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18-The Daily Sentinel

,__..._Local news briefs... - continued from page 1

AEP employees

r~cognized

Several employees from Meigs County have been recognized
for !bell" years of service at Southern Ohio Coal Company's
Meigs Division this month.
Recognized for 15 years service were the following
employees:
Laurance S. Ebersbach, prep plant supervisor at the Meigs
No. 1 mine. Ebersbach resides lit Syracuse with his wife, Sally,
and sons, Christopher and Oavld, who Is attending West
VIrginia Wesleyan CoUege.
Charles R. Find.ley , Jr., mobile equipment operator at the
Meigs No. 2 mine. Findley resides In Racine with his wife.
Loretta.
Norman E. Hawley, motorman at the Raccqon. No. 3 mine.
Hawley lives In Middleport and bas two daughters, Tamara and
.
Jeri.
Michael J . Hill, plant operator at the Raccoon No.3 mine. Hill
resides In Racine with his wife, Mindy, son, Michael II, and
daughter. Dolly. .
.
Delbert G. Mlllll"on, belt repairman at the Raccoon No. 3
mine. MI!Urm1 resides In Racine and has two children, Robert
and Debra.

Rinehart wanis crack
dealers behind.bars

Moderate damage was incurred to a car driven by Gina
Scarberry, 19, Laurel Cliff Road, Pomeroy, when a dee Nan Into
the right front of her vehicle on Nye Ave. In Pomeroy.
According to the report of Pomeroy pollee, Scarberry was
traveling north on Nye when the accident happened at 2:01a.m.
ThurSday. The deer was not found. The driver was not IQjured In
the accident.

EMS has 7 Wednesday calls
Seven cal is for medica! assls tance were answered on
Wednesday l)y units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services.
At 9:53a.m., Pomeroy went to Township Road 296 for Lore an
Gorrell to St. Joseph's Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
At 12:47 p.m., Rutland went to Riming Road for Clara Haning
who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
Middleport at 1: 27 p.m. went to Cheshire for Keith McCarty
who was treated at the scene. At 2: 26 p.m., Middleport was
• called to Page St. for Dorothy Roush who was taken to Veterans
Memorial HospitaL
,
Pomeroy at 3:50p.m. transported Charlotte Cooper and Sean
Walton from an auto accident on Flatwoods Road to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Cooper was later transferred to Holzer
Medical Center.
Racine at 7:34 p.lll'. was called to Route 338 for Catherine
McNickle to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Ppmeroy at 9: 25 p.m.·went to Cave St. for Magdalene Russell
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Around the Nation
A large high pressure system

stretching from the East Coast to
Texas produced warm and
muggy weather early Thursday
morning and triggered showers
and heavy downpours in parts of
New England and in Michigan .
Meanwhile, Hu rr!cane Hugo
· was 390 · miles southeast of
Savannah, Ga .. early Thursday
and cont!nuea to threaten parts
of the southeast, the National
Weather Service said.
Hurricane warnings were
posted from Fernandina Beach,
Fla ., to Cape Lookout, N.C.,
forecasters said. Residents oft he
area, the expected target If the
storm's lethal 110 mph winds
reach the" U.S . . mainland as
expected by early Friday, were
urged to take protective action.
Warm and humid tempera·
tures In the 70s hovered over New
York and across the Northeast. A
mix of sun and clouds was
expected to replace the rain by
late Thursday morning with
highs In the 70s and 80s across the
region.
Locally heavy fog reduced
visibility to near zero in some
areas In New York and New
Jersey early Thursday. Steady
rain over the last two days
caused widespread flooding
across northern New Jersey and
many rivers and streams over·

ELLIOTT'S

Justin ·John:corin Arnold

·.

''·11·19)

5111 0-14
Infants, Toddlers
and Girls lndudld Also.

Friday &amp; Saturday Only ··
Vot.40. No.97 M
Copyrighted 1989

Knight fills Eastern
School Board vacancy

ELLIOTT'S
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If you buy 1omething from Elliott'l, end
within 30 daya find it for leu at anothir IO·
eel stocking dealer, Elliott'• will refund the
difference plu1 26% of the difference upon
proof of lower price.

~.;z.

. I

SPECIAL RECOGNITION - Carl Dahlberg,
eKecullve dh·ector, right, was recognized. by the
Southeast Ohio Regional Council for his many
years of service to the organization. Dahlberg, 70,_

SEORC honors Dahlberg

REFRIGERATOR

Leonard says diversity first
step for· enlarging job base

FROST.flEE

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By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP News Stall
Investments must be made In th e
future and businesses must di·
versfty to expand the Ohio job
base. according to Lt. Gov. Paul

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was presented a plaque by Bernard Fultz on
behalf of the SEORC, In addition to a proclama·
lion making next Wednesday Carl Dahlberg Day
In Wellston. (OVP photo by Lee Ann Welch)

Crosley 15 c:u. ft.

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 22. 1989

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Low In mid 68s tonight.
Chance of rain near 100
percen~. Saturday, low in the
mid 50s by evening. Chance of
rain 80 percent.

2360·

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Weather

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.Pick-4

2 'DAYS---

Secretary of State Sherrod
Brown reported today that articles ·of Incorporation have been
filed with his office In Columbus
by Douglas Hunter, M. D., Inc.
with incorporators being Dou·
glas D. Hunter and Tonja L.
Hunter with Cathy Berkhimer,
Pomeroy , as agent.

$299

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Papers filed

SEVEN
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20HOUR

flowing their banks overnight,
the weather service said.
Fog crept over much of lower
Michigan overnight Wednesday,
with drizzle and some ralnshow.
ers hitting the.Upper Peninsula.
Clear skies were reported at
Saginaw In the state's mldsec·
lion, the weather service said. A
Canadian cold front extending
from Minnesota Into Nebraska
brought scattered thundershow·
ers to parts of those states. as
well as In the Dakotas and Iowa,
the NWS said. The Nebraska
Panhandle was hit by thunder·
storms with winds to 30 mph,
ltghtnlng and small hall, the NWS
said.
Clear skies prevailed over
much of Texas early Thursday.
and a weak tropical wave moved
Into the lower coastal sections.
triggering thunderstorm activity
along the lower coast

Sou Ill Central Ohio
Tonight, becoming mostly
cloudy. A chance of rain. Low 65
to 70. Winds variable less than 10
mph. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Friday, rain developing. High 70
to 75. Chance of rain 80 percent.
Edended Forecast
Saturday through Monday
A chance of rain Saturday, and
fair Sunday and Monday . Highs
will be In the 60s, while lows will
be In the mid-50s to lower 60s
Saturday, and the mld-40s to low
50s Sunday and Monday.

In honor of

. Ohio Lottery

•

• ... ----'------------''
Continued from page 1
Ohw
:·-... - - - - -

forecast In the 4Us, but producers
with susceptible crops such as
tomatoes should still monitor this
situation.
The national weather servlce6·
to 10-day outlook for Tuesday
through Saturday of nexr week
keeps temperatures on the cool
)!Ide while also favoring below·
normal rainfall. This would slow
development of late·matul"lng
crops. bu I the cooler weather
should benefit quality of fruit.
. Drier weather next week may
let haymakers· schedule that
final cut as time for adequate
regrowth is becomln~ short.

Cubs, A's
up ltivisiori
leads ·

IT'S .A BOY SALE

first offense with no probation or
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Columbus Mayor Dana Rinehart parole, or else go through reba·
b!Utatlon. If they fall, they would
urged a state legislative panel
go
back to jail.
.
Wednesday to lock up adult crack
Adults selllng crack or
dealers for life without posslbll·
''crank'' would get an automatic
lty of parole.
life sentence under Rinehart's
At the same time, a youth
services expert told the Ohio proposal, while juvenUes could
Senate.Judlciary Committee that
get a sentence of up to life at the
60 percent of young drug sellers discretion of the judge.
don't use drugs themselves, but · Adults who l)'lanufacture crack
are. I ured to the trade by huge or ''crank'' should get th!! death
penalty, said the mayor. Crank Is
.
profits.
In his first public· appearance a conglomeration of synthetic
chemicals which may be cooked
after a citywide television ad·
In a crock pot to produce a cheap
dress on the drug problem
Tuesday evening, Rlneha.r t told - and lasting hlih. Rinehart said to
try It Is to be addicted.
the committee "our state and
The mayor said. an elderly
local laws need to grow a new set
woman on Columbus's west side
of sharp teeth."
told him of a crack house In her
He recommended that adults
who use crack go to jail on the neighborhood.

Deer hits car; damage moderate

'

ThUrsday, September 21,1989

Poma'oy-Middlf)Oi"i. Ohio

·

···---·-

Leonard addressed the Southeast Ohio Regional Council's
industrial appreciation banquet
Thursday night in Rio Grande.
. The first step to enlarging th e
job base lp Ohio is to diversify . It
is not the politician' sjob to create
jobs, Leonard said, but that of
private business.
Local and state government
can. he said, nurture the business
community to encourage growth.
Another means of expanding
employment is to par ticipate .in
the international marketplace.
Leonard notE'd there are . 13o
Japa.11ese investments in Ohio.
Heo, also made note t·hat while
Japan · is entering th e Ohio
market. Ohio is expanding
overseas.

Ohio was the third largest
exporter in the United StatfOS las t
year, with $18.6 billion In manufactured and agricultural products. Leonard also said one In
eight jobs in thestatearedlrectly
or Indirectly tied to the interna ..
tiona! market.
There are challenges in Ohio's
future, he said. Government
must become an Investor, not
just a spender, according to
Leonard.
"Government can't afford to
play Robin Hood and just redistribute funds. We hav ~ to invest
to ·expand the' Ohio job base."
Leonard said.
One of those investments must
be in the educational system, he
said. Education and the future
economy are tied together, and
tomorrow' s workers must be
acquainted with the technology
of the day.
Leonard sald on the average.
only around $2,500 per year per
pupil is spent for schools.

Local news briefs
Marijuana plants destroyed
An order to destroy contraband seized by area law
enforcement officials was filed earlil'r this week In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court. The contraband has been
destroyed by local deputies at the Meigs County Garage. The
following was listl'd In the destruction order.
Seven marijuana plants taken on March 29 from property on
County Road 10. Rutland: Township; .13 plants taken from
property on State Route 3;J8 in Letart Township; 160 plants ·
taken from three different locations on Valley Belle Road; 353
plants taken from property on County Road 35; 83 plants taken
from three different locations on Grimm Road; 112 plants from
property on Sellers Ridge Road; 14 plants from property on
Durst Ridge Road; 38 plants from property on Old Portland
Road: 13 plants taken from property on State Route 338: all
taken on Sept. 11 in Lebanon Township.
Twelve plants from two locations on properties State Route
124; Lebanon Township; 215 plants fro!T1 properties in two
locations on· State Route 681 in Orange Township; nine plants
from property on State Route 681 in Bedford Township; all
·
taken Sept. 12.
Sixty-four plants from property on Laurel Cliff Road in
SaliSbury Township; four plants from property on Tanners Run
Road in Letart Township; and 50 plants from property on State
Route 124 In Sutton Township. all taken on Sept. 13.

Pomeroy driver cited after wreck
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol
investigated an accident In Meigs County at 3:10p.m. Thu rsday
on SR. 124 .. 0.3 of a mile east of Hysell Run Road.
. Troopers said Richard E. Martin, 36, Middleport, was turning
right ·tnto a driveway when his 1987 Ford pickup truck was
struck from behind by a 1985 Chevrolet pickup truck driven by '
Bol/by J. Rupe. II. 17. Pomeroy. There was heavy damage to
both veh!€1es.
Rupe complained of an · injury but was not lmmedlatelky.
treated. Martin and a passenger. Michael Southern, 18,
Mlddlepo)Zt, suffered minor visible Injuries and were taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital at Pomeroy.
The patrol cited Rupe for failure to stop within the assured
clear distance.
Another Meigs County Injury accident occurred at 7 p.m.
Thursday at the Intersection of CR. 10 and CR. 8, In Rutland
Township.
1
Troopers said a 1979 Kawasaki 750 motorcycle ridden by Jack
Miller, 2b, Rutland, went offthe road Into a ditch. Dama~te was
· l:ontlnued on page 10
· ·

.

On the other hand, $15,000 per
.year per Inmate and $30,000
yearly for each juvenile in
detention is spent.
"We're building jails." and
they are at capacity upon O!!,'!n·
!ng, ··Leoriard said, · but schools
are not being constructed .
Leonard also noted that the
Southeastern Ohio business com·
munity will need nurturing to
grow in the 1990's.
A part of that nurturing will
center around the Infrastructure,
which Leonard said "Is vital to
growth."
The highway system is an
economic issue in Southeast
Ohio, the lieutenant governor
said.
Following Leonard 's address.
several SEORC members publically lobbied for the U.S. Route 35
bypass In Gallia County. some
going so far as to give the
lieuienant governor copies of the
Southeast Ohio highway priori·
ties for 2000.

Hugo death
toll reaches
4 thus far·
CHARLESTON, S.C. !UP!)Hurricane Hugo barre led
through historic Charleston with
135-mph winds early Friday,
ripping apart century-old build·
lngs and sending a wail of water
surging through city streets
before it moved Inland to create
more floods and deadly
tornadoes .
Four deaths were reported ln
the Carolinas from Hugo and its··
tornadoes .
Downgraded to a tropical
storm as it lost power Inland,
Hugo headed toward VIrginia at
, a 25-rilph pace Friday morning,
something of a blessing, forecas·
ters said, since its fast movement
decreased the threat of flash
flooding:
.
Tropical storm warnings were
in effect from VIrginia Beach
northward to Manasquan, N.J .,
including the Chesapeake and
Delaware bays.
Coast Guard crews In Charles·
ton were engaged In about 15
search and rescue attempts but
no details were available because of communications
problems.
At9a.m.EDT, thecenterofthe ·
storm was near· latitude 36.2
north, lOngitude 81.5 west, just
north of Hickory, N.C. Hugo was
moving north-northwest at 25 to .
30 mph, and forecasters expected
It to turn farther north during the
day, taking It through southwestern VIrginia and western
Maryland.
Maximum sustained winds decreased to 60 mph but higher
gusts were reported In squalls.
Continued on page 10

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Dally Sentinel Staff
Appointment of Charles
Knight, Pomeroy attorney. to fill
a vacancy on the Eastern Local
Board of Education and the
board's receipt of a check from
·the Eastern Boosters which
assures a winter·sports program
highlighted Thursday night's
meeting agenda of the Board at
Ea,stern High School.
K.nlght fills the unexpired term
of Susie Heines, who resigned
earlier.
The check from the Eastern
Athletic and Band Booster organ·
izations was In the amout of
$8,204. The donation allows the
Eastern Local Schools which has
been faced with severe financial
cutbacks resulting in deleting
certain sports programs,' to
move ahead toward providing
the winter sports. Superintend·
ent Dan Apllng was authorized to
advertise the coaching positions.
· In other action the · board
employed Margie Bartee as a .
half-time 'high school vocal
music teacher and as the high
school choir director.
Class advisors were employed
and include Jim Huff, senior
class; Nancy Larkins, junior
class; Dennis Eichinger, sopho·
more class, and Carol Brewer,

freshman class. Gina Tillis was
employed as yearbook advisor.
Substltutf' teachers employed
by th~ board include Robin
Prentice, Caroiyn Robinson.
Patty Duffy Taylor, Nancy
Wachter. and Bryan Zirkle. The
resignations of Victoria Diddle,
Karla Brown as substitute
teachers, and Cynthia Rector as
substitute bus driver were
accepted.
Robert White was employed as
a bus driver. Jill Holter as a
substitute secretary, Edward
Holter as a regular substitute bus
driver, and Roberta Ridenour as
in-school suspension monitor.
In oiher action the applications
for reimbursement to Betsy
Jones and Debra Pratt forprofessional growth for teachers
training wws approved.
Sunday. June 3, at 6:30p.m was
set as the date and time for
graduation exer&lt;;lses for the
class of 1990.
Tlie board entered Into an
agreement with Asbestech, Inc.
for the purpose of providing the
district the professional help,
assistance and various services
required to ensure that the
district Is within full AHERA
·
compliance.
The contract for the 1989-90
school year for school pictures

was renewed with National
School Studio (Lifetouch) .
The board approved an application for school building assist· ·
ance from the State Department
of Education, and home Ins true-:
lion for a high school student ;
because of medical reasons was
authorized.
A resolution establishing ,
1989-90 as the "Year of Reachi·
!ng for the VIsion" was adopted ;
by the board. The resolution calls ;
for ·the school district to support a .
totally literate citizenry, and to :
establish a vision to reach toward
that goal.
·
It further callS for all members:
of the educational community In ·
the district including students,:
parents and family, school and :
community, to join In the cele-·
brat ion of strengthening lndivid·
ual skills through a strong:
educational system and for the·
District to encourage Its students. ·
to become literate and to ensure· .
that every student has the:
· opportunity to achieve success. :
Oct. 11 was set as a specla I
meeting date to be held at 7 p.m
in the high school cafeteria. The
regular meeting will ·be held on
Oct. 26 at 7 p.m. In the cafeteria. ·
Present at the meeting were
Kathy Manicke, vice president,
and members, Ray Karr and I. 0 .
McCoy·.

~

Rio's enrollment tops 2,000;
attendance following trend
The significant increase in the Grande's 1989 fall enrollment
attending fr om ·aut of state and 43
number of students attending the represents an increase of nearly
international students.
University of Rio Grande over 6 percent.
In the community college,1,127
the past few years has reached a
students are attending from
new high this fall.
"Whenever you have an in· within the district and 405 res ide
Un lversity officials report cur- crease of this magnitude, many outside the district.
·
rent total enrollment at Rio factors come Into play, " Abell
The number of full-time stuGrande is 2,012. Including 480 explained. "Obviously, more dents in the unJverslty total 420
students enrolled in the private people are opting for college. Rio and 1.146 in ·t he community
university and 1,532 attending Grande has gotten a larger share college . Figures reveal there are
Rio Grande Community College. of these people because of the 60 part -time scholars and 97
This fall's record-breaking nature of the institution, the "special" students in th e com.
number of enrolled students programs we have available and munlty college.
shatters the previous high re- the fact the community college
The bulk of the private untver.
corded in fall quarter 1988, when concept is very attractive to sity students are seniors 1204), ,,.
1,884 students were listed on the people."
offici als said. The largest
With a decreasing number of number of community college
rolls.
The Rio Grande increase ap· high school graduates, the uni· students are freshmen (1,093) .
pears to be running well ahead of versity Is enrolling many " nonEnrollment dat a also reveals
a continuing trend In Ohio and traditional'' students. Abell said. more women are attending Rio
across the nation. as record These include scholars who are Grande than men. There are 275
numbers of students are reported older than the average college women enrolled in the university ·
· to be attending colleges and student, or people who are in comparison to 205 men. The
universities, observ.ed Mark F. seeking training for a new community college contains 902
Abell, the university's executive career.
women and 630 males.
Enrollment figures show that
director of admissions and flnan ·
"There isn't anything new
within the private university, 251 about that," Abell commented.
cia! aid.
While nationwide the U.S. students are from the four- "More women have opted for
Department of Education pre· county district of Galila. Jack· school. ft's increasingly appar·
diets 1.9 percent more students son, Meigs and Vinton counties. ent women want careers and
will attend American colleges or There are 140 students enrolled need the additional training."
universities this year. Rio from outside the district. 46

••
•

PRIV. UNIV.

COI"H COLL.
fO TAL ENROLL.

RI!:COU B'ftROil...laarr • llace 1987, enrollment at the
UDI.enltr al Rlo OrUide lau lacrea1ed bJ nearl)' 10 peroeat. Tile nambel' of 1hdenta et·

tJIU\IItR811T or RIO GRANDE

tenciiDJ Uae Ulllnllltr tlalllaD 1taad1 at 2,012 • np hill u enrollment of 1,884 In 1988 ·
IDd 1,810 Ia 1987,

.

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�.·

Commentary
..

'

Pomeroy, Ohio

,

DEl '"'TED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

'

ROBERT L. WINGET!'
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant P.ublisher/C(!ntroller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be lesothau 300

words lonx. All leiters are subject to editing and must be oiped with
name, 11ddress and telephone number. No unstcned letters will be pub·
Ushed. Letteril should be In JOOd taste, addressing issues, not persanalllleo.

New guidebook gives helpful
hints to political appointees

WASHINGTON - A secret hOstages. It also ·raises the
Senate Investigation has unco- specter of perjury by anyone who
vered the possibility that the knowingly misled the commit· •
Central Intelligence Agency tees to believe that the CIA was
knew far more than It admits not Involved until November,
about the 1985 shipment of after two missile shipments had
American missiles to Iran.
already been made.
A former CIA desk officer told
Our sources say those questwo Senate committees this tions are now being secretly
summer that the CIA knew about Investigated by the Senate Intela September :i985 arms shipment ligence Committee.
shortly after the mlssUes arrived
As we reported earlier, the
In Tabriz, Iran. Testimony be- · Iran-contra wound was secretly
fore the Iran-contra lnvestigat· reopened this summer wheri two
lng committees lit 1987 Implied Senate committees, working
that the CIA was a latecomer to with the General Accounting
the operation, not learning about Office, began probing the quesIt untU November 1985.
tion of what federal agencies
The Information raises the knew about the Illegal arms
possibility tltat the Iran-contra ·shipments. Sources told our
· committees In Congress were associate Stewart Harris that the
duped when they tried to piece FBI had developed Information
together the details of the operaabout the September shipment
tion to swap arms for American
and took It to the CIA, only to be

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON - One · year Into its four -year life, the Bush
administration· still is having a hard time filling the top appointive
jobs in Washington.
The closer scr utiny by the FBI in terms of security clearances and
the new ethica l criteria that. one has to be above reproach, like
Ceasar's wife, has been a deterrent in the ability of the president in
Juring quailfied men and women from their safe spots around the
country to come to Washington.
Their reluctance is understandable. The tenure is not guaranteed
for a political appointee. The environment is totally new, since
government operates In a different way from business or academia.
granting only that bureaucracies are bureaucracies by a ny other
name.

