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                  <text>P8a•

18-The Oily Sentinel

Poriwlloy-Midclepol't. Ohio

l3eiJt of the Bend

What a .way to ·win
By BOB HOEFLICH
There must be a delicate way
to tell you about this activity. In
many Instances
In this day and
age, apparently
some donn'!
have to be con·
cerned a bout
deltcale Jan·
guage -or plain·
just aren't. Hqwever. being from
the old school", I somehow feel
that ~omtng right out with
·:blunt" jusnsn't my bag. ·
Now, about that activity.
The annual Racine Area Road
Apple Contest will be held at 1
p.m. on Sunday, Ocl. 21, at the
farm of Tom Hamm on the
Forest Run Road. Now, If you
. are also ftom the old school, after
A few seconds of thinking road
apples, you think of horses. At
last year's conte$t, that was okay
- 'cause they used horses.
However, this year two Holstein
cows will determine the lucky
winner of the contest.
Here's the way It works; A
!lei~ will be mar)!.ed Into 300
numbered squares and the
squares will be sold at $10 each.
Tbe two Holsteins will be put Into
the field and the owner oft he first
square In which one of the cows
deposits manure will win $1,000.
There will be judges and ll Is
hoped that the contest doesn't
end up in a tie- or whatever.
Proceeds from the event will
go to toward paying for a trip to
Washington, D.C., for eighth
·graders of Southern High School.
All eighth graders are selling
squares or those Interested may
. purchase their squares by con- .
tactlng Bill Baer or VIckie Hill at
the school.
There! I hope you understand
It all- and I hope I was delicate.

Pirates
capture_
Game One

include some iCebergs and Ice
glaciers.
Finding a balloon on your
property Isn't that unusual these
days since balloon launches
seem to be a sign ot the times.
However, 48 balloo1111 .Is a
dltferent story.
We(lnesday nliht, 48 _orange
· and White balloons, all tied
together landed on the property
of Mrs. Junior Hunt In the
Chester area. There was no
. Indication -,- and that's unusual
as to who launched ~he balloons.

*90 MODELS UST· GO*
1990 DYNASTY

Month-In and month-out, our
excellent squads making up the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services are ml!klng over 200
runs.
· September was no exception.
Squads made 223 runs which
included 73 by Pomeroy; 56 by
Middleport; _291;)y Racine; 27 by
Rutland; 19 by Tuppers Plains;
n by Syracuse, and two by
Columbia . Township's unit.
Squads took 105 patients to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; 40
to the Holzer Medical Center; 11
, to Pleasant Valley, and 19 to
other hospitals.
In addition, there were another
47 runs made by the Transfer
Squad and three LlfeFJight and
SkqMed calls were handed by the
services during the month.
Bob Byer, director of the
services, provides the statistics
which point up how dePillldentwe
are on the sq11ads. • ·

Canis:

1990 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER S.E.

1990 JOD.GE DAYTONA

DESCRIPTION
'

ill!

PLYMOUTH VOYAGER S.E. FWD
BLACK CHERRY PEARL COAT PAINT
SEAT TRIM-DELUXE CLOTH. VINYL
POPULAR VALUE PACKAGE
7 PASSENGER SEATING PACKAGE
TRANSMISSION-3 SPEED AUTOMATIC
ENGINE-3.0L OHC MPI V-8 .
AIR CONDITIONING
LUGGAGE RACK-ROOF MOUNTED
AM/FM STEREO CASSETTE.!'I API~ W/CLO
TIRES P196178R14 SBR BSW-4
.

1'990 DODGE D-1' 50

.

-1

,

WAS S11,941
'.

DODGE DAYTONA-2 DR. HATCHBACK
FLASH RED CLEAR COAT
SEATS-LOW BACK BUCKETS AND SPLIT
POULAR EQUIPMENT DISCOUNT PACKAGE
TRANSMISSION-3 SPEED AUTOMATIC
ENGINE-2.6 LITER SOHC EFI
CASSffiE RADIO UPGRADE

-

1990 DODGE DAKOTA 4X4

THE 2oo CLUB - James Anderson became the
' first m~mb.er of the newly organized 200 ,Club of
the Melgs.Jsand Boosters Thursday. Membership
fee for the Club Is SlO. Debbl Buck here accepts the
first ~embershlp from Anderson. The moriey will

WAS S14,05·2

'

DESCRIPTION
D160 131 WB DODGE SWEPTLINE PICKU~
COlORADO RED ·
I ..
BENCH·SEAT-CLOTH Ill VINYL TRIM
AP LIGHT PACKAGE
ADVANTAGE PAC I
AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION
318 CID V-B ENGINE EFI
WINDOW REAR SLIDING
,
AP MIRRORS-BRIGHT 8"X1 " LOW MOUNT
AP WINDSHIELD WIPER-DELUXE 2 SPEED
BUMPER REAR STEP TYPE PAINTED
.
AP RAM'S HEAD HOOD ORNAMENT
AP FUEL TANK-30·GAUON FRAME MT.
AP 2 STEREO RADIO SPEAKERS .
P216/78R18 BSW/SBR (Iii
AP WHEEL COVERS (4)-BRIGHT

1990 DOD-GE DAKOTA CLUB CAB

HOOVER•
legecy"
UprtghtV-

HARRY MESHEL
Senate Minority Leader

123.9 WB DODGE DAKOTA SWEPTLINE
SAND, ME-T AUlC
.
BENCH SEAT-CLOTH Ill VINYL TRIM
AP LIGHT PACKAGE :
ADVANTAGE PAC I
4 SPEED AUTOMATIC TRASNMISSION
3.9 LITER V-8 ENGINE EFI
AP WINDSHIELD WIPERS_;INTERMinENT
REAR STEP BUMPER-PAINTED
TIRES P231i/78R18 XL BSW SBR (61 .
OWNER COMMUNICA110N PROGRAM
MANUFACTURERS STATEMENTOF ORIGIN
7 ADDIITONAL GALLONS OF GAS
6710/ G.V.W. PACKAGE

....,

'Tap lool C-*=IIOft
• Tooltl!orlllo IMIN"hf&gt;d
• lnchtdn ..... ~ 5 plo•r-•

1ool"1
• Btwt..d . , . c"''"ninll o..
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• Sialtt....... ~
•Hudlighl
•l!l' r.O&lt;d """"'QUiek .......

__
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.......
_...u~•

ALL PRICES AFTER REBATES
TAX 8a TITLE NOT INCLUDED.

...u .. ,

AilE

OPEN MON., WED., &amp;
· FRI. 8·7 .
TUES. &amp; THUR. 8-5:30
SAT. 8·4

. •.•.

State Sen. Harry Meshel, the
minority leader of the Ohio
S!lnaie, will be 'the featured
speaker at the Meigs County
Democratic Party Fall Dinner on
Saturday at the Meigs Senki.r
Multipurpose Building in
Pomeroy.
Meshel represents the 33rd
Ohio Senate District, located In
the Youngstown and Mahonlng
County area.
Meshells an adjunct professor
of Political Science at Ohio
University, and holds a Masters
Degree, ln. Business Admlnllitra·
t!on from Columbia University:
According to Democratic
Party Chairman Sua Malson,

there were an addltloruil 101,000
By VINCENT DEL GIUDICE
people our of work· last month,
UPI Business Writer
. WASHINGTON (UPI) -The · Including a bout 42,000 tern porary
civilian unemployment rate census workers dismissed as the
jumped to 5. 7 percent In Sep· government's 10-year population
tember - the highest In more count neared completion.
The latest data were In line
·than two years - as factories
with
economists'. predictions.
laid off more workers, the
·
September's
unemployment
government said Friday. '
rate
the
highest
since 5.7
The job picture 1.n the services
percent In March 1988-follows a
Industry also failed to Improve.
The Labor Department said 5.6 percent ra,te in August and a

WAS S15, 189
130.9" DODGE DAKOTA CLUB CAB-2W
COLORADO RED
STERLING SILVER. METALLIC
SPLIT BENCH BET-CLOTH
AP LIGHT PACKAGE
ADVANTAGE PAC I
TWO TONE PAINT PROCEDURE II
REAR BEAT
•
4 SPEED AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION
3.8.LITER V-8 ENGINE EFI
AIR CONDITIDNI ..G
AP WINDSHIELD WIPERS-INTERMmENT
REAR STEP BUMPER-PAINTED
FUEL TANK-22 GALLON
POWER STEERING
TIRI!8 LT211171R-11 ISW SBR I
DELUXE WHEEL COVER-BRIGHT 4
OWNER COMMUNICATION PROGRAM
MANUFACTURERS STATEMENT OF ORIGIN
GASOLINE 7 GALLONS
18101 G.V.W. PACKAGE

·.&lt;

.'

.

Story said Jewell was one of 12
people Indicted by a July grand
jury. Tile Indictments came after
a year,Jong investigation by the
, prosecutor's office, the Sheriff's
, · Depar'lment and the Bureau 'or
Criminal. Investigation and
Identification.
Jewell, represented by Meigs
public defender Charles H.
Knight, was a co-defendant with
her husband, Manford "Terry"
Jewell, Who is serving a setence
for cocaine sale stemming from ·
an unrelated offense.
He Jewell Is scheduled for trial
on Thursday,

--.

Meshells a "veteran legislator of
i9 years, unparal_laled In the Ohio
Senate as a producer of major 1
legislation."
.
· "He Is a strong supporter of
workers, consumers, and senior
citizens, as his record proves",
Malson said.
The dinner will be served at 6
p.m. , with the program beginning at 7 p.m.
State Sen. Jan Michael Long .
and State Rep. Mary Abel will
also be on hand, along with other
state and local ·candidates.
Tickets are · $7 and may be
purchased from any DemOcratic
committee person or at the door.

..

5.5 percent rate In July, accordIng to the report compUed by the
.department's Bureau of Labor
Statistics.
Counting mUitary personnel,
the ·nation's total jobless rate
s~ood · at · 5.6 percent In
September.
The number of jobs lost last
month was the most since 104,000
In June 1986, . a 'Labor .Department spo-k esman· said.
The number of factory jobs has
been slashed by 520,000 positions
since peaking In January 1989 · and tl!at severe trend continued

BACKSTREET VIDEO_ Ralph and Sue Hall
are the new owners of Backstreet Video, located
at 113 West Second Street In Pomeroy. The store Is
open from 10 a.rit, until 9 p.m. Monday through
.

Thursday and 10 a.m. untll9: 30 P-Ill· o.n Friday
· Saturday. In a ddlli on to popu1 ar vid eo till es,
and
Backstreet Video rents Nlntendo games and sells
soft drinks and snacks. Pictured are Sue Hall, left,
and employee Unda Gilkey.

;:;~\~~~~~r~~~~~~7.1g~~ Disappointed Bush consultS

•th Ieaders on next move

seasonal adjustment," the Labor
'
.
Department said. "Durable
g~s Industries continued to
account for most of the declines, · . ;' ·
· ·
as transportation equipment, · ,'
electronic equipment, and InduswASHINGTON (UPI) - A veto another stop-gap spending, · l. bu&lt;jg~t agreement that proposed
trial machinery each near l0$t disappointed President Bush be- measure, called a continuing . a c,omblnatlon of· spending cu'ts
15,000 jobs In September.
gan a rourid or consultations wiih resolution, to avoid a shutdown of
and tax Increases to reduce the
:·smaller but sun stgni11cant congressional leaders Friday on the government.
soaring federal deficit by $500
losses occurred In fabricated
the nexfmove to keep the federal
"There 'are so many different
billion over the next five years.
metals, furniture, and stone, clay
government In business after the posslblilttes," Fitzwater saillln
The continuing resolution,·
and glass products," the departHouse's stunning rejection of the discussing Bush's next move.
which expires at midnight Fi'rment said.
budget summit agreement.
"We want to , see what the' day, would trigger domestic and
Over the past two months,
"We've got a lot of conversa- ' leadership has In mind In terms ' military spending cuts as man115,000 factory jobs have been tionstoholdtoday,"WhlteHouse of . a resolution" to maintain · dated by the Gramm· Rudman
eliminated.
press secretary Marlin Fltz· federal spending -until a budget
balanced budget law.
In the services field, which has · wllter ·told reporters. "First ott,' package Is passed. .
The cuts threaten tlfe furlough
been a pillar of strength for the
we want to talk- to the congres·
"No decisions have ' been
of federal workers and the.
domestl~ economy, "only a few
slonal leadership because this made."
disruption of public services
' Industries provided evidence of was part ot a joint effort. We·
Fitzwater said Bush was
naiionwide. Experts said just
employment growth In Sep- want to talk to them on where awake in the early morning
·about every American would feel
!ember," the Labor Department they want to go."
hours and Informed of the defeat.
the pinch of the Gramm-Rudman
said.
.
Bush worked against the mid· Bush showed up for work In the
cuts. Bush has said that such a
Health led the way followed by night deadline of a stop-g,ap Oval Office at 6 a.m.
drl\stic scenario would spell
hiring ln_local government and . measw:e to avoid an automatic
House Speaker Thomas Foley,
hardship for the nation's
transportation, mainly on SeP- $105 billion acr0$8-the-:board cut . 0-Wash., promised to counter
economy.
tember Increases of teachers and In government spending.
_Friday's defeat of the bipartisan
While Democrats and Republi·
school bus drlv~rs as schools
."Sure be -was . dilappolnled," budget aareement on (;apltol Hill
cans flirted with political chaos
re-opened, the department said.
said Fitzwater when asked for by seektna a stop-gap spending
.on Capitol Hill just weeks before
But lhe~e were offlet by loues the president's reaction to the measure to keep the government
congressional elections. flnanin the financial Industry, refiect·. 254·179 House vote.
,
operatlng.
cia! markets ap-peared lndlffer- ·
lng hard times in banking and
Fitzwater appeared to be edg· · Foley told reporters of his plan
ent to the twists and ~urns of the
real estate.
·
lng away from Bush's threat to after the House. rejected the · budget package .
W
'
I

•

COATS FOR IUD8 -Bull O.e, for~ Iouth eo-eutfve year,
Ia apouor~n&amp; tile Coa&amp;a for Kldi Pl'OJI'IIIII at Ita bruellee. The

'
l'

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.·
...........
,.. 'INGELS FURNITURE
............
.,

· the roof on a house owned by
council at a cost of $810.
Mayor Pickens
announced
that the fire department will be
attending schooling on the handling of hazardous materials.
It was announced by Connolly
that no bow and arrows are
permitted In the village as they
are considered firearms.
Others attending the meeting
were Janice Lawson, clerk treasurer; Kenny Buckley, Jim Pai&gt;e,
Katie , Crow, Teresa TysonDrummer and Minter Fryar,
. council members.

Jobless rate hits 5.7 percent
DESCRIPTION

CieMiklg 8yetem

go Into the band's unlfonn fund. As a part of the
program, a SilO and two $211 bonds will be awarded
at each home boys' basketball game for the
season. Membership tickets will go on sale tonight
allhe Meigs football games.

Democratic dinner features state
Senate minority leader
Meshel ·
...
- . ' c.-.... -

WAS 513,594

' VIlA - MAITitl - DIICOYIIIII

. By KATIE CROW
$502.50 to place concrete at the
picnic shelter located at the park.
Sentinel Correspondent
Syracuse VIllage Council It was also noted that the parking
Thursday night noted that two area at the pool had been
completed and that no trucks are
one·ll)ill levies, one a renewal,
permitted on the .new par king
will be voted on in the November
election.
·area. This was done through
Community Development Block
Residents are reminded that
Grant
. money by · the Meigs
the one-mill renewal will be for
County
Commlssloijers and the
street lighting but wm be listed
cost
to
the
village was $1,600. The
on the ballot as current expenses.
grant from the commissioners
The new one-mill levy Is a fire
was approximately $13,000. department levy for the purCouncil approved the purchase
.
chase of equipment.
of field glasses for police chief
· Mayor Eber Pickens anJim Connolly, and also to replace
nounced that he Is proclaiming
Oct. 27 as Marcia Karr Day In
celebration of her tOOth birthday.
Miss Karr is the village's oldest
resident.
. A Langsvtll~ woman has. enIt was noted that the new street
tered a guilty ,plea to drug
signs for the village have arrived
charges In Meigs County Com:
apd will be placed as soon as the
mon Pleas Court.
necessary hardware Is received.
,_Joyce Jewell, .46, entered her
guilty p)ea before Meigs County
. In other businss ' council ap- / Commori Pleas Court Judge Fred
Proved the third reading of an . VI- Crow -~II on Thursday to two
ordinance accepting the petition ·counts or sale of cocaine.
According . to Meigs County
for annexation of the Lawrence
Grueser property. Greg Bailey,
Prosecuting Attorney Steven L.
Story, Jewell was sentenced to
who j\'lll be building apartments
for the elderly, In that location,
five to 15 years on one count and
was present and thanked council . five to 25 years on another, with
for their cooperation. He also
actual time to be served of five
noted that Ihere was nothing new · years, as prescribed by law .
to report.
·
,
Fines of $3,000 and $5,000 were
as welL • ·
Council accepted a bid of

Jewell .enters guilty plea

A typing class Is being scheequipment, Including new IBM
duled through the Adult Services P$-2 computers, a network sysDivision of Buckeye Hills Career tem, and the newest Lotus 1-2-3
Center beginning Oct. 18. Tbe version.
six -week class Is for beginner or
The cost lor the course Is $100.
Intermediate typists and will "Interested persons are encour·
meet on· Wednesday and Thurs- aged to register early as a strong
day evenings from 6 p.m. to 9 response Is expected for the
p.m. The fee for the class Is $72.
course offering.
A class on using Lotus 1·2-3
Those who . are Interested In
software, America•s·most popuparticipating In either class are
lar computer spreadsheet pro-' encouraged to register by send-.
gram, will be of.fered by Buckeye
lng a check or money or;der to
Hills beginning 0ct. 29.
·
Adult Services, P.O.,Box 157, Rio
The course will be offered
Grande, 45674. Checks should be
Monday and Wednesday even-' · made payable to Gallla-Jacksonings from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. for five
VInton JVSD.
consecutive weeks in the Buck· For more Information, contact
eye Hills Computer ·Lab. Stu- Buckeye Hills Career Cen_ter at
dents will be able to take 245-5334 and . ask for Adult
advantage of state-of-the-art Services.

s,,,,.__,
=
--==
. . ..... .
·-·-.::::-·-.·-

2 SeCtions. 14 Pages 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Syracuse ·residents to
.vote on one-mill levies

WAS SJ6,922
DESCRIPTION
DODGE DYNASTY LE 4 DOOR SEDAN
BLACK-CLEAR .COAT
SEATS-60XIi0 CLOTH BENCH WITH CA
LUXURY EQUIPMENT DISCOUNT PACKAGE
RADIO-INFINITY I SOUND SYSTEM
TRANS.-ULTRADRIVE 4-SPEED AUTOMAT
ENGINE-,3.3 LITER OHV MPI V-6
'
SPARE TIRE-CONVENTIONAL
TIRES-P196176R14 WSW STEEL BELT R

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Friday, October 6, 1990

WAS S18,271

Typing classes offered
by Buckeye Hills Center

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---

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1601

. Clear toulght: Low In mid
50s. Sunny Saturday. High In
nild 80s.

Vol.41. No. 108
Copyrighted t990

DESCRIPTION

-

5-H, 8-C, 4-D, 7-S

Page 3_

•

Looking ahead, the Ladles
Auxiliary of the Tuppers Plains
Fire Department has set Its
annual turkey dinner - which
always packs 'em In -for Nov.
10 starting at 5 p.m.

SAVE

Lott~ry

·Piek-3: ·891
Piek-4: 3787

•

We tend to become complacent
John and Ann Williams must a bout actions taken by our public
be exhausted after chalking up a officials. Too soon, we forget that
month-lobg, 11,000 mile trip to they do. ~nee you don't want to
Alas.ka.
join the . revolution, perhaps, It
Tbe traveled to tile Baylands, would be well for you to revisited the famous Walls Drug member that we do vote them In
: .Store In Walls, S.D., and Yellow, · and they are
supposed to
stone National Park on their represent us. Keep In mind If
way.
They went as far as they don't do that, we can atso
Fairbanks and loVed the beaut!· vote them out. Hold that thought
lui scenery which, of course, did and do keep smllmg.

IIlli' L l " '

Ohio

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PNII'8Jll, whJeh will nn Oet. 11 Uarqh Dee. 14, provides col&amp;a for
the eillldrea oftbe area. All col&amp;l doal&amp;ed (for children onb') will '
be dry-elellllell by Cra.Jc Cleaa... ln Bl)llq, W.Va., dlraqlt Ule
Fabric Shop In Pomeroy. Pfo&amp;uted 11 Ami Lambert of tbe Fabl1c
Shop aDd Gerrl WaJtu _of llaak One, Pomeroy, Allyone wlahlq to
donate a coal. 'to the program
. may de ·so at Baak One.

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• PomerOy- Middleport. Ohio 1

:C ommentary

Pirates beat Red~ 4-3 in NLCS opener
.,..
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f

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

.~.

.1'

· Ppmeroy-Middlaport. O.f\io
Friday, October 5, 1990

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·The .Daily·· Sentinel · Chronic fatigue research moves slowly
111 Court Street .

Pomeroy, OhioDEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA
' A~

Bl!m~

,.....,_, ,__...,.., f"'T"'E'l!c:;loo=o

~v

ROBERT L. WJNG·E TT
Publisher

CHARtENE HOEFLICH
General M11nager

. PAT WHITEHEAD

Asslstanl Publlsher/Conlroller

AMEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the Amer ican Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 ·
words long. AQ letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
nam~, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters'should.be In good taste, addressing Issues, notpersonalltles.

j

•

Gulf crisis continues
By NORMAN D. SANDLER
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Just as President -Bush was urging curbs
on the arms race in a speech to the U.N. General ,Assembly this past
week, White House aides quietly announced the emergency shipment
of Patriot miSsiles to Israel.
Days before, with the Persian Gulf region already near flash point,
the administration notified Congress of a proposed sale of tanks,
planes a 0d other arms to Saudi Arabia In a deal eventually expected
to exceed $20 billion.
·
To some, pouring sophisticated weapons Into a region at the brink of
war seemed provocative. To others, It jUst underscored the failure .of
· U.S. policy to alter the sad and dangerous realities of politics In the
·
Middle East. .
When the Iran arms scandal broke In November 1986, a senior
administration official, working hard to explain why President
Reagan had agreed to send weapons to a radical regime vehemently
opposed to the United Stales, asserted that arms had become the
•'currency of choice'' In the Middle East, the commodity one used to
open doors, win friends and prove your peaceful intent.
Four years later, M·lA tanks, F -15 warplanes and Patriot missiles
remain the measure of American political allegiance In the Middle
East. Short on dollars, the United States remains long on weapons of
war to keep peace with its friends .
In a tinderbox like the Middle East, that always has carried some
,
·
element of risk.
When· t"e shah of Iran was overthrown In 1979, the forces· of
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomelnl Inherited sophlstic~;~ted American
weaponry the shah, a longtime client of the United States, had
purchased witb petrodollars over the years In a misguided stragegy
·
to protect his hold on power ,
When Iraq overran Kuwait two months ago, It similarly gained hold
of American arms the oll-dch emirate had similarly purchased more
for Internal security than defense agajnst external threat . .
. Having failed to deter Saddam Hussein with billions of dollars of
weapons sales to Kuwait, Israel, Saudi Arabia and other countries In
the region, the United Siates has again decided to stress the role of
mlliMry might In a region rife with political tension.
Saudi Arabia; Egypt and other moderate Arali states all may be In
· , store for Infusions of U.S. arms to reward their support for the
· Isolation of Ir11q.
·
,
Israel is bound to receive some, though not all of the additional
armament ·u has urgently requested, ostensibly to guard ·against
aggression by Saddam but driven In reaJity by nervousness.about the
strengthened ties the Persian Gulf crisis has .produced between the
United States and Its Arab neighbors.
With Saddam's ruthlessness-' exposed by the brutal seizure of
Kuwait, much has been said about ·the threat posed by Iraq's
possession or poiSon gas, ballistic missiles and nuclear facilities.
''The gulf crisis proves how Important It Is to act together, and to .
act now, to conclude an absolute worldwide ban on these weapons,"
Bush declared before the United Nations. "We must redouble our
efforts to stem 'ihe spread of nuclear weapons, biological weapons and
the .ballistic missiles that can rain,destruction upon distant peoples."
Overlooked In that warning was the fact that Saddam Invaded
Kuwait without resorting to those weapons of mass destruction. As ·
much as underscoring the dangers posed by rogue regimes armed
with chemical weapons and balilstlc missiles, the current crisis
demonstrates how• war more often Is waged with the kinds of
conventional arms ~ guns, tanks and aircraft - that the United
States Is using to supposedly enhance the balance of power In the
Middle East.
'

Today in history
· · By UnHed Press International
Today Is Friday, Oct. 5, the 278th day of 1990 with 87 to follow _
Tile moon Is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
'I'hf morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
Th~ evening star is Saturn.

