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Pomeroy • Mldclleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

7

·.

Rockets
capture
•
series

DeHvery room .is no place for company
hoipitat. Wait Ulllii after.the

10 the

Ann
Landers

..

Dear A•• L&amp;lldtn: May I
comment 011 the woman whole inlaws trooped into the labor room
while ibe was giving birth?
. For.eight yem.l-an olllmrical
nune in alalp bolpilli. You would

oot believe What we witneased on a
daily blsis - families erupting into
fighrs in the ballways and in-laws
vi~ the entire delivery and
geuing m the way of the obstetrician.
One woman brouaht two men inlll the
labur room beca•m she wasn't sure
which one WIS the fathet She asked
the nurse, 'Wbk;h of these guys does
the baby toot like? His name goes
on the birth c:atiftC&amp;te. •
My advicc·toall expectant mothers
is this: If you don't want I mob in 10
witness the delivery, don't call your
relatives llld rdl .tbem you are going

blby is bora. -INDIANA R.N.
DEAR R.N.: Splendid advice.
H='a meR 011 the IUbject:

Dar Alia: f.iaht yean qo, when
I was expecting my tnt c:bild. my
husband llld I ciiOIIe 1 birthing room

cduatte the clods IIIII IJIIOI'IIIIII'CS.
-- K.B.,1111SBURGH
DEAR PllTSBURGH: I hope
~po~t.-whoreedlthis
col1111n will clip it out and t1pe it 10

the lid of the lillie big she hasP"'' M
10 like to the hospital. Here's the
because we liked the idea of a closer:
~Au Laaden: Your advice
ldax.od, bcxDe-IW: llllllCIIphcre. What
1 mislike 1hat was. In the middle or 10 'In:ne's' mom in Salinas, Cllif..
a very dillicult labor,l group of lOIII was typicBl or the sllllf you've been
strangas trooped illllld siOOd at the dishing out for years, and I 1111 sick
1
foot of my bed liking it all in. When ofiL
Why was .Irene's mOm the only
the nurse told them 10 leave, one of
the group explained that they were mother .nowed in the cldivery room? .
fiom a local dlun:b, bad eome to viJit And you thought that was p¢ectly
a parishioner and bad accidentally OK. The mother of the baby's father
.has just IS much right 10 be there as
gotten oft' on the wrong flool: ,
I also biiiiO contend with in-laws the maternal IJ'IIIIImochet II was up
friends and relatives who took 10 you to say just that. but you didn't
The husband should have insiSied
advanlage of the 'relaxed, home-like
that
if his wife's mother was allowed
almospbere"IO drop by llld- bow
in
the
delivery room, his moiher
were going.
·
should
have been allowed in also. I
I swOre I would never go lhrough
hate
the
way you stick up for the
that again. Wi~. !lOih of my other
children, I insisted on a Rgular labor wife's mother and give the husband's
room where family memben are mother the back or your hand. I dare
~iued by invitation only. A woman you 10 print this. -- SHREVF.I'Oirr,
m labor should not have 10 enla18in LA.
D~ LA; If I WOIIIIII wants her
company. Please print this, and

dlin_.

b......... modler ill die llbor -

u well u ... owit ~ il'l fine
widl me. In flct, if she w•ta bet
modler-ill-law there IMtftMl of bet
molber, Chat's a1ao OK. Bat •• a
buabiDd bunoriJbtso iuiltthltbia ·
mocber be pre sent if hiJ wife docln't
Wlllt her.
When the husband c:arrielthe child
in his belly for nine mondls, I will
champion his rights 10 invite 'his
mother in 10 view the birth. Unlit
then, it is sttictly up 10 the wOman to
decide who gets in the labor mom and .
who stays out.
,
Gem of the Day: Resisting
temptation is a lot easier if you think

you might get anocher clilnco laltl'

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
5-5-6
Pick 4:
3-9-5-4

BuckeyeS:
9..!16-23-24-36

Sports, Page 4 ·

•

a1

1993 FORD
.MUSTANG lX

1993 FORD
MUSTANG LX

Convertible, auto, air cond.,

4 cyt., auto., air cond., Ult,
cruiH, AM/FM caa., PS,
PB, PW,PDL. .

AMJFM - . tilt, crulaa,
laaclld

on.

P~~~a~?W~4rlgN?

w~·s wro11g? 'TM A1111 Laiukrs .
Gllilk for Brides" wUI ~liew yo11r .

229.:.

tuaiety. Selld a ulf-at~Jtrued,IOIIg,
buswss-size e11wlope aNl a clreck
or mo11ey order for $3.75 (this
illcludes postage aNl htuullillg) to: .
Brides, c/o AM Lallders, P.O. Box
11562, Cllicago,IU. 6061UJ562. (In
CIJIUJda, selld $4.55 .)

2 Sicllono, 12 Pages 35 cents

Vol. 46, NO. 24
Copyrlght1995

I .

'.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, June 2, 1995

State firm on
33 corridor

Racine-Southern reunion
Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich

SOUTHERN KING &amp; QUEEN - The 1995 Racine-S~utbern
Alumni Association named this year's king Mason •'isher and
queen Courtney Roush. Fisher is the .s on of Linda and Gordon
Fisher of Syracuse. Roush is the daughter of Debbie and MarshaU
Roush of LetarL (Sentinel photo by George Abate)

RECOGNIZED ALUMNI- Numerous Racine-Southern
alumni returned for the annual banquet Saturday night. Joy Fos·
ter Ellis, left, traveled the farthest to attend the reunion from Simi
Valley, Calif. The oldest alumni present was ·Jrene Hayman. Mrs.
Hayman, a 1924 graduate, was married to Charles Hayman. (Sentinel-photo.by George Abate)
_

knee . and is on a three-wheeled
walker as a result, but he's getting
better.
And by the way, The Palm
Beach Posr recently asked readers
to write articles about their favorite
· ships, cruise lines, itineraries and
so forth. Martha, many of you will
remember her as a local school
'teacher, submitted an entry and, 1
hers was one of over 200 emries to
. be published.
·
In her article, Martha told of
meeting Jack white on a cruise
aboard the QEII, the start of their
relationship and after their mar riage, their world cruise on the .
same vessel.

I picked up a box of old music

from Mrs . Gussie Hostottle of
Pomeroy for posSible use in future
Big Bend Minstrel Association
musicals.
Believe me, this is old music
and the box held a few surprises for
me.
Included in the sheets of music
is a copy of a song called "Lucky
Lindy." Perhaps, you've never
heard it. I heard it a few times
marty years.ago on a player piabo.
The song, with a 1927 copyright, was written in tribute to the
infamous Atlantic solo flight of the
late Charles Lindbergh and probably was really popular during its
time since Lindbergh was bailed as
such a hero for his flight and was
the first pilot to accomplish the
Jack and Martlfa Greenaway • _feat Tba~ of course, was his solo
have "arriven."
non-stop flight from New York to
Jack and Martha flew into
P'!fiS, and that was in 1927, so the
Col umbu s Sunday from Palm
songwriters must hav e moved
Beach Gardens, Fla.; and expect 10
quickly to take advantage of the
be wiU1 us until maybe a' long as
timing. ·
.
November before heading back to
The second surprise came which
the sunny south.
I ran across a copy of song entitled,
This weekend, Jack anti Martha
"I Apologize." I remember the late
will be traveling to Media. Pa ..
Danny Thompson singing this song
where Jack will attend ' alumni
in one·of the local musical shows
activities of the Williamson
in the 1950s. I assumed at the time ·
School, a technical training inslitu·
that it was a current popular song
tion. The Greenaway s will be
of that time. Maybe it was enjoying ·
guests in the home of the school's
a "comeback ." At any rate, the
· president, Barry Shuler, for the
song 's copyright is dated 1931.
weekend. This will be Jack's 75th
alumni anniversary.
L!fe's · st full of liule surgrises.
Although heWill be 90 on July
Maybe at s what makes it mter·
20, Jack is enjoying relative good esting. o keep smiling.
health. He qoes have an "ailing"

Community
calendar

1994FORD
TAURUS
Clll, tilt, crulaa, PS, PB,

PW, PPL, ate.

239.:.
1994 MERCURY .
COUGAR XR-7

1993 FORD

f1 SO
. 4X2
.

Long bed, 6 cyl, tuto, ....... , V-8, auto., A/C, tilt, crtAIIjt,J"'·J I
cond., AM/FM caea, PS, PB.IS 1 AM/FM caa, PS, PB,
POL, etc.
mora

269

249.:.

*

1991 CADILLAC BROUGHAM
V·8, auto., air cond., AM/FM eal8., tilt, c·r ulaa, PS, PB,
POL, leather.
·

1993
.G20
'3/4 JON VAN
Tiara Conversion, 350
8, auto, A/C, tilt, cnll&amp;jt,l
loaded,
Only
miles

1993 FORD ·
AEROSTAR 11 SPORT"
6 cyl, auto, air
AM/FM cas&amp;, tilt, crullaej
PS, PB, PW, POL Mut~H
More.

-

17 949

t-l4,949

1992 PONTIAC
·TRANSPORT

1992 GEO
TRACKER

V-6, euto, air cond,

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Al-Anon meet·
ing , Sacred Heart Church,
Pomeroy, 7 pm. Thursday.

V-6, auto, air cond., AMJFM

4 eyl., auto., alr "'c ,olllq
AM/FM , Pwr mirror, air
PS, PB, PW, PPL.

cruii!B, AM/FM Clll,
PB, PW, ABS Brallleal
Mora

· Convertible, . 5 spd,
cond., AM/FM call,
PB, more.

sa,249

POMEROY - Pomeroy· group
9f Alcoholics Anonymous Thurs·
day. 7 p.m. at Sacred Heart Cllutch.
Mulberry Ave .. Potncroy.

19~1

CHEVr
ASTRO

MIBDLEPORT
- Spcdal •
meeting or Middl epor t Village
Council, 6:30p.m. Thursday in vii•
lage chambers. Purpose. to discuss
funding for U1e repair of the Middleport swimming pool.

Mark Ill Conversion, V-6,
auto, A/C, tilt, orulee, PS,
PB, PW, POL, More

POMEROY - Kickoff for the
annual door-to·door crusade for
volunteer workers and ACS board
members of the Meigs Co unty
Cancer Society, 7 p.m. Thursday.
Senior Citizens Center. Mulberry
Heights. Pomeroy.

1991 FORD
AEROSTAR 4X4
Eddie Bauer extended,
V-6, auto, AJC, tilt,
cruise, all power, AMIFM
casa. More.

~11,949
'PaymeniS quoted 11e a! moolh Rllll Catpet Lea..
payment al time ol delivefy. Wllllllliy inclr.ded. Slate

'tan' payments Ill baled 01112,000 tlooli' .
101 included.

The town of
········~---~--···-··-··-···-

Rutland Comm;
Yard Sale·
Saturday June 3rd,
EMS will serve
dinner in front of
Civic Center.

RUTLAND FURNITURE
and ·
CARRY
-·
~

-~

742·2211 1·800·837·8217
MAIN STREET • RUTLAND, OHIO
7

Showrooms

\ 11
warehOUSllS

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Ohio Department of Transportation officials remain commiued to
dev~loping the entire U.S. 33 corridor, said Steve Story, Meigs County'.s
comdor coordmator.
Re~ional offi~,;ials met Wednesday with Ohio Departmef!t of Trans. portalion Dtrector Jerry Wray and Ohio House Speaker JoAnn Davidson
Story said.
'
Also auending ·the meeting were U.S. Rep. Frank Cremeans, repres~n­
tatives from U.S. Rep. Dayid Hobson, State Rep. John Carey, State Rep :
Nancy Dtx and representatives from State Sen. Jan Michael Long's office.
About 25 members of the Southeast Ohio Regional Council's corridor
.
commillee also attended the meeting, Story said.
"In this day of tight fmancial budgets we felt it was importanfthat they
know the priorities in order to complete the corridor," Story said.
The entire corridor construction could top $300 million. ODOT will
spend a total of about $!75 million across the state this year, with $!30
million set for next year.
.
"Right n~w there is a fun.ding problem in Ohio," Sto~y said. "Ultima~- ~- _
ly, fundmg tS the bottom hne. II s tm~rtant that legJslators are mvolved
an~ understand the reasons why ':"e're mvolvea.': _
. .
The group dtscussed alternauve sources of lundmg the proJeCts. The
state's debt limit for construction projects could be increased, or the gas
. taX could be ratsed •. Story s~ td.
· .
(Continued on Page 3)

Chairman
supports
home rule

' ""'

\

..

'

-

The Meigs County United Methodist Coopera tin Parish continues to
rrroVfcle support to area flood victims. The Rev. William Hoback and tbe Rev. Ken· Baker above at
left, accepted a $1,1100 check from Farmers Rank Presjdent Paul Reed a11d Chairman/Chief Executive Oflicer Paul Kloes. Farmers Bank and Home National Bank in Racine continue to accept
donations for nood relief, Baker said. About $12,000 has been donated, with about $5,000 disbursed, he added. (Sentinel photo)

;;;;;;;;·; ::;;;:;::==:::;---""'7'----------:-------------.J

Court accepts guilty
pleas on numerous ·
charges: prosecutor

l~gislation

\

By KEVIN KELLY
OVP News Editor
~
RIO GRANDE - Providing
Ohio's school districts with theoption of borne rule is one of sever·
al steps the Legislature is taking to
Improve the educational process, ,
the chairman of the House Education Committee said Thursday.
Rep. Michael A. Fox , R-Fairfleld, said legislative goals with the
state's public school system are
directed toward decemralizat.ion,
deregulation and cmpowennenL
EDUCATION AGENDA- State Rep. Michael A. Fox, right,
He made hi s comlnents while
chairman
of the House Education Committee, made a pitch for a
appearing at an education issues
home
rule
bill and other legislative concepts dealing. with Ohio's
forum sponsored by Rep, John A.
schools
at
an
issues forum Thursday. Rep. John A. Carey Jr., who
Carey Jr., R-Wellston, at the Uni·
sponsored
Fox's
visit, is at left.
versity of Rio Grande· attended by
nearly 20 area educators, adminis·
trators and school board members.
wiU1mandates."
garner their support and if
Fo)(, a former teacher, is pu sh·
With home rule. a district would obtained. OSDA's backin g will aid
ing a bill 10 grant home rule to be exempted from mandates or pro- in the bill 's passage.
local districts so the districts can-be grams imposed by the state. It fur·
Allowing ihe schools more (]ex enabled to solve their own prob·
ther allows a school board more i~ility in resolving money lUl U sermanagement right s in bargaining vic!! details are also the concepts
lems.
But because home rule, if with employees, including separale behind other itlcH s Fox and the
approved by a district's voters , negotiating with employees who GOP-controlled House and Senate
pa..,s,.s_.::
ru:.:::·e not part of the bargaining unit.
are exarn uung.allows a school bom:d to b~yL.l'.
collective bargaining, tenure, mas'TilC lllca behind it is tu-try-to · · .Some of tl1ese in~h•de-cstablishter contracts ar1d other labor-related
put tile schools onlhe satne level as ing a c harter co mmi ssion . site-.
features , the hill is opposed by
business in dealing with labor based governance by a council of
unions and administrators for "50
issues ," Fox explained. "But the parents1and ed ucators, a voucher
different reason s," Fox said.
school board has to live. with those system ·and targeting available
"The whole home rule U1ing is
employees, and U1en UJCre are a lot resources.
to allow disuict s to lift themselves
of tllings you· could get rid of that
Detler utilizat ion. of resources is
out of mandal es." Fox said. "For you'll find you can'l."
a key answer 10 fut&gt;ding equity
U1e past 20 years, I've heard two
Fox said be is meeting wiU1 tl1e concerns, Fox believes. because
things from the schools: senti us Ohio School Boards Association - there isn't enough money to meet
board of directors this weekend lo
(Continued on Page 3)
more money and gel off our backs

.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Most of schools where to focus shorHenn
... __ l,he_ stttdent~ who failed the S,tllte's inJcrvcntion, lon &amp;-terni planning .
ninth-g rade proficiency test had efforts and curriculum changes. ·
problems with· the maU1 portion of
''MaUl remains the gatekeeper
the exam, U1e Ohio Department of at all grades, despite Ute fact that
Education sai d.
virtually all of these students have
The agency released figures on completed their required two erectThursday that show 2,667 seniors its of high school inathematics and
, had not passed the matb section . despite tl1e fact tltat the math test
Tha\ compares with 546 students measures perfonnances m a middle
who bad failed ~1 e citizenship sec- school level," he saitl in a state- .
tion , 252 who did not pass the read- mcnL
ing section and 201 who had failed .
i\IU1ough 52 percent of the class
·the writing section .
of 1995 ·had passed U1e tests by the
Students must pass all four sec- end of nintl• grade, compared with
tions to graduate. The c l ass ·of 46 percent from the class of 1994,
1994, whi ch was first tested in the passing rat.es bad evened out by
October .1990, was the first class the end of the sludents' senior
required to pass the exams.
years .
This year's ninth-graders , who
An estimated 3,050 of 109,915
seniors will not graduate with their will graduate in 1998, are U1e llrst
class. but they are eligible for a to achieve a 60 percent passage rate
summ er intervention program to on all four portions of the test .
teach them the skills needed to pass
For the second year, schools
the tests. They can retum to school could offer the tests to eigh th to take the tests as many times as graders: More than 7 5 percent of
needed.
,
.
all schools administered tests to
- ~ - State schools s-uperlutendenr --eighth-graders, and 41 percent of
Ted Sanders said ~1c resuiL&lt; show

.

.

By KATHRYN CROW
Sentinel Correspondent
Syracuse Village Council discussed whether to close various
alleys Thu.rsday when it conducted
its regular meeting.
Kathryn Crow pres ided over the
meeting in U1e absence of Mayor
Jim Pape, who was out of town .
If alleys are used by residents.
they mu st be maintained, council
agreed . If ·not used or maintained
by the village, th ey s hould be
closed, council decided .
Council has discussed the alley
issue for Jbout a year, Crow said.
Earlier this year , six alleys were
closetl. No decision s were matle .
Plat maps will soon be available
lO council. Then. members will

perform .on-site in.o..,pecLions

to

determine which alleys should be
closed.
The boartl will consider fire pro·
tect10n and village water line
access. Crow said.
"Many haven't had 'lltention in
50 years." Crow sail). "The lown
- ooesn' t have money to keep Orem
up . The alleys were buill for the
horse and buggy I00 yea" ago."
Dennis Moore. a FourU1 Street
resilient. lUlU council be haU 'b \s
property s urveyed ahd detenninctl
a passageway behind his property
was not an alley. Moore intends to
place a ga te on the property.
Moore ~as asked to wail a
month befl&gt;re takin g any action.
peniling providi ng a description to
counCil
Council IHt-s--no objec ti on to
Moore's suggestion, bul wants to
discuss the matter with its solici tor.
Crow said. Also. unnecessary
expenses need to be avoided .
Councilman Larry Lavender
reported U1a1 Briugeman Street on
Rustic Hills 1.1 &gt;lippi.ng .
·
Meigs County Engi neer llob
· Eason will inspect the area and rcc·
ommentl some action, Counci lman
Dill Roush said.
Ditch work on Rustic Hills has
been completed . Ditching wtll get
underway m lrolll ol I he Taylor
residence.
In other action . council:
, approved Etl o,mer, request
to usc the pool at 10 a.m on June
26 for a 'Wllllllllllg in st ruction
clas'
• wtll buy ~ vacuum pump lor

Four individuals have pleaded · Meigs County Sheriff's Departguilty to felony charges, Meig s menl and the Bureau of Criminal
County Prosecuting Attomey John Jnvesli ga lion antlldcntificmion.
Lcntes said Thursday.
··
.·
The. Barleys consented to a
Dennis Tolley, State Route 143, search of the property.
• Carpenter, pleaded guilty to third·
AuthoriltCs co11fiscatcd two
degree felony charges of gross sex· four· wheelers, a trail er anti their
ual imposition against a juvenile, 36-acrc property. he addetl .
Lemes said.
·
·"
The founh case involved a
The incident allegedly occurred Meigs County man and woman
May 9 involving a 17-year-old girl , · who have been charged with lourth
Lentes said.
degree felony cultivalion of mariTolley' s sentencing has been set j uana. I,.e 1ues said.
for 10:45 a.m. on Jul y 24.
Richard Cooper; who also is
William George, of Pennsylva- known as Doviu Jennings 111 .
nia, pleaded guilty to felony fleeing Mount Union Road. Carpen ter,
charges. George and another indi· underwent an. arraigmnent 011
vidual led authorities on a high - felon y charge' Thurstlay and a
speed chase across U1e westem part $250,000, 10 percent surc iy bond
. ofMejgs County on April 18.
was set. accordiilg to court rccortls.
George also faces Gallia County
Cooper's girlfriend. Jnlly lloyer,
·charges tltal he allegedly stol e the a lso faces c ulti vation charges,
vehicle used in the chase from Letllcs added.
Dostie Motors in Gallipolis.
·
More than 100 plants were
Sentencing has been set for July. seized. along with equipment and
23, he added.
other drug paraphernalia from the
Ernest Darley Sr.. of Bedford, residence. Meigs Sheriff James M.
and William Barley , of Ruiland, Sou lsby h ad said 111 a previous
were arrested Friday . They COil· imervicw wiUl The /)rl//1' Sellllllel.
f esse d to fourth . degree lclony
Cooper was aHcsied by u1c Stale
charges of ~Uii!.vattcm of man1uana . lligbwax P_atr!ll 111 Atl1cns County $197.4~ .
and posseSSion of cnmmallools.
last week. but posted hnnu. When ~ Wlli buy 3() b:tg~ ol sant}--for
Meigs County Game Warden arrested by the OSP. he allegedly U1t pool tiller
,. Keith Wood had been checki ng on · posscsseu six pounlls nf nrarijuana,
• lc;u·ned one ol Ute soccer goals
turkey problems in that arc.a when Lentes said .
at ille park llas been dcstn&gt;yed . ·
. he reportedly saw the pair planting
Cooper's final pretrial hearing is
• heart) et ghtlight' are needed at
th e mar·ijuana. Lcntes said.
set for 9:30 n 111 011 July 3. with the halllicld.
t Continued on Pal\• 3)
In-vestigators incluuetlthc Meigs uial set at 9 a.m. on July 12.

Education
·officials find test's
.
math portion troubles students

..

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

,....-Flood relief donation--- Syracuse .
ponders
closing
·
""""~.,.,
of alleys
f

It was a bit of a serious time at
Veterans Memorial Hospital Tuesday afternoon when a farewell '
party was held to honor Dr.
Richard G. Pallerson, who is leaving after wrapping up eight years of
service to the hospital .
Dr. Patterson bas been head
physician-supervisor of the Emergency Room/Urgent Care Center at
the Pomeroy hospital.
Mrs. Linda Jones ; au administrative secretary, was in charge of
the farewell gesture, during which
time Hospital Administrator Scott
Lucas presented Dr. Patterson with
a gift certificate at Quality Farm
and I'leet from the hospital and a
plaque of appreciation from the
hospital's medical staff.
Bob Byer, director of the Meigs ·
EMS, presented Dr. Patterson witl1
a souvenir crock jar. There were
.o ther gifts and cards given 10 the
departing physician and refreshments, prepared by the nutriti on
department of Margaret Corsi.
were served to employees who
dropped by to say goodbye to Dr.
Patterson. He will be working at
the Cabell-Huntington Hospital,
Huntington,' W.Va.
·•·
Tuesday was Dr. Patterson's last
day at VMH. There were a lot of
hugs exchanged and regrets
expressed that Dr. Patterson wi 11 no
longer ·be at the local hospital. He
will certainly be missed. That's for
sure!

Low IOnfabtln 60s. Sbowm
1111d tbuodersiGrmallkely.
Saturday, ch"!!c• of rain. Highs
In the 70s.

prose cu1ing :..~ttorney'~ office, the

Community effort pays ·off

.

the s tudent s passed . Last year.
'lbout bne-third of ;he sla t e'~
eighth-grader~ took ll1e tests- a nil -·
about 32 percent of Utem p&lt;c&lt;sed.
Nt;J11. year, prollciency ;csts will
begin in the fourth and sixth
grades. That way, studcnls who
have trouble can receive intervention immediately and the failure
rate on the ninth-grade tests car1 be
reduced, said Rep . Ron Gcrherry.
D-Austintown.
Gerberry. who sponsorcu th e
bill that provided for the .fourthand six1la-grade tesls, said it "is
going to be the salvation for the 3
percetlt that did ·not graduate (with .
!heir class) last year and won't
graduate this Sunday or next Su1•day ."
Gerbcrry said proficiency test- ·
ing should have been started with
kindergarteners so that all students
could have a basis to pass the
ninth-grade test.
·'It .(proflcietlcy testing) should
have never been started with the
elass of 1994," he..,tid.

Members of the Reedsville community donated their time and energy to estllblish this flag pole
· at the' Reedsville Volunteer Fire Department, Fire Chief Mark Smith said. Members of Tuppers
Plains VFW l'ost #9053 pr•'-'•nted a flag. In the foreground, pos~ commander James Ingels give~
the flag to Smith. In the l!ackground, from left, are VFW members David Reed, John Hetzer
O~le Smith; FA Humphrey, Victor Rahr, Fritz Goebel, Dan Spurlock and Olive Township 'rrtL•te;
Bill Osborne. Osborne furnished the materials and Craig Reed welded an old fire hydrant &lt;mto
lhe base of the pole and a fire hal on the top, Smith ~aid. Dale Smith and Osborpe also are firt
department members. Also, lhe lire deparln,.,nt recently il~&lt;t:tlloo a handicfpped-ilccessible bath·
room. (Se ntinel photo by George Abate)
.

•

�•

•

Friday, June 2,1996

'

••

Page2
Friday, June 2, 1995

111 Court Street
Pomeroy. Ohio

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome They should be less than 300
words long All leners are subje&lt;:tto edatmg and must be sagned wllh name.
address and telephone number No unsagned letters wall be pubhshed Leuers
should be m good taste, addressmg 1ssues, not persona hues

Primary games

~.N.

Satunlay, June 3

By WALTER R. MEARS
AI&gt; Special Correspondent
r
WASHINGTON - Camprugnmg to get to the finals for the Whne
House, pres1denual candtdates used to ptck thetr spots, promiSing to stay
the long course to the end and shapmg strategtes to do 11 But this wne.
U1e end may be at the begmmng
l'or the Repubhcans seeking to challenge Prestdent Clmton m 1996,
the old-style gamesmanship won't work Not w1th the lmeup of contests
thai w1ll begm next February, and settle more GOP delegate contests
more swtfUy than ever before
And there may yet be some dale changes that would start the process
even sooner, smce tbe states as well as the GOP candidates are maneuvermg for advantage and clout. Iowa. sue of the opemng caucus, and New
Hampshtre , ho ldmg the tirst prestdenual prunary. may move thetr dates
ahead m order to keep thetr status
In lheory. all that ought to work to the advantage of lhe candtdate who
starts ahead of the field , Sen Bob Dole of Kansas, a pos1Uon he's runnmg
to hold now so that he can carry 11 mto the real compeUI!on next year
Dole has smd that tf he wms those first two states he's almost certamly
gomg to be the nommee
There'd be no wne for nvals to regroup and overtake an early wmner
[he btggest states used to cast thetr votes late m the process, some
tunes too late to mnuence 11 So they' vc crowded to the front now, to the
pomt that Cahfomta may su llturn out to be voung on a contest all but settled, even though 1t' s tradtllonal late prunary has been moved up 10
weeks to March 26
l hat dnve to hold pnmancs whtlc the race 1s on led to the leapfroggmg
\
ot dales that pushed up the schedule
In some cases, supporters have tatlore&lt;l the process to help thetr entry,
as 111 New Ymk, where a complex system for geumg delegates on the ballot heavtly favors the candtdate backed by state GOP leaders That' s Dole,
and Iu s slate not only has the hallot advantage, the pnmary ts set for
March 7, a 'Thursday, makmg 11 a solo on a crowded calendar
There can be a down stde to that kmd ol maneuvermg For example,
An~ona, where Sen Ph1L!Grmmn ol I exa' has top pat:ty leaders on h1s
Side. had voted to hold 1ts prunary on the same day as the first one sel
anywhere 1llat colltded wtll'l New Harnpshrre · s state law , setllng that one
a week ahead of any other And 11 also angered Repubhcan leaders there,
who saw Gramm's camprugn hand m the attempt
rhc ill wtll perSists even though Gramm srud as Arizona backed down
llmt New Harnpshue should always be frrst
The New Hampslure pnmary 1s set for Feb 20, but only tcntauvely
smcc Delaware IS scheduled to hold one Feb 24, U1e lollow10g Saturday
II that holds. New Hmnpslurc prob.tbly wtll swttch to Feb 13
1he same thmg may happen on tl1e ftrst caucus Iowa's date IS 1-eb 12,
, but Loutstana has called caucuses tor Feb 6 If that stands, low.a would
move up to Jan 29
That's not all the manc uvenng , live New England states may JOtn m a
regiOnal pnmary March 5 f'londa and Texas vote a week lat er, the
biggest pnzes m what used to be called Super Tuesday It 's been supet seded, the label may lit the nex t I uestlay, March 19. when tl1e mdustrml
Mtdwest and prob.tbly Pennsylvama ho ld thetr pnmanes
What' s happenmg IS somethmg ot a Republican replay ol the Demo
crat•c expenence of 1972, when Ute rostc1 and 1mpact of the prcsJdcnual
prun:rrtes changed drasucally as a product ol reform efforts
Unul then , Uw pnm.mes had been provmg grounds for candld&lt;~te s, but
ncuher essenw~ nor dcc•stvc Hubert Humphrey was nonunated m 1968
w1tll0ut wuunng, or rc.~ly compctmg m a smglc pnmary
But four years l.tter U1ete wcte 21 pmnanes and the remodeled system
ptoved U1e undomg ol [ llmund Musk1c, l.tr and aw.ty Uac !rant-runner
before the votmg beg.m He pronmed to compete evcrywhet c, but George •
McGovern whnUed Ius Sl.uulmg m New llampslure, won tlle nommauon
.md lost !he elecuon
Nobody understood the pnmartes rclorm plan better than Mc-Govern ,
he d he.tded a party commtsstonthat wrote 11 And when sta te leg tslatures
wrote pnmary laws to meet Ute Dcmocraltc requtrements. they created
GOP prunanes at the same lime
Now there Will be more th.m 40 perhaps 44 rhat' s rat sed tlJe already
lu gh pnce of runmng , ll1 .1 race likely to be won m a cosUy dash
BOIT~R!SJIIOTE -= Wallu R Me~ts, vtce pres1de11t and columnist for The Assocaated l'rcs., ha s rcpnrtcd on Washmgton and
national pohttcs for more than 311 yc.tr&lt;

Today in history
•
By The Associated Press
Today ts Fnday, June 2, the 153rd day of 1995 There are 212 days left
m the year
Today's Htghlight tn Htstory:
On June 2, 1953, Queen Elizabeth II of Bntrun was crowned m Westmmster Abbey, 16 monlhs after the death of her father, King George VI
On th1s date.
In 1851. Mame became the fitStstate to enact a law probibtung alcohol
In 1883, tbe flfSt non-league baseball game to be played under eleclnc
lights took place, m Fort Wayne, lnd
In 1886, Prestdenl Cleveland mamed Frances Folsom m a Whate
House ceremony. (fo date, ClevciiUld ts tho only prestdent to marry m the
execuuve manswn whtle m office )
In 1924, Congress granted US ctUzensbtp to all American lm.hans
In 1941, baseball 's "Iron Horse,',' Lou Gehrig, dted m New York of a
- degenerauve disease, arnyotropbtc lateral sclerosiS
In 1946, the Italian monarchy was abohshcd m favor of a repub.hc
In 1966, the U.S space probe Surveyor I landed on the moon and
began tranSIIIilli!!g detailed photographs of the lunar surface.
In 1975, Vice Pres1dent Nelson Rockejeller said bis commtSston had
, found no wtdespread pattern of tllegal acuviues at lhe Central Intelligence

: Ag1:l979, Pope Jolm Paul II arrived m hts nauve Poland on the ftrst visit
: by a pope to aCommurust country
• In- 1986, for the first time, the pubhc coulp watch the proceedmgs of
· the U.S. Senate on televtsion as a stx-week experiment of televised sessions began
In 1987, President Reagan announced be was nomtnating economtst
Alan Greenspan to succeed Paul Volcker as cbalfDiart of the Federal
Reserve Boord
Ten years ago: Greet socialists led by Prem1er Andreas Papandreou
won a dectslve victory over conservatives m nauonal electrons.
Five years ago On the third day of their Washmgton sumuut, Presi• dent Bush and Sov1et Prestddnt Mikhatl S. Gorbacbev held mfonnal talks
- at tbe Camp David presidential retreat m Maryland Actor Str Rex Ham•ion died m New Y-ule at age 82
One year ago: The International Atomic Energy Agency. the UN.
atomiC watchdog, reponed it could no longer verify ~ status of North
Korea's nuclear program. promptlllg the Unued States to seek economtc
sanctions President Olnton met at the Vabcan with Pope John Paul II

I'~ M

for

Edwin C. Teter Jr.

conditions and

memorial to the fallen bogs dowri

UNITED NATIONS- In the
weelc that 370 mternational peacekeepers were bemg detamed in
Bosma, Unned Nauons officials
and staffers cootmued to drag their
heels on plans to memorialize lhetr
fallen comrades
The Umted Nauons w111 celebrate the 50th anmversary of Us
creauon this fall amid much fanfare
and self-congratulatton. Yet a
bureaucrauc battle ms1de the world
body threatens to derail what started as a noble effon to commemorate those who've been killed m the
1 lme of duty over the years So far,
the two-year commemorative effort
has produced one untnspmng
sculpture, plenty of arguments and
a lack of a concerted staff effort but no memonal
"Our ltlabihty to agree and get
on w1th it does a great dtsservtce to
tbetr memory," one high -level
UN otfictal remarked
By mld-1993, the Staff Union,
wb1ch represents the maJonty of
U N staffers, bad come up wtth a

plan that was probably mspired by
tbe Viemam Veterans Memorial m
Washmgton The plan called for
the names of U N. CIYihan employ.

