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0

Odober 12, 1989·

Pte•

Cold front brings frost to Ohio, · East Coast
said temperatures In the 40s
extendlna from NI!W York, and
New Jersey to Ohio produced
momillg frost conditions. Forecasters predicted frost probably
would blanket the region again
Thursday night.
A weak cold front brought
showers and chilly temperatures

B)' Uallri Preu lalerllll&amp;lo..l
A blah-pressure system
brought-chilly temperatures and
frost to parts of the mid-Atlantic
regton early Thursday while
scattered showers and thunderstorms stretched acroSs the
Midwest.
The National Weather Service

.Vandals ... _.....,.__c:.:o.;;nti.:;.n.;;ue:.:.:.d.;;rr.:..om.;;...:;pa.;;g~e:.:1:.:·._ _ __
According to the sheriff's report, around 10 p.m. Wednesday
at the Intersection of Woods Road
and State Route 681, west of
Alfred, a vehicle with loud
exhaust was· spotted, stopped by
haybales. Flames were seen.
Once spotted, the vehicle sped
east on State Route 681 towards
Alfred.
Orange Township Fire Depart·
ment was calll!d to the scene.
There was only slight damage to
. one bale.
According to the report, the
hay was owned by Lester Keaton.
Anyone In the Alfred area
hearing a loud exhaust vehicle
going past their · residence
around 10 p.m. last night Is asked
to contact the sheriffs oiflce.
Also on Wednesday evening
shortly bejore 5: 30, deputies
Investigated a one car accident
on DeWitt's Run Road, one mile

TO BE IN POMEROY - Tills velllcle OWMd by Bob Sayre,
which wu aa award wlaaer Ill the So•lhen Alllletle Hoosier's ear
- allow Ia Racllle SuadaJ will al10 be featured Ill the upeomlllg
"Oldies Bul Goodies Car Club" (of Melp CoUIIIy) ear Allow lobe
held •• the JIIU'killl Jolla Pomeroy Ibis Saturday ..There will be 17
claues wllll two trophlell per el- aad dub plates lo llle first 50
entries. Bep.vatloli'hecllls at 9 a.m.

Local news briefs...- - - - ,
'·
Continued from page 1
.
Rodney that took the life of a Rio Grande elementary school
teacher and daughter, and critically lnjulred the teacher's
husband. Pamela J. Foster, 34, died at the scene. Her dal!ghter,
Kimberly J. Mannon, 5, died after being alrHlted to Children's
Hospital, Columbus. Her husband, Narvel H. (Shug) Foster, 46,
Rio Grande, was Injured and was listed In critical condition atll
a.m., this morning at St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington, W.Va. ·

.,

-~\

Both drivers cited after mishap
Both · drivers were cited In an accident Investigated 'by
Pomeroy, pollee at 5:49p.m. Wednesday.
According to. the report, Brenda Cogar, Syracuse, traveling
south on Nye Ave., had stopped to make a lett hand turn Into a
service station when her vehicle was struck from behind by a
car driven by Roy E. Boggs, NI!W Brighton, Pa.
There was moderate rear end damage to the Cogar Vehicle
and heavy front end damage to the Boggs vehicle which had to
be towed !rom the scene:
'
Boggs was cited for failure to maintain assured clear
distance. and Cogar was cited for not wearing her seat belt.

. EMS has 7 Wednesday calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services answered seven
calls for assistance on Wednesday.
Rutland at 8:57 a.m. went to State Route 325 for Wanda
Gardner to Holzer Medical Center.
Pomeroy was called• at 1:08 p.m. to the-Amerlcare-Pomeroy
Nursing Center for Lucy Carpenter to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Syracuse at 2:16p.m. went to County Road 35 for Bllly Brewer
to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Racllle aiHI.Syracu~e aiHI the Buhan F\re Department were
called at4: 01 p.m. to an auto a~ldent on County Road 28. Robin
friend was transported !rom the scene to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Br~t Friend and Larry Circle were treated at the
scene.
Racine EMS and !Ire department were called at 5: 30 p.m. to
an auto accldent on Dewitt's Run. Linda Putman was taken
from the accident to Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital.
Middleport at 5:45p.m. was called to Meigs Junior High lor
Clayton Crow who was treated but not transported.
Tuppers Plains Fire Department was called at 10: 07 p.m. to a
hay !Ire.

off State Route 124. The accident
sent one person to the hospital.
Linda Putman, 23, of Reedsville, reported to authorities that
as she was traveling east on
DeWitt's Run when she heard
something pop. Aft~r which, she
could no longer ;control her
vehicle, a 1981 Polnllac. The car
went off the roadway on the right,
struck the embankment and then
rolled over · to land on the
pasaenger side In the roadway.
Racine EMS and fire depart·
ment were called to the scene.
Putman was transported by
Racine EMS to Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital In Parkers·
burg, W.Va.
There was hea\Jy damage to
the vehicle.

Area
...
Continued from page 1

HomeiOWJl, W· };'a,: TI.!'IIOthy
, R. Richardson.'
·
·~
Hurricane. W.Va.: Jeff Cox.
Albany: John Blankenship: .
Tuppers Plains: Betsy A.
Herald.
Dexter: Robin Slater.
Ray: John lively.
Rutland: Dinah M. SteWart,
Donna M. Davison, Mary E.
Davidson, Joyce E. Frye, Pear-&gt;,
lie F. Jewell, Raymond DeWitt,
Marta H. Blackwood, Kevin
Jewell.
VInton: Sam Sowards.
Reedsville: Joseph D. Mar·
cinko, Macel S. Barton, Caralyn
S. Barton, John C. Rice, Johnny
L. Roush, and Sherrie A. Roush .
Gallipolis: Terry White, Dou·
glas G. Spurlock, Lynda J.
Fraley.
Bidwell: Tina Lambert.
Syracuse, Kathy Cumings,
Darla N. Thomas, Brenda J.
Davis, and Richard G. Ash.
Portland: Dudley W.
Meadows.
Wellston: Jeffrey L.
Richardson.
Langsville, Patricia A. Mor·
gan, Ellis E. Myers, Cecil D.
Frye, and Alva B. Clark.

.

to the M,ldwest early Thursday, northc!!ntral Kansas and across
but forecasters said southerly Oklahoma to theTexas·Panhan· .
winds would bring a return of dle weakened as It slowly moved ·
Indlan·su.mmer conditions later eastward. que!Hng winds that
In the day.
blew up to 30 mph late
The cold fr!)nt triggered rain Wednesday.
showers In Minnesota and Wls·
A high-wind warning Issued for
consln and dropped tempera· eastern Montana was cancel~
lures to the 50s and 60s across the Wednesday ntght.
Early morning temperatures·
region.
The last of a light rAin that were In the 50s and 60s In most of
crossed New England ended the Southwest and mid-South. '
early Thursday as clear skies
moved Into the region.
Some clouds remained In
northern Maine and New HampBy Untied Preu laleraatlonal .
shire and patchy ground fog was
Soulh Central Oltlo
•
reported In both states and
Tonight:
Mostly
clear,
with
a
western Massachusetts .
Temperatures ranged from 35 low betWeen 45 and 50. Winds •
degrees In Concord, N.H., to 40 In becomtr.g light and variable.
Friday: Mostly sunny, with
Hartford, Conn.
highs
In the. lower 80s.
Skies were mostly clear and
El&lt;lended Forecast
dry over the Souihwest part of
Saturday
lhrqh MoDday
the nation and the mid-South
Fair
·
Saturday
and Sunday,
region early Thursday, but showers were scattered across Flor- with a chance of showers Mon· •
ida, the NWS said. Temperatures day. Hlglls will range from the
were In the 50s and 60s across upper 60s to the mld 70s north and . .
· Tennessee, Georgia, South Carol- from tb.e mid 70s to the lower ~s·
south. Early morning lows wlll .
Ina and Florida.
A low-pressure trough from be In the upper 40s or In the 50s.

Weather

•

A jury trial scheduled to be
held In Meigs County Court
Friday morning has been can·
celled and officials advise that
jurors need not report.

Dall)' alock prices
(Aa of lO:ttl a.m.)
llr)'Ce and Mark Smllh
of Blunt, Ellla .1: Loewl

'

Am Electric Power .............30,.

AT&amp;T .: ..................... :....... ;..42%
Ashland 011 ........................39'f8
Bob Evans .......................... 14V..
Charming Shoppes .... ,.......... 14
City Holding Co ................... 15
Federal MoguL ................... 23,.
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................52V..
Heck's .......... .......................... ~
Keyte'nu n .................. ~
Lands' n ........ ..
...... 28 •
Limited Inc ........................37~
Multimedia Inc ................. 102~
Rax Restaurants .................. 2,.
Robbins &amp; Myers ....... , ........ 153,4
Sboney's Inc ... :..........., ....... 11~
Wendy's lntl ........................ 5~
Worthington lnd ................. 24¥..

Plan golf scramble
There wlll be a tour-man Best
Ball Scramble on Sunday, startIng at 12:30p.m. ,at theftlverslde
Golf Course In Mason. Entry fee
Is $20 which Includes cart and
green fees. Prizes will be
awarded. The scramble Is being
sponaored by the Eastern At·
hletk Boosters. For moce lnfor·
matlon, ' ~tact Blll Hannan at
9854244, "'/if Johnny Evaps, at

'

OFF

REGULAR PRICE
HIGH TOPS &amp; LOW CUTS
INCLUDING

N•ta••s

&amp; WlSHABlES

Chapman Shoes

There were no admissions or
discharges at Veterans•Memorlal Hospital on Wednesday.

POMEIOT'S QUAUTY SHOE STOlE

AT

•

PAT HILL FORD
'·

FORD FACT:ORY SALE CARS
-·

con&amp;~e

from .Joyee Maauel, emploJee ill the Meclleal Records

Department of Veteraas Memorial Hoapllal. The deparlment
lloDorecl pllyalci&amp;Ds of lhe hospital lltaff In oiiHrv&amp;Dce of Natloul

Me.lcal Recorda Week with lhe p-la&amp;lon of conacet and
boalonnleres. Today tile departmeal boiled aa open houe for all
lloapMal emploJees.

- -·Area deaths. -Clinlon Faulk
Clinton l Faulk, 54, of Flat·
woods Road, Pomeroy, died
early this morning at Unlveulty
Hospitals In Columbus following
an extended Illness. Arrangements will be announced later by
Rawllng-Coats-Fisher Funeral
Home, Middleport. ·

"
Eu8me Deavers
Former Minersville area real·
dent, Eueene Deavers, 69, of
Reynoldsburg, died Wednesday
al Mount Carmel Medical Center
In Columbus. Mr. Deavers was
retired from 40 years In printing
with the Colwnbua OOpatch. He
began hll printing. career ' at a
Pomeroy newspaper, then
worlled at newspapers In Point

..- -·

-- ~--

-- -·- --· . -

Pleasant, W.Va. and Portsmouth
before going to Columbus.
He Is survived by his wife,
Minersville area native, VIrginia
Baer Deavers; a son and
daughter-In-law, Robert E. and
Mary Deavers; a grandson,
Ronald, all of Reynoldsburg; his
father, Fred Deavers of New
Lexlnll!On: a sister, Cleo Doherty
of Pataskala; three brothers,
Harry Deavers of Newark, Larry
· Deavers of Etna and Douglas
Deavers of New Lexington.
Funeral services wfll be Satur·
day, 10:30a.m.,at the Reynoldsburg Nazarene Church, on Crest
Drive, under the direction of the
Cotner Funeral Home. Calling
houra at the funeral home, which
Is located at 7369 East Main St. In
Reynoldsburg, will be 2 to4 al)d 7
to· 9 on Friday. Burial will be In
the Glen Rea t Cemetery.

,.,••••.-•.

AND
COMP~RE
ONLY

•Tit Whttl

•S,••II Control

..

SHOP

Save

. •Automatic
Transmission
. •Air Conditioning

..

'S ~AND MERCURY· TOPAZ .

6-1989 MODELS IN STOCK FOR
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY

Dr. Wlllna M&amp;DafteW,Iefl, reeelvet a

Vot.40. No.111 M
· Copyrighted 1989

$8495°0

•Rear Dtfrosttr
-.AM/FM

•Power Locks
•6 Yr.-60,000 Milt
Power Train Warranty

PAT. HILL FORD INC.
461 SO. THiii._Q___•_ _ _ _
99ii2i.i-2iil19il!i6..__ _ _ _ _11111iiiiit
'

Wholesale prices. up
0.9 percent last month

'

~

eqiiiprnerit w·hh:h the firemen use to fight fires,
were given some literature on how to make
their homes !Ire sale. '

&gt;

•

WASHINGTON (UPI)
Wholesale prices rose a season·
ally· adjusted 0.9 percent in
September, wiping out three
months of declines, as energy
costs climbed sharply, the Labor
Department reported Friday. ·
The Increase In the Producer
Price Index lor Finished Goods,
a'harblliger of future lntiatlonat
the consumer level, follows drops
in wholesale prices In the past
thr.ee months, Including a 0.4
percent drop In August.
The , September , gain drove
wholesale prices back up their
May level and continued a
volatile period when swings In

energy and food prices have by economists because of their
caused wide monthly variations volatility, the September InIn the Index, pushing the Inflation crease was 0.7 percent, still
rate up sharply early In the year higher than the recent trend
and driving It down during the towards an annual Inflation rate·
summer before push lng it back In the 4 percent to 5 percent
range.
up last month.
The Index also was pushed up
Energy prices were up 6.5
percent in September after drops in September by smaller-than·
of 7.3 percent in August, 3 percent · normal discounts In car prices
in July and 2.8 percent In June, because automakers offered end·
and accounted lor more than half of-model-year discounts in July
and August, earlier than normal.
the jump in the overall Index .
The
small 0.5 percent decline in
Meanwhlle, food prices fell 0.6
actual
prices translated into a 3.8·'
percent during the month after a
percent
increase oncethedepart·
0.3 percent Increase In August.
ment
adjusted
for seasonal
Taking out food and energy
costs, which are often discounted , factors.

