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                  <text>Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, May 12, 1988

,-------Local news briefs-----Middleport Chamber to meet

EMS has 6 calls Wednesday

Middleport Chamber of Commerce will meet at 12 noon
Tuesday at the sheller house at Hartinger Park. Brown bag
lunch. Beverage furnished.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports six calls
Wedn.e sday; Pomeroy at 9 a.m. to Township Road 143 for Edna
Leach to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland atll: 3.3 a.m. to
Depot St. for Evelyn Schuler to Veterans Memorial Hospital; ·
Pomeroy at 4:01 p.m . to Amerlcare-Pomeroy Nursing Center
for F1ossle Story to Veterans Memorial Hospital; TUppers
Plains at 4:44p.m. to the Aubaugh Addition for Isaac Jackson to
St , Joseph's Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 7:39p.m. to Limburger
Ridge for Gladys Powell to St. Joseph's Hospital.

Defendant ordered to pay sum
II\ a Meigs County Court action for foreclosure on a land
contract , defendant, Bruce Fleming, et al, has been ordered to
pay real estate taxes on the property and to pay judgment to the
plaintiff within 10 days.
.
The court has reduced the bond order of Earl Phelps to $10,000
with the standard 10 percent rule of posting, and has denied a
motion for shock probation for Charles W. Green . ..
In other court action, a stay order has been suspended in !he
case of Soulhern Ohio Production Credit Assoc)allon versus
Sherman Ray Marcum, et al.
Cases which have been dismissed by lhe court include; Harry
W. Pickens Sr. against Joanne E. Pickens; George M. Collins
against Earl Cllnckinger, et al; Melissa Manley against
Michael Manley; Price Brothers Company against Hemlock
Pipeline Inc.; Annie M. Lawson, et al, against Bruce Fleming,
et al; Steven C. Hill agaslnt lhe State of Ohio Bureau of Motor
Vehicles.

Skin testing clinic set Monday
The Meigs County Tuberculosis Office will be conducting a
skin testil'\g clinic at the fire house ·in Rutland on Mond ay
evening from 4 to 6 p.m. This will be the only evening skin
testing clinic that will be held in lhe Rutland area this year. All
persons who will be helping serve food for annual ox roast, the
civic center and alumni banquets s hould gel their skin tes ts at
this time, For lu !her Information, call 992-3722.

One player eligible for top prize _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
CLEVELAND (UP I) - One'
player Is eligible to claim the $9
million jackpot In Ohio's Super
lotto game after picking all six
numbers In Wednesday night 's
drawing.
The name of the player will be
announced after the winning
ticket Is validated at a regional
lottery office, a lottery commls·
. slon spokesman said today. The

winning numbers were 1, 2,10,19,
30 and 37 .
The player will receive the
winnings In 20 annual pre-tax
payments of $450,000, the spokes·
man said.
In addition to the top-prize
winner, 291 players picked five of
the numbers to win $1,000 each.
and 11,024 players chose four of
the numbers to win $56 apiece.

Ticket sales for the midweek
drawing totaled $5,450,348, while
the prize payout totaled
$9,908,344 . The jackpot for Satur·
day's drawing will be worth $3
million.
·
In the lottery's new Kicker
game, there was one ticket sold
that listed the six winning
numbers of 4·9·4·3·2·3. That
ticket Is worlh $100,000.

Al so,ll tickets listed five of the
numbers, rrlaking them worth
$5,000 each; 99 tickets that had
four of the numbers are worth
$1,000 each; 893tickets with three
of the numbers are worth $100
each; and 8,423 tickets with two
of the numbers are worth $10
apiece.
Kicker ticket sales totaled
$910,197.

-----Announcements----Trustees to meet
Olive Township Trustees will
hold a special meeling Friday,
7:.30 p.m .• at the Reedsville Fire
Stallon.
Revival to begin .
The Church of Christ In Chris·
tlan Union, Hartford, W.Va., will
be in revival Monday through
Saturday at 7 p.m. earh evening.
Rev. Joe Gwinn of Leon, W.Va.
will be the speaker. Special
'

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Sm llh
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

.

Revival underway
Syracuse Mission Is In revival
through Sunday with services
starting at 7 p.m. each evening.
Special music by Jan and Kathy
will be featured Friday night.
Evangelist Is Mark Morrow.
Everyone welcome.
AppUcatlons available
Applications are now available
to students In Syracuse for 19881
Carleton Memorial Scholar·
ships. Applications may be ob·
talned from the Carleton Board
of Trustees Secretary John Lisle.
The deadline for submitting
completed applications is June
19.

SPECIAL
JU$1

RECEIVED

'~_oc•rdi1110told

Vol.39, No.6

at

Twin Sheet Set .................... Only
Full Sheet Set ...................... Only
Oueeh Sheet Set .................. Only

_ _ :"ll,_

Lo'J"

IT'S GO, GO, GO for the big parade to be held
tomorrow momlng In Syracuse
at 11 a.m.
sponosored by the Syracuse Baseball Association.
T!te parade will line up at Larry's Grocery and
travel up river, staying on village streets and
croas lbe highway at the latersectloa of
Brldreman and Tlllrd aad dlsbaad at King's ball
field. Taking part In the parade In addition to team
members will be Soulherns's High School
marching band. Gelllnr ready lor tomorrow's

$1 4900

Great new styles and the latest fashion
colors.
Beads, Earrings, Bracelets

Stle Prle..
Fre• Oelf

Twin, Full,. q,.:~

SERTA SLEEPER

eC:ontour Corrtct
•Posture IUPPorl system

S299

ORTHO LUX

FLOOR
COVERINGS
VINYL LINOLEUM
Sale

$299 Foil Sot
$399o-s.t

$399 Full •-$44 9 0.,. Sot

e(....,._oliwt
•Soft touch lop
•Total IUifllntiOn SJIItm

•15 yr. womonty

$399 Sq. Yd.

SCULPTURED
CARPO

Full Sizo Stt
10 Yr. Worranty

PERFECT SLEEPER

$-159

MAY SALE

Sale
eUitro plush top
•T...,.nd coils
•10 yr. worranty

Computer Club and a three year
member of the French Club. She
has been a member of the science
IIWAU year, Sheplans toatlllnd
University majoring In
rese~rch physics.
The son of Hugh and Marlha
McPhail, the salutatorian Is vice
president of the· Soulhern High
School Chapter of lhe National
Honor Society and has been a
quiz bowl participant for two
years. He received the Meigs
County Academic Award In his
sophomore and senior years and
the Soulhern Academic Award
this year. He Is a member of the
Society of Distinguished Amerl·
Continued on page 5

SPRING JEWELRY

SERTA BEDDING
!!!~~~on~~..'!ORT $9 9
•lnntnpring support

activities are front, Jamie Buskirk; biUlk, l·r,
TyBOD Buckley, Jeremy Buskirk, Ryan Hlll, Ryaa
Wllllam.s, Jay McKelvey aad Robby Crow. Tile
fire department wnt be selBag fish sandwiches,
not dop &amp;Dd french frle8 and the baseball
association will be offering pop and chips. The
band wUI offer several oelections and music will
be provided by another group later In die di,OY.
Baseball games will get underway following the
parade.
·

SALE

MAY SALE

SPW'
---"/,.aNOIUU.r·
1111!/,.::::;
_ __

$59 5 Sq. Yd.

PAtiO TURF
Sale

enttne
2 Sect Kms. 16 Pages

2 6 Centt

A Multimedia Inc. NewtPeper ·

Watered down waste
bill upsets officials

51 5. 99
524.99
526.99

Bath Towei....Special 53.99
Hand Towei ... Special 52.99
Wash
s

•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Friday. May 13, 1988

Copyrighted 1•988

flat shttt and two standard pillowca ..s. AN are·no·
iroo percale in an array of prints.

Thick absorbant towels of 86% col·
ton/14% polyester. Colors include
beige, peach, ·pink and blue. Stack up
now!

;!/:

•

e

BED
SHEETS
btd sets include one fitted sheet, one

TOWEL SPECIAL

19"
Color Portable ....... S2 59
19" Remote
Color Part11ble ....... S339
20" Remote
Color Portable ....... S349
26" Remote
Calor Console ........ S549

5001

Cloudy tonight, chance of
showers. Low In 50s. Mostly
sunny Saturday. Highs In mid

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) State officials are bolllng over
what !hey perceive as a dramatic
weakening of House-passed leg·
lslation aimed at controlling the
disposal of solid waste In Ohio.
A drastically revised bill deal·
ing with garbage disposal and
landfills, rewritten In private, ·
apparently to lhe specifications
of Industry and the owners of
huge garballe coUectlon firms,
surfaced In an Ohio Senate
subcommittee Thursday.
The new proposal, containing
63 amendments to the House
version, removes many of tbe
powers of the Ohio Envlronmen· ·
tal Protection Agency to site
landfills and to crack down on
violators of solid waste
regulations.
There foUowed a s.t orm of
protests from the Ohio EPA,
state Attorney General Anlhony
Celebrezze Jr. and Gov. Richard
Celeste, whO called It "worth·
less" and said It would "tie our
hands In enforcing laws intended
to protect public heallh and

safety.''
"We are taking a toothless
EPA and making It gumless,"
said state Sen. Charles Butts,
D.Cieveland, a member of the
Senate Energy, Natural Resour·
ces and Environment subcom·
mlttee, which received the rew·
rltten version and began
preparing It for full committee
action next week.
"! don't know why we would
want to de-fang what we've got,"
said Butts, who pledged to work
to restore earlier language before the measure reaches the
Senate floor, perhaps In two
weeks.
As passed by the House In
March after months of hearings,
field trips, public meetings and
negotiations among in teres llld
parties, the bill was aimed at
encouraging careful county ana
regional planning for solid waste
disposal In landfllls and lnclnera·
tors and through recycling.
It also Included provisions
bringing old landfills up to
modern standards; empowering

the state to enforce !hose stand·
ards and pre-empt local zoning
ordinances In siting new land·
fills: and discouraging lmporta·
' ion of trash from olher states.
As unveiled by Sen. Gary
Suhadoinlk, R-Parma Heights,
chairman of the three-member
subcommittee, the bill;
-Limits the EPA director's
rulemaklng authority on solid
waste disposal and removes his
authority to Issue enforcement
orders for threatened violations.
-Restricts the director's solid
waste entorcement and license
suspension and revocation authority to actions requested by
local disposal districts.
-Forbids citizens to sue local
governments for solid waste
facilities and any regulatory
activity In !hat area.
-Weakens a proposed back·
ground check on the owners of
waste disposal facilities to detect .
any ties with organized crime.
-Eliminates a moratorium on
new landfills.
Continued on page 6

Heather Shuler, Scott McPhail are State· approves block grants
Southern H. School students

DEE

RCA SALE

Daily Number
590
Pick 4

70s.

-White enamol finish
-Includes back, ends and
link springs

*Dining Rooms
*Rocker/
Recliners
*Loveseats
*Tables

Bibs
Baby Plaques
Lamps
Carriers
High Chairs
Booster Seats

I

PageJ2

DAYBED

Quality brands like Norwalk, Berkline, Webb,
Mersman, Keller and Crawford. Free Delivery~

Baby Blankets
Crib Toys
Baby Pants
Strollers
Playpens
Toilet Trainers

•
notices

DRESHER

SALE

~
'
OFF

singing will be featured each
evening. Pastor Mike Thompson
Invites everyone.

Am Electric Power . ............ 26%
AT&amp;T ................................. 26'Vs
Ashland Oil ...... ..................69%
Lodge to meet
Bob Evans .......... ................ l6'h
Charming Shoppes .............. 10%
Shade River Masonic Lodge
City Holding Co ................... 32
453. F&amp;AM, will meet at 8 this
Federal Mogul... ............. .... 38\1,
evening at the hall In Chester.
Goodyear T&amp;R ........ ...........61%
Refreshm ents wil.l be served.
Heck's Inc ...... ..................... 1%
Key Centurion .................... 39'h
License issued
Lands' End ................... .... .24%
Limited Inc ................... , ..... 18
Marriage licenses have been
Multimedia Inc ................... 65'1.
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Rax Restaurants ..... ....... ...... 4%
Court to Roy Earl Adkins, 53, and
Robbins &amp; Myers .. .. ..... ....... 10'h
Deborah Lynn Adkins, 34, both of
Shoney's Inc ....................... 24%
Ravenswood , W.Va.; David
Wendy 's Inti ....................... 6\1,
Allen Leach, 19, Reedsville, and
Worlhlngton lnd ................. 19'Vs . Amy Beth Roush,18, Middleport.

MAY FURNITURE
*Sofas
*Recliners
*Swivel
Rockers
*Bedrooms

Ohio Lottery

Church

$395Sq. Yd.

FREE DELIVER~

Heather Camute Shuler has
· been named valedictorian and
Scott McPhail sarutatorian ofthe
. 1988 senior class at Soulhern
' High School.
·
As the top two scholars of this
year's graduating class the two
will speak at annual commencement exercises to be held at 8
p.m. on Sunday, May 22, with
OhloGov.RichardCelestealsoto
be on the speaking program.
The daughter of Carla and
David Shuler, the valedictorian
has . been a member of the
SoutiJern High School scholar·
ship teallJI' for four years and a
member of the National Honor
Societyfortwoyears.Shulerwas
ho
to ta ke lhe ASHME test
fc sen
f
or our years and was chosen to
~~: ~~~ ~!rf!F 1W Esse~

iect

Gifted In !he State of Ohio. She
received the Manesseh Cutler
Scholarship, the Shipman ScholarshiplnphyslcsatOhloUntver·
sity, the Ohio Board of Regents'
Scholarship for !he highest GPA
·and AGT results.
Miss Shuler was selected to
speak at several talented and
gifted conterences across Ohio
and received !he Meigs County
Academic Excellence Award In
bolh her sophomore and senior
years. She received the Soulhern
Local School Dlslrlct Academic
Excellent Award this year. She
participated In !he OHio Univer·
slty Regional Scholars program
last year.
Shuler has been In the march·
ing band for four years, on the
quiz bowl team for lhree years, Is

The state has approved all
eight projects Included In Meigs
County's Community Block
Grant proposal package for this
year.
Included In lhe group of eight
are Suiton1'ownsbtp;;10,719 for
road paving on Welshtown Hill
Road; Middleport VIllage, $9,200
for sidewalk handicap access
ramps; Racine VIllage, $4,863;
$6,400 for Improvements to Lon·
don Pool; Rutland EMS, $9,624 to
Improve the EMS building; Ches·
ter Fire Department, $7,680 for
flreflghtlng equipment; Pomeroy VIllage, $9,800 for sidewalk
Improvements In lhe business
section.
The $24,863 which had been set
aside for a revolving loan for a

-••TB C"DJ!:
We all need II, yet aometlmes worry a bo Dt
..... how to pay for,.
•• and how (OYernmenl prolll'ams c1111 help ua a f ford
.....u.

it. AD "M 1111d M Forum: KeeplngHeallh Care ProgramaStralrht"
lleld Wednesday at die Senior Clllzet18 Center by the Area Areacy

possible new county business, Is
still included In the county's
allocation of CDBG funds. How·
ever, anolher economic developmen! project for lhese funds has
not been selected to replace the
initial project.
Announcement of the state's
approval of the local CDBG
projects was made In Wednes·
day's meeting of the Meigs
·~
County Commissioners.
Discussed by the commission~~ers, County Engineer Philip
Roberts and County Highway
Superintendent Ted Warner, was
a request from the Dravo Corporation to acquire the county's
gravel pit In Apple Grove, In
return for sand and gravel In
amounts equivalent to the value

of the county pit . The group felt
more Information would be
needed from Dravo, Including
whether townships would be
permitted to sand and gravel
along with the county, before a
decision could be· made.
Roberts reported !hat two
bridges In Bedford Township
have .been replaced, and that a
bridge on Strong's Run In Salem
Township Is scheduled for re·
placement after school is out !his
year.
Interdepartmental budget
transfers were approved by !he
commissioners for Meigs County
Court, the Meigs MR·DD Board
and jhe County Highway
Department.

..._ P'OUP, and arency
the left Ia Sea. 11111 Lo •• who met with t ....
repreoentallvee, AI Loholalcy, Social Se curlty representative,
Mike Swisher 1111d Yvoane Sisaoa, Melp County Human Services,
and Don WtrWtafler, Legal Services of Area Agency.

Heaiih. p~gi;iiri';e~;,-;iderly rights topic

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH . medical proJil'ams and hOw to
Sentlael Staff Writer '
qualify, along with Medlgap
Medicare, Medicaid; Medlgap
Insurance policies and how to
. and proposed Catastrophic select one;
Heallh Care coverage - what
AI Lehotsky of the Social
covers what and when, which Security admlnstratlon, who ex·
covers who, and why and where plained the federally funded
each comes Into play In lhe life of Medicare pr011ram;
a senior citizen or disabled
Yvonne Sisson of the Meigs
person. Those were the County Human Services, who
ques lions.
'
detailed the method for qualify·
Confusion among Melp Coun·
log for die state funded Medicaid
ttana was almoet the nameofthe program for low Income persons
game for lhe mediCIII proJil'ams and;
until this week when representa,
Heather Hartley, representing
lives of administrative agencies
Senator Metzenbaum's office,
had an open meeting at the who dlsculled the proposed
Senior Citizens Center under
Catastrophic Heallh Care lerls·
sponsorship of the Area Agency
lation, currently being readied
on Aal!ll.
for lhe president's signature.
Jane Arml trong of the Area
Lepl ANIRance
Agency on Aging in traduced the
Wlrtahafler advised that he
apeallers:
comes to the Melp Sen tor Center
' Don Wlrtlhafler of Legal Servt· once a month to assllt Ienior
ces for the Area Agency, who citizens who need legal assist·
tallied about legal rights to anee lncludlnt clarification on

.

~

eligibility for medical assistance
'through ellher the Social Secur·
lty federal program of Medicare,
or the federal-state funded wei·
fare assistance for low Income,
Medicaid.
As for Medicaid, Wlrtshafter
said that every person has a right
to have h!J eligibility for !hat low
income medical assistance determined - the right to be
provided an application, the
right to have help In fUing It, the
right to a speedy response, and
the right to appeal lhe decision.
He called for being very
selective In purchasing a Medlgap policy Issued by private
compan lei, being sure that you
gel what you need Insofar as
coverage Is concerned, something that fills the gaps, or pays
for that not covered by Medicare.
As to whether or not a senior
citizen should purchatle a Medigap policy, Wlrtshatter gave

The "sP,end down " process for
lhls rule of lhumb - "If you can lhelr care can apply for Medl·
afford It, then you need It; If you caid. Assets play a role In assistance In paying medical
can't afford It, you probably qualifying, however, and as Mrs. bills was also discussed by Mrs
don't need It since you are Sisson explained, for eligibility Sisson. She said Income level and
already probably close to qual!· lhe resource standard Is $1,500 amount of monthly medical bills
for an individual or $2,250 for a determine the time when sen.lor
fylng for Medicaid."
couple.
This Includes cash, certif- cl tizens become eligible for MeMedicaid
The "phenomlnallncrease" In Icates of deposit, bank accounts, dicaid assistance with medical
recent years of OhiO's Medicaid . stocks and bonds. It does not bills. That amount Is predeter·
program and the role of long- include the home If It remat ns mined for each individual by lhe
term care for senior clti2ens In occupied by a spouse · or If the Depariment of Human Services
that, was discussed by Mrs. applicant has been in a nursing and then when· medical bill~
Sisson of Meigs County Human horne for less than six monlhs reach !hat level each month,
Services In her address to the and conceivably will be return· Medicaid picks up the bills for !he
remainder of the month. The
ing to !hat home.
over :lJO attending the forum.
same
"spend down" process Is
She
also
talked
about
"ImShe said that estimates lndl·
repeated
each month, the
cate that 97 percent of singles and proper transfer'' of real property
explained.
speaker
and
noted
that
anything
trans77 percent of couples In Meigs
Medicare
County would be redUCed to ferred within two years before
Medicare
Is a part of the Social
the
application,
perhaps
an
ac·
poverty level within one year's
Security
Insurance
program paid
stay In a nursing home. The tion taken as a method to gain
·into
by
workers,
Lohotsky
said,
average state figures fora month eligibility, falls under scrutiny
'and
Is
an
entitlement
for
those
In a nursing home Is now $2.000. when the Medicaid application Is
People In nurslag bomea who filed. She also noted that the ·over 65 or disabled.
He talked aboutPartAwhlch Is
do not have enoUJit'lm:ome or value of a life estate In property
resources to pay for the coat of Is also coltlldered In lhe qualify· hospitalization and has no preContinued on page 9
'1111 process.

�-

-

-----

~-----

Commentary
The .Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~

cs:m~

~v

,...,_.,_-r, .......... c:~,,.

ROBERT L. WINGE'l.T ·
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

\

Airbag proponents .score win
WASHINGTON - The Reagan
administration has been the most
powerful obstacle s tanding in the
way of mandatory automobile
airbags. But right under President Reagan 's nose, a government oflice has handed consu. mers a major coup.
The battle of the ait·bag has
been raging in courts and in
Congress since the 1960s. A series
of contacts between consumer
guru Ralph Nader a nd Gerald
Carmen, who was then head of

the General Services Adm!nis·
tration, finally moved the debate
off dead center.
Nader informed Carmen that a
number of government workers
could be saved from injury and
death if motor pool cars were
equ lpped with the bags that
inflate In the passenger compart·
ment upon impact.
"He badgered the hell out of
Carmen, that's how he did it,"
says one consumer ally who
watched Nader work. In De-

cember 1982, Carmen announced
that the GSA was ordering 5,000
Ford Tempos with a!rbags.
Carmen's decision broke the
dam · that was holding back
routine airbag use and demo n·
straled how government spend·
!ng habits can be a powerful tool
for reform, Nader told our
associate Stewart Harris. With
the GSA demanding a!rbags,
automakers began to see a
market for the safety device.
A survey of automakers by

A MEMBER of The United Press International. Inland Dally Press
Association and the AmePlCan Newspaper Publishttrs Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. All letter~ are subject to editing and must be signed with name, address and
teiE.•phone number. No unsi gned letters will be published. Lt&gt;lters should be In

good Tas te , addressing Issues, not personalities.

White House ·
legitim~H~N~H!~trology
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The White House ha s put an official
imprimatur on the practice ol astrology.
First lady Nancy Reagan's interest in the occult and President
Reagan 's high degree of superstition are not so unusual in a world of
unknowns , But raising the Interest to a point of legitimacy casts the
White House In a different light a nd brings Into question whether
rationality, logic and of course politics, guide decision-making.
Former White House chief of staff Don Regan, albeit disgruntled,
chronicles .in ·his new book, "For the Record: From Wall Street to
Washington," an amazing amount of intrusion of astrology Into the
day-to-day operations of the Oval Office. Since the truth will make
you free, that bit of knowledge Is an important contribution to the
history of the Reagan administration.
Regan, who targets Mrs. Reagan throughout his memoirs, wrote
that the first lady called the shots on the scheduling of travel,
speeches and news conferences for the president Since they were at
odds on the timing ol such events from the start with Regan assuming
the total power that a passive president deferred to him , there was
bound to be a clash.
The modus operandi alsoaccrued 'toJoan Quigley, a San Francisco
astrologer. incredible power to manipulate official activities, well
meant and U1Jintentional as that might be.
News syndicate officials say that. they can eliminate any feature
except tor horoscopes. They are read by the true be!levers, the
skeptics and the hopefuls, all in search of a better future.
But when It comes to running th e government, Americans have a
right to hope that decisions are based on armloads of facts , thinking
through the issues, llstening to all sides and taking into account how
best the publlc will be served.
Doing the nation's business by astrology puts the United States in a
bizarre class that can only be damaging.
It is true that the president has said that he has never made policy
decisions on the position of the stars. But no one In the White House
has . denied that on the periphery the timing of Reagan's public
pronouncements, holding of a news conference and travel have been
affected by the first lady 's worries and fears.
Mrs. Reagan is influential in her husband's affairs as she has a
right to be. She has his interest at heart and the country's. If anything,
her advice has been sounder in terms of nudging the president to be
more amenable to peace negotiations in Nicaragua, arms control and
to move away from the right wing issues as he prepares to leave the
White House .
It is to her credit that she has pushed him In the direction of a more
conclliatory attitude on the international front. Above all she has
tried to shield him from the repercussions of the Iran-Contra scandal.
Her whole intent was to save the shattered presidency in the last
months of 1986 and all of 1987 as disclosures of a private government
run by the top aides on the national s~curity staff came to light.
While Reagan was calling Lt. Col. Oliver North a "national hero"
after he fired him for diverting funds to the Contras from Iranian
arms sales, the firstlady was less complimentary. She went public on
North and former national security adviser John Poindexter while
apparently urging Reagan to remain silent.
Mrs . Reagan's need for comfort, solace and certitude Is not unusual
in -p complicated world where outside threats to the president and the
presidency are ever present. And she has a right to find it where she
can - through her friends, her minister and even her astrologist.
But the question arises as to whether presidential movements and
dialogue should be guided by the stars, or charted by an astrologer as
good days, bad days and iffy days .
'fhe Reagans might say in unison that the stars are as reliable,
maybe more so, than their top aides. Nevertheless, it leaves more to
chance than the people might desire.

Letters to the editor

1

Claims picture disrupted
Dear Editor,
You know I thought a person
had a right to sit down In their
home and enjoy their TV anytime
they wish.
Well, my famlly cannot be·
cause a neighbor has an electric
fence charger and it flashes
across our television and then the
picture rolls . About half the time
you can't even see the picture.
This all sta rted three years ago
when they gave it to one of our
other neighbors to keep her dogs
ln. We tried to find something to
help, but nothing did. They acted
like we were trying to cause
trouble and get this--it didn't
keep the dogs in the pen. After
months of complaints the neighbor finally admitted that her TV
was doing the same thing. She
never admitted that before . The
original owner took the charger
back and put it around his
garden. We called him also to ask
It be turned off. His wife said she
didn't care what it was doing to
our TV, it was staying
__:__ on.

Well, it was a summer of
everytlme you wanted to watch
TV you had to call the neighbors
to ask them to turn off the
charger if you could catch them
home.
It's supposed to keep the
rabbits and deer out of their
garden. It doesn 't. He had to
shoot several rabbits last
summer

I contacted the prosecutor in
Pomeroy and was told for several hundred dollars, I'd proba·
bly have a case. Well, needless to
say, I don't have that money or
money to buy a new TV if this
burns ours up. I've called the
sheriff's department and they
can't do anything.
It's happening again this
summer and I guess l am just
tired of people who don't care
about others. The charger Isn't
doing what they want it to do. lt
just tears up the TV reception. It
does theirs also.
Mary E. Wells

______

Cruel to birds
Editor,
Some people e njoy seeing
robins at springtime -enjoying
their beauty, their singing and
watch them feed their young
ones.
Well, this is what some cruel
people like to do to those innocent
beautiful robins - tie a string
around their neck and feet, then
tie a piece of string around a rock
to weigh the birds down, then
throw the robin along the side of

your front yard.
This is what I and my family
found while working in our yard.
What a cruel way !or that robin to
have suffered.
To the person or persons that
would be so cruel to do that to a
beautiful bird, I hope and pray
that everytlme you see or hear a
robin singing, theslghtwtllhaunt
you until the day you die.
Virginia Duckworth,
Middlepbrt.

friday, May 13, 1988

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
FridJy, May 13, 1988

Southern edges North Gallia 4-3 in Class A tour·••ey tilt

By Jack Anderson
and Joseph Spear

ROCK SPRINGS - Grasping
the phllosphy that "winning by
one run is as good as 100," the
Southern Tornadoes bounced off
the JOpes of adversity to edge the
stubborn North Gallla Pirates 4-3
Thursday evening in Class 'A·
sectional tournament play at
Meigs High School.
Senior catcher John R.iffle,
after coming back from major
knee surgery, became the hero
as his bases-loaded, one-out
single to right field proved to be
the difference in the game.
. After NGI'IS had tied the score
in the top of the frame, another
senior Mike Hill kept the Tornadoes alive with .a gutsy infield
single. Leadoff batter Jell Caldwell then followed suit with a line
single to set the stage for an
· intentionaly walk to ali-state
candidate Dave Amburgey .The
move set up a Ioree at any base
and worked on the Initial try as
Chris Stout roped a grounder, but
Hill was forced out at home.