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
ees k1lled wh1le on duty to be
engraved on a wall of the U N
lobby, oppostte portr81ts of all the
pr10r secretaries-general. A separate monument on !he North Lawn
would honor fallen nulitary peacekeepers
As thts proposal was bemg
advanced, other staffers managed
to stnke a deal with the U N
admmtstrauon to usc a smgle carvin g by lamed Itahan scu lptor
Arnaldo Pomodoro Yet the
counter-proposal caused two maJor
problems
1 be U N admmtstrallon wanted
to fund tbe sculpture wtth much of
the ~500,000 m pnze money •t gar-

nered for winning the Nobel Peace
Prize m 1988 But tbe money was
so badly mvested, our sources say,
that as much as half of it may have
been lost.
The second obstacle was the
sculpture ttself. A drawmg of the
globe was leaked to staffers, who
complained that 11 resembled a corroded ball bearmg P1ctures were
soon produced showing that
Pomodoro's expenstve offermg
bore striking resemblance to two of
hts other sculptures one in downtown Charlotte, N C., and the other
m front of Mount Stnat Hospatal m
New York Ctty
As these events were unfoldmg
last year, a thtrd group of staffers
suggested that tf any money was
spen~ 11 should be used for a "livIng memonal" set up as a scholarshtp fund for the dependents of
slam U N staff members One
strong advocate of th1s pos1t1on,
Lon Berhner, said that the United
Nauons would be better served by
tendmg to those left behmd rather

F~~LIN'

UNAPtm.lATtD,
ALMOST INVISIFUI
I ~.~l~!~MA~·

'WUND ur.ru.Y BUT
I't-A ~lNNINc, TO

F'~L NO CN~ L~lmi
10 M;, OOCT!l2.

..... OOCTO~.:r....

Sin isn't so old-fashioned after all
Whatever became of Calvm
Coolidge's mmtster? We don't see
the bkes of hun around much anymore

The former prestdent (1923-29),
so the famthar story goes. came
home from church one Sunday
mormng to be asked by hts wtfe,
Grace, what the mmtster had talked
about m hiS sermon
'' Sm ·' replied the lacomc Cal
"What d1d he say .about u ?'
asked Mrs Coohdge
" He's agamst tt," smd the prestdent
What would make Coolidge's
mmtstcr unusual today ts not that
he 1s c~g.unst sm but thai he would
preach about the subJeCt of sm at
all Sm ts an old-fasluoncd word
today like lire and bnmstone .tnd
hell-and-damnauon We have put tt
m U1c "remember when" category
But talk about 11 or not, we still
have sm What we don' t have anymore 1s '-'sm w1th an I m tlle mtdy
die " That " I" runmn g smack
through th e heart of sm kept us
mmdlul that sm had ,, personal
dtmenston You and I had to personally answer for our masdecd s
Then carne U1e socml revolutwn
ol the 1960s Thmgs changed It
was dectded that soctety a~ a whole

(wbat was called " the system")
was responstble tor cnme, broken
farnthes, homelessness and all anusoct.11 behaviOr Humanity was

mtze sm and mamtam !Is proper
role m our culture," he srud "We
need ham as our umptre to dtrect
us, to accuse us, 10 reproach us, to

exhort us Fatlure to do so ts hts

George R. Plagenz
seen as essenually good, spotlcd by
a bad envrronment 'llns vtew hfted
tile heavy wetghl of gu1lL I rom mdavtdual shoulders Gone w.IS "sm
wtth an I m the mtddle "
!he hber.1l m,unlme churches
defme sm as "separ:tuon ltom
God" rather than as personal
wrong -dmng "Separcttlon from

God' was suthctenlly vague and
all-encompassmg that 11 allowed
everyone to adrmt he or she was £l
smner wJUtout leelmg consptcuous
When the Eptscopal C hurch
rcvtsed tts Book of Common
Pr.tycr m the 1970s, the phrase
"Utere ts no healll1 m us
miSerable offenders" w.ts delet ed 1 oo
mu ell ol 11 tlowner People wametl
uphlt
I he nflled p sych1atnst Karl
Menmnger, m Ills book "What ever
Became of Sm?" c:une down hard
on the clergy lor refusmg to deal
wlth Slll

' 'The clergyman cannot mmt -

Sill"

Some mtmsters .ne commg to
quesuon the wtsdom ol the course
the church has taken regardmg sm
They arc havmg doubt hke Uwsc
th.tl pl.t gued Peter 111 the novel
"Bodtes and Souls."
Peter was a mmtster - but not
for hun the stern doclnnes of sm
and hell "He would prefer to bnng
God tnto hts partshwncrs' hves
throu gh the doors of fear But what
tf, by h1s tolerance , be was IT)aking
tt posstble for hts congregation to
shp mto sm? The td ea ol sm was
passe now, he knew, yet all the
same 1l existed, as allunng as a
cool blue lake on a hot summer's
d.ty He felt he was lcadm g h1 s
llock near that lake when he should
perhap s be shoomg them angrily
away''

Wh1le the ' I en Commandments
.1re sllll our best gutdc to what ts
nght atld wrong, you may wm1t to
try Harry Emerson Fosd tck s 5pomt qm z on " II w to tcl11f tt' s
smful"

Why not Gingrich in 1996?
Le t's face tt For conservatives conserv,IIISm across the whole
at least. the race for the 1996 spectrum of tssues But the cunous
Repubhc.m pres1denual nommation fact tS that he has not (yet, at any
ts almost unbearably frustratmg
rate) "m,tde the demonstrallon"
The party. ru1d for that matter the
natiOn, have probably never been,
Ill modern tunes, as conservatively
mmded as they are today Nobody that would command sohd conserof whom the conservauve move- vauve alleg~ance Perhaps tht s ts
ment senously disapproves can owmg m part to hts alleged belat posstbly wm the Repubhcan prest- edness m t.akmg up the cudgel vtgdenl!al nommauon - or probably orously for the "soctal tssu es " In
even the vtcc prestdenual nomma- addtllon, a forgtvable fear that hts
Southern drawl wtll prove a senous
uon
Yet the conservatives don't have handtcap m the NorU1em Republi a smgle clear lavonte m the race can pnmanes undoubtedly plays a
for eather spot Senator Dole ts Iar part as well
Must uf the rest ot the conahead for the presidcnual nommatendersAlexander, Wtlson,
twn, and 11 IS probably "hts to
lose." But be doesn't pretend to be Lugar, Specter, and even such vtce
a "movement conservauve." hav- pre$•denllal posstbthues as Weld
mg entered pohucs before the con- and Wb1unan - wouli.l almost cerservative movement m tts modem tamly be vetoed by the conservafonn even extsted Instead. he has tives Buchar1an and Doman are, to
concentrated on bemg JUSI accept- be sure, conservative enough, but
able enou~h to the movement to JUSt aren't taken senously. Cohn
msure that 11 wtll not veto hts nom- Powell looms on the honzon, smtlJnauon. and he seems to have suc- lllg e mgfllallcally - but the conse rvauves ate 10 no mood for .a
ceeded m that effort
Sen Phtl Gramm would appear Mona Ltsa
What !hey are m the mood for ts
to have a far better claul) mdecd, almost a pre-empuve cla~m a leader who 1s mdisputably con- on the allegtance ol the conser- servallve, uncompromtsmg and
vauves, gtven hts uncompromi~mg spectacularly arttcu latc Is 11 any

William A. Rusher

- Is the course of ac11on you
plan to follow honorable m your
estmmtton?
- If everyone followed the

same course of acuon, would tl1e
results be benetictal to all?
- Will you thmk well of yoursell when you look back on what
you have done?
- l&gt;retend your problem ts the
problem of the person you most
admtrc Ask yourself, "How would
that person handle 1t?"
- Would you want your lamlly
and lnends to know what you have
done? The deCISIOns we make m
the hope that no one finds out arc
usu,tlly wrong
1 he larger concerns ul U1e world
should not get us to Jose stght of
tht s need for personal morahty
("sm wllh an I tn the m1ddle") ,
whtch may be the l.rrgcst cone~ n
olall
George J»lagenz IS AJ!YOdical·
ed writer f!lr Newspaper Enter•
pnse Association.
(For mformahon on how to
cummumcate electronlcall) wtth
thts colummst and others, contact America Online by calhng 1800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

PA

e

' ' '''

•1Columbusl7s•

I

Mintha Morrison
W VA.

Pt
01995 Accu-Wealhl'lr Inc

Martha Momson, 53, Gallipolis, dted Thursday, June I, 1995 at Holzer
Medical Center Sbe was a homemaker
~
Born Feb 16, 1942 to Cbeshme, sbe was the daughter of the late Julillg
and Sylvta Ohlmger
Survtvors mclude one daughter, Yolanda Neal of Galhpolls, thtee
sons, Les Clark of Cheshtre, Charles Clark of Mtddleport and Jeffrey
Shaffer of St Albans, W Va., one Sister. Gladys Barren of Pomeroy, and
s1x grandchildren
In addtllon to ber parents, she was preceded m death by her husband.
Walter E Momson
Bunal will be at the convenience of the fam1ly There wall be no calling hours

·Flash flooding remains
possible through tonight Meigs announcements
By Tbe Associated Press
The posstbtlity of flash flooding
continues across Ohw tomgbt as
the wet weather stays wtth us
Showers and thunderstorms also
' are posstble on Saturday
H tgh temperatures on Saturday
wtll be mostly m the 70s.
The passage of a low pressure
system over the weekend should
leave Ohio wtth a penod of early
next week
A warmmg trend shou ld pro.duee temperatures m the 80s by
1ruesday
I
1 he record htgh temperature for
thts date at the Columbus weather
•Stauon was 96 degrees m 1895
.wh1le the record low was 39 m

1966 Sunset tomght wtll be at 8 54
p m and sunnse Saturday at 6 04
am
Weather forecast:
Tomght. Showers and thunderstorms likely Lows 60 to 65
Sah!rday Motsly cloudy wtth a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. H1ghs in the lower to mtd
70s
Extended forecast:'
Sunday and Monday Dry
Lows m the 50s and htghs 10 the
70s
Tuesday A chance of thunderstorms Lows tl\,the upper 50s and
lower 60s H1ghs from the upper
70s to mtddle 80s

.o.J. trial evidence moves
from tiJe dry to the grisly

LOS ANGELES (AP)- After
a month m the htghbrow world of
DNA stallsi.Jcs, 0 J Sunpson prosecutors are turnmg to the cold realtty of gnsly autopsy evtdencc
Los Angeles County Coroner
'Lakshmanan Sathyavag1swaran ts
due on tbe stand when the tnal
resumes today He ts to be followed by Deputy Medtcal Exarnmer lrwm 6olden, who performed
autopstcs on the muulated "'!dies
of N1cole Brown S 1mpson and
Ronald Goldman
Defense attorneys have tough
qucsoJus for Golden. who warned
dunng U1e prehmmary bearmg on
whe01er he felt one or two kmves
were used and acknowledged dtscardmg Ms S1mpson's stomach
contents
The defen se has suggested more
th:m one weapon could mea11 more
than one k1llcr Lakshmm1an. m h1s
:revtew of the autopstes, s.ttd he
co uld not rule out the pOsSJbtllty
tlMt two kn1ves were used
Ito has lorbtdden the defense to
quesuon Golden about reports Otat
shortly after hts shaky appearance
at the prehmmary hearmg , he took
a gun to work, waved 1l •rround mtd
tl~rcm e ned to k1ll lawyers Ito wtll
allow quesuons on llllstakes Golden has made Ill hts nearly 6,500
The Assoctated

aui~~~IIC~ummer,

Press ob~1!ned all!lllemal coronQr's
fftce report tde nulym g "16 evaO
dcnce problem s" 111 the Sunpson
--.:ascc"'mong the mtstakGS--W.lS •\bilc sample labeled as urme anu the
posstbtluylhatMs S1mpson's
blood-so.1ked dress was dangled 10
acommun.~ dnppan
Prosecutors could steal some
defense thunuer by hnngm g up
problems walh Golden ' s fmdmgs
through Labhmanan, s.ud B.arry
T.trlow . .1 I os Angeles defense
lawyer
"II Ulcy were smru tthey would

step up and say, 'We d1d some
mcompetent thmgs, but 11 doesn't
destroy the substance of what we
have to prove,"' nrrlow smd
Thete could also soon be another Jury change Judge Lance Ito
met wtth attorneys for 90 mmutes
Thursday about allegallons of JUror
m1sconduct
At least two Jurors are s81d to be
under mvesugauon The Los Angeles Ttmes and KNBC-TV reported
that three paneltsts are under scrutJny for alle ged offenses rangtng
from note -pasSing to ununulatton
ol other JUrors
•
Defense attorney Johnn1e
Cochran Jr satd he expected U1e
problem to be resolved today W1th
months of testtmony remammg,
only four alternates rematn to
replace JUrors lltSmtssed trom the
12 person panel
Cochran srud he would be wtllmg to conunue wnh 11 or fewer
JUrors Pros~cutors smd t! was too
soon 10 dectde If the numbers of
Jurors dtps below 12, both stdes
would have 10 agree 10 contmue or
a mtstrtal would be declared
Prosecutors scored a v1ctory
Wednesday when Ito tssued a rulmg allowmg them to use 44 crune
scene and autopsy photographs that
h all II
h b
I e rutahty

~::!:~.1.l...'P..ow
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171/B
Worthington lnd
t9 3/4
-•-•Stock reports arc the 10 30 am
quotes provided by Adv~st uf
Galltpolls

F.. day

~:::::::::::~

1175
$7 60

s9r

oo

15 Ce nt~&gt;

S ub~n~n

no( des1nng 10 pay the c::rtrner may
re mit 10 advance due~:t to llle Owl)' Senunel
on tJ three \J ~ or 12 mon th ba~1~ Credit will be
gn•en cmTltr eoch week
No Jllh~cnp tJO n by mtul permmed llt
where home crimer service lt UllttJlnble

aren~

MAILSUBSCRIP'IIONS
lmldr Mrlp Counl~
11 W~eks
S23 92
'26 Week,
S47 00
SHNceks
592 56
R•tu Outside Meigs County
13 Wrck'
"523 61
14966

$96 20

Entertainment planned
Free entertatnment wtll be
offered Saturday at Star Mtll Park,
Ractne, begmmng at 7 p m The
pubhc IS mvtled and encouraged to
take lawn chairs
Piano/vocal recital set
P1ano and vocal students of
Sharon Hawley wtll present a
recttal Sunday at 2 p m at t11e Mad
dleport Ftrst Bapust Church The
pubhc ts mv!led to attend Cratg
Wehrung wtll be d1splaymg han
ners and P J Harn s wtll provtde
backdrops carrymg out the theme
ol the recttdl A recepuon wtll to!
low
Piano recital scheduled
A p!lmo rec1~11 w111 be presemed
Fnda&gt; at 6 p m at the Ftrst Bapttst
Church of Racme The pubhc ts
mvtl ed to nltcnd anu hear lO stu
dents, elementary through h1gh
school, perform both classtcal .tnd
sacred numbers
Barbecue planned
Th e Syracuse Volunteer rtrc
Department wtll hold ,, clucken
b.arbecue Sunday at U1e lire st,\tton.
w1tl1 seavmg to begm ~~ II a m

Bthle School sluled
Btble school at th e Rac10e F~rst
Bapust Church wtll he held •Monday through Fnday, June 9, 9 am
to l1 15 a m Pre-reg tstrauon ts
requested An tee cream soctal and
p.trade wtll be held Saturday at 10
a m at the ahurch
Benefit hymn smg
A benefit hymn smg and
spaghet11 dmnc r wtll be held at 6
p m Saturday at U1e Believers Fel
low shtp Mtntstry o n New L1ma
Road, RuUand
Banquet slated
Eas1crn Htg h Alumnr banquet
wtll be beld June JO at 6 30 p m at
the Royal 0&lt;1k Acuvny. Center
D11mer fOllowed by dance , 8 30 10
11 30 p m Adv.111ced llcket s
reqUJred Avatlable at FranciS
Flonst, Pomeroy, Baums and Summerlr elds .tt Chester, Keebaughs
and llawks at Tuppers Plams, and
Reed s at Reedsv ille

!I

STATE THEATRE
POINT PLEASANT
LIVE ON STAGE 7:30PM
" MARSHAL UNIV. CHOIR"
ADM. $5.00 ,
ONE SHOW.JUNE 3RD
FRI. THRU THURS. 7:30
2PMSUN
DUSTIN HOFFMAN IN
"OUTBREAK" R
NEW SUMMER HRS
MOVIE STARTS 8 PM

-+hur&lt;;da~

POMEROY
151am ,Lmculn lerrace Jnn

Cl OSIOQ
, of alleys

,
(Contmucd rr;m• I ;tge I)
• Will accept appllcaltons l ot
certified SWJmrnmg mstruciOr Ptck
up an apphcauon With pool .tdmmJstrator Keath Eubank from noon to
p m After 6 p m c.1ll hun ,1\

g

92 -6635 at hts home
• .rcwpretl SR/2 fOr mayors
report
Syracuse f'oheeman l rm
Gtlhlm1 reported that he tssucd J6
cttattOns, mvcstJgaled three complatniS, drove 551 mtlcs dunng OJC
momhofMay
Atlendmno "ere counctl mcmbers Larry L.tvcnd cr. Demus
Wolfe Ebcr Ptckcns and Kathtyn
Crow, anti Clerk- l rcasnrcr Jamce.
Zwtllmg

Umted States

·····~llllllt

spur fears
of possible
recession
By MARTlN CRUTSlNGER
AP Economics Writer
WASHINGTON - Wtdespread
layoffs m manufactunng and constructwn tnggered the sharpest
drop m busmess payrolls m four
years wbile the govenunent 's ch1ef
forecastmg gauge nashed stgnals of
a posstble recesston
The Labor Deparunent reported
today that the unemployment rate
showed a sUght dtp to 5 7 percent
even though a separate survey that
measures busmess payrolls plunged
by 101,000, the btgg es t setback
smce Apnl of 1991 at tl1e en d of
the country· s last recessiOn
It marked the second stra1ght
month that payrolls had declined
In Apnl, the JOb loss was put at a
loss of 7 ,000, markJng t11 e fmt
monthly dechne m Utree years
The Commerce Depart cn e nt
reported that tts Index of Leadmg
Economtc Indtcator s tell for th e
thtrd stratght month , droppmg 0 6
percent Ill Apnl Three COnSCCUUie
dechnes m the mdex can be a stgnal of an tmpendm g reces siOn
.tlthough the forecastm g g.mge ts
not tnfalhbfe
Tbe btg JOb drop 111 payroll JObs
caught analysts by surp n sc I he y
had been predtcung a "nse ol
around 175.000 The dechne. coupled wtth the sharp dcclme m the
leadmg mdex prov1dcd the most
dramauc evtdence yet that th e
economy h,ts entered .t pronoun ced

slowdown
'These numbers ,tre not good,
srud Robert Dedenck, an eco nomiSt
at NorU1em Trust Co 111 Ch tc.Jgo
"Tile real quesuon now rs "hetl1er
thts correcuon ts gomg 10 be short
.tnd JUSt a htccup or wall tl develop
sc lf-enforcmg weakness '
~ Fmanctalmarkcts rail red strong·
ly on the weaker than ex pe cletl
unemploym ent report Bond pn ces
surged, wtth dem and so strong for
Treasury's benchmark 30-yc.H
bodll that ti S yaelll fell to 6 46 per
cent , down from 6 60 percent late
Thursd,ly
A tegtonul b.mk m the Mtdwest,
Southwe st Bank ol St Loms cu t
tiS prune lcndmg r,lfe lo 8 S pcrcem
from 9 percent alter tl•c tcpons No
IndJOf Q:mk moved to Jn;lh.:h the c ut
unm edmtely Southwest l1.1s ollcn
moved .theatl o l larger b.mb on
prune rate changes rhc last move
m th e prun e rate was an mcrcasc of

a half percentage pomt 10 'l percent
on Feb I
Analy sts salll!Dvestors were

UNEMPLOYMENT

"

..........•...•......

75~

7o·;o:···-·-·· ······-······-..--. .···············r

57'tt
•
60 ~·

65

••..................

55
JJ A SONDJF M,t,M

1994

1995

Monthly 1ncrease 1n non farm jObs,

1n thousands
600
500

-101,000

100
JJAS ONDJF

1994

AP

bettm);! that the ecnnmrm:

wc~tkness

bas become so Widespread U1a1 the
Federal Reserve will soon start cut

tm g f d iCS
Wall Street h." coll ltnuell to
soar to new lughs as mvestors bet
that the Federal Re se rve ha s
ach1eved 11S hoped for ''soft landJDg, ' m whtch growth s low s
enough to keep mnauon under control but not so mu ch th at a new
recessmn IS tnggered
"All of these reports are pretty
negat1ve It ccrta10ly rat ses th e
spec ter ol a recesston sa1d Cynthia Latta, an cconom1 st a t DRIM cGrav. IIIII Inc of I ext ngton
Mass
The May unempl oymcm report
showed w rd e,pread v.e.1k ness 111
manutu..: tunng and con~truc tJ on
f'actory employment fell by 56,000
JObs the b1ggcst set hack srnce January 1992 wilh th e JOh losses
showmg up In a number of mdu s·
lfiC~

ConstruCtiOn employment was

do"" by 57 000. although analysts
blamed some ol tim ucclllle o n
weather f.Jctors Ilea' y ra ms and
lloodtn g, cspccJa ll ) tn til e Sou th
contil butcd tp construct ron 1.1yofl s
la.'\ t montJ1 t11e govcmmem ~rud
1 he 5 7 percent overall uncm
plo)m ~ nl rate rcfl ec tell ,, tin)
Improv ement I rom " 'i 8 percent
rate m Apnl when the JDhlc" rat e
h.td shot up by 0 1 p c ~eentagc
[Xlllll

Kath!trme (, Ahrahatn com mJS
s10 ner ol the Bureau of Labor
S taH st 1cs smd lherc was no deny

mg that UJCre ha s hccn " dcl mllc
softcnmg m lahor markets

State firm on 33

corridor~-

(Contmued from l'uge IJ

The U S 33/lnterst~tc 77 corndor 1s destgnatcd ·" ,, maJor st.ate proJCCI he added
CnrnJor backers set pnont 1cs for 1ts dcvelopm c nr Srorv s 1u.J fhe
M~1gs Cou nty port• on between Rock Spnngs and the R11cln c !Jndgc
toppeu U1e ltsl In descendmg order the members agreed on the /\tlle ns to
Flood benefit set
Datwm section, the Lancaster bypass and then tl1e Nclsonvtllc b1 P•l%
A llood benefit w1ll be held lor
Last yc.tr Congress a pproved $1 31 mtllton to the Mergs conm·cw1 as
Joseph .mu Rit.a Whue of Cheshire, \
one of four state dcmonstrallon proJCCLS Story satd Dcspatc earhet con
who h~d damage to numerous per cems, Lhat money remcuns secure anti wil l he usctl on the portiOn nc,ucst
so nal aems upholstered furnnure
to the R1tclne hndge
and uultu es tncludm g bouled gas
A number of potentJ,II de;elopment silc s ex1sl ,,long the coiTl dor he
t&lt;mks Volunleer a\lcttons wtll be added
,
held The Rocky Mountrun Boys of
"flw
mcctmg
was
11npoiL1lll"
Story
s.uu
"II
.JJiowcd
us
tl&gt;
sho"
U1 crc
West Vtrg101a and "l11e Clark l81mwas
mMnunlly
111
the
comdm
m
\\hat
Wtl'i
unpon
nnt
ly wall prov1de cntcrt:unment J he
Corndor b.1ckers mt cnd to meet wnh ODO I' o ff1 Crt ls on , rcgul:u
benefit Will bcglll at S pIll June 9
b~tsls, ll c addctl Aho 11101~ mcc tm g~ w1ll he ~ct wuh IC!!I"I.HOI'-1 to dl..,cus\
at the Amcnc an l cgwn annex '"
lundmg
M•ddlepoll

Un!ls of the Metg s County
E
M d
s
merg ency
e tea 1 ervJce
responded to s1x c.tll s lnr.c,SJ sUmce

StOCkS

Pu bhdlt'd c\lcry nf!crnoon M ondny '1hrough

1Jy Csrr•norMo1or Moult

Public dance
The Belles and Beaus Western
Style Square DaQce Club wtll
sponsor an open dance at the
Semor CitiZens Centet, Pomeroy,
Saturday, 8-11 p.m Tom Poe will
be the caller All western style
square dancers are mvtted
Refreshments

Bable School set
Vac.llton D1ble school wall be
held at tl1e Mount Hennon Umted
Brethren Church Montlay tl1rough
1une 9 9 30 II '10 a rn 1 he closmg progf81n be on June l I, I0 30
am

rr===~==~:""'===""l!

cusPsm 9601

orno4516°
suosCRti'TION RATES

Chester reur..lon set
Chester Alumnt Associauon
banquet and dance wtll be held Saturday mght at the Chester Elementary School. The dmner wtll be
served at 6 and the dance wtll
begtn at 8 MUSIC Will be provtded
by Out of the Blue

Btble Schoolannounc•d
The Rutland Nazarene Church
w111 have Btbl e sc hool Monday
through June 9, 9 30 am -noon !at
the church There wtll be classes
for ehtldren ages two to 14 Theme
Will be "Biazmg 1r.uls w1th God's
Love

EMS units log six calls

The Daily Sentinel

11leD:~JiySr.ntJnd

Alumni to decorate
The Chester Alumm Assoctat10n wtll be decoratmg for the
alumnt banquet, Fnday, 6 p m
Anyone wtllmg to help ts asked to
attend

