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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Ohio Lottery

Star Garden Club installs three
new officers at recent meeting
The Sw Garden Club· held its
regular meeting at the home of
Mrs. Orion Nelson in Dexter
recently.
Mrs. Allegra Will presided at
the meeting and led the club in
prayer, club collect and creed. Mrs.
Nelson had devotions, "Let Me
Live In th e House Beside the
Road." Roil call was answered by
the 10 members present naming a
wtld flower m bloom.
It was announced that Allegra
Will, Stella Atkins, Binda Diehl,
Neva Nicholson and Pauline Atkins
attended the open house and flo\Ver
show presented by the Rutland
Garden Club. Allegra Will, Stella
Atkins and Binda Diehl attended
the Chesler club's open house.
Mrs. Will announced that she
and Pauline Atkins laid the ribbons
ror both shows at the County Fair
Flower Show and they made
arrangements receiving a first, a
second and three third place ribbons.

They discussed the therapy program to be presented at Gallipolis
Developmental Center on OcL 24.
Mrs. Will installed the follow ing officers: Mrs. Virgil Atkins,
president; Mrs. Neal Jeffers, vice
president; Mrs. Orion Nelson, secretary-treasurer.
Mrs. Binda Diehl, Virginia Nelson and Pauline Atkins displayed
"A Mass Arrangement of Fall
Aowers."
Mrs. Neva Nicholson's topic for
the program was ''To Pot or Not to
PoL" She said that signs of plants
needing repouing was if roots grow
from the bottom of the pot, plant
wilting and looking for yellowing
and loss of lower leaves. She stated
to always choose a pot an inch or
two larger that the present one and
always use potting soil not garden
soil.
Mrs. Binda Diehl stated that this
is the time to divide iris and
peonies. Iris should have the

The Homebuilders Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ met
recently at the church for its
September meeting with Dorothy
Roach presiding.
Frank Ihle opened the meeting
with prayer and the secretary and
treasurer reports were read and
approved.
The class made plans for its
52nd annual banquet to be held in
October at tile church. Committees
were appointed with Frank and
Kathy lhle to plan the program.
Geneva Tuttle, Hazel Wilson,
Clarice Erwin and Mary Martin are
in charge of reservations. Thelma ·
and Nettie Boyer, Flo Grueser and
Roseanna Manley will do the decorations.
A goal of 52 was set for the
class attendance for Homecoming
Sunday on OcL 27.
Devotions were given by
Kathryn Evans reading "A Verse to
Jiang Onto" from Romans 8:28 and
DorothX Roach read "Grandpa's
Coffee ' relating to Revelallons
3:16.
The meeting closed with prayer
by-Joe Bishop.
. Geneva and Clay Tuttle and Flo
aitd Bill Grueser served refreshto the following members:

Bud and Hazel Wilson, Gene and
Dorothy McDaniel, Dorothy Baker,
Delcie Forthe, Elsie King, Roseanna Manley, Dorothy Roach, The!-

foliage cut back to three inches. If
division is needed, dig carefully
and wash din from the roots and
cut away any damaJed part.
Peonies need not be divided for
several years unless they become
crowded. They do best when plant·
ed in the full sun and in a neutral
soil with good drainage. Cut
foliage off after fall frost at ground
Jevel and burn the foliage.
Mrs. Stella Aikins gave the garden tip: oriental poppies can be
divided or transplanted or used to
sow new seeds. Cut flowers to be
dried by hanging with heads down.
This is the time to do lawn seedings of spots or renovation.
Other members present were
Ruby Diehl, Martha Chapman and
Wanetta Radekin.
Mrs. Harry Lewis was reported
to be in the nursing home.
Refreshments were served and
Mrs. Norman Will will receive the
hostess gift.

UCLA romps
over Aztecs

Cards: Q-H; Q-C;

9-D; J -S

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DR. SEUSS DIES,Seuss Geisel, known as Dr. Seius to
readers or classic children's books, iucllidiDg "The Cat In the Hat"
and ."How the Crlnch Stole Christmas,!i! died Tuesday night in
LaJolla, Calli., after a long Illness. He was 87.

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SHELBY POWELL

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New arrival
: Lawrence and Nannetle Powell,
Pomeroy, are announcing the birth
of a daughter, Shelby Malynn Powell on Aug. 9 at Holzer Medical
Center.
.
· The infant weighed .e1ght
pounds and nine ounces and was 21
mchesloog.
Grandparents are Delbert and
Loretta Blake, Middlepon; Hattie
and Gerald Sellers, Pomeroy; and
the late Roy Powell.
Great grandparents are Virgie
Blake and the late William Blake;
Point Pleasant, W.Va.; Sarah
Congo and the late Dud Congo,
aacine; and Ruth Powell and the
late Charlie Powell, Torch.

Gene Wilder
moves on
• STAMFORD, Conn. (AP)Actor Gene Wilder, who has spent
much cif the past two years helping
In the fight against ovarian cancer,
says it's about time he got on with
rest of his life.
· Wilder, whose wife Gilda Radner died of the disease in 1989, is
to receive an award tonight from
the Yale Cancer Center in New
Haven. He said that will probably
ponclude much of his anli-cancer
effons.
• "I'm going back to watercolor
painting and acting and d,irecting
and I'm ~oing to retire from
·medicine,' said the star of such
movies as "Stir Crazy," "The
Woman in Red" and "Young
Frankenstein.''
· It wesn 't until, after Radner ' s
W, Wilder said, that he learned
earlier detection of tbe disease
might bave saved her life.
· wilder, 56, remarried earlier
this month. His wife, Karen Webb,
. is a ~g specialist.

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Theodor Seuss Geisel,'
Dr. Seuss, dead at 87
By BRIGITIE GREENBERG
Assoelated Press Writer
LA JOLLA, Calif. (AP) Theodor Seuss Geisel, the Dr.
Seuss whose rhyming children's
classics delighted generations of
children and parents has died. He
was 87.
Geisel, author of "The Cat in
the Hat," "Green Eggs and Ham,"
"How the Grinch Stole Christmas" and dozens of other books,
died Tuesday night at his home
with his family at his bedside. He
had been ill for several months.
He wrote and illustrated 4 7
books, selling more than 100 million copies in 18 languages. He
was awarded a 1984 Pulitzc;r Prize
for his contribption to children's
literalllre.
.
Geisel's works were journeys
into nonsense, magical worlds of
truffula trees, ziffs and zuffs and
nerldes and nerds, where top-batted
cats run rampant ihrough youngsters' homes while parents are
away.
They often included subtle messages on issues imponant to him,
from internationalism to environmentalism,+
In his 1984 best seller, "The
Butter Battle Book," he offered a
parable for the atomic age.
Geisel was childleas himself after his fust wife's death in 1967,
he married Audrey Stone Dimond,
a mother of two.
Bom March 2, 1904, in Springfield, Mass., son of a brewer who
ran a zoo during Prohibition, Geisel
gnaduated in 1925 from Darunouth,
where he drew cartoons for the
humor magazine, J~-0-Lantern.
During a year studying literalllre
at Oxford University in England,
he met another American literature
student, Helen Palmer, who
encouiaged Geisel's artistic career.
Geisel drifted to Paris, where he
mingled with Lost Generation writers such as Ernest Hemingway,

C lear toni ght. Low In 40s.
Saturday, sunn y. High In mid 60s.

Page4

Vol. 42, No. 102
Copyrighted 1991

AWAITS OCCUPANTS - Biosphere ll sits
completed near Oracle, Ariz., about 40 miles
northeast or Tucson, where it will become the
home to eight people who will stay inside tor the

By ARTHUR H. ROT51'EIN
Associated Press Writer
ORACLE, Ariz. (AP) Against a backdrop of laser lights
and tribal music, four men and four
women bid goodbye to friends and
families Wednesday before being
sealed for two years in a glassenclosed, self-sustaining miniworld.
The crew of the Biosphere 11
project went through a day of interviews and celebralion in advance of
C-Day- as in Closure -set for
shortly afler sunrise Thursday.
The eight crew members will
spend 24 months sealed in the 3.15acre geodesic-framed compound,
barring serious illness or major
mishap.
Crew members range from ages
27 to 67. Two 1!fe from England,
one from ~elgiUm and the rest
fro!'_~ the, Uruted States.
We ve ~around the har·
bor, W~ ;mow II S 8!&gt;~a fl~t, we
know 11 s gonna S81l, S81d Jane
~ynter, ~9, who~ run the inten·
s1ve farmmg operauon. "Now we
bave to see, can we make it sail for
two years, an~.beyond that, for a
hundred years?.
.
The crew will try to replicate the
earth's environment to te.ot ~ace
col~nizatio~ technologies. And
they II have m-person contact only
with each otl!er.
Space B1ospheres Ventures,
developer of the private, for-profit
project financed by entrepreneur
Edward P. Bass at a cost of perhaps
$ISO million, expects to draw up to
a half-million visitors annually and
has applied for some SO design
patents.
It has incorporated several manmade climatic zones, called
biomes, under the double-laminated glass: 85-foot rain forest with
waterfall, savannah, ocean with
coral reef, fresh-to-saltwater

marshes and high-humidi~ ~
The biomes are packed w1th
3,800 plant and animal species,
from bananas, peanuts and papayas
to wheat and potatoes, talapia fish
and hwnmingbirds, butterflies and
pygmy goats.
"I bave keen anticipalion to get
to that final moment, and then we
can get to that two ye8rs of hard
wort," Bass, wbo generall.r::·
es to talk to~ said
y
night during last-minuto prepara·

lions.

Reproduction among· all the
species but the humans will be
encouraged.
Sex certainly has not been rull!d
ouL The Biosphere's head)Margret
Augustine, says that wbat'the crew
members do after working hours
will be their own business.
Each biospherian is likely to
spend about four hours daily on
farming and other chores; :to maintain the complicated mochinery
driving the BioSJ&gt;here Another four
hours a day will go' to SQientific
work.
Psychologists say the group's
focus on goals likely will keep
them from getting on each other's
nerves too badly
Pre-closure celebrations sched·
uled for much of Wednesday
included American Indian dances
and urban music, a cocktail receplion under the stars and a lailer light

3 Sectlona, Jll Pegea 25 cents
A Mulllmedlo Inc. NewapaP!'r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 27, 1991

Future of coal industry will be known shortly

next two years. "Biospherians" tour men and
rour women will be sealed Inside the 24-acre
'compound today and conduct experiments. (AP)

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) - The effects of
the federal Clean Air Act on the coal industry will
soon be obvious, even though new standards don't
take effect until 1995, an American Electric Power
System official said.
"You will know before tllis year is out," said
Jack Katlic, senior vice president of tile AEP Service
Corp. of Lancaster, Ohio. The corporation buys coal
for generating plants operated by American Electric
Power in seven states.
Katlic spoke at a conference at which pri vale and
government officials discussed the coal industry 's
status in southern and central Appalachia.
Katlic said utilities and the state agencies that regulate them will have to make decisions soon on how
to comply with the new regulations, largely because

Biospherians
count
down
to
Homebuilders Class makes plans
for 52nd annual banquet in October start of two-year ~adventure
ma Boyer, Loretta Tiemyer, Lester
Bowers, Frank Ihle, Joe and
Marylin Bishop, Glenn and
Kathryn Evans and Farie Cole.

Pick 3:495
Pick 4: 6666

show.
.
The contractor that bu1lt the
wave-~g_ machine for the_Biosphere s mm1-ocean _asked a Judge
Wednesday to allow 1t access to IJ!e
~upposedly · seakd project. ~o
mspect the equtpment. Pac1ftc
Aquascape _Inc. ~f Hunu~gton
Beach, Cahf., faded to wm an
ernergencr order, but is pursuing
its claim m federal coun that it's
owed $321,000.
.
There have been persiStent queslions about the proJect's scientific
validity. The latest surfaced in
repons that a prestigious consul·
tant, Smithsonian Institution
marine S!'«ialist Waller Adey, had
cut his ues to the project, fearing
that his fi~ld of_synthetic ecology
could be diSCredited.
. .
~e was quoted as saymg tt was
unlikely the system would support
humans ~or tw~ years.
Adey s off1ce S81d Wednesday
he was on an expedlbOn and could
not be reached.
Biosphere II _spokeswoman
Kathleen Dyhr sa1d Adey's contract had expired but that as far as
she ~ew, Adey _had not se_vered his
relauonsh1p wllh the Btosphere
project.
The eight crew members wiU be
residents of some of the world:s
most expens1ve apartments, set m
an all wool-and-oak furniture
decor.

of construction deadlines.
It takes between 3 lfl and 5 years for utilities to
install the "scrubbers" that will allow them to continue to burn the high-sulfur coal found in northern
West Virginia, Ohio, and western Kentucky.
"If you're going to scrub ... you're ~oing to have
to make the commitment this year,' Katlic said
Thursday.
Conversely, the effects on the low-sulfur coal producers of southern West Virginia and eastern Kentucky also will become more apparent, Katlic said,
since those utilities that decide against using "scrubbing" technology will want to buy low-sulfur coal or
other fuels.
Coal operators looking for new markets have sent

out more bids to utilities than they ultimately may be
able to serve, Katlic said.
" It wiU take a while to understand that the same
coal has been bid to a lot of different buyers,'' KaUtc
said.
But Katlic said there are other potential problems
for the coal industry because of acid rain, which is
generally attributed to emissions of sulfur dioxide
from the bwning of high-sulfur coal and oil.
"This is not about high-sulfur versus low-sulfur,"
Katlic said. "It's about carbon dioxide- it's about
any kind of coal you burn.' '
He said the coal industry must seek congressional
understanding, and he said other countries should
also be responsible for reducing pollution.
Katlic warned against "extreme environmental

positions which are either unattainable or prohibiti ve
in cost"

"You're in trouble, coal, if they buy this one,"
Katlic said.
The conference was sponsored by Marshall University and coal associations from Wes t Virginia,
Kentucky, Ohio and Virginia.
" This is the fust of what we hope will be an annual event in conjunction with Marshall University,"
said Chris Hamilton, vice president of the West Virginia Coal Association. "It's intended to provide a
forum for the southern and central Appalachian mining community to examine developing policies and
other llovernment actions that have an impac t on
them.'~'

Agency ~will appeal
judge's MR/DD decision

ILLEGAL DUMP· Yet another illegal
dump has been discovered in Meigs County on
Laurel Clift Road by the Meigs County Litter
Col)trol l&gt;epartment. Trustees of Salisbury
- · -~-11'-llip"lmve--bl!en instrumental In the' cleanup or the illegal dump site containing approxl-

mately 40 to 50 old typewriters, calculators and
other omce equipment, as well as water tanks,
old tires and household furniture. According to
the litter·control department this Is the 37th
clean-up· this year; In addition, 20 otber sites
have been cleaned up by the ortenders.

Job training grants available for
ousted Meigs, Gallia mine workers

~ wANT

ADS
; WORK!

Displaced workers in Meigs and
Gallia Counties as a direct or indi·
rect result of the layoffs at the
Meigs Mines may qualify for job
training grants.
On Aug. 16, 197 workers at tile
Meigs Mines were laid off as the
company continued its cutback. Of
the number whose jobs were deleted, 137 were miners and 60 were
salaried workers.
The Ironton-Lawrence Community Action Organization will
receive $150,000 to serve workers
dislocated due to the decline in the
coal industry in Athens, Gallia,
Hocking, Lawrence, Meigs, Perry
and Vinton Counties.
That amount is a part of Governor George V. Voinovich 's three

992-2156

James Joyce and Genrude Stein.
He returned to the United States
in 1927 to marry Miss Palmer and
to pursue his hope of being a novelist. The Depression forced him to
put the great American novel on
hold and be went to work writing
two-line gags for humor magazines
Judge and Life.
It was on a spoof of scientific
developments that he fust used the
name that would become his trade·
mark. He added "Dr." to· his mid·
die name to sound more scientific.
"Mulberry Street" was pub·
lished in 1937, the same year as his
fust adult novel, "The Seven Lady
Godivas." The children's book,
rejected by 27 publishers before
being accepted by Vanguard Press,
became a spectacular success. His
novel flopped.
He wrote three more children's
books and switched to Random
House publishers before World
Warll.
"Horton Hatches the Egg,_"
published in 1940, reflected
Geisel's impatience with pacifist
sentiment in America at a time of
international crisis.
After Pearl Harbor, Geisel
joined the Arrriy and was se11t to
Hollywood, where he worked on
indoctrination films under director
Frank Capra.
Two Geisel documentaries made
in the ' .'40s "Hitler Lives"
. and
"Design for Death," co-.wrinen
with his wife, won Academy
Awards for their producers.
A Geisel cartoon, "Gerald
McBoing-Boing" won its JI'Oducer
an Oscar in 1951 in the animation
category.
Through the 19 SOs, Geisel
wrote a couple of children's books
a year, capped in 1957 by the publication of"''How the Orinch Stole
Christmas and "The Cat in the .

job training grants which totaled
one-half million dollars to dislocated workers in southern and southeastern Ohio.
The grant money e11n be used to
provide classroom training, on-theJOb training and job search acti vi.
ties. The emphasis of the training
would be on increasin~ job skills
and opportunities for fmding per·
manent jobs.
The other two grants went to the
Joint Training Partnership of
Southeastern Ohio in Cambndge,
$200,000 to serve workers dislocated primarily from the National
Cash Register Corporation, Shadyside Stamping, Ohio Valley Coal
and Sidwell Brothers. That grant

will serve dislocated workers in
Belmont, Guernsey, Harrison, Jefferson, Monroe, Noble, and Washin~ton Counties. The funding is
bemg handled through Joint Training Partnership of Southeastern
Ohio.
A grant of $150,000 was made
to the Community Action Organization of Scioto County to serve
dislocated workers in Hi~hland,
Adams, Brown, Jackson, Pike, and
Scioto Counties. ·
The grants are pan of the Governor's discrelionary funds of Title
III of the federally funded Job
Training Partnership Act. It is
designed to retrain dislocated
workers.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MR/DD levy back on the ballot.
Sentinel News Statr
"Practically speaking, we can
The decision of Judge Fred W. assume that we are not going to see
Crow III which ordered the Ohio any of that money," Lentes said.
Department of Mental Retardation
In Judge Crow's order dated
and Developmental Disabilities to SepL I I, the Meigs MR/DD Board
provide the Meigs County MR/DD was ordered to provide ad09uate
Board witll $275 ,000 as supple- services to Meigs MR/DD cltents,
mentary funds for this year's oper- while the Ohio MR/DD board was
ation of Carleton School and Meigs ordered to provide any necessary
Industries will be appealed.
funding to the local board.
The order in the case (State ex
John Lentes, president of the
local MR/DD Board, reported rei. Joan Cottrill versus Meigs
today that Jerome C. Manuel , County Board of Mental ReWda·
director of the OMRRDD. has lion and Developmental Disability
advised him that his agency will and otllers) came as a result of a
appeal the decision.
·
civillrial held in June.
Lentes said that Manuel will be
That civil action was flied when
asking the Court of Appeals for a the MR/DD Board announced that
stay on the order -hom .Judge it would lay off 12 staff members
Cro'W's'Coutt'IO pay·llxf $275,000. · bccau~of the fmancial difficulties.
An opinion from the Court of
A pitt of the order issued by
Appeals will likely take a mini- Judge Crow states that "The sermum of 12 months, Lentes vices provided to the MR/DD
explained, which means that the plaintiffs, which were eliminated
state will not be required to provide after January 1991 were necessary
the support while the action is to meet the basic health and weipending.
fare needs of said plaintiffs includIf the local program loses the ing basic hygiene practices. These
money on the basis of that appeal, represent fundamental needs of the
then Lentes said the Meigs MWDD plaintiffs.
·
Board will appeal the case to the
"The state, by its statutory
Supreme Court of Ohio. He said if scheme, has created for the plainthat happens, in all probability it tiffs an entitlement t~ receive prowill take about three years before a gf!imS a~d serv,tces m. accordance
decision is reached.
w1th tbeu IHP s. While the state
The board president said it was may elect not to initiate such profelt right along that the decision grams, once they have been estab·
would be ap~d and the money lished, they become rights of the
not forthcommg. He said that was a MR!pD plaintiffs which must be
deciding factor in putting the proVIded m such a way as to not be

unequally afforded due to geographical location. In no case. may
they be withdrawn without due
process....."
Specifically, the entry ordered
the Ohio MR/DD to provide the
local board the sum of $275,000 as
supplementary funds for the 1991
calendar year to enable the MR!DD
board to fulfill its responsibilities
and duties to the clients.
Currently, according to Lenres,
there is no change in the operation
of the Carleton School insorar as
the number of teachers and aides
are concerned . He said that the
stale law requires not more than
eight students to one reacher and
that the school is in compliance
with the state requirements.
He said that instead of cutting
the program fm the school aged
children, the board O);lted to cut the
adult program to ' bare bones."
That program is being run by a
staff of one or two, according to
Lentcs, and while the same number
of adults with mental retardation
are being served, there are less staff
members to work with them. The
out:placement program has been
discontinued temporarily altllough
Lentcs indicated that it would probably be resumed if the levy passes
in November.
The three year one-mill MR/DD
levy to be voted on in the Nov. 5
general election, if passed, will
generate $211 ,470 per year,
according to William Wi ckline,
auditor.

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RAC replacement workers
mount their own campaign
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- About 1,700 out-of-work sleel·
workers at Ravenswood Aluminum
Corp. will have competition in their
bids to return to work.
Replacement workers at the
Jackson County aluminum maker
are lobbying Congress to reject a
bill that would ban the hiring of
permanent replacement workers in
labor disputes.
The workers were hired to
replace members of Local 5668 of
Ravenswood who haven't worked
at tile plant since Nov. I. The company says the S!eelworkers w:Qked
off the job, but the union says its
members were locked ouL
The RAC Volunleer Commitlee,
a group of salaried and replacement
workers, is lobbying Congress to
reject the so-called strikebreaker
bill.
"Although our situation has
been used an example of why this
bill should be approved, it is criti·
cal that you understand we are people, not specimens," the group
wrote in a letter to senators.
"For many, this is the flfSt good
job they have ever secured. We are
working hard to build a better
future for ourselves, our families
and our community," the group
said.
On Thursday, lawyers for the .
National Labor Relations .1,\oard
wrapped up their unfair labor prac- ·
tjces c:ase against Ravcnswopd

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Hat."

"The Cat in the Hat" revolutionized children's reading habits,
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Aluminum.
Carey Burnell, a benefits specialist with the United Steelworkers
of America union, and Steelworkers District 23 Director Jim Bowen

testified before an administrative
law judge.
Bernard Ries of Washington,
D.C., an administrative law judge,
is hearing the complaint.

ARRESTED IN
- Paul Daniels,
wearing camouflage cap, Tomahawk, Ky., ·is
brought Into the courtbouse by Scioto County
deputies Thursday afternoon. Daniels was

arraigned Friday morning In the shooting
deathJ ot two ramUy members and 1he woundingor three others early Thursday in South Web·
ster, near Portsmouth. (AP)

Kentucky man charged with 2
counts of aggravated murder

,,

SOUTH WEBSTER, Ohio (AP)
- Authorities say a man killed two
of his in-laws and wounded three
others after ·his estranged wife
refused to end their separation.
Paul Daniels Jr., 3S, of Tomahawk, Ky., is charged with two
counts of aggravated murder in the
deaths of his wife's brother and
aunt at the home of his wife's parents, His wife, Judy, escaped
through a window.
Daniels was lll'!'aiPed today in
Ponsmouth Municipal Coun. Judge

David Spi'ars ordered Daniels heid
at the Scioto County Jail on
$400,000 bond and set a preliminaey hearing for OcL 4.
Greg Dunham, chief investi~a­
tor for the Scioto County shenff,
said no other charges would be
filed pending possible indictments
by a Scioto County grand jury.
Mrs. Daniels, 3S, had been separated from her husband for about
two months and was living with her
parents in this southern Ohio town,
said Scioto County sheriff's

Deputy Phil Malone.
Witnesses told investigators that
Daniels telephoned his wife
Wednesday night and asked her to
come back to him. She refused.
He went to tile house at about I ·
a.m. and cut the telephone line and
electricity, Malone said. Deputies
said the women in the house were
watching television and the mtm
were asleep.
Mrs. Daniels opened the fron\,
door in answer to a knock, said
Continued on page 3

�·Commentary

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Friday, Septembe; ~. 1891

Page-2-The Dally Sent~nel
Pomeroy-MiddlePQrt, Ot)lo
Friday, September '0,199&lt;1

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Cold weather will continue through

- Saturday, Sept. 28

The Daily Sentinel

The nomination of Judge
Clarence
Thomas to lhe Supreme
Pomeroy, Ohio
Coun
is
just
lhe latest in a series of
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
developments lhat is sharply altering our perception of America's
black leaders.
~MULTIMEDIA, INC.
It has been no secret for many
years that there are lots of able
blacks who dissent sharply from
ROBERT L. WINGETT
lhe
official "line" of liberal black
Publisher
organizations like the NAACP.
Such distinguished economists as
PAT WIDTEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Thomas Sowell of the Hoover
General Manager
Assistant Publisher/Controller
Institution and Walter WiUiams at
George Mason University, and lhe
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association Uld
astute and articulate former Assislhe Americm Newspape1 Publisher Association.
tan~ Secretary of State Alan Keyes
bluntly reject !he liberal strategy of
LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less lhan 300 , treating blacks as a cripploo minorwords long, All!cllefS arc subjecl to editing and must be signed with name, , ity that needs special help, instead
address and telephone number. No unsigned lentrs will be pub!iJhod. Letters
of just equal opportunity.
should be in good taste, addressing issues, ml personalities.
But until very recently black
Americans who hold this view
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..... were often barred from public .

111 Court Street

office by lhe Jll!litical clout of lhe
liberal estabbshment. It was less
~ a year ago lhat a black R~ub­
hcan, Gary Franks, managoo to win
a seat in Congress from Connecticut as an outspOken conservative,
The Thomas nomination to the
Supreme Court (assuming he is
confirmed by the Senate) is, of
course, another major stride in lhe
same direction.
Next year lite people of California wiD have a chance to make an
important contribution alon11 the
same line. Black political sc1ence
professor BiD Allen is challenging
John Seymour, Gov. Pete Wilson's
designee, for lhe two-year Senate
term crea!OO by Wilson's resignation to lake lhe governorship. In lite
words of an informal slogan lhat' s
gaining currency in the Golden
State, "If r,ou liked Clarence
Thomas, you ll love Bill Allen."

