<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11070" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/11070?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-19T22:02:50+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42036">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/702e6c9b0fe41d7ffe48f9812eaf7179.pdf</src>
      <authentication>1e745b28cd4f52b9d17e55351005e7c2</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="34927">
                  <text>Page--12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 11,1991

Ohio Lottery

Thomas smoked marijuana in colleg.e President Bush accepts
base-closing plan

WASHINGTON (AP)
Supreme Court nominee Clarence
Thomas "took several puffs" on a
marijuana cigareue in college and perhaps again in law school but the White House says the matter is "inconsequential."
The conservative appeals court
judge "believes it was a mislake
and never repealed it," the White
House said in a statement Wednesday nighL
The statement said: "Judge
Thomas took several puffs on a
marijuana cigarette in college and
perhaps once in law school.''
"Judge Thomas fully disclosed
thi s information on the FBI form
and interview which were provided
to the Senate Judiciary Committee
in connection with the judge's
nomination to the court of
appeals," said the statement read
over the telephone by White House
spokeswoman Judy Smith.
"We view this maner as inconsequential,'' the statement said.
Ms. Smith said she could not
immediately provide information
beyond the statement but suggested
that questions about dates and
places might be cleared up today.
Thomas is a graduate of Holy
Cross College and Yale Law
School.
The statement was prepared in
response to a query by The Washington Post.
Another Supreme Court nominee in recent years was tripped up
by marijuana smoking.
Federal appeals Judge Douglas
Ginsburg was selected by President
Reagan for a Supreme Court seat
on Oct. 29, 1987, after the Senate
defeated the nomination of Judge

on Bush," Bork said. "If he nominated a white male conservative,
there wouldn't be a chance that
he'd go through. The Senate Judiciary Comminee has forced a quota
system on Bush."
The president denied Wednesday that he was filling a racial
' quota by picking Thomas to
replace the retiring Thurgood MarshaD, the court's only black justice.
Bush called Thomas' nomination "the right thing at the right
time" and predicted he would win
confmnation.
Thomas is continuing his visits
to key senators at their Capitol Hill
offices and is preparing for his confirmation hearings scheduled for
September.
Bork said Thomas is "probably
not" the best legal mind the president could find for the court job.
"But he may be the best legal mind
he had a chance to get confirmed,''
Bork said.
"There's no point to (Bush's)
throwing up great legal minds who
are going to get shot down," Bork
added. "The object is to get somebody confmned. George Bush has
a problem with that very liberal
Senate and an even more liberal
Senate Judiciary Committee.
"In these days ., you have to go
to somebody who has a constituency. and right now that means a
black, or a Hispanic or possibly a
woman," Bork said
Bork said he thought Thomas
would be confmned despite a rancorous political fight. "The key is
the Southern Democratic senators
who need the black vote to be
elected," he said. "If the black
vote is solidly against him, he

UNDER SCRUTINY - Two Supreme Court nominees in
recent years have been tripped up by marijuana smoking. Judge
Clarence Thomas, right, President Bush's nominee for the High
Court, "took several puffs" on a marijuana cigarette iD coDege and
perhaps again in law school. Federal appeals Judge Douglas Gins·
burg, len, who was selected by President Ronald ReaJan for a seat
in the Supreme Court on Oct. 29, 1987, withdrew hiS nomination
after admitting be bad smoked marijuana while a professor at
Harvard Law SchooL (AP LaserPboto)
Robert H. Bork. But Ginsburg won 't be conllnned."
withdrew nine days later after
But Bork said the black vote
admitting he had smoked marijuana probably will be split, allowing
while a professor at Harvard Law Thomas to win confmnation.
School.
Southern blacks and numerous
Meanwhile, Bork said in an civil rights organizations opposed
interview with AP Broadcast Ser- Bark's nomination four years ago.
vices that political reality forced Anthony M. Kennedy eventually
Bush to use a quota system in pick- was confirmed to fiU the vacancy
ing Thomas for the high court.
Reagan had chosen Bork, and then
''That kind of a choice is forced Ginsburg, to fill.

Space station gets subcommittee 0 K
WASHINGTON (AP)
NASA's space station project survived a challenge in a Senate panel,
but critics of the $30 billion-plus
orbital laboratory said they may try
to slash the money later on.
An appropriations subcommittee
gave voice vote approval Wednesday to a bill giving the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration $14.3 billion in the fiscal year
that begins OcL I.

That would be $437 million before the full Senate Appropria- not only NASA's science and techmore than the House approved last tions Comminee late today.
nology programs, but those of other
month after rancorous debate, The
. Part of the work for the space independent agencies as weD.''
Senate version adds $128 million station will be done at the NASA
Some Democratic senators said
to the $1.9 biDion the House allo- Lewis Research Center in Cleve- after the subcommiuee meeting
cated to the station, bringing it to land.
that they might try to slash tile stathe $2 biUion level President Bush
Approval of the space station tion's funds when the bill reaches
requested.
money came over the protests of 14 the Senate floor, no earlier than
An $81 billion bill to pay for major scientific societies. They next week. Once the Senate votes,
housing, veterans and space pro- said in a lener to the Senate that the any differences with the House will
grams, including the station, in the "excessive cost" of the proposed be ironed out by a joint committee.
coming fiscal year was to come station "threatens the v1tahty of
The $30 billion cost estimate is
NASA's and covers expenses to
the turn of the century when the
station is in orbit and ready to be
occupied permanently by four
astronauts.

New figures released on
deaths caused_by US forces
By SUSANNE M. SCHAFER
AP, Military Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- U.S.
forces killed 20 of their own and
British troops and wounded 28
more in "friendly fire" in~idents
durin$ the Persian Gulf War,
according to figures released by the
U.S. military.
But Pentagon sources warn that
investigations under way will add
to the tragic toll.
"It won't be massive (numbers),
but there will be more," said a
senior Pentagon officer, who spoke
on condition of anonymity.
In the most detailed description
yet released of cases where allied
soldiers were killed by American
forces, U.S. Central Command said ·
Wednesday that 11 Americans and
9 British troops died, while 15 U.S.
troops and 13 British were wounded by friendly fJre.
That translates into about 7 percent of all Americans killed in
action during the 43-day war.
"This is our best snapshot so
far," said Capt. Jack Fouts, a
spokesman for the U.S. Central
Command in Tampa, Fla. "As
. more investigation is done, the
numbers could change .... This 1s
something that certainly will

rece1ve lots of study."
From the beginning of the air
war on Jan. 17 until the end of the
ground war on Feb. 28, the U.S .
military counts 148 troops killed in
action and 458 wounded.
The British count 24 total deaths
from combat action. Eleven of
those were due to auacks from U.S.
forces.
The Central Command and the
Marine Corps cited the ongoing
studies in declining to reveal the
names or many specifics of the various incidents.
ln past conflicts, the military has
not provided casually figures for
U.S. troops firing on their compatnots.

But given the high-tech nature
of modem warfare, the subject has
become the object of intensive
Slildy inside the Pentagon, which is
scouring its performance in the
desert to fmd ways to prevent such
deaths.
Here are the Gulf War friendly
fJre incidents, as reported by Central Command:
-Jan. 24. Two Marines were
wounded when a U.S. Air Force A10 strafed a Marine Corps HumVee and a 5-ton truck.
-Jan. 29. Seven Marines were

.

.

killed by friendly fire wben a U.S.
Air Force A-10 fired a missile that
hit a Light Armored Vehicle during
a clash with Iraqi forces.
-Feb. 2. A Marine lance corporal was killed and two Marines
were wounded during an air attack
at the battle for Khafji.
-Feb. 14. Three U.S. soldiers
were wounded in a small arms
exchange during urban clearing
operauons.
-Feb. 17. Two Army soldiers
were killed when a Bradley fighting vehicle was struck by a missile
fired from an AH-64 Apache helicopter. A ground surveiDance vehicle was damaged in the incident
and six soldiers were wounded.
-Feb. 24. A Marine was killed
and two Marines were wounded
when a missile struck a radar unit.
A Marine Corps spokesman said
the incident occurred near AI
Wafra inside Kuwait.
-Feb. 26. Nine British soldiers
died and II others were wounded
when the armored vehicles in
which they were riding were fired
on by a U.S. Air Force A-10.
-Feb. 27. Two British soldiers
were wounded when a U.S.
armored vehicle ftred on their tank.

Rep. Leon Panella, D-Calif.,
whose district includes Fort Ord,
said the community must look to
the future uses of the base's land
Some Texas lawmaters have
concluded that although the state is
losing Carswell, Bergstrom Air
Force Base in Austin and Chase
Field Naval Air Station in Beeville,
Texas will gain about 4,000 jobs
because realignments will draw
more people to Fort Hood and elsewhere.
Courter said communities hit by
shutdowns can be the "beneficiaries of greater prosperity down the
line" if they readjust to using the
base for other purposes.
The panel made one last-minute
change to the list: Fort Chaffee,
Ark., once listed as a closure, was
put in the realignment column
because some active duty personnel
will remain at the facility_

ONE OF THE BIGGEST
INDOOR TENT SALES GOING ON
NOW AT•••

RUTLAND FURNITURE CO.

REFRIGERATORS

RANGES

2 DOOR FROST FREE

GAS &amp; ElECTRIC

Starting At

Starting At

$44995

$349 95

AIR
CONDITIONERS
Starting At

$24995

'RUTLAND FURNITURE·Rutland,.
CO. Ohio

·,

•

•

2 sections, 14 Pages 25 cenls

Vol. 42, No. 48
Copyrighted 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, July 12, 1991

A Multimedia

tnc. Newspaper

AEP: Coal bill
won't matter
WELLSTON, Ohio (AP) - A
new law that seeks to preserve coal
mining jobs by giving utilities
incentives to bum Ohio coal likely
wiD not affect the fate of American
Electric Power's Gavin plant, an
AEP executive said.
William Lohta, executive vice
presidenl of the corporation, told
the Southeast Ohio Regional Council Thursday that incentives contained in the bill were positive tools
but must be placed in perspective.
"The $!-per-ton tax credit at
Gavin would amount to about $6
million annually, but contrast that
with the average annual cost of
compliance at Gavin, which ranges
: from about $125 million to $230
· million, depending upon what compliance option you choose," Lohta
said in prepared remarks.

"So these incentives, though
they may possibly be helpful at
other locauons, probably will not
play a major role for Gavin," he
said.
Bill Oiler, a United Mine Workers official, said he wasn't surprised by Lohta' s remarks. Oiler
was among 120 people in Athens
Thursday night for a Public Utilities Commission of Ohio hearing
on the Clean Air Act.
"AEP is a business. They can't
make a viable decision on just the
legislation. The PUCO will have
something to say.'' Oiler said.
PUCO Chairman Craig Glazer
said the hearing and otllers to be
held in Columbus and Canton
would help the PUCO analyze
AEP's overall plan to comply with
Continued from page 3

FAMILIAR SITE. You know it must be summertime when the
Delta Queen travels through the Big Bend area. The boat "visited"

Middleport and Pomeroy during tbe midday on Thursday,
bedecked in red, white and blue bunting.

·Aging program funding phased! Voinovich will sign budget
out in approved Ohio budget
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Only phase-out funding for the
Options for Elders program was
·included in the two-year budget
passed by the Oh1o General
''!\$Set!jbJrltlld' Mw awaiting Gov,
George V. Voinovich 's signature.
Eleanor Thomas, director of the
Meigs County Council on Aging,
expressed her disappoinanent at the
program phase-out Friday morning
after receiving word of the General
Assembly's action from the Ohio
Department of Aging, Columbus.
It was Gov. Voinovich's original budget recommendation that
the Options for Elders demonstration programs in Southeastern Ohio
and Franklin County be phased out
and that the Hassport program be
expanded.
Mrs. Thomas said that $3.5 million has been included in the budget for the two year phase-out period. The program ·of assistance to
the elderly in their homes will
cease in July, 1993.
In Meigs County approximately
75 frail elderly have been able to
remain in their own homes with
some assistance through the program. Many, according to Mrs.
Thomas, may now be forced to
move into a nursing home or in

with members of their families in
order to receive the care they
require.
The dollars from Options has
provided home delivered tleals,
homemaker services, transporta·
lion, and chore services, and health
care through the Home Health Services of Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Services were provided on a
sliding fee scalc,meaning that
many receiving services paid a portion of tile cost. While this many
times was a small amount for
many, it meant that they contributed to their care while being supplemented through Options making it
possible for them to remain independent in part.
Options for Elders has been considered an extremely successful
program in Southeastern Ohio by
the agencies involved and the
recipients. Many of the 75 receiving services have indicated that
they would not be able to remain in
their homes if such help was not
available.
Mrs. Thomas has repeatedly
defmed the Options for Elders progrnm as cost effective, pointing out
that the cost to the State would be
much increased by phasing out the
program since the services provided in the home are much less than

Maynard, the village's pool manager. Maynard resigned as pool manager but was hired by council as a
Dennis Wolfe was named on lifeguard. She agreed to continue in
Thursday night by Syracuse Vil- the position or manager until a
lage Council to fill the unexpir_ed replacement could be found.
However, council did hire Shanterm of Council Pres1dent J1m Hill,
whose resignation was effective on non Slavin as pool manager. Slavin
could not be reached at last night's
July 3.
.
There have been two resigna- meeting to confirm the appointtions on the council in as many ment, but had previously told counmonths. Earlier, Jack WiUiams was cil that she was interested in the
named 'to fill the seat of Teresa position.
Discussion was held regarding
Tyson-Drumm~r. ~illiams was
the general operation of the pool
sworn in at last mght s meeung.
Pool Business
and the pool's financial condition.
Also resigning a post was Marty According to discussions held last

Tf1EMrN IJflii S ~ AVINGS f DUN!J IHHIJlJGHOlll lHF SlfJRF 1

7·2·2211
TOU AEE 1·100·137·1217

Tonight, mostly cloudy
wilh a chance or showers
and thunderstorms. Low
65-70.

Page4

By KATIE CROW
Sentinel Correspondent

WE HAVE A SUPER SELECTION OF USED APPLIANCES.
RA!'IGES, DRYERS, REFRIGERATORS, ETC.

St. lt. 114

Pick 3:756
Pick 4: 9414
Cards: Q-H, 2-C
J-D; 8-S

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) nursing home care.
Ohio's lawmakers adopted a $27.2
Tbe budget does provide for an billion biennial budget bill and
expansion of the Passport program• · Gov. George Voinovich said within
However, as explained by Mrs.
he will sign it into law
Thomas, only the indigent, or Med- minutes
when it reaches his deslc, probably
icaid eligible, qualify for services next week.
under that program. She said that
final votes marked
of the 75 now on Options, only theThursday's
end
of
a
long
pro- ·
about 10 or 15 will be eligible. This cess that started bargaining
in March and
means that a few thousand dollars bogged down two weeks ago when
elderly residents might have saved the Senate and House were forced
for home or health emergencies or to enact a one-month budget to
even burial expenses would have to meet a July I fiscal deadline.
be "spent down" before they would
In a flurry of activity Thursday
qualify for any assistance through before adjourning for a summer
Passport.
break, the Senate completed pasUnder Options in the Southeast- sa~e when it voted to go along 27-5
ern Ohio project which covers I0 wllh the report of a conference
counties, a caseload of about 700 commiuee that resolved Senatehas been maintained.
differences.
Under the Passport program in House
Earlier, the House approved it
eight of those same 10 counties, 80-15 after members of both parthere are only 100 slots for Pass- ties called it a responsible docuport. This means that 600 of those ment that stretches the state's
frail elderly now receiving ser- declining tax revenues as far as
vices, even if they are Medicaid possible to avoid cuts and maintain
eligible, will not have a place in the vital services.
new progrnm.
While the governor said he
In anticipation of the phase-out would sign the bill, he indicated he
of Options, no new clients have might veto pans of it. He did idenbeen accepted since July I. Ser- tify any specific targets Thursday.
vices will continue over the next
In other business, lawmakers
two years to those already in the completed passage of a separate,
program or until the $3.5 million 1991-1993 budget totaling about
set up in the budget has been spenl $411 million for the Bureau of
Workers' Compensation.

Also approved was a separate,
two-year appropriation of $77.4
million for the Ohio lndustnal
Commission, which hears appeals
from decisions regarding injuredworker claims.
Both of those agencies arc
financed by employer assessments.
Rep. Patrick Sweeney, D-Cleveland, chairman of the joint committee, told House colleagues that tile
two-ye~r budget is fair and balanced, and is the best the state
could do in uncertain econom1c
times.
Sweeney said the bill shows
necessary restraint but protects
education, health and other v1tal
services without raising major
taxes.
"It's a budget you can take
home and say, 'Ohio is· well managed,' " be said.
. .
While General Fund spending m
the next two years would exceed
the 1991-1993 budget ~~~ore than
$2 billion, the bill man
acrossthe-board cuts if tax revenues fall
below estimates.
It calls for about $281 million in
new "revenue enhancements" that
enabled the conference committee,
after other adjustments, to add
$120 million to the bill's total.
The revenue gains will come
from. among otller things, extending the base of the 5 percent sales
tax to lawn care and landsc_aping.
detective and protection services.

I

and purchases or equipment by
cable television companies and fed eral contractors.
The biggest portion of the
money is earmarked for welfare,
including a soaring Medicaid program, which receives $11.3 billion.
Primary and secondary education is down for $7.4 billion and
higher education $3.6 billion.
Generally, education will
receive money in the first year
about equal to current levels and a
5 percent boost in the second year.
House Speaker Vern Riffe. DWheelersburg, said the budget is
"in tune with the economic realities of tile state at this time." He
said it reflects beuer management
than other states that are struggling
to pass budgets during the recession.
Some minority Democrats in the
Senate voted against the bill, how
ever, denouncing sharp cuts in the
General Assistance welfare program and what they said were inadequate outlays for education,
among .others.
"This is the worst education
budget in this state in the past l 0
years," said Senate Minority Leader Robert Boggs, D-Jcfferson.
The biU, in the negotiatin~ process, was stripped of several trutiatives proposed by the governor,
including a plan to turn Ohio's
retail liquor stores over to the privaiC sector.

Syracuse village council discusses pool, recycling program

You'll Find Storewide Savings On
All Bedroom, Living Room &amp;
Dining Room Furniture••••
NOTHING HELD BACK!

President Bush, who has sigThe most commonly known
naled a willingness to sign gun- brands that the bill would ban are
control legislation if Congress Uzis, AK model assault rifles and
passed a crime bill to his liking, the Street Sweeper.
mdicated last week that he found
The assault-weapons ban, first
the Senate bill generally accept·
sponsored by Sen. Dennis
able.
DeConcini, D-Ariz., was narrowly
Attorney General Dick Thorn- approved by the Senate last year
burgh went to Capitol Hill .on but was stripped out of anti-crime
Wednesday to urge Republicans to legislation during a House-Senate
vote for the bill.
conference.
But one of the Senate· s leawng
It would require people who
supporters of $un control said he already possess the weapons to regwould vote agamst fmal passage of ister them with federal authorities.
the measure because of the numer- The measure also would impose a
oos death penalty provisions.
10-year mandatory sentence on
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D- defendants found guilty of using
Ohio, said the bill "virtually • the banned weapons in a violent or
assures that we will execute inno- drug crime.
cent people; people whose only
The focus of the gun-control
crime was to be caught in the cross- debate was on the so-called Brady
fire of this legislative duel over Bill, which imposes a waiting periwho can be tougher on crime."
od on handgun purchases to give
Beside the waiting period on police a chance to check to deterhandg._lllf'rPurchases, the bill would mine if buyers have criminal
ban tile manufl!Cture and sale of records.
nine types of semiautomatic
Th'at debate effectively ended
weapons. These arc five foreign- June 28 wben the Senate voted 67made styles of assault weapons and 32 to impose a five-day waiting
four domestically produced types.
period on handgun pwthases while
police conduct background checks.

·,

' defense spending by 25 percent in
the next five years.
A number of other major installations are slated to be eliminated:
Fprt Ord, Seaside, Calif.; Fort
Devens, Ayer, Mass.; Carswell Air
Force Base, Fort Worth, Texas and
Long Beach Naval Station, Long
Beach, Calif.
Congress, like Bush, is forbidden bv law from amendin~t the
repon, Its lake-it-or-leave-it vote is
likely in September.
Courter, a former Republican
con~ressman from New Jersey,
predicted the report wiD eventuaUy
"receive the blessing of
Congress," but not without a
pitched lobbying battle.
Lawmakers from Pennsylvania
and New Jersey have filed a lawsuit in federal district court to block
the closing of the Philadelphia
installations.
Senate Majority Leader George
Mitchell, D-Maine, was one of nine
lawmakers who unsuccessfully
petitioned Bush to send the report
back to the panel with recommendations that it remove from the list
three Strategic Air Command
bases: Carswell, Loring Air Force
Base in Maine and Castle Air Force
Base in California.
The lawmakers complained the
panel reached its decision on the
SAC bases "hastily under an
abbreviated, irregular procedure,
simply because" members faced a
deadline.

8 Big .
DaveI

Senate moves toward passage
of sweeping crime bill
By JAMES ROWLEY
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Senate is moving toward fmal passage of a sweeping crime bill that
would impose a five-day waiting
period on handgun purchases and
ban nine types of semiautomatic
assawt-style weapons.
Senators took a big step
Wednesday night toward final passage .when they voted 71-27 to curtail further debate, which has taken
up nearly three weeks of the chamber's time.
It was not immediately ~lear
when the final vote would take
place.
But Senate Majority Leader
George Mitchell, D-Maine,
obtained an agreement for an additional 10 hours of debate, with
amendments restricted to those
directly related to provisions in the
bill.
The crime bill expands the federal death penalty to include 51
crimes and conrains tougher ~nal­
ties for drug traffiCking and illegal
use of fueanns.

By JOAN MOWER
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush declared his "total
acceptance" Wednesday of an
independent panel's recommendalion to close 34 military facilities, a
belt-tightening move that reflects
the nation's shrinking defense
requirements.
Bush sent the report to Congress
where the battle over the bases
began almost immediately .
Congress has 45 legislative days to
approve or reject the package, but
cannot modify iL
Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., upset
over the panel's proposed closing
of the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard,
introduced a resolution to kill the
plan. Aside froJD the clqsures, the
plan would restructure 48 other
military installations in the 1990s.
About 82,000 uniformed and
38,000 civilian jobs are directly at
slake in the areas where the closores are slated, and many other
workers doubtlessly would face
layoffs as local firms struggle to
survive without military dollars.
But other communities stand to
gain, because some bases would be
enlarged and modernized in the
shuffle.
Bush said he was happy with the
way the seven-member Defense
Base Closure and Realignment
Commission conducted its business. "I think they did their work
without any reference to politics,"
he said, adding the list had his
"total acceptance."
Bush, speaking at a news conference, acknowledged· the hardships some communities wiD experience. "Any time' you close a
base, your going to have people in
that district or that state raise Cain
about it," he said.
Jim Courter, the commission
chairman, said the president was
"very enthusiastic" about the
report as well as the panel's handling of deliberations in open sessions.
The closings proposed by the
commission will cost $4. I billion
from 1992 to 1997. After that, savings are projected at S1.5 billion
annually.
The cuts, which were endorsed
by the Defense Deparunent, underscore projected changes,in the U.S.
military m the post-Cold War era.
The Pentagon is planning to reduce

Pirates beat
Reds

night, the pool continues to' operate
at a deficit and costs the village
from the general fund. Council held
discussion on possible remedies for
the situation.
Recycling Program
Henry Eblin, the village trash
collector, also met with council
regarding the recycling program
that ~ill be mandatory in June,
1992. Councilman Jim Pape stated
that Eblin should come up with
ideas that will work for both Eblin
and the village.
Eblin noted that he has not spoken to anyone regarding the progr:un at this point. and is not cer-

tam. at thiS JUncture, which pro- ucts ...
Other Business
gram would work. He is also not
Member Kenny Buckley
sure at this point how the program
brought to the attention that a lot at
would work.
Pape stated that it must be eco- the comer of Bridgeman and Third
nomically feasible for !iblin and needed cleaning, and trash ncar the
that the village must have people area needed to be hauled away.
willing to work with thc -progrnm.
Buckley also noted that a
"If the program does not work," guardrail near the corpol]ltion limit
Pape said, "where are we going to was in need of repair or replace put the trash?"
ment. Council believed that it was
"Recycling starts in the the responsiblity of the Ohio
kitchen,'' Eblin noted. "If people Department of Transportation.
have a good attitude. it will work.
Buckley also reported that vanHowever, recycling is just another dalism at the park and dugouts is
utility. It will cost additional
mon~y to handle recyclable prod-

increasing .
Attending were: Mayor Eber
Pickens, Councilmen Buckley and
Pape, Council members Katie
Crow. Jack Williams and Minter
Fryar. and Clerk/Treasurer Janice
Lawson.
The council also adopted a proposed budget for fiscal year 1992.
Receipts are estimated at $166,425
and expenses at $168,325. Council
estimates the balance as of December 1992 at $20,448. The council
also adopted a mayor's report for
reciepts $1,496 for June.

Kings Island death
~------Local briefs--------,
resulted from drowning
Sheriff's deputies probe accident
Sharon Farley was treated but not transported.

Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby repons th;lt his deputies
probed a one-car accident Tuesday pight on State Route 681 at
Snowville.
According to the report, Alan Holter of Athens was heading cast
in his 1989 Ford and went off the roadway on the right in a curve.
Damage was sustained to the underside of the vehicle.
No injuries or citations were reported.

EMS units answer ji~e calls
Five calls for assistance were answered on Thursday and Friday
by units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.
At 1:41 p.m. on Thursday, Middleport unit took Benji Call to
Veterans Memorial Hospital from State Route 143. At 2:23 p.m.,
Syracuse unit went to College Street. Russell Radcliffe was laken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital. At 4:27 p.m., Rutland went to Meigs
Mine 2. James Johnson was laken to Holzer Medical Center. At
6:05 p.m., Racine unit went to Canter's Road. Icy Tucker was laken
to Veterans.
At 4:30 a.m. on Friday, Middleport unit went to Mill Street.

•

Theft, entry reported

·

On Wednesday, Meigs County Sheriff's deputies took a th_eft
report from Norman Milliron, who reported that a bathroom smk
and fixtures were laken from his son's home on Bone Hollow Road.
The theft, according to Milliron, took place within ~e last two days.
Deputies also took a report on Wednesday mght from Glema
Yarbrough of Beech Grove Road, who reported that she discovered
someone had broken out the door glass and ransaked the home.
Nothing was reported missing.

Racine fight investigated
The Meigs County Sherifrs Department was called to Racine
late Wednesday evemng for a fighL According to the departtnent, a
vehicle stopped and two subjects got out and began to fighL Shortly
thereafter, the fight stopped, one subject got in the car and the other
walked toward town. The subjects were gone when depuues
arrived. The caller was unable to identify the ear or the subjects.

CINCINNATI (AP)- One of instantly from cardiac arrest caused
two men killed in a pond accident by tile shock.
at an amusement park died from
Haithcoat had jumped into the
drowning and not electrical shock, pond to save a friend, Timothy
the Hamilton County coroner ruled. Binning, who had fallen in and
The men died in the June 9 inci- received a shock . Robertson
dent June 9 in which a faulty aera- jumped into the water to help the
tor pump was submerged in the other men.
pond at Kings Island in Kings
Binning, 22, of suburban
Mills.
Mariemont, recovered.
Coroner Dr. Frank Cleveland
Stanley Chesley, a Cincinnati
said Thursday he ruled the death of lawyer representin~ the families of
Darrell Robertson a drowning in the three men, sa1d Thursday. the
part because the 20-year-old cause of death has no bearing on
Hamilton security guard's lungs possible lawsuits.
and stomach con tamed water.
Officials from the Occupational
But Cleveland said Robertson Health and Safety Administration
and William Haithcoat Jr., 21, of said they expect an investigation
Cincinnati also both received elec- into the incident to be completed
trical shocks.
within a week.
Cleveland said Haithcoat died

,.

�The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Friday, July 12, 1991 ,

AEP...

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

~~MULTIMEDIA. INC
ROBERT L. WINGETT

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Publisher

General Manager
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

A MEMBER of The Associated Press. Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In good taste. address ing Issues. not persona II·
ti es

.

