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                  <text>Pomaoy-Middlaport, Ohio

12-The Deily Sentinel

Thul'lday. August 10, 1989

Dry weather' reported. around most of nation
B;r Vlllled Prea. Ialernatlonal
Thunderstorms soaked the deserts Of California, Nevada and
wesll!rn Arizona overnight, caus, Ina flash fioodlnr some areas and
dumpmg more than a year's
worth Of rain In one night on
· Yuma, Ariz.
The National Weather Service
said most other parts of the
nation we~ dry early Thursday,

Cholesterol

screening
program set

but showers and thunderstorms
were widely scattered ov('r .'the
central plains near the Kansas
and Colorado border_
Showers_also extended along
coastal sections of the South
Atlantic states.
Yuma rl!cetved 3 'n Inches of
rain late Wednesday evening,
nearly 1 \i · llines Its nonnal
rainfall for the entire year.
Average annual rainfaliJn·Yuma
is lradltlonally am&lt;mg the lowest
in the nation at about 2.65 inches.
Yuma· also had 2 'n Inches. of
rain in one hour on July 27, NWS
forecasters said.
The thunderst11rm thai

pounded Yuma began with a few
hours of gusty winds, which
reduced visibility to one-half
mile at times In blowing dust and
sand, the NWS said. Winds
peaked at 56 mph.
Rain ren so hard that '&lt;ISiblllty
was cut to a few hundred feet and
a bout a foot of standlng_,water ·
covered the r unway of. Yuma's
airport. The thunderstorm, accompanied by . small hail and
lightning·, knocked out communications across much of the city
and ca_used massive flooding
problems.
Flash flooding also occurred In
Churchill County, Nev., about 60

Five fined in
Middleport court
Five were fined and four others
forfeited bonds In the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Fined were Charles Knapp,
Middleport, $25 and costs, disorderly manner; Kenneth R.
Mohler, Jr., Middleport, $425 and
costs, and three days In jail,
OWl; Lajean Armstrong, Middleport, $25 and costs, open
burning of garbage; Mtck Otler,
Pomeroy, $25 and costs, disorderly manner; and Michael
Klnr. Pomeroy, $100 and costs,
financial risk suspension.
: Forfeiting bonds were Randy
L. Stewart, Mtddl~ort, $60,
expired tags; Wayne Wiliams,
Middleport, $110, disorderly
~anner; Michael L. Allen, Mid·
dlepoi-t, $51 speedtna, and Jessie
K. Kimel, Middleport, $110 dlsor·
I!Jrly manner.
·

Event cancelled
The Southern Ohio Coal Co. and
its employees will be unable togo
ahead with plans for a picnic at
the Syracuse Park on Saturday,
It was announced today. Therefore, the pool, tennis courts and
park ":'Ill be open to the general
public, II Is reported. The six
picnic tables which were donated
by Southern Ohio and Its
ployees will remain the property
of tl\e village.

em-

The Pomeroy Fire Depart·
ment responded to nine tire
alarms during the month of July..
There were two callS In Po meroy and the remaining seven
wereout-of-townruns. Twoofthe
calls were for structure fires and

the other seven were for autn
accidents.
Fire department vehicles
drove a total of 402 miles during
the month and - fire fighters
logged 210 hours of work.

-----Clarification----According to John Anderson,
Pomeroy VIllage adnilnlstrator,
In regards to Monday even lng' s
village council meeting, he did .
obtain permission, as he always,
does, from Danny Zirkle, fir e
chief, to use the water pump,
although he dldn' I because
another method of problem correction was utilized. Anderson

Fair edition ·
inside today's
Daily Sentinel

Pick-3
311
Pick-4

also stated that he did not pry the
door open · to get tile pump
because the door was already
"smashed." The smashed door
was caused when the fire truck
was Involved in a wreck on a tire
call. Anderson had one of the
village workers carefully open
the door so as not to cause further
damage.

•

w -In Pro

2 Soe1ion1, 14 Pogee 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. NewiP..,.,

Wholesale prices dip
second straight ·month

YEIIi ·liD SALE

*

'I'uinpfke_of GaiUpoOe Saye "Yes"
To Saving You Money!
We Have What You Want·.AQcl
We Want You To Shop Us!
We Must Move Our 19891nventory To
Make Room For The 1-9 90 Models!
Selection Has Never Been Better AI:Jd
Prices Are Lower Than Ever Before!
Don't Mlss this Chance To Get Your
Absolute Best Deal!
·
~ow Is The Time To Buy A New
Fqrcl, Lincoln, Mercury, Jeep, '
·
Or Eagle Prom
"The Ohio Valley Auto Warehouee"

YEIR-EID SAVINGS!

1989ESCORT

REGISTERS FAIR ENTRIES- Hundreds of
enlrlea In the opea clall!l!s for exhibit at the 126th
Metis Coaaty Falr which gets underway Tuesday
were registered yesterday and today at the fair

1989 LINCOLN TOWN CAR
#9719

"SIGNATURE SERIES"

board olflce on
Rock Springs Fairgrounds. ·
Sarah Caldwell of Alfred, _asslsled by Muriel
Bradford, left, registers several Items.

)Meigs ABE staff announced
• Dealer To Retain Rebate
Tille &amp; Fees ExclUded

NOW

.9o/o

A.P.R.

WAS

$13,769

FINANCING
Al"AILABLE ON

SELECT

Postal service worker kills two
co-workers, his wife and himself

$1,00~~
•XLT Lariat Trim

1989 LTD CROWN VIC 'LX'

•BRT Low·Mnt Mirrors
•Convenience Gi'oup
•Auxiliary Fuel Tank
•Chromo Grille ·

•L!ght Group
·AINFM Stereo
·Spotd Conlroi/TIR
•AIC
•HanHilng Pacluogo

•TACH

."

·-

'NOW

•Headliner/Ins PKG

$998

·Sliding Window

•Aigont Whotlo
•Chromo Bu"'l*

• Dealer To Retain Rebate
Tax, Title·, Fees Excluded

./I

I- :::.

I-.

. the staff for the Adult Basic
It was also agreed that the
Robert White.
·Education program in Meigs
board would serve as the fiscal
Southern Local: Roger Hill,
:county was employed at the agent to the talented and gifted Thomas Hill, Delbert Smith, Don
recent meeting of the Meigs
program, the multi-handicapped Smith, and Larry Smith.
,O lunty Board of Education.
class and the severe behavior
,Meigs Local: Debra Burns,
l-inda Stanley was named
handicapped class, If adequate Letha Cotterill, Teresa Cre.teacher-coordinator, with Avo- funding arrangements are ac- means, Timothy Fey, Deborah
·nell AleShl~e. Shirley Mitchell, cepted with the local school Grueser, · Danny ,Grueser, Leta .
.' I!Jid Pat Neece as teacher aides. districts and -the State Depart· . llall, Kathy Johnson, Vernon
The bo•rd also employed Ca· IJII,!nt of Education.
Little, Cynthia McMillian, Don
roJyn SUe Helneti aa a speech _ l lflle certificates of the fo'IJirW&gt;"" ROger·Smith, Don~ Stacy, Llsa
thmp'il." • "'"' ·~.~ ·· • · ii:tg school bus drivers were"- ·Thoritton ;' Uirry.Tucker, James ·
The board approved a voca: approved:.
·
, Vanaman, Mont Vance, and
The Meigs County Grand Jury
ticinal agriculture course of study
Eastern Local: Glenn East· Charles Williamson.
has returned 10 Indictments
Carleton : Jerry Holley, Kat- agalnstiOindiY!dualsoncharges
and a textbook for the -n urse erllng, William Hannum, Ed·
assistant program.
ward Holter, JoAnn Newsome, hleen Morris, PatrlciaPape, and of felonious assault and cultlvaCynthia Rector, Edward Werry, Lee Wedemeyer. ·
tlon of marijuana. Eight of the 10
were open Indictments while two
other Individuals were Indicted
secretly.
Gary L. Wltl)row, Jr., 22,
Pomeroy, was Indicted on a
charge of felonious assault In
connection with!' July 41ncident
tn which he allegedly caused
ESCONOIOO, Calif, (!JPI) the gun toward me but said, 'I'm creased In recent years as postal serlousphyslcalharm to Howard
Pollee said they do not know why
not going to shoot you'. He shot workers have been put under Lambert by kicking and striking
a postal worker shot his wife,
away from me. I went back greater pressure by managers him in the face, head and other
then went to work and killed two Inside my office . .. and called trying to cope with shrinking portions of the bodv.
Another felonious assault In·
fellow employees and wounded a 911."
bude:ets.
dlctment
was handed down
third before shooting himself, but
"You assume a certain
The two dead men, I:tonald
against
Greg
Hicks, 24, Pome. a union official said such trage- Williams, 56, and Richard Ber- number of tragic events such as
roy.
who
allegedly
caused struck
dies are on the rise because of the nie, 38, were shot behind the post these In any population, but there
workload.
office where they ' and Taylor have been far too many In the Dale Rlffie with a club In the
The gunman, John Merlin
usually had coffee together In the Postal Service," said union off!· face, head, and other portions of
his body.
Taylor, 52, was on life support morning. Another employee suf· clal WilHam Bucrus.
If convicted, Withrow and
.systems Palomar Medical Cen- feretl·a minor gilnshot wound and
Officials Said four postal
ter, where officials said he was a fourth hurt herself scram tiling workers In San Diego County Hicks could be sentenced to three
brain dead.
for safety with the other dozen or have kflled theinseives this year. to 15 years in prison and fined
.
Pollee said Taylor, a 27-year so employees .
A postal worker who refused to $7,500.
Six
other.
people
were
Indicted
veteran of the Postal Service,
Taylor had no history of give his name said Taylor left
for
cultivating
marijuana
as a
shot his wife, Elizabeth, 50, as problems on the job, but a feiiow -work early Wednesday night
result
·
of
the
Meigs
County
she lay in their bed .Thursday worker said Taylor and others upset a bout the large volume of
· Sheriff's drug eradication effort
morning, then drove to the had recently discussed a 1986 mall that had to be processed.
Orange Glen Post Office a·nd shooting rampage by a dis"He said he was going home In June.
emptied a .22-callber pistol at gruntled Oklahoma mall carrier early because 'there's not
co-workers, reloaded and fired that left 15 dead and six wounded enough mall here,"' the · cosome more and flnaiiy sljot in a postal branch near Okla- worker said, . adding he ,took
himself In the head.
homa City.
Taylor's remark · as a joke
Pollee said the letter carrier
"We don't have any rationale,'' because ''there was a ton of mall
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Refired 15 to 20 shots, but passed by said Police Chief VIncent Jimno. there."
tall
sales were up .a surprising 0.9
several people without harming "It's real uncomfortable for us,
Taylor also apparently had
percentln
July on the strenght of
them as· he walked through the because we don't have a reason been arguing with his wife over
automobile
sales, an Indication
building.
·
her 22-year-old son, who lived
for this.shooting."
that
the
economy
Is not heading
Bob Henley, manager of the
But a spokesman for · the with the couple.
toward
a
recession,
the Com.postal station 40 miles north of American Postal Workers Union
"There was some ln~reased
said
Friday.
.lnerce
Department
San Diego, said Taylor "pointed said such lncfdents have Inparanoia recently because of
As
someeconomistshadantlcl·
some kind of trouble with their
son, but It was -nothing out of the paled, therewasastrongupward
revision to the June retail sales
ordinary," Jlmno said.·
estimates, due to responses from
When·
pollee
went
to
Taylor's
.
.
home, they found his wife dead in additional retailers, to an 0.8
her nightclothes, shot twice In the percent advance. Last month,
head. Police said the stepson was the Commerce Deparlment had
The Gallla·Melgs Post of the State Highway Patrol
not home when his mother was reported a 0.1 percent drop In
June sales.
Investigated a car-horse accident at 1:15 a.m. this morning on
shot.
Adjusted for seasonal factors,
SR. 684, 1.2 miles south ·of the Meigs-Athens County line. The
Neighbors told reporters the
July
. retail sales were $143.7
driver was injured .
.family lived quietly and that
bUIIon,
6 percent above their July
The patrol said a 1983 Chevrolet Chevette driven by Terry L. ·
Taylor seemed to enjoy his job.
1988
level.
Payne, 21, Pomeroy, struck a horse· owned by David Riggs of
. "He worked for the post office
Potneroy. Damage .was minor to the car. Troopers said the
'27 years so J:!e musi have liked · Total retail sales, excluding horse was not Injured.
11," said Barbara Blnto, who automobiles.. were up to $112
Payne suffered a minor injury and was taken to. Veterans
lived next door to the ' Taylors bUIIon, a 0.4 percent 'dyance,
with durable goods - big ticket
~emorlal Hospital by car.
since 1986.
items
lasting three years or more
Blnto said the .couple' never
· - registering a strong 1.7 per·
argued.
.
"John liked to take c~re Of the cent growth to $54.6 billion.
Automobile dealers ruJii up 2. 7
lawn and _she usually 'I'Orked In
, Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
percent
more than last month,
the house, " she said. "lie called
responded to three calls on Thursday.
for
'
a
total
Of $31.7 b!Uion. This
her 'Poops !e.' I think they really
At 12:49 p.m. the PJ)meroy unit went to West Main for Pau\.,.
was
the
dealers'
best month; In
were In love."
i
Saunders who was transported to Veterans Memorial.
.
terms
of
a
percentage
Increase,
Postal Service spokesman Ken
The Middleport unit at 6: J~ p.m. was called to Stories Run
since
a
7
percent
percent
October
Boyd said Taylor had no record
Road for Maycle Searles who was taken to Pleasant Valley
1988,
the
Commeree
Department
of conflicts with his supervisors,
Hospital, and at 11: 55 p.m. the Tuppers Plains u111t responded to
had been named "Employee of said.
a call on Keebaueh Follrod Road In which RObert McDaniel was
Amolli other durable goods,
the Quarter" several ~mes and ·
·
·
transported to Veterans.
was under conslderatlbn for the . building materials and h11rdware
sale$ climbed 0.6 percent; to $7.7
Continued on page 10
.

second half of the year.
prices rose 2.5 percent after
"Price increases earlier this fa!Ung 3.8 percent in June.
Prices also rose for fish, pasta,
year were too aggressive and
now were getting some rollbacks soft-drinks, dairy products ,bakand moderation," said Don Ra- ery products, roasted coffee,
tajczak, director of the Eco· · milled rice, shortening and cook·
nomic Forecasting Center at lng oils.
Georgia State University in
- Among products that were less
expensive were pork, eggs, proAtlanta.
.
Energy prices, which fell 3 cessed turkeys, processed
percent during the month, were chickens and fresh vegetables.
the major contributor to the drop · In 'non-food categories, prices
In the Index. Food prices were up rose for glassware, flatware,
a slight 0.1 percent.
gold jewelry, books and textile
Excluding food and energy home · furnishings and feU for
prices, which are volatlle and tobacco products, children's clooften discounted by economists, thing and soaps and detergents.
The department said that the
the wholesale Inflation rate was
price of Intermediate goods fell
down 0.2 percent for July .
· Passenger car 'prices fell an 0.2 j,ercent due to a 1.3 percent
unexpectedly high 1.9 percent decline In energy goods . Crude
during July as automakers be- goods prices fell2 percentlnJune
gan offering end-of-the-model-' despite ·an Increase In crude
year discounts earller than energy prices.
Capital equipment costs were
usual.
Breaking out the report, prices unchanged during July as a drop
for finished consumer goods fell In motor vehicle prices was offset
0.6 percent during July atter a0.4 by moderate Increases In other
eqUipment.
percent June decrease.
Among foods, beef an_d veal

'

.

'XLT LARIAT'
#9829

WASHINGTON (UPI)
Lower au tomoblle and energy
prices drove wholesale prices
down 0.4 percent in July, the
second consecu tlve monthly decline and a sign that consumers
will get a . break Ia ter thIs year,
the government reported Friday.
The dr-op In the Labor Depart·
ment's Producer Price Index for
Finished Goods, a harbinger of
future consumer prices, was the
largest one-month dip in whole·
sale Inflation sirice·a 0.8 percent
decline in July 1986.
It follows a 0.1 percent dip lp
June and marks the first back-to·
back .monthly drop in the Index
since early 1986. ·
So far this · year, wholesale
prices have climbed at a rela·
tlvely high 5.7 percent annual
rate.
But _analysts said the· repor.t
shows that inflation, which rose
sharply in the first half of the
year under the pressure of
sharply higher food and energy
prices, has eased considerably
and should be moderate In the

•

.

.

Indicted were John Coffma"ri,'
62, Lonnie Ross, Donna Lee"
Ross, Mike Henry, James E.
Sellers, Jr., 37, and Crystal Irene
Sellers, all of Portland. Cultivating marijuana Is a fourth degree
felony charge and if convicted
they could be sentenced to up to

· 18 months In jails and ordered to

pay a $2,500 fine.
Prosecutlng Attorney Story
said he also will seek forfeitures
of real estate or personal property used by the' Indicted people
In connection with trafficking In
drugs.

T'WO MeJgs
• countJans
• •
ed
b
d
sentenc
·y J•U eOie
·

-

.

Two Meigs County men have County Prosecuting Attorney
been sentenced to serve six Steven L. Story .
months in prison by the Meigs
In addition to the jail term,
County Common Pleas Court Shuler was ordered to pay for
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill.
'funeral expenses of the victim,
Martin A. Shuler, Rulland, was . his driver's license was suscharged with vehicular homicide pended for one year and he was
and Sherman A. Artrip was ordered to pay court costs .
charged with receiving stolen
Shuler has been granted a slay
property.
in his sentence until Aug. 18. His
Shuler had entered a guilty wife is expecting to gtve birth
·
plea to the-charge July 11, and the ' before that date.
Artrip had his sentence· sus·
sentencing was ordered after a
pre-sentence Investigation was pended to 30 days and Since he
completed by the Adult Proba· had already served that time he
Uon and . Parole Authority as was released. He also was placed
required by law and ordered by on three years probation and
Judge"Crow, according to Meigs ordered to·pay court cos.ts .

Retail sales up 0.9 percent in-July

....

_____
elBa

IIICl 1?11111, 4 ql ... 5 . . . .-.,,

WAS
'5995

.

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

1985 FORD TEMPO

......

--. ......

WAS
. $4995

B~ONCO

II

Stock 19302t, 4 whtel drive, 8 cyl, flet air, pt, pb, AMifM radio,
ttereo tape, bucket 111ft, gauges.
·. -

WAS.

•lila

.1988 CHEVY C-15 .

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

lllct'-1, I~- •11 1M1. 111 ton

•al!la

1916 POtiTifiC
- PARISIEHHE

!.':.'*.::::::~~D..':"'·
WAS
$8495
''

·l~la

- --....

1987 DODGE 150

=-·--·..,.~...
""'
WAS
$9995

Local news briefs--

1~2 FORD F-100

'.

StockM0288, 71,000"tmlltt, V-8tng,1121Dnpldcup,tj~ngwldl
bed, rearetep bumblr, gaugtt.
-

WAS

1tl4 FORD F-150
t=.'=:o.:%~~.:;,ra"

•••

.,••

Driver hurt in car, horse mishap

Squads respond to three calls

...

..

billion. Furniture and equipment
Food stores sales climbed 0.6
stores saw their sales decllne 0.3 percent during July, to $29.7
percent,ln July, to $8.4 l!lllion.
billion.
Non-durable goods sales InGasoline service stations recreased 0.4 percent In July, to ·celpts were flat at $9.4 billion.
$89.2 billion, with advances In all
Apparel and accesory stores·,
sectors.
suffered a 1.5 percent loss and ·
General merchandise stores rung up $7.3 billion.
sales grew 0.5 percent, to $16.2
E.a ting and drinking places, a
b!Uion, with department stores gauge of consumer feeling, regis·
registering a 0.9 percent hike to tered a 1.2 percent increase in
$13.6 billion.
receipts, to $13.9 billion.

Lumberjacks display
talent at state fair
i

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -At
an age when most other men are
either dead or wish they were,
74-year-old Hank Peters· just
keeps on chopping logs.
Peters and his troop of five
other sawyers, choppers, ax ·
throwers, log-rollers and canoejousters have been putting on one,
of the Ohio State Fair's most
popular shows for the past 10
years.
It's wild and wet excitement. It
wears you Qut just watching the
standing block chop, the .fierce .
two--man crosscut saw race and
the underhand block chop, These

boys go through more wQod in a
single show than could a ton of
termites.
And at the center of it all Is
Hank himself, all 5-foot-11 and
225 pounds of him. In his 56th
year of putting on lumberjack
shows, Peters stU! has the clear,
gray eyes of a young man and
·
he's as strong as an ox.
"I never drank much," Peters
said Thursday In explaining how
he can stU! wield a 5-pound ax·
and chain saw at an are when '
other men are spending moat
their time sawllli lop of a
different kind.

of

/

I

'-',

Two secret indictments among
,
1,~- re_tUrJ1~dw. by__grartd jury

24,0857

1989 FORD F- 159 4 X 2

Mostly cloudy tonight.
Chance- of rain 30 percent.
Saturday, highs near 80.
Chance of rain 40 percent.

5923

. •3,000oaO

Pomeroy woman
fined on 4. charges
Joseph Enriquez, Pomeroy,
was fined on four charges when
she appeared Tuesday night In
· the court .of Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler.
. She was fined $63 and costs on
·each of three charges, s()uealing
.tires, failure to display ·ucense
'tags, and no operator's license,
·and $375 and costs on. a charge of
OWl.
- Others fined In the court were
·Carol L. Barry, Marietta, $43and
:costs, assured clear distance;
·Kurtis Lemley, Pomeroy, $63
and costs, operating under suspension; Karrell Lemley, Pomeroy, $63 and costs, operating
under suspension; Trudy Swartz,
'Middleport, $50 and costs, no
financial responsibility; and
Sherr! Butcher, Pomeroy, $25
and costs, failure to appear.
Forfeiting bonds were Dale E.
Wilfong, Tuppers Plains, $63,
operating under suspension;
Mark C. Warner, Pomeroy, $375.,
DWI ; Paul E. Wilson, Pomeroy,·
$63 operating under suspension;
Blair- Windon, Pomeroy, $43, •
assured clear distance; Thomas
M. Stover, Jr., Pomeroy, $43,
illegal left turn; Karin Young,
Long Bottom, illegal lett turn,
$43; Carolyn Nelson, Point Plea·
sant, $43, Illegal left turn; and
i:..arry E - Kline. Pomeroy, $63,
operating under s.uspens!on.

Ohio.LO~tery

Pomeroy fireman have 9 July calls

miles east of Fallon, where 2
Inches of marbie-slzed hail covered the ground.

Year End Sale

. The second low-cost cholesterol screening program has
been scheduled by the Meigs
County Health Department.
The screenings will be held on
Friday, Aug. 25, and Monday,
Aug. 28, from 8: 30 a.m. to 3: 30
·· p.m. ; and on Tuesday and
.. Wednll$day, Aug. 29 and 30, from
11 a.m. to 6:30 p.ll). the depart·
ment will be conducting finger, stick cholesterol screenings. The
· cost will be $5 per test and only
.-_ total blood cholesterol will be
~ determined.
· . Due to the necessary cost
· containments, the department
can only perform 425 tests during
the screening days. However, the
deP~I:tment Is tit the process of
_ P,urchaslng a cholesterol screen· ·
· illg machine and the plan Is to
. Offer re-testing on an · on-going ,
: basis every three months.
·. Because otthe limited amount ·'
of testing which can be per·
formed, residents are encour·
aged to make appointments only
If they have never had a cholesterol test or If their readlnr was
abQve 200 at the last test. For
·those with tests results within
nonnal limits, the rechecking
can be completed later this year.
Appointments are now being
.taken at 992-6626, 9 to 11 a.m. and
1 to 3 p.m. Monday through
-Friday. The screening will be
.done at the Senior Citizen's
Center.
·• As explained -by Norma
Torres, R.N., nursing director,
n;~ore tlian half of aif'Amerlcans
have blood cholesterol levels
high enough to be be at risk for
. heart disease. The American
Heart Association recommends
being screened for cholesterol. If
. the level Is 200, then a change In
food Is recommended with retest.
lng in another three months. If
the level Is 200-239, the person is
considered border llne high rtsk,
If It is 240or above, high risk for
heart disease, the nursilfg director explained.
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Commentary

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Dravecky's comeback beats odds, Reds

Page- 2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio
Friday. Auguet 11-, ·1989

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The Daily Sentln~f Speaking out in South Africa d8ngerous
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

,

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb

Bm;9 rn.....,_""T'",,.,;.._=·-

'l!v

ROBJ;R'l' L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General (Wanager

LE'rl'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. Tbey ....,ld he Ifill tlwl300
words lone. AD letters are oubJed lo edit Inc and mulll he slped wllh
•arne, addreos and telepbene number. No uaalped letlero wm bo pblloloed. Let&amp;erolbould he In pod tute, addreealn1laaueo, not pet"IIOIIIIIJ.

u....

U.S. should back
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disbanding Contras
By LEON DANIEL
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON - The United States should support the plan of
Central America' s five presidents to disband the Contras and end the
,
Nicaraguan civil war.
Many American conservatives will bitterly oppose the accord
reached Monday In Tela, Honduras, against U.S. opposition. But the
poUcy of bankroUing the Nicaraguan rebels has been a dismal failure.
The United States will find Itself Isolated from Its Central American
neighbors If It fails to back their plan to disband rebel camps In
southern Honduras by Dec. 8.
That deadline would fall 90 days after International monitors are
posted In the jungle to oversee compliance and prohll;lll raids across
the border.
Supporting the pact would be a difficult but correct . course for
President Bush, whose administration has contended the Contras
must remain In the field until Nicaraguan elections_promised for next
Feb. 25.
But even Nicaraguan opposition groups, Including democratic
parties tha t favor good relations with the United States, joined the
Sandlnlsta government in calling for disbanding the Contras before
.
the voting.
Even Honduras, heavily dependent on the United States for aid,
supported the early demobilization of the rebels.
Chances are slim that Congress wouldrenewnon·milltary aid to the
Contras when It expires In November.
A look at the historical record make make II easier for Bush to
re ject once and for all a milita ry solution and support the Tela pact.
After the Sandlnlstas overthrew U.S.·backed Nicaraguan dictator
Anataslo Somoza, the Reagan administration did all it could to oust
·
·
them.
It even hatched the notorious Iran-Contra scheme to divert
proceeds from an arms-for -hostages deal to the rebels. Reagan
administration operatives involved In those bizarre shenanigans !jed
to Congress and the American people.
As vice president, Bush was a strong supporter of mUitary aid for
the rebels Reagan liked to call freedom fighters.
But in the spring the new Bush administration replaced the Reagan .
team' s falled Nicaragua policy with a push for what appeared to be a
poUtlcal rather than a mllltary solution.
It reduced funding for the Miami-based Contra propagandists to
encourage them to go home and participate In the promised elections.
Now the Bush administration wisely has challenged the Sandlnista
regime to guarantee the safety of Contras retuning home under the
new pact. It has said It does not Intend to resettle the Contras In the
United States.
The United States has assured Honduras the Contras are "our
responsibility" but It is unclear what will happen if they refuse to go
home.,.
The ultimate destination for many of the rebels Is likely to be
Miami, a city already afflicted with an unwanted Influx of
Nicar aguans.
Reagan, In drumming liP support for the Contras, once hinted
darkly tha t Sandinlsta hordes threatened Harlingen, Texas.
Since Miami does not want them, perhaps theContras could set up a
defensive perimeter around Harlingen.
·

Letters to the editor
Support sought
Dear Editor :
Hopefully this article wUl genera te some support and enthusiasm among all who read it. I'm
writing on behalf of the Southern
Local School District Boosters
Club.
In the past couple of years,
we've all heard of the financial
problems co ncerning the Meigs
Local · Schools and also the
Eastern Local Schools. My ha t
goes off to . both of t hese school
districts. Meigs has apparently
got ten back on solid gr ound,
Eastern is still struggling but has
certainly accomplished a great
deal. I'm sure Its been a hard
struggle and there are still a lot of
obstacles down the road, but they
can certainly be proud of their
accomplishments.
Now that I've got you half-way
Interested, you're probably be·
ginning to wonder what' s coming
next.
Southern Local School District
has basically gotten along well
through the years, but we too are
now experiencing some budget
problems. The school board have
tried to ease the financial strain
In several areas, many of them
affecting a variety of job classlfi·
cations In t he sys tem.
These problems as explained
to me come from high operating
expenses , cr eated by Increasing
prices on supplies and . aging
school buildings along with de·
creasing tax dollars !rom the
Racine Hydro-Electric Plant.
Hopefully these financial problems are femp6rary . and a
permanent solution c;an be found.
We the Boosters Club at Southern
Local have been asked to raise
money to help pay the salaries of
approximately 14 coaching posl·
lions In tbe .cllstrlct. We at first
dldn' t think It was at all possible
to raise the amount of ' money
necessary, especially In this day

p.

and "time when It seems like
there's always someone knocking on your door and either
asking or at times demanding a
hand out. We, the boosters talked
with the school board expressing
of doubts.
They In turn Informed us that
our help was desperately needed
or numerous athletic functions
would simply be eliminated,
namely all junior high sports. all
assistant coaches at high school
level in addition to the freshmen
and reserve coaching positions.
We believe that studies are the
most Important function In the
educational system, and that a
properly manageed athletic program Is also essentiaL
So enough sermon and now
down to the basics. We · the
boosters are· going to go for It,
we' re going to get off our tails
and do some work. We'regolngto
raise the needed funds and keep
the athletic program alive, how·
ever we're small In nu111ber and
we need you to help us. II can be a
fun and rewarding, yes reward·
'ing experience. We don't plan on
knocking on doors or begging or
asking for any cry handouts. You
can help by helping yourself. We
are organizing several fun· ah'd
pleasureable events. Keep an eye
out for these events In the
upcoming weeks In the Sentinel.
Among them: Chicken Bar·B·
Q, Aug. 13, Racine Fire Dept.
Golf Tournament, Aug. 23
,. Auction (high school)o Sept.
Car show, Sept.
Old fashion type dinners.
,concerning the upcoming Auctlon, were looking for donated
items get rid of ihat old bicycle or
coonskin hat! We'll even pick
Items up there will also be
consignment Items, It's a good
chance to help us and help
yourself.
Last, but not least, concerned

,

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Jack Anderson

WASHINGTON - sOuth AfriCa

" Sutter the Chllw:en," directed
wbat kind of action? 'rite
by Nicholas Claxton; wereplcked .government pr oduced Its own
the recent prison tete-ii· tete up by the Sou.th African Broad· documentary refuting all the
between President P.W. Botha ·casting Corp. Mhlawull des· allegations and loc ke d up ·Mar ch she was released on $1,000
ball. She Is awaltln'g trial and has
and Nelson Mandela. The black crlbed ,In ,detail seeing children . Mhlawull.
.
gone
Into hiding again.
leader, In prison for more than 25 tear-gassed to death while South
Alayne Reesberg, a spokeswoClaxton
said he finds It " mor e
years, hosted the kingpin of the Afr ican pollee stood by. Now she man for the South African
t!lan
a
coincidence"
that Mhlawhite apartheid establishment, faces charges · ot ter rorism and Embassy In WashlnA'ton, D.C.,
wull
was
shot
after
the.jlocumen·.
and&lt;lt could be the beginning of a . furthering the alms of the Atrl·
told us that her government
tat'Y was shown In South Africa.
healing.
· . .
can Natlonal Con~~~:ess; . ·
thinks the .children In the flln.l
Claxton
has been banned from ,
In the documentary; Mhlawull were coerced Into lying. "It was a
But Botha could make the
the
country
since the end of last
rounds of South African prisons said she used to be afraid that her clear fraud," she said. Reesberg
for a long time and stU! not heal children would grow up to would not comment' on Mhlawu· year.
In the United States, the
all the wounds. For every Nelson become victims of violence. But ll's case while It Is pending.
Three weeks after the docu· Congressional Human Rights
Mandela, there are a dozen after seeing two children, a
Vellswa Mhlawuils.
4-year-old and a 3-month·old, mentary was shown In South Caucus has been following MhlaMhlawull Is a bli1ck journalist tear-gassed to death, " you jus't · Africa, Mhlawull was shot In the wuli's pllglit and has wtltten to
who cared .enough about black say that you are lucky your face by an unidentified assailant. · the South African gover~ent on
her 'behalf.
She lost an eye.
children to worry aloud abOut children are still alive."
If Mhlawull is convicted, she
their future. Because she did that
Mhlawull related her stories on
She went Into hldllig, but two .
could
be sentenced to life In
In South Africa, she was shot In television without emotion, Clax·
months later, In October 1988, she
the face, arrested and jailed ton told our reporter Ken Roger· _was arrested and charged with prison - all beCJiUSe --.:;;.;::='=·o:....,..
without a trial.
son. But because she was v~al .-terrorism and ald1n11: the ANC , In for children.
•. .
The 35-year-old mother of two and the stories clem;ly came
··
.J
works . for a community news- from the heart, the South African
m~ ht~s·
paper In Cape Town called government was plque(J.
"Grassroots." She made . the
Along with Mhlawull's polg·
·
By United Press lftternl&amp;tlonal
· '
·
mistake of openly talking about nant stories, the film showed
Today Is Friday, Aug ..ll, the 223rd day of 1989 with 142 to follow .
the hardships of children In South Interviews with children who
Africa . Mhlawull has lived claimed they had been tortured
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its full phase.
The morning star Is Jupiter.
through the nightmare of apar· In detention. Religious and com·
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
!held and shared her experiences munlty leaders were also Inter·
Those born on this day are under the sign of Leo. They Include
In a British television documen· viewed, along with parents,
author Robert Ingersoll In 1833, songwriter Carrie Jacobs Bond (" I · ,
tary on human rights and doctors and lawyers. The governLove You Truly") In 1862, art coUector Joseph H!rshhor11 In 1899, . '
children.
'
ment vowed to Investigate each
' actor Lloyd !'lolan In 1902,
·
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Clips from the documentary, alle~tatlon and take action.
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Is buzzing with speculation about

Today' .

