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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Colorado
turns tables
on Cincinnati

Super Lotto: •
1-5-8-11-22-36
Kicker:
4-8-8-5-2-0
Pick 3:
7-1·2
Pick 4:
7-5-3-9

Sports on Page 5

•

a1
lib!. 48, NO. 89
C1te7, Ohio 118lley Publishing COml)llny

Chane• of ahowera
tonight, Iowa In the mid
50.. Frldey, pertly cloudy,
highs ln. the lower 70s .

entine

..

2 Soctlona, 12 Pogea, 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport,. Ohio, Thursday, August
. 21 , 1997 ·

A Gennen Co. Newal)llper

·convicted rapist gets ov~r 30 years behind bars .
Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes said ·Barney made life for his vic- '
By JIM FREEMAN
tim into "a living hell" and added that "we need to send a message that thiS
Sentinel News Staff
.
.
A rapist who abused his victim over a period of years must in remm for-. 'kind of behavior will not be tolerated."
Attorney S.teve Story asked for a more lenient sentence, noting that the
feit many years of his own life.
.
Convicted rapist Darrell Barney, 42, received a stem moral lecture along charges against his client were uncorroborated by evidence.
"Anyone can be accused," he said.
with a 32-year prison term during his sentencing Wednesday afternoon in
Kne~&gt;e disagreed, condemning Barney's behavior.
the Meigs County Court of Common Pleas.
"It disgusted the coun to hear the kind of conduct that you carried on,"
Visiting Judge Randall Knece of Pickaway County sentenced Barney to
four consecutive prison terms of eight-to-12 years each while damning the he said. "Sollie people think you own a child like you own a car or a dog .. .
you robbed her of her childhood.
·
.
behavior that landed Barney in court in the first place.
"It came down to your word against hers; that's not unusual in incest casHarney, formerly of Shade, repeatedly had seK with a minor female rei·
ative from .1993to 1996 and was found guilty in May of four counts ofrape, es like this. These things don't happen on the corner of Main Street," he said.
Knece also commended the jury and attorneys for both sides. "The jury
eight counts of seKual battery and four counts of felonious sexual penetraspent
a great ~eal oftime ... making the determination they made. This was
tion.
During sentencing, Barney's victim said the incidents began years before, one of the cleanest ... fairest cases I have ever heard."
Knece continued, again directing his comments to Barney who remained
when she was in the third grad,e and the family was not living in Meigs CouneKpressionless
during the proceeding: "You took advantage of a ybung girl.
ty. Now 18 years old, she asked Knece to impose the muimum sentence posyou
have
to
repay
with several years of what remains of your life.'
.
sible.

Before he passed sentence, Knece told Barney the four prison terms would
be consecutive, to be served one after another.
'
"Anything less would demean the sentence," he said.
· The sentence followed a pre-sentence investigation ordered ell{lier and
Lentes and Story agreed the 16 counts. for purposes of sentencing, should
be merged with the four,rape counts.
·
Kncce also classifierl Barney as a "sexual predator" which, under a new
Ohio law. will' require him to register with law enforcement officials every
90 days for the remainder of his life following release from prison. In addition, local law enforcement officials will have to notify Barney's adjacent
neighbors and nearby schools and other facilities that a seKual predator is
living in their midst.
,
•.
He will also have to submit a photograph, fingerprints and a DNA sample to the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation and Identification.
_
Immediately after the sentencing. a male family member was lectured oy
the judge for .shouting out 10 Barney in the courtroom, "I hope you rot in
hell."
:..

,...;--A first for Pomeroy-- Pomeroy.·merchants make
plans for Delta Queen stop
I
•

night for another planning session. · some arts and crafts exhibits, ana
Musser al'so comme nded the mer- refreshment hooths on the parking
chants for painting curbing and doing lot.
Potpourri ~ags wi II be prepared as
other work to improve the appearance
of the village in anticipation of the favors , and the gazebos will be decorated. it was reported.
visit of Delta Queen.
In other business, !he Merchant•
Susan Clark. the association's
president, reported that greeters, a Association noted 'that Wesley
group consisting of village officials Thoene: who created the Victorian
and merchants. wi.ll be attired in thorned holiday display for the minipark as a scout project, will receive
in revitalization projects in town. is black an~ white ensembles.
his Eagle Scout award Aug. 31 at 2
heading up a committee to welcome
The men. she said, will wear p.m. at Heath United Methodist
and entertain the visitors.
white shirts:.black pallts and red ties, Church. His mother, Nancy Thoene,
In anticipation of motorists com- while the women will have matching secretary, invited the lricmhers. ,
ing inio Pomeroy to hear the calliope red and black plaid vests to be worn
A letter was read from lhe Allen
concert, tour the sternwheeler and with white blouses and black slacks Bros. Circus asking about sponsorjoin in other activities, Musser said or skirts. She noted that The Fabric ship for a show on ·Sept. 5 . in
arrangements have been made for Shop is making the vests and any Pomeroy for a percentage of advance
cars to .park behind the fire sJation or women interested in ordering one and gate ticket proceeds.
" the former junior htgh school build· should go in for measurements before
The merchants decided not to
ing, 'and travel by van downtown.
5 p.()l. Monday.
, .
sponsor the show since it falls on a
The Delta Queen will docki.t·tha 'Pomeroy
on Sept. 1 - • first for Pomeroy- and the
He reported that four welcome
Mike Stroth reported on brochures home football game night and their
nurty 170 passengers are expected to come aahore.·.Realdentl will be given the opportunity ,
banners have been secured and that he's preparing for distribution 'to the involvement in other fall activities.
to tour the sternwheeler, which will be at the ~. . from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
new r.ed and blue Hags arc being visitors that show a mnp of the vi llage
It w.as voted to purchase an
made to adorn the period lamps and a listing of various business~s. inscribed rock for the··Pomeroy Fire
along the promenade. Attempts are Ann Chapman is preparing histories ·Department in appreciation for
also being made to get six staie flags on the various buildings to be placed cleanup work downtown.
for use along the river.
in the store front windows.
Approval was also given to buy·
Carol Layh of the tourism bureau
Plans call for a walking tour of the ing a pump and accessory equipment
in Marietta. a city that has hosted vis· village. an icc cream social on Lynn ·· to be used in cleaning the awnings.
its of the Delta Quech many times, is Street hosted by Trinity Church. an . . Clark asked for assistance with the
at least 5 percent of i~ business, but offering her expertise in the planning,
ATI..ANTA (AP}- For thousands business.
show and herb -displays .in the duck derby at the Sternwheel Fostr·
''All of our jobs depend on our has .said it won't be able to properly said Musser. She was in Pomeroy last art
of United Parcel Service workers, the
minipark. an antique i\UtO display. val.
end of their strike didn't mean a volume level," UPS spokesman Rick measure lost business until next
Warlick said. "Certainly as we go week.
return to work.
UPS' daily volume fell during the
As the delivery giant slowly began back to work. a.• our volume picks up •. '
recovering Wednesday from the 15- we will add workers. Any business- strike to I 0 percent of its nonnal 12
day Teamsters walkout, the company es that have gone away as a result of million parcels lind packages. The
company expected a quick, large
told some workers they were laid off. the strike may mean fewer jobs."
UPS
has
estimated
the
strike
cost
surge as customers shipped packages
at least temporarily. because of lost
that had piled up during the strike.
Some 185,000 Teamsters struck
the company, and UPS has said more I
than 15,000 jobs could be cut because
of permanently lost business. The
company did not release figures
Wednesday on the number of workBy The Aaaoclated Pre•• .
ers back on the job.
Residents in the Athens County village of Chauncey have returned to
Thiny-five percent of 4,671 worktheir homes but other parts of the southeastern Ohio county were still .in
ers in UPS' mid-South offices were
danger from rising floodwaters.
laid off Wednesday, said Doug
More than a dozen Chauncey residents returned home Wednesday, said
Ashcraft, a manager in Little Rock,
Te9 Jacobson, director of the county emergency management agency. They
Ark.
were forced to leave Tuesday after rising waters Hooded the town and sur"To the degree that our customers
rounding roads. •
come
back will dictate whether those
The storms dumped up to siK inches of rain in some parts of the coun- ·
jobs
come
back," Ashcraft said.
ty since Saturday, Jacobson said.
·
About
1.200
pan-time workers
· "The water is a moving problem," he said. "Tile water is down in the
were
laid
off
in
Massachusetts
and
northern parts of the county, but we may end up with people out of their
Rhode Island. In Oregon and southhomes in the eastern pan of the county." ·
west Washington, 684 workers 'Preliminary assessments indicate the storm caused damage to at least
257
of them full-timers- were laid
430 homes and 20 businesses in Athens, Hocking and Perry counties.
off
Wednesday.
A handful of Atlanta
Athens County Commissioners declared a state of emergency TuesBOOK SIGNING - Retired U.S. Air Force many accomplishment!' Include serving aa
drivers
were
also
turned away.
day. Gov. George Voinovich declared states of emergency in Hocking and
Gen.
and Middleport native James V. Hartinger commander-In-chief of the North American
In
Charlotte,
N.C
..
only
a
small
Perry counties Tuesday.
.
Is
visiting
his hometown to sign copies of his Aerospace Defense Command· (NORAD) and
number
of
the
800
UPS
employees
. Jacobson also said many farmers lost their corn crops, which were
"General
Jim Hartinger - from One first commander of the Air Force Space Combook,
-were called hack to ~.Qrk. Rows of
almost ready for harvest.
.
Stripe
to
Four
Stars."
The book concerns his mand. He Is now retired and living In Colorado
"A lot of folks farm com, and it was close to being harvestable," he' idle trucks were parkeitTn the expanyouth
In
Middleport
and
his career In the Air Springs, Colo. Above, he signed a copy of his
sive parking lot.
said. ''They lost the corn because it rotted or washed ·away. It was bad
Force,
which
spanned
five
decades, three wars book which belongs to the Middleport Library,
"There's not enough work for
timing because noi1T]ally there's fl(\odS in the spring when little is plantand
ranks
from
private
to
sergeant
to general. while library clerk Peggy Carpenter observed.
..
them," supervisor Norman Bellow
ed .
Known as the "Father of Space Command," his
said.
By CHARLENE HOEfUCH
Sentinel News Staff1
Entertainment and activities for
the 170 people on board the Delta
Queen when it docks ,at the Pomeroy
levee on Labor Day were planned
during Wednesday's meeting of the
Pomeroy Merchant!f Association.
John Musser.. president of
Pomeroy Village Council and active

·~ L

Business dropoff causes UPS
to tell some to stay off the job

Athens County residents
assess flooding's impact

Health officials pledge action against .Ohio-based egg manufacturer
·;

COLUMBUS (AP) - State
health officials promise to take AgriGeneral Co. L.P. to court if the egg
processor does not fix housing problems uncovered by inspectors last
year.
.
"We've given them two chances,"
Randy Hertzer, spokesman for the
Ohio Department of Health, said
, Wednesday. "There will be no third.
If they do not follow through, we will
go to court."
The Occupational Safety &amp; Health
Administration announced fines this

•

J

week totaling more than $1 million
against AgriGeneral, one of the country's largest egg producers. OSHA
said a five-month investigation into
AgriGeneral 's Croton farm uncovered potentially life-threatening conditions at the facilities and nearby
migrant housing.
OSHA conducted its own inspections following a tip from the state
health department.
The department, which is responsible for inspecting Ohio's 142
migrant camps, in October investi-

gated conditions at two houses near
AgriGeneral's LaRue egg farm in
northwest Ohio and at eight houses
near.the company's Croton farm east
of Columbus.
· Inspectors found 183 violations at
the Croton.homes and 60 in LaRue.
At one · house, inspectors found
dead bees "l-inch thick'' in light fiKtures. At another house, raw sewage
was visible in a back yard.
Hertzer said the department did
not immediately seek a coun order to
stop the company from housing

workers because AgriGeneral
promised to make-improvements and
get the proper state permits.
"We wanted them to act q~ickly,"
he e~plained . "But we also understood that as long as they were mak·
ing substanti al improvements.... you
allow them to go on·."
. In May, the company infonned the
department it would no longer offer
worker housing.
But a surprise visit in June by
OSHA and health department inspec-·
tors found workers still living in the

Croton houses -some of which had
raw sewage in the basement and
drinking water contaminated with
coliform bacteria.
On Aug. 8, the company again
applied for a li~ense to use up. to five
homes near the Croton facility as
worker housing .. Health inspectors
reported that the LaRue houses no
longer qualified as migrant labor
camps because they were occupied
by fewer than five workers.
AgriGeneral -President Duke
Goranites said in a written statement

that the company is continuing to
work with the health department to
resolve the housing issue.
Henzer conceded the department
has no 'way of knowing whether the
company will upgrade the housing
this time .
"We don't know that for sure," he
said. "But we'll be going back regularly to make sure they're making'
progress."
Hertzer said state law makes quick'
actio~ difficult..
'

�· The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Thursday, August 21, 1997

Commenta

.

.•

Thu...uy, August 21, 1

.

OHIO Weather

.
• •

The Daily Sentinel

What's a CCO to do in times like these?

.
ing if we all don't start gathering our
By Ben Wattenberg
'Lstilb(isfu/ in 1948
For about 35 years I have been a own roots and berries." But I don't
counter-cyclical optimist (CCO). believe that. (E•cept that Europe
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
. While most everyone was saying, and Japan are in real trouble unless
614-992-2158 • Fu 992-2157
look how bad it's gelling, I made a they start having babies.)
living saying, no, most measurable
I could remind all who will listen
aspects
of
the
human
condition
are
never to forget
. ..
improving.
Murphy's
Law
'_,.
is
an
old
(ML).
The
text
of
(Counter-cyclicality
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
problem with me. Growing up in the
ML announces: If
Bronx, home of the Yankees, I was a
It Can Go Wrong,
ROBERT L. WINGEtT
Brooklyn
Dodgers
fan
,
and
paid
It Will Go Wrong.
Publl8her
- ''
. dearly for it.)
As Casey Stengel
But now everything is perfect.'
used to say, that is
The Wall Street types say the econoa true fact. But
CHARLENE HQEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
my is unbelievably, implausibly perWattenberg there is an even
General Meneger
Controller
fect. (Even the mini-busts don't
more
powerful
seem
to
last
long.)
'crime
and
wellaw
:
Murphy
's
Law
Amended
i
fare are way down. American sol- (MLA). The essence of MLA stipun. Snldlltl •'ca ,,.. ...,..... to the ediDr
on • broad,.,. of 10p1ca.
diers aren't fighting anywhere. lates that even as everything that can
'
----·~... --oll»&gt;nffP'+''I'wd.l)'pod,...
,.~--IIIJmoyiN_&amp;oh,__.,._,
Democracy is spreading around the go wrong is going wrong, the tide of
photrenurrJNr. ......, . . . . , , . , ........ 'MCIIf .., •
·world.
measurable human progress is so
., 11o11 10: ~.MWo ., lilo EillfDr. ,.,. Sonflnol. 111 c- St.. """"'""· 0111o
So what's a CCO to do? How can powerful that the track of our
~--~~~~~-~~~-~~~~.,~·~~~·;-~~~~~~~-~--~--~--~~----~--~-~-~-~-~~--~ an optimist be against the ! rain species remains ascendant at this
when everyone else is also cooing'! I lime. (Progress Trumps Inevitable
see five and a half choices, some of Ineptllude.)
them interrelated. Stay with me on
this.
I could say I Told You So
Because
I do not intend to take this
' ·- yWALTER R. MEARS
path,
I
will
not bore you with the
· AP Special Correspondent
_ · WASHING1DN -For President Chnton, this delivery was timed right details. I Will not say, "I always said
- - a selllement of the UPS strike, packaged under administration prodding, the economy was doing better than
just after he'd raised his personal and political stake in ending the walkout. the pessimoans were saying." (Now
, ·::.. Labor Secretary Alex1s Herman oversaw the marathon bargaining that led confirmed by data showing ntiscal~·· ' -to the Monday night deal after the vacationing president dc;manded redou- culations in the Consumer Pnce
: - bled settlement efforts and warned striking Teamsters they'd soon face the Index.) I will not say, "I always said
America will prevail (sooner or
· . -:-Joss of public sympathy.
later)
in the Cold War" (while many
Until then, Clinton had limited his personal role to urging a bargained setneo-cons
were saying America has
__-. tlement while assigning Herman to get management and union negotiators
lost
its
nerve,
and some liberals were
. .,· talking, and keep them at it.
•
saying
it's
about
time). I will not say,
"The president and I always believed that the solution was at the bar"I
always
said
crime and welfare
' " gaining table," Herman said in announcing the settlement early today.
would
tum
around
if we got tough
Dealing with a national strike is a balancing act for any president, particularly for a Democrat who doesn 'I want a collision with organized labor. But again." I will not say, "I always sa~d
the United Parcel Service shutdown was dragging at the economy, and there the Democratic Party could eventually change its ways." (We shall see
was heightening business pressure for White House intervention.
about that. No one's perfect.)
That didn't seem to be a real option, at least not after 15 days.
I could -- eek! -- switch and
But there were others. Prodding, persuading, coaxing, demanding, sometimes intervening to force strikers back to work, sometimes threatening to do become a counter-cyclical pessimist
• · so, presidents have used an array of tactics in dealing with disruptive strikes. (CCP). I could say, "This won 'tlast,
• ,. Clinton ventured a new ope, saying Sunday night that a selllement was as look at the dark clouds on the hori.. close as his thumb to his forefinger, and that his gut told him the strike was zon .no larger than a man's fist, but
.; 'about to be ended. It seemed a wishful prophecy, as though saying so would swelling rapidly." I could say, "The
world will succumb to global warmmake it so, and the Teamsters contradicted Clinton.
Until they settled, one night later.
The presidential impact on a situation like this one is difficult to gauge;
: ·.,. after all, nobody in or out of the bargaining room had to be told that Clinton
• · · wanted a settlement.
•
Still, it was his push and his admimstration's.
and especially in Netanyahu's
: • .Beyond Jawboning - Washmgton slang for an effort to talk things into By Morton Kondracke
The Clinton administration is nationalist Likud Party ---that there
, :~ :..: bappenmg- there weren't many __options for the administration.
: ·• ·.:. · The intervention UPS and some of its delivery-starved c,ustomers wanted puttmg maximum pressure on Pales- can be no independent Palestinian
: ; : ;~ . would have been the first oi its kind of two decades, an unlikely course for tini~n leader Yasser Arafat to revive state and that Jerusalem must be the
the Mideast peace process now, but "undivided capital of Israel."
:::;~.Clinton, and one that might not have worked anyhow.
an
·eventual policy crunch with
The amount of territory that
·: · •: Under the Taft-Hartley Act. a president can seek a court order to stop a
Israel can 'I be ruled out.
Arafal's Palestinian Authonty might
~· · - . strike, but only by proving that the walkout is a national emergency that
The United States exPI'cts Arafat control is open to negotiation, but
..: .• - imperils public health or safety.
to
mount
a "100 percent effort" to Netanyahu is proposing to give it
-:: ·
It was a case the admmistration didn't think could have been made. And
crack down on less than 40 percent of the Israeli: : . _ trying would have enraged big laboragains~ pinton.
Arab
terronst occupied West Bank and in non-con: -;
The Taft-Hartley Act has been a bane to organized labor since~ it took
tiguous patches separated by Israeli
groups
operating
: ; · _:•. effect, 50 years ago Friday, over Harry S. Truman's veto.
·
in
its
midst
as
a
territory.
•: ·- _ Not only are back-to-work orders anathema to unions, but when a coun
precondition
io
Arafat is demanding close to 100
:: . , issues one under Taft-Hanley, it includes a requirement that the company's
Secretar-y
of
State
percent withdrawal from territory
~· : :- last contract offer be put to a vote of union members. UPS wanted that; the
Madeleine
Israel captured in 1967. a fully sov-~ .- · Teamsters said no until their leaders came to terms with the company.
Albright's visitmg ereign state with unlimited rights to
:: :
The Taft-Hartley machinery hasn't been used since Jimmy Caner
the reg10n at the pursue whatever foreign and miliinvoked the law in 1978 to end a three-month coal strike, which then was
'
tary P-Olicies it likes and a chunk of
Kondracke end of August.
: : settled.
If
he Jerusalem to call the Palestinian
does so, however, President Clinton capital.
'• .
sa1d that Albright would brmg With
Both sides will howl, but any
.• .. .
-'
her his administration's "best ideas" U.S . administration has more to
.
on how to jump from an incremental worry about 'from Israeli anger than
l Mf\
JIAPPY
peace process to 14 final slatus" Palestinian. ~utting pressure on
01-\1
A"OOT
1'1-\e;
NE\111
..
negouat1ons on the b1g Issues diVId- Palestinians is relatively easy, but
1'AX
mg
Israelis and Palestinians
. ·~
pressuring Israel 1s hard for a U.S.
/
Those
issues
are
(I)
will
the
president, as Dwight Eisenhower,
I
. .• .
Palestinians have a sovereig~ state, Gerald Ford and George Bush dis(2) what territory will it control and covered at various times.
(3) will it control any part of
EISenhower opposed Israel's
Jerusalem?
Suez invasion. Ford's secretary of
If the Clinton administration has state, Henry Kissinger, threatened a
any "ideas" on those subjects, they "reassessment" of U.S.-Israeh relaare bound to dissatisfy both Arafat tions 10 force a panial withdrawal
and Israeli Prime Minister BenJamm from territory Israel captured m
Nctanyahu, but the differences With 1973. And Bush and his secretary of
Netanyahu will be more poliucally state. James Baker, were denounced
I'M. flo. 1M ~f'fllRN
as "anti-Semites" for holding up
explosive in the United States.
~PARER.
It's political dogma m Israel -- U.S. housing loan _ guarantees to
'

~

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(

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•

hom,...,_

__

' end.,..,..
_ ..
1

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,.,...,.llflcle

~For

President Clinton,
:-: an on tinie deliv~ry

U.S.

... ..
-.

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I

•'

·n
hl•story
l
Oday
'

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.,

By The loseoclated Press
Today is Thursday, Aug. 21, the 233rd day of 1997. There are 132 days
lef! in the year.
.r
Today•s H1ghhght in History:
.. On A~g . 21 , 1959, President Eisenhower s1gned an executive order proclaiming Hawaii the 50th state of the uniOn.
On thi~ date :
In 1680, Pu1;blo Indians took pussession of Santa Fe, N.M., after drivmg
ou~ the Spanisl~
In 18~ 1. fOII!ler slave Nat Turner led a violent insurrection in Virginia.
(lij: was later cxeculed.)
·
In 18~8. t"; famous debates between Senatorial contenders Abraham
Lmcoln ~nd S~;phen Douglas began: .
.
In 18718, the Americah Bar As~oc~auon was founded 10 Saratoga, N.Y.
In 1940. e~led Communist revolutionary Leon Trotsky died in Mexico
City from wou1~ds innicted by an assassin.
In 1945, President Truman ended the Lend-Lea~ program that had
ship!l'ld 1ome po billion in aid to Amenca's Allies dunng _World War II.
In 19~3. P~ilippine opposition leader Benigno S. Aqumo Jr., endmg a
self-Imposed eJ~IIe m the Umted. States, v.:as shot dead moments after step
• piqg off~ planu at Manila Inlematlonal Airport.
In 19~. mo[e than I ,700 peopl_e died when toxic gas erupted from a vol·
canic lakn in t~e West African nation of Cameroon.

..

iJLL

SATES

,..

..

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••

;::,,~.

}!·'~.....&lt;

. ·.--~
~

..

........

•leolumbusl74'

I

Charles Gillilan
Word has been received of the death of Charles (Francis) Gillilan, 81, of
Canton. formerly of Chester, who died on Thursday, Aug. 14, 1997 at h1s
home.
Surviving are his wife, Winifred Gillilan; two sons, James and Glenn, and
a daughter, Frankie, all of Canton; a sister, Freda Holsinger of Chester; three
brothers, Joe of Canton, Jack of Reedsville, and Roy of Chester; an uncle;
and several nieces and nephews.
Preceding him in death were his parents, Eber S. and Deborah Beaver
Gillilan; a granddaughter. Debbie Simon; and three brothers: Ralph, Wilbur,
and George.
·
Memorial services were held on Saturday, Aug. 16 at Reed's Funeral Home
in Canton.

Meigs Local Schools
get ready for classes
The 1997-98 school year for students in the Meigs Local School District
will begin Monday, Aug. 25, with teachers and non-certified employees of
the district reporting this Friday.
Students who are new to the. district and have not registered for classes
should repon to the building in their attendance area as soon as possible to
pre-register.
'
There have been only ntinor changes m bus routes: and the buses are scheduled to run at approximately the same times as last year, according to district officials.
·
S1xth graders will bending the middle school and high school buses. Parents with questions related to bus p1ckup times should call the tran sponation supervisor at 742.2990.
Students will be bringing home information during the first week of school,
mcluding emergency medical forms , student accident msurance forms. student handbooks and free lunch applications. The district encourages parents
to read the information and return any needed information to the schools m
a timely manner.
Students who were on free or reduced -price lunches last year will remain
on the list until a date is set for new forms to be returned.
Teachers should report to their buildings at their regular staning time and
non-cenifoed employees should report to their work assignments.
Parents with other questions can contact their child's principal's office.

