.
gone, as arc the bleachers. Windows clcancd and waxed stage area. while and th is process is likely to continue
have been encl osed. The new noor
only a few feet away. an employee of through the upcomin g school year
. and bleachers arc expected to he in
Wcsam Construc.:tion. w'as cuttin g and the next summer.
place before the district's first home ·
Th~ two huildings should he comaway a faulty pi ece of the original
basketball game in November. har·
pleted
and in usc hy September
concrete gy m ll oor. preparing to lev·
ring any unexpected delay s.
1998.
Custodial staff are trying their best el the lloor.

Building program boosts dollars
into coffers of Meigs County firms

---·-·· ·
'

'

'

When a multi-million dollar build·
ing project like Eastern Local's comes
into being. what is the effect on the
local ccooomy''
Money for building supplies and
payroll for employees arc major
expenditures for such a proj ec t, and
in the case of this local undertakin g.
as much of that money as possi ble
will stay in Meigs County.
Tom Karr of Wcsam Construction

Co. of Pomeroy, the general contrac·
tor · for the Eastern proj ect. sa id
Thursday that his company has a pol·
icy of buying from local suppliers as

much as possible - eve~ if the huild·
ing project is in another community .

arc some of the projects that have

hccn purchased for the Eastern project
from his hu Sincss. Baum said .
"Most of our work is done in oth·
Forest
Run Ready Mi x of
er areas. like Athens. Gallipolis and
Pomeroy
is
supplying concrete for
Maricua." Karr said. "But even in ·
Eastern
project.
and Rose's Ex~:a ­
the
those cases. we try to huy from loca l
vendors."
Tim Bau~ of Baurn \Lumhcr Co.

vating nf RaL:inc is a Suhcontra~.: tor
for Wcsam for all excavation work on

and Karr said. that BaUJn Lumhcr
ships lumhcr and other huilding

the site.
.
·Other more spccialilcd material.
such as doors, door frames and steel
joisL.o;. must he pun;hasL.":d from firms

m_atcrials to sit es outside ·ol' the ~.:oun ­
t y.

outside of the loc ;JI com munity. Karr
said .

in Ch..:stcr said that the Wc smn firm
JS a good I.: USIOJnCT Of his opcraltOO .

Lumhcr and wall cavi ty insulation

(Continued on Page 3)

Chester/Shade Days starts tonight

Ell.

GROUND BROKEN - Ground was broken
Thursday morning on the new Tuppers Plains
wastewater facility. At the ceremony were,
front, from left, Marvin Keebaugh, Joe Boyles
and Lindsey Lyons, members of the Sewer Dis·
trict Board, Ron McDade of the Meigs County
Economic Development Office, Sue Malson,
district bOard member, Jerry Woodson of con·

tractor Daln-l.yon Inc., and James Stumpp, project engineer for URS/Grelner in Columbus;
back, from left, Doug Uhren, project manager
for URS/Grelner, Homer Cole, district board
member, Dave Douglas of USDA Rural Development, and Jeff Fields and Scott Park of
Fields Excavating, the general contractor.

• 7 p.m.: Ohio State . Harmonica
The.
Second
Annual
Championship
Chester/Shade Days Celebration
• K p.m.: Pi c haking contest results
begins tonight. Food will he served
• M:JO p.m.: Harmonica Jam Sesbeginning at 5 p.m. Entertainment,
hiStorical reenactments, food. and sion
• 8:30 p.m.. Crossroads Bl ueillumination ceremonies will be
included in thi s weekend's fe sti,itics. grass Band
• 9:J(j p.m.: Illum ination of hrid gc
FRIDAY
'
• 6:15 p.m. : Pic Judging hegins. and candlelight walk .
SATURDAY
Pies mu st be entered by .thk' time.
•
9
55
a.m.:
Cannon Call
• 6:30p.m .: Swinging SC'h1nrs and
• 10 a.m.:- Orcning cL:rcmonics.
Junior Cloggcrs
'

invocation and speakers
• 10:15 a.m. : Arrival of American

Indians : Speaker. Dr. Ivan Trihc
• II a.m.: Arrival of the first set·
tl.crs. spcc~hcs hy t~c first.cmnmb-,sumers

• II :30 ;un .: The Chester Commons Stroll : health walk around the
co mmon~.

C hildrcns' games hcgin.

• 12 p.m.: Lun ch hrcak
• I p m.: Parade heg inning at
(Continued on Page 3)

Tuppers Plains Sewer District
breaks ground for new facility
Project brings en,d to 25-year building ban in area
'

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel New .. Staff
"Congratulations to all of you who
did nol gel discouraged. This is so
cxciling!"

Those were the congratulatory
words offered by Pomeroy Attorney
Jennifer Shee.ts at Thursday's ground·
breaking for the $3. !.million Tuppers
Plains Wastewater Improvement project. Aft.er a 25-year building ban and
years of planning, Tuppers Plains'
new sewer system is underway.
. Ground for the project was brok~n
Thursday morning, with members of
the Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer
District, project engineers and con·
tractors, elected officials and eco·
nomic deve lopment promoters, ·in'
attendance.
Sheets. who serves as president of
the Ohio Board ·of Ed ucation,
· described development acti,ities in
the.community, such as the new sewer system, the Community Improve-

'

mcnl . Corporation's indu strial site.

and the building program in Eastern
Local School .District as examples of
the community "pulling .together to
make hcttcr life."
State Sen. Michael Shoemaker. DBourneville. also spoke.
"I want to compliment this hoard
for . making this project happen."·
Shoemaker said. "It's frustrating, I
kn ow, when residents of a communi·
ty have to wait for progress, and

a

sometimes progress can create

con ~

troversy."
'
"There are those who want to con·
tinue living the way we did years ago,
but things aren't like they used to be,"
Shoemaker said.
"This project will improve the
quality of life and allow us to build
on' our community," Economic
Development Director Ron McDade
·said. "We need to join hands so we
can sontinue to carry the ball."
Paul Reed , President of lender
Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co .. called

the relationship between the CIC.
which he also leads. and the TPRSD
as a "nice little partnership."
fie said ground sh.oul&lt;ll'ic broken
on the CIC's industrial site in a mat·
1er of weeks.
·
Represe ntatives from the offices
of U.S. Rep . Ted Strickland·and U.S.
Sen. Mike De Wine were also present,
as were rcprcsentati vcs from the
Governor's Office of Appalachia and
USDA Rural Development. formerly Farmers Home Administration,
which provided funding for the pro·
ject.
Coun\y Commi ssioners Janet
Howard and JeffThornton, and Treasurer Howard Frank, as well as mem·
bers of the Chamber of Commerce
and CIC, were also in attendance.
Construction will begin in the area
of the system lagoon on State Route
681. Fields Excavating of Kitts Hill
is the general contractor for the project. Dain-Lyon Inc. of Ponsmou.th is
also a contractor.

MARIJUANA FIND - · Officers of the
Pomeroy Pollee Department, assisted by oth·
er local law enforcement officials, unearthed
this stash of 220 marijuana plants near a Monkey Run area residence Thursday morning.
Pollee Chief Gerald Rought, Maj. James Stacy,
patrolmen Mark Norman and Ken Wolf, Mid·
dleport Police Chief Bruce Swift, Meigs County Game Protector ,Keith Wood and Jeff Miller

.
.
of the Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney's
office seized the plants, some almost 10 feet
tall , along with grow lights and other paraphernalia. Charges are now pending ·against a
Monkey Run resident, Rought said. Above, Sta·
cy and Norman, standing, Rought and Wolf
examine the find , the first publicized marijua·
na confiscation of the season.

�Friday, July 18, 1997

Commentary

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 2

Meigs announcements

OHIO Weather

Friday: July 18, 1997

Saturday, July 19
Accu Wealher• forecast for

_The_Dl;lily .Sentinel
'LsttJ!JfisfJ in 1948

Some workers' comp cases are laughable
By Jack Anderson

end J1111 Molllll'
The nation's oldest social insur-

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fu 1182·2157

ance program is severely out of
whack because liberal state eouns
have been approving worker.;' compensation claoms that never should
have gotten to coun. That's one conelusion of our own state-by-state
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
review of the $70 billion-plus sys·
tern.
ROIERT L WINGm
We last looked at this troubled
Publ.......
and costly area for the American
consumer and taxpayer five years
ago. After a series of columns, near· CHARLENE HOEFUCH
MARGARET LEHEW
ly lhree dozen states passed reform
G• ...... MzTipl'
laws to tighten up their workers'
Control'-r
camp systems.
But many problems still exisl.
JlWs..tlool
., _ _ .., ... _ _ _ ..... _ _ ., ........
And one of 1he biggest is liberal
l)pocl,.,.
. . . . . , .......... ,.., ....... bdrMtou~Ghdudl~ ....... ...... . judicial rulings on favor of question~~~-able claims.
" ' - · . . . .., .. , . - . JlW ....... 11f """"8t, ,..,...... OltiG
Perhaps the most outrageous
.flllf;M.IIU IOII.U.·/1117.
cases have to do with what various
state couns have allowed to be compensable "stress" caused by work.
Most people feel stress on the job.
from a church custodian to the president of the United States. "Everyone has stress." agrees workers
'Dear Editor,
comp expen Eric Oxfeld. "ll's totalIn many urban areas people are tcrnfied to leave their homes: School ly subjecUve."
children are shot on street corners, crack houses are springing up on every
A Wisconsin case illustrates whal
other block, and due to prison overcrowding convicted felons are released properly should be compensable
back into society to maim. murder, and rape again. Not to mention, the under reasonable workers' comp ruljunkies out conducting drug deals, the street gangs that prey on the weak and ings. John Beverly, a Vietnam veterelderly, lhc disease-ridden prostitutes that walk the streets noghtly to make an, suffers from post-traumatic
money to suppon !heir children or !heir habits, or the peuy c~iminals that stress syndrome, which produces
mug citizens on their way to work, steal their cars, break into their homes, sudden flashbacks of oolllefield terand rob their local stores. Life in many urban areas is a daily struggle to stay ror. He managed to keep his p&lt;oblem
in check and hold down a series of
alive in an environment overrun by criminal infestation.
By contrast we have a place like Meigs County where school children jobs. until he went to work at the
ride !heir bikes around the neighborhood, people go to work and leave their Miller Brewing Co. in Milwaukee.
There. some of his mean-spirited
homes unlocked, elderly people stroll to the comer store to shop and chat,
and cars are left unlocked. Violence IS limoted to domestic squabbles or the co-workers quickly figured out Ihat
occasional bar room brawl. People feel safe, and confident !hat their police they could make Beverly cower on
force will protect them . The· citizens are friendly, open, honest and caring. his knees simply by popping a milk
l)ley enjoy good mental health because they are not afraid to leave their canon or breaking a bottle. Beverly
homes, or dnve their streets in the evening hours. Daily life in Meigs Coun- spent eight months out of work and
ty is conducted in an environment of peace and quiet surrounded by a com- , in psychiatric treatment after someone set off a firecracker in the lunchmunity of tremendous suppon and love.
On the evening of July 8 this peace was shauered. The two worlds col- room at the brewery.
lided when the criminal element intruded upon events at a local swimming
When he finally came b&amp;ek to
hole. The idyllic life residents had for so long cherished and enjoyed was work: a bottle rocket launched in his
shaken to its core when news was received thin a beloved, 30-year-old, direction put'him back in treatment
founh ~rade teacher had been brut'allv beaten and murdered by a local man. for seven more months, Beverly
who had a history of violence and had recently been released from prison.
The community watched as the sheriffs depanment arrested the perpetrator
at the crime scene, and eyewitnesses gave statements and conclusive evidence wa~ collected. The three-time felon was taken into custody, he confessed to lhe murder. refused his right (o counsel (a right he had also previously refused on prior convictions), and he requested to talk to the prosecu- By George R. Plagenz
It was a hot Sunday morning in
tor's office and enter a plea of guilty. The procedure moved at the pace that
August.
Everyone in the congrcgait did because the felon admitted his guilt, an~ plea b;lrgained to drop additioqW8ll
-"dresocd down'' -- open· ·
tional charges of aggravated murder; robbery, assault and esdtpe. Dtiring the
necked
spon
shins for the men and
plea hearing the judge asked the felon between 10 to 20 times if he underboys,
cool
colton
frocks and sandals
stood the ,chargcs, his rights, and the plea he had entered. The felon consisfor
the
women
and
girls.
tently and coherently answered that he did, a fact that was recorded by telePeople
in
the
congregation
wonvision news cameras and broadcast later that evening.
dered
how
the
clergyman
equid
The community in little Meigs CQ.u~ty breathed a coll~ctive sigh of relief.
The brutal murderer, robber and menace to society had been sentenced to stand wearing his neck-to-ankles ·
prison 15 years-to-life by his own volition. (The felon, stated off record that ministcnal gown. What they d1dn ' t
he knew the prison system and that he knew that he would he free in no know is that under the gown the pastome). The plea of guolty surprised no one. In a community where everyone tor was wearing only a pair of shons
knows everyone else's business, families arc close knil and reputations arc and an undcrshon .

.!1

'

,.,_,__.,_,_It'..--.,_, ....,..,

Ifill.,..,.,........ ,..,...,.............

Letters to the editor

.'Guilt is guilt'

•

tried again, but couldn'ttolerate lhe

pranks. When he sprained his ankle
on the in~? and took some time off,
he decided he could not go back and
won an $85,000 stress-related workers compensation claim.
Beverly deserved to have workers comp insurance on his side. But,
too often, the stress-related claims
are. very questionable. Consider
these three our assocoate Dale Van
Alta discovered:
-- Barbara Kaliski can't have
children, but that alone wouldn't
have made her eligible for workers
compensation benefits .. at least not
until a co-worker teased her about
being "barren." Now Kaliski is on
the company dole because of the
insult.
Kaliski was on the job installing
wiring in airplanes at Fairchild
Republic Co. of Farmingdale, N.Y. ,
when she and another woman quibbled over a work issue. The argumen1 escalated to msuhs about
Kaliski's infertility and ended on a
psychiatrist 's couch where Kaliski
was pronounced dysfunctionally
depressed. A workers compensation
board and a stale appeals court
agreed she was entitled to stay home
and collect a check because the

insults were above and beyond the blown away by two drug thugs'" a
usual workplace bickering. .
, green Toyota wbo shot up hiS coun.. Ruth Jandrucko of Ffonda has ty car. Asbell saod he fought bac,k
collected SSO,OOO so far because of wuh a shotgun and killed one of hiS
her "phobia" of black men . It began assailants.
when she was mugged by a black . The only problem was, no bulletman in 1986 while delivcrmg pro- riddled green Toyota ever turned up.
motional matenals as pan of her job . nor did a dead drug dealer._
in Moami. The anacker slugged her
Asbell later pleaded guolty to the
in the back, fracturing a venebra, scam and paod for the cost of the
and that gave her grounds to claim a invcsllgation mto his false ~cpon
physical ' injury, which has since and the damage to his car. whoch he
been compounded by what her psy- sh01 up him self in an effort to
chiatrist calls post-traumatic stress demonstrate to the mcomong goverdisorder.
nor how successful he had been at
Try as Jandrucko might .. and hara.'Sing drug dealers.
she says she has tried very hard ..
But then there was tbe little_ matshe says she can't help feeling ter of employ men I. He lost hiS JOb as
frightened when she's cl~sc to black cou nty prosecutor and. to Asbell. the
men. Jandrucko's case went all the situation shaped up into a perfec1
way to the U.S. Supreme Court workers compen sation claim . He
which. in 199l.let stand lowcrcoun was oul of work and job-stress was
rulings that she was cnmlcd to com- to blame. Some experts believe he
pensntion because of her phobia.
could have made and won the case
.. After the namboyant, pistol- in the legal climate ol New Jersey
packmg prosecutor of Camden courts. But puhlic outrage caused a
County. N.L got caught in a monu- further embarrassed Asbell to withmental lie about a shootou1 he draw his claim. If nol. he mighl he
allegedly had with drug dealers, he collecting today courtesy of N~
saod job stress made hom do il.
Jersey taxpayers.
Sam Asbell initially wowed his
Jack Anderson and Jan Mollcr
community with the news that on are writers for United Feature
New Years Day 1990, he was nearly Syndi~te, Inc.

loatU:leP ot-1 MaRS.

caSQC~Il'!

Comedy material inappropriate

Today in history

..

'

'

•

• IColumbus 186' I

Chester H. Hutton

Front will usher in storms
~tonight, · cooler air Saturday

Chester H. Hutton, 82, Pomeroy, died on Thursday. July 17. 1997 at the
Overbrook Center in Middleport. He was a retired employee of Foote Mineral.
Born Sept. 30, 1914 in Columbus, he was the son of lhe late John Hutton and Edith Terrell Ryther
,
He is survived by three daughters and sons- in -law, Beverly and Robert
Chapman of Syracuse, Sandra and William Bretz of Col umbus. and Candice
and Dan Wellman of GallipOlis; a daughler; Sherry Rou sh o[ Gallipolis; a
half-brother, Frank (Ann) Ryther of Pomeroy; and seven grandchi ldren and
seven great-grandchildren.
·
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by hos w1fc. Margaret HunnelL
Gravcsode funeral services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in 1hc RocksP,rings
Cemetery, with Pastor Dan Wellman officialing . Friends may call one hour

_By The Associated Press

prior to the services at the Ewmg Funeral Home m Pomeroy.

Sunny Pf. Cloudy Cloudy
VIa A.tsoctated Press Graph/csNet

.

baby) "dressed as if the church was
the tirst hole on the golf course."
But some pastors encourage such
mfonnality. The rector of an Eposcopal church has told his summer
parishioners. "If you and your chi Idren arc gomg on a pocmc, come In

ally come dressed up.
"When we want to pull ourselves
together, we often get dressed up.
We feel better. In Ihe same way. I
think that symbolically we pull ourselves together when we dress up for

church m picmc clothes. We would

churc~."

as the thmg itself."
·
Here is another question some
raise about church dress: Is it ~or­
shipful'! Dn the clothe&lt; you wc~r
help you and lhnse around you to
worsbip better'!
,
The head of a sch&lt;KII of fashion

The cuslnm of women wearing

design !\ays that while certain colors

rather have you here than stay away •hats tn church is a thing of the past because yuu arc hung UQ.on a dress - a sac.rifocc 10 fashion. St. P~ul

.. like bright reds .. llallcr some
women. they tend tn he such ancn-

t.: odc. We don't have one. \'

tion -g rahhcr!-i that they detract from

warned women agamst commg to

A Lulherao pastor feels the rule church wllh t~cir heads uncnvcr~d
on dress should be that you dnn '1 hu1 wasn't dear as to why.
wear d olhing that dostracts others
Jewi sh tradition calling for

the worship experience of others. :
Clothes worn in church. she says.
should he selected. a1 least in part.

from worsh1ppmg . "Propncty 1s

women lo have their heads covered

with other worshipers in mind .

involved. too." he adds. " When you
go to sec a king. you don't wear cut-

in the temple or synagogue is hascd
on 1hc rabhinical dictum. "The hair

What about cnmfnrt'&gt;
That should he a cnnsidcrati&lt;in
tou. she ICcls. ·· If you arc uncom -

oils or hluc JCans."
, of a woman mctle!ri lust."
There arc other pastors who
When wigs were popular. the fol belie ve thai most people prefer to lowing question was raised : " Docs-

dress up for chuo:ch.
A United Church of Chnst minis-

n't a wig cover the hair'! Isn't it then
a sufficient covering''"

ter snys. "Ex.ccpl for early morning

"Certainly in surh ca.scs the hair

scrvoccs I used to hold for skiers in
Vermont when everyone came in ski
togs at my urging. I have never
broughl up Ihe subJCCI of what to
wear to church. But the people usu-

is covered.'' explains a rabbi. "but
to people who don't know it is a wig,
lhe woman appears not to be covering her hair. And m Jewish law,
'what appears to he ' is as important

fortahlc in church. your aiiCnti(in

will he drawn from wllrship .. which
is what you arc there for. "
But , she hastens tn add, when
comfort extends to sloppiness, thf;o;
can affect your altitude toward wor:
ship as welL
George Plagenz is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Assodation.
.

What shall we worry about today?

l,

IND.

Showers and thunderstorms are likely across Ohoo tonighl and Saturday
: tllorning as a frontal system moves across the state , the National Weather
: Service said.
::: Lows tomght will be m the 60s.
.
• :· Cooler and drier air will be in store for Saturday as high pressure moves
:1i11o the state. Northwest winds will also help to keep the tcmperalurcs down
; and comfon levels high.
::: Temperatures w1ll only reach 75-80 in the northeast. and the low to mid ' ~Os in the southern and central parts of ohio.
: • The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather sta·
' tion was 99 degrees in 1887 while the record low was 53'" 1976. Sunset
' tonight will be at 8·58 p.m. and sunrise Saturday at 6:19a.m .
:
Weather forecast:
, · Tonight ... Warm and muggy . Perhaps Slray thunderstorms un11l midnight
: or so. Lows in the mod 60s. Loghl wmd . Chance of ra in 30 percent.
' Saturday... Mostly sunny and less humid . Highs in the m1d 80s.
Saturday night... Clear. Lows 60 10 65.
·
Extended forecast:
Sunday ... Mostly sunny. H1ghs in lhc mid 80s.
• Monday and Tucsday ...Panly cloudy with a chance of showers and thun: derstorins. Morning lows in the upper 60s. H1ghs in the upper 80s

Here is how to worship in style=

Welcome to the "come as yO~
still imponant, the felon had crossed a line that would forever make him an
arc
" church. Most mmistcrs indicate
outcast. He had taken away a life of a son. father. brother, Icachcr, producthey
arc glad that rules on church
tive citizen and rricnd to many. Murder is a rare occurrence in thi!i commudress
have been relaxed from what
nity. Resident' believed justice had been served._The officials they had
thcy
were
in the ronscrvativc 1950s
placed their faith and trust in and elected into office had done their jobs. The
But
is
there
a limiiio how unconsheriff had made the arrest. the prosecutor had prosecuted the case, and the
vcntional
we
should
let ourselves
judges had prudently and sagely upheld the American legal system by advisbecome
m
our
modes
of church
ing the perpetrator repetitiously of his right to an attorney, and to remain
allirc?
silent, etc.
One clergyman came out of 1hc
The grief, which had been put on hold , could fi9ally pour forth as the
sacristy o( his church into the sanecommunity prepared for the closed -casket funeral oftheir dear, dear friend .
The closed casket being necessitated because of the horrific nature of the tuary to ollicoatc at a baptosm and
victim's injuries. Over 400 people attended the service. close to 100 nower couldn't believe his eyes. He found
arrangements adorned the room. and more than 30 elementary school chil - the baptismal pany (all except the
dren cried tears of con(usion, fear, and gnef ThiS ·was a monumental outpouring of love for a small town with a population of less than 3.000. In the
midst of this sorrow newspapers carrying the story, that State Public Defender, David Bodiker. was filing an unsolicited appeal on behalf of the murderer, were delivered on our-doorsteps.
By William A. Rusher .
Nation-wide people complain that crime is rampant, the world is becomIt seems to he a law &lt;&gt;f nature that
ing a horrible place, and thai traditional family values and beliefs have been people must have something to
lost forever. And yet when justice is served we have men like David Bodik- worry about. In times of war, and
er coming fonh and stating that the process happened too swiftly. My ques- perhaps m pcruids of severe ccotion to you sir is, too swiftly for what'! David Bodikcr states that 24 hours is nomoc hardship. reality itself pronot enough time for someone to he conVIcted. Guilt is guilt Mr. Bodikcr. So, vides the necessary subject maucr.
what David Bodiker is really saying is that 24 hours is not enough lime for But in a "weak piping time of
this now four time convicted felon and brutal murderer to forn'lulate a series peace" like today. or when the econof lies. so that he can plead "not guilty" and dr•g the community through an omy IS robust (agaon, like today ). the
expensive, O.J. Simpson-style legal proceeding. If David Bodikcr had human psyche apparently cannot
re~iewed the facts of the case that day, he would have seen that the murderrest until it has found something to
er would have cenainly received a much stiffer sentence had the case gone worry abou,. That is the amused perto trial and he had been convicted of all the heinous acts which he had com- ception underlying the old Jewish
mined. which ultimately and undoubtedly would have happened.
joke about the man who wired hiS
This leads one to the natural conclusion that David Bodiker has not foled cousin, "Start worrying now; lcucr
this appeal out of some supreme desire for justice. but rather out of a very follows."
·
base desire for publicity. David Bodoker obviously works under the assumpIL is the media. of course, who
tion that no press is bad press. These proceedings did not move 100 swiftly. feed this need to worry, and their
The only thing that hasn't been swirt enough Mr. Bodiker is your career. The cloicf source of llf'W fears is science .
sooner it's over the better.
This isn't always science's fault
Karin Johnson (though lots of individual scientists
Pomeroy -haven't been above -exploiting it).
ScientiSts, a,l least allcgc&lt;!ly, know
more than most of us, because they
study things that can't been seen.
smelled, or otherwise perceived by
Dear Editor,
the average person .
·
This letter concerns the inappropriate hehavii&gt;r displayedtl'y the master
Thus. in the last 20 years alone.
of ceremonies at Middlepon's July 4 ceremony. Diny jokes and foul lan- the media have--participated in major
guage have no place at a famoly-oricnted adivioy. This one person i~in~d efforts to scare the wits out of us
a beautiful evening for many. He. along wuh the people who put hom m over a new icc age, nuclear winter;
front of the crowd, owes the community an apo!ogy,
global warming, the greenhouse
effect, and the ozone hole -- to menDallas and Anila Sayre, tion only fears involving the planeMiddleport tary climate. Peer just a liule deeper
into space and we are told that it is
quite likely that some asteroid or
~omet not yet visible is on a collision course with the Eartb, and that
By The A••oclated Pre..
Fifty years ago, on July 18. 1947, President Truman signed lhe Pr'esiden- its impact could easily exceed thai of
the object that hit Yucatan 65 million
tial Succession Act, which placed the S~aker of the H?use and the Sen·
years
ago and wiped out the
aLe President Pro Tempore next in the hne of successool) after the voce
dinosaurs all over the globe.
president.
·

PA.

Robert A. Baker, 50, of 53700 No. 9 Road , Reedsville, died Wednesday,
July 16. 1997 at his residence .
Born on Aug. 19, 1946 in Reedsville , he was the soli of the late Frank
and Mary Sisson Baker. He was a member of the U.S. Army National Guard
and the Forked Run Gun Club.
He is survived by his wife. Florrilla Gale Baker; two sons, Raben E. Baker of Arizona, and David A. Baker of Chicago; a son and daughter-in-law,
William E. and Sally Baker of Germany; two brothers, Clarence Baker of
. Reedsville. and Carl Baker of Canton ; three sisters, Ethel Clutter of Massillon, Hattie Rockhold of Portland. and Lillie Baker of Canal Winchester.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by two brothers, Charles
and Ernest Baker; and a SISler, Beatncc Baker.
Graveside servoces will be I p.m. Sunday in the Sand Hill Cemetery. Long ·
Bottom, with the Rev. Helen Kline officialing. Friends may call atlhe White
Funeral Home on Coolville from 6-8 p.m. Sunday,

0:·

T~ Mal{flal-l aiR F~
fi~S No e.'liPeNCe 1HaT
~t-1 at.ieN SP.ac:eSIIiP Has
~lleR

Robert A. Baker

But without much doubt the
biggest cornucopia of terrors yet

found and moncd hy the 1f1Cdia
involves foods and other substances
that allegedly endanger our health.
These arc the subJect of a report just
published by the American Counci I
on Science and Health m New York,
and 11 belongs on c.vcry library shelf
dedicated to the follies of mankmd.
Prepared by Adam J. Lieberman
and edited by Cindy F Kleiman, it is
cnlllled "Facts Versus Fears: A
Rcvocw of the 20 Greatest Unfounded Health Scares of Recent Times. "
One by one it guides the reader
through the most hysterical health ,
fits of the past 40 years. Starting
with the great "Cranberry Scare" of
1959, it coolly dcscnbes and diS·
misses such majestic panics as those
over DDT (beginning in 1962),
cyclamates (1969), DES in beer
(1972), Red Dye Number 2 (1976),
saccharin (1977 ). Love Canal
. (1978), Times Beach (19R2). and
Alar (1989).
The public uproar over each of
these " dangers " recalls H.L:.
Mencken 's dry reminder that during '
the Spanish-Amencan War Massachusetts moved the gold reserves of
the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
inland to protect them from a SpanIsh attack. .
Mr Loeberman, m a shon -introduction , notes various "themes and
patterns" in the successive health

who mgcst much tinier amounts.
This violates "the basoc principle of
toxicology:· namely. that "The dnsc
makes the p&lt;&gt;ison."
For another. the fear-mongers

favor the "precautiOnary principle,"
which a."iscrts that, in cases where

possoblc serious or irreversible environmental damage is alleged, " lack
of full scientific certainty shall not
be used a~ a reason for postponmg
eost-ciTcctivc measures to prevent
degradation." The trouble is that
next to no evidence can properly he
considered " lack of i'ull SCICO!Jiic

certainty.''
The Introduction rightly says that
this report "shows just how :he
Amen can pub I ic has been manipulated repeatedly hy certain segments
of the mcdoa, by a handful of scientists outs1de the scJcntllk m J in'~

stream. and by a larger coterie of .
activists and government regulato,..,
all of whom have fnghtencd the'
public over hypothetical risks.''
:
William A. Rusher is a. Distin-:
guished Fellow of the Claremont;
Institute for the Study of Slates-•
manship.
.:

(cont'tnued. from page 1)

the project is a welcome change for
them, since they arc accustomed to
Perhaps mostomponantlv. most of commuung to other areas to work on
the labor force for Wesam Construe- W
.
d'
K
csam prOJCC1s.
.
.
loon IS . 1oca1, accor mg to arr.
Karr esumates that of !hose 28
ApproXImately 28 laborers from men, at least half are Eastern gradu)Vesam are on the Eastern Site, and ales or other Meigs Counoy nati ves.