A book, "A Survivor' s Guide for Government Executives." by John
H. Trattner, a former newspaperman and career diplomat, offers
some helpful hints to those considering high-ranking government
jobs. It is a sort of " do's and don'ts" handbook for easing into the
world of Washington.
.
Some of the questions by the aut.hor at the outset are revealing and
might g ive a potential appointee pause, such as:
·
"Are you truly qualified to take the·jobon?" "Why do you want this
job?" and "Are yo u prepared for the sacrifices and indignities
involved?"
Some of .the advice offered is that it Is best to be in sine with the
president and the administration. Another suggestion is for the
appointee to " prepare yourself for careful public scrutiny by
Congress,'.' and another word of counsel is "get your personal life in
order quickly" to make the tran sition to Washington.
As for the politics of the new role, the author urges the appointee to
know that in governmen t · 'you can't operate autonomously," because
there are too many others involved In the process of accountability
who are on the team.
For a top executive who has a lready made it , it is recommended
that they " know when and how to compromise ... and when not to
compromise" and to "know where the power centers are."
·
In taking control, some appointees have wanted to bring their own
people in and take over full forc e. In'those Instances, they are often
bucked by the career civil service employees who are left out.
" Political appointees .believe they can manage with only the
handful of people who come in with them,'' writes the author. "You'll
kill yourself if you do that. "
The high-ranking official is also told to build morale, recogn ize the
importance of crectibility and respect and communicate well and
regu larly with other s taffer s.
,
Also high on the agenda for a newcomer is to understand there is a
different code for judging behavior in government. In th at respect,
th e importance of perception cannot be underestimated. To many It is
the reality.
There are many cl ues in the handbook on how to deal with the press.
The official Is told to '' be prepared'' before going into an interview,
and to " tell the truth. "
Understandi ng the ground rules is also important : "Off-the
record" means exactly that : nothing that is said ca n be printed or
broadcas t. "On background" means that the material can be used by
direct quotes but ca nnot be sourced by name or position. "Deep
background " mea ns reporters ca n use th e information but must
prese nt it as their own .

Nobody said it would be easy. But top-level jobs in government do
have their rewards - the rewar ds of public service that can be the
crown of any ca reer.

Letters to the editor
This letter is to clarify the
law suit that Hobart Newell
(Piaintilfl has against Gary R.
Dill ET-AL !Defendant\. It is
against Chester Township and
Tru stees G. Alfred Wolfe. Rodney
. Chevalier and Gary. R. Dill.

And not Gary R. Dill personalty.
And is currently pending and set
for January 4, 1990 - 9:30 a.m.
Meigs Co. Court.
Thank You
Gary R. Dill
Trustee

•

Today m history
By United Press International
Today is Friday. Sept. 22, the 265th day of 1989 with 100 to follow.
Toda y Is the first day of fall. !Autumnal equinox at 8:20p.m. EST.)
The moon IS waning, moving toward its new p'hase.
The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
Those bo rn on this date are under the sign of Virgo . They Include
English statesman and wit Philip Dormer Stanhope, Ear l of
Chesterfield , In 1694; English chemist and physicist Michael Faraday
in1791; humorlstFrankSullivanlnl892; filmdlrectorandactorErlc
Von Strohelm in 188S; actor Paul Muniln 1895; producer and actor
John Houseman in 1902; Los Angeles Dodge:;sa·tiager Tommy
Lasorda in 1927 (age 621; s inger Debby Boone In 56 Iage 331; and
·
actor Scott Baio In 1961 f age 281. .
· On this date In history:
In 1776. the British hanged American Revolutionary War hero and
patriot Nathan Hale. His famous last words were, "I only regret that I
have but one ltfe to lose for my country."
In 1862, statesman and military theoretician Otto von Bismarck
·
·
became prime minister of Prussia.
In 1949, the U.S. nuclear monopoly ended as the Soviet Union
·
detonated its first. atomic bomb.
In 1975, self-proclaimed revolutionary Sara Jane Moore attempted
to kill President Ford as he walked from a San Francisco hotel. A
bullet she fired slightly wounded a man In the crowd.
In 1985, more than 50 rock and country-western stars staged the
14-hour Farm Aid concert for 78,000 rain-soaked spectators in
Champaign, Ill. The event raised $9 million for debt-ridden U.S.
farmers.
·
•
A thought for the day: English statesman Lord Chesterfield wrote.
•'Advice Is seldom welcome; and Ihose who want It the most always
like It the least."

r

(,
r

THe.

PllMP iS L.eaK'iNG,

, .

told to back off because It was a
"White House operation."
All of that occurred shortly
after the September shipmentearly October at the latest- the
former CIA desk officer has told
the Senate committees.
I!! contrast, the Iran-contra
report compiled by the Congres- .
slonal 'Investigating committees
says that then-CIA Director
William Casey dldn' t find out
about the arms-for-hostages deal
untU Nov. 14, 1985, In a meeting
with former National Security
· Adviser Robert McFarlane.
National Security Council consultant Michael Ledeen told the
It·an-contra commltf!!es that be. fore Nov. 14, the NSC had left the
CIA In the dark because the
White House was afraid the CIA
might ieak the Information.

It has been genei'ally'assumed
that the CIA joined the arms deal
In November 1985 with a shipment of HAWK anti-aircraft
missiles to Iran on a CIA airline.
The only record of the ear ller
contact between the CIA and the
FBI was never turned over to the
Iran-contra committees. That
record Is a memo written In 1987
by the same CIA desk officer. At·
the time, the CIA was scrambling
to prepare for confirmation hearlngs for then-FBI Director WI!liam Webster, who had been
nominated lo head the CIA.
Webster was quizzed on what he
knew about Iran-contra . ·
Congress, as part or' th~ Irancontra Investigation, asked for
all CIA documents about the
affair, but staffers ·for both
Iran-contra committees told us
they never saw the memo.

c;er Tg iT!

Trief(e's f\tJTotJitJM
a1.~
83(;1(

Tonight two unbeatens In
SVAC league play will square It
off In a big game that Is
highlighted as the Eastern High
School Homecoming, where the
hometown Eagles take on the
Kyger Creek Bobcats.
Eastern Is looking for that little
extra Incentive that comes with a
homecoming event ,as It will need
all of Its guns loaded against the
overall undefeated Bobcats (4-

Jack Anderson.
and Dale Van Atta

IS3iP I'D ~

Wasre.

0).

Coach Arch RoSe noted that his
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I

Biggest political football game in town :
spending cuts each year to meet
the budget deficit targets of the
Gramm-Rudman law .
Because of this law, It appears
that the $300 billion budget that
the Pentagon currently receives
is going to be the funding level
that the Pentagon will have to
live with for the foreseeable
future.
This has created a whole new
game of budgetary politics on
Capitol Hill. The problem is that
the cost of the weapons systems
developed In the early 1980's has
increased with each passing year ·
due to Inflation.
So. with overall Pentagon
spendin g fixed, the costly weapons systems developed . in the
1980's must now compete with
each other for their share of a
consta nt pool of Pentagon dollars. Not surprisingly. this has
meant that pork barrel polltics
has come In to play In a major
way In the debate over the
defense budget, as members of
both the House and Senate have
tried to maintain their most
favored programs.
Because of this competitive
state of affairs, new and unusual
political. alliances are being
forged dally In the halls of
Congress . For example, In an

Con. Cl arence M•l/ er !:

efforttoensureadequatefundlng
for their program, supporters of
l
th e Midgetman may join for~es
•
1
· with anti-Pentagon liberals In an to finan·ce big ticket Items such :
effort to reduce funding for the as the B-2, spending In 1990 for ~
MX. In t~e next breath, Midget- Army ammunition for training l
man supporters might join with will probably be at Its lowest '
s upporters of the MX to save all level In ten years.
i
land-based missiles from budgeIn short, while supporters of i
tary raids to fund the B-2.
eac h program cloak their argu- 1
While this doesn't make sel)se ments In terms of what Is best for '
to the American people, It national security, no one Is :
unfortunat ely Is the way that objectively discussing how best l
. Congress often does business. to achieve that security hi the '
After all, weapons systems con- overall context of limited budge- l·
tracts usually mean jobs for the tary resources.
· i
people back home and all
Unfortunately, these problems ~
members of Congress are ex- will only grow worse In the years i
tremely sensitive to the eco- to come. This year, Congress can '
nomic Interests of their respec- probably get away with con- ;
tlnued funding of most of the ;
live constituencies.
However, given the current major programs, albeit at re· :
debate, one cannot help but duced levels. Howev.er, as the •
wonder what actually happens to new generation of weapons · :
our national security as a result comes on line with their growing :
of this process. 'r.he problem Is . costs of production and deploy-· t
that no one In Congress appears ment, Congress will no longer
to be as kin!( what our true overall have that luxury.
national security needs are.
In the years to come, defense
In fact, Congress often finds spending wlll become even more :
itself cutting programs which of a political football, and It will :
will safeguard our national de- take a concerted effort on the ~
tense just to save programs that part of the Congress to ensure •
will safeguard employment In that our national security does ,
.certain congressional districts. not come out as the ultimate !
For example, because oft he need loser.
•
I

.What's really happening in China?
When a flawed political system
begins to fall apart, as communlsm is doing today In the Soviet
Union and China, essentially only
two responses are possible:
either to crack down, or to try to
reform the system in the hope of
making It work . . Neither ~an
succeed In the long run, and the
desperate managers of the collapsing system are quite likely to
use first one tactic and then the
other, as each In turn Is seen to
fall.
In the Soviet Union, Mikhail
Gorbachev Is making a courageous attempt at both political and
economic reform, and It Is far too
early for his internal critics to
announce that he has fatled.
In China, Deng Xlaoplng went
even further In the direction of a
market economy than Gorbachev. But Deng has allowed very
little political freedom of the kind
that has been busting out all over
iri the Soviet Union. Early In his'
period of power, Deng closed
down a "democracy wall" In
Peking on which students were
Inscribing political slogans and
short essays calling for more

political freedom.
gists have clung desperately to
In tha t sense, the savage the contention that Deng's other
response of Deng·s regime to the eye, so to speak- his support for
demonstrations In Ttananmen economic reform ~ was still
Square in May and June was wide open. Politically, they conpredictable. !twas also stupid, of ceded, he might be a . back
course; within another few days
number, but economically he
the students would ha;e been was still leading China toward
forced to vacate the square
the light.
anyway, as problems of sanltaSo, It came as chilling news
lion and health became acute. Indeed when the Chinese governBut nobody can accuse Deng of
ment, late In August. announced
Inconsistency, as far as demothat a large number of privately
owned companies would be
cracy Is concerned. He's always
been agln' it.
closed down. The usual excuses
Even the subsequent an- "embezzlement, theft, pro!ltnouncement that graduate stueerin~ and bribery" were
dents (and per hap~ also undertrotted out. and may not even
graduates - it lsn t clear) will
ilecessartly ·be altogether false.
have to spend a year or two doing . Nor Is It clear whether foreignfarm Ia bor and receiving pollti- owned businesses are exempt
cal Indoctrination, before they
from closure. But the announcecan continue their studies Is pure
ment was the worst possible
Deng. The communist bosses In
news for those In the United
Peking are rather like the old
States and els~here, who had
Afrikaner leader Oom Paul
hoped that the craokdown In
Kruger, who believed the world
Peking could be limited to
was flat and often exiled his more
politics, with eco1111mlc reforms
sophisticated critics to the highleft untouched. "
veld untU they personally per·
And now comes word that the
celved Its flatness.
regime Intends to limit sharply
But China's American apolo- the number ot young people

· \

Wiliam Rusher :•

allowed to go abroad to pursue
their studi es. Clearly, Deng and ••
his cronies think a lot of students
have come home Infected with :
what Thomas Jefferson called - ~
"the disease of freedom ," and .
have contributed to recent polltl- · f~
cal unre~t.
This last restriction may be
conceived by Its authors as
essentlaliy political In nature, .•
buttt will, over the longrun, have .•
ominous economic consequences
as well. Chlrta cannot drag Itself .;
fully Into the 20th ceritury, let ..
alone the 21st, without the .,
sci~ntlflc knowledge that Its . 1
brightest minds can obtain only ' I
abroad. By pulling up the draw·
bridge and trying to turn China
Into a self-contained cultural and
Intellectual unit, Deng may tem- . ,
porarlly reduce his political
problems, but only at the expense
of unacceptable technological · &lt;~
shortcomings further down the .,,
road.
In which case, perhaps after ,1 ,
Deng's death, the Chinese coin
may again flip from repression to• ••
reform.

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M011l~llol I. Pltlllhura:h l
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Calendar

we

appear to be and have had a good
week of spirit for homecoming.
KC Is heatable ~nd If we play well
we can do it ."
''Tonight wfll be our biggest
challenge." stated Rose.
Eastern will look to establish a
solid ground game to enable the
'MAC' attack of Shaun Savoy and
Scott McDonald to stake a claim
on victory.
Savoy also has a good .receiver
In Mike Smith, so KC will have to

have Its watch on guard at ali
times . Jeff Horner adds a th ird
dimension to the passing crew.
Tornadoes vs. Wildcats
Southern has co ntin ued to look
better each week, but somehow
has managed to Jose. Once the
Tornadoes get a taste of that first
victory, they could be a force In
the SVAC, but tongith must be the
week of decision for Coach Dave
Gaul and his young Whirlwinds.
Soutehrn travels to winless
Hannan Trace, who hasn't come

close to a win in four starts, while
Southern is also fruitless des pi tt•
being in contension in ever y

game .
Gau l said it s important that hi s
club realize the improvement
that they've gained and not
measure the season in terms of
wins and losses.
"We're hungry for a win
tonight ,'' said Gaul.
Southern's offense has shown
steady improvement each week
and last week didn't load too bad

against a proven team in Kyger
Creek.
Special teams seem to be a big
area of co ncern and the Tornadoes have made adjustments to
strenghten their pursuit.
Seven touchdowns by opponent s have come against SHS
s pecial teams, mostly all on punt
returns.
With. some luck and maybe a
boost from Its Hurric.ane cousin
Hugo, !he Tornadoes could pull
off a needed win tonight.

Goalie Jeff cops 44th
Little Brou;n Jug
DELAWARE, Ohio (UPli -In
horse racing, It never hurts to
have a little luck, especially
when it comes to drawing post
positions In the final heat of the
Llltle Brown Jug 3-year-old·paclng classic.
Michel LaChance and Goalie
Jeff drew that coveted rail
position .Thursday on the halfmile Delaware County Fairgrounds track and the rest was
easy.
" When l drew the rail I knew I
had a chance,'' said LaChance,
who captured his second Jug title
In a row by a length and a quarter
over Barefoot Hanover, which
started beside him in the second
position. He won )ast year behind
B.J. Scoot.
"I had to be concerned with
Barefoot Hanover at the start
and when I saw we paced the half
In (a slow) 58 seconds, I knew I
had it. If Barefoot Hanover had
come at me, I would have parked

II"·

This *~'s
Ohio games

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Mlltlltlldla Ill Pllt-~b. I p.m .
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SIUI l!'r11nl'l~ Ill Phlkdf'lphl 14. I p.m .

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NV -JI.'t 11111 Mlllllll. -t
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Mo ..
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Huiii~Q~. Ot-t. I
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p.m.
f ind•-' 1M Ku~~ar~fll~.l,.m.

,.m.

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Mlllmllll HoaMiell. I p.m .
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Tam .. Ra,v Ill Mln ..K«a, I p.m .
l'll'l' GlaM11 tt.1 Dalkl! 1 I p.m.

1A R•nw•l !-ian FriUid~tt:o,l p.m .
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St'llllli• ut LA R .. dPf'll. I,....
Monday,
nlllldf!l .. lllll ('hit'

lonnnl 'n-n-or Dam lo JvrHr k'aun. ·
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mullrt'IU' f'O .... tt.
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luk, rll(ht win.- D•n Ft11wley, l'enlf'r .
GIN• Mutw-a... df'lt'fi~Wmea Deu.Hohloll. Mlllfo Mrr,.•h, Todd Stl~«~n . ,Jim
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a.eh 8eb Rel.tl•l to t-)frar eolllnu.'l.

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Toronto .................... ...K.t 11 .sa BaltlmOft' ....... ..... : ...... JtJ 7D .Sft I

YaRP, THe

The Department of Defense's
Authorization Bill lor FY 1990 Is
now rapidly approaching final
consideration by Congress. This
bill is very Important because It
determines on what the Defense
Department will spend its money. The blll also determines
what our nation's overall defense
and national security priorities
will be. This makes the Defense
Authorization Bill one of the
biggest political football games
in town.
In the early SO's the Defense
Department's budget skyrocketed . Congress gave the Pen·
lagon broad authority to develop
a number of new weapons
programs in an effort to modernize our aging defense systems
and increase the readiness of our
armed forces.
In fact, many of the programs
that are being m6st hotlydebated
during consideration of this year's authorization bill were given
accelerated funding at that time,
· Including the Strategic Defense
Initiative, the multiple warhead
rail-based MX missile, t.he single
warhead Mldgetman mobile missile, and the B-2 stealth bomber.
However, a lot has changed since
the early 1980's. These days,
Congress must come up with new

· u1 hope we are 'UP';

Against North Gallia Coach
Coach Don Jackson said,"We rubber game in the match was a
Eastern's Eaglettes volleyball
Pam
Douthitt
commented,
played
so hard the first game, we real cliff hanger.
team recently split In a pair of
"We're
getting
better
.
Mandie
didn't have anything left for the
Lisa Hoffman had two aces in
games, claiming a 15-8,4-15,15-1
win . over North Gallla, then Harris has done an excellent job other two. lndivid.ual effor ts are her game-leading effor t of I2
dropping the match In two games coming off the bench serving for really Improving. I have confi- points, Michelle Metzger had 7
us. We are 'starting to mold dence we are going to really start points and one ace. ·Kellie Ridento non-league Waterford, 9·15,4together
somewhat now. Our coming on strong. "
our and Jenny Deem five points,
15.
.freshmen
are
finally
digging
In
J
enny
Deem
led
with
10
points,
Amy Well 3,' and Sherri Smith 1.
Eastern Is 3-6 overall and 3-3
and
do\ng
a
good
job."
·
.
Kellie
Ridenour
5,Carrie
BerAlthough tlie EHS attitude and
in the SVAC.
•
only
one
senior
Easterl)_llas
nard
4,Sherri
Smith
3
with
one
floor
game is Improving, the
Waterford's Misty McFaden
and
one
junior
o~
the
varsity
ace,
Amy
Well
2.
and
Lisa
young
EHS reserves dropped a
led . all scorers with 10 In Eastteam,
which
consists
mostly
of
1.
Hoffman
three
match
set to Southwes tern
ern's loss to the Wlldklttens,
sophomores
and
freshmen.
Eastern
played
rea
lly
tough
15-11,4-15,
and 11-15. Deem
followed by a 6 point effort from
Lorrie
Baker
led
the
way
Oak
Hill,
narrowly
missagainst
led
with
12.Ridenour.
Bernard,
Teresa Hinton, and duel four
against
North
Gallia
with
ten
Ing defeat In a three set match of and Well each had 4, Metzger 3,
pointers by Lisa Hinton and
points, Gillilan and Otto each had 15-6. 15-13, and 15-12. The Hoffman 2, and Smith 1.
Hollie Hottinger.
Eastern was led by Lorrie 6 markers, Mandie Harris 8,
Baker's five points, while Lee . Toby Hlll3, and Tabby Phi llips 1.
North Gallla was led by
Gillilan had 4, Toby Hill 2, and
Heather
Sprague with 9 points,
one each by Mary Jo Ree, Tabby
Rosilaandie
Dias and Deena
Phillips, and Mandie Harris.
Petrie
had
five
each. Sarah Sales
· Eastern's front line seemingly
221hru 28
4,
and
Stephanie
Stout l .
did the job, with a near-perfect
FRlDAY thru THURSDA~!
Lee Gillilan,went 7-11 setting,
effort as they clalmed . JO of 12
"SOME OF THE
and
in spiking Otto was 2-4, and
spike attempts. That corps was
BIGGEST
LA!JGHS
Phillips,
Harris
,
and
Baker
1-1.
Jed by freshman Stephanie Otto
lll(IUBE.WliDL\
W. IUOO:'olt ntu:mrll.J\11£\ r
·
The
Eastern
reserves
won
with a 4-for--4 night and one
---·•tumolr••
kill, while Toby Hill was 3-5, Impressively in the first game
Baketl-1, and Phillips 2-2. Hill over North Gallla, but forgo
about the other two games in the
and Baker had one kill each.
Gillilan was 9-12 setti ng and match until it was too late,
winning 15-8, then dropping
Carrie Morrissey was 2-3.
1-15,and 9-15 battles.

. . ..., ..1

cBhu~kll - 11 ). '2:35p .m.

Be T~f(etJ oUT•••

team must: 1) Improve the
penalty situation, 2) play solid
defense, 3) must play mistake
free and not beat ourselves, and
4) neutralize their big offensive
tackles with our offensive line.
Rose stated,"We must play
solid defense and not make any
mistakes either physical or mentally. KC Is a very good team. We
can't make mistakes on offense
or defense and expect to gel away
with it. We want to make sure we
do not beat ourselves."

Eastern- splits pair of vollyball matches

Q'/eR THe

.,\,
'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, September 22, 1989._

•

-

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 3

Poma-oy-Middleport, Ohio

Eastem eyes· homecoming victory; Southern is on road

Page-2-The Dally Sentiuel

CIA possibly had knowledge

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Friday, Sept.-nber 22, 1989

Oc1. t

.II.., 11 p.m.

