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'

•

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.

�C.opm~ntary
'

J

'Estlll1fisMI i/11948

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-112-2151• Fax 992-2157

.!1

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publl8her

MARGARET LEHEW

Controller

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P.ge 2

Friday, Augull 22, 1917

••
)

;

CWo

Letters to the editor
~

Responds to article
Dear Editor
I read in the last week's Sunday Times-Sentinel where Sam Wilson, a
writer for the limes-Sentinel said that Greg Maddux is worth every penny .
of the $11 .5 million he will be getting from the Atlanta Braves each year.
This is more than myself and my whole family will get in a lifetime of
hard work, for just throwing a ball. This what is wrong with all pro-sports.
'when the owners give big money they just raise the price of tickets they
did a couple of yeas ago in pro-basketball, more than doubled the price of
tickets. The fans are the ones who pay for these so-called athletes to become
millionaires and play their games at our expense.
You can be a fan of a team in any pro sport and the following year hal(
the team may be playing for some other team, or like the Browns move to
another city and state, all because of the all mighty dollar.
.• If a person wants to see a sport where the players are playing for the love
of the game, go watch high school and most colleges.
The only way to stop these outrageous salaries paid to these pt'O'players
in all sports is for the fans to stop going to watch them.
Some people will say TV pays for them, but if they see empty stadiums,
gyms and ball parks, TV will stop paying those high prices.
Mr. Wilson also said that Maddux was that good -- no one is worth that
iind of money. There are kids out there I believe can.be just as good if they
had the chance.
· There are many overpaid pro-players in all sports. I put the blame on the
jl:Wners and as long as there is greed with the owners it will be hard to stop.
It is up Jo the fans to stop these high priced athletics. It is getting so expensive for a family to go to a pro-sporting event because of these salaries so
many players are getting a person cannot afford to take the family out anymore.
.
·
.
·
Now taxpayers are going to build places for these pro-players to play. I
liily if the owners of these teams can afford to pay these high salaries, they
·can aiTord, to build their own places for their players to play, not at tbe
expense of the general public and the taxpayers.
, In closing, maybe Mr. Wilson doesn't think S11 .5 million a year is much
money· and the price of tickets will go up every year if the fans are dunib
enough to pay the price.
Thank you,
Robert Burton,
Pomeroy

as

Let's all go on st!:ike
Dear Editor,
In order to pay bills and live a comfortable life, every citizen should
1 belong to a profit-making organization.
If you're laid off from work because there's no business. you should
belong to the Laid Off .Workers group. If you only make minimum wage and
your neighbor makes a hundred and fifty dollars an ho~r. you should switch
jobs and join the one that pays a hundred and fifty dollars an hour. If you are
Jhinking of getting a job you can join TOGAJU (Thinking Of Getting A Job
Union).
A popular television commercial shows a teenage girl in need of a prcI!Cription but can't aiTord it. Her dad sits with her on the swing and· tells her
to join his organization. It doesn't mauer if she doesn't know anything about
ihe job requirements, she's eligible as long as she pays dues.
: We .all need to find the union that suits our lifestyle and sign up. I've been
looking for a union that pays me to sign up for a union, paying me to switch
unions' in the event ·my union goes on strike against the union to which I
belong.
,
·
I'm not sure if the .J)Ost office can ~o on strike, but if they do. I know a
union that makes "On Strike" union signs, printed on union paper, by union
folks.
In any event, now that I am unable to shop by mail using the service of
UPS, I think we should all go on strike and join the ASU (American Strikers Union). If you can't afford the dues, you can join the CADU. If you read
this, it means I joined the Leuer To Editor Union.
Roger Reeb,
Racine

Limited government has faults, too

By Jack Anderson
But it may help another one of · . issue." In other words, members of
.lnd Jan Moller
Murtha's political neighbors: Rep. Congress shouldn't have to face
Rep. John Murtha, D-Pa., knows Bud Shuster, R-Pa., who hails from intimidation •." and possible finanall about the havoc that the Jusllce a neighboring district and chairs the cial hardship - at the hands of a coDepanment can wreak on an unsusequal branch of government.
.
That's fine, but what about all the
pecung member of Congress.
As a . young lawmaker. 1~ 1980,
anonymous White House staiTers
Munha ~as n~ed as an unmd1cted
who've been called to testify on
. c.o-consp1rator m the Absc~ mvesCapitol· Hill about misdeeds and
t1gat1on . He ~as nev~r tnd1cted,
shenanigans that they may- or may
though ~e prov1ded testimony about
· not .. have witnessed?
two of h1s fe!Io"! congressme,n.
By one White House staffer's
account, more than 100 CUITCnl and
The expenence may ,explam why
Munha, nearly two deca~es later,
. former Clinton aides have been
has. sought to c~ate a cunou.s new
called to Capitol Hill to give testi·
enutlement for h1mself and h1s colmony since 1993. Dozens of aides
leagues. An amendment he . S)lOn·
Molter and Anclareon
have made repeat appearances, some
s~red, tacked on to an appropnauons
for no better reason tban because
bt!I that could become law n~xt Transportation Committee. Accord- they happened to have been worlcing
month, would force the U.S. Just1ce ing to the Boston Globe, Shuster is on the day that Vince Foster comDepanment to pay the legal fees ~f under investigation by a federal milled suicide. And most of these
any member of Congress who 11 grand jury that's trying to determine staffers have been forced to hire priinvestigates and who is then acquit- whether· he and a f&lt;irmer top aide . vate attorneys.
ted.
. .
.,
.
. improperly intervened on behalf of
So who pays their legal fees? Not
~ot . surpnsmgly, . 11 s an 1dea contributors who had a stake in a Congress; that's for sure. Although
that s ~aught on qune well wnh massive transportation proj,ect in the l•w provides for reimbursement
Mu.~ha s co!Ieagues.
Massachusetts.
of some legal fees ' for federal
. Th.1s IS a senous P!,oposal, and I
Murtha says the amendment was- · eQtployees who become targets of an
thmk 11 may (pass) · says Gary n't about creating a new entitlement, independent counsel's investigalion,
Ruskm of · the Congresswnal but instead is "a
there isn't much recourse for
Accountability Project, which
opposes the new perk. "It's clearly
popular on Capitol Hill. ... Members
of Congress like this proposal."
Of course they like it. It's too bad
ordinary Americans don't have the
same protection when the government comes breathing down their
neck. Nor do they have the ability to
set up legal defense funds to help
. defray their costs, the way lawmakers often do when their integrity is
questioned.
Murtha told us he was inspired to
act by the ordeal of a home-stat~ colleague, Rep. Joe McDade, R-Pa.
McDade spent four years being
investigated by the Justice Depanmenl on suspicion of having taken
bribes before he was acquitted on all
charges by a jury last year. In addition to costing more than $1 million,
the indictment probably cost
McDade the chairmanship of the
powerful House Appropriations
Committee.
"My initial intention," Murtha
says, "was to establish the fact that
if a person .is prosecuted when following the duties of the House, they
shouldobe reimbursed."
Munha's proposal won't help
McDade recover his costs, since it
isn't retroactive. Not that he needs
it; a legal defense fund has raised
enough money to cover most of the
costs associated with the trial.

$30,000-a-year White
House
staffers who get called on the carpet
by Sen. Alfonse D' Amato, R-N.Y.
The Justice Department does maintain a "representation fund " for
staffers who need lawyers as a result
of their official duties. But in practice, it's rarely used.
Murtha says be offered, on three
separate occasions, to expand his
proposal to include administration
staffers, but his olive branch found
no support within the White House.
Instead, we are at a moment
when members of Congress are on
the verge of expanding the alreadygenerous safety net they provide for
themselves.
They've already imposed a moratorium on all new internal ethics
complaints, which has already been
extended on nine separate occasions.
And now they ' re trying to insulate
themselves even further by creating
a perk to which the rest of us are not
entitled.
Jack Aaderson and Jan Moller
are wrlten Cor Uahed Feature
Syndkate, lac:.

By William A. Rusher
Congress is rushing headlong
toward a mid-September decision on
an . imponant bill involving the federal judiciary. All
signs point to an
agreement that
will quite unnecessarily
cost
American taxpayers many millions
of dollars and
result in two Circuit Courts of
Appeals dominated
Rusher
by liberal judges
for the foreseeable future .
There are . currently II Circuit
Courts of Appeals hearing cases
appealed from the federal district
courts around the country. (There
are alSo Courts of Appeals for the ·
District of Columbia Circuit and the
Federal Circuit, which need not concern us.) The problem is the Ninth
Circuit, whose territory includes
nine states (Alaska, Arizona, California, Hawaii. Idaho, Montana,
Nevada, Oregon and Washington)
plus Guam and the Northern Mari- ·
ana Islands.
California alone has nearly two-

Dear Editor,
I would like to comment on R. Weedy's Aug. 17 column, "Rise of the
Socialist States of America."
According to Mr. Weedy, limited government gave us more freedoms to
enjoy, but alas, liberals converted "little brother" government into "big
brother" and turned paradise into a socialist Hell.
; The historical record demonstrates otherwise ..
' Aside from fighting against the struggles for economic justice, and civil
rights, and in ·general, opposinj! every effort to make life better qualitatively
lor the average citizen, what did conservatives do for the country's moral By George R. Plagenz
The woman reading my teacup
fiber?
·
: "Little brother" government gave us the Whiskey Ring. Belknap Scan- seemed bored by it all. She reminddals, Saiibom Scandals, the Gold Conspiracy, Teapot Dome, and Boss cd me of some of the women who
Tweed, just to name a few.
have mtcrv1ewed me at unemploy: In regard to taxation, Mr. Weedy attempts to pull a standard conservative men! offices at various times in my
~oax: connecting"big brother" with oppressive taxes . The economist Herb
life.
.
Stein (not a liberal), has admiued thatlhe share of the gross domestic prod- _ $he was not at . ~ hke those
uct taken by federal taxes, is no higher than it was 42 years ago. The reason peppy, personable psych1cs you
the middle class has paid more taxes is because conservatives. over the past meet these d~ys on TV infomercials.
. couple of decades, have lifted the burden of taxation from the rich, and busi- These psychtc hot hnes g1ve you
. nesses, and placed it on the middle class, Today, corporations pay only about advice on your career, love life and
10 percent of federal taxes. Forty-seven years ago they paid one-third of fed- m~iage and tell you how to find
happmess. .
.
o;ral
taxes.
.
Is of be'mg "soc1a
. I'ISIS "• but lhey can 'l . run
, Conservatives
accuse hbera
By d1ahng an 800 number on
your TV screen, you can get a per(rom their own sordid history and remain intellecll!ally honest.
Jeffrey Fields, sonal reading from one of those
Middleport "amazing" psychics who will also
tell your fortune for $3.99 a minute.
My tea was no bargain either -$10
a cup. But for that you got not ,
Dear Editor,
· This is to the person or persons who took a white wicker basket of pink roses only your teacup filled but your fortune told. There were several of us in
riom my mother's lwo&gt;day-old grave.
1 wish you could have been mere aod e•plained to an 8-year-old and 9-year~old the small from room of the house
CJrild "why" as they (we) stood crying. Weill know the Oowers or basket ~an noth- where the . fortuneteller lived .. We
ing to you, but for her grandchildren it w~s their way of ttlling Nan one last good- were dnnking our tea and wallmg
bye. You may want to know we did have plans for the basket.
our tum.
1ju!ol want to say thank you again for more tem.
One woman was soon to have a
Robia Roclohavor,
baby
and for an instant I had the
•
Middleport
mischievous thought of asking her to

thirds of the Ninth Circuit's population, as well (of course) as the lion's
share of its judges and cases. The
circuit is by far the largest in the
country, ,&lt; and there is a case to be
made for splitting it in two. But the
Senate, brushing aside California
senator Dianne Feinstein's proposal
for an 18-monlh study commission,
has endorsed a split that simply
affronls common sense. The House
will probably disagree early in September, but a conference will then be
held, probably by mid-month, to
reach a compromise. And there lies
the danger.
·
Under the Senate bill, the Ninth
Circuit would be reduced to just two
states (California and Nevada), and
all the others, plus the Pacific
islands, would be placed in a new
12th Circuit, which would carry
about a third of the current Ninth's
workload. The present headquancrs·
of the Ninth Circuit is San Francisco, so ·no new courthouse would be .
needed. But with Arizona assigned
to the 12th (though it is far to the
south and hence would not be contiguous with any other state in the
circuit), the bill calls for two new
"co-equal" headquarters -- and that

MICH.

Marvin Walker

. IMansfield 171° I·
IND.

(f

~

.

•!eorumbus!7e•

the expression on the fonuneteller's
· face when she looked in my cup and
saw that I was pregnant.
When my turn came, I went in the
room where the fortuneteller sat. She
asked me to tum my
teacup over on the
saucer, put my hand
on the bottom of the
cup and make a wish.
Plagenz Then she turned the
cup right side up and
read the tea leaves that were stuck to
the bottom.
Later she asked me to cut a deck
of playing cards three ways. She
pi cked three or four cards off one of
the piles and continued to look into
my future with the cards. to guide
her.
She told me nothing startling, but
at times it did seem as if she might
be reading my mind. And I have
wondered since if this might be at

·
discern what someone is thinking or
planning, you can, . to a ccnain
extent, predict what that person 'will
be doing in the future.
It nevertheless remains a mystery
to me how a person can read someone else's mind, even after allowing
for the mental messages we all inadvertentl'~give out.
I ha e been to one other fortunetelle in my life. She was wellthought of in psychic circles and
charged $45 a half-hour.
She had me sit across from her at
her desk and put my hand on an
open Bible and a cross lyjng on it.
Then she picked up the cross and
held it in her hand for the next 30
minutes while she related what "the
·spirits" were telling· her about my
· fulure.
' She did not appear to be reading
my mind. As a matter of fact; most
of the things this pleasant middleaged woman told me about my pre-

sent life were wrong.
·
" You have a brother." (I
haven't.)
,
" You arc a lawyer." (When I told
her I wasn 't, she said I should have
. been.) .
When I said I was a clergyman as
well as a newspaperman, she pegged
. me as a Pentecostal minister.
(Wrong again, but maybe my fond ness for Pentecostal church services
shows through.)
·
Why do people go to for- .
tunctellers? Some arc obviously .
reassured to learn that their lives .
have not been !crt to unknown :
chance, that their future is already :
laid out -- at least in broad brush-·
strokes if not in detail -- and that :
·they can cease to worry about it.
Others go to psychics fort he help :
they give in making decisions.
.
Is there a lessqn, and a warning, :.
here for the churches -- that if rcli- :
gion does not offer guidance to peo- :
pie in their day-lo-day affairs, they ·
may look elsewhere for it?
:
George Plagenz b a syndicated :
writer for Newspaper Enterprise ·
Association.
. '

Marvin Walker, 84, of Main Sti-eet, 1\lppers Plains, died Thursday. Aug.
21, 1997 at the Heanland Nursing Center in Marietta.
Born Dec. 21, 1912 at Beasley Knob Mountain, Tenn., be was the son of
the late John Vestall!ld Sarah Beasley Walker. He was a retired heavy equipment operator from the Ohio Depanment of Transportation and be attended
the Nazarene Church in Chester.
.
He is survived by three daughters and sons-in-law, Ruthic and Gary Witte
of Little Hocking, Alice and George Hashman of St. Marys, W.Va., and Mary
and John Newell of Long Bottom; two brothers, Verlin Walker of Clay Ciiy,
j{y., and Philip Walker of Dayton; three sisters, Thelma Miller and Dimple
Miller, both of Dayton, and Geneva Clark of Xenia; and nine grandchildren
and nine great-grandchildren.
Besides ·his parents, he was preceded 10 death by his wife, Mirna Walk·
er; a son, Johnnie Walker; a granddaughter, Terri Nutter; a sister, Opal Maddox; a brother, Carson Walker; and an infant brother.
Services will be I p.m. Sunday in the White Funeral Home, Coolville,
with the Rev. Herbert Grate officiating. Burial will be in the South Bethel
Cemetery, Coolville. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 79 p.m. Saturday.

The Eastern Local School District has announced that the 1997-98
school year will open on Monday. Starting time for the high school will
be 8:30a.m., and ending time 3:2S p.m. The elementary schools will begin
classes at 8:15a.m., and close at 3:05p.m.
Bus routes in the district will remain the same. The buses will pick up
children at Tuppers Plains and Chester Elementary schools and then proceed to the high school. From that poin~ all buses will proceed on evening
routes. The lllOrning route time will remain the same. The only significant change for the year will be that Bus 9, driven by Gary Dill, will travel East Shade Road (Summerfield Road) instead of Locust Grove Road.
Children on Locust Grove Road will be transported by Nita Jean Ritchie .
Thd district advises that children should be at the bus stop· early and
waiting.
.
Lunches will be served on Monday. Prices are as follows : elementary
students, K-6, $1 .25; high school and junior high, $1 .30; and breakfast
' in all buildings, 75 cents. Milk is priced at 30 cents per carton.

TP·C system Issues boll advisory

The Tuppers Plains-Cheter Water District has issued a boil advisory
for Sutton Township for the following areas: Bashan Road from Morning Star Road to State Route 124 including Dorcas and Oak Grove Road.
When a boil advisory is in effect, residents are asked to boil their cooking and drinking water for three minutes before consuming it. Samples
of the water will be taken after line repair has been made. When the results
of the test are received, residents will be notified through the newspaper.
Meanwhile, district officials have lifted the boil advisory in Chester
and Salisbury townships. Areas affected are Pomeroy Pike west of Flatwoods Road. Crew Road. Fisher Subdivision, Seneca Drive, Township
· Road 674 and Township 6173, Meigs High School, and tilt; Meigs CoonProsecutors say Rogers, 41, of
ty Garage. Lat~st water test result$ indicate thatth~ water is now safe.
WHEELING, W.Va. (AP) Jurors in the trial of a firefighter lane Lew, slipped into the basement ·'-_.;..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,
accused of preparing for an attack on of the Clarksburg fire hall and took
the FBI center in Clarksburg request- photographs of FBI center blueprints
ed an extension cord before resuming kept on file in the event of a fire.
deliberations today.
jtogers is the first person to be
Units of the Meigs County Emer- Justin Allen. PVH.
.
RUTLAND
The request indicated they were tried under a 1994 antiterrorism law gency Medical Service recorded sevready to plug in a tape recorder and that makes it a crime to provide mate- en calls for assistance Thursday.
II :23 a.m., Bradbury Road, Middlepon, Elza Gilmore, OBMH,
listen to .some of the 50 audio tapes rial resources for use in preparing for Units responding includelj:
an
assault
on
government
property.
entered as evidence in the trial of
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Pomeroy squad assisted;
3:45 p.m., volunteer fire depanHe faces I 5 years in prison if conClarksburg fire Lt. James Rogers.
7:51 a.m., Court Street, Racine,
Jurors deliberated nearly five victed of violating the. antiterrorism Evelyn Holter, Pleasant Valley Hos- ment and squad to Main Street, Carl
Hysell Sr., Cabeii-Huntington Hos- .
hours before U.S. District Judge · statute, along with a separate con- pital, Syracuse squad assisted;
Frederick Stamp Jr. sent them home spiracy count.
IP:35 a.m., Rocksprings Rehabil- pital via helicopter ambulance, MidLoQker, 57, of Stonewood, plead- itation Center, Frank Doone, O'B!e, dleport VFD and Central Dispatch ·
Thursday.
Assistant U.S . Attorney David ed guilty to charges including pro- ness Memorial Hospital;
squad assisted .
.
·
SYRACUSE
Godwin "told jurors fear and hatred of viding resources to terrorists after he .
2:35 p.m., Noble Summit Road,
II :28 a.m. Laurel Cliff Road.
the government drove Rogers to was convicted at his first trial on a Rut!'and, Julia Moodispaugh, lreated
Pomeroy, Irene Gilmore, Veterans
make photograph copies of the blue- charge of conspiracy to make explo- at the scene;
prints in preparation for an assault on sives.
5:58. p.m., Elm ·Street, Racine, Memorial Hospital.
·Godwin acknowledged Thursday
the complex.
Mountaineer Militia leader Aoyd that Rogers was a well-liked public
Looker later sold the blueprints for servant and family man, but he said
$50,000 10 the middleman for what statements on the recordings made by
(Continued from Page 1)
· teacher on a one-year contract for the
he believed was a Middle East ter- an informant show his intent and state Collins Lisle, Tanya Meadows, Tricia 1997-98 school year.
rorist organization. The middleman ' of mind.
McNickle, Lorre Osborne, Nathan
In other business •. the board adopl·"This case is nul about being a Robinette and Nancy Scarbrough.
was an FBI agent.
ed the advanced biology te•tbook,
"This i~ no~ a game," Godwin good person or a bad person," GodSubstitute aides approved were: approved the d1sabled and handi·
said in ,his closing argument. "This is win said. "The hard reality is some- Joyce Ash, Patricia Clark, Linda capped student course of study and
times good people do bad things."
the militia pre'paring for war."
Kean, Deborah Maynard, Jolene participation in the Oh1o Outreach
And Godwin pointed to tape · Rupe Connie Soulsby and Phyllis Program.
Defense lawyer Gary Zimmerman
·
said his client had no idea that the retordings in which Rogers said the With;rell.
·
The next meeting will be .Thurs-.
blueprints would be sold or distrib- militia alone. did not· have resources
In addition, the board hired Cecil- day, Sept. II at 7 p.m. at the ESC
to carry out the job as evidence ia Harris as a talented and gifted offices on the. ~econd n~or of the
uted.
Pomeroy Mun1c1pal Bu•ldmg.
"My God, an auack on !be U.S. · Rogers knew others might use the
government?" asked Zimmerman. blueprints for planning an assault.
Zimmerman said his client was
"We're talking about make-believe.
We're talking about lames Rogers snared by an informant with "snake
(Continued from Page 1) ·
li (i), Republican; Rae A. Gwiazoil salesmanship"
and his make-believe world."
son (i), Eber Pickens Jr. (i) and dowsky (i), Republican; Robert Pooler, Independent; Roger L. Manley,
Kathryn H. Crow (i);
Syracuse Board of Public,Affairs Independent.
.
The Meigs County Board of Elec-Gordon Winebrenner (i);
Meigs Clinic. Mulberry Heights,
Open door session
Racine Village Council - Robe.j tions will meet Tuesday at 9 a.m. at
State Rep. John Carey, R-Well- Pomeroy,· Mondays, 4 to 5 p.m.. · E. Beegle (i), Alfred Henry Lyons Jr. the board office in Pomeroy to certiston, will hold an open door session beginning Sept. 8. Focus will be on (i), Gregory W. Taylor, Joseph L. fy petitions. The board was going to
at the Meigs County Courthouse on parenting techniques with particular Evans, Bobbie E. Roy and David meet Monday, but postponed the
meeting ~ntil Tuesday.
Thursday, Aug. 28, from I to 2 p.m. emphasis on anger management. The Henry Spencer;
Sept. 15 is the deadline for voters
service is funded in part by the GalRacine Village Mayor, unexpired
lia-Jackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol, term- Julian Scott Hill (i); .
wanting to file as write-in candidates.
Board to meet
.
The Board of Directors of the Gal- Drug Addiction and Mental Health
Racine Board of Public Affairslia-Jackson-Meigs-Vinton Joint Sol- Services is offered without charge. LeeS. Layne (i);
.
1
id Waste Management Distric\ will Residents wanting to participate may
Rutland Village Council, four to
meet Wednesday at 3 p.m. at the dis- call992-2192.
be elected - no candidates filed;
·
trict office.
Pomeroy Village Council, four to
Meeting act
be elected - Frederick "Chip" WerThe East~rn Local Board of Edu- ry Jr., Republican; George L. Wright
Parendn&amp; meetlq
Woodland Centers, Inc. is offering .ation will meet in regular session (i), Republican; William A. Young (i),
a four-week parenting group for Monday, 6:30 p.m. al Eastern High Republican; John F. Musser (i),
Meigs County residents. The group School library.
Republican; . Larry Wehrung (i), ·
will be held at Woodland Centers
Democrat; David Ballard, Independent;
Meetin&amp; postponed
'
Middleport Village Council, four
The
Meigs
County
Board
of
Electo
be
elected :...... Sandra K. lannarel·
Vetere111 Memorial
tions
will
meet
Tuesday,
9
a.m.
at
the
Thursday admissions - John
board office in Pomeroy to certify
Southern, Syracuse~
petitions. The meeting was originalThursday discharges - none.
(Editor' a note: A leMuH outlines
ly slated for Monday.
Holzer Medical Center
the grievances of one party against
Disoharges Aug.ll -Charlotte
another. II does not eiteblllh guilt
Dray, Mrs .. William Griffith and Advisory lifted
or Innocence.)
The boil advisory for Leading
daughter, Mrs. Christopher Simpson
In Meigs County Common Pleas
and twin daughters, Harold Rowe, Creek Conservancy District cus- Court, Pacific Central Mortgage Inc.
Charles Holzer, Ralph Cardwell, Mrs. tomers on State Route 684 at ·the was awarded $27,151.16 plus interM'ckey Graham and son, Brady , intersection .of Vance Road, and all est and costs in a foreclosure suit
customers north of SR 143 in the against Emory L. and Joyce L.
Jones.
Harrisonville area has been lifted.
(Published wl.t h permission)
O'Bryanl.