Local News in Brief:sR 248 closings slated by ODOT
State Route 248 will be closed by the Ohio Department of Transponation at two locations where culvens are bemg replaced.
The first closure could take place as early as Aug. 25, and 1s located
one mile west of the junction of SR 124 near Long Bouom . Once the culven is replaced, the road will be closed at the site of another culven
replacement, one-half mile west of the juncuon ofSR 124 near Long Bot- ·
tom.
The entire proJect is scheduled for completion by Nov. 15. The offi·
cial detour during th.e closure IS state routes 7 and 681.
The cost for the proJect" $262,845.84 and the contractor is Diaz Construction Co., Piketon. Kenny Buckley ofODOTwill oversee the project.

By The A11oclllled Press
Some rainfall mu linger in northern Ohio on Friday, but that should be
the last of it for several days, the National Weather Service said.
Temperatures will continue to be unseasonably cool with highs m the upper
60s to low 70s.
Deputies report one-vehicle crash
Fair weather then is forecast through Monday.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather staNo mjuries were reponed following a one-vehicle accident on Old SR
tion was 99 degrees in 1936 while the record low was 43 in 1940. Sunset
7
near
Five Points Wednesday around 8:30 a.m.
(Ecltor'e note:AiewsultoutllnH icals or preservatives. '
tonight will be at 8:21 p.m. and sunrise Friday at 6:50a.m.
Christina
S. Cooper, 26. Racine, was southbound when she fell asleep
the grlevaneee of one party egalnll ,. Hocking Valley Bank, Athens,
Weather forecast:
behind
the
wheel
of her 1995 Toyota p1ckup, according to a Meigs Counanother. It does not eetablllh gulll .seeks $6,098.38 plus costs and interTonight...A chance of showers. Fog developing after midnight. Lows m or Innocence.)
ty
Sheriffs
Depanment
report. The truck then hit a guardrail sustaining
!1ft including the foreclosure of sevthe mid 50s. West wind around I 0 mph. Chance of rain 30 percent.
moderate,
disabling
damage.
The following lawsuits were filed -en acres in Columbia Township in a
Friday ... Fog early, then panly cloudy. Highs in the lower 70s.
Cooper refused treatment from a Metgs County Emergency Medical
recently in the Meigs County Com· foreclosure suit filed against Ronald
Fnday night .. Mostly clear. Lows in the 50s.
Service
squad summoned to the scene. The Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
mon Pleas Court of Judge Fred W. L. and Audrey J. Sanders, both of
Extended forecaot:
Depanment
also responded to the scene.
•
Crow III:
Albany. ·
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Highs in the m1d 70s.
Jane M. Frymyer, Shade, seeks
Peoples Banking &amp;Trust Co. of
Dairy Show winners named from fair
Sunday...Mostly clear. Lows 10 the mid 50s and highs in the upper 70s. compensatory costs and damages for Middlepon seeks $30,770.22 plus
Winners in the Meigs ~ounty Fair Open Class Dairy Show were, by
Monday ... Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 50s and highs in the lower 80s. pain and suffering from William M. interest and costs including the foreclass:
Francis, Reedsville, stemming from a closure of property on Bradbury
Holstein -Junior champion Holstein heifer, Alyssa Holter; reserve
July 28. 1995, motor-vehicle accident · J.oad, Middleport, from Ricky E.
junior champion Holstein heifer, Ross Holter; senior champion Holstein
on State Route 681.
Hawley, Middleport, and Dawn G.
cow, Tricia Davis; reserve semor champion Holstein cow, Ben Holter,
Michael A. Carsey, Albany, seekJ ' Hawley, Pomeroy.
,grand
champiOn'!-Iolstein bull, Holter's Holstein Farm (showed by Dave.
$75,000 from Rona Enterprises Inc. •'1 ., Home National Bank, Racine.
Bun).
•
of Pataskala, alleging breacH of con- seeks $17,085.51 plus interest and
A 19 percent increase in earnings enhanced customer satisfaction, tract, negligence and fraud in the pur- costs and the foreclosure of property
Ayrshire -Grand champion Ayrshire, Chris Parker; reserve champion Ayrshire, Chns Parker.
•
per share for the first fiscal quaner of increased sales and h1gher profits," chase of a damaged mobile home.
on Carroll Street, Syracuse, in a suit
Jersey
Junior
champion
Jersey
heifer,
Donnie
Beaumier; reserve
1997 has been declared by Bob said Daniel E. Evans, chairman of the
Margaret K. Eskey, Dayton, filed flied against Kevm C. and Teresa L.
junior
champion
Jersey
heifer,
Carson
Yost;
senior
champion
Jersey cow,
Evans Farms Inc.
board and chief executive officer.
a foreclosure actiOn to recover Knapp, Syracuse .
Chris
Parker,
reserve
senior
champion
Je':'ey
cow,
Rachael
Chapman.
The improved results primarily
"Our mtensified focus on cus- $36,883.01 plus interest and costs
Steven L. Smith, Parkersburg,
reflected positive momentum in the tomer service is helping us anract stemming from a broken land con- W.Va., seeks unspecified compenrestaurant segment's same-store customers seeking friendly, respon- tract.
satory damages in a suit agamst Lisa
sales, according to a company sive service and superior food qualiSandra L. King, Pomeroy. admin- A. Welch, Coolville. The su1t stems
spokesman.
ly," Evans added.
istrator of Charles E. King Estate, 'from a Aug. 5, 1995, motor veh1cle
Net income for the quarter was
Profitability in the food products seeks in eKcess of $25,000 plus ~~~:eident in Olive Township.
SI0.41million, or 25 cents per share, segment during the quanercontinued interest and costs in a wrongful death
Home- National Bank, Racine,
With the 1997-98 school year
on net sales of $222 million. In the to reflect unfavorable raw material suit flied against Veterans Memorial · ieeks $4,544.58 plus interests and
beginning
next week, the State High·
corresponding period last year, neL • costs and h1gh retail sausage prices. Hospital of Pomeroy, Michael C. costs on a delinquent promissory note
way
Patrol
is reminding drivers of
income was $8.9 million, or 21 cents
Net sales were up 3 percent from Myers D.O., James Withere)l M.D., :(rom Bryan Betzing, Pomeroy.
their
cesponsibility
to stop for nay
per share, on net sales of $213.1 mil· a year ago, primarily due to price and others. King alleges the defen· ' .1 In addition, the following judgschool
bus
that's
stopped
to pick up or
lion Thecompany'sclosingofits 15 increases. which also contributed to dants were negligent in their care ·' ments and dismissals were entered
drop
off
students.
Cantina del Rio Mexican restaurants a 2 percent volume &lt;!ecline. The com- resulting in the delay of treatment for ·hlto the court's journal:
"When you see a schoolbus, pay
in August 1996 dampened the sales pany's hog costs averaged $51 per M1. King, who died on Oct. 26, 1996.
A case filed by FCC National particular auention to its amber and ·
comparison, but · benefited net hundredweight in the quaner, above
The Fon Mongage Companies of Bank against Gladys Barker was
mcome.
both the same period a year ago Dallas, Texas, seeks $58,706.25 plus dismissed when representatives of the fFd flashing lights," cautioned Lt.
Rising 3.3 percent from a year ($46.90) and the fourth quarter of int~rest and costs in a foreclosure suit bank did not appear at a coun hear- Wayne McGlone. cemmander of the
patrol's Gallia-Meigs Post.
ago, same-store sales in the restaurant 1997 ($50). The segment's operating filed against Ronald Bruce Denny . ing.
"When you see the flashing lights;
segment increased for the third con- mcome Improved significantly from and Bonnie Sue Denny, Middleport.
A judgment' of $11,062.36 plus prepare to stop," he added. "When
secutive quarter, and overall restau- last year's cyclical low p01nt, but
Carrie L. Deem and Jimmy Deem, interest and court costs was awarded
rant sales were up 4.5 percent. Oper- remamed substanually below histor- Rae me, seek an amount in excess of to National City Bank of Columbus the red lights are flashing, you must
stop and remain stopped until they
ating income advanced 20 percent, icallevels.
$25,000 plus interest and costs from from William D. Davis.
are turned off."
which was driven by the sales
A quanerly cash dividend of 8 Powell SuperValu in Pomeroy, allegHome National Bank, Rae me,
increase. an improved operatmg '!lar- cents per share on BEF's outstanding ing that Mrs. Deem" was made ill was awarded $14,767.01 plus intergin and the absence of the MeKican common stock was declared Aug. I. from a package of hamburger pur- , est ~md costs {rom Charlolle P. Pickrestaurants. .
It's payable Sept. 2to stockholders of chased on Aug. 7, 1995, that con· ~ ens.
"We are deltghted to sec the hard record on Aug. 15.
tained unauthorized and illegal chem·
work of thousands of Bob Evans
restaurant employees produce

Civil actions filed in court

.,

..

...m~6ili~~·c;llltlj(l l\\oO·

··~~)ol'·~

force a stop to Israeli settlement
construction on Arab land.
Putting pressure on Israel to give
th~ Palestinians a state, a piece of
Jerusalem and sufficient land to be
an economically viable country will
cause Clinton trouble in the American Jewish community, which votes
overwhelmingly Democratic.
Vice· President AI Gore was the
beneficiary of heavy Jewish suppon
when he ran for president in 1988
and expects it again when he runs in
2000, but it would be at risk if Clinton engages in hardball diplomacy
with Netanyahu.
Netanyahu, correctly seeing that
step-by-step progreSs toward peace
was causing more trouble than good •.
first proposed JUmping to the hard
issues. Arafat rejected the idea and
still hasn't embraced 11 since
Albright signalled a shift of U.S.
policy in that direction. .
Moreover, Arafat has yet to
demonstrate that he will satisfy
Israel's security concerns, which
Albright correctly declared to be the
sine qua non .of further movement
on the peace front.
1
As former Israeh Pnmc Mm1stcr
Abba Ebban observed, "the Arabs
never miss an o)lponunity to miss an
opponunity," and Arafat may be
missing another one by not doing
everything he can to keep terrorist
groups under control.
ThiS the Israelis rightly interpret
as a call to violence in spite of the
fact that two suicide bombers had

wasn't done to a crisp before, he is
now. What could Weld possibly be
From the day Bill Clinton
announced it, William Weld 's nomiBrahmin is not thinking about?
I have some hunches about that.
nation' as ambassador to Mexico has
siuing still for
My guess is that Mexico City is
been pegged as a loser.
the slaughter.
He is sman. he the last place Bill Weld wants to be
No, actually, It was much worse
than that. When Senate Foreign
is WI)y, he IS in the coming election cycle. He has
Relations chairman Jesse Helms·first
nimble, he is presidential ambitio115 and he wants
heard that Weld was being consid'telegenic and he to position himself as the leader of
ered for the post, the Nonh Carohnis refreshingly the Republican Pany's mainstream
- ;art ·sent word 10 reporters that the
impeninent. No mode•ates against the primitives,
Massachuseus governor mfght have
one can recall flakes and extremist~ who seem to
a beuer chance of visnmg Ciudad de
an ambassadori- dominate the headlines.
Spear
Mexico on a tourist visa.
The fanatics, blind to anything
al nominee who
Weld might be a Republican and had the cheek to call a press confer- but ideology, have risen to Weld's
a former federal prosecutor, Helms ence and challenge the chairman of bait like crabs to chicken entrails.
said, but he is pro-choice, he sup· the Sen~te committee that has to Heh, heh, they smcker, he 'II never
pons gay nghts and he IS soft on approve him . Weld d1d it -- wllh get past us. Rep. Gerald B.H.
drugs. Heck, he even favors the gusto.
Solomon. R-N.Y., one of the party's
medicinal use of marijuana and
"Let me be clear about one more colorful loons, dispatched a
other such foolishness. We can't thing," Weld said. " Senator Helms' letter to Helms urgmg him to "stick
ab1de that son of fellow as our man oppositiOn has nothing whatsoever to your guns." The Weld fight.
in Mexico. The senator announced to do with drug policy. It has every- Solomon told House Majority
his opposition on Fox Television. "l thing to do with the future or the Leader Dick Army iri another feller.
don't thmk (Weld) is of ambassador Republican Party. In plain language, is "an imponant watermark for our
quality," Helms drawled. "He is a I am not Senator Helms' kind of pany."
lillie loose with his hps sometimes Republican. I do not pass his litmus . My guess is that Bill Weld is
and that sort of thing."
chuckling up his sleeve. What better
test on social policy."
Ho. ho, the insiders chortled. OJ'
Then Weld resigned his gover- adversary could he ask for than the
· Jess has got the stove hot and the norship and flew to Washington to imperious, stubborn, sometimes
pan a-sizzling. Bill Weld is fried take up the nommat1on baule per- dense Jesse Helms? He is the foreign
affairs authority who once introscrapple, baby.
sonally.
Well, the insiders snickered, if he duced Pakistani prime minister
Problem is ,- Jesse can't .make a
poor man's pate out of Weld if Jesse
can 'I catch h1m, and the Boston

~...-,•~·"
'

I

"
"'1&gt;;31!'~.

~

"~·""'..
• '".:;.,-_

Janeth Melvina Pallen Beal, 71, of.Pl •oy, died'on Thursday, Aug. 21,
1997 at Overbrook Center in Middl1 1M, 1'811owing an extended illness.
She was born on Feb. 18, 1926 ia ~.Mont., daughter of the late
Benjamin and Georgianna Headley. Sbi!WII a retired employee of Ohio University, an active member of the CarletOR Cburch, and a member of the Kingsbury Missionary Society.
She is survived by her husband, Wayne D. Beal; four daughters and sonsin-law: Yvonne and Roger Young of Pwneroy, Sandra and Steve Bailey of
Albany, Linda and Russell Well of Cbester, and Karla and David Fox of
Pomeroy; two sisters, Shirley Stuver of Broadus, and Helen Richardson of
Fruitdale, S.D.; five brothers, Benjamin Patten of Oracle, Ariz .• John Patten
of Belle Fourche, S.D .. Charles Pallen of Broadus, Whitney Pallen of Longmont, Colo., and Irvine Patton of Spearfish, S.D.; a foster daughter, Denise
Hendricks Davis of Athens; allfl nine pandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
She was also preceded in death by iler sisters, Georgia, Belle and Beatrice; a brother, Wallace, and an infant lister.
Services will be I p.m. Saturday ill the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
with the Rev. Jeff Smith officiating. Blllial will follow in the Carleton Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home on Friday {rom 7-9 p.m
Memorial contributions may be mllde to the Carleton Church.

Fair weather to prevail
throughout the weekend

just killed 16 people at a crowded
Jerusalem marketplace.
In her speech to the National
Press Club last week, Albright said
that no one expected "100 percent
success" in stopping terrorists, but
that the United States expected
Arafat's government to seize arms
caches, arrest and jail ihose engaging in terrorist planning and do
"everythmg possible to create a
moral atmosphere m which advocacy of violence and terror withers
9.way."
"On this issue, there can be no
winks, no double standards, no double mcanmgs with respect to the
imprisonment of terrorists .. no
revolving doors," she said, refcrrmg
to Ararat's hahit of releasing arrested plotters of terrorism .
Albright made clear that she also
expected Nctanyahu's government
to refrain from "unhelpful unilateral
acts" like land seizures that encour·
age Palcstmian rage, but declared
that "there is no moral equivalency
between suicide bombers and bulldozers."
The balance· of U.S. pressure "
bemg placed squarely on Arafat
right now, as it should be. But if
Arafat plays his cards right, he could
leverage action on his paq into pressure on Israel.
(Morton Kondracke is execu·
tive editor of Roll Call, the newspaper of Capllol Hill.)

Bob Evans Farms reports
19°/o earnings per share rise

Patrol issues ·
bus stop warning

Pomeroy Mayor's Court
Wellston, squealing tires, $83; M1ke
Mulford, Pomeroy, fmlure to comply,
$1,000; Steve R. Hood, Middlepon,
public intoxication, costs only;
Thomas E. Sayre, Pomeroy, trespassing, costs only; Timothy Herdman, Pomeroy, public intoxication.
$133; Paul Price. Pomeroy, assault,
$233, disorderly conduct, $83;
Michael Jackson, Rae me, disorderly.
$83, public intoxication, $133; Harry Ours, Columbus, speed, $65.

The following cases were resolved
recently in the Pomeroy Court of
Mayor Frank Vaughan.
Fined were: Harley E. Hoschar,
Pomeroy, driving under the influence,
$395; Sarah Hysell, Racine, assault,
$233; CltriStopher P. Haye, Rutland,
speed, $83; Larry Hoffman, Syracuse, . speed, $64, Eric T. Orender,
· -~

Weld flourishes in battle with Helms
By Joseph Spear

'

So I will ride out the
acknowledgment of good
knowing that MLAA will
That leaves me with my own
choice, S-112. SooJICr or later, I
once again be anti-MLAA, that is,
counter-cyclical optimist. Do
follow me?
That leaves out only one thoougltt,
which supersedes even ant:i-JI,IU~.
The measurable aspects of
human condition are indeed
than ever before. We live Ion1ger
are healthier. All that IS very Iffit)()r·
tant. But we don't fly to the moon
gossamer win,gs. Personally, life
still too tragic. And most people
at least a little bit nuts. That comes
with the territory. Even countercyclical optimists ought not maintain otherwise.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fel·
low at the American Enterprise
Institute, is the author of "Values
Matter Most"

to press PLO now, Israel later

.

..-.
..
-...
....

There is a fifth choice: Murphy's
Law Amended Again (MLAA). This
folk statute holds that even though
ML is overriddCn by MbA, there
will be people with vested interests
who make the case that there are
hidden demons out there. In good
times like these it takes a while for
such goblin-mongers to .sl!ri'ace, but,
trust me, they will arrive. (Special
Interests Fight · The Perception of
Progress.)
(Think Teamsters. They argued
that part-time workers at UPS, most
of them pan-time by choice and
about half of them college students,
making $11 an hour with a full complement of benefits, were proof that
"working people" were cruelly
short-changed. And who are the
working people in Teamster-talk?
Are they the I0 percent of the private labor force in unions, sweating
profusely while the rest of us sip
claret in our smoking jackets and
chp coupons?)

"""'

"...

,

'..

Janeth Melvina Beal

•
IToledo I 7f1' I '

-

,,

.

• . ·/·

Benazir Bhutto on the floor of the
Senate as the "distinguished pnme
minister of India." He once alluded
to Nonh Korea's Kim Jong II (as in
"ill") as "Kim Jong Two." His staff
wrote it out for him -- Kim long Ill · and he began refcmng to "Kim
Jong Third."
I once wrote a satirical piece
based on documents markeil EYES
ONLY/EAT, BURN OR FLUSH IF
CAUGHT WITH THIS, which quoted Jesse Helms as telling a Chmcse
diplomat that [)eng Xiaoping's name
sounded like a cow pattie. My edi·
tors and lawyers talked me into
adding a disclaimer on the grounds
that the story sounded too credible to
be perceived as caricature.
I think It IS more or less Irrelevant
whether William Weld is formally
approved as the U.S. ambassador to
Mexico, and my guess is he feels the
same way. At bottom, this is a brawl
between Old School Republicanism
and New School Republicanism.
Blessed with the perfect foil,
Weld has already won.
Joseph Spear is a syndl&lt;ated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Assoc:latlon.

The Daily Sentinel
(VSPS2U·960)

Published every Jflcrnoon, Monday drrouHh
Frrday, Ill Court St, Pomeroy. Ohro, by the
Ohro Valley Publish1111 Comp11nytGannt11 Co.,
Pomeroy, Oh•o 4S769, Ph 992-2_1.Sfl Se:cood
cia» posrage j"ld al Pomeroy, Ohro.

Stocks
Am Ele Power .........................43
Akzo ......................................81 ~
AmrTech ...............................65'.1
Ashland 011 .................,.........51\
AT&amp;T .....................................40Y,
Bank OM ..............................58\

Mcmbm The Anociated Press, and the: Ohio
Newspaper 1\noctation.

POSTMA!tTIR: Send addren corrce1ions to
The Daily Sl!ntmd , Ill Court St., Pomeroy,

Bob Evans ............................ 17'!.
Borg·Wamer ...........:.............53'.1
Champion ............................. 18~.
Charm Shpa ............................ S'.I.
City Holding ........,................. 39~
Federal Mogul .....................36"iw
Gannett ...............................1oo\

OhiO 45769.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
IIJ Carrttr or Motor ltotllc
One Week. ...... . .. . .......................... Sl.Ull
One Morllh ... ..................................... $1'.70
One Yell' ................................. ....... $104.00

SINGLE COPY PRICE

Goodyear ............................ ~.62',;
Kmart ............
~.13"Jr

Dilly ......... , •... . _ .. .... .................. ~5 CcniL

u

Svbsaibcrs no1 dHrnnJIO pay the carrier may
remrt rn adv1nce di~' to The Daily Scntuacl
on •lhru. aia or 12 month bUit. Cftdit will be

Ltd ......................................... 22~
Oak Hill Flnl .......................... 20~
ova·.......................................3&amp;'h

jliven cm.er each week.
No aubscription by mall permilltd In ue11
where hOlM earner serv1ce d available.

Publi1hcr rtKrves the r~Jht to adjust ra1u durin&amp; the subsc:nptton penod Subscnplion me
chiiiJt!' m1y be implemented by changinathe
duration of the wbK:rlplion.

MAILSUBSCRimONS
Inside Melp Cotllly
13 W.elo ............................ ................ 127.30
26 Weeb ... ,. . ..................................... $jil.Kl
l2
b ...........................................SIM l6

w..

Rllee: O.ulde Melp c....,

13 Wteb ......................... ................ SZ'/.ZS.
2JI W..b ............................................... S$6.611
l2Wteb .................................... .....1109.12

...................

Lande End .............................271.

1

OM Valley ......;.......r .............43'1.
Peoplea .................................37'h
Prem Flnl ...............................2o\
Rockwall :..............................61 ~
RD-Shell ...............................53'1.
Shoney's .................................5\
Star Bank ..............................45~
Wendv's ................................23\
Worthlngton ......................... ,39\

-·-·-

Stock report• are the 10:30
a.m. quot• provided by Adwat
of Gallipolis.

Meigs ·announcements

a temporary food service license of
places where "meals or lunches or
portions of meals or lunches are prepared or served for a consideration
for a single event, in one location of
not. longer than five consecutive
days, regardless of whether the food
is consumed on or off the premises."
The requirement does not apply to
the sale of prepackaged Items.
Licenses are Issued through the
Units of the Meigs County Emer- J'!'eigs County Health Depanment
gency Medical Service recorded six
calls for assistance Wed.1esday. Units JEWELL to meet
responding included:
JEWELL home school support
CENTRAL DISPATCH
group will meet Sept. 4 at 7 p.m at the
8:41 a.m., Old S·.ate Route 7, home of Brian and K1m Hupp,
Pomeroy, Christina Ccoper, treated at Pomeroy. Plans w1ll be made for
the scene, Pomeroy \ FD assisted; .school year activities. Those inter10:26 a.m., OverJrook Nursing ested may contact the Hupps at 992Center, Middlepon, l'reda Maynard. 0045.
Pleasant Valley Hos~ital;
2:40p.m., Dailey ~oad, Portland, Social to be held
- Mar-y Bradford, Vet&lt;mns Memorial
The Columbia Township VolunHospital, Racine squ.1d assisted.
teer Fire Depanment Auxiliary will
POMER..JY
serve homemade ice cream, pie,
10.53 a.m., OBNC, Ada Starcher, sandwiches, and beverages at the firePVH.
' •
house on State Route 143 near &lt;:;arREEDSVILLE
penter, Aug. 31, 4 to 8 p.m.
I0:22 p.m., SR 681, Jessica Barber, treated at the scene.
RUTLAND
II :25 p.m .. Rutland Fire Station,
Holzer Medi&lt;al Center
Bonita Walker, Holzer Medical CenDischarges Aug. 20 - Michael
ter, Central Dispatch squad assiSted. Johnson, Evan Moore, Stephanie
Beaver, Jennifer Hannon, Mrs. Gregory Watts and son, Mrs. Dwayne
The following couples were Houck and daughter, Joshua Scott,
issued marriage licenses recently in Jennifer Hager, Rick Colburn, Elber·
the Meigs County Probate Court of ta Cleland, Travis Ratliff.
Births- Mr. and Mrs. William ;
Judge Robert Buck:
Griffith,
daughter, Jackson; Mr. and i
B311)' Joe Arnold, 22, and Kim·
tofts.
Mickey
Grttham, son, Gallipo- ;
berly Ann Stout, 28, both of Larwill,
'lia;
Mr.
and
Mrs. Robert Starcher,
ln!l.; Richard Eugene Gibbs, 27, and
daughter,
Jackson.
Charlotte Lynri Conley, 44, both of
(Publlsbed with permission)
1
Middlepon.
License required
Individuals and organizations
planmng to sell food at fall festivals
and events are reminded to apply for
a license through the Meigs County
Health Department. •
The OhiO Revised Code requires

I Need A
Massage!

