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Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio

'

'
•
TJ:Iursday, October 17, 1991 ;

-"

Former Meigs resident
Pawell'hospitalizedfor dizziness; suit filed · (}gainst Hammerr
(AP)
Reti_red
NORTHAMPTON, Mass. (AP)
Child said the strictest strictures beat him after aconcert .
. :
named Inspector of the Year U.S.BALTIMORE
Supreme Court JustJce Lew1s Healtn aut~orities , ha've , of health-conscious cooking could
Steven McKinney claim~ his:":
-

~

i

Ohio Lottery·

Braves to
meet Twins in
World Series

'7

Becky Drenner, a former Meigs
County resident, employed at the
Pumam County Health Department
in Palatka, Fla.• has recently been
named "Inspector of theYear."
She has been employed by the
Smte of Florida in the Environmental Health Divisioq for approximately fo ur years, servi~g the first
two years at the St. Johns County ..
Hea lth Department in St. Augustine, Fla.
,
·As an environmental health specia li st, Drennet coordinates the
drinking water program for Putnam '
County. She is also S.U.P.E.R. Act
co ordinator , which co nsists of
hydrocarbon sampling of private
and public drinking water systems
for any detection of petroleum base
products that may have leaked into
the water underground. Other job
r~pon sib i li ties consist of public
swimming pool inspections, radon
coordinator, and assisting the epidef)liology division with food
borne and water borne illnesses.
Drenner moved to Palatka in
1985 when her husband, Gary,
accepted a position with the seminole electric cooperative, Inc.· She
is a graduate of Meigs High School
and attended Hocking Technical
College where she majored in
dietetics.

Pow~ll Jr. was releas~d from ths
hospital after undergo10g tests for
an trregular heartbeat
Powell, 84, was a~mitted last
week to John~ Hopki~s ~osp1tal
after _complammg of dizzmes~.. At
the t1~e, he w~s at the hospital
attend10g am~:!'
He was rei
Tuesday.
. Powell_ had a ~acemaker
1mplanted m h1s heart m January,
S31d. Supreme Court spokeswoman
Tom House. .
Plllllil reurc;d from the Supreme
Coui'I'Tn 1986, 15 years after he
w~s appointed by President Nixon.
i'

eventually be "the death of gastronomy."
. '
Child and other recipe book
authors raised about $10,000 Tuesday for Hampshire County United
Way programs. ~author helped
volunteer chefs from restaura~ts
prep~® favorite recipe~ .with l!onated ingredients. About 300 fqod
mavens paid to $35 ea~h to sample
the succulen.t creations. ~- .
~ ·
GULFPORT, Miss .•(AP) .-· A
rhyming lawsuit has .l'be.en filed
agamst Hammer by il man who
claims the rapper's bodyguards

She is .the daughter of Dwight
(Kelly) and Eulonda Haley, Mid·
dlcpon, and the daughter-in-law of
Belly Schneemann of Palatka, Fla.
She has two sons, Darrin, a Corporal in the United States Marine
Corps stationed in ·california, and
Jaso n, who is attending Central
Florida Communi ty College majoring in business administration. She
also has one grandchild, Jennah :
Nicole Drcnner, age 21 months.

wreaths and topiaries for showand-tell which she had made from
everlastings. She noted everlastings
are an herb which she grows, then
picks when the flowers are just
blooming, cuts and hangs to dry,
When dry they may be used in
arrangements which wiU last a long
time.
For "Now is the Time" everyone
told of things they were doing in
their garden to prepare for winter.
For the arrangement of the
month, Peggy Moore had end-ofthe-garden flowers, using purple
mums, zinnias and dill in a white
glass container.
Janet Theiss read an article on
forcing bulbs for ·winter bloom .
The meeting adjourned and the
hostess served a dessert course to
the members and Juanila Will won
the door prize.

Band to perform

. The Mei~s High School Marching Band w1ll attend the band festival in Point Pleasant, W.Va., on
Saturday. There are 15 bands competing in the event at Saunders
Field from II a.m. to 5 p.m. The Meigs Band will perform at
2:45 p.m. and the public is invited
to auend and enjoy the "Battle of
the Bands" festival. A band boosters award will be presented.
,
The cost of admission is $4 for
adults and $2.50 for students.

'
:"For M.C.'f guards were strut·
ling their migh~
,
"Under the guise of preventing
~ fi~ht.
..
'But,there was no fight and no."
Hammer to protect, ,
'
"When all of a sudden your.
·plaintiff
. .. hit the deck."

•
I

Vol. 42, No. 117

I

,HouSing starts drop 2.2 percent in September

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, October 18, 1991

NOT $199

s77
-

SPRING AIR SLEEP CUSHION
MATTRESS &amp; BOXSPRING
Not$174S

ss9

BRASS
ETEGERE

5
NOT$999 397

WASHINGTON (AP) - Housing starts stumbled
2.2 percent in S~tember, the gov~nient said today,
breaking a string of-five advances and raising fresh
doubts about the viability of the housing recovery. .
Building activity slackened in all regions of the
country except for the South. BIll that area failed to
recoup its loss of a month earlier. 1
The Commerce Department said new construction
of houses and apanments totaled a seasonally adjust·
ed annual rate of 1.03 million, down from Ul6 million a month earlier.
It wa5 the fust decline since March. The ensuing
gains had marked !he fust five-month string since the

MARBLE
FLOOR lAMP .
Not $169
OAK, PINf,.
CHERRY TV·
VCR CABINET

drop.
. of 1ower mortgage rates, th e ma
. b'li
"In spite
1 ty of
builders- and the hesitancy of consumers- to bor-

Elderly-say Social Security hike
for cost-of-living not enough

5347

MICROWAVE
CART

TAMPA, Fla. (AP)- For Ola comes tojust$240.
McLaurin, getting through the
"You try living in this world on
month on a $240 Social Security $240 a month - it's hard," she
check is hard enough, and she says said.
the smallest cost-of-living increase
Other people around the country
in five years won't make it any cas- said times will be tough for them as
ier.
well.
,
··
Claire Sei fert, a 68-year -old
''I'm hurting already," the 79year-old retired Tampa housekeep- widow, said she is forced to work
er said Thursday, echoing the senti- as a secretary at Jewish Family Serments of other elderly people · vices of Los Angeles to supplement
across the nation.
her $600-a-month Social Security
"I've got rent, electricity bills, check.
phone bills that keep going up. My
" I' m working because I have
check has to keep up. A few extra to," she said. " I can' t survive on
dollars just ain't enough," she said.. Social Security alone and a 3.7 perThe government announced cent increase is a slap in the face."
Thursday that the nation's·43 milFred McKimzey, a 64-year-old
lion Social Security recipients will disabled commercial arti st from
receive a 3.7 percent cost-of-living Lit~e Reck, Ark., agreed that beneincrease next January, the smallest fits already are too low.
raise since 1987 when benefits rose
"You subsist on Social Securi1.3 perceq!. ~ast year' s increase ty, you don'tlive on it," he_said.
. ··wllll 5:4-pettCI!t•-.."'-'·"""·":--.....,_ •.,.,~"'' V~Stmlb.-;Of•Elafl'ltUe; HI.,
The average check will .rise just wondered what happened to the
$22 a month to $629, reflecting money that was deducted from her
moderate price inflation' because of paycheck whilp she worked.
thesluggisheconomy.
.
" I don :t know wh~re the
McLaurin is among an esumat- money's go10g that we paid m for
ed 25 percent of Americans who years and years," said the 76-yearrely on Social Security for more old woman, who depends almost
than 90 percent of their income. entirely on her $416-a-month
After paying premiums for supple- check.
mental health insurance, her check

87

Oven
42" HUTCH
Not SI 099 OAK FINISH

5

49

TTRESS
S47.a.pc.
$77 ia. pc.
$97-ea.pc.
597 ea. pc.

TWIN
. FULL:
QUEEN
KING

Sold In Sets Only

SECTIONAL MULTI..COLOR
QUEEN SLEEPER INCLUDING
END, LOUNGE END,
CORNER TABLE ·

, TO ·BE ·FRANK • "Frank" ,·represenUng
Amerlc1111 Red Cross Blood Services, presented ·
informatioil about .an upcomlpg blood drive to
juniors and seniors at Soutbern High School on
Th'ursday afternoon. "Frank", who is really
Donor Resources Specialist Detibie Stalnaker, is

~ot $1977

897 ·

PATII CONSILNIO

~

ODOT inspection slated Oct. 28

NOT$1199

I

i

OVER 100

Early Amerka• Gree• or Gold

LIVING

WING CHAIRS
OAK TRIM .BWE PRINT

ROOM

Not$797

Not $589

SUITES IN
STOCK

DINING

A Coolville woman escaped injury in a one-vehicle accident on
C.R. 37 in·Bedford Township Thursday everting.
According to a report from the.Gallia-Meigs Posl of the State
Highway Patrol, Neda B. Mitchell, 45, was southbound on C.R. 37,
lost control in a .right curve and slid off the right side of the road-

Four arrested on drug charges

Castal Coattmponry

S)

Woman escapes injury in wreck

to rest on its top.
· Damage to the front and top of Miu:hell's 1979 Dodge 150 pickup wa~ listed as moderate and disablmg.
. .
Miu:hell was cited by !he pabOI for safety belt vtolauon.

PINE

Blat •• Mane PlaW

SOLID OAI &amp; GlASS

Each year the Ohio Department of Transportation begins the
winter season with a thorough inspection of snow and ice removal
equipment and material storage.
· Purpose is to insure !hat !he ODOT Maintenance Operation is in
the best possible eondition to taclde the winter storms.
This year, the public is being invited to witness the inspection
and tour the ODOT maintenance garage. The inspection and tour at
!he Meigs County maintenance garage located on State Route 7
about two miles south of Chester will be from 8: 30 a.m. to 10:30
am. on Monday, Oct 28.

wa~er vehicl~ then struck an embankment and turned over coming

&amp;

END TABLES
NOTS389

pictured bere witb students after the presen~­
tion. front row, 1-r, are Stalnaker and Apr1l
Freeman. Second row are Jody Hayes, Sar~b
Duhl, Mike Hill, Michele Friend and James Vming. The bloodmobile wiD be held at the school
on Monday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

..------ Local briefs-----. Council to present

QUEEN SLEEPER
BLUt MAUVE, BEIGE

&amp;

Not $1397$

Four Meigs Countians were set to appear in Meigs County Court
on Friday morning on drug charges.
According to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, the four
were arrested Thursday night after a "substantial amount of pro·
cessed marijuana" was confiscated from a Dyesville Road resi·
dence.
.
Arrested and scheduled to appear were: Robert L. Laub, 30,
Albany; Harvey Michael O'Dell, 30, Albany; Becky S. Trout, 29,
Pomeroy; and Brian L. Woodgerd, 33, Pomeroy.
Trout was tioused in the Gallia County Jail, and the others in the
Meigs County Jail pending their hearings this morning.
Continued on page 3

overview o'ff project
Tuesday evening
An application to the Ohio
Department of D~velopment for a
$2 50,000 grant for a downtown
revitalization project is being
developed by Middleport Village
Council in conjunction with the
Middleport Community Associa·
tion, according to Mayor Fred
Hoffman.
The mayor said that Buckeye
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional
Development District and Mike
Stroth of SB A Consultants are
assisting in the application process.
Tuesday evening Middleport
Village and lhe Community Association ivill host a meeting at the
AmericaQ Legion Annex on Mill
Street in Middleport where an
overview of the project will be presented.
Representatives from Buckeye
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional
Development District and Stroth,
who was instrumental in the City of
Wellston's Downtown Revitalization grant award, will be present at
the meeting to discuss the project.
Business owners and others
will have an opportunity to ask
questions concerning the project,
what it will do for business and
building owners, and the advantages of the project to growth and
development.
The meeting will be preceded
by a 6 p.m. buffet dinner. Reservations are to be made with J ea n ~
Trussell at992-6782 at village hall.
1

Hous~ . rejects · g~n control

--

VISA

(

'

jumped 6.7 percent in August to 5_10,000, the highest
level in a year.
,
But the National Association of Realtors said
existing home sales fell 2.1 percent that month, the
second straight decline. The Realtors attributed the
drop to "uncertainty over if and whether the economic recovery is coming.''
· Single-family starts fell 2.0 percent. to 86)!.000
units at an lmnual rate, after a 0.8 percent increase in
August.
Multi-family starts fell even farther, down 2.9 percent to a 165,000 rate. New apanment construction
was fiat a month earlier.

row means the housing industry is not expected to
rebo1111d for at leas1the-rest-ofthis year," Michael K.
Evans, head of a Washington economic forecasting
service, said in advance of the report
Fixed-rates for 30-year conventional mortgages
fell from' 9.15 percent at the beginning of September
to 8.82 percent at the end of the month, according to
weekly surveys by the Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corp.
Also providing mixed incentives for builders were
housing sales a month earlier.
The Commerce Department said new home sales

IIOT $779

OVER25

I •

.

'

June-October period of 1980.
~- The housing industry began emerging from the
recession last Febrpary but its recovery .has been
tepid. For the fust nme months of the year, starts are
19.4 percent below those of the same period of 1990.
The report did contain one bit of optimism, however. Applications for building permits - often a
barometer of future activity - rose 2.7 percent after
a 5.2 percent loss a month earlier. Applications had
risen each mpnth since February before the August

N~T$199

S9Q9

2 Seclton, 14 PogH 25 cento
Allulllmodlo Inc. Now~per.

'

: Copyrll!htod 1991

~.

SMOKE GLASS TOP, 6 NAVY
BLUE CHAIRS, BRASS FRAME

••

i

I

OAK &amp;EBONY DRESSER •
MIRROR • CHEST • 2 NITETABLES
-,HEADBOARD &amp; FRAME
Not $2279 , · . ~847

Low tonight in mid
40s. Saturday, chance of
rain SO percent.

'

I

Charley Smith returned home
recently from Holzer Hospital and
is reportedly improved.
Mrs. J.R. Murphy was a Tuesday dinner guest 'of Robert Murphy
and Robbie.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp were
Sunday afternoon visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Charley Smith and Mr.
and Mrs. Kevin Knapp and family,
and Mr. and Mrs. Charley Knapp.
Mrs. Daniel Worley, Stacy,
Daniel and Stephen, Daniel s,
w·.Va., were weekend visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith.
·'

K-D, J.S ·
•

I

i

Smith returns
.from hospital

Pick 3: SSO
Pick 4:6441
Cards: 9-H, Q•C;

Page4

·BECKY DRENNER

Consilnio goes to Tennessee
Patty (Sexson) Consilnio, formerly of Meigs County and a grad:
uate of Eastern High School, has
moved from Oak Ridge, Tenn., to
California.
She was relocated by her
employer, Hertel Cuui~g Technolo~ies, to manage the remote
locanon in San Diego.
Her responsibilities include .
order entry, shipping, quoting and
customer service for the Western
Region. In April of this year she
was the only woman first in customer service and was awarded a
trip and other gifts . She now
resides in Oceanside with her husband, Joe, a second-degree black
belt who teaches Kenpo Karate.

jaw, was bro)(en by two bodygu~.,,
in a hotel .parking Jot .after a Nov.'''
16 concert in Biloxi.
. ..
The lawsuit, filed by lawyer~
Lisa Collums, with rhyme by colleague Jim Rose, said in part:

'

Wildwood Garden Club meets
The Wildwood Garden Club
met reccn~y at the home of Heidi
Elberfeld.
The meeting opened with devotions by Connie Hill reading about
..--"S'Cptember" and "Autumn." For
roll call everyon.e brought a dried
branch suitable for use in an
arrangement.
Kathryn Miller announced the
fall regional meeting to be held
Oct. 26 at Warren Local High
School in Vincent.
Evelyn Hollon gave a report on
the Chester Garden Club's open
meeting and !hat she had furnished
Oower arrangements this summer
for the Forest Run United
Methodist Church.
Get well cards were signed for
Hilda Yeauger and Betty Milhoan
who were in the hospital.
Connie Hill displayed several

squeezed much of the fun with the
fat from this country's .dinner
tables, say Julia Child and some
other culinary heavyweights.
They spoke at a fund-raiser featuring pizza topped w.ith mashed
potatoes and other gutsy heresies
· against the salt-free, cholesterolfree dictates of the past decade.
"We've been lectured to for so
long by the nutriiionl!l prigs," said
Michael Stern , co-author of the
"American Gourmet" cookboolc.
"We're all so scared of not being
nutritionally cortect we've been
·intimidated.' I
· '

IJ

WASHINGTON (AP) - Gun
control advocates, after suffering
an overwhelming defeat in the
House, concede that a ban on.semiautomatic assault weapons w1ll not
be part of this year's'crime bill.
. In the face of a shooting rampage in Texas that left 23 people
dead the House voted 24 7-177
Thur~y to reject the ban as part
of major anti-crime legislation
, pushed by President Bush and
atready passed by the Senate.
Funher work on the measure
was put over until ·Tuesday.
Even tholl$h the Senate includ·
ed a ban on mne f!lodels of assault·
type weapons as part of its bill, the

Even the relatively affluent
elderly are hurting this year
because income from their savings
has been pinched by the steep
decline in interest rates.
"To my way of thinking ,
they've got to peg Social Security
to more than inflation if they 're
interested in seein~ that people
who retire don ' t go backward,"
said Frank Kevra, 73, of Port
Orange, Fla., a retired mechanical
engineer who says hi s interest
income has fallen by $100 a montli.
The percentage increase
announced Thursday also applies to
Supplemental Security Income, the
welfare program that provides a
minimum income for poor people
who are elderly, blind or disabled.
The maximum SSI payment will
rise to $422 from $407 for an individual and to $633 from $610 for a
coup1e.

·1

"

-

••

-

The increase was determined by
comparing the Labor Department's
Consumer Price Index for the JulySeptember quarter with the same
quarter the previous year.
Through September, the annual
rate of consumer inflation in 1991
has been 2.9 percen~ far below last
year's 6.1 petcent rise .

Gunm.an described as loner
KILLEEN, Texas (AP) - Hundreds of people .went to memorial
services for 22 victims of a suicidal
gunman described by police and
former acquaintances as a vindictive loner who may have nursed a
violent rage against women.
Much remained a mystery two
days after George Hennard, a 35year-old doctor's son, drove his
pickup truck through the wmdow
of Luby's Cafeteria and began fll'·
ing two semiautomatic pistols at a
lunchtime crowd. The Wednesday
afternoon rampage ended when
Hennard, wounded by police fire,
killed himself.
Interviews with former associates revealed Hennard was a difficult man who had spent much of
his life wandering the world as a
seaman until he was thrown out of
the merchant marine in 1989 for

Two men jailed

smolcing marijuana.
"He was very vindictive," said
!siah Williams, a branch agent for
the National Maritime Union in
San Pedro, Calif. " He always
wanted to straighten out the score.
He acted like he didn't confide in
anybody or trust in anybody."
The Coast Guard, which
stripped Hennard of his merchant
mariner papers, released documen ts
Thursday stating he had undergone
voluntary drug treatment at a Houston hospital.
At the gunman's home in nearby Belton, his father said he did not
know what caused his son to go on
Wednesday's rampage.
"It was not drugs , that 's for
sure,'' said Georges M. Hennard, a
Houston doctor.
.
Meanwhile, Killeen began to
pick up the pieces of the worst
mass shooting in U.S. history.
Gov. Ann Richard s was to

attend a memorial service this
afternoon at the First Baptist
Church in Killeen.
About 35 0 people filled the
pews at St. Joseph's Catholic
Church Thursday night for song
and prayer.
Bishop John McCarthy of !he
Archdiocese of Austin rejected the
idea that the massacre was God's
will and said it should focus attention on societal problems.
" There are no words a clergyman can say that can allay the pain
and suffering and anguish that
marks this gatherin$," the bishop
said. " God didn' t Will the death of
the men and women of Killeen.''
One note of happiness was
sounded at the discovery of 19year-old dishwasher Mark Mathews, who had hidden overnight in
the cafeteria's large industrial dish:
washer, not knowing whether it
was safe to come out.

'

Two men are lodged in the Mid·
dlepon jail pending filing of theft
charges by Pomeroy Police.
Chief of Police Jerry Rou~ht
reported that early this mormng
Jeffrey A. Cochran, 26, Gallipolis,
and Terry 0 . Russell, 34, Vinton,
were arrested as they were prepar- ·
ing to remove money from the Sentinel newspaper rack at Big Bend
Foodland. Charges will be filed
later today, Chief Rought said.

ban, 247-177

70-vote margin of defeat in the House press sec reta~y, who was
House virtually assures its elimina- critically wounded 1n the 1981
tion from whatever compromise assassination attempt on former
bill emerges later, said Rep . Presiden_t Reagan.
·, .
Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., a key · De~~·te an all-out c~pa1gn 10
sponsor.
oppositiOn by the 261111D1on-mem"This was just a first step, we ber National Rifle Association, the
did not expect to win," said Se~ate included a five-day wainng
Schumer, whose measure would penod for the purchase of a handhave banned 13 11\odels of ass~lt gun in its package. T~e Hous_e
guns as well as th~ laJtC·Capaclty approved a seven-day ~31Ung. ~n--ammunition magazliiCs they use.
od, 239-186, last May 10 anuc1paThe crime bill, h~wever, sti!l" tio~ th_at it will be· folded into the
will have the fi!SI maJor new anti· ant1-cnme package.
.
gun initiative in years: a waiting
With an election year ~m10g up
period for !he purchase of a hand· and ~ouse members facm~ n~w
gun. Itbas been .dubbed lhe B~y ~onsutuents as a result of rediSinc~bill, for James Bmdy, the ~x-Wh1te · mg, many lawmakers took the pos1.

tion that one vote a year against the
NRA was enough, that two was too
many.
. ~ th
'Tm not a water carne_r or e
Nauonal R10e ~soctaUon, m May
I stood up ag31nst ~em ~d supported the Brady bill," sa1d R~p .
~~m~s. Sensenbrenner , R·:O,V•s .
Th1s ts bureaucratic overkill.
Gun ·control advocates acknowl·
edged that the NRA conducted a
more subtle, and more effecuve,
campaign this time, usin~ local
newspaper and gu~ magaz10e ads
to encourag~ theu members to
phone o~ wnte l.a':"m&amp;:~&lt;ers rather
than buytng t;elevtston ume to chal· ,
lenge them directly.

\~

'

CAFETERIA GUNMAN - Georae Hennard Is pictured In thi!
1981 El Paso County Sheriff's office photograph taken -after ' his
arrest for pOSRssloa ot marijuana. Hennard was the gunman who
killed ll people, and then hfmself, at Luby's cafeteria in Killeen,
Texas, Wednesday. (AP LlserPboto)

\1

,

...

�.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
PoJI1J!rOy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO Tl,IE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~MULTIMEDIA, INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

AMEMBER of. The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. Alllellers are subjecl lo ediling and must be signed with name,
. address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good tasle, addressing issues, 001 personalities.

Economics still a
gloo.my business
NEW YORK (AP)- "In the economic world," a noted authority
says. "prowess must be·slow."
The wnter was the British economist Alfred Marshall, and the time
was 1890. But he might just as well have been speaking to an American
audience in 1991, given the high levels of frustration and confusion that
prevail now.
The country is presumed to be emerging very slowly from a recession
whose causes and effects arc slill in dispute.
The ensuing recovery has been so tenuous to date that some experts
dim iss it as a mirage.
. ·
Even if better times lie ahead, many observers lament that little
progress has been achieved in freeing modem consumers, workers and
employers from the tyrnnny of the business cycle.
.
.
.
The record OOoks for the gast three decades show SIX recessiOns - Io
1960, 1969:'70, 1973-75, 198 , 1981-82, and 1990-91.
To a good many observers, this sequence provides little evidence of
progress in the effon by government policymakers and private researchers
to soften the bumps and jolts in the running of the economic machinery.
"There is no evidence that the economy has become more resilient
over time, or that recessions have been more self-correcting," says Robcn
Brusca, chief economist at Nikko Securities International in New York.
If it couldn't be avoided or even tamed, has the recent recession at least
accomplished some positive purposes?
Along with the pain and disruption they inflict, economic slumps arc
supposed 10 purge the system of accumulated excesses and imbalances,
and thus clear the way for revived growth.
·
On this point as well, the current verdict is mixed at best. If the pur·
pose of the whole process is to stimulate the job market, many observers
see not much cause for cheer.
If the goal in the latest crunch was to work off an onerous debt burden,
the picture looks equally cloudy.
But the news is better if recession is regarded as a necessary means of
cooling inflation down. As Brusca says, "The Dip side of the ba4 news on
the economy is the good news on inflation. In~tion bas dropped tO' an
extent heretofore unseen, at least since the 1960s."
Maybe, many analysts say, recessions could be better understood and
dealt with if they were merely repetitions of past downswings in the cycle.
But they aren't.
·
"The recession of 1990-91 has been a lot different from other postwar
recessions," says Rao Chalasani at Kemper Securities Group in Chicago.
"It followed one of the longest recoveries in history, which, more
importantly, was based on excess creation of debt rather than increasing
living standards."