Nader's group, Public Citizen,
shows how receptive to a!rbags
consumers have become.
Ford Tempo and Mercury
Topaz buyers have the option of
adding drlver's-side air bags this
year. A reported 23,000 have been
purchased and next year Ford
wU! offer a full front-seat airbag
as standard equipment on the
Lincoln Continental.
General .. Motors offers the
a!rbag as an option on the
Oldsmobile Delta 88 apd says it
wUI offer half a million as
standard equipment in 1990 and
three million by 1992.
Chrysler did a startling about·
face this month. Airbags will be
standard equipment on the Fifth
Avenue, Dodge Daytona, Diplomat, Plymouth Grand Fury and
LeBaron Coupe and Convertible.
The move w!ll surprise anyone
who has read Lee Jacocca's
autobiography. '' Airbags are one
of those areas where the solution
may· actually be worse than the
problem," Iacocca wrote refer· , •
ring to -!salted Incidents in which
airbags have caused accidents.
To back up his statement, he
quoted a retired safety engineer
In Michigan, who suggested that
air bags could be used as a more
humane alternative to the elect·
ric chair and other forms of
capital punishment.
After the GSA, insurance companies have been among the
biggest airbag boosters. Travel·
ers, Allstate and USAA have all
ordered airbags in their staff
cars. Many insurance companies
offer bonuses and reduced premi·
urr.s to drivers who use the
devices.
"It's better, than a savings
bank," says Nader. With the
premium discounts, drivers can
recover the $300 cost of a Ford
airbag and continue saving money on insurance premiums.

of left/ liberal Thought Police
whom the boys in the Kremlin
might well envy.
One continuing drive by these
intellectual storm troopers is an
effort to bring the Hoover Institution "under normal academic
governance" - which is to say,
under their thumb.
The Hoover Institution is quite
simply one of the world's grea·
test centers 'of interdisciplinary
scholarship. Among the re·
nowned scholars currently affil·
iated with it are half a dozen
Nobel Prizewinners. But structurally it has always been · an
"independant institution with the
frame of Stanford University",
and this is what the Thought
Police find unbearable.
For you see, many of Hoover's
most famous scholars hold Unapproved Opinions. Milton Fried·
man, for example, Is a famous
free-market economist-. Edward
Teller actually favors President
Reagan's Strategic Defense lnitl·
ative- indeed, he suggested it to
Reagan. Thomas Sowell Is
another prominent conservative
economist -and compounds the

lent annually.
Some of those desperate for
work are told opportunities await
them in fields ranging from truck
repair to beauty and cosmetol·
ogy. Others are lured into trade
schools with promises of becom·
ing nurses' aides, restaurant
managers or paramedics.
· In California, for example, one
journalist says he was recruited
in a welfare office and told he
could start a six-month computer
course "the next morning" with
the $3,000 fee to be "easily
financed with a federally insured
loan."
Students are shown ~how to
submit applica•tons for the maxi·
mum amount of federal financial
aid and how to facilitate Its
·
transfer to the schools.
The quality of education provided at the worst schools ranges
from mediocre to dreadful. Advertised courses are offered
seldom or not at all, classes are
unmanageably large. teachers
are unqualilied and course mate'
rials are incomprehensible.
As many as 70 percent of the
students drop out before completing the courses, often because
they are Incapable of doing the
work.
But the schools get most if not
all of their money because the
government makes substantial
payments even If the students
have attended classes lor only a
lew days or a few weeks.
Finally, the students who sign
up for loans discover they have
repayment obligations they cannot meet - and often default on
those legal commitments.
The default rat~ ranges trom 17

OAK HILi.. - The Eastern
Eagles outhit the Oak Hill Oaks
10-9, but it was the basts who
posted a hard-fought 8-6 wln over
the Meigs Countians In a win that
.captured them at least a share of
the SVAC diamond title.
Ironically, Eastern claimed a
win over Oak Hllllast year that
captured the second of two SVAC
title for the Eagles. This year the
Ia bles turned as OH clinched its
share of the championship.
Oak Htll boosts Its record to
17-7 as it ended its season, while
Eastern falls to a respectable
10-8 with one game left.
· As the saying goes, "Only time
wlll tell", veteran coach Scott
Bartholomew reaped the bene!. its of time and much hard work
as he has developed the Oaks'
program fromalso-rans to cham·
pions in the past three years.

Bartholomew got the ' ice·
cooler' treatment, NFL style,
after the game.
Eastern coach Scott Wolfe
said, "It's always frustrating
when you lose, but we came back
three times tonight and we never
gave up. This year has been a
challenge and tbe kids have
accepted it well. Six of our losses
have come to teams that have
records of 17 wins or better and
with a little luck, we could have
escaped with another win or
two."
Eastern's Kyle Davis, who
went 2·3 with a sacrifice fly,
anchored the attack that kept the
Eagles in the game for the first
three Innings.
Alter a scoreless first OH went
ahead 2-0, but singles by the
senior brigade of Mark Griffin,
Jeff Johnson, Steve Horner, and

a two-RBI slash by Davis gave
EHS a 3-2 lead.
A squeeze bunt tied the score in
the third and OH added another
single in the fourth for a 4-3 lead,
but Eastern again tied 4-4 in the
fifth when Griffin singled, stole
second, Hor.ner singled, and
Davis lashed a sacrifice fly to
deep right.
A three run fifth by the hosts
gave them the needed edge as
they added another in the sixth,
however, EHS did not di e.
Tlie Eagles scored two In the
seventh and had the tying runs on
!lase with one out, but Rob-Kuhn
buckled down for the win.
Eastern hitters were Griffin,
Johnson and Davis with two
singles, Horner three singles,
and Chris Lance a s ingle. Davis
had three RBI ' s.
Bill Belcher was 3-4 for the

winners, Rob Kuhn 2-3, :Tony
Simpson a home run, Mark Lyle
a triple,and singles by Mike
Walls and Carl Massie.
Kuhn, who hurled a no-hitter
against EHS at Eastern, was not
as effective this time around, but
nevertheless went the distance
for the win. Kuhn allowed 10 hits,
walked just three and fanned five
in a super dedicated effort.
Griffin went the distance for
EHS and pitched well, despite
two shaky Innings, where he
walked six and fanned two
overall. He gave up nine hits and
just five earned runs.
Eastern plays NG tonight.
Li nest! ore :
Eastern ... ..... ... 003 010 2-6-10·4
Oak Hill ..... ...... 021 131 x-8-9-1
Batteries - Griffin (LP ) and
DavIs (Eastern)
Kuhn (WP) and Ward (Oak Hill)

s ingle to right centerfield to win
the game, 4·3.
For Southern Caldwell , Hill,
McCoy, Rllfle and Turley had
singles, while Cunn·tngham had a
double.
Glassburn and Kevin Smith
had singles for North Gallla.
Southern pushes its record to
16-5 ana :earns a berth in the
sectional finals against the 18-8
Trimble Tomcats Friday at 4:30
p.m. The winner of that match
goes to Unto to HighSchoolfor the

By LEN HOCHBERG
UPI Sports Writer
Chicago Buns starting guards
Michael Jordan and Sam Vincent
combined for 67 points Thursday
night and deflected questions ·
concerning backcourt play to the
Detroit Pistons.
Jordan scored 36 points and
Vincent a career-high 31 to lift
the Bulls to a 105-95 road triumph
over the Pistons and tle the
best-of-seven Eastern Confer·
ence semifinal series at 1·1. The

series shifts to Chicago for
Games 3 and 4 Saturday and
Sunday.
Elsewhere, the Dallas Maver·
leks tied their Western Confer·
ence semifinal series with the
Nuggets, winning Game 2 al
Denver 112-108.
The two other conference se·
miflnals continue tonight and
Sunday . Atlanta, tralling1-0, !sat
Boston for Game 2 of their
Eastern Conference semifinal.
The Los AngeJes Lakers and

Scoreboard ...

a

Me litre ..

Maj01'8

81 ........
Phl ..delpltb

By Unite• Pt@.. ~ter.a~e-.1
AMERICAN U:40UIE
By Untu:d PMIIIIt.fr ... kllal

....

New York
Cle\·~land.

tt II .Ia
• II .• 1

Bot.ton
Mllwaull!!"

17 13 ,,.,.

1:
3%

18 14 .111

1%:

""''""

TorGfllo
Baltknore
Oakland

Texu

•

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try 's 5,500 trade schools are
reputable, accounts of abuse and
exploitation abound. In New
York, for instance, federal off!·
clals found a single instructor
attempting to simultaneously
teach five different subjects to
190 students.

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Berry's World

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Mlnnne&amp;a
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Mla~e~~oo&amp;a (A.,UieriDfl 1· 1) ld Detroll

(Aiexuder l-t), 1:31p.m.
Oaldarul (Stewart 11-f) al Ballmore
('ftbha t-1), 8:11 J.m.
TaroMo (StoU~rt I·S) It Chleap
(Perea 2-1), I:,H p.m.
Oe\'el .. d (SWI..ell .. l) a&amp; Mllwube
CHipra J.l ), 11:31 p.m.
llan_,.CMy (Sab!rhq:fd f-31 _. Te•••
(Hq•rd 1-fi,II:SI p.m.
s.turdlf''l Gamt~~
Sullie lit ao.tOft. I: II p.m.
Calllor••aa New York, I: 'II p.m.
Cln-eland a1 Mllwa~~kee, 1: 15 . p.m.
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st. Loa .. II, saaFrancMcn 12
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, ....... 1, ..... All pie~ 4
J'rldltl'• Game~
O.:la111U (Seta 1·2) at Plltllbu!"'h
(Drabft 4-1), 1:11 p.m.
Ana... ( Z. ltmllh !·I) at St. l..oula
(DeLe. . 14),11: II p.m.
Ollup (Mt,er 1-S) 1.1 Hou•on (Ryan
Z.t:),l:ll, ....
Pldladelpllla (K. Or ... ~1) • I.Aa
.o\nftles (Lt..,. t-Il, ll:tl p.m .
Molltreal (Dol*'• 1-11 a1 8an Dlel'l
(J'o-1-J), ll:ts p.m.
New YorlliO)edll·ll at; San Frand!leO
{Dow• ._1), II: Sl p.m.
SatwdiJ' O&amp;mes
CllleapaiB"IiO&amp;I:•p.m.
NN Y.rltM 8gFru*-, 4:11p.m .
ClndaMII at PIUIIMII'IIl. 7:11 p.m.
Allallla al St. LoaAa, 8: II p.m .
PhU..del-.laat Lo• All pies, It : IS p.m .

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (UPI) university) cannot be counted."
- Hundreds of Indiana UniverStudents carried numerous
sity students and basketball fans · signs. lncltiding ones that said
ra llied Thursday to suppor t bas- "Forget the opinions. 1U Loves
ketball coach Bob Knight , who Bobby, " " New Mexico sunshine
reportedly has been chosen as cannot beat Indiana 's Knight ,"
the new coach at the University and one that had the name of
of New Mexico.
NBC correspondent Connie •
Students gathered in front of Chung crossed out.
Assembly Hall, the Hoosiers'
home court, to show their desi re ; . . . . - - - - - - - - - - - that Knight stay at the Bloomington school.
t' The Daily Sentinel
''No news iR goOO news,' ' R-alph
Floyd, IU athletic director, told
( \JSPS 1U·IIf(J I
the crowd. "I've not heard a
A Dtvbdon of M'lltlmed.la, lnc.
thing today a nd the media has
Published every a!tcrnoon, Monday
followed me to the restrooms.
through Friday, ill Court St., PoEverybody In the univeqity
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
llshlng Company tMulttmedia, lnc.,
believes the legend belongs at
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph . 992-2156. SeJU."
cond class postage paid at Pom eroy,

Knight has talked with officials
from New Mexico several times
In the past week, but has not
indicated whether he is in line for
the job as Lobo coach . The school
Is looking for a replacement for
Gary Colson, who resigned under
pressure last manu. after eight
years.
The Dallas Times-Herald re·
ported Thursday that Knight had
agreed to a five-year )'lew
Mexico contract worth $350,000
annually.
New Mexico officials said
Thursday that because of complications in negotiations with their
two finalists, a decision on their
coaching choice would not be
of 17 field-goal attempts.
made until Wednesday.
"I was never totally d iscourStudents chanted "Bobby,
aged," said Vincent, who scored Bobby, Bobby," as Floyd, Hoosi·
27 first-half points. "I was just ers football coach Bill Mallory
upset because I t haug ht I was and former Indiana player Steve
letting the team down. I didn't Downing spoke to the crowd .
feel as If l was carrying my
"Bob Knight Is a man of
weight." ,
1
integrity, an individual who
Despite the efforts of Jordan believes in what Intercollegiate
Continued on page 4
athletics are all about," Floyd

INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
EMtrrnDI••••
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l.a II .481 ~~
tl 15 .4M 3%
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Colambu .. s, ... QII . .
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Dener(A.A.) llllalllf

Ok....._ Clly I,AAJ at P awtucket

Galion Country Club hosts
two summer goH toumaments
GALION - The Gallon Coun·
try Club will hOst The Colonel's
KFC Ohio Junior GoU Champion·
ships on June 16 at the Gallon
Country Club.
The tournament is lor all Ohio
students in grades 7-12, with this
year's graduates eligible. There
will be two •'flights," one !or
entrants in grades 7·9, and !or
· goUers in grades 10-12.

•

..
.

)

"Well, IllS In our price range. "

') . ·'

Kentucky Fried Chicken lunch
will be served to all partlcipan.t s
after play.
Gallon Country Club will also
host the nlllth annual "Ohio
Champion of Champions" tour·
nament on July 31.
This tournament Ia for all Ohio
club, county, city and cla111c
champlolll and tbelr runner-up
chalJlplolll. ~ournamentla a

Ohio.

'

Member: United Press International,
Inland Dat1y P1·ess Associat ion and t he
Ohio Newspaper AssQC!atlon . Natlona.1
Advertising Representative, .Branham
Newspaper Sales , 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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52

Week.s~i;;id"~- -tiiei;;;,· ~~~;;; --· 166 ' 56

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~~ ~:;~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ~:iJl

Redrnen baseballers honored r.s~aid~.~"H~t~s~co~nt~rtb~u~uo~n~&lt;t~o~th~e~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Members of the 1988 edition of
the Redmen baseball team a tRio
Grande College/Commupity Col·
lege were honored at a recent
d1nner and awards ceremony In
the Student Center.
The Redmen ended the season
with a 19-17·1 record. They were
7-7 in the Mid-Ohio Conference
and 17-16 in District 22.
Coach Dave Oglesby presented
the team's Dedication Award to
catcher Ed Yates, a senior from
Chillicothe. The Pitching Award
was given to Af Sleradzki, a
juniOr from Westerville. First
baseman Trey Seibel, a senior
from Cincinnati, was recipient of
the Hitting Award, and the
Defensive Award went to out·
fielder Rob Smith, a senior from
Washington Court House.
Yates and pitcher Rick Brown
(senior, Circleville) were presented with four-year awards
from Oglesby . Three-year lettermen honored were pitcher Dave
Cantwell (junior, Lancaster ),

infielder Larry Conrad (senior,
Logan), pitcher Jerry Hester
(junior, Greenfield), Seibel, Sieradzki and Smith.
Recognized as two-year letter·
men were outfielder Chris Boggs
(sophomore, Hamilton ), pitcher·
/ infielder Eugene Collins (se·
nior, Portsmouth) and catcher
Scott" Gheen (jun -ior,
Middleport).
First-year lettermen honored
included Donald Becker (fresh·
man , Middleport), pitcher Eddie
Collins (freshman, Reedsville),
Infielder Mike Coman (sophomore, Chillicothe), infielder
Chris Curtis (sophomore, Springboro), outfielder Keith Dell·
whiller (freshman, McDermott),
infielder John Nolan ( sopho·
more, Springboro), infielder
Mike Parrish (sophomore, Mar·
ion), pitcher Joel Spencer (fresh·
man , Gallipolis), pitcher Bucky
Spindler &lt;J11nior, Chillicothe)
and infielder Bob Young (freshman, Utica).

Delicious.Dishes!
Enjoy the very finest In home ttyle
cooking at the very best prices around I

MONDAY

27-hole stroke play event, with a
"cut" after 18 to the low 30
scores. '
For more ln!onnation, call
Mark Barrier, PGA pro at the
Gallon Country Club, at 1-419-468·
2640, or William E . Spangler,
director, at 1-419-468-4958.

flOW OPIN FOI SPIING
SIASOII
COMPlETE UNE OF YEGETAILE
&amp; liDDING PLANTS AND
8IUIIUMS NOW IIADY.
HAtiGIJG WillS, AZALEAS,
Filii\'
&amp; SH.....,

•s

OP8I ..., t·5-u.&amp;Y 1-5

88
88
·88
87
87
87
87
87
87

.

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TUESDAY
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3

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Beans &amp; Cornbread ............................... 1
FRIDAY

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SATURDAY

Sloppy Joe Basket ................................. $2 75
HOUIS: MON. thru SAT. 6:30 A.M.· 8:00 P.M.

WILLIAMS DINER

M~~ti~~~~

MAY SAVINGS ON
USED CARS &amp; TRUCKS

BEREnA Loaded, 6,000 miles .......... s1 0,995
CELEBRITY •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.s10, 99 5
CAVALIER ....... ~ ............................. 58995
DODGE CARAVAN Loaded •••••••••••• 513,995
FORD TEMPO •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S79 .
DODGE SHADOW 2 DR ...........~ ••••• 58995
PLYMOUTH CARAVALLE ................ 59400
SHADOW 4 DR............................. 58995
SUNDANCE 4 DR.......................... 57995
86 LEI. GTS ....................................... S8995
86 FORD RANGER....................;......... 55995

86 GMC JIMMY-································ S899 5

85 DODGE OMNI ................................ S499 5

85 LEI. GTS ....................................... 15995
85 DODGE D250 PICKUP .................. 56995
84 PLYMOUTH RELIANT .................... 52995
83 NEW YORKER••• ~............................ 54995
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81 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX ................... 11995
80 FORD FAIRMONT ............................ 599 5

.

Cooper Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge, IlK.
992·6421-Salts
399 South Third Awe.

1

992·3606-Parts &amp; Service
Mitltlleport, Ohio

SH: Mark or Carol

MONDAY, MAY 16th
Don't forget to pick
up your chicks.
We will have extra
chicks and ducks
available.
,,,

"PUASIIIIH YM DWII 101"

I&amp;G Store
FEED"AI&amp; SUPPLY CO•
The

with

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15 18 .tit

Utah Jazz, tied 1·1, play Games 3
and 4 of their Western Confer·
ence semifinal at the Salt Palace.
Jordan, held without a point in
the firstquarter, rebounded from
a mediocre performance in the
series opener, won by the Pis·
tons. Vincent, who hit just 32
percent of his post-season shots
entering the game, converted l1

district tournament , wliere It
pla ys the winner of the Valley
se.c tlonaL
North Gallia bows ou t wlih a
3-12 mark and · hosts Eas tern
Friday in Vin ton .
Unescore
Nor th Gallia ...... 10() 001 1-J-2-1
Southern ............ 0~ 000 1-4-6-2
Batteries: Cunningham, Am·
burgey 7th tWP ) and Riffle
(Southern )
Smith and Petrie 1North Gal·
lia)

Hoosier fans rally
.behind Bobby Knight

Jordan, Vincent pace Bulls 105-95 wm

crime by being black. Sidney
non-partisanship, . Geprge Ma·
rotta, a research fellow at
Hook was anti-communist back
in the 1950s when such a thing
Hoover, looked up the public
was practically unthinkable in voting registration records of 218
scholarly · circles. And so on.
professors in Stanford's social
Hoover's scholars are by no science and humanities · facu·
means all conservative, bpt the
lites, and found that 10 percent
presence of even a few such were RepAbl!cans, 10 percent
menaces on campus unnerves · ' independents - and 80 percent
the guardians of conformity.
Democrats.
So, across the decades, various
Manley was outraged. For one
thing, he implied, there was
members o!-the Stanford faculty
have kept up a steady di,'Umflre of something sneaky about inspectattacks on the Hoover Institu·
Ing registration ·records though these are open to the
lion. Most recently, two political science professor John
pubU.c. For another, he inslst&lt;!l,
Manley and English professor registration alone ''tells nothing
Ronald Rebholi- have launched about policy preferences" -the
petition to the Faculty Senate fascinating Implication being,
(their third in five years) calling apparently, •that the Stanford
for Stanford's control of Hoover,
faculty contains a huge reservoir
or a " divorce" of the two of conservative (Sam Nunn?)
institutions.
Democrats. The study, he said,
Another recent crusade by "falsely portrays Stanford as a
Stanford's busy Thought Police partisan and ideologically baised
succeeded in keeping the Reagan . university''.
Pr~sidenttal Library from being
"Falsely?" What is truly
located on campus, on the ground frightening is the odor of jack·
that this would threaten the booted uniformity that wafts
university's reputation as "a through the Spanish-mission
non-partisan institution."
archways of that lovely campus
Curious about this vaunted these spring afternoons.

to 30 percent in the 10 states with
the most serious problems. In
descending order, they are Del a·
ware, Arizona, Nevada, Oregon,
New Mexico, Idaho, Louisiana,
Washington, California and
Montana.
Although many of the coun-

him . In the last inning after
on an error In the outfield for a 2-1
Shawn had pitched the first six I
SHS lead in the second inning.
wanted to give Dave some work
In the third frame Amburgey
on the mound because Its been a · walked , stole second and third,
then came home on a fielder' s
week since he pitched last. I
wanted to give him some time on choice hit by Cunningham for a
the mound, but wouldn't you 3-1 lead .
During the top of the sixth
know North Gallia hung in there
Petrie walked . Petrie then went
and tied the game. Tomorrow
to second on a !!elder's choice,
night I expect a low scoring game
then went to third on a passed
with Trimble, but I expect it to be
ball and scored on a ground outto
close."
second by Hunt.
Smith fanned four and walked
With the score 3·2, Amburgey
three. Cunningham struck out
eight and walked three, while came on in relief of Cunningham,
Amburgey fanned two and
walked Jackson, went to second
on a ground out and scored on a
walked one .
North Gallia scored first when single by Glassburn to tie the
Glassburn walked and went to score 3-3.
In the bottom half of the frame
second on a passed ball, and Todd
Petrie singled him home for a 1-0 Southern fought back as Mike
Hill led off with an infield single,
lead in the first.
Shawn Cunningham led off Caldwell singled, Amburgey was
with a double, and Ken Turley intentionally walked to load the
bases and Stout grounded out for
drove him home with a single,
while Todd Lis Je reached on a a force at the plate.
With one outR!ffleripped a line
fielder's choice and came home

•

The education hucksters.____R_o-'-be_rt_~_al_te_rs
WASHINGTON (NEA) -Can
a semi-literate high school dropout be trained to overhaul a
diesel engine, operate data processing equipment or be a
secretary?
Probably not, but that hasn't
deterred proprietors of trade
schools from deceiving thousands of people without basic
skills into believing they can
learn to perform complex tasks,
then qualify for lucrative jobs.
The hapless students seldom
make much money but the
operators of the proprietary
schools often get rich because
they collect the federal grants
and government-guaranteed
loans is Issued under programs
designed to make educational
opportunities available to all
regardless of financial status.
Education Secretary William
Bennett is attempting to remedy
what he aptly characterizes as
"an outrage perpetrated not only
upon the American taxpayev but
also - and more tragically upon some of the most disadvantaged and most vulnerable
members of our society."
The iii-prepared, low-income
students are recruited by the
trade schools- somettmes while
they are on line waiting for
unemployment or welfare benefits - and told they can be
retrained and placed in good Jobs
without paying for the education.
The federal government, they
are told, will pay all the costs
Involved through either Pen
Grants, which average about
$1,300 per student yearly, or
guaranteed student loans, which
average about $2,300 per recip-

As time elapsed NG hurler
Kevin Sm tth, h av!ng pitched a
super game already, had · his
hands full with Riffle at the plate.
Riffle wasted . little time In
launching a solid shot to rightcenter. to score Caldwell with the
winning run.
Coach Mick Wiaebrenner said,
"Tonight was certainly a close
win.. . maybe we were looking
past this game to tommorow
night's game, but nevertheless
it's a win. John Riffle came
through for us when we needed it
most and has done a super job
since coming back from knee
surgery. Kevin Smith pitched a
great game for North GaiDa.
They have a much improved
team and should be tough next
year. Wewerejustglad to get out
of here with a win."
·
Winebrenner added, "Shawn
Cunningham pitched a great
game for us tonight, butwedidn't
produce too much offense behind

Oaks capture slice of SVAC championship

~bought police grip Stanford__
wu_tia_m_Ru_she__:_r
Stanford University's Faculty
Senate made headlines recently
by abolishing a required course
for freshmen called Western
Culture and replacing it with one
called Cultures, Ideas and
Values. The old course involved
reading selections from 15 "classic texts' : of Western civilization
(the Bible, Plato, etc.). The new
course slashes these from 15 to
six, to make room for works by
" women, minorities and persons
of color" - the point being that
the original list 's authors were
overwhelmingly white and male,
thus rendering it unacceptable.
It Is difficult to argue in great
detail with the Faculty Senate
until we know what readings wlll
replace the stricken classics, and
the Senate was coy about this,
leaving the selection to be made
· by individual professors when
the new course begins In Sep·
!ember 1989. But Secretary of
Education William J . Bennett
was undoubtedly rigllt on the
mark when he attributed the
faculty's decision to "a campaign of pressure politics" by
campus radicals. Stanford has
long been In the grip of a coterie

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio

Kinde of Stuff" - For

Peu. Stebl•. IAr.. • Smelt Animeto.
Lewne end Oerclene.
3" W. Mel•
"1·1164
P-ey. Ohie

f'IUILY PLOCIC . .tDQUAIUIRI

~

�Friday, May 13,11988
Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By TOM WITHERS
UPI Sports Writer
Last year's Nat lonal League
dlvisionwinnersThursdaya fternoon played as though they have
no mtentlon of taking part In this
season's playoffs.
In a game featuring eight
errors a nd a score resembling a
contest between the footb all
Cardinals and Giants, . the St.
Louis Cardinals outlasted the
San Francisco Giants 13-12.
Four of the eight errors came
on dropped fly balls by Cardmals
outfielders. The miscues gave St .