But driver Dave Rankin never
made a move, seemingly being
content' just .to hold onto his
second spot during the two trips
around the track.
Both of Goalie Jeff's winning
times were 1: 54.1, es ta blishlng a
new season's record for a 3-yearold pacing coil on a half-mile
track. Barefoot Hanover also did
a 1:54.1 In winning his seco nd
division race.
The victories for Goalie Jeff,
owned by Centre I~e Stable of
Islington, Ont., Can .. was the 11th
and 12th In 24 starts this year and
boosted his 1989 earnings to over
$1.3 million. The Jug win was
worth $151,310.
'
Tyler's Best, which also was
driven In the first division by
LaChance, was never a factor In

Ublo Colll!.-r Fooeblloll SrorPN
.
$lll.-dl0'
Ohio H111ir 17, OklllhOR\11 l'ilalf' 13
1Wil4111f' til. BlwH•« Grrrn 3
~Wre Ml~hiPII •· Ohio tJ ~:J
~- :111. Kt•nl stair !!'I
Mlc:lll ... !hfr .ft. Miami Wllfo) 0
\\'bw.-oNIIa U, ToW. II
Aatroa n, Ct.nlral Mldllp~~ Ul,
BPI l'•roll•ll. CIIK.b•tl U
H•IIIII'IMIC 1'7, . .I ....W .rlllt'l' 3
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Ohn'lllll. Hiram 1

-lohll t'IU'NII ~1. Mu!dllapm It
llt"nMon U,
U•IDII U
OIU'rhl'l• J.l, Ohl&amp; Northern 7
M'l lif',..r a 31, fur ~rw- ~~

Me••

Colle~W poll
NR' l'ORK4UPit-Th,•l ' n6tt•dP""'!&gt;i
ln~·r•klllll Boanl of (' oat · h~'ll

Top '!t
t·oUt•j(t' leldl ..l l'llltap, -.11tlh rt..-nrd •M
flr!CI ·p l~~eto Yak~ Ia piii'Pndtl'!lf'"-- lotul
pt)tnl11 (b_.d on II ,olnl11for lrlll plat·o•,
1-t lor lll'tond. M.t•.J, JUid 1.11111. " 't&gt;J•k'"

...........

I.Nolft'Dllnw ( U\! ~·DI

............. ."HI I

~-

Mlllml t3l ll!-tl ........................ lin
:t. NrJw..._a II) c'!-tl ......... ......... .111
:t .-\lthlr•Cilf~- 0\ ...................... 1116
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.-a

'!

3
I
7

11. l1f'nt~~on I :l-11 ........ ... .. ......... ... ..
6
;, Mlrhlpn 11-11 _..... .................. HI 3

The Daily Sentinel

K. .-\rMn~~t.~~ O ·fl) ........... ......... ... .. -4U M

tt. "

'Nt l \ 'lralnlll i:I-OI ...................

an

1

II. M' IIIIIIIIIIIMC'!-ll) ....... ........... .. ~UH
II. Tt•nlll'!IWl' (!-0) .... ... ........... .. .. :.!31 10
liJ ,\lllhJUnll ( 1-0) ~ .. ..... ......... ...... 111'111.1
ll.~Nt11.- (!-G) "" """ " '""" "' "i:l llfl
1-t. Plleftllh (:t-1) .. ................ .. .. l:tt It
IS. Medlrrq. fill (HI ....... ...... ... ..... 11-t Ill
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17. \\' ..tiiiiJtloa !'Wah• 1S.O) ........ ...... :t :t r.
Ill. Ort•KCJn It-O I ........ ..... ......... ... .... :.!i 1.

meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
llshlng Company/ Multlmedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Se·
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.

•

r~cf'lrinlt

\'ott.,.:

,\rllona.

Member: United Press Irllernatlonal,
Inland Dally PressAaoclatlon and the

t'ri'I4M Mlalt', Mlrhilltl"' Sl.lllf'. MIIIMIII"'Ppl Hla;lt•, Pt&gt;nn stMI.,, Soulh f11roiiRII.
T,XIt.ll .\I:M. U('L,\ , VJ,;IIIIu.

Ohio Newspaper Association. National

Advertising Representative, Branham

Southern volleyball team tops Defenders.
At Southern, the Tornadoettes
of Coach Suzanne Wolfe captured
a 15--1.16-14 victory over Ohio
Valley Christian In a non-league
Volleyball affair.
Jane Ann Williams had ten
serving points for the Tornadoes
and Megan Wolfe 8. Williams
picked up nine of her points In the
first game of the set, while all of
the winners took turlllO In the
· thrilling nightcap.
·
Wolfe had 7 of ~er markers In
the finale . including the final six
of the match. That effort proved
to be the bone breaker ·as It
stymies! a comeback btd In which
ovc had rallied from a 10-5
deficit to lead 14-10.
With Wolfe's six points SHS
rallied to the 16-14 win.
Coach Suzanne Wolfe prlllsed
her team's team effort.

,

DeSales at Gallipoils
Meigs at Wellston ·
Jackson at Centennial
Ironton at Logan
Warren at Newark
Carrollton at Marietta
Hurricane at Point Pleasant
Buffalo at Coal Grove
Kyger Creek at Eastern
Southern at Hannan Trace
Oak Hill at North Gallia
Symmes Valley at Southwestern
Wahama- Open

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Published every afternoon. Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St ., Po·

11. Air t'on·• CUI .... ... ............... ...H Ill

Olhf'r"

Tonight's games

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{USPS IU-KO)
A DlvilhMI of Malttmedia, Inc.

!I. Gcoo,P..CI-11 ..... .... .............. .....~11!1
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Z-u•NIIWd

the final heat with John Campbell driving.
Actually, Goalie .Jeff had a
much tougher time in winning his
division than he did in the final.
Starting from the seventh spot
In the 9-horse division, he was
parked out and in sixth place at
the three-quarters poll. But when
LaChance called on the Cam
Fella colt, he responded and won
by a length over Pilgrims Punch.
''That race didn't go the way I
thought,'' said LaChance. "I
planned to take the lead but there
were too many horses to , the
inside. so I held back."

Good floor games. outstanding
front line play, and setting from
the back line wre turned In by
Trlcla Wolfe. Tracy Norris, AImee Hill, Junle Beegle, Andrea
Theiss, Cheryl Pape, and Chris
Harmon.
·

11-_ _ _ _ _ _.........;o.-t

Newspap« Sa.Iea, 733 Third Avenue,
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IO The Dally Sentln&lt;l, 111 Court St.,
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POMEROY
HOME
AND
AUTO
MAIN
f

,,

�Page 4-The Daily Sentinel

Pornwoy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Friday, September 22. 1989

Indians derail Angels; A's hike ·AL West Division lead
By STEPHEN C. RUTKOWSKI
UPI Sports Writer
The Thursday night performances of the Oakland Athletics
and California Angels may have
dec.lded the American League
West winner.
The first-place A's received all
the necessary ingredients such
as good pitching, timely hitting
and superb defense to nip the
Minnesota Twins2-l. The second·
place California Angels went 17
in nings with the Cleveland lndi·
ans in an effort to keep pace with
Oakland. but finally fell 5-4 .
The A's victory Increased their
lead in the division to31 '2 games

over California and pushed the
Kansas City Royals five games
back. The Angels have only nine
games remaining to try to catch
the A's, who have 10 games left.
''That 's as good as the A's can
play,'' said Oakland Manager
Tony LaRussa after Bob Welch
and two relievers combined on a
six-hitter and Mark McGwtre
homered and scored both ruhs.
Oakland, which has won four
straight, Is looking for a return
lrip to the World Series where
they lost last year to the Los
Angeles Dodgers In five games.
California is looking for its first
division title since 1986.

Welch, 1~ -8, became ihe fourth 2-0 lead. The homer, theflrstever thon snapped California's fivemember of Oakland's staffto~in .at the Metrodome, was mea· game winning streak and end.ed
Cleveland's six-game losing
17 or more games- Mike Moore sured at 450 feet.
''The Metrodome hasn't been streak. The victory by the
(18·10), Storm Davis (18·7) and
Dave Stewart (19-9) are · the the greatest of places," said Indians was only _tbelr third In 18
others. Relief ace Dennis Eckers· McGwlre. who credited an lm· extra-Inning gaines this season.
Pete O'Brien led off the 17th
ley pitched the ninth for his 31st proved llghilng system this year.
with
a triple to right off loser
"When
I
cam·e
In
here
the
tlrst
save.
time
I
saw
a
little
difference.
Rich
Monteleone. 2·2, the sixth
''Talking to players on the
California
pitcher . Hinze ran for
Confidence
Is
with
you
knowing
other clubs, they don't! Ike to face
this pitching staff." McGwlre you're seeing the ball a little bit O'Brien and Jacoby , batting with
the Infield and outfield drawn in,
said. "It makes you feel good to better. "
At Cleveland, Brook Jacoby's . hit a sacrifice fly to right.
be on tbls team."
Despite the costly loss, the··
Though Jose Canseco has not sacrifice fly In the 17th Inning
supplied the punch like last year. scored Tommy Htnzo to end the Angels are not ready to concede
McGwtre has. The first baseman longest game In the AL this the division.
" We had our chances," Califorblasted his 29th home run of the season.
The 5-hour. 26-mlilute mara· nia first baseman Wally Joyner.
year in the fifth to give the A's a

Th_e Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

said. "We just couldn't get that
ex.t:ra hit We're not going to fold
up shop. We're not outoflt, we're
not going to be out of it." .
The Angels got the leadoff
batter to second In the extra
frames three times, but could not
get him home.
&lt;::alttornta had raiDed for three
runs In the ninth to tie the score ·
4-4.
Elsewhere In the American
League, Milwaukee beat New
York 14-1 In the first game of a
double-header and New York
took the' second game 5-4 In 10
Innings 1 and Seattle downed.
Texas 8-3.

Friday, September 22, 1989

Page-S

Fowler to speak locally

Cubs magic number six after 9-1 victory; Cards lose
By ERIK K. LffiF
UPI Sports Writer
The St. Louis Card.lnals' hopes
·fo r a divisional title were deal! a
critical set back Thursday night
when two National League East
p.ttchers threw impressive
complete-game victories.
After learning that the Chicago

Cubs had taken a 9-i earlier from
the Philadelphia Phillies behind
the six -hit pitching of Greg
Maddux. lhe Cardi nals tumbled
another full ga me in the s tand·
ings .when New York's Sid
Fernandez tossed a two-hitter to
lead the New York Mets to a u·1
victory.

major-league homer,
"II was too much 'El Sid'
tonight," said Cardinals Manager Whitey Herzog. "He had 13
strikeouts and he out hit us. He
kept the Mets. in the race and
we're one step further away."
St. Louis's loss ended a fourgame winning_ s_treak and

Maddux,18-12, walked two and
struck out six en route to his
seventh complete game of the
year.
Fernandez, 12·5, who struck
out ·u and did not walk anyone
while pitching,to only 29 batters,
also ted the Mets offensively with
three hils, including his first

:Miami, Cincin~ in 94th meeting Saturday
· By Untied Press lnlernatlonal
; Miami and Cincinnati meet for
the 94th time Saturday, with the
winner having possession of the
VIctory Bell. something neither
has needed so far this season.
: The Victory bell, which first
appea red In the mid 1940s, is
painted half red and white for
Miami and halfredandblackfor
P ncinrtatL It has the scores of all
93 previous games printed on it .
The winner keeps It until I he
following year's game.
Miami, 0-10·1 last season. enters Saturday's contest in Oxford
with a 0-2 record after back-to·
back losses to Purdue and
Michigan State of I he Big Ten. .
The Redskins currently are on a
16-game losing streak dal ing
back lo thE' 1987 season.
· Cincinnati is 0·1·1. with a 17-17
lie against Rutgers in Its opener
:and a 21·14 loss to East Carolina
: last Saturday.
, ·'We play three seasons in one
: here at" Miami,'' said Miami
roach Tim Rose. "Our first
$eason was the back-to-back
games against Big Ten foes
Purdue and Michigan Stale. The
Cincinnati game has always been
a season in itself. Just ask our
alumni in the Cincinnati area
:which game means the most to
:them.
·; "Next week, WE' start our third
$eason as we host Central Michl·

The others fma Western Michl·
gan a t Kent State and Central
Michigan at Bowling Green . Ohio
University steps out of the
league, visiting Vanderbilt in a
nig ht game.
Both Toledo and Ball Stale are
1-0 in the MAC . tied for second
· place behind Eastern Mi&lt;;J!Igan's
2·0 mark.
Toledo is 1-1 overall, Its lone
lossa23-10selbacklastSaturday
at Wisconsin. Ball State brings a
1·1·1 overmark into the game.
The Cardinals tied Rutgers , lost
to West Virginia and own a 28-3
decision over Bowling Green in
their only league game.
Toledo opened with a 27-18 win
over Ohio University.
Central Michigan, picked to
win the conference, is a surprising 0-2 so far this season, the
Chippewas' losses coming at
Southwestern Louisia na and last
Saturday at home to Akron. 27-26.
BG hasn't been in either one of
its games so far, losing 41 ·6 at
East Carolina before the defeat
at the hands of Ball State. Central
won last year's game, 21-3.
Western Michigan, making Its
first MA C start, is 2-1. losing 23-0
last week at Maryland after
opening with wins over Temple
and Louis iana Tech.
Kent State is 0-1 in the
conference and 0-3 overalL The
Golden Flashes were beaten

ga
n in the first of eight
Mid-American
Co nf stra
ere ight
nce
games."
• Miami hold sa 50-37-6lead in its
·series against Cincinnati, the
sixth longest and 12th oldest in
i-he nation among Division 1-A
and 1-AA sc hools. Cincinnati,
however. holds a 5·4 edge in the
19HOs and has won the last three
co nt ests. incl uding 34-18 las t

. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ·

yf'ar.

co nfe rence ' ~

televised

game.

Sports briefs
Basketball
The New Jersey Nets signed
· free agent Purvis Short. The
6-foot-7 forward played 11 sea·
sons with Golden Slate and
Hous ton. Short. 32. has a career
• scoring average of 17 .8 points a
:· ga me .... Nick Anderson, a 6-6
·. forward from lllino isa ndthellth
: selection in the NBA draft.
: sig ned a 4-year contract with the
· Orlando Magic.

FRI. THRU THURS.

Sports briefs

DEAD

S•••er Ho1rt

, ..... , ...

0101 -DAY TIIIU fi!DAY .

SATUII!IAY 9 AJI•• J P.M.

~THE

GRAVELY
SYSTEM

I

\

.

Riverview PTO meets

,.
\'

-i

I

POMEROY, OHIO

·Speelsi·Specisl

Officers elected
by S]HS boosters

MilWAY
TAVERN
WYOMING WOLF
BAND
Saturday
September. 23, 1989
9:30 p.m.-1 :30 a.m.
f2.00 COVER CHARGE
MUST BE 21 YURS OLD

COINER OF STATE IT. 7
AND 143

POMEROY, OHIO
KYLE· MICHAEL.WOLFE

1985 FORD LTD

$2895

PI, PS, air, 4 Dr., runs good.

1982 MERCURY COUGAR WAGON

$1295

PB, PS, V-6

1984 FORD F-150
4 sp., PI, PS, 6 cyl., blue.
$ 389 5
19 79
. MERCURY
. MONARCH
$

89 5

4 Dr., PB, PS, auto.

Chester D of A meets

On All Carry Out Orders•••
·Reach In Our Jar and Pull
Out Up to A
25°/o Discount!

''GMC Truck Dealers Increase
Rebates On 1989 Year-End Oearance"

" POMEROY AND MIDDLEPORT'S ONLY
LOCALLY OWNED PIZZA SHOP."

· GMC Truck dealers have increased the cash rebates an new 19891ight duty GMC
Trucks that must be sold! Now get up to $1,250.00 cash. back on 5·15
Jimmys and S-15 P,ickups and dealer incentives like 2.90fo APR GMAC Fi·
nancing. What was big savings is an even a better dealt
Here are reasons for buying new 1989 light trucks, vans, minivans, compact
pickups and compact sporty utility vehicles from your South East Ohio GMC Truck
Dealers Associaiton.
The GMC light trucks are fuel efficient and loaded with cor-like options. The 4x4
S-1 5 Jimmy's and S-1 5 pickups are stylish for in-town driving but for "off roilding ", they are amazing!
If you like a sporty vehicle, and yet want style; more families own a light truck.
Women appreciate the ease of handling ond it is better than the old family station
wagon because it is more fun to drive. GMC ·trucks are durable and are roomy enough for the kids.
So hurry to the Sale of your GMC Truck dealers today. Get a new GMC Truck
while these increased savings last!
·
See your hometown GMC Truck dealer located near you, in Pomeroy, Athens, Gallipolis and Jackson.

992-9922 or 992·2228

ATTENTION:
MEIGS COUNTY RESIDENTS
Have You Recently Moved or Married?
. Are ·You A New Resident of the County?
IN ORDER TO VOTE IN THE NOV. 7, 1989 ELECTION
YOUR REGISTRATION MUST BE UPDATED BY

OCTOBER 10, 1989
YOU MAY UPDATE YOUR REGISTRATION
AT OUR PERMANENT BRANCH, THE MEIGS PUBLIC LIBRARY

MONDAY, FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

RANDY ROFF

JCT. D. 93 &amp; U.S. 35
JACKSON - 216·6471

9:00 A.M. TILL 5:00 P.M.

TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, .THURSDAY

8:o·o P.M.

SMITH· NELSON

500 &amp; MAIN n.
POMEIOY - 992·2174

THE BOARD OF ELECTIONS, 108 MECHANIC ST., POMEROY
WILL BE OPEN FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE ON SATURDAY,
SEPT. 23, SEPT. 30 AND OCT. 7, 8 A.M.-12 NOON AND
TUESDAY, OCT. 10; 1989, 9 A.M. nLL 9 P.M.

It's not

.
•

••
{

Jtrl•l &amp;

DR. BUL G. FOWLER
service will be _"youth night. "
Rev . James Seddon Invites the
·
public to attend.