~;.;;..:~~.;.;...;..,_;,_;,..;..,~--------------,·

~

~erry's World
..
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s ickbed.•
We recently repor\ed on the
sluggish response of the Centers
fo'r Disease Control when Congress ordered a study. of chronic
fatigue syndrome In 1988. At the
time, the CDC was stlll calllng
the disease psychosomatic. But
pressure from victims' advocacy
groups has forced a turnaround,
and now · the CDC Is beginning
serious case studies.
Given that history, the Califor'nla woman .and her cow theory
are In for an uphill struggle for
credibility. But she Is nottheonly .
person with chronic fatigue syndrome who believes they got the
dt.ease through casual contact
with animals.
Dr. Paul Cheney, a Ieacllng
Independent researcher Into
chronic fatigue, has been In·
trlgued by the number of patients
who mention some connectlol) to
animals. He estimates trom an
Informal survey that more than
40 percent of his patients claim
they have a pet with an Irregular

Jack A~derson and Dale Van Atta
and the HTL V family of retrovirmalady . .
uses. It's a .long chain of connecThe California woman who told
tions, but the California woman
us her s'tory worked briefly on a
ranch In Urrlngton In the fall of · Is · convinced she Is onto
1985. In November 1986 sbe came something.
Cheney and his · colleague,
down with what she thought was
Elaine
DeFreitas, say that the ·
the flu, built wouldn' t go away~
should be doing
·government
Doctors called It everything from
more
to
Investigate
the link with
AIDS to 'the Epstein-Barr virus
animals. But gtven the governbefore she was diagnosed with
ment's track record on chronic
chronic fatigue syndrome.
fatigue syndrome, that wlll probShe began to put two and two
togetber. She learned that the
ably take some time.
Granted, chronic fattgue synmost notable outbreak of chronic,
fatigue syndrome had occured In
drome Isn't AIDS or cancer and It
Jsn'Uatal. Butagrowlngnumber
Incline VIllage when she was
of people suspect they have it.
near.,Y. She knew her cattle had
a herpes virus at tlie time, and. Gunn confirmed that the CDC
gets up .to 2,o00 calls ,a month
she found out that federal .refrom
people clalmlngtci have the
searchers were looking Jnto the
disease.
The CDC has been
link between some cattle viruses .
major cities to get an
surveying
an!l the HTL V family of retroviruses that causes AIDS.
estimate of the number of sufferThen, earlier this month, Che- ers . Gunn won't gtve a number
ney and two other chronic fatigue
yet, but he said, "It Is a much
experts announced a link behigher number than we
tween chronic fatigue syndrome
expected."

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"Well. you ite got ro admit- we 've narrowed
. the gap between the nave$ and the nsvenors."

•

·I WAS SAFE! - The Reds' Chris sAbO, who tried to stretch a
· single jato a double, pleads his case with second base umpire Paul
Runge idler. Runge called him out In the fourth l,nnlng of Thursday
night's National Leacue playoff game In Cincinnati, which the
Plratea won 4-3. The dust kicked up by Sabo's slide obsCured
Runge's view, and even though replays showed thai Sabo's hand
was on the bag ahead of second baseman Jose Und's lag, the call
stA&gt;od. ( UPI)
.

Fielder, Brett become stat
leaders on season's last day

. Twentf dar.s hath Cl?pft:mber, AJ so

ApYil,Vune ark~ ~~~r-+Jt~ ~. ,
MV~TYienttOne._, ceptfebrua~ '.#11ch AlnC

·

· By Untied Press ·I nternational
Cecil Fielder made history by
hitting two home runs on the last
day of the regular baseball
season Wednesday, and Wlllle
McGee did It without even
appearing in a game~··
Fielder, the Detroit · Tigers'
first baseman~ hit his 50th and
51st homers of the. season,
becoming the first majorleaguer since George Foster. to
reach 50 In one year . Fielder also
captured the AL RBI title with
132 RBI. San Francisco's Matt
Williams won the l\IL RBI honor
with 122 RBI.
McGee, now playing In the
'American League, wrapped up
the National' League batting title
with a .335 average. He did not
play In Oakland's season-ending
11-6 loss ·to California .
Kansas Cfty's Geoi"ge Brett,
jockeying to become · the first
major·leaguer to take a batting
title In three decades, succeeded
with a .329 average. He went 1 for
1 to raise his record to .329, then
left for a phich-hltter.
Oakland's Rickey Henderson
failed In pursuit, going -1 !or 3, ·
then also .leaving the game.
Henderson also failed In his
attempt to break Lou Brock's
all-time major league stolen
bases record. He ended the
season with 65, for a career total
of 936. However, Henderson led
the league with 119 rups scored.
In the National League, Vince
Coleman of the St. Louis Cardinals stole 77 bases to capture the
honors.
'Ryne Sandberg.of the Chicago
Cubs led the NL for most home
runs, 40, and 116 runs scored .
Boston,'s Jody Reed and Brett
tied lor most doubles In the AL
with 45 apiece. Craig Jefferies o(
the New York Mets wrapped up
the season with 40 two-baggers.
Tony Fernandez of Toronto
trlpled 17 times to lead the
American League while Mar)ano
Duncan of Cincinnati Reds totaled 11.
The Texas Rangers ' Raf~el
Palmelro led the AL In hits with
191. Philadelphia's Len Dykstra
and San Francisco's Brett Butler ,
tied for the NL lead witn 192.
Bob Welch of the AL West
champion Oakland Athletics finIshed with 27 victories and Doug

sC!t; N°n6t,,~

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J4

AOOi(i 1MtmaVon me&lt;;bage -From -the u. B. Census.
_
\f;oPI~ lou can (PJnt on.
·
Jury Selection excludes the b~St Vincent Carroll
,The lawyer bad just asked tis,
the 14 members of the jury panel,
whether anyone had strong feel·
lngs about chiropractors. By my
count, four people raised their
hands. Goners, I figured.
.
Anyone expecting to get on this
parilcular jury would (lbvlously
need to respect the word of
chiropractors. Of doctors, too.
Also, slrice the case Involved a
woman who.was suing a condomlnlum association after slipping
and falling on Ice, the would'be
Juror had better not believe that
Americans are too quick to turn
to an attorney, or that sidewalks
and steps are hard to keep ciear
of wintertime glop.
It would be helpful, for that
matter, If the juror had never
been Injured In a serious fall. All
these things would be asked of
each of us, not to mention a
blizzard of more mundane
questions.

So went a typical morning· of
jury selection . In an American .
.courtroom. Having observed this
process seve~al times before my
recent role as\~ prospective juror
(and before being bounced from
the panel, too), I'dsaylt'smostly
a waste of time. In fact, I'd say
"voir dire" (a French term
meaning "to speak the. truth").
as the procedure ts called, has
the perverse effect of stripping
juries of judgement and sometimes even wisdom - the wisdom that comes. from knowledge
and wide experience.
·
In this case, one or· the first ,
,panelt) to get the heave-ho was
a fell ~who cleared sidewalks
and s, al for a living. Now, why
shouldn' his experience be
v allied on a jury? The worry, no
doubt, was that he'd automatically side with the condominium
assoelatlon. More probably, he'd

simply have a better Idea· of
what's reasonable to expect of
cleanup crews, and what Isn't.
The plalntlfrs attorney also
removed a woman who owned a
small business. Better to trust
the judgement of a ne'er-do-well,
apparently, than someone sus·
ceptlble to similar lawsuits.
After that, three people who said
they'd have · trouble gtvlng a
chiropractor's testimony as
much weight as a doctor's were
asked to go. (The fourth seemed
to back. away from her doubts,
and so, for the moment, survived.) Yet why shouldn't .a
skeptic or two of a profession that
elicits such widespread skeptl·
clsm - psychiatry Is another
example - sit on a jury?
It's one thing to dump someone
from a jury panel . who has a
personal relationship with a
party to the case, who stands
. to

Nuclear·won't serve U~

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•
•'

WASHINGTON - In 1985, a
California woman contracted the
mysterious and debilitating ·disease now known as , "chronic
fatigue syndrome." Her version
of how she got this controversial
Illness Is a real eye-opener.
The woman Is convinced she
got the disease, 01' a trigger for It,
from a herd of cattle In Urrlng'
ton, Nev.,ln the fall.of 1985. At the
time of her visit there, an
outbreak of chronic fatigue syndrome was puzzling doctors In
the nearby Incline VIllage.
Her unusual theory about the
aillmal conneetlon Is no more odd
than the history of the disease
.Itself. Only recently have doctors
and scientists admitted that
chronic fatigue syndrpme Is not a
flgnlent of the victim's imaglna- ,
tlon. For a time, the IBneas was
c!ertslvely called "Yuppie Flu"
because the victims are generally middle class and the symptoms Include depression and
exhaustion. In severe cases, the
victim can't even rise from a

0

•

The Daily Sentinel- Page- 3

CLAY, Calif. (NEA) - In a
desolate corner of · California's
Sacramento County, the Rancho
Seco Nuclear Power Plant stands
as a monument to a .once
promising but now dubious
source of energy.
A pair of cooling towers soar
skyward, presiding over the
graaalands that stretch to the
horizon In every direction, What
makes Rancho Seco especially
forlorn, however, .Is not the
dreary landscape but the llkellhood that It will never again
p~oduce a single watt . of
electricity.
Built at a cost of $375 million,
the 900 megawatt plant began
'operatlllg In 1974 and was suppoled to be a safe, Inexpensive
source of !!OWer for homes · and
omces In sacramento, tbe state
capital, and t1ie surround!ng
area well into the next century.
Instead, the plallt Ia being
dllmantled. Therein lies an lmJIOrtant tale to be IQld about
nuclear power at a time when Ita
proponent&amp; are promot!nir the
virtlieli of "domestic . enerl)'
alternatives to foreign on."

'

gain from a verdict, 'or who
declares at the outset exactlY
how he'll 'rule. But most of this
picking and choosing simply
results In juries less representative of the general populace and
probably less fair. Meanwhile,
the process Is a colossal waste of
time.
According . to a ·wonderfully
meticulous account or the jury
deliberations In The Wash!ngion
Post, two Barry jurors' actually
argued that the crack evidence
was phony. Not even the mayor's
attorneys had quibbled with this
evidence. To put It bluntly,
several jurors seemed to possess
no Intellectual discipline and
little, If any, understanding of
their respOnsibilities. The Post's
account Is nothing less than an
appalling protrayal of Ignorance ·
In action. For Ibis we have to
thank, no doubt. the peculiar way
we select our juries . .

(USFS IU·fllll)

Published every afternoon , Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by thP Ohio Valley Publishing Company/ Multimedia, Inc ..

.
Robert ·Walters

.

Tonight's games

-

Marietta at Gallipolis
Jackson at Athens
Warren Local at Logan
Wellston at Meigs
Coal Grove at Buffalo
Ironton at Portsmouth
Federal Hocking at Nel.-York
Trimble at Miller
VInton County at .Alexander
Kyger Creek at Hannan Trace
North Gallla at Symmes Valley
Oak Hlll at Eastern
Southern at Southwestern
Guyan Valley at Wahama
Saturday's 1ames
Milton at Point Pleasant
DeSales at Watterson

Pomeroy, Ohio 45789, Ph. 992·21!16. Second class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
'

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Member: United Press Intern·auonal,
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Qhlo Newspaper Association. National
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•' .

Barry Larkin led off with a
with in' 3-1. But , the Pira tes ·'
ivalk, moved to second on a
should have scored more In the
sacrifice bunt by Billy Hatcher
Inning, stranding a runner on • ,
and scored on a Hal Morris line third with no outs. · ·
.· • •
drive single between ,third and
Mike LaValliere opened the
short.
third by drawi ng a walk off Rljo
Davis then blasted a double to and the husky catcher huffed a nd
right and Morris raced home all puffed home from firs t on Jose
the way from firSt when right Lind's screeching · triple that '
fielder Boliby Bonllla bobbled the hugged the first base line and
ball for an error. Davis scurried skipped all th e way to the right
to third oil the miscue. O'Neill field corner . Rightlleld.e r O'Nelll
followed with a double to right- made ' It easier for the slowcenter to score Davis and, give runfllng LaValliere to score · by
Cincinnati a 3-0 advantage:
b!llng down as,he fielded the ball_ ' ·
' 'Walk was fairly close to against the wa ll.
,
'coming' out In the first," said
That left the Pirates )lllth a
Leyland. "You can't let It get out runner on third and no outs, but
of hand. "
Rljo avoided further trouble by
" It seems I always win ugly,"
striking out Walk and Backrrian
said Walk. "I struggled a lot In and getting Jay Bell to pop up.
the first Inning."
Rljo struck out the pesky BackThe Pirates, after going down
man with a blazing fijstball that
In order the first two Innings, · handcuffed .t he usually adept
finally reached Rijo In the third Iedadoff.hltter .
and produced a run to pull' to

Cincinnati jumped to a 3-0
first-Inning lead, thanks mainly
, to back· to-back doubles by DaVIs
and !;'au! O'Neill. But the Pirates
battled back and tied It 3-3 In the
fourth on Sid Bream' s towering
two-run homer.
•'That first Inning was one
Inning I don't want to Sfi!e happen
again, " said VanSlyke. "But the
way we came back to w!n tonight
Is going to be great for our
confidence the rest of the way."
The Reds tore Into Walk right
off the bat,. turning three hits, a
walk and an error Into three runs
In the first Inning.

BARGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY
(EICEPT "GHOST")

HOUII ''• Yol&lt;;

POSTMASTER: Send addreSs changes

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times."

_...;_

Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenu e,
New York , New York 10017. '

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because we dldn 't move the
runners. over with a ' bunt and
because of that steal attempt," ,
said Plnlella. "It wasn't a double
steal. Davis wa., going on his own
and the first base coach told
Bates to go only If he got a good
jump. It's a tough decision for a
trail runner. Bates didn't get a
particularly good jump, but
obviously , he thought he did."
Said Bates, ''When 1 broke, I
. thought I had a chance. But In
that situation I've got to make
sure I get ln. "
The Pirates now figure they're
In great shape to win Friday's
second game and take a 2'0 series
lead because 22-game winner
Doug Drabek will be starting
against Tom Browning.
"I'm glad Doug's pitching
tomorow ," said Leyland.
"We'll bounce back tomorrow, " pledged Plnlella. "We .
played pretty well tonight. We
just failed to execute a couple of

•

"- Division of Mu1Um8:ita, Inc.

s.·~nergy woes

In n!)wspaPer and magazine , freshopportunltytoprepetuatea
advertisements designed to propaganda campaign that alevoke strong emotional reac- ways has been long on emotional
tions, the ~leaguered Industry appeals an!~ short orr rational
pal Utility District, tlte local
clumsily attemp!S to attract the . arguments.
, .
government agency that oper'readers' attentlon"\v~th a variety
Because of seemingly endless
ated the plant, abided by lt.
of terrifYing cartood!mages.
operational problems, serious
Defenders of nuclear pciwer
They Include a threatening accidents of minor mishaps, the
note that Rancho Seco Is the only
snake with Its fangs bared, an }\ancho Seco plant never pro- operating power plant In the
oversized hypodermic syringe, duced even 40 percent of the
nation ever closed by popular
and ominous bomb, a smoking power It was supposed to
vote.- Moreover, more than a
machine gun and a menacing generate.
dozen similar ballot referenda In
ayatollah-like figure with :Uncle
To·· pay for needed Improve-- Maine, Ml\llsachusetta, Oregon
Sam tied to his llttie finger.
menta that were more expensive
and other states have been
In each Instance, however, the . than the original construction
reJected, .
.
real thr.eat ls pOsed by dreaded costs, electricity rates. for the
But the costs Incurred In 16
"FOREIGN OIL," and salvation plant's 'more than 530,000· custo-. mOnths since the shUtdown vote
comes from "energy aources we mers In Sacramento and Placet ll~ustrate the hidden expenses of
can count on, like .nuclear counties doubled between 1985 nuClear power that Its propoenergy."
and 1~.
.
~~enta are reluctant to discuss. ·
In recent years, the out-ofThose consumers finally lost .~.tstlmates. or tbe price of decomfavornuclearpowerlndustryhas faith In the nuclear plant. Some missioning Rancbo Seco, for
pressed for a renaissance based characterized It as "a .disaster . example, nnge1rom$200mllllon
upon rising doll)eltlc demand for waiting to happen," while others
to&lt;S!IOO mUllan.
electricity and growing concern sharply criticized Its Inability to
Because no federal repoiltory
about the evtro~tal effecta of produce power at competitive for spent fuel Is available, the
fossU fuels- notably coal and on prlcea.
\lied fuel rods at Rancho Seco
used to feed boners at
Last year, the area's voters will Join the 21,000 metric tons of
generating atatlons.
. approved a ballot propoaltlon similar radioactive materials
Now, · the dramatically In· calling for a Rancho Seco ahut- elsewhere requiring around-the·
crealled lnltablllty In the Middle down. Although the vote was not clock IU&amp;rdl and special hanEast Provides tbe laduatry with a binding, the Sacramento Munlcl· dling for decades to come.

~

The Dally Sentinel

Ora bek led the NL with 22 wins as
a 'm ember of the Eastern DivIsion champion Pittsburgh
Pirates.
Despite being sidelined wi th
shoulder In early Septeml)er,
Bos.ton's Roger Clemens !.93
ERA was the best In the American League. Danny Darwin of the
Houston Astros complied an
NL-low ERA of 2.21 .

By RICK VANSANT
UPI Sports Writer
CINCINNATI (UPI ) - Reds
manager Lou Plnlella called It a
1-ln-lOOshot. But Andy VanSlyke
figured _ the odds were In his
favor . And Eric Davis, well, he
was the -odd man ou t.
Van Slyke snaped a 3-3 tie with
a two-out seventh Inning RBIdouble to 11ft the Pittsburgh
Plra tes to a 4-3 wiri over the
Cincinnati Reds In the opening
game of the National League
playoffs Thursday night.
With . one out In the Pirates'
seventh a11d the game tied 3-3, ·
pinch· hitter GaryRedus blooped
a single to shallow right off loser
Norm Charlton and stole second.
After pinch-hitter Jeff King flied
out and Jay Be11 walked, Van.
Slyke ripped a drive that went
over the head of wandering and
backtrac(dng left fielder Davis
and bounded over the wall for a
ground-rule double to score Re.dtis with the winning run.
"Eric makeS that play 99tlmes ·
oui of 100," said Plnlella. "I don't
know what happened."
But Van Slyk!! doubted Davis
could have gotten to the ball.
"!.don't know whether he los !It ,
or not," said Van Slyke. "I
noticed he had been .playing
pretty shallow and I hit the ball
pretty good. I figured It was
going to make It to the warning
track and lt 'dld,"
But Davis said he should have
caught the ball for the third out.
"1 saw the ball come off the
bat/' said Davis: "I dldn'
t lose It
.
In the lights. I simply misplayed
it. I just messed It up. That's all
there was to it."
Pirates' starter and winner
Bob Walk survived a shaky first
to go six innings, surrendering
three runs and four hits, with five
strikeouts and two walks. Stan
Belinda pitched a perfect sev. enth and eighth Innings, while
Ted Power got the final two outs
for a save In a scary ninth In
which the Reds almost sellt the
game Into extra Innings.
Pinch-hitter Todd Benzinger
opened the ninth with a single off
Bob Patterson and Davis walked,
but pinch-hitter Ron Oester
failed on a sacrifice bunt try,
with Patterson throwing Benzinger out at third . Power relieved
Patterson.and Inherited Davis at
second and rookie BillY Bates
pinch-running for Oester at first.
Then, In a pivotal failed steal
attempt; Bates was thrown out at
second while Davis made It to
third. But Davis died at third
wheri "Power struck out Chris .
Sabo to end the game.
,
"We got hurt In the nlrith

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CHEVROLET-OLDSrt10BILE
CADILLAC-GEO-INC.

II.,.

308 EAST MAlt
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PO.IOY, OHIO

992-6614

Jj

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. Paa• 4

. Friday, October 6, 1990 .

Pomtwoy-Middlaport. Ohio

The Dllily Sentinel

:After Satur~'s EMU-Toledo game,

Friday, October 6, 1990

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i::At least one te&amp;m will fall .from MAC's unbeaten ranks
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By United
lnterna&amp;lonal
·
i4-14 tie wi!JI AJ&lt;ron, which whipped Kent 38-10.
·
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Th~ miD\ togJam at9p the Mid-American CQnference will be
Central has won eight of Its last 10 games against Kent,ln~ludlng
reduced by at least one Saturday . .
·.
·
· .
. .
· 38-0 last year.
·
.
·.· ·
.
.
·
' Eastern Michigan and Toledo,twoofthethreeteamss(lllunbeaten
. In other
games Saturday, Ball State Is at Miami and Onlo
In MAC play, meet Satumay afternoon In Toledo's Glass BOwL The
Unjversltyvlslts Bowling Green. Weste'r n Michigan Is at Akron In a
other unbeaten S:quad, Central Mlcl)lgan, ylsilswlnless Kent State.0) nbn-conterence action.
.
.
Toledo, 4-0 overall and 3-0 In the MAC, actually holds a half .game
Bowling Green and ou will be battling to escape the basement In
'le$-d over Central Michigan and Eastern Michigan, both 2-0 In
. their game at J¥i."Both are 1-3 overall and 0-2 In the MAC.
·
..
·
.. ·
The FalcoiiS' only win In four games was over Cincinnati In the!t
conference play.
. Toledo Is coming off a 27-20 win over Ohio University, Its third
opener. Ohio ·u niversity also Is 1.3, with a win ov!!r Tennessee Tech
-victory on the road this season. The Rockets puttogether a 15-play •
two weeks ago.
.
..
.
.
.
68-yard touchdown drive In the fourth quarter, scoring with 17
Ball State takes 2·2 and 1-lrecords to Oxford for Its game against
seeorids to play. after ou rallied trom a 20-6 deficit to tie.
Miami, 1-4 and 0-2. The defending champion Cardinals need a win
' "That was a great drive beCause we made the -plays when we
over the Redsklns If they are to have any bope of repeating as MAC
·
needed them •"said Toledo head coach Nlcl&lt;
.
.Saban: "We have a very
d
cha.
. mps.
. ·
mature offensive teaqu~nd they've showed good poise, character an
Miami's lone wtn was a 16-12 decision over Cincinnati two weeks
attitude.at crucial times."
.
.
ago.
·
.
. ·
Eastern Michigan Is 2-.3 overall, losing -all three of Its .. · AkronwlllbemeetlngltsthlrdMACopponentlnWesternMichlgan,
· non-conference games on "the road, Including a 37-6 whipping .a t
Tbe Zips are 1·0-1 with the win over Kent .and the tie with ce11tral
Indiana last Saturday.
· ,
·
.
.· ·
·
·
Michigan. The Zips, however, were beaten 28-23 last week by ;
But Saban called Eastem "tile best MAC team we've laced to
Youngstown State.
· · · .· . . . .
..
. . .·
date."
This week, Youngstown State puts Its 5-0 mark on the line against
''There's no reason why they shouldn't contend for the .Mt&gt;C
Western Kentucky ; Tbe Hllltoppers ate 2-2, losing 35-12 to Eastern
charrtplonsl!lp," Saban said of tile Hurons, ''They have very good , · .Kentucky last week.
players on offense and play the stiint 4-3 defense just like we do:
western beat !Jie Penguins 41·38 last year In Youngstown. .
, · "I taught the Eastern coaching staff the stunt 4-3 when I was a11
Saturday's Ohio Athletic Conference schedule finds Baldwin·
assistant coach at Michigan State..! hope that doen't come back to
Wallace at Ohio Nortllern, Capital at Hiram, .Mount Union at John
·· haurit us."
.
·
Carroll and Musklngum'at Marietta In day games arid Heidelberg at
Toiedo, which has won llln a row at home, holds a 10-7leadln..,
Otterbein at night. ·
. ·
·
.
·
tlie series, but the Hurons have won lour of the lasttlflve games
. In the North Coast Athletic CQnference, Its Allegheny (Pa.).
played between the two schools.
Wooster, Wittenberg at Case,Resel'Ve, Ohio Wesleyan at r&gt;entson and
Kent State's losing streak reached 15·games last w~k when the
Kenyon at Oberlin.
•
Golden Flashes were beaten 27-24" by Cincinnati, a team the
In other games, Iona (N .Y.) plays at Dayton, Northea,stMiss0urlat
Chippewas belted 34-0 lour weeks ago: Central Michigan played a

:

,; .

..

Chamber to meet Tuesday

Central State, TIHin at Bluffton, Northwood {Mich. l at Find Ia~ ·
at Georgetown (Ky.) and Wilmington at Urbana,

.
.
··
·

The Meigs Local School District l.s .rnak]!'l__g appUcatlon to the
State Department of .Education, · Division of Educational
Services,.for federal funds available through Chapter II of the
Federal, State and Local Partnership for Educational
Improvement. The applcatlon and all related documents ·are ·
available for Inspection and comments to parents and ihe
general public. Persons Interested In vieWing or discussing the
application should contact Wendy Halar, Federal Program,s
Coordinator, Meigs Local school District, 320 East Main Street,
P.O. Bo)( 272, Pomeroy, Ohio. ·
.