Letters to the editor
Seeks support
. Carleton School/Meigs Industries will have a one mill three year
Je~y on the ballot on Nov. 5. The
The Carleton School/Meigs Industries Education Association would
appreciate a yes vote from every
umon member in Meigs County
Certainly in tbe last few months
we have been made very aware of
the need for unions to be supponive of one another. Most ·people in
our County have been directly
affected by the problems at
Ravenswood Aluminum, Meigs
Mines and Carleton School/Meigs
Industries. I'd like 10 try to clarify
some of the things th~t have been
happening at our agency in the past
few months. Because of drastic
cuts in services to clients of Meigs
Industries, our union and a client of
Meigs Industries filed a lawsuit in
County Court against the state of
Ohio for more money 10 keep our
progl'llm operating at a. quality
level. We won our suit and the
judge ordered the state to ·give us
money to bring our program back
up to the level it was before the
cuts. As is common in some lawsuits, an appeal was filed by the
state.
Thus we will not be getting the
money that the judge ordered the
state 10 give us until after the case
goes to appeals coon and we win
there,if we win there. This could be
a very long and drawn.out process,

taking up to as much as three years
to get a decision.
·
We need money now, and we're
counting on the voters of Meigs
County 10 recognize our efforts by
voling yes on our levy.
· These are the cuts have already
been made :(!) Job Placement Services for Adults (2) Speech and
Physical Therapy for Adults (3)
Occupational Therapy for Children
and Adults (4) Adapted Physical
Education for Children (5) Independent Skills Training for Adults
(6) Twenty Days cut from Adult
Calendar (7) Staff Hours and
Salary cut 12 (8) 22 of 41 Positions
Terminated.
As you can imagine our agency
and our students and clients have
suffered tremendously from these
cuts!
This is what is left to cut: (I)
Transportation (2) Hot Lunch Program (3) Physical Therapy for
Children (4) Carleton School.
(These arc not necessarily listed in
the order that they would come.
· Ycars ago a smllll parent group
fou$hl very hard to get services in
Me1gs County for thei r
children/adults with Mental Retardation. Now we need to fight to
keep them. Won't you help us?
Please vote yes for Carleton
school/Meigs Industries.
Melva Eblin,
CSMVEA President,
Rutland, Ohio

, .Proud band parents .
The theme for all of the 4-H
Clubs at the Meigs County Fair this
year was about things to be proud
of in Meigs Coumy.
I'm writing about one particular
group of kids and their inslructors
that we have in Meigs COIDity to be
Dtoud of. This group has worked
from July 10 the present to be the
best that they can be, and now i(s
paying off for them.
I'm talking about the Meigs
· Marauder Marching Band, they
have won numerous awards and
have qualified for state competition
five times in as many contests. For
all the band parents, friends and
neighbors who have been unable to
follow this group from competition

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to c9mpetition because of the distancc or whatever the reason, now
havq the opportunity to see these
ki~s perform ~lo~ to home. They
w1ll be compe~pg at.the Battle of
The bands 10 Pomt Pleasant on
October 19 at the High school. The
class
that wc ·will be in starts at 2 p.m.
Come C?" ¥eigs County let's show
these kids Just how proud we are of
them, Go and support them when
the~ take the field 10 do their fantasuc show for everyone. I guarantee, you won't.be able to stay seated once they start to perform .
They'll make you proud.
Very proud band parc~ts.
Carl &amp; Lue Shencfteld

_F_rld_a~~~o_c_to_b~er~1~8~,1~9~91~~----------~~------~----~P~o:m:e~ro2y~~~~ld:d:le~p:o~rt,~O:h:lo~--~-----------------------Th~e~D:•:IIy~Se::n:tl:ne:I~P:~~e__:3.,

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Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, OCt()ber 18, 1991 ·

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Financial Crimes EnlorcementNet-'
work, or FinCen, in the Treasury
Department. FinCen is a newagency that pulls together-the government's vast array of data on curren·
cy, banking and law enforcement
and runs it through computers to
search for money-laundering operations.
Here are some other techniques .
' FinCen is wise to:
_ Some food-stamp recipients
. trade their coupons for drugs on the
street. The drug delller then finds a
grocer who is willing to pay cash
for the stamps. The grocer Qlakes a
profit by buying the stamps for Jess
than face value and cashing them in
for full value.
-Some launderers make mulli pie advance payments on credit
cards generating a credit balance
of up' to $15,000. Then they bur
items against the credit, cash out
the card or request a refund from
the issuing bank.
- Drug delllers divide up their
cash among cohorts in amounts
that will not draw attention. The
a~complices deposit the money in
their accounts, mingling it with
legitimate funds. Then they wire
the money to various locations at

By Jack Anderson j
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and Dale'Van Atta
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the dealer's request, sprea~ing ihe
illegal money so far and w1de that
it is difficult to trace. .,.
- Several travel agencies have
been used to launder money. They
mix ill-gotten gain with their
income from ticket sllles and then
wire the money ,to an off-shore
account. Then it is wired back 10
the United States to the criminal.
- Automatic teller machines
arc a quick and easy way to make
frequent small deposits without
drawing attention. Banks are
required by law to report to the
government deposits of more than
$10,000, so laundered money ts
dropped into ATMs in ~maHer
amounts. Banks arc becommg w1se
to the ~ractice and are helping
authorities to nab launderers usmg
this method.
ON THE WAY OUT- Mo])utu Sese Seko, one of the greediest
dictators in the world, may soon
have Zaire yanked out from under
him. His people have finally mustcred the courage and power to
demand that he relinquish some of
his grip on the government. We
have been tracking Mobutu (or
years and are confident he won't
suffer in forced retirement, if that is
what his people finally demand of
him. He has a lavish townhouse in
Paris, a mansion in Switzerland and
a 16th-century cas~e in Spain. The
United States sends Mobutu millions of dollars in aid every year,
but few of those dollars trickle
down to the masses .
MINI-EDITORIAL- The Pentagon will have to make weapons
cuts to face the new world order,
but no weapons system, no mauer
how wasteful, will be given up
without a bitter battle. President
Bush has declared his support of
just about every weapons system in
the Pentagon pipeline. It doesn't
matter that the money is urgently
needed for economic and humanitarian purposes. Military procurement is still the same old story of
political pressure. corporate greed,
mili1ary tics , inside information
and fi nancial favors.

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years allo· have by now become so
rooted m her psyche that she actually believes them, and can easily
pass physiological tests designed to
detect gross and· deliberate lying.
But her share of blame is independent of whether she is lying or not.
When the legions of Norman
Lear's People for the American
Way, and the employees of Sens.
Kennedy and Mctzcnbaum, fanned
out across the country in search of
"dirt" on Clarence Thomas and
found Anita Hill, she agreed to furnish the committee with a state·
menton the assurance that only the
senators would sec it, and in the
expectation that her name would
never become public at all. In
short her deadly blow was to be
dcliv~rcd from ambush. She was
encoura¥cd to expect that Thomas
would • withdraw hts name qUietly," without ever knowing who
had destroyed him.
But now the Third Murderer
emerged from the shadows: the still
unknown individual (though you
can bet your bottom dollar it was a

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This was a broadcast happening
that riveted Americans like nothing
before. Not Army-McCarthy, not
Watergate, not Ollie and Iran-contra. Those were gripping television
dramas about them - revelations
of government people who committed crimes. This was about us
- the one Washington scandal that
was really about what was happening not just in government's workplaces, but ours.
·
Four of every 10 working
women say they have been victims
of some form of sexual harassment
on the job. That's why we watched
during workdays and worknights,
weekend days and weekend nights,
from our barber shops and beauty
shops, offices and warehouses, rcc
rooms and board rooms . ln the
name of getting ourselves a
Supreme Court justice, we wit·
ncssed norms of broadcast decency
being shattered by testimony that
was the crudest of srnut. This was
part Supreme soap opera, part classic tragedy.
We found ourselves in the iole
of SPectators at a bullfight, waiting
for the destruction that was
inevitable. And it came, as we
knew it would - wounds inflicted
by smears thrown from the Right,
wounds inflicted by smears thrown
from the Left, perrnane~t wounds
inflicted by Senate .wamors determined to win a political battle at all
cost. Their smears, unprovable yet

unrefutable, scarred forever two
lalented black Americans who had
lifted themselves from rural poor
circumstances to positions of pro·
fessional respect, and all we could
do was watch.
.Because Judge Thomas and Professor Hill spoke so convincingly,
our minds and hearts were captured
by the last person we heard. And
yet. ..
Men looked at Clarence Thomas
,Ji nd asked them selves' " If a
woman in my workplace fabricated
a harassment accusation against
me, could l ever prove it untrue?"
Women looked at Anita Hill and ·
asked themselves: "lf·l ever dared
to speak out agains1 someone .
who'd harassed me, wouldn't I be
subjected to .the same sort of
insults, hostility, character assassination antl innuendo?"

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William A. Rusher
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Kennedy or Metzenbaum staffer)
who betrayed Hill's confidence and
leaked her statement to the media.
That forced her to go public with .,
her accusation.
· The fourth contributor to this ·
appalling mess was the Senate
Democratic leadership, including
committee chairman Biden, which,
recoiling in terror before the ultrafeminist harpies of NOW, thereupon not only reversed itself on the
plausibility of Hill's decade-old
charges but decided that the investigation into them , must be wide
open.
What do you suppose is going to
go through the mind of the next
distinguished conservative Presi-. ·•
dent Bush wants to nominate for
the Supreme Court?
And " the beauty of it," as Jay
Gould once bragged of a business
deal, "is that nothing was lostsave · ..
honor."

So we fell into debate s bCiievc him, believe her. And while
we sensed from the outset that
we ' d never discover the whole ~
truth, without a shade of doubt, we
discovered searing truths about our
own workplace wounds. Fortunate·
1y, we were forced to see them m
time to treat them.
Long after the u g!ine.s~ and . . :
unfairness of this publtc amng of ,
the pri vatc lives of Judge Thomas '
and Professor Hill have receded,
the lives of working Americans
everywhere will be significantly
beuer.
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For seven days in October 1991, '
we shared an epoch of
belief/incredulity that left us with
new insights into the conduct of
prival.e matters in the public workplace. That is the endunng _contrl·
bution of this Tale of Two C1uzens: :
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Today in

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TodayisFriday,Oct.IB,the29lstdayofl99l.Thcrearc,74dayslcft ·

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By The Associated Press

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in the year. . . . .
)
Today's H1ghhght 1h Htstory:
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On Oct. 18, 1767, the boundary between Maryland and Pennsylvania, I ~
the Mason-Dixon line, was agreed upon.
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On this date:
•
In 1685, KingLouisXIVofFrancercvokedthe Edict of Nantes, which! ' :
had established the legal toleration of France's Protestant population, the ~ :
Huguenots.
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Toll free number listed for ·those with heart problems

At 5:10 p.m., Middleport unit went to Overbrook Center. Cora
Webb was transported to Veterans. At 5:30 p:i'n., Pomeroy unit
went to East Main Street and took Carolyn Russell to Veterans. At
10:54 p.m., Rutland squad went to Bachner Road. Gamet Bachner
was transponed to Veterans.
On Friday at. 2:57a.m., Tuppers Plains squad responded 10 State .
Route 124. Sanilra West was treated but not transported. At 5:10
a.m., Rutland unit and Co,umbia Township Volunteer Fire-Deparr-:ment went to Buck Run Road for a m010r Vehicle accident. Clyde
~les was taken to Holzer Medical Center, At 9:57 a.m., Syracuse
umt went to Worcbester Road for William Whitlock, who was treated but not transponed. ·

-Meigs announcements--

Thomas vs. Hill was therapeutic TV
Martin Schram
" It was the best of times, it was
the worst of times, it was the age of
wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch·of belief, it
was the epoch of incredulity ... we
had everything before us, we had
nothing before us, we were all
going direct to Heaven, we were all
going direct the other way."
It was. Charles Dickens must
have been trying to tell us. the Senate's tormented inquiry into the
sex ual hara ssment allegations
brought against Judge Clarence
Thomas by Professor Anita Hill.
It was, surely, the worst of
times: The tragic public destruction
of two private lives, forced before
us in the worst of ways, because 14
white male senators didn't care
enough about an initial allegation
of sexual harassment to insist that it
be fully investigated in the most ·
proper - that is, private - forum .
But it was also the best of times:
This was a National Consciousness
Raising. The public vetting of
Anita Hill vs. Clarence Thomas is
already causing CEOs, managers,
shopkeepers and workers everywhere to take a new look at their
· old views of sexual harassment both physical and psychological. It
has gotten us to talk openly about
things we mainly just whispered
about. We are all rethinking the
propriety of what we tolerated in
the workplace.

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EMS units answer calls

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·Who'sto blame for Hill vs. Thomas
A month ago, during the first
My first nomination may surround of hearings on the Thomas prise you. Every American who has
nomination, I predicted gloomily becn voting for a president of one
that "from now on Supreme Court party and legislators of the other
confirmations will resemble those bears a measurable degree of
contests in Communist East Ger- responsibility for turning the
many in the old days, when over- important deliberations of govern weight women in bathing suits mcnt into the kind of partisan brawl
used to wres~e in a tub of mud."
that is now commonplace.
At the time I wondered· if I
It is in the very nature of politimight not lie overstating the case a cal parties to oppose each otherbit; but I needn't have worried. The and not always fairly. by a long
grotesque travesty of a hearing sub- shot. In a two-party democracy, if '
.sequently staged by the Biden com- the voters dislike the performance
mittee to inquire into Anita Hill's .of the govermng party, they can
charges against Judge Thomas was and should replace it with the other
quite possibly the most sustained one. But the cute Idea (which polls
assault on fairne ss and sheer confirm most ~otcrs conscwusly
human decency ever waged by a endorse) of g1vmg the pres1dency
committee of the U.S. Senate. The to one party and the Congress to
only apology I owe is to the lady the other is tearing this country
mud-wrestlers of East Germany, apan .and making rational governfor comparing them to the masters ment Impossible.
of these revelling revels.
Narrowing our focus 10 the preAs we drag ourselves away from sent controversy, a maJor share of
this political compost-heap, the the early blame for what happened
least we can do is try to learn belongs sq u~cly to _Anita Hill. I
something from the experience. happen to thmk she IS lymg - or
How did we ever get into this more precisely that tbe fantasies of
mess? Who, precisely, is to blame? the woman of 25, which she was 10

Twenty de.endants
r
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d co~ts; R ay ·• E · D~v1s,
· · Cheshi_re, illers: conveyance
·
were
fined,
an
of a_ order tssu
· ed. ; Christopher s. B!II'lte,· • ~
d
th
d bo d h
W'lliamsport •• r..... . lation $50
an one o er paste
n w en . 1
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~ontrolled su stance, 10 da_ys in .· . Racine, .agravated menacing (two )
.
Meigs County Coon Judge Patrick and costs; Ricbard A. Peyton, ~:11- Jail, suspended 10 three, $50 and char~es), $100 and costs, 30 days- - i
The Trinity Church Community Development Committee· will
H. O'Brien -processed cases on ter, DUI, _
$4SO and costs, 30 days costs, one year probation; Margaret in jatl, suspended, one year proba-. )
sponsor a '!layoral debate at th~ church on Tuesday evening.
Wednesday.
in jail, suspended to three, 90 days · Cox, Cheshire, iUegal conveyance tion, disorderly conduct, costs; {
. Ac~rdmg to John Musser, who beads up the commiuee, the proFined were: Pa.ul Dasker, operator's license suspension,' pro- of a controlled substance, $50 and
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$
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Alb
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trespassinv,
30
fine,
sus.
. Pace . to .our questions to each of the candidates.
any, unproper passing, $10 and bation o one year,"""""" useaa- costs; Stev.en·.M. €ox, Middlepbrt, . pended;five days 1n jail, suspend- ::J
The ~and1dates wtll then be given three minutes to answer each
costs; Douglas Gloyd, Dexter, fail- ment, RTP school option instead of domestic Yi!)lence, $100 anct·costs. . ed, one year probation; Arthur 0 ,_,,_,1y,
question.
. · ure to control, $20 imd costs; Paul jail and SISO prfine suspended, · 60
. days Jg J'ail, suspe
· n.ded to four, R h R ·
D 1 $4 s
·
The candidates
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m11 . a e, amproper passing, aa ure to s1gna. costs, sea e. two· :years p~o,~,~!!,!Jn, alc'ohol costs, 30 days in jail suspende4 Iii ·. 1 _
deb~te penod m whtch to make a presentation. on the sub;ect of their
$10 and costs; Harold Weiss~ Birm- vioation, view l!IOYie and costs.
assessmenL ··'·· .:·
th
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1uies, · ...
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• . Eleanor K. Withrow, Shade, to three, ope~ator •s.. I'1.~egse sus- . .,i•.
uesti
·11
a1 be •~'J [f 0.1c • ., speed, $24 · and
ted
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ons w1 so .....en from the Door, and the pubijc is
coslli; . e hlinger, Pomeroy, seat attemp assa t, 10 ....ys m ,81 • passing bad cbecks~ $~5 and costs, pended for 51 x mobths::. al.~g)!ok::;:C
IDVlted to attend.
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belt violation, costs only; Lona K. .susp'ended, $100' and costs, .one restitution; Harold A. Persons, assessment, failed 18 drive in . 1 ·
Riffle; Pomeroy, expired tags, $10 year probation; James :M.'Benq;, Portland, domestic violence, $200 marked lanes, $20 and costs, ·
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and costs; Jack L. Stewart, Well· Jr., Racine, no safety helmet, $10 and cos!S: 60 days in jail, suspend·
· Forfeiiing bond was Marla 1
ston, speed, $21 and costs; Richard and cpsls; . Nornia· . Ratliffe, ed, one year probation,-·restraining Ro sh N Ha · w v speed
u • ew ven, · a.,
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Units of·Meigs County Emergency Medical Services answered . C. Scbultz, Lore City, speed, $24
$63.
calls for assistarice on Thursday and early Friday.
At 9:51 a,m., Tuppers Plains squad went 10 Limberger Ridge
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Debate SCheduled

Feds wise to money-laundering.schef!Ies ~
the most momentum these days is
the usc of unregulated financial
institutions including store-front
check-cashing services. Money
lau.nderers give· their cash to
cohorts who own some .of these
busmesses. Uns!l.speCllng cus·
tomers then come mto the stores to
cash checks. They get the dirty
money and the crooks get a le~itimate check !hat they can depos1t 10
their bank a~count withoutattractmg the attenuon of the law.
Casas de cambia- the currcncy exchange l)ouses along the U.S.·
Mexican border- are an even bet·
tcr way to launder money because
so much cash flows throogh them.
Federal officials estimate that up to
2,000 such money exchanges do
busmess on the border, and many
of them accommodate money launderers.
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A dru g dealer takes dollars to
the border exchange. The exchanger puts the dollars in his Mexican
bank and then wtres the money to
an Amencan bank where the crook
can get It.
Our ~ssociate Scott Sleek go~ an
education 10 money laundenng
from the federal cxpen on the subJCCt, Bnan Bruh. He runs the

Twenty defendants -ti.ned in Meigs Court_ i5~

Continued from page 1 ·

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WASHINGTON - When
authorities shut down .the corrupt
' Bank of Credit and Commerce
International, the world learned
that BCCI had laundered money
for drug lords and o~her sordtd
characters. But by the ume the law
caught up with BCCJ,J!lany money
launderers had already stopped
using the bank. !fley found craftier
ways to htde the1r bucks.
.
The challenge of the cri~inal
who makes 100 much money IS .10
fi~d a w~~ to mingle_that money
wuh legmmate funds and avmd
~alling attcn~on 10 the bundles of
til-gotten gam. That nteans that a
drug dealer can't walk up to the
teller window with $50,000 in cash
and expect to have no questiOns
asked.
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That means exerc1smg enough
creativity to keep one step ahead of
the law. Here's an example:
A fisherman , who sells drugs on
the side, hauls in a catch 3J!d ~en
exagge_rate~ the val~e of II wllh
phony mvmces, makmg 1l appear
as though he sold $50,000 worth of
fish when he sol~ only $20,000.
That way he has d1sgu1sed $30,000
m drug money as fish money. .
The laundcnng techmquc wllh

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SAR anniversary
)&gt;wings Chapter, Sons of the
American Revolution, will hold its
annual banqueCin honor of its 5~th
anniversary on Oct. 25 at6:30 p.m.
at the Sportsman Restaurant in
Athens.
Speaker for the evening will be
State Representative Mary Abel.
Reservations are required no
later than 5 p.m. on Wednesday.
Call 992-7874 for reservations.
PTO to meet
The Salisbury PTO will meet
Monday at 7 p.m. Candidates for
Meigs Local School Board will
speak. All parents are urged to
auend. A pumpkin judging contest
will be held pnor to the meeting.
Craft show Nov. 9
The Fourth Annual Eastern
High School Craft Show, in support of the Eastern Band, is
planned for Nov. 9 from 9 am. to 3
p.m. at the high school.
Quality craftsmen from Ohio
and West Virginia with exbibits
such as quilts, baskets, rugs and
dolls will be present. Also available
will be food, entertainment and
more. For information call 614985-4231. The public is invited to
attend.
Trick or treat slated
The Chester Volunteer Fire
Department has scheduled trick or
treat on Oct. 30 from 6 10 7 p.m.
The siren will sound to start and
stop.
Adult education class set
An adult education class for basketball officiating will be held
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at Meigs
High School. For further information contact Dave Jenkins or any
other local basketball offiCials. The
class is sponsored by the Athens
Basketball Officials Association.
Fall meeting reminder
Meigs County Garden Clubs are
reminded of the upcoming fall
meeting on Monday at 7:30p.m. at
the Meigs County Extension
Office. Officers of all clubs are
urged to attend to draw for the
schedule for the Chrisunas flower
show to be held Nov. 23 and 24 at
Royal Oak Resort. New officers
will be installed and Janet Bolin
will be demonstrating new trends
in arranging for the Star Club. The
Middlepon Amateur Club will host
the meeting.
Halloween party
The Alfred Community Halloween Party sponsored by the
Alfred United Methodist Church
will be held Nov. 26 at 7 p.m.
There will be a fun house, treats
and refreshments. The public is
invited to auend.
Trick or treat
Trick or treat will be held in the
Portland area on OcL 30 from 6:30
to 7:30 p.m. Those wishing to treat

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213·860)
Publi1hed every an.emoon, Mond1y
through Friday, Ill Court St. Pomeroy,
Ohio by lhe Ohio Valloy p.;bliohing
Company/Multimodia Inc., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769 1 Ph. 992·2156. Socond clau
postage pnia at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member: The Aaoc:iated Prcae Inland
Dally Prcu Aaa«iatlon and the Ohio
Newapa,Pcr AaaociaLion, National
Advcrti11ng Repreacntative, Br1nh1m
Ncwapapcr Salea, 733 Third Avenue,
New YOrk, New YOrlc 10017.
POSTMASTER: Send add1&lt;11 changoo to
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
'Po""'"'y, OHio 4ll769.
. SUBSCRIPI'ION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route
Ono Wcck..........................................$1 .60
Ono MonLh .........................................l,8.95

the children should tum on front
porch lights.
Meet the candidates slated
A "Meet the Candidates" night
is scheduled for Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. at Trinity Congregational
Church, Second and Lynn Streets,
Pomeroy. The public is invited.
This will give the public an opportunity to bear the three candidates
· for mayor and to learn of their
positions on various projects.
To begin meetings
The Harrisonville Senior Citi·
zens Club wiil begin its winter
meetings and suppers at noon on
the dates set for them. The first
meeting and covered dish dinner
will be held Tuesday at noon at the
townhouse. All members are urged
to attend.
New number or dog warden
Effective immediately the new
home phone number for the Meigs
County Dog Warden is 992-6833.
The dog pound phone number is
the same.
Commissioners to meet
The Meigs County Commissioners will meet in special session
on Monday at I p.m.
Trick or treat
Tuppers Plains will observe
trick or treat Monday. Oct . 28,
from 6 to 7 p.m., Mark Boy~ 1 c~ief
of the Tuppers Plains Fire' uepart'
ment. announced today.

Hospital news·
Veterans Memorial Hospital
THURSDAY ADMISSIONS •
None.
THURSDAY DISCHARGES .
William Finkenbinder, Ted Hatfield, Alice Chapman, and Benjamin Smith.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges ()ct. 16 - William
Buchanan, Larry Craycraft,
Andrew Elcess, Mrs. Keith Errett
and daughter, Betty Gaul, Darrell
Herdman, Vesta Hurt, Bradley
Sayre, Donna Stewart, Mrs. Dale
Teaford and daughter, Kimberly
Thompson, Juanita Whytsell and
Jesse Wilson.
Births Oct. 17- Mr. and Mrs.
Christopher Bates, daughter,
Sciotoville. Mr. and Mrs. Michael
White, son, Letart, W.Va.

heilrd two members report that they
Sandy Iannarelli, president, Margie Blake, Kathy Reed arid
had received telephone calls from requested that informational mate- · Cindy Oliveri for their work .in
re~idents seeking some financial rial be made available locally for
staging food festivals IQ Blake and
help in handling problems relating members of the division's speak- Reed for providin~ refreshments to
to heart ailments.
ers' committee so that it will be on turkey walk particapants.
.
' The discussion brought out that hand .wben speakers need it in conOthers at the meeting were Dr.
funds raised by the Meigs Division junction with their appearances Wilma Mansfield, Joan Tewksbary,
are designatea for research iiffil ~before various. organizations. Orga- Rhonda Dailey, Alice Wolfe, Ida
the amount of money raised nizations wishing a speaker from Diehl , Betsy Horky, Nora R1ce,
through various activities would ·the Meigs Division may call Bob Denver Rice, and John Costanw.
not be adequat~ to provide any Hoeflich, 992-5292.
notable financial h~lp for people
Millie Midkiff, treasurer, reporthaving heart ailments.
. ed that $2,593 has been collected to
Pick 3 Numbers
Gerkin said that a toll free tele- da~ from the organization's recent
5-5-0
phone number is available for tutkey wallc with additionlll pledges
(five, five, zero)
Meigs residents who need special forthcoming.
Pick 4 Numbers
aid. She pointed out that the staff at
Thanks were extended to
644-1
the location of the phone in Colum(six, four, four, one)
bus is well versed in what ai~ programs are available and might be
COLONY THEATRE
able to refer residents seeking help
South Central Ohio
to a source through which help
Tonight, becoming cloudy with
could be provided.
That toll-free number is 1-800- a chance of rain. Low 40-45. The
chance of rain is 40 percenL Satur282-0291.
Reporting on the school jump day, cloudy with a chance of rain in
rope fund raising program to be the morning, Decreasing afternoon
held in the schools, Gerkin stated cloudiness. High 50-55. The
that Eastern High School, Salem chance of rain is 50 percent in the
Center Elementary, Port Elemen- morning and 20 percent in the
.
tary, and Southern High school afternoon.
Extended
roreeast
have agreed to participa~ and sevSunday through Tuesday:
eral others are expected to join iii
Fair except a slight chance Qf
the activity.
showers extreme northeast on Sunday. Lows mostly in the 30s. Highs ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
55-65 Sunday and Monday 'and in
ADMISSION $1 .50
the 60s Tuesday.
446-0923
.
nieces.
Services will be I p.m. Sunday
in the· McCoy-Moore Funeral
$3.00
$3 .00
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
BARGAIN MATIMEES SATURDAY I SUMOA'f'
Home, Vinton, with · the Rev.
B!ltGAIN NIGHT IUESOAY
446 4524
. ~. ' ~ •.
Robert Hersman offiCiating. Burial
will be in Pine Grove Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Saturday from 7-9 p.m.
Military graveside rites will be
conducted by Vinton American
Legion Post 131.