Militia member's fate
now in hands of jurors
Possible record low temps
forecast for region tonight

Prospective jurors named

means courthouses -- for the new in the Ninth, as the Hruska Commiscircuit: one in Phoenix and .one in sion would hayc done, would greatSeattle. That's where the taxpayers · ly mitigate this result -- though. of
course, coming liberal appointments
come in, bigtime.
A far more sensible division was · by President Clinton make an
proposed by the Hruska Commis- incrcao;cd liberal presence inevitable
sion in 1974. Under it, California'~ in the short term .
four federal judicial districts would
There arc other alternatives. One
be ·split: the central and southern dis-' would be to create a 12th Circuit
tricts remaining in the Ninth Circuit, ··consisting only of tlie nonhwcstem
along with Nevada-and Arizona, and states (Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and
the northern and eastern districts Washington) plus Alaska, Hawaii
going to a new circuit, along with and the Pacific islands. That would
the rest of the cuiTCnt Ninth. No new at least make geographic sense, and
courthouses would he needed, sinqe a better political balance, though it
the Ninth Circuit already has one in would create a workload imbalance
Pasadena and the new circuit could even worse than the Senate's bill.
continue to use the one in San FranBut what's the hurry? Why this ·
cisco. ·
lemming-like rush to create a zany
Perhaps best of all, the two cir- new circuit with only a third of the
cults would be roughly equal in size, workload, one state (Arizona) far
sharing the workload almost equally. away to the south. and "co-equal."
But sentiment seems to be running hcadquaners and expensive coonagainst spliuing California in this houses in two cities that currently
way.
have neither?
·
Politically, although the current
Congress should take an aspirin
proposal was adopted by the Senate and lie down.'
Republican majority on practically a ·
pany-line vote, its effect would be to
William A. Rusher is a Distinguarantee liberal control of both the guished Fellow of the aaremont
f\linth and 12th Circuits as far ahead Institute Cor the Study of States- ·
as the eye can see. Leaving Arizona manship and Politieal Philosophy. :

the hcan offortunetelling.lfyou can

I

w.w..

· ·. Jhe following citizens. were
named as prospective jurors in the
September term of the Meigs County Grand Jury:
Kathryn Milrose Mora, Pomeroy;
Harriet S. Block, Pomeroy; JeffreyS.
Needs, Pomeroy; Buddy G. Kuhn Jr.,
Albany; Mildred A. Krider, Long
Bonom; Leonard E. Koenig,
Pomeroy; Carolyn Snowden, Rutland; William R. Capehan, Middleport; Judy Mae McDaniel, Pomeroy;
John Wayne Gaus, Rutland;
Eric Shane Walker. Middleport;
Larry Edward Laudermih, Dexter;
Lynn
McDonald,
Jeannette
Langsville; Carolyn Vonon Bachner,
Middleport; John W. Tillis, Middleport; Roger K. Stewan, Middlepon;
Stephanie Lynn Walker, Pomeroy;
Catherine Jill Williams, Middlepon;
Jean Whobrey, Pomeroy; Harold
William Bird, Racine;
·
Barbara Gene Gheen, Long Botto111 : D. Gene . LyQns.- Racine;
Stephanie L. Ash, Syracuse; Kenneth

Sean Grueser, Racine; Duane K.
.McLaughlin, Pomeroy; Mickey Clair
Williams, Pomeroy; John D. Frank,
Syracuse; Kenneth Gail Sinclair,
Shade; Rick Causey, R.eedsville;
Steven G. Barber, Reedsvtlle; .
Daniel Earl Knotts, Reedsville;
David P. Cain, Albany; Hazel Mae
Oliver, Pomeroy; Myrna Mane
Swearingen, Rutland; Clifford E.
Whittington Jr., Rutland; Kenny R.
Leesburg, Albany; Charles F. Perry
Jr., Middleport;. J~an Valen~ Han,
Reedsville; Chrisu Dawn Ban1mus,
Reedsville;
William K. Hayes, Rutland;
Heather Lynn ~eravolo, Albany;
Bertha Faye M1tchell, Pomeroy;
·sandy Luann Gangwer, Po111eroy;
Robert leromy Htll, Syracuse; Mary
Y. Ross, Middlepon; Scott M. Johnson, Pomeroy; James Donald Riffle,
Syracuse; Warren David Gregory,
Long Bottom; Penny J. Eads,
Pomeroy.

Actions filed to.end·marriages
The following actions to end mar-

ria~c were filed recently in the ott"ICe
offdeigs County Clerk of Courts Larry Spencer: .
Dissolution asked - Steven A.
Yonker, Galloway, and Paula Jane
Yonker, Middleport.
Divorces asked - Patricia L.
Rose, Racine, from Joseph D. Rose.
Racine; Steve Amon, Pomeroy, from
Holly Marie Arnott, Middleport;
Tammy Sue Moore, Middleport,
frq111 Bill . Gene Moore Ill. U.S.
N~vy ; Atricia Dawn Randolph, Middleport, from Charles Willi. ~m R~~:

'(he Daily Sentinel
!Usrs·m_,..,

switch cups with me. I wanted to see
·

School begins at Eastern Monday

conditional!ld hi&amp;h

bac"

Reading bet_
ween the tea leaves no bargain
I My tea was no bargain either-- $10 a cup
I

More tears of sorrow

Local News in Brief:

~
AccuWeather• forecast for

Satunlay, Aug. 23

By The Associated Press
The skies will clear out over the entire state tonight as a large high pressure area moves in from the west. The temperatures in Ohio may dip to near·tecord cold leyels Saturday morning as light winds and clear skies allow temperatures to fall into the upper 40s and middle 50s.
Mostly ·sunny skies are in the forecast for a good deal of the state on Saturday. Temperatures will stay at levels more suitable for October than August,
with highs only reaching into the low and middle 70s. Rainfall is not in the
forecast through Tuesday as temperatures rise. slowly
to near normal
readings.
· The normal high for today is 81 and the normal low is 60. The record high
for today was 98, set in 1936 and the record low was 46, set in 1982.
· Sunrise today was at 6:50 a.m., sunset will occur at 8:19 a.m. .
Sunrise Saturday is at6:51 a.m. and sunset at 8:18 a.m.
Weather Corecut:
Tonight. .. Mostly clear. Lows from the upper 40s to the lower 50s.
Saturday...Panly cloudy. Highs 70 to 75.
Saturday night. .. Mostly clear. Lows in the lower 50s.
Extended rorecast:
Sunday... Mostly clear. Highs in the upper 70s.
Monday ... Mostly clear: Lows in the low and upper 50s and highs in the
lower 80s.
'
Tuesday ...Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 60s and highs in the mid 80s.

September decision may prove costly to U.S. taxpayers

The.Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

Murtha's proposal popular on Capitol Hill

The Daily Sentinel

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
G_,.llollftiiOII'

Friday, Augu1122, t997

P~lished eYery altf:!rnoon, Monday thrO\IKh

Fpday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by 1ttr

Ohia Valle y Publishing CompJny!Gannell Co.,
Pqmcroy, Ohin .157M. Ph . 992-2156. Second
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Mfmbrr: The A~socialed Press, and the Ohia
~cwspaper Auncia1ion.
PO!ITMASTER: Send address wrrec::lionS to
Thr Daily Scntintl, Ill Court St, Pomeroy,
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MAILSU&amp;SCRIPTIONS
ln11de Mefas Cou1117
1] Wccks ................................................. S27.30

0.-

2f1Weeks ................................................. SSJ.Hl

sz Weets ................................:.............. $10~.!56
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Mtlp CoftiJ

~ :e~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::::~

52 Wceks ............................................... $109.72

dolph, Middleport; Kathy Smith,
Long Bottom, from Carter T. Smith,
Portland; Walter A. Ellis from Thelma J. Ellis, both of Rutland; Gail E.
Dailey from Donald L. Dailey, both
of Middlepart.
Divorces granted - Michelle
Lorraine Pollock from Bradley Pollock;·Mildred S. Conon and Billy E.
Colton.

Stocks
Arq Ete Power .....................42"1•
Akzo ........................................82
AmrTech ..............................64'l.
Ashland Oil ........ ~ ...........: .....5o'!.

EMS units answer 7 calls

ESC gives nod ·to bus

Meigs voters to decide

Meigs announcements

Hospital news

Award given

AT&amp;T ...........................;•••••.•.• 39\
BaM One .....•~ .......................55\

Bob Evans ............................ 17'/,
Borg-Warner .......................52'l.
Champion ............................. 18).
Charm Shps ............................!5t
Clly Holdlng .......................... 39~
Federal Mogul ........................ .36
Gannett .................................97'.1
Goodyear .............................&amp;~
Kmert ...................................13~
Landa End ............................. 27'.1
Ltd.........................................22~
Oak Hill Flnl .......................... 20~
OVB .......................................36',;
one Valley. ....... ~ ...................11_12"~

Peoples ..........:......................37~
Prem Flnl ............................... 2o\
Rockwell ...............................59'1o
RD/Shell ...............................51 '-

, WHY MAUSOLEUM
· ENTOMBMENT
• Less than the cost of traditionalgmund

burial
• Entombnedmonlabove ground in clean,
diJ venlital«&lt;chambciS.
• granite,
Built forsteel
lhe ages.
Conslrucled
of hardfor
and rejnforqd
congetc;
ever lasting bcauly.

I GIFT and Detailed lnformati.on. I

1D

lD

1D
·1

• Indoor Chapel available for vi~wing and

services at no cost.
• Special Discounts in effect before
eVCI)' budget. ·.
• Exc:bllllge privilages to Clmenl Meigs

-·-·-

1 Please provide the following 1
t information, for your FREE I

• Aece)lted by families of alheligous
faiths as an everlasting merr:'orial to your
family name.

Star Bank ..............................45'.1
Wendv'e ................................ 23~
1

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.--------,
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Sports

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, August 22, 1997

Pege4

Woods &amp; Mickelson shoot 67s to lead

Friday, Auguet 22, 1997

Dodgers &amp; Mets split DH; Pirates lose

. UNHAPPY SOULS ~ Cleveland catcher Pat Borders gets hie
meek beck fi'om pitcher Paul Al8enmacher aftar a passed ball
allowed the Seattle Marinara' Joey Cora to acore frpm third baae In
lha eighth Inning of Thureday night'• American League gtllll8in Seat·
lie, ~ the Marlnere won 7-6. (AP)

eighth time in nine starts. He drew changeup, made 12. relief appearmany Korean fans to Shea Stadium ances before getting the start. And he
and got some of the biggest chec:rs of
was especially pleased that Valentine
lhe night.
turned to him with the team in a
"It feels absolutely like a home
funk.
game," said Park (13-6), who gave
"This game really makes me feel
up three runs and six hits in 6 2/3 like if we do win ii all, I'd feel pretinnings and struck out six. He has ty good celebrating with them,"
lost just once since June 27.
Crawford said.
"You can see his confidence
Greg McMichael escaped a twobuild," first-game loser Tom Can- on, rione-out jam in the eighth, getBy RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP) -A double- diotti (9-5) said. "It's gaining ting a break when Nelson Liriano
.
·
header split didn't help the Los speed."
forced the lead runner at third on his
New York put runners at the Cor-· sacrifice attempt. John Franco
·Angeles Dodgers or the New York
ners with one out in lhe eighth, but pitched the ninth for his 31st save in
Mets.
"It's handly the ideal situation," Darren Hall got pinch-hitter Matt 36 chances.
"You've got to execute the bunt,
Mets catcher Todd Hundley said . Franco to ground into an inning-endafter New York beat' Los Angeles 3- ing double play. Todd Worrell fin- · and a vete11111 player didn't do it,"
1 Thursday to stop a four-game los- ished for his 3lstsave in 38 chances. · Dodgers manager Bill Russell said.
Mets starter Rick Reed (I 0-7)
Mets shortstop Rey Ordonez
ing streak, then lost the second game
4-3. "We've got to try to stay close allowed all four runs and six hits in . made a spectacular backhand play on
a sixth-inning grounder, throwing out
and be more consistent. ..
six innings.
Los Angeles remained two games
In the opener, Joe Crawford shut Eric Young from. deep shortstop
behind first-place San Franci,sco in down Los Angeles in his first 'major while on one knee.
the- National League We.st. New league start, and Carlos Baerga hit a
"I thought it was as good a play
York, which lost the series opener two-run homer.
as he's made an year," Valentine
Tuesday, has dropped nine of 12 and ·
Crawford (2-1) allowed one run said. "He got him out by 20 feet. At
is S 112 gaines behind Aorida in the and three hits in ·six-plus innings; . first I thought it was going to be a
..
wild-cand race .
giving up Mike Piazza's 28th homer hi t.
"Sure, it would have been nice to in the ·seventh.
In other NL games, Houston beat
win both, and we had opportunities
"I've been wanting to give Joe a Colorado 10-4, San Diego stopped
to," said Todd Zei.le, who drove in chance to start," said Mets manager Pittsburgh 9-4 and Montreal downed
three runs in the second game after Bobby Valentine, who made the St. Louis 3-2.
getting ejected for arguing in the decision after Wednesday night's
Astros 10, Rockies 4
opener. "But at least we won the game was rained out. "With all their
The Killer B's all delivered as
series."
right-handed hitters, I thought be was Houston beat Colorado at the
The Dodgers won mainly because going to be OK."
Astrodome.
·
of Chan Ho Park, who won for the
Jeff BagweU and 'Craig Biggio
Crawford, who relies on a

Mariners tally 7-6
·victory over Tribe
By JIM COUR
SEA'ITLE (AP) - Maybe 50
will be a lucky number? Lou Piniella can·only hope.
Roberto Kelly flew from · Baltimore on Thursday and joined the
Seatlle Mariners, going 2-for-5 in a
7-6 victory over the Cleveland Indians on Thursday night.
"I was very anxious' to get
eoing," said Kelly, who became the
~h .player to start in left field along5ide J(en Griffey Jr. in Seattle's outfield since 1989. '"It's nice to have a
part in the win."
. Piniella inserted Kelly into No. 2
In lhe Mariners ' lineup and dropped
All-Star shortstop Alex Rodriguez to
No. S. Rodriguez responded with his
t9th:homer in the second inning for
lieatUe's first run.
K&lt;elly was greeted warmly by his
new : teammates. Piniella has . platooned live players in lef~ since the
Mariners traded Jose Cruz Jr. to·
'l'oronto July 31.
Said Rodriguez: "He brings in
good· speed and he brings in good
jlefef!SC. Most of all, he brings in
pxpe:rience."
Kc:lly hachn infield single in the
first jnning and scored a run after ·
~ingllns in the fifth. He reached base
p thild time in the eighth on a wold
pitcli aftentriking out.
'I}Ie two,time All-Star hopes to
Jet a:chance to play _in his first World
Series in Seattle thos year.· He left a
last-place club in Minnesota to join

"' standings
;.L

-·

'&amp;!".... ..... ~ h ~
)'lew York .............. 76 ~0
~ft. ...................64 64

.fiOJ

.,Toronto .................. 60 66

.476

o()ctro61 .........., ...•..... ~ 67

•,.

·

-~

.46R

Cftnl Diwldon
;p.EVEI.AND ....... 6.&lt; ~9 .~24
£hiCIIO.................. bJ 64 .496
..r.tilwnubc .... :........ 62 &amp;4 .492
Miftfldl4~ .............. ~2

~

12

.419

7:l

.416

lill .
~

IK
21

.•• .~~·

IJ
1.\ '•:

.~w

..Ted. ..................... 60 67 .412
&lt;tokland ........:-··· ··"~1 77 ,39/t

20'~

.•

II

Thursday'sKor..
Chil:ngo While Sa1 6. Toronto J
()aldond ll Boston 6
Del toil 2. Milwaukr.! I ( 12)
BallitnOr"e 4. Kuntu City J
N.Y. Yan~4. Anabeini J (\~)
Sc.u11~ 1. CL.EVELANDf:l

Detroit (Janis O-J) mt Milwaukee

jWoodord J.IJ. B:OS p.m.
" Toron1o (Clemens 19-4) at Kansu
City (Rosado B-91. ti:0:1 p.m.
Qica&amp;o White So• (Nav~~rro 9· t ll at
,

: Boston,(Saberhoaen 0.0) ill Anahc1m
'Waisoo 10.7). 10:05 p.m.
• N.Y. Yankees (Rosen: :'1-41 at Scortlc
~.em 12-7). 10:~ p.m.
• CLEVELAND (Judm O-Il at Oakhmd

!J'rieto 6-7), IO:n

p.nl.

Saturday's Pfi!OI

BosiOfl (Sde 12-9) at Anaheim (Dkk·
1011 12-.5). 4:0~

lill

Athuua .... ........ .......1R 49

614

Florida ....... :........... IJ ~2
New York . .......•. ...68 58
Montreal ................ 62 6J

.584
.5'0
.496

4
9'r.

369

.'&lt;J'r.

71

p.m.

N.Y. Yanked (Meldoza ..5•.5) ar Sea!·
11! (Oii•.-cs 6-8). -4:0.5 p.m.
MianeiOf.a (Rodri,un 2-4) a1 Balli·
~(MUNina 11-S). :0!5 p.m..

~ Detroit {Kea&amp;lt 1-2) at Mdwauke.e ·

(Xorll-10). BiJS p.m.
~ Toronto (WUii.ams7-11) Dl Kansas
Oty (Pin•ley ) .7), 8:M p.m.
• Chlu&amp;o Whit~ .~ox (liyre 2-2) 1111

Momre:~.l

Cilbs(Chirk

HouSion ................. 67

60

.528

Piushurgh . .. .. : ... 6J 64
St. Loois ................~K 6tl
CINCINNATL. ..... :'I!i 69

.496
.-%0
.44.1
.J94

I~

Padres 9, Pirates 4
Steve Finley and Greg Vaughn
both ended slumps with home runs
as visiting San Diego stopped Pittsburgh's three-game winning streak.
. finley, in an 11-for-67 rut, drove
in three runs. Vaughn , in a 1-for-19
skid that included eight strikeouts,
had three hits.
Ken Caminiti hit his 17th home
run and Tony Gwynn had a sacrifice
fly, giving him 10 I RBJs.
'
· Expos 3, Cardinals 2 ,
Mike Johnson earned. his first
major league win, combining with
Anthony Telford and Ugucth Urbina
on a two-hitter as host Montreal beal
St. Louis.
Johnson ( 1-1 ), ·a 21-ycar-old
Canadian, was acquired July 31
from Baltimore for a player to be
named.
Johnson also got his first bigleague hit and scored the go-ahead
nin in the fifth inning on Mike Lansing's two-run double.

STRIVING FOR THE HOOP - The Cleveland ROckera' Rushla
Brown makes her way to the t:Mtsket ae the Houston Comet•' Wan. de .Guyton shadows her In the first half of Thu111day night's WNBA
contest In Houston, where the Rockera won 76-75; (AP)

WNBA heads into final weekend

Rockers get past
Comets 76-75; Sting·down Starzz 66-56,.

(Gan:ia ~8), I: IS p.m.
St. Loui1 (An.Bcnes 8·6) nl Floril.lo
(Brown 11 -8). 7:05p.m.
Snn FriUldsco (01Uwin 0·0) al Pinabur&amp;h (Loaiza9-8), 7:05p.m.
los Angeles (Cnndioni 9-4} at
Phikldelphia (Cire&amp;!n J-1 ), 7:05 p.m.

San_ Diego (~enhan 0.1)
(MI"kt 5-10), 7.10 p.1111.

* N.Y. Me11

Activat~d

Galt!~

to

or Rnb

Ducey (rum the 15-dny tliJabletl lis1.
Pla..:l."d Ur Lee Ti nsk:)' un tht: 1~ -Li:t Y lli5·
ablcd li ~ l . Rccnllctl ss AIV.ly Stk.'I!IS rwtn
Tut.:uma.

Bueball
Amtrlean Lta1ur

ANAHEIM ANGELS: Recillled C
Chris Turnti fron1 Vun.:nu\'tt uf 1bc= PCL.
Plm;ed LHP Mo1rk LllnJIItm 011 1~ - dlly

NMiiunllll..taaur
MONTREAl. EXPOS : Plu~·c tl MHI'
D;1ve Veres 11n lhc I ~ - d&lt;~y di .~i1l'llcd lis!
Purchu~ed tile contr:u:l uf RHP Sh,aync

disabled lbt.

SEATTLE MARINERS : Optioaed

CINCINNATI al All11111: I:IOp.m
San Frnncitco at PittsbutJh. I:J~ p.m.
Los Ante~ at Pt.iladelpr,ia. I .J.S p.m.
San Oie&amp;o al' N.Y. Mets, 1:40 p.m.
Mon1real at Chio.go Cubs, 2:20p.m.
Colooldo at Hooslon, 2:J.S p.m.
St l..oui1 ilt Aorida. 4:35p. m.

4

8\

10~

WNBA standings

17

:rr.i .
2
10
10

Thursday's sc:on:s
:t 51. Louis 2

OH: N.Y. Mecs J. Los AfiJCies I; Los
Anaeles 4. N.Y. Mets J
San Ditgo 9, Pictsbui'gh 4
Houston I0. Colorndo 4

Tonlght'spmes·
Montreal (Hermanson ~.S) a1 Cbicaao
Cubs (TnJChiCI S-10). 3:20p.m.
Sf. Louil (Morris 1·8) II Florida
(Saunders .l -4), 7:05p.m.
S~n Francitco (Rueter 9-.S) :n Pinsburah (Cooke 8-12). 7:35p.m.
Los Angeles {Rtyes 1-2) at Ptlilndelphla (Schilling IJ-10), 7:35p.m.
San Die10 (Homilton 10·4) al N.Y.
Mell (Harnisch ().I), 7:40p.m.
CINCINNATI (Remlinger 6-~J Dl Atlanta (MadduJ. 16-n 7:40p.m.
Colorado ('J'homton S-7) 111 Houston
(Kile 16-J). 8 : 0~ p.m.

Soturday's pmes
CINCINNATI (Tomko 8-t) al .'.IIWUIII

Eutern Confrrtncr

»:

J.·Houston .............. IH
New York .............. lfl
Chorlotle :............... l4
O.E\IELAND ....... I4

L

9
10
12
12

ra.-

.6t67
.61~

1\

.S:lfl

J'11

. S~

J~

Waltm Con(rl"fnrt

Phoenill .................. l4 12 538
13 .500
Sacrolmemo ..............9 17 ..\46
Utah ......................... 7 20 .259
l..oiARJt!les ........... l~

I

5

7~

x-dioched pl11yoff berth

Thursday-'s scores
CLEVELAND 76. Houston 75
C'Mrlonc 66. Utah !16

Tonight's prnos
Charloue 111 Phoenik. 9 p.m
Sacra~Mnto or Los Angeles, IO:JO
p.m..

Soturday's1om..,
New York nt Cl.EVELAND, 4 p.m.

. . Sunday's
.
regular-season finales

CLEVELAND a1 New Yortc, ~p . m.
Ullll111 Charlonc, 7:30p.m.

Sltramento ill Houlfon. 8:10p.m.
Lot An&amp;eles n1 Phoeni11, 9 p.m.