Age groups for the canoe races to be held Sunday for the
Ethnic Settlers Fest Weekend are ages 11-13, 14-17, and 18 and
over. Trophies will be awarded to the first place winners In each
category..
·
In the Kinder Para. de on Saturday trophies will be.awarded In
the children's categories of be.s t bicycle, best costume and best

In Sunday's Detroit-Minnesota game,

~- Southern

!~~d~::~ 17:;!~~p~~d ~:~:
· .,

ha:h~~ ~t~a~~ers replaced Mil·

l\

·

~'

Nancy J..an.ter's five points In \he
Southern-needed 11 points from · straight-serves by Jenkins. HowJunleoBeegle and three games to · e~er, OVC's Cindy Sheets tllid the second·game hell)ed pl.lsb Gailla
: beat North Gallla (14-16, 15-7, gal!le at 14 on. six consecutive Academy's varsity to a 15-2,15-11
: 1:;-4) In Thursday nlgbt's varsity
serves by Cindy Sheets. But the win over Warren Local.
The Academy Is now 12-8
•match at VInton.
Wildcats took the match on an
overall and 3-5 In the SEOAL.
: , The Pirates were ' Jed by . ace point by Kim Triplett and a
'GA veteran Jennifer Young,
~ Chrlstee Ratliff (eight points)
kllllog spike by Tanya Short.
who
.led the net play with an
- and Dee Dee Dobbins (seven). ·
Triplett flnlsh.ed the match
11-for-15
effort and seven kills,
: In the reserve match, North with seven polots, arid Short and
also led on defense with 20
· GaiDa won 15-9, 15·7. Jennifer teammate Heather . Hutchinson
passes. Teammate Tandra
:Truance and Dama Twyman led
totaled four. Sheets led the
: North with eight points each.
Defenders with 11 points.
. Adams went 11 for 12 and totaled
five kills. Elliott's oHense earned
•Christy Maidens led Racine with
IIi the junior high .match, the
her the Shake Shoppe .Server of
:six.
Defenders won 15-9, 15-11 to push
.
;. The Plrateswon theJunlorhlgh
their record to7-5. Ariesa VanMa: . the Game award.
The Blue Angels won the Junior
· •i:natch 15-'3, 15-5. Allison Farley . . tre .Jed OVCS with seven, arid
varsity match 15-2, 15-1. Amy
' ~aced the Bucs (10·1, 9-0) with
Trace's Stacy Bricker and Andie
Morris Jed the Academy wltlll2
:seven points, and three players McGuire led with four each.
points to win the Shake Shovpe
.,:_ K. CoUlns, A. Moore and C.
Blue ADgels beat Warriors Server ot the Game award.
· :Roush- ied the Tornadoes with At Ga!Upol\s, Gwen Elliott's
The Angels \viii head north to
:iwo eaclr;
seven points in the first game ·
·, KC takes two ma&amp;ches - At
(out of 10 for the match) and play Athens Tuesday a.t 5:30p.m.
. :ruppers Pialns, ~yger Creek
.o¥ercame a game-high 16 serv- ·
'lng points from Eastern's Lee ....
(;lillian ,and the Eagles' first·
:came victory to post a 1H5,
;15-12, l:i-12 win In the varsity
·•lflatch.
: Jodi Nance, wlio led the Che. ;jhlre six with 11 points, went 14
j
-(or 17 at the spiking line and
I':
.
· rollected five kills. Teammate
Luciana Scott had 'nine . points.
SANDWICHES-Sl.S~
.._nd Beth Bradbury went lS lor 22.
:at the line and .racked up eight .
kills.
.
·• In the junior varsity match, KC
. won 15.13, •15-7. Tanya Drum- .
tnond and Bethany Rose led the
·'visitors with six points, and
teammate Amy Hauldren
.
. . . FIIDAY~ OCTOIEI 5, 1990 .
·.
ehtpped In with five. Penny
. Aeiker led Eastern wl\!) eight.
~~~~~~A
niE ...- ..~~~··--·...•••••••••••••••~~•••••.•.• 13.6 5
~ The Eagles claimed a 7-15, 15'-2,
~ J:. ,__........ F-~ Fr.tllor, Sor .... 'wiltl er-y ...ooi &amp; Clo- AI Ho. _ ..., .,..
, _ rill 1041 AHot hl.. ool 11i1L
15-1 wlri In the junior high match.
iessica Radford paced the hosts
.
SUNDAY, OCTOin 7, 1990
With 17 points, and Sonya Jividen
HO .
·
·
......
J!ECOOIED
lOAn
DINND
-·•··"
..
'' SC.93
(lid the same for the Bobcats With
~- ................................... s......... ~ ........ .
10. .
.
.
~-wii~Coiho,
~. "!1 moh• • ....,.. U.., A llol I""'""'' loa
; Wlldca&amp;a ap!U twlnblU ·.:.. At
--, •
...... or e,..Hol olool, llotk F'"""' hWool.
Mercetvllle, senior Tracey Jeli•
CHU 5 PORTION--~...."":.-........~ ••- ...............~................. 13.39
lttns racked up 13 poiJ!ts In the
ROANASTD·WINE( F SANDWIOI
s2•65
Varsity match to power Hannan
S
H
TOPPED
WITH
MASHED
POTATOES
I
GRAVY
...
•3.69
'f'I:a~;e to a 15-7,16-14 victory over ,
bhio Valley Christian.
. ·
HOURS: 10:00 A.M. TO 9:30P.M. 7 D-AYS A WEEK
: The Defenders, 13-6, commit;
: .
ted 12 c01t1y errors, which the
l.vlldcats cashed In to collect tlie
liVID In theflrstgame. Theseconci ·
IJaiDe. hp~ver, saw a different
OVCS team, as the Defenders .
pvereame their early woes and
refuled to let .the Guyaa ll)lkers
tel aw!ly aa eaally as In the first
IJame. The Wildcats took .a 14-8
lead ·on the. strength ot seven
:

Uons to run Barry Sanders at
Minnesota a loi.
.
· The Vikings defense has been
struggling against the run. In the
first tour games, four backs have
gained 90 or. more yards Kansas Oty's Christian Okoye,
Chicago's Neal Anderson and
Brad Muster and Tampa Bay's
Gary Anderson, who had 108, the
first enemy back to crack the
100-yard mark against Minnesota In 19 games.
The V!kings defense Is allow·
lng 4.3 yards per rush, more than
a yard more than last season.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES lit SERVICE

204 Condor St.

TUESDAY THRU FRIDAY
9 A.M.·&amp; P.M.
SAT. 9 A.M.-1 P.M.
CLOSED MONDAYS

~THE

GRAVELY
.SYSTEM
c

FIS"
SERVING BEGINS AT 10:30 A.M.

for TVC volleyball ·crawn
A Meigs Marauder win coupled who added seven points and three
with a Vinton County upset kUls, was followed by Amy
overluecond place Miller has Wagner (five points, eight asgiven the Lady M;!rauders a slice sists) and Jennifer Taylor (five
of ·. their .first-ever Tri-Valley' pblnts and seven assists). Kelly
CQnference championship In vol- Smith had another good gane
leyball, Meigs can win the title with two points and 12 kllls, and
outright with a win· at Belpre Weaver had one point apd four
kllls, while Tara HUmphreys
Thursday evening.
In the win over Wellston the added two aces.
For Southern, Marcy Hill led
Marauders had little trouble
defeating the Jackson C&lt;lurity the charge·wlth six points, Junle.
Beegle four points, ·Cheryl Pape ·
girls 15-4 and 15-3. ·
Tricla Baer Jed the way with 15 and An!)era Thelus two points
points, five aces, and two kills, and Jan Wllllams .one point.
ln the reserve contesttheLittle
Jennifer Taylor added six points
and (our assists, Kelly Smith
Marauderu were down 14-,-9
three aces ·anu nine kills, Amy . . before coming back to win the
Watnerlelght assists and first game 16-14, Meigs won the
second ·game 15:-.; Ito keep their
· Chrissy Weaver four kills.
The reserve team also, moved · unbeaten garne . streak Intact.
closer-to a ·r~vve title with a Carrie )3artels led the way for
15-8, ' 15-4 win over Wellston.
Meigs with lOipoints, Lee HendChrissy Weaver led the way with erson added eight and Nikki
10 points, Carrie Bartels added
Meiers six.
eight.
The reserve and varsity teams ·
.
In a non-league contest at for Meigs raise their records to
Southern . Wednesday evening, 17-0 and 13-0 in the conference,
the Marauders had to come from respectively, before Thursday
behind to defeat a good Tornado night's action.
team 15-11 and 15·4. Southern had
the Marauders down 10-6 in the
first game .before Meigs went on
FrtJth Pharmacy
a 9-1 streak to nail dowo the
· victory.
Mor(l
Kim Hanning led the way with
Pr(lscri ptions!
eight points, four aces and three
Thczrcz Must
kills. Teammate Trtcla Baer,

Fills

MIZWAY TAVERN
PRESENTS AN

Fruth
.Pharmacy-

OKTOBERFEST ·
PARTY
SAT., OCT. 6
.

WITH

D.J. STEVE PEnRS

Bcz fi Good
Rczoson!

'

FROM 9:30-1 :30
•DOOR PRIZES
•FREE HAlS TO THE FIRST 50
•2.00 covn CHARGE
MUST IE 21
COINER OF 7 &amp; 143
POMEROY

tow Prices And
Quality
Pharmaceutical
Care!

ATTE·NTION!'
MEIGS COUNTY RESIDENTS

.

FOR YOUI EmA CONVENIENCE; PERMANENT BRANCH LOCAnON AT
MEIGS COUNTY PUBUC UIRARY, West Main StrHt, Pomeroy, Ohio
Monday thru Friday 9:00 a.m. till 9:00 p.m. · · · . .
Saturday 9:do a.m. till 5:00 p.m.-Sunday 1:00 p.m. till 5:00 p.m.~ ·
YOUR MAY ALSO REGISTER ON THE MEIGS BOOKMOBILE .·
r
AT ITS DESIGNATED STOPS

•

I

. · MIAMI (UP!) . - Hurricane
Klaus, · upgraded from .tropical
s~rm strength, swirled In .place.
Friday with 80..mph winds and
spUied heavy · rains onto the
Islands of. Barbtidil and Antigua,
while Hurricane Josephine
.drifted jn the Atlantic.
.
Forecasters at the National
Hurricane Center expected
Klaus, which grew Into the sixth
hurricane of the year Friday, to
continue strengthening over the
next 24 hours and to resume
drifting to the ·northwest: ·
"It's . just building up out
there," said Mites· Lawrence, a
forecaster at the National Hurricane Center. "It's just not
· moving .... Our expectation Is Its
going · to' start moving to the
northwest but that hasn't happened yet." .
In tile northeast Caribbean, ·
. hurricane warnings remained In
effect for lsll\nds from St. Martin

I

Hospital news

Dally stock prices
· (As of 10:30 ·a.J!l.)

Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt; EliiS &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power ....... .,..... 27
AT&amp;T ... , .................... ... .... .':n%
Ashland 011 .......................... 31
Bob Evans ...... ..'......... ... .... :,.11 Yo
Charming Shoppes .... .. .... ..... BY,
City Holding Co . .. ...............15¥,
Federal Mogu I. .. ............. .... l3Y,
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .. ......... ... .... 17
Key centurion .. .. .. .... ... .. .. .. .10'h
Lands' End .......................... 10%
Limited Inc . ............ .... ....... 13%
Multimedia Inc .......... .. ... .... 59%
Rax Restaurants ...... .. ......... 1'f.
Robbins &amp; Myers .. .. ... ....... ... 17
Shoney's Inc . ....... .... .. .. ....... 11~
StarBank ................ ..... .... .. 16'h
Wendy's Ir.t'l. ........... ........... 5Y,
Worthington Ind ........ .. ... ..... 19% .

Woman cited after 2-car 'wreck
A Mlddlepor~ was Cited for failure to yield when she
was Involved In a two-car acddimt on State Route 124 Thursday
,
night. '
·Joyce Jacks, 37, was attemptlngtomakea right turnout of the
Brown's Trailer Court driveway when she traveled Into the path
of another car, driven by Wanda Riffle, 22, of Racine. The two
cars collided; resulting lrt m(rior damage to boll! vehicles,
according to a report from the Gallla-Meigs post of the Slate
Hlgh"'ay Patrol. ·
Jacks was cited for failure to·yield from private drive. She,
Riffle, and one passenger In each car were not Injured.

eastward, Including the British
· VIrgin Islands, :Nevis, Barbuda,
Montserrat, Antigua and surrounding Islands.
Tropical storm warnings were
In place for Guadeloupe and the
neighboring _F rench Islands.

while tropical storm-force winds
extended up to 115 miles east of
the center and 40 miles west of
the center. ·
. Probability charts from the
hurricane center said there was a
14 percent to 17 percent chance
the storm's . eye would pass
Forecasters w;~rned boaters In
within 65 mllfs of St. Croix and
the northeast ·Caribbean · from .St. Thomas In the U.S. VIrgin
Puerto Rico eastward to stay
Islands and San Juan and Ponce,
near port Klaus dumped heavy
Puerto Rico, by 2 a.m. Monday.
rains 'ori Martlnlcjue ' Thursday,
Klaus is the 11th named storm ·
producing flash flooding · that
of the 1990 At.Iantlc-Carlbbean
triggered mud sUdes.
hurricane season·, which runs
At 6 a.m. EDT Friday, Klaus
from June 1 to Nov. 30. It sprang ·
was -centered near latitude 17.2 from a tropical depression that
north, longitude 61.3 west; or . rapidly strengthened
about 30 miles east-northeast of
Wednesday.
Antigua.
. ·The 10th named storm, HurriMaximum sustained winds
cane Josephine, achieved. winds
were near80 mph, 6 mph above of 75.mph Friday as It meandered
the 'hurilcane threshold of 74
through the north Atlantic to- ·
mph.
ward the Azores.
·
Hurricane (orce winds exJosephine formed off the Afritended outward up to 30 miles, can coast Sepi. 16 and has waxed

and waned as It followed an
erratic northward coursf.
through the Atlantic .
At 6 a.m. EDT, Josephine was
centered near latitude 30.4 north,
longitude 40:o west, or about 920
mlles sou ill west of Tercelra In
the Azores. Hurrlcance force
winds extended outward up to 30
miles from the · 'center with
tropical storm Ioree winds extending 145 miles.
Josephine was moving north at
neal' 10 mph aild was expected to
continue that moilon for the next
12 bouts with a gradqaJ . turn to
the north late Friday.
·
~ The system was considered a
threat only to marine Interests.

'
· , By United Press International
~ · The National Weather Service
. : says a nice weekend Is In store for
• a change In Ohio ..
; · Dry and warm weather Is
• expected· to prevail through the
; .)Veekend In Ohio, prbvldlng a
:· change In weather pattern. In,
Cleveland, for example, three
·· ·out of every four weekends this
· year have had precipitation. . ·
Skies cleared Thursday night
· over northern Ohio In the wake of
, another round of showers and
thunderstorms. The weather distu_rbance that produced the show·
ers
. moved rapidly east allowing

skies to clear shortly after
midnight.

Early Friday morning temperatures were In the lower to
middle 50s over the state.
War111lng southwest winds and
considerable sunshine Friday
were expected to propel temperatures to above normai levels,
With highs reaching 80 In southwest Ohio.
.
Clear skies should prevail
through Friday night, with
temperatures remaining ·on the
mUd side. I,.ows should fall Into
the 50 to 55 degree range.

Ohio cities held six of the top 12
growth rate positions, due prim·
arlly to reb9und In auto
· production.
_Youngstown topped the . list
with a U3 percent growth rate
liver the first quarter. Toledo was
second wltha6.02percentgrowth.
.i:ate, followed bY CQJumbus In
fourth place at 2. 70 percent.
. Cleveland was sixth at 1.93
Pet'cent, while Dayton was eighth
liVtth a 1.64 percent growth rate,
and Clnclruilltl · 12th at .1.117
j)ercent.
· ·
The EPIC ranks the 'Ill larpst

••

DiSsolution
filed
..
An action for dissolution ot
marriage has been flied In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
Theodore C. Fisher, Pomeroy
and Nancy Jo Fisher,
Middleport.
·

Warm and breezy weather Is in
the forecast for Saturday along
wl.th plenty of sunshine, Highs
Saturday should generally be In
the 80 to 85 degree range, some 10·
to 15 degrees above normal fOr
the first week of Octol!er,
·
The . un.s easonably war-m
weather Is expected to continue
through the first part of next
week. The next chance for
showers will be about Monday.
On the Friday morning
weather map, a large area of
high pressure stretched from the
southern Plains eastward lrito
t~e Tennessee Valley.

-

The Melp County Public Ll- ·
brary In Pomeroy will be closed
on Monday In ·observance · of

Columbua Day.

Receives ·degree
Jennifer Ellen ·Meadows of
Middleport was one of 1,722
graduates of Ohio State University receiving degrees at OSU's
summer quarcler CO!Dmencement exercises on August 30;
Meadows received a bachelor ·
.of science degree .In Pharmacy·.

•

.

If~

frer.1 And it's going to be rnore fui1 than a
barrd of hamburgers. Grunes. M~ic tricks: Son~s .
f .wn ~pedal prizes. And be sure to' tJring your
c~mcr&lt;\. l\10. ~o

you can take picturr.s of
Rl'nald and the kids. Don't miss it. It's
w0rrdr.rful fun for the whole family.

Fruth Phormoc:y

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Fills Morcz
i'rczsc:ri ptions!
Thcznz Must i3cz H
Good Rczomn!
Your Fruth
Pharmacist - .
The Healthcare
Specialist M,ore
People Rely On.
·He Cares About

YOU1

-------------Bestl.re to cutout this

~Mom!

.OFFICIAL RONALD McDONALD
REMINDER.

. On Saiurday, dt•tohf'r fl. at
· the new Mr.Donahf'~® in
Pomero~·. hrin-g tlw ki1l11
to see .I he new Rnnaltl
..
McDomrl1l~ Show. Th1• .,lmw

!'lla.-rs al l :00 p.m.

i

\

rntl 99'2 I· Fil
i'J1~t hJI( 'I
_,

'''r;

~-

\

•

'·

'

The Shady, River Shufflers
Clogging Team will pel'forrrt at'
McDonald's In Pomeroy on Saturday at 3 p.m. for the reslnu·
rant's . grand opening. Sandy
Butcher and Nicole Bunch will
make guest appearances.

-Live and
in .Person!.·

nearly 4.percent to their
respective job bases in the last
year alone.
·
"These are two of only 29 cities
to actually add manufacturt'ng
jobs slnce .the swnmer of 1989,"
Renfro said, ''Cleveland, too, has
been expanding briskly this last
year, ·posting ·job growth of
around 3 percent and holding on
to Its manufacturing Jobs."

Library to clOse

South Central Ohio
Clear Friday night ; With a low
between 50 and 55. Sunny and
windy Saturday, with highs in the
mid aos.
. Extended ~orecast
· Sunday through Tuesday
Generally fair Sunday, with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms Monday and Tuesday.
Highs will range .from 75 to 85
eac~ day, with overnight lows
between 55 and 65.

Clogger ream
will perforrJl

Ronald

.

.

Weather

. Veterans Memorial
. Thursday admissions - Della
Norton, P&lt;:&gt;meroy; Avanell Bass,
Pom!lroy.
.
Thursday discl)arges .- Shelly
Proffitt, Don B. Cullums, John J,
Southern , Shlrle' Roush, Garnet
Brown, Jason Wells.

Come see

,.A
dry
Ohio
weekend
forecast
.
.

By Ualted Press International
U.S. metropolitan areas In ecoAn Economic Performance nomic activity as measured bY
Inde~ for Cities report released . · real personal . Income ,... and
:Friday . by the Alphametrics employmen!.
Corp. of BaJa Cynwyd, Pa.,
''The strongest regional per.shows six Ohio cities had strong formance In the second quarter
"economic growth during the came from the large Ohlocltles, ''
second quarter despite a national sal!l Charles Renfro, president of
.trend the other way.
. IJphametrlcs. ''These older. In: The report shwed an economic dustrlal centers · are currenlly
-decline In 56 of the 75 largest riding a rebound in a~tomoblle,
:cllles In the United States for \he ' . export arid related Industries
·April .through June period. The· after nearly a decade of relative
decline reverses the pattern of. decline.
. the tlrst quarter, when 58 cities
"Youngstown · ·arid Toledo
.showeq some positive growth.
topped the list ... the result of
It also confirms the U.s. reopening au to-related plants
economic slowdoWn outUned In . shut down lri January' to clear
~the government's .most recent
Inventories," Renfro said.
·Gross' National . Product report,
He said CQ!umbus a,nd
which showed national growth to Clnclimatt ·have generated the
be only 0.4 pei'Cent for the second ·.most steady economic growth
quar~r.
• · ·
over the past two years, adding·

.Board of Elactiorf Hours Are. Monday, thru Friday 8:30 .a.m. till 4:30 p.m . .
·Monday. October _81Columbue DayJ-8:30 a.m. til 4:30p.m.
Tu1!1d1Y, October 9-9:00 a.m. till 9:00 p.m.
.,

.

.

:Ohio cities show .economic
growth .during second qu~er

THE BOARD OF ELECnONS OFFICE IS LOCAnD AT 101 MECHANIC STRE~T
·
- LQ~estions? - Coll992-2697
·

AlONE-··--···-··..····-··"""

-

Meigs County Sheriff's deputies transported three convicted
criminal offenders to Orient Correc(lonal Center on Thursday .
According to Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Michael 1;&gt;. O'Neil,
Stevep Scott Powell and Stephen Kimes were transported to the
reception center to begin serving sentences lmpi&gt;sed recently _·
by Meigs County Common Pleas CQurt Judge F~ed W. Crow III . ·
Souls by also reports that deputies Investigated an accident on ·
Wednesday morning at Cherry Ridge, Involving AaronS. Hysell
of Middleport.
.
,
Hysell was westbound o.n State Route 681 ·In a 1985 ~lssan
when. the vehicle'dropped off the right side of .the road, came back onto the road and overturned on Its right side.
The truck sustained heavy damage.
The West Virginia State Pollee at Spen~r. V'{_.Va. arrested
Art Cullers of Spencer _on a felony bad check charge for ·a $46~
check written to Excelsior Salt Works.
..
It Is not yet known If Cullers will waive extradition
proceedln!&lt;'s.
·

Hortense Kirkhart

Four· calls for assistance were
'!nswered by Meigs County · Word has been received of tl)e
Emergency Medical Services on death of Hortense Kirkhart; a
former Meigs . County resident,
Thursday . ·
·
who died In a Ravenna hospital
!1-t 6:10 a,m., Racine squad on
September 28 following an
we11t to Bucktown .Road · for
·
extended
ll.lness.
Courtney Jane's . Jones, w.,_s
She
was
a school teacher and
treated but 1)01 transported .
taught
for
several years In the
AI 12:54 p.m., Pomeroy squad
Olive-Orange
school district .
was called to Spring Avenue.
She
was
preceded
In death by
Audrey Arnold was taken to
her
husband,
Willard
Kirkhart
Pleasanl Valley Hospital. .Pome-· _' and one.da.ugh\er.
' .
roy fire department was called to
She
is
survived
by
two
daughSecond Street at 9: 13p.m. for a
vehicle fire . At 10: 07' p.m. , ters and fo\lr sons and grandMiddleport squad was dis- children, all in the R11venna area._
Burial was Monday In
patched to Cofe Street for Kenny
Ravenna,
Whl(e, wl)o was taken to Veterans Memorial HospitaL ,

Prisoners taken to Orient

•

Call: 992-6491
Middleport

four calls

According to Meigs· County Prosecuting Attorney Steven L.
Story, the.charge against Young cardes a mlnlmumsentenceof
10 to 15 years In prison and a mai&lt;il1lum serite.nce of 25 years; .
with a maximum fine of $10 ,000.
·
At the arraignment hearing, Judge Fred W. Crow III set
Young's bond at $50,000 cash, and trial for October 29.
Meigs County Public Defender Charles H. Knight was
appoi11ted as counsel for'Young, who Is Indigent.
· He remains hOused in the Meigs County JaiL·

Ht•rricane Klaus threatens Caribbean

.

In Order To Vote In The Upcoming General Election On
·
November 6, 1990. .
You Must Register_o,r U~te Your Registration By
.
October 9, 1990 ot 9:00 P.M.

111

•

capture t~e .

WILL YOU BE 18 BY NOVEMBER 6, 19907
JUST MOVED TO MEIGS COUNTY?
,
MOVED. WITHIN THE COUNTY?
MARRIED AND CHANGED YOUR NAME?

llaeka•d Spaellls

.

Pomeroy, OH.

FaU &amp; Winter Hours

FISH FRY

MIDDLEPORT FIRE DEPARTMENT
SATURDAY, OCT~ 6

John Lewis Young was arralgiied on one count of kidnapping
on Thuruday In Meigs County C,omrnon Pleas Court.
Young was Indicted on the charge, an aggravated fks.tdegree ·
felony, last week ..

neyman, said Vlklngsde(en~.lve
coordinator Floyd Peters. He
~:J'~Jm~f~~~~~~? pass well, a
·it .1111 th
1 limit d
n .
e ac on · w
e
Vikings last year Strauthers
played In 12 games and had six
tackles and a sack. Despite tho,se
lean statistics, he was protected
on the 37.player roster.
"Nowl'vegotllchancetoshow
that the faith they had In me was
warranted , said Strauthers.
"I'm re~lly not trying to put
pressure on ,myself . . I'm not ,
saying 'Millard's down so I've ·
got to play up to his standards .•
Keith Is a great player. 1 can't go
lnanddo· theihlngshedld."
S
th
But with Millard out, trau ·
ers, 29, should get a chance to
contribute. Instead of Millard,
the· opposition will likely focus
the VIkings with three sacks.
"If they get doubled maybe ~t

.

Man arraigned for kidnapping

LEAPS FOR BLOCK- Southern's Junle'lleegleleaps to.block a
sb!&gt;t by Meigs Marauder Tr!Cia Baer _In Wednesday n,lght's
voUeyball · game at Rac_lne. Tbe Marauders defeated the
Tornadoes to raise lts.record to 17-0.
·

Mara~ders

lard lastSunda he had a tackle
. ·
Y ·
.
and sacked Bucs quarterback
i~~ny Testeverde for a five-yard
0 "He's ~n above-average Jou't -

oo_rsit_y tops North ·. Gallia; ~~:~~e~~~:om~~~~~$lea~~
.
~- K vuer
Cre_ ek sn
__ikers. beat·.E"ules
~:~~~e~~ g;~~n !=~~:~ s~~~
J 0.
r'
'

~agon :

coach Jerry Burns. But he Is a ·
,

.

Canoe .races set ·sunday

at

Y

Jack Burllngameo! the Jackson County, W.Va. Depart.rient
of Development• will be the keynote speaker at the monthly
meeting of the Meigs CQunty Cha'*r of Commerce on
Tuesaay.
.·
·
.
. .
BurUngame will speak to the chamber on the advantages of a
cham)Jer executive director an(! development-director.: ~ch
the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce is In the process .
biting.
.
·
.
. Chamber President Br.uce Reed urges all .members o.f ·the
chamber to attend this meeting, which wlll be held at noon on
Tuesday at Over\lrook .Center.
·
·
·

.· School applying for funds

Vikings to play minus Millard_; Uons.miss ~eete

