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                  <text>Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 16, 1988

-Local news briefs---. Pomeroy
court news

Swim lessons start Monday
Swimming lessons at the Middleport Pool will start Monday
with La.ura McCullough serving as instructor.
Lessons offered and t he schedule Include: beginners,ll a.m.
to 12 noon; advanced beginners, 10 a.m. to 11 a.m.;
Intermediate, 9 to 10 a .m.; swimmers. 8 to 9 a.m.; junior life
saving, 5 to 6 p.m.; adult beginners, 6 to 7 p.m.
Lessons will last for two weeks. The cost is $12 for the first
person in a family a nd $10 for the second. The pool will be open
from J2 noon to 5 p.m. starting next Monda y. All fathers can
swim free on Su nday, June 19, In observa nce of fathers day .
Those interested in swimming lessons can pre-register by
calli ng 992-5322.

Riebel named representative
Meigs County Super intendent of Schools John Riebel was
named to serve as representative for several programs when
the Meigs County Board of Education met Tuesday evening.
Supt. Riebel will serve as the representative for the
Southeastern Ohio Special Education Regional Resource
Center program, the Southeastern Ohio \;olunta ry Education
Cooperative, Council of Gover nment program and the
Tri-County Career Development Program.
The board contracted with Eric Chambers to operate the sPa t
belt safety center on two Saturdays of each month for.the fiscal'
year of 1988-89 and sever ance pay was approved for Jim Rogers,
retired school psychologist. The board employed Kathy L.
Baker, Athens, an Ohio University graduate, as a speech
therapist for th e upcoming school year. A tentative budget for
the next school year was adopted along with a base teachers
salary schedule for $15,700 for certified staff members. The
board approved a 10-cent per hour increase for non-certificated
employees. Board member. Harold Roush , was appointed to
serve as the legislative liason person for the county board .
A calendar was adopted for the 1988-89 school yea r for the
county offi ce sta ff, bills were approved for pa yment and a
discussion was held on the employees' health lnsuyrance plans.

'Meigs haulers...
·that barring further trouble, the
courthouse air conditioning will
be working by Friday. The air
conditioning broke down last
)"eek and repairmen have been
working on the four teen-year-old
unit ever since.
Workers for Danny's UnIted
-Roofing, Columbus and Athens,
began this week replacing the
courthouse roof and the job is
" progressing nicely." said Commissioner Manning Roush.

I

F'lnally, the commissioners
heard revisions of two Insurance
proposals, one from Gregg RI chard, of Klais and Company
lnc., Akron, and the other from
Rick Pat rick, of McNellyPatrick Associates, Jackson.
The commissioners are hoping to
make a final decision on an
insurance package for co unty
employees next Wednesday. The
county's current Blue Cross-Blue
Sh ield policy must be renewed by
July I, or replaced by another.

. Alma O'Brien, 94, of Lake
Placid, Fla .. died Tuesday at
Lake Placid .
_. Mrs. O'Brien was the widow of
the late Charles O'Brien, for·
lnerly of Meigs County who di ed
on May 29, 1988. She was a retired
musician and belonged to the
,Eastern Stars in Miami, Fla .
She is survived by a son and
daughter-in -law, Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis · Meier of Lake Placid,
Fla .; a sister, Lola Stage of Lake
Placid, Fla., two grandchildren
11nd five great-grandchildren.
Local survivors are a brother-Inlaw , Rex O'Brien, and a sister-i n·
taw, Etta Cullums·. both of
Pomeroy.
Besides her husband . Mrs.
O'Brien was preceded in dea th
by her parents, a sister, Ruth
J&lt;ostoff, and two brothers, Stan·
ley· and Ray Thrash.
: Services will be held at 1: 30
p.m . Saturday at the Spence
Funeral Home in Canal Winchester with Dr. Dan S. Grant
officiating Burial will be In the
Lithopolis Cemetery .
· Friends may call at the funeral
home from noon until l: 30 p.m.
on Saturday

Rita Lemp
Mrs. Bernard L. tRita Rose)
Lemp, 77. Sun Cit y, Cal if.,
former Meigs County resident,

Eastern ...

Continued from page 1

:~c hool

was abo lished for linan-

cial reasons .

. The board also heard" report
from Superintendent Dan Apllng
that steps are being taken to
ensure that two "pre-1977"
school bu ses have !heir Iuel tanks
'properly protected. Although the
l&gt;uses have always passed their
annual inspections, these add!·
ilona! steps are being taken in
light of the recent fatal crash
Involvlng a school bus In Kenl ucky, In which several children
;.vere killed as a result of an
unprotected f~el tank on an oil!

Armouncements

I

died Tuesdaay at the Glendale
-Adventist Hospital in California.
Mrs , Lemp was born Nov . 8,
1910 in Long Bottom, a daughter
of the late Ulysses and Bess
Lawrence Rose. She was a
homemaker and worked as a
secreta ry . She was a member of
the St. Andrew Episcopal Church
at York, Pa .
Surviving are a stepson, Ber·
nard L. Lemp III, Sun valley,
and, a sister, Mrs. Wallace
(Myrtle) Damewood, Long
Bottom.
Graveside rites will bP held at
Sand Hill Cemetery , Long Bot.
tom , at 2 p.m. Sunday with the
Rev. Don Archer officiating. The
White Funeral Home, Coolville,
is In cha rge of arrangements.
There are no calling hours.

Louis McMurray

Five defendants were fined Ill ·
the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler Tuesday night.
They include Cheryl Hysell,
Pomeroy, failure to pay old fines,
$63 and costs; Charles Knapp,
Middleport, intoxication, $113
and costs; $375 and costs, driving
while intoxicated; $63 and costs,
operating while under suspension, and $63 and costs, expired
plates; Robert Thorla, Zanes·
ville, $63 and costs, operating
while under suspension; Ches·
tesr Young, Mason, W. \;a. , $63
and costs, failure to display
license plate; Earl Roush, Pomeroy, $50 and costs, open burning.
Forfeiting bonds were David
Harpster, South Gate, Mich., $53,
speeding; Ca thy Baldwin, Ra·
cine. $47, speeding; Carrie Fabbro, Columbus, · $48, speeding;
Iris Bailey, Pomeroy, $47, speed·
ing; Chrisi Lynch, Logan, $43,
assured clear distance, and $63,
to Canada and the , Virgin Islands. Infinite
no operator's license; Lora L.
FINAL STEP - Infinite Flherworks' ProducF1herworks owners, Michael and Darlene
tion Supervisor John Merica!, does some finish
Roach, Mason, $63, speeding;
Warner, say that ~omen employees are espe·
work, touching up and sanding, to a fiberglass
Charles Kearns, Clifton, $63,
clally "persnickety" when It comes to getdng
expired plates; Adolph Stamm,
body part. Employees need patience to perfect
things just right.
·
Chico, Calif .. $63, improper passbody parts before shipment all across the country,
ing; Sheila Taylor, Pomeroy, .
$46, speeding; Robin Dugan,
Co ntinued from page l
Pomeroy, $63, expired plates,
•
and· $52, speeding; Cecil Throck·
for $5,000 to $10,000, will look like loan proposal Is accepted. With Now that they have a salvage
morton ,' Dayton. $63, failure to
the gel-coat system, a one-step license, the Warners can purtoday's $40,000 model.
control; Eileen Smith, Pomeroy.
With the price of some Porsche molding of parts will be possible. chase damaged Porsches at
$43, Improper backing; Donald
models go ing up from 12 to 22 Now, in a s tep-by-s tep process, it auctions, refit them with their
Pierce, Pomeroy, $43, failure to
percent each year, the new cars takes the company a bout eight customized parts, and sell the
yield; Curtis Jones, Racine, $48,
are out of the price range of most hours to make one piece. With the vehicl es through the 944 Store.
speeding; Deborah Hatfield, Ru - sports car lovers. Infinite Fiber- proper equipment, that time will
But with or without the loan,
tland, $46, speeding; Edward
works provides an affordable be cutin half and overhead costs the Warners will be expanding in
Laudermllt , Middleport , $43, lm·
alternative.
will also be reduced.
lh e near furture. " We have no
proper backing.
And even wealthy Porshe
The loan would also provide the choice,'' says Darlene, who
owners do a tremendous business Warners with the needed capital lea rned while . dating Michael
with Infinite Fiberworks, simply to install adequate hea ting and th at she better develop a liking
because they like the look that cooling systems (as molds should for cars and motorcycles or she'd
Homecoming Sunday
Michael, with his mail order be kept a constant 65 to 70 never see him.
Homecoming will be held Sun- parts, can give their cars.
degrees), an office and other
" If Meigs County Is willing to
day at the Mt. Union Baptist
And he's always working on needed additions.
help us get started, and if there
Church, located two miles south
new designs. (Other local small
They are also developing a are willing workers in the area,
of Carpenter , oft Route 143 on business owners, such as carpen- branch-off business from infinite then we're here to stay," they
Co unty Road 10.
ters and machinists, are involved Fiberworks called the 944 Store. state.
A potluck dinner at 12 noon will
throughout the design process.)
be foll!'wed by a 1 p.m. program
Successful designs are adverfeatur.ng the True Gospel Sounds
tised nationally under the "Our
Quartet of Portsmouth and the
Own Designline" name. One
duet tea m of Jan and Kathy of d'!sign which Is currently in the
:vteigs County. The public Is
works won't be unveiled until
invi ted.
· August. Infinite Fiberworks'
competitors would like nothing
Offer swim lessons
better than to discover the secret
London Pool In Syracuse will before. the August unveiling.
be offering swimming lessons
"It's like any other business ,"
starting June 20. Lessons are $12
the Warners explain. '' the first to
per person for a two-week get to market makes the most
course. Beginning lessons start
money."
at 11 a .m. Advanced beginning,
And the Warners are always
Intermediate and swimmer lesthinking ahead. Right now
sons start at 10 a.m. For they're looking for someone,
information call the pool at
hopefully someone from the local
992-9909 or Heidi Cobb at992-3402.
area, to help design a 959 body
kit.
After making a design , th en
Women plan event
comes
the task of building the
Plans for holding guest day
mold.
Once
the mold is comnext Tuesday were made when
pleted,
then
begins
the process of
the Jaymar Ladies Tuesday Golf
turning
out
the
fiberglass
body
League met Tuesday at the
course. A scramble was played parts. And although the techno!·
ADULTS $8.00, CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE
and after 18 holes of play , a team ogy has changed little in 20years,
there is better tooling and equipcomposed of Norma Custer,
Located 3 miles off Rt. 50 at Stewart on County
ment
available, in particular, a
Garen Schneider, Clarice Kraut·
Rd. 53.
ter and Roberta O'Brien was gel-coat system . . which the
Warners hope to purchase if their
named the winning group.

Racine couple ...

co ntinued from page 1

Area deaths

Abna O'Brien

Ohio Lottery

Judgment sought
• A Meigs County Common
Pleas Court action toi a judg·
ment of $4,100.39 has been flied
by Central Insurance CompanIes, Van Wert, and Rutland
Furniture Inc., Rutland , against
Donnie E Stone and Marjorie
Stone, Middleport.
A reciprocal action for child
support has been filed by Janice
J . Clay against Carl E . Clay.
And an action by Esther Ward,
now known as Esther Frecker,
against James T. Wa rd, has been
dismissed.
•

598
.Pick 4-

Page 6

6096

e
Vot.39, No.29
CopyriJhted 1988

•

at

By United Press Internallonal
Rainfall averaged about a
quarter of an Inch across Ohio
Thursday, not enough to significantly relieve the drought condl·
tlo.ns aff~ting much of the state.
And forecasters said the state
was on the verge of another dry
spell.
National Weather Service offl·
clals said some areas of the state
that were hit with thunderstorms
received up to an Inch of rain
Thursday while others, mainly
the northwestern section, got
little or no precipitation.
PredominantlY dry weather is
expected today through Tuesday, with a few showers possible
In northwestern Ohio on Saturday, NWS forecasters said.
A cool front that triggered
Thursday's rainfall also brought

much lower temperatures to the
state.. Following three days of
temperatures In the 90s, Thursday's highs were mostly In the
70s and low 80s.
Similar high temperatures
were forecast for today and
Saturday, with readings climb·
lng Into the 80s and low 90s
Sunday through Tuesday.
Around the Natlon
By JEFF BATER
United Press IDternational
A Canadian cold front and
Atlantic seaboard rain took the
steam out of an eastern U.S. heat
wave blamed In at least 21
deaths, but a relentless drought
dogged Midwestern farmers wilting crops, pushing up commodity prices, and driving one
desperate florist to hire an Indian

rain dancer.
The hot, dry spell has scorched
crops In the northern Plains,
parts of the Corn Belt, Texas,
California and the South. Corn
leaves are twisting and curling, a
sign of stress, in Kentucky. North
Dakota had record heat In the
last week and soli moisture Is the
lowest since record-keeping began 30 years ago.
''There's not much relief In
sight," National Weather Service forecaster Lyle Alexander
said. "Most of the Midwest is
go lng to remal n dry."
But the heat wave that has
scorched the East and Midwes t
will abate today, he said, as
temperatures dip some 10 de·
grees. He said highs would reach
the 70s and 80s - compared to
record 90-degree temperatures

NAMED WINNER - Rob Barriloa, Meip
Hirh School bulaeu marketlq and manqement student at Melp Hlp School, center, Is
pictured receiving the Distributive Education
Clubs of America "Student of the Year'' Award
from John Blaettnar, left, colll'lle l111tructor at
Melp High. Harrllon has ~~erved as assistant
manager ol Main Street Pizza In Pomeroy and has

Canada may be able to sell
much more electric power to the
United States If stringent acid
rain control legislation Is passed
by Congress even before scientific evidence Is in showing such
controls are needed, a senior
American Electric Power offl·
cia! says.
"If acid rain legislation Is
enacted, the cost of coal fired
electricity In this country would
be Increased somewhere between 15 and 20 perent," said A.
Joseph Dowd, senior vice pres!·

West Columbia landfill operator
A.O. Powers said Wednesday he
will continue 10 actept II'IISb from
Mason, Gallia and Meigs counties
and appeal a West Virginia
Department of Natural Resources
order limiting the landfill 10 2,900
IIlilS a month.
However, should the landfill be
~a~uired 10 meet the tonnaac limit
after the appeal process with the
state is Clllhausted, Powers said he
wiD be hard-pressed 10 accept all
the IIISh he acceptS now whether it be Jelidenlial, illdUSirial
or commercial. Tho landfill accepts
6,000 10 7,000 tonS • monlh.
"We have an impendinJ problem
and it will not ~y until the
state nwli"CCIit,"
said.

Colognes, After Shave, etc.

25°/o OFF!

Powers has been accepting IIBSh
from out-of-state haulers Since last
summer. He said the out-of-state
II3Sh represents less than 2 percent
of his net profit. Tho out-of-state
II3Sh reven1111 has subsidized his
opellllional costs, such as pun:hase
or seven monitoing weDs.
It is the first lime a IOM&amp;ge limit
has been placed on the landfill.
''Our engineen are talking 10 the
DNR 10 see if they can work somethin' out," Powers said. He
ICCelved notification of the tonnage.
limit from the DNR Monday morning llld immcdlately- ootilied his
customers.He said his commiunent
10 ~ IIISh from
the
municipalities will . continue "as

lonC:S'ble."
, millzing that his pennit
was 10 Clllpiro this month, applied

ne landfill oo MIAion Rldae is for a new permit in Man:h. Pan I of

run under ERO, Inc. Powers•

Village Pharmacy
loans SUbject

IIIDDliPOIT, OHIO

dent and general counsel of AEP.
"Now that means that the
Canadians, who have a very
large surplus of electllty to sell
and only one market In which to
sell It, the United States, would
have their competitive position
greatly enhanced."
DOwd made the comments In
an NBC News interview at AEP
headquarters In Columbus. The
Interview was to have aired this
mnmtng (Friday) on the Today
Show, three days before the
Western Economic Summit

Powers to appeal DNR order
By Charla A. MISOII

992-6669

been employed at Main Street Pizza lor the past
year and a half In conjunction with his studies. AI
the right Is Rod PuUins, owner of the pizza
establishment. Harrison, who plans to further his
education In restaurant manarement at Hocking
Technical Coiie1e In Nelsonville, Is the son ol
Janice and Charles VanCooney, Bailey Run Road.

AEP official comments on
acid rain control legislation

GIFTS FOR DAD.... "·

To Qualification
Of Borrower

throughout the week.
NWS meteorologist Bud Dorr
said Northeastern · thunderstorms battered several communities north of Boston between
5 p.m. and 7 p.m. Thu rsday and
left about 10,000 electric customers without power.
Winds estimated up to 80 mph
blew across a marsh at Salis·
bury, Mass., State Park, knockIng over 16 trailers and mobi le
homes and leaving one elderly
man hospitalized.
At Barryville in southeastern
New York state, thunderstorms
dumped more than 2 inches of
rain in just a half-hour.
"As far as the East in con'
·cerned, there won't be much of a
heat wave anymore," Alexander
said. "The combination of the

cold front and rain has pretty
much dampened it out."
In Boston Thursday, at least 14
people, Including an elderly
woman and her daughter, were
found dead In their homes, the
apparent victims of the broiling
heat. Two Boston deaths reported Wednesday a nd four others in Suffolk County Sunday
were also thought to be heat
related, authorities said.
In Indianapolis, Clara Rardon,
71, walked away from her nursing home Tuesday and her body
was found a da y later in the back
yard of a nearby home. An
au tops y Thursday showed she
died from exposure to heat.
While the cold front sweeping
in from south Ca nada carried
relief to the eastern half of the
nation. parts of the West braced

The baccalaureate sermon will
The 20th annual Meigs High
School 8acalaureate and Com· also be presented by Hartson.
The Meigs High School Band,
mencement exercises will be
held Sunday , 4: 30 p.m., at the the combined choirs, and the
Madrigals will each present a
school.
special number during the comAI Hartson, senior minister at
the Middleport Church of Christ mencement portion of the exerwill offer the invocation followed cises. The band will perform
by the traditional welcome by the " Overture For A Coronation,"
senior class president, Deeanna followed by the choirs' presenta·
lion of "Tear Them Down" and
Henderson.
Introductions of members of the Madrigals' presentation of
the school board and admlnistra· ~ 'Friends."
tlon will be made by Audra .
The salutatory address will be
Houdashelt, treasurer of the made by Donlta Pooler and the
valedictory address by David
senior cl.a ss.

Skyline Speedway has moved from
Saturday Night racing to Fridays,
starting this week. Enioy an
evening of family entertainment
at Skyline Speedway.

STOP IN TODAY AND SEE
OUR SELECTION OF
FATHER'S DAY CARDS.

2 se'cttons, H Pages
.4. 1\lultirnedia In c. Nt&gt;wspaper

for more sweltering weather
today. Alexander said tempera:
lures In the desert Southwest
would climb into the llOs. and
that a new heat wave would crop
up farther north, simmering over
eastern Montana and the Dako·
tas during the weekend.
Showers and thunderstorms
dampened parts of the dry
Midwest and Great Plains Thursday, but the rain in Wiscons in
and North Dakota was light .
Showers from Ohio across Kentucky to the southern Appalachians were widely scattered.
The Ohio Agricultural Stallslies Service said 7 to 10 inches of
rai n is needed to alleviate the
drought. In the northwes t clt)ol of
Sandusky, a florist paid $2,000 to
summon a Sioux medicine man
to perform a rain dance.

Meigs High school graduation
to be held Sunday afternoon

SKYLINE SPEEDWAY

SURPRISE DAD WITH A Gin
FROM VILLAGE PHARMACY.
FATHER'S DAY SUNDAY. JUNE 19TH

80s.

Thursday rain fails to help drought areas

RACES 8 P.M. ·

Stocks

Clear tonight , low in 60s.
Saturday, sunny, highs in mid

en tine

Pomeroy...:..Middleport, Ohio. Friday, June 17, 1988

FRIDAY, JUNE 17, 1988

Louis A. McMurray, 84, died
Wednesday at his residence,
33105 Dewitt 's Run, Long
Bottom.
A farmer, Mr. McMurray was
born June 6. 1904 In Meigs Dally stock prices
County, a son of the late Charles (As of 10:30 a.m.)
and Blanche Miller McMurray . Bryce and Mark Smith
He wa s a member of th e Hazel of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Community Church.
Surviving a re two step- Am Electric Power ............. 28%
granddaughters , Sue Cavot and AT&amp;T ...... .......... .................. 27
Lorra in McMurray, both of Es- Ashland Oil ........ ......... .. ..... 69'h
ca ndida , Calif., and a step- Bob Evans .......................... l7'h
daughter, Marie Beaver of Long Charming Shoppes .... ........... 12
Bottom.
City Holding Co ................... 33
Besides his parents, he was Federal Mogul... ................. 383,4
preceded in death by ' his wife Goodyear T&amp;R ...................66%
Bertie McMurray, and two broth: Heck's Inc .. ...... ..... .... .. ........ 1%
ers. Ha yes and Roy McMurray. Key Cen turton .............. ....... 38
Services will be held at 1:30 Lands' End ................. ...... .. 263,4
p.m . Sunday al theEwingErunal Limited Inc ........................ 20%
Home with th e Rev. Edsel Hart Multimedia Inc ................... 67'h
officiating. Burial will be in Sand Rax Restaurants ......... ......... 4%
Hil Cemetery . Friends may call Robbins &amp; Myers ................ ll'h
at the funer a{ home from 7 to 9 Shoney's Inc ....................... 2611.
p.m. Friday and from 2 to4 and 7 Wendy 's Inti ..... ................... 5'A
to 9 p.m. Saturda'y.
Worthington lnd ................. 21 'A

2 71 NORTH SECOND

Daily Number

GRAND RE-OPENING

~us.

' Eastern Board resolved in Its
May meeting that no replacement school buses would be
purchased for this coming year
due to the severe financ ial
problems .
.

Church
•
notices

Sanilation Service Co. l&amp;'o'eS upper
Mason CO:~ai AD Slllllation
Co. I&amp;'IU
Calny IIIII RW'III
Sanilation Co. 11M1 die IOUlhem
of Mllllll CouniY. SIDco tho
County landftll - clolecl,

.
=
taiUoa

from 11&amp;:1011 die river ue

their !rail .. die ltt!dl!ll

tho now permit has been approved
for approval from the
MaiOII County Cclmmiaion. 1111t
IJllli'OVII is not requiled under the
lllllll'a new solid wute disposal setup whklh ... aiJ'cct 1uly 1 if
Pilaus' lancUI!I ICCeJIII under
10,000 tOIIUIIIOndl.

e-..

Contllluecl on paae 10

Meeting at Toronto.
"I am not suggesting that their
concerns about acid rain are not
genuine. But the Canadians are
well aware that by forcing
further environmental controls
on U.S. Industry, they are going
to be able to sell an awfullotmore
electricity to the United States."
Canada is presently a major
supller of electric power to New
York state, the Northeast, the
Northwest and Is actively pursu·
lng energy markets In the Mldw·
est. Canadian electric energy
sales to the U.S. have Increased
by 81 percent In the past seven
years, amounting to$1 .5 billion In
revenues to
Canada inl987 alone. Canadian
utilities have built many new
high-voltage transmission lines
to the U.S., Increasing their
capacity to sell to U.S. electricity
markets by 180 percent to
11,400,000 kilowatts since 1969.
"Our plants would be shut
down (due to Jack of a market for
their power) and In many cases
the coal mines would be closed,''
Dowd said.
"Economic dislocation and hu·
man misery for the United States
and economic prosperity for
Canada: I hope that the people
who are watching In Washington
keep that In mind ."
He said 146'emlsslon scrubbers
are In operation and 11nother 44
are either under construction or
planned on U.S. generating
plants but none are operating or
being built on Canadian power
plants.
Dowel said a fundamental fact
being Ignored In the acid rain
debate Is that there Is no
scientific evidence that clearly
shows Midwestern
Industrial and power plants to be
Continued on page 10

Beegle.
Presentation of the Class of
1988 will be made by Pr lncipal
F'enton Taylor and Robert
Snowden, pres ident of the Meigs
Local Board of Educat ion, will
present diplomas as Margaret
Rhodes , senior class secretary,
reads the class roll.
Kevin \; . King. vice-president
of the Class of 1988, will present
the symbol of gradua lion.
The exercises will concl ud e
with the MHS alma mater
"Maroon and Gold," and the
Continued on page 10

GTE North Inc., Pomeroy
village are working together
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Stall
About a year ago, GTE North
Inc. built a conduit project down
the south lane of Main St. In
Pomeroy . Construction Of this
project required excavation of
pavement, and although the
pavement was patched once the
project was finished, local res idents were not pleased with the
restoration of the street.
One local resident, Ted Reed,
president of Farmers Bank and

Lawsuit
dismissed
A $100,000 lawsuit filed In
February by James B. Scott
against Pomeroy Attorney Dan
Michael Mullen has been dismissed In the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
Judge Charles H. Knight has
signed an entry stating that all
allegations contained In Scott's
complaint are "untrue, frivolous
and without merit".
Scott had charged negligence·
on the part of Mullen, whom he
said he paid a retainer and other
fees, to have· Mullen represent
him In regard to alleged harass·
ing pollee techniques used on him ·
by certain members of the
Middleport Pollee Department.
Scott alleged that Middleport
Solicitor Steven L. Story was
authorized to present two out of
court settlements to Scott but
that he (Scott) was not advised
by his counsel on one of the
settlement offerings until the
statute or limitations had ex·
plred. Scott alleged that the
village no longer wanted to pay
the $500· settlement, allegedly
offered, after the statute of
limitations had expired.
In his suit, Scott had asked for
the $500 settlement, $49,000 In
punitive damages and $50,000 for
mental anguish and emotional
distress.
lJI his decision on the case,
Judge Knight ordered that a
swnmary judgment be entered
for the defendant, Mullen, and
that the cause be dismissed with
1
prejqdtce.