H " It ":'as a ~eat game 1 ~ win, "
ornet sa td. It was a veoy easy
game for us 10 lose after we made

~l~hosect~orsa~dlookedawful.

h':re playmg bad and II ':"auld
a hel b;en kind of easy to shtft out
~ot .. r a'!Q fouthgeara ndglveit
p.
"
L S~ott Terry, 1·1· the third St.
d ou s pltchet , earned the victory
esptte g!VIng up three runs in
t~e ~eventh innmg. Todd Worrell
P tc ed the ninth for his lOth
sa~~~ ig Lefferts, l-2, took the
loss. He was charged with four

~~~i~~!~~~.~~~~~~-~~af~~~~i~~ ~~~;~th~~nnti;~-r:nun~~gl:shi~~
errors.
Horner and Luis Alicea.
"It was wild, ·• said cardinals

first baseman Bob Horner, who
had four hits- and one error. " It
was a great game for players and
the fans . You saw everything
that you would want in a
four -hour, nine-lninng game.
You had 25 runs, errors. doubles,
triples, and home runs."
Horner, who broke a 1 for 28
slump with a single in his las t
at-ba t Wednesday nigh!. led the
Cardinals ' 18-hit at tack.

The Cardinals scored six runs
in the sixth, capped by Terry
Pendleton ·s two-run homer, to
take a 9-8 lead.
The Giants had taken a 7-3
advantage with a six-run inning
of their own, the fourth, with the
help or three St. Louis errors two by center fielder Willi e
McGee. Five of .the r uns were
unearned.
San Francisco's Will Clark had
three hits, including a hom er and
a do ubl e, and drove in two runs.

Jordan ...

Conti nued from page 3
Roy Tarp ley came off the
and Vincent, Detroit guard lsiah
bench
to score 27 lor the MaverThomas said backcourt defense
icks. Lafayette Lever and Alex
Is not the Pistons' problem.
"We are not shooting the ball English scored 22 points each for
well," said ThOmas. who scored Denver.
The .two teams, tied l -1, play
a team-high 25 points. "I don't
3 and4 at Dallas Saturday
Games
care how hyped you get, If you
and
Sunday
.
cannot put the basketball In the
"Dallas
is
an excellent tea m.
hole, you cannot win games.
going
to
be
tough to get one
It's
Defensively, we played well
there,"
Nuggets Coach
down
enough to win the game. OffenDoug
Moe.
"But
ifwedon'twe're
sively, we just didn't do anything
go ing to be in deep trouble."
right."
Blackman scored 4 points in an
Del roll hit 36 of 96 shots from
11-2
spurt early in the fourth
the field and 22 of 41 from the foul
quarter that sen t the Mavericks
line.
Holding an 81-62 lead after ahead 91 -81 with nine minutes to
three periods, the Pistons put play. Denver countered with 8
together a 12-3 blitz to pull to 84-74 s tra ight points, before Dallas
with 7:06 left. Detroit's James built a 106-97 cushion with 1:07
Edwards scored eight points left. .
Haw·ks at Celtics
during the surge and all of his 16
If Atlanta is to prevent a repeat
In the final quarter.
Gamel's ll0-101 Boston victory,
Mavericks 112, Nuggets 108
· Rolanqo Blackman scored 15 of 11 wilt have to slow down Larry
liis 31 points In the fourth quarter Bird and speed up Dominique
Wilkins.
tp pace Dallas.
The Celtics blew open the game
· "Our guys did a great job of
setting up screens," Blackman early. with Bird ·outscoring the
said. "Everbody else Is setting Hawks in the first quarter. He
totaled 24 of his game-high 38
this up as a showdown In between
the guards. I just want to help points in the quarter as Atlanta
fell behind by 15.
Dallas beat Denver."

"You can't goo~tthereandsay
we didn't do our Jobs or (Giants
siarter Rick) Reuschel didn't do
his job," Clark said. "Nothing
went right for the pitcl\ers.
Everything went right for the
hitters."
.
.
Reuschel allowed e tght hits
and six runs over five innings.
"The Cardinals and our ourselves are two evenly matched
ballclubs," Clark said. "We
sho":ed it in the playo~fs last year
by playing seven games. We've
battled in every game we played

outs in the !Otb Inning to lift the
Cubs.
Grace singled with one out off
Mark Davis, 1-2. One out later,
Rafael Palmeiro walked, before
Berryhill hit Davis's flrstpttch to
left center .
·
Bill Landrum, J-0, earned the
victory . The Padres had 14 hits
and stranded 12 runners.
Pirates 7, Dodgers 4
At Pittsburgh ·Barry Bonds
homered twice oifOrel Hershiser
and Bobby Bonilla blasted a
three-run homer to power

Pittsburgh.
Pirates starter John Smiley,
3-2 had one bad inning, allowing
th;ee runs on four hits In the
fourth. The Dodgers didn't get
another hit until there were two
outs in thE! eighth. Smiley lin!shed with a six-hitter, walking
four and striking out five In his
first major-league complete
game.
Hershlser 6-1 surrendered 12
hits. Bonds 'and' Jose Lind were
each 3 for4, and Rafael HelUard 2
for 3 for the Pirates.

.
.
:
·

cand wtt~,
• • I d•
k
.
n ~ans tonnle Miliv.au ee, 3-1
By United ~ress International
Cleveland s Tom Candiotti,
much like his knuckle ball, had
ups and downs Thursday night.
Candtotti allowed 10 hits, inel uding five doubles, and worked
into- and out of- several jams
to 1111 the Indians to a 3-1 triumph
over the Milwaukee Brewers at
C~~nty Stadium.
The~. took a lot of good
swi ngs, satd Candlottl, 5-1.
"They hit the ball at t(mes hard
and at times th.~y didn't hit It
very good at all.
Mtlwaukee had runners in
scoring position in seven different Innings . Each Brewers starter had at least one hit.
"The way I, look at It, hitting is
all timing and your job as a
pitcher is to upset timing," said
Candlottl, who' hurled his fifth
complete game of the season.
"So if you can do that, you've
done your job."
Milwaukee Manager Tom Trebelhorn said although Candlotti
struggled, the right-hander was
, tough when he had to be.
"He pitched a great ballgame," Trebelhorn said. "A lot
of people are trying to make
of the fact that he
something
·
didn't pitch very well, but I
thought he pitched a marvelous
game to do what he was able to
do. He got every key out he had to
get and · he went a complete
ballgame.
Candiottl was locked In a 1-1
duel with Brewers starter Juan
Nieves, who yielded one run on
three hits over 7 2-3 innings.
Cleveland broke a 1-1 tie In the
ninth with two runs on three
extra-base hits after Milwaukee 's Chuck Crim, 0-2, recorded
two outs. Mel Hall doubled, Ron
Washington tripled and Andy

Devils top Bruins,
force seventh game
By GERRY MONIGAN
UPI Sports Writer
' EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J.
(UP!) Mark Johnson.
scratched from Game 5, re•turned to the New Jersey lineup
Thursday night and helped the
Devils force a deciding seventh
g.ame against the Boston Bruins
In the Wales Conference finaL
: "This has been a tough series
for me," said Johnson, who
s~ored twice to pace the Devils to
a .6-3 victory. "I got knocked out
(;by Boston defenseman Gord ·
l}luza k) In Game I, didn't play in
Game 2, didn ' t do much In Games
l and 4, and wasn't wanted in
{iame 5. I made up my mind our
line had to have a big game
tlmight."
• Llnemate John MacLean
' s~ored In the second period to
give New Jersey a 4-3 edge and a
lead It never relinquished. The
Devils scored five goals in 13
$hots on net against starting
coaltender Rejean Lemelin.
•'Johnson provided the early
spark, giving the Devils a 2-1
first-period lead with his ninth
and lOth goals of (he season. New
J,ersey recorded only six shots on
!;0•1 In the opening period.
"Mark was skating about 2
JOches off the tee," Devils Coach
Jtrn Schoenfeld said. " He's a
skilled player, and he's one of the
players who can take control of a
~lish all by himself. Mark has
great capabilities, and we expect
anotller big game out of him
Saturday.,.
:-Game 7 will be played Saturday night at Boston, with tlje
• winner advancing to the Stanley
&lt;;up final against the defending
champion Oilers beginning Wed' rlesday at Edmonton.
:Sc hoenfeld has scratched
JOhnson for two of the three
· games on Boston Garden's small
lbe surface, a choice that has
, disappointed Johnson but proved
tieneflclal.
• "The Garden Is s small build: lrlg. and they had a better chance
df getting a hold of him If he was
, fatigued ," Schoenfeld said of his
. • d~cision to bench Johnson for
Game 5, a 7-l Boston victory . "A
'' lot of players try to run him, but
' when he's on top of his game and
well rested, he's skilled enough
and quick enough and perserverlng enough; to hang In there and
get out of the way and make the
big play. When he loses that half
step, that's when he runs the risk
of getting Injured."
New Jersey. which finished
20th out of 21 teams in the NHL
t~st season, has not lost consecutive games since March 1-2 of the
regular season. Boston is 7-l at
home during the ptbyoffs.

this year. It just shows you two
good clubs battling and ·never
giving up."
Elsewhere,ChicagoedgedSan
Diego 2-1 In 10 innings, and.
Pittsburgh dumped Los Angeles
7-4.
In the AL: Toronto8, Seattle 2;
Texas 2, Baltimore 1; and
Cleveland 3, Milwaukee 1.
Cubs 2, Padres 1 ·
10 Innings
At .· Chicago, Rookie Damon
Berryhill doubled to score Mark
Grace from second base with two

rr

Allanson doubled to produce the Deer's RBI single.
· ,,
runs.
Elsewhere, Toronto routed
"It's real frustrating, " Crim Seattle 8-2 and Texas nipped
said. " It's my job to go out there Baltimore 2-1.
and hold them to no runs and 1
In the National League : St.
really feel like 1 let the team _Louis lJ, San Francisco 12 ;
down when that happens Chicago 2, San Diego 1 In 10
especially in a game like that Innings· and Plttsbu,rgh 7 Los
'
when all we have to do is go out Angel~ 4.
and score one run."
Blue Jays 8, Marblers 2
The loss was the third straight
At Toronto, Kelly Gruber
for Milwaukee after a 10-game banged out three hits including
winning streak.
an RBI single and 'a two-run
The Indians took a 1-0 lead in double, to lead a 13-htt attack.
the second when Cory Snyder Mike Flanagan went 61-3 innings
launched his sixth home run. The to improve to 4-2. Seattle starter
Brewers tied it in the sixth on Rob

Bill Swift, 2-1, yielded five earned
runs on 10 hits over five innings .
Rey Quinones homered for the
Mariners.
Rangers 2, Orioles 1_
At Arlington, Texas.- Ruben
Sierra and Curtis Wilkerson
. delivered RBI singles to propel
the Rangers to .500. The Orioles
fell to 4-29, the worst record in
baseball. JoseGuzman,4-2, tosta
shutout In the seventh when
Keith Hughes connected for a
405-foot homer. Mitch Williams .
notched his seventh save. Balli- ·
more's Juan Bautista, 0-2 took
the loss.

can High School Students and is
listed in Who's Who Among
American High School Students.
He served lour years on the
school scholastic team and was
winner of the Ohio University
Chemistry Contest and the Ohio
University History Contest In his
junior year. He was selected for
the American- High School
mathematics exam for four
years arid was In the Oh Jo
University Regional Scholars
program at Ohio University last
year.
McPhail has been a choir
member and a member of the
Computer Club for four years. He
"'as a Boys' State delegate his
junior year and a member of the
show choir for two years. He has
been a member of the Science
Club this year and has served as
a sports writer on the school
newspaper: He took part In
basketball for four years, belonged to the French Club, and
was a member of the senior play
cast. He attends St. Paul Lutheran Church where he is active Jn
youth activities . McPhail plans
to attend Ohio State University
where he will. major in the
biological sciences.

a lot of putts."
Lietzke, a former Nelson ..
winner, said that while low
scores could be expected, the
par-70 layout would create problems all week.
"It's the kind of course where
somebody, can shoot a 63 or 64," ·
Lietzke said . "But nobody is
going to do that everyday. And if
the wind blows, It wtJI be really •
tough."
·
After finishing 25th on the
money llst two years ago,
Wiebe's game all but disappeared In !987. His best finish this
year was a lOth at the Players
Championship.
"It's been a while since I've
had a chance to win on Sunda.y,"
Wiebe said. "So this round is
nothing for me to get excited
about. Not yet."
Wiebe broke out of the 4-under
logjam with a two-putt birdie at
the par-5 seventh I his 16th hole of
the day) and then made a
five-foot birdie putt at the par-4
ninth .
I

Soufh Central Ohio ·
Showers and thunderstorms
Ukely today, with highs In the
mid 80s. Mostly cloudy · early
tonight with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms, and clearing
late tonight with a low between 50
and 55. Mostly sunny Saturday,
with highs In the mid 70s.
The probability of precipitation Is 70 percent today, 30
percent tonight and near zero
Saturday.
Winds will be from the southwest at. 15 to 25 mph today,
becoming northwesterly at 10 to
15 mph tonight.
Extended Forecast
Sunday through Tuesday
Fair Sunday and Tuesday, with
a chance of rain on Monnday .
Highs will be in the 70s Sunday
and Monday, and ranging from
the mid 60s to the low 70s
Tuesday.

~~~

$111 35

~~

Payment based on sale price of $61 00.00 with colh down or
trodt equity of $500.00. Amount financed is $5600.00, for
66 mo. at 10,7 S% APR ••rioble rate. Simply odd ta11s and
~tlo lets. For qualified buyers.

-

FOUR'DI THRU EIGHTH MEIGS HONoREES- These fourth, slxtb and elghtb graders of .
the Meigs Locat Sehool Dl&amp;lrld, were amon1 the
honorees at the Melp County AcademiC Excellence Banquet Thunday night and Include: front,
I to r, Dorotby Leifheit, fourth pade; Jason
Witherell, slxtb pade, Salisbury Elementary;
Thomas P. Gannaway, fourth; Mattbew Clark,
sixth, Salem Center Elementary; Clndl Stewart,

Sixty top scholars honored

~SNOW
. FRONTS:

11 Warm

MO.
Payment based on solo priu of $10,225.00 with cash down or
lradt equity $1000.00. Amount financed is $922 5.00 for 66 mo.
at 10.25'/o APR •orioble rate. Simply add taxes and title Ins. For
qualified buyers.
·

Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services reports seven
calls Thursday: Ru Uand at 2: 28
a.m. to Meigs Mine No. I for
Kenny Taylor to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 8:13
a:m. to·Maln St. for Patricia Hill
Veterans Memorial Hospital:
Rutland at 9:46a.m. toNewLima
Road for Henry Rider to Veterans Memorial Hospita I; Middleport at 11:44 a.m. to North
Second Ave. for Louise Hubbard
1o Holzer·Medical Center: Syrac\lse at 7: 52 p.m. toW ater St. for
Debbie Hawley to Pleasant VaiJey Ho~pital; Ru tiand at 8:52
Itm. to Malloon's Roaq for
Melanie Carman to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at 10:42
p.m. to Collin's Road lor Shirley
Might to Veterans Memorial
i{ospital.
.

$13323

•

•

SPRING SALE-A-BRATION!

Due To Tlie Overwhelming Response

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.

Sprl•l &amp; S•••" llo111
'OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
9 AM-6 PM
SATURDAY 9 AM-1 PM
~THE

Marriage licenses have been
issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to Daniel Neil Paxton, 22,
Gallipolis, and Barbara Lee
Fowler, 17, Middleport; Carl
Anthony Keathley, 30, and Margaret Eliza beth Fields, 23, both
of Letart, W.Va.

... .......

GRAVELY

M

U

The Excitement Is Back!

INVENTORY
CLEARANCE

2 DA!S ONLY!· Sale Ends Saturday, May 14'h

; I

Paymtnl based on sate prl&lt;t of
$7200.00 with casll dawn or trade equoty of $500.00. Amount linancod it
$6700.00 for 66 me. at 10.25% APR

1988 CORSICA
4 Dr. Sedan ·

variablt raft. Simply add taxes and title
let . for qualified buyolrs.

$1ggB4

_:!pty

BIG-TIME WRESTLING -

1988 BERETTA
2 Dr. Coupe

Finance specialists will be on duty to arrange the lowest
possible payments. Terms available up to 60 months.
This clearance Is FOR RETAIL CUSTOMERS ONLY. NO SALES
PERMIITED TO DEALERS. Prices apply to available units only.
No ORDERING PERMIITED AT these prices.