The Daily Sentinai-Paga 6

..-local news briefs-"!"':".--------.....,......., EMS·answers Area death!

MAd

. · MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) - .Few league. · ·
·
though Minnesota lost 23-20 to
· pro football watchers expected
''They could be 3-1 with a \)teak Tampa Bay In overtlme.Thomas
the Ml_nnesota VIkings and the here or there. If anyone had told Strauthers steps at tackle lor·
Detroit Lions to have a combined me before the season tha.t when . Millard, who was lostfor the year
re.cord of 2-6 at this point of the we went to Minnesota wed have with a kneed lnJl!l'Yseason.
the same record as the VIkings, I
•'I know everyone will be
Many expected they would be probably wquld have beeil very . looking at me wondering 'What
contendlni for the NFC Central happy because I felt they were . can this ·guy do?'" said Strauth·title this year Instead of sitting at the class of the division. And I ers. "They'll ·want to know II I
the bottom of the division with 1-3 still feel that way. ·
can hold down the fort. I'm sure
records. But that Is where they
"We haven't beaten the Vlk· the spotlight will be on me."
stand heading Into their game at lngs In a long tline and after the
Originally a lOth-round draft
the Metrodo~e S~nday.
way they lost last week,. you can pick by Philadelphia In 19&amp;3,
Both clubs are banged up. The just bet they'llbe very fired up to .S trauthers has bounced around
. Vlklnts!Uiv!Nos) their starting play us. We're still banged up, so the NFL for seven seasons. In
q uarterback, Witde Wilson, and It's going to be a tough game for addition to the Eagles he's been
·
us...
·
.
·
'
their top defensive lineman,
on the payrolls of Miami, Atlanta
Peete suffered a pulled hl!-mst, and Detroit before tile Vikings
Keith Millard. Tbe Lions are
missing their starting quarter· ring Sunday In a 24-21 loss to signed him. as a Plan Bfreeagent
back, Rodney Peete.
, Green Bay. Backup Bob Gagll- la~~year.
.
.
Lions head coach Wayne' ano wlll flll In lor peete. Last
~~en I came here I,~!Jew my
Fontes said he still considers · sea,son, Gagliano filled In f9r the role, sald Strauthers. You look
Minnesota to be a very good Injured Peete .and led Detroit to out· there and see : Millard,
team.
five stralgbt victories at the end
(Chris) Doleman, (AI) Noga and
"TheylostagameSundaythey of year.
· (Herny) Thomas. and and say
very easily could have won and
Rich Gannon will .be making second·s~\ng lsn t bad In that
had a chance to win," Fontes his second NFL start In .place of company.
.
said . "Like us, tl!ey hav!i suf·
Wilson, who suffered a hand
Now Strauthers Is on the
feredsomekeylnjurlesaridwhen Injury thai will keep him out of varsity.
that happens, It becomes that · action for several weeks. Last · ''l'mnotsayinghe'sasgoodas
. VIkings · head
mu.ch ha. rder to win. In this week, he looked solid even Millard •" said
.
·
•
·
·

Pomii!'Oy-Middleport. ()hio

I'

�•

•

-'

•

J

Friday, October 6, 19So

Ohio

OR.

••

•

orne

·By The Bend

Th~ Message and Church Directory Spon.!eored Ry The Interested Rri.~inesses Listed On This l'_a.ge.
. Veterans ·
Memorial Hospital
115 E. Mornorioll Dr.

Pomtro.r

lil

·

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARM~~'
~y
wo F•ll ooctors·

""-

Prescnptions

•

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
' 172 North St&lt;'!lld An.

Nationwi-de Ins. o.
.C

ol Columbus, 0 .

u·

TRINli'Y CONGREGATIONAL anJROI,
pasta-. Cllureh
Scllool ~IS Ln1. Allee GlobOiuu', &amp;lilt; Woc. ... - 1 0 : :II a.m. OIDir reheanal, nrun~- -~00 p.m.; u. Burl, - POMEROY CHURCH OF 'THE NA2A·
' llENE. Qrm- l.ttlon and Mulberry, Rev.
'l1unas Glm Mlnl..r, pest&lt;r. Nmnan Pn!slel&lt;, S. S. &amp;lp., SuDda,y Sc1lool. 9::11 am.;
111C11*&gt;gwwsljp1D::Jla.m: l'Y8llngservice6
p.m.; - -· W-11)'. 7p.m.
GRACE EPIS!DPAL C11URCH, 32i E.
Main St., l'l&gt;rnero!-.lho Ri!Y. Dr. RoyC.Myen,
rector. &amp;lndoy oeMces: 11 a.in. Jun&gt; through
" - " 11::11 a.m. Seplember tlnu&amp;h !d&gt;YJiobl O!mm"'*&gt;n, !lrst, SECOnd, tnrd and

·Tho Rev. Roland

wucmao.

IDurtll &amp;lnda,ys of each lllOlth; Mor.-,g
~'roy&lt;!'. on llllh &amp;lnda,ys. (llureh sc1m1 and
111nery care provided. ~ twr In t!l. puilh haD lmmedlale\Y - g llle service.
POMERO\; CHURCH OF Cl!RlST, 212 W.
MilD St., Leo Lash, ...."'""'. Billie Scllool
9::Jla.m; l'olqrnlniiYorsldp,IO::Jla.m; Yooth
rneettnp, ~ 00 p.m.; Evening wa-sldp, 7:00 p.
m We&lt;b!lda,y Jqjlt prayer ~and lllble
IIIIey. 7:00 p.m.
TilE SALVATION ARMY, liS But11!n!Ut
A..,., Pomeroy, Mr-s. Dora Wining In c~.
&amp;lndoy holllas meeting, 10 a.m.; &amp;1111111)'
Sdm. 10::11 a.m. &amp;lnday Sclml, YPSM
n. Mams,
7: :II p.m. Salvation
meetlntr. varlou5 speal&lt;en and music specials.
, 'Ibunday, ll:Xl a.m to 2 p.m Ladles Home
· Le-. mem!B's In . c~. aU ·women
lmifal; 6:45 p.m. Thunday, Orps Cad&lt;4
C.. (YOUIII Pl'ope-BIIIIe), 7::11 p.m. Bible
SNey and l'rayEr meet
.
q. open to the Pttilc.
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
:112260lllc!ren'sl!ornelload(Cowtty
'16). !1!2-.1111'7. Vocal rriuslc. &amp;lnday Worsljp Ill a.m.; Illhie !lnley 11 a.m.; WOillldp, 6 p.
; : m w~. lllhle St,.ey, 7 p.m Speaker,
' • Lanmn Hope, eYIIIgellst.
'
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRm'IAN
. CHURCH, Jack. Cleland, pui&lt;r, Alana CJe.
hold. &amp;lp. Sunda,Y Schxli!D:OO a.m.; Yooth
-· 1 p.m.....,. w-.y:
• SACitED HEART CATHOLIC CHURCH
:, - 161 Mulber!l' Awo., Pomeroy. Ph. 992r ,1 58!18. Saturday Evening Mus, 5: .1&gt; p.m.;
~ Sunday MOll 9:11a.m. CCDclasaea.!O::Jl
r" a;m, first, MCOnd and thlrdSunda.ysofeach

le_..

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.

Pomeroy

f.

POMEROY. OHI0-992·6677
BI~L QUICKEL
'·

John f . FuiU, .Mgr.
Ph . 992· 2101

10'4 w. Main
9t2·2J11 Pomeroy
•'

106 lutllr101t An, Pomo-oy,

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
'

16141 992-6454
. 16141 992·64ss

Crow' s Family Rest all' cnt
"Futtfllllt.llll~ig Ffl•l C6Uu•"
228 W. Main. St:, Pomeroy

992·5432

992-2975

Ol\r.t

K&amp;C JEWELERS

83 MHI Slroet

716 NORTH SECOND AVE.
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN - SunW,y School, 10 a.m.;
Church service, 10:15 a.m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF' GtlO, fiasior,
Raymond Cox. Sunday SchoOilO:OO a.m.:
Sunday Morning Worship ll: 00 ~.m. C.hll·
dren' s Church 11 a.m. Sunday Eve~Jng
.*'rvlce 7:00p.m. Wed., 6 p.m. Young. Ladles' Auxlllary. WednesdaY, 7 p.m. Fam·
lly Worship. ·
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH . 011
Rt. 124. 3 miles trom PoMland-Long Bot-'
tom. Edsel Hart . p~stor. Sunday Sc"ool,
9:30 a.m .; Sunday morning preaching
10::r:l a .m .; Sunday evening services. 7:30
p.m
.
MIDDLEPORT ·FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH. Cornt'r A:&gt;h and Plum. Noel
Herrmann, pastor. Sunday SchO.ollO: 00 a.
m.: Morning Worship, 11:00. a.m.: Wednesday and Saturday Evening Services at
7:3() p:m .
APPLE GROVE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH - Pastor. Rev. Carl
Hicks, 10 miles abOve Racine on Rt. 388.
Sunday School 9 a .m .; worship service 10
· a.m. Sunday PYenlng service. 6:00p.m .:
Prayer· m~lng and 'Bible Study Thursday , 6: 30p.m.
MT. OLIVE UNITED .i\!ETHODIST Off 124, behind Wilkesville: Charles Jones,
pastor. SUnday School, 9:30a.m.: morning
worship, 10: 30; Sunday and Thursday
evening sel'\llces, 7:00p.m.
·

t

Mldtleport. Ohio 45780
16141992-8867 -199B·OOKSI

tiiiMI~D~D:ilEiili.O~RriTO.iOHiliOOOiPiCHURCH SUPPLIES •
f

.SHOP

992·""

BIBLES

RAWUNGS-COATS

271 North
.StcOftll

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

·Mldtllioporl,

992·5141

264 South 2nd

Ohla

Middleport

..Digniry and Service

Al~ay.f "

992·2121

CHRJST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS. Port- ·

'1.------------...1
106 Mulllerry An.

School. lOa.m. ; SundaYevenlng service, '6
p.m.; prayer meettna and Bible study,
o.m.
FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rev. Nvle
Borden, pastor. Cornellu~ Bunch, su'pt.
Sunday School 9: 30 a.m.; Second and
fourth Sundays worship service at 2:30 p,
Wedr;~.~d,a~, .7.:.30

Established 1913
P~meroy

10: 30 a.m.
land-Racin e Road. Mike Duhl, pastor;
mMT
.
MOR H
. RIST IN
Janice Danner. church school dlrectbr.
·
·
lA BAPTIST. Fourth and
HOBSON CHURCH OF CH
worship.
service
7:00
p.m.
Wednesday
Main
St
·1 ·
CHRISTIAN UNION, 'Iberoo Durham,
Churchschool9:30a.m.; Morningworship
.-· Middleport : Rev-. Gil~
U"';r t crag,
.,••tor, sunday aervlce, 9:~ a.m.: even10:30 a.m.; Wedn.e sday eyentng prayer
prayer' meettng 7 :00p.m. :r.
Jr., pastor. ~rs . Ervin Baumgardner
~ _,-vice 7:00 p.m.
• Prayer meeting,
MT. HERMON UNITED HRETHREN
SundaySchooi _S upt.Sunda_ySchool9:30a:
lnR
s ervlces, 7 : JOpm
. ·
Wednesday, 7:00p.m .
.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. Rev: Earl
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Located in TeXas
m.; Wors hip SE-rvice. 10:45 a .m.
BEARWALLO\Y RIDGE CHURCH OF
Shuler. pastor. Worslllp '""'Ice, 9:30a.m.
.Community ofl Ct. Rt. 82. Rev . Robert
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
CHRIST, J•ck Colt!ll'ove
. , ,..,.tor. Bible
Sunday Schooft0:30 a.m.""BlbleStudy a nd
Sanders, pastor. Jefl Holter. lav leader:
- Jo§eph B. Hoskins. evangPllst . Sunday
~
1 Th
.
sd
7 ,.,
Ed Roush. ~unday School Supi. Sunday
BibleStudy9a .m.: Worshlp,lOa .m .; SunCl Ill, 9: 30 a.m.;MomtngWorshlp10:
30a.
prayerservce ur ay, :""p.m.
Sch 19 ~
d
6
m.; Evening Worship, 6: 30p.m . Thursday
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION·
00 : .... a.m.: m orning worship B. nd
ay rven 1og ser;1ct&gt; p.m.; WPdn~day ~
1
.
' MEIGS
Bible Study, 6::JJ p .m.
AL CHURCH, KingsOOry Road. Rev.
chlldrhenl 's church 10:30 a:m .; evening
ev~nENngTsEervCOScTe,ALpA
_.m.
.
r
ZIONCHURCHOFCHRJST,PomeroyClyde w. Henderson, pastor. Sunday
preac ng srrvlcti first three Sundays.
SSEMBLY . RaCi ne,
COOPEBA'I'IVI!: PUIIIB
School9: 30 a.m.: Ralph Carl. Supt. Even7:30 p.m.: Special service fourth ·Sunday
Rt . 124 . William Hoback, pastor. Sunday
Hat'l'llollvUie Rd . (Rt. 1'3) Robert E . Pur·
IJNITED METBODIBT CBIJRCB
tell, mlnlltB; Steve Stanley, B1ble School
lng worshJp 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting,
eve ntng, 7:30 p.m.; Wednesdav Praver
School10 a.m .; Sunday evening service 7
NORTIIEAST CLIJSTEII
sup t .; Har1ey J 0 b Dllmt, ..,_
-'-·t s t SUN
Wed esd 7 00
Meeting, Bible SIUdV and Youth FellOwp.m . Wednesday evening servlcP 7 p.m ,
Re-w. SUr•Baaunaa
• up ·
·
n ay : p.m .
.hip 7 30
.
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle-.
~~ev
c,..,oot
DAY: Bible School 9:30a.m.: Wonhlp
OLD BETHEL FR_EE WILL BAPTIST
s c iJU'RcG·";jF GOD OF PROPHECY .
Supt. Sunday SChool 9:30a.m. Morning
Rn. Seldoa lolmlan .
10:30 A .M. and 7: :1) P.M.: Wedneaday Bl·
CHURCH, 28601 State Route 7, MiddleLocated on 0 . J . White Roaa of Hl ghwav
Worship 10:30 a .m . Prayer service, altern·
ALFRED - Church School 9: 3() a.m.:
ble Study,7:00 p.m .
~rt . Sunday SchoollOa .m .; Sunday evenp a t Hensoo, pastor. Sundav Sc hoollO
·
•·ale Sundays . ..
160
·•
~
T
sd
1
.
Worshlp,ll a.m.; UMYF6:30p.m;; UMW
ST· JOHN Luri!ERAN CHURCH ,
Cl
! '
·
.
THE CRURCH. OF 'ESUS CHRIST,
· ng serv Ice , : .... p.m.; ue ay serv ce,
:. month. DaUy Mass, 8:30a.m. ConfessloJW
Grove. The Rev. Laura A, Leach, pastor.
7·:10 o.m.
a .m . asses or all ages. JuniorChurth 11
.J
Third Tuesday, 7: ll p.m. Communion,
' ' s.turday atternm, 4-5 p.m.
HYSELL HUN HOLINESS CHURCH,
a. m .; Morning worshiP 11 a .m. Adult
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd .,
first Sunday. (Haushman) ·
. Church service 9:-30a.m.; Sunday School
. : • CHURCH OF JESVS CHRIST APOS10:30 a.m.
Bob Grimm, pastor. Sunday Schoo19:30a.
ChOir practice 6 p .m . Sunday. Young Peonext to F ort Meigs Park, Rutland. Robert
CHESTER - Worship 9 a .m.; Church
r · TOUC FAITH - NE!'N Lima Road, next to
m. ; Worship 10:45 a.m.; S~day eyenJng pie's, Children's Chur'ch and A~ult Bibl e
Richard~. pas ror. SeMIICes at 1 p .m . on
BRADBURY CHURCH OF. CHRIST,
School10a.m.:
BlbleStudy,
ThUrsday,
7p.
~ ' FoM Metal Park. Rolx&gt;rt W. Rlcllards
Tom Ruftym, pastor. Sunday School9: 30
servlee, 7 p.m.
.
Studv, Wednesdav at 7:30p. m . ·
Wednesdays and Sun_d ays. ' ·
m.;
UMW,
first
Thursday,
1
p.m.;
Com• : putcr._Siinday services, 10 a.m. and 7
a.m.; i.arr)l Hayneo,
s. Supt. Morning
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION aT Bald
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL . .570 Grant
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAPmunion, first Su~day (Hau,muJ.
.
• m.; Wednesday wonhlp, 7 p.m.
wonhlp 10:30 a.m. .
·
Knob,· located on County Ro~d 31~ Rev.
St., Middleport. AttlllatPQ with SOut hern
TER or the Wesleyan HOliness Church.
JOPPA - Worship 9:30 a .m.; Cbu'r ch
~ • MIDDLEPORT COMMUNITY CHURCH
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
Roger Willford, pastor. Sunay School 9: 30
Baptist Convention. David Bryan. St., Ml ·
Rev. Earl Fields, pastor. Henry Eblin.
Schooll0:30 a.m . Bible Study Wedneiday,
... 575 Pearl St., Middlepcrt. Sam Anderson',
RENE, .Rev. Thomas L. Gates n, pastor.
a.m.; Morning worship 10 :45 a .m.; Sunn!Ster. Sunday School10 a.m.; Morning
Sunday School Supt. : Sunday SchoollO a.
7:30p.m. (JohnsCJl).
pukll'. Sunday School 10 a.m .: Sunday
Ora Bu1, Sunday School Supel'lntendent.
day eventna worship 1:00 p.m.; Wednes - worship 11 a.m.; Evening worship 7 p.m: ;
m.: Mor ning Worship 11 a-.m .; Evenl~g
LONG BOTTOM - Church School 9:30
evening servJce7:30j&gt;.m.; Wednesdayst!"-'Sunday Scbool, 9:30a.m.; worsblp service
day evening Bible Study 7:00p.m.
.
Wednesday evening Bible st udy an.d
service-7 :30p.m . Wt'dnesday evening seri:.m.; Worship 10!30 a.m.; Bible Study,
vlce, 7; 30 p .m.
10:3() a.m.; evetalna aervlce, 6 p.m . Wed·
WIDTE'S CHAPEL WESLEYAN . Coolprayer meeting 7 p.m.
vice 7:30p.m .
·
·
.
Wednesday, 7: 30 p.m.; Communion First
neoday evening service, 7p.m.
VIlle RD. Rev. PHillip Rld...,our, pastor.
BRADFORDCHURCHOF CHRIST, St .
STIVERSVJLLE WORD OF FAITH,
Sunday of Month (Rev. Charles Eaton I
UBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, DexSunday Scboo19:30 a.m.; worship sEn" lee
Rt. 124 and Co. Rd. S. Derek Stump. past or.... Gary Holter, pastor. Sunday services 9: 30
REEDSVILLE - Churoh SChool9: 30 a .
ter. Woody CalL putot. Services Sunday
]0:30a.m :; Bible study and worship serWilliam Amberg€'f, s . S. Supt.; Sunday
a.m . and 7 p.m . ; Midweek servl(."(', 7:30p.
m.; Wonhlp Service 11:00 a .m .
GRAHAM
UNITED METHODIST
10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednesday, 7 p.m.
vice, Wednesday,-7 p.m .
School 9:30a .m.; Morning Worship 10:30
m. Thursday.
·.
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL &lt;Preachlna 9:30a.m. nrst and second Sun: Church
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH .
RUTI.AND CHURCH OF CHRIST, Eu·
a.m. ; Evening worship 7: 30p.m . WednesMIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL. Third
School 9 a.m.; Worship 10 a .m .;
• .dll)'l of N$ month; tlllrd and fourth SllllBible Study, Tue.day, 7:30p.m.; CommuLloyd Sayre, Supt. Sunday Sdlool9: XI a.
gene E. Underwood, minister. Sunday
day worship 7: 30p.m.
Ave. Rev. Clark Baker, pastor. Carl Not~ day-each month worship services at 7: 30p.
nion Flnt Sunday (Hausman).
m. ; momlne worship 10: 30 a.m . Sunday
SChool, 9:30a.m .; MDrnlllgw(I'Sbfp, 10: 30
ST.
PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH.
tlngham, Sul'lday· School Supt. Sunday
• m.; Wednesday evenings at 7:30 p.m.
evenlaeaervlce 7 p. m .
a.~~ !. Evenlftl Worablp, 7: 00p.m.
Corner Sycamore and Secolllt'"Sts., PoSchool 10 a.m. with classes for all ages.
CENTIIAL CLIJSTEII
e 'Prayer and Bible Study.
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST
Steve
~un..AND BU:ILE METHODIST, Rev.
merey. The Rev . Laura A. Leach, pastor.
Evening services at6 p.m. Wednesday Bl·
'7 SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST, Mul Rev.WeoJe,
llaoo ~~~-·
Rev.
Ttoo&amp;eh ..
Deaver, Pastoc. Mike Swiger · Sunday
Ivan Myers, Sunday Scliool, 9:30a.m. with
Sunday School9: 45 a.m . Church servtce·u
ble study at 7:30p.m . Youth services Frit ,lierry HeltJbts Road, Pomeroy. Pastor Bob
Rev. 1'1'11111&lt; Smith
; lilydH'; Sabbath School Superintendent,
School Supt.: Sunday Scb~uX 9;30 a .m .;
SOnny HudiCI1, superintendent: evening
a .m .
day at 7:30p.m .
Rev. llalllryo RUe1
Morning worshlp IO:IO a.m.; Sunday
service, 7 p.m. l'rayer meettnc and Bible
'_VICfORY BAI/TIST. 525 N. 2nd St..
ECCLES lA FELLOWSHIP. 128MIII St.,
~ _ Rodney Splrt&gt;!. Sabbath School begins at 2
Rev. Boll Pierce
•.t_u_dY__• W. _ed
__ _,nesday, 7p.m.
.
Middleport. James E . Keesee. pastor.
Middleport. Brother Chuck McPherson.
evening worship 7:30-aG.m.·, Wednesday
~p.m . on Saturday ah:emQM with worship
Sunday morning worship 10- a .m.; ~venpastor. Sunday SChOol 10 a.m .; Sunday
Arill•r Crabtree
... ..-vJce follow:lq at 3 ~ 00 p;m, Everyme
B
.
Rev . . , _.. Smllll
ev~::tn.:8~ud~~
CHURCH
RUTLAND CHURCH ·oF. THE NAZA·
ing service t ·p.m.; Wednesday evenlpg.
evening services at 7 p.m. a,nd Wednesday
' 1 wtlcome.
.
.
ASBURY !Syracu,.l- Worship II a .m .
Burlingham. Ray Lauden'nllt pasta-: Ro-"
RENE. samuel, Ba_sye, pastor. _Sunday
worship 7 p.m. Vis itatlon Thursday 6:30 p .
services at 7 p.m.
· ·
~, .RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
; Church School9:t5 a.m. ; Charge Bible
bert Coo&gt;rt, asohtant past&lt;r. Sunday
Sc~ool9: 30 a.m.: Wo~lp Service 10:30 a.
m.
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST . Kenneth Smith,
Siller Harrlt'tt Warner, Supt. Sunday
study,.Wednesday, 7:30p.m.; UMW, nrst
10 a.m.; wmtip 1 p.m .; WednESCiaw, 6 p.m .
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: David
pastor. Sunday School ·9:30 a .m. ; church
m., Young Peoples Service 6. p.m.
[::Sebool9:30 a.m.; Morning Worship, 10:45
Tuesday, 1:30 p.m. ; Choir Rehearsal,
youth meeting; Wed., 7 p.m. ciiJ~h services.
Evangelistic serv1ee6: 30p.m. Wednesday
Curfman. pastor. Sunday School., 10 a. m .;
sPrvice 7:30p.m._; youth fellowship 6: 30 p.
~· a.m .
··
Wednesday 6: 30p.m . (Thatcher I
PJNE GROVE HOUNESSCHURCH t .t
service 1 p.m.
worship service 11 a .m .; Sunday night
m.: Bible study, Thursday , 7:30p.m .
~ POMEROY flRST BAPTIST, East
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m .;
MASON CHURCH OF CfffliST, Miller
worship service 7:30 p.m .; MldwePk
FULL GOSPEL LlGIITHOUSE , 33045
mlleootfRt. 32:5. Rev. Ben J. watts. pasr'~
1 Matn Sl. Steve Fuller, pastor. George
Church Schooi!O a .m.; Bible Shldy, TuesP.obert searles, S.S. Supt. Sunday Schooi
St., ~son, W. Va. Sunday Bible Stud)' 10
prayer service Wednesday 7 p,m .
. Hiland Road, Pomer6y. Tom Kell y, pas: lldnner, Sunday School Superlnt!'ndent.
day, 7:00p.m .; UMW, FlrJt Monday, 7: 30
9: 30 a.m .: Morning Worship lO: a .m. :
a.m., Worship 11 a.m . aDd 7 p.m. WednesWESLEYAN
BIBLE
HOLINESS
tor. Danny Lambert. S. S. Supt. Sunday
r Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.; Mom I"' Worp.m.; UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m . (RUey)
day Bible Study, vocal music, 7 p.m.
,_ . CHURCH of Middleport, Inc.• 75 PeariSt. .
morning service at 10 a.m.; Sunday evenSunday ·evening service 7.:1:1 P m30. Wedt aldp 10:30 a.m ~; Wednesday evening
. ntSday service. 7 : 30 p.m. ·
FLATWOODS- Church School, 10 a.m .
· ·•
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud-•· Rev. Ivan Myers, pastor: Roger Manley,
lng senrlce 7: 30 p.m . Tuesday and Thursprayer and Bible study, 7:30p.m .
; Worship, 11 a.m.; Bible Shady, ThursSILVER RUN BAPI'lST. Bill Little
ding Lane, Muon, W. Va. J . N. Thacker,
Sr .. Sunday School Supt. Sunda~ School
day services at 7:30p.m.
•
flRST SO!ITHERN BAPTIST, 11872
day , 7 p.m .; UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m. (Rl·
pastor: Steve Uttle, s. s. Supt. SundaY
past?". Evening service 7:30p.m .: We&gt;
9130 a.m.: Morning Worship 10: 30 a. m .;
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA ~ Pi;tm-eroy Pike. E. Lamar O'~ryant, pasley)
.
·
SchoollO am. Morningworslp 11 am .
men sMtnlstrynursday, 9: 30a.m.; Wed- Evening Worship 7:.30 p.m . Wednesday
ZARENE, Rev. Glendon Stroud, pastor.
tor and Sunday School Director. Sunday
FOREST , RUN - Worship 9 a.m.:
Sunday ev~t.ii wcrshlp 7. ~ P ~ Pr~yf,~
nesday Prayer and Bible Study 7: 15p.m .
evenln~ Bible stud~. prayer and praise
Sunday School9: 30 a;m .: Worship service.
r- Sthool, t; 30 a.m .; MornlilK Worship,
Church School 10 A.M.: Chotr practice,
meetlna and Bible study Wednesday 1,
HILLSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH, st. Rt.
service, 7:30p.m.
10: 30 a .m .; Youth service' Sunday 6:15 p.
r:-10:45; Choir practice, 6: :JJ p.m.; evening
30
Thul'lday, 6:30p.m .; UMW thlrdMonclay.
p.m.; Youth meeting Wednesday at P ·m
143 just ott Rt. 7. Rev. James R. ~ree Sr. ,
F AJTH COSPEL CHURCH. Lo ng Botm. Sunday evening servlce7: OOp.m. Wed, ·~blp . 1 :30 p.m.; Wedne5day Prayer
(Thatcher)
REJOICING LJFE BAPTIST CHURCH
pastor; Rev. Mike Willett. Asst.- Pastor;
tcm . Sunday School. 9:30a. m ;: Morning
nesday Prayer Meetlng and Bible Study
~ .lervlce, 7: 30p.m. Mission Frlf'ftds 1118'
HEATH (Middleport I - Church School,
Joe Humphrey S S Supt· Sunday School •Worship 10: 45 a: m ~: Sunday evening 7:00
7·00~ m
: M,, RoyaJAmbaa~dors (boys ages6-18) ,
383
2
N. nd Ave. , Middleport. Sunday
10 a.m.; Momtng
' w
' orshiPlla.m.;
.· '
p m Is mme 7 30
.
w-•
.d
. N AS
. E. SE'ITLEMENTCHURCH,Sun 9:30a.m.; Mom In~ Worship 10: 30 a .m.;
~· ·D4 Girls In Action {agee 6-181 on WednesSchool10 a.m. Sunday evening 7'00p m .
Sunday
· · .u
r :
p.m.);
t:Unes ay
e~lng sen-Ice 6 p.m . ; Wednesday evennight 7:00 p.m. (summer 7:30 p. m .~.
day afternoon services at ~:30. Thursday
,. a.y., 7:30 p.m. Church-wtdP VIsitation Youth Group, 4 p.m.; Wednesday, Bible Mid-week service, Wed. , 7 p.m. · · "
study 6: 00p.m . Choir rehearsal 7: GO p.m.
1".1:!0 p.m. Tueoday.
.
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH .
lng 7 p.m.
.
NEW LIFE COVENANT CHURCH OF
·evening services at 7: 3().
!Frank Smith).
_. ]'AITH TABERNACLE CHURCH Bat·
Sunday School9: 30 a .m .; Jeff Smith, supt '
PORTLAND FIRST CHURCH QF TilE
GOD, Chester- Gary Hines, pastor . SunFIRST B~TIST CHURCH , Mason, W.
MINERSVILLE - Churcll School 9:00
~ Ru Road, R~. Emmett Rawsoo', pas. Morning worahtp 10· 3Q ·am . SundaY
NAZARENE, WOllam Justis, pastor. Sunday School 9: :11 a .m.; worship service,
Va . Pastor, Blll Murphy. Sundp.y SchoollO
a.m.; Worship serviCe 10:00 a.m.; UMW
~..-tll'. Handley Dunn, supt. Sunday School,
evening service, 7: 30 ·p.m.;' W~nesday
day SCh?OI Sup~, Sonja Justis. Sunday
]0:30a .m .; evening service, 6p.m .; Disci·
a.m. ; Sunday evening 7:30 p.m. Prayer
third Wednesday, 1 p.m. (Thatcher)
r:ma.m.; Sunday eventngterVIce, 7: OOp.m.
evening service, 7:30 p.m.
Sc~l, 9.30 a.m ., momtng wcnhlp, lO:to
pies hlp class, Wednesday. 7 p.m.
meeting and Bible study Wednesday, 7: 30
PEARL CH~EL - ChurcltSchool9: 00
•:;. Billie teacbtl;lJ. 7:00p.m. Thuuday.
EDEN U.NITED BRETHREN IN
a:m., Sunday and Wl!dneoday servlcel,
MT. OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
p.m. Everyme W&lt;!lcome.
·
a .m.; Worship ServiCe 10: oo~ a . m. (FloCHRIST Eld R Bl
7 30 p.m.
Lawrence Bush. pastor. Sunday School
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, S...',-. 'SYRACUSE MISSION, In! Bridgeman
ren"' Smith)
.
,
. '
en · ake, past cr. Sunday
. MIDDLEPORT COMMUNITY CHURCH
9:30 a . m.; Sunday and Wednesday evenlem St. Rev. Paul Taylor, past or. Sunday
· { &amp;, Syracute. Sunday School 10 a.m.;
0
POMEROY -Church School, 9:15a.m .
.. ~ servlt"e 6 p.m.; Wednesday ser~:~n~~~
s!~~G~P'a
~-~s!':la~~~:~
515 Pearl St. Sam AndEnm, putcr. Swldaj
lng worship servlct&gt;, 7:00p.m .
School10a.m .: Sundayevelflng7;00p.m .;
; Worship 10: 30 a.m.; Choir rehearsal
,. "'fi'k'e, 7 p.m.
services : Christian Endeavor 7 . 30 P m
morning H!'Vice, 10 a.m .; EvenlagiE!I"\''cea,
UNITED FAITH CHURCH . Rt . 7on Po·
Wednesday evening prayer meet ing 7:00
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.; t.IMW. aecoad