Chester/Shade Days event
7 p.m.: Storyteller
• 7:30 p.m.: Square Dancing and
The Happy Hollow Boys
·
• 10 p.m.: llluminatoon of the
Courthouse and Academy
Courthouse tours wil l be given all
day until twilight: Van ride s to hilltop displays will be provoded. Penod
dcmonstrallons and diSplays will be
avaolablc throughout the day. Children's corner with Airwalk and games

(Continued from Page 1)
school ·
,. • 2 p.m.: Cannon Call; Morgan's
Raoders nde; Narratovc by Jackoe
' Spaun
• 2:45p.m.: Cavalry rides; Narrative by Jackie Spaun
• 3:30p.m.: The Big Bend Cloggers
.
• 4 to 7 p.m.: Musical Entertainment , The Big Bend Cloggcrs; Fish
Fry by the Chester Volunteer Fire
0
·
Department
• 5 to 7 p.m.: Canoe Rides

-

to entertain ch1ldrcn arc planned.

.EMS units record nine runs

The Daily Sentinel

Laverne "Vern" Peck, 79. of Roulc 3 1n Albany. doed on Fnday. July 18,
1997. after a bnef illness.
·
Born Feb.26, 1918 in Vinlon Coumy. he was a self-employ ed truck driver, aveteran of the U.S . Army during World War II, a member of the Dexter Church of Chnst. Orphan's Fnend Masomc Lodge 275 in Wilkesville.
O.E.S. 207 in Wilkesville and RAM Chapter 102 in McAnhur.
Surviving are his wife, Hope Elizabeth Nelson Peck~ iwo sons and daughters-In-law, Johnny and Joyce Swearingen of Albany. and Larry nnd Sue Peck
of Sabina; a daughter and son-in-law, Monalec and David Reed of Wilmington; a Sister. Lucille Martin ;_and six 'grandchil_drcn and one great-grand son.
.
He was preceded in death by an infant son; and hiS grandmother who raised
him. Lavona Peck.
'
,
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday 10 the Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home in
Albany, with the Rev. Davod Nelson o[focialing . Burial will he 1n the Siandtsh Cemetery, where mlluary gravcstdc .scrvace:o;. will be conducted Friends

may call two hours prior to the service Sunday althc Bogony-Jordan Funeral Home.
·

Gallipolis livestock results
'

-

$78 . Hf. $62-$73 1.
(Feeder Callie sale is t~e second
Wednesday of each month)
Cull Cows-Steady
Well Muscled/Fleshed $42-$56.
Medium/Avcra~c $36-$41.

Church at Grca1 Bend lnca1cd on
Route 124 have been changed. Sunday school IS now held a1 9 30 and

Trustees to meet
The Letart Tm.vn•d11p Tfu-.tce'\ will
meet Monday.' 6 p m. ,at Ihe nff~ee
worsh1p service service at 10·30 am. huildmg .

The Sunday cvenmg service and 1hc
Wednesday Bible s1udy arc hnth held
In 1978. in a mass suicide in
at6 p.m.
·
Guyana , some 900 Amencans killed
lhemselvcs on orders of their cult
Meeting time changes
le~der Jim Jones, who also died.
Ron Adkins, cxccutJVC director of
the Gallia-Jackson-Mcogs Board of
AlcohoL Drug Addic1ion and Me mal
Health Services, has announced Ihat
Ihe next mcetmg woll be held on Aug .
18, 7 p.m. atlhe Board offic e in Gal-

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Thursday admissions- none .
Thursday discharges - Henry
Eblin.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges July 17 - Edi1h
Smoth. Will1am Hamon , Anhur
Musser. Mrs. Wolliam Cummongs ·
and daughter. Clarence Freeman .
Charlolle Cremeans, Mrs. Mark Scurlock and daughter.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Anlhony
Burgess. son. C~wn City; Mr. and
Mrs. Michael Moore. daughlcr, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs Wolli am Sharp, \
sqn, Crown City; Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Spaun, son. Racine.
.
(Published with permiSSion)

~

L

'PubliWd every mftcmoon. Mondmy through
PridDy. Ill Court St • Pomeroy. Ohio, by the

.

'

River Bed Tanning
and

Party Supplies

"GRAND OPENING"
Door

Prizes

July 19th
.

Ohio.

Am Ele Power ....................... 43 ),
Akzo ...................................... &amp;&amp;'•
AmrTech ..............:............... 64').
Ashland Oil ........................ ..48'1•
ATI•T .....................................34'•
Bank One ..............................49'•
Bob Evans ..............................17
Borg-Warner ........................ 57'1.
Champion ............................. 18h
Charm Shps ............................s'•
City Holding ............................34
Federal Mogul ..................... .. 37'1•
Gannett ............................... 100~
Goodyear .............................. 62i.
Kmart .... .................................1o'•
Lands End ............................ 21;1.

One Month ... .............. ................ .. $8 70
One¥"'--· ..... .-............. $10400
SINGLE COPY PRICE

DDily_.~-· .. .

.. .. ........... :........ .35 Ccm"

Subscnbcrs nO! dc~iring to pay the cnnier may
rt~Nt in lHhoncc direct to The DAlly Senlincl
on n thru:. 5ill or 12 month tw15. Credit will be
J!VCI\ CllmeT Ca&lt;:h week,

Drawing~

for
Tanning Products
and Party Supply
Packs
SR 124, Minersville

N() s ub~ cn pti on by mail permitted 10 areas
where horne crur1er servu:e i ~ avlllloble

.

Publi~her ~rve~

'

dJC nght 10 adjust rates durin&amp; the subscnption period. Subscripti()n rotc
change~ may be implemented by c:hnnalng the
durntioo of the sub.fCripllon.

_.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inside Mclp Coanty
ll Wedel.. ......................................... .S27.l0

9 pc. Chicken Trawler
9 pc Fish Trawler
Choice
·18 pc Butterfly Shrimp Trawler
FREE Sundae with purchase
FREE Ice Cream Cones for Kids 12 &amp; under
FREE Medium drink with purchase
"JOIN OUR SILVER STAR CLUB"

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ll W..b ............................. .. .......... SIOS.S6
Rain Out!lklt 1\ttlp Counly
J] Weei:J .......... .,.............. ................. $29.25
26 Woeb .......................................... Sl6.68
$2Weeb.: .......... -.............................. $109.72

--- '•Trawler" Dinners Reg. S9.49 NOW '8.49

Ltd ......................................... 201.

Oak Hill Flnl .......................... 20'h
OVB ......................................... 38
One Valley ............................. 44 ~
Prem Flnl................................. 19
Rockwe11 ............................... 62'!.
RD·Shell ................................ 54~
Shoney's .................................&amp;~
Star Bank ............................. 45'"
Wendy's ............................... 261\.
Worthlngton .......................... 19~

'

1

Stock reports are the 10:30
a:m. quotes provided by Adveat
of Gallipolis.

T~nnin

Sesston
9:00-3:00 Give-aways

Stocks

Ohio VQlley Publbhmg Comp(Uly/Oanlll':ll Co.•
Pomeroy, Oh1o 4~769. Ph. 992-21 S6. Second

___ _,,

---

(USPS ZIJ-960)

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carriu or Motor Routt
One Week: ........................................$1.00

•

Loverne 'Vern' Peck .·

1

Serv1ces at the Bethlehem Bapttst

motor vehicle accident. Norman

POSTMASTER: Send nddreu correction'&gt; to
The Dally Sentinel, I ll Court S!., Pomeroy.
Ohlo4S769.

"TII8 preSident loves me. The presldllnl loves me
1101. The president loves me. The pr11sidenl ... •.

Frank Edward McBengc, 9-month-old son of Mark and Allys on Wolfe
McBenge of Rutland, died Wednesday. July 16, 1997 at Children's Hospi tal , Columbus.
He was born on Oct. 6, 1996 al Gallipolis
·
He IS survoved by his parents; a sister, Ancssa Wolfe of Rutland ; and 1hrce
half-brothers, Mathew McBenge of Rutland . and Luke and John McBengc
of Buhl, Idaho.
·
Also surviving are his maternal grandparcniS, Claudia and Paul W9lfc of
Rutland ; paternal grandmother. Rose Anna McBcngc of Buhl. Idaho; greatgrandmother. Maxine Tucker of Pomeroy; and two aunts, four uncles and
seve ral cousins.
He was preceded m death by his grandfather, Frank E. McBcngc; and his
great-grandfather, Harry Grimm.
Services woll be 2 p.m. Sunday in the Pomeroy Chapel of the Foshcr Funeral Home. Main Street. Pomeroy. Bunal will be 1n the Graham Slat ion Cemetery, New Haven , W.Va Sam Anderson will officiate. Fncnds may call at
the funeral home Sunday from noon untillil)le of the services.

'

Camp Lo be held
Classes to start
Eastern Eagles Fo01ball Camp
The second half of the 1997 sumwill he held July 28-31. lnfonnation mer course scheduled begins Monday
and form s are available at Newell 's atlhe Uooversity of Rio Grande and
Gas Statoon. Chester, Reed's Store . Rio Grande Community College.
Reedsville ; Clark 's BP 1n Tuppers
Open rc giSiration will be held thai
Plains. or from Coach Coffey. at 667- dny from 9 a.m until noon in the a trt 7347. '
um of John W. Berry Fine and Per:
forming AriS Ccn1cr. AcademiC adviAthletes to m..,t
sors will be available.
A meeting for all aohlelcs inlerFor more mformation contact I ~
cslcd '"playmg JUnior h1gh loolball 800-282-7201. Ext. 7369.
will be held July 23 a16 p.m. at Eastem schooL Hclme1 fitung will follow Circles plan reunion
the mcctmg ..
Circle reunion July 26. S1ar Mill
Park . Racine. at noon. Take covered
Services changed
dtsh Tab k scrvH:C' prov1dcd .

McCam and Jackie Webb 10 St.
Joseph Hospotal ·

Mtmbtr: The Am)Ciratcd Pte.\,\, ilnd tile Ohto
Newspaper Aswctat!On.

Barry's World

!

E. McBenge

Producers i'..ivcsteck ~arkc1
Report from Gallipolis for sales conFood will be provided liy local orgaducted on Wednesday, July 16.
niJ.ations.
Feeder tattle-Steady/Stronger
200-300# St. $85-$114, Hf. $79$102. 300-400# St. $82-$97.
Hf. $70-$91. 500-650# St. $72Units of Meigs C9unty Emer- Plams ;
$87,
Hf. $68:$82. 650-800# St. $652:57p.m . Meigs Carpet and Dec·
gency Medocal Services answered
nine calls for assistance on Thursday. orming. Jean Whohric. treated not
Iransponcd
CENTRAL DISPATCH
POMEROY
FRI. THRU THURS
12: I0 a.m .. Overbrook Cenlcr, · .
WALTER MAT,THAU,
9:41 a.m.. The Mapl es. Bernice
L'lncoln Smith, treated not transportJACK LEMMON IN
Swartz. VMH.
ed;
OUT TO SEA~..
RUTLAND
2:58 a,m , Rocksprings Rehabili ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
I i1 30. a.m .. College Road. Syratation Center, Joe Smith. Veterans
446-0t23iiiiiiii.
cuse.
Laurn Dinges s. Holzer Medi cal
1\oJemorial Hospital, assisted by
Ccnier.
Pomeroy;
SYRACUSE
8:51 a.m ., Over~roo~ Center. Lin7:50
p
m
. Third Slrccl. Melinda
coln Smith. VMH:
, 12 :25 p.m .. Owl Hollow Road. Laudcrmilt. treated nottronsponcd .
TUPPERS PLAINS
Nora Robinson, O'Bicncss Mcmori4.40
p.m .. stale roules 7 and 6H I.
ai Hqspital, assiSted by Tuppers

~la.u ~togc prud at Pomeroy,

scares ..
For one lhmg, laboratory tests of
mice given huge doses of a substance are indiscriminately extrapolated to humans, on the theory that if
the mice got cancer, so will humans

:Building program boosts

Frank

VBS set
lipolis.
Riverview Community Vacation
Boble School will be held July 21 -25 Reunion set
from 6:30 to 9 p.m. at Re~dsvi lle
The descendants of Dannie and
United Methodist Church. Cooperat- Flossie Brickles will be held Aug . 3
ing churches are the Reedsv ille aothe home of Jesse Bricklcs. PleasChurch of Christ, Eden Unued ant Hill Road, Athens. A potluck dinBrethren Church, and the Long Bot- ner will be at noon. wilh games, fishlorn and ReedSVIlle Unilcd Mc1hodiso ing. and special music in the afterChurches.
noon.·For direction&gt; call 592-6134.

Buy? Dinners Get 1 FREE
Details at Store

992-4295

�.

The Daily S_ent~~!

Sports

.

1917

Reds pound Pirates 9-5;
Braves and Giants also win
By TOM WITHERS
AP Sports Writer
The Pittsburgh Pirates handed
out souvenir posters to commemorate Francisco Cordova ·s r.ecent

combined no-hiuer. Unfonunately,
Cordova was nearly as generous to
the Cincinnati Reds.
Cordova, who combined with
Ricardo Rincon to no-hit the Houston Astros last weekend, made it
through just two-plus innings Thursday night as the Reds downed Piusburgh 9-5 at Three Rivers Stadium.
"He threw as many bad pitches in
two innings us he usually does in
three games," Pittsburgh manager
dene Lamont said. "I'm not sure
what I expected - I didn't expect
another no-hitter- but it was probably the worst control he had all
year." .
Hal Morris had three hits and five
RBls by the founh inning as the
Reds finished off a two-game sweep.
Cordova (6-6), who pitched nfne
innings Saturday night in the' first
two-pitcher, extra-innings no-hitter
in major league history, was tagged
for seven runs and eight hits in the
worst of his 25 career .tans.
Before being roughed up by the
Reds, the right-hander had allowed
only 36 earned runs in IS stans.
"No, I don 't think it (t~e pressure) bothered him," Lamont said.
"If it had, it would have bothered
him in the eighth and ninth innings
(Saturday). The only way I'd believe
it is if it came out of his own
mouth ...

Cordova had lasted at least seven

innings in his previous four starts, .402.
but was gone before the Pirates finMarliiL'l 8, Dodgen 7
ished distributing the posters and 18
· At Miami , Charles Johnson went
autographed baseballs.
3-for-3 with two walks and tied a
Jon Nunnally, making his second .tcain record by scoring four runs.
stan for .the Reds, had two hits and
Tripp Cromer homered twice for
scored three runs, Bret Boone was 4- the Dodgers, giving him three this
for-5 with twq RBis and Willie season. He hit a leadoff shot againM
Greene and Joe Oliver each had three Robb Nen to start the ninth and Eric
Karros hit a solo home run with one
of the Reds' 17 hits .
John Smiley (8-10) lasted seven OUI.
Nen, who had allowed only one
innings to wm his third consecutive
start.·
,
homer in 44 113 innings. hung on for
Elsewhere in the NL, it was: his 25th save.
AI Leiter (8-6) was the V.:inner.
Atlanta 8, Colorado 2; Florida 8. Los
Angelcs 7; Sun Diego 3. St. Louis I: and also hit an RBI smgle. Tom CanMontreal 5, Philadelphia 4; New diotti (5-3) took the loS&gt;.
Padr&lt;S 3, Cardinals I
York 4, Chicago 3 in 10 mnings: and
AI Sl'. Louis , Joey Hamihoh
San Franc tsco 3, Houston I .
pitched eight-plus innings and Steve
Braves 8, Rockies 2 .
Al Allanta, Ryan Klcsko homered Finley hit a two-run homer as San
twice and Greg Maddux became the Diego handed St. Louis its sixth
straight home Joss.
NL's lirst 13-ga(\le winner.
Tony Gwynn went 2-lor-4 with
Klcsko homered in the fourth to
put the · Braves ahead for good and an RBI double, rai sing his batting
added his I ~th of the season, a two- average just one point to .398.
The Padres, 6-2 since the All-Star
run shot, in the seventh. It was the
break,
have won four straight.
sixth two-homer game of his career,
Hamtlton
(8-3) allowed seven
the last coming on Aug . 26, 1996,
hits,
struck
out
one and walked one.
against the Pirates.
Trevor
Hoflinan
got three outs J'or
Maddux (13-3), who was lifted
for a pinch-hitler when · the Braves his 21 st save.
Andy Benes (6-4) has only one
pulled away with a four-run seventh,
victory
i'n his last seven starts.
picked up his siKth straight victory.
Expos 5, Phillies 4
Bill Swift (4-3) was the loser.
At
Philadelphia.
Carlos Perez (YColorado, which has plummeted
in the NL West over the past month 6) came within one out of a complete
by losing 19 of 25, jumped on Mad- game and Mike Lansing hit one ol'
dux in the first when Larry Walker Montreal's three home runs .
Chris Widger and Rundell White
homcrcd ' with two outs. It was the
only hit for Walker in four at-bats, also homered for the Expos.
Ugueth Urbina got his 17th save.
dropping his average from .404 to

;..LEAPS BACK ·- Pittsburgh second sacker
Tony Womack (left) leaps back from the first ba5;11
bag alter retiring the Cincinnati Reds' Bret
Boone on a fielder's choice play In the third
Montreal took a 2-1 lead in the
third off Matt Beech (0-5) when
Perez 11cat out an mlicld h,it. and
Lansing hit his 13th homer.
Mets 4, Cubs 3
At New York, Butch Huskey sin-

Inning of Thursday nlght'a National League
game In Pltttburgh, whare the Reds notched a
9·5 win over the Central Dlvi•!on co-laader. (AP)

glcd home the winning run in th.:
lOth mning for his lirst four-hit game

as the Mcts snapped a three-game
losing streak.
New York rallied from a 3- 1
deficit in the sixth on Bernard

Gilkey's ninth homer. Huskey 's double and Todd Pratt 's IWO·OUt RBI
single.
In ihc llhh, Ed~anlnAifonw smglcd ,,If Kent Bouunlield ( 1-2) le"ding ,;rf

Grissom's 'goaltending' catch
helps Tribe beat Brewers 3-2
Hargrove sotid ahout Grissom · ~
.cmch·. "He made a very. very good
play on the ball and prnbahly, a.&lt; it
turned out. the gamc-~mvcr."
Grissom's Ciitch helped Hcrshiscr (Y-5) and the Indians linish their
shiscr said ahout his ~enter fielder 's eight-game toad trip wilh a 6-2
leaping catch which helped the record . The AL Centrul Division~
Cleveland Indians to a 3-2 ~in over leaders won for the sixth lime in 1hc
the Milwaukee Brewers on Thursday last seven gm11cs. and II of 14 to
night.
take a 5 112 gan]c lead, thcit hig~cst
' 'I don't know if it would've went
of the se~tson ,
over the fence. hut it sure loiJkcd like
The piny hc~;o.tme even hiJ:.!~er
from the mnund it was going tn. He when Hershtscr hurt himself starting
made an oUtstanding defensive a double play in the third mnmg.
play."
He cleanly licldcd Mike M;ithe:
In the ' second inning. Jose ny's grounder hack 10 the mound and
Valentin pounded a pitch that lmked quickly turned to throw to second.
headed over the fence in center.
On the play. he felt a muscle pull in
Grissom got a great jump on the his groin . The Indians completed the
hall, trackmg it all the way from his double play and Hcrshiscr hid his
SPol in ·shallow center. Jusi a.&lt; the ball · dis~;omfnrt from the Brewers us he
neared the top of the wall , Grissom . retired the next hatter on a lly out.
leaped and caught it while crashing
Hcrshiscr pitched six solid
into the padding.
innings overall, hut his last . three
"That's as good as it gets taxed hun the mnl'it hedmsc nf lhc
~~night ," Indians manager Mike
sore groin musdc. He allowed three

MILWAUKEE (AP) - From
where Orcl Hcrshiscr was standing,
it looked like Marquis Grissom
saved the game.
"We could still be playing if Grissom doesn't catch that ball," Hcr-

I
League game in Milwaukee, where the Indians
. won 3·2. Voigt got In Fernandez's way just
enough to allow Jeft Cirillo, who hit into the fielder's choice, to make It to first. (AP)

FOILS ATTEMPT ....,.. The Milwaukee Brewers'
Jack Voigt gets In the way of Cleveland aecond
bi!Mmen Tony Fernandez after .being retired In
the flret Inning of .Thumfly nlght'e American

more hits ufter the muscle pull, linishing with four overall. He struck
out three und walked nne .
·
"I threw the hall very well here
tonight until I tweaked my grom." he
said. "Then it started tu make the
. pitches kind or decline in elfectivencss."
·
"Hopefully. physically this won't
be a set hack,:· .he said, adding tha)
he should be able to make his next
start.
Dave Nilsson singled with twu
outs in the fourth o.md sCored on
Jcn.nny Bornitz's double to cut th~
Je"d to :1- I.
':
Hershiser allowed his lirst home
run in 42 innings·, hut his l~th ol'trul
season, when Valentin hit a shot thai
Grissom couldn't cmch lilf his eight~
homer of the ye;ar lc;1ding niT the
lil'th.
.
Valentin critcrcd lhc game hitting
- ~6K against Hcrsh1scr.
'll'm sure he owns me," Hershiser .&lt;aid . "Thc(e's a lot of lcf'thanded hitters that own me ,"

Scoreboard
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(Ciark0-0). I : Q~ p.m
Chir.:a~to White So~ (Orabtlt 6-~) al
Bllltirt'll.n {Kamacnr«kr 6-.fl. 1 .0~ p.m.
M lnrw1o1a (Steven~) 1-2 nt Ont.;lanJ

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N.Y. YunkC'I!'I (Wdls ~ ·41 4l MiiWIUI ·
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(Dkbon 10.41. 10:0!'1 p.m

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.

Transactions
Baseball
~ml!'rlcan

Clarke said. "We all have 10 be very
patient. One shot into the wrong
~lace can lead to a bogey or a dou, ble bogey."
Or sometimes worse. Just ask
Woods ,
He was I under through nine
holes, missing three putts inside 10
feet, and still in the thick of il until
he shoved his drive into the gorse at
the lith.
After taking a penalty drop, he
failed to get back to the fairway , hit
his approach just through the green
and then three-putted for a triple
bogey, dropping to 2 over.
He recovered for a phenomenal
finish - birdies on two of the last
three holes.
"I knew I needed some birdies
coming in and I had some tou~h
holes to play," Woods said.
The birdie-par-birdie linish left
him at l-over 72, maybe not the
round he envisioned but still only
five strokes behind Furyk and
Clarke.
" Seventy-two is in the hall
game," . Woods said. "We're still
there - we can still sec the leaders.
If it stays like this, it 's going to be
tough to go low."
Davis Love Ill and Jespcr
Parnevik were among four players at
1-undcr 70, while Tom Wat&gt;on, Curtis Strange and Ian Woosnam were at
71.
Bernhard Langer, 3 under with
six holes to play, linished at 72 .
along wnh Tom Kite. Jack Nicklaus
was among tile few players who
managed par 35 on the treacherous
back nine, giving him a 73.
U.S. Open champion Ernie Els
shot a·7s, while Co) in Montgomcrie
was 7 over during a nine-hole stretch
and finished at 76.
Defending · champion Tom
Lehman was 2 over going to the
18th. Nick Faldo, a three-time
British Open champion, was I over
through IS holes.
. With the wind at their hacks on
the front nine. Couples and Norman
each made five birdies. Then they
got to the lOth tee, the first of e1ght
closing holes into a wind so strong
the 450-yard par-4s were unreachable in two.

•

"Being . 5 under after nine, I
knew 1 was going to · make some
bogeys, so I just tried to hang in
1here," Couples said.
·
·
He took three bogeys and ·avoided three more with par putts longer
than his shadow. Couples' four-foot
par putt on the 18th slid by on the
right, giving him a 69 and great .
peace of mind.
·
'.'I'm thrilled to death to he under
par," said Couples, who has played
only four tournaments _tiince the
Masters in part because ol his father,
who IS hauling leukemia in Seattle.
Norman was at 4 under after
rolling in an eight-foot birdie putt on
the ninth hole, and he remained there
after saving par on No. II. But
desp.itc two par-saving puns, he
missed a 10-footer for par on No. 18
to slip hack to 2-under 69.
"Believe me, I'm delighted ,"
Norman said. "It was a long. hard
day today, and we've got another
three long, hard days to go."
Leonard eagled the 577-yard
sixth hole, hilling a S-iron to 20 feet
and holing the putt. He made the turn
at only 2 under. hut then shot a par
35 on the hack to share the early
lead.
"I pulled beautifully today. and I
stayed real pat1cnt on the hat.:k nine
because I realized there were some

greens I just wasn't go jng to get to,"
Leonard said.
·
And it wasn 't geuing any easier
as the day grew long. Moist con.llittons yielded to a drier wind, which
was making it even more ditficult to
get the ball dose to the hole on
downwind approaches that ran up to
the green.
Woods drove into the grccnsidc
bunker on the 364-yard lirst hole, hut
blasted through the green into anoth.
er pot hunker and had to save par. '
He made birdtes at both par Ss,
reachahlc hy just about everyone,
and then tried the driver on the 402yard ·seventh hole. Aga1n, the hall
found a pot hunker short of the
green, but he miSs'ed a seven-foot
birdie putt.
Norman, who missed the cut at
the Ma.&lt;ters and the U.S. Open this
year, is a two-time winner at the
Bntish Open. He lost in a playoff the
last time it was played at Troon. and
has linished out of the top 20 just
onue at ihe Open since 1983.
"I have always lclt that the
British Open lias not had enough
wind m the lilsl couple of years,' '
Norman suid. " This is one of the
lnngcsl British Open courses, and we
arc play.ing in some of the heaviest
winds . For this type oJ' course,
you're going to have to work at n."