,. ory

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Comlilon ·sense approach ·to social ·ills.

Americans are a generous
people and we have always
shown a willingness to reach out
and help those less fortunate. For
this reason, numerous federal
programs have been created·
over the years that are Intended
to help people In need. However,
whl)e these programs are well
Intentioned, they usually fall far
short of the mark. The problem Is
that when the federal govern·
ment creates a new program to
help someone, It often ends up
creating a new federal bureau·
cracy that absorbs tax dollars
but does little to help those It was
Intended to help. However, there
Is another way for the government to help people In need ..
Across the country there are
already countless volunteer ser·
vice organizations In place that
are , helping people In a very
direct fashion, and these orpnl·
zatlons can often succeed where
the federal government cannot.
Unfortunately, volunteer service
organizations often find that
their resources are strained and
that there Is always more work to
be done than volunteers to do II. ·
For this reason, President Bush
has asked Congress to channel
federal resourc'es Into a new
effort to promote volunteer
service.
•
Unlike past federal efforts to
help those In need which tended
to duplicate private volunteer
efforts, the President's plan Is
Intended to work with existing
private volunteer organizations
to help them better the jobs that
they already do so well. At the
centerpiece of the President's
plan Is a new "Points of Light
Initiative Foundation" to promote volunteer service. Part of
the foundation·~ work would be to
Identify existing successful volunteer service programS and to
match would-be volunteers with
these programs through a na·
tiona! telephOne hotllne network.
The foundation's work would be ·
to identify existing successful
volunteer service programs and
to match would·be volunteers
with these programs through a
national telephone hotllne net·
work. He foundation would also
work with corporations, unions
and &lt;&gt;ther groups to encourage
them to donate the services of
their employees to promote volunteer efforts.
Furthermore, the pr ogram
would seek to recognize and
award successful volunteer ef·
forts 'and It would work to aid In ·
the development of a new generation of community leaders. The ,
Foundation Itself would be established In part on volunteer
principles. While one-half of Its
expected $50 million budget

would come from the federal
government, the rest would be
raised through private
donations.
Y\'hen the President released .
his proposals earlier this '
summer, they were met with a
warm .reception on Capitol Hill
where volunteer service has long
had strong appeal. In fact,
numerous bills pertaining to
,v olunteer serylce have· been'
Introduced In this session of
Congress. These bills areprlmar·
ily based upon , either existing
iederal volunteer service programs such as Volunteers In
Service To Amerjca. (VISTA) or
on the creatiOn of entirely new
federal programs. Among the
new programs that !lave been ·
Public Notice

proposed Is a school-based program that would encourage
students to volunteer In the
community and encourage
adults to volunteer to work in
elementary and · secondary
schools and share their expertise
with students. A new·Conserva·.
tlon Corps program \Omaintain
and Improve public laJJds has
also· been proposed. 'In addition,
some of these proposals Include
provisions to provide stipends for
volunteers, or education and
housing benefits:
However, In discussing volun·
leer service Congress must take
care to ensure that It does not
merely create a costly new
federal bureaucracy to duplicate
prlva te efforts or that It does not

Public Notice

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GREAT COMEBACK - Giants pitcher Dave Dravecky Is
jubilant after striking out Reda plneh hitter Ron Oeslet In tile
eighth lnalng of Thursday's game In San Francl!ICO. Draveeky's
111"111 start of the season was a success, as the Giants edged the Reds
4-3. (UPI)

Clarence Miller
turn the Idea of volunteer service
Into a new federal jobs program.
That Is why ,In my judgment, the
President's program has such
merit. It would work with existIng volunteer organizations to
help them do thefr jobs better,
not create a new set of federal
programs to compete with those
efforts. In my opinion, the
President's proposals represent
a common sense approach to
addressing and ameliorating
many of the social problems that
currently face us as a nation, and
I hope Congress will heed the
President's call for placing the
emphasis for such volunteer
assistance on private not public
organizations.

Public Notice

Public N ~ice

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Scoreboard ...
Major8

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FrUettN lt..C••f.1), lt: P p.m.

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AMERICAN tEAGUE

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1'1a.,1: 11 p.m.
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PW:IIIhlll'l'• at Onel.-d, 7:'• p.m.
Dallu a1 LA RMI.r., I p.m.

lh!ti-oll II Texu, nlpa
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NATIONAL LEAGUE
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w...

port, Moiga County, Ohio,
erly edge of Townohlp Road \
c;ounty: Moigo
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
TRACT. TWO: Situated in 627 ondluolng iron pipOI
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Boord of Education of The following were recei- the State of Ohio. County of laat) at 1 . 14 taar of 74.22 '
the Meigo Locol School Disved/ prepored by the Ohio Wuhington• . Townohip of ,,.., ond where an Iron pipe ;
trict dHir• to receive
Environmental Protection Adamo, allotment of Cato lfound(ln the 111tarly Hno of •
. .led bldo lor tho follow·
IOEPA) leat woek. Creek oftha Donation Tract. a0.14acratractbeeraNonh "
Ageney
ing:
Effective dot01 of final oc· 22 acre lot 116, and being 77 deg. 34"20" Wnt • dil· ~
1 . Fleet lnaurance
tions
and iuuance dat• of more particularly bounded tance of 26.841eet; tllence •
2. Gatoline and Oil ProSouth 84deg. 46' Eeotodil· '
proi&gt;ooed -iono end of and Clirecrlbed u followo:
ducta
PARCEL 1: Co111mtndng tance of 60.00 feet to the ~
draft
actiono
are
atoted.
Fl·
In order to be con1iderd,
•
nal ectiono miV be oppNied, at on Iron pipelfound) ip the piece of beginning.
all aoeled biola ohtll be reContaining 0.098 acree.
In
writing, within 30 deyo of -terly lint ,of Morkat
ceived in the TreMurer' a OfSurvey and dMcription by I
the d..o of thio notice. to the Strirat in the 1outherly edge
fice, 320 Eut Moin Street.
Environmental Board of Re· of Townohip Rood 627, uld C. S. Correll. R,. Sur, :
Pomaroy, Ohio. onorbeforo view. Rm. 300. 238 E, pipe being at the northe•· #8070 and T. W. ulhka. •
12:0,0 o'clock Nooo on T-n St.. Columbuo. Oh,, ,tarly -cornar of a 0.113 aero Rag. Sur. ll80971n Novem·
TuMday, Auguot 111. 1989.
43216. Notice ofany appNI tract owned by the grantor ber, 1977.
Tho Board of Education
PARCEL Ill: Commencing •
oholl be filed with the direc· and recorded in Volume
the right to accept
403. Page408. oftheWMh- at an, iron pipe (found) in the '
tor
within
3
doyo.
Propolled
or reject any and all bids. ·
octiono wHibecome finol un· ington County Recordo; wMterly Hne of Market Jj
Jane Fry. Treasurer .1011 o written odjudlceiion thence North 84 dog. 46" Street in the oouthlrly edge ,•
MeigaLocal School Oiotrict . hearing requ•t ia submitted Wat, puolng on iron pipe of Townohip Rood 527. oeid
320 Eaot Main Street ·
within 30 diVa of the io· (foundl at a dlotance of pipe baing the northtMterly ~
P. ·O. Box 272
88.00 ' - · • total dlotonce corner of • 0.113 acre tl'llct
•~ance dlte:·or the director
Pomeroy, Ohio 45189
of 129,00 feet to the north· owned by the grantor andrerwioM/
withdrowa
·tile
pro·
(8) 7 , 11, 14, 3tc
pOMCI action. Any peroon west corner of a 0 .106 acre corded in Volume 403, Page :
may eubmit comment a and- tract conveyed by the gran- 408. of . the Wuhington •
/or a meeting regarding any tor to Norman Gilmore end County Recordo: tllen.. •
draft action within 30 deyo recorded in Volume 488. North 64 deg, 46' 00" ~
of the d..e incicated. "Ac- Pogo 306 of tho Wuhlngton Weet. pa11inQ an iron pipe
Public Notice
tion ... 11 uHd above doet County Racordo .,d being (found) at o dlatance of
not Include receipt of a veri~ the True Place of Beginning 68.00 feet .. a total dlatan"" '
IN THE
lied complaint. If olgnlllcant of the tract of lend hereinaf. of229.00ioettoopointand :
COMMON PLEAS COURT
public inter•t exists, a pub- tor d01cribed: thence South being the True Pleca of Be· •
OF
lic mMting miV be held, AI 26 dog. 16" Welt, a di1tonce ginninA: th.,ce South 25 :
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
,
to any action. including re- of 80.00 feat. more or leoo, dog . 15' 00" Welt pooolnQ
TRUSTEES OF
ceipt of varlfied complllinto. to the low water m•k the Iron pip• ·tlat), at 7 .78 feet •
CARLETON CHURCH.
any person may obtain no- Muoklngum River. r&gt;Uoing and 88.B8 feet, • total dlo·
Plointlffo tice of funher action•. 1nd Iron plpee 1ot at 10.00 and tance of 82.00 feet to the
- vs.- .
additional information. Un- 88.4'? foot; thence North 70 , low water mark of the Mu•
TRUSTEES OF SAINT
IOio otherwioo provided In · deg, 28' Woot, along tho ldn~m River; tllence North
JAMES PROTESTANT
notice of particular ectiono. meanders of the low water 74 dig. 28' 20'" W01t. along
EPISCOPAL CHURCH ,
ell communication• 811811 be mark of the river, a dlatance the River. a dlotonce of '
Oeleridanto lont to:
Haering Clark. of &amp;0.26 feet to a point; 28.88 firat to the Southe01· •
CASE NO. 89-CV-189
OEPA. P.O. Box 1049. Col· thence North 25 dog. 1&amp;' tarly coon or of a 0. 141 acre :
NOTICE BY
umbua. OH . 43288-0149 Eaat ·• diatance of 86,00 tract: thence North 27 dag. 1
PUBLICATION
to • point 00" 00"' Eeot. poulng on
Ph . (8141 644·2116. Con- feet, more or
TO : TN- of Stint oult ORC Chap. 3746 end in the ooutherly . edge of iron pipe (found] at a dil·
Jam• Prot- Epilcopal OAC Chapo. 3746·47 end Townohip Rood 627 and tanca of 81.00 feet. a total
Chuoch. whoae lest known 3746· &amp; lor requlrom-o.
p01aing Iron pipe (lot) at dlatanco of 88. 30 feat to the
Mlclr•a il uMnown; you ere
Final approvol of Plano 18.47 feet and 75.17 feet: northeaatorly corner of oeld
hereby notified that you hove 1111d &amp;pocltlcationo: Ciy of thence South 84 deg, 4&amp;" 0 .141 aero troctJ thenoo · '
................ Delendintln Chillicothe Woblr T1'111tment - t . along the edge of ollid South 57 deg . 00' 00" Ea1t
a legal
octlon entkled Plant, Verioue Townehipe, Townohip R,.d. o di1tonce o diotance ol 10.27 feet:
T N - of c.....on Church. Ohio. Effective Date Aug, 2. of 50.00 feet to the point of "*too South 84 dog. 46" 00"'
Plalntlfla. ... T N - of 1SIB9.
beginning.
Euta dilblnce of 16.57 feat •
Stint Jam• P r o t - EpioContaining 0.095 aoru. to the pleea of beginning.
Thlo final octlon not prec·
copal Church. Oeflllldanto. odld by propoud action and
Survey and doocripticin by
Containing 0:0113 acreo, •
Thlo action ............. loopp....a.letoEBR. 'ludgo C . S. Correll, R,. Sur.
Survey end P•cription by '
oianed caoe number 89·CV· Maneg-ent Plan lor lend 118070 'and T, W. ulhka. C. S. Coorell, Rag, Sur.
189 .. .d Ia pending In the application of lline oludgo · Reg. Sur. 118097in Novtm· 118070 and-T. W. Suohko, R.
Court of Common Pl.- of from the City of Chillicothe ber, 1977.
•
S. 118097 in February 1978.
Melgo County. Ohio. In Po- Wttar TrNtment Plant to
PARCEL II: Commencing
RE$ERVING unto the
meroy, Otlio, 46789.
Agricultiorol and Coal Mine .. an iron pipelfound) In the · Grantor• .hla hlir1 end ••·
The objact of thlo com. lllllola.
WMtlrly Hno of Markat ligna, e;n eMement end
plaint lo to quiet title to roal .1 8111. 1tc
Strest in the ooutllerly edgo rlghto of way. fiftun 11 til
Mttto by adverae
of Townohlp Road 1127, uid feet In width along the w•·
olon. and the proyer Ia to
pipe being at tho northe... terly olola of the above de·
Public Notice
terly corner of 1 0.1 1 3 aero ocrlbed 0.0113 acre tract. ox·
- - - -.,.-- - ' - - - - - - 1 forlld- oil int-t pur·
portedly owned by 'fGU and
tract owned by the grantor tending from the townohlp
people of Southern local, lnclud· for aoma.
NOTICE OF SALE
and riiCOI'olad In Volume roed to the Muoitdngum
You are required to onlng coaches, whose positions
By virtue of on Order of 403, P1ga 408 ofthe WMh- River. Bold
to be
thlo Complaint within Sole laoued out of the Com- ington County Recorola; u - lnr lngr"l •d egrMa
we're fighting for, we need help
28 deyo oflar the lest date of mon PI- , Court of Maigo thence North 84. clog, 46" from tho Grantor' 1 remain· ·'
with these events, lets break out publication
of thlo notice, County. Ohio, In the - • of 00" WMt, Pltlllng on Iron lng land to llid river for the
the old school spirit, don't .dye , Whlcll wllbe publlahed onoe H...,• National lank. R•· pipe (found) at tho north- u•. benefit. and onjoymlflt
hour hair purple and gold, but' •....., for obi (Siauc_...,. cine, Ohio. Plaintiff, egllinot -orly corner of aald of aald 'rlver.
RESERVING to the Gran · ' '
lets get the ball rolling, attend the ........ The tat publication William W. Horrlo •d VIckie 0.113 acre tract at a dlawillie mode on the 11tllday K. Hllrrla, .. al., Det.ndan,._
tonaa of 8B.OO 1111, a - 1 tor the oil and g01 rlghto
boosters meetings, I(Oice your ' of loptambar, 1888, end upon • )udlm•t therein dlatanaa
of 178 feet to a ,underlying the above de· ,
opinion, we accept Ideas and the 28 day1 lnr • - wAI roncllo a~~. being C.o No. pqint and being 1111 True ocrlbod tlvM tracto.
••
even criticism.
oomm- on that elate.
18·CV·348 In uld Court. t
Plioce of Beginning: th1111aa
Sold Tract One woo •P· '· '
In - • of your failure to wll offer for uta. at the South 21 deg. 1I' 0" W•ta prlli1ed at 14,000.00.
Football season Is upon us,
front donr of the Couit dlatonce of 11.00 fHI. more
Sold Tract T- w.. ep· " •
come sample one of our fish tall •
or otherwiN
- · Hou• In l'llm•oy. Mal go
pond
.. required
IIi... Ohio
or l01o. tn the low _ . . prllled at 111.1100.00,
••
sandwiches and enjay yourself. llulol of Civl Pra HJwe, County, Ohio. on the 1 lth mark of the Muoldngum Term1 of lola: Ctoh.
,
Save some wear and tear on that Judg....,. by default d be ""' of lltottmbar, 1 989 .. River end pooHig Iron plflll
Real
ci8nnot be oold • '
couch. Leta look alive! Let's .............. .,..,lnrtho 10:00 o'aln«* A.M. the fDI • Ceatl .. 8 .83 feet end 18.83 for .... t11111 two-thlrola of
.., demllllded In the Com· lowing l•do end t fwt: thenoe North 81 deg . tlleappraioedVIIIUI.
work together and enjoy our· ...
"
plaint,
_ . , to-wit:
1g• Weat, olong the m..,.
Jem• M. loulaby, Sheriff ,,,,
selvea In the process! It can be
TIIACT
ONE:
·
deraofthel--morlt
Lorry I .......- .
of Malgo County, Ohio
Ciarlo of CourtL , 8ltUitod In the Yllogo of of the river, a dlotonco of CB) 11 , 18. 21, 3tc
fun!
Meigo County Common Mllldtellort. Meigo County,
110.01 feet to a point ....,aa
Thank you
''
Ptooo
Court
Dido.
htng
30
feet
oH
the
Nortll21olag. 11'Eeatoclo·
Larry D. Circle, V. Pretl. 18) 1 1. 18.21;
110rth .... ofLot48inle· tonoe ot82.00 feat. mora or More Logala on Page 8
Southern Local Boosters til 1, I, 1• • Ito
hllll' I Addition to Mld•e.. .
....~
I•L tn I point in,the Iouth-

I••·

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Ohio

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Bengals have no-huddle ·
offense waiting for Bills

in the fift h to tie the score 10·10.
Jeff Par rett. 9-4. went the fina l
three innings lor the victory.
Steve Wilson, · the fourth of six
Chicago pitchers, fell to 5-1 after
giVIng up three runs In the
seven th. P hiladelph ia collected
17 hits and the Cubs 18.
Padres 13, Astros 3
At San Diego, Greg Harris
allowed six hits over eight
Innings to Improve to 5·6 and
Tony Gwynn and Ga rry Tern·
pleton each collected three hits to
pace a 17-hlt P adre attack. The
. loss dropped the Astros three
games behind San Francisco In
the JilL West, Gwynn had lour •
RBI and Templeton hit his fourth
hOmer of the year. Chris J ames
added two hits to extend his
hitting streak to 14 games. Bob

F 0 rsch, 3-4, suffered the loss.
· Mets 5·6, Cardinals 1·4
At New York, Ron Darling,
10·9, pitched a seven-hitter and
Keith Miller drove home two
r uns on a ground -rule double In
the firs t game of a twl-nlght
double-header, Jose DeLeon, 11·
11, took the loss. In the nig htcap,
Kevin McReynolds blasted a
three-run home r un , his second of
the day, to highlight a six-run
sixth Inning and lead the Mets to
a sweep. ·Barry Lyons, Darryl
Strawber ry and Gar y Carter also
drove home runs In t he six th
Inning a s th e Mets sent 10 men to ·
the plate. J ohn Costello, 1-2, was
the loser. J eff Musselman, 2-2,
got the win with one Inning of
relief. Randy Myers earned his
17th save,

Lions host Browns in exhibition tilt
a dvantage of seams In zone
ROCHESTER, Mich. !UP l l The Detroit Lions will give th e defenses and put quickness
first p1,1blie showing of thei r new aga inst size in man-to-mans. The
ability of a quarterback to read .•
"Stretch" . offense. plus a new
quar terback to run It Saturday what the defense Is doing a nd get :•
the ball to an open receiver Is
nigh( when they host the Cleveparamount.
,.
land Browns in an NFL exhibl·
''I'd love for our offense to
tlon game.
Rookie Rodney P eete, whom perform and look good, " said
Detroit drafte!)in the sixth r ound Detroit coach Wayne Fontes,
from USC, will make his pro who bossed th e Lions the last five
debut running the Lions' version games of 1988 but Is In c harge of
of the 'Run and Shoot' four- his first exhibition game.
" It' s an offense In which
receiver offense,
Detroit will deploy lour receiv- quarterback and receivers have
ers, two Inside·and a P'li r outside, to be on same page, have to have
on every offensive down. They the same reads ," he said. "There ,
will utilize Just o'ne r unning back will be Urnes when a pass will go
awry and it will look.. like they
and not have a tight eqd.
The man expected to be the one don 't know what they 're doing .
''But it's an offense that should
back, top draft choice Bar ry
make
big plays. Keep In mind
Sanders of Oklahoma State, will
some
of
the rece ivers who are not
be at the game. But the tfelsman
playing
in the firs t g a me, beTrophy winner will not be in
cause
of
Injuries,
might be better
uniform because he ~m a ins
than those that play.
unsigned.
It Is an offense created to take

making a mistake, which is an
advantage to the offense."
Before the AFC championship
game, ~vy explained why lie
objected to the.no-huddle .
"It~s not'legal when you break
the.huddle- and·I know with the
no-huddle that's a hazy area - to
have 12 or 13 players on the
field," he said. "We' ve felt that
the Bengals have had a lot of
players on the field. They're slow
coming off. Youdon'tknowwho's
coming off. Is Ita tight end? Is Ita
receiver? Is II a running back?
"I think there needs to be
enforcement of getting people off
the field ·.and ajlowlng enough
time for the defense lo do what
they have to do."

CINCINNATI (UPI) -Seven
mo.n ths ago the Buffalo Bills
persuaded NFL officials to ban
the Cincinnati Bengals' nohuddle offense 'In :the American
Conference championship game.
"We · will remember' that
forever," says Clnclm\atl coach
, Sam . Wyche. ' 'Every time we
play Buffalo."
'
Well, the Ben~ls piay Buffalo
Sunday and Cincinnati Intends to
use the no-huddle~
"It's our style of play and If
(Buffalo coach) Marv Levy Isn't
happy with that, we're real sorry
. about It," says Wyche.
After b~~J~nlng the no-hudc!le In
the AFC title contest, NFL
officials quickly admltte~ . they
·had erred and permitted the
Bengals to use It In the Super
Bowl.
But, during off-season NFL
meetings, several NFL coaches
tried again to get the no-huddle
banned. They failed . The only
thing the league did was to rule
that If a no-huddling team
simulates or makes a substltu·
lion, then the defense must be
.. given time to make substitutions
before the offense quick-snaps.
Wyche says that won't affect his
use of the no-huddle.
"The only time we quick-snap
Is when we get right back to the
no-huddle (Without subs t!tutlng)
and the defense tries to substl·
tute," he said. "That has always
been, Is now, and should always
be, legal."
Wyche says he likes the nohuddle because "It changes the
tempo of the game."
·
"It puts a little more pressure
on the defense to think quickly
and a little more pressure on the
(opponents') coaches to make
decisions on the sidelines and
signal them lp quicker.
"Any time you're In a hurry ,
you run a very g~ chance of

'The Daily Sentinel

TIIIU'IIIIQ'I 8ptrt1 Trall•dll•

•••lllt4•

• .... lril" - Plar:e4 •lfld*' ...
Drer "IW
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frem~awroltkAIMrie•AIMdllde•
(A.U) .

•

(V8P81-I

A Special Edition In
The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, August 24, 1989

" Dh-11101 ............ Joe.

Publlalled every ollernoon. Monclly
thrwlh Frtdoy, 111 COUrt St., Pom..-ay, Oblo,=be Ollie VaUey ""'·
llobln1 Com
/Multlmedlo. Inc.,
Pom..-ay. 0 0
' Ph. 99'-2156. Se·
cond cluo pcotqe potd at Pomeroy,
Oldo.

.

Akron to host 52nd annual
Soap Box Derby Saturday .
AKRON, Ohio (UPI ) - Some
161 champions from across the
nation and five foreign countries .
will be racing their motorless
cars Saturday In the finals of the
52nd Ali·Amerlcan Soap Box
Derby.
Competition at Derby Downs
near the university or Akron's
Rubber BOwl begins at 12: 30 p.m.
EDT, with finals In the two age
categories - the Kit division for
9· 10 11-year-olds and the Masters
division for ·12· to 16-year-olds scheduled for 3 p.m. The finals
will be televised In many areas
by PBS stations. ·
The other· countries repres·
ented Include Canada, West
Germany, The Philllplnes,
Guam and Ireland.
The annual races are an Akron
tradition alld for some drivers,
like 16-year-old Michael Stockton
of Denver, It's a tradition to
compete.
Stockton raced In the national

Series. I saw Don Larsen pitc h a
By TOM WITHERS
perfect game. But rve never
. . VPI Sports Writer
Showing enormous courage seen anything like today.''
after battling nearly Impossible · Craig pulled Dravecky a t the
odds, Dave Dravecky of the San s tar t of the nlnih In favor of Steve
Francisco Giants pitched again Bedrosian, who picked up his
Thursday to provide this base- · 15th save.
"He proba bly could have gone ·
ball season with Its most uplifting
out for t,!)J ninth," Crai g sa id.
story.
Dr avecky, who underwent " But I had todowhat was bes tfor
surgery to remove a cancerous the team. He was n't going to lose
tumor in his .left ar m last this game after the way he
September, returned to pitch pitched."
Cincinnati s ta r ter Scott
Thursday and held the Cincinnati
Reds to one hit through seven Scudder, who was ta gged for four
Innings · before giving up a runs oyer ·five Innings while
three-run home run In the Giants' falling to 2·5, had only admlra·
lion for Dravecky .
•·3 victory.
"Who won or lost didn't mal·
Because a portion of his deltoid
ter
," Scudder said. "II was just
·muscle was removed, doctors
felt Dravecky would never pitch Inspiring to me to watch him out
In the majors again. Months of there. But I could have used the
win maybe more than he did."
grueling rehabilitation paid off,
''I hope what I've gone through
Scudder fell behind 1·0 In th£
will give hope to others (cancer
victims) to keep on fighting, " second when Pat Sheridan
DravecJ&lt;y said. "I hope It makes tripled down the left-field line
thl!m take a good look at what's and scored on a Terry Kennedy
·
groundout.
Inside and their faith In God."
S'an Francisco torged ahead 4-0
Dravecky's wife, , ,Jan, was
understandably emotional on on Matt Williams' RBI double In
the third and his tWo-run homer
this special day.
'
In
the fifth.
"I 'm the one who lives and dies
In the National
Elsewhere
with every pitch," Mrs. Dra·
League:
vecky said. "I'm the one who
Ph!Uies 16, Cubs 13
worries about him. I cried this ·
At
Chlc·
ago, John Kruk belted a
morning. I cried when I saw him
get on the mound . I cried when homer, a double and two singles,
they put 'Welcome Back Dave' scored five runs and drove In
three to help Philadelphia win a
on the scoreboard."
.
Dravecky threw 92 pitches, 58 slugfest. Ryne Sandberg had two
for strikes. He struck outflve and homers for the Cubs. driving in
walked one. He hung a pitch In four runs, and has hit five home
the elg)lth Inning to Lujs Qui· runs In the past four games.
nones. who ripped It for the Shawon Dunston had four singles
for Chicago. Each team recorded
three· run homer.
"I've seen a · lot of things In one l;llg ·Inning, with the Cubs
·baseball," said Giants man;1ger scoring eight In the third to take a
Roger Craig. "I was In five World 10-3 lead and Philadelphia seven

finals as a 10-year-old but fin·
!shed second In his region since
then, missing the opportunity to
return to the Rubber City.
This year, however. Stockton Is
back with his cal' appropriately
named Deja Vue.
"I guess I named It right,"
Stockton said, "becau~ It feels
·
'
like lleJa vue. :•
Most of the ~acers arrived In
Akron early In the week to begin
taking test runs at Derby Downs.
Some of the cars, however, were
sidelined temporarily.
"See all those cars lined up
over ihere?" Jack Martin of
Augusta, Ga., said. "Mine's the
blue metallic one at the back. I
had to make some Chaflll!l 10 I
didn't get a VIP sUcker."
Organizers say strict guidelines ~uallze the competlUon:
And deslp, as 'Well aa luck In
lane asqmnentl, tend to deter·
mine the winner•.