Lottery numbers

_ _ Area deaths-Alvin P. Russell

•
•

__,
·.•
•

•

·.

••
·~·•

Weath er

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Alvin Phillip Russell, 68. Vinton, died Thursday at his residence.
He was a retired mechanic for Bob
Evans Farms, a World War II
Ann y veteran and a member of the
Gold Wings Motorcycle Club.
Born Feb. 27, 1923 in Meigs
County, he was the son of the late
Charles Dale and Phyllis Rusche!
Russell. He was also preceded in
death by his wife, Burvena (Dtilch) Ran&lt;Jy Barcus
George Russell, on Sept. 8, 1990,
and by a sister, Ruth Russell.
Randy Barcus, 3S, of Bidwell
Survivin~ are a brother, Don
died Thursday, Oci. 17, 1991 in
Russell of B1dwell; six sisters, Mrs. Columbus.
Ray (Bert) Lawson of Bidwell,
Funeral arrangements will be
Mrs. Roben (Julia) Knight of Ger- announced later by the McCoyAn action for dissolution of mantown, Mrs. Bill (Jylonda) Allen Moore Funeral Home, Wetherholt
marriage has been filed in Meigs of Bidwell, Mrs. Harve (Gertrude) Chapel, Gallipolis.
1
County Common Pleas Court by Ferrell of Bidwell, Mrs. Robert
Mamie Dawn Harmon and James (Diana) Hersman of Bidwell, and
Mrs. Elmer (Susie) Robinson of
E. Harmon, both of Dexter.
Portsmouth; I 0 nephews and 14

..

' '

.

"
'

.. .
,.

·Dissolution sought

fJ3~cfcy, Sliaron_, Judy

aniSfiefta

Are Pleased To Welcome
The Addition of

l(ris Chadwell &amp;

Raena Eblin
To The Staff of

CLASSIC CUTS
318 North Second Ave.

Middleport

992-3667
NEW HOURS ·
.Open Monday 12 Noon-8 p.m.
rt'uesday &amp;.Wednesday 9 a.m.-8 p.m.
Friday &amp;Saturday 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

NOW FOR ALIMITED TIME GET A
BEAUTIFUL, .RAND NEW 1992 HOME
WITH FIREPLACE, CEILING FAN,
CATHEDRAL CEILING AND BAY WINDOW

AT AHOT PRICE

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80x14

PRICE '
'
Daily......... ...................... ..........- .. 25 Cen1a

SubiC'ribcn not dctirin(J Lo pay the earri·
cr may remit In adv1nce direct to The
Calllpolia Dally Tribune on 1 3.6 or 12
mon~h bui1. Crodi~ will bo givun canior

JUNCTION

11.33' 595

IETWEIN

The,Farmers Banfl Travel Clull ·
Is Pleased To Announee Two
Fabulous
.Jioli-'a' Trips
. ·,.., ,.....,
~

' ,·

,.,..s~.

1 ,

~\.

·

r-•

'

\

~J

OGI.EBAY FESTIVAL OF LIGHTS. ~1&gt; · •
.
NOYEMB~~_17, 1991
. ~, ' , . "''-j:-;

Travel with us to WHEELING, WEST VIRGINIA to enjoy tour~., join in
CHRISTMAS activities, and sec the most gorgeous Christmas light display
in the area!!!
Keep busy with the many planned activities, or just relax and sonk in
the festive Christmas atmosphere at your leisure.
Stopping al St. Clairsville Moll for shopping and lunch on your own.
Back on the bus at 2:30 to Wheeling, we will cat at Mellman's Carcteria
(price included in trip). After dinner we will have a private guide step on
our bus for the tour· of lights.
· .... Leave Fanners Sank at 8:00a.m. Stop for breakfast.
Return to Pomeroy 11 :00
Price only '45 per person
Reservations due by November 8, 1991

CHRISTMAS SHOPPING IN CINCINNATI, 01110
DECEMBER 4, 1991
An exciting shopping trip to one or \he area's l~.rgcst mulls. You will
have over 250 ·storC8 to ehooec ftJIPius other outlet malls in the area.
After your shopping adventure, yt
\ated to a ':"ondcrful meal ut
the frog leg capital of the w•tJ.M li •• ouston Inn. Th1s restauru~t spc·
ciallzcs In steak and seafood ulfd has one of the best salad lours ynu II find
anywhere!
Departure ume- 6:30 a.m.
Price: '45 per person
Reservetlons due by November 22, 1991

(t:lliD

FALL FIREPLACE
SPECIAL

ono Ycor......8i.iiili'L'E'coP:Y·--....$8:1.2o

each week .
No aubaaiption1 by mail permitted in
arou where home canier tcrvice l1
available.
Mal18ubtcrlptlon1
lnaldo Galli• Coant;y
13 Wccka.........................................S2t.M
26 Wc&lt;b .......................................... $43.16
52 w..~w .......................................... l84.76
Oullldo Oallla County
13 Woob., ........................................$23.40
26 Weob .......................................... l-45.!50
52 WHb ...:.... ....... ..... :.......... ........... $811.40

A toll-free telephone number is
available for ~dents having special problems associated with heart
conditions, Susan Gerltin, field representative, told Meigs Division ·of
the American Heart Association
board members Tuesday.
Gerkin meeting with the-board
. at Veterans Memorial Hospital

-·•

SJ9217
~":.u,
240 llllC dooo 11.7SUPI
ltlo.

OPEN
. MON.·SAT.
8:30·8:00
CLOSED
SUNDAY

LOGAN
AND
385-4367
NUSONVIW
"WHIRl $ERYKI MEANS YOUR sansf ACTION•

FOR MORE INFORMTION CALL JoANNE WILLIAMS
AT

,

Your Bank~~. .
Fo

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company
211 Wtot Seca~ Str. .l
P. 0 Box 121
Pomeroy, OH. 45718
114-882-21311

Route 7
P. 0 . Bo• 339

,

Tuppers Plains. OH . 45783
614-667-3161

•·.

..

�Friday, October

·The' Daily Sentinel

· ~· Sports

.

~

By RISCK. GANO
AP' pof4Writer
. '
GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) - It
was the kind of game Mike Ditlca
relishes. His Chicago Bears
defense was dominating and his
offense was effective enough to
produce another down-in·the-dirt. .
grass-stained victory.
And once again the victim \vas
the hapless Green Bay Packers, .
whose offense, once regarded as
the most innovative in the NFL,
was embiurasingly inepi.
''It ain't pretty. It wa,s a tough
game, it was a good win and I ain't
apologizing," said Ditka after
Thursday night's 10.(} victory over
the Packers.. "And I ain't giving it
back. ·
"We' were just exuemely ready
and prepared for this team, this
game, this outing. A week off
helped us mend up our people, and
that assisted us on defense. especially."
·
·· Consider the Packers' pathetic
numbers. Five ftrst downs, includ·
ing only one in the first half; 138
total yards; and a deepest drive that
only reached the Bears' 43.
Was tfie Bears' defense that
good?
·
It held Don Majkowski to only
three completions in 16 attempts
for 32 yards, a performanc~&lt; that
forced head coach Lmdy Infante to
replace 'hirn with Mike Tomczak in
the fourth quarter.
Or was Green Bay's offense that
bad?
"I really believe it was more of

·=- Braves enter World Series
:;. play for first time since 1958
By ALAN ROBINSON
AP Sports Writer
•
PITTSBURGH (AP) - First
: they wrote asequel to "Gone With
·• the Wind." Now the Atlanta
Braves have rewritten the history
books - ·and the storybooks.
'
What else tan Atlanta take in
·• one year?
••
Would you believe the World
• Series?
,
"There isn't one person in this
stadium who'd have believed in
April that they'd win their division,
·• let.alone Game 7 here," a disbe·
• lieving Andy Van Slyke said fol lowing the Braves ' decisive 4-0
victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates
in the National League playoffs
Thursday night.
They'd been shut out of the
World Series since 1958, when
they played in Milwaukee during
the Aaron-Matthews-Spahn years,
but the Braves literally shut the·
Pirates out of the series. Three of
the Braves' four victories were
shutouts as baseball's best regularseason team failed to score in the
fina122 innings overall and the last
27 in Pittsburgh.
"You wish for shutouts, but
that's awfully hard to do," Braves
manager Bobby Cox said.
"Who would have thought we'd
get shut out three times?" Van
Slyke said. "We're not slouches.
We underachieved, but they have a
· · great pitching staff.''
They were a last-place team the
last three seasons.
.
"People sa1d we were out of tt
at the All-Star break, but we ke~t
batthng . They satd we couldn t
. catch the Dodgers and we kept bat·
. . tltng. This tS a learn that won t gtve
up," NL batting champion Terry
'

.

.

.'

Major league playoffs

Colpry

In the NHL. ..

American League

1

t.oc Anacte.

Winnipq:

WALES CONFERENCE

Sundly, OcL J3

M.inneaota H, toronto 5, Minnesota
wiJu aerie~ 4· 1

National League
Wednttday, Oct. 9

PUuburah S. Alknta 1
fhurtd&amp;J, OcL 10
Atlanu l, PitUbulJh 0

Palrlck Di vision

Team
Washington

W L T PU. GFGII
5 I 0 10 25 18
Pirubut&amp;)l ..... 41 1
92924
New Jersey
4 20
82518
N.Y. Rangers
4 4 0
8 2227
N.Y. hland en . 2 31
52428
l202)
Philldclphia .... 231

Saturday, Oct.12

Adami Division

ALlanu 10, Pitubur&amp;h 3

Sunday, &lt;Xt. 13

Pitubwgh3,"Atllnta 2, !Oinning•

Monday, OcL 14
Pitu:bur&amp;h \, AtlanLI 0
Weda01day, Ott 16
Alltnu 1, PitUbWJh 0
Thui'ICby, Oct.17
AtlantJ 4, Piasb&amp;a!'Jh 0, Atlanta winJ
acrica4-3

WORLD SERIES
Saturday, Oct. 19
AtlanU (Olavine :Z.O.ll) II Minneacta

(Monio 18·12), 8:29p.m.
Su1dly, OcL 20
Allanll (Avery 11-8) 11 Minnesota
16-9). 8:40p.m.

Momrea1
Hartford
Boston

~­
Buftalo

T.......y,Ocl.l!
Minne.ou (Erickson 211- B) at Atlanu
(Smo1tz 14-13),1:19 p.m .
·
Wtdnuday, &lt;kL 11
Minnel«111 Atlanta, 1:26 p.m. .
ThuradaJ, Oc:t.l4

Minncaott It Allanu, 8:26p.m., if
nc&lt;COifJI

Saturday, OcL 26
Allanu at Minn.Ciota, 8:26 p:m., if

._...,.

Sunday, Od.17
Alltnll at Minnesota, 8:40 p.m., if
neceaury

Next week's NFL slate

4 2 I
l I 1
I 3 2
.....

I 4

I

....... I 4 1

9 25 ll
7
4
3
3

16 13
16 22
19 22

Toam
Chicago
Minneao11

SL LoW..
Detrftit
Toronto
Vancouver

~

..,...,•••

..

~: ,
,.
,..
, ...

New YDJcu lllnd.ianapolia, 1 p.m.
Seattle at Pittlburgh, 1_p.m.
Minne~ou. at New EnSllnd, I p.m.
Tampa Bay at New Oduns, I p.m.
Atlantt at Phornil., 4 p.m.
Cleveland at San Plq~ 4 p.m.
Detroit at Sm FnnciJco, 4 p.m.
Karuu City at Derwer, 4 p.m.
Lo• Anacle~ R1m1 11 Los Anailc.s
Roldm, 4 p.m.
OPEN" DATE: Oallu. New YoU Oi·
antt, Philaddphi.a, WuJtinato:t

Norris Dll'lllon
W L T

Pis, GFGA.

.... .. 4 2 1

93224

.... .4 I 0
........ 2 31

8 21 14
6 19 22
52022

...... 25 0

4 2427

.... .. l 3 0

Smt1ht DlvlJion
... S 1 I 1t 26 19

.

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••

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••
••
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•
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:

GOOD CONDITION

Pit~~biUJ)l

Tonight's games

Monualat Buffalo, 7:35p.m.
New Jeney 11 Wuhinptn, 7:35p.m.
Bllffalo at Hartfwcl. 7:35 p.m.
Wuh.in&amp;ton at New Jeney, 7:35p.m.
Edmonton at· N.Y. hlandcn, 7:35
p.m.
Dctroh at Quebec, 7:3S p.m.
N.Y. Ransm at Pittabu!Jh, 7:35p.m.
MonutalatPhiladelphia, 1:05 p.m.
Toronto at WinnipeJ, 8:05p.m.
Cillall)' at Vancouver,I:OS" p.m.
0UCI80 It Sl. Loud, 8:35p.m.
Minnesota at Los Anlitde.~ , 10:35 p.m.
BOlton at San Jose, tb:35 p.m.

$13,500

MAX HILL'S COUNTRY
CORVETTES
614·247·4861

Playtr

Quart.erbadtl
A.tr. Com. Ydl. TD lnl.

Kelly, BW!.... ....211
Ka~•, Cltv .. - 1,9
MOOR H..........233
Deka,K.C.....l61
Elwoy, Don....... lll

1461171 14 5
1071139 5. 0
1431123 tO 6
1021116 9 4
1011315 6 2

Playor

1111111...
' AI~ Yda. A'I. LG TD
673 1.3 33

Okoye, K.C.......137 664 4.1 48
a.-. Den .......l:zl 154 4.4 63

R-

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No.
Blodol, S...
40
Jclf'uu, Hau. 40
!ol...... lad.......)l
Rcod BW!.
37
Th..,;u, B..tf...... JS

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Yda. A¥1· LG TD
61S 1S.4 12 2
S09 12.7 42 3
324~

SIB 14.0 l4
JS9 10.3 lO

0
3
2

NATIONAL CONfERENCE
Qoartarbocu

Plaf'l'
All. C-. Yell.
Youn.. S.F....... ll9 1111638
Rwlal. WII!L .. 167 1061346
•Alkmiii,Dol . ....214 1391611
McMah ..,Phil.l21 10 9lS
n-lot, Oian•190 1:141373

TD lo~
10 ' 7
9 6
I I
4 )
4 l

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Yda. "'I- LC TD

Playtr
AIL
E. Snlilh, 011. .. .141
B. Sondm, Det.ll2
81"", Wuh .... J~ l
HampUin, Oiantl 90
Walk•, Mlnn ... 104-

701
640
191
444
431

4.7
4.1
4.2
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4.1

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2.5

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44
49

llocel•on

No. Y•• Avlo LG TD
Irvin, Dal ............ :M S47 16.1 61 3
Plaj&lt;r

£, J..,.,l'lulx.... l4 SOC tU . S3
,.,..,..,DaL ..... lt 332 10.7 :16
R-.I.F.
.29 SU 20.! .71
. C1aL Wuh. ....... 29 '430 14.1 7l

2
•
7
2

'

'

HAROLD "Butch" BIIIIKER
FOR SALISBURY TOWNSIIP TRUSTEE
·Served In u.s. Navy ·Member Pomeroy Masonic

Lodge 164 •Salisbury 'IWp. Trustee · 4 Years
·Employed at Ohio Valley Electric Co•. tor 19 Years
•Involved with getting Block Grant tor Zuapan Hollow
Rd. and tor Naylor's Run Rd. tor next year •Five
Cemetarles well maintained •Believes In Dust Control
•Reildes at Belley Run Road with Wife and 2 Children
1'JN .Ma Who CaNS ''-' Jib Tollllla•ta
Paid for by candidate, HAROLD "Butch" llrlnktr,
32714 Bailey Ru" Rd., Pomtroy

•
'

Detroit 6, St. l.ouil3
Philadelphia 5, Quebec 3

8, N.Y. ~london 5
Ctucaao 4, Edmonton 2
Cal•ry 6, Tcm:mto4
Mmfte101.a 8, San Jose 2
Bo6lon J, V~ncouver, 3, Lie

·t

~nd

Influence Appreciated

BERNARD D. GILKEY

By RONALD BLUM
AP Sports Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - A season
with surprise. winners produced a
new-look Associated Press All-Star
tearit
Five players who didn't get a
single vote last year made the team
and four of last season's All-Stars
didn't get any votes .
First baseman Cecil Fielder of
the Detroit Tigers and outfielder
Barry Bonds of the Pittsburgh
Pirates were the only players to
rep~at from 1990. The five who
didn't get votes last year were thud
baseman T_erry Pendleton of the
Atlanta Braves, catcher Mtckey
Tettleton of the Tigers, designated '

FOR

SALISBURY TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE
NOVEMBER 5, 1991
Tried, Trusted, 30 Years Experience
Non·Partisa11, MemLer of SEnior Citizens, Veler111 ol World War II, lltt
Amric111 Leglott Post 128, VIW Post 9926
Paid lor by candidate, Bernard Gilkey, 390 Ash Sl., Middleport, Oh.

AT

Thursday's scores

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

;~_:

.~.

l 20 2l
3 ll 21
2 26 46

NFL leaders

Bemstine, SD .. lll 139 4.9 27
Hitp. Mio ........ 127 497 19 24

.•••,.•

8 35 21

TV Series "Dragnet"

Monday, Oct. 2t

n.... u, Bulf....126

I -

0

Your Vote

j

FAIRPLAINS
FACTORY OUTLET

$164°

PER MONTH

PH. (304) 372·2912

Take the short scenic
drive to Fairplain,
Ripley 177 Exit 132.
.6 mile 21 North
beside 84 Lumber and
save.

By SCOTI WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Nathen Baloy of Pomeroy and
Jane Hoffman of Letart, W.Va.,
were the overall winners in the Big
Bend Stemwheel Festival 5K Run
held this past we,ttkend, according
to an announcement today. Baley
turned in a time of 17:22 and Hoff.
man a20:45.
In the 14 and under age group
Dale Johnson of West Columbia
and Brett Boothe of Crown City
were 1-2, while Jim Pullins of Mid·
dleport edged hometown native
Bobby Johnson. In the 30-34 year
old class Ralph Searles was the
winner; and in the 35-39 year-old
division, it was Cody Boothe over
Randall Rice. The 40-44 year-old
class saw Tim Scarberry of Point
Pleasant take it over Fred Baloy of
Pomeroy. The 4549 year-old division winner was Ken Holley of
Gallipolis, and in the 50-59 year·
old class, To.m Smith of Pomeroy
was the winner.
Overall, Baloy was the male
winner. Following him across the
stripe were P.J. Chadwell of Mid·
dleport, Mike Carter of Gallipolis;
and Bill Toundas and Chris Sloan,
both of Pomeroy.
. In the female division, Jan Hoff·
man was the winner over Karen
Davis of Gallipolis, Tammy Engle
of Letan, W.Va., Cathy Berkhimer
of Pomeroy and Alison Gerlach of

Your Sunshine &amp; Redman
Manufactured Home Dealer

TH~CARDBOX
•
I~

Mile South of Tuppers Plains
On State Route 7 (look-.for Sign)

667·6092
BASEBALL, BASKETBALL, HOCKEY and FOOTBALL CARDS
'

AVARIETY OF 1990
BASEBAL_Land
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hitter Frank Tl)omas of the Chicago
White Sox, left-bander Tom
GIavine of Atlanta and reliever Lee
Smith of the StLouis Cardinals.
Julio Franco of the Texas
Rangers won at second base, while
Baltimore's Cal Ripken won for
the fifth time at shortstop. Ken
Griffey Jr. of the Seat~e Mariners
and Jose Canseco of the Oakland
A's com~leted the outfield. Boston
Red Sox s Roger Clemens won at
right-handed pitcher for the third
time.
Outfielder Rickey Henderson
and pitchers Bob Welch, Frank
Viola and Bobby Thigpen all failed
to get a vote after making last
year's team.

Baloy, Hoffman among winners
in Big Bend Sternwheel SK Run

You Can Own A New 199214'
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wf\at our detense was doing th3!1 ... yards.
.what their offense was doing,"
Majkowski fumbled a snap out
Ditlca said. "He (Majkowski) stiU of the shotgun and Richard Dent
scares the heck out of rne. I'm net · recovered for the Bears at the
going to say anything negative."
· Green Bay 14 with 30 seconds to
But the fans at Lambea~ Field go in the third quarter, Chic:aso just
were le~s tha~ pleased with th~ missed a rll'St down and settled for
Majik Man and the Packers. They Butler's 22-yard field goal with
booed at the end of the half as the 13:48 to play.
team left the field and again at the
endoftheg3q)e.
·
Trailing 10-0, the Packers
One of Majkowski's longest
apparently
recovered a Chicago
completions was overruled by
fumble
on
a
punt return early in the
instant replay when it showed tight
end Ed West had stepjled out of : fourth quarter, but il whistle while
the ball was loose ~lew the play1
bounds: It was that kind of night,
"When you have that, I think dead and allowed Chicago to mainit's tough on a quar(erback. You t~in possession. Field judge Don
begin to try to make things happen, Orr admitted after the game that he
you force things," said Bears blew the whiStle too soon on the
play. _
linebacker Mike Singletary.
'
· 'The Bears, whose ftrst two pas·
Chicago's offense, meanwhile,
sessions
of the game ended on a
got only one touchdown, but that
fumble
and
interception, finally
was enough as the Bears beat the
scored
when
Harbaugh hit ThornPackers for the 11th time in their
ton
for
the
score
with I :44 left in
last 13 games;
the
frrst
half.
Jim Harbaugh's eight-yard
touchdown pass to James Thornton
late in the..secon.d quaner and
In Sunday's games, the New
Kevin B,utler' s 22· yard fteld goal York Jets play at Indianapolis,
early in \he fourth sent the Bears Houston is at Miami, Seattle plays
(5-2) to victory after two straight at Pittsburgh, Minesota visits New
losses.
England, Tampa Bay is at New
The Packers fell to 1-6 with Orleans. Atlanta plays at Phoenix,
their fourth straight loss and their Cleveland visits Sail Diego,'Detroit
lith in 12 games dating back to plays at San Francisco, Kansas City
last season. Green Bay hasn't been is at Denver, and the Los Angeles
1-6 since 1986.
Rams play the Los Angeles
"It wasn't pretty, but I don't RaiderS.
·think a lot of the Packer-Bear . NFC East teams are off and the
games are," said Harbaugh, who week concludes Monday .night with
completed 18 of 29 passes for 142 Cincinnati at Buffalo.

FUMBLES I!(JNT -With Green Bay's in Tb·~ay night's game ag~nst th~'host.r.d!~ ·. ·
Charles Wilson stopping in his tracks to snag . ers, wh1ch the Bears won 10-0. Bailey got to his
the pigskin, Chicago punt returner Johnny Bai· feet secoads later and recovered the punt. (AP)
ley (22) roDs on bis back arter fumbling a punt

Lakota comes up short in tight
·games;·Phalin, Hawley lauded ·

By RUSTY MILLER'
AP SportS Writer
West Chester Lakota can't seem
to catch a break.
Two weel::s ago, coach Ken
Smith's T-Birds trailed 13-10 in
overtime against Fairfield and
failed on two shots to score from
the one-yard line.
The AP team was selected in
. Last week, Lakota trailed Milnationwide voting by sports writers ford 26-24 in the final seconds of
and broadcasters. The closest race regulation and had the ball at the
was ~t catcher, where Tettleton one. Smith decided to kick a 17beat Brian Harper of Minnesota 41· yard field goal, but the snap was
36. There were no players on the bad and kicker Bill Silva had to
team from the AL champion Twins kick the ball as it sat sideways on
or the AL East champion Toronto the grass. He got.it over the line of
Blue Jays.
scrimmage, but under the crossbar.
Only two clubs had more than
Elsewhere around the state, Matt
one player. Atlanta, the NL West Leopard of Dayton Carroll set a
champ, had Pendleton and Glavine. school record with 334 rushing
Detroit, which finished tied for sec· yards on 39 carries and scored on
ond in the AL East at 84-78, had runs of 54, 45, three and 36 yards
Fielder and Tettleton.
in a 42-21 victory over Lemon·
Just two .National Leaguers Monroe; Orwell Grand Valley cor·
made it among the position players, nerback Don Childs was Middle·
Pendleton and Bonds.
.
Cardinal's leading receiver,
After catcher, the second-closest field
intercepting
three passes and
voting was for designated hitter. returning two for
in a
Thomas got 49 votes, beating Paul 41 -6 victory; Elyriatouchdowns
Catholic's Jeff
Molitor of the Milwaukee Brewers
scored four touchdowns in
and Fielder by 10 each. Thomas aVerhoff
42·0 victory over Oregon Stritch;
also got 48 votes at fll'St base and Grafton Midview ' s Chris Riddick
they didn't count toward the DH rushed 31 times for 210 yards and
total.
three scores in a 21·14 victory
Ripken, who hit .323 with 34 all
over Vermilion;
homers and 114 RB!s, also was
Caldwe.ll 's Jerry Heddleson
selected to the AP team in 1983, averaged
28.8 yards on six carries
1984, 1985 and 1989. Clemens and scored
two touchdowns in a
(18-10) also made the team in 1986 41-13 victory over New Matamoras
and 1987, while Canseco wonin Frontier; Shawn Affolter threw
1988 and Tet~eton in 1989.
touchdown passes of 23 and 61
Ripken won by the largest mar- yards as Amanda-Clearcreek beat
gin , beating last year's winner, Canal Winchester 13-8; North
Barry Larkin of the Cincinnati Union's Ben Snively completed 24
Reds, 166-9. Glavine (20-11) had of 37 pass attempts for 29 I yards
the second-largest, beating Califor- and two touchdowns but his team
nia Angels' Jim Abbqtt 149-11.
still lost to Morral Ridgedale, 33Fielder, who tied Canseco for 14; Tim Driver rushed for three
the major league lead in homers scores and Brian McCluskey added
with 44, beat Thomas 95 1/248 at two in Bellbrook's 42-17 triumph
first base. Julio Franco beat the
Cubs' Ryne Sandberg 104-57 at
second base and Pendleton beat
Howard Johnsori of the New York
Mets 126-36 at third. In the outfield, Bonds got 117
votes, Griffey 80 and Canseco 79.
Toronto's Joe Carter was fourth
with 52 and Pittsburgh' s Bobby
CHEVROLET
Bonilla, the biggest star among the
players eligible for free agency,
was fifth with 40.

over Eaton; Lancaster's Steve Pos·
ton intercepted two passes in a 42-0
victory over Findlay, extending his
school record to 15 in his two-year
career;
Thornville Sheridan's Monte
Shriner carried 12 times for 192
yards and touchdowns of 61 and 82
yards in a 32-15 victory over New
Concord John Glenn; all-name
team quarterback Wince Morris
threw for five touchdowns and 220
yards in unbeaten Oxford Talawanda's 41 -6 victory over Lebanon;
Hamilton Badin's Brad War~o
rushed for 210 yards and 24 cam!=S
and scored twice in a 26-6 victory
over Dayton Chaminade-Julienne.
l'omeroy Meigs quarterback
Jeremy Phalin completed 17 or
25 pass attempts for a school
record 322 yards and two touch·
- downs, but his team still lost to
Wellston 30-29 when Chad
Ingalls kicked a 28-yard field
goal with 16 seconds left. Ti~tit
end Shawn Hawley caught mne
PbaUn passes for 130 yards and a
touchdown.
Marion Elgin running backs
Eric Clark and Doug Hesson combined for 302 rushing yards and all
but six points in a 38-12 victory
over another previously unbeaten

Repeaters Fielder, Bonds among
those named to AP All~Star squad

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IN LIGHT of the Atlanta
Braves' 4·0 win over the host
Pittsburgh Pira~es Thursday
night in the seventh game 'or the
National League playoffs, it may
seem that pitcher John S111oltz
(right) is taunting the Pirates'
Jose Lind, but he is really pointing to catcher Greg Olson (out of
view) moments before embracing
him in celebration or the Braves'
first trip to the Fall Classic since
the franchise was based in Mil·
waukee. (AP)

Scoreboard

' .