Savings Company, Initiated contact with GTE North, explaining
that the paving restoration was
not satisfactory.
Thus began a combined eftort
by the telephone company and
Pomeroy \;lllage to work out -an
arrangement whereby Main St.
through Pomeroy's business section would be repaved.
Originally, says Phil Van Meter, manager-facilities engineerIng, out of GTE North's Marlc;m
office, the telephone company
planned to bring In a stripping
machine to plane the south lane
of Main St. only, and then repave
the lane.
However, while working
closely with Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler, GTE realized

tha t If the telephone company
and Pomeroy Village would just
combine their financial capa bilities, planing of the street could
take pla ce, bo th sides of the
street could be paved a nd everyone would benefit.
GTE North had originally
pledged $17,000 to the repaving
project. But when the company
and the mayor learned that fo r a
few thousand dollars more, a
better repaving could be undertaken , new plans were
developed.
Through funding from the
Community Development Block
Grant Program, Pomeroy will be
building new sidewalks In the
business section later this year.
Continued on page 10

Gallia highway project
placed on "standby'
By SUSAN BALSTER
OVP News Staff
The Highway Users Commit·
tee of the Southeastern Ohio
Regional Council announced that
the U.S. 35 four-lane proposal has
been made a "standby' : project
by the state, said Charles I.
Adkins, president of the Gallipolis Area Chamber of Commerce,
at the chamber's June monthly
meeting.
The "standby" designation
means the 35 four-lane will be
funded If the money becomes
available, Adkins said.
Adkins reported that the state
also purchased additional rightof-way from property owners for
the project, and that more
rigb.t·of·way would have to be
purchased for proposed exits.
Adkins assured chamber
members that the project would
remain the number one, priority
Item out Of the 18 counties served
by the SEORC, and that the
highway users committee would
continue to get the project under
way.
The highway users committee
met June 6 at the Meigs County
Gun Club.
Adkins said Sljpport for the
I

U.S. four-lanP project reaches as
far north as Lancaster. but
funding from gover nmental sources Is just not there.
The committee plans to have
fu rther meetings In Chillicothe
and Lancaster , but no action has
been taken to get the project
under way. Even If the monev
were available. it would be at
least a year before the project
could be started. Adkins said.
During that year, an environ·
mental impact ~tudy would have
to be conducted. Adkins said the
study would take six to seven
months.
According to Adkins, U.S . 35 is
a heavy traffic area, and the
four-lane Is essential to the
community as well as to travelers passing through.
"It (the four-lane ) Is Integral to
the economic interest here," he
said. ''The four-lane would give a
better economic base here."
The committee discussed a
possible solution lo the project
funding Issue - an Increase in
the gas tax, Adkins said. He
added that a tax increase of five
cents would raise about $50
million In West \; lrglnla, and an
Continued on paee 10
~

\

�The Deily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomaov-Middlaport, Ohio

Commentary
Move wor·ries S&amp;L

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

~~

~m ~

f""'M........JL--r"l f""T"'E:!

.~v

d.-=-

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
A

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press

Association and the Amertcan Newspa per Publishers Associatlon .
L.ET"'TRS OF- OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subject to editing and mu s t be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsig ned letters wll\ be published. Letters should be In
Rood laste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

Bush free to
differ with Reagan
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI While House Reporter
WASHINGTON- No matll'r how far vIce President George Bush
distances himself from President Reagan's policies as the
presidential campaigrt heats up. It's fine with the White House.
The president is prepared to turn the other cheek. And politically
speaking, if Bush needs to split with Reagan's views- well, so be it.
White Housl' spokesman Marlin Fitzwater has made It clear that
Bush can do no wrong in hls presidential quest. In his attempt to prove
• that he is his own man, Bush apparently has been advised to take new
· bold stands even if they differ from positions he has endorsed, even
·:applauded over the past seven years as vice president.
• He would undoubtedly like some coattail help from Reagan and the
president Is willing to give hlm that. Bush, always the loyal team
player, has paid his dues and the president Is ready to give him a long
.leas}! to make hls break If necessary.
In terms of wooing connstltuents. sometimes at the price of
differing with the administration, Bush has announced his support of
payment of $1 billion in reparations to Japanese· Americans who were
Interned during World War I!; he has endorsed a moratorium on
off-shore oil drilling leases to woo environmentalists, and he has
announced he favors "some kind of severance pay " requirements for
workers displaced by plant closings.
In addition, he took a stand against bargaining with Gen. Manuel
Antonio Noriega to drop the federal narcotics charges against the
Panamanian strongman if he would agree to leave the country.
The vice president also has indicated he would be more supportive
of civil rights programs than Reagan, who recently became the first
president in 122 years to veto a civil rights bill.
Reminded that Bush was easing away, Fitzwater said: "That's
fine. The vice presldl'nt's free to break with us at any time. '·
When told that el !her Reagan or Bush has to be right on a particular
Issue, Fitzwater said:
"We'll defend our own policies if necessary, but the vice president
is free tocampaigh and to stake out positions as best he can about the
future and what he would be doing as president of the United States,
· and we are not going to gl't into an argument with the vice president,
period."
•
Bush and Reagan did not see eye to eye in the 1980 campaign when
they both sought the presidential nomination in the primaries. Bush
still bemoans labeling Reagan's policies "voodoo economics," a label
that stuck and has haunted him In the ensuing years as he has moved
closer to the president.
The vice president is getting a lot of advice on how to approach his
campaign and establish his own Identity and persona.
Since he has had to submerge his views, especially If they were
different from the president, through the years, Bush is having to take
strong positions. "Me too," won't do anymore.
Still he Is not expected to stray too far from the fold. Most of his key
aides In the campaign are veterans of Reagan's two successful bids
lor the presidency and they bring with them the experience of pros.
The vice president has hired Sheila Tate, the first lady's former
press secretary and a public relations executive, to handle hls
campaign press operations. She has fielded some of the toughest
questions In her previous roll' In the White House and is expected to
bring the same savvy to her new job.
Bush also has engaged Jim Lake, Reagan's former campaign press
spokesman, as a communications consultant who is at home on the ·
hustings. ·
As It is shaping up, Bush is free to do his own thing. And even when
he parts company on the Issues with Reagan, the president plans to be
there backing him up wherever he can.

Today in history
By United Press International
Today Is Friday, June 17, the !69th day of 1988 with 197 to follow.
The moon is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter .
The morning stars are Mercury, venus, Mars, Jupltl'r and Saturn.
There are no evening stars.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They include
John Wesley, the founder of Methodism. In 1703; Russlan·born
composer Igor Stravinsky in 1882; actor Ralph Bellamy In 1905 (age
83); author John Hersey in 1914 (age 74); actor-singer Dean Martin in
1917 (age 71); singer Barry Manilow in 1946 (age42\, and comedian
Joe Piscopo in 1951 (age 37) .

Letters to
the editor

_______

::Expresses
thanks
,.,.,__
.

WASHINGTON - M. Danny
Wall promoted himself as "Mr.
Clean" last July when he took
over as chairman of the Federal
Home Loan Bank Board, the
agency that regulates the sev·
lngs and loan Industry . Nearly a
year later, wan finds his reputa·
lion among some fellow regula·
tors as near to banckruptcy as
the industry he oversees.
This harsh assessment is the
verdict of Washington's bank and
thrift examiners and the nor·
mally tight·lipped bank regula·
tors who seldom break ranks
with one of their own.
The problem Is Wall's handling
of a savings and loan owned by a
man who is a generous contrlbu·
tor to political heavyweights.
Current and past officials from
the principal banking agencies
told us that Wall has "crippled"
the Independence of his exam ina·
lion staff and "undercut every
regulator In the country."
Lincoln Savings and Loan,
based in Irvine, Calif., and owned
by Charles H. Keating Jr., was
slated by back regulators for
receivership or conservatorship
in May 1987. Wall took over as

One of the great challenges of
living In a democracy that rules
by and of the people Is how to
protect us all equally.lt can't be
done, but we try -to our credit.
We try to balance the right~ of
adults who need care and those
who provide it, and the rights of
innocent chlldren those rights
affect.
Two recent news stories that
bring the issue into focus are the
threatened Food and Drug Ad·
ministration ban of the drug
Accutane. and the court-ordered
birth control of Debra Ann
Forster.
Accutane is the drug that
rescues acne victims from hav·
ing their faces turned Into
mincemeat, and the accompany·
ing psychological wounds the
disease lnfllcts. It Is the first drug
that has ever worked for suffer·
ers or the most severe form of
acne. It also causes birth defects
in the babies of pregnant users.
Some FDA officials argue that
the Incidence of Accutane·
caused birth defects Is simllar to
the Thalidomide horror, where
babies of mothers who took the
tranquilizer were born horribly
deformed. But it Isn't the same.
One Important difference: Moth·
ers who took Thalidomide had no
idea it would cause birth defects.
It took years of work by medical
researchers to trace the deform!·
ties to Thalidomide. The posslbll·
ties of defects with Accutane are
well-known, and responslblephy·
sicians warned female patients
and sent them for a prescription
of birth-control pllls before pres·
criblng the drug. A high percen·
tage of women who have become
pregnant whileonAccutanewere
low-Income patients, and the
pre-dosage actions of their physi·
clans is not known.
To Its credit, the FDA Is
leaning toward strotiger educa·
lion and mortltorlng of physicians
who prescrl!le Accutane. They
haven't Instituted a ban yet,
although their first proposal was
to punish those who would
prescribe and use the drug

NOTICE TO PATIENTS
I will be retiring from ac·
tive practice and closing my
offke effective June 30,
1988.

~}!me.

.•

r

chairman or the Bank Board in
July and within a month confided
to fellow regulators that the
Keating problem was settled.
A knowledgeable banking
source posed this question: How
could Wall give a virtually clean
bill of health to Lincoln Savings
and .Loan so quickly when it took
his own regulators two years In a
complex audit to reach their
negative conclusions about
Lincoln?
Previous stories have reported
allegations regarding Lincoln's
deficiencies in loan . underwrlt·
ing, appraisals and speculative
Investments In junk bonds, eq·
ulty securities and partners)lips.
Keating did not return our calls.
He has said previously that his
institution Is profitable and
healthy and that he Is the victim
of Bank Board persecutio!l.
When the regulators In the San
Franclso regional office of the
Bank Board finished a long and
often tense audit of Lincoln
Savings and Loan, they ream·
mended that the institution
either be put In coservatorshlpor
receivership. Lincoln officials

found out and demanded to be
taken ·out of the jurisdiction oft he
San Francisco office, according
to a confidential Bank Board
memo dated January 13. Our
associate Michael Blostein ob·
tal ned a copy of that memo.
The Bank Board . caved In to
Lincoln's demands. On May 30
the three-member board · voted
2·1 to conduct Lincoln's next
examination of the Washington,
D. C., Instead of San Francisco.
And the board ruled, In effect,
that Keating could be able to shop
for a new regulator thorugh the
acqulstion of thrlt In another
Bank Board district.
The decision to let a banking
Institution select Its own regula·
tory office because It can't get
along with the office to which It Is
assigned Is unprecedented in the
Bank Board's history .
Some of Wall's fellow regula·
tors suspect politics may have
played a role in the unusual
ruling for Lincoln Savings and
Loan. Keating and his business
associates have given nearly
$300,000 In campaign contrlbu·
lions to five senators during the

1980s. Those senators pressed the
Bank Board regulators In San
Francisco to bring their lnvesti·
galion of Lincoln to an end,
according to a recent story by our
associate Michael Blostein In thE)
Washington Post. They are John
Glenn, D·Ohlo; Donald Riegle,
D-Mich.; John McCain, R·A.riz.;
Dennis DeConclnl, D·Arlz.; and
Alan Cranston, D-Calif.
In an unusual meeting on April
9, !987, the five senators sat down
with regu Ia tors from the San
Francisco office and in essence
told them to wrap up the Lincoln
investigation. "To be blunt, you
should charge them of get off
their backs." Glenn said, accord:
lng to a confidential account of
the meeting prepared by the one
of the regulators.
Wall's handling of the Lincoln
case seems to fly in the face of his
announced goals when he took
office last year. Then he said that
the savings and loan industry
would not be allowed to run
roughshod close to the Industry It
regulates," he said 'In an adress
at the National Press Club.
Danny Wall refused comment
on this story.

IT'S MINE - Detroit cenler Bill Lalmbeer, left, and Lakers
guard Magic .Johnson battle lor the ball in the llrst'luarter ol Game
5 of the NBA flilals, played Thul'!lday nlghlln Pontiac, Mich. The
Pistons won 104-94 and lead the series S-2. ( UPI)

Comment is made
in jest
Knepper
HOUSTON IUPI\
A some of our members to find out
women's rights group that
what we've been doing for
dubbed Houston Astros pltch!'r women's rights over the last 21
Bob Knepper "Neanderthal of years, " Aubin said.
the Year" for his comments
Knl'pper said he received more
aboUt female umpires has pre·
than 40 telephonE' calls at hls
pared an Astros cap with a
hotel room Wednesday alter hls
muzzle attached to acknowledge comments about NOW were
his latest comments about made public.
feminists. '
"I flna lly got tired of It and just
Knepper's comments about the unplugged the phone," he said.
National Organization for
National League President
Women are Included In the June Bart Giamatti condemnl'd
20 Issue of Sports Illustrated .
Knepper's statement. ·
"NOW is such a blowhard
·'He thoroughly disagrees with
organization," KneppPr is . the comments attributed to Bob
quoted as saying. "They are a Knepper." said spokeswoman
bunch of lesbians. Their focus Kaly Feeney. "They are hls
has nothing to do with women's personal opinion and, like eve·
rights. It has everything to do ryonl' else, he is entitled to his
with wanting to be men."
personal viewpoint."
Knepper, who was with the
Astros spokesman Rob Mat·
Astros in Cincinnati Thursday , wick also said Knepper's com·
has said I he comment was made ments do not rl'flect the views of
in jest.
his teammates or the ballclub.
Bul Kathy Aubin, prl'sident of
Knepper made headlines dur·
the NOW Houston chapter. said lng spring training when he said
Knl'pper's remarks are n()t a he didn't believe a woman should
joke.
be an umpire. The comments
"He has put a label on an were In referencE' to Pam Pos·
organization he knows nothing tema. who umpired a major
abOut," she said. "I don't think it league schedule during spring
is a joke. It is . a serious training. ·
Knepper said he had nothing
accusation. We are o,lfended. He
should pitch and rl'ally not talk against Postema personally, but
about something he doesn't know he didn't think God meant for
women to be umpires because
about."
·Aubin said Knepper's com· women shouldn't have authority
ments foster bias against femi· over men. He also said he didn't
think women should run for
·ntst groups.
. She said the muzzle for publie offices like president,
Knepper was to be delivered governor or mayor.
Knepper later said, "I don't
through thl' Cincinnati NOW
know If I was 100 percent correct
chaptl'r.
~ · "We are certainly going ·to in my Interpretation, but I stood
request that the team make an up for the word of God and that's
official apology. and come meet what's Important to me."

responsibly for the sins of those
who would not. Greater vigilance
was not the first option
discussed.
In contrast, the first reactions
among the Protectors of Rights
to the sentence imposed on Debra
Ann Forster left two of her babies
unattended for nearly three days
while they almost died of dehy·
dratlon and malnutrition. She
could have received 30 years in
prison. Instead, the judge sent·
enced her to practice birth
control for the rest of her
child-bearing years, and to
supply weekly reports on her
birth-control use to probation
officers.
I believe the sentence was too
harsh In one respect. She is
forbidden to see the two boys she
neglected and almost killed plus a daughter she later borefor the rest of her life. But a
lifetime of birth control to a

TAKE

mother whO has already shown
her incapability for responsible

care-taking? Would prison have
been better?

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VI

,,

I·

advantage to lead 59·50 at
Intermission.
Thl' game, though. didn't begin
so well lor Detroit, which will
move Into a $40 million !acUity in
nearby Auburn Hills beginning
next season .

Thomas, apparently still rec·
overing from a bruised lower
back and lhl' birth of hls son .
Wednesday night , committed 4
turnovers In the open 1
:our
minutes and Los Angel
'eled.
off the game's first 12 po~o.ts .
And when Abdul-Jabbar hll a
skyhook. the Lakers wpre ahead
15-2 at the 7:41 mark.
But the Pistons retaliated with
a 13·2 run . Danttey had 5 points in
the burst and drew Worthy's ,
third foul, sending the Laker·
forward to the bench just 4:51
into the contest.
The Lakers managed to hold
onto a 30-27 edge alter one period,
but Detroit stormed ahead In the·
second behind Dan Uey. who had.
10 points in the period.
Two minutes after drawing
A.C. Green's third foul, Dantley
sank a lallaway jumper, then
stripped Mychal Thompson of
the ball. The steal led to Dumars·
jumper that concluded a 23·9
perlod ·openlng run for a 50·39
bulge.
Abdui -Jabbar. who had 18
points In the first·hall, struck for
a skyhook but Dantley answerl'd
with two more lallaways for
Detroit's largest lead at 54·41
with 3:02 left, and the Pistons
dashed off the court with a 9-polnt
halftime lead .

Davis paces Houston past Cincinnati, 7-4
By United Presslnler1111&amp;1onal
Despite a slump occasionally
lnt~&gt;rrupted by home runs, Glenn
Davis has a piece of the National
League RBI lead.
Davis powered two of loser
Marlo Solo's pitches out of the
park In the first and third
innings, both times with Blll
Doran on base, to knock in four
runs for winner Mike Scott In the
Houston Astros' 7' 4 victory over
the Cincinnati Reds.
Eric Davis duplicated the feat
Thursday with a pair of homers
and contributed three RBI in a
losing cause.
Glenn Davis,_ now tied with
Pittsburgh's Bobby Bonilla for
the National League RBI lead
with 52 after hitting his 14th and
15th homers, has been battling a
slump that has seen hlm go
4-for-34, all four of the hits being
home runs.
"1 can't explain the slump,"
Glenn Davis said. "lt'sjustoneof
those things you go through In the
course of the year. But there
have been some good things in it,
because I've still been able to
drive In soml' runs and
contribute."
Eric Davis. who has 11 homers.
lifted his average to .250. but
declined to talk a bout his
production.
"I've got nothing to say," he
stated, after having hls left
ankle, right hand and right
shoulder Iced down.
Soto, 3·7, said he was having a
tough time now, but felt that he
was throwing the ball well.

"I'm okay," he pointed out
after giving up six hits and four
runs In five innings. "My arm
feels good but I'm having hard
luck. But I've been around long
enough to know that that's part of
the gamE&gt;. It just seems right now
that every pitch I make has to be
perfect."
Reds Manager Pete Rose
agreed that So to was okay, but
added "I think his problem Is that
he's not making quality pitches,
And when he makes a mistake.
they're pounding It out of the
park."
Scott, 8·2, was forced to leave
the game with two out in the
eighth when he pulled hls left
hamstring.
"It happened on my last pitch
(to Chris Sabol and something
just gave," said Scott, who will
be examined Friday In Atlanta,
whl're the Astros wlll play a
double-header with the Braves.
The Reds arl' scheduled to open
a .three-game series with the San
Francisco Giants Friday night.
In the only other National
League game, Atlanta pounded
Los Angeles 9-2. ·
In the Am!'rican League. It
was: Kansas City 9, .Oakland 5;
California 3, Texas 0; Toronto 1.1,
Detroit 5; Baltimore 8, Boston 4
and Ch,icago 3, Milwaukee 1.
Braves 9, Dodgers 2
At Atlanta, Ken Oberkfell
keyed an 18-hit at tack with four
hits and three RBI, powering the
Braves. Zane Smith improved· to
3·3 while Dodg~&gt;rs startl'r Ken
Howell fell to 0·1. Howell was

Greenhills Open set June 25 and 26

making his first start of the
season since being recalled from

men's Classsoftball
C andtournament
D doubleelimination
on Saturday, June 25, and Sunday, June 26 at Hocking Techlnl·
cal College In Nelsonvllle.
The entry fee Is $60 and two
softballs. Team trophies for
first·, second· and third place
teams will be avalla ble, as well
as Individual trophies for players
on the championship team (llml'
- 15-man roster) and for the
most hits and for the most home
runs. Concessions wlll he avalla·
ble, with pop 50 cents a can.
The deadline for en try Is
Wednesday, June 22. For more

Hickle wins
feature race
Benny Hickle ol Pomeroy won
the leature In limited late model
action last Saturday In the
Mountaineer 100 auto race at the
West VIrginia Motor Speedway
In Parkersburg, W.Va.
More than 4,000 race fans were
·tn ettendance at the event.

Albuquerque of the Tnple·A
Pacific Coast League.

Tommy Spencer to conduct
autograph session July 11
Tommy Spl'ncer. first base
coach for the Cleveland Indians,
wlll hold an autographing session
at the main lobby of Ohio valley
Bank In Gallipolis on July 11 from
10 a.m. until noon.
Spencl'r. a 1969 graduate of
Gallla Academy, was a lour·
sport star and Is considered one
or the top athletes In Blue Devil
history. He began playing major
league baseball with the Reds
organization In 1970 as an out·
fielder, graduating to the majors
with the Chicago White Sox In
1978.
Since moving to the managerial ranks, he has piloted cham·
plonship teams at Asheville, N.C.
and G!'neva, N.Y., where last
year he was named Manager of
the Year.
He has proven himself as an
astute judge of talent and an
expert Instructor. While with the
Cubs organization, he was re·
sponslble for persuading the
Cubs to make Dave Martinez a
centerlielder, and also managed
current Cubs Greg Maddux and
Rafal'l Palmelro. Maddux and
Palmeiro are among the Na·
Ilona! League leaders in pitching
and hitting, respect lvely.
Spencer was also Instrumental in
the development of Harold
Baines In the late 1970s. Baines is
now an all·Star outfielder for the
White Sox.

Greenhllls Country Club of entry fee with handicap lnforma·
Ravenswood, W.Va., will hold Uon to: Greenhills Open, to the
the first annual Greenhllls Open · attention of Jay L. Robinson, golf
·on Saturday, June 25, and Sun· pro; Greenhills ·Country Club,
P.O. Box 206, RavpnswOoc!, WV
day, June 26.
The tournament is open to men 26164.
Deadline for entries is Tuesday
and women amateur players and
will be flighted following the first at 5 p.m. Tee times in the first
round of play. The entry feeol$40 round begin at 7:30a.m. on June
includes practice round week 25.
The tournament is sponsored
prior to the event (call for tee
time), golf In the tournament. by Tetrick's Showcase Jpwelers
prizes and a steak fry on of Ripley and Ravenswood,
completion of the round on Pleaser' s of Ravenswood and
Sunday. Entry blanks are a val Ia· W.R. Ramsey &amp; Associates of
ble at all local courses or send Silverton.

The Nelsonville Bucks LIIUe
League t-;am will sponsor a

!'lt . Le.n al PM.,._..P, 1:Sip.m.
S11• FuiH'IIwo •• rl~~tla..U l, 7:3:1 p.m.
Na~~t....

shooting. But for the second
straight game. they could not
overcome foul trouble to James
Worthy .
The 6-foot-9 forward, who had
Ju~t 7 points In 26 foul·plagul'd
minutes Tuesday night, picked
up his third foul with 7:091eflln
the first quarter Thursday night
and finished with only 14 points,
again In only 26 minutes.
"I remember one solid foul In
the first quarter and that was my
third," Worthy said. "You get
Used to playing a certain style
and you can't change. Those
fouls took away our spirit."
Dumars entered the game
averaging just 8.5 points in the
series. But he has a h.istory of
playing well In big games,
scoring a season-high 29 points
against Boston in Gam!' 3 of the
Eastern Conference final.
Magic . Johnson collected 17
assists and 15 points and Scott
added 15 points for the Lakl'rs.
Thomas finished with 15 points
and 8 assists .
Worthy, who played only eight
minutes In the first half, scored 8
points- 2 on a swoopingbasellnl'
jam - In a 17-10 spree that
brought Los Angeles to within
69·67 with 4: 47 left in the third
quarter.
But after Pach team scored
twice. Dumars hit a jumper and
James Edwards ~dded a jumper
and jam, and Detroit carried an
81·75 !Pad Into the final quart!'f .'
Dantley, who hit 11 of 13 free
throws, went to the line 11 times
in lhl' first half and the swarming
Pistons built a 2815 rebounding

Information, call Ron Love at
753-2620 or Yogi MacGregor at

Spencer was named first base·
coach of the Tribe last November
and Is credited with developing
much of the team's young talent,
which In its chase for the
AmeriCan Ll'ague East title has
gotten off to its best start slncp
l%8.

He feels he has the best young'
outfield in baseball. with
sluggers J~ Carter and Cory·
Snyder and left fielder Mel Hall.
The trio should anchor the·
Indians' fortunes for years to
come.
Spencer is the son or the Betty
Spencer of Gallipolis and the late
Jim Spencer. He, his wife Linda '
and his daughter K.C . live In
Tucson, Ariz. during the off·
season.

The Daily Sentinel
!USPS

1~11-NI.

A DWIIIoa .. llalltlnellla, be.

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
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Ohio.
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lhll!IWe Metp CCMlllly

Nelsonville plans softball tournament

IJo!IIMI "' lbtltmoft', A: II p.m .
Sl•lllllk' at Mhlll!"eia· M:l$ p.m.
O&amp;lllorl'lla M IK••• C'k)', !II:SI 11.m.
("hh·qo a1 Mll-.•lu!e, M::ll p.m.
Tellll!li at Oal!.aud, 11::15 p.m .
N ....... Lf' liP"
MoMn•al Ml'llltaa:o. t:tl p.m.
fttUIIII•n M1 .......... :l, 5:-11p.m.
1'1. . INfO. . a1 1M All-~. t, 7: IS p.WI.
Plltlaftlplllalll NN , ..,.... 1: Jl p.m.

