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••

'

' .

.

.~~--------------------~~
SOFA, LOVESEAT

'

-

.

--- -,;

,.EXTRA SPECIAL BUY

599°0
900

$1

SOFA &amp; CHAIR

SOFA, LOVESEAT, CHAIR
Benchcralt1 trtle back. dark
arown.

$)2_37

Reg.$2285.00

RECLINING SOFA

SOFA, lOVESEAT, CHAIR

By Stratford. Black with Beige,
Blue &amp; Mauve
·

BROYHILL
Brown wHh wood trim.

Reg. $1201.00

$675

FLEXSTEEL SECTIOftAL

lieg. Sll6o.oo

s15 7 5

STRATFORD SECTIONAL

wIHide·a·bed &amp; Recliner

Bluel ilh 2 Reclining Ends

Reg. $2717.00

Reg. $2102.00

$1

SOFA, LOVESEAT,
CHAIR

SOFA &amp; CHAIR

ENGLAND .
Wood trim, multl·color.
Reg. $1461.00

589

RECLINING SOFA
&amp; RECLINING CHAIR
BUSHLINE
$79

Green

SOFA, LOVESEAT, CHAIR
Bruanls, Blue Pin Dot
Reg. $1388.00

I

BRUARDS

$6

LOVESEAT, C~IR

Bru•dws with Cllnellatk, Wut ,
w/pJr. dati, throw pillow on sofa &amp;
loveseat $

388.00

.
89

SOFA, LOVESEAT
ENGLAND. Multi-color.

$1973.0~

s944

R

STRATFORD

5599

Reg.$1125.00

SOFA, LOVESEAT, CHAIR
Broyhdl. Blue Flame paHem
wtwood trim. QOSEOUTI
Reg. $2986.00 5 1444

FLEXSTEEL SOFA
Dark blue with green, mauve,
peach (print).

5735

$1392.00

SOFA, lOVESEAT, CHAIR
IRUARDS
Over stuffed, blue &amp; mauve.

England. Peach w/dark.green.
Reg.

5
848

With Wood Trim

5699

SOFA, LOVESEAT &amp;
WING CHAIR

$688

Reg. $1299.00

Black &amp; Rose Velvet
Reg. $12Bto0

$1299

Reg. $1968.00

51099

MANY MORE to CHOOSE FROM
"

DINING ROOM SUITES
1-Maplt China

SALE

5399

1-corner China in Maple
Reg. $662.50
1-Maplt China
. Reg. $ 1001 •00

SALE

1-Solld Oak ·china
Rig. $1430.00
0 k .. ble·Chalrs&amp;Bench

SALE

a .a

$

788

399
$19 9
SALE
'

-

Rig. $ 673•00
Round Table In Cher~v,
•·
Reg. $357.00 · 4 chairs
•

5499

SA' L.E .5

$

Dark Pine Table, 6 chairs
Reg. $883.00 ·

SALE

Map·'11 Table, 6 chairs .

SALE

475
299

$

Reg. \ $599.00
.
•
· .
$
Ch romecrcift Table In light oak SALE
w 4 swivel title back chairs, reg. 1139 $
Chroinecraft Table, oak w/4
SALE "
swivel arm ·c hairs, reg. $1464 · . . $

644

s

I

.

Cal•stylt Tablt, oak wl4 swivel
title back ·arm chairs r • $986

848

SALE

588
.

Cards:

'

1

Octagon Table w/glass &amp; 4 chairs, NOT $199."--· NOW $28.00
Octagan .w/glass &amp; 2 chairs, NOT $149---....... --:..;... · NOW$58.00
3 sets Lg. Sq. Table w/glass; 4 chairs, NOT $249-- NOW $109 eo.
Wlille Vinlfi wHhstoOI, NOr$199"--"NOW$99:00
Brass Vanity wHh Stool, NOT $139------ NOW $78.00 ·
Rechners, on~ 6 In stock at__ _:_____ $125.00eo.
I5 Wing Back Chairs, NOT $399-----" NOW $248 ea.
Almond Day Bed wfsprlngs, NOT $210---· NOW $119.00
Brass Day Bed w/poreelaln bals &amp; springs, NOT $270 NOW$159.00
Red Daybtd w/springs, NOT $270...- - - - - - . NOW $99.00
2 VIdeo Chairs-...""'"""-'"'"""--""--"· NOW $39 eo.
1 Sets of Glass Top Tables-""-""'"""" __..___ NOW $68 eo.
With Frullwood finish &amp; beveled glass. NOT $195 ea. sns ONLY
Maple Tables, set of 3, NOT $1200 eo--·-·--.. NOW $62 eo. set
2 Sets of 3 Coffee &amp; End Tables on Legs, oak, 2 sets only....
NOW$17Ssat
Goad Selection of Tobles._..._""'""'""-"""'"".Fram $50 to $90 ea.
New Shipment of Bassett Mlrrors... "'".;..,__,Reduced 30% Off Retad

Lamps......- ......._ ...........;................_..--~-..40% Off R•tad
3 pc. Wall Unils In Oak Finish, NOT $1200""'"""'""""""-·NOW $488

.

Flat Top. Reg. $320..........."""'""""-"""'""'SAlE $166.00 .
~oil Top. Reg; $343."""""""".:......""-·"·""'SALE $198.00
~oil Top. Reg. $457:......"""'"-'"""""..""""""SALE $288.00
Rolf Top. Reg. $732."'""""'""-"""'"""-"""SALE $488.00

CVRIOS
Reg. $314 ....;_ .."'"".."'"""'"""""""'""""""'..SALE $178.00

ENTER~INMENTCENTERS
Up To

S50% Off

Vol. 42, No. 10?
Copyrlghl8d 1991

THE REAL THING· SOLiD OAK
FLOOR MIRRORS
Reg. $261 "......:.......................SAlE $13

900 .

BEANBAGs-

a

Large King Size
,
Neon Colors • OhiO State • West Va. University •
.
Ohio State University
SIMMONS BEAUTY REST QUEEN PAIR

Reg. $715 ........."................... ~................ SALE $399.00 set

King Size Woad ROtkers, Reg. $300....,_.. _ .._ ............NOW $166.00 .
2-Medlum Size Bookcases (water damaged~""'"""""""-"-'"$33 ea.
Bookmses, all.slzes.....'"--'"""-------·---30% Off
1_:Solld Pine Post~r Bed (~ pt.), reg. $2445--_,......SALE $11 ~.00
1-&lt;he;ry Bedroom~Sulte w/n.s., reg. $2236-..--."SALE $1099.00

BEDROOM ·SUITEs
!·Large White Orle1ilal, storage Ired w/mirror, Rght

.s

o c·

Gold...............,...........................................,.•••$225
85,000 BTU.Yfll.rlll Morning Heater
LP gas,
· li{
I e new..........................................$599,95
Warm Morning Gas Grill, works good.................;....S90.
2·"'aytag Timer Pryer, white..................;...............$99
2·Maytcig Eledronlc Dryer, green,...........;.............$ 135
l·Sears Humidifier, lg. capacity w chemicals
k
d
wor s goo ·...:....~ .......................;.................." ..$50

I

2 Sectlona, 14 P~ 25 eenlll
Alluldmedbo Inc. NtWtpeper

-~- ~~ --~-

~--- --~" k 't·•~-·

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News swr
The general public will be
afforded the chance to lake a closer
look at the opemtion of Belleville
Locks and Dam when the facility
holds an open house this weekend.
The event, scheduled for 2 p.m.
to 6 p.m. Sunday, is the ftrst at the
23~ year-old project si.lite 1979,
when 800 people toured the facility.
Belleville Locks and Dam
looms over the community of
Reeds.ville and was constructed by
the U.S. Anny COI)ls of Engineers
at a cost of $63. million. Construy·
lion on the project began in May,
1962. The Jocks began operation in
196S and the facility was completed in 19.68.
The locks con~t of two parallel
locks: the main lock measuring

1,200 feet in length by 110 feet in
wi~th, and the auxiliary lock measurin$ 600.feet by 110 feet. The
dani IS .a high-lift gated ~tructure
with a top length of 1.206 feeL
In addition to the navigaVon
structure, the project also prov1des
over 60 acres of recreational facili·
ties 'for public use, including picnic
areas and restrllOIIIs.
The Belleville project employs
18 people under the direction of
· Loclcmaster George Connolly. It is
open 24 hours a day, every day of
the year.
Twelve staff members will be
on hand Sunday to assist in con·
ducting the tours, and Connolly
anticipates several high-ranking
officials in lhe Corps of Engineers
to attend the open house.
According to Connolly, Disl!ict
Engin~r Colonel James Van Epps,

.

Chief of Opemtions Ken Crisp, and ·
their wives will attend and assist in
conducting the tours. · . ,
An observation !leek allows the.
public to ~ commercial tows
as they '1ock through~ lhe facility.
On Sunday, however, the general
public will be permitted to enter
areas that are usually off-limits, ·
allowing them to walk around the
enonnous project' (including a stroll
across the 1,200-foot high dam),
and to participate in guided tours ·
and boat rides on the Ohio River.
Boats will continue to iock
through the main lock as sched·
uled, so that the public can get an
"up-close" look at the procedure.
The·Eastern-Athletic Boosters
will offer refreshments for sale at
mmERWAY • Preparathe open house. All of Sunday's tloas·PREPARATIONS
for
Sunday's
open
house are underway al
activities will be flee of charge and BeUeville Locks a11d Dam
In Reedsville. Here,
open 10 the public.
Gary Willford and Mike Burns paint from .tbe
facility's boat in the auxiUary lock chamber.

1-C&gt;ak Flblshed w/nlte stand............ """"""...SALE $399.00
I·Dark Flnlsh·w/night sland......................SALE $499.00
4·Bedraom Suite, oak, mapJe, dark oak finish
Your Choke $599.00
I·Solld Ptna with Poster Bed

Reg. $2674....~.........................~..............SALE $1299.00
!·Solid Pine Floor Sample, as Is, 6 pc.
Reg. S1544,............................................SALE $799.00

2·Gibsan Ref., 14 cu. ft., green. Was $699.95..- ..."'""NOW $499.95
4·Gtbsan I5 cu. ft. Ref~ 7 white, 2almond.
.
Wa $69995
·
NOW~S4995
s
•
-·----"'"""---........
_
•
3·Gtbsan 17 cu. ft. Ref~ grHn. Was S699.95.."""""""'NOW 549.95
Hrlglllatre, 11 cu. ft., 2·almand, 1-wh1te. ,
:
Was 699 95
NOW 5549 95
• cu.
""""'""""'"-"'"-'""""""'"'""'"""
•
Hrlgtllatre 19
ft~ 6-olmand, 2·whlle.
Wi's·S799.95..__"_.. ______..,""'"'"'""""NOW$649.95

s

PAVEMENT COMING UP· Work on Sllte
Route 7 below Hobson damaged In a rock and
landslide there oa May 3 bas llegun. Trame wiD
be maintained one-way W.tll tbe $206,000 project Is cpmpleted In mid-November. The con·
tract for the work was awarded by the Ohio
Department of Transporlatlon to the Shelly Co.
Thornville. Approximately 1500 feet of pave·

ment witt be takea up and fbe base stabllized
before the new pavement Is put down, aCtortung
to an ODOT spokesman. ·When the slide .
occurred, large cracks developed Ia tbe blgb·
way, some areas sunk wbUe others rllised. Since
that time ODOT has monltored,tbe area to
determine u1161erground movement.

State mapmakers fix omission,
Democrats boycott meeting r

Gallipolis Stockyard destroyed by fire
The Gallipolis Stockyard Company buillling on Vinton Avenue
was destroyed as a result of an
early·Friday morning blaze.
When the ftre was extinguished,
all that remained of the building
was crumbled seetions of lhe outer
walls, twisted metJ\1 roofing inateri·
a1 and some smoldering wood.
According to a report from the
Gallipglis Volunteer Fire Depart·
men~ the ftre was reported at 12:17
a.m. when someone called and
reponed the blaze.

The ftre department arrived at
12:21 a.m. and was on the scene
until6 am. according 10 the report.
•However, several firefighters
remained on the scene to extin·
guish smolders.
The report indicated the fire
originated in the empty livestock
pen area. As of 9 a.m. Friday, a
cause for the fire had not been
es~blished, according 10 Fire Chief
Ray Bush.
The building, with value estimated at $610,000 including contents, is considered to be a tota!

4·Ke1Yinator, 14 cu. ft. l·whtte, 3-almond.

Was $599.95.._'"'"""-'"""""'"'-""'""'""""NOW $449•95 .
2-~~vlnator, Iacu.1t. almond. Was S699.95.......~.".. NOW $599.95
.J.A.mlralr 17 cu. 11., a1
monel. Was S699.95"""""'"""NOW $549.95
I·AIImlra 19 cu. ft., almond. Was $799.95 ..-.,_..".. NOW $599.95

COLUMBUS (AP) - The
Republican-controlled state Appor·
tionment Board reconvened 10 cor· ·
reel some errors in a plan creating
new' election districts for the Ohio
House and Senate.
But the two Democmts on the
five-member board, state Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson and Rep. Barney Quilter of Toledo boycotted
Thursday's meeting, claiming it
was illegal.
Gov. George Voinovich, Secretary of Stale Bob Taft and Senate
President Stanley Aronoff, R·
Cincinnati, approved one amend·
m.ent lhat added the city of Maple

loss. The building, owned by Mary
Williamson, Traer Stewart and
Joanne Stewart. al of Gallipolis,
and managed by Tommy Joe SlllW·
art of Gallipolis, was insuted by the
Wood Agency.
Firefighters responding to the
blaze used an estimated 2SO,OOO
gallons of water to extinguish lhe
fire. Four fire trucks were.on the
scene as well as 24 fircfighteJs.
Oddly enough, the structure'was
built on lhe site of another s1rucwre
'that burned down in the early
1950s.
·

H'eighcs to the plan's legal descrip~
tion.
James Tilling, board secretary,
said the city was inadvertently
omitred from the plan that the fivemember board adopted Tuesday.
Noble County was lisled in the
wrong House district. The board
. made that correction also before
conducting olher routine business
and.ad,ioor!Jing. .
Vmnovich, as required. by law,
was directed by the board to have
the new Sena~ and House districts
published for four co~secutive
weeks· in several newspapers
around the stale, starting Saturday.

. Thi_s is' required by the 'Ohio
ConstJtullon to inform voters of
poSSible changes in the IIIJlleSCntation of their areas.
Earlier, the board voted 10 SWt
lhe clock running Saturday on the
~0 days allowed for lawmakers
whose disaicts were abolished or
who wound up in the same disrrlct
with other incumbents, to move .
into another district
Senators and representatives·
must Jive in a district at least a year
before they are eligible to run for
the Legislature from that district
The new alignment of districts will
apply for the first time to the
November 1992 election.

~----·-.Local briefs------Auditor certifies Eastern deficit

$678,000; Champaign, Wist Liberty Salem, $124,000; Geauga,
Cardinal, $S60,000; GuC~fisey, East Guernsey, $353,000; Licking,
North Fork, $192,000;
.
Lorain, Wellin~, $395,000; Mahoning, Campbell, .$574,000;
Medina, Black River, $367,000; Meigs, Eastern, $35,000; Noble
Noble Local, $461,000; Perry, New Lexington, $979,000; Portage'
Southeast. $497,000; Summit. Coventry, $882,000 and ~pringficl~
$2.8 million; Trumbull, Girard. $256,000 and Warren, $5.4 million.

COLUMBUS (AP)- State Audit!)r Thomas E. Ferguson
released financial forecasts that show 35 school districts, including
Eastern Local in Meigs County, face projected operating deficits
1/lat could forte them 1Al seek state-backed loan$.
.
Eighteen school systems ~steel by Ferguson Thursday already
have received State Controlling Board approval for government·
guaranteed borrowing from private lenders to rcmain OjXln.
•
· Fi!IIIIICial forecasiS certifY the operating deficit distrtciS will have
by ~une 30, 1992, the end of the current fiscal year, if they continue
Registrat;ion deadline Monday
operating and pay all their expenses.
The Meigs County Board of Elections located on Mechanic
John Conley, spokesman for the auditor, said requests to conduct
Street
in Pomeroy, will be open SlllUrday from 8 a.m. 10 noon and
financial f(l'ec8S!S had been received from 62 school districts. There
Monday
from 9 a.~. 10 9 p.m. for voter registration. Monday is lhe
are 612 disaicts srarewide.
·
final
day
for residents 10 register and is also the fmal day for resi"Some of those may be withdrawn. that~s FOJ!lmon," Conley
dencs to change their add!eases.
·
said. ''If they happen to pass levies ... a lot of times the school dis·
Abs~ntee voting will~~ through Nov. 2 at noon. To
trict will withdraw the
the analysis."
qu~/to
vote.absen~. re ·
'IOtas must be over 62 years of
Of the 36 forecasts
. by Ferguson, 35 projected operating
age,
m
the
milirary.
disabled,
Cl' oul of town on Election Day. The
deficits. The Oallia County local school district was dctennined 10
office is ~pen regularly Crom 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p:m.·Monday
have a projected positive operatiq.Miance of$117,000 by June 30,
through Friday.
' 1992.
.
Ferguson said the Cincinnati district had the largest projected
6 EMS
deficit of the 35 systems at $63.5 million. A state-backed loan of
runs answered
S46,61!1illiOn was approved fCI' the sysrem last month. .
On wednesda
its f u.,_ County
Here·; by cbunty., are districts and the amount 'of pro1'ected
y,
un
Emergency Medical Services. answered six calla fCI' lllilllnce on Thursday.
deficits for which the Ohio Dcplnment of Bducatlon said loans
· At 12:31 p.m., Rutland UDiC went to White Hill Road. Evelyn
have not already been approved:
&lt;'
•
•
M ca key was take to Plculll Vall
Athens, Fe~ !:iOCkinR, $225,000; -~~~. ;t::.,:Martin=
':s.:F:erry::,_ __:.c-s-~·~-.:nCon=tin.~lle~ll~!.~pa~~~yJ~H-oso-t"':"'tai_._A_t2-:-36~p-.m_.•

CLOSEOtrr WASHER fl DRYEilAT SALE PRICES

2s• Zenith Swtvtl Floor Model TY, r•te.
·
·
799
95
S Rtma!e
• '""--·-·""--·-...
- ..."'""""~·NOW $549.9$
25"Was
Zenith
SterH·TV. Was $899""""'"'"""""'NOW
$699.95

n: z:~1:h c~~~n!:{:'rv·
r·· steno,'~~~~~;~95~-~~.~.:::fis::::i
WaJi~l95b-"'";"'"$'"'"-NOW $599.95

26"

j

ordi'

·. Quean Beds.............................................$tartlng $33.00 ap

NEW REFRIGERATORS

:
:
·
·

. able prices. The main purpose of the village. Mayor Eber Pickens
.. going into the program at this time exjllained the cost involved in get:
is'to getJlrtces on .a new police tingtheinformation. .
~:
Syracuse Village Council at a cruiser for a fulure pmchase.
In olher business, a second rtad;
meeting Thumtay night set Ott. 30 . Jack Williams reported that ing was given to the gas 131e
as trick or treat night, agreed to Richmond SICeet just beyond Rus· · nance. A donation was acknowlplace a shelter house behind Lon- tic Hills (old Sand Hill Road) is edged for the cemetery from Mrs.
don pool, and passed a resolution sinking. Kenny Buctley agreed to Carl·Moore.
..
to' ~ipate in.lbe.SlaiC purehas· seek adVic~ on bow repairs can be
Police Chief Jil)l Conqolly
ing program. · ·
made and when.
reminded re5idencs that there is a 9
Trick or treat night will be from . Minter Fryar reported that all p.m. curfew for·all children under
610 7 p.m. and the siren will sound new street signs will be placed 18 yems '!f age._
to begin and end activities.
within the next two weeks and that
Council dectded 10 send leuers
It was decided that the damaged the cemetery has been cut again. to Meigs County Engineer Phil
shelter house located in the park He also agreed to contact village Robercs and tile Meigs County
area near the high~ay will be solicitor, I. Carson C~w, regarding Commi~sioners &lt;;o~missioners
moved to an area behind the pool. · updating of some v1llage ord1· requesung repavmg of the Roy
The shelter house was damaged nances. Fryar also reponed t!l;lt the Jones Road ,from Syracuse to Forwhen it was struck by a car. Sal· village owned dump truck has a est Run. It was reponed that there ,
vaging will 'cost $•1,500, it was new exhaust system, asked pennis· is heavy traffic on the road and
reported, with this to inClude new sion to clean out a house owlled by also that it is used a flood road.
posts, concrete, and the Ia bot the village (Conner GuV.ther prop·
_Auending were Frym:. Wolfe,
mvolved.
eity). The house IS used for storage. Wtlhams, Buckley, Kaue Crow,
Dennis Wolfe expressed a desire and Jim PaJYe, council members
A resolution to participate in the to see electric costs for the park Mayor Pickens, Cbief of Polic~
state purchasing program was facilities broken down between the Connolly, and Janice Lawson
passed. This entides the village to pool, tennis coun and ·ball f.eld, in clerk.
'
purchase state .equipment at reason· order to know what each·is costing

Reg. $2,000......................................................$888.00
Twin Bkls.................\..............................Starting $33.00 ap ,

door, coatlnuounleon aven, Was $549.95 w.t·----.NOW S348
4·Sunray Gas Ra_nge, ,lmolld, alass bade with dock, chrome bUIIIII' pan,
black oven door, was S595.9S:-------NOW $368
3-Sunray Gas, 2 almond • I whitt, roll clock hghtln back .-1 and
oven with timer. chrome burner pan, conlln11011 clean, ovtn black. new
d'!r1 also black \rod drawer In front. Was $649.95"-.NOW $388
1·AIIIIIral Gas Rar: almond, dock and timer, hght In avtn, 'lack aven
f~f ~~9i:n9;,-"ai;;,";i';";utomattc dock, bi;;;;;;;;d:,~ S395
Was $599.91 w.t."'"-"'"'""--·---:."---NOW$398
2·Sulll'll#flec. Ranges, gold clock, black oven door.
Was $599.95"------·-NOW $385
!·Sunray Elac. Range, ti!Jiper, clock back, continuous dean oven, black
oven deor and bladi broil drawer.

.·

By KATIE CROW
Sentinel Comspondent

bridge, matching clrest w/door. Reg. $3,000. SALE $1,000
I.Orlentalilark Starage Bookcase Bed,
-

l'"ltt ~·mot•

Locblaster George COIUIOily is plchmd ltud·
ing 01 . . wan. Tile open house is the fint at the
facility since 1979, when 800 people attended.
Tours and )loat rides ere being planned ud ._
public Is invited to auend.