If you plan on buying
an new automobile this year, "'~&lt;®
doitnow!
~~~~ . .

ii
'
PER
MO.

Payment baud 011 salt price S11,55 0.00 with cosh down or tradt
equity $1500.00. Amount li-ed is $10,050.00 for 66 mo. at
I 0.25 'Ia APR vorlablt rato, Simply ac1ot1 tax• ancl tillt IHL For
quelifiod buy••·
.

Take Advantage Of Up to $1,000 Cash Back And
No Payments 'Till August 1988,' On Approved
Credit On Selected Models, See Dealer For Details!
. PRICES WILL "NOT BE ADVERTISED, values for your trade in. Please bring
in consideration of other ·authorized your car's title and payment book, If
dealers
In
the
area.
Certified applicable.
appraisers will be on
to allow top .

· The Rock 'n RoD Express,
• above, wDI take on the Death
;• Machine In one of the matches
•: oltbe I.W.A. all-star wresiUng
.• competition Saturday at 8: 05
;: p.m., In fhe Convocation Cen·
, ter 1D j\theu. Among the otber
, · wrestlers at tbe competition
will be the Iron Sheik vs. Sgt.
:, Slaughter, -Bruiser Brody,
:· David Sammartino, Tony
·, Atlallln addition to midget and
:; women wrestlers. Tlcketa are
:• $10 lor rlnplde and S8 lor
•: 1enerat admlttslon. The event
~ IuponsoredbyC.D.C.Promolions al Rutland.

PER
MO.
. Payment ba11ci on salt pri&lt;t $10,S70.00 with cash down or trade
equity $1500.00. Amount financed is $9,070.00 for 66 mo. at
10.25"1o APR vwiablt raft. Simply odd la1es and title Ius. for
qualified buyers.

Payment based on solo prict $11,465 with cash dawn or tradt oquity $1500.00. Amount financed is $9965.00 for 66 rna. at
I 0.25'/o APR •ariablo rate. Simply add tales ancl tltlt fH. For .....
ifitd buy•s.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

TOM2ndANNUAL
PEDEN'S( )

PEl
MO.

$18Ql;·

$19815 ~~-

Patricia Hill was arraigned
this morning (Friday) In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court on a
pand jury Indictment charging
her with arson. The Indictment
against Hill was tiled October
1987 in connection with an incident In December 1986. Hill was
released by the court on a $5,000
personal recognizance bond.

***PLUS***

1988 S-10 EL PICKt!.IP
2WD

$15341 ~~

1988 CELEBRITY
4 Dr. Sedan

0

-RAIN
SHOWERS
"Cold
"Static . . Occluded

AITaigned today

Issued licences

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
Sixty top scholars representing
all three local school districts
were honored at the annual
Meigs County Academic Excellence Banquet held at the Meigs
High School cafeteria Thursday
night.
.Staged by the Meigs County
Board of Education, the banquet
is held annually to honor the top
fourth, sixth, eighth, lOth and
12th graders of the three local
districts for outstanding accomplishment In the academic field.
The recognition event was begun
several years ago by Meigs
County Superintendent of
Schools John Riebel with board
of education sponsorship.
About 300 people were on hand
for Thursday night's event Including the honorees, their families, friends, teachers and adminIstrators, all of whom were given
recognition by Bill Buckley,
secondary school supervisor for
Continued on page 9

Map shows m•n.mum 1emoeratures. At least 50% ot any shadeo area 1s ~orecast
ro rece•·Je prec10•!at on •n&lt;l;cated
UPI

PER

Payment based on salt price 18715.00 with cash down or tradt
equity $1000.00. Amount financed is $7715.00 for 66 mo. at
10.25"1o APR variable rate. Simply add ta11s and titlt fees. for
qualified buyers.
.

lourtb; Lori Bumem,alxfh,Rutland Elementary;
Travis Abbott, fourth; Tracy File, slxtb,
Pomeroy Elementary; second row, I tor, Allison
Gerlach, fourth pade, Middleport Elementary;
Amber Bennett, fourfh grade; Timmy Vance,
slxtb pade, Harrisonville Elementary; Heather
Burch, sixth pade, Bradbury Elementary:
Robby Wyatt, lJobby Vance, Joe McElroy, Tara
Gerlach, Frank Blake and Barbara Anderson, all
eighth graders al the Meigs Junior High School.

Am Electric Power ........... .-. 26%
AT&amp;T ................................. 27'h
Ashland 011 ....... ................. 69*
Bob Evans ................ .......... 16]1,
Charming Shoppes .............. 10}'8
City Holding Co ................... 32
Federal Mogul... .......... .. ... .. 38\1
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................61~
Heck's Inc ........................... 1~
Key Centurion ....................39~
Lands' End ......................... 24%
Umlted Inc ........................18\1
Multimedia Inc ...................66
Rax Restaurants ................. .4\1
Robbins &amp; Myers .............. ... 11
Shoney's Inc ...... ................. 24]1,
Wendy's Inti.. ...................... 6\1
Worthington Ind ....... ........... 20

Tom Pedeq has a huge inventory of brand-new Chevrolets,
Oldsmobiles, Pontiacs, Buicks, Special Factory Purchase
vehicles,and used cars tha~must be sold by May 14,1988. For
the next 2 days only, Tom Peden will clear out this inventory
at substantial discount.

1988 NOVA
4 Dr. Sedan

'

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce asid Mark Smith
of Blunt, Elll&amp; 6 Loewl

.

1988 CAVALIER
4 Dr. Station Wagon

$18343

Stocks

and Brasel Company for a permit
to use salt brine for dust and ice
control at their yard and lease
roads on Leading Creek Road. No
objections to the permit were
voiced at the meeting. The
commissioners therefore approved tbe permit request. Final
approval on the permit should be
forthcoming from the state in the
near future.

EMS has 7 calls

to

1988 SPRINT METRO
2 Dr. Hatchback Coupe

A publiC hearing was held
Wednesday In the office of the
, Meigs County Commissioners to
review a request from the Brasel

Weather

Chamblee first round Nelson leader··
IRVING, Texas (UP!) - The this year In his third try.
only problem with the leader
The 11-man group at 66 inboards dotted around the TPC- cluded Payne Stewart, Ben CrenLas Collnas Sports Club Thurs- shaw, Bruce Lietzke, Peter Jaday was that for most of the day cobsen. Clarence Rose, Tommy
there was not enough room on Nakajima, David Frost. Dave
them for the leaders.
Rummells, Jeff Sluman, George
"! looked ,at the board once," Archer and Curt Byrum.
said Brandel Chamblee, who
Raymond Floyd, Tom Watson·
finished the day a shot out of the and Cl,&gt;rey Pavln were among
top spot, "and It looked like there those at 67, Masters champion
were 20 guys at 4-under."
Sandy Lyle and Craig Stadler
There weren't that many , but were at 68 and Lanny Wadkins
for a while it appeared as if the and Lee Trevino both shot 69.
opening day of the Byron Nelson . And Arnold Palmer shot a 70,
Golf Classic would set a record putting the 58-year-old golfing
for most players tied for the lead legend In position to make the
at the end of a round.
36-hole cut.
Mark Wiebe birdied two of the
The opening round was played
last three· holes, however, and in clear, warm, and virtually
Chamblee birdied the last one to windless weather - making
break away from the huge mob scoring conditions perfect .
that eventually finished with
"The only surprise tome Is that
4- under 66s.
someone didn 't shoot a 62," said
Wiebe, a two-time winner in a Wiebe, whose 64 was his low
five-year tour career, shot a round of the year. "The course is
6-under 64 to lead Chamblee by in great shape and when the
one stroke. Chamblee, a tour greens are as . good as these
rookie, qualified for the circuit greens are, people usually make

Commission approves permit request

Heather
Continued from page 1

Friday, May 13, 1988

Cards outlast Giants, 13-12; Cubs, Pirates p1st triumphs
·

The Daily Santinei-Pega 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

'

·SALES • SERVICE ·TESTING

I

TOM PEDEN

BlOWN &amp; SNOUFFEI
FilE I SAfEn
EQUIPMENT

Chevrolet • Oldsmobile • Pontiac • Buick, Inc.
Mon.-Fri.
Phone:
a.m. to 8p.m. Rt. 21 South • Ripley 372·2844
. 8:30- 6p.m. 475 South Church St. 422.0756
~OSI:D SUNDAY
344-5947

Sm•• '"·

· J71 hrtll
.......rt, Ohio 45760
I Pl. (61.) "1•7075

GarY, I Sllovf~ - 992-J 446

: . ,' I

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0~.$

••••

l.

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Pomeroy-Middlqport, Ohio

;·• Common pleas court news

•

:

••
.

:
~

•
•
•

•

Christina Pullins Da iley,
Pomeroy , has filed suit In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court for
$50,000 from Catherine Pratt,
Point Pleasant, W.Va . The suit
stems from an incident on May 7,
1986 In Middleport in which
Dalley. who was riding a bicycle,
was struck by a vehicle driven by
Pratt. Dailey charges that
Pratt's negligence caused the
Incident. Dalley Is requesting the
$50,000 judgment for damages .
First Family Mortgage Corporation, Lisle, Ill., has filed suit
against Richard E. Workman
arid Karen L. Workman, Dexter.
and Buckeye Rural Electric,
Galllpolls. for a judgment of
$22,958.34.
Lawrence R. Yeauger, Cheshire, has flied an action against .

Area
deaths .

wUte red dawn...

Martin J . Chapman, Middlepo rt,
requesting judgmentof$3,000for
damages to personal property.
Yeauger alleges that on Dec. 7,
1987, the defendant negligently
drove his vehicle into a Ma ck
truck and trailer owned by the
plaintiff.
An entry confirming the sale of
property and ordering dlstrlbU·
tlon of proceeds from the sale has
been fUed In a foreclosure action
by Citizens Federal Savings arid
Loan Association of Miami, Fla.
against Charles Ellis; et al.
A deficiency judgment of
$43,411.49 ha~ been awarded the
plaintiff In the case of James
Clifford against Royal Petroleum Properties Inc.
The retrial of Joseph Taylor,
charged with murder, has been
set by the court for May 23,
beginning at 9 a.m.

-Increases fees from $1.50 to
$2.50 a ton for local trash and

I Market report

1

ATHENS UVESTOCK SALES
May 7, 1988

CATTLE PRICES: Feeder Steers:
(Good and Choice) ae&amp;-500 ib8. 1!.00.noo·
m-700 lh8. '2.80-78.50; Feeder Heifers;
(Good and Choioe) :lt0-500 ibs. 77.110-l18.00;
000.7GO lbs. 56.00-68.50; Feeder Bull8:
Wood and Choice) 3011-500 ibo. oo.ot-90.00;
500..700 lbs. 60.00-75.01: Back to Farm
Bulls: 58.00..59.00; Slaugld er Bulla: ( O~er
1000 lbs.) 58.50; Slaughter Cows: UtUitl~
oli.00-53.23; Cannq:s and Cutters U'm~.00; Springer !mws: (By the Head)
l80.80-U5.00; Cow and Call Pairs: (By the
Unit) 585.(10-170.00; Veals: (Choice and
Prime) 10.00.93.00; Baby Calves: ·(By the
Head) 62.50-127.50; Baby Calves: (By the
Pound) 17.00-1~.00.

HOG PRICES: Hogs: (#I, Barrows and
Glib) 200-230 lbs. 42.00-44.00; Butcher
Sows: 35.00..31.50; Butcher Boara: 30.00;
Feeder Pigs: (By the Head) 30.1)'H7.00;
SHEEP PRICES: Slau&amp;fllor Lambs:
81.00-8%.00; Feeder Lambs: 63.00-84,00;
Goats by the Head: 12.00-47.00.

.
•

Friday. May 13. 1988

Divorce actions filed in court

Continued from page I

from $4.50 to $7.50 for out-of-state
trash.
.
''The new version of House Bill
592 looks like a laundry list of
every objection the waste Industry made to the orlglnalleglslatlon, and a few Ideas never
previously mentioned,' ' said
Celebrezze, who especially crttlclzed weakening provisions for
background checks to weed out
unscrupulous landlfll operators.
"The adoption of the substitute
bill wm take Ohto's soud waste
program back to the 1960s
Instead of moving it forward into
the 21st century," said Richard
Shank, director of the Ohio EPA.

Divorce actions have been filed
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Keith 0 . Black, Syracuse, from Melanie A. Black,
Galllpolis; Debra s. Halley,
Syracuse, from William J . Hal·
ley, Syracuse. Restraining
orders have been issued against
the defendants In both cases.
Judy Ann Jewell has been

gra nted a divorce from Pearlle
F . Jewell and restored by the
court tohermaldennameDenny.
Kimberly Marlene McFann
and Kenneth Ray McFann have
been granted a dissolution of
their marriage. Kimberly
McFann has been restored to.her
malden name Maynard.

EASTERN HILL
FABRIC SHOP

For emorlal Day

-- ..

SILK FLOWER
ARRANGEMENTS
FOR MEMORIAL DAY

$199 TO $2499
OP£N. 10 A.M.-s P.M. MON.-SAT.
1 P.M.-5 P.M. SUN.
985-3909

SEE OUR BEAUTIFUL
E
·
SEL CTION OF SILK
FLOWERS AND
ARRANGEMENTS

Dear Ann Landen: Years ago I
married the most wonderful man.
I'll call him David. He doesn't
drink, thoush he claims to be an
, alcoholic. He doesn't smoke ot use
foullaiiJW!Ie. He is helpful with the
housework, loves shopping and
ef\ioys the children.
The problem? He disappears. Just
ups and goes. There is never a
quarrel, no warning. He just goes.
This happened the tim time
while I was pregnant with our son,
who is now 12. David went to work
one mornilll! and never returned.
He was gone for seven months. I
gave birth to our son alone. Out of
the blue,- he appeared in the livilll!
room, said he had been drinking.
was sorry that he wasn't here when
the baby was born and he hoped I
would forgive him. I said I would.
The following year he said he had
a call sayilll! two relatives who live
out of town were killed in a
hit-and·run accident and he had to
go handle the funeral and attend to
legal matters. This time he was gone
for nine months. Then one day I
looked up from my desk at work
and he was standing there.
Apin I forgave and took him
back. Shortly after that our family
moved to another state and we had
two years of happiness.
· Then he disappeared apin, this
time for six months. He left behind
some checks that I had to cover and

Cl"ff
1 's Place
POWELL ST., MIDDLEPOn
992-5496

FRIDAY
REEDSVILLE -_,Olive Township Trustees will hold a special
meeting on Friday, 7:30p.m., at
the Reedsville Fire Statton.

/o

POMEROY - Senior Citizens
round and square dance Friday,
8 to 11 p.m. Music by Larry
Hubbard and his Band. Those
attending are to take snacks for
the snack table.

APR
FIXED RATE
FINANCING•

RUTLAND- Rutland Church
of the Nazarene will be In revival
through Saturday with services
at 7 p.m. each evening. Speaker
will be Rev. A.B. Malloy Jr.
Special musiC by Frank and
Evelyn Leach will be featured. A
slngsplratlon will be held at the
church on Sunday at 6:30p.m.

Edward Humphrey

t'
t

.,

..

::
,•·•
' ,
;: .
,·• .

..

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Edward Newton Humphrey,
65, 34331 Crew Road, Pomeroy,
died Thursday at the Holzer
Medical Center.
A farmer and horse trainer,
Mr. Humphrey was born Sept. 3,
1922 at Rock Springs, a son the
late Edward and Hazel Brown
Humphrey.
Surviving are a brother, Lewis
Eugene Humphrey, Pomeroy;
four sisters, Hortense Humphrey, Pomeroy; Grace Drake,
Westerville; Louise Bartels,
Pomeroy; Clara Humphrey,
Pomeroy; several nieces and
nephews; an aunt, Addle Brown,
Pomeroy, and a close friend,
Sherry Indestad, Langsville.
Besides his parents. Mr.
Humphrey was preceded In
death by a sister, Janet Humphrey, and a brother, Waid Cross
Humphrey.
Mr. Humphrey was a veteran
of World War II having served In
the U. S. Army and was a
member of the United States
Trotters Association.
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Saturday at the Ewing Furteral
Home with the Rev . Melvln
Franklin officiating. Burial will
be in Rock Springs Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 6 to 9 this evening.

SYRACUSE - Syracuse VIllage Council meeting, 6 p.m.
Friday at VIllage Hall.

•

\

FOR
GASOUNE

'

'

HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonvllle Elementary PTO is
sponsoring a flea market on
Saturday, May 14,from10a.m. to
5 p.m., at the school. Table set up
Is $5. A beans and cornbread
dinner will be served beginning

l
CHOOSE FROM THESE GREAT NAMES ...
FORD • JEEP • EAGLE • CADILLAC
BMW • HONDA • PONnAC • SUBARU
GMC • NISSAN • CHEVROLET • OLDS
PEUGEOT • UNCOLN • MERCURY
• YUGO
TOYOTA • CHRYSLER • DODGE
PLYMOUTH • DODGE TRUCKS • BUICK
• MUDA • ISUIU • MERCEDES
• VOLKSWAGEN

••'.••
••

.. .

:; ~ Announcements

I
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Plans for sending donations to
Sine Cara and Bethany Mountain
Mission and for contributing to
the church building fund were
made when the Rock Springs
United Methodist Women met at

!

~

••

Twins club to meet
The Mother of Twins Club will
•' meet Monday, 7 p.m., at the
•••• Pomeroy United Methodist
• • Church.

..·-·

A party In observance of the
first birthday of Dustin Brlnager
was held recently at the home of
his pare.nts, Tyrone and Lon
Brlnager.
Theme of the party was Pond
Puppies. Attending besides his
parents were his grandmother,
Kay Warden, greatgrandmother, Florence Mat·
thews, Doug, Bunni, Stacy,
Derek and Christopher Warden,
Becky and Brandl Mallory, -camellia and Mitchell Walker,
Unda, Dale and Derek Teaford,
Michael and Adam Ball, Karen
and Jennifer Walker, Maryann
Shoults, Scotty Brinager, Mary,
Jesae and Marla Huddleston,
Bobbl and Jeri Hill, Trlcla Wolfe,
and Dolly Hill.
Sending gifts but unable to
attend were bls arandfather. Bob
Wlll'llen, arandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil Brlnager. Rhonda and
~anda Spaun.

'·
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••

Trustees meetln&amp; lonlght
Salisbury Township Trustees
~~ will meet In special session
C
i. tonight (Friday), 7 p.m.. at the
'
township hall.

'·
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' Hospital news
~;.
:J
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••

••

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•

Veterans Memorial
Thursday Admissions- Ralph
Day, Pomeroy; Michael Smith,
Middleport; Leslie Gibbs, Pomeroy; Ruth Childs, Parkersburg,
W.Va.; Erta Christopherson,
Middleport; Middleport; Wilda
Brinker, New Haven, W.Va.;
Melanie Carman, Langsville.
Thursday Discharges - Phyllis Cadle, Judith Laudermllt,
Elizabeth Horak.
I

purse.

at 12 noon, as well as other
refreshments. Everyone Is
welcome.
SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Eight
District Buckeye Girls Sta\e tea
will be held at the American
Legion annex, 299 Mill St.,
Middleport, Sunday at 1 p.m .

:'Se~ Your lo~~l Participating Deal~r. For More Information. Ouahfted Applicants Only.
·

ASTORG MOTOR
COMPANY

DICK WARNER
PONnAC, INC•

DILS FORD
1601 13111 Strwl
,............. wv 26101

2028 7th Slr•t
,............ wv 26101

7111 &amp; Gr•n Sir• I
Parlconllurg, WV 26101

422-6403

422-3502

415·6401

McCUNTON
CHEVROlET·IMW

MUUEN M(ITORS
DODGE

PARK£RSIUIG NISSAN
PEUGEOT

712 lioorty Sino I
,........... wv 26101

422-6501
~

DODGE TIIICIS CHITSlll
13th &amp; ~~~~~ Str•t
,..............
26101

' 415·5555

Aw•••

1627 ...._h
Parbr.... WY 2601

415-1455

DIS UNCOlN
.RCURY YUGO

ICINCHElOf
MOTOIS, INC.

I" Grand C•lral An.
""- wv 26105

14th &amp; P•ny AYI•
........... W¥26101

295-3323

415-7576

POWEll'S HONDA

LAllY SIMMONS INC.
MAIDA VCUSWAVEN

41031_ _ .._
l'8rllonburt, WV26101

415-1671

1710 141h Slnot
......,.,..., wv 26101

. .5-5451

lOUIS THOMAS
SUIARU, INC.
636 7th Slrwt

MATHENY GMC
TIUCIS
3rd &amp; A• Slroot

............. wv 26101 , .........,.. wv 26101
421·5111

415-4411

SUPERIOR
TOYOTA, INC.

WHARTON CADWC/
OlDS/ JEEP /EAGlE

3101 7th Strwl
............ wv 26101

424-5122

cago, Rl. 6lA51 UJ562.

1125 7th Sino!
,.~......... wv 26101

415·7511
\i

MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
High School Concert Band, along
with the seventh and eighth
grade bands, wlll present their
spring concert on Sunday at 3
. p.m. at the Meigs Junior High in
Middleport. Admission free but
donations will be accepted.

JUDGING- Judging this year's science fair at
the Chester Elementary School were Individuals
from local Industry and the community. Here

Chuck Manuel, representative of Southern Ohio
Coal Co.'s Meigs Dlv lslon, gets some lnfonnatlon
on frogs and tadpoles from sixth grader, Andrea
Dillard .

Science Fair conduaed
. at Chester

Science fairs at elementary
schools are a combination of
various individuals working together to heip students learn.
Participants include the students, of course, their teachers, ·
and usually one or both of the
each student's parents.
At this year's science fair at
Chester Elementary School,
Principal Catherine Johnson
added another element--she invovled people from local Indu s·

try and the community to help
judge the projects.
Judges for this year's fair were
Mike Lively, Chuck Manuel and
George Stewart of Sothern Ohio
Coal Co.'s Meigs Division;
county supervisors, John Costanzo and Bill Buckley, and
retired teacher, Howard Parker.
More titan 70 studnets, fourth
through sixth grades, partie!·
pated in this year's fair. with
subjects Including the minerals

we eat, ants and their communities, frogs and tadpoles , and
medical subjects .
The students were each judged
on theli' individual ability and
were given one of four ribbons,
-superior. excellent, good or satisfactory. The projects were set up
In the gymnasium and were
available for parents to view
following a dinner at the school
that evening.

MONDAY
RACINE -The regular meetPOMEROY - Gospel sing, 2 Ing of the Southern Local School
p.m. Sunday at United Faith ' Board will be 7 p.m. Monday at
Church, Route 7 by-pass near the high school.
Pomeroy, f_eatuling the Gabriels, the Old Timers Quartet
RUTLAND - The Meigs
"Women in Captivity" was the Maxine Goegleln. Doris Grueser. Goeglein and will be given to
and Jan and Kathy.
County Tuberculosis Office will
be conducting a skin tes tlng theme of the program for Church Faye Wallace, Sue Grace, and Serenity House In Gallia County .
A sack lunch was taken by each
BEDFORD - Picnic at 4: 30 clinic at the Rutland fire house on Women United of Meigs County Glenna Rummell.
Songs were "Love Devine, All member attending and the host
p.m. Sunday for men and women Monday from 4 to 6 p.m. This wlll held at the Racine Baptist
Love Excelling", "Just As I church served dessert and beverof Meigs County Churches of be the only evening skin tes tlng Church Friday.
The program dealing with Am", and "Lean on Me." Pianist age. Mrs. Mary Frances BaumChrist Fellowships at the Ohio clinic In the Rutland area this
women who have served time In was Lillian Hayman with Bar- gardner presided at the business
Valley Christian · Assembly year.
jails, prisons, and reformatories bara Gheen passing out meeting and thanked the women
Campgrounds. Beverage
of the church for their
provided.
MIDDLEPORT - The Flame was led by Martha Lu Beegle. programs.
part
were
Mary
hospitality.
Others
taking
The
offering
of
$50.25
was
Fellowship local chapters of
taken by Mr s. Gheen and Mrs.
POMEROY - A scramble will GallpoUs, Letart, and Lorig Bot· Kay Yost, Ada Titus, Rhoda Hall,
be held at 3 p.m. Sunday at the tom, will meet Monday at 7: 30
Jaymar Golf Course; a covered p.m. at the Meigs Jl/nlor High
dish dinner with meat dish School, Middleport. Guest
provided will be held and there speaker will be Martha Knox,
will be a meeting and election of New Boston, Texas . She Is vice
May 14 and June 1~ were set as women of Churches of Christ Prayer closed the meeting. Reofficers following meeting; event
president of Prayer for Flame
cleaning
days at the Ohio Valley attended the meeting. Next meet- freshments were served In the
slarts at 3 p.m.
Fellowship International. The
Christian Camp when the ing will be on May 26 at 7: 30p.m social rooms of the church .
public Is Invited to attend.
Women's Fellowship of the at the Bradford Church of Christ.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Meigs County hurches of Christ
Genealogical Society meeting 2
TUESDAY
p.m. Sunday at Meigs Museum In
POMEROY .:_ XI Gamma· met recently at the Bradbury
Pomeroy; last meeting before Epsilon Sorority will meet 6: 30 Church of Christ.
'
The women also voted to
summer break. Those needing
p.m. Tuesday at the home of supply
kitchen towels and paper
help with applications for First Patty Circle.
supplies for use at the camp. . New officers were installed at exhibit. Representatives of the
Families of Ohio are urged to
Devotions for the meeting were the final PTO meeting held at the Community Assault Prevention
attend; visitors welcome.
MIDDLEPORT -Middleport given by Ann Lambert of Zion Riverview School.
Services presented an lnforma·
Chamber of Commerce will meet . Churchwhousedthetheme"The
Installed
by
Gra
ce
Weber,
live program. It was voted to
ROCK SPRINGS- Tryouts for
at 12 noon Tuesday at the Light of the Body is the Eye." head teacher, were Sue Suttle, allocate an amount of money to
Meigs American Legion baseball shelterhouse at Hartinger Park.
Scripture was from Matthew 9, president; Sue Douglas, vice each teacher to be used for
team, 1 p.m. Sunday at Meigs
Brown.. bag tunc]). Beverage Matt. 20, and Acts 9.
president; Sonia Circle, treas- classroom teaching supplies.
High School, ages 15-18; players provided.
•
Jeannette
Carter
presided
at
urer; and Theresa Church , Roommothers for the year were
to take gloves, all other equipthe business meeting, and for the secretary .
~onored. Refreshments were
ment provided. No tryouts In
EAST MEIGS-Eastern Local program the Rev . Bill Carter of
An art show uispiaym'g
served by the first grade
shorts, street trousers or tank top Board of Education will meet
Rutland church gave a slide ,~th~e~en~t~lr~e~~~~~~~~~m~o~thers.
shirts.
Tuesday, 8 p.m., in the high the
presentation. Twenty -four
====------school library.

Church Women United hold program

Women's fellowship planned at camp
Riverview PTO cond_
ucts meeting .

the church.
Sharon Folmer had the openIng prayer and the group sang
''What a Friend We Have In
Jesus"; and "Have Thine Own
Way, Lord." Prayer requests

Brinager ~ l;&gt;irthday observed

"'•
•••

;

he took my car. When he returned .
he said his drinking had done him
in again and that if I would take
him back this one last time he
Now I believe that David is
would never drink again. I took · probably not his real name and
him back and we had seven won· that there are other women in the
derful years.
country who think they are legally
Last May David disappeared married to this man. He has
again. This time I had no job, very probably been doing this same
little money and had to give up my · number with God knows how
home. My daushter and son·in·law many others.
·
(bless them) brought me to Virginia .
In the past I have been able to
and made a plare for n;te with them.
juSt
sit and wait.· But this time I
I was very happy.
want
to be free of this nut. I am
Out of the blue David called our
older daushter, who had always ashamed of my stupidity and can't
understand why I took him back ·
adored him. He was sick and alone.
after
he abandoned me so many
He gave the same old reason,
drinking and feeling that he times. Please tell me what to do. couldn't take care of his family. THROWN-AWAY-WIFE IN TEX·
AS
Good, believable excuses, right?
I had my misgivin~. This time I
DEAR WIFE (?): You need legal
didn't exactly welcome him back counsel. This man has not only left
with open arms because I didn't you, he has stolen your daushter's
quite believe him. I linally gave in, car, her husband's gun, your new
however, and he moved in with us clothes and money. He is a fugitive
at my daughter's house. He was from justice.
workilll! and making a little mon·
I urge you to prosecute the crook
ey, but I never saw any of it.
and dump him promptly.
You guessed it. He stayed just
Planning a wedding? What's
long enoush to be in a position to
right?
What's wrong? "The Ann
take my daughter's car and several
Landers
Gukk for Brides" will relieve
hundred dollars from the store
where he was working. He also your anxiety. To rtCtive a copy, send
took a pistol that beloiiJ!Cd to my S3 plu.s a No. 10, self-tJddressed,
s6n-in-law, all my new clothes and stamped envelope (45 cents posrage)
the small amount of money in my to Ann Landen, P.O. Box 11562, Chi·

Rock Springs UMW holds meeting _ _ _ _ __

\

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••••

SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Youth League kickoff parade
starting at 10 a.m. Saturday at
the "T"; prizes for best decorated bicycles. Scrimages at the
park following parade; a conces·
slon stand and bake sale at park
along with craft booths.

POMEROY - The Eastern
High School sophomore class Is
sponsoring a free car wash on
Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
at Pleasers Restaurant In Pome·
roy. Sponsors and donations are
welcome.

1

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Ann
Landers

Community calendar

0

Melanie Carman, 88, Langsville, died Friday morning at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Services are being arranged by
the Ewing Funeral Home.

7

'

Thursday, May 12, Friday, May 13,
Saturday, May 14 and Monday, May 16

.
.
Melanie Cannan

Friday. May 13, 1988
'·

How many wives
does this man have?

Ruth M. Hersman
Ruth M. Hersman, 74. of Rt. 1,
Langsville, Ohio, died Monday at
her residence.
Born Feb. 12, 1914, in Smythe
County, Va., she was the daughter of the late William Glenn and
Luvlna (Surber) Hash. She was a
member of the Morgan Center
Wesleyan Church.
She Is survived by her husband, Robert R. Hersman; one
daughter. Helen McClellan, In· .
glls, Fla.; three grandchildren
reared in her home. Joyce
Doubhie, Richmond, Va., Charles Stewart, Crystal Springs,
Fla., and Eric Knotts, Inglis.
Fla .; one great-grandchild; two
sisters, Mrs. Donald (Dorcas)
Dodrill, Westerville, Ohio, and
Mrs. Maggie Morgan, Rt. 1,
Bidwell; and four brothers,
Frank, Leonard, and Clarence
Hash. all of Rt. 1, Bidwell. and
Martin Hash, Rt. 2, Bidwell.
She was preceded In death by
two grandsons, one brother and
one sister.
Services were Thursday at 1
p.m. at the Morgart Center
Wesleyan Church with the Rev .
A.B. Maloy. Burial was at the
Morgan Center Cenetery .
Pallbearers were Ryne Hersman, Mark Wray, Bill Franklin,
' . Paul Cremeens, Donald Shupe,
and Woodrow Mollohan.

The Daily Sentinel

•

r;:=========::;~-;::;;:::;;::::::;::;:;:=::;

PRICED
Massachusetts Gov. Mike Dukakis
is paid $75,000 per year, according to
figures released in 1987.

By The Bend

I

'"

were taken and Virginia Wears
had prayer. Reported Ill were
Tina Jacobs, Thor Carsey, Nute
Humphreys, Francis Goeglein,
and Thelma Jeffers.
Dorothy Jeffers reported on
the success of the Election day
dinner. Officers' reports were
given. New officers .were elected
and Include Sharon Folmer,
pres klent; Betty Wills, vice pres-

!dent; Fern Morris, treasurer;
Francis Goegleln, treasurer;
Virginia Wears, devotions, and
Trecie Abbott, cards.
The meeting was closed with
prayer by Dorothy Jeffers. Refreshments were served to those
named and Betty Dill. Linda
Foster, Mary Showalter, and a
guest, ~lllndy Odell.

Spring Savings!
1978 Ford F-150 ................ $1095
Auto .• PB. PS, little rough but runs good.
.
'

1982 Datsun Pickup ............ S1695

5 speed, good condition.

1978 Ford F-1 00 .................. S995
Short bed. stand.

for your support
and vote in the
MAY 3rd PRIMARY
ElECTION.

EMMOGENE
HOLSTEIN CONGO
MEIGS COUNTY
RECORDER
Poid tor by cendidlt' Coll111 Rd.,
Syrocuu. Oh. 45179

1982 Buick Regal Estate ..... 52 595

V-6, good condition .

1983

Mere~

lvnx Wagon •••. S1995

IS speed, good condi'tion.

1984 Ford Escort ................. S1995

Auto., 2 door.

RIGGS USED CARS
CHEml

I

�Page 8-The Daily Sentinel

Friday, May 13, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1
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-M'

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TUESDAY IS SENIOR CITIZEN'S DAY AT VAUGHAN'S
50Jo DISCOUNT ON ALL PURCHASES ( ~r;:~~~~ )
MUST PROVIDE GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARD OR DRIVER'S LICENSE

I

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MiddlepQrt, Ott•Corner of Gen. Hartinger Pkwy. &amp; Pearl St.•992-3471
~ ~-- MEIGS LOCAL UPPERCLASSMEN- These

back, I tor, Donlla Pooler, Kevin V. King, Dee
Henderson, Charlotte Hart, Wendy Fry, and
David Beegle, all seniors. Senior honorees absent
are Shannon Slavin, Sherry Cooper and Margie
Baker.

: :are the sophomores
:
:
,
'

and seniors of Meigs High
~ School honored at Thursday's academic excel1•lence banquet. Tbey are, front, I lor, Kristin King,
!Ryan Harper, Ed Crooks, Melanie Beegle, Nancy
"Baller, all sophomores; Angela Sloan, senior;

.

""

'

ADULtS AID CHILDREN (14
SAMPlES OF p

a~d Under}

· • 10 SPEED~~~'feR CHilDREN
• RAND SCOOl ·
ER
• TIDE

••

.. •
Elementary; back, I tor, Stephanie Sayre, sixth
grade, Letart Falls Elementary; Trevor Petrel,
David lhle, eighth graders at Southern Junior
High; Kathryn lhle, sophomore, Southern High
School, and Heather Shuler, Douglas Scott
McPhail, and Tammy Holter, seniors at Sauthern
High School. Sheri Roush, a sophomore, was not
present.

• : SOU'mERN HONOREES - These are the
: ; Southern Local School District academic excel; • lence honorees. They are, front, I to r, Jennifer
; (Lawrence, fourth grade; MlchaeiMcKelvy,slxth,
• •Syracuse Elementary; Craig Knight, fourth;
' I
•
• , Marlo White, sixth, Racine Elementary; Charles
: ;J. Harris, fourth; James Smith, sixth, Portland
' :Elementary; Jason Shuler, fourth, Letart Falls

•

'MUCH MORE

•
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•••
:

EASTERN HONOREES- These
the 12
, ,~scholastic honorees of the Eastern Local School
~ . ;:District. They are, front, I to r, Brian Bowen;'
:;:;~urth grader; Jaime Wilson, sixth, Tuppers
• ~&gt;Plains Elementary; Rebecca Evans, fourth;

.

'

RC PRODUCTS
NON-RETURNABLE

8 oz.
BAGS

JennlferMora,fourth; TysonRose,slxth,Chester
Elementary; back, I to r, Sherr! Wolfe, eighth,
and Steve Barnell, eighth, Eastern Junior High
School; Greta Rilfle, Shawn Bush, sophomores,
Eastern High; Renee Kaylor, and Maralyn

1

:;ift1um,
but on
does
have a 1o
$540
::il'ductlble
admission
a
::'JlOspltaL This, he explained, pays
all covered services In a
• ~ml-prlvate room Including op·
: ~rating and recovery rooms.
; regular nursing care, lab work,
: qrugs, anti therapy. up to60days.
• • It also provides for a short time
: In a skilled nursing facility as
: (equlred by the physician with
• carrier approval (and in Ohio,
: that's Nationwide Insurance) as
• well as some home health care
' where skilled nursing Is required
; as well as some care In a hospice,
; If available, for the terminally Ill.
• , As for Part B which now has a
: premium of $24.80, with a $75
: yearly deductible, Lohotsky
: says, this pays for such things as
: doctor's services, out·patient
• hospital care, cas Is and splints,
: physical and speeeh therapy,and
' (\urable medical supplies.
• He also talked about doctors
who accept what Medicare ap·
proves Insofar as payment is
concerned, and noted that a list of
such physicians Is available In
tile Athens Social Security Office
and can be obtained by calling
tllere.
, ; Those things not covered by
:Medicare were listed by the
: s\leaker -nursing home stays In
, ap Intermediate or custodial
: raclllty, routine physiclai examl; nations, prl~ate duty nurses,
: hpmemaker assistants, and hot
•llleals.
: ; He also caulloned the group
:aJx&gt;ut Medlgap policies and
• urged that before buying any:t6ing be sure about the coverage.

WHEN YOU BUY 1 AT REGULAR PRICE

DORITOS

PUBLIC NOTICE
COUNTY: MEIGS
The following were received / prepared by The Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency IOEPAI loot w881t.
Effecttve datea of final ac ·
tiona and issuance dates of
propo11d actions and of
draft actions are stated. Final actions mev be appealed,
In writing. Within 30 daYI of
the data of this notice, to
The Environmental Board of
Review. Rm. 300, 236 E.
Town St.. Columbus, OhiO,
43215. Notice ofany appeal
shall be fil ad with the dirac·
tor within 3 days. Proposed
actions will becomefinalun·
leu a written adjudication
hearing request is submitted
within 30 days of the is·
suance date; or the director
revises/withdraws the proposed action. Any person
may submit comments and/ or a meeting regarding any
draft action within 30 days
of the date indiceted. '"Ac·
tion". as used above does
not indude receipt of a veri· .
fled complaint. If significant
public intereet exists, a pub·
He meeting may be held. As
to any action. including re·
ceipt of verified complaints.
any person may obtain no·
rice of further actions. and
additional information. Un·
less otherwise provided in
notiC81 of particular actions.
all communications shall be
sent to:
Hearing Clerk.
OEPA, P. 0 . Box 1049, Columbus, OH . 43266-0149 .
Ph. (614) 844-2115. Consult ORC Chap. 3745 and
OAC Chaps. 3746·47 and
3746·5 for requirements.
Final iuuance of certifica·

Engineer•. Olive TwP .. Oh .
Effective date 06/ 05/ 88.
This final action not preceded by proposed action and
is appealable to EBR. Pertains to 401 certificUon.
grant . Pertains to public nolice No. 1H188· 33.
161 13

The reale~tate herein con·
veyed being 0 .26 acre, more
or leu. of a four acre lot off
the South and Wnt sides of
a ten acre lot sold by John
Pilchard to Thomas T. Hop·
kins, it being off the West
end of 100 Acre Lot #141 of
School Section #16, Town
#1, of Range # 12 ,
There is .tiXceptecf. 1 from
this conveyance. hoWever,
to tl'le State: of Ohio: all oil,
gas. coal and other minerals
wi_th the right of entry for the
purpose of proapecting for,
developing, producing. or
· operating for the same and
the right of occupancy insofar as the same is essential to
auch prospecting, developing. operating or producing.
Also, reserving to the Slate
of Ohio the usa of streams
flowing through said lands
or abutting upon the sama
and ao much of the banks
thereof as may be necessary
for such &amp;njovmenr and the

ADVERTISEM~NT

Public Notice
NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of an Order of
Sale issued out of the Common Pleas Court of Meigs

County, Ohio, in the case of
Union Mortgage Companv.
Ina., Plaintiff. ~.vs. Fred W.
Stewart. et al. . Defendants,
upon a judgment therein
rendered being Case No.
87CV268. in said Court, I
will offer for sale, at the
front door of the Courthouse
in Pomeroy. Meigs County,
Ohio. on the third day of
June, 1988, at 10,:00 _a .m ..
the following lands and tenements. to wit :
Situated in the Countv of
Meigs. State of Ohio, Town.
ship of l8tart and more particul'arly described as follows : Beginning at a stake at
the Northeast corner of a lot
belonging to or formerly belonging to E. B . Finney;
thence West a distance of
100 feet to a stake; thence
North a distance of 141 feet
to a stake intersection the
South line Of what is or was
High McClain' s lot; thence
Eastarlv a distance of 122
feet along said line to a stake
on the public road leading
from letart to Apple Grove:
thence South along said
road a distance of 5o feet to ·
the place of beginning. containing 10,000 square feet.
more or less.

'•

,

!Career

WHEN YOU BUY 1 AT REGULAR PRICE

..

•

+'•

ing roof of the Meigs County
Courthouse in Pomeroy,
Ohio will be received at the
office of the Meigs County Comminkmeu. Melgt. _

County ·courthouse. Pomeroy, OhiO 45769 until2 :00
p.m . jlocal fif'!'le) on May 24,
1988 and then at said office
publicly opftned and read

aloud.
The work covered by the

Contract

Meigt

Courthouse

membrane roofing including
roof deck repair~ with all necessary apper1aining work.
The estimated constru·
cion cost is $50,000.00 as
of March 1. 1988 .
The Contract Documents '
may be examined at:
The Office of the Meigs

Deed Reference: Volume

Appraised Value:
S6 ,300 .00 .
Terms of Sale: Cash
The real estate cannot be
sold for less than'\wo-thirds
than the appraised value.
Howard E. Frank.
Sheriff, Meigs County, Ohio
141 29: 151 6, 13. 3tc

C~ounty

Removal of the e~tating as·
phalt shingles and buil1-up
roofing and replace with
new &amp;usphalt shlngll!l!l and

protection of such streams

271 , Page 477.
Meigs
County Deed Records.
Be the same more or· less.
but aubject to aU legal high~
ways.

Documents in·

elude the following items fOr
which bids will be accepted :
Roofing Renovat ion of the

from erosion, conramina~
tion or deposn. of sediment.

County Commillioner's

Meigs County Courthouse
Pomeroy. Ohio 467&amp;9
Burgess &amp;. Niple, limited
4424 Emerson Avenue
Parkersburg, WV 26104
Copies of the Contract
Documents may be ob·
tained at the office of
Burgess &amp; Niple. Limited
located at 4424 Emerson
Avenue, Parkersburg, West
Virginia 26104 upon payment of Fortv·Five Dollars
($46 .001. NONE OF WHICH
WILL BE REFUNDED.
By Order of the Meigs
County Comminoners
141 22. 29: (51 6, 13 , 4tc

the 1\leigs County Board of School, s~n of Mr. and Mrs. Circle's preceedlng the presen1a·
Education, who served as master Jennings Beegle, as Meigs Coun- tlon of awards. The Invocation
of ceremonies.
ty's N.allonal Merit Scholar.
was by John Fosler, county
Or. Dan Apllng, superintendA buffet dinner was catered by work-study coordinator.
ent of the Eastern Local School riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijijjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjiiijiiijiiijiiijiiij
District, extended congratulations to the honorees and spoke
on the attributes of excellence.
Harold Roush, president of the
Meigs County Board of Educa·
FRIDAY, MAY 13TH
t!on, preseated the engraved
QUARTER POUND BURGER PLATTER ....................... 52.79
awards to the honorees. Intro·
A
Quarter Pound Chopped Sirloin Stook Pattie, foohlring ADelicious Smolctd
duclng the honorees. from the
Fla•or, Served on a Hot Steamy Bun, with Hot Golden Steak Fries (Tater Ba· three districts were Dr. Apllng,
hiesl and Your Choice of Homemade Colt Slow, Ma&lt;aroni Salad, Potato Salad
Eastern Local; Bobby Ord, SU·
or Baked Beans.
perlnlendent, Southern Local,
SUNDAY, MAY 15TH
and Robert Snowden, president
'All YOU CAN EAT' FAAy· STYLI CIICIIEN DINNER ....54.39
of the Meigs Local Board of
Tasty Homo Coolced Clicken (All You Can fall Served with Mashed Potatoes &amp;
Education, Meigs Local
Homemade Gravy, Homo Coolced Gr•n Beans with Mushrooms, A Hot Buthonorees.
tortd Roll or Hamon ode limo! (wilh H...oyl ond Ma•well Hause Coffee or
Buckley gave special recognl·
DKaffoinated,
lolh Frtshly Brewed, a Small Drink or Hot Tea May Be Subtlon to David Beegle, Meigs High
stituted).

This Week's Speelllt

IYm a.Aislo!J-y •r WIII•/WIItr. . T.Wt S.Wice Wltlt ,..., .....

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWR$To &amp;end a beautltullv
arr::'!::'!I1,0J:;~..I

...... -

cw................ , .., c..... ., ,_ ··- CIIIH ,.,.,

NEW HOURS 9 A.M-9 P.M. DAILY; 10 A.M.-9 P.M. ON SUNDAY

:E

or vloll

POMEROY

FLOWER SHOP

IK~~buugl(a
¥

.. •

''
·'••J
i . .

,,&gt; :- .;~

of (!lq~.at~r •

IESTAU
. lA.NT

10m 7

915·3132

CHESTEI

WE GIVE SENIOR CITIZENS 10% DISCOUNT

"Thell'n,Am«iroS.ndoLno•"

Hesaysmanypollciescoveronly
what
Medicare covers. just for a
longer period of time, while some
only cover Items approved by
Medicare,
Catastrophic Legislation
Ms. Hartley of Senator Metzen:
baum's office emphasized that
we do not yet have a law
providing any sort of catastrophic health care, but that there Is
a bill which Is now In conference.
As for anticipated provisions,
Ms . Hartley said probably a
$1,850 ceiling cap will be put on
Part B expenditures, I hat there
will be some amendment to
Include prescription drugs, that
hosplcecarefortheterminallyill
will have no time restriction.
She stated that when the bill
becomes taw, since It has to
remain revenue neutral, probably premiums for Part B will be
Increased $5 ' or $6 a month.
Emphasis Is also on Increasing
the amount a spouse can retain
and still be eligible for Medicaid.
The senator's representative
also talked about Title IX which
provides funds for research and
expanded educational and train·
lng programs In Alzheimer and
related disorders. She said the
Older Americans Act was re·
newed allowing for extended
services Including a nursing
home ombudsman program.
The cost of good health care is
now 11 percent of the gross
national product, she said, and In
conclusion she called for Ohio's
one million senior cll_!?;ens to
become smart health care
consumers.

Director of Staff Development
Americare·Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Cent•r

advancement opportunity for an R.N.
l seeking management position in long term care.
• Responsibilities include orientation of employees.
~ staff in118rvlces and aide training clas~e~ .
; Flexible hours with fringe benefits.
; B.S.N. preferred but will consider other qualified
,applicants.
t
Accepting resumes thru May 13, 1988.
'
Nancy K. VanMeter, R.N., D.O.N.
Amerlcare.Pomeroy
~ 36769 Rock Spring• Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 46789

APPRECIATION DAY

•

CUS~OMER

SATURD·Av MAY 14
1

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_

-

9A
- M 12 PM
•

At Our Tuppers Plains Branch
In Observance of Our
•

Stop In And Help Us Celebrate Our 1st Anniversary
SIGN UP TO WIN (2) *1 00 SAVINGS
BONDS
•
FREE REFRESHMENTS and FAVORS FOR ALL
Thf! Cnf!lmunily Own~d Bank

.

PEPPERONI, 15.5 OZ.
SUPREME, 17.5 OZ.

FOR BIOS
Separate naiad bidt for
the renovation of the exilt·

~~~~~~~mtary;
~~.~~~n~~~rs~,~E;as~te;m~HI~g~h~S~c~h~oo~I~.~~d~~~~~-~·~·~~~~~0~3~9~w~9~H~·~S~n~1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~edicare...
Continued from page
1
r..;

FRITO LAY

Public Notice

•

are

:i

2· LITER BOTTLES

Public Notice

9

~~t){ t()]J ..• __c_o_n_un_u_e_d_rr_o_m_p_a_g_e_5----------~----------------~----

•

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:=,Tfi.EvJslo.
--

PIZZA

Public Notice

tion:

CH, MUCH MOllE
a
SAMPlES OF PR
• 2 MICROWA~~:::sADUlTS
• FISHER VCR
• 2 G.E. DRYERS

1

Public Notice

_Huntington District Corps of

·PWS
~
~;,O::ra
CAR
MU
MIRA .