month is
observed

October · is Recycle Month all
across Ohio with the theme "If
You 're Not Recycling- You're
Throwing It All Away." In
conjunction with state-wide Rec·
ycle Month, the Meigs County
Litter Control Progra'm Is con·
dueling a drive to help those
residents who are already recy·
cling. ani! to encourage all other
residents to join in. "It'seasy and
now.
doesn't cost - it pays. It takes
Durlne; the day also, an emer·
very little time and Is of great
gency medical technician
benefit to everyone." says Kenny
checked blood sugar for visitors.
Wiggins, Meigs litter control
The annual poster contest
director.
staged by the firemen at the
Recycling benefits everyone
Middleport Elementary School
by saving energy. conserving
which Is aimed toward educating
valuable natural resources, rechildren In fire safety will be
ducing litter and pollution, creat·
judged later and ·prizes awarded
ing jobs and helping the econ·
to the winners.
omy, reducing the dangers of
The National Fire Protection
environmentwl damage and
Association's theme for Fire
much more.
Prevention Week Is "Big Fires
According to stat !sties,
Start Small: Keep Matches and
Ohioans generate a staggering
Lighers In the Right Hands."
amount of waste - 27,000 tons
With that theme in mind, firemen
per day - that's over 10,000.000
hlwe been going to schools with
tons every year - and much of
programs geared to educating
this can be recycled.
children to the dangers of
Solid Waste Districts have
matches and lighters and creal·
CHECKING BLOOD SUGAR - As a part of the Middleport Fire
been formed throughout Ohio,
lng an adult awareness to the
Department's open bouse In observance of Fire Prevention Week
including a district consisting of
problem.
there was blood sugar testing. Here Christi Lynch of Middleport
Meigs, Athens, Gallla, Hocking,
Child !lreplay. according to the
gels her blood sugar checked by Larry Byer, AEMT-A.
Jackson and Vinton Counties,
National Fire Protection Associ·
reports Wiggins. There are three
atlon (NFPA), Is the leading ·
-Check your smoke detector.
operating landfills within our
cause of fire deaths among the property loss of mor&amp; than $262
own district -In Gallia, Jackson
Be sure there are smoke detec·
million.
very young, killing three of every
Fire Prevention Week was first tors on every level of your house
and VInton Counties -and each
ten preschool chlldren who die in proclaimed by President Warrtfn and outside each sleeping area.
has less that five :~:ears dumping
residential fires, and the sixth
capacity remaining, he says.
.
Don't
forget
about
attics
and
leading cause of civilian fire G. Hatding in 1922 to commemo·
In recent months, landlill
h
rate the Great Chicago Fire of cellars. Check your smoke detec·
tor
battery
once
a
week
and
dumping
fees have skyrocketed
cleX~ ~xplalned by the NFPA 1871. That fire killed 250 people,
..,.
as
much
as 400 percent, says
replace
1t
at
least
once
a
year.
many very young children do not left 100,000 homeless, and des·
"This
In turn causes
Wiggins.
Sound
th~
smoke
detector
alarm
have the capacity to understand troyed more than 17,400
so
everyone
in
the
family
knows
haulers
to
raise
their
charges."
the consequences of striking a buildings.
what
it
sounds
like
and
what
to
do
Wiggins says that all Ohioans
match or lighter and many older
Family activities are encour·
are facing tough, new challenges
children who do understand, aged as a method of teaching if they hear lt.
-De\·elop a family home es·
in proper waste disposal. "We
have no Idea bow quickly a fire children about fire safety. Local
cape
plan. Draw a floor plan of can no longer merely throw
can grow out of controL
firemen suggest these activities:
Therefor, the NFPA contends
-Set famlly fire safety rules. your home showing two ways out. waste away because there Is no
'away.' That's why It's important
that educating adults as well as Make sure children know that of each room and a safe meeting
place
outside.
Discuss
what
to
do
to
reduce waste by reusing and
children is an Important step In matc~es, lighters and other heat
Continued
on
page
12
recycling."
He says that recythe bat tie. According to the State sources ·are tools , not toys.
cling
uses
only
a small amount of
Fire Marshal Wlllam A. Hen· Instruct young children to bring
Deputieo
probe
B&amp;Es
space and requires just seconds a
nosy, fire broke out once every these tools to an adult if found.
day. "A small area In the garage,
slx minutes last year In Ohio. In Make sure children know what to
Meigs County Sheriff James M. barn or utility building makes a
1988, fire caused 218 deaths,
do In case of a fire and how to call
Souls by ·reports that hls depart· convenient place to locate your
~~~~~~for~~~~~----, ment Is investigating two break· own recycling center," he
ings and entertngs that occurred explains.
recently in Columbia Township
Recyclable materials Include
on Southern Ohio Coal Company aluminum cans (which need not
property.
be crushed); glass (separated by
A house on State Route 689 was color - clear, green and brown
entered sometime between 8 -and !Ids removed and rinsed);
p.m. Wednesday and 6:30 a.m.
plastic (liter bottles, mUk jugs
Thursday. A bed, scales, three and others); copper, brass, stain·
poriable ranges, chain saw, less steel and aluminum siding.
ten-Inch radial saw and a pair of
An the above materials can be
snow skis were reportedly taken·. marketed at one or both of Meigs
Just a short distance away on County's local recycling centers
Buck Run, a truck traller had the located at Pomeroy near the
lock cut off and the trailer door Intersection of State Route 143
was pried open . A Turbo space and the State Route 7bypass, and
heater was the only Item taken at the lower end of Middleport
from the trailer.
just below Park Street. The
On Thursday morning, Syra- nearest outlet for newspapers
cuse Marshal James Connolly and cardboard Is at Cartwright
and sheriff's deputies responded Recycling on Columbus Road In
to a domestic violence calL Athens.
Charges are pending.
The Meigs County Utter ConThen Thursday even tng depu- trol Program Is encouraging all
LUCKY DAY! -If you're really worried about your state of
ties answered a domestic vio· Meigs Countlans (Individuals,
affalp on this Friday the 13th, lhen you might want to consider
lence
call in Sutton Township, but community and clvlc groups,
hu•llllg for a.four·leaf clover. TlrMe four-leaf cloven- and a few
the
complainant
declined to flle churches, scouts, fH clubs,
flve~ealer• too- were found In the McEihillney run area of Meigs
tharges.
Count)'. ~Jeporledly, !here's a whole patcli of them out there.
Continued on page 12

~

i

2 Sections, 11 P•ge 2&amp; Cents
A Muttimedil Inc. Ntw1P•P1tr

Pomeroy-MiddleJrt, Ohio. Friday. October 13; 1989

Fire PrE'ventlog Week actlvl·
ties by the Middleport Fire
Department Included an open
· house where services were ex·
' plalned and equipment dis·
played, a poster contest and
other .educational activities in
the schools.
At Saturday's open house,
residents were able to enjoy food,
see the 1956 Seagraves nrc
engine which has been restored
by tde firemen over the past
sever~! yea~s, as wejl as get a
look at the modern equipment
which'' Is used In fighting rtres

25°/o

Mostly clear tonirht. Low
near 55. Saturday, consldera·
ble sunshine. High In 80s.

•

,.

Services .descr1 e ' equipment
displayed during open house Recycling

ON SALE NOW

RECEIVES CORSAGE -

.

•b d

FOR WOMEN"
AND CHiLDREN
INFANTS SIZES TO
YOUTII SIZE 6

V eleraas Memorial

FORD

.

Pick-4
0721

Page 3

'

I

Lott~ry

526

ON DISPLAY -VIsitors to the Middleport Fire '
Department's open house got a good look at the

Nike ·Tennie·

Hospital news

'

•

Ohio

Pick-3

ON

•

'

first win
at Miami

OLETYME
' PRICES

Stocks

843·5440.

Session cancelled

·OU seeks

c

t

'

Pr ltrM~aloent
RECYCLE
- Octolrer 18 Ret) de
Ohio and Meigs County Uller Control Progranl empluy~es are
encouraging all area residents til join them In a recycling dtlve.

•ttf .

BROWN TOURS CENTER -Secretary of State Sherrod Brown
toured Overbrook Center and visited with some of Its residents
during hls Thursday visit to SoutheaStern Ohio. He was
accompanied by area representative, Michelle Jenkins, and was ,
taken on the tour by Dr. Harold Brown, facility founder and
sponsor, and Mrs. Brown, and Attorney Ray Brown. Here the
Secretary of Stale, seated, visits with a patient, Ruth Bennett, In
one of the spacious lounges as Dr. Brown looks on.

:-------r.......--,

POSTER CONTEST WINNERS- Cash prizes were awuded to
lbe winners of a fire prevenllon poster contest sla1ed al the
Middleport Elementary Scbool by the Middleport Fire Department. FirM place wbl~~errln each clals received SIO, seeead place
winners, IS, aad llo110rable mentions, 11. Firemen Jeff Darst
pruenled tile prizes to tile students. Tile winners, lelt to right;
were T. J. KIDI, third IJ'ade, flrat place; .JosJrua Glaze,
kindergarten, flrat place; second row, .Jeany Hayman, first place,
fourlb grade; Seth Rawson, flrsl place, second l!:rade; Det-ek
Johnson, llrsl place; first grade; Zaek Meadows, secoad ll'llde,
second place; and.Amanda Neece, second place, lint crllde; aad
third row; Josh Price, third IJ'ade, honorable- mention; .Jason
Nelgler, fourlb ll'ade, hoBOI'able menllon; Sarah Larldna, aecond
place, lhlrd gr•de; Brandon Smllll, ~~econd place, luurtlr grad~;
Scott WIIUamson, killdercarte•, second place. Renee Stew.. rt, not
pictured, ~celved honorable mendon.

4

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�.
Comment~ry

·'

.

ihe Daily Sentin.el
111 Court Sireet
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON ARE~

~'b

ts~m~ rn......_-.-.,...,.c::~.­

'l1v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager •

PAT WHiTEHEAD
Aulslant Publisher/ Controller

LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They llhould be lesslhanSOO
words klllr. AU letters are subject lo edltlnr and mull be si!Pied wHb
Ullle, addr ..s and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub· .
llabed. Lellen should be In pod lute, addreosiDr Issues, not personal!·

''-·

.. '.
t'

\.

Pesticide oolnpanies have
WASHINGTON - John Tod·
hunter was once the federal
government's top watchdog of
pesticide manufacturers. Now he
works for them.
Todhunter headed the EPA's
toxic and pesticides division,
which attempts to ensure that
Insect repellents placed on the
market are safe. After leaving
government service In 1983, he
opened his own business and
·· became an adviser to the bug
spray makers.
Before leaving the EPA, Tod·
hunter gained a reputation for
favoring the chemical industry.
We reveared two cases in which
he claimed two chemicals were
safe despite EPA scientists'

conclusions that they could he
cancer-causing.
Todhunter Isn't the only EPA
official to switch sides. The
revolving door moves briskly at
the EPA, as bureaucrats parlay
inside knowledge Into private
sector jobs. Companies can gain
a competitive edge by hiring a
former Insider, someone ,who, for
example, can expedite approval
for certain products.
There's no evidence linking
Todhunter to unlawful or even
Improper conduct. He and some
other government officials are
lawfully exploiting what many
believe is a flawed set of et hies
laws. Some sources believe the ·
situation at the EPA is a scandal

Glasnost gives us .
pinheads from outer space
By LEON DANIEL
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON..: Glasnost has prompted a deltc!ously hyped press
report about a UFO that landed In central Russia and discharged
some gangly pln~eads from outer space.
Perhaps encouraged by the new openness, lhe official and once
staid news agency Tass reported that scientists "confirmed" the
yarn.
·
The close encounter between the extraterrestrial visitors and sorne
scared youngsters in a park in Voronezh evidently was taken
seriously by many Russians -not all of them bumpkins who just fell
off the turnip truck.
·
.
Glasnost's gifts Include a recent rash of reports of bizarre
shenanigans worthy of America's supermarket tabloids and trash

TV.

For example, Tass recently carried a story a bout a man who could,
while In a bathtub, create a huge soap bubble and climb inside 11.
The news agency also has reported about a bull with six legs.
The Tass version of "Dr. Ruth" Westheimer, the sex expert . is a
Tibetan doctor who advises that winter is the best time for amorous
.• activity and summer Is the worst.
Among the hottest' programs on state-run Soviet television are ones
featuring psychic healers who promise cures via the airwaves. But
the market-driven thrust of perestroika has yet to produce
faith-healing televangelists who can rake in the rubles, a Ia Jim and
Tammy Bakker.
A Russian mystic who claimed to be able to halt trains turned out to
1!1! wrong about. that. He was run over by one and killed.
The Sovl~! Union set up a commission to Investigate "abnormal
phenomena in 1984 after a "flying cigar" was spotted near Gorky
east of Moscow. '
'
: A newspaper last summer carried a straight-faced account of all
encounter -presumably a close one -between an allen with stubby
legs and a mUkmalll.
·
'
.. '
: But the most sensational account of all was the Voronezh visit of the
pinheads, who witnesses said arrived in a large shining ball, or disk.
The lanky aliens were escorted by a small robot who took them ••for a
~hort promenade" In a park.
Walter Aadrus, a UFO expertfrorn Seguin, Texas, found the idea of
tall alll!ns with small heads puzzling.
·
·
1
"Usually, they're only 3 to 4 feet tall with large heads," Andrus told
USA Today newspaper.
.
Edwin Diamond. a New York University media expert who
recently visted t)le Soviet Union, had an explanation for the recent
a:nd uncharacteristic antics of the Soviet media.
·
· "This is just good old capitalistic economics, •• Diamond told USA
Toaay. "It sells newspapers and moves magazines."
Sal lvone, managing editor of the Weekly World News, a journal
&amp;\1ailable at supermarket checkout counters, said his publication is
oil top of the Tass UFO story.
.
lvone told USA Today his newspaper would do a better job of
covering It than Tass did and would give It front-page display.
"We're going to give the story some dimension," Ivone promised,
presumably with a straight face.
Beam them all up, Scotty.
'

~tiers to the editor
Seeks help for project
Ol!ar Editor:
The Meigs County Genealogicil Society · has been copying
ll(elp cemeteries for quite some
ttme. The cemeteries in Pomeniy Village are already in print
and are available at the County
Museum. Middleport V'illage will
be available in several weeks.
,We are now concentrating on
those In the twelve townships.
Sutton Township has been comPleted and is ready to be
transcribed, followed by Le·
banon Township. We .hope to
C9mplete the remaining town-

•

ships In -1990.
If you have a friend or loved
one In an unmarked grave In
Mel~ County, please help us
preserve our history as these
books .Yi.!J.l be a one-time
publicatiOn:
.
Please call the Information to
the Meigs County Museum at ·
992-3810 or to myself at 949-2241.
Thank you.
Sue Ellen Hager
Chairman, Meigs Cemetery
Committee
Meigs County Genealogical
Soctetv

•

FIRES

STARr SMAll
KEEP MATCHES&amp;. LIGIITERS IN TilE' RIGHT HANDS.

This= more than 300 people will die in residential
fires
use of children playing with "toys" that are
not toys at all! Store matches and lighters out of the
reach of children.

NtlllnJI PIN Ptotecllon

AIIDGiallon

Quincy, Muaachusetts 02169

EPA :

stronger labelln requirements ·
on the Industry .
. .
The EPA has also
own for '
some time about another lawri '·
and garden Insecticide, Spectra· :
clde, that occasionally ruptures its . ~ ontainer. Concerns ha~e . ·
been stirred about the chemical s ;
hazardous effects when it spllls ·•
Indoors. The EPA only recently · ·
- spurred by public pressure - .
is seeking solutions.
·
Insecticide makers must regis· '
ter their products ·with the ·1
pesticide office of the EPA. ·
Scientific data is weighed by ··
agency scientists who make sure ·
the data meets government
guidelines. According to EPA;scientists, the pesticide office Is·:
marked by a pro-business bias. · ·
These sclentista blame part of
the pr.oblem on the migration of
their bosses to private lndustcy
jobs.
.
Several EPA scientists told us ··
that they have resisted pressure ·
from companies that have clou! 1
to accelerate their review· ·of
products.
" I think when you're expedit· ·•
lng anything, by definition; :'
you're being asked to cur .
corners," one source said. Hlf.· ~
you're doing an expedited tuneup on a car, I don't think the ·:
tune-up Is going to be as good." · ·.
Former EPA officials we con! ..•
tacted deny they wield their ·:
influence improperly. But they · ·
do concede they have asked for ···
expedited approval on some '
products and often call to check '
the status of pending product .i
applications.
· .,
In the eyes of some, that 's ·
enough to bias the system.

otherwise.
For example, the reconcllia·
lion bill would rewrite into law
thl!ltontroversial "fairness doc·
trine" that requires broadcas-.
ters, as a public service, to air all
sides of a controversial issue.
The bill would also repeal the
Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act that was enacted Into law
last year. Similarly; the reronci- ·
llatlon bill also Includes a pack·
age of expanded federal tax
credits and grant programs to
assist parents with child care,
benefits which would worsen the
deficit. Moreover, thereconcllta·
lion bill also contains extensions
o( a number of other extraneous
tax credits.
On the outlay side, there are
some actual deficit reduction
measures In the reconciliation
blll. Medicare costs would he
reduced through expenditure
targets lor medical service payments and agriculture support
programs would also he trimmed
back. However, many of the
reductions Involve mainly budgetary gimmicks such as removing
the Postal Service's deficits from

'·, ,

By Cong. Clarence Miller ,
' ,.\ j

the federal budget calculations. FY 1990, they are not very .;
The majority of the bill's deficit significant and would put only a · 1
reduction features come from small dent in our budget deficit._, o!
the generation of'n~w revenue.
Primarily, Congress has chosen-.~
The most significant of these is to focus on issues that are •
the reintroduction of a capital completely unrelated to deficit
gains exclusion In the Income tax reduction jn this year's reconcilicode which In the short-term is ation biH....Becauseo!thecontrov=-···~
expected to stimulate the sale of • ersy su r'roundtng these l~s. ~
such assets \md raise $2.9 billion the reconciliation · bill faces a
In FY 1990. The bill would also bumpy ride In the Senate, and It :
impose new excise taxes on appears unlikely that
!lna'l ,.,
cruise ships and on producers version of the bill can he enacted '•
and importers ol ozone-depleting in lime to stop the automatic ~
chemicals. Additionally, the bill spending cuts of lhe Gramm- •
would raise the oil spill clean-up Rudman Law, mentioned ear·
tax, accelerate collectlon..of the ller, from taking affect.
airline ticket tax, ·and make
While these spending cuts are ·•
permanent the 3\11 telephone not likely to be permanent, the '•
excise tax.
fact that Congress would let
· The remaining revenues for
these automatic cuts take place •
deficit reduction would come
In the first place is Inexcusable. :
from a number of user .fees. Joan
Congress has a responsibility to j
origination fees, loan asset sales
pass. a budget reconciliation bill
and from ending several tax
that reduces the deficit in a 1
preferences such as the ability of
straightforward and meaningful &gt;
· corporations to write off interest
way. Like the famous Roman ••
paid on so-called "junk bonds."
fiddler, Nero, Congress Is play- l
While the deficit reductions
log an irrelevant political tune • :
embodied in this bill would meet
when it should be playing a {
the Gramm-Rudman target for
budgetary one.
•
j

gists say, no paper-and-pencil
test that is administered In 15 to
30 minutes, relies on answers to
multiple choice or true-false
questions and costs the employer
only $10 to $20 per copy can he
expected to measure personal
integrity, emotional stability,
future behavior and assorted
other traits and attitudes.
Yet that Is . precisely what
many employers expect, be·
cause federal law now prohibits
them from using polygraph (lie
detector) testing In screening job
applicants and because firing
people can be costly and dlHicult.
Approximately 20 to 25 companies sell tests to he admlnls·
tered to would he employees, but
few of those firms have allowed
any independent professional
examination of the results they
and their customers have
achieved.
·'Misinterpretation of research
abounds in this field," says
Inwald, who proudly notes Hll·
son's policy of submitting Its
work to outside researchers for
validation studies published In
professional journals.
Those studies have found the
accuracy rates In the 67-to-75
percent range, which Inwald
believes are about as high as catt
be achieved with currently available knowledge and techniques.
"Sociopaths, for example, can
evade not only paper-and-pencil
teats but also lie detectors," she
says.
Others In thefleldarereluctant
to discuss the lsaue for the
obvious reuon - they would he
telling their proapectlve clients
that the testa cannot identity
substantial numbera of applicants who . abuse alcohol
... or

a

,

Post-season
lltr. .Pd Pie111 lllt«•t•.r
Mlljor

panacea," says Jon Bauer, a
University of Connecticut law
professor who has studied the
subject.
"The tests are essentially
alike," says lnwald. "They all
measure anti-social behavior."
But many of tests being sold in a
highly competitive market do not

u...,.

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Oft. I~ - lll Oakland, 11 : 3~ p. m.
Od. 15 -au O~tiF.Iud , II:H p.m.
Od. II - N. lfalllt' ••hHIIIIPd.
Pft. •~- •I s .. P,..coiM'O, K:ll o.'m.
Od. Ul- at Mu f'1&gt;.. 1W., A: II ,_m.
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fkt , • - Ne pnM' ~~eltedla.od.
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x-Ott. t t - II 01111...... 11: II p.m.
5·11 llft'tli•r1

','

•
'I
Robert Walters !'

NATIONAL FOOI'BALL LEAGUE
!Willi:.,, on.

n

W.a.l . .aaal NYGI..a~~o I p.m.
Su FrutclM"e a1 Dalk"• I p.m.

........ Tun .. BQ,Ip.m.
Grtrn BQ Ill Mln.-u. 1 p.m.
Houlllonat Clllcaao.l p.m.
Ml..,llll Ct•·f.-11, I p.m.
Nfow &amp;~.ru4at .\tlaela, I p.m.
NY olf'tut N"n· Ork&gt;11111, -4 p.IJI.
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Ku!U CIIJa&amp; LA Ralb., I p.m.
nlladtlplllaat P._,.b:, -4 p.m.
Pllhhuttltat Clt'\"I'IMd, -1 p.m.
lik'llltiP Ill SIU'I Dlrjta, -t p.m.
Monl~. Oc.1. It
LA R - ai a.Halo. t p.m.

\

meet the American Psychologi- :l
cal Association's professional I
standards.
1
Indeed, the most common '
protection most employers have I
from hiring unsatisfactory j,
workers is the fact that relatively
few people - no more than 1
one-fifth of those in or seeking to
join the work force- are likely to
engage in unsuitable behavior on , '
the job.
• ·,

.I

Tonight's games

.'

Gallipolis at Athens
Jackson at Warren
Marietta at Logan
Huntington at Pt. Pleasant
Coal Grove at Rock Hill
DeSales at Akron St. VIncent-St.
Mary
.
Eastern at North Gallla
SouthwesJern at Hannan Trace
Symmes Valley at Kyger Creek
Oak Hill at Southern
Meigs at WavC"rly
Nelsonville-York at Alexander
Belpre at Miller
Wellston at Federal-Hocking
Trimble at Vinton county

'.

:01
. ... ._1

·..'

'• ,' I

.•. i
•

~•• J

·r'

' •

.. '
.•t
.

/

••

.'

, 1' ~

"

'

Sa&amp;urd~

Wahama at Buffalo-Putnam

'

·..1
·i

•

-

204 Condor lt.

NEA , Jne.

9THE

'

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~

DIESEL FUEL- POP- CANDY
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BhlfftOII .. " 'IQ'IIHiblllt" (Pal
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,.

Member: Uritted Press lnlernatlonal,
Inland Daily Press Alloctatlon and tbe
Ohlo Newspap~ AasodiUon. National
Advertising Represenlatlv~. Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.
POSTMASTER: Sead addreu ch•l8
to The Dally Seollnel. Ill Court Sl,
Pom«oy, Ohio C5769.

APPEARING
SATURDAY
OCTOBER 14th
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Wolf Band"
9:30 pm-1 :30 am

SUJI8CBIPTION RATI!il
By Carrter or Mot« a-te
OneWeek .. ....,.. .. .. ... ............ ........suo
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52.00 COVEl CHAIGE

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THE BEACON

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POMEROY I . OHIO

Delinquent Taxpayers Notice
In compliance with provisions ot Section 5721.03 of
the Ohio ReviRd Code, there will be published within the
next few weeks a list of those persons who are delinquent In payment of real estate taxes in Meigs County.
If delinquent taxes are paid in full or arrangements
·made with the~ County TrHsurer to pay not later than 48
hours before.said publication, the parcel will be removed
from the delinquent list befo~• adwertisint~.
All delinquent lands wiH be certified for foreclosu'• by
the Ceunty Auditor ulllea till taxes, aSHS•ents, lnt•· ·
ests, and penalties due al'l

ltGid.

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Auta.

Published every afternoon, MondiiY
through Friday; Ul Coui1. St., Po·
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio VaHey Pub·
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Pomeroy, Ohio IS769, Ph. 992-2156. Se·
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games

7 Passenger,

reception of 91 percent in 136
attempts.
The daughter of Charles and
Leona Hoop of Coshocton. Hoop
is a junior at Rio Grande.
majoring in physical education.

(USPS 14J.KI'
A DIY liM• ot M111tlm ... a.-lac.

SUNDAYS

• NOW IN STOCK •

•••hi

Ohh CoiiPif' Football St~hedlll~
!WWihlt', Ort 1-t
tRill ... u Ollie S&amp;•r
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Q!IPIIIH• IN Mln~nll&amp;a, ......

Toronto it
WorWKHWN

The Daily Sentinel

BEACON

Wllllllpt'l • To,....o, nllfll

Oci . II-O~tk ...d-1,

Ohio Northern at second-place .
Mount Union, Muskingum at '
Baldwin-Wallace and Otterbein
at Marietta .
NCAC action finds first -place
Allegheny ( Pa. ' · at Earlham.
Case Reserve at Wooster, Deni·
son at Ohio Wesleyan and Ke•
nyon at Oberlin.
Ro11ndlng out Saturday's schedule, it's Mercyhurst &lt;Pa.) at'
Capital, Hiram at CarnegieMellon (Pa.). Blufflon at Way nesburg (Pa. }·, Georgetown
(Ky., at Dayton, Defiance at
Manchester (Ind. ). Findlay at
Tennessee Wesleyan, Urbana at
Tiffin and West VIrginia Wesleyan at Wilmington.

THE

N_. York at " '•W•IIon.lkGISp.m.
llnl• at FAim.-o., t:SS p.m.
1.- "-~"'Ill \'Ut'O.iwr. II: 3S p.m.

.r .. t IP'FY at \\'~~o~~1111ton.

tlh...l- To....-o 7," Ollk .... d S

last Saturday by No. 2-rknked
Miami &lt;Fla.).
''The kids played hard."
Murphy said of the Miami defeat,
"and we are proud of them for
hanging In there as best they
could."
In other games S~turday ,
Northeastern plays at Youngstown State, Akron Is at Eastern
Illinols, Ohio State entertains
Indiana, Wayne.State (Mich. ) is
at Ashland and Central State
plays at Kentucky State Ina night
game.
Four games are on Saturday's
schedule In both the Ohio Athletic
ConferenCe and the North Coast
I&gt;&lt;
Athletic Conference.
In the OAC, Heidelberg plays
at league-leading John Carroll,

•

Redmen shut out

Mlnn"•ola 3, sa. Lot111111
Chlt·&amp;(O!,Ta.._.l
Frl_,.' " GamN
HIU'tford ••Hille, 7:15p.m.
Monlno.. u N"'·Jpr..,-.1:-lilp.m.

.a

Ball State is 2·2·1 overall and
one of four teams with a 2·1
conference record. The Cardl·
nals have· won their last three
meetings with Kent .
At Cincinnati, the Bearcats
&lt;l·J.l) will be trying to snap a
two-game losing streak against
Memphis State, a team whose 1-4
record tends to be a . bit
misleading.
Three of Memphis State's fou.r
losses have come to Southeastern
Conference teams Mississippi,
Alabama and Florida. And, last
week. the Tigers heat Vanderbilt, another SEC team, 13-10.
"Memphis State is probably
the best 1-4 team In the country,"
said UC Coach Tim Murphy,
whose Bearcats were beaten 56-0

about Schnell and Thompson Is
For the second time this