Thanks many for happy 4th
Dear Editor:

'

I'd like to seize the opponunity
to express heanfelt thanks for all
the efforts that helped make our
Founh of July Celebration successful.
: In February the President of the
United Slates appealed to America
to try to make ·this Fourth of July
1!11 extra special welcome home for
our troops. I think we did itl
: The Village of Middleport, at
~e request of Mayor Hoffman and
llle Village Council, pulled out all
(he stops, and renovated Dave
~iles park-new paint job on the
building-new park signs both on
Dave Diles Park and General
Hartinger Park-a nice concrete slab
for our entenainers-and with the
help of Feeney-Bennett Post of the
American Legion and the Auxiliary-a tent over it as well as the
three banners at the entries to town.
The Village crews worked very
hard to make it a good day, under
the direction of Bill Durst. The
Middlepon Police Depanment was
there when we needed them, thanks
to Chief Sid Little, and the Middle·
pon Fire Depanment outdid themselves under the direction of Chief
Jeff Darst. The firing of the fireworks was fantastic.
We appreciate the extra effon
extended by Bill Miller and Charlie
Frye-we saw them out there pouring concrete the Sunday before the
4th, Ray Smith, Paul Smith, among
many others, are to be congratulated for their hard work, as is Dusty
Tobias, Bill Gilmore, Carol Baker,
Debbie Davidson. Margaret Wyan,
l';larlene Wilson and Bert Dill of
the Big Bend CB Club did a great

job of providing communicabons.
A special thanks ~oes to Chuck
Kitchen for being JUSt the right
touch as Master of Ceremonies,
and cenainly to The Shady River
Shufflers and the Crossover Band
for the excellent entenainment for
the evening. To all the
concessionaires who provided
refreshments fa the huge crowd.
The day wouldn't have been
complete without all the participants in our parade-you made our
'day-and we thank you one and all.
A very special note of thanks to
General Hartinger for his generous
response to my request to come
home to be a part of our festivities.
He did all this at his own expense
just because we asked him to, and
his generosity was unparalleled. He
must have shaken at least ten-thousand hands, with a gracious smile
for each and every one. He told me
that he really enjoyed renewing old
acquainrances, and enjoyed the holiday immensely. We gamed respect
for his office and for his many
accomplishments. We are proud to
number him among our Meigs
County natives.
This letter is long and I fear
naming names, because I'll probably have a momentary lapse and
forget someone. If I have, please
forgive me. It was a great July 4th,
and we're grateful for everyone· s
help. Now lets get busy on our Catfish Festival scheduled for September 21st. Our next meeting of The
Middlepon Community Association kicks it off on August 6, at the
Council Chambers at 7 PM. Please
come and help us plan it. Thanks.
Bob Gilmore

Today in history
By The Associated Press
. Today is Friday, July 12, the 193rd day of 1991. There are 172 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 12, 1690, Protesrant forces led by William of Orange defeated
the Roman Catholic army of James II at the Battle of the Boyne, a victory
which esrablished Protesrant domination in Nonhem Ireland.
On this date:
In 100 B.C., the Roman Emperor Julius Caesar was born.
In 1543, England's King Henry VIII married his sixth and last w1fe,
Catherine Parr, who would outlive him.
In 1812, U.S. forces led by Gen. William Hull invaded Canada during
the War of 1812 against Britain.
In 1817, naturalist-author Henry David Thoreau was born in Concord,
Mass.
In 1854, George Eastman, inventor of the Kodak camera, was born in
Waterville, N.Y.
In 1862, Congress authorized the Medal of Honor.
In 1933, the U.S. government set the minimum wage at 40 cents an
hour.
In 1974, John Ehrlichman, a former aide to President Nixon, and three
others were convicted of conspiring to violate the civil rights of Daniel
EUsberg's former psychiatrist
In 1977, President Carter defended Supreme Court decisions limiting
government payments for poor women's abortions, saying, "There are
many things in life that are not fair."

~

....

~

([I ltil by NEA Inc

..
-

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, July 12, 1991

Gorbachev has his reasons to keep Baltics
GULF OF RIGA, Latvia- One for them, and maybe even willing
thing comes into focus on a beach to allow some of them to sray.
overlooking this vast body of iceLithuanian Foreign Minister
free Baltic water. The primary rea- Algirdas Saudargas hinted as much
son Mikhail Gorbachev doesn't to us when he said it might be
want to part with the three Baltic "necessary" to keep some Soviet
republics is military strategy. He troops in Lithuania as part of the
needs these warm waters south of Soviets' defense needs. "I regard
Leningrad as pons for the ships and this as a realistic compromise," he
submarines of his Baltic fleel
said. '' Any presence of Soviet
On principle, Gorbachev doesn't troops on Lithuanian territory is a
want to lose any of three Baltic compromise."
states because it would encourage
The Latvians are less accommoother Soviet republics to break dating. They will not abide any
away, too. But we have learned Soviet troops in a future indepenfrom sources in the Baltics and dent Latvian nation. "We do not
U.S. intelligence sources, that Gor- see any reason why they should
bachev is already planning for the stay in Latvia," Vice President
possibility that the three states, and Dainis Ivans told us. He said Soviet
their coastline, may be lost to his generals stationed there now have
conttol.
been asked why they need such a
Top military surveyors have large contingent. The answer is,
been making plans to buttress pon that the soldiers need to defend
facilities at Kaliningrad, a small Latvia against American imperialRussian enclave on the Baltic Sea ism.
between Lithuania and Poland. If
But among Latvians, there is no
Gorbachev's troops based in the demand for that protection. Ivans
Baltics have to retreat to the pon at said, "Our main goal is to desttoy
Kaliningrad, there is only one way the communist system here and
10 do it - through Lithuania Our cover it with DDT so il can never
sources tell us that while making grow again.''
public demands for a total withThe Latvians have more reason
drawal of Soviet troops, Lithuania to be sensitive about the issue than
is willing to negotiate safe transit Estonia or Lithuania. The Soviet

Union has enforced a "Russification" program in Latvia since
World War II that has included
replacing huge chunks of the native
Latvian population with Russians
and olhers. Joseph Stalin sraned the
program by massive deportations
and executions of Latvians. Meanwhile, Russians carne in droves to
settle in the warmer Baltic climate.
Latvia became a haven for retired
Soviet military officers - the
Soviet equivalent of Sun City.
Latvian leaders told us they
aren't worried about those Russians
who would remain behind when
Latvia won independence. In a
March 3 advisory vote on the issue
of independence, the result was
overwhelmingly in favor of breaking away from the Soviet Union,
even among voters in cities where
the population is no longer predominantly native Latvian. The
immigrants want to stay, and they
apparently want to their independence from Moscow, too.
But some Latvians arc afraid
that time is running out for true
natives, and that the immigrants
will forever change their country,
even if it wins independence.
Romualdas Razukas, the leader of
the Latvian Popular Front, pointed

.r.r~r.r.,.r.r.

By Jack Anderson

and Dale Van Atta
to the number of Soviet troops
being pulled out of Eastern Europe
who may end ul' in the Baltics. ''It
IS not only a milirary problem, but
a political one. These people are
rude . They are not so shy as the
specialists who were here earlier.
They are demanding flats, places in
schools, food, water, eleclricicy and
everything. But we don't have it"
(The waiting list for apartments in
Riga is 91,000 names long.)
Razukas said of the newcomers,
"Everyone is thinking, how do we
get rid of them? Everyone is angry.
It is a great big problem.''
JUST IN CASE - The Nation- .
al Security Council has reassured
President Bush that the Soviets are
not likely to start World War III.
They have too many troubles at
home. Even if the hardliners regain:
control of the Soviet Union, they
are not fools, and they don't want a
military confrOJ!tation between
superpowers. Yet ihe Penragon still
refuses to abandon the costly "Srar
Wars" space-based missile defense
program. Why? It's strictly a matter of money. "Star Wars" will
cost billions of dollars, most of
which will go to defense conlractors who have the ear of the military brass. The program means
more jobs at the Penlagon too, big- ·
ger promotions and higher pay all
around.
MINI-EDITORIAL - White .
House Chief of Staff John Sununu
app~rentl~ has apologized again.
Maybe thts one will stick. A few··
weeks ago the White House issued·
a carefully crafted apolo~y from '
Sununu for his globe-trotting _at
taxpayer expense. But Sununu.
trampled all over his own apology ·
within a few days by claiming,
without a decent amount of chagrin, that the whole hullabaloo was··
merely politics as usual in Washington. Now George Bush says
Sununu has apologized 10 him per·
sonally for any "embarrassment"
he might have caused. That's good
enough for the president, who
wants the matter "laid to rest."
But we've always held that a prop- ·
er apology means the perpetrator
won't commit the same offense
again. In Sununu's case, his
remorse remains to be nroved.

DEWEY BEACH, Del. - The lion of the public's money to hound
Ask the Curmudgeon folder is a God-fearing American like Col.
bulging with inquuies and I will North. Isn't it about time Walsh
get to them momentarily, but I ftrst was put out of business? Incensed
want to address those few churls in Indiana, Pa.
who have challenged my patriotism
Dear INIPA: (Here we go
because I occasionally bash Oliver agai'n). What the Iran-contra invesNorth:
tigation is about is constitutional
A hundred years ago, this little democracy. Do the people rule, or
seacoast town to which I some- do self-appointed, self-righteous
times repair for spiritual rehabilita- little martinets rule? The true cost
tion went by another name. But of the investigation - you are
then came a shon, victorious war using Ollie's figure - is $25 mil·
with Spain and the villagers here- lion. That's !/20th of a Stealth
abouts swelled with pride and bomber. I would gladly pay for 10
renamed their town after George Stealths, nay I 00, to remind the
Dewey, the admiral who dis- closet II Duces in this country who
patched the Spanish fleet off Mani- the real bosses are.
la Bay. Now, in the wake of our
Dear Curmudgeon: Who do you
Desert Storm triumph, I plan to think have the world's easiest jobs?
petition the town fathers to re-name I vote for weather persons. They
our hamlet "Schwarzkopf Beach." earn nice salaries for being wrong
OK, cavilers? Will that buff up my most of the time. - Unemployed
bona fides? Now can we get on in Upper Sandusky.
with other business?
Dear Un in Up: I vote for food
Dear Curmudgeon: You' ve been nulrilionists. They unblushingly tell
on Ollie Nonh' s case for two years us a different thing every day and
now, and I'm getting tired of it. I somehow find steady ' work.
am also getting ured of indepen- Remember when they touted dairy
dent counsel Lawrence Walsh. I am products? Then they informed us
outraged that he has spent $35 mil- that cholesterol is to blood vessels

what cork is 10 bottles. Then satu·
rated fats became the villain, then
all fats. Just yesterday" it seems,
eating a peanut was like firing a
bullet in your ear. Now they're saying that a lifetime of avoiding fats
mtght earn you an extra three
months. If I could get a hold of one
of these characters, I'd make them
eat a cheese steak and wash it
down with whole milk.
Dear Curmudgeon: I heard that
Saddarn Hussein eluded the U.S.
Air Force by scooting around Iraq
in a motor home. Any truth to this?
William in Winnebago, Minn.
Dear Will in Wino: It's true.
Saddam used an American-made
luxury bus called a "Wanderlodge." I'm told that envious folks
up your way are working on a
Stealth RV. (I know, Winnebagos
are made in Iowa, but it's just
down the road.)
· Dear Cunnudgeon: I just wanted
to alen your rea~rs to an incredible new development in medicine.
They now have miniature video
cameras that can be lowered mto
your abdomen to guide surgeons
dunng an operation. My doctor just

... p:

'

- •

,

:
:
:
,
:
·
:
:
·
·
·
·

OHIO Weather

"'

the federal law. He said the PUCO mine in.neiJhbotlng Me~f&gt;unty.
can make recommendations ·but ·
"Our Jaien study, in
tes that
cannot require' AEP to install 'liitti- switching GaVin's fUel ·to low-suipollution equiproent at Gavin.
fur coal ...._ POssibly from mines in
· ·1;-0~ta said ·AJ;P; still had not . •Ken~ky or V{est Virgil1ia - may
deculed on the Strate~· ihat would ,; .be thC' lcasi-cost' oplion:However,
be used to bligg G.aviil inll'l.com~!i; : .we !lave .not 'dismtssed•the option
ance wilh the federal air polluboa' · of' installing scrubbers, especially if
law. The plant along ,the Qhio .scrubbing becomes more practical
River at Cheshire in Gallia. COuritx :, in. meeting the Phase II requireaccounts for 25 perUnt of AEP's l · met)ts," Lolua said.
·
total sulfur dioxi~ emissidas. · , .• , ! He re~ted earlier statements
A company study submittM to that even a 'decision to build.scrubthe PUCO pegged switching to ' ber!l',at Gavin would not assure
low-sulfur coal from out of stale as continued operation of the' Meigs
the least costly way to comply witb mines.
federal srandards. Phase One of the
Lohta said AEP would· have to
requirements takes effect Jan. 1, .decide what action to take at Gavin
1995, while Phase II goes into ~ by the end of the summer.
effect in 2000.
"We have received extensions
'Legislators passed the coal on the bids for low-sulfur coal. We
incentives bill, including tax credits have received extensions from
fQr utilities that install anti-poilu- scnlbber manufacturers. But, if we
tion equipment needed to cleanly delay our decision beyond the end
bum Ohio high sulfur coal, as a of summer, there is a very real pasway to preserve jobs in the state's sibilily that Gavin mighl not be in
coal industry.
compl~ce wilh lhe Phase I reguA switch to low-sulfur coal at lations by January 1995, and we
Gavin would force 1 ,258 miners cannot allow that to happen," he
out of work at a company-ow!IC4 · said.

Saturday, July 13
Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and high'""',....."'"""'
MICH

•
IToledo I 79• I
' ' ' '

Evelyn Scott
· Word has been received of the
death of Evelyn Mae Picken Scou,
71, of Plantation, Fla., a former
Meigs County resident. She died,on
June 23, 1991 at lhe home of her
sister, Madblyn, in Plantation.
She was born on November 16,
1919 in DarWin to the !ale Harley
Bert and D. Mae Diehl Picken.
She was a graduate of Pomeroy
High School and received n~ '
uilining at Athens Swe Hospital. ·
She is survived by her daughter,
Melissa Ti Mae Scott of Dcnyer,
Colo.; two sisters, Gwendolyn
Pi~kett-Roach of ArlingtOn, Texas
and Madolyn Markham of Plantation; one brother, Charles Pickett of
Dania, Fla.: several nieces,
nephews, grand nieces and grand
nephews.
: She was preceded in death by
her husband, Alben Lloyd Scott,
w~om she married in 1941; and her
b'rothers, Harley Ben Pickett, Jr.,
~ Roben Glenroy Pickell

Zelia K. Ours
. Zelia K. Ours, 81, Hebron,
Ohio, died on Thursday, June 11.
1991 at Heath Nursing and Convalescence Center,
,
She was .born on.}une 19, 1910
in.Calhoun County, W.Va. to the
late Guy and Susan Leach .Gainer.
She was a member of the

o

IND.

' ' "

~
~
............ ...

Am Ele Power .................. 28 3/4
Ashland Oil ..................... .30 5/8
AT&amp;T................................38 3/J.
Bob Evans ........................ 19 1/9
Charming Shop.................. 22 3/4
City Holding .................... .13 Ifl.
Federal Mogul.. ................ .17
Goodyear T&amp;R .................35 3/4
Key Centurion ..................15 l(l
Lands' End ....................... 20 5/8
Limited Inc ....................... 29 l!l
Multimedia Inc .................29 .
Rax Restaurant ................ .l(l
Robbins&amp;Myers .............. .32
Shoney's Inc ..................... 15 7/8
Srar Bank .......................... 21 3/4
Wendy Int'1 ........................9 1/4
Wonhington Ind ............... 26

, .

Hospital news

Srock reports art the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis
and Loe wi of Gallipolis.

"' .. ~ ""
If

f

$3 . 00

I' WI '-!

1..

had ever done what has been
alleged, he probably wouldn't have
told Meese, the campaign's chief of
staff. That's why President Bush
and former President Reagan have
tippy-toed around, avoiding a blanket denial, insisting they personally
knew of no wron~doinJ!.
Iranians of unsavory reputation
insist Casey met them in July 1980,
in Madrid; we now know CaSey, in
fact, did travel to London that July
and could have hopped covertly
over to Madrid on the day of the
alleged rendezvous.
Clearly, Meese couldn't have
known whether his denial was true.
But he Meesed onward, into the
complexities of constitutional law,
where he made an even more preposterous observlition. He questioned whether Congress even has
the authority to probe allegations
that private citizens tried to subvert
U.S. foreign policy (which, in fact,
is a violation of law).
"There's no independent constitutional authori1y for the Congress
to go off on investigatory frolics of
tlletr own," our ex -attorney general
Meesed anew.
Meese •s blind assertion stunned

By Martin Schram

I

Snow

~-

Ice

Sunny

from 1-4 p.m. The tea IS bcmg
hosted by the Meigs County
Retired Teachers Association.
Members are to bring cookies.

Retired te1chen to meet
All retired teachers are invited
to a tea on Saturday, July 20, at the
Pomeroy Episcopal Parish House

Tractor puU scheduled
The Scipio Township Volunteer
Fire Depanment will hold a tracla
pull on Saturday. Weigh-in will
begin at 5 p.m. and the tractor pull
will start at 6 p.m. Classes are
divided into 800,900, 1,000 lb., 12
horsepower and over and 12 horsepower and under.
Winners announced
The Shoe Place and Locker 219
of Middleport have announced
winners of gift cenificates during
their recent Open House.
Pamela Still of Middlepon was
the winner of $100, Jim Anderson
of Racine, $50, Cris Tate, New
Haven, W.Va. $50, S. Allen Azar,
West Union, $25, and Darla Stats
of Pomeroy, $25 .
Goll outing scheduled
Ducks Unlimited's Eastern Ohio
Valley Chapter will hold the Second Annual Golf Outing at Riverside Golf Course in Mason, W.Va
on Thursday. A shotgun stan is
stared for I p.m.
The 10umament will observe the
A-B-C-D Player Handicap. The pro
at the course will choose the foursome. Ladies are invited to participate.
A charcoal-broiled steak dinner
will be served following the outing.
All proceeds will go to Ducks
Unlimited.
Questions can be directed to
Roy Jones at 992-7626. ·

SG2719TR Suitable to the
traditional decor. our richly
crafted console has the
System 3 famny of features
including SEq stereo and
Multi-Brand Remote Wood
products with simulated wood fronl
and bose Hidden casters for easy
movement. Traditional Cherry f1n1sh
Cabiret size 31'\'a"H x 41 V." W x 22 1hl "0

I

SAVE NOW
AT

RIDENOUR'S

46 INCH ZENITH PROJECTION
TV NOW ON DISPLAY

Tennis Clinic offered
The Middleport Recreation
Department will sponsor a free tenms clinic on Saturday at the tennis
courts at General Hartinger Park.
Shawn Baker will be the instructor
and interested individuals may sign
up for tennis lessons at that time.
Beginners clinic will be held from
I 1:30 to 12:30 and advanced clinic
from I p.m. to 2 p.m.

.JULY IZ thru 18

L,-----'---;__fRIDAY thru THURSDAY!
NOW SHOWING I
FRIDAY 7o20
SATURDAY l:D0,3 o20,7 .20
S~DAY 1:00,3 o20,7 :20
OOft . • THVRS .7:20

.

~Jl!.

RoBIN''Hooo
fiiiHJlo.
110 'ASSES . Ill

~IN

MIGIIT

NOW SHOWINGI
FRIDAY 7:1)1),9:30
SAT . 1:00,3:30,7:00,9:30
SUN . 1:00 ,3 ' 30.7 ·00,9 :30
MON. - THURS . /:00,9 :30

SAL,£ PRICES EFFECnVE
JUNE 22nd-JULY 31st

1991
OLDSMOBILE
CALAIS

58,999

Ohio.

1991
CHEVY
· CAVAUER
R/S

2 or 4 Dr.

SAVE

1991
GEO
PRIZM

1991
S-10 TAHO£

Auto., Air

V-6, 6 Spd.

S8,999

58,999

PICKUP

ME'mber: 111E&gt; Associated Press. In-

even the most partisan of Republicans on Capitol Hill - they say
that, of course, Congress has the
authority to probe allegations of
private meddling in public policy.
Even President Bush says Congress
has that authority- he just desperately hopes Congress won't use it.
But the bad news for Bush is
that all of the Meesing and Reaganizing seems to be backfiring.
The most respected and fair-minded Democrat on the HiD, Rep. Lee
Hamilton of Indiana, headed House
Speaker Thomas Foley's informal
task force that looked mto the matter - and concluded that Congress
must take a new, hard look at those
old 1980 allegations. Hamilton
says Congress must begin "a clean,
clear investigation" of the documented evidence . And he warns
that it must be low-keyed and
bipartisan, not a Democratic vldeofesl
Now the diffident House Speaker has no choice but to proceed. Let
the probe begin - not as a partisan·
circus, but as a paper chase .

•

land Dally Press Assoctallon and lhe
Ohio N~w spaper AssCICiatton. National
Attventsln&amp;' Representative. Branh41pt
Nrwspaper 5ales. 733 Third Avenu~.
Nf&gt;w York, New York 10017.
POSTMASTER ; Send addresa changes

to Tht&gt; Dally Sentinel. 111 Court St.,
Pom&lt;'Tcy, Ohio moo.

One

SIJIISCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Rout~
Wool&lt; ....................... ......... $1.60

One Month .............................. ..$6.95

One Year ............................... $83.20
SINGLE COPY
PJIICE

Dally .... ............ :................. 25

Cents

par.

SubscrlbeJ;'I not deslrlh&amp;' to
the carrier may remU In a'dyance iltred to
Tbe Dally Sentinel qn a 3, 6qr 12moat~
baslll. Credit wtll be rtven carrt,.-'..oli

week.
.

..

'·

avalljlble.

lllall Su ......lplfolll
·
IDOide Melp CewiiiJ
IJ-Weeks ......... ....... .................. $2I.IIf
26 Weeks ............................... .. $43.16
52 'Weeks ....................... ....... ... SM.76
Oullltle Melp CGIIDIJ
.
13 Weeks .............. .................... SlUO
26 Weeks ........... ·•· ......... ........... $45.50
52'Weeks .......................·........... -.co

·--- --

1989 CHEVY S-10 PICKUP
16,000 miles

55,999

Loaded

French Frieo, Choic, of Cole Slaw, Macaroni Salad
or Baked Beans.

1985 CHEVY CAPRICE

SUNDAY, JULY 14, 1991
ALL YOU CAN EAT CHICKEN ......................... S4.54

MUST SEE
VE
1987 FORD RANGER PICKUP

Meahed Potltoea &amp; Gravy. Green aaans with Mushrooms,
Hot Buttered Roll. Small Drink or Coffee.
NEW HOURI: Mon.·Sot. 10 :00 am·8:00 pm
Sunav lb:OO am-8:00pm

1983 CHEVY BLAZER, 4x4

1 Owner, 30,000 Miles

54,999
1981 OLDS CUTLASS
BROUGHAM

Low M ilea, 1 Owner.

SHARP

,

No subscriptions by mall permitted•In
. areas wherf home carrier servlcf 11

•-'-----~ -

Weekend Speeials
FIIDAY, JULY 12, -l991
· FISH TAIL SANDWKH PLInER ..................... s3.19

Cloudy

e 1991 Accu· Weatner Inc

VIa Associalecl Press Grap/licSNet

Meigs announcements

PI Cloudy

BARGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY

_,OfTH&gt;MS

WASHINGTON- There are, it questioner by blinking 10 sheer
turns out, basically two ways presi- befuddlement and insisting that,
dents and their hired hands strive to gosh, you just can't recall somecon the Congress and the public:
thing, even somethmg that's so cru(1.) Some do it by Meesing.
cia! everyone knows you couldn't
This technique, named in honor have forgotten it. In thts art of
of its grandest practitioner, Edwin being sincerely forgetful, it is helpMeese III, is the art of staring ful to be as old as namesake
unblinkingly at a questioner and Ronald Reagan; but that is not a
boldly denying something that requisite. (See George Bush and his
everyone knows is really true. Or manifold vagaries on Iran-Contra,
conversely, it is insisting that or Campaign '80, or S&amp;Ls, or
something is true when everyone voodoo economics or no-newlmows it isn't.
taxes.)
Meese most recently demonOn CBS and CNN, our former
strated its twin applications on attorney general opened with a darCBS News' "Face the Nation" ingly bold Meese- a blanket
and CNN's "Larry King Live." He denial of all the Campaign '80 ailewas trying to con a Congress that gations.
finally seems inclined to clear up
"At no time did anyone in the
those disturbing allegations from campaign, connected wtth the camthe 1980 election - that some paign, associated with the camReagan campaign officials met paign, meet or negotiate or agree or
secretly with Iranians, hoping to conspire with anyone to delay the
delay the release of Americans held release of the hosrages " Meesed
hostage by promising to ship arms . Meese.
'
to Tehran after Reagan became
The pronouncement stunned
president. (More about his effon even longtime Reagan loyalists
later.)
. who sax they are sure that if the
(2.) Olhers prefer to con by Rea- late Wtlliam Casey -Reagan's
ganizing.
I 980 campaign chairman who
This is the art of responding to a · loved secrecy and the spy biz -

Flumes

~ ··
KEVIN COSTNER

Published t&gt;very aflernom. Monday
through Frld av. J1l Court So .. Po·
ineroy. Ohi o. by lho Ohio Valloy Publishing Company /Multlmedla, Inc ..
Pomorov. Ohio 45769. Ph. 992·21!Wi. Se·
cond cl8ss postage paid at Pome-roy,

1

$3 . 00

-.

(USPS IIIIUII
A Dlvbloo of Multimedia, Inc.

••

BARGAIN MATINEES SATURDAY • SUNDAY

. . . ..

The Daily Sentinel

,

~

ShoWIHS T-siOmls Rain

Court news

446 ·4524

•I Columbus I 81 ° I

·~~h
diA
~ ~
.. .. .. -~- ~ ~

Hebron Christian Church, Ruth
Circle, Order of EaslCCD Srar Eagon
Chapter 11123, Hebron Lioness
Club, The 55 Plus Club, The BuckCivil case rtled
eye Lake Senior Citizens Center
A
judgment
is being sought in
and the Hebron/Buckeye Lake HisMeigs
County
Common Pleas
torical Society.
Surviving are her sons, JQsse Court by First Service Federal
Ours, Anbur Ours, and William Credit Union, Inc., of Columbus,
·Ours, all of Hebron; Paul Ours, against Gary Jenkins of Syracuse in
Somerset, Dale Ours, Newark; her the amount of $5,645.33.
Divorces sought
daughters, Evelyn Clay and ElizaDivorce
actions have been ftled
beth Morgan, both of Hebron, and
Judy Dupler, Lebanon, Tenn.; 21 in Meigs County Common Pleas
grandchildren; 23 great grandchil- Court by Shirley Mae Kerns,
dren and several nieces and Pomeroy, against John Kerns, Iron·
nephews who reside in Meigs ton; Harry W. Pickens, Sr., Racine,
against Joanne E. Pickens, also of
County.
Besides ~~arents, she was Racine; Nancy Campbell, Racine,
preceded in
by her husband, against Robert Bruce Campbell,
Everett "Pappy" Ours in 1971, and Racine; Sandra P. Snyder.
a son, Roben E. Ours; 1ive broth- Langsville, against James A. Sny·
ers; four sisters; one grandchild and der, Langsville; and by Byron Dale
McCoy, Reedsville, against Anna
one ·gm~t-grandchild.
Funeral service will be at 10 Belle McCoy, Parkersburg, W.Va.
Marriage Ucease granted
a.m. on Monday at EmersonA
marriage license has been
Newkirk-Watehime Funeral Home
granted
in Meigs County Probate
in Kirkersville, Ohio with Rev. C.
Morgan Wickizer officiating. Buri- Court to Lowell Allen Ridenour,
29, Gallipolis, and Sharon Lynn
al will be in Somerset Cemetery.
Friends may call from 2 p.m. to Arix, 31, Albany; and to Brian
4 p.m. on Saturday and on ·Sunday Gene Hendrix. 22, Coolville, and
Lorrie Lee Baker, 18, Reedsville.
from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m.
O.E.S. service will be held at 4
p.m. on Sunday.
Memorial conlributions may be
Veterans Memorial Hospital
made to Hebron Christian Church.
THURSDAY ADMISSIONS Carol Dennis, Portland, and Guy
Priddy, Middlepon.
THURSDAY DISCHARGESRena Marshall, Junior Hunt, Freda
Sunday tbrougb Tuesday:
Fair each day. Highs upper 70s Jividen, Lina Brunty, Claude Cunto lower 80s Sunday and middle ningham, Charles McCloud and
80s Monday and Tuesday. Lows 55 Irene Davis.
to 65 Sunday and Monday with 60s
Holzer Medical Center
sratewide Tuesday.
Discharges, July 11 - Joshua
Arbaugh, Arlene Davis, Ruby
Dray, Wilma Eisnaugle, Cecil
Soag swlpiDI!?
Elliott, Carol Knotts, Amanda
McCorkle, Dixie Newman, Mrs.
Tbe words to "America• ("My Kevin Payne and son, Pamela PerCountry 'Tis of Thee") - first sung in sons, Mrs. Bernie Rittenhouse and
public on July 4, 1831 at a service in
daughter, Mrs. Jeffrey Royster and
the Park Street Church, Boston were written by Rev. Samuel Francis daughter, Cecile Sheaffer, Teresa
Smith, a Baptisl clergyman. He set Spears, Mrs. Phillip Waldron and
them to a melody be found in a Ger· daughter, Mary Wright
Birtbs, July 11- Mr. and Mrs.
man songbook, unaware that it was
the tune for the British anthem "God Vincent Adams, Oak Hill, a daughSaTe tbe King/Queen.·
ter.