~~a~h~ niu~d~~~ate

lnc ... .... .. ....
=~-+---'-_J:;:;:;;::::';:'~~~~~~-:-:~~~L~Imltcd
lllmed1a-ln= · =

wonder that they arc be!QIIJllllg -to speakGr, pemung to slrrmrt:rung
cons1der senously a man whc&gt; IS all
posstbtliucs that ha vcn' t been
three House Speaker Newt Gmthought ol 111 Washmgton for 60
years
gnch?
B ut At nen~an voters r.uely elect
What's more, there .tre Signs
lhdl Mr Gmgnch IS not unaware a hery personality lO the nation's
ol, or mdifletent to, nil th(}~peculrt
htghesl office In that powerful
ltOD swtrltng aruun d h tm H IS post , lh ey pre f er gentler type s
"vacauon tnp" to New llampshtre (Ronald Reagan, Ill tlus as m so
c.m't poss1bly be pure conlCJdence , much else , 1s the par adtgm ) In
he stmply has to be test!llg th e ltme the pubhc may become accuswatersmthatkeypnmarystate
tomed to 1 'Speakcr Newt ,'' and
The scenano tsn't hard to tmag• learn to love, rather than fear. his
me - !l's Ule Lochmvar swry 1~1 boytsh zeal Bill even some conserover agam The dashmg young vauvcs who admlte h1m enonnous
hero's beloved ts condemned to ly (as I do) wonder tf, m 1996, hts
marry another, but be swmgs her ~ommatwn wouldn't be "a bndge
up mto h1s saddle and makes off too far "
Even so, don't count htm out
wtth her before the w!lne~ses can
recover from thetr astomshment
Conservallves may not be wtlhng
All very well; but are the Amer- to see thetr current opportunlly to
tcan people ready for Newt Gm- transform Amenca thwarted by the
gnch as president? Have they been lack of a colorful candtdate
properly mtroduced to, and preW1lliam Rusher 1s a OJStmpared for, that posstblhty? Smce guished Fellow or the Claremont
Repubhcans set zed control of Institute for the Study or StatesCongress last November, Mr Gm- manship and Political Pbilosognch bas indisputably been the phy.
dommant ftgure tn Washmgton
(For mformahon on how to
(Prestdent Chnton has been communi1=3te electronically with
r~duced to mststmg on bts own Ibis columnist and
con''relevance '') At the forefront of tact Ameri~ Onlm&lt;cjly_ catllnll--l-~­
every baule, leadmg therellargC,-sOO:s17·63 , ext. 831
ha s been th ~ Silver -maned young

Edwm C. Teter Jr, 76, Point Pleasant, W Va, dted 1bur.;day, June 1,
1995 at his restdence, following a lenglhy 1llness
Jie was a reured uullwright and a member of Local #2430 m
Charleston, W.Va.
Born Feb "24, 1919 m Clarksburg, W Va , he was a son of the late
Edwm C. Sr and Jesse Laurel (Snyder) Teter In addtllon to hts parents,
be was also preceded m death by Utree brothers, Robert and Jack Teter
and Edward Lantz.
He is survived by bts w1fe, Violet M Shackelford Teter, a son and
daugliter-m-law, Ronald L and Kay Teter of Harrogate, Tenn , two
daughters and son-m-law, Margaret and Bill Crawford of Apple Grove,
W.Va, and Jane A Teter of Pomt Pleasant, a daughter-m-law, Marge
Teter of Charleston. a brother, Hubert L Teter of Wh1tuer, Caltf, and
five grandchtldren and four ~t-grandchtldren
•
Servtces wtll be I p.m. Sunday to the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home,
Pomt Pleasant, wilb Pastor Max Spurlock anti the Rev Ron me Long officJatlDg Bunal w1ll be m the Teter Farntly Cemetery on Rock Castle Road
Fnends may call at the funeral home on Saturday from 6-9 p m

' ,,

than expending limited resources
on those who are al(eady gone
The sculpture idea has been
dropped, sources say, as of last fall
The "living" memonal is on hold,
but can be embraced by tbe Secretanat at any time because it doesn't
require engravmg or such - JUSt a
ceremony wtth a pledge of money
As of now, the plans are to
engrave the names of all Clvthan
and nuhtary personnelm one place
- scrappmg the memortal on the
North Lawn, as well as the other
tdeas But as wtth everythmg else
at the Umted Nations, thts tdea IS
subject to revtston

"It's m lunbo at the moment,"
one UN offtctal told us But thts
offtctal qu1ckly added that tf
wouldn't take long to get a contractor to engrave the names, so there's
plenty of 11me before tbe anniversary celebrauon this fall
The debate over a memonal
comes at a tune when the safety of
U N offtctals ts mcreasmgly
1mpenled Peacckeepmg operauons
have 111ushroomed m recent years
- 171separate operations are currently m progress. And as the
Bosman cnstS ts provmg, the U N
aegts no longer protects soldters
the way it once dtd
By the end of 1994, accordmg
to one count, 1,176 staffers and
peacekeepers had been ktlled m the
bne of duty smce 1948 The death
rate ts nsmg qutckly, however, evidenced m part by the 39 U N
staffers who were killed m Rwanda
m Apn11994
U N Secunty Coordtnator
Benon Sevan says hts btggest
won y ts that many belligerents
now seem to condone VIOlence
agamsl peacekeepers Smce 1992,
42 U N staffers have been shot to
death tn nonpeacekeepmg satuattons m var1ous counlnes - usu~­
ly when provtdmg farnme rehef or
other humanuartan asststance
"Not it ,stngle case has been
resolved and nctther has anyone
been arrested or brought to JUSttce," Sevan told us He added that
several measures are now bemg
constdered that would strengthen
tnternauonal law to prov1dc
tougher pumshments for coqntr1es
that condone v1olence ag81nst U N
offictals
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are wrtters for U naled
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

The Dally Sentinel • Page S

..;....._-Area Deaths-- Job cuts ·

OHIO Weather
1\ccu-VVead&gt;er"

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy •"Middl,port, Ohio

Stacey Veterans Me monal Hospt
1·~
•
5 21 p m , C htltlr e n's !lome
__Road_,_ Pearl Pro!fitt, VMH
9 06 p m , Gen ll.trtJngcr~P~ar
~kway,JohnBoOtllC,VMJI
10 24 p m Bali _Run Road, Har-·well Curd Hol zerMedJc.tl Center
RU1LAND
4 34 .t m • Ash Succt, Jolm IItle
VMII
8 46 p m St.tlc Rout e 689
motor vehtcle "" tu cnl M1 chael
Patrtck ,O'Bieness Mcmonal llos
pttal

u . · f· a~ -news
- nOSpl

VETERANS MEMORIAL
T)lursday admtss 1ons _ none
Thursday dtsc hargcs _ May belle Dougt1matl, Mtddlcport
HOLZE~ MEDICAl CENTER
Discharges .June 1 - Crys tal
DIX.OO, ZaC11ary Bf OWl\ M r~ Norman Pluml ey and ll.lll ghtcr
Btrth _ Mr ,mu Mrs ('.mnrm
L1vely , daughter Ga lllpolrs
(l'ubhshed wtth pcrnu«aon)

JOHNNY bi)f;-.
\111 (.111"'0'
MNEMONIC 1!1(\VUH_\RI
............ - ·.,.,..,. ........ ',.,"' ......
~

~•H II

•

1' ,

Chal"rman sup port s b"ll
I
(Contmuedfroml'age I)

woulll spcctly .UJd &lt;~&lt;lure" fundmg
tlccd·
'
vacwpoan t," Fox estHTJ.Iletl th.ll ll
I w.urt to restore hope to ctluca-woulll cost an extr.t $ 1 7 billion per - non" l!C" nitl- "ftncre,, ·,-"""'.,..-,...e- - - yc~ t~mectallequnydcmands
fulllu y thatpcrvndt'scler)tlnn g
It s not gorng to happen ''""when you get th ai se nse that
becdu~e we de,al Wi lli the s.un c l.lx
nOb Od) C.\rCS you get tim trag payers as you do "''h lcvtes and 11\cntatton, and lthmk we h,1 ve to
there s strong taxpayer re&lt;tsta ncc.
do sornctlling strullurally In tcslorc
he said
that hope
However I ox sa•d he IS llltllat
mg dascusswns wllll Gov George
KANAUGA DRIVE-IN
Vomovtch. s st,\fl 1o explore the
ieastbllll) ol a ballot tssue that
the neell.s ol all dJStnct s
Admnung thm has" ·' . mmontv.

WALT DISNEYS

COLONY THEATRE
FRI THRU THURS

WALT DISNEYS
A GOOFY MOVIE G

WHILE YOU WERE
SLEEPING PG-13
AND
WALT DISNEYS

ONE EVENING SHOW 7'30

HEAVY WEIGHTS PG

446.0923

446-1088

· ROAST BEEF DINNER
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Vegetable

Dinner Roll

~··

1 JD P" OAIL'r
8A'f/III)Jil

~'Pilti!I':S

'"

•

TFIY OUR HOMEMADE PIES
Open 1 Days A W®k
10:00 am to 10:00 pm

•

�•

I
I .

Sports

The Daily.· Sentinel

do Men:cd tried ev

Rockets top Spurs 100-95 to win serie s

In the French Open,

•
By HARRY ATKINS
DETROIT (AP) ~ Detroit
knew the Chicago Blackhawks
would be a powerful playoff test,
unlike the San Jose Sharl&lt;s.
Realizing that there would be no
more 6-2 blowouts, the Red Wings
went 10 work.
The effort produced a 2-1 victory as Nicklas Lidstrom scored a1
I :01 of overtime in the opening
game of the Western Conference
linals Thursday night.
"Both teams played the way
ing malcb~s.
playoff hockey should be played,"
llic, 19, was born in Buchares~
Romania, 10 an Australian mother Detroil coach Scotty Bowman said.
"None or the top players on either
and · Romanian father. The family
moved to Australia when be was • learn had anyroom at all. Timl wl!S
pure, old-time hockey."
10.
Ga1nc 2 will be played Sunday
He remembers harsh living conat
Joe
Louis Arena before t11e bestditions in Romania .
"You had 10 stand in lin e for of-seven series moves to Chicago
.
everything - bread and the rest- fur Garnes 3 and 4.
Joe Murphy opened the scoring
and I didn't have lhe right to [l_l~y
al lrclubliCCiii:Ise'We had applied 10 witll a lirsl -period goal for Chicago. Keith Primeau tied it for
·emigrate," he recalled.
·
!lie already is assured of earning Detroit in t11e second.
more with his showing here than
his entire previous career earnings
or $12,900.
Draper had won onI y lhree tour
CINCINNATI (AP) - The genmatches in his ca reer, all in th e eral manager of the Cincinnati
Japan Open when he reached the Bengals says he will go to Balli. qum·tcrfinaJs, again ancr winning a more 10 check prospects of moving
berth through qualifying .
U1e team to that city.
Eve n down two se ts against
" I expect a lot of U1ings to gel
Schaller, he attacked.
aclive very soon," Mike Brown
·'When things get tough , I he
told 111e Cincinnati Enquirer for a
only thing I know is 10 be aggres- story published today . "We are
sive ," Draper said. "I never suc- worried now more than ever U1at
ceed . wheil I wail 10 sec what hap- we won' 1 be able to put the pieces
pens in a point."
together here and &lt;tre seriously cnnllic had a reasonable ch~ncc or sideri ug Baltimore."
advancing ·even further - his
Brown wouldn't give a specific
third-round opponent today was date for his trip to Baltimore,
Yo unes El Aynoui of Morocco, where, he expects 10 be offered a
another qualitier. Draper is sehed- $200 million package that includes
ulet.l to play Richey Rcnebcrg on a n;novatcd practice faci l ily anti a
Saturday.
·
stad ium yielding the tenant $44
"Every player is ranked hi gher million per year, compared with U1e
!han me, every player has more $8.5 million tbe Bengals gel in
experience than me," Draper said.
Riverfront Stndium.
(Su...EilliNCH OI'EI'S .unl~ge.5)

Two Australians
enter third round

.. ,,:;,,

.

lly DAVID CRARY
1'1\RIS (1\P)- You won't find
them I!StCcl anywhere in U1e 1995
1\TP playl&gt;1 )iuicl~, Yoli will,
tiHliJ~h . lind Scott Draper and
i\ ndrc.w llie 111 the third round of
the l'rcnch Ore n. two upstarts from
Australia playing the tennis of their
hv..:.s.
ln a lmamamcnL where most of
the seeds arc st ill around, they have
I"'&lt;&gt;Vitktl tt-hdty-;&lt;h&lt;trc-ohhe-upsas·
after ga in ing berths tlJrough

'"''Y
d1~

qualilic:uion process.

lite. a J'J:year-o ld ranked 256th
111

the world. hac! never before won

"m:~tch ·,n any offic ial tour even!.

Ycl l1c Slunncd l 5 th -seedet.l
Ru.:lltud Krajicek ln a sccond-rouml
ll\c-\cttcr alter ~:&gt;eati n g Christiano
( ';lf :t lli o lltaJy in lhc first roumJ.
I he I)Sih-r:IIIkcd Draper, who
ttlllt..., 2.1 ncxt Mnnday, bc:u No. 21
ln!l.t\ B 1urkman in th e first round

111 live sc- L". theu upset 2401-rankcd.
( :dhc• t Schaller on Thursday 4-6.
4 I•. J.(, (7-5). 7-5. R-6. Schaller
~n t n~ d the- match with ~oni c fan-

l:uc. hav11tg just hcatcn ;vorlcl No .
2 PctL: S: tmpra:-. in the lirst TOtmU .
· "l \Vi uc-d Sampms to win, so I
l'Ot lld · lay him.' ' Draper sa iU .
··nu o he h~rc. in the t.hird roumJ
ul

;1 (

iraml Sl;un.' it' s a dream lm

ll1C

lin· .md Draper arc hotll pl ayi ng
1n tltL'H ~.;t·cond

caree r Grand Slam
t:\t'Jll lhL\' wen:. admitted into thi!-'tl'&lt;U ·~ Aii ... t,; tli·;-111 O pi.!n as wi ld
wub--"lllil pruu1ptl¥ lnst !heir &lt;!Pen-

::tu::

His last three-pointer, with 1:58 93-92 with 2:42 remaining.
Robinson drew his fifth foul
to play, put Houston ahead 97-93 ,
with
9 :48 left and went to the
then he clinched the victory by
bench, but came back for what
making ~o free throws 13 seconds
· probably were the most miserable
from the misb.
"! wa feeling it the whole 6: 15 of his career.
Drexler, who came to his homegame," Harry said. "When it's a
town
of Houston in a Valentine's
hot gym, I get into the flow of
Day
trade,
made two free throws to
things."
·
put
!l)e
Rockets
ahead for good. 94Robinson scored 19 for San
93
with
2
1/2
minutes
10 play.
:
Antonio, but missed two free
"We
were
in
position
to
lake·
throws and commit\,Cd a fatal
it," Spurs coach Bob Hill said .'
turnover in the finall:06.
"We just couldn't finish it."
•
Avery Johnson had 19 points
Robinson.
just
6-for-17
from
the
and ;tO assists, Sean Elliott scored
18 points and Dennis Rodman had field for the game was 0-for-3 in.
14 points and 17 rebounds for the the final quarter. After he missed·
inside. Harry made his fmal threeSputs.
pointer.
,
Someone asked the Rockets'
missed
two
free
•
R.ohinson
Kenny Smith if, with all the dramatic comebacks, this was a team throws with I :06 remaining. After~
Cassell made one of iwo free '
of destiny.
' "I wouldn't say destiny," he throws, Rodman's rebound basket•
said. "! can't predict the future. . with 28 seconds to go kept San,
Antonio's fading hopes alive.
·
But when we put our game togethBut
Harry
was
fouled
by
Roder, no one can beat us."
'
The clincher didn't come easily. man and made both free throws.
San Antonio had won four ~
After Drexler stole Robinson's pass
and found Elie for a layup with straight on the road and liked its
chances of sending the series back"
5:56 to play, Houston led 92-83.
to the Alamodome for a deciding
But San Antonio's Doc Rivers
scored seven during a ,10-0 run. Game 7, especially since Houston "
Robinson capped the rally with a was playing its 16th game in 30 .
free throw, putting the Spurs ahead days.

mid-June.' '

·

·

The Bengals reiterated Thursday
·that they're still seeking a Cincinnati solution. Bro;vn said he met
wilh some members of the Cincinnati Business Committee about a
stndi um on Thursday, but "nothing

.,

'

.~11nnesot :1 (T apan1 - · 4) at

t(irn~~ 1-4), 11:35

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Mmne~'otD al Te.-.:;"", ):05 p rn.
t.r.Jkland al .Bnllimore, 11 :05 p.m

t:aslern Divi!;lon

111

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l..('ls i\.ngeleli
l;,anDa:go

nlrtill,lrl +2}, 7:J5 p.rn

2-4) at Nuw Y Cl rk

lh·tlllt,·l:-1).1 t~ p.m
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fthit'KU 1- 4), ti {1.~ p.m.
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Snillhl :_l_1l;_05 .P 1!'- - · ·
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lMusstna 3·3), U5 p.m.
Califorou• (.llo~ki t l·fl) at New Yorle
(Mc!Jowrlll-2). I :J~ p.rn.
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Sunday'sganu.:s

HouMuna! ALlanta, l :Hl p.m.

( A ~hb~2.·3) ,10:05p.m.
Pl1il ~dtdp h ia '(Schil\1.ng 1·0) 111 Still
Fr~nci~co( Po rtuga I ••
3 I ), l)t :U 5 p.m

ill!

St.LouisatONClNNA11.2:1Sp.m.
Piltsbur&lt;•h at Colorado, 3:05p.m
!~''
NewYork.atLusAnseles.4:05p.m.

Mon!lealolSan0ie~o,4:05_P. m.

Salu nlay's ''allu.os
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Plu\ adelrl11a (Quantrdl4·1)
ar San
Francisco (Wilt:on 2· 2), 4:05 I' 111

4,5

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5

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204 Condor SL
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•

SYStEM

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Serving Meigs County Since 1868

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of Insurance Companies

Phone 992-4484·. Rondy
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.

Norman &amp; O'Meara lead
in Memorial Tournament
ByBOBGREEN ·
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) - The
only thing detracting from Greg
Norman's impressi vc comeback
was an unfavorable weather forecast.
Nonnan, who took otT the last
six week.~ because of back spalms ,
and Mark O'Meara shot 6-underpar 66~ Thursday for U1e overnight
lead in the rain-delayf;d and
uncompleted first round of the
Memorial.
Fifty-five of the starting field of
113 were stranded by darkness on
the rain-soaked Muirficld Village
Golf Club course. Thev marked
their positions and were "scheduled
10 resume play today at 8 a.m .. with
the second round scheduled to slarl
at 9:20a.m.
But the weather forec as t inLermiUent showers and rhmu,Jer-

stonns are ex¢cted through Sunday - and tournament hi story
indicate things probably won 'I go
as scheduled.
·
A 3-hour, '25-minute rain delay
Thursday morning marked the
22nd time in the 77 rounds in tournament history in which weather
disrupted play.
While the rorcca.~ t was far from
good, it wa."i hardl y

~L"i

had as Nor-

man secmet.l to indicalc.
"With t11e forecast we have , I
wanted to get as good a round on
th e board as I could . You never
know what will happen in the nex1
three days," he said, adding he wa.~
thinking of the 1990 Memorial .
Norman won that e vent with a
birdie on the tim~ hole of the thircl
round, then saw the last rouncl
rained out a nd th e tournament
reduced to 54 hob.

DRIVE
THRU
FOR YOUR
CONVENIENCE

c.

"I'm just going to take one malch

te.rm experience, community presence, and
someone who is with you both be fore and
after tnings happen . Just do this one thing,
and leave the juggling act to us .

FINEST EQUIPMENT AVAJUBLI.

.

.

By RONALD BLUM
vice president of scouting and play- a recruiting tool .
Texas then se lected Florida
NEW YORK (AP)- Top pick e.r personnel. "Everybody's on 1
San Diego used the second pick Stale right-hander Jonathan JohnDarin Erstad probably won't be in
their own timetable. And thc .day on Ben Davis, an 18-year-old son, who is 11 -3 witl1 a 2.95 ERA
tlle major leagues for a few years. !hat he's ready to play in the major ~alcher at Malvem Prep outside and 125 strikeouts in 125 innings
No. 5 pick Ariel Prieto may be up
leagues i~ when he's (!!ady to play Philadelphia. His agent, Ron for the Seminoles. He was schedm a few weeks. ·
m the maJor leagues.
Shapiro, quickly ag_reed to a deal nied..lu..pit~:h toda-y-against
. "W~ do~'t have any intention or
. ''When y..uu give him- tha r - thatincltides a $1] million signin g homa in the College World Series
!lf\lf\ed1ate destre to-rush-tnm\o-liiiletahle, you JUSt put an arlificial bonus.
opener, and s:fid he expected lo
pitch in .Baltimore, New York or deadline on him. Sometimes, that
"It's really tough to think about make it up to the majors quicldy.
Boston," Oakland general manager · extra pressure is not fair to either right riow," Davis said. "I'm only
"When they pu.t this kind of
Sandy Alderson sa1d Thursday
U1e team or the kid. So. we won't 18 years old, and I can't believe 1 money into a player, they don 't
night after the A's drafted Prieto. put a timetable. on him.
have this opportunity ahead of expect to waste my time and their
"We don't have any specilic timeErstad, a 20-year-old outfielder, me."
time in tltc mino,s," he said.
frame to gel Ariel to the maJor hil .410 in 57 games for the ComPadres general manager Randy ,.
leagues."
- .. huskers this year with 20 doubles , Smith said Davis likely will be . .----------------~-------------------. .
Prieto, a Cuban defector , is 19 homers, 76 RBis and 11 steals.
· assigned to Idaho ~ails of the Class
between 25 and :1.8 years old -. n.o
. "This is a great opportunity," A short-season Pioneer Leagu e.
one seems sure. He was ruled ehg1- he said. • 'The last couple of days, I Davis, a switcb-biuer; was balling
bie for the amateur draft by the had a good feeling about it. It's a .507 .with six homers ancl 37 RB!s
\
commissioner's office even though great feeling to get that call. I'm in 71 at-bats.
he's pitching for Palm Springs in really excited about getting startJose Cruz Jr.. a 21-ycar-old out·
.the independent Western League. ed."
fielder from Rice who is a son of
. While previous Cuban dcfecwrs
Erstad, dral·led by the New York former major leaguer Jose Crul,
I
wer.e free agents, baseball oft:k1als Mets three years ago aflcr he fin - wen·l 10 Seattle with t11c third pick. ·
dectded to mal&lt;:e them draft-ehgible ished high school, ha.&lt; two ye:trs of Cruz hit .377 with 16 homers and
starung lhts year, even though football eligibility remaining, hut 76 RB Is 111 223 at-bats for the
they ' re professionals.
probably won'tkick again.
Owls.
Oakland general manager Sandy
California had been expected to
The Chicago Cubs then look
Alderson s~id. Pri~to wouldn't be . choose him and probably will hav e right -bander. Kerry Wood from
brought up muned1a1ely :- at least to pay a signing bonu s of more Grand Prame H1gh School 111
on the A's current road tnp .
.
than $1.55 million , the amount il Texil~. Considered as advanced as
. Prieto, a right-hander, is 2~0 cost the New York Mets to sign some college pitchers, Woods is
w1th 0.00 ERA at Palm Spnn¥s m last year's top pick, pitcher Paul
12-0 with a 0 .77 ERA and 139
strikeouts in 72 113 innings. lie
two starts covcnng 10 113 ummgs . .Wilson .
He's allowed three hils, stru ck out
"Whether I'm the frrst pick or throw s in the mid-90s and is sched16 and walked one.
the 20th pick, I ' m not going to ulcd lO pitch Saturday in the
"To our ve~cran scouts , he rep- change my approach to the game,"
regional finals of the Texas high
resents somethtng a cut above any- Erstad said.
school championship.
thing that would have been avail- . Thirteen pla·y ers in the first
"Even though he's only 17
able.lllt!SJ\S far .M.a s_mnmg_pllcher LilliJUL.w:re taken from colleges
cars old his J!Oisc ant.! mou·na
in this drafl," Alderson said. "Just and 14 from high schools. Thirteen · presence are similar 10lliosc o!aiithe way he ~arried himse!f ~hen were pitchers. A tok11 of 507 .play- cxperien'ccct coii(:Sc pitcher," said ~~
we all saw hun , plus hiS stutf .and · ers were lakeJUhrough~l-8-roundO"-il"llJoldis ; llie ubs' director of
~--"""ico~~IDJ~nd:and,.:'
.
.
thursday.
scouting .
. the punter lor na110nal
Teams will continue drafting
Florida used the sixth pick o n
,
champiOn Nebraska, wtil have a through Saturday . The rest of. th e oulfielder Jaime Jones of Rancho
draft probably will be released June Bernardo High Schoo·l in San
slower route to the big leagu~~ · .
"There IS no umetable. . said 12. The delay is to prevent college Diego. Jones has hiI .45 2 with 12
Bob Fonta:ne, the Angels' ass•starlt coaches from using the dral't list as homers, 32 RBJs and .26 steals.

at a Lime.~'

Tal~ to. yow inaependent agent. Insist on long"

3
l5

Plu\:Jtiel p\ua 5, 011c::ij.W1
Monlreal 6, St. LoUiS ~

~

()

GOOD "OMEST . PEOPLE

Division

lK

~.K
...~--

~~

French Open. !So_n_tin_ue_d_rr_om_._ra_ge_4_&gt;- - - - - - - - - - - - -

Chicago PI Aorid!l, 6:05p.m.

II

BACK . TO FIRST- Pittsburgh first baseman Mark johnson
the .pickoff attempt from pitc.her Denny Neagle while Cincinnati's Bnan. Hu~ter gets. hac.k to f1rst safely In the sixt h inning of
Thursday mght s game m I'1Ushurgh, where the l'irates won 5-3

- uk~s

EXXON FOOD MART "'

614·696·14001

Philade.lphia al San Francuco. 4;05
p.rn.

~6

--Y~
-- ~«·

Thursday's scores

&gt;1l Bustontl"lcmcns

1l 0)_ 1 n~p.m
O.IJ.;.hmd · (IJnl! v~ros 5· 1) 31 BoWmore

(\d1furnu1 tl'in\cy

727
57(,

625
.625
414

Wc-~lun

s.. n Fr.tnnt.CO

T(\nmio tl..cll~:r :.2 Htt CLEVr..L1\ND
-~-0)

New York {S:~berha&amp;en 1··1) at l.o .~
Angell.'i(Numo 0- 1), \ 0:0Sp. m..
Montte:JI (P:Ji&gt;sero 6·11 at San Diego

-

UNTIL
12 MIDNIGHT

1050 Carter Aoacl , Shade, OH

LESS
THING
FOR YOU
TO
JuGGLE

I
\gee.~

(Astac:io 1·2), 10:05 p.m.
M onlleal (Martinez 1·1) at San Dlti;O
(l·lani•'IIon O-l). \ O:Ol P·'"·

1-n :u CulnrOJtlo

12
12
16

CINCINNATI ....... 20
]i&lt;.JuSion :.............. 15

j;-.;._,~1. '~; , . lQ~ [l_ f!l.

Sn1lllc tDosH·I

............ 20

C\ucago .

S1

Thursdav's scores

l·.riday'!!

9
14
15

Ar

c..,ntrllll DivbiOII

1~
11

( :;lhl•lf\11.1

L &amp;1.

(Ritz 2~1 ), &amp;:05 p.m.
New y or k (Ml'IC...,
"2 - t ) at Los

- •~

6AM

ONE

A (l'u\lh
). ' r.m.
.
Jluuslo n (Kile 1-4) at Atlanta (Mmldux
4-1), 7:10p.m.
P111 sburgh {Lieber 1-4) at -Cu\urado

(Smoltz 3-2). 7·4(1 P m
Pmsbuq~h (loau.a
(Freermn l-2). 9:05 p rn .

NA1IONALLEAGUE
Is:.Ym

Tonight's games

OliCa go (Navarro 4-0) at Florilla (BurK 11 3-4) 7 05
e St . L~u\s (~~~kson li-G) at CINCIN-

NATI (Jar,,·, 2_21 . ? .· J' P·'''
.
llouston !Dr abek-' 1-21
ol Allonta

C'uh fomru at New York, I :.•.&gt; p.m.

7

.~!1

p.m.

-.c

6.5

1 'w!r :.! Uit·isiun

(t\a.lr!\-'IL\~P
Wd!.~ I "tl'/

---------

~"i~~~r~(~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~ I:O

_....,-

c:~u~

I

and four of the last five.
"We couldn't keep the ball in
the park," Chicago manager Gene
Lamont said. ''I think Jason had
real good stuff: But whenever he
made a mistake, they made him
pay . Hey, they're a good-hitting
learn tlmt' s real bot right now."
Ventura homered, his sixth, for
Chicago's first run in the fourth,
and Ray Durham drove in a run
with a forceout in the fifth . Ron
Karkovice hit an RBI single in the
seventh, and John Kruk doubled
home a run in the eighth.
•
Eric Plunk, Cleveland's fourth
pitcher, gul the last two outs for his
first save. stranding runners at second and third when he got Durham
on a called third strike.
"You can't forget the stand ings," Lamont said. "You wish
you could start from day one. The
trouble is , it's day 31, so you just
go from there." .

'

•

OPEN
SEVEN DAYS
A WEEK

-··-

3 2
Fl ' d
Lm Angd~~ 6, ALI ..tnhl 3
Ch11oago (Foslt:r - ) al
orr a
Pitt.~bur,ll S. CINCINN ATI 3
(We aU1m 1-2), 7;05 P rn.
-=~-...------;&lt;;iSLloui~;-(tk:bucl:&amp; 1-.1) at C!NCIN· ·~
N ·n
2 -0 7 05

p.m.

Sunday's games

r;

~::a,ltrn" Qi.yision
L ....