Seymour was a state senator
when Wilson chose him to fdl the
Senate seat Wilson was vacating. It
has been said of Wilson that he
" blends wilh lhe wallpaper," leaving little impression on his surroundings, and in litis respect, as in
most olhers, Se:ymour is his clone.
In the nearly mne months he has
lhus far spent in lite U.S. Senate, he
has not done a sin~le lhing lhat lhe
average Califorman-in-the-street
could remember, if asked . It is
widely believed that former San
Francisco Mayor Dianne Feinstein,
the almost certain Democratic
choice for lhe seat, would mop up
lhe floor wilh Seymour.
But what if the Repu"li can
nominee isn't Seymour? \I. ,11 ia m
Dannemeyer, a consc" ,, "ve
Republican congressman, i, also
opposing mm lor the nomination,
But California voters have already

Letters to the editor
Seeks information on poor farm
Dear Editor
In 1910, my grandmother was
born in or around Letart, Mason
County, W. Va
She was given to the Cottageville Jackson County. West
Virginia Poor Farm. Her name at
that lime was Leilia Shields. She
had two sisters that also were given
away to families that may or may
not have let them know !heir real
identity,
One of the sisters was older. Her
name was Roxieann Shields and
th,e other was my grandmother's

twin. Her nam-e ·was Leathia
Shields. Parents names were
William and Martha Shields. I have
reason to believe Martha was married before to David Canter and
had a child that died. Her maiden
name was Martha May Grimm.
If any one knows or has any
information on the Jackson County
Poor Farm, please write to:
Robert Shinn.
P.O.Box 10204,
Charleston, West Virginia,
25357-0204

Commission responds to article
Dear Editor:
A ~nt. article publishOO in .the
Cincmnau Enqutrer regardmg
administrative costs at the Ohio
Lottery Commission has generated
a great deal of misleading and false
information lhat we at the Lottery
feel must be rectifioo.
The article was picked up by
newspapers slatewide and it's tone
suggests that the Ohio Lottery
Commission is overspending in it's
operatin~ budget
This IS patently false! Lotteries
across the country run on different
systems of accounting and are
under the conttol of different government agencies wilhin each state.
' Many of the costs incurred at
Lotteries in olher states are picked
up by different government agen-

cies and do not appear as operating
costs. There are also a number of
other variables in each slate's lottery operations "equation" that
should have been addressed in lhe
article and were not.
The Ohio Lottery is spending at
a level needoo to operate lhe lottery
and expand to generate more profits for ooucation. Our expenditures
are under slate guidelines and are
therefore closely monitored.
The Lottery is a public, state
a11ency and we are happy to proVIde information on operations to
all who request it
Sincerely,
Virgil E. Brown,
E~tecutive Director,
Ohio Lottery Commission

Democrats in favor of
aid for Americans first
I
,I

l

I'

f

i
·l

I

I

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
: WASHINGTON - There was a lime when foreign aid was a target a
ci:lnservalive Republican could count on. Not now.
: As Democrats try to domesticate the coming presidential campaign,
they're the ones complaining about bailouts abroad while !here's no
money to spare at home.
, - That swaps political sides in debllle dating back nearly 40 years.
-: Not thjlt Democratic leaders have turned against foreign aid: lhey
1\aven•L lhdeed, one of them proposed assistance for the Soviet Union
wly !his year, so long ago lhatlhe administtation ridicttled an idea lhat
pow has growing Western support.
,
• But lhe Democrats insist that !here ought to be as much l_ll'llency, and
flloney, foc domestic needs as for assistance overseas. It fits theu budding
campaign argument lhat President Bush doesn't care much about domeslie matters, only about foreign policy.
·: Their case study: the twice-around bill to provide emergency unemplorment benefits for about 3 million people whose jobless pay has
~xpired. Bush signoo lhe first version but wouldn't declare an emergency
!D order to release money to fmance it.
.· Con~ is working now on final terms of a $6.1 billion extension that
wouldn t give him lhe option, a measure he intends to veto. It passed with
Margins wide enough to override a veto, but Republican leaders say !hey
Could reclaim some of those votes to sustain Bush.
; Eilher way, it's an issue wailing for the campaign.
· The president has ordered emergency spending in order to deal with
foreign crises and disasters, and Democrats have been pointing to lhat all
(hrough the unemployment compensation debate.
• "We have helped the Kurds and Turkey, we have helped
tlangladeshis, " said Rep. Thomas J. Downey, D-N.Y., a sponsor of lhe
House measure. "It is lime to help Americans."
"The hard-working people of the Uni!OO States have been shortchanged by a president who is more concerned with emergencies in
l!angladesh, Kuwait, Kurdistan and Israel than the unemployment emerJCnCy in his own back yard," said Rep. Joseoh M. Gaydos, D-Pa.
• In Senate debate on the measure. Sen. bonaid M. Riegle, D-Mich.,
$aid lhe administration wants to aid COI!ntries that most Americans
epuldn 't fmd on a world map. "The list reads like a-traveler's guide to the
third World," said Sen. James Sasser, D-Tenn.
·· The emergency declarations are required to exceed spending limits set
tinder the 1990 budget agreement Republicans argue lhat if Bush signoo
6ne for jobless Pll}', lhe Democrats would be back for more.
· Bush "recognized and officially declared emergencies" abroad, but
?,.on't do it at home, said Sen. George J. Miccbell, D-Mainc, the majority
feader. He caUoo it "a double standard lhat worlcs against Americans."
"We're really down now to a cruel political hoax," Sen. Phil Gramm,
R-Texas, countered Wednesday. "The Democrats are trying to create a
litical issue."
~ 1bere's a special political problem iovolve4 for Bush. An emergency
declaration to finance extendoo unemployment benefits hardly would
diesh with his assurances that the recession is over and the economy is

~vering..
. needs WI'lh aor:tgn
r • 81'd IS
. a po!'tical
, that' s
,, ContniSIJng dom esllc
1
tactic

'I

)jCen rehearsed for years.
.
,
•: Congress hasn't managed to pass a foreign aid blueprint bill since
!985, aJIIiloplialing funds for the pwpose each year without approving
bills to set policy guide!Utes, which have been snarled in disputes on
issues ranging from ab&lt;l1ion to trade.
, .
: A bill awaiting fmal action now would authaizc $14 billion in foreign
aid for the next year, about $1 billion less than Bush~ That does
not include food and medical assistance for the disintegrating Soviet
Union this winter, something the White House and Democratic leaders
a,gree will be necessary, although how much and how to pay for it remain
unseuled.

Accu-Weath~ forecast for

A 'Clarence Thomas' for -'California,

need to shout offending politicians
off lhe stage. Gong 'em, Give 'em
the hook.
As much as I would like to
claim cre4it for !his bright idea, I
cannot. ABC's Sam Donaldson
emplo&gt;:ed it effectively in 1988
after Michael Dukakis, in an effort
to demonstrate he was 5trong on
defense, donned a flak suit and helmet and took a rocking ride in an
M-1 tank, then flashed an Alfred E.
Newman grin for the cameras.
Donaldson P.illoried Dukakis for
staging the 'have-you-no-shame"
photo opportunity of the week.
That's the pill, I think, that wiD
cure lhe madness that plagues lhe
political process. Dukakis
should've been dosed again when
he loaded up .a hundre4 members of
the media, flew them across the
country, bused them up to Yellowstone Park and chatted on litis naturai stage for 40 minutes to get a 9second soundbite to show his concern for the environment
Anolher healthy dose of horse
pills should have been stuffed
down Genteel George's gullet
when he scarfed pork rinds, lis-

tened to country music and drove a
ttuck around a parking lot to woo
blue-collar voters. And when he
used Lake Erie as a prop to show
his environmenral credentials. And
when he used lhe flag as a prop to
prove his pab'iolism. It was cheap,
patronizing, show-busip\l,&amp;s l~o.,cy
and he should have been !lispatchoo lhe way artless vaudeville
comedians were. With the hook.
Will you have lhe opportunity in
1992? Fact is, you've already
missed a few,
President Bush recently turned
lhe Grand Canyon into a television
prop to shore up his lame environmenral image, then had the chutzpah to claim he was not campaignmg. Hook him.
Jesse Jackson was recently
asked if he will run again, and he
resorted to one of !hose overcooked
metaphors lhat he mistakes for wisdom. "If I finally conclude to run,
I'll not be testing the waters, I'll be
swimming in the waters and I'll be
leading lite school of fis\1," he said.
Hook him.
Former California Gov. Jerry
Brown recently addressed a labor

Waiting for LBJ's third shoe
The new two-part PBS miniseries, "LBJ," is rich, fascinating
- and liberal - television (Sept.
30 and Oct. 1, at9 p.m.).
It's worlh wau:hing because it's
good stuff, and a revealing way station in lhe ultimate asSessment of
President Lyndon Johnson, and dare one say it? - the ultimate
assessment of the war in Viebi8DI.
First there were Robert Caro 's
fairy-tale volumes about LBJ,
revealing a wholly terrible, nasty,
evil man. A rat. It is no wonder,
Caro intimates, lhat we endoo up in
an immoral, war. ,
The "LBJ" programs are 5aner.
We see Johnson as a complica!OO
man. There was some crudeness
and skullduggery. But we watch
Johnson doing so much that was so
very good, certainly in civil rights.
Finally, it is tragedy: We witness
LBJ, his presidency, and perhaps
America, ruined by Vietnam. It is
the orthodox liberal vision.
There is, however, lhird shoe
in this assessment game. It fell
when communism died in the
USSR. Sooner or later, that will
have to be factored into the
LBJNietnam equation. Even the
academics, journalists, politicians
and activists whose essence was
forgoo on the smithy of the antiwar movement, and who have since
gran!OO themselves 8' sole-source
charter on interpreting history, wiD
have to re-think.
Consider how the "LBJ" series
hl!ndles Barry Goldwater,
describe4 as a candidate of the "far
right." To demonstrate litis we see
Goldwater saying, "The only
enemy of peace in the world is
C&lt;lllmwrisrn ...••
What a kook!
Except by now, in most

a

'

precincts, if not in lib-land, what
kooky Barry said is ho-hum stuff.
Even the once-communist leaders
of the once-Soviet Union believe it
Lyndon Johnson, too, was a
ferocious anti-communist. I was an
LBJ speech-writer. I do not claim
close and regular personal contact
with Johnson, but almost every
time I was in a room with him, he
was railing against lhe global communist threat, always, it seemed,
trying to ooucate his young staff.
Johnson did it with gusto, but
anti-communism was the stated
policy of all nine post-World War
II presidents. And, to pursue the
stated policy of anti-communism,
!here was a tactic: "containment."
The Cold War of containment,
with some hot flashes, Ia&gt;'· .1 for
four decades. Battles were 1• '" ~ ht;
mistakes were made. The Korean
War ended in a split decision; lhe
Bay of Pigs was a defeat; Vietnam
was a defeat; Afghanistan was a
victory,
But the anti-communist war, lhe
Cold War, the one against "the
enemy of peace," was fmally won,
by America, with allies.
It is in that light lhat Vieblam,
and Johnson, will one day be
reconsidered. The whole policy
will be judged by its whole results,
understanding that all human enterprises are at least partially Oawoo,
and that, alas, history does not
announce in advance which specific parts of a policy will fail ttagically -even when the whole policy saves the world.
Do not Cltpect an immediate rethinking. The anti-Vietnam
demonologY- still dominates, and
addles, the libelal mind.
Thus, in "LBJ," it is sugges!OO
lhat the black riots of lhe '60s were

caused by Vieblam (allhough lhey
began earlier), that the war on
poverty was starved because of
Vieblam (although poverty spending soared), that Americans
stopped supporting the war effort
(but Richard Nixon, a hawk, won
the 1968 election).
When will we get a balanced
look at recent history? Eilher sooner or later,
Lon~-term, the anti- Vietnam
generauon will- Yes! -die out
Fresh minds, unbridled and
unblurred by the heroic passions of
their youlh, wiD lake a fresh loolc.
Short-term, it could happen
when !here is a Vietnamese replica-

•
IToledo I sa• I

seen Bill Allen in nationwide
action, as a member since 1987 of
the U.S. Commission on Civil
Rights (appointed by President
Reagan) and as its chairman in
I 988-89. It was his record in the
latter post that prompted New
York's John Cardinal O'Connor to
describe Allen as "lhe public official in the United States for whom I
have the greatest admiration and
respect"
As a matter of fact, Allen's
whole career, private as well as
public, commands respeci. He was
raise4 in rural Florida, the sixth of
12 children. But he gradua!OO from
Pepperdine College, and then, wilh
lhe help of a series of fellowships,
obtained his Master's and Ph.D .
degrees at Claremont Graduate
School. Since 1972 he has been a
professor of government at Harvey
Mudd College, teaching American
government, political philosophy
and jurisprudence. Today his son
and daughter are bolh undergraduates at Princeton.
Surprisin~ly, the Bush administration has tnoo hard to pretend lhat
Seymour, who holds his seat only
by appointmen~ is entitled, as "lhe
incumbent," to lhe party's official
support against primary opponents.
The Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee has already given
Seymour the maximum ($ 17 ,500)
it is allowed to give any senatorial,
candidate. The committee's chair- '
man, Phil Gramm, has endorsed :
him, and President Bush is expect- ·
e4 to follow suit
·
But Bill Allen, as an outspoken :
conservative, was prepared to be:
ignored, and he is pressing on. He .
is betting that California Republi- :
cans are eager to give Feinstein a ·
battle instead of a pushover.
:
(C)1991
NEWSPAPER :
EN1ERPRISE ASSN.

How to create a meaningful election
Lots of serious pundits have lots
of serious ideas for making eleclions meaningful once 'again.
The Joan Shorenstein Barone
Center on the Press, Politics and
Public Policy at Harvard University
has proposw that the final nine
Sundays of the cam~ be given
over to televised polillcal discussion -three debates, five "conversations, ~' and an address by
each candidate. The National Organizalion for Women is organizing a
third party "dedicate4 to equality,
social and economic justice, demilitarizalion and a heallhy environment" Washington Post columnist
David Broder presumably will continue his 2-year-old campaign to
e~pose misleading political advertisements.
Personally, I think the only
thing that will work is ridicule. The
political J10CCSS has been going to
pot since Richard Nixon turnoo it
into a public-relations charade 23
years ago and has now become so
preposterous lhat it is beyond lhe
reach of a thoughtful, well-reasonoo solution. We need to focus
on lhe pel]lellators themselves. We

By The Associated Press
Cool weather caused by the
influx of Canadian air will continue
through Saturday, forecasters said.
The National Weather Service
alerted gardeners that the ftrst frost
of the season was possible tonight,
especially in low-lying areas. l;ows
generally were forecast from the
mid-30s to mid40s.
Showers or thunderstorms may
occur late tonight or Saturday in
northeast Ohio because of the
effect of the cold air moving over
the warmer waters of Lake Erie.

MICH,

William Rusher

IMansfield I 62• I•
INO,

•I Columbus I 54• I

i)iiJl4
Ice

-----Weather-----

Bookmobile stop eliminated
The Meigs County Public Library will eliminate its Friday bookmObiles~ in Syracuse.
According to Director Ruth Powers, lite bookmobile will continue to stop in Syracuse on Saturdays.

Tripp account established
A special account has been established on behalf of Todd Tripp.
who was injuroo in a farming accident earlier this monlh. Tripp ts
not covered by medical insurance,
Kathryn Windon is lhe ttustee of the account, which has been
established at Farmers Bank and Savings Company in Pomeroy.
Any funds collected wiD be used to defray Tripp's medical expenses. Anyone interested in making a donation to lite fund can do so at
the bank.

Joseph Spea~

EMS units answer calls
Eight calls for assistance were answered on Thursday and early
Friday by units of Meigs County Emergency Mooical Services.
On Thursday at 2: I 7 p.m,, Middleport unit respondoo to Mine
31. James Cox was transporle4 to Holzer Medical Center. At 2:27
p.mt, Pomeroy unit went to U.S. Route 33 and County ·Road 19 for
an auto fire. At 2:46 p,m., Pomeroy squad went to East Main Screet.
Ralph Cundiff refused treatment. At4:27 p.m., Racine unit went to
Elm Street for an electrical fue at the Hager residence.
Racine unit, at 8:02 p.m., went to Long Run Road, Max Folmer
was transported to Veterans. At 10:39 p.m., Rutland squad went to
Meigs Mine 2. Thomas Cross was treated but not transportoo. He
was later taken by Life Aight to Grant Medical Center. At 11:07
p.m,, Racine units went to State Route 124 for a motor vehicle accident. Pete Roush was taken from lhe station to Veterans.
At 1:42 a.m. on Friday, Pomeroy squad went to Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center. Harry Perry was taken to Veterans.

---Area deaths-He is survived by a dau~hter,
Pamela COvert McKinney, Middleport; a brother, Charles A. COvert,
Donald Eugene Covert, 76, of Milton Free Water, Oreson; a sisPomeroy, dioo Thursday, Sept. 26, ter, Leona Sickle, Magaclore; and a
1991 at the Pleasant Valley Hospi- sister and brother-in-law, Mildred
ral following a lenglhy illness.
and Carl Hubbard, Syracuse, along
He was a retired foreman with with a special friend, Freda
lhe Ohio Department of Highways. Durham and several nieces and
Born on Sept. 1, 1915 at Nel- nephews.
sonville, he was the son of the late
Besides his parents, he was preCharles Coven and Hattie Nelson coooo in dealh by his wife, Virginia
Covert. He was a member of the Hubbard Covert, two brothers, Orin
Southern Baptist Church, a veteran and Dana Covert, and a sister,
of World War II, and belonged to Elhel Johnson.
the Pomeroy Disabled American
Funeral services will be held
Veterans, lhe Veterans of Foreign Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Ewing
Wars, Mason, W. Va., and the Funeral Home. The Rev . James
Smith Capehart Post 140, Ameri- Keesee will officiate and burial
can Legion, New Haven,
will be in the Beech Grove Cemetery, Friends may call at the funeral
home, 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.

Donald Covert

Ben Wattenberg
lion of Tiananmen Square, or when
a Vietnamese Gorby lakes over and
reveals the decadence of Vietnamese communism, or when Vietnam becomes free, along wilh most
of the rest of lhe world.
Which, the way things are
going, and !hanks to American policy over lhe years, including 196368, could happen any day.
(C)1991
NEWSPAPER
EN1ERPRISE ASSN.
Ben Wallenberg, a senior fellow:
at the American Enterprise lnsti-'
lute, is author of "The First Universal Nation," published by The
freePress.
·

The Daily Sentinel
(IJSP81t...)

t••·

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throu1h Friday, l11 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley PubIIJhlnl Company /Miltlme&lt;lla, Jnc,
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to

Thr Dolly Senlln&lt;l, Ill Court St,
, Pomeroy, Ohio t5789,

IIJUCIIJPnON BATIIII

a, Carrier or Mtltr a..te
One WHk,. ,,,.,,,.,,.,.,.,.,,,,.,.,.,. ,.,ll.(IJ
One Month .,,..,,.,.,.,.,.,.,,.,,..,.,,,.,.IU5
One YYr """"'"""""'"' ,,.,,.,,. 18.1.:11
SJNOLBOOPY

RICE

Dally ,.,.,.,,,.,. ,,. ,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,. 25 Cent•

S..blcrlben 1101 clellrillltopay t~ear­
ritr may remit Ill advance cllrect lo

The Dally Sefttiii.C oil .a, &amp;or ltmC!IIth

basil, Cn!dlt will bo l!vm earrler eeeh ·

'

Co"ection
Jennie I. Canter was hired as a
subslitue cook and custodian by !he
Southern Local School District
Board of Education at Monday
night's me=. Her name was
incorrec:~y ·
in lhe account of
the board meeting.

A Dlvlol• ol Malll-la,

Today in history

I

Fair on Sunday. A chance of
showers Monday and Tuesday ,
Lows in upper 30s or the 40s.
Highs mainly in the 60s Sunday, in
the 70s Monday and 65-75 Tuesday,

.----Local briefs---.

union convention in Las Vegas and
made the outrageous claim that
Reagan and Bush had "deregulated
cocaine. That was !heir supply-side'
economics. Now every kid inAmerica can buy that stuff." He
!hen paused and said, "You think;
that was a cheap-shot? Well, m'
some ways it is." Right question,
right answer. Hook him.
,
How to hook them? That's the,
hard part. Letters to candidates, letters to editors, postcanls, telephone
calls. Hoot at them. Wave placards.
Try that Hook- 'em-Horns gesture
lhat University of Texas Longhorn
fans use to taunt !heir foes.
Time magazine said three years :
ago lhat candidates and their media,
handlers had "underestimated the,
good sense of the American peopie," who were ready for "a cam- .
paign in which the candidate says
what he thinks, takes questions
from all comers, and dares to let
the networks create their own
sound bites:·
Prove it, people. Hook 'em.
(C)1991
NEWSPAPER
EN1ERPRISE ASSN.

By The Associated Press
Today is Friday, Sept 27, lhe 2701h day of 199 I. There are 95 days
left in lhe year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 27, 1964, the Warren Commission issued a report concluding
that Lee Harvey Oswald had acted alone in assassinating President
Kennedy in November 1963.
,
On litis date:
In 1779, John Adams was named to negotiate lhe Revolutionary War's
peace terms with Britain.
In 1825, lhe first locomotive to haul a passenger train was operated by
George Stephenson in England
In 1854, the first great disaster involving an Atlantic Ocean liner
occurred when the steamship Arctic sank wilh 300 people aboard,
In 1928, the l,lnited States said it was recognizing the Nationalist Chinese government.
In 1939, Warsaw, Poland, surrendered after weeks of tesistance to
invading forces from Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union during World
War II.
·
In 1954, "Tonight!'' hosted by Steve Allen, made its debut on NBC
television.
·
In 1959, a typhoon battered the main Japanese island of Honshu,
killing nearly 5,000 people.
In 1959, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev concludoo his visil to lhe
Uni!OO State.~ .

Sunny Pl. Cloudy Cloudy
011191 Accu-WNiher, Inc,

South-Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly clear. Low near
40. Saturday, mostly sunny with
the high in the mid-60s.
Extended rorecast:
Sunday ~rough Tuesday:

week,

• No IUblcrlptlou by maU pormlttod ln
areu where borne carrier Jei'V~ II
avalljlble,

......_.,._

bollle -P Coul7

13 Weeb .,,.,.,,.,.,,.,.,.,.,.,. .,.,.,.,.. $21.8t

26 Weeka ..... ,.,.,., ...... ,. .. ,,,. ....... M3.11
52 Weeka ....... ., .. ,. .. ,, .. .,,: .... ,........'ll
.
· ...
p
.13WHki
..............
,....................
,Q&amp;to
26 Weeka .. .., ......... .,.,, .. ,. .. ,........ uuo
52 W'Oelll ........ ,.. ,......................... 40

Cloll..,

/1 '

Am Ele Power ............ ,.... .30 1/1.
Ashland Oil ............. ,........30 1/4
AT&amp;T................................37 3/4
Bob Evans ......................... 18
Charming Shop.. ,..... ,.. ,...... 21 3/4
Qity Holding ............, .. ,.... .l6 1/4
Federal MoKul .................. 14 1/1.
GoodyearT&amp;R .............. ,..43 7/8
Key Centurion ............... ,..15
Lands' End ........ ,. .............. 17 5/8
Limi!OO Inc. .... ,.:,............. .26 1/8
Multimedia Inc .................. 24 1/1.
Rax Restaurant .. ,........ ,........ S/16
Robbins&amp;Myers ...............38 3/4
Shot\ey's Inc......,.. ,,., .. ,.... .l7 3/8
Star Bank ........... ,..............23 1/8
Wendy Int'L... ....,.. ,. ............8 1/1.
Worthington Ind.. ;............29

Stock rrptWIJ 11n 1M 10:30 ._._
fiOIII ,.,,._,~,111, E/111

tulll!Mwl of

Forecasters said some sleet or hail
was possible.
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 90 degrees in 1946.
The record low was 32 in 1947.
Sunrise this morning was at
7:23 a.m. Sunset will be at 7:2 1
p.m.
Around the nation
The Norlheast was cool and dry
early today after a storm system
that brought two days of rain to
most of the East Coast moved out
over lhe Atlantic Ocean.

Pre-dawn temperatures were
mostly in the 50s in most of the
Northeast. Highs were lilcely to
linger in lhe chilly low 60s.
The rain also Iefllhe Soulheast,
where temperatures were warmer,
Highs were-to be in lhe 70s mostly,
wilh temperatures reaching into the
80s in Florida.
Some early morning rain wet
the southern tip of Florida, and
moisture was expected laLer in
parts of Washington, Oregon, California, Arizona, Idaho, Iowa, Illi nois, Michigan, and Ohio.

Saturda~

:

High temperatures today were'
expected to reach the 40s and 50S:
in lhe Great Lakes region; lhe 50s;
and 60s in New England, the mid-'
Atlantic states and the northwest:
Plains; the 70s in most or the;
Plains, lhe Midwest and the Southeast; lhe 70s and 80s in the Norlh-:
west; the 80s and 90s in the West.:
the Southwest, and Florida; and·
over 100 in the southwest comer oC:
Arizona.
The high for the nation Thurs-:
day was 111 degrees at Lake Hava-:
su City, Ariz.

Kentucky...
W, VA,

;

The Dally sentlnei-Page-4

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

Ill.

Continued from page 1
Sheriff's Deputy Dave Simoncs.
Her husband, who was carrying a
flashlight and a gun, enteroo and
startoo fuing , the officer said.
At one point, Daniels reloaded
his gun as his wife begged him to
stop shooting, investigators said.
He shouted, "'No, I'm going to
kill you. I'll kill you aU,'" Malone
said.
The body of Betty Jo Branham,
44, of Oakwood in Paulding County, was found behind a chair. Invesugators believe Daniels archoo his
arm over lhe top of the chair and
shot down at !he top of her head.
The body of Steven Rawlins,
32, of Soulh Webster, was found in
a dicch near the house with gunshot
wounds to his head and back.
Investigators said he was shot in a
be4room.
Mrs. Daniels· father, Ernie
Rawlins, 64, was in serious condition today night at Grant Medical
Center in Columbus with a chest
wound.