SPRIN6 VALLEY CINEMA

' '

W VA

------Weather------

Stocks

\

' ' ' ' IMansfield I 81 I•

--Area deaths--

By Joseph Spear
used one to take out my gall biadder and I have enclosed the videotape to prove what I'm saying. Recuperating m Rochester.
Dear RNR: Sorry. my VCR is
on the fritz. Actually, I've heard of
this and anxiously await the day
they can lower that camera into a
cranium. Then I will push for a
Constitutional amendment mandatmg that all political candidates
have their noodles videotaped
before running - especially vice
presidents.
From the No Comment File:
In Washington, D.C., a traffic
attendant spotted a Lincoln Town
Car illegally parked near an elemenrary school playground with itS
motor running. She approached the
vehicle, saw a man lying in the
back seat, tapped on the window,
got no response and left a citation
on the windshield. Hours later,
another traffic attendant left another ticket. Fifteen hours after the car
was first ticketed, a passerby
opened the door and discovered the
occupant was dead.

,~

r ,...._,

Soutb Central
Tonight, mostly cloudy with a
chance ·of showers and thunderstorms. Low 65-70, Chance of rain
40 percent. Saturday, variable
cloudiness. High around 85 .
Chance of rain 20 percent.

Of patriots, Ollie and the Constitution

Meesing and Reaganizing backfire

Berryls World

Continued on pi~ 1

•

1-800-137·1094
Wt're mailing it ta·
oitr to do busin111
wilhus wirh this
TOll FRH number.

54,999

Excellent

DON~

999

TATE

Chevrolet·Oidsmobile·Cadillac·GEO
308 East Main Streel
Pomer~Ohio

614-992-6614

..

.,

�The I)aily Sentinel

Sports

..

Friday, July 12, 1991
Page--4

Pittsburgh beats Cincy 10-6;
New York tops San Diego 4-3
HoBwy TdboetAssoc:h
Nil~ PrLess
e altona1 eague
races look after the All-Star '---~?
w1
uo ~ •
e I, almost the same as they did
gomg
Th 1010 the break·
k
e red-hot New York Mets
ept pace With Pittsburgh and beat
San D1ego 4-3 at Shea Stadium 10
remam 2 1/2 ~ames behmd the
P1~a~n the ast. Los Angeles
an
m~all each started the sec(Jnd half wuh a loss, keepmg the

Oodgers live games ahead of the
Reds
A· 1 th .
t east e Pirates were able to
pull away a bit from the surprising
S t. Lo ms
· Cardi na1 s, who fell SIX
·
games out after a 4-1 loss in
Atlanta.
The Pirates entered the break
with four losses in seven games
but came out swinging at River~
front Stadium and beat tbc Reds
10-6 as Barry Bonds drove in four

Scoreboard
lliii-

. PrrCkiNo &lt;i deci&amp;i-l -ll. x........ Lao ""..... • 1:1.-3, .100, 2.54; c...
......... St. Louil. 7-2, .771.161;
Atlaola. 12..ol, .750. 1.91; - - . P11U.

In the majors ...
NATIONAL LEAGUE

East Division

Tum

Pd.

GB

Pltlaburth - - - ol9 31 .413
No• Yad&lt;
47 34 .580
St Lou.ia
.......... 44 38 .$37
Chicaso
......... 38 45 .458
Monu.a!
......... l6 47 .434
Philadolpltia ....... 34 49 .410

W

L

2.5
6
12.5
14.5
16.5

GB

32 .6115
37 .543
40 .500
44 .476

5
i.S
IO.S

HoUitm
......... 3S 47 .427
San Franciaoo ...... 1S 47 ,427

I 4.:5
J4j

......

49
Clndnn~U
44
Allulu
........... 40
San Diqo ....... 40

N--

YOlk

AmericiDI..Npe
BAITINO - C. Riplleo, aaJiim.,.
.344; Baine., Oaklaad, .326; 0...we11:

Tbunday's scora
Plllaburth It, Clndonaal 6

Botton , .12S; Boga, Boatoa, . 32S;
Palmeiro, TCJ.U, .32A: Malia, Wilwa~;
kcc. .324; Joyner, C&amp;lifomi.a.. 322..
RUNS - Pabntiro. Tuaa, 60:
Canaeco. Oakland, 60; Molitor, Milwaukeo. 60; C. llipkeo, Butimooe, 51; While.
Toronto, 56; Sicira. Te~u. 55: Franco,
Teau, S5 .
RBI - Fidder, Detroit, 66; C.nJOCo,
Oakland, 64; TUIIbull. Kllllll City, 59;
Cart~. Toronto, 59; Thoma•. Chicaao,
58; S1cm, Tu.u, S8; Dlina, Oakland.
51.
.
JUTS· - C. Ripken, Baltimon:, 111;
Palmciro, Tcua. f05; Sierra, Tcua, 105;
Molitor, Milwaukee., lOS; Puc&amp;eu.. Min·
nc1ota, 102; loyn~r. Califomia, 99;
O....wcii.B....._99.
OOUBLES - R. Alomar, TCII'OIUO, :!7:
Bow, &amp;o.Ula, 27: Palmeito, Tea.u, 26;
Carter, TOlQGto, 25; White. Tomnto, 23:
Reed,-. 21; C....CO, Oakland. 21;
C. ~. Bollim..._ 21 .
TRlPLES -Molitor, Milwau.kc., 7:
Palania. Calif'omia, 6; Whi.., T....... 6;
McRae, Kan111 City, S; R. Alomar
Tortr~to, 5; Rainca, Chie~go, 5; 7 are tioJ

Monll'CI.i 3, Lot Anr;ciOI 2
Phillddphia 3, Saa Fl'll:lc::iloo 2
Al.lanta4, Sl Lou.it I
New Ycd 4, San Di.c&amp;o 3
Houltm 6, Chicqo 4, 11 iminp

Today's games
Hou1ton (Ponuaal 8· 4) 1t Chicaao
(Castillo 1.0), 3:20p.m.
Phtaburp (Drabek 1-8) at Clnclnnad
(Amu ..... 6- 7), 7:3$ p.ao.
to. .Ana~ (Marau 9-5) at Montrol.l
(llonnU MulinoZ 10.~).7:35 p.m.
San Frandloo' (Bbck 6-7) " P!Wadolphia (0....oS.ll7:35 p.m.
Sl. Louis (B . Smith 7·5) at Atbnta
(Smoll2 2· 11), 7:40p.m.
San Dieao (Undecided) at New Yor:t.
(Viola }().~) . 7:40p.m.

Saturday's &amp;ames

San Diqo at New YcB. l :l5 p.m.
HOWIJm It OUcaao, 2:20p.m.

Pllllbuflh II Clndollllll, 7:15 p.IIL
Su frantliCO atfbilUdphia, 7:05 p.rn
Sl Lo.W atAtl&amp;nll, 7:10p.m.
Loa AnJClc:a at Montra.l. 7:35p.m.

wilh 4.

HOME RUNS - Cuaeco, Oakland,

Sunday's games
SL l..ouU It A tWill, I ;OS

.

21; Fielder, Dcaoi~ 21; TUilbWI,IWou

City, 20; Carter, Toran10, 19; C. DIYil,

p.m.

f""·
Loa AngelCI ., Monuw. :3!5 r...·

19; C.

MiMCIOia,

HOWIWI'I 11 Otica10, 1;OS

Rir..c:n. B•hjm··

II ·

D. Hcnd~non, Oak and, 11; W'uafteld'
Califom.ia, 18.
'

San Francisco at Philadelphia, :3!i p.m.
San Dicso at New YeO. I :40 p.m.
PIUsburah 1t Cl~~elnnallt 1:15 p.m.

STOLEN BASES - R. Hon4-.

Odcaa0:

17; Franco. Tllii.U, 17.

~G (8 deciaiaru) -

AMERICAN LEAGUE

.-

East DlvilloD

Team

W L Pel
......... 50 34 .595
a.....
.. ....... 42 39 .519
........... 41 41 .500
Deuoit
New York
...... 39 40 .494
_ .. 'R 44 .4S7
Milwaukoc
Toronl.o

Baltimaro
Clndand

.-..•.

··'

--

........ 33 41

:u u

-

Mmnca~ta.

.

Califomu, 1:1.-3 • .100, 3.8-4;

,4(fl

.315

22

2.23.
STRIXEOUfS - Clo.001, loa111n,

2.5
3
3.5

123; R. Johuon, Seattle, 119; Ryu,
T-. 116; P'W.y, Califomia, !Ill&lt; C&amp;ndioai, T--, 106; Mcllowdl. a...,..
100; Swindell, Cle•aland, Ill.
SAVES - Edteraloy, Oaklaad, 23;
Harvey, Califomia, 21; A.pihn, Min·
.-ott, 21; Reardon, Bo.tcm,. 21: 'IlliiPen
~,:go. II; Olson, Baltimore. 17;lefi
.Teua. I7;Halke,T.,...IO.I7.

W

L Pet.

48 36 ,j7J

44
4.5
44
43
41

34
31
31
JB
42
'R 44

.564
.542

.531

.S3J
.4(94
.4.57

9.S

Transactions

GB
I

6.5

Tbul'llllay'sseons

-'-·
Blldlall

KanauCily9,Dolloia5
T.-o;!.TUIIO
l\lilnulteo 5, CIUeato I

BALllMOitl! OIUOUS - - Ow;tja l!v.... . . . - . - lboiU.y
diH61ad 1111. Dealpalal Kevin Hicl&lt;oy

~7. lloolon3

Oaltw.t I , B - I
S..ltlef,Cie....aodt
No• y od 2. Califotnia 0

pildtor, r.. auipnonc
·~Icd li1t .

Optioned Wayn~ Edwards,
~.::to Vancouver of tho Paci.fie Cout

Kan..a• Ci11 (Guhicu 4-S) at D«roit
6-6). 7:l$ p.m.
Tcxu (11 . Guunan 7· 3) at Toronto
(Wclla9..o1), 7:35 p.m.
Botton (Clement 11-5) at Minne~ota
(Andenon 4-7),
p.m.
Chicago (Fernandez 4-7) 11 Milw.....,
(Nmm&gt; 7-6), 8:35p.m.
.
New YcD. (klmicaiecti 3·1) 11 Califcrnia (A-.7-'), 10:35 p.m.
BulimGl'tl (Md)onald .3-3) " Oaidllld
(Weld! 8-S) 10:35 p.m.
CI.....Dd (Nidlolo ..7) ol Sallie (L
Job- ,.., 11-.35 p.m.
(flfWII

t.aau~

National Lao~~~t
CINCINNATI RIDS -

lie-, ID lilt Kanau Cil}' • .,... I'Or

-. CUIIMioM..-..,nm
flcldor ......d. Jolf Jtood,............ .
lilt 15-day dlaablod 1111, - -.. re
J..ayt. Recalled Cbrll
vdl I hr~
lroao NubYIUe ollbe "-~coo "-1olloo.

J•-.

Kansu City at Deuait, l :tS pm.
Tau ... T~to. 1:35 .m.
BabimGWat Oakland, :OS p.m.
o....... ~.1:05 p.m.
Chicaao 1t MUwau-. 1:35 p.m.
New YoD at.Califomla, 10:05 p.rn.
Cl..,elaad •I Su~ li:M p.II'L

PHILADEIJ'IIIA PIIILLIES - Ac:U-

va~

Randy Reidy, inficlclu, fran the
1$ -day disabled lin. Recalled Dan
Hollinl, third baaeman, from ScranaWilk... aur. of 1he lnlanlliolial . . _
SCII'll Sil c.mpliiAO and l.an J. ., IUl·

K.anau C:ily at.Dcaait, 1:3$ p.m.
Ba.ton It Minn4'*Jta, 2:05 p.m.
aucaao al MUwaukee.l;3S p.m.
New YGat Califamil, 3:0:5 p.m..

I'

BUFFALO BR.I.S -Sip Ta~y 0..
L&lt;mnzo. Ucl&lt;lo; SU.. Clad!, li&amp;bl md,
and MaS Mad4ot. tineblcta.
HOUSTON OILERS - ~ 10
~ wilh S~ Jac:ilcln, coma
.
INDIANAPOUS COLTS - SiJDc4
~cl Aaco. dcfcnaivc end ; Tlm Bn~t.oo,
..,., end. and Frank OiaMeai, - ..
MIAMI DOLPHINS - Waivo4 JO&lt;
JohMcla aod Clift'ord ~ 'id+c b
Eddi. BJOWn and Al HicP,'Oc.cnn•;;
Eric Jentina, rwmina Net; Ptt Dltlry:
au.ard ; Jason Jusup. tackle: Briaa
Williams, wide recei.vet. Wai•td Doa
Smilb, '!'MinJba&lt;*· "" ..,.
aad Aiwlao JalwCII. wide - · elf iajuiOII-e.
.
NEW ENOLAND PATIUOTS Si.,..C Bon Coalel aad llon4y BOibol,
Ua,hl tndl; lotcae HlndezWN. COIIMir..
ba&lt;*; BLUe Miller, O'Niil Ollml, '

""*·

DOUBLES -IHe, $1. Louis, l j ;
Bonilla, PUUitMrp, 12i Mcla.ynoldl,
New Yod:, 22; Morrlo, Clod. .tl, at;
T. Gwynn, Saa llilp, 20; L Ooa&amp;ala.
- - . 19;
CllicoFI 1'.

19: 0. Bell, OUoqo, 17; W. Call. San

HoclteJ

Notloul " " " " " . _

. . 8""""-

--...~.oopo.

v--.

,

•.
.

·:•

SAN JOSI SIIAllU- _ , -

·.

r_:•••

....

f.l

A Class 0 &amp; E softball tournament will be held on July 20th and
21st at Eastern High School. Entry
Fee is $6S and you hit your own
ball. Trophies will be given to the
first-, second- apd third-place
teams. First and second place teams
will receive individual trophies or
shins.

and Dally Hill. In the second row
are Jasc)m Mlller, Garret Kiser,
Jason Laudennilt, J.P. Harmon,
Tyler Little and Terry Smitb. In
the third row are teammates
Jonathan Evans, Tyler Johnson,
Tony Hupp, Matthew Shain and
Matthew Thompson. Behind

them ·are coaches Ken Kiser,
Jonathan Rees, Joe Evans and
Sam Shain.

7-9-91

$13999

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St .

Pomeroy. OH .

Spring and Summer Hours
Menday thru Friday
9 l.M.·S P'.M.
Sot. 9 A.M.-1 P'.M.

~THE

GRAVELY
SYSTEM

THE 1991

7-9-91

OTHER TRIMMERS IN STOCK
POWER BlOWER
HEDGE TRIMMER
CHAIN SAWS

.

7-10-91

MORRIS EQUIPMENT

ALBANY REDS

742-2U5

MASON CUBS

I

I

ONLY

z
(/)

0

0

I
!

~

-1

6
z

~

7-17-81
7:16P.M.

0

z

(/)

:z:
;;

'
7-16-91
8:00P.M.

7-10-91

RACINE

7 :16P.M.

RACINE REDS

I
7-18-91
7 :16P.M .

HUBBAROttREENHOUSE #1

..

M""""'
,
•o o

7 -11-91

"'
. 'l

8:00P.M.

GREENHOUSE 111

RACINE ORIOLES
7-16-91
7:16P.M .