·1·

·

Prieto, Erstad &amp; Davis among top picks

·'
Milwoukt!"e ( Sp.uk~ l · ll llt K.~n~;~~
c 1rv (Gurdon 1-1), 8:05p .m

but.[astballs.
Yeah, and I didn't have a good
fastball, either," Rijo said. "I just
couldn't throw the slider the way 1
~anted to. It's been like that, but
1 ve been getting away with it."
Four relievers fmisbed up ·onl .
the Pirates' founh victory in the&amp;
Iast 15 games agamst
· the Reds Je 1' f
McCurry got Reggie Sanders ·on a
fly ball with the bases loaded in the
setenth, and Dan Miceli struck 0111
the side in the ninth for his seventh
save in eight opponunitics.
Sanders had a two-run double
and a solo liomer 10 account for ali
of the Reds' runs in their only loss
on a seven-game road trip.
"All good lhings come to an
end, and it was a great road trip," I
Johnson said. "Now 1 hope we can
crank it up when we get back
home"
•
·

In continuing baseball draft,

Education Planning .
Business Phone:

.

the season and the 464th of his
advantage over second-place
career. He's tied with teammate
Kansas City, the .biggest f~rst-place
Dave Winfield for 18th place on
lead for the Indians since 1954.
the career home run list
"It meilns that we won another
Black (I-I) allowed two runs
four games, and I'm not saying. that
and
four hits in five innings, notchfacetiously," manager Mike H!lfing
his ijrsl winfor the Indians
grove said. "Coming into the sea- ·
since he beat the White Sox in
son, we fell the White sox were a
team we had to beat this summer. · September 1990, a week before
Cleveland traded him to Toronto.
That still remains true. I am trying
The Indians brought him back as a
to downplay this, but I'm not trying
free agent Ibis season.
to make it ho-hum. Yeah, it was a
''Very impressive. I don't U1ink
big series."
I've been on a team that has this
Eddie .Murray, Albert Belle, .lim
much firepower froni top to botThome and Paul Sorrento homered
tom," Black said. "It can be anyfor Cleveland, which has had four
body from first to ninth. On the
home runs in a game five times this
year. Robin Ventura homered for Giants in '93, we had a pretty
potent offense, · but this is somethe White Sox.
Murray had two hits, leaving thing else."
Jason Bere (1-4) allowed Sorhim 30 away from 3,000 in his
career. The Jacobs Field crowd rento's two-run home run in the
demanded a curtain call - and second, his lith, and solo shots in
the third by Belle, his seventh, and
Murray obliged - when he hit a
Thome, bis ninth . Thome has
two-run homer off Tim Fortugno in
the seventh, his sixth home run of
homered in three straight games

By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Cleveland Indians came into the
season thinking the Chicago White
Sox were the team to beat in the
AL Central. They still believe that.
It's just not such a scary task
. anymore.
"I lhink we sent a message that
we're a good team," But! Black
said Thursday night after the lndians, with four home runs1gave him
a 7-4 victory over the White Sox,
completing a four-game sweep.
Cleveland has won f1 ve in a row
overall and improved the best
record in the American League to
22-9, matching the besl start in
team history . The 1941 and '66
Indians also started out 22-9.
The White Sox, Ieat.lers of the
AL Central by one game over the
Indians when the strike hit last
August. now have fallen 1 1 games
back. Cleveland has a six-game

cia! turf stlldiurri, which opened in ·
specific emerged."
"We waited to see if we could 1970 . Reds owner M arge Schott .
get a new stadi.um here. and we wants a more intimalc, natural
haven 'l really sal down to look . grass stadium, and Brown wanL" a ,;
hard and seriously at Baltimore stadium wilh more scaling anti rev~
enue-producing luxury boxes.
until now," Brown said.
. "It's a very attractive alTer. ll's
Atlrlr~llilllf 11 ('llflltf(iltf{ worltl
just that we've been here 28 years
I"'O/f'u ioualiAm"mtd illlf',-ity.
and· that's liard to throw over the
side.' '
Business leaders have pledged
Cuclder Consulting Inc.
to help the Cincinnati Reds huild a
new, baseball-only stadium, and
College
said tl1ey would try to work a similar deal to accommodate the BenThe two teams share Rivcifrom
Stadium, which is owned by
Hamilton County and operated by
lhe city of Cincinnati.
Neither is happy with the artifi-

Milt ~ I should just go ~P ~re
and sWing the way I can swmg.
Luckily for the ~irates, NeaJ!le
- one of baseball s weakest hitting ~itchers -wasn't up there
sw1.~gmg.
. .
.
,
That was b1g-ume m1stake,
Rijo sai.d of walking his pitching
opponen t. ''Tb a t' s th e toug h es t out
for me . .J'm trying to just throw it
o-ver the plate and I couldn't do it.
That was bad for me . I was mad
and look what happened."
A four-run inning, that's what.
"Walking the pitcher is the ultimate sin," Reds manager Davey
Johnson said. "That's just asking
for trouble. He was probably just
relaxing there."
Actually, be wasn't. Rijo (3-3),
who has had elbow problems in the
pas~ couldn't find his slider, so the
Pirates- predominantly a fastball· · team - ·saw almost nothmg
·
h1¥tng

Indians capture fifth straight triu.mph

job of screening Bel four."
·•
Burr distracted Bel four by '
engaging Chicago forward Tony '
Amante just as Lidstrom let fly .
"After Keith won the faceoff, I :
took Amonte in front of the net, ·
and Nick's shot went straight in,"
Burr said. "There were a lot of lit- "
tie things done well .on lhlot goal ."
The Blackhawks now. arc 3-2 in"
overtime games in the playoffs. ·
They fell two games behind Toron-:
to with an overtime loss in l.he tirsl!
round, U1en rebounded to win U1e
series in seven games. Chicago ;
then won tlucc over~me gruncs in a
four-gmne ~weep of Vancouver in '
the seeond round. ·
'.'
"We know we have lo keep it''
low -scoring :md slay out of lh e··
penalty box," Chicago coac\l Darryl Suuer said. ".We did thai , but "
we just didn ' t score the last goal. "
We've certainly shown 111m we can ~
win in OT, but they ended it with .'
the firSt chance."
·

gals.

streak since they won 10 straight in
July 1975.
Neagle (5-1) ~tc:" ~e Reds to
!htee runs over s1x mnmgs, and,
JUSt as lmponantly, drew a basesemp\Y, two-o~t w3!k that led to J~y
Bell s RBI smglc .and Merced s
three-run homer m the second
mnmg
M ·
.
.
erced, who prev1ously had
homerc:d only once, added a solo
ho~.er m the seventh.
!he I list coup~e of weeks ,
not~.rng' s been. gomg good for
me, Merced sa1d. "Sometimes I
pu~h myself too .hard . I've been
gom~ up th~re and Irym~ to hit the
ballm the nver, and that s not me.
"I saw everybody else in the
.lea~ue hittmg.h~!De ~n~ an~. I was
trymg to d? ~t, he sa1d.. But I
talkde(d to (hilling .coach) Milt May
an manager) 11m Leyland, and

By beating White Sox 7-4,

Brown looking at Baltimore as Bengals' poten'tial new home
Guy Guckenberger, Hamilton
Co unty commissioner and cochairman of the regional Stadium
Task Force, said keeping the Bengals in Cincinnati remains the task
force's lop priority.
"We have taken (the Bengal's)
opportunity of Jnoving to Baltimore
very seriously and fully intend to
meet deadlines U1at (Brown) says
should be mel,'' Guckenberger
said "We had planned In make our
recommendations that would
respond to his concerns in about

1

;!

also

Blackhawks 14-5 the rest of ihe
It was the fifth ovtrtime game
way.
of the playoffs for the Blackhawks.
"We knew before we started
"They had won U1eir last two in
that they would shut us down,"
overtime, ant.! we remember lhal
Bowman said. "They didn't finish
year Montreal won 10 games in
wilh the best defensive record in
overtime, so you thought about it,"
the league on accidc.nl. ·Except for
Bowman said.
ll was the f~rst overtime playoff the last one, we won all our games
with them, but they were all very
victory at home for the Red Wings
since March 29, 1960 against close.''
Lidstrom's winning goal came
Toronto. They .had lost 10 playoff
on a slap shot from just inside the
overtime games in that period.
The teams are well-malched,
blue line. It was set up by Primeau,
who won a faceoff with Rocrlick,
despite Detroit's 4-1 record against
Chicago during the abbreviated and by Shawn Burr. who.helped
regular season. The Blackhawks screen Chicago goaltender Et.l
playet.l without Jeremy Roenick
Belfour's view of the puck.
aner he went Clowir April 2 with a
"Usually, t.trere is l:ither a goal
knee injury. But he is back now .
in tile first couple minutes, or il setEach team had· nine shots on
lies down anti goes to double overgoal in t11e first period. Then the
time." Detroit defenseman Paul
Red Wings , U1e NllL's best team Coffey said. "I told Keith to bear
during the season, began 10 gain ar1 down and win the draw, because
edge . Despite playing without that's how those goals arc scored.
"He did a great job to do that,
Stevfl Yzennan, wHo is expected to
.
Nick's
got one bf !he best shoiS in
miss atlcasttwo weeks witl1 a knee
the
league,
and Shawn did a great
injury , the Red Wings ouL1hot !he

~

.

aJ

,,

NOT TillS TlME! -Houston center Hakeem Olajuwon (far lert)
hlucks the shot of San Antonio guard/forward Se.an Elliott in the first
'luartcr of Game 6 of the Western Conference finals Thursday night
in llou&lt;ton, where the Rockel&lt; ended .the Lone Star series with a 100')5 homc -cuurt win. (AP)

~ 0~ _

home runs and cou~~~m~i!~hu
aftr;r con lti
'tb b' ·
ly,
and' his
~~ach 1 ~em: ':J':g~
stopped trying.
•
PY
Natural! he hit h
and surpnse
· y, anotberaAndom~ rtun,
'
'
· Red~'
'JUS
quickly
the Cincinnati
n· as
arne ~innin str ak
. me~ just likegMe~ce;.':S bh~::~ry
slump
mg
Me~ced. breakin
f
0
2
18 slump that thr!te~~e~ ~0 ;lorhis avera e below
h
rop
twice
drove in · 300
~ ' omered
Denny Neagle won ~i~r A~:h .and
row as the Pittsburgh p· te
a
the Reds _ Thursda Ira s at
53
1f it weren't f(J' M~' bat
and the bat that Nea
s
-.
1
shoulder_ the RJse!~gp~~:ahis
.
. . ve
rna t c h e d th eu 1ongest wmnmg

4

last year. It was special. I don't
want to larnisb tha~ but rigbt now
this Was better."
~
As ·usual, Hakeem Olajuwon
was magnificent. He had 39 points,
17 rebounds and five blocked
shots. In six games against the
league's MVP, ·David Robinson,
Olajuwon avef38ed 35.3 points and
12.5 rebounds.
The showdown between these
two Texas towers was no contest.
Olajuwon's play inade his fifthplace finish in this year's MVP voting seem ridiculous.
"I've never seen anyone on this
planet play like this guy," Houston's Clyde Drexler said. "He is
phenomenal, night in and night out.
He does it so easily people come to
expect it. Thai's the ultimate."
Drexler, the Rocket without a
championship ring, bad a rough
start Thursday nighl, but he made
big plays down the stretch and finished with 16 points and 10
rebounds.
Olajuwon' s biggest help,
though , came from Raben Harry.
Shifted to power forward much of
the time as coach Rudy Tomjanovich went with a smaller lineup, Horry made six of II threepointers and scored 22 poin(S.

·

Pirates r~co.rd 5-3 victory over Reds
Byt.tt:B~~~~~~

ByBOBBAUM
HOUSTON (AP) -The 1-10
series between Houston and San
Antonio is over, and the Spurs are
road kill.
Perhaps no team has bad a more
precarious or impr9bable route to
the NBA Finals thaJ\ the Rockets.
They were defending champions. But after a sixth-place finish in
the Western Conference, nobody
gave the Rockets much of a cbance
for a repeat title.
Now, after coming back from
the brink of elimination against
Utah and Phoenix, Houston bas
disposed of San Antonio. the team
with the league'~ best record, and
is headed back to the Finals.
' 'Once agilin, we proved all the
doubters wrong," Houston's Sam
Cassell said. "This ball club is a
playoff team. When the playoffs
come, we know what to do."
The Rockets finished ofr the
Spurs 100-95 Thursday night,
pulling to rest the bomecourt
demons that haunted this series. It
took six tries, but finally the home
team won a game, and Houston
won the best-of-seven series·4-2.
·'I'm probably the proudest man
in the world,". Houston coach
Rudy Tomjanovicb said. "I don't
want 10 take anything away from

Pomeroy •Mi~dleport, Ohio

~Efl!cause of Merced's homers,

Page4
Friday, Juni 2, 1995

In the NBA. Western Conference finals.

•

l=_rlday, June 2, 1995_

'

•

IS OUR POLICY

'I'

Top-seeded Andre Agassi was
to face Spain's Francisco Clavet
today , with tile winner racing either
llic or El Aynoui in tile fourth
round.
One of Agassi's lOP. rivals for
the title, fifth-seeded Thomas
Muster, was to meet Carlos Costa
of Spain as he bid for his 31st
straight victory on clay .
In featured wom en's matches
today .. second,secdcd Steffi Graf
was to face Italy's Nathali e
Daudone an&lt;J'No. 4 Conchita Martinez was to play Julie Halard of
. France .
The only seed to lose Thursday
was No . 16 Marc Rosset of
Switz.erlarul, beaten 7-6 (9-7), 7-6
(7.,4),';,2-6, 6-3 by Femando Meligeni of Bmzil.
.
·
!'he iiiOSicminent loser was SICfan Edberg, who was eliminated by
No. 12 M ichacl Stich of Gennany
7-6 (7-3), 6-3, 6-2.
Edberg, 29, has won each of the
other-Grand.Slam-.evenls twiro. but
never the French. The native of
Sweden was runner-up .to Michael
Chang in 1989 and reached the
quanerfinals lhrec other times.
The five-set loss to . Chang still ·
haunts Edberg.

"Once !lost that match. I didn't
think that much about it because I
gave it all that I had,'' he said.
" Now 1he more I think about it,

with all those chances U1at I had in
U1e fourth set (I 0 break poinls), the
tougher it is 10 realize tha t I actually lost thai match."

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�Pap 8 • THe Dillly Sentinel

Pomeroy • MICICIIepoit, Ohio

Fi'ICiay,

Friday, June 2, 1995

Junl2, 1995

The Dally Sentinel·· Page 7

Pomer_
o y • Middleport, Ohio

I

In Ame,rlcan Legion baseball action,

.

·

. .

-

Gallipolis splits twin bill
with Waverly
.
.

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Starr Writer
After suffering through a doubleheader sweep Monday against
McArthur Post 303 and enduring a
15-6 doubleheader-opening loss to
Waverly Post 142 Thursday, the
Gallipolis Post 27 American ugion
baseball team rioted for eight runs in
tbe sixth inning of the nightcap to
claim a 10•3 victory - it.was its
first of the new season - at the
University of Rio Grande's Stanley
L. Evans Field.
The first game, which Post 142
won 15-6, saw Waverly chase Post
27 starter Ryan Williams off the hill
with 13 runs that came in part
because of the hosts' five errors. All
that came despite Williams' 3-for-4
effort at the plate (he had two
and a double) and before Ga~li
got on the board in the fifth.
But Gallipolis got even .
second game, though it seemed
"so close and so far away" would be
the order of that affair. Why?
After Gallipolis got on the board
in the first, offensive 'frustration was
its lot [or the next four frames. How
frustrated? One runner left in the
second. Two left in the third. One
left in the fourth .
There's more . Runners at first
third in the fifth were the result of

.

head of center fielder Owen Crarik
for a' tr:r·le. Gary Stanley,. who had
replace starter Kevin Edwards on
the hill in the fifth, hit a ground-ball
single to left that got McCorkle
home to cut Waverly's lead to 3·2.
After Gee and left fielder Josh
Blakeman traded places on the field,
Williams, pinch-hilling for Gruber,
hit a fielder's-choice grounder to
thir&lt;! that Aaron Walls threw past
second baseman Wesley Ward. The
result: Stanley made it to third, while
Williams was aboard at first.
Then DBrunton, pinch-hitting for
Wilson, lined a 1-1 pitch into left to
get Stanley home with the tying run
and gel Williams to second.
After leadoff hitter John
Browning flkd out to center,
Gilliland singled to center to load
the bases. Then Mark Burns' line-

singles by Scott Gilliland and Buck
Reynolds. With one out, pincb-runner Jason Dailey , who ran for
Reynolds and replaced him in right
field, was thrown out in a steal
auempt at second base before Casey
Canaday grounded out to third to
end the threat.
That's how deep the hole was
that the hosts had to escape. Despite
Waverly's erasing the Gallipolis
lead with a two-run rally in the third
and. the guests ' adding an insurance
run two innings later, that 3-1 lead
was marked for erasure. Why?
The sixth: Waverly was on the
brink of breaking away when with
two out, Mike Westfall singled to
center. Ordinarily, such a high, powerful drive would have gone to the
for extra.bases, but center fieldWilson got the ball back to
to persuade Westfall to

drive single to left center got
Williams home with the go-ahead
run and kept the bases loaded.
Canaday's two-run single,
Stanley's RBJ infield single and
Williams' three-run double followed
to give the hosts all the insurance
necessary to secure the victory.
In that rally, McCorkle and
Stanley scored twice, while every, one else (Trent Thomas can be
counted as having scored for Burns)
except Browning and Chris Toler
scored once.
Stanley sandwiched a called
strikeout betWeen two groundouts to
shortstop in the Waverly seventh to
earn the win in relief.

lppipg
&amp;1111&amp;
Wa'&lt;l!rly.........
000 0 = 15-10-0
Gallipolis.......OOO 033 o = 6-5-5

s

Sunday Services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Okla.homa Sta.te staying close to Stanford·
. By RUSTY MILLER
to shoot a combined 3-under on the
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- hack nine to build their fead.'
Oklahoma State's Chris Tidland
Oklahoma State has been No .. l
has played the last 36 holes in U1e and Stanford No. 2 for most of Ute
same group with Stanford's frcsll- year, even though the Cardinal
man superstar, Tiger Woods.
returned four starters from las t
Even though Tid land says .he ~ year's team and added the reigning
finds himself watching Woods U.S. Amateur champion, Woods.
more than he might another oppo- Many have all but conceded the
nent, it apparently hasn't affected title to Stanlord.
his play .
But coach Wally Goodwin said
Tidland shot bis second straight tltat doesn't add 11p.
3-under-par 69 Thursday to share
"If yo u don't know anything
· the low individual score with about golf, you might expect us tu
Auburn's Chip Spratli n midway , win, " Goodwin said. "If you know
through the 98th NCAA Division I anytl1ing about colleg~~te golf, you
men's golf championshi p at Ohio could put any of six or eight teams
State's Scarlet Course.
in Umt group that co uld wih it"
.
With Stanford and Oklahoma
Tied for !bird were North CarState battling it out for UJC lead oli11a State, Arizona and Houston,
as expected - it figures that Tid- all at 584. Houston shot a diStnal
~-~-~uu•u. migbl-gllt~more-opponunitit !~304-ffi-the__QJJ&lt;!ning round and was a
to see Woods, a Cardinal freshman longshot to even-make Ute cut , but
who is also the reigning U.S. Ama- came back with a 280 - 10 strokes
teur chrunpion.
bett er than any other team - to ·
"I've played with him quite a jump back into contention.
bit and I know where he's going to
UNLV, Texas and Tulsa were
be and I alsn Ia\ow he's going to be
next at 585, followed by host Ohio
quite a bit ahead of me off the .State at 586, California at 587
tee," Tidland ~aid. "I watch him first-round team leader Arizon~
sometime(;, but you know he's real- Staic at 588 and Florida with 589.
Iy playing a different golf course
A dozen teams are grouped
!ban you. You JUSt have to dtsre- within eight sh011; of Stanford, not
gard that and go play your own counting the ones that could join
game."
the logjam Friday morning.
Behind Woods ' even-par 72,
Nine teams and seven groups
Stanford moved to 5-ovcr 581 and were unable to complete their
was nalfway toward defending its rounds before dark. They will comteam title as it took a two-stroke plctc their second rounds Friday
lead over Oklahoma State. Dut morning, then the 1ield wiD be cut
, Woo&lt;,ls said leading through two in half "-- from 30 teams to 15 and
rounds wasn't the same as leading from six at-large individuals to
after four.
.
three. Third-round play will begin
"We've only played 36 holes . itruhcdiately after tbe cut.
.
There are a lot of holes left," he
.Play was stopped at 8:32a.m.
said. "Anything can hnppen in 36 with Woods and Tidland playing
holes."
the par-4 second bole. Stanford' s
Woods and tbe Cardinal had to players headed for the clubhouse
sit through a rain suspension of and spent the next two hours talkalmost3 1/2 hours, then came back

Cincinnati Country Day
&amp; Greenwich ~sc to meet
Saturday in D-IV state final
The Silver Knights struggled
early against Galion Northmor pitcher J .T Triplett before breaking
through .
·
Adam Keslosky led off tbe lifth
illlling with a single.lfr.left on an_02 pitch, and AJ. Cohen followed
with a double to left-center that •
scoreol(ffili§Icy;- With one out,
Mike Tudor singled in the tying
run. Coben:s older brother, Dustin,
followed .wtth the btg hit: a two-run
trijl,l£ ~r.!_gbt.
_

·:when l'v~ had a goo&lt;! rQund.
the next day I seem to fight it a little," Spratlin )iaid.
Three strokes behind Spratlin
and Tidland came Tulsa's Dennis
Hillman - who had a second round 68 - and UNL v· s Mike
Ruiz, boU1 at 3-under 141.
Houston's Anders Hansen and
Marcus Jones of Texas were at
142, with Ohio State's Chris Wollmann, Charlie Wi of California and
Andrew Smecth of Weber State
an individual qualifier - next at 1under 143.

ing while Oklahoma State's players
went to a nearby submarine sand wich shop.
Play resumed at 11 :50 a.m. with
Stanford's Casey Martin and
Willi3111 Yanagisawa completing
rounds or 73 and N0 tah Begay
shooting a 74. Oklahoma State
moved into second with Tidland's
69, a 73 by Kris Cox and 75s by
Trip Kuehm: aml Leif Westerberg.
Tidland's second straight69 tied
him with first-round leader
Spratlin, who followed an opening
67 with a 71.

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Tickets available thru June at: Francis Florist, Pomeroy;
Baums ; Summerfields, Chester; Keebaugh's, Hawks,
Tuppers Plains; Reeds, Reedsville,

..

SUnday School- 10 a.m.

Service-7:30p.m.

.Rutland Fint Baptist Church
Sunday S.:hool- 9:30a.m.
a. ~ .

Pomeroy Flnt Baptist

Paslor: Paul Stinson
East Main St.
Sunday SChool-9:30a .m.

Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Fint Soulbera Bapllsl

41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O' Bryant

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- t0:45 a.m .. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.

First Baptist Chur&lt;b

6th and Palrr.c~ St., Middlepon
Sunday School-9:15a.m.

Worship- 10:t5 a.m., 7:00p.m.
A.B.Y.- 5:30p.m.
Lord's Supper lSI Sunday or e\lery month .
Wednesday Sc:f\lice· 7:00 p.m.

Racine Flnl Baptist
Pastor: Rev. Larry Haley
Youth Pastor: Aaron Young
Sunday School· 9 :30a.m.

Wo,.hiP- 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.
Silver Run Baptist
Pasto;·: Bill Little
Sunday SLhool - IOa.m.
Worship - 11 ... m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

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4x2, automatic, air, loaded.. ............

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

~

2- w .h 1d nve,
·
V8 , au t omat'1c ,.. .........

_.

.
------,..

.

Bethlehem Baplist
Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Berdine
W(l rship- 9:30a .m. Sunday
Bible Study .. 7:00p.m. Wednesday

Old Betbet Free Will Bapllsl Cbur&lt;h
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
E~ening- 7:30p.m.
Thursday Sefvicc:~- 7:30

4do~4whe~~i~.~wmi~s .... ...

Hillside BapUsl Ch?Jreh
St Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7
Pas'tor : Rev . James R. Acree, Sr.

4 X4 .Ioaded ....... : ............................

FaUh Baptist Church
Railroad St., Mason
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
.Worship - 11 a.m._, 6 p.m.
Wednesday Scr\lices- 7 p.m.
'
Forest Run Baplisl
Paslor : Arius Hun
Sunday School ~ 10 a.m.
Worshif) - 11 a.m.

'

Mt. Moriah Baplist
Fourlh &amp; Main St, Midd!epor'
Paslor : Re\1 . Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.

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

..

Antiquity Baplist
Sunday School· 9:30a.m .
Worship- 10:45 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7:30p.m.

Rutland fm Wlll B•ptisl
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev, Paul Taylor
Sunday School - I 0 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

.... :.............

Catholic
Sacrt4 Jlrar1 Catbolic Cbunh
161 Mulberry A\le., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Hei nz

Sat. Con 4:45-S:!Sp.m.; Mass· 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. ·8.45-9. 15 a.m.,
Sun. Mass-9:30 a.m.
D'a.iley Mass·. 8:30a .m.

~~I !~~~~~it~~~·· · · ~2,495
. ...,...

-~

.

Church of Christ
Pomeroy Churtb of Christ

212 W. Main St.

Paslor : Andrew Miles

•• •••••••
• • ••
~,

I

THE BIG BEND COIOI11lfiTY BAND WILL
PJm&amp;ltNT A1f AFTitRNOOR OF MUSIC l1i
MIDDLEPORT l1i FRONT OF THE JUlfiOR
IDOH SCHOOL AT :ll:30 P.M. TIDS SUJIDAY,
.JUllfE TIDt 4TH.

608 EAST MAIN POMEROY, OHIO

. BRING YOUR LAWNCHAIRS AND joiN THE FUN.
IN THE EVENT OF RAIN THE PROGRAM WILL MOVE INDOORS
TO THE MEIGS JUNIOR HIGH AUDITORIUM.

Zloo Cburth of Christ
Sunday S.:hool -9:30a.m.
wo ..hip- 10:30 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m .

east State St~eet
Athens. OhiO

593•.

-

Worship· t 1 a.m.

· Sunday wotship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeling-7 p.m .

Forest Run
Pastor: Oeron Newrnan
Sunday School - 10 a.m .
Worship · 9 a.m.
Thursda~ Services-6:30p.m.

Sunday oc:hool- 9:30a.m.

l/2 mile off Rt. 325

Pastor: Vernagaye Sullivan

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

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Churth .

Pastor : Tom Runyon

Youth Meeting-5 :30p.m.
Evening Service~ 7 p.m.
Wednesday , Bible Study • 7 p.rn .
Rutland Church of Christ
Pastor: Eugene E. UnderwOod

15 Pearl St, Middleport .
Pastor: Rev . John Ne\lille
Sunday school ·9:30a.m.
Worship- J0:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m .

Mlnernille
Pastor: Deron Newman
· S1,1nday School • 9 a.m.
Worship - 1.0 a.m.

llysell Run· HOliness Churcb
Pastor: Robert Manley

Pastor: Florence Smith
Sunday School . 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m,

Pearl Chapel

Sunday School - 9:30 a,m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.

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

Worship. 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service- 7:30p.m .

Bradford Church of Chrlsl

Lourel Cliff Free Methodist Cbur&lt;b

Corner of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
·
Evan~elisl : Derek Slump
Youth Minister : Michkl Teagarden
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship ~ 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:00 p.m. .

Hickory IIIlis Chur&lt;b uf Christ
Pastor: Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

'

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

Pastor : Peter Tremblay .
Sunday School ·9: 30a.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

Rock Springs
Paslor:Keith Rader
Sunday School· 9:15 a.m.
Wors hip - 10 a.m. ·
Yoath Fttt o wsht~, Sunday - 6 p.m:

Rutt.nd Community Church
Pastor: Rev. Roy McCarty

Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Sunday Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Rulland
Pas tor: Arthur Crabnee
Sunday School -9:30a.m .
Wor"ship • 10:30 a.m.
Thur$~ay Services · 7 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
· Reorpnlzed Cbur&lt;b of Jesus Chrtll
of Loiter Day Salois

Liberty Christian Church
Dexter
Pastor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening- 6~30 p.m.
Thursday Service -6:30p. m.
Langswille Christian Church
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., ?oJO p.m.·
Wednesday Sef'lice 7:30p.m.

Jltml()(k Grove Churl':h
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school · 10:30 a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m,, 7 p.m.

Salem Cent~r
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sundl':ly School- 9:15 a.m.
Worship- 10:15 a.m.

Ponland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Janice Danner
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Snowville
Pastor: Florence Smith
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.

The ChUrch of Jea;us
Cbrbt or LaUer-Day Salois

St. Rl. 160, 446-6247 or 446· 7486

Bethlny
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School- 10 a.m .
Worship- 9 a.m. ,
Wednesday Services - I 0 a.m.

Sunday School 10:20-1 1 a.m.
Relief Society/Pries!hood 1 1:05- 12:00 noon
SacramLoflt Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking meeting, 1Sl Thurs. - 7 p.m.

Carmel
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School - 9:JO a.m.
Worship : I 0:45a.m , (2nd &amp; 4th Sun)

Lutheran
·

Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Christian Union
Hanford Cburtb ofCbrlst in
Christian Uoion
Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. David McMa nis
Sunday School - II a,m ,
Worsh ip-9:30a. m., 7:30p.m.
Wt:dnesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Church of God
Mt. Moriah Churcb of God
Racine
Pastor: Rev. James Satterfield
Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Kulland Chur&lt;b of God
Pastor: Gregory L. Sears
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship· I J a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services# 7 p.m.
Syratu~e

Flrsl C hurch of God
Apple and· Second Sts.
Pastor:· Rev . David Russell
Sunday School11nd Worship- 10 a.m.
Evening Services- 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.
Cbun:h of God qf Prophecy
O.J . White Rd . off St. Rt. 160
Pastor: P.J. Chapman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worsh1p- 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

New Life Church of God
S.R. 248 &amp; Riebel Road, Chester
Pastor: Rev. William D. Hmds
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship · 6 p.m.
·

Trinity Church

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

Walker Alley, Racine, Ohio
992·2804

992·7075

!Ieath (Middlrpon)

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

Sunday Sehoot - 9:30a.m.
Worship - t0:30 a.rn.

172 North Second Ave.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Paslor: Rev. Dewey King

Pastor: Rev. 0 1Dell Manley .

Bradbury Cbun:b of Christ

Middleport, Ohio

~-:---"":7.

R... of Sharoa Hollaeu Chun:'
uading Creek Rd., Rutland

Pastor: Stanley Mincks
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship . 9:45a.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

Bright Idea!

Flatwoods
Pastor : Keith Rader

Pint Grove Bibk Holiness Churtb

Tupptn Plato Churtb of Christ

A

ClASSIFIEDS

Sunday School9:30 a.m.

Wednesday Servtce -7:30p.m.

Pomeroy : Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.143)
·
Pastor: Roger WatsOn

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE

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

• Worship ~ 11 a.~., 7:30p.m.

Wednesday Services -6:30p.m.