•

"
from ~ly in Game I until late in
Game·7.
The numbers tell all about the
Pirates' second consecutive playoff
defeat and their sixth in eight NL
playoff appearances: Bonds, ·.1~8
with no RB!s; Bonds, 0-for-16 wtth
runners in scoring position; Bonil·
Ia, one RBI : Van -Slyke, .160 and
no RB!s after the third inning of
Gamel.
The Braves themselves had a
playoff record 26-inning scoreless ·
streak as big hoppers Pendleton
(.167, I RBI), David Justice (.200,
2 RB!s, I missed base) and Ron
Gant (.259) had so-so series. But
they stiU won. ·
"We just didn' t get the hits,"
Pittsburgh manager Jim Leyland
said. "Getting shut out three times
says it for you."
The Braves made it tough on
20-game winner John Smiley from
the start, knocking him out in a
three-run first inning keyed. by
Brian Hunter's two-run homer. For
a team that had scored only one run
in its previous 27 innings, it
seemed liked an avalanche of runs.
"!had a decent season, but I let
my team down and it's going to
take a long time to get over it," ·
said Smiley, who al.lowed seven
first-inning runs in his two playoff
defeats. He lost 1(),3 to Smaltz in
Game 3.
The Game 7 crowd of 46,932
was nearly 8,000 fewer than the
night before. .
.
Some fans started boomg as
early as the ftrst inning.
"Here's a team that busted its
rear to win a national champi·
onship and they boo us? That's
weak," Bonds said.

Pendleton said.
Th e Pitates. had never lost a
-decisive Game 7 in the 104-year
history of theidranchise, but not
even the history books could save
them from some of the best post·
season pitching in history. Pitts·
burgh was shut out at home only
twice all season, only to be zeroed
out in three of their four home
playoff games.
Playoff MVP Steve Avery, a
two-time 1-0 winner, said the
Braves now will zero in on ·the
Minnesota Twins in the frrst World
Series matchup of last-place teams
from the previous season.
The Worst Series, err, World
Series begins Saturday night in the
Metrodome with the Twins' Jack
Morris to face probable Braves
starter Tom Glavtne. Sconng ts
optional.
"I think we showed we can
throw the ball a lit~e bit out there,"
Avery said. ' 'I'm sure the Twms
have a great stalf, but I don't think
that any team in the league can
match our staff now.''
"I don't know if anybody
knows how it feels to lose consistently," said Game 7 winner John
Smaltz, who allowed six hits,
struck out eight and walked one in ·
his first shutout of the season. "I
knowitfeelsgreattowin."
For Pittsburgh, it felt a lot worse
to lose to Atlanta than it did to
1990 world champion Cmcinnati in
1990. The Braves went from worst
to first, but it only got worse for the
Pir.ates this time around.
They managed only seven runs
in the final six games as their big
three of Barry Bonds, Bobby
Bonilla and Van Slyke went 0-for·
33 with runners in scoring position

The Dally

Chicago beats·~ Green ·Bay 10-0

Friday, October 18, 1991
. - Page-4

.~ ·..--------------------------~--~========~==================~
With Atlanta's 4-0 win over Pittsburgh, ·

•
•

1991

Middleport.
The integrated fmish saw Baloy
the winner over Chadwell (18:07),
Mike Carter (18: 18), Toundas,
Sloan, Scarberrry, Jim Pullins,
Bobby Johnson, Shannon Bamhan.
Fred Baloy, Matt Craddock, Jane
Hoffman. Phil Burgess, Ken Holley, Kyle Simpson, Ralph Searles,
Dale Johnson, Cody Boothe and
Brett Boothe.
Next in line were Tony Roush,
Mike Test, Chris Chapman, Ran dall Rice, Bryan Hoffman, Shane
Roush, Kevin Shields, Tom Smith,
Randy McMillin, Mike Marshall,
Karen Davis, Tammy Engle, Willie
Johnson, Josh McFarland. Jeff
Steele, Berkhimer, Roger Wood
and Gerlach.
The festival committe stressed
the importance of all competitnrs in
making this event a huge success
and the efforts. People's Bank of
Mason, W.Va., who provided
plaques and donations, Locker 219,
Foodland of Middleport, Added
Touch Beauty Salon in Middleport,
Domino's of Middleport, West·
moreland Family Care Center of
Mason; Bob's Market of Mason
and McDonald's of Pomeroy contributed to the event.
This year's event was a huge
success and this and other events
are already being organized for
next year's festival.

Tonight's games

A variety of Sports Memorabilia....
•Auto~aphed Baseballs of Players Past
and Present
•Autographed Picture Plaques
•Autographed Bats
•Autographed Jersey of Chris Sabo

MIZWAY.
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von FoR

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Eastern at Oak Hill
Hannan Trace at Kyger Creek
North Gallia at Symmes Valley
Southwestern at Southern
Gallia Academy·at Marietta
Athens at Jackson
Logan at Warren Local
Meigs al Waverly
Point Pleasant at Huntington East
Wahama at Buffalo-Pumam
Circleville at Hannan ·

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NOW TIIRU CHRISTMAS!

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Cleme~s. who led the AL in
ERA (2.62), innings (271 1/3),
strikeouts (241) and shutouts (4),
beat the Twins' Scott Erickson
109-43 at right·hander. Ericks~n
and Detroit's Bill Gultickson were
the only 20·game winners in the
AL.

team, Ma?lon ·Pleasant Clark had
177 yards on 12 carries and scored
three touchdowns, while Hesson
had 125 yards in 22 carries, scored
a touchdown, kicked a 33-yard
field goal and had five point-after
-kicks.
Hubbard's Mike Falhamer made
the most of the only pass he has
thrown in his high school career.
Falhamer, nonnally a tight end and
defensive end, took over at quarterback against Warren Champion last
weekend with the score tied at 7
and 20 seconds left. Falhamer
threw a desperation pass to Mike
Smith, who caught the ball at the
II and scored the winning touchdown untouched.
. FRANTIC FINISHES: Toledo
St Francis scored with 49 seconds
left and went for the tie against
Fostoria. But a bad snap from center forced holder Jim Burner to
scramble and his pass to Jeff Enck
in the end zone was batted away by
Tony Hammond, giving Division ll
No.I Fostoria a 28-27 victory;
McComb's Bryson Wiler th~elN a
two·point conversion pass to Andy
Nigh with 2:51 left and Cory-Rawson missed a 37-yard field goal in
the closing seco~ds df a 22-21 win
by the Panthers·

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OPENSUNDAYSI-5

�By The Bend
·~

'

FRIDAY
COOL VILLE - The Bethel
United Methodist Church west of
Coolville will' hold revival Friday
through Sunday at 7 p.in. ·nightly.
·Rev. Wendell Stutler and Rev. Paul
Hooks will be speakers. The Soutllem Hill Singers will also perform.
The public is invited to attend. ~
RUTLAND - Revival at the
Rutland Nazarene Church will be
held through Sunday at 7 p.'m.
nightly with Joe Jordan, evangelist.
Pastor Sam Basye invites the .public.

PERFORMANCE PREPARATIONS - Pictured are membe~s
or the"Beauty and the Beast" cast, 'l!hich will be performing on
Saturday, Oct. 19 at 8 p.m. and Sunday, Oct. 20 at 3 p.m. at the
Morris &amp; Dorothy Haskins Ariel Theatre. For more information
calls 446-ARTS.

Vegetarianism enters the
food bU;siness mainstream
By PAUL A. DRISCOLL
Associated Press Writer
-OAK PARK, Ill. (AP)- Vege wianism may not be in the mainstream of American cuisine, but it's
finally escaped the backwaters a
few devotees shared with cranks
and food·faddists.
As recently as the mid-1970s, a
young freelance writer wasn't able
to peddle an article about vegetarianism even to Chicago's alternati ve
ne~spapers·, which aimed its stories'at the young, hip and radical.
"There's no interest in this,"
Paul Obis Jr. said he was told.
The rejection resulted in what is
now the nation's most successful
magazine devoted to substituting
beans, tofu and sprouts for beef,
pork and chicken.
Obis - at the time a 23-yearold nurse, freelance writer and vegetarian of three-years standing took the rejection as a challenge.
He assembled a four-page
newsletter in 1974 and called it
"Vegetarian Times ." He also
rejected his oym-artiole.aOOdt~gc­
tarianism for the newsletter, and
insfead stuffed it with meatless
rectpes and a subscription card.
"I distributed it to 300 heal th
food stores in the area and got back
three subscriptions cards," Ob is
recalled recently. " That gave us an
Income of $9 after spending S17 to
get the newsletter printed.''
Today,' 'Vegetarian Times" is a
row:-color, slick publication of 100
pages or more with a circulation
approaching 200,000.
The ma~azine is riding the crest
of ibe nauon' s health and fitness
craze' and attracts vegetarians as
well as readers interested in cutting
down on their usc of meat. Ob is
sold the magazine a year ago "for
a good sum of money " to Min neapolis-based Cowles Media Co. ,
but saayed on as publisher and editor in Chicago.
;{here are an estimated 9 million
DC&amp;Ile In the nation who identify
iheinselves as vegetarians, said
Lige, Weill, president of Vcgetarian
Awareness Network, a not-forprofit group dedicated to spreading
the word.

There arc even more who eat
meat only occasionally or have cut
out red meat, Weill said.
Obis,.who estimates that half his
readers arc non-vegetarians, docs
not prdmote any particular type or
vegetarianism in the magazine.
Obis and a half dozen editors
work at the magazine's suburban
Chicago office and handle the stories and recipes supplied by a regular stable of freelance writers.
The magazine includes articles
on fitness, health, food and human
interest. Frequently the cover features a well-known person, inclu&lt;!ing in recent months children's
television host Fred Rogers. baseball manager Tony LaRussa, and
Paul and Linda McCartney, vegetarians all.
·
The recipes, Obis said, are
developed by longtime contributors, many of whom authored cookbooks.
Cynthia Cowan, who runs a
non -credit vegetarian studies program at Miami Dade Community
College in Florida, said shc frequently draw s on articles and
recipes from the magazine for her
classes.
Over the past few ·decades the
foods promoted for a vegetarian
diet have changed as new health
studies appear on the scene.
At one time, vegetarian recipes
featured nut casseroles and meal ~
high in cheese and eggs.
"The trend now is away from
dairy products and foods that arc
high in fat," said Obis.
The nation's interest in health
and fitncs.~ has given vegetarianism
a respectabili ty and acceptance that
wasn't there just a few years buck.
It's easier for a vegetarian to eat
out now . and there's a greater
selection of ingredients at groce ry
stores.
Obis' honeymoon 14 years ago
started off with a baked potato for
breakfast because that's what the
a'irlinc he was flying came up with
as a vegetarian meal.
" It just amazes me sometimes
to think about how commonplace
vegetarianism is becoming," he
said.

Black announces
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Country singer Clint Black is not
overly sympathetic with the thou sands of hopeful hearts he broke
wflen ~e announced his engagement to acttess Lisa Hartman.
.
( 'l tell 'em they're probably
gqing to go off and get married and
not check with me either," he said
in:a recent interview.
; Black announced hi~engagc ­
mg~~t to Hartman on Sept. ' 28, but

engage~ent .

. the wedding date depends on how
their sc hedules mesh in the coming
months.
"We might have to do it on the
run, " Black told the Nashville
Banner, "but we want to plan for
it. ..
Black's hits include "Loving
Blind," "Killin' Time" and
"Where Are You Now? " He was
named most promising performer
in 1989 by the Country Mu sic
Association.

lf&lt;vangeline Missionary
Group officers give reports
~at Thoma was hostess to the

Evingeline Missionary Group of

1110 Pomeroy Cllurch of Christ with
!

Kallly Haley presiding.
Jtoll call w~ answ~ on Harveat ~ Charldine Alkire gav~ the
-~~~ prayer and had devouons
Psalms and read "Have a
Day" stating ~ch day should
with the Lord and pleasing
Him.
b(fiCers reports were given and
ca(ds sent to Ruth Young, Robert
C~thers, Marcia Well and Polly

=

The Daily Sentinel
Friday, October
18, ·1991.
.
Page 6

:J

Community Calendar Items
appear two days berore an event
and the day or tbat event. Items
must bt'recelved weD In advance
to assure publication in tbe calendar.

Curtis.
A discussion on supplies for
Grundy Mountain Mission waE
held.
Kathy Haley had _the mission ,
study reading frot;n GUideposts 011 a
quiet person.
·
Pat Thoma gave the pmr.er for
the refreshments with D·ebbie
Alkire assisting in serving.
Also attending were Eileen
Bowers, Eva Dessauer, Debbie
Miles and Pauline Kennedy.

:,

HARRJSON,VILLE -.The Harrisonville Holiness Cha~tCI, Route
68&lt;\, Pomeroy, will have revival
through Sunday at 7:30p.m . nightly with Rev. David Neville, evan~elist. Rev. John Neville, pastor,
mvites the public.
MIDDLEPORT -Revival services will be held through Sunday
at the Middleport Church of the
Nazarene. Rev. Donald R. Dunn
will be the evangelist. Jim and
Cathy Sisson will be the song evangelists. Services will be held at 7
p.m. nightly and ·10:30 a.m. on
Sunday. The public is invited to
attend.
LONG BOTTOM - The Long
Bouom/Reedsville charge o( the
United Methodist Church will hold
revival services at the Long Bottom
Church through Saturday at 7 p.m.
nightly. Rev. Caroll McCauley,
South Parkersburg United
Methodist Church, will be the
evangelist, and special singing is
planned for each evening. Rev.
Charles Eaton, pastOr, invites the
public.
NEW ENGLAND - There will
be a halloween dance at New England on Friday from 9 p.m. to I
a.m. Country Roads will perform
and the public is invited to attend.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains VFW and Auxiliary
will have a round and·square dance
on Friday with music by Rocky
Mountain Bluegrass. The public is
invited to attend.
LONG BOTTOM • The Faith
Full Gospel Church in Long Bottom will have a hymn sing on Friday at 7 p.m. featuring the Dailey
Family and otller local talent. Pastor Steve Reed invites the public.
...
SATURDAY
RUTLAND - There will be a
round and square dance at the Rutland American Legion Hall on Saturday from 8 p.m. to midnight.
Hard Times Band will perform and
Ray Fitch is the caller. Admission
is $3 for adults and $2 for children.

'

SYRACUSE - A fall festival
will be held Saturday at the Syracuse Grade School. A soup dinner
wi ll begin at 5:30p.m. with games
from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Free entertainment begins at6 p.m. with Jan and
Kathy, The Rainbow Cloggcrs and
Doug Circle and the Band performing.

ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
Springs \)nited Methodist Church
will have a hymn sing on Sund;ty at
POMEROY - Movies to ·be 7 p.m. with the Hurmony .Gospel
shown at the Meigs County Public. Singers from Coolville. Rev. Keith
.
Library in Pomeroy o~ Saturday Rader invites thqiublic . .
and Sunday at 2 p.m .. arc ·
POMEROY - Carleton Church,
"Ramona's Bad Day" and :'Reluc- ·
tant Dragon." The movies will be Kingsbury Road, Pomeroy, will
shown at the Middleport Library on host special speaker Rev . Gene
Skaggs, on Sunday at 7 p.m. Pastor
Monday at 7 p.m.
.
Clyde Henderson in vi tes the pubSALEM CENTER . Star lic.
'
Gmnge and Star Junior Grangc.will
TUPPERS PLAINS - The St.
hold their annual Halloween Party
and Haunted House 011-Saturday at Paul United Methodist Church i~
6:30 p.m .. at the grange hall located Tuppers Plains will observe it s
on County Road I. near Salem Cen- annual homecoming on Sunday.
ter. Costume judging al'6:30 p.m. Sunday school is a 9 a.m. and worfollowed by a potluck supper and ship is at 10 a.m. with Rev. Sharon
TENNESSEE
games for all. Officers will hold .a Hausman. Carry-in dinner at 12:30
ERNIE FORD
conference at approximately 8 p.m. p.m. Afternoon sing at 2 p.m. with
the Fellowship Baptist Trio frmn
RACINE - The Racine First Vienna, W.Va. There will also be a
Baptist Church will host Home youth trio from St. Paul. The public
Missions on Saturday and Sunday. is invited 10 attend.
Carrie Bell Brown, Dayton Chris·
RACI NE - Ohio Volley Draft
tian Center, wifl be the speaker. A
potluck dinner will be held Satur- Horse and Mule Associution Trail
day evening at 6 p.m. and Sunday Ride wi ll be held at lO a.m. on
services ~ill be at 10:40 a.m. The Sunday . The ride- will be held a
quarter-mile south of Bashun Fire • RESTON , Va . (AP) - Tenpublic is invited to attend.
House on County Road 28 ncar nessee Ernie Ford, whose bass
Th ere will be a potluck voice boomed out on the millionRacine.
RACINE - There will be an
dinner
after
{he ride. The public is selling record "Sixteen Tons:· and
Alcoh!JHc's Anonymous meeting
invited.
on his TV variety show spanning
on Saturday at 7 p.m. at the Carmel
two decades, died Thursday after a
United Methodist Church on
.
POMEROY - The Meigs Coull· long illness. He was 72.
Carmel Road. Call 949-2952 for
Ford
died
at
6:15
a.m.
at
HCA
ty Genealogical Society will m.cct
information .
Sunday at 2 p.m. at th e Meigs Reston Hospital, where he had
LONG BOTTOM - There will County Museum in Pomeroy. The been ad milled on Sept. 28.
"Mrs. Ford was at his side, as
be a religious retreat for the public is invited to attend.
she has been throughout his ill· Women of Sacred Heart Parish on
ness," said hospital spokeswoman
Friday and Saturday at the Hackett
MONDAY
Claudia
Smith.
cottage in Long Bottom. The
POMEROY - "The Hoosier
Smith
said Ford had suffered
retreat will be conducted by Father Schoolmaster" by Edward Egglefrom
a
lengthy
liver disease. She
Robert Borer. For more informa- ston will be presented by Professor
would
not
disclose
the nature of the
tion and to make reservations con- Ronald· Grosh,. Superintendent Of
ailment.
tact Phyllis Hackett at992-2444,
Springfield Christian Schools, on
Ford became ill at Washington
Monday at the Meigs County PubDulles
Intcrnational Airport as he
SUNDAY
lic Library as a part of the "Heroes
BASHAN - The Ohio Valley and Heroines of the Ohio River was about to fly home to San Francisco following his attendance at a
Draft Horse and Mule Association Valley" series.
White House dinner.
will have a trail drive on Sunday
Ford, known affectionately as
beginning at 10 a.m ., one-quarter
REEDSVILLE - The Eden Unit"
the
ol' pcapicker" and "ol'
mile south of Bashan on County ed Brethren Church in Reedsville
Em,"
was host or TV shows in the
Road 28. For information call Mary will hold revival services Monday
1950s
and
1960s. He was host of a
Rose at 614-949-2822 or Tim through Oct. 27 at 7 p.m. nightly
nighuime
variety show on NBC
Bearhs at 614-992-7880. There will with Rev. Bob Wiseman, Point
from
1956
to
1961, then had anothhe a potluck dinner with meat fur- Pleasant , W.Y'a., as evangelist.
er
program
from
J962to 1965, this
nished by th e association.
There will be special singing eac h
one on ABC in the daytime.
evening.
Ford recorded more than 80
albums
during a singing career of
RACINE - The American Red
MIDDLEPORT· The First B:tpmore
than
40 years. He was espetist church of Middleport will be Cross Bloodmobile will be at
cially
known
for his gospel music.
celebrating Bible $unday on Sun - Southern High School on Monday
The
mustachiocd
performer with
day when the chur"h will focus on from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Everyone
a
mischievous
grip
and homespun
"The Gilh of Love" bil&gt;lcs h&gt;r the who is eligible to give blood is
humor
said
in
a
I
990
Asso~iated
USSR. Ccntrulnnd Eastern Europe. urged to do so..
Press interview that he believes he
cume
across the TV screen as a
REEDS VILLE - The Reedsville
MIDDLEPORT · Revival at the
loving
memher or the family.
United Methodist Church will hold · Old Bethel Freewill Baptist Church
"They
fell like when the time
its first homecom ing on Sunday. at Route 7 and Story's Run Road,
came
fo
r
my show, th ey didn't
Re v. Charles Eaton, pastor, will south of Middleport, will he held
have
to
change
clothes or put sterspeak and several local musicians Monday through Saturday at 7:30
ling
on
the
table,"
Ford said.
will perform. A potluck dinner will p.m. nightly. Marvin Markin will
begin at I p.m. and the publ ic is be the evangelis t. There will be
invited.
special singing. The public is invitGRAVELY TRACTOR
ed to aucnd.
POMEROY - Rev. Eddie Buff.
SALES &amp; SERVICE
inglon will be the guest minister m
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.
RACINE - The Southern Local
the Naomi Baptist Church in Board or Education will meet Mon:
FILL I Worn:R IIURI
Pomeroy on Sunday at 10:45 a.m. day at 7 p.m. at the high sc hool.
CLOSED MONDAY
The Hocki ng Di stri ct Sunday
OPEN TUESDAY THRU FRIDAY
School and B.T.U. Institute will
.
8AM·5 PM
meet at lhe church at 2:30 p.m. and
Rev. Buffington will be th e guest
In Roger Maris' record home
~THE
speaker.
run year, 196 1, he hit 15 of his 61
homers in the month of June, his
POMEROY - Former Mc1gs biggest month.
CoUnt)' resident Bruce Stone wi ll
perform a gospel concert m St . Paul
Luthemn Church in Pom eroy on
Sunday at 7 p.m. Th e pub lic is
invited to altend and refres hments
will be served.

Apostolic
Church or Jesus Christ Apostolic Faith
New Lima Rd., nt•l 10Ft' Mcip Pall&lt;
Putor: Raben W. Richardo
Sunday School· 10 Lm.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service• - 7 p.m.

Liberty A"'"'bly u1 God
Dudding une, Ma1011, W.VL
Pastor: Dan S. Eaton
Sunday Worship · !0:30 p.m.
Thursday Servicet - 7 p.m. .

.GRAVELY
SYSTEM

Thomas, treasurer; Grace Weber,
program leader, and Mrs. Lillian
Pickens, reporter.
·
Mrs. Boston announced the district meeting and plans were made
for a soup supper on Dec. 2.
A white elephant sale was held
and a game was played with prizes
given, Mrs. Emma Durst was
named game chairman.
Refreshments were served to
those named and Mrs. Mary Alice
Bisc and Mrs. Pearl Osborne.
The next meeting will be held at
the home of Mrs. Boston . Mrs.
Weber received the door prize.

Care • Concern • Compassion
-II.ICYWho: EDa J. Rougbt
.
Whea: -Nov•ber B, 1111
What: Maflll' of Pomeroy
Why: Full time Mayor

,.ld for tht C11H11d11t
Ellen J. lou1ht • 151 Uncoln HID, Po111eror, OH.
~

'

THANK YO/I
·

CHAIN SAW
' CHAINS .
SHARPENED

99C
.....

(011-Ihe-Saw Chains Only)

O'DELL
839 E. Main

@".

Lumber Co.
992·S800

McClure's
FamUy Restaurant
•

.

'

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 20

'

.

FREEl

•

•

MONDAY THRU SUNDAY, OCT. 21·27
LONG HOTDOG AND MEDIUM FRENCH FRIES

5

2.99

Gtn. Hartinger Pltwy
• MIDDlEPOIT
614-"2-5248

4n Jockton Piko
GAWPOUS
614·4U·3137

354 East Main St.
POMIIOY
614-992-6292

s...

Zi"!! Ch.urrb or c•r1s1
Pomeroy, HuriJonYille Rd. (RL t 43)
Pastor. Rober E1 Ponell
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Bndbury Churth oiChrlst
Pu10r: Tom Runyon
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m.
Tuppers Plains Churdl or Christ
Panor: Robert Foster
Sunday School • 9 o.m.
Worship · 9:45 Lm., 6:30p.m.
Doxter Churdl or Christ
Pastor: Roaer Wauon
Sunday Sehool· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 Lm.
Wednesday SeJVictJ • 7 p.m.
Rutlald Church orChrlsl
Pu10r: Eugene E. Underwood
Sunday Sehool- 9:30a. m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

..