PRESENTS

Wolfe birth

will begin at 1 p.m. Chicken and vited . Those attending are to
MIDDLEPORT -The Rejoic- · noodles and coffee will be fur· bring a covered dish.
Mr. artd Mrs. Bryan Wolfe.
ing Life Christian school will nished. ThOse attending are to
Racine,
are announcing the birth
RUTLAND -The Rutland
have a chill supper on Saturday bring a covered dish. In case of
of
a
~.
o
n,
Kyle Michael. born Aug.
rain the picnic will be held in the Church of God will honor .senior
from 5-7 p,m.
17
at
Holzer
Medical Center.
adults, ages 55 and over. on
annex.
!. ·
The
Infant
weighed seven
Sunday at the church. Activilles
!
LONG BOTTOM -The Long
pounds
and
seven
ounces and 20
POMEROY -The a~nual will begin at 10 a.m.
Bottom Community Association
and
one
half
Inches
long.
homecoming of the Eagle Ridge
will stage a smorgasbord dinner
ls Mrs.
Maternal
grandmother
COOLVILLE -Homecoming
Church will be held Sunday .
on Saturday at the Long Bottom
Evelyn
Hachmelster.
Lenora.
Community . Building. Serving Morning services ~Ill begin at 10 at the Vanderhoof Baptist Kan.
a.m. with a carey In dinner at . Church in Coolville will be held
will begin at 5 p.m. The dinner
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
on Sunday with serytces begin·
~Ill tnclu~Je ham, turkey and . noon. Afternoon services will be
and
Mrs. Hilton Wolfe, Jr ..
at 1 p.m. with special singing by ning at 9:45a .m. A baskefdtnner
· dressing, chicken and noodles.
Racine.
will begin at noon . Afternoon
the Dailey family.
etc. Desserts and drinks are
Maternal great grandparents
services
at 1:30 p.m . Davl.d
Included In the $3.50 charge. For
,
are
Mrs. Wilma Evans, Luray,
LETART, W.VA. -The El· Stone, Neighborhood Ministries,
children under 12 thecostis $2.50.
Kan.;
and Ferdinand Hachmels·
wOOd Llevtng family reuhlon will will be the speaker.
ter,
Natoma,
Kan.
be held Sunday In Letart, W.Va ..
, MIDDLEPORT -The Country
are
Paternal
grandparents
POMEROY -Services at the
at the Community Building be·
Hymn Timers ate planning a
Mrs.
Leona
Ebersbach,
MiddleGrace ·Episcopal Church In
ginning at noon.
reunion hymn sing on Saturday
port; and Mr. and Mrs. Hilton
Pomeroy will begin at 7 p.m. on
from 7:30p.m. to midnight at the
Wolfe, Racine.
CHESTER -The Sha(le River Sunday. There will be no morn·
Church of Christ In ChriStian
A shower ·was held In the honor
Lodge 453, Chester, will have its ing services. The Rev. Ron
Union In Middleport. The service
of
the infant at lhe home his
annual picnic on Sunday at 6p.m. Baird, Point Pleasant, W.Va , will
will be under the direction of Dan
parents
hosted , by_ Shirley and
at Royal Oak Resort. All preach.
Hayman.
Ertcka
Dugan,
and Carol Pape.
members and families are inlt was attended by many rela·
CARPENTER ~The Carpen•
liVes and friends .
ter Baptist Church Busy Bees
will have a bake and rummage
sale on Saturday from 9 a.m.
Mrs. Debbi~ · Weber, head
until 4 p.m. at the Townhouse on
Plans. for the upcoming _falJ
teacher, Introduced the staff and
Route 143 across from Laura's carnival, to be held Oct. 7, were
Grocery.
expressed her hopes for a suc·
discussed at the first meeting of
cessful
year.
the year for the Riverview
Officers for the 1989-90 school
It was announced the PTO
MIDDLEPORT -There will Elementary PTO.
year were elected when the
refrigerator was repaired and Southern Junior High Boosters
be a class 0 softball tournament
The carnival will follow a
that a record player was pur· met recently.
Iii Middleport on Saturday and
western theme · and anyy one
Sunday for $60. Call Rick Staf- wishing to help decorate should . chased during the summer.
Elected were Phyllis Edwards,
The room count was won by the president; Vicki Northup, vice
ford at r3041 882-3205 for
meet at the school on Oct. 6.
ihformation.
first grade.
Sue Douglas, president, welpresident: Judy Wllllams, secreOfficers served refreshments tary; and Oe.bby Halfhill,
comed those in attendance and
and it was announced that the treasurer.
:: POMEROY -A car wash will the first grade parents Intronext meeting will be held Oct. 9.
be sponsored by the Midnight
duced themselves and- their
The outgoing officers were
Cloggers on Saturday from noon children.
commended for their ef,forts last
to 4 p.m. at Pleaser's Restaurant
year.
ill Pomeroy. The $3 donation for
It was noted that there are two
all cars, and S5 lor all trucks and
home football games left. Peach
vans will go towards the group's
Mugrage will be in charge of the
\990 summer. season east coast
concession
stand, and football
Betty Roush, Beulah Maxey,
Practice for the7:30p.m.,Oct.
tour.
programs
will
be sold.
Lillian Demosky, Lora Dame17 Inspection was held when
A
sports
banquet
committee
members of the Chester Council wood, Elizabeth Hayes. and
RACINE -The Ladles Auxil·
will
be
named.
later
In
thz year.
Laura Mae Nice. A cake, baked
323, Daughters of America met at
lary Fraternal Order of Eagles
All
Interested
parents
are
asked
the lodge hall in ritualistic form
by JoAnv Baum and Dorothy
2171 will have a booth at the
to
contact
any
officer
to
help
with
Ritchie, was also served.
with Betty Young, associate
Racine Block Party on Saturday.
the
boosters
this
year.
Mrs. Cleland read a poem "A
councilor presiding.
Hoi sausages. pop, and grab
Bridge
of Friendship." A potluck
30
members
presThere
were
bags. as well as other Items will
supper
was enjoyed with Helen
ent.
It
was
reported
thai
Ethel
be sold. ·
Arbaugh Is having a knee Wolf serving as pianist for the
problem.
meeting.
REEDSVILLE -The Eastern
Erma
Cleland,
deputy
state
The next meeting will be held
AthleHc Boosters will. sponsor a
councilor,
spoke
briefly
concernon
Oct. 3 at 7:30p.m.
four man. best ball scramble on
ing
inspection
and
the
friendship
Others
present in addition to
Saturday and Sunday at the
meeting
those
mentioned
wee Esther .
at
the
.
Belle
Prairie
Riverside Golf Course in Mason,
Smith,
.
Alta
Ballard,
Eva RobCouncil in Belpre on Nov. 2, with
W.Va. The entry fee is $20 and
son,
Thelma
Orr,
Pauline
Ridena potluck dinner at 6:30 p.m.
includes cart and green fees.
Quarterly birthdays were ob· our, lnzy Newell, Ada Bissell.
Registration begins at 1: 30 p.m.
served
and the following were Marcia Keller, Betty Denny,
Contact Bill Hannan at 985-4244
Ruth Smith, Sandra White,
seated
at
a special table with a
or Johnnie Evans at 843-5440.
Baum, Mae McPeek, and
JoAnn
gift
at
each
place.
Doris
Grueser,
Prizes will be awarded.
Mary K. Holter, Faye Kirkhart, Opal Hollon.
: MASON, W.VA. -The Wa·
hama Alumni, class of '70, is
sponsoring a sanctioned double
elimination softball tournament
on Saturday and Sunday In
Mason. Trophies will be awarded
to the top three teams and the
winners will received t-shlrts:
Fee Is $75 and two red dot
softballs. Call Jeff Arnold at
(3041 882-3735 or Gar:( Clark at
882-2328.
SATURDAY

Pom41roy, OH.

I .

'

(

Community calendar

SALES &amp; SERVICE •

South East Ohio .T ruck Dealers

'

•

GRAVELY TRACTOR

216 EAST MAIN

9:00 A.M. TILL

perfonn on Saturday at the annual Harvest
Festival In Racine. A program of blue grass,
country and gospel music will start at 12 noon. The
music will be staged In the downtown area of
_Racine, along with the craft and food stands, and

Elsewhere In the Natlo·nal
League. San Diego trounced
Cincinnati 11 ·7, Chicago
slammed Philadelphia 9-l.
Atlanta ·silenced Houston 3-0,
Montreal edged Pittsburgh 6-5,
New York. pounded St. Louis 6·1
and San Francisco downed Los
Angeles 4·3.

204 Condor St.

the games. Al!d groups will perfonn 811 scheduled
"rain or shine," ac~-ording to Larry Wolle, one of
the music organizers lor the fefilival. Also In
conjunction with the festival, a car show will be
held on the Southern Junior High School grounds.
Wolle encoU,rages all area residents to "bring
your lawn chairs and enjoy the day."

TO BE IN RACINE - The Mountain Fever
Band I&amp; among several musical groups which )rill

me."

Conference games on Saturday's
schedule, Including Capital's
By Unlled Press International
visit to neighboring Otterbein.
Auto Racing
The other OAC contests have
Emerson Fittlpaldi could be·
Heidelberg at Mount Union, Ohio
Northern at J.Wn Carroll and come only the second driver to
win a Formula One and Indy Car
Marietta at Muskingum.
· The North Coast Athletic Con· championship with a victory
terence has three league games Sunday In the 200-m lie Busch
on tap- Oberlin at Allegheny · Spark Plug Grand Prix at Naza·
·
IPa. 1, Earlham (lnd.l at Case reth, Pa.
Reserve and Kenyon at
Baseball
Wittenberg.
The Chicago Cubs won a coin
Rounding out Saturday's sche· toss with the St. Louis Cardinals
dule, Its Baldwin-Wallace at St. and w·ill play a one-game playoff
Joseph (Ind. 1, Thiel tPa.) at at Wrigley Field If the teams
Hiram, Denison at Hope (Mich.). finish tied for first In the National
Ohio Wesleyan . at Adrian League East. ... NO BOSS
(National Organization to BOy·
(Mich.). Grove City (Pa. ) at
Wooster, Ashland at Hillsdale colt and Stop Steinbrenner! has .
(Mich.), Dayton at Butler (Ind.), called for a fan boycott of the
Olivet (Mich.) at Defiance, Find· Sept. 29 New York Yankees game
lay at Alma (Mich.), Wilmington In protest of the way principal
at Tiffin and Union tKy.) at owner George Steinbrenner has
handled the team.
Urbana .

MAIN STREET
PIZZA

.

Saturd ay's sc hedule has three
MAC games on tap , including
Ball Sta te's visit to Toledo in the

28-21 last week by former coach
Glen Mason's Kansas team .
Ohio U takes an 0-3 mark to
Nashville. Tenn .. for its game
with Vanderbilt. The Bobcats
dropped a 30-25 decision to
Eastern Michigan last week
atterleadtng17-71nthelatelnlhe
second quarter .
Vanderbilt Is 0-1,1osing42-7 to
Mississippi State Sept. 2. The
Commodores have had the last
two Saturday's off.
In other games Saturday,
Akron plays at Youngstown
State, Ohio State visits Southern
California for a nationally tetevised game against the Trojans
and Central State plays West
Virginia Slate at Cooper Stadium
in Columbus.
There are four Ohio Athletic.

dropped the cardinals four was the best I've ever seen him
games behind first-place Chi· throw;.''
cago In the NL East. The Mets
Maddux, like Fernandez, beare 5 1·2 games back.
nefitted from pitching with a
Eq~lly Impressed with Fer·
lead.
nandez's performance was Mets'
:'The big lead enabled me to
Manager Davey Johrison.
concentrate on the batter wi!h
"He was a one-man show out runners on base," said Maddux.
there today," said Johnson. who won his career-high 18th
•'When he gets his cprve ball over game. "It takes a lot of pressure
like hedld tonlght,it's going to be off the pitcher. I knew that a
a long night for people. Tonight three-run homer wouldn't hurt

was Instrumental in establishing
the Christian Studies Program
which has received recognition
in terms of preparing young
people for church ministry.
Dr. Fowler has written numer·
ous articles including "A Theology for Lay Persons," and "The
New Testament Basts for the,
Small Church."
He has traveled in Europe and
most recently In Haiti where he
visited both mission sites as well
as places of industrial development in thai country . He has also
served as a resident chaplain at
Broadd"us Hospital in Philippi,
and at Hol"y Cross Hospital In
Silver Springs, Md ., where he
was involved in an advanced
clinical pastoral education
experience.
The theme of the revival will be
"Commitment. Getting Behind
Jesus."
Services will begin with Sun·
day morning worship at 10: 15
a.m. Evening services will begin
at 7 p.m. The Ovt. 1 evening

Dr. Bill G. Fowler, Director of
Church Ministries, and chaplain
and professor of Religion at
Alderson Broaddus College in
Philippi, · W.Va., will be the
evangelist at the . revival of the
Middleport First Baptist Church
on Oct. 1-3.
The first part of Fowler's
professional 'life was given to
pastorlng churches In Oklahoma.
Texas, New Mexico, and Colo·
rado . He has studied at Okla·
homa Baptist University, Texas
Christian University, and the
University of New Mexico. He Is
a graduate of the University of
Oklahoma with a bachelor's
degree, Southwestern Baptist
Theological Seminary with a
master's d_egree In dlv.lnity, and
the Iliff School of Theology With a
doctorate degree in theology.
His ministry has Included
teaching, preaching, counseling,
administration of religious pro·
grammtng, and Interfacing the
ministries of the college with
those of the church. In 1978 he

J.

DON WOOD

130 E. MAIN ST.
ATHENS - 593-6641

SMITH GMC TRUCK CENTER
135 "·ST.
GAWPOUS - 446-2532

GMC:i-RUC:K
a truck
•

IM

· RUTLAND -There will be a
square, round, and slow dance on
Saturday from 8 p.m. to midnight
at the Ell Denison Post 467 home
in Rutland . There will be a live
lland and snack bar.

ANNUAL lATE

MIDDLEPORT -There will
be a family picnic for members
of the Feeney Bennett Pos 1128 on
Sunday at the Legion Park on
Mill Street In Middleport. Dinner

•

Chili s1fpper
The annual Bissell cblll:soup
supper has been set tor Oct. 7.
There will be special music by
tbe Bissell Brothers Gospel
Group and other musicians will
be
announced after
confirnla t ton .
. II

EFFEOIYE
ANNUAL YIELD

penalty for urly wlthdr•w•l

GLORIOUS by Gloria Vanderbilt, 1.7 oz ..................
OPIUMif 2 Oz .........................................................
OSCAR 2 Oz...................•......................•.............
LIZ CLAiBORNE, 1 Oz ...........................................

fTn1 Farmers ·

Bank ·

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

.• • • . Your Communll7 Owned Buk
MEMBER FDIC
992·2136
885-33811
221 Wett S.cond
St•t• Rout11 7 .
Po\.~0¥· Ohio
Tupper• Plelna, Ohio
.... ' ;,. ,;. _... \

. 992-6669

4.-r, ..

~-Pi: .
jl

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'

SHALIMAR, 1 Oz.·······································.·········· '23.00

"The Shining Lighl in Banking"

~
•= -

l'

OBSESSION. 3.4 oz. Spray .................................... 5 45.00
KNOWING 1 Oz .................................................... s35.00
ESTEE LAUDER YOUTH DEW, 1.8 oz .................... 5 14.50
ELIZABETH TAYLOR'S PASSION, 1.5 Oz ..... ,......... 5 27.00
OMBRE ROSE, 1 Oz .............................................. s16.00

lnterelt compounded monthly.
Minimum depo11t $1,000.

S~bltenliel

- .:g=

New Colognes Arriving Daily!

8.07°/o

SUNDAY

'. .. E

MIDDUPOU, OHIO

.

I'

'24.00

*47.~0
*29.~ . . 0

'22.60

�Pemeloy- Midcleport, Ohio

7 fXrERIEN

Friday. September 22. 1989_
Friday, Septanber 22. 1989

THf JOY Of RELIGION

Crew's Fafllity lttt••t
•.,,., ~--, ,,.. eMikl"

992-5432 .

"2·3325

Ph. m -1101
p..,..,.oy

fMi\

SUPPLY

'lM

we Fill Oocten'

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
HomellleS•••

""\27

of Columbus, 0 .

r)

114W. Main
"l-2311 Pomeroy

•

.p,,,,,g Fl•w" $6op
Veterans

ROWElS fOR IVIIT OCCASION

Memorial Ho•tal

Prescriltlions
'
tt2-HSS
Pomerer

Fall Festival is here

Nationwide Ins. Co • .

IUI.IQI

SWISIO &amp;LOHSE

' IIDENOOR

..

Pomeroy

J - F . FVIII, Mtr.

115 I. ...... Dr. .

16141992-2039 or
(6141992-5721

,_,

~-~~mtJI·II04

116 lutl«nul

a.... Pomor.oy, Oh.

'

SNOUFfER
FIRE &amp; SAFm
SMES I SOVICE
N8891670

"2-7075

112 11ert11 s.c..... a...
•. I
OW.

214 E. Main
992-SilO Pomeroy

"••rt.

...,-- &lt;I'RINl1Y WNGREGATIONAL CllllftCH,
·"'Rov.

--

171 llertll

.......,.,.

·flon.

Olllto

•.. POMD«JY' CIIURCII OF 11IE NAZA. )U:NE, C.Cner Union and Mulberry. Rev.
.•'lllomasGial M&lt;Qo.._ poster. Norman Presti!!~. S. S. Supt. Sunday SchoOl 9::11 a.m .:
~.,..I wtntip lO: ll a.m.: evening !lerVtce 6

;m..tw:::;

- Pom8'oy. Msgr. Michael Hellmer, Ph .

912-5898. saturday evening Mass. 5: :J) p.m .
~ SundaY Mass, 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. ceo

classes, gam. 1st and 3rd Sunday or eaCh

·m onth. Confessions: On~half hOur before

each Mass.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS·
TOLIC FAITH- New Lima Road, next to
·Fort Meigs Park. Robert W. Richards,
pester. Sunday services. 10 a .m. and 7 p,
m.: Wednesday worship, 7 p .m .
GRAHAM
UNITED METHODIST
Preachin~ 9: ll a m. first and second Sun:
days of each month: th.ir d and fourth Sun·
day each month worship SeJVices at 7:30 p.
m .; Wednesday evenings at 7·~ p.m.
Prayer and Bible Study.
SEVENTH·DAY ADVENTIST. Mulberry Heights Road, Pomeroy. P astor Bob
Snyder: Sabbath School Superintendent.
Rodney Spires. Sabbath School begins at 2
p.m. on Saturday aft£11'noon wit h worship
service rouowing at 3:00 p m. Everyone
.
weloome.
RUTlAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
- Slst~ Harriett Warner. Supt. Sunday
SChool9:l&gt; a.m.: Morning Worship. 10:45
a .m .
POMEROY FIRST BIWI'IST, Steve
FuUer, minister: Saturday ~t&gt;ning
evangellstlc servlct!S, opf'l'l to public, 7 p.
m .; Sunday Church School, 9: Xl a. m .:
Morning Worship 10:30 a .m.
FIRST SOUTHERN BIWI'IST, Po·
meroy Pike. E. Lamar O'Bryant. pas tor:
Jack Net"ds, Sunday SChool Direct or. Su n·
day School. 9:30a .m.: Morning Worship,
10:45; evening worship, 7:00p.m. (D S.T.l
1: 7:30 fE .S.T .) ; Wednesday Prayf"r Service. 7:00p.m . !D.S.T.l &amp; 7: :Jl PM . tE .S.
T . ); Mission Friends (ages 2·6l. Roya l
Ambassadors (boys ages 6-lBl. and Gir ls
In A('llon 1agf"S 6-181 on We dn esda ys, 7 p.
m . (0 .S.T J&amp;7 :30p. m !E.S.T .J: Tuesday
VIsitation, 6::rt p.m.
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH . Bal·
ley Run Road , Rev. Emmett Raw aon, pastor. Handley Dunn, su pt. Sunda y School.
10 a.m .: Sunday evening service, 7:30 p.m .
; Bible teaching, 7:30 p.m . Thursday.
SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherry St., Sy·
racuse. Mark Morrow. pastor servi ct'S, 10
a .m . Sunday. Evening serv ices Sunday
and Wednesday a1 6:00p.m.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRJST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Dwlghl Haley,
first elder; Wanda Mohler, Sunday School
Supt. SUnday School 9: JO a.m .; Morning
Worship 10: :rt a .m .; Even in~ Wors hip 7 :lJ
p.m .; Wednesday prayer meetlng 7· JJ p.m .
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF COD.
Racine. Rev. Jam es Sat1erflel.d. pastor.
Fr~man WUIIams, Supt . Sunday School
9:45a.m.: Sunday a nd Wednsday eve nIng serv tees. 7 p, m .
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST.
Corner Slxtl'l and Palmer. J a mes Seddon,
Pastor. Edna Wilsoo. S.S. Supt : Ca thy
Riggs, Asst. Supt. Sunday School, 9· 15 a.
m .; Morning Wor ship, 10: 15 a .m .. Sunday
Evening serv ice, 7 p.m . Prayer ml'E'tinJ
and Bible Study Wednetday eve-nina. 7 p.
m .: Children's choir practice, Wfdnes·
day, 1 p.m.: Adult choir prac:ilce, WH., 8
p.m. ; Radio prOJO'am, WMPO, Sunday ,
8:·:1J a .m.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST,
5th and Main. AI Hartson, mJn .. ter;
Richard DuBose, Associate Pastor; Mike
GerlKh, Sunday SchOol Superint endent.
Bible School9: ~a . m .; Mornlna Worship
JO:» a .m . Evening Wonhip 7:00 p.m.
Wednflday, 7:00p.m. Prayer meeting.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF TilE NA·
·ZARENE, PASTOR Fral !'1.nhorwood.
·BUI White, Sunday SChool Supl. Sunday
SchOol 9:XJ a.m.; Morning Worship 10: 4S
a.m.; Evonlnl !lerVIce, 6:00 p. m.; Wed·

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

·=~w.:::.'al~
'~tmiY
or lllit:IGI COlllft'Y

HARRI!IONVD.LE PRilBYTI:RIAN
CHURCH - Suodly: Worahlp 9orvlcea
t;OO o.m.; Chu~h SCIK&gt;ol10: 15 a .m ..
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN StiDdAy Scllool, t a.m.; Churell ..rvtce,

U:!5o.m.

SYRACUSE FIRSTIIKITEDPREBBY·
n:RIAN - Sunday !lchoal, Ill a.m .;
Qoordl _..leo, 10:15 a .m .
' IUJ'I'LAND CHURCH OF GOD, Paler,
!!4&gt;'!1101!'! Cox. Suidly ScllOoi!O: 00 a.m.;
Worlhlp 11 :tJO o.m. ChU·
-·•
11 a.m. Suldly EYI!llnl
IBYICt : ~ - .. tp.m. YDUIIIL.I·
Ill•' AUJI!IIIi!i: Wedll. .oy, 1 p.JW. Filii·

lliatiQEI

,.,......
•

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.

RAWliNGS-COAlS

FISHER
FISHER FUNERAL HOME
992-5141
264 South 2n~

........

HAZEL . WMMUNITY CHURCH. Off
Rt. 124, 3 mlla from Portland-Long Bot·
tan. Edsel Hart, patcc. Sunday ~hool,
9:30 a.m.: Sunday mornin&amp; preaching
10:30 a .m.; Sunda)' eventne aervlc:es, 7: 3l
p.m .

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH, Corner Ash and Plum. Noel
Herrmann, past«. Sunday Schoo110:00a .
m.: Mornina Worship, 11:00 a.m.; Wednesday and Saturday Evening Services at
7::Jl p.m.
APPLE GROVE UNrfED METHO·
DIST CHURCH - Pastor, Rev. Carl
Hicks, 10 mna above Ractne oa Rt. 388.
Su.nday School 9 a.m ., w&lt;nhlp service 10
a.m. Sunday evenlaa Se!'VIce, 6:00p.m .;
Prayer meetln&amp; and Bible Stutly Thursday, 1::16 p.m.
MT. OLIVE UNITED METHODIST Off IM, behind Wllki!IVWe. Charla Joaeo.
put or. SuncA.y School, 9:30a.m.; mornlnl
worship. 10; 30; Sunday and Thursday
evening serv ices, 7:00p.m.
·

LETART FALLS - Worship g. am·
Church School10 a.m. (Grace).
· ·•
RACINE- Cllurrh School,lO a.m.; Worship~ a.,m. ; UMW fourth Monday at 7:l&gt;p.
m.; Mens Prayer Breakfast, Wednesday, 8

a.m. (Grace).

SALEM CENTER- Chur&lt;h Scll0ol9: 15

a.m.; WorildD 10:15 a.m. (Steele).