I,

The Daily Sentinei-P

'Ohio

,

E.O.E.

·

·

POMEROY
992-2136
992i2137

-Bank
MEMBER 'fDIC
WE'VE GROWN BECAUSE WE HAVE HELPED OTHERS GROW

· Member
Federal Reserve
TUPPERS PLAINS
985-3385
667-3161

�Friday. May 13, 1988

SALES &amp; SERVICE

ID ~..

U O§ID SUNDA J

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New Holland, luJh Hog

The Best Technique
In Carpet Cleaning

Farm Equopment
Dealer

742-2451

hr111 Eqalt•••f

MIKE LEWIS-OWNER

Ptrfl &amp; Stlorle

II. I, Rutland, Oh. 45775

Authonud John Doore,

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U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-662-3821

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Help Wanted

lmmedrate openong for partti me regis·
terect nurses to work rn SPECIAL CARE
AND Mf:DICALI§URGICAl UNITS.
Salary commensurate woth expe ro ence
Excellent frrnge benefots
Send Resume to
Rhonda Da1ley, R N
Drrector of Nurs ong
Veterans Memorral Hospital
115 East Memonal Dnve
Pomeroy, Ohoo 45 7 69
0 r Call or Vis it
Nursrng Serv1ce Offoce at Veterans
Memorial Hospital
614 · 992-2104 . Ext 213
EO E

ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleanong
Parntrng
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949-21 8

HERE
992-2156

CARRIER
ROUTES
OPEN FOR
MIDDLEPORT

POMEROY - Lotlle house
lillie pr1ce &amp; seller may help
f1rt ance Hou se needs workll

$4,900 00
MIDDLE·

PORT- bcellent localmn' 2
story home loca led near park
&amp; pool' 2 3 bedrooms ongmal
woodwor~ new vonyl sodon&amp; II
replace and much mar ~ Call

lor yoor appOintment on

th1s

one ASKING $32 500 00
POMEROY - No ce 'l.e1gh
bor hood 1 4 bedr oom nome
w/ a 2 car garage W8 for eplace full baseme n! oak
tr 1m workshop over gar age
Lois of cabon el space PRICE
REDUCED $39.900 00
IN THE COUNTRY - Over
70 acreI arm w1l h ol der far m
home. garage an d other
buoldon gs Close to lawn
ASKING $42 500 00
PRICE REDUCED - If you
spend a lol of tome on lhe
kolchen lhos one 1s foo you'
Beautoful modern krtchen
comphmeols lhos 3 bedroom
home wrth a deck 101 outdoor
e•t11 1g f ull basement, lot sof
'".loset space, n1ce woodwork.
ONLY $4 190000
SR I - HETZING ROAO faslern local Sc ho ol Dosl oool
Apprax 19 80 acres all ono
nerr1b dnd royalties fr om ex
osl)ng well Approx $15/ ono
2 sp11ngs for dev elopmenl
WANT $1 2 000 00
NEW LISTING - Grealloca
t1on on Old 33 Beaullfull ay
111g land buy any amou lfl ol
acrt1 you want fro m 1 acre
10 243 acres CALL FOR DE
lAII '
PRIC[ REDUCED - PO
IIEROY - Frame house ~1t h
upper &amp; lower one bedroom
ap..-tmenls Good oenlal m
vestment' $300 00/ mo • '"
come potent"! $14 500 00
PRICE REDUCED - 2
houses for lhe proce ol on e
oo buy separately Good oen
tal unols w~h potentoal Call
lor addoloonal onlormal1on 11
you are lookong for a good
renlal onvestmenl WANT
$30 000 00
LISTINGS NEEDED• We h;r;e
buyers for lleop County
propertoes and need homes
to sell - Call Today' We
need your prop!fly to sell'
Henry E Cleland, Jr

992-6191
Je1n Trussell ... 949·2660
DoHie Turner .•. 992-5692
Traer Roffle .•. 949·3080
Olfree
992·2259

A JB.

mo

DEAD OR AUVE
168 Norlh Seoand
Moddleport, Ohoo 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Cony F1shlng Supplies

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Btlls Hero
BUSINESS PHONE
16141 992 uso
RESIDENCE PHONE
16141 992 17!4

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must Be Rtpaorablt"

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
We Servoce All Makes

1122188/tln

SEALED BIDS NOTICE

992-6282

BINGO

Seal ed b•ds w1ll be re
ce1ved at the Pomeroy VII
lage Hall 320 Mam St Po
me roy Ohto unttl 12 00
o ' clock noon June 1 1988
for the fottow1ng 1980 Inter
nat1onal Ftre Truck
9200 M tles 44&amp; cu tn en

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
I 28 88·tln

gmo. 1 0 OOx20 Ttres. 6
speed trans 2 speed rear
end, 1 0' dump valve, dump

2 electnc

reel lme

4% ' hard suctton 2 10ft
sect1ons 2 % hard suCtion
tank cap, 1500 gallon fold·
tng tank holder
The truck may be Seen at
the Pomeroy F1re Stat1on,
Butternut Ave , Pomeroy,
OhiO
The Vtllage of Pomeroy

reserves 1he nght to accept
or rBJOCt any and all b1ds

R1chard Seyler Mayor

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL- SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Jane Walton Clerk Treas

15) 13. 19 2tc

8

PH. 742-2833
Open Monday thru
Saturday
12 Noon till 8 P.M.
Corner of New Lima
Rood &amp; Bryant Street
Rutland1 Ohio

10·8·tfc

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Antique &amp;Collectible
Auction
Sunday, May 15, 1988
12:30 P.M.
Howells Grove Park on Washington Blvd. m
Belpre, Ohio, 1 m1le from Parkersburg WV
15 miles south of Manetta, Oh1o, 33 ~1le~
east of Athens, Ohio. Partial Listing:
FURNITURE H1ghback oak sideboard, oak curved
glass secrelary bookcase, oak wash stands, oak
dressers w1th m1rrors, small oak corner cabinet,
h1ghback walnul bed, 1ron bed, oak stand s, oak
cha1rs, 4 stack oak bookcase, 12 trn p1e safe, flatwall
cupboard w1th flowered doors, marble top wash
stand , hrghback oak organ, old rockers, oak flatwall
cupboard, oak wardrobe, 1ce cream table &amp; 4 charrs
library table, surpentme oak lowboy dresser w1th
mirror wicker lern stand. small oak showcase, parlor
cha1rs, trunks, clocks, blanket chest clock shelves
mantels mahogany 2 drawer rope ieg sland, drop
leaf table. foot stools, oak bookcase, repo curved
glass chma
PRIMITIVES Knock down walnut wardrobe, pewter
style step back cupboard, old cupboard square
narled, mght stand old tool baKes, benches, square
na1led krtchen table, plus other prrm111ves
STONE JARS: 3 gal Eagle pottery )ar, Donagghos,
plus olher tars &amp; crocks
Picture frames, old baskets, adv. boxes. paper
a~vert1uments, coins. old clothtng, lnd1an
pictures, old tools, W. Va &amp; OhiO postcards
lanterns, old toys, qurlts. linens, dolls, table
lamps &amp; others, copper kettle.
GLASSWARE: Fenton, Carnrval, Depress1on &amp;
other mrsc glassware
Plus a lot more furniture &amp; collectibles &amp;m1sc
PATRICK H. BLOSSER, AUCTIONEER
Phone 304-428-7245
Lrc. 10 W.Va. &amp; Ohro
Consignments Welcome
Sale Inside- Eats Avarlable

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT •
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
H6·86·tfn

v.w.

PARTS
BEETLE-BUS
RABBIT
NEW AND USED
PARTS

742-2315

Wanted To Buy

614-4413172

TOP CASH pood !of "83 model
and newer Ulll!ld cws Smith
B~ck-PonttiiC
1911 Easter,
Awt GallipoliS Call 614 448

2282

Complete houeahokh of furnl
ture &amp;. enttqU81 Al10 Wood Ill
coal heat•• Swain a Flll'niture
&amp; Auetton Th1rd
Oltve
WMt 10 bu_v U1ed furniture and
ent~qVeS Will buy entire hou..
hold furnl1hing tllerlln Wed•
mever. 814-245 !1"'2
Junk Cars With ar without
motors c.! I larry Uvaly a 14-

WOODEN BUILDINGS
Built On Your lot

388-9303

ON SAL£ NOW AT

Buying furnnure and appli ... ce~
bv the piece or by tha lot Fair
prices Call 614-••8·3168

SEARS IN MIDDilPORT
614-992-21.

Ca1h paid for color 10hd state
leta morW portable
for

rvs

...... Cell 114-4411-4325

Wanted Leon Luck I• 4-H Club
needl • good u•d refr1gentor

Cell 304-45e 1997

1\

\
\

I

Buyin\1 daity gold 1IIY'ir ooina,
rlnga j~Melry •erltng ware, old
cotnl, l•ge a~rmtcy Top prtCH Ed 8 ut1tett Berber Shop
2nd. Ave Middleport. Oh 614-

MANTIS
Prec1s1on
Gardenmg
System

1

992·3478

Pool te~e in good condition
Priced rae1onably 814-992·

2704

·~ghtwe~ghl

fmplovmr,nl
Services

a Snap'
FOR MORE INFORMATION
Care

MORRIS EQUIPMENT

11

742-2455
RUTLAND, OHIO

FR££ ESTIMATES

CALL 992-2772
BUILDINGS
ROOFING &amp;
GUTIERS

GOVERNMENT JOBS
S1e,040 · S&amp;9.230/ ,. Now

HILLSIDE
MUZZLELOADING
SUPPLIES

DIATE ()penlng1 Call 1 315-

733-80e2.ekl #F27Se
EARN •

PAT HILL FORD

GET

PAID for ..adtng booksl
8100 00 per title Write PASE·
33N 111 S Uncol.,.,.y N
Aur~. II 80542

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Bookkeeper I Cia e Manager
High echool diploma , .. perlenee
1n bookkNplng. bllhnge .,.yroU.
etc Muatbaltbletoaa•iltclient•
whh commur*y arvlcea Send
bvMay 31 1988to Job

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

614-742-2355

4·11 '87 1 mo

retum•
s...... P o ao. 413. Galltpo-

No•• BuUt
"'Free Eotimatea··

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

Rt. 124, Po...,oy Ohoo

3-11 tin

Alto Trtnt111lul on

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

52 I mo

Hair Styti111 Acrou The StrHt
1tyhng Ilion is •elltng one
additeonal ttyU1t who • looking
for more th., jult another tab
Clll Terri at 614-•4.. 9510 for
datiIll

TRIPLE P
EXCAVAnNG

Government Jobl t18, 040
t68 230 yr Now hiring Your
•81 80&amp;-187-6000 ell(t A·
9805 for current Federal list

•Dozer &amp; Beckhoe Work

•Will Do Houhng With
Dump Truck

Cendidate should po1•11 good
HC'J'atary lldll1andpoattivework
ettrtude Require ability to compo• qullity conesporufenca
and taka dictation
(shorthwld dHired) Permanent
po11t10n In Jackson County.
Send re1ume to P 0 Bo~
Aavln1W00d WVa 28184
Get ptt~d for read1ng books!
8100 00 P• tttle Wrna PAS E
-517 N 181 S Uncoln'Miy N
Aurora Ill 80642

SMALL ENGINE
IE PAIR
Authorozed Semce
&amp; Parts
Broggs &amp; Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater

MAN"S HOME CENlEAS. Tho

right cendkt•e 'Nill hiiVe a
mlmmum of tour ye•s of retail
and or a degree In 8u1inesa
Adm1n11tretlon Hardware
bu!ldtng 1upplf• product knowt
edge desirable Proven leader
•hlp skills e11ential Excellent
benefits tf you are looking for •
challenging lllperlanca with •
growth comp~~ny,appty today bY
Mndlng your ...u.,. to C Stan
tt•dman, Pr..ident, ..._dmen
Home Centers. 80.11 969

Homelole
Jacobsen

Hourty or

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY
Middlepon. Oh
992-8811

Lrve~l n

Arrangements

With Workmen' 1
Compensation

PH. 614·992-:ZI

..

Listenrng DIYIC8S
Dependable Heanng Ard Sales &amp; Senric•
Heanng Evaluatrons For All Ages

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
-az: licensed

:3
:z:
z
-

·Gallipolis··· · ····
&amp; Vicinity

A1111 DUll r.P.III en Is

721 Pine St Rio Grande
Ellatel FridiY. Saturday Mey

Announcements

131o14 9.5

BONDED · INSURED

Cov•~

3 30-111fll

CJ

loa•• .._

2 1tr.'l8 tfn

3

Clinical Audiologist

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second AYIIIUI, Box 1213
Gallipohs, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorral Hospital
Mulberry H&amp;ts. Pomeroy,

Unfin1shed house with Y2 b•e·
m.-.t on one acr•more or
las•wnh fruit trees Ctose to
Tycoon Lake. 810 000 or best
offer Must •II Cell 614 44&amp;.
2107 Days 245 5800-,Even

Be number 300 tn the number
one U 8 and win •100worth of
fr•producta. Formorelnform1
don cal M•ilyn wa.,.,·304-

Jllr•

~rdwiii,_.Colh ....

182 2841

ralwkldDw.,..atFI.. M•ket·
~~Ia Feirgrounch, Fri • Sat &amp;

4

Moving

Giveaway

.....

CrM
Gfve .,., 111bbh:a Dtff.....t
liMI • color Cell 614-2411-

&amp;117

~ to be ~t. CaU 814-256-

1

S.I•Mooy

14 2S Mill

Houllhold .nd much

Ywd Soi•Fri lo Sol • Mey 13 1o
t4 9 AM·S PM Perldng lot·
O.UIIe"t Milt lhopo·llt 31·
Rothey llpano- by The
Rodney

Unhed

Methodllt

Women In c.e of rflht •lewNI

• color TV'1 to gfveiWiy for

- · Cell 114-2&amp;11-1737
, Daw"m lkt kldoo 114-982
7124

2 hagledo•· oneoklerdoaend

304-1711-3081

2717
I304-8711-1043.
_., old ID"!I

b. .llho olouoch

Otrevelol•fri lollet 8·5 201

,..., Cllihue..... Sp,..,. - ·

I ...... - ·

30 ...17Pr

haired - ·

.

7-

-..
puppleo
ohL wwuwd
dh.tahatLaflw

ICineon Or

Loet and Found

3 bedrDOITII 1 1/t baths
garden tub dishwa1her a1r
cond appNence~ Sturdy House
outbuilding Itt on rental lot
304-676-5048 ev&amp;n1ngs
1970 Windsor 1 2JC65 with
10x12 edd on Woodburner
washer &amp; dryer air cond must

I~;=~~::;:=====
34
Business

2 bedroom, 2 baths 2 car
garage. levet lot on At 33
9Nimmtng pool utellte clo~e
to Meigs High Ceil 614-992·

3254

13

lnsur.-Jce

18 Wanted to Do

Movin_g

s..

..a...... co.-·

~~· Loltalgaadlt-

1·14

J1m'1 OddJobl
Sundacks. llidlng painting roof
ing, c•penter work trailer repair Call 814-37g.24HI

R • B Odd tBb• you need tt we
can do it. Auto, lawn or home
frae Mt~rnate 304-773

&amp;o•s

15 and 17 ye• aida looking 1or
work and IIIWn mowing for
1ummer 304-875-1325

For •le or rent Small houte at
31885 Weh:htown Hill Mm••
vtlla Re•onebl• Stop to ...

after3pm

Finonc1al
Business
Opportunity

Co.. 814-4411-8163 614592·5252. 614-753-30e1

3 bed room home large g•aga.
3 300 aq ft. approx. 1 aae,
304-87!5-8574 or 304-676-

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PIJIILISH-

ING CO recommendl that you
do bu11n ... with peopla you
know, and NOT to 11nd money
ttwOUQh the mail ul'ltfl you hwe
1nvetttgatad the offering

2452
3 h•droom 8x12stOI'IO• bldg 1
ea-e Gill Ferry. heat pump
prlcedt50'a 8'hpct aNumlble
loen Mo'.ling out of 1tete Cell
for eppolntmant 304-876

Middlaport
&amp; Vicinity

.
'

4 famly 2 mi1 81 north of
Ch•t•r on Rt 7 Ebarlbachl
Loti of ctothlng. 1hoes infatt
aln• 8
Ladt• ''""' dre11
p.ms etc Formal1, cablnet 1
electnc range, lhaet1 curtam1
dishes bookl. mile,
At 30919 Neece Ad tn Middleport May 1•th ,&amp;thand11th
Cloth•. d•humklifl•. air condJ..
tioner, etc Follow ligna

Motorcycle. blcyct 81

mettmll:y efoth• chlllra.larnpa
hou•hold ttem1

to&amp;r,

Yord Soi•Selurdllf. 9 4 825
Mile

-"---------Pleasant

&amp; Vicinity

2411.52 Double wide. Goodcond
t13.100 Clll 814-2158-9393

3 Rms • bath unfurnished. t 50
dep 8185 permo 6 mo lea.e
1 42 Fourth Ave Galli poNt
Prefer lingle lldv or gentlemen

Coli 814 4411-3187

3 Br

11h beth• Eureka •250
Dep required c.n
514-448-.222 bet~an 9 5

2 Bedroom, 2 story brick 1n
town no pets 8300 • mo 3
bedroom home in country •340
e mo includes g• ,.,. . .CM &amp;
depollt required WIMman Relll
Ettata 814-446-3844

2 bedroom houM for ..,t Ne •
Fauground1 No petl 814-992

3875.
L1ke new ranch ltyle hbme
Located 1n Rutland •275 p•
month Call 814 742 3171
Hou .. end 70 acre• for nmt '"
W•t Columbia eree 1200
month 1200dep0111t Call814-

6 roon'lhouee and4roomhou•.
Camp Conley, 304-675-1371
or 875-3812
Smal unfurnlthed hoult Clean
Good location Prefer coupl•
one child No pets 3218 How
ord Aw 304-87fi.U21
Roua 2 goodloeat.onmul1:18e
to appreciate •38 1500 00

304-S78-248e

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 BA Nice • el"" in Eureka
8200 • mo Oep required No

-

Cell 114-245·58S3

114-441-8341

•t

llelle

44

· Apartment
for Rent

2 BR apu 8 closet• khch en
appl furntlhed, Wa.her Dryer
hook up ww carpet naYtv
pamted deck
Regency Inc.
Apts Call 304-676-7738 or

675-5104-

New completely furntshed
apartment I. mobile home '"
city Adult• only Parldng Call

614-448 033e

BEAU11FUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 638 Jochon
2588 E 0 H

Brook11de Apertmenta Located

off BIA...,illeAd -1 BR specious
apartments with modern kitchen
and W81har-dryer hookups c•
ble tehNlllon av~tleble. Call
814--446-2, 27

Downtown Modern 1 BR compins kitchen AC c•pet Call

614-446-0139
Furn11had aff1oenev •145 Utllittes PJid Share bath 607
Second, Glll1polis Call 814-

448-4416oftor7 PM

Garage apt furnlahed S226
Ut1lit1et peid 29'/.z Netl Gallipolis Call 814-4•6 4•16 after 7

PM

11 Court St 2 BR , 2 bathl
kUtch en jurn11hed w / w c•pet
No p&amp;tl Off 11Net parking.
e325 • mo plu• utillt181 O.p &amp;.

... Call 814 44fl.492e

Garage epartment- 3 room~ &amp;
bllth. w / d atr Clean No pet•
Adults only Cell 614 4•6
Nice 1 BR apt Ranr &amp;. rerfrlg
funnhed Water
garbage
paid Oepolit required Call

814-4411-4345 olter 5 PM

2BR ,allutiltt l•lnduded •3!50
~r mo Call 614-446-.222.
Bat..,.en 9 6
New apartment 1 8~ Sto.,. &amp;:

Boat trailer 18 h long, Good
1hape Als o mce bo at 75 HP
eng~ne boat h• no tit le fr~JU
with purchase of treder !1 6 60
firm Call 614 446-9803

Callah.,' l Uaad Tire Shop over
1 OOOtlrM slze112 13 14 16
16 16 6 8 m•l• out At 218
Call614 25&amp;-6261

Spacious mobile home lots for
rent Fem1ly Pride Mobile Home
Perk Galhpoha Ferry W Va

304-675-3073

Trader spaces tor rent Locust
Road Route One 304-676-

Apple II C Computer monitor
JOY lttckl. prmter, k.,. boerd
d111c. desk Uke new Cell

Bass Tracker Bantam 2 man
boat Motor Gu1de Trolhn g Mo
tor Sa•• Die Hard Mar1na
battery EagleMackOneGr•p h
lli450 Cell614-99 2 3319

814-3e8-9342.

1 8 H P Seau C rtft1man rldmg
lawn mo'N8r with ettaehnwlts
E11.cel cond Call 614 882
3901

76

Auto Parts

&amp; Accessories

Se•• ndmg mower 32 in cut
10 HP Run! good S300 Call

614-4411-7812

1076

rei

UeS uollltlto pd 241

61 Household Goods
SWAIN

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Oliva St Golllpolla
NEW· 6 pc wood group- S399
liVIng room 1Uit81 t 199 8599
Bunk bed1 with beddmg- $199
Full 1118 mltt1'811 &amp; toundet1on
uartlng
$99 Recliners
stert•ng- S99
USED Beds dresser! bedroom
suttes, 1199 S299 Desks
wringer wa1her • complete line
of uaed furniture
NEW Western bootl 130
Workb0ot1 S18 &amp;. up (Steel &amp;
soft toal Call &amp;1• 446 3159
County Appliance Inc Good
uted appliance• and TV 1et1
Open BAM to &amp;PM Mon thru
Sat 614 4461699 827 3rd
Ave Gelhpohs, OH

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washer• dryers refttgl!lnltors
ranges Skaggs Appliance•
Upper R1ver Ad ba~lde Stone
Cre1t Motel 614-448 7398
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofas and chairs pneed from
$395 to $995 Tabl• $50 and
up to S125 Htd•• beds 8390
to S595 Recliners $225 to
8375 LamPl 828 to $125
Dtnettal $109 and up to $495
Wood table w-6 ehai" $285 to
8795 Oe1k 8100 up to 8375
Hutches $400 and up Bunk
bedl complete w-mettMII81
829Senduptot39&amp; Babvbedl
t1 10 Mattre11es or box !fh'lngs
fu II or twin 868 firm $78 end
888 Queen Mtl 8226 King
8360 4 drawer chMt $89 Gun
cabinets 8 gun Blbv mattre11H
135 &amp;
Bed frlllmas 820
$30 &amp; Kmg frame $150 Good
selection oi bedroom suite!
metal cabtnets hudbollrdl $30
end up to 165

••s

90 Dev1 18me n cash w1th
epprowd credit
3 Mlle1 out
Bulav11le Rd Open S.m to 5pm
Mon thru Set Ph 614 446

PICKENS
FURNITURE
Dinette1 , bedl bedding
dres..,.. chest couches cha1rs
lamps coffeHnd •bl• Every
day Specials 'h mile out Jerri

Furntahed ul)llllir1 3 room apt
Ut1litiWpald. 9• Loru11 •210
per month t 76 dep Can
814-.46-1340 or 446-3870
Newly ..ctaao,.ted furni1had 2
lr 4158 Second Aw $226 per
mo Sec. Oep &amp; ref Adu Ill No
poll Coli 114 448-223&amp; or

44fl.26e1

1 BR furnished or ullfurni•hed
apt In Middleport Call 114992 !5304 or 446 8898 efter 6
Gradoua Irving 1 end 2 bedroom apartment• at Village
Manor and Rl\terslda Apart
mentl In Middleport A-om

S182
EOH

Call 614· 982·77e7

2 bedroomap . .ment on lincoln

Hill l'&lt;lmeray Cell e14-992·

peted Nice 1enlng Laundry
fecllltl• available. Call 61 ..