Muon Church or Chrlsl
MillerSL,Muon, W.Va.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
W011hip - It a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday SeJVices -7 p.m.
Brodford Churdl or Christ
St Rt t 24 &amp;: Co. Rd. l
Pu1or. Derek Stump
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - !0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Serviceo - 7:30p.m.
Succas Road Chur&lt;h or Christ
Pauor: Jooeph B. Ho1kins
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedn~ sd•Y. Service•- 7 p.m.
Liberty Christian Church
Da1er
Pulor: Woody Call
Sunday Sdlod - t 0 a.m.
Eveninc • 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Service • 7 p.in.
Lanarvllle Christian Church
Sunday Schod · 9:30a.m.
,Wonhip-10:30~m ., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sc!Vice 7:30p.m.
Hemlock Grove Church
Putoc O.arles Oomigan
Sunday schod · 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30 ~m. 7 p.m.
Old Dtner Bible Christian Church
PallOr: Jack Oeland
Sunda:r.Schod · tO a.m.
Wedn&lt;1 y SeJViceo -7 p.m.

'

Hartford Church or Christ In Chrlsllan
Union
Hanford , W.Va.
Puroc Rev. David McManis
Sunday School - It l.m.
Wcnhip · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service• - 7:30 p,m.

Church of God
M~

Moriah Chordl uiGod
Racine
Pastor: Rev. James Saucrfield
Sunday Schod · 9:4l a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
RuUand Church ol God
PallOr: John F. Corcoran
Sunday Schod · to a.m.
Wonlup - It a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Symuse Church or Goo
Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor. Rev. David RuueU
SWlday School and Wonhip· 9:30 Lm.
E"enin&amp; Services· 7 p.m.
Wednesdly Services· 7 p.m.
Church or God or Prophecy
OJ. While Rd . off St. Rt 160
Pattor: Pal HeniOn
Sunday Schod • 10 a.m,
Worship · II a.m.
Wedneoday ScNiee1 • 7 p.m.

Sacredli..rt Calholle Churdl
!61 Mulberry Ave., Paneroy, 992-5898
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz
Sat Con. 4:45-S:IS p.m.; Mus· 5:30p.m~
,
SWI. Con.· 8:45-9:15 a.m.,
Sun . Mau · 9:10a.m.
Daily Mau · 8:30a.m. ·

•I
I

•

•

Christian Union
H..,_ c•urdl uiO.rlst Ia Chrlsllan
Union
Paltor: Theron Durham
Sunday Schoot' ·9:30a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m .
Wednelday s.Mces - 7 p.m.

Catholtc

Buy One Turtle Sundae and Get One

Grai:e Eplli:opal Clturch
326 E. Main SL, Pomel1&gt;)'
Putor. Rev. Dr. Roy C. Myen
Suilday ochod and worship • t I a.m.

Bearwallow Rid&amp;• Cliurch u1 Christ
Pastor: Jack Colearove
day School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedneoday Serviceo · 6:30p.m.

Fm Will Boptlst Churth
Ash S~ru~, Middtepon
Pastor. Mark Morrow
Soturday Serviao -7:30p.m.
Sunday School · I 0 Lm.
Woiship · It a.m.,
Wedneoday Service·7:30p.m.

.

Po•eroy Churth of Christ
212 W. Main St.
Putor: Andrew ,Mllea"'
Sunday !icl!ool ' 9:30a.m.
Worship - !0:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday SCrvictJ • 7 p.m.

Keno Church or Christ
Wonhip-9:30 a.m.
Sunday Schoct · 10:30 a.m.

Baptist

Rutland Flrst Baptist Church
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy Flrst Baptist
Eut Main St
Pastor; Steve FuDer •
SWJdoy School · 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip · 10:30 o.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:30p.m.
First Soulhtm Boptlst
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamu O'Bryam
SWJday School · 9:30 Lm.
Worship - 10:4la.m., '7 :30p.m.
Wedneulay Service•- 7:~0 p.m.
MlddleJI«t Flm BapUsl
Comer Sixth &amp;:. Palnler
Pastor: Rev. James A. Seddon
Sunday School · 9:15 a.m.
Wonhip -10:15 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Racine Flnt BapUst
Pastor: Steve Deaver
Sunday School- 9:30 Lm.
Worship - l0:40o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednelday Serviaos ·7:30p.m.
Sliver Run BapUst
Pastor: Bill Lilllc
SWlday School· 10 Lm.
Worship - t1 om., 7:30p.m.
Wednelday Serviaoo · 7:30p.m.
Mt. Union Baptltt
Pulor: Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School· 9:4l Lm.
Evening· 6:30p.m.
Wedneoday Services - 6:30p.m.
Bethlehem Bapllst
Pas1or: Rev. Earl Shuler
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Thu11day Se!Viceo. 7:30p.m.
Old Bctht F'rH Will Baptist Church
28601 St Rt 7, Middlcpon
Sunday School-10 Lm.
Evening -7:30p.m.
Thu11day Services ·7:30p.m.
Hillside Bapll!t Churth
St Rt 143 jun off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School · I 0 Lm.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedn.,day Services • 7 p.m.
Hope Bapllst Chapel
l70 Q,.nt St, Middlepon
Putor. David Bryan, Sr.
SWJday School • to Lm.
Wonhip • II a.m., 7 p.m.
"
Wednesday Scrvicta • 7 p.m.
VIctory Bapllst
525 N. 2nd SL, Middlepon
Pastor: lamet E. Keesee
Worship - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service• • 7 p.m.
Faith Boptl!t Churdl
Railroad St., MliOII
SWJday School· 10 Lm.
Wonh1p - !I a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Forell Run BapliJI
Pastor: Rev. Nyle Borden
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Worship ·2:30 p.m.
Mt. Morlah'Bapllst
Fourth d&lt; Main St., Middlepon
P11tor: R..,, Gilben Cwg,Jr.
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
wo.. hip -10:45 a.m.
Anllqully Baptist
Panor: KeMeth Smith
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Worship · l0:4l a.m.
Thunday Services ·7:30p.m.
Rutland !Creo Will Bapllsl
Salem St.
Putor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School· 10 i .m.
livenin&amp; ·1 p.m.
, Wedneaday Services • 1 p.m.
Ash Street FreewUI Bapllst
Middlepon
·Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.
Wedneoday Service . 7:30p.m.
Sawrday Service-7:30p.m,

Epi scopal

Mlddlep..-t Ctourch or C..rtst
Slh and Main
Pastor: AI Hansm
S101day School· 9:30a.m. ·
Wonhip • 8:15, 10:30am., 7p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Assembly of God

"

ll•.r .lb

SN....

788 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

Dhlt

(row's Family Resta..-ant
"IIIIIIIIIJ lt11fllig F1l•i Ctldu"
228 W. Main St., Po11111roy

992-.5432

UWUNGS.(OAn

'

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-5141

2114 South 2ntl

P..rt'chopel
PasUJr. Florence Smilh ··
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.

Holiness
Pint Growe Bible Hollaess Churcll
tn mile orr Rt 32S
rutor: R•v. O'Dell Manley
Sunday Sch.W · 9:30a.m .
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Eunhae (Groce) Kee
Sunday School - 9: tl a.m.
Worchip -10:~ a.m., 6 pm.
Wednesday Semces - 7:30p.m .
RoekSprlngo

Pastor~Keish

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
7l Pearl Sl., Middleport.
Pas10r: Rev. Roy MtCany ·
Sunday school - 9:30 1.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.,7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30 p.m.

Rutland
Pastor: Arthur Crat.ree
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 o.m.
Thunda)' Servieear· 7 p.m.

.
Hylell Run Hollnts.&lt; Church
Pas101: Raben Mmley
Sonday Schod - 9:30 a.m.
Worship -10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.

Salem Center
Pastor: Ron Fierce
SWiday School- 9:15a.m.
Worship · IO:tl a.m. ·

Harrisonville Holiness Chapter
Pastor: Rev.!6hn Neville
Sunday SchooliO a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednelday Service· 7:30p.m.

Snowville
Pastor: Aorence Smiah
Sunday School · tO 1.m.
Wonhip · 9 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Southern Cluster
Apple Grove
Paswr: Cad Hicks
Sunday School - 9 1.m.
Wonhip · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thuuday Services - 1 p.m.

Reorganized Church ul J.. us Chrlslln
Laller Day Salnls
Pon!and·Racine Rd.
Pastor. William Roush
Sunday Schod - 9:30 1.m.

Bethany
Pas1or: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School- 10 1.m.
Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 10 a.m.

Lutheran
f

SL John Lutheran Churdl
Pine Grove
PaSlor: r..u,. A. Leach SIJreffler
Wonhlp - 9:30 ~m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

.Cannd
Pastor. Kennet.h Baker
·· SW1d1y School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • I0:45a.m. (2nd 44th SWJ)
1

Morning Star
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
SWJday School· 9:45a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Thunday Services-7:30p.m.

Our Snlour Lutheran'Churth
Walnut and Henry Su., Ravenswood,
W.Va.
Paslor: Rev, George C. Weirick
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
w..."!t' . It a.m.

Sutton
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · I0:45a.m. (1st&amp;: 3rd Sun)

St. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycam"'" &amp;: Sealld SL, Pomeroy
PaSIOf: uuro A. Leach Shrelfler
SWlday School • 9:4l Lm,
Wonhip - 11 ~m.

East Letart
PaalOr: Roacr Grace
SWlday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 9 a.m.

United Methodist

Radnt
PaslOr. Ro&amp;er Gnce
SWlday School - 10 a.m.
Worship . 11 a.m.

Graham United Mtlhodtst
Worship- 9:30 o.m. (ht d&lt; 2nd Sun), 7:30
p.m. (3rd &amp;: 4!11 SijR)
Wednesday Service· 7:3P p.m.

Laurel ClllfFrn Methodist Church
Pastor. William Williams
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Mt. on.. United Methodist
Off 124 behind WilkeoYille
Pastor: Charlet Jooes
Sunday School -9:30 ~m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Services • 7 p.m.

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

Melgo Cooperallve Parish
Nor1hust Cluster

· Alfred
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Worship. II a.m., 6:30p.m.
Chester
PutOr: Sharon Hausman

Worship · 9 a.m.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Thursday Services -7 p.m.
Joppa
Pastor: Brenda Weber
'
Worsllip · 9:30 Lm. '
Sunday School - 10:30 o.m.
\ cdnesday Service•- 7:30p.m.

Radq

Sunda)l School - 9:15a.m .
·Worship ~ lO'a.m.
Wednesday Serviw · 6 p.m.

•
s

Long Bottom
Pastor: Charles Eaton
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Woohip · !0:30a.m.
Wedneaday Servic::es -7:30p.m.

Contra! Clu!Jer
Asburr (Syracuse)
Paslor; Walcy Thllthcr
Slillday S.hool - 9:45a.m.
Wonhip • It a.m.
Wcdnelday Service• · 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Jolin W. Doug ill
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Won.hip • l0:4l a.m., 7 p.m.
Syracust Churdl or th~ Nuarme

PuLOr. Rev . Glem McMillan
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Pomf:f'Dy Church ol'lltt Nazarent
Putor: Rev. Thomaa McOung
Sunday Sdlool · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip ~ 10:30 1.m. and 6p.m.
Wedneuiay StJViet.J . 7 p.m .

Forest Run

Pastor: Wcsh:y Thllc:hcr
SWlday School · 10 a.m.
Wo11hip · 9 a.m.
Thursday SciVicco • 6:30 .P.m.

MEIGS TIRE
CE~TER. INC.

Heath ( lddleporl)
Ptotor: Frank Smilh
S101day S.hool · 9:30 o.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Servic:c1 - 6 p.m.

John f . Fu1t1 , Mqr.

Pn. 9911101
.Pomeroy

PasiOr; Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday School- 9:30 Lm.
Worlhip-11&gt;45 a.m.,7 p.m.
Wednesday Service·· 7 p.m.
While's Chapel wesieyan
Coolville Road
·
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
SIDiday School . 9:30a.m.
Woohip · 10:30 a.m.
Wcdnelday Service· 7 p.m.
Falnl1w Bible Churdl
l.ctalt, W.Va. Ri. I
Pastor; James U:wil
Sunday School · t I Lm.
Worship· 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servico-7:30p.m. . - ' ......

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Trlnltr Conarflallonal Cburdl
Pastor; Rev. RoJand Wildman
O.urch • 9:1l a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 o.m.

Calmy Bible Churdl
Pcxnetoy Pike. Co. Rd.
Pallor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School ,. 9:30 Lm.
Worship !0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 :30p.m.

The Salvallon Army
Bunemut Ave.; Pomeroy.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:00 o.m., 7:30p.m.
II~

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Middleport Community Church
l7l Pearl St , Middlepon
P_aSlor: Sam Anderson
Sunday Scbool tO a.m.
Evening - 7:30p.m . .
Wednelday SeiVice · 7:30p.m.

Spiritual Fallh Cllurcb
Sliie 338, Antiquily
Pastor. A. Stewart
SWJday School· 10 Lm .
Evening · 7:30p.m.
Thursday Service - 7:30 p.m.

Fallh Tabemade Church
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. EmmcU Rawsoo
Sunday Schoot · 10:00 a.m.
Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday SeNice - 7 p.m.

Calvary Pll&amp;rlm Chapel
H1ni1011vUt. Road
Putor. Rev. ViCIOr Roush
Sunday Schoal9:30 a.m.
Worship · I lam., 7:30p.m.
Wednesdoy Service . 7:30p.m.

Syracu" Mission
1411 Bridaeman St., Syracuse
Sunday Scbod • 10 a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesday ~rvice · 7 p.m.

StlwersvUie Word ul Fallh
PallOr: David Da.iley
SWiday School9:30 a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Thursday Service · 7:30p.m.

Hazel Communlly Church
Of!Rl. 124
Putor: Edsel Han
Sunday Schod -9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.

Rejolclna Lifo Church
SilO N. 2nd Ave., Middlepon
Pastor. Rev. Michael Pangio
Sunday School· I 0 ~m.
Wednesday Se"'ices- 7 p.m.

Dyesvllle CCMnmunlty Chur&lt;h
Sonday Schod · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Pentecostal

Milltlltport

212 E. M1in Sitetl
992· 3785. Pomeroy

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE .---...
: SERVICES
· 214 E. Main .

992 ·5ll0 Pomeroy

RACINE PLANING Mill

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

Mill Work
Cabinet Mak in~

Syracpse
992-3978

204 Condor Sl.
Pomeroy, OH.

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992-297$

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BurUna;ton Community Church
Burlingham
Pasl.Ot: Ray La.udcrmih
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
W011hip · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

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Pentecostal AJstmbl1
St Rt 124, Racine
Puloc Williom Hoback
Sunday School · tO ~m .
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wednesday ServiCes · 7 p.m.

Chrlsdan Fellowship Center
Salem St., Ru~md
Pastor: Raben E. MUsser
Sunday Schod - 10 a.m.
Wonhip · ll:lla.m., 7p.m.
Thunday Service · 7 p.m.

· Middleport Pentecostal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Oark Baker
' ''I)
SI.Widay School · tO Lm.
'. " '
Evenin&amp; -6 p.m.
· Wednesday Services -7:30p.m

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Mor!f Chapel Cburcb
PaslOr: David Curfman
Sunday school · 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m., 7:30p.m.
- Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Unlled Faith Chur&lt;h
Rt 7 oo Pohle: roy By-Pass
Pastor: Rev. Roben E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday Scbod · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wtdnt1day Service • 7 p.m.

RecdJYille Fellowship

Flotwoods
Pallor: KcillrRadcr
Sunday School · 10 Lm.
Worship · It a.m., 6 p.m .
Thunday Service:!( · 7 p.m.

Other Churches

Hockingport Church
Grand Slreet
SW1d1y School · 10 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.
Wednesday Services • 8 p.m,

Church oflht Naurene

Enl&lt;rprlse
Pastor; KeHh Rader
SWlday School · tO o.m.
Worship · 9 a.m., 6 p.m.
Tuesday Services · 7 p.m.

New linen Churdl or the Nazarene
Plstor: GlendOn Stroud
Sunday 'Sob oct - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.
Wednelday Service•- 7 p.m.

MI. Olin Community Churdl
PuLor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday Scbod- 9:30 1.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service- 7 p.m.

Mlddlt'p0r1 Chun:h of the Nanrcne
Pastor: Rev. Uoyd D. Grimm, Jr.
SWlday s,hool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10 ~0 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednc5day Services .- 7 p.m.

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Fretdoa! Gospel Million
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31

Portland J1lnt Cburdl of the Nazarene
Putor: William Juawo
Sunday School - 9:30 am.
Worlhip - 10:40 ~m., 7:30pm.
Wednesday Se!Viceo -7:30p.m.

Bethcl Church
Township Rd., 468C
Suoday S.hool · 9 a.m .
Worsbip - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services - lOa.m.

Racine Flrst Church or the Nazarene
Paswr: Th001u L. Gatcs, IT
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · I0:30a.m., 6 p.m. ·
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Carleton Interdenoinlnatlollal Cli&amp;arch .
Kingsb•ny Raid
Pastor: Clyde W. Henderson
SWJday School ·9:30a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
WedneldayScrvice · 111om.

RuUand Cboreb of the Nazarene
PaROr: s..uei.Buye
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · t0:30a,m.,,6:30 p.m.
Wodnelday Servia:~ - 7 p.m.

Fallh Gospel Church
LongBouom
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m. , 7:30p.m.
Wedn&lt;~day 7:30p.m.

Nazarene

Tuppers Plains St. Paul
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday Schod · 9 a.m.
. w... hip . 10 ~m .
Tuesday Semcc:s ·7:30p.m.

Ch,.er Church of the Nazarene
PallOr. Rev. Herben G1&gt;1t
SoOday School ·9:30a.m.
Wqnhip - It Lm., 6 p.m.
~edfteacfay Service a- 7 p.m.

CoctwUie United Methodist Parish
Puwr. Harold E. AUoway·Priddy
Coolwllle Church
Main 4 Fifth St.
Sunday School- 10 1.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Tuesday Service• • 7 p.m.

Torch Church
Co. Rd. 63
S101day School· 9:30a.m.
Wonllip · 10:30 a.m.

Reedsville
Pastor: Rev. Charle1 Eaton
Wonhip · 9:30 Lm.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.

K&amp;C JEWELERS

M!Mt,.,t,

Pas10r: Wealey Thacher
Sunday School .- 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 Lm.

,J

Presbyterian

a3oofo 1
9 3 Mill Street
Middleport Ohio 46760

16141992· 6867 - 19BB ·ODKSI

1

Cllurch
.
Tmo Communily off'CR 82
PuLor: Robert Sanden
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
W~esday Service• - 7:30p.m.

POMEROY, OHJ0 - 992-61177

m
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1111.

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
S~lES &amp; SERVICE

992·7075
112 Harth SKtnti An.
Middleport, Ohio

"'Di~tnil~· a~d' St•rl'it'f' Alwn.~ .~~ ..
Established 1913
11111 Mu4ltorry An.
I

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~t. Htnnon United_Brethren Ia Christ

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
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United Brelhren

BILL QUICKEL

£

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0\\;f( Srruf

992·2121

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Seventh-Day Advenlbl
Mulbeny Hu. Rd., Pomeroy
Pas10r. Bob Snyder
Salurday Services:
Sabbath School · 2 p.m.
Worship • 3 p.m.

Eden Unlled Brethren In Chrlg
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7:.30 p.m.

EWING FUNERAl HOME

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Seventh -Day Advenlist

Suuth Bethel New Testament
SUver Ridge
PaSlor: Duane Sydenstricker
Sunday Schod • 9 a.m.
Wonhip • I0 a.m .• 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service -1 p.m.

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Middleport PreSbyterian
Sunday School · 9 ~m .
Worship · 10 a.m., 4 p.m. (2nd 4 4lh Sun.)
Syraeu,. Flrst Unbed Presbyterian
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
'
Worship ··t I a.m., 4 p.m. (hi&amp;: 3rd Sun .)

Nease SeiUement Churdl
Sunda) Wonhip · 2:30p.m.;
Thunday ~ervi~• · 7:30p.m.

ot Columbu,, 0 .
I04W . Moltn
tt1 1111 Pomero"t

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Harrisonville PresbJierlan Cbureh
Wonhip · 9 1..m.
Sonday School - 9:4l a.m.

Eedesla Fdtowslllp
128' Mill St, Middlepon
Pu10r: Chuck Mcl'henon
Sunday School • 10 ~m .
•
Evening - 7 pm.
Wedne1day Service - 7 p.m.
Fu.ll Gospel Lighthouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School- to a.m.
Eveninc 7:30p.m.
Tu&lt;Sday &amp;: Thu11day ·7:30pm.

Nationwide Ins. Co.

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Mtner,.tne

Church of Christ

' Pomeroy Weststde~Chur~h or Christ ·
33226 Children' 1 Home Rd.
992·3847
Sunday School· II a.m.
Worship ·.10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday StrvictJ • 7 p.m.

Church ul Jesuo Cbrlst Apostolic
VonZandt and Ward Rd.
Putor. lamea Miller
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
Eveninl! · 7:30p.m. .
Wedneoday Service• -7:30p.m.

Tennessee·
Ernie·Ford
dies Thursday

Reedsville UAfW gather

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Dl

will be available. The public is
invi.ted to attend.

POMEROY - Belles and Beaus
Western Square Dance Club will
hold a dance on Saturday from 8 to
II p.m. at the Pomeroy Senior CitiMORNING STAR - Homccorn·
zens Center with caller Sonny ing at the Morning Star United
Bess, Huntington, W.Va.
Methodist Church will be Sunckty
at 9:45 a.m. Sunduy school is :11 II
REEDSVILLE - Riverview Ele- a. m. and ucarry-in mc.11 will begin
mentary will have its fall festival at 12:30 p.m. Afternoon services
on Saturday witll supper at 5 p.m. arc at I:30 p.m. Kenny Baker, min·
and g\lffies at 7 p.m. Refreshments ister. invites the public.

A surprise baby shower was
held for Mrs. Sandy West at the
recent meeting of the Reedsville
United Methodist Women held at
the home of Mrs. Mamie Buckley.
Mrs. Nina Boston gave these
readings from devotions, "Thankfulness," "Too Late," and "Little
Things." Mrs. Buckley ·gave the
opening pmyer and 64 shut-in calls
were made and cards signed for
several friends.
Members elected for the coming
year are Nina Boston, president;
Nancy Buckley, vice president;
Diane Jones, secretary; Gladys

Friday, October a, 1991

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

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Page

B The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

18, 1991 :

Friday, O ctober

Friday, October

-:::::::::::t:::::~;;~r==;P=ub=ll=cN=~=~~==~r-:==Pu=b=l~=~==l~~.=1~~--;~~~~~--.:-~--~----~=~=-~--.~.~~~--~~~q

BULLETIN BOARD
MOTHERS OF.TWINS CLUB
FALL SALE
SAT , OCT. 19-9 AM-3.PM
EPISCOPAL CHURCH,
POM EROY
Hot Dogs and Pop, Tool

Public Notice

Public Notice

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
REX DEAN VANCE,
Petitioner,
and
KAREN DELORES VANCE,
Polltlonor.
CaHNo. 17,784
NOTICEOFPUBUCATION
Karen Delorea Yonce,
whose 1111 known oddroao
waa C/O Ann Carrol, Gorflald
Avenue, GaiiiJ&gt;olla, Ohio
45631 , you ore htreby noll·
lied lhat you have been
named defendant In a legal
action ontltlod Rex Dean

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS

Vance, Petitioner, •nd Raren
Deloroa Vance, Petitioner.
This acllon has bean as·
signed Caoa No. 17,784 and
Is pending In the Court al
Common Pleaa In Melga
County, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
The object ol thla motion
ls · to lorecloae any and all
lntereolln property In Melga
County, Ohio, and to loreclooo all lntereot ownld by
you and for costs

You are required to an·
ower thla motion within
twanty·elght (28) daya aher
the las t publication ol this
notice which will be pub·
llohed onca uch week for
six (6) I UCCOIIIVeWIIkl . The
last publication will be made
on Nov. 22, 1991 , and the

twentyelght (28) daya for
answer will commence on
that date
In ca ae ol your lallure to
answer or otherwise respond
Is required by the'Dhlo Rulli
of Clvll Procedure, Judgment
by default will be renderld
ag"alnst you lor the relief
demanded In the motion
dated
Larry E. Spencer
Clerk ol Courts
(10) 16, 25
(11) 1, 8, 15, 22 6TC
NOTICE OF ELECTION
Tha annual election ql
dlroctora of tho Albany
lnduendenl AArlculture
Society will be hold
November 2, 1191 at tho
AI ~any Grange Hall loCI tid
In ' Albony, Ohio. \btlng
houra will be held from 3:00
to 7:00 p.m. Condldotoa lor
, dlrectora muat be a m1111ber
of tho toclely. Petltlana
mual bo algned by 10 or
more memb•• of lh• aocl•
ty ond flied with the oacr•
tary at lout oevon daya
b.roro tht election.
Polltlona moy bt oblolnld
from a Secrellry, Dorio H.
Moce, 2081 Roynald'a Ave.,
Albtny, Ohio 45710.
R. . ldonta of Aleunder
Locol School Dlstrlcl, 1I
yeara tnd over, who
purchaud memberahlp
tlckell for the 1891 folr ore
eligible to vall fat dlrectora.
Dorio H. Mace, Secrallry
Albeny Independent
Agriculture Society
(10) 18, 25, 21c