1
I

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football.
Sanders said his back is stillsof\l,
but he plans on opening the season
with the Cowboys on Aug. 31 at ~
Pi.mburgh and will include punt_ :t

on roster cuts Sunday will determine
whether long snapper Harper Le Bel
makes the team.
relurning among his duties.
.• --~ .•
Le Bel, who has made long snap· He will continue to play basebatr:':
ping an art forrii in his eight seasons
for the Reds as much as the bulging
in the NFL. was acquired by the
disk in his back allows.
Packers as an unrestricted free agent
H1s iooming divorce was "a."'·.:::·:
on March 31 after six seasons with
blessing because I was able to look'' •''G
In the other WNBAcontest, Char- the Atlanta Falcons.
HOUSTON (AP) - While it's
in a mirror an~ change things" anl.lo •1t
Despite
lotte
defeated
Utah
66-56.
the
Packers'
concerns
on
1
not quite playoff time in the WNBA,
:that someday he will become cithc' ·'-"!i
Sting 66, Starzz 56 ·
special teams- the one unit that has
the Cleveland Rockers and Houston
' an evangelist or a pastor.
At
Salt
Lake
City,
Charlotte
doeslots
of
question
marks;
from
who
Comets are playing like it is.
. Chargers: San Diego, alreadY;~ ,liil
n't
like
to
play
zone
defense,
but
will
be
the
k.ick
retamers
to
who
will
Janice Braxton's free throw wilh
missong injured All-Pro Junior ScaQ
.less than a second remaining Thurs- gave it a·try against Utah and threw be the kicker when the season opens
until sometime in September. wilt ·
team.
•
on
Sept.
I
-LeBel's
services
might
.
day night gave the Rockers a 76-75 the Starzz off rbythm.
have
just one starter from its corps o{ ,. •
Dellenbauch
said
he'd
be
glad
to
"It
was
really
effective,"
Sting
be more of a luxury than a necessivictory over the Comets. .
linebackers
when it plays Minncso~ t;'
be
the
long
snapper
for
kicks
and
Braxton was sent to the line after ·coach Marynell Meadors said of the ty.
ta tonight.
· -~
punts
if
the
Packers
so
ask.
zone
defense
following
Charlotte's
He
could
be
the
odd
man
out,
for
she was fouled by Tina Thompson in
a disputed call. She missed the first 66-56 victory Thursday night."We
of two shots before nailing the throw it in every once in a while to
..
game-winner to keep playoff homes throw the other team off. I thought
' • y,
we did a .good job of covering up
alive for the Rockers (14-12). ·
'
' • ......
53:
Ed
Berrier,
176.
49. Jerry Nadeau, 287.
"This was an extremely big·win their shooters."
10. Jeremy Mayfield, 2.437.
By The Associated Press
54.
Loy
Allen,
119.
U!ah hit just 29· percent (21-for50. Rick Wilson, 200.
II . Ricky Rudd, 2,428.
for· us as a team and for the playThe 1997 NASCAR Winston Cup
l
55 Rqn Barl1eld. 97 .
51. Lance Hooper, 189.
12.
Johnny
Benson,
2.360.
offs," Michelle Edwards, who led 72) while Charlotte shot 42 percent
stock car racing 'schedule, with win·
56. Butch Gilliland, 91 .
52. Todd Bodine, 188.
13. Rusty Wallace, 2,312.
Cleveland with 15 points, said. "It (25-for-60).
ners in parentheses and driver point
"We rushed a lot of shots," Utah
14. Ernie lrvan, 2,300.
was two great teams out there bat·
standings:
coach
Denise·
Taylor
said.
"We
heat
15. Darrell Waltrip, 2,230.
tling for a win, and it seemed like a
Feb. 16 - Daytona 500, Dayourselves.
I
don't
know
if
it's
so
(tie)
Ken Schrader, 2.230.
playoff game."
tona, Fla. (Jeff Gordon).
'' 1;£
much
what
Charlotte
did
to
us,
but
17.
Michael
Waltrip, 2,220.
The Comets (18-9), who hold a I
Feb. 23 - Goodwrench Service
18. Kyle Petty, 2, 169.
112;game lead over second-place what we did to ourselves."
400, Rockingham, N.C. (Jeff GorVicky
Bullett
and
Andrea
Stinson
19. Jimmy Spencer. 2,129.
New York in the WNBA's Eastern
don).
each
scored
14
poinrs
for
Charlotte,
20.
Sterling Marlin, 2;045.
Conference, had won seven of their
March 2 - Pontiac Excitement
keeping
the
Sting's
WNBA
playoff
21.
Bobby Hamilton, 2,033.
400, Richmond, Va. (Rusty Wallace).
last eight games.
hopes
alive.
22.
John Andretti, I ,984.
Houston coach Van Chancellor
March 9 - Primestar 500,
Charlotte
(14-12)
has
the
same
23.
Ricky Craven, 1,970.
was irritated with his team's lackHampton, Ga. (Dale Jarret\).
record
as
Cleveland
and
is
just
bet24.
Mike Skinner, I;907.
luster lirst-halfplay and did not want ,
March 23- TranSouth Financial
ter
than
Los
Angeles'
13-13.
One
of
25.
Ward
'Bunon, 1,898.
to talk about the call that sent Brax400, Darlington, S.C. (Dale Jarrett).
those
teams
will
make
'the
playoffs.
26.
Brett
Bodine,
1,893.
ton to the line for the winning shot.
April 6 - Interstate Batteries .
Rhonda,
Mapp
had
12
points
and
27.
Steve
Grissom,
1,868.
'"I can't comment on the last
500, Fort Wonh, Texas. (Jeff BurnTne
rebaunds
for
the
Sting,
who
28.
Derrik~
Cope,
1,834.
call," Chancellor said. "We gave up
ton).
29. Geoff Bodine. '1.80 I.
April 13 - Food City 500, Bris. 40 points in the first half. We didn't 'broke a five-game road losing_streak.
Wendy
Palmer
led
the
Starzz
(730.
Rick Mast, I,720.
guand them . We haven't .guarded
.to.l, Tenn. (Jeff Gordon).
20)
wit.h
20
points
and
14
rebounds.
31.
Morgan
Shepherd, 1,596.
April 20 - Goody's Headache
anyone since New York."
, ,T
32.
Joe
Nemechek,
1,584.
Powders 500, Martinsville, Va. (Jeff·
33. Kenny Wallace, 1,573.
&lt;;ontinued from Page 4) . Gordon).
··~
34. Hut Stricklin, 1,555.
May 4 - Save Mart Supennarf:l~ley
.
'
··4
35. Lake Speed, 1,473.
kets 300, Sonoma. Calif. (Mark
game was halted after five innings
had 15 hits and three home runs.
36. Dick Trickle, I,457.
Martin).
"I thought that we could use because of Little League's mercy
37. David Green, 1,366.
May
I
0
Winston
500,
Talsome work on our hitting," Gattis rule, which ends a game when a teaou
38. Robby Gordon, 1,206.
ladega,
Ala.
(Mark
Martin).
said. "And I was really happy with leads by I0 or more runs.
39. Chad Little, 1,138.
·
May
17
x-The
Winston,
ConInfielder Nick Moore was 3-forthe workout we had."
40.
Dave Marcis, 1,119.
cord.
N.C.
(Jeff
Gordon).
Pitcher Ashton White, the son of 4 with a home run off starter Bran41. Wally Dallenbach Jr., 975.
May
25
Coca-C:ola
600,
Con1979. Heisman Trophy winner don Noel's fastball , and catcher cord, N.C. (Jeff Gordon).
42. Jeff Green, 840.
Ctuuies White, homered and drove in Adam Elconio homered and scored
43. Greg Sacks, 581.
June
I
Miller
500,
Dover,
'Del.
three times in Mission Viejo's second
si~ runs in the 'victory over Braden44. Roben Pressle.)'. 545.
(Ricky Rudd).
to~ in the game that put the Califor- · viclory in live hours.
45. Mike Wallace, 541.
June
8
Pocono
SOO,
Long
'' I was looking for a fastball,"
nians in the final. They beat
46. Bobby Hillin, 511.
Middleport, OH
Pond, Pa. (Jeff Gordon).
290N 2nd
Pottsville. Pa., 3-0 earlier in the day Moore said about his home run. "I
47. Gary Bradberry, 419.
June
15Miller
400,
Brooklyn,
in a qualifying game that was pushed always look for a fastball and adjust
48. Billy Strandrige, 329.
Mich. (Ernie lrvan).
from there."
back a day becau1c of rain.
.
June 22 - California 500,
Elconin 's home run was his first
" With 12-year-olds, havong
Fontana,
Calif. (Jeff Gordon).
enough energy is never an issue/' ever in Little League play. His teamJuly
5
- Pepsi 400, Daytona
·s:Pd Gattis, a former Wyoming'coach mates were trying Thursday night to
Beach,
Fla.
(John Andretti). ·
and Peppcrdine assistant. "The ossue retrieve the ball for him.
July
13
- Jiffy Lube 300,
Mission Viejo be.came the 19th
is. will the coaches have enough?"
Loudon,
N.H.
(Jeff Bunbn).
White allowed just a double and California team to reach the chamJuly
20
Pennsylvania 500,
pionship game in .the series' 51
single in a five-inning game.
Long
Pond,
Pa.
(Dale
Jarrett).
· "I tried to stay in my zone, keep years. Long Beach was the last CalAug.
2
Brickyard
400, lndi:
working, use my mechanics ~nd just .ifornia chamRion, beating Chiriqui,
anapoli~.
(Ricky
Rudd).
Panama, 3-2 in 1993.
throw," he said.
.
Aug. I0 - Bud at the Glen,
Rod Harper walked and scored
He drove in' two ·runs with a sinWatkins
Glen, N.Y. (Jeff Gordon).
gle in the first and hit a 230-foot Bradenton's run onRyan Kennedy 's
Aug.
17- ITW DeVilbiss 400.
· horne run to right on rehef potcher forst,inning double.
Brooklyn,
Mich. (Mark Manin).
"We've ha4 a hell of a ride,"
Joel Cocciolone's forst pitch in Mis-Aug.
23
- Goody's Headache
sion Viejo's four-run ·second. His Bradenton manager Mike Kennedy
•
Powders
500,
Bristol, Tenn.
•
father has been unable to attend the said. "Second best in the country.
Aug. 31 -Mountain Dew South·
••
series because he's an assistant coach That's not too bad."
em
500,
Darlington,
S.C.
.
Guadalupe beat Yokohama.
at USC. now in summer practices.
Sept: 6 - Winston Cup 400, ·
Japan,
1-0 in Thursday's internaWhite's groundout brought home
Richmond,
Va.
his team's lith run in the fofth. The tional bracket final to gain the other
Sept.
14
.,-"
New Hampshire 300,
spot in Saturday's championship
Loudon, N.H.
'
game.
·
.
Sept.
21
~
MBNA
500, Dover,
lira .. ~rw 1!1!11
Adrian Luna struck out 13 in his
ora•• Nrw 1gg7 Clny K-1500
Hrn•
Nrw
1!7
mvy
•
Del.
second consecutive shutout and ,
Pllllar
(Continued from Page 4)
lxlrnr•
Cal
h
t
Pit~•'
A
CIIYrrslll
Y11
Sept.
·
28
Hanes
5
00,
Mar; 4 Wheel Anti-lo:lc
•Autlmatic
Colon, who gave up five runs on drove in the game's only run with a
WinOOws
• 4 Wheel Anti-lode Bnolces
tinsville, Va.
•Autoolatic
~
• Aic Con&lt;ltion
Blakes
•
Remrwable
Trulgate
•
Dual
Alrbags
six hits in four-plus innings, dropped · fourth-inning single. Luna has suuck
• Ail Concltla1
Oct. 5- UAW-GM Quality 500,
·•
AM'FM
SterM
.
out
21
batters
in
12
scoreless
innings,
•
Power
WondoWs
•
T245175R
t6"
Sleel
•Power Steering
to 0-3 with an 11.45 ERA agaonst the
Concord, N.C.
· Belted fres
• foil Steering
• P-lo:lcs
but cannot pitch Saturday under
•Powerll!akes
•Powerlocb
Mariners this season.
Oct.
12
Sears
Diehard
500.
• Power MirrCJs
• Styled Wheels
• Wei Equipped!
•
Cust&lt;rn
Clatl1
nterior
league
rules.
· "Bartolo has great stuff," Indians
• Alml Cassetle
• loaded!
• Dual Ailba95
Talladega, Ala.
~
•Swirlg-ru Quarter
Yokohama
staner
Masayoshi
Izu• Cnoise Contrd
mqnager Mike.Hargro~e said. "B~t
Oct.
26AC
Delco
400,
Rock·
~
mi
left
after
orie
inning
because
of
just like all potchers, of you do.n t
•
ingham. N.C.
cramps
in
his
shoulder.
Takesi
Olino
TPC Fresh Start Financing
•
locate and keep it down in the stroke
Nov. 2 - Dura Lube 500,
StJmt ta-dealm!oiTer•SJI'(ial flnant:tnA"ftr IXUblt'ftl credit hut UUI)' a rrv. u:f'dmrs. 'l'orn l't•(b's1n:t-·n~l Silltt ..l!~llllitijf ~,.,'tOO fill " .11')
got the last five innings and the loss.
•
zone, you're really working the
Phoenix.
fll'.tnxt ,.. ... .., lhetut.. .... ..-..manct there'' ""'""oolnllutt'&lt;l Pli&lt;• r.. fm;, swn fl•~!•i•~ &lt;llll.lll008'l2 Wlltwaj ,,., ""' r..,.,.,t
edge, especially against an offensive
Nov. 16- NAPA 500, Hampton,
m; fmolo Sial f11111Do11~isi.11'&gt;~11\Jnll't&lt;Jtonllil~ry IWI) 1£1 IJS,;I&lt;)OII a (n"" ,;t;tn Olllltc•ruld Ui :tbo11C'I'ICN1..TUO!"'
A Mexican team last reached tbe
club like the Mariners."
finals in 1985 and last won in 1958. '·Ga.
·Thome hit a' two-run homer, his
x-non-points race
In preliminary action Thursday,
34th, in the seventh to pull Cleveland
Driver standings
Bradenton beat wi~less Oyer, Ind., 8wi!hin one.
I.
Jeff
Gordon, 3,194.
2 and Yokohama beat the Arabian·
••
Seattle scored two runs in the · American Little League 2·1 .
2. Mark Martin, 3,095.
••
eishth on a passed ball by Pat Bor3. Dale Jarrett, 2,914.
d~ and a wild pitch by Paul Assen4. Terry Labonte, 2,884.
'
T.. el·77 to AOey FAIAP\.AIN lnlllrctlange
MtlndtQ.• Frldlly: 10 am • 9 pm • Saturday: 9 am • 9 pm
(11ult 1!2) Tum North on Rt. 21. Dealershiji iS
mfjCher.
·
·
5. Jeff Burton, 2,814.
3 m11et on IIIII
'lbe runs ended up being imporS.nday: 1 Pill' 8 ptl
6. Dale Earnhardt, 2,744.
The Senior PGA Tour beg~n in
•
laf\t because Cleveland scored twice 1980 with two tournaments, one won
7. Bobby Labonte, 2,618.
in jhe ninth on Williams' RBI sin~le by Don January and the other by
8. -Ted Musgrave, 2,479.
•
ani;! Jeff Branson's run-scorong Charlie Sifford.
9. Bill Elliott, 2,476.
'&lt;&gt;
grqundout.

LL World SerieS..

r------------------------Columna x Inches
'

"!have no problem with that,' ' he
said. "Harper's a great snapper. It's
just going to be a numbers decision .
Who knows what's going to happen?''
Cowboys: Deion Sanders, wearing a diamond-encrusted gold cross
necklace and professihg he has found
peace in his life, showed up at the
Dallas Cowboys' practice field
ThurSday and announced , "Have no
fear, De ion is here."
·
It was a whirlwind visit by
Sanders on his off day from baseball
duties with the Cincinnati Reds. It
included meetings with defensive
coaches, a physical examination,
hugs and jokes with his teammates
and a remarkable news conference
about religion, divorce, baseball and

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instance, if the Packers ·choose to
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In which case, he's pretty sure he
could hook up with another team.
"I know every team needs a long
snapper and there are guys here who
can do it, too, " Le Bel said. "Regard·
less, this is a good team and there's
some incredible athletes here.
They'll be very .successful with
whatever decision they IJlake.
"I just hope I'm a part of it."
If not, his duties may fall on 12year veteran offensive lineman Jeff
Dellenbauch - if he makes the

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belief that I can score well on this
golf course because it requires some •
patience. It's not a course you can -:~:
just attack and expect to go low-on." ·~-.
Mickelson said it was the course :~:~
that produced the star-spangled:~:\
leaderboard.
~.:,
"The better players tend to come · : ::
out at this type of golf course as ·: ·.:
opposed to a course we normally ::• !"
play that might lead to 16- to 20- ·: .~
under winning, " Mickelson said. • •
. The crowd lurking a shot back :. ~
i~luded the current U.S. Open ::::l
(Ernie Els) and PGA Championship ·;~
winners (Davis Love III), a past ::!
World Series winner with tHree -:;:
major titles (Nick Price), a two-time :-;..
British Open champion and fanner .:::' ·
World Series winner (Greg Norman), :::"
a two-time winner this year (Mark :::
O'Meara) and a local favorite who ·. ~ ­
~rew up in Akron and whose father : ·
is the World. Series' tournament ~
manager (John Cook).

...------~--~
Boys, Girls, Mens &amp;Ladies
····
··"'

to the championship game of the Lit- semifinal to pick the U.S. champion
tie League World Series.on Saturday was the last-minute idea of Mission
afternoon.
Viejo manager Jim Gattis.
The batting practice between the ,His instincts were righ!. His team
preliminary-round game and the
(See SERIES on Page 5)

Tat:(lma ur the PCl.

surrounding the green, but it ended .
up shOrt, and he failed to get up and
down from the left rough.
"It feels pretty good because I
played. well today and under these
condouons 1f you play well you're
probably going to be up near the top
of the leaderboard," Woods said.
Mickelson got off to a rocky start
with a bogey, but righted himself to
take the lead with birdies al holes 10
and II . Back-to-back bogeys at the
.12th and 13thholescosthimtheoutright .lead.
He made up for those lapses by
rolling in his 30-foot pun for birdie
'on the last hole for his 67 and a piece
of the lead.
It was business as usual for Mickelson, who has supreme confidence
playing at Firestone.
"! have a lot of positive thoughts
playing here, " he said. " I have a lot
of good memories and I also have a

'

..

.

tree 20 paces away and over the trees

-....

Winston Cup slate &amp; standings posted

_

RHP Felipe Ura and INf Brent

Transactions

Basketball

Montre~JI

(Nea1te 16-.l), I: IS p.m.

(PaniilgUA 0·1 } ol Chicaso
10.7).1 : 1~p . m .

Colorado (Astacio 7 -9 ) at Houslon

Cmtnl Oldlion

San Frnncbcll .,, .....71 56_ .:'1:'19
Los An~:eka ...........fl'J ~~~ . 54~
Colmklo ................61 66 .480
SrJ,n Dieao ..............61 66 .4RO

Minnesota (Tcwklbury 4-.9) nl Balli-

te••(0tiYU9-10). 8:J;1 p.m.

.1. 1'&lt;1.

Wtttcrn Division

~(Eridl:Mm 14-5), 7:J5p.m.

..

n

Olicotgo ..................~ 77

Tonlabt's gam..

.each homered, Scan Berry bad a
two-run double and Derek Bell had
his founh strai&amp;ht niultihit game.
The Astros ino:reased their lead in
the NL Central to four games over
Pittsburgh, which gained 2 1/2
games in lhe previous tJuee days.
· Ellis Burks homered for ·the
Rockies. Larry Walker set a careerhigh with his 102nd RBI, one more
than he had in 1995.

of cocaine possession. Phillips went
as Baltimore beat Kansas City.
2-for-3 with three walks and scored
The Orioles' improved the best
twice for the Angels.
road record in the majors to 44-22.
"I'm glad to be back and part of The Royals (52- 72) fell 20 games
this team," PhilliP,S said. "Now I can below .500 for the first time this seastart using the term 'we' instead of son.
'I,' which is a good thing. It 's pretty
Randy Myers; the sixth Orioles
tough out there when you're feeling
pitcher, earned his team-record 38th
alone. So it's nice to be back where
save. He has been successful on 27
I' m .wanted, which is in this clubstraight save chances.
house."
Tigers 2, Brewers I
In other AL games, Oakland beat
Tony Clark drove in the go-ahead
Boston 13-6, Baltimore downed
run with a grounder in the 12th
Kansas City 4-3, Detroit· defeated
inning, and Detroit won at MilwauMilwaukee 2-1 in 12 innings 'and kee.
Chicago topped Toronto 6-3.
Bobby Higginson and Travis FryAthletks 13, Red Sox 6
man singled with one out off Bob
. Jason Giambi, Emie Young, Jason Wickman (6-6). Clark followed with
McDonald and Jose Canseco all a high bounce. to sec.ond baseman
homered in the third inning- markFernando Vina, who could only get
ing just the 40th time in major · an out at first base.
league history that a team has conDamian Easley went3-for-3 with
nected four times-in an inning.
two doubles and two walks for the
Mark Bell horn, who went 4-for- Tigers.
4, and Scott Spiezio also homered for
White ~OM 6, Blue Jays 3
Oakland. Boston last .allowed six
Frank Thomas hit a two-run
home runs in agamo in 1980.
homer and host Chicago won its
Nomar Garciaparra extended his third straight game.
·
hitting streak to 23 games for the Red
Thomas, leading the AL in batting
Sox, who had won six in a rD\11.
at .347, hit his 29th home run. He has
Orioles 4, Royals 3
38 RBis in 40 games since the AllRafael Palmeiro hit a two-run Star break.
·
double in the first inning and scored
Rookie Shannon Stcwan went 4on Cal Ripken 's single hi the eighth for-5 with three RBis for Toronto.

.

·right tbere on paper."
A wet courSe and strong crosswinds played havoc with the shots of
some of lhe finest players iq the
world in the winners-only tourna-

AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Tiger
Woods has a sore ankle, he's tired
and run down and he's been overwhelmed by everything he's seen in
ment.
his year as a professional golfer.
Only 14 of the 46 players broke
The learning process continued
par.
The field had 126 birdies to 171
for Woods on Thursday in the openbogeys,
and eight double-bogeys to
ing round of the NEC World Series
just
two
eagles.
.
ofGrlf.
·
·
The
course
was
playtng
so long
A bogey 'on the last hole - and
that
Jeff
Sluman,
who
finished
with
defending champion Phil Mickela
69,
hit
a
4-wood
on
his
third
shot
son's birdie on the same hole laterinto
the
625-yard
"Green
Monster"
left them boih with 67s and tied for
the top spot, a stroke ahead of a line 16th hole.
Woods, battling a balky driver
of major championship winners.
and
an ankle injury, saved par at the
".People tend to forget th.is is my
16th.
with a spectaCular flop shot that
first year on tour,'' Woods said after
another day surrounded by record · left him just three, feet fQI' par.
That save, and a birdie on lhe next
galleries at Firestone Country Club.
"I have never played this much golf. hole after hitting a 7-iron to four feet,
This is a long season because of that gave him a two-stroke lead going to
18, but he pulled his drive left near
and because I'm not used to it. I have
·
had lulls in my game and you can a drainage grate. ·
just look at my finishes - they're
He tried to cut an 8-iron around a

Sunday's games

EukmDiwllioh

Iam

Philadrlphin . .. .... ..45

2':

~9

CLEVELAND m Oakland, 4 :~ p.m.
N.Y. Ya11keeut Seattle, 4:3!i p.IJI.
Chicago While So~ at Te:us. 8:05 p.m

NL standings-

Wnlern Dtwilion

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

;saa~
71
~uheim ........... ,.... 69

MinneUM"n ar Bahimore, I : J~ p.m.
~lroit at Milwaukee. 2:05 p.m.
Toronto 111 Kansas City, 2:0:'1 p.m.
Bostoolll Anaheim. 4:05p.m.
.

22

-' 4~

By RUSTY MILLER

Mission Viejo .&amp; Guada·tupe advance to finals

Sunday's pmes

Eastern DiriPon

1(wMCity ..,. ....... ~2

the Mariners.
The Mariners survived some
shaky relief pitching - a two-run.
homer off Paul Spoljaric in the sev- By BEN WALKER
enth and two runs off Heathcliff AP Baseball Writer
Slocumb in the ninth - to go 2 112
If this had been a World Series
games ahead of Anaheini in the AL game, fans wou.ld ' ve been talking
West.
about it for years.
·
Edgar Martinez doubled in two
Instead, the New York Yankees'
runs to break a fifth-inning tie, and 4-3 win over the Anaheim Angels in
Jamie Moyer matched a career high 12 innings Wednesday night will
with his _13th victory as the Mariners simply be remembered as one of the
beat Cleveland for the second . most entertaining games of the 1997
straight game.
·
season.
The Mariners won the season
"A lot of things had to be perfect
series from the Indians 8-3, includ- for us to win this game," said Joe
ing 4-2 in the Kingdome.
Girardi, who bunted for a single with
Moyer ( 13-4) went five innings two outs in the 12th and later scored
and allowed two runs on live hits and the go-ahead run on Derek Jeter 's
lour walks while striking out six. He infield hit.
went a combined .13-3 for ~aston
The Yankees, eight games ahead
and the Mariners last season.
of Anaheim for the wild-card spot,
Siocumb worked the ninth inning have won three in a row and 10 of
and earned his 21st save - his 13. The Angels lost their third in a
feurth for Seattle- despite allow- row and slipped 2 112 games behind
ing the two runs before Sandy Ala- Seattle in the AL West.
mar grounded out with a runner on
From start to finish, .the game at
second base to end the game. It was Anaheim ·stadium had it aU:
Slocumb's second save in two
- Big hits. Tino Martinez
nights.
.
In the fifth, Martinez doubled off Little League World Series continues
rookie Bartolo Colon (2-6) after
Joey Cora and Kelly singled and
Griffey was walked intentionally. . .
.
The Mariners added a third run in the
California won two nationally teleinning when Jay Buhner grounded By JEFFREY BAIR
vised games and still found time for
WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. (AP) . out to bring Griffey in from third,
In less time than some people punch batting practice.
making it 5-2.
Mission Viejo beat Bradenton,
a time clock twice in a day, the Lit(See INDIA1\IS en Page 5)
tle League's U.S. champions from Fla., 12-1 Thursday night to ad11anc:e

Texas (Win 11-Y), tL\5 p.m.
CLEVELAND (Henhiser 11-5) at '
Oakland (Rigby 0-4). 9 : 1~ p.m.