Syracuse council plans Halloween -night

EXCELLENT BUYS ON USED
CLOSEOUT MODELS CAS RANGES
FURNITURE
2·5¥~ Gas, almond, glass back, black o~ door,
.
CR C
Ilk
.$
Was 5499.95 w/lra.r. __ __;,r; _ _ _ _ _ _ NQW $333
TV sta nd w/V ompartment, e new .............. 35· . hS1111ray
Gas Ranges, whitt glass back with dodc. black Ht thru aven

·
$249
20 Cu ft Ches.t Freez· er
• •
.............................. -.......
2 End Tables, cherry, step type, good shape-......$60 pr.
Wooden Table &amp; 6 ·chairs, like new.....,_,..,_........$285
or bl ·• h 1 b akf t
1·
.$15
.a e, • c a rs, re as set, meta type................
Pair Gold Glass Base Lamps, real nice .................$30 pr.
2 GE Dryers, good shape, runs good...................$75 ea.
Ma1tog Electronic. Dryer, works great....................$ 199
(3) Broyhill Clierry Coffee &amp; End Table Set
N W 5599 OO
NOW 5225
ew as
• .................................
Small Black Bedroom Suite, dresser chest, night stand
bed &amp; mirror, like new.~ ...................................$499
" ~&gt;2r0
Hl'de·A·Bed'· blue arint w/maHre•s
• ................ . · -··-"' :J
BlueRechner;goadsha~......................................$125
Zenlli'·""-t....
....:... woad:..L
~~~~~'""
-. lba,was$999-. NOW$418
12" wt'de ak ab"1net w1one,door &amp; drawer......... 3 ~P'
17 .cu. ft. Gibson Si de· by·Side Refrigerator • ,
coppertone
·
$250
. ..•••••••••!••••••••••••••••••........................
19 cu. ft. Coldspot Side·by·Side Refrigerator
.
Gold, like new.................................................$349
17 cu. ft. Gibso~ Top Freezer &amp; Refrigerator , _·.·

A-C;

Belleville
Locks,
Dam
.
·t0-- .· kue Op:ene d -·t0 puu IC
.

FuU Beds;:..;..."""""""""'""""""""""""Starttill $33.00 up.

la•Z•Ioy lelge Rug, reg. $449.00 .........""'"""SALE $288.00
La•Z•IDJ lraWII, reg. $569,00."--""""""'"""SALE $349.00
Flmteelllue, reg. $523.00...;,_"'"""""-""SALE $297.00
Flexst.. lllue, reg. $606.00........."'"""'""-"'SALE $369.00
Catnapper tw.. d, reg. $429oOO............... ""'""SAlE $269.00
Cotnapper, mauve, reg. $457.00......................SALE $299.00

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Fri"ay, Qetober 4, 1991

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I

Twin pair Bedding; sets only """'""'"""'""""""""$99.00 set
Full Size Set. Reg•.$350...............- ....._"""""'""$199 set
Restanlc Full Size Box Spring &amp;MaH~ess ....- .....$179.00 set

HERE ARE JUST A FIW IXAMPUS

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Room Dividers In oak or walnut, 48" wide or 60" wideOnly 8 Left
Your Choice $148

IA·Z.BOY, FLEXSTEEL, CATNAPPER
RECUNERS SAVE BIG ·

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RIVERSIDE DESKS

-

Chance of showers
today 70 percent. High ·
in llli!l 70s. . · · ·

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Bruards, averstulfed sloppy.Joe
2-4 Drawer.Chest.........~ •••••2 For
suite. Bra'f'n. very comfortatile. . .
.·
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Reg. $1315.00
$788 . 2-5 Drawer Chest............. 2 For

Brayhdl Blue w/Beige. Green &amp;
Rust Print

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Pick 3:409
. ·Pick 4: 4862

(.

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$1099

.Ohio Lottery

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...

~·~~---·-,.-~-~~

90 DAYS SAME
AS CASH
- LAYAWAYS AVAILABLE
... FREE DELIVERY
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·· ONE,,B H'HI
EL SALE
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Reg.$1949.00

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-~ Southern ·
: Volleyball .·

~ FLOOR ·

sc

Norwalk Off White w/lllue
Green &amp; Mauve Print &amp; Stripe
Reg. si828.00 . $980

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SOFA &amp; CHAIR

·-.

7

w Zenith POrtable TV Color, Was.$299.95""'"-""""Now

199.95
20• Zenith Portable TV, color. Was S399.95...- ..."....... NOW 299.95
lentth ~CR, Was $399.95"""""_.'""-'""""-"'""""ow·$299.95

BVl' NOW FOB CHRISTMAS

=fer

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

° .......,.

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Pag&amp;--2-The Dally Se'ntlnel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, October 4, ~ 991

Court
news

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The Daily Se tiD.ei · U. S. favors aid to.China·despit~ objection~
,

•

MU.TIMEDIA,I~)
ROBERT L. WINGETT
· PubHsher

·,
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant PublisHer/ControDer

CHARLENE HOEFLI.CH
General Manager

•
A MEMBER ofTheAssocia!Od Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
.

LETIER~ OF OPINION are welcome. They should be~ess lhan 300

words long. Alllenen are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters "will be J711blished. Lenen
should be in good taste. addressing issue$, not personalities.

Parents and students not
convinced by dismal reports
By TAMARA HENRY
AP Education Writer
WASHINGTON -Getting Americans to believe the llwiy of reports
berating the nation's education system may be the biggest challenge facing educators, governors and other leaders, a private research group says.
Jean Johnson, vice president of ihe Pubhc Agenda Foundation, says
most Americans have been reluctant to embrace the ecQnornic and educational refonns preached by President Bush and other leaders because they
don't have a clear sense of what is needed to compete in the world econo-

. •I

WASHINGTON - Tbe U.S.
government is heUbent on giving
$2 million in grants to two groups
doing projects in China. even
though mfonned critics of the plan
say the grants will amount to a
gross misuse of federal funds.
The pts, from the Agency for
InternatiOnal Development, would
go to an American mC!Iical center
and an American-studies program
at Fudan University, both in Shanghai. The groups seeking the grants
have something in their favor - a
president with a crush on China
and a high,powered lobbying flfiD
with good connections on Capitol
HiD.
But on the downside, they have
.run up against Sen. Jesse Helms, RN.C., who has held up the grants by
· asking a basic question that the
government doesn't seem to bave
the answer to: How is the money
going to be used?
~
That is just the beginning of the
questions. Why are there no Americans involved in on-site management of these Chinese-American
ventures? Does anyone on the
foundation staff know anything
about running a hospital? And will

my;,The American pubHc, while concerned about the schools.-~ly don't •
understand the impact of the schools on the economy," Johnson said in an
interview Tuesday.
"People hear a lot of news reports about schools, that they are really
besieged by academic and other problems such as poverty, teen pregnancy
and drugs. But for most people in most neighborhoods, the schools are not
tenrible. They are mediocre."
. A new Louis Harris poll underscores the point. It found that on 15
common objectives of elementary and secondary education, only 30 percent of employers were able to rank as positive the overall preparedness
of recent students to hold down jobs in their businesses. Sixty-six percent
gave them negative marks.
By contrast, among recent students asked the same questions, 7~ percent were positive about their education, as were 65 percent of thell" par-

the hospital be connected with
another Chinese hospital suspected
of performing forced abortions as
part of China's barbaric population-control program that hmits
families to one child each? With
this last question still unanswered,
sources say AID will opt to ~ve all
of the money to the university and
postpone action on the hospital.
· The attempt to throw money at
China once again renews the
debate over the Bush adniinistration 's love affair with China, where.
pro-democracy demodstrators were
massaQled in Tiananmen Square in
1989. It also shows how politics
override sound spending on American foreign aid.
The 'two groups asking for
money are the American Hospital
in Shanghai' Foundation and the
Fudan Foundation. They are represented in Washington by Cassidy
and Associates, one of tiw slickest
lobbying agencies in town, which
has been paid about $470,000 by
the two groups. The foundations
have alre~dy received about $8
million ifi U.S . aid since their
inception in 1986. Now they've
asked for $8.mi)lion n:tore, but AID

.

1iMe You We.l\'e NIJM881( 'T'Wc
MaN ar THe. CIA Yov HaP No
1Dea WtfaT THe aGeNCY

was ur To?

•

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Letters to editor

Request has a pur pose

Oear Editor:

· Rec~y my supervisor rode the
mail route with me and inspected
all mail boxes. Most needed painted some the door repaired or flag
fi~ed etc. and notices were given
these patrons. We didn't do this to
be mean. This is an annual job and
she is told to do it by her superiors.
It's meant to help you. Not only
should a mail box be a thing of
beauty in front of your home, ~1!1. it
~ould save your life someday.
: We ask each patron to put their
liouse number on their box. HOuse
numbers in the country serves the
same purpose as house numbers in
town; odd number's on one side of
the road and even ones on the other
~ide. If you need the sheriff or
E.M.S. Squad this will help them
so much. They have a map of all
road names but don't know just
where you live on on that road. But
if the numbers are on your box and
in print large enough to see plainly;
they can get to you ~ucb qwcker.
The numbers are m sequence on
tiach road so they know if they've

gone to far or not far enough. Also
if a substitute.carrier is serving the
route for one reason or another, it
makes it much better for that person because they too have a list of
the house numbers and the name
connected with that number, so that
means less mail mix-up. Year ago a
letter addressed to John Doe, R#l ,
Rutland, usually reached it's destination because the carrier knew
everypJH: 011 the route.
Now people move in and out of
homes and names change on a
daily basis. So unless it has a house
number on it we don't know w~ere
to deliver it. So on behalf of the
Rutland Post Master and myself
I'm asking all lhe rural patrons 10
flll and repair their mail boltes, not
just for me but to benefit themselves. And if you should be reading this and living in another rural
area such as Lan~sville, Racine,
Pomeroy. etc.. I thmk I'd be safe in
saying that your carriers woUld say
"Yes, do that for me too."
BeaWood
Rutland Rural Carrier

He W~S
. WiTH Me.

Send the speciaJ ·prosecutor. home
Judge Gesell's dismissal of all
charges against Oliver North
underscores the utter futility of
Lawrence Walsh's years- how
many has it been? four? five? - as
special prosecutor .for the Iran/contra affair, but the demonstration
was unnecessary.
Of all the bad ideas that have
been enacted into law in the last
half-century, the concept of special
.prosecutors is one of the worst. It
grew out of the Democratic
Congress ' virtuous conviction,
after Watergate, that a Republ,ican
Department of Justice simply could
not be trusted to prosecute highranking Republican malefactors
who commrtted various political
sorts of crimes.
So a mechanism was created for .
the appointment of a " special prosecutor," who would have the
power to wade into some major
area of wrongdoing (such as
Watergate) and seek indictments
against any wrongdoers who
appeared to deserve them. This
SJ?CCial prosecutor's 11:\lgth of servrce, the number of assistants he
could hire, and the budget he

would require were all left flexible.
In the case of Walsh. all three figures are staggering. As .noted, he
has been on the job for four years;
lre has hired somewhere in the
neighborhood of 70 assistants of all
sorts, and has run up expenses of
around $30 million.
In retmn for which, the taxpayers have gotten ... what? A couple
of guilty pleas by small fry to
minor charges; the now-overnuned
conviction of Col. North, and the
parallel conviction of Admiral
Poindexter (soon, no doubt, to be
overturned on the same grounds).
Yet the Walsh investigation staggers on and on , obliging the
Democrats politically by serving as
a son of permanent reminder of the
Iran/contra imbroglio.
The Democrats justify the
expense by suggesting that the
actions of North and Poindexter
(and, if they could only be reached,
"higher-ups" as weD) were particularly appalling deeds of criminality: a son of major lesion in the uniyerse. But in fact what these men
did was simply to conceal from
Congress actions they had raken in

About child abuse...

r

Today in history

r

\

William·A. Rusher

their ~;~pacity as Nation~ Security
Council staffers responsible only to . -~--:--:-::-:-:-:---­
the president- actions that it isn't
This required Walsh to try to ·
clear. even today, Congress had find jurors who had (or so they •
any right to know about. (If any- swore) paid no attention to the ;
body thinks the Constitution gives Democrats' aforesaid gaudy
Congress the power to determine, extravaganza. And when he had
let alone conduct, U.S. foreign pol- succeeded in assembling a couple
icy, shol\' me the citation.)
of juries that inen the Court of
. In fairness, Walsh has .the~- Appeals funher ruled that Walsh
mgs ?f an excuse for. hJS ptbful ~ must prove that the witnesses he .:
showmg to date. Havmg created called were likewise uninfluenced "
the office of special prosecutor_~d by the defendants' highly publi- :;
put the whole Iran/contra aff811" m cized statements to the congres- ·
Walsh's han~, the Congressional sional committee. When former
Democrats were unable to resist NSC director Robert MacFarlane ·
getting into the act themselves. swore that, on the contrary North's:
'l_'hey_wanted a gaud~ public inves- statements undoubtedly "~lored~' ::
trgauon, w1th televiSion cameras MacFarlane's own testimony in .·
picking up every bead of sweat on North's trial Walsh-gave up trying •
the misc~ts ' brows as ~e legis- to prosecute North.
:
Ia tors gnlled them mercilessly.
Why does~ •t Walsh just go "And they got rt. .
.
home? Grante,d, Oklahoma City ;
The !rOuble,was tnat, m otaer to may not possess all the charms or:
compel C~l. North,_ etc . to tesllfy Washington, but he is running the ::
before their commrttee, th~ con- risk of· becoming known as the .•
gressmen ":'~ !~gaily .~~ire&lt;! to Harold Stassen of special prosecu- :
grant them USCIIllmunlty -I.e., tors.
to agree that nothing Jhey said
Then the Democrats could con- ~
could. sub~u~ntly be use&lt;! against centrale on finding somebody to .•
them m a cnmrnal prosecuuon.
run against Bash in 1992.
· •

!

·For information, press number...

" Thank you for calling Amalga- For new product infonnation, press
mated Wackets. To proceed, press two. For billing information, press
one on your touch-tone tele- three. To reach our advertising
phone." Press. Wait. Hear lively d~Q&gt;artment, press four. To hear this
mixed·choral version of "Wacket menu again, press five."
tQ Wacicet Around the World"
And what if, .after bein~ entersflng to the tune of "Let There Be tained by your friendly 'audio
Peace on Earth.''
response unit" for three minutes
"To order wackets, or to change and five seconds, you don't want
your order, press two. For·account any of those se)ections? .Here's a
balance information, press· three. lf quaner, call someone who cares.
your wacket is not worting proper" Audio Response Unit." A
ly, press four. To confirm an woman I work with calls it "the
press five. For gener- (rhymes with witch) in the box,"
Dear Editor.
f
out the chicken house for a dime. I appointmen~
al
infonnation,
press six."
and I just call it "The Voice from
In retrospect I have come to liked to put that hard earned money
Press
six.
Wait.
Hear
more
of
Hell." Whlltever you call it, for
believe that r must have been a vic- in a glass.jar and go look at it ever
lively
choral
presentation.·
•
'Let
sheer torture value it has "call
tim of child abuse. There is much once and a while and imagine, what
there
be
wackets
for
all,
'alid
let
it
waiting" and "hold" beat all to
di~ of child abuse today.
I could buy with it. My mother
begin
with
me
...
"
Receive
second
heck
. Whereas the only thing
: At the tender age of 1e11 or so I gave me a limbing about once a
enli~tening
telephone
"menu."
unmannered
ignoramuses used to
dilly got one bath a weCk and had · week and that served to keep me in
'
For
offic,
e
hours,
press
one.
be
able
to
do
to their callers
to go to bed in a cold bed with·only fine fettle, even to this day.
.. was
hot brick wr.pped in paper to
There was the weeds to puU for
keep my feet Wllflll. At that age or the pigs, the waste water to be carbefore when any of us looked puny ried out in the bucket kept for that
&lt;iur dad gave us a round of calomel. purpo!e and the chips to be picked
Boils were allowed to get ripe and up out of the wood yard so a fue
By The Associated Press
'
then were squeezed out. Sometimes · could be star1ed quickly of a mornToday is Friday, Oct. 4, the 277 day of 1991. There are 88 days lef~ in
a little pine pitch was put an boils. ing. I was so abused that I didn't ·. the yea(.
·
Nail holes In the feet were covered have limo to pondtz on it. In fact I . Today's Highlight in History:
up with a piece of fat meat soaked didn't know what child abuse was.
On Oct. 4, 1957, the Space Age began as the Soviet Union, to the disin turpentine and then wrapped My grandmother trotttd ·me on her may of the Unitt&lt;! States, launched Sputnik, the fJCSt manmade satellite,
with • ~ of white fll·
. .
knee and told me I \vai the best bby· illto orbllllround the·Earth.
The worst abuse was gomg to in the cOunty. That made me feel
On this date:
.
'
the outside toilet when the snow good and some how I still do.
In 1777, George Washington's troops launched an assault on the
was on. I was denied money. The
Signed,
British at Oennantown, Penn. The ltlack lost momentum, and the Ameri·
most that I can remember earning
cans suffered heavy casualties. ·
as a chHd was picking blaclcberries
Gayle Price,
In 1822, the 19th president of the United State's, Rutherford B. Hayes,
for 2~ cents a gallon Qr cleaning
was
born in Delaware, Ohio.
Portland

a

By Jack Anderson .·
and·Dale Van Atta

works for Cassidy, helped set up
the two .,foundations. Over the last
three years; Cassidy, Fiedler iind '
Cloheny havt ~ven Obey about
$4,500 in Cllfllpmgn cohlributions.
. Obey told us he supported the
projects 11$ a way to keep ~fDf!DB·
tion about democracy flowmg m10
China.MdhesaidhehastoldAID.
that the two prQgrams should be ·
ex~ted IP "pass ~uster." ~bey :
sard that the campaign contrtbu-:
· lions have not influenced his thinking.
.
.
The Cassidy firm also has a,
familiar face in AID's top office..
AID Director-Ronald Roslcens was :
fonner president of the Vniversity :
of Nebraska:, and Cassidy r'epre-.
sents the university's fund-raisin[
··· ann.
FORMER FRIENDS - ·The
friendship between the Central
Intelligence Agency and the Israeli
intelligence service, Massad, is
cooling under the Bush administration. The relationship began to sour
after the lran-rontra scandal when
the CIA blamed the Mossad for
botching its role. Tll.e CIA also '
complained that Massad's intelli-_
gence on Iraq before the invasion
of Kuwait was poor. The CIA has
been funneling cash to the Mossad·
for years. 1n return, the Mossad has:.
-=-~• handled some covert operations