IWdiCJ'"Game~

CHESTER

('hit'IIII:O

Hn•!lloa (ltft~pl'l' 7-land AINh)arf.'!)

l

( 'lllltornllll

,,.,

1:t

Nrw \'ort.al flndMtl. 7:SJ • ·"'·

O~t.kllllld

IF YOU HAVEN'T CHECKED US OUT LATELY,

.:au

By MIKE BARNES
night at the Forum to dethrone
UPI Sports Wrller
Los Angeles.
PONTIAC, Mich. IUPI)
"Well, we've got a chance,"
Adrian Dantley and Joe Dumars, Detroit Coach Chuck Daly said.
the two quietest Pistons, Thurs: "We've got to go back to their
day night helped produce thl' building. We know what's ahead.
greatest roar In thl' history of Thl'y are great In their buUdlng.
Detroit baskl'tball.
But we did It once (a victory In
A playoff· record crowd of the series openl'r); let's see what
41,732 at the Sllverdome gave happens."
The Lakers, seeking to become
their team a huge send-off to Los
Angeles, hoping the Pistons will the first team In 19 years to
return to Motown with its lnaugu· repeat as champions, are 10·2 at
home In the playoffs.
rat NBA championship.
"I told Joe Dumars with a
"I still bellevp this team ts
minute left to just look around going to win the championship,"
and Pnjoy this because you'll Lakers Coach Pat Riley said.
neverseeanythlngllkeltagaln," "We have the opportunity to go
Detroit's Bill Lalmbeer said home before our home fans and
after the Pistons defeated the Los they'll be as vocal as thl'y've pver
Angeles Lakers 104-94 to 'take a been. The buck stops in Los
3·2 lead In thl' NBA Finals.
Angell's."
"Forty-one thousand penple
Detroit, which limited the
waving towels and scrl'amlng- opposition to fewer than 100
it was awesome."
points lor the 14th time In the last
So were Dantley and Dumars, 17 games, held a 53-31 rebounding
best friends off the court who advantage. And Los Angeles shot
teamed to put the defending just 47 percent from the floor.
champions In serious jeopardy.
Tralllng by as many as 13
Dantley scored 19 of his 25 points late In the second quarter,
points In the first half and the Lakers got to within 90-84
Dumars contributed 19 points on with 6:53 lefl on Byron Scott's
9 or 13 shooting as the Pistons 3-pointer. But Isiah Thomas hit a
' treated the massive crowd to a bank shot, found Dumars wide
party In their final NBA game at open lor a brpakaway layup and
the Sllverdome.
scored In the lane to give Detroit
Detroit overcame a 12·0 deficit a 12-polnt lead with 4:22 remain·
al the start. hl'ld Los Angeles'to ing. The Lakers never threa·
just 20 points In the ·second tened again.
Los Angeles received an out·
quarter and then staved off a
Laker comeback to grab the standing performance from 41·
advantage In the best-of-seven • year·old center Kareem Abdul·
championship series.
Jabbar, who scored his 1988
The Pistons need only to win playoff-high 26 points on 12 of 21
Sunday afternoon or Tuesday

ToriMilo a1. Drtrell, 7:11 p.m.

VANS

1979 Cadillac ........................................... 53895

4 Dr., air. A· 1 condition, fully equipped. 1 owner.

.n!l "''t

........1

Bm;ton
Tnr!tMn

suuw

'l1 21
tl -141
'hiiNIO''!I Rf'H•s
1\llan&amp;a t, IA11 Allplf'fl t
Hu•!'!ll•u• 7, n•·la_.U
fi'rNIIQ'!I Gamf'!ol
Monhul CSmlth f-11 ~
C!Widlftt f-11 • .t:fl ,.m.

!H-.

Amf!l'k·all~~

I\MERII '1\N l.F.M~Ufo:
F.asl
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Calendar

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FundM.. III l'latin•tl
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rtlllafft••• Nt"" fork, niJIII
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L.nuhi\'llh• Ill Pawhll' klot

1988
CONVERSION

.u'l n•'f

ntw·lluall (.Jacbofl 1-:1), 7:35p.m.
SII.W'IIIf'" Gamn

TldPw11ll'l' al lndlanaJifllb.

$1.00 Donation.
Proceeda Go To Help
Support RipleY'• 4th Of
July Celebration.
Compllmenta Of

:~~

ftl .1

Phlll&amp;dfoi(IMiu cGrOI'M i'·'!) 111 N- Vnrk
(Uoodl.'a t-tl, 7:35p.m.
St . lAnlh Ul•an•••l-1) Iii. I"Mllhlrr:h
tllu.....- .f.-1),1:31 p.m.
NUl FnutdMc'o lllllmmakH 3-t) Ill

Frld''-"' !Oo Gamr.,.;

Hot Summer Deals

H

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:HJ. t, 7:1$ p.m.

Hh: lwnond al 1\uffalo

O..n~·r

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Htlt:~h·r K. ltiWil :1
Orrulha7, S)'Nt·•~·'

NEW
1988
.
CAVALIERS

Help Support Ripley's ·
4th Of July Celebration!

Allnlll!'l

'l:! t3 ~'131' 17 1"1

GB

3-1 t1 .5...
:It lt .511

San fo'nnf'l"&lt;~
t1nO'Int~~~~ll
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"BUCK FOR A TRUCK"

Allcrl~

31,'.1

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INTERNr\TIONAL U :AGUE

Rldt~n•rli

1988
PONTIAC
GRANDAM

~A.TIONAL

GB

lnclalu&amp;polls

$300

Sl'allk' IIIII MIR ..KOII, Ill aN
Olit.'ll«ft a1 MiiWU~f. al ...

ASSOCIA'I'IO~

" ' L Pt.1 .

Sincerely,
Vicky Koste E!Dabaja

"

TnP al Oak....
Callferlllall K•••OIJ,Itl ...

Baseball

John M. Grubb M. D.

.··Dear Editor,

:. This letter is to thank all those
:whO supported me after I re·
teived notice of my nonrenewal.
·~ want to pxpress my apprecla·
~ton for my students who went
{hrough the efforts of making a
~tf!lon, preparing a speech, and
)etttng themselves placed on the
'khool board's agenda. Even
thOugh the meeting was on the
~me evening as the senior play,
l)ley came to express the! r
opinion. I also want to thank the
:lQuthern High School teachers
\fho also has prepared a speech
and all had signed a petition on .
[hy hehalf. I want to tell all of you
t)lat even though you never had
the chance to voice your presen·
tatlons, I value them just the

regulators~B_y_Ja_ck_A_nde_rso_n.

Balance of rights is shaky___sa_ra_h_av_e_rst_re_et

Fully equtpped, built·in TV, CB, like new, air.

;J..etter to Editor

Pistons bury Lakers; take playoff lead

I

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel.
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, June 17, 1988

TOM SPENCER

13 Weeks .............................. $18.20
26 Weeks ... .. ..................... .. .... $35.10
52 Weeks ................... ........ ... .... $67.!;0

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~

--WJNCHESTER. \1~

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Gulf Service
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"Father's Day Sa•-"

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CHAMPION@
TARG(T

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GREAT GIFT TO GIVE
KNIFE •••• ·ADADON·FATHER'S
DAY
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,,

�'
Friday, June 17, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Royals close .in on Athletics ·
· with 9-5 victory; Indians idle

..
BOGGS OUT ON DOUBLE PLAY - Buswn
s lugger Wade Boggs slides under the throw of
Baltimore' s Bill Ripken after he threw to first to

complete a double play In the fourth Inning of
Thursday night' s game In Baltbnore. The Birds
won 8-4. (UP I)

Positions are drawn
for Saturday's derby
NORTH RANDALL. Ohio
(UP]) - The draw for post
positions for the Ohio Derby saw
r ival horses of Wood y Stephens
and D. Wayne Lucas selected for
near -opposite e nds oft he star tlng
gate at Tfiistledown in Saturday's ra ce.
With a fi eld o! eight . star ti ng
positions are not critical, but
Lucas' , Tsarbaby will ge t to see
the entire field to his left coming
out of the eight ho le.
· Digress. tra ined by Stephens.
wi ll start in the third position.
The number one position went
to Intensive Comma nd , tra ined
by John Ca mpo. The seco nd spot
went to Speedy Delight, with
Digress next. Sir Riddle will start
in the fourth positio n, followed by
J im 's Orbil. Din's Dancer.
Primal a nd Tsarbaby
The 54th running of the Ohio

Event postponed
KIRKERSVILLE, Ohio (UP !)
-Qualifying for the National Hot
Rod Association Springnationals
at Nationa l Trail Raceway was
postponed Thursday because of
rcii n.
The 24th annual $859,050 race is
the sixth event in the Sl million
Wins ion drag racing series.
Two professio nal sessio ns
were sc heduled for ioday and
Saturday at noon and 4 p.m.
Sunday, si ngle-eliminat ion finals
begin at 11 a.m.

EAST ME IGS - Coach Pam - Trish Spencer the Most Assis ts
Douthitt's second place Easter n honor. a nd Most Put-outS by Lisa
Eagle Softball tea m wa s rPcently Driggs.
honored for thE&gt;ir finE&gt; season.
Special trophies presented by
Team members honored were I he school Included Best Batting
four -year letter winners Am y average, Lisa Driggs; Coach' s
Bissell · a nd .Melanie Mankin.
award, Amy Hager; Most [m:
a long wit h a third se nior Bonnie proved outfielder and infielder
Koenlg.Underclassmen incl ud ed respectively, Bonnie Koenig and
Lisa Drig~s. Lisa Bissell, Amy
Mel Mankin ; and Best DefenslHa ger, Trls ha Spencer.Heat her ve,Amy BisselL
Finlaw.Amy Murph y.Amanda
Amy Bissell and Mel Mankin
Bissell, Lorrie Baker, Mandi E&gt; were chosen to first tea m allHarr is.Mary Ann Kibbl e.Ed na SVAC, while Bonnie Koenig, Lisa
Driggs. a nd Toby HilL
Dr iggs, a nd Trlsh Spencer
Coac h Douthitt was assisted
ear ned honorable men lion.
for the fifth time by assistan t
Bissell a nd Mankin bo th
Coach Don Jackson with score- earned all-d istrict honors and
keeper Jen ny Jackson. and sta tBonn ie Koenig, Honorable
istician Ci ndy Ptizer.
men ti on.
Mi ssy Harris was th e
Amy Bissell and Mel Mankin
rt)an ager.
both participated in the JR-Sr All
•Special Awards were presStar Game held at Waverly J une
e nted to Mela nie Mankin for
5.
Most Sacrifices (!\); Most RBI's.
Amy Bissell earned honorable
Trish Spencer: Most Stolen Bamen tion, All-State.
ses, Bonnie Koenig, and Most
The Eaglet tes finished the
Runs Scored.Amy BisseiLLisa
season with a 11-7 overall and 9-3
league ma rk
Driggs won the Most Hil s award.

Summer league results

o~e .

. · • Melp-Muon
,
Summer Leape' Rac ine's pony league squa d
di-opped Rutland from the unb~a te n ranks in Tuesday night
a~tion by lt4·2 score. Racine, who
has lost some close heartbreakers, pulled this one out at the
expense of Dennis McKi nney's

I

Derby has only one jockey. Pat
Da y, with a victory in the even t.
Day Jed Stone Manor to victory In
1980.

Eagle gals honored

Pony League
EAST MEIGS - Tied at 7-7, a
bend area pony league game
between Eastern II and Ma so n
"?as called after the third out in
t ~ e top of the sixt h
inning
result ing In a dead lock and
suspended game.
·J eff Durst was the Eas tern
hurler, allowing five hits, walklpg fo ur, striking out seven 'and
allowing seven r uns, several or
wh lch were attributed to seven
errors by the Eat ern nine.
;R Board.Sparks , and Kea r ns
combined to hold Eastern a t
seven, combining for six walks,IJ!ree s trlkeouts,glving up three
hits, and the Mason team commit ting five errors.
·Eas ter n hitters were Jeff
Durst,Michael Smith, and Wes
Holter each with singles. Board
hpd two singles for Mason. while
Kearns, Ross, and King each had

i(

well-round ed team.
Racine's ace pitcher, Roy
Johnson, recorded the win going
the distance to strike out ninetee n ba t ters while the Rutland
sta ff of Kevin Taylor, Shawn
Lambert and Terry McGuire
tea med up to fan fifteen.
In the second inning, Racine 's
Todd Grindstaff hit one of his two
home runs with two on giving
Racine a three run lead but this
did not shake up the hard fighting
Rutland crew. In the fourth ,
Eva ns reached first on a single
and was knocked in by a McGhee
single to make it 3-1. Then in the
fifth a Musser home run made
the sco re even closer at 3-2.
As the tension mounted, some
fine defe nsive effort kept the
Racine squad quiet until the
seventh and then Grindstaff hit
another home run t.o give the
winners their final run and
ma rgin of victory.
'!'odd Grindstaff lead the Raci ne team with two homers and
four RBI's followed by Shane
Circle with a single and a double.
For Rutland, Musser had his
hOmer and Evans and McGhee
each chipped In with a single.
Racine now stands at 1-4 and
Rutland Is 4-1 on the season.

CEREMONIA.L PITCH Reds' Hall of Fame pitcher
Johnny VanderMeer, the only
major league pitcher to throw
consecutive no-hitters, throws
out the ceremonial llrst pitch
before Wednesday's AstrosReds game, on the 50th
anniversary of the feat whk!h
earned hbn a place In baseball
Immortality. Vander Meer's
llrst no-hit performance was a
3-0 decision against the Boston
Braves at Crosley Field on
June 11, · 1938, and his second
hitless wonder came four days
later against the Dodgers at
Ebbets Field In Brooklyn.
(UPI)

By GERRY MONIGAN
days. Despite his performance,
UPJ Sports Writer
however, Welbnan expects to be
The Kansas City Royals have back on the bench soon.
''I know I'm not going to be
revived a sweet memory for
Manager John Wathan, and playing no matter how I do, " said
provided the Oakland Athletics Welbnan, backup for five-time
All-Star second baseman Frank·
with cause for serious concern.
" I went through this type of a White. "The guy (W hite) is a
per iod in 1977," said Wathan, great ballpla yer. I'm here to do a
who played for a Kansas City job, and so far I'm doing It pre tty
team that won 102games anc:t the well.· :
AL West flag. " We won 16 In a
Wellman owns a .293 average,
row, lost one, and won eight
far above his career mark of .224.
more. You've got the feeling
"When a utility guy hits .300,"
every day when you come to the
he said, ·'it's not so much sk ill
ballpark that you're going towln.
that's involved as .. , luck and
lt's a great feeling."
breaks. I'm in the big leagues,
With a 9-5 victory over the A's
and I'm happy ."
So are the Royal s, who comThursday afternoon at Oakland,
the Royals recorded thei r 13th
pleted a three-game sweep.
success In their last 14 games,
"E"ery thlng's go ing well,"
said Wathan, whose team
and the lone loss in that streak
was a 1-0 defeat.
pounded out 17 hits In support of
The A's enjoyed an even better
winner Mark Gubicza, 9-5. " We
run earlier this season, winning
had a Jot of guys who had great
14 straight en route to an 11-game days today ."
lead In the AL East. Having lost
Pat Tabler picked up three hits
nine of their last 11 games, and drove In four runs. Kevin
however, their lead has dwindled Seltzer had three hits. White, Jn
to 4 1-2 over the Royals.
, his first game this season as
" I don't (like to) think about
designated hitter, homered.
slumps, but, when you stop to
Curt Young, 4-4, the first of six
think about it, teams go through Oakland pitchers, took the loss.
It," Oakland Manager Tony
In other games, California
LaRussa - said. "There hasn't blanked Texas 3-0, Toronto
been a team yet that has won crushed Detroit 13-5, Baltimore
130."
dumped Boston 8-4, and Chicago
Brad Welbnan stroked four clipped Milwaukee 3-1. Clevehits to lead Kansas City to Its land and New York were Idle.
Blue Jays 13, Tigers 5
sixth straight victory, and its
sixth victory over Oakland In 10
At Detroit, Mike Flanagan

Three share U.S. Open lead
By FREDERICK WATERMAN
UPI Sports Writer
BROOKLINE, Mass. (UPI) Making up for 1\ls nightmarish
tee shots with deadly putting,
Sandy Lyle grabbed a share of
the first-round lead Thursday at
the 88th U.S. Open and kept alive
the dream of capturing the
Grand Siam.
The reigning Masters champion compensated for seven
errant tee shots by using just 23
putts on his way to a 3-under-par
68 over The Country Club's
demanding course.
Lyle, among the afternoon
starters who had to deal with the
wind, rolled In birdie putts on
Nos. 16 and 18 to tie journeymen
Bob Gilder and Mike Nicolette.
The Scotsman says completing
the first-ever professional Grand
Siam -capturing the Masters,
U.S. and British Opens and PGA
in the same calendar year - "Is
possible, but I don't fancy the
odds looking too good."
The threesome at the top held a
one-stroke edge over a group of
five golfers that included defendIng champion Scott Simpson and
Spain's Seve Ballesteros. Also
2,under-par were 1987 Masters
champion Larry Mlze, Paul
Azinger and Dick Mast.
At J-under 70 were Lanny
Wadkins, Curtis Strange and
Craig Stadler. The large group at
even-par Included Andy Bean,
Ben. Crenshaw, two-time Open
champion Hale Irwin, DA. Wei bring, IsaoAoklandU.S. Amateur

champion Blll Mayfair.
Lyle tried using his J-Iron from
the tee on six occasions, but
continued to find the rough. On
only eight of the non-Par 3 holes
did he stay In the fairway .
"At least I had some Idea

Frazeyburg's Donnie Moran
outpowered Webbville, Ken ·
lucky driver Jack Boggs in the
premier late model classic.
Earlier In the season Hickel
blew-up his good engine on the
first night of a two day show, but
was saved by a rain out and did
not miss the race at the all new
five-eighths mile speed plant
Hickel and his crew worked hard

to remove the engine from his
street stock machine and
transfer the powerplant to the
limited late model.
The work paid off and Hickel
claimed the season opener.
ThIs time, without the engine
change, Hickel scored a repeat
as he mastered the high banking
and 125-plus straight -away
speeds to best the field.
Hickel Is sponsored by Mason
Auto Glass, Sorden Tool and
Machine,Green Sales.and Leroy
James Excavating.
Local racing continues this
Friday night at Skyline Speed·
way In Stewart, while Saturday
nighters have the option of
Jackson County (Ripley) ,Tyler
County( Middlebourne), · or K-C
Raceway at Chillicothe·.

$250.00

County Appliances

'•

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

STEWART - Beginning tonight
for the first time ever, Skyline
Speedway begins regular racing
on Friday evenings. Time Trials
begin at 7 and races at 8 p.m. so
area auto race fans are asked to
denote the changes to the racing
schedule.

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.

Sprl•t &amp; S•••u Ho1r1
· OPEN MONOAYTHRU FRIDAY
9 AM·6 PM
SATURDAY 9 AM-1 PM

~THE

- ~-

..

GRAVELY

y

Sunday
June 19th
Is
Father's Day!

'

Treatment infuriates man in ER

Time to tee off...
By BOB HOEFLICH
For the third year in a row, the
Meigs County Chapter of the
American Heart
Association will
be sponsoring a
golf. tournament
at the Jaymar
Golf Course on
June 30.
You, you and
you are invited to take part In the
sc ramble which wlll begin at 1
p.m. Calcutta will be held at 7
p.m. on the night before the
tournament. There'll be a steak
dinner held In conjunction with
the tournament and there will be
prizes for play Including a new
r ar for any player making a
nole-in-one on number 9. Turnpike Ford Is putting the car on the
line.
Now, to get signed In contact
Bill Childs at 992-6312: Karen
Facemyer at 992-5751 or Sandy
IanE&gt;relli at 992-7039.
Toad Searles was more than
pleased to receive a letter of
commendation and a photograph
sent to him from the Foodland
Offices in Gallipolis . . The com· .
munlcatlon acknowledged Searles' role In the annual horseshoe
tournament staged in Middleport
and named for him. He sends
thanks to Foodland for the
thoughtful recognition.

-----

The Ra cine Merchants Associat ion has changed the date or Its
annual fall fes tival.
Originally , the event was scheduled for Sept. 24 but now has
been moved ahead one week to
Sept. 17. The change was brought
about In order to have Meigs
Mine musicians take part in the
program.

MIDDLEPORT - FeeneyBennett Post 128, America n
Legion, Midleport, will have a
square dance at the annex,
Friday. 8 to midnight. The True
Country Band wlll be featured.
Dances will be held on the fir st
· and third Fridays of each month.
SATURDAY
POMEROY -Star Grange 778
and Star Junior Grange 878 wll
hold a potluck supper and fun
night Saturday at 6:30 at the haiL
All members are urged to attend.
RUTLAND - Square, round
and square dancing 9 p.m.
Saturday until 1 a .m. at Ell
Denison Post 461, American
Legion Home, 'Rutland; live
band, snack bar and refreshment
sta nd . Donations at door.
APPLE GRO\IE- Hymn sing
Saturday 7 p.m. at Apple Grove
United Methodist Church, 10
mlles above Racine on Route 337,
featuring Dan Hayman and the
Faith Trio.
SUNDAY
CARPENTER Annual
homecoming of MI. Union Baptist Church, two miles south of
Carpenter -off Route 143, on
County Road 10, with potluck
dinner at 12 noon and an
afternoon program at 1 featuring
the True Gospel Sounds Quartet
.of Portsmouth and the duet , Jan
.. and Kathy of Meigs County.
BASHAN - Spencer Family
Reunion Sunday at Wald

On Sunday,
All Fathers Will
Receive A

FREE SUNDAE
FROM

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
, "At the foot of the Pomeroy-Mason lrhlge"

992-2556

POMEROY, OHIO

Friday, June 17, 1988

Page-6

Beat of the bend

FRIDAY
BASHAN -TheBashan volunteer Fire Department will be
holding an ice cream social on
Friday with serving to begin at 5
p.m. Sandwiches and other re. freshments will also be sold .
Everyone welcome.

SHARES U.S. OPEN LEAD - Michael Nicolette acknowledged
applause of spectators on the 18th green Thursday as he finished
the first round of the U.S. Open with a score ol 3-under par 88,
giving him part of a three-way tie with Bob Glider and Sandy Lyle.
(UPI)

The Daily Sentinel

.

need. Willi was In a bad a utomo-bile accident on Feb. 26. Her
husba11d died of injuries, and she
was seriously injured.
Commenting on your kind·
nesses, Willi writes: "! heard
from friends that I had not seen
for some 25 years and believe me
when I say that a phone call or a
card saying 'I 'm thinking about
you' makes all the difference in
the world when something like
this has happens to you.:·
I thank you, too. You're always
so good about being there when
someone needs you!
John Dale Zurhcer of Pomeroy
graduated summa cum laude
from the College of Arts and
Sciences at Ohio University in
Athens and was recognized as the
outstanding graduate In mathematics for 1987-88.
Zurcher is the son of Mrs.
Robert C. Bailey, Sr., of the Wolf
Pen community and the late
Wayne Zurcher. He is married to
the former Rebecca Lynn Tate.
And--there Is a sh,ortage of
blood In the tri-state area so a
bloodmobile will be at the Meigs
Senior Citizens Center. Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, from 1 to 6
p.m. next Wednesday. The Racine United Methodist Church
Women will be serving the
canteen !or the visit. Evening
hours are one-half hour -longer
than normal to give people who
work a little better shot at get tlng
to the unit.
N9w a bout this lack of rain. All
sorts of things are being tried to
encourage a drop or two of
moisture. Why don't all of us try
washing our cars on the same
day --providing enough water Is
still available--? Usually works
for me--just_ think what mass
washing might do. '(ou keep
smiling.

Community calendar

EHS basehallers honored recently
EAST MEIGS
Special . Bases; Jeremy Barber, Most ImAwards were presented to proved; and Kenny Caldwelmembers of the Eastern boys l,Coach's Achievement, Award.
varsity baseball team, who finSeniors Steve Horner,Mark
ished the season at 11-8 and 9-51n Griffln,and Jell Johnson earned
the S\' AC for a third place finish All-District honors, while Horner
behind Co-Champions Southern and Johnson were first team
and Oak HilL
picks, ALL-SVAC. Kyle Davis,
Five seniors ended fine careers Jeremy Barber, and Mark Griffor Coach Scott Wolfe's club, fin ear11ed honorable mention.
including Jeff Johnson, Steve
Horner, Mark Griffin, Kyle Da- ,--~---------1
vis, and Jeremy Barber.
Over a four:year span the
SATURDAY ONLY
seniors amassed as 65-26 record
overall (ll-8,21-4,20-S,and 13-8),
SIDE-BY-SIDE
posting two sectional crowns,
REFRIGERATOR/
two S\'AC crowns,two district
FREEZER
crowns, a regional crown and
district runner-up. Eastern also
had a second place SVAC llnlsh.
7 TO PICK FROM
Steve Horner claimed the Best
Batting Average Award, Kyle
Davis and Wade McQqeen the
best defensive award; Jeff John627 3rd Ave.
son, the Team Leadership
Open Daily &amp; Sat.7 to 6
Award; Mark G:litln,MostStolen

where the ball was going," he
said.
Greg Norman, one of the
pre-tournament favorites, was at
3-over 74, along with Jack Nick· .
laus and Tom Watson.

-- ..

Thank you for remembering
former resident, Willi (Wilma
Righthouse ) Pack in her time of

Hickel unbeatable at speedway Achon
• s 1aled 1om'ghI
MINERAL WELLS- ~·eteran
race driver Benny Hickel of
Pomeroy proved to be unbeatable in the 1988 season at West
virginia Motor Speedway as he
drove his familiar number 51
Camara to victory in the the 25
lap Mountaineer 100 In the
semi-late model portion of the
program .

allowed five hits over eight-plus
innings and Ernie Whitt went 4
for 5 with four RBI, denying the
Tigers the c hance to pull within a · ·
half-ga me of the first-place Vankees. Flanagan, 6-4, walked six
and struck out seven. Jack
Morris, 6-8, lasted 2 2-3 innings,
yielding seven runs.
Orioles 8, Red So&gt;&lt; 4 .
At /?altimore, Cal Rlpken Jr.
and .Mickey Tettleton each delivered a two-run double to power
the Orioles. Jeff Ballard, 3-3,
scattered seven hits over seven
innings. Marty Barrett stole
home, Boston's first steal of
home since Tommy Harper did it
May 28, 1973 at Kansas City.
Angels 3, Texas 0
At Anaheim, Calif., Kirk
McCaskill hurled a three-hitter
fo r his first victory In seven
star ts and Wally Joyner and Bob
Boone delivered RBI singles to
carry the Angels. McCaskill, 3-5,
winless since beating Toronto
May 8, struck out a season-high
10 and walked three. Paul Kilgus,
6-5, took the loss.
White Sox 3, Brewers I
At Milwaukee, Jerry Reuss
and Bobby Thigpen combined on
a seven-hitter to help Chicago
snap the Brewers' four-game
winning streak. Reuss improved
to 6-2, and Thigpen, making his
American League-leading 33rd
appearance, pitched two Innings
for his 13th save. Chris Bosio, 6-7,
worked 81-3 innings.