Meigs EMS runs

Maeeage Therapy Provides Rell~
to People from All Walke of Life.
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Wellness
"Your Next Step To A H~althlor . llfol"'

L _____:5~4~0~W~.~U~n~io~n~:!..A~th!:en~S~(~at~Th~e~~~~~-J

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Thursday, August 21, 1997

71ft

Sports
(146), Wellston (149), Belpre ( 172),

Vinton County (191) ·and NelsOtwille-York (203).
Also for Meigs, Dave Anderson
carded an even par 34. Behind them
were Steve McCullough (36), Mick
Barr (37), Zach Meadows (39).and
Sean O'Brien (41).
In the Hocking Division, Waterford won with a 142, slipping past
Trimble with a 143. Eastern and Federal Hocking had 185s, with Eastern

winning third place on the tie breaker. Southern had a 189, and Miller
had a 209.
For Eastern, Matt King had a 37,
while Eric. Smith and Josh Will had
48s. Behind them were Chad Nelson
(52), Aaron Will (54) and Justin
Brewer (58).
. For Southern, Troy Hoback had a
44. Behind him were Mitchell Walker (45), Benji Manuel (49), Kyle
Norris (5 I), Billy Young (52) and
Scott Brinager (54).

Sampras' opponents in U.S. Open's
first two rounds "remain unknown
NEW YORK (AP)- Pete SamS'ome of the best first--round then could play her former doubles
pras still doesn't have any idea who
matches include Todd Martin against panner, Helena Sulmva.
he will play in the first two rounds Jim-Courier, Thomas Muster against
No. 2 Monica Seles opens against
of the U.S. Open.
'
Tim Henman and Pat Rafter against Kristie Boogen of the Netherlands.
'The tournament draw was
Jennifer Capriati, who has been
Andrei Medvedev.
'an;,.,unced Wednesday, and there are
"The men's draw is very tough," ·struggling to kick-sllll1 her career
two rounds of uncertainty faeing the Gullikson said. "There are some again, didn't catch a break this time.
top-seeded player. The three lines dangerous floaters around, but I She drew No. 7 Conchita Manine1
,.
below Pete Sampras' name on the think at the end ... we 're going to see in the first round.
draw sheet were blank except for the Sampras probably play Michael
designation, "Q-Q-Q."
Chang in a rematch of last year's Meigs to host
· That means Sampras, who is final ."
going for his third straight and fifth
Chang, seeded No. 2, opens Southern
overall U.S. Open title, will play an against Patrik Fredriksson· of Sweundetermined qualifier in the first den, then is likely to play a more In preview Friday
round, with the winn.er meeting the dangerous Swede, Mikael Tillstrom.
The Meigs Marauders will host
survivor of a first-round match
Unseeded Cedric Pioline of
the
Southern Tornadoes in a football
between two other qualifiers.
France, a Wimbledon finalist this
preview
Friday at Bob Robe.U Field
Sampras isn't likely to have a year and U.S. Open finalist in 1993,
in
Pomeroy
at7:30 p.m.- not6:30
tough match until.the quarterfinals, could face Chang in the fourth
p.m. as orginally reponed.
.
where he's seeded to play the round.
The
reserve
teams
will
play
in
a
Spaniard he beat easily in the AusBoris Becke.r, the 1989 champion
tralian Open this year, No. 8 Carlos who was expected to make this his two-quaner scrimmage, followed by
Maya.
last Grand Slam ·event before retir- a two-quarter scrimmage by the var"The real question in the U.S. ing from the majo,rs, withdrew sity.
Admission will be $2 for adults
Open is, 'Who can beat Pete Sam- . because of the death this week of his
pr.S?' " Tom Gullikson, the U.S. manager and close friend, Axel Mey- · and $1 for students.
Davis Cup captain, said.
er-Woelden, of liver cancer.
"I talked to hill) last night, and he
The 29-)!"ar-old Becker, who was Meigs football
. says he loves the new stadium and seeded No. 13, has not competed for
center coun. It's a good speed for more than a month because of a knee work session
him," said Gullikson, the twin broth- injury. ·
set for tonight
er of Sampras' late coach, Tim.
lnthewomen'sdraw,No. I Mar"Pete' is going.to have a comfortable tina Hingis of Switzerland opens
A work session will be held today
stan." ·
against American Tami Jones. Hingis at Bob Roberts Field in Pomeroy.
'Those inlerested in working are
asked to be at the football field at 6
p.m. and 10 bring wrenches and
socket sets.

By JOE KAY
The Rockies lead the National
CINCINNATI (AP) - The best League in homers and defense. Tiley
pan about Larry Walker's play was got two more homers Wednesdaythat he didn' t have to cringe at the a solo shot by Yinny Castilla and a
replay.
two-run homer from Ellis Burks Until now, the Colorado Rockies' and Walker's sensational play as
outfielder has been most closely their highlights.
linked defensively to one embarThe Reds are last in the league in
rassing play. He caught a foul fly in hitting. They managed only three hits
a 1994 game for Montreal, mistak- in seven innings off Frank Castillo
enly thought it was the third out and · (10-10), including Eduardo Perez's
handed it to a nine-year-old boy solo homer in the seventh. Nunnalwhile Jose Offerman tagged up.
.ly had a two-run triple in the eighth,
On Wednesday, he saved a game but Jetry Dipoto got the final three
with his glove work and threw the . outs for his ninth save in 12 chances.
ball to the right spot, too. He
"When I carne here I knew they
stretched over the right field wall to scored a lot &lt;if runs, but I didn't
take a homer away from Cincinnati, know they play pretty good defense,
then threw to first for a double play too," said Castillo, who is 4-1 since
that set up a 5-3 victory over the coming to the Rockies in a July 15
Reds.
'
trade with the Chicago Cubs. "!bat's
Walker timed Jon Nunnally's fly a lift for any pitcher when they make
ball, pulled it back from home-run that kind of play."
territory and doubled Brook Fordyce
The play snatched away the Reds'
at first to end the sixth inning and best chance to tie and ultimately
preserve the Rockies' two-run lead.
forced a split in their two-game
"It would have been great if I series.
would have caught it and then giv"He timed it well and made a
en the ball to a kid," Walker joked. great catch," Nunnally said. "When
The Reds would have appreciat- he first staned back, I thought he was
ed it. Walker's catch-and-throw took going to catch the ball inside (the
away ·their best chance of catching wall). Tile next thing I knew, he took
up to the Rockies on a day when another step and I though~ 'That's
both teams played to their resumes. going out.'

TRI.SE .Z NEW 96 MODEl&amp; .MUST BE SOUJf

WAS
$27,797

NOW!

23,985

5

1996 CHEVY CAMARO X·28 CONVERTIBLE
WAS
NOW!

$29,685

5

27,017

NEW 1996 BUICK ROADMASTER

By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
The really good news for the
Seanle Mariners came after their 10 win over the Clevelan.d Indians.
Randy Johnson, it seems, is all right.
Johnson was forced to leave
Wednesday night's game in the seventh inning because of a bruised
middle finger on his left hand. He reaggravated an injury that he sustained Aug. 3 when he caught a ball
with his bare hand.
"It's a litlle sore and a lillie
swollen. But hopefully it'll get tak·
en care of in the next five days,"
Johnson said.
.- Johnson ( 17-4) allowed two hits
and struck out eight. His win, coupled with Anaheim's 7-3 and 8-5
doubleheader loss to New York,
gave the Mariners a I 1/2-game lead
.over the Angels in the AL West.
"We think he's going to be QK,"
Mariners manager Lou Piniella said.
"We don't anticipate him missing a
start."

1998 CHEVY 1/2 TON
4 cyl, 5 sp, WM?. $11,682

4x4, V6, 5 sp, tiR, cruise, air, cass,red

NOWI$9,869

5)9,979

1997 CHEVY S-10 4X4

1997 GEO TRACKER CONV.

1997 BUICK REGAL

1998 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME

Loaded, WAS $22,302

V6, loaded, WAS $19,105

. 8

1998 CHEVY MALIBU

5

18,206

1997 BUICK LESABRE

~ad~m

Iw11

Baltimon~

.

!i.l!

. . 79 44

.642

New York .............. 7:'i 50

.600

~

Bo5ton ................. M 6J

.:'i04
.41«1
.464

17
20
22

Toronto ........ ;........ bO b:'i
Iktroir. .. , ......... ·. 5R fi7

4
4'··
J:i
14

w~~;trm

DhWoa
.'i'i6
Anaheim
........69 ~~~ · .54~
Tu:~~ ...
... 60 67 472
OaklaiHI .............. so 77 .J94
. ... 70 ~6

Scaulr ... .

2 Dr, criJiae, VB, auto, air, spoiler, cass, keyless entry, WAS $$21 ,654

NOWI """!"

Dotted Line Box

sao

I
I

weekday

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theee sizes and prices. Ads ·must be paid In
advance by mall or delivered to:
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Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
For additional ad sizes and prices, please call

992-2156

1 Col. x 21nDotted Line Box ·

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10':
20' ,

Wednesday's scores ·

1SII8 CORSICA Air, stereo, nice ......................................................................................... :.... .
1SII8 OLOSACHIEVA V6, auto, air, PW, stereo, ~tt. cruise .......... ...................................... ..
11117 BUICK LESABRE V6, auto, air, tilt, cruise ........... .' ....................................................... ..
19118 PONTIAC GRAND AM air, PS, PB, PW. tilt, cruise ......................................................
1,800
1SII8 OLDS DELTA 81 V6, all power, auto, air, stereo .............. :.............................................. $15,800
19960LOS CUTLASS SUPREME, auto, !itt, cruise, stereo ................................................... $12,990
1VII5 CHEVY CAPRICE CLASSIC VB, auto, all power, tltt, cruise ....... :............................... ,.. $13,990
19118 BUicK RECAL, Auto, titt, cruise, s1ereo ......................................................................... $12,500
1SII8 GEO METRO 4 Cyl, auto, air, stereo, .... ...................................................... .-.................... $8,800
1SII8 PONl1AC BONNEVILLE V6, PS, PB, air, spoiler,tiR, cruise ................. :........................ $15,800
1SII8 BUICK SKYLARK, air, PW, stereo, cruise: ..................................................................... $11 ,200
1SII8 CHEVY CAVAUER. auto, PS, PB, air, spoiler, tilt, cruise .. .'...... .......... :........................... $10,500
1SII8 OLDS CIERA, auro, air, PB, cruise ..................................... ... ...... ,............... ................... $11,900
1996 BUICK PARK AVENUE, cruise, ·auto, PW .....................................................................$22,900
t9114 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME 4 Door, tilt, cruise, IW./FM cass, 34,000 mi. Lt. Blue ....... $11,400
19115 FORD MUSTANG Auto, air, PW, PL, !itt, .cruise ............................................................. $13,500
1990.GRAND PRIX Air, V6, auto .. .... .................... ,................................................................ .....$5,600
11193 CADILlAC SEDAN SEVILLE VB, leather, all power, low miles .... ......... ........ ,............... $14,900
19114 GEO TRACKER 4X4,Conv, air, 4 cyl, 3B,OOO miles, green, WAS $9,600......................... $8,200
1996 DODGE RAM D150, VB, auto, air, tilt, cruise, tB,OOO mi. like new cond, white .............. $17 ,800
19115 CHEV 1/2 TON 4 W, V6, 5 SP, AIR, 35,000 Mi, SWB, red, WAS $16,999 ........ ......... ..... $15,600
19114 CHEVY 5-10 EXT CAB, 4 cyl, auto, air 54,000 mil Purple WAS $12,995 ...................... $11,200
19114 MAZDAB4000, 4 WD, 6 cyl, 5 spd, air; white, like new, 32,000 ml WAS $12,995 ......... $11,800
19115 CHEVY 112 EXT CAB, VB, 5 spd, air, white, like new, 32,000 miles, WAS $16,999 ...... $15,600
19115 FORD RANGER, 4 cyl, 5 spd, air, ext cab, 53,000 mil, green WAS $t0,999 ................... $9,800 .
19115 TOYOTA TOCOMA; 4 WD, 4 cyl, 5 spd, air, 36,000 mimi. blue WAS $t5,995 ..............$14,800
19114 GMC SIERRA SWB VB, auto, air, AM/FM, cass, red, sport side, 44,000 mi ................... $14,800
1998 CHEVY 8-10SWB, 4 cyl, auto, air, AM/FM cass, green, 22,000 ml WM?. $ t_t ,995 ......... $10,400
111116CHEVY 5-10 EXT CAB LS, 4 cyl, 5 spd, air, AM/FM black Only B,900 mi ..................... $12,400
19114 5-10 BLAZER TAttOE, 4 dr, 4.3 VB, auto, arf, PW, PL. tilt, cruise, 29,000 mi ............... $17,800
111116 CHEVY ASTRO 8 Pass, loaded, 30,000mll WAS $16,999 ........................................... $14,600
. 111116 8-10 BLAZER, LS loaded, '39,000 mi. alum wheels, air, auto, 4 Dr, Dk cherry .............. $1
19114 GOE TRACKER-.Conv., auto, air, TS, TB, 44,000 miles ................................................. ~;1ss0
11193 OLDS SIERRA VB. Auto, air, cass, one owner, low miles .................................................. .!~·~
18118 CHEVY C.10 PU SILVERADO, VB, auto, air, cass, PW, PL, ......................... ,..................
1:
:~tl::o 4 DR 5
REd .............. ...............
~in;

,.,,,IftAI

O.icago White Sm; 12, Toronto 6

CLEVELAND (J uden 11-6) at Oilk ·
l311d (Prieto 6-7), JO: :l~ p.m.

Milwa\ltcet., Texas 2
Seatde I. ClEVELANDO

NL standings

Balli more 4, KDnSU City 2

STEALS SECOND - The Cincinnati Reds'
Pokey Reese goes tO his belly to Steal second
baae as Colorado second sacker Neifi Perez lossaid. "We came alive late in the

game, but we were a little too far
.behind."
Notes: The Rockies release d
pitcher Bill Swift to open a rosier

Minrtt=501a II. De1roi1 I
DH : Boston 7, Oakland :'i : BO!iron :'i.
Oitkland4&lt;1Jl
DH : N.Y. Yankees1, Anaheim l; N.Y.
Yankees 8, Anaheim 'i

Toronto (Hem!len n -i) ;n Chicap:.IJ
Whitt! So~~; (Drabek r,l-H), 2 : 0~ p.m.
B1mon (Avery 6-J) a.r Oakland (Lornailll.! l·O).l'l!i p.m.
Detroit (Thompson 11 -9) :11 Milwa.ukct (E.ldred 11 -12). 8:0!i p.m.
Bnllimore (Krivda 1-0) m Kan1:15 'City
(AJ'f'ier 7-10), 8:0!i p.m.
N.Y. Yankee5 (Peniue 14-7) ar Amt·
hcim (Watson 10-7). IO:O!i p.m..
·
CLEVELAND !Colon 2-~) at Seaulc
(Moycr 12·4), 10:0:'1 p.m.

Friday's games
Mim~ soru CTewksbur~ 4-9} at Bnlli nkJre !Erickson 14-~). 7:3. p.m.
O~:troil (Mc.&gt;ehler 7-9) at Milwauk1.'l.!
(Woocbrd J- 11. 8:0:'i J'.m.
Tor o r~lo (Clemens 19-·U at Kans:u
City (Rosado H-9). R :O~ p.m
.
Chicago White So" (Nav.arro IJ-11) nt
Tu:u (Oli~&lt;er 9-10). IU~ p.m
Boston {Snbcrhugcn 0.0) at Analletm
(Sprmger 8-6 ). 10 0~ p m
'
NY Yankees (Rox.:n ~-4) nl Sc=nlllc
(FOJsero 12-1). IO : Q~ p.m.

Atlunlll 3. Hou51on I

San Francisco at Phil;al!!lphia, ppd ..
win

Today's games

Di•illioo

.!!: L .f&lt;L

Ct'ntr•l Di•isktn
CU:::VELAND .......bS :'i8 S2!1
Milwnukee ......... .. b2 li .3 4%
Chicago ................. bl b4 .492
Kans111 Cil)' ... .... . :'i 2 71 4D
Minnesotll ........ :.....:'\2 73 . .41b

-·-·-------------------------2 Columns x 3 Inches

times in his career and gotten a sin-

gle and two homers.
Dante Bichette had an RBI single
in the sixth, and Burks hit his 200th
career homer in the seventh for a 41 lead that was 'never seriously
threatened.
"Castillo was great, especially
early,·: Reds manager Jack ~cKeon

·doubleheader sweep at Anaheim ..
Edgar Martinez hit his 22nd jaric and Timlin.
In
other
AL
games,
Boston
swept
lrabu, told earlier this season by
homer, 'connecting in the fourt~
manager Joe Torre to tone down his
inning off Charles Nagy ( 12-9) for · a doubleheader from Oakland by 75 and 5-4 in 13 innings, Minnesota temper, kicked hard at the rubber in
the only run at the Kingdome. ·
Johnson, who leads the majors defeated Oetroit ll-1 , Chicago the seventh inning after being called
with 264 strikeouts, gave up a dou- topped Toronto 12-6, Baltimore beat for his second balk. Second · base
ble by Matt Williams in the fiflh and Kansas City 4-2 and Milwaukee umpire John Hirschbeck yelled at
Irabu, prompting Torre to come out
an infield single by Tony Fernandez downed Te•as 6-2.
Twins 11, Tigers l
onto the field.
'
to start the seventh.
In the fourth . Irabu (4-2) fumbled
Mike Timlin, Norm Charlton and . Minnesota stopped its I0-game
Heathcliff Slocumb combined for losing streak as Brad Radke beat a bunt single by Dave Hollins and
tossed his glove a~lhe ball as it rolled
Detroit at Tiger Stadium .
three innings of hitless relief.
Radke (17·7) allowed three hits in
into the dugout.
Indians manager Mike Hargrove
eight innings. He is the top winner
Derek Jeter homered twice and
said Johnson was tough, as always.
"Early in the game, I thought he for the Twins since 1991, when Scott drove in four runs in the second
struggled," Hargrove said. "It didn't EriclcSon won 20 and Jaek Morris I8. game. New York won the opener as
Denny Hocking, Terry Steinbach ·rookie Jorge Posada hit ·a three-run
look like he had his velocity. But
even Randy Johnson struggling is and Man Lawton homered for the homer.
The Yankees have won nine of
Twins.
bener than most."
12. TheAng~ls have lost five ofsi•.
Scon Sanders (4-11) fell1o 1-5
"I'm glad we got a hit off him,"
White Sox 12, Blue Jays 6
with a 6.95 ERA in seven starts since
he said.
Albert Belle homered, doubled
During the game, the Mariners the Tigers acquired him from Seat·
twice and drove in five runs as
made a trade to get outfielder Rober- tie on July 18.
Chicago beat Toronto at Comiskey
- Yankees(, Angels 3
to Kelly from Minnesota for a playPark.
Yankees ~. Angels 5
er to he named. Kelly is expected to
Belle matched his season high for.
Hideki lrabu threw his besl game
play left field, the spol Jose Cruz Jr.
in a while- plus. his glove and a RBis, going 3-for-3 with his 24th ·
held before he was traded 10 Toronto on July 31 for relievers Paul. Spol- !'antrum - as New York finished a

,t

AL standings

!fOWI$17,337

ssoweekday

He did, and then . doubled up
Fordyce, wbo could not tell initially
that Walker had snared !he ball. That .
was understandable - not even
Walker knew he had it.
"I didn ' t feel it in my glove,"
Walker said. "It hit in the webbing.
I didn't feel it until! actually saw it."
It was the only good moment of
the series for Walker, who went 0for-8 in the two games to drop his
average to .373 .
"It was good to do that because I
was (awful) during the series," the
two-time:Pbld Glove outfielder said.
"To me it's like hitting a two-run
homer - maybe better because it
would have tied the game."
The Reds never got that close
after Castilla homered in the second
inning offGabe White (1-1). Castilla has faced the left-bander three

Scoreboard

V6, PW, PL. auto, air, cruise, WAS $1B,055

. 1 COLX31N
MULTI LINE BOX

"

es the baseball in the first inning of Wednesday's
National League game in Cincinnati, where the
Rockies won 5-3. (AP)

spot for Pedro ASiado, who was
acquired in a trade with Los Angeles on Monday. Astacio will start Saturday in Houston....,Burks is 10-for·
22 in his last six ' games.- ... Reds

,.

Baseball

2 Columns x 5. inchesSolid Line Box

"Tilen lie jumped and I thought,
'Oh, no, he's not going to catch !hat"

shortstop Barry Larkin is scheduled
to have surgery on his left heel on c_.
Sept. 3. Larkin has bc~n bothered -·
since spring training by an inllamed ~·
bursa -sac and pain in the Achilles' •.
tendon.
.:

Mariners blank Indians 1~0; ChiSox beat Blue Jays 12-6

NO,
WIS2QI 895
.

Fair "Thank You" Ads

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Walker's glove work _helps
Rockies ·beat Cincinnati 5·3

Meigs golf team _breaks and ties .
marks while hosting TVC match
One team record was broken and
one individual record was tied in a
TVC golf match held Tuesday at the
Meigs County Golf Course.
The Meigs Marauders hroke the
.learn score record for the Meigs
County Golf Course with a 139. Clay
Crow tied the Meigs individual scoring record with a two under par 32.
Meigs won the Ohio Division
with its record performance. Behind
the Marauders were Alexander

Pomeroy ~-"'lddleport, Ohio

Lo.~

Today'.s games

Eas'ttm Division
49
:'i2
:'i7

&amp;1.

!i.l!

5R4
.540

4
9\

63

.492

77

. ~69

.II' L

Tum

Atlant:l
........ 7!1
Floritlu .
.. .... 7.\
New York ,. .......... 67
Montn: ill. ............ 61
· Philudelphi:t ........ :4:'i

.614

I S'~
~\

C~ntnal

Divlsion
60 .:'i24
6.3 . ~00
St. Louis ............... .5K 67 . ~
CINCINNATI ........ :'i .~ 69 .44J
Chicn$:0 ..... ............. 50 77 ..l94
Huu ~t u n

. .. 66
Piusburjth ........... 6.\

Wtslrrn Dhlsion '
SanFrancism . . "I I ~6 .'iS9
Los Angtles .......... b!l ~7 ..~oM

J
7\
10

16'~

.4!14

1
9'·

.476

10'·

Wednesday's scores
Colnr.u.ltJ 'i. CINCINNATI ;\
Pilllburgh 7, San Diego J
Sr. Louis 6. Mon1rcal J
Florida 6, C:hica!!o CubS 'i

51. Louis (Osborne 2·S) at Montn!:al
(JohnsonO-I).I : l~p . m

Angdc~

DH: Los
Pllfk. 12-6)

:u N.Y.

M : ()~

.

•

""i"'ri"

lncl.ucled. All

RelmnTo
DNI.er
'I

'

. ..'

.

Friday's gaines

burgh tCookc M-12 ), "IJ~ p.m
Lm Angtlt:s IN omu I 1- 10) at

Philudelphin (Sc.:hillin~ l.l-101. 7 : .)~ Jl.m
San Dieilo IHam1l11m 10·4) at N.Y.
Mets (Harnisch ~I), 7:40p.m.

CINCINNATI CRcmlingcr 6- 4) mAt·
lnnl:l (Madik111. 16-J). 7:40p.m.

Colorado &lt;TI•om)on :'i -7 ) al Huust un
tKilc= 16-JJ. !I:O:'i p m

· $3.69
.,... .$3.69 .
•$3.89
'

-",•

'

Jl.m.

Mofllrcill (Hcrn;an~on K·~) ul Chicag11
Cubs (Tmch~el :'i-1 0). .\'20 p m
S1. Louis (Murris H-!11 at F lnrit.l ;~
tSau~""~ ;i.4), 7:0~ p.m
S;m francisco (Rueter IJ-SI ltl Pills-

'

· ,,

(Cnndiotu -9-4 and
(Cruwf'onf 1- 1

Mt:t!i

and Rct:d 10-fi). 4:40p.m.
San Otego (Hiu:h~ock 8-71 al Pim·
bur~h (Cordova 9-fi~ 7 : )~ Jl.m.
Colorado tBnil ey 9-8) al Hout Gn
(Holt 7-1,1),

......

Color:r.t.lo ...... 1.. .... 6l M
Silll DieJ:o ............ 60 66

Angeles al N.Y. Met ~. ppd.. rain

$3~89 :~

home run . His two-run double highlighted a seven-run fourth 1rming.
Jorge Fabre gas and Ozzie Guillen
each drove in two runs for the White
Sox.
Red Sox 7, Athletics S
Red Sox 5, Athletics 4
Mo Vaughn hit a pair of two-run
doubles to key Boston's douhlc·
header sweep at Oakland.
In the opener, Vaugjm"s double
highlighted a seven-run llfth inning.
In the second ,game , Vaughn, hit a
tying double with 1wo outs in the
ninth, and the Red Sox won in the
13th on John Valentin 's RBI single .
The Red Sox (64-63) moved a
game over .500 for the lirst time
since May 4 . Boston cclievcrs

pitched a total of 14 scoreless
innings in the doubleheader.
Jose Canscco. sidelined sin&lt;.:c

Aug. I because of lower back
spasms, homered and drove in four

-.

runs for Oakland in the opener.
,,
. Orioles 4, Royals 2
., ..
Rafael Palmeiro hit two hnmc ,
runs, going 4-for-4 with four RBis in ·
Baltimore's vif.:tory.
Palmciro has 28 homers this sea· ·son, five against the Royals . He also ·.:
conne&lt;tcd Tuesday in the lirst game ~­
of a doubleheader at Kansas City.
· Jimmy Key ( 14· 7) won for lhc
lirst time since July 21 ..Randy
Myers got his 37th save, tying the ' '
team record set by Gregg Olson in · ·:
I~Q
.
-

Brewers 6, Rangers 2
...
Bryce Florie kept Te)&lt;as hitloss :. .for 5 1/3 innings and Milwaukee ... :
won for the fifth time in six games.
Florie (4-4) made his seventh start : '
ufter 134 career relief appearances in ·
the major~.
. · '··
Jcromy Burnitz and Fernando :
Vina homered for the Brcwc" and· ; ·
Jell Cirillo hit a two-run single.
·

�.