Baseball
....;

became the first Yankees player to
reach 40 home runs since Reggie
Jackson in 1980. Martinez, leading
the majors with 119 RBIS, tied Ken
Griffey Jr. for lhe homer lead with
his solo shot in the lith inning.
- Surprising hits. Chris TUrner
lined an RBI double with two outs in
the lith for the Angels, tying it 3-3.
Turner was promoted from the
minors before the game when pitcher Mark Langston was placed on the
disabled list, and was batting in the
majors fonhe first time this year.
- B,ig throws. Yankees left fielder Chad Curtis prevented Anaheim
from winning in the lith, making a
strong, one-hop throw to the plate to
cut down Turner when he tried to
score on Craig Grebeck's single.
·- Surprising throws. Rickey
Henderson was tossed by first base
umpire John Hirschbeck during an
unusual dispute in the Angels eighth.
Henderson, baseball's career stolen ·
base leader, drew. a two-our walk and
called time. He went to talk to
Hirschbeck about the pickoff move
off Andy Pellitte and wound up
being ejected. Pinch-runner Orlando
Palmeiro was then caught stealing..
- Boos and cheers. Tony Phillips
got a mix of both from the crowd of
27,102 in his first game since being
arrested Aug. 10 on a felony charge

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5 : :

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

,:
I:
•
••
:

I
"

I
1 Col. x 21n·
Dotted Line Box

•
~

Tom Peden

Country

I:
••

i•

-

.

�•

_Page..-.~6-•The
_ _oa_l..;.ty_s_en_u_ne_I_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _Pot::.::::m=lll:_::roY. Middleport, Ohio

Squeezed in Malibu: Disaster~prone
.. home of wealthy pressed for.cash
. MALIBU, Calif. (AP) - The
The disasters have kept Malibu
images scream wealth: celebrity- spending and that has prevented the
.soaked shores, lavish oceanfront stockpiling of cash to fall back on.
mansions, a rich-kid university, While the League of California Cities
lrendy boutiqoes and Hollywood suggests municipalities keep up to
mover-and-shaker watering boles.
half of their annual budget in ~e.
Yet tough fiscal times have falle'h Malibu has about S percent on hand
.on Ma)ibu, the beach enclave of -making it one of California's most
; 16,000 that has weathered five expen- thinly cushioned cities.
-sive disasters in the six years it h..s
That is why city officials and oth:been incorporated. And just around ers look nervously to next month,
the comer is September, often the when fierce Santa Ana winds usualbeginning of Malibu's notorious ly arrive. The winds can whip fires
cycle of fires, floods and mudslides. down the city's populated canyons in
While municipal leaders won 'I minutes, leaving slopes barren and
· uuer the word "B" word, there are ripe for Hoods and mudslides from
signs bankruptcy may be just a fire or intense winter J:Bins.
Hood away.
Malibu'scost of weathering a sin· "We're pretty · much close to gle disaster runs about $:500,000.
broke. I would say we are one good
While the City Council plans to
disaster away from insolvency." said build its reserve to $8.5 million over
Arnold York, gadfly publisher of the the next several years, City Manager
weekly Malibu Times.
Harry Peacoc!c said Malibu has about
How could this be in a communi- $1.7 million in the bank.
ty of multimillion-dollar homes
However, York's research found
owned by the likes of Johnny Carson, less man ssoo.ooo in cash on hand.
· Sylvester s·tallone, Frank Sinatra,
The city that is home to Pepper·
David Geffen, Jeffrey Katzenberg, dine University also must pay for
Dick Clark, Bruce Willis and Janet several big-ticket projects, including
Jackson? ·
the reopening of two key roads
"If you look at the hismry of Mal- closed by landslides and the repair of
ibu, it's about fires, mudslides and the crumbling Malibu Pier, its most
Hoods," city Planning Commission- prominent landmark.
er Tom Hasse said. "The only thing
"We don't have money," York
we haven't had has been a destructive . said. "One good storm and the Malwave."
ibu Pier could be sitting in some-

body's living room on Pacific Coast
Hishway."
Hasse, who insists Malibu is not .
going banluupt, acknowledges a
cash-How problem in recent years . .
He said it would take two natural disasters to wipe out the reserve and
force the city to begin cutting services.
"But it's not going to go hanluupt
because of two disasters," he said.
"Banluuprt:y has been used as a campaign war cry for those who want to ·
develop Malibu."
Construction could boost the city's
tax base, but the council's anli-devel·
opment ml\iority won&gt;t liear of that.
In fact. the city's financil!l woes ~an
be traced in lllllle part to legal costs
fighting developers.
Malibu also spent $30,000 and
countless hours to designate Malibu's
coastal waters a refuge for whales,
dolphins and fish.
. "We spent a lot of our juice get·
~ng the designation of a marine
sanctuary," resident Paul Grisanti
said. "Now we have our marine salictuary. But bow much is the city will·
.ing to set tiide for enforcing that?
The answer is nothing."
York still manages to express
optimism: "We're nOt behind in our
bills. We can probably keep our
head above water but only if the
water level stays the same."

Frl~y,

tan

..

· ·~·

Dailey Mass -8:30 a.m.

w.

Apostolic
Church ol Je~us Chrlsl Apostolic .
. VanZandt and Ward Rd.

•,

DUB J NBW 96 JIODBU JRTST BB SOLD!

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Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich

•

Don't even think of going to a .
movie in Meigs County these days. It
just ain't gonna happen. The meaters
have gone down tbe tube.
. However, Middleport's Paul Clark
through a program of coming movies
which had had among his good stuff
, reminds me ·that back in 1949 we
could pop in 10 see a show at the
·Meigs Theater and Bendvue Theater '
:in Pomeroy or at the Temple in Mid::cfleport. I believe the Liberty in Middlepon was also still operating at the
time through the efforts of the Hindy
family.
At any rate. the show program
Clark sent ' along involves only the
:Meigs. Bendvue and Temp.le. all
owned by the late Helen Lyons.
For the most part, it appears that
the Meigs Theater had preference
over the others in which movies were
shown with the Temple coming next.
the Bendvue seemed to have least
known and included a number of
westerns.
"Words and Music" was playing
the Meigs on Sunday and Monday.
Jan. 30 and 31. back in 1949 with the
cast including a lot of stars including
, Mickey Rooney, Tom Drake, June
Allyson, Judy Garland, Gene Kelly.
"Lena Horne, Ann Sothern, Janet
Leigh. Peggy Como and Cyd
Charissc. The Temple on those dates
was playing "Rachel and the
Stranger" starring Loretta Young,
William Holden and Robert
Mitchum. On Wednesday, Feb. 2,
thai week the Racine Quartet was featured in a stage performance at the
Temple in addition to the movie,
"Biondie's Reward".
.
Making up the quartet were Clark,
dilbert Hart, Robert Hlrl and Freeland Norris. The show bill had this ·
to say about the singing four:
"Religious songs! Popular songs!
Old
songs! Plenty of comedy.
Lest you forgei, these boys are fun- '
ny off the stage, but you'll never
know how funny they are until you've
seen their performance· And can they

nme

agree
them to appreciate them."
All three theaters featured the
"Lucky" game, similar to bingo, at
least one evening during the week.
Admission was 50 and 25 cents back
men so what with the movie, somettmes a stage show and the money
games which also included hank
,night, you certainly got.your money's
worth. .
And, needless to say, those days
are gone forever.
The Meigs County Genealogical
Society in its processes, of course,
does a lot of work in conjunction with
cemeteries across Meigs County.
The socieJy has encountered a special problem which somebody out
there may be able to solve. The society· is researching the old Meigs
County Infirmary Cemetery. This is
located on a hill in back of where the
infirmary stood on Route 143.
Unfortunately, each tombstone is
marked by only a null)ber and apparently records were kept of tbose nomhers so that a cross check could be
made to determine who was buried in
a particular grave.
Unfortunately, the records through
which those buried can be identified,
are no where to be found. It is
believed that at one time they might
have been at the old county courthouse in Chester. Over the years,
records were removed from that
struCture and the infirmary cemetery
records might have been among
them.
If you have any knowledge of the
names and numbers would you
please contact Sue Hager, president
of the society at 949-2441, or the
Meigs County Museum in Pomeroy?
.
.
.
Qutte a lot of attenllon went tnto
marking the 20th anniversary of the
death of Elvis Presley. Nice to keep
the tradition alive so that some ofus
can make the big bucks. Do keep
smiling.

Hollywood
Walk of Fame
may soon
be history
LOS ANGELES (AP) - To tile
or not to tile? It is a big question in
Los Angeles, where preservationists
fear the Hollywood Walk of Fame
could crumble under a construction
project.
The Metropolitan Transportation
Authority is iearing up part of Hollywood Boulevard for a subway and
that could affect 122 of the 2,095
bronze stars, names and medallions
set in 3-foot squares of terrazzo tile.
The MTA said it could save
$159,000 by demolishing the old tile
and putting the stars back in with new
terrazzo, rather than trying to preserve the tiles.
.
What would Martha Raye say? Or
Danny Kaye? Or the original movie
Tarzan, Johnny Weismuller? Their
stars are among those that would lose
tile to the jackhammer.
"They are destroying a part or hislory and they should preserve these ·
as they have promised," said Raben
Nudelman of HollywOod Heritage
Inc.
Linda Dishman of the Los Angeles Conservancy said the MTA had
agreed to preserve the stars, the latest of which was .unveiled Thursday
_to _h~or actress Cicely 'Jyson.
' "These people were all· there
when the stars were unveiled,' • Ms.
Dishman said. "The terrazzo was
there. There is a certain patina to it
now that won't be there if they just
pull out the medallions."
With the city's Cultural Heritage
Commission scheduled to vote on the
MTA plan Sept. 3, some suggested
the·preservationists are overreactin~ .
"I appreciate heritage but you
have to remember the cos~" said
Johnny Gran~ the master of cere·
monies for the unveiling of each new
star.
· if it was the hand and
~.(Mann's) Chinese Theyou.can 'I get them. there
Many damaged stars have been
replaced over the years. The Elvis
Presley star, directly above a subway,
wu recently replaced and already is
cracked, Grant said Thursday.

•

1.998 CHEVY 1/2 TON
4x4, V6, 5 ap, IHI, cruise, air, cass. red

4 cyl, 5 ap, WAS $11,882

IIOWI$9,869 .
_....._,

.519,979

P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane
Mason, W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
s.,v;c,,.. ""'uua.m. and 1

Hope Bapllsl Chur&lt;h (Soutbera)
Pastor: Richard Oliver
S10 Grant St, Middleport
Sunday schoo1·.9:30 a.m.
· Worship ~ 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
Fne Witt Baptist Church
Ash Street, Middleport
Pastor: Les Hayman
Sunday Scrv~ - 7:00 p.m.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wednesday Scl"\licc-7:00 p.m.
Hulland Ant Baptist Church
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy Flnt Baptist
East Main St.
Sunday &amp;:bool- 9:30a.m .
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Flnt Southem Bar.Ust
41872 Pomeroy Pdo:e
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bry"ant
Sunday School -9:30a.m .
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.
Flnt Baptist Church
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Worship - 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m. .
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.
Racine Fint S.ptiJt
Pastor: Rev. lawrence T. Haley
Youth P.astor; Aaron \oung
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

1997 GEO TRACKER CONV.

1997 BUICK RE.GAL
loaded, WAS $22,302

V8, loaded, WAS $19,105

8

-s1a,2o'

1997 BUICK LESABRE

V6, PW, PL, auto, air, cruise, WAS $18,055

All power; &amp;lllo, air, WAS $24.S18

NOWI$)7,337

NOWI$21,639

£NE1~

Bethlehem Baptist Church
Great Bend, Route 124, ~ne, OH
Pastor ; Daniel Bcn:lloc t
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday WotshiP. - 10'30 a.m.&amp;: 6 p.m.
Wednesday Bable Study - 6:00 p.m.
Old Bethel Froe Will BoptiJI Church
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middlepon
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
·
Evening-7:30p.m.
Th•rsday Services -1:30

VIctory Bapllsllndepeadant
52S N. 2nd St. Middlepon
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship· lOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sel"\'ices • 7 p.ril .

2 Or, cruloe, W, aalo, ol&lt;,

""*"'· .,_, UyiM omy, Wlo$ M21.850

NOWI~ftA

stereo,
. ....................................... .
.
.
. ,
18N OLDIACHIEVAV8, auiO, air, PW, stereo, ti", crul&amp;e ......................................... ,........... $11,900
11117 BUICK LESA8RE V6, auto, air, tift, cruise ............................................................ .. ....... $17,900
11111 PONl1AC GRAND AM air, PS; f&gt;B, PW, till, CIUise ........................................................ $11,900
11111 OLDI DELTA II V6, all power, auto, air, 8181110 ............................................................. $15,900
11111 OLD&amp; CUTLASS SUPREME, auto, tilt,~:n~lse, st&amp;reo ............ ;............ ,......................... $12,990
11115 CHEVY CAPRICE CLASSIC V8, auto, all power, tilt, cruise .......................................... $13,990
11111 BUICK REGAL, Auto, 1111~ cruise, stereo ......................................................................... $12,500
11111 GEO METRO 4 Cyl, auto, air, Sl8f80, .............................................................................. $8,900
11111 PONllAC BONNEVILLE V6. PS, PB. air, spoiler, ti", cruise.................................... ...... $15,900
11111 BUICK SKYLARK. air, PW, stereo, crul&amp;e ............................... :...................................... $11 ,200
11111 CI:IEVY CAVALIER, auto, PS, RB, air, spoiler, ti", ctuise ............ :................................. .$10,500
11111 OLDS CIERA, auro.• air, PB, crulse .................................................................:............... $11 ,900
11111 BUICK PARK AVENUE, cruise. auto, PW...................................................................... $22,900
18M OLDI CUTLASS SUPREME 4 Door, tilt, CIUise, AM/FM cass, 34,000 mi. Lt. Blue ....... $11 ,400
111115 FORD MUSTANG Au1o, air, PW, PL, tilt, cruise ................................................ ............. $13,500
11180 ORAND PRIX Air, V6, auto.................................................................................................$5,600
1883 CADIUAC SEDAN SEVILLE V8, leather, all power, low mlles ..................................... $14,900
18M OEO TIIACKER 4X4,Conv, air, 4 cyl, 38,000 miles, green, WAS $9,600 ......... ................$8,200
11111 DODGE RAM D150, V8, au1o, air, ti", cruise, 18,000 mi. like new cond, wh~e ...:.......... $17,800
11115 CHEV 1/2 TON 4·W, V6, 5 SP, AIR, 35,000 ,MI, SWB, red, WAS $16,999...................... $15,600
18M CHEV'f 5-10 EXT CAB; 4 cyl, auto, air 64,Qoo mil Purple WAS $12,995 .................... ,.$11,200
18M MAZDAB4000, 4 WD, 8 cyl, 5epd. air, white, Hke new, 32,000 ml WAS $12,995 ......... $11,800
11115 CHEVY 1/2 ElCT CAB, VB, 5epd, air, while, Nke new, 32,000 mMea, WAS $16,999 ......$15,800
11115 FORD RANGER, 4 cyl, 5 spd, air, elrt cab, 53,000 mW, graen WAS $10,999 ................... $9,800
11115 TOYOTA TOCQIIA, 4 WD, 4cyl, 5 spd, air, 38,000 mimi. blue WAS $15,995 ..............$14,900
18M OMC SIERRA SWB VB. auto, air, AM/FM, CUB, red, sport side, 44,000 ml. ..................$14,900
11111 CHEVY S.10SWB, 4 cyl, auto, alr,AM/FM CUB, green, 22,000 ml WAS $11,995 .........$10,400
11111 CHEVYS.10 EXT CAB Ul, 4 cyl, 5spd, air, AM{FM black Only 8,900 ml... .................. $12,400
18M S.10 BLAZEFI TAHOE, 4 dr, 4.3 V8, .uto, arl, PW. PL. tilt,. cruise, 29,000 mi ............... $17,900
11111 CHEVY A8TRO B P-. loaded, 30,000 mil WAS $1B,999 ....................................:...... $14,800
11111 s-10 BLJIZER, LS loaded, 39,000 mi. alum wheels, air, au1o, 4 Dr, Dk cherry .............. $18,900
. 18M QOE TIIACKEA- ConY., au1o, air, TS, TB, 44,000 miles .......................... ....................... $9,850
1883 OLDI SIERRA V8, Auto, air, cau, one owner, low miles ................................................. $:.7r:9€iii
11118 CHEVY C-10 PU SILVERADO, VB, auto, air, C8111, PW, PL, ........................ ;................... Ii
0!0 METRO 4 DR 5
cua, REd ............................:........... ~.·'IW

TIX &amp; Tlt5e Not
Included. All
RtbltiiTo

Dealer

Bearwallow Ridge Church or Christ
Pastor: Jack Colegrove
· Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m.
Zion Church ol Chaiot
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.143)
Pastor: Roger Watson
Sunday School ~ 9:30a . m .
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday S.rvll:es -7 p.m.
TUpJI'n Plain Church or Chris!
Instrume'ntal
Pastor: Scot Brown
Worship Serilce- 9 a.m.
Communion - 10 a.m.
Sunday School-10:15 a.m.
Bradbury Church ol Christ
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Rutland Church of Christ
Sunday Scltool -9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Bradford Church of Christ
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Min ister: Hill Amberger
Sunday Scltool- 9:30a.m.
Worship - S:Oila.m.\ 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
· Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

ML Moriah Church ol God
Racine
Pastor: Re\'. James Sauerfield
Sunday SChool - 9:45 a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

ML Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School ~ 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Andqulcy Bopllst
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evening · 6:00p.m.

Sacred Heart C.lbollc Church.
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz
Sat. Con. 4:45-5:15p.m.; Mass-5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m..
Sun. Mass · 9:30 a.!Jl.

DanYIIk Hollaou Churcb
31057 Slale Roule 32S, Langsvlte
Pastor: Dr. J.D. Young
Sunday school - 9 :30 a.m.
·Sunday worsllip • 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service -7 p.m.

Eaterprise
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship . 9 a.m.
Flatwoods
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush
Sunday Sc:hool9:30·a.m.
Worsltip- 11 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SeJVice- 7:30 p.m. ·

Forest Run
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Thursday Serticcs- 6:30p.m.

R01e of Sharon Hollneu Cllureh
Uading Creek Rd., Rutland
PastOr: Rev. Dew~y_ King
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Sunday worship · 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Heath (Middkport)
Pastor: Vernagaye Sullivan
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m.

Pine Grove Bible Hollaeu Church
1/2 mile off Rt. 325
·
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30 p.m..

Minersville
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worsh_ip- 10 a.m.
Peaai Chapel
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.

Wesleyan Blhk HoiiDCSI Church
75 Pearl St., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev, 1ohn Neville ·
Children's service - 10 a.m.
Worship - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Robert E. Robinson
Sunday School - 9:15 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 un.
Bible Study Tuesday • 10 a.m.

HyRII Run HoUneu Church
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7:30 p.m.

HOckSpliap
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School- 9:15 a.m.
Worship · 10a.m.
Youtli Fellowshtp. Sunday .. 6 p.m.

Lourol Ctllr Free Melhodlsl Church
Pastor: David DeWitt
Sunday Sc:hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:00p.m.

Rutland
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Won;hip - 10:.30 a.m.
Thursday Services : 7 p.m.

Rutland.Commun.lty Church
Pastor: Rev, Roy McCarty
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Salem Center
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School -9: 15a.m.
Worship -10:15 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Snow&gt;! lie
Sunday School · 10'a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.

Heot'JIIInlzed Church of Jesus Christ
of Lotter Day Salnll
POrtland-Racine Rd.
Branc:h President - Michael DU.bl
Sunday SchOQI - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Bolbony
Pastor: Dewayne Studer
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services - lO a.m.

The Churcb or Jeaus
Christ ol Lotter-Day S.lnll
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday School 10:20-11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood 11:05-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking meeting, 1st Thurs. -7 p.m.

Carmel
Pastor. Oewarne Stutler
· ·
Sunday Schoo ~ 9:30 a.m.
Wor5hip - 10:45 a.m: (2nd &amp; 4th Sun)

Momln&amp;Star
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School- 11 a.m.
Worship -10 a.m.

Syncuse First Church of God
Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev: David Russell
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evening Services- 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30 p.m.

, Ch.,ler
PllStor: Sharon Hausman
Worship,- 9 a.m .
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thursday Services- 7 p.m,

Trinity Church

Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev ." Roland Wildman
Sur~day school and wor5hip 10:25

SuUou
Pastor: Dewi.7ne Stutler
Sunday Schoo · 9;30 a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m. (1st&amp; 3rd Sun)

East L&lt;lart
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.
Hadne
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School - JO a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.
Cooi&gt;IUe Uniled Mdhndlst Palish
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolville Church
Main .t Fifth St.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Tuesday SeNiccs - 7 ~.m.
Bethel Church
Township Rd., 468C
Suflday Scttool - 9 a.m ..
Worship- 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 10 a.m.

ML Olive United Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m..
Meip Cooperodve Parl!h
Northeast Cllllter
Allml
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
S•nday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m ., 6:30p.m.

Congregational

Catholic

Centnl Cluster
Albury (Syrocuae)
• Paslor: Cllad Emric:k
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Ser.-:ices -7:30p.m.

Holtness

Ruitand Church or God
Pastor: Randy Barr
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Chun:h ol God or Prophecy
O.J. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Pastor: PJ. Chapman
' Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - ll a.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

Rudand Free Will Baptist
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School- 10 a:m.
Evening · 7 p.m,
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

326 E. Main Si, Pomeroy
Rector : Rev, D. A. duPlantier
Holy Eucharist and
·sunday School 10,30 a.m.
Coffee hour following

Lanpvllle Christian Church
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Lutheran
WorUlip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
. .
~-&gt;M:ednesday Service 7:30 p.m-r ~ ._~.~'.-~~.....,eran Church
·
Pine Grove
Hemi&lt;K:k Grnn Church
Rev. George Weirick
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Worship • 9:00a.m.
Sunday school - 10:30 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Wor5hip- 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Our Saviour Lutheran Churdl
· Walriut and Henry Sts., Ra'Yenswood, W.Va.
Reed.. lite Church ol Christ
· Jntrim pastors: Rev. Ro~rt Hupp
Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School • 10'00 a.m.
r Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.
SL Paul Laalhenn Chw:ch
Comer Sycamore &amp; Sec:ond St., Pomeroy
Rev. George Weirick
Christian Union
Sunday Scllool • 9:45 a.m.
Hartford Church of Christ In
Worship- 11 a.m.
Christian Union
Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. David ,McManis
United Methodtst
Sunday School - 11 a.m.
Gnham United MethOdlll
Worship-9:30a.m.. 7,30 p.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m. (lsi&amp;: 2nd Sun).
Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Servi.ce - 7:30 p.m.

Church of God

Fallh Baptist Church
Railroad St., Mason
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worsh1p • 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
Forest Run Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hun
Sunday School· JO a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.

1997 POtmAC GRAND PRIX GT

Keao Church of.Chriat
Worship -9:30a.m.
·Sunday School : 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
1st and 3rd S~day

Uberty Christian·Church
Dexter
Pastor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening-6:30p.m.
Thursday Service • 6:30 p.m.

Hlllolde Bapdst Church
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 1
Pastor: Rev. James R. Ac:ree, Sr.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship -11a.tn., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Scl"\'ices -7 p.m.

1998 CHEVY MAUBU

Pomeroy Westside ChUrdl ofCbriat
33226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday School - 1'1 a.m.
Worship - IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servicci- 7 p.m. ·

Hickory Hillo Church ol Christ
. Evangelist Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunday .Schoo.l - 9 a.m.
WorShip · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 P·pl· .

ML Union Baptist
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evening - 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.

1998 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME

Pastor: Neil Proudfoot
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Mlddkport Church ol Christ
5th and Main
Pas1or: AI Harti!IOn
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p._m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Uberty ........,bly-ol God

Sliver Run Blptlst
Pastor: Bill Utile
Sunday Sc:hool - 10a.m.
Worship- 11a.m., 7:30p.m.
· Wednesday Service~- 7:30p.m.