SNOWYILI.l: - Worship 9:00 a.m.;
Chur&lt;h SchoollO:OO a.m. (Martin) .
KENO CHuRCH OF CHRIST, fu,ger
Sprtna. mlalater; Starllne Massar and 01·
tver S"waln, Sunday School Supts. Preach·
MEIGS '
Ina 9: 30a.m. each Sunday; Sunday School
COOPEKATIVE PAIII!H
10:JOa.m.
UNJI'ED METIIODIST CHUIICR
HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
CHRISTIAN UNION, Theron Durham
Be". Don Archer
pastor. Sunday service, 9:00a.m .; even:
ReV. Frank. c ro1o ot
1Di' service 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting,
Re\'. Seldon JohMon
Wednesday, 7:00p.m.
A ~FRED - Church School 9; .l) a.m.;
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
Worship, lla.m .; UMYF6 :XIp.m.; UMW .
CHRIST, JosePh B. Hosldns. pastor. Bible
Third Tuesday, 7: 30 p.m. Communion,
Class, 9:30a.m. ; Morntna:Worship 10: 30a.
first Sunday. (Archer)
m. ; Even Ina Worlbip, 6: :J) p.m. Thursday
CHESTER - Worship 9 a.m.; Church
Bible Study, 6: :Jl p.m .
School10 a .m .; Bible Study, Tbu rsday, 7p.
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy·
m.; UMW. first Thursday, 1 p.m .; COm·
HarrtaonvWeRd. (Rt.143) Ro"""lE . Pur·
munlon. first Sunday (Ar('hef).
tell, minister; Steve Stanley, Bible School
JOPPA - Worship 9: 30 a.m : Church
Supt.; Rodney Howery, Alat. Supt. SUNScb0ol10 :ll a.m. Bible Study Wednsday,
DAY: 81ble School !1:30 a .m .; WOrship
7: :JJ p m . (Johnson) .
'
lO::Jl A.M. and 7::Jl P .M. : Wedneoday Bl·
LONC BO'ITOM - Church School 9: 30
tile Study,7:00 p.m.
a .m.; Worship 10 :30 a .m .; Bible Study,
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m .; UMYF Wednes·
Grove. The Rev. William Mldd1eswarth,
day, 6:00p.m.: Commu.nlon Firs t Sunday
pastor. Church service 9:30a.m .: Sunday
of Mont h (C rofoot).
Schoo110::rl a .m .
REEDSVILLE -Church SChool9: ~ a .
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST
m .; Worship Service 11:0(1 a .m.
Tom Runyon, pastor. Sunday SchoolS:
T UPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL a.m.; Larry Haynes, s. S. Supt. Morning
Chu rch School 9 am.; Worship 10 a.m .;
worship lO;:JJ a.m.
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.: Commu·
RACINE CHURCH OF TilE NAZA·
nlon First Sunday (Archer).
RENE, Rev. John Vance, pastor, Sandy
CENTIIAL CLU!!TER
Justice, Chairma'n of the Board of Chris·
Rev. Don Me.-ws
ttan Life. Sunday School9:30 a.m.; MornRev. Weele)' Thateller
toe worship 10:30 a.m.; evangelistic serRe~ . Haner Rl••lec:h
vice 7:00p.m. Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Rew. Kalhr)on au.,
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, DexRe". PaYl Martin
ter. Woody Call, pastor. Services Sunday
Rev. Arihur Cralllree
10 a.m. and 7 p.m . WednESday,.? p.m .
Hoe" , Ro hert S&amp;eel e
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH
ASBURY !Syracuse) -Worship 11 a.m .
Lloyd Sayre, Supt. Sunday School 9: 30 a:
: Church School9 :45 a.m.; Charge Bible
m.: morning worship lO: lJ a.m. Sunday
Study, We dnesday, 7:30p.m.; UMW, flrs1
evening service 7 p.m .
Tuesday , 1: 30 p.m.; Choir Rehearsal,
WPdnesday 6· 30 p.m . ~Thatcher~
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Steve
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a .m .;
Deaver, Pastor. Mike Swiger, Sunday
Church SchoollO a.m : Bible Study, TuesSchool Supt.; Sunday School 9:30 a .m .;
day, 7:00p. m .; UMW, First Monday, 7:30
Morning worship 10: 40 a.m.; Sunday
p m : UMYF Su nday. 6 p.m Choir Reevening worship 7:30p.m .; Wednesday
hearsal, Children' s at 6. 30 p.m. Adult folevening Bible study 7:30 p.m .
lowing: Wednesday. (Ril ey)
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH
FLATWOODS- Church School,lOa.m.
Bw-llnibam Ray Laudermnt, pastcr; Jto.,
. Worship, 11 a. m.; Bible Study, Thurs·
bert Cozart, ass~tant poster. SuOOliY School
day, 7 p.m .; UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m. (Ri·
10 a .m .; wcnbtp 7 p.m.; Wednedoy. 6 p.m.
ley) .
youth rneetlnl: Wed., 7 p.m. chureh serviCES.
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a.m .;
PINE GROVE HOUNESS CHURCH, ~
Church SC hool 10 A.M.: Choir pract ice,
mlleotf Rl. 325. RI!V. Ben J. Watts. past cr.
Thu rsday, 6: 30p.m., UMWthirdMonday.
Robert Searles, S.S. Supt. Sunday School
CThat('hl'f )
,
9. 30 a.m.: Morning Worship 10: 30 a .m .;
HEATH (Middleport) - Church School
Sunday evening servtce 7:30p.m. ; Wed·
9:3) a. m .. Mor nin g Wors hip 10: ~ a.m .;'
nesday service, 7:30p.m.
Youth Gr ou p, 4 p.m. ; Wednesda Y. Bible
SILVER RUN BIWI'IST, Bill Lillie
Study 6:00p.m. Choir rehearsal 7:00 p.m .
pastor. Stev~ Little, S. S. Supt. SundaY
!Rindftelsch l.
Schoo110 a.m.; Morl)lng wonJp, 11 a .m .;
MINERSVILLE - Church School 9:00
Sunday evening worship 7:30p.m . Prayer
a m .: Wors hip service 10:00 a .m. ; UMW
meetini and Bible 1tudy Wednesd ay, 7: 30
third Wedn esday, 1 p.m . (Thatcher )
p.m .; Youth meetingWednntlay at 7 p.m
PEARL CHAPEL- Church School9:00
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
a .m .; Worship Serv ice 10:00 a. m . (Mar383 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport. Sunday
tin )
~hool10 a.m. Sunday eyenlna7:00p.m.;
POMEROY- Church School, 9:15a.m .
Mid· week se rvi ce, Wed. , 1 p.m.
; Worship 10 ·30 a.m.; Choir rehearsal
LANGSVILLE CHRIST)AN CHURCH.
Wednesda y, 7: 30 p.m; UMW , Sec.'Ond
Jefl Pattersoo, super.tntendent. Sunday
Tuesday , 7:30p.m.; UMYFSunday,6p.m.
. School 9: :Jl a.m.; Mqrlllnl Won hlp 10: :Jl
{Meadowsl
a .m .: Sundat.,evenlq service, 7:ll p.m.;
ROCK SPRINGS- Church SchooL 9: 15
Wednetday Weninl ~rvlce, 7:30p.m.
a .m .; Worship lOa.m. ; Bible Study, Wednesday, -7: l) p.m .; UMYF (Sniors). Sun- ' SYRACUSE CHURCH OF TilE NA ZARENE. Rev. Glenn McMUlan, pastoc.
day, 6 p.m .: !Juniors) every other Sun.
Mary Janice Lavender, Sunday School •
day, 6 p m . (Riley)
Supt . Sunday School 9: 30 a.m.; Morhlng\
ftUTLAND- Church School, 10 a .m .;
worship 10:30 a.m.; Evangelistic service, I
Wonhtp, 11 a.m.; UMW First Monday,
6p.m.; Prayera~dPraiseWednesday, 7p.
7: :J&gt; p.m . (Crabtree-)
m.; Youth meeting, 7 p.m .
SALEM CENTER- Church School9: 15
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
a m .: Morning Worship 1 0: 1~ a.m.
CHRIST, Elden R. Blake, paster. Sunday
(Steel~)
School 10 a.m. ; Gary Reed, Lay leader.
SNOWVlLLE- Morn.tna Worship, , :00
Morning sermon, 11 a.m .; Sunday nl1ht
a .m ., Church School10:00 a.m . (Martin)
services: Christian Endeavor 7: 30 p.m .,
SOVDIERN CLU!!TER
Song ~ervtce 8 p.m . Preaching 8: XI p.m .
an. KenDfth Saker
Mid-week prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7
1&amp;ev. Boler Grace
p.m.
.
a... CariRidlo
.
APPLE GROVE - Chur&lt;h !!&lt;:hool 9:00 . HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN Oav ld
Prentlce,Jaator. Charles DomtaU, Sun.
a .m .; Morninl Worship 10:00 a.m.; 'Btble
dJy Scho Supt. Morning Woratilp 9:30 a.
Study _Sunday 7:00p.m.; Prayer meetlnJ
m.; Sund_.- Schooi10::ma .m .; Eventnrser7::.rim. Thurlllay. t!Uctu)
vlce, ?:~ p.m.
,
HANY t a.m.; Ctourch
Mr. UNION BAPTIST, Paatcr: Joe-;,
!lch0ol10a.m .; BttoloS- W--y!O
!oyie, SUnday !lchool9: t5'1 .m.; Evenlnr
a.m.; Dorcas WIJIMII'I FetlowlbiJ Wedwonhlp 6:XI p.m .; Prayer Meetlnr, 6:l&gt;
nesday lla.m. (Bikoi') .
p.m. Wedneday.
CAIIMEL- Church Scllool9:30 a.m.;
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF '
Worolllp, 10:45 o.m. SoClOild and Fourth
CHI!.IST. Robert Foaler, putcr; ' How•rd
Sundays; FellowMI' dinner wtth Sutte~~
Caldwoll, Su.,.....tolldent; Church school
lhlnl Tho......,y,I:JDp.m. (lak•t .
t a.m.; Worship setVIce9: 45 a.m . and 6:30
MORNING !ITAll- Churell School ':45
p.m. Ewryme wlmme.
a .m .; Woral!lp 10:30 a .m .; Bible Study,
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
Thuraday, 7::Jlp.m. (Biker) .
REI'IE. Rev. llerbort Grate, poster.
SVTI'ON - Churcb SChOol, 9: :Jl a .m.;
Frank Rlllle. 1up1. Sundoy SChool9: :J) a.
MornlnaWOflltlp10: 451.m. Oratandthlnl
m.; Wonntp service, 11 a .m. and 7 p.m .
SUnclaya; Fellowlltlp dinner with Carmol
Iunday. Wodneaday, 7 p.m. Prayer meet·
third Thunda~ 1:30 p.m. (llalt•).
EASTLET..,.T-MoriiDIWot'IIUt:tll
LAIJJIEL CLifF FREE METHODIST
o.m .; O..rcb !lellooi!G:OOa.m. ; UNW llrlt
CHIJIICR. William WUIIoma, putor: Ro~oy 7: 30
(Grace)_.
bert E. lorton, Dlreotor of Chrtattan Edu·

30

w-.

....

,.m.

.

t

:GRAVELY TRACTOR

The heat of summer's on the wane,
And clouds may form, producing rain.
The leaves that turn to red and gold
Proclaim a year that's growing old,
Before consumed by bonftre flames .
It's time for school and football games,
When winds of change will cool the scene
And kids prepare for Halloween.
Our Bible lesso!ls will convey
That harvest time is on the way;
A time for gathering the yield
From orchard and the farmer 's field .
Our House of Worship now relates
That God's great bounty demonstrates
His love, that we should all revere
When flaming autumn time is here.
· Gloria Nowak

992·66"

·~ Sdlool Supt Olureh Schooi9:J!Ia.m;
· ..WcnNp - l O : J i a.m. 010~ rohe,...L
-~. I:CI p.m. u_. clrK1lon of Lois

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677
BILL. QUICKEL

SHOP

Rldn•'ll Freern.._ poster. Deblie Bud&lt;.

~m.; mid- ....vice, Wedneodi\Y. 7p.m.
;, CRACE EPJSalPAL CHURCH, :tl6 E .
:::MIIn St. P&lt;&gt;rne~W. Sunday servk:es: Holy
...,..nmuiOn on t~ t1rst Sundllv of each mooth.
""ffld comtmed wtth mornnt .,.ay« on t~
11*&lt;1 Sundly. M&lt;rling prayer and oormon on
'II atll!l' Sundlys a! •~ month. CllurctlSdlool
-.d Nwwry care: IK'IJVIdad, Colee twr i'l t~
. Porlllhllall llmledi""'Y -·t~"""""·
· POMD«JY' CliURCII OF CHI!.I!!'l', 212 W.
Mllrl Sl.. Leo Laoh. evan ~~!~~St. Bl'*' School
· '9;Jia.m; M&lt;r..,gwuol1p, JO:Jia.m.; Youth
6:00p.m.; E"""lng ....,,_ 7:00p.
..m.
eodliiY nlglllX'3Ye!" mMtngandBIUe
- 7:00p.m.
11IE SALVATION ARMY, ill Blt10mlt
.A.... ~. Mrs. D&lt;ra Wlnlnr In &lt;harll'.
S.ndly ,_... rne&lt;tln&amp; JO a.m.; Sunday
.Sdlod, JO: :II a.m Sunday School. YPSM
•Dolae Adarm, ,._., 7::11 p.m. 5alvali&gt;n
"''I'M!E'tlng, variOus sp(!akers and mUSIC spedals.
'1lall'IIIIIY. 11::11 a.m. to 2 p.m. !..lela Homo'
~IIJIE'. memtl!rs in cttar~. all Wmll!l
• lavlal; 6:Ci p.m Thu~. Cap Cadel
.a- IYourw PeopleoBiblel, 7:30p.m Bible
·~ and~ rne&lt;tln&amp; .,.... to the public.
:: I'OMEROY' WESI'SIDE O!UROI OF
•QIRBI',ll!36 Cllll&lt;ftn'sllomeRoad tC.Urty
.'M). m.1M7. Vocal musk'. Sundly ·
,,.Np lOa.m.; BlbleSIIIIy 11a.m.; Worsljf, 6p.
•m. WemeodiiY. Blljo Study, 7 p.m. ~-B'.
'Linallopo. evan .,tis!.
' OCD DEX'IER BilLE CHRJSTlo\N
, CHURCH, JackCiellllclP14!cr; AIIIJyG~ .
· S.IIl Sundly School JO:OOa :m ; Yoolh mEet·
Ing. 7 p.m. every WM!Eid~ .
SACRED HEART CATHOLIC CHURCH

716 NOiTH SE(OND AVE.

204 Condor St.
P01111roy, OH.

992-2975

~r.s

Sired
13 MHI Street

Mldclepon. Ohio 41760
882-1157-OOKSI

10 a m .; Sunday Schad
a.m. Even
worship service 7:00 p:m. Wednesday
prayer meeting 7:00p.m .

EWING FUNERAL HOME
"Dignity and Service Alwayi'
Established 1913

992-2121
I 06 Mulbtrry Ava.

Pomoroy

meroy By-Pass. H.ev. Rober! E.Smtth, Sr.
pastor. Melvin Drake, S . s. Supt. Sunday
Schoo19 :30 a.m.; Morning Worship 10: 30;
Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.; Wednesday
Prayer Service, 7·00 p.m .
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, RallrC&gt;Id
St., Mason. SundaySchoollOa.m .; Morn·
ing worship 11 a.m.; Evening servtCP 6 p.
m. Prayer meeting and BlbleStudv Wed·
·
nesday , 7 p.m.
FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rev. Nyle
Borden, pastor Cornelius Bunch, supt.
Sunday School 9:Xl a.m.; Second and
fourth Sundays worship service at 2:30 p.

m.

MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth and
Ma in St ., Middleport. Rev. Gllber1 Craig,
Jr., pastor. Mrs. Ervin Baumgardner
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Located In Texas
Sunday School Supt. Sunday School9: 30 a:
Community off Ct. Rt 82. Rev. Rober(
m .; Worship Service, 10 :45 a.m .
Sanders, pastor Jett Holter, lay leader;
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
Ed Rou sh, Sunday Scho()l Supt . Sunday
- Joseph B. Hoskins, evangelist. Sunday
SChool 9: 30 a.m.; morning worship and
BibleStudy9a .m .: Worshlp,lOa .m.; Sunchildren's church 10 .30 a .m.; evening
day evening service fi p.m .; Wednesday
cation: Steve Eblin, ass istant. Sunday
preaching service first three Sundays,
evening service, 7 p.m .
School 9:30a.m.; Morning worship 10: ~
7:30 p .m .; Special service fourth Sunday
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY Racine
a.m. ; Teens in Action, 6 p.m .; Evening
evening. 7:30 p.m.; Wednestlay Prayer
Rt. 124. William Hoback. pas1 o;. SundaY
Wors hip, 7:00p.m. Choir practice 8 p.m ,
Meeting, Bible- Study and Youth FellowSchool10 a. m .; Sunday evening service 7
Sunday Wednesday evening prayer and
ship. 7:30p.m.
Bible study.
p.m. Wednesday evening service 7 p.m .
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY.
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST
CARPENTER BIWI'IST. Don Cheadle,
Located on 0 . J . White Road of Highway
Supl. Sunday School 9: :K) a.m . Morning
RogE!' Watson, minister; Norman Wlll:
160. Pat Henson. pastor. Sunday School10
Wo,rship 10:30 a .m. Prayer. service, altern·
supt. Sunday &amp;hool 9:30 a .m .; Worship
a.m. Classes for all ages. Junior Church 11
ate Sundays.
service 10:30 a.m. Bible s.ludy, Wedncs·
a
m
.
;
M;ornlng
worship
11
a.m.
Atlult
day , 7:00p.m .
THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
Choir practice 6 p .m. Sunday. Young PeoAPOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd .
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
ple's, Children's Church and Adult Biblenext t o Forr Me igs Park, Ru.11and. Ro~i
CHRIST OF LA'ITER DAY SAINTS. P ortStudy, Wednesday at 7·:ll p m.
Richards, pastor. Services at 7 p.m. on
land-Racine Road. Mike Duhl , pastor,
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL, •10 Gran t
Wednesdays and Sundays.
Janice Danner, ('bUrch .school director.
St., Middleport. Affiliated with Southern
Church school9·30a.m; Morning worship
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAPBaptist Convention. David Bryan, Sr., Mi·
10:30 a.m.; Wcdn£Sday evening prayer
TER of the Wesleyan Holiness Church.
nlster. Sunday SChoo110 a .m .; Mor- ning
services, 7:ll p.m.
Rev. Earl Fields, pastor. Henry Eblin,
worship 11 a .m .: Evening worship 7p.m.;
Suroo:tay School Supt.: SJ,&amp;nday School10 a .
BETHLE;HEM BAPTIST. Rev . Earl
Wednesdar fevenlng Bible study and
m ., Morning Wonhlp ~n a.m ,: Evening
Shuler, pastor. Worship service, 9: XI a.m.
prayer meet1ng 7 p.m .
servlce-7 :30 p.m . Wedn eSday evening serSunday School10:30 a .m. Bible Study and
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST. St.
vice 7:30 p.m .
·
prayer service Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
Rt. 124 and Co. Rd. 5. Derek Stump, past or. ·
STIVERSVILLE
WORD
OF FAITH
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION·
Willia m Amberger, S. S Supt. ; Sunday
Gary Holter, pas1or. Sunday services 9:30
AL CHURCH, Klngsrury Road. Rev
School9 ::m a.m.; Morning Worship 10:30
a.m . and 7 p.m .; Midweek service, 7::11 p .
Clyde W. Henderson, pastor. Sunday
a.m.; Evening worship 7:30p.m . Wednesm . Thursday,
School9:30 a.m.; Ralph Carl, Supt. Evenday worship 1:.'K) p .m .
Ing worship 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting,
ST. PAI./L LUTHERII:N CHURCH, . MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
Wedne;;day 7:00p.m .
Ave. Rev . Clark Saker, p&amp;;stor. Carl Not·
Corner Sycamore and Second Sts., PoOLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPTIST
tlngham, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
meroy'. The Rev William Middleswar1 ,
CHURCH. 28601 State Route 7, MiddleSchool 10 a .m . with classes for all ages.
pastor. Sunday School 9.45 a. m . Church
port. Sunday School10 a.m.; Sunday evenEvening services at 6 p.m. Wednesday Bi·
service 11 am .
Ing service 7· 30 p.m .; Tuesday service
ble study at 7:30p.m. Youth services Frl·
SACRED
HEART CHURCH, Msgr.
7:30 p.m .
'
day at 7:30p.m.
Anthony Glannamore. Ph . 992-5898. Satur·
ECCLES lA FELLOWSHIP,l28MIIISt .,
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH .
day Evening Mass 7: 30 p.m .: SundS.y
Middleport. Brother Chuck McPherson,
0 . H. Cart, pastor."Sunday School at 9: 30a .
Mass, 8 a.m. a nd 10 a .m. Conlt5slons one
pastor. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Sunday
m.; Morning worship at 10: 30 a .m. ; Sun·
half hour before each Mass. CCO classes,
eovenlng serVices at 7 p.m. and Wednesday
11 a .m . Sunday.
day e ven lngservlc e a17: 30 p.m. Thursday
services at 7 p.m.
services at 7:30 p m .
VICTORY BAPTIST, 525 N . 2nd St.,
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Kenneth Smith
Middleport . James E. Keesee, pastor.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
pastor. Sun(jay School 9:30 a.m.; chureti
Knob ~ located on Couhty Road 31. Rev.
Sunday morning worship 10 a ni.; Eve nlll'rvlce 7:30p.m .; youth lelloWllhlp 6:30 p.
' Roger Willford, past(J'. Sunday School.
Ing service 7 p.m .; W('dnesday evening
m .; Bible study, Thursday, 7: 30p.m.
9;30 a .m.; Morning Worshl 10: 45 a.m.;
worship 7 p.m. VIsitation Thursday 6: ;rfp.
FULL' GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE, 33045
m.
Sunday evening worship 7: 00p.m.; WedHiland Road , Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pas·
nesday evening Bible Study 7:00p.m.
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: David
tor. Danny Lambert. S. S. Supt Sunday
WHrfE'S . CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
CUrfman, pastor. Sunday School. 10 a.m.;
morning service at 10 a .m.; Sunday even·
CHURCH - CoolvllleRO. Rev. PhllllpRl·
worship service 11 a .m .; Sunday night
lng service 7:30p.m . Tuesday and Thursdenour, pastm'. Sunday School9;30 a.m.;
worsh ip service 7:30 p.m.: Midweek
day Services at 7:30p.m.
worship service 10:30 a.m.; Bible study
prayer service Wednesday 7 p.m .
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF TilE NA·
and wor ship service, Wednesday , 7 p.m .
WESLEYAN
BIBLE
HOLINESS
ZARENE, Rev. Glendon Strood, pastcr.
CHURCH of Middleport. Inc., 7! P,arlSt. ,
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, Roy
Sunday School9: :lla.m .: Worshlp'service,
W. Carter, (!aster. Mornlntl WCU"altlp 10:00
Rev. Roy McCarty, pastor; Roger Man10:30 a .m.; Youth service Sunday 6: 15 p ,
a.m.; Bible School6:00 p.m.; l!lble Study
ley, Sr., Sunday School Supt. Sunday
m . Sunday evenlngservice7:00p.m. Wed·
Wednesday 7:00p.m.
·
· School 9: 30 a. m .; Morning Worship 10:30
nesday Prayer Meeting and Bible Study
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amos
a.m.; Eve ning Worship? : lJ p.m. Wednes7:00p.m.
Tillis, pastor. Sonny f(uds(ll , supt. Sunday
day eve nlnji:: Bible study , prayer and
praise service, 7: 3() p.m.
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH, SunSchool 9:30 a.m .: Morning w orship, 10: l&gt;
FAITH FULL GOSPEL CHURCH, Long • day afternoon services at 2':30. Thursday
a.m .; Sunday evening service 7:00p.m .
evening services at 7:30.
Wednesday service 7 p.m . WMPO proBotlan, Sunday School, 9:30a.m.; MornFIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Masoo, W.
gram 9 a m . each Sunday.
Ing Worship 10:45 a .m. ; Sunday evening
Va. Pasta-, Bill Murphy. SundaySchool10
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
7:00p.m . (summer 7:30 p.m . I; Wednt5·
a.m.; Sunday evening 7:30 p.m. Prayer
RE.NE , Samuel Basye, pastor. Sunday
day night 7:00p.m . !summ er 7:30p.m.).
meeting and Bible stud.y Wednesday, 7: 30
School9:30 a.m.: Worship service 10: JOa .
p.m. Everyooe welcome.
m.; Young people's. service 6 p.m .
LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST SaEvan&amp;ellstk: servlce6: 30 p.m . Wednesday
OF GOD- Gary Hines, pastor. Sunday
lem St. Rev. Paul Taylor, pastor. Su~ay
service 7 p.m.
SChool9:;tl t o lO :Xl a.m. ; Worship srvlce
School10 a.m .: Sunday evening 7:00p.m.;
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
10: 30 to 11: 30 a.m.; Sunday evening serWednesday evening prayer meeting 7: 00
vice, 7 p.m .; Midweek Prayer service,
St., Mason, W. Va. Sunday BibleStudy10
p.m .
Wed .. 7 p .m.
a.m.; Worship 11 a .m . and 7 p.m. Wednes·
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
day Bible Study, vocal music, 7 p.m.
MT. OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
CHURCH, Silver Ridge. Duane Syden·
Lawrence Bush. pastor. Sunday School
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD Dud·
s.tr1cker, pas1or. Sunday School 9 am ·
ding Lane, Masm : w. Va . J. N. Thacker,
9:30 a.tn.: Sunday and Wednesday evenWorship Service, 10 a .m .; Sunday eveftlrig
Ing worship service, 1:00 p.m .
pastor. Evening service 7:30 p.m.; Woservice, 7:00p.m . Wednesday night Bible
men's Mlnlstry, Thursday, 9: 30 a.m.;
UNITED FAITH CHURCH. Rl. 7 on Postudy 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Prayer and ~lbleStudy, 7:15
p.m .