P.g. 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, August 21, 1997

Sister's attempt at reconciliation· falls
short - brother is the loser in issue
n01 very affectionate. Being a girl, I
really missed having a father who
would hug me like some of my
friends had, but l underStood that my
father was not a bugger, and I
accepted him the way be was.
I really feel bad about the way
my brother shut the door on me. He
is missing out on being part of a big,
loving family. He has lhree kids
whom I would love to know. Sad,
isn't it? I think about it often. Just
sign me - A Sister in Dayton, Ohio
.Dear Sister: Your brother is the
loser. He doesn't know what he is
missing. How sad that be is also
depriving his children of the pleasure of knowing you and their
cousins. I hope he sees this and
changes his mind. Let me know if it
happens. It would make my day.
Dear Ann UDders: I always
wondered how a pedestrian could be
hit by a car in a crosswalk. I know
now. I cannot count the number of
times I've 'seen pedestrians step
blindly into an intersection crosswalk , when the light turns to
" Walk." Do they stop to see if

Ann
Landers
u. A11f*1: r..,
,,..,_ and
1991.

S)'1Mticasc

Crca10n

Dear Ann LaHers: A while
back, you printed your annual column on Reconciliation Day and
tllllr.ed about the imponance ofkeeping in touch with £amily members
411d friends who have drifted away.
That letter impressed me so much, I
deCided to .write to my brother, who
is a preacher in a southern state, and
"reconnect." We'd had a falling out
an'd had not spoken .to one another
fqr several years.
. I wrote him a nice letter saying
we should let bygones be bygones
al)«&lt; enjoy the years we had left. He
responded at once with a letter sayins he didn't see any point in trying
to get together because I was "too
much like Dad -- bullheaded, a
know-it-all, etc., etc." Actually, Dad
\\"15 a decent, hard-working family
man. hut he was hard to please and

oncoming tnlffiC notices them? No, good job and an active soci.J Ufe. I
they do not. They just figure the dri- don't drink or do drugs, and I lead a
ver will see them and hit the brakes. fairly happy life. So what's my probThey man:h· directly into the stree~ lem? My mother lhinks it would be
assuming tlmt because they have the better if I were married, and sbe
right rif way, the cars will stop.
can't understand why I don't "find a
What they do not know is that the man. "
driver in an oncoming car just got
Mom has always harped .on this
fired, had a fight with his wife or is subject because I have had few
trying to find the lighted cigarette he boyfriends, and I've never really
just dropped. The pedestrian may taken her seriously. As I get older,
have the right of way, but being right her comments are more frequent and
isn't enough when you're laid up in increasingly hurtful. I don't want to
the hospital or, worse ye~ in the . stop talking to my mother, but how
cemetery.
can I let her know th8l her harping is
Wake up, you idiots. Your life is becoming unbearable? -- Vancouver
your responsibility, and if you value
Dear Van.: Tell your mother that
it, you will not assume that all dri- from now on, the subject of finding
vers are sober, considerate and inter- a man is strictly verboten and you
ested in keeping you alive.-- A. H. in don't want the subject brought up
Sacramento, Calif.
•
ever again. Let her know that if she·
,Dear A.H.: Thank you for all the doesn 't respect your wishes, you
reiders you may have saved today. will promptly leave the room. Then
Your message is clear: Don't assume do it.
a driver sees'you or that he is competent, sober and alen. The one who Send questions .to Ann Landers, Creisn't could cost you your life.
ators Syndicate, 5777 W, Century
Dear Ann Landers: I am a sin- Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif.
gle woman in my early 30s with a

By The Bend
Screen legend honored
.

1996 MERCURY

COUGAR XR7

VI,

IUto,

.... cond,
AM!FII CIM. tilt, cruiM,
PS, P8, PW, PDL,
......... Loeded.

mobile were: Helen Bodimer, Katie Larry Johnson, Gloria Kines, Rachel
Crist, Peggy Harris, Betty Spencer, Ashley, Beth Cremeans, Harold NorTed Hatfield, Jane Brown, June Ash- ·ton, Wendy Shrimplin, Frances
ley and James Grueser. The canteen Shrimplin, Barbara Bailey, Deborah
was served by the Trinity Church of · Grueser, Tara Grueser, Virgil WinPomeroy and volunteers assisting don. David Johnson and David King;
were Alice Globakar and Norma
Racine -- Harry Holter, Patsy
Jewell.
.
Cornell, Jeanette Radford, Jessica
Donors were, by community:
Radford, Bridget Ritchie, Evelyn
Pomeroy ·- Thomas Hart, Dennis Mugrage, Charles Mugrage, Barbara
Gilmore, Paul Marr, Mary Spencer, · Dugan and Richard Dugan;
Billy Spencer, Patricia Banon,
Rutland ·· Margaret Bishop, BeatEunice Jones, Joyce Hall, Barbara rice Wood, Kim Barrett, Melissa
Crow, Gerald Rought, Carrie Barren and 'Ralph Bales;
Kennedy. Michael Kennedy, John M.
Minersville-- Kenneth Wiggins;
Moore, Mark White, Danny White,
Syracuse-- Carolyn Charles, Dar-.
Maureen Hennessy, Barbara Smith, Ia Thomas, Leah Ord and Bobby Ord;

Long Bottom ·- Henry Bahr, Kelly Spencer and William Osborne;·
.Shade -- Charles Cook; ·
Middle~rt -- George J{arris Jr..
Vanessa Compston, Ellis Myers,
Patricia Weaver, Toni Givens, Donna
Hawley, Donna Davidson, Elaine
Ralston, Nonna Wik:ox, Jonathan
Newsome, Casey Booth, Ann Browning, Patricia Logan and Judith
Hunter;
,
Mason, W.Va. -- Brian Johnson;
Rio Grande -- Anne Bishop.
The Bloodmobile's next visit will
be0ct.l5from l-6p.m.attheSenior
Citizens Center.

Judge aims
to speed up
divorce cases

WINNERS • Scott Luc:.., edmlnlltrlltor It
- Vellr••• Memorial Hoapltlll, driWI the Mllllt
-of winners of of $25 gift certlfl!;ltn from
J(roglrl In Pomeroy IUIIIId by Doria lhle,
jldmlnlltl'ltlve eulsllnt Wlnnen werelllectICI from hundrlcls who regletertd It the ho•
pltltl'e booth at the Melga County Fal.r. They

1111y pick,up their certHI!:ete• at the counter of
the Women'• Auxiliary In the hoapltlll lobby.
The wlnnen ere Yvonne Wlleon, 557 High St,
Middleport; Tamml Lavender, POIMI'O)'; Debbie
Young, 41800 SR 7, Reedsville, and Linde Powell, 40778 SR 681, Pomeroy.

Davjs reunion held recently
1be annual Davis reunion, descendants of Orlando and Kathryn Davis,
was recently held at the Rutland Firemen's Park, Rutland.
. . A basket dinner was held at noon
(allowing the Lord's Prayer repeated by all as the blessing. Gary Holter
presided at the business meeting.
Mary Kathryn Holter, secretary/treasurer, gave a report and it was decided to have the 1998 reunion at the
same place first Sunday in August.
• Marjotie Davis in charge of the ·
gifts presented them to Clyde DaviS,
the oldest man; Mary Kathryn Holter,
the oldest woman; Cassie Davis, the
ypungest girl; Shayne Davis, the
youngest boy; Charlotte and Evcreu

Grant, the most family present; and
Gary Holter, the one that traveled the
farthest.
It was voted thai the same officers
serve for another year. Edna and
Kimberly Davis will have charge to
. buy the gifts for next year and also
conduct the games.
Attending were Janet Miller, Marjorie Davis, Danny, Kim, Oliva and
Ca5sie Davis', Holly Davis, Shawna
Davis, Jim Davis, Clyde and Alice
Davis, Rutland; Evereu and Charlotte
Grant, Michael Grant, ·Pam and
Shayne Davis. Eagle . Ridge; and
Mary Kathryn Hiolter and Gary
Holter, Bashan.