New 1991 Carrollton Sabre

~~~;g~~ICE

0

NEW HAVEN

8:00P.M.

33313 Side Hil Rd.
Rutland, Ohio

·~"'

:t

,, 0

B:30 P.M.

NEW HAVEN REDS

Trimmer String
Service and Repair

~.

0

M'PORTA'S

7-17-91
8:00P.M.

!4~

IE~

7-12-91
7 :16P.M.

HILL'S INDIANS

3 BEDROOMS - 2 BATHS

I ...

NELSONVILLE

7 :16P.M .

Leu '20 Rebate nil 7/15/91

School office, or you can register
from S to 6 p.m. the first day ok ,
camp.
Camp instructors will be the
Southern football staff, area coaches, and current and former Southem players.
If you have any questions, contact bead coach Dave Gaul at 9853954 or 949-2611.

SALE

D.O. BLAKE CONST.
REEDSVILLE REDS
7·8-91

$14~9-95

Organizational meeting
scheduled for Monday

s169 * Per Month
49

'1110 monlhl wilh 11.75'11 APR n1101\ down IO Qualified buytfl.

Stop In And See John Smith or Dick Cole For Details.

COLE'
S
MOBILE
HOMES
Located .s Miles East Of Rt. 33 ·
On Rt. 50 East, Athens 592·1972

8:16P.M.

7-11 -91
7 :16P.M.

D.O. BLAKE

REEDSVILLE

POMEROY MUSTANGS

each hoo~ up, 20 ft. heat tape, 6 tie downs and concrete block·.

'
';

Avery retired the first 18 Cardinals before Rex Hudler blooped a
smgle 10 center field leading off the
seventh inning for the first hit off
the 21 -year-old left-bander.
Hard-luck Jose DeLeon fell to
3-8.

7-16-91
8:00P.M .

MIDDLEPORT A't

15 cu. ft. 2door refrigerator, front house type door with storm. 30 gal
w~ter heater and much much more.

'

ter.

COOLVILLE

8 ;00 P.M.

..

There will be an organizational
meeting for the Big Bend Youth
Football League at 8:0Q...n.m. on
Monday, July 15 at thp Pleasers
Restaurant on West Main Street in
Pomeroy. All parents of participating children and interested people
are invited to attend.
The setllement of th~ 13-year~ld
lawsqit against AT&amp;T by the Justice
Department on Jan. 8, 1982, saw
AT&amp;T give up·its Bell s,.tem companies but expand into previously pro.
bibited areu, including data proceutns. .telephone and computer
equipment sales and computer communication devices.
·

FREE

LIVING TRUST SEMINAR
tLearn How To Avoid Probate
cost.
tLearn Ways To Avoid Probate Cost
·
tLearn Why A Wlll Is Not Enough In Most Cases
tLearn How To Prevent Your
Estate From Becoming
Public

tLearn How To Reduce or
EIJmlnate Federal Estate
Tax
tLearn How To Avoid the
Court$ From Appointing .A
Guardianship U You or
Your Spouse Become Dis·
a~led or Incompetent

PLACE: Meigs County Ubrary, Pomeroy, Ohio
TIME: 7:00 p.m. Monday, July 1Sth
Sponsored by:

FIRST CITY EST ATE PLANNING
MAIImA, OHIO
DENNIS L. HOCKMAN • 992·7088 • Clll For ReMrVItlon

--

Trevor Wilson (4-8) was the
loser.
Braves 4, Cardinals I
Steve Avery and Juan
Berenguer combined on a two-hit-

--MIDDLEPORT CARDINALS

ECHO GTil 00 TRIMMER

BUY ONE HOT FUDGE
CAKE AND GET ONE

WITH MEDIUM FRENCH FRIES ~2. 99

-

7- 12-91
6:00P.M.

NELSONVILLE-YORK

SUNDAY, JULY 14 ONLY

PIZZA STEAK
SANDWICH
$179

- --

COOLVILLE

FEATURES: Cathedral ceiling in living room and dining room, wired lor
ceiling fan, mirrored feature wall, extra 30x40 window, detachable hitch,

Constantina eo~eh ol die &amp;:..... Cit' '..f
of the latm~e_ti .. &amp;t HMkep

'

7-9-91

Prtce Includes: Delivery &amp;set-up with skirting, sel of steps, 20ft. material for

NBW lBRSEY DB\'11.8 _ . _ ., ·•
Hod&gt;
tlljlo W.Dorilorl ;'

STOLEN BASES - Ni-. Atlalll.
A2; GftaiOCDo M•uul. 39; ~W+
MoauoaL 37; Calomoa. Now
33; ·

-.20; ......

.

364 E..t Main St.
POMEROY
814-992·8292

MONDAY, JULY 15 tlwu SUNDAY, JULY 21

llalldyllaa'-, ...,_ ~ lluil
oadlcaoy ........... ~.... ,
wT...,s-.pao~.

Fr~. 16; Mdnilr. Son nu.il, 16;
Gant, Atlantl, IS: O'N.W. ~II,
U; Brook•, New York,. IS: DtwiOCl,
Chieolo,H .
'
' '

..

78 JICkiOII Pike
GALLIPOLIS
814-448-3837

This Is A Chocolate Lover's Favorite

SAN DIEOO CIIAIIO£RS - W JooCco..UO. _ . , . - .
SAN J'ltANCISCO- - Wai...t

c:iloo, 6; L Oolla1ll. . - _ 5; Emk.
PbilaoldpiUa, 5; ~· How Y..... 5;
1\1. 'll&gt;omfOOI!· Sa. Looit, ,_
HOMB RUNS - ,-...,Now Yodt.

o.

. The Southern Football Camp
will be held for students entering
grades 4-6 this fall. The camp will
be held on July lS, 16, &amp; 17 from 6
to 9 p.m. at Southern High School.
The camp is intended to introduce the student to the three basic
phases of the game of football offense, defense and special teams.
Rules, sportsmanship and other
aspects of the game will be covere&lt;l.
Players can wear tennis shoes,
shorts, T-shirts, etc. Water will be
available for all players.
Registration forms can be
picked up at the Southern High

FREE!

.-;v-.-.--...

s.-.,

11UPU!S - T. 0.,.0. S,. Diooo, I;
Lantronl. Sc LoaOo, 6; ,r.w., Sa l'an-

loodo, PIIIIM'I~• U1 Lulkfld, SL
Lcuia.ll; Caldoaal,
Lot Anplto,lll; SmiJII, Sa. !Ail,,20. .

.

FoolbaU
N-1 FOOiboULaotue

MIDDLEPORT
41HI~:~~~~

Softball tournament
set for July 20 at EHS

go out there every day and his home the winmng run w1th 1wo
velocity never changes," Bonds outs in the ninth inning after Garry
said. "You've just got to be quick. Templeton was intentionally
You can't swing hard against walked.
Randy Myers. But if you just get
Larry Andersen (2-2) walked
the bat on the ball, it's going 10 go pinch-hitter Gregg Jefferies with
out''
one out. Kelvin Torv~. another
Elsewhere in the NL it was pinch-hitter, hit into a fielder's
Montreal 3, Los Angeles 2; choice and San Diego chose to
Philadelphia 3, San Francisco 2: walk Templeton, a .243 hitter.
and Houston 6, Chicago 4 in II McReynolds, wt. J entered the
innings.
game with a .293 average , then
Expos 3, Dodgers 2
bounced a single up the middle 10
Ivan Calderon homered and score Jefferies.
Mark Gardner gave up two runs in
John Franco (2 -6) pitched one
seven imings.
and one-third innings for the victoGardner (5-5) allowed six hits ry.
before Scott Ruskin fmished for his
Phillies 3, Giants 2
sixth save. Ruskin gave up one hit.
Giant-killer Terry Mulholland
Dodgers starter Bob Ojeda (7 -6) gave up five hits in eight and onehit a two-run homer to tie the score third innings and John Kruk hit a
2-2 in the second inning, his first home run.
major league home run. Calderon,
Mulholland (8-8) had a three-hit
a starter in the All-Star game •. gave shutout going until the ninth when
Montreal the lead with his I Oth Mike Felder led off with a double
homer with two outs in the third and Will Oark: hil his 16th homer.
inning.
Mitch Williams put two runners on
Mets 4, Padres 3
base but ended the game for his
Kevin McReynolds singled 14th save.

-

T.P. BAUM LUMBER

Southern football camp set for Monday

Buketbd
. Gen. Hlrtlnger Pkwy

walked in the rally.
In the fifth Reedsville again
took the lead when Barber and
Smith each hit home runs.
Aaron Vickers was tbc wiming
pitcher with 9 strikeouts and just
four walks, while Tolliver and-Barber combined in the loss with 10
KO's and 8 walks.
The game-winning hit, a single
by Brinker, brought home Vickers
with the wiming run.
Tonight Syracuse Hubbard's
Greenhouse tl2 meets Coolville at 6
p.m. and Nelsonville meets the
Middlepon A's at 7:1S.

-

HUBBARD'S #2

7:30P.M.

HOME CARE MEDICAL

I

....

BATTING - T. Gwynn, SanDi,..,
.360; Pendleton, A.Llanu, .3Z7; Mc(foe,
San Fnncilco, .323; Jo.e. St Louil, .Jll;
Morrllt ClndnnaU, .Jll; Bigio, How: ·
10n, .31); O. Smilh, SL Louia, .310.
RUNS - Butler, La. Anacl.. , !59;
Sandbcr~, Chic~ao . 56; Jc;mw~. New
Yod. 53, 0 . Smnh, SL Louil, 52; T. f&lt;r.
nandcz, San Dieso. Sl ; OeShi.t.k, Monttul. 49; Van SIJb, Plttlbwah, 4J.
RBI - Johnaon, N•w York. 63; W.
Clad!. s... n..c:Ueo. 61 ;
Plliladd phia , 57; ~~~··~ Plt&amp;lbualt, 55; M_c:Oriff. San Di&lt;F. S3: !bmn&gt;. S1. U.U..
53; o..·-· cm.aao. 52.

lilTS - T. OwyM. San Dieao, 121;
Samuel. Lao Aapleo, 98; Bu.._, Lao All...... 95; c.w-, M-..1, 94; Jooe,
Sc Louill, 93; SandtJIII. Cllioa... 93; 0.
Bell. Oliap, 91.

·..·-·

7-8-91

'

NallouiiMkttbal W ~'der
NEW YORIC KNICKS - Named Sandia s....u ........y,...._ _
_

Major league leaders

Matthew LewiS and Michael Ramsburg. In the
middle row are Justin Gilmore, Matt Stewart
Adam Bullington, James Conley, Zach William~
and Ryan Kauff. Behind them are coaches Earl
Ramsburg, Mike Gilmore and Rocky Williams.

mates are Matt Ash, Brandon Hill, Matthew
Warner, Jay Stepp, Jason Cundiff, Ryan Hill,
Jeremy Fisher and Donald Bing. Behind them
are coaches Jeff Martin and Michael Warner.
Not pictured are coaches Jay Hill and Skeeter
Ohlinger.

NL games ... ....:&lt;C_o_nu_·n_ued_rro_m_P_a::..ge_4.:...)- - - --

HUBBARD GREENHOUSE #2

- . .. Sctu....w--&amp;Om.

Baldmcnll Ookland. 3:1S p.m.
Clneland ol Sallie, 4:35p.m.
Texu l l Torano, &amp;:05 p.m.

National Leape

'

Diddle ls the son of Jim and
Linda Diddle of Racine.
WVMS will hold a $1,000 to
win late model, semi-late and UMP
modified triple header this weekend on Saturday, July 13.

to

Sunday's pmes

.

Express.

HOUSTON ASTROS - Recalled
Mike Sinama, ipfieldcr, Scott ServW,
eateber, from T11e10n d the Pacific CoUl
f...:caauc. Optioned Xawie:r Hem~ndet:,
pttcher, Tuc~crt Placed Cui NicholJ
Cl\chcr, on waivcn.
'

1

-·

Trded

TCHid Benztnaer, nnt ~.........t..

Saturday's games

•'

Racine's Chris Diddle, in the
J.D. Drilling Company IISS, will be
out to defend his Semi-Late title at
West Virginia Motor Speedway at
Mineral Wells SaiUlday.
Two weeks ago Diddle won
both heat iaces and both features
_tJW he was in as well as set fast
lillie both evenings.
Diddle is also sponsored locally
by McDonald's and Five Points

OAJUAND A.nnEilCS - Actiwled
Joe Klink, pitcher, from lhe tS-day diJ.
abled liat Optioned Scott Hemond , infiel.er, Tacom• of the Pacific CD&amp;u

am

.·.·
-·

Diddle to defend
race title Saturday

OUCAOO WHI1'B SOX - Adinlad
c..., infiololor.- ... 15-&lt;ioy clio-

looy

Tonight's games

-·
-·.·

•

BIG BEND CHAMPS - Tbe Syracuse Slug·
gers minor league team, sponsored by the Syracuse Fire Department, recently captured the Big
Bend Tournament championship. In the front
row are (L.R) Nathan Martin, Matthew Bable,
Brice Hill, Cbris Yeauger, Chris Rupe, Cody
Wallace and Aaron Oblinger. Standing team-

1991 HUBBARD MEMORIAL
LITTLE LEAGUE TOURNAMENT

The 1991 Meigs Marauder Volleyball Cam{' will be held Monday
thr~ugh Fnday, July 15-19, at
Mc1gs High School, 9 a.m. to 12
noon each day.
The camp is open to all area '
Jir!s entering grades 7-12. The cost
11 $30 with a maximum of $4S' per
family. To register for the camp
residents may contact Maraude;
Head Coach Rick Ash, 992-5960.
FINISHES THIRD - The
Shirt size, grade entering, and
Rac:lne
Red Sox recently rmished
pho~ number is needed upon regIn
tblrd
place In the 12·team Big
lsttabon. The deadline 10 register is
Ben
Youth
League Minor League
Thursday, July 11.
tournament. In the front row
are (L·R) Matthew Johnson,
Macy Rees, Jeremy Pullins,
Anthony Barber, Joey Manuel

.... 12..ol, .750, 4.10; ~ DoaUt,
11-4, .733,4.00; -.u,~ 10.
4, .714, 3.20; ""'· T - . 10-4, .714,

6.5
8
I.S
11..5
15.5

s..........

Now YOlk. 10.3, .71/J, 162; SlnlllcanYtO.
T......, 9-3, .7So, l.OJ; FWey. Calif....

GB

West Division
Team
Minncl011
.......
Texu
...
OUiancl
.........
California .. ..... ..
ClUcas•
.........
Soaul•
...........
Kanaaa City .......

Ericbal,
12·3, .100, 1.&amp;3; Wp!On.

score 8-0.
Racine added a run in the fifth,
but its comeback bid fell short.
Todd Rizer walked and Ryan
Grace singled 10 score the run.
Kevin Fields was the winning
pitcher with llstrikeouts and five
walks, while Danny Sayre and
Jason Writesel suffered the loss
despite a good effon. They combined to fan six and walk 7.
In the night cap D.O. Blake
Contruction took a 3-0 lead on a
home run by Scott Yonker, but
Reedsvilles ToIIi ver and Driggs
had a home run and run-scoring hit
to pull close at 3-2.
Blake Const. went abead 4-2 in
the second, but Reedsville went
ahead 8-4 in the top of the third.
Hupp and Barber walked, Smith
singled, Barnhart singled, Driggs
doubled, and Hupp singled, along
with Murphy.
Back-to-back home runs by
Yonker and Chris Brinker sparked
Blake to a 9-8 lead in the third.
Dana Gillespie singled and David
Mitchell, and Josh Carpenter each

By SCOTI WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Two exciting games highlighted
the action in the annual Bill Hubbard Litlle League tournament held
last night in Syracuse, where Syracuse Hubbard's Greenhouse defeated the Racine Orioles 8-1, and
D.O. Blake Contruction defeated
Reedsville in the nighu:ap 14-13.
Kevin Fields reached on an error
to lead off a one-run first inning for
Syracuse. Fields scored on a walk
to Jeremy Buskirk and an error, the
score 1-0.
In the second inning, Bill Sheppard tripled, Matt Riffle walked,
Jamie Buskirk singled, Kevin
Fields singled, and Travis Lisle,
and Pete Sisson each walked to
bring home three runs.
Syracuse added two more runs
in the third inning Mike Ash
walked, Matt Riffle singled, and
Kevin Fields reached on an error.
In the fourth inning Syracuse
added two more runs when Pete
Sisson singled and rode home on a
Jeremy Buskirk home run, the

Meigs volleyball
camp scheduled
to open Monday

OUJand, 30; R. Alomar, Torouto. 27·
Polonia, Califomia, 27: a.m ••
21; While, T.....IO, 19; Cuyler. Deuoi~

ing In rront are (L·R) Trisha Warner, Valerie
Cundiff, Kimberly Sayre, Jenn7 Friend and
Bridget Cross. Standing are Coach Grea CUD·
dilf, Carissa Ash, Amy Nortbup, Cyatbla Cald·
weU, Asbll Davis, Erica Amott and Coacb Vicki
Cundiff.

Hubbard'S Greenhouse #1, D.D. Blake
Hubbard Memorial Tournament victors

Sports physicals for all sports
for the 1991·92 school year at
Southern Local Junior High and
High School will be done on
Wednesday, July 17, at the office
of Dr. DoUglas Hunter in Racine . .
The schedule for tbc physicals will
be as follows:
9 a.m. to noon - seventh, eighth
and ninth graders (boys and girls)
I p.m. to Sp.m. - tenth, eleventh
and twelfth lUIIdcrs (boys and girls)
There will be no charge for the
physicals on this day. However,
there will be no makeup day for the
UNBEATEN IN LEAGUE- Rutland's
physicals. If unable attend on
minor league team, sponsored by Rutland FurWednesday, other arrangements
niture &amp; Bottle Gas, was unbeaten in league
should be made to have the physicompetition
this season. In the rront row are (L·
cal done. There will be a fee of $15
R)
·Ben
Haley,
SlliP Dodson, Zach Bolin,
for patients wishing to schedule
with Dr. Hunter after July 17.
Children should wear shorts or
loose comfortable clothing on the
day of the physical and bring a
completed physical card with them.
The cards can be obtained at the
office at Southern High School. If
the student C8IIJIOI come during the
time allotted for their age group,
they should go ahead and come at
another time throu,hout the day.
For furtha' informauon call Howie
Caldwell at 949-2611 or Dr.
Hunter's office at 949-2683.

Bon•.

W L Pd.

FIRST IN LEAGUE &amp; TOURNAMENT The Syracuse Blasters softball team, sponsored
by Red Ace, took r~rst place in tbe Pee Wee Girls
Tournament, held recently in Racine. The
league champion B_lasters, 10-1 before heading
into the tournament, beat the competition in the
tournament and took the championship. Kneel-

Southern sports
physicals slated

b ..... , 6-%, .751,3.21; IIIJo. Clodnllllll,
6-%, .751, :t.U; PonuaaL H - . l..ol,
.667, 3.11; Browi!IOL Clnd..U, 1..5,
.6671 .S.99j Viola, New Yclk, 10..5 .661
2.8~ Dcnnia Martinez, l\loamal,' 10.5:
.M7, 2.10.
STRIKEOUTS - Ccme, New York
113; Goode~~, New Yo.t, 110; Olivine:
Allonta, I OS; 0 . Ml&lt;ldu, C11ioqo, 102;
RUo, Claclnnal~ U;
S11i Dioto.
8-4; DoLoon, Sc Louil, 83.
SAVES - lllbblt, Cloclluoall, 2:1· Lao
Smidl., St. I..ouia, 23; Franca, N.w
19; Dne Smith, Chie~ao, 16; L lA~
drum, Pllllburall, 15; Miicll Wi1JiU11
PbiWielphia. 14;1Aff-. Son Diap, 14. •

West Division
TWII
Lao AorJca

runs. His bitr hit was 8 three-run
h
h-,. hi' h th ·
•
omer t~ 1g .tg t e Puates
five-run eighth off Randy Myers
"I think it was Randy It was ·his
90-mtle-an-hour
·
· more
·
puch
than
anything else " Bonds said "It
just hit my bat and jumrwl. ·That
wasn't me; lhat was him.''l'-Tbe Pirates are ho in Bonds
tbc MVP last season, 'iersggoing u;
the second half. At the break he
had 11 homers and Sl RBis. '
Myers, who has been struggling,
was booed.
''They can boo him, but they
don't know how good be is. He'll
(See NL OD l'l&amp;e 5)

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is
Coming August 9, 1991.
Advertising Deadline Is
August 2, 1991.
CALL DAVE TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS
YEAR'S EDITION

992-215·5

�Friday, july 12, 1991

·11he

By The Bend

Daily ·Sentintf..l

CHURCH
Dl

Friday, July 12, 1991

'
Pag~

C~mmunity calenda~

Beat of the Bend ....

• · Community Calendar lt~ms
··ip;eir two da)'ll before an eveat
aad the day of that event Items
· muat be received weD Ia advance
to assure publication In the caleDCiar.

by Bob Hoeflich

The Delta Queen made its ftrst
pass of our river communities
Thursday afternoon, headed upriver
. and thanks to a friend who called
when it was near Cheshire to
advise us that the Queen was on
her way. The boat's calliope
remained silent at she moved along
. too bad. The calliope, I have concluded, is the best part.
And, of course, July 4th came
and went and I'll bet some of you
can remember when the wish for
that holiday was that you have a
"grand and glorious Fourth". That
expression went out of style apparently and I suspect now a wish for
a "fantastic Fourth" might be more
in keeping with the times.
Of course, the Fourth is the day
when we are supposed to reflect on
our nation •s independence. Some
of us might even reflect on our
independence as individuals. However, when that reflection discloses
that we depend pretty heavily upon
the butcher, the baker and the
power company not - to mention
scores of other individuals and
companies that keep us going on a
daily basis - we're really not all
that independent.
Of course, the Desert Shield
t&gt;peration earlier this year did
enhance somewhat our annual
observance of July 4th.
Did you know· that I st Lt.
Agustin Montanez, Jr., son of Mr.
and Mrs. Agustin (the former Carolyn Allman of Pomeroy) Montanez of Arecibo, Puerto Rico, and
grandson of Jean and Tom Ables,
Vale St, Pomeroy, has been awarded the Bronze Star Medal for
exceptional meritorious service in
Operation Desert Storm. Lt Montanez spent six months in the oper·

ation. His award reads:
"For exceptional meritorious
service during the period 17 Jlln.
uary 1991 to 20 March 1991 while
serving as the commander, 31lth
Quartermaster Company during
O,Peration Desert Storm. First
Lieutenant Montanez's firm but
caring leadership ensured that the
remains of every fallen VD Corps
soldier were respectfully and expe·
ditiously processed. H,is seventeen
teams quickly deployed throughout
the Corps area and performed flawlessly throughout the conflict FII'St
Lieutenant Montanez's performance was in the highest traditions
of the combat service support and
reflect distinguished credit upon
hi"', the 2d Corps Support Com- ..
mand, and the United StateS ··.·
Arm."
The award is signed by Robert
P. McFarlin, Brigadier General
USA.
Roger Abbott, so active with the
Pomeroy Youth League Program,
is sidelined for the lime being.
Roger recently underwent knee
surgery at Veterans Memorial Hospital and is recuperating • this is
going to take about a month · at his
home at I 08 High St. in Pomeroy.
He is employed by the Ohio Power
Co.
Helen Baer, Syracuse business
woman, chalked up another birthday this week. Her employees and
· friends join in a big Happy Birthday, Helen. Helen operates the
well-kept Baer's Market • and has
for the past 21 years.
What sunshine is. to flowers:
smiles are to humanity. So do keep
smiling.

PWC volunteer for Camp-Can-do

,·

't

Plans for the Meigs Ministry's
Vaq'ation Bible School program
were discussed at a recent meeting
of the Presbyterian Women's Circle of the Middleport Presbyterian
Church.
Members volunteered to provide
lunches for the children attending
Camp Can-do at the church. Adults
will have an opponunity to take
part in summer bible study during
the week of July 28 to Aug. 2 at
7:30 p.m. Vacation Bible School
activities for the Meigs Ministry
c:hqp:hes will end on Saturday,
Auc. 3 with a family retreat and
picriic at the Gen!lva Hills camp
and conference center.
During the meeting, Lennie
Haptonstall read ''Taking Seriously
God's Realm Among Us" as the
'Least Coin collection was taken.
Elizabeth Burkeu' s devotional

·'

theme was Faith, using mater'ial
from Why Believe by. Richard Kaf.
farnus. In her discussion, sbe
explained that faith is not merely
blind acceptance of a belief, but a
combination of understanding,
agreement with the truth of the
Gospel, and trust in surrendering
one's will and life to Christ;. The
need for faith in Jesus Christ and
true repentance was also the theme
of the bible study Jed by Carol
Harper who used Chapter 4,
"Empowered to Proclaim Salvation
for All" from the studies on the
Acts of the Apostles.
The meeting closed with the
singin~ of "Blest Be the Tie That
Binds • and prayer. Rev. Kris
Treintong, assisted by Maxine
Owens, served dessen to the members and one guest attending. The
next meeting will be on Sept 24.

FRIDAY
POMEROY · The Meigs County Health Department wtU sponsor
a "Sealants Day" on Friday, free of
charge to children between the ages
of 6-!6. Call 992-6626 for an
appoinunent
TIJPPERS PLAINS • The Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053 will
sponsor a dance Friday from 811:30 p.m. at the post home with
music by the Ramblin Country
Band. Refreshments wiU be served
and.the public is invited.
SYRACUSE • The . Sutton
Township Trustees will meet Friday at 7:30 p.m. in the Syracuse
Municipal Building to appomt a
ttustee to fill the vancancy which
now exists.

PATRICK RILEY

Couple observes 50 years
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Riley will children, Tabitha and Shawn Mosscelebrate their 50th wedding man and Tadd Kittle, and one stepanniversary Friday. They have one grandchild, Tricia Kittle.
daughter and son-in-law, Robert
The couple will be honored with
and Patricia Mossman: two grand- an open house on Sunday from
children and their spouses, Robert 2:30-5 p.m. at the daughter's resiand llena f&gt;iossman and Melanie dence on Horton Saeet in Mason,
and Bud Kittle: three great grand- W.Va

VMH Women's Auxiliary
members receive pins
Scou Lucas, Veterans Memorial
Hospital Administrator, spoke at
the recent meeting of the women's
auxiliary of the hospital.
Lucas presented pins to Mandy
Roush, Evelyn Warner, Grace
Warner, Jeanette Lawrence and
Sara Neigler for 100 hours or ser- .
vice: Abby Stratton for 500 hours
of service; Carrie Kennedy for
2,000 hours of service: Betty Sayre
for 4,000 hours of service and
Jessie White for 11,000 hours of
service.
Jessie White presided at the
meeting and the auxiliary prayer
was given by Evelyn Warner.

$6.
Lila Ridenour reported on Tarragon the herb of the month. Tarragon' is a perennial that ~ws weU

'

in full sun and requues good
drainage. There are two kids of
Tarragon: French, which is mild
tasting, and Rilssian, which has a
stronger flavor. The standard
height is two-three feet It is used

The scholarship committee
reported that. final action on the
applications wiU talce place later.
Louise Bearhs and Jessie White
who attended the district meeting
in Chillicothe gave that repon.
Instead of the Julr meeting, the
active members. wil be b'eated to
lunch and a ''day on the town."
The nominating committee was
named and includes, Edna Triplen,
chairman: Abby Stratton, Grace·
Warner, Mildred Wei~ Libby Fisher, Betty Sayre. They will give
their report at the picnic in August
Refreshments were served by
Rhonda Dailey.

Birthday celebration

Morgan BrittaiJy Brown, daughter of Robert and Cindy Brown,
recently celebrated her frrst birthday at her home in Minersville.
A "clown" theme was carried .
out with cake and ice cream served
to Ashton Brown, sister, paternal
grandparents, Danny ,and Dee
Brown, maternal grandparents,
Michael and Sharlee Evans, great
grandmother, Ada Van Meter, great
aunt, Helen Maag.
in making vinegar and in fish,
Others attending were Beth,
meat, egg and cheese dishes.
Cole and Bradley Brown, Tom,
Juanita Conrad demonstrated Dena and Trenton Rosebeny, Matt
making berb vinegars and after the Evans, John, Megan, Jonna and
Benji Manuel, Bonnie and Teddy ·
meetin~ the group was able to sample a v!flegar pie..
Brown, Benji Manue~ aml'nie and
A class on malting wreaths wiU Teddy Brown, Corey and Alison
be conducted by Connie Hill and Woods, Debbie Clay and Nicole
Jilanita Conrad on Aug. 10 begin- McDaniel, Sandy, Brandon and
MORGAN BROWN
ning at 8:30 a.m. at the home of Lee WiUiams.
Juanita Conrad.
Sending cards and gifts were Dunn, JoAnn WiJJford and Ryan
Friendship potpourri will be Lisa Collins, Melinda and Evan Evans.
made at the August meeting.
Details will be in the newsletter.
Refreshments of cucumber dill
and cream' cheese sandwiches, fruit
. A mother-daughter banquet wus Helper." Pat Martin gave a poetry
salad, cake and herb tea were
held
rec~ntly at the Faith Gospel
reading. The closing hymn was "A
served by Betty Jones and Jan Ger· Church
in
Long
Bottom.
Closer
Walk with Thee."
hold.
The theme was "footsteps of
Attending were Vivian
Motherhood" by Sandy Cow ery Humphrey. Bobbie Reed, Robin
and there was a shoe parade on- Testerman, Christine and J.C., Dartest
~ene Reed, Sue Reed, Angela Reed,
The hymn sung was "Steppin
J dy West, Ada VanMeter, Diane,
in the LighL" Two solos were sung
ynn, Tommy White, Tara Soulsby
Jennifer
Walker,
y, Leigh Ann Bigley, Mary Greer.
"M.O.T.H.E.R ." and "Mothers Kate Evans, Rae Lynn Dailey,
Harry Carroll, general manager
Debbie Dailey, Mary Dailey,
of communications and labor relaEloiese Connolly, Mary Frecker,
ti.ons for Heinz, said the company
Janel Connolly, Ethel Carson,
received four complaints from conDorothy Pence, Amanda Soulsby.
sumers who found the particles in
Sandy Cowdery, Virginia Walton,
Eighteen ladies were in auen- · Susie Cowdery, Mary Alice Bise,
strained vegetables and ham. He
dance
for the Tuesday Morning Eva Ruble, Rowha Reed, Pat Marsaid the U.S. Depanment of AgriLadies
League
at the Meigs County tin, Karen Walker, Jennifer Walk·
culture was informed of the recall
Golf
Couse.
and concurred in the decision not to
er, Tammy and Christopher CowThe group will have a mixed dery, Shirley Wells, Pamela Hall,
announce it
The recall became public Thurs· scramble on Sunday. A pet! uck Judy Hall, Jenny and Jodi Nutter,
day when television station WJW will be held and meat will be fur- Paula Cowdery, Pearl Baker and
in Cleveland aired a report about a nished. The sCl'llrllble wiU begin at Carla Soulsby.
man's complaint to the company. 4 p.m. with those participating to
Carroll said the consumer was one report at 3 p.m.
Winners for the day were Becky
COLONY 1 HFATHE
of those whose complaints trig- .
Alpderson, low gross: Donna
gered the recaU.
.
The rubber particles . are Nease, now net: and Noon a Custer.
believed to have been in a fOod ldw putts.
product the Piusburgh-based company received from a supp~. Carroll said. He said the company's
Homecoming at the Faith .
investigation concluded that the
Church in Long Bottom
Gospel
particles did not come from the
was
held.
recently with a dinner and
Heinz plant
singing.
The baby food was manufacPerformers included the Gabriel
tured April 6 at Heinz's Pittsburgh
Quanet,
The Dailey Family, Mary
ONI EVIING SHOW 7siD
plant, Carroll said. The affected
Folmer
and
Mary Dailey.
AMssiON $1.50
cases bear the code P0971WN, he
Approximately 70 peQple
- 446-0921
said.
attended the evenL

Mother-daughter banquet held

RACINE · The Charles and
Fannie Lee (Wolfe) Beaver reunion
will be held Saturday at Star Mill
Park in Racine. Bring a covered
dish and place setting. Dinner at
noon. Friends and r&lt;!latives welcome.
RACINE • Outdoor hymn sing
at the Mt. Moriah Church of God
wiD be held Saturday with dinner at
6 p.m. and singing at 7 p.m:~J;ing
a covered dish. Singers include
Mounlain Top Singers and Crystal
and the Dailey Family and others.
Bring lawn chairs. In case of rain
the event wiU be held inside.
FAIRPLAIN • The Liberty
Mountaineers will perform at the
Jackson County Jamboree in Fairplain, W.Va. on Saturday.
LOTIRIDGE • Country Music
Night at the Lottridge Colflmunity
Cenier wiU be ,held Saturday from
6 p.m. to midnight All bands are
welcome. Refreshments will be
avaiable. Public is invited.
SCIPIO 'IOWNSHIP · The Scipio Township Volunteer Fire

were

!A

Chatter Club meets
· h'hll1uiae meeting of the .Chauer
lifwu hold at the. home of
n1 uon. HarrisonvtUe.
llid floWer fund were col·
lded-'
JCPOI1I given.
, ' ~ INCI'C served.
WBi •ved a birthday
Kllbi Dill• abo received

~

,~J:~edUxl
won by
jdice ~a. ,
Myers, Susan

S~ngspiration

~,....; lacfltudl

OUDJ.

'Iiiio door pii~.e waa won by
Lyilla McJ'!nney. ·
held at
7boi!Oit meeang . . Lo
~ llo1lle o1 Miry Myers m ng

..:m'be

snc:oic:. was plailnect for the
A.,-mBII'I!J
· ·· . ' .
•

.

·--. -·

· - - -- - -- - - - - - - - - - - -

\,

•• •

~

M

_ _ _ ..

- - - --

·

-

-

--

set ..

There will be a gospel singspiralion at the Rutland Church of God
on Saturday at 7 p.m.
Singers from Rutland, Rodney,
New Life Covenant and the Eureka
Churches will all be panicipating.
The featured group will be
"Highest Call," from Xenia.
The public is invited to auend.
This is a benefit sing to support
mission churches. For further mformation contact Julie Corcoran at
742-2()60.

Apostolic
Church or J..., Christ Apoololk Fl.llh
New Lima Rd., next 10 Fl. Mdp Park
Pas10r. Roben W. Ri&lt;hards
Sunday School • 10 Lm.
Evenin&amp; ·7 p.m.
Wednesday Servi~s ·7 p.m.

RUTLAND · There will be a
gospel singspiration at the Rutland
Church of God on Saturday at 7
p.m. Singers from Rutland, Rodney, New Life Covenant and the
Eureka Churches wiU all be panici~ting. The featured group wiU be
'Highest Call," from Xenia. The
public is invited to attend. This is a
benefit sing to support mission
churches. For further information
contact Julie Corcoran at 742-2060.

Church or Jesut Christ APGIIOIIc
Vanbndt and Ward Rd.
Pu10r: James Miller
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
Evening ·7:30p.m.
Wodneoday Semceo · 7:30p.m.

Assembly of God

SUNDAY
DARWIN - The Modem Woodmen of America Camp 7230 wiU
have a picnic and potluck and community service recognition program on Sunday at 12:30 p.m. at
the north bound park on Route 33
near Darwin, Meat and soda pop
wiU be provided. Bring a covered
dish, table service and lawn chairs.
Public. is invited.
·

Uborly ASRmbly or God
Duddin&amp; ~ M11011, W.Va.
Putor. J.N. Thadter
Bvenina ·7:30p.m.
W~y Services- 7:1~ p.m.

Baptist
RuUand Firat Baptist Chan:h
S101day School - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip. 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy Flnt Baptist
Ea11 Main SL
Pas10r. Sieve Fuller
Smday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10,30 a.m.
Wednesdoy Services · 7:30p.m.

RACINE - The Theiss Family
Reunion will be held Sunday at
Star Mill Park in Racine. A potluck
dinner and registration wiD be from
noon to 1:30 p.m. A program will
follow. Bring a lawn chair.

First Southern Baptist
41812 Pomeroy Pike
Pas10r: E. Lamar O'Bryan1
SlOiday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:4S a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Selviceo ·7:30p.m.

POMEROY · There will be a
12-step AA meeting on Sunday at 7
p.m. at the J.T.P.A. office in
Pomeroy, 117 West Second St

Middleport First Bopllsl
Comer Sillth cl Palmer
Pastor: Rev. Jimes A. Seddm
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Wonhip · 10: IS a.m.

POMEROY · The Trinity
Church Yout)l Group will have a
swimming party on Sunday at the
Holter Farm beginning at 7 p.m.
Food will be served at 5 p.m. and
parents are asked to bring a covered dish. Hot dogs will be fur·
nished by the church.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Roclne Flnt Baptist
Pastor: Steve Deaver
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:40 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:30p.m.
Sliver Run Baptist
Pas10r: Billl.iule
Sunday School . 10 Lm.
Worship· II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedncoday Services ·7:30p.m.

MONDAY
ROCK SPRINGS • The 1991
Meigs Marauder Volleyball Camp
will be held Monday through Fri ·
day at Meigs High School, 9 a.m.
to noon each day. All area girls
entering grades 7-12 are eligible to
panicipate. Cost is $30 with a max·
imum of $45 per family. Registration deadline ts Thursday. Contact
Marauder Head Coach Rick Ash,
9920-5960. Shirt size, grade entering, and phone number is needed
when registering.

I

l
J

\

c? -- -=-: .
~,a'l.l~1 llu n ·- 111
tg'~··· ~~;;-rr;o

Hillside Bo~Ust Church
SL R.L 143 JUSI off Rt. 7
Pastoc .Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
SWldar School • I0 1.m.
Wonhlp • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.
Hope Baptist Chopel
S70Gtanl SL, Middleport

.

Pastor. David Bryan, Sr.

SWldar School · 10 Lm.
Wonhap ~ 11 a.m .• 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

FRI.-SAT.-SUN.
~urt Russell in

Victory Bopllst

S:ZS N. 2nd St.. Middleport
Pastor: James E. Keesee

BACKDRAFTR

Wonhip -

Faith Bapllsl Church
Roil road SL, Muon
Sundar School · 10 a.m.
Wonh1p • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Setvices • 7 p.m.
Fore5t Run Bapllst
Pa110r: Rev. N~le Borden
Sunday School' 9:30a.m.
Worship · 2:30 psn.

446-1011

FAMILY

MI. Moriah Bapllst
Fourth &amp; Main St.. Middlepon
Pastor: Rev. GUbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School.- 9,30 a.m.
. Wonhip · 10:45 a.m.
Antiquity. Baptist
Putor. Kennelh Smilh

SlDlday School'· 9:30a.m.
Eveninf·7:30 p.m.
Thunday Services · 7:30p.m.

~,

Rutland Free ~Ill Bapllsl
Salem St.
Putor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evenina - 7 p.m. ·
Wedneoday Services · 7p.m.

RESTAURANT.

Catholtc

RI'. 33
MASON, WV
NEXT TO FAST 4 U AND MASON MOTEL

Sacr&lt;d'lleart Colhollc O..rds

161 Mulberry Aye., Pomeroy: m·~898
1'1-. Rev. Walter E. a•.,..

Sunday thru Thur&gt;day, 6:30 am·10 pm; Friday &amp; Saturday, 6:30 am·11 pm

SaL M111 ·5:30p.m.
Sun. Con . • g:45·9:1S a.m., 4 :4~·5: 1S p.m.
Sm. Mau ·9:30a.m.
r;
Doily M~ss • g,30 a.m.

Make Plans To Have Sunday Dinner With Us

FRI~D caiei;N DINNER
,.

Mashed '.Potatoes/Gravy.
Green Beans, Soup &amp; Salad
. 'Bar

to a.m., 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

AND

~e~~~ MASO~Oo'

~

ML Union lbpUst
Puloc Joe N. Soy~&lt;
Sun~ay School • 9:45 a.m.
Evening • 6:30 t.,m.
Wednesday Services .,30p.m.

Old Bethe Free WID Bapllll Church
2860i'Sl. RL 7, Middlepon
Sunday School· tO a.m.
Evenlna - 7:30p.m.
Thunday Service~ • 7,30 p.m.

•

~-·

Rejolclnr Life Baptist Church
383 N. 2nd Ave., Middlepon
Sunday School · 10 Lm.
· Evening • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Bethlehem BapUsl
Pas1or. R~v. Earl Shuler
Sunday Sdiool· 10:30 asn.
Wonhip • 9:30 Lm.
Thur1day Services. 7:30p.m.

POMEROY · Summer band
practice for the Meigs Band will
resume Mnday from 9 a.m. to
noon. All students arc reminded
that this week is a special pre-eamp
practice and all absences m.ust be
excused by Toney Dingess, diroctor. Further information may be
obtained by calling the band office,
Monday through Friday. at 992·
7141 or (304) 675-7770.

• ~ .L\ N 4 U ll A

$5.99

- Or Try One Of Our Other Great Menu Items!

OPEN SUNDAY, 6:30 AM TO 10 PM

Church of Christ

Episcopal

Pomeroy ChurCh or C~rlll
212 W. Main St.

·Gnce Episcopal Church
3211 E MainS~. Pomeroy
Pas1or. Rev. Dr. Roy C. Myen
.
II a.m.,June • Au1ust

Pastor: Andrew Miles

Sllldoy School· 9:30 a.rlt.
Wonhip · 10:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesdoy Setvices · 7 p.m.

Holiness

Pomeroy Westside Ch•rch or Christ
332211 Children's Home Rd.

PlntGrove Holiness Chisrch
. lnmileoffRL 325
PasiOJ: Re .... Ben J. Watts
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

992.)g47

Sunday School • II a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Mlddlep&lt;lrl Church or Christ
Slh ond Main
Pastor. AI Hanson
SWldoy School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · g;)S, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Setvices · 7 psn.

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church

Keno Church or Christ
Wot1hip-9:30 a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 o.m.

Hysell Run Holiness Church
PaSlor: Robert Manley

'

Minersville
Pa110r: Wetley Thatcher
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wonhip · 10 a.m.