that were considered rpo politically
sensitive for the CIA to do directly.
MINI-EDITORIAL - The
hearings for CIA nominee Roben
Gates remind us of the bad old
days when Ronald Reagan first
took office. Reagan's transition
team decided it was time to purge
CIA employees who were too lib-.
eral for the Reagan era. The names
of 26 CIA employees were on the
hit list, but the purge was never
.carried out. Evidently it was too
extreme, even for·Reagan's CIA
Director William Casey. Still, the
hit list shows how easy it is to
politicize intelligence. A CIA
stacked with politically correct
thinkers will color the infonnation
that the president gets - infonnation he relies on to make vital
national security decisions.

Haw ~~a You etR?cT u~
1'o BeLieVe TMar Tlie eNT;J?e

Sarah Overstreet ·-

punch them into oblivion for 15
minutes, or constantly interrupt
them to answer the urgent blips of
more imPQrtant callers, now they silly or artless message and then
leave his. He can talk only when ,
can avoid them al together. Because she lets him talk, and only when
if one does manage to wa(le he's figured out her riddle and :
through the ARU, by the time one
,
gets to the person with whom one earns the right to punch her button. ,
was wishing to spea1c, one doesn't It may only be a minute or two he :
. have the energy.
spends enduring her commands, .
• What have we done? We took but i! seems like 15. That's exactly '
an arrangement that was basically the length one of o.ur customers ,
pretty efficien·t _ a phone system estimated to me in an indignant ;
real
complainl recently.
·
.
I
that Pugged
you miD a
pefSOn,
I'm probably going to.get hate :
who then either dealt with you or mail from AR U salespeople all :
transferred you to someone else and replaced it with a machine that over the co~try. telling ~e ~t a :
makes you play "20 QlleSiions" spectacular mvenuon thts IS _and t
before you qualify for the next how only.a numbslc~ could fail to )
round. lf I were a business that has pr~gram It to f~cuon beyond-.her
implemented one of these things, . wildest dreams.. 0K, I plead guilty. ,
I'd be re-thinking real hard right But I have a bttle challenge for :
about now. ·
you:
:
There's 00 "special promotion" . Some. day ~hen you guys are l
a business can dream up that can ured of mvcnung space-ag~ ~chc
do the hun feelings a lohal cus· nology, put ~own your s1hcon
. .
ch1ps and mv1te some real people·
.un
tomer ge~ the f1rst ~me e caUs in, maybe even some liberal-arts 1
anddoesn, tgetthe_ vo1ce~fthe~ types whose degrees don't qualify .:
person he s e~~~~· H~ s got hiS them for much of &amp;n,Ything else, :
mouth open, resdy to spout forth anyway. Then all of you sit around •
his reason for calling, 1when he around your big conference rabies l
realizes he's ~ng to a mac~ne. and figure .out how to teach manNext 1 he . diScovers thrs IS a agtn to put messages on the things ·
machme With real ego problems, a · so they really do save time and 1
control freak.
don't make people mad enough to •
Unl!ke the . mort: harmless kick a hog barefoored, then )l!lt that !
answenng machine, with the ARU on your Delli model instead of more :
he cannot simply suffer through a .fancy options.
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Saturday, Oct. 5
.conditions and
MICH.

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trimm.ed the request !0 $2 million.
The mopey would come from an
account called Anlerican ScHools
and Hospitals Abroad, or ASHA.
Every year, AID assembles a-panel
of experts to review the applicalions for A~HA grants. Our asso&lt;:_iate Scott Sleek ,has learned that m
past years the advisory panel has
said no to the two fOWldations, but
AID has.continued the grants anyway, with the exception of last
year. Now the 1991 installment has
been delayed because of Helms'
questions.
"If they get any money for this,
it will be an incredible waste''Qf
taxpayers' funds," said Dr. Paul
Ehrlich, a physician who has been
on the ASHA review panel several
times in the past eight years.
.
The decision to approve the
funding came under pressure from
Congress, specifically Rep. David
Obey, D-Wis., and Sen. Robert
Kasten, R-Wis. Obey chairs ·a
House panel overseeing foreign aid
programs. Cassidy and Associates
had a connection with Obey. EUiot
FiCdler, dbe'y•s aide for 11 years, 1$
now a lobbYist for Cassidy.
William Cloherty. who also

~nts.

• The telephone survey was conducted in the first three weeks of
Seplember with 2,446 employers, college and voca.tional school educators recent students, parents and the general public. The poll was jointly
spopsored by the Committee for Economic Development and The Business Roundtable, and was endorsed by the National Education Goals
Panel and the National Council on Education Standards and Testing.
: In the case of those students who went on to higher education, 70 per~ent of the students and 77 pereent of their parents felt their higher ~hoot
preparation was terrific. Only 36 pereent of the higher educators gave the
itudents positive marks, while 62 pereent gave them low grades. The margin of error was plus or minus 2 percentage points.
·. "There is onll one conclusion to be reached from this enonnous
cflasm that exists, 'said Louis Harris. "At leaslby the standards and pereeived needs of employers and higher educators, the products of qur high
sehools and their parents are simply deluding themselves. Sadly, they and
ihe whole country are paying a heavy price for it all."
.
• Johnson's group jomed the Business-Higher Education Forum in writ~g Bush and Vice President Dan Quayle tliat the administration's education reforin program, America 2!'00· wiD !Je il_r jeopardy unless Americans
understand the impacl of educauonal mediocnty.
· "Unless these misunderstandings and misconceptions about education
oird the economy are corrected, Mr. President, your crusade to turn around
American education will not move beyond square one," said the letter, ".
signed by Daniel Yankelovich and Colby Chandler.

I.

Ohio

Commentary
111 Court street
Pomeroy, Ohio
: DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

,

Meias County Court Judge
Patrick H. 0 'Bii.en processed 23
cases Oli Wednesday.
Fined were: James G. Hysell,
Middleport, expired tags, $10 and
costs; James Steliles, Cincinnati,
speed, $25 and costs; wanm Patterson, ~ Plains, speed, $27 and
costs; Sbawn 1}. Lambert,
Langsville, speeding, $100 and
costs; John Greg Hayes, five counts
of passing bad cheeks; $25, costs
and restitutipn on each charge;
Shannon L. Bare, PQrtsmouth, seat
belt violation, S1S and costs;
Larry Chapmall, Jackson, failure
to control, $~0 and costB; Robbie
Clonch, Middleport, assault, $450
and costs, three days in jail, sus·
pended, and one year )1tobation;
Timothy Frederick ,. Racine, no
motorcycle endorsement, $7 5 and
costs, three days in jail, suspended .
upon proof of valid endorsement
, • within 60 days;
Jackie Smith, Williamsport,
DWI, $450 and costs, six mQnths in
.
jail, suspended to I0 days,and one
TOP MONEY R,USERS • Tliese studenls at
Sayre,lourth grade, BDd Kara King, llltb grade.
year license suspension; Shannon
Ratioe Elementary were top seDel'll In a receat
In the back row are Bob Beegle, principal, BDd
Scott, Middleport, contributing,
. $50 and costs, fine suspended;
fund-raising eamrlli~ at the schooL Pictured, I·
Evelyn Holler, a representative for Stanley
r, are, front, Jer Hill, first grade, and Amber
Home Products. Tbe students were able to raise
Glen O.. Werry, Hemlock Grove,
Duffy, secoad grade. Second row, Clay Eltslen,
approximately $1,200 wb!cb will be used ror
criminal treSpaSSing, $30 and costs,
third grade, Jessica Roush, sixth &amp;rade, Deaa
school supplies.
·
I 0 days in jail suspended, one y~
probation.
·Danelle See, Pomeroy, no driver's license, $75 and costs, five
days in jail suspended upon proof
Mary N. Hysell
Charles and Iva May Hawk Find'
of valid operator's license within
ling. ile was a fanner and a memVeterans Memorial Hospital
90 days, failure to.,CO!Itrol, $30 and
Mary Nancy Hysell, 84, of State ber of the Modem Woodmen of
THURSDAY
AD.MISSIONS
costs. Timothy Imoooen, Syracuse,
Route 143 in Pomeroy, died Fri- Am ·
Tammy Hable, Syracuse; Martha' criminal. trespaising, $200 and
day, October 4, 199,1 at Veterans
fu~~ survived by his 'wife, CoUins, Sytacuse; Floyd 'Bricldes, costs, 30 da)'s in jail, $150 of fine
Memorial Hospital Extended Care Wanda Mohler Findling, one son Shade; Glenn Baker, ReedsvU)e; and jail time suspended, resuaining
Unit foDowing an Clltended illness. and daughte~-in-law, Carl, ]c. and and Susan Sickles,~order issued; Robert CoughenoUr,
She was born on January 21, Nancy Findling, Galion; four
TIIURSDAY DISCfiARGES - Gallipolis, aaempted theft, $50 and
1906 in Meigs County, the daugh- grandchildren, three step-grand- Ora Sinclair, Edward Martin and costs, contributing, $50 and costs,
tee of the late Ira and Jessie . children, one step-great-grand- Susan Sicldes.
six months in jail, suspendt;d and
Grueser Hysell. She was a house.
Hoizir
Medical
Center
two years probation.
wife, and attended the 'HyseU Run daughter, and one great-grandDischarges
Oct.
3
James
Timothy Imboden, Syracuse,
Free Methodist Chureh.
daughter; two sisters, Ethel Bell
Surviving are a son, Dale A. Reeves imd Helen Findling both of Bailey. William Capehart, Anna DWI, 10 days in jail, $450 and
Hysell of Middleport; a daughter, Coolville; two brothers, Russell Combs, Beatrice Evans, Elsie costs, operator's license suspended
Roberta Jeffers, Racine; three Findling of Athens, and Harry Fin- Folmer, Nathan Grant, frances for one year; Juanita M. Thomas,
Haskins, Heney Hlll, Mrs. Randy Middleport, DUI, $450 and costs,
grandchildren and five great-grand- dling of Carroll.
children.
Funeral services will be held Hubbard and son, Lois Stapleton, 30 days in jail, operator's license
suspended for one year, driving
Besides her parents, she was Sunday at I :30 p.m. at the White Emma Watson and Larry Wright.
Births
Oct.
3
Mr.
and
Mrs.
under suspension, $100 and costs,
preceded in death by her husband, Funeral Home in Coolville. The
Christopher.
Roe,
sou,
Jackson.
30
days in jail ccincurrent with DUI
Joe E. Hysell, a daughter, Nancy Rev. Duane Sydenstricker and the
charge,
left of center, costs only;
Hysell, and two sons, Vernon Rev. Mark McClung will officiate
Donna
Canterbury, Gallipolis
HyseD and Sammy Hysell. ·
and burial will be in Mound CemeFerry, W.Va., passing bad checks,
Funeral services will be held on tery at Chester. Friends may call at
$25
fine, costs and restiwtion.
Pick
3
Numbers
Sunday at 1 p.m. at Ewing Funeral the funeral home Saturday from 6
4..()..9
Forfeiting
bonds were: James
Home with Cecil Wise officiating. to 9 p.m.
M.
Werry,
Jr.,
Racine, failure to
(four,
zero,
nine)
Qurial will be in Rock .Springs
control,
$60;
and
Dale Treadway,
Cemetery.
Coolville,
speed,
$60.
Pick
4
Numbers
Friends may call at the funeral Howard Van Meter
The following forfeited for fail4-8-6-2
home from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Sature
to appear on charges requiring
(four, eight, six, two)
urday.
Howard Robert Villi Meter, 72,
court 11Jl1X8C1111CCS: Patrick s. Cona- .
•,
of Douglasville, Ga., a fonner area Cards
Io, Martella, failed to stop after
Carl M. Findling
resident, died Thursday, Oct. 3,
accident, $155; Patrick S. Conalo,
4 (four) of Hearts
1991 at his residence.
Marietta, failure to control, $55;
A (ace) of Clubs
He was a welder and retired
Carl M. Findling, Sr., 79, of
Shari McLain, Buckhannon,
6 (six) of Diamonds
40761 Sumner Road, Reedsville, employee of Tread Association,
W.Va., expired opemtor's license,
8 (eight) of Spades
died early Friday morning, OcL 4, Roanoke, Va.
$80,
Born on Oct. 4, 1918 at West
1991, at Veterans MemO!iaJ Hospi. tal, Pomeroy, following an extend- Columbia, W.Va., he was ·the son
ed illness.
of the late Walter Van Meter and
· Born on May 23, 1912 in Hick- Nellie Riley Van Meter. He was a
Continued from page 1
ory, Pa., he was the son of the late World War II Army veteran.
Pomeroy squad went 10 Anne Street. Mary Seaman refused trealHe is survived by five sons,
menL At 2:51 p.m., Racine squad _took Andrew Craig from the ~ta­
Mitchell Van Meter, Douglasville,
tion
to Veterans Memorial Hosp1tal and later to Holzer. Medical
Ga.; Martin Van Meter, Legrange,
Center.
At 3 p.m., Scipio Fire Department went to PagevrDe Road
Ohio; Randal Van Meter, Blackfor a brush fue at the G.L. Y_oung property. _At 7; 14 p.m., Pomeroy
stone, Va.; Rlt k Van Meter, Claxunit went to Pomeroy Ntm!mg and fi.ehabll1tal1on Center. Susan
'
ton,
Ga
.;
and
Greg
Van
Meter,
.
Am Ele Power .........:........31 1/8
Sickles
was taken to Veterans. At 10:52 p.m., Rutland squad went
Salem,
Va.;
a
sister,
Betty
Burton,
Ashland Oil ......................29 5/8
to
Erikson
Road for Kenny Erilcson, who was dead on arrival.
Letart,
W.Va.,
several
grandchilAT&amp;T................................ 363/4
dren
and
several
nieces
and
Bob Evans .:............, .........19 1/4
nephews.
Channing Shop.................. 20
Besides his parents, he was preCity Holding .....................16 1/8
A marriage license has been issued in Meigs County Probate
federal Mogw................... I4 S/8 ceded in death by three brothers,
Court 10 James Michael Zerkle, 21, Hartford. W.Va., and Roquelle
two sisters, and his wife, Betty Ann
Goodyear T&amp;R .................43
Renee Gibbs, 16, Mason, W.Va.
_.,.
Price Van Meter.
Key Centurion ;................J 4 3/4
Funeral services will be held at
I..aOOs' End ........................19
I
p.m.
Saturday at the Ewing
Limited Inc....................... 24 718
Funeral
Home. Burial will be in
Multimedia Inc ..................24
· An action for dissolution of marriage has been filed in Meigs
Miles
Cemetery.
Friends may call
County Common Pleas Coun by Kenneth R. Guinther and Carol L.
Rax Restaurant .................. 1/4
at the funeral home on Friday 6 to
Robbins&amp;Myers ..........~ ......39
Guinther, both of Racine.
9p.m.
Shoney's Inc .................... .17 1fl
..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;..._ _ __.'"'
Star Bank .......................... 22 1fl
:Wendy Int'l. ........................8 7/8
Worthington Ind ...............27 318
Stock rtporl$ an 1M 10:30 a.m.
q~otu pror/lltd by Bl~lll, EUis
COLUMBUS, Ohi&lt;1 (AP)- A distress and diminished_property
Among its demand's, the suit
and Loewl of GaltipD/Is.
U.S . District judge will decide values because of radioactive and sUb $300 million in damages and
whether nei~hbors of the Piketon chemical contamination.
lifetime'llledical monitoring for the
uranium ennchment plant can join
Thursday's hearing was to residents.
together in a class-action lawsuit determine whether there are
Without class-action cenificaagainst plant ~tors.
enough common questions to justi- tion, the suit wiU be hlore difficult
U.S. District Judge Joseph ·p. fy a class-action lawsuit. Kinneary to pursue, said Arthur Miller, an
The Daily Sentinel
Kinneary
heard ,. arguments Thurs- did not say when he will rule on the expert on class actio~ litigation
CVBPS 11!-HO)
day
in
a
$300·'· million lawsuit motion.
from Harvard University. Miller
Publiehed eveey al\emoon, •Monday
Goodyear
Atomic, which
against
Ulrough Friday, 1U Court SL Pomeroy
spoke on behalf of the plaintiffs.
Ohio by the Ohio Valley p,;bliohinr
Dpefllted the f&gt;lant in Pike County
Company!Mullimodia Inc:., Po'meroy,
from 19551hrough 1988; its parent,
Ohio 457691 Pb. 992-21158. S"'ond elou
ptage paid aL Pomeroy, Ohio.
Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co.; and
Martin Marietta Energy Systems,
Member: The At&amp;oclated Prci. -Inland
the current operator.
·
Daily Pret1 A11oc:iation and the Ohio
:·.
Newtpaper Allodatlon, National
The
was brought by six peoAdvertiting Reprenn&amp;a&amp;tv•, Branham
ple on behalf of about 10,000
N ew~papcr Sale•.r.. ?33 Third Avenue,
neighbors
of the plant. It charges
~ow YOrk, New Yvn 10017.
1
that
neighbors.
suffered emotional
POS'l'MASTER1Send addreoo eha- to
'.

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IMansfietd I 69'1•

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0

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. •lcolumbus!7o'

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aa

IND.

•••

PA.

aa
W. VA.

'

Hospital news

Lottery results

Via Alsoclatod l'ml Glllphk:sNet

C111111 Accu-WeoltlOr, inQ

- - -South
-- - Weatfier ----centrlli
Extended rorecast
Chltnce of rain. 20 _percent.
Tonight, variable cloudiness with a
slight chance of showers toward
morning. Low 60 to 65 . South
winds 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain
30 percent. Saturday, showers and
thunderstonns Hkely. High aroimd
70. Chance of rain 60 percent.

A chance of showers Sunday·
and fair Monday and Tuesday,
except' for a chance of showers·
northeast; highs mainly in the 50s
Sunday and Monday, and in the
60s Tuesday; lows 35 to 45 Sun. ,'
day, 25 to 35 Monday. and in th~ ·
30s Tuesday.
··

--Meigs announcements-_,.,j,·,
DAR to meet
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of the American Revolution, will meet Friday, Oct. II at
the home of Mrs, Roy Holter at 1
p.m. Program will be "The ~ilk
You Drink - Dairy Fanning: An
American H¢tage."

p.m:·
Cost is $5 for adults and $2.SO for
Hall on Saturday, Oct. 12 at4

children under 12. Menu includes·
roast beef, fried chicken, rolls; ·
assorted vegetables and homemade ·
·pies and coffee. The public is invit:
ed.
PTO to meet
,.
The Riverview PTO will meet
on Monday at 7 p.m. Final arrange-·
· Smorgasbord dinner
There will be a smorgasbord ments for the Fall Carnival will be
dinner at the WilkesviDe Pythian made. Babysitting will be avail•..
able.
•:

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

' .' ~ . ,:·

$3 •00

'

13.00

BARGAIN MATINEES SATURDAY I SUNCAY.
IARGA!N NIGHT TUESDAY

.....----Local briefs... ---.,

Stocks

Marriage license issued

-Dissolution sought '

.Judge debates class action request in _suit

1

-

McClure's
Family Restaurant

sun

'l'he Daily Sentinel, Ill ·court St.,
t!o'"'"'Y· OHio 45769.
SURSCRIPI'ION RATEs
~
By Carrier or Motor R011te ·
Ono Weok................................,..........SU\0
One Monlb .............................. ........... f6.9G •

COLONY THEATRE
FRI. THRU THURS.

One Yoar.................. ,. .............. - •..183.20
SINGLE COPY
PRICE

•

• MOND~Y

Bacon Cheesebur.ser &amp; Med. Frendt Fries

'

Dai\y............................. ............-.2G Cenll

•

Subtcriban not delirina lo pay the carrier may remit io advance direc:t t4 The
Calli poll• Daily Tribu.ne on a 3.8 or J2
month buil. Credit will be_(iven Clnier
each weell. - - - ~ - · No oubompUono 'by mail permiltecl In
arou when home canier aervice ia
available.
Moll Babocnptlona
lnaldo Goll\o Count)&lt;
13 Weelto..................... ................. ,••f21.114

26 Woeb .......................................... l-43.18
52 w..u.: ....................................... fM.7&amp;
O.toloh Goll\o Cwnly
t3Wilt'a ......................................... S23.40
:zew..u. ............... .........................HUO
62 Wet'a......................,................... S88.40 , .

•
tltru SUNDAY, OCT. 7·13
•

$2.89

.

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6

•

. BUY ONE BANANA SPLIT AND GET
ONE FREEl