,,
•'

Member: United Pr•• International,
Inland Dally PriUAIIOC!olllln and the
Qhlo Newo~
· A-lion. National

a-

Advertlllnl
•eatatlve, Branham
Newopoper
.._ 733 Third A-ue,
New York. New York 1001?.

I

,_

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~

J'aiTMASTER: Send
cblllllil
to "!be DoQy Sentlrlel, Ul Court St,
I'Orn&lt;l'ay, Oldo . . .

•rc.m..·-·-·

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NOW BY CALLING:

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'ASK FOR BRIAN OR DAVE

'.
•'

AD DEADLINE WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1989

~~~----------------~~--~

"

�August 11 . 1989

Ohio

'-0 .·.

Ryan fans 13 in Rangers' 4-1
triumph over Detroit.
By United Press International
The Texas Rangers' Nolan
Ryan Is a model fo r younger
pitchers to follow , though some-t imes It appears he m ay stili be
s tr ildng out hitters long after the
others have retired. ·
Ryan, 42, who has been as
overpowering In his 22nd major
league season as he was In his
prime, c ame within two outs of
his sixth career no-hit ter Thursday night. settltilg instead for a
combined two-hitter and ·a 4-1
victory over th e Detroit Tigers.
Ryan, who along w ith Bob
Feller a nd Walter ,Johnson are
considered among the elite
power pitchers in major league
history, lost his bid to become the
old est major leaguer to throw a
nO-hitter when Dave Bergman
sliced a single to left :center on an
0-l pitch.
' 'There are only five guys 25 or
younger that can do what Nolan
Ryan does, " Detroit manager
Sparky Anderson said. ''His body
to me Is the same as In 1970.
That's quite a thing at 42.
"He must have tremendous
work habits. Any young pitcher
should ask him about his work
habits. If he had pitched his
entire career In the National
League we'd be talking about
6,000 strlkrouts Instead of 5,000.
No man will ever have the power
at that age that he does ."
Ryan was visibly upset after
surrendering the single, bending
at the waist with his hands on his
knl'es. The crowd of 35,266
saluted him following the hit.
Ryan yielded a double to the next
batter, Matt Nokes, and left th e
game to chants of "Nolan,
Nolan.'' Ryan acknowle!lged the
crowd by coming out of the
dugout and tipping his hat.

-~

Course In Hawthorn Woods, DJ. Thompson shares
the lead with Mike Reid with a 6·un!fer par 66.
(UPI)

- Leonard Thompson of
Ponte Ver!la. F1a., walks .oll the 18th green with
his caddy during llrst·round action of the PGA
championship Thursday at Kemper Lakes Golf

Reid, Thompson share share
first round lead in PGA play
HAWTHORN WOODS. Il l.
'IUPI ) - Arnold P a lmer, J ack
Nicklaus a nd Tom Watson evoke
golfing memories that willlastas
·
long as the game is pla yed.
And they were very bu sy
mak ing some more memories
Thursday.
As im probable as it seem ed,
three players who represent
three different golfing eras ha ve
lined up to make run at th e fina l
ma jorchampionship of t he 1980s.
Mike Reid and Leonard
Thompson wound up leading the
7lst PGA Championship Thursday with 6- under 66s, but unfortu nately for them they picked a day
that golfing Jegends were running amok.
J ack Nicklau s, soon to turn 50,
was only two shots back after his
68. Tom Watson, nearing his 40ih
birth day a nd a wi nner only once
in th e las t five years, was just a
shot beh ind.
An d, in the biggest shocker of
a ll, Arnold P almer gave his
tho usa nds of Joyal fans a n
immense thr ill by shooting a
4-under 68. Only a bogey - bog~&gt;y
fi nish kept him from shar ing the
lead wi th T hompson and Reid.
On Sept. 10, Palmer will be 60
years old .
"We were wa lking off the 12th

a

green, " Nicklaus said, "and Reid came Watson, Kite and
(playing, partner ) Tom Kite Chris Perry. · Watson, like
looked over and said, ~ You know , Palmer, needs a PGA victory to
he (Palmer) Is leading ·the golf become the fifth player to win all
tournament.'
four Grand Slam events. Kite Is
"l said, 'He sure Is , that 's looking for his first major titl e
grea t.';'
and trying to overcome the
"I'm really pleased for him. disappointment of letting this
I'm sure that m ade him feel ~r's u.s. Open slip away.
wonderful. 1 think it is special to · P)rry briefly was credited
see the gu ys who have been the with a 66 that would have tied him
champions, who have been the for the lead. But a scorer's
good players through the years, miStake was detected before
play a round of good golf."
Perry signed his card and he
P almer, winner of four Mas· wound up at 67.
ter s, a U.S. Open and two British .
Tied with Palmer at 68 were
Opens. evoked memories of days Ben Crenwaw, Ian Woosnam,
long go ne by with a series of Phil Blackmar, Dave Rummels
rocket-like dr ives, gorgrous iron and Nicklaus - who birdied the
shots and putts that found the last hole to once more set up the
center of the hole.
possibility of a duel betwl'en two
"Can I win? Well, if I could of the greatest names in the
play and feel like I did today for history of the game.
t hree more days, yes , I could
Palmer was tied for the lead
win," said Pa lmer, who last won after 16 holes and only a bogeya regular tour eve nt 16 year s ago. bogey finish over the tough
"Whether that will happen, 1 closing holes at the Kemper
don't know."
Lakes Golf Club course kept It
Palmer's round not only re- from being a perfect day for-the
duced the performances of Reid man who Is credited with giving
and Thompson to almost footnote the game a new burst of popularstatus, it also ail but pushed asid e Ity in the 1950s.
the scores posted by a group of
"I thought I might shoot a 65for
fellow legends and near legends a while," Palmer said. "Those
who m ade the PGA Jeaderboard are the most birdies (he had
a ga la affair .
seven In the round) I have had in
One shot be hind Thompson and a year. "

Ohin fis hing report

\

By Un ited Press International
The weekly Ohio fishing report, fro m the Ohio Division of
Wildlife. For informat ion on
lakes or streams not listed in the
weekly report s, call614-265-6317.
South east
Lake Loga n - Largemouth
£.ass up to fo ur pounds are being
~a ug ht on blue and pu rple rubber
worms fis hed near the dam of .
this la ke. loca ted just wes t of
. Logan. Cha nnel catfi sh up to six
pounds also are being caught by
a nglers fis hing chicken liver s ·
)11'ar the bo ttom a long shoreline
areas.
Piedm on,t Lake- Largemouth
bass up to '6Y, pound s a re being
caught near the dam and the 4- H
camp on pu rple r ubber worms.
Channel catfi sh up to seven
pounds are being ta ken on
nlghtcrawlers fis hed in the Essex
Bay area during th e early
l'l)Orning a nd late evening. Wal~ye average seven to 10 pounds
are being caught by angle r s
djls tlng a nd drift-fishing Erie
Qea ries tipped wit h nightcr awler
at Holloway La nding and Ind ia n
11-un du ring the late afternoon
l(nd early evening. Some anglers
'?'o are trolling traditional lures,
sach as pink or gold Bag!eys, a re
C'atchlng muskles averaging 31 to
4•' Inches near the dam.
:•
Southwest
-:c .J. Brown Reservoir - ·Biueims averaging six to nine
ibches a re being caught on
waxworms In areas around fish·
1~ structure. Anglers are taking
an occasional wa) !eye in the 16- to
1!!-lnchrange when fishing Lindy
rigs or nlghtcrawlers on the lake
bjlttom.
Rocky Fork Lake - A. few

wa lleye are being caught by
angle rs trolling or dr ifting nightcrawlers and artificlai bait.
Channel catfish are hitting night crawlers and cu t bait during
evening hours la kewide. Crappies averaging eight to 10 inches
are be ing caug ht in 15 feet of
water on minnows fished benea th
a bobbe r. Some la rgemouth bass
can be caught on nightcrawlers
and a rtificial bait.
Central
Hargus Lake - This 146-acre
_Jake nea r Ci rcleville continues to
offer anglers a chance to catch
largemouth bass, bluegill and
channe l ca tfis h. Many of the
largem outh bass are below the
15-lnc h minimum length requirement , but some are larger and
can be harves tedfrom areas with
shore I ine cove r and _n ear dropoff
points . Bluegill averaging six to
seve n Inches can be caught In
shallow wa te r using small
worms or m innows suspended
beneath a bobber. Channel cat·
fish can be ·c aught in early
morning and evening hours by
using c hicken livers or nightcrawlers fished at or near the
lake bo ttom.
·
Knox Lake - Channel catfish
up to 10 pounds are plentiful
throughout this 495-acre lake. In
Knox County. Anglers should use
a var iety of stlnkbalts, shrimp,
crayfish , chicken livers and
nightcrawlers fished near bot·
tom during the early and late
evening hours. An occasional
muskle can be caught here by
trolling deep-diving plugs near
shoreline cover. Largemouth
bass are plentiful, especially
near woody shoreline cover and
v egetation areas . Small

WVU having trouble with recruits

M'OR G ANTOWN, W.Va .
(UP!) -West VIrginia's )'llountalneers, the nation' s fifth ranked team last year, are
having a rough time with new
football recruits thiS year.
Last week, WVU officials announced three of 25 recruits had
become academic casualties.
Now, a nother freshman has
s
wonnsbecome a Proposition 48 victim,
and two other recruits are
spinners, j lgs ana poppers will ·questiona ble for legal and aca·
.
at tract these bass, which are demic reasons.
Wednesday, a Nov. B trial date
protected by a 16-inch minimum
length limit.
was set In District of Columbia
Northwest
Superior Court for freshman
Maumee River - Some smal· quarterba ck Allen Johnson .of
!mouth Qass and chaimel catfish Washington D.C., on charges of
are being caught in deep holes dis tribu lion of cocaine.
And, Kansas junior college
from midday to early evening
along various stretches of the tr ansfer Faron Hornes, a defen·
river. Anglers should concen- slve back, Is awaiting his grade
trate their efforts In the lower in a s ummer algebra class at a
reaches of the river and use Florida junior college. He has not
traditional catfish baits fished re ported to WVU.
After freshman linebacker·
along the bottom.
Some tight end James Spears, 20, of
Metzger Mar sh anglers are catching bullheads Hollywood ,'Md. , did not arrive ill
and white perch, but fishing camp, WVU officials said he had
action has been fair. White bass decided to spend another season
and yellow perch can be caught In "prep" football. However~
near the pier and the marsh also Spears's high school coach said ·
offers walleye, channel catfish, he , also Is a Proposition 48
casualty and will stay at Glen · ·
crappies and freshwater drum.
'Mills
School for Boys In PennsylNortheast
Clendening Reservoir - This vania. But Spears is not eligible
1,80Q.acre HarriSon County re- to play football there:
Johnson would have a scholarser voir offers one of the best
largemouth bass fishing oppor- ship If he enrolls at WVU this fall,
tunities in northeast Ohio. The school officials said. But, he
bass average 12 to 23 Inches In apparently will not be on the
length , but can sometimes be football field.
If found innocent, Coach Don
difficult to locate.

.

-

D and M PIZZA &amp; SUB
Will Be Closed "Fair Week"
AUGUST 14th-21st

Nehlen said Johnson can report
to camp Immediately . Buthewlll
not be on Mountaineer Field
"until we find out what
happen s , '' Ne hlen said
Wednesday.
"We are obligated to give him a
scholarship for two semesters, "
said Shelly Poe, WVU sports
Information director.
Spears will not be In Morgantown this fall because he has
decided to spend another year
trying to raise his SAT score, said
his high school football coach.
" All I know Is he's elected to
stay In prep school," Poe said.
The "prep school" near Phlla·
delphia Is a private school for
"ajudlcated delinquents and dependent kids." said Glen Mills
'Coach Joe Ferra! nola ..
WVU had not listed Spears as a
casualty of Proposition 48, the
NCAA's role requiring recruits
to obtain minimum scores on
admission tests. Three other
WVU recruits - wide receiver
Mike Baker of Waverly, Ga .,
highly touted linebacker Michael

SpOrts briefs
GoU
Australian Roger Mackay
fired seven birdies agalns t one
bogey for a 6-under -par 64 and a
one-stroke lead after the opening
r ound of the $429,000 Nikkel Cup
tournament at the lzu-Nirayama
Country Club · southwest of
Tokyo.

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SYRACUSE, OHIO

Booth of Pl.ttsburgh and running
back Adrian Murrell of Wahl·
awa, Hawaii- all failed to make
minimum scores, too.

1984 Ch.evy ·Cavalier ...... S1995
Auto., PS, A1r.

OPENING FOI LUNCH ON AUGUST 22nd

'

Blyleven for the league record .
He has fivl! 200-strikeo ut.seasons
in the National Le ague.
Ha rold Baines' double off the
wall in ce nter fi eld scored Rafael
Palmo:.iro, who had wal ked, to
give Texas a 1-0 lead in the fi rst.
Ruben Sier ra 's 19th homer of
the year, a 443-foot dr ive over the
right-field wall In the sixth; made
. it 2·0. H was Sierra' s 82nd RBI of
.. the season - tops In the AL.
· The start of the game was
delayed becaause of rain for 21
minutes.
.
Elsewhere in the AL:
Brewers 10, Indians 3
At Cleveland, JOI'y Meyer
drove in a career-high five runs ·
and Ted Higuer a won )lis fl~th
straight game. Higuera, 8-4,
defeated the Indians for the
second time In 11 days but left
after five and lwo·t)lird Innings
with soreness In his left ankle.
Robin .Yount went 4 for 4 and Jim
Gantner went 3 for .4 to pace an
18-hlt attack. Bud Black dropped
to 9-9.
A' 4, White So" I
At Chicago, Tony Phillips hit a
sacrifice fl y In th e fourth to snap
a scoreless tie. Storm Davls, l2-5,
and two relievers protected the
lead. Steve Rosenberg, 3-8, took
the loss. Dennis Eckersley
hu rled one and two-third score. Jess innings for his 23rd save.
Mariners 3, Angels 2
At Anaheim, Calif., Jim Pres'
ley Jed off the lOth Inning with his
11th hom er to carry Seattle.
Presley homered off Chuck Finley , lJ-8. who allowed two homers In a game for the fi rst time
since Aug , 7,1988. Henry Cotto hit
a two-run homer in the se'corid
Inning. Mike Jackson improved
to 4-5 !lnd Mike Schooler earned
hiS 23rd save.

night's game against the visiting Milwaukee
Brewers. O'Brien drove In teammate Robin
Yount, which helped the Brewers post a 10·3
victory. (UPI)

DMNG CATCH - Indians .third baseman
Brook Jacoby makes a diving catch of a Char He
O'Brien grounder, but Is unable_to make the play
on O'Brien at first in the llflh Inning of Thursday

•k
Lake Logan IarO'em
l
th
_
I e.
e
ou

J eff Ru ssell relieved Ryan and
yielded an RBI groundout toChet
Lemon. He struck ou t Doug
Strange s truck out to end the
game for his 25th save.
"I got down 0-1 to Bergman,
throwing him the fastball first,
but 1 felt like he was going to be
sitting and waiting for the
curve ball," said Ryan. "And
tha t's just what happened. He
dldri' t over swing on the curve
and ju st hit It Into the gap."
It marked the second time this
season Ryan took a no-hitter Into
the ninth inning and the fourth
time past the seventh. On April 23
in Toronto, Nelson Llriano
tripled with one out In the ninth to
spoil Ryan.
"I felt strong a nd still had
command of my pitches going
Into the-ninth inning, and I had a
real good Idea what I wanted to
do with the batters coming up, "
Ryan said.
On April 12 at Milwauk!'e,
Terry Francona singled with
none out in the eighth, amjJune
25 vs . Cleveland, Brook Jacoby
doubled with two out In the
eighth.
Ryan, 13-7, walked six and
struck out 13. Ryan leads the
majors with 211 strjkeouts and Is
14 shy of 5,000 for .hls career.
The 13·slrikeout performance
marked the · 193rd time In 'his
career he has struck out 10 or
more In a game. He.lias fanned 10
or more In five of lils last seven
starts.
Doyle Alexander, 5-13, got the
loss. He gave up eight hits, three
runs, walked two and struck out
three.
Ryan has struck out 200 or
more 13 times In his career. H~&gt;
has eight in the American
League, tying him with ·Bert

.

M

DEMONSTRATION - A MlchiKan Rell employee of M years In Flatrock, Mich., wears his
sentiment on his sblrt as he joins an Informational

picket site In front of hie Michigan Bell Amerltech
(1uUdlng In !!own town .Detroit. (UP I)

Phone companies negotiate
as ·new strike deadline looms ·
ployees share health insuran ce
costs for the first time.
Pacific Telesis officials said no
new talks were scheduk:d Thurs-.
day. No significant progress·had
been reported at informal talks
earlier In the week.
A weekend strike deadline
loomed for three other regional
"Baby Bell" phone companies
serving 24 states.
Labor contracts for workers at
Amerltech In the Midwest,
Southwestern Bell and US West
in the West and Midwest were
due to expire at midnight Saturday. UniQn and.company negotiators met Thursday attempting to
avert a walkout.
Southwestern Bell .negotlators
met Thursday with officials of
the CWA, which represents 41,000
workers In Missouri.• Arkansas,
Texas. Kansas and Oklahoma.
The company serves 9 million
customers In the five states.
Amerltech spokesman Steve
Ford in Chicago said the CWA
contract covers five Midwestern
Bell units plus Ameritech Services - six separate 'companies.
The CWA and IBEW represent
49,000 Ameritech employees.
The strike that began early
Sunday was the first In three
years against any of the seven
regional "Baby Bell" companies, formed in 1984 after the
court-ordered breakup of the
American Telephone &amp; . Telegraph Co.
One of the companies Bel!South In Atlanta - approved
a contract Sunday and averted a
similar walkout.
Meanwhile, understaffed com·
pany managers at tempted to
maintain basic phone services,

make repairs and field a growing
flood of directory-assistance
calls.
" It's a thrill a minute," said a
manager for a Virginia phone
company In the Bell Atlantic
region who was taking customer
telephone service orders,
Thursday.
'·'You never know when It (a
strike) Is going to end until right
at the last moment. By the third
week, after working six days a
week, 12 hours a day, you can't
walt to get out of it. I'm sure they
(the striking workers) fl'el the
same way. They aren't getting
paid during this time.''
At New Jersey Bell, however,
Dick Brummer said that while he
and fellow maintenance supervisors are working long hours, they
are not overwhelmed by the
amount of work . .
' 'New and better technology .
has made life easier for us." he ·
said. " We have machines getting
the Information."
The CWA and IBEW unions
represent some 52,000 workers at
Bell Atlantic, a bout 60;000 strlk·
lng employees of NYNEX and
45,500 workers for Pacific
TelesiS.·
- The strike hils affected 10.5
million NYNEX customers In
New York, Rhode Island, Massachusetts , . Maine, New Hamp·
shire, Vermont and two southeastern Coimectlcut towns.
Bell Atlantic serves New Jer·
sey. Pennsylvania, Delaware,
Maryland, ·Virginia, West Vlrgl-·
nia and ·the District of Columbia
and has 14 million customers.
Pacific Telesis serves nearly 9.3
million customers In California
and Nevada .

Geneticisi ·
urges "rescue'
MARYVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) A famed French geneticist urged
a judge to award custody of seven
frozen embryos to the wife in a
1andmar k divorce tria!' so she can
"rescue her babies from the
concentration camp of the
freezer . ~·

cil. ......

BOSToN (UP!) - Landing
~ear failure that precipitat ed an
em ergency touchdown of a
Trump Shuttle plane with 56
people on board was a mecha ni cal · problem not related to the
aircraft 's age, a company s pokesman said.
The pilot of Flight 1012 fr om
New York,to-Boston brought the
crippled plane down Thursday
·morning at Logan Airport, balancing the speeding Boeing 727
on Its two back whl'els for 8,000
- feet before bringing the jet totes t
on Its nose with a tongue of flame
shooting from Its belly as It
scraped the tarmac.
The sparks did not result In fire
a nd all 49 p;~ssengers and 7
crewmembers evacuated the
plane safely via chutes, airport
officials said. The only Injury
reported Involved a passenger
with a cut finger .
"This was alllnaday'sworkas
far as I am concerned," said pilot
Capt. Robert Smith, 47, who
credited his crew, the plane and
the Logan control tower for
helping hlm comple te the safe
landing.
Trump Shuttl e Preside nt
Bruce Nobles refused to specu·
tate on what caused the -front .
landing gear to . lock on the
19-year-old jetliner, but ·he em·
phaslzed, " This Is not an age
Issue , It's ' a mechanical
problem..''
The Boston Gl.obe reported
Friday that the plane had a
near-perfect service and malnte. nance record. Federal Aviation·
Administration records s~wed
that the jet suffered only minor

DISPLAY
Charles CIHiord, attorney for Junior Davis,
displays a hen eg1 he used' lo question the origins of life during
Davis' custody battle With his estranged Wife over frozen embryos
lhe couple produced. (UPI)
also clear that they are not
entitled to legal representation
under the laws of the United
States or this state. They cannot
think, fl'el or know.
' "If you rule In her favor that
will place a burden on him that he
must live with for the rest of his
life. II you allow her to be a
mother, then you must also make
him a father," Clifford said.
Mary Sue Davis's lawyer, Jay
,ChriStenberry, acknowledged
that the judge faces a moral
dilemma but said, "When we
consider the facts In this case, we
end up with the plea of a woman
asking for her right to have her
child, which Is now In storage.
It's the yearning of a woman to be
a mother."
LejfUne told Young. that embryos created through In vitro
fertilization are not mere tissue,
but become life Instants after the
artificial unlo~ of sperm and

Clifford pulled a chicken egg
from his pocket In an attempt to
attack Lejeune's references to
the embryos as "early human
beings. " .,
·
"Can you tell me, doctor, what
thiS Is? " Clifford asked, holding
the egg In the air.
"It looks to mellke lt's an egg, "
Lejeune said.
''Thank you. I thought you
would have told me that It was an
early chicken," the lawyer said.
Lejeune's testimony countered
that of-John Robertson, a Unlver·
slty of Texas law professor who
serves on the ethics committee of
the American Fertility Society.
Robertson testified · Monday
that the AFS views embryos as
not yet developed enough to have
tile protection accorded human
life. He suggested that thel&gt;avls
embryos be allowed to c!le a
"passive death.''
But Mary Sue ·Davis told
ovum.
reporters, "! believe that would
"The youbgest form of human · be -murder.'' She testified Tues·
beibg starts u the egg Is . day that she feels she already l)as
fertilized. As soon as he Is conceived and the embryos are
conceived, a man Is a mail," he outside her body only
said.
temporarUy.
During cross:examlnatlon,

cracks, corrosion, scratc hes a nd fla me-retarding foam.
·s tress du ring Its thousa nd s of
Trump. the billionaire entrehours of fl ight time.
preneur who owns the shuttle,
The plane was acq uired by immediately canceled all a pTrump Air when its owner, real pointmen ts and flew from New
es tate tycoon Donald Trump, York on his air line's next a val !a·
pu rc.hased the shuttle service ble flight to congratulate Smith,
from Eastern Air lines in June. a former Navy flier and a
Eastern ran the plane on It s commercial pilot for 19 years.
" I think he·s a hero. !think he 's
Washington -New York-Boston
shuttle for three·yea rs, t he Globe a great tale nt and I thlnl!. he's a
hero, " Trump said. ''ThiS was a
·reported.
Officials said the jet was just great day as far a s I'm conput back in· ser vi ce after a cerned . ... I just really wanted to
structural Inspection and paint come here and shake hands with
job last week. Nobles said the the maestro," he said, referring
entire 21-jet fll'et Trump Air to t he pilot.
The passengers were equally
aqulred from Eastern was
closely Inspected before the deal e ntliusiastlc abo\lt Smith's per- .
formance : " Every-body
was completed.
According to a report In the clapped," said Sophia ZanniS of .
Boston Herald, a passenger said New _York. ·'The pilot told us .
maintenance workers appeared exactly what was going on. It was
to pay a lot of attention to the a wonderful crew. It was com·
,
front wheel of the plane before pletely professional "
Smith, who 'fOrked for Eastern
the flight departed LaGuardia
Airport In New York. Nobles said before going to work for Trump, :
there . were " zero" problems told passengers during the tllght
that he was "99' and 94-lOOths
before departure.
Smith circled the airport for percent" certain the plane would
almost an hour and tried to make land safely.
"After I made that statement
a touch-and-go, maneuver, using
the main landing gear to bump _my only concern was that I had
the plane on the runway in an not said '100 percent,"' Smith
told a news conference at the
effort to loosen the front gear.
About. 10 minutes later, the airport, flanked by Trump and
pilot brought down the jetliner on other crewmembers.
''This was all in a day's work as
Its rear landing gear, gracefully
suspended the nose off the far as I'm concerned," said
runway until the plane slowed, Smith, who lives in Roswell, Ga.
then gingerly lowered the metal "Folks did what they were
trained to do. We'retalklngabout
nose to the ground.
There were sparks and smoke a very seasoned crew.' '
Nobles said the plane had a few
as the aircraft skidded to a stop
on the runway at 10:44 a.m. EDT. scrapes but was In remarkably
The plane was sprayed with good condition, and predicted It ·
would be back In the air shortly.

'\ :;

ti ·~•

\ '\

.'
\...
'
.'

'i
•1
. I

INSPECTION - Fire and PoHce Inspectors
look over lhe Trwnp Shuttle that made an
emergency landing at Logan Airport In Boston

yesterday. The plane, carrylnt~49 passen1ers ans
seven crew, landed safely, wltb no Injuries. ( UPI)

Protester sentenced 20 years later
. CHICAGO (UP!) -A Vietnam
War protester who lived under an
assumed identity for 20 years
was sentenced Thursday for
crimes committed In 1969.
Linda Quint, 42, was sentenced
to perform 10,000 hours of community service and pay a $20,000
fine lor burning draft board
(ecords from a Chicago office.
She also received three years'
probation.
Friends and co-workers at an

of embryos

After the testimony of Jerome
Lejeune, lawyers made_ their .
final pleas Thursday to Blount
County Circuit Judge W. Dale
Young, who sa ld he wi II decide
the rate of the embryos within 30
·days.
Lejeune, who discovered the
cause of Down' s syndrome In
1959, was called as the final
witness for Mary Sue Davis, 28,
the childless woman who wants
to have a baby using the embryos
she formed with her husband at a
fer tillty center before he filed for
divorce In February.
Junior Lewis Davis, 30, wants
the sev.e n fertilized eggs :kept
Indefinitely In frozen storage,
arguing their use after the
divorce ·would force him Into
fatherhood against his will.
Lejeune testified that embryos
are human life, even if formed In
a laboratory dish through In vitro
fertilization.
"We now have proof that
embryos are not spare parts or
experimental material or com·
modltles or property," he said, .
"An early human .being cannot
be the property of anybody. I was
deeply moved when I found out
this woman wanted to rescue her
babies from the concentration
camp of the freeier."
.
But In closing arguments,
Junior Davia's lawyer, Charles
Clifford, !leclared, • 'Embryot
have" no rlpla," and uked the
judp to spare hla client the
bUrden of unwanted fatherhood.
"I tbiDk It la ·very clear from
the testimony that embryos are
not humari ·beings. I think It Is

Insurance company In Bakersfield, Calif., where Quint was
earning $60,000' a year said they
had no idea Quint was a woman
on the .r un from a 1970 conviction
and a 10-year priSon sentence.
She had been living as a
fugitive lit California since 1974
under the as sumed name Emily
Freeman.
Quint was convicted of conspiracy and des tructlon of government records, but she never
showed up In court to receive her
10-year sentence, AssiStant U.S.
Attorney Joari Safford said.
Quint's 10-year sentence was

vacated because under the law a
defendant must be present at the
time of sentencing.
"She was · unique In that she
paid her 'taxes every year,"
Safford said. ''She lived a lawabiding life as a fugitive.' '
But In May 1989 It became too ·
much to bear for Quint, who shed
her assumed identity and surren· •
dered In Chicago.
Quint told the judge of "the
terrible sense of loss, the loss of
family, the loss of past" Safford
said In describing Quint's plea.
"She said it was the most tragic ,
thing she could do."

Five· indicted
in IRA plot
BOSTON (UPI) :- A federal
grand jury has Indicted five
people for engaging In what the
FBI described as an elaborate
conspiracy · to supply weapons
and high technology to the
outlawed Irish Republican
Army.
Among those Indicted Thursday were four persons already
charged In the ongoing case,
Including a New Hampshire man
free on ball who federal author!·
ties said Is "very valuable" to the
IRA.
.
The indictment suggested the
alleged operation may have had
something to do with a mortar
attack on a British Army base In
Crossmaglen, Northern Ireland.
One British soldier was Injured In
·the shelling.
The . central figure In the
Indictment,_made public by the
U.S. Attorney's office, was Rl·
chard Johnson, 41, of Nashua,
N.H. Johnson Is anenglnl'er with
the Mitre Corp. of Bedford, Mass.
Also charged were: Christina
Reid, 25, of SuMyvale, Calif.;
Martin Quigley, 27, an Irlah
National living In Bethlehem,
Pa.; and Peter Maguire, 32, of
Dublin. The fifth 'defendant was
Identified as Vincent Hoy, 39, of
Easton, Pa.

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l..f\

By JEFF BATER
United Press International
Three regional telephone companies and their unions worked to
dfsconnect a walkout affecting
millions of customers on both
coasts as a weekend strike·
deadline approached Friday for
three additional "Baby Bell"
companies .
The six-day walkout against
the Bell Atlantic, NYNEX and
Pacific Telesis tel~&gt;phone companies has Idled more than
150,000 employees and hampered
servi ces for customers In 15
states and th!! nation's capital.
Bell Atlantic officials Thursday reported the first progress In
talks between the phone companIes and negotiators for the
Communications Workers of
America and ..the International
Brothe rhood of El e ctrical
Workers unions.
''This was a productive meetIng, we f!&gt;el we're making some
progress," said Christopher
Clouser, a spokesman for Bell
Atlantic.
Clouser said the company
would study proposals made by
the unions during negotiations In
Wasl11ngton, o :c., and "schedule
another ml'eting as quickly as
possible." ·
In New York City, about a
. thousand chanting NYNEX telephone workers marched across
the Brooklyn Bridge to a rally In
Manhattan ·a t tended by the Rev.
Jesse Jackson. Negotiations betwl'en the uniOJll and NYNEX
remained at an inlpasse.
·
Several of the demonstrators
wore white surgical masks as a
symbol of their opposition to
NYNEX' s attempt to have em·

The Daily Sentinel- Page

Pom•oy- Middleport, Ohio

I

.•

..

�\

The Daily Sentinel

,

By The Bend

· Friday, August 11,1989

&gt; fXrERIEN

Friday, August 11, 1989
Page-6

•

Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Circle of
Long Bottom, and grandson of
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Circle,
Racine.
Gifts were presented to the
following, James M Circle,
oldest nlan; Florence Circle,
oldest woman, James and Goldie
Circle, couple married the longest; Joe and Dixie Ctrcle Sayre,
newlyweds; Tyler Circle, youngest bOy; and Emtly Ashley,
youngest girl. The traveling
prize was awarded to Mr. and
Mrs. Philip Fisher of To 1edo,
Attending from the Meigs area
were Bob and June Ashley, Edith

GENERATIONS -Two new Circles' were welcomed into the
lamll)&gt; at llle recent Circle-Zirkle reunion. They are ten month old
James Chrls!Opher Circle, right, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Ctrele, and two month old Tyler Cleveland Circle, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Jeffrey Circle.

Sisson, Grace Warner, Bill and
Ma1 y Russell, Linda Circle Patterson, Wayne and Lisa Russell,
Florence Circle, Paul Moore,
Frances Roberts, Nancy, Patrece, Jason, and Jarrod Circle,
Chester. Maxine, Brent, Jeff,
and Tara Rose, Jim, Karen,
J amey , and Sarah Werry,
Sharon, Aaron, Tracy, John, and
Robbie Card, Keith, Emma,
Rachel. Whitney. and Emily
Ashley, Jeff, Sonia, Nikki, Jeffrey, and Tyler Circle, Joe and
Dixie Circle Sayre, Lui;~ Circle,
Roger, Helen, and Jamey Holter,
Ryan Cozart, Harold and Sue
Circle Hager, Kim Follrod, Bill
Harris, Michael Russell, Ryan
Martln, Randy, Robin, Rachel,
Robert, and Russell Reiber. John
Rose, Martha and Amy Lee,
Linda and Ryan Holter. David
and Paul Smith, Becky and John
Robert Bentz, Evelyn Holter.
and Shane and Grant Circle.
Attending from out of town
were Neil and Ila Circle Marks,
Mlnnora, W.Va.; James and
Goldie Circle, Cross Lanes,
W.Va., Phlllp and Martha
Fisher, and Wilbert and Elva
Garber, Toledo; Mary Davis
Russell, Waverly, W.Va.; Arthur, Elva, and Linda Garber,
and Marguerite Rasp, Fostoria;
Elsie Stahl, Helena; Jim, Phyllis, and Christopher Circle, New
Haven, W.Va; Debbie Moore
and Fred;l Wakefield, East LIverpool; "Eric Young, Sydney.
and Dorothy Willard, California
Swtmmmg, volleyball, and visIting old and new acquaintances
were enjoyed during the
afternoon

Southern kindergarten
There will be a short Informational meeting of all Southern
kindergarten parents In the high
school cafeteria at 7:30 p.m. on
Monday, Aug. 14. Name tags will
be given, classes will be assigned, and bus routes will be
discussed. Any child not previously registered must register
at this time. Those planning to
register must present a record of
Immunization, birth certificate,
and proof of a recent s kin test.
Seeking recipes for cookbook
When Pomeroy celebrates it's
150th \llrthday the sesquecenten
nial committee will have available lor sale a cookbook made up
of "old time" recipes of mothers,
grandmothers, great grandmothers, etc. If anyone has a
recipe they would like to contribute to the cookbook, entitled
"Treasur~ d Recipes from the
Past" send 11 or drop it by the
Dally -Sentinel office in care of
Julie E. Dillon. Any church
women's organizations are also
encouraged to collect recipes for
the book and turn them in to the
Sentinel office. The deadline for
submitting rectpes 1s Sept. 15.
Homecoming revival
The Zion Church of Christ of
Route 143 Is planning a weekend
homecoming revival for Aug. 18,
19, and 20. Greg and Jennifer

Wallace, Johnson City, Tenn ,
will be leading the services at
7:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday, and 10:30a.m. and2 p.m. on
Sunday. Wallace Is from the
Ripley Church of Christ in
Ripley, W.Va., and is married to
the former Jennifer Grover,
daughter of Ken and Mary
Grover of tile Zion congregation
A carry in dinner Is planned for
noon on Sunday and the public Is
mvited to attend.
Dorst reunion
The annual Dorst reunion will
be held on Aug. 20 at the
Lancaster fair grounds. A potluck dinner will be served at
noon. All friends and relatives
are Invited
Softball tournament
There will be men's slow pitch
softball tournament held on Aug,
19 and 20at Eastern HighSchooL
The cost Is $65 and hit your own
ball
Call 378-6406 for
mformallon.
Middleport block party
Middleport's annual block
party will be held on Sept. 16.
Interested parues should reserve
booths by ca!Ung Debbie or Mike
Gerlach at 992-6898, Lennie
Eliason at 992-6485, or Brian
Johnson at 992-3481. Booths are
reserved on a first come first
served basts, so call soon to

DARWIN - The Disabled
American Veterans and the
Ladles Auxiliary will have their
annual picnic on Friday at 6 30
p.m. at the southboung roadside
park on Route 33 just south of
Darwin. Those attending are to
bring a covered dish.
SATURDAY
RIO GRANDE -The 12th
Masonic District Association will
hold Its first annual fishing derby
day on Saturday at Tycoon Lake
In Rio Grande from 6. 30-11:30
a.m. Prizes will be awarded at
noon and the entry fee is $5 for
adults, $2.50 for children 12 years
of age and under. The derby ts
limited to all Masons and famtly
members only Rules can be
picked up at registratiOn time at
6:30am

MIDDLEPORT - Bradbury
PTO Is sponsoring a Men's Class
C&amp;D ASA Softball Tourney on
Aug. 12-13 at Hartinger Park In
Middleport Tbe entry fee Is $65
and two softballs. For information call 614-992 - 6890,
992-6593, or 992-7055.
RACINE - There will be free
entertamment on Saturday at
7· 30 p m at Star Mill Park In
Racme , featuring the Mountain
Top Gospel Group, and special
gospel soloists from Point Pleasant, and the Country Blend
Band. Those attending should
bnng lawn chatrs.
KANAUGA -Dan Hayman
and the Fatth Trio and also the
Unroe Family will be singing at