Meigs announcements
Hunter's sarety course
The Scipio Volunteer Fire
Department is hosting a hunter' s
safety course for anyone wanting to
attend on Monday, Tuesday and
Thursday frgm 6 to 9 p,m , and on
Oct 5 from 9 a.m, to noon.
Card shower
There will be a birthday card
shower for Gertrude Hoffman who
will be 90 years old on October 3_
She was formerly from Tuppers
Plains.
Cards may be sent to Mrs. Dana
Hoffman Sr., 800 Soulh KeysLone
Ave., Clearwater, Fla., 34616,
Revival slated
Revival services will be held at
the New Ufe Covenant Church of
God at Chester beginning Sunday
and continuing !hough Wednesday.
Richard Blackburn of Nashville,
Tenn. wil be the evangelist. Services Sunday will be held at 9:30
a.m. and 6 p.m. and at 7 p.m, on
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday.
Homecoming slated
The
Reedsville
United
Melhodist Church will hold its first
homecoming on Sunday, October
20. Rev. Charles Eaton, pastor, will
speak, and several local musicians
will peform, Potluck dinner will
begin at 1p.m. and the public is
invited.

Livestock report
Gallipolis Stockyards Co.
Sept. 21, 1991
Medium Frame, 1 &amp; 2 Steers:
250-300 lbs., 91.00-1 12.00;
300-500 lbs., 84.00-102.00;
500-700 lbs.,89.00-91 .00;
700-Up 66.00-77.00.
Medium Frame, 1 &amp; 2 Heirers:
250-300 lbs., 80.00-96,00;
300-500 lbs., 73.50-87 ,00;
500-700 lbs., 71.50-84.00;
700-Up 60.00-71.50.
Butcher cows:
Utilities, 49.50-55.00.
Canner/Cutters, 49,00-Down_
Light weight low grade cows,
49.00-Down.
Heiferettes, Up to 63,00.
Holstein Steers and Bulls:
300-800 Ibs. 68.50-72.00.
Butcher Bull:
Utilities, 55.00-62.50.
Canner/Cutter, 55.00-Down.
Veal Calves:
Choice/prime, 82,00-94.00.
Medium, 82.00-90.00,
Springer Cows:
550.00 &amp; down.
Cow/Cal1 Com.:
850.00-down.
Baby Calves:
145.00 &amp; down,
Butcher Sows:
400-600 lbs,, 38.00-HOO.
Top Hogs:
· 220-250 lbs,, 46_()()-47.00.
Butcher Boars:
34.00-36.50.
Pi111 by Head:
17.00-32.00.

'Court news
Dissolution, divorce processed
, An action for dissolution of
marriage has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
Pearl M. Colmer and William W.
Colmer, bolh of Pomeroy.
A divorce action has been granted to Evelyn 0, Barber from James
E. Barber.

LiteiiSe issued

A marriage license has been
granted in Meigs County Probate
Court to Rollie Douglas Stewart._
45, Pomeroy, and Shirley Charlene
Evans, 40, Racine.

EHS BUS DRIVERS HONORED • The
Eastern Local School District's transportation
department received its grade card Thursday
and that department passed with high honors, as
they received a national sarety award from
Nationwide Insurance ror three years or top perrormance. Pictured are tront, 1-r, transportation
supervisor Arcb Rose, Nationwide representative, Sam E. Fanning, shown presenting the

award, and Eastern Local superintendent or
sci)ools, Mr. Richard Smith. In the background
are the bus drivers: second row-Benny Benedum, Flossie Dill, Bob White; third row-Sandy ,
Cowdery, Ruth Masters, and Carolyn Ritchie.
Back row-Airred Wolre, Dolly Reed, Ellie ,
Bernard, and Bruce Myers. See related story
ror details.

Eastern transportation department earns award
The transportaion department of
the EasLem Local School District
received a national safety award
yes terday fo r a superior driving
record over the last Lhree years,
The award was presented to transportation supervisor Arch Rose by
Sam E, Fanning , Loss Control
Consultant for the Nationwid e
Insurance Company.
Fanning noted, "Eastern Local
has had an excellent driving record
over the last three years, far below
the national average in preventable
accidents as compared to lhe rest of
the controL The average is 8.7 per
million miles traveled and Eastern
is well below that rate."
Criteria for the award is in three
parts: !)The insured must have an
effective accedent-control program
which includes proper selection,

Warning issued
Articles were taken from several
unlocked cars parked on Mulberry
Avenue in Pomeroy overnight
Wednesday, according to Chief of
Police Gerald Rought The police
chief cautionoo motorists to lock
!heir cars when they park litem.

training, and supervision of drivers:
and a good vehicle maintenance
program, 2) They must maintain
for each of a minimum of three
consecutive years a motor trans portation accident rate at or below
the NSC lhree year accident rate as
found in the current issue of"Accident Facts," for the type of operation involved, and 3) They are limited to one Award of Merit per
three years. The group is not eligible for !his award if it has received
either an Honor or Merit award
during the previous three year period.
Three year safety awards arc
basoo on a national average of 8.7
chargeable accidents per million
miles traveled. Eastern has bee far
below the avemge for three years in
a row. This safety reco¢ would be
among the top 10% in the state of
Ohio.
Nationwide, 110 people were
killed in accidents involving school
buses in 1988-89. Of the pupils
killed I 0 were passengers and 30

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

. ''

~.

0

were pedestrians just getting on or
off the bus,

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
THURSDAY ADMISSIONS Linda Pridemore, Pomeroy , and
Max Folmer, Sr., Long Bottom,
THURSDAY DISCHARGES William Smith, Louis B. Vaughan
and Floyd Brown.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Sept. 26 - Mrs.
Sherman Bentley and daughter,
Jodi Best, Megan Daines, Mary
Malone, Christy McCarter, Marlin
McCorkle, Mrs. Timothy Patton
and daughter, Mrs. James Scott an~
son, Eileen Spriggs and Mrs_ Brian
Well and son.
Births, Sept. 26 - Mr. and Mrs.
James Taylor, a daughter,
McArthur. Mr. and Mrs. Jamie
White, a daughter, Oak Hill . Mr.
and Mrs, Keilh Wood, a son, Long
Bottom.

IUO
BARGAIN MATINEES SATURDAY I
BARGAIN NIGHT TUE SDAY

IJ, 00
S U~DAY

COLONY THEATRE

ON( IVlNING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION S1.50
416-0923

ARE YOU A RESIDENT OF MEIGS COUNTY?
IN ORDER TO VOTE IN DE NOVEMBER I, 1881,
GENERAL ELECTION, YOU MUS,. I I REGISTERED
BY OCTOBER 7, 1881.
VOTE AT YOUR OWN ·PRECINCT AND AVOID LONG LINES AT THE BOARD
ON ELECTION DAY BY CHANGING YOUR ADDRESS (IF YOU HAVE MOVED
WITHIN THE COUNTY) OR IF YOU"1tAYE"'(HANGED YOUR NNI_E, BY
UPDATING YOUR REGISTRATION BY OCTOBER 7, 1991.
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE, YOU MAY TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR EXTRA
HOURS.
,o
PERMANENT BRANCH LOCATION: POMEROY PUBLIC LIBRARY
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 9:00a.m. till 9:00p.m.
SATURDAY
9:00 a.m. till 5:00 p.m.
SUNDAY
1:00 p.m. till 5:00 p.m.
ALSO REGISTER ON THE MEIGS COUNTY BOOKMOBILE AT IT'S
DESIGNATED STOPS.
THE BOARD OF ELECTIONS OFFiCE WILL BE OPEN ON SATURDAY,
OCTOBER 5, 199.1, 8:00A.M. TILL 12:00 NOON AND ON
MONDAY, OCTOBER .7I 1991 I 9:00 A.M. till 9:00 P.M.
For aay additionallafor•atloa, call 992·2697 or stop by our office at 101
Mechanic St"et, PoMeroy,

0"•·

,,

\ I

�.,

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

.
I

'

where we want to be basically, but
we should have won last week.
This week will be our hardest
game, after that I'd almost guarantee some wins, but we'll have to
work bard. We're also looking forward to Eastern."
We've improved 100%. The
seniors know the program now and
the new people are stepping in and
doing well. We have a good coaching staff and theyrogram is getting
bener each year.
Senior Shane Circle said,
"We've improved a lot over last
year. Having Symmes Valley and
Oak Hill back to back is a bit of a
rough spot, but right now we arc
better than our record shows.
We'll be one of the teams to beat
the last half of the season,"
Southern football bas turned
around after a number of off-seasons. I think we are a team starting
to inake a name for itself, The program is on the upswing. I agree
with Todd that each year we've
been getting a little better and each
year we gain a little more support."
Assistant coach Jeff Baker had
this to say, "I wasn't here Dave's
(Gaul) fust year, but the J;XOsram is
turned around and getung better
each year. We've getting better
prepared athletes and more numbers, which as a ~ult allows us to
get pro~ively better. The kids
are getung locked in and going in
the right direction. They are a good
group to work with. Our outlook
for this season is good despite last
week's let down."
Head coach Dave Gaul commented on this week's opponent,
''This is the best team Oak Hill has
fielded for a while. They had a
tou~ non-league schedule."
' Offensively, the key for us to
be successful to to go out and execute and know our assignments.
Missed assignments and bad breaks
kllled us last week. Defensively we
must control their running game.
They are capable of putting some
points oo the board."
This week Trenton Cleland will
start at quarterback, while newcomer Scou Grace and Russell Sin·
gleton wili share time defensively
at free safety.
"Last week we had too many
missed tackles and missed assignments. W.e just did not execute
well. Hopefully we've got that bad
game out of our system. If we play
hard for four quarters tonight, we
can do well. We are expecting to
play a good hard 5-3 with some
vanations."
"A big factor tonight is that
there will be no travel for us. The
kids like to see that. This should be
a motivational. factor, We need to
get off to a good stari and make
thein play our game."
Both games begin at 7:30.
. .

BREAKS TACKLE- UCLA running back Shawn Wills (37)
breaks the tackle or San Diego State defender Lou Foster (43) on his
way to the end zone from four yards out in the second quarter of
Thursday night's game in San Diego, Calif., which the visiting Bruins wun 37-U. (AP)

UCLA posts 37-12 win

over San Diego State
By BERNIE WILSON
AP Sports Writer
SAN DIEGO (AP) - With its
annual victory over San Die~o
State in hand, UCLA turns lls
attention toward regaining some
prominence in the Pacific-tO Conference.
Sophomore Tommy Maddox
threw for 303 yards and two touchdowns and scored once himself as
UCLA routed San Diego State 3712 Thursday night, the Bruins' lith
straight win over the Aztecs.
The Bruins lead the series 14-01, including eight consecutive victories since it was resumed in 1984.
The tie was in 1924. San Diego
State (2-2) committed four
turnovers, three of which set up
UCLA touchdowns.
While the Bruins have dominated San Diego State, they haven't
dominated the Pac-10 recently, finishing ninth in 1989 and in a sixth-

All-Star Circuit
of Champions race
slated for Sunday

::1l.-AC BIg
• "est champs may
• .Las·
1get new bowf··st•te·rn

place· tie last year.
"I think this was an important
game in that it gives us a 2-1 non•
conference record," UCLA head
coach Terry Donahue said. "If we
lay preny good in the conference,
think we have a chance maybe to
get into the conference race and
catch some fire."
The Bruins had a week off following their 30-16 loss at Tennessee. That gave Maddox a
chance to rebound from his
mediocre performance, which he
did by using rollouts and bootlegs
to counter the Aztecs • defense and
complete 17 of 26 passes, with one
interception. Additionally, nine
Bruins carried the ball and II
receivers caught passes. UCLA
outgained SDSU, 644-322.
The Bruins led only 10-0 at
halftime on Louis Perez's 23-yard
field goal and Kevin Wills' 4-yard
run. Two other touchdowns were
called back due to penalties.
Maddox gave the Bruins a 17-0
lead when he rolled left and scored
from eight yards out with 4:57 left
in the third quarter. That capped a
96-yard, 11-play drive in which
Maddox was 4-for-4 for 50 yards.
On the next play from scrimmage, cornerback Carlton Gray
intercepted San Diego Slate's Cree
Morris. Maddox lost six yards on
the Bruins' first play, but then
found Bryan Aclams alone on a ny
pattern for a 58-yard scoring pass
and,a 24-0 lead with 3:52left in the
period.
Maddox was picked off by
defensive back Damon Pieri at
midfield with 30 seconds left in the
third quarter. David Lowery, who
replaced Morris, led the Aztecs to
the UCLA two , where freshman
Marshall Faulk went over on fourth
down. Lowery's conversion run
failed. Faulk, who set the NCAA
single-game rushing mark two
weeks ago with 386 yards against
Pacific, finished with 79 yards on
15 carries.
On second-and-goal from the
San Diego Slate five, Maddox was
flushed from the pocket but completed a two-handed shovel pass to
tight end Brian Allen with 8:07
left.
Lowery fumbled while scrambling and Maddox's replacement,
Jim Bonds, threw a five-yard TD
pass to Maury Toy with 5: 181eft.
SDSU had only a few ·days of
practice after losing 21-20 at Air
Force on Saturday.
Morris completed just eight of
23 passes for 98 yards and was
intercepted twice. Lowery was 4for-13 for 71 yards, including a 26yard scoring pass to Darnay Scott
with 3:281eft.

f

I

I

I

· ~ales

2M Condor 11.

th

-~ville

The Annual National Hunting and Fishing Day, sponsored by the
Ken Amsbary Chapter of the Izaak Walton League, will be held
Saturday, SepL 28 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
The event will be held at its new location at the Izaak Walton
Club House, two miles past the Boy Scout Camp on Scout Camp
Road. Signs will be posted.
Admission will be charged but a free lunch will be provided.
There will be events for men and women, children and adults,
including displays and demonstrations on gun safety, turkey calling,
taxidermy, 22-rifle shoot, fishing, archery, trapping, canoeing,
reloading, black powder, ttap shooting and coon hounds.
A prize will be awarded at 3 p.m. and the winner, age 18 and
under, must be present to win.

BBYFL to start action Saturday
The Big Bend Youth Football League kicks off its 1991 season
with two games on Saturday, Sept. 28th at 6 p.m. Southern High
School.
The first game will put the Home National Bank Mustangs
against the Veterans Memorial Hospital Dolphins, The Mustangs
are coached by Tom Smith, while the Dolphins are coached by
Andy Vaughan.
The second game will stan around 7:30 and will have the D.D.
Blake Construction Browns against the Pleasers Eagles, Perk Ault
will coach the Browns and Rick Keams will coach the Eagles.

Middleport Volleyball Tournament
slated for Sunday
The Middleport Volleyball Tournament will be held on Sunday
beginning at II a.m. at the volleyball court in General Hartinger
Park. Teams from Middleport, Pomeroy, Rutland and Gallipolis
will participate in the tournarnent, which is sponsored by the Middl~rt Recreation DepartmenL

Cincinnati posts 8-0 win ·
over Atlanta Thursday
By TOM SALADINO
AP Sports Writer
.
A1LANTA (AP)- Ron Gant
insists the Atlanta Braves are not
dead, although it appeared that way
against Jose Rijo.
The Braves, with a chance to
pick up ground on the idle Los
Angeles Dodgers in the NL West
race, instead gave up six unearned
runs and Rijo held them scoreless
for seven innings Thursday night in
an 8-0 thrashing.
The loss, the fourth in five
games for the Braves, dropped
them two games behind the
Dodgers with nine games remaining for both clubs.
.
Rijo (15-5) scattered eight hits,
walked three and struck out seven.
He was especially tough on Gant,
who left eight runners stranded in
going 0-for-4.
" He threw me good pitches,"
said Gant, who leads the Braves
with 31 home runs and 99 RBls.
"He's a good pitcher and he's hot
now."

" I made the best pitches of the
night to Gant," Rijo said. "He's
their toughest hitter and I respond
better to the good bitters."
Despite the Braves' recent
slump, Gant remains optimistic
about their chances of ovenaking
the Dodgers.

"It's just another loss. We've
been coming back all year long,"
he said. "We'll be there at th ~
end.''

The Braves open a three-game
series tonight in Houston while the.
Dodgers host San Francisco in the,
opener of a three-game set.
. ··

''Sure.we: hav~~

Dodgers have to lose s&lt;ime-:".'Thai's~
obvious," Braves mana~er Bobby
Cox said. "We're runnmg out of
games. What we need to do is put a
little win streak together.''
In the only other NL action,
(See NL on Page S)

-

O'DELL LUMBER
September Special! ·
..Off the Saw• Chains Oaly

CHAIN SAWS.
· SHARPENED

93
.......... 79
....... 73
Plllladdphia ....... 73
OUoaao
......... 12
Sll.oulr

60
74
79
80
79
......... 61 14

Pd.

GB

.608
.516
.480
.477
.477
.447

14
19.l
211
211
2A.l

W...,.Dhlllon
Two
WLP&lt;t.GB
Loo Anplco ...... 81 65 .l7l
A......
........... 86 67 .562
2
Sao l&gt;ioio ........ 78 75 .510
10
Clnd ... U · - · 73 It A77
15
Sao FtoncUco ...... 71 82 .464
17
HOUlton
......... 62 91 .405
26
-.-dinchod divil:icn tille..

Thursday's scores

.......

Piulblqh 4, New Yozk 3, IS inninaa.

Now Yak 2. Piuaburah 1, 2nd samo

games

Saa Dioto arm 7-5) I t Cincinn.ti
(Scudder 6'7~ •35 p.m.
Moouoal (o..Jo., 9·10) " Piwburgh
(Smilh 16'10), 7•35 p.m.
Philadelphia (De.Juua 10.7) at New

·

I

99(

O'DELL LUMBER
634 E. Mala St., Pameroy, OH. ·
992·5500

W1ek1nd Sp1Dial1
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1991
FISHTAIL SANDWICH PLAnER...............13.19

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Qu1rttrbadu ·

AlL Cmp. VIII. TD Int.
Kelly,Bul!........ll4 1071341 I I l
Elway, Ocrs ....... ll7 69 972 4 1
Kooar, 0.. ....... 116 70 740 • 0
Mom, u.......... 152 89 106&lt;1 6 3
0.0..., lnd ...... .14l 94 967 3 3
Player

Ruhen
AIL Yell. Avs- LC TD

Player

Thornu, Buff...... 61

311

mw.MU .......... 94
o-.,O... ......... U
Oko,., K.C ......... 66
Pinkou, Hw ........ 73

311

Yod&lt;(Sch...,..4.0), 7&gt;40p.m.
At11Dt.l (Glavino 19·11) l l Houaton
(llowm 5-4).1•35 p.m.
Chh~•ao (CaniUo 6-6 ) at St. Loui•
(fowbbouy 10.12). 8:35 r ·m.
San Pruicilco (Black I -15) ot Loo An·
aelor(Bdeber9·9),10:35 p.m.

Saturday's aames

Philadelphia (Brantle)' 1-2) at New
Yod&lt;(Y""'!lZ-l~ !:o40 p.m.
Allaata (Mercter S-3) at Houston (Ju-

5 .7

33

I

3.9 ~
360 4.3 63
32A 4.9 41
llA 4.4 31

2
3

2
3

Reeelnn
No. Yell. Ava. LG TO
lolwoo, Ind. ...... 30 211 9.4 ~
0

Player

Bladea,Sca. ... ..-.29

Cinchtnati I, Alhnta 0

To~ht's

NFL leaders

417 14.4 47

2

ThCIOIU, Bul!...... Z7 Uli 10.0 50
Rood, Bull.......... 26 367 1•.1 l4

2

Dickcnon, lnd .... 26

173 6 .7 26

l
1

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Quanerbadu
Player

AIL Cmp. Yda. TD Int.

Y"'"'1,S .f....... 116

78 Jill!

Hubouah.OU.. IIJ

73 863

l

2

McMAhon,Piill.ll9
Aikman, Dall. .. .l~

l9 714
76 923
74 771

l
4

3
l

l

l

R)pion, Wuh ....91

I

2

RUJhen

Player
AIL Ydl. Av&amp;- LG TD
E. Sntith, Dal!. ....79 450 5.7 7!
3

8)ncr, Wuh ....... 79 368 4.7 25

2

B. Sanden, Det. .. IO

3

364

4.6 42

Walker, Minn..... 80 298

3.7 23

I

Dc1pino. Run~ ....70

3.8 36

4

269

d&lt;ll (). 1), 2:05 p.m.
Chictao (Midctux. 13·1O) u St. Louia
(l!iiii0-10~ 2:15p.m.
Saa Pnncilco {WilJon 11·11) at Los
Anooloo (Ma.u-17·11), !&gt;IS p.m.
t'"u Dlep (Meleada 6-5) at Clncln·
naU (Browolnal4-12), 7:15 p.JL

Recelven
No. Yell. Ava.
Bunott, Pltil... ..... 21 303 14.4
Rico, S.f............. l9 4lll 21.4
ewt. Wuh........ l9 260 13.7

Mcatroll (N"abhob 7 -7) at Pituburgb
(llnbok ll-13), 7:35p.m.

Q ui;, Del. .......... 18

Player

Bym, Phil .......... l8

LG TD

7l

2

73
38
251 13.9 37
2!1 13.9 36

6
2
2
0

Transactions

Sunday's aames
Mc:nr.l .. Pmtbwah, 1:35 p.m .

Baseball

PhiladGJfh1a at Now"YOlk, 1:40 p.m.
S.olllop al Clodanat~ 2:15 p.m.
OUcapet SL Lou.ia, 2:15p.m.

open the inning. c·hris Sabo
knocked one run in with a forceout,
Martinez hit a sacrifice ny and Joe
Oliver had a two-out, two-run single off reliever Pete Smith.
The Reds added two unearned
runs in the ninth on an error by
Terry Pendleton and Sanders' fJCSt
major league homer.
Pirates 4, Mets 3
Mets 2, Pirates 1
Don Slaught doubled home the
go-ahead run in the 15th inning of
the opener as Pittsburgh won the
longest game of the season for both
teams. The second game at Shea
Stadium staned at 10:04 p.m. and
New York won on Howard John son's sacrifice fly in the eighth

inning, his league-leading 11 2th
RBI.
Barry Bonds singled to stan the
15th and Slaught followed with a
hit-and -run double off Wally
Whitehurst (7 -12). Both team s
scored in the 14th, the Pirates on
Lloyd McClendon's infield single
and the Mets on pinch hiuer Todd
Hundley 's fust major league home
run . Bill Landrum (3-4) was th e
winner.
The NL East champion Piraies
rested all of their regulars except
Steve Buechele and Jose Lind in
the second game. Pittsburgh starter
John Smiley , seeking his 19th win.
left after five innings when he was
hit by Gregg Jefferies' comeback-

er. Smil ey sustained a bru ise,
which was not described as serious.
Tim Burke (6-7) was the winner
and John Franco got his 28th save.
Roger Mason (3-1) was the loser.

Sports briefs
NEW YORK (AP) - Pent- ·
house magazi ne reported in its
November issue that Don Zimmer
bet $3,000 to $5,000 weekly on
football and basketball gam e~
whil e he wa s manager of the
Chicago Cubs.
Zimmer, fi red by the Cubs early
th 1s season. said that he was questioned by commissioner Fay Vincent last winter and believes ht;'s in
fine slanding with baseball.

EMPIRE FURNITURE
MUST REDUCE ITS

% MILLION DOLLAR INVENTORY
SALE
HALF 70%
BY

ENTIRE INVENTORY
ON

UP
TO

OFF

American Luaue
DIITROIT TIGERS - Prom..... ),.

Atlantlat Houam, 2:lS p.m.
San Pranc:ilc:o at l..ol An ad ea. I :OS p.m

ry Walkr.r, •pecial auignmr:nt Jcoul, to

aatonlmonop.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS - Ap·
pointed Joe Klein tpechl usianmcnt
Kout for the major lequCI and ClaiiCI

AAA and AA , and promoted Stcv.e

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Tum
TCII'OOlo

laolemDI.won
W L PeL
......... BS 68 .556
82 . 70 .539
........... 71 74 .513
...... 74 71 .490
....... 6l 87 .421
........ 64 88 .421
· -· 5l " .344

u..... . ... .
Dobolt
Milwaukee
Now Ycidt
Bal!imoni
Cleveland

Weltern DMaJon
Tllll'l
W L Pet.
Minnoada
....... 91 61 .599
Chicaao
........ 83 69 .546
Olkland

......... 81 72 .529

Tu.a

........... 80
Kanau City ....... 71
Sciaulo
........... 76
California ......... 76

72 .S26
75 5 10

Schryver,lpCCial Ulignment acout. lO di-

GB
2.l
6.5
I0
19.J
20.5
ll
GB
1
IO.l
11
l!.l

76 .SOO

IS

77 .491

ll.l

Thursday's scores
Baltimaro 6, 8011.on S, 2nd aarne
Bwtllrll.Baltimuo l , lat game

Delroll I, Cle,.land S
Milwallkoo '-New Yo.dr: 2
Kanau City 3, California l

TonJ&amp;bt's games
Cle~elaM

Baltimore (Rhode• 0 -3) at Detroit
(fomlll2-12), 7:3.! pm.
MimCIIOta (Tapani 16-8) at Toronto
(Juan 0ozman 1·2), 7:35 p.ttt.
Soattlo (Flemina 1-0) u Chicaao
(McDowell 17-10),1 •0'5 p.m.
CaUfornia (MeCa•kill 1 0· 18) al

Kanau City (S.bedtaam 12-8), 1:0! pm.
801toa (Mol'lon 6-3) It Milwaukee
(Baoio 13-10),1:05 p.m.

Ten• (JOK Guzman 12-6) at Oak·
land (Datlina 3-l). I 0:35p.m.

Saturday's ~ames
Baltimore (Muuina 4·5) at Detroit
(Ou!lickiiOill9-9),1•15 p.m.
New Y«k (Johnroo S.ll) al Clo•ellod (HIUeau 3-4), t :35 p.m.
MinnCIIOCI (Morril 11· 12) It Tormto
(Candioai I 3-12), I :3l p.m.
Boun (0~ 9-1) 11 Milwaui.oc
(Navuro 13-12), 2:35 p.m.
Tclll (Fajardo 0 -l) at Oakland
(SIOWUt 11-10),4:05 p.m.
SMtlle (Holman 13-14) at Chic•ao
(Hibbu&lt;IIO.ll), 7:05p.m.
California (Finely 17-9 ) at Kan•a•
City (Aquino 1· 3), I :OS p.m.