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE Is hereby given that on Saturday,
October 5, 1991, at 10:00 a.m., a pubic; sale
be
held at 105 Union Averlu.e, Pomeroy, Ohio, to 'Sell
for cash the following collateral:

will

•

1985 Chevy Caprice- air· power
1G1 BN69H2F.Y211872
The Farmers B~nk and Savings 'Company, •
Pomeroy, Ohio, reserves the right to bid at this ,
sale, and to withdraw· the above collateral prior to
sale . Further, The Farmers Bank and ·savings ,
co6;pany
reserves the right to reject any o(all
bids
submitted.
•

Further, the above collateral will be sold In the
condition .11 Is In ~ith no expressed or Implied
warranties given.

SWISHER LOHSE ..
PHARMACY IS-NOW
.ACCEPTING
CiC AND
FOR·OUR COSTUMERS'
CONVENIENCE
s=W=I=S=HE=R;[D::;: : ;:H: : :.;:; :E
5

Pha r macy
-

I

ONE
7:10
ADMISSION St.SO
446.0023

1

lien. H. II... Pltwy

419 ..... ,.,

IIDIILIPOIT

GAWPCIUS
614-446·1117
' ..

61~·"1·5241

•

SS41..t Mlin St.
POMaOY

-...

.,

•

· IIIN tot. 1:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
. . . 10:00 . .... ... 4:00 p."'·

PIIUCIII'TIOIIt
. PH. H2·2111 '
I.'~111'1¥ -too - - · OH.

o,.._....,.•.••

614-"1·6292

-.
~--------------------~
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. I•

\

�· Frl~ay, october 4, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page · 4 The Dally Senllnel

~

OSlf's Simmons unimpressed with
hisJilayin
spittfofsetting club mark .·
.

fChJcago White Sox sweep Minnesota i~ double~eader
.

~

•

;·
By The Associated Press
': The Minnesota Twins needed
·nearly eight l!ours to finish a dou,:bteheader in .,lhich Tom Kelly's
; only goal was a short workout for
.· his two sta(ting pitchers.
: .T.be American League champion
• Twins, following their first rained: out game of the season on Wednes• day, lost.a doubleheader to the
Chicago Whife Sox Thursday
night, 3-2 in 10 innings and 13-12
. in 12 innings. The fitStgaJIIe tasted
: 3:06, the second 4:42. ,
: Kelly's starters were 18-game
• winner Jack Morris and 16-gaine
Winner Kevin Tapani, and he wanted them to work five innings apiece
'

in their last apperances before the
AL playoffs against Toronto starts
WednC$1ay.
"Morris did what I wanted ... he
did all right," the Twins manager .
said of Morris • shutout pit£hillg for
five innings in the opener. "Tapani
dido 't. He looked a fittle stiff."
Tapani allowed II. hits and.four
runs in his five-inning"stint
. "But they got their five innings,
That was the JVain thing. I just
wanted to get them five innmgs
each," Kelly said. ,
In the only other major league
games played Thursday, New York
defeated Baltimore 9-6 at Yankee ·
Stadium, Detroit beat Boston 10.5

at Fenway Park and Milwaukee
won 9-3 at Cleveland.
Matt Merullo''s pinch-hit single
scored Joey Cora from second base
with th~ win~ing run in the_ second
g~me, m which €arlton F1~k had
six -RB!s and two homers, mcluding ~ grand slam, for the White
Sox. .
.
Br1an Drahl'flan (3-2) pllched
one-third of an inning for the victory as Chi~ago had 24 hits, includingJour homers. Terry Leach (1-2)
was the loser.
Minnesota trailed 12-8 going
into the ninth inning of the second
game, but a homer by Pedro
Munoz, an .RBI double by Paul

Scoreboat·(l
•

In the majors...
Eutem IMwlllon

W L Pd.

GB

.......... 84 7S .528
....... 16 82 .'\JI
l'lill•dolphio ...... 16 83 .418

l2
19.5
20
2l
25 ..5

~-Pitubutgh .:...... 96 63 .604

Sl. Lot.Ua
NowYod&lt;

......... 74 83 .471
........ . 70 88 .443

Chicago
MoollW

Saturday's games
SL Loul.latNcw Jcncy, S:OS p.m.

N . Y . lalandcz11tBq~ton, 7:05p.m.
Hulfool II ()~oboe. 7,35 p.m.

Buffalo at WuJtin&amp;ton, 7:35p.m.

Wtttun DMslon
W L PtL

Team

Chicaao 11 Minnalou, 8:05 p.m.

GB

Ar.lant.
.. ......... 92 67 .579
l.oo AngdOI ...... 92 61 .519
San Diego ........ 81 78 .S09

N.Y. Rangen at Montrm, 8:05p.m.

Detroit. at Toronw, 8:0:5 p.m.
II

VlftCillvmo at San Jc.e_ f l :OS p.m.

19
28

Sunday's pmes

II

Clndnnali --- 74 85 M5
.San Francilco ...... 7l 86 AS9
H01.11tm
....... 64 9S . .403
divisioo title.

' No game.
Tbursday's games
scheduled
&lt;

St. LouU (l'ewUbwy 11 -12) 11 OUcaao
(Sutcliffe 6-S}, 3:20 f·m.
'Now Yod&lt; (Vioil 3-15) lll'llilldelphil
(Brantley l-2), 7:35p.m.
Montreal (Nabholz 8-7) at Phubuq,h
(llnbok 15-14), 7,3s p.m.
Ho,.,.,rl\(1..... 0-1) 11 Allon11 (Avay
11-i), NO p.m.
Cincinnati (Brownina 14-13) u Stn
Diego (Melendez 7-S),lO:OS p.m.
l.oo Angdeo (R, Maninozl7-12) R SUI
F""oooo (Bilclt 11 · 16), llr.l5J&gt;m.

Minn~tlatDeuoit,

Transactions

SundiJ!I'&amp; c•mes

Baseball

~

9'

:w

Western Dl•illo..,
w L PeL
l·MinnCIICKI ...... 94 6l .591
......... 86 73 .541
Chitlaa
......... 83 16 .522
Ooklond
........... 83 16
T.,•
....... 8l 17
""""
Soolllo Cily ........... II 71 .509
Calltomia ......... 71 II .491
'

GB
II
II

12
13
16

Football

MHwau.i.ee (Eldred 1·0) at Boston
BS pm.

(~ct 9-9),

Toronto {Stottlcm_yro l.C-1) at Min·

neiOU. (NcaJie 0.0), I:OS p.m.

:

Hockey

Oakland (Stcwut,ll·l 0) n 'Po:uJ
(B"'wn 9-1 :!), 1'3lJ&gt;IIL
KonAJ City (Aqllino 1-4) II Coli!!&gt;&lt;·
ni.o (Fiftleyll-9), IO,llj&gt;Jn.

NalJoul Hockey Leap
BUFFALO SABRES - Auianed
Ducy Loe.wat, caucr, Lo Rochelle: o! the
Amcrlcln Hod&lt;e.f WI"~

CIU"'JO (ll&lt;op 9-9) 11 Saulo (ldhn101'1 ll-1 0), 10:3Sp.m.

MINNESOTA NORTH STARS -

Aareed 10 tam• wilh Neal B~. ccn\er,
on a muldYIUCOIW'Iel.

S.turdly'seames
(Pl111C:

NEW JERSEY DEVD.S -Rei"""

2·1) at Boalon

Ouistiltl,left Wlnlo and Mya O'Cmnor,
dcfcnnmJn, to ULic• of the Americ.n
Hook')' ~.u..,_
NOW YORK ISLANDERS - Ao·
riancd Dean Otynowelh, de!en~tmtn, w
C.piu.l District of the Ameriu.n Hockey

(T.,Iar 7-IJ),l:lt ,....

[)euoil (M. Leiter 9·6) at Baltimore
(D. J.m-4-1), 1:35 p.m.
.
Toronto (Wolll lS-10) 11 ~ou.
(l!riWon 19-1),1'05 p.m.
Oakland (Welch 12-13) 11 Tu.u (F•·
judo 0-1), US ~m.
1W1ou Cily (Appic 13-9) II COiiforni.o (l. A - 11-11), IOJI! p.m.
Olicaao (Femtndcz 9·13) at Sclttle
(1CM&amp;er Ill-&amp;), IOJI! p.m.

Lu~ YORK RANGERS - Siil'od
Roser NeW on, co.ch. to a now oontnct.
n . LOUIS BLUES- Aui.Jr!od la·
1on Manhtll, defen1anan, w Peoria or
the lntemltional Hockey Lc.ape.
\vASH!NGTON CAPITALS- Obtained Todd Krygier, lel\. wing, fttrn \he
Hanford Whllen in their fou.rth round
1993 mtry dnft choice.

Sundly's pmes

MilWll.t.oo at Sonon. 1:OS p.m.

Cl..dudotNtw Yori.,J:ltp.m.
D=oit at 8&amp;1t1more, 1:3S p.m.
T..... u-2-j)lp.m.
Ookllnd II T0111, )JI! p.m.
X..0U City II Colil011111, 4JI5 p.m.
Chic&lt;JO "S..lllo, 1,11 p.m.

•

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computer· ra~ings

ond ftU1)' footbtll oom~tor tUi'l&amp;l u
rdNood by dlo a.io Jliah S&lt;:hilol All-Jelic
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Rep. I - I. a-Juwl Sllptiuo
41.0000; 2. Menwr 62.0000; 3. Euclid
60.5000:4.
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l4.l1SO: 10. w-.2!1.0000.
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61.1~ :1. TolodoS&lt;- 60.1100l; 3.

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Akron Blle1 57.5000: 4. luberton
54.0000; '· c..... Mcl(Wey 41.0000: 6.

Toledo Whhmot 4!.0000; 7. W..Won
W~ 44.001\0; t. Toll\fo Colnutl
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!

B'"t&lt;~~!,N.Y.
)1oo110114. T - !

-

.

!,01... 3, llo

.

(

,

s...

(lit),,_,. Notre O..t, Fnnldln

Furnace cu.. Ui. IHI!• 9. UammondtviUe Edilon Nonh 1 .0000; 10.
B..nrnu.l4.5000.
Rej.on 20- 1. Mi.ddlt.cown Fctwick
45 .0000;"2. Cincinn1ti Country Day
40.0000: 3. Cin.cinnui Muicmon\
39.5000; 4. M.orion l'leallai3S.0000;-5.
UniCCI Oily Milllllinawo Volley !1.0000:
6. Hamilton New Miami 29.0000; 7,
Cocluvillo l'l.lOOO; s, l.oc*lonclll6..5000:
9 (tio), S. Q11rl011011 S..lilolllem, Mil·
ton\ Cat"' FWboaU )4,0000.

- -ILEC,._ .

o o o- o o o

IAAn...., ...

..

.,..

36.0000; 2. Fairport Harbor Hardin&amp;
28.5000; 3. Fnmonl Sl ],.qob 27.0000;
4. Sebrina MdCinlcy 26.0000; S.
Columbi.tna 25.5000; 6. McDonald
25 .0000; 7. O.llon 22.5000; I. Lucu
22.000C). 9. Wcllovillo 20.5000; 10. lndop&lt;Mollol9.0000.
ROIIICCI II - I. Blullloo 36.01100: 2
(tie). Delpho• St. John'•• Minlter
29.0000; ot. New Bran~~~ 27.0000; 5. J)o.
vfi•llce Ayenvi.Ue 26.5000; 6. Areadla
25..!)000; 1. McComb 24.0000; I.
llicko'lillo 2!.5000; 9 (lio). V111 Bwon.
Doll Htolin N"""""· S&lt; Hcouy 22.5000.
Rea,ion 19 - 1. Newark C,t.tholic
4S .SOOO; 2. Wood1field 39.5000; 3,
Roedo~lk Eullrn 37.5Hf: 4. ~""
3:3.5000; s. Ylatoa Nerlll Gallla
... - 6.
bwa-Fnnklin 11.0000: 1

Care • Concern • Compassion

•

' WL T PII.GFGAf
...... 000
000
... 0 0 0
0 0 .0

ColfuY

.

COLUMBUS. 'a ao (AP) r ~ ~ec·

WALES CONFERENCE
T-

Division V

ROIIICCI 11 - 1. SondUoky SL M.oey'o

High school football

In JheNHL ...

•

Ri"'

Aloin a,.,;,., pi&lt;aulu. Auignod Jdl

(BoiJao 1-111 ~......
Clmland (IUn&amp; 6·11) 11 N"' fori.

•
•
••

Division IV
Re&amp;ioh 13- 1. Wuren Kennedy
60.0000: 2. Chlpill Filii 41 .1000: 3. .
Gate. Mil!J Ha"bn 40.0000;r4. Lorain
Clauoiow 39..5000: 5. llum 36.0000; ~
Aa. 35.0000; 1. Clmpbdl
Monlo!lol ~0000: l.l'lrl)',29.0000; 10.
Elyrlo Cllholic 27.1250.
Re1ion 14 - l. Monmtpelier
31.0000 2. Ddph01 Jo!fcnon 35.5000; 3.
Carey 33.5000; 4, Bellville Clear Fork
33.0000; 5. Marlon Elc\~ _32.5000; 6.
Sprin&amp;llold Codlolic lO.OQro, 1. Bloom·
dale l!tmwood 29.0000; &amp;. Archbold
28.0000; 9. cwn....-Un&lt;oln 2A.SOOO;
10. Northwood ll..si:IOO.
Roaion Il - l. S~ Colh.Oo
SO.OOtfO; 2. Bamc•ville 41.Q.OOO; 3.
ToiVIIIO 32.0000; 4 (tie). Smnml\ Station
Uckin&amp; H•.• Alhland Mopl""' 31 .0000,
6. Cadiz 30.5000; 7, Apple Creek
Wayaedlle 29.0000: I . Columbilftl
Ctutview 11.0000. 9. Riumm 27.5000;
I0. IWinibll
26.0000.
Rocion 16- 1. Columbuo Honloy
47.0000: 2. WheeltniNira.U.tiOO; 3.
Amanda-Ocueaock 39.0000; 4 (tie). Wat
Ieffenon, Pottmouth Eut 31.1000; 6.
Cincimali W)'mlinJ 35.0000;. 7. Colum·
bu1 Rtlldy 33.5000; t. Coal Grow DIW·
, IOil ~Br,ant l!.SHI. t; Ca.uaptake
23.5t01J 10. Chlllicolhc Z1ne Tnce
21.5000.

Nalloul FIK!lball U•aue
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS Acliva\ed Tim Oordon, nfcty, from lhe
puctice •quad. Placed Ed Reynolds ,
~.on \he pr11c:tice ~quad .

Detroit (Aldred 2·4) at Baltimore
(Muuin• 4-!), 7:35 p.m.

•

Marian 69.0000; 2. Kettering Alter
66.0000; 3 (lie), Bclllnok, S&lt; Porio Onhun 46..5000; S. Spcioaf..W N...wo40.0000; 6. New Richmond 31.5000; 7.
S . bolo 36.5000; I . SprinJ!i.wl K&lt;ft.
\~p 36.(XX)O; 9. Cincinnati Aea~
m) of Ptlytieal Bduc1tior1. 35.0000: 10
(tie). Oennlnton Valley View, Hamil~cn
BIOtin 32.01100.

Sian ed
Ihi&amp;la., lUitd. to 1 ono-youmnncL ·
ORUfmO MAGIC - Added T1to
Holford, ct.nt.er, and Donald RoYal. for·
ward, 10 lbc ttainina Cldl.p • •••

Clntland (HIIIeau 3-ol) 11 Nnr
York (MIIIIl·l)1 71lt p.m.
~

Thonwillo Shcridon 23.0000 .

Rtlioa 12 - 1. Cincinnati 1'\irtcll

,..,.NEW
........JERS EY NETS -

Friday's &amp;alDK

•

Hll~

MILWAUKEE BUCKS - Sil"•d
Milt Waper and Everette Stephen•,
&amp;Umil, IDd Michael Ansley, forwud.
MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES SiJnod Tcll.il Fnnk, forward, to a one·

O.icaao 13, Minnuoll 12, 12 inninllo2ndllm0
Now York 9,8altimare6
DouoiiiO. 801\onl •
Mltwauket 9, Clevtllnd,J

•
'

McDermoU Northwal, Ironton Rock

LOS AIIGEU!S LAXERS- Sisn"'

t~taarne

•
••
•
•

mll, Colum""' BWoy 25.5000; 10 nit).

Jack. Haley, center, to an offtz 1hcct.

Tbunday's srores

•

B.

5. Po111miMilll W•tll.1250; 6..,roclonllle Falrl•nd 21.25tl; 7. Hebroi1
J..Uowaacl 27.5000; I (tio). Bloom•Cir-

lluo WuhinJ'Oft, panil, and Kurt Nim·
phM;, CUit.et, 10 the lninin&amp; camp l"'lllt:t.

OUcaao 3, MiMelc:U 2. 10 iMinp ,

MUwaU•

Ri•"

HOUSTON ROCKETS - Addod
"'"'
Oerald Hendeuon, Trent Jack.aon and

loClinched di.Yiai.on tide.

•.

. Un 51.0000, 2. B..,.. 41.5000: 3 (tie~
Olk IWboc, Cu1llia MupiCU&amp; 31.0000;
!. Aklon SL V'11100111-SL """'36..5000; 6.
Nodino Buckoye36.0000; 1. Rooky
30.0000; I. Sw1nton 27.5000; 9 (de).
CICMiond Onna~ Willltd 240000.
ROIIloo II - 1. !too... OJ1H; 2.
C~llumbv.• O.Salu 41.0000; 3. Utica
40.5000: 4. s-.y
Wllnut 36.!000;

lh&lt;&gt;ny HoUIIOn,
•
DALLAS MA RICKS - Siil'ed
Mik:CI Iuuolino, pard, to a twl)oyeu con·

-i

~

Coolloncl Lokmow 310000.
RoaiCCI 10 - I. Twinlhw1! O.unbcr-

BasketbaU

19
2:1

T..m

boro 44.5000; 6 (tie). Menlor Lake
CathoUc, Gnadenhutten Indian Valley
40.5000: I. Uhrich1ville Claymont
39.0000; 9. Mldiol Focrr :W.OOOO; IQ

NaUonal Buketbtll ..Utodallon
BOSTON CELTJCS - Signed Steve
Scheffier, forward.
GliAllLOTI'I; HORNETS - Siil'od
Eric
, cmt.er.
CL ELAND CAVALIERS Signed K Hu&amp;he-, forward, Ores Bu\·
ler and Dale
W.t, centen, ltld An-

1.

"

Clt"el•4

YoW!ipWwn Unuline .50.3750; 3 (tic).
Struthm, Minerva 46.5000; 5. SUocU·

ICOUL

-5

89 70 ..560
84
.l28
..516
Sl
80 79 .503
....... 70 19 .4-40
.41S
........ 66
- - !l!JIM .3U

Dlvlslonm
Rcsi011 9 - I. Oirud 60.2500; 2.

I
National Luaue
FLORIDA MARLINS - Nomod
Anael Vuquet din:ctor of Latin American opmd0111 and apccid conllllllnl to
""' ...cnl """'I!"'·
MONTREAL EXPOS - Named
~ Fc:rrcin directm- of Latin American
openliollll and Doua Carpenter Florida

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eulml DI•~IOn
w L I'd. Gl •
Tflm

Blltimore

ROiion 8 - L S1. Muyo Mi:mori~
63..5000: l . Norwood 54.0®0; 3. Lima
Shawnee 53.5000; 4, _J;)ayton Dunbar
42.5000; 5. Gaoh\11 35.01100: 6. Ddianco
34.01100: 1. M.oryoville 33.0000; i . Doy:
ton Carroll 32.0000: 9. HamULOn Rou
25.5000; 10. WapU:oneta 2A.SOOO.

Bufl'alo at K.anu1 City, 9 p.m.

New Ycd 1t Philadelp~Uf,l :3S p.m.
Montralat PiaabuJih, 1:35 p.m.
Houaton at Atlanl.a. } :10 p.m.
SLLoiilat Chicap. 2:20p.m.
Clndnnad at San Dlqo, 4:15 p.m.
Lot Anplolll San Fr~~~Qico. 4;0S p.m.

,•

19.-.

Monday's a(tlon

Mooa.ol 11 Piuobwah, 7JI5 pm.
Clndnnad at San' JMtao, U:t5 p.m.

NowYmk

1 p.m .

New York Jell at Cleveland, I p.m.
Phillddphia at Tampa Bay, I p.m.
Suttle 11 Clndnnall, 1 p.m.
WaWngton at Chica&amp;o. 1 p.m.
·
PhocrW. n New Yoti. Giants, 4 p.m.
San Die&amp;o at Loa Angde~ Raiden, 4
p.m.
Pituburgh at Indianapolis, &amp;p.m.
OPEN DATE: Atlanta, Loc An&amp;elu
Rams, New Orlean~, San Frtncileo

HOUI1on at Athnta, 3:05p.m.

........
..........
...........
ll&lt;tn&gt;i~
......
Milwaukee

40.3750; S. Madilon 36.0000; IS. Nitro.
MclCinJey31.7500; 7. Beloit WatBranc:h
31.01100: I. Ro...... JO.OOOO: 9. Hubbllll
28.0000; IO.Akron Hobon 240000.
ROIIlon 6 -I. Salon 56.5000; :1. FOI·
toria .54.0000; 3.. Punt Hll. Holy_~~
45.0000: 4. Lod; Clavor!NI44.0000; l.
Hunlina Valley Univmity 41.4375; 6.
Bellevue 31.0000; 7. Olm11ed Falla
35.1250: I. HalloDd Sprinllfiold 32..5000;
9. Sylvan.il Southview 32.6000; 10. North
RidaO'illle 11.0000.
Ropn 1 - I. Colum""' Booohaoft
56.01100: 1 Uniocnown Like 48..5000; 3.
Porumouth of5.51Hi 4. Louisville
44.5000; 5. McCo~aelnllle MorJID
38.5000; 6. McA~hl!r Vln_~ County
37.HM; 7. Dolow,.. Hiya 3'4.0000; I.
Co!umbUI- 31.25110; 9. Po....W.
Wolkino MaDaNI 2!1.5000; II. Jacluact

Sunday's slate

Saturday's games

l·TOIUIIO

SteUbenville 43.5000; 4. Richfield Rcvcm .

Lol Ancel.ctlt Edmcnton, 8:0S p.m.
Cllpry II W~ US p.m.
New Jc:ncy at Chielao. 8:35 p.m.

Oallu VI. 0recn Bay at Milwaukee, l
p.m.
Denver at Houtton, l p.m.
Miami 11 New EnJland, 1 p.m.

New Yolk. at Philadelphia, 1:3S p.m.
SL lmil at Chi.cap, 2.:20 p.m.
Loc Ansclc:a at San F~~acilca, 3:0S p.m.

B01m. .

Region 5 - 1, Ywnptown Chaney
63.0000: l Royilnd Bookcl" 44..5000; l .

Next week's
NFL games

Today's games

•

DlvlslonD

•

Pbilodelphio11 Piuobwgh, 4,05 pm.

..

~-clinched

4(l,lpOO; 10. N. CaniUI 11oova- &lt;lll.OOOO.
ROIIlon 3 - I. Onwo G1y 65.5000;
2. Pic\erii!Jtoa 59.5000; 3. Piqu1
53.5000; 4. llllbUn 48..5000; l (lie). Odloway Watland, Man•fitld, Lancuter
45 .0000; I. Columbvs Brookhaven.
38.0000; 9. ZonciYiJJe 35.0000; 10. w....
.milo~ 33.SOOO.
Rcsion 4 - 1. Cincinnati Prineeton
73.5000; 2. CincinaaU Mocll=- 61 .2500;
3. Cincinnat Pldcr tSO.SOOO; 4. OUard Ta·
U.wanda 49.0000; S. Middletown 47.5000;6. CCIIIOI\'illo 46.0000; 1. Qncimuti ML
Healthy 45.0000; 8. Cincinnati Westcm
Hi1lo 41.01100: 9. HuriJon 39.5000: 10.
Cincinnlti SL Xari« 35.0000.

Philadelphia 11 Wa~hinaton , 7:35
p.m.
Lao Anploo II WinniJIOI, B:ll p.m.
EdmontM at Cataur,..-9:"35 p.m. . .,
San J* at Vancouvcr,l0:35 p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
-

•

Tonllht's aames

Pitubur&amp;h llBuffalo. 7:35 p.m.

'

Team

.

~

'

. .

Wfho:EUeaJ.Iaugbt .
Wfhea: lovllllllerl, 1881
What: Mayor of Pomaroy

Sorrento and Kent Hrbelt's two-run
Tigers 10, Red Sox 5
· seventh, Detroit jumped on'relievhomer forced extra innings.
'
Detroit pulle~l. within two games ers Dennis Lamp, Tonr Fossas and
- Chicago, which lrailed 6-1 after of third-place Bosto~ with three Dan Petry for six runs m the eighth,
four innings, took an ~ 1-7 lead in . games to play .as Bill Gullickson . including Fielder's C::,d slant
the seventh on Fi~'s grand slam.
!leCa!lle 1 ~ AL 's fiill 20-g•m~
· Yankees9, ioles ~
·
Dan Pasqua and Jffiiij}(Thomas winner behind Cecil Field7ri s
New York won Its fourth ··
also homered for the White Sox. grand slam and Rob Deer's _three- straight game as Roberto Kelly
Scott Leius and Greg Gagne also run homer.
homered, doubled and drove in
homered for Minnesota.
Gullickson (20-9) allowed just four runs.
In the opener, Warren Newson, ·three runs on six hits in seven
· Jeff Johnson (6·11) gave up
who began a two-run rally in the · ionings, losin$ his bid for his firSt .three 111nS on seven ~itsHiullnsevhie!'.
ninth inning against Rick A~era, 1991 shutout 10 Boston'.s three-run innings for the win. Tun
ett . 1
singled home the winner with two seventh.
a three-run hom.er off ;Rich Mooouts in the lOth. Tim Raines led off
The Tigers scored four unearned teleone in the ci~ h11!"i Stedve Parr
by_reachini on third baseman runs off BoSton starter Kevin Mor- pitched the ninth',or IS 23r save.
_Le1us' throwmg error, took thrrd on · ton (6•5) intl)e first inning, capped .
·Kelly'$ three-nit! homer, his
a groundout and scored on New- . by Deer's 25th homer.
20th, capped a five-run third inning
son's
against Jeff Ballard (6-12). Kelly's
RBI double highlighted a three-run
fifth that made it 9-1.
. Brewers 9, Indians 3
Dale Sveum had tw() RBis during a four-run fifth inning, anll _
Dante Bichette had two in a fiverun seventh.
·
The Brewers, 17 games under
.500 in early August, !lave gone 3719 since Aug. 4, the best record in .
the league over that span. ·
Jaime Navarro (15-12) pitched
seven innings, giving up three runs
and nine hits.

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) EverY,body was impressed .with
Jason Simmons' play against
WashingtoR&gt;State- except for
Jason Simmons.
·
-His four sacks and the team's
total of nine sacks are Ohio State
single-game records.
·-..., Still, Simmons dfdn 't think
twice about it.
·"I didn't know anything about
it until! woke up Sunday morning .
and went to Bob Evans with a couple ,of my friends to have breakfast," Simmons said. "Coach
(John) Cooper was there, waiting in
line for a table, and he· told me
about the four sacks. He cOngratulated me on my game."
Simmons has come full circle
from the awkward and quiet freshman who .had to replace John
Kacherski in the firSt game of the
· year. Kachersld suffered a seasonending knee injury in the season
· opener.
Simmons improved and matured
so much, that Kacherski was concerned about winning his job back
when practice started this summer. .
"He was afuzzy-faced (redshirt) freshman who had never
played ioing into last year," Kacherski srud in AugusL "Now, he's a.