NOT HERE- The Cleveland Rockers' Eva Nemcova cuts off the
path Charlotte's Sharon Manning wants to take as Manning -k•
to pass the basketball In the first hall of Thursday nighl's WNBA
game in Cleveland, where the Rockers won 65-47. (AP)

WNBA play continues

Rockers beat Sting;
Liberty down Starzz.
CLEVELAND (AP~ - Michelle
Edwards presence in the Cleveland
Rockers' lineup was worth l'ar more
imponant than the six points she
scored. The point guard's return
gave the WNBA team a much needed emotional lift.
With Edwards hack al'ter missing
eight games hccause ol' a sprained
lel't ankle. Eva Nemcova and Lynetlc
WomlarcJ ca..:h scored 14 points a.o;
Cleveland heal Charlotlc 65-47 on
Thursday night to end a three-game
losing streak.
·
" ! think she pmvided a spark,"
Charlouc's Andrea Sllnson s:mJ.
"She came in and hit few shots and
organilcll the team .··
Edwards rcll happy to C\lntrihutc
••gain, cspcdally after missing her
, "team's 67 ~ 44 loss m Charlotte oh
June 2Y.
"I wasn't there the last time
against Charlottc, ·hut I was still part

Blue Jays' 9-1 win gives Clemens 15th
IJillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll~·llllllllllllllllllll~ .~_their best slreak in 18 years~ hy
American
League
roundup
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
The Toronto Blue Jays, for once,
made it real easy for Roger Clemens.
Clemens bee &gt;me the first ISgame winner in the majors, striking
·out 10 Thursday night in a 9-1 vtc·
· . tory uvcr the Texas Rangers.
· The Blue-lays had s~ored only 15
runs in Clemens' prcviou~ eight
. starts, and hegan the game with tbe
lowest batting· average and fewest
runs in the majors.
But Carlos Delgado's two homers
: and five RB Is were plenty fnr
' Clemens (I 5-3), who pitchctl a live: hiucr at Texas.
' "The hitters deserve all the crcd: il " Clemens said . .. It was exciting ·
; f(;r me to sec them having fun . It's
1 been quite some time."
! The Anaheim Angels arc also
: enjoying themselves these days. The
:Angels won their I Oth stm•ghl game

downing Detroit 9-4.
"We've gouen some pitching
and some big outs." Anaheim manager Terry Collins said. "What we ' re
learning now is what it takes to
win. "
Clemens leads IheAL with a I .62
ERA and is 9-0 on ihc road, extending his team record for consecutive
road wins.
"He's the he~t guy going right
now," Texas sfartcr John Burkett (78) said. " We've got a good hitting
team and he shut us down."
Clemens, a former University of
Texas star. is 3-0 with an 0.78 ERA
against the Rangers this season. HIS
appearance drew 46,239 to The Ball·park in Arlington.
In other games, Minnesota delcated Seaule 9-7 in 12 innings. New
York downed Chicago. 4-2, Boston
beat Baltimore 12-Y and Oakland
beat Kansas City 11-3.
Angels 9, Tigen 4
Anaheim, which had not won I0
in a row since 1979, moved within
one Victory of the team-record II game string set in 1964.
Tony Phillips hit a leadoff homer
in the lirst inning and drove in ruur
runs as the Angels 1mprovcd to H-0

th~

since
A;I-Star break.
Luis Alicea and Todd Greene
each drove in three runs for the
Angels, wh~ moved within one-half
game ol' AL West-leading Seattle.
Melvin Nieves homered in his
fourth strai'ght game lor visiting
Dctr&lt;iit.
Yankees 4, Wbile Sox 2
Wade Boggs, sub~ing for injured
DH Cecil Fielder, went 4-hJr-4 as
New York won at Comiskey Park.
Boggs, who recently asked for a
tmde, started al designated hitter for
the second straight game. Fielder had
surgery earlier in the day on the right
thumb . he fractured in a headfirst
slide this week .
David Cone (I 0-4) helped the
Yankees close wuhin 3 1/2 games of
Baltimore in the AL East. Chicago
made four errors and lost its fourth
m a row.
Yankees center licldcr Chad Curlis preserved the lead with one out in
the ninth, making a running catch
against the wall with two runners on
baSe.
Red Sox 12, Orioles 9
Mo Vaughn hit u two-run homer .
that broke an cighth-inntng tic. and
Boston swept the two-gumc series nt
Camden Yards .

a

Vaughn had three of Boston 's 21
hils and drove in three run~. Geronimo Bcrroa homered and tied a
career !)est with live RBls lor Baltimore. which has lost eight or 10.
Ron Mahay (1-0). a convened
nutlicldcr. won in hb mujor league
debut as a pitcher. The former
replacement player pitchcll one
innmg and gave Up a home run to
Rafncl Palmciro
The Red Sox hegan the game
with live straight smgles oil Sc&lt;lll
Erickson.
'
Twins 9, Mariners 7 ( ll)
Marty Cordova led off the 12th
inning With Minnesot01'~ fourth homC
run 6f the game, and the Twms won
at the Kingdomc.
·
Chuck Knohlauch homered in the
lOth for a 7-6lead. Scalllc tied it oo
Joey. Cora's RBI single with two outs
as Rick Aguilcra. ~lcw a save chnncc
for the second straight night.
Rich Becker ;md Scott Stahoviilk
homered for the Twins .

of the team and it killed me to sec us
lose hy "' many points. II did feel
g&lt;xld to be a part of this tonight. So
I reel good. "
Vicky Bullen &gt;OCorcd 24 points,
her season high, making I0 of 1.5
field-goal attempts. But the Sting's
usual hi~ ol'fenstve weapon, S!inson,
was held to seven points, II below
her average.
Cleveland
center
lsahelle
Fija\kowsk1 scored nnly eight points,
hut she had II rebounds and si•
assists.
In the other WNBAconlc&gt;t, New
York dnwncd Utah M0-54.·
Liberty 80, Slarzz 54 ·
At New York , Rebecca Loho had
17 points , c1ght rchnunds ami three
blocked shots to lead the Nev,: York
Liberty to an K0-54 victory over
Utah on Thursday night in the
Women 's National Baskcthall Asso·
ISee WNBA on Pa~e 5)

We Now Have Fly Bait In
1 Lbs Cans &amp;
'5 Lb Cans

Sugar Run
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No ~ames Sunday

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CINCINNATI IM l!'r~· kr.:r 7-61 ;~t N.Y.
Mc:ts (RI!'I!'il6·4), I : I~ (l.m.
Pinsbtlrf!h !Cooke 7-\tll 111 Phil:tdelphm
(GI'Ml 0-01. 1 : 1~ p.m.
Co lonar.lo tC:tsliJI O 6-IJ) :11 Ch1r.:ag tl
Cubs (Swanzbau@.h 0-1 ). 4:0."i fl.m
S11n Dacr~ llnd•s.un 2- 7) at Fl or •r.l;~
tRnpp.f-6). 7 . 0~p . m..
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(MHiwuodO-CI ). 7. 10p.m
Houlton (f&amp;ynuldl 4-l'l) at Montn:Oll
{J!Hkn 11 ·2t. 7:.l.'i p.na

&lt;iiUJ :N JIA Y I ' Al'I\E~S · Slj!lll.'tll &gt;t:
Dhuu h•n n111:

By DOUG FERGUSON
· TROON, Scotland (AP) - Jim
Furyk may have the most unusual
swing in golf, but it was good
enough to conquer the brutal wind at
Royal Troon Thursday - and good
enough to share the early first-round
lead at the British Open.
Playing in only his second Open,
Furyk made a birdie.on the hole that
tripped up Tiger Woods and finished
with a 4-under-par 67, tied with Ireland's Darren Clarke.
Furyk and Clarke had a chance to
accomplish what no one has come
close to doing- breaking par on the
back nine at two-faced Royal Treon,
_where the wind whipping off the
Irish Sea pr.oduced low scores on the
downwind front nine and night·
mares into the wind on the back.
They each made bogey on the
18th after poor drives, but Furyk and
Clarke had survived enough of the
'back nine to lead by two strokes over
Greg Norman, Fred Couples and
Justin Leonard.
·
, "I'm glad to come in even par,"
said Furyk, who has an odd loop in
his backswing. "It's really tough
coming in. I feel like I played a solid round of golf."
Only Furyk, Clarke and Couples
~ave gouen as low as 5 under on the
day, which began under a~h-colored
.clouds but gave way to blue skies as
the wind showed its strength.
· Couples made three bogeys and
twice saved pars with long putts on
the back mnc to fall to 2-undcr 69.
Furyk got to 5 under with his
birdie at the II th . He responded to a
bogey at No. 13 with another birdie
and saved par with a 15-foot pun on
the 15th.
' His drive found the rough on N&lt;i:
18, and he came up shon on a 45(oot putt for par.
Clarke also made a birdie at No.
II, a 463:yard hole dead into the
wind that Norman harely reached
with a driver and a 2-iron. The Irishman also birdied the par-S 16th to get
to 5 under, but lost a stroke at No . IS
when his drive sailed right hchind
the railing.
· "I got offto a good stan, and then
as soon as I stood on the IOth hole,
it ,)Nas a case of trying to hang on,"

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, July 18, 1997

'

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INtLUOING:

•41 0 SUPER SPRINTS
•55 STOCK
•4 CYLINDER MINI STOCKS

GATES OPEN AT
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·UCES START,AT

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QUICK 4 ·
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Gate Open 1o a.m. • Time Trials 12 Noon
Elimination 6:00 p.m.
AOMISSION I-tt.

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Children under 12 ' 1"''
us Rt. 35 Southside, WV

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urand N~wl~97 Cbrvy
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· I..!:.!IJ(.-,1;

�Page I • The O.lly Sentinel

-.

,
•• •

Frldlly, July 18, 1197

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

By The Bend

Ward Burton struggles while younger brother enjoys success
~

By MIKE HARRIS
AP Motorspom Wrher
As happy as Ward Bunon was
about younger brother Jeff's victory
at Loudon, N.H., it was hard for him
to even smile.
Jeff Burton is running up front
· and winning races, but Ward Burton,
at30 five years older than his sibling,
is in the middle of a slump and hurt·
ing from a crash on the last lap of the
Pepsi 400 two weeks ago at' Daytona.
"I've been recuperating pretty
good," Ward Burton said. "Last
week at New Hampshire, I went to

. '

said. "Of course, we were racing for
second (behind winner John Andrei·
til like everybody else. I think every·
body knows what happened out
there. Some people did some things
they shouldn't have done."
The crash came in the third tum
on tpe 2.5-mile oval as several contenders all tried to get into the same
space at the same time . When it.was
over, there was a lot of smoking
wreckage and a bunch of drivers
angry at each other but glad they
were able to walk away.
"I tell you that's the hardest I've

ever hit," the MBNA PontiAc driver
said. "I couldn' t sit up in the hospital and come to find out it was my
ribs, specifically my floating ribs,
down the very bottom at the side of
the rib cage. They'n: really bruised.
My neck is stretched and I've got a
bump on the forehead because of the
helmet hitting the steering wheel.
"All in all, the seat in the car and
the belts, everything did like it's supposed to. It was just a terrific
impact"
Despite his discomfort, Bunon

Winston Cup slate and standings posted ·

..
U o

see some sports physicians aqd they
say high altitude will kind of make
you swell up and make you sore
again, and I was sore for a couple of
days. I guess I don't need to be flying around much .these days."
Burton is 24th i[l the Winston Cup
driver standings and has only three
top-10 finishes and no top-fives in 17
starts ibis season. He was actually in
contention for his best finish or the
season when he wrecked at Daytona.
"We had such a great car and the
team did a great job all day at Daytona," the South Boston, Va., native

By The Associated Press
The I997 NASCAR Winston Cup
stock car racing schedule, with winners in parentheses and driver point
standings:
Feb. 16 - Daytona .500, Day"tona, Fla. (Jeff Gordon).
Feb. 23 - Goodwrench Service
400, Rockingham, N.C. (Jeff Gordon).
March 2 - Pontiac Excitement
400, Richmond, Va. (Rusty Wallace).
March 9 - Primestar 500,
Hampton, Ga. (Dale Jarrett).
March 23- TranSouth Financial
400, Darlington, S.C. (Dale Jarrell).
April 6 - .Interstate Balleries
500, Fort Worth, Texa.•. (Jeff Burton).
April 13- Food City 500, Bristol, Tenn. (Jeff Gordon).
· April 20 - Goody's Headache
Powders 500, Martinsville, Va, (Jeff
Gordon).
· May 4 - Save Mart Supermarkets 300, Sonoma, Calif. (Mark
Martin).
May I 0 - Winston 500, Talladega, Ala. (Mark Martin).
May 17- x-The Winston, Concord, N.C. (Jeff Gordon).
May 25 -Coca-Cola 600, Concord, N.C. (Jeff Gordon).
June I - Miller 500, Dover, Del.
(Ricky Rudd).
June 8 - Pocono 500 1 Long
Pond, Pa. (Jeff Gordon) .
June 15 - Miller 400, Brooklyn,
Mich, (Ernie lrvan).
June 22 - California 500,
Fontana, Calif'. (Jeff Gordon).
July 5 - Pepsi 400, Daytona
Beach, Fla. (John Andretti ).
July 13 - Jiffy Lube 300,
Loudon, N.H. (Jeff Burton).
July 20 - Pennsylvania 500,
Long Pond, Pa.
Aug. 2 - B'rickyard 400, Indianapolis.
Aug. 10 - Bud at the Glen,
Watkins Glen, N.Y.
Aug. 17 -:- Itw Devilbiss 400,
Brooklyn, Mich.
Aug. 23 · - Goody's Headache- ·
• . Powders 500, Bristol, Tenn.

I..

Aug. 31- Mountain Dew South·
ern 500. Darlington, S.C.
· Sept. 6 - Winston Cup 400,
Richmond, Va.
Sept. 14- New Hampshire 300,
Loudon, N.H.
Sept. 21 - MBNA 500, Dover,
Del.·
Sept.' ·'28 - Hanes 500, Mar- ·
tinsville, Va.
·
Oct. 5- UAW-GM Quality 500,
Concord, N.C.
Oct. 12 - Scars Diehard 500,
Thlladcga, Ala.
Oct. 26- AC Oclco 400, Rockingham, N.C.
Nov. 2 - Dura Lube 500,
Phoenix.
Nov. 16- NAPA 500, Hampton,
Ga.
~-non-points race
Driver standings
I. Terry Labonte, 2,497.
2. Jeff Gordon. 2,494.
3. Mark Martin, 2,445.
4. Dale Jarrell, 2,332.
5. Jeff Burton, 2,298.
6. Dale Earnhardt, 2,283.
7. Bobby Labonte, 2, Ill .
8. Ricky Rudd, 2,074.
9. Jeremy Mayfield , I ,962.
10. Ted Musgrave, I ,930.
-II. Rusty Wallace, I ,9.J7.
12. Bill Elliott, 1,898.
13. Michael Waltrip, I ,892,
14. Johnny Benson, I ,849.
15. Ernie lrvan. I ,848.
16. Darrell Waltrip, I, 792.
.17. Sterling Marlin, 1,750.
18. Ken Schrader, (,737.
19. Kyle Petty, 1,719.
20. Jimmy Spencer, 1,715.
21. Bobby Hamilton , 1.699.
22. John Andrctti, I ,620.
23. Brett Bodine, I ,592.
24. Ward Burton, I ,555.
25. Dcrrikc Cope, I ,51 0.
26. Ricky Craven, I ,497.
21.·Steve Grissom, 1,484.
28. Morgan Shepherd, 1,471.
29. Mike Skinner, I ,435 . .
30. Rick Mast, I ,395.
31. Geoff Bodine, I ,374.
32. Hut Stricklin, 1,351.
33. Dick Trickle, I ,30.5.

34. Kenny Wallace, I ,290.
35. Lake Speed, I ,246.
36. Joe Nemechek, 1.198.
37. Dave Marcis, 1.079.
38. David Green, I ,062.
39. Chad Little, 948.
40. Robhy Gordon, 818.
41. Wally Dallcnbach Jr., 692.
42. Robert Pressley, 545.
· 43. Mike Wallace, 541.
44. Bobby Hillin, 511.

(tie) Greg Sacks, 511.

was back on track last weekend at
Loudon, finishing an unsatisfying
36th.
He and the rest of the Bill Davis
Racing team will try to tum things
around this weekend at Pocono International Raceway, where Burton
qualified third and led 60 laps in the
June race before his engine blew
with 59 laps remaining.
"There's no doubt in my mind we
were the car to beat at Pocono last
time ." Burton said. ''I'm real confident going back.
"We're not going to be able to
take the same Pontiac, though. I had
a brain fade in practice at Michigan
and wrecked that car. But the guys
have built a new one and it's just as

. 47. Gary ~radherry, 41 ~ 48. Billy Strandrigc. 329.
49. Jerry Nadeau. 223 .
50. Todd Bodine, 130.
51. Loy Allen , 119.
52. Rick Wilson, I 00.
53. Ed Berrier, 94.
54. Butch Gilliland, 91.
55. Tommy Hubert , 79.

Any hoy interested in playing
footbDII at Meigs Htgh School arc
reminded that the I 0-day instr~c­
tional period will begin on Monday,
July 21 from 6to 8 p.m.
Players arc asked to meet in the

One thing that keeps him from

getting too discouraged is his confi·
dence in his learn.
" We've actually run well so far
this season and it'• frustrating for me
and the team not to have the finish·
es to show for it." he said. "We left
Sears Point (in early May) with a top
10 (lOth) and eighth in the points.
and then we had mechanical problems in the next four races.
" It's disco uraging because I
know this team is better than a 24th·
place \cam." Burton added. "We can
win. We' ve just got to keep on digging. I'm just trying to concentrate
on making something positive hap·
pen out or some negative situations."

varsity locker room at Meigs High
School by 6 p.m.
For. more infonnation, contact
varsity head coach Mike Chancey at
304-773-6453 or 992-2158.

Ann
Landers
IW?. Lo-s AnJtlcl Times
Sy~tl:~

1nd Cruttlt'$

Syllllk&lt;t.:.

Dear Ann Landers: How would
you feel if a stranger said to you,
" Isn't it wonderful ' that you are
STILL LIVING'" I'm 71 years old,
and it was a bus driver who made
that strange and unsettling comment.
I was too stunned to respond at the
time, but I would like him to know
that at age 68. I wa.• named one of
12 "Most Beautiful Moms in America.'' I am in excellent condition ana
,. think in ·terms or being "still gor·

geous and sexy" rather than "still
living."
My morale is actually quite high,
Ann, in spite of that downer because
just yesterday I had trouble keeping
a 28-year-old architect at arm's
length while discussing remodeling
plans ... Jeanne in Alexandria, Va.
Dear Jeanne: Age is only a number. Don 'I let the offhand remark of
a bus driver spoil your day.- I wonder
when was the last time HE won a
beauty contest.
Dear Ann Landers : Last week, I
was behind a man in the checkout
lane in the supermarket. He had a
toddler sitting in the child seat of the
cart, but the safety strap was not
buckled. If that child had squirmed

out of the cart, there would be no
· way the checker or the father could
possibly have caught her in time.
I went over, buckled the child in
and said in a loud voice, " Daddy
would be very upset if you fell out
and hit your head." The father gave
me a dirty look. A few days later, I
encountered the same situation with
a different man. This time, I politely
asked the father to buckle up his
child. He got ugly with me, told me
it was none of my business and
added, "Are you the kid's mother~"
A week later, another dad also
had a small child in the seat.
unbuckled . When I asked him to
· please use the seat bell, he shot me a
d~rty look, although he begrudgingly

nal
..•• Friday Devotio_
5,....

310 E. Main St

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

'
6th Annual Anniv~rsary Sellabration
Continues

·1997 CHEVY CAVALIER

1997 CHEVY S-10 PICKUP

SJ250 Rebate
$500 Rebate Or 2.9% Apr Financing 48

Mths Or 3.9% Apr 6 MtHs.

1997 CHEVY S-10 PICKUP

1997 CHEVY BLAZER

By Bonnie Shiveley

Devotional Writer

Fair time brings back memories. As a 4-H Club member, I tried to bake
2::
cookies and·make attractive flower arrangements. I never
won any kind of ribbon, but it didn't matter. The fair was
big-time fun for this little girl from the country.
But others experienced sad moments . A father
comforted his young daughter after .thc Junior Fair market lamb sale. Patiently, she had worked for hours gently
training and grooming her pet. Faithfully she had disciplined herself and the animal to perform their best. They
did well, but saying goodbye nearly broke her heart.
This lamb story reminds me of the perfect Lamb
of God, Christ Jesus, who died on the cross for our sings. When we know
and obey Him, we'll never be separated from Him or other believers. We'll
enjoy eternity together.
Today, besides the animals, I enjoy the agriculture exhibits,. As I walk
• through the buildings looking at the huge pumpkins. squash, gourds, mam moth tomatoes, other vegetables and fruit, I muse on the fruit of the spirit.
You may ask, "Is That at the fair'" Sure. Anywhere you have a believer in
the Lord Jesus Christ, you have the fruit of the Holy Spirit of God. This fruit
is displayed everyday in our lives . Gal. 5:22-23teaches us, "The fruit of the
Spirit is love, joy, peace. patience. kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentle- ness, self control ... "
I like all fair exhibits, and admire the people who worked hard to produce
the finished product. I also like the home-made icc cream. corn dogs. curly
fries and yogurt. I hope you'll attend a county or state fair this summer and
have a great-time.
,
Father, thank You for fun , for learning disciplines at a young age, and for
Your Spirit who lives through us., Amen.

Laurel Cliff news notes

or 2.9o/o APR
48 Mths
9%APR 60Mts

The Kyger Creek Lillie League
• Tournament is scheduled to start
today and run until Sunday, July 27
at the Kyger Creek Employees Cluh
. diamond on State Route 7 between
;, Addison and Cheshire . .
" Here is the weekend agenda. All
times arc approximate.
. .
Today games
,, '6 p.m. - Middlepoitlndians vs.
Kyger Creek Raiders
· 7:30 p.m. - Point Pleasanl
Mead's Body Shop vs. Gallipolis
Yankees
Sahjrday's games
10 a.m. - Coolville vs. Rio

f

Mrs. Sandi Gilmore and grand,
·- childrtn, Darbi Darst, Jordan ·and Arimas Scranton of Marysville, spent the
weekend here with Mr. and Mrs.
James Gilmore. Darbi is spending
I, two weeks here with her great-grandparents and aunt, Mrs. Ernest Haggy. ·
. - ······ ·.

Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Vanlnwagcm
were' recent visitors of Mrs . Clifford
Jacobs.
Mrs. Keith Wolfe. daughter. Carissa, and son, Trenton , visited rcccnlly with Mr. and Mrs. James Gilmore.

-

WNBA games ...
(Continued from Page 6)
ciation.
"I needed to play with- some
intensity." said Lobo, 7-for· 15 from
the licld. "I hadn't been doing that
for some reason or other recently. I
went 10 tbe boards stronger than I did
lately. This makes up for sornc of the
sloppy games that I've had."
Lobo helped New York improve
its league-best record to 11 .2.
"She let it come to her," New
York coach Nancy Darsch said of
Lobo, who scored I2 poin!S in the
second half. "She created her own
. 5 hots, especially in "the second half
when she went to the boards prctt y
strongly."
Vickie Johnson, Kym Hampton
and Sophia Witherspoon each added
13 points, and Kcisho Ford had II.
· Theresa Weatherspoon went scorclcss, -but had seven assists and five
steals as the L1bcrty remamcd
unbeaten in five home games.
Wendy Palmer and Lady Hardman each had 12 points for the
Storzz, who dropped to 3-10 with
their third straight loss.
"We played a great team and it's
52 years of experience against our 17
years of experience," .Utah coach
Denise Thy lor said. "This is a game
about players, We play hard, but we
don't play smart all the time."
·New York opened the second half
with a 12-4 run, with Hampton scor·
ing five points and Witherspoon
four. Kim Williams' jumper brought
Utah within 56-44 with 9;29to play,
but the Liberty followed with an 188 run.

French stands
among victors
of KVD races
Tom Bumgardner of Point Pleas·
ant, W.Va. finished third in the pro
division in the ct bracket show and
quick eight street car shootout at
Kanawha Valley Dmgway on Saturday.
·
Bumgardner took third in his
·1991 Spill.cr.
Ron Branham of Waverly won
the pro division in. his 1983 T-Bird.
Jeff Cox of Cool vi lie was runner-up
in his 1994 Chevrolet Lumina.
In a race won hy Middleport' s
Ty lcr French, Marissa Snodgrass of
Patriot finished second in her 1997
Strickland. Ciji Casto of Mason ,
W.Va. took third place in the junior
dragstcr division . Casto was mcing
in her 1995 pro nex. '
Billy · Murphy of 'Rav~nswood ,
W.Va. won the modit1cd division in
his 1978 Mustang while Duke Snyder of Wayerly finished second in his
1968 Roadrunner.
Shawn Weekley of Ona, W.Va.
won the motorcycle division in his
1979 ' Kawasaki. Mark Lilly of
McConnell, W.Va. was second in his
1996 Kawasaki.
In the quick eight street car
shootout, Will Brogan of Charleston,
W.Va. won in his 1968 Camaro. Neal
Vance of West Hamlin, W.Va. was
second in his 1979 Malibu.

fastened the belt while I stood there
watching.
I'm not picking on men, Ann.
Some mothe•s are just as guilty, but
when I ask a woman to .buckle up
her child, she doesn't get nasty and
defensive. She often looks embarrassed, but she thanks me.
It is so easy for a child ·to climb
out of those seats and suffer a serious injury. I'm hoping 'that all parents who read this will be reminded
how imponant it is to perform this
simple act to protect" their precious
children . .. Conceme\1 Grandma in
Vancouver ·
Dear Grandma: When one con·
siders that this simple act could pre·
vent a serious injury, it's hard to

believe some people won't bother to
do it. I' m glad you wrote, Grandma.
Your leller is sure to boost the num·
ber of those w~o will .
Dear Ann Landers: I've always
been self-sufficient and a loner. and
was never much interested in being
social. During my 32 years, I have
had no. more than a couple dozen
dates. Some led to relationships, but
they all ended after a few months.
• I should tell you that I am a virgin. The last time I dated. I wanted
to have sex with the lady. but when I
told her I was totally inexperienced,
she said she fell uncomfortable
about teaching me . I never took her
out after that.
I don't want to have meaningless

Miller and Eleanor Knight for plant·
Home remedies was the theme of high blood pressure.
She displayed samples of herbs ing the urns at Chester Cemetery.
the July 2 Chester Garden Club
Pat Holter discussed Chestermeeting held at the home of Clarice and explained their uses. Plantain and
mullen are used for skin diseases and Shade Days and a.skcd the garden
Krau11er.
Twila Buckley used as her topic yeast infections. She urged people to club for 10 pies for the pie-baking
"Stay out of the .emergency room ·go back to nature for healing. she contest . They were advised to bring
one to judge and one to sell. She
while gardening". Some suggestions said.
Belly Dean read devotions on "Is reported that work is progressing on
she made were to wear sunscreen at
all limes, stay oui of the garden from eating a sin'" and an article on the Chester Courthouse and that the
10 a.m. to 2 p.m., wear a wide- prayer. Roll call was answered on brick is being rc-pointcd. More moobrimmed hat, sun glasses and loose naming some of "Grandma's Wi·s- cy has been collected for the project.
clothes, drink plenty of water, watch dom". Sunshine chairman Maurita she said.
Gardeners Day Out is to he held
out for bee stings, licks and keep Miller will remember David
Koblentz
this
month.
in
Chillicothe on Thursday. The
medications on hand for such.
The
hint
of
the
month
was
on
the
OAGC
Convention is to be held July
Adolph's Meat Tenderizer is good
importance
of
watering
as
an
all·
28-29-30
in Sharonville. Bub
for stings, she said, also suggesting
important
chore
in
the
summer.
Thoma.s
will
he the demonstrator this
that to avoid problems from working
Thanks
was
extended
to
Edna
Wood
year
.
. outside, keep nails cut short and wash
and Dorothy Karr ·for making 28
The Meigs County Fair. Aug. II·
hands often.
flower
arrangements
for
the
Chester
15."was
discussed. The Chester Club
Betty Milhoan was guest speaker
to
Debbie
.
is
in
charge
this year and schedules
Alumni
Banquet
and
at the meeting and dedicated her
comments to 1\'{0 deceased garden
club members, Ada Holter and Janet ,
Koblentz Hawk . .
'
She intcoduccd her comments by
reminding members that "God gives
us the ingredients but we must make
the hrcad." \. She said there is a season for
everything, from rhubarb in · the
spring to pumpkins 10 the fall .
She talked .about herbs a~d their

one-night stands or play dating
· ga,.,cs, picking up women in night·
clubs or bars, but I am now ready for
a serious, long-term relationship.
Please tell me what to do. •• San
Diego
Dear S.D.: There arc a lot of WOIJlen
in San Diego who would love to
meet a guy like you. Call up some of
the women you 'vc dated andre-connect Join volunteer groups, attend
church socials and put yourself out
there. and I'll bet you'll be engaged
before lhe year is over.

Send questions to Ann Landers. Creators Syndica(e, 5777 W. Century
Blvd .. Suite 700. Los Angeles. Calif.
90045

were passed (lul tu interested mcm ~

her&gt;.
A hook on nuturc's remedies was
presented to Milhoan from the club
hy Lula Tohan . pro~ram chairman.

The next meeting will. he an open
meeting at the Chester United
Methodist Church at 7:30p.m. with
Denise Arnold doing a prngram about
dried and frc~h tlowers from her garden . All cluhs and the public arc welcome to attend and door pri1cs will
be offered. Betty Dean will be host·
css.
. Before the meeting. club members
vtcwcd Krauttcr's gardens which
were designed and planted by her
children.
·

uses noting that garlic is the most

important folk remedy, used for many
things. as is vinegar which provides
a cure for many illnesses. Complete
books arc written about vinegar, she
said, gomg on to explain that herbs
cleanse the blood and garlic cures
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Friday, July 18, 1987

Home remedies topic of Chester Garden Club

Kyger.Creek LL Tournament
announces weekend slate
Grande Redmen
·11 :30 a.m. - Harrisonville vs.
Point Pleasant Deal &amp; Brown
I p.m. - Point Pleasant Nationwide Insurance vs. Kyger Creek II
2:30p.m.- Chester vs. Vinton
4 p,m. -'- Gallipolis Reds vs ..
Mason VFW I
5:30p.m.- New Haven Red&lt; vs.
Green I
Su11day's games
I p.m. - Point Pleasant Fruth
Phannacy vs. Bidwell I
2:30 p.m. - Pomeroy Yankees
vs. Rio Grande II
4 p.m. - Friday's opening-game
victor vs. Mason VFW II
5:30 p.m. - Friday'S nightcap
victor vs. Point Plca...;ant Home Care
Medical

·

This·older lady is more than living -she is gorgeous and sexy

;;[

Don Tate Motors Inc.

.

Sen~inel

.. '
hge7
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good •"

Meigs football team schedules
instructional session for Monday

46. Jeff Green , 500.

The Dally

.

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TilE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR EDITION
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ADVERTISING DEADLINE IS JULY 30TH
CALL 992·2155 OR PLACE YOUR AD
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a•The Dally S1nUnet

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Fiv~

Gilliar reunion hetd

Friday, July 18, 1997

generations--- MS memorial

donation made·
by Harden and :
Nease familia$

The family reunion of Elbert and Becky, Mau and Jon, Ponsmouth;'
Della Gillian was held recently at 1he Jack and Rachel Diles and Dameon;
Todd and Diana Bissell, Andrew,
Kyger Creek .power plant park.
Attending were Dolores and Ray- Brady and Haley, Long Bottom; Lori
mond Donohue, Steve Dooohue, Bearhs, Rachel and Abigail, Roy and
Gerald and Linda Donohue, Robin, Mary Gillian, Chester; John and
Jodi and Decca. Harrisonville; Jason Wanora Beaver, Pomeroy; Mark and
and Crystal Roush, Pittsburgh, Pa.'; Regina Simpson, Josh and Tiffany,
Rex and Bea Carlyle, Cory Collins, Gene and Mary Lou Hawkins, MidWesterville: Stephanie and Jamie dleport; Grace Holsinger; John II and
Stemple, Harley 'Rose, Xenia; Kenda Rowan,. Carol Cline, Reedsville; Jan
and Alun Armstrong, Derrick and Harmon, Freeman and Mid Williams:
Debra, Chillicolhe; Kevin and Wendy .Gerald and Shirley Simpson, Racine.
Prizes went to Tammy Carlyle,
Myers, Kevin II, Andrew and Alex,
Bea
Carlyle. Diana Bissell. Mary
Lancaster; Brian and Tammy Carlyle,
Gillian,
Alun Armstrong, and Haley
Steven, Preston and Rexie, Joshua
Bissell.
.
Chaffin, Logan.
Glenn and Suellen Simpson.