they just don't tum the ball season, Shelly Hoop of the
ove1'," sale;! Cooper. "They make University of Rio Grande volley·
very few mistaJses."
ball team has been named the
Tbat, of course, would Impress Mid-Ohio Conference Player of
any coach who has seen his top the Week for her efforts between
tailback, Carlos Snow in Coop- Oct. 2 and .7.
er's case, fumble six times in
In addition, Hoop was one of
four games, including a pair of eight players nominated for
District 22 Player of the Week,
crucial ones in the loss to Illinois
deep in llllnlterritory.
which went to Jill Knowles of
Cooper insists. however, that
Lake Erie. Hoop had been the
the 5-foot-9, 200-pound Snow Is his MOC and district's top player !or
bestrunnlngbackand taking him · games played between Sept . 18
out of the lineup would not help
and 23.
the Buckeye offense.
Last week, the .Redwomen
PoSted victories over MOC rival
Mount Vernon Nazarene and won
four out of six matches at the
Concord (W.Va.) Invitational. in
The nationally ranked Univer- which Hoop and teammate Chris
sity of Charleston soccer team Williams were named to the
took the field at the University of All-Tournament team. The vicRio Grande Thursday, handing tory over MVNC helped cemenl
the Redmen an 8-0 loss.
Rio Grande's perfect record
UC, now ll-1, took 23 shots on within the conference. which now
goal. Rio Grande recorded four stands at 6-0.
shois at the goal, three recorded
"Shelly had a super tournaby Tony Daniels and the last by ment and played a very good
Frank Jinks. Chad Rickey had 14 game against Mount Vernon,"
saves for Rio Grande. while UC's Redwomen Coach Patsy Fields·
Todd McLaughlin had one.
said. ·'I definitely think that kept
"We played the top team in the us on top in the MOC. As I've said
nation and It showed," Redmen before, Shelly Is a very consistent
Coach Scott Morrissey re- player and the team Is very
marked. "Playing a man short happy lor her, Winning this kind
hurt, too, but UC utilized every of holllll' helps the team, too."
opportunliy.
The 5-8 middle hitter posted 74
"Most of our guys gave 100 kills in 135 attempts, one assist
percent. and I can't ask for more and seven serving aces. , In
than that," Morrissey added.
addition, she also served at 97
The Redmen. now 1·6-1, are percent w1th 101 Sl'rv)Ce at·
idle untU Wednesday. Oct. 18, tempts. Defensively, she has 112
when they ~ost Thomas More digs, 29 blocks and a service
(Ky.) .

NA.T ..NA.I. HOC.EY LEAGVE
• ftllftldttr'N Ret! .. II
PllllulrlpWa -1, q.ellec!
Dttnlt I, Pflanl,.a:-t

PhU.dl'lpNa

.Od. J-0Uiud7, To....o3

~

Berry's World

Spmething has to give Satur·
day when OU visits Miami in one
of three other conference contests. The others find Ball State
a.t Kent State and Central Michl·
gan at Western Michigan. East·
ern hosta Liberty ( Va.) in a
non-league game.
Miami is winless in Its last 18
games going back to the 1987
season, while OU has lost 23 of Its
last 24 games on the road.
"You can never lose optimism
or hope, " said Miami Coach Tim
Rose, whose team lost 37-9 at Ball
State last Saturday. "We feel we
are fighting through adversity.
Coaching Is a lot of fun, but
you've got to win. That's the
payoff."
Kent State has come close In
only one of its six losses this
season, dropping a 28-21 decision
at Kansas. The Golden Flashes
were beaten 38-0 by Central
Michigan a week ago.

~ .."' .. *PI&amp; liM rwll. at~t~~

(0aii.Ud wt••rll!!l ..., )

1

drugs, cannot get along with
bosses or co-workers, are dls~on·
est or are otherwise unsuitable.
"People operate under the
(false} assumption that there is a

bly the. premier running back In
college football," Ohio State
Coach John Cooper said in
describing the Hoosier star, who
rushed for 190 yards and seared
four touchdowns last year in a
41·7 thrashing of the Buckeyes.
"Anything you say about a
great running back you can say
about Anthony Thompson,"
added Cooper. "He's durable, he
doesn't make mistakes, he has
power, speed and he's a real
tough football player."
· '
Cooper doesn't figure his
young Bl!ckeye defense can stop
Thompson, who rushed for 178
yards and five TDs In the
Hoosiers' 43·11 win over Northw·
estern last week, but may be able
to slow him down some.
"Everybody's had trouble with
Thompson." said Cooper. "I
haven't seen anybody stop him
yet. He's a little bit like Archie
Griffin when he played at Ohio
State."
But the Indiana offense, which
amassed 586 yards against
Northwestern, 293 yards each
rushing and passing; is engJ.
neered by Schnell. The senior
signal-caller completed 15 of 22
passes for 254 yards against
Northwestern.
On the season, Schnell has
completed 44 of 77 passes for 542
yards and two touchdowns and
has yet to throw an Interception.
· "The thing that Impresses me

Scoreboard ...

I

Ernployee tests fail to make the grade
KEW GARDENS, N.Y. (NEA}
- Dr. Robin E .Inwald is proud of
the success rate of the principal
product sold by her company even though It performs effectively only about two- thirds to
three-fourths of the time.'
In some fields, such a failure
ratE' would he disastrous. But in
Inwald' s business - predicting
human he.havior on the basis of
brief, standardized written tests
administered to thousands of
people - that rate is exceptionally low.
Hilson Research Inc .. the firm
Inwald founded and 'directs, is
headquartered here in the New ·
York City borough of Queens. It
differs from many other companies in the pre-employment testing industry because it is wllling
to candidly discuss the accuracy ·
of ita paper-and-pencil tests.
Indeed, at a time when a
growing riumher of employers
are turning to such tests to
identlly potential workers who
are honest, reliable and competent, many test providers are
making outlandish If not mislead·
ing claims to sell their products.
One company says It has a test
"designed and proven to he a
simple, economic way of weeding out troublemakers before
they're hired," thus sparing Its
CUlltomers "tbe l01ses Involved
with dishonest, undependable
employees."
Another test supplier says Its
product enables clienta to "Increase profitS by hiring honest
employees." It advertises a
"reliable, predictive Indicator of
employee behavior on the Job"
but offers no evidence to subs tantiate that claim.
In fact, protesalonal psycholo-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI} Ohio State, still looking for
answers \O its inconsistent play,
hosts Anthony Thompson and the
Indiana Hoosiers Saturday In
Ohio Stadium. ·
The Buckeyes, in a four-game
start almost Identical to a year
ago, will take a 2-2 overall record
into the contest after opening Big
Ten play a week ago by losing
34-14 at Illinois.
The Buckeyes opened with an
impressive 37-13 win over Okla·
homa State, got embarrassed on
natJonal TV at Southern California 41-3, beat Boston College
34-29, then lost at Illinois. A year
ago In the lirst four games, it was
a win over Syracuse, a humiliatIng loss at Pitt, a victory over
LSU. followed by another loss to
Illinois. That was followed by a
41-7loss at Indiana.
The Hoosiers, led by Thompson, a 6-!oot, 209-pound senior
tailback, and sllck quarterback
Dave Schnell, havewonthreelna
row since dropping a l7-14 ·
decision at Kentucky Jri their
opener.
Thompson, with 52 career
touchdowns. needs just eight
more In Indiana's final seven
games to become the NCAA's
Division I·A career touchdown
leader, surpassing Pitt's Tony
Dorsett and Glenn Davis of
Army, both with 59.
"Anthony Thompson ts proba-

'

'

ability to score from anywhere
on the field."
BG Is coming off a 31·28 win at
Ohio University, a game which
the Falcons won after falling
behind 14-0in the second quarter.
Toledo fell 31-14 a week ago at
Eastern Michigan, losing a
chance to take sole possession of
the conference lead.
"This is a great rivalry and I'm
really looking forward to this
game," said Slmrell, who, like
BG Coach Mo Ankney. also
played in the annual "battle of
Northwest Ohio."
In last year's game at Toledo's
Glass Bowl, where BG has
struggled, the Falcons amassed
39:!Yards of offense, butfalied·to
score a touchdown in losing 34·5.
Toledo and BG are the only two
Ohio MAC teams to win a game
so far this season, with Ohio
University and Kent State both
0-6 and Miami at 0-5.

Bucks host Indiana in key tilt

..

Congress fiddling while budget burns
Last week the House of Representatives passed its version of
the budget reconciliation bill for
FY 1990. This legislation is
Intended to reduce the budget
deficit to $100 billion which is the
level specified by the GrammRudman law for FY 1990. Currently, the FY 1990budget ls$16.2
billion above that goal.
Since the Gramm-Rudman law
allows for a "cushion" of $10
billion, this means that the
.reconciliation bill must reflect at
least $6.2 billion in spending cuts
or revenue increases to reduce
the deficit. Should Congress fail
to pass a reconciliation bill that
meets this target by October 15,
automatic, across-the-board
spending cuts would take affect
to reduce the deficit by the full
$16.2 billion.
However, the version of the
reconciliation bill passed by the
House this past week has very
little to do with budget deficit
reduction. Instead, because ofthe urgency assocjated with the
passage of this bill, it has been
used primarily as a vehicle to
force consideration of m(!asures
that Congress may not take up

By United Presslnleraa&amp;lonal
While Eastern Michigan appears on the way to its second
Mid-American Conference
championship in the last three
· years. Toledo and Bowling Green
· battle Saturday to silly alive in
the race In !heir annual Northw·
est Ohio shootout.
The Rockets and Falcons will
take Identical records of 2·3
overall and 2·11n the conference
Into the game at BG's Perry
Field, where Toledo has been
outscored 74-12 In one win and
three losses during the 19BOs.
Eastern Michigan leads the MAC
w1th a 4-0 mark.
"BG is an improving football
team," said' UT Coach Dan
Simrell. "They have a very good
passing game and their rushing
attack Is really starting to come
along. They're explosive offensively because · (hey have the

lack Anderson and DQl~an Atta :

waiting to happen. Todhunter
defended his switch to the private
sector In an Interview with our
associate Scott Sieek. He said the'
approval process ·for various
products is open to public scrut·
iny,leaving little opportunity for
sweetheart deals.
Others are not so sure. For
example, the EPA has turned a
blind eye toward health hazards
asS&lt;)Ciated with bug sprays.
Government officials have
known for years that some
flammable indoor insecticides
don't adequately warn the consumer of fire hazards. Only now ate
they talking about imposing

The Daily Sentinel-Page 3

OU eyes first · victory at Miami; Toledo at Bowling Green

Pege-2-The Daily Sentinei:
Pomeroy-Middeport. Ohio
Friday. October 13, 1989 '

an in at

•

Fridlly. October 13, 1989

MAll AUTO SALES

. 605 GIJIIUL
IPAIIIZIIIJ PAIIWAY

"2·3011
jl

lhe •hi list will be ready for publication on Nove•ller
16 ... 30, 1919.
Wilianl I. WicldiM
Mela• County A.._

�Fndey.

·Pom.ay-Midcleport, Ohio

October

13. 1989

The o.ly 81 dioei-P I!

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Friday, October 13. ,.989

I
~·

Halloween ·costume·
tips offered by group

••
•

•

WE
SALUTE
OUR. CAR IERS

If you're concerned about the
safety of your child's Halloween
costume, then follow these slmplecostumedecoratlngtlpsfrom
the Ohio Op.tometrlc Association.
"VIsibility Is the key to preventing Halloween accidents,"
said the ODA. "There are two
sides to Halloween vlslblllty. A
child must be able to see steps,
curbs and automobiles, and
drlvers must be able to see a
young trick-or-treater 'in time to
stop safely. Costuming tricks can
help with both."

'

.•

/'

PUMPKIN CONTEST WINNERS -These siUdents at Tuppers
Plains Elementary were 'some of the winners in the "Create a
Pumpkin Contest" held there In conjunction wllb Saturday
evening's Jail carnival. Left to right, front row, David Rankin and
Wes Shafer. Back row, Jeromee Calaway, Steven Whitlock, Justin
DeLaCruz, and Shaun Long.

MORE PUMPKIN WINNERS -These Tuppers Plains Elementary students were winners in the recent pumpkin contest. Left to
right is Rrlan Hoffman and Sleven Durst.

The opt.ometrlsts recommend
using makeup Instead of masks.
Ill-fitting masks or th.os~ with
small eve openings can block a
child's ·view of oncoming cars
and objeets In his or her path.
Makeup not only gives children
a safer, natural view but also
enfn the non-allergic variety
and adults should double as
makeup artists. Makeup partlcles and applicators should be
kept out of the child's eyes.
Decoratlng costumes . \\lith
ret ro-reflectlve material Is the
most effecllve way to' make
children safely visible to drivers,
the ODA said. Optometric studies indicate retro-reflectlve
material is safely visible to
drivers even at excessive speeds.
of 70 to 80 miles per hour. White
material, by comparison, is
safely visible only up to speeds of
50 miles per hour.
Retro-reflectlve material Is
available In either Iron-on or
sew-on fabrics and tape. In some
area~. self-sticking reflectlve
decals are available. In decorat·
lng costumes, parents should be
certain children will be ,visible
from front, back and sides.
The ODA encourages parents
•.
to discuss safety awareness with
•.
their children. ''Trick -or·
.. ~:;~··.:· treaters themselves can do their
' • . . part for safely by walking on
sidewalks or in yards, looking
SARAH D. JENKINS
~arefully before crossing streets,
crossing at corners with street
1ft
lights and ·carrying a batteryoperated light or lantern."
More information on Hallo·
ween
costume safety may be
Sarah Dawn Jenkins, daughter
obtained
by calling doctors lo·
of Stephen E. and Donna Jenkins,
cally
who
are members of the
Rutland , celebrated her second
Ohio
Optometric
Association.
birthday on Sept. 25 at her home.
Attending were her parents.
and brother. Gabriel, maternal
COLONY THEATRE
grandmother, Margaret Weber,
Rutland; paternal grandparents,'·
FRIDAY-THURSDAY
David Jay and Ruth Jenkins . .----=:-:~7:-~7.75:---.,..,
Portsmouth; paternal great
JOHN CANDY
grandparents, Harold and Ouida
~~ .
Chase, Middleport; paternal .
u~
·
great grandfather. Earl Robin·
.
son, Gallipolis; Duane Weber.
Rutland; Dallas, Tammy. and
~.
Fiii'!1 Q
Zachary Weber, Langsville; ~.:·::·-=m::::-=Kc..:::·;;;.----~-=-­
Nancy Kime and Rick Robinson ,
ADIIISSION 11.5CI
Middleport: and Jean Sommer·
1
EVENING
SHOW 7:3()
ville, Gallipolis.

STfi.L MORE WINNERS -These . ldadergarten students at
Tuppers Plains were among some ot the winners In the pumpkin
contest ·held there In conjuctlon with the fall carnival. Thew are,
1-r. Darlene Connolly, Jeremiah Custer, and Janel Calaway.

Fall carnival slated
at school Sarurday
The Tuppers Plains Elemen·
tary School will have ils annual
fall .carnival on Saturday from
5-9 p.m.
In conjunction with the earn!·
val the school conducted a
"Create a Pumpkin Contest."
Winners in the pumpkjn conrest were chosen In the following
categories weirdest, prettiest,
funniest, scariest, most creative.
most unusual, and ugliest
Session I kindergarten winners
were Ashley Hager, Darlene
Co nnolly. Janet Calaway, Jared
Marcinko, Jeremiah Custer.
Ashley Hager, and Anthony
Curtis. Session 2 winners were
Christie Barber, Raehel Smith,
A.J. Tolliver, 'Robert Lawrence.
A.J. Tolliver, Christie Barber,
and Jeremy Reed.
Winners in the first grade were
Wes Shafer, Gary Vierling, Josh
Kehl, Wes Shafer. Josh Hoffman,
Danielle Spencer, and Josh Kehl.
The second grade winners
were Kyle Norris, David Rankin ,
Bridget Connolly, Amanda Upton. Qezra Wrikeman, Kyle Mor·
rls , and Amanda Upton.
Winning in the third grade
were Jessica Brannon. Jenny
Cline, Steven Whitlock, Josh
Hager, Sarah Householder. Juslin DeLaCruz. and Michael
. Lefebre.
Fourth grade winners were
Lamar Sandidge, Steven Durst.
Chris Buchanan, Lamar San·
dldge, Chris Buchanan, Jaymie
Osborne, and Mike Guess .

'""l'lfBL""""

In the fifth grade the winners
were Wes Sanders. Jeromee
Calaway, Arland McCartney,
Shaun Long, Billy Francis, Jo Jo
Coram, and Shaun Long.
Winning in the sixth grade
were. Brian Hoffman, Autumn
Bussey, Mike Laughery, Brian
Bowen, Noelle Pickens, Brian
Hoffman, and Matt Milliron.
The school also held a prtnce
·and princess contest in which a
prince and princess were chosen
from each class.
Prince and princess of the
kindergarten session 1 class are
Stacie Watson and Jake House·
holder. In session 2 was Robert
Lawrence and Christie Barber.
The flr!ll grade winner .was •
Danielle Spen·cer. Second grade
winners were Sarah Sex tou_ and
Matthew Bissell. In the tfl!rd
grade It was Sarah Householder
and J.T. White. In the fourth
grade, Vicki Adams and Steve

Vanderhoof Bapti~t
revival scheduled
The Vanderhoof Baptist
Church will be having ' Its fall
revival Oct . 18-21 at 7 p.m. each
evening.
The evangelist will be Rev .
Mark McClung of the Mullen
Memorial Baptist Vhurch.
There will be special singing
each evening featuring The
Church Trio on Wednesday,
Mullen Church Memorial Sin·
gers on Thursday. Tammy and
Marry Fullerton .on Friday. and
·
the Kestersons on Saturday.
Pastor Cecil A. Morrison Invites the public.

••
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•

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Every day of the year, we put our ·
business in their hands, and. today we
say thanks for ·a Job well done. Tomorrow is
International Newspaper Carrier Day. A
day, set aside to honor the carrier who ·
dellvers your.newspaper. It's a tough job
being the important link between this
newspaper and you, the reader.,

•

u

.

..

1984 Ford Escort"•• ~: Sl

2 door. standard.

Every day the !otaJ ·effort .of our advertising,
news, and production depa.rtmen•s goes
into their hands. They are the hearers of
the news
go'o d or bad, and a~ · a whole,
we think they do a good job!

1979 Ford Mustang ••. S1295
ROY.,.LTY -These Tuppers Plains Elementary students will
serve as princes and pricesses for the fall carnival. From 1-r,
front row, Is Stacie Watson and Jake Householder. Back row,
Sarah Sexton, Matthew Bissell, Danlelle Spencer, Robert
Lawrence, and Chrlslie Barber.

Auto .. P.S .. air.

.

·

1978 Olds Delta 88 ••• 51095
4 door. auto .• P.S .• air.

1978 Mere. Cougar ••••S1295

Durst were chosen. Laura Brown
and Wes Sanders won for the fifth
grade, and in the sixth grade It
was Brian Bowen and Jamie
Erwin.

Loaded - sharp car. low miles.

_

1984
Mer_
c
.
Cougar
••.•
S4295
Loaded. V-6.

Ellis birth
George and Barb Ellis, Ru.tland, are announcing the birth of
their second child, a daughter,
Patricia Clarice, born Sept. 13.
The infant weighed seven
pounds and two ounces and was
20 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
Patricia Hoffman, Bradenton,

•

•

International NeWspaper Carrier Day
Octo r 14, 19 8 9

•
b' hday·
e
tns
J nk
PRINCES AND PRINCESSES -These studenis were chosen as
prince and princess for each grade at Tuppers Plains Elementary.
They are, 1-r, front row, Sarah Householder, J.T. Wh~te, VIcki
Adams, and Steven Durst. Back row , Brian Bowen, J anue Erwin,
Laura Brown, and· Wes Sanders.

•

•

Fla.. and the late Wayne
Chappelear.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs . Roy Ellis, RuUand.
Great grandparents are Mrs.
Helen Roush and the late Paul
Roush, Palmetto, Fla., and
Mildred Castle, Pomeroy. Step
grandfather Is Bruce Hoffman,
Syracuse.
The couple has another daugh·
ter, Ashley Elizabeth, age three.

.

~We salute our carriers on their special d~y and ask you to jQin

OCTOBER14

.

6:30P.M.
SPEEDWAY LOCATED
4.5 MILES OFF U.S. 50
BElWEEN COOLVILLE
AND ATHENS, OH

:us
in
honoring
them
for
a
job·
well
done.
Please.
remember
.
..
~ International Newspaper Carrier Day!
'

FROM

NEW!

PURINA

~.

WEEK'S
WDMSDAY I OCTOIEI 11th
SOUP 'N SA . .WICH ......................~ ••••••••••••••• S2.' '

I

A hwl of Ow ,.,.... CNam of lreullli S.up Served with a Taoty
Grilltd ChMoe Sllllllwkh te Wara 'fJoeM C~ Fal Dayol

SUNDAY, OCTO IEI 15th
HOMEIAKED POlK cHOP &amp; D"&lt;SSNG DINIER ....s4.54

r .

POMEROY

•
F

A~ Jtolcy Perk Chop. Pnpartd f.-1111 Our lltt._ Served '!lith
hllcl- ......,..... D111ol111, . . . . . Potat- &amp; • • udo Gravy,

g,_ a-. w1t1o • . . . , _ , _ Cllelct of allllf lutteretl lol., He.,.,.,... llocult, CoHu, ........ or llealfftiHtlll, Toa, or a s-1 S.ft

INTRODUCTORY OFFERS

.....

'
10 •• 8ag

NOW HOURS EFFECTIVE OCTOBER B. 1989
9:00 A.M.-8:30P.M. SERVED SEVEN DAYS A WEEK

zo•....

..•

$149
$395 40 lb••••

DAILY
SENTINEL

''

$750 '

IIOW OPIIIIIG fOIIIIAIFAST-111 OUT HOT C&amp;IIS, RENCH TOAST,
011.115, oa-..aL &amp; ,GilTS.

PATRICIA C. ELLIS

lI

r;~oo-o;i-sl~ooFri-si~ooF~
w•M YOU HAYI A fUll. ..aUAST WITII US, WE'Ll
DIIICY 0111. DOI1AI HOI YOW TOIIll Mt PIISIIIT
I
TIIS COUPON AIID IIIIOY DIUCIOUS IIOIIIf. .S,
I IIOTCliiS, OIIIIITnS, PIIICN TOAST, HOT CDULS,
I
PIISII IGOS, . . . lOIII

I
I

!Now htlrla.t- .... 011• ,,... . at Cllost•
IAHI.... Dl..., .. h Not A.,tyl

localion Ontrl

·

I

I

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1

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·---------·--------------·
I •1.00 OFF

PURINA
DEALER'S
PRIDE. '
INTRODUCTORY
OFFER
20 LB. BAG

•1.00 OFF I

,

.

I

S6'' ·

•

•

•

REG. 1 7.99

f'&lt;"1i:.'' "~
•j

•

"YOUR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER"

'

.. - • ""' ·, , , ..,

!

~ ·. R&amp;G Feed &amp; Supply

••

•

••
•

••

(

'I

POMIIOY I OHIO

,399 WIST IWIII

..

•

•'

t

992·2164

•'
' '

The S._, Wltii"AIIIIIIIsaf Stuff"
.
f• Pets, St....., ..... ~ s.aii..Mh, lawM &amp; Garde111.

'

~

l'

,r

l·

�.i . • '

Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Page--7·
D-

(From BEAT, page 9)

veat... __.;:;::.:.::~~~-.-:::---:-::::-:::=--:-::-:-:-ii-;,;-;tM;;;t-;;:;;;?o;;;-;;;;;;;;;-t,:i;;
c
d
like 11 don't we? One more tr 1 p

you have one of ,lhe vesrs · they're yellow -hanging away
and would like to see It join the
upswing of the local club jusl
leave Is by Pleasers Restaurant
or you can contacl Kenneth Ull
and he'll.be glad to pick 11 up .

and CJaurch

•

.

. Vittrans
emorial

115 E• .._lool tr.
'"·2104

Hot;ital

992-7075

*"""

•

-

P. J. PAULEY, MJENl
Nationw.iile Ins. Co.
of Colurnbul, 0.
104 w. Moin

.•

ttH311 Pomeroy

..

-·

.::• Su......
Worslip Selvlce

I)

~.

~\~

)

) (

1

a.m. Ololr rehearsal

~

(6141992-2039 or
(6141992-5721

loll••'''.. ,_.,, Olt
~04

Ph. 991-!101
Pomeror_

Su.,

GRACE EPI500PAL CHURCH. Di E.
MaiD ~. Pomeroy.
servO!s: Holy
t'a'MlUtionon thl&gt; arstSuiXIay of each month.
and comtUIEd with nliX'Ilng p-ayer on the'

• ••.-•
: . •...
• -:;:. • . ttvd S.nday. MOCI'Ulg JQyer and sermoo on
otbel' Sundi\Ys ct tile month Ololdl SChOOl
and Nunel)r care JllWkled Ccdee oour In tte
•
Parlohllalllmmedi""'Y rollowlngt"'SEM&lt;le,

•

au

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, 212 W.

•

- . St.. Leo wh. evaniJI!Ilsl Bille ~
9:3Ja.m.; Morlingwtn~ D.l&gt;a.m; Youth
meetlnas, 6:00p.m.; EVI!Illng""'tip. 1:00 p.

'

•''

m. WeGI&lt;Bdoy nlgbl p-.,.,- rneottngandBible

•
;

1· ••
'

''
•
''

m. WeGI~. Bl!ie
Lanctm Hope, evaneeast
OLD DE:Jen:R BIII.E OlRISTIAN

'

CHURCH, JackCiel•&lt;l 1)111&lt;r. AllbyG~.
SU!1 SUn;loy Schocl 10;00 a.m.; Yoo&lt;ll mEe&lt;·
ID1&lt; ·1 p.m. fNB'Y WeGI&lt;Bdoy.
SACRED HEART CATHOLIC CHURCH

-Pomeroy. Msgr. Michael Hellmer, Ph.
992-5898. S&amp;turdliy evening Mass, 5:l&gt; p.m.

; Sunday Mass, 8 a.m . and 10 a.m . CCD

-classes, 9 a.m. lst and 3rd Sunday of each

mont b. ConfessiOns: On~halt hour before
each Mass.

r,.

\:

CHURCH OF JESUS CHR1ST APOS·

'•

I '.
•

'

TOUC FAITH- Nl!w Lima Road, next to

Fort Meigs Park. Robert W. Rlchar:ds,
pasur. Sunday services, 10 a.m. and 7 p.
m.; Wednesday worship, 7 p.m.

GRAHAM

UNITED METIIODIST.

Preaching 9::J) a.m. first and second Sundays of each month; third and fourth Sunday eactl month wontup servkB at 7: XI p.

m.; Vt'f'dneaday evenlnp at 7:;l) p.m.
PrayH" and Bible Study.

SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST. Mul-

berry H~lghts Road, Pomeroy. Past« Bob
Snyder; Sabbath School Superintendent ,

''

Rodney Sptr15. Sabbath School betlfns at 2

p.m. on Saturday afternoon with wc:nhlp
servk:e following at 3:00 p.m . Everyooe

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH . 011

p.MiDDLEPORT FRE.EWILL BAPI'IST
CHURCH. Corner Ash and Plum. Noel
HPrrmann, pastor. Sunday SchoollO:OO a .
m .; MorninR Worship. 11:00 a.m .; Wed·
nesday and Saturday Evening Services at
7::1J p.m.

m.; Sunday Churdl School. 9:)1 a.m ..
Morning Worship lO :lt a .m .

FIRST SOUTIIERN BAPTIST, Po-

meroy Pike. E . Lamar O'Bryant, pastor;
Jack Needs. Sunday School Director. Sunday School. 9:30a. m.: Mornln!it Worship,
10:45; evPDingworshlp, 7:00p.m . tD .S.T.l
1:7:30 IE.S.T.J ; Wednesday Prayer Service, 7:00p.m. (D.S.T.) &amp; 7: :1lP.M. !E.S.
T. \; Mls,ston Friends {&amp;gl'f! 2-6). Roy al
Ambassadors !boys Bl!es 6-18). and Girls
tn Action 1ages 6-181 on Wednesdays, 7 p.
m . fD .S.T.l lr7::. p.m . tE.S.T.I: Tuesday
VIsitatiOn. 6:ll p .m .

F"-ITH TABERNACLE CHURCH. Bal·

lt"Y Run Road. Rev . Emmeu Rawson. pas-

tor. Handley Dunn. supt . Sunday Sl'hool,

HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRJS:l' IN

CHRISTIAN UNION, Theron Durham,
pastor. Sunday service, 9: ~ a.m.; even·

UNrrED 111El'BODIST CHURCH

NORTBE.4ST CUISTER
Rev. Doll .t.rdliw
Be•. Fraak

LONG BOTTOM- Church SchOol 9:)1

and Wednesday at 6 :00p.m.

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION , DwiKht HalEY.

nnt elder; Wanda Mohler, SUnday SChool
SUpt. Sunday School 9::Jl a.m.; MornlnR
Worsli.p tO:JOa.m .: EvminRWorship7:30

p.m.: Wednesday prayffmEE1inR7:Xlp.m.
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD.
Racine. Re-v . James Satlerflel.d. p;lstor.
Freeman Williams, Supt . Sunday School
9:45a.m.; Sunday and Wednesda y even·
lnf!: servict"!, 7 p.m .

Wednesday, 1:Jj) p.m.; UMYF Wedn,..

MIDDLEPORT

FIRST

BAPTIST.

Corner Sixth and Palmer. James 5eddon.

Pastor. Edna Wli!Cil. S.S. Supt. ; C8thy
Rlgp, Asst. Supt. Sunday SchooJ. 9:15 a .
m.; Morning Worship, 10: 15 a.m.; Sunday

Evening service. 7 p.m. Prayer meet in~
and Bible Study Wednesday evenlnR". 7 p.
m.; Children's choir practice, Wf'dnes·
day~ 7 p.m .; Adult choir practice. We-d .. f\
p.m.; Radio program, WMPO, Sunday,

8:30a.m.

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH 0 F CHR 1ST~
5th and · Main,

AI Han soo, minister:

Richard OuBosP. Assorlate Pastor: MikP
Gerlach, Sunda~· School Supeorlntmdent.
Bible School9: :10 a.m.: Morning Wors hip
10:30 a .m. EvPnlng Worship 7:00 p.m .
WE'dnesday. i : no p.m. Prayer met"tlng.

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NAZ·
ARENE, PASTOR J!&lt;ov. Lloyd D. Grimm,

'

.

Jr., pester. Jean Kimes, Sunday School Su ·
perlntE'rtMnt. Sunday School 9:lJ a.m.;
Mo rntn~ Worship 5ervlce, lO:l&gt; a.m. : Sunday evening serviCe. 6 p.m.; Wtdnesday
evening service, 7 p.m.

SYRACUSE CJ!URCH OF THE NAZA·

RENE. Reov. Glenn McMillan, pastor.
Mark Matson. Superintendent. Sunday
SChooi9:J&gt; a.m.; Morning WorshJp, 10::1)
a.m.;
Evantt~Usttc
service. &amp; p.m.;
Prayer and Praile Wednl!ldly. 7 p.m .;
Youth meeting, 7 p.m.
•

UNli'IID PSEIIIYTEIIIAN 1111NI!TRV
OF ~Clll OOl!Nn'
.... O'q,ln-

HARRiliONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH - Sund.ly : Worship Services
t:OO a.m.; Church School tO: 15 a .m ..

MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN -

•••

•••

•

•

••
•

'*

Sundlly School, 9 a.m. ; Churdt Sf'r'Vice,
11:15a. m.

SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY·
- Sundoy School. 10 a.m.:

TERI~

· Church I«VIce', 10 :15 a.m .

Rl1'1'LAND CHURCH OF GOD. Put or.
llo)llll&lt;llldCox. SunnySchooiiO:OOa.m. ;
SundiiY Mornlnt WorohJp II:OOa.m. Chll·

port. SundaY Sch0ol10a .m. ; Sunday ev(&gt;tl·
lnf! _serv!CP 7::ll p.m.: Tuesday service.
7:llp.m.
.

HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH .
Bob Grimm. past or. Sunday School9: 30 a.
m.; Worship 10:45 a.m.; SWiday evening
service, 7 p.m .

!'REEDOM GOSPEL M1SSION at·Bald

Knob, located on County Road 31. Rev.
RoRer WOlford, pastor. Sunday School
9;30 a.m.: Mornln~~,: Wonhl 10:45 a.m.;
Sunday evenlnA: worship 7:00 p.m.; Wed·
nesday evPntnJl BlbtP Study 7:00p.m .

Schooi!O: 30 a.m.
' BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHR1ST,
Tom Runy011, putor. Sunday School9::ll

• day, 6:00p.m .; Communion First Sunday
of Month cCrotootl.

REEDSVILLE - Church Scbool9: :ll a.

a.m.;

La~

Haynes, S. S. Supt. Momlng
wonhip 10: :tJ a.m.

m.: Worship Servicell:OOa.m.

PLAINS ST. PAUL -

WHITE'S
CHAPEL WESLEYAN
CHURCH- CoolvUIPRD.- Rev. PhiUip Rl·

RACINE CHUROI OF TilE NAZA·
RENE, Rev. John Vallee, putcr. Sondy

Chureh Schad 9 a.m.: Worship 10 a.m.;
BlbleStudy, Tllesday. 7:30p.m.: Communion First Sunday iArcher) .
CENTR.\1. CLUSTER
Rev. Boa . . . . .

denour, past«. Sunday SChool9: 30 a .m.:
worship servlt'f' IO;:J) a.m.; Blbte study
. and worship service, Weilnesday. 7 p.m.

Just Ire, Chairman or the Board of Chrls·

ttu Ule. Sunday Sch0ol9::ll a.m.; Morn·

ln1 wonblp 10:30 a.m.; · evanretlltlc ser·

RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHR1ST.

vlco 1:110 p.m. Wednesday ~l&lt;e, 7 p.m. . Ray W. Carter. pastor. Sunda\' Morninf!:
LIBERTY CIIRlSTIAN CHURCH, !lex·
Worship, 10:00a.m.; Sunday Bible SChool
ter. Woody Call, put or. Service~ SUnday
6:00p.m.; Wednesday Bible Study 1:00 p.
10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednelday,!_~·~·
m.
DYESVTLLE COMMUNITY CljURCH,
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amos
Lloyd Soyre, Supt. Sunday Scllool 9: ll a.
Tillis, pastor. Sonny Hudson, supt. Sunday
m.; morning worsblp 10:00 a.m. Sunday
Schoot9:30 a.m.: Mornln~ worship. 10:30
evening snvtce 7 p.m.
a.m.: Sunday eveninll servlc;e 7:00p.m.
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST. Steve
Wednesday service 7 p.m. WMPO proDl'aver, Pastor. Mike Sw~er. Sunday
gram 9 a.m. each Sunday.
School' Supt. ; Sunday Schllol 9:.~ a.m.;
RUTLAND. CHURCH OF THE NAZA·

Bev. Wnle,- 'l'bllcller
ae.. Baney lltii..IM&lt;h
lleo.JW-,oRIIO'
lie\&lt;. Paul Martlll
~. lrt..r Crabtree
a.&lt;." Rob«t 81eele

ASBURY !Syracuse\ -Worship lla.m.
: Church SChooi9:4S a.m~ ; Charge Bible
Study, _Wednesday, 7: Xl p.m.; UMW. first

Tuesday, l:ll p.m.: Choir l!ehearsal.

Wednesday 6:30p.m . (Thatcher!
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m.;
Church SchOol tO a.m.; BibiPStudy, Tues·
day, 7:00p.m.; UMW. First Monday, 7:30
p.m .; UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m. Chob' Re·
hearsal, Children's al 6:30p.m. Adult fol·
lowing; Wednesday. (RilEY\
FLATWOODS- Church School, 10a.m.
; Wors hip, 11 a .m. ; BiblE' Sludy, Thurs·
day, 7 p.m. ; UMYF. Sunday. 6 _p.m. (RJ·

Morning wonhlp 10 :40 a.m.: Sunday
eve-ning worship 7:30 p.m .; Wednesday
evening Bible study 7:30p.m.

RENE. Samuel Basye, pastor. Sunday
SChooi9:30 a.m.; Worship service 10:30 a.
m.; Young people's service 6 p.m .
E vangelistic service 6: ~p.m . Wf!'dneRday
service 7 p.m.

IURLINGHAM COMMUNm' CHURCH.
Burllnllf\aln. Ray Lauclermllt. pastor. Ro-

bert COzart. assistant pastcr. Sunday Sctnol

MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST. MIUer

10 a.m.: wcrstip 7 p.m .: Wednetdl\V. 6p.m.
yooth meet in,; We-d. 7p.m. ctllrdl services.

St., Mason, W. Va. Sunday Bible-Study 10
a .m .; Worship 11 a.m. and7 p.m. Wednes·
day BiblE' Study, vocal mus\(',' 7 p.m .

PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH. 1\

mlleort Rt. 325. Rev. Ben J. Watts, pastor.
Robert Searles, S.S. Supt. Sunday School

.

FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a.m.;
Church School 10 A.M .: Cholr pracHre,
Thursday, 6:30p.m. ; UMW third Monday.
I Thatcher)

LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud·

9:ll a.m .: Mornin~ Worship 10: 30 a .m .; ,
Sunday fYenlna service 7: Jl p.m. ; Wed·
nesday service, 7:;Jl p.m .

SILVER RUN BAPT1ST, B111 Lillie,

HEATH 1Middlepoi11-Church School,

pastor. Steve Little, S. S. Supt. Sunday
SchoollO a.m.; MornlnR worslp, 11 a.m.;
Sunday evenlnR worship 7: ll p.m. PrayPr
meeting and Bible study Wednesday, 7:30
p.m.: Youth meeting Wednesday at 7 p.m .

.

MINERSYILLE -:- Cburch '8chool 9:00
a.m.; Worship service 10:00 a .m .; UMW
third Wednesday. 1 p.m. iThatche-1
PEARL CHAPEL - Church School9: 00
a. m.; Worship Serv tee 10 :00 a.m. (Mar·
tin\
POMEROY - Chureh School, 9: 15a.m.
: Worship 10 : ~ a.m.; Choir rehearsal
Wednesday, 7::1) p.m.; UMW. Sft.'Ond
Tuesday. 7:.llp.m.; UMYFSunday,6p.m.

(Meadows)

OLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPI'1ST
CHURCH. 28601 State Rout. 1, Mlddlt&gt;

Grove. The Rev. WOllam Mlddleawarth,
putor. Cburch service 9::tl a .m.; SuDdly

a .m. : Worship 10:30 a.m. : Bible Study,

IRindnetschl.

. AL CHURCH . KinMS~ry Road. Rev .
Clvde W. Henderson'. pastor. SuMay
Sc'hool9:30 a.m.; Ralph Carl, Supt . Even·
In~· worship 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting.
Wedneulay 7:00p.m.

Billie Stud)', 6:.111 p.m.
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIS&lt;:. "-&gt;meroy·
Harrllanvllle Rd. IRt. 113! Robert E. Pur·
tell, mtnJster: S~e~&lt;e Stanley. Bible School
Supt.; RodDey )lowery, ANt. Supt. SUN·
DAY: Bible School 9:311 a.m.; Wonr:r.
Ill: 3D Ul. 11114 7:a P.M.l Wedll- ·
bleSIII&lt;IY,7:00 p.m.
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine

10 a.m.: Sunday eventnscservlct. 7:30p.m . . 9:l&gt; a .m .; Morning Worship 10::1) a .m .;
; Bible teaching, 7:» p.m. Thursday.
Youth Group, 4 p.m. ; Wednmday, Bible
SYRACUSE MlSSION. Cherry St. , Sy·
study 6:00 p.m. Choir rehellJ'Sal 7 ~ 00 p.m.

racuse. Mark Morrow. pastor. Services. 10
a.m. Sunday. Evenln~ services Sunday

CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION·

CHRIST, JOM"Ph B. Hosldal, pastor. Bible
Clus, t:30a.m.; Mornlng!A'orsht_p10: :11a.
m.; EventnaWonhlp, 6::1)p.m. 'lbursday

Ke\1, SeldDn
ALF'f(.ED - Church School 9:30a.m.;
Worship. 11 a.m.; t.JMYF6:30p.m. ; UMW
Third~ay, 7::11 p.m. Communion.
first S
y. f Archer)
CH
R - Worstup 9 a.m.; Church
SchoollOa.m.; BibleStudy, Thursday, 7p.
m.; UMW. first Thursday, 1 p.m. ; Com· ·
munlon. llrst Sunday (Arcber) .
JOPPA - Wonlllp·g: _, a.m.; Church
SchOollO : Xl a.m. BlbleStudyWednesday,
7:30p.m. tJohnson).

1'1'1.

prayer SPTVIce- Thursday-, 7: ll p.m .

tnr lft'Vke 7:00 p.m .. Prayer m~tng,
Wedll-y, 7:00p.m.
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF

c-•
.Joa..•

RUTLAND FIRST BAPT1ST CHURCH

mlnlstP,r; Satunlay ('VenlnJ!t
(&gt;Van~t&gt;llstlc services, open to ~bile, 7 ~­

I

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH

- Sister Harrteu Waraf!l'\ Supl. Sunday
School 9: ~ a .m. ; Morning Worship. 10: 45

FuUer,

This earthly planet we have known
Since andent history'd begun
Was seen as Bat and all alone,
Uke any Island In the sun.
But then explorers came along,
And like Columbus, they had found
Those geographic notions wrong,
And so they proved the earth was round,
By Sailing to some unknown land .
With only God to be their guide;
And thus today we understand
The faith on which those men relied.
So thank the Lord, who made this earth
So round, according to His plan;
And then discover what It's worth
To live on It, the best you can.
- Gloria Nowak

Rt. 124, 3 milE$ from Portland-Long Bot·
tern. Edsel Hart. pastor. Sunday School.
9:.ll a .m.: Sunday morning preechlng:
10:30 a.m.; Sunday evenln~ services, 7:.ll

welcome.

a.m.
POMEROY FIRST BAPT1ST, Sti'Ve

Fami~ Rtstaw111t
"FHIIIIfl K1111 f FtW eMth• "

(row's

w. Main St~ Pomeror

'·
•'·

.)lr&amp;d

REJOICING LIFE BAPT1ST CHURCH

- 383 N. 2nd Ave.. Mtddlepor1. Sunday
Sc'hool10 a .m . Sunday eve-ning 7:00p.m.;
Mld·wHk service, Wed.. 7 p.m.

LANGSVILLE CHR1STIAN CHURCH.

Sunday School9::1) a .m. : Jert Pattnson,
supt.; Mornlna worship 10 :ll a.m.: Sunday ('VenlniZ service. 7::1) p.m.; Wednes·
day PVenin~ s«vlce. 7:30p.m.

EDEN

·

UNITED

BRETHREN · IN

CHRlST. Elden R. Blake, pastor. Sunday
School 10 a.m.; Gary Reed, Lay leader.

. ROCK SPRINGS- Chul'l'h SchOol. 9:15
a .m.; Worship 10 a .m .; Bible Study, Wl'd·
nesday , 7:30p.m .; UMYF (Seniors), Sunday, 6 p.m.: IJuniors\ every other Sun.
day. 6 p.m. !Riley) .
RUTLAND- Church School, 10 a .m,;
Worship. 11 a.m.; UMW First Monday,
7::JJ p.m . (Crabtree)

MorniRJl sermon, 11 a .m.; Sunday night
services: Christian Endeavor 7:~ p.m ..
Song serviCE' 8 p.m .. Preachlng 8: :K) p.m .
Mld·week prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7

g.m.

.

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, David
Prentice, pastor. Charlf'S Dom!Ran, Sun·
day School Supt. Morning Worship 9:30 a .
m .~ Sunda,y School l0 :30a.m.; Evenlngser·

SALEM CENTER - Churrh School&amp;: 15

a.m.; Morning Worship 10: 1~ a.m.
iSieelel
SNOWVILLE- Morning Worship, 9:00
a .m .; Church School10:00 a.m . tMartln)

vn.. 1:00 p.m.

MT. UNION BAPTIST, Pastor: Joe N.
Sayre, Sunday School9: 4~ a.m.; Ewnlng
worship 6: :tl p.m.; PrayL"T Mel"'lng, 6::1)
p.m. Wednmday.

SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Bn. Knaet:• Wer
Rev. a.,... Graee
.... Cor1Bldto

niPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF

APPLE GROVE - Chun:h School9:00
a .m .: MornlnJ Worship 10:00 a .m .; Bible
Study Sunday 7:00p.m.; Prayer meeting
7:00p.m. Thursday. { Hickt)
BE:I"HANY- Worship 9 a.m.; Chureh
School10 a.m.; Bible Study Wednesday 10
a.m.; Dorcas Women's Yrll•llllp Wed·
nesday 11 a.m. (Bilker) .

CARMEL - Chu"'h Scllool 9: :ll a.m.;

CHRIST. Robert Foster, pastor; Howard
Caldwell. Superintendent; Church school
9 a.m.; Worstdp servlce9: C5a.m. and6::1)
p.m. Every me welcome.

CHESTER CHURCH OF TilE NAZA·

RENE . Rev. HerbeM Grate,

pastor.

Frank Rtrne. supt. Sunday School 9: 30 a .
m.; Wonhlp service, 11 a .m . and 7 p.m .
Sunday. Wednelday, 7 p.m.. Praye-r meet·

In,.
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHOD1ST
CHURCH. Wlntam Wllllamo. pall«; Ro·

Wonhlp, 10:45 a .m . Second and Fourtb
Sunday~~; Fellowship dinner with Suttm
third Thunday, 6:30p.m. (Baker).

MORNING STAR- Chun:h Schod9:15

a.m.; Worship 10:30 a .m.; Bible Study,

bert E . Barton, Director of Chrlltlln Edu·
catlon; Steve Eblin, atallttnt. SUnday

School9:30 a.m.; Mornlnr worlllllp !O::ll

Thunc!_ay. 1:30 p.m. !Baker) .

a .m.: Teena. In ActiOn. 6 p.m.; Evenlnl
Worship, 7:00p.m. Cbolr practice 8 p.m.
SUnday. Wedntlday evening prayer and

SUTI'ON .- Church School. 9:·30 a.m .:
Morntn1 Worship 10: 45a.m. first and lhlrd
Sundoys: Fellowship dinner with canner

lhlnl Thul"'llay, 6:.111 p.m. iBak•J.
EAST LETART~ Mor!UrWonhJp9:00

a.m.: Cltun::h SchooliO:OOa.m.; UMWftrll

Tueodoy 1: 3D p.m. {Crace).

LETART FALLS - Worlllllp 9 a.m.;
Church Schod 10 a.m. {Grace),
RACINE - Cllurcb S&lt;llool.lO a.m.: Wor·
ship lla.m.; UMW lotu1h Mollllly at Ul p.
m.; Men's Prayer Brelk!Mt. Wednlldoy, 8
a.m. IGrace) .
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Rorer
Sprtn&amp;. mtnlllor; Starllq Maaoar ud Ot·
lvtr SWain. Sunday Scllod Sllplo. Pr••h·
Ina 9: 3D • .m. eac:h Sunday; Sunday School

Btbleotudy.

DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Roaer Watson, minister. Norman WUl,
supt. Sunday School 9:30a.m.; Worship
tervlee 10:~ a.m. Bible study. Wect.a·
day, 7:00p.m.
REORGANIZED CHUI!CH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LA'M'ER DAY SAINTS. "-&gt;11·
l1111d-RadD• Road. Mike Dull!. putcr.
Janice

Dann•,

cburcb ICbool dirf!t'tor.

Church school t: :m a.m. :· Mornln1 w(l'lhlp
10:30 a.m.; Wednlldll)' evenlna prayer

s«VIl'l!l, 7: :J) p.m .

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. l!ev, Earl
Shuler, pastor. WorshlpHrYice, 9: J)a.m.
Sunday Schod I0:30 a.m. Bible Study and

ding Lane, Mason, W. Va. J . N. Thacker,
pastor. Even in~ service 7::Kl p.m.; Wo.
men· ~ Ministry. Thursday, 9 : ~ a .m.:
Wedifesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7:.15
p.m.

HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHR1ST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. Harlfon:l, W. ya.
Rev ; David McManis, pastoc. Cburch
School 9:30 a.m.; Sunday morning ser·
vice, 11 a .m.; Sunday evening- ..ervtce,
7:30p.m. Wednesday prayer meeting. '1': :1)

P·~A.JRVIEW

BIBLE CHURCH, Letart,
W. Va. , Rt. 1, James Lewis, pastcr. War·
ship aervlces 9:30 a.m.; Sunday Schoolll
a.m.; Evening worship 7: :1) p.m. Tuesday
cottage prayer meeting and Bible Study
9:ll a.m.; Worship JErvlce, Wednesday

7:ll p.m.
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH,

Walnut and Henry Sts. , Ravenswood, W.
Va. The Rev. GeOrge C . Weirick, past«.
Sunday SChool9:~ a.m.; Sunday w«shlp
lla.m.

1J3oo,,

'

93 MNI Btroet
Mldlleport, Ohio 41710

716 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDlfPOIT. OHIO

(8141892-88117 -1888-00KSI

.,.•...

s.r-1

,.~

992-5141

01!14

264 Soutk

EWING FUNEIAL HOME
"Dil{llily and Servie&lt;&gt; Always"
Esiabllshed 1913

992-2121

L.------------_,
106 Mullorry A•L

. Meeting, Bible Study and Youth Fellow·
ship, 7: lO p. m.
·

CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY.

Located on 0. J . WhitE' Road of Highway
160. Pat Hens&lt;~~ . pOst or. Sunday School10
a .m. Classes for all ages. JunlorChurth 11
a.m.; Morning worship 11 a .m. Adult
Choir practice 6 p.m. Sunday. Young People's, Children's Church and Adult Bible
Study, we·d nesday at 7:.Jl p.m.

HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL. 510 Grant

Sl., Middleport. Aftlllated with Southern
Baptist Convention. David Bryan, Sr:-, Ml·
nlster. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Mornln~
worship 11 a .m.; Evenln~ worship 7 p.m .;
Wednesday evening Bible study and
prayer meeting 7 p.m .

BRADFOHD CHURCH OF CHR1ST. St.

Rt.124and Co. Rd. 5. Derek Stump, pas1or.
William Amberger, S. S. Supt.: Sunday
SChooi9: :KI a.m.; Morntn- Worship 10:30
a.m.; EYPntngworshlp 7:30 p.m. Wt"dnes·
day worship 7:30p.m.

Corner

PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,

Syc8more- and Second Sts., Pomeroy. The Rev. William Mlddleswart ,
pastor. Sunday SChOol 9:45 a.m. Church
ser~ice 11 a.m.

SACRED

j

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

271 llertlt

HEART CHURCH. Msgr.

Anthony GiannamoN'. Ph. 992·5898. Sarur·
day Evening Mass 7:30 p .m .: Sunday
Mass, 8 a.m. and 10 a .m. Confessions onehalf hour beror€' each Mass. CCD classes,
11 a.m. Sunday.

VICI'ORY BAPTIST. 525 N. 2nd St ..

Middleport. James E. KE'esPe, pastor.
Sunday mornln• worship 10 a.m .; Even·
Ina service 7 p,m.; Wednesday evening
worship 7 p .m . VIsitation Thursday 6: 30 p.

m.

MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH; David

Curfman. pastor. Sunday SChOol, 10 a.m.:
worship service 11 a.m.: Sunday night

worship service 7:ll p.m.; Midweek
prayer· se-rvice WPdnesday 7 p.m.

WESLEYAN
BIBLE
HOLINESS
· CHURCH ol Mlddlepor1,1nc.. 75Pear1St.,
Rev. Roy McCarty, pastor: Roger Man·
ley. Sr.. Sunday SChool Supt. Sunday
School9 ::1) a .m.; Morning Worship 10:30
a.m.: Evening Worship 7:30 p.m. Wednes·
day even\n~ Bible study. prayer and
praise se-rvice, 7: :JJ p.m.

FAITH FULL GOSPEL CHURCH.l.ong

Bottmt. Sunday School. 9:30a.m.; Morn·
inA: Worship 10:45 a .m.; Sunday evening
7:00p.m. uummer 7:ll p.m.); Wednea·
day nl~ht 7:00p.m. (summer 7:ll p.m . l .

LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
OF GOO - Gary Hines, pastor. Sunday
SChOol 9: :l) to 10 :20 a.m.: Worshtp· srvlce
10:30 to ll:lJ a.m.; Sunday evenin~ serviCE',' 7 p.m.; Midweek Prayer service,

Wed .. 1 p.m.
·
MT. OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH,

Lawrence Bush, pastor. Sunday School
9::1) a.m.: Sunday and Wednesday even·
lng worship service. 7:00p.m.

UNITED FAITH CHURCH, Rt. 1 on Po·

meroyBy-Pass. Rev. Robert E . Smlth. Sr.
pastor. Melvin Drake. S. S. Supt. Sunday
School9 : :J) a.m.; Morning Worship 10: lp:
Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.: Wednesday
Prayer Servire, 7:00p.m.

FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH. Railroad

St .. Mason. ~~nday ~hool .10 a .m.; Morn·

2n~

•

Mi.....,

tng worshtp 11 a.m. ; t;ventng serviCE' tt p.
m. Prayer meeting and Bible Study Wednesday, 7 p.m.

FOREST RUN BAPI'1ST. Rev. Nyle
Borden. pas1or. Cornelius Bunch, supt.
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.; SE&gt;cond and
fourth Sundays worship service at 2; 30 p.

m.

MT. MORIAH BAPTIST. Fourth and
Main St .. Middleport. Rev. Gilbert Craig.
Jr., pastor. Mrs. Ervin Baumgardner.
Sunday School Supt. Sunday School9: .3 0a .
m.: Worship Service, 10:4S a.m.

SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF C~UST
-Joseph B. Ho!lkins, evangelist S4Jday
BlbleSiudy9a.m .; Worsblp, 10a.mi,"Sun·
day evenlnR' servlct" 6 p.m .: WedDesday
evenln~ servi~.

7 p.m.
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY , Raclne.

Rt. 124. William Hoback; pastor. Sunday
Sch0ol10 a.m.; Sunday evening Sf'rvlce 7
p.m. Wednesda:V evenlnR wrvice 7 p.m .

CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle, .

n~~J~lU'iwsHrP CRuSAoE roR
CIIR1ST, St. Rt. 338, Antiquity. lie\&lt;.
Franklin Dlckl'lls, paator. Sunday morning 10 a.m.; Sunday evening 7:30 p.m.
Thuflllay evenlq7: .Jl p.m.

MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLI·
NESS CHURCH, Inc., 75 Pearl St. Rov.
Ivan Myers, actlq'pastcr; Roger Manley,

Sr., Sundoy School Supertntolldellt. Sunday School 9::ll a.m.; Mornllla wonblp
10:30 a .m.; evening wonblp 1:30 p.m.;
Wednelday evenina Bible study, prayer

and praboi oervlc:e, 7: .111 p.m.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APQS.
TOLIC - VanZandt 8Jid Ward Rd. Elder
Jameo MUler. putor. Sundoy Schod,
!0:30a.m.; WonhlpSOMce,Sundly,1:ll
p.m.; Bible Study. WedleodiY. 1:90 p.m.
CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL. Harl1·
o&lt;l!vWeRoad.ROII. VldorRoulll. putor;
CIIDICII Faullt. Sunday School Supt.; Sun·
day Schod 9: 31Ja.m.: mornllla worship. II
a .m.; Suaday I!YeDtnl ~rvlce 7:30p.m.
Prayer Me«lnr. WedneodiY. 7:30p.m.
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD.
naa·Penr.coatal. Wol'lhlp Mrvlc:e Sunday
10 a.m.; Sunday Schod II a.m. Evenlnr
worahlp atrVIc:e 7:00 p.m. Wedll-y
prayer meettnr 7:00p.m.
MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Located In Tnu
CornmunJI)I oil Ct. Rt. 82. l!ev. Rober!
Sondero, put or. Jell Roll ..,' lay l•der;
Ed Houlll. Sunday School Supt. Sunday
School 9:30 a.m.; momtnr wonhlp ud
c:hlldr•'a church 10:30 a.m.; OVflllna
preachtnr oervl&lt;e ltroi uno
7:30p.m.; Spedalllnlc:e llifirth Su y
evenlnr. 7:JJ p.m.; Wedl-y Prayer

=·

I

'

f

WASHINGTON (UP I) ~ King
Kong Bundy Is not your ordinary
corporate spokesman.
But the 6'foot·2, 450-pound
professional wrestler, an unor·
' · thodox choice to serve as a
t-· · spokesman for a line of computer
products, relishes the job.
He represents Heads tart Tech·
nologies, based ·1n Great Neck ,
. N.Y .
"I'm the spokesman for Head·
start. I don't think you need some
' bulton-down wimp. This Is something different," the massive
Bundy said In an Interview
Thursday after hundreds of peo·
pie lined up In a · Washington
deparunent store tor his
autograph.
"But don't ever think of calling
.King Kong Bundy a computer
geek, " he said. "I know you'd

SUpt . Sunday ·School 9:ll a.m. Morning

to find out lhelr needs and concerns
,
see what Is happening In the schools, Is why I 1m
here," commented Rep. Abel. She visited In several classroomss Including this filth IP'ade
classroom at tlie Pomeroy Elementary , School
where Uncia Stanley Is the teacher.

THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST.
"-POSTOLIC FAITH" - New Lima Rd ..

The lunch menu for the Easl·
ern Local School District has
been announced for the week at

next to Fort Meip Park, Rutland. Robert
Rlcttards. pastor. Services at 7 p.m. on
Wednesdays and Sundays.

HARR1SONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP·

TER of the WeSleYan Hollnfl!'l Church .

Rev. Earl Flt'ldl. pallor. Henry Eblin.

Sunday School Supt.; Sunday Scbooi!O a .

m.; Morninli[ worship 11 a.m.: Evening
servlet' 7: ~p. m. WeGnelday evening servtce7::Jtp.m.

STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH,

Gary HoltPr. pastor. Sun"-y serviCH 9: 30
a.m. and7 p.m.; Midweek serviCE', 7:ll p.
m. Thursday.
·

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, 1blrd
Ave. Rev. Clark Baker. pastor. Carl Not ·

!Ingham, Sundoy Sc:hool Supt. Sunday

School tO a.m. with clas!ll"l for all ages.
Evenlllll: serviCeS at 6 p.m. Wedneaday 81·
ble study at 7:30p.m . Youth services Frl·
day at 7:30p.m.

ECCLES lA FELLOWSHIP ,128 Mill Sl.,

• Oct. 16.
', Monday: hoi dog with sauce,
, tater tots, fruit, and mUk.
,. Tuesday: grUled cheese sand·
..' wich, tomato soup, relish tray,
fruit, cookie, and milk.
Wednesday: spaghetti with
cheese, homemade rolls with
buller, green beans, applesauce.
and mUk.
Thursday : cheeseburger,
·' "com. fruit, and milk.
· Friday: fish, peas, fruit, brow·
· nle, and milk.

Middleport. Brother Chuck McPheriCil,
pastor. Sunday School 10 a .m .; .Sunday
evening services a.t 7p.m. and Wednelday
servtces at 7 p.m.

·,.

pastor. Sunday School 9:30a.m.; church

r,

ANTIQUITY BAPT1ST. Kenneth Smith,

never do that ."
Bundy • on a hiatus !rom active
wrestling, has completed a series
of national television commer·
cials and makes appearances

--------

Did you catch the Delta Queen
moving upriver Thursday night•
That caliope player really knows
how to please use doesn't he assuming he' s a he. Just as the
Queen hit the edge of the .
Ber you hadn't even noticed
Pomeroy business sectio n he
that
it's Friday, the 13th. That's
again swung Into "Beautiful ·
the
way
things work when you
Ohio" which may not be popular
smiling.
with
butwe

--------

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
'" ',,' :, ~'

. 446 4524

FRJ~Y

thr1o1 TtliR50AY J

AJ; another outreach program
to the communities of Meigs
County, the Meigs County Health
Department will be conducting a
fingers tick cholesterol screening
at the Racine Home National .
Bank on Thursday, Oct. 19 from
9-11 a.m., and not Wednesday,
Oct. 18 as was reported In the
Thursday edition of The Dally
Sentinel. There w!ll be a $5
charge for this service with no
appointments necessary.

promoting the computers. In one
recent appearance at a Florida
de~arunent store, more than a
thousand people showed up to
meet him .

BUTTONS AND BOWS
MEIGS COUNTY'S ONLY
CHILDREN'S SPECIALTY SHOP!
"OVER 50 NAME HANDS TO CHOOSE FROM"

•BRYAN •BLUEBIRD • ALEXIS
•PICCOLO •JACITAR •TINYTOTS
•KID DUDS •SPENCERS •I-GEE
eGITANO •DR. DENTON •GARANIMALS
eCHILDWISE •HOT FUDGE •GOLDEN AGE
eULO •MISS QUAUTY •WONDERKNIT
•OCEAN PACIFIC

Menu set

Worship lO:.Jla.m. Prayer service. all ern·
ate Suncllys.

B•gle Bog Coming end Msng M•"···
JUST THINK-BRAND' NAME CLOTHI,.G
AT PRICES EVERYONE CAN AFFORD!!
Come in and sign up for Free Portrait to be given away.
·No rurch••

nacea•z·

BUTTONS
AND BOWS
992-5177
POMEROY, OHIO

220 EAST MAIN

STAHL'S
•,

servl&lt;e 7:30p.m.; youth lellowlhlp&amp;: 31Jp.

m.; Bible study, Thurlday.1:30p.m.
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE, 331145

111110

'1

CHRISTMAS
SHOP

Hiland Road. Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pu·

tor. Danny Lambert, s. s. Supt. Sunday
momlna aer:vtce at 10 a.m.; SuDIIay even·
Ina service 7:30p.m. T~o~esday and Thursday Services at 7::1) p.m.
'

·-

NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF TilE JIA·

ZARENE, Rev. Glendon Strc:ul, put a".

Sunday School9: 3D a.m.; Woroblpoervlce,

10:30 a .m.; Youth service- Su!Kiay 1:15 p.
m. Sunday eventnaservlre'I':OOp.m. Wed·
nesday Prayer Meetlne and Bible Stq.~
7:00p.m.
'

day afterilooo services at 2:30. Thur!day
evening services at 7::1).
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Masm, W.
Va. Paster, BlllMurphy.Sunday~hoollO
a.m.; Sunday evening 7 :30 p.m. Prayer
meeting and Bible shady Wednelday, 7::.)
p.m. Everyone welcome.

Justin Kiriakis on the TV daytime drama
''Days of Our Lives ·
•

.

,,,.

Rout•SS5.

oa.l.tll-2211111

P·~Otmt BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT

1001

CHURCH, Silver Ridge. Duane Syden·
strlcker, pastiJ". Sunday School 9 a.m.:
Worship Service, 10a.m.; Sunday evening
servtce, 7:00p.m . Wednesday niRht Bible

SALE 01 SEIICIID 11E1S

llamtonoon

•

,.

In Gallipolis
.
Ohio River·Plaza.,-Route 7 North

THE SPRINGTI!iiE OF OUR LIFE

1

t ,

AT HILLS
SATURDAY, OCIDBER·14TH

OPEN BOUSE

\em St. Rev. Paul Taylor, puler. Sunday

SchoollOa .m. ; Sundayevenlng'I':OOp.m.;
Wednesday evfonlng prayer meeting 7:00

Ute has Utile that Is sweeter than SprJnltlme. I know It lsAutumnnow
with 11s bright colors and blue skies. The season of Spring Is but one
season. I mean the Sprln(lllme of maa, oaar youth and school days. These
are golden days that ftlllhe hearl wt1h joy and pleasure and memories.
Every age of man has Its swee moments but youlh ~ms to fUl every
golden momeri1 with golden thouibts and memories. The song "Golden
Days" !rom the operetta "The Student Prince" n&gt;mlnds us of this.
Our youlh Is a time of intenee learning and feeling. Not only the
wonders ollhe world around uabut the breadth of ourcurloalty. We are
open to anylhlng and ri«Y lhinl. God Is the one thing lhatrrowalnto a
more beautiful and broader pqwer tri our lives. It sln&gt;n(llhens us and
suatalu us lhrOtllh the many trlalo of Ule, marriage, .work and the
wln1er of our life, old qe. Memories can never be over rated but believe
me, God Is our otren(llh.
.
·
Are we lndudlnl God In our children'• Ute when It Is most n~ed? ,
God can broaden oaar Uveo and mlndl to the fUllest. Plly 1hose children
whose parents and family deny t11em thll moat Important and vital or all
learning, God and Faith. No oneo educaUOn and memory bank can be
complete without God. The gresttelt alii ol 1 parent Ia to deny llielr
children the jOy o1 the lmowledge of God. As a parent wbere do you
srand? What wm God uk you about 011 thllt Judgement day? Did you
truely love your children? Tben wily did you deny them the moot baste
truth "God Is Ktng and aU In all Ill yoaar life." We need to teach them to
love Him and learn all pooslble about Him, 1M God or all and king of
klniL
'
School hal begUn lor another year. Ia God a part of your cblld's
edueatlon in thll aweel IOUOD ol the Spring of YllUih? Remember tbe ,
Sprlqtlme of yauth II 111e seuon· of the moat golden memories,
pleuuftl and joys. Don't faD to teach your children of Ihat moot vital
part ollhelr Ute, God and Faith. - PM&amp;er William Mlddl•warth

.

Locah!li at tilt intmection ol Roure1 50 &amp; I with Stat£

RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa·

study 7:00 p.m.

Meet Watly Kurth

,,"

NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH, Sun-

CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH,Iocatedon

Pomeroy Pike, County Road 2:5 n_EBr Flat·
woods. Rev. Blackwood, past«r. Services
on Sunday at lO:lOa.m. and7 :30 p.m. with
Sunday School 9:30a.m. BlbleStudy, Wed·

us up for the season.

~ · Wrestler Bundy says he's no Wimp'

RAWliNGS-COATS

'""""

ST.

•

SUPPLIES • BIBLEB

SHOP

TOURS MEIGS SCHOOUI- Rep. Mary Abel, a
member of the Ohio Hou.se education committee,
wu In Melp County Thursday to lour several
schools In the county. She wu ~ccompanled by
Melp County Superintendent of Schools John
Riebel. "To talk with administrators and teachers

''·

"

I

,•

\

992-5432

PROVED TO BE ROUND

Uy WmshJp.

TUPPERS

.

.

dren's Church 11 a .m . Sunday Evening
Seivice7:00p.m. Wed.. 6p.m. Young La·
dleo' Auxiliary. Wednesday, 7 p.m . Fam·

stip lla.m ;

'•

BILL QUICKEL

LlVE A GOOD UFE ON THE EARl1l THEY

wrap

next week should

Leesa Murphey of Pomeroy
underwent major surgery Wednesday at the Cleveland Clinic.
Friends report that she dolrtg
well following the ordeal. Now
rhal's good.

Cholesterol screening

PO.ROY, OHI0-992-6677

221

downriver

O C I - 1311oru fll

'

stilly. 1: Ill p.m.
TilE SALVATION ARMY, 115 Blttemlt
A -.e.. Pallt'lay. Mrs. Dora Wining In chlr•.
APPLE GROVE UNITED METRO·
DIST CHURCH - Pastor. Rev . Carl
-~ :KI a.m.; Sun:lo.Y
Schod. JO;:Jl am. Sundi\Y SCOOoL YPSM
Hicks, 10 mile&gt; above Racine on Rt. 388.
Ek:*e Adams. leader. 7:1) p.m. Salvation
Sunday School 9 a.m .. worship service 10
meeting varbl5 si)Nik«S and miBic specials. . · a.m. Sunday evealng service. 6:00p.m.:
llursdoy, ll:lla.m. to 2 p.m. Lad!"' Horne
Prayer meeting and Bible Study 'Miurs·
day, 6::11 p.m.
l..ea&amp;\le. members ln ch•&amp;P· all WGnEII
~~~ ~~
~
MT. OLIVE UNITED METHODIST Off 124, behind Wilkesville. Cl!arles Jone;,
pas1 or. Suriday SchoOl, 9:~ a.m.; morning
worship • .lO:lJ: Sunday and Thursday
£"Venlng services. 7: 00 p.m.