NOWI$20,895

Tuppen Pl1las St. Paul
Pastor: Sh1ron Hausman
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m ..
Tuesday Services-7:30p.m.

Eptscopal
Grace EPIJcoi&gt;at Cllurdl

.Ice cream trucks barred from school zones
HOUSlON (AP) - Dreamsi- O'Hearn said Thursday.
City Hall to compl.tn that Gibson's
.cles? Schoolchildren can dream on.
By using cows as foster ·moms, the stand hurts the neighborhood's charThey won'lbe snacking on Nully buffalo industry would be able to acter. Some said he got special treatBuddies ,or the like, either, since ice rBise production to satisfy a growing ment.
cream trucks will be barred from demand for the lean, red mea~ he
"No one disputes that 'Hoot's
Houston school zones during class said. So far, though. the longest a fruit' is cute; the point is moot," said
hours beginning Tuesday.
bison embryo has survived in a Hol- neighbor Jim McMurtry. "But changCity Councilman John Castillo stein dairy COW or an Angus beef COW ing the city's laws for one person is
sought the ordinance after hearing . has been three months, O'Hearn unfair."
about youngsters rushing from school said.
Gibson closed his stand last month
into traffic to buy ice cream.
Still, he says the idea could revo- !O .avoid fines of up to $250 a day. He
"This will just give us another lutionize the industry. "I think we are SBid he'll reopen in the fall, selling
provision, for safety reasons," he close, despjte all the hurdles and dis- peaches and pecans.
said.
"I feel like we can still all be
appointments," he said.
The measure passed Wednesday
friends," he said. "Heck, I love
by the City Council bars vendors
everybody.:•
TALLAHASSEE, Aa. (AP). from working in school zones during Lloyd "Hoot" Gibson has the green
hours when reduced speed limits are · light to get back in the produce-sellPITISBURGH (AP) - Dolores
in effect. It affects 275 licensed ing business, even if neighbors are the cat risked all nine of her lives to
~'mobile frozen dessert vendors" in seeing red:
help her owner escape a fire that gutHouston.
ted
his apartment.
·
For several summers, Gibson has
Dolores,
a
1-year-oldAbyssinian,
sold tomatoes and peaches from the
CEDARBURG, Wis. (AP)
back of a pickup truck in front of his alerted Kyle Leibach to the May 10
Wanted: A bossy to give birth to house. Neishbors complained, and fire by jumpin• on his head and
bison.
the city tried to shut him down on a . scrart:hing his race:
Buffalo fanner Jim O'Hearn may zoning violation.
The former stray inhaled smoke
be running such .an advertisement if
But city commissioners paved the dll\ing the fire and was revived by
his 3-year-old experiment to transfer way Wednesday for Gibson, 73, to set firefighters. She battled a lung infecbiso~ embryos into cows proves sue- up shop again by amending the zontion for weeks afterwanJ. Recently.
cessau1.
ing code
·
she was diagnosed with feline
Next month, O' Hearn ~lans to.. - Itallo~s produce sales by anyone leukemia.
tran~fer 24 b1son embryos •.nto ·the older than 70 who owns and occupies
The eat's courage didn't go unnouten of beefalo cows, whtch are a residence where the business is con- ticed. Three' months later, Dolores
crosses of buffalo and cows.
ducted, if that person has sold pro- was honored with a bravery award
If all _goes well, healthy buffalo duce since October 1992.
from the American Humane Associcalves w1ll be born m May or June,
A handful of people showed 11p at ation.

Church Directory

'

POMEIOY, 01. 45769
t3 57

The Dally Sentinef • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

August 22, 1997

Chester Church of·the Nazareae
Paslor: Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services..: 7 p.m.
RutJa•d Ch•n:h ofthe Nazarene
Pastor: Samuel Basve
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

South.Bethel New Testament
Silver Ridge
Pastor: Robert Barber
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servitt- 7 p.m.
Carleton Interdenominational Church
Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Jeff Smith
Sunday School -9 :30a.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m.
No Sundar or Wednesday Night Services
Freedom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob, o" Co. Rd. 31
Pastor : Rev. Roger Wjllrord
Sunday School - 9:30a.m ..
Worship- 7 p.m.

Por11aad Flnt l hurch of the Nazarene
Pastor: Mark Matson
• Worship· 10:30 p.m.
Sunday School - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

White's Chapel Wesleyan
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
·sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service : 7 p.m.

Other Churches
Harvn:t Outreach Ministrin
47439 Reibel Rd., Chester
Pastor: Rev. Mary McDaniel
Sunday Services: JO a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Agape Ufe Ci!nter
"Full-Gospel Church"
Pastors John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Second Ave . Mason
773-5017
Service time: Sunday 6:00p.m.

Falolew Bible Church
Le tart, W.Va. Rt. 1
Pastor : Joh n Hart
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship -7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 7:00p.m.

!I

Faith fellowship Crusade for Christ
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service : Friday, 7 p.m.

Faith Chapei.Opeo Bible Church
!1&lt;3 S. Third St., Middlepon
Senior Pastor Michael Pan gia
Resident Pastor Richard Vermillion
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Cal"ary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Re". Blackwood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7:30p.m.

ChristiiD Fellowship Center
Salem St., Rutland
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday School - lO a.m.
Worship · ll:lS a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedne¥Jay Service- 7 p.m.

Stlvenvllle Word or Faith
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday School 9:30 a.m . .
Evening- 7 p.m.

Hobson Christian Fellowship Church
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m.. , 7:00p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday service, 7:00p.m.
Fallh Full Gospel Churcb
Long Bottom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wor5hip - 9:30 a.. m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday -fellowship service 7 p.m.
fie Bellenrs' Fellowship Mini!Jtry
New Lime Rd., Rutland
Pastor: ReV. MargaretJ. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.
H•rrisonvllle CommUnity Church
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday· 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

R~oiclng ure Church
500 N. 2"d Ave .. Middlepon
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wednesday Service.••- 7 p.m.

Churth of Jesus Christ,
Apostolic Faith
1/4 mile past Fort Meigs on New Lima Rd.
Pastor: William Van Meter
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday -7:00p.m.
Friday-7:00p.m.
Clifton Tabernacle Church
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday.School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.
Thursday Service- 7 p.m.
New Ufe Victory Center ·
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Services- 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday -7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

Pentecostal

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

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

a.m.

Middleport Community Churda
·
515 Pearl St., Middlepon
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School tO a.m.
Eveni!18 ·7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Middleport Pentecostal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School - JO a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servic:es - 7:00p.m.

Fallh Vattey Taheiaack Church
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday SeJVice.- 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
Synu:'PH Ftrst Ualted Presbyterian
Pastor: Rev . Krisana Robinson
· Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a. m.

Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman St .~ Syracuse
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service . 7 p.m.

Hilrrlsonvllle Presbyterian Church
· Worship- 9 a. m.
Sunday School - 9:45a.m.

Haul Community Cbun:h
OffRt. 124
Pastor: Edse I Hart
Sullday School -9:30a.m.
Wotship · 10'30 a.m., 7:)0 p.m.

Middleport Presbyterian
Sunday School · 9 a. m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

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

Seventh-Day Adventist

lloeklaiiPI'rl (:hur&lt;h
Orand Street
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 8 p.m.

M,.... Chapel Church
Sunday school • 10 a.m.
Worship - J 1 a.m. '
Wedne~ay Service · 7 p.m.

Mulberry Hts. Rd ., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy LawinSky
Saturday Services:
Sabbaoh School • 2 p.m.
Worship- 3 p-.m.

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

Fallh Gospel Church
Long BottOm
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m .. 7:30p.m.·
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Nazarene
Middleport Church ollhe Nozorene
Pastor: Gregory A. Cundiff
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wo,.hip- 10,30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

JopJIO
Pastor: Bob Randolph
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sun~ay School- 10:30 a.m.

P01neroy Cbun:h of the Nuareae
Pastor: Re\'. Thomas Mc:Ciung
SundBy Sct10ol . 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m..
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

LA:Iag Bottoll'l
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Reed.swllle.Fellowsblp
Church of.the·Nazarene
Pastor: Mark A. Dupler
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedr.esday Services· 7 p.m.

Realnille
Worship- 9:.30 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
First Sunday or Month -7:30p.m. service

Synaue Chun::h of the Naurene
, Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Mt. Olin Community Chun:h
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service- 7 p.m.
United Faith Church

Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pastor: Rev. ROOert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worsltip - 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m .
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Seventh-Day Adnnllst

United Brethren
Mt. Hermon Uniled Brethren
In Christ Church
Tuas Community off CR 8~
Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunday Scltool -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wed nesday Servic"es- 7:30p.m.
Eden United Brethren in Christ
2 1/2 miles north of Reedsville
on Stale Route 124
Pastor: Rev . Robert Markley
Sunda)' Sch~l · ll a.m.
Sunday Worship · 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youtlt Service - 7:30p.m.

Full Gospel·Ughthouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
, Evening 7:30p. m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday ·7:30p.m.
'

.

thu:r.ch announcements sponsored by these area merchants
RACINE PLANING MILL '
Mill Work
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

992-3978
Devl84ulclrll AglnCy Inc.

JNSVRAN.i&amp;.

:::'~"':::

Pomeroy

FISHER
.FUNERAL HOME

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

992-3785

992-5141

St. Rt. 248, Chester, Oh.

K&amp;C JEWELERS
12 E. Main Street

6
,

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

F.WO/UNGScCOATS

264 South 2nd

985-3308

Middleport

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE

Briggs &amp; Stratton
SERVICES~
Master Servlca Technician
214E. Matn ~
IDe. KEROSENE HEATER REPAIR
992-5130 Pomeroy
Qulckel902-8877
949-2804

TIME FOR SPRING
CLEANING?
Clean our your basemfnr or
artie with file help or file

CLASSIFIED SECTION!

SAVE TIME
WITH A
CLASSIFIED AD!
)

"Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken •

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

Veterans
Memorial
Hospital

We Fill Doctors'

-.:"GENCIIS

Bill

Crow's Family Restaurant

Prescriptions
Pomeroy

992·2955

in

a hurry.. ~

TRY

CLASSIFJEDS

REfiL TIME
SfiVERS. .•

115 E. Memorial Dr. Pomeroy
992-2104

EWING FUNERAL HOME
"Dignity and Service Always"

Established 1913

992-2121
106 Mulber

Ave.

Pomero

TIME FOR SPRING
CLEANING?
Clean out yqur basement or
attic with the help of the

·CLASSIFIED SECTION!

:francis FLORIST
Meiss Countys Old•ot f'/.orist
EAST MAIN POMEROY, OHIO 45769

614/992·2644
614/992-6298

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
992;7075
172 North Second Ave.
Midd leport. Oh

�•

Friday, August 22, 1997

By The Bend

70

214

.ISSELL BUILDERS,

Woman's infidelity causes deep remorsE}
but the path I chose affected those I
love most. 'I live with the knowledge
that I broke one of the Ten Commandments as well as niy wedding
15197, loti AIIJCicJ Times
vows. I also live with the pain of
s,ooKa~e w . Crt•t~m
having hurt some very decent people. I fear that my children may one
day learn of my infidelity and think
Dear Ann Landen: I am not a ; less of me. I hope that from thiS
famous politician or a member of · point on, my behavior will make up
the British royal family. I'm just one ' for my past indiscretions, even
of the millions of women you have though nothing can wash away the
written about over the years who shame.
cheated on their husbands.
I want to share what I have
I was luckier than most. I have a learried. Please urge your readers )O
wonderfuTman who was able to for- talk with their spouses at the first
give me. We have two beautiful chil- sign of trouble and seek counseling
dren and are a truly happy family.
from a competent source. Encourage
To the outside world, I have it all,

Ann
landers

·-

Sermonette

theQl to keep their children in tbe
forefront of their thoughts 'at all
times. Caution them to 8J!Preciate
what they have and not risk Tosing it.
Whatever the gain, it isn' t wonh it.
lbere are no book contracts or
movie deals for my story. I am
·nobody special, just an anonymous
woman who cheated on her husband, someone ordinary people ·can
. identify with. If you publish my letter, maybe I can make a difference. - Atlanta, Ga.
Dear Ga.: I can assure you that
your letter WILL make a difference.
Mission ac.complished. Thank you
for writing.
,
Dear Ann Lll!lden: What can

one say to a friend whose table manners are repulsive? This woman is
l,ovely in every way, but she sloshes
food in her mouth, smacking, slurping and chomping like • Y(ashing
machine. She puts her elbows on the
table, hunches over her plate and
shoves the food. in with her fingers.
She talks incessantly, offering a
wide view of her half-chewed food
and intermittently licks her fingers .
Every so often, she uses a fingernail
to dislodge a chunk of whatever she
is eating from between her teeth.
I once nicely said, "It is not considered polite to lick your fingers."
She replied, "My father always said
it's OK to lick your fingers if you do

SATURDAY
ATHENS •. Poetry quilt perfor-A d' ·
mances, The Ridges u Jto~um,
Athens· Btll Renz perfonns That
, .
Gerry
Wh .ICh ·.IS ..,
.. oven 7.30 p.m.
Chorba
directs
"ForSeries
the Struggle
of
Wings" at
8:30p.m.
sponsored
by Rural Action with suppon from
the Ohio Arts Council. For more
information call lvars Balkits, 767.4938 _
. DEXTER -~ Homecoming at the
Old Dexter Church, Saturday at'noon.
Covered dish dinner, singing in the
after~~ con,

Minister's mess

S'f. ·PBTERSBURG, Aa. (AP)- .

Poli~ hava chiiiJed a man with offer-

ing $),10() for the murder of .the
emllltttled presil.tmt of the NatiOn~!
BaPiist Coriventi~n l!SA~ the nat1on s
Iars,st blafk deJ!Onnnatton.
Qale tJ~tchi.,., 52, was charged
Th~ay With scilicitation of murder.
Polife said lie approached a 59-yearold ~111'1 inla St. fetersburg doughnut
shop Aug. 12 ar!d asked him to kill
the£ev. t{enry1~yons.
lice 1aid J:futchins gave $1,120
mar~o whp alerted police. and
10
will not ~e chefBed with a cnme.
Hu(fhins 11pp8J1111tly has nev~r met
LyOI's and racisrn may be beh1nd t~e ·
allejled ofl'er, Jlll~ice spokesman 81ll
Dotjiel sa~~·
.
l,yons has ~ied repons that he
use~ chu':IJh m'ljlley for a $700,000
home he 1\0ughl with a woman who
Is .Pt his t;ife.
[,yons' wi(f, Deborah, was
accused o( seu~'g fires at the home
after learning
owned 11 w1th Bernicot Edwafds, a ~onvicted embezzler
and the cqurch 'If former public relations dire&lt;Jtor.
Meanwhile, federal prosecutors
confirme4 thett are . investigaung
Lyons' fitjanci~' affa1rs. 1be state
· auorney l(nd olficials with the 8.S
mil~on-m,ember
church
have
lauRelled iimil.. probes.

..,t

·'

Seutbiel
Cluaified.

99..2156

'

(No

Gt\t"''

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

REEDSVILLE-- Olive Township
Trustees will meet Monday, 7:30
p.m., in special session at the township building.
RACINE -- Southern Local Board
of Education regular meeting Monday, 7:30p.m. at the high school.

Public Notice
opprovitl tha controctor
ehall preeanl hta bill for
11 bkl, Including any
fiN efiiii'OWCI
to
the eroject engiOiar. A
chic~ 01 thPIYI 1111 n~ will be
laau- w1 n 14 uiP for
110% ol th• total bill. A
chick lor the 10% 19111111111
will ba laeuod within 110
dap of the 11191 chack II no
problamo diVIIop with tha
CCII1lr..:loi-.. work. Tha
ratalnage check will lla
loauld within 14 dip ol

extra-.

P=J::~per

a BIO OESCRIPTIONa ARE
AS FOLLOWS:
Bid Item 11 Floor end
Aprona:

Public NotiCe
Public Notice
_ , lrowellld nnlah w1t11
2. Labor to lnotall uld
lha , _ alopao and no .llema par Nallonol Electric
paako Of' valley 1110n1 than
1/4.. Abr-. nnllh Ia to be =~~;.:':;,;:..,-::
provldld on tha ··prone by the ...,. lnopector. All
only!· lnoura proper rough work eholl ba eomplllld
p umlllng tie-ln. 1'111 drain _,.. ol
lnlughuhall be 1orm1c1 ond
n2
ac,_lld
pouNd par tha plan d118U. "=~~~r the proJect lira
Contractor 1hall olltoln · available at .tho Roclna
DICIIIIry appi'OYIIIIy lha M n1 I I a lldl
d I
118!1 lnepactor. All work
u c po u "II ur ng
ehall be oomp- ·wltllln 2
:~o~:h toF:J:~:
Wllkl ol the achldulad Thera 11 a charge oi par
11
Electrical df'IWing.llda will bl duoot
";j'd~m
12
IIIIIIIIIIIDn:
tho oamoloclltlon on Sept.
Controctora ahall lncludl 15, 11117, II 4 p.m. Biela will
lhllollowlng In lhalr bid:
.ba IWtrdld lila following
11c:!.:t ~,:rlo~
1. Alllleclrlcelaqulpmant
1 by tha :-,
ond auppllel naceoury to can be enaworlll
lnllall truck bay perimeter
nil oullalo, HPS high bey PIOJIC!angl-1181~ .
lighting, awllchee, wiring, 009• 1 a.m. to 1.p.m.
·
A.G. Braach,
OPE48112
tic . AI101II equp1111nt
I
.,. 5 3TC
Ior 111 lila building earvlce altar "'----'_••_;_,._,;_ _ __
lhlmet• Including only lha
.braakara and aupply
Liltlt things
wiring/conduit .lor tha
11rt Worth Alol
aloramanllonld clroulll.
1n
110
the Cl.ssifitd Stctionl

COIIIriCtorll lhlll Include
lhllotloWing ln.thalr bid:
t. Concrete, rameah,
b arrar,
I
vopor
an d
Public Notice
expanalon I« !hi buHdlng
floor ond aprono.
PUBUCNOncE
2. Labor to ploeil end
Proloct : RICine V o l - llnl1h tha concrete illoba,
flra DepL • flra Sidon
per lhl pl8na ond provide a
Daacrtptlon:
Bid
·Sollcllllllon lor Cofllrlc:lorL
The VIllage ol Racine
wlahaa to conatruct 1 new
Ilia alation between the
montha of Aulull 'and
Decamber 11187. Ida ah811
not be baaed on prevailing
wage. Contractora may bid
Tu!'nPikt Ford,
on any portion ol tha
the Mid Ohio
protaot or on tha antlra
projoct. Pl8na are avall8ble
VaHey's Leading
and ahall bl uHd aa the
Automotive
llaiJII lor bidding I I
deacrlbad IIY !heat
Retailer his
apectlle8ltOM.

GENERAL CONDITIONS
t. Work Houra: 7 a.m. to 5
p.m. Mon·Frl. Alldrau
vartancaa with project
englnMt.
2. Ulllltl•: Contractor•
are raaponalbla lor wllar,
1ew•ge, power, treeh
removal
lor their
worbc:opa.

· 3. Schlduta: The projiCt
englna~r will provide
IUCOIUIUI lllddwa with I
progriiiiVI IChldUII
batoN work IMOJnl,

4. lnauranoa: Contractor
muat provide oopiM of
liability (1 million dolltre)
and Workman'• Comp.
ln~Urance providing lull
coverage belora anrctlng
bid.
s. Contractor ehall COMUII
with the proloct IIIIJinMt "

raqulrad and 1hall gat
IPJII'OVII batoNIHvlng the
Jollllle upon completion.
11. l'aymant Tamr1: Upon
completion ol work and
aubaaquant anglnaar'a

Immediate
openings In the
following areas:

:"::.r:"

=•

·,, 985.-&amp;1473

. 1-IDCJ.Ze1o5800

IAD=~I_ .. ~£-. IAD=ONI
'""~/ 2ndAnn...,J '-,'f#,
.i."
EXPO 1'97
'o/...t.,
; ~·
\

•DECKS
• ROOFING
• SIDING .

113 W. 2ND ST.

JoeWIIeon
(814 992-4277
~-

·--- --

614-992..5479

•Weed Eaten

Roofing, Siding,

2 ml:off Rt.,7
Leading CrHk Rd.

Pole Bama, .
Dack8, Painting

742•2925

:·

If~"

1

::=====·:·:,.,:·-=~l

'.

"·

,
.......

I

Contn!te, Ek.
P.O. Box 220 Bidwell,
· Oh 45614
(t!14) 388 ~

Center

.1--===·F~r~ee~·~o~lg~lt~a~lTh~e~rm~o-::st:-a-::t;;:~~~

L----.Ailil/ll,;la.IIIU

BENNETT'S
HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING

Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WI/
· t14o4-444~81-1MI41e
1oo800o872-5SII'T 1391 Salford SchOol Rd., Gallipolis, OH

. . YOUNG'S
. \tAIP~HTER SERVIa

custol"Xl,

oNewGaragea '
oEieetrlc.l a Plumbing
·•Roofing

eel

ofnNrl~

Novelties
Spedal Designs

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

P.O. llx21S

Howard L. WrlteMI

9ffdOIA see
cur/fd haireci
sweet sixteen
toclafd tell her

Happij
(Jirthdaij
11

o

-

Gutters ·
Downspouts
GuHer Chtanlng
Painting

949-2168

L.fo_r_Ch~
. _risty..;,....E...;q~uai-O...;ppo.:....rtu-nlty.;_Em..;ploy...:,.er_._--1

•
!

· $2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (619) 645-'8434

,,~·----~~----~E•
...... . .. . . .. L-------------~
~

~

-

·

J&amp;L 51 lNG &amp;
INSULATION
537 BRYAN PlACE

MIDDLEPORT '
892-277~

8:00 o.m.-3:30 p.m.
•Replac~~~~e~~t W'llidows

· •lllld Garages
•Stonn DOll'S &amp;
·. WWows

, ..... Allrlllloas

rCO_M_M_U_N_ITY-=S=KI=L=LS=I=N=STR=U=CTO=R-need_ed..., '
to teach community and personal skills to an
edult with leamlng limitations In Meigs County.
HOURS: 8 am Sat thru 8 am Men: sleep-over
required. Informal setting. Training provided.
High school dlploma/GED, valid driver's license,
good driving record, three years licensed driving
experience and adequate automobile coverage
required. Salary: $5.50/hr, to start. If Interested
call1-800-531-2302 no later than 8/29/97; ask

--

3111/1.4/TFN

. PEIGAIIE

Help Wanted

1·900·329.0611
Ext. 188"'- .

FREE ESTIMATES

$50.00 01 MDII
lEECH GROVE
ROAD

SPORTS!
SCORES!
SPREADS!

. RQOFING
NEW-REPAIR

BINGO

•

·-

r-y, OH

(614)992-4279

30 . Amouncemenas

a Ettarlor

.Painting . .
. ,
. Al1o Concrete Work

Wearable Admtlslng
33051 SR 33

ANNOUNCEMENTS

.-.n Addltlomt .

...

nME

RUTLAND
POST467
6:3C1P.M.
STIR BURST
$1500.00

AU. v.nli9Mo lluot

Be Paid In Adwan~.
Qf!(J IHE: 2:00p.m.
tho day bolo.. tho lid
la to Nn. Sul')dl)'
tdlllon- a:oo p.m.
Frlday. llonday tdltlon

·10:ooa.m. S.lurday.

. Croa11oads Centenarr IVanco . ·
Road, 8J23, Wlnchtttar 30·30, •
Carhart Coveralls. Anrqius Bed- •
room SUite, 250 Gallon Gal Tank
Willi Slllncl. Cunam, Loll OJ New

a-3.
lnllde Tag Silo: Friday li-5. Sit·

Clolhn, IIIK.IIamo.

urdoy 8·172i Second A,.nue,
HouMhold ltoml, Furniture, Ewrylhlng Goool

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp;VIcinity
A.ltVard S.l• Muat Be Paid In

Advance. D•tdllne: 1 :QOprn the
d1y btfort tht •cl Ia 10 run,
Sunday I llondar ed(tloa1:GOpmFrfday.
·

Pt. Pleasant
&amp;VIcinity

FREE ESnMATES

i . D.

Gflaey's

CUSTOM

•Exhaust•
Brakes • Shocks
Struts - Tune·ups

LEWIS TIRE
742·2792
0/1191 pd.

soo/ OFF
/O

1 Bod.u Shop

All carpel· Upholstery

1

(HEYAllER'S

.
i
:

j

.,

Quality Work at
• Fair ~rlcel
550 Page 51•
Middleport, Oh. 45780.
Home Ph.
1

l

614-992-3120

•

&amp;·family 11rd oale. Aug 22-23, g.
? 2i07 llaplo Ave. Riding inow.
or, rototillaf, blOnd ,...,. clolhaa,
toro,moc.