man. He's a returning starter, a guy
1

Sports briefs
Terufis
,
SYDNEY, Australia (AP)South African Wayne Ferreira
upset Ivan Lend!, ousting the threetime Australian Indoor ch,_mpion
6-4, 2-6, 7-5 to reach the quarterfi-·
nals.
In other matches, top-seeded
Stefan Edberg, the reigning U.S.
Open champion, downed Aus·
traliah Mark Woodforde 6-4, 6-2;
No. 4 Andre Agassi overpowered
American MaliVai Washington 63, 6-1; third-seeded Pete Sampras
routed 13th-seeded Australian
Todd Woodbridg~ 6-2, 6-1; No. 8
Michael Chang beat unseeded Italian Gianluca Pozzi 6-1, 6-2; fifthseeded David Wheaion beat Grant
Connell of Canada 7-5, 6-2; and
No. 9 Brad Gilben topped Brazilian Danilo Marcelino 6-1, 6-2.
Tennis
MILAN, Italy (AP) -Topseeded Monica Seles beat Laura
LATE THROW - Cleveland Indians rll'St baseman Reggie JefGarrone
6-0, 6-1 in 49 minutes to
ferson stretches for the t~row from his third baseman, whieh fails to
reach
the
quarterfinals of the Milan
beat Milwaukee's Dante Bichette in the third inning of Thursday
women's
indoor
tournament
night's game in Cleveland, which the Brewers won 9-3. (AP)
In other second-round matches,
No. 2 Martina Navratilova topped
Australian 'Rachel McQuillan 6-7
(6-8), 6-0, 6-0; third-seeded Mary
Joe Fernandez beat Claudia Kohde
Kitsch, 6-2, 6-0; Sabine Appelmans
of the Netherlands beat No. 8 Lori
McNeil 6-3, 6-2; and Magadalena
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) next Saturday.
Maleeva of Bulgaria stopped San·
- A M8rshall freshman offensive.
Thursday's practice was can- dra Wasserman of Belgium 7-fJ (7~uard died of a bacterial infection
celed, and Ricard met with players 5),6-4.
m his blood, one (lay after being and coaches to explain the circum·
taken to the hospital when he com- -stances surrounding Coffman's
plained of headaches and became death.
nauseated in the weight room, offi- ·
Ricand said the illness was rare,
cials said.
and he does not expect further out"It was so active, it over- breaks.
.
whelmed him," said Dr. Jose
But an antibiotic will be dis·
Ricard, Marshall's team doctor.
tributed to players, coaches and
Coffman, 19, a 6-foot-1, 266- other personnel who came into
pound reserve guard from Ironton, contact with Coffman, the doctor
Ohio, died Thursday at Cabell- said.
Huntington Hospital, Ricand said.
"It's a precaution. It's nothing
ON
The severity of the infection alarming," Ricard said
thwarted effort!!, to save Coffman's
life, tbe doctor said.
Coffman's death cast a shadow
. " .'
over Marshall, which has rebuilt
itself into an NCAA Division 1-AA
Warren Local at Gallipolis
football power 21 years after a
Athens at Marietta
plane crash killed 75 players,
Logan at Jackson
coaches, ·school officials and supFederal Hocking at Meigs
porters returning,from a game at
Buffalo at Coal Grove
.East Carolina.
DeSales at Akron St. Yin·
"This is a tremendous loss to centSLMary
the Marshall football team. J.D.
Ashland at Portsmouth
$2.00 Cover Chilrge
was an integral part of our proHurricane at Pt. Pleasant
gram, and he represented our team
Must be 21 years old.
Van at Wahama
as a first-class Citizen,'' head coach
Corner of State Route 7
Hannan Trace at Eastern
Jim Donnan said.
Southern
at
Kyger
Creek
and State Route 143
Marshall has an open date this
North
Gallia
at
Southwestern
Pomeroy
weekend before playing Furman
Oak Hill $tSymmes Valley

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Gallia Academy and Meigs have
advanced to the disaict golf toumamem next week at Coshocton by
placing one and two in the Division
II sectional golf tournament held
Thursday afternoon at Lakeside
Golf Course at Beverly.
Galllia Academy won the championship with a One-stroke victory
over John Krawsczyn's Meigs
Marauders. The second-J.&gt;lace finish
marked the first -time thts year that
Meigs has not finished in fitSt place
in a match. The Marauders own an
outstanding 53-I record on the season.
Gallia Academy won the title
with a team score of 326, and
MeigS'finished with a 327. The
Sheridan Generals ftnisbed in third
place with a 337 score, followed by
Warren Local (341), Alexander
(344), Athens (345), New Lexington (368), Fairland (394) and Nelsonville-York (428).
. Adam. Breakiron of Gallia
Academy and Keith Lewis of
Sheridan were co-medalists with a
score of 77.
Jay Harris and John Bentley led
Meigs with an 81, Iason Hart card·
ed an 82, Ada!n Krawsczyn an 83
and Phil Hovatter an 86.
. The district will be on Wednesday, Oct. 9 at the River Green Golf
Course in Coshocton, with 16

MIZWAY

TAVERN ·

To-night's games

.

By JOHN MOSSMAN
AP Sports Writer
DENVER (AP) - Gaston
Green has answered his critics in
the only way he knew how- three
100-yard games, an AFC-lcading
518 yards and the most carries in
the league.
· Green's revival' in Denver after
three years of purgatory in Los
Angeles is one of the NFL's most
inaiguing comeback stories.
Akhough he was UCLA's aUtime rushing leader with 3, 731
yards, the 5-foot· ll, 192-pound
Green was deemed too small to
take the pounding of pro foutball
even by the team that drafted him
in the firSt round in 1988.
'
With the Rams, Green started
only three games over three seasons and rushed for 45 I yards on
129 carries.
With the Broncos, who acquired
. him last April in a trade, he already
has 110 carries in 6ve games. And
his S18 yards is second in the
league to DetroirLions' Barry
Sanders (524).
. In four games, he's carried 24 or
more times, topped by Sunday
night's 26-carry, 158·yard effort in
Denver's 13·6 victory over Min·
nesota. That performance earned
him the AFC offensive player of
tlie week:
"People have always questioned
my durability," Green said after
: the Vikings' game. "I like carrying
. the ball tliat-much. Any time rou
cari'y the ball a couple of times ma
: row, it lets you get in a groove. I
.. got in a groove early and was· able
· to stay there.
,
"I wasn't tired at all. Any time
you get holes like that, it makes it
easy. If I can continue to carry the
: ball like that, I can erase those
: questions."
· .
· When Green says "I hope I can
keep on proving people wrong,"
he's really talking about only one

PR.E;SENTS

CROSSOVER

9:00·1 :30 A.M.

.ARE YOU A RESIDEN7 OF MEIGS COUNft?
IN ORDEI TO lOft IN TBEIQVEMBER I, 1•1,
GENERAL ELECftON, YOU MUS! BE IEIIS!IRED
f
BY OCfOBEI 7, 1•1.
VOTE AT YOUR OWN PRECINCT AND AVOID lONG'liNES AT JIIE BOARD
ON ElECTION DAY BY CHA"GING YOUR ADDRESS (IF YOU HAVE MOVED
WITHIN THE COUNTY) OR IF YOU HAVE CHANGED YOUR NAME, BY
UPDATING YOU.R REGISTRATION BY OCTOBER 7, 1991.
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE, YOU M~Y TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR EXTRA
HOURS.
PERMANENT BRANCH LOCATION: POMEROY PUBLIC LIBURY
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 9:00 a.m. till 9:00 p.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 BOOKMO~
. EAT IT'S
DESIGNAnD
STOPS. ·
.
.
.
tHE BOARD OF ELECTIONS OFFI.
CE WILL i'EOPEN
.
. ON SATURDAY.,
· OCTOBER 5, 1~91, 8:00A.M. Tlll12:00 NOON AND ON
MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1991, 9:00A.M. 11119:00
P.M.
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. Green denies he ,harbon any
· grudges against Rams head coach
John 'Robift§OO, who elected to use
' Green as a kick returner but played
him SJ*ingly in the backfield. ·
"It doesn't~ a difference Ill
me anymore," Green said. "I'm
;here now, and I don't really care if
.he watches. rm just getting an

For any additional infor11atioit, call 992·26.97 or dop by our office at 101
Paltl far ~ the Conclltlare
11/ANK rOU
. ·Mechanic Street, Pomeroy, Ohio.
.
.
Elle11 J. Rought • ISt Untoln.Hill, ""''"'' OH.
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tically have a chance to get to tile
quarterback," Simmons said.
"Because it comes down to a per·
sonal battle between me and the
offensive lineman or the back trying to block me."
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opportunity."
When there's no hole for Green,
he's liable to be stopped for no
~ain or even a loss. llut he always
IS a threat to break a long one. He
ran 63 yards for a TD against the
San Diego Charges and also had a
43-yarder against the Cincinnati
Bengals.
Asainst the Vikings, Green had
no long runs, but ~e did have II
carries of eight yards or more.
. And he even showed some
toughness running inside, breaking
tacldes and knocking over defenders. He's still a finesse runner,
using his speed, quickness and
deceptiveness, but he was more
effective running between the tackles Sunday nighL

BBYFL's opener
results posted
More than 500 people turned
ont for the season-opening games
of the Big Bend Youth Football
League, held last·Saturday evening
at Southern High School.
. In the fust game, the Veterans
Memorial Hospital Dolphins
scoml on their first offensive play
on a 60-yanl run by Matt Williams
and rolled to 22-0 win over the
Home National Bank Mustangs.
The second game was a bam·
burner between the Pleaser's
Eaales and the Blake Construction
l!rowns. Eagle ·quarterback Jason
Roush scored the game's only
touchdown, and the Eaale defense
held on for to defeat the Browns 6-

GRAVELY TRACTOR.
SALES 8r. SERVICE

204 Condor $t.

Pomeroy, 011.

Spring and Summer. Noun

Monday thru r..-y
, 9 l.M.-5 P.M.

Sat. 9 ..... , , ...

,.

.~THE

.' GRAVELY

'

&lt;?
CHEVROlET

Hadsrrobi~

~

Gee
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•·o·umun. omo

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1-UOO-U:17- I tm I

RETURNS VOLLEY- As Southern's Megan Wolfe looks on at
right, teammate Anile Swiger returns a volley toward Easte~n 's
side or the court during Thursday night's SVAC match at Racine,
which the Tornadoes won 15-9, 16-14•

1991 Cadillac'
Brougham

Southern posts two-game
win over Eastern spikers .
By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondeut
Avengin¥ an earlier loss at East·
em earlier m the season, Suzanne
Wolfe's Southern Tornadoettes
boosted their record to 6-4 in theSVAC with a two-set win over the
visiting Eastern Eagles Thursday in
an important league volleyball
match. SHS claimed the win 15-9
and 16-14.
Eastern dropped to 5-5 in the
SV AC for fourth, while Southern
moves into third place (6-4) and is
7-10 overall.
Suzanne Wolfe praised the
efforts of all her players and stated
that this was a great team victory;
"One of the best team efforts we've
had this year."
In serving, Sarah Duhl paced
Southern, who took an early lead in
the opener, and sailed uncontended
to a 15-9 win. Dub! was a key player in that win and notched II
points overall.
The second game was much
closer and was decided on the front
line, where Marcy Hill and Megan
Wolfe, were Southern's twin towers, going head to head with Eastem's Lee Gillilan and Jaime Wil-

son. Good floor play by Morrissey
and Wilson kept the Eagles alive,
but Wolfe and Hill's combatant
style on the net proved to be too
much in the end.
Hill ended with a perfect 19-19
spiking night and four points,
while Wolfe was near pelfect at 16·
19 and three points serving. .
Beseiiles Duhl's 11 points, whe
was 12·15 serving, and 4·6 spiking
with a good floor game. Senior
Renee Russell had one of her best
outings with a pelfect 11·11 serving night and was 3· 3 spiking.
Angie Swiger also did a good job
to end the night with 5 points and
an 8-8 serving nighL
Carrie Monissey, who tallied-22
points in Eastern's win at Eastern,
again led her aoops, but was limited to just eight pomts on the Southem hardwood. Secky Driggs added
five and Lee Gillilan four.
In the reserve contest, Marcy
Mathews was outstanding in notching IS points to lead Southern to
15·11 and 15·6 wins. Jodi Caldwell
and Amy Weaver each added five.
Jessica Chevalier led Eastern with .
7 points.

W11k1ni lpt~lsll

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FRIDAY; OCTOBER 4, 1991
.
FISH TAll P'LATTER.............................. $3.19
French Frln, Choice of Homemada M1c1ronl Salad, Colo Slaw or Bakod
Be1na.

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1991
.
HOMEMADE PORK CHOP &amp;DRESSING DINNER•.$4.95

0.

This Saturday evening the Mustangs (0.1) will play the Browns
(0.1) at 6 p.m., and 81 7:30 p.m.,
the Eaales (1-0) will play the Dolphins (1-0). Both_s.~es will be
played 81 Southern High School.
On Saturday, the football league
will also be holding its 11111ual lllg
day. Money used by this event goes
to buy the. equipment and other
supplies to keep this program for
the fifth· and mth-graders of the
bend &amp;rca going. One helmet COst
$65 and 80 youths are taldng pan
itr the league, so the Ieasue is aslcing for your support.
·

SOUTHERN VARSITY VOL·
LEYBALL -Members or this
year's Southeru varsity volleyball team, coached by Suzanne
Wolfe, are (froat row, L-R)
Heather McPhail, Renee RusseD,
Christi Maidens and Kim Jenkins. Behind them ate Suzanne
Wolfe, Marcy Hill, Megan Wolfe,
Angie Swiger, Sarah Dubl and
Tammi Buckley.

. SYSTEM

teams taking part, the top four
teams and the four individual low
scores not on a qualifying team
advance to the state tournament at
Ohio State University's Gray
Course on October 18th and 19th.
Adena, Southern adV&amp;nce
At Chillicothe, Frankfort Adena
and the Southern Tornadoes have
. advaced to the Division ru district
golf tournament, set for Tuesday at
the Steubenville Golf Course, by
finishing one and two in the sectional golf tournament held this
past Wednesday at the Jaycee Golf
Club in Chillicothe.
Adena won the title with a score
of 328, Coach Jim Anderson's
Southern Tornadoes finished in
second place with a 340. Huntin·
gon (Ross) finished in third place
with a 340, followed by Unioto
(3Sl), Crooksville (361), Belpre
(395), Fairfield (401), Paint Valley
(445) and Federal Hocking (460).
Bracken McFann, who led
Southern with a 79, was followed
by Brent DeCosse (81), Mark Allen
(87), Michael McKelvey (88), and
Joshua Codner (89). Bledesdell of
Huntington (Ross) was the match
medalist with a 75.
At the district tournament, the
top three teams and the top three
individual low scores not on a qualifying team will advance to the
state.

Green's revival in Denver
makes him top AFC rusher

. WHy: Full Tillie Mayor

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a

think I proved myself." ·
. ·
From the moment he entered
until the last play, was run .in the
Libeny Bowl, Simmons rarely Will
off the field Wben the defense was
on. He had 56 ~es. 12 fat losses, including five sacks. · ·
"With all of .that time, if you
surVive, you have lo·get better,"
Kacherski said.
But all of that time taught him
another leS$00 about major college
football, Simmons ,faid, For a
defense to compete 8t a superior
level 60 minutes a game, 12 games
a year, there has to be a buddf sys•tern.
·· "Thete wcruome games where
I have to admit I got really tired 81
the end ... The Michigan game was
one of those," Simmons said. "I
think the depth on our defensive
line this year has helped us out
more than anythink in being able to
substitute freely and frequently ..
"Having a fresh body out there
for four qll8l'ters can only help get
the job done."
·
Simmons said Kacherski was
"' right. Experience has made Sim·
mons a more confident
attacker/sacker.
"I think every time I ~ne up·out
ther~· ~ a passin$ situation, I rcalis-

Gallia Academy golfers
top Meigs in D-11 sectionals

Bacterial infection claims life
of Marshall's J.D. Coffman

SATURDAY,
OCT. ·s

who's plAyed a lot cf football, a
guy whc's a much beuer football
player.
"Hey, he's good."
• If there is a player on this 14thranked OSU team who lets his
actions do his .talking, it's the 6foot-S, 240-pound Simmons. rn
conversation he is polite, courteous
and succincL
.
•It's not suiprising to learn t!Jen,
that he is .criminology I!lajor who
hopesonedaytoworkfortbeFBI. '
For now, though, despite the big
game and a team-leading five sacks
for the year, he's second string
·behind Kacherski as the Buckeyes
(3-0) prepare for their Big Ten
opener Saturday against Wisconsin.
· "The fact that he and.I arc really good friends has made it a lot
easier," Simmons said. "The
coach (defensive coordinator Bill
Young) came up with the decision
to let him start., and I accepted that
I also know I will be around tWo
mdre years, and for John, this is his
final shoL"
But, as Kacherski said, what a
difference a year-makes.
" I knew going into last season
John was the better player," Simmons said. "Unfortunately, he got
.hurl. !,got the chance to play, and I

U18hod Pollto11 1 Grovy, Buttered Pen, Hot Roll, Small Drink or
Collll.

"

NEW HOURS: open 10:00 to 8:00
•

$221999
1988 Olds 98 Regency Brougham................~999
1989 Ford Astra Van...............................S7999
1989 GEO Tracker.......................................56999
1984 4X4 Stepside Pickup ..........................S4995
1989 Ford Tempo••••••..•••.••••••••••••.•.•••••••••.••.s499S
1988 Monte Carlo......................................S6995

D

FALL CLEARANCE
"Our Prices Are Falling Like Leaves"
1991 PINE RIDGE 14X70

LIST PRICE $~0

WAS s19;Qas

SALE PRICE ... $17,495 .
· AS LOW AS ...... $197.73* Per Mo.
Plus You Get: Dellvery &amp; set-up, concrete footers,
vinyl skirting,up to 20 fl. of material for each utility
hookup, one set of steps with 4x~ deck .and tie
downs and 20 ft. of heat tape at no additional cost.
This Home Features: Glamor bath, cathedral
ceilings.throughout, steel front door, upgrade carpet
&amp; pad, up!ijrade drapes with shears, sell-storing
storms, R-19 roof insulation, detachable hitch, .
woodgrain e~erjor, .brass patio light and much,
much more.
'Poymtntl lor 180 monlha,10% down, 11 .75 APR to qua lifted buyora.
..1

COLE·'S MOB.ILE HOMES
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. Located 5 Miles East of Rt. 3~ 1
On Rt. SO East, Athens ·592·1972
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tourney
re
ts
ann
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'Troop 1~09 experiences·outdoors ·Riversid~
Riversi~Golf
J~yce
· During 1/le month of September,
Pomeroy Junior Troop 1309 took
p!!,ft In out door activities a. nd
~s.

.

;"!bey me• to plan activities relat~· 10 the World·of Out-of-Doors
roc the Mall Mt~ at the Kroger

St$re.

The girls also gathered at the
leader's home to hike and take part
in an afternoon· of ·outdoor fdn.
Allen ding were Jennifer Heck,
Andrea Neutzling, Bonnie ~uucr
and Melissa Houser. Leaders
attendin~ were Brenda Neutzling
and Teme Houser. · ·
Some of the skills learned were
table lashing, fllC bqilding, cooking
over a pit fire, and how to make
foil dinners and banana boats.
They also enjoyed picrure taking

and learning jackknife skills. The
'The girls also reviewed their
girts walked sofdy and·Jeft no trace lashing skills and putting up a
that they had been at the site. .
camp' clothesline, how to make and
· The girls visited a miniature use a clove hitch as ~Yell as making
horse farm where they practiced foil dinners.
grooming and leading the horses;
Other activities of th~ day were
Slcills iililg6lto ihein ll"y t)ft Meigs vlsltlngthe·Pomel'Qy F'll'~ · Sta.tlon,
4-H Pleasure Riders. They experi- · songs_,. games and learnmg some
enced cleaning a horse stall and first atd skills; ,
~
putting doWn clean bedding straw. · A Court of Awards was held
Attending were Barbara Wilson, with the _follow~ng proficiency
Betty Wilson, Jennifer Heck, badges gtven: chilli care, Andrea
Andrea Neutzlilig, Terrie Houser Neutzling; outdoor fun, Andrea