'

RCHES &amp;TRADITION

EalerpriH

Harrisonville Road ·
Pastor : Rev. Victor Roush

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 ,a.m ., 6:30p.m.

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

•

Pastor: Deron Newman
Sunday School -9:45 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.
Wednesday Strvices. 7:30p.m.

Calvary Pilp1m Chapel
•

Chaster

Asbury (SyncuH)

Wednesday prayer service· 7 p.m .

Oaureh announeements
sponsored by these area
merchants.

•

Ceatn~l

Pastor: Rev. Rick Maloyed
Sunday school- 9:30 a.m.
Sunday worship. !0:33 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m..

Children., church - 10:33 a.m. Youth 6 p.m.

Worship · llr~ . m ., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service!' -7 p.m.

... , ...... :.........

..

Holiness
DaavUie Hollaeu C'urcb
31057 State Route 325, Lanpvll~

/ ..

Retdnille Church of Christ
Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10::30 a.m.

Tuppen rlalns St. Paul
Pa.!itor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School - 9..J.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.
Tunday Services- 7:30p.m.

,Coffee hour fo1Jowin&amp;

Sunday School· 10 a.m.

Victory Bapllsl Jndependanl
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pastor: J&lt;imcs E. Ke'esee
Worship. IOa .m., 7 p.m.
Wednl!sday Services - 7 p.m.

UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.

Sunday Sehool10:30 a.m.

Pastor. Jack Colewove

Paslor: Les Hayman
Saturday Service· 7:30p.m.

"'tooper

326 E. Main Si., Pomeroy
Rector: Rev. D. A. duPlander
Holy Euchari51 and

BtarwiUow RJdl" Chur&lt;b of Chrilt

W-ednesda)' Service - 7 p.m.

Ke..t.. llk
Pastor: Rev, Cltarle1 Muh
Worship -9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.

Gract EpiKopol Clt•rc'

Pastor-Jefrrey Wallace
1st and 3rd Sunday

Worship -lla.m. and 7 p.m.

Frte 11\'Ul Baptiot Cburth
Ash Street, Middtepon

Cburcb or Christ

Worship -9;30 a.m.
Sunday S.:hool- 10:30 a.m.

Sunday 5&lt;hool , 9:45a.m.

90

\

KtDO

Pastor: Rev. David ·Bryan

Gallipolis Post 27
P!ayer-oos,
Ill! r h!U
h IIi John Browning-ss. :......... 4 I
0
3 4 Scott Gilliland-2b ........... 4 I
I
0 0 Mark Burns-1!.. ............. ..4 I
0
0 I Buck Reynolds-rf.. ......... 3 0
0
0 0 Casey Canaday-lb ......... 2 I
2
1 o Jake Blazer-3b ................ 2 o
o.
ISUIU
0 0 Kevin Edwards-p ........... 2 0
0
.
I'
· I 0 JamieGruber-c ............ ... 2 0
0
V-6, automatic, air ................. ........... :
0 0 CoryWilson-.cf.. ............. l 0
0
0 · 0 w·ee's~~~~~ ,=~-1~~'--tt!
.,l
s ~45--Gary
4x4, aY1QJl
Jow miles ................ ..

·

.

Baptist
·Hope Baptist Churtb (Soulbom)
570 Grant St., Middleport

Worship - 10:45

Congregattonal

· Sth and Main
Pastor: AI Hartson
Youth Minister: Billlfrazier
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Thursday Prayer Meetins- 7 p.m.

Wedn~sday

w- c••rclt ofChrtot

Middleport Churt• ofC.rilt

Assembly of God
Ulltrty Aaembly of God
P.O. BO• 467, Dudding Lane

Waverly Post 142
Player-pos,
all [ h IIi
Wesley Ward-2b .......... ..4 0 0 0
Owen Crank-cf.. .............3 0 I I
Josh Blakeman-lf/p ........3 0 0 0
JoeCrabtree-lb .............. 2 0 0 0
Aaron Walls-3b ...... ,....... 2 .. 0 0 0
Mike Wcstfall-rL ........... 3 0 I 0
Ronn ie Crabtree-c ......... 2 I 0 0
Alex Gee-p/If ................. 2 1 0 0
J .R. Ramsey-ss.-.... ........ .3 I I 0
Totals
24 3 3 1
Pitchers
Gee: 5 1/3 ip, 2K, 3BB &amp; 9 hits
Blakeman (L): 2/3 ip, 2K, I BB &amp; 4
hi•
.

Ryan Toler-ph ................
.......... 2!
•HEYDA Y AT THE PlATE- Gallipolis· Post 27 pinch-hitter Ryan Williams (!...): Pitchers
4 1/3 ip, 4K, 5BB, 2 Chris
Williams heads to first shortly after riDing Josh Blakeman's 0-1 pitch HBP &amp; 7 hits
D Brunton-ph ................. 2 I I
into left center field to score three runs in the sixth inning of the night· McCorlde: 2 2/3 ip, IK, 3BB &amp; 3 Totals
32 10 1~
clip of Thursday's American ugion doubleheader against Waverly. hits
Pitchers
The double, the last of Williams' four hits on. tht day, iced a nine-run
Edwards: 4 ip, 2K,
4BB &amp; no hits
S tan Iey (w) : 3 ·tp, 4K·, no BBs &amp; 3
riot tlult helped the hostS come from behind to win 10-3. (OVP photo
by G. Spencer osborne\
hits
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-

sport

Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

Gallipolis (1-3) will play the Bob
Evans Dream Team Saturday at 1
p.m. at Stanley L. Evans Field,

Gallipolis Post 27
Player-oos.
all [
Ryan Williams-p ............ 4 I
Trent Thomas-1!.. ..... ,..... 3 0
Wes McCorkle-ss/p ........ 2 0
Chris Toler-lb ............... .4 0
Gary Stanley-2b ............. 4 1
0 Brunton-rf................... 2 I
· Bobby Fink-3b ............... 2 l
EricHumplireys-c .......... 2 0
Jason Dailey-cL ............ 2 I

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) Cincinnati Summit Country Day's
baseball team ·swamped Galion
Northmor with an 11 -run fifth
inning - a Division IV state tournament TeGOid --en--it&amp; way-to-an
11·3 win on Thursday.
The victory pqt~~Oay
(22-3) in tbe state finals against
Greenwich South Central (20-7) on
Saturday . A win in that game
would give the Cin~innati school ·
it&amp; fJrst sta~~tonship in any--

Evening - 7;30 p.tn.

Worship . 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Eptscopal

, · 33226 Children 1t Home Rd.
Sunday Sdlool - t 1 a.m.
Worship -10a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Sunday S.:hool - 10:30 a.m.

lppipg toiAJs-SCJtopd Wil'
Waverly .........002 010 0 = 3-3-2
Gallipolis ....... 1ob 009 x = 10-13-2

Waverly Postl42
Player-oos,
all [ h IIi
Tyler Gullion-~b ............ 3 2 I I
Mike Lee-If ....................5 I 2 1
Owen Crank-cL ............ 4 1 0 0
Joe Crabtree-p ................ 1 3 I 2
John Maxsoo-c ........ ....... 3 0 0 0
Mike Hannah-rL .......... .4 3 2 2
Jeremy GilloU·lb ........... 3 2 1 0
E,Jan Maxson-ss ............. 5 2 3 2
Dave Crank-3b ............... 3 1 0 0
Greg Cook-ph/p ............. 1 0 0 0
Totals
32 15 10 8
Pjtcbers
J. Crabtree (W): 5 ip, 5K, 3BB &amp; 2
hil•
Cook: 2 ip, II&lt;, 2BB &amp; 2 hits

p-"'1

Pastor: James Miller

Statistical sheet

-Ronniie Crabtree, Waverly's No.
7 hitter, then hit a .grounder to third.
that Jake Blazer threw past Canaday
at first. Westfall was waved on to
the plate, but Canaday recovered in
time to throw a .strike to catcher
Jamie Gruber that retired Westfall
and ended the Waverly sixth.
The Gallipolis jailbreak started
when Wes McCorkle took Alex
Gee's 3-1 pitch and hit it over the

In NCAA men's golf tournament,

Apostolic
CltUdt or J-. Clttlol A&amp;&gt;ootolk
VanZandl and Ward Rd.

Mason, W.Va.
Pastor : Neil Tennant

Sunday School -9;30 a.m.

Sunday Scltool - ~;30 Lm.
Worslup- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday.Servic:es -7 p.m.

St. John Lutheran Church
Pine Grove
Pastof : J?awn. Sp~lding
WorSh1p - 9.00 a.m.
Sunday School- )0:00a.m.

Morning Star
P,astor: Kenn eth Bak er
Sunday Schoo!· 9:45a.m.
Worship - 10:30. a.m.
Thursday Services - 7:30p.m.

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henr y Sts., Ra\lenswood, W.Va.
lntrim pastors: George C. Weinck
Sunday School- )0:00a .m.
Worship · 11 a. m.

Sun on
Pastor : Kenneth Baker
Sunday School . 9:30a .m.
· Worship· 10:45 a.m. (1st &amp; 3rd Sun)

St. Paul Lutheran Chorcb
Corner Sycamore &amp; Se.coitd St., Pome roy
Pastor: Dawn Spalding
Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
~
Worsh1p- II a.m.

East Ltlart
Pastor: Ken Moller
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m.

United Methodist

Racine
Pastor ; Ken Mol ter
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship· ll a.m. and 7 p.m.

Graham United Methodist
Worship . 9:JO a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),

7:30 p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)

Wednesday Service -7:30p.m.
Old Outer Bible Christian Church
Sunday School : 10 a.m.
Morning Worship: 11 a.m.
Evening Worship: 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Coolville United Methodist Parish
Paslor: Helen Kline
Coolville Church
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worsh1p · Y a m.
Tuesday Services - 7 p.m

Mt. Oliwe United Methodist
Off 124 behuld Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spnes
Sunday Schoo1-IJ .30 a.m.
Worship. l0:30 a.m , 7 p.m.
Thur.sday St:J\Iices- 7 p.m.

Belhtl Church
ToWnsh1p Rd., 468C
Sundav School- 9 a. m.
wor!ioh !P.- 10 3m.
Wt:dnesday Servi~o:es · 10 a.m.
llockingpor1 Church
Grand S1rcct 1
Sunday School- \0 a.m.
Wor"sh!p - II a.m.
Wednesday Services- R p m.

Meigs Cuuptrati,·e Parish
Northeast Clusler
Alfr&lt;d

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worsh1p · 11 a.m., 6.30 p.m.

Tonh Church

Co. Rd. 63

Sunday Sc_hool ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

( ~es ter

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thursday Scrv1ces • 7 p.m.

Nazarene
Racine Flrsl Church of lhe Naz.a~nr
Pastor : Scon Rose
Sunday School-9:30a .m.
Worsh!p • 10:30 a.m , 6 p.m.
Wt:dncsday Services- 7 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor: Bob Randolph
WorShip · 9.30 a.m.
Sunday School • I0:30a.m.

Middlepor1 Church or Che Nazarene
Pastor: Gregory A. Cundtff
Sunday S&lt;:hool ·9:30a.m.

Long BoUOm
Paslor: Rev. Charles Mash

"~\a
cw:rr j, . w

P.
!Boor.s

93 Mill Street

Middleport, Ohio 45760
(61 4) 992-6657 - (99B·ooks)

J.

204 Condor St.
.
\..!::!=Y.Je

Pomeroy, OH

992•2975 .

Nationwide Ins. Co .
of Columbus. Oh .
804 w. Main
992-231 8 Pomeroy

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

.p::F~~~~:. ~

Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

RAWLINGS • COATS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-5141
264 South 2nd

Middleport

Wednesday Services.· 7 p.m .

Full Goopel Ualt..outt
33045 Hiland Road, Porner&lt;&gt;y

Reedl•llk Fellowtlllp

Sunday School- tO a.m.

Ourdt oftbe Nezan1e
Pastor · John W. Douglas

Tuesday &amp; Thursday - 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Roy Hunter
Evemng 7:30p.m.

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wor5hip - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service'· 7 p.m.

Syracuse C~ur&lt;~ oltbe Nna,...
Pasmr: Rev . Ric:k Sturgill

Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Worship .. l0:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wt:dnesday Services · 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Cburcb of tbt Naurene
Pastor: Rev. Thomas McOung

Sunday School " 9~0 a.m.

Worship - 10:30 a.m . and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
Chester ChurC'h of tbe Nanrtoe
Pastor: Re\1. Herbert Grate
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Rutland Church of the Nazanne
Pastor: Samuel Basye

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 •.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday

Services ~

7 p.m.

Portland Firsl Church of tbe Nazareat
Pastor: John W. Douglas.
Sunday School -1.0:00 a. m.
Worship-6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m

Faith t'ull Gospel Church
Long Bouom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worsh !p- 9:30 a:m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
· Friday - fellpws hip service' 7 p.m.
lbe Btllevtrs ' fellowship Ministry
New Lime Rd .• Rutland
~~ P.astm.:.. Rtv....Mat&amp;lfetl- Robin_son
Services: Wed nesday, 7:30p.m.

Sunday. 2:30p.m.

llarrison"ille Community Churrh
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday- 9:30a.m. ·and 7 p,m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Endlimr House nr Prayer
(at Burlingham church off Route 33) '
Pastor: Robert Vance
Sl;nday worship - 10 a.m.
- Wednc::!lday serv1ce ·6:30pm
Tht Salvalion Army
115 Butternut Ave .. Pomeroy.
Sunday SchOOl- 10:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:00 am, 7:30 p.m.
Middleport Community Church
515 Pearl St., Midillt:purt
Pastor. Sam Anderson
Sunday Schooll 0 a.m.
Evening-7:30p.m.
Wedne~ay Ser\licc • 7:30 p.m.

Faith Tabernacle Church
Bailey Run Road
Pas10r: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunda)' Schoo l ~ 10:00 am
E\lening 7 p.m.
Thur!'day Service - 7 p.m.

White's Cb,apel Wesleyan
·
Eoolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Serv~oce - 7 p.m.

Calury Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev .. Blackwood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worsh ip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7 :30p .m.
Stiversvllle Word of Faith
Paslor : Dav1d Dailey
Sunday Xhool9:30 a.m.
E\lening • 7 p.m.

Rejolctag Ufe Cbur&lt;h

500 N. 2nd Ave .. Middlepon
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School ~ 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.
· Churt·h or Jesus Christ,
· Aposlolil': Faith
1/4 mile past Fort Meigs on New Lima Rd.
Pastor: William Van Meter
Sunday-7 :00p.m.
Wednesday-7:00 p.m.
· Friday-7:00p.m.
Clifton Tabemade Cbun:h
Cllfton, W.Va.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worsht p - 7 p.m.
Thursday Serv1ce · 7 p.m.

Pentecostal
Pentecostal Asstmbly
St . Rt. 124, Racme
Pastor: William Hobad:
"und&amp;y School · 10 a.m.
Evenmg - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 1 p.m.
Mlddkport PenltcoUal
\
Third Ave .
Pastor: Rev.: Clark Baker
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evemng. 6 p.m.
Wedncsda)' Sef\lices- 7:00p.m.

Syracuse Mission
1411 Uridgc:man St., Syracuse ·
Pastor: Roy (M1kc:) Thompson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
~venmg -. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Ser\11Ce- 7 p.m.
llaul Community Chun:h
Off Rt . 124
Pastor: Edsel Han
Sunda~ School

· 9.30 a.m.

Presbyterian
Syracuse First United Pn:sbyttrian
Pastor: Rt\1 Krisana Robmson
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worsh1p - 11 a m.

Worship· 10:30 am .. 7:30p.m .
Oyesvillt Community Church
Sunday School- 9.30 a.m
Worsh1p . 10:30-a m , 7 p.m
ChriSiian fellowship &lt;;:euler
Salem St .. Rulldnd
Pastor . Rober t E Muss&lt;:r
Sunday School - 10 a.m
Worsh1p - 11 · !5 a m.: 7 p.m.
Wednesda y Ser.-Kc - 7 p m.
Morse Chaptl Church
Larry Faw, Supenntendent
Sunday school · 10 a.m..
Worship - 7 r m
Wednesday S~rvice- 7 P. m.
Failh Gaspel Church ·
~ngBouom

Sunday School · 9 ;\0 a.m
Worsh1p- \0:45am , 7:30p.m.
Wtdnesd~) 7:30 p"'
Mt. Olin Communih' Church
Pastor l.a"rcncc ·Bush
Sunday School - 9:JO a.m
Eventng - 7 p.m.
Wedncda) Servll'C -7 p.m·

'

Unitt&gt;d Faith Churth
Rt. 7 on Pome.rO) By-Pass
Pas~nr· Re\· Robert E. Smuh. Sr.
Su.nday School · 9 30 a.m
Worshlp- 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m
WedncMJa y Scrv1ce · 7 p m

{00'1

... ,..

~~Q!(~
··~

POMEROY, OHIO - 992-66677
BILL QUICKEL

llatrisonville Prtsby1trlaa Church
Wors.h1p · 9 a.m.
Sunday School· 9:45a.m
Middleport Presbyterian
' Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worsh1p · 10 a.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seventh-Day Ad"tnlist
Mulberry Hts Rd .. ~omeroy
PaMor : Roy Lawmsky
Salurday Serv1ces
Sahbath School · 2 p.m.
Worsh1p . 3 p.m

United Brethren
MI. llennon Uniled Brethren
· in Christ Chun:b
Texa~ Cummun ny off CR 82
Pas iCir Robert Sanders
Sunda~ School· 9;30 am
Worsh1p · 10 30 am ., 7.JO p m
Wednesday Services- 7-30 r m
Edrn United Brtth~n in.Christ
2 I '~ mde5 north of Re edsville
on Stalt; Route 124
Pastor Re\ Robert Markley
Sunday School · 10 am
Worsh1p- 7:)0 p m.
Wednc~ay Scrv1Ce!\- 7:30p.m,

RIDENOUR

SUPPLY
FURNITURE &amp; iiARDWARE
Homeltte Saws

i

Crow's Family
Restaurant
"F earuring Kentucky Fried Chicken"
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432

992·2121
'
Pomeroy
106 Mulbe.rry Ave.

W:Tod Cuck.... PrwliMnt

Frte:dom Gosptl Mission
Bald Knob. on Co. Rd . 31
Pastor: Rev . Roger Willford
Sunday School-9:30a.m .
Worship- 10:45 a m.,? p m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Faith Fellowsbip Cruude for Christ
Pastor: Rev. Frank!Jn Dick~ns
Sqv1ct: : Friday, 7 p.m.

1050 C.n.r RoM!, Shlidl, OH &lt;&amp;35718
BusJneu f't\one614 ·696-1400
MotJMI; 614-5-41-o208, FAX 61~1400

.•

Carleton lnterdrnomlnatloaal Cburt'b
Kingsbur y Road
Pash&gt;r: Jeff Smith
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worsh rp Serv1ce I 0:30a .m.
... Worship Serv1ce-Jst and 3rd Sunday, 7 p.m.
No Wednesday Evening Scrvace

Other Churches
Hubson Chrtsllan Fellowship Churth
Rev , Woody Call, Speaker
Sunday service, 7:30 p.tn.
Wednesday servict, ·7JO p.m.

Cuckler Cons~!!,i2&amp;1.nc.
.

· South Be-thel New Tesl1me:at
Sil\ler Ridge
Pastor: Duane Sydenstricker
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesda y Service· 7 p.m.

Fairview Bible Cllun::ll
Le1an, W.Va . Rt. 1
Pastor: Rankin Roach
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m .
Worship - 9:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service . 7:00p.m.

EWING FUNERAL HOME
I
·"Dignity and Sen •tce Always"
'
Established 1913

~;7':'"'1 .

Neo,. Seltltmeat C..n:~
Sunday Worship . 2:30p.m.;
Thursday sc.rvtces • 7:30p.m.

New H1nn Chun::b oft be Nazartne
Pastor: Glendon Stroud
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m ., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m

PAULEY, AGENT

CHURCH SUPPLIES &amp; BIBLES

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

r

Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.

214 E. Mam ·
992-5130 ·
Pomero.y

rMi\
--'57

Veterans
Memorial Hospital
I

115 E. Memonal Dr.
992-2104

Pomeroy

·,

'

I

�I

/

.

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Society
scrapbook

Anderson
.excels in
math

·.I

Brian Andenon, a 1995 gradu·

ate of Southern Higb Scbool,
achieved tbe second bigbest score
In the Stale in the mathemati"=S pol'·
lion of tbe l2tb grade proficiency
test

Tbe test was given to 104,826
students. or tbe total number, 629
swdents scored 356. Anderson bad
tbe second bigbest score of 328 In
tbe Obio Department of Education
test. His matb teacber at Southern
Local Higb Scbool was Carla Mor-

BRIAN ANDERSON
.;..

ris Sbuler.

Anderson is the son of Jim and

Becky Anderson, Racine. Tbc
youtb ranked fiftb in bis class witb
a 3.839 grade point average and
plans to attend Obio University tbis

nett , ~ electric guitar; Lank Wears,

Iiddle and lead guitar; SearonJ .lor·

RECOGNIZED
Josbua Moles of Cheshire was
among more tban 300 students
recognized for scholastic achievements at tbe recent Ashland University Academic Honors Convo."
cation.
Moles, the son of Josbua and
Terry Moles, 2624 Little Kyger
Road, received the Dr. Rendell
~oa~s End~wed Scholarship. He
1s ma]onng tn toxicology and biology.
BIRTHI.&gt;JI.Y PARTY

fall.

'Qut of the Blue' to strike a
tune at Chester banquet
"Out of the Blue." a prom in em
local band, will play music to
round and square dance. music. at
the annual Chester alumni banquet
which will be held between 8 and
12 p.m .. June 3.
The band members include :
Millie Reynolds, bass; Denzil Den-

A surprise birthday dinner was
held ror Robert Vaughan recently
at the American Legion hall in
Pomeroy.

dan, steel guilaf and mandolin; and .
Bryant Facemyer, rhylhm guiw ..
The group has performed at
Fairplains, Ripley. Beech Hill and
Nitro, W.Va. In Ohio, the group
has played at Jackson. Gallipolis,
Lowell. Kanauga, Marietla and
Summerset.
· The band will play at 2 p.m.
June 4 on the woun radio station
in Athens.

Allending were Cathy Workman, sons, D. J. and Shawn, Rowena Vaughan and son, Loring, Eliza·
betb Vaughan, Carolyn Tripp and
son, Daniel, Frank Vaughan, and
daughters, Pat Vaughan and Pam
Miller; Mr. and Mrs. Dick Vaugh·
an, Mrs . Zandra Hindy, Howard
Mullen, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Spencer,
and Joann Vaugh;tn.

Sacred Heart members
to attend convention
Women and priests of tbe diocese, including Sacred Heart
Church, Pomeroy, bave been invit·
ed to attend the Golden Anniversary Convention of the Diocesan
Council of Catbolic Women June
14, at tbe Jefferson County Civic
Center.
Special anniversary activities
will include a retrospective look at
tbc DCCW's past 50 years, witb
presentations by diocesan moderators and past diocesan prcsiderits; a
memorial service in honor of Bishop John King Mussiao and all
deceased diocesan moderators and
members of the Caiholic Women's
Club, and special recognition of all
charter members of the Catholic
Women's Club;
K;eynote address will be given
by Bishop Alber H. Ottenweller.
Registration and refreshments
will bC at 8 a.m. witb tbe convention op~ning at 9 and liturgy at

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~THIEN PIE:TE .. !lAID UNTO TM[M ,

CELEBRATE JESUS

GENESIS

Ru•UH . ,It, NO 81 DAPT i l£0 EVIUI'W'

WITH THE

BIBLE STUDY CLASS

OloiE Of" YOU I"' THE: I'M111E 0,. J[SUS

UNITED PENTECOSTAL

Every Sunday Morning
11

CH,.IST ,.01111 T'"IE

HURCH INTERNATIONAL

am

IUMI SSION OF SINS . AND VIE !IHIH.. L

·ON PENTECOST SUNDAY,

Ash Street
Freewill
Baptist Church

t'U: CEIIIti: THE GIFT OF THE H OL.,.Y

JUNE 4,
GtiOST

M

1995

Business Services
(u..sto~e Low RattS)

H&amp;H ~V/MILL

WICKS

Portable

HAULING

8andsaw Mill

(Specialize In
driveway epretldlng)
. Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

32124 Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
• Danny &amp; !leggy
Brickles
614-742-2193

Racine
Gun Club
Trap Shoot
Every Wed. Nite

5:30p.m.
Everyone
Welcome

MY BUSINESS

ALFALFA
AND MIXED

Residential &amp;
, Office Cleaning
PLUS
Pickup &amp; Delivery
Service
Owner/Opr.: Tom Lane
· Racine, Ohio
(614) 949-3005

HAY
FOR SALE
BAILED TO
YOUR NEEDS

949-2512

•Room Additions
-New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
1112/ttn

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

GUYS!
We want to hear
·from you !I! We're
live and waiting!! I
1-900-388· 7000
Ext. 9970
$3.99 per min. ·
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-742.0

-·

NEFF REMODELING

949-2192

SERVICE

FARMS

House Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Bath Remodeling
Room Mditions
Siding, Roofing, Patios
Reasonable
Insured - Experienced
Cali WayDe-~H 992·4405
For Free stimates

,,
AUCTIONEER
SERVICE
JIM REEDY Auctioneer
Antiques

4/I::W5

..

·''·;

Vacuum Cleaner Service Special-

Special offer includes·

1 Clean motor
2 Grease roller bear1ngs
3 ·Clean &amp; check ag1tator
4 Clean all moving parts

5. Clean &amp; check filter system
6. Check bell s
7. Check electrical system
8. Replace filter bag

The .· Sunday Times-Sentinel
.
SUNDAY, JUNE l8, 1995

Ail For Only $14.95 Plus Parts
One year warranty on work performed .
Valid on all nationally advertised brands.
We service most makes &amp; models.

W. Main St., Ripley, WV

304-372-6144

.•.• ; :.....

.

I

11 Your. Name (s):

I

.

I
I
I
I

II Your
Address:
.

1
1

I
I
I

I
I
I

..

II
I

1 City, State:
I

I Phone:

•

.L-·-·----..-----------------------.. -----------:.1
Fill out above form and mail with payment to:
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street, Poq~eroy, Ohio 45769

I

I

--

_,...

.

:, t:

.•

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

-~-

. 264 Upper River Rd.
Galli olis, OH. 45631

STORAGE
COMPARTMENTS
Now renting on S.R. 1
in Chester across from
·the Dairy Queen •.Size
. I Ox 28 ·store cars,
boats, furniture, ~r
whal ever you want.

Fri., Sat. and Sun

,

9-5
'

Located on 50 W. of Albany follow
flea market sign to Hutchinson
Auction House.
·
2-4 drawe( sheet, 2-maple dining
tables w/chairs; garden tools;
wood block plainer; antiques;
collectibles; crafts; and many
misc. items. Taking consignments
for upcoming hottsehold auction
and July antique auction. We will
also l)uy antiques and clean used
furniture. Call
bring this
weekend wh~n you come.

or

&lt;

~'

.~
'

Call992·3961

BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992·2772
. 539

. Office Hours: Mon.-Fri.
B:OO a.m.-3:30p.m.
Vinyl &amp; Alum. Siding,

Rooting, Vinyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.

I.

I'

Free Estimates

I'

SMIIH'S
CONSIRUCIION
Custom Building &amp; Remodeling
•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
• REMODELING
• SIDING
• ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992-5535
(614) 992-2753

Jackson

286-1553

MARSHALL UNIVERSITY
CHAMBER CHOIR,
directed by David
Caslieberry, singing
spiritual and secular music
on stage at the State
·'
Theatre, 523 Main St..
Point Pleasant, WV, Sat.;
June 3, 8 p.m . Adm . $5.00,
~tvailable at the· door.

Call for all of your storage needs
992-5251

Bill Slack
992·2269 .

&lt;RelriiJIIHaloro •F,_,..
otllahw_,o .
oH.W. Hutoro
-Microwo- •Diopo1111
•Tllonkl Melgo&amp;
Surrounding Areoo
(6U~~:J:1 or

~

Mon · Fri 8 a.m. · 6 p.m.
Sat. B p.m. · 5 p.m.
Sun. by !IPPt. only
Serving Pomeroy, Middleport
&amp; surrounding area.

Call for rate schedule
Min. $2.00

LINDA'S ·
PAINTING &amp; CO.
Interior &amp;
bterior

Take the pain out of
painting. Lot us do it'!or
you. Very reasonable.
Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
· message.
After&amp; p.m.
614-985-4180 ,..... '

Berbe, Perennllle,
EverluU•ge, RaDglni
laaltalll, ale.

(Depot St.) Rutland to
Leading Creek, then to
Paul ins Hill. Just 2 1/2
miles from Rutland or 4
1/2 miles from ·SR 7
Open Mon.-Fri. 10 a.rn.-.5 p.m.

Weekends Call614-742-2772

"·-------...1

CHARLIE'S
CONCRET.E
•Sidewalks
•Driveways

TONY'S PORTABLE
WELDING
Radiator Repair
Service Portable
aluminum welding

New radiators
available,
recores. also.

•Patios
.

•Porches
•Slabs
g92-3265

IJ

5/2llt mo.

I,.

ABieRue
I:Ca•uld Be Toursf
· Just Call
1-900-945·61 00

614·742·3212

Your

Sweetheart Is
As Close As

Ext. 1327,

Your Phone
1-900·945-6200

per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procail Co.
602-954-7 ~20

52.99

Ext. 2579
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.

HAUliNG &amp;
EXCAVATION

AB&amp;T AUTO
3RD ST., RACINE, OHIO .
949~2882
Owners: Ed Chll!ley &amp; Richard Moore
14 Years Experience in Area

•ALIGNMENTS •BRAKES
•TIRES •OIL CHANGES
Looking forward lo seeing old friends
and making new!
5119/!tn

Call
Tonight!
1-900-726-0033
Ext. 8878
$2.99 Per Min
Must be 18 yrs.
Pracall Co
(602) 954-7420
Lonely?