Sunday's pmes
NIIW York at CICYeland, 1:35 p.m.
Baltimcnat Dc:croiL, 1:15 p.m.
MianCIOLIII TOIOIII.o., 1:3S p.m.
Soa1\lc at Cbi~,l:3S p.m.
Califcmia 11 ICaiUU City, 2::\S p.m.
Ba.ton a1 Milwaukee, 2:3S p.m.
Te~.u al OUiand, 4:0!5 p.m.

Upcoming NFL games
Sunday

f'"·

Tam~ Bay 1t Detroit. 1
New OrloanJ 11Atlanta. p.m.
New Yod Oiantaal Dallu, I p.m.
San francbco 11 Lo• Anaele•
Raidcn, 4 p.m.
Orccn Bay at Lor Anaclea Ranu, 4

.
lndian•poli.lat Seaalc, 4 p.m.
Xanau City at San Dieto· 4 p.m.
Miami at New Yodr: Jell, 4 P.IJ'I·
New Eapnd at A.or.ni1. 4 p.m..
o.tver at MinaMota. I p.m.
OPBN DA TB: Cincinnati, Clcn-

p~ .

llod, - · PilubwJlo

or \he minor league lystem .

MILWAUKEE

BREWERS

-

Named Joe Eanon genenl mantger of
Hc.l~:na in lhc PianCCI Luau e.

Basketball
Natlonal Bukelball AJJoclallon
OUCAOO Btii.LS - Signed Marlr.
Randall, forward, IO a one-year contnct.
WASHINOTON BULLETS s p Wca Uwcld, ro~ch , to I threc-yeu

'"'"'10&lt;1.
Football
National FootbaiiiAaaue
CINaNNA11 BENGALS - Waind
Carl Carter, (;Omorbac.k. . Pla ced Rod
Jonc~, comcrb.ck, on injured raerve.
NEW YORK OIANTS - Pl 1ced
Erik Howard, I'IOIC tickle, on injmed reaerve. Sianod

Ores MCU.ner, nO&amp;e ucklc.

Rcleued"Jerey Bouldin, wide reciever,
from Jho J"'diCO I&lt;JUid.

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS- P!oced
Ron Lowil. wide receiver, on injured n&gt;
KrVC. Rc-&amp;igncd Jim Burt, n01c tackle.

OaklancllO, Tcut 0

New York (Peru l...C) al
(Swtodtll f-14), 7:35p.m.

RICCor

Hoc:key

OUR MASSIVE SELECTION OF
BEDROOM, DININGROOM &amp; LIVING
ROOM SUITES ALONG WITH THE
TABLES, DINETTES, LAMPS,
RECLINERS,
MATTRESSES MUST BE
REDUCED.

NOW!

QUALITY FURNITURE
By

FLEXSTEEL, BASSETT, WEBB, KINCAID,
LEA. QUALITY, IMPERIAL,
COUNTY, COROLLA CLASSICS,
UNIVERSAL,
SPRING-AIR,
RESTONIC, BRYANT,
PIONEER •

3/4

MILLION
DOLLAR

N1tlD11tl Hockey I.Aiaue
BUFFALO SABRES - Auijned
David Liuman, aoahender; Peler
Oava&amp;Ua and Bob Coawn, center~ ; and
Joel Savaac and Jiri Sejba, forwards, to
Rocbclter of lhc 4mcrican Hockey
t.oaau~

CHICAOO BLACKHA WKS Traded Mike DaJmaU, defcn1cman, to
tho QuobM: Nordiquc. for Ryan McGill,
ddcnacman.
DIITROIT RED WINGS - s..,, Bill
McDou•all and Mike Sillinaer, centen,
and DWel Shank. Sheldoot Kcnn...ty,lim
Cumm.int: and Ken QuiMey, riahl winp ,
lO Adirondack of tho Amc:rie.~n Hockey
t.oaau~

MINNI!SOTA NORTH STARS Auipod Steve Ouc:ncuo. .oalie, to Kala·
muoo of 1he lnternauonal Hockey
Loaauo; Rod Houk, goalie, and Brian
Stnub, dcfenaeman, to San Diego of the
IIU..i and Mike Rmer, cenur, to Oay1m of
lho Eaa1 ColA Hockey l.elpe.
N1!W .JI!RSEY DEVILS - Satt Neil
Bn~dy, cat\cr; Jamie Hl.lKroft, dcfCMeman; and Valeri ZelopUin, left wina. to
Ucica ollhe Americu)Jockey Leasuo.
NI!W YORK RANGERS - Sign...!
Tun K=. rixht wina.
SAN J6SE SHARKS - Signed P11
Fallooti, ri&amp;}tt wi.nJ.. to a multiyear con·
tracL Aaaiancd Mike Colman and Dean
Kolltad. defenacmen. and John Caner,
Pde Lappin and Jeff Madill, forwuds, to
Kanua City of the International Hockey
Loape

FALL HARDY MUMS

. 7 6%-8" POTS
Asst. Colors - '1.35

ea.

00

8/'10
HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
Syracuse, OH.
992-sns
OPEN DAILY 9-5
CLOSED SUNDAY

SWISHER LOHSE
· ' :~. PHARMACY IS NOW
ACCEPTING
ale AND
FOR OUR .(OSTUMERS'
CON·VENIENCE

FINANCING
OR
5°/o OFF FOR CASH
OTHER TYPE FINANCING
AVAILABLE
8 MON,HS SAME AS CASH
10 PAYS SAME AS CASH
NO PAYMEN' FOR 8 MON,HS
MISMATCHED

MAftRESS OR FOUNDA,ION

4,... EA. PC.

ftVIN 8

FULL .,.,. EA. PC.
GUBEN*I~u. PC.
SOLD 1111!1 OILY

Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy, Broccoli with Cheese Sauce,
Hot Buttered Roll, Small Drink or Coffee
NEW HOURS: Open 10:00 to 8:00

.....,............,

l'orheroy, OH.

t==lill '

9 AJL.S P.M.
.
S.t.·t Ul.·1 .....

·e

· ~THE .'.­

.''GRAVELY
8Y8TIM .
'.

•;

. . ._. .

W L

Pittsburgh and New York split a
doubleheader, the Pirates winning
the opener 4-3 in 15 innings and
the Mets coming back 2-1 in the
second game.
Atlanta starter Charlie Leibrandt
(15 -12) was locked in a scoreless
game and had retired the first I 0
Reds before the roof fell in. The
left-bander, who had won his last
six decisions, allowed a single to
Barry Larkin and then a two-out
walk to Eric Davis. Carmelo Martinez then drove in both runners
with a double for a 2-0 lead.
The Reds then iced it with four
unearned runs in the sixth after
Braves shortstop Jeff Blauser bobbled Reggie Sanders' ,~Uounder to