the Silver Memonal Freewill
Baptist Church at Kanauga on
Saturday at 7 p.m
DARWIN -The annual Eblin
reunion of Samuel Allen )i:bhn
Will be held on Saturday at the
Route 33 Roadside park Dmner
w11l be set ved at 6 p.m.

Freshmen scholars named
Jared Sheets, a graduate of
Meigs High School. and Carol
Fisher, a graduate of Southern
Local Hlgn School, are among
the 400 Ohio State Universltv
students selected as Freshma~
Scholars on the basis of thetr
outstanding academic per!or
mance In high school.
Each received a commendation from the office of Ohio State
President Edward H. Jennings
The commendation makes the
student eligible, upon application, for an annual $300 scholar-

sh1pwh1ch IS renewa ble for three
years
To quahfy as Freshman Scho
Iars, s tudents generally rank 1n
the lop four percent of Iheir high
school graduattngclass and have
a minimum standardized test
score of 28 on the Amencan
College Test, or combined scol'l'
of 1,250 on the Scholastic Apt!
tude Test
The award also makes stu
dents ehglble for a number of
academic opportunities at Ohio
State mcludlng participation In
the umverstly's honors program

Cohen, Yeauger reunion held
The 19th annual Cohen
YeJluger famil y reunion was held
recently at tht&gt; Darwin Hoadstde
Patk.
~I tending were Bob and Gerry,
Alex, Terri, Sara h, and Justin
Halley, Lucille, MarVIn, and
Jerry Yeauger, Debbie a nd Josiah Rawson , Sue Ann, Erl&lt;', and
Ma;tthew Smith, Cheshire; Ray,
Tracey, Ash lee, and .Jacob
SI11Jth, Kevin, Terri, Nick, and
Autumn McLaughlin, and Reva
Beach, all of Middleport; Xantha
Sm'lth and Chris \'eauger, PomeroY,; Lawrence and Charles
Yeauger, Gallipolis; Don and

Marlene Yeauger, Canal Winc hester, Alfred and Hilda
Yeauger, Racine; Rochelle and
Ktmberly Jenkins , Racine; Gene
and Sanlea Yeauger, Enon.
Pam. Tom, John, Tommy, and
Steve Mead. Centersburg, Pau l
and Ethel Yeauger, Melboure
Beach, Fla., and John, Ruth
Ann, and Misty Carsey, Athens
A gift was awarded to Alfreo:!
Yeauger for being the oldest. age
82 Other gills were given to Alex
Halley, Autumn McLaughlin,
Sue Ann Smith, and Ethel
Yeauger

•

Harrisonville
happenings
•
. '
~nday visitors of Stella Atkins

were Danny Riggs and friend,
Columbus, and Paul Riggs,
Atl)ens.
Mr. and Mrs. Hob Jewell and
dalifhter, and Mrs. Paullne
Allllns spent the past week at
Lake Erie.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Sydenstr!Cker, Masoo, W.Va., Mr. and
Mn. Babe Whaley. Florida, and
Ray Alkire, Columbus, were
recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Boi Alkire.
.
•

..

SUNDAY
LETART -The Christian and
Mary Hart reunion will be held on
Sunday at the Letart Community
Building In Letart, W Va A
basket dinner will be served at
12· 30 p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Parker reunion will be held at the
Tuppers Plains Elementary
Scoool on Sunday with dinner at
12 45 p m . All welcome.
RUTLAND -The annual Davis reunion for descendants of
Orlando and Katherine (Sheline)
Davis will be held on Sunday at
the Elt Dennison Post American
Legion Hall 0:1 Beech Grove
Road in Rutland The·hall is air
conditioned. A basket dinner will
be served at noon. Families are
to brmg gifts for the games, and
old pictures and news clippings
KANAUGA -Special singers.
Tnsha and Leslie Hayman, will
be at the Silver Run Freewill
Baptist Church In Kanauga on
Sunday at 7 p.m. Rev. Dennis
Parsons invites the public .

.
WILKESVILLE - The annual

Green Ogdln Caster reunion will
be held on Sunday at the
Columbia Chapel Christian
Church near Mine No 2 between
Albany and Wilkesville. Dinner
wtll be served at 12:30 p.m.

Flame Fellowship
to meet Friday
Flame
day . 7
Southern
Staten of

Fellowship meets Fnp.m., Columbus and
Power. S!Jeaker Is Bill
Ashland, Ky.

The Lend-a -Hand Society met
Wednesday evening at the home
of Mrs. Don Gibson, Athens, with
Margaret Douglas as cohostess.
Mrs. Donna Wlnefordner, Charleston, W.Va., Is spending two
weeks with her mother
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ball
Columbus, recently spent a te~
days with Mrs. Frances Young.
Mrs. Betty Bishop attended
Eastern Star meeting In Columbus on Wednesday.

an

I' •

Crow's Family Restaurant
"F~ttttltf «1111elrf

TAKE ME OUT TO THE BALlGAME- From left, Wallace
Bradford, Anna Blackwood, and Uoyd Blackwood are seen here
waiting to board the bus with other Bank One Senior Champs to'
travel to the Clnclnnall Reds-Houston Astros game.

Senior Champs take trip
Thirty Senior Champs from
Bank One, Athens, travelled to
Cincinnati recently to attend the
Reds-Astros game.
The Cincinnati Reds set a
major league record when the
club made 16 hits and scored a
record 14 runs In the first Inning
enroute to an 18-2 victory over
the Houston Astros.
Among those from the Pome
roy area enJoying the game In the

atr conditioned press box, were
Lloyd and Anna Blackwood,
Virgil and Nellie Brown, Robert
and Genevieve Burdette, Virginia Chadwell, Sara Cullums,
Edison and Evelyn Hollon, Roy
and Pat Holter, Marilyn Wolfe,
and Joan Wolfe, asststant branch
manager of the Pomeroy office,
and Maxine Gnfflth, Senior
Champs Director, Bank One,
AI hens, as escorts

TOPS meets recently
Dreama Pickens explained the
new rules for the football wetght
loss game, between the KOPS
an'd the TOPS, to be started Aug.
22, at the recent meeting of Ohio
TOPS 570 when the group met at
the coonhunter's lodge at the
fairgrounds.
Lenni~ Aleshire. leader, welcomed everyone and opened the
meeting with prayer and pledge.
Peggi Vining, assistant leader,
conducted a game on calories
with Norma Torres the winner A
game was held for the door prize
and won by Mary Roush The
fruit and vegetable basket was
won by Shirley Wolfe.
A secret sister gift exchange
was held and Ola St. Clair,
Virginia Dean, and Juanita
Humphrey thanked everyone for
·
their gifts.
Weight recorder Mary Martin,
and Mrs. VIning, announced that
the !)est loser was Mrs. Pickens,
an&lt;l the runner up was Mrs.
Dean.
The Aug 22 meeting TOPS will
honor the KOPS who are
Mrs.Alesh!re, Julia Hysell, Pearl
Knapp, Maida . Long, Vlrginlli

lnidt luttons &amp; lows
Mike &amp; Clwh Martin,

O•••n

Pomeroy, Ohio

DiMtte Set, round table &amp; 4 chairs ............ sn.oo
50'' Proiecti011 TV--··································· S495.00
1989 Fleer Set (660 cards) ......................... S2 8.00
1989 Donruss (660 cards) with MVP's ...... 127.00
1989 Score (660 iards) ............................... S24.95
1989 Topps (792 cards) .............................. S22.95

Smllt!, and Mrs'. Martin. A
cheese and salad course witH soft
drinks will be served
There will be no meeting on
Tuesday due to the fair .

99th birthday
The 99th birthday of Garred
Blake will be celebrated Sunday,
plcf!IC and reunion, Kanauga
Roadside Park;....dlnner at 1 p.m.

Revival
Revival with Norman Taylor
from Evans, W Va. will be held at
the Ash Street Freewill Baptist
Church In Middleport from Aug.
14 through Aug. 19 at 7: 30 p.m.
nightly.

SUPPLY

Pres~r~pteons

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE

Melon supper
The Modern WoOdmen of
America, Burlingham Camp,
will have a melon supper on
Monday at 6· 30 p.m. at the
fairgrounds In front ofthe grange
building. Members and friends
are Invited

992-7075

•

99N104

•

IF
HAVEA
TALK WITII YOUR CLERGYMAN

214 e. Main
992·5130 Pomeroy

172 North Second Ave.
Middl-1. Ohie

ON SHOP

LI!!V
SooRli!Y Schild
Wonljp Service
rebeanal,
Theoday, 6: 45 p.m. unler dlre&lt;llon of Lois
IJ..-t
l'OMEROY CHURCH OF 11IE NAZA
IU:NE, Olrll!l' Union 101d Mulberry, Rev

·n.,.,.s Glen M&lt;Clul¥!. pastCI' Nonnan Presley, S S. Sup. Sullla.v Sclloal. Ul a.m ..
morrlngw..-shlplO:lla.m.: eventng......t&lt;e6
pm. mlcl-- oervlce, W-1!)'. 7 p.m
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH. 326 E
Main St, Pomeroy Surd~~\~ llel"i!CI!S' Holy
tV&gt;nunldonon tho flntSunllo\Y oloacllmonth,
Wid l'Omllloied wlth morDng prayer on the
•hlnl Surd~~\~. Marring prayer and.,.., em
nll ottEr ~nllo\Ys ct the mo,.b. Church Sdlod
•nd Nuroory carelli'OYI- Coi!.,.IJJUr In tho
l'arEbllall mrnedlalely folkMtngtho&amp;e!'VIce.
POMEROY CHURCII OF CI!Rllr!', 212 W.
Main St, Leo Lash, eYOIII'!ilst- Bille Scllo&lt;i
!,· :KI a m.; Morrlngw..-shlp, lO: :II a.m.: Youth
1nl!&lt;'tlnfii,,6:00 p.m: Evening w&lt;nlip, 7:00 p

992-6669
271 North
SecMil

Middleport,
Ohio

RAWUNGS..&lt;OATS

FISHER
FISHER FUNERAL HOME
992-5141
2•4

South 2nd

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH Off
Rt 124, 3 miles from Portland-LonR Bot7:00p.m.
tm&gt;. Edsel Hart, past..-. Sunday School.
TilE SALVATION ARMY, 115 BLtterrut
Aw, F'o!neroY Mrs. Dora Wlnlng In charg&lt;:. 9.~ a.m., Sunday rnomlng preaching
10:30 a.m., Sunday evening services, 7. :J1
Sllollll!' meetfn110 to a.m.. Sunllo\Y
Schod. 10: ll a.m. Sulllllv Sclni. YPSM
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
};Ad-. Ieider 7::11 p.m SalvatiOn
CHURCH. Corner Ash and Plum. Noel
meetfnllo varfoussp!alu.-s and muolcspidals.
Herrmann, pastor Sunday Scli.ool10:00a
''hllr.day, n· :II am. to 2 p.m Ladm-Home
m, Morning Worship, 11·00 am.: Wed
L2ague, members In cllarfp!. all ........,
lnv11ed: 6:45 p.m. 'l'burodiiiY. Cm-11' C&amp;dtt ~ neaday and Saturday Evening Services at
.
a .... (Yoorv Fl!ot*-BI~*&gt;l. 7·ll p.m. Bible 7:30p.m.
APPLE GROVE UNITED METHO
Stilly and Pra~:;e'~ opon 10 the l)lilllc.
DIS'!' CHURCH - Pastor, Rev carl
POMEROY
E CHURCII . OF
Hicks, 10 mllm above Racine on Rt. 388.
CllltiST, 332'.16 Children's Home Road (O&gt;urty
Sunday SChool 9 a m , worship service 10
11ood 'lti) m.1ll7 Vocal mu!llc SUniiiiY W«
a.m. Sunday evenln1 servtce, 6:00p.m "
&lt;hip Wa.m. Bible!lilly 11 a m, Wonhtp, 6 p
Prayer meeting and Bible Study Thursm W-IlY· Bille Stilly, 7 p.m. Speaker.
day, 6· 30 p m.
Lallmn lJolJe. evan ,us!
MT OLIVE UNITED METHODIST OLD OEK'!ER WILE CHRISTIAN
Off 124. behind WUk ..vWe. Char los Jon eo,
CHIJRCII. Alvtn CUrtlo, past&lt;r. U!lla Swan,
pastor. Sunday School,9 30a.m., mornlne
f&gt;'up. Surd~~\~ School9: ll a.m.; preachfngoer,'kles. lint and tlmd Su_.
Sunllo\Y worship, 10:30; Sunday and Thursday
evening services, 7 00 p.m. ·
&amp;hod. Youth rila!tlag. 7::11 p.m. 011ecy Sun-

'" W~nlgliprayermeettngandllllle
r~llly .

pm

-g

SAcRED HEAR CATHOLIC CHURCH

Ministerial
Associ4ton
to open fair

- Pomeroy Msgr Michael Hellmer. Ph
992 5898. Saturday evening Mass, 5· :J)
p m , Sunday Mass, 8 a.m. and 10 at m

CCDclaases, 9a m firstandthirdSundays
of each month Confessions One-hair hour
before each Mass

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS
TOLIC FAITH - New Lima Road, next to
r'ort Mellis Park. Robert W Richards,
past..- SUnday oervtces. 10 a.m. and 7 p.

The Meigs County Ministerial
Association will again this year
open the Meigs County Fa!r,wlth
religious services at 7· 30 on
Monday night at the grandstand.
Instead of a speaker this year,
several choirs will be presenting
special music. Among the choirs
will be those of the Trinity
Congregational Church, First
Southern Baptist Church and
Rejoicing Ltfe Baptist Church.
Various ministers will participate with lessons, prayers and
responsive rea(llngs.
The Ministerial Association
Invites the public to attend the
service.

m., Wednesday wCl'ahtp, 7 p m

GRAHAM

UNITED METHODIST,

?reaching 9 :ll am first and second Sun·
days of each month, third and fourth Sun
day each mon.th worship services at 7: 30p
m ; Wednesday evenings at 7 :J) p m
Prayer and Bible Study.

SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST.

Mul

ber ry Heights Road Pomel'ryy Pastf:KBob
Snyder, Sabbath School Superintendent,

Rodney Spires. Sabbath School begins at 2
p m on Saturday afternoon with worship

service following at 3. 00 p.m Every one
wei rome.

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

- Sister Harriett Warner, Supt Sunday
School9:30 a.m .. Morning Worship. 10 45

am
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Lyst oo

Looking for
sensible
life insurance?

1

m

(DST 1&amp;7 llpm tEST !:Tuesday

Vis itation, 6·:1) p.m

FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH. Bal

ley Run Road, 'Rev. Emmett Rawson, pas
tor Handley Dunn, !upt Sunday SChool,

l Oam, Sundayeventngservlce,7.30p.m.

. Bible tl'llchlnK. 7 30 p m. Thursday.
SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherry St . Sy·

racuse Mark Morrow, past tr Serv lees, 10
a m. Sunday. Ewnlng services Sunday
d ftd Wednesday at 6·00 p m

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
lN CHRIS'I'IAN UNION, Dwight Haley,
[irst elder. Wanda Mohler. Sunday SCllool
~upt Sunday School 9" :JI a m, Morning

Allslare·

Worship 10.~ a.m, EvenlngWorshl.p 7 :1)
p.m.. Wednesday prayer meetlng7· ~. p. m.

MT

AliiYte Ufe IDIU~ Cooi:p,ny

MORIAH CHURCII OF GOD,

Racine Rev James Satterfield, pastoc
Freeman Williams, Supt. Sunday School

!l 45

a m ; Sunday and

W~nNday

even·

I\IIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST.

Corner Sixth and Palmer James 8eddon,
Pastor Edna Wilson, S S Supt Cathy

Riggs, Ass I Supt Sunday School.

9

15 a.

m., Morning Wonhtp,10:15a.m, Sunday
Evening service 7 p m Prayer meeting
and Bible Study Wednesday evening 7 p.

m.. Children's choir practice, Wednes
day, 7 p.m.: Adult cbolr practice, Wed , 8
p m., Radio prpgram, WMPO, Sunday,

den Batter-Dipp.t F\ah, FNePieoll of Succul.t Shrimp. Hot Ooed. . Fr~ch Frl•.
Homern.cle Colaltw and • Hot Bunered RoH (Above Pl.n• Served With Your
Choice of Our Hom.-nlde S.ucet TM1er S.U~ or Coc:kt.ll S.uce. or Both.)

8::JI a.m.

SUNDAyI AUGUST 13th
BAKED SALISBURY mAl DINNER ...................... 14.79

A Oen•ou• Portion of Our Own Popul• IRed StNk &amp;imm•lll In A Cr~
Mulhroom Orwy, hrved With Mlaed Potato• and HOmemiide Gravy, Hom•

cooked GreM . ..,, With Mulhrooms and Your Choice of A Hot Butt•ld Roll or

Homtmedl lllault. COffH. Aegul• or Decalftn•ed, Te1 or Small Soft Dtlnk

STEAl SANDWIC!I ALONI -"""""""""""'""'"""""' S2.79
I
I
'

I
I

l••

q

~

m, Worship Service ll:OOa.m.

TUPPERS PLAINS ST PAUL Church School 9 am : Worship 10 a m :
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:30p.m., Communion First Su-y (Archer) .
CENTRAL CLUSTER
ae.. Melvfa P'nntdla
Rn. a ......... s. Zualp, lr.

ASBURY (Syra&lt;ull!) -Worship lla.m.
: Church Scllool 9· f5 a m , Charge Bible
Study, WedDEOday, 7.30 p.m .. UMW. Drat
Tlleoday, 1. 30 p.m, Cbolr Rehearsal,
Wedueoclay 6 30 p m ("'atch..-)
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a m ,
Church SclloollO a.m: Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:00p.m.: UMW, F1rst Monday, 7:30
p.m., UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m. Choir Rehearsal, Chlldren'a at 6:30p.m. Adult following; Wednesday (Franklin)
FLATWOODS- Chu"'h Schooi,10a.m
: Worship, 11 a.m.: Bible Study, Thuraday, ~7 p.m.; UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m
(Franltlln).
.J. FOREST RUN -'- Worship 9 a.m'.,
o.;nurch School 10 A.M.: Choir Rracttce,
Thunoday, 6· 30 p m : UMW third Monday
(Thatch I!!')
HEATII (Middleport) - Cburoh School,
9: :II 1.m.; Morning Worllllp 10: ll a m ,
Youth Grrup, 4 p.m.; Weduesday, Bible
otudy 6 00 p.m. Cboir rehearsal 7:00p.m.

T l: Mission Friends (ages 2-6~. Royal
Ambassadors (boys ages 6-18) and Girls
lu Action (ages 6-18) on Wednesdays. 7 p.

450 2•4 ....
Gallipalit, Oh.
1614) 441-1104

NOR'I'IIBMT (JL1Jtni!R '
Rft. DoaArelo..Re¥. Fr-Crafoal
Be¥. 8eloloaleltDI•
ALFRED - Church School 9· 30 a.m.,
Worshlp,lla.m.: UMYF6:30p.m., UMW ,
Third Tuesday, 1: 30 p.m. Communion,
llrot Sunday, (Archer)
CHESTER - Worship 9 a m.. Church
School10a.m.. BfbleStudy. Thunday, 7p.
m : UMW, It rot Thuroday, 1 p m : Communlon. !irat SUnday (ArcHer).
JOPPA - Worship 9 3Q a.m.. Church
Scllool10: :10 a.m. Bible Study Wl'&lt;IDesday,
7:30p.m (3ohnson)
LONG BOTTOM - Church School9.ll
a.m., Worship 10:30 a.m.; Bible Study,
Weduesday, 7:30 p m: UMYF Wednesday, 6 00 p.m.: Communion First Sunday
of Month (Crofoot).
REEDSVILLE- Church School9 :!01.

1neroy Pike E Lamar O'Bryant, pastor
Jack Needs, Sunday School Director Sun.
day School, 9· 30 a.m.; Morning Worship,
10: 45, evening worship, 7·00p m (0 s T l

7 30 (E S.T.) Wl'dnesday Prayer Ser
vice, 7 OOpm. lOST I &amp;7:30PM IE.S

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

UMTBD METBDDIBT ()JilliiCB

Halley, minister, Saturday evening
evangelistic services, open to public, 7 p
m , Sunday Church School, 9 XI a m ,
Morning Worship 10. 30 a.m

&amp;

Call me!

MEIGS OOOPBBATJVB PABIIB

ae..DoaMololowo
ae..
te)' Thllleh.,.
- - 1'1111 Mlrlla
Be¥. Artburi.Zabtree

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. Po

Our Tentallzlnt CombinMkln Plttt• ConaWUof AU While Me .. Chick• Flllt. Ool·

I

liS E. Momorlal Dr.

,. ,
~

e

Flowst $6op

.....''
,

FIOWIIS 101 EVElY OCCASION

I '

16141992-2039 or
16141992-5721

,.......,

..

Ho"

'

• )06 lutt..-..1 Avo., Pomeroy, Oh.

t_ll

SALES I SDVICE

FRIDAY I AUGUST 11th
COMBINAnON SEAFOOD/CHICKEN PLAnER ...... 13.59

HOURS 10 AM·I PM

1M

•

'-

·.' J

BROWN &amp; SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY

SPECIALS

Buying Good Clo., Fumture-Complete Auction Sarvlce

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

Pon jeroy

992·2955

Homellte S•w•

No parking
The Ash Street Freewill Baptls t Church In Middleport •has
announced tllal there will be no
parking In the church parking lot
for the softball tournament that
will take place at General HartIng Park on Saturday after 6 p.m.

NEW HOUR&amp;: 10:00 A.M, 101:30 P.M. Seven D1y1 A We*

Pome~og

SWISHER&amp;LOHSE
PI:IARMACY
We Foil Doctors•

RIDENOOR

Rutland block party
The Rutland Fire Department
and ladles auxiliary wl)l be
having a j)lock party on Sept. 2.
There will be craft shows,
entertainment, and foOd.

1).

992 2318 Pomeroy

lug services. 7 p,m,

CALL 992-6172 or IIOMI: 915·4396

Nationwide Ins. Co.
of Columbus, 0.
804 W Maon

992-5432

Baird, Halfhill
reunion slated
CHESHIRE -Baird and Halfhill reunion, Gavin Recreation
Center, Sunday, basket (!Inner at
noon

Frlti Cflll.rw"

221 W. Main' St., Pomeroy

day

'

f

Cross country practice for
Meigs High School will begin on
Monday . Boys and girls Interested In running should meet at
the high school at 9 a.m.

Special meeting
There will be a special meeting
or the Middleport Lodge F&amp;AM
on Tuesday, Aug. 15. at 7 p.m.
Work In fellow craft degree
Members are urged to attend.

MARTIN'S FURNITURE &amp; MORE

222 E. Main St.

Cross country pracllce

Brickle!! reunion scheduled
The second annual reunion of
the descendants of. Dannie and
Flossie Brlckles will be held on
Sunday, Aug. 20, at ' the Old
Holiday School grounds on Gilkey Ridge Road. A basket lunch
will be held at noon.

POMEROY -There will be a
work session at Salisbury Elementary School on Saturday
from 9:30 a.m. to noon. Equipment will be painted, and safety
areas will be installed under the
play ground equipment. All parents are urged to eome and bring
their paint brushes.
LANGSVILLE -The annual
outdoor hymn sing of the Langsville Christian Church will be
held Saturday at 7:30p.m. at the
Carl Gorby Farm, two miles wesl
of Langsville on Route 325 off
Route 124.

reserve a booth.

Preview changed
TheSVAC football preview has
been changed from Friday, Aug.
18, to Saturday, Aug. 19.

Community
calendar
•
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT- The Middle
port Christian Umon w111 hold
revival on Friday, Saturday, and
Sunday. Different speakers and
singers will be featured nightly.

THf JOY Of RELIGION

Announcements

Circle, Zirkle reunion conducted
Ninety-three relatives and
friends gathered at the residence
of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Circle,
Carmel Road, Racine. recently
for the annual Clrcle-Zirkle
Reu111on.
A I?Qtluck meal was served at 1
p.m; with grace given by Mrs
Mary Davis Russell.
Two new Circles were welcomed Into the family, 10 mo nth
old James Christopher Circle,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Circle and grandson, of Mr. and
Mrs. James G. Circle, all of Ne w
Haven, W.Va.; and two month
old ;I)ler Cleveland Circle, so of

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST,
~th and lllaln, AI Hartom. nllnflter;
Richard DuBose, Auoctate Putcr. Mike
Gerlach, Suaday School SUperlnt-ent
BfbleSchooU.:Jia.m. Morlln&amp;Worahfp
JJl::JI a.m. Evening Worolllp 7:00 p.m.
Wedueoclay. 7:00p.m. Prayer ml!ellniMIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF TilE NAZARENE, PASTOR Fral Penllorwoad
Blll White Sunday Scllool Supt Su-y
£cltool9:i6 am. Mornblg Worship 10 15
a.m : Evenln1 Service, 6:00 p.m.; Wl'&lt;l
nst!ay Pra~r 14H!lllll. 7•00 p.m
UNrrEDI'KBI8!'IGMN M-Tin'

or lUlGI OCKIHn'
..,, o•q.• a.lb

HARRI!IONVn.LE PJIEIIBYTERIAN
CHIJRCH - ~y: Worahlp Servlceo
9:00 lorn.; Cllu"'b SchoollD:lli a.m.
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN S.odoy l!ehool, I a.m., a.u..b 11rvlce.
ll•lli 1.m.
SYRACVIil f'IIIST UNI'I'BD PRESBYTE1tiAN - llutiiY llcbool, 10 ...... ;
Clnlrdl .-vlce, 10: IS a.m.
RtJTLAND CIIUIICH or GOD, PPtcr,
RlymoDt! COI.IIu!ldar ~~ lll:IO 1.m.;
SudiiJ Mo r hi 'll'orilllll U:GO 1.m. CJdl.
dr•'l Clludll1 L11L SomdaY llYIIIflll
SorYioe ?:GO 11-111. Wal., • 11-m-'Youq La·
dl•' Aulllory. Weda.-day, Tp.m. l'lm·
lly Wonll!p. •

•'·

w..

9

am

RACINE- Chuoch School, 10 a m.: Worshlplla.m.; UMW!ou11hMondayat7 30p
m., Men's Prayer Breakfast, Wednlliday, 8
am {Grace)

RENE, Rev John Vance, pastor; Sandy
Justice, Chairman of the Board of Chris
tlan Life Sunday School9 30 a m , Morn
tng worship 10· 30 a m , evangelistic ser·
vice 7 00 p m Wednesday sel'vlce, 7 p m

MINERSVILLE ~ Church Schod 9· 00
am, Worlblp oervlce lO.OOLm.; UMW
third Weduesday, 1 p m (Thotcher)
PEARD CHAPEL - Church Scllool9 00
am , Worthlp Service 10.00 a.m (Mar·
tin)
POMEROY- Churcb School, 9:15a.m.
: Wonhlp 10 30 a.m.; Choir rehearsal
Weduesday, 7:30 p.m., UMW, lleCOI\d
Tllesday, 7:30p.m; UMYFSunday,6p.m.
(~ldOWI)

ROCK SPRINGS- Church SChool; 9. 15
a.m.: Wonhlp lOa.m.; BlbleStlldy, Wed,
nesday, 7·30 p.m.: UMYF (Seniors), Sunday, 6 p m, (Junloro) f!'lf!rY ofll..- Sunday, 6 p.m. (Franklin).
·~"
RUTLAND - Chu"'h SCbool. 1h m ,
Worship, 11 a.m., UMW First Monday,
7.00 p.m. (Crabtree)
·
..._SALEM CENTER- Chu"'h Scbool9· 15
a~ :
MortllDI Worship 10 15 a m.
(Steele)
SNOWVILLE - Mol'llllla Worship, 9: 00
a.m.: Churcll School10: 00 a.m (lllarttn)
SOUT8EBN CLUIITIR
Be¥. lllonn ..b Boller
lin. Boa• Once
ae..CariRI.U

APPLE GROVE - Chu"'h SChool 9 00
a m , MornlDg Worship 10 00 1 m., Bible
Study Suii&lt;I•Y 7:00 p m . Prayer meetlne
7:00p.m. Tbul'lday. (Hicks)
lmi'IIANY - \Vorlblp 9 a.m.; Cbu"'b
Scllool10 a.m.; Bible Study Wednesday 10
a.m.; Dorraa WomeB'I FellOWihlp Wad.

noaday 1) a.m. (Bak..-)
CARMEL - Chu"'h School9:00 1.m.,
Worship, 10:45 a.m. Second and Fourth
Sandlyo; Ffllowshlp dlnaer with SUt!m
third '111untl•r, 6:31J p m (Bak.-) .
MORNING STAR- Chu"'b SchOol t . f5
1.m.; Wor&amp;ldp 10:30 a.m.; Bible Study,
Tbutlr~•·7:00 p.m. (Bak.-)
S
" - Churdl Sehool, f: 30 a.m.,
MomlnfWDtlhlp10:45a.m. !lrotancttlllrd
llwii!Qo; FelloWshiP dinner wllll cannel
tbltd '11Mrl'lil9'.t 6:00p.m. (Bak.-) •

EASTLETAKT-MornlniWonlllpf:OO

a.m; Onl"'h SchoollD:OOa.m: UMW Drat
Tuetdt.v 7. 00 p.m (Grace) , __ .
~

.

PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,

OLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPTIST
CHURCH, 28rol State Roule 7. Mlddl"

Sycamore and Second Sts.. Po
The Rev William Middleswart ,
Sunday School !l 45 a m Church
11 a.m

VKTORY BAPTIST 525 N 2nd St

MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH

BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CIRJRCH,
Burlingham Ray LaudermRl, past..-; Rober! Cozart, asslstanl paSIII'. Sum"" Schild
10 am, wcrslllp 7p m , WemesdiiiY, 6 p m
youth meeting Wed., 7 p m church services

RENE Samuel Basye, pastor Sunday
School9 30a m. , WorshlpservicelO 30a
m , Young people's service 6 p m
Evangellstlcservice6 30p m Wednesday
service 7 p m

PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH,~
mile orr Rt. 325. Rev. Ben J. Watts, pastor

David

Curfman. paittor Sunday School, 10 a.m:
worship service 11 a m • Sunday niRht
worship service 7 30 p m , Midweek
prayer sPrvlre Wednesday 7 p m

WESLEYAN
BIBLE HOLINESS
CHURCH of Middleport. Inc , 75 Pearl St

RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, Roy
W Carter, pootCI' Mornln1Worsltlp10:00
am , BfbloScbool6.00 p m.; Blblestudy
Wedueoclay 7 00 p.m.
RUTLAND BIBLE METlfODIST Amos

evening Bible study 7 30 p m

HEART CHURCH. Msw

Middleport .James E Keesee pastor
Sunday morning worsh.lp 10 a m , Even
inJl service 7 p m , Wednesday evening
worship 7 p m Visitation Thursday 6· 30 p
m

denour. pastor. Sunday School9 30 a .m.:
worship serVIce 10::.l am; Bible study
and worship service, Wednesday, 7 p m

Deaver, Pastor Mike Swiger, Sunday
School Supt.: Sunday School 9 30 a m
Morning worship 10· 40 a m ; Sunday
evening worsl;l.ip 7 30 p.m, Wednesday

Rev Ivan Myers. pastor: Roger Manl~ .
Sr , Sunday School Supt Sunday School
9 30 a m , Morning Worship 10 30 a m ,
EvPning Worship 7 30 p m Wedne!iday
ever\lng Bibl e study, prayer and praise
service, 7 30 p m

FAITH FULL GOSPEL CHURCH, Long

RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA

Bottom Sunday School 9 30 a m , Morn
lng Worship 10 45 a m . Su nday evening
7 00 p m (summer 1 30.p m ), Wednes
day night 7 00 p m (summer 7 · 30 p m )

MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST. Miller

OF GOD - Gary Hines, pastor Sunday
SChool 9' 30 to 10 20 a m , Worship srvlce
10 30 to 11· :11 a m , Sunday evenin~ ser
vice, 7 p.m , Midweek Prayer Service,

LIVING WORD CHESTER CHUHCH

St , Mason, W.Va. Sunday Bible Study 10 • Wl'd.7pm
MT OLIVE FULL GOSPEL COMMUNa m , Worship 11 a m and 7 p m Wednes
ITY CHURCH, Lawrence Bush. pastor.
day Bible Study. vocal music, 7 p m
MaxFolmer,Sr ,S S Supt Sunday SChool
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud
9·:Jl am; ~unday evening service, 7· 30
ding Lane, Mason, W Va J N Thacker,
m., Wednesday evening Bible study and
pastor. EVening service 7 30 p m , Wopraise service, 7 30 p m
men's Ministry Thursiay, 9.30 a .m.;
UNITED FAITH CHURCH Rt. 7on Po•
Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7•15

Robert Searles, S S Supt Sunday School
9 30 a m Morning Worship 10 30 a m ,
Sunday evening service 7·.30 p m ; Wed
nesday service, 7 30 p m

SILVER HUN BAPTIST, Bill Little,

pastor Steve Little, S. S. Supt Sunday
School10 a m Morning worsip, 11 a m ,
Sunday evening worship 7 30 p m Prayer

pm

meeting and Bible study Wl'dnesday. 7: 30

Borden, pastor Cornelius Bunch supt •
Sunday School 9 .'J.l a m , Second and "

fourth Sundays worship service at 2. :KJ p
m

r

I

•
~ • ''
MT MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth and -

CARPENTER BAPTIST Don Cheadle, •• '

THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST, , '•
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd.. "

next to Fort Meigs Park Rutland Rotwrt ~ .. ._
Richards, pastor Services at 7 p m on .... ....
Wednesdays and Sundays
,• •J

HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP

TER of the Wesleyan Holiness Church ' 1) !
Rev David Ferrell, pastor Henry Eblin, ... 1 ~
Sunday School Supt ; Sunday SchoollO a .,J
m Morning Worship 11 am, Ewnln~
service 7 30 p m Wednesday evening service 7 30 p m

STIVERSV!LLE WORD OF FAITH,

Gary Holter pastor, Sunday services 9 30 ' •
a.m and 7 p m , Midweek serv lee, 7 :.:1 p · 1
m Thursday
v ..

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL,;fhlrd : ;

Ave Rev. Clark Baker, pastor Cart Not ; 1
tlngham, Sunday School Supt Sunday 1 , 1
Sehool10 a.m. with classes tor
ages. l ,
Evening services at 6 p.m. Wednesday Bi • :
ble study at 1 30 p m Youth services Frl· ~ ·•
dayat7 ,30pm
'• ••

an

ECCLES!A FELLOWSHIP.128 Mill St.,
Middleport Brother Chuck McPherson ' · ~
pastor Sunday School lQ a m SundaY • ,..., 1
evening services at 7p m . and Wednesday ~ .....
services at 7 p. m.
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Kenneth Smith.~ ,~ , ~
pastor Sunday Schot:i 9 30 am, chureh)' '•
I

service 7 30 p m youlh fellowship 6 30 p
m , Bible study, Thursday, 7:30p.m

FULL GOSPEL LIGIITHOUSE , 3:1145
Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pas • ...
tor Danny Lambert S S Supt Sunday ._ ~
morning service at 10 a.m , Sunday even ~
lng service 7. 30 p m TuEitiday and Thurs
day Services at 7· 30 p.m
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA- ,

ZARENE, Rev Glendon Stroud, pasttr ~
SundaySchool9·30a m, Worshipservlef!', ' ..
10 30 am , Youth service Sunday 6 15 p , ~
m Sunday eveningservice7 OOp m Wed
nesday Prayer Meeting and Bible Study '• 11

7·0Qpm

_.

"

NEASE SETT(.EMENTCHURCH, Sun- : ; ;
day afternooo services at 2~30 Thursday •
evening services at 7 30.
•'' •

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Masm, W _,.,
Va Pastoc, Bill Murphy Sunday SchoollO
a m , Sunday evening 7 .30 p m Prayer
meeting and Bible study Wednesday, 7 30 p m Everyooe welcome
1
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST. Sa 1' '' :
lem St Rev Paul Taylor, pastor Sunday _~.~" ; • l
SchoollO a m I Sunday evening 7 00 p m 1 , :-:.~
Wednesday evening prayer meeting 7 00 ~ , , .J
p.m
.

SOl!rH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT" " I
CHURCH, Silver Ridge Duane Syden
Stricker, pastor Sunday School 9 a.m , ,,
Worship Service, 10 a m , Sunday evening ~ .,
secvice, 7 00 p m Wednesday night Bible study 1 00 p m.

HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION Hartford, W Va

p.m .; Youth meetlng Wednesday at7p m

REJOICING LIFE BAfTIST CHURCH

David McManiS, pastor ~ Church
School 9. 30 a m , Sunday morning ser·
vice. 11 a m.: Sunday evening service,
7 30 p m Wednesday prayer meeting, 7: 30

Rev

- 383 N 2nd Ave , Middleport Sunday
School10 a m. Sunday evening 7• 00 p m ,
Mid week service, Wed, 7 p m

HOMEWORK

pmFAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letarl,

LANGSVn.LE CHRISTIAN CHURCH.

Jeff P•ttersm superintendent. Sunday

School 9 lla.m., Morning Worship 10 ll

Read .Matthew 7:7-12

W Va. , Rt 1, James Lew Is, putcr Wor
ship Aervtces 9 30 a m ; Sunday Schoolll
, a m 1 Ev~nlng worship 7 30 p.m. Tuesday

a.m ; SuiXlay evening service, 7 .l&gt; p m ,
Wednesday evening service, 7 :JI: p m

SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA
ZARENE. Rev Glenn McMlll~n . past&lt;r

If any of you lacks wisdom, he should ask God, who
gives generously to aU without finding fault, and It wUI be
given to him. - James 1: 5

cot taRe prayer me•Ung and Bible Sludy
9· 30 am. ; Worship servtce, Wednesday
7 30
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Walnut and Henry Sts , Ravenswood, w
Va Tho Rev George C Weirick, paotCI'
Sunday SCitool9.30 a.m., Sunday WCI'shlp

pm

Mary Janice Lavender, Sunday School'
Supt Sunday School 9· 30 a m ; Morning-!
worship 10 30 a m , Evangelistic service, I
6 p m; PrayerandPralseWednesday, 7p
m i Youth meeting, 7 p.m.

EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST, Eldon R Blake, pastor Sunday
School 10 a.m .. Gary Reed, Lay leader

llam

CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH,locatl'don

Pomeroy Pike, County Road 25 near Flat·
woods. Rev BlackWood, pasur. Services
onsundayat10:30am.and7 30pm wtth

Momlng sermon, 11 a m t- Sunday night
services Christian Endeavor 7 30 p m ,
Son1 oervfoo 8 p.m. Preachl111 8 30 p m

SundaySChool9 30a.m BlbloStu&lt;IY,Wl'&lt;l·

p.mHEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN
. Char-

Mld week prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7

nesday, 1 30 p m

FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST, Sl llt 338, Antiquity Rev
Franklin Dickens, pa1tor Sunday mom·
In&amp; 10 a.m., Sunday evenl111 7:30 p.m .

les Domlpn. pastor. Mildred Zlesl.i-. Sun
dOll' Scllool Supt, Morning Worslllp 9 :Jl a
m., SUIXI~ SchoollD :Jla m., Evenlnaser·
vice. 7 30·p.m.
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Past..- Joe N
Sayre, Sunday School9'45 am.: Evening
w&lt;nhiP 6:30p.m.: Prayer Meeting, 6 ll
p.m. Wednelday. .
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF•
CHRIST Robert Foster, past..-; Howard
Caldwell. SuperintendeD~ Ollurch ocltool

Thu l'l!lday evening 7:.., p.m.

9a.m.; Worshlplervlce9 45a.m and6ll
p.m ~-ewelcome

CH
R CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE. Re\1. Herbert Grate, pastor.
Frank Riffle, 11,11pt Sunday School 9· :KJ a.
m.. Worship lf!'Vlce, 11 a m and 7 p.m
SUnday. Wl'dnesday. 7 p m, Prayer meet-

-· ·-

SACRED

Anthony Giannamore Ph 992 5898 S~tur­
day Evening Mass 7 30 p.m., Sunday
Mass. 8 a m and 10 a m Confessions one
half hour before each Mass CCO classes,
11 am Sunday

WHITE'S CHAPEL WESLEYAN
CHUHCH- CoolvUlo RD. Rev Phillip Rl

Tillis, pastor~ SonnyHudsm, supt Sunday
School 9 30 a.m : Morning worship, 10. 30
a m , Suilday evening service 7 00 p m
Wednesday service 7 p m WMPO program 9 a.m each Sunday

_

BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, St.

Knob. located on County Road 31. Rev.
'Roger Willford , pastor Sunday School
9, 30 am , Morning Wprshi 10 45 a m ,
Sunday evening worship 7 00 p.m .. Wed·
nesday evening Bible Study 7•00 p m

BAPTIST, Sieve

lnfAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH Wllllam WUIIams, past..-: Robert E. Bartm, Olrl!ctor or Chrflttan Edu-

St, Middleport Affiliated with Southern
Baptist ConventiOn David Bryan Sr , Ml
nlster Sunday School 10 a m , Mornln~
worstup 11 a m , Everting worship 7 p m ,
Wednesday evening Bible study and
praypr meet lng 7 p m

day evening service at 7· 30 p.m. Thursday
services at 7 30 p m

DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH,

RACINE FIRST

Study, Wednesday at 7 ll p m
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL. 570 Grant

7:10pm
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH

Lloyd Sayre, Supt Sunday School 9 30 a
m , morning worshh 10 :IJ a m Sunday
evening service 1 p m

lng worship 11 a m , Evening service 6 p

Supt. Sunday School 9 ~ a m Morning
Worship 10 30 a m Prayer service, altern
ate Sundays
'

ST

. FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION al Bald

Evening Worship 7 00 p.m: Weduesday • ·"'
Prayer servIce. 7 00 p m
* ...,."'
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH. Railroad .:_;:,
Sl • Mason. Sunday School10 a m • Morn- - •

Located on 0 J White Road of Highway
160 Pat Henson, pastor Sunday School tO
am Classes for all ages JunlorChurchll
am Morning worship 11 a m Adult
Choir practice 6 p m Sunday Young People' s. Children's Church and Adult Bible

Corner
meroy
pastor
service

Tom Runyon, pastor Sunday School9· 30
a m : larry Haynes, S S Supt Morning
worship 10 ~ a m

meroy By-Pass Rev Robeft E Smith, Sr.
pastor Meivfn Drake, S S S'upt Sunday '""'School9 :.1) a m , Morning Worship tO· 30, ... h~

- Joseph B Hoskins evangelist Sunday
Bible Study 9 a m , Worship 10 a m , Sun
day evening 5ervlce 6 p m, Wednesday ..,,,
evening service, 7 p m
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY Racine •t''"'
Rt 124 William Hoback, pastor Sunday , &gt;L1 ,
School10 a m .. Sunday evening service 7 ... ,
p m Wednesday evening service 7 p m
.. ·

AL CHURCH Kingsbury Road Rev
Clyde W Hen~erson, past or Sunday

0 H Cart, pastor SundaySchoolat 9 30a
m , Morning worship at 10 30 a.m., Sun·

,........,

School 9· 30 a m : morning worship and
children's church 10 30 a.m., E'venlng
preachin~ service first three Sundays.
7·ll p m , Special service fourth Sunday
evenin~. 'i 30 p m , Wednesday Prayer
Meeting, Bible Study and Youth Fellow·
ship, 7 :II p. m

CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY

port Sunday SchOol lOam: Sunday evenIn~ service 7. 30 p m, Tuesday service,

BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST

pm

Rt 124 and Co. Rd 5 Derek Stump, pastor
William Amberger S S Supt • Sunday
School 9. :l&gt; a m . Morning Worship 10 30
a m Evening worship 7 30 p m Wednes
day worship 7 30 p m

Grove The Rev. WUUam Mlddleswarth,
pastor. Church service 9 30 a m , Sunday
School 10 30 a m

a...

Main St., Middleport Rev Gilbert Craig, ,. ._
MT lfERMON UNITED BRETHREN
Jr.
pastor Mrs Ervin Baumgardner,
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Located In Texas ,
Sunday School Supt Sunday SChool9 30 a
Community off Ct Rt 82 Rev Robert
m , Worship service 10 45 a m
Sanders, pastor. Jeff Holter, lay leader,
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST • --~
Ed Roush Sunday School Supt Sunday

:Jl a m , Ralph C&amp;rl Supl EvenIng worship 7 00 p m Prayer meeting,
Wednesday 7 00 p m

10.30 AM and 7 30 PM Wednesday Bl
ble Study, 7· 00 p m
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine

.Q).,.;,;,~