Limesl!lfle &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems, Trailer &amp;
House Sites.
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742·2138

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Cuslom
Frame Repair ·. ·
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR ALL MAKES &amp;
MODELS
992·7013 OR
992·5553 OR
TOLL FREE 1-800-848·007
DARWIN, OHIO

1:"":"
.

t.lc•lld

lft.A·WAY

SUMMER
. IMAGES

-1·900-884·7800
Ext. 4466

5:00-11:00
16 for 25.00
12 for 20.00
Call 992-2487
Owners: Pete &amp;

$2.99 pefmin.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procell Co.
(602) 954·7420

· 51911 mo. Dol .

MANLEY~s

BOMB
IMPROVEMENT

Open 9:00-2:00 .

Diane Hendricks
Howard L. Writesel
ROOFING

NEW-REPAIR

Roofing, Siding, Room
Addillons, Concrete, etc.
P.O. Box 22D,
Bidwell, Oh. 45614 ,
(614) 388·9865
24 Hour Pager.Ansering Servic
1-800.215-2023

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949·2168 .

5111/tfn

SIW94 TFN

TAMMY HYSELL'S
DAY CARE
• Lots of Fun and
Learning
• Lots of
Experience
Mon. thru Fri. 7:00 ·
A.M. till 6:00 P.M ...
992·5388
311!Wn

NEVER
BE LONELY
AGAIN
CALL 1-900·945-6100
Ext. 8587 .
$2.99 per min .
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
(6D2) 954-7420

POOR BOYS TIRES

fl7~-.1111

Cali Lon

ANNOUNCEr.1 E NTS

005

Pllr8onall
All NEW OIJEUNEI 1000'1 o1

•,

1-800-MERIT-98
MB#0489

Everything For Bab~ : Acceno·
, . , Furn. And Clalhel. Mat•nlty
CIOthll, Quell And lt¥1 Jeana
Shortt. Book&amp;, TO'fl, Nice Clean
Clothing All Slzea, Mlac. What
Noll, Fri, Sot 8·4, 157 SUllO Ro·

Gerage tale· 3 112 ml._a nat Of
Che1ter on 2•e. Bedspreads.
ruga, pmowa, afgl'lana, clothing,
Iota of oddt/ ends, June 1·3,

uto ns.

June 1· 2, pu t· LIL Tire, Pine
GI'OYI Rd., Ftve Points, 81+882·

Flea Market Mon &amp; Tu~ts, June
S&amp;h, &amp;lh, Amvet Building, 6 t 4--256-

53olol.

MEN ANOWOMEH on our-

85711, 814-40$..208.

""'m.-..

Frl, Sat. Hilda Ori~te, Snow Plow
For Riding Uower, Uans, Wom-

101m-?

June 1·3, Nelson Rd .. Rutland.
High ctwtr. tires, craft&amp;, and many
morelltml.

June a; behind Ru tland Gra"e
SChOo[ Some woodworking tools,
lurniture, ' truck topper. clothing,
lots mi~e.ltema. •

en• Clothet.. Tool• Miac.

Frl, Sat, Vanco Road, Olt Cente·
nary Road, Clothing, Swivel Chair,
ADOPTION: A declalon of lav. 2 Tractor Tires, ·c ar Tires, Some

June 3,

know It can :::""::1iquoa,:::::..;Mi.'ac::.
:;: ·.:;:"""':::::.'·- - work. We can ptovlde VOl( with Frida ·~nd Sa •- Ju 3rd
peo&lt;1 ot mind, knowing tt-.1 ""''
), ~· •
tur-,, na .
beby will be lovod. ModlcaVIogll 8:30-5:00 454 LeGrande Blvd, 3
for your

1·2, 34~ Page

s..olMiddopon, Ill' morj,.._

30 AMollncements
baby. We

~ad

under Prlrne-roy-Ua·

aon bridge, cloth ing, household
lulml, misc. Rain dall June 5.

4f2smn·

. fl 7:'i-.1.'\.1-l
lk ndmon. Wv
Fo1 Th~ D~al AI Th~ N~w Stor~

N~al

Route 7, 52 gal. hot water heat«,
atarao. TV, Home lnter.ior, cur tains, bear collection &amp; lots gl
good clothi~

left Before Jumbo, Centenary, Sl.

RL 1&lt;1, Cfothao. Bcckll. Misc.

3 long Hair8d Kinena To Givea·

Garage Sale: Plastic Barrels, Air
Compressor, Clo!hea, Knick ·
pup, nacks, Pop Machine, Something
goad for older person. 304-875- For Everyone, June 2nd, 3td. IJ..S,
34 Smilhera Averue.
1038oltor5pm.

-814-256-1377.
Aualnllan Shej&gt;herd, lomalo,

Beautiful, Tr;alned, Domeatlc: Cat. Garagt Sale: Saturday, 8-5, Fair·
Litter Trained, Long Haled, Good vtaw Subdivision, 198 Buckridg•

Wi!IIChikken,614~2200.

~Raa_d·-----,-.,.-­

Cat &amp; 2 kittens. Frae. 304-895·
3640.

June 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 25 Eva~s
~eig~ts, Lots Nice Clothing, Vary-

Couch ID glva away, you pick up.

C&amp;N 30H75-5392.

Four kinent- 3 yellow ttrlped, one

Saturday, June 3rd at Dave
Spencer"&amp;, Racine. Baby clothe'i,
· stroller, high chair, girl's clotMs
size• 3-S. women's clothes sizes
1~18, househokt Items.
Six ·ramny yard ule June 2, 3. 4,
rain or ahlne. one mile !rom Ohio
River, N. St. Rt. 33 across hom

Wha t)llmacallil Shop.

Ing Size~ 9 A.M. -SP.M.
·
June Znc1 ·7th, Off Addioon Pike,

Thr. . tamil'f garage

tale· Friday,

Sarurdav, 9am-Spm. Srrilh'a, 1691
lincoln Height&amp;. Pomeroy. Warn-

~ ·4 P.t.t., Home Interior,

en's career· clothing , great jein&amp;
uMectlon. atuft galore.

blacl&lt; lind )OIIaw, 814-7&lt;2·2•70.
to good l"'cM'ne wllotl 01 TLC, Junt 2nd, 3rd, g. ,, An1ique1,

Free

Thl'ee family inaide yard sale- 1it·
1 rain 01 thine, Texas Rd. Baby

Orenera. Cheat Of Dfawers.

Full alzo manrou, goad candl· Comprenor, Wuhor, Or)or,

clothe&amp; 0-~T. 'boby lurnlwro, "'''·
men and womene clothes, water
bed. stereo and lland and loll

FULLWARRAtUYUKENEW

lion; stereo without speakers; Craltmatle Bed , Bikes, Name

more. EVerything worka and ln

Dlip Repair In Tubs Or Sinks,
Rcsutf.lCt: Old Ccram1c Tile, And

,1
.
BIIIIH,.UB

Fiberglass Showe r Cracks Or Sags

~:?~~ dot!• and klnans. Glanwaro, An11quo Tool&amp;, And

Gray Kl.nena, Liner Trained,

WMa Old. 814-~944.

•

Portable
Bandsaw Mill
32124 Happy
Ho11ow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles
614-742-2193 .,..
4/28/tln

MITCHELL'S
CONSTRUCTION
Carpenter Work
Free Estimates
Porches, Decks,
Reroofing, etc.
614·742·2165 or
304-882-3704
Ask for Mike
412G'II5

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
985-4473

0!

Inch Steel Ooor, Kl~then TaDle

Threv famtly yard sale- June 1, 2,

And Chaira, CoHee Table, Toys ,

3, \aroe assortmen t clothes, Ur111.
turniwre, fishing eqwpment 8:306. Crossroadl on CR 5 and SA

Mt.ni Other Item• To Numeroua

Main. 814-•~1 -

To Mention, Raln Or Shine, 1157
Soc:oncl
, AYalUe.

====----large
Saturday.

,..12~•·;.__

_ _ _ _ _ __

9-5

Three tamily- San"da~. June 31d

And Sunday 12-5, Rain /Shine. Off
Pupplet: 3 Beagle &amp; 8 Part Aull Routt 7 Go 1 Mil• On Georgea
Shftpherd, 814-388-0013, 814· Creek Ro.id To 271 McCully
367-oB51 .
Road. Toya, Houaehold Items,
::::...::.:.::__ _ _ _ _ _ 1 Book·&amp;, Oiahet. lot&amp; or Mite.
Sinall beige Codter Spaniel. ' " 1/ lrema, Lar~Womana Clothe&amp;,
2yra old, good wlchildren, good u · .... u ......
1

at Broad and l.t aln, Ra'ine. Cai-

CWt7.

H&amp;H SAWMILL

a

Klnena, 61~1;,,

Kitten&amp;. loll

~CRdA~a~i :£· E~~~~0 ~~~~~'2 ::g:-co_dco-:-ndi:-lion-.- : - - : - - - 1

81 4-843-5453.

watch dog, to .good home only.
30&gt;4-875-4650.

Garage Sale:

roYTeabrd'a. U.S.

.

TMJ farrily- 112 mile up Bailey'·Rur,
Rd. orf 124, frtday 2nd, Satl.lrday
3td. Am Clli"IOI»&amp;.
•
' VanMe ter Hill ~d ., Racine,

MU\oi!"'Uiooll

oti.

Moving Sale Ahet 35 Years, Due · Juat off BashaM and Carmel Rd.
To Large Sale, Bring '!bur Saga &amp; WaU;h for ~gnal Now and ollghlly
Small Tiger Car Klnen To Gaad Boxe&amp;, Also Carpetal Fri 1 Sat, 8 uaed hous.e hold lttma from JC
Home, 814-379-2428.
Tl/15, 441 LeGrande BNd. Off Of Penney, lamp&amp;, Home lnterio.r,
Three male kinens, 6 weeki old, Roure 141, Friday, 812, &amp; Sltur·
litter trained, 814-992-6079:
day, &amp;'3.
Two pupa, one adiJII dog, comes,
614-949-2988.

New hregular Marls, Wor:nana ,
Children• Jeans All Sizes $5.00
Up, 3 Days, June 1-3rd, See
Anne , 8991 Suite Ate . •218
Crown Cl1y.

Wooden Pallets To Giveaway,
Srap By .At : The Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 Third Avenue. Gam- =:::..:~--,.--..,.,-poli .. Ohio.
On 798 &amp; SA 588, Alit Clothes,
Houaehold Goods. Furniture. Fri

60 Lost and Found

~'..:::s.='------­

Faund: Cocker Spaniel pup, call
ID idenpfy. 304-675-7985.
'=~=.....:......:.=--Found: Unl• Klnens, Bob Evans
Parking lat. &amp;14-2.f.S..5368.

Sar ani';', 1071 Second Avenue,
fishing equipl, old money, ball ·
cards. clolhing, kns mise items.

wallpaper, peti1e clothing, ef.eetric
piano, la'!"nmower. wood ttove,
upright sweeper, porch awing·
ladder. desk, miac June 3-5. 1~
8~.

·

-'--------~rd !UII8- 31425 NicMis Rd., Ru,
tland. June ~ -2. Luggage, m~s 1
large !adtes clothes, cowboy hall;
horse tack, lot's ol odds and ends.
Rain cancels.
·

F&gt;t. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

2-Family Yard Sale P1ne Dr ive~
Camp Conley. June 1, 2, 3. U rairf
SaL June 3rd, Children• Cloth ...
Inside.
•
Furniture, 1 114 Mile On Georges
lost: blac:kJwh ite Boston Terrter,C·. .:ree.:.k. .:Oft.. . :RL:..:7..:....:...._ _ __
l · famdy. Fri -Sat. June 2 3 . 1304
male, las I aeen at Muon "ball UeadowbroQk Dr ; . ? Doort, tv'1.•
park Friday evening not wearing Saturday, 613195, 8·4, Ambletlde
bikO, ctalll, caJS811qrMng
•
Or!\le, l(en. lnfanl Swing, Wa.lk&amp;f,
!'Ollar. 304-773·5257 or 304·882· Ca.rrilH',
Clothea.
Infant
To
18
Mo.
3005 . .
Women• &amp; Mana, Waodburner, ' Ful figurod _,.,., · - · gi~
bay&amp; 0-1•. Homo lntorlor, offioo
Loll: Brown Billl Gao~ Approx. ~ :E:::'"'::cls::•:.::IJj::'kO.::..:_&amp;:::M::
Isc.:__ __ &amp;chalra,
.lt1tle Trke• roya, goo&lt;{
Mo'a Old. Vicini1y: Clark Chapel
et•n clothes. Too much to men..
Road. 91~1. 6t~a 1 ~ 4hef Saturda7' June 3rd, ~ain /Shine,
.. P.M.
9·? Big Gueu, levi, Oah Kosh tionl '"nouN paat Seale Ele
Clothes, Men, Woman, Children
Sc:hool ....~~~. ...... '. ~ 3. 8on).?
loat young redboM coon hound Sizes, Clothe&amp;, Fumtiure, Crafts,
Garago Salo. Juno 2-3.
21 15'
w~hlte apeeks an front lega, In Miac. Worth The Orlvel 18-460 St.
Ut 'W8f'nan. Name brand ladle'• '
Apple Grove are&amp;t- anawen to RL 160, EwlngiDn, 3 ilin Ou1 Of
men'a. girra dothflg. booka, di1~
Vln.,n On 160, Signa Poatad.
'Oon". 304·57&amp;-2718.

u.

... miiC.

Seturda), June 3rd, B
·•. Corne•
teo I Mabelene Drive, Lola Of Garago Sale. Serurda) 8:00. four'

Yard sale

70

Clothes, Shoea, Dlahe., 10 Ga.

Gallipolis
&amp;.VIC In lty
•• _...._ . ..., Ro d Sa
1360 Bob "'""""'""""
a • t,
8/3, Sun, G/4, 1D-3, Bedroom Su110, Pool Tabla, S1erea. Houll!hald
Necesside1.

And MuclliAorol

Yard Sole. 2505 Ml Yo1nan Avo.•
rw. Sol.llno 3rd. t1om-? .
Yard sate. 2e05 .Hrlfer100 Avo. a.:

Saturd8';', June 3rd, 8:00A.M. 2to4
MagnDii• Drive, Fairview Behind

Domino's Pizza. Ladder, SWeepet,

Balhroom Val'l ltr, Weights &amp;
Bench, Bird Cagee. Toolt. About
100 T-Shlrta, Lota Goad Clean
I1Bm1, Paclv1tt Orvam Salel Turn

Thurt, Frt, Sat, Al ,ll3Q Chatham
AYen~t~e, Air Condi1ionera. Rernv·
irator, Bicycle, Recliner, VCR.
Country Tape• &amp; Tapa Players.
DOgHouses.

So~ Juno 2nd. 3rll.
8·7 Glothet Dryer, B&amp; W TV't;

ca.., Conley Road. r...:

on l8f't

hOuM

==:.:::..----..,..--.1

111 Tlmo: F~.

tomilioa.

Aquaflum Wllh Sland, Games

Many Misc.
SUn VaU!If Drive, Frl, SoL
N~e C~fllng,

, Mlu•• 8 clothe•. exarclae.
bike, """' organ.
Yard Sale . June 1.· 2. 3. Uaaon·
Co Hamel&amp;ll Canttr, 308·, 2th'
SovoL
'

Yard Sale . Saturdar 3rd. 212· ·
Camden Ave., acrou trom Har~·
rnon Par!t. gam. Retn ~..
~

on t&amp;D, Go Znct Pomeroy,
To Rlgh( Groan Valley Drive, ~d
80
Public sale
Ho'H On Right Paat B.E. Sau·
Mlddlepon
and
Auction
aagoPiant
· &amp; VIcinity
Auct1on Evi~Hy Frkiay I Saturda ;
111-:lrd, Cia! TownlhiP. Building, .159 N. Filth, Mujdlepon. Sawrday. Crown
City On St Rt 7 All Ha! ·
Loven lane. Baby Clothea, Fur~
June 3, If ram fol~wlng Satur&lt;fa'f,
Mordlondloe 7:00P.M.
•
nnure, Boolls, Dishes, M ia~;.

On Kerr ~

lulml,

.kJne 1 o. Q.am..?

Roil. Slino.

~I Yard Sales Mvat Be Paid In
2 Famll~ June 2+3, 21 Evans
A~vance. Oeadllne · 1:OOpm the
Height&amp;, Home lnterlof. Curtain&amp;.
Craft Suppllta, Clothea, Bfuah· day before the ad 11 m run, Sundo) O&lt;itlon· 1:OOpm Frida). Mo,.
Guard, Tallga'• Protector, Bug

2

Bankruptcy, Judgements, Slow Credit
Our Specialty

Garege aale·

s-

New Haven, WV
304-882-2996

2 family: Frldol &amp; Sowrdoy, g
5, I Mil O..t T0101 Run Road.

REFINANCE
.CONSOLIDATE

mile.

tric: Fence Charger, Ear Tags,
Farm, Mlac. And MOfll Jun. 6th,
II-? 3770
fbi II 850, Bidwoll.

Shilld. RooM Hll&lt;h. C&amp;rnpor Top.
per.

PURCHASE

ctop t..f tiii:N~ room ctvlder, curtaina, bfdtpreaclt, antique&amp; and

Cloihtng, Curtalno. TO)I, Hau,._
hold ltoma, Molding Sulp1, Elec·

MINI STORAGE
NOW RENTING
Comparable Sizes &amp; Prices

depraa&amp;lo,.

.:..:..=~.:..:..-----1 Machinery, Acataylene Torch. Air

.

_EASY MATCH
MAKING IS
READY NOW!!!

4125/!Jn

MERIT

ciae equipment,

gluM, Victrola and rocord~ Sail·
tr1 tablo ond lour chllro. Dan&lt;an
At: Mory La1no'o Grovor Rood,' Pltjfll
dining raom 10~ Clvl&amp;lnU
" " ' and decoratlona, ced~r
C~tahlrt.
Ohio.
J&lt;ine
4fl, 5th,
8111,Watch
7111, 8·5,Signa,
Rain cheat,
four oak cha1n, cherry

FREE ·
ESTIMATES

1

(602) 954·7420

J

G a,.ge and tag ..,._ Oa'- Han

r••ldenca, Yallawbuah Rd.,
Roclne, J&lt;ine 3, lllm-4pm. E•or·

;:cioJ::;·_...,.._ _ _ _...--

9943.

-

· Ang_ie's
. Greeriho:ase

-

'

Frld•y •nd Saturday, Front St..

lolua1 Bo Plld In
Adftnco. OEAOLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the doy befort tM od Ia 10 run.
SUnday odilion . 2:00 p.OL Frldoy.
llo'*Y odllion · 2:00 P.'!'- Sohrr·

Home, 814-388-9624, a 14 .388· Garage 5ale: 813/95, 1st House

Hillin

992·9949 . 992·6471

.......

Flowers &amp;
Vegetable Plants
t.atge 3 la(niJ yord aale. Frldar &amp; '
Hanging Baskets I expenaea paid. PIH&amp;e call uo 11 Fern~~), Swing Se~ IJjkO, Mi..,.
SalJrda)', g.s, !ollow lign1 1rom RL
at Burlingham, 8\lerythir'lg '"'
&amp; Flats
Nl'omo.I-IQI).80ll3Q2. · Garage Sale: 10-~. Salurda), 33
baby, clo1hea, toy&amp;, fur111ture, c:ar,
iveaway
Juno
3rd,
3138
Country
Lane,
1.8
40
G
$6.00
Mile a NDftl'l Of .Holzer Lah Off Of truck camper, riding lawn mower,
""ch lT101'8.•
Roger &amp; Tom Hill
2 rabbltt W/3 compertment cage. St Rt ~eo , Clothea. Household
49534 Stale Route 338
Male rabbll-&amp;laQUI dog, approx 3- 1tem1, Nicnaca, Tupperware
large ';'&amp;rd aale in Bradbl.lry n&amp;xt
Letart Falls, Ohio
4yra old. 304-175-3741.
Demonatration Sign Up For A to ct'lJrch, June 181 thru 3td.
'
(614) 247·2015 daytime
S..L June 3, one mile on ~ 43 {rom
Doar "'~··
(614) 949-2231 evenings 3 BeauUiul Gl~ Pupt&gt;let, To Good ::=:..:..:.:~--,-.,.-:-:-:---:--

1 _800 _486_1590
Bus. (614) 446-9971

COMMUNITY
CAB CO. INC.
Owners: Robert Barton &amp;
Harry Clark

lng lor .....,.,....

All Yard Solei

==":"

::;;;;;;::::'

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

Hill Brothns·
Produee

tltlltfn

OPEN HOUSE
I,
Wellness &amp; Rehab
Center
at Pleasant Valley Hospital
Saturday, June 3
9 a.m. to 12 Ndon
Free Mini Sample Sessions of
Aerobics &amp; Country Line
Dancing will be offered. Light
refreshments will be served.

Mobile Welding
Diesel Injector svc
Injector Pu.mp SVC
Tune-ups
985·3879

right an 'rann.,a Run ~- fourth
hauae. Watch for ligna. SQmelh·

lomona.

•W••Iwn • Oryar• • Range•

•

_..__....,_ _,

J&amp;L INSULATION

Grueser Res., next to
Forest Run Ready Mix.

YARD SALE

.......

: Kenny's Auto Center

8 until??

:

~.

We H•ve C11rs """ V•lrsl

YARD SALE
Saturday, June 3

Public S=!!le
&amp; Auction .

Ir-------------------------------~----------~
·
· Your Message H&gt;ere: 1
I Father's Name:
Limit 25 Words
I
I
I
I

·-

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

Deadline Wednesday, June 14th - 4:00 p.m.

.

•

.......

Open For Business

Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a car rental.

Ratliff . .,
Pool Center

Costume jewelry,
furniture, antiques
&amp; lots of clothing.

Pomeroy, Ohio·-

•s.mc:.

•All u.toto -42 YNrl .
of'ool Relloblo Service

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
. and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

Kenny's Auto Rental

VACATON BIBLE SCHOOL
Will Be Held at Mount Hermon
U.B, Church
June 5·9, 9:30 am-11 :30 am
Closing Program June 11 ,
10:30 am

MR. VACUUM CLEANER
368

"

446-6579

-

1x5 Greeting w/Picture ......$1 0.00

Four !on111· 31 at 1-2. Twa raodl
pool Soulhorn HIGh SchOOl, turn

5.2lolil• 0..1141, llllrlday, Frl- i;l! 1IJ!Ii\i' .,.,. - Jurw 31&lt;1.
dat. &amp;atufday, 5 Families, I·? 210 S. ....... Sl, Mldclopar1, rain
Hoopltal Bod, Furniblre, Clalho~

l)g3.Qc50,

$56.00

Gallipolis ·

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
&amp;
rental rates. ·

To Be Published In

&amp; VIcinity

day,.,..,. 2nd. ~d, Rain~

8-444 14-4.11.1111o'nin. 1.. B1213-

()()•) ' ) 0 • ) 0
--.)(),)()

Chlorine Users
25 Lb.
Big .3 Inch
Pucks

Chuck Stotts
614·992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

1111111:1

of'octory A . . - - Perla

- - "Coll,_t1-II00-22111' , _ . clall

YARD SALE: Ronald Beegle
residence, 9-4 June 2 &amp; 3, 1 ·
ll]ile East of Racine just off At.
124 on Hogg Hollow . Rd.
Watch for signs 949-2008.

.

RACINE, OHIO

S. R. 7 Five Points

Darwin, Ohio

VILLAGE PIZZA INN

,... • ·

Convenient Mini-Storage Units

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
State Rt. 33

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

MODERN SANITATION

I

Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.
Home Sites, Land
Clearipg, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking- Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

BULLETIN BOARD
16"' column inch weekdays
1800 column inch Sunday

873 So. Third Ave.
Middleport

Father's Da,
Tribute

1x3 Greeting ....... $7.00

110\\ \1:11
F\1 \\ \TI\C

CHURCH

· 7 Days A Week • 24 flours A Day
$2.99/Min Must Be .18 Yrs.
Procall Co. (602) 954-7420

One Step Ce11~lete Aute 8edy Rtptlr

Get Your Message Across
. With ADally Sentinel

One mile out
143 from Rt. 7
Tues.-Wed.·Fri.-Sat.
1·6
.Craftsman Tools
•Toys
•Glassware
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell-Trade
1ot&amp;'1 rno,

Calll-900-656-3000 Ext. 5752

(·No Sunday Calls)

412119!5

YOUNG'S
CARPENtER SERVICE

Listen to voice mail messages ·left by jnteresting
singles of all ages. Leave messages for singles
that interest you or open you'r own voice mail
box. It's fun, exciting, and can lead to new
friendships and meaningful relation,:&gt;,hips.

614·992·7643

(614)992~9
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

"'"'"'·

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

COMMER€IAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Rent a
Umeulne fer
Weddings, Pre. .
aodSpeelal
Oooule_.,

773-5541

Let Everyon.e Know
The -Love, Respect,
and Appreciation
You Have For Your
Father In The

Middleport

Fornlty: 822 Jorlcho Rood,
111'1 API'IdUCI 5Chuhlrt,
Ohio, Friday I Satur·

'S

Meet Interesting Singles.
Safely And Privately

-New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Roo~ Additions • Roofing

-Service

UNITED
.PENTECOSTAL

992-7410

J

Laure{Limo

MASON
OFFERS FREE
DELIVERY

Teacher Les Hayman

Pomeroy,

• Fomlly: Furnlturt, CI01MI,
Adulll And Children, Wtlght
Bonch I Blkeo, Mlac. 112 Milt
Eo• Of Pww On 550, Frt, 6o1,

C... IRon.

4c:u 2 38

Remember Father's D
i •' .

((Cli\SSI'FI!D 1\05 sure ·to gat ta~un&amp;))

Dlstovef a personal rela!lonSI'Iip with GOd that wm
bllng peace to your soul, lultillment Jor your family,
snrfhope 1or the future.

Middleport, Ohio
G.R.Q.C. Accredited
Diplomas Offer:ed.

The Dally Sentinel • Page ~

Pomeroy • Mlddl,pc;rt, Ohio

2, 1~

.

'

11211 ....

9:30 a:m. Con celebrants will be
Bishop Gilbert l. Sheldon and
Bisbop Ottenweller.

10am-

Friday, June

To

famll: JuM Znd, 3rd, Q-7, Rail

/Shine, End 0! Spruco Sl. Ext.

Eltctronlca. Toys, Mite. Watch
""' Signa, Frlio Ki119011

3 Famll): 2 Milt' Out Llnooln
Piko, Juno 111·3rd, Beby Clolhu,
Ace., ladle&amp; ClolhH, Tool&amp;, Bar•
Clohl. ~ lliq&lt;:lo.
3rd. 8· 4, Home-

?th HouH Out 775, June 2nd,
3rd, 8 ::!0 To 5 :00 Furniture,
Oropea. Sorrot!lllug FOI Ewryonol

&lt;111 odition IO:ooa.m. Sownlly.

Five laml~ garage ~~~ .Aine 2·3.
Tupper• Plams at "rbaugh Addi ·
tton, on atrHt 10 ball diamond,
second hou•• from dfamond.
ClotNng, lurnituro. g piO&lt;O dining
set, dr~er, sliding glut door,

lllOIL ,..,.;.. &amp;q~pmo&lt;t. miiC.

Five familY · June 1-3. 8am-? tnf·
anll adult clothes. toala. furnl'tur~.

burning drums, and mile. Thi'd
house on Willow Cfeek Rd. b..

&amp;Ide l'anicla.

.

Four family gaflg41 &amp;ale· June 2
and 3, large aelec:tlon bl good
clothing, etc. Great prlc&amp;al P.

Aouah ··~-. Bar 30 Rd. ....
10 CMIIor· lliPI&gt;O&lt;I Ptalna water
olll&lt;e, !'lin or ahino, km-olpm.

A.uctlona tNerr Frlday·S~turclay,.
7pm. Wt. Alta · Auculon, !=tt 2-33 .
"Crollroada•. Ntw merchandl .. ..
groc:erlat &amp; loll moro. Ed

flu..; -'

830.

Ric• Pearaon Auction Col'f'lpany
full time aut.tlonaer, compl at.
auction
a.tr¥1c:e.
Ucenaed
.e&amp;,Onio
Welt Vlrglnlll , 304 ~·

773-5785 004-773-5Ao&lt;7.
90 Wanted to Buy

"

Decorated aronewara, wall tet•

~old ~e-. old 1ha!n...,.. .
tera, ok:l cloc.ka, antique furniture ..
AlvDrlne Antlquea . Ru•• Uoor.. •·
bu~ '

owner. 8 U·8Q2-252e. We

•slatH.

•:

ul

Don·r Junk ltl Sail
Your Non- •
Work1rtg Refrlgwatota Fr. .zers. •
Walarah•r•. Oryen, l.fl'crowa'fea \

Co T.V.'I VCR't, Air CaNiilic,:
~~ C:O,.,U11ra, O"ic9 tot,cllino'
oiC.

814-258-t236.

·

�..
'

Aage 1o • The Dally Sentinel

June2, 1995

Ohio

· The

Sentinel • Pae11e 11

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

KIT 'N' CAJlL YLE® by Larry Wright

*

t - lumina Van, fully laol~.
built-In car -tt. lti,OOO.
175&gt;tCI21.
•

740

form,

Motorcycles

•K Q 54 2
•Q J 10
tA K Q 4

12,000 firm. 30H75-,7t0
01304475-5478.
ttN Hondo Qoldwl"9 3 Wh,.l
Trike, Alk For VIrgil, 814·4. .t3011 Ahor 8 P,l.l. 814·441-2~5
t:30 A.l.l... P.ll.
•

I

I IIIII ~-

.