Sprill1 111111 klllj'llr. IIHn

~)iarietta at Ri~~er LOcal
: i'rimblc it Mcip
~~lll'l'ell at Mtadowbroolc
•Pt. Pleasant at Siilonville
:Coal Grove at~
at Nordi.G81lia
: ' thweltern
at Hinnan Ttace
; )'III!IICI V8uey at Kyger Creek
•IJak Hill at SoUthern
:v~nson at wahama
.

~~~----

Philadelphia at Wuhinpcn, 9 p.m.

Chi"'&amp;o 11 Bttffa!D, I p.m.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1991
BAR·B·QUE CHICKEN DINNER...............'4.39

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SAlES &amp; S~RVICE

Coun=hellS

•, inron
:1acbon
at

•-Piarbmth ........

-

French Fries, Choice of Homemade Cole.Slaw, M\lcaronl
Salad or Baked Beans

we

:.Tonight's games
.•.
.•.
•
at Gallipolis

....... .,.......

T-

Marauder boys place fifth
in Jackson Invitational

National Hunting and Fishing
Day scheduled for Saturday

Monday

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Now Ycidt

The AU-Star Cin:uit of Ouunpions sprint cars will invade West
Virginia Motor Speedway at Minera! Wells, W.Va., on Sunday,
Sept. 29 at noon. A large field of
'tiT
cars is expected as the All-Stars
;. fl'.l
'
race at KC Raceway in Chillicothe
4
•
T&lt;
~··~ ·
.on Saturday, Sep• 28,
y~was·"· '"'--··- K'tso"m afi y ·fue nibers of the
•
· 6'
Pennsylvania "Posse" are expected
to be on hand to chase the touring
• TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - A
Nevada-Reno rep-laces Fresno outlaw drivers . This event is
; bowl game between the champions State next season in the Big West,
• of the Mid-American and Big West of which UNL V already is a mem- dubbed the first annual "West Virginia Fall Sprint Challenge" and
: Conferences could be moved to Las ber.
will become an annal event. Actual
• Vegas, Nev., the league&amp;' commisl3ig West Commissioner Jim racing events.will begin at 2 p.m.
•• SIOIIClll
.
'd
S81 •
. .
· Hillley told The (Toledo) Blade that
Currently Ricky Hood, former! y
~
Champions from the two a bowl giune in Las Vegas was far
of
Memphis, Tenn., and now from
•. leagues have met since 1981 at the from certain.
Indianapolis,
Ind., is chasing PA
: CaUCornia Bowl in F~na, calif.,
''In terms of a fmal decision, if I driver Frankie Kerr in a close
: home of Fresno State University, were to equate it to a football
• which is leaving the Big West after ~ame, I'd sa~ we're about 25 yards points race.
Then, on Thursday, Oct. 3, the
: this season.
mto our dn ve," Haney told the World of Outlaw Sprints are in
: California Bowl officials have newspaper. "There's a ways to go,
• indicated they probably will end but there is genuine desire to make town for the biggest sprint payoff
ot the year. Outlaw King Steve
; the MAC-Big West arrangement ith
."
Kinser recently won his 300th
; (allowing this year's game on ))e(:,
~feel
the California Bowl WOS victory and bas started a run
• 14.
bas benefitted both conferences and
: ; MAC Commissioner Karl Ben- that it •s im~t thai our relation- for number 400 here lately. Rain
checks from Aug. 8 will be good
; ~n said Thursday that Las Vegas ship doesn t change," he said.
for
the October event only.
• bas expressed interest in having the
· Sponso~ship and other money . Skyline Speedwa1 will close its
: same, ,beginning in December isaues woUld have JO be Completed
gates after this Fnday's season
: ~992.
·and certain NCA.A guidelines ending Skyline 30 paying $1,200
• , "This is exactly what we bad would have to be met before the
for Super Late Models. Racing
! Hoped for, that another site would bowl
game could become a reality, starts at 8:30
• step forward," Benson said. "We he said.
KC Raceway's last sho,w is
; !lave a definite interest in continuThe proposed bowl would have
: ing an arrangement with the Big to rece1ve a waiver from NCAA Septmeber 28 in a run with the All• West that would provide a posiSea- rules that require a minimum pay- Star Sprints, while Portsmouth
: lion.,.opportunity for our football out of $1.6 million per team for a Racway Paik hosts the American
Racing Association Late Models,
: chanlpion."
Division 1-A bowl games.
Saturday, OcL 5.
· A new bowl game probably
"The NCAA always provided
, would be played at the 32,000-seat the Cal Bowl with such.a waiver,"
: Silver Bowl on the campos of the Benson said. "In this situation, I
· University of Nevada-Las Vegas. would hope the NCAA would look
: The Las Vegas Convention and favorably on the two· conferences
: visitors Bureau is leading the ' .and the positions we.' rt hi. whereby
: ~ffort to cqanize the game.
normally have no ·Opportunities
••
for other bowl appearanceS. ••

:;season

In the majors ...

Meigs sports briefs.---.
The Meigs Marauder cross country team recently took part in the
Jackson Invitational.
The boys' team finished fifth out of 17 teams and in doing so
raise their record to 27-4 after three races.
P.J. Chadwell and Nathan Baloy were medalist in the race.
Chadwell finished lith out of 109 runners and Baloy finished right
behind him in 12th place. Other finishers for Meigs included David
Swanson (30th) Chris Sloan (45th) and Bill Toundas (49th). Baloy,
Swanson, Sloan' and Toundas each posted their best personal times
in their career.
In the boys' junior varsity race Philip Edmonds had a ~rsonal
best time of 19:59.9 to finish 12th out of 62 runners, while Joe
McElroy fmished in 20th.
In the girls' race, Heather Franckowiak, who led Meigs wi!Jl a
44th-place finish, was followed by Katrina Turner (46th) and Elizabeth Dowine (48th). Also scoring for the Lady Marauders were
Missy Sisson, April Hudson and Tara Gerlach.
Taking part in the junior high race and running their best times
of the year were Alison Gerlach, Dodger Vaughan and Willie Johnson.

__

Page 4) _____________
NL acti·on .. •___.:_(Continued from__:_....:...._

Scoreboar·d

Page--..:4

·'

The Dally Sentinel-Peg~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1

Thursday, Septem.ber 26, 1991

No. 2 Eastern to face
No. 5 North Gallia
in tonight's matohup
By SCO'IT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
This week's high school grid
headliner finds Eastern traveling to
. North Gallia in the battle of the
undefeated. Southern stays home to
: host tough rival Oak Hill.
. Eastern is ranked second in
·. Division V, Region 19 with 23
points, behind Newark Catholic
·· with 29.5. North Gallia is 5th with
: 13 points, and Southern is 8th with
: II :n points of 35 teams in the
• region.
: Eastern head coach Randy
:. Churilla stated, "Offensively, we
·: did a nice job replacing personnel.
· · We had a need to fill some spots
·:and our young kids had an opportu.: nity to experience success last
; week at Southwestern."
Currently Tun Bissell is not list: ed in the starting, line-up, but he
; shed his sling atiOut midweek and
-: is hungry for action. Only time will
tell.
Defensively, Churilla comment. ed "Our defeosive unit is playing
-: well. SW did a nice job in one
• drive to score. We made a few
; adjustments and our kids handled it
: well."
Listed as keys to this week's
· game, Churilla retorted, "We will
need to be _mentally prepared this
.· week. Coach Dee! bas a fine ball
: club and its shows by NG being 4; 0. Offensively, they are able to do
- different things. We will need to
:-tine up in the correct places. recog; nize our assignments, and play
.football."
. · Commenting on the pressures of
. an undefeated season, he said, "My
; pressure is internal. I strive to be a
: bettu coach and to know all facets
• of the game. As far as team pres:. sure, the team pressure comes from
: outside. People expect them to play
•: well. We want our kids to know
: that we have to prepare every week
; and improve every week. We must
• strive to be the best football team
: on any given Friday night."
: Commenting on tradition and
• the fact that the seniors had won
: the eighth-grade championship,
;~Churilla noted, "I've heard these
~. statements the last two years. It's
:-mce that the people are very enthu•:siastic for this team. These com: ments do not bother me, my goal is
: ti&gt; imporvc our team and play to
• win each week through bard wodc."
: : Defensively last week at Eastern
:.Jeff Durst had 11 tackles, while
•:Mike Hoffman, James McDaniel,
:·and Terry McGuire each had six,
·:wes Holter, Jared Ridenour, Matt
: Bowen, Charlie Bissell and Shane
:James had four each. Mike New~ lind had two interteptions.
,. •
Oak Hill vs. SouthertJ
~ : At Racine, senior Todd Hanison
•:had this to say, "By the end of the
we should be tough. We're
•.

friday, s.ewmber 21, 1991

\•

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

-----------------------·-~~~~
- -":"'T-.;;

.__._._.~_.~

-

~

·-.

-

••

~~

lllfl:f,;O:";~

...... . •· .

~------~~LA.~c~~ ~ ~ ~' ~ ~ '~ ' ~ ~ ~
4

�....

..

"t

\

By The Bend

The .Daily Sentinel
Friday, september 27:,:1991
Page 6

t-F-rld_a~y~,s_e~p_w_m_be~r~27~·~1~99~1~----~--------------------~P~o~m~e~ro~y~~~A~Id~d~le~po~rt~,~O~h~lo~----------------------------Th--e_o~a-ll~y~S~en~t~ln~e-I_P~a~g~e--7__

:

-·.~
~
:':

Tuberculosis is a healthcare threat Cremeans families hold reunion
A series of five articles on tuberculosis, which is on the increase
worldwide, has been prepared by
Joan Tweksbary, R.N., Meigs
County TB nurse.
In her articles she will be
exploring the causes, symptoms
and treatment or the disease.
Tuberculosis is an infectious
disease caused by the rod-shal'ed,
acidfast bacilli, Mycobactenum
tuberculosis. It is transmitted from
person to person by infected
droplet nuclei, which are
amlSOiized droplets of sputum, The
droplets are expelled durin$ talking, laughing, singing, coughing, or
sneezing. When a person inhales
the droplet, the organism is carried
10 the lung. These droplets are very
small and easily carried on air currents. It can auack even the healthiest individual.
Tuberculosis is also transmitted
from infected callle to humans
through contaminated milk or milk
by-products. Mycobacterium bovis
is the responsible organism in these

cases.

The pasteurization process and
control of disease in catde have virtually eliminated this mode of
transmission in the United States:
however, it still exists in other
countries and you could encounter
a patient who has picked it up
abroad.
Infectious diseases IOday rarely
cause the epidemics of centuries
gone by. Immunization has drastically reduced the incidence of
many illnesses once considered
common, and modern drugs usually
cure or at least control outbreaks
before they get out of hand.
Despite these advances, tuberculosis remains a significant and stubborn healthcare threat. With the
possible exception of measles,
more persons in developing countries die from tuberculosis each
year than from any other pathogen.
The estimated annual number of
deaths from tuberculosis in the
developing world is 2,500,000.
Once known as "Consumption"
or the "White Plague," tuberculosis
has been a health problem since

ancient times. Hippocrates
described the disease in the fifth
century B.C.
Though it is no lon'er the killer
it once was, tuberculosis hasn't disappeared by any means. More than
20,000 cases of tuberculosis were
diagnosed last year in the United
States alone. Many of these
patients won't complete their theraPY, increasing the risk that they will
develop complications or spread
tuberculosis 10 others.
Transmission of infection also
continues.
An
estimated
10,000,000 to 15,000,000 persons
in this country are infected with
tubercle bacilli and carry a lifelong
risk of developing tuberculosis.
Have you had a tuberculosis
skin test recendy7 If you are a positive reactor, when did you have
your last chest x-ray? If you are in
doubt about either, we suggest you
contact the Meigs County Tuberculosis Office at 992-3722 between
the hours of 8 a.m. 10 4 p.m., Monday through Friday.

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appell' two days before au event
aud the day ot that event. Items
must be received weD Ia llllvaDCe
to usure publication in the cal·
endar.

FRIDAY
RUTLAND - Revival at the
Rutl~d Freewill Baptist Church
will be held through Sunday with
Bob Mead the speaker. PasiOr Paul
Taylor invites the public.
REEDSVILLE - The Joppa
United Methodist Church will hold
revival through Sunday with services at 7:30 p.m. nightly. For
homecoming on Sunday, Russell
Spencer and the Southern Hills
Smgers will perform and there will
be a ~-in dinner at 12:30 p.m.
~th singmg at 2 p.m.
~

;•

' BASHAN - The Red Brush
Church of Christ, Bashan Road,
will have special services through
Sunday at 7:30 p.m. nightly and on
Sunday at 10 a.m. Guy Mallory,
Winter Garden, Fla., will be the
s~er. The public is invited to

laen&lt;L
I
POMEROY - The Tuppers
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 and
Ladies Auxiliary will hold a dance
Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. with
music by the CJ and Country Gen-

I'
\'

I

llemen.

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Senior Citizens Dance Club will
have a square dance on Friday from
8-11 p.m. with music by the Happy
Hollow Boys of Athens. Those
attending bring snacks for the
snac1c rable. The public is invited.
LONG BOTTOM - There will
ymn si!lpt the Faith Full
...:
Oauroh m Long Bottom on
y featuring the Dailey Family.
PasiOr Steve Reed invites the public.
'

11;

'

~ 'I

I

SATURDAY
' . LONG BOTTOM - The Long
Bot&amp;om Community Association
will hold a smorgasbord dinner on
Saturday 11 S J.l.m. in lhe Long Botllllll Commuruty Building. Cost is
$5 for adults and $2.50 for children
11nder 12. Desserts and drinks are
iRc:ludcd in the price of the meal.
· RACINE- ••super Saturday,"
sponsored by the Southern Boosters. will be held Saturday at Southem High School. A car show will
llesin 11 10 a.m. and chicken barbe~~~~~ will begin at noon. The cost of
lhe dinner is $4 and includes chick~. green beans, mashed potatoes,

Post announces
jguest speaker
I

: It was announced at the recent
)Reeling of the American Legion
f)rew Webster Post No. 39 that
Bernard Fultz, local attorney and
life member of the post, will be the
~ 11 the Legion birthday dinner on Maich 17, 1992. This cele·
jntion is. a joint venture with the
!'merican Legion Post and the
Ladies Auxiliary of Post 39.
• . Tickets were distributed to
incmbeti present for the fund raiser
ror the beilefit of AmtzicaD Legion
Jlueblll. All members will be out
concluile Ibis·event
It was nolal tbat membership is
225. The local st's quote is
77. It is urged tr.t all present
lncmbcrs pay dues as soon as poslhblc &amp;o insure free disability insurpolicy. ... .
: The next meeting will be held
fuesday at the legion home. Diniler
!WI be at 7 p.m. and meelinJIIl 8
~.m. All members are urged to

~

w

fltend.

.

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slaw, roll and a drink. Desserts are
available at an extra charge of 75
cents. Carry-out orders are available and delivery will also be available for the Racine area only by
calling 949-2817 on Friday. A sale
will begin at S p.m. in which the
1980 State Basketball Champion
uniforms will be sold along with
warm up suits, basketballs, t-shirts
and tennis shoes.
POMEROY - A clean.up day
will be held at the old Sugar Run
School in Pomeroy on Saturday
beginning at 9 a.m. Those wanting
to assist in the clean-up should
bring necessary tools such as rakes,
clippers, weeders, etc.
LOTTRIDGE - Country Music
Night at the Lottridge Community
Center will be held Satruday from
7 p.m. to midnight. All bands are
welcome and refreshments will be
available. The public is invited.
POCA - The Liberty Mountaineers will perform at Poca High
School on Saturday in Poca, W.Va..
The public is invited.
REEDSVILLE - There will be a
special meeting of the Olive Township Trustees on Saturday at 9 a.m.
at the Reedsville Fire House.
POMEROY - "Freaky Friday"
and "A Good Tree" are the movies
to be shown at the Meigs County
Public Library in Pomeroy on Saturday at 2 p.m. and at the Middleport Library on Monday at 7 p.m.

REEDSVILLE -Friendship Day
will be held at the Reedsville Fellowship Church of the Nazarene on
Sunday with Sunday school at 9:30
a.m. and church at I0:45 a.m. Rev.
John Douglas invites the public to
stay for a covered dish dinner following services.
POMEROY - A 12-step AA
meeting will be held every Sunday
at 7 p.m. at lhe JTPA office, 117
West Second Street in Pomeroy.
CHESTER - Revival services
will be held at the New Life
Covenant Church of God at
Chester beginning Sunday. Richard
Blackburn of Nashville, Tenn. will
be the evangelist. He will speak at
the 9:30a.m and 6 p.m. services on
Sunday, and at 7 p.m. on Monday,
Tuesday and Wednesday. Pastor
Gary Hines invites the public to
attend.
MONDAY
PORTLAND - The Lebanon
Township Trustees will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the township
garage.

POMEROY - The Meigs County Veterans Service Commission
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. in
the Veterans Service Office in
Pomeroy.
RACINE · There will be a
Southern Local Chapter I parco t
meeting at the Southern High
School Cafeteria on Monday at 7
p.m.

SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT - "Freaky FriRUTLAND - The Age Level day" and "A Good Tree" are the
and Family Ministry Committee of movies to be shown at the Middlethe Pomeroy United Methodist port Library on Monday at 7 p.m.
Church will host the annual hayride
and wiener roast on- Sunday at 4
p.m. at the George Wright farm.
Bring a lawn chair and potluck
dish.
Terre Wood, daughter of Robert
MIDDI:.EPORT - Middleport
and
Cathie Wood, Long BoliOm, is
Recreation Department Volleyball
among
several Cumberland ColTournament will be held on Sunlege
Students
serving on the Bapday at II a.m. at the volleyball
tist
Student
Union
Council for the
court in General Hartinger Park in
1991-92
academic
year. Miss
Middleport. Teams from MiddleWood
is
the
secretary
on the BSU
port, Pomeroy, Rutland and GalExecutive
Council
lipolis will participate in the tourThe BSU is an active organizanament.
tion at Cumberland College that
ATHENS -The Athens Coun- encompasses a large number of stutians for Opportunity will have its dents who are eager 10 fel!owshiJ&gt;
fall potluck picnic on Sunday with other Christians. The Counctl
beginning at 2 p.m. The public is directs the many campus ministries
invited to attned. Bring food and which fall under the BSU umbrella,
such as choir, revival and drama
drink.
.

Wood to serve
on council

teams.

RACINE · The Eagle Ridge
Community Church will hold its
homecoming on Sunday with a
basket dinner at 12:30 p.m. Afternoon services are at 2 p.m. with the
Bissell Brothers and other singers.
Public is invited.
LET ART - The Lieving reunion
will be held Sunday at the Letart
Community Center following
chlirch.

Wolf Pen area news
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Lavander
and son were Sunday visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Knapp,
Michelle, Amy and Ashley.
Ida Murphy wes a recent visitor
of Mr. and Mis. OWiey Smity.
Mrs. Leslie Frank and Matthew
were Wednesday visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Haning and
Ronald.
Mrs .. Elaine Downs, Eric and
Dickie, Glouster, were recent visitors ofMrs. J.R. Murphy.
Robbie Murphy was a Satwday
overnight guest of his grandmother,
Mrs. lela Murphy.
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Bole are
spending a few days with Mrs. J.R.
Murphy.

Cumberland College, located in
Williamsburg, Ky., is a private
four-year liberal arts institution
which is in its I 02nd year of operation.

The Cremeans family reunion
was held recently Forest Acres
Park in Rutland with 79 attending.
Attending from the Rudand area
were Cheryl and Brian Smilh, Randall Arnold, Carrol Smith, Arthur
and Glennis Musser, Tewcy May.
Dickie Fetty, Roma Cremeans,
Darrin Cremeans, Doris Richmond,
Dan and Barbara Cremeans, Derek
Cremeans, Kris Chadwell, Tommy
and Shirley Simmons, Lisa and
Alisha Compson, Kenney Zuspan,
Maude Smith, 'f!leodore Cremeans,

CLIFTON, NJ. (AP) -If your
piano is out of tune - or the action
isn't quite right - the cause could
be clothing moths, according to a
mothproofing company.
The felt sections of hammers in
pianos can be attacked by the larvae laid by clothing moths and
cause severe dama$e, explains Mel
Appelbaum, pres1dent of Excell
Products Corp., of Clifton, NJ.
Simply siOring a small bag of
mothballs inside a piaRIJ should
solve the problem, be notes.

Arnold's family
says little on child
abuse allegation

ML Union Bopllsl
Putor: Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School -9:45 Lm.
Evening · 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service•- 6:30p.m.

ML Moriah Baptist
Fourth&amp;. Main St., Middleport
PaalOr. Rev. Gilbert Craia, Jr.
SIDlday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:4S a.m.

Featuring Homes Such As This Patriot Heather Glen
(Approximately 1320 Square Feet)

.,

Aallqulty Baptist
Putor. Kennelh Smilh
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wor1hip. 10:45 a.m.
Thunday Servia" -7:30p.m.
Rullancl Fr&lt;e Will Baptist
Solan St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School- to a.m.
Evenins · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servica -7 p.m.

UUJMU0.\1
Ll\l~G

IIVU\1
lll '- Ll'

II '·J·

II

AJh Street Freewill Bapllsl
Middl rt
Sunday SchooOJf. 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.
Wednesday Service -7:30p.m.
Sa01rday Service .7:30p.m.

The PERI Group will meet
Thursday at 1 p.m. at the Meigs
('ounty Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy. All members are urged to
auend.

Catholic

WAS .........................-.......... ~0
REDUCED TO ................... $~

Church of Christ
Pomeroy Ch•rds of Christ
212 w. Main St.
PallOr: Andrew Mile•
SIDiday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - !0:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Servicea -7 p.m.

NOW .....................$31 ,870

t fet 1 S~lll

This home is loaded with outstanding feawres such as: Premium provincial
~inyl lap siding, Y.' wood siding underlayment, 2x6 sidewalls with At g
Insulation in the walla and ceiling, 1.11" on center In the roof lull ts• eaves
slel!f midenllal nine panel ~ wilh deadbolll on the fronl &amp;rear, aoid oak
ca~1net doots and styles, l\• rebond carpel pad, sculptured shag carpeting
painted mono walls, 6 panel interior doors, fireplace and much, mUCh more. '

SHRIMP••••••••.' .99 .

354 fill M1i1 St.
, PGMIIOY
. 61 ...92-.62..

Sacred H11rt Catholic Church
161 Mulbeny Ave .. PC111eroy, 992·"98
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz
Sat Coo. 4:45·S :lS p.m.; Ma11 ·5:30p.m.
Sun. Coo.- 8:4S-9:15 ~.m. ,
Sun. Mall · 9:30a.m.
Daily Mau - 8:30a.m.

LIST PRICE. ...................... ~O

•

CHECK OUR WEEKLY SPECIALS

•••

Hope Baptist Chapel
S70 Grant St, Middleport
Pastor: David Bryan, Sr.
SUilday School - 10 a.m.
Wor&gt;htp · II a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

PERI to meet

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 291~
ON OUR PARFAIT SUNDAE
Bty Ole Parfait S.1dai aad Get O.t FREEl

'

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Bethlehem Bapllst
Pastor: Rev. Earl Shuler
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 9:30a.m.
Thur&gt;day Servicea - 7:30 p.m.
' . Gld'Delhe Free :Witlllopllst Church
28601 St RL 7, Middlepon
Sunday School - I0 a.m.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Thursday Service~ · 7:30p.m.
Hillside Baptist Church
SL RL I 43 j,.t off Rt. 1
PUler. Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
SUilday School · I0 a.m.
Wor1hip - It a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Services -7 p.m.

Filth Bapllst Church
Railroad St., Maaon
SIDlday School • I0 a.m.
Worship· II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Forest Run Bapdst
PastOf: Rev. Nyle Borden
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 2:30p.m.

Pl~s. you get delivery &amp; set-~p. concrete footers, vinyl
sk1rbng, up to 20 ft. ,of matenal for each utility hookup,
one set of steps w1th 4x4 deck and tie downs at no
additional cost*

·

Putor: Steve Deaver
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:40 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.
Sliver Run Baptist
Pastor. Bill Linle
Sunday School · to a.m.
Wo11hip ·II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedne1&lt;1ly Service&amp;· 7:30p.m.

1991 Model Clearance Sale

Wit.

614·tU~5241

Racine Fll'lll Bapdst

Vldorr Bapllst
525 N. 2nd SL, Middtcpon
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Wor1hip • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Services · 7 p.m.

MONDAY AND TUESDAY EVENINGS AFTER 4 PM
Featna FREE S•l Salatl
Ynr Dlwr
Dinners lndude loll"and a OJIIKe of Two: French Fries, Baked Bem~ Slaw.

.....

Middleport First Bapllsl
Comer Sixlh &amp;. Palmer
Pastor: Rcv.Junc1 A. Scddoo
SIDlday School- 9:1S a.m.
Worship- 10:15 a.m.
Wedneaday Servi~;ea · 7 p.m.

Mei!JS High School. Frances Hunnel 1s constitution and by-laws
chairman, and Isabelle Couch in
national security, civil defense and
legislation chairman.
A budget report will be made at
the next meeting.
Mrs. Hysell announced the
Eighth District Fall Conference
will be held Oct. 3 at the American
Legion Home in Middleport. Registration is at 9 a.m. and the meeting will last all day with lunch
served by the post auxiliary. Reservations must be made in advance
and the cost is $5.
All department officers will be
present and Eighth District President Sharon Squires, Wells10n, will
be giving the instruction for this
year's program.
All American Legion Auxiliary
members in the county are urged. 10
attend:
Several from the unit plan to
attend.

~

COLE'S MOBILE HOMES
located 5 Milts East of-Rt. 33
On. Rt. 50 East, Athens 592·1972

Pomeroy Welllkle Church of Chrlsl
33226 Oilldmt'• Home Rd.
992-3847
Sunday School · II a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a._m., 6 p.m.
Wedneodily SemCd ·7 p.m.

1

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II

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I

I

. . . . . . . . . .\ . . . . . . . . . . . . .
, .. . . . . . . . . . . .~i ~

Tuppon Plains Church or Christ
Pastor: Roben Foncr
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wo11hip . 9:45 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Deller Church or Christ
Pastor. Roger Watson
SIDlday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · to:JO a.m.
Wedneoday Service&amp; · 7 p.m.

Pom..-oy Flrst Baptist
East Main St.
Pastor: St.c:vc Fuller
SIDlday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -!0:30a.m
Wcdneaday Scrn.c:et - 7.30 p.m.
Flrst Southern Baptist
41812 Pomeroy Pike
Patter: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
WOfship · 10:4S a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

F fOil MIE lOOlUMI Rill A IIICI, OlDfii08IIE, NtmAC, CAWIUC
8IIC JJfiD, Oil TOYOTA... CW. .liE .WAIIfHDIISE AI DOll WOOIJf SHOP
ar PHOiff, ll'l wr_ Mr llfCI ., JJE PHOfff, DEft~~&amp; JHE
Vflfa£ fOIII LOOIUNS FOil, AIID 8Er llfADf R1ll A GRfA1 DfAU

the TV series "Roseanne," said in
a speech Saturday that her parents
physically and sexually abused her
while she was growing up in Salt
Lake City. Her audience of about
1.100 people included incest survivors, !heir friends and counselors.
Her brother, Ben Barr, has IOid
reporters, "We have some problems with dysfunction in our family, and we're trying 10 deal with it
... Roseanne has chosen to deal
with it in this way.
··she has not been in touch with
me or my family, and I see no reason to discuss this with the press at
this time."

•••food ami Salad Nflht

-

Rulland Flrst Bopllst Church
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- !0:45a.m.

Revival at the Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene, Route
124, Reedsville, will have revival
Tuesday through Oct. 6 at 7 p.m.
nightly with special singers each
evening. Nursery is available for
pre·school children age five and
under. Pas10r John Douglas invites
the public.

·-~~. ~ 38-year.otihitai.bf

•

a... 1111 ihllll Pkwy

Free Wltl Baptist Church
Ash Suut, Middleport
Pastor: Mark Morrow
Saturday Service-7:30p.m.
Sunday School - tO a.m.
Wonhip · 11 a.m.,
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

D/16 ,.,., . , . ,

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) Comedian Roseanne Arnold's parents said they were hurt and disappointed by her allegations she was
molested during childhood.
But Jerome and Helen Barr
refused 10 comment further, saying
they were preparing a statemenL
"We've been advised by counsel not to say any more until the
statement is ready," Mrs. Barr
said. The couple did not say when

Bradbury Church of Christ
Putor. Tom Runyon
SIDlday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.

Baptist

Fall conference Oct. 3

Moths may
untune pianos

Zloo Ch.un:h of Christ
Pomeroy, Huriaooville Rd. (RLI43)
PallOr: Rober E. Purull
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneoday Serviceo -7 p.m.

Liberty Aaanbly of God
Duddins Lane, Ma101t, W.Va.
Pallor: DanS. Buoo
Sunday Wonhip • 10:30 p.m.
Thunday Services · 7 p.m.

Revival planned

Mica Jones presented a program
on music and led group singing of
Patriotic song at the recent meeting
of the American Legion Drew
Webster Unit No. 39 Auxiliary.
Julia Hysell presided at the
meeting and Catherine Welsh,
chaplain, gave the prayer.
·
Pearl Knapp, sargeant-at·arms,
led the pledge to the flag and
preamble.
Iva Powell, first vice president,
gave the membership report. Wilh
I 02 members the group met goal
on Sept. 20. Five new members
were taken in and one junior member, Mica Jones, became a senior
member and chairman of the junior
activities and music.
Iva Powell, children and youth
chairman, made a motion to support the tuberculosis levy,
Catherine Welsh was appointed
Americanism chairman and she is
to contact the American Legion
about a joint Americanism test in

Bearwallow Rlqe Church of Christ
Pastor. Jack Colegrove
SWlday S~ool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30 p.m.

Assembly of God

Hostesses were Mrs. Dale Out~
ton, Mrs. Paul Eich, Mrs. Thereon
Johnson, Mrs. James O'Brien, Miss
Eleanor Smith and Miss Lucille
Smith.

of the Meigs County Council on
Aging and the new director, Susan
Stewart, at the senior citizens center.
The French Colony Chapter
from Gallipolis extended an invitation to the chapter 10 attend its luncheon to celebrate its 65th birthday
on OcL 12 at the Grsce Methodist
Church. The price is $10.
Nabby Lee Ames Chapter from
Athens invited the chapter 10 attend
a reception at the Sportsman Club
to honor Mrs. Wayne Finer, recording secretary general, Washington,
D.C. This will be OcL 16 at 3:30
p.m. There is no admission charge.

Forty-three members of the
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of the American Revolution, and their guests, met at the
Grace Episcopal Parish House
recendy for a constitution luncheon
honorink Mrs. Joseph L. Colburn,
State Regent, D.A.R. Guests were
from the Nobby Lee Ames Chapter, D.A.R., Athens, and French
Colony Chapter, D.A.R., Gallipolis.
The regent, Anna Cleland, welcomed Mrs. Colburn who spoke on
the six men who signed both the
Declaration of Independence and
the Constitution. They were
George Clymer, Benjamin
Franklin. Robert Morris, James
Wilson, all of Pennsylvania; and
George Reed, Delaware; and Roger
Shermau, Connecticut. Mrs. Colbum selected six ladies to portray
the six signers in an entenaining
and knowledgeable skit.
An announcement was made of
the open house honoring Eleanor
Thomas, retiring executive direciOr

Keno Church of Chrlll
Wo11hip-9:30 am.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

Church or Jesuo Christ Aposlollc
VanZandt and Ward Rd.
Pastor. June• Miller
Sunday School - 10:30 am.
Evenins -7:30p.m.
WednCiday Servicet · 7:30pm.

DAR observes Constitution week

McClure's
Family Restaurant
FISH............'4.99

Church or Jfa111 Christ Apostolic Filth
New Lima Rd, next to FL Meigs Park
Pasto' Robert W. Richanb
SIDlday School · LO a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wcdnelday Services · .1 p.m.

Brittan)! Cremeans, Teressa and
Jay Cremeans, Patty and Michelle
Weaver, Vickie and Jared McKinney.
·
Others attending were Roy Cremeans, Bucyrus; Larry and Domy
Fetty. Galion; Melanie Dudding,
Shade; Charles and Vera Cremeans, Trenton; Mickey, Joyce,
Andrea and Nicole Cremeans,
Huntington, W.Va.; Richard and
Glenna Fetty, Langsville; Victor
and Marjorie Cremeans and grand;
daughter, Bucyrus.

Basil and Kate Cremeans, Ted and
Margaret Cremeans, Danny, Judy,
Mindy, Angie, Danny Jr., and
Tiffany McDonald, Everet, Sherry,
Elizabeth and Philip Smith. Betty
Lake and Robert Smith.
Attending from Middleport
were Karen and Richie Gilkey,
Billy, Debbie, Melissa, B.Q., James
and Elizabeth Cremeans, Luther
and Mary Smith, Debbie Whitlatch,
Paula and Jarrod Ryan Hall,
Charles, Linda, Heather and
Bethany Boyles, John, Tammy and

Mlddlep..-1 Churck ofChrill
5tll and Main
PutOf: A1 Hart""'
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
We&lt;lnesday Servicea -7 p.m.

Apostolic

Rutland Church of Christ
Putor: Eugene B. Uoclerwood
SIDlday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Masoo Church or Christ
Miller St, Muon, W.Va.
SIDlday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
BraMord Church of Christ
St. RL 124 &amp; Cc. Rd. 5
Putor: Derek StlDllp
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · I 0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneoday Service• - 7:30p.m.
Sucua Rood Church or Christ
Pastor: Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wonhip - lO a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednelday Services -7 p.m.

Latter-Day Sa111ts

c•urctJ or J••

Reorp•l:red
Chrtll In
Laller Day Salnll
Portland-Raoine Rd.
Paator: William Roooh
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 am.
Wedn-y Service• · 7:30p.m.

Lutheran
St. John Lutheran Church
Pine Grove
PastOf: uura A. Leach Shreffler
Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Our Saviour Lutber1n Church
Walnut and Henry Stt., Ravenswood,
W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. Geo11e C. Weiridt
S1D1day School · 9:30a.m.
WOJohip · II Lm.

St. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore&amp;. Second SL, Pumeroy
Pastor: Laura A. Leach Slln:lller
SIDlday School- 9:45 Lm.
WOJohip • II a.m.

United Methodist
Graham United Methodist
Worship · 9:30a.m. (In &amp; 2nd SIDl), 7:30
p.m. (3rd &amp;. 41h Sun)
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.
Mt. Olive United Methodist
Off 124 behind Willr."ville
Pastor: Charle1 Jones
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Services · 7 p.m.

Meigs Cooperative Parish
Northeast Cluster
Allred
Pu1or: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School · 9:30 1.m.
Worship · II a.m., 6:30p.m.
Chester
Paslor: Sharon Hausman
Worship · 9 a.m.
Sunday School- 10 Lm.
Thursday Service• · 7 p.m.

Jopp1
Putor. Brenda Weber
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services . 7:30p.m.

Llbert7 Chrlsllan Church
DexLer
PulOJ: Woody Coli
Sunday School · I0 a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
We&lt;lnelday Service - 7 p.m.

LonaBottOOI
Pastor: Charles Eaton
SID!day School - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

Lanasvlle Christian Church
Sunday Scbool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednuday Service 7:30p.m.

Reedavllle
Pastor: Rev. Cllarles Eaton
Wonhip • 9:30 Lm.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Hemt.c:k Grove Chun:h
Pulor: Olarlea Domiaan
SIDlday achool · 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 9:30 Lm. 7 p.m.
Old Demr Bible Christian Church
Putor: lack Oeland
~~1.School • 10 a.m.
W
y Scrvitco • 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Holt- Churds of CtJri• Ia Chrlltlan
Union
PallOr: The1011 Durham
Sunday Scbool ·9:30a.m.
Evenina - 7 p.m .
Wednescby Services - 7 p.m.
Hartford Church or Christ In Christian
Union
Hartfonl, W.Va.

Putor: Rev. David McManis
Sunday School · II a.m.
Wonhip- 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedn-y Servicea - 7:30 p.m.

Church of God
ML Moriah ChurdJ of God
Racine
Pas &amp;or. Rev. Jame~ Sauerfield
Sunday School • 9:4S a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Rudand Church or God
P11tor. John F. Corcoran
Sunday School · to a.m.
WOJihip - ll a.m .. 7 p.m.
Wcdnesday Services · 7 p.m.

Tuppers Plalps St. Paul
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip · lO a.m.
Tuesday SeMceJ • 7:30p.m.
Centnl Cluster
A•bury (S7rac111&lt;)
Pastor: Wesley ~chcr
Sunday School ·9:45a.m.
Worship· 11 Lm.
Wednesday Service• • 7:30p.m.

Entcrrrlse
Pastor: Kenh Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 9 a.m., 6p.m.
Tuesday Services · 1 p.m.

Church or God or Prophecy
OJ. White Rd. off St. Rt 160
Pastor: Pat Henson
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • t 1 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Forest Run
Pastor: Wesley Thlldicr
Sunday School - tO a.m.
Worship. 9 a.m.
Thunday Service~ . 6:30p.m.
Heath (Middlep..-1)
Pastor: Frank Smith
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 6 p.m.
Mlnenvllle
Pastor: Wesley Thatcher
Sunday School. • 9 a.m.
WOfahip · 10 a.m.
Pearl Chapel

Pomeroy
?astor: Eunhae (Grace) Kee
Sunday School - 9:15 a.m.
Wor1hip · 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.
RockSprinas
P11tor:Kehh !Wier
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Wonhip · 10 a.m.
Wedneoday Servic:eo - 6 p.m.

Holiness

Rudi!Dd
Pastor: Arthur Cn.b.rec
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -I 0:30a.m.
Thur1day Service• - 7 p.m.

PIM Grvve Bible H.Un- CIMJrds

suom c... ter

t/2 mile on RL 325
Putor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

SnOW\'Ille
Pastor: florence Smith
Sunday Schoo! · to a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Soulhern CluR.,.
AppleGroYf
Pastor. Cart Hicks
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wonhip- 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services -7 p.m.

Hyoell Run Hollneu Church
Paotor. Robert Manley
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Harrlooovllle Hotl... Chaplor
Putor: Rev. Jolm Neville
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Wonhip. 11 ·~··7:30p.m.
Wedneoday Servtc:e ·7:30p.m.

115 1. Memorial Dr.
992 · 2104

Pomeroy

Dyesvlllt Community Church
Sunday School· 9.30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church
PaslOr: William Williams
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Rutland Bible Methodist
Pasta: Rev. Ivan Myen
Sunday School · 930 a.m.
Evmin1 - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Coolvlllt United Methodist Parish
Pastor: Harold H. Alloway· Priddy
Coolville &lt;JI,un:h
Main"' F'.rm St .
Sunday School • lO a.m.
Wonhip · 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services • 7 p.m.
Belhel Church
Townahip Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.
Wednesday S'avices - 10 a.m.
Hockingport Church

GnndStiUl
Sunday School - lO a.m.
Wonhip • ll a.m.
Wednesday Services . 8 p.m.
Torch Church
Co. Rd. 63
SIDlday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Nazarene

Middleport Church of the Nazarene
Pauor. Rev. Uoyd D. Grimm, Jr.
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
W011hip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Servic:es · 7 p.m.
Reesbvllle Fellowslllp
Churtb of the Nazarme
P11tor: Jolm W. Dru&amp;laa
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m.,7 p.m.
Syra&lt;Uie Chorch of the Nuarene
Pastor: Rev. Glenn McMillan
Sunday Sdlool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service• • 7 p.m.

Cheater Church of the Nuarene
P1110r: Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday Scbool ·9:30a.m.
Worship- I I a.m .. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servicea - 7 p._m.
Rutland Church or lhe Nazarene
PallOr: Sanuel Buye
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wor1hip · 10:30 Lm., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Service• .7 p.m.
Portland Fll'lll Churcb of tile Nazarene
Pastor. William Jusws
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wor1hip · 10:40 a.m., 7:30p.m .
Wednesday Service• -7:30p.m.

Trlnlly c..,areaatloaal Church
P11tor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Omch- 9:1S a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

~·

VIL

Calvary Ptlgs-lm Chapel
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush
SUilday School 9:30 a.m.
WonhiJ. · 11 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednes ay Service . 7:30p.m.
Stiursvllle Word ot Faith
Paslor: David Dailey
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Thursday Service · 7:30p.m.
Rejoicing Llle Church
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middlepon
l'1utor: H.~ . Michael Pangio
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wedne1day Service• · 7 p.m.

Chrlsllan Fdlowshlp Center
Salem St. Rutland
Putor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday School · I 0 a.m.
Wor1hip · ll :15 a.m.• 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 1 p.m.

Pentecostal

Mone Cha!'fl Church
Pa1tor: DaYJd Curfman
Sunday school · 10 a.m.
Wor1hip · ll a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneoday Servia: - 7 p.m.

Pentecostal AssembiJ
St Rt 124, Racine
Pastor: Williun Hoback
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Serv1Cc:1 · 7 p.m.

Faith Gospel Church
Lma 11ouom
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Mlddltport Pentecostal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clast Baker
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evcnin&amp; · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service~ - 7:30p.m.

Mt. Olive Community Church
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service · 7 p.m.

United Fallh Churck
Rt. 1 on Pm1eroy By·Pass
Putor: Rev. Robert H. Smilh. Sr.
Sunday School - 9:30am.
· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

E&lt;desla Fellowship
128 Mill S1., Middleport
PasiOr: Clluck McPtlcnon
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service -7 p.m.
Full Gospel Uahlhouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pa~tor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School · to a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday&amp;. Thunday · 7:30p.m.

Presbyterian
Harrlsoovllle Presbyterian Church
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Sunday School · 9:45a.m.
Middleport Prestiyterlan
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wbcship . 10 am., 4 p.m. (2nd &amp; 4th Sun.}
Syracuse Fll'lll United Preobyterlan
S1111day School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip - lla.m.,4 p.m. (Ill&amp;. 3rd Sun.) •

Seventh-Day Adventist
Sev..,th·Day Advonllsl
Mulbesry Hu. Rd., Pomeroy
Paator. Bolt Snyder
Saturday Servigcs:
Sabllatll School • 2 p.m.
Wonhip • 3 p.m.

Nease SeUiemenl Church
Sunday Wonhip - 2:30p.m.;
Thunday services · 7:30p.m.
Sou til Btthcl New Testament
Silver Ridge
Pastor: Duane Sydcnstrickcr
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wonhip · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedne1dsy Service - 7 p.m.

Carleton

lntcrtte•omlnatloho~l

Church
Kin&amp;sbury Road
Pastor: Clyde W. Henderson
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

United Brethren
MI. Hennon Unked Brethren In Christ
Church
TellS Canmunity off CR 82
Pmor: Robert Sanden
SWJday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - !0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedn01day Servia:• - 7:30p.m.
Eden United Brelhrtn In Christ
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worlhip -7:30p.m.
Wednuday Services · 7:30p.m.

Freedom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor; Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday School - 9:30a.m .
Wonhip· 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.
White's Chapel Wesleyan
Coolville Road
Pastor. Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.
Fairview Bible Church
U:~an, W.Va. Rt. I
Pa.uor: James Lewis
SlUld.ay School . II a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m. .
Wednesday Service -7:30 p.m.
Calvary Dible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worsh ip I0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m .

The Solvation Amy
Ill Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

RAWUNGS·COATS

271 North

Main
992 · 5130 Pomeroy
214 E.

SNOUFFER
FIR£ &amp; SAFETY
SALES

I SERVICE

992·7075
172 North SocorNI Avo.
Mitldl-rt, Ohio

i

992·5141

Mlcldloport,
Ohio

2114

MEIGS nRE
CENTtR, INC.
John F . Fultl, Mgr .
P~ . 991·210!
Pom&lt;&gt;roy

(row's Family Restaurant
"FuMing l&lt;utuelv Frl1d Chlehw"
221 W. Main St., Pomeroy
992-S432

e 992·2975

~~~

l\\\;(( jlr((f

a3oof.J
93 Mill SIIMI

Middleport, Ohio 45780

11141992-1117 -1988·001&lt;81
CHURCH IUPPLIEI ,. IIILES

-.

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

9112·1111 ..

Pomeroy

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.

716 NORTH SECOND AVE .
MIDDLIPORT. OHIO

Splrllual Faith Church
State 338, Antiquity
Pastor: A. Stewan
SUilday School · 10 Lm.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Thunday Service· 1:30 p.m.

Burlington Community Church
Budin lwn
Pastor. Ray f.:udermilt
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
W011hip . 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service . 1 p.m.

Wor~hip

Radne Flrlt Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Thomas L. Galea, n
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Established 1913

GRAVELY TRA~TOR SALES

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

Racine
PasLor. Roger Grac:e
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

992·2121

6h\

SyratuH Mlsoloo
1411 Bridaeman St .. Sym:use
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 1 p.m.
Haul Community Church
Of!RL 124
PasiOr: Edsel Han
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wor1hip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

"IJi~nit~· nnd Sf•rri•''' .·thrn~· ,."

~

Faith Tabernacle Chun'h
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmeu Rawsm
Sunday School - 10:00 o.m.
Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service · 7 p.m.

East Lotart
Pasi.Or: Roger Grace
SWJday School · to a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.

EWING FUNER11L HOME

I 06 Mulberry bo.

Middleport Community Church
S1S Pearl St., Middleport
PasiOr. Sam Andenon
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Hvenin&amp; · 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service · 7:30 p.m.

SKottd

Pallor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School· 9:lla.m.
Wor1hip -10:15 a.m.

Welleyan Bible Hollnao Church
7S Pcad SL, Middleport.
Paator. Rev. Roy MtCarty
Sunday o&lt;hOol • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · l0:30a.m.,7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service . 7:30p.m.

So lion
PulOr: Kennclh Biker
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · I0:45a.m. (In&amp; 3rd Sun)

Other Churches

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip . to a.m.