and Phillis Wilson.
Neutzling and Melissa Houser;
The troop enjoyed another out- ho!Se lover, Jennifer Heck, Andrea
door expenence at the Mechanic Neuuling and Melissa Houser. ·
Street Park in Pomeroy. Learning
The troop meets every Saturday
to pitch a tent were Melissa Hous- at the leaders home unless a field
er, Andrea Neutzling, Jennifer trip is planned. For further informaHeck, Autumn Phillips and a guest, tlon about ihe troop, contact BrenAinanda Miller.
. da Neutzling at992-5770.

Rutland garden~rs to furnish flowers
for Big Bend Stemwheel _Festival
The Rutland Garden Club met
recently at the home of Stella
Atkins with Ruby.Diehl as co-host-

. Roll call was answered with "a
flower I pressed." Eleve11 members
and two guests answered roll call.
ess.
A letter was read ftom incoming
Stella Atkins had de,·otions · regional director announcing com·
reading a poem, "The Rose," and ing meetings. A hoard meeting will
''That What I Like About God."
be held Oct. 12 at Chester. A colin'
The creed and collect were ty meetinfwill be held Oct. 2l ·at
given in unison.
the extension office in Pomeroy.
The regional meeting will be held
YV I
Oct. 26 at Warren High School in
Vincent ·
Qfl
Pauline Atkins thanked the
members for all of their help with
The Wood reunion was held the flower show held at their CJP.Cn
recently at the home of Mr. and meeting. She said she 'had matled
Mrs. Virgil King with a basket in the book on the show.
lunch at noon.
The Rutland Club is to furnish
Delores King gave a report on ribbons for the Stemwheel Flower
Mary Ogdin and Joshua Wood .Show in Pomero,. They are to furfrom the Pione« History of Meigs ·nish two arrangements. Dorothy
County, 1700-1800.
Woodard will furnish the fall
Dale Hoffman gave a report on arrangement for Overbrook Nursthe history of the Wood name.
ing Center.
Officers elected were Rosemary
Pearl Canaday, Binda Diehl and
Neese, president; Margaret Fulton, Marcia Denison had viewed the
vice-president; and Jean Wood, Belgian Carpet of Flowers at the
seeretary·treasurer.
State House in Columbus.
· The oldest members attending · Pearl Canaday had the arrangewere Weber Wood, 97, and Murl mcnt for the evening featuring wild
Wood, 93.
flowers.
Others attending were Virgil
Pauline Atkins and Stella Atkins
and Deloris King, Earie and had furnished flowers for churches.
Frances Wood and Eric, Robyn
Hunt, David and Cyndi King and
Elizabeth and Stephen, Edith Hubbard and Addie, Dale Hoffman,
Pomeroy; Neva King, Pomeroy,
Donna Wilma. Leo, Mary Davidson, Allegra and Norman Will,
Rutland; Duk and Betty Jewell,
Minersville, Joann, John and Brittany Wood, Radcliffe; John and
Helen Vinson, Virginia; Anna, Ivan
and Alan Haliday, Dexter; Rosemary and Woody Neese, Albany;
Margurite Frank, John Cotterill,
Lloyd Bolin, Ermel and Don Beckley Athens; Clarice and Woody
Mr. and Mrs ~ Eugeoe Haliday Margaret Quinn, Charleston;
Ed Md Margaret Fulton, David and
Cuntan Cooke, Chillicothe; Ralph
and Marlene Coleman, Columbus;
Rf,ID and Grace Scott, Susan and
- Jb~n Steward, Grove City;
Ste~ie Wood, Middleport, and
Elste Rarey.

llTood,famt'ly.

reunl'

held

Cooner.

Pauline Atkins gave the report
on the 4-H garden club. She also
had the hint for the evening, "The
Cat and Rosemary," She stated by
saturating a cat with rosemary and
wrapping it in. a towel and waiting
a few minutes thai this will eliminate ·fleas.
Pearl Canaday had an article, "It
Time for Rose Hips." She stated
flowers are naturally followed by
fruit and so are roses. The fruit is
called "Rose Hips': and that usually
the diligent gardener clips away
faded flowers so hips never develop. These fruits can be used in jams
and for rose hip tea. They contain
many times the vitamin C of citrus
.fruits.
.
Eva Robson had an article on
'The Many Faces of Sunflowers."
The strong growth aitd heat loving
qualities .have nlade sunflowers a
mainstay of American rural landscapes for over 100 years, according to
Robson.
The meeting closed with a 1100m
entitled "Fall."
f ..
Pearl Ca~aday won the door
prize furnished by Octa Ward.
Kathy Dalton won the door prize.
A plant sale was held at the close
of the meeti,ng.

Mrs:

The ladies at
Course held a four-man scramble
and covered dish ~inner recently
wtth stx teams playmg.
. Two teains en4ed in a ti,e for
first. They were Gary and p;fary
Roush, Bill and Hilda Mae Gygax; .~
and Ron and Joyce Quillen and
Bob and Louise Roush.
The ladies held their year-end
dinner at Gilinore'.s in Pomeroy
after which a short. business meeting was conducted. Kay Gy.ga~.
president, announced the winners
of the Tuesday Ladies League.
First place team is Mary Am!Jld
and Delma Arnold. Runner-up
team is Rita Slavin and Louise
Roush.
The Ladies Association ·Pin
Tournament was won by .Jtay·.
Gygax and the most improved
golfer is Joyce Quillen with Rita
Slavm, runner-up. .
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New officers are Rita Slavin;
president; Mary Ingles, vice-presi·
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dent; and secretary-treasurer, Mary were
Quille11, Nellte Smtth
Roush. .
and Alace. Icard. Second place was
. AtiCndin~ the _dinner were Jane a thJee,-way .tie of NHi~ ~tini~Y:
Vance, Nellie Smtih, Oorothy Karr, . · DOnn~ 'fhompso~,
· yg
Mary Burton, Rhonda Wood, Joyce Delma Arnold, Libby Tullah ' and
Quillen, Mary Arnold, .-Delma Mary, Arn~ld Mary Bur to1Jfc~
_1\rn(ll!i. Rian_!:_lngi~~L,S~s~Ch_2i, Sus~ Ch9,1- '!b_e~ were . .
Celta McCoy, L1lhan Green, playmg.-Nellene Pethel':was closeSt
Louise Rou$11, Libby Tullah, Lisa ' to the !t_ole_o~ l';o. 7·
Woods, Rita Slavin, EvaWhitlatclt,
An tmft~tdualtoumame~t was
Becky Anderson, Hilda Gygax, held on Sunday_and ihe wmner~
Bobbie Karr, Maty Roush,' Kay were Joyc,e Quillen. low gross,
Gygax, Nellen~ Pethel, Mary Delma Arnold, l_ow net; ~ary
Ingles, Diane Bodkins and Marg Arnold, second low gross, and
Maxwell..
·
Hilda Gygax, seco~d low ~et.
An association tournament was There w~re 10 ladtes playmg.
held Saturday with a scramble. Joyce Qutllen ~as closest to the
,Winners on the first place team hole on No. 7.

17

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Apostolic

Church of Christ

Episcopal

Chur&lt;h or :i.... ChriJI Ap'1flliui Fulb
New Lima Rd., n~t to FL Meigs Pad:
Pastor: Roben W. Richudl
SIUldoy School -tO Lm.
Evming -7 p.m. .
Wedneaday'SeiViw - 7 p.in.

1'9s*fi'OJ Church orChrlc
. . . 212 W. Moin St.
Putor. Andiew Milts ·
.SuniloySchoot • 9,30 a.m.
Wonhip ·10:30 a.m:, 7 p.m.
Wednesday Se~ . 7 p.m.

Gnce EptJcopal Churc~
3261!. Miin SL, Pomeroy · ~ ,
Putor: Rev. Dr. Roy C. Myers
. Suns!ax sdooolonhonhip • t I a.m.

·

S!mday Sdooot.- 10:30 a.m.
Bvming·.7:30p.m.
. Weilnorday Services • 7:30p.m.

Asst. Colors -

'1.35.ea.

8/'1000
HUBBARD'S
. GREENHOUSE
Syracuse, OH.

992-Sno
OPEN DAILY 9·5
CLOSED SUNDAY

Friday, Oct. 11

+ 10 a.m. -

4 p.m.

~

PLEASANT VALLEY

Home Medical Equipment

Zion Ch.ur&lt;h or Christ
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt. 143)
Pastor. Rober B. Purtell
Sunday School . 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip - 10:30a.m., 7130p.m.
Wednesday SeiViees • 7 p.m.
Bndbu17 Church or Christ
Putor: Tsxn R""yon
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Tuppers Plains Church or Chrlsl
Pastor: Raben Foaer ..
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
. Worship · 9:45a.m., 6:30p.m.
Dexter Chur&lt;h or Chrlsl
Pastor: Roger Watson

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
Rutland Church or Christ
Pastor: Eugene E. Underwood
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Worship -10:30o.m.,7 p.m.

Wonhip. tO:IS a.m.

Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

Racine Flrsl Bapllst
Pastor: Sleve Deaver
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · I0:40a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.
Silver Run Bapllsl.
Pastor: Billl.it~e
Sunday School · to a.m.
Wonhip • It a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servia:s ·7:30p.m.
MI. Union D'apllrt
Pastor: Joe N. Sayre •
Sunday School -9.:45 Lm.
Evening· 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services·- 6:30p.m.
Bethlehem Dapllst
Pmor: Rev. Earl Shuler '
Sunday School - i0:30 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip · 9:30a.m.
Thursday Services· 7:30p.m.
Old Bothe Free Will Baptlsl Church
28601 SL RL 7, Middtepon
Sunday School· ID o.m.
Evening · 7:30p.m:

U/alft Refla!ift'tj

Mason Church ol ChriS!
Miller·St, Mason, W.Va.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
'Worship · II o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

Homllls:k Gro¥1 Churc:b

t

P11110r: Ooarlu Domipn
Sunday schqol - 10:30 Lm.
Wonhip - 9:30 Lm. 7 p.m.

Hope Dapllsl Chapel
S70 Grant SL, Middleport
Pastor: David Bryan, Sr.

·:An honor to reach 100 years.
'•But so mlich lime has passed,
Just where do you look for
"peers'"/
At ninety you may still be a part
ofthings
·
And feel you are special too;
But friends of your age are leaving,
You think, "could the next be
you7"
.
~ Now Eighty is~ like~y num~
: Oc•to-gen-anan, 1mpresstve
name lOIII
· Life hasn't changed stl' very

li!uch, .... ·

'

Old Delder Bible Chrllllan Cburch
•
P1110r. Jack Cleland
S!mday SciJool. 10 a.m.

Wednesday ServiA:es. 7 p.m.

Christian Union
H - Cbun:h ol Chilli In Chrlollan
Union
Pusor: Theroa Durlwn
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Evcnilog • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Seovices • 7 p.m.
Hartl'ord Chun:~ or Christ In Chrlsllan

'

Church of God
Ml Moriah Churcl! or God
Racine

Pu10r. Rev. Jamea Saaerfield
Sundoy School · 9:45a.m.
Evenina -7 p.m.
Wedneadoy Seovicei• 7 p.m.

'
Rlllland Churdo
or God
Pastor. John F. Con:os.n
Sonday Schooi - !Oa.m.
Worilup- II Lm., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
Syracuse Flrst Churdl or God
Wonhip • tQ a.m . . ..
Sunday Scl!ool- II a.m.

~ it's~~ Jbad being-eighty,

Sunday S~O a.m.
W&lt;Jr1hip • II a.m.
Wedneoday Service -1:30 p.m.
Satoud.oy Seovice • 7:30 p.oh.

,..,

• New glasses help counting pills;
: You can lean on an arm when
diuy,
.
• Nutrition guides help most ills.

•

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DU~

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about.

·• We humbly say, ~'Thank you",
l It's nice to.lcnol¥ ~ carel

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Work in the Yes~ayear Program
!1 To tell youth wh•l the past is

•
· : This honor is appn:cialed.
; We 'II continue 10 do our share;

Church orGnd or Prophecy
OJ. White Rd. off St. RL 160
Postor1Pal Henson
S!mdoy School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.
Wodneiday Services· 7 p.m.

(614) 742-2511

TrlnllJ Con.regallona~Chu'rch
Pastor:: Rev. Roland W.ildman
Cbun:h • 9:15 Lm.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m.
· The Salvallon Army
Sunday School.· 10:30 a.m.
W011hip • 10:00 Lm., 7:30p.m.

Sunday School· 9:45 Lm.
Wonhip -It Lm. '

United Methodist

..

'WOI'Ihip·· 9 a.m.
Sundsy School · 10 o.m.
Thunday Services • 7 p.m.

PaStor: Kc11h Rader

flatwoods
Panor: Keith Rader

• Syracuse Church ot the Nazarene
PallOr. Rev. Glem McMillan
Sunday Sci!Dol - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 o.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serviceo.· 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services • 7:30 p.m.

Enterprise
Sunday School • to a.m.
Worship · 9a.m., 6 p.m.
Tuesday Services • T p.m.

Sunday School'· 10 a.m.
Worship • t I a.m., 6 p.m.

Pomeroy Cloun:h ol she Nazarene
Putor: Rev. Thom11 McClung
Sundoy School· 9:30 a.m. ·
Wonhip- 10:30 up. 111d 6 p.m.
Wednesday Seovices • 7 ~.m.

Thursday Services • 7 p.m.

ForC!st Run
Pastor: Wesley Thatcher

S!lllday School · tO a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
ThursdayServices · 6:30p.m.

MEIGS TIRE
CENTIR, INC.

Pastor: Frink Smith

Sunday School · 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.·
Wednesday Services - 6 p.m.

,.

. ...-.
~..,

.,

Pcnlcwstal Assembly
St. Rt. 124, Rocine
Putor: Williom Hoback
Sunday School ~ I0 o.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ccs - 7 p.m.

!' I ''!.

MlddlcP.ort PentecOstal
Thi~ Av,e.

..: f,!
• j

.~H

!.i' 'i

Passor: Rev. Oari&lt; Baker
'• 1
SundaySchooi·IOa.m.
':' .
Evening ·6p.m.
~ · •:•
Wednesday SeiVicos • 7:30 p.m.•.n ~

.
'
0

'

Presbyterian
.

£*J

Harrisonville PresbytenanCbunli-"7:J- Worshlp • 9 a.m.
·
Sunday School · 9:45a.m.
"'

..,.

Middleport Prcsbyterl•n
Sunday-School - 9 o.m.
Wtnhip • !Oa.m., 4 p.m. (2nd .t 4th Sun.j
Syracuse Firs! United ,.....ytorlan ~
Sunday School - 10 o.m.
Wor&gt;l\ip · II a.m., 4 p.m. {lu.t 3rd Sun{ :

Unlsed Faith Church
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service ~ 7 p.m.

"l
'/

Seventh-Day Adventist ti.

Ecclcsla Fellowship
128 Mill SL, Middleport

. Seventh-Day Adv..,llst
Mulbeny H~. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor. Bob Snyder

Pastor: Chuck McPherson

Sunday School · tO a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Saturday Services:

Sabbath School · 2 p.m.
. Worship - 3 p.m.

Full Gospel Llghlhousc
33045 Hiland Ro•d. Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School · 10 a.n\.
Evening 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday· 7:30 p.m.

United Brethren

)

ML Hermon Unlltd Brolhren In Cbr!SI
Church
r
Texas Community off CR 82

Ncaie Seulcmcnl Chur&lt;h
Sundoy Wor&gt;hip · 2:30p.m.;
Thunday services · 7:3 0 p.m.

Pastor: Roben Sanders

·

..'·

Sw&gt;day School · 9:30 i .m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m ., 7:30p.m.
Wedne•doy Services· 7:30p.m.

Soulh Bclhl'l Now Tcslamcnl
Silver Ridge

Eden United Brethren In ChM11
SW1day School · tO a.m.
Worship - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SeiVices • 7,30 p.m.

Pastor: Duane Sydenuricter

Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scrwice ~ 7 p.m.

93 Mill Slrtel
Middleport, Ohio 46760
(614) 992-8667 - 199B -OOKSI
'

• BIBLES

P. J. PAULEY, AG£NT
Natsonwid.e

Ins . Co.

ol Columbus, 0 . •

J onn F . Fulfl . Mqr .

804 w. Matn
992 13 II P om(lrov ·

Ph. 991·1101

'"·""
271 llarth

M
0
•

212 E. Main Street
992-3185. Pommy&lt;

Middleport,

Ofllt
I

(row's Family Restaure11t
"'""'''"
221 W. 1&lt;111•~,
Main St.,'''''
Pointror
992-5432

c•'"""

Rutland, Ohio
r

•

r. ;.
'

'

I

\

·•

RAWliNGS-COATS

, FISHER
,FUNERAL HOME
992·5141

264 Soulh 2nd

Micldltptll't

'·

RACINE PlANING MILL
'M1III'Io1k
Cablnel Mak i n~

'Syracuse
992-3978

'""r
.
'

"

.. 1• .

. ..
~·

I

••

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALE.S
204
Condc/r
St.
.
'
·q
Pomeroy, OH.

992-2975

EWING FUNERAL HOME

.. Di~tnit~· and Snl'ift' Alrr.n_n ··'

·

Established 1913
'·

992-2121
106 Mulbfrry Avo.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

~~!~! r~l .
Prt\cnpt•on \

Pomoroy

erov

\

..

..

C\\\if( S,rw (5 ••r.,

CHURCH

Hoalh (Middleporl)

n''

j

Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pa!S
Pastor. Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.

Middleport Church or lhc Nazarene
Pastor; Rev. Uoyd D. Grimm, Jr.
.Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Reedsville Fellowship
Chur&lt;h or the Nuarene
Pastor: John W. Douglas
S11nday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m.••7 p.m.

.

•'?! ..1

Pentecostal

MI. Olive Communlly Church
Pastor: Llwrence Bush
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Evening -7 p.m.
Wedncday SeiVice • 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Worship - I 0:30a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service! • 7 p.m.

Swoday School · 9:45a.m.
Worship • 11 a.m~

.-··
..

, '
,, i J

&lt;

F•llh Gospel Church
Long Bottom
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hi~ · 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Woonesiliy 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Thomas L Gates, n

.

.,.• .

M..-se Chap•l Churc:h
Pastor: D~Yl rfman
Sunday s
1- 10 a.m.
Wonhip • om., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Racine Flrst Church or the Nuarene

Pastor: Wesley Tha1cher

1·11

I ;)

Christian Fl'llowshlp Cenler
Salem St., Ru~and
Pastor: Robcn. E. Musser
Sunday School· 10 o.m.
Worship . II :IS o.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Service · 7 p.m.

Nazarene

Central Cluster
Asbury (Syracuse)

'

Rejotdna Life Church
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middlepon
PasiOn Rev. Michael P111&amp;io
Sundoy School - tO o.m.
Weclnesdoy Services -7 p.m.

Wednesday Service · 7 pm.

Swoday School - 10 a.m.
Wo~hip • II a.m.
Wednesday Services • 8 p.m.
• Torch Church
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

Tuppers Plains Sl. Paul
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sund.ay School · 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.
Tueoday Scrvoces · 7:30p.m.

.,

Falrvi.W Dible Church
Letal\, W.Va. RL I
':.~:
- Pastor. James Lewis- -- - · ~ Swtday School • t t Lm.
Worship. 9:30 o.m., 7:30p.m . .. ,
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.
~I"

Pastor: David Dailey

BurUngton Community Church
Burlingham
Pastor: Ray Lauderrnill
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.

Hockingport Church
Grand Streca

RC&lt;dsvllle
Pastor. Rev. Olarles Ea1on
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Wedncodoy Services · 7:30 p.m.

White's Chapel We11cyaa
· Cool ville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Dyesvllle Community Church
. Sundoy Scl!ool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

. Belhl'l Church
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday Sthool - 9 a.m.
Worship -10 a.m.
Wednesday Services · tO a.m.

Long Bollom
Pastor: Otarles !}a ton
Sunday School · 9:30a.m,
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services -7:30 p.m.

••

Sunday School9:30.a.m.
·
Evening • 7 p.m.
Thursday Service· 7:30p.m.

Hazel Community Church
Off RL 124
Pastor: Edsel Han
Sunday School- 9:30 o.m.
Worship ~ 10:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.

Tuesday Service1 • 1 p.m.

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

•

Sllvcrsvlile Word or hUh

Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
Sunday Scl!ool - 10 a.m.
Evenina • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7 p.m.

Coolville Churc:h
Main l Fifth St. '
Swoday School · 10 a.m.
·
Wonhip • 9 a.m.

Paslor: Sharon Hausman

•
.~ ,

S11t1day School9:30 a.m.
Worship- II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.
Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service • 7 p.m.

Pastor: Hara)d E. Alloway-Priddy

Chester

Freedom Gospel Mlssloa
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 3 t
Pastor: Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday.Schoo! · 9:30Lm.
Worship· 10:45 o.m.,lp.m.
Wednesday SeiVice -7 p.m.

Hani.sonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush

Pastor: Rev, Emmett Rawson

Coohllle United Melhodlsl Pa!ish

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

f'J

I I

Calvary Pilgrim Chapel

Faith Tabemade Church
Blliley R11n Road

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Pasiot': Sharon Hausman

Wednesday Service ~ 1 p.m.

Spiritual Faith Chur&lt;h
State 338, Antiquity
Pastor. A. Stcwan
S11t1day School · to a.m.
Evening . 7:30p.m.
Thursday Service· 7:30p.m.

Middleport Communltr Chur&lt;h