Rutland Churd!Gf the Nazarene
Pastor: Samuel Buye
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10,30 Lm., 6JO p.m.

Paslor. Aorenoe Smith

Sunday School . 9 Lm.
Wonhip · 10 a.m.
Pomeroy
Pastor: Don Meadows
Sunday School . 9:IS a.m.
Wonhip .J0:30a.m.,6p.m.
Wednesday Service•- 7:30p.m.

Pa.stoc' : Rev. Roger Willford

Rock Sprtnr•

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Putor:Keith Rader

Wonhip- 10:45 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wedne~eily Service - 1 p.m.

S\Dlday School· 9:15a.m.
Wonhip · tO a.m., 6 p.m.

White's Chapel Wesleyan

Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.

Salem Center
Pastor: Ron Fierce

Sunday School · 9: IS o.m.
Worship · 10:15 a.m.

Snowville
Pastor: florence SmiLh

Sunday School · 10 1.m.
Worship . 9 a.m.
Soulllern Cluder
Apple Growe

PaslOr: Carl Hicks
Sunday School -9 a.m .
Wonhip - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Services · 7 p.m.
Bethany
Pastor: Kennetll Baker
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.

St John Lutheran Churdl

Wednesday Services · 10 a.m.

Pine Grove
Pastor: Lauro A. Lead! Sh ..ffler
Wonhip • 9:30 Lm.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

Carmel
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Worship . !0:4l a.m. (2nd &amp; 4th Sun)

Our Saviour Lutheran Church

Morn In&amp; Star

Walnut and Htru)' Su., Ravenswood,

w.v•.

MillcrSL, Muon, W.Va .

Sund_ar School · 10 a.m.
Wonh1p • II a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Semoes · 7 p.m.

Pastor: Kenneth Baker

· Putor. Rev. Geo!Je C. Wdriclt
Sunday School • 9:30 Lm.
Worship · II a.m.

Brodford Church or Christ
St. RL 124 4 Co. Rd. 5
Putor. Derek Stump
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m.,7:30p.I!J.
Wemelday s..,oes · 7:30p.m.

SL Poul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore 4 Second SL, Pomeroy
Poaor: Lau" A. w&lt;h Shteffler
Smday School • 9:45 Lm.
Wonhip - II a.m.

Pas10r. tad&lt; Cleland
Sunday School • I 0 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Hob- Church o(Christln Christian
Union

Chester
Pastbr: Sharon Ha11sman
Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Thunday Ser"Viccs · 7 p.m.

Coolville United Mathodlst Parish

Joppa

Tuesday Services · 1 p.m.

Pastor: Harold E. Alloway -Priddy

Coolville Church
Moin &amp; Fiflh St .
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 9 a .m.
Bethel C~urch
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.
Wednesday Service:• · 10 a.m.

Lung Bottom
Pastor: Charles Eaton
Sunday School • 9JO a.m.
Wonhip · 10,30 a.m.

.

Sunday School-9:30a.m. ..
Evc:nin&amp;- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Hockingport Church
Grand Street
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - I I a .m.
Wednesday Services · 8 p.m.

Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Hartford ChUrch ol ChriS! In Christian
Union
Hartford, W.Va.
Putor: Rev. David McManis
Sunday School · II a.m
Wonhip . 9:30a.m., 7,30p.m.
Wednetday Servi~"'; 7:30p.m.

Chu rch of God

Syracuae First Church or God
Wonhip · !Oa.m.
SUnday School • II a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
We.lnesday Services · 7 p.m.

Rulland Bible Methodist
Pastor: Rev , Ivan My en
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

PaslOr: Seldon Johnson
Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:30p.m.

Chnst1an Union

Worship - II a.m .,? p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Alfred
P11tor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Old Deller Bible Chrlsllan Church ·

Pastor: John F. Corcoran

Pastor: William Williams

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

NOrtlleut Cluster

Hemlock Cro.. Churcb
Pastor: Chorles llomigari
Sunday s&lt;h~ · 10,30 Lm .
Worship · 9:30 Lm. 7 p.m. ·

Sunday School · 10 a.m.

Laurel ClllfFree Methndln Church

Melp Cooperallve Parloh

Llnalrille Chrlsllaa Churc~
Sunday School- 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip . 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesdoy Setvice 7:30p.m.

Rullond Church or Gnd

Pas1or: Roger Grace
Sunday School · 10 o.m.
Wonhip . II a.m.

ML Olive United Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilketville
Pastor. Charles Jones
Sunday School • 9,30 a.m.
Wonhip : 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Thunday Services · ·1 P·'!'·

Oex1er
·
Pu1or: Woody Call
Sunday School • I 0 a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.
.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m. '

ML Moriah Ch•rch Of God
Racine ·
Pas10r. Rev. James Sa11erfield
Sunday School · 9:4S a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Setvices · 7 p.m.

R1clne

Recd5vllle
PIStor: Rev. O..arles Eaton
Wonhip · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Wemesday Services · 7:30p.m.

I

Torch Church

Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonliip · !0:30a.m.

..

Tuppers Plains SL Paul
Pattor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School · 9 o.m.
Worship . 10 Lm.
Tuesday Semees · 7:30p.m.

Nazarene

Wednesd!ly Service-7:30p.m .

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pallor: Rev. Blackwood
SWlday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip 10:30 a.m.,7JO p.m.
. Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m

Faith Tabcmade Church
Bailey Run Road
PaslOr: Rev. Emmell Rawsoo
Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.
Evening 7 p.m.
Thunday Service - 7 p.m.

Pastor: A. Stewart
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Thursdly Service · 7:30p.m.

Syranne Mission
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse

Sunday School · 10 a. m.
Evening · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Hud Communlly Church

Off RL 124

Sthersvllle Word

PaslOr: Edsel Hart

., .

-··

ot Faith

Paalor: Gary Holter

Sunday S&lt;hool · 9:30a .m.
Wonhip . 10:30 a.m.. 7:30p.m.

Sunday School9:30 a.m.
E.vcnirl&amp; - 7 p.m.
Thursday Setvice ·7:30p.m.

...'·

Pentecostal
Penle&lt;;ostil Assembly
St Rt 124, Racine

Burlinah•m
P11sLor: Ray IJaudcnnih

'.

Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Sunday School · 10 o.m.
Wonhip - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ce1 - 1 p.m.

Christian Fellowship Center
Salem SL. Rutland
Pastor: Robcn E. Musser
Sunday School • 10 a.m.

.: '
•'

Middleport Pentecostal

Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Dark Baker
Sundoy School · 10 a.m.
Evening · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 730 p.m.

Wonhip - I I: 15 a.m., 1 p.m.
Thursday Servia: · 7 p.m.

Morse Chapel Church
Pastor: David Curfman

Presbyterian

Sunday school • 10 a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m ., 7:30p.m.
Wednesdty Setvice · 7 p.m.

•.'·

. .,

Harrisonville Presbylerlan Church
Worship · 9 a.m.
Sunday School · 9:4S a.m.

Faith Gospel Church
Long Oouom
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
WotShip . 10:4S Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

•

Mlddlcporl Presbyterian
'
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wonhip · 10 a.m., 4 p.m. (2nd &amp; 4th Sun.)

t,_

~

"I •

Syrocuae First United Presbyterian
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
•
Wonhip ·II a.m., 4 p.m. (lsi &amp; 3td Sun.) • 1

Mt. Olive CommLmlly Church
Pastor: Lawrena: Bush

Sunday School · 9:30a.m .
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wc:dneday Sctvice .7 p.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Sevenlli·Day AdvenUsl
Mulbeny Hu. Rd., Pomeroy
Pas10r: Bob Snyder
Sabb.tlil Services:
Sabbath School · 2 p.m.
Wonhip · 3 p.m.

United Folth Church
Rt 7 on Pomeroy By· Pan
Paswr: Rev. Roben E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worsh1p · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m .
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

I ..·

•r

Ecclcsla Fellow•hlp
128 Mill St, Middlcpon
Pastor: Chuck Mcrhcrson

Church
Texas Cornmunily off CR 82

Sunday School · IOa.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Service· 7 p.m.

Pastor: Robcn Sanden

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · IOJO s.m., 7:30p.m.

Full Gospel Lighthouse
33045 Hiland Rood, Pomeroy
Putor: Tom KeUy
Sunday School · 10 Lm.
E.enins 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thunday · 7:30p.m.

."

·,.-

Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

'·

Eden United Brethren Jn Christ
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Worship - 7:30p.m.
.Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

or

Worship -" 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sctviccs · 7 p.m.

Asbury (Syracu,.)
Pastor: Wesley Thudler
Sunday School· 9:4S a.m .
Worship · II a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Syracuse Church of the Nazarene

Enterprise

Wedncs.day Services · 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Glenn McMillan

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Won hip · 1030 a.m., 6 p.m.

Pastor: Ke1th Rader

.

m~~

(.\\\iff S,rw

Sunday SehQOI · 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 9 a.m., 6 p.m .
Tuesday Services - 7 p.m .

Pomeroy Church oi lhe Namtene
Putor: Rev. Thomu McOung
Sundaf SchoOl ·9:30a.m.

FlatwoodJ

Worship · I 0:30a.m. and6p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Pas10r: Kcilh Rader

Sundoy School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Thunday Services · 7 p.m.

MEIGS nRE
CENTER, INC.

Forest Run
Pas10r: Wesley Thatcher
Smday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Thunday Setvices • 6,30 p.m.

Johnt= . Futll, Mqr .

Q).,.,r.,

93 Mill Street
Mlddlepon. Ohio 46760
(6141992·6867 - (998 -00KSI

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677
BILL QUICKEL

CHURCH SUPPLIES It BIBLES

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

n

Nationwide Ins. Co., ~
111 (olurrtbu\ , 0 .

Ph ,,, 1101

to• w . Moun

Pomeroy

991 1111 Pomeretv

.

M1

~5~

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

II S E.

Pom troy

l'

'

'
,' .
'
J

'

Pt»mrroy
• 'I

~

P---------------------~~--------------------; ':

•

:I

. '·

Calvary Pilgrim Chapol
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. VicLOr Rou sh
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.• 7:30p.m.
Wednt.~day Se:l"'lice . 7 :30p.m .

,VJSA • MASTERCARD • AMERICAN EXPRESS ACCEP'IED
- - -

•, :·;

Splrllual Faith Church
Sllle 338, Antiquily

.{1 .Carry aUt Orden A~l)le (:)04) 773-5321 lj,.
· -

..

,,

. :

Middleport Church the Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. I.Joyd D. Grimm, Jr.
SWlday School · (}:30 a.m.

Central Cluster

'

Pastor: Jamea Lewis

Pntor: Sam Andenon
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evenina - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 :30p.m.

Burlington Community Ct.urch

.

"

Sunday School · II a.m.
WotShip · 9:30 a.m.,7:30 p.m.

Middleport Community Church
S7S Pearl S1., Middlepon

Sulton

SWlday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 9 a .m.

.'

Folnlew Bible Church
U.1an , W.Vo. Rt I

Thr S11lvallon Army
II 5 Buucmul Ave., Pomeroy .
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Dyenllle Community Church
Sunday School ·9:30a.m .
WotShip · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

East Letart
Pastor: Roger Grace

Gnham United Melllodlll
Worship· 9:3oa.m. (lilA 2nd Sm), 7:30
. pJII. (3nl &amp;; 4th Slut)
WednOJCI,oy Service • 7 :~0 p.m.

U&gt;erty Chrlsllon Church

Sunday School · 9JO Lm.

' I.'

Sunday School · 9:45 o.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Thursdoy Services ·7:30p.m.
Pa.stor: Kenneth Balcer
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
WotShip · 10:45 a.m. (!51 &amp; 3rd Sun)

Methodi st

Succeoo Road Church of Christ
Pas10r: Joseph B. Hoskins
Sundoy SChool • 9 a.m.
Wonhip • Ill a.m., 7 p.m . .
WedneodayServices · 7 p.m.

Freedom Gospel Mlssloo
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31

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

Lutheran

Maaon Church or Christ

SWlday School · 9:30a.m.
Evenin&amp; · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Setvice · 7 p.m.

Trinity Conaret~allonal Church
Pastor. Rev. Roland Wildman
Chur&lt;:h · 9:15a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.

Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Rulland Church ol Christ
Pas10r: Eugene E. Underwood ·
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

New HIVen Churth or tile Naurene

Kinssbury Road
Ptnor. Clyde W. Hendenm

Pu1or: Glendon Suood
Sunday School • 9,30 a.m.
Wot1hip · IMO a.m., 7 p.m .

Thunday Setvicet · 7 p.m.

,.
.' .

Carleton Interdenominational Church

Rulland
Pas10r: Arthur Crabtree
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Dexter Churall or Christ
Pastor: Roger.Wauon
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · I0:30a.m.
Wednesday Setvices • 7 p.m.

PorUand Flrll Church or the Nuarene
PaslOr: William Jusws
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:40 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Setvices · 7:30 p.m.

Middleport Independent Holiness
Church ·
75 Pearl St.
Pastor: Rev. Ivan Myers

.

Wcdnc.aday Services · 7 p.m .

Cool&gt;'ille Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour

Reoraonlzcd Church Gf Jesus Chrlslln
Liller Day Saln!S
Portland·Racine Rd.
Pmor: William Roush
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worshi~ · 10:30 a.m.

Tuppers Plains Church or Christ
Pastor: Robert Foster
Sundoy Schoo).. 9 a.m. .
Worship · 9:4S a.m.• 6:30p.m.

Swill Bethel New Testament
Silver Ridae
Paltor: Duane Sydens1ricker
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m., 7 p .m.
Wednesday Service - 1 p.m.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Other Churches

Harrisonville Holiness Chapter
PaSlo~ Rev. Earl Field
Sundat School 10 o.m.
Wonhip . II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30 p.m.

Bndbul')' Church or Christ
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sundoy School· 9:30 o.m .
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

Thunday services - 1:10 p.m.

Wedne1day Services · 6 p.m.

·sunday School9:30 a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service ·7:30p.m.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

N- Setllemenl Church
Sunday Wonhip · 2:30p.m.;

Sunday School · 9 :30a.m .
Worship . 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
·

Zloa Ch.urch or Christ
Pomeroy, Horrisonville Rd. (RL 143)
PaslOr: Rober E. Punell
Sunday School· 9:30a .m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Church of God G( PrOI&gt;hCCJ
OJ. While Rd. off St. RL 16()
Pas10" Pat Henoon
Sunday School • I 0 a.m . .
Wonhip • II a.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.ill.

Ch...,. C~urch Gf the Nua...,e
Pallor. Rev. Hemen Gro1e
Sunday School · 9:30 o. m.
Wonhip • II a.m., 7 p.m.

Pearl Chopol

75 Pearl SL, Middlqxm.
Pas10r: Rev. Ivan Myers
Sunday school · 9:30a.m.
·Wotship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m

Bearwalldw Rld1e Church G( Christ
PasiOr: Jack Colegrov~
Sundoy School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedneoday Service• · 6:30p.m.

Pastor: Theron Durham

Healll (Middleport)
Pallor: Fnnk Smith
SW&gt;day School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Serviceo • 6 p.m.

Wednesday Service - 7 :30p.m .

l

c,ood's Abt•ah

Mixed scramble
slated Sunday

Homecoming held

bCpanmem willliold a tractOf.pull
on Satunlay. Weigh-in will begm' at
5 p.m. and the tractor puU will stan
at 6 p.m. Classes are divided into
800, 900, 1,000 lb., 12 horsepower
and over and 12 horsepower and
under.
·

•

Heinz recalling baby food
after rubber particles found
:PITI'SBURGH (AP) - Heinz
U$A recalled 12,000 cases of baby
food after small rubber particles
dilcovered in several jars.
tompany spokesman said
11iutsdaY the recall began about
t* :weeks ·ago and was not
an,wunc:ed because the particles
poled no danger:
·

..

SATURDAY
LONG BOTTOM • There will
be an old fashioned ice cream
social at the Long Bottom Community Building. Six flavors of ice
cream, sandwiches, pie and cake
wiU be on sale. Live bands will be
performing and prizes awarded. ·
RACINE - Free music show at
Star Mill Park beginning at 7:30
p.m.

T(lrragon: herb of the month
'I1Ie herb fest was discussed at
the recent meeting of the River
Valley Herbalists held at the home
ol Debbie Gilmore, Reedsville.
Connie HiU distributed a Jist of
committees for members to select
which committee they desired to
wo¢with.
It was announced that the cook
books are in· and will be sold for

LONG BOTTOM • There will
be a hymn sing at the Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom on
Friday at 7:30 p.m. featuring a
group from Parkersburg, W.Va.,
BiU Cadle of Middleport, and other
local talent. Pastor Steve Reed
invites the public.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

I

�Friday, July
Page

~The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Promoters sue Guns N' Roses
CL AYTON , Mo (AP)- Concert promoters are sUJng G uns N'
Roses , saymg the heavy -metal rock
group provoked last week' s concen
not that mJured more than 60 people and heavily damaged a new
arnpuheater
The plam11ffs f1led the lawsuu
Wednesd ay 1n St Lou•s County
Circuli Court agamst lead smger
Axl Ro s e a nd MOGOBO, the

group's corporate name
Th e la w s uit sa y s th e band
agreed m 1ts contract " to refram
from c onduct wh1ch defendants
knew
would be provocauve and
dangerous to members of the audi-

ence' '
It says Guns N' Roses v1olated
Its agreement by us m g msulttng
and profane language, confronung
the audience, mterfenng w1lh secu-

Friday, July

Business Services

Plamuffs mcluded R•verport
Performmg Arts Cemre and Contemporary Producuons Inc., the
booking agent and promoter.
The lawsuit asks that JUdgments
agamst Guns N' Roses he equal to
any awarded to IDJured concertgoers
Two people also have ftled su1t
agaunst R1verport Amphitheatre

POOL~2!~NINE
Open Tuas , Thurs .,
Fri • Sat 7 30 p m.

'

POMEROY
BOWLING
380

Classified

East 2nd St.

LINDA'S
PAINTING
INliiiOI • DTIIIOI
FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

• pa1nting.

MONDAY thru

8 A.M.

until

SED SUNDAY
POU CI

Over 16 Words
Rate
$4 00
20
30
S6 00
42
$9 00
60
013 00
05 / doy
S1 30/ doy

Announcemenls
2 - ln Memory

3 - Annoucements
4 - Gtveewav
S - Happy Ads
6 - Los t and Found
7 - Yard Sale (Pa•d tn advan cel
8 - Publ• c Sale &amp; Aut.:! ton

Yard Sales

9- Wanted to Buy

15 1-

62 53 54 55 56 57 58 -

59 -

Elllployment
Serv1ces

clau•f•ed ad'\lert•sement placed m The Da•l v Sentmel ( fill
cept - clas11f•ed d•spll'{ Busmess Card and legal not tees)
Will alto appear tn the Pt Ple•ant Regtster and th e Gellt
pohs Oatly Trtbu ne reachmg over 18 000 homes

Help Wanted
Sttuatton Wanted
13- lnsurance
14 - Busmess Trammg
15 Schools &amp; lnuruct•on
16 - Red• o TV &amp; C B Repatr

MONDAY PAP ER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

-

2 00 PM WEDNESDAY
2 00 PM THURSDAY

-

2 00 PM

FRIDAY

Clas s1j1ed pafies co t e r th e

foll onlllj! telephonP exchan![es
Galltl County
Area Code 614

Me•gs Co t.ml y
Area Code 614

Mu on Co WV
Area Code 304

4•6 - Gall,pol•s
367- Ch•htre
388 - \liOIOM
245 - Rio Grande
256-Guyan Ois t
~43 - Arab• a Otll
379 - Walnot

992 - M

ddleport
Pomeroy
985 - Cheste•
843- Port land
247 - letart Falls
949 - Aa c•ne
742 - Rutland
667 - Coolvtlle

675 458 576 773 -

Pt PlaasaMt
leon
Appl e Grove
Ma ton
882 - New Haven
895 - lelllt
937 - Bufl al o

12 -

1 7 - M•sc~laneous

1 B-

Wanted To Do

21 - Susme:ss Op(Jortuntt~
22 - Money to l oa n
23 - ProfesSIOnal Servtces

Real Eslale
31 - Homes fo r Sale
32 - Moblle Homes tor Sate
33 - Farms for Sale
34 - Susiness 8utldtngs
35 - l o t s &amp; Acreage
36 - Real Estate Wanted

985·4180

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Hou•ehold Good•
Sporltng Goodt
AnttQues
Mts c Merch1nd•s e
Bu•ldtno Supph•
Pets for Salfl
Mua•callnnrument s
Fru•ts &amp; Veg .. abl ee
For S1te or Trade

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Now Homos Built
" Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-286,
NO SUNDAY

Farm Supplies
&amp; L1ves1ock

1 1-

PUBLICATION
- 1100AM SATURDAY
- 2 00 PM MOND AY
- 2 00PM TUESDAY

REFERENCES

6 10 91 - 1 mo

Merchandise

1- Car d of Thanks

H appy Ads

DAY BEFOR E

(614)

fnr ear.h cbv as Hpa ral e ads

"A

COPY DEADLINE -

HA VI

A 11" are for conMcuttve run s broken up davs will be charged

"Ada outstde M11 gs G•ll• a or Mason cou nt•es mus1 be pre
Pltd
"Aecl'llole t 50 chscount tor ad1 patd m advance
"free ads - Gtveaway and Found ads under 15 words wt ll be
run 3 d't l 11 no c~ •ge
"Pnce of ad for all capnallfftt ers •s double prt ce o f •d cost
"7 po1nt line type on!y used
•SentmeliS not responsible for errors after ftrst d'8V (C heck
lor er rors full d-v ICI runs'" paperI Call before 2 00 p m
~t.- after pubhcallon to mek e co rrec110M
"Ads thlt must be Plitl in adva nce are
I n Memouam

Words
16
15
15
15
15

Davs
1
3
6
10
Monthly

NOON SATURDAY

C•rd ol Thanks

let me do it for you.
VERY REASONABlE

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD

61 - Ferm Equipment
62 - Wanted to Buy
63 - Lwes1oclt
64 - Hav &amp; Gram
66 - S•ed &amp; Fert!ltler

cuatlllt

SIGNS
by 'lick Htolt!'lt¥

Transpnrlalion

B~rby

71 ~ Autos for Sale
72 - Trucka fo r Sal e
73 - Vans 6 4 VVD s
74 - Motorcycles
75 - Boeu &amp; Motors for Sale
76 - Auto Parts &amp; ACCMSOn•
77 Aut o Repatr
78 - Cem pmg Equipment
79 - Campeu &amp; Motor Homes

~UALITY
Poont Pleasant 675-1;9'2 '

COMPLnE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

CUSTOM BUILT

Conven1ble Tops.
Carpets, Headliner
&amp; Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair.

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"~t R111sonable Prices"

PH. 949·2101
or Its. 949-2160
Day

MAUl 51., MASON, WV.

or Night

1-(304)·
773-9560

NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16-86-tfn

•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
8 -12-90-tln

•BUY

DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK
(614)
696-1006

Public Notice

t1nct1on 1n eltgebthty for, ortn
PUBLIC NOTICE
It ,. tho pohcy of the M01g1 the manner of prov1c1ng. ch·
County Boord of Mont&lt;ol re- ent Hnt1caa All serv1cea are
' tardatlon I Dovolopmont&lt;ol ava.labla without d11ttnction
DlMbllltlea t o treat all ch to all clients end visltore re
tntl without regard to race gardle11 of race. color, ne
color, natlonol ongon, hando tlonol orogln, sex, hondocap,
cap or age Tho •m• rogu1 or age All par10na and or
remonta are oppllad to all ganlutions having occas•on
1nd client1 1re •••gned e1ther to refer clients for 18r·
without reg•rd to race VICII or to recommend the
color. n1tion1l origtn, h1nd1 MCBMR/00 oro odvosed to
c•p or age There 11 no d11 do 10 without regard to the

2

In Memory
IN LOVING
MEMORY OF
CELESTINO
!Danny)
CORDERO

July 12, 1988
It II h1rd to beiMIVe
yean have
p111Hd since your
dNth.
The birthday•. the holideya, end the weekend vitlta are ttill aa
empty a1 the flrlt
you left ua.
You unulfillhly gave
ut the enjoyment of
your laughter and
the wildom of your
experience
Your wife,
your daughter, Enllicll. yow grendchll-

BULLETiN

Public Notice
cuent 1 race. color, nat•onal
ongm handtcap or age
Tho poroon doolgnatod to
coordtnate complt~nce w1th
Soct1on 504 of the Rohabllotatlon Act of 1973 (non-dos
cr~m1nat1on aga1nst the han·
docappedlo• Botto Hoffman
who can be reached It P 0
Box 307-1310 Carillon
Street.
Syracu•. Oh1o
46779, (614) 992 6681
(7) 12 1tc

NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HEARING
Notlcalo hereby goven that
on July 15, 1991 from 7 00
to 7 30 p m t pubhc meet
ong on tho Budget end Revenue Sharing for the year
1992 for the Vllllgo of Pomeroy, Ohio woll ba hold at
the Clerk' a Off1co
Brenda Morros,
Volllgo Clerk
(7) 12. 1tc

LORDY,
LORDYII
OUR BOSS
IS 401

BOARD

Across from Post OH!ca

ve•

Mon--.

dNn. ~.Johnand

Kr-..

memorlae

For

GOO BLESS YOU I

5

HappyAds

Polnl Pleasanl

New Haven

675-5540

882-2405

YOU ARE INVITED

OPEN DOUSE
Saturday, July 13
2:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.
Lyons Subdivision - Mason

Oh, my
gosh I
Look who's

' 3011
Mom end Dad

(Just below Wahama High School)
Please come and enjoy seeing the many
fine features of this all brick house.
1900+ sq. ft., 3 bedrooms, 21/2 baths,
2 fireplaces, new heat pump,
formal dining room, family room,
2 car garage and basement.

Painting

(FREE ESTIMATES!

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Oh1o
111490\ln

All

Breeds

EMILEE MERINAR
Owner

20S N. Stconcl Str1tt
.DIIlEPOn, OHIO 4576&amp;
Offict 614-992-2116
HOME 614-992-5692
E S. TUINEI, IIOIU
H SES•LOTS#FAilMiSI
COMMERCIAL
We Need Liollngo'
I 5 11Hf11

&amp; Operator

614-992-6820

OH.

Pomeroy,

USED APPUANCES

J&amp;L
INSULATION

90 DAY WAIUiiln
WASHEIS-$100 liP
IEfiiiGEUTOIS-$100 op
UHGIS-Got-atc.-$125 liP
FIUZIIS-S 125 up
'
rtiCIO OVENS- $79 up

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

AVON - All areas, Call Marilyn
w.... 304-812 2645
AniWtr phonn loc1Uy for
Nationwide Co full I par1·tlme
or will train, hiring Immediately
allrwmety high w1ge1, Sat Sun
11am-5pm, M.f' 9:00..5 OOpm,
614498-20111
POMEROY
'ASSEMBLERS NEEDED'
Immediate openings No ax·
porltnct noadad. Full/Port-limo
can TOLL FREE 1-8011-743-5921,
lllm-10pm 7 daya
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Excellent
Pay,
Bonolllo,
Tranoportallon,
407 2g2-4'll17,
Ext 571 Oa m -10p m loll
Rotunolad

BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES.
LANDCLEARING,
WATER and SEWER
LINES

992-533S or 91S-3S61
Across From Post Office
POMI!IDY. OHO
tin

TRUCKING

OFFICE
HOME

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting
FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

992-2886

992-5692
awc.. r;w

...... .

IMI h - ..,...

206

NORTH SECOND AVE
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
DOTTIE-S . TURNER . BROKER

DARWIN - Farm - 151 \7 acres of land woth an older 2
story home Has s11 rooms 3 bedroom s 2 barn s and lree
gas to heal your home Approx 20 acres bllable $85,000
POMEROY - No down Payment - Owner s woll carry 2nd
mortgage on tho s two story home on a good slreet Has a large
famoly room some hardwood floor s 3 bedroom s and a dm
ong room Has vonyl sodong for a low maonlenance
ONLY $24,000
ROUTE 124- Have you ever dreamed ol ownong your own
busoness - Well now's the t1me to buy Thos busmess IS
equipped With shake machme. 4 freezers oce cream
machone, deep lryer, 1ce machme groll and LOTS more Sot
tong on approx one acre corner lot along a slate roule
ONlY $60,500
RIVER FRONT PROPERTY - Approx I acre beaullful grassy
lot with water lllp already onslalled Greal for campong or
boatong - near Racone
PRICED AT ONLY $7,000
POMEROY -laurel Cliff Rd -Fora low pnce you can own
yoor own home Thos 1'h story 2 bedroom home os sottong on
approx a 14 acre lot woth a small barn
$7,900

JEFFERS . ...... . _
DARLINE STEWART ......... .
SANDY BUTCHER ........ .
SHERYL WATERS ........ _ .
BRENDA

AVAILABlE
FREE ESTIMATES

' "" 992-3056
. 992-6365
...992-5371
""' ' 367-0421

Second
Middleport

Hand Tufting
Custom Drapes
36 Ye•n Experlen~e

614-992-2321
We Soy Whet We Do
We Do What -:~_-,.., .

I 14-'lt -tfn

Now lnStotk/1
AIR CONDmONERS - HEAT PUMPS and

&amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

FURNACES FOR MOilLE
•

•

•••••

0

•

•••••

0

•••

0

••••

BENNEtT'S ·::l~N~O=E
COOUNG
141
(6141 446-9416 or 1·1DO·I72·S967

located On Safford School Rd. off It.

4 29-91

WE DO

d

2U•Ne.

992-6648 or
698-6864

0

4 29·81 · 1 mo

UPHOLSTERY

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION

••••••••••

992-7458

oF Mldj/•pott

ROOFING

Announcements
3

Announcements

Slnglt ..,.,.,. and ,_laltor
tor oroa olnglto All agee. Conlldanllat and
Wrtta
SlngiH.._ p.o. Box 1043, Galllpolla, .... 451131.

•-blo.

4

Giveaway

1 Full Size Box Spring I llat1,_ 114 441 1855
2 Ftmlle Klltena, 12 W•ka Old,
Black And Whho, lllxod, CliO
814-387-7811, Anytlrno After
5p.m.
~~

main, 1 female

4 month old part Germ1n
Shapherd and Collla lomslo,
3114..15-3021 aftar I DO Pll
Clltnd 3 kill.,., W-8'15-141M
CcMich nloda aomo repair, lt4W24728
Free kfttena, light SIRIY,
monthl, •304-175-1153

2

Hall Colllt Pupa To Glv11way
114-388-11033
Heavy ltMI aiding •nd lumber
loom. bullcllng, lt~-ta2-e802

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH

~~&amp;!zar, Avacoclo Color

TROMM
BUILDERS
FREE ESTIMATES

Pupploa Fr• To Oood Homo
Have liMn Wormod Hu Shots,
I WMkl Old ti14MI-II34 after
lp.m.

•20

Years Experience
•Quality Homes and
Custom Remodeling

742-2328

cam,..... ......,,..
N1!/W TBlS

8EoWQJJ-

POOL

5/22/tln

=

mothar Boaglt, 304-

Two 3 llonlh Old Khlano, lwo 8
Wool&lt; Old Kltltnt, 114-4411-4070

Lost&amp; Found

Follld: Cot In OtMifiOIII, 1144.. 1S48.

-TO B.a.&amp;
CAIIPIRG - Beoullfulllumluaol!nls

R.\'TES- D.y, Wack, MODth, or Scuon
PICIIIC - . f t l l ... IITAGI 'tw bat
Reunlona - Get Togethers - Porttea
NBlJIG
CAIIUI a CAIII'ICR relit llllfT
lftAat IIAil
AllCADii
nm•~f1D

......... .

Lotlllaglt pupa, llomontha old
1-whftt aitd lin, 1-M, Ill Hill
of Racine; 114-141-2114.
LOST blk mlnatwt Poodlt, 21th
StrMt IFel, 1nawera to 'Bo"
'
304.&amp;75-108hfttr4•30

46

Country llobllt Homo Park,
Route 33, North of Pomeroy
Lot1, rentala, parte, aale1 Ctll
114-992-111711

Merchandise

Beautiful Solid O.k Dining
Room Suite, 1 Y11r Old, 614-44ff-

72
Household

10,DOD BTU Whlripool Air Conditioner, $150 814-446-4761

Peraon

To

Htng

Ortptry, Vertical &amp; Mlnl Blinds

614-441.()411

Wanted Service Technician for
Heating &amp; Air Condl'lon·
lng/Refrlgeratlon Experienced
Seind Reaume Oa 079, clo Gal·
II polls Dally Trlbuno,_ 825 •Third
Avenue, GallipoUt, OH 4563t

14

Business
Training

Retrain
Nowii!Southa~atam
Buolnosa College, Spring Valley
Plszo can loolay, 6t4-446-436711
Aoglstorallon t90-li5-127'1B

18

Wanted to Do

=,-,...,-,,--,---..,.-,...Will Bobysll In lly Homo

*-571~

'72 mobllt homt 12xtl5, OIC
cond, $4,5011 304-815-3614
12xeo Tnlller For S1le, On
Clsrko Chapel Road 614-388IM13
1972 12xSO, Fltmlngo, 2br, Gaa
Fumace, Cltrpatlng, Stove,
Aalrigarator Included 13,800
114-388-11724
1m Kirkwood mobile home, 2
~!'a' good condition, SSSOO 614-..4235.

1875 double wide, aatup on 314
acra, uklng 115,000 304-1'153738

1082 Commador Mobile Home, 2
BR Garden 1\ob, II Poart Sl
lll~dlopo~ tnoo. 114-992-1030
1g!M llsnolon 14x80, all olactrlc,
2 bedroom, 2 lull balhl, AC,
WID 304475-78Tf.
lias Radman 14x70, 2br 2
Bothl, Whl~pool, Tub1 Skylight
lal1nd Ktlchtn, DouDia P1llo
Glau Doore, M1ny E:rtrasl
$11,5011 614-251-1058
1gas Redmon 14x70, 2br 2
batho, llan_y Extroo, llual SMI
S14,fl00 0 B.O, 8t4-992-lll711, 84
1987 14X70 3-BR, 2·blth, on 2
acro ronlod lot, 114-992-7103
2 1nd 3 bedroom mobile hom•
on nontad lol, W-&amp;75-3812
2-BR mobllt homo lot 1111, .,_
colllnl condition, 814-247-2300.
Knox 1t81, 1-owner, 2 bedroom,
111 electric, call 614-DSI2·302'1 or
l14-1112-710l
Now t1x80'1 Now On Display AI
Ellll Homt cantor, Affordabllhy, Luxury, &amp; Quality Call
1-80Q-58fl-5710
New 1091 14x80 three bedroom,
2 luR bathsh ahlnglo roof, vinyl
tiding,
• UC1tr1,
carpeted
throuGhout, all drywall lnlorlo•
ond !1-bay window $17,DII7.00
Clll1-800-72fl-4045
llobllt homo and throe loll
Prlco roducod Phono 304-882-

3551
Trtllttr tor Nle or rent, 304·7'735225

33

Farms for Sale

11 ~rea, Claan I Neal, Vory
Nlco :Jbr H-. Clutbulldlnga
Barn, Tobacco Baae, Mineral
~lghll1 _9-ar 4 ~r• Bollom
Llitd, ....ooo. 114-251-135l

34

Business
Buildings

OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE on
2nd Av. , GalllfiOilt. CloM to
Court Houoo. t .-n, 2 rooma,
3 - . , 4 r - . AU nlcoly
-Ia\!, tit condlllonlf!to
your ...., a ...., bill .,. palel.
flake ywr c1oo1co now No
quoiN o- lhe p~oc&gt;M, you
oouat
•Phonl ..,d.ay,
an
a11001n1mon1
114-441-'!Mg

446-0531avo.

35

Lots

&amp; Acreage

F01 Salt: River banlo property In
llaoon 304-773-5651

Coffer lor ronl, Jllll'filltd, AIC,
carpo , good ol1ghborllolpot, no
pats, Pi Plelsant, WV 1·304·
675-8200
Efficiency Apartment, Fur·
niahtd, Dopoell, &amp; Reference
Required No
114-441-t8'71
For rtn1. 1 bedroom 1partment,
1225 utllhlH lncludad, da-'1
roqulrad, no poll, 814-t!l2-:12t8.

P"••

Fumlahed
Ap~rtment
Downttall'l, All Utllllita Paid,
$175/mo t1D Second Avenue,
GalltfiOIII, 61~-441-3!145
Nlcaly Fomlahad Apa~monl,
1br, ntXI to Ubrory, pooklng,
central hut, 1lr, 11fnnc1 ,.
qulred. 114-446.0338.
Fumlallod
EHlcltncy,
All
UUIItl• Paid, Share Bath,
1125/mo. t19 Second Avtnut,
Golllpollt, 614-441-31145
Fumlshod
EHicloncy, 1150
Utllllln Pold, Sharo Bath, 701
Fou~h. Ga11lpolla, 514-446-4418
1h1r 7p m
Grtclout living 1 and 2 bed·
room •partm.nta •• Vlllage
Manor
and
Rlvtrlkta
Apa~monta In lllddlopo~ From
$1911 COli 114-1112-TIBl EOH
New Haven, 2 bedroom fur·
nlt had 1par1m1nt, dlpollt 1nd
raftrence, 304·882·2566
Nice clean cunenlly available 1
bedroom apt, for Independent
living, tlderty, h•ndlctpptd 1nd
dlubltd l*?'pl• Low Income
may quality if Income 11 under
111350 ~·•r Electric, water,
a•~• lnclodad with ronl
Aonlli 30% ol od)ualad Income
River Btnd PIICe, New Hav1n,
wv 304-862-312t
Completly Fumlahed mobile
home, 1 mile below lownl overlooking river No Pete, CA 614·
446.0!31
No~h 3rd Sl, 11\ddloport, Ohio, 1
bedroom tuml1htd apt, referen·
ceo and dopooh roqulrod 304112-2561
North 40h1 Mlddloport, Ohio 2
bodooom tumlshod opt, dopooH
and "terence required, 304-8822561
Ont bedroom 1partmant In Middleport, ltove and relrlger~tor,
AC, $225 011 + O.poolt, t4t4W2-315117 or 1112-3312
Small klmlehad 1pl on Ml Ver·
non Ave, lower dupl1xl $215
month phJI electrtc At erence
and dopooll, 304475-2651
Very nlco 1 bedroom apt, blaut~
lui coumry llfllng, 1rot laundry
I W811lr, air concf. located Park
Ad Oarwln OH, GIN C R Prall,
814-5114-5322, sm month

45

Furnished
Rooms

Ap1rtmant IVIillble for 2 01 3
con.tructlon workws 304-182·
2561
Rooms tor rert1 · week or month
Starting at $120/rno Gs11lo Hotel
114-446'1580
Slooplna roonoo whh cooking
Alao troliar · - All hook-upo .
cau after 2 oo p m , 304-7135651, Maaon WV

$3 99 • $4 i9 Y1rd Porch Turf

1-f&gt;-

~~

IJ.'U

~~========:::r-;;;;"'~"~''~'~'"~';';'M~

llpolle, OH

Fornt groan carpet, hallwoy
runner and podding, FKll,.r
chair, labia tnd chairs, 31144758120

GOOD

USED APPLIANCES
Waahera, dry.,., refrlger1tora,
rangM Skagp Al)l)lllncee,
Upper River Aa. Btalde Slone
Creet Mota! C." S14-441-73N
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Com!Hit homo luml~~~~i"
Houno llon-SII, fl-5 1
60322, 3 miiH out Bulavlllt Ad
F,.. Delivery
PlCKENS FUANfTURE
New/Uttd

Houaehold tumlahing 112 ml
Jorricho Rd. PI PINNnt, WV,
call ~75-1450
Rttrlgtralorw, S125; automatic

wllllolra, SN, oltc1rlc dryaro,

S75, gu dryano1 $50, gu rongn, $75i wnlll Kenmore
olodrlc ranga, llko now, $150,
•ctr&amp;c range, $75, a· cheat type
- p frMZor, NO, portable
compact WIIMI', 1125, 2 gu
doublo ovon rongaa, SN aach,
gao build In oven wHh drop In
&amp;umer, $75, 2 electric drop In
bumerw SSO NCh, 5 hood lana
whh Ught1, $2:0 ueh, 1 Speed
Ouaon wringer waohor, S7S. All
kinde
or
mlacellanaoua,
houaallold
homo
O.lbl~
Swl•h•r'a UHd Appliancea,
Comer R1nd and Ptrch StrMt,
Kanauga, lt4-446-7413
RENT20WN
114-441-3158
Vl'nt Furniture
Sofa &amp; Chair, 11110 WHk,
Recliner, h 47 WMk. Swivel
Rocloo1, S3 63 WMILBunk Bod
Com~HJt S6 41 WHit, 4 Drawt11
Choat, S3 28 Woalc; Poltor Bodroom SuHa, 7 pc , 111 B7 WMk,
lnclu- Bidding Counlry Plna
Dlnalla With Banch &amp; 4 Chillre,
$10 118 WIIIILOPEN lloncloy
Thru Saluldoy, Ia m to lp m.,
Sunday 12 Noon Till 5p m •
llllaa Ott Routt 7 On Route 141,
In Clnllnory
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 82
Olivo St , Galllpollo Now &amp; Uood
fumhure, hnltl'l, WHttm &amp;
Work boots 514-446-3150
VI'~A FURNITURE
614-446-3151
LIVING ROOM Sola &amp; Chair,
$199 oo,
Recliner,
$149 oo
Swivel Rocker, $19 oo, Coff" I
End Tabloo, Sll DO Sot OINING
ROOM Toblo With 4 Podded
Ch1lr1, $149 00, Count'I Pine
Dlnouo Wllh Bonch
nd 3
Cholroo. S29V 00, llolchlng 2
Doo• Hitch $341, Or ssag 00
Sat, Oak Table, 42xl2 WHh 1
Bow
Back
Cl!alra,
$629 DO BEDROOM Poatar Bodroom Sulta (5 pe ), $341 011, 4
Drawor Chill, S44 N; Bunk
Bod, S229, Complete Full Man
Sal, $105 011 Stl, 7 po Cedar
Bodroom Suha, $1911 00 OPEN
Monday Thru Saturday, 11 m to
6p m , Sunday 12 Noon Till
Sp m , 4 Milot Off Roula 7 On
Aoule 141 In Centenary
Whirl~ w1eMr and dr~er,
30C.. 82-336l

53

Antiques

5 Pelc. Antique Ttble Stl, M1ke

54