Grace Episcopal Church
3:16 H. Main St, Pumcroy
Putor. Rev. Dr. Roy C. Myen
Sunday ochool and worship - 11 a.m.

Morning Slar
Putor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Wonhip · I 0:30a.m.
Thursday Services-7:30p.m.

New Haven Church ot the Nazarene
Putor: Glendon Strood
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service•. -7 p.m.

Paswr: Flormce Smith

Ep1scopal

Cannel
Putor. Kennelh Baker
SID!day School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m. (2nd&amp;: 41h SIUI)

Pomeroy Otureh of the Nazarmc
Pastor: Rev. Thomu McOWII
Sunday Scbool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wcdn-y Servia:a • 7 p.m.

Flatwoods
Panor: Keith Rader
Sunday School· lO a.m.
Worship · II a.m., 6 p.m.
Thursday Services • 7 p.m.

Syracuse Flrst Church or God
Wonhip • 10 a.m.
Sunday School · II a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Service a · 7 p.m.

Bethany
Putor: Kennetll Baker
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Wedneaday Services • lO a.m.

South 2nd

Middleport

SWISHER &amp;LOHSE

~~~~~!
-~
Prescnption\
ru
992 29Sl

Pomrroy

RIDENOUR'
SUPPLY
FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
Homehte Saws

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

··,:,~t~7.£;:.
I •

Co.

n

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677 .
BILL QUICKEL

�\
Ohio

27

Dally Sentinel

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
SUNDAY

,

3
6
10
Monthly

peid.
•Rectfv• t .&amp;O discount tor eds pe id 11'1 1dvence
•free edt - G•veawey end Found 1ds ~.mder 1 !i words will be
run 3 II•• It no ch•ge
of ed for ell cepltel letters
•7 point line tyJM only uMd .

11

double price of ed coli
.

•sentinel it not rnpontible for errortefte.r firtt:_d.,. . (Check
tor euort fifll day ad runt in peper ) Cel1 before 2 ·00 p m
dfN eft• publicmton to milk• correction
•Ads tt'lt mu11 be l)lid in edvance are
C•rd of Th.,ks
Happy Adl
In Memoriem
Y ~rd Seles

3- Annoucement t
4- Grve.wey
5 - Heppy Ads
6- lott lnd Found

7- VIfd Selelpeid in advance)
8 - Public Salt &amp; Auction

9 - Wenttd to Buy

'A cl•nified advartfsement placed •n The Daily Sent in~ 1e.11 ·
cep1 - cl•lified di1pi1Y. Bu1in~s Cerd and legtl notictt)
will 1110 •PP"~ In the Pl . Pla•ant ... gister •nd the Gtlli-

polil Oe•IV Tribune. ruching ovtr 18,000 hom•

TI4URSOAY PAPER

- 2'00 P.M. WEDNESDAY
- 2'00 P.M. THURSDAY
- 200 PM FRIDAY

16 - Rtdio, TV 1o CB Rtpait
17- MitctUeneout
1 B- Wenttd To Do

- 2 :00P .M . TUESDAY

pa~es .cot·er

the

follou.:ing telephon'f! exchanges ...
Ollli•

Cour~ty

Ar., Code 614
••e - Gallipotis

Meig1 County
Area Code 614

M•aonCo . WV
Ar11 Code 304

992 - MiddiiPOfl

675 - Pt Ple1nnt
458-leon
!76 - Apple Grov1
773 - Melon
882-New H.ven
895-lttart

Pomeroy

307- Ch•t'lire
318- VInton
2415- Rio Grinde

9815 - Cheettr

So\3 - At~bil

9•9 - Rtcine

256-Guyoon Dist
Oist

379 - Welnat

843- Pon&amp;llnd

2•7-Lotlrt Falls
742 - Rutllrld

937 - Buffalo

667- CoolviUe

!9-For Sele or Trade

F~rm

SuppliP.s

liVU S!UCk

23 - PrOf•aioa•l

R~ 1 l

s ... vices

Esl ale

31 - Homea.. for $1le
32 - Mobile Homtt for Sale
33- Farm• for Sale
34- Busineal Butldings

153- Livtttock

71 - Aural for Selt
72 - Trucks for Sale
73 - Vens&amp; 4 "\'VO ' s
74-MotO(CVcle&amp;

76 - Boeu,._ Motott for S1le
76 - Auto Partt &amp; Acceuori•
77 -- Auto Repeir
78 - Cemp lng Equ ipment!'

79 - Cempeu S. Motor Homes

41-Ht~uaes

46 47 48 .t9 -

81 - -Hornelmprovementa
82 - Piumbing lo Helling
83- hc•etinl .
84 - Eiectrlctl
A•frigeration
85 - Gtn .-el Meu ling
86 - Mobile Home Repair

87-Uphols1erv

· 5-POtNTS: MOndays •5:00p.m. "
5-POINTS: Tuesdays • 10:00 a.m.
MASON : Tuesdays-6:00p.m.
Methods! Church
LETART: Thursdays . 6:00 p.m.
Graham Methodist Church

CALL:
JoAnn : 992·3382 or
Debbie: 895·3807

I
Call Sentinel

£LASSIFIEDS!
992-2156
2

PubliC Notice

In Memory

In Memory Of
DON EBLIN
Who Pasaed Away 7
Years Ago
Sept. 27, 1984
Time Doesn'1 Always
Heal The Pain. I Miss
You Very Much.
Dau hter Juanita

PUBLIC NOTICE
Sotltd propou11 will be
received by the VlU•a• of
Middleport In the Offlca of
the ll1yo1, 237. R•ce St.,
llldd~. Ohio, undl 4:00
.m. OCiobar 7, 11111, lor
mprovementa to ba per·
formed 11 tha boet leunch·
lng faclllty on Welnut SL
Conetructlon plene, ee
prep11td by the U. s. Army
Corpa ol Englneere, are
neUebla 11 the mayor'•
olllce by contacting SIU

r.

11111• •• 1..14-H2-t782,

Memory Of
DOLLY WOLFE
on Her Birthday
Sept. 27th
Three blrthd(lys
In

have~
since

I

I

you left us

but you are still In

our hearts.

Sadly missed by
Janel Dale,
Children &amp;

Bide wUI b• •oo•pted
from quaUII.cl conlrectora
lor tha complete project or
any Plrt thereof.
A dascrlpdon of the work
to be performed onuat be
outlined In your propo111
wJttn IUbmJUtcl.
The Vlilege reurv11 the
light to ~eject 1ny or 111 blda
•nd to waive 1ny lnlormell1111 1n bidding.
Fred Hollmtn,lllyor
VUiage of lllddloport
(g)20, 27, 2to

Speciolizillg in
C•stom Fram• I•PGir
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR All MliiES &amp;
MOORS
992-7013
or 992·5553
OITOU FIR
1·800·841·0070

wtaletllf.
~Wr~;~~=;!:~~r:~~!
of
• fln•l
c
dlgaster, lfudge dewatering
building, chlorine cont1ct
tank, ofllce/laboretory
m11onry building, txlallng
1er1tlon tank reltabllltallan,
txletlng llnll clorlflor reh•·
bllltallon, demolition work,
alta work, earth work, pipIng, elaolrlcll, and all
neca11ary •ppertalnlng
work. The work may ba bld
ae 1 total of any comblna·
don of the following:
Conlrecll1·1 -Complete
Plan I
Conlrocii1·1A- Complete
Plan, Le11 Electrical
Conlrect 11·1B - ·Eiaclrlcal
together with the necHaary
oppertalnlng WORK.
Tha eallmated conllruc·
lion coot Ia $970,000 ao· of
Auguot, 1991,
•
Special ttlentlon by the
Conlractor 11 to be directed
to tho mlnarttr, bualne11
enterprise requ rementa 11
lllpulattd within tha euppl•
montary condltlono.
The CONTRACT DOCU·
MENTS may ba examined
II:
Vlllogo of Pomeroy
320 Eut Moln Str"t
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

F. W. Dodga McGraw Hill
· 1175 Dublin Ro1d
Columbua, OH. 43215
Surge11 l Nlpla, Umlted
4424 Emereon Avenue
Ptrkereburg, WV. 26104
F. W. Dodg1 McGraw Hill
405 Capitol Street
Suite 803
Chllltalon, WV 25301
Copfas of the CONTRACT
DOCUMENTS m1y ba
purcllllld et:
Burgas1 l Nlplt, Umlt.cl
4424 E-.on oAvanue
Pllbraburg, WV 20104
upon peymenl or 1100.00,
NONE QF WHICH WILL BE
REFUNDED.
Proap•cUve BIDDERS
mey '1ddre11 lnqulrltt to
Burge11 l Nlple, Limited,
Plrkaraburg, Walt Vlrglnl•.
By order of the Vllllgt of
Pomeroy.
Thla 231d d1y or
September, 1111
John A. Anderaon
Vlll•ge Admlnlatrttor
(1)20, 27, 21c

'

J&amp;L
INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Window•
•Roofing
•lnaulation

.JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or '
742-2251
639 Bryan Piece
Middleport. Ohio
lJ.IHfn

Real Estale General

BUILDERS

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPliES

CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

''J.t ReasonaWt Pricts"
PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949·2860

OF~ICE 992·2886
•

AGES 3 and UP

e Wooko Old. 1..._!15.

318-fti:Z.

J •puDDIM lnd
dog,
304-6'78.6300 oftor•:30.
5 •kHtono nold 1 good homo,
:JOII-67Uno.

O.J. Whlto Rood, 2 Acrn
Woodin lulldlnm Lot, Roody To
Build On. Rootrlctld. $7,1100.
8t4·2411-D581.

"Ask the ~Y with the binoculars If he wants
headphones for the In-flight movie."

G"~~..JI'~
m~~
-11------------- 21
Help Wanted

THE DANCE
COMPANY
992-6289

Trailer lot for Nnl: 10 mlln from
town on At. 'U'I. 814-3794501 ef·
ter4 p.m.

Business
Opportunity

Trollor lollor ront on Now Umo
Rd., wotor/uwor hook-u... at•·
'1112·2·21

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

Rentals

rocommonda thot you do buol·
, _ with poop!o you know ond
NOT to und money through tho
moll unll you hovo lnvlltlgotld
tho offorlng.

INTERIOR • EXTERIOR

OPEN
TuHdaV thru Saturday
10:00 am-6:00 pm

FREE ESTIMATES
Toke the pain out of

21f2 MI. outside

Day or Night · ·
NO SUNDAY

Rutland

. 'HOME

992·5692

205

NORTH SECOND AVE .
_ MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
DOTTIE S.

on New

limo Rd.

5-10-'91-tln.

ROOFING
NEW - REPAIR ·
Gutters

CHESTER
COUNTRY CWB
GoH

Ltssons (6) .... '55.00

Grips ............ $4.00
Woods ................ 122.00
lrtm .................. $14.75
R£PAI8S
Ustcl lrons ............ $5.00
U1141 Woods ......... $7.00
AWARDS
Ntw

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
9/ 9/ 91 / 1 mo. pd.

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK

41

Houses for Rent

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER 8s
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING:
l.imeatone, Dirt.
Gravel end Coal
UcenMd and Bonded
PH. 614-992·
9·11·1

Begins Sept. 1S

HOWARD
EXCAVATING
• BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES,
LANDSCAPING
WATER and SEWER
UNES

1RUOONG AVAUIIE

FREE ESTIMATES

1· 1mo.

992·7458

W.H. MOBILE

90DAYWAHANn

MIDDLEPORT-North Second· Ever dreamed of owning
your OWN BUSINESS? Ham's your chance. A bar that is
weN equipped .nd &amp;locked. A D5 IK!uor license. Has 2
apartments ~furnished) and 1 sleeping room. Buying building, business, and license.
.
ALL FOR JUST
$55,900
BRENDA JEFFERS.........................................912-3058
DARLINE 9TEWART.........................................992-8385
SANDY BUTCHER............................................992: 5371
. SHERYL WALTERS.-..............,......................... 367-o421

HOME PARTS
If you're in need of
Mobile Home Paris
or Accessories...

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVKE

5E(

RT. 33 WEST OF
DARWIN, OHIO

IO/!Ofl9 tfn

8 / 18/ 1 mo. tfn

A&amp;B
COMPLUE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

•Remodeling and
Home Repeil'l •
~Roofing

FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIIIATES

CEDAR

MAIN ST., MASON, YA.

CONSTRUaiON

1-(30341·
773-9560

992~6648 or

691-6864

9/ 9/ 91 11 mo. pd.

;

&gt;

12 Gouge Factory

Choke Only
9·6·1fn

li.F~~

I

I

:G

&amp;·14·'11-tfn

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE ·

· · -ltoom A&lt;ldltlona
-Outtw WO:rtt
- Eiootrlool ond Plumbing
-Concnt• work
-,Rooting
- lntorlol I Eatlllor
P-Ing

!FREE ESTIMATE&amp; I

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-621$

P-oy, Ohio
11-14·'90 tin

prd ull. CArolyn

.,_y, Oct 1·2-3~Upm, rugo,
qullo, mile, •otty Rupo
realdancee, Salem St. Rutltlnd,
011 114-llf2..2llll
Public Sale

a. Auction

Rldl Puroon Auction COmpony,
lull, tlmo ouctlanMr, campllto
ouatlon Ml'lllcl. Llclnold Ohio,
Wilt Vlrglnlo, ~..m-5'18!.

9

•Reasonable flates
•Quality Work
•Free Estimates
•Carpet H11 Faat Dry
Tlma ·
•High Glo11 on Til,a
Floor Finish
MIKE lEWIS, OwIt, 1, lurl1ntd, OH.

'.
•

Want~ to Buy

1171 Chovy Vogo body.
RoMonoble plloo. m.fll2-aiiU

-

Uold llobllo - · · C.ll 114-

.,

''

W o::.=: ~k .nd ocrop mot•

al,

31.

Wlntld to buy, Stlndlng tlmblr,
Bob Wllllmo I Son1 ~14-1182·

~··
Wlntld To Buy: Junk Autos,
Sc!.IP 111111. C.ll onor 2 p.m.

114'441-G011
Top , . _ Pold: All Old U.S.
Cclnt, Gold Rlnae, SIIYW Colno,
Gold Colne. II.T.S. Coin Shop,
111 - A - Oolllpalla.

GUN SHO.OT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Employment Serv1ces

Bashan Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

11

=-

6:30P.M.

1350. por doy proc-"'G phone
ontorolhoplo ooll you. No IX•
- - r y . 1-t00-285-

Starting Sept. 28
Factory Chokl

12 Gatrto Shotgun Only
Strictly Enhnool

.

g. u . ·et .lfn

;:;:;:::::::::::~

•Garages
•Complete
R.-tWJng
Stop &amp; Cempare

·~

..
..

Free Estlmat11

~

985-4473
667-6179

Rep~lr

•··
"'
~?~

n;

Mlcrow1ve
Rader lletactor
~
Home Entertainment ,:;
Center
, ,.

H.E.C.
Pomeroy

.•
992·3524 '""
112711 mo.

Rotundod.

AVON I All - · I Shl~ey
Spoo..,30W11-tGe.
CAlL£ TV JOBS
No · _ . ... - - r y .
St~. Fal lnlomtltlotl, coli I·
m2.
...e:ooprn, 7 dlyo, tu.u

=.,m..-.
_.,.
t.,

•;

TV· VCR· Stereo. Boom ••
.· Box • C.D. Pl1yer
Sc1nnar • T~pewrlter
"&lt;

Cordle. hone

AVOH • All ~.Coli Morllyn
WlliovorSOUG.-8.
A Dilly S111rv Of 1300 For
luylng llorcfilndloo. Buyor
Noido'il. No Erpotloneo No-.
wy. 1,._201:Z. Ext.3813.
~USTRAUA WANTS VOU
Exqollont
Poy,
BonoiH!,
Tr.,.......ootlon,
407~112-0IT.
lid. m ll.m.·1Dp.m. Tool

5I

735 Rear Third Avenue, $150/mo,

$100 Dopoolt, 114-44Wti'IV, 114-1340.

WANTED: Port·nmo Uconold Houll For Solo On RT. 141 In
Proctlcll Nuroo 120 Hro/Wicl For Contonory A~r. 1.3, Acr11
Two Communfty Oovup 3br, Full BIMmtnt,
For Ponon WHh tllvotopmentll Flit land,
Furnoco, Chimney WHh
Dlubllnlll In 0.1111 County OU
lnHit
Dotochld
(Golllpollo/Bidwolll. Houro: 3::10- Flrop!ocoSlporoto
Storogo Build·
8:30p.m.. Fndly; lo.m.-&amp;p.m., Oorogo,
1~, Flahlng Pond, Oarcfen Aree,
Slturdly; 5-lp.m., Sundly·l 2· FruH
Tro~~, !52,000 Nogolloblo.
Hour Wookly SloH lloot ng; Clll 114-4411-4300.
Qno.Hour Woolcly LPN llootlng;
Or AI Othllwloo Schldufld.
Moclum 8tzo Ftshor Wood lu1·
Curront LPN UconN llntonm - Stovo. Excollont Condition,
Pormlt
Accoptoblol. ··- 1.. •••~~s
OOPNESMAPNES/Or
Stoto ~~~~.ti~;;-~;;,'~·ii;':;;;j;;;td,
Boord A!&gt;PIOvod Trllnlng, Vlllcl
oorpolld,
Uconoo And GOOd on..
..,.\
now out·
lng Rocord, Good CommunlooLow 7 mlloo
tlon And Oraonllotlon BILIIIo,
30W71-2188.
Punctull, AntfAble To WGik AI
P•~ 01 A Tum Roqulrld; Ex·
32 Mobile Homes
po~onco Working With ...,_,.
With llontol Rotllllltton And
for Sale
Dlvolopmonlll
DlubllhiM
Prolonld. S1tory: 18.00/Hour, To 112 ocro lot wHh ,.110 moblll
Stort. Sind Rooumo To CICIIII homo, 3 bodroomo, oU oloctrlc,
Bokor, P.O. Bor eo.. Jlckoon, noodl ropolro, pltono 30WS2·
OH •514ll. Deedtlno For Ap- 2841.
pllconto: _ . . Equol Oppor· 10150 mabllo homo, largo
tunlty Employor.
ohldld lot. L.ocltld In r-~
or•: bolting I llohlng. $1000
Business
14
down. S2Q.4 mo. 7 mi. from 011·
llpalls. 814-21111-1211.
Training
1173 Clmoron 3 bodroom trollor,
Allroln
NfttllllouthNIIorn :ltM-6~
.
Bull&lt;*~ Colllgo, Spring Volley
Plua. Clll Tadoiy, 1~31711 1i75 Floltwood 3br, Both i 112,
Roglolorotlon fiO.OI-121'1.
Tolol Eloctrlo WHh Wood Bur·
nor. 18,500, Or But RIUonlbll
18 wanted to Do
onor. lt4-441.eG75.
Child oorw In my hoon:'J will 1D81 Wlndaor 14x701 1 112 Nth,
witch lnlonl tp 4yro ooa. ••· 3 Hdroom, very nice t,.u.,.,
$12,100, coll•apm 114-1182·38M
polio.- IJ4.i.O.W3.
or after tl2-1534.
Exporloncod lllolhor Ottoro
Child C.ro In Homo Nolr 1D88 SchuHz trailer on 1 112 acre
Sout-llom
Schooll. proport(o~ to Mil quick and
-3337.
Rotor- Avolilblo. 114-37!1- cholp,
250:1.
:Z.bdrm onobllo homo, 12x52 on
Clootgol Poltoblo Slwmlll, don~ 1.51 ICrl lat, nNr Chettll',
houl yo..- loal to thi mill luot $10,500.00 obo 114-185-3!151
coli ~'IS-1)67.
Looking Fo1 A Cui? Conoldlr A
HouM ciMnlng or oftlc• clean. Bonk Roclolmld Mobllo Homo.
$500 . Oown WHh Approved
lng, $4.00 HR. C.M IM-1112-3M1
Crodltl Groll Slloctlonl F•oo
Mloo Poull'o lily Coto Contw. Slt·Up And tllllvoryl Coli Eiloo
Solo, ollonllbto, chllclclrw. 11-F Homo Contor, 1-1011-111-&amp;71 1.
e a.m. • ! :30 p.m. AfO! :m.to. Now 11182 MaiO throo bodroom,
Bot- oftor ochool. Doop-lnl
we~come. •u ue 1224. NeW ln- 2 lull bothlih ohlnglo roof, vinyl
utters,
carpeted
tont Toddlor Coro, 114-44W227. lldlng,
throughout, all drywall Interior
Will do bebvolttlna In my homo, ond 3-boy wind-. $17,117.00.
SyracUM Oli, 114-la.Jm
Coil ,_721-4045.
WIU do lily Clrl In my homo. Now Cilyton, lhlrp Ao A Tockj

Drl•···

Coihlono FUI ..... Anondlnto
.._... P1111·11mo. llull a.
Able To Work Wookondl And
• lkott .. Holt And
Allfilv In Ponon IP
Mlri,. "Route 35, Rio

~OIIIo.

Churoh . _ _ , , houro I .,..
12 noon, llondoy, Thutodly,

Bedroom,

Tota

Good
lind llondly·
· Dlyli E_.,...
Blturdrly. A•ton.W. rate~
cortlllld. .,......zt4t

Eloctrlo, $13,D95. Nowhorw Eloo
But El- Homo Cenlor. C.ll 1·
lt4-m-wo.

WIM Do lranlngl And s-Ing,
0oot1 RoltranoM 1tJ4.4*711t.

34

Ftnanctal
21

Business
Opportunity
INOTICEI
AIIOntlonl Stvllna loion For
..... Prtmo Ll&gt;coBon. Coli 114-

,,...,. _,putor lklllo
htlpliol, IOW7N170.
Doohlno'1 Pluo of Pomoroy now
tokJnw ospplloodlonl.
441 11031 tM-44HSI5.

Business
Buildings

OFFICE SPACE FOR L£ASE on
2nd Avo., O.lllpalls. ~ to
Cou~ Houu. 1 room, 2 rooms,
3 1001111, • 1001111. All. nlclly
docorltltl, olr conditioning,
your wot• • bill .,. pola.

Mob your choice . - . No

quoiM tho Dhonl you
mull - thom. Pliono b. on
oppolntmonl. 114-446-'1801 doy,
44t..g131eve,

&amp; Liveslock

44

Apartment
for Rent

1 I 2 bcltm •PI In Mlddlopolt,

Ullllt" Fum, dep req, no pete,

114-1112·2218.

2 bedroom apt above Holzer

Ctlnlo of Wilt Vlrglnlo, 114-44115111.
2·BR In lllddloport. No polo.
Poy -n utllltloo, $200 por mo.
~lt/RoforlllCII
roqulrod.
114-lt2·23t1 dlyo.
lbr All UUIHIII Pold, 12&amp;0/mo.;
1br On Central Avenye, Will Be

Avolloblo Flrll Of October,

~~=ii~~::~..u:::~:~~

Orondo. e

:~::menta

'""'·

For Rent, IJ4..446.

Aportrnonto lor ronl In Mid·
dloport. 1 l 2-bdm IM-1182·
2~31rom I to 5pm.
Aportmonto lor tho Elcloriy. 0.1·
llo llonot A.. ~rnonts. 1155 Buhl
Monon Rood. Doalanld for tho
Ienior CHilen 112 I otdor) ond
~ndlclppod penono. Equol
houllng
opponunhy.
Ap~lcltlono moy be plckld up 11

..

.:n''I&gt;Yu.v:.~ ~:;r••:z:,:trk·
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATE!1,~!38 Jlcklon Pilei
lrom """"""· W1lk to ohop 1
movloo. C.IIIM-841-a&amp;l. £011.
B-h Stllll, MlddtoiiCIII, o111o.
Two boolroom lumlohld opt,
rotor- ond dopooH, 304882·2588.
B-h Stroll, Mlddlopolt, Ohio.
One room tPI, reference• and

dlpooh. ~-1182-2$&amp;1.
Complotoly Fumlolold Smoll
Houoo, No Poll, Yord, Pluo
Ut11Hioo. 1231/mo. 814-441-03311.

For rent· New 1 bdrm apl, tum

or unturn, In Ill-port, IM1182-1225 ., 1182·5304.
Fuml- 3 Roomo 1 Bllh,
CIIOn, No P.llo, Rotor.,.. l
Dfpotlh RoqulfiC. IM ...I-t511.
Fuml- Aponrnont 1 llodroom, Wltor Plld, $275, V.Z IIIIo
Elll 01 Partor. m-381-IMIII3.
F - Elllclonoy, f1681mo.

lltr, ::

~~~·- Ave,
Pilei,Gllllpollt,
~
I
4411 Allor 7p.m.
QriCI- living. t lind z bod-

-Monor ...I tRlvllllilo
walind
Aportmentl In llklclloport, From
atlll. Clll1,...·771l EOH.

Comptotty Fu..- ma1111o
home. 1 milo below town. looldna ....... No ...... CA. 114&gt;14U:I'll.
North :lrtlll,lllcltl-'o Ohio, ,
bodroom lumlohorl opt, l'lfonn.
OM end dtpoaM roqulrttl. 3041124588.
.

-73111.

Clrpot 1112 150 I Up! Silo On
All. Outlldl C.rpot: 13.11 •
... Dll; KHchln C.rpot, 17; VInyl
h.Dll I $4.D9. Solo On Atl Cor·
pot In Stockl lllollohon Clrpolo,

61 Farm Equipment
165 MF Troctot, Sharpl $4 350;
T030 Ferguson With Now Bush
Hog, 12,295; D-17 AC WRh Cui·
tlvalor, Plow, Bush Hog, $2,950.