By The Bend

Spencer's pond, Bashan; bring
folding chair, table service and
covered dish for dinner at noon.
MONDAY
POMEROY -Vacation Bible
srhool starting Monday at Pome·
roy Church of the Nazarene from
6 to 8 p.m. through June 26; for
Information call 992-3111.

Dear Ann Landers: Recent! y I
had to go to the h05pital emergency
. room. (Nothing serious.) While 1
was there a woman was brought in
by the police. She had been raped in
a moteL
· They put her in a curtained
booth and everyone in the place
could hear them questioning her.
They treated the woman as if she
had done something wrong. There
was no hint of compassion or
respect. It was disgusting.
Everyone in the place heard the
doctors talking while they exam·
ined her. I realize they must get
samples of semen but their language
was so vulgar it made me furious. I
am a 36-year-old man and I was
embarrassed. Can you imagine
what it was like for her? She kept
saying, "Why me'! There are so
many attractive girls out there. I am
54 years old. Why . would anyone
want me?''
The woman's !O.year·old grand·
child had been locked in the
bathroom during the rape. The

Thank you for the opportunity
child was left in the waiting room
of the hospital by herself. No one to bring this incident to the atten·
was assigned to give her reassurance tion of the public. You did a kind
or consolation while her grand· and thoughtful thing today.
mother was being examined. Final·
Dear Ann Landers: In the natural
ly I went out and checked on her course of events, my two sons will
myself. The poor little thing was probably die before their wives.
who are younger. The women will
terrified.
Now that it is all over 1 am upset no doubt have man y suitors for a
because I didn't do more. But what • sa:ond marriage since both are
could I have done. Ann? Please tell attractive and will inherit a consid·
me, and all the others in your vast erable amount of money.
I have a good relationship with
reading audience. - MR. R. IN
my
sons and their wives and I do
NEW JERSEY
DEAR MR. R.: You could have not wish to alienate them. I confess.
asked to see the administrator of however. that I bristl e at the
the hospital, reported what you had thought of my daughters-in-law
seen and heard and insisted that enjoying the fruits of my labor with
they send someone in to comfort second husbands
I have four grandchildren with
the woman and stay with the child.
After the fact. you should have whom I am very close. How can I
reported the incident to the Ameri· be sure that they will inherit the
can H05pital Association in Chica· bulk of my .estate without making
go. (It's not too late to do this.) It's their parents upset by passing them
bad enough to be raped, but to have over? Please advise. -- REALISTIC
one's dignity assaulted by the police IN LA JOLLA
and physicians after such an ordeal
DEAR LA jOLLA: There are
. is inexcusable.
ways oo provide for your sons and

An article on how the flag
originated and scripture from
John 3 was given by virginia
Wears for devotions at the
Tuesday night meeting of the
Rock Springs United Methodist
Women held at the church.
Group singing of several songs
Including "Amazing Grace" and
"Beyond the Sunset " opened the
meting. There were prayer re·

Grange meets

LOLA A. SJGNOM
School, Signom has a bachelor of
science degree in journalism
which she received in 1967 from
Ohio University.
NCR develops, manufactures,
markets and supports business
Information systems for worldwide markets.

Sgeve Haggy, Stephanie and
Brad, were visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Summerfield and
family of Medina. They went
espe&lt;;lally for the graduation of
Wendy Summerfield .
.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Thoma ,
Sr. were the recentvlsltorsofMr.
and Mrs. Howard Thoma, Jr. and
famlly·of Newark. They attended
.the graduation of Curt Thoma.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank,
Sarah Beth and Matthew, Texas
Road, were recent visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Haning.

Becky Knight, Marvin and Debbie Dodrill, Jerry, Diane, Mlssie
and Brian Frederick, Don, Rose,
Shawn and Amyh Madden,
Harry Hayman, Sid, Carol, Ryan
and Rolbert Hayman, Mary and
Angela Carney, Priscilla Dodrill,
Evelyn Roush, Mildred Neal
Jerry, Louise, Christina and
Jerry Lee Unroe, Brandi Herron.

Essay winners named
Winners in the Yesteryear
essay contest, a part of the Meigs
County Retired Senior Volunteer
program held · at the Meigs
Museum, have been announced.
The essays are now on exhibit
at the museum. A reception will
be held for the winning contestants and their parents In the fall.
Michele Harris o! the Portland
school was the county winner.
Students placing first and second
In their respective schools were

Michele Harris and Angel Flinn,
Portland; Michael Bing and
Mary Chaney, Syracuse; David
Fetty and Sara Ann Machlr,
Chester; Gwen Johnson and
Dean Hankla, Harrisonville.
Courtney Roush and Kevin
Ihle, Racine; Larry Pat~rson
and Sabrina Congo, Letart Falls;
Chip Suttle and Jeromy Jackson,
Riverview ; and Mandy Jones
and Kristin Torres, Rejoicing
Life Christian School.

---Peopkinthenews----------------~--~

ms

the gra ndchildren without cutting
the wives out completely. (This
would be insulting.) 5&lt;.'e your lawyer or your bank trust department.
Meanwhile. I hope you are being
good to yourself. An awful lot of
people who worked hard all their
lives deny themselves pleasures and
acquisitions that they would thoroughly enjoy because they want to
leave a large estate to their relatives.
In my opinion, this is a big mistake.
Planning a wedding 1 Wha (s
right 1 What 's wrong 1 "The Ann
Landers Guide for Brides" will relieve
your anxiety. To roceive a copy, send
$3 plus a No. 10. self-addressed,
stamped envelope (45 cents postage)
to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chi·
cago, ill. 6061 /-{)562.

quests for Thor Carsey, Mlldreil
. and Tina Ja cobs, Betty Dill,:
Francis Goegleln, and the Rev .•
Melvin Franklin with .prayer by'
Sharon Fobner.
Mary Showalter had a reading·
entitled "Taxes' ' and there was a·
prayer by Mrs. Wears. Llilda
Foster and Sharon Folmer
served refreshments. Next meetIng will be held on Sept. 13.

SuperAmerica honors woman

Reunion held recently

By WILLIA.M C. TROTI'
United Press International
IS THAT AMORE?: The stories of marital problems have
followed Bruce Springsteen to Rome. Italian newspapers, like
those In the United States, a reo tPI'mlng with reports about the
apparent breakup of Springsteen's marriage to actress
Jullanne Phillips and a romance between The Boss and Patti
Sclalfa, the only female member of his E Street Band. "At this
point there are no doubts ... Paitl and Bruce really love each
other," one newspaper went so far to say In Its review of his
Wednesday night show at Flamlnlo Stadium. Another ran a
photo of the two lying together In a deck chair. Springsteen also
did some sightseeing - visiting the Sistine Chapel, having
. dinner with friends at a restaurant hi the picturesque
Trastevere district and taking a midnight stroll with Sclalfa to
the Spanish Steps where he sat down for an Impromptu
sing-along with young night owls In the piazza . Rome was the
second stop ol the European leg of Springsteen's "Tunnel of
Love" tour and he also will hit France, , England, West
Germany, the Netherlands, Austria and Scandinavia.
HARD ROCK IN BOSTON: Actor Dan -:':~. .7d, an,d

...

.,... .,_

Kay Johnson, an ' employe of
SuperAmerica store in Pomeroy,
has been recognized for outs tandIng performance concerning the
company 's Customer Service
Awareness Program, according
to R. J. Ma&gt;&lt;well, senior vice
president and general manager
of SuperAmerlca's Southern
Dlvison.
Candiates are observed and
evaluated with res pect to
friendly attitude, appearance,
professionalism, efficiency, use

of Intercom , and telephone
etiquette.
For her commitment to service
excellence, Johnson received a
cerrlflcate of apprecla tion, a•
letter of commendation and a
special service attltute award. '
SuperAmerica is a chain of
more than 500 gasoline-compact
mass merchandising stores featuring the one-stop shopping concept and Is an operating·division
of Ashland Oil, Inc.

.Wolf Pen area notes Eastern Star has meeting

Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp of
Langsville, Mrs. Daniel Worley ,
Stacy and Daniel, of Daniels, W.
Va., Charles Knapp, Kevin
Knapp, Michelle and Amy of
Hymn sing
Racine
were Sunday dinner
APPLEGROVE - A hymn
of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
guests
sing will be held Saturday, 7
Smith.
p.m., at the Apple Grove United
Mr. and Mrs. Tom SummerMethodist Church, 10 miles
field,
Crystal, Wendy and Rog of
above Racine on Route 338. Dan ·
Medina
were weekend visitors of
Hayman and the Faith Trio will
Mr.
and
Mrs. Robert Russell, Mr.
be featured.
and Mrs. Steve Haggy, Ste·
phanle, Brad and Mr. and Mrs.
Bl ble School
Don
Russell.
ROCK SPRINGS - Sunday is
Mrs.
Robert Russell, Mrs.
the deadline for registering to
attend the Vacation Bible School
at the Rock Springs United
Methodist Church, July 11·15,
6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Theme for this
The second annual Country
year's school Is "Champions for
Hymntimers
reunion was held
Jesus." All children preschool
June
4
at
Bob
Evans Shelter
through high school are invited to
House,
Rio
Grande.
attend. Registrations are being
Preceding the dinner at 1 p.m a
taken by Lenora Leifheit , 992blessing
was lead by Dan Hay5863 or Susie Abbott. 992-6114.
man. Next year's reunon was set
for June 3, same locatiOn.
Attending were Dan, Faith and
Tamara Hayman, Cheryle and

Plans for summer actlvlltres
were made when Star Junior
Grange 878 located on County
Road 1 north QISalem Center met
recently at the grange hall.
Severa I members wlll attend
the Junior Grange Camp in July.
It was noted that anyone between
the ages of 5 and 13 Is Invited to
join the grange. Prospective
members may also attend the
camp In July. Information may
be obtained from Linda Montgomery, junior leader, 669-4245 or
Denise Shenefield, master, 6694836.

ANN lANDEfis•
"1118,[a-

'lln:lei ·SrMicl&amp;e _.

UMW meeting conduaed

Signom is
promoted
Lola A. Slgnom, daughter of
George and Mildred Ziegler,
Pomeroy, has been appointed an
execu live assistant within NCR's
Exxecu live Office.
Since 1986 Slgnom was dlrec·
tor, Communications and Advertising Services, within NCR's
Pacific Group. She joined NCR In
1969 as an editor In Corporate
lndustdrial Relations. ln 1974 she
was named manager, Internal
Communications and Equal Employment Opportunity, for the
Engineering and Manufacturing
facility in Dayton. In 1976shewas
appOinted manager, Equal Em·
ployment Opportunity, for the
United States Data Processing
Group, and from 1978 until 1986
she served as manager of Employe Communications within
the Communications Dlvslon.
A resident of Dayton, and a
1962 graduate of Pomeroy High

Ann
Landers

actress Donna Dixon, didn' t let the record heat Interfere with
their fun at a ground-breaking ceremony for the new Hard Rock
Cafe In Boston. "I promise this restaurant Is going to be hOtter
than this day," Aykroyd said Wednesday as thermometers in
the city hit 97. Aykroyd, who Is co-owner of the Boston and New
York Hard Rocks, says Boston Is a great location. ".I love
Boston. This Is a great town," he said. "J. Geils (the rock band)
came out of here." The club Is scheduled to open by Christmas.
\liNTON GETS HIS WISH: AI the request of Bobby Vinton's
staff, Thllrsday was Bobby vinton Day In St. Paul, Minn. Mayor
George Latbner came up with a proclamation tor the singer
honoring him as a "versatile entertainer who continues to enjoy
success and whose many hit songs have retained their vitality
and relevance over tbne." "The request (for a special day)
came from Bobby VInton's office,'' said Christine Murakami, a
spokeswoman tor the Ordway Music Theater where \linton will
perform Friday and Saturday nights. "Basically, their
reasoning behind It Is that Bobby has been In the industry lor 20
yea~~.-~?d his songs continue to be played and retain their
vltalo~~."

Fathers were recognized at
Tuesday night's meeting of. the
Harrisonville Chapter 255, Order
of the Eastern Star, held at the
Masonic Temple. Bernice Hoffman , worthy matron, read an
appropriate poem for Father's
Day and then presented each
father with a bag of candy.
Also noted was Flag Day with
the pinons being tiny flags .
Mrs. Hoffman and Dana Hoi·
fman, worthy patron, presided at
the meeting recognizing those
with grand appointments, honored Mqsons. 60 year member,
Ruby Diehl, and- 50 year
member, Frances Young. Catherine Shenefield and Martha Muse
were recognized and welcomed.
Thank you cards were read by

Personal note
Mrs. Karl R. Russell, the
former Linda Lou Smith, Melissa
and Ken Russell, Olathe, Kansas,
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd T. Chapman,
the former Kenda Russell, Plcke·
rington, were Sunday dinner
guests of Pearl L. Russell,
Racine.

Gracie Wilson, secretary, from
grand officers at tending the
chapter's Inspection. Thank you'
cards were also read from
Charles King and Bernice Wlnn
for flowers ·and cards received
during their illnesses, and the
family of the late· Ruth Erlewlne
for special klndessses.
The charter was draped for
Susan Jeffers . Lois Pauley was
reported ill and a get-well card
was signed for her.
The birthdays of Stella Atklns
and Ruby Diehl were noted.
Charles King had the blessing
before refreshments were served
by Bernice Hoffman and Pearl
Canaday.

SALES- SERVICE ·TESTING •
BROWN &amp; SNOUFFER

FIRE &amp;.SAFm
EQUIPMENT
172 Jlorth S.CIIIMI Awe.
llltl•eport, Ohio 45760
PH. 161•1 991-7075
Gary Snouffer - 992·7446

...

-

LAST MINUTE FATHER'S
DAY 81FT IDEAS
PHILCO • SYLVANIA • ZENITH

$1 98 , up
19 ln. Color TV............... $2 38 up
25 in. Color Consol• TV ... $4 48 up '"
25 ln. Remote................. $ 55 9 up
26 ln. Stereo Color TV •••• S648,
13 in. Color TV .••••••••••••••

&amp;

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up

RIDENOUR
CHESTER

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE
915·3307

I·

�Page-6- The Daily Sent1nel

Friday, June 17, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Dh10

, fXrERIENCE THE JOY Of RELIGION ~

Fnday, June 17, 1988

•

.

~

·

'''""'"I lt.e-lfekg F111d Clliekln
22 8 W M111n St , Pomeroy

"

MEIGS nRE
~ \ CENTER, INC.

1 )\

l

992 -5432

\Itt }!.~ ("'"'''"(,/ ,/, 1

II n

Pomeroy
992 JJ75

@

RIDENOUR

B.~~~

FURNI~!e~~~RDWAR:tI

THE WVE OF GOD BLESSES
US WITH JOY OF SUMMER

214 E Ma1n
992 SIJO Pomeroy

Rawhngs-Coots-Biower

Wtth the sprmg and Its beauty all over and done,
And the flowers begmrung to fade,
Let the temperature nse from the overhead sun,
While the trees gsve a welcommg shade
It's a tune of departure from wowes and chores,
To enJOYment m ~Nery regard,
And the season of everyone movmg outdoors,
To the beach or Just out m the yard
Let's remember our faith and 1ts infimte worth,
As the wonders of nature appear,
And the love of our Father for life on the earth
When the warmth of the summer lS here
- Gloria Nowak

WAID CROSS
SONS SlORE

FUNERAL HOME
'Servtng Fom1hes

GrocenesGeneral Merchandtse

264 S 2nd Middleport

992-5141

Rac1ne 949 2SSO

TRINITY OfURQ-f Rev John Iutf pastor

Debblo Bock Sunday School Sup! (burch
SchOOl 9 l5 a m Worship Service 10 l) a m

CHAPMAN SHOES

Choir rehf&gt;arsal Tuesday 7 l) p m under d1
rectlon ol Lois Bw1
POMEROY OIUROI Of" TilE NAZA
RENE Co!Tl('T' Umon and Mulberr Rev
11Drnas Glen Mcr.Ju~ pastor Norman Prt-s
""' S S Supl Sunday School 9 lJ a m
O'lQrnln~ wo~hip 10 :ll a m e\rnm~ se viet' f.
p.m p'lid-"'~k service Wednesday 7 p m

• GRACE EPISCOPAL

Main Sl Pomero\ Sunday services Hoh
CommwUon on the first Sunday of each mrmO!
and combined wUh mornlng prawr on the
thtrd Sunday Mornlng prayer and sermon on
all other Sundays of the month Church School
and Nursery care proVIded. Coff€e hour in the
Parish Halllrrurll.'daalely following Ihe service

POMEROY OIUROI OF CHRIST 212 W
Main 5&lt; Leo Lash t'Vl!ngl'l~l Bible School
9:Xlam Momlngworship lO::Ilam Youlh
l!ftlinp 6 00 p m Evening worship 7 00 p

m Wectnesday night prayer meeting and B1bk&gt;
stwtv 700pm
THE S.U.VATION ARMY ll.'l But1ernut
Ave Pomeroy Mrs Dora Wtrung in charge
~Mav hoUness meeling 10 a m Sunday
School Ill: ll a m Surday &amp;'OOol YPSM
• Eloise Adams leadt&gt;r 7 :ll p m Salvation
tpet'tl~ 'w'arious s~akers and music specials
'Onasdav U ll a m to 2 p m Ladles Home

, J,.ea~
lftvlled

memlx&gt;rs In chargE&gt; all women
~ ;s p m Th...OOy eo,. radol

9asss IYoWla P'-'&lt;lple-Biblel

~•

~Wv aOO Praver mee!l~

1ll p m Bible
to the public

ct)(.'n

POMEROY WESTSIDE

OIURCII

OF'

CHRIST 3.12:li O.ik1ren S Home Road ICount,
ROad 76) 992 5235 Vocal music Sunda, Wor
!ihlplOam Blbk&gt;StudvU a m Wcrstup Gp.
m Wednesday Bible Study 1 p m

OLD DEXTER BffiLE CHRI'&gt;TIAN

CHURCH AMn CW1ls pa stor Linda ~"an
Supt SUnday SChool 9 :D a m preachin~ ser
v1ces firs&lt;

and rhlrd Surday following Sunday

SChool Youth
dav

meeting 7 :II p m everv Sun

(HA H \M

t'\IIFD

Mf rH011J S1

Pl

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SF. \ f:J'I;T H DA '\ \0\ r\ T IST
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Hllil I Pom r
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hn s IJ! r s 1hh h r h
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r nd r nt 0 1 hn £1 SI P"
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hq!ln tl
p m nn S 1 d ;~
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\ nh~ ... np, ' c rollrm np,a tl J,p m
I \t r\1 nt "('!(on

RCTI AND FIRST BAPTIST O ILRCH

- S " l H 1 11 11 \\ ;.J nt"' l Su11 Suncl 1\
S hnnl 9 II m Mo rning \\ o;h r Hi I)
m
POMERO'\ F'TR ST BAPrtSI 1 vs tor
f'f II '
mm ! ' "'
S;.~ tu !cll \ r rn ln c
';~n~t II!&lt;. C' srn Icc"• OPf'n 10 puhl l(
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1'1'1
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(huH h S&lt;hoo t 9 tn
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FIRST

SOLTHER ~

BAPTIST Po

ni t m Plt&gt;c F: I tm t 0 An 10 p 1"'101
J · ~ k ~r rd ., ~unri J ' s, h ot D l &lt;'C In :-,un
cl1\ Sc ho I I ill m Mor nrnr: \\c "hi
10 ~ ~ N rn nJ,! "
htp no p m n S T
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f \ 11!11 \ REH:\\(JF. ( HL R(H B
\4' But HJ 1 I R r \ F:mn' R " n p
1 1 H 11111 \ Dunn upt Su nd
Sl ht I
ll1m Sun! \1\f"nlngo;• \l ~ t .. to pm
R hi
hlng
lfl 1 m Tl u 1 d 1
svn '' L s t :\-li SS tO'\ Ch1 • s
S
t
HI n Sund u
" ' ' '·· ;, ., ... ~ l
I
n11 \\ c\nf' I I\

' MIDill EPORr ( Hl Rf ll

OF ( IIR"
.. lr\ CHR IST I\ 1" l,!'\ 10 1\ lMrc nt Hale
Ill"' hi 1 \\ nIt Mohh Sun Ia \ !-.t hunl
f..iupt Sund \ S t l ~ ¥! m Me 1m p,
\\ 1 hpll) Vl
m F ' r mng \\ m -. hip 10
p m \hdn "'&lt;I p H mrr11nJ.,! Wl p m
MI MORIAH C'HL RC H m f Oil
R 1 n4 R f'\
I 1m
'i 111 II d j).J l r
... ~~ cmtn ~ I l l 1m c up " unl' S{ honl
"' t 1:1
m Sunda\ nd \\ Nln fl ' ' r n
" Ina 1 1 ..
pm
•
MlOOl F. PORT
fiR ST
Hi\PTJS !
• ( n 1 Sh h uHl fl tim
lt mf' S itlnn
P , .,,
f. tln' W 1., n S S Su pt ( h\
Rl,e: ~
\
Sup! ~u nd
Sr I I 4 I ~
m MN n nt:: \\ m o,; hlp HI 1'
m r.;un It
f
lin p f" \ l1 I
p m P \ I n 1 In
nil Hlhl St ull \\ N inC'vl
\ f'ning • p
m
l MII c n " h o pi &lt;.1 ti 1 WI 'Cill o
• tt~'h
pm \hll&lt;hl"'l pl a( fll \\ N-1 tt
~ n
R 1111'1 pr r g 1um Y..MPO Sund :.n
:;,'A 30 u m

'I

11 MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST

~l h an d Main

AI Ha rl!ion mini!&gt;IPr
..'Rh hard DuBosc&gt; Assoclt:~ l f.' Pas10r Mikr
...'Gflrlach Sundav School Super tnt endrnt
.-1 Bibl f'~kh o&lt;l9 :kla m Mornln,zWo rshtp
""j10 W u m F.vf'ninR" Wor ship 7 00 p m
~Wrdn PSdav 7 00 p m Prayer meeting
~

MIDDL EPORT CHURCH OF THE NA

... ZARENE PASTOR Frt"d Prnt!Orwood
-$111 Whllr Sundav School Sup! Sunda y
"'.SC hool 9 30 a m Morning Worship 10 45
:~ m
Evangehs 1ic mCE"tlng 7 00 p m
"Wednl'Sda\ 7 00 p m P raye-r m ef' tln~

••
•' Ul'jrrED PRESBYTERI.\N MINISTRY
•1

\

OF MEIGS COUNTY
Rn Chrl.. Tollloll
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTER IAN

~HURCH - Sunday Worship S{'rvices
"Of 00 a m Church SchoOl 10 15 a m

(_ MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN ·~unday School 9 a m Church servlct
\10 15 am
..._SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY
..· •-ERIAN - Sund ay School
hurch serv ice 11 15 am

10 am

• RUTLAND CHURCH OF GDD PaS! or

~ Jotm Evans Sunday School 10 00 a m
: sunday Morning Wotshlp 11 00 a m Chll
d ren • Chul't'h l l a m Sunday Eveni ng
•'ServiCI' 7 00 p m WE'd 6 p m Young I a
~llh.'l AuxUiary Wednf'Sda' 7 om Fam

..

liy Worship

' :...

Pommg 'r Qu1Mg $4~e $to" '
104 E MAIN ST POrtlROY
992-281

s

CIIURCII 326 E

'

11\ZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH Off

R t 1 4 \ m tl r:-&gt; 1 om~ Por land I ong Bot
wm F 0 f'l H:Jrl p a~,;t or Sundav S('hOol
! 11 .... m
~ u n Ia \. m o r nm~ pr c-arhlng
UJ 0 n ~ u n d :n n('n 1~ ~ f" viCI'5 7 30

The world LS wat m

pm

around us and

MIDO\ El OH r FREEWIL L BAPTIST
l HL RCH Co n 1 Ash and Plum N0£'1
HNrma nn p s t n Sun In Schno110 Of) a
m Mor mn g \\01 sh1p 11 00 a m W('(l
nrsdav tnd S&lt;~ turd av Evf'nlng Se-rviet•s at

everywhere glows
the sun

- Dan Walley

7 10 p m

Re" Don Archer
Rev Roy Deeter
Rev Carl Hicks
Re " Seldon Johnson
At FRED- Church Schoo l 9 30 am
Y\: o ro;htp l1 a m L.:MYF'G 30p m UMW
Third TuPs dav
30 p m Communio n
flr s1 Su ndOJ \. Atchf'r
CHESfER - Wor s hip g a m C h ur ch
&amp; nooJ lt) a m BibtcStudv 1 hursda v ' P
m UM \\ f11 sl Thursd a\ 1 p m Com
m unlon fi rs t Sund av Archer!
JOPPA - \\ orc;hip 9 30 a m C'hurrh
Sc hool 10 30 u m Bibl&lt;' Stud\ We-dnPsda y
7 :m l' m Joh l:;:on
LONG HOTIOM - Chu rc h School 9 30
1m \-\ or ship 10 \0 a m Bible Studv
'hC'dn('sda"
JO p m UMYF W&lt;"CCncs
da' 6 on p m Communi on Fir$1 t;.undav
of :'vfon t h H c k"
REEDS\ IL LE - C'h u &lt;h Sch ol9 30 a
n
Vl01-. h p 5er c: f' ll OOam ! Det&gt; t£'11
rL PP£RS PI AI ~ S ST PAUL ( hu rt 'khOol lt a rn \\or!ihip 10 am
n h1' s ud \ 1 ur sda \i 7 30 p m Commu
n or I 1M 5i und a~ Archer

CESTRAI CLUSTER

Rev Kandy Burch
RPv Melvin Franklin
R4 \! Clemente s Zun1a:11. Jr
R4" \' Robe rt Mussman
Rev Don Meadows
/\ S8 L.:R ' SH ICU!iC' I - Wors hip 11 a m
r hul rh ~ h oo l 9 ~5 a m Chargt' Bible
S udv \\- cd nrsda'w'
10 p m UMW fi rst
T \I C!;diJ\
I iO p m
Choir Re h e arsal
Wedncsda' 6 30 p m
Burch
El'TE RPR ISE Worsh•p q a m
Chu rch &amp;h0o l1!1 1 m Bible S1udy Tueli
d a 'w'
00 p m U:'vl \\ First Monday 7 30
p n
l MY F' Sunda' 6 p m Choir Rl'
hl"ftr"a ChlldrC&gt;n " ll l:i Wpm Adult fo l
10\-'oin,e \\Ninl"sdav 1F a nkllr
Fl AT\\OODS - ChurchSchool lOam
\\ o r~h i p 11 a m Blbll' Study Thu1 s
da \
p m
UMYF Sunda y 6 p m
I
nklln
F O R E ~T RU "\: - Wm ~ hip ~ a m
( huH· h Sc hol.)i 1 l A M Cho l1 pr ac tiC'c
rtiU 'dit \ n ~~ p m t M\\ thir d Ml)nd ay
'
Bu rch m Ru 1d'
HE..\TH Midd Ppor - Churc h School
q tO .. m
Morning: Wor~hip 10 30 am
i: o utt ( roup 1 p m Wedn es dav Bl blf'
s tud' 6 on p m { hoir ft , Par a l 7 OO p n
Zun iJ!a
MIN F. RS\ ILL F - Cnurch SChool 9 00
1 m
Wflrshlp S('rv icP 10 00 a m UMW
t hird W£'dnPSd;.t\ 1 p m tBurchl
PF.ARL IH \ PEL - Wor s nip SPrvlrC&gt;
9 30 ' m
( hurC'h SC'ho I lO l :i a m
Mussm 1n
POMEROY -C hut ch&amp;hoo l q ll a m
Wo1 sh p 10 W a m
Choir r ('hea rsa l
Wf'dn!' sdav r lO p m
UM \\ S('COnd
TU rsdJV
}(I m l:MY F" 'it nda \- 6p m
Ml"adm' "I
H(}( K Sr Rl NG"i - Chu r:h School 9 15
am Worshi p 10 m 8 bl(' Study W~:d
nl'o;da '&gt; - 30 p m UMVF (Sen iors! Sun
da\ tJ p m tJun lor s t&gt;ven o1he r Sun
da~ fl p m 1F' a nklln1
RUT l AN D - r hu ch ~hoo t 10 am
\\ o r .. hlp 11 &lt;1 m UM\\ f"lrst Mo nday
7 30 p m Muss man 1
~

SALEM CESTER- Church School~ 15
m Wo rship t O 15 p m t Muss m a n!