Society .scrapbqok
Winner named
The seminars are designed to help
• Winner of a coverlet at the Meigs small businesses develop concrete
County fair provided by Friends of advertising and promotion plans. The
Ill~ Meigs County Library was Opal . seminar will be ·presented by Kippy
!licbinger, Chester.
~~~r, assistant director .of the
Workshop olfered
The Small Business Development
Center of Southeast Ohio is sponsoring an advenising and promotion
workshop on Sept; I0, 2 to S p.m. at
!be Community Kitchen Conference
Room •. 94 North Columbus road,
Athens. A second workshop will be
held in Logan on Sept. II, Ito 4 p.m.
at the National City Bank.

Deadline for registration for the
seminar in Athens is Sept. 3, 5931797.
The agency is partially fund&lt;;jl by
the US Sm.JI Business Administration and the Ohio Department of
"Development and provides free individual counseling and other support
services to small business owners.

· --·---~

---

NEW YORK (AP) - A two-day
experiment to eliminate Manhattan's
longest running divorce cases went so
well that ~ judge lb CIWp ,was
planning to Jry it sta~ide .
•
"I am planning !Make this -show
on the road," Justice Jacqueline W.
Silbennann _s~d Wed~~l' after
putting many of the 135 cases well on
the way to splitsville.
" It works well. It shook up, the
backlog," said Ms. Silbennann, an
administrative judge who is in charge
of New York state's matrimonial
courts.
· To move things along, she sent letters to couples threatening to dismiss
cases and force them to refile if they
did not appear before her. One of the
cases settled began in· 1986.
The judge formally granted
divorces in five cases and discovered
that another 20 were already completed but had not been properly put
into the state's computer. She
promised the computer entry system
will be improved.
Trial dates were given in another
seven cases and all the rest were
pushed along toward resolution. The
judge was smiling.
"I think we did very, very well,"
she said. The backlog represents 5
percent of the total number of divorce
filings .
Ms. Silbennann said she plans to
conduct similar hearings of cases
nearly 3 years old

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1989 OLDS
CUTLASS

.
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP)- The al insurance fraud charges stemming
new edition of the official state infor- from a canceled fight.
mation manual honors a local girl:
Since 1954, King was convicted
Katharine Hepburn.
of murder, a charge later reduced to
The 90-year-old screen legend · manslaughter; faced numerous lawlives in the Fenwick section of Old suits from boxers and their handlers;
Saybrook and grew up. in Hartford, and was acquitted on tax evasion
the second child of a suffragist leader charges in 1985. ·Last month, he
and a prominent physician.
received the NAACP's ·President's
, "She is, u.nquestionably, one of Award for "significant .suppon of
the. most enduring actors in history," soc;al causes."
states the dedication in the Connecticut State Register and Manual ,
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Christocommonly known as the " Blue pher Darden says he has taken a newBook." ·
born girl "into my home, my family ,
Dr. Robert Hepburn of West Hart- and my heart" ....:. whether she's his
ford on Wednesday accepted a copy daughter or not. A television station
of the book for his sister, whose said she is.
health has been failing. But he said
The baby's mother has said the
she still eats a hearty meal , goes for OJ. Simpson prosecutor fathered
car rides and receives visitors.
her daughter, born May 25. Darden
Her ..character is very strong as has acknoWledged a brief relationship
usual ," he said.
with lhe woman.
·
A four-time Academy Award-winDarden said Wednesd ay he is
ner, her mov ies include "The · awaiting the results of a paternity test
Philadelphia Story" (1940), " Adam's since he's unsure the baby is his. He
Rib " (1949) and "On Golden Pond" wants primary custody if she is.
(1981).
. But KCAL-TV reported that it had
obtained the test results and they
NEW YORK (AP) - Don King showed a high probability that DarDay'
den was the father.
No schools. were closed, but
" In the meantime, I have taken
Wednesday was singled out for the Tiffany into my home, my family and
wild-haired boxing promoter by the my heart, and I will continue to do
City Council's Black and Hispanic what in my judgment I believe is my
Caucus.
best for Tiffany and all concerned,"
The caucus gave King a procla- Darden said in 'a statement.
mation, thanking him for helping the
He and the mother have each filed
city 's economy through and called paternity actions. Hearings were held
him a "cherished American celebri- ' Wednesday, but court officials would
ty."
not disclose what happened.
. "He is a self-made .person and I
think he 's done a wonderful job,"
ATHENS, Greece (AP) - No
said Councilman Jose Rivera, chair of millionaire boyfriend, no .aquatic ren\he 22-me!llber caucus.
dezvous - just ~ix days of swim· King, who promotes Mike Tyson ming and sunbathing for Princess
lind other fighters , could face up to 45 Diana, according to the crew of a
.years in ·prison if convicted of feder- yacht chartered for her hbliday.

1989 HONDA
ACCORD LX

The Community Calendar is
as a rree service to non'proftt groups wishing to announce
·meeting and special events. The
ealendar is not designed to promote
sales or rund niisers or any type.
Items an printed as space permits
nod cannot lie paranteed to run a
specific number of days.
pu~llshed

Public Notice

LEGAl.. NOTICI!

Alto o rlglll of w~ 151MI
wldt extending tlong lilt
•nllre Iouth old• of th• r111
eetete
hereinabove
doocrlbed, ond oxt•ndlng

Notte• It h•roby gtvon
lhot tho Tru••••• al tho
Chftttr Church of Ood, en
Ohto Corporotlon Not For
Profit, ond th• Southern
Ohio Stet• Encuttv.
OIIICII ol Church of Qod,
lne., on Ohio Corparetlon
Not For Pralll, llltd o
Petition to StU Rool Ettolt
by Rtllglout Organization
(R.C. 1715.38) In tho Court
of Common PI•••· Melgt
County, Ohio, CoM No. 87CV-115, oll•glng thot the
Truoltll of tho Cheater
Church ol Qad ond tnt
Southern Ohio Slot•
.Ex~utlve Olllc11 at Church
of God,

from the Southeeet cornlf
thereof In en •••tarly .

dlroctlon to tho public rood,
which right of wey lo 1
meena of lngreea end
egreaa to and from aeld reel
111111 to the public road.

Excepting on, goa, coat and

other mlntrele, together

with mtntng rlgntt, which
wert ntretolort r..arvod.
REFERENCE : Deed
Volume 220, Page 537,
M•lgt County Rtcorder'a
Olllco, Molga County, Onto.
. Po""'l 'IWo:
Sllultod In tho Townehlp
of Cholhlr, County of Molgo
ond Steto of Ohio ond
bounded ind deecrl.,.d oe
folloWII:
B•glnntng at a atone
n}noty-olght ond ono·hall
(18 1/2) rodo out of tho

Inc., ere the owner~

In loo elmpl• of the
following rHI -to:
Po""'l Ono:
Sltuet• In Ch•tttr
Townehlp,. ll•lgt County,

Ohio, 1nd deacrlbed · 11

lollowe: Bolng tn Section
No. 18, Cheater Tonwehlp,

Melgt County, Ohio,
bogtnnlng In tho contor or
ROIICI No. T-113, W•IIB91.78
felt end North 751.91 loti

Southweat

corner

of

Soctlon 18; thonce eeot
ooventy-•lghl (78) rode and
lour (4) ltnke to tho center of
from where the center at rood loading from Cheater
tald road lnteroocta tho to Wllaon'a Ford; thence
South lint al Stetlon No. along oald road North
18; tnonc• South 1o• 27' Elghtoon and one-hell (18
W•et 15 .., feet; · thence 112) dogreeo walt oaventaon
South 73' 42' W•ll137111t; (17) rode and olxtoon (16)
tnonc. South 79' 27' W•at IInke; thence north lilly (50)
112.1 1111, to an Iron pipe; dtgreeo woet thtrty-otghl
tnonco North 31 ' 30' Eaot (38) roclo and olx '(B) ttnko;
307.e ltlt to tho center ol thence north lilly-nino and
Hid road; tn•nc• south 57' one-hall (59 112) dagrtte
27' Eolt 185.81•11 along tho woot fifty (50) roda and
'eonter ol oold rood to the fifteen (15) llnko; thence
pliCI Of b•glnnlng, ooulh olxty-olx (66) roda
contelnlng 1.00 acre. El&lt;c•pl and tw•nty-throe (23) llnko
to the ploce ol beginning,
oH t.;ot rlglllo of way.

Public Notice
containing twonty (20) ocrot
end ·nlnotoon (1 t) •quoro
rodo. All of which lo
oltuoted In Section 18, Town
3, Range 12, Ohio
Com~ny'a

PurcheM.

Excepting and reserving

unto Nollie T. Fronk and

c.

Homer Frank, their helrt

and atalgna forever, all tht

Public Notice
d•ed recorded In Vol. 223,
Pogt 488 or tnt Do•d
Record• of M.tgt County,
Ohio.
Exeept 2 1/2 ecree
conv•v•d to Oto. A. end
Helen Wolf by d•td
rec:ord•d In Vol. 201 , Pog•
453 of lht Dttd Roeordo,
Metge County, Onto.
Subltct to a common

oil, gaa, coal and all other
mlnoreto ol tVtl1' kind and driveway agreement 11
doacrlptton, In and doocrllMd
In Vol. 223, Paga
underlying aald real eatate,
together with the excluelvt 501 altho Dttd Rocorda or
right to enter on aald Molgo County, Ohio.
premlaea to proapact,
explore, drill for, mint,
ex:cavate and remoVe the
aame with all neceaaary

machlnory and thlngo

neceeaary or convenient
thararor, and the .further
right to uH ao much of the

aurfact

11

may

be

neceaaary or convenient te

accompllth the atoreeald

purpoH or purpona. ·
Except 4 acre~ conveyed
to Goorgo A. Wolf by dead

The real eatate to be

convoy.d by thl• chad to
5.23 acroo. Paretl ~1381
Alto I rtglll at WilY 15 !HI
wldt ••tending along tnt
ontlr• touth aide or th• reel
Utat•
h•r•tnlbOVI
dllcrtbtd, and •ICttndtng
from tht aouth•eat corn•r
theraor In an eaaterly

dlroctlon to tho public rood,
which right of woy lo o
m••n• of lngreaa and

ogrou to and from Hid rHI
eotote to the public roed .
recorded In Vol. 246, Pogo Exc..,ttng oil, goo, cool and
801 of the Dead Recorda, other minerals, together
Malga County, Ohio.
with mining rtghto, which
-Except 4 · 1/3 acroa were heretofore r...rved.
conveyed to Clarence C.
Excepting a 10 lttt wid•
Wolfe, Jr. by deed recorded right of way leading from
In Vol. 240, Page 823 of tho George A. Wolf, Jr. property
Deed Recorda, . Melga and to the aforementioned
County, Ohio.
·
tillite to tho metor.
Except 3.05 acru real
REFERENCE: D•ed
conveyed
Freeman and Recorda Volume 324, Page
Vondartna Wllltamo by deed 555, Malga County
recorded In Vol. 231 , Page Rocord•r'o Office, Molge
813 of tho Dood Recorda, · County,
Ohio.
Melgo County, Ohio.
That told real eatllt Ia
Except 1 acre conveyed to hold by the Trullttl ol tht
Board of Truateea of the Chllttr Church of God and
Church of God at Cheoler, the Southern Ohio Stell
Molga County, Ohio, by Executive omc" at Church

'o

Public Notice
al Clod, Inc., lor the utt end
btnellt of tht Ch ..ter
Church or Oocl 11 Cheater,
lle~)Y, Ohio, lor
rill OUI purpoaa lncl tho!
th•r
11 conetruct•d
thlreon • enurch. That tt 11
tho d11lre of ·the Chiller
Church of God and th•
Southorn Ohio State
El&lt;ec:ullve Ollie.• ol Cllurcll
at Gocl, Inc., to 1111 Hid real
••t•t• end tho Choeter.
Church of . God lnd tho
Soutl)•rn Ohio Stolt
El&lt;ec:ullv• Olllc.o of Cllurdt&gt;
at Gocl hev• ftled o Plt"lon
with and In tho Court of
Common . Plooo, M•lgo;
County, Ohio, C.11 Numbw
17-cY·115, lor outhorlty to,
c:onvey,
and tronafer,
uld real olhll•, pur-nt to
on Ollor To Purchll..
Contract, which Ia ltl8chod
to tho PIIHlan and on Ill•
Willi tho Court.
•
Tho prayer at Hid petl!ton
11 thot ttld Tru- altho,
Chllltr Churcll at God and.
tnt Southern Onto Stott
Executive Ollleu or Churcr.
of God bo outnortzed to'
eonv~. .... and tronaftr
ttld reol 10111o, upon the,
lermo ond eondltlono o~
oeld oll•r to Purcholl
Agreomont or upon tueh
other ttrma 11 the court.

••II

dNm...-blo.

Sold Ceuee will be fo(.
htorlng boloro ttld Courj,
an th• 15th doy ar;
Soptomi&gt;M, 1887, ot 2:00
p.m. ol th• M.tge County.
Courthouea, 100 btl;
Second Street, Pomeroy,

Ohio, 45781.
(8) 21, 28; (8) 4, 11; 4TC

.

infonnation call Ivars Balkits, 767- .
4938.
.
DEXTER -· Homecoming at the
Old Dexter Church, Saturday at noon.
Covered dish dinner, singing in the
afternoon.
~.

· ..;.,

·~ ·

RACINE -- Annual reunion of the
Samuel Allen Eblin family, Saturday,
THURSDAY
Star Mill Park, Racine, 5 to 9 p.m.
, DANVILLE -· The Vision Trio Dinner at6 p.m. Tal:e musical instrufrom Hobe Sound, Aa. will present. ments and old pictures.
a concert of sacred music at the
Danville Holiness Church on Thurs~
day, 7 p.m. The cliurch is located on
State Route 325 in Danville. For SUNDAY
more infonnation residents may call
CARPENTER -- Rev. Clyde l:len742-2485.
derson will be speaking at the Carpenter Baptist Church, SR 143, Sun- ·
RU1LAND .. Meigs Soil and day, 10:30 a.m. service.
Water Conservation District Board of
Supervisors, Friday, tour at 6 p.m. MONDAY
.,
from the Rutland Firemen's Park, folRUTLAND -- Rutland Garden
lowed by picnic and August board Club, open meeting, Monday, at the '
meeting.
. Rutland Methodist Church, 7:30p.m.
Hal Kneen, county extension agent,
SATURDAY
will speak on fall plantings. care and
·ATHENS -- Poetry quilt perfor- storage of bulbs. All other clubs and
mances, The Ridges Auditorium , visitors are invited to .attend.
Athens. Bill Renz performs "That
Which is Woven" 7:30 p.m. Gerry ·
POMEROY·- Meigs County VetChorba directs "For the Struggle of · erans Service Commission, 7:30p.m.
Wings" at 8:30p.m. Series sponsored . Monday at the Veterans Service
by Rural Action with suppon from Office, Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy.
the Ohio Arts Council. For more

Compare Acquistions Price
Before You.Buy Anywhere

NEW SELECTION

Ace In
lhellole

....

lasaball
="
La-ds
$4,000 .. .. .. .... .. ........ ............... .. .2

VIeT:/

..........

..........

$2,000 ............... ........ ... ........... .4
$1 ,000 ................................. :.... 2
$500 ........................................ 5
$300 ..................... ,................ 70
$200 ...... ..... .... ,, ....... ..... ......... 73
$150 .................................... 154
$100 ............... .... ... .. ... 233
$60 ....... ................. ... c•• 307
$50 .. ....... .. ............. ..... .321
$40 ................. ............. 476

$1 ;ooo ................. .... :.............. so
$400 ..... ..... ........ ....... ............... 57
$100 ...................................... 160
$80 .......... ....... :................1,016
$40 .............. :................. 7,437

'Black

25%
OFF

.Dr, VB, • • 11r coriii.IXI 4 cyl, auto, air
AMJF11 Clll, tilt, .....t-. I AMJFM c:au, PS, PB, r-n,r;, ''' 1
POL. tilt, cruiH, etc.
PS, PB, More.

Mmd&amp;C..o

LuckJDmasTen

$500,000 .. .....:..... ......... .... 1
$10,000 .......................... 11
. $5,000 .... .. ...... ....... .... ... .. 75
$1,000 .. ...... ........... ..... ..452
$500 ... .. .. .. .. ........... .... 1,038
$100 ......... •.............. 15,298
$75 .......... :'................ 12,066
$50 .......... ... ;:....... ... .33,661
'

Aulumn Harvest
$20,000 .............................. 1 ·
$4,000 ... .. .......... .,..... ......... .3
$1 ,000 .... .......... ... .. .. ..... ...... 2
$100 ............................3,323
$50 ....... .. ................ .....9,634

Join In The Wl•lna

Thank You!
conaralulalonsl
. Happy Blrlhdavl
Happy Anniversary!

$2,000 .......... ........ ... ... ............ 14
$500 .... ..... .... .............. ........... .. 75
$100 ...................................... 288
$50 .. .. .... ............ ................ 4,736

Double BIIIUS Bingo

$500............. :......... .... ...........821
$100 .. ................ :............. 10,686
·$50 .. ...........:..: ..... ..... .. .. ... 40,584

$20,000 .................. ................ ,... 4
$1 ,500 .. ......... ,............................ 6
$1 ,000 ................. ......................... 9
$400 .. ....,...................:.. ................ 33
$200 .............. .. .............. ":.......224
$150 .. .......:............................. 206
$100 .. .. .................... ..... ... ..... ...405
$50 ....... :.............. ." ............. .... 580

DOUbling Dollars
$5,000 .. ................ .. .. .. •. .... .. ...... 9
$2,500 .................................... 25
$200 ...... ............. .... ............... 206
$100 .. ................................ 5.426
$50 .... .......... ... ... .............. 32,913

SCratch Poker

$10,000 ............ .. ...................... 5
$1 ,000 ..............&gt;·· ··· ···· ············51
$500 ...... ...... ...................... .. .. 172
$250 ............ ........ ...... ,........ ... 372
$100 .. .............. .................. 5,657
$40 .... ............ ........... ... ... .25,051

lndapandanca Cash

Cotlee Break Cash

$1 ,776 .............. ... ... .... .... ......... ,2
$776 ...... ...... ................ ............ 17
$76 .... ......•........... ,............ ..... 200
$40 ............... .. ..... ....... ....... 1,737

$599 ................... ..... ...... ... ...... ... .. 7
$100 ................ ..... .......... ....... 352
$50 ... .. .................... .. ..... .:..2,171

EasySiraat

$5,000 ............ ........ .. ... ........ ..... 5
$1 ,000 ... ..... :........... .. .. .. ...... ... ... 5
$500 ............................ , .......... 20
$100 ..... :.............................. ..128
$50 ........................ ..... ... .... 8,535

$50,000/year lor 20 years ........ ,. 1
$100,000 ......... .... .. .................... 2
$10,000 ................... .... ............. 8
$5,000 .......... ............ .............. 35
$1,000 ......................... ......... 121
$500 .. ............. ......... ..... ........ .415
$100 ........................ ..... :.. . .4,876
$75 ................................. ... 8,621
$50 ........................ .......... 25,603

DaiiJ Double

$4,000 ...................................... 4
$500 ....... ... .... ................ .......... 10
$100 .......... :.................... ... .... 263
$50 .......... ..... ................... ..6,070

ACQUISITIONS
TWo Locations
.
Corner 2nd at Grape, Gallipolis, OH 446-2842

S

LuckY Double Doubler

Bicentennial Dollars ..

FINE jEWELRY
91 Mill St., Middleport, OH 992-6250 Iii •

$15,000 .... ,...... ... .. ...... .............. 3
$2 ,000 ... ................. .................. 4
$1 ,000 .... .. ................... ........... 11
$500 ..................... ................ ... 50
$100 .......................... ........ 6,780
$50 .... .............. .... ........ .... 12,55 1

· LuckY Fortune

• Earrings
• Necklaces
• Bracelets
• Rings

· Expert

Repair

$5,000 ............... .. ... .. ................ 2
$2,500 ............... .................... ... 5
$200...... .. ...................... .. ........ 17
$100 ..... .... ... ... ....... ................ 647
E0 ................... :................ 2,M1

$599 ................. ....... .... ::.......... 17
$100 ...................................... 500
$50 .......... .......................... 6 ,291

Jewelry
AIIOIIICi l flllf'!!lWI'tiiS.lillt.l !Or!lies il'ld !IIIINIOIIlSt!

lhtOil&lt;OlD~err

Cilfli"""OOO

•

$3,000 ..................................3
$2,000 ...... ..... ... ..................5
$1 .•000 ... ... :...... ............... ... .9
$100 .. .... .. ..... ............... 3,541
$40 ..... ... ....... .. ...... :.... 12. 791

Count Your LuckV Heatts

2

LOOKS &amp; RUNS
LIKE A NEW ONE!

Public Notice

The Dally Sentinel o Page 7

:Community calendar

REDUCED

$10,949

NO'I,ICI~

Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy will bill and take
assignment on the following diabetic supplies with a prescription from your doctor:
Blood Glucose Monitoring Systems
Glucose Testing Strips
Lancets '
..
When your ·Medicare deductible Is paid, we
will bill Medicare for 80% and your secondary
Insurance for the remainder. This can result ·
In you not payhig anything . for the above
· diabetic supplies. If you have any questions
see Debbie, Monda.v through Friday 9 a.m. ~ 5
p.m.

VI, IUto, air cond, AM/FM

1997 FORD EXPLORER 2 DR .

.....

MEDICARE PATIENTS WHO ARE
INSULIN DEPENDENT:

199.6 FORD
MUSTANG GT

PWR MOONROOF

Meigs blood donors give 6.5 units
,. · : · Meigs County residents donated
6s units of blood when the Red Cross
Bloodmobile visited the Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy on Aug. 13.
: ·There were four first-time donors:
Wendy Shrimp lin,. Frances Shrimplin, Tara Grueser ·and Jonathan
Newsome.
·
Multiple gallon donors were:
George Harris Jr., seven gallons;
Norma Wilcox, five gallons: Brian
Johnson, four gallons; Harry Holter.
four gallons: Charles Cook, two gallons; Eunice Jones, two gallons; Toni
Givens, one gallon.
Retired and Senio~ Volunteer Program workers assisting the. Blood·

Pomeroy o Middleport, Ohio

W' ~.rll Hc~ E•~II'Yii
0

OI!P'(!Of l)!olf' Lortr,

lor

!'I~'!

llff)I'III.ITIM

~.llll! ~llh&lt; ~U'IOI'~Ofl'oln"""'r

1111161

181:.,:.:~,:::..::-:::,:::...::_=_:::-:::;:::;:;::::::-.:,.:,=·=--=~

.. '•

�Thursday, Augu.t 21, 1987
Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

MUFFLER SHOP

992-2196

NO'llfiNG RUNS •
UK£ A DEERE'

992-2196
Yau&gt;w Got Quulane, W.'W Got Ala

II!L

BISSELL BUILDERS,

Muffler &amp; Tail Pipe

668 Pinecrest Qrive
Gallipolis
Across from Galli a Auto Sales on old Rte. 35 West
New Summer Hours Mon.-Fri. 8-5: Sat. 8-3

Starting at $79.95

t06 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

_
Guaranteed Service

992-2825

(614) 446-2412orToll Free 1·800·594-111

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

•

. . . ., . _......,1&gt;0_

SOLID VINYL ,
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

cav.

.,

THIS

·See us for Your
Stihl•
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

185-3301
• W I - Cup Qoody'IIIIIO quollf1ln1l
· Oo30 p.m. • Flldoy • e&amp;PN2 (Some-day tape)

For Homeowners
ln surnncc

CaiiJEFF

lf'll

~!~=="'=
".......
,_,.....
, ••me
.

a---

·--I:&gt;CI'ongl.

rip!..

__

01101:

'..:11t••u

t ' .... SplwlgiMI, 2. 7:MI
I . AII::tl8ic:WI,2,St
3. Aon HonOI!y, 2.832

2. Mn Millin. 1.0116
3. Dill ...... 2,814
• · Terry~.a...
5. Jll!ur1an. 2,114

4 . ... "*'-'. 2,800

15 .. . .

I. 0 . &amp;rnwci, I ,?M

pnll. 2,383
7. ..,.,....~z.m

·l Chlai!Bowft, 2.337

e..-,su..uto

10. .....,.,.,. ~. 2.437

WW I'"' CUP: Midi Marin ceme
from two llpl beNnd t:l Mn ... 01\11bloo 4&lt;XI .. Mlclllgon Sjloodwor. •

- -· "*"-""""'..,
~

... --·~"~
tlnioNrog-"
piiCO-

Sundoyt

N&amp;T10NAL'Parle
mlloogeiO
trad&lt; c;own Mark Manin
w1n tor
the eeoond time In the ChriMtJiet

am

·

'

-l&gt;v- rod-

illlln ""Y " ' - Ramy
L.1Jo1o """""'"' 1:&gt; lood Todd Bodno
in . . polntt . . . . . . . PwiC tnCIYid
'4&gt; ...... . .
CIW'TWIIAH IIIUCK 12111ES'
Sfnguo put • ..., .. 0,.,.Jr.) ""'
1CJ118k, wlnnklg on the .!58$-mlle nell
WI Naai'MDe, Tam. Thtwln kept
Sfnguo In ... ,..,. In . . -

RQn-

....._..

--~Rioi1Bicl&lt;leiii1CI

. ... rlnki1Q 11111'1 Pll.... •••.

Rick -

2.--(3)
Focd'o point man
:S.o.leJorroll(21
4.Jellllwlonll)

·

win--

Tid......,....

24-t'ace

--

... -

___
--

. , _ FGII1I , _ ......

mora-.
bel:- E,rnhardt..... .
1'oolllliowllltld

'11'1 limo for I to otop.l'm
- &lt;llii'IIO dom unlolr, I
••· rrri drtYing
don, ...... -

,_,
'