•A
WEST
&amp;A J
9A K 3 2
tJ
•t087 5

?00, WOGe

tillS Handa -

6·2-95

NORTH

tN2 Moped, ealent condition,
It 110, 11 ..11112-7574.
kep~

39 L.oat mo. 40WINOMI
1 Actor Jamea- 42 Brlde 'a path
5 Crate
44 Woolen cap
9 Genua of
45 Roman 3,000
rodenll
46 Waiting fort2 Juon'a ahlp
49 Actor
t3 Actor Aida
George t4 Some (comb.
53 Actreu Luplno

EAST

.. 10 6
• 7 6 4
tl0816S2

42

• .r9

SOUTH
.. 9 8 7 3

Copter 'a kin
Wagers
Mal de Stretchy
Passive
Poetic time
Roman t ,05t
Merchandise
Nobility
Wedding
words
32 Name for a dog

t5
t6
t7
ts
20
22
23
24
27
3t

34 Musical ~ork
35 Auctioneer 's

word

54 Existence
56 Sandarac tree
57
58
59
60
6t
62

Free (of)
Bird's home
Bay
Genetic abbr.
Makes lace
Small branch

DOWN
1 Zoo feature
2 Seed covering
3 Taj Mahal city
4 Lassoed

7 -Used a c·hair
8 Store fodder
9 Silent

~og-

5

37 Petroleum grp.

soo. - .

performer
Addict
Kind
Hardy lass
Robert DeAllot
Computer
acronym
25 Aroma
.,.,..-+f-f--i 26 An O 'Neill
27 Dads
-+---&lt;1--i 28 Constellation
29 Sea bird
3o Jhis (Sp.)
33 Verse
36 Opp. of endo
18- David
4t Potential
43 Major effect
.,.,..+-1---i ~5 Encounters
46 Encircle
1--+-+--147 Norse deity
48 School of
modern art
t9 Attenliongettlng. sound
s-o
111 tine
51. MusicianShankar
tO
11
19
2t
li'"'"'TT'!!"''T'!'1-, 2 3
24

6 Actor Baldwin

• 9 8 5

- . . m con&lt;lillon, 12000. 3¥·
-451-1e56.
'

A.nawer to Prevlaua Pur:nt

• 9 3

•K Q ~ 3

TT+-+----1

Vulnerable: East-West
• Dealer: West
South

4•

ior.r+-+----+--1

DON'T

Avon Earn $8 ·$14 /Hr. No Door
To Door, Full !Part Time, 1·800·
736-0!68lnd Rop.

F'OLLOW ~E ~

I MAV NEVER
COME BACK ..

I'M RUNNING AWAV
FROM 140ME!

I

SAID, DON'T
FOLLOW ME!

AVON SELLS AT WORK·HOME
Neod Additionollnccmo?
AYOrage $8-St51Hr. Bonofilal
T&amp;flitory Opllonal.ln&lt;llrop.
I -800-142·4738

I

THOU6~T

'(OU MI614T
NI:ED AN
ATTORNEV..

AVON to buy or atll, Marilyn, In·
dependent rep. 30•-882~28•5 or
1-1100-992-6356.

Bauer Buafneu Bureau Se4tki

17 Ft. Alta~tamler Super 8•
Horse Johnson• Motor 80 HP,
8t ..2511-881U.

lo-

cal Businesses Into Mombet'&amp;Np.

Adull Car, Ambulatory Preferred, 310 Homes

Thll Ia A Great Opportunlly For
lndepondonl, Sell-t.loriwtod lndl·
vidual Wilh High lncoma-Expoc-

614·446·3243,
Night Ot Day.

tatlont. Preatlga And E~ecelten1
SeMcaa To Off• Bullineu Com--

Will Do Yard Work. Weedeat HIIItldea, Cut Brulh &amp; Work In Haw

lt4 ·446·6003

Mastercraft We~et Personal W.l&amp;rCrall. 87-428ec, 90-432ec. on •
doublo 92 .trallar, 13500, 6tH...
01 20 after 8pm.
~

30U7_.. .

liaS Oldamobllo Della 88 Excel·

House For Sale Br Owner: 8

ltnt Condition, 4 Door, New Tlroa
lllanory, 61..317-7400.

Yooro Old, 5 llodn&gt;Omi, 2 Both~
0... 8 AcrH, WI Conoldor !And

Contrac;l With 10~ Down To
Qualified Buyoro, 148,000, 814· •
31Q.2343.

tll88 Nlaatn Sontra, hatchback,

IIG2·3244.

--

rhrH bedroom, 1 112 bath, new

1981: Chevy Cavalier, auto, air.
80,700ml, new exhaust ayatam,

two car garage, 140,900, (lt4)
119~-7727 .

HIGH SCHOOl AND SENIORS·If
I Stove:
rou need a patHimo )ob while you
continuo yo~o.u schooling or just to
·earn. additional money, call lhe , Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
West Virginia Afmy National haul your log• 10 the milljual Rail
Guard. ()Jr joba come wilh many 31 4 -675-1957.
. benefits like monthly par,check, l:l_a_w_n-:&amp;:-:G:-a-rd-:-o-p-=sa_r_v-:
lc-o-.:"61
-:4-:.
6ducatlonal asai5tance, ree lob 2stH033. ,
lralning, and much more. Join 10· 1:-:-:-:----:--:-:-:::---:
day. Call 304· 722-6702, ~-341- Need lawn c:are done? CaiJ ,and
8490, 30_.. 766-7347. or 1·800· leave meuage, 304-773-5420,
642-3819.
· ask for Jell

exc running condition, $1,800.
30U7~118.

Priced ohoop .. ..... 1hro
room. one IIO'Y houM, t¥fO bedrooms,. bath, carpet. baaement
Out o.l Ill llood wator~, wrr good
location and neighborhood In
t.llddlopor1, 125,000, Bl4-g&amp;27047, 814 -742-2550 Of 814·38.4-

t889 Cutlall, 2dr. Phone 304·
675-23511 be-. 6pm-llpm.

8384.

::32:-:0~M::-o-.:b-::11-:-e-:-:H-:-om=es=-.-I

450

Furnished

for Sale

RQOms

In-hOme CaregiVers/ Homemaker Piano Ienon• to beginn"l. ad--

New Maatercraft 18 112• scrqll
taw, .wat 1300, nit for $150 br
rTJ~.ki offet, I14-982·761Q.

positions. Candidates should lvarlCe&lt; students and adults; also
have home health aide certUica· teat:h chording and transposing.

tfon and 1·2 years ax parlance In
providing direct service c;:are 10
older adults. MiJtl have reliable
transporl81ion, telephone in the
home.and willing to work aome
weekunds. Applications are avail·
able at tM Meigs County Mulli·
purpoae Sonier Center, Mulberry
HelghlS, Pomeroy, OH. An EOE
etripiOJ8flptOvider ol sorvials..
·

JQln the long-term health t:ara

If interested c:al (614) 992-6403.
Tree Service, Com·
pleta
Care, \ Buckel Truck
servtce · SOFt Reach, Stump R.moval, Free Estimates! Inauranco, 2_. Hr. Emergency Serv~
lee ·Cali And Savel No Tree Too
Big Or Too Smalll. 614·388·9643,
81 4·387· 7010.

tOXIO Rail Good Condition With
Stow l Rofrlganllor, 12.300. 81 ..
388-11886.

I

.

NON HIRING
AdV'tHitatng Salas. You Uua(
Havo Good Communocation Skills.
Roliable Transportation And A
Wiihngnoss To Succeed. Bi1se
Plus Commission. Full Or Pari
Time. Send Resume To: The Ad·
vtrtJser, P.O Bo• 254, JacksOn,
OH 45640.

Ohio Based Trucki ng Company
looklng For OTR OrlvMI. Single

Or Team Drivers, Must Be Over
26 Yean Old With 2 Yeara E)lperlence And Good UVA. All
Equipmanr Is La to Model Conventlonat Trat:to rs Wllh Reeler.
Weekly Pay Healt h. Insurance
Avlltlbkt 1-80Q-437- 6764·
Ou1s1de Salaaman, Full or Pari
time Ex~lence [)(tsired. Bane~
fils. Frenctl City Preas, 61~·446-

e•t

Will Do Interior, ·Ellerior Palndng,
Reasonable Rale&amp;, Exparlam;ed,
Relerencea, For Free Etlimatea,
CaD 81 .. 24&amp;-5755.

FINANCIAL

We Are A Growing Company
Seekin9 A Mollvated Person For

8

210

Sam Somervlll•'a Arrrrj Surptue,
used camouflage IUrkeV clothing,
bx Sand,vUie Paat Office, noon6pm Fri·Sun. (cnh·no chKkl).
304-273-5655.

o

an~ WV 25650. (A Glenmark. AI· Will do backhoe wo~k. phQne 61.._
liiOetalel Facilll)'t. EOE.
992-317'3 or 614--992-5858.

lifeguards wanted k:!r th&amp; Town of
New Haven. Appiic&amp;I!On may be
p1c:Ked up at the c i t~ building
Mort-Frr &amp;.&lt;!pm. 304--882·3203.

1
US neSS
Opportunity

----'::'::::=:::--''-,..-

INOTICEI
OHIO ·VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do business with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mali unlit you have lnves1fgated
the ofter1ng.
:--::-::-'--:--'--::--:-:--:::Retail Buslneu For Sale, Rio
Grande, Low jnveatment, Great
Pottn[lal, Can For Oetaill, 814·
24S.D109.
·
"'v=E:-:NO::I::N::G:-::-:Wo:-:n't-Ge::-1-:Ri='c-:h-Ou::-lck-:-.
Wifi Get A Steady. Cash Income,
Priced To Sell, 1-8Q0.820-o4353.

::::--:-:-:-::-:-:-:-----1

a.

Free~l~.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 82
011,. St, Gtllllpolla. Now &amp; Ul&amp;d
furniture, heaters, Witttern &amp;
Work boola. 814-446-31 SQ.

310 Homes for Sale

2-ltory garage, beakle Hew Ha·
van Su~rmarket. bottom flo.or
completely r•modeled, 2 bays:
(front .bay 40'x28', rear bay
32'x23'), IOO'x40' lot, $18,500.
304-882·2783.

small Local Firm Seeking Port· 3 Bodrocima, 2 Bolha, Hoat ........
Gas Furntce, , Acre, Garage.
lui Work R~ulred, Good Com- Addison Aroo. 102.000, 814·317·
munlcatJon Skills A Must. light 7'21J].
OUica M1lntenanc•. Send Rt- 3bedroom Ranch, 2batha, lamlly
1 um• To: sees. P.o . Bor 538, room. loncad 1n yard. Toytor Road,
KMr, OH 45643.
Camp Conlay. lt2,000.,304-e75Someone needed tMnlnga tnd 5XI6 pm.
rs'landi ·ID cart br ~ Mman In her ·home near Pomeroy. Bw Owner 3 Bedroom, Fuilau...
Apply bV wriUng The O.Hy Senti- .maont. t.lodlaon Avt.Oolllpolll.
nel, r.Jo ·so• 728·0, Pomeroy, W!Wirhout extra Pr, 40 lot. Re·
Ohlo 4&amp;1011, gl•lng oxporltnc•. duco To 138,000. OtW'III-211111
reference~ I wage 1'8QUiNtnlnt
By Owner. Country home 1 fJ
Someone to mow J&amp;rd on Rt e2 2srory, 7 rooms, 2bathl, d011ble
6n regular bnfs. Have rour garage. out building, an new roofa.
""'lpmont. 3QU7&amp;-8&amp;12.
hooL cily . .,.,., no ronlng
4 large ·lota. Shown br appointSomeone with log titldl to haul monl only. Cd 3Q4.458-tll83.
togo a~ort ho~ll, paying 140 o 1-::---.,-.,--.,-:----'1000 -an short h.aula, c;all 814- Four bedroOms, barh, new Mat
D85-4t21 .
pump, a~ condl..,.,, '""04 a ,...
~lgora.,r Included, lull buomont;
Tul Drfvor Wantl!d t.luat B• 25 _ . ,
nlc&lt;t loL Good
Yoaro Old, Pay 4D'IIo Of lnloko. locadon, ., .. UU2-~tla ollar 5pm
Fr8noh City Taxi. 6t ..448-1341.
or lt ..11112-3132.

Scenic Valier. Apple Grove,
beautiful 2ac 1011, pubUe ·water,
Clydo- Jr., :J04.5111-ZI38.

nme Offt~ Aulltant. Son. c._,.

_,_,.,. .. . .............,......... ,.,!.~-~

•

,......,..""!'

Fruits

a.

VegetableS

;;:::-:-=.::-::::::::-::::::::::-::;
:::;:Red l white IW88t potato P1anta,
8tH42·2220 or ltH42·2m.

Strawberritl You Pick Or We
Pick, Taylor Strawberry Patch,
Open : 8-B Mondor ·Friday, 8
Noon Soturday, Cloatd Sunday,
21184 Korr Road, llldwoll, 81 ..24511047.
Strawberries, P ic k Your Own,
ClaudoWinlarl, 81 ..245-512t.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Seasoned Walnut Lumber, Oak
Washstand, Oak Peg Shalvaa,

Oak Plant Sland. 814-448·8568.
Slalrway
Elevatora
And
Wheelchair /Sc:ooler llfta For
Ca11, New And .Uaad, Botimanl
Homacara, 814--446-7283.
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upright, Ron Evans Enterprisea,
Jackson. Ohio, 1·800-537·0528.
Table Saw a· Blade Wilh Sland
$15,614~4242.
Tandy PC wlprlnter &amp; modem.
ssoo. 304.fl15-3328.

Tlrea, Aluminum Rima, $3,300,

ltW'III-111185. 8t-7-1373.
1aa2 Chryllor Filth Avanuo, llko

RENTALS
410 Houses for Rant

New,

Parts a.

•

•
'

Auto. Tnino. Flto 318 ·360, 5

Spcj:

304-882-3754.

One . &amp;~N Ford trac:to;; one 801
84t-418:Z.745t .

FOld-·
630

Llvsatocll

7lbMI,-.B1 .........110.
Puny, 45" Toll Gelding, Seddlt l
Brldlo $4110, 61 ..256-13t3.
REGISTERED ANGUS And Chi ·
Angua Bulia And Holforo t750 •
Up. Excellent Bloodlines, -Slate
Run Farm1, 8t4·2M·63G5 Joolt-

aon.

VI'RA FURNITURE •
814-448·31 58
~ Houaehold Fumlwre AAd
ianc11. Great Deals On
Caoh And Carry I RENT-2-QWN
And ~ Alao Available.
Fret Delivtry Within 25 MiOL

1895 Ford Uualang Very Low
Milts, Mini Condition, Keylell
Entre Block E•rar Blaclt lnrar CaU
Altar 3 P.ll. 6t4-448·7848.
Naon 3,800 IMMet, Exr::etlent
l1t,500, 8t4· 44t ·

720

Wath•r, Dryer, Refrigerator, Air
Conditioner, Microwave, Color
T.V.. 81 .. 258-1238.

-----:::::=::::::1!1~-«l0-4QQI-34ffl.
-~~--~~-,_....,....., ........- '

~·-·

...

percent of men are so lucky. Or should
that be by gender?
In today's deal. West thought he was
facing a hopeless defensive task . Bul
then he spotted the one chance - and it
worked. Against four spades. West led
the heart king: 10, four, fi ve. How should
he have continued?
If East had only a doubleton heart, he
would have started an echo. So it looked
as though South· could have only three
losers: one spade and two hearts
· Perhaps you switched to th e diamond
jack. hoping South had the 10. Maybe he
· would try to enter hand at tri ck thr ee
with a diamond with the intention of
leading a trump toward the dummy .
This would work well if West had a singleton spade 11ce. Yet against a good de-.
clarer it doesn't stand much chance of

I
lJQRNLOSER
P'

. .

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

OOPS 1

':

YOJ (}I.J\\

~· ~RRY.

MY MI~TN&lt;.E- 1

P'
~T DIN.. 0/'-IE

Dl ~ Of'-IE,

f\llt&lt;DR£D fll-l.a\\E/'-ILJMea5ANDC£T

\.JRQ.\6 NUM.BE.R.
N-It:&gt; TflEY'I'?f.

/'-10 N--I~WE-R ...

OOJI'-IDTO

OC

1-10/"f..l

790

IJ J X

XREJAXKAZL

N

R S C KA ABUC KX

I K J Ail K

F X K .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Men learn whole they leach .. - Seneca
~The bnghler you are the more you have l,p team " - Don Herold

S©R4U}A-~£t/'S"

TNAT DAILY
rUULII
- - - - - - - ld ;tod by CLAY I. rOLLAN

"ORO
GAMi o

0 fovr
Rearrange leners of
scrambled words
low to form fov r words

NUP0 T

I I I
I

I. 1 I · I' I I
WtLYN
3

'-/-,A,.,D'TBo---Yr-L-r--+1~:;:',
I .ri r
,.
.

Our son is a b;g daydreamer.
HIS head IS always tn the clouds
Myhusbandtellshimthatifheis

_

_

LI

always stargazing , he will

be at

0 N AS
lthemercyofmud· -· · · - r--l,IG-,r~-r-,,--,r:;,.:-1 C) Complet~ the cMud:ie quoted

-I
.

.

.

.

_

.

.

'---'--'--"--1-...1..-...J

BIG NATE
EVEN iF I WANTeD
TO WEAR M'( HAl R A
DIFFERENT WAY.•, _I__..:.._
COULDN'T I 1'1'( HAIR RESIST.S
CHANGE .

GOON ..

TRY TO
RUN YOUR
COMB
THROUGH
IT.

f}

E{P

by ftlt.ng m the m 1 S~ I r\Q W&lt;lrds
yov deve lop I rom' $!ep No 3 be low

PRINT NUMBeRED lETTERS. I
IN THESE SQUARES.
UNSCRAMBl E l ETTERS TO
GET AN S\NEP

. OKAY .

SCRAM.LETS ANSWERS
Hawker· Pound- Ovary- Second. NEW ONE

'

STRIKE A81./JW IN THE WAR ON
HIGH PRICES. SHOP THE CLASSIFIEDS. '

.

I had completed my monthly chore of maktng pay.
ments The btggest drawback of. buytng something on ·
lomP o&lt; th"' ~v ihP t1me ot 15 oaod l or vou need a NEW ONE

-~-- - --~-··

IFRIDAY

ROBOT MAN

Improvements

J

MJSXBMC

JMMFERJSFZZL
C F Z Y . '.

MJVKXL

ZFAIKZL

r-;--;-;::-:-:-:-:::--,

a.

Home

Luis Campos

VBERMFZ

MJ.SERECE

1

1994 IM1bruc:k camper_. flo!lly
toaded, loti of extrat. 1aka over fl.
nanc09. 304-675-6903.
'·

810

,F

I

Campers
Motor Homes

SERVICES

by

Cetebfllf Crpner cryotograms are &lt;:reared !rom QUotatrcm s. Oy tamou~ peoOie past and crese/'11
Each leu.,r rn 11'1e etcher ll'~nds lo1 omoth&amp;• Toolly s clue B equals u

-

Wanted To Buy : Parta For 1970
Old* CuHan, 2 Door Or 4 D~r
Hardtop. 81 ... 48 01Ml3
.

Residue

CELEBRITY CIPHER

West did better. Hoping his partner
had two spades includin ~ th e 10 and
only three hearts, West continued with
the heart ace and another heart.
Locked in the dummy, declarer contin ued with the spade king. But now the
13th heart effected a trump promotion
lot the defense.
It's the old story: After you have tak en all of your side-suit tricks, give a ruff.
and-discanl. It might fatally undennine
declarer's trump holding.

-·

SOVTHWEST PICK-UP FAATS
Beds, Cab.l , Ooori, Fancier• And
More. 3 MUea Soulh Of Galllpolla
At Juction RL 7, &amp; RL 2t8, 814446-3787.

JUNE 21

E4·

oao.

fg84 GIIC Slerro t/2ton pickup,
aut~,

4. ,liter, kyl, 143,000ml, ft.

bergla11 IOpper, good ahap•,
$2.500:304-882-2245.

Ace Vinyl Sidin'l 20% Off Sal*,

Vinyl Siding /Replacement Wine;.:
owa, Roofing, 25 Yaart Ex~~

Iince, 6t•:367-00.13.

•

Barnett'• Home lmpornmentf:
Room Addltlona ·Deckt, A~
I'Orche~ Exporlanced, Frea· E...
matot,81444e8561

j

C&amp;C General Hom!ll Ualn1enanc:e- Painting, vinyl aldlna.
carpentry, doort, wlndow1, bath~
mobile homt "'JJIflr and '"""'· For
fraa .oatimala coil Chat 6to-Qg28323.
Joe's Home Maintenance, vinyl
llldlng, roofing, oxtorlor palnti09,
power wathlng, tree aatimatel,
II..U82-445t.

Building
Supplies

Pets ror

New gas tanks, one ton uu'Ck
wheels, radia.,ra, l'loor rmtl, ell:.
D l A Auto, Ripley, WV. 304·372·
3U33 or 1·800-273-11329.

~2

=+-+---+-; 55 Ocean

BASEMENT
IUI4 Dodgo 112 Ton Pick·Up,
WAtERPROOFING
'
go,ooo Mlloo, Runa Good, $575, ·
Unconditional lifetime guarantat.
6t ..256-t424.
local reference• furnished. Call
t9111 Chavrolel Seonadale, 4WD, I j800) 287-0578 Or (614) 237·
needs lrtnaml..lon ""rk, $500 0488 Rogera Waterproofing.
742·3011 between noon tallllshod 1e15.
and 5pm.

- - · 1210Sacond"'"· Gollol'lla. OHo, ., .........
4331.

--·Sol,

Datsun 280ZX Motor &amp; Trona·
muiooi100, 61..317-7047.
'

lhlcks for Sale

WHTTE'S IIETAI. OETEC'lllRS ·

Block. brick, • - plpoa, wind· Allalla Hor will toll out of field.
owl, llntal~ otc. Claude Wlnl&lt;iro. 81~24811
Rio Gnando, OH Coli 8t4-245·
5t2t.
For 80 ..,., ol hal' In fteld,
-::---::----:--:--:---::-:1cut an aha'"' Harrla farma. Por·
Grovellou -pipe l ftlnplpa tlond, OHo, 8t~lfl3. .
now In 1tock. Sldtra EqUipmen~
304-875-7421 .

l

'-1:-+-+----+--1

r.:;

clear that 51 percent or women have sex
at work on their birthdays, but only 31

success.

tUB&amp; Toyota 4•4, la795. 1988
Ford pickup $2295. Scotlj'a Ulad
Cn.304-882·3752.

Uaacl All Condlllo!&gt;ar, 22,500 Bill
· Cllmotrol 220 Volt 1350 Firm, 4
Yeats Old, 61 ..245-5383.

550

Budget Transmiuion1, U11d

Rebuilt, All Types, Aceeaalbla Te
Over 1Q.OOO Tranaml11ion. AltJ
Parts, 814·379·2936.
J

1984 Bronco, need work, St395.

A.C. 50150 trlclllr, 310 N.H. hay
balor, 725 II.F. har conditioner.

-

a,.,, Ptulh 1mr1or. t.oadad.
..,

Parts For 611 ~ly. Barracuda, 814446-4316.
.
'

1918 Shaata Camper, Groat Con- ·
11it83 Ford Taurus, V8. S7e95.
1993 Chevy lumina, Ve, $7315. dillon, Fully Equipped, · Also,
tlla2 Cutliaa Suprema, VB, .Queen Slzo Walorbed, StOO, 6t4l73aS. 19g2 Oldl Clorro, V8,
151195. 111811 Plymouth SUndanca
StUD&amp;. 1885 Olda Toronado
lt4U5. IU&amp;t l'llndac Fiero lt3US.

610 Farm Equipment

Whirlpool Waaher Supreme Cur
TRANSPORTATION
To tD5: Whirlpool Wa1her ImpeREPO IIUILDINGS,
rial Cut To 1125; Whirlpool Due To Rolocatlon Fttctory Hoo 3
Waahtr Almond llkt Now It 50; All Staat Ouonaet Sl)'lo Bulklnjro 710 Autos for Sale
G.E. Dryer US; Konmort Dryer
(t) 40xtQ, (t)
Almond Cut To 1125: Electric For
1G55 Chavrole1 4 Door, BelAir
30x38, Erlclod. Col 1111
Ringo
30
Inch
White
W11
1150,
Rust-FrM Priced On lnapacdon
On MuiNrr)' HtiOhta, PomeroJ,
1-fl00.581·&amp;843.
Cut To SU5; Gil Range Kenmore
Con1ldor Trode For Plck·Up
1330/mo., dapolll •nd - - Almond, Nice, $1 so; Elacrrlc
Tructc. et ..258-I058.
560
Sjlle
no 304-882-2945.
Ranoa Harvell Gold Black Glen
Ot For S.lo: Houat 11 Vaaro Old, Door, Nict •150; Refrigerator Groom Sltop -Fttt Oroomlna. F•- IU8G Cornaro 400 Smofl Block
s llodrooma, $47SIIIo, With Rtf· Fro at Fru Cut To I t25; Rafrlg- turlng Hydro Both. Julio Webb. Now Paint, Porcho Rod; t87a
Chevy Truclt, B Cylndor, lt4-388trolor Apanmonf Slzo sg5; Ra· Cd 814-448-023t.
- - eto-31Q.2343.
.
!)0011.
fllgtrator Sldo By Sldo Cul To
420 Mobile Homes ltSO; ~· Dryer Haavy Dul)' 8 lloa Old ·PuJIPIII, Part Chow,
Dullor, 12,000,
Whitt t205 1 Year Warranty; Part Collie, 1 Black &amp; Brown; 1 1G72 I
for Rent
Kenmore W.. htr Heavy Dutr Wlito,lt4-4401-t8U7.
1~;:;~~~--::-:-:-141160 Tnollar To Ront 2 BA, Air, Whlto $205 t Yoor Warranty: AKC Reglltorod Boaglo Pupa, 1g73 Rood Runntr 3t8, iuto,
F,P.;Wo- &amp; Drr•. FurNihed, Skogga Applloncoa, 7B Vlnt copperno1o And Trl-Colot, $75, · 24,000 mllea 12,000, lt4-ga2Bt .. 258-t044 Altar Sp.rn,
StrooL Galllpolla, 114-446·7398, Cole-irva, lt4-44t--0130
4111.

-·~

Auto

Acce~orles

E-··'lont Condl•- 74 ooo t.li
Ail::4 P.M. 8t ~754.

Two 5,000BTU room air condl·
tioners $300/borh, uted 2moa.
:JI4-675-ZIIS.

-::-:::=::-::=:::::-"7::=::::-:::-::::=-

br-.

580

clllon. S60 080. eto-441.0001.

TW9 tO horse 31" cut riding mowera. ltliO, 6t ..llll2-5658.

REAL ESTATE

-tric

Drummer looking
ba•d to play with, lt•Hiti12·1'37CII tUSII Ford Thunderbird, blue, 6
uk lor Rondy. ·
cyl., window~ - L tllllllm
r::aaa•n• and more, excellent
Splnot-conaolo plono. Wont ra· ooudlllor• 15300. lt4-ll9:Z.3711.
aponalblt party to make low
manthly paymen~:"Jiano. See 1011 Gao Tracror, 4wd, new
......,,., Coll!-800t8
CloodrNr Wro09lor Rodlala. bug
- •·
·
· doniietor, llr &amp; ate, ax~a clean,
Will trodo Poorl Export Sorlaa ISOOO. 814-1192-7574.
drum aet Wlpalatt 20"' ride &amp; 1e•
c;rash far guitar or amp of equal 1101 Chev1 Cavalier 2 Door, .&amp;
wlue, 814-0U2-3CI1.
·SJ)Hd, Tinted WJndows. New

Saara Exareiaa Bike, Good Con-

Trl-Star vacuum c;leaner. 1800
080. 304.fl75-1575.

4383
Part-time toller position available
at local bank, Appro!' 20hrs/Week
'"cludlng Saturday- mornings.
Mu.•l be high school graduate or
eqUJvalent educauon. Cash handling experience preferred. Send
resume to PO Box 3o1 Pt ~oosanL
wv 25550.
'
.

470 Wahted to Rent

2.bodroom Now lloon nllar, good
MERCHANDISE
cond .• new gu "'miCe', n.w hotwater l ank, good solid lloora,
s2.ooo. 304·875-BU22 or 304· 51
Household
7 5357
73'
Goods
t.IAJOR
t.IOBILE
HOUE
LENDER. New 14x70, 2 or 3bed· Carpet &amp; VInyl In Stock $5.00 Yd
r09fY1, nw.ke 2 ~,.,..II, ITIOYt In, &amp; Up 60 Pltltt'nl Of Kilchen Cat·
no paymenll after .5 yeara. Joe
In Slack. Over 35 Patterns
SWarta!-800-25t-5011l.
lnylln Stock. t.lollohan Carpel~
:---:-:::-:-:-::::-:--:--:--:-:-:- 1614-446-7Now 19US t~x70, lncludea
:---:-:--:---:--:--:Ina . 11eps, blocka,
Countr)' Furnllure-Furniture tor
homeowner&amp; !nauro!-:~r.ll~dc~~ EV«Y Room. 6ml, Rt. 2 Not1h, Pt.
montha FREE '&gt;t ....:
l'leuant304-67S-6820.
17
=-~~-= per _,,, .··~, GOOD USED APPLIANCES
~:::_;..;;;::..;;;;;;;;.-;--::-:--·1 Washers, dryers, refriGerators,
330 Farms for Sale
rangaa. Skagga Appllancea, 76
::--:--:--::-~;::::-=-::--:--::-;1 Vlno Stroot, Call814·446-7398,
74 acres. 3badroom house, 20 1--800-499-349Q.
mlnutel from Pt Pla11an1. 304·
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
882-3154.
Complete home furnishings.
Hours: Mon · Sat, 9-5 .. 614-&lt;146350 Lots
Acreage
0322, 3 mile• oul Bulavlll• Pika

50, naeda repair, 1800. 304·
875-6574.

field. Seeking Car tlfled Nursing ~ ~~~l~a'e M-F 6am-5:30pm Agel
Assistants for 68-bed skilled
K, Young School Age During
nursing facl!lty. ApP'y Point Pleas~
3 Oay1 per Week Miniant Nursing &amp; Rehabalta.don Cen614-446-3657.
1er RouaJ 1, Box 326, Poinc Pleas·

wv.

One 5 HP Soaro Crollmon 24"
Rotollllar, Excallant Shape, 2 t/2
Year Old Slartl Easy: 1 New
Home Deluxe Sewing Machine
Vary Good Shope, 61 ..245-U3113.
Ratrlgaratora, Stoves, Washara
And Oryan. All Reconditioned
And Gauranteedl I 100 And Up,
WID Dallvor. 8t4-1169-644t.

1

I:--::-:-:--:::---::-:--:Valley Nursery School.

Sleeping r'oomt wllh c;ooklng.
Alto trailer 1pace on rlv•r. All
hook-upa. Call at1ar 2:00 p.m;,
:J04.773-585t, Muon

House In Apple Grove, WV,
Good reference&amp;, needed immedlotoly. :J04.518-4oot.