SNOWVILLE - Wors hip 9 00 a m
~: hu ch school 9 'I ~ am Mus sm an

SOlllliF.RN CLUSTER
IWv Dehl Fosl er

~.,. Rel{er Grac e
APPLE GROVE - Chu rch School 9 :wJ
a m Wo r s hip 10 00 am Ult !&gt;I t\nd third
Su ndays\ Bib le study evPry Su nday 7 p
m UMW Second Tuesday 7 00 p m
Praver mf"C'IIn,g We-dnesday 7 p m
rGrac(')
BETIIAI'IY - Wor ship 9 am Ch urch
SChool 10 a m Rlblt&gt; Sludy Wednesday
10 a m
Dorcas Women s F Pll owshlp
Wed nesday 1l a m (Fosten

CARMEL- Church School

9 30

am

Worship 10 4.5 a m &amp;&gt;co nd an d F ourth
~unday~ Ff'\lowshl p dinner With Sutton
third Thursday G ?.0 p m !Foster!

MORNING STAR- Church SChool9 45

am
Worshlp 10 30 a m BiblP Study
1 hursd ay 7 30 p m F'oslerl
SUTTON - Ch urch School 9 10 a m
Mornlnl!! Worship 10 45 a m tl rlit andt hlrd
Sunday s Fellowship dinner with Carmel
third Thursday 6 :1) p m IFO!terl
EAST LETART -ChurdlSc00oJ9a m
Worship 10 am second and fourth Sun
d ays UMW llrs t Tuesday 7 :1) p m
(Grace)
LETART FALLS - Worship 9 am
Church SchoollO a m !Grace)

RACINE - Church School

10 a m Wor
UMW rourth Monday at 7 )) p

ship U a m
m Men s Prayer Breakfast Wednsday 8
am (Grace)

KENO CHURCH Of CHRIST Vernon

E ldrld~C' mlnls1cr Olt vl"r S\l.t~ln Sundav
SChoal '\up! P't (';~:chl nr. ct :W .1 m tuh

Sund .. v

Veterans
Memorial Hospital
,.....,.,

716 NORTH SECOND AVE
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

HOB.'.iO!\ CHRIST!Al'i l i ~ IO N E vtl ( tl
0&lt; Inn£'\ pa~ l 1 Sun Ia' scrv c:c lJ Ul ;.~
n
('\! C'n nc s C'rVirf' 7 00 p m p, aH
m(l{'f lng W&lt; d n&lt;~ d u\ 7 00 p m
BEAR I\ AI I OW RIIX,E CHURCH OF
CHR l ST JosC'ph B Hnskl ns pasl or Blbll'
Cla ss 9 It am Mo ntn g \\m s hlpto !0 t
m EH'ntn g\Vr ., hip 6 JO p m Thu1 sdJ.'
Blbl r S!ud' tl ll p m
Z ION f'H CRf'H OF ( HRJST PomC't O\
Har rl on\ lilt Rd Hober t Put1dl mlm
te l Sl f'\lf' St •nl f'\ S S Sup1 Btll Mr f I
ov Asst Su pt SundavSchoo l9 :lOu m
Wms hlp "ln I( C' 10 lo 1m E\&lt;'nin,(!'u 01
s hlpS unda v - p m andW('dn t'Sda'w' 7 p m
ST JO H~ I UT HER A:'\ CHURC'H Pin t'
fi ovl' Th &lt;' Rf' " \\ !Hi am MuldiPSu 111 h
pa10 t or ( hur &lt;h S('l\ [('(' !t JO 1m Suhd&lt;n
Sc ho ol 11 10 a m
RRADBl;R\ ( HURCH OF CHRIST
John W1lg h1 p 1sr r Sunrl ' Sc hnol9 :UI 1
n
I ar l\ H a v n ~ S S S up! M 01 n l 1 ~
"01 s hip 111 ~~~ m
RACI~E CHUR&lt; H m THE "AZA
R F.N~ Rl'\ I lo\dD ( nmm 11 p~slm
OrtRass (' h l ffi iln fth C'Boa lof C' h1 ls
tit n I lfc Su ndt\ School 't IH m Morn

mg '' s hi p 10 In m C\ iJng('llsri&lt; "'&lt;'r
' lC&lt;' HOp m \\ r ln~d 1\ ""~'" 1{'(1 - p m

I IREilT\ CllHISTI\" &lt;Hl; RCH lx s

' " ' \\ o ()( l\ f 111 p i1 .. to• ~" !('("!; Sund 1\
10 1 m mil J&gt; m \\C'd n~d ;n • p m
D\ ES\I LI I ( OMMUNin ( HURCH
I lovd Sn1 Supt Sunda\ &amp;hool 9 ~ u
m mm nin g " I ) .,hlp ttl ;o i.l m Sunda\
1 \C'nlng o;( '1u
pm

\\ orshlp se rvice 10 Jll
Tuesday 7 30 p m

RACINE FIRST BAPTIST

Slove

Pa"tor Mik e S!A tger Sunday
School Supt Sundav School 9 lO am
Morning Y. orshlp 10 40 a m
Sunday
C'Vt' nlng worship 7 30 p m
Wedn esday
eve ning Bible s!udv 7 30 p m

BURUNGHAM C:OMMUMTY CHURCH

Bible study

REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATIER DAY SAINTS Pori
la nd Rac ine Road Mike Duhl pastor
Janice Da nner church school director
C hurc h school9 30 a m Mornlngworshlp
1U 30 a m Wednesday evening prayer
servi&lt;'fOs 7 30 p m

BETHLEHEM BAPI'IST Rev Earl

Shuler pastor Worship service 9 30 a m
Sunday SchoollO 30 a m Bible- Study a nd
prayer service Thursday 7 30 p m

CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION

AL CHURCH Kingsbury Roa d Rev
Clyde W Henderson pastor Sunday
School 9 30 am Ralph Carl Supt ~ven
lnJO: 'li.Orship - 00 p m Pray('r meeting
Wednesday 7 00 p m

LONG BOTIOM CHRISTIAN Vernon

Eldridge pastor Wallace Damewood S
S Sup! Sunday Srhool9 30 a m Worship
Service 10 30 a m

H\ SELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH
0 H Ca t paslor Sunda:vSchoola19 30a
m M01 ninR worship at 10 30 a m Sun
da y t VI nlng s£'rvl ce at .. 30 p m Thursday
St&gt;l\ iC&lt;'S &lt;I I 7 30pm

FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION al Bald

Knob Joca l t'd on Coun1v Road 31 Rev
Law r l'nc£1 Glu ('!.encamp pa st or RE'"
ROJH'I Willford ass1 pastor Pr cachln ~
Sf' 'I Cf'S Sunda, 7 30 p m Pra)&lt;'rmN'Iinll
W('(ln(.'!)d;w 7 30 p m
Cary Grlrtlth
IC'adrr Youth g:roups Sund av f'Venin~ at
6 30 p m wllh Rog£'1 and Vlol £'1 Willford
II adN s Communion servlcP first Sundav
e~r h m onth

WHITE S

Oet:~'&gt;t&gt;l

am

CHAPEL

WESLEY AN

CHURCH- CoolvUleRO RPV Phillip Rl
dcnour pastor Sunday School9 30 am
\'-Orshlp servlc(' 10 30 a m Blbi(' study
and wors hip St'r\ let' Wt'dnesda:v 7 p m

RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST

Bill Carlf:'l pas lor Sunday School9 30 a
m
Mo rni n g Worship and Co mmunion

10 30am

RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIS1 Amos

PINE GROVE HOI INESS CHURCH IS

Tillis pastor Sonny Hudsoo supt Sunday
Sc hool 9 30 a m Mornin!Z worship, 10 30
a m Sund ay l'venln!Z s&lt;'rvlre 7 00 p m
wronP.ida\1 sen Icc 7 p m WMPO pro-~:r~ m 9 a m each Sunday

SILVER RUN BAPI'IST Bill Lilli e

RENE Samu el Basye- pa s1or Sundav
Sc hool9 30a m Worshlp se rv 1Ci' 10 30a
m
Young propl £' s sf'rvlfi' 6 p m
Evangelistic srrv 1Cf'6 JOp m Wf&gt;dnesday
SPr\ ICl' 7 p m

Lau~mUt pastor. Robert C01.ar1 :lsststant p;~ l or Su nday School

Bw lind\am Rav

10 a rn \'oorshlp 7 p m Wednesday 6 p m
vouth mi"Pting Wed 7p m church su:v it1'S

mll eoffRt :125 Re' BenJ Wall s pastor
RobPr t Se~rlec; S S Sup! Sunday School
9 JO a m Morn In~ Wors hip 10 30 am
Su nda'w' evenin g: serv ice 7 30 p m Wed
nesday S('rvlct&gt; 7 30 p m

pas lor Stevt- l 11 11 1:! S S Supt Sunday
School 10 a rn Morning worslp II a m
~undav l'Vcnlng worship 7 30 p m Pray£'1
m&lt;&gt;etln~&lt;: and Blble SIUdy Wedn es day 7 10
pn
Youth m ('(-'!lng Wedn esday at 7 p m

REJOICING LIFE BAPTIS r CHURCH

- 383 N 2nd A vc Middleport Sunday
School10 am Sunday evening 7 00 p m
Mad week serv Icc Wed 7 p m
1 ANGSVILl E CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Sunday School 9 30 am Dallas JanL'Y
supt Morning v. ()rshlp 10 30 a m Sun
di.I V cvcnin~ servlcP 7 JO p m Wl'dnet
day cven\n~t service 7 30 p m

SYRACUSE CllURCH OF' THE NA

ZARENE Re'w' Glenn McMillan pastor
Mary Jani C'P la'w'endel Sunda y School
upt Sundav Sc hool 9 30 it m Morning
'li. Or ship 10 WJ am E 'ange ll!iticserv lce
6 p m Pra";oer and Pra\s('W£'d nesday 7p
m Youlh m ee:tlng 7 p m

EOEN

UNITED BRETHREN

IN

CHRIST ~!den R Blake pas tor Sundav
Sr.: ho ot 10 a m Ca ty ReN Lay lea drr
Mornln~ sermon 11 a m
Sunda'J nlghl
services Christian Endeavor 7 :KI p m
Song ser..,lce 8 p m Preaching 8 lO p m
Mid week pra" er meetlnfil \\edn esdav 7

pm

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN Rog
er Watson pastor Crenson Pratt Sunday
School Supt Morning Worsh lp 9 30 a m
Sunday School 10 30 a m F venlng ser

vtce 7 JOpm
MT UN ION BAPTIST Donald Shue

past or Joe Sayre Sunday School SUpt
Sunday &amp;hool 9 45 am E'w'enlng "' or
ship 6 30 p m Prayer Meeting 6 30 p m
Wednesday

TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF

CHRIST Dave Prenllce mini ster Oeryl
We ll s Supt Ctn.rrch School 9 a m Wnr
sh~ Service 9 45 p m

CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA

RENE

Rev Herbert Grate paator
Frank Rltne supt Sunday School9 30 a
m Worship service 11 a m and 7 p m
Sunday Wednt'lday 7 p m Prayer~~

lnJ.
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH David Bell p011or Robert E

Barton Dirfi'tor of Christian Education
Strve Eblin Alliltant Sunday School9 JO
am Morning worship 10:30 a m Teens

inAc-tion 6pm Evenlna:Worthlp 700p
m Wednelday evenlna prayer and Bible
study 7 00 p m Choir practice Thunday

7pm

DEXTER CHUROI OF CHRIST

Charln Rutsell Sr mini ster ftlck Ma
~'$miter .su~M Suntlay SchHJ ' 31 a m

RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA

MASDN CHURCH OF CHRIST Miller

S1 M ason W Va Sunday Bibl e Studv 10
am Wot ship 11 a m and 7 p m Wf'dn ('S
d ty BlbiC' St ud~ 'w'ocal music 7 p m

Ll BERTY ASSEMBLY OF' GOD Dud
dlnJ! l a n(' Masoo W Va J N Tha ck('f

pas! or Evenln~&lt;: ~Service 7 30 p m Wo
me-n s Mlnls1ry Thursday 9 30 am
Wt'dnesday Prayer and Bible Study 7 15

pm

I

ROWERS lOR EVERY OCUSION

(614)9412-2039 or
(1114)992-5721
106 Butternut Ave Pomeroy Oh

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES
POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677
ltll Qu1&lt;kel and Ruth
SYRACcSE FIR" C'IIURCHOF GOD
nm Pcn1r cosra 1 VI n o;htp $(" 'IC't:' Sunda\
10 am Sund a\ Srhool 11 a m f,C'nln~
wot ~ hl p SC'n lc('
no p m \-\ ronesda\
pttn C'l mf'f'l nR fill p m

MT

RRHHRE"

H E:RMO~ U ~ IT ED
I ~ C HRI ST CH URCH l ocu C'd tn Texa s
Com mur ' '
fl C 1 Rt tt" Rc
Holx' 1

Sa nd l'l" pt l o

)('(! HOI!f'l Ia' ll"adrt
Ed Roush Sunct t\ School Sup! Sun d n
Scho I q lO 1 m mornin g "o s htp and
ch ald C'!l " t hu1 t h 111 YJ 1m
o cnln g
pr«' tchl nc &lt;'" tr t 1 1 .. 1 tn N' Su nd ""
• iO p m Sp1'( I tl "£'1\ ICI f Ullh Sund
C\.C'n ln g
«t p m \\ dn f'Sd ' P a v~
MC'c ri ng Rl bl f' s ud\ nd You h F c li O\\
s hip
:\1'1 p m

l

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
l~ITED METHODIST CHURCH
NORTHEAST CLUSTER

B04 W Matn

9911318 Pomeroy

Pome,og Flowet Shop

-w:!!':-s.r-

E

I(•

of Columbus 0

'