s...- -

Condor St.

....

''" '"~!, .. .

992-2975

:..!:
....:
•: ~

r...

Ponroy, 011.

John F . Fulll, Mgr .

212 E. Main Strnl
9'.12 -3715. Po11eroy

POMEROY CHURCH OF TilE NAZA·

... :- • RENE, Cor!S' Union and MLllleTy, Rev.
•.,.•
Thomas Glen McC'kl.., pest(I", N&lt;J"I'I\M Presley. S. s_ SuJt., Sunday SctKlOL 9;:1) a.m.;
• ...,.., mer ring wm;lip lO:;JJ a.m.; E"o'enlng !II!'I'VIce 6
,-.· p.m.; mlch&lt;ek....-vice. WedneodoY.1p.m.

·oo

K&amp;C JEWELERS

•'" 'l'uesdlt)'. 6:45 p.m. urO!r direction C( Wis
lllrt
&lt;

•-

,,. ...-~

ROIIIIS fOIIVEIY OC:USION

=·;...e......;.:..--__;...---t
a.m.;

.'

992-3325

p,,,., Flow, $'''

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC;

1

S. Second
Pomeroy

992-.3978

214 E. Mai~
992-5130 Pomeroy

172 N•th
Avt.
Mioldloport, ~·

•

Pre-scriptions

INSURANCE __,__
. SERVICES .

SALES &amp; SOVKE

216

Syracuse

Brogan-Warner .

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY

Mill WorkCabinet Makinc

Wt Fill Doctor•'

,_,.,

Elza Gilmore of Pomeroy ,
active for many years with the
Drew Webster Posr39, American
Legion, has the following mes·
sage to veterans;
WANTED: Eligible veterans
for "replacements'' In the AmerIcan Legion. You are needed to
"fill the line". If you are a World
War II, Korean or VIetnam
veteran and wish the join the
ranks of the American Legion •.

••

just contacl Pos 139 amman er
Dick Vaughan at 992-7822 or
Adjutant Richard Russell at
992-3597.

••

_2to3pm

I

'
•

In Ironton
Ironton Hills-Route 52 at Route 93

•'

4:30 to 5:30pm
In Huntington West
5th St. at Interstate 64

-·

,..-~

9 a.m.-6 p:iii.
9a.m.-Sp.m.
2p.m.·5 p.m.

At . 1. Box 221
Lhtle Hooking, Ohio
6, &lt;1-989-2271

Free Fun For The Family

. ..,.;.(

•

0

It's AU Part of the Gallipolis Grand Opening Celebration(

,,

�...

Pau•

.
8 The Dilly Sentinel

Friday, October 13. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Community calendar
FRIDAY
MASON, -There will be a
REEDSVILLE -The United gospel sing on Saturday from
Brethrt!n In Chr 1st Church, io·
6-9 p.m. at the Mason Fire
cated two miles north of Reeds·
Station featnrlng The Taylor
ville. on Route 124, will have · Family, Otway: Winning Side,
revival through Monday at 7p ..m . New Life Singers, Renections.
nightly. The evangelist will be . and the Singing Conners, Proc·
~rt "Bobby" Wiseman from
torvllle. The public is l!lvlted.
Pblnt Pleasant, W.Va. There will
bt special singing each evening.
POMEROY -The Oldies But
Goodies Car Club of Meigs
RUTLAND -The Rutland BI- County will have its first annual
ble Methodist Church will have car show Saturday on the Pome·
roy parking lot. There wlll be 17
~Ivai through Sunday at 7 p.m.
nightly with the Rev. B.J. Walker classes offered to exhibitors with
a~ speaker. The Rev . Daniel • two trophies given per class.
Dash plaques will be given to the
Roush Invites the public.
'
first 50 cars that enter. Registra·
.POMEROY -The Pomeroy
Senior Citizens Dance Club will
·have a square dance on Friday
!rpm 8-11 p.m. Music will be
pi'Ovlded by True Country
Ramblers. Admission is $2.
B(lng snacks for the snack table.

tlon begins at 9 a.m . and the feels
$5. Call Gene Whaley at992-7013
or Bill and Sharon Neutzllng at
985-4317.

p.m. with Mary Dailey and the
Joy Singers. The church is
·tocated between Long Bottom
and Portland.

TUPPERS PLAINS -The
Tuppers Plains Elementary
SChool will hold its fall carnival
on Saturday from 5-9 p .m . A .25
rent admission charge will entl·
tie participants to a country
store. sweet shop. bazaar,
games, door prizes, cakewalks,
and food .

WEST COLUMBIA - The
annual Halloween carnival of the
West Columbia Elementary
School will be held Saturday.
from noon to 7 p.m. at the school.
There will be door prizes. refreshments and games through·
out the day .

RACINE-The Southern Boosters wlll sponsor an auction on
Saturday at the football field
beginning at 4 p.m.
LONG BOTTOM -There will
be a hymnslngonSaturday at the
Hazel Commun.lty Church at 7:30

.

homecoming at th e Morning Star
United Methodist Church on
Sunday . Wors&gt;tlp will be at 9: 45
a.m. and Sunday SChool will
begin at 11 a.m. A carry-In
dinner ~¥111 begin at 12:30 p .m .
with afternoon service at 1 p.m .
Pastor Kenny Baker Invites the
public.

PUBUC NOnACAnON:

.

~MEROY -The Return Jon-

ailan Meigs Chapter ·Daughers
ol'.,j\merlca will meet Friday at 1
p.)n. at the Grace Episcopal
Church pariSh house. The guest
•
spnker
will be Mrs. Edgar A
Yerian. state conservation chalrffi!ln . Hostesses will be Mrs.
H..-old Sargent, Mrs. Everett
Hayes, Mrs. George Morris, Mrs.
Jatnes O'Brien, and Mrs. Gerald
POwell.

WITH FLOWUS

• b-llllolly

Ju• call
·-~~~~~~-­
.,~··
POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
(.,..,. ··
arruc~.

·ilu•

W~W ~mHiM .~tl•

"'· "2·21H or "2·SUI

STORE HAS BEEN CLOSED DDWN
SINCE LAST WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON
- DOORS OPEN SUNDAY!

UNPRECEDENTED

S700,000 INVENTORY
•
·oRDERED SOLD!

Meigs Junior High students
ga thered Wednesday morning to
view a very specfal movie - a
movie with a message. "Chol·
ces" is a 45·minute film aimed at
convincing today's youth that
they have the !reedorr. to choose
what 's best for themselves, and
not· what someone else thinks is
best for .them, especially when It
comes to the use of alcohol and
drugs. The film, sponsored by the
Pepsi Company and Burger
King, and produced by Motivalional Media Assemblies.· was
presented Wednesday morning
to students at Meigs Junior High.
The film, whlcl) Is both inspirational as well as instruction~!,
encourages youths to give real
thought to what they might be
doing to their lives, as well as
their bodies, before they become
.involved In alcohol or drugs ,
Including the use of steroids .
Youths are encouraged to listen

.......
To -

0t.OPU8IITID IICI- ·AllY UIWITIIONDII
.__OfnHMATDW..,FULLOIITHIMOfiiMOI-TIOft LAW:

GOODS TO BE
EXPEDmD
TO PUBLIC
SUNDAY! .

OPEN12

·-'nl
MIDIIGHTI

.........
••t
•••r ••
•m
72'%. OFF

.h;fusalern will meet at the Rock
Sppngs grange hall on Friday at
7: 30 p.m. Potluck refreshments
will be served.

FINALI

SUNDAY'S!

,
SATURDAY
POINT PLEASANT -There
will be a benefit breakfast for
Amy Boggs, age 15. Point Plea·
·sant, W.Va. on Saturday from
6-10 a.m. at the Royal Order of
the Moose Lodge No. 731. The
benefit Is under the direction of
8111 Show, civic affairs chair·
man, and all proceeds will go to
aid Miss Boggs who Is awaiting a
heart and lung transplant. The
ev~t Is open to the public and
will cost $3 per person for the
al,-you-can-eat breakfast.

THIS IS A PUBLIC SALE AND SHALL BE
CONDUCTED ON THE PREMISES SUNDAYn

NO LAY-AWAYS_.

· ·No c.o.o:s_.

UP

NO SPECIAL
ORDERS!!

TO:.

II
••

2:000'CLOCK NOON 'TIL

CHESTER - The Region 11,
Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs, board meeting Will be held
· Saturday at the Chester United
Methodist Church. There will be
a carry-In dinner at noon. All
gardea club officers are urged to
attend and all garden club
mewnbers are Invited.

BASSm • FLEXSTEEL * RIVERSIDE • ARMSTRONG
BENCHCRAFT * KINCAID • RESTONIC • IMPERIAL * ASHLEY
HARRIS • BEST • CHATHAM COUNTY • BLACKSMITH
SHELBY * 4RT. * JIMISON • STYLI. • WASHINGTON
ENGLAND * CORSAIR * CENTURY • HIGDON • CALDWELL
HAMILTON * AND MANY. MORE.
-

anyone.''

'

about drugs, drink-.-------.._,,.

Meigs Junior High. they were
also at Kyger Creek High on
Wednesday . They were at North
Gallla High and the Buckeye
Hills Career Center on Monday;
Gallla Academy High for two
shows, and Hannan Trace Hlgb
on Tuesday; and Eastern High on
Thursday .

Actually, Byerley and Reinig,
both from California. are one of
10 tour teams going all around
the United States at this time.
They left California back In the
summer and have been In Kentucky and Ohio since about Sept.
1. In addition to their stop at

SEE US FOR THE
FINEST USED CARS IN
THE AREA!

...................... .........................
Your Hometown Bank
' 1
Hires Hometown People!
In our community, we're committed ~ offer
the kind of services and personal alten·
lion you want and need. When you bank
with us, you'll find that we're much more
than just a ~inancial institutioa, we're a
hometown frtend.

1986 Chevy S-10 ........ 56495
Club Cab, PB, PS, air, electric windows, low mileage, A-1 condition.

Gravemarking slated

6 cyl . .- 5 speed, long bed, PS.

After some slack in activity the
Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
Club Is swinging back Into action.
· Membership and activities ar0

The local Pepsi Bottling ComA similar film , called " Stars, "
pany, out of Athens, with a . was presented locally by Pepsi . ~
warehouse In CheshIre. Is pa ying last year, Thrapp said. However, .J
for the presentations at the Thrapp feels that this year' s · ~
schools. ~fports Henry Thrapp, presentation Is more defined anil ,.,
Pepsi' s area manager.
to the point than last yea r's . .., ,
~
~

Ann Miller has been
employed with Farmers
Ba.n k for 9112 years. Ann
is currently .the ·
Assistant Head Teller.
She is a graduate of
Racine High School
Class of 1955. Ann is
married to Noel Miller
and they reside in
Middleport,- Ohio -

1986 Ford f;.150 ........ 55695

being increased. Ken Ut t is
presently the president and the
Rev. William Mlddleswart Is
secretary-treasurer. Meetings
are held the second and fourth
Wednesdays of each month and
the club currently has two
women members. The club . Is
trying to create an upswing In
one of their projects which !s
supplying eye glasses for
children.
Local members are also be·
coming more active In dislrict
activities and are traveling' to
district meetings. Now about all
Lions attending the district s&lt;'s.'
sions are wearing th'e traditional
Lions Club vests.
·
While local members could buy
new vests there Is currently
interest in putting some of the
older vests back into service.
Jim Hill, a past club president.
believes some of these vests are
hanging in the back of closets of
former members . ..Ji!JI is asking
that thesevestsbeputlntouse. If
(See BEAT, page 7)

1985 Chevy El Camino ••• S5995

Auto .• air, good .c ondition, 60.000 miles.

1981 Chevy C-10 ••.••••• 53495
1979 Mere. Monarch .•••• $695

6 cyl., auto., looks &amp; runs good.

Hometown ... "

1975 Ford Sta. Wagon •••• S595

Auto .. PS. big motor.

I· _....,
FnJ . Farmers
Bank

·

Your Community Owned Bank

IGGS

MEMBER FDIC

=-••if!l:t:WI

Sdlool 985·4200

St. Rt. 7

NOW CALL TOLL FREE

72°/o OFF

992·2136
221 WEST SECOND
POMEROY, OHIO

915-3315
STATE ROUTE 7
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO

l-800-521-0084
*Tax &amp; Title Ext(llt

1989 GEO METRO .L.S.I.
Retail Sticker ..................... $7 451
Discount ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 351
$7100
GM Rebate ·····•···········•··········· 400

S49
ONE lAY• ONlY ...

12 - I S OIILY

Tbe Rev. Chris Meenach.
Frinklln Furnace, will be
preaching with his puppet. Lester. at the Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene 'Oct. 18·22 at 7 p.m.
each evening and 6 p.m. on
Sunday.
~- Meenach and the Sunshine Gang have been In the .
mtMtry for the past 20 years.
His ministry Includes children.
youth, and adult evangelism.
He Is a registered evangelist
and .cblldrens worker with the ,
Church of the Nazarene.
Rev. Meenach will bespeaking
especially to children at the
beginning of each' service.

Liwyers: Recall
_lye drain cleaner

•
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
nation's trial lawyers called for
the recall of Lewis Red Devil
Lye, warning that the drain
cleaner available nationwide Is
explosive and Its use Is "akin to
playing Russian roulet re."
The warning Thursday was the
flr~t In a campaign by the
AsliOCiatlon of Trial Lawyers of
America to reveal information
about dangerous products that Is
'lrneoverecl duling litigation, but
Is often ~t secret under out-of-

.._,
............. *• •m.l... ,__............
.....
,......,
NOT SJ2ft.95.. SU11D
--·--····
.,Y ONLY... s79 7
" CotmllllllllAL" 5 PIECE DINETTE SET
'"'"Now''"·"·••• .... ·• .....
wo...o•n ...
su•n

f.

SUNDAY ONlY ...

~·

113-r":7tt:'u... ONE m

DilLY...

"*'••

72, /o OFF

•Ill•

,... ~., ...... , ..., .. t..., ,..,, , ••• higtl
Mit: ...., .... in • •wol oc* •II if rtalr

-~h

........

$997

IIOT llotUJ
. _ . , OIIIT

'150.00 1ottops ,_ S7J.OO.I

MIDIIBHTI"
"UP TO 72% OFF SUN.!"

S97 10•

..'
..
•

$597

*ow•

·;z

ROT tUH.95- .
0111 DAY D-.Y"'

•

$139 7

........, ..,.... .... lor
thol-•4stoopsowo-

"'Ullin~

S147
101 0111 lAY ONlY
NOT SJ9.U..NOW

DU FIIISII

. CIIIIT..oiUY IIIIIIG lOOM SUIR

c.....wit • .rtet~.,._

..

I· 11.. ltaf, 1 ann I 5 tWuhllirs,
ftlllchint....,.. wttl,..rtrttt Hdl &amp; a~rio • • w/tltiu .........

NOT l2199.9S". 01111. Y....

Retail Sticker ...... 12,030
Our Discount. .... -1,030
GM Rebate
ISC Option ......... -1,100 .

$134 7

"OilTIIAII COUNTY"

IOSTOIIIOCDI

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

THIS IS AN UNPRECEDENTED REUQUISHMENT AND

lWI ....................

_.,........, ...... lr••
NOT S14t.t1- y ONlY...

$8 7

SALE AND SHALL . . . .elm ON THE
PIIEIIB•:

- -

"•VIISIII"
IOl TOP DISI

......
,.....
......
...... _
.....................
'-

·-~

NOT

""..C:.: $41 7
''IIVIISM''

......................
............... ..
c•o calilllm

·-·-·
.,,1 ...............;,c··
..~

-DOWNTOWN-

. :..:~:k$197

GALUPOLIS, OHIO

t.•

A SAVINGS TO
YOU OF

$3300°0
,•Ta~~:

• Title Extr1

S2034

Retail Sticker..... S17,900
Our Discount ..... -2,400

NET SALE

$9900
a
•Tax

Thle E•tra

515,500
GM Rebate ............ -600
Your
Net Ccnt ............. S14,900

YOU SAVE

$3 000
*Tp ( Thle Extrt

OHIO VALLEY!

PHONE

••

SL 4 DR.

Stoclt #1650

Retaii ................. SI7,787
5aver·Ptx
Discount.....,. ......... -725
SJ7,062
Our Discount .... -2,000
'15.062
GM Rebate~.......... -900
-Tax &amp; Title Extr•

JOHNSON SAYS:
"Our inventory must be reduced
in the next 30 days - This is the
time you have been wailing for!
Bring Your Trade or Your
Checkbook!

"WE ARE DEALING!"

0hw~ol'et (}frif ~()
GALUPOUS, OH.
(614) 446-3672

OF THE

446-1405
(

A SAVINGS
TO YOU OF

letpii ................. S11,134
P.E.G. Sover·Ptx
Discount ............... -700
$10,434
Our Discount ....... -134
$9,600
G.M. Rebate......... -500
Net Sala
S9, 100

*Other Units Priced Accordingly • On the Spot Financing- Bank &amp; GMAC

PilE
FURNITURE
COMPANY
142- SECOND AVENUE

..... Wdol,.. - · · ...

Stack #1776

SAVE _
BIG!

"" fMttr•• II....._ illd'll
Qf. . . . . . . ,.,.....

CAVALIER 4 DR.

~·----------~
- --~~~~--------------~
...
. 1989 OLDSMOBILE CALAIS
"
1989 OLDSMOBILE ROY ALE
2DL
884DL

COIMI ile M161111pirt1 fillilh•cl tndudts a trifllt •eu•
t..-, t.tdt mirror, tift
ch•t, full 01' quett1 titt
,...... IM4.aH •••• · - · ...... st.tcl

Fill SIZE ISLEEHI)
IIDE·AWAY. .D
IIotta!
- ....
tiot, llotI fotlsilo
lootfill•

Retoil ................. •1 5,284
P.E.G. Sower Pac
Discount ....... -1,400
s 13,884
Our Discount .... -1,300
S12,584
GM Rebate........... -1100
Net Salt
$11,984

"KINCAID" 5 PIECE
SOLID PINE IEDIOOM SUITE

.::.

.

'

II NOUII OIILY ...ONI DAr Ollll ...

'19. 95 Lamps
'29. 95 Lamps
'39.95 Lamps
IIDW, 0111
DAY Oii.Y ...
(Otloor '--'100.00 lor 150:00.

....... al ............. -flllilhllin a , . . . . ,..,..

NOT $12tt.9J ...NOW...

NEW-----. tlf.tf 1989 OLDSMOBILE CIEIA
1989 CHEVROLET

Steclt #1752

••gn.

fr•a, fr" P"Oftl twWII •II lots ef plilhllllgeww polyur·

UMPS

....... 1111111
...

$9 7

lfh. . . . . . . . . ., ...........
NOI'ItUS.JIOW
~-· ·

$837

IN DESIGNER STYLED VELVET
1M beCilti ..land &lt;emfoftaMt twt pc. Sflitt with ih atra poclding
1101\'111 with rofltd ontioMd ttack •d thidl1eat cusliona.lhts ,Pil·
low ott•hll4 IGJ'· out ornw, hllllwMMI tr ... •II ~lltt

Co•••cl. in rkh ,.,., wit• ""tli-htftH bed:. Hen oc:i

r---------.

"7 PC. COIIITIIY IINIIIG
IIOOMStlfE w/OIIIIA"

ONlY ...

NOT S!Jt9.95... 0.LY...

CDNTIMPOIARY UVINGIOOMSUITI

SWIYR IOCIIIS IYBVITI

... il . . . lih ,,........... hwt. Wicl

lolilt,'-sWodt·~

l,

N01'1;;:9S 0111 DAY

••••L
$
NOI .. H.9LSUNDAY ONlY...
597
(-

..100111L

AAorttcl Nil-. ...... and finillwl thtu dt•ry • ... tobl• •• protldttl
with a llt•tlful . . h •II han as..,.
!lritld I

"CAIDWBJ." S PC.IOIIID DINETTE SUTIE

S49 7

bi' •••1.

hiW"
Hf wilh prW~iu IGft witll
wo.d tclge. Four 1witel I itt chairs with
llt•tifvl doth finish.

(Dmtf with •.,ortlround

•-.....
• ONlY- S2 4 7
W..ITII'f WT..SUNIMY

·

s797

011\Y...

"RACISMITH SHOP" CONTIMPORARY DINml still

".SON" MAPU IIDIOOM SUITE

UP TO ...
0

S9 7

..............,.Mit.w*wtt41ramt
fll• . . - tile hNIIIIt•4
four

lt.a1, hutch·•r•,. firt

trr,lt

~

,. .... ,..., ",:;,vmt..~\i:,

"'USSm"' END TABUS

S9 7

1989 CHEVROLET BEREnA G.T. ·

~

Wllilt ,.., '-tt... ilt. . . wat•IIH
_,., •II fin ...cl ~ fr•L
ONIDIY DillY •

•it• *"..
............
...,..a.-• .....••-.. ••
S.ite~•he
. ,...

MAUIVI 4 PICE VaVET UVING ROOM .GIOII'

rxtrol•••"'
'"••·
m••tt-dlh1ett--.AI
..•.tin•.
quality
.,ton lol!o!
lown ....
llio ...
__ ....,...,...,;.

"WATERBEDS"

~

"HIGDON" 4 NCE
TUDmOIIIAL KDIOOM SIITE

American Home Products
Col'p., whtcl) sellll the drain
cleaner, acknowledged Ina statemeat Issued In New York that lye
can be dangerous, but said Lewis
Red Devil Lye Is sate when uled
according to label Instructions.
"ATLA Is engaged In an effort
to promote the economic Interest
of Ita members by thll cllentlollrlttng effort/.' ~ COIIIJIIlDY

.

·

T1M Mitt • . _ wilh II weN • • ,..etect;rt
lfr...
~ ' • ....... railt. . Itt ,.. •II fMr • • •••

court leltleml!llts.

.......

"THE SECRET IS OUT AND THE HEAT IS ONII"

''IASSm''
. SECnOIIIAL UYIIIIG 10011 SUm

···--···"····

S6700

NO SALE

Revival slated ·

,,

-'

,.,. .

-·

•••
' I

'''

i;:

'

UP TO ...

REV. CHBti MEENACB

".

The Shlnlnt Light In Bankh1g

MOVE 'EM OUT NOW!

RECUNEIS

.•I.'

'"We're Committed To Our

General Motors says.: THESE UNITS MUST GO!

lultool ba.. ,_.;• ., ..,......
P......., w~hpiltaw llt•hHbao'
wshio" Has ..... springs .,4
solid harlfwoool ITama

'j

Long bed, 305 motor. 4 sp.

'

,

I
~

'.

Beat of the Bend

By BOB HOEFLICH
Returri Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the
of the
American Revolu lion will be
holding a gravemarking service
for the late Dorothy Harley
Sunday.
The ceremony
will he held at 2:30p.m . Sunday
at the Middleport Hill Cemetery
tn Middleport and since there
_was no public service held here
for the late Mrs. Harley, the
public is Invited to attend· Sun·
day's event.
Mrs. Harley, who died in
Springfield, was well known In
Middleport where she resided for
many years. Her husband , the
late James Harley. was mayor of
Middleport many years ago.

ALL
SALES

a

'ROCK SPRINGS -The Mary
Slirlne No. 37 White Shrine of

to and share confidences with
knowledgable adults, and seek
out drug-free recreation.
Today's popular songs accompany the messages that are
presented thtough two stories .
One story Is of .!1 young man who
loses both legs because he
refuses to give up sterlods. The
second is a story of a girl who Is
hit by a drunk driver and the
effect of -that accident on her life.
According to film technicians
Peggy Byerley and Kymm Reinig, Pepsi and Burger King
sponsored the film tour which
was presented yesterday at
Meigs Junior High In order "to
help kids." The tour team brings
with them all the necessary
equipment • to show the film,
Including an approximately 25
foot-wide screen. "We'll go to
anybody that wants us," Reinig
says, "schools, youth groups,

.

OILYSUIDIY

•••sa;

stu~ent~

Program stresses choices for

MONDAY
REEDSVILLE -The Ohio
Division of Wildlife will sponsor a
hunter safety course on Monday ,
Tuesday, Thursday, and Oct. 23
at Eastern HlghSchoolfrom 6-9
p.m.'each evening. Preregistra·
tlon Is required and class size will
be limited to 40 students. Call
1-800-282-3557 to register .

POMEROY -The Mt. Herman
United Brethren Church. Texas
community, Pomeroy. will have
revival Sunday through Oct . 22 at
7: 30p.m. nightly. The evangelist
will be the Rev. Carsey Knittle,
Lancaster, Pastor Robert Sand-

SUNDAY
· RACINE - There will be a

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

er's Invites the public .

POMEROY -The Meigs
County Genealogical Society
meets Sunday at 2 p.m . at the
Meigs County Museum. The
publiC Is Invited to attend.

BURLINGHAM -The Bll[·
lingham Modern Woodmen will
have their regular meeting on
Saturday with a potluck dinner at
6:30p.m. at theBurllnghamHall.
The public Is Invited to attend.