• '• MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD
Song service 8 p.m . Preaching 8: 30 n\'
&amp;may and Wednmclay, 'T!:Jl p.m.
meroy By-Pass . Rev . Robert E . Smith, $r.
p.mSO. urH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
Tuesday, 7: 30p.m.: l.JMYFSunday, &amp;p.m.
~ciH. Rev. James Satterfield, pastor:
Mid
ek
1 w....a
. ··
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHR
pastor. Melvin Drake. S. S. Supt. Sunday
(Meadows)
p.m:we prayer mft't ng, .:unesday, 7
CHRISTIAN UNION. Hartford, JJ_TJ~
SChool 9:30a .m.; MornlngWorshlpJ0:30:
CHURCH, Silver ·Ridge. Duane Syden~ennan WUIIams, Supt. SUI)day School ·
ROCK S}'RINGS- Church School, 9: 15
:f!l a.m.; Sunday and Wednesday evenCHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CENTER
Rev. David McManis, pasJor. Church
Evening Worstup 7:00p.m .; Wednesday
strlcker, pas tor. Sunday School 9 a .m .;
a.m .; Worship 10 a.m.; BlblfoStudy, Wed ~-tBIHFVIces, 7 p.m.
.
Salem St., Rutland . Robert E . Musser:
School 9:30a.m .; Sunday morning serPrayer Service. 7:00p.m.
Worship Service, lOa.m.: Sunday evening
nesday. 7:'9o p.m .; UMYF (Seniors), Sun~· ~ MIDDLEPORT
FIRST BAPTIST.
pastor. Sunday_School 10:00 a.m.: Worv~ce. 11 a .m. ; Sunday evening service,
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Masoo, W.
service, 7:00 p.m . Wednesday night Blbl ~
day, 6 p.m. ; (Juniors) every other Sun·
C~m« Stxtb and Palmer. Rev. James A.
ship .-rvlce, 1:15 a .m.; Sunday evening
7. l&gt;p.m. Wedne,day prayer meeting, 7: 30
Va., Rev. Wallace Min.~. pastor. Sunday
study 7:00p.m .
·
·
day, 6 p.m . (RUeyl .
~. paJtor: Don Wlloon. S.S. Supt.:
service,
7:00p.m
.;
Thursday
evening
ser~
p.mFAJ
.
R
·
·
RUTLAND ·- Sunday School, 9:30a.m.;
Beulah Whltr, Aqt Supt. Sunday School
vice. 7:.00 p.m.
·
VIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart
Worship service, 10: J:l a.m.; BJble Stuy. 1
9:15 am; morning wonhlp 10:15 8m;
NEW _ LIFE COVENANT CHURCH
W. Va., Rt:l , James LeWis, .pastor. War:
p.m. llluriiCiay; UMW, ni'st Monday, 7:30
'Sunay evening worship 1 pm; PrayE'r
Cheate-r, Gary Hines, pastor. SundaY
ship services 9:30a.m. ; Sunday Schoolll
p.m. (Crabtree)
: rneettnr and Bible Study WedDeaday 7
School
at
9:30a.m
.;
Worship
service
at
a.m. ; Evenlngworshlp7::r:lp.m.Tuesday
SALEM CENTER -Church School9: 15
_.., pm: Men 's Prayer Breakrasr, lit Saflir·
C?ttage prayer meeting and Bible Study
a.m.; Morntne Worship 10: 1!5 a.m. . 10:30 a.m.; Sunclay evening service, 6:00
~Y each month 1 am In rellowtb.lp hall:
p.m.; Wednesday Disciple C18$s, 7;00 p.
; :: a.m .: Worship service, Wednesday
·
• adult d'iolr practice Sunday, 8 pm; radio , (Fierce)
SNOWVILLE - Morntnc Worship, 9:00
..ptORflm "Prepartng the Way" Saturday 1
m.
- ~RSAVIOUR."-UTHERAN CHURCH,
, . THE WORLD OWES ME .... NOTHING .
a.m.; Church SchoollO:OOa.m. (Florence
pm WMOV 1360 AM, Raveaswood, WV·
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, David
Walnut and Henry Sts.• Ravenswood. W.
Smlthl
.;.Lord's Supper observed 111 Sunay of each
So
many
people think the world owes them living. Not so. Life owes
Prentice, putor. C. aries Domlgan SunVa. The Rev. GeOrge C. Weirick, pastor.
SOli'DIERN CLIJSTER
.;month.
day Schad Supt. MornlDg Worship 9:30 a .
Sunday SChool9 : ~a.m.; Sunday worship
ltev. Kenneth Baller
ine nothing, nor you either. We owe the world, you and I. As I look
Rev. RoJft' Grace
•
back on my life, I find so many things that have made me happy,
!0:30a.m.: ·E venlngserII
VARY BIBLE CHURCH.Iocatedon
Rev. CoriMitu
• MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
warmed
my heart or gave me a smile. Has eve~ the sun shone In your
APPLE
GROVE
-Church
Sc110ol9:00
MT.
UNION
BAPTIST,
Pasta-:
Joe
N.
Pomeroy
Pike.
County
Road
25
near
Flat·
5th and Main , AI Hartson; mlrflater;'
Sayre, Sunday Scboo19: 4~ a.m .; Evening
a.m. ; Morning Worsblp 10:00 a.m.; Bible
woods. Rev. Blackwood, put&lt;r. 5ervltel
bedroom window early In the morning to wake you up? Haven't you
~ I chard DuBose, Associate Pastor; Mike
wcnhlp 8::11 p.m. : Prayer Meeting, 6:;10
on Sunday at 10:30a.m . ud7:11p.m. with
Study Sunday 7:00p.m.; Prayer meeting
.J:Jerlacb, Sunday School Superintendent.
ever sat In the shade of a tree and heard the songs of the birds? How
p.m . We&lt;Jneoday.
Sunday School9: II a.m. Billie Study, Wed·
):00 p.m. Thursday. (Hicks) .
.
""' WOrship ~rvlce- I, 8: 15 a.m.; Sunday
·many days have you smelled the sweet scent of lilacs In, the sprlng or
.TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
n-y.7:11p.m.
· BETHANY - Worship 9 a.m.; Church ·
"'School 9:30a.m .; WorshlpServlcell. 10:30
CHRJST. Robert footer, [iastor: Howard
School10 a.m.; BtbleStucly We&lt;Jn-y 10
SPIRITUAL FAITH FELLOWSHIP
-,.. m.: Evening Worshlp,7 p.m .; Wednenew mown hay In the summer? Howoftenhaveyou had to smUeat the
a .m.; Dorcas Women't Fellowship Wed.·
State Route 338, Aollqulty. Rev. A. I: Sl.:
Caldwell, Sur&gt;ertntenclent; Chu.;,h school
) ay, 7 p. m. Prayer meeting . .
antics
of sm,a ll children busy 111 their play or as they passed you on
9a.m.; Worahtp ~rvlce9:45a.m. and6:30
wart, past«. Sunday aei'vlces,10a.m. Blld
nesd~ 11 a .m . (Baker) .
'
" MIDDLEPORT CHURCH Of' THE NAZ·
1, p.m.; TuesdaY',7 p.m • .
p.m. EvtryCIIewelcome.~·
C MEL- Church School 9:30a.m.;
the street and said "HI." ..There must have beel! many Sundays you
"R£NE, PASTOR Rev. L)Oyd D. Grlmm, .
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZAWon p, 1Q : 4~ a.m. Second 'and Fourth
MIDDLEPORT INDEI'EN'DENT ROLl:Jr., put or. Jean Kimes, Sunday SChool Sufelt good while singing an old familiar hymm or watched the sun shine
Sundays: Fellowship dinner with :;uttcn
RENE. Rtv. Herbert Grate f pastor
NESS CHURCH , Inc., 75 Peari St. Rev.
j)M'Inff'ftdent. Sunday SChool 9:30 a.m.:
through
the stain glass windows at church. How often has a choir
third Thunclay, 6: 3() p.m. (Baker).
Dou~u Blllltll, aupt. Sunday sChooi9:JO
ISrvan Myers, acting paat&lt;r; Rog..,Manley,
Jtfornlna- Worship Srrvlce, IO:J&gt; a.m.; SunMORNING STAR -Church SciMid 9:45
a .m.; Wonhlp lei'VIC., 11 a.m . and 6 p.m
·• Sunday School Superintendent. Sunnumber or an organ prelude or offertory touched you In your heart? I
.diy f'Yrnlnlil :'lervlce, 6 p.m.: W~nesday
a.m.; WOrship 10:30 a.m.; Bible Study,
&amp;.1 Delay. Weclrr-y, 7 p.m. Prayer meet: . day School 9:11 a .m.: Mornllla wonhlp
"""'enlnR l'llet'VIct, 7 p.m.
No, I do not think life owes me or you. We owe the world and life for
nc.
10:11 a.m.; eventnc worlllllp 7:11p.m.;
Thuu~~· 7;30 p.m. (Baker) .
• SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA2Athe
gifts
have received. So many good times and good memories I
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
Wedl\eaclay even Inc Bible ltlldy, prayer
S
N - Chur&lt;:b School, 9:11a.m .;
ENE. Rev. GIE'fln McMillan, pastor. Jim
Mo.r nll'laWouhlpl0:4Sa.m . nrstandthlrd
CHURCH. William WUllams, put&lt;r; Ro- ·
and Praiae servtce, 7:30p.m.
undltr, ~ - S. S.uperlntendftlt . Sunday
we have are all unearned and often forgotten . Our task In llie Is to
SUndaya: Fellowlhtp dinner wttll Carmel
bert E . Bartm,Direct..-ol!lirladaaEtluCHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOShool 9: :tO a .m.; morning worship, 10: XI
repay God for these good happenings and goqd memories. God Is the
third Thu!'lllay, 8: II p.m. (Baker). ·
catlon: Steve Eblbl, uslatant. Suoclay
TOUC - VanZandt and Ward Rd. Elder
...m.: Evan~lstlc st"rVIce, 6 p,m,;
SciMid 9: :II a.m.; Mornlllg woralll_p IO· 30
James Mlller, put..-. Sullday School
EAST LETART- MornlaaWorsMp9:00
one who sent them to us. So let us remember all_God has given to us In
Prayer and Praise Wednesday, 7 p.m.;
a.m.; Toeru In Acllon. 6 p.m.; EYenilltl
!O:IIa.m.; Worahlpllervlce,Sullday, 7:30
a.m.; Church SChoollll:OOa.m.; UMW ftrat
Youth mtoetln(lt, 7 p.m .
little ways and smile. We need to share our smiles and memori!!S with
Worablp, 7:110 P,'hl. Cllolr practla! 8 P m.
p.m.: Bible Study, Wedneoday, 7:11p.m.
Tueadllf 7: II p.m . (Grar:o).
,
,;tJNI'I'IED PBDBYTEIUAN MINISTRY
those who for the moment
and hear on~ the dark side of life. We
SUIICiay.
Weclrr-y
I!Yelllttl
prayer
ind
.
CALVARY
PILGRIM
CHAPEL,
HarrtRACINEChurch
!lclmi,IO
a
.m
.:
Wor,
. OP IIIIIIGI COIJNTY
Biblelludy.
SODVWeRoad. Rf'V. VidorRoulb, putcr.
ship 11a.m.; UMWfourtbMondoy at7:11p.
,,
a.n. o•q.~a. ~u7
owe life, the world a'ild God, mostly God. Let us share what we have
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST
Clinton Faullr, Swlclay School Supt:; Sunm.; Men's Prll)'er Breoklaat; W-Ill'· 8
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN
and 81'1! and make the work a better place and a happier place: I owe
a.m. (Grace).
·
Roger Wataon, mlallll!!i Nonnan wm:
daySciMid9:30a .m.; mol'llllllw..-shlp,ll
CHURCH - SUIICiay: Worship Services
the world that much anyhow.
aupt.
Su'!tdo,y
SchOol
'""'a.m.;
Worship
a.m.:
Sullclay
tvenlq
aervlct
7:30
p.m.
CHRIST,
,p:m a.m.: Cllurrh Schooll0:15 a.m ..
Pr~~~lttl. Wedrlllclay, 7:11p.m .
.!lilrlna. mtnllt..-: Starllttl- aadlll· IOI'Yice 10:30 .a .m. Bible ltudy, Wetln8MIDDLEPORT PRii:SI!YTERIAN ..._ .,_,
U'IRS'I' CHURCH OF GOD.
IYor SWI!n, Stlllclay Sehool !lupts. Preach· day, 7:00 ji.m.
iullday ~- 9 a.m .: Church servl"'
Pllli&amp;or WIWam Mlddleswarlh
Dw•nutemstal. Worlhlp aervla! Sunday
lrlllt:30a.!ft. eochSUnd&lt;y; SunclayScbooi · ' REORGANIZED CHURCH QF JESUS
Jl: l5a.m ..
·
. \
1n a.m.; Sunday SChool II a .m . E&gt;Ming

anusr.

.;

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p

Sennonette ·

;3

::/c'.~~~~-ho~

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'

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Homecoming set

were, front, Jenny Varney, and back from left,
Jody Hayes, Kellle ErVIn, David Thle, Sarah Duhl
and Robyn Stout.

,..----

Bloodmobile
visit Center

Ann
Landers

He must earn .
•
your trust agatn

to

'

The Red Cross Bloodmo'bne
will be In Meigs County Wednti.s·
day from I to 5: 30 p.m. at the
Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy .

~ '~ l . ntlEH~
"l'~li 1J.I .n .. -\njJ.o'lo.,.
Tiuw,.. !'i\ llltit•u!t· und
I : r~·u l '"'·,. ~~ mli• 'lllt•

1

.

Proudly Presents
An Exciting
Collecnon

~iLACK HILLS GOLD
~ ~. '?~i.;;dt. ~Ut9

~~:!-'

oo'o ~~~A~~G.

11I /C

.I

Government topic
at .DAR meeting

WITH

~

COUPON ~ I

.

BLACX HILLS GOLD &amp;SILVER -#j

:

I

:

I
~ ~ ?~&lt;JJdL 1~te. .
I
I
COUPON GOOD TiiRU 10/31/90
I
I 1972 lito"" lei. 716 N. SK St. »4 .lll:bect Pill• 7501 IDd::Jwl Aw I
1

Attt-. O+lit
16141 D4-3116

IIWIII.,ort, Ohio· Gollpol,, Ohio

i6141

9U~tl

(61•J 4'6-6610

.

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(30416r5-2303

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CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION

Se~qulcentennlal

t'
&gt;

1'1'- w..... •~•.o. &amp;.~

Committee
Melga Co. Chamber offlc•i
pq~·5Q05
. :

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OCTOBER 6, &amp; 7
SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY

For additional Information contact the

..

Dear Ann Limders: If you tllrqw .overwhelmed. Many 1ears were
this letter in the trash I wouldn't shed, including mine. I was no needed them most Wbat do 1 ao'
.'
blame you. it sounds like a soap longer a "Mafia seamstress." I was · now;- Ann?-- PfiTSBURGH.
''
opern but it's God's tl1lth.1 need your the molher of their grandson, lheir
DEAR PmSBURGH: Now you
COLONY THEATRE
help.
·
·
most ~ured gift
·
lead wilh your head instead of your
My parenrs came to this countty
A few days later Jimmy met his hean.- for a change. See a lawyer ...
FRI. THRU THURS.
from llaly many years ago. My father. He broke dowrt and cried; about support for Jimmy, including
fatlter was a cabinetmaker and my babbled like an idiot and begged me compensation for his care during the
Shewalked off the~reel, .
mother was a seamstress. She taught 10 forgive him f&lt;X" abandoning me. I last four years.
mlo hislifr and stolehisheart.
me 10 sew. After graduating from have been offered marriage, secu- Next you agree to become rcachigh school, I joined her full time, rity and a family . This is whal I want quainted with the fan~y doc lor but
working out of our home.
more than anylhing in the world, Ibis doesn't meau picking up where
Life was wonderful until my especially for Jimmy, In case you left off. Treal him like a new
parents were killed in a car ac~i- sorileihing should happen 10 me. But · friend and let him eam me right
lr m~Ju 1 :.~h u ·:
dcnL 1 was 23 years old, an only 1 have a lot of resenuncnt about the to be _close to you again. Don't
L 11 :~ :• • :11:
child, completely on my own. My way I was treated. I never loved make any pig decisions for at
parenis owed no debts, owned our anyone but Jimmy's father but 1 least six moillhs. Then write again
•:
ONE ~ENiNG SHOW 7:30
'I
home and had a little money in the · cannot forget how he and his family and let me know how things are
ADMISSION SUO
bank. 1 hired a helper and took over turned lheir backs on me when I going.
446-0923
my mother's business.
I wasn't daling anyone until I met
a handsome yoqng physician. We
fell in love -- a1 least I did. When l
became pregnant, we plan ned 10 ·
marry. His society parenls, particularly his mother whom 1 had never
me1, called me and said a "MafJa
seamstresS" was not going to ruin
her only child's brillianl career. I
waited for him 10 phone me and say
his molher !lad rriade ~ call on her
own and not 10 pay any altention lo
her. That call never came. I had my
baby alone, got back 1o work as soon
as I could and put lhe fancy docror
oul of my mind.
When "Jimmy· was 4 years old I
•
made a bold' move. I took him to see
.
~-----------~-~
his grandp~ts. When they saw thiS
beautiful, brighl child they were
I

JOSHUA S. TAYLOR

FUN FOR THOSE OF ALL AlESI

'

Homecoming will be held al tlie
Hemlock Grove Church Suncja:l'.
Church will be at 9:30a.m. al),d
Sunday school at 10:30 a.m.
There will be a dinner at 12: ~0
p.mandat 2p.m. the Joy Singers,
The Davis Family will sing.

ETHNIC FEST

m.er

r

p.m. Monday. The public js
invited to come to the schoof. to
donate blood.
.;

COLONEL HARLAND SANDERS

. Yolksrnarch · .
Commemorative Stamping
Bicycle l . .o ·
Children Games.~.Entertalnment ••• Food
Can,ot lace - Carriage lldts
Arts &amp; Crafts .
Clowns •••.• Balloon~

-·
I

The Red Cross bloodmobtte

· Sen. Jan Michael Long will talk
on state governmental a meeting
of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the American
Revblution , to be held Friday,
. Oct. 12, at 1: 30 p.m. at the Grace
Epis co pal Parish House .
Members are encouraged to take
gues IS to the meeting.

~~::~ ~~:~:~, ~~~~ R~~h~~~:

I•

will he al Eastern High School
gymnasium from ·10 a.m. to' ~ 2

CHESTER - Revival at MI.
Herman U.B. Church (Texas
Community) Monday through
Oct . l4 with Rev. Donald Bender,
Chambersburg, Pa. Services
7:30 p.m. nightly . Special singIJig. Rev. Robert Sanders Invites
the public.

Albans, W.Va.; great .grand·
mother, Mrs. .Bonnie Miller,
John, Janet, Derek, Usa Miller, ,
Shirley, .Tammy, Micky, Mandl,
Chrissy Mlll~r, Jerry Taylor, and
Jim Taylor, Fostoria; and an out
of town gift was sent from Retsey
Wimbish, Columbus.
'

we

•

Bloodmobile to
visit Eastern

The annual
POMEROY
homecoming of the United Faith
Church, Route 7-bypass, Pomeroy, will be Sunday with worship
at 11 a.m. , basket dinner at noon
and gospel sing · at 2 p.m.
featuring the New Ga brlel
Quartet, liarvast Trio, Johnson
Family, and'·other local talent.
Public ·is Invited.

A party was held recently
honoring Joshua S. Taylor on his
first blt'thday.
The party was given by his
parents, Steve and Brenda Taylor, at . the home . ot' his
grandpliren ts.
A family gathering and fisH fry
and a High Roller Cake with
homeJTUide Ice cream were
served and gifts presented.
A surprise birthday cake was
also presented to his mother and
one to a cousin, Usa Miller.
Attending were grandparents,
Robert ·and Judy Miller, Jeff

see

•
•

a

FOREST RUN -The Forest ,
Run United Methodist Church
HONOR _I!;OCmTY - These six sludenis at
will celebrate Its 75th anniver- . Southern lOgb School were Inducted Into the
sary on-Sunday. Regula~;_ serviNational Honor Society on Thursday afternoon
ces, 9 a .m.; carry-In dinner,
during a ceremony at the hl~h school. Inducted
12:30 p.m. ; special anniversary
program, 1:30 p.m. Public Is
Invited. ·

Tayl9r birthday

so

KENO CHURCH 0,

•

The United Methodist Womep
of the Rock Springs Unlt.tli
Methodist Church will hold
bake and craft sale at Big Whe~
Saturday beginning al 10 a.m. i

GALLIPOLIS ..: The River
CHESTER
District 13
Valley
Herbalists will meet SunDaughters of America will tneet
day
at
Bob
Evans Restaurant at I
Saturday at 1 p.m. at the Chester
·
p.m.
for
lunch
and a tour of Cora
Lodge Hail.
Mill
Antiques
and
Herb Crafts on
'
Cora
Mill
Road
near
Rio Grande.
BASHAN - The Bashan Ladles Auxiliary will have a smorSYRACSUE - A chicken barg_asboard dinner on Saturday
from 5-~ p.m. at the Bashan Fire . becuewillbeheldattheSyracuse
Fire Departinent on Sunday at 11
House. Cos tis $4.50for adults and
a.m. 'Cost -Is $3.50. Desserts are
$2 for children under
extra. All proceeds go to building
fund . Menu Includes half
REEDSVILLE.:... There will be
ctllcken,
baked beans, roll and
a yard and bake sale at the
coleslaw.
Reedsville Fire House on Saturday from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
LO'ITRIDGE- There will be a
sponsored by lhe Faith Gospel
smorgasbord
dinner Sunday at
Ladi!!S Circle. They will be
noon
at
thel.ottrldgeCommunlty"
serving hot soup, hotdogs, pie.
Center west of Coolville. Cost Is
pop and coffee. Eal In or bring
$5 for adults and $2.50 for
own container.
children under 12. Public Is
PORTLAND - The Portland
Invited.
PTO Fall Carnival will be held
Saturday featuring the group
MONDAY
"Silver Wings." Serving _will
BURLINGHAM - The Bed·
begin at 5 p.m.'
ford Township Truutees will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
HENDERSON - The Gallla
town hall.

~;X

f

-Bake sale

12:

aev.

Schad

The Red Cross bloodmobile
will be at the Wahama . Hi~
School Monday, Oct. -22 from .g
a.m. to 2 p.m.
·

. SUNDAY
HEMLOCK GROVE - Homecoming at the Hemlock Grove
Cfiurch will be held Sunday .

.

s.

i··-

MIDDLEPORT - There will
be a fish fry on Saturday at n ·
a.m. al the Middleport Fire
Department.

SALEM CENTER - The Star
Grange and Star Junior Grange
will meet In regular session on
Saturday at 8 p.m. at the g~!lnge
hall. Refreshments will be
served.

. .......

p:

BURLINGHAM - The Bedford Lodl • ·Township History
Group will meet Friday at 7 p.m.
at the Modern Woodmen Hall.
Anyone Interested may attend.
-Bring history related Items.

SATURDAY ·
BURLINGHAM - The Burlingham Modern Woodmen will
have a fish and chicken dinner
and bake sale on Saturday from
11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Proceeds will go
toward a new b roof on · the
Burlingham Community Church.

.

Bloodmobile at
Wahama High

REE!&gt;SVILLE - The Olive
Towrt~hlp TJ-ustees will meet
Friday . at 7': 30 p.m. at the
Reedsville Fire Ho.use.

· POMEROY - The Spiritual
Faith Church will be having a
benefit yard .sale at the home of·
Lula SchaUer. · Dark HoUow
Road, Pomeroy, on Friday, Saturday and Monday from 9 a.m. to
4 p.m.

'
£WING FUNERAL HOME

.

POMEROY - ;'Star Trek:
City on the Edge of Forever" will
be presented at the Meigs County
Public Library In Pomeroy on
Saturday at 2 p.m .

.

l'\\\;f( Srul !Boo~l

212 £.Main Street
992-3785, Pomeroy

Page-~

(Community Calendar Items Twlrler.s Western. Square Dance
appear two days before an event Club will' hold -a ·dance Saturday .
and tbe day of that event, Items from 8-11 p.m. at the Henderson
must be received In advance to Community Center, Henderson,
IDsure publlcallon In the calan· - w ,va. Jim Wilbur will be the
dar.)
caller.
FRIDAY
.
MIDDLEPORT - There will
RUTLAND - Revlva1 at the
Rutland Bible Methodist Church be a hymn sing at the Middleport
will be held Friday through First Baptist Church on Saturday
Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly with at 6:30 p.m. Jan and Kathy and
Rev. Creed Thomas, Ports- Tbe Children of God will per'
. mouth, and Wayne Dalton Fam· form. Fellowship will follow .
ily Singers. ~ev. Ivan Myers Rev. James A. Seddon invites the
public.
·
.
Invites the public. ·

992·3325

FlOWElS FOI IYDY OCU$MIN

214 E. Mairi
992-5130 Pomiroy

~ltport, Ohio

Pomeroy

Pometog-.f/owll Shop

: SERVICES

. 992-7075

,-!l'i\tj .

992-mS

·Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE -=-

216 S. Second
.•

Friday. October 5, 1990

Com~unity .calendar

·· · ·

Mill work~{~MI
Cabinet Making ,.. . · .
•
Syracuse
l:i' Y~A4

il

The Daily Sentinel

.

TEAFORD

RACINE PLANING MILL

t--....,;--.;.";.;~..;-2;..t.,;.04---~~'-'_1 -_1'.:.55_ _ _ _,._•_m_•_••_v--l

..

...

• I0 Pieces of Chid! en
I OH~
partli:ipotlllJ KFC• .

'"""It

'

•'

ttltlurlata: Jlot Jood •Y oiiNr offer.
l AddHioool
c11or1t lor 111-ttiiHo ""'
-..
Cut!- pap oil tPJIIca~
1-lao. COUNII FOR

ICIIII'IOUT.

l

i!XPtRIS:
10131110

• 2 Pieces of Chicken
•Mashed Potaf!ltS •liscuits
air.. tO!MI at "rt li:lpot Itt! IF Co

r1tii•IIMI. Jlot IOOd eny othtr offtr .
cliarp lor oii-!111Ho 1011t
.....,, COlt- PIJI oil appllcoblo
•Its 111 COUPGII FOR
Add~

CllllfDIII.j
'j

.. EXPIII$

10/31110

·~-

.

• 2 Pieces of Chichn
•Mosht.d Potatoes •Biscuits

• 10 "'"''' Chici:Ot

. •Lotte MashedPolatOts wilhGnrvy
•Lorge Cole Slaw

•' '

Offtr Jood It J)lrticiPitin, II.FC•
mt111r1nts. Jlot 100d any other offer.
A~itlonal dlatp for 111-wt.tte Nit
ordtfs. C•t011.- ..JI Ill applklblt
Aiol tu, COUPOtl FOR

''

CMIIfDIII.

EX"RIS:

10/JI/ttl

•nt 1110

'. .''
~

CROWS FA IL Y RESTAURANT
228 WEST MAiNI
' .

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.

POMEROY
'

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M2·5432
•

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Pcxneroy- Middleport. Ohio

"-'• 8 - llle

Co~nty

Meigs

property transfers

· CompDecJ 'by:
Dorothy Jean Alkire, Racine
Emmoa-e Be..tela c..p
VIllage.
Reoorder, Melp Ceoan&amp;y, Ohio ,:
Mildred Roush Ohlinger, part.
Donald Alvin Mawrer and
lot, to W!Uiam A. Ohlinger and
Betty Jean Mawrer, parcels, to
Donna R. Ohlinger, Pomeroy
Donald Alvin Mawrer and Betty · VIllage.
Jean Mawrer. Salisbury and
Martha S. Anderson and Ar·
Bedford.
'
•
nold Anderson, IOOA, to Lorlann
Allen P age, 3.3 A., to Allen
A!lderson and Arnold Anderson,
Pa ge and Ca rolyn Page·,
Letart.
.
Mary F. S~ncer, !Ita, Mary F .
··=M tland.
Jtlcbard A. Fln l~w and Ger·
Jell and Donald Ray Spencer,
tr\ld~ Fln law. p a r cels, to
4A, to Golda . Reltmlre and
Farmers ·Bank &amp; Sav. Co., · Raymond A. Reltmlre, Lebanon.
Sutton. ..
Glen R. Bissell and Naomi
Robert W. Crow and Cheryl A. Bissell, 35A, to Gerald Hegedus.
Crow: sherttf' s deed, to Diamond Sutton.
Sav. &amp; Ln Co.. Sutton.
VIvian K. Titus, dec'd., cert. of
JOhn L. R. Gillilan· and Mary trans . to Robert B. Titus,
M. GUlllan, parcel, to William Pomeroy.
Glllllan andSusanJoyce GUlllan,
Dale Rockhold and Shirley
Chester.
Rockhold !Ita Harris, Easement,
John Fisher, J r. and Sarah Sue to Ohio Bell Telephone Co.,
Fisher, Jot 2, to Joseph F . Llevlng Orange.
a nd Betty Jo Lleving, Chester.
Tuppers Plains, Chester Water
Marvin D. Glasgo (lnd Phyllis Dlst., easement, to Ohio Bell
M. Glasgo, .lot 6, to Glendo11 Telephone Co., Orange.
Michael Sharp and Pamela Kay
W.H. Berdine, et.al, sheriff's
~arp , Orange.
deed (lnlner als ), to Homer P .
Ernest A. Wingett, dec'd, cert. Par ker and Sar ah J . Parker,
of trans.. to Robert Wingett , Lebanon.
Pomeroy VIllage.
Mary M. Andrews, parcels, to
Charles Edward Wheeler and Carol w. Cline, Olive.
Martha Kay Wheeler , Tracts, to
N. Ruth Betzlng, dec'd, aka
Frank Herald, J r ., Syracuse RuthBelzing, affidavit •. toDonL.
V1llage.
Betzlng, Middleport VIllage.
Gerald Timo t h y Welker,
N. Ruth Betztng; aka Ruth
tracts, to Eileen Walker, Pome· Betzlng, affidavit, to Don L.
roy Vlllage.
. Betzlng, Middleport VIllage.
Aline H. Weaver, dec'd,cert. of
I. Carson Crow and Barbara
trans., to
R.