MT . HERMON UNITED BRETHREN

HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION . Hartlonl , W. Va.
Rev. David McManis, pastor. ChuJCh
School 9:30 a.m.; Sunday morning ser·
VIce, 11 a.m.; Sunday e-vening service.
7:30p.m. Wednesday prayer meeting, 7: 30
p.m .
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart ,
- W. Va., Rt. 1, James Lewls, pastor. Worship services 9::.&gt; a.m.; Sunday Scboolll
a.m.; EveninB worship 7:30p.m. Tuesday
cottage pnyer meeting and Bible Study
9:30 a.m.; Worship service, Wednesday

l:~JR1..VIOUR LUTI!ERAN CHURCH

W:

Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenawoo:l,
Va. The Rev. Georxe C. Welr.tck, pastoc.
Sunday SChoal9 : 30 a .m. ; Sunday worship
lla.m.
•
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, located on
Pomeroy Pike, COunty Road 25 r.:ear Flat·
woods. Re-v. BlackwOOd, pashr. Services
on Sunday at 10: l&gt;a.m. and 7:30p.m. wtth
Sunday Schoolt::Jla.m.'BibleStudy, Wednesday, 7 ::Jl p.m .
. FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST, Sl. Rt. 338, Antiquity. Rev.
Franklin Dickens, pastor. Sunday mom-Inc 10 a .m.; Sullday evenllla 7:30p.m.
Thura::lay evenlq7::K) p.m.
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLI· '
NESS CHURCH, Inc., 7S !'1.arl St. Rtv.
!von Myera, actlq J*lcr; Roier Manloy,
Sr., Sundoy Scllool Su.,.....tendent. Sunday Scbool t::J) a.m.; Mornln1 wcnlllp
10: 30 a .m .; eventna Worablp 7:30 p.m.;
W&lt;dneoday evenlnr Bible study, prayer
and praise service, 7:30p.m .
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOSTOLIC - VanZandt and Ward Rd . Elder
J1m01 Miller, patcw. Suncbly ScllOd
10: 30 a .m .: Worlltlp Servl.,, Sunday, 7:30
p.m.; Bible Study, Wedneaday, ?: 30 p.m.
CALVARY PD.GR!M CHAPEL, Rarri·
soovllle Road. Rev. VIctor Roulh, pastor;
Cllntm Faulk, Sullday SchOol SUpt.; Sun·
day!lehool9:30a.m.; momlna,.crlhlp,ll
a.m .; Sunday evenln1 service 7:30p.m.
!'J'ayor Meotlna, Wedn~ , 7::Jl p.m•

I

· STANDING FIRM

By BOB HOEFLICH
Th£&gt; action In Meigs County on
Saturday, of
will be the
annual fall festiva l at Rpcine.
There Is a
good llneu p of
free entertain·
ment ready to
step on stage
and a number of
activities have been planned for
the day . It's a bring your own
chai r, down-orne kind of ev£&gt;nt, and undoubt i&gt;dl y, community
leade rs have their finge rs
crossed since we're expected to
get some overflow from Hu'go on
• the weekend.
Middleport had such bad luck
weatherwlse with it s a nnual
block party last Saturday.
Hopefully, Racine will fare
better.
Congratulations to Mrs. Homer (Edna) Cooper who will
mark her 96th birthday on
Tuesday, Sept. 26.
Mrs. Cooper still resides in her
home and gets along well with a
little help hither and yon. She's a
bit alone on the home front,
ho~ever, since her daughter,
Eloise White, sold her home and
furni shings and left Pomeroy.
Eloise is in a Columbus area
nurs ing center these days.
No doubt Mrs. Cooper would be
pleasec! to hear from you Tuesday. Her address is 520 Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy.
The teen dances at Locomo·
lion, the former Elberfeld Store
warehouse building on Mechntc
St., conlinue to be well attended
and the young people enjoy the
Saturday night outings.
Chaperones at the weekly
dance, however, are having a
little problem In that a few of the
young people leave the dance and
are not there when their parents
stop by to pick them up. The
hands of th e chaperones, how·
ever. are tied in that they ·really
can only control behavior of
young people Inside the dance
building. They can't control
what they do when they leave the
dance, nor can they stop young
people from leaving If they wish
to do so.
As always, parents are invited
to join the chaperone group any
Saturday night. There 's always

Evelyn Hollon Ie~ the program
"The Wonder of Love" at the
recent meeting of the Fores t Run
United Methodist Women held at
the church with Mary K. Roush
as hostess, and Mary Nease
presidi ng.
For the program . scriptures
were read from Luke 10, Luke 12,
and Mat thew 6. A poem, "Fulfillme nt " was rea d also. The
purpose of the program was to
explai n where pledge money Is
used.

need for more parental support.
Any parents wishing to lend a
hand may just report to the
building.
The Meigs County Emergency
Medical Center on Mulberry
Heights will be the scene of a
chemotherapy nursing review
seminar on Oct. 2 from 12 noon to
4 p.m .
Making the presentation will
be Nancy Rowe, RN, MSN,
affiliated with the MI. Carmel
Hos pital School of Nursing.
Residents interested In attend·
ing the session - and there Is a
$20 charge :- may call Linda·
Jones at 992-2104, extension 214.
The seminar is being sponsored
by Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Readers taking part were
Kathleen Scott, Mrs. Roush,

A couple of readers during the
Meigs County Fair inquired
about a singles' organization In
this area.
'
Sometime ago there was such a
group and leaders pertodlca'ly ·
advised for publication the scheduled activities and Invited residents to attend. However, with
the Inquiry came the realization
that the newspaper has not heard
anything from the group In many
months. Does such a group still
exis t• ll so, we'd · appreciate
kn'owlng.

Hilda Yeauger, Carolyn SaiSOl{.
and Mary Nease. Mrs . Yeauger
also read a poem.
Mrs. Nease opened the meeting with the song "Jesus is All ij)e
World to Me." Devotions were by
Ada Nease with the topic. "God's
Plan ." Officers reports weore
given and It was announced
the Enric hment Day me•etiroi!
will be Oct . 28 in New Lexirogtori
The an nual meeting
held on Sept. 28 ~~ Gallipolis.
There were 32 sick and shu
calls reported and it was
that Lillian Napper is co nfi
her home.

RECEIVE AWARDS -Cathy CIU!ord, lelt, committee chair·
man from Cub Scout Pack 285, received a first lime award from the
district lor being the S.M.E. Chairman in 1989• .JoAnn Newsome,
right, cub master for Pack 285 received recognition lor
outstanding leadership and guidance In 1988-89.

Chapell birth

Ohio River buff, Gene Grate
says that the Delta Queen will be
passing our way in October. He'll
try to Jet us know when.

Sandy and Richard L. Chapell
are announcing the birth of their
second child, a daughter. Brit·
tany Diane, on July 24 at Holzer
Medical Center.
The infant weighed eight
pounds and was 21 inches long.
Maternal grandparenls are
Lawrence and Cora Lee, Pomeroy. Maternal great grandmother is Rachel Wilson ,
Middleport.
Paternal grandparents areCa·
rolyn and Sonny Van Meter ,

How can people be constructed
emotionally so that they can see
their homes and businesses des·
troyed by a tornado and then see
what little they could salvage be
ripped off by looters? Seems like
that would make it pretty diffl·
cult to keep smiling.

jay Mar ends play
Plans were made for the end of
season party of the Jay Mars
Tuesday Ladies Golf League to
be held at the club on Tuesday.
An 18 hole scramble will be
played with ~ prizes given.
Tee-off time will be 9 a .m. and
the luncheon will be catered.
Winners on Tuesday . were
Norma Custer and Joan Childs,
low gross and low putts; and low
net went to Elizabeth Lohse.

Middle por t. Paternal great
grandparents are Hazel and
Russell Chapell, Tennessee.
The couple also has a son,
Scott.

Worship service
times change
Services for Sunday a t Grace
Episcopal Church in Pomeroy
will begin at 7 p.m. There will be
no morning service. The Rev.
Ron Baird, Point Pleasant,
W.Va., will preach. The public is
invited to at tend.

Offer Good Now Tbru September 30, 1989

Offer Good Now thru Sept; 30, 1989

LP GAS TANK
COMPLETELY INSTALLED
'

WITH 20' OF COPPER

*

n

J,P GAS

..

Plus Tax
"\' .

He drew me up from the desolate pit, out of the miry bog, and
set my feet upon a rock, maklng'my steps' !HlCUre,
-Psalm 48:2 (RSV)

* Installation Includes 20

Recently a noted newspaper columnist, apparently overwhelmed by life as she saw It, committed suicide. One of her
peers, commentlpg on this sad event, said, " It Is too bad for all''
of us that she lost her footing."
.-~
Most people, fortunately , do not act so des perately in the·
midst of their troubles. But who has not had the experience of
standing In slippery places which , at least temporarily, caused
a lack of balance and security? This may happen when we are
angry, disappointed, tempted, or In times of hard decisions 0~101
deep sorrow.
,J. 30)
But the ps~lmist confidently believed that he had found ~
solution to this problem of losing · one's r.oot!ng. Whatever "!"
we~ness had pr~viously marked his.life was now conquered bynd
God s saving action; now hls feet were on a rock and his steps
were secure.
·'
I helleve this can be true for each or us. God can assure us that
under the changing scenes that greet us hour by hour, a solid
foundation or alertness and trust steadies our every step. And in
the event that we do fall, a loving God will be there to lift us u
·
p
and set our feet on the rock again.

F•D

.

1

Of Copptr, Over 20' Of Copp~. · Extra!

e. ,

..

tt ,...,........._

f

Phone

Phone

(304)

(304)

675-1700

675-2460

CITY ICE &amp; FUEL CO.
(304) 675 ... 1700 or 675·2460
"YOVR PETROIANE ,LJJ GAS DEAJ..ER"

ASK FOR CAROLYN THOMAS

- Taken from the Upper Baom•Dally Devotional Gtllde '

(

Forest Run UMW meets~:

Beat of the b{md

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

m

216 S. Second

221 W. Mlin St., P-roy

The Daily Sentinel- Page-'-...,

)

'

...

II

'

CALL TODAY...
ASK FOR CAROLYN THOMAS

...

�22,1989

Ohio

Business Services

Classifie

EED A·HOME?

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

• The· Area's Number 1 Marketplace

~-Ranch,

.,

LEGAL NOTICE
Sealed propo11ls will be
received in the office of the
Meiga County Commiuioners, third Floor of the Court·
hGUM, Pomeroy. Ohio until
12 noon on October 4.
1981. Biela wll be opened at
2 PMatthesamelocetionon
the -above date. Propouls
· shall be for refurbishment ·ot
one (111984 Meigs County
EMS Ambulanco. Detailed
informltion. proposal formt.
and complete specifications
may be obtained from the oflie. of the Mol!!" CountY
Emorgencv Medocol Servicoo. P . 0 . Box 74B. Mulberry Heights. Pomeroy, Ohio
45719.
(614) 992-6617 .
Bi-a shell uoo the printed
forms provided 8s no shop
ordlrs or other forms will be
accePted.
Each proposal
mutt contain the full name
of the party or parties making the proposal andmustbe
accompanied by a bid bond
or certified check made out
to the Meigs County Commisaionrs in the amount of
five percent (6%) of the total
bid . .Only bidders with QVM
approval in the ambulance
manufacturing buslnMs will
be considered. Successful
bidder must guarantee all
work performed and must
asaume to remaining guarantee on the module body.
The Meigs County Commissioners rnerve the right
to rojoct ony and oil bida or
any part thereof and to
waive any informality in any

NOTICE TO BIOOERS
Sealed propQsals will be
received on the construction
of a 60'x100' Dry Storage
facility to be located at
39561 Bar 30 Road, Reedavillo. Ohio. The building to
be constn.~cted in accor·
dance with specifications
which may be piclced up at
the office, 39661 Bar JO
Road .
Reedsville, Ohio,
phone 985 -3315.
Bids ahall be sealed and
addressed to;
Tuppers PlainsChester Water District
39561 Bar 30 Road
Reedoville. Ohio 45772
Marked "Dry Storage Facility bid"
All bida to be received at
the Water Office no later
than
Thursday , October
15th, 1989 at 2 :00P .M. at
which time ill bids will be

proposal.

Meigs County
Commisstoners
Mary Hobstetter. Clerk
(9) 15. 22, 2tc

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIOUCIARY
On September 1 B, 1989,
In the Meigs County Probate
Court. Cooo No. 26312, DelorM R. Fronk; 50767 State
Route 248. long Bottom.
Ohio 46743, was appointed
Executor of the estate of
Harlis E . Frank. deceMed,
late of 50767 State Route
248, Long Bottom, Ohio
45743.
Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge
Lena K. Nesselroad, Clerk
(9) 22. 29; (100 6 3tc

CHECK THE

/ or all bida.
19! 22. 24, 2B; (10) 1 4tc

3 Announcements

NEW HOURS

PAUL'S
BARBER SHOP
RACINE, OHIO

WILL BE OPEN
ONLY 3 DAY$ A
WEEK

Mon.-Wed.-Sot.
8 A.M.-4:30 P.M.
Rul Estate General

11

1978 Pontiac Bonneville
·
4 door
Vehicle may be inspected by

SYRACUSE
992-2621 or

992-6944

550 Page St.
Middleport, Oh.
OPEN
7:30 A.M .-5 :00P. M .
8 -23-' 89 I

Real Estate General

VAUGHN'S •
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE
SYRACUSE, OHIO

Most foreign end
Domestic Vehi cles
A/ C Service
Atl MIJOf &amp; Minor

Repatrs
NIASE Certrtiud MacAenic

CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN
Certified

Lic~msud

Shop

-

RUOO

HOCKINGPORT!McKIM

Still Looking
Fine at 49.
We Lo-e You
Happy Birthday

(Country loving)
113 acres to grow on.
whether cattle or kids! lots
of pasture,
cropland,
woods, shared private lake.
Call Kate today to see, 5944211. 594-8183.

1()Ofo OFF

All PERMS
WALK-IN WELCOME

KAY'S
BEAUTY SHOP
169 N. 2nd
Mildloport
992-2725
8·1· 1 mo.

WANTED
DEAD OR AUVE
•Washers •D rvers
•Range •F reezers
•Refrigerators

"Must It Rljlairable"

KEN'S APPLIAKCE
SERVICE

.192-5335~915-356

Wa Service All Mek•

You can own this house for less than you now pay rent. let
me tell you hqw at our Open House on Sunday, September
241h from 2:00 to 4:00 at 36656 Peach Fork Road.

P.ut your trust in Number One:

B&amp;W
GARAGE

3 BR ranch home, 2Vt
baths , full basement. 2
car garage, !Ox60 ft.
deck, 3 acres plus I y,
acre lake. Mini cond.
$120,000 firm. Ali new
drapes, fully carpeted .
Built-in lg. TV, stove &amp;
relrig. See-through fireplace.

992-2571

9·22-89

IEPAII

Rt. 124 Between
Wilkonille and
Salem Cont•

EVERY SUNDAY
11:00 A.M.

12 Gauge Shotguns Only .
Factory Choke

STRicnY ENFotiCEDI
9 -21-89-1
•VINYL
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO".
••"-hilt

"Free Eatimllteo"

'"· 949-2801
or Res. 949'·21'60
NO SUNDAY

Rt. 33 North of
Pomeroy, Ohio

PliiMIING I
• Now
161 North s.c-1 '
Mlf••••rt,

Clhle

45760

W• Cony , _ . lu111111•

Your Phone

247-3522
St. lt. 338

Letart Fal1, Ohio
1110-

992-9922 or 992-:i22B
91 181 1 mo pd

L. W.

Roger -Hysell
Garage

STEWART
TRUCKING

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

•Gravel
•Limestone
.•Fill Dirt

Also Trans111lsslon
I
.
PH. 992-5682

742-2421

or 992-7121

IIIII Here
.,.ISs l'lfDIII
HJ-6150

...,.

SWEEPER REPAIR
ALl MAKES AND
MODELS

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE

222

Eastolllain

POMEROY,' OH.

992-6872

9-20-tfn

· 4-25-tln

6-5-'89-tln

SE~ICE

1,000 GALLONS

W1 can repair and ,..
core radiators and
heater corn. We can

POOLS, WELlS
CISTERNS

also acjd boil and rod
out radiators. We also

Call Anytime
992-23·71

,PAT HILL FORD

Writnel

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

16141 667-3271
Grant

A. Newland

TRI-CO. TERMITE
&amp; PEST CONTROL
SINCE 1976

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

ROACHES • FLEAS

"At Reasonable Prices"

SPIDERS
BEES • WASPS
Member National Pest
Control Assn.

TERMITES • ANTS

PH. 949-2801
949-2860

Res.

Toll FrH

Day or Night•
NO SUNDAY CALLS

4:•

9-7-89· 1 ma. d.

GREG I . ROUSH
' GENERAL
CONTRACTORS
RESIDENTIAL

•
··~

DAVE'S
SMAU INGINE
REPAIR
lacahcl at Valty Lumber
In·Middleport, Oh,

DUSIJ IT. 1Y IACUSI

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Most 2 and 4 -cycle
engines
Stock Parts for
Homelite. WeedeatBr.
Tecumseh, Briggs &amp;
Stratton.

992·7611

PH. 992-3922

~

,

. COMMERCIAL

•CUSTOM KITCHENS 6 .ATHS

•EXTENSIVE REMODELING

•VINYL SIDfNQ &amp; AOOANG
•METAL BUILDINGS
•NEW HOMES

SINCE l969

5-25-'89-tfn
~·- -

DRY CLEANING
SERVICE

TRI COUNTY
RECYCLING

OFFERED AT

POMiiOY, OHIO
We Buy All Non Fer-

Fabric Shop
992-2284
POMEROY, OHIO

rous Metals, Plastics,
Stainless StHI

"We441ne gown
Spul•ll•tt"

LINDA'S
PAINTING

lmRIOR-EXTERIOR

FREE ESTIMATES
Toke the pain out of

painting....... tlo

It

.