Friday. October 13, 1989

,, I
The Daily Sentlnai-Page-9' •

'•

' •,'

�Pagl 10-The

Sentinel

SWEEPER REPAIR
AU MAKES AND
MODELS

• The Area's Number 1.
Marketplace
'
W ord•

0 11y"

1
3

6
10
Mont hly

15
16
16
16
16
constcut Ne HIM

3

11

no eh•ft•

OJ 1d for •II Clll itll lf!U«!f'111 Ill dm1t&gt;lf! II"CO\ &lt;1f lUi CClS I

-

222

&gt;

•e..oo

"'"Of'

992-6872
6 -S-'19-tln

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

I'"'

Me rgs Count y

M•st~n

ANtol C&lt;Jd'" 61 4

AtCit ll Cmlro 11 1

Aru Cod• 304

992 - Middiii!Pnrt

87!5 - Pt Pl f!.UIU
4Y - lfiC'ln

'

311 - Vinton
245 · Alo Grend t

' A diS S!IIfd ld\lertiH mll'll pl.cild i" Tk e Oailv S!!&gt;n t in elle•
c.,t ··. d • sified d it.plll'fl , I Us. in• • Card ~t n d leg .. nn ticesl
willl 1110 artp.., '"the~~ Pt PI••• " ' Regi1U11 11nd t hro G~t llr
tHJiil Daily Tt ihluu!. ~ • e hin11 r.vJitr 1R 000 hC'l !Tli'S

211 GuVtn Dis t
143 Ar• bi •Dis t
3 79. ~""" '

PonlltrOV

Basham Building
EVElY
SAT. NIGHT

Ca . W V

571 - Apple Grove

915 - Cf1eUet

143 P orllanrl
247 l.eten F•lls

949

773 M•• nn

6:30P.M.

195 - l e11rt

Factory Chob
12 Gaugo Shotguns Only
Strictly Enlorod

182

- R1 ~n e

742 - RviiR
617 ·~ C o olville

937

N~

Htvf!n

Buffa! ~

10-9-tfn
Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAlJ LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
UMITATION
NOTICE io hereby given
tllaL in pureuance of • Re..,..tlon of tho loerd of
Tru8t- of the Township of
l4bonon.
Portl111d, Ohio.
tho 1st doy of Au·
IUit. 1 - · tlwro will be
..llmttted to 1 ,v ote of the
people of eaid
Leblrnon
T-nthlp lit 1 GENERAL
ELECTION to be held in thit
county of Meiga. Ohio. et
the reguler pl.ce of voting
therein. on Tuesday, the ••
- h doy at November.
1189. tho quoiotion of levy-

-""on

ing.etu. inuceesoftheten
mill' limitlltion, for the ben•
It of lellonon Townohip for
the purpoM of fire protect~ .

s.id tax being:le renewal
of 81'1 Milting tax of 1 .0 mill
to Rln for flvo (5) v•ors ot o
filii not uceeding 1 .0 mills
lor MCh one clollor of votuo·
tion. which amounts to ten
.,..,,. 1•. 10) lor uch ono
hundred dollora ofvoluttion.
lor flvo (li) yura.
Tho Potta for Mid Eloctlon
wll be op., ot 1 '30 o'c1ocll
A.M. ond rtmoin open unti
7:30•o 'ctocll P. M.
By O&lt;dor of tho a-d of
ofMoigo
County. Ohio
Ewt&gt;tn ~Iori!.

E1-•·

et.........

Jene M. Frymyor
Director
Dot;i: Sopt-ber 12. 1989
11DI 13. 20, 27. 1111 3 4tc

Public

Notice

43215. No1ice ofony oppeal
thoU be filed with the dine·
tor within 3 days . Proposed
actions will become final unless a written adiudication
hearing request is submitted
wh:hin 30 days of the is suance date ; or the director
revises / withdraws the proposed action. Any person
may submit comments and/ or f1 meeting regarding any
draft action within 30 days
of the date indicated. "Action". as used ebove doll
not include receipt of a verified complaint. If significant
public: int•est exists. 1 pub·
lie meeting mov be held. As
to any ICtion, induding receipt of verified compl8ints,
any person may obtain notice of further octiona. and
additional inform.tion. Un·
'-• otherwise provided ih
·
f
· 1
·
not~ 0 partlcu., aCtiOns,
all communications shill be
sent to:
Hearing Clerk,
OEPA. P .O. lox 1049. C.ol·

umbus.

Public Notice

Public Notice

OH . 43286·0149

Ph. 16141 &amp;44·21 1s. con·
suit ORC Chop. 3746 end
OAC Chaps. 374&amp;~ 47 and
3746· 5 for reauirementt. .
Final issuance of renfJW'el
of Air Permit to operlte
Col. Gu Trans CRP LeN
non Compressor Ste .
RD 1
Portl111d. OH.
EHectlve Date 10/ 06/ 89
AppNcotion No. (S)
D663000024 8003
Fine! isauance of certifica·
tion
Huntington District Corps
of Engineers
Veriout Twpa .. Oh.
EH-Ivo Dote 10104/1,9
Thhl fin. actton ftQt prec•
eded by propoaed octionond
is appealable
E8A . Pertains
to 401 to
Certifie~~tton,
4

five (5) years.

The Poll• for uid Elect'on
will be open at 6 :30 o ' c1ocll
A .M. and remain open until
7,30 o' clocll P.M ,
By order of the Board of
Elections, of Meigs
County. Ohio
Evelyn Clark,
Chairman
Jane M . Frymyer
Direct Of
Data: September 1 2. 1989
(1D) 13. 20. 27. 11 1) 3 4tc

Running this yr. ·(Petittons
received to datal :
Roger Spencer. Hugh Custer. Iorber a Fry, WHilom Rod·
ford. laurie Reed. Jofhy
Folma-, Tim Be•hl (inOJmbontl)
The Meigs County
Agricultural Society by
Mary Gilmore. Secretary
(10) 13. 20. 27 3tc

NEWLlND
·ENTERPRISES
DUMP TRUCK
Sand - Stone-Dirt

(614) 667-3271
7· 18-'89-Hn

NOTICE TO TRUCK
DEALERS:
In accordance with sec·

0

11

TRI·CO. TEI.TE
&amp; PEST CONTROL
SIIICE 1976

.,.

M&lt;mber Notional Pes1
Control Assn,

1

1

13

ROACHES o FLEAS
TERMITES • ANTS
SPIDERS
BEES • WASPS

RACINE'
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
Sept. 17
Starts at ·1:00 P.M.
Factory Chatltd 1.2
Beginning

1----------+---------""""l
!:~;;;~~~=~
8
VI

&amp;UO

GoUge

US IDe

'---------""""l

L &amp; J VIDEO
RECORDING

BOB'S
HEAnNG &amp;
COOLING .

1600 GALLON
WATEI SERVICE
UMESTONE
SPIEAD
DIIIT HAUUD
992-5275

SUN'S UP
TANNING

Rt. 124 ·1tfwatn
Wifktnille and

c..,..
EVElY SUNDAY
11:00 A.M• .
Soltftl

of Homes for
Insurance.

Call 7U-2486
Af
5
ttr p.m.

12 Gouge Shotguns Only
Factory Chol!t
STIICR Y- ENFORCED!
9 -21 · 89-1 mo.

10-2-' 89 -1 mo.

•-nLwn....a

v--

Unit.
Memorial otaff, llev. Norrie

Cou:~~l"No11CE
Tho· -lng,w.,. ......
ved/" p otf by the Ohio

t-

Envllo........

Protection

" - - IOEPAl IMI ·
EffHIIn dllt• of flnol oc11td • .....,.,. dllt• of
pr_.cl octiona ond of
clr.tl octiona •• ttoted. F ~
.... - - - b e oppeolld.
In -Int. w•hin 30 doy1 of
tllelf,wlaaftHI ootrtico, totho
of Re~
- · Rm. 300. 2311 E .
Tqoht II., Calumbua, 011.,

lett••••--l..d

.,.

andR..,. W •. !Nn.
and Mfghbon.
W.-.ld ... toextend our appreciation
for the wonderful kit&lt;J.

'*"· flowarw and food
during the death of our
fovitg brother, Wlid H.
Johnlon.

Roger, Hysell
Garage
Ill. 124, ,_.., Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

-~~· ,,....1..,..

PH. 992:5682
or 992-7121

POMEIOY ·EAGLES
CLUI

ROOFING

• • - IEPAII'

224-f . MAIN ST.
992 -9978

Gutters

THIS. U. 6:45 P.M.
SUfi. 1.1. 1:45 P.M.

· Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
• 9-1 .. ' ... 1110. pd,
VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE
SYIACUS(, OHIO
Moll Foreign and

I

HHPIIII

I 2 H.D. FREE with ci!UJIOn and
1 purch.. of min. H.C. Pack1 ~~~ lim~ I coupon per cus·1 lomer per bin11:0 SOSSIOh.
We PDf ISO.OO P• Game
·I Owtr 110 '"pie 165.00 ,
'I
,., Glime
I ~' 110os-12
.o.L
PLUMING &amp;
· Now Locatlorl:

161 North Sotond
Mi!Wfoporl, Ohio .45760

SALE5 &amp; SERVICE

Dom-.tic V..,id•
A/ C Sentice
All M.;Of II Minor
Repairs
NIASE Certified Machanic

614-992-5344
FIVE POINTS, 01110

LIVING lOOM SUITES
IEDIOOM SUITtS
DINE11£ SETS
" NEW" RUUNERS

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVICE
992·5335 or
915
1

Metals, ·
Plastks,
Stainless Steel.

l'~•
•. .

"

.loi.I\ Cf: 19fiiJ

DIISD ST., SYUCISI

' 992-7611
5-25-'IHn
•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and RE ·
-MOv'AL

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Mott 2 and 4 -cycla
engines
Stock Pans for
Homelita. Weedeater,
Tecumseh, Briggs&amp;:

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

EV-ENINGS

PH. 992-3922

4 11 / 89/ tfn

L. W.
STEWART
TRUCKING

I. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
CHESYn; 01110
•GRAVEL

•ANYTHING
AT ALL

•Gravel
•Limestone
•Fill Dirt

985-44·2 2

742-2421

•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT

9-20-tfn

9 -23-89· 1 mo. pd.

WATER
SERVICE

EAGLE IIDGE

SMALL ENGINE
YAIDMAN MOWRS
ECHO SAWS &amp; Til-IS .
·OIIGOII UH, CUIIIS

1,000 .GALLONS
POOLSt WELLS
ClnEINS

IY AN· SEIYICE t111111
I S•oice 0•

AI .....

VISA · MASTERCHAAGE

Call Anytime

HOURS: Mon .-Fri. g. 7
Sot.9·5
Cloaed Sundoy'

992-2371

949-2969

10/ 10/ 19 tin

BISSELL
BUILDERS

llll/ \9""

-HOUSE FOR SALE

ranch home. 2 y,
baths. full basement. 2
car prqe. 10x60 ft.
deck. 3 acres plus H'i
acre lake . Mini cond .
SI20.000 firm . All new
drapes. tully carpeted .
.Built-in lg . TV, stove &amp;
refrig. See-throueh lireplace.

"At Reasonable Prices"

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949-2160
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALlS

&amp;· 2&amp;-'88· tln

THE
lASKO WEAVE
HANDWOVEN IASICETS
IASICET WEAVING
SUI'PIJES

FREE ESTIMATES
lake the pain aut of'

painting. Let nte &amp;Ia
it far yail.

VUY IEASONAILE
HAVE IEFEIEfiCES

.14-915-4110
.

MOBILE
HOME PARI
• PM11_ -

•ALUMINUM IIDINO
. .LOWN Ill

INSULATION

BISSELL
SIIUtG co~

..........

-

•Moblla Homo
Rant1l1 •
•Lot Rentals

" F - Eatlmot•"

992-7479

ef

1/4/19-tfn

•VINYL

•Mobile HOm.-

lt. 33

RunAND TOWNSHIP

145 acres, barn,
bottom, hill land,
timber. 2 produc-

We

PH. 949·2101
..... Mt·JIM
110 SIIIDAY

'

Bo..,.htar, llon-Frl, 7-4:30. 2
glrlo, lwko. &amp; 3 t/2 yro. old.
bo relllblo &amp; dapondobiO.
Send nemts ot 3 rafertneH to
lobyalner, 8o1 14011 Rt. 1
ChMh~e. OH 45820.

Canning Jars. Quarts and plnte.
81 4-8112'2986.

pupPn to

glvetwaf, &amp; wke. old. 614-JII..

1655.
FOUND: Set of keys at Mcintyre
Park. Clllto detcrlbe. ltt--4467100.

Be on TV mtny Medtd torcomrMrCiall. For CIMino Into.
115·779-7111 oxt. T-513.

Corpot

end VInyl 1nttol1w.
Noodad for locol boitlnou. W~t­
ton raptloo only. Sand 1o ln11•11•r. PO Bol 503, Point
PINIIIII, WV 25550.

Kitten• • -eo me long-hllr.d. 304-

675-37711.

,. ChoiNtrol Scr-lng T nlclan: Experience Preferred,
but will train right peraon. Muat
h•v• Apencf•bl•
transpor·
tollon. -•go 100 mlln dolly.
Send Anum• to Box cia 014 clo
G.auplla Dally Tribune 121 Third
AYo, GolllpllaOH 4513t.

Shy Outdoor Assort.t ldtten., I
wke to 7 months, will Oliver
locllly to good home. 114-441-0317.

&amp;

Found ·

..

l.oet ,

EARN MONEY Roodlng Bookol
$311,000/yr. lnoomo ootentlol.
Ootollo. (I) 1105-U7.aoclo Est. Y·
10tll.

Ladlta watch. SAlver
Bridge Plaza. Engraved on
beck". ..1 Love You Mom" 1187.
814-388-1245.

LOOl ' Whllo temole dog ntmod
lady, n11r St. At. 233, If
found/Hen call 614-446.0112 Of
614-379-2712.

7

Yard Sale

36

&amp; VIcinity
5 llmlly yard 1110: CtlfiiiOr IIIH
Wed· So1. 1·5.
ALL Yord Soloa Mull 8o Pold In
Advonce. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
1he doy beeor. tho ... Ia 10 ......
SUndoy ldlll011 • 2'00 p:m.
ldhlon • a,oo
p.m.Solurdoy.
.......... ,Solo: 2t2 JaPu... o...,_ t4 . ..... cJ..ned. Thie ...tl. Lol• of
Item• Including Bumper Paol
Tobto.

Business

Sale: Clar
batwHn Rl. 7 A
i-S.

MOVING' EVERYTHING MUST
GO BOOKS WHAT NOlS,
CLOTHING, FURNITURE, ETC.
554 Jay Dri¥1, Golllpolla, OH. · .

1NOTICEI
OHIO V4LLEV PUBLISHING CO.
recommend• that
you do

Pt. Pleasant

Moving

mull

Hll

r•pldly

Shot 8Con lnd YidH Store
combined tor Hie. In Pomero'{.
area. 114-H2·383D or 114-H •
2571 .

Professional
Services

McDinlel Custom Butchering, 6
dip I - · 304-182·3224.

/L

McrchJnd~'&lt;c

Real

r..ume to P.O. 771, New Haven,
W¥25215.

I

Estate
Household

31

Goods

Homes tor Sale

room• and ba"'-. On 3 to 4
Wntpolnt Rd., Hartfotd,
w.v. $22,000. 1-114-21Z-1211

Energy llllcltntL 3_ bodroom
wilh ~ yoor old pump on
Fletwoode Ad., belweM I .R.7
end Royal Olk AMOrt. All
oiOotrlc Wllh no ollclrle bi11ovor
$100 In the last two yeara. Dtve
Fox 114-M2·7701 ar 114-112-

-· '

Middleport,

614. . 5-3117

ult at 315 Condor St.
TtH•. Frt and Saturday.

LOWEST PRICES
IIGHEST QUAUTY

A.

FIH lO(Al DEUVfiY
POMROY
MIDDUPOIT'S ONLY
LOCALLY OWWID PIZZA SHOP.

Pizza·SUbs·Salads-Dailv Soecials
992-9922 or 992·1228 ..
9 / 18/ 1

mo. pd.

D.A HOME?
MODUIAI HOliES
SINa 1970
lciiHIII, Cape C.. &amp; 2 Stery
MODEl OPEN DAI MONDAY THIU SATUIDAY
1:00 P.M.-6:00P.M. w Call F• Appointment

FAMILY HO.S INC.
614·992·2471
'· o.... 107
......v.
l.ocl1ffy Owned. Operoted by 1111. It~~~-~
r

15

Oct-

17

14,t0.00a.m .

Wanted to Buy
Fumlture •nd appllanc• tty , ., _ ..
piece or enllra l'touubold. F•lr -.:
prlc•• being paid. Cal 614-;4-463151.
.
Junk ca rt~ ·WHh or wlthowt
molors. Call Larry Lively 814.
388-8303. •

'
,

C.•h Paid. Can 114-t12.JI57 or
., 4-592·241t'
Toblcco boxM, pocket lrinlve•,
pocket
watches,
farm
m•chinery I anvil old clocks,
allwer Coin., 114-171-2110.

UMd furnltur• 1nd houHhold
lppliancee. Phone 114-rQ:
2041.
'

"*"'""

&amp;

.BE·TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS
COLLEGE, 529 Jack110n Plko.
Coli 114-4411-4367. Reg. No. ss11·1055B.

r-tomlly ,ord u1o. Ono doy
only.
14, 1-5. 1011 ,._
deraon St., Mason, W. Ve.
Vard saie. 1 mUe from Rodney
on Bidwell-Rodney Rd. Sat. Oet.

Oullta
Pre 1140 ~IH•. Anr condition.

Schools

Instruction

9

MAIN STREET .
--..- PIZZA

For ~r~o~a ..... call 304-471-1115.

av•llal;lle. AI. 110. Kerr Rd. 5
01ln. 1r&lt;1m Holzer Hoopl111. f14441-H37 or 614-4U.. 111.
Llkll

new

3IR home. IO")t

For s• · Concrete lind Pteltlc

Hltlllc lankS. All slu1. RON

an.r

tto.e w/la,.. lol 121,000. 2 lois
.ach hM gn, watlf, tile.

new,

OYtrythlng ram-lid. whh
...,. br!Cl. Priced tlght1 f14311--1711 .
Nlco homo cioN to town. Largo

Rkl Grandi!, 2br, no p.t1,
auRablo oouoloo, big yard,
along~ building. Refilrances,
dopojlt . ., 4-441-11430.

TraU• nlc. clean unfumt.hed,
ret.renc.. r~l.lirecl, Route OM
out Loculi! Rood on tlgh1, 304175-1071.

We now have 1 nLce •leclion of
lot• n•llabla. Quail Cre•k
Mabile Home Community, lor lnfonutlon. 114·241-8374 after
3:30p.m.
Apartment

Miscellaneous

Mobile Homes
for

Sale

• '

~:-:=-':---::~;-:::-::-=

1965 Concrod, 12x55, 2br, tote

of cablntts &amp; ciOHI epac:e,

awnings, cell after· 5p.m. 114245·1222.
1173 Flaningo, ladS. 2br, 1
bath, on ,.nted lot In Point
PINNnt, Call sfter 7p.m. 114441-7551.

371~443.

18 Wanted to Do

mave, 123,000. 114-3Jt.2720,
evanlnga.
2 bodroom, 1980 Llblnr. t4d2.

In thalr honw.

1 Nl Clayton 24151, 3br, mutl

301-511-20e0.

All electric, turnllhld. SliGO.

Cortltl041
Arc
Tla,
&amp; - 01s. · Wilding:
Also, amarl

z br. houH in GaUIJK'1111. Land

fl6rlcatlng joba. 814-441-MOrl.

EJ.plrilnc•d l•byeJn., 111 ag..
In mr ~1om~. 11.50 an how. 304·
175-3811 inyllme.

care In our home
lor •ldllf'lr or light h•ndicapped.
lt4-311-2376 belwHn 2-lp.m.

2 bodroom 1pt1. lot ron1. Cor·
potld, Nlca lOlling. loundnt
t.clllll.. IYIII•blll. Cill 814-1123711 EOH.
.
2br, apt. lum'ed or vntum'ed,
wlatove
refrlg. 0.~ 1 R.t

a

A-'H. No Ptts."l14-441-t384.
~
J Mdroom ul'lfumllhed lpl
loollod Holzor Clinic of WV.I1444HII5 tar morolnlarinlllon..
3 roorn and bath apt, 304-17~

1173 Llblny mobllo homo. 4023.
121155, Olpancfo, aoad cond,
35 W. apt. 2 br., 1 bolh, orivoto
mutt •II, 304..a7a·1!31.
encloMd
pallo. CioN to
1881 Uberty 14x51, 17000. 114- . grocory eloru I lhopplng • .,..
1111 Floot Wood t4x70, 3br,
$11,500. 814·245-1122.

Ex~nced

I,

before 2:30p.m.

D4 Cat Doz.- wHh winch. Oood
unclltr carriage, fffth overhaul
wllh com~lf• parte m~chln1 .
301-571-21tl.

c.,. 1w - , .
'

llrgo kltchon, wuh-dry
up, edul1t 0111y. No poll.
Tolal ltectrlc. Cell It • Ulll27

32

814-892·7471.
contr11c:t aYaillbl•, S:lD,OOO, 114446-0644 or 441•7102.

In Brooksville, Florida. tnc:ludM
lol. eon 114-812-0011.
Rent or Sail 14170, MW 2 beef.
room, a..th, UHd ont year, ren1
J32S. 304-175-5181.

Ho-.

In bulldl"'l._tcw

614-112-3071 '

~

001.12,1314. Homolntorlor, , _
9-25· '89· 1 mo.
h•me, clothH and ••c. 2 rnliM
OU1 L..dlng Crook Rd. ott Rt. 7.
to.m.-ep.m.
• · ·:Television Liltenin&amp; Devices
Oct
. 13,14,15• • ,_ ..._
....
:ilependable Hearin&amp; Aid Sales &amp; Se"rictl.
Fltch'a.
Long
Bottom,
Ohio.
&lt;!J Hmin&amp; Eval u1tions For AII Ages

~LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
~ licensed Clinical Audiologist

-y. . .---Flrwwood, 4 - -

dty, IIICUd

For ule or flint. 2·3 bedroom
brick horne, Pom.roy. Call tar

d.talls.
loOOp.m.

AKC .-glatarod, Cocluor Spaniol
Femal•1 blonde I whitt, he• Ill
shot•, ,go. 114-24J.I15T.
Drlgonwynd eonory Kanno!.
Persian,
Sl1m1H
•nd
Himalayan ldtt.na. Chow •tud
Mivice. 11of--441-3844 1ftlr 7
p.m.
Pith T1nk, 2413 Jackson A••·
Point PIO-n!, 304.&amp;75-2063, 10
Q11 M1 YP St 4.111 ond 10 gal
complete $43.25.
·
Gtoom end SUpply Shop-Pot
Grooming. All brMda. All .. ylt~~a.
limo Pol Food DNior. Julia
Wtbb. Coli 114-448.0231.
Llbr1dor Retriever puppl...
AKC Roglaterld. lllckl ond
yellOwS. Own
and Am. C.ll
tvenlngii14-M2-6111.

*•

Male ao. Conslrictor, 2 year•
old, biN, exct~llent ho-. pet.
t20G.OO. 304-671-2108.

Shot-pol mole, 1 I'· old. Alklng

.-o.ltol-256-1431.
57

Musical

Flrwwood
lat - . 130. - ·
304~11-1.1.

Hwar,, a••·

Glra~

.oftwere. I pc. AtMrican Drew
bedroom oot. little 1ykn
tort.
chlldo
riding
'""''"'·
lt4-446-8771.

El.c lighted 1lgrl with leltsr•
4ft.•lft. $225. Llko now. Abo..
ground. Gruoo trop 1425. 1150
new ul• price. 8144t1 ~ 1208.

KilL

1IR ..,tum. opl. Aongo ~ ratrtg.
pn&gt;Yidod. W11or,
bego, pold. Oop. &amp; Aof. 14-4414345.

,PAT HILL FOlD

Commodor• 121 computer, C
Kay loonl, dloll drhro, printer,

O..lgn your own 11111onery I

for Renl

'

Chrl•tm•• •eethl, r.el pine.
Home or umelery. Weather
proof vel'tlet bowl. Piece Orclelr
Now. 304-171-.2133.

built on
your lot, $13.195 &amp; up. S. our

44

'•

a...,'"""'

AKC AICMttred caN Terrier
pup, t molo, SUO. 114-317·7700.

cellridlrt. Write to Home Com·
put•r Corp. Rt. 1 Ia• 1135
Patriot, OH 45858. W• will und
a lilt ot dnlgna I coiDfS lo
c-lrom lf4~511-15t1 .

12

radiators. Wa alsa
ripllir Gas fanlcs.

AKC Roglllorod Cockor Spaniol
pupploa. $150.114-24Ht22.

modol. l1~81-7311 .

$27,500. 6l4-441-9780.

We cere lor •lderty and han.
dlcoDDid In ...- homo. 21 YN'"
upitlonco. LPN on con. '-""'
lncomo homo. Colll14·192-1173
lftlf 7:00 p.m. tor raore lnfor·
matlon.
Will do bobythtlng In Golllpo11o
arM. Ev"enlnge &amp; wMkende.
114-4411-1138.

BUy Stroller and Hlrh Chair tor
ule. ltraller. 14 .00; High
Chlr, $21.00. 114-742-2541.

••••~ sew.r,
tratt
ptOVIdod. t215/mo. Coli 11 "'
441-1727.
3111',
kitchen
wl.-OY•,

f•,

::~:!:, :~n::;· -~
-~

Court !lt. lt4-441-412t.

~-

- . - 1at - · 304-175-

1211.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
IUOQET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATE!". 131 Jack_, Pll1o
from S1nnna.' Walk to ahop &amp;
movlel;. Ceiii1+441-2MI. EOH.
Fum. lftlclancy 1 14 5 utiiiiiM
Shere bo1l1. 107 Soc:ond,
oa......u.. 114 411 1111 •fllr
"..--.

~

h1 2 Clrpot UO; rol Clfplll4 I
rard a up; MOtlohond FwmRIWo
114-441-7444.

EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jock·

ton, OH. 1-100-537-11128.