Blue clolh lift chair, exc cond,

Concrete • pintle uptlc tanh,
Ron Evana EnterprtHa, Jack·

LAYNE'S FURNITURii
eomp111• homo tum~·~c·
Houra:a I
0322,
mllll·
out •e.
luilvlllo
Rd.
FI'M Dlllvtry.
PICKENS FURNITURE
Now/Uold
lumlo!olng. 112 mi.
Jorrlcho Rd. Pt. Pluunt, WV,
coli 30M711-1450.
RENT20WN
I~U

Vl'ro Fumhuro
Soli • Choir, att.to Wook;
Rocllnor, 18.•7 W11k. Swlvol
Rocker, 13.13 Wook.Bunk Bid
Comploto IU1 Wool&lt;, • Drlwtr
Chill, $3.21 WOlle; Pootor lidroom SuHo, 7 pc., $11.117 Wool&lt;,
lnctudlo locldlng.Counlry Plno
Dlnllto WHh Bench I • Chllro,
$10.118 Wook.OPEN: llondly
ThN lltunla~, ta.m. to lp.m.,
Sundly 12 Noon nu 5p.m. •
MIIM on lloWo 7 On Routo 141,
lnContonory.
SWAIN
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 12
Olivo St., O.lllpolll. Now I Ulld
tumhw1, hMttrw, Watem

a

or will lflde for cattle. 30.ta458·

1817.
oon, OH 1-800-637.0528.
Conn Trumpet, oacollont cond. _6_3::-:::::L:-IV e::st~O-:C:-k:-::---::$100.00 5t4.0D2·3507
Aprll 11188 AQHA Golding By
CRAFT SUPPLIES
·Billy Blllr. Bayou. Would Llh To
Hand Made Cr~tta
Hire Pro nslonal Quarter Horu

7

Straw wrulhs, driMI flow111,
baskett and more. Trt County

Trainer. 114-286-6522.

Sporto Shop, Point Ploooont,
:JCM-6711-2988.

autom~tlc waahera, $7~$125i

dryoro••$50.$125; gu rongora,
15041ou; lltctrlo rongoro, 150$150; drop In -rloh lnd gu
bumtre, $30 uc : dlth~
woohoro,l80 11ah; ron(ll hoodo
Hght, ton 110 - h; All wHh o 30
doy 1 gouronlOotbort

Swlahere UMd Appliances,
Comer Rind and Pe;ch StrMt 1
Konougo.l14-446-~

53
8UV

Antiques
~

Hll. Riverine Antiques,

112• E. Moln St,.ot, Pomeroy.
Houro: II.T.W: 10:00 o.m. to 8:00
p.m., Sundly 1:00 to S:OO p.m.
SM-D92-252e.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

SUzuki

Helmet

And ::

cond, call evening•, ~.:.

3868.

I

•

71

~:-;:~ ~'i.at~e: :~: .,

Syotom, 2nd Ownor, Aoklng

UQO. 614-44B·U52.

773-1532.

loch chain aaw1 merked dOW'n ti75 Morcury Marqula, 400
Sopt. Solo. Sldoro Equipment, enlnga1 .alr cond, exc cond, no
rult, 304-882·3715.
Henderson, WV. 304-175·7421.
LP ga• fumance, 75,000 BTU, 111711 Doclgo Chorgor, &amp;2,000 Ac·
down droft, $200. eM-Dll2·2040 tuol 111111, 1 Ownor, Runo Uko
Howl 5,.-446-4532.
after 5:00PM.
Plno Olnotto Sot And Chol11: 111711 Doclgo allnt I motor &amp;

tranamlallon In gOOd lhlpe,

dowa, llntelt, etc. Claude Win· 81,000 Mllu, $700 or But otter.
tere, Rio Grande, OH Call 614· 114-441-0020.

1181 Doclgo Colt. Good lotllngo,
Mag WhMII, New Plrtl, $800.

_56
_ _P_et_s_t,..o_r_s_a_le_...,..

ti14·3'1li-24M.

Grooming. All b&lt;Mda, otyloo.
lomo Pol Food Deolor. Julio
Wobb. Coli 51H48~3t, t.aoo.
3!2.0231.

1881 Olde Delta 88, ot.OR Seden.
Like new, tverr option, 305 V-8,

3 gray Cocketelta, 1 mile out
Jerlcho Road, $25.00 each.

$1785. at4-tv2-6n!l

11t8Z Olde Cut1111 $1 1750. Make
offer. 304-87&amp;.5301.
11t83 Nlaaan Stanz1
New

Brakn, New Exhault, Air ntt,
Puppllll
112
Australian Crulae, PW, H~h Mlteage. ~000
Shor,herd, 112 AUitrallan Blue OBO 114-38
•
Hee er. From Working Part1nt1,

'

Iii·

81.-446-7157 AKor .p.m.
111M Cllobrlty, ...,, AT, AC, PS,
AKC Delmatlon pupploo, vet PB, EJCtro Cloonll2,150. Coli AI·
12
chocked, $225. 614-liD&amp;-2716
~'"::::;:5 P::c,·"'~8-;-1 •__..-:;...
:..,:;.;,
..::·:--- -

AK.C Miniature Schnauzer, Mala 1D84 Monte Carlo SS, ga,.g•
Puppy, Shoto, 1200. Wondorlul kopt, $5,500. :JCM-6711-lllt•.

Poll 614-4.JI.OD10.
AKC roglll- Cock1&lt; Sponlol

IKipplee1 ehot1 and wormed,
~_.75-114121Kor •:OOPM.

Extro Good Uft Chllrl 1350. 514- AKC Roglotorod YlllcM U.b
IIIII Pup, 7 Wooko Old. t17tl.
:2U.et::,::;:52.=------- 114-2!11-1733.
1183 Comoro, V-6, outo. 11louvered hoUH wlndowe~ floor Orogonwynd C.Hory Porllln,
furnace, fireplace lneert. 114- Sl1n1111 111&lt;1 Hlmoilyon kHtono.
114 141 3IU aftll' 7 p.m.
1182·71M
I lln&gt;yhlll Sot (Oikl Solo, Flolo Tonlo, :M13 Jockoon Avo.
L.o-11, Choir And 3 Tohloo. 3 Point P-rot. 304-1711-2013,
full llnl Troplcll :J.IIIrU,
Clllmonl-~~~=o.SIIcl­ omoll
...,... ond 1 1
.
lng Ctooot Doore.
Scot·
ter.IM-4-..-.
Goldin RotrloYW pu@l.........
Air comprweeor, microwave, ,_...,_, RIIIIY IOpt. 3Gth,
hay, ~. llwnmower, en- ttOO ... 114-11112-6tl3
loOdor lor troctor. 30M711-1217 HAPPY JACK TRIVERMICIDE:
or I'IS·7221.
Rocoanllld 1111 lnd olloctlvo
Aohloy Wood/Cool -~~. Good by lf.S. IUIIIU of Yotorl~
Conclftlon. Alia loby loci With orildlclno lflllnol hook,
lnd ........... In ~
11-.
Prlcod cota.
Avolloble O.T.C 11 R I 0
R-Iolo. Coli ~M-6~2·7277.
Fold.l14-lti241M
Av"":!J,_, 30" olio rongo.
loy
unllorm olzl M, uMd Rogloloild IIICk And Whfto,
1 yr. both flOod ooncl, ~711- Uvor And WhHo, Delmltlon
Pupo For Solo. Roody October
38f1.
!lid., 1,......,768.

tDIM Pontile Floro, Groot Condl·

tlonl Rune Grutl $2,000. 114--

245.filtl.
1DB5

Cl~n~ra

lroc,

-79~~731~·------------..
Campers &amp;
~
Motor Homes

aurrnd~ •

With Rid Interior. $5,38 . 11438f.f:IU Aft1&lt; &amp;p.m.
1187 Ford LTD e-n Vlctotlo 4DR Sidon. Booutltul fomlly cor,
Ill ot&gt;tlono. 302-Y.. I21U. 8141182-6711
11117 ll110ury Orond MorqtiiO,
37,000 mlloo, A·t oond, ono
-nor, 11,500. 304-1711-6111.
11117 Pontile Trono-Am, T~op,
outo., ore. COnd., 114-a.•:zaa.
oftor5:00 ....
1188 blut Corolol. good COnd,
now tlroo l bllkoo. 80,000
mlloo, $4,500. 30UI2·3!i7.