57S Pearl St., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Ande1'10n
Sunday School tO a.m.
Evening . 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Morning Star
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School · 9:45 a.m.
Wonhip -10:30 a.m.
Thunday SeiVices ~ 7:30,p.m.
Sutton
P1110r. Kenneth Baker
S11nday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m. (1st &amp; 3rd Sun)
East LC!Iart
Pastor: Roger Gr~ce ·
Sunday School .. 10 a.m.
'\Vorship • 9 a.m.
Racine
Pastor: Roger Grace
Sunday School - to a.m.
Wonhip - It a.m.
Laurtl Clllf F'roe Methodist Church
PasLor: William Wllliams "
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · I0:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service~ • 7 p.m.
Rulland Dible Methodist
Pas~or: l!_ev. Ivan Myen
SIUiday School · 9:30a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.

'·lB.

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School· 9:30 Lm.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:SO p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30 p.m.

115 BuuemutAve., Pomeroy.

Southern.Cluter
Ap~le Grove -.
Pao10r. CarlllicU
Sunday School - h.m.
Wonhip -10 a.m., 7 pm.
Thun~ay SeiViceo - 7 pm.
Bclhany
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.

·r.t

Carletoalnlerdenomlnatloaal Church ""
·
Kingsbury Road
•
Pastor: Clyde W. Henderoon
S11nday School -9:30a.m. '
Evening - 7 p.m. -·. -:- ·~ rJ

K&amp;C JEWELERS

SKIIIII

D·

Other Churches

Pom eroy

PRESCRIPTION
I

still sew and quilt,
i·We
Read stories and generally help

Wedneoday Service• . J p.m.

. Satrtcl Hort Calhollc Churdo
161 Mulberry Avi., Paneroy, 992-5898
Putor. Rev.'Wafler E. Heinz
S~t. Con. 4:45-S:IS p.m.; Mu• ·5:30p.m:
Sun. Con.· 8:45-9:15 a.m.,
•
SIDI. Man · 9:30a.m.
Dllily Man· 8:30a.m.
...-..·

.·'··

Acane isn't always needed,
When you take a nice long
-" -·~
,,...
' Hearing aid is turned on
So, why don't we jUSl talll:?

Evenina • 7.p.m.

Catholic

'

Union

Hollfixd, W.VL
Putor: Rev. David McManiJ
S!mday~ool- II Lm.
Wonhip • 9:30 om., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.

Middle

; There are still friends same age
as you.

SL Paul Lulhenn Church
Comer Syeamono &amp;. Secmd SL, Pomeroy
Pastor: Lau11 A. Leach Sh .. rner

Meigs Cooperallve Parish
Northeast Cluster
, Alrred '

Woody Call

New Haven Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Glendon Stroud
Sun&lt;lay Sdtpol • 9:30 uri.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m,, 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Cannel
Pancm Kenilelh Baker .
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m. {2nd &amp; 4th Swo)

Our Saviour Lutheran Chureh
Walnut and Hensy Sts., Ravenswood,
W.VL
Putor. Rev. George C. Weirick
Sunday School· 9:30a.m,
Worship· II Lm.

••

Portland First Chureh or !he Nazarene
Pao10r. Willilm Justus
Sunday Scl!ool - 9:30a.m.
Worship ·10:40 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SeiVices · 7:30p.m.

Wedne1day Services - 10 a.m.

Sl John Lulhoran Churdl
Pine Grove
PUior: l.au11 A. Leach Shreffler
Wonhip , 9:30 Lm.
S!mday School · 10:30 a.m.

Llbelty ChriSIIan Cburcb
Dex,.r

Lananme Chrlollan Chureb .
Suioilay Sd!ool · 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm.,7:30 p.m.~
Wednesday SeiVice 7:30p.m.

Faith Bapllsi Church
Roilroad St., Muon
SIUlday School . tO a.m.
Wonhop - II o.m., 6 p.m.
WednesdaY Service~ - 7 p.m.
Forest Run BaptiSI
Pallor: lj.ev. Nyle Borden
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 2:30p.m.
Ml Moriah Baptlll •
Founh .t Main St., Middlepon
Putor. Rev. G~ben Craig, Jr.
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
_\Vonhip -10:45 a.m.
Antlqul11 Baptlll
Putor: Kenneth Smith
SIUlday Sdoool · 9:30 a.tn.
Wonhip -10:45 a.m..
Thurtday Services -7:30p.m,
Rutland Frtt Wilt Daptlll
Salem 51.
Putor: Rev. Paul Taylor
St&gt;~day School · 10 o.m.
Evmina • 7 p.m.
Wedncsdoy SeiVicca • 7 p.m.
Alh Street Freewill !Japtlll

Lutheran

Suci:ess Road Church or Christ
Pa.stor: Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunda~School- 9 a.m.
Wonhip -10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Hillside Baptlsl Chun;h
d e Rc t 43 just off ~:7 .
Putor: Rev. James R-:-Acree, Sr.
Sunday School · to a.m.
Worship · t I a.m., 6 p.m.

Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Reorganlzfll Chur&lt;h fllJesus Christ In
Lauer Day SalnlS
Penland-Racine Rd.
Pastor. Wiltiari: Roush
Sc:nday School - 9:30 o.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wedncs9.•Y Services · 7:30p.m.

ML Olive Unlll!d Methodlsl
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
PastOr: Charles Jones
Sunday School - ~:30 Lm.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service• ;; 7 p.m.

P~

Sunday School· to a.m.
Worsh:p • II a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service1- 7 p.m.
VIctory Baptist
525 N. 2nd St., Middleport
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Wonhip • IOa.m., 7 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

~

RuOand Churc~ or lhe Nazar ....
Pa-: SamuelBuye
. Sunday Sl:hod , 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 Lm., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday ServiCeJ • 7 p.m.

Snowvlile
Pastor: Flooence Smith
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.

Graham Untied Mc,thodlst
Worship· 9:30a.m. (ht .t 2nd Sun), 7:30
p.m. (3rd &amp;. 4th Son)
Wedneaday Service • 7:30p.m.

S!milay Sd!ool · 10 a.m. ·',
Evenina • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Seovioe • 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Harrisonville Holiness Chapler
I'Utor: Rev. John Neville
Sundsy School tO a.m.
. Wonhip • It un., 7:30 p:m.
Wedneidoy Servia: - 7:30p.m.

iO

Pearl C~lpel
PasLOr: Florence Smith
Sunday SChool- 9 a.m.
w_orship- to a.m.

Rock Spring•
Putor.Keuh Rader
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.
~ednesday Servicei • 6 p.m.
Rulland
Pastor: AnhurCrabuee
Sunday SchOol • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip , 10:30 o.m.
Thunday semce.~ 7 p.m.
Salem Center ~
Pastor: Ron Fien:e
S~mday School· 9:15a.m.
Wonhip - I 0:1$ o.m.

75 Pearl SL, Middleport.
PallOr: Rev. Roy McCmy
Sunday school • 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesdoy Service - 7:30p.m.

Dradrord Churdl or Christ
St. Rt. 124 &amp;. Co. Rd. 5
Putor: Derek Stump
Sundoy School~ 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m .. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:30p.m.

Thursday Services · 7:30p.m.

-Aifl&amp;~u/ee?

.

'

Pastor: Rev. Jamet A. Seddon
Sunday School · 9:t S a.m.

This is a day for Seniors

.....

PastOr: Jack 'Colearove

j.

For ~ome,. Farm,
Business ar:td Industry

Ohio's STARS are its seniors
That's what the pastelS day.
Qh yes, I'm proud to be one
Wbo is honored here today.

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:90p.m.
Wednesday Services · 6:~0 p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m. ·
Wednesday SeiVia:s · 7:30p.m.
Flrsl Southern BapliSt
·
41812 Pcmeroy Pike
P1110r: B. !oamar O'BIJ'onl
S!mday School · 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SeiVia:s • 7;30 p.m.
Middleport Flrlt Baptist
Comer Sixth &amp; Palmer

1011 Viand Street• Point Pleasant, WV
(304) 675-6100

.•Heating and Water Heating
•tift Truck Gas Delivery
•
•Grain Drying and Cooking
•Construction Heating
'

Dorothy Downie or High
Street, Pomeroy, WIIS the recipient or a blue ribbon from the
Area Agency on Aging for ber
poem entered In the 1991 essay
contest entitled "Remembering
~nior Cllluns Day,1991.''

Free Will Blp~rt ~rch

Pastor: St.eve Fuller ..

OIJer 40 Years Of Dependable Service

Poet's corner

HyseU Runilolin&lt;'lS Churdl
Pastor. Robert Manley
Sunday S&lt;l!ool · 9:30 a.m.
Worship ·.10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.

'

Chesla' Church or !he Nazareile
eutor: Rev. !lerben Gnne
Sunday s~ .9:31).o.m.
Worship • 11 Lnt, 7 P·"1·
Wedneoday Services· 7 p.m.

Min enville
Pastor: Wesley Thalcher
Su11day School • 9 a:m.
. Worohip · to a.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Eunhae (Grace) Kec
Sundoy Sj:hool · 9:15a.m.
Wonhip- 10;30 o.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

1

Keno Church or Christ
Wonhip-9:30 a.m.
Sundoy School · 10:30 i.m.

Beannllow'.Rlllae Church or Christ

Rulland First Bapllst Chur&lt;h
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip -10:45 a,m:
.Pomeroy Flrst Dapllst
East Main St

•

· Pine Gron Bible Holiness Church
· 1/2 mile off RL 325
Putor: Rev. 0'Dell Manley
Sonday School-9:30a.m.
Worship -10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesdoy Service . 7:30p.m.

w..leyan Bible Holiness Church

Baptist

Saturdoy Servia: • 7:30 p.m.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip- It o.m.,
Wednesday SeiVice-7:30 p.m.

Holiness

•

Mlddlep..-1 Church orC~Iist
5'1o llld Main
. Pufor: AI Hartson
Sundsy·School -'9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:15,10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scrviceo -1 p.m.

Alh S1reet, Middleport
Pastor: Mark Monow

It's Point Pleasant Battle Days Weekend, tool
Stop by and take advantage of our free health
screenings, pick up some valuable health-related
infonnatlon and enjoy a slice of pumpkin pie
&amp; a cup of coffee, tea or elder!

l7l

•

Ubert1 Asl&lt;mbiJorGocl
Dud4ing Lane; Mo1011; w:va.
'l'utor. D111 S. Bata!
S~nday Wonhip.· 10:30 p.m.
Thunday ServiA:es • 7 p.m., ,

••

I

~

Assembly of God

2rid Annual
Fall Health
Resource Festival

'

Ponseror Wesl!lde Church or Cbrlsl
' 3)226 Oilld,..'s HO!IIe Rd.
992-3847
S!mllay Sc:hooi • II a.m.
Wonhip -to a.m., 6p.m.
Wednesd,Y SeiVicea • 7 p.m.

VIDZindt llld Wani Rd.
Pulor: J'!IIOI Miller

'

FALL HARDY MUMS
6%-S"POTS

i·.l\

Chur&lt;~ o1 J...,IChrtii.Apootollc .

Open house set
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Autherson, Waterford, will celebmte their
~5th anniversary with an open
house on Sunday from 2-4 p.m. at
the Waterford Gmnge Hall.
Thomas Autherson and the former Marie Dailey were married
Oct. 7. 1936.
They are the parents of Helen
Ebersbach, Rutland; Ruth Roe,
McConnelsviUe; and Edith Ackley,
Worthington. They have six grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren.
The couple requests that gifts by .
omitted.
.
.

1./'o

I

�''

,

. '

·Servi es

Bu

....,L..Js ·
~==~~==========~
RENT-TO-OWN .
Is Your Roof Ready Fer Anothtr Year of Ice anrl Snew?
Name Brand Producta
Factory Authorized
. Repair
TV • VCR • Stereo • Boom
: ilox • C.D. Player
Scanner • Tvpewrfter
Cordia. Phon•
Microwave
Radar Deleclor

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplac_e
RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

Days

Words

~

~;

6
Mon1hly

"Atc-'ve 1 .150 diteaunt lor tdt ~ id in ldvan ce

run 3 d.-ut no ch•oe.

"Price ol td for ell cap ittlltll tert is double price oltd co tl .
for en on lint dey td • u nt in p1pe rl Ctll b efo re 2·00 p m

diV after t:~ublh::-'io n to mike c:onection.
'Adt thl! mutt bt ptid in tdvtn ce "'
Yatd Sties

.80

t1 .30 / day

AdA

M eigs County

AtwtCode&amp;14

ArtiCOdet14

MIIOr'l
' Ca., WV
Art1Codt304 •

441- Gellipolis

912 - Middleport

e7&amp; - PI. PleiiiRI ·

Pom«oV

367- ChMhirt
311- Vinton
246- Rio Ortnde

' A c iiStifiecf tdvertitt mtnt plac: ed in The01 ily Sentinelltlll ·
cept - cl• t ified ditpltY . Butinll\t Clfd and legll notices)
Wlll l l to ·apptt~ In the Pt. Ple•ant A'9ilttr and the G11fi·
polls q ail¥ Tr ibUn e. reaching ovlf 18.000 tlom••·· .

268- Guvoil Dist

143- Arebte Dlst.

379- WIInat

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 :00A,M . SATURDA Y
MONDAY PAPER
~ HO P.M. MONDAY
TUESDAY PAP.ER
- 2 :00P.M . TUESDAY
WEDNE SDAY PAP ER

91!115 - Chnter

742- Rutland
687- Coolvlle

937 - Bulflllo

THUI\SDAY PAPER

FRIDA'( PAPER
SUNDAY' PAPER

-

BULLETIN BOARD

·

&lt;1441'4:131.

MOn1 .., GoOd Cl&gt;ndlllon,

We Guarantee Your Satlllfaet1on

Sakes Alive

Look Who:. 45!
Happy Birthday

ATIENTION ALL LADIES I
THE LAS VEGAS STYLE
BURLESQUE

Ocl. 51h
LoiHl
Pam, Candy, Mike ,
Jr., Michael
Chelsie, Becky &amp;
.Scoll, Julie &amp; .f;ric

All Male Revue Appearing at

·•

the Newly Remodeled
ADDISON CLUB
FRIDAY, OCT. 4~ : 00 pm
Get Tickets Now: $7.00 in Advance
$10.00 Night of Show
Gentlemen Welcome After tO:OO p.m.
Proper attire &amp; ID's Required
For lnformalion Call

JOSEPH D. JACIS

5·10·'1l·lln.

GUN SHOOT

Speclalbhlg in

FORKED RUN

NEW &amp; USED PARTS

. SPORTSMAN
CLUB

Custo111 Fr- lepair
FOI All MAlliS &amp;
MODRS

Real Estate General

9U-7013
or 992-5553
FlU
1·100·141-0070
DAIWII OliO
~OI .YOU

OFFICE992'2888

USED APPUANCIS
WASHIIS-$100 up
DITIS-$6t up
lfFIIGIIATOIS-$100 up
IAIIGH .;,..Gos·Eitc.-$125 up
FII1111S- $12S up · '
IIIKIO OYINS-$79 .,.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

•Rem~ellng

992.5335 or 915-3561
Across from !'ott Offk•
POMifROY, OliO

•Roofing
•Siding
•Peinthig
FULLY INSURED

205 North Second A,ve.
Middleport, OH
EASY LIVING·In this 4 year old 14X60 Sunnybrookmobile
home. It has a calhedral ceiling lor dimension and a
'laundry room wilh shelves for slorage, equipPed kilehen, 2
·bedrooms, and 1 112 balhs. It Is beautiful and in , _
condition.
OWNER WANTS AN OFFER
$11,500

FREE ESTIMATES

· CEDAR
CONSTRUCnON
992·6641 or
691-6164
; •. , •..,,.lfn

RACCOON CREEK·A nice camping lot Wlih electric and
grey walsr-cfiaposal. Showers and balhrooms rl!llllydoae,
also has frontage on Raccoon Craek fora boat dot:l\, Could
,be yours lor $2,000 down and $t29.55 a month @12% for
.a years.
TOTAL COST·
$5,800

.MALLOON"S RUN·The Quiet Llf•Sitononeolthe porches ·
·and feellhe peacefulness. This 130 acre farm wilh large
bottoms, a 2 story house will\ 3-4 be&lt;tooms, barn, olher
$64,000
.oulbuildings, and tree gas.

PAINTING
INTERIOR - EXTUIOII
FREE ESTIMATES

Take the pain out of
painting.
Let mt do it for

you .

VERY IEASONAILE
HAVE REFERENCES

on.•uo

POMEROY·Uncotn Helghlo·Cute es a buno'n, neat as a
pln·describe lhls lwo bedroom pome with an 'equipped
kitchen, carpon, and pan basement Has a floored attic and
$25,000
a 50X288 fool lol.

Howcrd L. WritHtl

·DANVILLE·Red Hill Road·A 3·5 bedroom home has 21/
2 baths. Also has a finished basemen! with a flrepl""', an
.attached 2.car garage, an in-ground swimming pool, and a
well ·aquipped kiiChen. It all sits on appro•. tO aan
WAS $120,000
NOW $10,0

ROOFING ··
•

MIODLEPORT·VIne SlrHI·A nice area Ia live ln. This
home could haw 34 bedrooms. All rooms an~ n~ sized.
Has dishwasher, ~ love, relrigeralor, disposal, and fir&amp;place. What more couldyouwanl? Sils on ~ fencedflallols, ·
Plenly of playroom for kids.
$38,000

CHESTER·Sandrldg•Want some acreage? Live In the
clean oounlly air on this nice 33 acre small farm, with some
timber ffee gas, 40X32 polo barn.(901Jid use as a 3 car
garag~). Also a 3 bedroom, 2 bath home, wilh a finished
basamenl,· and a patio.
·
Jususg,ooo
·

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

9/ 1/ 91 / 1 mo. pd.

COMPLETE.AUTO

UPHOLSIDY

Convtrtlbl.e Tops, ·
Carpetl, Headliner
• Sot Covers end
Minor Auto Repair.

DOTTIE TURNER, aroker•.....•:. . . . .:. . . ..................i82-51112

IWN st., IASOI, VA.

BRENDA JEFFERS............ ......- ••.•.••.•••.•••••. fg2-30$1.
DARLINE STEWART. ...................................... - ....f8J~3f5

1-13034)·
773-9560

lANDY BUTCHER..- ............... "'''"t"·~·· .. •••• ..:JI2-d7i

SHERYL WALTERS...........................................-387.Q421

Gl~o

ClOihoro, .., ...... ...... - Each, 1.1'1!' 8lzt Clollloo.,.,
Hond""'rlo . bey Holr - .
Kllchln Tobie. Woll Doc., Sol Of
, 1.1-, TCII'I, llloc. EYirJlhlng,
-Ool

AND EVERTHIHG UNDERNEATH ~

TROMM BUILDERS
*20 Years Experience
*QuaUty Homes rmd
Custom Remodeling

742·2328

carport Sill: Friday Ancl Bllur·;
rloy, Oct- •th Aod lith. ,.,.."
KaU"a, 'Choolllro.. (Flood To .
Chool11ro Kygw SChool).
,
Friday And Salurday, Shoollllng
Rldai,
lloby,
Chlldron Anti Adlln Clolhoa,
T"''a,llwlng Set, ComtortFrlrloy, ' Sdunlly, 8-? 2027
Cholhlln Annut. I.Oto Every~~&gt;-,
i!lgl ,.. Jilnkl Procoodo Go To
Cini1N11f)'
Unllod Clvlotlan

1M Fotd Ranger, 11t 111 1114.-

Chun:h"a BuUclng Fund.
Qarogo Sa..: u 111111 OUt 218, •
Oclotior 111 Thru lith. Ftw Llwn
. . _ , Odda, Enda Tobloa,
El...rlc Hooton, Varloly Othor
hmol
~ Solo: 123 112 Pine Stroot
Oclotior ~th-lth. Throe Family!
No11 To Big Lola.
Clarogo Sola: October lth, 111111~
Fomlly: Roln Ot Shlno. 2212
ChorrJ Ridge Rood, 2 \'. IIIIa
F""" Rio Grandi Unlverolly

Farm Suppl1es
&amp; Livestock

W~ngor

•ton.

T-,

JAZZ CLASSES

CARPENTER SERVICE .

AGES 3 ·and UP

PI"'"""' I

-ltoom Addklono
-Guftor work ·
- Eioctrlcol end
-concmo _,.

Bllllll• 414; 111M

THE DANCE
COMPANY
992·6289

•VInyl Siding
•Replacom'ent
Windows
•

•Rooting

..,Rooting

-1-lor' Ex1orlor
Pol"l"tt
(FREE ESTIMATES I

•fnsuletlon'

JAMES KEESEE
9

V. C• YOU NG Ill

IUUDOZING

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER.J.INES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES

99 2·6 2

&amp;39 Brylin Place
Mlddloport.

•VINVL
•ALUMINUM Slp!NG
•BLOWN IN ·
INSULATION . .

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
......._

HI\U~ING :

lullt

"Frae lltttimi1H'"

Umea10ne. Dirt.
Gravel and Coal·
Ucaneed and Boilded

PH . 614-992·6691

.

;~i~~~~t '

'"'· 949-2101
· ar ltlo 949-2160
NQ lUNDAY

COUNTRY CLUB

P.U.;.

1183 ,..to, P.U.; AI To•
-.111. BID Auto SoiH, Hlglrwoj ·

WMhlr, .

c..a.c.

~lVII, Unono,
Olaawue, IU1G CalecllbiN, &amp;

I"NSULATION

•

11Q Ninon P.U., 4u; 111J Ford &gt;'
Rongor, P.U, •••; 1. . Topbl :
P. U, 4~! 1115 - - fiiOur,._
·~~i 1Hr FOfd F-110, P.U, - · ,
1... Nlooan P.U. AUIO; W '•
FOfd llongor lLT P.~: a.'IO'·

u.-,..

Appl~

304-1111-mt.

~to, .... cond. tM-112.'

Coutlon
Glont Yord llo ..: &lt;1441 Spnrce ,
Slroot EJ!onllon. 11114·1017, ....
Hou- And Btby Fumlluro,
-.... ....... Bill

Chivy hoW 1on pickup, :105 •
ongtno. :lf,OOO mtlto. ....... :

11181 Hoovy 112 Ton Font XL·:
34,100 mil-. PS, PI, IUI0~4
lronrr., horovy ..,_ .....,.,.

11011. 114 441 '"1 .

'.

73 · Vans ~ 4 WD's

•

11111 Ford Plck-uD truck: loorlod.

.;rr ...

F-110. l1ull to
M,IOO. CIH 114 41t

tmutor, ToolluchToMontlont
,..~hup: lloconrl H- A&lt;:.B~dgo In Northup. 811urdoy,
11115.
Flowora.
Oourda
l'llmpklno, Toyo, Coote. To-. '
Oct- 41h 6 llh.I:IIO o.m.•? 2
112 1111• Osd,$L Rt. 211 To ln.
Jl¥d, R!2,h1111 11 ... Two•
11'l:l'.:;
;_~...,., ~

e=:•
E:':
81
:1:.~ eo.t~.C. 0:.111~.1
:~~'R."Tn';!:~

Oct- 41h, 1 lith, 1:30 o.m.
Routo 141, 454 LIOrando Blvd,
Roln Or Shine. 2,. Ftmlly:
Chlldron Ta Ad..., Clothoo,
-~~~~~ Cordi!, 21"
Blcyola, 11-11-.

lllrlo .

Golf

Lessons (61 .... sss.oo

Ntw Grips .............. $4.00

Woods .....;.......... S22 .00
Irons ~ ................. S14.75
REPAIRS
Ustcllrons ............ $5.00
Ustd W.Ods ._; .... $7.00
AWAIDS .
8·9·1 mo.

811-1

Pallo lair.
Oolollor
lith, ,..._,........., Ch ldron And

- ·-.2nd

Adul Clothing,
- O n Lit!, UnoCI4nPIU.
Parch Sail: • 111111 Oort '
Bullville Plb. Loa Collin - ·
Shrlno Chlb. - _ llllc . Oc- •

Se rvtces

lober41~U.

OYEN·IEPAII

... ,....._ 'GROOM

AU lADS .

lrlnt1 It In Or Wt
. Pick Up.

ROOM

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIYICE - .
992-5335 or
915·3561

Complete Grooming
far Alllrlltls .

EMILEE MERINAR .
Owner &amp; Operator

Acren,,..PestDfflral

2171 . ..._,St.
POIIIOY,

614-992-6820
Po.meroy,

BISSELL &amp; BUIICE
CONSTIUCnON

81

IALl FESTIVAL
SPECIAL

BOB JONES
·EXCAVATING
DOZER and
BACKHOE