For Sail: OUMn •lze toll bed,
Colloe llblo, 2 ond 1 - , 304- sso vory good cond. ownor hu
no room lor lt.
pipe,
773-6141.
HYIInll MCtlons, n exc. CIHn
County Appllonco Inc. Good cond. Pric• negollonablt. 114ulled appliances. T.'v. 1111. Open 245-i!IQ.
8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon ...Sat . 11+ N.tural 11• Warm Momino
446--11~'- 127 3rd. Aw•. Gal- Huter tor ale. 15,000 ITll.
llpoUs, U'I
.14-812·5121.
For Sale: Brown-slriped eota, Portoblo Llghtld Arrow Sign•
cllalr, rocklrr recliner. 1300. 12tt. (Fre• Oellvery/L.Uers)
S.maung 13" cDior T.V. 1100. PI•Uc Lett•ra (Halt Price) $50.
• t 4-4411-2340'
boa. Explret 112WBI. t-800.533-GOOD USED APPLIANCES 3453. Anytime.
•W.ahlrl, dryera, ,.fri.rltors, A•• 36 Chevy, 2 dr. Stdan, .-.
,.nga. Sluogga ApptiOncoa, aharp. t71100 or 1roclo. 114-888Upper River ACI. hlida Stont 7311 .
c,.ot lloto1. Co11114-44e-7311.
·
Subml1tu11d offo,. 1w 7.5 KW
Good, used8 eor. lor ...._ Uud Lake Pllnt, Kohler, 1 cvl, w1ter
4
92-7107.
•·•'lad
1 Y..r' 11 -.
coolld, dU. tor ICn.uU
.,._.
I
King eiH wavel1n w•terbed, giM overhaul, n run nl ng cond ·
tar ulll, wldr••.., chwera, u:c. Maybe !nspec:ted II G•ner•l
oond. l1,f-388--8351.
Rental, All off.,. muse be eubmlllecl to the trNIW'fi ol the
Mulloh•n Fumtlure
Bouanf Library by Nov 1 1989.
10 ydo. corpot &amp; pod lna11111d, The Llbro'Y ,...,... tho ~gh11o
$491. While aupplllll &amp;alt. 11+ reluHiny ottw.
441-7444.
I
R
, RE
SLWpll•, Army, Den m, tnta1
PICKENS FURNI1U
cloChlng. Our 25th yur, regular
New/Used
lsaue c•mofll~. Small •
HouHh~d furnishing. 112 mi. q : l l t. .. Uncle'' Sam Som•
Jerricho Rd. Pt. Pluunl, WV,
b
,
us..
Rollrod
oo11301-t75-1450.
"'" I,
•
' ~.r.
'
Okl Rt. 2 ' ,._ Era, Jac:Qon
SWAIN
Co. Frl, Sat, &amp; Sun . Noon 1111
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 12 a,oo Pll. 304·273-~
011Yo !II., Go11po11o.- &amp; Uood lonely Color C4mputor 3 .
tvmHurl, hHters, Western 1: Monitor; keyboard, gai'Mt and
Work boo1a.l14-4411-3t51.
Joy otlc1uo. 411 $3IO. 61 4-11112•
7467
lolld wood1• ~ ~· dining ""'"'
•uh•, wlbun.:. Plddld chelrt. Uprlgh1 Retrlaerator tr.uer, an·
t150. 114-4-511.
tlqlll orchlril IPfOyor, pllltlc
Rlk'lbaW vacuum ciNnlr, Nns batT..._ 11~151.
Nko now w/alllchmonto, $111.
114 _ . _11 , 1!4-1112•1412 or Uood tumhuro, "'""II oppUenc11, g .. rang•. Lab doa t
304 .,75-4411 .
yr old, could be registered ftu
VI'R4 FURNI1URE
had Ill o/1011, porliolly trained,
RT. 14!,_4 MILES
304-5711-1411.
CEN, &lt;NARV
VMta 01• cook •on end 1mall
RENT TO OWN. 4 drowor goo crrculollng hootor ( _ ,
d - . chHI • $5 wk .. bunk
old ntld )1114-441-3541
bed complete • t10 wk. Swi¥11 n
"
'
'
n&gt;c:kor • 35 wto. dlnotll Ml, 4
WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
cliolro. $7.50 wk. Rocllnw. II Ron Alliao!!,.t210 Socond Avo,
wk . LOW CASH PRICES
Gol11po11o,"" 614 t41 43341.
10% oft tor CISh. CMh ..nne
IVIIIIble. Open Mon ..S.I. t 1.m. W.rm Morning G• HMter,
to I p.m.1 Sun. t 2 noon to S p.m. •lb1-, 15•000 ITU. Like . _
~~~1!4-4~•411-~&gt;~151:!:,.----~Je:t~4!3:11~B:t~ez:·_ _ _ _ _~

Trtr,• •••

i'f.

-hor

Instruments .
-Remoo
Kl::s;
uc:. ~ llanc:l lnclu h i
Drklld to
114-141-1430 after
~p.m.
.
guHII' · - . . .
lndlvlduol
l!ogiMoro, oaflouo aulloriol.
BrunUrdll Mutko 114-4410117, Jett W.mMy ,l nltructor,
114 4 .. 1077,11mited -lngo.
Saxophone, JOt U.3051 .

WufiMJor Orgon fw ulo. 4300 wfth mutll-rua._, percuellon. 11111o ollor. 114-'t12·71211.

r arm Suppilf'S
Farm Equipment

1010 JD. tractor wlloadlf, ...,_r
nlc•, $3850, 2010 JO tractor,
12110; 3010 JD troctor, 14750,
hoo"' dutr JD 11uo11 11oa !1215.
Own« wlllllonco. 114-2lfi-G522.

":75

11

Help Wanted

5

.
$«50. 3600 Ford Dlooo1 35 .
Owner will 11nenc.. 114.-2811522.
I
lone! ~ • ~- with
ntemat
,.,. uuc:ll'
winch. Good shape. 14500. 11..._
742~627.

JIVIDEN'S FARM EQUIPMENT
"FIH Sill" e14-441-,175. Long
Trllctoro,_loodlroL lockh-, &amp;
n11er1:, Vermeer "ound l•lln,
(2 Oomoo)1 Rokn, Teddon,
Mowera I • Complete Lin• Of
GEHI
Equlp..,.nt.
G&lt;lndor
Mixers, Wqona, Aatary Cutten,
Rotory Tillero, Dloc, Pollio
Plows,

SUbeo.Utr•.

s..ur..

Eonh.._
Woodoplht...,
l'oolougoro, -d~YOrt, Coli
HutchM,
Ostu, ... SquMit
Shoot•, HMd Gates, COJrll
Ponola, - Truck Rockl, loom
Pol.,., OIIC Holt~f!1 Woodbur·
nlng
roor
End
au
Wheel HorM
, _ ...-,
A.~"!'. Troctora. USED
~· - · - ·
EQUIPMENT' Troctoro, Round
laiOro,
Aako-T- Com-.
blnollon, A-,lloworo. Ptowo,
Olaco, Cunlvoloro, Grlndlr
Mlxert, Gr.wtty ltd• W/RuMing
Gur or WIO Running Gelr..
Manu,. !If!&lt;-, Ho...,.r IIIII,
Chlln - · LoWn 11--.
Complet• liM ol Parts a s.rvk:•l

81-.

.'

,,,

.,..,. ' lftytlma.

..

"""'

-·-· ..._

.,._'1011

• ~-:~..

Motoroyclea

~hoy, su "'1•=t"'H"'..,-...
-:--:c:::a=-::uo~=c-,."',.-..,., · •
Winct.h .... full llrlng
·~ ~
1

for •II; Old Mlnni•IIOIIa

wea_;: •·"'..:

mU.., exc. concl. 11 ,000.

tlllbll or lrHa tor tNak. ...
..-. 11W11-2401.
1111 Honda 2sax 4 ••

Motlng Trlldor, 1,......21,,
NN ear aom IZ.IO per bulhll,
~ t.r, 11 .10 ,., ..... 114ollorlp.10.
at•.. far - · t1.10 bolo. 114441-4111 E•oni"'ll' 114-4*7157

315

=~=Pt

~ 4-lc!W II'ICII, Rood.
Ownor
flnonolnt

-

W1l do lllllf olttlng onytlma, Avoiloblo. tiOO · 10 _ ,
1roct, II,DOO · JIM.I75304- 7SI7.
Wllclo-o-.g.et....1:12- tu,ooo,
11222.
'
Rt. 7, ........ CtS lt4o
441-441hlor7p.M.

::!'rl.r - - - -

-•nd,

••J Hilt,

':.!::t .:--~
R::;:.!o•:.,- . .,_
,,.

...;:~IIi·=
~
,._,
:'T:..~=

-

iOM7WI40., . . . .

I

llr. fum.

w unfum.

==-:.~.::::. 2

·.,

c .n

11t ... tltl.

tm a.v,

.. 1:

w~

1MI Ka--w Kll121, Exc., ·.-.:
oond.l2,210 --~~-7-7523n ...

m-

tl..., _, ..........

7717.

t

_.cor.-·

1171 ctvyotor Cordobo. 2 - ·

311 VI, aood
114-ie2~4.

,._

1171 Dlds CutiOoo. I t.ttery, no rwt. Engine ..,.,
hi!uled, IUID., $100. 11 .........

~-·

... 114-

.... ~-­

llogor lentllr-111 114 1111

--

--

compllll lop, , . . wpMislelf., . _1._,
Colll14-211-13tloftor 7:10p.m. • .

104TiR9:llobiiO
-~
Proc1o1on
Morino.
Iori'
dod. I1W5NI71.
• "

76 . Auto Pans &amp;

1710•

1171

--

1714114.

...,.t 1m 11 •· Stan:roft TrUtutt
11~
- 128 HP. , _ Engine. - -

W/.-y!hlng, 350 -or,

. .•

Accessories
C.dl111c

O.VIIIe,

lui

- r . good - n g cor, _, POOR BOY TIRES, 304-171-' ' ~
nice condition. EJ.lr•. cwr 3331 front end •llanment , r- ..
. • , •.•, 4,000 "'"" ..... ' ' -' •• '
t2150. 304-fl'I-IIIO.

1871 Monte Carto, 301 ttnalne,
runs good, body lair, 11,000',....
gotleble, or trade tar truck or
van. 814-37t-24ot.
1110 Bobcll, I cyt., 1aoflo good,
run1 good.&amp;. nldng SISD., 1113
Chry~~llr, ~ Clau. 1810. lt4245-1232.
1110 Thundorblrd, - · eon
Stt-185-3841.

tll2 Iuick Aogolil 2 ell'.. VI,

..,..1,.., ,_ ,.,..,
79

•.,. . .:

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

till K-'Y Alre 35 11. 51h •
•• :
. ..... 111,500.104-1124111. • ....•
Wheel Compor, lir, - · •

Serv1ces

-----81

....,
~-..:.

Home

'(

..

Improvements
14SEIIENT
WATERPROOFING
U......,.atlono1 NloU,.. t... LONII ... ¥lCII ...........
F,_. 11tlmat11. C.ll ooa.ct 1·
11W37o0418, cloy or night. R
a•r•l•••m•nt
Waterpf0081ng. ·
·,

•:

,!·.w.

~

• .

,fq

o ....

dowa. Good condMiorL S2.100.
11t..e41-8701.
•
.,,.,.
1112 Comoro T-Topo, V-1, 4 ,-.,:..-::--c=---=:-:-:---c-" ~
C. W. Dovloon, P l u - &amp; •
........ 301-t75-5301 .
'lrenchWia, tar au
I .,...,.. ...
1H2 Ford Fal~ FUIUrl. 4 -.11i1'441-Gt51.
door Helen, juet llkl new.
H,OOO miiH. All equlpmont.
Au1omo11c thll . tttt5. 114-112·

-•r

6711.

1113 TCHOnldo Oldomobill. 304li2·2706, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m.
1M3 Z28 350 automaUc, loedad.
Will COnlldM' trade. Phone 304571~383.

tN4 Dodal mini van, PSiPB,
opoclol pilco, el : F,.nch
Clly lloblll ~o.mu. ~ 8_1 4-4*134~
-

ROIO'J or coblo toot

-

drt1tint-

Mosl: wella completed NIM daY.
Pump 111M and MrVict, 304-· -

115-3102.

•

'

1114 Sky Howk, 4 cy1., 4 - .
good condlllon, 304-812·2541
.,.., 4 p.m.

0.¥11
Sow-Voc
...
O.O.g" Creok Rd. P1111, ....
plin, pickup. lAd dtUvtry. 114o •.i

1115

So.pt;c Tonk P-'~ng_$90 GoiMit ..,.
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES. , ._
Jack.an , OH 1-I00-537-t521. ', w·~

Comoro LS,
lauv..-ed
r•r

PSI

PI,

· w ndow
outomo11c, V-1, AIIIFII rodiciCl
$5.200. lt4-446-7167.
1115 llonta Corio SS, ucellonl
condftlon. 304-451-tln.

446.0294.

::--..

......

82

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

.

~~

' -.

1111 ..... n 300 Z·X. ktlclecf,
dlghol oloc. piC- n,ooo
oon.. lluat oo111 snoo or - 11 4-441-07tG.
1.. Plymouth Dueter, ACi
t.m/Fm "'-· 44,000 ml1oo

• •
114-e46--3111
.:.;.,;..;.;;;_;;;;;;;._ _ _ _ _.;: , •

tauvnr
aulomatic IIUtO uc.
""""-l3700.1tUII121~.

84

eonor'o PIUII*io.

F!:,~
Golllpotio, Ohio

Elect"'-'
,_ &amp;

Refrigeration

=

..... --~~-­

to 1400 ....

•

~-~·-~·~·,!11~4~3~11~13~M~-;::::-

A STEAL AT t1000.tll7 luzuld · '•
GS450l.lepold,ollnt.dhlon. t,IOO
-Me "'•
. .... _ of - . ....
TransportatiOn
- · lncl- 2 f u l - ••
- - - - - - - - - hllmoll" . - bell, ..,. AFG.
71 Autos for Sale
-lt4-ta-52tll.
-111ch oftw ~~'·'"­
11111 Chevy Novo, 2&lt;1•. honl-lop,
75 Boats &amp; Motors
•xc. cond. 114-441-4081.
for Sale
11111%21----11,000
or bat offer. 304-111-lal alttr
Sp.m.
te.
·.tlh tooiMng
70 hp • ~'
Evtnrudo
-or·gutdo
tm flulcll Ldoln, 2dr, good mator, drln on trjUer, .. kl n· ~ • o·
cond. 114-2411-52111.

tNT o o lkyllawk
. .nlllnl
1NT
Iuick
,
till ChoYy
till , , _ iiW
l:lvtstock
63
14t00. All heve -rol, P.O.. P.l ., llr
oonlltdoltlr1ft 4 ilaora. Call
.,_""' lllndonl - - 1:00-4:00
14-lt2-21G. 41tor
•""
• -,.,. 1:00 114-112-1371. """ ""
t - oott, 304-1714141
okl, · · lloholl.
ATTENT10N H - - . I 1111 ~-·-All
Paint Plua ....... .-r)............
Point PL.., 1411 ion- AM.,
Point ,... .............. John.. .-. HolldQ1nn.Kanr9

---lad--

•

""

CR, 250 tor Nil.

1111 -

Want to wlntw 10.200 con.,
..... hey lnd ••• focllhloo. ...
Morgan'a Farm, Rt. 35, PWny,
wv.104-V3740t8.

c_,

lllnJ • • Area • 1

•

2241- anytlmo.

85

",•

COSMETOLOOIIT.
,lntutlo
..'".. wiN open eoon. a...,..
,_ 1111"'! "'"' - · I I ~

74

~~:.

...... 114-4411-3415.

'I

,
'.'J

MN810.

Ito T-at~L~.-!J. M eng., AC,
PS, PW, Alllf'IM,;I-., new I.....

,

le..,TV~--

a.uor ·-ge.

IN Ford Hlah I Low rango

I dlac, cuHivator, &amp; bueh

; _,..,._

1117 ~ . . . Ford ltondo. Ida'"~
111
E x - ·- ·
condition. li 4-tll IIIII pr 11... •· '-'

auto, cruiH, AMIF ttereo ce•
Htt•, lilt WhMI, pawer wfn.

•'

oommlf'Ciate. NOw hlrlftl •U
-Tfn -ea.
FotT..aa.
-lng Into 111'--

114.13100.

1111 P1ymou1h Chimp, 24,000
mlln,
exc.ll•nt
COndition,
St700. 3114-1175-1231.

••

..
_ ...
,..cg,_•_·- -- -' . . : '
- _.._._.._,.
&lt;

Employmenl Se1 ,·:rP:,

-lorL· . .

- · l-250. Good
lllr bo 01 IN--~ ""-

131 MF dieHI treelor wtplow,
dlec, • HI waor,
I
~. h
-•
, ~.
1pray outllt, 14115, 1
d!IHI whh frMmen loader, nice
14150. owner will tilnnce. 114•.e522.

Ullld 1urnl1u,. by 1he
110o aollll\8.
'
f14-742·245J.
.
.:
W1n1 to buy' 1 owner Slatkin
Wlgon. Clll Steve, 114-112·2121 .,. •·

on11,. llouHIIold

Uu~h

..1~

· "&gt;

FOJ!Iy -

tomlzod, of oandtllon. 11+7Q.2271.

1171 Ford LTD, •lr, crut., pd
body, t1,t00 .. - r. 30411111-3171.

&amp; Livestock

61

lonlo round bol•

NCJ.. It...-•1012.

a-.

Ooo1f
' ;
"'·. 1n i
t•1 PlymoUh \'orlgtr eu.o. -~

Har

Coolville IIIII, Inc. l•obl1111. Pwinl ettow.. custom
grinding end mixing, ~~~n~-.
dog .. (114)117·3350
.
Ground oholl oorn 11.00 por
100, I :OO.t2:00 lion dltu Sol.
Fo1111, Rt . 31 Pliny, WV
304-137-2011.

wllltrN. I75--7111.

..

:-;·
.. .

vans &amp;4 WD'a

1171 Ford

400 t.lee ol lht owtlng Or·
chard Grua
tor ..... 11.00

AKC Rog'ld Buoott PwOIIIoa,
end AKC reg'lld Ponwanlain1,
10 wb. okl. 1"1 DD.I14-4u.ol74.

OekOII Farm Home

Comjoll1o1y

etol-256-1143.

Automollc :rlnklor opt-,
,_..
- · In 301-343-1111
Qolllpolla "".
...... lnfonnotlon.

lnsld• · •nd aut .
132,500. Own11r tlnancH, L110n
ar11. 304·586--2412 or 581-4374.

bolh.

3 Albino Ferret .. $50, c•ge 6 111.

73

Hay&amp; Grain

3 yoot old Rucbr c:-t dog •

3 bedroom horne llvlngruom,

kHchon,

64

por bolO. Conloct IWioy E. Rico
114-567-3311.

Chi¥)' 1 IDI'I dual ,..r end; 1111
cob; Cho¥y 4 tpold
trvck trans., pUe ol usad
parwling end trim; 2 uud wood
gar1ge doot'll wUh track.
304-388-8184 •fter I p.m.

Well established buuty ulan,
very rHaonably priced. 114388·1013 after 5p.m.

Tobl,cco Work.,. Wanted, Nor·
man Yowng, luttuo. WY, 304- tol. 1 car garage, tuu bulmliit.
1137~530 .

&lt;

out

992-2196

wood
Antlqw • ..._ 2 0011 •ov-. Upriahl
Ftlgldolro F,....,, Llnooln VIoldol A.C. 114-012.-7.

end

growing nry proflt1bte, small
~-~.,juio•· A~ulremenl1 wlllln.-.- to work, b.aalc carpent~ -'111•, ~~mall lnvlltnMint,
no Sunday Calle plea•. 114.
371-2101

23

mlloogo, ta71. 114~7071.

15,000 STU Warm llomlng
Hellier. Uted 1 winter onr. For
.mor. intormatlon, Dill ltt-112·
2173.

l•w•llgated tho olloring.

Pomeroy,

&amp;

~- so PrDipi~DI'- 4 8pd.; ......

llodgo

Rentals

buslnea whh ,_ople you know,
and NOT to •nd mon•v
through the mall until you have

.remodeled

• • •nd retr.nc. In first •{·
1or1 wlrto 1o lox P-25, cu. ol
Potnt Planent Regilt•, 20G
Main St, Pt. Pl., WV 25550.

Sat Oet 14th onlr, At. 7N. Ti.lm
011 554, 3 b1oc1uo on lal1. loby .
clothH, homo ln1orior, " ' prk:oo.

also add boil and rod

I

Land Wanted: 1DO IC,.. I up,
Wooded, strNmS, VIIWI, 1. . .
3214131.

Opportunity

EARN -EY typing II home.
S30,CIOO/Iftlr lnoomo polontlol.
Ootolla, 1-t05-11'7- Est. •·
10111.
EARN -EY typing 11 homo.
$30,000/yur I~ potenll•l.
Ootolla, (1)1105-S117.aoclo Ell. B·
4112.
Exp.riencecl nurH or medical
Mldld tor physlc•n••
offlctl. X•ar experfenw ben•ft-

Point ,..._. 8uelne11, ...
tabliMrNint nMCIII pert tm.
jonllortot """'· o-lmotely
10.12 eu. ~,.. _.., ••~nina
houri, • 135. _ , _ Soni
,..ume to lox s-a, care Point
PINunt Aagilt•, ZOO IIU. St.,
~PI- WV 21150,
AegW• N..-.e tar lang twm
..,. _ , 1ul or pa~ """'·
CompotiiiYo 11lllry end blnefR
pooluogo.
P-Ill
¥111oy
His.p"el, JDW71-4S4G. &amp;OE/AA
someone to ,..., over In home
of •lderty tidy no work or care
lnvolncf, p1oM0 lllota loklng

Y•rd

Middleport

•hi,.

collect.

F-.. -..,

radiators and
heater cores. We ran

Real Estate

clal but nol n-o•aary. Send

SEtWICE

can r~ and rt·

Fum.. htd dlclency, 111 utllltln
ba1h, Ito/mo., 111
8econdAve.I1....,.*"3MI·

Wanted

21

Furnished
Rooms ·

_.._..nt

Gallipolis

con

742-2143

PAINTING

(LASSES OFFEMD
New Fo11/Wint•

•

HIGLEY FARM

INTERIOR-EXTERIOR

992-6155

tacltltr great 111ft • rMkltnt•.
Apply CoraHoYtn, ~1. t Bo1 321,
Polnf Ptoount, WV 25550, 304175-3005.

Calico kiHen to good home. 114~
892·7382 after ·5p.m.

Lost

Fmancial

ulary I blnetht. Modem-clean

367-Gtl&amp; or 614·3157•7750. '

45
lteld.

Int-.

FOI SALE

LINDA'S

36415 lecksprl... Ill.
. ,_.,, 011.

teciUtr experience perflfrtd n

1 wtc. old pupplu, bloek &amp;
whit•; medium size doge, 11..._

Saturd.ly, 10:30·1 Chi,. eablnel
StiO.OO rog. S310.GO~Iko ,_,
D.,.k S1D; lo,_ S2.GO; poporbock books 1Do. Hamo
cloth..,' 2nd laiW ' MI .. CrHII
ROitd an right,· Rt. 31 Hender·
304-17&amp;-6077

H2-89

Admlnion Coordlnetor-Socl•l
Worker for ~ng ttrm Clre

riMd1 good home. 61 ....... ,
1411.
'

6

1---------...,.---------_,
match,"

w.... :W.-882·2645.

3vr. old reglstertd llmlle
Cocker Spaniel, great wlldde.

addorable

"Our kitehen chairs · don't

AVON • 411 Iran, Coli

&amp; VIcinity

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry H&amp;ts, Pomeroy, Ohio

Cartlfied licensed Shop

Giveaway

992-2571

! ~~i~~~~M~sMC« 1213

CAU 992-6756
" DOC" VAUGHN

4

3 BR

CUSTOM lUll
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Bv•ll'als

Announcements

Cute

BILL SLACK
992-2269

Stratton.

ing gas wells.
$45,000

The

a lATHS

•VINYL SIDIN06 AOOANO
-r.£TAL BUILDINGS
•NEW HOMES

Localell at Valley lumber
In llilolloport, Oh.

•

Jet. 5.1. 7 &amp; 143
On

•EXTENSIVE RIMOOELINO

DAVE'S
SMALL I!NGINE
REPAIR

,_,. ihell M recen~, rllllld
.., . __ For "" llf&gt;'
pt""'tlon ond turthor lntarmadon, contact ttw Superlnten-donl Buclloyo Hl110 eo- eon,.,, Rio Grandi, OH 45174, T...,
61 245 334
·
phoM "' ..
ANYOHE CAN APPLYl GUllran·
lood VIHIIIC, US chorao. bon
. with bed crodh. No ono raluood.
Co112t3&gt;125-81011oxt. U2508.
AVON I All Arau I Shl~oy
Spooro, :W.-675-1428.

COIIMERCIAL

•CUSTOM
KITCHEI'IS

742-2455
. Salem St.&amp;.~!l.~':'!.

Parts

At

CONTRACT GIS

llltarM

,_,. of recent Mlal.ci wortc
o•poriorco; or 1i1 Hold 1 hlah
ochool dlplomo or the ..,r•.
otont end o¥1- II llwl
lftlrl ot • .,..,..nco In lhe
fM~f*IG IJU, Of Which thr•

992-5114

RESIDENTIAL

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

. . . -.t-...oc._.• ar ttchnlclrl

7
9 a.m .- 7 p.m.

. GENERAL

.

-~~·-'"
dogreo
end
OYidonco
lllhty • hounl
of techrilcal c:ouree work rallied
to 1M ._ohlng ,,.. 1ncl1t !Mat
two , ..,. af NMnt, rtlettd
..por~onco; or (2) Hold an

HOURS
Days A Week

R'fJ!P, GIEG I. IOUSH

Located Behindr
Tractor Dealership

·-lonol
In tho !of.
:
;:,
_- _ ,
Aor1cU1110'el
lhchonlco, ~r Condhlonlclgl!:1oating, 4ulo lody,
Building Tradoo; F-ry, Woldlna. To llualifr' M I IDilutl
t..o-...., yau IIIUit mete the totlowing qwo111ico11ont: (tl Hold 1

We Buy AI

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

t•ct.or..,. noldld

who mar be owtlllect to tMCh

POMEIOY ,. OHIO

9-28-' 81· 1 mo. d.

USED FURNITURE

SUbeiMuto

Non Ferrous

%: (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104

4-25-lfn
(

L&amp;L TilES

I

UlliiOW

BINGO

4

Tothe~C.e

SALE STAllS
SEPT. 29, 1989

(

Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING

We Service All
Makes - Gas or
Electric . Also Parts
for All Makes.

4-li-16-tlft-

u...

Ctll fer Fill Sp1e1111

·RACCOON V~LLEY
SPORTSMEN'S CLUB

Weddings.
Birthdays.
Reunions, Interiors

RUUD

ALLEN'S
HAULING

GUN SHOOT

Will Video Tape

::":0~~::~

TEMPSTAR

13" through 205 -15"
$30.00 o Poir .
Mounted and lalan&lt;td
unEE"

·21-'19-lln

ti9n .307. 86 of the Ohio Re·
vised Code, aeoled bidt w~1
be received by the Board of
Meigs County Commission·
ars. Court Hou18, Pomeroy,
Ohio 46769, untH 12 noon.

MeiOI County Agriculture
"I
w.. be
held Mond1y. November 6.
1989. in the Secretary's Of- Oct. 25. The bids will then
fico at the Fair Groomdlot ~.af;'8'9d.~td1r!':~ =~~;
Rocksprings, Ohio from 5·9
p.m.
th~ c~rw• 9t~o SINGLE
Qualificttiont for diroC· AXLE DUMP TRUCKS
tors are thalt they must be a
qualified voter of Meigs
Bid spec:ificattons may be
County and must have a picked. up It the ·Meigs
membership ticket in said County EnginMf's Office or
10clety for 1989.
the Meigs COUnty Comm~·
candidal•' petitions must aioners Office.
·
be filed with tho Secr•ory no
Tho Meigs County Comlol•thon6p.m . Monct.)I.Oc- mlooioti. . mey occop1 tho
t - 30. 1989. Only,.....,. loweot bid. oraelect the beat
18y. . . ofogoll1dholdngo bid lor tho intonded ,.Urmemborlhip ticflot ot the poae. ond ,..,.e tho right
c1oae of tho 1988 Fair or It to accept or reject any or ell
leMt fifteen 115} cal.,dar bid&amp; and / or any part therdoyt before the dote of oleo· eof.
tion. •e qualifi!ed to vote. p 8 . Mary Hobltetter. Clerk
titionl can be obtained 1Tom eoord of Meiga County
tile Fair Seer...,.
C ~:'.il ""'
. ~~

soaety
·
o·•rectors

servJces
•

PubliC N atice

A. Nowland

Gront

Public Notice

NOTICE Of ELECTION ON
e
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
Gront.
Partoina
to
Hunting·
, THE TEN MILL
ton Diltrict Corps of Engi UMITATION
NOTICE lo lwrolry given neer• Public Notice No.
th .. in pur..nce of e Re- (H)89-5&amp;.
Fino! iltuance of Emer·
-tlon of the a-d of
T " ' - of tho Tawnohlp of ::,~cv Hozorclout Wute PerLlltort. Lotan, Ohio. pMaed
Stoto of Ohio. Dept. of r
on tllo 8th doy of Augult.
Commerca.
50 DIFFERENT WOOD
1981, thero wll be aubmit· Fire Marshall Div. of S1ote
ted to 1 vote of the people of
Stote Route 143
&amp; COAL STOVES.
uid Utart Township at 1
Columbia Townahip, Oh.
INSERTS &amp; FURNACES
GENERAL ELECTION to be
hold In tho ceunty of Me;aa. D.;'l{'icotion No.(t) 04-53Olllo. ot tho r-lor p10M of
Thlo finllj ectlon not prec·
.. c..,_..,, ... Iff 143·
voting therein. an T-doy. odedbyprOI'OMdoctionand
691-6111
tho - h doy of - m- is l!ppelleble to EBR . May
bor. 1 - . tho qu.,ion of trHt 1Wo 121 caeo of dy·
lowylng u ... In ..... ofthit n'amite which have detetwt mill limitMiOn. far the
·riorated while in &amp;tor-ae.
bon_. of l.etMt Townthip
State of Ohio. Dept. of
for tilt of fire pro- Commerce, ON. of State
toctlllft.
•
Fire Marshall
Sekl tu Ming: 2 1 renewal
Township Road 3'
of M •iltintl tax of 1.0 mille
Columbia Twp .• Oh.
to run for five (61 .,... ot o
Applicotion No. Is) 04· 53·
r.te not eaceeding 1.0 mill1 084E
for MCh one clollor
of
This final action not precvelulltion. which emoums to edecl by proposed action and
fivo _ , , 110. 1D) for - h il oppNioble lo EIR . May
SYIACUSE
one hundred
clollort of trnt one (1} case of dynam992-2621 or
volulltion. lor five (6) yeoro. ite deteriorated during stor·
992-.944
Thio Polio for lllid Election age.
9·22-1 mo.
will be..,., It 1:30 o'clocll i10) 1311c
A.M., Md remain open until
7 :30 o'ctocll P.M .
Public Notice
By ordor of the Boord of
Election&amp;. ol Mli91
'·
County, Ohio NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
Ew!&gt;tn Clork. . TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
.
Chairman
LIMITATION
Jane M . Frvmyer
NOTICE ia hereby given
· '
Dlroc:tnr
Doto: Boptom'- 12. 1889 that in pursuance of a Re·
solution of the Board of
110)13. 20. rT. 1111 3 4tc
Trustees of the Township of
S.lem.
Pomeroy, Ohio,
Notice
pMaed on tho 28th doy of
July. 1989. there wMI be
1ubmrtted to a vote of the
ELECTION
people of uid Sllem 1ownLEGAL NOTICE
Tile Ol1lo Soil lftd Wlllor ahip ot 1 GENERAL ELEC·
Com,.tlon TION to be held in 1ho
Conoorvlltlon
will CILIH . . election of Su· county of Meigs, Ohio, at
,.,.._ at tho Moigo Soii the regul• piKe of voting
~17 - lfn
.,d Wit.- Conatn"lltion Oil· therein, on Tu•dev. the ••
vent
h
day
of
Novem,ber.
triclto lie hold in occordonce
wkh Chlllt• 1414 of tho 1989, the qu•tion of levyOhio
Revioed Code Ill ing •tu, in exc•• of the ten
Soulhlm High School on No- mill limitation, for the bene_,bor 14. 1989. 7 :21 p. fit of Satem Township for
the purpose of fire protee·
m.
2 1/t IIIIas Out Maw
Nominees
are David t ion.
Seid tax being:2 an lcldi·
OkJeckn• 'and David King.
ld. in
Nominlrlions will be ac· tional tax of Y2 mill to run for
lutlatNI, Oh.
cept_. from the floor at the five (6) years .. 1 retenotu·