. A donation was made to the
National Multiple Sclerosis Found•
tion in memory of Aorence Nease!
Harden by the Harden-Nease familie£
during their annual reunion held , ill.
Carleton School in Syracuse on June
28.
The late Mrs. Harden is the mat.;:
arch in whose honor the annual fe.i
was begun in 1977. The donati011 wai
. designated for medical research. ',
It was noted that one of the two
founders of the annual n:union. ll ·
granddaughter of Mrs. Harden, was
struck with the disca.'e several yean
ago. The donation rcpla&lt;:cd the usual gifts for recognition of families by

M.ilitary news
Christina A. McDoaald
Marine Cpl. Christina A. M~Don­
ald, daughter of Karen L. McDonald
of Racine, recently received a leuer
of appreciation while assigned with
Marine Air Control Squadron Seven,
Marine Air Control Group 38, Third
Marine Divisi011, Marine Corps Air
Station, Yuma. Ariz.
McDonald was recognized for
her superior performance of duly.
\)isplaying remarkable dedication
and initiative, McDonald consistently perfonued her demanding duties in
~ exemplary and highly professionill manner.
McDonald is an essential pan of
toda)"s naval forces as they shift
focus away from long-&lt;listance war at
sea to 'handling the challenges of

regional conflicts affecting U.S. interests.
Whether helping to provide
humanitarian assistance and disasterrelief or proje_cting power ashore and
providing forward presence, Marines
like McDonald are making a difference as the work assigned to
squadrons, battalions, ships or shore
commands around the world .
McDonald is not only improYing her
knowledge and skill. but is serving as
part orthe most technical naval force
in history.
·
A 1992 graduate &lt;&gt;f Warren High
School in Vincent. she JOined the
Marine Corps in October, 1993. She·
is a graduate of the University of'
Maryland, College Park, Md.

Announce birth of first child

..

I

· Mr. and M(S. Shawn (Leanne)
Cunningham of-.Bidwell announce
the birth of their fll'sl child, a daughter, Kali Morgan, Tuesc)ay, July I, at
the Holzer Medical Ce.ller, Gallipolis.
, "'-.
She weighed eight 'pounds. nine
ounces and was 21 inches li&gt;ng.
·,
Malemal grandparents arc Ronald
and Judy Clark of Racine. Maternal
great:grandparents are Simon and
Mary Geistwhitc of Wintersville,
Russell Carpenter of Weirton, W.Va.,
William Clark of Hurricane, W. Va.
and the late Waneta Clark.
Paternal grandparents arc Robert
and Sharon Cunningham of Syracuse.
, Paternal great-grandparents are
Margie Cunningham of Syracuse and ginia Smith of Clifton, W. Va. an~ the
the lale Oaude Cunningham, and Vir- late Harold Smith.

Community calendar
Tile Community Calendar is SATURDAY
· publllbed u I free serviCe lo nonSALEM CENTER -- Star Grange
prolll JI'OU(IS wilhlnc to IDOUIICe - 778-and Star Junior Grange 878. fun
met1 "1 tmd special eveall. The night and potluck suJl!lr. Saturday,
nlmt•liROt f ipedtopromote 6:30p.m. to be followed by work on
tlllhs or fund ralsen of any type. . local and slate fair hooth materials.
Items a~ printed u space permils Subordinate grange contests. needleand eaJIIIOl be pannteed lo lUll a work, an. and sewing contests. will
spullle number ol days.
be judged.
MJDDLEPOIIT --Middleport Village Council. Friday, 7 p.m. to discuss budget.

SUNDAY
,
CHESTER -· Northca.•t Cluster
Hymn Sing, Alfred United Methodist
Church. Sunday. 7 p.m. Public invited.
•

TUPPERS PLAINS -- Special
meeting, Bastein Local Board of
Education, Friday, 6:30 p.m.' at the
Toppers Plains .Elementary School
for the purpose of personnel, school
~novation and new construction discussion.

WEDNESDAY
.EAST MEIGS -- Athletes interested in playing junior high football
to meet Wednesday. 6 p.m. at Eastern
school. Helmet lining following
mcc.ting.

FRIDAY

O'Connor says ·he doesn't
regret 'figure of speech'

I

II
I

consensus of those attending_ that a

donation to help research on this
debilitating disca.\C was q.orc appro·
:_. priatc.
Fifty-eight family members fro.m
Michigan. North Car(•lina. Arkansas.
Indiana and Texas. Ohio and WeSt
Virginia gathered at Carleton School
where they enjoyed homemade dish'
cs and desserts while catching up on
'
ea&lt;:h other's past year. Many preset!'·
\
were there fnr the first time.
·
Attending
from
Texas
wc{c
The Chester area family of Vernada Hanung
the great-granddaughter of Vane Marcinko, the
Charles and Elizabeth (Price) Hujl:now has five living generations. From the left
grandd•ughter of Charlene Frederick, and the
gins and John (Tiny) Price; from lndjVemeda Hanullg Is pictured holding her great
daughter of Jessie:~~ Smith, back.
-grllllt- granddaughter, Makayla Smith, who ia
ana. Walter and Elaine Nea..C; frol!l
Arkansas. Jack and Dolores NeuSj;;
from Michigan. Willard and"Leotn
(Harden) Kendall with children. K~
(Kendaii).Sihlani, Willard and Connie Kendall. and grandchildren. Brl·
an and Cindy Kendall and Benjie
Jones; from North Carolina, Dcbhie
(Harden) Shepley.
Of W&lt;K&gt;Iwnrth Corp.'s more than
"Where else do you get
COLUMBUS (APJ - Linda
Coming from West Virginia wen:
Hengst has relied.on Woolworth's all envelopes, a pound -of coffee. thread $8 billion in annual sales. $7 billion
Betty (Nease) Harden. John and Beth
if you 10se the button on your clothes comes from the company's newer.
her life.,
Nease-Thompson.
Rohcn F. Nease
As a child, she would go to the on the way to an interview? It's just more profitable chains. which include
and
William
W.
Nca.&lt;e.
From Ohio
Foot Locker. Champs sporting g&lt;K&gt;ds
store in Altoona, Pa., and beg her awful they're closing," she said.
came
Sally
Ann
(Nease)
and lames
After 118 years as America's gen- and Northern Rcnections apparel
grandparents to buy her a toy. As a
Bender,
Robert
and
Mary
(Nease)
teen-ager, !\he would share Coke:~nnd eral store. Woclwonh Corp. said shops.
Branda!,
Ronald
and
Carol
(Nease)
Woolworth stores reponed an
fries with friends at the lunch counter Thursday it will clo&gt;;C its remaining
·
Stomieroski,
Amy
Stomicmski,
Mary
400 U.S. F W. Woolworth stores and operating loss of $]7 million la.'t year
in Warren. Ohio.
(Harden)
Lisle,
John
and
Janice
Lisle
And on Thursday, Mrs. Hengst. change its name. Frank Woolwonh as the chain struggled to compote
with
son
Travis.
Rose
Ann
(Lisle)
·
50, went to lhc five-and -dime in opened the nation's first five-and- against big discounters.
Jenkins
with
daughters
Kimberly
.
dime in L~ncastcr. Pa.. in 1879.
search ofenvelopes for her oflice .
and Rochelle, Keith and Karen Lisle
with sons Jason and Nick, Esther
Harden, Rohcrt A. Harden II, Dorothy
(Harden) Yates. Don and Angie Hard,en w1th son Michael, D.J. and Stacy
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Brad a different place and a different the Ali Cup host committee.
"Muhammad wants il to he the H~rden With son Wesley and daughPitt and Gwyneth Paltrow's movie is time. ·•
crown jewel of what boxing should ter M1chacla. John and Tami (Hardbreaking up, too.
en) Nelson with children John and
be," Ali's wil'c. Lonnie. said.
The Hollywood couple. whose
LOUISVILLE. Ky. (AP) Heath.
Although Ali. who is suffering
romance recently ended. won't star Muhammad Ali put on boxing gloves
The blessing was asked hcl&lt;11-r
together as planned in a rt&gt;ovic llirect- and mockingly knocked out Paul Per- from Parkinson's di~ea.o;c, did not dinner hy E.•ther Harden. Followinl'
conti. ihcn drclcd his hand around his speak to the audience, he •}~ned autoed by Paltrow's father;"Dtucc.
dmncr the door prize: a silk nowcr
"Everybody loves their children," car to show that his opponent wa.-. graphs and posed lor p1cturcs to pro- arrangement donated hy Beth NeuseBruce Paltrow said in Wednesday's crazy to take on the fonner champ. mote the inaugural tournament.
Proceeds will go to youth hoxing Thompson. was won by Nick Lisle.
Ali was in his hometown ThursHollywood R~porter. "And. I think
The pa."ing of Rohcn A. Harden 1on
that whatever each of them is going day to promote the 1997 Ali Cup. an programsand the proposed Muham- July 27. IOJ%, wa.' mitcd. Money colthrough, they need til not have this international amateur boxing event mad Ali Museum and Education lected to he donated to the Multiple
hanging over them. When we talked scheduled for September 15-19 in Center.
~clerosis Foundation totaled $250.
about doing this together, we were at Louisville. Pcrconti is chairman of
PASADENA. Calif. (AP)- After
Plans were made for the I998
15 years on NBC's "Today" show, reunion to he held on the last Satur- .
Bryant Gumhcl says he is a creature . day 10 June as has hecn done lor the
p&lt;~st 211 years
.
I ..
0 f .IIVC lC CVISIOQ.
.'
One.
"Public
Eye
with
Bryant
Gum_
_ _ _ _ _ ____;___;_ __
ABOARD AIR -FORCE ONE
Chatting with reporters on the hcl, ., debuting this fall on CBS , will
(AP) - Clinton Wants Hollywood
Vice President Spiro Agnc'w
real-life
presidential jet late Thursday ·mix traditional newsmagazine reports resigned in 1973 after he was accused
Kickback'
Harrison Ford Pops the Question night en route to Arkansa.•. Clinton with live newsniakcr interviews. of income tax evasion, and Gerald
said he thought he deserved a sneak Gumhcltgld television critics
to Glenn 'Close!
Ford was named vice president.
.President Clinton made his own preview - and cut of the take tabloid-like headlines when he spilled from the potential blockbuster, slar-.
behind-the-scenes secrets about the ring Ford as president and Close as
motion picture "Air Force One." due the nation 's first woman vice presiin theaters later this month. In the dent.
"I was present at part of the cremovie, terrorists hijack Air Force
ation of it ... so !think l should have
Bible school announced gotten some kind of cut out of the
S01iRise Balloon Adventure wi II IIHJvic.·, Cl,ntun said. explaining that
he the theme of the 1997 Vacation F&lt;&gt;rd first toured the president's 747
Bible School to he held at the South when he dropped by Clinton's l'umi'-V'"'"·
Bethel New Testament Church July ly vacation in Jackson Hole. Wyo .. ·
27-31, 6:30 to 8:30 p,m. with a clo&gt;· last year.
How did the actnr recruit Close for
ing program on Sunday. Aug. 3.
the project'! "He propo;;cd to Glenn
a v~~~; ~;~~::n~~a;~~c~rs~lilt:~~~ Close. got down on hi' knee." Clin:nur,.n Directory - Fax "'"'"''"'" ·
·. refreshments. Registration is hcing ton said with a chuckle. "She was sitWe offer 10% Discount to Senior Citizens
handled by Jeanne Baker. 614-667- ting there- we were nil huvi.ng dinncr
together
and
he
asked
her
to
•
Racine, OH
St. Rt. 124
Historical Look
6448. The church. is located on Silver
he his vice president."
Call Ken Rausch Mgr.
949-2526
Ridge Road.

.

Woolworth to close its remaining
400 stores across United States

Ali promotes boxing event in Louisville

Clinton dishes on 'Air Force One'

LQS ANGELES (AP) - Carroll Sigel. have denied that he ever dealt
O'Connor says he was using "a lig- drugs for profit.
urc of speech" after his son· s drug. O'Connor wa.' continuing tcstiinduced suicide when he branded mony hegun Wednesday. His return
Harry .Perzeg.ian "a partner in mur- to the witness stand was delayed by
the late arrival ofPcrzigian, who had
der."
He told jurors Thursday he didn't ,been arrested and jailed overnight on
regret the statement and he knew his a parole violation charge of drunk dricondemnation of Perzcgian would ving. He had served jail time after
reach a wide audience. He beli'evcs being convicted of furnishing drugs
Pcrzcgian furnished the cocaine that to Hugh O'Connor.
Inman accused the sometime
led to his son's death.
·
songwriter
o( prolonging the O'Con "Anybody who deals deadly sub·
nor
family
's
grief in an effon to profstances to an addict contributing to
it
from
the
tragedy.
He has asked for
his ·death is 'a partner in murder."
SIO
million
in
damages
.
O'Connor testilicd. "It's a figure of
Under
Sigel's
questioning.
a visispeech."
bly
weary
O'Connor
recountc'
d the
Pcrzigian, 41 , is suing O'Connor
long.
futile
battle
to
pull
his
son
out _
for slander over his remarks after the
199S suicide of the actor's son. of the nethcrworldnf drug addiction.
Hugh. who was deprc;sscd alicr years He said Hugh O'Coilnor.who was 32
when he died, went through drug
. of drug abuse ..
Pcrzigian ha.• admitted sharing rehabilitation programs including the
cocaine with Hugh O'Connor for Betty Ford Center. but always
years and even supplying it. bul he relapsed into f,ocaine usc.
A private investigator whose
said he never sold it to him for profdeposition
was read to jurors said he
it and considered himself the young
learned
that
Hugh O'Connor declared
actor's best friend.
shonly
before
his suicide: "I can't go
·William Schneid. a criminologist
through
any
more
rehabilitation. If I
who interviewed Perzegian after his
can't
do
drugs
I'd
rather die ."
drug arrest in 1_99S, ~id Perzigian
In
the
last
weeks
of Hugh's life ,
acknowledged that he was Hugh
O'Connor
said
he
and
his family tried
O'Connor's "connection" for
to
practice
"tough
love"
but it didn't
cocaine and that "His supply of
cocaine was limited to the friends he work.
"!thought! was employing tough
.
.
knew. ..
love
but I dido 't do it right," the actor
"Did he tell you if he I1Uide a profit?" uked O'Connor attorney Lucy said, his face furrowing with sadness.
"It meant breaking off contact and l
Inman..
'I do that."
couldn
"He said he had I1Uide some money 'ofr of it," said Schneid.
Perzigiln and his lawyer, Allan

'

.

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Pa~onleavesleadership

am1d current GOP turmoil
· WASHINGTON (AP) - In the
latest i~trigue in Republican ranks,
Rep . B1ll Paxon resigned from the
GOP leadership today in the wake of
an ahoned coup against Speaker
Newt Gingrich.
"I gave you my trust and
my word but since both have been
cast in doilhl it is clear lhatl can no
longer be an asset to your team in this ·
appointed capacity," Paxon, R-N .Y.',
wrote Gingrich.
In reply, Gingrich said he
was accepting the -resignation with
regret. ·
·~

Paxon's

eparture

whether forced or n t -

-

came one

day after questions surfaced. about
any partiCipation he or the elected
members of the leadership may have
had in effons last week by dissidents
to organize Gingrich's ouster.
Pa,~~;on, 43, who represents a
congressional district in the Buffalo,
N.Y. area, had been one of the
fastest-rising stars on the Republican
side of the House.
Although he did not hold an
elected position within the GOP
leader&gt;hip, Gingrich tapped him last
winter to chair the GOP leadership
meetings. In that role, he had become
an increasingly powerful figure within the Republican majority. Previously. he had presided over the GOP
campaign committee for two consecutive terms.

Majorny leader Dick
Armey, Paxon and John Boehner all
demed complicity on Wednesday, and
GOP Whip Tom Delay refused to
comment. But that did little to satisfy Gingrich's supporters.
.
"I think the leadership
needs to explain what's going on,''
said Rep. Ray LaHood. R-111 . "They
give us all this stuff all the time about
teamwork and they're out to gut the
speaker."

lawmakers offered connicting accounts of meetings and
conversations that occurred late last

week, although several Gingrich loyalists. speaking on condition of
anonymity, said lhey were certain at ·
least some of lhe leaders had l,Jcen
involved in the effort to topple him .
One critic of Gingrich, also
speaking only on condition of
anonymity, said that at a late-night
meeting with dissident House Republicans last Thursday, DeLay prodded
for immediate action to replace the
speaker and explicitly pledged his
own suppo·rt on a no-confidence

By ELIZABETH WEISE
AP Cyberspace Writer
A human error slowed the now of
c l cctron i~

Wch sites -were inaccessible because
,

I'

of the error early Thu rsday at the

company that ass igns the widely
used "dot-com" lntemet addresses.

The problem was compounded
hours later by an accident near Lau-

vote.

rel. Md ., when a backhoe operator cut

Other officials said, however. that DeLay had been less emphat-

a fthcr optic cahl c, fo'rcing lntetnet

traffic and long di stance telephone.

i&lt;.: in his comments.

The meeting included a discussion of the make-up of a new leadership slate, said the Gingrich critic,
including a declaration by the dissidents that Armey didn't enjoy enough
support to replace Gingrich and
should step aside in favor of Rep. Bill
Paxon of New York.
Another official, speaking
on condition of anonymity, said that
after DeLay. met with the dissidents,
he and Paxon told Armey in a postmidn'lght meeting that they should
attempt 10 manage the effort lo
leplace Gingrich rather than resist it.
After a few hours sleep, se_veral sources said, Armey declared his
opposition, the leadership mel with
the dissidents and told then they
would not support any change.
As the architect of the stunning Republicar{ electoral ·VICtory in
1994, Gingrich has had a tumultuous
· tenure in office, including persistent
attacks from the Democratic minority, his own admission last winter that
he had violated House ethics rules
and a strenuous effort to hold onlo his
powerful post when the new Con-

L"alls to he rerouted.

Both problems appeared to be
reso lved by mid aftcrn OOJl.
The tr.uublc began at 2:45 a.m.
EDT when Network Solutions Inc ..
which runs the main regi)!;try of Internet addresses in the Umted States.

began its daily routine of updating
files.
·r wd of those fi lts somehow

became corrupted. setting off error .
ala rms. Thc·!-.Y!'item adllJinistrator on
duty chose to re lease the fi les an y-

DISCUSS CAPITAL GAINS TAX RELIEF
House ·S peaker News Gingrich of Georgia, .
right, along with fellow House Republican leaders, House Majority Dick Armay of Texas, center, and Rep. · John_ Boehner,· Ohio, meet
gress convened in January.

,
His relations .with Aimcy
and other members of the leadership
were frayed several weeks ago when

the GOP was forced to surrender in
a veto struggle with President Clinton over disaster aid legislation.
·

Some c~nservatives, in par-

ticular, helicvc that under Gingrich 's
leadership. the Republicans have

reporters on Capitol Hill Thursday to discuss
capital gains tax relief. Earlier, Rep. Bill Baxton,
New York, resigned from the GOP leadership
in the wake of an aborted coup against Gin·
grich. (AP)
·

failed to develop a coherent agenda
or method for communicating it.
"Obviously some of us believe '?JC ' rc

gomg to lose the majority in 1998 or
2000," said one lawmaker involved
in the effon to remove Gingrich from

office.
Many lawmakers clearly
were left baffied by the repons of
intrigue.

------Hoster ordered to give sworn statement in
WASHINGTON (AP) -A retired women were treated unfairly during
Army sergeant major who was the the hearing al Washington's. Fort
first to accuse the service's top enlist- McNair, and she has refused to testied man of sexual harassment has fy without limits on quesiions about
been ordered to give a sworn state- her sexual past.
ment in lhe case, a hearing officer
She also has objected that planned
said today.
testimony in McKinney's favor by
Retired Sgt. Maj. Brenda Hoster Army Chief of Staff Gen.~Dennis
has refused to testify so far in a hear- Reimer would unfairly influence the
ing that will determine whether proceedings.
Sergeant Major of the Army Gene
Her lawyer, Susan Barnes, said
McKinney will be court-manialed on today, "Brenda Hoster wants totessex harassment charges.
·
tify" if she is assured the hearing offiThree other women also have cer will enforce a military rule that
leveled such accusations against generally bars questioning about an
Me Kinney. He has denied the accuser's sexual past Barnes said she
charges.
was trying to work out an agreement
Hoster has contended the other for Hoster to testify voluntarily.

I

_

.

Hoster, who worked as Me Kin Col. Robert Jarvis, presiding ortiney's public affairs specialist, says cer at the hearing, said today that Col.
McKinney made sexual ovenures to Owen C. Powell, the official who
her in a hotel room on a business trip. convened the proceeding, approved
Her allegations, which became an order to take a sworn statement,
public in February, launched the although no date was set.
investigation of McKinney and led
Pentagon officials are expected
the other three women to come for- next Wednesday to consider whether
ward .
·
Hoster will be recalled to active duty
McKinney's defense lawyers have and forced to testify at the heariug,
requested that Hoster either be Jarvis added. Jarvis postponed unto!
·recalled to active duty and forced to neKt Thursday funher proceedings in
testify at the hearing, or be ordered to the hearmg, now in its founh week.
give a sworn statement and undergo
Defense lawyer Charles Gittins
cross-examination . She can be told reporters he was pleased a sworn
ordered to give the slatement without statement had been ordered. Howevbeing recalled to active duly, and the er,lie added , "The clear preference is
statement could be taken i.n Texas, to have this witness testify before this
where she lives.
·
... hearing, and that's still in play. ... One

When

Armey

their investigation, was making vis~
its to a private i,.vestment finn while

that Huang ·passed sensitive

ceo~

nomic intelligence to his former
Indonesia
employer, the Lippa
working for the government
Group,
which
has extensive business
Paula Greene, a soft-spoken secdealings
with
the Chinese governretary in the Washington office of
ment,
or
Lippo
related entities.
Arkansas-based Stephens Inc., testiStephens
had
had
financial
dealings
fied her boss instructed her to call
Huang at Commerce to inform him with Lippo.
Huang emphatically denies leakwhen. something arrived for him at .

D.C. officials defend taking
two days to get fans to elderly
.

-

.

WASHINGTON (AP) - In the ly to thC liigh 90s. With the torrid heat
midst of a heal wave , city officials wave, the city has permitted public
defended taking up to two days to works employees to go home early.
Washington Gas, .a local utility,
distribute more than 100 free fans
also
collected more than RO fans for
donated for the elderly. The heat has
the
elderly
but waited several days to
claimed at least one woman's life .
coordinate
with the ciLy before preOfficials began moving lhe fans
senting
them
to residents today.
and some air conditioning units from
"!think
what's
overlooked is that
private donors out of storage Wednesthrough
coordination
we can serve
day evening and distributing them to
the
entire
city,
we
can
detennine
the
needy residents struggling with the
places
where
the
needs
are
greatest."
stifling heat and 'humidity.
District officials said that getting said Washington Gas spokesman Tim
the donated equipment out to deserv- Sargeant. Washington &lt;fas delivered
ing recipients is easier said than done. its truckload of fans to the Columbia
"Usually when we get fans, we Heights Senior Center Building this
have to inventory them, match them morning.
On Wednesday, Mary Corsey, 64,
up with eligible seniors, and deliver
was
found unconscious in her apartthem . It may take a day or two . Obviment
, which had neitheia ·fan nor air
.ously, if there is an urgent situatiQn ,
conditioning.
She died later at
that changes things," said Zachary
Howard
University
Hospital where
Smith , spokesman for the city's
doctms
said
her
body
temperature
Office of Emergency Preparedness.
had
risen
to
108-degrees
by the time
The natiun 's capital has been
she
was
brought
in.
under a high ozone warning all this

ing any of ihe classified information
he received as a deputy assistant secretary at Commerce · in 1994 and
1995.
.
Republicans inquired whether
Huang's visits to the firm might have

involv Cmen1 , several officials said

site design . company in Woburn,

Rep . Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., one of

Mass.
A user seeking an address ending
in .com. for example, would have

Gingrich's chief critic s, rushed to a
miCroph one to re spond, several par-

ticipants said. Others ultimately prevailed on him to refrain, though .
Graham and two other lawmakers . later met privately with
Armcy.

case~---way or the other. she's g01ng to
appear."
Lead prosecutor Lt. Col. Michael
Child urged Jarvi s to assure Hoster
that he won't allow quesuonmg about
her sexual past. With such an a
promise she could appear voluntarily, he said.
Gittins , speaking with reporters.
refused to· guarantee that Hoster
would not be asked such question s,
saying her testimony may open the
door to the issue.
One of Me Kinney 's other
accusers, Army Sgt. Christine Roy.
was asked during the hearing whether
her husband was the father of her
child and whether she had considered
having an abortion.

some sinister purpose, but Democrats

suggested Huang may simply have
been using his lunch hour co do personal business- such as his membership with a Chinese-American
group or his activities in the Asian
American community.

"I find the fact that Mr. Huang
would maintain an arrangement
where he would · make phone calls
outside the Department of Com merce not in and of itself suspicious,"
Sen. Robert Torricelli, D-NJ., said.
Added Sen. Joseph Lieberman, DConn .: "These visits I find very curi-

more.''

times a week; other times there were
weeks with no visits. Most times the

byist, has told the committee he can't

mer Indonesian-based employer or

ous, but I can't conclude much

Greene could shed little light on . purpose was to pick up faxes that had
the purpose of Huang's visit, saying arrived there, she said.
'fhe testimony carne as senators
she could nat recall who had sent him
tUrned
their attention to Huang 's
the packages or faxes.
contacts
at Commerce with his for·
Weaver, who is a registered lobrecall much about his contacts with · parties affiliated with Lippo.
Investigators prepared today to
Huang, committee investi·gators said.
present
detailed evidence about the
Greene testified that on occasion
400
contacts
Huang hag with Lippo.
Weaver instructed her to call Huang
The
evidence
of phone calls to and
at Commerce on her behalf because
from
Lippo
was
gathered from telehe "did not want his n'ame to appear
.
phone
records
subpoenaed
by the
on the logs very frequently." She said
commiuee.
the reason was that Weaver did not
It was being presented in an
want to appear to be lobbying the
attempt
to show that Huang made
government official.
calls
after
receiving intelligence
Greene, dressed in a blue polkabriefings
from
a CIA officer about
dot dress, said Huang's visits were
sporadic -

sometimes two or thre e~

way. which caused chaos at compulc rs natiun~idc J~ many Web sites
cffcctiYciY bli nked out of existence ,

at least in the eyes of browsers.
"The big effect was thill our site
became invi sible," said Chris Calddeni ed ' well , chief engineer at NDA. a Web

Americans still in the dark on campaign fund raising issue
WASHINGTON (AP) - Adding the f~rm but not to leave any mesan element of intrigue, a brOkerage sages indicating the purpose of her
firm secretary told senators today.that call.
"I was told if any faxes or anyJohn Huang occasionally crossed the
thing
came in for Mr. Huang , l was
street from his Commerce Depanto
contact
him and speak directly to
mentjob to pick up packages, mail or
him,".
Greene
said , rel3ting the
faxes sent to him at the brokerage or
instructions
she
received fr om
to use a spare office there .
Stephens'
official
Vernon
Weaver. :'If
Republicans on the Senate Gov•
he
was
not
there,
I
was
to leave a
ernmental Affairs Commillee raised
message"
with
just
her
name.
questions about why Huang. the conThe panel is pursuing allegations
troversial fund -raiser at the center of

·

Tile S'entinel News Hotline

.992-2156

To. offer story suggestions,
report late-breaking news ·and
offer news tips

informati on and showed

Ihe vulnerability of the Internet. '
E·mail deli very was disrupted and

political and economic cOnditions in

Asia.

received an error message that read

"Could not resolve DNS," said Aggie
Ntcta, a spokeswoman for Network
Solutions.

·

The file s were corrected and rereleased 'about four hours later,
although it may have caken several
more hours for the corrected infor-

mation to spread throughout the network, Nteta said .
Network Solutions Is under an
arrangement with the U.S. government to as~ign the " domain 11 names ,
as the su.ffix addresses are known.

Critics ~ave complained that Network Solutions has an unfau 010nopoly that has led to a h1gh regisu;ation
price - $100 - and poor service .
Thursday 's problem is the latest in
a series of recent addressing glitch-

• ps. Last weekend rival AlterNIC
briefly took over the registry 's Web
address to protest the monopoly distribution of Internet addresses.

PUBLIC NOTICE
To all customers of
Tuppe.rs Plains-Chester
Water District, due to
renovations
and
improvemenls at the Water
Treatment Plant, in Long
Boltom, Ohio, on Monday,
July 21st, 1997, we will
suspend all softening
operations for a period of
about 11 weeks (October
. 27th), until the new
softening units are placed
on line. The pressure filters
that remove iron and
manganese will stay on line,
so ·laste and clarity will not
be affected during the
expansion of the Treatment
Plant.

QUALITY FURNITURE PLU
Announces MAYTAG MONTH!