!PAYING TODAY
AUG. 30, 1989)
CLEAN, DRY
AlUMINUM CANS
41Cperlb.
#I COPPER.-..... 90• •.
#2 COI'I'ER ....... 75• lb.
lh IIASS-....... 50'· •.
YnLOW IRlSS ... 40' ••
RADIATORS ........ 35' •.
HOURS

fer.you.

YRY IUSONAIU
HAYIIIfiiiNCIS

992-527

1-800-535-2199

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
,8WJLER:

MOO GALLON
WATER SERVICE
UMESTONE
SPREAD
DIRT HAULED

7 Dey1AWeelc

a.m.-7 p.m.
Jet. S.l. 7 I 143
9

At

On

T~-~·~-~ ma.

•Lawn Mowers
·•Riders '
•Chain Saws
•Weedeaters
3 milt1t1 off of Rt. 7

at

Meigs Memory

Gardens
8-17-1 mo.

JONES TIRE
CENTER
•New &amp; Uoed Tlreo

•Custom Pipe Bending
•Oil Changea
•Grea~eJobs

oQeneral ChMois
MelntenMce
•Computerized Balancer

992-3897
St. 'Rt. 124
Oh.
IN'"' to

I Top

HT HAULING
•FIREWOOD·

BILL SLACK
992-226t
IVDIINGS ·
4/1/88/lfn

.
- .:

•

1985 Vamahll V2480, motor r..l ~: :·.
nice plue extr11 $1,500. 304- ·; •' ·
882-3317

Adorable kittens, fr11 to 1 Qood
home. 614-446-2782.
BeauUful kittens, long haired,

...

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

1987 Hondo 250X 4-whoolor. · • ·.

Bought new In April at. Extre'a ••, ,

InclUded. $1500. 014-44to0411
or 114-445-1211.

short, claico, striped &amp; mixed.

To a loving homel614·256-1793.

1987 Vahama Virago. 4,000
mlln. $1800. 614-1143-5304 or

Kittens to give away In Bradbury. Call614·992·5071 .

114-111~-2874 .

' -.'.

Mala Cocker Spaniel dog, 5
years old. Well behaved, very
loving, haa shot!_, lo good hom•
onlyl614-446· 46r4.

Mother cat and 5 cute heallhy
kl1tens, 304-675-1528.

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

St. Bernard needs 1 good home
in tha · country, 2 11'.1: yra old,
304&lt;675-7340.

6

1172 Maverick 302 engine,
automatic, body rough, 1200.
304-458-1042.

Lost &amp; Found.

FOUND 1990 girls PPHS class
ring, parking lot Foodland, call
end ldantlly, 304-1175-3025 after
5:00.

Wantld to buy 4 llraa I whHII.
•
8 or 10 Inch WhHit with . .
11001C15 Of 1200X15 tlrl8 to fiL
.
Ford or Dodge. 304-875-UU. ... v:; ~

Found: Brown horse on Rocky
Fork Rd. 614-256·6573.

79

.

Lost : Tan wiblack pug face.
Raccoon Cr~ak area on 141.
Answers to Butch, hard of
hearing. Reward oHered. 614379-2957.

7

,I

$3500.114-11411-2840.

•'

114-11~21110.

5 Family Yard Sale: Rid House
on Lover's laM. Friday thru
Sat. 11)..? Microwave,' toaster, In·
teiievlalonltapes, weight ,bench 1
teen boys 6 girls clothes, ana
many houaehotd Items!

Home
Improvements

I

Waterproofing.

C. W. Davleon, Plumbing a
trenching, for all w.ter &amp; drain
linn, 614-441.0151.

Fri &amp; Sal. 9·5, Roush Lana In
Choohlra, baby bado, youth bod,
winter clothastc01ts, formal
dr11111, all tlzll. Many more
Items!

Ex~rtanced

9-5;

Fetty Tree Trimming, atump
nmoval, call304-675-'f331.

Rolery ar cabte tool drilling. :: ~·:

Moat wttllt compltted Nme :OZ.·

Pump saln and strvlce,

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; Vlclnlly

Davis

Sew·Vac;

....(;KIKIII,

,..

84

vn

1-CJUU-;).)I•li~410 ,

~.

'•

.'

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

·• •..

'=R~n"'lcto-:-nl,-lo"'l...:;or
____
co_m_m_o_rc"'l-al-.: :'':
wiring, new eervJce or Npaire.

..

Llcanled eltctrlclan. Rld~nour
Eleclrleal, 104-t7&amp;-1781.

Furniture and appllanc11 by the
pltca or entire .household. Fair

,.

85 General Hauling

'.

:
·•
·,

,...
••

J l J Wattr Service. Swtmmlng
poota, citteme, walla. Call
245-1215.

Junk e11ra whh or wlthoul
motors. Call Larry Lively 114·

381-0303.

"

114'~

.••'

A &amp; A Water Service. Poolt ell•
tema, Weill. lmmadl11•1,06ci or
~.
21)00 Qlllont dtllvtry. cau 304- ' .: :
115-1370.
-

''

.

TOP CASH paid lor 1963 modal
and newer u11d carS. Smith
Buick·Pontlac, 1911 Eaettm

~ OaiUpoiiL Call 114-448-

' "&gt;gkltrM Llmoulln luL 1
... ,.....,. ..,..,, • •111•
.. 1 , _ H•olold """

.Uoad fumlturo and - o l d
oppllancao. Phone 114-742-

.I

·~

.... ....
: .:

Wanted to Buy

Uoad fumltu,. by tho pleco or
'anlh haf.Nehokl 1110 aaiUng
114·742-2455.
.

~

Servica, •

Sopllc Tonk Pumping $90 , Galllo
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,

Public Sale
&amp; Aucllon

2041.

._ "·

Georges Creak Rd. Parts, sup-"
pllet, pickup, and dtlivtry. 614441.0294.

Garage Sale, 25 Warwick Road,
Fri and Sat. 9:00 1111 4:00, Sapl.
22 ond 23. "LIItlo Bll ol
Evoryohlng".

Oulltl
Pre tD40 qullte. Any condition.
Cooh Paid. Call 614-1192-5657 or
114-612-2411.

."..,.;

.... ~

895-3802.

prlcoo baing paid. Coli 614·446-

'

• '•
In Zanllh also aervlclng moat · ~ • ~
other brandt. House calls, 11eo ....... "'
IICime appliance Nlpaire. WY
• ""
304-1171-2398 Ohio 114-448- • • • ·
2454.
••

Movlnq Sale; Everything must
go! Be~ Items, clothe~, lots of
foys, triCycle, maternity clothes,
mrsc.
items.
Centenary
Townhouso, Sl1. Sept. 23, 8·4.

9

• ,t1

Ron"t TV Service, specializing

7381.

2 day auction Friday and Satur.
day, Sept. 22 &amp; 23, 6:00 p.m.
Lots of new merchandiN, and
furniture, living room suUe,
swivel rOClktr, recliners, bunk
beds and cheat ol drawers. 1
yur guarantee. Brass, toots,
quality pile-up will ba oHered tor
dealers. Wa still have hot dogs
31$1.00, coHN .~, lots of door
prizes. For more information
call Ed or Brenda 304·273·5183.

. ''

drywall hanging ...., , '
•nd finishing a110 repair work:, ._; •
304-675-11451.
~:'! ~

redwood
tunltura, camping
equip, furniture, misc. boal
88111. 3 miles OUI141, 614-446-

8

,I

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guaran~
t11. Local ratarencu furnished.
Free ettlmatll. Cell coUect 1·
614-237.()408, doy or night. A o
g e r • B • .• • m e n t

ALL Yard Saloo Mull Bo Paid In
Advenca. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day before the ad It to run.
Sunday edition • 2 :00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edition - 2:00
p.m. Saturday.

Sat.

'.

Mult Mil, 1i8G Tarry Taurut 281
Travtl Trtllllf' In ttorage In
Florida. Clean, extr1 nlct.
18,500. Serious inqulrln only.

Services

Sale:

-.

"·•
-:,: ·~ ~
• '•

:::::::-::"~:::"::':"":~::---.:;-:--;: •

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Gartlge

.

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Cobrl Cam~r. 30 n., wllh full ' ~ .
aize btd and bath. at Racine.
"~

Yard Sale

3151.

•SHRUB It TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL

..

304-1175-

1986 XR25R Hondo X250R; " '
good oond, $800. 304-175-34112. . " ' .

Rain/Shine. 12 gauge reloader,

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR
PARTS &amp; SERVICE

nogoolablo,

"

1N4 Honda motorcycle or trade ••I ·
tor 250 Honda 4-w-.r. 614742-2545,

6 mo. old part-lab. ra1rlavar pup.
Has
had
DHLP,
RAB
vacinatlons. 614-245-9283, or
614·245·5064.

.985-4422

ALLEN'S
HAULING

$1,400.
3641.

5 k'ittens 4 blk and 1 gray, 8 wkl
old, 304-&amp;75-3734.

7-18-'89-dn

BISSELL
BUILDERS

or

CHESTER, OHIO

.,.

1912 Honda V-t5 S.bre, new
Whht lAhar tires, exc cond,

3 Rax Rabbltts, 1 duck, 614-448-8692.
3 long-haired khtans. While,
calico, tan and white. 614·992·
5685 or 614·742·3154.

Roollng Shlnglaa. 614-388-9816.

1st visit FREE
more.

Motorcycles

2 puppies lo giveaway. 614-4468140.
'

SUSAN COLEMAN

DOZER
SITEWORK - ROADS
CLEARING

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

2 kittens, 1 black, 1 yellow, pay
for shots. Approx. 7 weeks. 61 4·
446-4056.

Need good home's, German
Shephard doge, owner Mr. Hill
decuMd. Polnt Pleasant Shelter. Please Mlp. 304-675-6458.