9e2·3711 EOH

Quality furniture and carpet at
LDw Pr1ce1 Financingavellebla
Mollohan Furnrture • Upper
R1ver Rd 814-446-7444

17" ZenHh black &amp; whrte TV
825 Wood tlble • 1wo chair•
t40 275 Harlequin book• 160
Tru tone 1terea with IJ)8IkM'I
8&amp;0 See at 2&amp;6 So Fourth
Ave Middleport
Oak dlmng table with elfiN legs
Oak padeatal fern lland PorUI·
bleiJINIIIngmachioe Callafter4

PM 614 446 01&amp;6

King 11ze watar bad 1 2 drawer~.
mirror llght1 padded rtlla,
.. .,. wavele11 8•oo Call 814-

949 2801

Oinnette set end tabl .. coffee
table. lamp• TV set. phone
304--876-7315 after 6 00 PM
Queen 1izamattreta, boK _.ring•
with frame Portable dll ·
~';';~her. good cond 304-676-

Supplies

&amp; Livestock
61 Fann Equipment

U Haul truckl and trailers for
rent 304-675-7421

U S 35 We~t, Jackson OhiO
614-286-6451
Maney Filrguson New Holland
8u1h Hog Salas&amp;. Servl(:e Over
40 used tractors to chooJll from
&amp; complete hne of new &amp; used
equipment Large1t aelect1on tn
S E Ohio

Double bed 2 p1ecas c•pet
(grey and be1gel hke new Call
304-875 5995 after 5 DO
15 cu
5375

freezer

ft

304·675-

Mittl and Merrill brush chipper
304-676 3956 or 304 576

2903

S1gns Portable lighted and
non hghted $199 $279 Pay
half-balance 30 dav• Free deUv
arv and hrtters W VA 1 800..
642 2434and0hlo1 800..5333463

CROSS II&lt; SONS

3000 FOrd tractor late model
plows d11c cu ltNetor corn
planter 8 4900 5020 J D
tractor 22 fl Harne. 86450
Owner w1ll finence Call 814286-8622
Hay conditioner for ule Call
614 448 0871 Dala Beam
Ne1ghborhood Ad
830 Ca1e dtesel tractor wi~h
baler mowing mechtne &amp; re1ka
S38!50 2401nternetlonel with 6
ft Flail mower S2495 Owner
will finance Call 614 286--

56 Building Supphes

6522

Butlding Matenal1
Block bnck 181N8r p1pes win
dow• lintels etc Claude Win
ter1 R1o Grande 0 Cell 614245-6121

56

•

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supply Shop Pst
Groommg All breed• All
style• lams Pet Food O.eler
Juhe Webb Ph 814-.46·0231
D.-gonwvnd Cattery Kennel
CFA H1malayan Persian and
Slem•e kh:Wn! AKC Chow
pupl)lel New Himalavan k1t
tent Call 814-448 3844 ahar
7PM

614-245 6125

Beegle 1 yr old Good rabbit
dog Female Spayed Had ell

shots 814-992 7e57
pup! s 20 00
304-675-7187

3 pomt hitch wood 1plitter Used
1 yr Uke new $400 Call
614-742 2126
NewHollltl"ld7ft heybme John
Deere 3• forage haNMter with
hay and corn head 81th exc
cond 304-27~4215
Parts for 450 John Deere dozer,
ell like new, one front eros• b•
t 500 00 One re• cro11 b•
1150 00 Two sprocket lhialds
$100 00 72 track shoe1 16 1neh
t400 00 Will •II all or pal1,
304-676-1076
230 C.1e belar New Idea corn
Pick« gravit:y bed. 30 1nch
Gravely mo...wr 304-882 2•22
JohnOhhng•
12 HP Economy Power Ktng
wrth
mo...,.r gradar blade
tummg &amp; potato plow $2,600:
12 HP rldtng Gravlllly with 60"
mov.er 1now blade 8t turn1ng
plow 81700 304-675-4435
after 5 p m

•a

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

each

Cute playful Cocker Spaniel pup
female call after B 00 PM
304-675 4506

814-992 5402

1982 Pont~o Ftrebird Good
condit1on low miles fourspeed
Call 614-992 6723 after 5p m

1976 21 ft Emp~ra Camper
Sleep! 6 Self contamed wrth
lllr S2350 Call614-286-6522

1981 Ford Escort Station
Wagon w1th 11.1n roof Trensmia ~
Slon final drive recently rebu Itt

1973 Dodge Cless A motor
home 89.000 m~les
000
Call 614 388-8745

•s

814-949 2179

Must sell I , 976 Chevy Monza
Run• good low m1leage. Cell

1968 18 ft Smoky C.mper
Sleeps 6 Good eond Self
con•tned $1250 Call 614-

614-992 5396

1978 Plymouth Velora runs
good good body $600 00
304-675-6555
1979 Mercury Capri Turbo
new pe1nt
run! good
s 1.800 00 304-875 3698
1975Ford Mu1tang. good cond
$300 00 30 .. 675-5926
1981 CapriCe Cless1c statton
wagon, good shape, 304- n:J.5867 aftar 5 00

388 9017

1982 35 ft 5th wheel Coaehmen camper Used 2 Winters
Cali 61. 446-4846
Starcraft camper 24ft tunv solf
contltn~ , roll out awmng a1r
cond !Jots of !flp&amp;Qal features
catl 304-875-5853 after 5 00

PM

1974 Pfymouth Fury 4 door
400emnge. $300 00 304-67&amp;

4506

63

;;811- -;:;H-=om=e- - - :

1979 PontifiC F~rebird p! pb
euto 400 2bl v 8 304-875

Improvements

79e6

eASEMENT
72

Trucks for Sale

1986 S 10 bng bed. Call after 5

PM. 614-4411-8221

1988 Dodge one ton rteel bad
dump truck S1000 Arm Cell

814-245-5204
1980 ChrNy Oelu _,with topper
Call 614-446 7•96 after 5 PM
1982 Chevrolet % ton 4x4
pickup 350 V 8 4 bbl Excel
cond Bed hner. Am FM·C•.. .
chrome t1•down! high m1IA1

$4eoo

080 Call 614 245·

6688

V 8 auto nn•
new' ttres 49,000
orgimal mtlaJ. very good truck.
~nt

$2600 1979 Ford F 100 v.e,
a.~to

Female burro for sal a t100. Call

Wented to buy Buff Orptngton
Roomr cell ~04-896 3881 .
Reg11tered Appalooae hor• and
colt good r~ding hot'IB 304675-8489

64

Hay &amp; Grain

for rent Hay &amp; Corn ground

Cell 614 245 5492

tran•

one owner truck

$2500 Cell 814 4411-4045

Transportation

PiW~o and organ les1ons Allen
St""1t 61• 446-4683 or Brum·
cardt Music lne 4•&amp;-0687

71 Auto's For Sale

1976 Chevy 1/z ton ttlt wheel
dual tenkl 350. auto S1000
814-9.9-2801

1976 Ford ptelc up truck 304--

875 3954
Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

73

1987 S 1&amp; Jimmy Sierra Cl••·
114 500 Cell 614 379
2663 after 3 30 PM
lfC

1988 Plymouth Voyager LE
Mintvln loaded &amp;. baantful
1982 Dlt1un 280 ZJC 2 ~ 2
t-topl Sharp 17' Starcnft boat
&amp;. lnlller. w / 116 HP Mercury
OB Call 614-446-7438

74

SNAFU® by

114-992 e551
78 Oodge 4 wheel drive runt

Motorcycles

1986JC10 350EnduroYemaha.
Coma with helmet Low mtle.ge C.ll614-446·8753

rml81 Good
t 2500 low
Call
1978
Ford cond
1hu nderbird

1982 H•lev Davidson Sport•

814-2&amp;11-8704

198!5 Chevy Celaberity Euro
Sport Y-6, 33 200mil81 auto ,

2331 or

448-~723

1225 a
month Oepolit requlr.t 114-

loogo Folly equipped Cell 814-

114-44fi.107S

982 1724 Alter lpm

2 BR furni1had mobile home
and a 1 lA hou•fumilhed. Call

Newtv

1977 8uidl: La Sabre
nice
Twice owned Full power Cell

........ 260 Call 814-992
7647

19115 Mu1tang Fastb1ck. niW'

1984 Harlt¥ Devid1on SLHTC
atra"&amp;

114-446-4109or 37e.2740
2

Hy dopotlt end ,., Four·•"•

114-44fl.n83
!.:_
___.:______

1.b50 -Edge of town on 888
c.rport.
~taw •
refrtg, ND
No chl*Prefer ••n or edults •140
monthly oolut ut"Mloe • depoolt

o• h••·

r::•

'"·

Cell 814-448·7124 - , . 1
PM

1810 01&lt;11
441-130&amp;

ApertmllnU for ltnt, 304-875-

3800.

4

1ervl01 aveDable for Honda.
Suz~. Kawauk. Yamah• W•
buy Mil .,d w.de ul8d .,.k...

uso Colt 114 Pltone304-171-4130
1879-&lt;11710 bhockwtlhred

1912 Dodge Ari•

Apt for rent 1 17 N Fourth It
Middleport. Ohio 2 beci'oom•

pin

Low mi

water with 10 packets ol colfae crNmer?""

lspd m~g

w,....,

tlrlpe•

new battery,

1877 Budl Regol V e eulo.
AW. lttf'to •711.0001'tfldefor
fold up..,.... 1879 Plymouth
ch..., h11 bad motor. •2915 00

1812 ............ Slpporo-811•....

''We're out of mHk How 'bout a glaa o1 warm

&amp; Refrrgeration

RM 1dentlal or commerc1al w1r
New ~rv1ce or rap a" 1
Ucen.ssd eloetriCIM Esttmate
free R1denour Electrical 304-

875-17e6
86

General Hauling

Otllllrd WMar StrviCe Pools
Ctltern! Weill OaUverv Any
time Cali 814-4•6· 7404-No
Su ndl'f call•
J &amp;. J Water Serv1ee Sw1mm1ng
uoola. c11terns, wells Ph 614-

245-9285

R a. R Water Serv1ce Pool•
ei1tarns wellt lmmedtate
1 000 Of 2 OOOgallon•dehvery

Cell 304-175-1370

Peu I Rupe Jr Water Sarv1ce
Pbol1 cistern• Mila Call 814-

4411-3171

Watter1on'1 Weier Hau hng
r... onable ntu Immediate
2 000 gallon dsUvwy, ci1Mrna
poOII well tte call 304-1578-

2819
87

Upholttery

noo ao 304-17fi.I7U

- · Very go act oond $2700
Colll14-3e7·0148

2 room apt

171-1172oltor S p.m

Kawauki Tecate

Rt 3!5 Cycle Sal• parts and

,_,.,.,Sold nit HIO Cell
814-4411-84110

llt 114-44fl.e221

AD.,nwnt1 in Hendllrson 304-

1987

1978 280 Z sun roof, lou~~t~rJ,

Itt Pl...mendOaUipo-

304-la2·2SII.

44fl.e1e9

Loaded INith
mog"t. v e outo $1100 1980 dr•*
114-742
2934
Do~g• truck,
many ut,.l,
U800 Cell 814-4411-4412
NOW OPEN

APARTMENTS. mobile h - .

al10

1987Harley08Yid•on 883 640
mil• Excel cond Cell 61.C..

114-446·7904

quloed 114-812·1021

fur!11hiH IPt.

•aoo

v.,

I room and b•h IPt for tent
Third floor Net •1715 plus
utllt._ dapotll R•ference , .

tU)U. .

1982 410 Honda e 000 mil81
Good cond
Electric fur
noco. •?S Cell 814-446-4096

441·7672-Div• ••&amp;-1980 Af
w5PM

114-112· &amp;724 """'I 00

;:;==:;;:;;:;:;:::===
84
Electro cal

ter 7300 mil• Ukenew Black
•3000 Otn Thom11 114-441-

Ap..crnent tor rent

apartment•
wabble. UtHitl• paid. •2215
p•month.dapOIIt-.ulr.t C.ll

Plumbing

• &amp; Heatong

mg

1980 Fl.. HT corMrtibl•
Excel cond, 5 apd low mi

redeaor~ted

82

448-4477

AC. PS. P B. AM FM Ca10 . tit
Coli 614·3eS.e240

... 114-8g2·3523

Rotary or cable tool drilltng
Most v.eil!t::O mpleted !amedey
Pump sales and terv!Qt 304895-3802

1986 Toyota 4x4 truck short
bed 5apeed chromaroUbarand
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
bed 1'8111 Bl~·ehrome module
AND HEATING
Cor FourthendPlne
wheels AMFMcMitmtatereo
off road hgtrta. 1trip1, 42,00:irlGallipolis Ohio
mthtt Er:tre1herp t7000 flrm
Phone 614-4413888 or 614-

1 bedroom furnhhed effed•cv
ipt 1 UPitllrt apt with 2
bedroomt Kitchen turnilhed E
M11n Pomeroy 114-892 8215

614-448 1S02

Fetty Tree Tnmmng, lh.mp
remo,.l Cell 304-675-1331

2903

good ta5o 304-675-6643 of
,., 8 P m

~.:::::::::::.L:3:0:4-:8:e:2:2:&amp;:45======~
Bruce Beattie

2454

Starks Law nand Sttrub Serv~ca
304-675 3958 or 304 578'

1977 Camaro V ·B euto 1r1n1
PS 1P8 Call 614-448 1615
aft• 8 PM 446-1244

Benumher300in number one In
United States and win $ 1OO 00
of free product• for more
mfornwtlonceiiMeritvnWeever

Maaonry Bnck. blodl: ltone •
f1replaces Free ee11mata Refer
ences Call Bill Denny 614-256-

RON S Television Servtce
House calls on RCA Ouez:ar
GE Specieltng m Zenith C.ll
30• 576 2398 or 61 4-4•8·

Beldwin Piano $89!5 00 5 re
po11e 11ed piano• t39 00 per
month Cell now 3 04 453
Rt

load Coli .Y.eOO 537· 952e

1978DodgePiekup-318 auto
t37&amp; 1986 Mazda B-2000
pickup 86800 Call 614 992
5304 or 448-8898 after 5 PM

1984 Chryal• La1ar PB PS
AM FM Can 1tereo • cyl
E~~:..t cond $4800 Call 614446-4347 Of 446 4748

~6 6 ~.,0.d~.F:J~:o" Mus-e

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
SeptiC tank pLmp!ng- 190 per

Pamtmg-30 ve• eJtpenence
lntartor &amp;: exter1or com~raal
&amp; Re1kfentlal Cell 614 266
9327

Ieeman F~1ng W81'1ock guttar 1
Gretch Sender VOl( amp PV412
cebinat 1uper feed backer
Noi1egate Cour• flanger Vo
lume 1~it watl digital delay
pedal• Teec reel to ra..t 8 chen
nal mixer Rosa • track .. corder
Mu•t lttll Buy. Sen. Trade Call
814-446-31215 •tetW no

1983 Chevene low miles 4
tpd Good cond $2360 or bMt
offer Call 814-265-1621

Concrete Septtc Tankl 1000
gal 1500gal ltldJet Aaret1on
•vstem Factory tnun.,d repetr
shop RON EVANS ENTER ·
PAISES Jack!on Ohio 1 800.

1985 DodgeD 100 pickup 4
1pd , 8 cyl S4499 John s Auto
Salea At 7 below Holiday Inn
Kanauga

85 S10 truCk. extended cab

Soy Be ens 304-675 6086

Musical
Instruments

SWEEPEFJ and aew1ng m.:hine
rapelr parta and supplie1 P1ck
up and dehwry Davis Veooln't
Cleaner one half m1le up
Georges Creek Rd Call 614•46-0294.

1749

304-875-5375
57

WATERPROOFING
Uncondtttonal hfetlrne guarantee. local feference~ furrnhed
Free e111mate1 Call collect
1 614-237-0488 dtiV or n.ght
RogersBasement
Waterproofmg

5379528

Q &amp; J tool box for pcku p truck
call 614 367 0448

naw

livestock

Services

1979 Mercury Caprice 2 door
hatch back 6cyl auto PS. AC
lh•p. 304-675-6394

19n Chevy

814-992 6&amp;94

AKC Regta1ered male Engh•h
Bulldog! 6 wks old Shots &amp;.
wormed Bnndle &amp; whh:• $700
Call 814 446-1354

Beagle

John Deere corn pliWttet' S375
OIIVI'l corn ptdcar t400 Cen1ury
sprayer $800 Ex.cel cond Call

I c6_1_4-_4_4_fl._8_3_e_3:__ _ _ __

Concrete blodl• all •«&lt;tt yard
ordehvtry Masonsand Galhpo111 Block Co 123Yr Pine St
Gelllpoha. Ohto Call 814 •46·

2783

1979 Buu::k Le Sabre Htgh
mtleage. very good condition
S1200 Cell 614-9B5-3505 or
614-992 3996
1974 Volks.,.gon Model 412

K1ng sa.e 'rN8terbed for s&amp;le
$176 ftrrn Call 614 992-3640
after 3 30 R m

AKC Reg Garrmn Shepherd
pupptes Bleck. tan &amp; 11lver
Exeel nock $260 each Cell

1415 Eastern Ave
Uving room sulte1 t179 &amp; up
Bedroom aultes S399 &amp;. up

Farm

For sale Locul1 POit $1 25 a
p18C&amp; 814-7422220

Velltlf Furniture
New 1nd u1ed furniture and
apphcancel Call 614 448
7&amp;72 Hours 9 5

J lo S FU ANlTURE

1986 Camero Z28 Blue wn:h
stnp81 27 000 m1les: excellent
conditiOn Call 614 992 7647

Metchmg couch &amp; cha~r Navy&amp;
beige $200 Call 614 446
8891

0322

2 Br apt Ac
downtown
redecorated t390 Ut1litle1
prud Oepolit required Call

614-4411-2129 8 00 AM·4 00
PM

Huge 31 oval pool w1th deck.
&amp; filter lnttallation &amp;
fmene~ng available 1 BOO 345
0946

fen~

Chtnose Shar Pe1 puPI Cream
Re81onlble prices Call 606
32&amp;.3138 Allhl•nd. Ky

2 pc hvlng room 1Uht &amp; odd
chall' Good ull!ld Magnevox
coniDia 1tereo Call 81• 245
9130 after 8 PM

2 bedroom Apt for ..m Car-

843-2844

2 Phy t~aen fem1ly destres to rent
Laroe houJll wtth posSible
mtent to purchase start1ng July
88 Send any in for 1D Box Cia
147, e / oGalhpohs Dally Tribu 119 825 Third Aw Galhpol1s
Ohto 45631 or cell evenulgs
904-787 3488 A a

cho 304-67&amp; 1450

Adutts
Oerct.n
Clean Cell 114-441 7784 or

•us • mo

47 Wanted to Rent

Jeck•on Pike O.lhpoh• 44&amp;.
4416 after 7pm

1539 or 814-992· 3•89

a•t•l
u""-'rNihad
up
on rented lot E10el oond Must Furmhed In ~y,.ou •• Dlpoelt
..tl Call 114-211·1153 morn- and rlfwsnot required Cell
lnt~~M·F. IM
114-182·7180

•au• any•-.

Tretler for rent 2 br 12x601 1 V2
mtles out M1ll•tone Ad Apple
GrD&gt;A WV &amp;260 per month
plu! Depolit Phone 304-5762483 or 576-2233

2 BR Ne 11 Lecta Aef &amp; dep

tA mile from otty llmlt1 Clll

2BR mabllehome Awning. out
bulldng. cell aft• I
PM

43 Farms for Rent

PM

1981 Aadmen leatlonll home

*·

•lr, 72.000

mllw Oaod oond IHOO. Cell

304-1711-221 B

114-4411-1814- S 30 PM

Mow rev 1 Upholstering terv~n g
trl oou"'v•rea 2:3yeera Thebest
In furnftur8 uaholl•rlng Cell
30• 1715 · 41&amp;4 for free

ntlmal:•

meedeAddn Olll..,..clotr.•
)I

...,.

~

26 h S.yliner cruiSer 19 86
wule beam all el eetr()niC galley
canvu at e 350 V 8 eng
sleepl 6
Very low h o uu

54 Mise Merchandose

Merchandise

1519

BR , fuiJy furni1Md new
~pet. "'C AJI utUttl• peld
ucept Iller: •nd QIS Clble TV
available. OW,_ _ . Wltw.
~RV~~teandtrlllh PdwP. Secur-

1818 Nu ... 141180. 2 8R

3301 MD•-• Aw
riolngoovo. mloc

.... Cell 814-446·0338

1883 Auburn mobile home
14a: 70 3 Br beth &amp; 'h front a
bldl llrge porch, undarP.::J
&amp; block. 11r conditioner
hurMr EJtcet coNI Altdng
price t12,000 Call 814-182
3901

8114 1ft• I PM

'

Nu:.tv furni1hed small house
Adult• only Ref .equlrad No

Furniahed·3 m1 from O.lllpolil
on At 7 Pref•old•couale.No
pet1 No chlld..n AC 1 bedroom couch mak•• bed. t171
a mo Pay own utllt._ C.ll

2e.H.
38R
.centoer•
Reeot,10 be ...
Cell 814-4411-

Y.rd Sale. S.tunlay Lower 5
Mle Aoad, cloee lo Cottage Hill

Homes for Rent

1971 Duke Crown Royale,
14x70, 2 BR. W11hlrd,.,.r,
mlcro..wve, CA pon:h-. ood.,.
pinning Prttv furnithad C.ll
61~441-0811

Mey 1• Sam
m Norrr.n
E Hyalll • on Chi dren1 Home

41

Furnished or unfurnl1hed 2 8R •
cable. weter·.-wao• p1id. AC
~•t•'• Mabtle Home Pwk·

3e7 0403

.ewing mKhlne. bebv clottw1

10 am

Renlals

•cr• By owner whh
14x70 Mobile Home Call 81413'.1\1

Frld~ and Satu"""' May 1 3th
~d 14th 2 miiMabove Beacon

Clluooh. 304 1711-1837

3 lot• on Cedar St in New"
Haven WV 11oti•101ll100ft.
2 loture100x100ft ueh Will
llell all for •15,000 City Wilt•
and JIW'age nahble Clll b•
tween 4-6 p m 304-882-2847

IT"S HEREI ITS e101 Tho 9th
Annuel ShaNnee VaiiiPI Mobile
Home Show • Mey 11th thru
May 16th In lite Chillicothe
roAall Yourchanceto•eAm•'can • llffordeble alternatfve ln
one OrHI alg Dltolllf Open "til
8 every evening O.itv drawing~
tar CASH I Fln ...oe Con1Utl8ntl
1nd F•ctorv Rep1., anawtr all
VtAII queltlon• Come to 'The
Onllloothre Mill on North Bridge
Street You can't mill The
ShiiWnle VIIIIPI Mobile Home
Show!

2 bedroom ell eleetr~c on
Ashton Upton Road $180 00
month plu! utilih81 Hud wei
come 304-875-4088

Ferry,

992 6821

12x60 Vehant Mobile Home
with porgh In Crown Chy 2 BA
furrnhed. Set up ~ react;' to
move Into or can be moved
E~~eal cond Cell 614-446-0278
after 6 PM

·POmeroy··· ·······

la•ch St • MlddltPort

1 'h acre lot with rurel water at
Apple Grove phoM 304-678-

per mo

Owner tt11n1t.red, price reduced. 8•2.000 2 bedroom 2
bath eleetrlc helt pump glr·
•g• 427 4th Aw Gallipolia.
Ohto Hocking Yalty Relfty Will

We buy quilt1 Pre1960 1 Any
conditton (tS •400) Need
now Call614-992-5857

Aahton large buildmg lots,
mobile homes permitted public
water also nver lot1. Ctyde
Bo.,.n Jr 304-576-2336

Hou• lots Gathpohl
304-675-6908

Cell e14-992·5053 ,

2 bedrooms furn11.,8d and
unfurnt1hed, 304-675-1371 or
675-3812

Ake from 8183 1 mo Walk to
shop and movies 614-448-

992 1332

2 yr old total electric
bi level home 2 01' 3 bedroom
large livlngroom lpiCious kh
chen with hwdwood cabinets
fem1ty room with woodburning
fireplace lot• of clo_.a JPICe.
wr11p around deck. c •port.
concrete drMtWey ba~ement
beauttfullv lendlcaptd a real
ateal at 837,500 OWner wfll
hatp finence to qualified buyer

e14-949 2117

Ylld uta Satufd.,

35 lots &amp; Acreage

8ea~tllul

Would like to babflll 1n my
home dav or night Have mamy
referenCM end great •tes Cell

··· ·· pt

8u11ness butld1ng in Meson W

Vo 304- 773-57e5

23e3

3bedroomandbath All electnc
Rench home 1 acrewith1•x.18
outbuildtng '" Syracu111 814992 !5293 after 4 30

1----------

on 33

Buildings

3bedroomhouSB 1 9acr• On
At 7 Appolmment onty 614Government home~ from 81 (u
repair) Delinquent ex property
Rapouas1ion1 Call 805-6876000 Ext G H 9805 for current
repo list

21

be mowd 304-895-3802

4411-789&amp;

lit , Mey 14 1 AM ~ lab/ Ad CloiB to ho1phallt Pome •
"'rMure. etroll•, a~n • child- .. roy Gun1. taoll collec:tort
r•'• clot~No Upp« Rt
ttem1 antique~, clothll
7, v. mill
Addllon.

Spring Cl-Ing loi•Ciolhlng.
1:00 ooll 304-17S.a702
Molelrllt,..SpMitl. 304-1711- ippl.._. Md ather mlec SM
ooly. t-a 112'HihAw
1473.

6

1986 Schultz 14x80 ell elect

Florid• Rm over looking Raccoon Ck Wooded secluded, 3
BR. 2 BA. CH/AC 2 ec bollt
dock Ea1y acce11 to nvar May
f•nance 848,900 Call 814-

Mev 131hond141h 900.500

AutorMtlc v.aher

1983 Liberty 14x64 mobile
home all electric 2 bedrooms 1
bath mntellot 304-875-7663

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

ht•- 9 a.rn.•6 p.m.

NURSES AIDES .
ORDERLIES. LPN"s

9508

8264

614-742-2617

We Provide Care For The
Elderly In Tha1r Home

19 82 Kno.11 1 2ll85, all aleetnc. 3
bedroom 1 fu rn11hed rest of
tre1ler completely furr111hed tn
cludmg wa!her end dryer porch
and underpenmng VfKY good
cond $7 500 00 304-773

riC.

$32.000 Cell 614-3ee 9305

Situations
Wanted

Moon and land.

304-675-7689

1986 3 BR 2 baths 24x40
Sltctional One acre of land

for any of thtte ltnKII rail

or

1971 New

4411-1420

WANT lO IUY WIICIID 01
JUIII UIS 01 TIUCIS

Home Health Care
Aaency

14r:17Governor 1979 Centre!
3 badrooma 1'/z bath
factory fireplACe Good condt
tlon Cell 614 992 236B

3 BR home Nice flat lot in
Evergreen
Excel garden
$25 000-Meke offBI' Call 814-

Store MWIII(Ier whh HAAO

for Rent

an

6221

Advance your e•eer by accep1·
1ng the rewarding position of

42 Mobile Homes

for Sale

Moving out of state Need nMiaonable offer on 2 vr old Mocillar
home Call after 6 PM 614 446-

-Fill !STIM.UIS-

P. E. MILLER
&amp; ASSOCIATES

32 Mobrle Homes

Rd Cell 814-256·6867

Need 1omaoneinPomeroy. Ohto
area far phone ul81, 30 ... 8762296 evening11fter 5 00

Boats and
Motors for Sale

t~~~;~::;;~::::::::-,-;:;::;;:"";";~;:::::::::::-1 o-07.;;--:--:c:--;,..---

3 or 4 BR houll!l8 with 2 baths
Only 3 vrs old 2 acres
outbuildtng pond extra trailer
space cou ntv water &amp; well 2
deck• NearMercerllilleonDavla

•Wrecker Serv1ce
•Junk Yerd Bu81ne11

6· 17·1fc

"Oh, it's just another one of
Norman's get-rich-quick
schemes!"

BR ,nmch, large liVIng room,
k1tctlan dln1ng room full bas•
ment • gereg• Fultv c•peted
{some new) Natural gas city
water crty school• No pets
Ref &amp; dep requ~red Call
614-448-0276 after 6 PM
weekdays weekends anytime

SECRETARY

75

Old child' s roll top detk Smell

W Vo Call 304-773-5e51

FOR SALE OR RENT 4

Now taking epptlcattonl for
night ...!Ill Subwey l)pon ti 2
AM Apptv In per1on

NO SUNDAY CAtLS

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

AVON all are• ShrlfV Spear1

Motorcycles

••

2526

Space for small trailers All
hook upa Cable A11o effiaencv
room• a1r and cable Muon

call 1 e14-8efl.7311

304-675 1429

lil, Ohio 45131 M/F/H E 0 E

New

Roger Hysell
Garage

•aoo oo

in your home Send 181f addrt..ed, ltllmped enwtope to
Homecrlfts. P.O Box 9008
Huntington, W Va 21704

992-2196
Middleport. Ohoo
1·13·tfc

llock Pawtftr Supphes
"Modern Ammunition"
CAN ORDER "Modern"
GUNS ON REQUEST
At Reasonable Prices
Rt. 124 Across
Happy Hollow Road

much ..

Weekty ....mblvlng Product•

614-4411-7496

Buy or Sell RNI!If tn&amp; Ant~quet
1124 E Main Str&amp;et Pomeroy
Houn MTW10em to6pm
Sundav 1 to ep m 6'14-992

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Rouw. 3 3 North of Pomeroy
Rental tr.1lw1 C.ll 614-9927479

Big 2 Bedroom Rutt&gt;e homo
bulttonyoursite S13996&amp;up

1304)675 5236. EOE·AAE

Your area

S13.650 to t&amp;8.480 IMME

ba~ement

all electric
centllll atr garage.
Call after
5 PM

•

74

Wroght

t27 500 Cell 304-727 6e90

Mobile harTMI lot 80 ft or
smaller 9 20 4th Gallipolis
$76-water paid can 446-4416
after 7 PM

814-379 2433

FEDERAL STATE ANO CIVIL
SERVICE JOBS
HIRING

46 Space for Rent

Homes for Sale

Tupp&amp;rl Pla~ns 3 Br , em 1n
kltch 10 large hv mg room fu II

KIT ' N" CARLYLE® by Larry

Antoques

oak •200 e14-949 2e01

38A f ba~ement, oneeere,e1ty
weter F A natu""l gas furnace.
City .:hoots 31. mi off 180 on
8ui1N1IIe Ad S55 000 Cell

Ae..,nt Veflav Nursing
C.ra Center ~mg licensed
LPN• for part dme ampkJyment
medical end dentaf in•urance
avalable. If tnterelted call Kat hV
Thornton OWeelor of Nurling

53

Ra oms for rent 'NBek 01 month
Start"'g at 8120 • mo. Galli•
Hotel 614-.46 9680

l'or Sale or Rant 3 8A houtB
with attached gwage. CA No
petl 0ep &amp;. ref required 39
Chillicothe Rd Cell 614 446-

LPN

Furnished Rooms

Furmshed room 919 Second
Ave Gllllpol11 $125 • mo
Utilit iM pe1d Single male Shflf"e
balh Cell 446 44 16 after 1 PM

2583 9·5 dolly

Your etN 805 687·
6000. 8JI:t R-10189 for current
fod...O lilt

NOW

31

\

Fornwr Point Pl .... nt couple
now living In Naw .lltraey
1aeklng Wv• in babuitter for 2
pre tehoalen Some light houll!l
work rtqull'ed, room and bolrd
plus 8160 00 per weak Non
1moker end references .equired
One year commrtment pre
f•red Call201 584-5595•11•
8 00 PM for local inteMM
181'1ous applicant• only

hiring

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boll and rod
out radiators We also
repan Gas Tanks.