HOWA~~u:.~M~O
MEIGS COUNTY

TREASURER
PLAINTIFF
CASE NO. 81·DLT·12
RUTH POWELL
ADDRESS UNKNOWN
DEFENDANT
NOnCE OF SALE UNDER
JUDGMENT OF FORECLQ.
SURE OF UENS FOR
DELINQUENT LAND TAXES
Wherou, Judgment haa
been ronderld 1galnll cer·
1
1
ta n parcela o raal property
for 11111, ••••••menta,
chargoa, penaldot, lntoreol,
and 00111 11 lollowa:
Parcel Numbor•Tuao,
lntertal and Ponoltloa 07·
00555.000-$687.28
Parcell. Thelcllowlng d•
acrlbed Real Ealltealtualeln
Lebanon Townahlp, Melga
County, Ohio ond In Section
No 30, Townohlp Nc. 2 ond
Range No. II of the Ohio
Company' a Purchoae and
baundedaolallawt:ThoEaot
Half ol tho North Hall of tho
Northwoat Quarter ol uld
Section No. 30, ccntolnlng42
114 acre1, more or lilt; 1110
thofollawlngRuiEatatultuate In Section no. 30, Townahlp No. 2 and Ronge No. 11
of lhl Ohio Com pan fa Pur·
chaae,lnllbanonTownahlp,
Melgo County, Ohio, being
two(2)acroaolltheEaatend
of a 20 aero lot oft tho north
1ldo altho South Hall of tho
Northweot Quarter of uld
Section No. 30. And being
thuamepropartyccnveyld
byWuloyDevlaandEmllyJ.
Davis, Hlowlle, toAndrewM.
Powoa by dead dated March
9, 181131ndrecordldlnBook
76, II Page 320 of tho Deed
Roccrda of Melgo County,
Ohio.
WHEREAS, 1uch )udg•
mont ordlra ouch rul proP"
orty to boaold by tho under·
algnod to oatlaly lhl tolll
amounl olouch Judgment;
NOW, THEREFORE, publlcnoUcelahorobyglvenlhat
I,JameaM.SaulobyoiMelgo
County, Ohio, will Hll auch
rool properly II public ouc&gt;
lion, for ca1h, to the hlghoat
bidder of an amount that
oquola atluat:
Aa In the Coun'a order,
the fair morklt value ollhe
parcela 11 detormlnod by tho .
countyaudltar,lnlhlamount
ol $8,850.00 or the total
amount ol the Judgment,
Including 111 11x11, 111111o
monto, ch11goo, penoltloo,
and Intern! payable aubu·
quent to the delivery to 1ht
PIOIICUtlng attorney ol tho
dlllnquentlondllrcertiftoate
or m11tar lltt of delinquent
trocllfor a Ioiii ol $817.28.
The Hrat auch ulo ohell
be be-n tho hcuro of 8
o.m ond 4 p.m. 11 the front
otep ol the courthouae In
Pomeroy,Ohlo, onFrldoythe

Real Estate General
OFFICE 992·2886

201h d•r. ol Dlollllber, 1991 .
II •• d porcllo do not r•
celve 1 aulflclent bid, they
ohall be ollerld lor 1111,
under the 11me lermo ond
condltlona of the Drat 1111
and litho umellmo ol doy
and 11 the umo pi-, on
Frldoy, the 3rd day ol Janu·
try, 1991, lor 1 omount that
~uole atleut:
Aa In lhl caurl'o order,
the fair morktt value ol the
parcelua d-mlnld by the
countyoudltor,lnthumounl
ol SI,85 0.00 or the total
I mount of the Judgment,
Including Ill IIXH, 111111•
menta, chorgu, ponaiUoa,
and lntorut payable aub••
quent to tho delivery to the
proaecutlng attorney of the
dellnquentland tu cerUflcate
or maattr llat ol delinquent
trocta for a total ol $687.28.
Jamu M. Soulaby
Sheriff
(10) 18, 25 ; (11 ) 2, 3TC
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,_ _P_u_b_ll_c_N_o_llc_a__
,LEGAL NOnCE
The Public Utllltleo Commlaolon of Ohio has ached·
uled aoveral local public
hearlngaln Cue No. 91·195·
GA·AIR, In the Matter ol the
Appllcotlon cf Columbia Gu
of Ohlo,lnc. to Increase Gu
Sa lea and Csrllln Tranapor·
lltlon Rataa within Its Serv·
Ice Area. The heorlnga are
acheduled lorthe purpose of
providing an opportunity to
In totes ted mombots of the
public IO teotlly In the procudlngo. Thelocothoarlnga
will bo held allhe following
tlmeo ond places:
Mansfleld: Monday, Octo·
ber 28, 1991, at1:00 p.m., at
Hall, Council Chambero,
30 North Diamond
Manlflold, Ohio;
Monday, Dc·
11 6:00p.m. at
the Commlo·
alan, lith Flocr, Borden
Building, 180 Eut Broad
Street, Columbus, Ohio.
Cambridge: Tuesday ,
Ocio6er29,1§91,att:OOp.m.,
01 City Hall, Council Cham•
bera, 111 Floor, 11 31 Stou·
benvlllo Ave., Cambridge,
Ohio;
•
Cadiz: Tuooday, October
29 • 1991,atG:OOp.m.,atCadlz
Municipal Building, VIllage
Council Chambers, 128 Caurt
Street, Cadiz, Ohio;
Marlon :Tuesday,October
29 • 1991 • al 6 00 p.m., 11 City
Hall, Council Chamboro, 2nd
Floor,233WeatCentorStroet,
Morlan, Ohio;
Tolldo· Thursday, Octo·
ber 31, t99t, 116 OO p.m. at
Toledo Government Center,
City Council Chambera, 111
Floor, 1 Government Center,
Tolldo, Ohio;
SPRINGFIELD: Friday ,
Novornbir 1• 1991, at IO:OO
a.m., at the City Hall Forum,
Ill Floor, 76 EutHighStrllt,
Springfield, Ohio;
ELVRIA: Frldoy, Novem·
ber 1• 1901 • 11 11:00 o.m., 11
Lorain County Community
College, College Con tor
Building, Room 227 ·B, 1005
North Abbe Road, Elyria,
Ohio;
PARMA: Friday, Novem·
her 1• 1991 • 11 3' 00 p.m'., 11
City Hall, Council Chambers,
Lower Llvel, 6811 Ridge
Road, Parma, Ohio; ond
GALLIPOLIS: Monday,
Novombar 4, t89t, 118 =00 P·
m. at Galllo County CauM·
hou11, PubllcMHtlng Rocm,
2nd Floor, Locuot Street,
Gallipolis, Ohio.
The applicant has re·
quelled 1 revenue lncreaoe
In theamountol$61,348,379.
Rocammendotlono which
dlllor from the application
oubmlttld by Columblo Gu
ofOhlo,lnc.maybemodeby
lhe ataH of the Commloolon
or by Intervening parllnond
moy beldopted by lhe Com·

~::·:~'.':.:,mo)orluuetln

205 North Secand Ave.
Middleport, OH
'POMEROY·Beeoh Street• You need lo see thio beautiful
brick home Has.3 bedrooms, large i;,ng room, lui basement, and a one car garage
ONLY $34,000
RUTLANO.S.Iom Slraii·Samethmg lor t.10M: A splu
level home with an open raised hallway thai has *utilul
oak railings Hallcl a cethedral cetltng gtveo thiShome an
armosphere of room•neas Has 31Jedrooo:ns. a large bath,
utihiY room, and a kitchen loadod with cabineta Somathlnd
for DAD A detached 2 112 car garege With a WOfltlhop, a
concrete driveway, and maontanance lrae llcing Samething lor the kids A 1 8 acre yard and a tree houae
$47,100
;JUST BELOW THE RACINE DAII·You'IIOve the VIew of
the baau~ful OhiO River and the Great fishing IOU won
thil 3 6 acre campsite Wtth 768 feet of river ~ontage Irs
approx 113 cleared and has tis own gravel dnveway and
elecllictly avatlable
ONLY $10,000

n

JOHNSON ROAO.Approx 1 mtle out of Pomero1 Approx
5 IICI'es wtth a butlding 11te HasanoldweU and pub!tcwater
•• avatlable Elecllic ts on the Stte Cornea wtth your own
cave Some wooded land
$11,000
MIDOLEPORT·Rutlond Striii·You need to 11e thla one II
It's a mce 3 bedroom ranch style home with 1 full basemen~
2 fireplace, carefreQ. vtnyl sidtng, fu ly carpeted, and a one
car garage all on a 2 acre lot
PRICED AT JUST$39,5IJO

•

ADDISON·Hanoyoucklo Drlvo-Could be uaed for a rental
ora ntee starter homer Two bedrooms, 1 bath, new sepbc,
and new wtring
,
$24,500
EAGLE RIDGE·Wtnt S.Cfuolon? Th11 11 the one lor you .
and a beautiful home ~ Is batng whtll brick wilh 3 bedrooms, 2 balh1, family room, and large kitchen on approk
1 acre
/
$55,000
POMEROY-Hyaell Run Rotci-Hunte~l Oream-7112tcroll
, of woodld land on 1 mce black topped road

ASKING t7 ,sao

POMEROY-Hyaelf Run Road-Two nice laying 2 acre Iota
These would malol beautilul homesitta,

SI,OOOnch

·oorne TURNER, Broker...............................et2-S882
BRENDA JEFFERS .......... ... ........ ................ 11240$1

oAfiUNE BTEWAAT......................................... ,ez~s "
lANDY BUTCHER..- .....................................~ Olz.im