up wllh 1hlm Fordo.'

NASC.IIIlbll- Mo!OIIPOr1s
WrHtr Uon1t Dto11on gl;n hla
oplnlorl: 'NASCAR _,.to bo
lllck1g)he -Ifill, bolore
-a..y dllwncon comploln, ~ , _
up
wtlh the ono Chwy lhlt the FGII1I on on""" bull: the
Jill Gordon.'

10-

• YOU HAD A GREAT RUN AT
THE DAYTONA 1100, DIIIcareer earnings.
V1NG lUI UNSPONSORED
I lAST IIACE,·Flnishad 38ltl ;n
CAR, IN 1•, BUT YOU
lhe Oe&gt;IJibloi4&lt;XJ
HAD TO WNr utm.. '111110
• WHAT PUT YOU ON THE
TO GET A fUU.TilE 110£.
ROAD TO THE.WINSTON
'GoltW&gt;g a lui-limoCUP SERES? 'We were
Cup ride was ..tlat I'd v.OOled
0000 10 a Buec:tl Grand
National rw:.e at Hld&lt;oty
"" and longod "" 1tYougi1CU
my , _ ., Now my pr1ollly II
(N.C.) Motor Spoedway for
winnng. I redy Wllnl tD Ml•
lho fll&gt;lllmo (11 1111!3) and ...
race In the w.:nt way.·
tow truck bloke down.
3 - · 710piM!s, 2910p
10a, about $4.5 mlion in

iiSJIOUR' Sharon

•Citi.DREH' Ricky (14), twm

by Bu1CI1 Mocll.
• HOMETOWN' Bam ., Ul&gt;&lt;lng-

Til• Week

BROOKLYN, Mich.- Jack
Roush finally 1nnovnocd what
bad been rumored for weeks. ·
namely, thai he is "acquiring an
interesl" in Muk Ryplen Motorsports, the Pondac team of Chad

Linl&lt;.
Unle 1110 signed a multi·year
eatension in his driver's cootrKI
with the team. &lt;irq Pollex, who
had co-owned tbt team with
Rypien, will remain u a share·
holder and leam executive.

Big Bend Fabrication,
Machine.&amp; Welding Shop

Marine Service
2131 Karr St.
Syracuse, OH
614-992-6520

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

Custom Homes

Remodeling

Dear NASCAR fan,
Assuming 1ha1 fanwy
NASCAR is some sort of pri. vately run rocisserie league, .
you would have to contact
whatever organization or
business runs the individual
· game. as there is no 011.e stan·
dard set of rules.
As for rules 1ha1 govern
oompetition. rule books arc
1101 available 1D lhe general
wblic ilnd, in fact. arc 1101
even distributed to the news
media.·
The only way 10 oblaln a
rule book for lhe Winoton
Cup Series is 1o become a
member of NASCAR and pay
annual dues.

Dear Your Thm,
Wha1 do lloe NASCAR
· teams use to "inflatc their
tire&amp;-OOrmal ab11osphere or
an inen gas?
&amp;llphen E. Loll...,_
WalerviNe. Malno

Dear NASCAR fan,
NASCAR 111CC !ires are
inflated wilh com~ air,
just like passenger cars.

&amp;J

985·4473

.

.

.

"Build Your Dream"
1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

JoeWIIeon
(614 992-4277

Lona·s
-consmoa1on

SMITH'S CONSTRUCTION
·DECKS
• ROOFING

WlfO'SHI17l
• Since Match 10. 11196.
Jell Gordon hal won
17raceo.
WHO'INO'Il
• Slnct MM:Ih 10, 1898,
Dole Elml1lllll ""' ....

"Stop putting off tho8e much needed ·
hoi'1Ul improvements." CaU Today!

2. Whii-NASCAR--.11011
hii~WM . . - wllhlho-a3. Who """lhl tlrJI Supe&lt;riUCic ....?

none.

Call 614·843·5426

992·5535

__..:~=..:..:::;.:_j

Chester, Ohio

SAYRE

TRUCKING

" When we were approached by team."
. Rypien Motorsporu, we first had MAKING rr OFF1CW.: Jim Maatei

to consider what our role could
be or WOUld be, without disrupt·
ina other objcc:ti\le~ regardin&amp;
our CWTCnt Wiruuon Clip teams.
sponsors and affiliations." said
Roush...When we looked at their
program, we found that we rould
panidpale not only on a supplier
level as their engine builder. bUt
we abo felt that we CO\Ikl help
lbeir molorspDrlS program as a
whole. Ultimately, thole discus·
sionsled to an investment In tbe

and ~ohn Porter were introduCed
officially as the businessmen
who have bought into Geoff
Bodi~ 's Winston Cup team.
What formerly wb known u
Geoff Bodine Radng will now
become Mattei MotorspOrt.S.
Amid assurances that Bodine
will have the re&amp;oorccs .neccssary
to be competitive again, veteran
crew chief Tim Brewer was
Introduced as the 1eam's newest
member. Brewer, one of the win·

JEFF WARNER INSURANCE

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

POMEROY,,OH.

20 Yrs. Exp. . Ins. Owner: Rick Johnson

614;.992~5479

-Tumplkt Ford,
the Mid Ohio
Valley's Leading

Free

E1tlmalfll

614·742·2138

$2,000 REWARD!!

Homes, AdciiUona,
Roofing, Siding,
Pole Barna,

AutomOIIve

Valley
·Lumber &amp;
Supply Co.

Retailer hae
Immediate
openlnglln the
following areas:

555 Park St.
Middleport

Decks, PalnUng
Us F01 A Frett Estimate

614-742-3090
614-742-3324

Car Sales

HOME

In Memory

992-6611

BEATING &amp; COOLING

· s.Mng Soutlleastem OH &amp; wv
1~

ll14-446-11416

139t Safford SchOOl Ad .. Gallipolis, OH

992-4025

YOUNG'S
~'toPENTD SERVIa

· OHIO VAllEY

N yOu... g a l l . . - Of I

con••awc. wrtt.: NAsc.M nat.
W... YOU&lt; Tum, e/0 Th6

cu.stOJ::Q.

--.21100E.Frri-

emr or 11111 Willi

~

:r ·

0

______ ..,,

----~----.~-,

UONG 011 THE WEI

. •Rooting

.•

ft'rCUMmUI

.

- "'**' .... _

~
d
ond opinion
. OOiumnt .. blwrld. Prw 1 Py
~-oorr.ln•
mlllit1011W.a "--· wlfl
11111pdUcl--lo-

Pt. Pleasant Moose #731
Friday &amp; Saturday Nites
9pmtil1 am
The New River Band with .
vocalist "Cindy Byrne"

. II i11&gt;cx11n1 ond -~~ nal.

Wayne's Place

ATTENTIONADVERTISERS!!

Dave.Harris Ext 104 or Don Riffle Ext. 105
For More Information

DEMIIGH GABRE'IT IN(;.
Ripley, VW 26271
Bus. Phone (304j' 372-3673

1-800-964-FORO

Rt. 21

3 uMdTVI, 614-11112·76811.
Two long Haired Baby Kittens, 5 ·

7 Pupj:Mtt Swk1. oki, part Region
Elkhound, road~ 1o goI 304-6 755364.

7 Week Old Blonde Fitmala Kit- ·
ten, Cal Ah8( 8, 81 ......1-1651.
'

AI&gt;PioL 304-875-5488.

===~----'
Church pewa 10 Qlva away 11 any ••
chJidl. 304-118Z-Z71!0.

~

'

IEight Weak old Beagleltanier. mix

puppies; nine week old St. Ber· .
In&amp;~dA:ollle mix; 81 ...-.3882.
: ..
Firewood: .You Cut, You Haul :
Away, Call Allor 5:00 P.M. 814- ·
245-11372. .
:
Free Otange Tiger Kittens Also 6 :
Week Old Female NotWegian Elk· •
hound Puppy Phone 611l·378· '
Q278.
.
'.

HOUII OOQ , Ask for Marsha
Sllllloy, 81&lt;-«1-GT.l2.

Husky/Shepherd mix pupa to •

good home, alx Weeka old, very '
adQr'able,614--9-48-2911 .

'

Puppiea &amp; dogs to good home1,:
810·742·2:157 . .

' OUilllameo. 304-G75-5282.

·

. Wooden pallets. You come and ·
get Fruth Pharmacy Warahoua ·
1
in Pt Pleasant.
.;

60 Lost and Found

y.c. YOUNG Ill

a. lh• Rlpley-Falrplaln Exit 1132

Come See Us For All Your
Parts and
Service.Needs

'·

Middleport, Ohio
announces
3 Year Anniversary
August 22nd
Come help us celebrate all
weekend.
No cover charge
Thurs. Ladies Night
Fri. D.J.
Sat.- D.J.

CROSSCOVER
Appearing .Friday 8:00-12:00
POMEROY EAGLES CLUB

lAD:,;:,..,,

'

.

1-

C\~ /

· ·;4,~

:--,'(#,

2ndAnniUil

~.1 ·

EXPO 97
I)
1

I /
('tf- I
·
~
I~ · Meigs County Fairgrounds

·.. \

- ~~

•- -

Intersection of US 33 &amp; SA 7 ~North.we&amp;t Corner)

September 20th "21st
Saturday 10-5 p.m. &amp; Sunday 10.5 p.m.

L.;.F;;;or.;M;;,;or;;.e;.l;;,;nl;.;o;,;,rm,;;a;;;tlon:;,;,.;C;.;a;;;ll;.;
: 99;;;;;.2-66~96;.;.i;~,;.2;;.·5_29_3;...74_2_-302_o_,

Card of Thanka

~-- -

..

i'

MIDDLEPORT

112·~

11:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
I .....11..11 Wlidews
' .....·Garatis

i eStnllws &amp;

llllftOWfulllme. -

.

'l'hank you • • rbe Family of~ ..

RooOng, Plumbing,
Room Additions,
Drywall, Siding,
Concrete, Etc.
P.O. Box 220 Bidwell,
· Oh 45614

(614) 388-9865

.0. 0.1117'•

•••,s~~o,

DREHEL'S
SAW CHAIN

10 in .......... $10.00
12 in .......... $11.00
14 in .......... $12.00
Middleport, Oh. 45780
16 in .......... $14.00
Home Ph.
1,
.....4-892-3120 . : 20 in .......... $.16.00

:;:,a;::

-··

· •Small Engines
•Lawn Mowers
•Chain Saws
•Weed Eaters
2 ml:·ott Rt. ,7 "'
Leading Creek Rd.

LEWIS TIRE

Quality Work at

DIO Gtery, Owner . '

DREBELS

'

Brakes • Shocks
Struts • Tune·ups
8171117 pd .

1·614·742·2925

•.

lo1t: L1rge Calico Cat Near Bul.:_ •
ville Pille &amp; 160, RoMrdl KFoUIMI '
C&amp;U14-44&amp;-2712.
":

70

Yard Sale

•
•

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

...

143 Second Avenue, August .
211\ 22nd.
:•

214 Magnolia Drive. Gallipoli&amp;: :
Ohio Frida~ And Sllurday (Au-'
gull 22nd, I 23rd) 8-? Tools, •
•
Clolhot, Toya &amp; Misc. tam•

0 Famill Yard Sal&lt;t: Augusl 22nd. ·
231d, AI Old 8&amp;0 Markel Across ·
From Foodland On Roul8180.

UnHP.M.

'

Road, 5 112 Foot Cat Tree, Nice :
~Ids Playhouse, Boys And Girls
Clolhes, Women's Clothes, Men's

Dress Pants, Shifts, 38 Waist, ·
16·17, Toys, Shoes, Books, lots '
01 EYOIYI!lingl lf Rain C8ncel•
:
8773 State Route 588, Augu11 '

2Znd, 2:Jrd, z.ilh, Clolheo 01 All :
Sizes, lott For Everyone.

HOME IMPROVEMENT

•Exhaust•
742·2792

· Wllllews
; . . . AMtlols
IWEIISTMIATES

From rbe hmUy of VlrJinll R. Duc1worlll who pasoed IWil'
Thunday, Augusll4, 1997, ullolzrr Medical Cenltr.
1t wiJh 10 lloanlo rbe &amp;mUy rn&lt;t11bm, spe&lt;W frl&lt;ndl and many
Ol!ler friends for lhek pnym, lhougbu and cooctmJ. The
bnullful llowm, lhe many cards ond all rbe food, lhls MS ICI)'
IOIIchins. Thank JOU 10 lhe ICU sWf at lhe Holm Medlcal Ctn)tr
for 111e1r an: and concern 111he llme of dealll. Aspe&lt;W Thanks 10
Dr. Alice Gricookl for her lojal de&gt;odon and heanlelo concern for
\'lrzinll. Many lloa'nb 10 ,._ AI lllnlon for a W1lll1lerNI
c:mmony, Fl.oher Funenl HoiiiC: for rbe loYelr - · Jilooryone
Wll lln&lt;t~&lt;ly woi.lerful duouaJloul lhls llil8l&lt; and unnpened

MANLEY'S

$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs •
Serv-U ~619) 645-8434

CUSTOfe'

cov":

LOST: Gray Yoorlng bolt
In .,.. of Otd Town Farm on emREWARD! Cal304-1175-85115.
'·

.

..

~

Jll Sl JNG &amp;
INSUUIION
. 5378RVANP~

loll· rrall ~sh brown Chihua·:
ooa. "Til", reward, Middleport vl- •
clnity, e"-992-3675.
•

8122nd Friday, 8-3, 1118 Cora Mrn ·

Residemal &amp;(GIIIIMidal

1-900-329-0611
Ext. 1881

3117/iWTFN
-··~·.

Found: while 1omale dog. Lonil
Bonom vicinity, if not k:lst, needa •
good homo, 81•·98~71.
.:

natural look

Free Estimate

892-6215 .
Pomeroy, Ohio

Painting
!*MII!STIMATES
948-2168

J~ {:~-.y-. AD:,;:,ON t! . - .·. . . .. ...

•

farrn•u• Bank perking lot, Pomer· ·
oy. VOfJ' kiancly, 810-992-5896.

B flmlly Y•rd Sale: School :
Cl~uhes, Something For Every-,
onel Lois Of Nice Clothing, 2nd •
House On The left From 218 On •
Bladen Road Thuro &amp; Fri. a A.M.;

We can wOsh anything

SPORTS!
SCORES!
. SPREADS!

Downspoull
Gutter c1Hn1ilg .

i

Speedw1y USA to watch 16-

Call992~2155

_40:..__G"'
_lv_e:..;,awa__:Y:.,..,.__;: :

5 Kinono 10 Glv-ay, 3 Yolk!W, &amp;
2Grey, Only To Good H..,., 614..a-7730

Privacy Fences • Patio
Driveways • Farm &amp;
Heavy Equipment • Remove
unwanted dirt, mold and
mildew • Restore ttlc clean
Deck~,

·•· · .

..

I

Howe • Mobile Homeo •

: otnwrlor a Ett8rlor
hinting
. . , ,
. Also ConcrWte Worir'
(FREE ESTIMATES)

Special Deslps .
W.lble Ad'l'ertlslng
P.O.ha215
Ull5l SUl Ps•nty, 011

'1om my Long Jr.
would lifie evtryone
wlio finew liim to
'(614)992-4279
!l•rememb·er him today on
his 22nd birtliday. ·
- 'Please remember your
Howard L Wrlt-1
and happiest hmes
togetfier witfi him. - ' . . ROOFING
:May god u•---c.. ' NEW-REPAIR
Guttera
'Tom and 1ennife;r 'Bill)

11'1 WOIInl urunn

HoT PRISSURE ClEANING

· .:~Additions .
oNew Gal'llges '
oEiactrtcal a Plumbing

Novelties

"

&lt;Tiie family of

Jimmy Femig oncllhiiOII 01
lho-No. eaew
fll)llrod iiiQi • • ..._ lo
- - ) F o o l - lllnl

CHI' OFF THE OUl BLOCK: Aller
qualifying at Mid!igan, Sterling
Marlin new to Nashville (Tenn.)

Advertise on this page .

For Information
leading to the
arrest and
conviction of
anyone Involved
stealing a
property line
fence at:
1927 Cross St.,
Racine, Oh .
J.D. Callerl
Contact:
Ron L Miller

3351 Heppy Ho11ow R011d
Middleport, Ohio 45761

ningesc crew chiefs in the 1p0r1•s
biSk&gt;r}', will assillPat Tryson.
who WjJI continue in the crew
chief's capacity.

year-old son Steldman rac:t in
the Late Model Stock division.
"Jt 's like Otd times." said Mar·
lin, who grew up watching his
father, Coo Coo, r.tce. "(Sttad·
man's) g01aboot a 10-year-oki
car, and it isn 't that Jood."

Hauling, Excavatioo &amp;:
.TreJKhiog
Limestone &amp; Gnvel
Septic Systems Trailer
&amp; House Sites
Re&amp;sonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

Communications

"

-

'

985-4422

Holle Improvements

IIIII S!&gt;oedw11.

"

.-Gravtf

umestone
Dll't • Sand

KINGS'

wlntiollid-GIIho_,
In lho Do- 400 .. -

AROUND THE GARAGE

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

CELLULAR PHONES
113 W. 2ND ST.

::.::::=:::..-----

Found· tamale Baneu hound, ·

1 . Who-INASCAR-~

-~ ... .No. 7J){jJ(IDodge?

R. L. H
TRUCKING

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
· • Room Additions
Over 20 fHI'$ sxpsrlsncs.
F'" Estlmsres

~SIDING

992·2753 _ _ _
,..L:.:.=-=::...::.:

Shirt Your Thoughtl With Glrli
1 On 1 Livelli 1-U00-255-0700 ·
E1t 2Q83 $3.1H1111n. 111+, SOiv·U. ;
B1U-84H434.

Female, 1 Yellow &amp; 1 :
1....;;•·!"!"',....--J/l~~ Weeki,
llladl Ptlono: 61 4-4&lt;6-{1«11

.•

~60°

'·-------------------------------·
...., -...., ....,., _:;;;=====---=======--------....==-------,
NASCAR w--. .Sorta·~-.

·Newttome&amp;
•Garages .
-complete
'"Remodeling .
.Stop &amp; Compare ·
FREE
ESTIMATEES

1.aoQ.2111-5800

•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
•REMODELING
•GARAGES

AtJNOUNCEMENTS

0700 axl. 2iloz. I3.UU per f!lln. :

Pomeroy, Ohio
WVII023477

.tht Clt!ssifitd Stclion!

614•992•3470 . Mull bt 18yfl, SarY·U ·1~··45- .
· ----~~
i~==~~(~~~
IIEET
NEW PEOPLE Tho FuJi ·
way Today, 1-U00 -2116-9035, EXL.
.ROBERT BISSELL t714, Pet Min. Mutt Be ·t&amp;
CONSTRUCTION Yra Solv-U5111-84!&gt;&amp;134.

050 -1-888-441·1050

~

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

.-

110 Court St.
1112-41111

In

t2 .Q~

0

Roush puts investment in Little's Pontiac team
NASCA11

01 1
""-""'
-

Liltlt lltings
tlrt Worth Alot
.

Umestone, Gravel, Sand,
005
Personals
,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt Live Gl•lll can NowiH00-255- :

•Wt Recharge Laaer Cartridges
•We Refill Ink Jet Cartridges
•We Re-tnk Dot Matrix

~ BMJ., GIR&lt;IIo, N.C. 2IoM

!,

1JIIoola1111111

•Financing

WHO'S HOT - WHO'S NOT

hung""-·

--by

--~~~~-­

...,.,.. oocaskw1a, he Ia 1
,.,..lml winner In lhe BUICh

......

cllanco. For1,.,_. we lhe next t(l().4appef. I Uled
lhal money 10 fluy my tlrJI
(,uperlopoeclway ca- oncl ran
a Grand National race 11
Chwlotte.'

ton, va., resides In ROCk·
brld(lo Balhs, V..
• RECORD' 2:l21111r1s, 0 wina,

.
toi-Cup-.yon

Katie oncl Slrah )bOm Oct. 2,
1119e).
• CAR' No. 75 Remlng1oo1
/Vma Font Tlu.r.clelbird,

J. -

FE 0
E
Dale Earnhardt
vs.
NASCAR
i
my bull 011,
,MiiCI
~-·.
Elrnlllnll, COIIII'
IIk Old 1Dudy ..
-.yo .-.1 IIIII can, keep

I'Gidlloak llualthe11rit
five ~ .. Michigan."

.. -llrtdgo ....
Ealtlldl, • pelr of Vlrglnll

......
liMn)

[8. ~)

-

.AGE'40

heclocldediOgiwme.,..,.,

L.ll1 _ . . _ waa FUaol L Bme ol..,_, ...._

.... ·--- --(A. w.a.:.)

'

ololho · 25GOL
Franklo
BMI..llul:&gt;nlo,
N.C.

blttlt."

J.-

.....

IIASC.IR 11111-.why 11.111;

Anguo ... ho
from
1173, ho ........
hlo l i n t - I n that car, a
11t7 Cllovy, In the~ diYI-

'"""

T. ......

--"'
-··

NASCM'Il*-hal.-

111-lho~larhla

J . .......

llullho- l&gt;ad I elM
11'*'41 1llet f you .... "'"'
1()()..ilp ...... i:'•IOW, he
...... poy I""' 125.000. We
........ nlgllt oncllgOillho
-.gmonlll. lt111t1hln1
Md ..... ,_,., M WfWICMd.
Tho pmmoteriOid ... aowd

ond ......... _ .

--by-.1hod-

----......
--·-· -·

ON THE SCHEDULE

--dii-

-·~

_hla_up_ ..
- - l h o ...... -

10.
(lln.....ucl)
Tougl:l-iud&lt; Teddy

-We didn,
.... know
..-...,f11Ci1g.
t allho limo,

WlrtAicilc
.....
Ontdi&gt;O
_ _ .. _

The PMOi Ill I IIIIC hU

18-faot wtntese-

S. Ttny .__,.. (I)

Franldln COun1y Speedway
wun't far away, ao l\a1's

Tel Ulln 100\IIIIOJdi·Ot ...

... _,eup.-y. ·

Nothing since Indy
I.Dole-(7)
Oazod ond C011111&amp;ed.
I. Alllly Wll-15)

No ahort-tnlcl&lt;-

WHYIUKE-

Ono thing l h l t - ... tcwRick_lo_ho_
glvM up on h l a - ~

•

•. EmlllrNI II! .
Gclng out In style
7. Alclcy Rudel (&lt;I)

1. Jeii,Qonlon (1)
,.. utull. -In claos

Ito 111111 -n:hlng lor hlo ft111 WlniiiOn CUp win.

.,........
NASCAR Tl1is Week

·

.

- . . .......... ... .... -· - .. . . .,...

~Ea1-.oy
Qlrisle, Ind.

lhet.mlfvcnt;)a••~.,_

.

Dear NASCAR This ~k.
I am intemled in the rules
for Fanwy NASCAR.
Would yoo possibly haYe a
copy of 1hese rules 1ha1 you
oould send to me7
If not, can you please gi\lc
me a name and address where
I could write to find oUt about

Boats New &amp;Used
"Professional Service
Guaranteed"

lhisreq-.

Elmhlnt
Dill Eamhwcl.k. IIIOW lniOIIMlr
of

TOP I 0

~
-

READERS ASK 1HE (JlJESIDt5
..... ·-·-· -- _...

~

Complete Machine Sbop SerYke Fabricad011
Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, lndwitrlal Gu
Radiator Repair &amp; ReplateMt

I would sure appreciate
your help and assistance in

'

w--, IMklngo by NASCAR 1'lllo-"'""'- OuiiDn. L.oot'

Teem,.,

.........

1hem7

10. Klmy....., 2.241

' FROM LAST WHK

--IIIIlCH--fuel

-.2,3118

.. -

7. . . . ~.U11
I . Ted .......... 2,471
I . . . EIOI. 2,471

poinla l8lld CNir Martin Intact.
,., Muop.o- . . big ..... In

«:anA.......,...

' .

""""'

s. 184

: Palee. . . N-.1!1

•

Rick Mast

. . . . . . . CUll'

thl2-milt
nctlln.,.,
lrten
t--.. Jell
_
__
keoplng"'

.,
.......,...
.u:;r..:, ....;.,

'·

Web-

1997 POINTS STANDINGS
1. ..... Gordon.

oc\t'"

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

Chester 985-3308

7:30p.m. • Frmy • ESPN

Jtl-·-

(614) 367-0266
1-800-9 50-3359 ·s~raQ

St. Rt. 248

e-ON-CIIy210

PROFILE

HAULING

"FA(:TORY
DIBECI'
,PRI£ES"
' · Qutillty Window Systems

.'tf\111

Ridenour
Supply

On.TV All Times Eutem

• Cup Qoody'IIIIIO
7:30p.m. • SaUCily • ESPN
• er.tllnwl TniCII , . . Alnerlell110
12:30 p.m. • s..nMy • ESPH
N llmol PfOY(dodiJV 'fVE oncl NASCM

•Custom Orders

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

WEEK

•

WICKS

•Computer Systems
•Repairs
•Accessories
•90 Day Same As Cash

•Printers

Porta John Rentals
Septic Tanka Installed
New Aerlator Timers &amp; Motors

614·742·2566

__ __

•Software
•Parts

2000 Gal. S.ptlc Pumping Truck

HE WINSTON CUP CIRCUI
wllt10IA a viiiiiD,. tamo... ,._...
Steak Hcue 1n JotNon
1n ...-on
ID h lieaka, h r8llla.l'a"t ofllrl .,
liiiiplscalil wN lilt II'ICIIn Mnoll ....-

Chester·

Low Aatn)

TRI-COUNTY SANITATION

AlMOST HOME COOKING

St. Rl 248

· (Ume

HOWARD'S

614-992-7643 .

LUMIER

• Page 9

Thurtday, Auguat21, 1997 _

Services
SHBobHeyes

Carmichael's Farm &amp;Lawn

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

I

.6LL Yard Saloollual

&amp;~-p.kf In Advance.
Q§AQLINE: 2:00p.m. .
lho day bolorelho od

Is to "'"·SUnday
lllhlon - 2'00 p.m,
Flldoy.llondoy odlllon
• 10:00 a.m. 8a1unf1J,

Big Yard Sale : Mens, Womans. :
Boys Clothes, Toys, Hous,..,n. ·
Tools. Something For Everyone!
Thurs, Fri, Augusr 21st, 22nd,
3314 Gerogos Creek Road
lnaide Tag Sale: Friday 8·5, S:at-- :
urday 8·? 72 9 Second Avenue, ·
Houl8hold Items, Furni1ure, EY• ·
ryltling Goes I
:

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
Atl Y1rd SIIH Mull Bt Paid ln.
Advancs. D•adllna: 1:00pm the
day before the •d Ia to run,
Sunday &amp; Monday tdltlon·
.1 ,oopm Frldoy.

sale· Augu st 22nd, Qam742·2925 .. Pofch
3pm. 133 Nor th Thi rd A\lenua,
Middleport, house across from
•w.s...... reu '. welfare
parking lot. Scme ch ild·
•
Jfo~~q"
....,,_.._,. dothifll.
fln'l

Pt. Pleasant

'

&amp; VIcinity

50% OFF
All Cll'ptl- Upllolsttry
Oeanlng

CHEVALIER'S
STEAM CLEANING
· Carpet· Upholetery

614-992-oon .

. MlddleDOrt, Oh

6·lamll1 1ard oale. Aug 22·23. g.

1 2801 Maple Ave. Riding mower, IOtotill&amp;r, brand narrMt clothes.
lOy~ lrioc.

80

Auction
and Flea Marllei

CraWford's Flea Market, Hendttr·
aon, WV. Everydar 9·e. Cralll,
antiques, trading cards, furniture,

toya, wrilly. 304-87S.S4o.t.

·

Rick Pearso n Auction Company.
lull time auctioneer, complete
urvice. Ucenaed
•uctlon
186,0hio &amp; West Virginia, 304773-5785 Or 300- 773-5«7.

�•
Thursday, August 21 , 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

•-·

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP

ALDER

- l u.. Top DoHw: All U.S. 511·

Massie Ferguson 1010 4 WO
.Tractor Compact~ With Belly
Mawer. 1,050 Houri. 114-2511371 , 5t ..25B-1!13Q.
~,;:..;~;;;;;..;..;;;;;;..~--630
Livestock

ver And Gold Colna. Prooltetl,

Dlomonclo. Atldquo J-ry. Gold

Rlnga. Pr~te30 U.S. Currency,

Slorllna. Ell:. A&lt;qulliliOrw Jewolry

· "II.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
.......,., Gall&gt;olio. 5t...a-2&amp;02.
'Antiques, lurniturt, glass. chi!)&amp;,
~Int. IOjl, IaMPI. gurw, 10011,
ntalta; also appraisals, Otb1
Mlt1in, 51 ..1182·7..1.

una, 825 Third Avenue.

IJIC.cond.~213--t215.

u

I:OH::::..:4:::5B3=:'·- - - - - - : -

Clun Late Model Clfl Or
Ttudca, HU~O Models Or Newer,

licensed nurH or UcenMd todal
worker, with a minimum of fiva
yaar 1 axperlenct tn lono term
acute, rehabllitlltlon and ac:ult

I:..:::::::::.:::.=::,::-:=.::::=0405.

Wanted To Bu~ Uaed Uoblle j:S::c:on:::_lc_H_I_il_l-N-u-ia""ln-g""C~o-n-to•r-:-11
Homo. Call 614·..6·0115 or 30 4· Now Ollerlng Pati-Tirno Nuralng
075-511115
Positlona With SHIFT DIFFER·

I!EN~T!I~A~L~L;PN!'~S~A~n~d~R~N~·~a~E::.n·
To Appl~un At
Fld..

• OK.

Secretary /ReceptlorUat. Establlahed Downtown Real Eatallj
Ef,1PLOYMENT
Buslne11, Reaporialble Person&gt;~
SERVICES
llust H~vo All Typin9, Ollie~
Skilil, ~~ng e.....anc. Nor
A Must But A Plus! Sind Resumt
To: P.O. Qox 1184, Gallipolla, ONo
110 Help Wanted
45831 , All Replies Sulcdy Conll·
AVON I All Areal I Shirley ld:en:::liai:::·-----:-:--:-::Speert. 304-875-1428·
The Southern local School Dla·
lrlct hll the position af ·reiiiVI
Girls BaokotbaU Coach 1111ilablo
for the 10i7·DB school rear. All
appllcantl mu at poaaell a
apona medicine CIH'Uflcate and 1

7l o

560

East

aK I 095 4

• J 6 2

• A7

• J

Pets for Sale

South
a AQ7
• Q 8 6 2
t

South
INT

B.ARNEY

z•

MAW'S GONE

••

SHE'S GOT
STEREO

HIGH.-TECK ll

West

Pass
Pass
Pass

North
2.
3•

2 An O'Neill

3 Cwpld
a Bean •
4 Sofior (2 wdo.)
example of
5 Treasure o1 the
9 Coeraocorn
Slerre mltal
6 Tho same (L.at.l 10 Ty~ of bend
7 Drain
Ot!Ork

Pass

Goldl 28 Milky gem
28 Craconl
aha.,.
30 Flnaloa
33 Ty.,. of
bflrgllln
:M; Route
38u-l
41 Hot opting
43 Style ot ty.,_
45 Family car ·

Pass
Pass

By Phillip Alder
What is d9ntopedology? Could
you remember that word?
In bridge, there are plays 1hat have

46EI-,T-- ~'"

47--lha .
ground floor
48· Uaoa
keyboard 49 Film a..r

names with no direct relevance to the

IT'S CAL£.eP "FMt
~ toot&gt;" ·BecAuse of ·rt4e
IN AY IT GOES

.

SnAIGtfT TO
YOU~

t41PS.

NON-STOP.

...

•
• • 0 1111' tr., NEA,

THE BORN LOSER
M'( l 1-\u.P Y()J' ~I R

7

· !X&gt; YOU~
N-l'ffi\1~ YOO

.,

11 Soiling VIIMI
111 Loella
21 DoHa
cleaning job
23 Orange-red
alone
24 Anontlon·
getting IOUnd
25 Skeleton pari
26 Actor O'Neat
27 laraal'l

Pass

:Pulling
their teeth

game , but are aide-memoires. For
Paulexample, the croc odile coup and
50 Wornan·a
name
sCissors coup. The tech0ique used by
51 Epic poam '
declarer in ihis deal is a third exam· · lz...-+~+-­
52 Fonder·
ple. How would yotrplan 1he play in
bendor
re1uH
four hearts? WeSI leads the club six :
55 School org. .
seven , IO, lcihg. 1