Refrlferators
Drastically
Reduced

Mafic Chef
Ranttes

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week, with temperatures soaring dai-

FREE BAG OF ICE WITH ANY 12 PACK
BEVERAGE PURCHASE

One Stop
Shopping

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, July 18, 1997

42123 St. Rt. 7

Mon. ·Thurs. 9-5
Fri. 9-6, Sat. 9-4

Acro11 StrHIIrotll Far••n Bank

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liCIJ liiiJ 614•667
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�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Upcoming Kehoe trial .puts county officials on edge

Space officials not ruling
out stress in Mir mishaps
By DAVE CARPENTER
As~

Preu Writer

MOSCOW - In June, a heavily
laden supply ship slams into the Mir
space station, damaging much of its
power system. Several weeks later.
during routine preparations to repair
' the damage, ·a vital cable is discon·
nected, shutting down electricity,
communications and oxygen genera·
·tion systems for nearly the entire sta·
tion. ·
The latest crisis, on Thursday. has
rai&lt;Cd a troubling question for ground
controllers: Is the crew; making mis·
takes because of all the stress'
Russian space officials brushed off
suggestions that Thursday's mishap
might reflect a mission in psychological breakdown. But it's clear
they haven 't dismissed the possibility.
Asked whether the mistake result·
ed from crew stress. Igor Goncharov.
deputy mission controller in charge of
medical affairs. said: "I don't e.clude
such a happenstance, but there is no
direct connection."
There is no problem with the men·
tal state of U.S. astronaut Michael
Foale and · cosmonaut Alexander
Lazutkin. Goncharov ·said. The two

are preparing for a stressful repair
mission, including a space walk in a
ruptured module of the station, to ·
repair damage to Mir's pawer when
a supply ship slammed into the station on June 25.
NASA has approved Russia's
request for Foale to take pan in training for the challenging repair jobalthough the final go-ahead won't
come until shortlv before the missinn
Both the .practice session and the
fix-it spacewalk itself, which had
been scheduled for next Thursday,
now will be bumped back for an
indefinite period, Russ.ian "!ission
control said. ·
·
But with the world watching the
unfolding of seemingly daily crises,
officials said evacuation, from the
aging vehicle isn't foreseen.
"We do not plan an early return of
the crew,"said Mission Control chief
Vladimir Solovyov. " We are going to .
continue the flight ."
As for commander Vasily Tsibliyev, who's taking hean mediCation
and sedatives, Goncharov said he suffers from tension caused by fatigue
and stress from Mir's many problems.
Forced to ignore doctors' orders to

Pleas Judge William McCracken lion .
More than a dozen ,heritr,
ordered him held on a $20 million
Associated Press Writer
deputie
s ringed the atrium of the
WILMINGTON - Tbe pending bond and set a Sept. 22 trial date.
three-story
counhouse as the older
Kehoe. 24. and his brother Oteync
trial of Chevie Kehoe for shooting at
Kehoe
was
brought into the courtthree Ohio police officers has author- Kcboe. 21 . formerly of Colville.
room.
ities on cdgo because Kehoe is linked Wash .. arc accused of shooting at
·-ru feel better when the se guy,
to anti-government and militia officers in two separate shootouLs
·
arc
in prison... Fizer said .
after a Feb. IS traffic stop ncar Wilmgroups.
Kehoe
wore a ragged. light hluc
"We don't know what might hap- ·ington .
sleeveless
shin. blue jeans and work
Chcvic Kehoe, was flown · in
pen, ··Clinton County She riff Ralph
boots
.
His
legs and wfist~ were
Fizer said Thursday when asked Thursday from Utah , where he had
shackled.
about security. "We hope nothing hccn in ~ustody since his capture last
He said nothing as he was led hy
month.
happens:•
Cheyne Kehoe is in custody in deputies into the ~o urthousc . but
Kehoe pleaded innocent to II
felony charges Thursday. Common Washingto~ and is fighting cxtradi · winked twice at reporters watchin g

By KEVIN O'HANLON

resi after reponing an uneven heartbeat, the 43-year-old Tsibliyev
worked through the night to deal with
the latest power emergency, caused
when someone accidencilly disconnected a vital cable providing data
about the station's .rowion to the Mir.
The two Russians al;&gt;oa rd Mir
h.-e lurched rrom one crisis 10 the
next since joining Mir in February. ·
They have endured a terrifying fire,
a failure of their oxygen generators,
a breakdown in the cooli ng system
and a surge in the station's carbon
dioxide level:
Foale was aboard for the most
recent foul-ups. including the collision with the cargo ship. which
already had damaged much of the station's power system, and Thursday's
further power outage.
If Mir's crew ·is feeling the pressure, their controllers on the ground
have outwardly displayed the right
stuff. Once again Thursday, Russian
space officials were strikingly calm
as Mir lurched into another crisis.
But the tOp controller allowed
himself a mild reproach of the crew's
latest actions.
Annoyed that the trio wasn't
working rapidly enough to restore

.

,vlilitia member freed from ·prison
• CHILLICOTHE (AP)- A mili - Pleas Court jury convicted Manz in
!ia member convicted of assaulting a May 1996 of' assaulting a peace offiState Highway Patrol trooper has cer and carryiqg a concealed weapon
A trooper said Man z attacked him
been released from pri son.
Larry Mani:. 54, of Hartvill e. was . during a traffic stop in January 1996.
released .Thursday from the Chilli- A gun and more than 1.000 rounds of
cothe Correcti onal In-stit ution. said ammunition .wcic found in Manz's
Andrea Dean. spokeswoman for the truck.
Trooper Wi.lliam Fulton said the
Ohio Depanment of Rehabilitation
two
struggled while he was escorti ng. .
and Correction.
·
Martz
to· his cruiser.
A Guernsey County Common
· O Uf !t&gt;C ) VC~ .• ,

The Rus., ian space agency already
has said if the currcm crew proves
unable to repair damage from the
Jun e 25 coll ision. the joh might have
to wait for the next Mir crew. sc hc~ ­
ulcd to arrive in August .

WASHINGTON (AP) - Rcla. tivcs of campus murder victim s urged
Congress to give students more information on college crimes.

With seven grieving mot hers
shouldcr-lo:shouldcr behind him .
Benjamin F. Clcry. whose sister was
killed in Pennsylvania. told a Hou se
subcommittee Thursday that the
crime reporting law needs to he
updated .
Students don 1 get important information about safety on their cam puses. either hccause schools don't

By E\I'AH PEREZ

Asi0Ci8ted Preas Writer

routinely make their crime statistics
available. be cause the slatislics

include only ·police arrests and not
incident report~ made to other arms
or the cn\lcgc. or because the cases

arc handled as discif!linc probl ems
rather than crimes. he said .
··The viciOus cycle of studenHm·
student crime~· is quietly perpetuated
hy imagc·conscious administrator~

a'\

..

I

....
. '.
'

•
r

I

..

. ·l

who adjudicate felonies &lt;lnd misdemeanors in do:-.'Cd campus di ~c ipli ·
nary· hearings." Clcry said.

101 Reasons Why 1o Drive to

·· Aggravated a:-;saulls hct:o mc
simple assaults ." :-.cxuai assaults

Motors •••

MANCHESTER (AP) - An
equipment operator was rcseucd from
the roof of his machine after ash collapsed around him in a disposal pit at
a power plant. '
William Moore .climbed onto a
fire truck ladder and out of the pit
Thursday at the J .M. Stuart Electric
Generating Station. He was stranded

1997 NISSAN .
4x4 REGULAR CAB

$1

for two hours but was nol injured .

The accident happened us Moore.

F11cr said Kehoe will not be kept
in the county Jail. whi ch wa' butlt on
19!8 and not suited for high-security pri soner.;. He would say only that
Kc~oc will be kept in aJ3il in a ncar·
hy coun1y.
Both brmhcrs arc charged with
attempted murder of a pol icc officer.

fcl o ni ou~ assault and caiTying a con -

tooh.. improper transportation of a

firearm and llceing.
No officer was injured.
Officers said Chcvie Kehoe was
th~ driver and his brother was riding

Manz told jurors he was heing targeted because he saw a Frazcyshurg

hccausc it had expired Washington
_state lit:cnsc plate:,~

judge appoimcd them

10 represent

Kehoe at trial after they said Kehoe
had no job and no money.
Bodikcr declined w challenge the
bond amount.
·· we rcolliJ.c the re &lt;lTC '\Cverc
aggra\'ating L: ircumstanccs." Bodik -

cr told the judge.
Moy~.:r said the ~tate c x.ped~ to
call about 10 witncs:-.cs. A video camera in a state trooper's patrol '~u

filmed the lirst Fe h. 15 shnotout. hut
Moyerued incd to soy th&lt;ll wi ll make
the rrosccuti on c:lsicr.

·· 1 learned a long time ago not lo
try 10 predict how hJrd or how easy
;1 case will he ... M nya ~aid .

police officer shoot and kill a militia
member in June 1995. He

t c~1ificd

Pu.bllc Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
In
g.
Routine
Physicala, Gyne·
milled by 2:00 p.m. on July
PUBLIC NOTICE
Maternity as any other cological and Pap Testing,
25,
1997.
Saturday, July 26, at tO:Oo
Well Care and Child lmmu·
The Insurance Company illnesa.
Martz was scntcnc0d to two years a.m., the Home National must . be licensed to do.
$7.00
prescription
card nlzatlona (No deductible)
Bank will offer for sale at
Term Life Insurance
in prison. He served 14 month,, public auction at Marine bualneae In the State at (to ~· used at pharmacy)
Pays first $300 for each $15,000
receiving ~:redit for good hchavior Services, 2131 Karr Street, Ohio and shall have an A.M.
and avery accident (no
Home Health Care, Hos·
and for Lime served hcfnre hi s trial.
Syracuse , Ohlo r the follow- rating of A+ or better~ The
deductible)
pice
Cur and Convaleacent
Insurance
Agent
muat
also
Ing :

that when the trooper slopped him. he
reared his life was ·in jeopardy. Mai'IZ
sai d he defended him self.

.).

hccome. abusive conduct. dormiwry campus crim e laws "on behal[ of my
hurglarics hccomc si mple theft ... daughlcr wno is dead at 20 because
downgrading or eli min atin g many somebody chose to drink ...
.
Shc an d Cl ~;;ry. w hu:-.c SISter was
crime:-. unt il the.campus seems sa fe.' "
Hi ~ testimony was hacked up hy
murdered by another Lehigh Univern March report hy the invcsugati vc sity student in 1986. asked for a law
arm of Congress, Which found a vari - opening disciplinary proceedin g-s
ety of pro hlcm:-. in the way colleges on volving criminal alle gati ons and
compl y w1th th e l:,1w requirin g them including more informati on in annu·
ul cumpus crime d&lt;).ta.
.·
to report their cr.imc stati stics.

Public Notice

ba licensed to do bualneaa

1977 Ouachita Watercraft,
Serial I XMRB2854M77A
1963 Johnson 75 HP

Wellneaa Package ; $200 Faeili1y.

per year per Insured tor
In the State of Ohio. ·
The Village of Middleport
reaervea tht right to accept
In Memory of
or reJect any and all ·

Motor, Serial I 2363394

T.he terrras at the sale are

cnh. Home National Bank quote1ionl or to request
reoorvoo the right to bid at future bid quotation• •)II•
tho sale and or.the right to dlacretlon.
Any bidder wishing· to
· remove any or ell 11ema
submit alternate quotations
from the sale at any tlma.
to thooe which are specified
(7) 11,14,16, 18, 21,23 &amp;te
may do so . with lull
explanation ot the options.
Public Notice
Pollclea must have a
PUBLIC NOTICE
guaranteed ra1e tor at least

SIDNEY
BURTON

Splnef Manipulations and
Adjustments
12 Month Rate Guarantee
Mail·in Prescriptiona, 90

day supply ·- $5.00
(7) 18, 20, 21 3tc

who passed away
July 18, 1988.,
The month of July is
here again
To me the saddest of
the year.
The Village at Middleport twelve months .
For gone Is the .lace
wlahea 1o receive sealed SPECIFICATIONS:
we loved so dear
$150 lndlvlduall$450 famThe hill the y favor would chan ge bids for Hospitalization
Clcry also was hacked up by .an
Silent
is the voice we
th e law guaranteeing privacy to ~tu · Insurance. All bids shall be Ily, calendar year deduct·
unscheduled witnc!IS.
loved
to hear.
lble 80/20% co-pay to $5,000
received in, andand
bid
Wearing a cros s-stitched memor- dent academic records. medical and apoclflcatlono
What
would
I give to
$2,000,000
per
person
lite,
a 1111 of
finam: iat information so that it W()u \J covered employees may be time maximums
clasp his hand,
ial 1o her murdered daughter $20 co-pay Doctors Office His happy face to see
" My Jeanne. I loved her with all my not extend con fidc n1ialit y to criminal · obtained from the VIllage
VIsits (No doduclibla)
· To hear his voice and
a\lc\!ations.
OHicea,located
at
237
Race
heart. 1966-1987"- Stella Goldberg .
Includes: X·rays, lab
in
addition
.
it
would
al
low
the
·
Straet,
Middleport,
Ohio.
All
see his smile
of P1tt shurgh made a heartfelt appeal
work·, and Diagnoa1ic Te1tpropoaala must be sub·
That meant so much
OR MORE
for strict enforcement or all laws, say· government to withhold a portion of
federal
aid
from
sc
hool
s
that
fail
to
to
me.
ing what may seem to he minor
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
PER GAME
comply with crime-rcponint! requi recrimes often arc not.
Experienced
Part-time
Sadly
missed
by
wife,
BEECH GROVE
Jeanne. a Carnegie-Mellon Uni- , mcnts. and require all sdlo~' I &lt;.IUthor­
Construction
Catherine,·sons and
.
itic:oo
.
and
not
just
campus
.p
n
li~:e.
to
Secretary
for
ve rsity student. was stabbed lo death
ROAD
daughters-in-law,
worker for Meigs
hy drunken strangers . Mrs . GoldhCrg suhmit statistics.
Meigs County
grandchildren and
County Area.
A· rccc.m Ohio Supreme Coun
said .
business. Flexible
Roofing,
Electrical,
grandchildren.
dc(.;
ision
required
one
in
stitut
ion.
"There is nothing min or ahout
hours. 15-25 hours
Carpentry.
Miami
University.
to
rel
ease
st
udent
underage drinking or·the usc of drugs
Supervisory skills
per week.
Yard Sale Fri.-Sat. and · Sunday. 9-5 pm.
on an y college campus ... she sa id . . disciplinary rc~..:ords to the campu s
preferred.
Send resume c/o The
Albany at 3315 US 50 west. Quarter mile ott
asking the lawmakers tocha~e the ncwspuper.
Send resume c/o The
Dally Sentinel, P.O.
Appalachian Highway on 50 wesi towards
Dally Sentinel, P.O.
Box 729-47, Pomeroy,
McArthur. Inside rain cir shine. Wal.
Box 729·47, Pomeroy,
OH 45769.
Plantation desk; brass beds; oak dresser
OH 45769.
w/bevel mirror; stands; sleeper sofa; dinette
table and 4 chairs; wood table w/4 chairs;
49. of 'Aberdee n. was operating a t.:ah cJ Mmlrc '!'l mad1inc . Stah l s~1id .
The Stuurt power: pl;.tnt is ·,lion1!
scoop shovel to load ll y ash ont o a
dresser; collectibles; old tools; bird collecthe
Ohio
River.
ahout
65
miks
cas~t
truck. Fly ash is a byprodu ct of
Must have an EPA Refrigerant Certification, .tion; sets of dishes; pictures; occasional
of Cincinn·ati .
burned coal.
knowledge of oil, gas &amp; electric furnaces,
chairs; tans; refrigerator; elect. stove;
~ ·· The ash cncirclud his equip·
Cincrgy Corp . and Am~.:ril·an Ele cincluding air conditioners &amp; heat pumps.
wringer washer; new bathroom vanities;
mcOt and came up around his cah ... tric Power Co. also an: CIH\wncrs of ·•Excellent pay based ori experience
MUCH! MUCH! MORE .
said Don Stahl. spokesn1an for Day- the coal -lircd plant that SCI'\'CS cus- •P11Id vacations and holidays
ton Power &amp; Light Co." . a I:{H)wncr torpcrs in ~:cntral and soulhwcstcrn
•Paid overtime and medical insurance
Ohio including Columhus. Dayton · •Year around employment with new state of the art
of the plant.
A rescue :-. quad rrn m Pcchlcs and Cincinniui.
service van with tools supplied.
Howard L. Wrltesel
ex tended the lire tru ~..:k h1ddcr to tl1c
Call Bennetts M.H. Htg. &amp; Clg. at 446-9416 or
1-800-872-5967 or send resume to 1391
ROOFING
Safford School Rd., Gallipolis, OH 45631.

BINGO

RUTLAND
POST 467
6:30P.M.
STAR BURST
$1500.00
$50.00

HVAC SERVICE TECHNICIAN NEEDED

!EBRA.
COMING.TUESDAY, JULY.21TH, 1997

I

·'r
I!
II
li:I

I'
I

I

•-'

·

·

Submitted By:

'

.

•

614-992-4025
Cit! 8 am-8 pm

Gutters ·
Oownsp9uts
Gutter Cleaning
. Painting
FREE· ESTIMATES

949-2168
3117!94/TFN

I
I

is now accepting·
Residential Trash

II
I
I
I

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

1-800-967-4774

Bob Morris
Letart Falls, Ohio

614-247-3421
After

6 or leave

Limestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; 1
House Sites

..

Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

Sayre Trucking Co.
614-742-2138

'UZ7f87tfn

DREHEL'S
SAW CHAIN

CORPORAL·ELEORIC

10 in .......... $10.00
12 in .......... $11 .00
14 in ... .. .. ... $12.00
16 in .......... $14.00
20 in .......... $16.00

John Williams, Owner
Licensed Electrician
Work Guaranteed
Free Estimates
Providing Quality
.Residential Service.
24 Hr. Emergency
Service

1-614-742-2925

$11.00.

We can also provide a
90 gallon cart for $14.50 .
per month .

•

25% Discount
HUPP'S CUSTOM
SHARPENING
949·2641

.Service

HELP WANTED
TOMATO
PICKERS

HAULING I
EXCAVI!IDI

members

General Refuse

· Service for

SHARPENING
SERVICE

to 4·H &amp; IIA

MOOSE LODGE 731
FRI .' &amp; SAT.
The Return of the Band
"AMBER" with Amber Crisp
Fri. 9 til 1, Sat. 8:30-1 2:30 ·

Call

.

•

Appearing Friday B-12
POMEROY
EAGLES CLUB
Members and ·Guest Inviled

r---------~Q~~2~I~~f~~!~~~Q~~--~~---,

IPhone No

BULLETIN BOARD ....

CROSSOVER

To:

ICHILDS NAME(S) &amp; AGE(S):
I
!PARENTS' NAME:
1ciTY &amp; STATE
I
' I
The Above Information Will Be Used In Ad

I

FREE
Local.Area Pick Up
Discarded AppUances
&amp; Many Metals.

NEW-REPAIR

CILL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

The Daily Sentinel
"BABY SENTINEL"

I'

•••P

'7" column Inch •••kd•ys
, '9" .colum~ ln-h ·Sunday

The Daily Sentinel BABY Sentinel is a
Special Edition filled wilh pholographs of
local kids· ages newborn lo four years old,
Tne BABY Sentinel will appear io the July
291h issue . Be sure your child, grandchild
........._......_·
or relative is included.
Complete the form below
and enclose a snapshot or
wallel.size picture plus a
$5.00 charge for each
photograph. If more than
one child is in picture
Pictures must
enclose an additional
be In by
$2 per child.
Tuesday,
· (ENCLOSE
PAYMENT
July 22th,
WITH
1997
PICTURE)
Pictures can
be picked up
after Auguet 4
S~nd

Business
Services

.·Get Your
&amp;cross
. With 1 Dallr Sentinel •
• .

'he Daily Sentinel
BABY Sentinel

',.,·

- I

gm in1o the ~uhurban and drm c
away. r •!.sscngcr Cheyne Kehoe fired
:o.C\'Cral round~ at the ofliccrs with a
~cmiautomatil.: hand~un and \led on
ln{lL th e patrol s::tid. ~
A Wilnlington pO!kc nffu.:cr fnunJ
the \Chide shortly ~tftcrw~mJ and wa . .
fired on hy Chcv1c Kehoe. the patrol
said .
Rick Moyer. an assistam count)
prosecutor. said he expects the tri~1\ to
take three Ill fi\"C days . Kchnc race~
35 to 40 year&gt; in prison if con\'ltlcd.
Moy..::r said .
The prosecutor said he "'a-. pre\'Cnted hy OhiQ: law from a~ ~tng for
no bond . whi~.:h he said i:-. an npu on

cealed weapon. Chevic Kehoe also is
charged with pos sc~ s i on of criminal

.,

Although the island's 2.•000 residents were ordered to cva~uatc.
Collins estimated that only about 40
percent did so. "They didn't take it
· serious enough. It 's a lesson to be
learned," he said.
· Around 6 a.m. COT. Danny was
ncar Pon Sulphur. about 40 miles
southeast of New Orleans. Danny
could make landfall again anywhere
from Gulfpon. Miss., to the Florida
Panhandle. forecasters said.
"Our track takes it somewhere
between Gu.lfpon and Mobile, Ala.,
in 22 hours , but that could change
slightly." said Martin Nelson, a meteorologist at the ·National Hurricane
·Center in Miaini.
A hurricane warning was post~d
from Morgan City. La .. to Destin. Aa.
Forecasters said Danny could bring
10 to 20 inches of rain to the Gulf
Coast.
"Hurricane force winds extend
outward up to 25 miles mainly to the
east of the center and tropical· storm
force winds extend outward up to 115
miles east of the center," the National Weather Service said. "Since Danny is moving very slowly, rainfall is ·
expected to be a problem."
Reconnaissance flights recorded
winds of up to 92 mph to the nonheast of Danny's center.
\

Chcvie Kehoe resisted a putdnwn onl y m aggravated murder c a:-.e~ .
Da\'ld Bod1kcr. Ohto 's puhlic
scan;h. Ocd to his 'chid e and w:l~
pur&gt;ucd py a stale trooper and a defender. and assostant Jerry McHcndeputy &gt;heriff. the ·patrol said . As he r) accompanied Kehoe in court . The

.

Operator rescued from ash collapse

Hurricane Dan·n y sloshes
way through the "Gulf Coast
NEW ORLEANS (APl - An
erratic hurricane born in the marshes
of south Louisiana early today
churned slowly toward the Gulf
Coast, bringing high winds and heavy
downpours.
·
.
·
Hurricane Danny, travehng nonhcast at about 6 mph. sloshed into a
sparsely populated tongue of marshland that pokes out into the Gulf of
Mexico. From there it was expected
to move back into the Gulf and up to
Mississippi and Alabama. Danny
was barely strong enough to be classified a hurricane. with ,maxomum
sustained winds clocked at 75 mph
and gusts up to 95 mph. .
"It's blowing more than ever now.
1 can't believe this ," Tracey Polkcy
said in a telephone interview from
Grand Isle, a reson island where the
eye 'Passed _eoirly today. "There's
things bangmg around. We have no
idea what they nrc . They have lo~s
floating in the main highway and ns
all coming into my yard.·:
.
No injuries. and no maJor prope~­
ly. damage were reponed early thiS
morning, but Grand Isle Aldennan
Roben Collins said he expected to
see 1 Jreal deal once he goes outstde.
.. A lot of flood damage ... A lot of
boats IKoke loose from docks. A lot
of docks missing. A lot of veh1cles
loSt, for sure."

him .

with him 1n a blue Chevrolet Suburban that [lOiicc stopped along Ohio 73

.Victims' relatives want reporting updated

.

FBI combing Florida
for murder suspect
sace mansion.
• Police have focused an intense
MIAMI BEACH, Fla . ...:. Investi- search across South Florida for
gators chased even the wispiest of Cunanan since Versace. who was gay,
leads into the whereabouts of Andrew was shot twice in the back of the head
Cunanan, the elusive suspect in the Weanesday.
killing of designer Gianni Versace.
"We strongly believe he is still in
Investigators said Thursday that this area." FBI spokeswoman Anne
they believe Cunanan - described as Figueiras said. " We urge the public
a gay prostitute and susfl"!'led in four to be very cautious. He is armed and
killings since April during a cross' dangerous."
Authorities were studying a blurcountry spree - is still in South
Florida and phiying a deadly cat-and- ry videotape from a security camera
mouse game. ·
at the Tides Hotel ncar Versace's •
The FBI warned residents he home that showed someone in shons
could he nearby, and . scrutiny tight- and aT-shin running down
alley
ened at Miami's busy airpon, seapon after the slaying.
·
and bus terminals.
An attendant a.t a parking garage
•Tips about ·Cunanan sightings where police found a red Chevrolet
poured into police, especially artcr a truck that Cunanan is suspected of
gay doctor was killed Thursday about stealing said the vehicle had been
15 miles from where Versace was parked there. si~ce June 10.
gunned down outside his oceanfront
In addition to the Versace slaying,
villa.
Cunanan, 27. is suspected of four
Agents rushed to the scene after killings in Minnesota. Illinois and
the doctor was found dead in his bed· New Jersey since April 29. He has
room. By late Thursday, however. been charged in three of those cases.
agent John Coffey of the Florida The latest charge came Thursday in
Dcpanment of Law Enforccmcm - the. May 3 slaying of millionaire
said the two crimes were ' 'definitely Chicago developer Lee Miglin, who
not connected."
police say had IM:cn stabbed and torMetro-Dade homicide Sgt: Lou tured.
Alvarez said 44-ycar-old Dr. Silvio
Poiii:c in the Philippines on ThursAifonso had not been shot: but died day located Cunanan's father.
from "trauma to the upper pan of his Modesto · Cunanan. The elder
body."
Cunanan fled San Diego, where he
Law enforcement officials said had been a successful stockbroker, in
Alfonso's killing appeared to have 1988 to avoid charges of financial
resulted from a domestic dispute chicanery.
involving his brother. The WashingPolice in Plaridel, nonh of Maniton Post reponed today.
Ia, said the elder Cunanan, a Filipino
Investigators were lookmg into a native, told investigators he doesn't
possible Cunanan link to the May 12 hel!~ve his son killed Versace ..
heating death of a gay man 10 'hiS
My son ts not hkc that. He IS not
Miami Beach apanment. lllcrc was a high-class male prostitute. He had
a "remote" possibility Cunanan may a Catholic upbringing . He wa. an
have been in the area then. The Mia- altar boy," the elder Cunanan said.
mi Herald reported today, quoting a
Rewards of at least $65,000 have
police source it did not identify.
heen offered for information leading
"We' re definitely looking at this to Cunanan ~s capture.
as being related to the Versace murA~ the frantic scorch for Cunanan
der," the source said, adding )hat continued. friends. admirers and local
Casey Patrie~ Sigler, 41 , may have dignitaries planned to remember the
met his killer in a well-known pick- world-renowned fashion maverick
up. park a f~w blocks from the Ver- at a public memorial mass today

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

friday, July 18, 1997

Friday, July 18, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Meigs
Refrigeration
Residential Heating
&amp; Cooling
Auto Air Conditioning
Installation and
Service
American • Standard,
Janltrol &amp; Heating &amp;
Cooling Equipment
R.S.E.S. Certified •
Arl Certified
Don Smith
·37814 Psach Fork Rd.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
Phone 614-992·2735

6127/1 mo. d.

Daily Rd., Racine

614·949-3060

$1,500 REWARD!!
For information
leading to the
arrest and
conviction of
anyone involved
stealing a
property line
fence at:
1927 Cross St.,
Racine, Oh.
1.0. Caller!
Contact: ,
Ron Miller

992-4025

�P1ge 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, July

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, July 18, 1997

18, 1997

The Dally Sentinel• Page 13

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

====;;======I

110

554 Bidwell, Behind Auction
HouM, Fri &amp;Sat.

Babys itter Needed Wttkday•
From8-&lt;t:30PM. f! 1,-44&amp;-7558.

Yard Sale

70

Help Wlmld

110

Help WMJ-.d

AVON - $8 -$18/Hr. No Door To local Retail Bualnell IHIUng
Door. ·eo .. oea· OUkk Cuhtl 1- Full Or Part-Time, Salea Clerk
Mull Ba AnMablo To Work •~
1100-827-&lt;G«&lt; lnl&gt;'•o~n~p. .
To I P.M. I DIYI WHI&lt;, ExpenBabytitler needed In my home. aneo Prtlorrod Will Olocuaa Ban3 FWlJ Yard Sale: Antiques Fur· Muat have reltrencta. Send to olita. Send Dtollled -mo Wlfl
nll\lrt, Kttoaene Lampl, Iron Box G·12 , "IM.Pt Pleasant Rtg· "-'"nal &amp; ProloiOion RallraneWare, Glaaawara, T. V.'a, Adult. ister. 200 Main St, Pt Ptea11n1 e• To: CLA 415, cia Galllpolla
Baby Clothe' l'!lfta!U er,_., Air vr-1 25560.
Dailv TrtbJne. 82S Thkd Menue,
Conditioner, 14728 State Route
Gall"poll~ 01145831 .
GallipoliS
&amp; VIcinity

P

Apostol•c
Cloolrd al J - Cluld "~:.""""
Vanllnd1 and Wan! .

W..wdo C~ordo of Cluld
33226 arildn:n's Home Rd.
S1111dsf School- II Lm.
WCH1hip - IOo.m., 6 p.m.
. Weclnuday Services - 7 p.m .
010,

Mlddloport Clnorch or Christ
5th and Main

Pa&amp;tor. AI Hartson
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
S1111dly School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a. m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.
K0110 Chun:h ol Christ

Worship - 9:30 a.m.
Sundly School - 10:30 a.m.
Pulor-leffrey Wallace
1st and 3nl Sunday
Beanroliow Jlld&amp;t Church or Christ
Pastor: Jack Colegrove
SWldly School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Sen' ices· 6:30p.m.

\1/.:;jti'~ - 11 a.m.-9:30a.m.
and 7 p.m.
Wednesday S.rvi&lt;e -' p.m.

Zloa Church or Christ
Pomeroy, Harri""'ville Rd. (R1.143)

Fne WIU Bapdot c•orch
Ash Street, Middlepon
Pastor: Les Hayman
Sunday Service ·7:00p.m.

Pastor: Roger Watson
·
Sundly School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
· Wedneadly Services - 7 p.m.

Sundly School- 10 a.m.
Wednesday S.rvice-7:00 p.m.

.

.' '

Tappen Plaia Church or Christ
Instrumental
Pastor: Scot Brown
Worship Service- 9 a.m.
, • Communion - 10 a.m.

Rutlalld Flnl Ba.,u.t Church
Sundly School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy Flnt Bapllsl
East Main St.
Sundly School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Flnt Sou...... Bar.tl"
418n Pomeroy P•k•
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wol&gt;hip - 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.
Flnt Bapllsl C~urch
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday School -9:15a.m.
WoBhip - .tO: IS a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:00 p.m.

Sunday School· 10: lS a.m.

Brodb•ry cburch or Christ
Pastor: Tom Runyon

Sunday Scllool - 9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.

Rutlaad Church or Christ
Sunday Sdlool - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Brodlord Church or Christ
Carner of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
· Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship-8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Rlr:lae Flnt Baptist
Paslor: Rev. l.aWTence T. Haley
Youth PISior: Aaron Young

Hickory HWs Church or Christ

Sundly School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedntsday Services. 7:00p.m.