II! E Momonal Dr
992 2104

Pomeroy

991 l9SS

Nahonw1delns Co a ' l

-o

ru

Pre5crtpttons

m

216 S Second

Pomeroy

~~~~

1

352 EAST MAIN
POMEROY OHIO 45769
614 1 992 2644

Homehle S•w•

John F Fultz Mgr
Ph 9'111101

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

FRANCIS FLORIST

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

TEAFORD REALTY

HURnl

OF

&lt; DD Of PROPHECY

l oc tlf'd nnO I "'hl1t R ld OI Ht g h\\1\
1ti0 P 11 Hl"n son ~ ~ 1 Su nd 1\ SCht J 10
am ('lao;.,"' f Ill J..-:t"' lunl n \ hu C'h 11
tm
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mAdu lt
Cho pr 1c ll n 1-1m Sundon ' oung Pr
pi&lt; s C' h hi m ( hu ch 1n d Adull Rlhll
Stud\ \\ C'dn "" " 1 11
iO p m

HOP E RI\PT ISf &lt; H \P E I dl C n t
S! Mldd\l"plll \ ffil 1tf'ft 1th Sou th rn
Rapllsl \ on\f'nll n n 'ill Rn n S M
nis tC' Sun(ft \ Sc h 1 1!1 1 n
M01 mn g
"'or!&lt;: hip 11 1 n I ' f"nlng " n o;h p 7 p m
WPrln f'Srl n
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~;fuel\
and
pr :nC'I m•'CIIn g

pm

BRADFORD&lt; Hl; Rl HOF CIIR 1ST Sl
Rt 12:.f an I f'n H.d :. Sen SIN Ill pu~,;
lot Wi lli am \mbr-1 IZ&lt;'l ~,; up S un Ia\
Sc hoo l !J tO m mnrnmg" 1 ship 10 lO
m C\f'nlng \ Ot o;hp I p m WrdnC'!'
dl\ v.cr~hip
lfl p m
PAl I

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I C IH J::KA\ (H L H.Ci~
HIS!t,niS s P
rh R
W111t 1m Ml hilt~ " 111
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M ss X 1 n 1n11 H1 1 n f' nl l"'siOns nn f'
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11 m Suntla\
\UIOR,HAJihl
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I nl(&gt;"i F K1 ("' 'I' p 1s1m
Su ndl\ men ng \\ t shlp 101m I::H n
In ~ st !'\ lc&lt;
p m \\1 dnt,..da' 1 o, nine
" rshlp • p m \ II tl n Thu ., I \ ti ~ p
m
MORSF: ( H \ I J.l ( HCHCH 01\oid
(u•fman p:J
t S1 nell\ Sc hnnl 111 1m
" or ship &lt; ' '&lt; 11
m Sund ' n g ht
1shlp s£'1\ r
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Mld"N"k
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WF.SI I \ A~
f!IRI I
IIOII NESS
CHURCH IMIIdlqJo I ln1 1 PNu1St
RC'v l v 1n M\r s p I t
n ngC&gt;t Manl("\o
S Sund 1 SC' hnoi Sup1 S un In Sc ho I
1 «l t m Mn1 nln g \\n .. hlp Ill ~~ ... m
J. ' C'ning \\ m o; h p
VI p m WC&gt;dnl':-ida\
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(mn
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LJ\ INf

WORD ( HESTEH ( HURlH
Of COD-fllbiiTSppnc£"1 IKls l o Su n
da' Sc'h()OI !-1 I 1 m Mor n1n g o;f'f\. lel'
UJ f!On m ~undl\ t f'n n~s('r\ Cl7 Ollp
m Md\\ I'C'kp 1\ I SI'I lCtWedn ~dt v
1pm
MT ()J IV F. Fl: ll flOSPEI C'OM:&gt;l UN
11 Y CHURCH I a ' 1 n(\' Ru sh pa!&lt;:t o
Ma:\ f' olmrt Sr S s Supt ~und 1\ Sc hool
9 to 1m Suml ' l Vl lng sc ~ iC{' 7 10
n
Wcdr p.-;d 1\ 1 ' t nin~ Rlblt s!udv nd
p1a\sC&gt; ""n kf' • 1'1 p m

UN IrED FAITH&lt; HUR( H R "on Po

mcrov By P 1ss Rf'\ D&lt;n ld Wl s('man Sr
pa!itor Me lv in Dri.lkC' S s Supf Su ndav

~nn

fo•

Scho ol 9 10:.1 m Mo1nlng Wors hip 10 W
Eve n ng Wor ship
30 p m Wf:'dnesdav

P

a\l'l

&amp;&gt; \I cc 7 30p m

FAITH BAPTIS1 fllURCH R ll1 ood

S1 Mason Su nda\ Sc hoollO i'l n Morn
Jng " ors hip 11 1 m
Ev~?nin~ Sl! l vice 6 p
m P ravc-1 mN lng and B1blt Studv Wed
ncsdav 7 p m
FORESI 11l J ~ BAP'TIS1 RN N\l r
Borden pa~to C01 H:• lius Bunch ~ upt
Su nday School 9 10 1 m
Se co nd a nd
fourlh Sun ltv .. uoJshlp Hnlcc 2 30 p
m
M1 MORI AH BAPTIST Fou th and
M nn St Muldl{'J)ot! RC'v ( tX' I C1alg
J
pa" 0 1 M1 s E1' n Baumg trdnc
Su nd av School Supt Sunda \ Scho 19 10 ,
m Wo • s h1 p Sc1v i('(' 10 4~ a m

SUCCESS ROAD ("Hl; RCH01 CHRIST
- J osf'p h R Hoskin s &lt;'Vang£'11~ 1 Sundav
Bible Studv Q a m Wm sh p 10 ~ m S un
dav tV{'ning SCJV1('{' n p m Wcdu:"" da\
('\ l'nlng srr vlcC'

pn

PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY R&gt;rln o

Rt 124 Wllltam Hob 1ck pa .,lm Sunda~
School 10 am 'iunda' f''&gt;('ning st 'V IC&lt;'p m W&lt;'dn csd tV N f"n n~ s('1v n p m
( ARPE: NTE R RA PT IS I Do 1 ChC' 1diC'
Supt Sundav Sc hool Cl 30 &lt;-1 m Mor nm ,e\\ or.s hlp10 \I} am P1 av0 s l \ICc a lt e-rn
al&lt;' Sunda\ "
THE C'HUfl&lt; H OF JESUS CHR!~T
APOSTOL IC FAITH - Ne" Llm i.l Rd
ncxl to Joort MPig!o Pa1 k Rut lan d Robe 1
Rl cnar ds pI"' o Sen IC&lt;"S a! 7 p m on
Wc-dn PS dav s 1n I Sundav s.

HAn RISOWII LE HOli NESS CHAP

TE R of tht"' W(',.l{'\ an Holtn f'Ss lhurch
RN David h r rf'll pasto Hf'lll 'w' Eblin
Sunrl1 v Sehoul Sup! Sund tv Sr ho()l 10 1
m
Mor ning \\-m shi p 11 u m
E ("nln g
!Ol''V iCf'7 \Opm \\ ( dn ~dtiVCVf nin gs('
vier 7 Wpm

STIVERSV!It E WORD OF FAITH

&lt;.a \ Hoh('l p Js or ~undn sr-v lccs9 30
a m a nd '"p m Mld" crk sC&gt;IVi CC'- JOp
m Thu sdav

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL Third
Ave Rev ClatkBakE'f' pastor Carl Nol
llnRham Sunday School Supt Sunday
School 10 a m "II h c la s ses fot all ag:es
EvE" nl ng se-rv1Cf'S at 6 p m We dn esday Bl
bit' stud y at 7 30 p m Youth S('rvtc&lt;'s Frl
dav at 7 30 p m

ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP I28 M1ll Sl

Mlddlepo r l Brothrr C hu ck Mc Phers on
pas tor Sundav School 10 a m Sundav
E'V&lt;'nln~ SN\ IcC's al 7 p m a nd W(&gt;(tn('Sday
services at 7 p m
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST KPnn rth Smith
pas lor Sundav Sc hool 9 30 a m c hu rch
se1vice 7 30 p m ~ outh fellowship G 30 p
m Biblf' sludy Thursday 7 30 p m

FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE 33045

Hil a nd Road Pomerov Tom Kelly pas
tor Dannv Lam1X"11 S S Supt Sunday
mo rning se• vh:f' a110 am Sundav even
In~ service 7 30 p m T ues d ay and Thu rs
day Servlet&gt;s al 7 30 p m

NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA

ZARENE Rf'v Gl endo n Stroud pastor
Sunday Sc hool9 30 a m Worshipser VICf&gt;
10 30 am Youth s£'rvice Sundav 6 1~ p
m Sundav rv&lt;'nln JZ servlcf' 7 OOp m Wed
nl'5day Pt ayf'r Mrl"' m11: and Blbl£' Stud\.
7 OOpm

NEASE SET1 LEMENT ('HURCH Sun

dav aftrrnoon S&lt;'r, lcf's at 2 10 Thursclav
('H n l n~ srr vkcs at 7 :II
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH M ason W
Vn Pas101 Bil1 Murphv Sundav S&lt; hoot 10
a m Sunday C&gt;vl'nln~ 7 30 p m Prav('r
m ('{'lin ~ and Bl bl£'sludv " ('dn e;da y 7 30
p m EvNvon(' welromf

RU rLA ND FREE WILL BAPTIST Sa

tern Sl R&lt;'v Paul T ay lor pa s ! or Sunday
Sc hool 10 a m Sundav ('venlng 7 00 p m
Wf'dn C'S day ('V('n ng p r&lt;l\ t' r mrt'lln~ 7 00

pm
SOUTH BETHEl NEW TESTAM ENT

CHURCH Sllvl'r Rldg!' Ou an&lt;' Svden
st ickt&gt;r pastor Su ndav School 9 a m
Worship S&lt;&gt;r\ lc&lt;' 10 ~ m Sunduv cvrnln~
s('n ic{' 7 00 p m Wed n rsda' nlJ!'h Ribl&lt;'
study 7 OOp m

HAR1TORD ( HURC H OF' ( HRI"T IN
CHRISTIAf'l; UN I ON Hartford Y. \a
Re\ Oa\ ld McManl~ pa~ tor Ch urt'h
School ~ «t a m s unda' morning scr
\I('(' II &lt;l m Sunda\ f"vf"nln~ SE'rvlct'
- iO ll m \\ ednPsda' pra}'f'r mE'et\n ~ 7 Ml

Sermonette

pm

F \IH\1 E \-\ I:UBI E (HUR(H l t:'tafl
\\ Va HI 1 lame!! LewJo; p&lt;-t~lo r \\ or
ship ~rvlres !I lfl a m !'iunda\ Schoolll
am E\enln~wo•ship"' !Opm Tu{sda\
C'OIIt$tl' pra\if't mC&gt;ellng and BlblP. Slud\1 lfl am V.o~hlp senlcr \\ ednesda\

• lflpm

OUfl ~A VI OUR LUTilERAN CHURCH

\\ a! nul and He nry Sts Rav('nswood \\
Va Tht&gt; RE'V Ct&gt;ollle C Weirick put I'll'
Sunday SChool !t lOa m Sundav wor~hlp

llam

CAL\ARYBIBI ECHU RCH lor.-ate don
Pomerov Pike Coun1y Road 25 nN r Flat
woods Rev Blackwood pBStcr Se rvices
onSundayallO:JOa m and7 JOpm with
Sunday SC'hool9 :\Oa m Bi bi~Stud y Wed
neMia) - 30 p m

FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST Sl Rl IlK Anllqully Rev
Fra nklin Dlckf"fts pa~ l or Sunda y mom
in g JO a m Sunday evening 7 :lO p m
Thumda:v eve-ning., l:l p m

MIDDLEPOR1 INDEPENDENT HOLI
NESS CHURCH Inc 7~ P•arl St Re&lt;

Ivan My~ra acting pastor Roal'I'Manley

Sr

Sunday School Superintendent Sun

day School

9 30

a m MomlnJ worship

10 30 am fVf'nina wonhlp 7 30 p m
Wednesday evening Bible' study pra:veor
and pralll' servl« 7 30 p m

CHURCH OF JESUS OIRIST APOS
TOLIC- VanZandt and Wart! Rd Elder
James Miller pastor Sunday School
10 30a m Wonlllp5erYice Sunday 7 :tO
pm

Bible Study Wednesday 7 30p m

CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL, Horr!
soovllle Road Rev Dewey King pastor
CllniCII Faulk Sunday School SUpt SUn
day Schoo19 30a m momlna: worshlp.ll
a m Sunday rvenlna: ~rvl~ 7 30 p m
Prav~r M~~ ln&amp;

I

Wedne&gt;llllay 7 30., m

EAT BREAD NOT CAKE
Eve-r stop to think about what you need each and

l'\P

v d tV? 1he most

common of alllhlngs are used dally - a bed sleep "a e1 for drinking
cooking and washing. bread and milk clothes and of course rellgton
Every day we need God and ourfallh and religion We ma y no I ad mil 11
but almost every day we need the thlnp I just listed Thmgs thalar e as
common as an old shoe or favorite sweater
I read In a 30 year old Sunshine Magazine a short axiom It wenl hkt
this Religion Is meanl to be bread for dally use nol cake far Spt'Cial
occasions So much truth In justa few words We n•cd God In our llvt:&gt;S
every day We need our religion to show us how to beh ave and Inter acl
with others I know cake is KOOd and Is desirable for 95 pt'r cenl or all
mankind I also know I can go days or week~ wllh oul one bite of cakt 1
do need sleep water food shelter on a day to day bas Is
Look at your Ule Is religion a dally event In your way of life' Is
religion only tor special occasions In your lite• Qur iallh neejls to be 1
part of us day by day If we lum to God only on special occas ions such as
Euler Christmas Sundays and Good Friday th~n we consider our
religion cake to be usm only on special occasstons Ever notice a

blrtllday going away party Graduation weddln~s and other ~pt'Cial
days, we seem to always have a cake There Is nothing wrong wilh
having cake but whal about our ev~ day life Too much cake will
make uulck but bread every day neuer goes oul of style II feeds us and
strenr.hens us as cake never can
Rei Ilion should be very Important to us everydav We need to ad mil
that reiiJilon Is truely bread lor dally use Cake Is good lor Spt'Cial
"""uaions but religiOn Is Mt cake religiOn Is bread and meal to be
taken dally to oerve us well Turn your religion from cake lo bread and
use II every day. Then see how strong you will be - PMtor William
MlddJMwarllt, Melp County L•lher ana.
•

FDA expands use of experimental.
Parkinson's Disease treatment drug
•

1"his Message and Church Directory Sponsored By The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.
Crow s Fam1ly Restaurant

The Dally SentJnei-Page-7

Pomeroy- Middleport, Oh10

QUILT PROJECT- The Names project QuUt
a colorful patchwork of over 4 000 three by six foot
Individual quilts made by friends and family of
those who have died of AIDS Is on display at

Boston s Park Plaza Castle The quilt is on a
20-dty tour of the United States and represents 50
states and seven countries (UP I)

WASHINGTON (UP!)- More
of the 30 000 Americans with
severe Parkinson s disease naw
will be allowed to take an
ex~rlmen tal drug that could cut
the dose and side effects of
treatment for their progressive
nerve debilitation
The Food and Drug Adm lnls
tratlon announced Thursday that
while final approval Is not
granted yet doclors notlnvolved
In clinical trials for selegllene
can prescribe It to patients who
have hail difficulty with standard
treatment
Selegllene Is used In comblna
tlon with L dopa the traditional
medication used to treat Parkin
son s The drug s manufacturer
found In preliminary tests on
several hundred patients that
doctors were able to reduce by as
much as 30 percent the dose of
L dopa needed to relieve
symptoms
This Is lmportan t because
L dopa loses effectiveness In
patients over time forcing them
to take larger doses that cause
Increasingly severe side effects
such as nausea Involuntary
bodily movements flushing and
palpitations the FDA noted
Selegilene Is distributed by
Samerset Pharmaceuticals Inc
of Danville N J and the special

provision for dlstrlbu lion of
promising drugs to desperatel y
Ill patients before final FDA
approval Is permitted by regula
!Ions adopted last year Selegl
lene Is the fifth drug to win the
exemption
As many as 30 000 patien ts In
the United States with severe
Parkinson s dlsea$e may benefit
from this comb ined treatmeni
and be provided early access to a
said
promising new therapy
FDA Com m issio ner Frank
Young
Selegllene, which will be sold
with the trade name Eldepryl
also Is known as an orphan
drug
The FDA ex pla !ned
'This status provides the span
sor of drugs for rare diseases
with tax and other financial
incentives designed to encourage
their development efforts
The drug already has been
approved In several foreign
countries Including the United
Kingdom which approved h In
1982 an FDA spokesma n said
The key feature of Parkinson s
disease first descr ibed In 1817 by
British physician James Parkin
so n Is the dea th of a group of
ner ve cells tha t produce the
chemical dopamine Without
which movement becomes
awkward
L dopa Is co nverted In the

brain to dopamme but al so
carries side effecl s a nd as It
loses effectiveness over tim~
such symptoms progress Seleg~
lene works by blocking enzymei'
m the body that brea k dow ~
dopamine
•

•
'••

Divorces sought ••
•

Divorce act 10ns have been !Ilea
m Meigs Count) Common Pleat
Court by Wayne Wesley Upton1
Reedsville aga msl Ellzabelti
Luc1lle Upton Reedsville and b,t
Na ncy K Gillispie Long Bot tam.
against Robert H Gillispie Lo n~
Bottom

-,

Filing for dlssolullon s of ma r•
rcage are Barbara Jo Stewarl 1
Langsville and Robert Tham a ~
Stewart Guysville Patnc1a E•
Hoffm an Pome1 ov and Bruce
W Hoffman Pomeroy Ja l'l et
Sue Felty Racine and H F,
Fetty Jr Gallipo lis Glenn
Tuttle Racine a nd Ola Mar:
garel Tu t tie Racine

w:

l

I

Granted a dissolu tiOn werf!
Wilham M Baumgardner ana
Florence A Bau mgardn er Flor~
ence Baumgardner was restorect
by lh e court to her pr1or name(
Swick

Pentagon probers serve subpoenas in 'widespread' scandal
\\ASHINGTON !UP]) - A
central figure m the still
e merg mg Pentagon br ibery
scandal funneled classi fi ed or
secret de fen se da ta lo the
McDannel I Douglas Corp to hel p
the company sell 1ts F 18 and
advanced tact lea l fight er planes
a federal sea rch warra nt alleges
The accusallons agamst Mel
vvn Paisley a former Navy
procurement ch1ef now back In
the private sector as a consul
tant help to Illustrate the alleged
conspiracy thai already IS brmg
mg new outcries for reform
The allegations were conta med
m the fir st publicly released
afhdav1t In the sweepmg Justice
Department mvesugat iO n of de
fe nse procurement fraud
It s btg II s widesprea d It s
almost a way of life one law
enforcement source said Thurs
day of the scandal mvolvmg
bribes for mslde1 contract mfor
mat10n that has riveted attention
m the nations capital
Officia ls speakmg an lhe condl
!Ion of anonym1ty sa id the
Just1ce De partment act mg after

lelephone wiretaps of Industry
co nsultants served more than
250 subpoenas and 38 search
warrants on defense contractors
and md1vlduals this week m the
nationwide Inves tigation
The probe has Implicated as
many as 15 military contractors
fi ve Defense Department offi
c1als and more than a half-dozen
private consultants alleged to
have served as middlemen Saur
ces sa1d 1t also has led lnvestlga
tors to probe the act ivlt1es of
congressional offices that they
re fused to 1denufy
Compames under lnvestlga
twn mclude McDonnell Douglas
the Northrop Corp United Tech
nolog1es Corp the Loral Corp
Litton Industries and Teledyne
NBC News reported Thursday
that It had access to records
md1cat1ng nearly 4 BOO conversa
twns were monllored m 290 days
of court authorized wiretaps and
671 of the calls were deemed
mcrun Ina t lng
Attorney General Edw1n
Meese told reporters at the
Just1ce Departmenl he was hope

ful all 1nd1ctments In the case
will be completed within the
nex t 30 to 90 days
NBC reported that the mves tl
gallon was ordered not by Meese
but by Assistant Attorney Gen
eral William Weld whose reslg
natiOn March 29 as dlrectoraf the
department s criminal division
was reportedly prompted by
dissatisfaction with the ethical
and legal cloud surrounding h1s
boss
The warrant alleging some of
Paisley s activities was Issued In
federal courl In St Louis clear
lng the way for a search of the
offices of McDonnell \1 Ice Pres l
dent Thomas Gunn Io whom It
said Paisley reported FBI
agents searched slmullaneously
lhrough Paisleys offices m Wa
shlngton and McLean Va
According to the warrant after
leaving the government a year
ago Paisley fed Gunn classified
or secret Pentagon data affect
lng the sale of Its FA 18 fighter
bomber to foreign governments
and on the competing F 16
manufactured by General Dy

namics Corp
The warrant sought all docu
ments relating to Paisleys ef
forts to steer' the Navy s $35
billion advanced tactical flghler
to McDonnell Douglas While
with the Navy Paisley was
described as a close confidant of
Secretary John Lehman
McDonnell Douglas In part
nership with General Dynamics
won the long term contract to
build 500 of the ATA light
bombers In December over a
competing joint venture proposal
from the Grumman Corp and
Northrop Corp
Paisley provided McDonnell
Douglas substantial informa
tlon obtamed from government
officials which has been class!
fled and or confidential or not
avatlable to the contracting
public the warrant alleged
McDonnell Douglas Issued a
s tatement In St Louis Thursday
pledging to cooperate with the
Inquiry and stating We are not
aware of any Improper requests
by the company to Mr PaIsley or
any 1mproper activities by Mr

.'

ANNOUNCING SWEEP - Attorney General Edwin Meese sald
that a "number of subpoenas' have been served In the growli!B'
Pentagon fraud case Meese met with reporters outside the Jusdce
Department In an Impromptu sidewalk news conference (UP I)
I

'

Paisley on behalf of the
company
Gunn. said In hi s own state
ment I can state unequivocally
that my work In beha lf of

McDonnell Douglas has been
thoroughly proper and legal Any
assertions or a llegations to the
contrary are false

Senate passes sweeping wel~~"'.!!!2~...!!ill
WASHINGTON iUPil - The
Senate s overwhelming approval
far the most sweepmg re form of
the 53 year old welfal system
sends a m essage to President
Reagan tha t there may be
momentum to 0 , ernde his threa
tened veto
The news Is that by a vote of
93 3 the us Senate voted to
replace the AFDC program wllh
a child support job placement
program
declared a JUbilant
Sen Daniel Moynihan D N Y
after the leglslallon that he
sponsored was endorsed by h1s
colleagues Thursday e\ enlng
It Is the most Important
legislat iOn of lis time the fi rst
legis lation of Its kind since lhe
welfare syslem was es tablished
m the 1930s Moynihan said 11
redefines the pu rpose of our
public assistance PI ogram
We ve had In the pas t an
Income mainte nanc e progra m

e

with a mild work requirement
The major thrust of the $2 8
billion legislation Is to emphasize
parental responsibility through
strengthened child support laws
and required education training
and jobs prog rams with tough
standards for work and partie!
patlon It focuses on poor people
with long term dependence upon
pubhc assistance
Voting against the bill were
Republican Sens Jesse He lms of
North Carolina and Gordon
Humphrey a! New Hampshire
and Sen William Proxmire
D W1s
A While House spokeswoman
said no comment would be made
until the measurr;&gt; was reviewed
The president threatened a week
ago to veto the bill as then written
because of Its cost Its expansion
of the existing system and Its
fa1lure In his eyes ta make
recipients
actually work 1f

they re able to do so
The Senate however mav
have placated Reagan by rcfu s
lng on a surprise 54 4I vote
before fmal passage to kill a
proposal by Republican leader
Robert Dole of Kansa s In sertin g
tougher work demands Int o I he
legislation
Dole said his successful
amendment would make the
measure mare altractlve to
Reagan and the broad Republl
can support for the final vote
suggested Reagan would fall In
any vela effort now because Ihe
tally far exceeds the two thirds
majority necessary to override
such presidential action
Moynihan said Sen William
Armstrong R Colo promised he
would talk with administration
afflclals Thursday night and
urge them to be positive about
the bill Moynihan stressed A
strong message wa s sent to the

W~it~ Hou~lt~hth~ 3 3 voted
n ecem r e ouse v~
230194 forha S7f: billion

wei:::
fe

measure tfiat others ~~re
ate
ous ben~ tsh bl~n
e e~ a
vers10 ~ ot
sf now go 0
House enate con ere~c~ ic~m
mlttee to be comprom se n a
fin~ I gack:g~ t
the
n er 1 e ena e measure m
current Work Incentive progra
would glved ~ 10s':tt~~bt 0 ~fr
tunltles an
s 1c
s ra n ng
pr~f;;::wauld have to possess at

°

least two of three componenls
paying part of employment costs
to companies willing to hire
welfare recipients training and
assisting welfare clients In subse

~~~=~:sj~~ ~eoa:~~~;~~:~~~!;~~
through community projects
Mandatory participation rates
would be required until 1994
beginning at 10 percent In fiscal

Jackson defends Rowan's shooting
WASHINGTON (UP! ) -Pre
sldentlal candidate Jesse Jack
son called syndicated columnist
Carl Rowans shooting of a white
teenager perfectly acceptable
behavior as ques tions of racism
surfaced In the Incident
Rowan who Is black used an
unregistered p1stol to shoo! a
teenager during lhe early morn
lng hours In the back ya1 d of the
wrller s home In upper Northw
es t \\ ashlngton pollee said
Ben Smith 18 of surburan
Chevy Chase Md was treated
and released at Georgetown
University Hospital allier the
shooting early Tuesday and no
charges of unlawful entry have
been pressed against him or his
female companion Launa Bach
man 19 who also Is white
Jackson defend ~d Rowan s
action
I think a man defending the
privacy of his back yard at 2 a m
Is perfectly acceplable behav
lor Jackson told The Washing
ton Post Anyone who crawls
over an 8 foot fence at 2 a m and
then does not harken to an appeal
to leave Is a threat
You can t be crossing some
t:~ne
s fence at 2 a m swimming
1

and be considered as one having
socially acceptable behavior
The civil right s leaders com
ments came during a ljuestlon
and answer session with repor
ters and editors of the Post and
were published lodav
The newspaper also reported
that Jackson and other black
leaders have suggested reaction
to the case might have been
different had the Intruders been
black Instead of white
Calvin Rolark a community
activist In Washington told the
Post
In much of the black
community the reaction Is one of
anger and disgust
Jackson echoed the sentiment,
saying that If the trespllssers had
come from any of the city s
poorer black neighborhoods the
reaction may have been
different
"See the fact Is that If those
kIds had been f~om over here on
U Street the reaction probably
would have been different The
boy carries with him the pre
sumptlon of Innocence If that
had been four kids from over
here on U Street It would have
been the presumption of guilt and
danger Jack~on said

Rowan who has been a
staunch supporter of gun control
planned to discuss the shooting
during a nationally lelevlsed talk
show this weekend The show
Inside Washington was to be
taped this afternoon said the
program s executive producer
Carls a public figure and he s
not Into not speaking up said
producer Jim Snyder When I
called him I said I assume
you re going to be willing lo
discuss this and he said Oh
yes I m writing a column right
now
The program airs Saturday
Rowan 62 maintains the tres
passers were skinny dipping In
his outdoor swimming pool and
Jacuzzi ' smoking pot and drink
lng beer He complained such
nighttime Intrusions were too
many to count despite the fence
around his yard
Rowan said the teenager con
fronted him and Insisted that he
was coming In I said You d
better freeze because I have a
gun He said, Aw, hell I m
coming ln 1 He lunged for me
and lflred a warning shot h~ttlng
him In the hand
Smith said of the lncldenl l

was just In my underwear
soaking wet I never spoke to
him He had no rlghl to shoot
me

22 percen t In 1994
If a state failed lo meel I he
required percentage In fiscal
1991 to 1994 Its federal matching
rate for the JOBS progra m would
decllneto50percent Part of such
penalties could be waived under
certain conditions
Dole s amendment set min
Imum work standards for 50
percent of the Intact families
Involved In the federal Unem
played Program by 1994 mean
lng that al leas I one parenl would
have to work a minimum of 16
hours a week In community
service under his provision
Only 27 stales currently partie
Ipate In the Unemployed Program offered as part of the Aid
to Families with Dependent
Children The bill would mandate
participation by all states
Also a welfare recipient would
have to accept a job If the state
assured that the Individuals
family would experience no net
loss of cash income
The legislation would subsidize
child care for nine months and
would provide Medicaid cover
age for a minimum of six months
to clients moving from welfare to
employment and self
sufficiency This would e~lre at

Police aiTest 48
during past month
Fifty-eight arrests were made
by the Middleport Pollee Depart
ment during May Chief of Pollee
Sid Ll t tie rep oris
The department Investigated
12 accidents and vehicles of the
department were driven 5 159
mUes during the month Mer
chant pollee collections totaled
$34 while parking meter collec
!Ions amounted to $745 91 There
were 360 parking tickets writ ten
during the month

EMS has two calls
Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services reports two
calls Wednesday, Racine at 1 13
p m to Front St for Marie
Michaels to Veterans Memorial
Hospital Racine at 8 15 p m to
Dewitt s Run for Louis McM~r
ray who was dead on arrival

The bill had proposed to
generate revenue by reduct~
the tax credit for employment
related child care expenses but
Sen Bill Bradley D N J wdn
suppor t for his amendment tc
protect thai credit and Ins lead to
phase out the entertainment and
meals deduct Ions of high Income
persons The phase out woul&lt;;l
begin al mcomes of $360 000 and
be eliminated at $440 000
Wel(are reform has been on
Ihe Senate s agenda for the las&lt;
two decades sa id Sen Lloyd
Bentsen D Texas chairman of
the Finance Committee Now
we have an opportunity to move
beyond d ebate and lo set an
entirely new dhecllon for the
outdated and lneffec!lve system
we have tod ay

r;:::::::::::::·::::::::::::;
REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS

e
11

Tn Aend a heautllullv

d"lr;ned t•neral
~trran!Jement

just

Clll1

,

or vbll

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
In

I

r 11 :'i 1 I I

.
,
.. ,

PI! 99!-._2039 or •n-5721

"

'

Thlt W11k't Speeltlt
FRIDAY I JUNE 17
POlK PAmE SANDWICH PLAnER....... •• .

"
•• '2 49 ::
•

Our Geldtn D111p friod ,.,. Patlio on a llel St111my lun S.rvod wtth Hot Gol
.,. frm fnts and Y- Choi&lt;t ef H-de Cole Slow Ma1aron1 Salad, Po , ,
lalo Salad, or hlto4 IIIIM
"

':.

SUNDAYI JUNE 19
"IIING DAD 1111 FOI A Fa SUIIIDAEI"

'Ml YOU CAN EAT' FAMIY STYLE CIICIIEN DINNER ........ '4.39 ·

Taoty "-coaktd Clic.tn IAll Y1111 C• lit), StnH wtth Mashed Potatoes &amp;
Hamt1nd1 Gra•.J; Hanotcooktd Grttn lltam with Mushreams a Hollutlort41
1oM or llomtma lilcult (with H':lllllllllaxwtll H-• Cofftt or Decaf-•
ftl•ltd, loth frttllly lrtwtd (AS
Dri,. or Hot TM May It S.llllltuttdl ,

HOURS Monday thru Saturday 9 A M to 9 P M , '
Sunday 10 A M to 9 P M
•

, Z l!\rrhauglfs of C!t~r.atrr e ·:
IEnAIIANT
lOIII 7

tiS·IIU

c•ma ••

WE OIVE SENIOII CITIZENI 10" DISCOUNT

~·------------------~ ·

�Page 8 The Daily Sentinel'

THE BEST
HOUSECLEANEit;

Is A

Public Notice

9

.-~·

-----=--c:-::-

4 ..

The United States Envt·
ronment Protection Agency
(E PAI sets drtnktng water
standard and has deter·
mmed that lead •s a health
co n cern at ce rtam levels of
e"pos ure. There as currently

a standard of 0 050 pans
per million (ppm} Based on

new health mformation,
EPA ts likely to lower thes
standa rd segnafecantly
Part of the purpose of thts
nottce es to tnform you of the
potenttal adverse health ef·
feels of lead . This ts being
done e&lt;Jen though your wa
ter mav not be m v•olatton of
the c urrent standard .

EPA and others are con
earned about lead '" dnnk ·
ing wate r Too much lead m

househo ld, such as showermg or bathmg. flushing toilets. or doing laundry wnh
cold water, flushmg the
p1pes may take 5 to 30 seconds. 1f nol flushmg the
p1pes could take at long as
several minutes. Each household should check the
plumbing to see if lead
p1pes. solder. or flux have
been used 1n the plumbmg
that pro\lidel tap water, and
to ensure that new plumbmg
repa~rs

wdl uselead-freema·

tenals
For add111onal1nformatlon
you may contact the water
office durtng off1ce hours
and obtain a free booklet on
lf!:ed and Your Drinking Wa ter
.
(6 1 17. (7118 . (8118

the human body cause sen

Public Notice

ous damage to the bram,

ktdnevs

nervous

system,

and red blood ce lls The
greatest rrsk even wtth short

te rm exposure. IS to young
c h ildre n and pregnant wo·
men
" Lead levels m your dnnk
mg water are hkely to be ht·
ghest, 1f your home or water
system has lead p1pes. or 1f
your home has copper p1pes
With lead solder , and 1f the
home IS ~ss than five years
old or 1f you have soft or
ac1dic water, or 1f water sits
m the p1pes several hours ''
The only way to be sure of
the amount of lead in the
supphed water is to have the
water tested by a competent
laboratory
Use only the cold water
f&amp;tucet for dnnk1ng and for
use tn cooking or preparing
baby formula. and to run the
water until1t gets as cold as
1t IS going to get before each
use If there has recently
beery ma1or water use 1n a

2

•

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On June 13, 1988, •n tho
Meigs County Probate Court,
Case No 25881 . M Walter

Jordan, Dwaine A Jordan,
and Melva Faye Crabtree c / o M Waher Jordan. 53
Washmgton Ave.,

Albany,

Oh1o 46710 was appo~ntod
Co-Executors of the •tate of
Elizoboth
R Jordan, deceased, late of 27100 Ruther·
lord Road, Rt 3, Albany,
Ohoo 45710
Robert E Buck.
Probate Judge
Lena K Nesselroad. Clerk
16) 17. 24: (1 I etc

Business
Services
lmm MOVIES &amp; SliDES to
YHS TAPE

Let us 'CI!Ytrt those old Movits
&amp; Slidtl ovtr to easy VHS.

CALl AMY CARTER
or 101'! ElECTRONICS

Helen Milhoan
17, 1987

~om e.

Sadly m1ssed by
Brothers. Sisters.
Nieces &amp; Nephews

$23 900 00
NEW LISTING - Soulhern
School OIStnct - Really mce
ranch type home 3 bedrms
eQUIPPOO k1tch~1 and a jard
for the k1ds Garage, storage
bu1ldm g "''d m111y other lea
lures $42 500 00
NEW LISTING - RUTlAND
- I '· story home on a mce
streel 3 bedrms equ1ppoo
krtchen endosoo Iron! porch
s1tl1ng on approx 17 acre;
Need some work' AS KING

$31 900 00
HOME for a family - 4 5
bedroom s n~ce lol Newer
spilt Ioyer home 1n Mer gs
School D1stn ct Fam•ly room,
2 baths all 1n good cond•
tmn $67 500 00
EASTERN SCHOOl DISTRICT
- Really great sphl Ioyer
home 3 bedrms. lam1ly room
good location and 1n good con
d1l1 on $49 900 00
SALEM TOWNSHIP - Ap
P•o• 130 acres ol vacant
land Old barn. sheds. old
log hou se 25 acres hay
land appro• 40 acres +
paslure Has an old dugwell
ASKI NG $39 000 00

~1m:murance

wife,
Helen L. Milhoan.