~~~~~dp~~m1-~t~~~~~

worship
prayer meeting 7

School9

Supt 1 Rodney Howery, Asst Supt SUN
DAY· Bible School 9 30 a.m., Worship

lrtU

992-2121

FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rev Nyle·

CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION

Bible Study, 6 30 p.m.
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, PomeroyHarrflonvlllo Rd (Rt 143) Roberl E. Pur
tell, minister, Steve Stanley Bible School

"Dignity and Service Alway••
Established 1913

88Z~-1~6~1~7~~~~~~~~~,-0~0~K~B;l~m
Prayer
and Bible Study Wed .
81
nosday,
7 p meeting
m

land·Raclne Road Mike Duhl. pastor;
Janice Danner, church school •dlrector
Church school9. 30 a.m , Morning worship
10 30 a m , Wednesday evening prayer
services, 7,30 p.m.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl
Shuler. pastor Worship service, 9•:1)a m
SUnday School 10 :W a m Bible Study and
prayer service Thursday, 7 30 p.m.
•

CHRIST, Joseph B Hoskins, Pfi:Sior Bible
Class, 9·30a m, MornlngWorshlplO 30a
m , Evening Worship, 6.~.m. Thursday

EWING FUNERAL HOME

106 Mulbtrr~

' 93 Mill Street
Mldtleport. Ohio 4&amp;760

REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS Port

HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
€HRISTIAN UNION. Theron Durham,
or Sunday service, 9· .ll a m evenCngut service
7·00 p m Prayer meeting,
Wl'dnesday, 7 00 p m
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF

s

~•&gt; '"""

Roger Watson, minister, Norman Wlll,
supt Sunday School 9.ll am, Worship
service 10 :II am Bible study, Wedne$·
day 7 OOpm

Sprtng, minister; Starling Massar and Ol·
lver Swain, Sunday School Supts Preach
lng 9:30a.m. each Sunday: Sunday School
lO·JOam

RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA

992-2975

DEXTER CHURCH OF' CHRIST,

SALEM CENTER - Church School9 15
a.m.: Worlhlp 10 l,5 a.m IS!eelolSNOWVILLE - Worship 9· 00 a.m.;
Church Scbool10.00 a m (Martin).
KE~O CHURCH OF CHRIST, Roger

BILL QUICKEL

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.

cation; Steve Eblin, assistant Sunday
School 9 lJ a m , Morning worship 10.30
a m Teens in A"tt ion, 6 p m : Evening
Worship 7 00 p m Cholr practice 8 p m
Sunday Wednesday evening prayer and
Bible study

LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, Ilex

(Zunlea&gt;

..

LETART FALLS - Wor$hfp

Chureh SchoollO am (Grace)

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

You have just had a terrible week. First, you
recetved bad news about something. Then, as
if that weren't enough, you acted on impulse
and made some foolish statements that let
certain people down and almost cost you a
friendship of long standing. Altogether, you
couldn't feel more depressed and your selfesteem has never been lower. Of course, you
try tQ make amends with those people whom
you inadvertently injured by your unwise re·
marks. Actually, none of this may describe
your problems; but whatever they are, go to
your House of Worship and talk to your cler·
gyman. He will give you his best advice, for
he is there to help poople like you who are in
some kind of trouble. And remember to
thank God for this guidance He has provided
for you, just when you needed it most.

ter. Woody Call, pastor Services Sunday
10 am and 7 p m Wednesday, 7 p m

Rft.Rohtrillleele

716 NORTH SECOND AVE.

•

MIDDLEPORT lNDEPENDENT HOLI·
NESS CHURCH, Inc., 15 Pearl Sl. Rev
Ivan Myers, actlnlpa&amp;tcr: RocorManley,
Sr . Sullday School Sup..-lntendenl Sun·
day School g :II o m.: Mornlna w..-ablp
10 30 a.m ,•evenln11 worablp 1:30 p.m.;
Wedueoclay evenlq Bible study, prayer
and praise m-vtce, 7 30 p m.
CHURCH OF JESU~ CHRIST APO&amp;
TOLIC - VanZindt and Ward Rd Eld..,
James Mlll..-, .,.tCI' SUnday Schow
10 :lOam: Wor&amp;blp Servlce,Su~. 7:30
p.m., BfbleStu&lt;IY, Weclneaday, 7:00pm.
CAL VARY PILGRIM CHAPEL, Harrl·
oonvllleRoad. Rev VIet..- Roulb, putor:
ClintIll Faulk. Sunday School Supt.; Sunday School9• :IOa.m.: momtniWII'&amp;Idp, ll
am. , Sunday evenflll oervlce 7.30 p.m.
!_'ra~r Meetlns. Wednesday, 7:30 p,m.