Evangelist Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services-? p.m.

su..r Ria• Baptist

Pasror: Bill Unle
Sunday School - IOa.m.
Worship - II a.m., 7:30 p.ni,
Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.

Ubtny Chrisdao Church
Dexter
Pastor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening· 6:30p.m.
Thuooay Service - 6:30p.m.

'

ML Ualoa Bapdll
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sundly School-9:45a.m.
Evening • 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6_
:30p.m.

Laopvlllo Chrlstlao Church
Sundly School - 9:30a.m.
WoBhip- 10:30 a.m., 7o30 p.m.
W~dnesday Service 7:30p.m.

-lebo01 Baptlat Church
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Berdine
. Sunday SchOol - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday WorshiP.- 10o30 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wedneaday B1ble Study - 6:00 p.m.

H,ml9ck Grove Clourch
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school- 10:30 a.m.
Worship. 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Reocbvillo Church or Christ
PistOl': Philip Siurm
Sunday School! 9:30a.m.
Worship SeiVite: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m. .

Old lktllel Fne WUI Baptlat Church

..

I

28601 St. Rl. 7, Middleport
Sundly School - 10 a.m.
l;venina - 7:30 p.m.
Thuradly.S.rvices - 7:30

Cl1rist1an Un1on

Hll1alde Baptlat Church
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev.lames R. A,..., Sr.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services •7 p.m.

Hartlord Church oiChrist In
Christian Uoloa
Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. David McManis
Sunday School - II a.m.
wo..hip- 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.

Vldory BapllllladtJIOIIdaat
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship - lOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m .

Chu rch of God
ML Morilll Church or God
RaCine

Pastor: Rev. JameS Sauerfield
Sunday School- 9:45a.m.
Evening. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

Faith Bapdot Chorch
Railroad St., Muon
Sundly School- 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.

Wodneadly Services- 7 p.m.
Fora! Ron Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hun

Sunday School • tO l.m.

Worship • lla.m. ·

ML Moriah Baptllt
Fourth &amp; Main St., Mlddlepon
,astor. Rev. Gilben Craig, Jr.
Sundly School - 9:30a.m.
. Wor~hip- 10:45 a.m.

Putor: Rev. Paul Taylor

Trinity Church
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday school ind worship 10:25

· Saa-..1 a ..rt C.thGik Cb•""
. 161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Plllor: Rev, Walter E. Heinz
Sat. Con. 4:4S-5:15p.m.; ~us· 5_:30 p.m.
Sun. Can. -8:45·9.15 a.m.,
Sun. Mus - 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mus- 8:30a.m.

Epi scopal
Groce Episcopal Cllun:h
326 E. Main St., Pomeroy

· Rector: Rev. D. A. duPiantier
Holy Euc:hariSl and
SuDdsy School10:30 a.m.
Coffee hour following

Ch urch of Chr1 st

Holm ess

,._roy C~urch el Christ
212 W. Main Si.
Putor: Neil Proudfoot
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worahip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneadly Services - 7 p.m.

Dlovllle Holt- Church
31057 State Route 325, Lanasvlle
Pastor: Dr. J.D. Young ·
Sunday school - 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship·- 10:30 a.m. &amp;. 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer SCI'\'ice - 7 p.m.

FOI'IIIRue
l'lstor: Clwlca Neville

Other Churche s
47439 Reibel Rd., Oleslcr
Putor: Rev. Mary McDaniel
Sunday Service~: 10 a.m. A 6 p.m.
Wedneadly Services - 7 p.m.
Appe Ult Ceater

Worship - 10 a.m.

Pine Gro,.. Bible Hollaeu Chu,..h
1/2 mile off Rt. 325

Faith Ch-' Open Bible Church
923 S. third lit., Middlepon
Senior Pastor Michael Panglo
Resident Paslor Richard Vermillion
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

PeariChapel

PastoqRe.... O'Dell Manley

Sundly School - 'la.m.
Worshlp - 10 a.m.

Sunda,..School· 9:30a.m.

Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30 p.m.

""-"Y
Pastor: Robert E. Robinson

Wesleyao Blblo Holln011 Church
75 Pearl St., Middleport.
Pastor: R~. John Nevilk
Children's servia: - 10 a.m.
Worship · 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Sundly School - 9:'15 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. ·
Bible Study Tuesday - 10 a.m.
llockSfrilp

Pastor: K&amp;1th Rader
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m. ·
Youth FeUowshtp. St~nday • 6 p.m.

H7sell Rua Halla... Church
Sundly School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
.Thursday Service-7:30p.m.
Laurel CUir Free Method lsi Church
Pastor: David DeWitt ·
Sundly School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m .

Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sundly School - 9il5 a.m.
Worship - 10: IS a.m.

Rutlaad Communlt7 Church
Pastor: Rev. Roy McCarty
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Sunday Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

SnowoUie
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.

Reorgulud Church or Jesu Chrlat
of Latter Dav Saints
Portland-Racine Rd.

Belhaay
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sundly School - 10 a.m.
· Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

Branch President· Michael Duhl

Cimel

Latter-Day Saint s

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service• - 7:30 p.m.

Harrbon•IHe Community c•urch
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday - 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m.

Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m
.(2nd &amp; 41h Sun)
.

End~lme

MomlncStar

The Church of Jtsu!l
.Christ ol !.alter-Day Salnb

Luth eran

Sunday School - I I a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Suttoa

Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m. (1st &amp; 3rd Sun)

'Sunday SchoollO a.m.

Evening-7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service - 7:30p.m.

Eut Lotan
Pastor: Brian Harkn,ess
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

SL Jolm Luther110 Church
Pine Oro\le
Rev. G~~e Weirick
Wors~1p - 9:00a.m.
S~nday School- 10:00 a.m.

bdne
Pastor: Brian Harkneu
Sundly School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Our Saviour Lutheran Churth
W'alnul and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W:Va.
lntrim pastors: Rev. Robert Hupp
Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.

Worship · ~1 a.m.

SL Paul Lutheran C~urch
Comer S~camore &amp; Second St, Pomeroy
Rev. George Weirick
Sunday SChool · 9o4S a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.

SyraCllse MI&amp;Oioo
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
Sunday School • 10 a.m .

Coolville United Melhodltt Parish
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolollle Church
Main &amp;. Fifth St
·Suoday School - 10 a.m.
Worship . 9 a.m. ·
Tuesday Services · 7 p.m.

·

Worship·11a .m.

Torch Church
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Northelist Cluster
Allred

Nazarene

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Racloe Flnt Cbun:ll of tile Na11rene
Pastor: Scoll Rose

Chester
Pastor: Sharon Hausman

Sunday School ~ I0:30a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
First Sunday of Month ·7 :30p.m. service

ML Hmnon United Bmhren
Ia Christ Cllun:h
Texas Community off CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
WoBhip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesda~ Services - 7:30p.m.

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services -.7 p.m.

Pastor: Roy Hunter

Sunday School'· 9 a.m.

Worsbip - 10 a.m. ·
· Tuesday Services· 7:30p.m.
Central Cluster
Asbury (Syracuse)
Pastor: Charles Neville
Sunday Schooi .. 9:4S a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\'iccs - 7 p.m.

Church annom1cements
sponsored by these area
merchants.

Easy Bank Finandng
Air (oadilionen lnstaHed 128111 amonth
Heat Pumps lnstoHed 138111 a month

SERVICES
214 E. Main

"Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken·

992-5130 Po.meroy

992-5432

228

x·

w. Main St., Pomeroy

INSVRAN
.
CE . ...... - ..:...-

CLINIC
Briggs &amp; Stl'ltton
Muter Service Technician
GENCJES lne. IKE!RC)SE:NE HEATER REPAIR

Bill Quickel

,..

ttz-41877

nME FOR SPRING
CLEANING?
CINn out
Of'
atllc w1t11 , . /Jalp ot , .

yow,....,.,.,

CLASSIFIED SECTION!

'

'

94g..2804

CLASSIFIED ADS
a supermarket
for everything

SUppLY

St. Rt. 248, Chester, Oh.
885-3308

PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
. Prescriptions

992•2955

~iolfer ~umral ~ome ~n•.
. , . ...141

Established 1913

8101!.- . . . ~
~OHt&amp;lll

606 EAST MAIN
POMEROY. OHIO
992-2259

992-2121

Amouncements

Border Coni~&gt;, 1 Uale &amp; 1 Female,

c-.

62 years of age or. handicapped.

Must meet HUD eligibility requirements.
For further details call today

L

&amp;

8:1)0 a.m .-3:~ p.m.

CLEANING?

•RepkKemeJJI Wlldows

R. L.

=

FREE ESTIMATES

SERVICE

·WILL BlUL-· .
JUST CALL.

Limestone • Gravlll

992·7074
Gravel, Uf11eltone,
TO.JliiOII, Fill Dirt,
!iiiJicf. No Minimum.

DUMP TRUCK

Clean out your bi.sement or
little with the heiP'Ofthe

•llllltl Gngis

Dlit • Sand

I

1•51111'111 Doan '

985-4422

CLASSIFIED SECTION
FLORIST"

County~ Oltiell Florut

Meig•

EAST MAIN POMEROY, OHIO 45769

614/992 2644
61 41992·6298

- ..!'~•Ia SPecuJ. r ••~· ,.

Your

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES

&amp; SERVICE

992-7075
172

North Second Ave.
Oh

Wildows
•R... Adlltlells

JC
CONSTRUOION
Uc. wv 011o3o

Roollitg, Painting
GUtters

· Guar1ntted

..............,
,...~

FrHEatlmetee

992-90571/t.,

Chesler, Ohio

SCUIACWSES
IIOW FORMIIIG,
$COlt Wilton, C)pon Water
Scuba lnatructor
614-982-3314
-opon Wiler
•Ad.. nce Open Willi

•lleacua Dive
•Diva Malter
•Macllc Fl..t Aid
•Lifeguard Training

i»Jii)l

"'''-

,.l).

(Jle..........

YOUNG'S
'WPENTER SERVIa
tiiDom Addltlonl .
~Oerag..

'

-Electrical • Plumbing
oflooflng
.
otm.rlor • Ettarlor

.

.P.rntlng
. · •. ·
. Allo CciiiCN18 Work '
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

982-G'IS
Pomeroy, Ohio

~

Quality Work et
Free to good home on!~ I Purebred ui male Sheltia, 1 ~eat old,
a Fair ~rice!
' beautiful dog. 814-367-ll021l.
550 Page St.
Mlddl.....,.., Oh. 45760 . Kineno To Givoaway. 614-367·
.......

Home Ph.

614·992-3120
Don Geary, OWner

' 021111.

Otd rtfrlgerator, doesnl work, other metal parts. fT'AIIt take a~ . 614·
:99.2:.·.:;784::.:.:,1.-~~~~:-:

Puppl"
·ttw bold
boeuufur
·
· - 1or
"the G:bg
&amp;&amp;
thettwrestless·.
}=======-=~
81&lt;·e411.

Talk live To A
Real Gifted ·
Psychic

1·900-868·4900
Ext. 1817
$3·99 per ml n.

Muat be 18.yra.
r·U
Se 1619) 845 8434

BEGINNING: JULY 21.19p1

Ouali"ficaliJns:
1) Management Capabiliry

TAINMENT

202 North Second Avenue, Middleport. Billiards, video gamn,
music and dance, pizza to come.
Acap~ng applic:ationa Friday, July
1, lh lor tul.lre employment

:::":__=---

is seeking a luU titYWpart tiiT'II' RN
for 11-7· lhifl. Experience ,pre-

1-----...o•::-:.:.•-:=.=..

60

Lost and Found

!FOUND : 7·16-97 Small black
Scottish Teuier, Poplar Heighll
arao. :DI-ti7!&gt;289S.

1
•

Found: on Rt 62 at mou th of 8
red &amp; white mala Beag... 30ol-875-1344.
•

: Mile Rd,

loot- 3 malo Lab/Pit bull mlxod
pupplta, moatlr black wtwhite,
Eaatttn High School area, 814-·

1185-9818.

LOST: gold chain •¥!diploma a
graduation cap, ·a6·, lost bet·
l w.en Gallipolis pool &amp; Krpgers.
-11 30'-417S.757tl. .
.

ANY ODD JOBS: E11terkJt paint-

ing, shrubs 1 weeds trimmed,
ferred, but will consider the right landscaping, sidewalk&amp; edged,
candidale. E•ceilent benefit pack- lawn care, etc. Call Bill 304-675aoe tlr lull •me and parr Orne em- 711 2.
ployetts. Apply 11 Rockaprings
Rehabilitation Center, 36 7SW Certified dayc:are on Bailey Run
Rotksprlngs Road, Pomeroy, Oh.
814-992-3508.
45769.
SALES POSITION AVAILABLE: Certified Nursing Aaslstanl Quality Care At Reaaonab&amp;e Ratea,
We Are A Growing Conauuction 814~1754 .
company Looking For Someone

F-:.;,:;:._._______

Rd.."""-

Diamonds. Antique Jewelry, GOld
Rings, Pre-1930 U.S. Currency,
Sutrl1ng, Etc. Acqu lsillons Jewelry Who Hu A·Background In Saltl
· M.T.S. Coin Shop, 1St Second And 11 Comfoi'tabla And Confiden1 In Talking Wllh People. Ttle
Avenue. Ga llipolis, 614-446·2842.
Position Entaila Eatlnlating And
~ntique~; furniiUre, glass, china,
Bidding Remodeling Jobs, New
coins, toys, lamps, ~uns, tools, ConstructiOn Job1, And Olher ·
estates ; also appraisals, Osby Related Areas. Thlfe lA Customer Follow-Up, Contract Writing,
Uartin, 614·992·7441 .
Etc. That Goes Alcng With Tho
Antiques, top pricas paid, River· · Job Also. II Vou Feel Up To The
ine Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio, Chalenge Give Us A call At 814·
Russ Moore owner. 61 4·992· 446·4514 Or Stop In At 1403
2526.
Easlern Ave:, Gallipolia, OH We
Are Christiiln's Construction And
Buying Standing Pine, . 1 Acre Loolc Forward To Mee!:ingVou..
Tract Or larget, 614-258·6038.

~roducta,

CusiOm&amp;fl.

58117.

I
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

'

eo Puppies, 112 Cocker. 112

D. Geaey's : _lo••1.~1-0417.
j ret Puppies: Half Golden ReBod~ lllop ~ ~..;aii814·37H871. T.LC.

,· TRUCKING

Wanted.to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar : All U.S. Silver And Gold Coins, Proolsets,

. 258-131 t, 814-256-41107.

537 BRyAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT
992-2m

· TIME FOR

~R:;:ic7
k-;:Pe::-a:-r-so:-n:-A-::-u:-c:-tio::n:-C~o-:m::p::a-:::-ny.
ruu time auellcneer, complete
auction
serv ic e.
Licensed
166,0hio &amp; West Virginia. 30-4·
773-5785 Or 304-773-54&lt;7.

FTH Kinens. Some Pari Persian,
Uner Boxed Trained, Gentle. e1-4-

J&amp;L.

1 tn

8W..UOid,6U 046 3438
3 lomale puppies, part
Bill
;Hawk, 1st blue house on leh pall Clean Lale Mode l Cars Or
The Area'a Lar ,::L.ang=IVII::::io:.:Sto:::".::·---- Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer, gest And Oldest Maintenance
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 East- And Janllprial Suppl~ Company
Bam To Giveaway, Mull Remove, ern ~enue, Gallipolis.
Is Ptesencly Stelclng A Salta
81&lt;1-388--.
Representative For GaiUa, Jack·
Btad&lt; C'- mil puppie~ two mole J &amp; D'S Auto Parts. Buying sal- ion And Vinton Counties. The
vage veh icles. Selling parts. 304- Salicted Candidate Should Ll¥e
and~· 1ema1e. et4-742·3ne.
773·5033.
In Gallipo~s And Be Familiar With
Four 2 Month Old Mlll8d Boagloa, Shephard logging Buyer 01 Stan- ThoSI! Areas.
WOrmed, 814·379-9455. 614-446- log Timber And Land, Pine, Pulpwood, And Saw Timber, 614·682· Rose Is 5eeking M EMpariencad
l'310.
Sa lea Represenlative Who Has
8402.
614
10
Four
Kittens.
Weeka
Otd,
The
Abil i l~ To Deal With The
&lt;4&amp;-3479.
Wanted: Used Hardwood "Flooring Many Present Customer&amp; And
Froo Kltlonol To Good Homea In Good Condition, Call 614·245- Aiso Call On New Prospective

ALL PRIMARY UTILITIES PAID

,...,-" ...,...... .., HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING

Giveaway

148
!Se!M~·
~ng~So!!uth~e~as!t~er~n~O~H~&amp;!WV~~~6,!:14:!4~4~8~94~1=8!J.IL...--...;:1_
· ·~:.,:1:.:!•..;9:_9,:.:2:_•;,7_:0:.2=2:.....:':=-~J~.:.'~.:.·
.:.:12:...W_•_ek_•_o=-ld-C-•t_l6_1•_1391 Sallord School Rd.,' Gallipolis, OH
_
1-800-872-8867

115 E . Memorial Dr. Pomeroy
992-2104

"Dignity and Seivice Always•

......._OH41~

""" ... ~ • DlrwMr
...... A. . . . . ... Chaar

'--""

Memorial
Hospital

EWING FUNERAL HOME

lt4 lcdllleccitld,.,.,

.,.........

.-/

~=

Serv-U (6t9) a.5-8434

2 PuP!IIeo, 112 Engllllh Senor, 112

income. Lovely apartments featuring wall·
to-wall carpeting, ·with all. appliances.

MUSt be

T-;;R~AC;;IN;;;E~M~O~W~E;R:-GR~ID~E~N~O~-:;U;;R~~S;;:W;;;I;S~HE;;;R;-;&amp;-;-L~O;;HS~E~~-::00
-:=::~~V~e~te-ra-ns--f--rt;·anri~

f--:Devl..aulcUI--.-==Ag=..-=JCY-=Inc
.....

"':":!.~~s.·•~

40

in Pomeroy, Ohio
Rents are computed according to your

(Paymenta based on appro•od credH)
•Free 5 Year Parts Warranty
•Free Digital Thermostat

INSULATION
Restaurant
•

___;~Dilu:L.m.iua.l' 30

TilE MAPLES

Worship - 10:30 a.m.

INSURANCE . - -

1

Joe Wilson
(614 992·4277

Consider:

Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Crow's Family

ATTRACTIVE AND LOOKING
FOR FUNIII

In Ttie Poor House?

Wednesday Services· 1 p.m.

. Brog!ln-Warner

WIJH AWANi AD

"Build Your Dream"

PersonalS

Will Your Utilities Put You

I

I

005

Wanted: Crart items on consign -

I
I'

CLASSIFIEDS

.---""'i r---------------------, :~~~;:;~:~. ~::·-

White's Cbaprl Wt~le71n
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday.School -9:30a.m.

Portlud Flnt Chrch of lhe Naurt'ne
Pastor: Mark Mal\Orl
WoBhip- 10:30 p.m.
Sunday School - 6 p.m.

in a hurry... TRY

Remodeling

Poineroy, Ohio 45769

Jyty 21

I

90

Freedom Gospel Mlssloa
Bald Knob, on Ca. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev . Roger Willford ·
Sunday School · 9:30a.m. ,
Worstlip- 7 p.m.

Rutlaad Cburth of the Nauren1
Pastor: Samuel Basye

614-992~5479

t.:..=::.:::.=:.;~:.:_

TOMAC~LU'S FAMILY ENTER-

APPLICATION DEADLIIE:

.-J~·~~~~~

ANNOUNCEMENTS

20 Yrs . Exp. • Ins . Owner: Ronnie Jones

814~82 -

a-·

POMEROY, OH.

1998 Martin Street

Nood To Apply, Call
7455.

KINGS'

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE
113 W. 2ND ST.

Help Wanted: Timber Cutter I
Power Saw Optrltor, LOaclor 0p-·
erator, Sickle, Experienced OniJ

61 "992•3470
,.,_,...;....;,,.....;,..;_,,.,:._,,.......l_sR 7.

WV 1023477

M&amp;J

Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service-7:30p.m.

Carleton lrlterdenoml•adonal Church
Kingsbury ROad
Pastor: Jeff Smith
St~nday School -9:30a.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m.
No Sundmy or Wednesday Nighl Services

Chester Chu~h oftbe Naurene
Pastor: Rev . Herbert Grate '
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m. ·

• d ow systems
u ality Wm
Q
Ohio
110 Courts,.

Edrn United Brethren In Christ
2 lf2 miles nonb or Reedsville
on State Route l24
Pastor: Rev. Roben Markley
Sunday School - II a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.

South Bethel New Testamenl ·
Silver Ridge
Pll51or: Robert Barber
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

.

PBJCES!I!I

Custom Homes

Sundoy School- 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thurs$y - 7:30 p.m.

Syracu!le Church of the Naureae
Pastor: Bill S1ircs
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

DJRECf

Free E•limaleo

WorshiP - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene
PastOr. Rev. Thomas McClung
Sunday School - 9:3Q a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Tuppen Plains SL Paul
Pastor: Sharon Hausman

Flatwoods
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

• Stump Grinding
20 Vra. Exp. -Ina. Ow"iier."Rick Jotlnson

Plaue aend ihqulrles .to Mt.
.11me1 Lawtonce, S.perlntondont.
Southern IAcal Schoota. P.O. Bo1
1711, Racinl, Ohio 45771 . SlSO lo
an Equal O!lporlllnlty E.....,_.

WICKS
HAU.LING

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

360° Communications

United Brethren

HUGE GARAGE SAlE
MONDAY, JULY 2111 &amp;
TUESDAY, JULY 22nd
1:00 A.ll. • 5:00 P.ll.
NO EARLY BI!DSIIIIt
llbeny Ave., (Road To Tho AmVets Building) Olf Burnell Rd.

1 mJiio.

1

''F'A~"TOH"
~'-'
·A

• Top • Trim • Removal

Friday, Saturday, 8 A.M. On 180
111 Houae Before Robles Auto
3alea, 3 Truck Loads, e Guns,
Toyo, Lata Of.Miac, SWing Sat

ele~ ning dillbilitl81,

and

1

CELLULAR PHONES

Mulberry HIS. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastore Roy Lawinolty
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
Worship - 3 p.m.

a.m.

Full Gospel Ughthoust
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

s.v...._oa, M••lil\

Unittd Faith Cburch
Rt 7 on Pomeroy By-Pu ss
Pa:;tor: Re'·· Raben E. Smith. Sr.

Church of,the Naurtnt
Pastor: Mark A. Dupler

I

~

250 Condor Street
Pomeroy, Ohlp 45769
A Division on Nichols Metal, INc.
Phone: 614: 992-2406
Fax: 304-773-5861

Reednllle Ftllowohlp

Reedsville
Pas1or: Rev. Charles Mash
Worship . 9:30 1.m.

(N S d C II )
======O=U:n::a:y:::a::S===":':-:::·
'----~""""'::::::.:•.:::-~·
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Complete Machine Shop Service Fabrication
Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, Industrial Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement '

Wcdncsda)" Service - 7 p.m.

Sunday School- 9:30 a:m.
Woohip - 10:30 a.m. '

614·992-7643

Free Estimates

Call 614-843-5426

t'-.:='~o':"v!':

742·2925 .

FR~E ESTIMATES

experience

Seventh -Day A dventist

Paslor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
'
Evening. 7 p.m.
Wedneday Sen-ice · 7 p.m.

Sunda,· School - 9:·30

20 years

Mlddlepol1 Presb)Uriao
Sunday School · 9a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

Mt. Olin Community Churda

Mlddlepo11 Church or the Nazare..
Pastor: Gregory A. Cundiff
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

LongBottom

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

Over

Big Bend Fabrication,
Machine.&amp;Welding Shop

Worship· 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship -l 0:30a.m.,6p.m.
Wednesda~ Services - 7 p.ni,.

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

Syracuse Filii United Pnshylerian
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m. ·

Faith Gospel Church
Long Bottom
Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Melas Cooperadve Pao:tsh

Room Additions • Roofing

Presbyten an

Mont Chapel Church
Sunday school· !Oa.m.
Worship· II a.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services· 8 p.m.\)

• Pole Buildings

• Room Additions
••

W1th Hazardous Maleriala En· : wlll11he appropriale c«tificatlon:

DREIELS

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

Monday-Friday- 8:00 a .m.- 4:30p.m.
Saturday- 8:00 a.m. - 12 noon

Dyes•llle Community Church
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Hoddn11J1011 Church.
Orand Street
Sunday School · 10 a.m.

ML Oll•e United Mtt~ndlst
Off 124 behind Wilkesvi.lle
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services - 7p.m.

Evening· 6"p.in.

Haul Commuolty Church
OffRt. 124
Pastor: Edsel Han
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
WoBhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 10 a.m.

Gnoham Ualted Methodist
Worship .- 9:30a.m. (1st A 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service. 7:30p.m.

• New Homes

Neodocl- managor of-lllop,
m&lt;~lt havt oxparioru In all tYI*'
of arrangomoniJ, ful~timo polltlon,
aencl reaumo to, John Wyaa, 158
Buuemut. FVrnerov. Oh.

2) Knowledge Of Dispatching j:Pidl~
'::..:up::.::!aP!II:;,:ica::"'::'
Procedures, Ois paiChlng Equ ip·
UNTED STAlES
ment. Computer Equipment
CEbbUlAA
3) A Minimum Of 5 Years Previ·
WIRELESS
Wal::h For Signa.
ous E1padence In The Field 01
COWIIJNICATIONS
mall
Engines
Queen
Size
Waterbed,
Porcelain
'S
Dolls, Misc. ColleCiibles, Enler- Emeroency Sef'vK:es.
•lawn Mowers
talrwnent Center, Misc. Chriounao The Salary For This Position Will United S!atea Cellular tt ExperODecorations, New Lighted Be Negotiated Baaed On Qualili· ing tts Team:
' Ch 8 In S8WS
Houau, New Village Accesso· We Are Seeking Prole11ionel
•Weed Eaters
rl10, Reck Stereo, Bikes, Baby cations And E·xperience.
Sales Consultants. The Dellrable
Items, Miac. Dishes, Glassware,
Gallia
Co~nty
Adhe
res
To
Alt
Candidate t.4ull Be, An Aggrea2 mi. Off Rt
. •7
Cloihing. Fumkura. Toys, Pil rta~e
Stale Polk:!es PertainlnG To Equal alwe Seii·Staner, With Elfeclive
Leading Creek Rd.
T.V., And New Train Set
Opportunity Employmenl/Aflirma- Communications Skllla, A SOlid
liveAction.
Work Ethic, A Positive AUltude,
And Must Posses Good Cualom·
.. For Everyone!·
APPLY
TO:
If Strvica Skilll.
"Wa Sa11e
Gall~ Counly Comn'isllonera ,
•-"You
July t71h-1gth, QiQ0-7 sg Hilda
.Mo· - ,
Gallia County CourthOuse .
Sales Exporiente Required.
Drive Behind Spring Vall~ Cine18Locusr Street, Room 1292
ma CouchClean
&amp; Loveseat
$125,
Gallipolis.rOhio 45631
Drapes,
Kids Clothes,
We otter:
r--.o-;,;·;;;,-...
i- Toys. Mur.h Morel
Phone: 614~46-4374
• An Excellent Starting Base SaJ..
HOME
TYPISTS,
ltY.
And Commission
(Lime stone·
Pomeroy,
PC users needed . $45,000 in· •C&amp;ItulatPhont
Low Rates)
Mlddlepon
come potential. Call 1-600-513· • FuU~enafita PtOgram
&amp; VIcinity
4343 E&gt;t 8·9368.
j • t.tontlly Car Allowanco
8+ family garage 1111e. Lee Circle. local Non Profit Agency Is Sea· ' •local ~lularTr1ining
ing A Part· Time E•ecutive Direc' RuiiiC
Hil ls, Syracuse,
18th &amp; Sabrrday.
19111. 9-5. Friday, tor. The Director Workll Under If You Are Looking For An OpThe Direction Of A Volunteer Ad- ponunity That Matches Vour Am~
All Yard SaiN Muat Be Paid In visoJ W" Committee .And Accom- bitkln... Hare Ia That Opporturily.
Limestone, ·
Advaneo. Doadttno: 1:oopm tha· pliShes Work Through A Cadre
:dar btl••• tho ad lo to run, Of~ Service Volunteers In A Var· Bclb Wilson, Sale• Manager Will
Be Holding A Recruiting Seminar
Gravel, Sand,
(Sundar &amp; Monday odltlon- iely Of CommJnliy Servicas.
Friday, .lilly 25th, 10:00 A.ll. And
1:00pm Friday.
Tho Ideal Candidate Will Bo EtTop Soli, _F ill Dirt f:·G;;.::a.:::rag;;;.•:...::••=,.!:.,-,g. 20-.:.g:o-o-.m-7 loctlvo At Landing An Ellort To 2:00 P.M. ONLY, At Tho Daya
Inn On Nonh Bridge Street In
Four family, SR 124 towarda Ru- Increase The Otganlzatlon'a Pro~ Chilicothe.
..,; tland, second place on rlgtn off of lilt, Community Awareneat And
Clothing ol.a!l sizes, two Finding lovol. lntorootod lndiYid- Vocallat Wanled For Mota! Band,
washers, knick Knacks, shoes. uals Sllouki Send A Curr.,t ~ Must Be 18, Dependable, And
toy_s, lOts or misc. items.
sumo To: CLA 416, cto Gallipolll · Willing To Do What It Takoa.
Dall~ Tribune, 825 Third Avenue, 814·448-28511, 814-367-7BQO,
Garage salt · Jt.ily 21 ·22. Lawn Gali po~, 011•5831 .
mower, tools, misc. O"e mile on
WANTED: Part-Time Positton
l•prowe•••t• SR
t 43, lee Rd.
Available At A Community' Group
010
Seeks
Team
Good
Pay,
EX3351 Happy Hollow Road
Home For Persona With MRIOD
cellent
Driving
Record;
614·256·
Yard aale, July 18 &amp; l!il, en SR 7
In Bidwell. Hours: 4 .o P.M., Fri;
Mlddlepon, Ohio 45769
1021.
b¥ pass, Howel Hill Rd., Q-4.
8:&lt;S A.M. -7:1S P.M., Sot: 8 A.M.·
New Homes. Addition~.
Plant Maftager /Satcher • Pto- 8 P.M., Sun: 2 -Hour W~y Staff
Pt. Pleasant
duction E ~eparienct With Con- Mealing; Or As Otherwise
Roo11ng, Siding, Pole
&amp; VIcinity
creta Mate~ials, Dry !Wet Batch-~ Sc:hodulod. High School Diploma I
Barns, Decks, Pain~ng
ing. Blod&lt; Prod .. lmmediaiO Nood GED. Valid Dtiver~a licenlt,
Yard Sale SaiUrdav July 19th 9-? In- New Haven Atee. Please Send Good Driving Record And ThrH
Call Us For A FrtHJ Esnmate · AI 2•. near Roosevelt scr.,ot
Resume To Roaa Terry 5711 Sta· Yeara licensed Driving Experience Required. Salary: $5.50 JHr,
614-742-3090
Yard Sale-On top Letafl Hill, Sat- pies Mill Road, Richmond, VA To Start. Ttaining Prcvided. Send
23228.
urday
Ju
ly
19th
9:00am.
firm,
614-742-3324
Reaume To: P.O. Box 604, Jackboy's car .waterbed, I!JII size bed, Poatal Joba 3 Poaltlons Avail- . son, OH 458&lt;0: ATTN : Cecil II.
614-742-3076'
rototiller, ten gallon !i sh tank, able, No E1perlence Nece11ary, Doadlino Flir Apptlcanll: 71231U7.
tovs &amp; misc.
.For Information , Call 818· 757- Equal DpporiUrlty Employo&lt;.
.
314t.E&gt;t3031.
. 80
Public Sale
180 wanted To Do
Rodtsprlngs Rehabilitation Cent'Jf'
and Auction

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~
Garages • Replacement Windows

Delivery Driver Seasonal, Ferre·

1

112&amp;/W/2 11101.