and Becker Mathews Crow,
lots

'

·Business ·Services

&lt;

104. 113, 114, to Frederick W.
Crow In, Pomeroy VIllage. •
Margaret L . Sheets, parcels, ·to
Gregory C. Sheets and Mabel A.
Sheets, Bedford.
William K. Oller, dec' d, cert. of
trans.. to William E. 'oiler,
Stanley W. Oller, Thomas L.
Oller, Debra K. Patton, l.,.etart.
Vance Mlllhone, dec'd, afnd, to
VIolet Mlllhone, Olive.
.
Jeslie A. Brlckles and Patricia
t;lrlckles, 48A, to Vernal H. Well
and E. Louise Well, Bedford.
Carl Taylor, parcels, . to Anna
J . Taylor, Rutland.
Robert E . Roble and Clara L.
Roble, lot, to Kenneth M. Roble,
Salisbury.
~
Lawrence A. l'tupe, dec 'd,
affld. for Trans. to, Betty L.
Rupe, etal, Larry Rupe, etal, .
Charlotte Rupe Stewart, eta!,
Lots Rupe Snodgrass , eta! ,
Brenda Ruper Dodson, etal,
"
Rutland.
Middleport Hous ing Corp.
0.07A., to Dwight D. Ashley and
Wanda L. Ashley, Middlepor t
V!llage.
Clarence E. Taylor, dec 'd,
par~l . to Betty M. Taylor ,
Salisbury.
Helen M. Williams, lot 301, te
Helen M. Williams, Kenneth
Williams, and Arlene Wtlllams,
Middleport VIllage.
Volen L. McMahan and El·
frlede McMahan; 1.15A, to Terry
L. Cunningham and Trlnce r,:
Cunningham, Columiiiiibiilaii.• • •

'

The

Til-COUNTY RECYCLING

GROOM
ROOM

POMEROY. OHIO: Rt. 7 &amp; S.R. 143
ALBANY. OHIO: Rt. 50 &amp; S.R. 1 43
NEW HOURS:
POMEROY: .9 a.m .-7 p.m. 7 Day1
ALBANY: 10 a.m.·ll p.m. 8 Dap, CIOHCI Sunday

for All lrll!ls
EMILEE MERINAR
.Owner &amp; Operator
614-992-6120
Pomeror. Oltio

PAYING AS OF TODAY, SEPT.

1D-I 1 mo.

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

3
6
10
Monthly

, ClOSED

Ren1als

-·

We can r~r cind rt·
~· radiators · and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators, We also
repair Gas Tanks. ·

:~•· ...~· I _5Q diuount for aft Plid in advance
ada - Giveaway and Found edl unci• 15 word• will be
run 3 diPI &amp;It no ch•ge.
.
.
""iat olad for all ceprtal IMter• i1 doubt e price of ad cost
•7 point line type only u1ed .
•Sentin .. is nol responai~e for irronafter fint d-,. . !ChieM
tcH '"or' tint d~ •d run• .., PIPIIr l . C•lt before 2 :0 0pm
d• aft• PVblicMio'l to
c:orteCijon.
•Ads tt'llt m.u lt be paid in 1dY1nce 1re
C.rd of Th.,.ks
Happy Ada
In Ml1noriam
V11d SliM

- 11 ,00 A.M . SATURDAY
- 2:00P.M. MONDAY
- 2 :QQ.P.M . TUESDAY

Area Code 614

441- Gallipolis
317- Ch•hire

992 - ,.iddleport . 675 - Pt . PIQIInt

Pam•ov

311- Vinton

2•1- Rto Grende
218- Guyon Dist.

·143- Arebi • Dist,

371- Weln&amp;tt

985 - Ch•ter
843- Portla;nd

2.rl7- latan Falls
149 - Aacine

742 - Autland

576 773882 896937-

41 - Houtes tor Ren t
•t2 - Mobile Homes for Rent
43 - Ferrna for Ran t
44 - Apartment for Rant
-.s- Furni•had Rooms

1/fJ

······ ·roo....
47-Wan~ect t o Ren t •

48 - Eauipment for Re nt

BUILDING &amp;
REMODEUNG
Commercial &amp;
ReSidential
•Roofing
•Siding
•Windows

71 - Autol for Sale
72- Trucks for Sale
73 - V•ns &amp; 4 vyo ·s
74 - Motorc:yciM
76- Bo au &amp; Mo t ors for Sale
76 - Auto Peru &amp; Acc•sori•
77-·Auto RePair
78 - Ca.m ping Equipment
79- Campss 6 Motor Homes

31 ·- Homes for Sale
32 - Mobil•l1omei for Sal e
33- .Ferm• for Sal• .
34"-- Busin•t BuildingS
3~ - lota &amp; Aere-ae
36- Aul E1t1te Wan'ted

667- Coolv illt

10 Buy

Transportati on

Real Eslal e

Apple Grovt
Maaon
New Haveft
lttart
lluflalo

,.,,
Re ••.,-ftc Fa' sf._
g

62 - ~anted

63-Liveltock
14- Hay &amp; Grein
65 - Seed &amp; F~rtilile r

8 I ·- Home Improvement s
82 - Piumbing &amp; Hett lng

83-EIIic.,atinl

84Eioct•icol . ... ,...alion
85 - Genllf'al Heuling
86- Mobile Mome Re~air

··········~~.-.··.•.L•I•I·. . . . . . . .B7 - Upholsterw
Public Notice

PubliC Notice

lor the Nllof dtmandad In
lha Complaint.
·
Larry E. Spencer
Cltrt ol Courta
Mtlgo County
.
Common Pleu Court
I ·TC
18131. 1917. 14, 21 , 28 (101
&amp;

of October, 1990, and tht

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY·, OHIO
Ma,...tANtLittlo,
·
Plelntlff.
VI.

o

Public Notice · ,

Anlhony Eugono Uttla.
• Defend•nt.
Cue No. 90 OR 138
NOnCE OF PUBLICA nON
To·Andlony Eugonellttlo,
- l a a t k - - -·
' 21 1 N. 10111 AVW'IUO
.11 ' Jock-lla, Florid•
32210; you •o horwby not~
lha1 y o u - ...... .
named Otfendant In a lagal
at:tlon entitled Margaret
Ann Uttla, Plaintiff. va.
Anthony Eugana Little, OaMn-. Thla action hila
·-•olgnedCaotNumber

t-.ty· olaht (281 doyo for
aniWBr wll on that dea.
In ca•• of your ffli.lure to
1n1wer or otherwtee re-nd 11 Nqulrod by the
Ohio Rulaa of Clvl Proce·
duro, judgonwnt by dofautt
will be rondoNd agtlnat you

=~~~~~=:.=

BULLETIN BOARD
.l\UI.I.E'l'IN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE

"' Molga County, Molp

co;,:::,";,•-g:.~: 't----•f•l•IB-'.,·'.C,.,A-T1•0•'N-----1
objact of the complaint Ia tho Plaintiff
·praya that aho .bo - t e d .
divorce from the DetMidant
dta1 ....... _.dod.,.,_.

cltlld 0&lt;11!0&lt;1\' "' dta
olllld of tho ...,...
-lila pr_ .. ..., tho
P'lalndlf be granted 1fto

-·
· You

ere · required

11

II

YARD SALE
'-' mil~ E. of Rulland

Craft ilems, furniture, small appli·
ances, clothinil of all sizes. baby

•lllms. Saturday, 9·dark
Bishop Residence

to

_....

anilwtr tlla ~omplalnt
within 1WtfltV·oigllt 12BI
deyo .,., 1ftl ..., publica·
lonoltltle--wll

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

. . . . . . . . . .) . . CEil ....

........ n. laat pulllllllltlo.o

_. bolMI(e on lila -day

THIS 1"xl"
'

BUllETIN BOARD
I SPACE .AVAilABLE
AT S5.00 PER DAY

Let me tell ye'
tie story 'bout a
men celled Dad
A poor mountaineer wentin' to
keep his three
. girls fed.
So he moved to
Ohio and got a
job In a plant
But now my ol'
Dad he's makln'
his own gas ...
end oil thilt Is :
Well the first thing
ya know tanks
ere 1ittin' ever
where
The kin folk told
me Dad
You oughte move
away from here.
Said Ohio Ia the
place you ough-

tebe
10 we lol!ded -: UP
our stuff and we
moved to Leading Creek.

.ll•ttr

.1,.•••,

Y• o1· e••,

From Your
Youngellt Critter

Betly

Bird

&amp; SERVICE.

RACCOONlVAllEY
SPORTSMAN CLUB

GAME ROOM

WANTED

NOW OPEN
Wed. thru Sat.

DELIYIIED TO

OHIO PALLET
COMPANY .

RACINE
GUN CLUB

can ~75·14!10.
·
RENT TO OWN .
814-446-3158
•
8 pc. wood group $14.01 por

..

.-

.

w.-.

4 poster btdroom suh1,

complete $15.20 per w..k,
dlnouo with 4 cholro $7.50 por
w- Mogle Chol 14 cu. h.

Refrigerator $12.15 per we1k, 15
cu. ft. frMZIII', $10.90 per
wMk. VI"Ra Furnhure. At. 141, 4
mlloa ott At. 7-Conlonary.Opon 'I

==·

..

doyaa-'&lt;.

·

-,,n
Dodgo Dakota 13,ooo
mnoa,
Dliyo: 81a.2M.aiJ4,
Ev~runp:

*"""

205 N.
Str"t
IIIDDLEPORT, _bHIO 45760
Offka .614·992-2116
HOME 614·992 ·Sii92
DOniE 5. TUINEI, UOIEI

992-S335 or 915·3561
Aer..s froM Post OHlce
217 1. S.C. P-oy
POIIEIOY, 01110
3/6/' 90/lfn

·

Every Sunday

949-2801
Res. 949-2860
CAUS

Starting ot 11 :00 A.l\t
Between ·
Wilkesville and
Salem Center
·9·12·'80·1 mo. .

4-16-H-tln

CAl

USED APPUANCES
90 DAY WAIIAJilT

ol Nldii•P"'

Announcements

3

Announcements

.'

$700. REWARD lor lnlo~ollon
l1adlng to the arrnt and c:Gnvk&gt;

lion of person or perwon• nn-

1nd ..,uy.

br~aklng

dallzlng,

wire

connectOI'II

whlt1 ·an color: One Shlkllllpear

troiUng motor Moct.l 601 PS or
006 LPS. On• Cran•man wMCI
wacker Mod•l 257 797-100. One
Homelh• chain AW wlth 20"' bar
and c:haln~cOv•r Super XL12. I
will ldontl , piooa!L 19port lnlo
to Maeon
unty ::merrtt'• Olpt
or Ch1~er Martin, 541 C.pltol
Blwcl, Elkhart, Ind. otelltl.
Qold.Crtdlt C1rd, caeh adv1nce
progtlm. VIIIIMnt•r c1rd guar.
Na ~~eurlty depoelt. 1..t00 4415

,.,,,...

54

' ·.

12

on• 1peclal. Writ• Hean111rch.
P.O. Box 1043, GoiHpollo, OH.
411831.
IICDonltl Cuot0111 Butchering, I
Doya A WMk, -~224.
No t-ponlng or hu,..lnt.

11 Clarbago boga hill o1 yord
aalo homo, phana 304.e75-1247
aftotl p.m.
14 wHk old Bugle puppy;

"At 110~ Prices"

PH. 949~2101
or Res. 949•2160
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS
4-I&amp;-16-1111

10/301'191111

COMPlETE
ElECTRICAl SERVICE

Reeldent.. l and ·
Commercl1l

.IEWJIIIG ANO
lROUilE SHOOTWG
(ertlfllll lilcfrldaM

Fnelthllatn

BANKS
CONSTRUCnON
992-6009

10.1 I••·

- ANI Eatate Genel'lll

FOR SALE

4

phone 304-773-15302.

2 f,... puppl•, approx. I w.kl
old. 114-Mf.2882.
2 e1t1 ta glvUw•y. all are
doclaIn ~· 1
malll, · niUtered,
&amp; 1-flfrlatl.

,.

Pomeroy,

..

4 frM 8 wMk old gny killona to
a good home. For ,_.olnlo,....
lion can 814-1192·7292.

BabyaHtlng In my homo. 22
yu11 oxporlonco. 81&lt;i-1o'16-02116.
Furniture refinishing and r1palr,
qualh~ work and 1·- Hllmoloa•
304-6 5-7991.
Glt your chain uw Hrvlcld tor

11.-.wood INSOn, · Sldll'l E~
qulpnwrt Co., H•nd1rson, WV.
30H'IH421.

45 · Furnished.
Rooms
Aoomolornnt · - o r month.
ltartlngat ttaom.. Galllo Halo!.

11t 4g;1110

81-'na with oooklng.
Alao. tnTiar apace. AI hook.upo.
Call ••• 2:00 p.m.~ 304·773118'1, Maeon WV.

',. '
•

1fT

'

"

1111 14170, ••1 ....no. CIA,
awnlnt. vlnrl aklrtlng, phone

.

-

304ol75-7131altot I:M.p.m.

"

. •.

8 .

Mat,_ 0111, 2 ldtt.n.,
caUco'e, 80\lthpaw, ball tnlnld.
&amp;

·•

'\

'•

114-446-7185-llftor lp.m. ·
Froo milk juga. 114/1112otllll.
Proo pupa. Port Collie ond
Auatrolllan lho-rd. 114-11112·
1'881.
•

'
. ..,

Gtntla klttona to gtv&lt;iawoy, 1143117-'1'120,
• .

..

.,

..

Part INglll. puppiH, 30W82o

.

Smtll blaclc I wltfto klltan, half
arown whha cat, 11'11• wltHI cat.
Callll14-311 IIIII. .

1-ACIE lOT

To Ohiwwar. 8en1'1tl BoxN of
Yard lola llooohancllao.ll14-241- •

111'11.

l...o8t &amp; Found

Public ·Sale
&amp; Auction

"·

.,. '. I

I;,\

.'
..
. ..'
.;

Finane tal

Rick Pooroon 4ucllon Companr
now booking •uctlone, 11ptrllnce m1kt1 ihl difference.

LlcanHd Oh!!, Kontucky, WHI
VIrginia, 304-Tn-1785.

9

Wanted to Buy

rtdl11g

21

Bualness
Opponunlty

, 304-871-1111.

For Sill. BroUw NWina m•

=·

-.~ar.-plnornNr

Rio Unndo. Adoquato wiring

wa,l14--~

In

chine

Wanted to R.e nt

.Goorgo lilt,..

I

dt'lwer

WalnUt

cabinet. t12&amp;.00 V.G.C. 114-111121114.
For Sola: 11111 ChoW Aotro
ec.nv..lon
v... l.oodod,

-=

~40::i !;'

Dolamatlan puooloo, born Aua.
31, 1100. AKC 'litter Nglll1r.a,
304.e82·3723.
.
Dragonwynd Catt.y Pilrelan,
SlarnHI and Hlmaa.y.n
111 ue 3154hft• 7 p.m.
Aoh Tank, 2413 Jackoon Ava.
Point. Pluunt, 304-17'1-20U, 10
gal Ml up t14.n and 10 gol
complato 1543.2&amp;.
On• YMr .old white Lha1a ~.

wondtrtul pet, 304-8112-3139.

Frulls &amp;
Vegetables

Duni'DVIn FruM F1inn )UII _oft Sr
S81 Mil ol Albany, We loocl ata-. Ya!IOIY ol apploo,
,...... dd., lndl.n ~.
puonpllno, and gorda. H dally,

·--r.l14.a11M2!11.
Pall!-: w. ..... • good

a

ol good Konnoboc:
- · t1l.OO pot 100.
mphr'l',
al
Roadavllll.
11413'18-112115. No Sunday oolaa.

59

For sale .
or Trade

zr ow- 8' Boom Cabin
Crulaor, _...t by !1811 Cha'l',
Y-8, Bogan W.mor Vllvat Drt..
Tnna. S l - 4-1: Fully oqull&gt;'
lar Lab Elfo II(Jatlng, I
ahlng. IO!Ihod at llorbl-.
Ohio. ~II top. Wlntot otongo
lramo.lnlarmOtlon: 814 4081541.

=

Autos for sale

.

'

.)

4 WD 's

11171 CIJe"Y Van, 350, automotlc,

ndlo, IIN!ot. oood •-· ohon
· W'ould make aaoal·
convonlon
van. 114-ill2·

l*l.

''
''

I

. 'J

...

4

ltiiOOO ·m..... CB, ll:•rea, TV, PS,
P , naoda Dnlahod pal,..lng,
$2.000. &amp;14o448-~.
·• .

",.
, :,;

~, '•
.1HT J•P Wrlngltr, very good . .• :..;

cond, 304.e75.e8&amp;4.

.

74

Motorcycles
1980 Yamaha 4251T, good cond,

14JQ. 30H"~Wa71.

1...•

.,

• •

...

. '.
.

11115 Ka-akl Nlnta 600. Rune
and ·looka good. $1350.
I141111Zo35D3.
·
-'
1. . ' 9uz. Katana 100, 7,500
mU•; NRed" New Metzlert, like

\

- 1 Call E-lng•: 114-446-

...··:

KX\111. In Excollonl condHion.
114-11112·104e.

.'

11014.

' .'
.,..

75 Boats &amp; Motora
, forsale
11112 17 ft. Ston:raft Tri-Hull
- · 12&amp; HP, EvlrvUdo Engine,
complata topL!JOW uoholalo&lt;y.
Call114-211&amp;-1.,. aftor t :oo p.m.
Alurnn 12 n V boll, -

·3311.

BOATERS
llon:ury llorculoor Spoclollat
Factory Tralnod, Bandod. Pracl·
elon Mobile Manne. We c:ome lo
youiii14-25N871.

•

'.

.

\

•,

.' .'
•'

...•
•

..

We ara nowwtNTEAIZING,_rll,

Mrvlc. ~cce~aon.. . W• Install
SHAINKWRAP.
RIVERSIDE
IIARINE Galllpolito, OH. 11.......
2424,1~728~ .

76

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

1VT7 Ptrmoutfi Fury, 3eO, on·

Brougham, loadad, MW Urn, 8115-3335.
Haw 22 caliber Mml" • tm 1CI tt. "Go Tllii ·Aiong" •If
auto,lnadii70HC. 304-875-728'1.
contllned extra c...n, $1,200
n~n• ~-

tm

1871 vw Rebblt I
ford
= .• p, 116!10 ooch !104-175-

tr~etor.

Vfntan. 1814 Keyeton

24H071.

1N7 Chovr Cavallor, $4,500.
114-317-'1118.
1117 Sublru tour whtll drlvtt
OL10 Turbo Wagon. Loadod, ox·

coli... condition. Pomoroy: 61411112-3143.
1N7 ~..,darblrd, loaded, 3.8
LV-!L.. 45~!0 m. Exc. cond,

Services
Home
_,
Improvements

BASEMENT ·
WATERPROOFING
UncondHionol lllotlmo guo,.,.

IH. Loc.l ret1renc• luml1hld.
FI'M HtlmiiH. Clll cOiled 1•
114-237-G4811, cloy or night.

lulm.nt Waterproo-

Aoget~~

fing.

JET
Aontlon lloloro, ropalrod. &amp; ,..bulh motora In llock. Ron
Enl•prtMa,

Evan•

Jiclwon,

OH. 1;800-537-t521.
Complatf llobllo Homo all upa
I r_.ro, 1110 ~. :~,
e11ctrlcal, roaflng,
patloo I cloc:ka ole. REIIODE •
INGI Rotor..,..., Eatlmatoe,
814-2118-1111.
llqr!'a TV Slt'VIco, apoc:lollzlnaln Zanhh · ar.o ..ntolng moliil
ott.r brind1. Houee calla, altO
aomo -ll•nco _,,., wv
304-1511..2381 Ohio 114-441-2454.

Rotary or cable tool drilling.

........ OIIU. 11448'1.QZ14.

Moet walla cornpllltlld ..,...

1181 Charcoal groy, lroc Z,
loadld, every opilon ••eelll T·
topt, mint cand, 1 owner, 211,000
mlloa, Booll P!'icO: $11,100; Wll
ollllor $10,1100. 114-446-87111.
11U Yugo O.V., Standard,
AMIFM .terM caa.U•, al,, low
mllooga, now llrM, good c:ond,
woulcf make IKCIIIInt ear for

Pump 8153102

ttudlnt

Of

work cer. 114·245-

51121

:f· ,. · .,

olactronlc

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

AHIIII,..Ial or comman:IOI •
wiring, new ""*- • raplltll.
Llconiod aloOtridan. Aldanour
Elactlloal, 304-11'11·17i8.

180 II!F DieM! $3,1110;, )35 MF
DIMOU!-1811: Uood oft. Buoh
Hoa, - · Uoad' Grodtr ltodo,
$100; Ill. Anlllhod - · ..,.
owner w111 IlNnea. 814-Zif.

85

llil2.

.........

=

2 Balllan 2,210 bu nch, will .... -

...... -.....

Rral Est;l1r

cnbo
""

2ton alE I'IIRI Trua!l, or - I I ,
grain • ~ Otonp Uft,

.......

· Help wanted

1110 -

........ I1WJI.IIII

...,.

-M :=-

GO'IERNIIEN1 S£1ZED
from 8100. Fonll. ........
ChOV)'o. Surplua.
- -· ( 1 1 - Ext.

Coo,...

·-·
72

Trucki for

-...,

..

••. "1 ~

.. .

Carter'• Plumbing

84 · Electrical &amp;

Fann Equlpnlent

... .

piiM, pickup, and dollnry. lt4-

Refrlgerlltlon

61

•.

~2M.

andHaatlng
FOUrlh and Pine
Galllpolla, Olllo
814-446-3888

1181 Cullaolnl'l Sorlaa

.....

G.argl8 CI'Hk Ad. P1111, 1up..

82

:.':4.

oncl M&lt;Yict,

So pile Tank PUIIIIIng SIOLGalli a
Co. RON EVANS ENTEAPHISES ,
Jaokoon, OH 1-100-1537-11521.
Davia
S.W.Vac
Slt'VIco,

t881 Camero Rally Sport, 308, 8
opel, loododL 22,~00 mlloo, llko
Call o.vonlnga:~ , .........

i&gt;.iiim.-o;

F:1t111 Supplies
&amp; Livestock

814 888 8820.

11113
Qldo.Oona 116-4 - · Ex·
calllnt eancUtlon. Air, crul11,
• - amllrn $2,100. 132 Buttlf·. 81
nut PomlfOY.
18154 11011to Carl'!., V-8, Salo or
!rode for good. INCk or lorrn

Lumbar Slsta,

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

=.~=u.=-

11

71

&gt; ....

Building
Supplies

~~E·:&lt;!=-·=· ~=-·-=

ono - · Call
.
For
HNr11&gt;11ato wood
..mer 1.-. SIS. Or11t.O.
SPECIAL.. l'llatory to youtnt, 2
Lalor with lor fl19placo.
or 3 bod-14xl0 ·IIHIIIolo at
- 1 - - ol e• p19lob
tho
ot
...
t12,DOOunbelievable
clollvorod .,nc)- HI up.
all·luol chi m..,: c •11 e••
~
Callt-'121 41Mijor dalali!L
5I
.
01110 altar I P.ll.
.
Household
· For Sot.: O.kwood Dlnlnl
Short limo on job? Pall - "
Good
A
H ~ bl Hut h
S
oom 8 u • ' 1 1 '
c '
hlllory • ~llirll? Small down
~·
Mur pro o nod _ _ _.::.;:..:;::,._..;:,__ Chllra l14-44&amp;-'1313.
Call1 1011111 m1.
For - : RooiiMr alao a aolld FULLER IAUSH PAOOUCTS tor
WI- 14X'IO, 2br, c• lloJIIcl. moplt 1-; both llkf your fall clllnlng nuda,
..,
nowl - b l y prlood. 114- can Dolo or Wllmo Wpod, 1·:J04.
lng, llklrtlna,
' an lot
CiMII.
o.il -.1,
FIn-Ouall
City ~~4~41i4~4~lfi~;;;~;~;;JJ8~75-~t010:.~:~~~~~
llobllo H - . 111 Ul 8340 .

INOTlCEI
Ham• brew batllea l bottle OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
Clpper. 114 ttl 1551.
.............. that you do With people you kNWr ond
~oad goa _or, ........ wltK
to ooild -"Y ttvouan tho 33 Fanna for Sale
u,..ll you havo lnvootlg11od
blow.r. 614·742·2858 betwen 10
.. .... "14unttrl' .....,.,
otlatlng.
am and 2 pm or anytime aftei 5
nlol .....,., bin\ flnoed ,
pm.
VENDING ROUTE:. Local. Groat
Want to buy a larg"a dog houee, - h • -· High trolllc
-lona. Eaay woriL Will Train.
can 304-t'l5·2338.
HIOIHI8W3e3.
, 35
a.Acruge
Want«&lt; To Buy: JWtk Aut~
wlth or without motors. C.U 22 ·. Money to Loan ·
La&lt;ry Llvoty. 114488-1303.
LOANS IY IIAIL
' Wamid Ta Buy: U~d mobile
Up to p,ooo 1n 'Ill houJW. W.
homn, Clll 114-441-0171.
help you got • lllgnallft
Loan ay 11111. 1-211 11100

Employme nt Se1v1ces

TransportatiOn

..........

ForM •

j

oallao. 114oe87.e205.

8

Fotrmorrt, 12xso. 2 boclo
new windoW, AJC, t2Z.OOO
btu $4000, 304-773-1111.
tHI T a - 14li'IV s boclo
""'""• balh I ha~.L..iJ~. 3Q4.
8 - 2.or 11115-31,. onor 7:SO.
1182 TownhauM, 14100, double
Ill~, CA, on prtvatt Nflttd
lot In Rodney. 814-446-1831altar
5p.m.
rooM,

Gener111 Hauling

A I R Wltot Slt'VIoo. - · oleo
terne.
•lla. lmmtelat•1~000 or

"

.

.,: -..

..
'It

.
"ol

I; ~·• 1 I

l

.,t!,

,i ~jq

'"'"'
"' l ''t.'

dallvary. CaU 3Q4.

Sale

Cllaln ......... $100, ,.... .....

I-

. ,.,.,,
c.. or
-114·
wiDiairo.
114-441·M11

SHOWN IY APPOINTMENT.:._992~5107
Mtrth If

""":=

58

home, .two bl1ck 1111d WhiTt, 1

an

tm

i . •

A d - frM kltltiW to aood

Aduh whMo tomalll cat, Indoor
pot, •orv alfoctlonato, and good
wllh ahlld,..., 814-4411-2383.

WMiarn auto

. REDUCED TO UI,OOO FOR_ QUICK BALE
1(4 . .

calif, top ~lood line, .olld black,

·

Rd.
886-3013.
Poodloa: tore, •-upo, AKC.
2 prlntora. Radio Shack llno nny maiM, belutltul t.male•. 1884 Tompo, $111116. 11181 Tompo,
prlntoro V, TRS-IIO'o. Both tor Aloo adult dogo. Largo cagoa. 1124111. 1!1118 Tempo, $3185. 11181
Cavollor, $24811. 1141812·11114Coolvlllo114.'1e1-3404.
SS0.00. 114/182·'12?0·
IIU Buick Rogal Llntltod. ve.
4 aood candy machlnoo. 51
Musical
PS, PB, AK1, 1m wholl, ~
304f1'11.11811.
.
wlndowll, , . . bnkll. Alklng
Instrument•
$4,'100.614-'1112·2215 aftor 5 pm.
Afto Bu. uood 1 ochool ,..,, 18U Dodge Cha'lllf, 2dr,
uc. cond,UOO.IM482 IIIJS..
hatcht.k. white, with red lnt•
for, AMIFU I 1pd, PS, rww U·
So!IOphona, ... oond, . - couplt montha !104.-s. hluat, sz,too. t14 44128al
3111 dar- « 30l11C1 18U Oldll Cutla• Supromo,
Brougham, low ~~'':'&amp;"4 garage
053.
WE CARE.JIII (Jooua l . llo) kapl, allox1noll
PIANO SERVICE olton EXPERt 1N7 Camaro, Z·:z&amp;, bright Jed,
~I~- PSlPB, •lr, II._, orul••,
_,.II - ·· 2&amp; mpg. hWy. 114W.rd. :ICIW82·23211tProv 22:11.

I

20R3BR
2·S10RY HOUSE
AM or:::~:·~:= TV cable. 1111 bathe, • - roof;
oomplltcty •mod1hd, new modwn kttchen
lnaludl,. al _ .... _ ......., 1ftraugllout. Iorge .
Pll1iO 111d -.r.e,. ful •u•-•t, , _ VCnyt ..,.ng
witlt lneulltlon, 1110 lllown In lntulltlon. , _ atorm
- .. - wtndowa. ful lantr1ft ..~. out
buN. . 111d MMII ...

·'

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
•
s 1 At 338
AI B000 a, •••~·
•
•,
Portland (Gt
Bend).· FridaySunday, Octo~r 5·7. 10:Q0.4:0d.
Gar~ae Sale. Now thru October
13th. l=olmer r•ldent, Long Run
.Road Long Bottom.
.

tt....a.ms.

Black

hp

mower, 4 monthl old. '1980
Chevy Mona nHde wort. 304-

I .I

Giveaway

1 molo Gorinan Shaphard"'- obout

Miscellaneous
Merchandise '

,

Heart111rch •lngl• network.
An IXCitlng WIY to meet 10m...

992-5335 orfl5·3561
Aa- F.- Post Offlct
. .POMIIOY('OIIO .

(USTOM IUif.
HOMES &amp; GARAGEI

·

POQI 'tabll1 n.w blalls,· CUIJI, ltPPfOll. 100 lb.La_call afl1r
good cona, price nogotlablo, 1:3Cip.m.l14-251-llw&lt;.
.
304-11,7H:IOo.
.
.
Chlcklna tor aalo, 304-175-252'1.
Sowm1111•Nnar uood. Drlvo a haft
rw V bon drtvon. Complata with Plga lor Alo. 114184•:1017.
blado. Roady lor .... $2300. Roglotorod Polled Hanford
814 441 8031aftar Spm.
BuRt, 814-251-1385.
Soaoonad Aah, oak and hickory
nice llacllod,
plcllup Don'a
load,64
-:~...;H::;a;:.:y:...&amp;:::-;G;.;,ra~l.;,;n;;:-=
Dol
and
,..,
La.-aplng, 1111 11811148.
Hay tor Solo. Clovar I llmolhy.
Round Bal• In thl Flekl. 614.
Tandy 1000 Computer and Color 24UIIIIB
llonHar. IBII Compotablo wHh 3
112 Inch dllvo, 8 V4 clrlvo, 30 mg Hay lor aalo. Round and ....,.,.
hard drivo. $700. 1114-1182.f205.
boloa. Call ........ 2344 anor· 5

ltltt••"·

,•

0040,$25.

614-992-2321

BISSELL- ',·
BUILDERS.

Now Columblo to. opood 63
Livestock
mQountaln
bike,
28
ln.
304-675=-..,.....-=-==~-=
8285
Ch-A.ngue Slmi'TIInttl,·~xc. club

laaV1rM188fl.

Laton, wv.

We Say Wllat We Do.

12

Mooon County. Property tobn
two 750x:16 truck tl.-.• compa.t•
rlm1,

Vans &amp;

j

•

tm

~:''"ftc!,~ "!YIIfa'::.."YR\~';l:

with

.

'i

gino,.!&gt;".!, tronomloalon, $200.
Ford· ll..tang, Coupo, 18·*
c.c:.:.c:...=
_..""l:.:..,-,-.,-,-,--,OYI. 3 - d, CFromo Domagod) 1500 "'"'· Ita uuae:z.
1181 _Eagle a """' drive. All
~ · 114-1112-2505.
Block, brick, _ . , olpn, wln11111 Chavy Nova. 2 ::,~ 35o
dowe, llntell, etc. Claude Win· •utorn1tlc.
Good
ion. Sudalll Tnm1m'-1or., Uallid a
lora, Rio Grandi, OH Call 814- 12500
rw
boat
ollor.
1141111Z·70lll.
nbuln, atoning 11 $1111; 814-245245-5121
11877, 1114-371-2213.
1m cttwrot.~ lm~... 4 door,
new tltM, AJC hie been takln UMd automatic II'IIMm..IIGN.
56 Pets for Sale
are of, A-1 eond mec:~hanlcelly, Gil I ole, caD 811 411 0431,
Groorn • and SUpply Shci~ $710, :J04.175.2541.
garantMd. 1110 repair twalllble,
G,_lng.. An broiaclil. Allotrloa.
lama Pal Food DNiar. Julio
Buick LaSabro, aood """'· VInton Auto Sol-. Forllgn •
dMion. !1811 onglna. Phone 814- Dom Porta lluyln1l tunk care.
Wobb. Calll14 U8 0231. ,
814-388-1106~.
aote 3852
.
Al&lt;C Rig. BMgiM. All ... aJ&gt;o
prox. one yaar and rumlng. tm Chevy lllllbu, 304-175- 79
Campers &amp;
.
Priced ort abHhy. $80-tiOO. 814- 8853.
MI-21543.
. ' tm Ford LTD n,_Excollont Con·
Motor Homes
All brood pel grooming, 21 dnlon, low mh..ga, 114-448- 1m Starcrtft truck Clmper,
•
yell'l IXperience. l\DDOintmente 111158.
ltOVI, let bol, link. Walll' tank.
only. 1141112-41820. It ·no an.wer, 1871
Pontiac
Bormovllto llllpil 4, IIC cancf, $100. 304-

9,21.10. I mo.

Hittle Reed firm, Vernon RDit ,

We Do Wllat We Say.
S-6-IOM.

table, Iampo ·•

62 wanted to Buy
Montgomory .,.,. Woahor/Dryor, w.,.. to buy a uaoc1 ftuio.
horovy duty. UJU, $100 tor both. 1141912·78f8.
11411112-2070.
:.::::::.:.:::::....._ _ __

55

We Need Liolln8"!

MATCH

PH~

co-

miK. n1m1. 114-2~1tel.

lion. 114-1149-2101.
WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
R. o~ Alll1"!!1 .1210 Soc:ond Ava,
Golllpolla, ot1 814-4411-4338.

HOUSES•LOTS#FAAMS
COMMERCIAL

RACCOON VALLEY
SPORTSMAN CLUB

"FrH Eatlrn111e1" . '

tabloa~,

-:-- ====--

KEN'S lPPUANCE
SERVICE

.......... lo!llt

Jlm'a Farm Equlpmo,.., SA. 35,

W.ohor 19trlgarotor and oloctrlc ;prn::::...

Yard Sal•: 355 LeGrande Blvd.
Oct 6, 9 :00-4:00 Rala canCII!II.
Blk••· tcoatar, fun elze 81ddll,
lerger miM • ·wonwn.· cloUMtl,
glrfs clothe~ ml.a. tteml, No
ll)rly ..l •.
Yard Sal1: Saturday Oct &amp;lh, 9-4.
Brick houH bthlnd Clay
Sc hool, Winter ctothN, hunting
h1m1, 1oo11, ml1c.

lf4-25M32t.

"-

1
atovo. All
gciod WC!rklng condl· Hay, phone 304-e7W571.

Iring It In Or Wi
Pick Up.

S~OOTiNG

IO· f

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

2 bodl'OOml, nlco,

USED RAilROAD TIES

•-mbtr the 1111M

Jerrlcho Rd. P1. PIIIH.,t, WV,

9127/'10/ 1 mo.

1 r••r old &amp; s Tom cata &amp;
fem1l1 cat. 114--251-111331.

00-·-

NIW!Ui ed

H.,_hold hlmlshlng, · 112 mi.

POMIIOY, OH.

ALL MAKES

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

'·

PICKENS FURNITURE

SAW LOGS .
' ..
.
$1 50 ,..!.~. '•

. Sept. 4,tfn

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

""""

ch1lra, 814 446 3548. .

•' I

.

175-'1085 or 175.. 515. •
~~~~~~~;;;~:::=-r~~;;;;;~~;;;;;;~ltm
a.-kae, x4, 30454
61 Fann Equipment
tm Ford 3/a ton 'window van,