20 SESSIONS
For $20.00

lfltw Homes
•Garaps
•Contpltte

Announcements
Announcement&amp;

hmotWiftg
Stop &amp; Compare
FrM Estimates

IIASEIIEII7
WATERPJIOOFINQ

Parch Sail: llolurrloy, October ·

U.IICOI .... COII ....... ~

lith. 10... lunda,.? Chllthno
And "'"" Clothing, llloc. 1107

t•Loalr...,wr 1~
fiM lllknotao. Col 1111ect 1~II, . , Of NtN.
- 11 ewnt WJI:wproo.
llnj..
•
• .._ltorno liii,U,..
Coc
1M. "alliin-

SecOnd AYWIUI.

Employment Services

915-4473

tPtumblna.
·-·Eh:tlwl.
.......

Offer Ends Oct.•31

FDRmR
BRONZE

WORK
(614)
696-1

0 949·2126 .
104, mo.

·'BISSELL ·
'BUILDERS
·cuSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
''AJ RIDtonable Prlc11"

lashan lulldlng
EYaY

SAT. NIGHr ,

."6:30P.M.
Starting Sept. 2a

'"· 949-2101
or In, 949-2160 .
Day or Night -·NO SUNDAY CALLS

C!Mb

't Stlktlf

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 p.M.·

2 Friendly K1111n1 To Good

Homo. Phono: m 441 38Vl .
2 Froo Bodo, 114-415-1170i.
31ong hotrod ond 2 lhon hotrod
kHitnl, 3G4-175-5043.

'

.

Ron'o TV Sarvlce, -loi!Jina

Starting Sept. 22

CAU

OHIO PALLET CO.

Gauge FCKtorr
Choke Onlr

. 992-6461
8·1·91· 1mo.

8/ 8/ 11 / 1

.,

ElctUenl

•LIGHT HAULING

·•FIREWOOD
•

BILl SLACK

'992-2269

In :Z.nl1h olio M&lt;Yiclng moil
othor bnondo: ...,_ colo, ~~

"o~lyn

uoo

For

12

_,. appllonco -Ira.

Situation
Wanted

31M.a7t4318 Ohio 1~41-2

Pa~,

Bentf~•,

Tran_..llon, 4V74112-41'1ll
Ext. 571. 9o.m.-10p.m. Tol
Rohlnrlod.

14

AVON I All - · I Shl~oy
Spuro, 301-111-1428.
lobyoltlor Noorlod In Vlnlon
ML_Ro _ _ l...,...

Rll,.ln
Nawfll-huatom
BuolnoH Collep, 8Drlna Vallay
Plw , Coli Todliy, 11ol-44l-431l'lll

8117 Allor lf&gt;.m.

8/11 / 1 mo. lfn

IEMOYAL

537-11631.

llorchondtoo. Buyor
Hoirloil. No boorfonco No_. ~:-:-:::~:==;:.,,_,....,...,..
oary. 114-315-20112, E11.3883.
Lldy To Stow With Elderly lody.
AUSTRAUA WANTS YOU
~::e.5J':l•· 5 Night• AW11k.

992-'SIOO
IT, 33 WEST OF
. DARWIN,, OHIO

111M and

JET
......... II01oro, repolfld . I ,.buill motonr In atrrck, RON
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1.101).

Buying

Hyov1re in need of
Mobile Home Parh
or Acctssorits.:.
SEE US FIISTI .

FIREWOOD
SELLERS

· Ropolro
llructlon.
l14o.38l 40•, .....eon;
e..
tlmat11l

. Drrwo.

W.H. MOBILE
HOME PARTS

SHill &amp; TIEE

·suNDAYS

)

Giveaway

AVON • All lrHI, Coli

AmNnON
Hardwoqd Slabs
For Sale
Great Prictl

I

llo&lt;o lnfonnotlon S.-.1 A Ad-

- - Slomold Envllopl Ta:
ATW Tr1vtl, P.O. 8o1 U071G,
llllml, f l 331M.
': POSTAL JOBS'
Gotllpoll• Aroa.
.
Start $11.J&amp;'Hr. • Bonollta. For
AI&gt;DIIclllon 1 lnlo. Coli 1·21e.
3244711l, 7 a.m. ·To 10 p.m., 7

w..... 3114-882-2645.

RACINE
FilE DIPf.

12

Exm llOo..IOO Wtoklr 11111!!'11
Holldtw Tro¥01 Broeh"''"· F01

4

6

LDst &amp; Found

Yard ond Craft Solo, Oct . 3 I 4.
Fow .... on At 211 rr function .
CloUioo. oklltra, mloc.
Van! ltlo, Oct. • and lith. OW ·
Filii Strett, - Ho-, WY.

FOU"D b1k ond tonk lhophwd, Lll.,t, 304-IIWIIl.

Pomeroy;
Mlddlllport
&amp; VIcinity .

,_, Gror And Whho .._.

Cat. 'ttrsry .......... Hoe ......
Doclnod.- - n d Dstve
IDW?Hm Til ...... 14 Footor Drive In llaaan, wv •
11t ttt tat After 4:Jctp.m.
Frf.Bol Oct.. W. 11oya ....... •

gl~• clothing, ...._ milO.
' "
Loll, lmlll - · ..... holrod
I..
;_;.:
IIJ:::,=Tiv:!!.:-#~~;:.:::Ho=_
::,__vl_llo
_,,
claa wlbl1ck an ..,..aM, krl ;Z.~
old" In Hill orto.. ,,..._ 8R 143, kldo Ololhlrl. porto c~b
2421
boby lhtnga, wood arafll I
.
LOST: Rorl'WMo flee - with
whltl tall. Loll In.._ orto. II ~·yard ,.- on Ill....... ,.,.., •
lo11nd will poy 1110 rword to s.mllto MU!h of Mldd•patl on '
poraon who IIndo her. Ctll 11._ R1. 1 abo" tho Clallilllolgo
388-8167 or 388-17111.

"""'·

.....

:
•

Home lni(Mo,.,_..l: ·
Yoaro Ex.....,_ On 01r1or 1 •
_ . . _, , ADOOIAddlliiN, ;
Foolndlllon Wort, !1ooft!!g •
KMchono And Bolho. Froo u! ·
tlmot•l Rolor- No Job To •
Bl(l Or Srnolll 114-441-0225.
:
D I E Construction Gonoro1
Comtlclor, Rooll~rcrlll, •

• EXTRA INCOME "81" '

A Dtllf Sallrr 01

GUN, SHOOt

1•0..

CAIPn CIIAIIIIS

and nu fLOOI CAll

~

•

Curtlt

doro. Poopll coli Y'"' lo ordor.
Will lrlln. 1.-73HII7 Ext.
1122

IIIDIPIIIDIIfr

!MM~ng:
lftturlnCit

•

:

Clot...... plOd. -111~

Help Wanted

11

667-6179

•Reaaouble Ratea
•Quality Work
'
•Frae Eltlmatea
•Carpet Haa F..t Dry
Time •
•High Gloas on Tile
Floor Flnl1h
MlllliWIS, Ownir
II. I, Rulflttol, OH.

Home
Improvements

$3001Doy Proc-lng phone or•

'DANVILLE·Red Hill Road· Vou'w got lo aee lhls home. It .
Is beau~lully deeoraled and has plenly of room. Vou"Ulove
lha 2 lull baths with lho masler balh having a garden 1Ub.
The house has 3 bedrooms, formal dining rcom, famiy
Toom, ancl· li~ ng room. An sitting on approx. 3 acres.
'
$100,~

LAUREL CLIFF·Pomeroy·Sitting on a lillie loss than t
a;:ra of levelland Is this 3 bedroom house with an open
stairway, lireplaca, and mainlenance Ires siding.
•
$23,000

btdiOGm fvrnl.tl.t apt, referln.
ond depaoll roqulrld . 3041124111.
1
eto

-=~~~~~;:~~;:::::::::~~==~~~~~~
~h=ll«=·=·---------~
YOUNG'$
!!lgonllc
SaleOctAt Contonory'
.
Townho-l
lith. H.
BALlET, TAP &amp;
J&amp;L
Clothlrl, Nlnlondo Topoo, Homo

end

Home Repelrt

I

FREE ESTIMATES

I&amp;C EXCAVATING

919/91/2 mo.

·- WE DO ROOFINGI

901MYWAIUNn

9-11 -1mo.

RUTLAND-How can you beal a deal like this
story
home with 3 bedrooms and a nice ~at lot...A ' 100 good
lo pass up.
0 LY$7,500

Located On SaHord School ld. off lt. 141
c•1414U-9416 ir 1-100-172·5"7

992·7451

Factory Guns Only

7131 / '81 '"'

1

BENNETT'S

UNES

herr Svlidar 12 Noon

d •.

~

TIUCKING AVAWU

Begins Sept. 15

.

All C~DmONERS - HEAT PUMPS and
S FOR MOBILE &amp;DOUBLEWIDE HOMES
...FURNACE.
........
.............. , ...... ..
.
MOBILE HOME
HEAliNG &amp;
COOLING

LANDSCAPING
WATER end SEWER

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE Ia her•bv
that on S.lurday, Ocio6or
1991 at10 :00 a. m., a public
aale will be held al 105
Union Avenue, Pomeroy,
Ohio, to IIIII for C@lh the fol•
lowing collalerol:
1985 Chevy C.prlco
Air· Power
1GtBN69H2FY211872
The Farmers Bank and
Savlngo Company, Ppm .
eroy, Ohio, reaerv11 tha
right to bid allhls aale, and
to withdraw lhe obove col·
laleral prior to sola. Fu~her,
The Farmera Bonk ond
Savings Company reserves
lhe right to reject any or all
blda aubmllted.
Further, lhe above collet·
eral will be sold In the con·
dillon II Ia In wllh no
e1preased or Implied war·
ranllea given.
0) 2, 3, 4, 3tc

WHALEY'S
AUTO PAITS

. .

Flinn-. Ckllhtng, Oulna, ,
DW.,_IIo._ Clip~ IIIII. R1..7, .
-h. •rlday. Bllurday.
•

llllfllflaf .

.llnlltiJCIIfQN .

BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES,

9·6-1 mo.

The Daily Sentinel is in
need of 2 May 27th
papers. If you have one
. please call
992·2155.

'

,-a

Big Clarl(ll Solei Como Lookl

HOWARD ~
EXCAVATING

Btlsiness Services

446-4756

•

Unta Rd.

&amp;.28-Qt 1 mo.

Bring Thi$ Ad for 10% Di=unt

010.-taM

Mi. outside
Rutland on Ntw

FREE ESTIIATES •

FALL OPEN HOUSE
SAT. &amp; SUN .• OCT. 5-6
11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
BERRY BASKET
2301 6th St., Syracuse, OH.

rnololll

Notth 3td It, llldclopon. Clhlo, 1

From 218. · Whho ..._ On
Righi. Boya . Cl&lt;14hll Qotl•

For ~ld &amp; Ne.wRoofs, Shingles
Repairs, Gutters .
B•llcllng and Ranicideb•g

1111 ISTIMATIS

fumtahod

;;:::c
.
iiliJ!

21/i

Public Notice

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

Coonplllly

auto,e.c. ...... ~

742-2421

2•1- Lmrt Foils .S82- New Ht~Jtn
·:19&amp;- Ltllrt
949 - R•cine

Happy Ads

clothoo,

:

'0:00 am·5:00 pm

Read theBest Seller ·CLRSSIFIED f\DS
5'

-"1'.

Rd. 1_ .
booka,m...

nor

~-•For Rant, I,......_

Flo- .... lkln.

71 Autos Jor ·Sale
.tilT _..,.,_ All.

\ OPEN
TuoscbW, thru Salurday

lht RuuJte Fist

2 ·00 P.M . ~AtOAV

-of

3 Fomlly: ·Oolqbtr 11111, 8-2. floln,
Or Shlno, IndOor Aod Outl Approl. 3-112 ...... Down 111.7

COPY DEADliN E -

- 2:00P.M. WEDNESDAY
- Z.OO PM . THURSDAY

•.3-FIIIIIIIto •Oct. il-l, 1:00-li:OO,

KIT 'N' CARLYLE®by Larry Wli&amp;bl .

Apartment
· Jor Rant

•BIY tSIU •11ADI

571- Apple Grove
773- Muon

44

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

•sB- llon

843....:. Portltlnd

35 Loll&amp;

.......
..... - - 114-·
looking1rlHr.
,.. ,....

CONSTRUCTION. . 992·2653

892!·35241

.05/ doy

OtiUa Count¥

:::::::;Y•rd:::::::Sa··==

· SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

1127N .

jollo_wing telephonE exc~a11ges ...

'1 point lln·e type only uMd.
"Sentinel is not responsible tor err ors ah11 fin "(dlt' {Chtck

In Men10film .

.13.00

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

CAR' JACKS ROOFING &amp;

H.E.C.
Pomeroy

Classified p~{{es :cot·e,r the '

"Frt'!l ed t - G ~ ..wty end Found tdt under 15 word• will be ·

Hepp~

: ~g
.4f"

R•t • 1re lor c:onMcutW. r ~ ne. br oken upd~e w ill bech•ged
fnr eer:h ri 1111 1 1 H tnrate ad• .

"Adt outtide Me lgt. Gallit or Mat on countiM mutt be pr e·
paid.
,

Ctrd 0 1 Ttltn .. t

::gg. .

Ohio

.==.,

IJpwis lite nme to Find Out.

Home Entertainment
Center

Ov.r15 Wordo .

. t9.00

15
15
15

10.

Role

. '

Friday, October 4, 1991 '

OhiO

..

.•

..

Septic Tonk Pu...,.ng &amp;10"Clolllo

Ca. RON EVANS ENTERPniSEs · '
.lockoon, DH 1-100-637-i$21, ' :
Drrvlo,
S.W.Voc
Serwlco,
~ Croak Rd. Porto, ......

Business
•
Training

,..... plclup, ond riiii"'Y. ....

44f.021M.

build Pilla .......... .....
.-r
........... 1M:
lldlng or troller
up .,-;~

Roglllwotlon ,_12liiB.

18

•

Fumlohod 3 Roomo I Bath.

Wanted to Do

llonoh lbforlon Dlrlf•
lncludl: Chlldron'a llorvtces. E &amp; R TREE SERYJC£. To/::~?,
llolorence Woft, Clrcullllon Trimming, TrN A•mov•f,
Dutlto. bporlonco wortlng with Trimming. FrH Eltlm~t..t 114chlldron -or Nbfof)' ._. 317·7UT.
ground ......ry. Ubnorlon whl
appnlllmlltiY 20 ...... Goorg11 Ponoble Sawmill, don~
-klv II 1ho II.... City haul your loa• to IM m1ll Just
llonclr. Apptlclllono oro avol~ clll304-eli-11U
lmaalnt owning • now Potm
oblo all .. lllton Counly Public
Horliar ooctlonol homo lor 1111
Ubnory.
O..r loctory
oavo.Co1111on1.-

Ctoan, Na. P11•1 Roloronco 1

Drrpaoll Roqulroa. 11•_..e.1511.

Nicely Fumlohld· Aponmont
1br, nut to Ubr1ry, ,.rtdng:
central ~l!·...•!.r1 .~t. .nc• , .
qulrod.l-.

luy or •ell. Alvlrine Antlqull,
1124 E. llotn Slroll, P-roy.
Houro: II.T.W. 10:00 o.m. to 1:110
p.m., SUncfoy 1:00 lo 1:00 p.m.

114-1112·252J.

lkl~l"tt.
1M2 P - Grand Prix U Y-1
AKC rojtlotorod Codror Sflll~ol 1 olr, OU1o, PW. un..cruiH. ii'U'U 245.ftll.
Lh- Apoo"o, Tor Poocltoa, noa culllta, 304-ll'UI13.
th&lt;&gt;1t and wonnorf. 304-417So
82 Plumbing &amp;

2183.

.

54 Miscellaneous

·-1.

1914
Codllloc
Fltotwood
lro..ghorw, 11,1100 mllll. hn5.

Heating
Cortor'o Plumbing
ondHMIIna
FowthondPTno
Claii...... Ohlo

Merchafidlse

114~··

Fumllhod Elflclorlcy, ttWmo.
UIIUIIto Pold, $haro Bo1h 1107
Second Avo, Ollllpolla, ai44
-.111 Ahar 7~.m.

84

Electrical &amp;

• Rltrlgeretlon
•

Rlll•mw "' or

..,_.. ,Ill

tor¥lol or ......._
U.lllr LicenMd Tll151alsn. t
R - EJtctrlool, liiMll- '

!'Iring, -

33 Farms Jor Sale

P-•·

DRIV~IHI

Will coro lor lldl~y In my homo
'

~.

304-1111-20111..

•.

sm.u
DrrllvorY. Dst•• Will do bobyahllng In my homes,
Corn- Cir. To &amp;550 Par hl vt good rtltrencn: In
Willi, 1 -·1'131.
s, ....,... Ohlo,l*"2-3m

"

lllton Counly 12+ · - (40
acr• tlmbw), old hCNM, 2 metal
borna, Rl. 35; 11 m... to

Modem 1 lrdlaorn Apal1ment.

111 141 0310.

Nlwfy rMlcdrlld 2 and 3

room

1~n11

bed·

In llldd...,...

Wlnlllld 10 mllll to PC14nl 2 bolho, EquiPIIIII ldlchone:
Pl1111nl. $1!0,000. Col 304-llSo WID - ... ~. · Aoloronoo ana
3280 bolwoon 8:00 All ond 4:30 d-'1 roqillrld. Phono 114o.
Pll. l

~ ........ 1:00pm.

21" RCA TY •nd on1onn11, 1200.
304-1'11-7328.
Air

com,..101, microwave,
::-.~ .. pllno, ltwft!!!'J.•.!.r. ...
lor

""'c-:•

lrletor. ._,..7:117

·Screen,

1111.

HAPPY JACK TRIVERIIICID&amp;:
Rocoanlzld .... . -...

by u:s. ·-· ol ~
- ·.. aplnll ...........
oncl · · - -O.T.C
In llogo
Cltt...Avolloblo
II R I 0
Fttiil:114-1112-2*

•

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~

Community

Cal~ndar lt~ms

'ndar

·
FRIDAY
.. ~ REliDSVILLE • Revival the
Fellowship Church of the Nazarene
will be held through Sunday at 7
· ~.tn. nighdy. There will be special
8ingers and nursery will be avail:able for preschool, age five and
under. Rev. John Douglas invites
:the public. .
'
'
!' LONG BOTIOM • There will
· ·ibe a hymn sing at the Faith Full
· ·Go~l Church in Lon~ Bottom on
:Friday at 7 p.m. featunnJ local tal.:ent. Pastor Steve Reed mvites the
;public.

at

•

; REEDSVILLE • The Olive
:Township Trustees will meet Friday at 7:30 p.m. at the Reedsville
:Fire House.
•

: TUPPERS PLAINS · A round
:and square dance will be held on
•Friday from 8 p.m. to 11:30 p.m.,
; sponsored by the Tuppers Plains
:VFW and auxiliary. The band will
:be CJ. and the CriUlltry Gendemen.
: The public is invited.
,
SATURDAY
: SALEM CENTER · The Star
: Grange and Star Junior Grange will
· meet in regular session on Saturday
; at 8 p.m. at the grange h11ll on
1County Road I near Salem Cen~.
1 Degree work will be performed on
• candidates presenl Poduck refresh: ments will ·follow the meeting. All
: members and candidates are urged
:to attend.
.

i

POMEROY • Salisbury ElewiU have its fall festival
; on Saturday. Kitchen opens at 5
• p.m. and games will begin at 6:30
: p.m. Door J&gt;r!.zes will be_awarded.
: Admission 1s 25 cents.
1mentary

Township Trustees.will meet Mon•
·Junior p.m. at
••
will meet Monday ai
day at 7:30 p.m: at the Syracuse High
Municipal Building.
., 7 p.m. at the junior high. Everyone ·
MIDDLEPORT ~ The Middle
welcome.
port Garden Club ..yill meet Mon.
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP •
·'
'·day
at 7:30p.m. at the home of '
The Columbia Township Trustees
LETART · The Letart Township
Mrs.
George Anderson.
'
will meet Monday at 7:30p.m. at Trustees will meet Monday at 7
the fU'C station.

and Monday
Wednesday at
7:30p.m. nighdy. Tlie public is
invited to auend.

llPpear two days belon au ~veat
!lJid tb~ day or tbat evener Items
must be received well in advance to asstlre pubUcation in the cal-

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·

RUTLAND • The Leading
Creek Conservancy Distdct will
hold a special meeting on Saturday
at the office.
CHESTER . Districtl3, Daughters of America, will meet Saturday

·POMEROY • In obServance of
World Wide Com!Dunion Sun~y
the Pomeroy .U:mted Meth~d1st
Church and Triruty Congregational
Church will be sharing in open
communion in the parking lot of
Bank One at 11:15 a.m. In case of
r;lin the sacrament will be held at
· the United Methodist Church.
•
·
. POMEROY. · The annual. meet·
mg of the Me1gs CountY. P1oneer
and Historical Society will be held
Sunday at the Meigs County Muse·
um in Pomeroy. A poduck ·ilinner
will begin at 1 p.m. and program at
2 p.m. MCj:ting will follow the pro-

atl p.m. at the Chester Lodge Hall.
All members welcome
·
SUNDAY
POMEROY . Another clean-up
session will be held at Sugar Run
School in Pomeroy on Sunday at 1
p.m. Those .interested in assisting
should bring the necessary tools.
•
·. ,
HEMLOCK GROVE • The
I 25th anniversary of the Hemlock
Grove Christian Church will be
celebrated at its homecoming on
Sunday with services at 9:30 a.m.
Mike Hazelton and Jim Quizenberry will be the ~uest speakers. A
basket dinner will be held at 12:30
p.m. and afternoon services are at 2
p.m.
LOTTRIDGE • ·There will ~ a
smorgasbord dinner at the Lottridge Community Center on Sunday at 2 p.m. Cost is $5 for adults
and $2.50 for children under 12.

gram.
MONDAY
POMEROY • "Beloved" by
Toni ~orrison will be ~nted ~t
the Me1gs County Pubbc L1brary m
Pomeroy on Monday at 7 p.m. by
J?r. Joanna. Grosh, Ohio Humaniues Councd, C?lumbus,.and pro·
fes~or ~f Enghsh at Wlt~enb.erg
Umvemty. The presentau~n 1s a
part of the "Heroes and Heromes of
the Ohio River Valley."
SYRACUSE • The Meigs Coun·
ty Board of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities will
meet Monday at 7 p.m.

,

RACINE • The ~ine Chapter
No. 134, O.E.S., will fiteet Monday
at 7:30p.m. at the Racine Masonic
Hall. Annual reports. and eleetion
of officers will lake place .
·
POMEROY. The Pomeroy Elementary Pro will meet Monday at
7 p.m. Meet candidates running for
school board. Also to be disc~
.will be a food booth at the Stem·
wheel Festival.

State Route 124, Racine ·
3 miles past Southern
High School .

2°

From
.,

$100

0

$300

to
~ Several Variety of
·
Apples

"

·

FISHER ~
~

FDNERAL:
HOME ·
'

When the time comes, a single call to
our funeral home should be all tiiat's
needed.

CaU us td,dayfor mort infontUIJion! '

..

264 South Second Avenue
Middleport,_Ohio 45760.:
•

BRUCE R. FISHER,
OWNER/DIRECTOR

' 614/992·5141

POMEROY ~ Eddie Buffmgton,
Oallipolis, will be the guest speaker
at the First Baptist Church of
Pomeroy on Sunday at 10:30 a.ll),

Heath UMW
elect officers,

1991
COUNTRY
MUSIC
' ASSOCIATION
AWARDS
I'

'

I.

'

'
I c./1 your Mm'e;
VInce Gill
Kentucky HtadHunte,.

ThtJi.lddt .

•

'•

NOTH·ING

HELD BACIU
HURRY!
SALE NOW IN
ROGRESS!

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

...

Sundly twu'Thurldly, 8:301111-10pm; Friday a SIU'dly, 8:301111·11 pm

llake PlaDI To BaYe Buday Dbmer With Us

Featuring

ROAST BEEF DINNER
Choice of Potatoes
So.up &amp; Salad Bar
•

$4.79

Or 7'rV One Of OUr Oth6 Gmt Men~ lterrwi

.I .
!
'

OPEN SUNDAY, 6:30AM TO 10 PM

II CUlT Oat Orden Ani"';;!TlS-5321 lj
VISA • MASTERCARD • AMERICAN

ACCEPTED
'

~

OPEII ..
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10 A.M. TIL 5 P.M.
SATURDAY 10 A.M. TIL 6 P.M.
SUNDAY 12 NOON nL 5 P.M•
DELIVERY AVAILAILE
TO MEifS·GALLIA·lWOII·JACISON
VINTON·LAWREMCE I ALL OTHER AREAS
FINANCING TO SUIT YOUR IUDGEl
PAY WITH YOUR Til REFUND
.,

..•
~

C&gt;l 991 Forethouslit

The Sutton

New officers were announced at
the recent m~eting of the Heath
United Methodist Women held in
the church social room.
Pauline Horton, vice president,
: POMEROY • "Great Hair Argu·
: ment" and ''Legend of Firefly opened the meeting and new offi•
·Marsh" will be shown at the Meigs cers were announced by Euvetta
: County Public Library in Pomeroy Bechde of the nominating commit·
: on Sa!Ufday and Sunday .at 2 p.m. tee. Offjcers are Betty Fultz, presi• and at the Middleport L1brary on dent; Pauline Horton, vice-president; Vicki Houchins, secretary;
: Monday at 7 p.m.
Sue Smith, tteasurer.
'
'· RUTLAND • The Big Fish
Rev. Frank Smith was program
leader.
He spoke on his Salvation
Tournament which was set for Sat·
Army
ministries
before coming to
urday at the Rutland American
Middlepon.
l Le$ion Pond has been postponed,
Devotions were given by Vicki
: until later in the month. The tour·
• nament is sponsored by the Meigs Houchins on The Lord's Prayer.
Hostesses were Euvetta Bechde
: County Soap Box Derby Associaand Emily Sprague.
: lion.
·

•

~·

•

• Funded by policies from Forethought Lire Insurance Company

\•

SYRACUSE

SEEN ON.
MAJOR CABLE
TEt,.EVISION,
NETWORKS

•

.

5 0

Apple Oder 53°
Pumpkins

Funeral arrangements
,,
oon't have to be made
on the dav a person tJks.
IJ"here are many decisions related to
the funeral and burial of a loved one
that need attention by the family. Now
you can provide for them by planning
your~ral withForethought&lt;tfwieral
. planning'.

KAREN'S
GREENHOUSE
Hardy Fall Mums

. As

.I

I •

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