• Garages

own hours. $20k to tSOkJyr 1·
000·348-7186 J.1S08.

Hood s Ladlea To Sail -von Coli
81 ....a-3358.

. a.a. State Route tBO, Corner ot llgas Is Saeking A Prop&amp;fll DaliY·
. ss• &amp; 1eQ, 8-4, Thurs. Frl, Cloth- ery Driver To Wo rk Th rough Fall
in;, ~ Woma·n s 3 Uonths ·4T, And Winter Soason . EJcellent The Southem Local SChool Ola: Wadding Drosa. Baby Things. ~pportunlty ~~, Someone look- u lct has the following teaching
mg ~or Add1t1onal Income, To poaitiona available for the 1Di7·
' ~~~o~~~ods , AC . Bu~k Cr~allty, Mu't Have COL Class B . ua -chool year 10 ·all appUcanta

992·5042

949-2804

• Vinyl Siding

. O•yer Road, lots of clothing, all
Illes, mise lttms.

Contract
Family Atmosphere
209 S. 4th Street
Middleport

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTION

July 17·10, 2 miles out CompUter Uurs Ntedtd. Wor k

554 from red llghl in Cheshire on

U:00-8:00. July 18lt9. 3 Miles dorsement. Call 81o4·44S.2284, Or
'i:=~"=!~~~7~/2211=:'n=:•
,i South
Ri&amp; Grandt
on Rt 325: 1·800·488·2264.
I
Lata ot Clilldron'o
Clolba.
OONI BEAQ]jtS!
Unless you want to lose Weight
&amp; Feel Groat CALL NOWI 1304)
582.()373.
DEADLINE: 2:00p.m.
,
till day llolore tho ad
E:.:petienc:ed Hair Stylill Wanted,
lo Ia rvn. S.ndly
For ModEtfn New Salon, 6t4-441 ·
For Han dl cappe d
edition _ 2:00p.m.
1880, 814·258-41338.
&amp; Elderly.
Frlday.llonday ed"lon
Dally- Weekly ~
\- lo:oo a.m. Sotun!ay.

lllttloor Powtr Eqllflllll Aswclatlal: W11111t12 Cycle'
• State Route 338 • At VIne • Racine, Ohio
614

tam l ~.

3

985·4473

AND OTHERSII
. . . IL Stratlttt: Mast.- Slnkl T...,_

Hanison•llle Preshyltrlan Chorch
Worship· 9 a.m.
·Sunday Sc.!IOOI- 9:45 a.m.

Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Bethel Cbun:b
. Township Rd., 468C

United Methodist

Deater for:
·Brlgga 6 Stratton • MTD- Murray- McCollough •
EGho- Ryobl· Roper • Rally· Hydro Gear

Fahh Valley Tabtn~~dt Church
Bailey Run Road
Paslor: Rev. Emmeu Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
'thursday Service- 7 p.m.

FREE
ESTIMATEES

~

ELIM
HOME .CARE

• Mowers • Chain S.We • Weedeetere • Airthortud

Middleport Penterollll
•'
Third Ave.
P&lt;t!lltor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00 p.m.

Mlddltporl Com01unlty Church
515 Pearl St., Middlepon
PetOJ: Sam Anderson

"Srop pulling offrlwse much needed
ho.me improvemenrs." Call Today!
992·2753 Free Estimates 992-5535

Part• and Sertliee!!

P0111tcos1al Assembly
St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening.- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

House of Pr~~y.er

25260

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
~Remodeling .
Stop &amp; Compare

• Decks
• Roofing
• Siding

RACINE MowER CLINIC

Pentecostal

(at Burlingham c1JUrch off Route 33)
Pastor: Robert Vance .
Sunday worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday service · 6:30p.m.

Pastor: Oewayne St1,1tler

St. Rl. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday School10:20·11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood 1t :O.S -12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking meeting, 1st Thurs.- 7 p.m. .

'

'

New ure ·Vklory Cooter
•
3773 Georges Cmk Road, Gallipolis, OH ·
Pastor: Bill Staten
•
Sunday Services · to a.m. cl 7 p.m.
· Wednesday - 7 p.m. &amp; Yooth 1 p.m.

Sundly, 2:30p.m.

M•on,WV

FIIIIIICing through N-.t Financial

Clllloo Tabt!'Dade Church
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

The Belleoers' Fdlowshlp Ministry
New lime Rd., Rutland
P'-'Stor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

At. 1, Box 44-C

UMa L Beustn, CDPMA

Church or.Jaus Chris~
Apootollc Faith
114 mile past Fort Meigs on New Uritii Rd.
Pasror: William Van Meter
Sunday,7:00 p.m.
Wed~esday -7:00 p.m.
fnday-7:00 p.m .

Faith FuU Gospel Clum:h
lAng Bottom
Pastor: Steve 'Reed
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m . and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday • fellowship service 7 p.m.

Salem C011ter

304-773-5822

ReJold•&amp; ur. Cbu""
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pistor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School- 10 a.m,
Wedneadly Services - 7 p.m.

Hobson Cbrlstlao Fellowship Church
Sunilay service, 10:00 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Youlh Fellowship Sunday, 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday service, 7:00p.m.

Rutland
Sundly School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

FAMILY DENTISTRY

Stlven•llle Word ol Fakll
Pasi:Pf: David Daile~
Sunday School9:30 Lm.
. Even ina- 7 p.m.

Chriatiaa Fellowship Ctolcr
Salem SL, Rutland
Pastor: Roben E. Musser
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship -11:15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Se.rvice -7 p.m.

•New Homes
•.Additions
• Remodeling
•Garages

Ba.., B. Roustoa~ D.D.S.

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Paslor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

603 Second Ave. M"""
773-5017
Service time: Sunday 6:00p.m.

ROIEIT IIS:SELl
COIISTRUCTIOII

~ MASON DENTAL CARE

Faith f....,.blp c . - forCiorlsl
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Didtns
Se~ice : Friday, 7 p.m.

•Fuii..G05pel Ourch•
Pastors John &amp;. Pauy Wade

Mllienvlle·
Pastor: Charles Neville
Sunday School- 9 a.m.

i--...rw;;,;,.__..;..;...;..,"i

FairvitwlllblcCIIa""
J.ttart, W.Va. Rt. I
'l'astor: John Han
S1111dly School - 9-.30 a.m.
· Wo11hip- 7:00p.m.
Wedneaday Bible Study - 7:00p.m.

llantstOatrac~MIIIillrln

H..th (Middloport)

Pastor: Rev. Oe~y King
Sunday school- 9.30 a.m.
Sunday worship •7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer mectin&amp;-.7 p.m.

· Synn~se Flnt Chun:h of God
Apple and Second SIS.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell

Congregational

Cath ol ic

Pmor. Vemapye Sullivan
Sunday SchoOl - 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.

Joppa
Pas1or: Bob Randolph
Worstdp - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 1.0:30 a.m.

Church·or God or Prophecy
OJ. While Rd. off Si. Rl. 160
Pastor: PJ . Chapman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Ser.-ices • 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evenina - 7 p.m.
Wedneadly S.rvl&lt;~" - 7 p.m.

Rose or Sun111 Holl- Cllarch
Leading Creek Rd., Rutland

Worship • 9 a.m.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Thursday Services- 7 p.m.

Wednesday SeJVices - 6:30p.m,.

Rotlaod Free Will Bapllll
Salem St.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 Lm.
Thuradly S.&gt;Vices- 6:30p.m.

Rutlud Chun:h or God
Paslor: Randy Barr
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.·

Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evening Services-6 :30p.m.

Aallqulty Bapllll
Sundly School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evening· 6:00p.m.

Calvary Pllptta Cloapel
Harrisooville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush
Sundly School9:30 a.m.
Worship - lla.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Servia:· 7:30p.m.

110

Help WBntec:l

AVON I. All Areaa I Shirley
Spear~, 304-175-1~.

ACCESS To Human Reaource
Development IACCESS Head

Rose Offlrl An E•cet!ent Slarting
Salary, Commlssicn Bonus, A Full
Size Van, Health lnauranc:e. Profll

Sharing And An On-Going Train·

EICP&amp;f'lenced carpentry and ·rerno-

dehng. · Inside and outside,
decks, vinyl siding, add-on additions, cabinet relaclng or newl~
rebuilt Relerenc&amp;S-Frte Eatirna»~. Jim

Shull :JJ4-ti75-1272.

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't

haul your logs to the miU just call
304-675-1957.

Home Or Office Cleaning, Refer-

ences. 814-245-5887.

Registered Nurse Will Do Babysitting For 1 Child 2 -3 Dara Per
1

~:r~~ ~~ci~i~y~~:~~lrE::~ i~~:

Cen1ar, References Furnished,

61~~·3375.
S&amp;M W1 1 H 1·
s ·1
er au IRQ erv cea,
· where Purity Ia Our Pasalon•
Give Us A

3716.

•

Ca11 TOday: ~04-875·

SEASONAL DAYCABE
Opens Aug 251h till Juno 5th
liiT!ited Enrollmenll
. CaU Now 304-875-5788.
Specializing In Remodeling. Slding, Decks, And PrivacY Fences.
Porches, Free Estimales, 814446..0785.
.

Will babysit, three meal a with
care. excellent care, in my home
oryoura. call 614·992·7847.

ing Pr~.

Wal Clean Houses Week~, Or Bl·

Please Send Resume To:
·
RoseProducts

weekly. Trustworthy, Reasonable,

And Setvicea,

m.

· 545 Slrrwntl Raad
Cotumbua, Ohio 43223

&amp;toill.,. 4 t-QJK) 4 .

Will t)aul junk or truh IWI)'. $351
~ckup load. 304-B7S.503S.

Alln: StiMI Blakt
FINANCIAL
Slarl Ia Accepting AppBcationa Shephard logging Anyone Ex· For The Following Po Ilion:
perience With Chain saw, Also
Business
210
Skidclor OperalOr, 6 14~·8402.
MENTAL HEALTH SPECIALIST:
Applicants Must Have A Tho Moigo County Council on
Opportunity
Bachelors O~ree in Social Work, Aging, Inc:. Ia accepllng appllca·
INOTtCEI
Counseling Ot Related Field. tiona lor tho poaltion of Ro~red OHIO VALLEV PUBliSHING CO.
t.4ental Health E•perience Work- •nd Senior Volunteer Program recommends that you do bull·
ing With Young Children And {RSVP) Coordinatof. The sue- nan with people you know, and
Tl'lelr Families Prelerred. Beginceulul candidate• should: have NOT 10 send monay throu9h the
ning Ra.te Of Pay $10.00 IHr.
an A11oclate dlgru in buaintll mail until you have invesllgattd ·
or computers or aoc:lal work, be the offering.
·
Applicants For This Position Ua'f experienced in WOfklng wUh comS!Jbmit A Resume To Jeannie munity organizationa, agencita Bu~ding For Rent For Special OcWilliams, Human Resource Man- and the aging population; have cas1ons By l;tle Hour, Day, Or
ager, Acceu To Human Re· basic office 1killa including com- Week, St . At. 33 New Haven,
source Development, P.O. Bo• putar data entry ancvor computlf WVA ., 614·698-2613.
318, Gallipolis, OH 45631.
programmtng, and have baalc
knawledge/aklns In artl and cralta Business Space For Rani: 2000
The Deadline For Accep~ ng AP- and planned programming for Sq. Ft. St. At. 33. New Haven,
plications Is Tuesday, July 29, adults ago 55 and older. Appilca- W.VA., 6:&lt;-696-2613.
1997 5o00 ~M . For Addltionallr\tlons and I poal~on d11crlption Commercial Building For Sate Or
lormalion Call 6t4·441-30 .10 8:00 can
ob-'ned lrom Darla Haw.
-5:00P.M . Mondav Thru Friday. loy, be
Administrative Aaslatanl al lease, • 000 Sq. Ft , St. Rt. 33,
Access To Human Resource D• lhe Malga Mulllpurpoae Senior New Haven, WVA. Bt•-eaavelopmihl Ia An AA IE EO Em· Conllr, 112 Eastllamorill Drlw, 21113·
I·
player.
Pomeroy, Ohio. DMdllne IDr appl· Connn ltnCa SUHe FoT Lea11,
'AYOn $8 ·S1B /Hr, No Door ·To - cation aubmlasion II Jul~ 28, Includes All E(f.lipment, St Rt 33.
Door, Quick Cash, Fun &amp; Rela.:- 11117. An EEO EmptoyeriProvlder New Haven W.VA .. 614-598 ·
ing, t -800-738.0188 irldisl!lrep.
~0~~~~~-----------1:26~13~---------------

�_Friday, July 18~7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Pllge15

•

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER

ACROSS

41 Com-pt.

44IINI
1 Of 1 nablaman 4e C.llndllr

IThlw

porlod

• .............

540 Miscellaneous
Pr•EnoinHrecf Steel Bldgs. Na·
tin Compony Awardif19 O..lw-

lhip In Open UarileL Htgh Profit
PotentiaL ContUuctlon Or SaleL

303-7~13~

Ert6200.

Retirement Oa-. Is Near, Which

3 Bedroom Horna With Gl.-go &amp;
AI- Lo~ Oldor Trallor, Dock &amp;
Barn, Maintenance Fru, Loca... Dock. S17.800. aadtburn AMity,
ed: Addison Township, $14·448- 114 148 0001
4782.
ThrM Scenic w..., Front Loll
3bedroom brick house on 1acr• Raccoon Creek, Ofder MobUt
lot in Gall ipolis Feny. Nlcel 304- Homo. Rural Wt1M &amp; Sopllc Sf•

875-5010 Of 304-115411.

Mlkll Me Want Tp Cheer. •Pet

Shop For Sale" If You"ro Sarlouo
'About Bu~ng AI I Am Atlout Retiring, Call Today AI 814·448·
79:17.

Proress1ona1·
Services

230

HARTS MASONARY · Block,
brick &amp; stone work, 30 years e~·
perienca, reasonable rates. 304895-3591 after 8:00pm, no job Ia

omal or 10 BG. WV-021206
Keyatrokaa Plus, ResumeJSectt!arlal Sorvlce, cal814-742·7404:
Li~t~ingston's

buement waterproofing, all banment repairs
done, free esllmates, lifetime

320 Mobile Homes
1411.00 DOWN, 1.10... APR
FIXED BUYS ANY SINGLE·
WIDE ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOliES OF BARBOURSVILLE,

-------

Real Estate
wanted

-wanted: 300 Secluded Acres ln
Ol-io Wilh Alllllnoral Righll And

No DOYtlopmonl ~Ianda! . Craig
Londeleld, 80410 Apache,
Washington, Ml 48014. Phon•
81D-78CI-1G."
Rental W.nced: Homeownera Re·

ittt.OO DOWN 1.11... APR locallng Need 3 Bedroom Oh10

FIXED BUYS ANY DOUBLE· Homo, In Country, Good Roads &amp;
WIDE ONLY AT OAKWOOD Sctlool' Wllhln 1 Hour 01 Galli·
HOliES OF IARBOURSVILLE polio, HIMI Pets, 814-458-12211.

RENTALS

tllMEONlYI

11-l.O.W-0-U-Tl
1499 Down anllllact linglelion. $099 Down on llllect nllf11·
I8Ctiona. 2·3 or 4 &amp;droom IYQd:.
els avaitatja.()akwood HorN~
Nlln&gt;, WV. 304-755-5865.

gulrantee. 10yra on JOb 8lperi·

..... 30-4-875-2145.

..... 814-V27-8575.

360
for Sale

I~~~~~~~~~:-::""

.

Mobile Hom• t2a70 2 Bedroom,
All Electric: Washir Dyer HookUp Must Be Moved 814·4411064 Allor 8 PM.

410 Houses for Rent
2bedroom hou11 in Hanford,

$250hoo. No pol' don' uk. 304·
882·2D18ol1or Spm.

814-497·~-

1his _b_subjectlo
the F-.r Fair Housing Act
of 1961w1Mch mal&lt;os H Illegal
to advertise "any pi&amp;f8iiiiC8,
llmlallon or discrimination
baSad on rae&amp;. colOr. re1to!On,
sex familial status or nat1ona1
origin. or any 011ertion lo
make any such preference.
limitation or ~scrlmlna11on .•

Thil newspaper \!till not
knowingly aa:ep1
advertisements for'rval fitala
whiCh Is In vtolatlon of 1IJo
raw. our reado&lt;'s are l'erebV

i-

thalalldweHings
adYerlbedlnlhlsnewspaper
are avaiab~ on an equal
oppo&lt;tuni1y basis

REAL ESTATE

t

310 Homes for sale
12 Rooms Ranch Style Home3Badraom, 2 112 baths, large
kitchen &amp; cflnlno room &amp; lamllr
,..,... 2 porchet/ID'Nned, 2 cor
garage, 8J10 mila out Sandhill
Rd. and loll...,,._ ~7!M571 .
3bedroom houte in Mason, wf

--

acreage, heat pumpJalf, recently
remodoled, aoklng $88,000. 304713-5132 lean me1uge if no

\I

•bdrm, 3 balho, opllt level entry,
2 glraQH, 3 112 mllal OUI Sand·
lil.lt40,000.304-875-6403.

1.8 Acret, 2 year old sec:tlorlat
3br, 2 bathe, cenlf'81 air, NICE I

Realty. 304-675-3030
or 30-4-875-3431 Jearl Ct•ll!·
Somon~lllo

\ ·

All bric:k, 3btdroom Raneh, lull
basemenl, central air, Camp

Conlar- 304-675-1371.
ATHENS MORTGAGE
COU-Y

Whon 1110 bank oays no, let
Athena Mor-oay res II Lot
our IIIII halp IOU get , . loan I""

noeci.
WtoqiOCIIIIHin:
FIMnclftl tor hou... and mo. llllthomH
1111-eii!IIID!td- rollnonclng~Imp CHI..,.,". . Bill COfto
ooldlllon·lnvotlmont Propor-

$10.000 Or Bell CHar, 814·448· Mo.. Available Immediately, 814·
-2D57.
0785.
1874 Cameron ~bile home, ex~ HouH For L•.. $350/Mo., Plua
cellent condil!on. $8500, 61,...992- o..._ llepoti1. 814-385-4778.
3931.
'
Houaa In Pomeroy for sali or
197!1 14x70 Schu~ Wilh Expanclo ...~ 614-982-3090.
Li,ino Room And A 1918 12&gt;42
l,dd-A-Room On A Ranted Lot. In Middleport, 4 bedroom, tHick,
Four Bedrooms, 1 112 Baths, ntw carper, $350+ depollllrefer·
Family Room. Underpinning, 2 encea, uliiltles not Included, no
Covered Porches, And Out~dld­ poll. 814·1192-3457.
ing, Upgrades Include New Furnace, Heat Pump, And car~ng. Or leasol 3br, 2 /I 2 balh, 3 car
Portable Dishwasher Stays, garage wlcar lift, swimming pool
Wid~. llllra 70x50 building, IO·
116,950, call614-245-5565.
cared on 23 acrat. 304-675-5431 .
1987 Clayton 14x70 3 Bedroom1,
614-3711·2857 A""' 4 P.ll.

510

Household

Goods
Appliances:
Recondllloned
Washers, Dryers, Rangu, Relrlgrators. 90 Day Guaranleal
French City Maytag, 614·448·
77115.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, refrigerators.
ranges, Skaggs Appliances, 78
Vine Street, Call 6t~ - ~~6-73~B.
1·800..IHI-34911.
Green Refrigerator
Free,
$150; Harvell Gold Re,f~i~.~~~~r ' l
Frosl Free, $150; wturlpooJ AI-lngerator Very Nice, 1 Year warramy $300; /oJr Conditioner 5,000
BTU, $125; WestinghoUie Air
Conditioner ·11,000 BTU $250;
G.E. Washer t95: Maytafil Wuh·
er $150; Horpoint Dryer SliJ5:
Electric Range, $G5; Hotpolnt
Washer &amp;. Dryer Set $205 Each,
1 Year Warranty, Skaggs Ap'pliances, 78 Vine Stteal, Gallipoli1, 614--44e·7398, 1·888·818·

al

155-5885.

1987 14xBD 3 or 4 Bedroom,
$1,358 down, 12~ma. Fr•e air,

skirting;-&amp; 4ellvory. Only 11 Oek·
wood Hamoo NI ..,Wv. 3o4-7555885
1997 daublowido S1U5 down,
$229/mo Free deli¥"etY &amp; 111up.
1-800-691-6777.
1 gg7 Fleetwood 1411 s2 , 2 Bedrooms, 1 Bath, Washer /Dryer,
CA, s1 e,SK&gt;o, 814 •367 . 051 e Or

814-992·5428.
3 Bedroom Traiitr, 81 .... 1. 1946_

4 Bodroaf"' 2 Belhs. $500 Down.

$225/Uo., 304-736-7295.

FACTORY DIRECT.
NO MIODLE MAH.

3231.

1nr. WV. Call Prem1er Eqliity WV. 304-755-5815.
Monaago 11 1-888-343-4738 And
RotoM Your Seal Today!
~·~

!:.•n-:.tt;REE~~~

81 .81 per month with
down. Call t-100·837·

For ..... 1 bedroom homt in Po·
rneroy, willltll on land convact,

8144112-5858.

No-_..,. to...,..,....

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

NMY rwnodoled lhrH bldroom,
one and 112 both hlmo in Mlddlt- For Salt Or Trad1: 32 1cre1 5
Milo• From Galllpollo. on Stall
por~ 114-1182-3486 lfltr &amp;pm.
Roull 211. Will Soli All or Parts.
Three bedroom, two ttath, on us.ooo; et4-25H574
large corner 101. located 33184

Now Umo Rd., Rudand, $35,000
OBO, 8•1·713-5782 avonlnoo

...,_

To qualllltd buttr· 3 bedrooma
rd flo1h. MD •~orr on 401100 lo~
now carpal. kllchtn and bllh.
Small down payment, I 1SO

month, 814·002·252g and loavo
nam. and phone numbtr for appolnonont

UN Thet Mortgogo Payment lor
Somot,;ng Bo1llr Thin "'•"''
.·Pay rour morlgiQI orr 5·15

,..,._....,
·'Save 125.0C10-$1S,OOO or morel

Ap~IO
Grovo-Sconlc Volley.
Baau~ful 21cro lolo, pu~lc watar.

C. Bowen Jr. 30•·578-2331 or
Wtdge Rool~ 304-1175-2722.
lAUNER LAND
lt4-7711-117S
QALLIA CO.: Galllpollo, Noloh·
borhood Rd., 22 Acroo o2•.ooo.
Frlondly Ridgo, 8 Acroo 18,000,
1.5 ACrll 17.500 Or 18 Acroo
111,000. Totno Run Rd. (2) tO
....,.-.,lto,ooo •.

1111011 CO.: BaiWHn Chll11t +
Tu_. Plains, The Ball 5 Aero
••Make ""' your Lendtt ltn'l Parcell On Koebauoh -Follrod
mlacalculallng ~ur mortgage . Rd......ooo Eoch. Beth 127,1100.
Nnr Albany • Rwnote tO Aero•
......... )011 ....-1
000. Onlr 11,000 llooin + 1108
.•Pnlgrant on mabllt home ..
A Mo. Of ~ Acrll 17,500. Alii·
laorto 11101
HOW?
andrla Schoolo. All Ntw Lots
Opining Soon In Danvllal
, . ..............01
PN+&amp;td

Col torFIWinfo"""'lon

Tolf,..
1·-341-4'138 EXT. II

Call For frH llopa + Ownlf Flrwte:lna Info. Taka tO.. 011 UoltCI

PlloooOnCuhPu-1

lipoti&amp;.

Buying opo~s cordol

AKC Regisrered Male Shelrie 3
Months Old, Shols &amp; Wormed.

814-«6--1767.

I will bu~ any Elites or new Dla·
monel KinQL II you havt cards to
sail, let me know. Call 1114·149·
30D8.

AKC Registered Yorkie pupp1es.
ready to go $350ea. 304-895·
3928.

Concrete &amp; Plastic Sepdc Tanks,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterprises, Jackaan, OH

Beautiful AKC, Black W!Tan
Marklngs Cocker Spaniel Puppy,
Champion Sired. 12 Weaks old.

1-800-537·8521.

$100 OBO. (614)&lt;41-14 17 Leave

Cub Cadel 1872. 18 hf', 110" mower deck, hydroatatic, 450 hrs.,

Canar~'1: pair

814·092·6488 days or
814-992·22tg ovoningl.

...... 304-875-4603.

$~000,

Message.

$50. wtcage $60.

Fint three pair sold, gel a free

IHI2·51168 ....-ings

Flllh Tank, 18 Inch Color T.V. Air
CondiUoner, 32,000 BTU; Dish·
Much llcnl814-245-!18115.

446·3430 $9,500
467 N.H haybine, S200o ,

two

ISO

gallon Rubbermaid water trough's,

Downtown Gallipolis: Modern 1

StOO aach. 514·247-1 too.
Ha~

Baler New Ho lland Round

Balet No. 846, Cal1614-682-6173.

Hor11 Drawn Buggy Anuque,
Good Condition, 61~-~~~3782.
We make hydfaulic hose assemblies. Sider's Equipment 304·

875-7421 .

630

1890 AOHA Brood Mare Bey 151
Good Blood Linea, Gantle, Good
Disposition, Broke To Ride, Rea·
aonable: Clauy 1897 Weanlina.
Colt, Big, Gentle, Good DiiPDII·
lion, Good Confirmation, Excellant
Bloodlines, For More lnbrmalion,

Call B14-256-60115.
American Saddle Bred $1,000,
81H48-2s:JJ. 614-387·7419.
Halttein Heifers 3 Days Ta 3
Monlhl $65&amp; Up, 614-245-5484.

Bedroom, All Electric, Carpeted,
Complete Kitchen. Electric Heat I
"' CondillOnng, 814-448-013D.

640

Hay &amp; Grain

For aale· corn $3 1 bushel, call

27"' Zenith TV, remora. cabl•

ready, 186: whllo ralrlgorotor,
-good.l60. 81-7841.
7 Aluminum wr.-o. campi•
5-38x38 oven
- 120.$25.
Built-In
Stove top

1111"""' S:!D. 304-875-40311.

814-7&lt;42·2410.

Hay, square bates. 30-4·882·

2854.
Tobacco water bad plants. 304·

1195-3954

TRA NSPORTATION

71 o Autos for 5ale

57 Rarelhlno
5.8 unlock again
59 Anltlope
60 Corp. oftlcer

• 8 5

DOWN

23 Adriatic, lor

1 Edllor"a word
2 H.,.allan toocl
flah
3 Egypllan
4 E-yaHiy
5 llernaleln, lor

IUIIIple

24

SOl-. e.0.

27 More precloua

~=

8 KinG w1111 I

lltofl

38 Beck lo lito -

37 More uncamy

8 Calendar box
7 CDIIH pola

40 Dell"'-

golden louclt

9 Lizard

•-A Q 6

1986 Toyota Camry, cruise, ti ll, I~~~~~~~~:-~
1nterm•ttent wipers, cold air, new
uras, excellent inslda 6 out.
$2495, "14·il92 .....

550EX,
1g93
Kawuakl
1987 Ford Escort GT, 5spd, good 3,300mllea. $1,900flrm. ~ - 675cord.. $2,300. 304-875-3781 .
5010.
~

South

BARNEY

1987 Plymoulh Voyager LE, Au· 1993 Kawaoakl Ninja 800Rfl,

DbI.