llovlng Solll: llwlng room aufto,
roll away bod,. 4 dining room

"•

HRS.: Wtd.·Thurs.,Fri.
5:00 p,m.· lt :00 p.m. ·

S.25-'99·1fn

&amp;-12· 90

..,.

LOW GlADE OAII

uS:::ii!l'up
KEN'S APPUANCE
SEIYI(E

And

7720.

= ::-- - - ----''-

Merchandise

J

1888 Rangor Plck·up, 11ao446-

For Solo: tm Ford Pickup, 4x4,
nma good, 6M-401·17011.

coni::l, $150. 304.;e7.5-~3l.

;

Hand Tufting
Custom Drapes
36 Yearo Experle~e•

Forgot tllot have
hedhaAnd ro-mbor I heve had
IOIIda of fun,
Rt-mbor I holfO fought
aomo hard battiOa,
And won tro tho, oto• of
the clay,
..
Thtn fo'9111 to grieve
"" going.
I would no! have you aad
I My,
lut I n - Juat ....

~.

,.,....,_.ora.,.

•• •

~~ndoblo INCk, $4,800 . .

I

Largo choll typo fraozor, good

.

UPHOLSTERY

In MemOry

-••'fJ.':-

APPLIANCES

.

,

11115 S10 ohon bod Plck· up, 2.8,
v..a, 4 •pHd, blk and lllver gray
llnor, llldlng ,..,
wdw.
battlfY and u'hault
llpllm, IIIla now COIId. II 000
mlloa, will ..... CJ5 01' CJ! j;ip
an trodo, 30U75-tii&amp;O.
1V81 Ford F-250, now·u... aUio
A ai r, Prof-kmlolly re-bu1tt 1ft..

.,_.,_...

GaUJI Factory
· Choke onlr

12 0.... Sholg- Ooly
Strictly Enforced

992-2269

USED

•

Shocb, $3,200. 114-448-2213. 1-6

WHI Galllpollt, 814-446-IT77j
rr::·~:ar. ~:.::; For Sale: eo..·
.I C.nnoil PC.;Ziol !Mde •election nn' uMd tann
c.... - I . Call 114-44&amp;-T3III. · 1500, 114-21e.tal8.
tnctoro I · lmplomonta. Buy,
. king WoodiColl S1ove, wtth Nil, trade, 8:00-;5:00 wMkdays,
Hotpolnt •ov• Hlf-c~Mnlng blaw~r, homelh1 uw 11 ln. s.t. till Noon.
ov.n, hood. Hotpolnt 11 cu ft no McCuira Saw, 14 ln., gu wMd John o..,. 12 ft. wh• disc.
lroat 19frlgontor/tr..zor, both
aotor. 614 38.8540, .814-388- Good oondHion. 114-247-3644.
111111 In uao, ancoda. :J04.I75. 8595
4234.
·
Living room lumltwe, end

BILL SLACK

2

0000

'•

11115 Ford 314 T. plclwp, I cyllndor, alllomatlc, P9/PB, H.D.

-

12

EVERY .
SAT~ NIGHT
6:3.
0 '·"'
factory
Cliolto

or MO SUNDU

n

nHII'oand
I Carpoto, Rt. 7 North.
tul9
carpat11.
Fu..
lj/,:" ........_11144, Galllpolla,

.

72 Trucka for S111e

•

SUNDAYS

Bashan luil.ng

"FIREWOOD

--------~---~-~
5
Happy~ds

.:0":!'/!

Sentinel-

73

1:00 P.M.

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

992-6009

SHRUB &amp; TREE ·
TRIM and
REMOVAL
"LIGHT HAULING

llpollo,....
Do yGU like io .... lloiloy?
CheCII .. CH.C hlr
him~

,;,

MICROWAVE
O~EN REPAll

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION

Ser v1ces

Gam pons
&amp; Vli:lh_lty

Wript

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Solu and chalra priced from ·
$385 to 111115. Tobloa UO end up
to $125. HhM 1 Iordi $310 to
Ntl. Aocllnora $221 to lm.
Lampo hJ to $125. OlniiiM
1100 onc1 up to..-. Wood tabla
1HI chalro 1218 to S'lll. Doakf
$148 up to $375. H'"choro $400 &amp;
up, bu'* _..,...., ""h
matt..- 12111 oncl .. to 13111.
boby $110 111n- or
box - ' - lull or twtn S~.J!.rm
. . . ind ftll, OUNn pro •
up, King $3!0. 4 draw« ahNI
• • Qun C.binlll; I , I , A 10 .
gun. Baby manr- t35 I
148. Bod framoo $25. OUNn
81•1311 king Ira~ tao. Good ..
Mlactlon or llodroom ollilaa,
molal oablnoto, hoadboorda $30
end up to ...._IO dora """" u
- h wMh approvad cracllt. 3 mi.
aut Bulavllo Ad. Ooon I #-.11. to
I P.ll. lion, lhru Sat. Call 814-

W.ehenl, dry.,., .

GUN SHOOT

lstt't h Worth Daing Ri;tl

10.1·1 010.

JALU

667-6179

992-3033

61 - F•rm Equipment

Yard Sale

161 Harth Sacond
Middlaport, Ohio 45 760

SHOOTS START
SE" 16, 1990

CALl

FHnl Su~Jplies
1\, LIVUStock

21 - Busin•• Opportunity
· 22-Monl';' 10 L.oan·
23- Prot•aional S•v•~

•sa- Leon

OPEN BY
APPOINTMENT

57 - Mu~cel ln• t rumet'lt l

58- Frui1t &amp; Veg.cebl•
59- For Sat·e or Tr1de

18 - Wanted To Do

M.. on Co •. WV
Art~ Code 304

FIT and TRIM
OCTOBER
SPECIAL

SlrNI, 614-446-3297.