Auction

80

and Flea Martel

Rick Ptaraon Au10tion Companr. :

tun lime auctioneer. complete·

auction aervlce.
Licensed :
te&amp;,Ohlo &amp; West Virginia, 30~· 173-5785 01 304-~7.

90

W~ted

to Buy

Aboolule Top DoUar: All u.s. Sit· ·
vtr And Gold Coins. Proolsets, •

Dlomondo. AnUque J-'ty, Gold
Rings, Pr•1g30 u.s. Currencv.
SteoiO\g, E~. Acquloiliono

J-,

• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Slc:ond .
""""""· Gallipolil, 11.-448-3142. ..
Andquea. furniture, gl111, china,
coins, loya, lamps, guns, IOola,
e11a1es; alao appraiaala. Oaby ,
llatlln, 614·9e2-7441.
Anliquaa. top price• paid, River·
ine Anliquea. Pomaro)', Ohio,
Ru .. Uoore owner, 814·9G2·.

2!j28.

Clean Lale Modal Cara Or
Trucks, 1880 Uodela or Newer,
Smith Bukk PonUac, 1800 Eoot·
.,. .......... Gollpotla.
&amp; 0'1 Auao Part1. Buwolng sal- :
Yage vthiCIH. Selling patti. 304· •

•

7~~.

Non-Working Washer, Dryers. '
Stoves, Refrigerators, Freezef1, .
Air CondllionetJ, Color T. V.'1, ·
VCR'a. Also Junk Cara, 814·256-

t238.

Wanred To Buy Used Mobile ·
Cal 614-448-0175 or 304·

Straight Truck Wllh .

ll110m To llova Pint .

Logo, 814-250-8172.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Help Wanted
I Shirler

IWIL

CROSSCOVER

3rdAnnual
Health Information
Fair
Thursday Sept. 4th
12:00-4:00 pm
at the
Meigs Multipurpose

'

•Free 5 Year Parts Warranty

'

CLASSIFIEDS

POMEROY &amp; RIPLEY ONLY
614-992-2124

.·. sNO-BIZ

•

ResidenJial&amp;c-dal

DOMINO'S
PIZZA

End of Season

' I I

For Information
leading to the
arrest and
,:onvlctlon of
anyone Involved
ateallng a
property line
fence at:
1927 Cross St,
Racine, Oh.
J.D. Caller! .
Contact:
Ron L Miller
992-4025

unwant«&lt; dirt, mold and

$8.99

Members and Guest Invited

814-742·3078

mildew • Restore the clean
natural look
We Cllll wusb anything
Free Estimate ·

·

Appearing Friday 8:00-12:00
POMEROY EAGLES CLUB ,

0 I •

Heavy Equipmcnl • Remove

Hand tossed only

··,.

614-742·2138

'·

Privacy Fences• Patio
Deco, Driveways • Fonn &amp;

MEGA DEAL
Only

Free E1tinuite•

1

House•MobileHomes•

Friday &amp; Saturday N~es
9pmlil1am
The New River Band with
vocalist "Cindy Byrne"

6 it~ms.

JoeN. Sayre

Callue;::..;~.:umste I~:!:~~~~ 38"amonlh
814-742-3324
1'
approwd credilJ

HOME IMPROVEMENT
Pt. Pleasant Moose #731

;..r

20 Yro. Exp. · Ins. OWrier: Aiel&lt; Johnson

Easy Bank finandng

HoT:~~~

Any size pizza with

'

RuiOINible Ratu

Air Conditioners 1nslalled 12r amonlh

MANLEY'S
Roofing, Plumbing,
Room Addldon1,
Drywall, Sldlllg,

• ' ,_;, ,
.~;~ ...r_ ' ;·'?~==========~
.,}. .-.'

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

1

"~ ,_. r..

. 9Ss-4422
Chester, Ohio

$2,000 IEWIRD!I

Hoppy Hollow Rolli
Middleport, Ohio 45761
New Homeo, Acldlllona,

22nd, 2Srd, 2~1h. ClolhH 01 All
Siz" Loa Fat EWf}lone.

Crawford't Flea Marker. Hender-

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

"''"'"'

1773 State Route 581, August

· Limestone ·l'rriiv.T" : lan, WV. Evertday ·8·8. Crafta;
'
amlquea, trading cardt, tumlrUre,
Dll't • Sand
toro. vario~. 304-87S.Sol04.
;

HanUna, Excavation &amp;

3351

•Lawn Mowers .
•Chain Sawa

DUMP TRUCK

TRUCKING

""'"~!~,:!:meals

DRIBELS
• •Small Engines

I. L. HOLlO
TRUCKING

SAYRE

POMEROY, OH. '

4 f1lmllr 'IUd Sole: Augutt 22nd,
23«1, AI Old B&amp;D lloout Ac&lt;oN
Foom-OnRault110.

SERVICE

\@
_\

Intersection of US 33 &amp; SR 7 (Northwest Comer)
September 20th &amp; 2111
Saturday 1Q-6 p.m. &amp; Sunday 10-5 p.m.
For More Information Can: 992-6696 992·5293 742-3020

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE

"Build Your DNam"

,_

Q
Meigs County Fairgrounds

-.

~60° Communications

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

'. t~/
~

CELLULAR PHONES .

81

·BAG SALE

1

·New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
"Remodeling .
Stop &amp; Compare ·
FREE
-i:STIMATEES

"Stop putting off rho1e much needed
home improvement,," CaU Today!

Remodeling

WICKS
HAULING

.ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

'5 CON

Big Bend Fabrkation,·
Machine.,.Welding Shop

,.

614-992-3470.

1-614-441-1050-1-888-441-1050

Pomeroy, Ohio

wv 1023477

Complete Ma~ Sbop Servlee Fabrkadon
Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, IDduslrial Gas ,.......,,., ._.
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement
Monday-Friday-8:00a.m.- 4:30p.m.
•NEW HOMES
Saturday-8:00a.m.- 12 noon
•ADDmONS
• REMODELING
• GARAGES

THRIFT SHOPPE

LONDON (AP) - Prince.ss
Public Notice
Diana and Dodi al Fayed jetted off to I-:--.::.:::=::.::~~-St. Tropez, France, for their third hoi- On ::..~,"t,~!t 23,
iday in each other's company in five 111871110:00 a.m. the Home
weeks, the Daily Mail reponed.
Nallomtl llanll will ollar .for
Diana and her man about town left Niall public lucllon on the
London and arrived late Thursday at lob•1onkwl P~~~~~ .lot the
1 ng ,.,,.,.,.,
the villa of Fayed's father, Harrods. 1813 Eagle summit, S.arlal
depanment store owner Mohammed · IJE3C~U083tl48
al Fayed, the. paper reponed.
t 891
lzuzu, &amp;trill
.
h d IO-d h0 I'd
· h IJAAfJL01L2M9806712
Dlana
1
a a . ay
ay Wit 1987 Mazda PlciWp, Sarlo!
the Fayed famtly m the French IJM2UF311811111100712
·
Mediterranea.n island last month. The 11187 Dodge Shadow, Se~l
younger Fayed was there withAmer- 11B3BS44E2HN478783
ican model Kelly Fisher, who 1987 Chryelar LeBaron,
announced Aug. 14 that she was :g:~H58E8FN2085 14
suing him for breach of contract, con- 1982 Chevy Pickup Serial
tending that he jilted her for Diana. 110CDCt41!2C~
She's seeking $440,000, legal costs 1M3 Ford Fl..ta,~So"ir•l
·
IKNJP1'05117Pe118417 -v
and other damages.
(8) II, I, 13, 15, 20, 22; IITC

•We Recltarge Laaer Cartrldgea
•We Refill Ink Jet Cartridge•
•We Re-lnk Dot Matrix

· Quality Window Systems
110 Court St.

LowRatet)

•

llatnolla Drlva,

Umestone, Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, FIJI Dirt

PRI~S''

DeNiro decides to stay a while longer on Italian island

Meigs County Humane Society

•90 Day Same As Cash

. "FA(;TORY
DIRECI'

Jll2.4118

Custom Homes

•AcCessories

15 I'E4IIS IN SUS/NESS

(614) 367-0266 .11'\1'11
1-800-950-3359 -~~"'

a

•Printers
-custom Orders
•Financing .

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

SBMGE

'

•Computer Systems
•Repairs

•Pans

6 4·742·2566

Calls}

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

· •Software

2000 Gal. Septic Pumping Truck
Porta John Rentals
Septic Tanke Installed
New Aertator Tlmere &amp; Motore

Senior Citizen
Discount

9004$

403 SECOID AVE.

Tru-COUNTY SANITATION

614-992-7643

Send questions to Ann Landers, Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif.

FILICUDI, Italy (AP) - Roben
Diana and Fayed also spent five able to complete it,"
dejected
Stewan pleaded ·guilty to driving
De Niro wu so taken with the •wild days together recently sailing from Gibbs· said Wednesday. "This is a under the innuence of alcohol after a
At age 12, He went to the temple beauty of the island Filicudi he Nice, France, to the French island of sore, an open sore."
June 30 car crash.' Police said her ·
in Jerusalem for the first time. On decided to stay a while.
Corsica and Italy 's Sardinia.
Gibbs, who co-starred on the tele- blood-alcohol level was 0.19, nearly
their way home His parents missed
De Niro, whose new movie "Copvision sitcoms "lbe Jeffersons" and twice the then-legal limit in Illino.is.
Him. Where did they find Him?
land" will be featured at the upeomLOS ANGEI:.ES (AP) - Death "227," lost her Vision Theater Com- No one was seriously injured.
"After three days they found him ing Venice film festival, has been Row Records, the rap music label of plex in June, after a fund-raising
In coun Monday, she entered her
in the temple, sitting in the midst of vacationing in the Aeolian Islands off Snoop Doggy Dogg and the late effon failed to raise enough money to plea and was sentenced to one year
the doctors, both hearing them, and Sicily.
Tupac Shakur, may be for sale .
retire about $250,000 in bank debt. of coun supervision, during which
asking them questions. And all that
The actor, who married former
Now part of Interscope Records, She estimated she lost about $2,5 mil- she will ~ot be allowed to drink or
heard Him were astonished at his flight attendant Grace Hightower in Death Row's s(atus was clouded by lion on the complex.
,
buy alcOhol. She also was fined
understanding and answers." Lu~e June, found the remote island Filicu- ·. the imprisonment last November of
Since 1990, the 1,000-seattheater $750 and ordered to attend treatment
2:46-47
'
di so enchanting that he anchored his co-founder Marion "Suge" Knight. .has played host to a variety of peo- or counseling, attend a victim impact
When Jesus' mother said, "I have !50-foot chartered yacht there and One of' the most popular rap labels ple, including Hillary Rodharn Cljn- panel and contribute to Mothers
been anxiously searching for you," rented a villa, Italian newspapers now is looking for a new distribution ton, Nation of Islam Minister Louis Against Drunk Driving.
•
Jesus replied, "Didn't you know I · reponed Thursday.
deal and wants to leave lnterscope, Farrakhan, poet Maya Angelou and
"My social life has always includhad to be in my Father's house?"
The food's not bad, either. De Niro the Los Angeles Times reponed singer Napcy Wilson.
ed a social drink before dinner," said
Luke 2:49
and his entourage feasted at a restau- Thursday.
Stewan, 67. "My message is, don't
At 12, Jesus realized the temple ' rant with a menu of Sicilian specialSeagram Co., which owns half of
KEWANEE, Ill. (AP) - Marja- drink and drive."
was God's house, and that God was ties - fresh tuna ravioli, wild fennel lnterscope, has been pressuring Inter- · belle Stewart. the etiquette expen, is
On July I, Illinois's legal limit for
His Father. What a wonderful thing risotto, swordfish, tuna sausage, octo- scope to drop Death Ro\" over con- .offering some new advice: Don't intoxication was lowered to 0.08.
for a child to know!
'
pus with eggplant, and stuffed squid cems the label's gangster rap music drink and drive.
Father, bless all students return- - all washed down with white wine. has generated heavy criticism, ' the
ing io school. Give them wisdom to
paper said.
·
.
know our heavenly Father. Amen.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - CeCily
Seagram's Universal Music Group
·
· '
Tyson picked up another accolade: a bought half ·of Interscope in. 1996
I
starontheHollywoodWalkofFame after Time Warner Inc. dropped the
that she unveiled to the cheering fans, label a year earlier amid a firestorin
mayors past and present and celebri- of complaints about sexually explicty friends.
it and violent rap lyrics.
l'v!iss Tyson flashed •' big smile
A spokeswoman for Seagram's
derson will be speaking at· the Car- ·
penter Baptist Church, SR 143, Sun- and leaned over to .kiss the star at entenainment operations refused to
Middleport, Ohio
Thursday.;s ceremony, attended by · comment Thursday.
day, I0:30a.m. service.
Open every Wednesday through Saturday
about 300 fans and a host of hizzonKnight, 31 , was sentenced to nine
MONDAY
ers - Mayor Richar~ Riordan, for- years in prison for parole violation
RU'l1..AND •. Rutland Garden mer Mayor Tom Bradley, San Fran- and barred from daily involvement in
Club, open meeting, Monday, at the cisco Mayor Willie Brown and Hoi- the record label. Death Rolli's hits
Rutland Methodist Church, 7:30p.m. lywood honorary mayor Johnny once generated as much as $125 milAugust 22 and 23
Hal Kneen, county extension agent, Grant.
lion a year.
Attention Elementary Teachers- FREE
will speak on fall plantings, care and
Miss Tyson was nominated for an
storag~ of bulbs. All other clubs and Academy Award for 1972's
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Marla
Educational material will be available at Thrift
-¥isitQrs are invited to attend.
"Sounder" and won an Emmy Award Gibbs says her vision for a theater
Shoppe on August 21st thru August 23rd.
·
for "The Autobiography of Miss Jane ,didn't pan out, and the venture cost
POMEROY-- Meigs County Vet- Pittman."
her about $2.5 million.
.
· ·
·erans
7:S30 p.m.
"I had a vision .and I jus.t. wasn't
M dServ1ce Commtss1on,
h "
. , I Her new film,
27 "Hoodluin," will be
on ayMulberry
at I e Avenue,
veteransPomeroy.
. ervtce re eased Aug. .
--==::==:====::"'1'-=========lr-=::::=:::====~::=======
_
Office,

'
.
POMEROY-Board of Elections
RACINE -- Annual reunion of the
meeting Monday, 9 a.m. to cenify
Sap~uel Allen Eblin family, Saturday,
petitions
and conduct regular busiStV Mill Park, Racine, 5 to 9 p.m.
ness.
Dipp~r 816 p.m. Take musical instru- .
md¥$ and old pictures,
RUTLAND -- A revival ~ill be .
held
Monday through Satutday, . 7
S(JWP~V
p.m
.
nightly at Rutland Freewill
«;ARP6N'I'ER •• Rev. Clyde HenBaptist Church with Norman Taylor
·
speakmg.

.

He was always getting into her lingerie drawer, and she was terribly
upset. Has she ever tried wearing
clothes that are. too tight? Well, I
have, and it's miserable.
· She should buy her husband
some lovely silk and lace underwear
in HIS size, and he will then leaowe ·
her undies alone.-- Voice ·of Experience in La Jolla, Calif.
Dear Voice: I hear you loud and
clear. Let's hope all the cross.dressers and their spouses did, too.

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

Com mU.nl•ty ca·Ien.da~·
The Community Calendar is
published 1111 a free service to DOD•
pn&gt;lll JII"OIIps wishin&amp; to announce
meetlug and special nents. The
c.,md&amp;rlsuotdrs!ped to promote
sales or fuud riaisen of any type.
Items are printed as space permits
and cannot be paranteed to run a
specifiC number of days.

it with elegance." I was too horrified
to respond. Evidently, she thinks
licking her fingers gracefully is a
sig'n of refinement.
This woman is quite attractive,
intelligent and friendly, and I feel
sony for her because so many people are revolted by her eating habits.
Any advice? -- Nauseated in Illinois
Dear Nauseated: Shop with her.
Visit on the phone. Maintain your ·
friendship, but avoid eating with her
whenever IJ!lSSible. Her eating habits
are well-established, and she's not
going to change.
Dear Ann Landen: This is
about the woman who has been married to a cross-dresser for 25 yellfS.

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
, Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

'. iUme StOIIIt-

FIIICB Clft IOf tWIRl

HOWARD'S

Yard

Ohio Frld11 And Soturdll (Au·
II"" 22nd, &amp; 23odJ ' ' ' Toolo,
Ctafleto TOll &amp; llloc. lama.

Friday, August 22, 1997
'

..

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

The
Daily
Sentinel
.
'-9e8

•

By Bonnie Shively
School is about to start. Let's look
at a special student. In Luke 2:52
(NIV) the Bible says that at age 12,
"Jesus grew in wisdom and stature."
How7
His parents tenderly taught Him
about religious
customs; · sent
j-lim to school or
synagogue at age
five or six; and
up to age 10, the
Old Testament
was His oilly text
book.
Can
you imagine
Shively
your child sitting
in a classroom with the Son of God?
Looking on the .face of Him who
reverently recited the sacrificial
laws? Did He know the law would
be fulfilled in Himself? What an
unusual student!

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Cltalllng

STEAM CLEIIIIIG

Carpet· Uph~latery

614-992·0(177 •
Don ca.:~· ~ ~ L..:M:::Id::d:::;le:co;,:,;rl:z..O;::;.;.;.h_.

7 WeH Old Blonde·FemaleiCII·
.... CIIAAirl, 614-441·1ll5tl.
8uftrocl\....wn.304-8Q5-3103.

�'
Page 10 • The Dilly Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Fridly, August22,1997

t

Frklly, August 22, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~· - ~oop ·

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

NEA Crossword Puzzle

(

~

'r .•
r.

PHil UP

ACROSS.

31 Join 1ba MmY

ALDER .

1T.W.'"""

-::-

(.

..

12 __,

ThrH Hdroom, two bath. on
large corner lot. locatK 33114
Ntw lima Rd., Ruland, $35,000
OBO, t41 -357· 2BS. ..onlnga

Oomlno'a Pizza Now Ac~;eptlng

: Applkletiono At: Gollpolla &amp; Pa· -·~tll'orlon.
'

N~

ontr-

Tlvao lltdrooml, Ont Both, 0nt
Car Garage, On Bulawllle Pika
Road, tse.ooo Phone (014)4418280 Boloro 5 p.m. Or (114)«411112 Allor 5 p.m.
Two ' Bedroom Houu, CloH tD
Goillpo\11. now olclnO. Now Wind- . All K""-', WI Tolot 01

Tnodoln 135,000. Phont: 114·
307-o403

320 Mobllt Homes
torSalt ·
Cllll Givar For Eldorly t1
Tholr Homo 5 Doyo /Wook, 24
.,AIII.Y DIIEAM ltOUSE'
Hou "'- 814-llll-117113.
Hugo 4111, 2 l1llh homo, looturing
:.,;:;;;;'";_'~..,..:..··;...;,..:..;,;~..:..;.;-...,.-1 all now 110 lhrough flrop\oco,
Child Care In my homo Chalhlrt IIIII ollht 111 ltCurltr oyolom.•
- . 11 hou11. (tt&lt;) 387-'18411 · $2.415/doWII. 134U4 per 11101111L
Only It
ErP&lt;Hitneld carponlrJ and romodellng. tnslde and outside,
decks, vinyl aiding, add-on addl·
Homo Bualnon S.A.S.E. $1.00 tiona, cabinet raflclng or
M.O. Only, S.P.F. Int. P.O. Bor rebuilt. Raftrences-Fr..
347351, San Francisco, CA - J i m Shul304-1175-1272.
114134.

For AulomobUa Teehnlclan 2
V.en Experience Requlrld, And

·
~

ASE

Cordflca~on

Mtdl
QIIIII

Ho~

West

East

2 Bedroom&amp;, AO, Tr111h &amp; Water
Furnilhld, 1 111\t From Go\llpol\1
On Rc. . 141 , No Ptttl, - ... $250/Mo., $160 Otpolil. 814-

•
•
•
•

• 10

~7111 .

Haallh Waiver Pro-

ror Waahlnglon, Athens and
Meigs countiea. Call 1·800·42&amp;.
2773, M.f, 8:1101m-4:11Cpm.

N. .dtid Bobyo\Uor For Friday
EYenlngl Till Monday Mornings,

OCCU~onolly -kdayl For 7 &amp;
I I'Mt Old. RelortncH Roqulrtd,
814-25&amp;-1025.

Part·time Dietary Aide/Cook
opening. CDtn@llitiVt 111lary. Appl,- in parao(l. Poln~9teasant
Nurainu &amp; Rahabiiitaliorfbenter,

Slate Route 62. Route 1. Box
326, Point Plusanl, WV 25550.
EOE.

W\1 ~. o\doriy core II lholr
2·3 dtyo ptr Wllllk. H- OVOI
~ears ••Parlance, NIA training
and many relerern:es. 15.00 per 1172 12x85 Uberty, 2\Jr, 11&gt;1. loJr
hour. Canllet Paula Gilbride. 81 4· cond., must be moved. 13,500.
1141-2329.
W~l movt locally. 304-875-3000
Will haul junk ar lnllh away. $351 ~... 11-5.
p\dwp load. 304:875-5035.
11187 Slorilng 14'r70, Sbr, 21&gt;o. oil
alecttlc, range, refrigerator, diatt.
FINANCIAL
washar, porch &amp; underpinning.
304-578-2201 allor llpm.