NEW LISTING - 1971 Salem
mobil e home 1n a beo.JIIful
country sertmg 2 bedrooms,
bath Iron! porch s•tlmg on 1?
acre lot Call lor ywr show1n~
ONLY $12,000 00

God's tender care
when trouble comes.
as it does to us all
God is so great
and we are so small- , GREAT locatmn on Old 33
But there IS nothing
- Bea ut •fullay~n g land. buy
any amounl of acreage you
that we need know
want from I acre lo 243
II we have fa1th
aCI es Ask 101 "tOre del a~ ls
that wherever we go
God will be waiting
Henry E. Cleland. Jr.
to help us bear
992-6191
our pain and sorrow.
Jean Trussell .... 949-2660
our suflermg and
Dottie Turner. .992·5692
careTracy Riffle
949-2807
for no pain or suffering
01!1ce ................ 992·2259
1s ever too much
To y1eld itself
to God's merciful touch!
Wayne Milhoan,
Husband

11

PeachtreB Doors
and Windows

11

Help Wanted

PH. 742

I;::::::;=;:;;;;;;;::;:;:;:;:;;;:;;::::::::::::ITourGuldei-Malelt
femlle. Our
top people e•n t80()..1200

BINGO

r

NEED WATER?

11

Help Wanted

CALL
'

8• H• 8eegI1, 0Wntr
Rt. 1, BoK 74·A, Riply, W.Va. 2S271

Middleport, Oh .
992-6611

Air and Mud Rotary Drilling
We Also Install &amp; Service All Types
Water Pumps
mo.

3· 30·17 lfn

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SYRACUSE. OHIO

Most Fore1gn and
Domestic Veh1cles
A / C Serv1ce
All M&amp;JOr S. Mtnor
Repairs
NIASE Certified Mechantc

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949-2969
Doalor for

YARDMAN &amp; ECHO
Located Halfway Be·
tween Rt. 7 &amp; Bashan

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
8 .7 Financing On
Yardman
SerYI&lt;t On All Makes
We Honor MC/DiH/Viso

4· 18·'8811n

TUNE-UPS, BRAKE
JOBS, BUMP and
PAINT WORK
We Buy an~ Sell Used
Cars
AlBANY AREA
HElPING IOU RECOVER

YOUR INVESTMEI4T
SNODGRASS'
UPHOLSTERY
Racme. Ohio 45771
Phone 949 -

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or .Res. 949-2860
Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CALLS

FULL AUTO

SALES &amp; SERVICE
614-698-7157
5·26·'18-1 mo.

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-662-3821
Authorized John Deore,
New Holloncl, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment

Deoler

Far~~~

Equlp111ent

Peril &amp; Servlee

1·l ·'861fc

4·16-86-tln,

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

·V.W.
PARTS
BEETLE-BUS
RABBIT

WANJ TO IUY TnfCifD OR
JUNI UIS 01 nuns
-filii ESTIMATIIfor ony of tlooso nrwicn call

NEW AND USED
PARTS

614-742-2617

742-2315

9 a.m.-6 p.m.
arloaroMessap

hlwHII

~-2- 1 mo

2-1~81 - rtn

ROUSH
CONSTRUCJION

OWNER: GREG I. ROUSH
,,;.,
GENERAl
' .. '
CONTRACTORS
RESIDENTIAL
•
COMMERCIAL

L.

Writasal

ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR
Guttsrs
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949-2168

RADIATOR
SER~ICE

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also actd boil and rod
out radiators . We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILl FORD
992-2196

Middleport, Ohio

1·13-tfc

6· 10·88·1 mo

DU50 51., SJUCUSI

•

'f92-7611 or
9CJ2.7583

;;:;
:::

DENNY CONGO
Will HAUl
JUST CALL!
992-3410
liMESTONE
GRAVEl - SAND

TQP SOIL
Fill DIRT

WANTED

DEAD OR AUVE
I

•Washers •D,r yera
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators

"Mu1t h Ropai~ablo"

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
'
985·3561
We Service All Makes

992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, Ohio
1-

S14CJS

Brakes. Muffler, Air
Condition Checked
and Refill,
Minor Repairs.

NEWELL'S
SUNOCO

BISSELL
SIDING .....
CO.
,
"free Eetimetee"

MANTIS

Precision
Gardening

I

System
• Ulhtwtilhl
•Tifltr/ CultNalor
•E11y to Opoute

•M•k• Garden &amp; Yard
Cere • Snap I

FOR IIORE INFORIIATION

MORRIS EQUIPMENT
742·2466
RUTLAND, OHIO
11 · 2 1 mo

Announcements

Dabble Shop. Going out of

busln111 •I e. June · July 2. 50 ·
715 peR:ent off.
Get ono 8•10hewhonvout&gt;ov
one 11 rtegulw price As m11ny
person• In PC!rtl'lllt •• d•lred. 2
week111)edlll . Prtdous '-'emory
Studio. Dorothy Bentz

4

W1nted: Good home tor beautiful 1 yr old long hlir, female
Celioo c.t Good hRith. Named
Oln~ C.lt 814-446-39111 .
Med "red biiCk dog-M1Ie1hort

hotr. Oood-tch Colt 814-448~203or 448-1836
bl~~ek

I

161 North Sec1111d
M•dtloport, Ohio 45760

furr; chow V«y

friendty. Good wtth ltldl C.ll

814-2411-5497 or 2411-5231

3 lcnll of hly. Bidwell. You cut.
bale. 1nd rake f/WIV . C.ll 8143811-9883.
Grey Hound, 3 yrs. old, fe..n.te.
Coil 814· 388-8270.
8 - - oldk"-•· 4 gold ......
1 block,._. .. 814-a4J.5445.
Port Shop"-d, port Colle dog.

15 months old Whtte end tan
Gentle with children. 814-742·
2853.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Carry Ft1h1ng Suppl111
Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here

IUSINESS PHON£

S Mlud tiNed puppl• to good
homo. 8 weHo otct. eon 30487&amp;-8141.

........-rod

Thr.. ·

8

to I

304-8711-528 .

6

wkl. old
ho ....

c.u

Loat and Found

(6141 992·6!!0

985-3350

RESIDEN(E PHDNI

Fourw:t grocwy b119 on Rodc 1 ~
rlngtRd. containlngbten"-tand
llrttc:lo. loll · Coli

16141 ····"''"

814-742-2350

8

OPEN FOR BUSINESS
324 E. Main St.
Pom•oy
llohin d I "Y Holl

ANN'S

Gift Shop &amp; Toy Store
Collectors Items, Clowns
Action Toys, Musical
Toys &amp; Trinket Boxes
Open 10 AM . to 4 P .M.
Mon thru Fri. or by
Appointment

Cal (614 992·72D4
mo.

TAYLORED TANS
That Fit Your Body
FEATURING
SUNTANA
WOLFE SYSTEMS

20 SESSIONS S35

(A~~ 949-2414
OWNm &amp; OPIItlTlD II

ANGIE TAYLOR
811 Vint St., Radnt
5·12-'88·1 mo.

J&amp;L

In ret•IIMiet Eaperience helpful
but not nec••rv. Elln.ttt pickage IYeileble For d•llt •nd
~;:',:.••·~h~:25e:,~· 784'

WAN lEO-Experienced Holr Stylist for tocelthop perflrBbiY wtth
• following. Top p~ . Send
reswneto Bo•Cf•1&amp;4,c/ oGelllpoll• Qolly Trlllu,., 8251hlod
Ave , Clelllpollo. Ohio 45831 All
repll01 lcept conlldontlel
Echoing Me«tows Retklentel
Center, Athena, Ohio hilt Immediate openlniJI for full-time &amp;
pert-dme RN1 and LPNI. For
further lnfornwtion II epplic•
tloncoii814-59J.8074.
H•r StyUna. Aero• The Strelft
Ryting ulan II •lklng one
eddll:lonlll ttyll1t who II looking
for more thW'I iult 81lo1her job
Coli Terrio! 814-448-9510 fo•
dotollo

Food Sttrvtce Wor. . -.
BectroniCI Technld.na, lndu•
trlel M•lntensnce Workerl.
Nursing Alllltlntl end Order·
llel, lllochlnllto, ond Wotdoro.
Aegl.., nowforci•IH beginning July &amp;th Cell Trl-County
Vocltlonal Adutt Centw 81814753-3511 .,, 14. A verloty ol
funding toUrcn to prf for
tr•ning are evaileble for tho•
eligible

Be In demand. Food Sarvice
workar1 mHe up one of thll
lergett end fMtelt growing
occupnionll groups in the .. bor
force. Enrol now for summer
quo..., In tho
Food
Mlnaoement end Clltering Progntm at The Aduh EducMk»n
C.n•r--Tr .. ()Junty VocetloNI
School. We htw a vart.cy of
funding •oure• wall•bl• for
th- who quollty. Coli 614753-3111 .... 14.

.-...n

Giveaway

Smel

Full-dme c.-.er opportunity for
well groomed, Mtpanllble male

d•s.

CHESTER, OHIO

NO 5UNDAT CAW
l·ll·lf•

.\
\ ..

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

1·21 I mo

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDINC&gt;
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

3

12

Situations
Wanted

P~rt - time

Job hunting? Need • aldll7 We
tf'lin people tor jobl •• Auto
MecMnice. C.rpentve, Electri-

An no1111 ce 1111!11t s

3 BR. 2 blthl, mnc:f1ttyte hou•.
Hertford. WV. on 11/aacree. Total
elec.• air condition. 2 c• gerage.
I 37,900. Coli 304-a82·2888.

c.,,..,,...

110

8 puppl•. Mlaed breed, .,....
Sled Oog Cllll 814-949-2998

LUBE-OIL-FILTER
With 4 Qls, Oil

6· 2·11·1

HOUSING lo APT P'OJECTS
-'" l\1 J· 1w,y
9

1122/88/111

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

550 PAGl STllfT
ltiiDDLfPORT, OliO
OPEN 1:30-6:0D P.M.

•CUSTOM KITCHENS flo BATHS
•EXTENSIVE REMODELING
•VINYl SIDING &amp; AOOFlNG
•METAL BUILDINGS

10·8·tfc
Howard

GEARY
BODY SHOP

Earn e30o to $700 a 'Mek
working whh Fi,. DePartment in
W. Va, Ky., &amp; Ohio. Mutt hwe
good trenspor1etlon • be able to
work wonlngo Coli 304-8752 280 and
for Mr Summen
before Noon

Will do odd jobs. Pllinting,
c•pentry, etc. C.ll 114-992
7e38

A\loni'Mtedt711dl•totei1Avon
Coli 514-446-3358.

•Dozer • Backhoe Work
•Will Do HouMng Whh
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Y1rd Buaine11

Hou•. 11571 Uncoln H.lghtl,
Pomeroy C.ll afier 4:30 Wlllk·
d._,,, any,me weekends, 814986-4103

Help needed In privete home.
c •• lo• oidorly 209 9 4th.
Middleport Ooy ohllt
ao ...rnnwrt Jobt. e1 8,040 .
t59,230 yr Now hiring. Your
are•. 8015-887·8000 Ext R98015 for curl8nt Fed. .llilt
Fodnl. &amp;tote, ondCivl Service
Jobl 018.000.0711, ISO yr. Now
hlrlngl Coli Job Cntr. 1·619·
586-1513"'1 J4710H24h!l·
" " llgn up with Avon. Sell to

friende. •lathles. or 1 territory.
Col1814-992-7180.

Now hirtng demonst,.ton for
toyt a gifts. Hou .. of Uo,.cl
prowkl• frM kit, free tuppli-.
free t•lnlng. frH ho,. ., glttt
Ab•olu•t., no 1nYHtment1, E•n
1 Wttelcl';' ~check . Now untl
Christmu, also booking ~rtlea.
Call Mognotle Nltz, 814-992·
3581.

Fri.,dlv Homo Ponlel h• opon·

lngs In this arM for menaglfl
ond deel. . Com-lon up to
21 percent, hlghwt ho . . .,
ew.-de. no deUwrlng or collect·
lng. no h .. dllng or .moe
chorgo. Ovor 800cSy_,lcltomo
oltoyo, gift•.. home diCOr end
ChriltiMt decor Formtr l*'lY
pl., dul. .-be tura ltld check
our ...•progreml Callfortr..
cllllog1·800.227· 1810.

13

Insurance

C1ll us for your mobile ho,_,
l"turence Miller lntur•nce,
304·882-214&amp; Also auto,
ho,.., lite. health

18

Wsntad to

Do

Will do bebvtlinlng in my home.

Aodn8Y area
9173.

Cell 614-245-

Ceder and log home exterior
treatments. Truetesi·Thompson
M~tlf •al or Hn..ed oil. Expe;.
riMced Call weekdl'(l after 4
PM, 304-8711-7152
Painting-inllde. outsld• b•"'
Ref~rencea furnished Call 61 ....
448-8790.
Prtvlte home care 111d board for
Senior~.., d hltldiCICJped. Elem
Home 814-992-8873
Ytrd cere, brulh c u = ligtw
hauling, .,metrwtrt
gend
'"mowl. Coli BHI &amp;lode. 814992-2289 ovenlngo.
Un.ttle to get out? Ne«&lt; togo to
thopplng. .,..,.. or Just
too bu..,-. let me do It for you.
Coli 304-576-5728, Pt. Pl. .
unterea.
11:01'8,

Finanwl
21

Busin88a
Opportunity

ntE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommendl thet you
do bus in... wtth p.,ple y au
knaw. and NOT to 11nd money.
tlwough the moM until you h ...
ln-lgoted the ofllrlng,
Cno SBOB bocllhoo .,d loodor
941 Cot ... ck loed« a. .. ro~ ..
C&amp;S ckJmp. 12 ton Low Boy
t&lt;o!ler. C.ll304-481-1142.

Real [stale
31

Homes for Sale

Smell hou•. Oolllpolo- Ono
bedroom piul Nur~, nM
wlndows•vlnyltklng. n.we•
fu,.ce a centJIIalrcond. lmal
lot. Lo081ed88MIIIC-Drlvo.
All lor 021,900 on.. 1Jv&lt;ell814-446-7037,to - ·
A1nc:f1 style 3 BR , H'!t blithe.
dining room. ltvlng room. 1 c•
gnge. '-' acre lot. Ve.y nice
al.bdhtieion. Rio Orwulll echool
dlotrlct. C.ll814-445-2297.
1981 Marfltte Modullr Homa.
8o..Z8. All oloc., CA. 3 BR .. 2
b•hl. greet room, dlntng room.
To meny ••tree to ll1t. Must . .
to lpproclote. 045,000. Coli
514-448-1408
Rio Onnde-R.-.ch 11yte. 3 lA ..
2 bllho. lomlly room, dining
raom, .... In kttchen, C., fireplace. Alsumlbla Cell 814245-9848.

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

992-2772
6-13-1 mo.

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt, I 24, PomorCIJ Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Al•o Trt11111111o•
PH.' 992·5682
or 992·7121
6-17-tfc

3 BR., 2 botho, lull finished
ba..mant:, new furnace ' cencrelalr, g ... ga. fenced yard Low
80'•· 2414 Mt Vernon Ave. Pt
PI-nt C.ll304-876-1774

32

Mobile Homes
tor Sail!

1988 Redman Sectional home
2811168. 3 SA • cent ..! air Move
to your lot Call 814-44~8694
tfter 6 PM

Wanted To

Buy

······-aamp·ona···-······
&amp; Vicinity

t-,-

Oongo Sol• 801 Jw, Drlvo . Fri.
a ht 1:00.5:00. lobv lurnl·
grll, glrllolothlng, otc.

TOP CASH pold tor '83 modo!
end ,..._, &amp;.eel a.... Smith
lul'*·l'onlilo. 1911 Eutorn
Ave .. Olllllpolo. Call e1 4-4482212.
Complooo hou-ltlo of tllrnl1,.. a ontlqiM. Aloo wood a
coal "-'-• lweln•• 'wnlturw
a Auction, Third a Ollvll,
114-448-3111.

CIM11t:h Bonolk Gerogo lol•
O.llby Drive. Juno 11·11 1·1.

R-blo
-~~~·
OUI
tilotlllng .,.-.
e1 00 beg.

4 Famlly·lll. oitly. HI&gt;"'''IUOklo
Hllll epts. Dtlldrent dott'lfng.
fUrnltuN, • much more
Yerd 111•18 Neot Avo. Fri.,

Acreage

40 acres· 2 mobile homes
' Reccoon Rd. 1000ft frontage.
, I 38.000. negotiable. Coli 304522·7279.

Junk C.. with or without
motcn. Call LMrv Uvoly-814318-1303.

Ill""'""

Buying
ond ..,...,...
bv "'' .,._ or bv flo loc. Folr
prl.... Colt 114-44&amp;-31 sa.

44

Apartment
for Rent

2 BR apts 6 clollltt, kttchen·
appl. furnl1hed, Wa~her-Oryer
hoOk-up, ww c•pet. nW~tv
painted, deck. Reg.-cy. Inc
APto C.ll304-87&amp;-5104. 8767813 or 876-5388.

Furnithed uptteln 3 room tpt .
Utl~l• pold. 94 loculi 8210
per month •7&amp; dep Call
81 4-448-13.0 or 446-3870.

'-------------------1

75

evenings.

24.000 BTU otr condkloneo,
used r.Jrig -10 cu ft , 1 yr
Mollohan Furniture Upper River
Rd Coli 614-448·7444.
Admiral W.herandDryer, herNy
duty Used 1 yeer New. 1950 .•
will
••• 1450 Coli 814·742·
28110.

da2_ilt raquired, 304-882·
311111'' .. 304-773·5024

Uted Whlrpool w••hlf and
dryer Call304-875-7988

62

CB,TV, Radio
Equipment

63

Antiquos

Buy or Sell Riverine Antique•.

Apt Conwnlentty located 3
room1 furnlthed Call 304-8752441

1124 E. Main Street . Pomeroy.
Hours: M.T.W 10a .m to 8p.m ..
Sundev 1 to 8p m. 614·9922528.

Apartment for rent In Hender·
10n. Partially furnished. Call
eltor 5 PM- 304-875-1972.

54

Furmlhed room-919 Second
Ave , GelllpoUa •125 a mo.
Utllitlll pel d. Single male. Sh.,.
both C.ll448·4418olter 7 PM.
Ro am• for rent-week 011 month.
Stardng et •120 • mo Glllta
Hotol· 814-448-9580

46

Space for Rant

Store corner of Second &amp; Pine.
1400 sq ft. Off ttreet parking
I 360 a mo plut utRttiel Call
814-448-2325, 448-4249
Privllte lot Pref. . bty older
couple. Centenary Cell 814448-453ol
COUNTRY M081LE Home P•k.
Rouw 33. North of Pomeroy.
Ren•l tnlllon Coli 814-992·
7479.
Sp•c• for tmal tN~II"" An
hoc*·upt. Ceble Alaoefficiencv
room•. air and cable Muon,
w Va C•ll 304-773-58151

Misc. Merchandise

Cellllhan'• Uted 'TlreShop. Over
1, 000tit'll, Iilii 12.13,14, 15,
18. 185 8mil11outRt 218.
Cell814·255-8261
\fVheelcheir•new or used 3
wheeled electric scooters Call
Roger• Mobllty collect, 1· 814870-9881
Industrial Hydraulic Auger drill
mounted on truck. Will trade for
good Wiler well ng Coli 614886-7311.

28 lt . ..., .... ,..-.. , . . .
Wide beam. Ill electronic. gall.,,
ClrWII , etc. 310 V-1 tn• •

10 HPridinglewnmow.r E11ctl
cond Coli 304-875-283ol

....... 8 .

Electrtc typw.ortt•-1815 Contole G.E colored TV. workl
good· t75. Coli 304-875-4038

•ow

Falcon Cradle SnateharWreck•
bed. good cond., II SilO. 1987
Chwwtte, 8.000 mile~, damag«&lt; but rep•l,.ble •1 175 C.ll
814-286-8522

Porch owning•- Aluminum ·
front·24V. , ... wide. 2 llde-811.
wide. Coil814-448-1899.
Tri·Star {Compect) tweeper
wfth en.chment .. Clean• Uke
new Onty *118
call
614-388-9993

pt•••

County Ar,pN..,.., Inc. Good
u11d IPDI ..oet end TV Jetl.
Op., 8AM to 8PM. Men ftru
Sot. 814-446-1898, 827 3rd.
A... Ootllpollo, 0 H.
0000 USED APPLIANCES
W•hert. dryera, r.trlg. .ton.
renget Skagg1 Appllanc11.
UPP" River Ad. beoldo Stone
Cr•t Motel 81 ....448·7388.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Pets for Sale

Groom and Suppty Shop-Pet
Grooming . All breeds .. All
atyles lam• Pet Food Daaltf.
Julie Webb Ph . 814-448-0231.
Dregonwynd c.tt....,. Kennel
CFA Hlmelayen, Persllll'l •nd
SiameM kittens AKC Chow
puppl• New Himalayan kittena Call 61 4·448-3844 after
7PM
Happy JacM Flea Trap· Control
fleea in your home without
Plltidd• or exterminator•. R&amp;
tults overnight Monev back
guarantee. Bldw'ell C..h Feed/ J
0 North Produce
AD8A Reg Pit Bull pup1 t50
Coli 814-445-8384.
AKC Reg GerfNn Shepherd
puppioo *150 Coli 814·2455 12&amp; or 245-5844
Full Blooded, 2 female Pomeranian puppies t125 each. Clll
814-379·2103 after 5 PM

AKC Regil10red Ooldan A•
triever puppiel 8 weeks old
~=-~heel all lhou. 304-8•2·

a..rge Mobile Home lot

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 82
Olive St , Oolllpclll.
NEW· 8 pc wood group- 0399.
Uvlng.room oulteo· 1199· t599.
Bunk betlo with botldlng- 1199.
Full .._ mitt,... • found•lon
1t•r1lng- $99 Aecllnen
tt8rdng- $99
USED· Bodo, droo .... bedroom
tultet, $199·t298 Deakl.
wringer we•h•. • complenllne
of ulld furniture
NEW· W•tern boots· t 30.
Workbootl t18 &amp; up. (Staal •
loft toe!. Coli 81 4·448·3, 59.

"

Hobert electric welder with tlg,

J . C Penney -Smith Corona
electric cartlage typewriter.
t75 Cell 614-448-8250.

Household Goods

-

Purebred white German Sh&amp;
pherd pup1 6 W~l old 2
males, 1 fe!T1111e 614-9922582.

Trail• IPIC• for 11nt, Locust
Road, Rou• One, 304-8751078.

51

•nd. ~~~~:,i~:lng
G ···••ntood Gual~y
CETIDE ' INC .. Ath.ns -6,4 .
59 ... 3578

Gravely 10 plus tome equipment Dune buggy·WIIIIIfs Con·
...,ible, wood tplltter C•ll
61 4-446·8752 or g92-3034

Spaclout mobile home lots for
rent. Famit., p;ide Mobile Home
P•k. Gtlllpolll Ferry. W. Vo.
304-875-3073.

Mercllallllls e

76

NI'II'IMr R.. nbow Sweeper with
pov.er noule Runs good. recentty conditioned. Only 8195.
PIMII calll14·388-9993.

9 \Wek old Beagle pupa. Had
shots and worrntld •11 814992-7008 o• 814-992-8349
White Etktmo Spitz puppiet
Cell 304-876-3308

57

aUOOET TRANSMISSION·

c•••

New Elec Pe4W8Y guitar a
I 168 le11 then purchase price
Call 614· 388-9861 .

40 Channel CB Realist. Nevaho
D 104 d11k model power mike.
Coli 814·446-8592.

58

Air conditioner, 14,100 BTU.
Coli 814-445-2222

For •I e. STRAWBERRIES Free
for pidcing. TAYLOR'S
BERRY PATCH Ker• Rd. Mon·
doy 1h&lt;u Sotu!doy, 8AM·8PM
Coli 814·448-8892 or 8142411-5178

Ktng olze otr bod Thick podded
r•Ht, 8 draw• pedlltll 3 llltl
• h - 0250. Coli 814·949·
2989
2 WOOd 1••· 2 floor model drill
prellll. tmall dNp tr... Call
814-992-8229 alt .. s 00.

&amp;

bo•••

Gl111burn's Farm M•katis now
open for the season. Loefted SR.
160 nur Portor Call814·3889027.

Motorized Wheel O.oir Colt
over 01800. new, wilt eell lor
1800. Hal lloo Ill., S miiM.
814-992·7479
New Elite Selon Eace~l•• led.
Excellent opportunity. T•eowr
I••· low peyment1 304-7735888 .. 304-484-4811 .

Fruit
Vagetablss

r;1r111

Sup1il1t!o

&amp; LIVI~Siill;k
61

Fann Equipment

City fri ..xle dump trell• 32ft.
bo• Coll514-448-9379.

•
• 'I

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:;~~~~~
61

Farm Equipment

71

Auto's For Sale

AC 014 trector Sharp, witti
mowing mllchlne, raikl, bll•.
plowl, cultlvetor , t 3800.
Own., will llnonc:o. Coli 814288-8522.

1987 M.lstang. I cyl. awto
60,000 mil• Good concltion.
12000 Also wreck......
"" 1971
~ ge g:, 1..,~, 9R • "':!,111 '!""or
400
1 9 2 10 ~

800 Ford tractor wtth mowing
machtne, ,.ike, NHbll•, plows,
cultivator. m.,u,. spre•der,
buoh ho~ •48150 Owner wilt
flnonco
II 814-288-8522.

~9._7! T,.·B.,Ir.,d.. 3!_!. :ofruM~~odtor,
,.,.,..
.......
""'"
198"u Hcnde ·~
~ wheel• NINel,
..,... ~ft.
vr
lftd -~
~- o.......
• -.2llgtrtg•dl, muffl•..,d•h..._.
UOO Call 814-949-30415

Lote modal AC 190 wloo·3
trector with plowt, trwuport
ditc, t2400.1nternatioi'WIIround
baler. 198150 Owner will fi·
nance Clll 8, .. 288-8622.
1 OHP MBIIIIY Fergu10n Garden
Trtctor Verlable drlvt mQ\Wr,
dozer blade. side mower, many
....... 811,742·2372

Whlte't Tract on, 2&amp; 1o 1 80 HP.
at.olutt deal . . COlt plut 6 P•
cent Compere our pri011b1fore
you buy, Slder1 Equipment,
Henderton. W Va 304-8757421
ICing cu~r brulh hog Drag
type. Go
shepe 1275. Coli
304-458· 591.
12 HP Economy ••ctor, 48 in.
mower, grader blllde. turning
plow. and potato plow. S2,300
Coli 304-875-4435 elter 5 PM

63

0

111

•eoo.