time of election. One super- ceeding 'h milia for each one
SUSAN COllMAN
vitO&lt; lo to be elected. You dollar of Yaluation, which
742-2771
five cents
vote et the annual amounta to
mMtlnt or on en ablentee (10.06) for each ·one hun·
belltrt which moy be secured dred dollort of voluttlon. for
from the conaentation dil;
1st visit FlEE
trlctoffico.
·
-PoJiiblv _ , ., ·
(101 13, 2f 2tc
1 C1rd of Ttwnkl
1-21-,1-t ... d.

m.,

DOZER
SITEWORK ~ ROADS
CLEARING

Public N atice

PUBLIC NOTICE
FAIR BOARD ELECTION
The anual election of the

It's Time Now!
Hove That Furnace
Chtcktd.

USED TIRE
SALE

·

G•lli• County
441 · GIII ipoltt
367 Ch .. ~i• &lt;'!'

H • PJ'IY A ds
V "' ~ S" IP.e&lt;

East . . .in

POMEIOY, OH.

.fullull'i n /! I el &lt;'iJit Ill If' r•.n ·ltnn I!''L.

"7 point lin e type Onty vMd
"1.-inet Is nol t&amp;tpont ibl e to r
•h er f 1tst dl!¥ IC~u~·c~
lot M'Uttt fiu1 diV •d wns in p ap erl Call tw&gt;forl'! 2 00 P m
41• •ft• public-' ion 10 mahe CO !I~tctir:tn
"Ads ltHit m ull b1 p•i d in 11dvan ce l lf'
C11Jd a f Tt'I W~k~
In ll!b~rno • iton•

Wordl

. 20
.30
.42
$9 .00
.60
" 3 DO
s 1.30 d•v
.05 ' d•r
hrnken trf) d :.vswill bP. etl araed
..

t4.00

Ucr~sifi••d f'"ll' '·' ' ''"'''r

G i"'I IWI¥' a nd Fnu rwt 111rt" u tut"" Hi v.t~rtl " woll b,.

run

ov,t 15

.A l i i!!

•• .. par••• •d•

·-~::~ s 50 disc:ounl fo • ad! p~~id tn • d~•ntt'
"Pri~

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE

RA

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

t

Business Services

·C-lassified
••

October 13, 1

Ohio

General

Heuang

••
.,J

.·•,,•

�Dlg1 12-The Oily S1
I

ltil••

Court news
An entry 'has been flied In
Melp County Common Pleas
Court orderlllg the dlstrlbu Uon of
proceeds In a forfeiture action by
Central Trust Company of Sou·
theutern Ohio against Scipio
Energy Associates Inc . • et al.
A judgment of $14,203.23 bas
been awarded to Farme•s Bank
and Savings Company In a
forfeiture against Yvonne Scally.
et al, with Judgments also ordered to other parties with an
interest In the foreclosure, In·
eluding Central Trust Company
of Southeastern Ohio, Bank One,
Standard Food Service Inc. and
Melp County Treasurer George
Collins.
Tile Meigs Common Pleas
Court has received notice of
forfeiture of property proceed·
IJIIIS which are pending In U.S. .
Dis trlct Court, Southern Dis ttlct ·
of Ohio, against Fred Priddy .
The court has also received
notice of the filing of an appeal In
the Meigs County Court of
Appeals, Fourth Appelate Dis- .
trlet, by Ronald Davis, who was
receJJtly found guilty by Jury of
gross sexual Imposition.
In another common pleas ac·
tlon, a restraining order has been
filed against the defendant In an
action by Trudy A. Swartz
against Jerry D. Swariz.

Toendmam•
James B. Smith, Belpre, and
Becky Jo Smith, Belpre, have
flied In Melp County Common
Pleas Court for a dissolution of
their marriage.

'

Local news

i

briefs~....,

Bob Evans
Farms Fall
Festival

EMS has nine Thursday caDs
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
answered nine callS lor assistance on Th.ursday.
At 2: 32 a.m., Rutland was called to Meigs Mine No. 31 for
Tommy Pennington to Holzer Medical Center.
Pomeroy at 5:08a.m. went to State Route 143 for Juanita
·
Norman who was also taken to Hol2er .Medical Center.
Middleport at 8: 21 a.m. transported Debbie Seebert from
Route 7 to Holzer Medical Center.
At 9: 18 a .m .. Syracuse was called to Fifth St . for Mae Cleland
to Holzer Medical Center.
Middleport at 9:46a.m. went to First St. lor Hilda Weber who
was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
·
Pomeroy at 11:35 a.m. was called to Peacock Ave. to treat
Trey Robson.
Racine at 12 noon Thursday was called to Portland Road for
James Meadows who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Middleport at 12:53 p.m. went to Page St. for Freda Casto to
Veterans Memorial Hospital and at 5:53p.m. toSouthFrontSt .
for Robbie Clonch to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Recycling...

schools, garden clubs and oth·
ers) to join them for October
Recycle Month. "It's· an excel·
lent opportunity to raise funds for
your group," reminds Wiggins.
A recycling drive Is being
conducted for all the elementary
schoolS of the ·county and a poster
contest Is underway for sixth
graders, he reports.
"All of us add to the solid waste
disposal problem and each of us
can contribute to the solution...
Wtulns says.
Anyone who wants to join
Wiggins and other members of
the Utter control program In the
October drive, or for more
Information, call Utter control
office at 992-6360. or stop by the
office at the Intersection of Union

Chapel with the Rev. V lctor
Roush officiating. Burial will be
In Gravel Hill Cemetery In
Cheshire.
Friends may call on Saturday
2·4 p.m. and 6·8 p.m. at the
Rawllng-Coats-Fisher Funeral
Home. and one hour prior to the
service at the church.

Special
Incentives

Eastern Athletic Boosters will
be sponsoring a tour-man Best
Ball Golf Scramble on Sunday,
starting at 12:30 p.m., at River·
side Golf Course In Mason. The
entry lee Is $20 which Includes
cart and green fees. Prizes will
be given. For more Information.
call Bill Hannan at 98!&gt;-4244 or
Johnny Evans at 843-5440.

Just For ·our

Grand Opening ~

u:o$7Cash50~
•
·
0

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Thursday admissions - Scott
A. Williams, Rutland; Hilda
Weber, Middleport; Freda M.
Casto. Middleport; James D.
Meadows, Portland.
Thursday discharges -James
Denney, Elizabeth Horak. Ber·
nice Fry.

• 0

Clinton Faulk
Clinton I. Faulk, 54, Flatwoods
Road, Pomeroy, died Thursday
at University Hospital In Colum·
bus following an extended
· Illness.
Born In Pomeroy, Mr. Faulk
was adopted and raised by his
griU!dparents, the late Walter
and Cynthia Edna Faulk. He wtff
a mechanic at the Southern Ohio
Coal Company Mine No.2, and he
attended the Calvary Pilgrim
Chapel.
· He Is survived by his wife.
Wallda Bias Faulk, Pomeroy; a
'son and daughter-In-law, Clln·
ton Randall and Brenda Faulk,
· Rutland; two daughters, Trina
Darlene Faulk and Cynthia Lynn
Faulk, Pomeroy; a son and
special friend, Timothy Dale
Faulk and Christie Blackston,
Pomeroy; five grandchildren,
four brothers, Robert, Columbus; and Charles. Glendon, and
Arvendale. all of Pomeroy; four
sisters. Ruth McKinney, Colum·
bus; Shirley Friend, Irene Cline,
and Garnett Golden, all of
Pomeroy.
In addition to his grandparents
he wu preceded In death by a
brother. Walter.
Services will be Sunday at 2
p.m. at- the Calvary Pilgrim

Seroices ...
Condnlll!d fmD page 1
In cue of a fire and how this can
uve llvell. Explain to young
children tllat they cannot bide
from lllllolle or fire that they
mull get out Immediately.
-Practice home fire ufety.
Make your home ufe from fire
bliZU'da- If you bave QllfltloDI
about this call your local fire
~~epartment.

I

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THIS SUNDAY'S MENU INCLUDES
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Roast Beef
Baked Pork Chop
Oven Baked Chicken
Mashed Potatoes and Gravy
Baked Potato with Sour Cream
Cauliflower with Cheese Sauce
Broccoli Normandy

•

Truckloads Of
New Models
Arriving Dailyl
Set All Tile Models

See 1h 1990 616
Touring Sedtm

MARIETTA - Are you ready
for winter's snow and ice? The
Ohio Deparlment of Trarisporta·
lion Is taking steps to make sure
the equipment used by ODOT Is
ready to clear state highways of
winter's nasty debris' ·
Don Johnson, maintenance en·
glneey for ODOT' s District 10.
h.:s · announced -that the Inspection of winter equlptnent will
take place Oct. 24-27. District
10 Includes Athens, Gallia, Hock·
lng, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan,
Noble, VInton and Washington
Counties.
the Inspections to assure that
Several areas are covered In

ODOT dump trucks and plows ·
are r!'ady for operation before
the first snow fall. Personnel who
inspect the equipment Include
safe.ty, equipment-mechanics,
maintenance and radio communIcations specialists.
Johnson said that In 1988-89,
ODOT spent $10 million stat!'·
wide for material used during the
snow and Ice season. District 10
spent $355,000 of the $10 million
for·10,790 tons of material used.
OOOT Is trying to conserve salt
use as Its sole snow and ice
material by using a 50-50 ratio of
salt with cinders. Johnson said
that not ·only dol's the 5050 ratio

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Enjoy the Delicious Menu Selection.
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Holzer Medical Center's Newly
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Floor at the Hospital.
Try It Once and You'll Make it a Sunday
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DENNIS J, BAISDEN
against Baisden.
.Each of the aggravated
mbberv charges and the aggra·
(See BAISDEN, page Ml

return.
She has been keeping up with ·
her classes, doing homework In
between physical therapy
sessions.
The therapy Is extensive. but
Christina knowsshehastodoltor be permanently scarred.
She received skin grafts at the
Burn Institute and wears a
pressure suit , to keep the areas
free from scars.
With the exception of the
pressure suit, back and neck
braces. she looks and acts like a
. typical teenager - laughing,
talking about hair styles and
visiting with friends on the
phone.
And, according to her mother
Connie. she's coping pretty well,
and can do much what she did
before. There are some llmltatlons, but nothing Christina's not
conquering, she said.
One of the llmt(!ltlons Is riding

1

CHRISTINA JAGERS
doesn't ·. look forward to
homework ·associated with

COPING,

~=..:.::!..,

lower salt's damage to road
surfaces. but also lowers the cost
of snow and Ice material, sin~
the cost of salt has risen 33
percent In the last three years.
"Distt'lct 10 Is doing Its best to
keep the cost of snow and Ice
operations to a minimum," John·
son said. "WI' were the bestln the
state In sticking to the 50-50 ratio
of materlal;·ud our costs have
always been one of the lowest In
the state. Considering that we
spent $600,000 for material In a
two-week period during the bllz·
zards of 1977·78, $355,000 for an
entire year Is something we'd
!Ike 10 see more,". Johnson
r!'pll!'d.

.'

.

TRADITIONAL CRAFTS- Leatllerworldng Is
d
f'
dl
one of many trad!Uonal arts an era •• on sp1ay
at the Bob Evans Farms FesUval being held this
weekend In Rio Grande. Here, a fesdval-goer

lnspeda an .Item made by Douglas Rowe Friday '
afternoon at the lhrefHI•v event. 'lbe festival
...,
continues throu1h 5 p.m. today. See addldonal
photos, page 81. (Times-SenUnel photo by Lee
Ann
Welch)
.

LOCAL ACl'IVJSTS - Protedln1 tile "m..t belpleu of' tile
belpleso," the uabom child, local I'Midenll took to tile ltreetoln
WMblap011, D.C., participating In a pro-life march earlier tlllo
year. Next, they wilt march oaColwnbuiSaturdv,Od.IS,Jollllng
otller Rl~·t&amp;-IJfen from Oblo. (Photo colll1ely Barrie&amp; Davllllli)

•

from home. She can talk to others
about the Issue In public, and
pray they may find the same
answers about wh!'n life begins
for a child at home and church.
Mrs . Davison, and a core group
numbering only a handful, organIze the events and attend the
meetings, but several hundred
stand. up to be counted when
pro-life advertising appears' and
when believers are needed to
march on the , nation's capitol,
and In Columbus later this
month.
''We're trying to pr9-t~ct someone who can't protect themselves," she said. ''The unborn
are the most helpless of the
helpless."
Tile group speaks to anyone
wishing to hear their message,
and has literature geared toward
any age or sex, and even to the
woman who has bad an abortion.
There are also models of
human development from conception to birth to be utilized In
conjunction with speaking
engagements.
Beslclea prohibition of abor·
tlons, the group's goals Include
helping women make an In·

By LEE ANN WELCH
Tlm...Sendnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - They are
teenagers, young mothers, single
men and grandmothers with one
common goal. They take a stand
for what they believe In, and
aren't afraid to speak out In
public.
This d'lverse group of people
are all members of the Gallla
County Right to Life.
Gallla County Right to Life
meets .monthly, and has an
unlikely leader In a 70-year-old
grandmother of 48.
liarriet Davison of Gl!lllpolls
doesn't look like a radical,
speaks softly and with great
conviction In what she sees as her
cause on this earth - the
preservation of life.
Mrs. Davison said the Issue of
abortion will affect her grand·
children and the rest or their
generation, so sbe feels a moral
obligation to ao what she can.
What she can do 18 visit schools
and other organizations to present the pro-life message ..Shecan
march on her legislators In
public and write letters to them

non - profit and nonformed choice, Mrs. Davison
denominational. promoting resaid.
Abortion, according to Websspect for human life at any stage
ter's New International Diction· . of development.
Right to Life groups spranp; up
ary Is an act of giving premature
nation-wide
following the 1973
birth, the expulsion of the human
fetus prematurely, particularly
decision In Roev . Wad!', allof'ing
at any time before It Is viable or abortion on demand for the full
nine months of pregnancy .
capable of sustaining life; mis·
carriage. This is where the
Th!'ir purposes have been to
ques lion "When does life begin"
inform the public on the Issue of
abortion and lobby legislatures
enters the picture.
Mrs. Davison, the mother of 12 to change the laws concerning
herself, believes there Is an abortion.
alternative to abortion In an
The Webster Human Reprounwolltted pregnancy - adop- ductive Services case decision
tion. She, and the others realize earlier this year placed stiffer
there are a number of couples In restrictions on abortions. While It
the world who ar!' childless and did not overturn Roe vs. Wade,
willing to adopt a child, tb care M~s. Davison said It modified
for It all the days of their lives.
and narrowed that decision,
According to Mrs. Davison. 1\1
leaving the states to restrict
million babies are aborted each abortions Individually .
year, which Is approximately
She, and others, believe this
4,000 a day In this nation. To her, was a small victory for the
and other membersoftbe pro-life pro-life mov~ment In this nation.
movement. life begins at concep·
And Mrs. Davison. and a small
tion, not when the child Is finally group of Gallla Countlans vow to
born.
continue their quest to overturn
Gallla County Right to Life was Roe vs. Wade by doing whatever
founded In February 1981, with a they can - speaktna, marching
group of a bout 50 people. It • Is and lobbying legislators.

205 NORTH COLUMBUS ROAD- ATHENS, OHIO

PHO~E

•

Protecting the/unborn is.pro-lifers' work

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By LEE ANN WELCH
Tlmes-Sendnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - After spend·
lng four weeks In Shriners Bum
Institute In Cincinnati, Christina
Jagers has re1urned home to
Gallla County. She Is optimistic
abOut' the futu~. but knows she
has a long road to recovery.
The 13-year-old was critically
burned Sept. 16; when she was
allegedly Ignited' by two male
schoolmates at Jackson Estates.
The boys - both juveniles have been charged with two
felonies In the Incident, and have
been remanded to the custody of
their parents. The parents have
found hOusing outside of Jackson
Estates, pending the adjudlcatlon of the case.
Hopefully, in a few weeks,
Christina will be able to return to
Gallla Academy High School.
"I can't wall to see· my
friends," she said at her home
late last week. but added she

·ODOT preparing ·for winter

MIATA

In The

Audrey •.Foster, Milton, W.Va.,
whose throat-slashed bodies
were found the next day In the
Wears' residence at 415 Fourth
Ave., Kanauga.
The grand jury Jnittcted
Baisden Thursday on threecounts of aggravated murder;
two -counts of. aggravated
robbery; and one-count of aggravated burglary.
.
Each of the aggravated
murder charges carries the
death penalty upon conviction.
The State has indicated It Is
seeking the death penalty

13 S.C.ions. 90 Pofioo
A Muttimtdio Inc. Now-•

Coping with recovery,
teen, mOm ·taking
the road little by little

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
assistance can be contracted
Many of the Meigs Coui!IY
Ttmes-SenUnel Slalf
while still allowing an Individual patients who .went to nursing
MIDDLEPORT - A $1.4 mil·
or a couple to continue tndepend· homes out of the county are now
lion congregate housing project
ell't living.
returning, he said. and many
adjacent to Overbrook Center on
out-of-county patients are being
The Farmers Home Admtnts· referred In by hospitals In other
Page Street In Middleport could
!ration is currently reviewing the counties.
get under construction In the
funding application and som~&gt;
spring, according to ·Dr. Harold
He further noted the Meigs
.decision Is expected yet this ·County economic Impact of Over·
Brown.
year. 'D r. Brown said. The site brook, reporting that there are 97
Or. Brown, Overbrook founder
adjacent to the nursing faclllty Is employees on th!! payroll making
and sponsor, ·and attorney Ray
Ideal for congregate housing. he It one of the larger employers In
Brown. In an Informal meeting at
pointed out, because of th&amp; the
the Center reported that plans
J
are moving forward for a thTee convenience and availability of.
floor,40 unit. facility to be built
services from Overbrjpk ·' ·"';
Dr. Brown talked .tlXiut' Ovei'· · ·
on · lanct ·.a&lt;J11lt'e•lfr'ti!·l·tli~ nlr'l11ng
book, reviewing the problems from the Farme~s
home.
It would be designated for' 'the
encountered In securing the Is tratlon and looks 1990 as
elder.Jy, 65 and over. and hand I·
certificate of need from the Ohio year of construction.
capped persons and defined as
Secretary of State Sherrod
Department of Health for Its
assisted living - a middle level construction. He went on to point Brawn and his area repres~&gt;nta ·
between an independent lifestyle · out that the100bedfacllltyisnow
rive, Michelle Jenkins, at the
and that offered In a nursing
three-fourths full despite the faclllty for a tour of Overbrook,
home. Ray Brown explained.
fact that II was In late February sat In on the discussion of the
He said that plans are to when the final approval for skilled nursing center's accompprovide living faciJities where Medtcald payment came llshmentsandproposedplansfor
meals and certain housekeeping throu11:h.
the congregate housing.

1990 MaJchl
IX·7 GTU

Mootly ounay . Hilh Ia mid
808.

tS

'Congregate h~using may be ·added
:to Overbrook Center in the spring

Rebates

Along the River ......... B1·8
B1111lneso ............ .......... D-1
Comics· .... .. ...... .... ... Insert
Clualfleda ..... ..... ....... 112-7
Death&amp; ..... .. ...... ......... .. A-4
Editorial .... .................A·Z .
· Sports .... ......... ... ... ... C+S

'
Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant. October, 15, 1989

GALLIPOLIS - Dennis J.
Baisden, 18, pleaded not guilty,
and not guilty by reason of
Insanity· Friday to a six couni
Indictment In Gallla County
Common PI eas Court.
Judge Donald A. Cox ordered
that Baisden undergo' psychiatric evaluatlort by the Shawnee
Forensic Center, Portsmouth,
bmore proceeding with his case.
Baisden was arraigned Friday
on a stx-count Indictment In the
Sunday Sept. 24 deaths of Marvin
W. Wears, 91, his wife, Beulah
w'e ars. 84, and her daughter,

Ripley station plans benefit toumey

Josephine Hauber Kibble, 81,
: of Route 1. Reedsville, died
Friday morning at Camden·
. Clark Memorial Hospital Par· kersburg, W.Va., .following a
brief Illness. Arrangements will
' be announced by the White
. Funeral Home, Coolville.

First snow of winter season
to be on Election Day.•. Page 0.3

Baisden enters
.not gui\ty.plea

golf scramble

The Perfect Answer To
Sunday Dinner Out for the Entire Family

are recalled.-A-5

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

Vol. 24 No. 38
Copyrightocf 19e9

• • • • For Dter Prflos

Inside

bootl~

•
t

*
*"•tdot•
*8alloo111 For 'l1lt IW1

Marcella L. Birchfield, 63,
Findlay, died Thursday afternoon at Blachard Valley Hospital
In Findlay.
.
Born Sept. 22, 1926 In Pomeroy.
she was the daughter of the late
Marlon Guy and Mary Christina
Smith Watson. She was a
homemaker.
On Aug. 1. 1945 she married '
Charles R. Birchfield who
survives.
WCEFRadlo, Ripley, W.Va.,ls awarded, along · ,with other
Also surviving are a son, . sponsoring a golf tourney to prizes.
Marlon Robert Birchfield, Fosto- benefit victims of Hurricane
The entry fee Is $20 which
ria; a daughter, Mrs. Jeffrey Hugo In and around CharleSton,
Includes golf cart and green fees.
tThoma) Fittro. Findlay; three S.C. In a scramble format, the
All proceeds will go to Hugo
sisters, Mrs. Roy iJoAnn) Smal- Hurricane Hugo Relief Fund · victims and tourney organizers
ley, Zanesville; Mrs. Thomas Amateur Open Best 8!111 Tourna· are hoping to raise at least$500 to
(Conalel Drake, Findlay; Ms. lllllllt will be lleld Frilay, Oct. 20, send to South Carolina:
S!laroD Klncakl, Plllllt Plusallt, at lbe Green Hills Golf Course at
Meigs, Gallla and Mason
W.Va.; and three brothers, Wll· Silverton, w. Va., near Countygolfersareneededlohelp
flam David Watson, Pnmeroy;
Ravenswood.
tourney promoters reach their
Charles' Waison. Baltimore,
·
Trophies for first, second and · goal.
Md.; and . Gary Freeman, · third place teams will be . - Pomeroy.
Services will be Monday at 1: 30
p.m. at the Coldren-Crates Fun·
eral Home In Findlay. Burial will
be In Van Horn Cemetery In
· Hancock County.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Saturday from 79 p.m.
and after 2 p.m. on Sunday.

. ,Jo8ephine Kibble

days

Come o.t And. Enloy
With Us
Uvo WXTQ l ... leilloto

Avenue and State Route 7.
Pomeroy. Helpful booklets and
brochures are available to
anyone wishing to learn more·
about recycling. Upon request,
members of the litter control
staff' will speak to organizations
a bout recycling.
"Let's go Meigs County,"
encourages Wiggins. "If you're
not recycling, you're throwing It
all away."
·

Plan

M001111hining,

Page B-1

Continued from page 1

--Area deaths-Mllftftla Birddield

Friday. October 13. 1989

Porneioy-Midclapan. Ohio

594-1261

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