210

Business
OpportunHy .
___;;,:.,=,_...:..,;,__

1988 Clayton 14x7o, 3br, 1~1.
heat pump, Ill o lront porch,
good cond., $12,100. 304-875·
INOTICEI
. 13000 11om 11-5.
Part-Time PosiUon Available For Medical Transcriptionist - Can- OHIO VAL1.EY PUBLISHING CO. 1188 Clayton Nowport, 2br,
didate Must Be High School recommends lhat you do busi- tbath, new carp•t. new central
Graduate Or Equivalent Wilh nan with people ~ou know~ and air,l13,500. 304-675-4825.
ComprthtntiYe Knowledge or NOT to send moner through the
Medical Terminology. Must Pos~ mail until you have lnvastfgated New-1987 14 Wldl-1 bath, $6881'
down, $139/mo, with apptovad
u•• Good Typing Skilll And theofferi~ .
Knowledoe · Of Grammar And Business Space For Rent:.100Q credit Call HI00-691-11777.
Spoling.
Sq. FL For Office Or SIOra, St. Rt. 18117 doublewldt 11445 down,
PSeall Sand Reaume• To Holzer· 33, New Haven, W.VA., Gt4-688· $228/mo. Free delivery &amp; setup.
Clinic; Human Reladono Depart· 2613·
l-800-69 1·8777.
mon~ 10 Jado.oon Plko, Galllpolla,
Commorcla\ Bulldlnll For Solo
1197 Fletlwood . 14K52. 2 BR.
Ohio 45831-1582 Or Far To 81+ . Least, 4000 Sq. FL, SL RL 33, lik&amp; - -(614)·1192·54211
4411·5532. Equo\ OpporiUnllf Em- New Haven, WVA. 814-BII8·
pla)W.
·
"
2813.
2 Bedroom Mobile Home 12160
$1 ,600, 814-446-8172, Or 814·
.,•ri-Time position available Convenlance Slara For Lia11, 2~251.
Solfl &amp; C\orlcal Dutloo Rota\\ lndudoo AI Equipmon' St RL 33,
Furnllurt Store. Apply Tape's New Haven W.VA., 6U-6Q8· Daublewide re-po nevlf lived In,
Furnltt.tra, 151 Second Avenue, 2613.
mu _st aell, no reaaona~e offer r•
GIIUpol\1., 10 a.m. ~111 p.m. No
lullld. IIQ4-755-71111.
PhaneCallt
·
~~~. ShQQ ~or Sale, Gallipolis,
OhkJ. I'm Ready to Retire, Lei's lirge aeleclion Of Uled home. 2
Pltlunt VoUI)' Nursing l Rolla- Make A Deal\\ A Growing Bus\· or 3 badrooma. Stardng al $34115.
fiiN•don Conlllll looking lor on noll In A Rapidly Growing Araa, Oulck delivery. Call 1·600-837·
A&lt;jml11ion Coordlnolor. Mua1 bt ;.81;.;•..;
·441-;,;,;.,;.750;,;.:..7·, ;__ _ _ _ _ _3238_., ;__ _ _ _ _ _ __
1 ::
lcenM&lt;J nutU Of licensed lodll
worhr, with a minimum olllvo 230
ProfeSSional
Now 1997 14170 throe bedroom.
·
ie
1 1
t
includes e monlhl FREE lot renL
yeoro Nptr net n ong orm
5er¥1CeS
Only 1181 .
month "'lth
- - Exporllnco
In lklllodloul&gt;""AmSi~SciiiWiiY-:-"B;d,l
S1050
acutt.
rehablllmtlon
and acute H
down.
all
1-B00-8371
.-Ia ~llrfed. Send reaume liD brick &amp; stone work, 30 years ex: 3238 ·
Per10nnel at Pleasant Valley parience, reasonable ra111. 30.C· Naw Bank Aepo'el Only 3 telt,
Hospital 2520 Valley Or., Pt. 89S.3591 after 6:00pm, no tab to owner financing anllable. 304·
- . . . , WV. 25550. MIEOE.
small or 1D BIG. WY-0.21206
75s-1191.
Proftnlonal
Telemarktttrs Livinoston·a basement water· ---';_,;,_N_od-ca-oi_Sa_o_ __
Needed For Pollee I Fire Pro- proafing , all buement repairs 1973 Cameron mobile home,
SJtaml Rllaed Fundi Far Child- dona, lree aatimates, lifetime 12 ~5 "b""
• ·1 bl 1
no Pt
. ograma, Call 812·••311u • ~ -rooms. nVBI a e or
..r.~
guarantee. 10yra on job ••pari· showing August 25, 11!la7, 9am.
_.._
anc:e. 304-$75-2145. ·
Conract Sale a Manager, Teays
Rou .. Sales: Snack Food ManuSaleacantet, Rainbow Homaa,
tacturar N.H dS Hard Working ·
Inc. 304·757·3688 . Home located
Comml11lonod Saito Roprnon' Lton, WV (Brownsville). Torma:
tallve To 'CIIII On New a EJdaUno
cash or approved financing at
Ar:courltl;81+886-6160.
time ol purchaaa.
·
Own
a
new
home
$1,0001down,
Socrotiry /Rocoptionill. Eo•bno payments al18r 7·yelus. 304·
tlahed DowntoWn Real Es .. te
755-5586.
Buo\nooo, Rooponallllo Porion,
MUll HIYI /loll Trplng, Olllco
1AII real estale advertising in
350 Lots &amp; Acreage
- . A&lt;Mrdttlng
11o1
tnls newspaper is Sub}eet IO
A M•t Bul/lo PIUoi ·Btnd Raluml
the Fedef-at Fair HousflQ Act
To: P.O. Bor 114. GolltpoNo; Ohio
2 acro loll on BathOl Rd, emlln
41831, All Roplloo Str\cdJ Conll·
of1968 which makes h Illegal
from Pt Pleasant. No alngle
wldOI. $15,000ta. Call ~tloro
10 advellile ·any """"""'·
lpm 304-117&amp;-711411.
tlmltatlon Of discriminatiOn
Tht lllllawlnG ~Ioiii ... - baSe&lt;l
on
race,
CCIOI,
religion,
·~It lor lho Porchlaulc Dar
Fer Sale Or Trade: 32 acrea 5
sex famll~l status or national
Trntm.. t Proer~m at Vettf'ahl
M\leo From Ga\1\pollo, on Slalo
ongln, or any lmentlon to
M - Holjllill ol Mtlgl Co.,
Rcuta 218. WIH SoP All or Porll.
make any such preference,
$25,000, 814-2511-11674
~Olio
limitation or dlscrimlnaUon:
Apple Grovo-Sctnlc VallaJ.
Program. Coordinator/Manager·
Booudlul :Zoero iol' public - ·coordlnoltl, dlrtcll. tdm\n\11111
ThiS newspapor wilt not
C. Bowen Jr. 304·578·2331 or
and man1111•• all uptctl ol lht
knowlngty accePt
Wadga Raalty 31J.H75-2722.
,..OQIII!IIn accardlnco
with pollclee and procedurll
advertisements 1Dr reel estate
BRUIERLAHD
wllhln lfrl holp\ta\ and Sunrlu
which istn violation ottho
114-7'111-1171
Hnllhcaro'o
admlnlotratlvo ·
law. Our readers a,. ltefebV
.
lntormodlhataH dwellings
Ga\lla Co.: Go\1\po\lo,. No!GhboradveniiiOd In 11110 nowepapor
hood Rd., Loil Two\ 22 Acroo
Ouo18cotlon lndudo: 1-Hd 10
are avoltable on an aq~
$24,000 Or 10 Acroo 111,000.
_ . . . t1 a Rag\- Nuraa In
~unny Dasts
Frlentl\y fldgt, 10 114,000,
bltlo/WV, Two yoaro poychlotrlc .....!!~!!'!~-·
1.5 ACIII $7,500 Or 11 ACIII
nurl\ng - '....• ,.....,tbly In 1.'
118,000. T11n1 Run Rd. (2) 10
maniQtment Muat pos11t1 a
/tao Por&lt;oi' 110.000 •.
REAL ESTATE
tharouah knowledg• of current
- - hoolth conctptl, prlnllelaa Co.: Near Rutland, In
ciP\ft ond methodl of trH.,..t
Darw\1\o 11 Acroo $17,000 Or 5
otid capablo ol otgtnlZ\ng, man- 31 0 Homes for Salll
Acreo lti,OOO. 0ya1YIIII, Chtopaging, "omo~ng and thoroughly
er Than lot Rani ~ 5 Acrtl
tvaluating an outpatfent service
Located In Rolling Acroo. 4 btd· $7,500 • $1,000 Down+ 1138
dolltoory oyllom.
rooms, 3 baths, li¥ing room, lolo., You Own In 5 Yoaro. Btl·
family room, 2 garagoo. 304-875- ween Tuppara PlaJnH ....Challtf,
Mtnlll Health TtchnlcloniPRN· 5403.
Best 5 Acraa Building Sites On
Muat posse11 a high school di·
Kaobough
-Fol\rod Ad. 114,000
plotnll, mutt have 1 ¥1lld Ohio 2 Story, 8 room house on c:loutH
DriVII'I L\Cinlf W\lh good drlv• lot in Belle meade. Full · alzt EL
lng record. Must have at laast baoamonl fully carpo\td, - vi' Jack1on Co.: Jacklon, 2 Milas
o.. Y*l' ...,.na.~e~ •• 1 MHT or ll'flllding. 304-1175-1534.
Out BaiYII PikA!, Qo\ng Ou\Ck. ..
Nuro\ng Alliltlnl In 1 HE'ALTH
CARE Hnlng, prolerobly paych\· 4 Btdroom Split Lwol With 5400 Wooded, Privo• Bulid\"1! Silo On
Sq. Ft. Including Full Baaament 5 Acieo 117,000. High Point On
atrlc.
With 2 Car Garogo, Gao Hut, 2 Thil 15 GIYII Groot Vlowo
Bond 1t1umt 10: Uto Hogan, RN. MIIH From Gallpolio On Bu\av\Uo $27,000. Start A Stabla Bulinlll
-lal Hoopllll, Ooy Pike, On 1 112 Aero Fiati.D, . Ci~ On 58 Acre• With large Barna
Treatment Prooram, 115 Eall Schoo\1, 1115,000 Or Btl! Ollor, Bordering Hemmartown lake
$67.000. Bill Farm .Hornt (4 ·2 +
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio 814~10.
Sun Rooor,~, On 5 Acrea Wllh
467111.
By Ownlir: 1 112 Year Old Brick Pond 170, .
Tht Solllhorn Local School Oil· Ranch, 3 Btdrocm, 3 Batha, 21100
1rlct htl lilt poliilon ol rooorvo Sq. Fr. Back Deck, 2 Ac;re, Flat Call For Froo lolapo + Owner Fl·
nanclnQ tlh Tai&lt;oa IO'Ifo 011 Uolod
Glrlo Bolkotbll Coach ovolloblo L01.114-441-1345.
PtiCHOnCalh'Purchlllll
lor tho 1117·81 ochool roor. All
FOR SALE BY OWIER
appllcantt must po11ess a
RENTALS
- I I mtd\clnl cortlllcllt and I 2 Slory, 2 Botho. 2 Or 3 Bodnlom
Ho!TM', For Sale Ni~a Size lot, ·
a'RMason, WV, 304-773-50111, Call
Ptaan nnd i11qulrles to Ur. Only .Batweon 8.A.M, To 7 P.M. 410 HoUSH for Relit .
.....,.__.,.., su~ Pluaa.
31 chi~cotho Rotd, 2 Bodroo,...
......... Local Bchooll, Bor .17B,
I'Oj'l SALE BY OWNER:
Rlclnt, Olio 45771 . SLSO Ia an
Depo•ll. Rerare"'et, 1 1 4~448·
111 VInton Coun, In Gallipolia, 1 2A11.
Equal Opporwrirr e...,.,..
Floor Plan, 3 Bedrooms, 1 Car
Wanltd Boaullclon with oxporl- Garage, Lo160XIO, Cal\614-371- Small 2br. Camp Con\oy aroa,
onct, lull or port-111M. 304-175- 2720 For Appo\nlmonl Only AI· 1175/mo. + dtpoolt. 304·175Iori P.M.
3012:
!1040 or304-1175-21115.

"l"

WATCH YORE
TONGUE,
~tor

UdiiUH, Dapol\1 Rtq, No Ptto,
814 418 2857.
·
lbr, all utlltieo paid txC&lt;tpt tltc·

tile, Gol\\po\11 ftfiY oroa. $2501

mo.+ depoalt.

~-175-1371

304-87!h'l812.

or

2bdrm. apta.• 10181 eltclrlc, applillnc:oo furnllhod, laundry 1110111
lacilldoo. doot to ldlool In .,.,._
Appl\cadont IYII\11\do at: V\1\ago
GrHn AplL M or c:al l14-a82·
3711 . EOH.
·Fumllhtd Elliclanl)' Sha,. Both,
$1115/Mo., Ullilltl Fl\d, 807 Stcond Avtnuo, Go\1\po\lo. 814-4433844, Altor7 PJI.
Furnlshod EH\cillncy 2 Roomo &amp;
Bath, 122Wo., Udltieo Paid, 12ll
Fourth Awanue, Galllpoll1, 114·
ua 31144, Altor7PJI.
Fumllhtd Aplrantn~ 1 - - . _
838 Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
$211Wo.. Utlltloo Paid, 814-44&amp;3844, NIDI 7 PJI.

lrlgoroiDr Sldt By Sldo s Dooro,
Almond Woo t250 Cut To 1175;
Drf'r 115; Wtohor US; HIIYJ
Duty Wllhor 815: Range 30 Inch
Almond 1150: Range 30 Inch Vt1IOio hou• Rain Soft 101t 125 Cui To US: Wolhtr Llkt . paid C3300 - ·
old.l1,300080,
614-1192·5532.
Now 1205; 1 Wtrnonty, Orr·
II Llco 1205 I Yaar Wlllran·
ty, Ska11g1 Appllancn, 71 Vlno 550
Building
StrH~ Go\llpotia, 814·441-7318,
Supplies
1-ua-e11H112A
p\pll, windUood blthtub, very good cond., Block, brick, will accept r•sonabll oller. 304· OWl, .llntala, ele. Claude Wln18fl.
Rio Grande, OH Coli 814· 245·
175-2811.
5121 . .
.
UHCI Furn\luro SlOtt, 130 Bu\av\1\o Plko, Good UHCI Bado, Mol· 560 Pets for Sale
, 1111111, Oolkl, TVI, Oaak ITablo
Lornpa, Dlnotllt, Roc:klna Chah 112 Auatnlllan Shophlrd, 112 Co~
Couchn, Hldo-A-IIIdo, Colll&lt;ta· lit puppies. 8wks, 126ea. 304tMI. El&lt;:. Stop By And C'-k Our 882·21811.
Prices, 614-441· 4782, M-F Hra. 2 AKC Ratlloiartd Cocktr Spln10.4.
lo\ Malo lo llun Colo!ld Fomolo 81
WOOden dlntno Itt with 4 chtlro. w•l25, Each. 814-448-3275.
ctina hutch &amp; IOIYing bullol very 2 Black /Tan Mala lolinl
good condlllon. .. sso. 114·1&amp;2- Dachshund AKC Reglararad
3584.
. •ns. 080 814-381H11114.
·

cna,..,

520

~rtlng

GOOds

2 F..-.Jo Jack Rulsell'o Puppies.
$250,00 ooch .. Ca\1: (814)·441 ·
-055S
'

Browning Crossbow, Ouivar 4x32 A Groom Shop -Pet Grooming.
Tasca Scope, Arrows I Btoad· Fnturlng H~dro Bath . Don
ha,do \ncludod $1110, 814-388· Sheeta. 373 Georg6a Creek Rd.
1514-448-0231.
1143, E...-;nga.
AKC Reg miniature .Pomarian.
530
Antiques
7wko old. $250. 304-458·
Buy cr tell. Riverine Antiques, 1:;:;::~-:------1124 E. Main Slraolon RL 124, AI&lt;C Reg Rc11W11\Ior puppies. tail
Pomtro~. Hours: M.T.W.. 10:00 docked, i:»clawa removed, ahotl
a.m. 110 6:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 ID
d
d h
8:00p.m. 6l4 ·892·252tS, Run 1 worme , goo
orne only.
Moore CMnar.
S300ea. ;l04·BB2·2531.
AKC Reglttared Alradale Pupp\81 $200 Black l Tan Roady A~
tar August 25, 1897, 814·388116112.

AKC registered ~ ack Labrador
retriever puppies, 'flormed, tat
lhot, dew claws removed, ' vel
checked, cute, lovable, healthy, 8
wks. old, puppies need new
homes. caN 614-W2-2•72.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON ~ Sets Of American Racing
ESTATES, 52 Woatwood Drlvo Wheels, 1 Year Old, Paid $600,
AKC Ragistered lab PupPiea.
flam 1260 to $334. Wal\c to shop Alk\ng .:!75, iiiHIB-8215.
Proven lfunting Sleek Champion.
&amp; movloo. Call 114•448-2586.
·
Yellow 1 Black $250,
Equal Houq ()pp&gt;rllril)'.

.......

V-•

bluo, lm'lri1, ale. 61+992-7861 .

"81 vw Rabbi~ good condition,
high mlln, 1800 080, 114·112·

730 Vans &amp; 4-WOS

8511 .

Ful Size Chevy Blazlr 4x•,
14,3111, 814-245-9327.

1AL

·

'81 Ford Escort GT, 111n1 •nd
lookl good, ..... lor good lUll . . 1187 ChiJY)' 5-10 4&gt;4, good conoldar model car, 114-048·3005, dtlon, 814.Q92-8737.
aok tor Torn.
1888 Chevy Conversion Van,
1130 Modtt A Ford Vicky con- 350 V-8, Loaded, $4,900 OBO,
verdbl• Corvette 350, TH400, e14·446·6280 Aher 5 P.M. 814·
atreet rod. 114,000. 30•.t75~ 441·1851.
5403.
1D89 Altro Van 4.3 new angina,
1\l87 Camato, 454 auto, 13.000. g,ooo. miles, 23 month war ran a,,
304-578-311111.,., 5prn.
er&lt;. conrl $6,000. 304-1175-31111.

1971 Cadillac Coupe, Ercollonl 111113 GMC salori mini van, lully
Condition, $1,801080,114-258- lcadld.$!2,500.
,;.6_;19_1._____.,..-----11 i188 Ford Bronco Eddie Bauer
1971 Plymouth Ouilar Raco Cat, ~::"~CJ.s ~ 500_
UO Sec 118 Mit Alot 01 Exlllo,
...,.
...,
814-448-4848, 30.·075-1702 304-1175-7039.
Eveni'lgs.
1995 Honda Passport. Low Miles.
1979 Dodge St Regia 4 Doara, $15,800, 814-4t8 0330.
318 V-8, Good Condidon, $1,000, 1991 Ford F-150 XLT, 4d, towing
814-388-8265.
package with tral&amp;er hitch, 351 Moina
, lull~ _ loaded plus 11:1181,
1983 Uarcury Gtand Marquis, $24,000
price negotiable, 814-.
prlca negotiable, call 814-{UI2· 1192-5532.
5519, leave message, will call
back.
1997 4k4 Chevy Silverado Z-71 8
1984 Old I Clerra. 84,000 mllaa, FtBad $22,000,614-3711-11361 .
excenent condition, call 61~ · 742 · To,ota 4x4, ale, 86,000 miles,
2187alter5prn.
chrome roll bara, nice wheals,
s harp uuck, runs excellont, 81411168 BMW K75, Mint Condition, 742·3142.
$3,500.614-2116-8215.

Motorcycles
11l86 Chewy Caprice aralion wag- 740
on, good bocfw', new tires a parta. ·eg Honda CR 250, good liraa,
needs engine. 1125. 304·87.5· 11200 lrwasled In new molar;
1843.
have recaipll, many new parts,
11188 Ood11e Colt $700 O.B.O. runa e'xcellent, $1500, 614·742·
3t~
61+256-1482.
1988 Plymouth Reliant K. cold 1a&amp;7 LT 500 Suzuki Quad Racer ·
4 Wheeler, All New $2,&lt;400, G14.... 47.000 304-1175-3011.
2!8-ti430.
1988 Ponllac Qrand·Am quad
tour, we. amtfm radio, rear defog·
ger, crulot controi:,30H75-2508.
$,3,000 neg.
..
.

111111 Oldomobilo 68 3800 V-6,
Automatic, 4 Doora, Loaded,
116.000 lolilel, 814-368 8304.

.·
FRANK &amp; EARNEST

TJIE
p.....

BORN WSER
.

~

Yoo p, t;;€CN ~~~.ere r

'...\o.ll-\'(, [rr-'1.TIE: e.IC:hC&gt;TWR::IIIf......
~NKER 'IOO'U. E&gt;Ja.~! '1tiU

Kt&gt;1D'N W.T tlOlTLED WmJt.'flli..\
fW)CNI'E.IIIf.. IN IT?WEL.L..,1 tlom:

r
~
~15QDO I! ~DWI-\EN I~
ICED (.QffEE., [ N.SO lr.£. Tl\t-.T
CAfff.l~ ~"-'fEIZ-.'ID mL TJ-1£

l~cu&amp;.~'

M.'( c.om::E

RIC. NATF.

Yamaha PW50 Good Shape
$700, 814-245-965t After 6 P.M.

750 ·Boats &amp; Motors

appointnlnt.

no potx, 114-11112·5116&amp;

Upota\ro Apartment For Rtnl •
1300:00 Mbnth • Mull Ptr For
Gu &amp; Phont • N• Kitchin Ont
Largo Bodroo_rq_- Living Room
And Bath • Ercollont Condlllon.
No Ptto. Oopo~t Required. Con
Bo Soon Al1403 Ellttrn Avl·
nua, Gailpo\\o, Cal\114-441-4614
ForAppoln-

450

Fumlshed
Rooms

Klngo Motel Lowtlt Rotoo In
Town, Newly Remodtl•d. HSO,
Clnemax, Shawtlme &amp; Olanay.
Wookly Ratn, Or MonlhiY Raltl,
Construction Workers Welcome
•814-4411-1\1122, 114-441·5117.

.

8 Pilot

word
5 Prying toolo

7-IIU
8HotNe1

760

614...48-4231 .

enclurmont

South

Wnt

North

East

2 NT

Pass

3 NT

All pass

Cornmorc\a\ Sta\nlau Statl Double Door Ralrig01110r, Or Ooublo
Door Freezer Both Like New
$1,000 EliCh, 114-245-8o33.

Kimball plano wlbench, exc.
COnti., $2,000, 30+875-1474.

580

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Comp\Oto Kln11 Slzo Wator~od; 8\ackbtrr\eo 13.50qi. tl3:00gal.
PJI.
304-4511-11167.
.

81~71-2720 AI'TEIU

Concre\a &amp; Plolllc Sopdc Tanka,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallono Ron
Ewana en;;aaa, Jack10n, OH
1-800-537·
.

Canning toma1o11 for sale; 1110
hot and green peppert. Bring
container, Maut\all Adams,
,_,Rd., letart Fail Ohio.

Oiling Room Sol lnclucloo Huldl. Cofoning tomatoao. olroacly p\ckod
Tobie, &amp; 1 Cha\11 le50; Small or pick your own. bring container,
Tab\o. With 4 Chalra 175, 814· 814-247· 21181.
448-3114.
Fresh Cannlno Peachea Ju11 Ar·
rlvod BHch'o Farm Marko~ Stlto
G.E. Ro\r\gOIIIOr. 30+875-5.182.
Route t80, At Ev.-graen. 3 Ullea
Grubb's Plano- lUning &amp; repair~ , North 01 Holzar: Hoop\tol, Call For
Problema? Need Tuntd? Coil tho EJtra Ordera, 014·441· 1884 Or
plano0r. 614-4411-4525
All.or 7 P.M. 81+448-32211.

JET .

Sweet corn, peppers and . to·
AERATION MOTORS
rna1ae1, 101m·? Willianis Farm,
Rapal-td &amp; Rabulk In Slock. Syracuot, Ohio, B14-1112·3185
Cllll Ron E..,., 1-800·537-1528.
dip or 814-1102· 51168 ...,an~ng.,
Julioua Erving Plato Hlaholl Bid·

dor, Buobd lfootbal Cordi, Call

114-311-1870, I A.M. ·3 P.M.

f-ARrA SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Sleoplnll roomo with cooking.
Aloo trallar opoca on rlvor. All
hook-upo. Collaltor 2:00p.m.,
304· 773-5651, loluon WV.

460 Space for Rent
Molllll home Ilia tuallablo btl·
WHO Alhtnl lnd Pomtror, call
11+385 4387•

Suptr Muoio F• rma\1 Wide
Ravon 10 IPHd bike, nmt II ,.,. PS, Wal U- 13,801, II+
- ·$55. 304-1175-11113.
371-11381.

A Need A C1r? No Credit, ·aad
Crldil Bankruptcy? Wo Con Ho\p
Ro-Eotab\lsh Credit\ llult Maka
$150 Wook Tokt Home, 15%
Down On Cuh Or· Trade To
Oulllily For Tltlo Bonk Financing.
No Craclt Turn Down•le14-441 ·
01107.

11177 2711. Mldaa
troller, air,
awning, aleaps 8, Sl,500 llrm.
304-175-4435aner 5prn.

27 Rogreto

29 Pr8nk

30 Olary of - HOUMW\fe
31 Moron
33 Fill
35 Btt.boottlthloedtd
39 Woiks
oiO Aulhor Levin
42 Btlll '
45-Uml
46 Regal
47 Poetic
times
49 lnvulon

. Joseph.Jgubert, a French essayist ·
and moralist, said, "Genuinely good
remarks surprise their author as well
as his audience." That definitely
applies to me as the author, and probably to you, the reader.
Today's deal , which ocCurred at
the Forbo international team tournament in The Hague, features a sur·
prisilig misplay by an expert. I sup- ·
pose it just goes to show that anyone:
can take his eye off the balL
Had they belonged in a club con-:
tract, South would have regretted his.
opening bid. But as it was, he reached
three no-trump without giving much·
away.
West was unwilling to lead from
any of his honors around 10 a big balanced hand . So, he selected the club
six . Declarer won in the dummy and
immediately played a spade to his
jack. After winning with the queen,
West returned a club. South cashed
his club tricks, took the spade ace,
. and crossed to dummy's spade king.
When the suit didn't divide evenly,
declarer tried the diamond finesse .·
However, it lost, leaving South with
only eight. tricks.
Where did declarer go wrong?
Well, he started with eigh! top
tricks. He should have taken the best
shot for a third spade trick. He
should have cashed the spade ace and
played a spade. to dummy 's king,
planning to lead a third round toward
his jack. Here, when the queen
appears on t!te second round, the con·
tract is safe. South only dies when
West has queen-fourth of spades and
the defenders can avoid giving away
a ninth trick in a red suit .
f\}ow if! could only think of some·
thing clever to end this column, Horatio Nelson.

50T'=Ur8&amp;

52 Ml

SERVICES

rnponu

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptogrwns .,. CtMied from qootaiiOnt b¥ tamoot people. past and prMent
Elldllilhr in the ciphtr Stii'IOI !ot tno!Mr. TOOS)''s du•: M . . , . C

N L MI '

B Z X. I

SJP ; ' -

Chevy Mon2:a Drag Car, Jegater
Choo~o. 5:13 Dono, Pcwor Glide
Trantmlnlon, 377 c .l.d. Small
Black ROller Uator Runa e.SO 118
Mila, t .L 18,500 OBO, Turn Kay,
61+24~57.
.

·BASEMENT
WATERPROOfiNG
Unconditionlllif&amp;tlma guarantee.
Local ralerences lurnished. Ettabl\ohad 11175. Call 16141 446·
0870 Or 1-I00·281-ll57B. Aogoro
watotpn&gt;ofine.

t't:ANU'fS

VJXIAV . •

EJP

JKZDZXC

LPZGLA

J

J P C' T. P · A

AFAVC

ZP
TP

MIJVDAN

RLVJDX .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION; "WhMe Charles Kuralt never showed his fl'llriotism on .
his sleeve , he truly loved America.' - Waller Cronkite.

••••
lAM I

.

0 four
Rearrange ' t.Hers of
teramb*l word1
low to form four words.

RIPAYA

I

HOCUV

II I
j

~~ ...
J AR0 M

~~

1always dreamed
of being a princess living in a
~ · castle . Now I know that a

, I 1 ·Is 1 :::

I.

.

@

OF COURSE, ONE

I TI-IINK
WE 1-!Av'E A

OF 'fOUR 8ROTilERS
EATS MO~E TUAN

PRO&amp;I.EM ..

8

ALL OF VOU ..

.

.

!buT/ be f1ooti'f on a clood with
the buys .,OO'H fitd In rht
dosslfteds.

.

.

.