4·11-1 mo

AVON All are• C.ll Marityn
Wewar 304-882·2645

\

5316

RADIATOR
SERVICE .

POLE

I

BalPtlitttngmChriati... Home 6
Points ••• Phone 614 992

Help Wanted

52 t mo

GARAGE &amp;

vollo. Ohio 1 114-887 3158

12

45

Real Estate

Sponcor. W Vo 25271

•l1ller /Cultrvat or

•Easy to Operate

•Makes Garden &amp; Yard

INSULATION

long t«m c•e tacllitv looking tor
nui'SM to join ourdediCiteda•ff
who 1re committed to proVIding
qUIIIttv e~re Pl.... call Patty
Conrtld D 0 N for intervi.W '
New wage teale. eJtcellent be- 't
nlfh: padcage. Arc1dia MJr1ing '
Center Bor: A Main St , Coo~

Ito,. management expel'lenca

11 / 2/IB tlc:

LAFF-A-DAY

8e1t One Penon Bwmess
Can be operatad part t1me or
full ume Service acoountswlth
name-brand product• No 1el
ltng low owrtlaad Mnunom
1nvutment call 1 BOO 286
5726 ext 8031 for e local
appomtrnent

•e2.

Wanted To Buy-Small manure
spreader Good wortc.lng condition Ceii814-3G7-neo

lmm MOVIES &amp; SLIDES to
VHSTAPI
let US COI'I'ftt'1 those okt MoYitl
&amp; Shdos a•or lo '"'I VHS.
CAll AMY CARTER
or 101'5 EUCTRONICS
446.7390

J&amp;L

a.

814-4411-3159

Various Sizes

4·12-"88·1 mo.

n

We peycMhfota.temodal dHn
uled c.rs
J1m Mink Chew -Oidllnc
Bill Otne Johnson

and

S35

CHARLIE'S
MIDTOWN
VIDEOS

9

3 Styles

ANGIE TAYLOR
811 Vone St., RCKrne
5·12 "88·1 mo

'

Publoc Notrce

hose. 2 1 V:t pre connects on
rear e"tens mn ladder, roof
ladder 2 10 ft sections

SALE

II ?8/ltn

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

valve extens10"
reel lme holders

For The Tan For '
Your Body
FEATURING
SUNTANA
WOLFE SYSTEMS

OWNED &amp; OPERATED IY

WANTED

992-2155
NEW LISTING - Appoox 5
acre; buoldong or mobole home
sne part level elec and wateo
available WANT $9 000 00

Phone 949 2202

FOR

Ul!p~~R 949-2414

Ruc1ne Oh10 46771

mo

CALL
POMEROY. OH
992-2269

HELPING YOU RECOVER
YOUR INVEIIMINI
SNODGRASS'
UPHOLSTERY

e......

4·18 "18 tfn

TAYLORED TANS

20 SESSIONS

Rldt P••10n Auctioneer. h
cenHd Ohio and W•t Virginia
antique, f ..m. liquid•
tlon ...... 304- 3-11785

YAIDMAN &amp; ECHO

Federal State and CiVIl Servict~
Jobl 818, '00 to tl9 891
Now hiring! Otll Job Une
1-618·459·3811 Ext F1122

11 7 30 thilt 75 bed ICF SNF

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Business
Opportunity

Food bu1inM1 for sale Ali
equ1pment and recelpt1 In Middleport S••ou1 enqunies only
pl ..se Write Del~ Sentinal Bo.11
729 T Pom•oy, Oh1o 4!5769

241...

Wadenwver'1 Auction Servieeavallabte at your con-..nience
and location~ M•hn Wed...
mav• Auctioneer 814-2•5·
6152.

Locatad Hallway Be·
tween Rt 7 &amp; Baahan
NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
8 7 Fonencong On
Yardman
Servile On All Makos
We Honor MC/Dos&lt;/Vosa

Help Wanted

11

Full or part ttme AN Superv..or
7 ·3 30 ftft LPN 3-11 30 1nd

8

Dealer,..

992·5496

Howard L. Writasel

448 9850

PH. 949-2969

POWHL ST
MIDDLEPORT

WORK

NEW LISTIN G -

SEE OUR
BEAUTIFUL
SELECTION OF
SILK FLOWERS
AND
ARRANGEMENTS

,

Lost and Found

FOUND Poocle type bid w4th
•omo whh:e Very frieru:lv On
Neighborhood Ad c-41 81.C..

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

..- ··-~ ~===~=====:::JI
Business
REGISTERED NURSES
Cliff's Place
Services

.....

'"' D ~ UQ&amp;
......
...
' ,.,..
,~

" ~ liO

"'

.,

,_
•-e-ot. . ....
.

UDO

.. , , o - - · 0.0 v;o ,,........

-. ,.. c_.
c.. ..,.
.,.
·~

OICID
tlllll
o 1 111
CID
Of!QII

.,.,,j(l(lo"'

' "' - . , . . ' ' " ' o , • .._., • •

~- .

.....
01 110
.. 110

_
-__--

RATES
..QIIO. n • _,_

I ... OIO DI It a

6

L&amp;L
lt!DEPENDENT
CARPET
CLEANERS

BOGGS.
10 PUH AN AD CAll 9U 2H II
MOHOAY lhtw Ult!AY I AM t• 5 1' fl\
I AM Ull !tl NOON U f\JRDAY

21

Friday, May 13, 1988

Ohio

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

1

•

�Page- 12- The Daily Sentinel

Friday. May 13, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Sunday

oo ou... orne to hun:li

•

'