CAN !SORRY
A CHICKEN,
WKEY?

tomatic, AC, Cruise, AUIFU Cas· $2.500, 61~-9543..
Good Condllion, $2,400,
080, 614-245-5120.
t9G3, 883 Harley Davison Spor t
Slel' $8,500. 614--448·9543.
t
1987 Red Trans-Am, "'cloma!IC,
5.0 liter Engine, Low Uileage, Ex· 1995 F.L. H1C Elecrra Gl1df
cellent Cond'rtion. 15,500 080, Cla11ic, Mileage· 13,300, Many
61./1-367- 7386.
Extrasl Uke Newl614·446-1522.

sene,

l DON'T
WANT TO LOSE
MY KNACK II

A REFORMED CHICKEN
THIEF

WANTS TO
lORRY A
CHICKEN

1966 Ponl~ac leMons For Sole 750 Boats &amp; Motors
Or Trade, Runs &amp; looks Good,
for 5ale
$995.614-256-1050
l1iii,W.d&amp;rl7:"bii8i.-;j;ii:W.
1991 Chrysler Naw Yorker (Sa·

614·448-0271 Allor 8:00P.M.
1995 Chrysler Cirrua, loadld,
26,000 m1les. $12,000 cr trade lor
2452.

YeA~.

Ttft
OUTSIPe.

Upton Used Carl At. 62·3 Milet
South ol leon, WV. Financing

-BIG NATE

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

r I.IOtiDEII. IF 5HE
LIKES ME " . r NEED A

720 ll'Ucks for 5ale

Budgel Price Trantmiuions,
Starang II SIHI.OO and Up, Ultd I
RebUilt, All Trpao, Over 1o,oop
Transml11ians, Acctas Tranalllr
Caaea &amp; Rear Ends, 614·245·

'87 Ford Ranger, !ka ,_ ongN,

~58-:--7~7 ~-,--~~---­

Avai~~·-

304-458-1069.

!lrea. clutch and P'tatura plate,
S2500, 814·949·2804 Oam-6pm

SIGJH, THAT':&gt; WHAT .
I: NEED~ .$0MET+llNG.
TO !&gt;HOW ME THAT
!&gt;HE AND I: JU!&gt;T

T CAN'T fl.ELIE:VE
THI5 CAFETERIA
DOE5N'T 5E LL
"CHEEZ DOOt&gt;LE5" 1

WHAT AN OUTI\AGE ~

tiiGHT SEl.ONG TOGETHER!

Full tine of auto body paneli.
paints and suRplles. also glasi.

lightasatmbly. Oxytan and act·
'88 lauzu. runs good, S850, '87 t;lene llda filled and exchanged,
614-742-271it2.
'
Cha-;y lull 81Ze. V-1. po, pb. auto,
weeKdays.

•

$1850,61-4·9&amp;2·7841 .

tanks, t ton truik.

·u s. 1o pickup, Tahoe pk•., 5 lwi,Hiil radiators. D &amp; R Aute,
•
WV. 304-372·3933 or 1·
apHd, pa, pb, amlfm caaa.,
b•dllnar, 1lde wlndow·vlaon,
bug ohleld, olldlng bocll glooa, 790
campers &amp;
2.1 V·l, 25,000 mfln, lmmacu·
late condition, $5100, call 1140112-4088.
11189 Chevy Pick·Up, 1/2 Ton, 2

WO. 305. 3 Spae&lt;f, Far Cond100n,
$750' Firm. 81-4~48-8142, Leave
1g7Q Chevrolet Stoll dale Pick·
Up Short Wheel Base 414, Excal-

lent Condition. Proflltlorw.l Paint
Job, And New 350 V·B Englno,
$5,500,

81~·4~8·7171

Or 814·

..8·7375
1981 Toyota Pick·Up 5 Speed,
$800,814--3149.

1--------Motor Homes

1975 Winnebago, 2711, 45-4 efiQine, 4kw generator, self·co6·

1993 Fifth Wheel camper, Sand·
piper by Cobra, private bedrooro.
complete bath, sleeps 6, cenrral
11r, gas furnace, $8000, 61 -4-1;922393 or 614 -992·2886, ask lof

11189 Ford Ranger XLT, extended
cab, Sspd, ecyl, 88,000mllu,
Leer topper, good cond., $5,500.

1996 Dutchman excellent cond,
load&amp;d, lake o\ler payments. 304'·
675-5522.
'

Chevrolet 8·10 Blazer, Ta·

hoe Package, 4 Doors, 4 WD,
FuNy Loaded, Excellent Condition.
-4 .3 Liter Fuel Injected V-e,
$8,800, 814·-4~6 ·7 171, Or 61~ ·

''SILAS MA!lNER : ..

NOW,WHAT DOl DO?

SERVICES

810

ASTRO·GRAPH

Home
Improvements

Appliance Parts And Service . All
Name Brand! Over 25 Years Ex·
penance All Work Guaranteed
French City Ma~lag , 614·4-46~

·

,

1988 F250HD, XLT l.arlal 4•4, 7.5 C&amp;C General Home Main.'
titer 460, AC, Till, Cruise, Alley teneryce· Painllng~ vinyl 1ld1ng,
WhHIIINIW TlrH, $8,500,,814- Clrptnlry, doors, wlndoWI baths.
mobile home ta,:air and mOre. FDr'
3117·7090.
tstimate call Chat, e14·0021993 Ford Aerostar XlT whitt
van, acyl, auto, am·lm cusene, I~::~~~@:;-;e~~~·
ps. pb, pw, good cond., 1j
Residential'
80,000ml •• 1 owner, selling due
Decking~
10 illnen. 304-882·2325
Work Guar·
1g84 Chevr S-10 4x4 pick-up,
excalltnr condlllon, 50.000 miles,
. ... - · aaklng $8,000, call .,.
. lor 5pm. 814-849-341 f.
1gg5 QOdgo Dakoll Extendtd
Cob 4x4, btdllnot, V-CI. options, 27,000 mlloo. $18,DOO, 614IHI2·5578 ...,.;ng~

Electrical and
Relrlgti'IIUon
Rnlden1ial or COnvnerdal wiring.

u.

new lllfYice or repairs. MIJier
cen1ed electrician. Aidanour:

Elaculcal. WV000308, 304-675-'
17118.

flllde

42"-

43 A Flalt

Called-

45 Uncoullnnad
goaalp
47 Wading
bird
50 Budcltlol
ohrino
51 1Jpe ol code
52Fomale54 Scltool "'ll·

56 AHaw

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Clmpos
Celebri1y C!Ohef cl\'l)loOrllms are created lrom QUOIIIIOflS by tamous people pnl.-.t present
Each letteJin tha cJihtr ~al'dllot anolher Today's p.. r equals C

'MPFPS

UA

RAGXUM'I

TMJILWMV

IA

RTMI

UAWMV . '

UPTU

JAG ,

H p

YTGYLI

.DA L M

YTSSTUWMP.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I think it's a duly lor a singer while he is at h1s besllo
let everyone around the world hear him.~ - Placido Domingo.

'

.

0 Rearrange
four

!etten of the
scrambled words be-

low to form four sil'ftple words

I

I

SUMBIN

I I I 1I
2

B 0 E· E s

I 1I
3

r

1· I

I
~'
_

-r.;-L.,I_C"TI_Y,-;1 ;..

If you clrop the ball, hgUratively speaking, you shouldn't
,--;;-;-:--;;-;:-;--;;:-, complain how it • - - - • - -.

I I I I

I

5

MUVELO

Ie

~---.-:r,6--,I--"TI--rl--r.:l7--1

i

IFRIDAY

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

81-4·448·7~ .

nBS.

36 Lite ol31 Lilla(-.)
4, Synlltollc

. . PRIN I NUM8EIIfD LETIERS
~ IN THESE ~ARES

W&gt;u'U be (Jooring oo a cloud with
the buys rou·n find in the
classifrtds.

::

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
1972 International Truck, 1 Ton
Un~;onditl onallltefime guarantee
Dual Wheels, 82,000 Actuat
Local rltlerencu furnished Es·
M1le1, Good ConditiOn, 61&lt;lw258tablished 1975. Cal! (61-4) ·446·
8574.
0870 Or 1·800·287·0576. Roger&amp;
1984 Bronco II 4 WD Standard. Waterproolir.g.

IG87 .otwd truck. call earl,- am. or
Iota prn. 304-075-3220.

34-36 c. pall

CompleiO · "'• chuckle quoto:d

by fill•ng in the m1uing WOf'ds

UNSCRAMBLE lETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

II

r·l·rrrl'l

I II IIIII

SCIAM-LETS ANSWIIS

.

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDs

1984 Dodge ~WO. 318 motor, air,
now pain~ $4000, 514-742-2554.

~EADIT?

20 Fr. Argosy, (By Alr Straam)
T.T. Very l 1ght, Pull With Ant
Medium Size Car, Completely R•
lurt;lhed, $2.60~. 614-446-2957.

448-7375.
1995 Toyota SR&amp; 4-runner, ~e.
414 , 30,000ml., all electric,
$21,000 080.304-882-3323.

.

oymbol

32 Your and my
33 Sob

L--L-..L......o.l'-__.._.._-:'
_ . you de.elap ·from step No. 3 balaw.

'f'ES. BUT f
DIDN'T PA'&lt;
AN'r' ATTENTION ..

1984 Prowler 22' AIC Awn1nQ ,
1a78 Sw.ss Colony 20' A1C Awn·
lng; 1975 Mallard 2T With Awn·
ing; 16~a McCormick Road, 61{446·1511.'
...

198-4 Renault, 4SP. 104,000 rrilas,
$600.00 or 080. (814)·256-1233
1985 N1ssan 414, $3,800, firm;
1QI23 T Bucket, $7,500 Firm, 81•·
448·1425.

1~91

FINISioiED READING

'(OU'RE KIDDIN6 .. WH'f NOT?
DID '&lt;OLI
ON THE 800K?
ACTUALL.'(

Whats Owed, 614·448o,311 .

1gee Pace Arrow 34'l basemf:~rn.
TV, VCR, Satollite, CB. 8 5 g~~2 NC, lwelerL 304-875-1731. ;

304-875-44311.

OKA'f. MARCIE, I'VE

According 10 W.S. Gilbert, an
office boy in an allorncy's finn
cleaned windows swept noors, and
polished the han~e on the b•g front
door. He did the lasl lask so "care.f ullee " thai he was promoled . Whal
was his new job'
·
If you know the answer 10 that •
you will readily recognize the peculiarity in this deal. It features some·
lhing I cannot remember seeing
before .
The deal occurred· in Norway.
Three declarers tried lo make five
clubs, bul only Arild Rasmussen was
successful.
·
·
After cashing 1he heart ace. dropping Rasmussen's . queen, Wesl ,
swilchcd lo his smgleton diamond;
South winnmg Easl's nme with his
queen. Declarer played a 1rump lo
dummy 's queen, followed by a spade
10 his queen. Now Rasmussen cashed
1he rest of his trumps, bringing every·
one down 10 four cards.
East, who couldn't expccllo fool
declarer by blankmg a king ,' opled to
keep lwo spades and two diamonds.
So Rasmussen exiled wilh 1hc ace
and another spade. AI trick 12, East
was forced to lead away from the diamond king, giving declarer II tricks
by way of two spades, three diamonds and six clubs .
Are you wondenng whal happens
if West plays, say, a second heart al
Irick two? It is much .harder, but
declarer can succeed -- do you sec
how• (Hint: Take the spade finesse
when in dummy wilh 1he 1rump
queen.) ~
Our office boy, in " H.M.S .
Pinafore," became the "Ruler of Ihe
Queen 's Navee! '' On this deal ,
declarer had all four queens in his
anny. And he played one 10 each of
the first four 1ricks.

1981 28 Fl. Tiaska Clall A MO·
1Dr Homo. 454 CIWI~ Engin4, Uqil
With AI' Elltral, Must Sell For

Bell('. .

21 Decay
30 Vlclory

A

!lined $4,500.304.. 75-4822

1981 Toyota Truck With Cimpar
Top Runs Excellent. St.OOO, .614·
245-59114.

Opening lead: •

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

By Phillip Alder

446-6491 .

760

North
Pass
4.
Pass

12T13Eodar
11 Gungrp.

rrr--t----t-t-+--1 ·25
ACID&lt; Gulagor
28 Rower'olool

What was
his job?

?II

1988 Grand Pnx, New Interior, &amp; 19QS Honda Accord LXA, :4
Tirea, Pioneer AMIFM CO Stereo, Doors. Auto. AJC, PW, PB. PM,
Eacellent Shape, 614·-446-1638, P&amp; Exctllent, 2,.,000 Miles, 81)·
After 5.

54

West
39
Pass
Pass

. 10 Mr. Cltua

~~
24~"'11-

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West

"

Ueaage.

Livestock

Indian

55 Thrllltr - IAonard

•AKJ942

610 Fann Equipment

181it4 Ford 1320 4 WD 5 Ft New
Holland F1n1shmg Mower: 4 Ft.
King Kut:er Brush Hog, 5 FL Kmg
Kutter Scraper Blade Call 614·

tK , 1092

•AQ6
•Q

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

washer; Entertalnmenr Stand;

4t Pnwo'a atalt
5.3 Ooleware

20 Enmily

Soulb

.

pliancas·furnished, laundry room
facilities, close 10 sc:OOol in town.
Applications available at: Village
Green Apts. l49 or call614·1it92·

Furnished 2 88Ciroom Apanment,
Acron From Paft(, AC, No Pets,
References, Deposit, $325JUo.,
e14....WS·8235, 81-4o.ue-o5n.
Furnished 3 Rooms &amp; Bath, No
Peto. Releron&lt;e And Oepoli1 Re·
Clfllred, 814-446-1519.

• 3
41063

aulltor
II Seem·
-ding
pattlclpilnl
13 Cooll..s-1
14 Wolftoh
t&amp; Part ol L8J
18 Hal lunch
17 Campau pl.
191Jpe ol ahakar

East
a K J 10 9 7
• J 9

•AK108753

Ohio, 814·992·3985 days or 614·

MOYtno S..la: 45 Gal. Pantagan

Price reduced- t963 Ford 2000
tractor, li\18 power, 3 pt, new radiator, rebuilt molor, bru&amp;h hog,
plow's, disc, $3900, 614·992·21&lt;43
or814·992·8373ahor 5.

Apartment For Rent /New Haven,
WVA. Ona Bedroom, Furniahad,

W•st
• 42

true" of equal wa lue, 614-949·

For sale, Norge refrigerator; 1
SCA Wolfe tann1ng bed and 1
570
Musical
Sonlegra bad, call814-982·24811.
Instruments
Girl's western show cloches, like
new, slzas small, 3·5Jr., veal, 6 Piece Royce Drum Sat, $150;
tuxedo shirrs, suede chaps, Ed· Ep1phone Gu1tar $150, 614·367·
d~a hata. :m4 -882-21X18.
0857.
Ladl11 Jewerly 28 Inch cultured 580
Fruits &amp;
pelflrl necklace; dl1mond and
Vegetables
llpphlrt uk whitt gold ring.
Have currenr appraj181. Call 304·
Now Open· Beach's Farm Markel.
875-1021 after e:oopm. weak· State Route 160, AI E\lergraen
day, anytl. . .......,..
Home Grown Tomatoes, Hall RunMotor Cro11 Gear Air Brushed ner Green Beans, Corn, Fresh
Painted Holmot. Alpine Star, AXO Watermollons And Cantalopes,
Boola Size D, Ch11t Protecror, · We Also Bu,- local Produce
Thor JerNY ll'lnll. Glove' Scott Open lit·7 Da1ly, Call 614·446·
Gogglaa, Knee Pada. Shlnn 1984.
Guard' Smw Ski~ Ridng Dyne- Swee1 corn and peppers. 10am.
mark Mower 35 8 HP 814-446·
4pm. Williams Farm, Syracuse,
2847.
.

07-11-97

• J 8 7S4

2720. AFTER I P.M.

Registered mini11ture Chihuahua,
seven months old. $150, 614·
992·3119 or 614·992-3648.

N ortb
• 8 53

/!

• Q7

One Owner, Excellent Condition,

7~21 .

Air Conditioner. VCR, Washer,
Dryer, Relr1gera10r, Stove, Freez·
er, Mlcrowa\lt, Color T.V. 61-4·
258-1238.

/

• 6 4 2

Extra .Nice Whirlpool Raklgora1Dr; Registered Australian Shepherd
Puppies, Red Merrllle's, &amp; Blue
Memlle's, $100 , 614·388-9925.
For Pick·Up Truck S30, 614·37~

With AutomaUc lea Maker: Extra
Nice Couch &amp; Chair, 8 FL Topper

:::---:--:7---:-:----:-

/

/'

kin) Deluxe Interior, 68,000 Mil&amp;s,

1 lledloom In Gallipolio. No Pall,
VeryNice, 6 t4-44ll·7!1032bdrm. i.pts., total eiGctnc, ap-

3711. EOH.
2bedroom apt at Broad Run Rd ..
NH, 110'18 &amp; relrlgeraiOr, water lneluded, $285/mo. pluo deposit.
304-773-Q17t leave IT'8SIIQI.

/

10% OFF all farm traclor parts.
Sider's Equ1pment. 304·675·

1 ·and 2 bedroom aportmenll, lurnlshad and unfurnished, aeeurlty
deposit requl~ed, no pets, 81~·
992•2216_

Bank Aopo'ol Onlr 3 loh, Furniohod Efficioncr $185/Mo ..
GREAT PRICE
owner flninclng 1vallable. 304w U!lli11oo Pold, Share Bolh, 107
GREAT LOCATION
By owner: Mount Vernon Awnue, 75&amp;-7181.
SICOnd Avenua, Gallipolis, 014·
Polnl Pleasant e rooms, 2 or 3 We1twaod Home Show, Inc. 4tl!l 3844 Al'l• 7P.M.
bedrooms, 1 bllth, Iaroe kitchen,
IIIIa oull Uniled omo off·
baaemenl, vinyl aldtn;.· renced Clloclt
blcktard. Reduced )o $87,000. or.
Double wldn 11 low ••
304-17~10.
·
pat rronlh, lingle widol u
11 1148 por month. Call lor
In Rutland, 4 bedroom, 1 plus
ocrll, $18,000 080, 814.gg2. ho _.._ ·-2li1-5070.
4614., 814-802·2817.
-

r

MERCHANDISE

SAVE$$$$.
I:::Pho::-:-:ne-:::6::1::4·-:::8ll-6--:::26::1-:::3==::-::--:=
NO application foe. All Mrs of
Antiques
Oakwood Hcmea 'is the only BEAUTIFUL APARTMI:'NTS AT 530
creclll wolcorne 10 awlrdoaler in lht lri•&amp;tale area that BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Bu~ or sell. Riverine Antiques,
Call iDday lor a he analyliol
builds and 11111 their awn ESTATES, 52 Westwood Dr1ve 112,. E. Main Street, on Rt. 12-4,
I00-921·111W 814-502-41011.
homes. F.or laclory d1rect pricea. tram 1260 10 $334 . Walk to shOp · Pomeroy. Haura: M.T.W. 10.00
ohop
OAKWOOD HOMES, Nl· &amp; movieo: Call 814·446-2588. a.m. 10 8:00 p.m, Sunday 1:00 1D
ATTENT10N HOIEOWNERSI
Equal Houoing Opportunity.
Anend a fret l'fiOrlgage infor-ma- TAO, WV. ~-755-5885.
:00 p.m. 614-992· 2526, Ruso
tion aeminar &amp; learn: ·How 10 IT'S BIG. tn7 4BR, 2BATH C
I 10 PVH 2b·"
uwe 125.000 or mo!• from the DOUBLEWIDE. $1,949 DOWN.
onven ent
• ~room, I:-:::-:::-:---::----kitcllon, balh, LR. No pe11. $3001 540 Miscellaneous
Interest you are pay1ng on wour $31 9/MO. FREE DELIVERY &amp; rro.
$300 depo!lit304-CI75-5788.
homo or -Po homo, WITHOUT SETUP ONLY AT OAKWOOD
MerchandiSe
REFINANCING I 'How lo gel a HOMES. NITRO, WV. 304-755· Countrrsido Apartments. House 1 - - - - - - - - - REFUND korn your lender on ln- 5885. Umiled Offer.
Size Apsrtmenl: 2 Bedroom a, 2
lltelll )OUW OVIrpaldl 'Mortgage
Baths, Cl, &amp; Hee~ WID Hook-Up,
lltlllgi" IUCh u: •How to get I Large selacllon ol used home. 2 Depoolt RequW.d, $425/Mo., 513home Improvement loan or c:on- or 3 bedrooma. Stardng at $3405. 574-2S:!II
·
tolldate bills when my bank ' Quick delivery. Call 1-800-1137·
11~1 no: and ·How 10 Jlnd the

I

614-385-4367.

2 I 3 bedroom mobile homes
otarang II $2110-PIXI, • - · wo- 0128.
875-482li. ·
,.,. and ..,h Included, e 14-882- King· size waterbed, new 1emi·
2187. '
wave mattress, lighled mirror
191KJ ClayiOn Northridge 14x70, 2
S150. May tag washer
Bedrooms, 2 Bathl, Fireplace, 2 bedtoom mobile hOme on 21ev· headboard.
$75. Elecmc dryer $75. 304-773CA, F.urnishad, 2 Porchn, Out· el acres,. 1275 per month plul
5970 aher -4pm.
D.ulding, Pedect Starl8f Home For utilillel, 1200 deposit, relefenc:u
AYoung Couplo. 114-5!13-3521.
required, caa 814-992-9052.
$8.50 Sale On All
11iJ93 Fleming 14x70 2br, 1balh, 2 Bedroom Trailer For Rant;
A;~;~'srz'~wC",,~;., Mollohan
canrral air a heat, exc. cond. Miles Down 218, Gampolis. $2:251
$13,500 . 304·273·3214 or 304· Mo., • Deposit, Referencea. RePoiiW'• N• I U..ct Furniture
773-5957.
qulrad, 614-446-6172, 814-2562101 Jaffe,_ Nt.
8251.
Open 9:30 . 5:00 Mon-Sat
New·19D7 14 Wid•1 bath, 1899/
304-075-SOFA (7832)
down, l138tmo, with approved 2 Bedroom.Tralltr Scenic Road.
crectiL Call 1·800-DHim.
VInton, 1250/Mo., Deposit, No
1987 14JC70 2 or 3 Bedroom, - · 814-44U785.
Apartments
$995 down, $195/mo. Only at 440
Oakwood Home' Nitro, wv. 304·
for Rent

money 1need even If I have not·
eo-good 1D jul1 pleln "bad" credit Limited Offtrl tDI7 doubltwldt,
WHEN: Saturday Jult 28,11H17 II Sbr, 21&gt;alh. 11788 down, .12781
10:00AM·11 :30AM. WHERE: Ma· month. FrH dellvary I aelup.
aon County Library, Point Pleat· 01'111 ar Oakwood Homes, Ni1ro

I

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent'

11i188 14x70 Cla~ton NewpoJI,
2bedroom, 1bath, cia, new car·
pot. 1 porch Wlroof. $13,500. 3D+

ll· call! ••• .., •nr - .

I .

675-5182.

1972 Freedom 2 Bedrooma, 1 Execuliwl Home For laa11, 2,000
Acre Land, Scenic Road, Vinton, Sq. Ft. Near GoU Couna $8501

2 Batha. Fireplace. Central Air,

WHn Athans and Pomeroy, call

High School, No .,.,, $400/Mo..
Pluo Dapoolt, 814-440-8495.

1970 Skyline 12'11:80' Mobile Avallablo ooon. Clean 2bedroom.
new appllancta, basement RefFurnace, Fair Condllion, $2,500, erences. Deposit No peta. 304-

All real estate advertrslng In

Upstalrl Apanmtnl For Rtnl - Alfred AnD8'1o .weddlnn nown wi AKC Female Pomeranian Pup.
$300.00 Monlh • Must Pay For VIII, 3 br!il.omold . .:.:. (red), pill, 3 Adull Chow, AKC Ragll·
Ilia I Phone · K l - Ono ,anondanco drou-block &amp; whill, and. t .c - Puo. AKG RegLarge Bedroom • Llvlna Room all matching acceasarltl, all llllrtd, 814-258 8t98
And 8111'1 - Excllltnr Condilion. decorations &amp; bouqullt. 30-4·
No Pet1. D1po1it Required. Can 882-31171.
7 -8 Week Old Dalmatian Pup·
Be Sean At 1403 Eutern Ave· 1;:=:;::::::-;:;:-:~:-;:-::--;:---;:-:-1 pita, ISO Each, CaR Tom MitcheU
nue, Galllpolll, Ctl 814-ol48·4514 Alum'""m DlamondTool Bo• For All14·388-8922.
For Appo"!mOIIt
Full Slzo Pick-Up 2 Sf do Lido, ::--:-:-~.;;...~---$150; Four 1s- Whallla For C~ 7
Registered
Aullralian
450
Furnished
vy Pick-Up 2 Mountod Mud &amp; Shepherd Puppies, Blue Morrill'
Rooms
Snow Tires, 1150; e· Bilek 1 Black Trlu a Red Tries Vat
Decker Por11bla Tabla Sow 150: Chod&lt;ed, 614{388-11388.
Kings Motel lowaat Ra111 In H•il Electric Forced A!r Furnace, A Groom Shop · Pat Qroomina.
Town, Newlr Remodeltd, HBO. 2•.000 Wans, 220 blt $50, 114- F81turlng H~dro Bath. Don
Clntmu, Showtlm1' &amp; Disney. :2:::•5-:-::55:58-:--.;::-::;:-:-:--:~;::-::;:--:l Shoall. 373 George&amp; CrHk Rd.
Weal&lt;lr Ra•' Or ~nlhly Ral01,
Construction Workert Welcome Are ~ou buylns new furniture? 114-448-0231.
Sail rour Ultd lumlturo ., 1ho I'll- "KC R Bl d H
P
814~BD22.814&lt;141·5187.
meroy TIYift Shop. There il a real "'
10 oo
ound uppiel,
nead
for
couche~
broaklall
and
lwlll
old.304-882-3Bt3.
Sleeping rooms with cooking.
AIIO trailer spact on riVIf. All d1nlng room 1111. Wt also buy AKC Rag Boxar puppies. d&amp;·
hook-ups. Call alter 2:00 p.m., baby bldl, strolllrL/Iaypana, clawed &amp; tails docked, 111 shOts
30..._773-St!St, Mason WV.
toddler car 11111 an walkers. 1 wormed twice 304-075-3888.
Call 814-8g2·3725 Tuesday thru
Saturday, 10M\-4pm at 220 Eatt AKC Regis tered Champion
460 Space.for Rent
Main Slrtet, PornenJr.
Bloodllnl Boxer Puppies, Tails
Located On Route 7 Water Paid,
Docked, Dew Claws Removed,
$12s.t.lo., 814-245-5024.
Boots By Recfwlng, Chippewa, Vel Checked. Wormed, Sill FaRoctcy, Tony llfTII. Guaranteed ma&amp;e!I:OneMale, 614·446·71e8.
Mobtlw home slit available bat· Lawall Prlcea At Shot Ctft. Gal·

3 Bedrooms, Near North Gallia

Home 2 Bedrooms. Uke New Gas

Merchandise

-:;-::-:;-:-:-:-:::-:-:7~--"-:l 2 AKC lololo Chow Pupplao, 2

411Juidod

SaiUrday, July 19: 1997
Use extreme care regarding who.m
you choose as allies in the year ahead.
Select only those who can make a
~onrribulion 1n areas you ' re able lo
offer somelhing of equal value rn

P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Statio n.
New York, NY I 0156.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) If you've
hcen camounaging your efforts in
order lo look bcncr. 1his could be a
day of reckoning. What you ncglccled will vic for immediate anent1on.
VIRGO (Aug 23- Scpt. 22) If you
dun '! lake a h:md in formulating
social plans today. olhcr&gt; in your cirdc might selccl activities you dislike.
Let your voice be heard.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) Guard

agllinsllcndcncics to take on in\lolvcmcnls that you're nul equipped to
complete a1 this lime .· Begin only

wh:.u you're 'crtain ynu 'an finish.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nuv. 22) Slay
relum.
.
calm,
cool and collected today, or else
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Ciryou mighl lose your lcmpcr over
c umstances mighl position you Ieday
in a w.ay thai will cause you 10 have · something which you have always
to deal wilh a person you dislike. Do been able 10 lolerale .
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23 -Dec.
nol add 10 a bad ammgement; mstead,
21
)
Be prudent in the managemem of
be as 1ac1ful as possible. Trying to
your
resources loday. Do nol assume
palch up a broken romance? The
any
new
obligalions and be selective
¥1ro-Graph Malchmaker can help
as
10
whom
you make loans.
you understand whallo d~ 10 make
CAPRICORN
(Dec. 22-Jan . 19)
lhe rela1ionship work. Mall $2.75 to
Matchma_!cer, c/o 1his newspaper, Today you mi~ht experience OI_)P&lt;lSi-

tion from a leas1-expcc1ed quarter.
lnsrcad of gelling angry, try to figure
oul what precipilaled lhis lorn of

events.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Yo'!_ might be 1aken to lask today for
somelhing you were supposed lo do
but have thus far ignored. Instead of
makrng excuses, Slart perfonning.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Mind
your behavior in social sellings today
so Ihal you don't do somelhing unintentionally lhal could generale ill will
between you and a friend .
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) Condilions might not be as placid as
you'd prefer in your household loday.
This could be due lo oulside force s
invadrng your domrcile.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20 )
Idea~ you though! had substantial
support of assoc1a1es mrght be chal-lenged loday. II is besl nol 10 fry to
force compliance.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) A person who knows how to apply sales
pressure mighl use il on you loday to
try to gel you to part wilh or loan ou1
somelhing you cherish.

Editor· Latch - Affix -Inlaid· FOLD IT
The man was struggli11g with the directions.-HB finally
mumblecl to his wife, "lfs easier to reacl a map than to
FOLD IT."

JULY 181

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