~~~~~ ~~ ~~~~ a house ~ith-

G Complete

the chuckle quoted

PRINr NUM&amp;ERED lETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES

I I• I• I•

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER
•

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Jaunty · MucUS'· Squib · Loudly · SMALL JOBS
My children argued about their chores. Granny told
them, "big tasks ~come easier if you divide them into
SMALL JOBS"

AUGUST221 .

-1FRIDAY

ASTRO-GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Saturday, Aug.
1997
The year ahead could be· a very
'rewarding one for you where your
finances are concerned. Approprtatc
channels migh! be opened 10 prov!dc
you with additional malertal fulttll·
menl.
VIRGO(Aug. 23-Scpt. 2~) Do _not
be a loner today; get out and soctal·
ize. Fortunate developments are poS·
sible when you rub shoulders woth
persons who shat:e similar rnterests .•
Trying to patch up a broken·
romiuice? The Astro-Graph Match·'
maker can flelp you understand wha~
to do to malce the relationship work.·
Mail $2 75 to Matchmaker, c/o this]
ncwspaP.r, P.O, Bo• 1758, Murray.
Hill Station New York. NY 10156. ·

'

K A A P

PTKZOZ· XC

OZPE

XT

PAFAV

I J H

' XI AVA

l--rl.;6-:;lr-::..lr,7;-:y.I..:.TI-~

Home
Improvements .

hrs.

53 Go owlll\y
55 Positive

11171 Ford Motor Homo, 24 Ft.
Fully SoU Contained, Ntco Shapo,
15,500,080, 614·441-o5114.

810

720 Trucks for Salt

,__

••vet

CARS FOR .100\ Trucko, boata,
4-whHlet-1, motor homn, turnl·
turt, electronics, computlrt ale.
~ FBI, UlS. DEA. Avallablo your
area now. Call1 ·800·613t4343

Upton Used Cart Rt. 82·3 Miles
Soulh or lean, WV. Financing
A-blo. -4511-101111,

.-

24 Scorch
26Bronte'a

Motor Homes

1gas Motor Home 24' Chavy
Aoklnll ·$11,500: 1988
By owntr- 11111 Codil\or: O.Vilo, Chanla
BLiick
Regal
$2,000, 81,._
4 door, excellent condition, tll"l· 441-1481AIIerAsking
6.
oua callera only during evanlng
houra, 814-11411-2861.

Ext S-8368

20 LAIQII·ald org,
23F.-.nc:h

Campers &amp;

790

-..art

1 'by lrlling in the missing wotdJ
_
.
.
•
Il.......L-..1.--l-..L.-j,.....J
you deveiop lrom '''P No. 3 below.

Auto .Parts &amp;
Accessories

83 Buick Electra, bodr good,
manr naw por11, 8375 or boot oR·
or, 814·1112· 7271 .

I Roman 5e
10 Craving
11 Schoofol

vthlcle
18 Ttrm of

E G G A. N E

hll line of auto body panela.
lllliJS Cavalier 2 Door Coupe, paint• and auppUes, a lso glall, ·
While, loaded , 12,000 Uilea, light auemt#. Oxygen and ac•
="';:;·11;:;60;;:'..;8;.;.1+,;.256-=.;.'6:.:".;.·~---t""'nt tankllillod and ..changtd.
B1 4-1-12·2712.
11115 Soturn SC2, AuiOmaUc. Ntr,
Cruise, AMIFM Canatlt, Trunk New gas tanks, 1 ton truck
Relaau. $12,000 Cal Alief 5 P.M. wheel a &amp; radiators. 0 a R Aulo,
(Sorlouo lnqu\rlao Only II 114· Ripley, WV, 304-372-3933 or 1·
448-4015.
1100-273-11329. _ __
,;,;.:..,;;=:::._

Old Ash Vlllag41: Apartments.
Nowly ronowuod, -ptttd. pilllty of clout 1pace. tnlth 1 water
paid, marwgerlmalnllnct. on 1he,
HUD accepted. Col\ 304-882·
3718 Mon-Frl101m-2pm. or by

dlopor~

ooclal

4 R...lanvtto

13Wln...

I

Two bedroom apartment ln' llld·

san -, eatH.

3 Ending for

By Phillip Alder

&amp;4 Ford Ranger, low miles, navy

710 Autos for Salt

1GIQQ Chevy Lumina, 3.1 l,
1994 Pontoon SWT 16 Fouester
air, automatic, arnllm lt«eo, one Uaed Very Little With 25 H. P.
ownar, excellent Inside and out· Evinrude Mlr. Depth &amp; Fish Findaide, 814-992.e&amp;24.
er, With Live WeN, O.W.l. Canopt
All Ace . Trlr Oars, U Jats, And
1111 Buld&lt; Contu~
Ldr. 1 Radio Price $4,900,' 814PW, SL /JI,;, Very
Corldilk"'- 448-ll827 After 4:00P.M.
13.650, B1+3B7-C411,

e_....

I

TRANSPORTATIOtJ

Hl&amp;g Buick Century, 4. door, au·
for Sale
tomatic, crui,se, lilt. electric window• and 11111, bad~ excellent, 1988 Ba11 Tracker 18 112ft., II·
k!!PI in g11age, runs perfect. bel'glass, 1501'1p JaMson GT, 12tOO% dependable, 11850 080, 24 volt troHing motor, exc. $hape,
make me an ortar, 614·742-2370 $6,SI00 . 304~7S.1171.
or 814-388-82.48.
1988 Ranger 373V 18" 12 ·24V
t9ag Hyundai Ell:cel, 45 mileS! Trolling Motor, 150 XP Evinrude
gaHon, runs great, $1 ,1a5; 814· O!Jtboard. $8,800, .614-992·2770.
9!12-6824 .
1969 Cajun bassboat, fish &amp; ski,
198g Pontiac Grand-Am. 304· new batlery, new li!h Iinder.
815-1506.
$5,500. 304-ti75·4625.

Twin Rivero T-. ,_ accop•ng
app\lcodcno lor 1br. HUD oub~ ­
lzod apt. lor o\derly and handl·
c:Oppld. EOH 304-87'5-11878.

2

A surprising error

11115 Ford ~r •uck XLT LorIa' auiOrnatic. ~r. am1m ..._.,
new tires and wheals, 40,000
mil11, whitl with gray lnteJior,
17500 080, 114-992·5436.

Froot Ftto, 11l!5; Rt-

Apartment For Rent : 322 Third
A'"""e, 61+256-11103.

Tara Townhouse Apartments,
Vary Spacious, 2 Badrooms, 2
Floors, CA, 1 112 Both, Fully Corpaled, Adu\1 Pool a BlbJ Pool,
Pallo, Starl 1350/Mo. No Pttl,
Ltuo PIUI Stcuritr Olpooll Rtqu~td, 114·441·3411, 114·441·
0101 ,

I Producar
Spoiling

Opening lead: • 6

YOUNG MAN!!

ThrH bedroom mobile home for

1 Bedroom Near H'olzer Extra
Nice, Central Air, 1288/Uo., +

DOWN

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

Gltnwood Rd. 2 1/2 mUea troi'n
Alhhln Rd. I btdroomo, 2 balh;
14a70 mobile home, cltw water,
tccoptHUD. $!160 p\uo dopooll
304-5412-~.
'

1 badroom lurrishad 1p11tmont In
loticldlepor' 814-111,2-2178.

6 B5

22 Rigt111 (II.)
25 Monitor lba
CO!Mntol
28 llelore (poll)
21NI•..,._
edition
32 Unln'o country
34 lmprloon
311 i:apalron
37 Apply lightly

'

• A K Q 10 9

Conditioned, No Pels, Deposit.
Ralerenc11, folltr'l Mabile
Hornoi'Wk, 11+441.0111.

Apartments
for Rent

se Dr\1\er'l
59
60 Pronou

IAQ

Booudlul RMr Ylow In Kanouga,
2 Badrooma. Unfurnished, Air

and--

•
• AJ 7 5
• 6 5

448 0228

...,, nc potx,l1+112-5858.

•

14Siwp
M-Uicoo
mountain ridge
lint ~
15 Feuclal ..,
57 Schoololllclala

21-

a&amp; s
K 12
J 10 7 s

-··=

52 - c i t y
54 811111' 11011 -

vegoMI

11
Alntdtle,.,._
o.g
17 Aclora'
11 - o x

Soalll

lr-iioiiliiiiiiliiir,.;fiiijit!iiii

...__._ ..

Q 9
A J 84
K 643
6 4 2

2 Bldloornt, Cllpotld On Privl•
lol. Clolo To . _ , Otpo~t Rof.
arancaa Raqulfed No Pets, 814-

1 and2-opartmonll,lur'
nishod 111d unlurnllhtd, otcurity
deposit raqulred, no pels, 614·
1192-22,18.

now hiring LPII:o and CNA'o

111-22-17

• K 42
• Q 10 7 3
• 9 8 2
• J 73

$210·1300, sewer, water and
ouhlncludod, 114-11112·2187,

A Pluo, Stnd

dot-. wv 25101.

N

Goods

2 &amp; 3 bldroom moblla homes

440

Resumes To: P.O. Boa: 38, Hen-

Houahold

- · wv. 304-111-21811.

Two bedroon\ total t'-ctrlc, on
Now un. Rd., 81+742-:!1109.

Rtau~•

510

For S.'-' or Rent t•a70 Suftlbll
lor 1 eNid. no poll, Apple-

Two bedroom trailer, air, largt
yard. depoli~ call 114-1165-4372

LIGHT DELIVERY
Cuh paid wuk\y, nHd amall
car I know area well. Call 0
31J.H75-5117.

Local Dulor Taking

14170 SM. Camp Conlor. 12501
mo. + dopollt 304-1175-3012.

.

li:."

, , ........ ol

"
"12lnllinllonolty

1.1FIICHMID1St

torRent

Anaww to Prevl a ,. PuDia

:
.. W.W bullalo

I - v.p.
• Gobypl.ne

,'
420 Mobllt-Homes

41

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You. Today you could be rather fortunate
might reap substantial rewards today with persons you lcnow socially. Do
in an area where you've e~pendcd not hesitate to make requests if
considerable etTort. Think big; the you ' rc in need of a favor.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
returns might be l.arger than you
!i)rivc_
to be more optimistic today
thought
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) regarding your-financeS. "See yourself
Maintain a positive allitudc today . receiving what you ' re entitled, and
regardless of the circumstances. Do good things can happen.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
not bow to uncertainties, and the
hopes you visuali ze could malerial· Cupid is prepar&lt;;d t&lt;;&gt; make amends
today for hi s past neg/eel. That very
ize.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . special som~one you' ve been seeking
21) You cotild bC extremely lucky col'ld now enter your life.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Finantoday, but not necessarily as a resull
of your own efforts. The labor of your cial developments that have been dif·
lo•ed ones will make all the differ·, ficultto master should be vigorously attacked today. Monetary trends
ence.
.
are
waiting for' a push from you.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
CANCER
(June 21-July 22) You
Partnership ~'!angements have very
arc
entering
a
cycle where your pop·
good probabdmes for success tod~y. i
ularity
will
experience upward
Y?u and a cohort can accomplish 1
bounces.
This
will give you more
thrngs that nerther could do unruded.
1 influence over your
group.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-~eb. 19) !
·
LEO
(July
23-Aug.
22)Asituation
Your !loss and coworkers w1ll recog·
mze your worth today and applaud r that has been causing you anxiety
your a~ompltslunents. Some type of . may work out to your advantage
today. Slop worrying about things
bonus is likely, either now or later.
.
that
will never happen.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) .

peer

(PA)(CC)

�'
Along the River

Inside

!erunlng to be·

'Heart Smart'

51

Technology
project yields
Scholarship

Families
Involved in
$rtlng school

• PagtA3 •

• Page A2 •

• l'atuNd on page C1

oo

HI: Neer80
Low: 50s

J

Details on
pageA6

Cloudy, chlnce of
~.._.

•

tmts•
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant· August 24, 1997

G~llia County schools

open 'as normal' Monday
Strike t~reatened district prepares for possible Sept. 2 walkout
By KEVIN KELLY
·
Association launch a planned strike Sept. 2, the board
nm11 81nllntl Stall
took steps Friday night to keep the educational process
GAWPOUS - Although a 1·year contract dffer going.
was rejected by tbe Gallia County Local School Dis'School opens as normal on Monday' Board Presi·
trict's two employee unions, the new school yesr will dent John Davis said.
'
begin as scheduled Monday, tbe Board of
In the interim, both sides remain
Education has decided.
wining to continue negotiations to
Oasses will be held this week with cur.
head off the walkout, althoogh none
~nt teachers aod staff, but_should th~ ~al·
sre scheduled yet.
ha Coon~ Local Educatton Association
An open letter from the
The associations rejected the board's
and . Galha County Local Support Staff board of education • P~ga A2 'last and final' offer earlier Friday.

lrde
nsl
1

,.,.-,.,...
SatiWCIIIfi'S .

baseball results
•P..,tll•
SR 850 will close for
constuctlon project
BIDWELL - State Route
850, approximately a half-mile
north of the intersection with U.S.
35, will be closed within the next
2·1/2 weeks for an. Ohio Depart·
ment of Transportation construe·
lion project, ODOT District 10
apokesperson Naocy Pedigo said.
An exact date of the closure is
not available at this time due to
current weather conditions, Pedigo said, but she ad4!ed that Robert
Fellure, the project supervisor for
ODOT, expects the closure will
take place around Sept. 3-8.
Work at the site is somewhat
delayed by recent rains, Pedigo
said.
The $1.5 million ODOT project fs under contract to the Shelly
Co., Thornville.
Three separate locations are
included in the same project, and
work entails replacing box cui·
verts and installing a large
drainage pipe.
During the closure, motorists
will detour SR 160 and U.S. 35.
The daie set for completion is
June 30, 1998.

Good Mornin
Calenc!an
C!•y!fteds
Com!q
Ec!ltorla!s
Alone the River
Qbltuaries
Snorts

Cl&amp;S
DJ.7
lgRn
M
CI
A6
Bl-8

0 1997 Ohio Valley Pu.bll•hlna Co.

Vol. 32 , No. 28

· agreed to change the
1997-98 school year .
calendar, and employ a
Cincinnati firm to provide strike management
services and replace·
ment personnel if the
strike occurs.
If there is a walk•r.
out, the calendar has
·~llllll!iiiMim'IIWO I8IPIOr- "
81 uniOI)I wldft Debbie been amended to set
R8tlltf, tilt ca.trlet'i
Sept. 2, 3 and 4 as inserV..Urw, ....ntdlllt vice days for all
docu~ following
employees. School will
~!.~ be cancelled Sept. 5 and .
~!!!!!!~~!l!!~===.C:"!._--_.._:_.._-•:__IIIII___:_"""
_ _j reopen Sept. 8. All non-

Preparing for possible strike

,_ .:::\act

The proposal called for a 3 percent s;lary increase, continued full payment of benefits and retention of provi·
sions in the present and past agreements with the associations.
·
The board called an emergency meeting later in the
day and after emerging from a J:hour executive session,

By JENNIFER RICHTER
Tlmu.Stntlnel Staff
GALUPOUS - The city of Gallipolis, along
with Portsmouth and Zanesville, recently received
a grant totaling $40,000 in the form of technical
assistance from tbe Ohio Department of Development.
·
The
will aid in promoting tourism to the
downtown area through the
!1k~~~:~ l!i~!PJic
of a inacl&lt;ttiog package 'selling~ the
area to touris~.
r
The Ohio Heritage Tourism Initiative will P\'0'
vide Gallipolis with technical aasistaoce for one
yesr from a heritage tourism consultant, Cheryl
Hargrove, and the aasistant state tourism director,
Risa Varasso Viswanathan. During the yesr, these
two with the _help of Gallipolis city residents will
develop a plao to attract more tourists to the area
in hopes of increasing spending in the downtown
area.
Kim Sheets Schuette, from the Ohio Valley
VISitor's Bureau, recognized the need for improv·
ing upon what Gallipolis already has - a worth·
while, historic downtown area.
"Now that a lot of these building are in danger,
we have recognized that we need to preserve the
past,' said·SchUette: "We just need to revitalize the
downtown." ·
· Schuette, having heard of the grant during its
first yesr in 1996, decided that since Gallipolis
· was eligible in 1997 sbe would apply with support
from tbe city. With the application, Schuette pro·
vided pamphle~, an .audio tour and all of the
bureau's marketing materials about Gallipolis and
Gallia County.
·
Following the review of the six applications
they received, the Ohio Department of Development chose three and presented the grants on
August 14.
"I am just real happy we got this,' said
Schuette. "We do a .real good job marketing our
BUDDY GRAHAM AND MARJEAN BUTCHER will help with the marbling
heritage in Gallipolis bUt we cao atwsys do better. pl8n by developing • commlttN of community repreaenlltlvea. Greham repWe just have a strong product We can make bet· te1811ta the Community Improvement Corporltlon and Butcher repreaenta
ter."
the Chamber of Commerce In lhl• communitY elloi1 to Improve Gelllpoll1
Since, according to Schuette, heritage aurae· tourllm.
The city, in accepting this grant, made a commitment to
lions are tbe most frequented attrnctions during travels, the Ohio
include
the community in the developing of a market plan. As
grant hopes to do just that - get people to stop by Ohio and visit
part
of
the
grant, the community must form a committee to develits attractions. Therefore, the state is not only benefiting but also
op
this
plan.
1
the communities. .
Suggested
committee
members
include
local business people,
'We will review all influences that bring people here," said
city
govemment
officials,
rC[!resentatives
from
the tourism indusSchuet.te. 'People place a lot of value on historic preservation.
try,
historic
preservation
groups
and
any
other
community
orient,
Heritage tourism is a big industry.and we want to capitalize on
ed
individuals
or
group.
it."
On Friday, August 22, Buddy Graham from the Ccmmunity
The visitor's bureau tries to market the downtown srea with
Improvement
Corporation, and MarJean Butcher from the Cham·
pamphlets, providing maps of walking and driving tours and by
ber
of
Commerce,
met with a proposed committee.
the selling of the srea's audio tour but their budget is limited.
'We
want
to
give
everyone .the opportunity to be represented,"
Schuette said with the technical assistance from this grant, the
said
Graham.
bureau will have a better understanding of how to better market
The committee will have more direction after Gallipolis
Gallipolis and the county.
receives
a visit from Hargrove and Viswananthan on September
'One of our limitations is we have limited funds,' said
18
and
19.
The women will tour the city and historic districts.on
Schuette. 'We try our best to seek new avenues of marketing. If
Thursday.
Then
on Friday, the women will meet with the com·
we get mote visitor spending in, we get a bigger budget. We hope .
Col)llnuad on page A2
this grant will help increase visitor spending in Ga!lia County.'

t~~~~~t:~:~~~~

What's next?
If there Ia 1 walkout,
the calendar haa
been amendtd to ·
Ht Sept. 2, 3 and 4
I
I d
ae nHrv Cl IY8
for all amploytta.
School WIll "- canCllltd Stpt. 5 and
reopen Stpt 8. All .
non-teaching
employtte wiU havt
an lnnrvlce on -~
Sept. 5 ·
·,

have
'Students will be excused from attending school o~
those dates in the event that there is a strike, but all
employees shall be expected to report to work and atteriti
the scheduled inservice programs ·and activities,'
Continued on pege A2

owner.
..JriJI8ftMIIII'Itflll9"'
AtkiMOn·CiiMtructifm t!O:,
the contracting company
building the OMEGA plant for
American Municipal Power :
.
Ohio, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on August 11, and
work on the local project ceased last Sunday.
A San Francisco, Calif. newspaper reported esrlier this
week thl't Atkinson Construction Co. sought protection
under Chapter 11 because it had not been paid for two
major construction projects it bad completed and was,
therefore, unable to meet the demaods ofits creditors.
Curtis Todt, a apokesman for AM~- Ohio's Westerville
office, said that the power company will now wait to see
if Atkinson plans to finish the $73.8 million project.
"Since the work stopped, we've been basically checking to see what Atkinson's final position will be. We waiil
to l}now if they're going to reaffirm their contract or not, •
Todt said Friday.
.
Todt said that a final deadline for such a decision has
not been set by AMP • Ohio, but noted that the bonding
company, Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland,
might set a deadline
soon.
.
Fidelity and Deposit
rr 1
U' "' &amp;v
Company, as the bond·
6'
ing agent for the project, would be respon·
sibte for seeing that
the project is complet·
ed if Atkinson Construction is not able to
finish it.
'This project will '
definitely be finished,'
Todt said, 'but there is
II.
no firm deadline. The
bonding company may
make the final deci·
11
sion on that."
The construction that
Curtll Todt, 1poke1pereon
d · 1 d
lor American Munlclpel Po-r was halte mvo ve
the power plant, located near the Belleville Locks and Dam. According to Todt,
the·facility was approximately 70 percent complete wh~n
the work ceased. As a result of the stoppage, about 190
union tradesmen are now out of work., including workers
from Meigs County.
Other work in Meigs County, namely the installation
of transmission lines from Reedsville to a Rutland substation, is finished, according to Todt.
Other work yet to be completed is the installation of '
backup units which would provide generation in the event
that the Ohio River was unable to generate the 42
megawatts of power required by the system.

protection

"This projec
..,,.11 Je•'nl·•al
b e llnished ...
but there Is no
firm deadline•.
The bonding
company ma
make the ••nal
decision on
that.

·Ohio AG ruling all()ws public to know whereabouts of convicted sex offenders
By JIM FREEMAN
nme•~lnel Staff
POM OY - Finding out if a convicted child
· molester I es in your neighborhood may soon be as
easy as making a trip, to the sheriffs department- or
reading the newspaper.
Ohio residents may have access to information about
all sex offenders submitted to sheriffs departments, fol·
lowing a recent ruling by Ohio Attorney General Betty
Montgomery.
·
Montgomery last week ruled the public can access all
information about sex offenders submitted 10 county
sheriffs under a new state law requiring released sex
criminals to register their address upon release from
prison.
And Meigs County officials are getting
to

!""Y

oblige.
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes
said he is prepating a registration book for sex offenders
to be kept by the Meigs County Sheriffs Department,
adding the book will be part of the public .record and
open to public scrutiny in compliance with . Montgomery's order.
·
This means parents could quickly deterinine if a convicted sex offender is in their midst, or even open the
door for publishing in community newspapers the
names and addresses of sex offenders moving into the
county or released from prison.
.
On a personal level, Lentes said he approves of
Montgomery's decision, adding he believes people need
to know when they have sex offenders living nearby.
But don't expect to look at the book soon - there are

no sex offenders registered at this time, Lentes said. To
date, five Meigs Countians have been labeled sexual
predators but they are still in prison, although one is slat·
ed for release next August.
·
In addition, the controversy has not successfully hurdled all court o~tacles, he said.
Meigs Local Schools Superintendent Bill Buckley,
who under the current law must be notified of sex
offenders' whereabouts, said he supports the new law
along with Montgomery's ruling.
'The more we know about them (sex offenders) the
better we are able to deal with it, especially where
school-age children are involved," he said.
The chairman of a local children's advocacy group
was even more supportive of Montgomery's decision.
"They definitely should be published," said Norma

Torres, who heads the 60-member Meigs County Con;
sortium for Children, a group representing a wide vari·
ety of local family and children service providers and
. advocates.
"I have prayed for Megan's Law to come to us," she
said. ''As a mother I would want to know if a sex offend· ,
er lived nearby." .
.
She referred to a similar law passed in New Jersey
commonly known as Megan's Law- named for 7-year·
· old Megan Kanka who was raped and killed by Jesse
Timmendequas, a neighbor with a criminal record for
sex offenses against children. Timrilendequas. was sentenced to death in l11ne.
~·1 support this, if for no other reason, people who are
out to hurt kids won't want to live here,' she said.
Continued on Pllll• A2

-'---&gt; 1 -------~-----...____

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