_.. _ _

&lt;

Once an eight -year-old girl came up to me ,looking very
worried, and said, "I have such difficult homework from
school. I cannot do It!"
The Lord gave me the above scripture from James 1: 5,
and I quoted her , "If any of you lacks wisdom, he should
ask God, who gives generously to all without finding fault,
and It will be given to him."
She gav~ It a good thought. Finally she said, "I wlll try
it! "
.
A few days later I met her again. '}:'his tim~ she was
radiant with Joy. She said happily, "I did as you toldme,
and I was able to do my homework."
It Is worthwhile to pray. The little girl found this to be
true by experience, and I have found the same thing In my
own life.
If you have . problems and find your Ufe bard, try
praying to God and reading the word of God. You will find
as I have found : God Is a faithful guide.
- Taken
'

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

fl'))m The Upper Room DaUy Devotional Guide

'

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" ~-...:...-- . -~--~-----"""--~

-·

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'i

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, IJ ~

~'~(
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'0 •

,•'••
~

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·' •

�'
Paga 8 The

Senti loll
Public Notice

NOTICE OF IALE
By .virtUe of an Order of
Selo ilouod out of the Com, _ PI- Covrt of Meiga
CountY, Ohio. In the c:aoe of
C.,,., Truat Company ol
SoutheMtem Ohio, N .A.,
Plointllf fllllnot Scipio En.,.,. A-.t•. Inc., et al.,
Oelendonto. upon a judgm•t therlln r o n - . IM·
lng Cue No. BB-CV-11131n
oald Court. I whl offer lor
sole. at the front cfoor ol tho
C9Urt Hou• In Pomeroy,
Miligo CountY. Ohio. on the
Bth dey of Sept., 19B9, at
10:30 O'clock A ,M . the fol·
,lowil!lf lando
and tanementa.: to· wlt:
Situated In tho County ol
~ga. In the State of Ohoo,
end In thl Townohlp of Scipi,.. and boun- end do·
scribed • lolowa:
The following rNI "atate
aitioated In 'he Townahip of
Sclpoo, CountY of Moiga and
State of Ohio, •d In Fraction 12, commoncong ot 1
point whore the oMt Une of
uld Frac:tion lntor0K11 the
centarllne of
Township
Road 142; thence South
1165 feet, thenoe North-·
torly and parallel to Town·

More Legala on Page 2

toall._•·••erighta of way of

5

Happy Ads

o..d: Vol. 291.
289, Pege
County Deed Re-

6

~~~=~~n:

to the above·
propertv era •

follows:
F•om the Route #7 By-a
..,.. 143 North to Harris·
vHie. go right on Route IB4
to Pegavile, take the first
gravel rood to the right.
which ia Township Ro!ld
142 (Pagov~le Rood). proceed 1'/t mil•. thl plant io
tha right hand oldo with 1
~~ says
1n front
.. .,,..,,,. Non-Fo rrouo Me-

GOlLY GEE!

l00/1. WHO'S 4~111
HAPPY BIRTHf)AY,
WilliE I

Torma of aale 20% of thl
priCI, on day of sale. bu!
in no event
Ills than
""
~
.,., 000 .00• ·on caa h or ·•
fiod check at the time of sale.
with the bol.,ce in cMh or
certified check w•hin orght
(B) dayalrom the day of ..,,.
Reotootata connot be sold
for loao than two -thirdo of
the appraloed voluo.
Jam• M Soulsby
Sheriff of Melgo co,un~r.

lOVE.

NOll(~

..

centartino of
Township
Road 142: thence South
•¥,torly following the can·
tenino of Townohop Rood
142. 111131eM to the piof ~Inning end containing
24.83 acrM, more or Ieos
Excepting and raaorvlng
frC)m the property obovo doeorlbod al mlnorolo underlying the aame with the right

ITir.;:U::;;'i;;;::;-&amp;;;~i.;T
tsn&gt;tn1or Ro11'
August 12. He h111 1$
grandchildren. 3 children 12 girlo, 1 boy).
Brother Rou will be 55
old and reside• in

without encumbr·

ance to tho ourtoce.

8

OF EXECUTOR'S SALE

ANTIQUE &amp; COLLECTABUS· Oepress10n glass, lmpenal
glass, old p1tchers, English &amp; Bavanan serv1ng p1eces red
Anchor cake server dated 1914, serpentine dresser wim11
ror, shaker style rocker, stone tars card table, small library
table, oak table, twm spool bed, chillrs, Bohem1an crystal
wme decantor set, R1ser 011 Co the•mometer 196).62 0 S
U basketball glasses unusual blanket chest: large flat top
trunk, collectiOn of class1cal mus1c albums 78 RPM's 1e
Beethoven, Tchalkousky rc'l (over 100 album s)
HOUSEHOLD: Maytag wnnger wa sher, Wh~rlpool 17' frost·
free refr~gerator, dmette table w/ 6 cha~rs LR surte maple
bedroom su~e. Whirlpool elect dryer, Wh~rlpool gas range,
maple twm bed w/n ew box spnngs &amp; mattress, maple chest,
mght stands, maple CriCket cha~r, occas1onal tables, stereo,
Hoover upnght sweeper, alu m•num porch glider, !mens,
pots, pans, dishes, elec lawn mower, occasional cha~rs, 2 011
pamttngs Signed by Gatkher plus many 1tems too numerou s
to ment1on
lle1gs Co. Case *26153
Executnx Sandy Luckydoo

Wnk)

$18 Per Doy &amp; Up
949·2526

PLUMBING &amp; HEA nNG
New Lomfion:
161 North Second
Middleport, Ohio

4Sr.o

SALE$ &amp; SERVICE
We C•rry Filhma Suppll•
Your Phone
Celllfe Bille Here
IUSIIIESS PHONE

(614) 992-6550
IESIDENCE PHONE

Announcements

(614) '":!11~

SWEEPER REPAIR
All MAKES AND
MODELS

for careers In

·~'\IBL,NtS

-FINANCIAL AID AVAIL.
..lOB PLACEMENT ASSIST

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE

ACT. TRAVEL SCHOOL

222 East Main
POMEROY r OH.

-C!HJISE LJNES
·Til~VL

L AGENC;ES

. . .SNI\'1110. , . _

HOIIUTIIDY/110. TIIA-

oi'INANCIAL AID AVAIL
..JOB PLACEMENT A ST.

: 1I
.,.rr

hdqn

Pomp~~no

•992-6872

lc:t1. Fl.

6-5-'89-tfn

THE 944 STORE
SALVAGE AUTO PARTS
&amp; REBUILDABLE AUTOS
'84 Dodge Daytono ..................... S2r600

992-3897
St. Rt. 124

Turbo

Z, 55K

'80 Porsche 924 Turbo SS K..•... S2,600

Middleport, Oh.
(Next to Hill Top Grocery)
6-16-tln

51080 St. Rt. 124 Racine, Ohio
949-2600

WANTED

Open Monday-Friday
Saturday

DEAD OR ALIVE

9-5

•Washers •Dryers
•Range •Freezers
•Refrigerators

1 0-2

"Mus1

An?ericare'\'t~tlr o;..,tr l"(;r

YfJur

gtH.tl ~ 1n

Auention

R.N.'s

.and p~.:r:-.on.d
hu.drh u rt"'

s.lt ls f ,lLt lo n Gm rn &lt;
Hch
f.t., t t"it ,growtn,g m arket

~

l

orJg r~.:rm

Our N

l flon ~

du11 111d for long tu rn t.trt w il l

o: ltn d wdlm1n t ht 2 1st tt:nr ury Jo •n r h ~ fut ure
•
Jom till: AnH.:r iGJTL'- I'om&lt;.:roy Tt·,Jmr

992-5335-985-3561
We Service All Makes
5·4-89-1 mo

LW.
TRUCKING
•Gravel
•limestone

r o r-.; 1 M I
I ol (w II II I H N , I )ON
/11!11 1 1(

t , r~ ·;

rt l'o iiH( f ll ~

le Repairallle"

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

( ,tre

Amt r Jt,JrL -P''tnL·roy h • ~ ,1n Jm mtdr,Jrt: optn1ng fo r
I r .lrl t lmt .llldj or full t l tn(: R N dt: Si riOJ.: dJy
~hlfr llt: xJblt ~d1td u hn g tomp&lt;: t lt i Vt s.d.try .md
htn tfn, nfftrt&lt;tl
S~ OO 00 S1gn On llonu s

OPEN

~

AM-9 PM
7 DAYS

.LIVE BAIT
ETC.
2112 Mi. Below
Racine Locks &amp;
Dam At Antiquity

TRI-CO. TERMITE
&amp; PEST CONTROL
SINCE 1976
• ROACHES • FLEAS
TERMITES o ANTS
SPIDERS
BEES • WASPS
Member National Pest
Control Assn

CaR vv·:r.7

Roger
Garage
II. 124, P-ay Ohio

BILL SLACK
992-2269
EVENINGS

D

4/l/89/ dn

ALLEN'S
HAULING

1600 GALLON
WATER SERVICE
UMESTOME
SPREAD
DIRT HAULED
992-527

•Fill Dirt

l'wnu11y Olu , l'i 7rn
h 1J'J!. ( ,{~](,

l (r l

H" ( b p r n• J.I~ Hoi

742-2421
7-26·'89·,

THE WORLD'S LARGEST
CALL NOW

'1•800•Ford Van

New Conversion Vans from SJ0,99S
~lt:/.llfT
Van/and
Columbus, Ohio
I

MOBILE "
HOME PARK
•Mobile Home •
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

loU Free

Rt. 33 North of

1-800-535-2199

Pomeroy, Ohio

72t-891mo

.

d

DRY CLEANING
SERVICE
OFFERED AT

Fabric Shop
992-2284
POMEROY, OHIO

"W•••Ing gown
Stacia lists"

8-l· lmo

- RAVE A QOC)D
Ill em DII"PEEttiiT COLOM.
......
Stop By and See Uo! -Financing Available
MASTERCARD and VJSA WELCOME

HlOW HOUDAY Ill.. IMMIGA,-

•FIREWOOD

1-13-'18-1111

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"A I Rtasonablt

Pricts"

PH. 949-2801
or. Res. 949-2860
Day or Night,
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16-86-Hn

BALLET, TAP
&amp; JAZZ
DANCE CLASSES
MODEUNG
&amp; BATON
IN MIDDLEPOU, OHIO

Now Taking
Registrations
Far

992-5288

:'":·:1=mc=pd=~-·J
;:========:;ii;:===7=·1:1·
WATER
V
AUGHN'S
"

AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE
OHIO
Moat Foreign •nd
Dotn8111c Veh•d•
+ IC S..-voco
All Mljor e. MinD&lt;
Rep•lr•
NIASE cortKiod Moch.,lc

Call Anytl"me

"DOC" VAUGHN

992·2371

Wt can repair and n·
core radiators •
htclttr cDI'IS. We can
also acid bol and rod
out radiators. We also
repair

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

"Free Estlmetn"

(614) 667-3271
Grant A. Newland

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

Non Ferrous

Metals,
Plastics,
Stainless Steel,
Etc.
Give Us .4 Call
Today"

992-5114

EQUIPMENT
•ZETOR TRACTORS
•ECHO PRODUCTS
•HOWARD ROTAVATORS

•YARDMAN MOWERS
•tNTERSTAJE IAYTOIES

LAWN MOWER REPAIR

MOIRIS
EQUIPMENT '
742·2455

Soiltm St.

Rutlattsi,OII.

&amp;..ted at V...y L....
In lllddls,....r Oh.
PARTS AND IIERVICE
For Moot 2 end 4-ayalo

enaln•
Stoclt Porto lor
Homollta. Woedeator,
Tocumaeh, Br!Oill •

Strmon.

PH. 992-3922"

Household

KIT N' CARLYLE®

Wright
74

~ods

for Rent

Motorcycles

Uaod oppllancoo, Woohoro,
drytra, rang11, refrlg~rltOfll ,
mfcrawav• ovena. Ktn'a Appllonco, 217 E. SIC!'Rd st.,
Pom•roy, 11 ,.._112·5335 or 6tot.

PAT HILL FORD

Pomeroy,
Middleport

2 family. AUQ\IIt 101h,11th,12th.
B01ldo Larry'l COipel OUtlot.
E1tr1 nice pluo womon'o
olothae, bob\' and boy; luro
nltura, many, many 1xtra1. Rain
cancel&amp;
3 lomlly yord ult. Fridlly Aug.
11. DanvHI• on 321. Rain ca.,...
0111. 814·742~513.
I family. Aug.101h,11th. II'? Rt.
33, pall 7-33 ClrryoUL
Auguot 111h,12th. Old Rt.33,
acroee from Amerlcar•. ClolhMi
baby Htmli ,.frlgarator; double,
qu.., bade·, misc.

~A--ug'"u~lt--1:-:;2.:-'-;:10::1-;ll;;:u:;;lborry:::=::uH;:gi::-O; ••
Sectional couch1 c.halr, coffM
ond end tabiH, oooroom MOHo,
curlolno, Fenton glue, lntorlor
DlcoriiCJII' lt1m1, door, matt,.•• '"'
•nd boxeprtnga, 2 blue Fronch
la:rt•.

and arnoclt topl,

"

Augull 14th,15th. Clothing, '
boooball cords, mloc. Moxln•
Mlohoo~ llunl CtiH, PomorOf. ·:;
Big sale. One daY only. Bat. Aug
1~ Toolt, kldl cloth.. and lot•
of mloc. 3 mllu Soulh of 1
RlldiYIIIa an SR t24 11 Joa
Uatt•rt.
Frldoy, s.turday" Mondoy. 572 •
High SL, llldcooport. JoAnn •'

Ccinont.

'

OUifte
Wonted to buy, 1-IOIJ.445-6525.

8

Public Sale

-.~
(.

&amp; Auction

Announcements

32 Callbor Con IU1omatlc hand

w.

9

va.

Stale

Champion

:g~u~~81~4~~~-~·~15=3~-~~~~· ·

:;~;~~;~~~~~Avo.,

J)WNEI: GIEG I. 1011511

....

-

,rl, •

ERAL

"

Khlono to loving homo. 304-t75119!1.

RESIDENTIAL
COIIIIERCIAL

,,

uphol.tlred chair, 904.
175·2871.
La~•

•CUITOM KITCHENS • lATHS

•EX1EN8NE REMODELING

•VINYL SIDING A ROOFING

Malo dog. Pori Collie, pari Gormon Shophord. 1 yur ol~ 1 good
wolch dog, good wllh cmtann.
Nted1 home In country. 11+
9!12-e519.

IMEJAL 8UILDINGS
•NEWHOMU

SINCE 1969

DUSIY 51. SYIAGIU

992-

Puplll111 sonaR dogo, 304-t751343 or ot&lt;l-440-3283.

6

, EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
Y~DMAN

Lost&amp; Found

$200 Roword. 2 Wolklr C-.
Houndo Block, Whho, Tan
Wllght 15-75 lbo. Roturnad In
gooil h11Hh Loot nur CO. Ad.
21 VInton ~rlah Rldgo) Clll collooJI14-288-0111.
LOST lomolo Gormon Shophwd,
blk tan &amp; ..d. 7 112 mo old on
Waterloo Ad, Lion, Aug 5, 304458·1t29.
•
Loot: 2 red oowo (1 whh motley
face) 2 CaiYII (Red atMr, hiller
coli, molloy 1-1 Vlnton-Eno
Rd. VIrgil Julllce, 814-388-111111.

MOWERS

ECHO SAWS I TRIMMERS
OREGON lARS, CHAINS

IYAN SEIYICE CEII1'EI

,.......

Pam &amp; S.wic• On
VISA· MASTERCHARClE
HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 9-7
Sat. 9-6
Cloood Sundoy

LOOII.. Tuoodoy on LBSiay St.,

Pomeloy, 2 klttens. Black, tan

opog ond groy IIgor. 81 4-9!1259!10.
Loot:

7

Yard Sale

KAY'S
BEAUTY SHOP

Mlddltpart

&amp;

---'-------- '·.,
Employment Services
11

Help Wanted

=~~~~~~~~~

$350/Day procoulng phone ...
dtrsl Peopl• clll you. No IX•
porlonco noco;;~ CIR (rltoo· :
2 oxtanalon "
dablo) 1·315·7
P-2732A.

4 ombltlouo pooplo needed lmmodlotlly. Local branch o1
national network marketing
company. E~eelant part-tim• ,
Income. 114-1192-7583 Monday .• ,
through Frldlly 6:00.11:0111.m.

.,.........,.....,--c.,-....,..___ '
have

ax- ..

perlenca,
• In
account• •(I
receivable, with apeclllc tm- ~ .
phulo, on 1at II 3id parly bU.
ling, related buelnne appliCallone, I apoclllc courHo,
In aom~ar operatlone, &amp; ax;;
porllncod In computorlxod
bualneu envlommenl mall
rooumo to Sondro llcForlandil
Poroonnll OHicor, Woodlan
Conlore, Inc., 412 Vlmon Pk. ,
Galllpollo, OH 45831 . 614-1411-

age,

color,

ci'Hd,

Tak• tM pahlout of
palllfl111. Let - do

you.

YIIY UASONAILI
HAYIIIfEUNCIS
614-915-4110
814/lt-lln

national

ROOFING
NIW- REPAIR
Guttera
Down1pout1

Parl-tlmo mldlcol tab tochnlclon

for 1 hollY _,_.. ohnlclan-.

loborltory. No ihlft W.ik. Apply
In pareon. Medical PIIZI, 203
Jocklon Plko, GoiUpollo. 8:30 to

sioo.

R.D. only wanlod. 11 hours par
Wllk. W.I.C. courwollng. lltl!lll
County Hoollh Dllpt. 614-w.l6821.
Socii!
Sarvlcoo/Diochlrgo
Planner, a full-tim• poshlon ,..
qulrlng 1 BSW Dogru; pravloue
cllnlcol
bockgro..,ll ' ond
knowlt&lt;lgo
of
oroo
•g-loiiiHrllcn
dnlroblo.
COmpotltiYI oalory and bonoflta.
Contoct
, Ploount
Volloy
Hi:tlll'"' Point Plolllm wv
2
. ibW711-4340. EOEIAA I'
Wonted: R•ponalblo ""'""" to
babysit In my homo. Doyo, ll.f.
All. Roqulred. 814-448-18211.

12

Advorllalng
SIIH
nlldtd for local buelnea.. 61ot.
256-8445 oftor 7 p.m.

Gutter Clllltning
Painting

3 br. home' lor oalo, lw own ora,
2 m1• frem town, calf anytime
614-14807728. '
3.1 acrn, 3 bedroom trame eel·
lar, part ba•ment, out b1
dge
truh lrea, drlllod woll, 8 1i::l
mllu N, Rt. 2. 304-175-71110. '
I roan homo, llaaon, goa IIWnac•, walking. dl1tanc• or
atoi'H, $13,000. 3fM.882·2171
lor appolntm•nt.
UK fiXed roto mortgogo
money avolloblo. 2. 71 polnllo, 30
'/f. le'f!l. 'Loan11 •re available on
I
lair ond lqUII boale
,.gardl.. or race, color, anceolry, natlonol orlgln1 rollglon,
HK ar ohyolcll nandlcop.
Wlaeman Aaal Eatata, 11......,
3844.
'
All , _ 3 br., homo locoled on
At. 1110. Priced to movo. 114381-8711 .
Drootlcallr roduced mull 1111, 3
bodrooma, 1 1/2 bolhl, dining
and family rCIOm, otntal air,
$37,100. . . .Y financing, 304175-3030or 875-3431 .
Eltanor Buffllo area large rtver
lot, 4 bldroemt, 3 bal:hl, tamll'l
room, 2 tlreplacll, boat houle,
In the 80't, PutnaM COUnt'/

Rnlty, 304-586-11073.

Farmer'• Home Admlnl.tratlon
loano ovollablo. ApproYIII -

tlonal now on

:ro. llo~IO

3431.

-~~

Low

lncorrio homo. Colll14-112-eB73
ofttr 7:00 p.m. tor moro lnlormltlon.

'

home
Ria Clr~ on
Lillo Drlvo. 2 br, both,
IY)ng.-, khellin com~ wllh
,.lrlgorato&lt;l 11~c rango. Goo
Fumace. • ectrlc water heater.
· -· and dryer hook-up In
-mo!W. E101lllnt lor - . 1
na• _.ogo. By ownar 814-4482871 IMioro 2p m. or 614-241-

'ill

_58=-1~1·:'-'-::25-",oo=o,....=~==-=
;;:
SOIIU home, llkll Driva, Ala
Grondo, 2 bt., both, living room,
kHchen combCll with r•frl~,
oloctrlc wolor h0111&lt; .........
dryer hook-up In kHmlnl.
E10. for rental near Collogo. 8144411~671 boloro 2p m. or 114245-5811 425,Qp0. •

•

axparlencc LPN on call.

· 114-446-

Redulied oornor lot 3 bod·
raomo, 2 botho, lom. .me
Aulty, ' :104-175-3030 or 175-

32

ea... 304-e75-754t.
Wo ca,. tor oldorly and han·
dl"pHd In ow homl. 26 year•

-

French

Jr•P•

wanted
Board ond rvom lor oldorly In
Porntroy. l14-9!12·7204.

cl~:pll'l·

llull, INYI or-. 3 br.• _!lome 1
1/2 bothe, ..... eond. "" ......
C11J oebootll mi. frCit town on
Frtonc!ly_R~ii'.
114258,81182. Olt
7t •

SltuatiOIT

.Mobile .l'fomes
.

for S81e

12x58, 2 bedroom,. Claod condillon. Colllt4-9!12-UU.
12x10 mobile hom• eomt fur·

nlturo, lot 1101100 fill lot on Sun
Von.,. Drlvo, roody to movolnlo.
RrlcoCI nogotlonoblt 114-4468005.

12115 3 bedrooms, 2 bothl,

54,500. 304-175-2722.

I 870 Elcona. 12x65. $31100,
OBO. lluot Hll. 814-742·2452 or
Will, coro lor Oldorly, Han 8t4·742-21tl.
roloranceo. 814-1417-3402.
-,97=4-C'"'hl_m_,plo,.-n-1~411S....,.,5.._'"'"'
2B"R:-,-,
0
Will can tor eldlriY paron ar both lolol olictrlc, $1,1UO. 114couple. Eilpallanoail. 814-'M2· 24W211, 441-4204.
1974 Champion t4x&amp;5, 2BR, 1
218t honlngo.
Will dO bobyllllillllln my homo. both lolol oloct!!_c1 $1,700. 814SR 7, Tuppara Ptolno. Fenced In 245-1121!1, 441-4-.
yo~, pllniJ al TLC. 114-1417·
1878 14dO Elcono located on
6328.
11111 Rt. 7110. naar llooc. .llle,
priCe .. ducod to nsoo 814-258Schools&amp;
15
1877 or 814-258-1521:
,

Instruction

Alllotonl Bond Director noodod
In Southam Locol School Dlolrlct. Thle II nol a Inching
polltlon. Contoct Supt. Bobby
J. Ord •• 814-8411-2661 by .
Auguol , •• , ·~·
• •;.
OOAYon • Llltthed limo only "
$5.00 .. ppolntmont ' " "blllllil'"
to your flrll ardor", elgn up troe
(billed on your oraor). Plue ,
ilcllvo .3UO frM producto.
Call Marilyn WH- 304-I02t45.

WrlttHI

Pori limo lob? Work own houro?
Avon. SS. to ollrt. Wo Nil "Sidn
So Soft"-114-9!12-7180.

orlgJn, race, HX, or type of dlelblllly.

'

FREE EST1f!4ATES

728V, Pomeroy. Ohlo.

d1rty man or woman. Excellent

AVON • All oron, Call llorllyn
WtiYir 304-882·2t45.

mull:

Mood dollvory
on, lull ond
p.~n-tlme. Muat hav• • olean,
neat .app~arance. Be at ..... 21
YMN old, h~VO I good driving
roconl and bo able to ddvo 1
YMI. BuotnMoln boud In llolge
COUnty. Bond opl&gt;llcat(on to BOx

NOW HAVE VACANCY • For ol·

AVON I All Arooe I Shlrioy
Spoorw, 304-675-1429.

Accoutant,

iducotlonll background In
blologlcol oclon..., prafa"obly
In pora·lledlcol lleldo, you
should bf talking whh uo. lluat
hovo rolloblo' lranaportotlon.
Salory and COrnmlulon. Send
roowno to Bo1 007 cia Oolllpolla
DollY Trlbu~1 525 Third Avonuo,
GolllpOIIo, UH 45831.
,

Work At Homt, eom 1300 • cloy.
Toldng Phono Ordoro. Peoplo
coli you! Brondll 714-1197-3282,

2 nurus oldoo, shop clerk, . ln![Uiro at Odds ond Endo "hop,
Mlcldloport.

Aa par Anlcla e Tranat.rs and
Yacancl••, s.ctloft B, Posting,
of lho Nogotl•led Agroom,nt
b - n lho IIllA ond the
Boord of Educotlon, lhl· llolge
17 llodloon AYe,, Oalllpotlo, Fri., LOCII Sch""' Dlototct II pootlrig
Mon, I TIMI. lot• ef Chllarena 1ht foiiDWI. . vacancy for Ita •
regular leaching lfttf: OH
clolhH good for ochool.
Toochor at llllga Junlot High •
2 lomiiiH: Aug. 11 I 12.11-8. 1/2 School.
'
mi. 011 Rt. 7 on Cleorgn C,.llc
Rd. PICJIW, OUIIIVIICJII' I MCliW AI par Anlclo 8 Tronafero and '
blacl• for g~rd•n tractor, Vocenclu, Sacllon BL Polling, "
basoboU oardo, old jaN, cll- of tho Nogolloted "'lrumonl .•
botwoon tlio IILTA ond tho
llmloc.
Botrd of Educotlon, lhl llolgo
ALL Yord 81111 lluot le Paid In Locol School Dlllotct lo pooling
Advonce. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. tho foll""!'ng YOoanoiH lor ho ·
eel le to run. regular taachlng otalf: Fourlh
• 2:00 p.m. Qradt TMcher It Salem Center ,...
odklon • 2:00 Elomontory and Anlatonl Vorllty Footboll Coach.

IMTERIOR·EnPIOR

l-ard L

Uoed turnHIWI by tho ploco or
anllro houoollold olao oolllng.
814·742·24!15.

PI""'"

LINDA'S
PAINTING
for

·

' -

on Equol Opporlunlty/olllrmlllvo
action employer, &amp; doee not
discriminate on the balll of

WALK-IN WELCOME

It

814-742-

5500. Woodland Centera Inc. I•

1OOfo OFF ALL PERMS

16'1 N. 2NI

Phone

204L

• Huhh Clinic Dlrlclor. Quollfl.
catlona: Phytlclana Aselatanl,
Family NUJH Practitioner or an
RNIBSN. Dutlto: Oporotlon ol
rurol hoallh ollnlc progroms.
$10.54 par hr. OH W•k"l'do and
hollda~l. Submit ,.,ume ID
J.V.C.A.A. P. 0 . Bo1 71 1
Wolaton, QH 45882. Eltondoo
doadllno: Auguot 15, 11119. An
Equol Opportunity Employer.

If you hiYe uparience II Inter·
nt·In uiM ani::l marketing. and

Wanted to Buy

appllanc••·

3 bedroomt, 2 ..the; fUll
finished baeemant, new turr.c•
and central •lr, _garag1, f•ced
yard, 2414 Mt. Vtmon AVIOu•,
Point PINaant. Prlctd an lnapoctlon. 304-G75-t774.

Holp wanted boby oilier In Now
Hovan ..... 304412-3421.

Announcements

Fraa: I adoroblo S wook old
mt1od Gorman Shlllhord Diu, part wolf. Nood gocld
homo. Call 514-742~292.

3 liedroom ·brick ho..o whh
largo lot, Mid Woy Drl\lo. Now
Hlvon. Clood Cond. 304.7735811 .

llrr ahlrto ond pants, womon'o
on boby clothn, toys. Rlln

........

Homes for Sale

2·3 bedroomo, balh, boumontl
gartge. 4.51 acrH on achoo
buo nno. 114-8!18-3374.

man'•

"'1,.·

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

31

NCordFire
player,
uniform•
Cfty
okfo whhe
cholro,
T.V.'s, ,,

2H.D.

u.~~tos.J'I'

~~~-3581 .

Unauga.

Compltta hou1thold1 ot fur· "
nlture • antlquu. At• wood I
COli htltere. Swain'• Furniture
992-2198
$40.00 hae moochondlooluot lor &amp; Auction, Third I Olivo, 814Middleport. Ohio
hooilng • Hou• ol UOI'd parly. 448-3159.
Choou trom glfto
IOfO, .:.;.:_:.:..::::.......,.-,.---:-"7'"' '.
I 13
ond applloncto by tho ~:!!!'!!!'!~:O:=::."!·ii:;·:.;C:I!
lalhlone,
lowolry,
chttotmu
Z __ .... ___ ,....,. • •.,
decoratk:tnl and home decor. Fumlluro
"
p5ece or entire houMhold. Fair
pdcoo being paid. Call 114-4411- •
BINGO
I ealltodayl814-9!12-ss11.
I
315L
" ·'
POMEIOY-bGLES I 4
Giveaway
Junk Cora with motors SilO &amp;
(LUI
I'
down. w/o mot-. $25 i down.
2
224 E. MAIN ST
yr. rlkd mall A..trlllln Rlchord Ooorgo, 814-3118-11015.
II· Shlj&gt;hord,
81.. Morrill, g 992 _9976
whh canle &amp; horHe. NMda Junk Cllra whh 01 whhout
TIIUIS. E.L •=45 P.M. 1 good country home. 304-875- molars. Call larry Lively 614SUN. I.L 1145 P.M. 1 -:-357:70.:...·-.-:--.-:-;-;:,----;:-::-::-:--:; 381·1303.
F'nf:tf::~]IOIIIIId 1 I olx wka old ldttons, whllo ond
0111111
Pra t940 quina. Any eond•lon.
pun:h.. of mill. H.C. Paa- ' I o42ro4'•!g.a Tabby cota, 30~75- Cash
Pold. Calll14492-5657 or
JP. lim~ 1 cou~cus- I Born whh mllll roof, HaYO lo 114-e92·245t.
laiDor
I* biiiiJI
on.
I toar hdoWn. 614-145-7075.
We , , 150.00 p.,
mr
TOP CASH paid ''"' 1183 modal 1
Onr 10 PHplt •65.00
Chlcklne to glvo owor. llt-742- ond ,_.,. uald .
Smllh •.
p Go
2773.
'
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 Etotem •• ,
... l·l·lln
2282. Gallipolis. Cll 814-4411- '
=.UIId:::::-fu:-m-::lt,-ur_e_o~ncl~ho;:::u=o~ohol=d :

6/30/4fft

DAVE'S
SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

51

Apartment

'·

Auctlonoor. Rick POirsonllk:onlld In Ohio ond W_. V rglnlo.
Booking Aucllone, 304-7735785.

3

NO S.... DAY

MORRIS

44

Yord Sale: 10·11·12 clolhlo,
knick knackll, ole. 405 Flhh Avo.

Ill WANT ADS.
AIIAIIDY ·.:._..
1001.
'

Gas laMs.

Now thru Stpl. 9, 1919

We Buy All

MAKE IT

SE~IeE

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

EXCEPT
HOLIDAYS

5/U/H '"'

RADIATOR

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

9AM-7PM

POOLS, WELLS
CISTERNS

Certified Lic:Mied Shop
6·25·'88-tln

MEET THE
STAFF
PERM SALE

OPEN 7 DAYS

VA

CALL 992-6756

•VINYL S IDINO
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

RECYCLING

SERVICE
l ,OOO ""•LLONS

SYRo\(USf.

DOZER
SITEWQRK - ROADS
CLEARING

7-18·'89-tfn

1614) 446·4711

Loot: SIIYir Cillo Ring, VIctory
Chrlttlln H.S. ~bj_ Stone, It
lolrgrounda. 11 4
2541 .

....._..

Help Wanted

&amp; VIcinity

lulbeny Hps, Pomeroy, Ohio

992-7479

• New &amp; Used Tires
•Custom Pipe Bendmg
•Oil Changes

'88 Ford Festiva, 19K ................. 51 ,600
'87 Pontiac Fiero GT ................... 54,500

·v.s Au1o. 27 K

D&amp;R
TACKLE BOX

JONES TIRE
CENTER
•GreaSe Jobs
•General Chassis
Maintenance
•Computerized Balancer

or at
•
Veterans Memorial Hospital

FREE E8TIMATES

7-24-89 1 mo.

AUCTIONEERS: COL. W. KEITH IIOLDEN-#4318
614-742-2048
COL. JACK R. WALKER-#4323

-WO RD PROCESSOR

Wioldaws

•LIGHT HAULING

WITH ROOMS AND
APARTMENTS FOR
RENT (By Day or

% ~614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
z '417 Second Avenue. llol1213
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

lnsulali•
Sterm D.rs &amp;

dence of Erma Smith and Genevieve Meinhtrt located at 207 Spring Ave., Pomeroy,

NOW OPEN

Ucensed Clinical Audiologist

llawn

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM end REMOVAL

RIVER
CAMPGROUNDS

a

JnONI

- LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Seamless Guttor
leplaca1111111 Windows

PH. 993·5682
or 992·7121

11

i

Yillyl Siding

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Aleo Tr•••1111111o•

LAFF-A-DAY

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

The Deily Sentinel-Page 9

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Moving. Soturdl!)'. 11-S. Arnold

(ortaintlld18

and personal property owned by the late
Erma Smith and Genevieve Meinhart will
be sold at private sale . Sale to be atthe tes1' -

Business Services

258 MAIN ST., MIDDLEPORT, OH.
ESTATE OF JAMES BREWINGTON

·SECHUAHV
·EXECUTIVE SFC:

Her faith wu tried, ahe
stood the test.
Those of you biMoed
with o Mother.
Be kond to her. you' ll
n01;oerho••• another.

jact to approval of Probate Court, Meigs
County, Ohio.