Scott'~ ~old
C.ll, - s-10
~~~­
wv.
2·3752.tlfll
v:t
pickup h,too. 11188 CUIIIo car.
rto V-6 12,11!. 1Vl'l Cooc:hrnon
ero oond, $3,.00. 11114 · "· •••• 12,800. 1112 Dodge
Chlrgor UJ_at,ts,. 11111 Rongor
V-6 lute, N,l95. 11111 Torripo
12,4U. tlfiiiiUZU outo u.zao.

:

1982 Nomld Zllt. So&amp;t.eon. ;
tolnld, Eacollonl Condftlonl ,.
Sloopo I, $4,000 Or Boot onor. '
814-31111-Dll!l.
(.

~

Services

~

------------~
Home
81
Improvements

er~

troa, $200.00, !14-317·77711 or
Forth Etc. 81._.411-8441.
387.JM2t
Reconditioned
WIShlira
&amp;
drye,., e~eh $100 and up. We tm z.aa C.moro robuln 350,
Mrvlce all makn. The Waaher &amp; ohlh.Cit, Bill ohlftor, at500 or
trodo lOt okllr Chivy. 614-3711Oryor Shoppo. 614-448-21144.

Groom and Suppl~ Shop-Pet

:

800-2'13-6685.
~
Tool box crooo bod lor wldl bod ~
pickup. Toppor llborlg- for !
llhort wldl bod pickup. ~'IS·

Huaky Home Lite and McCUI·

245-512\

•·r

Autos for Sale

1971 Buick Skylorlo, Runa Good,
Good Tirol, $800. 814·2511-tT.ID.
tf75 Buick IASobro Convortlblo,
Coal Fumece, Cheapl Clll 114- Now Top, Paint, Tirol. •55 En•U-3878.
. gino, Good Shopol $2,200. :JCM.

Few Womena Oothaa And So

enow tlrea :

1111 235P.711RW mountld orl •
Ford who.... 304-455-2013.
~
Budgll Tronomlll..,., UMd
robUin, otonlr.g 11 SH; A.. o '
Pono. S14-2o!HI77, IM-3711- •

au tonka, body pono, ono ~
ton lruck whMI11 radlatcn, .,

Appllancn, Blocka And Under·
plnnlng, Re~d~ To Move lntol 191M Mercury llontoroy Clol&amp;lc.
Vory Good Englno, Now Exhouol
Aaklng, S•,too. 11.~511-5237.

For Solo: 20 Condy vondT, mo·
chlnoo1 • 18 locolly p ocod,
S2950.uo, IM-'1112~005 or 1'12·
30U.
For Soil: Good Uold Coot Iron

4 ltMI belted rM&amp;II

Transportation

For Sale: 1072 Indian 12x50.

Vory Good Condftlonl Clrpolld
Throughout, OlaiMuhor And

_...;.Acc;,;,:,;e;.;;a.;.eo:;rle.::.:.s___ •

2263.

SS

lp.m., Sundoy t2 Noon Till
5p.m., • IIIIH Off Routo 7 On
Roull 141 In cantonory.
Rolrlgor••-·
$711-Stoo:

,081

Wlndohlold, e,ooo .t.ctuot 1111oo._;
$1100. 114-379-•484.
'::!
19110 KX.ao Kl•ooolcl good ~

1183 S.•Roy SRV 210, 21 n.
cuddy cobln, V.f. Ex. concl. Coli
onor s, 8M-44f.t713.
Boot And Wovo Runnor WJn.
torlzotlon. FIICiory Trolnod. 114Hog, $1,905. Owner ·WIIJ Finance. 2!0-6110.
114·2116-6522.
Auto Parts &amp;
IIIIHY Forguoon 12• hoy balor 76

Wotk booto. 114-4411-3151.
12!1
Stokermatlc Stove, UMd 8 Win·
VI'RA FURNITURE
tm Chovrolol llltlbu Wogon.
toro, $500. l&gt;l-3sa.&amp;ll56.
114-4411-3158
HHch, n&gt;OI.,.ck, run1 gOod,
LIVING ROOM: Solo I Choir, Surplua Army Cemoutlluge looko good, outo, AC. John
$1Dt.OO:
Rocllnor
SMV.OO; Original clothing, •mall ace•• Krowoczyn, 814-D92·m7.
Swlvll Rocker, $D9.00; CoHoo I aorf11, l11ther US Combat
End Toblll, 181.00 Slt.DINtNO Boote. Sam Somerville'• J...~an· tm Chryllor Cordobo 310,
ROOM: Toblo With 4 Podded dyvlllo WV boolclo Pool unlco, outo, now ovorythlng, $1&gt;100.
Cholro, $141.00; Count'I Plno Rt. 21 N.F~, Sit, Sun, noon-6'00 dlyo 814-1182·215l. onor 5:30pm,
DlnoHo With lench nd 3 PM textendld houra during coli ~'IS-1155.
Cho!r•1. 12911.00; Motchlna 2 hunting 111oon1. 304-213-5655.
1m Olcla CUilll, looko good
Door Hftch 13otl· Or 1581.00
Sit; !Ilk Toblolc f2d2 WHh I Wood For Sole; Coil Aftor 5p.m. run1 fill good, $1,75q. 11:17
Evorgroon Or, P.P. oftor 5:00PM.
low
Boc
Cholro, 614-4411-3210.
1828.00.8EOROOM: Pootor Bid·
1m Oldl O.ha N Royal, ••c
room 8ufto I! pc.l, $a.I.OO; •
cond, 10,000 mil•, new tll'tls,
Building
Drawer Cheat, 144.11; Bunk
well malntainld 1 PS, auto,
lid, 1221LComploto Full lion
Supplies
$1,200. ~-675-71165.
Sit, flOII.uu Sot; 7 pc. C.dlr
loaroom Sufto, 18Dli.OO.OPEN: Block, brick, HWif Dipea, win· 1~81 ChtV)' St11lon Wagon,
Monday Ttvu Saturdly, 11.m. to

!:

aell, trade, 8:()0.5:00 wMkdev•.

County Applilnco'v Inc. Good
uold "''ptloncoo, T. • olio. a-

-111!.,. 527 31&lt;1. Avo. Gol·
llpotlo, ....
0000 USED APPLIANCES
w..,.,., dryera, "trlgeratorw,
rong.-. Bkoggl ApPiilnooo,
Uppor Rlvor Ra. Booldl 8tono
Ctut _ .. call 114-4411-7311.

Motorcycles

Sot. till Noon.
Blby ftomo· JoMy Lynn Crib, 2
U.to Modol 110 AC, DIOHI Troc·
car S•t•, Stroller, TWin Stroller. tor,
_.,850: 180 MF Oloaot
81.-441-G723.
... 350: I N Ford With Buoh

&amp;M-4411-11144.

'*

74

Ownor Will Flnanco. 814·285- Hondi250R, .. 50; Good CondJ•
6522.
tlonl 114-441·7370.
Jlm'o Form Equipment, SR. 35,
Wool Golllpollo, · 814-445-11777; 75 Boats &amp; Motors
Wldo aoloctlon now &amp; uold larm
for Sale
tl'l.ctors I. lmpltmenll. Buy,

now 1500. nil $300. 614·25116817 Ot 2!6-11:13.

1 a.m. to I p.m. Mon..Sat.

lotln~Von. Fuuy:l::
oqulppld, oxcollont condlllonl"
gorogo bpi, 111100. IM-1182....,
5082.
....

800-447-3750 for prlcH. BOB'S 1187 Chovy • Whlll DriV.:i
MARKET, lotooon or Golllpotla, Pickup, Short loti, L.oodldl 1,....,.;
011.
446-3113.
::
1188 Ford Eoonatlno Von, ._.,..
~~CIIIont Conclltlonl 114-~
Farm Supplies

Merchandise
Household
Goods
4ll Inch Frlaldllro Eloclrlc
Rango,. Sldl By Sldl OVono,
$12!. Mini Condftlon. 614-258•
,.a..
lorgoln APPIIIneoo 10 Dayo
Only. Frool. FrM Rllrlflll'llot
W11 $1!50 Now $'IS; Wuhor W11
$125, Nowll5 And $'IS; lllny To
Choou From All Aro O.u,.,..
tMd. Sko991 Appltoncoo, IM-

... .

1188. Plymouth

owner flnancl"", 30.t-17S·1000.

Homes for Sale

3

5648

Clnning Pe~chea now tvallable,
el&amp;o Bartlett Pun and Prune
Plum• later In Auguat. Clll ,.

Country Mobllo Homo Pork,
Routo 33, North ol Pomeroy.
Loto,
814-11112·'-····
111'111. porto, ...... Coli

Fumlohld 1br Houll, Locotld

14x70,

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Space for Rent

lotobllo homo 1poco lot ront.
Cfty wttor. No poll. 114-o1*3117.

7:00pm.

··~·

~.

RENT· TO.OWN
Nama Brand Product•
Factory Aulhorlzed

Help Wanted

46

.

1984 Bronco, 361, V-1, Auto, Air ._..
Tilt, Now Polntl 18,000. 114-2U·V

Alec traller apace. All hook·upe.

Coli oftor 2:00 p.m., !ICM·TI35651, l.. eon WV.

3-BR ho- on Ftotwoodl Rd.
No
1poto.
Roloronco/Dopooft
roqulrod.
614-185-lMI
e room houH tor Nit or rent,

Smoll 2 bodroom trollor
Horttord, $125. month ptuo
IJ4.1112.T.IlM.
dlpooll. 3tM-6112·2i!M.
HOUSE FOR FREEIIIIuot movo 3 bedroom1, nice yard cttr
oH lol In lllclcloport. Fill In school dlltrlct. 3M Pon:h St1oot,
b&amp;Mment, Hid and ltraw. Mutt Klnougo. 814-446-1'173.
llan oontroctl 2·1R, U.rgo LA.
DA, Both, hu now roolond gut· 43 Farms for Rent
tor, now copper ond PVC plumbIng, nold 10m1 work. You PlY Farm For Rent Or laaM 54
lor tho moving! Only Hriouo Acroo, Nur Nonh Oolllo High
collorll Coli Sfot-11112·2071 oftor School, 304-273-C588.

Adima on Ylllow Buoh Rit.,
RICino. Tuoodly, Oct. 1.

8

CAIPET CIEANIIS
and 1111 FLOOI CliE

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

baHment. 304-f7W213.

Houll And U.nd For Solo: 113
kill, Frot OUI 114-446-8411,

•New Honi.s

•Siding
•Painting

Convertible Tops,
Carp.eta, Headliner
8t Seat Covers end
Minor Auto Repair.

Starting Sept. 22

US FIRST!

992-5800

992-5335 "' 915·3561
Atross From Post Offlu
POMnOY, OHO

RACINE GUN
ClUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS

Pomeroy,

8-28-0t 1 mo. pd.

USED APPUAIICES

Nee

-2-.

. 614-9«12-6820 .

Across fro• Pest OHicel
117 I. s.c-1 St.
PO.IDY, 01110

OHIO PALLET CO.

ALBANY-A wei maintained 3 bedroom home with 2 lull
baths, air COndilioning, woodbumer, attached 1 car garage, and equjlj5ed kitchen. Sitting on approx. 2 t/2 aetes
with a stocked porod.
ALL FOR $39,500

EMILEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operator·

992-5335 or
985-3561

home,

t"c.;

Firat Tlmo: Clothee, Smoll ApPIIIncH. Golf Clubl, llloc. 20
Wllow Drlvo, Thurldoy, Frldly,
Slturdly, ~.

SERVICE

Hardwood Slabs
For Sale
Great Price!
CALL

UIODLEPORT·Ruosell Street·Greal Neighborhood-In
town l1vong With country &amp;elting. A 3 bedroom, 1 112 bath
home with a lull basement, I car garage, and a large lot
Prlca Wll S$1,8110
NOW $56,000

NQ SUNDAY

KEN'S APPLIANCE ·,:

FIREWOOD
SELLERS

HYSELL RUN ROAD-II a kitchen with lots ol cabinets is
what y~u need, this home is lor you. It has 3 badrooms . a
large k1tchen. and a large living room. Comes wilh .75 aetas
and a patoo.
OWNER WANTS AN OFFER $29,900

',
PH. 949·2801
· or las. 949-2860 ''

ALL IIlilS .
Iring It lw Or We
Pick Up.

Factory Guns Only
919/91/2 mo.

SALEM STREET·RUTLAND-A 2 story home with 4·5
bedrooms, nocelront srtbng porch, carport, cute little playhouse silting inside a lenced back yard. Home has a brand
new rool and gutters, central air, and some new carpeting
and a storage building
JtjST $30,500 '

,

&lt;

OVEN REPAIR

Every Sundoy 12 Noon

FIVE POINTS-A Dr•m Home- This beautiful stone house
h~s a gigantic living room with a fireplace, a dining room
w1th e fireplace, and a full basement wilh a fireplace, bar
and a dance lloor. Large bedrooms with cedar lined clos·
ats. Comes wtih range, relrigeralor, a&gt;mpactor, dryer, and
washer. The apPro X. 4 acre yard with a large lake, weeping
Willows, and ntce shrubbery lOoks like a pari&lt;. Also has a 2
car garage, decking, and much mora . This is a must see
home.
$128,000

Gallipolis

Complete Grooming
For All Breeds

bedroom

nolghborhood, big yord, holl

ABSOWTELY MUST SELLII
Rocluold To Sill: 2 Story 3br
Comer Lot In ChMhlro, Ohio. 42 Mobile Homes
Excollont Condition. Flononclng
for Rent
Avoltoblo. 1104-1:12-6159, gM.
t:I2·'1U0,114-317.QI4g,
2 bodroom Aahton Uptllld Rd,
2.story houll In Rutilnd, 1· Hud oco:optld, no poll, 30W711bclrm upolllro opt. 3-l&gt;odroom 4t181.
upolol.., -notolro llvlno ron,
bedroom tnller, ••• • watlr
2-boclroom, bothroom, dining 2turntshod.
Rolw.ncoo, Aloo
~l kHchon, utllhy rm, laking
trollor opoco. North Rt. 1 L.ocuot
NOIOOOI 114-'M2·265e
Rood on rlmht, Pt. Pit. ~711·
:ztlr LA. Kftchon, OR, U.rgo 10711
loth, Wllk~n Clooot. Acrooo
From Communfty Porlo, Lion, 2·BR mablla homM, lumlohed,
WV, $1!,000, Will Hogottoto. 814- waaher/dryer, air, I"Man2-6800.
3711-24M.
2·1R port. tum. or untum. In
3 lldrooon Houoo, 111 Klnoon coun1ry. Dloolft/Reflrenc:• ,..
Drive, Golllpollo. Uvlng Room, qulrod. IM-~1-2133
Dining R n KHchlil, Both, 2br Trollor In Rio Orondo,
~~
rt.::~w.c:.~ $2501mo. 114-388-II!MI.
Wolklng Dlotonoo Of Tho Pool, For Solo or Ronl, 1181- bodGoll Colroo And Clinic. Ool· room mobile harM on rentH
llpalls Cfty School Dlotrict. 614· lot, coul1ry ..Uing 1 depoalt and
roloronco roqulriMI, ~-67112U-et52. ,
71188.
3br, Both, Kllchon, OR, LR,
BaM, Garage1 CentraJ Alr1 Gal Mobile Home For Rent.
- . Mlcl$20'1. Mlddtopon. 114- Ralor- And DopOIIt R•
qulrod. CoN Altll 2p.m. &amp;M...e.
1112-o314.
0527.
00\IERNIIEHT HOliES From $1
(U Rtpolrt. Delinquent Tu Ohio Rlvor CAmpgroundo troiiO&lt;
Proponr. lla-lllono. Your 1p1ce, yur round water, AWtr,
gorbogo pick-up, tumlohed,
-10111 (1
For Cuntnl Rtpo Ext
List. QH. $85.tKTpor month, BM-8411-2521

&amp; VIcinity

New llitwn luNt
"Free BMimatee"

2

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

SIMplng room• wllt11 cooking.

Cuotom lutcho~ng. I dlyo 1
wllk. Clttll, Hoge, OMr, 304-

31

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

qulrod, et4-D92-7503

achoola snd hoaphal, reference
ond dopooH.304-i754116.

Real Estate
"

mo plua utiHin, ref &amp; dep ,...

8580.

I

Professional
Services

812~383.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

2 bdnn hoUH In Pomeroy1 $225

Rooma for rent • week or month.
s~:~~~ at $120/mo. G1111a Hotet.

3 boclloom homo clolo to

23

IUUDOIIIG

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB

WASHEIS-$100 op
DIYIS-S69 ''
IIFIIGUATOIS-$100 "'
IIHGES---$125
FIEmiS-$125 op
•
IICIO OVENS-$79 op

I LOANS I
AI Typoo Of l.oono Poroonol
BuiiMM Etc. Coli For FrH
eono.notlon With A Loon
OHiclr Todoyl 1-6(1().1182-8450.
O.urontMd RMults.

painting.
let me do it for you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES
161
180

Retrigan~tor

Fumlohld,
$185/mo.
$100
DepooH. 2! IIIII Crook. 81.-446·
134ll.

22 Money to Loan

8·9·1 mo. pd.

GUN SHOOT

992-

LINDA'S
PAINTING

eiUY •SELL e1'1ADE

742-2421

------------------~~:
72 Trucks for Sale ....

zan.

Nlco Bullcllni u.t. BltwMn
Now BI.Pau nd St. Rt. 3! On
Rodney Plko, Rootrlctld. 114-

9· 6·1 mo.

(614)
696-luuo

. ._

l Klttono To Good Homo. Lltior

~olnod. 114-446-3897.

BALLET, TAP &amp;
JAZZ CLASSES ··

11·12·90-tfn

Howcrd l. Writestl

Public Notice

SUNDE RELLA DIET
CLASSES

USED RAILROAD TIES

7/ 31 / '91 tin

CLflSSiAED f\DS

ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS
VIllage or Pomeroy
320 Eut lhln Str"t
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
S•Pirlt• 111led Bl OS for
the conatrucllon of the
Wu-.ter Treetment Plant
lmpronmenta will ba
1ecelved by the VIllage of
Pomeroy at the Municipal
Building, 320 E111 Meln
Strlll, Pomeroy, Ohio 4578g
und112:00 o'clock noon (local lillie), October 21, 1191,
and than 11 ukl office pufl.
lcly, opan.cl and rud oloucl.
The WORK covered by
lhe
CONTRACT
DOCUMENTS lncludea the
following approximate
quanUdaa.
Contrect g1·1, 91·1A, and
g1•1 a
Wutewater
Tre•tmenl
Pl1n1
Improvement• - Tha com·
plete lna11111t1on at the

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

992-2269

ror Rent

Spece for Atnt
Wen1ed .to Rent
Equipment tor R111t
Fot Le•e - .·

AIR CONDinONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOBU. &amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

BILl SLACK

ltfMithl

- -·
Read the Best Seier

Square Dancing, ROund Dancing,
Clogging
ADM. : $4,00 Welcome
KANAUGA, OHIO

•FI~EWOOD

DAIWIN, OliO

.........
-·
Read the

D.A.V. DANCE
SAT., SEPT. 28th
BAND: Morton Bros.

•LIGHT HAULING

WHALEY'S
AUTO PARTS

64 - Hev &amp; Grein
66 - S.Id &amp; Fert~ iltr

35- lots &amp; Acre-ue

tor Rtnl
o\6 - Furnithtd Room•

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

REMOVAL

~

North 4thlullklcllo11011, Ohio. 2
mlohool lp!, dopooH
ond rollrlriOI roqulrld, 304-182·
bollroom

Mercer Bottom Sub-division,
one ICI'tl late, At. 2 front•ge,
price reduced, city water, 304·
! ....233•.

4 Moll Klttono. ! W11ko Old, 2
~~·· Thoy Aro Eotlngl

.,I ..

·g,~m

-,:",&amp;

-.m 1 Bldroom Aponmont.
1111 141 0310.

lrom Oolllpollo. $500 down. $115
mo. 814·2!6-1211.

Giveaway

JOSIPH D. JACKS

Now Ill· ·

1

1811 Ford Escort GL ltuo u~
torlorlgrey lntlrlor. Exo.
lnoldl ond out. 11,700 oct
mllol, $3250. lt4.f4"2W
,•

4:t:z23

2 WhHo Klttono WHh Bluo Eyoo.

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and

Autos for Sale

3 to 4 acres: &amp;oclted In molt
area. Good boating. 7 miiH

1br HouM, Stove,

315- Aeal hlltt Wenled

44 - A~rrment

BULLETIN BOARD

Ill£ miMATIS

71

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Apartment
for Rent

Helen Street, Columbw, OH

We Guarantee Your Saflsfactlon

61 - Ferm Equipment
&amp;2.-;- Wanted ro Buy

Transporl aIJOn
21 - Bulin•• Oppo,rtunitv
22 - ~on.,- to loen

42 - Mobile Homes tor Ren t
o\3 - Fermt tor Rent

tht Ruults Fast

57 - Mullictllnttrument t
&amp;8 - Fruitl &amp; Veg.a1blet

&amp;

-1 1,00 A.M SATURDAY
- 2'00 P.M. MONDAY

Classified

61 - HouNhold Good•

&amp;2 - Sporlh'lg Ooodt
53- Antiqutl
5• - Misc . Merchandise
55 - Bui&amp;dlng Suppli•
5~ - Ptts for 581 ft

Srrv1cr.s

MONOAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAP,EA
F~IOA'( PAPER
SUNDAY PAPE~

Mcr c han!lt sc

ElllllillYIIIP.Ill

12 - SI'UJition wan1ed
1.3 - lnturance
14-Busin•• Tr1ining
15 - Schoolt lo ln1truction

WEONESOAY PAPER

Ov,r 15 Wordo
.
.20
16.00
.30
$9.00
.42
et3.oo
.eo
11 .30 / day
.Oel doy

u .oo

1, - Help W1nttd

DAY BEfORE PUBLICATION

COPY DEADLINE -

tlon mollld on roquoll. 304-417115253, John D. Go~och, no
olngl•wldo trlllo.., plolll.
10 112 •c- In 0.1111 Co. on
Populor Rldgo Rd lol ulo. 4Cimotory lofo on Grovel Hill In
Chlohlro, Sond lnqulrioo to: s•s

Repairs Gutters
Building a1d RemodeRng

Rete

Annou nCP.Illt~nl s
1- Cerd of Thenkt
2 - ln Memory

county
water,
reuonable
l'tlltrlctlons. Complete Inform•·

For Old &amp; New Roofs, Shingles

Aec• ere tor conMcutive runs, broken updfYswill bt cl\•ged
fnr e•r:h d.w •• Mp•rete tds

outaidt Meigs. Gell1e or Meson count!• mull be prt·

•Pri~

Words
16
15
15
te
15

home conltructkm on

Rayburn Rood. Povld rood,

CAll JACKS ROOFING &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
992·7653

RATES
Days

new

Is Your Roef Ready For Another Year of Ice and
Now's The.Dme to Find Out.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

44

u.t. l ICroiJII IYIIiabll lor

Business Servi·c es

Classified
TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992·21.56
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

35 . Lots a. Acreage

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

BASEMENT
··
WATERPROOFING
,
Uncondlllonll lllltlmo gUIIIn- ·.
IH. L.ocol rot111ncos tumlshld. :·
Froo Mtlmotoo. C.ll colloct 1· •.
IM·237-IM88, dly or . night. •·
Rog•re Baument W.terproo- "'

tlng.

:

Comploto Mobllo Homo Sot.U.. ~
Ropalro; Commorlcll, Rllid..,: ;.
tiel Improvements. Including: ro
Plumbing, Electrical. lnaurance 4•
Clalma ACcepted. 11-t.211-1111. t.:

..

Curtis

Home lmprovemenla: ._
Yure E.lperlence On Older 1 ill.
Newer HomM. Room Addltlona •

Foundation

Worlc,

Rooii!'U' •

Windowe &amp; Siding. FI'M ~ :
llm1t11l Aeferencee, No Job To •

Big Or Smolll 114-441-0221.
•
0 &amp; E Conllructlon Oonorol

Contractor, Roollng, Concrlle
General Repalre 1 aeneral Con~
1truetlon, f14--388..Q08e, FrM Eatlmlltll

JET

Aeration Uoeora, re~INCI.

Ntw

I ••bUlK moton In otock, RON
EVANS, JACKSON, 011. 1-t00-

537-8521.

Ron 1a TV Service, epeciallzJng
In Zenith al~ Hrvlclng mowt
other branda. HouM calli, a110

oomo oppllonco ropolro. WV
!ICM.Olii~:IN Ohio 814-441-2U• .
Rool worlo ond olhor homo -

,..,.,,., 304-t75-2110.

•

Slpllc Tank Pumping 1110~Gollil Co. ROll EVANS ENTERPHISES,
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Friday, September 27, 199,!

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

••
•

Woman struggles as one of nation's poor

VOLUNTEERS • Betty Jean Lamphier (left), president of the
Holzer Medlc:al Center Volunteer Service League is pictured dis·
cussing plaDS for the upromiDg Volunteer Recruitment Tea witb
Ginger Tayotor (right), director of Volunteer Services at the hospital The tea is scheduled for Monday, Od. 7, from 1-3 p.m. in the
French 500 Room.

By JAMES JEFFERSON
Associated Press Writer
LIITLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) 1Sheila Johnson is behind in her
rent, has sometimes had to plug an
extension cord into a neighbor 's
electrical outlet to turn on her lights
and says her refrigerator recently
held nothing but ice.
The 30-year-old mother of two
is one of 33.6 million Americans
- 13.5 percent of the population
- the U.S . Census Bureau says
live in poverty.
The number of poor Americans
grew by 2.1 million between 1989
and 1990, the first increase since
1983,.the Census Bureau reported
Thursday. Some economists
warned things may worsen as weak
economic conditions continue.
Mrs. Johnson, who has just
returned to work after months of
unemployment, is hopeful things
will improve for ber.

" I have hope every day that I
wake up that today is going to be
better," she said.
The Census Bureau considers a
family of four earning $13,359 or
less to be poor. The definition does
not include family owned property
and some forms of assistance people may receive. It also does not
reflect regional differences in the
cost of living.
The bureau's findings, based on
interviews with about 60,000
households, are the first to track
poverty in America since the nation
fell into recession last year. They
showed that the number of poor
Americans increased by 2.1 million
between 1989 and '90.
Until last year, the poverty rate
had fallen steadily since 1983, the
year after the last recession ended.
The figures indicated that being
black or Hispanic, a child, a city
dweller, a Southerner or a member

of a family headed by a woman
meant a person was more likely to
be poor.
One-fifth of the nation's children and nearly one-third of its
blacks were considered poor.
Mrs . Johnson, meanwhile,
expects a .Paycheck today for the
first time m months. She recently
began a job as a day-care worker,
earning $4.35 an hour, the minimum wage. She had quit the same
job in June when she couldn't find
a baby sitter for her children.
This summer, she and the boys

The Annual Recruiunent Tea for
the Holzer Medical Center Volunteer Service League will be held
Monday. Oct. 7. in the French 500
Room at Holzer Medical Center,
acctnling to Ginger Tayntor, director of Volunteer Services.
Every member of the hospital
volunteer group has received a letter or invitation from Ms. Tayntor,
urging their attendance and asking
each one to bring a prospective volunteer to the reception, which will
be held from 1-3 p.m. Volunteers
are also urged to make their reservations in advance, notifying the
Volunteer Services Deparunent of
their intention to come and the
names of their guests.
Betty Jean Lamphier, presidem
of the hospital's Volunteer Service
League explained, "ff each of our
active volunteers would invile and
bring one guest to the tea, we could

add greatly to our membership and
make J??SSible more volunteer service w1thiD lhe hospital."
She commenled on how much
lhe program had grown Wid emphasized the great value of the time
and talent contributed by the volunteers. She also stated, "Volunteers
gain so much satisfaction through
their work and direct contact with
the patients. They are ttuly dedicated, and give so generously of themselves."
Other officers of the hospital's
volunteer group are Phyllis Taylor,
president-elect; Wanda Boggs, vice
president; Karen Crabtree, secre·
tary.

Anyone interested in knowing
more about the volunteer program
at the hospital is urged to call the
Volunteer Office at 446-5056.
Reservations should be made by
Friday, Oct 4.

Oo'
FAMILY ~,

"

Volunteer recruitment 'Marlboro Man' settles
lawsuit out-of-court
tea slated at Holzer
SANI'A ANA, Calif. (AP)- A
cancer-stricken model who depicted the robust "Marlboro man" in
advertisements agreed to settle his
malpractice lawsuit against a doctor who allegedly failed to diagnose a tumor.
Tbe out-of-court settlement was
announced Wednesday, but terms
were not disclosed.
"I don't think there' s any compensation that could ever be arrived
at that would be satisfactory," said
Wayne McLaren, 49, of Corona del
Mar. "How much is a man's life
worth?"
McLaren, a pack-and-a-half-aday smoker for about 25 years, was
featured in 1975 print ads as the
"Marlboro Man."
In his Orange County Superior
Court lawsuit, McLaren said he
went to Newport Beach Dr.
William Freud on Sept. 5, 1989,
cornplainiDg of a cough. A chest X-

r.

~e' MASON
RT. 33

75 cents

.

lived in a two-bedrOOm flat without~
utilities. She rWI WI extenSIOn cord~
from an adjoining ap_artment for~
lights and hauled pa1Is of water,
from neighbors. She cleWied, !"'s~;
from yards for " extra change.
...
An understanding Ian~lor&lt;t
recently allowed her to mov~ mto
three-bedroom house. forgomg th~
rent for now. Family and friend :
have paid for the water and lights.,,,
Her application for food stampi
was recently approved and her first
$277 monthly allotment arrivedthis week.
::

c.ood's Abva)'.t C

Sunday

Big Bend
Sternwheel
Festival

College
Scores

Veterans Memorial honors Adams - B3

B-1

Sands recalls lawsuit filed by local
church in 1933 - A4

.

MASON. WV

Vol. 2e, No. 34
Copyrlghlod 1991

Make Plans To Have Sunday Dinner With Us

Southern Ohio Coal sets records

FRIED CffiCKEN DINNER

$5.99 ~

Mashed Potatoes/Gravy
Choice of Vegetable
Soup &amp; Salad Bar
Or Try One Of Our Other Great.Menu Items!
OPEN SUNDAY, 6:30 AM'rO 10 PM
jl Carry Out Orden Available (304) 773·5321 11·
VISA • MASJ'ERCARD • AMERICAN EXPRESS ACCEPIED

ALBANY - Southern Ohio Coal Company's Meigs Division
established eight new records Thursday, several of which lasted
only days.
According to Jim Tompkins, vice president and general manager
of the Meigs Division, the Meigs No. 31 and Meigs Np. 2 mines
combined to set a new division record tonnage record that day by
producing 35,576 clean tons, shattering the old mark, set in June, by
nearly 2,000 tons. The division's longwall units produced 31 ,845
tons of the total, also a record.
In setting the division mark, Tompkins said Meigs No. 2 also
established new shift and daily records for the mine and its two
longwall units. The mine's daily record is now 24,771 tons.
On Wednesday, Meigs No. 2's west longwall unit established a
new daily mark by producing 12,257 cleW\ tons.
Southern Ohio Coal Company's Meigs Division is part of the
American Electric Power System, the nation's largest purchaser of
coal.

Trooper involved in accident

24' ROOF TRUSS ·
4/12 PITCH
UP TO 2' OVERHANG

23.99

Inside
Along the river ..............81-7
BusinessJFarm ............. D-1-8
Classified. ......................D3·7
Deaths................................ A3
Editoral. ............................A2
Sports............................. C1-7
Weather ...........................A-3

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, September 29, 1991

Sunday thru Thurlday, 6:30 am-10 pm; Friday &amp; Sauday, 6:30 am-11 pm

Featuring

Florida St. 51 Michigan 31
Oklahoma 27, Virginia Tech 10
Penn State .28 Boston College 21 Rutgers 14 Michigan St. 7

Sunny. High In

tower 70s.

•
tmts-

NEXT 10 FAST 4 U AND MASON MOTEL

ray taken during the examination
detected a lung tumor, but the Xray was never reviewed by the doctor, the lawsuit said
Eight months later, a second
doctor took another chest X-ray
and it was learned McLaren's lung
cancer was in its advanced stage,
the lawsuit said.
The lawsuit alleged that Freud
was negligent for not reading
McLaren's first X-ray, but Freud
denied any wrongdoing.
He testified Tuesday that
McLaren never showed up for a
followup examination after the Xrays were taken. The physician said
he never examined the X-ray, say·
ing it is common to review X-rays
during followup appointments.

W. Michigan 35 Ohio U. 9
Notre Dame 45 Purdue 20

GALLIPOLIS - A trooper for the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol was involved a two-car accident Friday night
on S.R. 588 in Green Township.
According to a patrol repon, uooper Bryan D. Pack, 27, of Gallipolis, was westbound on S.R. 588 when another vehicle, driven by
Virginia R. Hall, 29, of Gallipolis, turned east onto S.R. 588 from
C.R. 12. Hall was driving left of center and sideswiped Pack's
cruiser when the vehicles meL
Neither Pack nor Wall were injured in the accident.
Damage to Pack's 1991 Ford Crown Victoria cruiser was listed
as light. Damage to Wall's 1988 Ford Escon was listed as light
The repon staled that Wall had beell'drinldng- before the accident
and that her ability , to dP,'&lt;~- ~as impaired. According .to a patrol
source, Wall refused to submitlo an alcohol test
Wall was cited by the patrol for driving left of center and driving
under the influence.

14 Sections, 134 Psgos
A Mu1tlmodlo Inc. Newspaper

Meigs commissioners review
CDBG plans, accept asphalt bid
• A $43,323 request to be used
to install a 6,400 foot water line for
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water DisPOMEROY - The merits of 10 trict. Twenty-two residents of
Community Development Block Vance Road would immediately
, Grant Fund applications were dis- benefit from the project, but the
cussed when the Meigs County expansion could also result in
Board of County Commissioners water service for 70 more residents
met in regular session on Friday in the Pageville community;
• A request for $3,138 for two
morning.
The applications were submitted air packs (respiratory protection
by townships, villages and other equ1pment) filed by the Bashan
organizations in the hopes of Volunteer Fire Deparunent;
• An application from the Vilreceiving a share of the $96,360 in
CD BG monies to be distributed by lage of Middleport for $23,460 to
resurface and widen First Street as
the board for the 1991 fiscal year,
Those applications received and a part of its downtown revitalization work;
reviewed were:
By BRIAN J, REED
Times-Sentinel Starr

• A $5,493 application for water
hose and adapters for the Pomeroy
Volunteer Fire Deparunent;
• A request from Syracuse Village for $22,000 for resurfacing
pan of Snowball Hill Road;
• An application from Salisbury
Township for the resurfacing of a
portion of Naylor's Run Road, in
the amount of $30,270. 15. The
township has pledged $3,363.35
toward the total cost of that wodc;
• A $15,000 request from the
Village of Pomeroy to use for
demolition of unsafe structures.
The village has pledged $5 ,000
toward that work;
• An application for $8,120 to

complete resurfacing work (specifically on Depot Street) within the
Village of Rutland. The village
received funds last year to pave
two streets, and were turned down ·
on their request for the Depot
Street funds;
• A request for $31 ,817 filed by
the Meigs County Board of County
Commissioners to demolish the
Masonic Temple building next to
the courthouse and to clear the lot.
The commissioners have pledged
$10,000 toward that project;
• An application from the VilIage of Racine for $1 2.490.37 to
extend a waler line in the village.
Continued on page A3

Body search continues
·SH~ATH.-It!G
..
, PLYWOOD '·

Manville

·--

'

FOIL·FAGD
INSULATION
SOCC DONATION· Southern Ohio Coal
Company's Meigs Division recently donated
$450 to the Salem Center Township Volunteer
Fire Department. Jon Merrirleld, (right), safety
and health manager for the Southe~n Ohio Coal

Company's Meiga Division, presented the check
to Chief Richard Lambert. According to Lambert, tbe donation will go Into the department's
equipment purchase fund.

Woman in sex videotape case attempts suicide
By JAMES MARTINEZ
Associated Press Writer
TAMPA, Fla. (AP{ -A woman
who .became the subp:t of intense
pubhcny after a ne1ghbor videotaped her having sex with her
boyfriend in their condo attempted
suicide Thursday by taking a drug
overdose, authorities said.
Janet Paddock, 32, was found
lying in bed by boyfriend Alfred
Stephens, who said she appeared
"lifeless," accordin~ to Hillsborough County sheriff s spokesman
Jack Espinosa. Stephens took her to
Humana Hospital Brandon just
after midnight, he said.

"The case was listed as an
auempted suicide by overdose "
Espinosa said. "She apparenily
took a number of drugs we aren't
going into right now.''
Espinosa said Ms. Paddock
checked into the hospital under the
name of Janet Harrel, which her
attorney, Nicholas Matassini, said
was her fanner married name.
Ms. Paddock was treated and
was released in stable condition
Espinosa
said.
Hospital
spokeswoman Deborah McKell
said the womWI was undergoing
further care elsewhere.
Ms. Paddock and Stephens, 36,

made headlines when ihey were
arrested July 16 after police saw
the video a neighbor had shot
through the blinds of Stephens'
ground-floor condo.
They were orij!inally charged
with lewd and lascivious conduct in
front of a child, a felony carrying a
possible IS-year sentence, because
neighbors said children could see
the couple from the swimming pool
outside.
The felony was dropped, and
prosecutors instead charged the
couple with three counts of disorderly conduct for incidents that had
nothinllln lin with thP. vitiP.nto..,.

8.29

14.49

'la·x4'x8'
O'Dtlls sheathing plywood i1 l ply lor 111ra
llrtnglh. U11 undtr roofing. as subflooring, or in
may homt projtcll.

Rll l'I!X15- 88.12 sq. ft.
We atock R19 and R30 Insulation,
suppons and pipe wrap. Also water line
lnaulatlng tubes.

AlUMINUM

MOBIL£ HOME
UNDERSKIRTING

FIBER EO

ROOF
COATING

3.89

Deputies probe accident

EVERY DAY LOW PRICE
SGAL

Galvanized underaklnln8 wllh ·cement
block dealgn. 28"160". •• on mobile
homes porchtl to atop cold draha and
11ve 11 fuel billa.

2.99
%•x4'x8'

•A .pel flx for •Y
roo..olong
wal

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CHESTER AGRI SERVICE
RT. 7 NORTH
CHESTER, OHIO
PH. 614·985·3831
FEATURING AFULL LINE OF BUCKEYE FEED PRODUOS

Chesap_~ake

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dealer in this area

t

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Class A
20 Yr. Warranty. Wltlto,

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BUCIB!I

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WEST WIND
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porcelain
tank and

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bowl combo.

O'DELL
634 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY

992·5500

POMEROY - Volunteers and deputies of the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department are continuing a field search in Lebanon
Township in the vicinity where human remains were found earlier
this week. According to Sheriff James M. Soulsby, no official word
from the autopsy has been received.
In other matlers, on Sarurday morning at 3 a.m. deputies took a
deer and car accident report. According to the report. Regina A.
Rider, New Lima Road, Rutland, was traveling west on Route 33 in
a 1984 Oldsmobile when a deer rWI into the path of her vehicle.
Heavy damage was listed to the vehicle.
David Steinmetz, Middlepon, was released Friday afternoon to a
representative of the California Deparunent of Corrections. Steinmetz was wanted in California for parole violation. An Ohio's Governor's warrant had been issued for his arrest and he was subsequently ordered returned to California controL
Sheriff Soulsby reports that Wayne Deaver, Raben Saltsman and
Shannon Williams, Racine, have been summoned to Meigs County
Court on charges of contributing to the delinquency of a minor_
According to the information stated in the repon, they aided two
Southern High School girls in being truant from school last
Wednesday. They are to appear in Meigs County Court on Wednesday.

we repair storm doors
and windows or ctit
glass_to size for

CHESHIRE - A Cheshire man was cited following a two-vehicle accident on S.R. 7 in Cheshire Friday afternoon.
According to a repon from the Gallia County Sheriffs Depanment, Walter E. Baker, 58, of Long Bottom, was northbound on
S.R. 7 and stopped for a vehicle in front of him. Another vehicle,
driven by ThurmWI Smith, 35, of Cheshire, failed to stop in time
and struck the rear of Baker's vehicle.
No injuries were reported.
Damage to the rear of Baker's 1989 Chevy truck was listed as
moderate. Damage to the front of Smith's 1986 GMC S-15 was listed as light
Smith was cited by the sheriffs deparunent for failure to maintain assured clear distance.

Meigs EMS answers 5 calls
'POMEROY • Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service responded to five calls for assistance on Friday.
At 11:25 a.m. on Friday the Racine unit went to Pearl Street for
Fred Scarberry who was taken to Veterans Memorial HospitaL _
The Middlepon unit, at2:26 p.m. went to Roule 143 for William
Chapman who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
The Pomeroy unit went to West Main at 7:10 p.m. for Elizabeth
Carmen who was taken to Holzer.
Jonathan Hooper was transponed from the Meigs Football Stadium at 8:30p.m. to Veterans, and at 9:21 p.m. the Racine unit went
to Front Street for Fred Scarberry who was treated but not transponed.

Motorcycle theft p"robed
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Police Deparunent is currently
investigating the theft of motorcycle from a Gallipolis residence
Friday.
According to the police report, Donald Cox, of Berger Avenue,
~ the theft of his motoreycle when he noticed it was missing
Fnday.
A description of the motorcyle, a 1976 Honda CB550, serial
numherCB550F2004739,license number 15HUZ, has been entered
into the LEADS computer system.

NEW CAR AND TRUCK SHOW - Local car and truck dealerships are going to participate in the New Car and Truck Show to be
held Saturday, Oct. !5, on the park front in downtown Gallipolis. Tbe

event will be sponsored by the Ohio Valley Bank. This banner was
put up Friday on Second Avenue in downtown Gallipolis.

RAC begins its case in unfair practices hearing
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Ravenswood Aluminum Corp.
fortified its Jackson County plant
in anticipation of violence months
before the company's contract with
the United Sleelworkers expired,
an employee testified Friday.
Company employees installed
surveillance cameras, erected steel
plates around electrical transfonners and boarded up plant windows
in preparation for "a holding
action ," said AI Toothman, manager of relations at Ravenswood Alu-

minum.
Toothman was the first witness
called by Ravenswood Aluminum
in a National Labor Relations
Board hearing that completed its
fust week Friday.
The board has charged
Ravenswood Aluminum with violating felferal labor law by refusing
to bargain in good faith, locking
out union members and prematurely declaring an impasse in negotiallons.
About I, 700 members of Local

Test scores reveal academics
rank high with Rio freshmen
RIO GRANDE - Average
scores on the college admissions
tests taken by entering freshmen at
the University of Rio Grande
reflect an increase in overall academic ability at this southeastern
Ohio institullon.
"The averagdl ACT (American
College Testing) score for Rio
Grande students went up by two
points over the past three years,"
said University President Barry M.
Dorsey. "The university is also seeing a sleady increase in high school
grade point averages among those
students choosing to attend Rio
Grande."
ACT composite scores range
from 1 to 36, with the latter being a
perfect score. Almost 20 percent of
last year's entering students had
scores of 22 to 36, Dorsey said.
"Students who plan to major in
Allied Health Programs, including
nursing, have especially high
scores on the ACT, as well as outstanding hij!h school grades, but we
are enrolling excellent students
throughout all of our programs," he
added.
The increase in student ability at
Rio Grande serves as a counterpoint to a national trend toward

lower average scores on achievement te sts by high school gradu·
ates.
In early September, the College
Board, which administers the SAT
(Scholastic Achievement Test),
reported that 1991 national average
scores dropped two points in both
the verbal section and in the math
section of its standardized text. The
ACT Program reported in midSeptember that 1991 national average test scores remained essentially
unchm~gcd from the previous year.
"In recent years, we have seen a
steady increase in student enrollment, which reflects the continuing
physical and programmatic expansion at the institution," said Mark
Abell, executive director of admissions and records. "We are very
pleased that our quantitative
growth has been accompanied by
·qualitative growth."
"A University Honors Program
provides these students an opponunity to exercise their intellectual
capabilities through a series of specially-chosen classes and programs," Dorsey added. The program is beginninPtstfiird year this
fall.
Continued on page A3

5668 have been out of work at
Ravenswood Aluminum since Nov.
I, when their contract expired. The
company says the workers walked
out, but the union says they were
locked out.
Two weeks before the contract
ended, D.P. Mancini of
Ravenswood Aluminum's personnel department issued interoffice
memos about the "holding action"
officials were considering .
"Since there is a real possibility
of a holding action, we are current-

I y in need of your cooperation to
complete preparations," one memo
said.
Employees were also told to
bring enough work clothes, underwear, safety shoes, pillows, bed
linens and toiletries to Iast30 days.
Toothman said he worked 42
consecutive days of 12-hour shifts
after Nov. I , and said salaried
workers endured longer hours than
that.
The hearings will resume Oct 8
in CharlestOn.

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