~~~":leo~..,..~,
250-CC•.

t65 IIF lrsctor With Loador,

1986tl2 Nlsun 4dr hard bod~

Ford $2,195, WD 45 AC Now
Rubber $915, 1991 Horae &amp;
Stock Tr~ l ler, 14ft $1,995, Owner
WUI Fln~nca 614 286-6522

13200 00 304-882 3425

Blade • chllns tor rtdlng
grovely, 114-118$.4339
U.hogany bMiroom tumllure,
LM'1 blue carpet, 2 heritage
whhe chalrt trimmed In blu•,
Studio pl•no, drapes, pleturel,
w.a75-4t55

Folcllng Blcvclt For Clmplna
!Folda Up FOr Trontport) S10G:
814-441-3934
Lllllt..,..d lift chair, like now,
prlcad lor quick 1111, 13DO blue
cloth, !104475-1111

,.

t!t:~~~3~'Mf$.~s5~,·~~ ~~ft~~t~'. ro::;:ar :~~::~~ gu~~~
1D88 GMC 1uto, PSJPB AC
crulst, tilt Lots ol e~etraa nn1ed
windows diesel 614-446-8044

1985 Chevy 3/4 Ton , S14 000
lllloa, S8 000, 1990 Small lrac- 1989 Oodgo 0-50 21,000 Mllos, 5•
tor With Mower S4 BOO 614-446- Spood, Bod Llnor Super Shi'J)"
Odd alzaa ol windows, doort 4286
Truck' S135tmo 6t4-446-875\
and matsl lromae. R a l n l o r e l n g &amp;:.':_4-"-4-':46:_·760=4.::,-.-..,---,--,-ltMI tor concret1 f0011trl, 19f1 Lonn 4 Wh dr tractor =patio., aldew1lka and floorl
$8995, ~le model 454 ln1
For Salt Ford Truck, Wit.,
Priced to Mil 1nd cha 1 p, con· dl...l tr.clor with buah hog, Covered
Bed
Good FGr
llct Elden Walburn, ~~4-992· $3995, 4000 Ford, $2195, 3010 O.hvery Can Be Seen 44)
2805 aHtr 5 00 pm
JO dl ... l, ahlrp, $4850, 7030 Jackson Pika
AC $6195 Ownor wlll llnanco _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,;;.
OoMn az walorbad, bookcaoa, 614.28$.1522
~
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD 's
hoocboanl, liner, now haalor, 1111 of lllMII, $!DO, ltt-1112-3703 Evano llolotl, 1530 Exotam
or7'42-214l
Avanuo, GalllfiOIIa, Ohio, Jull 1188 CheYrolll: hllf to11._ truck. Traded Uoad 20ft Gooalnoctc 4x4, 35!500 original mil••. 301:
Aecondhloned w.. hera, Dryera
Flat Trailer 11,800, New Tralllre Y-4 ong no auto, $7,0110 30~ -882&gt;• Guarontood prompl ..,leo for In Slock By Pondorota, 10 2 2012
all mall..., modale The Washer Horse ll'lllltr, Bum~r Hitch
For Salt tl86 Ford Rangar, 4x~
Doyor Shoppo 814-446~144
Livestock Trail.,. 10 Thru 11'
Y-4, Auto, Air, loppor, Maw
Also l'x1S GooMneck, New Whoola E•catltnl Condlllon.
Boall Hog Ftall mow•!z 50" pull- Hluoboro Trallooo In Stock (2)
bahlnd, S1400 now, Now $550, 6JC16 Bumper Httch, Gooteneck $4,1100 614-441.()419, aHor 5p m
S14-t85-4388
Moct••• In ax16, 7x1&amp;, 7x18, -.A
Motorcycles
Alto 24' Gootentek Fl1t r ..
Roral O.k Raaort Property, 'h20,
Tr~ller , 8 112 SIMI Flatbada For
____
,:_;__;.:._;__;_::___.
Muat atll, t1ke over payments,
Pickups &amp; lon Trucka, S7l15 111711 Honda-Goldwlng Full-•
callll0&amp;-139-41180 after 5 p m
WIUghl Kit Good SoliiCIIon ol' Drou, tOOOml on anglno, S18Q9:
Scanner, kllclotn cablnat, oak Trailer Pa~a &amp; lruck ~- BO or lrodo, 8 oam-12 oQ".
'd,...., oak hutch, metal cnooorloa Bod llolo, Bod 110orl, 814-192-3078
cloeet, microwave w/ltand, 304· llnara, Bug Shialdl, Running 1082 Honda Goldwlng, 1100 c 01 . .
1111-1488
Boalda, Etc Phono, 814-446- 114-1112-7794
'
6592 Opon 11-F 8-S Saturday, 5-3
Sooro Frot Standing Flroploco
1983 Honda 750 Shoolow, Uka '
Wllh Piping, I AccONorlu 1981 Ford 800 Power M..ter Now, Only 5,800 Mlloa, 114-3711-.
$150 114-446-1160 (Ooyl, 814- Tractor, Elctlltnt Condillon, m7oftar7pm
448-t807 (Evo)
$3,600 6t4-388-9724
19B7 Ha~l ~~•loon Tour GlldO:
Surplua 1 _army orkllnll la•ue•. G111valy trector, runs aood. Clue~ . I
oo2111 after lp m \.
collaclaiiiH, (nonlol aurptua S3 nHd• mufller 304-675-45~8 or
11!10 Hondo XA 200 Now S11li10
rmood)
Sam SomaNillt 1, 8'15-5441
lt4-245-1860
aaldo Sandyvlllt Pool oHict
Jim
s
Farm
Equipment,
SA
35,
Fd, Sal, Sun, Noon4 011 Pll
Wts1
GaUipoUa,
614-446-9777,
Othar days. loouno call 304-273Wide IIIKtlon new I used farm 75 Boats &amp; Motors
5!155 bllono It :DO All
trlctora 6 lmplemenle Buy,
for Sale
Tobacco Sllckt, 814-:179-2272
Hll , lrade, 8 1)()..5 00 WHkdays,
Sol 1111 Noon
1987 14H, B1yllne~ 50 HP Fore ...
S5
Engine, AMIFM t.;lasena Life .."
Building
MatHY Fergueon Tractor T 0
JacK.. I, Ski Boat, Excallafll ,::
35
With
Bruolo
Hog,
Blodo,
Dlak,
Supplies
Condition, 614-256-t058
"
Cull
P1ckll'll,
CultiVItorl,
...
Block, brick, -or plpoo, wln - Plow&amp;, Wagon, $4,000 Firm 614- Mull Sail akl bool, 16ft, now ._
motor, cover, aahey ace••·"
dowo, llnlalt, etc Clauda Wln - 256-1357
aorin, rudy lo go, 304-675-'
laro, Rio Grandt, OH can 6142864 anytim1
245..512t
63
Livestock
Pontoon
Boat,
Sltel
50
Horae
Pool docka, In-ground &amp; aboYo
Now Polled Horotord bull, 8
Country porchn, open &amp; months old, breeding ltock, Johnaon New Deck, Carpet
Siding, $2,000 Flrm 814-446:
tcrMnad In Original dlalgna Gllsplt Howard, 014-992"·7458
4043
FI"H Htlmatu
References
avtllabla Contact Odie, 614-446- Used goo11neck C horse trailer,
$2395, 3 year old AOHA Wostom 76
1756
Auto Parts &amp;
Pleasure galdlng brolher lo
Accessories
World Pleasure Champion 614·
56 Pets for Sale
-:---...,.-,--,---::,.--::- 286-6522
Jl..up Chavro111 truck hood
Groom and Supply Shop-Pot
$50 00, N~p Chlvroltt bed
Gooomlng. All bloocto, llylta 64
Hay &amp; Grain
aide, paaHnger side, $50 00
lama Pal Food Ooala• Julio :---.,.;.-.,.,,---- 814-11124t25
aftar 5 00
Wollb. COli 114-448.()231, 1-aoo- For your hay, sllollo, or grass
352.0231
nooda, callllorgon Farmt on Rt
Budpt Tranemlseiona, Used &amp;..,
35 304-937-2018.
NbuTH, st1rtlng 11 $6, Auto
I Woalc old Btaglo pupa $25
Po~a
114-245-5677, 614-!79Transportation
ltt-446-11121
2261
AKC roglotored Cockor Spaniol
Whlta llblrglau topper, 1111 lu)l
pupol 2lem•lea, 3 male1 •nd 1 71 Autos for Sale
olzo pickup truck 1400 Phc.,
tema e, Buff a l~ Whitt and
30C47H033
Buff, $75 ueh, 7 wke old, 11t
Hl47 Plymouth Coupe, 111M Fal
1hot1 and wormed, 304-875· con, Both S3,2DO 814-446-:lm 79
Campers&amp;
1021
alter 7p m
Motor
Homes
AKC Boxer pupploa, 4 Wltkl 19n Ford LTD, 4 door, air,
old, can 1v1nrnge, 304-675-1556
crui11 control, $450 ot betl or- 1171 Bonann Trtvel Trtller
:,:lo::.!r,_:_186::_:N::..;_P::•r.:k.:D.::r- - - - -121ft., 2 AxiH, Fully Soli con:
1977 ~incoln M•rk V, new telned, Ercellenl Condition 614
MlcMIIn tlrea and brake Job, 258·1058
$1,200 11J79 Pontiac Bonnev1Ue, 1171 GMC Motor Home, Excel
llnl Condhlon, Stored In Wlntar
AKC flmala Colllo Pup, 3 A-1 cond, $1,200 304-773-!11!9
'
lloolha Otd, $150 eg Bladon
1979 Camaro Z-28, robulft 114 44&amp; 0038.
Road, Socond Houoo Right Oft lrantmlnlon, new exhaust, new
llrtt, rune great, 304-895-3081
Rt1

r.

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

Blackblnloo lor oolo, plckod,

r,..o:et~ ewMt, local grown,

388-83511.

Eleclrlc Slovo With Double

$5,500 new
614-446
2957low mlleag4
auto,
p.alnt,
1986 Toyota 4 wh dr 60,000
ml PSIPB, stereo Good cond
5 spd , 614-388-8934

'Merchandise

G
........,Jon; 1tfl0 Su1uk
Rll,
Excolltnl Cond~
lion, 0uotn oozo Wlltrbad, 114-

ov- $125. 114 448 eol3.