"·

.GUN SHOOTS

•Complete
l .emodeling
Stop &amp; €0!1ipare
Frae Estimates
985-4473

10 v1sns S2900

54 - Mis c . Merchandise
55 - Building Suppli•
56- Pets for Sale

17- MiiCellaneoui

follou:ing telephom.&gt; exchanll'~s ...
ANaCode614

53- Antiques

16 - Aeduy, TV &amp;..&gt; B Aepeir

- 2:00P.M. WEDNESDAY
- HO P.M. THURSDAY
- 2·00 P .M. FRIDAY

the

985-4422

51 - Hou•ehold Good11
52- Sporting Gooch

1 1 -HIIP Wented
1 ~ - S ituation Wen"d
1 3-lnaurancCI
14-Busin•• Training
15 - Sch~ola &amp; ln. truction

•LIMESTONE

•Garages

.05/ day

Merrhandtse

Employmen t
Si!rvtt:es

DAV BEFORE PUBLICATION

'Meigt Coumv

81.30/ day

6 - lost and Found
7 -- Y~rd Sale (paid in 1dv1ncel
&amp;- Public: $1/e-, Auction
9 - W•nted to luv

*"'

Ga:IUa Coun1y

15

5 - HIPPV Ad l

c;ep1 """:" elaaified. dilpl.,. Buain•• Card and legit not iceal
lito IPP•• tn the Pt. Ple•ent Aigietlr end lhe Gfill i·
polis D•itv Tribune. reeching over 18,000 homn.
··

pa,~:~ .cot'er

. 30

. .42..
.sci

Mfo22113.

Shl pherd, VI cinity ; Of Vin•

Ntw location:

Sat, 12 Nll&lt;ln·lt p.m.
Betwun Wilkesville
ond Salem Center

BISSELl &amp; BUllE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes

•ANYTHING
AT ALL

.20

S13.00

Announce 1111:nts

•A clusitied advenisament placed in The Daily Sentin .. l.- .'

Classified

15

1-Card of Tt!ank•
2 - ln Memory
3- Annoucement s
4 - Giveawav

m••

TUESOAV PAP.ER
WEDNESOAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FA IDA Y .PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

Ovf}r 16 Word•

male "German

PlUM8tNG &amp; HEAI1NGI

8·12· '80·1 mo.

•GRAVEL
•FILL DIRT:'

4 bodiOOIII; unhlrnllheil homo.
No polo, Dopoalt roqulrod, 114-

KJT •N'

Household
Goods

-eppllancM,T.Y. HIO. o 1 a.m. to 1 p.m. llon•.sat. l14-1"!,,, 827 3td. A... oa~

16141 446 ... 16 or

·

Banks
·construction

NEYER ClEAN YOUR
AGAIN

-.

Slfl"lllt.

•

Located on SaHorcl School Rd. off lt. 141 ~

H2·'88·tfn

l:ii~Gutter
~Helmet"

Mdroorna, .,... .bm
Stoullor Chomlcill, Golllpolla
Forry. 3Q4.878..3080· H k . tor

5I

tounty Appllanco,.lnc. Good

BENNEn'S .-o.Li HOME
HEATING.&amp; COOLING

lt. 33 Nerth of
POIWtroy, Ohio

992-6009

614-388-11732.
l.OSI : White

O!'EN MOIIAII. 10·5
742-2421
3649'6 SMITH RUN RD.
RUTlAND, OHIO ,

MOBilE HOME FURNACES • HEAT PUMPS
All FURNACE PARTS

• 99,·7479

fbt .. ere tor con .. cutNe run1. bro ken Updaya will be ch•ged
tnr eer.h rlfl'll 11 teDarate ads . ' ~
.

Mei;a. GaH ia or Me1on count•.;. mull b e pre·

COI'Y DEADliNE MONDAY PAPER

15

11 , 1990

·a

LOll: Pockat book, at K-Mart,
cont•lnlng my pereon11 ID'•,
checkbooi &amp; tiledlcare card
which l1 nMded. Pllase C1JI

Stoekff

oLotoRen~

CHimR, OHIO' ·

U .DO
86 .DO
$9 .00

Hou..S for Rent

Now In

oM.=e~~rhf~.

R., L. HOLLON
TRUCKING ··

15
15

LOti : ~ JOUng whllli malit cat,
one g,..n tYI , one blue eyeh In
RodMV. 810-246-Mil
a or

Buy, Sail or Trade
Guns

•Mobile .Home-., ·

RATES
~

41

LAFF-A-DAY
.

448.Q322..

COUNTRY ...
MOBILl
HOME PARK

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

&amp; Found

The D~ly

Ohio

10.11 mo.

Middleport;

Rate

S.. Us For Your
Sporting NHds

#1 Copper •1 per lb.;
·
.Clean Dry Aluminum Cane, 415C per lb.
Clean
RIICIIeton 44C lb.; Bella lee •1 .215 ea.
Yellow
40C lb.

992·21

• Words

.

'

STEWARTS
GUNS &amp;
SUPPLIES

OFfiiS 2 LOCA'iloiS TO SIIVI YOU" ..

Grooming

Classifie
Days

,LOst

6

•

&amp;p.m.

PA't HILL FORD

TO PlAC! AN AD CAll 992-2156

october s. 199o

Friday, October 5. 1990

-.12111;

011.... St. lt. JJ

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

.

l'ar -

~ .'

3 l:ladroom ._.. tar ..,. or

)j

••

"Next year,

..

paint .,., t1111 teevea IIIII"

.

l

: F...... TIMtdr,

C. . . .. 114 ttl 4410.

.

-~
-

•"

�1

'-a•

.

Flidly, October' 6. 1~80

10-lbe IWy Stntlne(

.

•

I

75 cents

Sunday

football results

Berry
castle being
renovated

Around the Tri-County area:
·,
t
.
FJVe high school homecoming queens are
at
Right ceremonies - A-4

James Sands:

.

I:'Iesent Walriut Ridge Church near

.

I..eeta organized 145 yean ago - B-8

.M§§fTI LI_VING ROOM!
Ovlr11uffed lladilional style sofa ~ • . Multi-allored
jac:qulrd flbric:. 81nd1 CUihion•.~fool legs, oak lrim with

IIIII hNd loOk. ·~x Cushion'
wih Ufeline Wamriy.

Reg.WSETT SLEEPER!

It~

designed and i'l:tended 10 be the
Greatest One-Day SeUing Event
in thi~ store's 40 year history!

· Camel blck Sl)it quean size sofa sleeper. Colnry lallric
wih rulllld lldrt and Clmlllli.1g thro!¥ pillows. ,

· l1111rJPring ~. 'UIIralux
Cushion' with lllaline Warnnty.

HAS!ii'.IT SPECIAL!

9 A.M. UNTIL 7 P.M. ONLY!

· ijASSETT BEDROOM!

Reg. 1299.00
Oak-Chtny·Pilt be&lt;lroom suias. ·All wood lrcnts.
Your choice ol 3 styles and finishes. 4 Piact Sukes.
Night stand optional.

Dining Rooms Reduced!
..

.

--

·- --*•"*·
~

·.

Flit lido
and.,. n poddod ... - . Flltgilll

MASON FURNITURE
COMPANY

clow~tudl!MpOIIIIIblowllllll.

~~8110MIMIIISIIIE

.

AllioyOW. Am loglt!IOUIIIoand-. .
... ~-and- Foil' lidoand2-cNhttll1poddod--

l &gt;lt.- -'*"-'**

773~ 5592.

flip
andcul&gt;glolo-s-1

...plus

SPECIAL CREDIT TfRPIS!

Bedrooms Reduced!

Living Rooms Reduced!
. . .. ::

•

'

, ,•

' !I

'

I

~
&gt;

EARLY AIERICAN SOFU OWII
PiiDW., ·~ wi1h wood rim.
.
MaNe wi1h bluo l1ripo flbric.
Rig. '1885TRAIIIfiOIIAI. 3 PECE!
ilulhline 3 piiCI ..ilo .. boU!ul cut """'
""" libric will paecM&gt;aigl llorll print

Q.ll..,.q 111.¥1

Rag. '2195 PUB-IIM:K UYIHG AOOIII
Sd•• ·.., 3piiCI"'uedetook'IMng
iDOfll Ml 100% nylon boigo Iabrie. f0111·
... sin!H:Oil 11.-t ,ymn. Tenilic Voluel

'

Dinette Sets Reduced!

sg 97

IIIII. '348.. FIVE PECUEI'I

Olk lnilll .. with 4 ..... buil iaid -.1

Buitt Solidi Made To Last!
Maple Rnlsh.

Mattress Sets Reduced!
Sofas and Sleepers!

TvmSIZEI
0'-t 11om Sllll, 1111*iai. and
Namaco 1111. Allquiltap ~·

$299
$ .
54 9

FULLSIZEI
HateM.IIIIII model.
P1tmiarn quillclp btdditboddi'Mlg.
QUEEN SIZE!

Pltnitr comlort series.

QUEEN SLEEP SOFA!
C'AJionial style wth beige print Iabrie.
•Padded wing. innerspring mallfess.

Q~ENSIZE!

Pllowtopltl byNarnlta,topquallyset.
'lilldge s~ SysW~n' .

Tables and Lamps!
~ '7U51t~21.15TAII.£~

_..,Aol8r.-·a.Dalcocjltli.

~~21.11110AI-TAILDI

-·will--··

" " ' " ' - - ond - - •
~ '531.1111 oWsl'li'TAIUIETI

Chramo
lig
.,.,
Aoclanglocoddllllbloond
.....Thlcli(jllll
andploooo

· EACH PIECE

Chairs and Rockers!
•

a.-

$39&amp; UP
$79EACH
$369sET

la-Z-8oy hll1dle rock raclner.
Cholc:aot2styles,3. lallrk:slllllcolars.
Utetime warranty Qn lrwne 11111 mecluwlism.

I

.. • r 1

$289sET-

1

... plus much. much morel

r

~

~

~

i

$129 ;i
$279 .
$3 49 '

Reg.'258.95 SWIVEL ROCKERS!
'

bruWn 111nt tabrfc.Trett•ldaUI Value!
pill-' much. much morel

· ,

r.

•

11

I '

....., ... 91*1 hnt ... o.nit with ...tile
.,.,. 24' widllnll rr ...
Rig. 'ZIII•IUIIK IIEDII

~ Rlg.. . . . HWIIETYI
lMill ' I l l ' - oonliltl- calor TV.
a o.tt oak loW!.

$129
$169
$499

...plus much. much morel

111AT fnTIIU: · HOI!SUUL

tOO, I'IUD

~1!\1;
,;~~.
-;;;

or MW FUMITUIU:

.., two.~. fOIIt,
f!lillltlre ..,. lid -

.

.

•

•

COMPANY .
773-5592
.

.

Mason,
WV .
.

SALE HOURS: 9 .A.M. 'TIL 7 P.~. SATuRDAY!
.'

,_.'
'

Reg.siiSSETI TABLES!
Cholototcontempo~•y light olkortradllional rk:hpecan

lilish llblt .-.Includes oor:lllailllblt and radangle tl)d
llblt. ~llldllbltavailllllt ·
$
·

89

'

MASON FURNITURE
..
.
2nd·Street

$99

fAMOUS BRANDS AT

STOREWIDERr:DUCTIOrtSI
•Bassett

•La•Z..Boy

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CONTRIBUTION MADE - The GaiUpollll
Junior Woman's Club, represented here by!I~WD
Saunders, left, made a contrlbudon to the I
Oy
of three-year-old Katie Dennison of GaiU lis.
Denllllloit, held by her mother Kim, attencla
pre-sehool ln HuntingtOn, .w.va. for lhe . deaf.

Bush: 'No more
.

.

,,

District Senate seat; Rep. C!ar·
ence Miller, who is , seeking
re-election to his lOth District
seat In . the U.S. House of

left, a Fello.w of the UDlvenUy, and t'rank
Cremeans, far rtgbt, an alwnnns .. Alae pictured
with the vice president, and their parent:a, are
·Steve Enns and Carl Cremeans. The photo was
.laken Sept. 22 at a GOP rally In Columbus.

RepresenU!tlves; and Richard
Ohio GOP chairman Bob BenJones , who is running for state nett will be among the entourage
representative from the 94th · traveling · with the VIce.
Hous.e District.
President.

authorized
'

.Teens ~lightly injured in·wreck

BIISSm' SI'WALI

.... Of ...... H~
'

~ 6 SO&lt;tlona, 90 Pagoo
. A . Multimedia Inc. NeWIPIIP•r

GALLIPOLIS - A plctoral special phtlateltc mobile unn
ca!lcelatlon, noting the Gallllpo- from the Columbus Division, has
l!s Bicentennial celebration, has tentatively been scheduled to be
been authorized by the U.S. ' at the .Gal!lpolls office Oct.15-20.
PQsta! Service for use in Gallipo·
The handstamp cancelation
' 11$, Oct. 1~20.
will be available for collectorThe handstamp cancel depicts prepared (stamped, addressed),
Gal!lpolis' historic bandstand In envelopes sent to the Postmasthe City Park, which was built as
ter, Gallipolis Bicentennial City
a memorial to Civil War veterans Station. Gallipolis, 45631·9998.
in ca. 1876.
The · Gal!lpolis Bicentennial
The U.S. Postal Service, CoCommission Is offering an offl·
lumbus Division, has authorized cia! bicentennial cacheted cover
· the · Ga!llpo!)s Post Office as a
featuring .the Gallipolis BicentenBicentennial City Station. A
(See POSTAL, P"-IPie A5)

~~if.lf 3 PIECE LIVING ROOM!

II $20.00 upchlrge,

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Sporm ..................... . C-1·7

VICE PRESIDENT TO VISIT Rl() - The
University of Rio Grande will host a press
conlerence and recepdon lor :VIce Presldenl Dan
Quayle on Oct. 13. Quayle's vlslt lo the area has
heen arranged largely by Bob Evans, second
from.
- -

ssg

Nice size Rldinertorthewhole lamiy. Roll anMuftadback
style. Choice ol colorl.

Accessory Sale!

i

..

...__ __..,;;._.~-------__,-~1:¥

Special Credit Offer!

Bankcards
·wetcomef

A number of Republican Party
leaders and current candidates
for state and local office will be
trav~ling with
the Vice
President.
SchedUled to participate In the
rally are Mike DeWine, candl·
date for lieutenant governor;
Robert A. Taft li, whc is running
for secretary of state; James
Petro, candidate ior state audl·
tor; Judy Brachman, who Is
seeking the state treasurer's
post; Paul Pfeifer, candidate for

•Reg. '229.95 RECLINER!

·. .

Sold pile 2"18' Iuiie • . _ . . , nllkl
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8i llin bldl. Laddlr.inaludld.lledding alii.

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•Add On To Your Account

.t.:xecutlve Committee.
''The VIce President's visit is a
demonstration of his, and the
party's, commitment to southeastern Ohio," Cremeans said.

.

Their entire 1750,000.00 Inventory Is SAl.f. PRICID at IMPORTAN'i'.REDUCDONSI

..

tentatively scheduled to begin at
approximately 10 a.m., when he
will participate In the unveiling
of "La · Vue Premiere," the
commemorative sculpture of the
Gallipolis Bicentennial, In the
city park.
,
Following the dedication,
Quayle will travel to Rio Grande
for a provate reception, followed
by a Republican party·sponsored
rally. After an early afternoon
press conference at the university, Quayle will visit the Bob
Evans Farm Fes tiva!.
Quayle' s visit to the area has
.been arranged largely by Bob
Evan·s, farmer, businessman,
and Fellow of the university, and .
· F:r•\1~ .
a 1966 graduate of Rio
and member of
~e Oalila
Republican ·

·PID-IID llyle wth IMMon tuftl.llllgl or

AS ADRRDSED 00\ST-'1'0-CMST orl .
l'f.tWS, CBS, PIAJOR GAJIIf SHOWs, 'I.AI\l~•u
MI'IOML PIWIAI IT-S A.IWIOML

•E,xfended Terms

ters In Gallla, Meigs, JacKSon,
Vinton and Lawrence counties.
VIce President Dan Quayle wll!
·appear at the rally In the Fine
and Perfpnnlng Arts Center of ·
·the university. The rally will
begin at 11:15 Jl.m., and the
buffet will follow In the Rhodes
Student Ce_nter.

Trdionll pAHiat:k style suite with heavy padded arms
ll1tl --tiUffed bldt Oak rail tom, tan IICIJiiclabticwkh
a Vllilly calor palllm. 'Uhitx
Cushion' with !itttine warrny.

Rig. '261.95 ROCkER!

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R,g. '562.50 FUXSTEEU
Wal or roc:Mr IICiner. Yoor choice.
. Nioe nylon fabric in solid colors.

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Woad._ plllllrm rock with ~nd
ttalllldblck wihlkit. Blue prO nylon fabric;.

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ftRIIAPS Tilt GRfATtJ.ST SAVINGS t VtiYT ttVARfA ~rtsr,:mr.r
SOflft:. rrti'IS ARl ONt·Of·Mf/ND. SOI'fl ARt Ul'lrrtD
QUANTrrY... BUT fVfRY ITlf'fiS RfDUCfD fOti THIS SN.lt

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Recli ners Reduced!
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...pill-' much. much morel

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a - - . - . - 1 -.GIMISI-nl

Tickets .for the Republican
Rally and buffet, to be held Oct.
13 at the University of Rio
Grande, will go on sale Monday
at · GOP headquarters in . the
region.
According loa partyspokeswo·
man, the tickets are $50 each and
will be available from heaquar-

...plus much. much more I

$88

Serii~Sit.

0 849.95

$68&amp;uP

j • .-. ; • • • • • • •

Rally tickets on sale Monday

4 DRAWER CHEST!

...plus much. much morel

Reg.

RIO GRANDE - The Unlver. sity of Rio -6rande will host a
'press conference and reception
for Vice President Dan Quayle on
Saturday, Oct . 13 .
. In addition to the university·
sponsored events , . Quayle is
scheduled to visit Gallipolis,
participate In the unveiling of a.
pioneer statue, anti attend the
Bob Evans Farm Festival.
·
· Quayle's entourage is exj)E\cted
to Include former Ohio Govefnor
James A. Rhodes and guberna. Ioria! hopeful George Volnovich.
;Miss Ohio Kristi Cook is sche·
duled to be among the party
greeting the presidet\1 upon his
. arrival.
·
- The Vice President's father ,
Jim Quayle, · will alSO be in
attendance during his son's visit
· to Gallia County.
"We are extremely pleased
that the Vice President has
chosen to visit our campus and
. extremely grateful to alumnus
Frank Cremeans for . arrimglng
·this hjstorlc trip to our campus ,"
said University President Paul
C. Hayes.
· "W~ are-sure his visit to Gallta
County Will be a boost for both
'our !ns.tltutlon and the
com.munity / •
.
'"" Quayle's visit to the area is

ITYCRW/Ill.ll

Reg. '99.95

Editorial .•••

Middleport-flomeroy~GaUipoi~.:..._Point Pleasant. October 7. 1990

Copyrightod 1990

.

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Reg. '7911.15
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tress. BlueimaiMIIoral pillow arm style.

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Reg. 0411.151RADillOIW. FULL SIZE!
lolauYe with blue prO Iabrie.
tbtrdKMSiyilg.

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• Open a new accounU·
Jl~ie§fTI DINING ROOM!
• Add-on to your present account! ~. Tllodltlorlalllyle oak linish sule. lolicaJt~ICp oval fable.
ftghled,mhol-back,g~sidedhutdHouvereddooroottet,
• Bank cards welcome!
ftve side &amp; 0118 arm chair
'

lllong the River ......... 81·8
Buslaess .... ............ . .... .D-1
Comics·-............. ....Insert
, Classllleds ................. D-2·7 1
.Deaths ........................ A·5

Vice President to visit Gallia County

BASSfiT.SPECIALI

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ts

BASSETT .SPECIAL/ .

In celebration of 88 years of service to fo":r gene.ations of American
. homemakers, Bassett Pumiture Ind ustries sets aside a s ing~&lt;! day
(Saturday, October' 6, 1990) to coordinate their biggest factoFy span•·
sored nationwide sale cvcrf. lt 's .a t seUict'participa.ring stores in cities
and towns across America! You'll shop everything ... not just Bassett
products ... but everything ci&lt;larly tagged at .sa/AJ prices!

C-l

'

There Is no requirement In Oblo to provide Ule
halldlcaJ.Itied pre..Chool, allboap that law Ia
challglng, Saunders said. The eoatrlbud0118
received by the Dennlsons wiD help defray the
eost of the school and tl'IUlllportation to
Hundngton. (Times-Sentinel photo) ·

.

bu~iness

WASIUNGTON (UPI) - A live to a bipartisan budget plan
defiant President Bush vetoed a . defeated by tlie House Friday.
stop-gap spending bill Saturday
"No, it's not acceptable,"
and defended his declslo.n· to Foley said. "We do not think
virtually shut down the govern- . there ·should be any lnterruptioq
ment, promising "no more busi- of the federal government or any
ness as usual" until' Congress Imposition ot sequestration." ·
passes a budget he can accept. ' · As federal agencies, parks and
Congress, meeting In an rare
tourist sites began closing their
. Saturday session, scheduled a
doors and gates, Bush sent a
vote on whether to override
letier to Congress demanding it'
Busll:s veto litter in the day. The end the fiscal crisis by promptly
· House vote was set for about 4 passing a new budget resolution. ·
p.m. EDt with the Senate 'to
Complainlnil about dozens of
follow If the Ho1,1se overrode the
previous stop-gap spending bills,
·veto.
·
Bush said: "Responsible con·
Bush told reporters he would
gresstonal action to reduce the
SiJ111 a temporary spending blll to
deficit can be delayed no longer.
lund tbe government ·if the
It Is time for the Congress to act
measure allowed automatic
responsibly on a budget resoluspending cuts required by the
tion - not time for business as
Gramm-Rudman balanced
usual."
budget law to take effect.
The House and Senate, by wide
But House Speaker' Thomas
margins, passed the stop-gap
Foley, D-Wash., told reporters
spef!dlng bill late Friday. less ·
that congressional Democratic
thim 24 hours after the House
leaders would not accept such a
overwhelmingly rejected tbe bi!Jill because they Oppoll! the
partisan:· defk:lt-cuttlng budget
bn~ltlon of the spending cuts.
pushed by the president.
while they search lor an alternaI

t .

,.

as usual'·

A Patriot woman was received
GALLIPOLIS - Two teenaga
citation
after she was involved
. ers suffered ·m~J!or Injuries Fri·
.
In
a
two-cat
accident on State
day after the car they were riding
Route
588
in
Ga!lia County
In f!lpped over off of Meigs
Friday
morning.
County Road 30:
Heather Trout, 17, was east·
Jason Yeauger, 16, of Chebound
·behind another vehicle
shlre,was driving northbound at
.
that
was
slowing In traffic. Trout ,
approximately 50 miles perhour
was
unable
to stop in time, and
on County Road 403, when he
attempted to make a left turn went left of center to avoid
onto County Road 30. Yeauger's . striking the car In front of here.
car slid through a stop sign a~d . She then struck an oncoming car
went off the right side of County driven by Susan Morgan, 34, of
Road 30. His 1984 Pontiac Fiero Jackson, according to a report
from the GaUl a. Melr.;s post of tlie
then struck a pole, went over an
State
Highway Pa,trol.
embankment and flipped over ·
Trout
and Morgan were not
Into a creek, according to a
Injured.
Trout was c ited for
report from the. Gallla-Melgs
failure
to
maintain an assured
• post of the State Highway Patrol.
clear
distance
ahead.
Yeauger and his passenger;
An
Ewlngton
woman was
Amy Wood,.l4, of Racine, were
Issued
a
citation
following a
taken to Veterans Memorial by
two-car
accident
on
Township
Meigs County EMS, where they
Road
813
in
Gallia
County
Friday
· were treated for contusions and
afternoon.
abrasions and later released.
· Lendra Harper. 18, westbound
.. Yeauger was cited for failure
wh~n she and an oncoming car
to control.

· The measure, had It been
signed, would have provided
funding to keep the government
·.operating for seven days, would
have delayed the expiration of
the government's abilitY. to bor·
row money and would have
prevented the automatic cuts
from taking effect.
Foley declined to predict
whether Democrats would be
.able to get the two-thirds vote In
the House to override the veto, .
but Senate Republican leader
Robert Dole of Kansas Instated
enouirh Senate RepUbllc!lns
would stand by the president to
sustain the vetO&lt;
As Congress prepared for the
showdown vote on th' veto,
leaders of both partil!l continued
meetings to find an acceptable
a1 ternate budget plan to replace
. the bipartisan budget defeated In
the Holiae on Friday. .
Foley said theQ! wu a chance
that leaders could reach
ment aomeUme saturday bu,t
said It could take until Sunday.

e.eree-

.

'

'

sideswiped each other as they '
passed. Harper and the driver of
the second car, Bernetta Pearce,
38, of Bidwell, were not Injured.
Harper was cited for failure to
use child restraint on her two
passengers, Elisha Harper, two,
and David Harper, one .
A Middleport man was cited
lor fai)ure · to maintain ail a~ ­
sured clear distance ahead when
he was rear·endedanother car on
Slate Route 7 In Addison Town·
ship Friday.
'
·\
Steve Lane, 38, was north·
bound, traveling at approxi·'
mately 50·55 miles per hour when
he failed to stop for another car
slowing in tra ffic, driven by
Gregory Ball, 30, of Gallipolis.
Lane struck Ball's car. resulting '
in heavy damage t6 Lane's
vehicle, according to a ·r eport
from the Gallia-Melgs post of the .
State Highway Patrol.
·
Lane and Ba)l were no.t in·

Jured.

•
•
•
•

.•

D£1100&amp;\TIC BQ OPEMI - It-** len.
E•s- Br!lnaloOI. Dernoeratlc candltla&amp;e Ueut·
.e - t OoverMI', wu In Pomei'O)' on FrldaJ lor
lbe opealq or &amp;lie Melp County Demoerailc

Pll'l)' lledqllllrien. Ple&amp;ued from left are·Parb'
Cllabman Sue Mallon, 8&amp;ate Sen. .Jaa Michael
Loq, BrauiOol, ProbM&amp; .Judge candlrWe D .

Mlcllul Mllllen and Coaa&amp;y Commllllon candldate .Jaaet Boward. Hours for the ofllee will be
Monday tllroalb !la&amp;urday, noon andl I p.m .
.Located a&amp; 111 Sycamore st., Pomeroy, office
phone numben are 99t-9011 and - . . ..
· (Tim...SenUnel photo)

·
•
:
••

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