.-tERYL WALTE.RS..........................................Jf7-o421

o)opproprlatecalculttlon
or I leod lag lor the Cllh
component al working capl·
tal;
'
b) appropriate 18\lel of
operating expenau lncludo
lng advertlolng , Iabar, bon•
ftt, and rate caoe expanaea;
• c) determlnetlon of the
approprloto roto ol return be
allowed for raternaklng pur·
poaea;
d) the ollocollon ol rev•
nue'"ponolbllltyemong lhe
varloua cluau ol cuatomora ond the determlnotlon ol

~~~approprloteratedlllgna:

e)thedelormlnatlonafthe
rate•~ term1, and conditione
under which gu tronoporta•
tlon oervlce will be provided
for cuetomer-owned volume•
ol gao.
(10) 11, 18, 2tc
Public Notice
NOTICE OF SALE
By vlrlue of on O.der of
Solo loautd out , of the
Cammon Pleaa Court of
Melgo County, Ohio, In tho
c111 al The H-• Nollonol
Ben". Plolntlll, egalnat Cloro
E. Dlivlo, 11 ~~~ Dlfendlnll,
upon 1 Judgment lhereln
rendered, belntJ Coee No.
11-CV·IU In aold Court I
will ofter for 1111, at the
front door or the Courl
Houoe In Pomeroy, llolao
Counly, Ohio, on the tfih
day of NoVIInber, '"'· al
10:00 o',olock A.M., the
fallowing Iondo, lonemento
tnd peraonol property, towit:
Sltuotld In the Town•lp
ol Sutton, Vllloge of Raolne,
County ol Melga ond Billa
of Ohio, 111d mora
artlcularly d11crlbld 11
onawa: Bllng with In
Socllan 11, Town 2, Ronge
12, ond Lo12, and beginning
at tho soulheool comer ol

r.

us In e.....,...,...,..,.
s s ___erv Ices

Wlllllm Snldlr'olol or Whit
waa oome looalld on the t----~--;...-_,r"""'.;....,.,.-..
north aide ol 1 twenty-loot
11 ' "1 no11 h 89 deg. Ill1•
dlatance of 701 leel lrom
lhe lnteraocllon ol VIne
BULLDOIIIG
Strlll and Broadwoy, or
PONDS
wh" woa commonly known
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
I I Seventh Street, the
LAND CLEARING
lnteraectlon being the narlh
WATEII l!t
tide al VIne with the...,,.,
SEWER
LINES
a.
h h
•
01 ...
vent ;•I ence nor1h •
BASEMENTS.
dlolonce! al 177 futto tho
· HOME SITES
nonh aide al Lot 2; thence
HAULING:
north 89 dog. 18' oeot 1
dl1tonce ol 50 lui Ia the
Every Sunday 12 Noon
norlhweat cornar ol what
waa UUII Baktr'.lot ond II
Factory Guns Only
now the Muon Spencer
91
mo.
real estate; thonco aouth I
dlallnce ol 178 flit to the
h ld 1 f
ld
nort 1 e 0 1 011"
VIne
Street; thence •long the
north aide ol uld VIne
Street aouth 89 deg, 15'
Wettl dlotanco of sa l11t to
h
•VInyl Siding
t e place ol beginning,
•Replacem.,t
contolnlng Twenty Hun·
Wlndowa
drldtha Acre (0.20), more cr
•Roofing
loDEED REFERENCE: Vol·
Offer Ends Oct. 31
•Insulation
ume 288, Poge 147, Molga
JAMES ICEESEE
County Diad Rocarda.
The abavo dlacrlbld real
992-2772 or •
742-2251 .
eatate Ia ldentlllod In the
recorda ol the Malgo County
639 Bryan Place
949·2826
Audllor by Parcel No. 19·
Middleport, Ohio
J 1041mo.
00343,
Said reo I utote wu
appralald at S2,7SO.OO.
Tenna ol S.le: Caoh.
A&amp;B
Rool eotate cannot be
acid lor 1111 thon two-thlrdo
oflht apprelald value.
Jamu M. Souloby,
Sheriff ol
Convertible Top1,
Melgo county, Ohio
Complete
Grooming
Carpeta, Headliner
(10) 11, 18, 25, 3tc
llt Seat Covers end
For All Breeds
Public Nollce
Minor Auto Repair .

..,..1.....;__..,..:;.~;;_--...,"':--.._:-

GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
£LUB

Begins Sept. -15

I&amp;L

I.NSULATION

EMILEE MERINAR

Owner &amp; Operator

NOTICE OF SALE
By vlrlue of an Order ol
luued out of the
Pomeroy,
l~·::~~~u:P 1:;•,•• Court of
)I
Ohio, In the
ol Tho
Notional
Bonk, Plolntlfl, agalnat
BISSEU &amp; BURKE
Denver Peraon1, 11 al.,
Delendanta, upon a )udg·
CONSIIUCnON
mont lhoroln rendered,
tNtw Homes
bolng CeH Na.llt.CV·331n
aald Court, I will oHor lcr
tGarages
aale, atthe front door of the
t(omjllttt
Court Houae In Pomeroy,
ltmodttlng
Melga County, Ohio, on the
1Sih doy ol November, 1991 ,
Stop &amp; Cotnpart
at t0i30 o'clock A.M., tho
Fret Estimates
lollowlng londa, tenements
and peraonal property, to·
985-4473
wit:
Situated In tho VIllage ol
667-6179
Pomeroy, Melga County,
S-31-'90 tfn
Ohio:
PARCEL NO. 1: Beginning
11 tho corner ol tho rock
WHALEY'S
wall lhru leot back ol
garage on Lot No. 244 ol the
AUTO PARTS
Subdlvlalon 1; thence north
Sptclallzi"' in
olang the 1111 aide of a 10
Custom Fr-• lepalr
h. alloy 1baut 41 lutto tho
aouthweat earner of Maggie
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
Sllnley'a lot ; lhence eaat
FOR AU MAKES &amp;
along tho rock woll to tho
MODELS
aouthooal cor9or al Maggie
992-7013
Stanley' a lot; lhenct 1111
along the aouth Uno of Lot
or 992-5553
NO. 261, fourteen feet;
01 TOLL Fill
thence eoulh ebaut25 1111;
1·100·848-0070
therice weal In 1 direct line
DAIWrN, OliO
to tho ploce ol beginning.
7 / 31 / '91 tfn
PARCEL NO.2: Beginning
tho bock part ol lot No. 244
dlldld to Jamea A. Miller
ond Sodle L. Miller from
Geo. W. Plontz ond wile,
Augult 3, 1006, ond lurther
doocrlbod 11 follawa:
Beginning at the olley on
the northout corner ol Lot
No. 243; thence 1111 ebaut
70 fut along tho weal or
bock nne ol Lot No. 244 and
3 feet Into Lot No. 261;
thence aouth along aold llno
obout 70 ful to a board
fence built on 1 atone woll,.
12 Gauge Factory
behind a Iorge bern on Lot
Choke
No. 244 ownld by Jamoa A.
Miller end Sodlt L. Miller ;
thence olong uld fence
obout 62 fut to a 10 loot
olley; thence northerly
along the line ol aald allay
to lhl place ol beginning.
DEED REFERENCE :
Volume 235, Page 359,
Mofgo County Deed
Recorda.
The above described
real oaloto lo ldentllled In
the recorda ol lhe Melgo 1 Clrd Of Thanks
County Auditor by Parcel -====~:=::::;=::::;
Noe. 16·01987 ond 16• r
01088.
The Fanuly Of
Sold rool 111111 wu
STELLA ADKINS
appruld 11 $t0,800·00•
WtShes to thank everyone
Tenn1 of S.lo: Cuh
R 1
1 b
thea kmd expressions
"
oalalo canno
t
aoldlor Iouthan two-thlrdo
supper~ prayers,
ol tho epprolald value.
food and cards
Jomn M. Soulaby, !during her illness and death.
Meigs Cou~;.'ll:tr~
A special thanlc you too
(10) 11, 18, 25, 3tc
Ewing Funeral Home, Rev.

1-(3034)·
773-9560

c-111

I'Thon~o
10 lh:.·e~:~~~~~~
squad and Dr.
and lhe sraff of Veterans

Memorial Hospital.
Thanks 10 Joyce Hollon
for all her help in caring
for her and lhanks to all
who vtsiled, sent nov.oersl
food. Thanks to
Florence Smilh for her
consoling words and to
the Ewing Funeral HoiTtel
for the services.
ThcFamiM

0

0

0

I

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

BENNETT'S

0

0

0

0

0

t

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

MOBILE HOME
HEAnNG &amp;
COOLING

located On SaHord Schoel Rd. off Rt. 141
(6141 446-9416 or 1-800·87
'

ITS INSULATOR®

9/ B/ 11 / 1 mo

w~tton

'742·2328
HOME CREEK ENTERPRISES, INC.
(A vrnlurc of J&amp;F (onlroctinq and K&amp;J Con1:ruclion)

Dozer, Bmkhoe, Trenching Wo1k
Utilities: water, gas, sewer, electric.
Cuslom and log Home~
Remodeling and Gene1al Contracting
Commercial Development
See us about Sunshine Room Solariums

FIREWOOD
SELLERS
Hardwood

Slabs

For Sale
Great Price!
CAll

· CALL JACKS ROOFING &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
992·2653
We Guarantee Your Satisfaction
t-51-.

USED

APPUAIICIS

90 DAY WAIRAIITT

WASHIIS-$tDO,.
DITIS- $69 "'

IIFIIGI.ATOII--$190 op
UNGIS-Gos·Dt&lt;.-$U5 ,.
fHEZUS-$125 up
'
IICIO OVINS- $79 ,.

ICEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-533S .. ·15-!561
Acroo Fr., Posl OHica
POMEROY, OHO
10/!01'19 Hn

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
NewH-Iullt
"'Free atlmates"

PH. 949-2101
or Res. 949·2160

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK

JAZZ CLASSES
AGES 3 and UP

129 Baatllnl Orlvt, Salurdly,

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

•.

YOUNG'S

AU. IUDS
Iring It In Or

- Room AddiUont
- ouner work

- Eiectnetl and Plumbtng
- Concrete work
- Roofing

Wt

- lnteriof a hterlor
Painting

Pick Up.

liEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
985-3561

Aa-011 fro111 Pelt

!FREE ESTIMATES I

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

OH,Ical

217 I. SecoM St.
POMIIDY,

GUN

For Residential

NEW- REPAIR

and Commercial
Dump Truck
Delivery or Pick-

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FFIEE ESTIMATES

949-2168
9/ 8/91 / 1 mo

pd

10.1f1MO

In

HUGHBEARHS

depaned this life
one year ago, Oct. 18,

IUJI.h

1990
With a cheery smile

and a wave of the
hand
entered a far better
Land.
Sadly missed by w;~;.l
Louise; Son Ro~~1
Daughter and :&gt;on·· ln· l
Law, Carol and~~~~~

INDIPINDINT
CliPIT ClllNEiiS .
anti TU FLOOR CARE
•Rauoneble Roteo
•Oualily'Work
•Fru Etlimetea
•Cerpet Hat Faot Dry
Time •
•High Gl011 on Tll,a
Floor Flnlah
Mill lEWIS, Ownar
.,. I, lutlond, OM.

•Remodeling and
Home Repair•

FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR

Eam $200-1500 Wotkly Malting
Holiday Travel Brochurn. For
Mora lnlormatlon Send A Ad·
droaaod Stamood Envolopo To:
ATW Trtvat, P.o. Box 430780,
Miami, FL 33181.
AVON • All arNaMI Call Marilyn
·~ · 5
var ·
·
•
-Excotltm
Pay,
Bonollla,
Trantportatlan,
407·212-4~7.
Ell 171 lt.m •10p.m Toll
Rotundad. .

SHRUB &amp; TREE
••

AVON I All Antoo I Shl~ty
Spoora, 304-1175-1421

..
'

992·6648 or
"•·6864
•
1·14-'11-tlft

NAME IRAMD PRODUCTS
foclory Aulhorized Ropalr
TV· VCR · Stereo
Boom Box · C.D. PI aye&lt;
Scanner · Typewrltar
Cordless Phone ·
Microwave • Radar

Detector
Home

Entertainment
Center
H.I.C.
Pa01troy

Your Key to Grea1 Buys

99NS24
912711 mo

CANNERY WORKERS/ALASKA
MoruWomon. Up to 1100
Tranaolortllllon,__!lou•
lng. CALL NOW 1·20e·no-'IVOO
Eil. 11t7B5
D~VIfl til you pold ~ I
mila? n..i lo what wa pay. Uvo

::!'kY'1·

loed a~d unload pay, trh'tl ••·
""II advance. Lift modtl ~

RENT·TO·OWN

CONSTIUCTION

Utrchandlu 614-365-2082, Exf.

3833.

Pomeroy Area POSTAL JOBS,
Stan $11881u + blntflla For

appllcollon Info" call 1-216-324153f 7am-10pm rdays

AN Nurt• to pro"ldt ptrtOnal
cara ttrvlets lo Ptychlalrlcally

dtaabtod cllonlo In Maaon
County 1r1a. Will require no
moro than 17 houro per waak
work may bt performed

213 Valley Orlvt, Point Pltaunt,

.

•

3 btdroornt, apllt·ln'tl, 2 112

448.e588.
NHd .ameane to INr down
houu for rnatarlalt IMo-802·

3431

Unklut4-BA hquM on 10-lcres1

Bradbury Road, oxt11 building,
$27,500. 114-11112·2811 or 218315-23tltl
Vary nice 3·BR Ranch, b~ck
front, corport, 112 blaamom, oak
horclwood lloora. 'J10 """· ~
ml from Holztr Ha.phal, SA 10,
olklng 138,500, 6*1112-2721.
Wanl to buy 4 bedroom homt

Galllpoll1 ochool clatrlct. ()c.
cupancy by aummar of 'G2. Box
8-11, "' Pt. PH. Rogllltr, 200
Main St, PI Pn , WV 2&amp;550

TV REPAIR, tull-tlmt, tiP only,
sa so ""' HR HE c 3tn w

qulpmant, Nlet. , ond ltiYica

awardt,

II% p.Uitlud loads,
MaJor lllllcaJ lniUrlnH IVaU·

Soment to llvt In for thtlr

board t1,000 BTU oil haator for
ulo chup 614-446-3419

::;.:.;;;;:::;;..:.,.:...:.;;:.:,.:.,:.,.:...:._

14

Business
Training

Ret rain
Nowi!!Southte sttrn
But lnlls CoUtl)l 1 Spring Vallay

PIIZI Coli T~~ !14-446-436711
Roglltorallon ,.....,5·1274B.

18 Wantad to Do
----=,.,..,==.,....,,--E a TREE SERVICE. l~ng,
A

T~mmlng,

Traa Rtmoval;
a
T~mmlng FrH EatlmiiHI I
387-71111.
Goorgoa Portoble SowmUI, don,
haul your toga to tho mill full
coll3044'11·11l17. .
lntonor and utarlor pointing, 10
yaaro OXpll'lonco, ~I polnllng,
hand woohlng houOH, trtll•a,
wlndowo Odd lobo Ralaroncaa.
FrH EotlmoiH. 304.e71-2708.
Mlto Paula's Day Cart cantor.
Sola, affartlobta, ahlldcara. M·F
f • m. • 5 30 p.m. Agao ~10.
Balora, ohtr achool. Orapolna
wotcoma. 114-44&amp;.e224. Now IIJI
font Toddttr Coli, 114-4411-1227."
Hood
taavao rokod, 304-

.,.U"'

obta. 401 K pan w~h company mmatching up to 21fo ol poy. Mul!l

.

·

Frnancral

ha¥1 3 )'lll'r8 OVII tht ratd

-ll~ble arparlonco
yoar 1•·- -- -- - - -txperltnce
pulling •11!1
van 1 typt
traltaro.Ptauo .. tt e&amp;N Evana
~:J. eo , Boyd Adklna, 304-

[lJ

21

Business
Opportunity

J---~~IN~cm~cE=t~---­
HONEST.. . OHIO VALLEY P~BLISHING CO
rtcommendt thlt you do butl·
Cluaifiedo nne wlfh poopta you know, and
NOT 10 oond monll' tlvougn tho ·

Work!

mtll until you hav• lnvtltlgalld
tho onorlng
..J

"

~

WV 25550 AAIEOE.

Help Wanted
1350.00/Day Procnolng Phona
Ordarol Pooplo Colt You No El·
portonco Noconary 1-1100.2560242
' EXTRA INCOME ' tn " •

PH. 949-2101
or Its, 949-2160
Day or Night ·
NO SUNDAY CALLS

USED RAILROAD TIES

Colly Sllory 01 1300 For Buying

9

11

"AI Reasonable PricH"

9.92-2269

•Siding
•Painting

Dining Roo'\', Kllchan, Bolh,
Cantril "AIIj_ vtnvl Sieling, Car·
""od. 2 ""' Oaralll!. -wltliln
Walking Dlottnco OrTha Pool,
Golf Ccorao And Clnlc. Got.
llpolla CHy School Cllt~ct . 114245-6152.

"u

BIU SLACK

•Roofing '

Drive, Gt.lllpalls. Uvlng Room,

32 Mobile Homes
Bob Wllllomo • Sons &amp;*tltl2- Main, Pomeroy Apply In porocn
for Sale
!54411.
Wanted. La1d Gultlrill For
Wantod To Buy: Junk Aulool Co1.1nlry And Rock Band. Call 1161 2-BR mobllo homa on us
Scr11p Matal And FrM Rtmova 114-366-9443
acrn more or
kx:altd at
From Wilt VIrginia 614-441·
4113 Vlno 91., Raclnt. Fully tur·
Wanted . Pari·Timt Bar1tndtr, nlahod Jan. 11. Now corpot,
0013.
For Local Private Club. Exctl· wuhorldryor, AC, now khchan
Top PPicu Paid: All Old US lent Working Condition. Frldtyt oppllancoo. Coli 114-1192-2135
COino, Gold Rlnll!t Sltvor Colno, And Satruday Nlghtt Only 1.00.5:90. Atkin;
St5,000
Gold COina. M.T.~. Cain Shop, Reply At . CLA 014, clo Qalllpollo ovarythlng.
Dally Trlbul"'l, 825 Third Avtnut,
111 Socond Avanuo, Gallll'!l'l•
Gallipolis, OH 45831.
1970 12x60 mobllt home, 3 btclroomo, beth 6 112, phona 3045~2101.
Employment Services 12
Sltuauon
11170
121150, 2 bedroom
wanted

CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
•

El!peritnct Ntctt llry. A

No

COunty Mtntal Htolth Slrvlcoa,

Wanttd lo'buy, Slandlng Umbtr,

BISSELL
BUILDERS

HHIJO'I.

llllllaaoiat="' ......; - •

~
' 4 CWII!t!!or. ......
Rod, ~ low llllaa, W
For Pll'
11.5011;. 1111 DNa

GOOD

USED APPL.tlo'ICI:S
dr;tra, rtlrtgtlfllonl,
rlftlll. IUaai AHtllnoH, .,
u- Alvtr IJa. Boalda llano
Crul Motot. Call_.,._

w.-.

on.

t

Della ·U, HHcfe \irark, 1100,

I

Flnn. l - 1 2 .

-

~,.,....-, 11aul,

-ang Ut. ........... ;

W/lca ~. l,_, 4 ya old,

128,000 Mllaa. Ell..... W.. •

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Comflla!t
homa t-1.
"""~~~:·
Houro: u-Sa~,
I
0322, 3 mllol out Bu~vllta Rd.
FrooDallvory.

1110 mUle,
lllvor h500 11
8,100

ranty,18,1H, IM-141-1027.

$410, ~,.7113,

•

,ord T'::A tU2
-·

AIITCIM!lfliLII. lAO CMm'r

· OK.~~-~~t-.a

..........

A.-11. lla Down P.,-. 1o

800-23N211, 24 Hrt.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
14x70 all otoctrlc on p~vato lot.
1250.00 plua utiiHial HUD Approvarl. 304-1175-4088.
2 bad~m moblta homo, Sind
Hill Road, 304-875-3834.

SkC.. Good condition,

mobllt

304-117&amp;.e4ll.
1m moblla homo on 1·111
ICIH, Jerry's Run Road, Applt
Grove. St5,000. Will 1111 moblta

VI'RA FURNITURE
614-448-3158
LIVING ROOM : Solo l Choir,
$1tltl OO· Racllntr, SMI 00; Ont Larae Htaler, Nlhnl Or

End Tablal, $8Q.OO Sot DINING
ROOM: Tablo With 4 Poddod
Chilli, SMQ 00, COuntry Pint
Dlnollt With Banch And 3
Chalro1, $2tltl 00; Mllchlng 2
Door "Itch $34Q Or H89 00
Sat; 011t Tabta, 4ax&amp;2 With &amp;
Bow

BICK

Chalnl,

1124 E. Main StrHI, Pom~rar.
Houra M.T W 10 00 a.m. to 1.00

p.m , Sunday t:OO to 1:00 p m

BM·IIII2·2al!~.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
1t-lnc:h color TV 171, nlct con·

dillon. 614-141-2038

350 Cummins ott frame cam

20,000 mllaa on tha m•lor. -n7
Mack Malor, 35,000 on major, 44

home uparl1t 304o425o5033 or

6t4-8~51.

1181 14x10 cuttom built, no
down poymo'!,t1 ~kl ovor loan
payments ot ......22 month. 1·

304-1182·3451 lhll 7:00pm.
lit! Fleming M1'1V 3 bed·
roomol 2 bitho, oil ttactrlc,
contra tlr, undarponnlng wlf~
blockl that oxlat $17,000. You

-lng.

aorii1,

letthlr US

Camblt

Bboto. Slm Somarvltta'a san.
dyvlllo
PGol btilct,
apanmenlt tor rant. 30-t-675- Rt. 21 1", WV
F~. Sat, SUn, Mono41:00
2053 or 171-4100,
PM (ollandod hourw du~ng
smoll 1bf Apartmont, 7 COurt humlng 101oon) 304-273&gt;11155
Slrllt, Kllchan With Stav~t
WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
Rol~gorot~r1 •
$185/mo Pluo Ron
Alllaon 1210 Second
Dtposll, Ulllhln, AtltNnct. Avanuo,
GaH{potto, Olllo, 614614-446-4ml.

one

and

two

btdroom

441-4331

45

Hutclt, Qold Stor Ring, WIJh
stand, Boor 91gna~- Arid Odda
And Enda. 114-311..,11.
-1304-45&amp;-20011.
=Roo_m_a..,.tar-ro-nt~.-.-,.-:,k-or_mo_m-::-h.·l Concrota I ~ oapllc tanka,
I::-=:::C:--i7-:::-::--:-..,......,.
II Sl20/m0. Gall~ Hotlll. Ron Evant Enttl'llritll, Jack·
Now 1112 14172, a or 3 bed· ~:7lf 1580.
oon, 011 1-IIOH37-1828.
roomt madell, 2 ful balht, 1
lltlngla roof, vinyl aiding, A21 Stooping coolllng. Crat* ~~~~ Hooplltl Bod With
calling, 2x1 R20 wllllo, aot-up APoo traltar opaco.whh
AI hook-ups. Tablt,
.30:
F~ldah,
Call
Call aft• 2:00 p m., 304-Tn- Rolltaarltor, 150. Con 110 aSt7, •••.oo.
1.- 5111,
At 131 Cllapal Rood, 1-1 UnMooon wv.
UIOct-2111.
REBATE REBATE!
Up To lt.OOO Rabato On 11o1oc1 46 Space for Rent
Fl......, lor Hlo 120.00 par
Lot Modolo At Elooo Homo can.
load,
....1112-2411.
tor. Grtll lloloctton No-• Counlry Mobile Homo Pork,
Routt
33,
North
o1
Pomoroy
ElM But Ellll Homo Cantor. 1·
Lam, rental1, parta, 11111 Call
IIOO.aau7tt
614-tltl2·7'471.
21ro Dollaro Down On ProFar IIIIa: 7 Cluall PINIUN CanOwned Mobl~ H -. API You Qood hunting and came litH nor, 2 Dozon Quart Jara And II
Poy It Ttl And THio Fooa With tar rtnl Dwll' 100 acrn a hunt Ptm Jaro.I14-44HI30.
Approvld Crocllt. Coli Elou on In Muon County. CIJI any
For lola: Chll'c: ~o, Bodo,
Homa CantarA!: 1.efiO.UI.5~11. 111M, 304-rr.2581.
10 • Chllrt1,
St1ndt Tab'-,·
And Ela. I-'IIIIQ.
Trollaf.loll71.
~!!...
"'"
·
33 Fanna for Sale
up, Norlh At. 2; ......, . . For IIIIo: W•• Htolor And
100,000 ITU, l.tnnol1 PUIH Fur·
Maoon Colmy 12• (40
ICrttllmbtr), otd ttan., 2 mMII
!,1erchandrse
- . CaN Iofaro llp.m. 1*241bema, Rt. :II; 11 mflaa • to
5414.
Wlnltatcl 10 mllol to Point
Qonaoal Eloctrlc -'ono
PIHillll. $t50,000. Colt 304-871- ~
HDUIIhold
""'-•
and
llovo,
3210
bot- 1:00 All and 4:30 "'
PM • •
FrkiiCitlrt dlohw-. gold.
Furnished
Rooms

=

. Goode

4 Wltoot Platform Scatoo Com·
With Wolghtt. Calll14-148l

PSE bow, 3 1111 ot olghlo,
qulvtr, IWII arrow fllt 1 IIUII 3
rotrlgarato11 ao tow u $40

Nell: 304-171-3100.

*"~-.

::352~.0;:231:::·.,.....--.,. .,.,-:--:::- 1 ~=.~~~~:'-"

·==:.:..::.::..::::::____

..

for Sale- ,

8oa1 And Wtvarvnnt1 WlnIII'IZIIIon Faclooy Trolnod. 114,, ,
251-1180

76

r

Auto Pans&amp;
Accessories

1m rallullt Porlloc 301 .,....,,
wtl:h rMulll traniMinlo,.; ~ ,
304-e'IU:IIt
- ;, .
40 Parlo Cara, 7U7 M-,.

=·

~ :.:p:::·~o ~·114o ' '

AKC 11otg~
'· pupo, 304 ~'118-3847.• Hay 71 Conti par bola, locllod In 448-3112.
Building And .... For AKC rog. Bolar popplaa, 1 Rutlond, OH, 304-77WIII.

'-, •
..

month old, •~• 1.flmale,

Flbefg.... truc1r.

6*111124762 or 1124754
AKC Raglltnd ~ aPupploa, 8 Waolto Old, 811Cko,
'
Roda,, And I Blue, St2l Each.
614-258-1447.
71 Autos for Sa e
ARHA R~llarod Baal!lo't, 8- 11173 Ford Mulling runs moo. old, 1111 allflod, 155 tL good, no rv• riaodo aomo
114-1112·20
Work. 3111-ctavii/end, 4-BRL, 4o
::O:
Ch,.:._= =
lro:...m
---,:'"'
1-b,.-troo
-:do---:AK
:-:C
::- J BLT main, P8, PI, AC, CC,
Cocklr Spanlat, AKC Wltlto StOOO OBO 114-t12-8711
Will Hlehlond Tonia,., AKC t171 CllrioiOr Cordobo, 310 ang,
Scoltllh Tarrlaro. 114-614-4177
114-112·2t1130Ul'UH6.
Oragonwjnd Canary Pwalon, 1879 Ford llullong, $410, Fair
Slam- ond Hlmoloyan kilt.... Condition. lt4-37i-2MI Aak For
614-448-3844 aftor 7 p.m.
Lao Dr 8annlo
-=:...,.,.-----,,----=-- Floh Tank, 2413 Jacklon Avt t171 Monta Carlo, T~opa, many
Point Ptonam, 304-415-2013, tXIIIt, mu ..... to 1ppreclltt,
Nil tina Tropical floh 1 ~blrdo, 304-176-4185 or 175-f258.

hlnaO both - . - $850. yr cid 1250 --211M.

I

sman animala 1nd tupphtl.

cover I

I bed, ..

•-

SICUI Valva Orinda~ s.t GrtndInti .... Qulda Equlf1011r11 all':

4411

z•

- · ·
"

Vary good 305 clltvy -or In"- '
.;;111;:2·,:21;:21:,__ _ _ _ __
4-opood "-1200 lor both 114,

Clmpers &amp;

79

Motor Homes
11111 20ft, Toyota R.U., ~:: : ·
Oood Concltfan,

51,.

t. •

- n d T1roo. lt4-4q.· ~

202\

'

Services

.J.."'t

t171 Pontiac Flllblrd, point,
cond, St,5oo or 81
Home
t11do,
71-11120
Improvements
1111 Buick Rogal, I Cyllndar,
Runa Good, Voiy Cooan tnaldal
BASEMENT
plgltlt Makt.l/rut Chrlatmat OUt, 11,300, Stt la Apprtclatt
WATERPROOFING
~~
gifts and 110 ont potol St50. 114-311U700.
Uncondltlonll Hr.tlma guaran- ,
For uto or trado, Alglatared
Slbt~an
Huaky
pupo,
malolltmaltl14-892-4073
Miniature Pot Bally olga ond

614-84~5453

1111 Plymouth Champ, Good

Pondle, toys, and 111 cups, 1110 Condlllonl $500 Firm. 114-448mlnllurt Schnauzerw sal • 7317.
pepper, Champion Grand Slr1,
1181
Pontiac
Bonnovllla
AKC, Cootvll~ 1-7-3404
a~ughom , 4 dr eodan, baa~lhtl
Ragltttrld D11mallont for tale. flmlly e~r, every option inc
114'448-1751.
IYnroof, 305 V.f, 11185, 114-112·
Roglattrtd tamale Grill Done 1711
puppy; VICCintt.cf 6 Wormed 1112 OIMI 14,000 Mltoa, AC,
$150.114-446-t3!54.
AMIFM Auto, 11 t 111.0SSt.

R-

Local

IH

r~tl

~

fumllhed .

Froa llllmtt11. Col colloct 1- •
Sl4-237-o4111, day or night.
-mem Wttorproot~

~~:!;r~ .:l::.""'~..!l!~~~ 1u3 c~tao• s u -, lotdod,

fl4-44a-1730Affor 4.00p m.

good cond ' ~ IM.IJII6-4tllll
Z~l,
V-1, BuiH Up,
Aulomot~,. WMh M!llllltlfttr,
I.Oldod wnh Evary Oi&gt;tton, T·
Topa, - Conrllla Wltht Palnl,
c-ana Aalllaa, s-111 Ed~
lion, Groy Interior, 1'/,800 lnv..
lod,,B~mR THAN NEWI 121000
1183

!S7

Musical
Instruments
Armotrong fluta, 304.e7!-7880

COnn Trombone, excellent con-dltlon, alklne 1300.00 CoN 304882·21121

In ~or Atone, 18~15, 114-.:455518

c_.----.__,,..,.,c-----

t984 300 ZX Datsun, tow mllu.
Gamolnhordt Ftuto 2-yr old, Coli
1*11112-6800 or 112-61177
oxc. cond., J1IOI Antlq111 Ann aftor 5:00pm.
Arbor uprighl p ano wlbtnch,
good cond , nklng $400 I* 1114
CodMioc
F985-4315
B1'l"'J~'J?o 13,500, NogOIIablo,
7.
Ludwig Snart drum c. ., ttand, •
and otf&lt;ko, $tOO. 304-451&gt;1511.
1184 Colobrlty, 4dr AT AC, PS,
PB, Extra C~anl $2,100. CaliA~
Up~ght Botdwln plono, 304-882·
tor Sp.m.IM-448-1244
3271.
1165 Monte Corio, T•opo,
58
Fruits &amp;
toodod WIOVIrythlng, 4.3 motor,
lull lnloclod, $2500. 614-1112.
Vegetables
380t
Fino Tumlpa, $8/Buohll, $5 00 • 1111 Dodgt Doytona 5 S - .
You Pick. Also, Kola And Muo- Air, AMrA! Caalllll, ANI Good
llrd By Tho Buahol Dr Trolllr Cond~lonl $3,200. 114-2U.e28t.
Load. Chlrl• McKtan F1rmt,
Falrllatd Contonory Road, Gil· tlll7 Aucl 40008, now battary,
llorlor, IQnHton, $4,500. Irion
llpollo.
304-6~1121 ohar e·oo.
No. 1 • 10 Poundll Of Potat011, 1
$5 50 Eech; AI Tho Flu Ma- 11117 Chevy Nova· hiGh mllugo,
COrnor Ot Rl 35 And Rt 1110, a. noods repair Goorl1ronaport•
llda Fruth PhtnrutCf, Tho tton car. $1.soo For mort lnfor·
Thaler Building, GallipOlis Ohio, milton Ca1I 114-441-2342, Alit
lor PaUl.
Saturday And Bunday.
11117 HotUon $2,000. 1185 lllfo
cvtY Lynx S700. 1111 Cavollor
Farm Suppl1os
$100. 111711 Chov truck 1100. 304171-2440.
&amp; Lrvestock
1IN Bonnavlllo Pontlao, v.a,
Automat,lc1 All P-r, $5.600:
11H ..... - - Um~od,
V-1. Automatic, $1,000. For Silt
61 Farm Equipment
DrTrodo.IM58-12711.
1 Row COrn Plckor, S Point Dlri
11111 AI, 31,000 IIIIa,
Scoopar B,ucltll. 1144'1M711.
Bllak, Qroy lnlorlor, lluftl Pool
3f1 MF Tractor With OynobourJoa Fuat t~. v.a,
P-r, ()ptlona, lroa
· MF$1,115:
Boler, ..uv
~!IIi:.: All
Ftrguton
11ro1, E-m Condition
l3,fi5. Owner WIA F -. 114- 11,150 a14-441-c311 Anytt281.e522.
1111 Iuick U - . . .. 111111

Cou,!IIJ ~~-. Inc. Good Olonwood Goa Cook Stovt, Ukl Jlm'l
Will Parm~l-ntl.:~J}
QaHI
I
1M
j
u~pptloncea,
T.V.
alii.
0ooon
Brand
Now,
Aaklng
$110.
114112 to 314 tcro lola whh oounly
Wldonow
I
45:..;5,.:.11,.:.3·:.....__ _ _ __
traatoro I tmptomontL luy,
water 1nd tleetrle, 10 mll11 1 a. . to I p.m Man .aot. ·l14- I:2:..;
oouth ol Point Plolalnt. 1:1,100. 441-1
127 3rd. Avo Go~ Loa Sptltllr For Rant. Evana llll,ltroda, I:DN:OO - y a ,
llo~ Hlllloon
304'1711-2814.
lpollo,
Mcil011, 114-1441-11182.

35 Lots &amp; AcratJge

1111 Clltvy S.10, 114, T - '
RIIM And Tlroo, Aulomlllc, Y-f.' '
114-m-2120.
'.
63
Livestock
.;.;;...,......;::;.,;.;,;;.;~;;_--- 1111 Chewy Van, eonuw:' ·
4 Hcnt Goauneck Tralllr, alan KH, 14.000 Or Olfor. ''
$'1,185; 5 Year ad AQHA Mart, 114 44111204 Allorlp.m.
St,250; 2 Yaar Old, AOHA Moro,
tt,soo. 1... zou522.
74 Motorcyclel
II Gao.. Nick tralllr, AQHA ln- ~11111=Kiw::--llltt":":"':K:::JI:~-«&lt;:-,-,..-.-I.-.~,(
conttvo Fund ~yr old lloldlng, condNion, $410.00 I14.IJII2.IISI
lloriod on pot_. barrola. 114- aftor 5:00pm
1112·2552
1111 "-111 -A lllnlo, '1W1n
Cult- Llvlllock Hauling. Can cam,
11 V"".J1400 11110o,
•
Haul To Hlllaboro , _ Dr Lo- Naf' AICRAT...,t
·
. '
cally. Chuck Willian Trlpto AREAL STREET liKE I
Croak Trucldng.l*248--.
$3,710 Finn. 114-241.15U.
Goatt, Pacl1raoct Nubian BliCk,
$80 Otharl. Good Pllll 120 75 Boats &amp; Motors
And Up. Mounl Olivo Rood, 114-

$821.00.BEOROOM Poalor Bodroom 9ullo 11 pc.), 13411.00; 4 Wood For Silt• 81110nod.
Dra10tr Chtot, $4415; Bunk $3011.oad. WI Accapl Vouchara,
Bod, 12211-Complota Full Matt 114-441·1003.
Sot. St05.oo Sot; 7 pc. Cedar
Bedroom Sullo, $8tlti.OO.OPEN: 55
Building
Mondoy Ttvu Slturdly, lo.n1. to
&amp;p.m., Sunday 12 Noon Till
Supplies
sp m., 4 Mlloo 011 Routa 7 On
Routt 1411n Centonary.
Black, brletc, ptpao, wtndOWI, finials, etc. Claudt WI,_.
Sims Hldobed. gold btua, plaid, tara, Rio Gllndt, 011 Col I* 388-8548
'
gel. condition. 114-4441·3411.
241-6121.
Roglatorod Polod Ht11lord Sui.
Octaa- SpscW., two car 114'4418531.
52 Sponlng Goods
gorogao
24x:l4d-13lltlti.CO,
Nubian goat lor Nil, $30. 114·
Croaa Bow, PS. E FO.flrt 2, Ar· 24x27Ki-14111.00,27132xlraws Culver Can, $200; Cam- $4141.00, Proclalan Poll Frame 4411-41112.
pound Bow, Ban Paaroc'!l Ar· Bulldtll,l14-1112-3541.
rvwo Quiver Etc. $50: 11uck ====-=~-- 164
Hay &amp; Grain
Tool Box, Behind Cab. $80. 114- 56 Pets for Sale
;;.;........;.;:.:....::....::;=-448-3040.
-:;;;;;;;:-;;;;-;;;j;i;~;;;p; 1 Attolla hay lor 1111. o.,. 114Groom tnd Supplr Btlo, Pit • ·3111
or
114-t85-3Ht
Grooming, All biNds, IIYlH. tv~nlnga.
53
Antiques
~mo Pol Food Doolor. Julio
,..--....,....,..:...,......,..,..._ Wtbb.
Colt 114 Ul 0231, ,..... Alllllo/Qrtaa Rolli 125. Frao
Buy at 1tll. RIVIflnt Antlq-,