1

1974 Kenworth K100 Semi 336
Cumm1n1 motor, 13 speed
Fuller transmission 304·67.52
_
96
= 8-=----,--::--c-:---o----,---o-- ·
t978 Ford F-150, Good Condltlon, $1,500 6t4-445-7638
1984 OIIHI Ford l/4 ton air

61 Fann EQU Ipment

oa:r,

lllolaa Motor Homo, Air

Trucks for Sale

Miscellaneous

Offer 814-441-1014
Buy or alii Rlvarlno Anllquoa,
t124 E Main 51-, Po. .roy
Houro MlW 10011am lo800
pm, Sunctoy 100to8011pm
614-992-2526
Oak Bullll, Low Back With Mlr- AKC
Reglatertd
Garman
pupplu
S~ota,
ro•, Rollnlohod, $225 114-445- Shepherd
Wonnod, Hodhy :!OC-875-2193
3664 Evonlngto
Bolton Tlniar Puppies 1 Mile
54 Miscellaneous
Below Swan Creek Bridge on 7.
$75 Each
Merchandise
~ and Cat grooming all
Fuel 011 Furnacai' Horizontal bJHdl, 1paclallzed In Poodle
Typo, 100,000 8 U, Uud 5 grooming,
Yeara, Good Shlpt, (Soma :!OC-475-1133212 yrs experience,
Plpo) $125 114-367-?e70
Dog Obadlonco Clanoa, Start11!1 John Deere Model B, Ing
7120191 For lnlormatlon Call
Rebuilt, Excellent Condition! IM-441-1864,
Hyator 4 Stage Fork Lift, Dock canlllod TrainorShony Robarts,
Plaia, 3 Trall1r Axltl, &amp; Trailer
Bad 614-446-2351
Doa Obedience Classes, basic
tncf 1dv1nctd, t larting July 20
1980 VW Ouher ·Ditsal, 1979 For
lnforma11on ea R Sherry
Chavy Wagon, tm Kawaskl Robert•
KX-t25 Dl~ Blko, Ovor the COb 446-111114 Certified Trainer, 614·
Truck Camper, 2..C1mper Sill
Rafrtg~~rltOf'l, &amp;14·9924090
Orlgonwynd Clnery Persian,
SiamaN and Himalayan kittens
2 Plltola:, 44 M1ngum, 0 UM, 8t4-445-3644 sHor 7 p m
both eao eoncl, 304-182-20'10
Famola Pomarsnlan puppy, 30421" S.lf.Propallad Llwn Boy BQS-3g21
wlblgg~r, l'tiW cond, bat oHer,
814-012·2331
Fish T1nk, 2413 Jackson Ava
Polnl Plaaunt, 304475-20113,
310 Pounds Wolghl' With tun line Tropical fish, birds,
Bench, 1 Month Old; SUO lt4- email anlm111 1nd auppllta
4411.-m
Full
.,oodtd
Norwegian
ACARIBBEAN BLOWOUT I
Elkhound puppies, 1 male, 1
Wt OVtr Boullltl Crulaaa, female 304-895-3019
Florlcta to Till Bihamu on 1
Luxury Unor, 5
4 Nlgltlt, Pomeranian Ooa For Sale, Call
Ptld, No' Aftar 5p m 614-{4&amp;-3243
S22Wcouplt. Hot
Glmmlcke Tlclooto Oood 1 Yur
Poodle puppl•a, loyl and tel
404-4111 -11860
cupo, AKC Champion Bloodllno,
Adull Trillo, Miami Sun, All now COOlvllo 5t~467-:1~04
pa~a. $125, 114-1112-5152 No
Poodle .~uppltt, loya and 111
lator lhan I :OOpon.
cupo, AltC Champion Bloodllno,
Com~HJo Sat 01 Encyclopodlo CooiVINt 614467-3404
Britonlca, LUtt How, SZOII 114Roglatorod Chow-chow puppies
4411-75113 tftar lp m.
lor Mia 3 cream, 1 brown, 1
Concrolo I plaallo aopllc tanka, blue, 1 black 814-4411 ..323
Ron £v1n1 Enttrvrlllt, Jack·
oon, OH 1-1011-337-0528
Roglolorod Lhooo-Apao pupa
ond Bltgla pupa, lt4-7'42-1103
Coppar1ono nofrfgoralor. I"
table MW. BID groM lrlmmor, 58
Fruits &amp;
B&amp;D ldgar ond lrimmar 3048"15-1090
Vegetables

=

Autos for Sale

- - --

8000

8uMCI
amlppllances,
to 6 p m TV
Mon .Sat Open
614446 1699,
627 3rd 11t1
Ave Gal

9

1970 Dodge 1 ton ll at bed 318
engln1, 37000 actual milts,
$16"00 call aner 4 00 614·742
254t
1D7l Toyola land Cru1 ser, Exctl
lent 4x4 ca pability $750 00, \.
614 985-4369

Goods

$3 911 &amp; $5 99 Yard Mollohan
Clrpolo, Upper River ~oad, 6t4446-7444
County Appliance, Inc Good

Page

For $111 1978 D111un, Eictllent
COndition, 197i Oldl CUUISI, l ·
Tope, 350 Automatic, New Tlr..,
New 81Hery 1m Chevy
.-aubu, 6 Cyl{nder, Autom11lc,
New Tirea, Runa Good 614-256
1058
Wrecked t983 Dodgs 318, Royal
SE Pickage, Till Cruise Fanoy
Whao\1, Firm, $1800 6t4-4461637, 614-445-3431

Space for Rent

0hlo Rlvor lot 205' lrontago,
comer 1011 wlold tl'llller bearfng
truh trooa, gallion, 117,000 :IM112-3425

Rentals

Anr.lma
Rod,.y
Aroa
Ro aroncao Avollablo All ShiHo
AVON t All Araas I Shl~ay Coil 614-245-5786
Spoaro, 304475-1429
Bush Hog SeJYice Re11ontble
c..e M1nager, Full-Time, Aa1es No Job To Sm111• 614·
aalarlocl poolllon, Mon-Fri High 379-2942
School Educ11lon required wfth
addillon1l lr1lning recommen· Chrlsll•n UoiMr will blby In
dod Exporionco working wllh her home, F11trock area, 304pubtlc 1 plua This positron ,.. 895-3801 or 304-&amp;75-3111 before
qulrn an •nthuutic person DOOPM
with 1 caring ltthude, someone
who 11 Interested In people and Gaorgn Po~ablt Sawmill, don'l
haa 1 commitment to helping haul your loge to the mill Just
people mak1 poeltlv• changes call30C-875-1i51
In lholr llvH Appl\conl muol H1ve room for elderly parson In
have rallablt tr~naportatlon
Send rHuml to PO Box 454 naad of good home, 814-667Gallipolis, OH 45631, Ann Por- 3778
sonntl Director
Honoot, oxporloncod hou ...
palnlor, would llka lo polnl InCa11 M1nager Full-time, Salary aide
and out, 30C475-7ti01l
Poeltlon, Monday Thru Friday
High School Educollon Ro- lnlari01 end aXIarlor pointing, tO
qulred, With Addlllonal Toolnlng yra experience Roof painting
Recommended
ErperltnCI Hand wa1hlng houMI, trlllers,
Working With Tho Public A PIUI wlndowa Odd Jobl Reference•
Thla Poolllon RoqulrH An En- FrH ntlmatH 304-175-2708
lhualalllc PtroCMI Wllh A Caring
Alllludt, Somaono Who Ia lnlar- IIIII Paula'• Day Cart cantor
ollad In PtoPit And Hal A Salo, aHordablt, chlldcara 11-F
Conlmhmanl To Holplng People I a m - 5 30 p m Agta 2~10
Mlkl POIItiVI ChlngHln There Before, 1fter echoot Drop-Ina
Llv• Applicant Must Have walcoma 6t4-44H224 Now InReliable Tranaportatlon Send fant Toddler Ctre, 014-44MZ2l
Rn~o~me To PO. Bot 454, Gal·
llfiOilo, Ott 4!1031, AUonllon Will build patio covera, decks,
aerMnad rooms, put up vinyl
Personnel 01rector
1idlng 01 trailer skirting 614·
Domino's Plz11 of Pomeroy now 245-565l
laking oppllesllons
WDI•do yard work, call :!OC-6'15Fleet• Hair Salons, lnc, NMda 211110
Ttltnlad Stylllla &amp; llonogara
lmmadlaloly Top Hou~y Poy
Financial
Plua
Commlalion,
Paid
Y1catlon1 Hunh lnaur~nce,
Cnodll Union. Fr1t Educal\ont I
Incentive Progr1me Av1Uabl1
Business
21
Join Tho F011111 Growing
Opportunity
Family of Hllr Salorll In Tho
Mldwlll 1 Share Thalr Succo11
\NOTICE I
For A Fantoatlc Clroar Futwa
With No Llmho, can 140G-825- OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommend• thai you do bu.,_.
13113 Alii For Myrna
nou with-" you know and
FT Rocapllonltt Rocordo Cltrk NOT lo osnd monoy llvollgh tho
To Pr..lclt Cllrlcli moll uniU you l!ava lnvlll[galad
In llaiOt County OU1- Ihe oHarlng.
Itnl Clinic In p.._ And
ntCMI Countt Clutpotltnl Clinic A~hur'a Cltaln Unk flnco
RISI.nllll, Commercii!, In·
In lllcAo1hur. A101Uir8t A HighlY dullrlal,
Froo EltlmolNI ComOtatnlzad And RaaPDNI~ ln- plolo lnolallallon
Phone 114dlvldual W1to II Familiar With
Clinical And Fltcal Roconl 3844277.
K":t,~~£"' HMfttocano Sanlroga.
Local Yarodlna ~outo For Sale,
PI
And lltlplul Por- Cltlap 1-8011-115-1111.
IOIIIIIIy. Rllltlllt Tnntportollon. 11-1' 1.30 a.m. -4 30 p.m. VENDING IIOUTE. Gal Rich
P I - Rtopond With R - O.lck? No Woyl But Wt Hov. A
And 3 Rt-...a To Boronlt Good, StNdv, AHOI!Ia~,_Buol•
sw.a..~.4GI Rlchllnd Avarouo, naao Won'f Loot. 1-2114Alhtno, un 48701. E Q.E
VEND

=

71

Carpet S4 oo Yard &amp; Up Vinyl

Wanltd

Help Wanted

Wright

7844.

51

ALL Yard Saito llu11 Bt Plld In
Advtl1C41. DEADLINE· 2 DO P m
'Go question thai guy who just parked for
1111 day bl~ lht ad It to run
31 m 1nutes so we can give him a ticket "
sonclay adi1ICMI _ 2 00 p.m
41 Houses for Rent
Friday.
Monday
od•lon
2
0
1
1
'
.
.
.
1
p m. Salorolay
r
2br Houao, 58 Mlll Coook. With
StoveJ. &amp; Hetrlgerator $1651mo,
Bla Salol July 12th - 20th 3
11011 uopooh rt4-446-3870, 114IIITN Bilow Rio Grondo,
448 1340.
Toward Soulhwootorn Schools
::--=,.-:.,.:;..--.,..,----,---c:-3 bodroom, GalllfiOIIa Fony,
Big Yord Salt: lodoy thru July EARN MONEY Raodlng booktt
304475-3150, 7 30 tlll 4 00 wook
13. 1 1o s. 424 Rond Avo , $30,0011/y• lnccma potonuao
31 Homes for sate
doya ..,,,
Kanaoga, OH
O.lollo (1) 805-9112-8000 Ext Y~c.:,.:=-----::---.,.--,-10189
1 mila lrom clly llmlta 25 ocros, Small 2 BAit B homo In
Garage S.te. July 12th, &amp; 13th, G
So
1 room houM, much, much SyracuH,
refrlncH
tnd
W. ~ LIGrando Blvd Nlco
- 1ng
uthaaltom Ohio moro 114-445-t340
HCurily dopoolt required, call
Adult 1 Chlldrona Clothing, HVAC Conlrodor In NMd 01 An
collocl, t-408 723-4702 aHar
Toya &amp; Olhor Houaohold ltomsf
Experiooneod SaNica Tech- 3br 2 Full Bstho, Groat Room, 2 3pm
nlcltn Good Poy, Excollonl Car Garaga, $57,500 814-445- - ' - - · - - - - - - - July n, t2, 13 1154 Sacood Bonofho Sond Reaume To 0706
42 Mobil H
Avonuo. Elltta Salol Contanla 'Tochnlclan" PO Box 806,
e omes
01 Six Room Houoo, Fumltura, Jackson, Ohio 45640
5 bodroom, 2 t/2 bolh, lg
for Rent
Appllancao, Tools, And llloc, 9.S Growing Southoaotom Ohio kllchtn,
lamlly
room,
Yard Sale Firat One Thla Y-1 HVAC Contractor In nMd of an wltlreplact, living rm, dining rm, 12X60 mobile home tor rent Par·
doubla gorlflt onachad, 4 113 llally lllmlahod 814-367.0586
July 11th, 12th, 13th 3 Famlllnl experlenc.d Hrvlce technician
acrea, $85,000 Firm, call 814CiothML. Gluaware, Furniture, Good pay, excellant benellta
985·3574
2·BR mobile home, centl'lll tlr,
Many More hemal Balnette Send Resume to "Teehnlcl1n"
large lol In country, very nice,
Road At Plckano Fumlluro WV
PO Box 806, Jockoon, Ohto Allducod To Sotl 2 Story 3br $250 month, S200 oocurlty, 6t445640
Como• Lot In ChHhlro Ohio IM3-621111
4 Family Garage Solo· Ccrnor
Excotlonl Condhlon For FlnoncDan ...,_ Road, 2 lltlto Out HtV Program COOrdinator, Full- lng, Flvo Stu llo~googo, Vlcklt 2-BA moblla homo, prlvala
nice uttlng. molt
775 From 14t Salurday, fl-5
~m:,,h:~~'1:':&amp;!~1 ~~:e Hauldnon 814 446 4042, Sallor drive
2-odultt, no poll, 5
Fundod Prolact Which Raqu\raa Wll Pay Polnlt g04-932-6951, IUHablt
Polnta oru, 114-lt2-2114D
Ouol Sklllo 01 Community V04-0:J2-7670
Pomeroy,
O.velopmentiEducatlonal Out· FIIIWoodl Arn, Pomeroy 2 2·BR, k&gt;te of yard 1nd tlowera,
reach, And Individual Tnt· Story Home New Kitchen, no pete, above New Hav1n, 1200
Middleport
lng/Counsetlng. Bachllor a 0.. 81throom • Carpeting 17 mo, 1-304-812-2465
&amp; VIcinity
grM In Health, Social Service Acrn 614-446-2351
2br mobllo homo In vlllaga ol
Mongomont 00' In Aolttod Field
Garage Sale, Fri.S•t. Dick War. Salary $20,000 To 122,000 Sond For ule by owner, I~ home In Vlnton, clo11 to etort &amp; poet
ner residence, S.ntcl Dr hll- Letter And Rnume Naming counlry, 15 ac,.s, 3 b.ctroom, oHict, will ICCOpl H U 0 114wHn S•llsbury Elementary •nd ThrH Emplo~mtnt Ret.rencn llvlngroom, family room, 2 112 388-11771i
Meigs High School
To Planned P•renthood Of balhl, In ground pool, heal Syracun , 2 BR $150 plus
Southeast Ohio, 396 Richland pump, all el1c, extra• Owner
Inside Rummlge Sail, Fri·Sat· Avenua, Athena, Ohio, 45701 wltl 1\nanca down payment lo utllltlOI, doposll 614-llil2 5132
•her 8 00 pm
Sun, Jul~ 12·13-14, 48644 Horse ATTN Zudak E 0 EJE S ~
quallllad bu:l':66 appolntmonl
Cant Ad, Raclna, 314 ml off
only 304-89544
Apartment
Bashan Rd Lola of Items very HIV Program Coordinator, !utilow prices Rain or Shine!
time, five courdy 1rw1 baMd In GOVERNMENT HOMES lorm S1
lor Rent
Athena Take owr 1 grant·fun· (U repair) Delinquent tu
July 11·12-13, David Brew•r'a, dod pro(oct which roqulrH dual property Repoasuelona Your
Brewer Ad off Co Ad 21, akllla of community develop- erN (1) 805-962-8000 Ext GH- t BR apartmont living room,
lum'od kltchan, alovo, rtlrig ,
Po~land, Bald Knob Rd.
mentltducatlonal outreach, 1nd 10189 tor current repo list
dlehwaaher, garbage disposal,
ln.iivldual
ttttlng/counsellng
July-13, tum llr11 road leh past
Hou11 for frHII Must move oft ehowtr In bath, gn heat, 1lr
WMPO lrom Middleport H111, 5th Bachelor's degrH rn heatth, ID- Jol In lllddlapor1 Fltl In bail- cond
Qulol nalghborhood
clal
service
management,
or
In
house, rain or ehlnt!
RalartncH and dopoalt 8t4rolatlld llold Solary $20,000 to ment, eaed 1nd 1tr1w Must sign -1370
aftar 5 p.m
Yt rd Sale, chlldrana toys, $22,000 Send lettar and rHume conlractl 2-BR, Lorge LR, OR,
Bath,
haa
new
roof
1nd
guttar;
naming
thr•
employment
Saturdly July-13, 9 00-4 00, 102
1br Apartment, Appliances Fur·
relarences to Planned Par•n· new copper and PVC plumbing, nlahtd,
Pork SO, Mlddloport OH
1
Block
From
nHd
eome
won
You
pay
for
thood of Southaaat Ohio, 3911
o.w..own. Cl118t4-446-4830
the
moving!
Only
aertout
Richland Avonuo, Alhono, Ohio,
Public Sale
8
45701
ATTN
Zuolak callorol can 614-192-2071 alter 2br Apartm1nl Waler, Trllh,
700pm
Stolfi, I Rttrlglfltor Furnished
EOE.IESI'
&amp;Auction
614-446-31140
lnler11ted In Hlling or w1nt to Lyona Addhlon In M1son,
Rick Pearson Auction Company, buy
Avon, frn gift, call Key 614· quanly bulh, 4 btdroome, 3 681 Third Avenue, GalllpoU1,
full time auctlonHr, complete 992-7180
bllha, cuetom Ml In kHchen, 2br, Retrlgentor, Stove, Month1
auction Mrvk:l Llcen.ad Ohio,
DR, FA, 2 llropla-, CA, 1 aero O.poolt
O~oldo
Slorago
Wtlf Ylrglnlt, :!OC-773-5785
JOBS IN ALASKA-Hiring Entry ~ IIONIII $117,500 :!OC-713- $250/mo 614-245-0595
Llvel $6011110 + -kry CooApa~mant For Rtnt, Gallipolis
strucllon, CanneriM, Oil Fl1ida
9 Wanted to Buy
IIayo Drlvo, Now Hovan, 11011125' &amp; Polnl Plaaunt 614-448-8221
CALL NOW 1-206-73e-7000 Ext
Ulod lloblla Homaa, Coli 814- t617BB
101,
· ·bock
1 112
balha,
2 Apl lor rent Booch Slroat Mid
story,4 all brick,
dock
corn446.0t75
dlepor1, Ohio, 2 bedroom fur
Service ReprtHnt•tfn Per· pltloly carpotail, 304-882-2362
nlehtd, depoalt and rel•rtnct
Wanted to buy, Standing limber, menent pal1-tlma , whol...le
Bob Williams &amp; Sona 614-992· distributor uaks mature, reli- llocfom HouM· 3br, 1 112 Balho, 30C-482-25tl5.
able indivldu11 to service chain CA, llool Pump. Bam, 20 ~raa
5449
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS Al
account• &amp; ~ace re~rdere In 11/L 114-24H8fl1
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
Top PrlcH For All Old US your local area One day par
ESlAlE!I... 531 JICkOCMI Pika
Colna, Gold Rlnga, Dlamondo1 week Good wage &amp; paid 32 Mobile Homes
lrom 11.-.t~mo Walk 10 ahop &amp;
SUvar Coln1, Slerllng, Gola mileage Interviews will be held
moviH Cllll14-441-251111 EOH
Coin a IllS Coin Sl\op, 151 In your aru~, Sand wrinon
for Sale
Socond Avanuo, Gslllpolla
responoo lo H Gnpor, P 0
Booch Slroot, lllddltpo~. Ohio
S500 Down On Soloct RIP&lt;* One
Box 1813, Konl, OH 44240
room efllcltnc~ apt
ooaood -~~ H -- Frot Sol
lnd dtpoall, 304·
Up And Dollvary. Flnanclna
Employment Services Someone To Haul Sc:r1p Build· Avai11blt
Mld OhiO Fll"'lnce, 1· 882-2561
lng llatorltls Awoy 614-:179-:llt2

11

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry

3 or 4br 0111 of IO!IIn In
Ga1Ua COUdy ...... 1*367-

Loll I Aclrlfll For Soli Lind
Conlract. 114-'1117-3044 altar
lpm
U.I'Oer Bottom Sub-clvlslon,
OM ICN k&gt;ll, At 2 frontlgt,
~~ucad, chy water, 304-

,.,.rencea

DIYis-uv.,

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Windows
•Roofing
•lnaulation

DEXTER - Corner lot - App rox one acre laorly level
Could be a moo1le home sote Electn c avaolable
$1500

Sandy Dunn, Broker, 675-4053

- Roofing

- Interior • Exterior

(omplele Grooming

Middleport. Ohio

OWNER WANTS AN OFFER - Pomeroy - 5 lois woh a 2
story home Home has 4 bedroom s donong room and a full
basement Newer gas furnace and a bog one ca r garage
PRICE WAS $17 900
REDUCED TO $15,000

man who made their
1'- a litdl richer
Your apirit llngert in our
,.._, our heertl,
Md molt of Ill. our

- Eiectncel and Plumbing
-Concrete work

GROOM
ROOM

742-2251

FlATWOODS ROAD- Agrowong area Appro• 3 ac res woth
great layong bUildong sole or mobole home sote TPC water
avaolable Electnc hnes across the property Farmers Home
Approved Almost ready to go 1u sl needs you
$8,000

end
end
_ numerous friendt are
reminded dilly of the

- Room Add11ion•
- Gutter wort.

THE

$30

SESSIONS

NEED A SMAll BUSINESS BUILDING- To start your own
busmess on lan gsvolle' ll sa noce buo ldon g on approx I acre
lol Has water sewage and res troom Bu oll to state regula
toons
$30,0DO

Real Estate General

Allcie; your a-..r-inlew, Maria, your
brvther-•n-law, Joe;
your niecee Norma

CARPENTER SERVICE

· 1 mo

639 Bryan Piece

th-

PRICE REDUCED•
Parbat ow~r1 f1nancmhivG~e The pnce
has been roauced to
,
$77900 and
owner fll'lanctng of up to 80% of purchase
amount may be posso~e lor qualilyong pe"on
to buy v~ nu:s rar~ home on l lh acres1n.Ra
cone 4 8R 3 bath~ 2 garages, renled I GR apt
Property ~dudes 4,800 sq. fl larm bldg
Call 614-992-7104 too Appt

YOUNG'S

992-7130

KEESEE
992-2772 or

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

RT. 33 WEST OF
OHIO

•Slabs
1O"'o DISCOUNT TO
SENIOI CIJliENS
FREE ESTIMATES

992-5335 or
985-3561

FIRST!

992-5800

•Driveways

JAMES

Real Estate General

SEE US

•Patios

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

IA~INE,

Accessories ...

•Sidewalks

We

Home

Parts or

IN CONCRETE

TACICEIVIW ID.

Public Notice

Mobile

of

SPECIALIZING

All MAliS

30

If you're in need

lutland on New
lima ld.
SIOgltfn

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR

1 mo

W. H. MOBILE
HOME PARTS

742-2421
2112 MI. outside

FOREVER
BRONZE
TANNING
Sum""' Spul1l1

Home Improvements
62 - Piumbmg &amp; HeM.tng
83 -EIIc•atm;
84 - Eiectuc- &amp; Aefngerat•on
85 - General Hauling
86 - Mob•le Homa Repan
87 - Upholstery

e 14- 91

OPEN
Tuesday thru Saturday
10 00 am- 6 00 pm

6 6 '91

ESTIMATES

949-2168

•SELL •TilDE

5

81

FREE

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

POMIIOY,

41 - Houses for Rent

Painting

5-31 90 tfn

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING

Bring It In Or
Pick Up.

Gutter Cleaning

The Dally Sentinel

~ Wanted to Rent

5681

4 IIIIM ()own Rt 7, 112 IIIIH OH
Rt.7, (Orchard Hill Rood, Fool,
-Irina Rldilo Rood) Fumltuno, Ctclho•• (All Slz:b..loyo,
Mite Friday, ""'unlay,
rio

Downspouts

&amp;Acreage

21 lOlls, nnl •-'" available,
loorotad on Brood Run Road,
Now Havtn, $28,5110 !104-773-

Joly 1tlh, 12th, 13th
3 Family• CraHa, Clothaa, Ping
Pong Tobit, FumHura, Homo
Int., Roofing Shlnglaa, Blkn,
Scooltr1• camping Equlprntnl,
a-, •rlday, 12th, Salruday
131h. 4 111111 Out Bulavllta Pika.
Raln/Shlno

Gutters

985-4473
667-6179

Yard Sale

&amp; VIcinity

NEW- REPAIR

Lots

Loll • . . . . . tvallablt tor
holM conatructlon on
RaybUrn Road. Povad ooad,
~
wtt•, naon1ble
roolrlctlono. Complatt lntormalloro mallod .., noquaal. ~'1552511, John D. , Goo!ach, no
tlrtg-lclt llllllrt, piiUI.

3 FemUr: 1831 Chatham Avenue,

ROOFING

•Complete
lemodeling
Stap &amp; Campart
Frtt Estimates

35

Gallipolis

Howard l. WrltHtl

•New Homes
•Garages

949-2826
Public Notice

7

742-2451

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

.

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Lost &amp; Found

black. loll In Ohio Alvar, 81499241183

INDENNDINT •
CAIPU CLEANEIS
and TILE FLOOI CARE
•Reasonable Rates
•Quality Work
•Free Ettimates
•Carpet Haa Faat Dry
Tome
•High Gloat on Tile
Floor F1nith
MilE LEWIS. Owner
Rt. 1, Rolland, OH.

A&amp;B

217 E. s-..t St.

l;t!ljlMtt
42 - MobtleHom!! for Rent
43 - Farms lo r Rent
44 - Apartm ent tor Rent
45 - Furntshed Rooms
46 - Space for Rem
47 - Wanted to Rent
48 - Equtpment for Rent
49 - l=or l ease

BISSELL
8UILDERS

6

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Lo.t Sld·Bob, btut, yalow, 1nd

nty and stoppmg 1ts perfonnance.

992-3432 or
992-2403
8 4 91 1 mo

CALL 992-2 I S6
FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P .M .

12, 1991

12, 1991

59

For Sale
or Trade

Commodore 114 Computer, Whh
Oloc Drivo, Prinl~1 Tapo COl...... Telephone Modem, Wllh
Many G1mN &amp; Pr~ramt , Will
Trodo For Vldooo cam Corder
114-388-825!, 814-388-811!

Serv1ces

1980 AMC Spirit, at 1 pe, pb, new
point, call 114-192-3703
1980 Chavy lmpola, AC, PS, PB,
good cood, 305 angina, auto,
$t400, 814-992-5655
1980 Plymouth Horizon (New
Shocka 6 Struta, 2 New nrea}
614-446·8059 •her 5p m
1981 Csdaltlc Coupe O.VIlla,
beaulilul car, every option, new
llrH, 350, V-8, St50S, 614-llil26719
1981 Monte Carlo, 304a67S.1506
1984 Oa1sun Nlssan San1rt
Wa!JC?n, AC, exc cond Inside and
out, $1,000 304-675-7259
191M Poollac Arablrd, 4..:yl, 4spetd, AMIFM Clll, nice car,
$2350, 6t~-192-5302 or 1!12-7507

81

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WAlERPROOFING
Uncondlllo1111 lltatime guaran
tae Local r~farencu fuml1tled
FrM estimates Call collect 1
614-237.()486, day or night
Aogll"' Baumant Walerpro.&gt;
tlng
Curtll Home lmprovtment s
Yeara Experience On Older 6
Newer Homes Room Addlllone,
Foundation Work, Roollng,
Wlndowa &amp; Sldln; FrH Es
llmatnl References, No Job To
Big 00' Smallt 614-44t-Q225

JEl
t985 S-10 Blozor._V,-81,5 opd Air, Atrsllon llo4ooo, repaired Now
ro-buln
moloro
In atock, RON
1
Tilt, Cruise, AMII'M, very Cletn,
eVANS, JACKSON, OH 1-8011$5,300 6t4-367-t122 AHar 5p m
537-11128
1986 Chovy S-10, 4 cyl, 67,0011
ml, Chav~ rally whHIS, Ron'a TV Service, a~clallzln;
3100 614 In Zenith also servicing moat
• other brands House calrs also
AM IFM ICIII • 5 1 pd $
37112428
=.:..::::.:::..--,---::--..,..-:-::-::,----1 some •ppllance raptlra WV
1981 C•dalhc S.viUt, 4-DR ex. 30ot..S78·2398 Ohio 814~C6 2454
traa, very clean etr S12 000
1986 Buick, 4-0R, ntras $4200, Slpllc lank Pum~ln¥ 190, Gallls
:6t:_:4,::-TI::_&amp;.a4:_:::.:5::9- - - - - -I ~k'!.O::, ~~~.:.X,~ ~:~~SES,
15187 Plymouth Horizon, I Uio, Davis
Sew V1c
Service
PS, PB, AC, llaro low ml, 814- GoorgH Crook Ad Ports, oup'1112-3020 afttr 5 OOpm
pll, pickup, and dollvor-t 6t4'
1988 Chavy Borono,_ l.oododl 446 214
11,900 lllloo, SS,BOO Muol Soli Wlll do ramoctallng, roollng
114-251-1058
building, lroo trimming and
1988 Cullall Cll111 SL V4 3, remov11, houN painllng For
Aulmoatlc, Cruloo, iiH, Air, Ex- fret nllmalu, call George al 1
colllnl Condlllon, Auoma lt~-992-5752
Loon, 814-251-135l
Plumbing &amp;
1911 O.ylona A~o. Wlth Air, 82
$4,800 814-256-1270
Heating
11118 Lincoln Town Car, l.oodod,
Carter's Plumbing
42,000 llllaa, 1 Ownor, Excolllnl
end Htatlng
CondHion, 114-4411-1157 Aftor
Fourth 1ncl Pfna
lpm
Golltpolto Ohio
1111 Olda Cutltu S11proma 114-446-!1888
Claolic,. T-Tope, Loadod, Vary 84
Electrical &amp;
CIMn, otkon Clr 01. 114-251-1417
Refrigeration
tGSI RS Clrnoro, Black Ext
Groy lnl. All - · · ()pit. TP V- Roaidonllal or cornmoreltl
I, Auto OOt 35,000 llllaa, EC,
se,200 or roc1t 114 441 0311, wiring, new llrllct or reptlre
Malter UcenHd llectrlclan
114-446-11114
Aldono&lt;or EIIICirlcol, :!OC-875t919 Lincoln Mark VII LSC, Fully ml.
l.oodod, 44,000 11\IH, 114-36'1!1168 Afto18p m
87
Upholstery
tGN Cllala Supremo, 3.0, V4 llowroy'o Upliolllarlng torvlco
Englno, Special Orot.ar, How
Tranamloalort, And How Air lng tri county .,.. 25 Y•no. TIM'
In lllmhuno •Phol:atarlng
Condftlonor. Good Condltlonl -COil 304-675-4154
tor fiB.-11:.
$3,300 514-245-0525
UmatM

·-

3

.