19sg New !Moan mobile home 10

760

new uantmlulon &amp; alhauat. C/0 Trana. For 2.8L ·Turbo For 2.~Lfplayer, 35 fi1IG, lt500 080, 814- 360 Cu. ln. Engine, Noodt RobuMI

In Syn1cu1e- recently remodeled

Wuhad
~~~~t.l~a~ln~te~n~a:n~ca~,~Pa~ln~tl~"9~,

Third Avenue, Galllpolia, OH \jl

tor Sale

I room houaa .,..,. t.nd an 18
t.lllt Ad, Soullltldt, WV. ltB,OOO.

munlty. Coli t.11. Ehdlch, t ·BOO· &amp; To~ 8to-441.0173.
'71-30t5.
I::--::--::-::-:-:::---:-::-oay Care, M·f 8:30am-5:30pm.
04Jntal Aaalatanll:
Uealt &amp; anacka. actlvltl81, IIO·
Currently Accepting Reaum11
&amp; mDI'e. 3)4-67~2882.
For
Pan-Time
And lOr Full-Time ~~~;i""fi:i~~~~~j;j~
Position. H8patltla Immunization 1~
Hauaa Or Office CleanAnd Radiology Exporlanco Holp- lng, Wookly Or BI· Waokl1 Coli
lui. Send Roop&lt;ma&amp; To: CLA 354, S111rley614~747.
clo Gallipolis Dallr Tribune, 825 l;;;;;;;iM.;;;;;;;;:.;;,-;;;;;;,;~

-

. Sentences t hat can be read more I
.than one way often unintentionally '
cause amusement. For example. last
March I spoiled' lhe following caption : mrl--t-Percent of adults aged 16 to 69 whose
last birthday was observed at work by
sex.
J-....1.-..__
' The chart, using candles, made it

..,.rll--+-

AVON I All Areas I Shirley
Spoo,., 304-875- 1420.

*

Pass

East
Pass
All pass

By Phillip Alder

Attn: Pt Pleasant. Postal POsitions IMllla.bla. F9rmanent 1\JIItime
for clttkllaonerl. Full bentllta.
For e•am date, appllc:a11on .and
ula,ry Into~ 708-284-1600 ut
3870, 8am " l!l&gt;m.

•

North
Dbl.

·Miswritten,
not misdefended

Help Wanted

Sates Profeulonal To lnvlra

1•

Opening lead : "K

$ 3.19 !!

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110 ,

1•

THAT'LL BE

T1iAT IT,
PAt&lt;SON?

IS

West

All Steel Truck Bod, 8'xt 2' 1250,
114,258-t058.

730

Vans

a. 4-WDs .

tll80 lntarnational School Bu1, 20
puoenger w/chalr 1111. NCO condl·
lor&gt;. lt,350. 304-576·281&amp;
·
tU84 Chavy C-20 4x4 350 V·8,
Sliclt, Body Rouglt, 11,000; Robulll
327 Chavr Engine, 1700, lt4·
44&amp;-4141 Alrer 6 P.M. Or Wet·

kama.
tG84.5-tO Blazer, V6. 84,000ml,
auto, po, pb, 30U1S.Ig2U:

1-:-:-:-'::-:'--:::-:--:---::-:--:
t11811 SUbotu XT 4 whaol drift, aU
po- option~ 14.000. 304-882·
2481.

Ron'a TV S.rvlco, -lollzl"9ln
Zenith alto Mrvlcing moat olher
brand1. Houat 01111, t·800·7U7·
0015, wv 304-5111·231111.
820

Plumbing

a.

He.atlng
Frteman'a Hearing And C~lng.
ln1tollallon And Service. EPA
Cartlfted. Raoldontlal, Commercial.
6t4-258-1811.
840

Electrical and
Refrlgeratlo!l

,.
•

ASTRO-GRAPH
make 1he relationship work. Mad $2.751o
Matchmaker, c/o lh1s newspaper . P .O .

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Box 4465 , New York. NY t0163 .
CANCER (June 2t : July 22) A good
Investment could pay handsome d1vi·
dends today. so follow your 1nSt1ncts and
your lOgic '' you have any speculat1ve
urges.

,

~EO (July 23-Aug. 22) The enthusiasm
you show for your en.deavors today Will
make others want to gel mvolved 1n them
as well Y~u won't have to do a h'El.c&amp;l~en ,
just telllhe !lulh
VIRGO (Aug . .23·S.ept. 22) If there IS
something you want thai someone else
can help yoiJ gel. this will be a good day
Saturday , June 3. 1995
to talk 10 your potenhal benefactor.
,
.
. ~IBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Good thongs
In the year ahea~. you re more likely .to could happen today in your soc 1aJ
~o well opeMrating !ndependenthly than w.lth · involvements . Acknowledge everyone at
~artners . a-ve to a zon~ w ere you re the gathenngs you attend today
free !Q make your own decosloos.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) A develop·
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Good news menl that might seem ralher 1nsognificant
might try to get through 10 you 1003"· 50 ~~ first could turn out to be an 1mpresstve
check your mal~box and return all your . opportunJty for your career and finances.
phone ca~ls. Tryong to palch up a broken SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23·1lec. 2t) II you
romance . The Astro·Graph Matchmaker look for !he brrghl sode loday, you' ll fmd ''
can help you understand what lo !lo to _.
........
...
•

~'Your

·

· '\j)''Birthday

-I

Ad11erse situations m1ght temporanly
darken your doorway , but tt won' t last
long ,
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. t9) Persons
you 've gone out of your way to help 1n the
past mtght treat you m a very considerate
fashion ioday Thts will be lhetr chance to
balance lhe books.
-AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 19) Your pop·
ularity will be at a h1gh pomt today and
fnends will seek your company A word of
warnmg. however You mustn't pray
lavorrtes.
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) Thos could
be a red letter day tor you Jn Your work or
career. Good tta'ngs are tn the ofhng, but

you'll have to shake the opportuntty tree
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) Your w11 ,

warmth and WISdom wtll make you ;:. fun
person to be around today You will make
a last1ng, good impresston on those you
meet lor the first lime .
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) Benefoc
developments are lntlipatitd today for"two
reasons . Ona: You persevere 1n domg
thongs the way they should be done , Two.
l~dy Luck adding the' finish1ng touches.

·'

.

..-,

_,..,..~-·--··~--.-~..-.· --------------·

_

'

�T

"

Page12 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, June 2, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Family
Medicine

'

.

Community
calendar

Syracuse Elementary activity-!-'!

100 years

The Community Calendar Is
publlsbed as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
John C. Wolf. D.O.
events. The calendar h not
Associate Professor
designed to promote sales or
of Family Medicine
fund raisers of any type. Items
are .printed as space permits and
Question: r m 35 years old and that trigger asthma attacks. Aller- cannot be guaranteed to run a
just started having problems with gies ant) physical exertion, particu- ·specific number of days.
'
coughing and wheezing. My doctor larly in cold weather, bring them FRIDAY
RACINE
Piano
recital,
Fribas diagnosed my condition as on in almost all asthmatics. You
asthma. which I thought was a chil- could live as a couch potato inside day, 6 p.m .. First Baptist Cburcb,
-dren's disease. Is asthma common a sterile plastic bubble to avoid Racine.
in adults, or am I just entering my asthma attacks, but that isn't practiSATURDAY
second childhood as my wife sus- cal or much fun.
DANVILLE
- Weekend serFortunately, there are medicapects?
vices
at
the
Danville
Church of
Answer: Asthma is becoming an tions that are quite effective at preChrist,
Saturday,
7
p.m.;
Sunday,
increasingly common disorder. venting exercise-induced asthma.
I
0:30
a.m.
arid
6
p.m.
Denver
Hill,
Today it affects from 3 to 6 percent That means that you will still be
Foster,
W.
Va.,
speaker.
of the United States population. able to cut !he grass - dam - and
•
and it's estimated there are now 3 do other activities that require
SALEM
CENTER
Star
Lightning
Bug,
symbol
of
American
Electric
•
million more asthmatics than just a physical exertion.
PARTNER IN EDUCATION -The Philip
Power, assistant plant manager Gary Jones, ;
Sporn plant in New Haven, W.Va., recently
decade ago.
Allergies bring on attacks in 85 Grange 778 and Star Junior Grange
Saturday,
·s
p.m.
at
the
Grang&lt;l
878,
Syracuse
head teacher Janice Curry and Sporn
This may be due, in part, to the percent of those with asthma.
became a partner In education with the Syracuse
hall,
County
Road
I
near
Salem
poor ve0 tilation in newer, better- House dust mites, anim'Kl dander
Elementary School. )'rom lert are Louie the
. employee Sam Hawley.
insulated homes. Most of these new and bugs - particularly cockroach Center. r
sufferers, as you suggest, are chil- leavings - are notorious offendHARRISONVILLE - Hardren. However, it is not unusual for ers. You should attempt to rid your
risqnville
Lodge 411, F&amp;AM, Satthe first attack of asthma to slrike home of them . It's e$pecially
urday,
7:30
p.m. at the Masonic
at age 35 or older, as in your case. important to keep your bedroom
Temple.
RefreshmeniS.
Tbe "later-in-life" onset is more "operating room" clean.
common in those who smoke or
Many asthmatics fail to get
RACINE - Star Mill Park
have other chronic lung problems, complete relief from their allergies
Sunday tbe Hocking Valley
entertainment,
7 p.m. Saturday.
but people without these risk fac- by regular-and scrupulous house
Deanery
of the Episcopal Diocese
Free. Public welcome. Suggest taktors develop asthma, too. .
Erica Arnott of Syracuse has
of
Soutl1em
Ohio will join together
cleaning, including moving the pelS
The tenn "asthma" creates con- out of lbe bouse. These individuals ing lawn chairs.
been selected as a state fmalist in
for the second mmual deanery Penfusion for many individuals. Most often benefit. from allergy shots to
the Miss Obio American Teen
tecost Liturgy.
·
,
RACINE - Racine Grange Pageant to be beld at the Hyatt
picture a wheezing child when they reduce their allergic reactions and
Retired
Diocesan
Bi~hotl
2606 open meeting with potluck Regency Hotel in Columbus, June
thinK aboUt this disease. And resulting asthma attacks.
Wtlham. Black 1s schedu led to be
supper,
6:30p.m. at Gmnge hall.
indeed, wheezing is often present
18 and 19.
!he celebrant and preacher at the
In addition to e~&lt;ercise and allerin !hose suffering an asthma auack. gies, asthma attacks can be trigEmphasis of the pageant is on
special
service which will take
SUNDAY
Bu~ not all aslbma attacks produce gered by a variety of things, such
self-confidence, setting and achievplace
at
11 a.m. at the Church of
RACINE - George Holter, Jr. ing personal goals, poise, appearwheezing, some non-aslhma condi- as:
the
Good
Shepherd in Athens .
.
family reunion I p.m. Sunday at ance, and the all-American Spirit.
tions CIUl cause wheezing, and asthThere
will
be
no
10:30
- !he common cold or olber resthe home of James and Karen Pageant winners are awarded
ma - as you now know - is not piratory infections,
Eucharist at Grace Church in
Holter
Werry, 31980 Court Street scholarships.
limited to children.
.
ERICA ARNOTT
Pomeroy on tlmt day, the Rev. Fr.
--emotional suess,
Road, Morning Star area, Racine.
We doctors think of astl1ma as a
Erica is the daughter of Jenna
David
du Plantier announced. The
- aspirin and other medications,
Phone 949-2746. Rltin will n~t can- Amott of .Syracuse and John Amott
reversible obstruction of the air and
Eucharist
at Grace Church will be
of
West
Coiumbia,
W.
Va.,
and
is
a
·
.
cel.
passages . Those wilh asthma have
on Sundpy.
held
at
9
a
.m.
-inhaled irritants such as
student at Southern High School.
alternate periods when !hey breaU1e smoke, dust or fumes.
POMEROY- Ala-Teen meetrelatively nonnally and when U1elr
Medications ate used to reduce ing, IIJe Sacred Heart Church, MulIn an effort to provide our readbreaUling is labored.
the frequency of attacks while oth- berry Avenue, Pomeroy, Sunday, 7 ership with current news, the GalThese periods of distress are ers are used to treat acute asthma
.
lip(Jiis Daily Tribune and The Daily
often marked by wheezing and when it occurs. Usually, both types p.m:
•
·
Sentinel will not accept weddings
coughing. In fact, coughing is often of treatment are prescribed for
MIDDLEPORT - Piano/Vocal after 60 days from the date of the
the dominant complaint among U10se with' asthma. And fortunately,
recital by studeniS of Sharon Haw- event.
those who develop asthma during this ue_atment is quite effective.
ley, 2 p.m. at the Middleport First
All club meetings and other
aduithood.
That is not to imply that asthma Baptist Church. Reception to fol&amp;
news
articles in the society section
Question: Is my astl1ma going to is a trivial illness, because it isn't.
must be submitted within 30 days
interfere with my physical activi- People die as a consequence of low .
of occurrence. All birthdays must
ties? So far , my breathing gets their asthma every year.
MASON - Stewart Johnson be submitted within 42 days of the
worse when I mow grass or do
Fortunately, this is uncommon.
· ·
other activities that require physical A far more common sequence is VFW Post 9926 and Auxiliary, ·occurence.
180 MULBERRY AVE.
PO'MERO'Y, OH.
installation
of
officers,
Sunday,
I
All
material
submitted
for
publiexertion.
days missed from school or work p.m. Potluck to follow.
992·2115
cation is subject to editting.
Answer: There are many things because of asthma.

Local girl.
advances in
teen pageant

Pentecost tcl
be observed.
.

News policy

See Us for Your Garden Needs!

•Fertilizer •Lime
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SUGAR RUN MILLS

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~lstory

-Featured on page 8·1

Annual 'Heritage

~eekend' -.Page es

Major League wrap•up -Pagect

•

tmts • •
•

A Multtm edt a Inc . News paper

Mtddleport -Pomeroy -Gallipohs-Pt. Pleasant - June 4, 1995

Veterans service funds:
County weighs possible appeal
of judge•s ruling _in favor of vso
By KEVIN PINSON
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - A Columbus attorney is awaiting the
·Gallia County Commission' s 01&lt;. to appeal a judge's
decision regarding funding of the Veterans Service Office.
"I respeclfully disagree with lhe court's analysis and
decision ,'' said Rufus B. Hearst. "The decision in essence
holds the board of county commissioners is without authority to revise a proposed budget of a veterans service
commission and I do not believe that is the intent of the
law.
"The county commission is not only authorized but .
· obligated to review, consider and, if appropriate, actjusr
the request."

Hearst said the county commission will meet early next
week to decide whether to have him file an appeal.
Commission President .Harold Montgomery said Fri·
day he could not comment on what action the commission
will rake.
"We need a little time to look at this,'' he said . Montgomery added that the commission would probably re·
lease a statement Monday .
The commissioner d.id say the ruling coulp have a
negati ve effect on the county's financial status if allowed
to stand.
"We only get a certain amount of money to operate the
county on," h.e said. "II would be just taking money from
other departments (to meet the VSC's requesls)."
Common Pleas Court J udgeJoseph L. Cain ruled Th4rs-

A

brief hlotory of lhe legal IMlnll regarding veteran•

service commlulona:

•1988- The state gives county commlsalonSiho rtghtto

revlae budget requests submitted by VSCs. Betore, the
commisolono were required to meet the request.
•1991 -The o1ate suprema court upholdolhe Plckaway
commission's right to revise hs VSC's budget request.
•1994- House Blll4481a adop1ed by the s1ale, removing
1M word '1ravlse" from 1ho law regarding tho county
commission's appropriation offundslo the vsc. vsca end
county commissions disagree on whether th~ commission

removes the commissions' autllorlty.
.
• Jan. 1995 -The Gatlia County Commission gives the
VSC an eslimatod budget of $117,000 for the year. The VSC
had requested $206,800.
• Feb. 1995- The county veteransservlce qllice reports a
shortage of funds and announces It will have to close Its
doors.

The county commission and VSC holds an eleventh-hour

d.ay the coumy commission must meet the VSC' s budget
request as long as it does not exceed one half-mill
($250,000) and the county is not in a financial crunch that
requires cutting all departmental budgets.
Cain's decision is in response to a lawsuit filed in March
by Veterans Service Officer Sieve Swords and his secre-

City manager: Commission will not formally
consider change in 'open consumption' law

By GEORGE ABATE
nmes-Sentlnal Staff
WELLSTON- An appeal to the
Ohio Supreme Court should be filed
wilhina week disputing the distribution of waste district funds, said Joe
Kasler, director of the Athens-Hocking_Solid Waste District.
·
The A-H board of directors voted
to appeal rhe decisional its May 16
meeting, Kasle r said. The di strict
had 45 days from May 9 to file the
appeal.
· "We 'II not ify the supreme court."
Kasler said . "The ' upremccourt will-

By KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel Stall
GALLIPOLIS - A request to
establish a sidewalk cafe-sty le
food and drink area on Court Street
during the Fourth of July holiday
will nor get the blessing of the
Gallipol.is Cily Commission,
City Manager Matthew Coppler
said a poll of the commissioners
showed all a-greed not to change

The A-H di; tricr has been fightin g
the local waste district in the courts
since 1993. when lhe district split
from the former six-county waste
· district.
The A-H district claimed the
""$50,000 of more than $500,000 in
pooled assets was set aside fnr A-H
to plan its new di ,tri cl.
.. But, tho Gallia-Jackson-MeigsVimon Solid Waste Management
District mainlained the departing
two-county district was breaking the
contract by Mmanding more lhan
$50,000.
The Fourth Districl Court of Appeals ruled by a 2-1 margin May 9
thea.'isets divided durin g the di strict's
separatiotl must follow the original
contract. The contract stated th e
newly-formed AI hens- Hocking district would get $50.000 of I he more
than $500,000 in total assets.
This remained an equilable portion of th e former assels. the court
w(Ote. The A-H district must assume the court costs for this case .
"Equitable need nor mean equal."
court files added.
Judge Lawrence Grey dissented
Continued on page A2

Vol. 30, No. 17

Gallia County, VSO funding dispute: A brief history of events

Waste district
set to file
another appeal

autom alit:ally acce: pt it"

.

negotiation and keepa the doors open. More than $12,000
In raises granted to the veterans service officer and his •

aecretary are revoked.

• March 1995 -The VSC submits a revised budget lor
$169,000. The county commission appropriates $127,500.
• April 1995- Veterans Service Office Steve Swords and
his secretary, Rhonda Lynch, file suit, alleging revocatiQn
of the pay raises and threats of a layoff were vi61ations of

their civil rights.

They also ask for a court order halting the commission 's

lnterterence wi1h VSC budgeting.

• May 1995 ~ Ruling over a similar argument in Lawrence
County, Judge Kenneth B. Ater decides the county commission must fund the VSC's full budget request and
cannot make revisions.
• June t 995 - Common Pleas Court Judge Joseph L CaIn
rules the Gallia County Board of Commissioners must
meet - and cannot revise- the VSC 's budget request, as

long as It does not exceed one-hall mill ($250,0011).

tary. Rhonda Lynch. The pair fil ed-to recover $ 12.&lt;XJO'"
CUt pay rai;es and lO SlOp lhe COUnty commi"lon ·, inter-.
ference with budget mailers.
.
Swords said Friday he was elated with the dec.,ion "It
was a great day for the veterans of the count) and the
Continued on page A2
1

Mental health
center director
resigns post
I

•

GALLIPOLIS - The head of a local ment•l health
service has rendered hi' resignalion.
. "The evenl s of the pa't year make it extremely diflicu lt
if nor impossible. for me to effecti ve ly continue my role"'
executive director of Woodland Center;:· Dr. Bernard F.
Niehm wrote to the cente"· hoar-i of tru&lt;tces in a letter
dated .May 31.
··After 40 year.. , in Lhe development anti admlm \ Lrauon
· of programs and 'crv~ ce' for Ihe mentall y \II and de' elnpmentally di sabl ed (the.IU\t 17 ) ea"at Woodl and). 11 i' w1t h
mixed emotions lhat I curt.., ldcr re..,1gnatmn and re t m:~­

city ordinances to allow for open

consumption of alcohol on the
section of Court between Secotld
and Third avenues.
The commission meets Tues-

mem ."

day and its agenda will not include any proposed changes to
city ordinances dealing with open
consumption, Coppler sa id.
•"'fhe consensus reached is that
·the commission doesn ' t want a
proposed ordinance brought 10
lhem," he added. "The city won ' t
act on it arid has no inlention to act

Niehm was nvt available for comment Friday.
Woodland Centers problems have come to • head in the
last·couple of months wirh employee by off, and program
.
,
changes.
File Photo
Last
week
,
17
'Vood
la
nd
Centers
employees
were
laid
NO ACTION EXPE;CT!=D- While a rough draft outlining changes to Gallipolis ordinances
off because of linan cial prohlems at the mental health
dealing with public alcohol consumption was prepared by City Solicitor Douglas Cowles, at
left, the Gallipolis City Commission will not lake action ·on any changes at Tuesday's meeting,
-;ervice .
City Manager Matthew Coppler, center, said. At right is Commissioner Celestine Sk.inner.
The layoffs were the second round "nee AprJI when
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -·- - - - - "- - - - - - - about a doze n Children·s Re... uJeniJa l Trejtmc:nt Program
011 it."
employees were released after the 317 Board. Which'g,;, The request. brought to rhe commission May 16 by local needed for the city ordinances. Coppler explained, but no formal
ern s \o\'oodland "s :-.late and federal funding . dec1dcd no1
businessman and radio perso nality Tom Young. touched off action wa~ ~[epa red for th e commi ssion 's con sideration .
~ upporl the program next year. ·.
"Based on the comm issioners' disinterest in tak ~
protesiS from religious groups and other citizens
The program was not being utilized hea,il) enough to
ing any action. nothing was form alized.'' he said .
objecting to the open consumpr ion of alcohol in an
jusrify
the expense and i' being replaced W\lh a fami l) - ·
Coppler said he and the commissioners had been .
area close to the ci ty park. sire of the annual River
oriented in-h ome trealmenl program. accordin'g to Wnodconlacted by a cross-section·of cilizens urging the cily
Recreation Festival.
·
land oflicial s.
.
not t0 grant the request. Officials were presented with
Commission President Carol O'Rourke said the
The
Woodland
board
also decided to cut it&lt;connec· tio n'
several petitions . as we ll as numerous letters and
public outcry againSt changing lhe city's stance on
with
the
fed
erally
funded
Head Start Program for underphone call s. he added.
· open con,u mplion prompted lhe commission not
privi
leged
for
preschoolers.
Young and rhe group making lhe request said the·
to lake action .
The program must find a new grantor. an orga mn.tll on to
sidewal k cafe concept was not affiliat ed wirh the
'There's a consensus of the commission not to
hand
le its legal and fina ncial re,pon,ibdrtie,_ h) Lhe Jul; I
fe stival but geared toward ,the numerous visitors the
chan ge anything," she said.
cut- off dat e.
event and lhe all -cl ass reunion ar Gallia Academ y
Young. speaking for a group of other citizens,
Last week, Nichm said the Wood lane! hoard aod Head
High School would bring to town that weekend.
wan red the city's permission to allow Court to be
S1art administrators did nor "ee l~)~ tn eyL~ nn h .., u~'·
You ng said-earlier that safe guard s to keep things
blocked off so that the chairs and rabies could beset
~ ncou raging the 'PIit.
from
getting out of hand wou ld be in place. Youn g.
up. Food and drink would be purchased from
Woodland has been Ihe &lt;.,pon..,or t lf HLcHJ SI JJt ft)r ~t htt u t
who hosts a ca ll-in show on WBYG-FM in Point
establishmen ts on Court. but a waiver to state an~
12
ye[l rs. when it look O\ e r the rt: . , JXIO.., Jbil!l te.., ,lwm the
Pleasan t. also ~l ressed the stalion was not endorsing
cit y laws on open containers would have tO be
Gal(ia -Meigs Communit}' A clilHI Agee~~:)
rhe idea.
approved-by the commission .
About 63 people arc ernp lo 0ed b) Ileac! St.irt. \\h\c h
City Solicitor Douglas Cow les drew up a roughdrafr of changes Young was unav ailable for further comment.
\erve~ nearly 400 familic'\ in G..tllta &lt;mJ M el~_.., 1.:ou ntl t:'\ .

DHS staff gets 4% pay hike
. By GEORGE ABATE
Times-Sentinel Staff
·
POMEROY - All Departmcnl of Human Services employees will get a 4
percent raise effective July 1, the Meigs County Board of Commissioners.
agreed Friday afternoon .
The raises will not come from county coffers, but from slate budget
allocations, said Mike Swisher, Meigs County DHS director.
During the last I 0 years, the employees earned two 5 percent raises, Swisher
said.
Last year, the total payroil for 54 employees totaled $1 ,123,549.89.-This
raise will amount to a $44,942.00 increase.
"I feel the employees and the case workers deserve .if," Commissioner Janet
Howard said.
Although the last raise for all employees was a 5 percent increase in 1991,
each year administrative staff gets a step increase.
. The employi'es' base salary is $1.80 per hour less than surrounding average
counties; Swisher said. Meigs County employees get $2.69 per hour less·than
Gallia County DHS employees, according to Swisher.
·
In other business, lhe board agreed to increase the number of agencie~ who
help disadvanlaged childron. The Meigs County Family and Children Firsl
Council was established.
Th; new council will include : Ron Adkins, Board of Alcohol, Drug
Addiction and Mental Health Services; Jon Jacobs, Board of Health ; Mike
Swisher, H~man Services Deparlment; James Soulsby, Meigs County Sheriff;
Bill Buckley, Meigs ~al Schools; John Riebel, County Board of Education;
Dewey Horton, Middleport Mayor; Bob Buck,,l.uvenile Court; Fred Hoffman,
CQunry Commissioners; David Gloeckner, ITPA; Chris Zimmer, Head Start;
SleveBeha,.Carleton Schools ; and a representative from the Early Intervention
Collaborative Group, along wilh parenls of children receiving services.
The Children Cluster has been coordinating local agencies to provide
services for youths sine~ 1978. ·
Currently, no money is available at rhe state level for clusters, m~king the
possibility for combining of funds, Buck said. This co~ncil will meet once a
year, while smaller clusters will continue to meet once a month .
''I think it 's a good group of people and 1hey are real inlerested in helping
children,".Commission President Fred Hoffman said.
In other action, the commissioners will make local changes lo comply with
nood insurance. Evenlually, the county will h~ve IO issue permits for people
who build in the nood plain, Hoffman said.
.
The board also learned about updates to the Family Leave Act, which will
all9w a minimum qfJl_~eq~ayoff and prot"!;~!!1Rf!(the.positionJQ,t:H~e_of
Contln:ued on page A2
'

News capsules
Economic

~eports

GOOD MORNING

spur concerns of possible recession

WASHINGTON (AP)- In a seco nd straight day of
ominous economic new s, the government reported on
Friday lhe biggest national job loss in four yearsanda lhird .
·
stra-ight declin e .
ECONOMIC INDICATOR
for a closely

lndexof=\

indi-

watched forecast-

:

ing gauge .
EGonomists said
chances of a re-

ors

Seasonally adjusted index

t987=100

103

cession

101.1.

102

101

99

98
97
96
MJJASONO
t994

were

growing . The
department's report on' u'nemploymentshowed
rhat 1,01 ,000 jobs
were lost in May,
the biggest selback since the nation was pulling
out of the last recession in April
1991.
The layoffs were ·
centered in manufacturingand con:
struction and

JFMA
1195

caught analysts totally off guard. They had been forecasting an increase in payroll employment of around
175,000 jobs following a loss of 7,000 jobs in April.
The overall unemploy ment rate, which is obtained
from a separate survey of house holds, did edge down
slightly ro 5.7 percent in May, but the slrght improvement followed a huge jumpof0.3 percenlage poinllhe
previous month.
Meanwhile, lhe Commerce Deparlment reported
thai irs Index of Leading Economic Indicators fell for
a lhird straighl month, declining 0.6 percent in April
eight of the I I forward-pointing business baromclers
lurned down.
Traditionally, three consecutive declines in I he leading index is a signal of a recession. While it has
accurately predicled all nine of the country's postwar
recessions. it pos1ed three or more consecutive de clines on five other time s when no recessi on followed.
But economis1s noted that on most of lhe false
readings. the economy slowed significantly even if it
avoidod,an outright recession .
The Dow Jones industrial average, whi ch had been

racing to record highs on euphoria about a sofllandi ng,
fell 28.36 to close at 4,444.39 as investors began to
worry about the impact of a weak economy on corporate profits.
·

Today's
17 Sections • 178

PaRe~

Business
Calendars
Comic~

Editorials

A4

~Loc
--.7
, ----------~,u

-

AS
Obituaries
Sports
Cl -6
~~~t~
h e~~----~BI
A2

lack Agdersop

Freel Crow
Bob HoeOicb

lirD Sands

Ohio jobless rate up to 4.7 percent; Shows signs of softening laborCOLUMBUS, Ohio(AP)- The state's unemploymenl rate increased0.2
percenlage point to 4.7 percent in May, the government s;nd Fnday .
The nation 'sjobless rate droppedslightly, to 5.7 percent , from~f 8 percent
rn April.
·
Ohio 's unemployment in April was 4.5 percent .
" The May employment survey shows s1gns of a suflcmng of the lahar
market in Ohio," said Debra Bowland, admintslratorof the Oh\o Bureau of,
Employmenl Services.
•

induwics.,' '
The stare still had one of the lowest rates among the II largest stales, •he
said, Md the second largest number of people with JObs in Male hr story .
Among the 11 largest stales. Oh1o had the second-lowC&lt;.Ijobles. rale, with
North Carolma at I he bottom of the hst at4.3 percent. Calllfom•a ted the list
at 8.5 percent.
.
The num.ber of Ohroans with jobs was 5.3 milhon, up 71.000 from Aprtl.
The number of workers unemployed last month was 262.000. compared with.
:_ :.:_(_)h.i.Q.@JJ~s.toJx.fnllol\l.in_g nation~ltrends lowar~.s.Jnwc.r-hiring.i~&gt;-kq _ £~.,_000 !._~_Apnl.
_ _ ~ ··- ... ·--~·-· _
__ .-· --·· ·-~

••

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