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

•

=•

Swlvtl Aocktr, Sfi 00; CoH• &amp; Battltd Clt1 AIIO, 1 Pair Of Old

Bocltwlll raar anda, rvbbar
block outponllon, now ~~~
roor and, raar built, 15 a
ovardrlvo tronamlaolon with
doap reduction call Don A114-84~5340 aftor I OOpm lor
mort Information.
Appro1 400 Ft. Of 3 Inch Oak
For 11111· 1 bdrm apt, fum BaH T~m. Sandod Naturally St
or unlurn, In Mlddlapart, 6* Par Ft 114-146-2515.
11112-6225 or 1192-6304.
llornott Wlldcll Croaobow1 .~71 ;
Fumlahld 3 Roomo I Bath, 11178 Camaro 1600, liNda work.
Cloon, No PltoiJ Rtloronca &amp; 114-448-1145.
Dopooft Roqulro . 114o446-151Q. ::.:~==----Coal, Hamt Delivery. Minimum
Fumlahldaportmant, 4 rooma l Of 4 112 Ton, $58 Par Ton, I*
bath1 no}'"Ia Sec clop. 6 ral. 314.,1331,
614 046 0444
Compular, Ral~g•ator, Chino
Nlcaty Fumlohod Aportmont, Rato Or Mica? In Your HouH?
1br, nul to Ubrary, ptrklng, Buy ENFORCER, Kllla rato I
central htat, air, rtftrtnct .... mlco
In only 1 -lng,
qulrod.l14-441.0338
GUARANTEED! Available 11'
Fumlohod opt. All ~llhlal oald. Boum Truo Yaluo 9tara, 11 Will
1 BR, upotalra, 2nd Avo. Cood Main Slrlll, Cllaetar, 011
cond 114-448-1523
Alii Or Mice? In 'four Hou11?
FumltMd Efflcltnqr, $1851ma Buy ENFORCER, Kllll rote I
Utllftlal Paid, Short BoPh, 1107 mlco In only 1
Second Avo, Oalllpotlo, 114-446- QUARANTEEDI Available ol:
O'Dalt Trua Vatuo Lu-. 134
44tl.t.ftor 7p m.
Eltt Main Str..t, Ponwroy, OH
Furnlohod Socond Aportmtnt,
RATS OR Mlel?
2br, M1 Second Avenua;, G1l·
llpollo, 1250/mo Utllltlao Paid, In Your HouH? Buy ENFOR·
CER. Kllta Roto And Mloo In
114-448-4411 Ahtr 7p.m.
Only I Foodlng. GUARANTEED!
Gr~clouo living. t and 2 bad·
Available At: Cenlrtl Supply, 17
room apartment• tt VIllage Court StrMt, Spring Vllloy
Manor
and
Rlvtrtldt Hartlwaro, 1121 JookiOn Pilla;
Apartmtntl In MkkfliP&lt;I'rt From Odall Trua l'lluo LBA, VIne
StH. Calll14-i92·77117. EOH.
Street At Third Avanut, C.~
lipoMa, Olllo.
In Mlddlopcrt, Ohio. 1 ond 2
bedroom fumlshtd apt, aoma Sactlonll Couch, GE Wuhar
w"h ulllhln paid, r~ltrtnce 1nd Whlto; DE Aalrl~or, All Now
dapoolt roqulred, 304-1182-2~
Porto, Can Ba Soon lP 1075
Comptaety Furnllhod mobile Slatt Route 14\ 114-441-0433,
homt1 1 milt bllaw town, ovtr- Surpluo Army Comoultauga
looklng river. No Poll, CA. 614- Orkilnal clothing, amatl acce.
446-0331.

. ..

73 Valli &amp; 4 WD'a

WI-.

WOlf VIrginia, 304·7'13-5785.
Wanted to Buy

3 Bedroom Houaa, 118 klneon

bllha, ltmlly rocon with wll ber,
2.4 acraailt Groonbrlar Eatotoa, 2br Mabile Ha1111, A...r~nc•
And Dopoolt Raqu~od. 11a Pots
304-1175-3 loftor 5 pm.
814 446 liN.
LABORERS FUII·Tima, Oonartl 4 btdrooma, 2112 bltllt, homo 3
yr1 old, •lee hut pumpbmalltr Mobllo home lor ront, Uppar AI
Help, to SM HR. 1-800-551-1738
sulto wtth whlrpoot, uln In 7, 114-44H508 or 44&amp;.e321.
LABORERS
dlohwuhor, mlcrowovo VInyl
Full nmo, Ganaral Http To St4 aldlng 1 "!'lar a cobla, 1 acre tot Nloa 2 bedroom mobile homo, 2
HR 1-600-551·1738.
In IUDCIMtlon, AI. 2 Soulh, batho, largo tlulng room ond
dining room, Somwvllla Aulty,
$71,1100. 304-5~21102.
Maintenance Suparvlsor
304.a75-3030 or 178-3431.
6 room 1·112 bath, story l hill.
We Ara SNklng An lndlvktual Kitchen, DR, LA, 2 BR 44
Apanment
With.
downstairs, 1 largo BR, 112 beth
upstair.. 24124 garage. 114-441• for Rent
·Plumbing
And
El1ctrlcal 7878.
1-bdrm opt Pom•oy, 1 I 2·bdrm
Knowltdg~
·Maintenance
Experlanct Corner Lot, 5 room• and blth, apt Mlddlapert, Call lt4-11112·
Prefenabltln A Health Care Stt· $24,000. 31t Handnon Strlll, 2403
Htndtrton, WV. 114-441-7523 or
ling
304.e78-14U •
2·8R In Mlddlaport. lla """
-Fiexlbll~y
Pay own utllftlaa, $200 par mo.
-Oopondabla
GOVERNMENT HOliES F~m St Dopoolt/Roloroncaa roqulrod.
(U Ropalr)
Dollnquont
Tox
We Ollar.
Property, Reponelllont. Your 114-11112·2311 dayo.
-Compotltlva
Salary And Aroo
(1 805-162-8000. Ext GH- 2br
F1mlahod,
12:10/mo.
Bonafns
10181 For Current Rapo LlaL
Ralooonc•~ Securlty DopoaK Of
• bcllllnt Trtlnlng Prvgram
.C. roar GroW1h OpportunMIH
HOUSE FOR FREEII Mull movo noo. 484 -ond Avonuo. ....
.Job Sotloflotlon
off lol In Mlddlapart. Fill In 441 2231, 114-441-2581.
baeamtnt, aNd enc:lllraw. Mutt 2br, Ra,...or And 9tova
Forward Anumt Or Letter Of olgn conPrllcll 2-BA, Llrga LR, Fumlahld, Aloo Wollr And
lntorlll Outlining Ouotlllclllono OR, Bllh, hu now roof and gut· Truh Fumlohod, Corpotod
And Sllary Hlotory To:
tor, now coppar and PVC ptu'""' Throughoutl114-14114140.
lng, nood, 10!111 worll. You pay
•
Bill Blat · Administrator
tor "tha nwtnal OnlY' Mrtoua BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
Pomtroy
NurtillG
And calloral Call 614-11112·2071 altar BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
7•00pm,
ESTATES1 • 53G Jacltoon Plko
Rohabllllalton Ctnltr
lrom Sthtmo. Walk to shop l
36759 Rocksprlng• Road
ln"•tmtnl Pack9" 11-houan movlaa. Calll14 441 2518. EOH .
Pomeroy, Oh io 45761
In Pomtroy/Midd~ area,
small down p8yment and owner Brookoldo APirtntonll, 1 Bodllnanclng, txcelltnl Income, room,
Stovt
Rafrlg~n~lor,
$400 WEEK, Dr Moro Stuffing 11rlou1
lnquh• anly, Clll 814Dryar Hook·Up, 614o
EnYtiOPII AI Homt. Rush $1.00
44NI27.
Saii-Addraaood Stamood En- 11112-2403.
voi-, No 10 10 D&amp;A Supplies, Munl Unit Romlll, 1 Yaar Old. Efflc~ncy AIIOrlmont, Fur·
P.O. Box 1443, Falrbom, Olllo Vlnyt Siding, Low Mtlnt,rwnce, nlahod, lll Utlt~l• Paid. Rio
45324
Centlllly !Aoolod, $51,1100. 614- Qranda, Ohlo. I*388-H45.

auction •rvlce. Ucented Ohio, Nursas llctnta Apply 11 Muon

Factlorw Ch..o
12 Gauge
Dnr,
Stridly

Amana Rofrlglialor, Gold Color,
El01111111 CclndMton, $71. 8*

-roon

Rick PNrwn Auction company, evening• and/or WMktndt.
full Umt auctionetr, eomplltt S.l1ry negollablt. valid WV

SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Starting Sept. 28

•

-lied, Aill!t
c:tlovrAir,~
~
N; •
PilL T·lopt, •
AlliN Ctlllt1e. ........... .

mo,

__....,.....;:--c-::.,.;.....,_,,..--- ·Jand

Bashan Building
EVERY

ROOFING

PubliC Sale
&amp; AuctiOn

8

RACINE

HowCI'd l. Writesel

llpolla Forry, beloW Sldoro, 17th-

1tlh. S.turday mwt lttma 112

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
242 B-h St , Middleport. Oct
18-11, 10:00-6 00, St bag, · -·
chtap ltamal
All Yard Slloa Must llo Pold In
Aduanca. Dudltna· 1'00pm tho
dly bllore tht ad It to run,
!kindly od~lon- 1:00pm Friday,
Monday odHion 10:001 m.
lloturday
Moth• of 'l'wiM Club tall •Ia,
E""-1 Church, Pomaroy,
Sitturdoy Oat.1111h, 1:00 to
3:00pm, hot dogalpop.

CARPENTER SERVICE

OVEN REPAIR

Suplf' Llrge Yard Ball, Gal-

Prlca

9· 6· 1 mo.

6·6·'91

~

4, mlac lttmt.

THE DANCE
COMPANY
992-62·89

(614)
696-1006

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE
All Hard Wood

2

_.

F~doy, Saturday, 3 MIIH OUt
Bulavlllt Road(/ Loh On Morton
Wood
ROll
TupptrwaN,
•CI!tldreno CICitllng, Mlocl _

FIRE DEPT.

Services Available
Call 992-6142

Sunday odltlon - 2 00 p m.
F~day Monday odltlon • 2 00

Small Engine•, uourde, DOort,

NQ SUNDAY CAils

Up Your Own
Also Splitter ·

Advtnca DEADLINE. 2:90 p m.

the d•y before lht ad Ia to run.

Mise

BALLET, TAP &amp;

u ..

GOOd a

1 lA, ltava I ro~!G· fum;, now
oarpee, wathlr I dryer hookup,
1225 por
$200 dop., I mo.
IIIU. 142 Fourth Avonuo, Go~
llpolla.l14-448-3887.
1br, Furnished Noo11, 738 Rur
Thl~ Ava;- Gallpotlo. I*
448-31170, • 441 1340.

-- - ------·1,.,

Gorogt Silo, Alln Dr Shlna.
Saturday, Octobar 11,1.00.5.00.
1201 Orchard Hilt Road, Off
Routt 218. Chlldron'o And
Adult's ClothMJ. Rlllotlllor, 2

JOS£PH D. JACKS

71 Auloaforlllt

41 Hbuses for Rent

Fllllfa Hair &amp; Tanning, Alhtn1,
Ia looking lor 1 qualified 6 tn•
thu.l alllc llylltt ta work In our
tatt pactd walk·fn aalon. Wt of·
top hour pay p(ut commit·
slon, pa id vacation I advance
tducallon htalth lnsursnct It
available call Lynn Olltr 814·

Yard Sale

p m Saturday.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

HOUHhold

111

All Yard Saltl Mull Bt Ptld In

...

5I

The Dally Sentlnei-Page....a ••

WV, U25. mo. Rlloranca siMI

Flta Marlett htmt, Mile!

For Old &amp; New Roofs, Shingles
Repairs, Gutters
Building and Remodehng

OHIO PALLET CO.
992·0'10

Rentals

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
512o117117.
4 Family Garaga Slla. 10/181h HAIRSTYLIST
NEEDED .
And 10/19thJ.. lP Addloon GaurantHCI $1'10 WMk Plus
TownhoiJit un Honeyauck'rt Moral Paid Vocatlona. 614-448Drlvo In Addloon, I To 5. Good 7267.

Is Your Roof Ready For Anolher Year of Ice and Snow?

fREliSTIMAIES

578-2331.

pormlaalon.

Gl veaway

7

Greg Bailey 992·681 0

Now's The nme to Find Out.

ATTENTION

Morcor lattom SuiHivlolon,

ana
aero lola, Rt. 2 - price reduced, ally nt•, 304-

2 bedroom hal!ta,
dapooll. 304-871-7111.
=1-~F~...
~,.~~~~~~~P~~~m~B~~~m~~.~~·t------------------r------------------+2bed~m MuM, r.nMya~.
yre old, glva to good homo wino -:-:-~-----nlca ntlghbcmood, ~71otlltrcafa 114.gg2.26Q7
11 Help Wanted
1213.
3 bedroom homo,. 2218 Joffar·
Black Walnuta To Gl""way ___;:.:::,...:..:;:.:;:=::.__
.an Avt, t300 rtftrence and
614-387.0274.
A Dolly Solory 01 $300 For
dapoo-. 304475-21111.
Buying Marcf11ndl11. Buyer
loot on Porllond Rd., omoll Naeded. No Exparltnct Ntcu- 31 Homes for Sale
~ 3br MouB ' MIIH Fr~ Town,
female dog, tan In color, namt
ABSOWTELY MUST IELLII 1371/mo. ~luo DopotH. 114-446Tippy. 614-~11-3081 ltiVI m,. oary. 614·385-2062, Ext.3883.
aagt.
Admlstlona
RtpNttntatlvt Roduood To Sail: 2 Story 3br 0365.
Noodad.
Loco! Collogo Sind Comtr lot In Chnhlra, Ohio 3br Ranc!!, Rodnay Vllloga II,
Male Border Colllt, 1 112 Yun Reaume To P 0 Box 213, Gat- Excellti'IIJ Condition. Flananclna
Old, Calll1~-3113.
Avollabla. 804-132.el59, 111&lt;1' 1300/mo. l'lua llopollt. 614'388It poll a, Olllo 45631.
8305Aftor 5p.m
932·7670,
614-387o0841.
Mothar And"S Mola Pupo, Mlxtd
EARN MONEY R11dtng Bookll 2·Story houH In Rutland, 1· Nice Fumlahod 1 Bodroom
, Brood. Sf4-256-1525.
$3a,OOCIIyr. lncom. Pot~ntlat. bdrm upstair• apt 3-Mc:lroom Houn, 114-441·1751.
Datallo. (11 605-1162-8000 Ext. y. upotal11, downatllro living rm,
6 Lost &amp; Found
Stoking R11ponalbla Paoplo To
10180.
Ront Nlco 2br, Untumlahod
loot. Smoll Grey Short Halrod Expo~onctd Modlcol Rocop- 2·bldroom, bathroom, dining Mou11 On Chatham Avenue,
!loa McCormick Road Noor Uonltt Nttdtd. Call 614-192· rm, kitchen, utility nn, 111dng Rataronco A Muat. $300/mo
Rotiblna And Myara, Galt(Jiolla. aaoo.
m,ooo, 614-7142-2856
Plua Utllltloo And 1 Month
Rtwordl614-446-7t35
CapooH 114-448-2515.

4

pd

oloo, 304-87J.3410 or 1175-4100.

Townthlp, A01d 211, whhout

We WUJ Not Be Undersold
*Save up to 50% on Fuel Bills

Jim (lilford-992-720 1

u low u $8500, and ono aero
toto tor olnglo wldao IVII~ble

T r n - will ba prooocutod.
IMPORTANT NOriCE
Doodtlna lor ohang• to bt
madaln ttltiZ Ohio Voltay Phona
look Ia Friday llav 1. Anyono
noodlng addHiona, dollllona,
ohangao In whtta or yattow
pagu or wtehtng to odvortloo
, shOuld caD batwoon 1:00AM·
5 OOPM. 1-800.al6&gt;8130 or mall
Information to Chtmpton Dirac·
10(11, Inc, PO Box 22, Norwalk,
Ohio 44857.
No Hunting or Traapoulng on
tha Frodtolck Wobb fiRiparly
tho farmar Chlllor Govrotl
propony, Melga County, Olivo

0

9· 5 lmo.

In Loving Memory
of my Mother,
Mrs H.
PubliC Notice
Nursmg Center, 0 0 A
ELVA F. DAVIS
Memben and Pythian
Who passed away
Sisters.
PUBLIC NOnCE
three years ago,
ATTENnON: Minority,
Oct. 19, 1988.
Women l Smlll Bualnno
2
In
Memory
Contractoro ond SuppllorL
Sadly missed by
Pro)act: Woatowoter
daughter and
TraotmeniPIIIn
I r--------,rl
Contractt, 2, U
husband and family,
We wish to lhank all
Pomeroy, Ohio
who helped us in
Grandchildren
OWNER: VUioge of Pomoroy
anyway during the •
BID DATE: Ootabtr 20, 1891
12:00 p.m.
illness and dealh of our
Loving Memory Of
ARCHITECT: Burge11 l
GRUESER

0

FOIEIEB
BRONZE

MAIN S1 ,, MASON, VA.

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22

FELICIA VICTORIA

0

*Increase the Value of.Your Home
*Call for Free Estimates

1

loved one

0

Lots &amp; Acraagit

Building lota,t._,.,nd up, TP I
C Willi, Eeotarn Molal Co.,
quanor ml~ SR 7, 114MI-31M
Moo-hill Subdlvlolan, 2.1
mlloo out llond HUt Rood, hll
roatrlclod buf!c!lng loto lor uta

proplfly, lit. 8218 (Tin Can He~
low) Will Cdumblt, Wll

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOW

614-9f2-6820

Nlple, Ltd., 304-485-8541
Wooom Conatructlon, Inc.
Ia -king bids from quail·
l
llld Minority,
Small Buelnoao
ond Supplloro for lhl follow·
lngrt:r- or work:
ng, Paving, Proceal
Piping,
Work, II•
aonry Work, IIIII Work,
Pointing, Drywall, EquiP"
m.,~ DMolon10Speogltloe,
Seeding l Llnd101plng, ond
Floor Coveting.
In-lid partloo ohould
caniiCI Mr. Roy Korr, 8:00
·A.M. to 5:00 P.M. " Woum
ConolrucUon, Inc.
P. 0. Bor31
Chiller, Ohio 45720
114-at2..&amp;488
114-1112-8801 (FAX)
(10)11, 11, 25, 31c

0

, 35

3 Annbuncements

AIR CONDmONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp; DOUILEWIDE HOMES
0

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcements

·s,,6m
0

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

$LOAHIIS All typaa of loonol
PoNOnl~ luolniOo, otc. Call tor
o lraa -natton IIIIth a tcan
oHicar today. 1-800-H2-&amp;!160 No
credH., cotlttoral-1
AbeoluPIIy no IMimlng or
troopulng, Halon S. Phelps

FAll FfS11VAt
SPECIAl
20 SESSIONS
For $20.00

COMPLnE AUTO
UPHOLSTDY

GROOM
ROOM

,,.

,.

18, 1991

JET
Aelltlon Mol- ........... '
I ro-bull - - In llock, RON
EVANS, JA~ OH 1.....

537o1521.

Ron'a TV Sarvlca, -"lr.lna
oloo ••lck'l 1IICII1
a l l l t r - - calla,In Z.nlth

-

IIIDIIonoa

ntplllra.

wv

304-6l'lotitlt Ohio 114-448-24!54.
Saptlc Tonti Pumolne $10 Gallll
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jacklon, 0111-aoo.a37-1521
Dovla
Saw·Vac
llonrlco
Goorgn Croall Rd Porto, oup
ptlol, pickup, ond dollv"'Y 614

..-r-

•

448.0214.

Will build potlo -.ra, docko

•

put up """
='~ l r - lltlollng
114-

82

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
Cortar"a Ptuonttlng
FOUIIh tnd Plna
Oaltlpolla, Olllo
114-44WIII

84

Electrl~l

•

'

•

•

&amp;

Refrigeration

:=h

Cu~hmln Macor Home

P,SIIt: c:ron,

=

D ft.

85 General H1u11ng
Wll- Houtt
~

I"::

lftl, -.., WIDII
~;wl. VouoMrw
'IIJ

S.M10
$2,111·
·'1010
1.. havy S.ltl; IS,
•
. ~,;.;,.:;;:,;,;;;.._____
IZUZU

Pte~:

.-.
""*""

1117 ...., Comnwnoha
f!1~; ltll FordE-' tl.~j
;... lranoa K 4x4, v..
U,IIUomo
oldar ca11 buy
hant pay hant. 304· 1124712.

Upholstery

1
'

~

•
:'

I

u,t 1 •• tarwlol ~
,_ .r ..,_.'lila
b:.. rft""flld
.,. 1111=11..... '
Call . . _ . . ,., lnlo ...
llowl'ly'l

tlmllll. -

'

:11=1'1.

•.,.

�,Page-:.-1 0-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

:Record pumpkin on display at festival
. CIRCLEVttLE (AP) - Dave
Mangione and his two children
turned J1 pumpkin exhibit into a
family affair when lhey weighed in
lhe heaviest squashes in the show's
history.
Mangione , 36, the Pickaway
County agricultural exte nsion
agent, took first and second places
in the traditional event Wednesday
wilh pumpkins weighing 589.5 and

574.5 pounds. He won a dollar a
pound for first place and $50 for
second.
His son Kyle, 5, a kiadergartner
at Salt Creek Elementary School,
placed third with a 557.5-pound
squash and won $35. Kyle's sister,
Jillian, 8, a thitd. grader at Salt
Creek, was fourth with a 526pounder. Sbe won $25.
Each of the family' s squashes

more than 100 pounds heavier
than the nearest competition, Circleville Pumpkin Show trustee
Kenneth Crabtree said.
'
The Carpenter family won honors for the heftiest pwnpkins.
Frank Carpenter, 64, of Cir_cleville placed first with a 67.5pounder, second with a 63.5'pounder and tied for third with ·
grandson Gabe Carpenter

'

'

.

v

Friday, October 18, 1991:

Two ton hippopotamus on the:loose

•

'•

'
College
Scores _

Livestock
yards
attempt
to recover

.,

Wll$

7:"1- u·nh

Sund:l\

'••

PORT CHARLOITE, Fla. (AP) recalled. "It was like an outer ' foi&gt;t elecb'ic fence around his several-acre enclosure short-circuite' &gt;
A lonely hippopotamus that space movie.' '
.
broke free from a wildlife park
There, glistening under a street after heavy rains, said Octagon,.
looked like an extratennestrial 10 the 'light, was 8-year-old Garth, a 2-ton spokeswomanJudy Maupin.
~·
Garth has had wanderlust since:,
woman who discovered it wander- hippopotamus that had escaped late
ing outside her home in the dark.
Monday night or early Tuesday th.e death of ~is twin brother, Percy e.;
"All of a sudden, .I looked out from 'the Octagon Wildlife ·Sanctu- in Augus~ she said. The two came-;
on the property and I saw a massive ary, about a quarter mile down the to Octagon four 'years ago from a~
Florida circus, where they wer(J:
creaiUre,My first thought was a road.
preh1stonc creature," Sue Smith
··
The hippo broke out after the 5- billed as "racing hippos."
-

''•

"'

'

(

.'
.!

'·
/

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The Ohio Department of Education
will ask the state Controlling Board
on Monday to approve government-backed loans worth $8 million for another 20 school districts.
Submission of the request
comes less than lhree weeks before
the Nov . 5 genera l election in
which 24 7 school money issues
will be at stake statewide.
Raben Moore, an assistant state
superintendent of public instruction,'said schools need additional
money,

ggc

1·LIWIII .
·MYLAR BILLOIII
R1

s 18
IICI

We Have A Large Selection Of
Adult and Children's
Costumes.
"•

RUDE SURPRISE- This home at 31
Portsmouth Road in Gallipolis sustained heavy
damage early Saturday morning when a 1985
Pontiac ,Trans Am crashed through the living
room wall. The driver of the car, Allen W. Elliot,
19, of Gallip~lis, apparently tried to make a left
turn orr State Route 141 at a high rate of speed

and lost control of his car. He was cited for
• excessive speed and operating a motor vehicle
while intoxicated. The home's occupant, Dawn
Meadows, was out of town at the iime of the
crash, and is expected to ·return home Sunday.
(T -S photo by Melinda Powe.rs)

·Theodore·f; ·R"eed, Jr~ na·med
Meigs County's 'Man of the Year'

..

CHILDREN'S HALLOWEEN COSTUMES

HAND WRAPPED
FLOWERS
.,

$1
2
FOR

Selections Vary From Store To Store

REGULAR s3.99
LIDia Ill!

LADIES. RIBBED CUFF

SWEI71R

ASSORTED COLORS

SOCKS

IWIAftR SOCKS
FITS SIZE 9 ro 11 .

With Sound and Movement

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
Columbus English teacher is
w~ tchin g her 8.0 students closely.
So are educators from all over the
country.
· Linda Staud~ heads a team of
teachers who devised a homemade
program to wage war against the
dropout rate at South High School.
The odds are not good. Nearly
half of all students at South ..High

•DRACULA •WITCH
•GHOST •SKULL

9TO II

s

99

SJII

EACH

2501 JACKSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT,
wv. 25550
(304) 675·2303

364 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS,
OH.45631
(614) 446·6620

.

quit. Disb'ictwide, the dropout rate
is two out of five.
Ms. Staude has overcome one
hurdle: last month, her team won a
$25,600 grant to pay for their ideas.
More than 650 teachers armed
with blueprints for drOpout preven·
tion programs asked the National
Foundation for Improvement of
Education for money. The foundation chose 17 teac hers, including

James -Van Keuren, director of
the department's Division of
School Finance, said more districts
can be expected to apply.
"We're still looking at 25 to 30
more districts, but I think we're
going to hold W)d wait until after
lhe first of the year and see what
comes out of the election," Van
Keuren said.
He expects as many as 64 of the
state's 612 districts .to seck loans
before the school year ends.

Gallia, Meigs coyotes cause some
concern, but no real problems
By JIM FREEMAN
From staff and wire reports
GALLIPOLIS - Many people
living In Gallia arid Meigs Counties
may ·Dot pay to much attention. to
coyotes (immortalized by such
images as Wily Coyote and his
counterpart the Road Runner in
Saturday morning cartoons) but
coyotes are here among us and
have been for quite some time.
Coyotes, long associated with
the American West, have made a
comeback in Ohio's 88 counties
(including Galtia and Meigs Counties), the Ohio Department of Natural Resources said.
"They've recently slarled coming back," said Juan Sandusky,
wildlife officer for Lake County
northeast of Cleveland. "We' ve
had more hit (by vehicles) this year
than ever before."
Gallia County Game Protector
Terry Hawk said Thursday afternoon that he' s personall y seen
three or four coyotes in Gallia
County.
Hawk stated a few have been
trapped or shot in Gallia County.
Wildlife officials said many
people mistake coyotes for German
shepherd-sized dogs wandering the
countryside.
Meigs County Game Protector
Keith Wood has had some reports
of coyotes, but has n' t seen any ·
save one that had been shot by
· turkey huntern ncar Chester.

"They have been in the state a Extension Agent Ed Vollbom, coylong time," said Jack·Weeks of the otes haven't posed a real problem
natural resources agency. " We forGalliaCounty farmm.
have records of them since at least
"They (coyotes) are a major
1913." According to infOrmation concern of farmers, and the confrom Hawk, coyotes seem 10 have cern peaks eaeh spring," Vollbom
first started appearing in Gallia . said. Th e concerh peaks each
County about seven or eight years spring because that's when most
ago in the Crown City area.
hvestock h3ve their young.
Steve Wilcox , wildlife rilanageNo coyote attacks on Gallia
ment assistant overseeing northeast County livestock have -been conOhio counties, said coyotes have firmed, according to Vollbom, and
been spotted in every Ohio county. no farmm in the county have been
" We have had them reponed hit reimbursed for coyote attacks.
all over the place trying to cross
Meigs County Extension Agent
roads," said to Wilcox, who said John Rice was unavailable for
there have been no reports of coy- comment. but an office' employee
ote attacks on livestock in northeast said she had never heard of any
Ohio.
coyote attacks on livestock in
Week s. who, has done coyote Meigs County.
research at the Crane Creek
Hawk and Vollborn have both
Wildlife Experiment Station near said they've heard coyotes howling
Oak Harbor. said coyotes can live at night. Vollborn singled out the
close to humans.
Northup and Centenary areas as
" We've monitored coyotes liv- spots where coyotes have been
ing as close to houses as ISO heardorspotted.
yards," he said.
It is legal to hunt coyotes slate·
Hawk doesn't feel this is reason wide. There is no closed season
eno ugh to keep your children and Sunday hunting is permitted
inside. 'They are scared to death of according 10 the Ohio Division of
people," Hawk said.
_ Wildlife's 1991 -92 Hunting and
Coyotes sometimes attack farm Trapping Regulations. Persons
animals, especially sheep, and the hunting coyotes during deer gun
state reimburses farmers for such season must possess a current huntlosses. Last year, Ohio paid out ing license and valid deer permit
more than $26,000 to farmers for with the tag attached and must be
animals lost to coyotes and wild usi ng a gun and ammunition legal
dogs.
. ..
for deer hunting.
According to Ga lli a Coun ty

Ms. Staude.
If the SoutH program is a success, it could spread to other
schools and other cities.
The idea is simple: Focus on
ninth- and lOth-graders teetering
on the borderline. Nurse them academically and prevent them .from
feeling lo st in the shufne of a
school with 1,300 students who
came from nine middle schools.

\..

786 NORTH SECOND ST.
MIDDLEPORT,
OH.45760
(614) 992a6491

BANNERS GO IJP • Bright red and white'
banners, like tbls one, are going up at schools
throughout the Meigs Local School District In
observance or Drug-Free Week, which starts

~•1.·

Here, the atude11t11
facuity at Sallsbury'EIIIIIeatary Schoollb Pomeroy prepare to
h~n1 tbelr'banaer. (Times- e~inel Photo by
Brian J. Reed)
•
.
.,

- ~.·
..- --~~·
.._.__
----- ---6.. _ --__"
~-

' ..

"The state budget this year was
a no-growth budget for most school
districts and of course (with) inila·
lion and everything else. their costs
continue to rise," Moore said.
The number of local districts
seeking state-guaranteed loans
from private lenders to keep classes
open is expected to set a record this
school year.
Last month . the Controlling
Board approved $59 million worth
of loans for 19 disb'icts, including
$46.6 million for Cincinnati public
schools.

HALLQWEEN
FIGURES

Aao,.ICI Colol'l
FITS SIZE

- ( ......,.... """,... ..,

'

State-backed loans
sought for 20 more
Ohio school districts

ADULT HALLOWEll

. AIIOIIW

13 S.CIIon 1, 94
A Mu111medlelnc.

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant October 20 1991

A,. FRtrrB
\......_ \ •.,·

. Sunny. High in 50S.

Weather •••~ .......... " ...........A-3

•
tmts·
.

•

'

Along the river ..............81·7
BusinessJFarm............. D-1-8
Classified .......................D3-7
Deaths................................ A3
Editor at . ............................A2
Sports ............................. C1·8

Gallia County's first families .
are honored, recently . Page B-6

Vol. 26, No. 37
Copyrighted 1991

•PEPSI•DIET PEPSI
•CAFFEINE FREE PEPSI
•DIET CAFFEINE FREE
PEPSI

Alabama 24 Tennesee 19
Miami (0) 34 OU 0

Inside

Levisay Grocery built in early part
of 20th century .· James Sands A•4

~

2LITER

NC State 15 Marshall 14
Michigan .2!11ndiana 16

•

B-1

'

OSU 34 Northwestern 3
WV A31 Boston College 24

..

·~

'\1'·-~·-;---- "------ -'~---· -·~--·

THE HALLOWEEN SPIRIT - Motorists
stopped at the busy intersection of U.S. 35 and
S.R. 160 in the Spring Valley area of Gallla
County bave been greeted recently with tbe Jeer.
ing faces of giant Jaek-o-lanterns haallne over
the intersection. W1th Halloween just aroond the

_,

'f

corner workers installing 1\tW
signals at
the iniersectlon apparently got into tbe spirit
and decided the decorate tbe ll*hts with the •
large pumpkin-raced bags commonly ,used for
leaf disposal. (Times-Sentinel photo by Jim
Freeman)
'I

.~

•••

·~

'

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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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