10:00 A.M.

Train

Mqstic -

st11,1989

Slr-.t, 1-11" Arry quootlone:
- Televlsion ListenhtC Dtvices
~YOrythlng mUll
· Dependable 11Mrin1 Aid Sales &amp;Servi,~ tl4-3-17.
pi FUll oil tonkdl, otum hoot
lyellm, 1182 Ch1V1tt1 tlra fu,..
'Hearin1 Evaluations For All A&amp;es
nlture. exiJC• aquiPiflllnt,

J&amp;L
INSULADON

Ohio. Cash in hand on day ofsale. Sale sub-

ESTATE
AUCTION
SATURDAY, AUG. 12, 1989

~

,.,_

~==:::=======c=========~

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Business Services

might do mora for her

somehow.
But we are sure she is It

19. 1989 between
the hours of 1:30 P.M. and 6:00 P.M. all
h h ouse h o ld goo d s, house h o ld e ffects
t e

tomlnoendromoveo~~id~m~i~·!;:.;:;;:==~-....1
nerola

We fooled In foto of
thlnga, wo know.
It aeema If we could have
her now,

On Saturdsy, August

(7128, t8l 4 . 11. 18, 25:
1 6tc

11

IN MEMORY
MY
BELOVED MOTHER ,
EMMA D JOHNSON
WHO PASSED AWAY
NINE YEARS AGO
TODAY,
AUGUST 11 , 1980.
It' a just nlneyeara-ao todoy,
Th•t my dear mother
pMoediWIY
And .ome. of courM,
thought we'd forget.
But no, wo haven't yet.
We tried in our poor fH·
ble wey
To make life pl-ant day
by dey.
We're ell ouch faulty

creaturea though .

woo eppro1oed

~.!o:'ort~"a~ 111:.!:t!~

11. 1989

Porna'oy-Middleport,

RE·TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN
BU~NESB
COLLEClE, 129 Jockoon Plko.
Coli 614-141-43117. Rog. No. 11611·t055B.

1171 Elcona 14170, 3 bedroom•,
1 112 b.. ha, centat air, vinyl undorponnlng, oppllt"- pon:h,
•••100. 304-675-2141.
,

11160 Noollua 14170' ••P•noto,
naw 3 ton cental air oond, 2
porch... under~nn,nG, wahter
• dryw, ........ bUill rn borl..!!'
18 Wanted to Do
,.ntfl lot, $13,000. 304-t rr
Chid cora' In mr homo~ . ~1": 5421.
'
coon Crook Rd. Clay 11162
Oakbrook
mobile
hom&amp;
Dlotrlct.l1~7211.
14K70, 3 bodroomo, oxc cond,
Dayouw ,lor oltllclron In my 304-875-74111ahlr 1:00PM.
homo. Cloln • laYing environmont. ChHhl,. • - 114-367· 1117 DlnYIIIo, !otll -lrlc
14x70, hMI pump, 3BR, 1-112
08H.
bllh. 114·241-9244 orrytlme,
Roof palming • -lng1 lrollor 2U-911771ftlll. ,
roofa, ho'*!o_ &amp; borne, na 2 bedroom with 4 acroo. Umoto. 114-3110-2320.
qulol ul01 mo~o offer. 114-MtWont to bebpll In my hontO; 2117
t-2431.
304-713-llllt. •
•
HilUM lrlllw 121lt5, 2 boclWill bobvoll In my - . . roomo, both and hiH, 18XI
Rlleanablo I'll-. RiolorenoM poroh, now cloorw I w l - .
ovallable. All _~-_...., ...... $4,000. 304-171:-1361.
_
. . . Caiii1W1HJW.
-nototakllovor-•
WIU bokl oallle any ";:1on, orl1117 Clinton llablli Honte. 2
re••nlble ' ,.,._,
71- ~.. 11/2-11447fo

Dr., .....

211f.

110 ICI'H on St. Rt. 143 whh oil
and gaL 10x50 trtller In Dexter.
11 4482-e231.
IS ..,.. 112 lb. lobocco b!ou
tlmbor, Clllllpollo •u. on 218.
125,000. 114-268·1580.
Athten beautiful one acre Iota
wl1h rtvll' frontage, public water,
Clydo B - . Jr. 304-571-2331.

Ashton. beautiful on• acre Iota
with rl"!r. frontage, public wotor.
Clydo /~Owen, J~ 304-571~336.
Aahton, ..... bulldlno - ·
mobllo homoo pormlttoG. Public
wotor, prlcu reduced. Clydo
Iowen, Jr. 304-8111-2336.

Leon, half aara, city •ttr, ac·
- s to crook (lor fishing)

$8,000. Putn1.m COunty Realty,
304-4116-11073.

LIYII bUilding loll, , 112 ......
naw dlv..opmenl, 3 mil•• out
Sind Hll Road, awnor llnano
,clng, 30~75-4450.
Woodlond, 132 ocroo, $35,000,
Rt. 7, bolow EIWikl, Call 614440-1416 alor 7 p.m.

Rentals
41

Houses lor Rent

'

2 br.._troller aultoblo lor 1 paroon. caiii14'448.011H.
3 Ria Clrwndo otudonltl (girls) lo
ohoro ho- whh othlr girt 2
bloct• from campua. No
omo lntL drinking, drugs or
pariiH, 'T~Io lo ed\ICttlonol HI·
tlng.l14-742-3033.
' 3 bedroom home Maaon, WV.
1250. _par month $200. dopooH.
304-773-IS$4,

45

Furnished
Rooms

Roome for rent. Wllk Clll month.
Starting 11 $120/mo. GIIUa
Hotol. 614-145-!1580.

53

AntiqUes

.,..,,....;....,....,..:...,.,...=~~

Antique dlnttt• Mt Will •••

SIHplng roomo wllh oooldng. choap. 814·112·7178.
AIIIO trollor IPfiCO. All hook-upa.
Call lttlll' 2£d0 p.m., 304-17'3- I"Y or atll. Rlv•rlne Antlquea.
1124 E. Mtln Str•t, Ponroy.
5651 1M•aon WV.
Houra: II.T.W. 10:00 o.m. toi:OO
p.m. 1 Sunday 1:00 to 6:00 p m.
46 Space for Rent
114...12·2526.
Commorclll •:r•co1 1400 sqft. Top Caoh paid. Old lumftwe
Comer Stcon ana Pint. Ample cuboarda,
qulb,
oriental,
parking. Coli 114-148-1249, 445- palntlnp, 10'/t,
or tntlr• ntale
2325, or 441-4425.
call cOIIoct 304-s25-32751 or
Country Mobile Hom• Park, 304-523'8854.
Routt 33, North ef Pomeroy.
Lott~1 rentals, pane, Nlee. Call 54 Miscellaneous
614.Y92-7479.
Merchandise
PRIVATE 2 112 ACRE troller lot,
1.1 mile• right on Northup 1978 24ft. Y•llowttone A':"~~~·
Palrlol Road. CALL 814-&amp;42· AC, oxtrao, o1c. cond 11

:22~37.2~d=u~~n~g~morn~=ln~~~~~: ·loo~t4~-~----~~=--:-­

Now to aru. Booutllul ~la­
tored short haired Colllo puppiH. Be llrot one to got onol
Elcoptlonol.quolhy, Dodlgrwe.

Traller a~ce tor ,.nt Bulavllla 1980 Verm. ., 434 Trencher
Addison Rd. Wordo Trallor Pork. wlbockhoa I blade 40 hp. 614114-441-4215.
446-3888 or 614-448-1477.

Shale, wormtd, certftiad •Y•

Route 1 1183 Toyota 4 dr., S 1pd., •'"'
Loculi Road on right, 304-875- roof, Mlchellng Tlrlll$2900;

~0.

Two lralltr

~11,

Bluo book whottiole $2200; 1871
Jeep CJ7 Flbor glolltop chromo.
wh•le, grHI, a-..omatlc $2495;
49 For Lease
18 1/2 ltar~raft aluminum boat
Very nloe ap.aloua 2nd tloor, 3 at-lng 84150, Thll WHk $550.
br., opl. unlumlohod, otovo &amp; 614-146'7019.
rafrlg, hlatoric home downtown 1988 L1wn Chl•f Mower, OHP
$275/mo. UtiiHiu extro, ,.,, 39" cU111ko now 150 lb. lronor,
roq'd. Call814-448-1421.
El. cond. 614-4411-7118.
3 IKh·WQOd windows, doubl•
long 40184, wllh bollromoa and
Merchandtse
aluminum
otorm wlndowo.
,, 50.00 304-175-2847.
51 Household
7,ooo BTU windoW A.c., •75,
Brother Sowing llochlno, wllh 8
Goods
clnwer walnul coblnll. $150.
814-11112-8114.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofu end cholrw priced from I ft. truck camper $650; &amp;' new
$395 1o $995. Tabllll SilO and up u,. &amp; rims mountid 2 uln lor
to $125. HldH-bode 1380 to • mobile homo. $400. Gu hot
~95. Rocllno,. 1225 to 1371. wolor hutor,~ !40; 2 porch
Lempa $28 to $121. DlnaltH ownln!lll 4x5 ,_, $40 uch. 30
$101 end up to $4111. Wood Inch hloory front door, good
tobll w-e chan $215 to $71L oond. $40; 814-388-9!158.
Dllttkl S't 45 up to $378. HU1ohM
$400 &amp; up, bunk bode c&lt;HIIfllllo Big Dakota Farm Homo bulft on
whh '""""'" 1211 ond up lo your lot, 124,115 • Up. Call81413$5. blby bod• 1110 Milt,... 886-7311.
or boil oprlnp full or twin
.78, linn $88, and Sill. ou- Big Dllkoto Fonn Homo bulK on
.... $275 &amp; up, King t3fl0, 4 1:~; ~ 24 •985 1 Up. Call 61 4-1
drawer chest $69. Gun Clbln...
8, 8, I 10 g..,. Boby motlrHIM Fer Sal• • Concrete and Pla..lc
$35 • $45. Bid hamH 125, Nptlc tanks. All alzoa. RON
OuHn Slzo $35 • ldng lromo EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jack·
$110. GOod uloctlon al liedroom eon, OH. 1-800-537-9528.
ault-.
metal
cablnele,
h..dbOirda 130 ond uP to ~5. For Bolo: Grovoly 7 l/21tp. !roc·
10 daye aamaat ctlh with
tor. Elec. atart, wnh ntw mewtr,
prov1ct credit. 3 mi. out Bulavl 1 exc. cond. 614·38B.e728.
Rd. Open 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. Mon,
For Salo: llbor gloao truck top,
thru Sat. Coll14-141-0322.
for an. bid, anei general alec.
38 Inch grHn gae cook .. ove, refrlgera~~r all In IIC. CCllnd.
1
$75. Call814·742·2921.
81 4-445-J:i49.
Automatic Maytag waahlr and HAPPY JACK FLEA GAAD: All
doyor. S75. Calf 61 ~-1112-3059.
me111 patented device oontr:oll
IIHI
In lhe home without
Brown couch with motchlng
or exterminator.
chair 1150., Tappan CCJIPPIInon• chtmlclll
RnuHa ovornlghll BIDWELL
double avon (won lnMrt) 175. CASH
FEED J D NORTH
114-146-1581oftor a. ·
PRODUCE!
'
Counly Appllanct Inc. Good Hony duty wockor brond dlrl
uood opplllncH, T.V. Hlo. Opon
II ytL old. coat naw
I o.m. to 8 p.m. Mon ..Sot. 814- tamper,
441·169_!1. 127 3rd. Avo. Go~ $3,000. Nil lor S1,000. Call 814367·7525
Hpolls, utt
112,000 BTU lull oR lurFull alze bedroom aultt. Cheat, Hill
naca. Somo ductlng. Exhouot
di'HIIr. Solid wood, Broyhill. Dlpo,
rune good. $150 OBO. lt&lt;lUkl now. 114·9!12-2733 after 5
'42-25411.
pm.
1071.

BOATERSII Mercury l..rcruiHr,
epoclollot Proclslon Mobile
llorlnol.wo como to you. 1-114218•11- Nn and Uledi PlrtL • .,

chock. 814-894-7546.

Roglltored Wolklr Coon Hound.
Call 114-!1112-3051.

Rogulor Cockor Spaniol pupploll!\150. luff color. 114-2451122.'

57

Musical
Instruments

1110 Chny Cftatlon $475, t978
Dodgo Chlllangor $425, 1978
PonHoc Catalina $8110. 114-14111751 or&lt;Me-7104.
1110 Pontloc Trono-Am 301 V-1
hord·lop, fully food.~. gorogo
~$5800; 61 4-Ms-......

9N l = •

1
-·

'' ..,.,.,......,..--,.,.--,--·l ...arp,

Cllk:' .atuo, air,

~ 32.
75 _,

guhar
lsaoono, 1881 Monto Carlo, 1 cyl, olr, Allaorlouo 'ultadll. FU, 71,000 mlloogo,'St,IOO. 304Brunlcard 1
Music,
Jttf
5~1.
Womaloy lnotructor, 114-4411- .:,57:::=::.;:.;....,-;--:c:'-:=-:-~
&amp;077,11mlled openlngo.
1112 Pontloc T· t,ooo oU1o,
S8
FruitS •
AMIFII oan., good cond.
ar.
Strong econoinlc•l IIHie Clr.
Vegetable•
,,_ooou··· o .B.O.II4-141-2140 Sat.
lndlvlduol
~lnnore

1

,.

s11 "

,.

•
''
•

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

'

POOR BOY TIRES, 304-175333_11 front ond ollnmont S't8.tsl :
4,0ou good UHd I I - oom
tim, ntw tlr•.
~

l

•t

-•a•

"::"'"c

'

::Z· •

n:':t

r.;·'

a

ESTATEim:.'

·-1

,....,.,....,.-:-=---,...··

--=

o..,.

tm

Dr

wa-·· -

-*

bofal S11.211. Mll!llan-. l'orm,

'"You're IIUPpoled to be -rchlng for
enemy bombers, not doing hand ehadows
off lhoee cloudsr•

.,

76

•

710 """· rune

l!l!f._MIIO. or boll
ilfor, 104 411 laa -lingo.
1m Hondtt Cl 710 l'elr -

lxO. qualfty Alfalfa gr- """"' aood, • -

.

i

thru. 221 HP, •orv· low houilo. 1
Phone 614-192-5868 evening•. ..
ori14-Mii'2162 doy.

•

:.64~..;.H~a;:,y~&amp;~G~ra~ln== 11m ~fonda

{

Starorafl Montego. 11 ft. walk·

Conning tomoiOM ~.00/bushll 1113 Chev¥ Cnlllor, 87,000
• '/OUr container, $8.00/buahll .. mlln, tltondwd tra.. mlollon, 79
Campers&amp;
'
3 br., dop. &amp; rot. roq'ed. 614-446our container. 7·112 mi. s. of runt • looko aood, $2,000. or
'
1541 oftor5:30.
GolllpoUo on St. At. 7. 814-256- bnl otftr, 3Q4.175-6470.
Motor Homes
,
.,
6535.
Doubl• wide mCllblll hom•, 4 br.,
1114 Flrablrd V... oU1omltlc, 18 ft. Trnll llolltr Camper. '
2 bothe; In 8 - o m
Canning tomotou for ule. low mllllge rune · Very ~- 6. Fully contolnod. G- ]
1
School Dlotrict •250 par momh
B~ng own contolnora. 614-247·
oocl condliiOR.
AokTng $4,000. ohopa. 11100. 1971 Ford •1
a dopooll r.qUired. •u-~.u­
21111.
eeuaar, new llrHJ niW battery. •
14-3111-11308.
!1588.
1350; 30911 llcibhlnnoy Hill,
canning
tomatou.
$4.CKt 1184 Ford Tl-po; 4 d - Hdon lllddlaport.
Fumlahld 3 room cottap, 1 br.,
buthll. You pick. Bring own G.L., aUla., ell oqulpmlnl. Ukl
'•
Jn town, Nflrance a dei'OIIt
container. Marshall Ad11111, MW. $2100. 11~711.
1958 Dodge moter hom• 2411, "
ro9'd. No pato.l14-448~54t
Lllort, Folio. 814-247-2055.
$2,500. rune good, donn't bum
llorcury Lynx 0.9. 2 dr., oil, 15,237.9 miiH on odomlter,
Canning tomotou. 54 par 1184
N101 tumiRIKI 1• w.. haulla on
hotch bock, powor atooring, complete unll. Clood ceiling air
Rlceoon Ad. Sacu~IY Dllpooh &amp;
buthtL Denny Hill'e Farm, - · brokn, A.C., storao cao- cond.
klul tor outdocnman,
,.,.,._ ,.q'd. $225/mo. 114Roclno, OH. 814-1411'2171.
Ntto, about 78,000 mlloll prtoe oonllrucllon . . . . . 304-e75440·1758. •
5800 Clltl75-2017,
J&amp;R Proctuc.. Com, tomatoe1, J1850. 614.4411-3714.
Nice thrH ar lour bodroom
eucumberw, bNM. 114..&amp;43- 1115 112 Morcury Lynx 82.000 1972 Cobto eampar, 30 n. good
houae In Pomeroy, SDI'tng Ave.
5313.
mi., aute. t2500i 1tll OOdg• cond., 014-441-51101 or 814-MIIAefrlgtraiCJII' and a\ove tu....
Omnl, aute, air, cruiU, CGntrol, 2840.
nlahod, fully corpoted. 1350. par
$2500. 614-448-8751 Oll14-448month llluo d-H: Phone 1147104.
t971 Mldot motor homo, 2e II •
9!12-e021 or 814·9!12-3127.
12,000 actual mlln, YtrY ~ .r ...
1985 Cho!lfor $2400, 1854 cond, $15,000. 304-182-24M:___ , .
42 Mobile homes ,
Plymouth 1\irtomo •2000, 1171 ::c:~:-::-7.:::--::::::::-::-:--=__. ,, •
_Lu..,v SBO....,.,o_._1,..,.•_~_58-:-::1270:-'--·--:::-:-· .I For Salo: 1011. cempar, otovo, ,;::
7
for Rent
'
Farm Supplies
11115 Chryaler LIBoron Turbo rotr1&lt;14
siOopa 4, $700. ,
~ 1
PW 114~ 5 15 antr 4 p.m.
•
2 br., AC, lurnlahod, booU111ul
&amp; Livestock
coupa, load- · 1 r, aut~a.
,
lookl &amp; runt ucellenl. t:~,DOO. Htavy duly 8 ft, cam~ top 171. ;
dvor Yio'!'1 In !(anaugo, Footor'a
Will acc•pl trade-in. 11......_ MDraiM F1rm, At. 31 Pliny, 304- ... ,
Mobile .....,. Parli. 11 4'441675t or441-7804.
137~018.
:•
1602.
61
FBnn Equlpmem
11115
Chryelor
Now
Yorllor,
good
2 br. fully lumlahed, now cor•
pot, AC, All'utiiMin paid IXC!'PI
1010 J.D. Dour Bush Hog 5000 ohlpo loaded, 304-17W722:
Services
oloc. ond gao. Cablo 'TV
F. End IHtchabll loldor. 114tll5 Dotona Turbo-Z All - •
available. OWntr PIP ....,.,
440-1447.
54,000 firm. 1t81 YJmaho 700 - - - - - - - - - - ' •
ond truh Dlckup.
115 IIF tractor whh 150 NH, M11lm-X good oond. $1300. 114- 81
Socunty dopooil ond ,.,, FourHome
•;
round boler, $67110. Late model 371-2430.
tonthe 01 mila tram cky Umlho.
5110 Ollvor wllh 5 ft. buoh hog, 1185 Olde Flronu, AC, Caoo.,
114-141-7713.
Improvements
'
131111. 814-286-6522.
.
now tlrto. Groat Cond. Very
2 br., trollor tor nnt. Rt. 218.
BASEMENT
J
11165 MF tractot Dlosol $5!1115. ciOon. 614-445-1811.
114~58-1!151.
.'
WATERPROOFING
I
150 IIF dloHI 13995, Loto 1181 Lil•r 8·10, air, ~. Uriconllhlonol llltlmo guoron- '
mOdol, S1500 Gohl round bolor, AMIFM topa rodlo, 2 whHI dr., too. Locll relorencoo lumlshod, •
llobiiO Homo for nnt - •
ChNiolra. 814-317-D682. ,
30,000 mi.. eac. cond. ,1,000. FrH Hllmat•. Call colloct 1· ,
Nlnt•ndo· 11 gam•, 3 con- $2595. • , 4-286-6522.
USED APPLIANCES troller•, $200. 12HP, Jacobttn
114~37-0488, day or night. q o •
Trall•r niCe clean unfumlthad, ClOOD
2010 JD troctor $34110. 24-T JD 614-446-1944.
Wath•ra,
dry1r1,
refrlgtratora,
• r e B a e a m • n t ..
l'lfMWicH I'IQUired, Routt 1 out rangu. Skagga Appllanc11, riding mowor St,IIOO. 114-4411- bolor with bolo klckor, $1195. JD 1166112 Nloun plck·\lP 5 apd. a
Walorprooflng.
Loculi Road on rlglll, 304-875- Upper R,v• Ado Bnl• Stont 3040.
mowing machine, 1:115. JO rake, Am/FM Stereo, oporta whHio, "--'-:---'=::-:-:--,--1076.
Cnot Motol. Call814-141·73116.
PA eyatem. 2 cotumn apeaker1, $815. 81t-2a6-8522.
•••· cond.1 ohorp. •4700. 114- Folly Troo Trimming, otump
,.movol, coll304-175-f331.
PICKENS
FURNITURE
hoad,
2
mlkH.
$350.
814-448400
gollon
lluonor
Slaln~on 448-11271 onor I p.m.
44 Apartment
Now/Used
0551.
otoolo Milk Tonk. 61 4-31111-8!146.
1987 Nl... n Sentra, 2 door, Nd, Ron'• TV StrviC., apeclallzlng
for Rent
Household lurnlshlng, 112 mi.
SWIMMING POOLS $8141
600 Hrlu bockhoa, 3pt. hHch, 5 'IP8td. AM·FM catHite atareo In Zenith also tervlclng moel
with equalizer. Fog llghte. other brandl. HouH calls, also
1 br., fum. or unfum. apt. In J•rricho Rd. ·Pt. Pl.... nt, WV, Summar epeclal on 81 poolt. till 1mall or medium alze II'IIC• 47,810 mii8L I month1 ut1n- acme appliance repalra. WV ~
coll304-175-1450.
Hugo 19x31 pool. Hugo dock, tor. $2500.814-892-11092.
lllddl:co:.:c· 114-9!12·5304 or .
dod warronty. E1co11om con· 1104-575-2398 Ohio 614-446- •
FURNITURE
ltnco, flllor I worronty. lnltll·
114-1
.
PI ""ENS
....
lollon I flnoncln~ ovollablo. Cllll Gravely troclor for uiO co~ &amp; dillon. $5500. 814-11411-21107.
2::-4:.:54.::·-----:-:--:--:--:-::::-- '
2 ~- 1 •-34 ~""'8
oxtra blodoo. 814-441-3384.
2.bodroom opartmonl,lllpollo Now: 2 pc. Now/Uoed
11167 Pontloc Trona-Am, rodil T· Rotary or .. ble tool drilling. •
Uvlng,.Aoom Bulloo,
4 ••• ~- ·
Forry, WY. 304-1711'2! •
-111 completed umo
1 pc. wood groupe, oak china String trimer, chain uwa, lawn John Dl•ra 34 Fora~ Harvaet•r TopJ__301 angina, tully loa ed. •
••c. ooncl. Pump 111M and urvloe,
2 bodtoom opte. lor rent. Car- catiliiOI, 4 drawor chHI. Uoed: 2 mowora Ill on ull durlng tho whh z huda. Alllo Cholmoro 2 36,uuu
4
347.
815!'3802.
*
Gllllo and Muon county Folr. rvw no-till plontor. Both • • - $12,300. 11
poled. Nlco Hlllng, loundry Ht'o bunk bods complota. S
focllftiH IVIIIIbll. Cilll1 4-9!12• bedroom oullo, twin &amp; lui uo , Sldoro Equlpmont, 30W75- lonl eondlllon. 304-273-4215.
1987 Tro,..Am, t-topo, tully SWIIP£R and - n g mochlne '
3711 EOil.
beds &amp; bedding, boby bod Ilk• 7421.
Loto modol 5,000 Ford Dlnol loaded. 31,000 ml&amp;n. 111,000. ,.pair, _p~~ne, •nd 1upp11W, PIOk
now, diMIIto Mil ratauront
trictor $1350. 1 N Ford. Now 114-C48-0111.
up and delivery, Davia Vacuu"'
238 Firat Ava., 1 br., riverview, booth, many more ••mt 112 1WD II ft., 10 dntwer lhow caaea.
b 1
milo out Jorrlcho Rd. Pl. Choop. 304-- 541 L
pal'!,l, new tlro_o1 ro u n motor, 1tll Nlnan Pulur Nlt T-lop
Cloonor, ono hill milo up
kholion
wlih
otovo
&amp;
""' •71 t4110
"~
$18... 801 Foro - · • llaotor AM·FM, AC, red/block, chorcoti = ~- Crook Rd. II~;,. .
rwlrlftrolor, 1f1801Ma. plus P luunl, ~
"'• ~ •
·
troctar, 12150.100 Ford, Shorp.
4
dopoaft. UtllhiM II ,.llronce, no
Uud eliding gino door 917 1 •-lll.ll4-288-1522.
grey Interior, ueum• loan, take
.-~
SWAIN
with new acr...,, gOod cond ...,..
poll. 814-145-4826
ayor pole:~"· only Mrlouo In- Saptlc Tonk Pumlllng S90~Clrllle ' •
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 82 $150. 304-875-3269.
75-2881.
Co. RON EVANS 'ENTERPHISES; , '
Now Hollond 8 ft hoyblnd, Clolll qulm,
3 bodrvom apt In uptown Pl. OIIYO St., Golllpolla. NEW 1 pc.
Pit, 114'441-51141 lor lurthor In· wood grouf; :g..3!1. Living room Whlalcholro • now or ..od. 3 arindor mlnr, both oxc cond, ClOVERNMENT SEIZED VohlciH Jackoon, OH I-80Q.S37.g 529 · · : ;
oullu St
9. Bunl&lt; bods wheeled Oloclrlc ocootor. Coli 304~73-4215 .
formation.
from $100. Fordo. lloroodoo. 82
Plumbing &amp;
:
wllh bedding, 1248. Full olzo Rogorallodlctl, 1-800-6811-2104. N
H 11 nd Sl
Ill
r ConttftH. Chlvyo. Bu=.
3 room, unMnllhecl, bath, mattm• I foundation ltartlna
tw
o •
urry
I'MIIU
IU'/Irl
Oukte
1..a05-187
,
downotolra. Doyo: 114-448-7572;
I
$Sf. 55
BUlldl ng
Sprudor, used 1 yr., 18ft. Pllz.
Heating
~
Allor I: l14-4411-ll60.
S9!1. Rocllnoro lllrl ng
·
Silo &amp; unloador, UHd 1 y&lt;, 614- Ell. S.10tlt.
-...,.,===,..,.;~=---···
UESD Bodo, -orw, bldroom
S
lie
388-9841.
CARTER'S PLUMBING
•• ·
"""rt= for
t u - Ill
IUHH. Dllttkl, wring• Wlolllr, I
Upp 8
AND HEATINCl
.. '
..,...
ron · -·•rv 1 c&lt;HIIDioto 1..,. o l - fumlluro.
Sow cholno to Ill ony - . l buy 72 Trucks for Sale
Cor. Fourth and Pine
• ;
arM.
par month. 114·258- NFW Wntorn ' •35. Blooll. brlcli, lllpao, win- one got ono frM drowlng, uallla 1970,ton 112. hlaYJ' duty,
Gallipolis, Ohio
• •
141113
Mytlnie.
•
Workboolo 111 &amp;· up. {StNI
dowo,_ Nntole, eto. Cloudo Win- ond uooon County telro. Sldora wlfldlo,
I 111M. 11ft. bod, Ht Call 814-4q-3881 or 114-446- •
log bunk:.alood I I - good 4477.
••
BIAU'IIFUL
APARTMENTS
AT ~.:eo;fl:toa.:::)l:t::4::4::41::3:1::1t~.==~Lt~o~ro,;!!H~Ia~Cl-rande--,
;.OH
...Ca-11•1•14--l Equlpmont, 304-e75-74~1.
BUDGET PRICU
AT JACKIION
245-1121.
.....,._ 11
-9331.
:;PI
,
pa--'-::H-cl
,
n~ot
-;P:;-Ipa
'-'-1:;1-out:-.
-=c=-=.w.,.,·: :
Joe- Plko
63
Livestock
1111 Chny ~o, 112 ton, • cyl.1 Dovloon Plumbing &amp; Tron:~rl:
::,;,: Calltt4~~ :_~
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie
utomatlc. Gooa dralrw a nler Hn•. 11
...
AOHA Wunllnlo, red dun filly, Scottldal..
&amp; 1 ...... col. 14-2411-60U.
condlllon. •
. CIIU 814-886- 0158.11otnlnp ot Evonlngo.
•
2 br., filmilhld IPiflmonl.
--.---';...,.--....::-~· ·· ·
4427 oftor 1 :00 m.
Ullltlla· Pilei. 107 1/2 Sacond
AT1ENTION HarM OWnora,
Electrical &amp;
:::
AYO. t23illmo. Dop. rwq'd. 114Paint Plue lo now corrylng lick. 1971 Chivy, 1 1on pick..., dual 84
1714171.
Paint PLUII, 2415 Jockaori An., whH~ ~Hum onglno auto,
Refrigeration
:::
Point Pta...... phone 304-175- loed~1 ~CIIIInt ooftdhlon. 114''
l'or rant or - . , one bedroom
40114.
9!12-5....
Rnldonlltl
or commercial::."
0 ""
wiring,
new
NrviDI or repair~(.~
lfll, 1Wo .....
~
D'-tl Solo, 4 big ,.glotared 11115 ~IYorado rod I whlto pick Llcenlld el_..lan. Rldanour. ;
- • lor dlltiOt ar aoclor,
Uptown leoot'- 304-175-2114
lalguln 111~1 ooHo on 1~1 _1 up haW ton, ICM mlloll.r, 1
od, ;;E;;Ioct;;;;;rlc;;;o;;:l•;;304,;.;..-1;;;7;;5-..:l,;.718;;,;;..
bien r- ""' gal•ng. 12,uw• ownll wltll toppar,
F...,, Apt. 1221 utnm. '"'· 1 br.,
Prlced on lno,...lon 104-87s- sa.iiOO. 1188 KIWIIIkl 1oo,
807 lleOond, Oollpolls, 114-44685 General HauHng
..
1Q7anytl-.'
1,000 miiM. 1 - · Nko new,
4411 aflorlp.m.
$880. 304-77W417.
J I J Wotor · Swlminlng
For Sale:
l'um. Asll. •1 br, 240 utlllt• Pd.
gliding
8 , ... tiki.DoDDio
tlu4e·3181
r:t:a"e~ WOUI, Call 11473 Vans &amp; 4 WD'I
120 l'otirtft Avo, Galllpalo1 814illlrl p.m.
-111ftorlp.m.
FOld ,_,.. .... oonc1. A a R Water Sorv1co. Poole ct.
Dna yeor oorrall .,..., - l d
lomo,- lm-1-l ,iiclli
mokll good -110 lto!IL. S 1110011 4 441 US4.
yoar -ang.ll-7·7710.
tll7 Clwory Collvwalon Yon, =~.--"CaDpotty whh ~eel Quorter 1Nrte Ill, tlilal, AC, . . . .rl T.V.
ltonioe training IIIICIII!y ltrollr. 10.000 mi. Ill• IIIIIIJ Ul'fll.
HIUII!IIo
Nuda pari-time ! * " trolnar Wll . .,d., lnMIHn. 11~
raiM, - - ...
lor hlltor I •lllln plluuro. 1110.
- · 2,000 to 4,000 ·~y.
114~88-0122.
•
:104-871:-:ltll
.;.;.;..;;;;.;:..;=----1 '74 Motorcycles
· · pooll,. - · .... Cllll

FREE ESTIMATES

949-21

BIH boot-1117 llndou 18'5" :
whh Morcury 35 hp motor with
- · lrlm ond outo oil ln)oc· •
tlon, lloocury Trolling mot.,.
Shoreline lrafler ptua mora. All •
~ condition. Clll 114-112· :

ue
_H...,.