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

-c7·

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

~~~~! r~t

Pomeroy

1 11 E. Memoriol Dr .

,,

"

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

·-

\

MEIGS TIRE

I

A"\
\Ill, 1\
'

Mill Work·
Cabinet Mak1ng
Syracuse

106 lutternut An.•. Pomeroy, Oh:

li1

992-3978

992-3785. Pomeroy

TR1NlTY CHURCH. Rev. John 111ft, Pastor.
Debbie Buck. Sunday Sctool Supt Church
School 9. 15 a.m., Worship Servi&lt;.'e 10. :I) a.m.
01otr rehearsal, Tuesday, 7 :.J p.m. urder dl·
rectlon of Lo~ Bw1.
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE, Comer Union and Mulberry, Rev
Thomas Glen McClung, pastor. Nonnan Presley. S S. Supt, Sunday School, 9:XI a.m.;
morning worship 10: .XI a.m : evening service 6
p.m., mld·week service, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
GRACE EPIS(X)PAL CHlJRCH, Jl6 E
Maln St.. Pomeroy. Sunday services: Holy
corrununton on the first &amp;lnday of each month,
and comttned wtth morning prayer on the
third Sunday. MOJ'T\lng prayer and sermon on
aU other SUndays of the month. DIW"Ch School
and Nursery care provtded. Coffee hour in the
Parish Hall Immediately foUowfng the service
POMEROY CH1JRCH OF CHRIST, 2l2 W.
Maln St. , Leo Lash. evangellsl. Bible School
9: :.D a rp .• Morning worship, 10: .'J&gt; a.m.: Youth
meetings, 6:00p.m .; Evening worship, 7:00p.
m. Wednesday night prayer meeting and Blbk!
study. 7:00p.m
THE SALVATION ARMY, ll5 Bulternut
AVP. , Pomeroy. Mrs. Dora Wining in charge
9.uxlay hollness meeHng, 10 a.m ., Sunday
School, 10: ll a.m &amp;inday Sch::ool, YPSM
Elo!:ie Adams, k&gt;ader. 7.ll p.m. Salvatlon
meeting, various speakers and music s~als.
Thursday, ll:l:l a.m to 2 p.m Ladies Home
l.e&lt;~i."Ue, members In charge. all wonen
lnvtted; 6:45 p.m. ThUOiday, Corp; Cadet
Classs (Young People-Bible) , 7: ~ p.m Bible
Slu:ly and Pra)'i'r meeting, open IO the public.
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHlJRCH OF
CHRist, l1226 Otlktren's Home Road (County
Road 76). 992-5m. Vocal music. Sunday Wor·
ship 10 a m , Ellble Study 11 am , Worship, 6 p.
m. Wednesday, Bible Stwty, 7 p.m.
OlD DEXTER Bffii.E CHR1STIAN
CHURCH, Alvin Curtis, pastor; Unda Swan,
Supt. Surday Schoo\ 9:l:l a.m.: preachlng services, first and third &amp;lnday folloYiing SuiXIay
SchOOl Youth meeting, 7·]) p.m f!llefy Sun·
day.
GRA HA M
UNITED METHODIST,
p, l'~(· hln l-{ 9. 30 &lt;:~. m . r!rs1 and second Sun
davs of ('&lt;:~C h month; third and fourth Su n·
duv i'ach month wor~h ip scrvicl'~a l7 · JOp
m ., WE'tlnesda y t'Vl'nlngs :11 7:30 p m.
Prayl'r and Bible Study.
SEVENTH -DAY ADVENTIST. Mul·
])('J'ry Hf'lghls Road . Pomt•roy . Pastor
Jo hn Swri~art: Sabbath Schoo l Sul)('ri ntr nd cnt. DarllnC' Stcwarl Sabba th School
bl:'gi ns al 2 p.m . on St~t urdav afiN noon
wit h worship ~r·v iC E.' following a t3. 15p m .
Evcryom• " £'!co me.
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
- S1s t£'1' Ha r·r· trtt War nN , Sup! Sund;;IV
S(·hoo! !l. 30 a .m : Mornin g Worship. 10··15

u. m.

POMEROY FI RST BAPTIST, Lvs ton
Hallrv. mmls ter: Sa turday f'vt' ning
f'\ angc&gt;!i~tlr Sf'rvil·l'S. ope n to public. 7 p
m : Su nd t~v Chur( h Schoo l. 9: 30 a. m ,
Mornmg Worship 10: :10 u m
FIRST SOUTHE:RN BAPTIST. Po
mc&gt;roy Plkf'. E . Lamar O' Bryan l, pa!HOI ;
.luck Nf'f'C:Is. Sunduv School Oirl'CIOr Sun ·
dav Sc hool. !t 30 a,m, Mornin~ Wo1s hlp.
10· 45: ('Vf'ning worship. 7: 00pm 1D ST. )
&amp; 7·30 IE .S.T. t: Wf'dnrsday Pr&lt;~ .VPr ~C'r ·
vicf' 1 IWJ p.m. (D.S.T. l &amp; 7. 30 P .M t E S.
T 1: Ml s~: lon Frl('n(l~: tages 2-61. H.oval
Ambussador s / bovs UJ!rl'.~ 6-lRt. unn Girls
In Action (,lgf'S fi · l ~l on Wf'dne sdavs. 7 p.
m iDS.Tt&amp;7· 30pm iE .S T.I :TuC'sdav
Visii:Jtion. ti: 30 p.m .
FAITH TABERNA C Lt~ CHURCH. Sal
lf'Y Run Roun Rf'v Emml'll Rawson. pas·
ro r. H&gt;Jndll'\' Dunn , .~ upl Sunday Sc hool ,
10 '' m.: ~undav f'V('n in ):! ~ t'rvlcC', 7: 30p:m
: Rlbll' tf.achlng. 7· JO p.m Thursdu y.
SYRACUSE MlSSION. Ch&lt;'rry SL. S~ ­
racusC' Scrvicf'~. 10 a.m Sunda v. E\'C'n ing
~l"'f\'lr'f's Sun•la;.&gt; &lt;.~ nd W('dn f'~du v at 7: lXI p
CHURCH
"'INMIDDLEPORT
CHRISTIAN UNION.

OF CHR IST
HaiC'v.
fir~~ C'idf'l , Wamla Moh[('r. Sunday SchOO l
Sup! Sund.tv School 9 :10 a.m.. M01 nlng
\\on;hip 10· .10 .'1 m : Evf'ning Worship 7 30
p.m .. wroncsday pra yt' r m('('fi n ~ 7•30 p.m
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD.
Rdci n£' Rf'V. Jam('s Satrc&gt;rf!C'Ir1. pa~ l or.
F"n•cman Williams. Supt S und&lt;.~ y Sc hool
9: 4:,1 a.m., Sundav and Wt'lf.Jnf'sdav f"Vf' n·
ln,Q sl'rvl('f'S. 7 p m .
MIDDLEPORT I' IRST BAPTIST
Co rn&lt;'r Sixth und Pa lm£'r. JamC':- SN:Idon,
Pu~lor Erina Wilson, S S Supt .; Cat hy
Rl.c~s. As~ I. Supt . Sunday School, 9·15 .i
m .. Morn ln,R' Worship , 1(]:15u.m .. Sunday
Ev1• ntn ~ SC'I"VICC', 7 p m Pray('r mN'Ilng
und B!bll' Slud:v WC'dnl'sdnv i'Vf'nlng . 7 p
m.: Chlldr('n "s chOil praclit"l'. W l&gt;dn~
dav. 7 p.m.: Adult choir practlcf', Wed. 8
p m.: Radi o program. WMPO. Sunday,
Dwl~ hl

S · ~a

m.

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST,
5th and Main, AI Hartson, minister;
Richard DuBose, Associate Pastor; Mike
Ger la ch, Sund ily School Superintendent .
Btbl (' School9 30 a m .: Morning Worship
10: 30 a.m. Eveni ng Worship 7: 00 p.m .
Wednesday, 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NA·
ZARENE . PASTOR Fred PenhOrwood .
Bill Whit&lt;'. Su nday School Supt. Sunday
School 9' :l0 a .m; Morning Worship 10: 45
a .m. ; Evan,~.:eU stlc meetin g 7:00 p.m.
Wednesda y. 7:00 p.m Prayer rneetlng.
UNrrED PRESBYTERIAN MINR!TRY
OF MEIGS COUNTY
Rev. Charlet TalbM&amp;
HAR RISONV ILLE PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH - Sunday: Worship ~rvtces
9:00 a m.; Chu rc h School10; 15 a.m., ·
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN Sunday School. 9 a. m .; Chu rch service,
. 10: 1$ a. m .
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY·
TERIAN - Sunday Sc hool, 10 a.m.;
Church service, 11: 15 a .m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD, Pasloc,
John Evans. Sunday Sc hool 10:00 a .m.;
Sunday Motnlng Worship 11 :00 a .m . Children 's Churc h ll a .m . Sunday Evening
Service 7:00p.m Wed., 6 p.m . Young La·

dies' Auxiliary . Wednesda"y, 7 p.m Fam·
tly Wors hip.
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. Off
Rl 124, 3 miles from Porlland·Long Bot·
tom. Edsel Hart. paslor. Sunday School,
9 30 a. m.; Sunday morning preaahlng
10:30 a.m .; Sund ay evening services, 7:30
pm.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH, Corner Ash a nd Plum. No('(
Hernnann, pastor . Sunday SchoollO:OOa.
m.; Mornln~ Worship, U : OO a. m., Wed ·
nesday a nd Sa turday Evenin g Services at
7.30 p. m .
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
UNITED ME'I'IIODIST CHURCH
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev. Doa Are her
Rev . Roy Deeter
Rev. Carl HieD
Rev. Seldon Johnson
ALFRED- Church School 9:JO.a.m .,
Wors hip , 11 a .m.; UMYF6:30p.m , UMW
Third Tuesday, 7:30 p.m . Communion,
first Sunday. IAreher)
CHESTER - Worship 9 a m .; Church
School10a .m : Bible Study, Thursday, 7p.
m.: UMW, firs t Thursday, 1 p.m , Com·
munlon, first Sunday (Arc heTJ .
JOPPA - Worship 9 30 a .m.; Church
SchoollO. 30 a .m. Bible SlUdy Wednesday,
7: 30p.m (Johnson).
LONG BOTTOM - Church School 9. 30
a .m., Worship 10: 30 a. m .; Bible Sludy,
Wednesday, 7: 30 p.m .; UMYF Wednes day, 6:00p.m ; Communion First Sunday
or Month I Hicks).
REEDSVILLE- Church SchoolS: 30 a .
m .. Wors hip Service 11: 00 am. (Deeter) .
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL Church School 9 a .m.; Worship ]0 a .m .;
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7: 30p.m .; Commu·
nlon First Sunday (Archer) .
CEN'JR.U. CLUSTER
Rev. Kandy Burch
Re~. MelvlD Fraaklln
Rev. Clemeale 8. Zulll&amp;a, Jr.
Rev. Robert Mus.nan
Rev. Doll Meadows
ASBURY (Syracuse)- Worship 11 a.m.
, Church School 9:45 a m .; Charge Bible
St udy , Wednesday , 7:30p.m.; UMW. first
Tuesday , 1: 30 p m. ; Choir Rehearsal,
Wednesday 6;30 p.m.; (Burch )
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a .m .;
Church School 10 a .m ; Bible Study, Tues ·
day, 7.00 p.m.; UMW, Flrsl Monday, 7:30
p m.; UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m . Choir Rehearsal , Children's at 6:30p.m Adull fol ·
low ing, Wednesday. (Franklin )
FLATWOODS- Church School, 10 a.m .
: Worship, 11 a .m .; Bible Study, Thurs·
day , 7 p.m.; UMYF , Sunday, 6 p.m
(Franklin I .
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a.m.;
Church Sctaool 10 A.M .: Choir prac tice,
Thursday, 6:30 p m .; UMW third Monday
(Burch).m. (Burch )
HEATH (Middleport) -Church School,
9:30 a m.; Morning Wors hip 10:30 a .m .:
Youth Group. 4 p.m : Wednesday, Bible
study 6:00p.m. Choir rehearsal7 :00 p.m .
(Zuniga )
MINERSVILLE - Church School 9: 00
a m .; Worship serv ice 10· 00 a.m.: UMW
third Wednesday, 1 p.m . (Burch)
PEARL CHAPE:L - Worship Service
9· 30 a. m. , Church School 10· 15 a. m
(Muss man)
POMEROY -Church Sc hool, 9: 1$ a.m.
; Worship 10:30 a.m. , Choir rehearsal
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m ., UMW, second
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.; VMYFSunday,Gp.m .
(Meadows)
ROCK SPRJNGS- Church School, 9: 15
a .m ., Worship 10 a.m.; Bible Study, Wed nesday, 7. 30 p.m .. UMYF (Seniors), Sun·
day, 6 p.m .; (Junlorsl every other Sun
day, 6 p.m. (Fra nklin ).
RUTLAND -Church School, 10 a. m .,
Worship, 11 am.; UMW First Monday,
7:30p. m . !Mussman)
SALEM CENTER- Chureh Sehool9: 15
a m .; Wors hip 10.15 p.m. £Muss man) .
SNOWVILLE - Worshtl), 9:00 a.m.;
church school9:45 a.m. (Mussman )
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev. Debl Fo.ter

Rev. Rocer Grace

APPLE GROVE - Church School 9: ~
a.m . Worship, 10:00 am. (first and third
Sundays}; Bible study every Sunday 6 p.
m .; UMW Second Tuesday, 7: 00 p.m.;
Prayer meeting, Wednesday, 6 p.m.
(Grace) .
BETHANY- Worship, 9 a .m .: Church
School.lO a.m.; Bible Study, Wednesday,
10 a .m.; Dorcas Women's Fellowship
'
Wednesday, 11 a.m. Woster• .
CARMEL - Church SchOol 9: 30 a.m.; .
Worship, 10:45 a.m. Second and Fourth 1
Sundays; Fellowship dinner with Sutton ~
third Thurlday, 6: »p.m. {Foster).
·
MORNING STAR- Church School9· 45
a.m. , Wonhlp 10:30 a .m.; Bible Study,
Th~~· 7:30p.m. (Fosler) .
.
S
N -Church School, 9: 30a.m .:
Morning Worship 10: 45 a.m. llnt and third
Sundays; Fellowship dlllner wllh Carnie!
third Thurlday, 6:30 _p.m. (Foster) .
EAST LETART- Church Scboo19 a.m.;
Wonhlp 10 a.m . second aDd founh Sun·
days; UMW first Tuesday, 7: l) p.m .
(Grace).
LETART FALLS - Worship 9 a .m ;
Church School tO a .m. {Grace).
RACINE - Chureh School, 10 a.m.; Worship ll a .m .; UMW lwrlh Monday at7: :rJ p.
m.; Men's Prayer Breakfast, Wednesday, 8
a m. (Grace).

KENO CHURCH Of" CHRIST , Vernon
Eldridge. minister; Oliver Swain, Sunday
School Supt. Preaching 9:30 am. each
Sunday.

U6 S. Second
Pomeroy

992-3325

m

Ol.de11t Flariu
352 EAST MAIN
POMEROY. OHIO 46769
Vol. 23 No. 14
Copyrightod 1988

UVRY •

CONTINUES 11IROUGHOUT OUR LIFE

FUNERAL HOME
"Serving Families"

Whether you are a
young adult just starting out in life or a more mature
person who returned to the halls of learning either
for pleasure or to acquire new ~ the joy of
accomplishment is the same. However, it should be
remembered that graduation is not the end of
It's almost gi"aduation time.

264 S. 2nd, Middltporl

992-5141

HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION, Evt&gt;rl'll
Delaney, pas tor. Su nday service, 9::11 a
m : eve ning service 7:00 p.m. Prayer
meeting. Wednesday, 7:00p.m .
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH Of"
CHRIST, Joseph B. Hoskins, pas tor, Bible
Class, 9· 30 a m.; Mor ning Wors hip 10.30 a.
m., Evening Wor ship, 6:30pm. Thurs day
Bible Study, 6. 30 p.m.
ZION CHURCH OF· CHRIST, Pomeroy·
Harrisonvill e Rd. RoberT Purtell, minister ; S teve Stanley, S, S. Supt.; Bill McEI
roy. AssL Supt. : Sunday School 9:30a.m.,
Worship serv ice 10:~ a m.; Evening worship S unday 7 p.m and Wedne;day, 7 p.m
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH , Pine
Grove. The Rev. William Mlddl e;wa rth,
pas! or. Church service 9. 30 a.m : Sunday
Schbol 10:.10 a.m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,
John Wr ight. past or. Sunday School9: 30a
m.; Larry Haynes, S S Supt. Morning
worsh.ip 10.30 a .m .
RACIN E CHURCH O F THE NAZA·
RENE, Rev. Lloyd D. Grlmm,Jr, pastor
Ora Bass, Chairman of the Board or Chrlsllan Ufe. Su nday School9: 30 a m .; Morn·
lng worship 10:30 a.m.; evangelistic servtce7:00 p.m . Wednes day service, 7 p.m.
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH , Dex·
ter. Woody Call. pastor. Services Sundav
10 a m. and 7 p.m. Wednesday, 7 p.m . ·
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH.
Lloyd Sayre, Supt. Sunday School 9:30 a.
m ; mornin g worship JO 30 a m. Sunday
evening service 7 p m.
J

H&gt;:MLO&lt;:K UltOVE CHRISTIAN , Rog·

er Watson , pas tor Crenson P ratt, Sunday
School Supt. Morning Wors hip 9: JO a.m.,
Sunday School 10: 30 a.m.; Evening ser·
vice, 7: 30 p.m
MT. UNION BAPftST , Donald Shue,
pas tor; Joe Sayre. Sunday School Supt.
Sunday SChool 9: 45a.m.; Evening wor~hlp6: 30 p.m .; Prayer Meeting, 6 30 p.m.
Wednesday.
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST. Dave Prentice, minister. Oeryl
Wells, Supt. Church School 9 a m.; Wor·
ship Service, 9:45 p.m .
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE . Rev. Herbert Crate, pastor
Frank Riffle, supt. Sunday School 9: 30 a.
m.; Wors hip service, 11 a .m . and 7 p.m.
Sunday. Wednesday, 7 p.m Praye r meet·
In g.
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH . David BelL pasror Robert E.
Barton, Director of Christian Education·
Steve Eblin , assistant. Sunday School9: 30
a.m.; Morning worship 10· 30 a.m .; Teens
In Action , 6 p.m , Evening Worship. 7: OOp
m. Wednesday evening prayer and Bible
s tudy. 7:00p.m. Choir practice, Thursday,
7p.m .
DEKTER CHURCH OF CHRIST.
Charles Russell Sr., minist er . Rick Ma·
comber, s upl . Sunday School 9·30 a .m .;
Worship service 10·30 a. m . Bible s tudy ,
Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
REORGANlZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LAITER DAY SAINTS. Port.
land-Racine Road. Mike Duhl, pas tor;
Janice Danner, church school director
Church school9: 30a.m ; Morning worship
10:30 a .m.; Wednesday evening prayer
services, 7:30pm.
BETHLEHEM BAPfiST. Rev . Earl
Shuler, pa&amp;tor. Worship service, 9: 30a.m
Sunday School tO: 30 a.m. Bible Study and
prayer service Thursday, 7:30p.m.
CARLETON !NTERDENOMrNATION·
AL CHURCH, Kingsbury Road. Rev
Clyde W. Henderson, pastor. Sunday
School 9: 30a.m .; Ralph Carl, Supt . Even·
lng worship 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting,
Wednesday 7:00p.m.
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN, Vernon
Eldridge, pa.stor; Wallace Damewood, s.
s. Supt. Sunday School9: 30 a.m.; Worship
Service, 10: a.m.

ao

RACINE FIRST BAPflST. Steve
Deaver, Pastor Mike Swiger, Sunday
School Supt.; Sunday School 9::.1 a .m .:
Morning worship 10; 40 a.m.; Sunday
evening worship 7·~ p.m.; Wednesday
evening Bible atudy 7 : ~ p.m.
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHUROI,
Burtlngjlam. Ray Laudl!nnllt, putor; Robert COzart, . .1111111 palter. Sunday School
10 a.m .; wm'* 1 p.m.; wa__., 6 p.m.
ywlhm... tna: Wed., TJ&gt;III.cllurdls...,IOI!I!
PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH, )4
mile ott Rl . 32.'5. Rev. Ben J . Watta. pastor~
Robert Searl,., S.S. Supt. Sunday School
9::11 a.m.; intna: Worlldu 10: 30 a.m.;
Sunday event g service 7:~ p.m.; Wed.·
nesday serv , 7 : ~ p.m.
SILVER R N BAPTIST. BUI Lll1le,
pastor. Steve Little, S. S. Supt Sunday
School tO a .m.; Morntnewor11p, 11 a.m.;
!~!'•day ..en1n1 wcrtht_p 7:30p.m. Prayer
meetlne and Blbletllldy Wednaday, 7:30
~.m .; Youth mtettneWednadayat 7p.m
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHUROI
- 383 N . 2nd Ave., Mlddloport. Sunday
SchoollO a .m . Sunday evenlng7:00 p.m.; ,
Mld·weok aervlce. Wed., 7 p.m .

By CHARLES MASON
OVP News Staff
PT. PLEASANT. W."l/a.- The
long wait for expansion of the
National Guard Armory at Camp
Conley is now over. The West
VIrginia Armory Board a p·
proved the $1.4 million expansion
during it s meetin g Friday in
Charleston, W.Va., Capt. Larry
Brown said Saturday .•
Brown has been squeezing his
near 200-man unit into the Camp
Conley facility that was built in lhe
1950s for 150 men. _'"Wc'v_e got

(row's Famill Restaurant
"Fututi•l K1w111~ gf"•i c•ldt~"
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432
Prayer ~rv Ice, "f. JI.J p.m
F'AITH BAPTIST CHURCH . Railroad
St., Mason. Sunday Schoo110 a m .; Morn

ing worship 11 a.m .;

something, but the beginning. Every day of our lives
is spent in learning something new, wherever we are,
and we are constantly adding to our store of
knowledge; if only by observing the world around us
with an opep. mind during our daily travels. We also
learn about.life and the Creator who gave us this
world in which to live, by our regular attendance· at
our House of Worship. There is no graduation from
this kind of learning, and that is the way it should be
for as long as we live.
'

Evenln~

service 6 p.

m . Praye-r mc&gt;etlng and Bible Study Wed·
F'OREST RUN BAPTIST. Rev Nyle

Borden, past or Cornellus Bunch, sup!

Sunday School 9:30 a .m ., Second and
fourth Sundays worship S(&gt;fv\ce at 2.30 p
m.
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST. f'our th and
Main St.. Midd leport Rev . Gilbert Cr aig,

three feet between lockers, Hrown
said. "It's tight."
Brown said the new expansion
will:
- Add new offices, a new locker
room and a new kitchen facility.
- Add an Occupational Heahh '
and Safety Administration-ap·
proved indoor firing range for small
caliber weapons.
-Add a maintenance bay.
- Expand the existing supply
room to three Urnes its current size.
- Provide a new parking lot.
The only part of the building that

will remain the same is lhe current

drill floor. The unit, wilh aulhorized
strength of 253, has 196 men now,
and approprialely during National
Guard month in May is conducting
a recruitment drive.
The firing range will replace an
old one that has been shut down for
the past two years because of lead
dust contamination and poor ven·
tilation , Brown explained. The $1.4
million renovation, according 10
Brown, is the first major expansion
of the Camp Conley facility since
initial construction.

me
9 Sactiona, 58 Pages
A Multimedielnc. Newspaper

I(·

That contract has been let, Brown
said.
Brown said the new parking lot.
among the other plans of the expansion, is desperately needed.
People have had to park their cars,
trucks and vans on the adjoining
grass because the front gravel park·
mg lot was inadequate.
The expansion could allow for
the unit's authorized strength to be
increased, Brown said.
The 3664 th unit trains people
who already have militiary operational specialities and also trams
people that don't have any military

record. The weekend drills are
matched with day-to-day repairs of
broken army equipment. Thiny-fi_ve
people work full-time al the facihty
perfonning
year-round
maintenance dulies .
. "It's not just going out in ·the
woods on the weekends," Brown
said. "l have a pla100n that runs a
$6 mimon to $7 million parts

warehouse."

The Camp Conley unit is the lar·
gest in the state. The se&lt;:ond·largest
unit is split in two locauons
Buckhannon and Clarksburg.

development director believes

ati~EdCktRCH

JO

Brown, who has been unit com·
mander since November of 1986,
said the expansion was first sought
by previous unit commander, now
Major Jake Huffman. "I am the
fourth commander who has sought
the expansion," an elated Brown
said today.
Members of the uni~ which
provides maintenance for equipment for a variety of other uni ts,
were aware the facility expansion
was on the drawing boards.
The first obstacle for lhe newlook armory is removal of asbestos
from the ceilings in the building.

...--Prom on the river....- - - - - - - , Meigs ·can boom ·once again,

.Ir, past or. Mrs. Ervin Baumgardner,

MT. HERMON UNITED BRET HR EN
Sunday School Supt. Sunday School9:30 a.
IN CHRIST CHURCH. Localed In T('xas
m : Worship Service, 10:45 a.m.
Communit y off Ct Rt. 82. Rev. Robert
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
Sanders, paslor. Jeff Holt er, lay leader,
- Joseph B. Hoskins, eva ngelist . Sunday
Ed Roush, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
Blb1C'Studv9a.m.: Worship, IOa .m.; Sun·
School 9·:MJ a. m : mornln_g worship and
day evenin g service 6 p m ; Wednesday
chlldrrn's "hu1ch 10:30 u m : l'Ventng
evening S('rvlce, 7 p.m.
preaohlng serv!('(l flrsl lhr€l"' Sundays.
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Racine,
7:30p.m : Spf'('lal service fou rth Sunday
Rl. 124 William Hobac k, past or. Sunday
('Vening, 7:30 p.m.: Wednesdav Prayer
School 10 a .m.; Sunday even In~ serv lt'e 7
Meeting, BlbiC' Sludv and Youth F'eliOwLANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH,
p m . Wednesday (&gt;veni n~ service 7 p.m.
shlp, 7:30 p m .
.'
Sunday Sch&lt;lol 9. 30 a.m.; Dallas J a ney,
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle,
CHURCH OF' GOD OF' PROPHECY .
s upt. ; Mo r ning worship 10·30 a.m.; Sun·
Supt. Sunday Sc hool 9:30 a.m. Mornin gLocaled on 0 J . Whitt' Road of Hlghwav
day evening seJV Ice, 7:30p.m.; WednesWorship 10:30 a m Prayer service, altern·
160. Pat H('nson, pastor. Sunday Schooi)O
day evening service, 7:~ p.m.
a.m
Classes
for
all
ages.
Junior
Chu
rch
11
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA·
OF' JESUS CHRIST,
a. m ; Morning worship 11 a.m . Adult
ZARENE. Rev. Glenn McMillan, pastor.
APOSTOLI
C
F'AITH
- New Lima Rd ,
Chulr practice 6 p.m Su nday Young Peo
Mary Jan ice Lavender, Sunday School
next to F'ort Meigs Park. Rutland. Robert·
pie's, Chlldrro"s Church and Adult Blblf'
Supt. Sunday School 9:30a. m .: Morning
Richards, pastor. Serv ices at 7 p m. on
worship 10.30 a .m.; Evangelistic service, · Studv, Weodn esdav at 7:30p.m .
Wednesdays a nd Sundays
H6PE
BAPTIST
CHAPEL.
570
Grant
6 p.m : Prayer andPralseWednesday, 7p.
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP ·
St., Middleport Affiliated with Southern
m ., You th meeting, 7 p.m .
TER of th e Wesleyan Holiness Church,,
Baprlst Convention . David &amp;ryan , Sr., MIE DEN UNITEO BRETHREN IN
Re v. Dav id Ferrell, past or. Henry Eblin ,
nister. Sunday School 10 am : Morning
CHRIST, Elden R Blak e, past or. Sunday
Sunday School Supt., Sunday School10 a .
worship 11 a.m.; Evenin~ wors hip ip m.:
School 10 a.m.; Gary Reed. Lay leader
m : Mor ning Wor s hip 11 a.m., Evening
Wednesda y evening Bible stud y an d
Morning sermon, 11 a.m.: !:!unday night
service
7· 30 p.m. Wednesday evening scr·
prawr mf'PI InP 7 n m .
services · Christian Endeavor 7:ll p.m.,
vlre 7. 30 p.m .
Song service 8 p.m. Preaching 8·:.1 p.m.
BRADF'ORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, St .
STIVERSVILLE WORD OF" f 'AITH .
Mid-week prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7
Rt. 124 and Co. Rd. 5. Scott Stl'Wart. pas·
Gary Holter. pastor Sun(\ay services 9. 30
p.m .
l or. William AmbergPr , supt. Sunday
a.m. and 7 p.m .: Midweek servi~. 7::Jl p
School, 9:30a.m .; mornln~ v.·orship 10 :30
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH
m . Thursday.
J
a
m.:
evening
worship
7:30pm.;
Wednes
0. H. Cart. pastor. Sunday School at 9: 30a .
MfDDLEPORT
PENTECOSTAL,
Third
d a~ worship, 7: 30p.m .
m. ; Morning worship at10:30 a.m.: Sun·
Ave. Rev. Clark Baker, pastor. Carl Not ·
ST
PAUL
LUTHERAN
CHURCH.
day evening servlef' at 7:30p.m . Thursday
tlngbam, Sunday School Supt. Sund ay
Corn{'!" Sycamor&lt;' and Second Sis., P oservices at 7:30p.m.
School 10 a.m wllh classes lor all ages.
meroy . Tht&gt; Rev. William Mlddleswar t.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION al Bald
Evening services at 6 p.m Wednesday Bl·
pastor. Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Church
Knob, located on Counl y Road 31. Rev.
ble study at 7:30p.m . Youth services Frl·
scrviC£'
11
a
.m.
Lawrence Gluesencamp, pastor Rev .
day at 7: 30p.m
SACRED
HEART CHURCH . Msgr
Roger Willford, asst. pastor. Preaching
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP, 128 Mill St.,
Ani
bony
Glannamorc.
Ph.
992-5898.
Sat
ur
services Sunday 7: :l&gt;.p.m Prayer meeting
Middleport. Brother Chuck McPherson, ,;
day Eveninl!! Mass 7· 30 p.m , Sunday
Wednesda y, 7:30 p.m., Gary Grttflth,
pa~tor . Sunda y School 10 a.m., Sunday
Mas s, 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. Confessions one
leader. Youth groups Sunday evening at
evening services at 7 p.m. and Wednesday
half
hour
lx'for
p
each
Ma.o;s.
CCD
claSses.
6.30 p.m . with Roger a nd Violet Wlllfc.rd,
services at 7 p m .
11 a .m. Sunday
leaders. Communion serv ice first Sunday
ANTIQUlTY BAPTIST. Kenne&lt;h Smllh.
Vlt"I"ORY
BAPftST,
525
N.
2nd
S
t
.
each month.
pastcc. Sunday Schoo19:30 a.m.; church
Middleport. James E . Keese.&gt;, pastor.
WHITE; 'S
CHAPEL
WESLEY AN
service 7:30p.m , youth fellowship 6:30 p.
Sunday morning wors hip JO a m; Even·
CHURCH' - CoolvUie RD. RE'v , Phillip Rl·
m.; Blbl(&gt;study, ThurSday, 7·JOp.m.
lng
servlc('
7
p
.m
..
Wednesday
evening
denour, pas t or. Sunday School9:30 a.m.;
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE. 33045
worship
7
p
m
VI
s
itation
Thursda
y
6:30
p
.
worship service 10:30 a .m : Bible study
Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pasm.
and worship service. Wednesday, 7 p.m .
tor. Danny Lambert, S. S Supt. Sunday
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: Da vid
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST.
morning service at10 a .m.; Sunday evenCurfman . pastor. Sunday School. 10 a. m.:
Bill Carler. pas tor. Sunday School9 : 30 a .
Ing servicE' 7: 30p.m. Tuesday and Thurs.
worship sf'rviC&lt;' 11 a m .: Sunday night
m : Morning Worship and Communion
day Services at 7:30p.m.
wors
hip
S('rvlce
7:30
p.m.:
Midwee-k
10:30 a.m.
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA·
prayer sc&gt;rvlc&lt;' Wednesday 7 p.m.
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amos
ZARENE, Rev . Glendon Slroud, pa11 or.
WESLEYAN
BIBL E
HOLINESS
TIIIJ§, pastor. Sonny Hudson . supl. Sunday
Sunday School9·30 a.m.; Worship service,
CHURCH or Middleport. In c.. 75 P('ar iSt .,
Sc hool 9:30a.m ; Morntn~ worship, 10:30
10:30 a.m. ; Youth service Sunday 6: 15 p.
Rev.
Ivan
Mv('rs,
pastor;
Rogel
Manl
~.
a .m.; Sunday evening se rvice 7:00 p.m.
m. Sunday evenlngservlce7:00p.m. Wed·
Sr
..
Sunday
School
Supl.
Sunday
School
Wednesday serv lce 7 p.m . WMPO pronesday Prayer Meellng and Bibl e Study
9. :iO a.m.; MornlnJZ Wors hip 10· 30 n.m.:
gram 9 a.m each Sunday.
7:00p.m.
Evening Wors hip 7:30 p.m Wednesda y
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
NEASE SE'l'TLEMENT CHURCH, Sun.
('Vening Bibl e study, prayer and prais"(&gt;
RENE Samuel Basye, pastor. Sunday
day afternoon services at 2:30. Thursday
St'TV
ICC',
7.30
p.m
.
School 9· 30 a m .; Worship SE&gt;rvlce 10:30 a.
evening services at 7:30.
LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
m .;
Younl{ proplr's service 6 p.m.
FIRST BAPfiST CHURCH, Mason, W.
OF' GOD- Gilbert Spencer, pastor. Sun·
Eva ngelistic servlce6: 30 p.m . Wednesday
Va . Pastor, Bill Murphy. Sunday SchoollO
day SchOol 9:30 am.: Morning service
service 7 p.m .
a.m.: Sunday evening 7:30p.m . Prayer
]0 :00a .m .: Sunday evening sen:lce7:00 p,
MASON CHURCH OF CHRrST, Miller
meeting and Bible study Wednesday, 7:30
m.;
Mid-week
prayer
serv
ice
Wednesday
St . Mason. W. Va. Sunday Bible Study 10
p.m . Everyone welcome.
7
p
m.
a.m : Worship 11 a .m and 7 p.m. WednE!ti·
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPfiST, Sa·
MT.
OLIVE
F"ULL
GOSPEL
COMMUNday Bible Study, vocal muslr; 7 p.m .
lent St . Rev . Paul Taylor, pastor. Sunday
ITY CHURCH , Lay,·rence Bush, past or
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, DudSchol:i lOam.: Sundayevenlng7:00p.m.;
Max F'olmer, Sr., S. S Supt . Sunday School
din g Lane, Masoo, W Va. J . N. Thacker.
Wednesday evening prayer meeting 7:00
9:30a.m.;
Sund~y
('venlng
serv
ice,
7:30.
pastor. Evening service 7:30 p.m .; Wo·
p.m .
m.;
Wednesday
fV
enln~
Bible
study
and
men 's Minis try, Thursday. 9:30 a.m.:
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
praise
serviCf',
7·
30
p.m.
Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7:15
CHURCH. Sliver Ridge. Duane Syden·
UNITED F'AITH CH\JRCH,l\1. 7 on Po·
p.m.
Stlicker, pastor. Sunday School 9 a.m.·
meroy By-Pass. Rev Da vtd Wiseman, Sr.,
Worship Service-, 10 a.m ; Sunday evenlni
pastor Melvin Drake, s. S. Supt . Sunday
service. 7:00p.m. Wednf'Sday night Bible
School9 .30 a .m .; Mor ning Worship 10:30,
study 7·00 p.m .
Evening Worship 7:30 p m.; Wednesday
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIA N UNION. Hartford. W Va
While American teenagers are generally considered to be
Rev David McManis, pastor. Churt'h
sexually active, one would think that this would not be the case
School 9: 30a .m.; .Sunday morning ser·
vice, 11 a .m., Sunday evening service
concerning America's churched youth. However a new survey
7: :ro p m Wednesday prayer meeting, 7:
reveals that nearly half of those polled have had sexual contact
p m.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH. Letart .
before the age of 1&amp;.
W. Va., Rt 1, James Lewis, pastor. WorThe survey, commissioned by the Josh McDowell Ministry,
ship ~rvlces 9:30a.m : Sunday School)]
attempted to monllor how much sexual contact churched
am.: Eveningworship7:30p.m . Tuesda y
cottage prayer meeting and Bible Study
teenagers experience.
9:30 a .m: Worship service, Wednesda y
The term "sexual contact" refers to fondling private parts
7:30 p.m
OUR SA VI OUR LUTI!ERAN CHURCH.
and/or having sexual Intercourse. By age 18, the report showed
Walnut and Henry Sis., Ravenswood , W.
that 65 percent of the churched youth polled have, engaged In
Va. Th e Rev. George C. Weirick , pas lor.
fondl)ng and/or sexual Intercourse and 43 Ilercent have
Sunday SChool 9· JOa .m; Sunday worship
ll a.m .
experienced sexual Intercourse.
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH,Iocaledon
Before age 13, one out of five young people have engaged In
Poml!l"oy Pike, County Road 25 near Fiat ·
fondling and/or sexual Intercourse. That figure jumped to 53
woods. Rev. Blackw~, pastor Serv1ces
on Sunday at 10·31Ja .m . and7 :30 p.m . wtth
percent by the age of 16.
Sunday SchoolS· 30 a. m BlbleStudy, WedMost teenagers, 55 percent, could not state that they believed
nesday , 7:30p.m,
F AI'rH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
fondling was morally unacceptable behavior be!ore marriage
CHRIST. Sl . Rl . 338, An11qully. Rev .
and 36 percent were notabletostatethat sexual Intercourse was
Franklin Dickens. pastor. Sunday mom·
unacceptable before marriage.
tng 10 a .m .: Sunday evenlna: 7:30 p.m.
Thunday eventng 7:30p.m
The study also tried to determine some variables that may
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLI·
attribute
to Increased sexual behavior among churched youth.
NESS CHURCH, Inc . 75 Pearl St. Rev .
For Instance, about68 percent of the young people admitted to
Ivan Myers, acttng pas tcr; Roger Manley,
Sr , Sunday School SuperintL&gt;ndent. Sun- ..1
attending one R·rated film, while 10 percent had seen at least
day School 9:30a.m.; Morntna worship
one
X-rated film within the last siX months. Their television
10. 30 a.m.; evening wonhtp 7:30 p.m ..
Wednesday evening Bible study, praYer
viewing and mualc listening averaged out at 34 hours a week.
and praise service, 7: 30p.m .
And churched youth claim their fathers spend about 12
CH\JRCH OF JESUS CHRIST APQS.
minutes
per week talking to them about things that really
TOLlC - VanZaod1 and Ward Rd . Elder
James Miller, pastor. Sunday Schoci,
matter. That figure Increased to nearly a half hour for the
!0:30a.m.; WonhlpServlce, Sunday, 7: 30
mothers.
p.m ; Blbi•Study, Wedneoday. 7:30p.m .
Aa for sex educatiOn, the famUy, church and school appear to
CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL, Harrt·
smvWe Road. Rev. Drwey King, pastor;
be falling abort here. Most kids, 72 percent say they get at least
Cltntm Faulk, Sunday School Supt.; Sun"some'' of tbelr sex Information from friends . Movies came In
day School 9:30a .m.: momlngwoclhlp, ll
a.m., Sunday eveolna service 7:30p.m
second at 57 percent with parents and schools coming In third
Prayer Meet1D1, Wedneoday. 7:30p.m.
and fourth respectively .
:
SYRACUSE FIRSTCH\JRCH OF GOD .
lnterestiDgly, 73 percent of the teens poUed say they received
noo·Pentecollll. Worlhlp Rrvitf' Sunday
10 a .m .; Sunday School J1 a.m. Evening
"little" or "none" of their Information abo11t sex from the
worship service 7: 00 p.m. Wednftday
church.
prayer meetlnr 7:00 p.m

v

In

mid 80s.

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant. May 15, 1988

n l'5day. 7 p.m.

786 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

of

$1.4 million A•"Inory expansion gets go ahead.

992·2975

Rawlings-Coots-Blower

Partly
afternoon

•

tmes

FRANCIS FLORIST

\leif{~ Counlv ·~

614/ 992·2644

ns101e:

Along the River ......... 81·8
Business-Farm ............ D·l
Comics-TV .............. Insert
-ctassUieds ........... ..... . D3· 7
Deaths ................ .... .... A'-3
Editorial ..................... A·2
Sports ....................... Cl·8

•

REAllOll

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, 011.

John F . Fulll. Mgr .
Ph . 992·2 101
Pomer-oy

the Bend:
recipes, By Bob Hoeflich
........,. B-2 .

TEAFORD REAlTY

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

5·81l·61

CENTER, INC.

QK&amp;~' ::e.~~s

Shop

(6141992-2039 or
(614199 2-57 21

TilE LEARNING PROCESS

RACINE PLANING Mill .

Flowe~

FIOWIRS FOR IVIIY OCCASION

214 E. Mam
992·5130 Pomeroy

"9 92-2156
of Columbus, 0 .
104 W . Ma1n
t92· 2318 Pomeroy

;-,,,,g
I

INSURANCE - SERVICES

WITH BARGAINS

•

General Mllchandise
Racine 949·2550

·Brogan-Warner

WANT ADS
ARE JUMPING

WAI D CROSS
SONS STORE
Groceries-

PrescnptiOM
992 · 2tSS
Pomeroy

~97 - 7104

Nationwtde Ins. Co.

_,..,.,J.IU.. ·

C-1

Major League results

Disaster
alert drills
Page B-1

This M~sage and Church Directory Spon..~nred Ry The Interested Rrt.~inesses Listed On This Page.
{ Mtj

50 cents

Hannan Trace High School danced the night
away Friday on the PA Denny sternwheeler for its
senior prom. The young people started the
evening on a terrific note, but by 10 p.m. , rain,

thunder and lightning selln, putUng a damper on
the evening. North Gallla's prom was held
Saturday night, with two more scheduled on the
boat next weekend. (Times.Sentlnel photo)

Schoolyard preacher, 10, suspended
from his classes for fourth time
MARION , N.C. (UPI) A
defiant 5th grade street preac her
and his younger siblings, suspended for their schOolyard
preaching. won 't return to the
classroom unless they can con·
ttnue exercising their const!tu·
Ilona! rights, their mother says .
"They're not going back unless
they have the right to preach."
said Robin Strode, 27, whose
10-year-old son Duffey was sus·
pended Friday for a fourth lime.
"This thing's gping to court.
Our attorney has the paper·
work." she said.
Duffey joins brother Malthew,
5, and sister Pepper, 6, both
suspended for a third lime last
week for the same offense

" They' re going 10 regret the
day they ever did this to the
Lord's children." said Strode,
who sat in family car In the
parkt~g tot as her son preached.
" You r gods are sex and money
and education, " shouted Duffey,
after hopping off the red bicycle
he rode to J:;astfleld Elementary
School.
"The adul terers shall be put to
d eat h, " Duffey continued,
hunched over and gripping a
zippered black Bible In his right
hand. "You are guilty. Your eyes
are full of adultery."
But AsststantPrtnclpal Shirley
R amsey suspended Duffey
again, citing Insubordination and
disruptive noise.
School officials say Strode and

her 40-year-old street preache r
husband, David , are bucking for
a fight and their children are
violating school policy that re·
quires them to come Inside the
building II they arrive early.
McDowell County Superintend·
ent David Rlchett said the
children were suspended lor 10
days, but they could come back
anytime they are willing to abide
by the rules.
The Strodes attend New Manna
Baptist Church, bu I pastor
Danny Castles said the congrega·
tlon does not support the Strodes.
''They seem to have the wrong
altitude and the wrong spirit,"
said Castles, who also does not
approve of the chldren' s choice of
scripture.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - "II you don' t
have your oar In the water,
you're not going to row," said
Meigs County Director of Devel·
opment Kim Shields, as he sized
up the reasons for the lack of
industrial development In Meigs
County over the lasl!ew decades.
"At the turn of the century,"
said Shields, "this was a booming
community. The whole fabric o!
Meigs County was buUt over a
very few years and butlt very
weli.'' 'But, as Shields explained,
. the backbone of the county' s
development was. coal, and when
the coal played out, population
figures went down, unemployment figures went up and the
pace of life In the county slowed
drastically .
Then as the years went by.
something vital lor the redevel·
opment of the county failed to
happen. "With all the planning,
ail the systematic forethought
and all the good minds In Meigs
County, lor some reason, the
county' never got on board with
the Ohio Departm!!nl of Develop·
ment as part of the confidential
inquiries-program. ''
Through this program, Shields
explained, the state receives an
inquiry !rom a firm, which
usually remains anonymous,
looking for X·Y·Z site. In turn, as
part of the confidential Inquiries
program, the state disseminates
the Information !rom the paten·
tlal !lrm to selected groups such
as utility companies or chambers
o! commerce.
"But for some reason, this has
bypassed Meigs County for as
many years as the process has
been In place," Shields said,
"until the last year or so." Now
Middleport Chamber has been
designated to recleve confiden·
tlal inquiries on behalf of the
county; Inquiries which can be
responded to Intelligently when

they are suitable for the county.
And the Inquiries do come,
Shields assured, including one
about a year ago from an
anonymous firm that turned out
to be the Pennzoil Corporation.
The request !rom Pennzoil was
particularly suitable to a site at
Hobson. ju st below Middleport,
which Is owned by ConraiL
Shields went to Indi anapolis,
Ind. to talk to Conrail about the
Hobson s ite. He was told by
Conrail's director of real estate It
was not available because Con·
rail was considering pulling a
coal loading facility for barges at
Hobson. "That !ell through, "
Shields said, and so did any
possible deal with Pennzoll.
As a side note, Shields recalled
that at a time when he wa s
representing both Middleport
and Pomeroy with block grants.
II took months of contact ing
Chessle System o!flces In Balli·
more, Philadelphia, Cincinnati
and Cleveland to plow through
the chain of comma nd, j ust to to
get someone to come to Meigs
County, appraise abandoned
Chessle property through the two
villages and put the i nforma tion
on paper so It could be presented
to the villages for their consider·
atlon lor purchase.
As for the Hobson site., which
for years has been co nsidered by
developmental experts as a
prim e site In Meigs County.
Shields has gone alone , and with
representatives of a loca l power
company, to make proposals to
Conrail to develop the site.
thereby expanding Conrai l's hO·
rtzons and the county's too.
The problem is, rellerated
Shields, "that the railroad hasn:t
wanted to move. They haven t
been interested," he says, even
though Conrail, as a member of
the Ohio Development Council,
should be considered a develop·
ment specialist. Because the ,
railroad Is not Interested, the

best industrial slle in Meigs
County lies dormant.
Acconling to Shields, Meigs
Count y has not haq a shot In the
in dustrial arm since the 1970's
when cam e lhe South ern Ohio
Coal Mines, the Gavin plant at
Ches hire and Investment by the
state of about $1 million In
lnfrastrucl ure monies.
Development In Meigs Cou nty
since the 1970's has come through
' loca1 " entrepreneurs and
"smaller" businesses , Shields
sai d. And it Is local people ant;!
sma ll businesses that will be the
key to the future development of
Meigs County, Shields believes.
" We have outstanding people
here," he added, "but we need to
bring "more of these people to the
fold ."
Shields said lt Is not enough for
citizens to ask 'why haven't we
got th is and why haven't we got
that. ' The reason Meigs County
doesn't have this and that Is
" because not enough people are
kicking and shoving and pushing
a nd saying we're going to do
this."
Even David Baker. director of
the Ohio Departmenl o! Development, remarked In a recent
meeting in Meigs County that
business growth In Meigs County
will likely come from people
already living here, not from
outsiders.
Meigs Cou nti ans shouldn't con·
slder giant smoke stacks, suc h as
a noth er Gavin plant, as the only
possibility lor growth In the area ,
Shields said. But the notion of
having live or six small Indu stries , each employing 50 people ,
is indeed a posslblllly.
Statistically. he pointed out,
over the J:)ast few deca des. an
e normous number of jobs. have
been created in the stale, but
almost all from small bu sinesses
locating in local environm ents . .
The kinds o! bus inesseS', he
(See MEIGS, page A7)
1

Explosion tips W.Va. plant _
.

Wll..LOW ISLAND,
W.Va.
Federal investigators
sOughtiO learn what touched off an
explosion in a special chemical unit
of the sprawling
American
Cyanamid complex that left a supervisor dead arid two other
workers were in·ured.
Company of~cials were tightlipped about the Friday morning accident, refusing to say what
chemicals were involved" when the
blast occuned on the third floor of
the building.
·
In an afternoon shirt. change,
departing workers told news repor.
~ they were under company orders not 10 discuss the incident.
George Stunyo, the regional in·
dustrial relations mana.ger for
American Cyanamid, S81d there
was no "significant" chemical
release, but only "one puff" of a
chemical he would not identify
quickly dissipated.

'I• (UP!)

~as

"It
a chemical explosion," a
state police spokesman said.
Teams were sent by both the
company and the federal Occupa·
ti~n!!l Safety . and . Health A~mmiStraUon 10 mvesbgate the acct·
dent. Stunyo estimated it would
take 48 hours for investigaiOrs to
disclose their account or th_e bJa;lt.
The dead work~r was 1dent1fied
as James A. Robmson Jr.• 33~ or
Parkersburg, a general super:nsor
and 12-year veteran at the W1Uow
Island plant, Swnyo said.
Another employee, Kenneth
Lough, 39, or SL Marys, w~ tak~n
to Camden-Clruk Hospt_tal m
Parkersburg for observauon of
secondary . bums. and
some
respiratory difficulues.
The third worker, Tim Car·
rolhers, 43, of Newport, was treated
at the plant's infinnary for minor
injuries.
I

Thcchef~!ical discharge posed no

threat to etther plant wo~kers ~r
resideniS of the communuy, Said

~~ . ~.eard •. director .or the West
Vuguu!' . Au Polluuon Control
CommiSSIOn.
"Be~eve me, if that had been the
case, we would have someone up
there," Beard _saiCI. "It w~. not a
particularly IOXIC substanc~.
The APC~ direc~ S81d one or
the chemtcals mvolved was
toluene, a solvent.
Only minor damage .to the. flant
resulted, but no repaus wil be
made until investigators C!Jmplete
theit work, pl~t officials satd.
Stunyo_ ~d 80 ~pie were
working ·~stde the building wh~n
the explosiOn occurred, but he did
not know how many w~ In the
immediate area of the acctdent.
Other operations of !he plant
continued as nonnal, Sunyo said.

END OF TERM - Mlcllelle mw of New
Plllltulelpltla, a aopbomore u Rio Grande
eouere/Commuaur Collere, jotadownaomeflnal
notea while llltt1D1 on one of tbe bleacben set up
!or loda.v's commeacemenl ceremony at Rio

Grande. ·Two hundred and fifty graduates w.IJ
receive their dlplomu In activities that belin at I
p.m. Other Rio Grande students be1an wummer
break with the completion of sprln1 quarter flnala
earlier In the week.

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