'North's sequence, a transfer bid
foll owed by a-single raise, is a gameby Luis Campos
invitation showing (at least) a six- .
Celabriy Cipher ayp1ograms ara cr.~a1ed !fOOl quo~ allons "" tamous people, PHI and Pf"«''l
card suit.
Eadl let1er rolhe dpMr st.andt: tor lnOO'Ief. TocMy"s clue; B frqUAII: K
Easl did we ll io keep communication with his parmer by withholdBTDPNU
IVRYD .
' A~SNY
JLPDNYM
ing hi s club ac e. Now, if Souih had
EPUDSGUSMX
Gl
MLGAYH
played a trump immediately, Wesl
wo uld have w on with the ace ,
L y
MNYVRY,
L S II
UDTNZ
NGRVH
returned his remaining club to part· .
ner 's ace, ruffed a club, and e xiled
p X y .D S J P . '
A P N u· Y D
J D G I B S U V;
with a diamond. Later, Wesl would
PREVIOUS
SOLUTION
:
"Jimmy
Slewilrt
represented
cinema's nobiliiy." have scored the spade Icing to defe at
· Jack Valenti. ·
· the contract.
"America lost a national treasure." :.... Bill Clinton .
However, South , Australian Tina
Zincs. foresaw lhis. Before touc hing
.....
. ~
lrumps, she e liminated diapwnds.
woao
. TIIAT DAILY
She played a diamond to dummy 's
tAMI
PUULII
kin g. played a diamond back to her
1•11to1
loy
-Ct.AV
I.
POlLAN
ace, and ruffed her last diamond in·
Rearrange leners of the
the dummy. Then she led a lrump.
lour
ocramblocl -d•
Wesl got his club ruff, but what
~ low to form four limple wordl.l
could he do nexl? A spade return
would be into South's tenace, and a
YA NJ UT
diamond exil would concede a ruff~
and-discard. Either way, Zines had no
spade loser.
This play is known as the denlis!'s
coup because you remove lhe oppoSCUMU
3
nent's Ieeth (safe exit).
Prince Philip, back in 1960, said
10 Brilain's General Dental Counc il,
" Donlopedo logy is the scie nce o f
Q I 6 U S 6 1:=,'
My children argued about
5
oP.,ning your mouth and · pulling
1
their chores. Granny told them,
your foot in il. I've been practicing it
"big tasks l)ecome easier if you
for years. " ·
r
0 L L y 0 U
divide them into • • •. ~ • • • • • "

CELEBRITY CIPHER

,

S@~~lA-l&amp;~tfs•

0

I I .I
I

I

I
I I''
~

I I

I
I I I I 0

~======~..,-

=-----:--

lL I
7

-l-~-l--L-,..J-_,.1.......1
-

9

·

,

lll:'t. PRINT NUMBERED
~ LETTE~S

·

I'

C~mp lete the chuckle quoted

by .l1illng in the missing wor~'
you devoelop from step No. 3 below.

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Soften -young· Truck- Whiten· HONEST

-. T- -·

hill be (looting on o cloud with
rht buysyou
. 'N find , rht .
dassifreds . .

!THURSDAY

83

;;;u

I 1944 lnvoolon
data

East

_48.

'*"'

DOWN

Opening lead; .., 6

&amp;05SIP II

=

.

aupport

20 DriVe IO&lt;Watd
22 llltwtll
23 Cal". airport
abbr. .
Z4 Cleanao of
lmpurllleo
21 Dance center
31 Uka a lox

54 "-o51 Eaay gall
57 Dip
58 Alcohol lamp
59 Preao
60 Undivided •
61 Pour
62 Play group

Dealer: So11th

'I;~~:~~:=~~

-•lc

15 coflactlon
SmaM foreat ox
11 Actor
JohMy 17 Gull
18 Pari of a u U'a

Vulnerable: Neither

1D93 Jeep G1and Cherokee limited, VB, loaded, 82.000mi.,
$14,000.304-676--3337.

2 AKC Regislered Coc:ker Span·
lei IIIIo ~ BuH Colored Fonlilt II'
w$125, Each, 614-448-3275.
730 Vans &amp; ~WDs
2 Black ITan Walt Uinl 1971 Cadillac: Coupe, Excellanll-,g"&amp;~-::F"ul""l"Si'""••....,C'"hev-y'=BI'"az_ar_4,.x4"",
Dacnahund AKC Aeglslered Condi1ion, 11.800 080, .814·256- ·s4,200. 814-245-9327.
Awn u ·118/Hr, No Door ·To· 150
SChools
$175. ceo 814-388-tt~.
em .
·
Door, Oulcl&lt; Cash, Fun 1 Rei••·
Instruction
Ina. 1-800-7311-111681ndlalllrep.
2
Femate·Jack
Ruaselra
Pu.....Jes.
·1871
Plymoulh
Oustlf'
Race Car. 1887 Chevy S- 10 4X4• good· CO'l·
lbr, a1 utiUtleo paid oxcofl(fiee· Browning Croaabow, Quiver 4X32
"'"
•
.oo
Sec
1/8
M
ilo
Alol
01
Extras, tilion. 814"892•8737·
lYON . $8 ·118/Hr. No Door To
11ag1c Y1iorl D~1TillE ONLYI
ttic, Qalllpoiia Ferry area. $260f TaKo Scopa, Arrows &amp; Broad- 1250,00 each. Coil : (614)·441 · o
1 le...,. mo. • deposit. 304·875-1371 or headalncludod $180, 114·388· 0553
Ooor. Oulch Cash! •aopuaea•
304-G75-5847
6U·448-4U8. 304·675-1702 1DB8 Chevy Conversion Van.
••"" Downll-L.Q.onW.IIIc::tJno
Funl1.0.827440 iM'IIalrap.
Now accepllng appUcatlona lor
Everi'"l!a:
350 V-8, Loaded, $4,800 OJ!O,
~··
304-875-3812.
D143,
EworiiiQL
tion. $998 Dawn on Hlec! rruld·
A Groom Shop ·Ptt
814·448·8280 After 5 P.M. 614·
Fall enrollment. Wagle Years
fealurlng Hydro
1978 Dodge St Regia 4 Doors, 44 ,., 85Q.
Babysitter nuded In my hQml DavCnforPIItnllftcare.
sectiona.2-3or4Bedroom~
2 BedroDm Apanmtnt At .Rlo 530
1
AntiqUeS
Sneets. 373 Gtotges a
318 v..&amp;, GOod CondWon, .$1,000,
lor 8mo. old, Plft-llme, day shift Uconlld til' 1111 Stataol wv.
ell avii-.OikWood Hornet
Gronpo, All Udlltloa Furnlahad
30..773-!878 b' T111cy.
614-·0231
.
614·368-9265.
1889
Aa~o
Von
4.3
now
engl!!o,
.· Nillll. W'l. 304-755-SUS.
$300.t.lo. Plua Dapolll~ 81 ..388&amp;,000 ml111, 23 month warranty,
_;.;;::~..:;..;.;.:.:__.,..---[118
Babyoillet Needed In M1 Homo 180 W8.n ted TO Do
eu:. cond. te,OOO. ~e7S..:fl 18.
12X50 mobile home, needs eome ---..::48::...- - - - - - Buy or aell. Riverine Antiques, AKC Ulnl Dachshund•. B Weeka
1
124
E.
llaln
Suoe~ on Rt 124. Oid, Had Sholl &amp; Wormed; 1250,
~rk, haa 3 yr. old furnace, wash- 2bdrm. apts., total ~&amp;ctric:. •P·
Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 B14·388-g1!14.
Alter
References
Re1g83 llorcury Orand llo&lt;qulo, 11181 S-10 4x~ V8 Auto, 79~ Ex·
er a drrer &amp; new water healer, pllancH fumlaMd, laundly room a.m.
In Tho School
llercorviJio
Aroo, Boloro
11 8:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 to
quired, Cd Alto&lt; 5 P.ll. B1H!8. price nagotlablo, coli B14·gg2. conant Condition, NADA $6,750
$5000, call B1'"ilt2-!8G8.
..clllliol, CioiO ID acl1oolln toWn.
:::.;;;:.;;;;.::....;..:;:::..;.:.:.:;____ 1Applicatlona ovallablo at Vllaoo 8 :00 p.m. 514·iD2·2528. Ru11 AKC Pomeranian Pupa. Shota &amp; 6518, leave menage, will Clll Sell Prlc:e: $5.685, Cook Motor,
fl!i77.
ANY ODD ~088: Exterior pain&gt; 1211115 2 Badroorna. 2 Balho. New Groan Apta. -.g or call ,B14.gD2· Moen Cllllmlr.
- · e1~-8253.
bode.
6t ...41Hlt03.
Cemetery aal••' Ill the beat lng, shrubs 1 weeds trimmed, Furnace, Air Conditioner, l Hoi 3711.EOH.
·
AXC Reg Ronwoller puppies, II,U 19114 Old• Clen-a, 14,000 lftllea, 1993 GMO Salarl mini van. 1u111
540 Miscellaneous
kept aec:ret In America. High landscaping, sidewalks ·edged,
docked, dot:lowo ramovocl, lll)oll oxcaflont condition, cal 014-742· loodad.$12,500.
commilllona. bonusoa. llonefita, lewn cart. ate. Call BiU 30H7!i- Watar Heater, Good Rolrlaerator Furnllhocl Elftclorq _SM-o Bath,
Merchandise
1 SIOVO. Clrf&gt;Oied, With Awning $ID5IIIo., Udlilloo Po1c1, 007 Sec· .
&amp; wormed, good tlome only. 2187 lflllf' 5pm.
1D88 Ford Bronco Eddie Bauer
-. "'"' 401K. $!500 loll 7112.
I Underpinning. In Good Condl·
· GaU' 111 "14-&lt;146$300oa. 304-8112·2531.
Edition 4&gt;4·
lilart nlnlng bo"'l. call 81 ..1182·
15.2
Cu.
Fl.
Upright
Freezer
18811
BIIW
K75,
lllnt
Condition,
A'jOnuO,
opo " •
7440.
Care Glvor Fo&lt; Eldarl1 Peroon In Jion, Coil Allor B P.ll. 514·387- ond
3844, Altar 7 P.ll.
Crosby' 8 Years Warranty Uaed AKC Registered Airedale Pup- $l500, et4--211-t215.
~..~~~. $3,500.
Tholr Home 5 Daya IWaek, 24 7871 .
Vary Llnlo t:!SO; Stallarnan Rid· pies 1200 Black I Tan Ready AI·
computer Uaors Noodad. Work HowrafDir, 814-38&amp;-11783.
U
.......
,
br,
,_
tilt
Furnlshtc
Efficiency
2
Room
a
&amp;
1872 12185
2 1
lng lewn Mower, 421ncn Cut, ter Augu11 25, 1997, Clt4·388- 1D88 Cllevy Capricestallon wag· 1ggs Honda Pallport Low Miles.
own hours. UOk to ISDklyr 1·
- '''
-.
Balh. $22&amp;11o., U~IIIH Paid, g20
8e92.
on, oood bodj, , _ droo &amp;·p1111, $$!,;t5.~800~.~6~
I00-348-7111111151l&amp;
Child Cano In my homo Choshlro cond., mull bo moved. 13,600. Fourth Avenue. Galllpolla, 614- 12.5, H.P.I300, 81~~2.484.'
14~.4~4~6~03~30:.:-:--::neoda engine. lt25. 304·875-.
WIII .move locallj. 304·B75·30Q0
A~ 7 P.ll
·
11M, all hourw. (8"1 3117-)'IUg
florn
8-5.
416
3844,
•.
.
1DO•
Ford
F
..
150
Xl,
low
miles.
AKC
R$gistered
Lab
Puppies,
1843.
·
Toyota
tlxtl,
ale, 88,000 miles,
Computar Uaera Naoded. Work
chrome roll bars, nice ·wheels,
' OWn Hra., UDK To $50K /Vr. 1· Ex~clltPI/liiY and 101110-f 1987 Sllfllng 14x70, 3br, 211o, oil 'furnllhod Apartmon~ 1 Badroom, 110,500 neg. Floor lurnace Proven Hunting Sloc:k Champion
~7188 X t17:l. ·
dellng. lnaldt and outllde,! eleculc, range, rolrlgarator, dish- g;~~~ Second Avonut. Gaillpolla, 45,500 BTU, 21·112" x 41' ISO. Bloodline Yellow 1 Block $250, 1988 Dodge Colt t700 O.B.O. oharp •uck, runa txcellent, 814· .
. 814-&amp;43-2288.
:8.:.:14-:..:25=:.8..:1482.=~---- 742·3142.
.
decks, vinyl aiding, edd-on adell· waah•r. porch 1 undorfl(nnlng. $2g5/Mo., UdliliH Paid, Bt4-446- 304-87!MI574.
Domina'&amp; PIZZI Now Accepting lions, cabinet refaclftQ or newly 304-5111-220tolla'
4 s•11 Of American Racing AKC Raglatorad Whlie Garman 1887 Dodgo Shadow, Whitl, 2
8prn.
3844, Altar 7 P.ll. ·
Applicodona At GaUipi&gt;lls I Po· rebuilt. Rolorencta·Frto Eatl·
Motorcycles
Wheala, 1 Ytar Old, Peld 1800, Snaphord Puppl ... $100,-0BO Dooro, Auto, AC. PS, PB. AIIIFII 740
- ..API*t In"-1110111. Jim Shul 304-875-1272.
Clayton Ux70, 3br. 1ba, AperUnan1 For Rani/NOW Havon, Allldngi27S.et4-28&amp;-8215.
1"88
6.14·388-!UD4.
Cauene,
Sunroof.
Sparta
Pac:k·
•eg
Honda
CR -250, good 1iret,
•
WVA. Ona Badroom, Pl1ono 814heat pump. ax 10 rronl porah, ~2613.
Many
New
Partt.
IU,OOO
11200
Invested
in new mo1or,
age,
EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
Goorooo Portable
good cond., 112,000. 304-875· 1=:::::::.;::..._______ Alto Sax $825; Wood Bunk Bed 1oQa1 tank ul up specials. Fish Mills.I1.!00Cit ....... JP20.
Mattreuts 1325: Youth Bed Tank &amp; Ptl Shop, 2413 Jackaon =:::.:::.::::;.:.::=:.:.:=-::--1 have receipts, many new paris,
Lacal Arm In Naod Of An E....,. haul your toga 10 0.. nil
3000 florn 8-5.
.
Apartment For Rant; 322. Third (Wood) $35; 1878 To~ota Truck Ave. Point Pltasam, 304·675 · 1887 Ford Tempo looks &amp; Runs runa excellent, 11500, 814•742·
dvo Secrotary. lluat 'bo Ablo To 304-87!i-lll57•
(Neocla Work) S•OO, Bt4-•4e· 2083.
Good 11,200, Call Allar B P.ll . :31;.:4:.;2·:...__ _ _ _ _ _ __
New-11187
14
Wido-1
llolh,Ntrut, 61 H!8-III03.
Function Wl1h Utmost Proles·
down, $13glrno, with approved BEAUTIFUL APARTIIENTS AT og1o llalo,.D P.M.
lior8Harn. llull Bo Cornpular Ul·
:":.:':..':.:':8..:3:::7V:..7:.:
. - - - . , - - - 11l/l7 LT 500 Suzuki Ouad Racer
aociLCal1-80().6gt-8n7.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Are you tluwlng irtw furniture? Dog kennel oxtoxa $2 9.85. 1D88 Sulek Centurr••4 dOor, au- 4 Wheller, All New $2.400, 814erale And Show Proflcltncin Ill
1
1
WOrk' Proctllir'IQ; DiCIIIion, And
tg•7 doublewldo 11445 down, ESTATES, 52 Weatwood Driva Sall your ulld luml""' "' 0.. Po- Paint Plus 304-1175-4084.
tomallc, crulao, Iii~
wind- ;;.2-;.:..;
...30:.:.;_
.
Olhlr Customary EXOCIItivo Sec·
•
lrorn $260 ID $334. Welk II shop
OWl anct 18111, bOd)' tliiCIIIInt. Yamaha PWSO Good Shape
S22Wmo. Free dalilrary I sotup. 1 movlea. ·c all 5 10·448' 2558. fMI'O'/ Ttvift Shop. lhlwt il a real
relalr Skills. Compensation And
nead for brtlkfall •nd dining Golden Retriever Puppiu, 5 ).ept in garage, runa perf•ct, $7'00. 014_24$-985t Aftef' e P.M.
t.aoo.egt-8777.
Equol Houlling Opportunity.
Benefits Commensurate With
room seta. W• al•o buy baby Weeks Old, 175. 4 Fema.111, 1 tOO% dependable, •1850 080,
ouollllcadona. Equal Opportunity
good ulld •
llustllo 1n 11o1e, 814·388-11213.
mli&lt;o rno an oiler, 814-742·2370 750 Boats &amp; Motors
1il7 floetwood. 1•X52. 2 BR. convanlantto PVH. 2bedroorn, 11em1,
txcellent condition. Good onough I=:::.:.:.:.=:::..:.::.:.:;:._____ ' or 81 ..
for Sale
FINANCIAL
Like Now. (814l-llt2-54211
kitchen, llolll, LR.·No f&gt;OII. $3001 for
Chtistrou glfls. CaH 014·Di2·
HAppy .L!,CK! SKit U' M·
.:.:..;~.:.:..:..:.:...:__ _-:---:-Send Roaume To:
2 Bedroom lloblle Homo 12xeo : rno.S300dapolit304-117!i-57B8.
3725 Tuoldajlhru Friday, 101m·
CI-Ucralehing,- hoi
1gag Hjundal Excel, 45 mlloll
Exoculive Soc:tllllry
apollanditrl11ted1Wnwllhout
gallon, runs grea~ 11,1g5, 014- 1988 Ranger 373V 18" 12 ·24V
$1,800, 814·448·81 72, Or 810· For Loaaa: 2nd Floor Unlllmiahtc 4pm a1220 Eaatllain swea~ Po·
210
Business
P.QIIox200
1111oldi•Promo11s haaUng andllt2
-::..:·882="-:....______ Trolling llo10r; 150 XP Evinruda
256-11251.
Apartment With Small Bedroom, ...,01_
Opportunity
Rio Grande. OH 4!874
hair Qrowti) on d:igs ond calli
OuiOOard, $8.800, B1'"ilt2·2770.
Ooubltwide re-po never lived ln. Corner 01 2nd And Pine, S235J Atl'anto 50,000 BTU natural gBI
AIIIUableQ-T-C JDNORTH
198g Pontiac Orand· Am. 304·
INOTICEI
Expotioncocl Hair StyUII Nooded
"'"" 11111, no reasorwbla olltr r• llo.. Plus Utillliat. No Poll, Relar· healer, baughl 10115/ge G&amp;Vt
PRODUCE IJ1~6-1D33.
8:;_:75-~1:.;506.~-:--:-~-:-:-7. 18D4 Pontoon SWT 18 Fortastll
oncoe And Security Dapolil Re· 185e Sol lor $650
For Buay Now Solon, 814·441· OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. luaad. 304·75fi.71gl,
~
Uaed Vary Lillie With 25 H.P.
you
do
bull·
qulre&lt;f,
81
..
448-&gt;142S.
.
recommends
that
18110, 814-256-6338.
Kon,;.,o walhar, .about :Jvro. old. llalo and lernalo mlnlan11o collies 19110 Chevy Lulftlno, 3.1 L, cold E11iiYudo llo. Depth &amp; Fish Find·
Large
selection
ol
used
home.
2
ne11 ·WIIh
and
D
$25 c 1 11 3104 675 (Sheltitsl. lull Nown, 1400, 614· air, automatic, am'lm otoroo, ono or. Willl Live Well, li.W.L. Canopy
0.. or 3 bedroom&amp;. Starling 11 $34QS. Furnflhtd 3 Rooms l Bath, No· '50 · ryer
•
·
·
..
·ownar, e11cellent Inside and out- All Ace. Trlr Oars. Lt. Jats, And
HELP WANTED: EXPERIENCED NOT 10
Ouick delivery. Call 1-800·837· Pets. Relarance And Deposit Re-. 3215.
742·2050.
·~81'-2"""'.
Ld
R . pI $ n
BOOKKEEPER • Thla Poolllon ntaH un~l rou IIIVt
r. 1 adoo r ce 4••oo. 614·
92311.
quirld. 81 ....441-1 518.
Entail Co!11&gt;Uitr Baaad Books • floo~
8abv bed, dressing labia, high Pug puppy female, 3mos. old, 1D90 Plymouth Acclaim. cruise, I..;;;;-~062;::;;7..;A;;;I1or;:.;;4;;;:00;;,;.P.;;;II;;..- - APIAR. PeyroK, Job Coatlng, Tn
chair. awing, car seal, .stroller. 5hols &amp; wormed. $200.
,
cold air. til' aun roof, aulll, great 760 Auto Parts &amp;
New 1997 14x70 lhreellodtoom. Furnished Apartment. One Bed- 304-675-4548
Work And lloro For A Growing Bualno11 Space For Ront: 1000 indudta
AKC Reg. Boston Terrier pup·
..
e monlhl FREE lot renL room, Upsrairtl~ All Utilities Paid,
Consiruc:llon Company. Two Sq. FL Fo&lt; Ollco Of SIOre, SL AI. Only $181.88
'
·
pies. 1s1 lhol! &amp; wormed, very shape, ' ' 1185 •81 4-iltU824·
ACCHSOrleS
No
Peta.
854
Second
Avo
..
Galli·
per
month
with
y11, 1 on Tht Job Experience 33, Now Havon, W.VA., 51 ..Boola By Redwlng, Chippewa, smaD.I200.81 .. ilt2-4199.
1891 Oldamoblla18 3600 V·l,l:!'":':'"::o-~:-:--:--:---:polia.
814-448-8523
$10~0 down. Call 1·800·837·
21113.
And Flelorencat Required. Ouall·
Aocky, Tony lama. Guaranteed
Automatic, 4 Doors, loaded, Full line of auto body pantll,
loci Appicanll llay Coli 61 ... 48· Commarclol Buldlng For Sele Or 3238.
~~
paints and 1upplies, also glass,
Gracloua living. 1 and 2 llodroorn Lowest P•W At Shoe Cafe, Gal· Rtgiltared Arabian G'elding 14 lae,~ooo~~~~~ilel,~6~1 ..
3 8~8~8304~~--- lighl
4514 Fcir lloralnbr. .lion.
Years Old Gehlle. $1 ,000, 814·
a111mbly. Oxygen and ac•
Loaao, 4000 Sq. Ft., St RL 33, N.ew Bank Rtpo'ol Only 3 lal~ ·apartrntnll at VUiago Manor &amp;nd lpoNa.
258·1677.
1~g5 Cavalier 2 Door Coupo, tyleno tanl&lt;o filled ond exchanged,
owner
finantlng
available.
30•·
·
Riverside
Aparlmentl
In
Middle·
1
Now
Haven,
WVA.
8
14·U8·
Homo Buainoss S.A.S.E..tt.OO
Buying """rlocanfa
White, Loodad, 12,000 Mlloa, 614·742·21V2.
755-7181 .
porl From 1230·$304 . Cali 81 .. •1. will buy
ony Eliloo or oaw Dla- 570
Musical
M.O. Onlj,,S.P.F. fnl. P.O. Box 21113.
19,aso. BtH5fi·1Bn.
Instruments
3t17358, san Francl•c:o, CA Convenience Store For Lea••· Now 'obrktr Mobile Home. In Will · 992·5otl4. Equal Houolng Oppor· mond Klnga. 11 you have cards to
n.r;liat,
aell,let me know. Call 614·949- .
1D95 Saturn SC2, AuiDmallc, Air, New fiias tanks, 1 to n truck
114134.
lncludaa AU Equlpmon~ SL AI. 33, good condllion, on an •ere of
wheels &amp; radiators. 0 &amp; R Aulo,
8
Conn Trombone Uud 1 Year Cruise, AMIFM Cas1ettt, TrYnk Riplaj, WV. 304·372-3933 or 1·
New Hawtn W. VA~, B1ti·6D8· ground. Call only if lnlereal•d. Uodern 2 Bedroom Apartment, 30U .
LJGHT DELIVERY
•' C 1Altar 3 P.ll Roieaao, t12.000 Call Altar 5 P.ll. 800·273·93~.
304-1175-5472.
814 4~8 0090.
Corrvnerciol SllirHII SIHI Dou• Good Condl,on,
cash paid weekiV, need •mall 21113.
al
· · (SIIfloua lnqulrloa Dnlyl) 814·
Door Re~lgarator, Or Double 81...a-4231 .
car &amp; know area well. Call @
- 4015.
Own a new home $1,000Jdown, Old Ash Vlllao• Apartmentl.
Professional
230
790 campers &amp;
Free1er
Bolh
Like
New
3(M-ll75-6187.
no paymen1s aher 7 yu11. 30tl· Newly rtnaVatad, carpeltd, plen- $1,000 Each, 014-245-11033.
Old
Upright
Plano,
Choapi114-1:
:::.B::.u::.lc::k_E~I-ec-tt-a-,-~~o-d~y-g-o-od-,
Services
Motor Homes .
755-5568.
1y ol cloaot *PICO. trash -1 wotor
Mtdi "Home Heallh Waiver .Pro..a-0282.
mar11 ,_ par~~, t375 or 11o11 on·
pold,
rnanogorlrnaln1anct
on
alto.
·
Complelt
ICing
Size
Watarbed:
now !Wing LPN"I ond CNA'I HARTS IIASONARY · Block,
1D77 20h. Midas lraV~ trailer, aJr,
or, 81 ..1182-7271.
Huo accop1od. Call 304·882· 8 14·37V·2120 AFTER BP.ll.
580
FruHs &amp;
~Wnhlnplon, Alhena and brick l 110nt work, 30 )'IIJ'I IX- 350 Lots &amp;Acreage
awnln g.l sleeps e, $3,500 firm.
Uon·frl 10am-2pm. or by
Vegetables
llolga coun_u11. Call 1·800·428- perlenct, reaiOn&amp;ble rates. 304· 2 acre Jols on Be~l Rd. amilll 3718
A Nead A Cor? No Crodil, Bad 304-67!1-4435 ahar !lpm.
appointmant
Concrett &amp; Plaslk: S.pdc: Tanks,
~5-3591 aher O:OOpm, no )ob 10 from Pt Plea11n1. No lingle 1::::::;:;:;;:;:______
2773, 11-F. 8:0Darn-4110prn.
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Aon Canning tomatoes for 11~; also Croci~ Banlvuptcy? We Cln H~ 1985 ~otor Home 2tl' Chevy
small or 10 BIG. W\l-ll212ll8
wides. $15,000ea. Call before · Tara Townhoult Apartment•. Evana Enterprilll, Jackaon. OH hot and green peppert. Bring Re-Establlth Credl!l Must Make Chasaif Asking $11 .50Q: 1966
11.50 Week Talce Home. 15%
9prn304-875-7948.
Very Spacloua, 2 Bodroomo, 2 HIOil-537·952&amp;
Llvlngtton's b111ment wa1!r·
container, Marshall Adams, Down On Cash Or Trade TD Buick ReGal Asking $2,000, 614Floo"
CA.
1
112
lldl,
fuU,
Cor·
proofing, all basement repa111 .
Oualily For Thlo Bank Flnanci'"ll. .« H48tAiter e.
Sale Or Trade : 32 acrea 5 peted, Adufi ·Pool &amp; Baby Poal. Oin!ng Room Set, h:ludn Hu1Ch, , Adamo Rd.. Lolarl Fall• Ohio.
done. 1111 .e11imatea. lifetime For
Table,
&amp; e Chairs 1650:. Small1 Cenning tomatoaa. already picked No Credit Turn Downll 014-441 ·
Miles
From
Gallipolll,
on
S!ale
Patio,
Sllrt
$3501MO.
No
Ptll,
guaran1ee. 1Oyrs on job experi· Route 218. Will Sell All or Pens. L•- Plua Security Dapoa~ A. Table With 4 Cholre $75, 614·
SERVICES
or pick your own; brlng con!Biner, 01107.
ence. 304-e75-2145.
125,000, 61 .. 258-8574
qulrod, 814·4-48·3481, .814·448- 446-3114.
614-247-2961 .
By owner- 1981 Cadlliac Oe\/Uie,
4 door; exc:ellent condition, seri- 810
Appla Grove-Scenic Yallay. 1·0:..1::0.::1·---,:------.- O.E. Relrlgora10r. 304-875-5162.
Home
Fresh
Canning
Peachaa
Just
Ar·
ous callers onlv during evening
Beautlfli 2ac:re lots, pUIIIc: wa11r. Twin Riv111 Toww, now acctpdng
rived aeach'a Farm Market, Slate hours. B14-94D--2661.
Plrt·tlmo Dlllary Aida/Cook
Improvements
Grubb's
Piano
~
tuning
&amp;
repairs.
C. ··Bowen Jr. 304·575·2335 or appllcatlono lor tbr. HUD aublidRou11 160, At Evergreen. 3 111111
opening. Competitive aalary. Ap·
WidOO Reel~ !l04-87!i-2722.
lzod apt. lot ofdorty and hindi· Problams? Nead Tuned? Call lha North 01 Holzer Hospilal, Clll For CARS FOR 11001 Trucka, boa II,
BASEMENT
ply In person. Point Pleasant
piono Or. e 14-4411-4525
Extta Ordera, 814-448·1gu Or 4-whaelerl, motor hornts, furniWATERPROOFINO
360 Real Estate
cappoc~. EOH 304-ll7$48l9.
Norolng &amp; Rehabllilatlon Centor,
Altar 7 P.M. 51 ....a-322ll.
.JET
1ure; alecllonics, computlfl etc. Unc:onclitional lifetime· guarantee.
State Routt 12. Routt 1. Bo•
Wantld
Two bedroom opartmont In llld·
AERATION
MOTORS
by FBI, IRS, DEA. Available jOUr Loc:al references furnrahed. Es3211, Point Piaaoant, WV 25550.
depot~ no pill, t1..,.·511611.
corn, pepper• and to· area now. Coil 1-600·513·4343 tabllshtd 1975. Call (514) 445·
Rapoirod. Now &amp; Rabuit In Stock. .Jw&amp;et
EOE.
Fatm tOO Acrta Moll Or Le11.
matoea,
10am·?
Williams
Farm,
0670 Or 1·600·287·0576. Fiooors
All real eslate advertiSing in
Houa• And Farm Equlpmtnl. 15 Two Bedroom Townllouso. Spring tali Ron Evono, 1·800-537-\528.
Syracuse, Ohio, 814.gg2.3g85 EnS.g3ell
Wa1erproo0ng.
thiS
newspaper
lll!lubtect
to
'Jaliej
.......
1326
Ront,
Dapoai~
lliloa
Of
Rio
Grande,
137·
773·
Patt·Tirno Pollldon AIIIAal&gt;fo for
or81H~·5688
ovonlnga.
lllllO
-1m
Clrs
For
tiOOIII
4
448
1he
F-.1
Fair
Hooting
Act
32011.
llodlcal Trenscrlptlonltt • Can·
Releroncoa.
Cal {51 1
oooe Julious Erving Plata Hlol&gt;at1 BidSellocl And Sold
1
of 11188 wl1lch makea n Illegal
Appliance Paris And Service: All
dldalo lluot Bo High School
. Fo&lt; PF' dor. Bo-IFoolball C'arda. Call
Localljltiallonlll.
FARrA
SUPPLIES
to
act\llr1IS8
·a01
prefal'eree,
Qraduoto Or Equlvalonl Willi
Name Brands Over 25 Years E•·
RENTALS
Trucko, 4x4"o, Etc.
Upatalra
Aponrnonl
ForPer
Rent
parlance All Work Guaranlead,
Cornprohonalvo Knowlodgo Of
llmilltlon or cllaetlmlnatlon
1\ LIVESTOCK
1·800-522·2730, X3101.
$300.00 llonllt
• lluat
For·l· ~;;~;;;7~A.~11~-~-3;P.~!II~.
French City Maytag, 614 ·446 · ·
llodlcaf Terminology. llull Po ..
baHG on race, DOlor, religiOn,
Gaa I Phone • N• Kl1A:hon Ono
oou Good Typing Sklllo And
:cht¥)' Monza Drag Cat, Jeg1111 7795.
aex tamlltal staUJS or national
0
Housss for Rent
Largo Bedroom • Living Room
Knowlodgo Of Qrommar And
Chaasla, 5:13 Dena, Power Gilda
oriQin, or ony lntemlon 10
And Bath • Excollan1 Condition.
610
Farm Equipment
'Transmlulon, 377 cA.d. Small CIC General · Home Main·
~
Room
House.
Furnlahod
No
No
Pall.
Dopoalt
Roqulred.
Con
,
5
make any such preference,
Bloc!&lt; Rellor l.fotor Fluna 8.50 118 tenence- Painting, vinyl siding 1
Smoking, No POll. Cenua111 Lo· Bo Sean At1403 Eutern Avo·
llmitallon Of dllertminallon:
1805
Malley
Fergu1on
trac1or
:Milt,
e.t 18,500 OBO. Tum Kay, carpenlr'y, doors, windows; baths,
Ploue Sand Reau1110' To Holzor
c:alocl, B1 .. 448·tgse.
nuo, Gallpola. Call 81.w48-4514
240 dlaael, ••c shlf&gt;O. $8,500. el4-24!1-9357,
mobile home repair and more. for
Clnlc: HU111111 Rellllona DoPifl·
1 .~~~~=n~m~·~"~~~--­
304·57&amp;2578.
1::.:::.::::::::.:--:--:-~- fr"eo estima1e call Chen, 614-QQ2Thla newop- wm not
House In Pomtroy lor 11le or r•
111011 ~ 10 Jao:lraon Pille, Oalllpollo,
UpiOn Uaod Cars At. 82-3 Mlloa 6323.
0111o -16831·1!112 Or Fu To 514knowlngllf accept
ron~ 8t4-m-3000.
450 Furnished