- ·-

'
'
•
~

,
•

,
,
,
'
•
•
:
,
:
•
•
'

'

-- -- ---··~-----.....~ ·

�. ·~

'

Page-1 0-The Dally Sentinel

Sunday

Parents should educate kids about sex
Dear Ann landers: I watched a
TV talk show recently during
which parents, professionals and
teen - agers were discussing teen sex.
A mother who adamantly advocated
abstinence was shouted down by
mothers who testified that they
aUowed their teens to have sex in
their own homes when the parents
were present.
I thought it might have been some
kind of a sick joke, but no kidding,
Ann, those mothers were actuaUy
encouraging their teens to have sex
at home, because, as one woman pui
i~ "We would rather know where
they are and not have to pay
chiropractor bills because they had
se x in cramped cars." Another
mother said, "Home is a safe place
to have sex," as if you can't get
AIDS, venereal disease or become
pregnant if you do it at home.
My heart really ached for those
children. One girl was only 14 and
said she didn't see any reason to waiL
She had been going with a boy for
five whole months and was "ready."
Why would mothers go on TV and
proudly express such outrageous
views? Please help me understand. I
am a pacem or teen-agers and this
is totally incomprehensible. -SOUTHERN MOM
DEAR SOUTHERN: Parents who
pennit their teen-age children to
have sex at home have just plain

given up. It was easier to give in
than to force their children to
adhere to standards. In a sick SOrt of
way, they figured they couldn't beat
'em, so they might as well join 'em.
The only way these kids can be
helped is to see that they get
adequate information to protect
themselves against disease and
pregnancy. As for standards of
morality, rm sorry to say, forget it.
That train left a long time ago.
Dear Ann Landers: I've done at
least $20,000 worth of business with
a local printer. rve always paid my
bills in installments. some as large
as$ I ,000 a month.
Suddenly my prinler told me my
payments were too small and she
had to have all her money in one
lump from then on. I paid her off
and took my printing elsewhere.
I've patronized the same dry
cleaner for five years. They know
me on sight and have never asked
for identification when they cashed
my checks. Suddenly, they are
losmg and damaging my clothing
and acting as if it's not their fauiL
This morning I drove into the
service station where I've been a
customer for three years. I asked the
man to please check the pressure in
a low tire. I was told that I'd have to
buy gas · in order to get 'full
semce." When I said, "OK," the
auendant continued to
and then

Ann
Landers

75 cents

Major league baseball results- Cl

Reader's
poll

ANN LANDERS
Ittl, LH Aa1elee
11ms Syndlca&amp;e lllld
Crealan 8JIIdlcale."
u

owner got into the acL I told
them to forget it, that I'd go
somewhere else. The attendant
replied, "You want me to take the
air back out of your tire?" Needless
to say, they won't see me again.
I've even had a run-in with a
doctor I've been seeing for six years.
!'walked out or his offiCe after being
kept waiting for an hour and a half.
He's a good doctor, but rm tired of
being treated like a piece of meat
Ann, what's wrong with these
people? Why don't they value those
of us who keep them in business? In
these times of economic hardship,
you'd think they would do everything possible to please their
customers. Am I wrong to expect a
little service and courtesy in
exchange for my business? - FED
UP IN DALLAS
DEAR DALLAS: It is no secret
that the quality of service is not what
it used to be. The way to make it
better is to punish the slobs by
refusing to put up with it. But
before you leave, be sure to tell them
they lost you.

Mourning the death of a close friend
- Fred Crow- Page A-2

B-1
Youth camps taught about nature and
God- James Sands- A-4

Haggy wins

scholarship
Pamela Jean Haggy, a 1991
graduate of Meigs High School,
has been awarded the Cenual Trust
Company of Middleport Scholarship to auend the University of Rio
Grande.
Haggy, who plans to major in
elementary education, was active in
several high school organizations,
including Teenage Institute, Helpful Understanding Giving Students,
the Fellowship of Christian Students, the Business Professionals of
America and Teens in Action.
She is the
of Ernest
and Brenda

Ml

CERTIFIED NURSES ·The six OR nurses at
the Holzer Medical Center who has been award·
ed Certification Status by completing the certifying examination of the Association of Operat·

Six of the operating room nurses with the hospital began tollowing
at the Holzer Medical Center graduation. She worked as a staff
received their Certification Status nurse on 3 West for lwo years,
and have the privilege of adding becoming an Operating Room staff
the C.N .O.R. designation to their nurse in 1980, and is now in her
names, according to Nancy BrunII th year in the OR. She is a memner, M.S., M.A., R.N., Vice Presi- ber of AORN.
,
dent of Nursing at the hospital.
Ms. Midkiff graduated from the
They are Sue Jones/ Gilliam , Holzer School of Nursing in 1969.
RN., C.N.O.R., Cathy Icard, R.N.,
She immediately joined the OR
C.N.O.R., Linda S. Midkiff, R.N.,
staff following graduation in May,
C.N.O.R., Janet E. North, R.N.,
1969, where she has remained. She
C.N.O.R., Nancy K . Ohlinger, is a member of AORN, ONA, and
R.N .. C.N.O.R., and Jackie Wood- the American Nurses Association
ward, R.N., C.N.O.R.
(ANA). She serves as the Laser
These six nurses successfully Safety Officer in the Operating
completed the certifying examina- Room.
lion of the Association of OperatMs. North graduated form the
ing Room Nurses (AORN). Their Hospital's S.chool of Nursing in
certification status is not only rec- 1963. She immediately became a
ognized by the C.N.O.R. designastaff nurse on the Obstetrics Unit at
tion, but in addition, each received the Hospital, and worked there
a check from the hospital to until 1969, when she joined the
acknowledge their accomplish- nursing staff at the Gallipolis
ment.
Developmental Center. She
Ms. Gilliam graduated fonn the returned to the Holzer Medical
Holzer School of Nursing in I977. Center in January of 1971, and has
GRILL WINNER • Emmett Rawson or Middleport was the
Following
her graduation she been a staff nurse in the Operating
winner of a gas grill given away during the Fourth of July holiday
worked for two years as a staff Room of the Hospital since that
at Vaughan's Cardinal in Middleport. Pictured with Rawson, left,
nurse on the 2 West nursing unit, time. She is a member of AORN.
is Krista Sellers, an employee or Vaughan's Cardinal's video
department.
Joining the Operating Room nursMs. Ohlinger joined the staff of
mg staff in September 1979, where the Emergency Department of the
she continues to work. She is a hospital in August, 1973. Two
member of AORN and the ONA.
years later she graduated form
Ms. Icard also is a graduate of L.P.N. School at Buckeye Hills
A unique all day seminar enti- Defensive Tactics for PPCT Mantled "Non-Violent Intervention in agement System, Non-lethal Use of the hospital's School of Nursing in Career Center. and continued to
Health Care", will be presented by Force Policy, and Officer Survival. the Class of 1978. Her association
the Holzer Medical Center on Sat- His background and experience
urday, July 20, in the French 500 qualify him to instruct Defensive
Room, according to Thomas R. Tactics.
A picnic honoring Spc. Rob and Kenny King, Kay Koehler,
Childs, FACHE, Vice President for
A highlight of the program will
Professional Services at the hospi- be Faulkner's actual demonstra- Harrison and wife, Audra Middleport; Glen and Grace
tal.
tions of defense tactics for the audi- Houdashelt Harrison was held Thoma. Chester; Candy VanThe seminar opens with regis- ence to participate in as well as recently at the roadside park on Cooney, Sandy Hart, Paul and
tration and coffee at 8:30 a.m., and observe.
Route 33. Harrison is a veteran of Anita Van Cooney, Middleport;
the official program will get underIncluded on the program, in the Gulf War where he served for June and Brooks Sayre, Paula and
way at 9 a.m. Featured speaker will addition to Faulkner's presentation, seven months.
Jack Welker, Marie Houdashelt,
be Sam Faulkner, MA, Academy will be an opening session conductAttending the picnic were her Syracuse; Margie Reuter, Pomeroy;
Commander at the Ohio Peace ed by James E. Roof, Chief Securi- parents and sister, Richard and Jerry Derenberger, Pomeroy; Tom
Officer Training Academy at Lon- ty Officer at the Hospital. The all Mary L. Houdashelt and Betsy. and Mary Eua Burnside, Wilmingdon, Ohio.
day program will include luncheon Kingsbury Road, and his parents, ton, N.C., and Chuck and Frances
This seminar is designed specif- served at noon, with sessions con- Jan and Chuck VanCooney, Mid- Eskew, Pomeroy.
ically to enhance the skills of secu- cluding at 2:30 p.m.
dleport.
Spc. Rob and Audra Harrison
rity officers and emergency personOthers attending were Elizabeth left for Fort Bennington, Ga.,
Due to limited seating, registranel, as well as local law enforce- tion should be completed no later Murry, Ruby Burnside, Roland where he is stationed.
ment officers in general, when than July 15. Registration fee is Dais, Pat Thoma. Pomeroy; Marcie
dealing with a crisis siruation. Each $25, and includes lunch and
participant will have the opportuni- refreshments. It should be sent to
ty to review or learn new tech- Beverly Jackson, at the Holzer
The Faith Gospel Ladies Circle and Tommy White, Debbie, Ray
niques of self defense, including Medical Center, 385 Jackson Pike,
met recently at the church with Lynn, Mary Dailey, Sandy, Tammy
pressure point control techniques Gallipolis, 45631.
Christopher Cowdery, Kate
(PPC1).
The planning committee Tammy Cowdery and Diane White and
Evans, Mary Folmer, Kelly
Faulkner has been associated includes Dave Schoonover, Direc- as hostesses.
Devotions were given by Sandy Eichinger, Virginia Walton, Mary
with a variety of law enforcement tor of Environmental Services;
Cowdery
on the gifts of God.
Alice Bise, Dolly, Sue, An~ie
agencies, and is currently with the Mary Harrison, R.N., Nursing Staff
Door
prizes
were
won
by
Eloise
Reed,
Eloise Connolly, Viv1an
Ohio Peace Officer Training Services; Childs, Roof and Ms.
Connolly
and
Mary
Dailey.
Humphrey,
Pat Martin, Verna
Academy. He is a training officer Jackson, Coordinator of Education54
shut
in
calls
Rose,
Audra
Ruckman,
Pearl Baker
There
were
in the areas of Defense Tactics, al Resources.
reported.
and Aida VanMeter.
Attendin,~t were Dianne. Lvnn

HMC seminar slated July 20

ODS veteran is honored

·;~?'

Scholarship awarded
Suzanne -Lynette West, a 1991
graduate of Eastern High School,
has received the Racine Home
National Bank Scholarship to help
pursue her education at the University of Rio Grande.
West plans to major in
medicine.
In high school , West was a
member of the National Honor
Society, the Student Council, the
yearbook staff, choir and served as
a basketball statistician.
She is the daughter of Gerald E.
West, and Garth and Carol Sovel,
and resides in Tuppers Plains.

TOPS
meets
Calasta Searles was the best

Sixth birthday

Jon Michael Geor~e Halar
recently celebrated his s1xth birthday at the home of his parents,
Michael and Wendy Halar,
Pomeroy.
A ''Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle" theme was carried out with a
cake decorated by Charlotte HarL
Lunch was served followed by
cake and ice cream. Party favors
were given to the guests.
Attending were Peg Carper,
Nina and Robbie Welch, Myca and
Mcghan Haynes, Timmy Hubbard,
Marc Barr, Evan Eastman, Isiah
Hart, Frank and Linda Keller, Kim
Peavley, Karen and Jennifer Walker, Marge and Amy Barr, Morgan
Mathews, Barb Crow, Michael,
Wendy and Marjorie Halar, Charlotte Hart and Ellen and Bob
Campbell.
Sending gifts were Dawn Carper
and Jay Miller, Michael. Vicki and

loser at the recent meeting of TOPS
Club No. 570 held at the Carpenters Hall in Pomeroy.
Virginia Dean won the fruit basket.
A white elephant sale will be
held at Tuesday's meeting and a
friendship diet will begin.
The group meers every Tuesday
at the Carpenters Hall in Pomeroy
with weigh-in at 5 p.m. and meetng
A faniily picnic was held July 4
at 6 p.m. For further information
on the lawn of Ruby Burnside,
call992-2516or m-5638.
Kmgsbury Road. Tom and Mary
Eua Burnside, Wilmington, N.C.,
Suzan Thoma, Columbus, and
The Circle Family reunion will Mike and Debbie Grate, Columbia,
be held July 28 at the Larry Circle Tenn., were honored.
residence on Carmel Road in
Attending were Mary L. and
Racine.

Summer band practice resumes
Summer band practice for the
Meigs Band will resume Mnday
from 9 a.m. to noon. All students
are reminded that this week is a
special pre-camp practice and all
absenc.es must be excused by

MEIGS COUNTY JAYCEES
PRESENT

MAGIC SHOW
SPECTACULAR

JONHALAR
Joseph Hughes, Charles and Ida
Alice Carper, Jim, Pa~ Colin, Sean
and Roarke Boes, and Anlca Halar,
Yugoslavia.

FEATURING

The _Amszlnl
7
'''9
Millet
SUNDAY JULy 14, 2:00 p.M.

Family picnic held

Circle reunion set

Toney Dingess, director. Further
information may be obtained by
calling the band office, Monday
through Friday, at 992-7141 or
(304) 675-7770.

Richard Houdashelt and Betsey,
Ruby Burnside, Pat Thoma,
Pomeroy; Glen and Grace Thoma,
Chester; Jeff and Linda Jones and
Bradley, Middleport: and Marcie
and Kenny King, MiddleporL
Fireworks at Middlepon were
enjoyed by the group later that
evening.

I

AT

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL GYMNASIUM
l

••

work in the Hospital's Emergency
Department for 14 years. In 1985
she graduated from the Holzer College of Nursing at the University of
Rio Grande, and continued to work
in the Emergency Department as a
registered nurse until June of 1987,
when she transferred to the Operating P.oom nursing staff. She is a
member of AORN and the ONA.
Ms. Woodward graduated fonn
the Holzer School of Nursing in
1978, and immediately began her
nursing career at the Hospital. She
worked first on 2 West, and then in
October, 1978, joined the nursing
staff of the Operating Room, where
she has been for 13 years.
As Ms. Brunner points out, "To
have si'x of our operating room
nurses take the necessary time and
put forth the extra effort to study
and meet the standards set by the
AORN, then successfully pass the
stringent examination necessary to
be certified, certainly speaks well
for them, both as individuals and as
professionals. We are proud to recognize their achievement as
C.N.O.R.s and congratulate them
on their accomplishment.

New arrival
Major and Mrs. William D.
Swisher (the fonner Sandy Curtis)
are announcing the birth of a
daughter, Kimberly (Kimi)
Leighanne on June 2 at Shumpert
Hospital in Shreveport, La.
She weighed five pounds and 13
ounces and was 18 and one-half
inches long.
There is another child at home,
Robbie, age six and a half.
Maternal grandparents are Lola
and Walter Ervin, Millfield, and
the late Jack Curtis. Maternal great
grandparents are Edmond Grueser,
Athens, and Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Shone, Stanton, Calif.
Paternal grandparents are Nola
and Bill Swisher and Paternal great
grandparents are Mae and Paul
Swisher. all of Middleport.

VICTORY
BAPTIST
CHURCH
525 N. 2ND ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

"Everyone Welcome"

GOD'S SIMPLE PLAN
OF SALVATION
I. "All have sinned." Romans
3:10. "For all have einned
and come ahort of the glory
of God ... " Romans 3:23
I. "Sin must be paid for:" Roman 6:12, "for the wagaa of
sin ia death but the gift of
God ia eternal life .. " Romans 8:23
Ill. "Jesua Christ paid for our
aina:" Romans li :8, "but
God commendeth Hia love
toward us. in that while we
were yet sinners. Christ died
for us."
IV. "What we muat do." Romans 10:9-13, "For Who·
eoev., shall call upon the
name of the Lord ehall be
liVed."

V. "How we can know we are
on our way to Heaven:"
John 3:36, '"He that bellev.
eth on he Son h11 evMiaeting life ... "
VI. "ANUrance:" I John 11:14
and 15, "And thilla the confi.
dance that - hi.. In Him... "

SUNDAY SCHOOL, 10:00 A.M.
MORNING WORSHIP,
11:00 A.M.
SUN. EVENING, 7:00 P.M.
WED. BIKE STUDY, 7:00 P.M.
992-2772
FUNDAMENTAl
INDEPENDENT

..

Is-Point Pleasant, July 14,1991

• •

• •I -

,_

• •

• ~.

I

I

I I

I

I

I

I •I

Partly Cloudy
Partly cloudy. High In 80s. Hot
and hum id

12 Sections. 86 Pages
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Reclamation projects
to be finished in Meigs

ing Room Nurses (AORN), are, left to right:
Jackie Woodward, Linda S. Midkiff, Cathy
Icard, Sue Jones Gilliam, Janet E. North, and
Nancy K. Ohlinger.

Ladies circle holds meetinR

SUZANNE WEST

Along the river ..............lll -7
Business ............................. DI
Comics........................ .Insert
Classified . ......................02-7
Deaths.... ............................ A3
Editoral ......................... .... A2
Farm ............................... D 1-6
Sports ............................. C 1-8
Weather . ..........................A-3

•
nnts
Six Holzer OR nurses awarded certification

PAMELA HAGGY

Inside

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Starr

rant. When the construction is complete, there
wiU be a turn lane in the middle lor the convenience or residents and customers of mercbaniS
in that area. (Times-Sentinel photo)

POURING IT ON - Construction workers
for Cremeans Concrete of Gallipolis pour new
concrete into one of the cut-out sections or the
westbound lane of U.S. 35 between Star Bank's
Jackson Pike Branch and McClure's Restau·

Union, RAC to meet in Pittsburgh
The negotiating teams from
Ravenswood Aluminum Corporation and the United Steelworkers of
America Local 5668 will head ~ ·
to the bargaining table in Pittsburgh
on July 30 and 31, according to a
story in the Jackson Star News.
This will be the first time since
April 25 that the two sides have
met.
The st~ said USWA International representative Joe Chapman
requested the face-to-face m~ting
after returning from a umon tnp to
Europe and having studied a "mock
up" agreement provided by RAC.
Chapman said he requested the
"mock up" agreement to des1gnate

where RAC stood on several issues,
including seniority, contracting out
work and restructuring of jobs.
Company spoketman Debbie
Boger told the Star News tlie company doesn't know what the union
purpose was in requesting the get
together. She confirmed the union
had requested that RAC "mark up a
copy of the old labor contract with
new proposals being made by the
company in previous meeting."
Neither Boger nor Chapman indicated that either side had given
any on their previous positions.
Both seem to stand firmly in their
positions on the replacement
workers.

According to the Star News ,
Boger repeated the company's
commiunent to their pennanent
replacement workers.
USWA Local 5668 president,
Dan Stidham also assured the Star
News that the union had not changed its feelings on the replacement
worker issue.
Both Chapman and Stidham said
the main purpose for request for a
new meeting was to attempt what
they wanted in October... a new
labor contract for Local 5668.
Chapman_told the Star News the
union negotiating committee would
meet before July 30 to discuss "its
plan of acb'on " for the Pittsburgh
meeting.

POMEROY - Over $2 million
in reclamation projects are expected to be completed in Meigs County within the next year under the
Abandoned Mined Land program.
According to Barbara Neimczura of the Athens Office, Division of
Reclamation, Department of Natural Resources, two of the projects
are nearly completed now.
They are the 144 acres of strip
mined land on Kingsbury Creek
near Harrisonville, and the RoachThompson project, a 14 acre strip
mine area on Route 143, about
three miles off the Route 7 by-pass.
The Kingsbury project cost
approximately $1,006,000 and was
handled by D &amp; J Energy.
Southeastern Ohio Construction,
Inc. did the Roach-Thompson project work at an approximate cost of
$170,000.
Scheduled for reclamation completion before June 30, 1992 are
three other projects. They include
the 80 acres of strip mine land
located on Jessie Creek just off
Townsl\il! Road 4l, west of Rutland, 6S acres at ·Mud Fork near

Pageville, and a five acre landslide
just off Route 143 near Townshtp
Road 165, referred to as the Pickens project.
Cost of the Jessie Creek project
with the contract awarded to
Watiker and Son is approximately
$490,000. Land and Reclamation
Specialists will be handling the
strip mine reclamation work on the
Mud Fork rrOJCCt at an approxi mate cost o $499.000 while Jeffers
Trucking Excavating will do corrective work on the five acre lan.~ ­
slide on the Pickens project.
Numerous other Meigs County
projects remain in the final design
and construction phase, according
to Mitchell E. Farley. construction
project specialist, Divi sion of
Reclamation. He said, however,
that no funding is available at this
time.
Among those projects are
Wolfe-Swisher, Route 7 and West
Main. at Salt Street Thomas Fork
near State Route 124 and 143; the
Lyons project at Chest~ut Street
and Seventh Ave. m Middleport;
and the Silver Run project near the
Gallia-Meigs Line outside of
Cheshire. ,
· · Roberf Baker, manager of the
Ohio Abandoned Mined Land Pro-

s:

gram, told a group a concerned citizens at a public meeting a year ago
that while Ohio coal operators have
paid into the Federal Abandoned
Mined Lands Program a total of
$132 million, only $85 million has
come back into Ohio projects and
that the rest is being held in a
"ttu~t."

Baker also said at that time that
Ohio had gotten $15 11'\illion a year
up to 1986 but that since that time
funds have diminished. Anticipated
amounts to come back for Ohio
projects this year was estimated at
about $6 million.
Public law 95-87. passed by the
U. S. Congress Aug. 3, 1977,1cvies
a severance llU on all coal currently mined. This llU, 35 cents per ton
for strip-mined coal and 15 cents
per ton for underground coal, is
collected and distributed by the
Federal Office of Surface Mining.
The Division of Reclamation
receives Ohio·s share of the money
which can be spent only for the
correction of mining-related problems.
Projects selected for reclamation
are made on the basis of priority ,
w.i~ heall,h and safety being the
biggest1n;ority. according 10 reclamation offici&lt;Us.

$1.2 million sewer project
plans in Pomeroy progressing
By BIUAN J, REED
Times-Sentinel Starr
POMEROY - Plans are forging
ahead on the first phase of a $1.2
million dollar sewage system
expansion project within the Village of Pomeroy, with bids ex peeled to awarded in the fall .
According to Village Administrator John Anderson, soil engineering and test boring have been
conducted at the site of the existing
sewage treatment plant located
behind Bob RobertS Field. It is that
plant which is targe_ted for construction and expansiOn later th1s
year.
That testing work has been conducted by Columbus Testing Laboratory.
The award of a bid on the $1.2
million rrojcct now awaits
approval o the project's plan (pre-

piired by Burgess and Niple of
Parkersburg, W.Va.) by the Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency.
The village anticipates bids to be
awarded sometime in August, but
that award is contingent upon
E.P.A. approval.
"The E.P.A. calls the shots as to
what you can do and when you can
do it," Anderson explained on Friday afternoon.
The construction at the plant is
the ftrSt phase of the project. It is
hoped that in the next few years, as
finances allow, the system will be
expanded to such a degree as to
allow connection of households
that are not currently connected to
the plant.
At present, homes from Monkey
Run to the Middleport/Pomeroy
boundary are not connected to the
system. Instead, raw sewage from
that area is dumped directly into

the Ohio River, in violation of the
Clean Water AcL
The E.P.A., of course, is aware
of this, and it is the village's hope
that the agency will bear with
Pomeroy's plan to connect those
customers to the new system. So
far, those hopes have been realized.
It is estimated, however, that $6
million dollars will be required to
get those customers connected to
the then-expanded treaunent plant.
Where that money will come from
is not yet known.
Instead, the village is attempting
to expand the system as finances
allow. The current phase of treatment plant improvement is being
funded by Issue 2 funds with a 10
percent local match. That local
match will be made poss1ble by an
increase in sewer rates for village
residents.

Jones warns of economic·disaster
ATHENS- Meigs County Commissioner Richard Jones used
Thursday night's PUCO hearing in
Atlrens to make strong points about
Meigs County's future if the Southem Ohio Coal Company's Meigs
Mines arc closed by American
Electric Power.
Jones emphasized the importance of scrubber installation at the
General James M. Gavin Plant in
Gallia County to the future eco. nomic condition of this region.
"No area of this state has suffered more from poor ec.onomic
conditions in recent years than the
counties of Southeastern Ohio,"
Jones told the full membership of
the PUCO. "We who have needed
help the most have received the
least.•
"During the past decade," Jones
continued "our welfare rolls have
'
.
~ontinued to grow at an alarmmg

rate. Economic development is
practically non-existent in most of
our counties. New and decent paying jobs are at an all-time low. Ow
major highways rank among the
poorest in the state and our educational system continues to decline
on an annual basis."
Jones referred to an economic
study rei~ by the Ohio Public
Expenditure Council which states

that workers in the southeastern
portion of the state make nearly 15
percent less than the state average.
"Having stated (that)", Jones
told the group, "I submit to you
that it is this person's opinion that
much of Southeastern Ohio is now
in an economic crisis."
"Should A.E.P. decide not to
scrub Gavin and close the Meigs
Continued on page 3

Rape investigation underway
. POMEROY • Tbe Meigs County Sberirrs Department is
investigating the report or a rape in the Leading Creek Road
area on Friday night.
.
According to Investigator Robert Beegle,"tbe aUeged victim
was a 22•year-old female.
The search continued on Saturday lor the suspected offend·
er, a ~-year-old GaiUp County man, whose name is being withh~Id. ,

•

COMPLETED • Only a lew minor repairs
remain to be made to complete the $170,000
reclamation of 14 acres of strip mine land located just orr State Route 143. Known as the

Roach-Thompson Project, Southeastern Ohio
Construction, Inc. handled the reclamation
work. The project is one of nve scheduled for
completion within the next year.

Piketon officials, union talks fail
PIKETON, Ohio (AP)- Company and union officials at a government-owned uranium plant met
for the first time since a strike
began last month.
The meeting Friday between
Local 3-689 of the Oil, Chemical
and Atomic Workers Union and
Martin Marietta Energy Systems
was arranged by a federal mediator.
Martin Marietta manages the
Portsm·outh Gaseous Diffusion
Plant for the federal government.
"The company seemed more
open to conversation, but there was
no real progress," John Knauff,
union president, said after the
meeting in Chillicothe.

Charles McNelly. union vice
president, said the_ main unresolved
issues in negouat10ns mvolve
seniority and overtime provisions.
Tim Matchett. a spokesman for
Martin Marietui, said the company
offered modifications on two proposals, rejected an overtime proposal again and said it would consider one job realignment.
About I ,050 workers at the
Portsmouth Ga seous Diffusion
Plant went on strike June II after
failing to negotiate a new threeyear contract
The contract expired May 2, and
workers rejected the company's
proposed three-year contract May

USWA claims trade unions
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP) A United Steelworkers local official
said members of another union arc
crossing the Steelworkers' picket
line at Ravenswood Aluminum
Corp.
"It's union brothers crossing
their union brothers· picket lines."
said Dan Stidham, president of
Steelworkers Ux:a! 5668.
About I ,700 members of Local
5668 have been off the job since
last Nov. I, when their contract
with Ravenswood Aluminum ex-

pired. The union says they're
locked out; the company san
they're on strike.
Stidham said union craftsmen
belonging to the ParkersburgMarieua (Ohio) Building and
Trades Council have been crossing
the picket line since July I to do
work at Ravenswood Aluminum 's
plant.
"We met with the Building and
Trades and they said they would
not cross our picket line. I ~on 't
understand the turnaround," Slid-

I

5. Workers remained on the job
while negotiations continued.
In a related matter, the company's Environmental Advisory
Committee declared the plant safe
following a series of inspections
last week.
"The committee concluded that
the environment in the plant area is
not endangered because of the
strike mode ," said Committee
Chainnan Leo Weaver.
McNelly disagreed with the
report.
"It's an accident waiting to happen. The people in operating positions now are not adequately qualiContinued on page 3

crossing line
ham said.
John Scalier, business manager
for the trade council, said there has
been discussion about working at
the plant, but he said he's unaware
of any work having been done.
"If anything would happen I
would know, and I don 't know of
any activity going on now," Scalier
said.
Ravenswood Aluminum spokeswoman Debbie Boger said no construction is underway in the plant.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="312">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9603">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="34929">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="34928">
              <text>July 12, 1991</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1524">
      <name>gainer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1369">
      <name>ours</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2017">
      <name>pickett</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="15">
      <name>scott</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