742-2778
fer Ftll Speelals

74

~~~--~~~~~~
U74 Kawasaki 800 Ex. Con d. .., "
$700. 1988 Honda XR200 toko ,.
ovar payment•. 3()4.675-4501 ... ·
before 2;00 p.m.
' " •

Giveaway

21f• Miles Out New
lima Rd.
in Rutland, Oh.

5/13/!91fn

N-ard L

4

N11d good homes for pure bred
Gorman Shtpards 1 •• Bill Hill,
owner has paasea away. Dogs
are at Pt. Pleasant Animal Shel·
ter. Plean help.

repair Gas Ta....

982·2198
· Middleport.

tor ch1nges to be made In the
Ohio Valley Phone Book I•
Friday, Sept. 29, 1989; Anyone
needing additions, deletions,
changes or wishing to •dvenlse
shourd ca11 weekdavs betwe111
9·5: 1-800-556-8930 or mail Information to Champion Dlf'tiC•
tories, P. 0 . Box 22 NotWalk, OH
44057.

UP
TANNING

SUN~S

WATER
SERVICE

8-1·1110.

SALU &amp; SERVICE

CUTTING 8t
WELDING

8-21-19-

RACCOON VALLEY
SPORTSMEN'S CLUB

'-'*"

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

Pizza-Subs-Salads-Daily Specials

949-21ft8
9-11-'119-1 mo. pot

GUN SHOOT

Now lhru Sept. 9, 1989

POMEROY AND MIDDLEPORT'S ONLY
LOCALLY OWNED PIZZA SHOP •

992-7479

HOUSE FOR SALE

5-26-' 88-tfn

MEET THE
STAFF
PERM SALE

FREE LOCAL DELIVERY

1-13-'88-tfn

BOB'S
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

BODY SHOP

' LOWEST PRICES
HIGHEST QUALITY

•Mobile Home
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rentals
. •Lot Rentals

TEMPSTAR

GEARY'S

Happy 30th,
Randy Ho.

I

MOBILE
HOME PARK

3 Announcements
Important Notice! lhe deldllne

MAIN STREET
PIZZA

contacting Kenny Wiggins
at 992-6360. Vehicle to be
sold "AS IS" with no gua-

.Veterans Memorial Hospital. a JCAHO-ac·
credited, not-for-profit hospital, Is looking
for a Patient Review Coordinator .. The Patient Review Coordinator will be responsible
for the assessment, planning, implementation, and evaluation of the hospital's Qual·
ity Assurance and Utilization Management
Plans.
Qualifications include a Registered Nurse
with a current Ohio nursing license. Prior
Quality Assurance and Utilization Management experience preferred.
Please call or send a resume to:
Margaret Holm, Assistant Administrator
Veterans Memorial Hospital
115 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
(6141992 -2104

APPALACHIAN
WOOD STOVES
In Cwp•tw, OH. Off 143
na-6121

now!

417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
-:- Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial HoSilital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

County :

PATIENT REVIEW COORDINATOR

Rutland

Announcements

Audiologist . t\

::r:: '(614) 446-7619 1M' (614) 992-2104

Help Wanted

50 DIFFERENT WOOD
&amp; COAL STOVES,
INSERTS &amp; FURNACES

Ucensed' Clinical

.z

meroy, Ohio, with bids toba
opened at 1:30 p.m. and
read aloud for the sale of the
following vehicle which is
no longer in use by the

Services Offered

he's on the other
end of the camera

~

the office of the Meigs

County Commissioners louted in the Counhouae, Po-

County Commissioners reserves tha right to accept or
reject any or all bids.
Meigs County
Commissioners
Ma,ry Hobstetter. Clerk
(9) 15, 22. 2tc

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT
Salem

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

noon, October 4. 1989, in

rantees. Outside of envelope

opened.
The District reserves the
right to reject or accept any-

J":f

Television Listenine Devices
:Dependable H~rine Aid Sales &amp; Sm·ice(
0 Hearine Evaluations For All Ages

County Commissioners wil
receive sealed bids until 12

containing bid must be
clearly marked "1978 Pontiac" .
The Board of Meigs

• ..

742-2455

loco!IY Owned &amp; Operated by Bill, Stoove,&amp;o

PUBLIC NOTICE
COUNTY VEHICLE
FOR SALE
Pursuant · to
Section
307. 12 O.R .C . tho Meigs

'.

19Se CJ5 Jeep. 4 wheal drive.

Located Behond•

I

.

wo·s

Engine nMda rebultt, nHd1 :..•
.omt body work. 114· ii2·7412.
1171 Ford Van, Eeono Una 200; ''". ·Body
&amp; runa good. $450.
614-t
30.

Tractor Dealership

614-992-2478
P. 0. Box 207
Pontera1v,

Gauge

73 Vans &amp; 4

DINEnE SETS
"NEW" REClltjERS .

Cape Cod &amp; 2 Story

FAMILY HQMES INC.

Factory Choked 12
PubliC Notice

LIVING ROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES

MODEL OPEN DAILY MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
1:00 P.M.-6:00 P.M. or Call for Appointment

Beginning Sept. 17
Starh at 1:00 P.M.

Serv1ces

USED FURNITURE

MODULAR HOMES
SINCE 1970

EVERY SUNDAY

Public Notice

Employment

~-.mo.

.....

-A:'

Rano M ~ I dr.
llhltp. 11100 or - . 11
73 1
;.;;..';..'- - - - - -

Trucka forSala
•·- .72. .. . -------1

87 Upholstery
_..,.. ~ _
vicini 1~ -n., a. . n ,..,._

~..;;;.;.;;...,...---:-......,-,:::-:- · 111t 4tc4 1 1/lton Cloev. u. 1 The
IIIII
In
fvrillon
1 ...................... tan ....... - - . ,. . . . ...-~... Call MMn-41114
411-1117.
1111.
fOr file 11011-

)•

\

'

•

,,

-·••.

wanereon'a W1tar f.leullng, • . ,
.....m11M ra1-. volume dl•
oounts, 2,000 ta 4,000 copach~l • ' .
clstorno, ..
104-17Wt11
. - · IIICI. Call • ••

••'
••

••
•'
••
•

••

••

••
•••
'

�Pega 1o--The Daily Sentinel

F~y. September 22, 1989;

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Sunday

r------Local news br'iefs-----. Hugo ...
Continued froin page 1
minor. There was no citation.
Miller suffered minor visible ln.jurles , and
Veterans Me.morial Hospital.
'
.

CQntlnued from page l
WliS

taken to

Squads have 5 Thursday calls
. Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports that five
calls for assislance were answered on Thursday by various
units throughout the county.
·
Thursday at 7:17a.m., Middleport went to Shady Cove Road
for Julie Engle who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Middleport at 2:40p.m. went to Sycamore St. for Nicole Siek
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The Rutland Fire Department at 3: 29 p.m. transported
Richard Martin al\d. Mike Southern from an auto accident on
Hysell Run to Holzer Medical Center.
. At 7:12p.m . , Rutland Fire Department was called to an auto
accident at the Intersection of County Roads 8 and 10. Jack
Miller was flown from the scene by Lifefllght.
Middleport at 8: 52 p.m. went to North Second Ave. for
Kenneth Barnett who was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

.Man arrested on charges
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports the arrest of
60-year·old Elza Bartlmus, Route 1, Reedsv1lle, on warrants
charging trespass and telephone harassment.
·
Bartlmus posted bond.for appearance In Meigs County Court.

Warrant issued for mans arrest

:

:

An order for the arrest of Mar.tln L. Searles has been flied In
Meigs County Common Pleas Court, after Searles falled to
appear at the Meigs County Jail on Sept.15 tobeglna previously
Imposed sentence.
The State's case against Michael Todd Musser has been
dismissed.
In other court matters, Bancohio National Bank has been
awarded judgment of $6,949.72 fi·om William K Cogar·.
David Stewart and Nancy S't ewart have been aw'a rded
judgment of $1,163.87 from Michael O'Bryant and Marty
O'Bryant.
.
Judgment has been ordered for the defendants In the case of
Tamara Hawley, a minor, by her 'n ext best friend , Linda
Hawley, against Jeffrey Acree, et al.
The cases of Trina T. Lee against Lawrence R. Lee Jr .• and a
reciprocal action for child support by the West Virginia
Department of Human Services againsi ·Kermlt Buzzard have
been assigned to Meigs Probate-Juvenile Judge Robert Buck.
Finally. Lila Van Meter has been appointed a special deputy
clerk of courts in Meigs County.

_ __.;._Meigs. announcements----Plan reception
A reception will be held Satur·
day, Sep.t. 23, at the Chester .
Methodist Church, from 2 to 4
p.m., for Esther Smith. vlci&gt;--st·
ate councilor of the Daughters of

America Lodge in Ohio. Smith
was installed to the office at a
state session In Mansfield in
August. Members of all baugh·
ters of America lodges .a re
welcome at the reception.

---Area deaths--

The weakening was E"xE"pcted to
continue throughout the day,·
, Hugo smashed Into Charleston
just as high tide was coming In
around midnight ," sending water
coursing through streets as tar as
10 m lies· 'inland. The wind
stripped the roofs from numer·
ous. buildings, . Including City .
Hall, the old Slave Market and
thE" Coast Guard's · command .
center. and splintered ancient
oak trees.
"We will be recovering from
thiS for a long, long time," said
Paul Lunsford , director of the
state' s Emergency Prepared· ·
ness Division.
Residents stepped out at dawn
to get the full Impact of Hugo's
devastation .

Am Electric Power .............. 30
AT&amp;T ......................... .. ...... 42'.4
Ashland Oil ........................ 41 V.
Bob Evans ........................... 15
Charming Shoppes .............. 14 3,4
City Holding Co .. ... .. .. ......... 15'h ·
Federal Mogul... .............. .. .23'.4
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................541.1
Heck's .. ... .... ....... ...... ...... .. ..... 3,4
Key Centurion .................... 1.31/,
I;.ands' End ............... .......... 26%
Limited Inc .......... .... .......... 37%
Multimedia Inc ...... .. ..... .. ..... 99
Rax Restaurants .................. 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers ..... ....... .... 14%
Shoney's Inc ................... ... .11%
Wendy's Intl ....................... .5'V.
Worthington Ind ,, ............... 23'1.
(Charming Shoppes reg. qtr.
5.03 dividend pay Oct. 16. Shareholders of record Oct. 2.)

Divoree action filed
. A divorce action has been filed
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Eric Manuel Priddy.
Middleport, against Depra
Priddy. by her next friend,
Nancy Brian, Langsville.
A divorce has been granted
both parties in the case of Donald
Ray Smith against Nola Renee
Smith.
.
Rhonda Stout, Albany, and
Jimmy Stout, Albany, have been
granted a dissolution of their
marriage.
Lisa Ann Mollett and Michael
Alan Mollett have been granted a
dissolution and Lisa Mollett has
been restored to her former
name, Manley.

(

.

.. t•\

,.,,.

A call. from Hugo... .
(Pieroni thai is)...Page B-4

'

•

' And ll't Worth

By NANCY YOACHAM
Times-Sentinel staff
ALBANY - A total of 182
active elflployees of Southern
Ohio Coal Company's Meigs
Division were laid off their jobs
on Friday. The layoff is the reS1,1lt
of the physical merger on Aug. 19
of the Meigs No . .1 and Raccoon
No. 3 mines. Into the newly

'1,000 .

87 NISSAN MAXIMA

85 MAZDA 626 LX

87 NISSAN PULSAR SE

$7489

mH619

$10,987

89 FORD AEROSTAR VAN
Two-t0111 brown. 1utom1tic cruise con-

sNts, rear •indow defroster.

trol. AII/FII. A/C. tilt stt.-in'

lf971149

1!991151

2 Dr.. rod.

IUiamali~

dow defroster.

RX7

AM/FII , re• win-

$7987

1195i!OG

87 NISSAN STANZA GXE
4 Dr.. Maroon, AII/FII/coss.. cruse co•
trol. till stMrin' pow, windows. auto.
w/overdrNt.

.

$14,495

58987

1197,1136

88 MAZDA MX6

4 Whetl
Dr;,e Truck, lone beet,
AII/FII/cas.. low miles, bfush pard
btdtin•.
11875271

2 Or... 11d. 5 sp•d. A/C, AII/FII/CISS,
re• Window defroster.

$7989.

$10,477

1198 tllO

85 FORD AEROSTAR VAN

4 .Dr., silver, 6 speed, AM/FM. great gaa
m1leage.

Automatic. cruise control, tilt steering.
AM/FM/cass. w/equalizer, int. wipers.

m•• ·laisin-Walnut

85 NISSAN KING CAB TRUCK
5 speed. mud flaps, bumper. $

#951176

$5987

#961086

5677

#951088

ST£Vf IIFFIE
Salos/loaling

CHILD'S PORTION ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ........... S3.32

592·4926

HOURS: 10:00 A.M. to 9:30P.M. Seven Oayo A Wool&lt;

85 MERCURY MARQUIS

4 Dr.. gray. A/C, AM/FM. cruise control.

S6989

#855271

84 FORD THUNDERBIRD
AM/FM/Casa .. A/C. 2 dr., white.

S6787

#941054

88 FORD ESCORT

4 Dr .• maroon. automatic, AM /FM /casa.
rear window defroster.
$

6 l 7· 7 ·

#981100

86 JEEP CHEROKEE

MARIC WlUAMS
Salts/leasing

592-4926

4 Wheel Driva, automatic, V-6. AM/FM,
A/C. luggaga rack, roar window defroa-

. ~~S6133

$10,477

87 FORD F150 TRUCK

198 7 Pontiac Grand Prix .~. S9 50'0
Auto., PB. PS. air, cruise, 24,000 miles, 1 owner, sharp.

'31ack. 4 speed, AM /FM. sildinp roar win·

:~~5176

1984 Chevy Chevette ......... SS29S

.

S7987

87 NISSAN SENTRA

Auto ., PB. PS. air.

4 Dr., red. 6 apeed, A/C, AM/FM/caaa:.
rear window dafroatar.
·

19 77 Ford Courier ................ 569 5
Auto.

,#97111

$5 989

87 NISSAN STANZA

1978 Ford F-1 SO ................ 51295

Managoi
592-4927

V-8, stand.

1978 Olds Toronado ........... 51295
Auto .. air, cru~se, tilt.

4 Dr .• white, A/C, automatic w/ovar·
drive, rear window defroatar. $

8191
&amp;\~e.F2t~£'at~~fM~~!o~!~w~n'!w
defroatar.
·
$
#971108

,119610153

1978 Olds Delta 88 ............ 51295
.

4977

S8989

88 FORD F250 %TON TRUCK

Sliding rear window, AM/FM/CIIIl. A/C,
automatic.

$1O, 987

#886223

87 FORD ESCORT GL
4 Dr., 9ray. 6 apeed,A/C.AM/FMotereo.
roar wendow defroster.

$547 7

#971168

85 FORD ESCORT
Automatic, AM radio. ·rear window defroster.
$

41 9 5

#961097

88 ESCORT GL 4 DR.

• 4 speed. AM/FM
frostar.
#981163

stereo~

roar window do·

55477

85 MAZDA 626 LX

Touring Sedan, automatic, p-er windows, A/C, .cruita control, daisy wipers.
AM/FM/caaa .. Alloy wheals.

$7989

#961070

89 FORD AEROSTAR VAN
I C. automatic, cruise control. AM/FM/coss..
tit ot-~ intermittent wipers. ._r dafrw/wlpen.

$13,497

•#991170

83 FORD F150
4 Wheel Drive, automatic, AM stereo. new
tlraa. bad liner.

$6787

. #831521515

*On Units Prlcecl Owr 1 2000

GIIQWII.. $1000 01 '"' 'IIADI

Where T.he Customer is # 1

Auto., PB, PS. air.

AZDA

SEVERAL CHEAPIES TO CHOOSE FROM

•

Located On Sl Rt. 550. Alhens

.·582·482&amp; ·
OPEN Mon., lues~ Wed., Fri. 8to 8

Thul'lday 8 to 8
I

i

workers the for the inevitable
layoffs, "it's still a heck of a
shock when the announcement Is
made," Tompkins said Friday
afternoon.
''The layoff Is unfortunate, but
necessary to preserve the jobs of
the majority and assure the
long-term viability of the dlv·
lslon," Tompkins said. In a May

Salurday 8 to 5

••••
•
I

RIO GRANDE - Containing
added classroom and office
space for students, faculty and
staff at the University of Rio
Grande, Robert Stewart Wood
Hall was formally dedicated
during a ceremony OJI Saturday.
The ceremony\ Included an
academic procession, along with
dedicatory speeches by Di'. Paul
C. Hayes, president of the unlver·
sity; Miles T. Epling, Immediate
past president of the Rio Grande
Board of Trustees; deans of the .
colleges; and faculty members.
A keynote address was dell·
vered )ly,RobeFtS., Wood-of Canal
.Wincltefter; tot wliom the ·butld·
lng is named.'·WOod ·is executive
vice president arid chief opera!·
lng officer of Bob·Evans Farms
Inc. Wood Is a member of the Rio
Grande Board of Trustees and ·
has served three terms as the
board's president.
The structure, costing $4 mil·
lion to build and opened In the fall
of 1988, houses the university's
. College of Social Studies and
·Ll beral Arts and the Holzer
College of Nursing.

By LEE ANN WELCH
Tlmes-S~!!Hnel Staff
.
G'Al.t1Pbt:Js ..f.·Hm's Department Store Is schedule to open in
mid-October at the Ohio River
Plaza on Eastern Avenue in
GalUpolls, and with it comes
nearly 200 new jobs for area
residents.
Although Ohio's unemploy·
ment rate Is at a 15-year low- 4.8
liercent -In Ga!Ua County It was
6.1 percent In July .
According to Hill's officials,
nearly 1,500 people applied for
the nearly 200 openings as
cashiers, stockers, snack bar
attendants, floor personnel and
various other positions neces·
sary to the everyday operations
of the 60,000 square-foot store.
The majority of hlrlng is
complete, store manager Wayne
Benson said late last week.
Letters are being sent to nearly
1,300 not hired. he added.
For the next few weeks, the
new employees and the apprOJd·
mately 20 set-up managers will
be. checking in merchandise,
ticketing Items and stocking

meeting of the Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce, Tamp·
klns ·described the area's coal
Industry as ''stablefor lhenext25
years" with the merging of the
two mines into Mine No. 31.
· The Mine No. 31 name was
derived by combining the
numbers from Raccoon No.3 and
Mine No. 1, Tomp(dns explained.

"Longwall mining Is the most
economical way to produce coal
today In a major underground
mine,'' said Tompkins, and a new
long'wall section will soon be put
Into operation at the Meigs No. 31
rlllne.
According to Tompkins, the
layoff affects 172 active em·
ployees who are represented by

the United Mine Workers of
America, and 10 salaried em·
ployees . In addition, 38 salaried
positions were eliminated earlier
through retirements, resignations and transfers. Tompkins
explained.
"Our UMWA-represented em·
ployees at Meigs No. 1 and
WORKERS, AS)
. (See
'

Japan
will host
.two Rio
branches

DEDICATION PRINCIPALS - Principals gathered for the
dedleatlon of RobertS. Wood Hall at the University of Rio Grande
. were, from left, Dr. Paul C. Hayes, presklent of the university;
Peggy Bradbury Woqd, center, wife of Wood; and Wood, executive
vice president and chief operating officer ol Bob·Evans Farms lac.
'
,.. ·'
"'
''The dedication of this build·
ing is a very fortunate event for
the University of Rio Grande,"
Hayes remarked. "It enhances
the Institution's abiUty to fulfill
Its mission of educating the
people of southeastern Ohio. and
adds considerably· to the natural
beauty of our campus.
''With the expanded classroom
space, which lnNudes a lecture
hall, our stUdents have found a

pleasing, academically-oriented
environment In which to study
and learn," Hayes continued.
"Such an environmentls assiSted
by the placement of a learning
center and an. Instructional media center In the building, so that
·our students can have full oppor·
tunlty to absorb and utilize skUls
necessary to achieve a better
life."
(See SCHOOL, PAGE A-3)

1,500 apply
for 200 jobs

,~""

87 MAZDA 826DO S£

86 NISSAN SENTRA

$7989

1!981154

5 speed, 'A/C. AM/FM/cass.. bucket

MA~DA

A/C. AI/FII/cas.. cruise colllrol, r.:.
window dolrostor and wip.-.

$9477

d75235

87 TOYOTA CAMRY

.85

88 MERCURY TRACER WAGON

Top of tilt li"' Hop, A/C, 5 speed. r.. r
window defroster. AII/FII.

cr_u1se control, A/C, power roof, power
wmdows.

named Meigs Mine No. 31,
according to Jim Tompkins,
vlce-pre.sldent and general man·
ager of the division.
The layoff of the 182 employees
is part of an .effort to improve
productivity and reduce opera!·
ing costs at the mining factnty.
And although efforts were on·
going for some time to prepare

School ·.
accepts
new hall

4 dr .. A/C. p. windows, cruise
control. AMlFM/cus. _w/equaf,
1zer, secunty system.

Touring S.d..,, 5 speed. AM / FM/cass ..

10,Sections, 78 Pag• .
A Multimedia Inc. New's paper

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, September 24, 1989

182 are laid off at Meigs, ·Raccoon mines

1!971143

A·Go1111rout Serving' af H.-bokod Ham Featuring Ow Own Ha-Sau• Sonod with ScaRopod Potatoes, Hot
Buttorod c..n and Hot llutterod loll or Ho-mado Biscuit (with
H-yl, CoHoe, legular or Decaffeinated, Both Freshly Brtwod. lA
s-1 Drink or Hot lea Substitute May Be Ma.l.
·

MosUy sunny . High in lower
60s.

·Puah It
Puil It
Draa It
Jutt Gel II ·Htrt

SUNDAY, SEnEMBER 24, 1989
HOMEBAKED HAM DINNER •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S4.79

NEW

B-l

VoL 24
~1989

· ' , r-.
/.\ '- · L
,_, .",I"'

Hospital news

WEEK'S SPECIALS

Along the River ....... .. Bl·S
Business ........ .. .............D-1
Comics· ........ ....... .... Insert
Classlfleds .............. ... D~ 7
Deaths ........................ A-8
Editorial ............. ... ,.... A-2
Sports ...................... C·1-8

tnttS

In lieu of flowers. relatives of
John Mora, Middleport Junior
High School Principal who died
unexpectedly on Friday, re·
quested that donations be made
In Mr: Mora's memory to the
athletic programs of Meigs,
Southern and Eastern Local
School Districts. To fulllll this
request. a central donation point
has been establiShed In Meigs
School District.
·
Anyone wishing to make a '
donation in memory of Mr. Mora,
should send the donation to the
Meigs Junior High Athletic Association, 621 South Secon.d Ave ..
Middleport, 45760 .
Donations will be deposited
into an account, to b·e divided
among the three school districts
according to directions from Mr.
Mora's relatives, reports John
Arnott, of MeigS Junior High.

J••

Inside

•

,_ r ,. \.,._~

Veterans Memorial
Thursday admissions - Earl ·
Glass, Middleport ; Adela
Swisher, , Pmeroy; Elizabeth"
. Horak, Pomeroy; Kathleen
McNickle, Racine; Donald w.
Ervin, Racine.
Thursday discharges - Do·
rothy Roush, Audrey Sauters,
Bermce Fry . Goldia Hendren,
Earl Glass.

·Beat of the Bend:
Worrying aboulthings
don't understand ..•B-3
In our town:

No.·:Jl

three brothers. Robert Parsons,
Chesapeake, Va.; Carl Ray Par.
Correction
and
James
sons.
Delaware;
William Joseph Parsons. Sr ..
The golf scramble sponsored
Parsons, Dayton ; three sisters,
44. of Blind Hollow Road, Racine,
by
the Eastern Athletic Boosters
Pauline
Bowling,
Winchester,
died Thursday at the Holzer
will
be held on Sunday only, and
Medical Center following a brief Ky.; Irene Rhodes. Racine , and
not Saturday. Everything else is
Leota Wolfe, Racine. along with
Illness.
the same. ·
·
several
nieces
and
nephews.
Born on Sept. 26, 19.44, at
He was preceded in death by
· Ravenna , he was the son of
his
father, a brother, Paul
Robert McKinley Parsons, and
Parsons,
and an infant sister.
REMEMID
Josephine Sybil Parsons. He was
Lillie
Parsons.
· employed as an eQUipment oper·
WITH ToFLOWERS
.
Funeral services will be held
ator at the Meigs Countyh
..... a b-llluUy
Sunday at 2 p.m at the EWing
d•lpodlu....U
Highway.
arraaiJII'MIII.
can
He was a member of the Mt. Funeral Home. The Rev . James
.,YlaM
·
·Satterfield
will
officiate
and
Moriah Church of God. A Li .S.
•
POMEROY
Army Vietnam veteran, he be· burial will be in the Letart Falls
FLOWER SHOP
longed to the Racine American CemE"tery . Friends may call at
"Th.- P'''"' ~ m~ri.Nl ."i'&lt;lff~ Lm'(' ··
2·to4
and
7
the
funeral
horne
from
Legion Post 602. and was also a
l'h. 9U-20n or 992·5721
member of the Chester Bowhun- to 9 on Saturday .
ters Club.
He is survived by his wife,
Dorothy Parsons, Racine; two
sons, William Joseph Parsons,
FRIDAY, SEnEMBER 22, 1989
Jr .. Randolph Air Force Base.
Texas, and Kelly Joseph Par·
SALMON PAniE PLATE ................................. S3.89
Try Ow O.liciaus Salmon Pattie; S.rvod wtih Savory, Creamy Macasons. Racine; his mother, Jose·
roni &amp; Choese (AI H-mado) and A Hot Buttered loll or HoiiHimadt
phine Sybil Par.sons. Pomeroy;
Biscuit.

Daily stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi

Page

C-1

OSU loses to USC

Pomeroy's
sesquicentennial
next year

Donations sought
for memorial

William Parsons, Sr.

Stocks

50 cents

RIO GRANDE - The Univer... slty of Rio Grande will open two
bral)th campuses in 'Japan. This
action -will place the southern
Ohio'institutlon at the forefront of
American linkage with an educa·
Ilona! system In the Asian realm,
according to Dr. Paul C. Hayes,
president of Rio Grande.
· An agreement between the
university and Tanezo Yamasaki
Technical &lt;;alleges of Japan will
hrlng U.S.·style higher education
to that nation's young people,
· Hayes explained. In addition. at
leastup to 100 Japanese students
enrolled at the branca campuses
are to attend the Rio Grande
campus, starting In 1991.
"The creation of these branch
campuses Is one of the most
significant events to occur In the .
hlsiory of our Institution," Hayes
said. •"By taking this step. the
mission of the university ·as·
sumes an international perspec·
live. It Is a task that we are more
than prepared to meet, and one in
which we hope the best of two
worlds will result."

REPRESENTATIVES ON HAND- Ustenlng Intently to Dr.
Paul C. Hayes' announcement of the establishment of two Rio
Grande branch camp118e8 In Japan In 1991 are, from left, Katswnl
Tanl, vice president of Tailezo Yamasaki Vocational Schoolll and
Junior CoOeges of Japan; Kayo Takenaga, a Rio Grande stndent
who aened u translator; and Kolchl Tanabl, secretary to
Yamuakt: · ·
' ~Progressive Vision
The announcement was made
at a press conference Saturday in
the James A. Rhodes Student
Center at Rio Grande. The event
was attended by university off!·
clals and two representatives of
the Japanese educational foun·
dation: Kat sum! Tanl, vlcepresl·
dent to Yamasaki, and Kotch!
Tanabi, secretary to Yamasaki.
"The creation of these branch
campuses would not have been

possible without the interest and
support of Mr. Yamasaki, who
possesses a truly progressive
vision of higher education for his
nation's young people, .. Hayes
said. "We are honored that Mr.
Yamasaki has chosen our lnstltu·
tion to help fulfill his goals."
University officials said the
Yamasaki corporation, which
serves as an educational founda·
lion, will establish two cam·
(SEE JAPAN, PAGE A·3)

Lusher noting a golden anniversary
ISy LEE ANN WELCH
Times-Sentinel Staff
CROWN CITY- Pastor, evan·
gellst, friend- that's some of the
description of the Rev. Charles
Lusher. Scholar, teacher, stu·
dent - that also describes the
man who last Thursday cele·
bra ted his 50th anniversary In the
ministry.
Lusher has been a pas tor or
evangelist since ordination Sept.
21, 1939 at First BaptistChurchof
Gallipolis, by its pas tor George
Sagen.
Since thai time, Lusher has

Passport
PREPARATION - ~arklng lot paving Is underway at Oblo
River Plaza, In aatlclpatlon of Its opealng In October. Willi has
employed nearly 200 area residents, according to Its manager.
(Times-Sentinel photo by Lee Ann Welch)
shelves.
Benson comes to the Gallipolis
store from the Hill's in Mans·
field, Ohio, and seems well·
pleased with those who applled
for positions here.

Most applicants came from the
Ohio Job Service office In Galli·
polls, but &amp;ns&lt;in said approxl·
mately 40 have come In on their
own after seeing. signs in the
windows.

pr~gram

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY- Plans for apply·
lng for the state's single $2.5
million Eldercare Options Rural
Demonstration Prilject were dis·
cussed, and an explanation of the
health and social servlcesavalla·
ble under the expanded Passport
program were explained Friday
to members of the Meigs County
Councll on Aging Advisory
Board.
Representatives of health

explained

agencies, area hospitals and
nursing homes. met with
members of the advisory hOard
to hear Cindy L. Farson, Director
of the Area Agency on Aging
which serves, Meigs, Athens,
Hocking, Athens, Monroe, Mar·
gan, Noble, Perry and Washing·
ton Counties, ex pia In the two
programs. how they wlll effect
community based care for the
elderly. and how they are
financed .
·Farson listed statiStics which

pointed out that over thepastflve .
years the needs have been
shifting from the young elderly to
the frail population, particularly
the over-85 segment which is the
single tastes t growing population
group In the country. This, she
said, has brought home-care
issues to the forefront.
She echoed the statement of
Governor Richard F. Celeste In
hiS State of the State Address that
no Ohioan should be forced to
(See PASSPORT, A7)

OVB board member McNeill dies
..

Ex-Gallia coroner
Warehime dead at 76
GALLIPOLIS - Pc;&gt;nald R. last four year term, 0\!c. 31,1989.
Warehime, 76, 8 Airport Road,
A graduate of Nelsonville High
Gallipolis, a Doctor of Osteo· School, Dr. Warehime was a 1941
pathy, died Saturday afternoon graduate of the Kirksville Col· ·
, lege of Osteopathy and Surgery
at .Holzer Medical Center.
Dr. Warehime was a practic· at Klrksvllle, Mo. He attended
lng osteopathic physician for 47 the First Prebyterian Church of
years and was founder of the GalUpolls. He was a member of
Warehime (;llnlc, 530 Second Knlglits of Pythlas, American
Ave., GaiUpoUs. He served In the Legion, Benevolent &amp; Protective
U.S. Navy in World War 11. He Order of Elks and Morning Dawn
was appointed Gallla County Lodge No.7 .
life
Coroner In 1941 before entering · Dr. Warehime was a
the service, returned to the post member of the Ohio Os teopathlc
after his . tour of duty being Association. He was a member of
successfully elected and re- the National Association of Medl·
elected for 11 terms. He .bad cal Examiner; the American
served a total of 46 years as Osteooathic Association: the
(See EX·GALLJA, A8l
coroner at the expiration of his

pastored at Salem Baptist, Cal· Sheets Lusher raised four sons,
vary Baptist, Elizabeth Chapel, John. Stan, Dan and Jim. The
Northup Baptist and Providence latter son has followed after his
Missionary Baptist, all in Gallla father in the ministry , pastoring
at Faith Baptist Church In
County.
He also pastored at Tabernacle Rodney.
The Lushers. Charles and
Baptist In Chillicothe. where a
special service was held in his · Gladys, had been married less
honor last Sunday, and at First than three months when he was
Baptist Church In Painesville. called to pastor at Tabernacle
Charles Lusher was also a Baptist Church, and tl)ey spent20
chaplain In the United States years of his ministry' there. His
Army Air Corps an·d an evange· companion and best friend of
list for the ,Ohio Baptist 48-years, Mrs. Lusher died in
August 1987.
Convention.
(See LUSHER, page A3)
He and wife Gladys Pauline

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Mason County resident, well·
known auclioneer and business·
man john Samuel McNelli, 2007
Marquette Ave., Point Pleasant,
d led Friday in the Pleasan I
V~Jiey N~rslng Care Center.
McNeill retired as a professional
auctioneer for the Pomt Pleasant
Livestock Company, Washington
Court House Livestoclc Company,
and Charleston UvestOclc Company

after 44 years.

DB. DONALD R. WAREHIME

A graduate of Point Pleasant
High School in 1930, he attended
Potomac State CoUege in Keyser,
W.Va., majoring in agriculture. He
played guard for three years on the
Potomac College football team;
was president of the Class of 1933;
president of Theta Sigma Chi; and

r

editor of the college newspaper, the

"Pasquino."
He was engaged in dairy farming
in Mason County for 25 years and
was a partner in Jones and McNeiU
Construction Company for 16
years. He announced the Point
Pleasant High School home
football games for 15 years. He
was a auctioneer for the HuntingiOO
Burley Tobacco Company for 12
years.
He was Master of Ceremonies
for civic, charity and social affairs
in both Gallia and Mason counties
during the 1950s and 1960s.
He recreated the character of
Devil Anse Hatfield in the play
"The Hatfields and McCoys,' on
the stage of the old Majestic Show
(See oVB, pale i\81
··

I

JOHN s. MCNEILL

,,

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