Rt. M Plhry, 304-nT.aGII.
H~_ln 1he ltlld •1.00. 104-875- dlllool, 1400. 114
11171.
HM!yar

OM, ca~

17

UphOiatery

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10-The Dllv Sa Jtil1el

Pomiloy-Middlapon. Ohio

....- fridaV;·Augult '11, 1989

our DUI cases processed in Meigs court

·-Area deaths-'- - -

Four ditvers were found guilty
of drMna u~~cter the !nfluenee of •
&amp;leohol In Meigs County Court
thll week.
Roeer E. Watson, Coolville,
wu flDed S250, sentenced to three
days Ia jaU and given a 60-day
llcellle awijlenslon. He also was
fined $'15 and ·given a 30-day
lUll""" tiM jail term for driving
wltbout a license.
Arthur Gray, Racine, also was
fined $3110 and sentenced to siX.
months -In jail for driving under
. the lnflueQCe. His jail sentence
wu auspendedto60-daysandhe
was placed on two yellrs
Probation_.
Gray also was fined. $75 for
drlvtq without a license and
sentenced to siX months In jail.
The jail term was suspended to
60-days. IIi addition he was
fined $20 for false license plates
and $20 for fishing without a
license.
Pat rica Grimm; Middleport,
was fined $300, sentenced to
10-days In jail and had her license
suspended lor 120-days for drlv:
lng under the Influence.
Wayne Adams of Tuppers
Plalns was fined $250, sentenced

on one year of probation. ·
·
Edward E. Fisher was fined
$Th for drlvJng wlthoui an opera· ,
tor's license. He was sentenced to
30 days In jaiL The sentence was
suspended to three days ·as long
as Fisher shows proof of a valid
license· bY Oct. '2, 1989. He was
placedonprobatlonforoneyear.
Richard E . Cooper, Guysville,
was fined $75 and was given a
suspended 30-day jail sentence
for driving wlth.o ut a license. He
was placed on siX months proba·
tlon and fined $30 for falling to
maintain an assured clear
dlqtance.
Denny Bryan, Cheshire,· also
was found guilty of driving
wlthoutanoperator'sllcenseand
fined $100. He also received a
30-day suspended jail sentence
and was placed on siX months
probation.
Christopher Ransom of Racine
was fined S75 and sentenced to30
days In jail lor driVIng without a
license. The jail sentence was
suspended to three days, if he can
show proof of a valid operator's
liCense within 60 days.
,.
Tlm9thy D. Jones of .Pomeroy
was fll)ed $75 lor driving without

~ce~re:~~~d!:: f~~~~ ~~~sh~~ ~~!e~ys~~ ~~ ;:~tt~~ ~

he attends a special program, the
judge said $150 of the fine and the
jail term will be suspended.
In other cases, Thomas w .
Parks of Reedsville, was sent·
:~ed to 10-days In jail and fined
..,..,forcrlmlnalmlschlef.Hewas
ordered to make res Ututlon and
·
sente
_
need to one year
of
probation.
Parks was also sentenced to a
concurrent 10-day jail term for
criminal trespassing and was
fined $50 along with being placed

0

suspended upon proof of a valid
license within 60·days.
Dale Riffle of Pomeroy was
fined $23 for speeding and $100for
drlvlngwlthoutallcense. Hewas
se~tenced to siX months In jail
w ch was suspended to 10days
and was placed on one year
probation .
Found , guilty of disorderly
conduct was Lisa Plrsons of West
Columbta, · W.Va. She was fined
$50 and placed on one year of
probation.

Two people were found guilty
of Uttering and were ordered to
perform 16 hours of community
)!ervice. Patrica SnlderofRaclne
and Kevin Siders of Middleport
were ordered to perform their
community service with litter
control. In addition. Siders was
flned$75.
· Those fiQed for traffic viola·
lions were: Bruce Tuyan of
Eleanor, W.Va., costs for speed·
lng, Joseph Might of Middleport,
$10 for parking on the highway,
Brent Bush of Leroy, w .va., $10
forlalllngtostop,CllflordMiller
Jr. &lt;if N. Charleston, W.Va., $24
lor speeding;
Teresa Strahler of Long Bot·
. tom, $10 for left of center,
Timothy P. Hayes of Racine, $21
lor speeding; Richard L. Morgan, $23 for spe edl ng, Edwards ·
Ash of St. Charles, lll., $26 lor
speeding, James W. Spry of
Kenova, W.:Ya., $25 foppeedlng;
Jerry L. Wade of Gallipolis,
$20 for speeding, Dennis · L. ·
Richards of Racine, $21 lor
speeding, . Jennifer L. Saylor of
Batavia, Ohio, $20 for seat· belt

Weath
er

honor again.
make him ma,d. I have never
"He was an exemplary em- seen him mad. "
ployee with no discipline probBut Sims recalled he and
lems of any kind," Boyd said. Taylor had just this.week casu''He was the kind of guy the other ally discussed the shooting ram·
employees called a friend."
page Aug. 2'1, 1986, In which a
Jonny Slnis, . a letter carrier . disgruntled poslal worker, P{l·
who knew Taylor for 14 years, trick Sherrill, kllled 14 and
said: "I never would have wounded six at an Edmond,
dreamed lt. Not ;John Taylor. Okla. , postal branch belpre kll·
Everybody liked John. He was ling hlniself. · ·
·
happy-go-lucky. You couldn't

Page 81

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Hosp1"tal news

PICK-3
Veterans Memorial
311.
Thursday admissions - Paul
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled D s d
p
s 1
$1,365,369, with a payoff due of . . aun ers, . omeroy; use
$941,996.
Wlrldon, Pqmeroy; and Earl
. Kauff, Ra!!lne.
PICK-4
Thursday discharges 5923.
Brenda Randolph, VIola Rob·
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled bins, Paul Tuckett, Lovle Wat$230;028.50 , with a payoff due of son, Jacqueline Ginther, and
$78,300. .
. .
Lena Carpenter.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
The place where you can enjoy
Tlmea:SenUnel Staff
everything from professional
POMEROY' The Rock bands to pretty babies, from
Springs fairgrounds Is the place tractor pulls to excltlng racing
where the action Is this weekend programs, from cotton candy to
as the midway 'r ides go up, the Appalachia cloggers.
.
exhibitors begin moving ln, the
Where you can share the
·food stands stock up, and t.h e Fair excitement of toddlers taking
Board officials generally cop- their first ride on the' merry-gocede that the time of "happy round, youngsters winning their
confusion" has·arrived.
first blue ribbon, and teenagers
It's Meigs County Fair week!
trying their hands at the games.
Following tradition, the 126th
Arid, If that's not enough, you
Fair will ojlen with religious can watch tired parents strugservic~ Monday at 7:30 p.m.,
gllng to keep their kids In tow ,
' under sponsorship of the Meigs and old . timers trying to get
·County Ministerial Association comfortable on hard benches
at the grandstand.
while the beat goes on.
This year It will be a more
On top and down over the hill,
Informal service without a ser- _there's plenty of action planned
mon. The program will feature lor the week. And once you're on
music by choirs from several the grounds, It's all free.
churches, short lessons, responTuesday's grandstand atb'acslve readings, group singing and lion will be the demolition derby
·prayers.
·
at 7 .. p.m. It's a thrlll~a-mlnute
As for the rest of the week mayhem as revved up vehicles
well ihere's no stopping In fun smash Into each other. You
things to do; see, taste, and might say It's a bash where
. experience. ·
everyone's after the cash.
It's the county's once-a-year
Then.on Wednesday there's-the
week lor choosing the best from Junior Fair parade at 5:30,
all of the rest In a wide range of followed by the "blggle" of the
both · junior and senior fair fair's .entertainment lineup, the
exhibits and actlvltl~s to be country music duo, _ Charlie
judge(!,
McClain, ;lnd . .. her
husband,
'

'

tax knowledgewxl'team bow to
saw ITIOI)eYOI'I ~~·are
~g career,
Noprel'l!q\.dsltesare'r'equlredto

lookln!r for ·a

come ,lax _preparers.
enroll. . , . , · ;
tf&amp;RBiock, theworld's:Jaiit'
Qualified course ···griduates
est Income taK """'""""lion
maybe offered~....._.._
__ 'or
81
,..,_,_M
""v'"w""
Ice, Is offlirlngabaslclncometax
positions wl.th .
Mah_lll ac·
course starting September 5th. cept employment •With ,Block
During the13 week course because o1 the n-tble'' hOurs
studentsWtlstudyalphasesQI avalable. ~· QiCx;k Is
Income tax ........,.ra...... _--' - under 110 obligallon.to .- •fer' em,..v,... """' ..ru ·~U1
ceiYe actual experience In pre- JJiovment, nor are' graUtei
paring lndMdual returns, Expe- Under an ob~ to
pt
rlena!d Block Instructors _
wiD ern...a......l.1 , ._..,. R
leach cumint laws, theory__8J'l!l
~bl, co~ kTiudet
aDPilcallon,aspractlcedln~ an textbooks, 51Qllles and tax
olflces nationwide. There 'Is a fonns ~for-the compleclassroomdlsc1isslononeachlax Jlon ollhe '00111e. ,-Cerllflt3ta
subject and pracllce problems at · and 7.5 ..CQII~ edUCation
ewry level. ~ are Jli:O' units wiD be~--~
., SI,IC·
grammed lo· leach students In- cesSfulcompletloncitf:fll·course.

'

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seJV.

.C.

aea~n c:omplex-taKproblems .
""'""-

~lslrallonfonnslndabroch
..,_

•progresses. "'l.\'ft'l'ts . we oru ....~.lal'course
the course both Interest- may be obtained ·by •contacllng
lng and ctiilllenglng. , ·: ';
H&amp;R Block office at
·
Courses are IdeallY sUited for 818 East Main !itreel · ; "

as
• wiD

people whowanttolncreasethelr

Pomeroy, Ohio 41789

..

614-99Z.887I . ·-~

,

•
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.•.••

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~~a'~

JIM COBB CHEVROLET, OLD

... .. .... .. . .. ·-··

...... .

..

·~

'-•1 e'

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.

1985 FLEETWOOD BROUGHAM
32.000 milH.

SALE$12, 900 "

• WAS 1 13,900

NEW YORKER TUUQ.

33,&amp;13 miles.
WAS 1 13,996

NOW~

12 900

35.ooo mu...
WAS 1 10,495

I

1986

NOW ~'l'l49 5

Auto.·. air.

-

·

· f,

,'~ , . ,

1167A

GM200A

1987 SEDAN DtVILLE

.....

1982 CUTLASS 4 DR.

.

Nl~:; S/f5495
.

WAS
,, '5996

~-

LtL.:.)~~S...:':·:.,___:

..,

EARLYSATVBDAYFIRE-TheVpperRiver
-· Oub, lonnerly tile Greea Gables, was heavily
damaged by ~Ire early Saturday. Till! alarm was
answered aU:ll&amp; a,m., by theGalUpollt Voluateer
"re Department, •lllaled by Point Pleasant

NOW

WAS '2996

.$2495

42,000 miiH.
WAS '8495

NOW

$7295

, c

By JULIE E, DILLON
Ttm..Sentlnel&amp;taff
POMEROY - Restoration of
several buildings on Pomeroy's
Main Street Is underway mark·
!ng the business community's
Initial preparation for the 1990
·sesquicentennial observance In
'the -village.
· Mary Ann Peters, regional
. coordinator with the Southeast·

..-

1982 BUICK PARK &amp;Vf--·
Clean, ;.,-~,good
SAL~ l ;,·99 5

· ·

1989 CAilJAftC SEVILLE .
z,.,oomnea . PRICE $19,900

j

'

GM21U

GM221

1986 SABLE

.

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Restorati~ns
GM2141

"'

WAS 1 4495

.

,

Nt•mbering system to assign
new ad-d resses for residents
·~

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13341

.......

,1,.,.

,

THESE CARS"'MUST GO TO MAKE ROOM FOR ·THE ·1990 ·MODELS
.

1301-A

will

OBILEt C:ADILLaC:,::
I"'•' 1,.&gt;

1 2 Section a. 80
A Multimedia Inc.

13, 1989

will feature Wyoming Wolf Band
Wayne Massey, at 8:30.
On the stage McClain will be and on Thursday the local Group ·
doing her biggest hits Including Therapy will entertain with
"You're My Music, You're My ·music from the fifties and sixties.
Song• :, and. "Who's Cheating · Vocalist Jonnle Belinda and the
Who" and then will be joliled by $hady River Shufflers will fill
Massey for a set of duets Friday's schedule on ·the Hill
including "With Just One Look In Stage. and on Saturday the
program will Include Peggy
Your Eyes" which climbed to
Gillespie Sytlettes Twirling
number three on the music
Troop, Barbara's School · of
charts. .
,
Dance, and the Country Blend.
Thursday will find the popular
Band.
McGuffey Lane whose especially
Horse shows, .truck, tractor
known to area residents for their
and horse pulling contests, horse
recorded songs, "Long Time
harness racing on three days and
Lovin' You" and '.'Green Country
quarter
horse races on Saturday ,
Mountains." , The siX-member
as
well
as a variety of other
country-rock band Is sure to
delight the local audience when animal events round out the
program.
they take to the stage at 8: 30.
And there. of course, will be all
The Baron of the Banjo and the
Restoration Jazz Band will per· of the exhibits to see.
Thursday Is Senior Citizens
form at 8 p.m on Friday doing
Day and anyone, over 65 will be
some ragtime and Dixieland with
a riverboat format of the 20's, admitted free at the gate.
The midway rides
be
and on Saturday night at 8 p.m .,
operating from 1 to 4:30 and 6,to
TO RACE AT MEIGS FAIR -This three year old trotter,
Butch Wax and The Glass Packs,
11
·p.m
·on
on
Tuesday,
Wednes·
Jl&lt;lollko, In her first year of racing, will !Je In t,.e field of horses on
a Southeastern Ohio rock group
day, Thursday and F'rlday, and
holh Wednesday and Thursday at the Meigs County Fair this week. ·
will be at the grandstand.
Nollko Is getting groomed here following a workout on the track by
There will be a variety of poon to 5 and 6 to 11 on Saturday.
owner-trainer Henry Henshaw.
entertainment on the Hill Stage Holders of.membershlp, season.
during the week, starting Off on . or 4-H tickets can ride by paying
Tuesday evening with a talent $2.50 at the ride office each qay. again this year all spaces are
lions are joined by several
There will be plenty to see In filled, and plenty to eat as the mobile food units for the week at
show and a performance by the
the commercial buildings where permanent local stand opera- the Meigs County F1;1lr .
Midnight Cloggers. Wednesday

_,;-.
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Meigs Fair features rides, musie; parade

·

of ' pec)pie · are
learning the 'skW of Income tax
prepara11on from H&amp;R Block,
and are earning money as In-

'•

Val 24 No. 27
1889

··u &amp;R 81ac
·· ,•}t 0· QU
,(fer . ax
30~
School·Jn This ~Area'l'lloUSiinds

Partly cloudy . Hll!'h In lower
80s. IJght winds .

•tnttS
'

e

St k8

Inside

There's no fool
like an old fooL ••A5
· Along the River .... : .... Bl-8 .
t-----------......----------~ IJvestpck ........ .. .... .... ...Dl
In our low
. ••
Comics· ................... Insert
0
ClassUieds ......... ........ DS-7
Bloodmobi1e returns to
Deaths ...... ., ................. M
Editorial ................ ., .... A2
Gallia August
84
Sports ....................... C1-6

REMEIIUI ·

YEARE D PRICES
AT

GM19SA

Beat of the· Bend:

.?""

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D-1, 8

Mason·fair livestock sales

days of
August

.

.

50 cents

The dog ·

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11

Lottery n-umbers ·

Sunday

violation, Janice L. Caine · of Richard L. Clark
· '. Kt.)c)·-liilark.
'.
:!!omeroy, $24 for speeding, Lori
·
.;,;; A1so's!lrv\vlng are three broth· ,.
L. Thomas of Cheshire, $10 for
Richard Lee Clark; 38, GalUPol:.l~~ ers, \\1Jl1am Clark of Bradoria, ,'
failure to stop:
us. died- unexpectantzy Wedne. !''' Texas!'i'~avld Clark of Spartans· ,,~.·
Barbara J. Hoch of Lancaster, d!IY afternoon at Holzer Medical burg l¥i'c., and Jerry Clark of
S2ti for speeding, Elizabeth R. Center. -·
Lat1caster, Ohio; • two sisters,
Amoriga of - Pomeroy, $21 lor
Born ,Aug. 29, '1950 In Butchel, M~s. !lormer I DIXIe) Proffit of ,,
speeding, Kevin Manley of Mid· Ohio, hf! Wi15 the son,·o t _:W.IIl\lilll •J!-HFine, a'!d 1.frs. EleG!Ior Batedleport,$30forfalluretocontrol,
Hester Ciark and Martha Mae man of"Butchel.
Jessie A. Curtis of Pomeroy, $30
, .
, -~~ ··~..-P.t'~_!:l1diP&amp; hlm ) n death was •,'·
lor failure to yield, James w.
·
one brother.
.
Ohlinger of Langsville, $30 for : ·•
,
, .
" , '"} " t'rvices ~U-.be Monday, 10
failure to control and Krls Nain
I t •
·
11. · at the McCoy-Moore Fun·
Meeks of Coolville sjo lor failure .
e con es w.mner .. · ·-eral· Home Wetherbolt Chapel In
to control.
'
.
Todd Tf .
. -~ I _· Ga!Upolls, with' the Rev. Robert
Foreleltlng bonds were Jenctly 1 !PP of Pomet.:oY C!Jr• ) Kyhuj),fficlatlng. Burlal_wlllbeln
nlfer L .•Saylor, Batavia, speed· · ·farn:i: 1 fh'n!'led 6 t~~u'rnY~~Y · :; th~~q~ntenary Cemetery.
lng $55 Joe v. Caldwell Clncln· s· nd
.e ug . . e on -o · t _
e " ·;...;;
There will be no calling hours.
• .•
·
•
u a'"' ..mes-Sentlnel as that of· ... -", ;;_;
~;;;-....;,;,";;"'"'"'"''.o.·- - - - - - .
natl, speeding $50, Steve Quillen, James and Becky Cotterlli, ·Cot·
1
Middleport, loUowing toclptely, term R d p
H
$55;
oa ' omeroy. e was
WITH ROWOS.
Andrew Miller. Hurricane
omnyesteof t)lfree tol lthd~n\lty the
'
ry arm n - e contest
To .... ab= tl' IIJ
W.Va., speeding, $55, Orrin R.• sponsored
by the Meigs 'Son.and
· ........ ......
Lockhart, $55 failure to control, Water ConservatiOn ' Distrl t
arnar--.·1••111
and Yvon Roussel, Quebec, Can- Tripp's name was· selected . ~y
POM
,wEROvtoa'l ada, speed!~, $55.
lottery- and he will receive $5
from Th s nd Tl
· Se 'tl
FLOWER SHOP
e u ay mes- n ne1
·T~. If'"' &lt;mn ... S.."i '-'••"
()C
lor his correct answer.
· ..
Pll., tft,.Oft .. . ttf,S721
Dally atoek prices
_;..;_ _ _ _ _ _..._·:::.
" :.:.
· · :. :·~.,.-=:t=::t~~=~~=~~
1
(As of 10 a,m.)
k' .
•·
T .
Bryce and M~k Smith
&amp;
of Blunt, I!:J!!s 1o Loewi
·
· • ""'''' • ·· ·
.

By Vnlted PresslnteraatlonaJ
Am Electric Power ..... .. ... ...
Sou Ill Central Ohio
AT&amp;T ......................... ........ 40~
T~nlg~: Mostly cloudy • will! a Ashland 011 ............ ............ 38Y,
sh g ~ c ance of showers and Bob Evans ............... .. .... ..... 15~
~hun tstorm~. Lows will be In Charming Shoppes .............. 16~
ow~r I~- ~ght winds. - CltyHoldlngCo ................... 15
S~~~a;.a ;a:tly ~:U&lt;;:;t;.vlth ~al Mogul... ..... ..... ....... 23~
h
•
uOvuy!lllrT&amp;R ............ .. .... .54~
·h ·
ate anceHol1shsowers and thundf\1'· Heck's .............. ................ .. . ~
s orms. r g will be near 80. Key Cen tur1on... .................123L
·ch
r•
1 40rrcent.
anc~~ald
. . Lands' End ....................... :.28%
s d
e orecast
Limited Inc ........................35%
A unh BY r~ghTuesday
Multlmedlainc ........ ........... 106
th de ance 0S showers and Rax Restaurants .................. 2%
un erstorms unday and Mon· Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 16~
day, with fair conditions Tues- Sh
• I
d
HI h
11
oney s nc .. ..................... -. 12
a~. g ~~~ w I be between 80 Wendy's Intl. ................ .. .. .....6
the io':.er ::~ld'gl~~~~ lows Worthington Ind ..... , ........... 24~

r.:' 85

ostal... --'-----..:.;:__
Continued from page 1_ __

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flreflchten. Here, Galllpola firefighter Steve
Wallla works to exUnp1sh a hotspot on the second
Door of the club, See 1 tory on page A4.
(Times-Seatlnel photo by Lee Ann Welch)

'

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By MARGARET CALDWElL
benefits wll.l be more visible. 1 was !lOt feasible," Barnes said.
Tlmes-Seatlnel Staff
· canseeonlypositivethlngsabout "With this system a person can
GALLIPOLIS- With approval this system.~·
tell, by knowing a house number,
from ·the Gallla Cpunty Commls·
The first phase of the project where the residence Is located
sloners, the Galllll County Eng I· has been completed. All township · from the beginning of the road. "
neer's Department again has and county roads have been
The only rqutes with the
begun working on an almost renamed and renumbered with
numbering system beginning at
15-year-old house numbering roads with duplicate names also an Intersection are SR325and SR
system,
renamed . New road signs wlll be 7. The numbers on these routes
Expected to be completed In a put up with township road signs wlll ,be specified east and west.
year, the system will reassign all In white on blue and county roads
On SR 325from the Intersection
county residents, businesses, In white on green.
of US 35 to Rio Grande, resldenand property with new route
County roads are numbered ces will have new numbers and
numbers, with some roads being from 1 to 199, with township roads specified West. The residences In
renamed. · However , all house numbered from '200 and up. All the opposite direction will be
numbers will remain .t he same odd numbers run north of US 35 ' numbered by East
Inside the Gallipolis city corpora· and all even numbers run south
The 11umberlng and north·
tlon limits.
of the highway .
'
south direction assignments on
SR 7 will begin at the Gallipolis
Craig Barnes, Gallla County
The engineer's department Is
assistant engineer, said the using a straight line mileage
city corporation limits .
county r~celved a grant In 1975 system, where a number will be ·
"To minimize confusion and
for the house numbering system. assigned every five lineal feet
Inconvenience, postal deliveries
will be made to both old and new
Due to numerous conflicts and along a road. Number one Is
hold ups, the project Is back In reserved for the first five feet of ,mailing addresses f9r a min·
the working. .
the beginning of tjle road and
lmum period ofoneyearfrom the
"It's going to create some progressing numerically to the
date or notification. Th is will
Inconvenience. But most of the end of the road.
ensure the people of Gallla
people have been fairly respon- · " Because or the geological
County sufficient time to utilize
slve," Barnes said. "Once the formations and variations In
and change letter heads. notlfy
system Is Implemented, the terrain, the popular grid system
(See NUMBERING, page A3) .

begin preparation for Pomeroy celebration

ern Ohio Preservation Office In
Athens, Is working with the
Pomeroy Historical Preservatlon Commission to advise buslness owners on how to go abOut
restoring and renovating their
buildings. Peters' organization Is
an extension of the Ohio H!storlcal Society 111 Columbus.
The advising group has been
having meetings with the Pol!le-

roy Commission anti another
committee Interested In
preservation,
According to a spokesman for
the local preservation commls·
slon, personnel of the Southeast·
ern Ohio Preservation Office are
available to offer suggestions on
e:~~terlor renovation, Including
painting, color selection and
materials.

Members of the local Commls·
slon are Carson Crow, Mary
Powell, Mikel Struble, Frank
Porter, and Tom Reed. The
committee Is made of anyone

who IS Interested In getting
Involved with historic preserva·
tlon.
TheOhloHistorlca!Socletyhas
a listrrom which Individuals can
·

obtain replacement parts, such
as wrought Iron and cornices
and a consulting architect also 1 ~
available. Someone known as a
(See RESTORATIONS, pageA3)

Activity flourishes in spite of work
f

l
I

1

I

1
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\
I

'
'
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I

'

Jim Cobb

.

:00 P.

.....

-

....

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(

992-6·6 14.
,.

By LEE ANN WELCH
Ttm..Sentlael Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Nearly 200
people were downtown at midday
Saturday for the Ole Car Club
Show In the Gallipolis City Park,
and a good number of them took

the opportunity to walk over and
On Court Street, the walks and
Inspect the streetscape project.
curbs should be completed Gallipolis was abuzz with ac- with the exception ofthe corners
tlvlty·between the car show and -bY Tuesday even11111. Holbrook
sidewalk sales - · or lor some said. After that, t))ey will being
merchants,' back alley sales.
pouring concrete on Second.
Sidewalk demolition Is com·
.All Intersections within the
plete on the project on Second project area will be handicap
AvenuetoBrunlcardiMuslc,and ac!cess!bJe and sloped. In addl·
orange tape fiutters In the tlon, neYf catchbasllls have yet to
breeze,- markinl areas not open . be Installed at thole areas.
The Interlocking brlck·look
to pedestrian traffic.
POMEROY - Another In the
. Tile tape Is there lor a purpose, concrete paver• may arrive
series of marijuana raids took · according to official with the 10111etlme thl.a week, Holbrook
place In r.lelp and Athens project. People should avoid Rtd. but he's not anUclpatlng
Counties Saturday with dozens of
walklna within cordoned-off them for another week,
law enforcement officials from
areas; accordlnatoon-sltesuperOnce Installation beglu on the
the two counties being joined bY
visor Rob Holbrook.
Court Street pavers, he aald,
National Guard units and the BCI ·
Tbel:e are areas on Secolld more sidewalk&amp; on Second c:an be
.helicopter In the search, It was . Avenue and Court Street marked demollllled
reported early Saturday that
for variOus reasons by the orange
In terms of electrical aervtce,
AtloriiiY General Anthony Celetape, he llld. In some areu, It the remalnlnl pole at the ,l lde of
breae waa on site to view the
mar.)!&amp; fresh concrete, In others Nancy _TaW!U!f.__ Framln&amp; has
operation.
It's unsafe for walking.
(See ~. pap AJ)

Celebrezze views
Meigs, Athens raids

/,

.I

•-~

FACE LIPT -Mala IJ&amp;net Plaaln Pomeroy Ia
one of the balldlllp · wbleh U. uder10ne
,-eaturatlan to 111 raeade: The local hlatorlcaf
oommlllloa Ia worlda1 Ia eeaJuldlon with the

Ohio lllatorleal8aclet)'whlch wllloffer .....tuce
Ia aucll areas u color and material ae'lectla•,
(Timet-Sentinel photo l

·~

,J

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