Ford lr'ICIOr and 5ft. l:nllh hog. Ill SDUth ol leDn, WV. Financing
" ' 11112 Eqllll (lppotll""' EmrufUOrtilamlnll for r..les!ale
good cond .. now paint I now Avlllal&gt;le.304-468-1088.
840 Electrlcaland
one bedroom houso In llaaon.
Rooms
..........
whlcf110 In violation of tno
porto on trociDr. 12.850. 304-1175Refrigeration
11ovo 1 rolrlgorator furnlahed, Klngo llotof Lowoll Retoa In •:::::::~:=.:::.;::~:....:::.:::;_-::;-:-; 5ol73.
720 lhlcks for Sale
Pill· Time poollfon OYaliablo
law. OIJr roadars are heroby
t225 month plua dopoM. no poll, Town, Nowfy Romodolad HBO, '
hloo a Clerical Dutloo Retail
I - that aii-!'QS
Rtslden6al or ~ommercfal wiring,
Husqvarna I Gtltn Machine
304-77.1-5llll4 aiW 5.
Clnarnax. Showllme I Dlanoy.
Furnflwre Storo. Apply Topo'l
-lnllllsnowrpapor
ttlmmtra &amp; bruth cuners Dn ..., 1g72 Ton 4 Wheal Drive, Good naw 11n1ice or repairs. Maattr U·
Small
2br,
Camp
Conloy
area,
WHkiY
AI-.
Or
llontll
Rl-.
Furnlllrro, 111 S.COnd A...,.J:
are available on an oqual
nbw. Sidar'o EqulpmonL 304-876- Rubbar, Runa Good, 814·258· censed elactrician. RiiJI:nour
f1 75/mo. • deposit 304·t75· Conattuctlon Workoro Welcorno
Electrical, WVOD0306, 304·6757421 .
5574.
Oefllpolll., 10 a.m.llfl 1 p.m. "'"l''!!!!!!!!!&lt;4'~·,~·&lt;t·.nty-·lloa-il._. . 3812.
. 811 , . 1122,114441-1187.
1788.
PtgwCaflo
·~

..•

40 Songbird
42 . . . . .
1 - - t aoy
411 tt'a fn lilt bag!
5 Fog
45 011111 collactlon
g 8hadt of bluo 41 FUll of
12 Oead111c mean1ng
13 An apple - - 41 Tlo-oad
14 ~llenlry
.
53 Some, no

34 llode thread
35 Ginger cookie
37 F01hlonable
beach relorl
39 In eddltlon

A 7 3

••

ACROSS

~Copycat

.., K Q 3

1982 lsuzu Rodeo, air, new lires.
75,000 mlloa, S7000 OBO. 304·
'81 VW Rabbil, good c_ondidon, 773-5434.
high milea, $800 OBO, 814-992· 18i3 Chevy 112 ton. V-8, 5
6511 .
speed, 1500 Series. wl lh radio.
rear window, badliner, en- ;
·ee Ford Esc:ort GT, runt and sliding
look! good, !Jade br good luU size gine oil coolef, Reese hi tch, top- 1
older model c:ar, 814-U4g·3005, per, excelent conditipn, ,614-992-'·
7285.
.
askb'T~r:n.

8f2·2888.

• J 6 4 2.
1 a A J 10 .5 4

• Q 10 9 5 '
• 6 2

Autos for Sale

112 ·Aullmlian Shephard, 112 Colflo pupploa, ewks, $25oa. 304·

CPRcord. •

E""""•·

West

S"

care. Eaperienc:t In akllledi&amp;Ub-

Proftlllonal
Talemarketera
Air Conditioner&amp;. Color T.v.•1 , Needed For, Pol~e l Fire Pro·
14 256
grama Railed Fwnda For Child·
VCR'a. AlsO Junk Cars. 6 . - rena Program•. Call 812~.C43·

wanted
Straight
With
Knuckle: Boom
To Tiuck
Ltowe Pine
Logo. B14-2$4Hil2.

Shape, 1800, Phona 814 ·388·

BuU For Silo, Chllolala I Anguo 1:'::733=.·- - - - - - - Crou 4 112 Ya111 Old, 814..45·
0181,014-245-UI~Aitar~P.II.
1Q78 F350, 480, PS, auto, long
whetl base, 10' steel bed with
Fow Wonlh Otd Brown end While 10olboxe1, radials, exc:ellent meCoil Siallon, will with hailer, chanlcals, 13GG5 OBO, 614.gg2.
t30(); Chlc:lronli&gt;r a11o 12.00 pc. 3981.
lay'a--(B14)25lH233
1:.;.:...;__ _-:---:-:--:---:18811 Cuttom 30 w/u~ll ty bed,
r-r otd rtgisaered Arl.blan 2wd, 454 wlcomplet• 111tr1 .a27.
_o, wlt.h or wi1ho_ur tack. 181\ Also complete rear end, auto, pt,
2357
pb. $5,000. '30&gt;1-875-3000 from a5
Riding and Buggy Horsos 614· f.::·- - - - - - - - &gt;1411-4110.
11188 GIIC Siem1 pickup, PS. PB,
5 speed, V-8, ucellenl condition,
640 Hay&amp; Grain
814-1182-6833.
Allalfa hay rolls In barn, From 1&amp;8111 Ford XLT Aulomallc, Air,
•15. Storage I dtllvory 111rali· 302 Engine, Runs Good, looks
·able. Morgan Farmt Rt 35. 30tl· Good, $3;500 Firm. 814-&amp;92·
937·2018.
5135.
Haj 1,000 1111. Round Biles, $15 19110 Ford 5uf)81 Cob XLT Larla~
Each. 614-388-1142.
8 314 bed, auto, air, c:ruise, two
palnl. bedline(, visor, SS,OOO,
Square balaa ol hay; Timothy I IDnl
Orchard gran mil. 304-882· G14-Q4g·231 1 days, 814-94D·
28118.
~1SIDO A1d Toyota Pick-Up Stan·
dard, 4 ap. good enid. $2,995.
TRANSPORTATION
Amy (514)-3'/V-2887

cortil llfOiorrld. Send """"" II
304 Personnel I ( Pta..ant Vall*f
;;r~cloo. Selling parts. • Hospital 2520 Valley Dr.. Pt.
PleauntoWV. 25550. MIEOE.

12311.

EEK&amp;MEEK

COWL New HoiLi.nd grlndlllmlllllf, Ton, Runs Good Body In Good

''ai(;pci;;l,

Pleawll Yat1or Nurolna I Rehoblli•tlon Center It looking b' an
Adlftlaalon Coordinator. lluat llo

Nan-Working Wasl"ler, Or~era,
Stoves, Refrigerators, Freezers,

Norlll ·
01·21 ·17
• 8 3
•KI09 543
t K8
• 9 8 7

20 Young Holstein fall freshening ~873 ln!trnaUonal Plck~ Up 314

I

Anllquoa. toP, ~~tlcos IIOid, Rlver·
lne Antiqu•a. POIIIOIOj, Ohio,
Rull Moore owner, et•·t92·
25211.
Smith Buick Pontiac. 1QOO Easrlf'ft~. GafplliL
\1 1 D'l Au10 Porta. Bu1ing ul·

tamatic, radio. clocll, c:aaHtte,
boclllnor, lllidlno roar gilao, blue
.lnledoJ. sliver, A-one condition,
110.000. 1gooo, 81 ..742-21187.

=--:~~~=

Reaume

CLA 422. c/0

'83 Chevrolet 112 ton pickUp
truck, undttc:oated V-e, air. au-

•

•

ASTRO-GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Friday, Aug. 22. 1997
.
In 1he year ahead. Lady Luck wtll
be pulling for yo u where your
finances a nd career. are c oncerned .
Keep your eyes peel~d for her ~hen
you feel in need of a break.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ) You must
resign yourself lo see thtngs lhr?ugh
to their completion t&lt;)day. You wdl be
successful, provided you have lhe
persislence to do so. Gel a JUmp on
life by unde rstanding lhe influences
lhat govern. you in the year ahe~d .
Send for your Astro-Graph predictions today by mailing $2 and SASE
to Astro·Graph. c/o Ibis newspa!''"·
P.O. Box 1758. Mumy Htll Slalt~n ,

New York, NY 10156. B·c sure ' 10 disturbing ou&lt;sidc innuence 1ha1 has
state your zodiac sign.
disrupted things o.n the home front
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpl. 22) Some· could have some eff~cl today, . c ~en
one who rubs you the wrong way !hough ils lhrust is decreasing.
mighl be up to his or her old tricks
PISCES (Fe b. 20-March 20 )
again loday. Usc good judgment and Today you may encounter a pe,on
ignore this individual's foolishness .
who•c opinions about a~ouchy matLIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23 ) If a ler are contrary to y'o urs and equally
family member has been spending as innexib1e: Do not be provoc ative.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) D o
too wildly recently, il's lime 10 hall
his or her e xtravagance before the nol hesitale to seek an adjustment
budget is IOtally annihilated.
today if you feel you' ve been put out
SC ORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 22) in a recenl negotia lion . Demand a
Ha nnony of purpose is essenlial fairer deal and you ' ll get one ,
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You
1oday in an imponant pannership
arrangement Discord will impede and your mate might not see eye-to·
your momenlum and may cost you eye today regarding the way a de lithe gains you've made.
ea1e matter should be managed with
SAGI1TARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. the other's best interest at hean.
21) Yo ur workload might be a trifle .
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) You
heavier than usual today. Keep your : might suffer some slight inconvc·
mind on the rewards you hope to gar· nienc es today on behalf of a frie nd . ·
• ner; and they w'!l!:t seem so trying.
You will do this willingly, for your
CAPRICORN'""(Dec. 22-Jan . 19) pa l would do the same for you.
An opportunily might arise today lhat . . CANCER (June 2 1-July 22) A
will enable you to improve a rela· i· loved one might not behave in accor· ·
tionship with a person with whom 1· dance wiih your wishes today. He or
. you do nol feel at ease socially.
she will come around eventually, so
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20 -Feb. 19} A don't make a big deal of il.

' Witho.ut adversity," the old gent told the young man,
"people would never find out that they are really HONEST."

AUGUST21

I

�i

'

•

Ohio Lottery
Indians lose
by single run
to Mariners

Pick 3:
6-7-1
Pick 4:
3-7-7-o
Buckeye 5:
9-11-18-25-36

Sports on Page 4

Mostly clear to!light,
Iowa In the upper 40s and
lower 501. Saturday, partly
cloudy. Highs in the 70s .

•

entine
\lol. 41, NO. 90
C&gt;19tl7, Ohio Volley Publishing Compsny

2 Sections, 12 Pages, 35.cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, August 22, 1997

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Record school ·enrollment predicted for fall
WASHINGTON (AP) ,..- Public and private school enrollment will reach
a record 52.2 million students this fall, with teen-agers making up the bulk
of the increase, federal officials said.
States such as California, Arizona, Nevada and North Carolina will see
the biggest growth, according to an Education Department repon ·released
Thursday . .
This year's total tops last fall's enrollment of 51.4 million and continues
a trend that is expected to peak at 54.3 million in 2007, the report found.
"We've got to start preparing for that now," warned Education Secretary
Richard Riley, adding that school districts "need to be thinking long-term
and building schools."
.
Riley foresees the need in the next decade to build about 6,000 addition. al schools and to hire about 2 million more teachers ~ 260,000 to 300,000
in California alone.

ESC gives
nod to bus
operators'
certificates
The Meigs County Educational
Service Center approved school bus
driver certificates, substitute teachers
and aides during its recent regular ·
meeting.
In addition, ESC Superintendent
John D. Riebel sr: reponed on the
preschool handicapped program,
which will have classes all day on
Mondays and Wednesdays during the
upcoming' school year.
The classes will be at · Pomeroy
Elementary School and three posi,
lions are open for typically developing children, ages three to five, for
· SSO per month. Applicants will be
chosen at Qlndom, he said.
Riebel said anyone interested in
enrolling their child into the program
should send a letter to him at P.O.
Box 684, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, orcall 992-3883 by Sept. 2. '
Bus drivers approved were:
Eastern Local ~ George Basim,
Flossie Dill, Gary Dill, Larry Dillon;
Glenn Easterling and Darlene Reed;
Meigs Local- Katherine Elliott.
J.o Gilmore, Kevin Jewell, Ida Mar. ·tirr, Carrie Morris, Linda Morris,
Steven Morris, Debra Shuler, Charles
Williamson, Ronald Wilson, Davina
Willis and P. David Williams;
Southern Local -'William Downie, Charles Lawrence, Daniel Riffle,
Larry Smith and Darla Haning.
· Approved as substitute teachers
were: Robert Austin, Deborah Barber~
William Gee, Lucille Haggerty,
Lawrence Haley, Rita Lewis, Christi
(Continued on Page 3)

Riley noted there was no shortage of teachers in the country. But he said
there was a need for well-trained faculty who are teaching in their chosen
fields. He said many schools may need more teachers in specific subjects
such as math and science.
"We can 't expect to raise the academic standards while lowering teacher
standards just so we can put an adult in front of every classroom," said Riley.
Officials said the largest share of the growth is expected with teen-agers,
reflecting the enrollment boost elementary schools have experienced from
fall 1985 to fall 1997.
.
The report said that from this fall until 2007, public schools c'an expect
a 13 percent increase in grades 9-12, a 5 percent increase in grades 6-8 and
a I percent decrease in grades 1-5.
California has the largest projected increase in public high schools for the
next decade at 35 percent. North Carolina follows at 27 percent, Arizona at

r------------------------

TRAPPED- Rutla.nd Marshal MB\t Proffitt l!hOWed 1J81f1hbors
the wall from which Carl Hyaall Sr. Wll removed TliuNdliy. The
well lain Hy1811's backyard. He wasllll8d In critical condition this
morning.

crews .
rescue Rutland man
after fall into well
Emerg~ncy

A Rutland man is in critical condition in the intensive care unit at
Ca!M:II-Huntington Hospital in Huntington, W.Va., after being pulled from
a water well at his home on Main Street Thursday.
Carl Hysell Sr. was apparently cleaning in or around the open well,
located in the backyard of his home, when he accidentally fell in, and
became trapped, according to Rutland Marshal Mark Proffitt.
Emergency crews from Rutland, Middleport and Pomeroy responded
to the call shortly after 4 p.m. Hysell was extricated at around 4:45p.m.
and was transported to .the Huntington hospital by emergency helicopter.
Hospital policy prohibits releasing specific information about Hysell's
injuries.

25 percent, Nevada at 24 percent, Massachusetts at 23 percent and Rhode
Island at 21 percent, according to the repon.
· ,. .
The report cired several reasons

ror the rising enrollments: immigration;

a delay in marriage and childbearing among baby boomers; higher binh rates
among minorities, especially Hispanics; and students staying in school longer.
Some students already are feeling the pinch.
Ray Henderson, principal of Miramar J-;ligh School in Broward County.
Fla., said morale among students is declining as bathroom lines get longer,
parking spaces become scarce and sludents arrive to class late bec3.use of

crowded hallways.
He expects his school to file for "critically overcrowded" status within
the next three or five years. Enrollment is expected to grow from 2,065 this
year to 2,700 by 2002. .
"Students are relegated to becoming crowds as opposed to individuals."
said Henderson.
·

Meigs voters to decide trio
of countywide tax issues
al half-mill, five-year levy for mainBy JIM FREEMAN
taining and operating cemeteries:
Sentinel News Staff
Meigs County voters wii!Jace no
In addition, Columbia Township
shortage of candidates or issu~ when voters will decide a local option issue
they report tp the polls in November. approving or barring the sale of
Voters will decide three county- alcohol for off-premise consumpion
wide property tax levies, including an within the township.
additional continuing 1.8 mills for the
Candidates in local races include,
purpose of maintenance, capital con- incumbents indicated by (i):
struction and operation of the CarTownships
leton Sl;hool and Meigs Industries
(i denotes incumbents)
Workshop for persons with mental
Bedford - Trustees, two to be
retardation and developmental dis- elected: David M. Brickles, Robert F.
abilities.
·
Hawk (i), Virgil C. King (i) and Jack
Other countywide issues are an R. Wells;
additional half-mill, five-year levy
Chester - Trustees, two to be
for maintenance and operation of the elected: David l. Koblentz (i) and
county home, and a one·mill, five- · Blair Windon (i);
year renewal levy for cumnt expensColumbia - Trustees, two to be
es ill the Meigs County Health elected: Don Cheadle (i). Jam~­
Department.
·
· · ' ton, R. Jerry Hanning and Granvilfc
Other property taX issues include: C. Stout (i);
· • Eastern Local 'School District Lebanon - Trustees. two to be
Additional 4. 7-mill, two-year levy elected: Elson Dailey (i), Lawrence
for the operation and permanent Hayman, Lawrence Johnston Jr.,
improvements of the-school district; ·John P. Krider, Charles R. Lawrence,
• Southern Local School District- Howard M. Lawrence Jr. and Bruce
Renewal 4-mill, _three-year levy for E. McKelvey (i);
current expenses;
Lctan ...:.. Trustees, two to be
• Rutland Township- Addition- elected: Zane A. Beegle, Dave Graal one-mill, five-year levy for main- ham (i) and Bob Manis;
taining and operating cemeteries;
Olive- Trustees, two to be electOlive Township- Renewal one-· ed: Ernest Barringer (i). Kenneth
mill, five-year levy for maintaining Larkins. William R. Osborne (i) and
and operating cemeteries;
Ronald G. Wilson; ·
Racine Village - Renewal 1.7Orange - Trustees, two to be
mill, five-year levy · for current elected: James A. Bernard, John
expenses;
Rankin. Roger Allen Ritchie (i), BenMiddleport Village - Renewal jamin "Benny" Upton (i), Lewis F.
two-mill, five-year levy for fire pro- White and Robert S. Marcinko;
tection;
· Clerk, Osie M. Follrod (i);
Columbia Township~ AdditionRutland - Trustees, two to be

elected: Charles D. ·.Barrett Jr. (i),
Steve Lambert and Charles
Williamson (i);
.
Salem - Trustees, two to be
elected: Stanley Hutton (i), Harold
Dannie Lambert and Cecil L. Stacy
(i) ;

Salisbury - Trustees. two to be
elected: Paul Dill, Edward W. Durst
(i), Bill Spaun and Bernard D. Gilkey
(i);

Scipio - Trustees, two . to be
elected:· Robert D. Butcher, Philip
Lee Erwin, Daniel W. Lantz, Joe N.
Sayre and Thomas D. Nicholson;
Sutton -

Trustee!\, two to be

elected: Larry Ebcrsbach, Kenneth R.
Guinther. Grover Salser Jr. (i), Don P.
Smith, · Thoma. M. Theiss, Roy -F.
Van Meter (i) and Dennie E Hill;
Clerk, Kenneth E. Wiggins (i).
School boards
·
Eastern Local, two to be elected
- Frank !hie. Pomeroy; James R.
Sf!lith (i), Tuppers Plains: Roger
Willford, Tuppers Plains, and J. Grq!l
Bailey (i), Pomeroy :
Meigs Local, two to be elected ·Scott Walton (i), Pomeroy;
Southern Local, three to be elected - Thomas R. Cammarata, Portland; Douglas W. Little (i), Racine,
and Marty L Morarity (i), Syracuse;
. Meigs County Educational Service Center - Roben E. Barton (i ),
Pomeroy; Howard B. Caldwell (i ),
Reedsville, and Jeanette M. Thom as
(i). Middleport.
Villages
Syracuse Village Council - Larry W. Lavender (i), Donna M. Peter(Contlnued on Page 3)

Consumer advocates slam check-cashing businesses' practices
WASHINGTON (AP)- Around the turn of the century, agents known
as "salary buyers" would lend strapped workers a few dollars, then recoup
the shon-term loan plus a substantial fee when the workers were paid.
These days, a consumer group contends, many low-income Americans are
being subjected to the same son of practice by the growing ranks of neighborhood check-cashing businesses.
.The Consumer Federation of America, releasing a survey Thursday, also
said consumers forced by rising bank fees to turn-to the storefront outlets
are getting soaked with excessive charges to cash their checks there.
· A trade group representing the industry countered that many consumers
prefer the convenience of check-cashing outlets, which often are open longer

hours than banks.
The consumer group, which surveyed I I I check-cashing outlets in 23 of
the nation's largest urban areas, found that fees for cashing a paycheck ranged
from I percent to 6. percent and averaged 2.34 percent. Fees for personal
checks ranged from 1.85 percent to 16 percent, averaging ·9.36 percent.
In a fast-growing sideline, some check-cashing operations also make loans
to customers on postdated personal checks to tide them over until their next
pay day, at interest rates equivalent to 261 percent to 913 percent a year. the
survey found.
Some 12 million American families cannot afford to maintain regular bank
accounts, acc~nding to the Treasury Dcpanmcnt. Stephen Brobeck, execu-

Local Heart Association branch slates
fifth benefit walk Sept. ·27 in Pomeroy

GnMoRE
FOR YOUR
DOUGH AT

t&amp;O

•

The fifth annual walk for the
Meigs County Branch of the American Heart Association will be held on
Saturday, Sept. 27 at 12:30 p.m.,
beginning at the Kroger parking lot
in Pomeroy and moving downtown.
Debbie Haptonstall is chairman' of
the wiilk, and her co111mittee members are Linda Warner, Jane Frymyer, Nancy Campbell, Linda King,
Dreama Pickens, Jackie Starcher,
Linda King, Brian Reed, Marsha
Russell, Barb Black, and Scott and
Julie Dillon.
This year's event 'is. being sponsored by Farmers Bank &amp; Savings
Co., Holzer Clinic and Whaley's
Auto Parts.
At a recent recruitment leaders
meeting, Haptonstall explained that
the event really has three purposes.
"We want to raise money to fund
research .and education to fight heart
disease, Meigs County's number one
cause of death and at the same time
promote walking as an easy way to
reduce one's risk of the disease. In
addition, we want to honor survivors
of heart disease," Haptonsiall noted.

"These are the people who have
Besides red caps for survivors of
benefited from the research that the hcan disease, a traveling plaque will
American Heart Association funds be awarded to the team that collects
with money raised from the walk. We the hi~hest total. Last year, the plaque
will once again be distribuiing red · was won by Trinity Church, collectcaps to all walkers who arc survivors jng a total of $1,774, ciQsely followed
of heart disease and stroke," said the by Sacred Heart Church.
chairman.
"We are thrilled to ha~e these
.This year's evert! is being con- teams and other involved in the
ducted in memory of Chester Rose, walk, ·: commented Haptonstall.
who recently died of heart disease, "Their team enthusiasm helps inspire
and in.hpnor of Walter Grueser. a sur- everyone. This year we are hoping
vivor ofhean disease and past pres- more teams will join in the healthy
idcnt of the Meigs County Branch of walk that may encourage their memlhe AHA.
bers to 111ake changes for a healthier
At the . event, walkers for every lifestyle."
team will be able to wear a back
Individual prizes are also available
patch denoiing a victim or survivor of to the walkers. Goody bags wil~ be
heart disease that the team or indi- distribuled to all walkers along with
vidual wants to honor.
water mugs, T-shin, umbrellas, khaIn explaining the walk, Hapton- 'ki shins, ·warmup suits arid sports
stall said, "Our committee is now bags to those collecting ·sponsor
contacting businesses, clubs, church- money· for their efforts.
es and other organizations to see if
Anyone interested in forming a
they would like to form a team for team or walking as an individual,
this year's walk. The event offers a may register by contacting Haptengreat chance for everyone to experi- stall, 992-6078, or any committee
ence the heart healthful benefits of member. Kits ~ill be delivered to
walking as well as other incentives." interested teams .

•

•

tivc director of the consumer group, said more than half of black and Hispanic households cit~er have no accounts or very small deposits with hanks,

thrifts or credit unions.
Increasingly. these people arc turning to check cashcrs, often located in
low-income and.minority neighborhoods but which have recentl y expanded
into suburban areas.

·

There arc now about 6.000 outlets in the United State&gt;, cashing more than
200 million checks a year worth some $55 billion, according to the National Check Cashcrs Association.
,
Only 18 states regulate check cashcrs and only 12 of them impose caps
on the fees they charge, the Consumer Federation said.

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

WALKING IN TRIBUTE - The fifth annual
walk for the Malga County Branch of the AmerIcan Heart A11oclstlon will be done In memory of Chester Rosa, who recently died from
heart di188H, and In honor of Walter Grueser,

a survivor of heart disease. Seen above with
Debbie Haptonstall, holding the sign, are from
left, Brent, Tara and Jeff Rose, children of the
late Chester Rose, and Grueser.

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