-d.

rtlfr__.or,

11-. Un-

19th

19715 Oldlmoblle Cut•• Swpreme 350, low mle.ge,. 2
door 1900 Call 814·t92·
5011
1 977VW001t- Statio_..,.
Auto •&amp;50 Call Sandy'• 814992·7403.
1979 Mercury C..,rl. I cyl ..
auto . PS. PB, air concltioNng.
11400. COli Sondr'o 11 814992· 7403.
1978 Chrysler L8 B.ron 4 doar,
paint, new" tires, n..,.
blltorv, looded. Coli 81 4-lt2·
7214 .. 514-992-3224
new

1987 Celebrity 13.300 mil•.
Good condition AM·FM
COIIIItO. $9.500. C.II304-875S995 ·

Ou1rter ho,... m•re. three yrs ,
torrel, white sock. 14 3 h andt

1978 Dodge · VIII 318 '-' ton,
new Pllnt, •12111. 1910
Camero 350 engine. good body,
runt good, new th•. $2480.
19115 Big Aed 3 wheel•. low
mil•. good thcla $900 Call
alt• 5pm. 304-576-2929

Palomino ge4ding hor• tor •I e.
Gaited, 11 .,.. ... old, well broke.
Cell814-742· 223ol
Pigs and Panyttor•le. All tina.
Cell 304-8711-2038
BlltY Aoyttl Show uddle. 8 yr.
old Sorrel Mar• 2 regittered
Yeerllng Colts 1 Ff\18';' Pure
bred Bordlr Collie puppi• Call

Hay

&amp;

H.-; for

s ....

t1 per bale C.ll
304-458-1947.

Transportation
71

Auto's

For

Sale

1973 Nove Custom paint 3150
engine, auto. llhlft ldt, headert.
Iott of chrome. •c 11800Firm
Cell 814-387-7891.
1 981 Dodge Arl• PS. PB.
AM·FM-Cou. 11800. Call 814448-9700.
1981 a. .. rolot81ocevne. 2 dr.,
$1000. 1982 Z-28, low mil-.
$7000. 1978 lllollilu, $850.
Cotl814-246-5832.
1982C.m•oZ28 !5100mil•
T·top. new tlr11 Muet ... to
opP'"cille C.II514-387-0S94
1 987 Ford Tempo. Pay b.atnce
due. C.ll e 14-448-8199

More's Ferm, lt. Rt. 7, 1 mile '
from Ftve Points. June 13th·
17th 1 1 0(). 7 00 Clothing,
bookt, coats, jewetry, radio,

Smel 2 bedroom hou• with
bnement a .. rege. unfurnlohed. Nicoy•d 1 ohld 0250.
Ao1 a clop. C.I1304-871-28S1 .

Mobile Homes
f!'r Rant

Mobile Homes for Rent. Cell
814-446-0508
2. 31R. All utl~lel pold ... opt

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

2 Ill ~funiohed ptlvlltelot. Rt.
Ill. AI oiiOirlo with olr oondltlo~ .-..... ontv. Coil 8144
07 or 814-448-2102.

LMgo Porch loto. Juno 11·11.
'Thrilllld ON.,,,. mHt onlt.
Rt 143 olllt. ~·· 7 .

Vtod lote..._ Addllon,
Junt 1t end 17, Rlln ar lhlne
I 00 tiN 1 lmll ~~tpllon- •
•ome •nt5quee, ~;hfld lleatrk:
CyCle.

1,... •. e110. , . . _ , . , .
ut ..loo. dOf!OOit. Colt 114-HZ.
1712-1:00.

Coli II 4-446-85118

4008.

« 44e.

fHwf¥ recleoorated epartn.nt•

01111Hoblo. UIHHiel paid. 1221.
,..month,dopoolt 10qu1Nd. Coli
814-tl2·1724 8 .00 ..
112·5118.

&amp; Camp. .
1977- · 11~ lt ..
- ............ ............. duel
. . .. 02tiQQ. Cell 814-44..

aa

81

Home

tmprov.,.••ta

·--·.........-

-TER llfiOOAIIO

UncondMioNII NNI:IrM .,.,...

Loco! ~~~-- funtlohed.
FrM • -· Colt oolloot
1-114-237-"- or nllflt.
Rogerslasement
w _ , _ , g.

SWEEPER . , d - t m - ·

""'""'··.....

up .,d - - . .. 0..11 Voanm. '
Cle•ner, one h•lf mile up
o.o11111 c..e~~ 114 eotl 8 '"'
448-0214

C o - lllp.tlc Tonb · 1000
gel .. , 500glll ... dJOI - ·
·~-m RON
Fectory
-lhOp
EVANI
EN"IE~
·
PIIIBEI.
Oltlo. Hill().
537-8528.

Jo-

--~---------------RON EVANS IN"IEII I'Ritl!l· •·
$optic-· OtiQ por
lood. Coi11 -IQO.U7-1821.

Pointing: l n t - a E-loo ,
. Coli 114-4468344

1970 Oldl Oelte 8a. 1300. Coli
304-876-3542.

Jim'sOddJebl
s.-..
lldlng,--. •
ing.
frwl• .. ,

-

CWj&amp;ill.. wGrtl,
polr F•oo E11- Cell 114- ,
379-2411

Grain

Hey 500 bel• Allot fa 1 500
bal• gr.., and lei pedez• Cell
304-575-2028

'i79iftoMoli::~tor==s-uHolr:::::n:-188
=---

1988Nit•n PulllrNX.bl-*.1
speed TIke over p1yrnanta. Cllll
301,773-5038.

304-882·2888

64

lug_,,--

1972 Now 307 engine. m•
cha-1lcelty In d interktr IXC...,.
condklon Coli &amp;14-992· 2278.

3 yr. old Reg Quarter horl8
Mare. Good blood ltne. C.ll
814-448-7521

Real nice C•ll 614-2&amp;8-6085

4LT 23151 - ·IIE ..... , ...
8
!Food
true_, , AIWng t395. call 11._
246-11187.

1977 Corwt:W New, origlnat
motor. full option c•. needt
paint Md cerpet Catl814-247·
4981

1982 Ch....,o, 2 door, otick_
good c:ond 304-8711-3540

AON·s Telwitlon lervlce.
Hou• ell• on "CA. O.•r.

-

Gl. ~!;=lot
Coli '
~~:: .. 221 "' 814-448- .

72

Trucks

for Sale

1979 GMC truck, 427 engine.
1 J'h tt dump. •lr brill: a 4 bag
ltr Ntt Ule. 80% MAlt... c.ft
814-2511-1451 .
1978 O.avy '.\ton, UIINtvHd.
0800, Coli 814-245-15114.
1912 Dodge Rem Vt ton. I cyl..
4 opd., top..,, olr. 13000. Cell
814-387-7475

c--00....---.
. . . . . . .d--

Fetty Tr• TrinCGdft&amp; lltump •
· -· Cell :1114-871-1131 . •
Flotory .,

tall -

...

895-3802

ltorb&amp;..rnondthr• ........ •
304-171-31118 .. :104-17..

2103.

n-

1977 Ford, 4•4. '.\ton, 41p10d
tr1n1 .• 480 cubic Inch engine,
8 ply ti.... V..-, good
condh:ion. 814-949-2237
1972 Ford 4d•. Good ruming
cordition, new tlrM, barteryand
dual exhauat Aetdng e100. cell
814-992·8505 or 514-892·
5778.
1950 OMC. 4-83T Dllrolt 01•
111, Allloon Aut .... tk:, 20 lt.
boa Oood condition $1100
304-812·3480.
2 ton older dump truck. New
hydrau lie .. d power •.ott.
n.,_br•k• good body{noNIIt
• 1800 firm Call 814-8928092 •fter 8·30.

1978 Ford Mort:ul"' -qull, 73
Vans &amp; 4 W.O.
AC, PS.1800.
Pl . 83.000
OI'Qinol 1-- - - - - - - - - - mUM,
Cell 814-8431
0101 .
1987 Ford 150 Cam.eraionVM'1.
14,000 mllel. loaded. tile.
1917 Are bird· 0850. Coli 304- crulla, pa•r wlndDWI.Ioctf.e.
8911-3002.
AM·FM-CIIII. 3S1·HP Oftglfto,
duol tonkl.
FIM - · .......
1979 C.maro, brown Good ln•tor
Coli 814-258-8327,
cond $800. Coli 814-248· 8·S Mon.· F&lt;I
9173
OMC Surbon 51..,. Clo11lc. 3od
1988Mull0ng. 1300DBO. Coli •Nt. front 6 re• ..r. fu" power
814-44&amp;-a250
Aboolutlly Ike • -· 09800. Coli
814-446-2957

84

S.

Electrical
ftefrlg1rltion

1971 H•rley Oevldlon Super
Ollde. CotiOoryHood. 814-4483910-Dov. 446-7788 8

I'M

2 bedroom Apt1 for ntnt
c .. _ct. Nlc:o •ttlng. Lou ndrt
hciiHioo o..lloble Coli 814982-371 I . EOH

Apattment for rent. e2215 •
month. OopOIIt MQUftd. 814992-5724. Allor tlpm oo 9925118

tor"'"'•

br*•

Livestock

Grtclout Irving. 1 and 2 bedroom apertmenu at VJ ..oe
Milnor and Rtwrslde Apenmenu In Mlddlepon From
0182. Coli 814-992·7787.
EOH

1 bedroom lu-hod olfeclency
•pt 1 upltlin apt with 2
bedroom• Kitchen ft.lrnlthed. E.
Moln. l'b,_oy 814-992-8215
or 814-982-3523

minJmum. IIJric.
op. - •
COIM!.-cl 81 low •
eJI,
Stanct.d cluch•. •reeture
plot• .....- -... All
type~ 12 moa.
We buy
ju,. t ....lmleeiotW c.H J04.
8711-4230 .. 814-371-2230.

"*'•••tv.

lndtvldu•l guitar l•sol'tl, b•
ginners, Mrious gutulrist. Brunicwdlo Mulic. 814-448·0887
Jeff Warnalev tnstructor, 814448-1077. tummtt' opening~

Omnichord, n8W' $150. H•m·
mond orgWt w l l•lle, UOO.
Melodlca, t38. Coli 304-87113542

~.,,

•• 30
189 •

O•t Hay· •1 25 a bale in field .
Coli 304-576-2107 "' 5762017

Musical
Instruments

Auto Pllrts
&amp; Accessories

Ulld &amp; rebult Ill t'(l*. Oulren-

Building Materiels
Block, brick. sewer pipa, win·
dows. lintels. etc CIM1de Winters, Rio Grande, 0 Call 81'246-6121
Concrete blocks- ellllze•· ,.,d
or delivery. Maton sand. Gllhpollo Block Co .. 123% Pine St..
llllli~olit, Ohio Call 614-448·
278
·
WEStERN REO CEDAR
,. Channel Ruttic

houn.

1978 C.btn cr.-, 301-·
cru ..... low hour., 1\1• cenw1
top. IDII•.
ll11p1 • Cell
301,875-7215

Building Supplies

Big I iA . Oako• f«m home
built on your lot. e31 , 995 .. up
C.II1·814-8B5-7311

Bunk bedl·good c:ond , e76
Shak11pqr1 elec. trolling mo·
tor, 1151b thrust,wlthSearsOie
Hard Marlnebatttry&amp; c111. Call
814-387·7123

Sew'er,
water, eltctric hoolc-upa. Call
304-576-2942

56

.,.,., low

I 27.100. Cell 304-727-MtiQ.

Briggs • Stretton 3. 5 HP
roto·tlller 1989 Ford two door
cu11om 500 w 302 eng C.ll
304-675-3084

Happy Jack Flee Trap : Conlrol
fleas In your home wtthout
pestlcidet or extwmiMtOf'l, A•
suhs overnight. Mon., b•ck
guarantee A S.G FeedS. Supply,
399 W Main St .. Pomeroy

AC·OC. 0500. Cell 814-448·
0247

Sale

bur,.r Phone 304-4158-1821

56
Cobre SA-900 18 Ch prog.
tcanner w / weether alto mobile
antenna, cig lighter plug Call
304-67&amp;·2623 etter &amp; PM

Boata 81'1d
Motors for

Homes for Rent

UnfurrMahecl-1 roOm hou•. 1'AI
bath, 911 furnacl. .. onn windows. g . .ge. •dulll No pett.
Dop • ror. C.l\514-44&amp;-2843.

42

Wrlahr

Waaher" and drver. 1100. Wood

Furnlohod opt Uttl~leo paid. Coli
bot ..... 9 • 5. 81 4-44&amp;-9244

5FomllyVonl 9oi•123P•k0r :
June 15. 18. 17. 8·oo till 1 •
Clothing. what nott, baby item•.
furniture

·······po·merov.. ···-···-·

2 bedroom furnl1hed apt New
H.ve'l._ reference and •D.trity

ao-··

111-lclty. Con...,_ -lon.

Sun.

3 BA hall•. t200 per month. 2
BRt ... l.,, $180po•month Call
304-875-4088

2 room funUhed apt, private
bath. utilities paid. 117 N 4th
Ave. Middleport 1· 304-882·
2588

depoolt ""'U~ed, 304-882·
3287 or 304-773-5024.

.t

&amp; Vicinity
·
.............. ·-·· ................

Bot..

~V

APARTNIENTS. mobile homes.
hou111. Pt Pl ....ntandGelllpolis 81 4-448·8221

Furnllhed efficiency. 701 4th,
Golllpollo. 0175 UtM~Iel pold.
Tobecco late for 511•118 Coli 446-4418 otter 7 PM.
ltM -21 cent• per pound Green
townthip, Oallla Co , Ohio Cell Furrished- 3 rooms &amp; Hth
1-354-2547
Ct-. No poto. Aol. a dopoolt
requir•d. Utilities furnlthed
1 acre and up butlclng lots and AckJtto only, Coli 814-448·
,. modultw 1 home sites Tuppers 1519
Fltalns· O.•ter 1Miter, roec:tw•y
to eech lot 114-985-3594
Rio Orenda arN·2 BR apart·
menu for .. nt C.ll 814-245Lot for rent In Porta.nd wllh 9&amp;75
trail• hook-up, water vwell, ~IV
1p1ce for children •70 per Nice 2 8R
4'h mH• from
month Cllll 51:'-843-5185.
Gallipollt Refrtg . stOYI. &amp;
water furnished. No pets. e225
• Aohlon. l•ge boHdlng lot~ Coli 814-4411-8038.
mobile homeo permlttod, public
Wlter. alto river loti. Ctyde 2 BR aoloo1 roomefficl.,cv.oll
Jr. 304-878-2338.
utllttl• with cable ~id. C.ll
elter 8pm. 814-446-5723.
9 aCNI wry prh•t•. good hou•
sh:•, nur county water. 200 Shady Lawn Apto. Furnlohed 3
· vde oil block top rood, ovenlngo rooms ' bath Pri¥118 &amp; quiet
~04-17.. 2349.
AckJitoonly . Coli 814-446-4807
or 814-448-2802
Two building tots wtth county
Mter. on Jerry's Run Road et On• BR unfurnished ~t New
Apple Gro\oe, W Va. 304-578- C*pet Range &amp; nrfrlg fur(
2:!83.
nithed Water &amp;. g.-baga peid.
O.pollt oequiNd C.II814-448Biautltul river latl one acre plut. 4:MS
p~llc watlr, Ciyde Bowen. Jr
' 304-578-2335.
1 BR. apt nearH MC. 1 adult No
pill. Coli 814-448·4782
LOTS. one acre. 1.-.1 wooded,
cltv WMer. olerk:ho Ao.t, owner Nice 1 SA apt. whh rengtt.
r firwndng. good termt. 30~
rtfrtg, c•pet. w&amp; dhook-up. ln
· 372-8405 or 372-2578.
town. t190amo. Cllll14-4489e10

Rentals

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry

t1 50 . Coli 814· 245· 5214.

Electric drver·llke new. •eo.oo.
Cell304-173-8944

2bedroommobllehomeMiddl•
port, Ohio. ,.ference and eecur-

Lots

&amp;

Apartment
for Rant

2 bedroom epartment t146
month plus utflhl•. depotit.
814·992 · 5732 alter 5 00
AwUeble end of month

One BR. apt .• 2nd floor facing
Park on Secon:l Aw. App, AC.
Max occupency2 edultt. t17&amp;a
mo. plut utllh:111 Refer. a ..c.
dop. roqulred. Call 814-44112325, 445-4249

"' 1' acrlftrm. tobaccoellotment.
City water, trailer hook-up 2Vz
mllet-Creb Ck . Rd ., W Va.
015,000. Cell 514-379-2221

44

2 bedroom. fumithed (wlither.
dryer, sir) . • 210. per month plus
utHitl• end 1100. d-Ill.
814-992-7479.

'

Fanns for Sale

ooln Hill 1'1&gt;-oy •190 P•
month. 814-192-8272 bolo ..
1:00.

...... "PfPTaiiaant······ ·

Mobile Homes
for Rent

lditchen furNshed. w / w c•pet.
No poti Off 11- porldng.
•32Sa mo. plututllltlel. Oep. a.
m. coil 814-448-4926.

2 bedroom hou•. FuUy c•·

Moving Sale. June 17th and '
18m. DownlllpotSt , Rutllnd.
first right. Carrall' •

42

11 Court St -2 BR .. 2 blll:hl.

Nicely furnilhed tmaH houae.
Adulto only.' Ref. roqulrod. No
Pill Call 814-448·0338

·-·

1~;:;;;;;;;:;~;;==-r.;:;=::;::::;::::::;===l

DowntO'Nf\·Modet'n 1 BR , complete kitchen, AC. carpet Call
814-446-01 39

For •le rental property, 3 Unitt
ail ,_..ntly rented. C.ll 61 4949·2800 0 , 514-949-2 2 28 .

V•d Sale •• Long Bottom On :
grMI, new electric stove, much. ,
much more June 18th and •

"Just so you know the situation, we may be getting a
divorce .. .I don't want to go
overboard!"

1978 12Jc86 Gowernor. 2 bedroom. total electric, centl'll eir.
tutycarpeted. 2 porch•. Excel.
cond Call 304-882·2944.

2 11ory 3 bodloorn. Depot St.,
Rutlond. OhiO. No - · 114742-2421 or·514-812·4403

9

Blue 1ofa 6 chair. Good cond.

Upt•ln unfurnished ~t . Car·
p•d. utilities .. hl No children.
No ..... C.ll814-445-1837.

33

Misc. Merchandise

FATHER'S DAY SPECIALS
GIMt 1i1e recliner, U79-reg
price e249 Drop leaf table.
189.95. Sofa &amp; chair. 1249 New Ehte Salon eaercise bed.
excellent opportunity Tekeover
Dinner Bell. 139.95.
Complenline of u11d furniture· leue. low payment•. Call 30~
Sofa at•rtlng It '24.95 • up 773·5888 or 484·4911.
Twin bedt with mattreu ,
*49 95 Orton 075 a up. 41118 ft. utility 1raller. Call 30487~2159.
VIllA'S FURNITURE
Rt 141. Centenry- 11• mile on
Portable lighted sign / lettert.
Uncoin Plk .. 614-448-3158
0299 F&lt;eo delivery WV 1· 800.
6000 BTU air condftioner. •715. 842·2434, Ohio 1-800.533Seart microwave, tl5. Call 3453
814-446-2824.

3 BR 86x1 2. ltcweend retriger·
ator, wether &amp; d,er Call
304-8711-7519

41

yard Sa\811

Mollohlln Furntture· et 4-448·
7444

New completely furnlthed
epanmet)t &amp; mobile home in
1961 50x10 Schutt! 2 DR. city Adukt only P1rking. C.ll
Good cord;tion Call 614-387- 814-445-0338.
7420
BEAUTIFUL APARTIIIIENTS AT
· 1 9 70 Skyline. 1 2x80, 3 bed- BUOOET PRICES AT JACK·
rooms, air corxlftloner Good SON ESTATES, 538 Jecklon
conditton Call 114-949-3090 Pike from t183 a mo Walk to
or 614-247-3844.
shop and moviM 6 1._4482588 E 0 H
1979 Patriot 14x80, fireplace,
air. a• furnace. nice thllpe. 8 rookslde Apartmentl: Located
16995. ftrm 814-843-8188.
off Bullville Rd.· 1 BR. specious
apartment• mth modern Idle han
1973 Champion, 14•70, total and Wither-dryer hookups, c•
el ectrfc. underpinning •nd hook ble tttlevlllon evallebla Call
• up, 304-575-2383.
814-446-2127.

Government Hom• from 11 . (w •
,.lrf Oelinqutnt •a property
RepOIIIelfont. C.ll 805~117·
8000 E ou9
repo ht.Jd. "' 101 for current

INSULAnON

Phone

3 bedroom•. 2 bat hi, brick
horne, McNeil Ava , pt. Pit
Priced on inspection. Call 304675-61700' 67 1-2 463 ·
4 bedroom ranch 1tvle. tatal
electric home, locetad In New
Hwen. WV1. Ecellent loce1ion,
large level lot Owner will
conlid• flnandng. Call 304B82·3888 or 875-8300

36

•FREE ESTIMATES•

TIRED OF PAI~TING
Cover your ho111e w~h
beautiful MASTIC 1or CER·
TAINT.EED vinyl Sldina.
Best Prices Anywhere!
Roofing and Seljmless
Gutters

3 ecr• for •le with S room
hou•. 2 c•rgarage. outbulldg1,
Chondlero Ridge. Orenwood,
W.Va Cell304-578-2230olte•
5 30 PM

I NOTICE I

~-==========+======::::::::.

Public Sele
&amp; Auction

By Owner-Lovely •nch Heveon
20 ac , 2 c• glf1lge, 2 atone
flreplac• Barn 167,600 Pos·
ai~e owner finance Call 3044511-1542

CORBIN. SNYDER
FURNITURE CO.
965 S.~»nd A...
G1lllpalis, Ohlo-8 14-448·1 171
l4"d soP• snd chalrt
Hloh prices got you down7
Check u1 out for Low Pricu a.
CM~Itty Furnitur1 &amp; C1rpet. E-Z
credit with approved credit

sPeclou• 3 bedroom two 1torv
home on St. Rt. 33 Loti of
clo•t spece, niW' furr.ce 1nd
heat pump, cia• to MeiOI
Schoolo. Coli 614-992·8383.

lmmMihlte opening tor • cable
TV•rvlce-tech.nie~n inRiplty.
RJYentwood •r• Sel.-y commensuN~t• with eapM"Ience. Be·
nellts available eft• prob.. lon.., per.od WllllngloMin proper
clf'lddate, EOE. Sendmume to
attn: P1111t MMag•. P.O. Box
lOB. l'blnt PI-nt, W.Vo.
25550

••k

61FT SUGGESTION'

3 bedroom, ranch- ttyle 1 89
Beech St ,' Middleport
I 18.500 Call 814.992-2808

ATTENTION E.::elll_.t Income
for home n11mbly work Info
coli 504-846-1700 dept. P
2303
Now hiring demonnnnort·
Duism.t Around The Worktrec:IMJ weeldy cornmllsJon. no
collecting. deiiYtry. IWoeiw fr•
TV. VCR or even trip to H.wall
!kJpi&lt;VIoOI' Pit Oreanloo 304875-2885

64

LAFF-A-DAY

Home for '*le or rent. Cell
814-992-5848.

8 rooms •nd bath Fultv c•plfted, new roof, pool, •tellfte,
wood or g• heat. garage with
workthop overheed, one end
two tenthl ecre 842,000
Phon. 614-992-3936 after
4 30

The

Ohio

Homes for Sale

Government •l!ed hornet from
11 .00, you "pair. Also propertiel forback•xtl For complete
dltaill and foreclosure litt call
(6151 822 2770, ENt. 575

Experienced c•hlltl &amp; stack
clerlu Needed immedtately
Send retwne to: Boa P. 16,
c/ oPolntPI ....ntAeginlf. 200
Main St. . Point Ple. .nt, W. Va
25650

Dental Hyglenllt
needed. Senclresumeto:lox Cia
155, c/oOolllpollo Dolly Trll&gt;
unt, 121 Third Aw .. O•lllpolit,
Ohto 45831 .

31

LPN. Ple....,t Yell., Nursing
Cafe Center liMking llcenlld
LPN• for ,_rt time emptoo,ment,
madic.l Md den•l lnturwnce
IVIillble. tf ln--d e-ll Kathy
Thornton. OlreC'Ior of Nurtlng.
!304te75-523B. EOE· AAE

woek. Solory to IIOrt pluo
comml•llon Pl. . .nt WOf'ldng
conoltlono. Aroollvfunploceto
work. Frllrtdty, n..e: a. d..,..d•
ble are the Jlqulrementt Call
f.814-28&amp;-8422.uklorSu•
BoNdi Brokal And Bluel Sell
Chrl..,.., A&lt;ound the Wo•ld
deoorotlon1 untl Doc. Fun jobr
P•ty plan. Fret 1300 kit No
P•

1t11ton eotl eotty
814-245-5383 Todll'(l

FULl TIME POSITION FOR REGISTERED MEDICAL
LABORATORY TECHNICIAN ON ROTATING SHIFTS

E 0 E.

6-ll mo pel

CUSTOM
INTERIOR DESIGN

Most Wells Drilled In One Day.

I

614 -992 -2104

C.F. SCOTT

:!h'!",."',:'.~~:"o'.~~

MEDICAL LABORATORY
TECHNICIAN

Please Contact:
Cecelia G . Lisle
Veterans Memorial Hospital
115 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy , Ohio 46769

~

Call Collect 13041 372-4331

PH. 949·2801
or les. 949-2860

ReqUires independent worker with capa·
bilities in all areas of clinical laboratory. EKcallent fringe benefits

Serv1r.es

Rollyson Vinyl
Replacement
Windows

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

A JJl ...._

Help Wanted

EITIIJIO v111 enI

B&amp;C •DRILLING CO.

992-2269

So many t1mes we've
longed lor you
A m1ll1on limes we've Cned
11 Love could have saved
you S1s
You never would have 01ed.
It hurt us so to see you go
But you never were alone
for a part of us went w1th
you.
The day God called you

~ 'H
~

Went to Buy-200 Amp br•k•
bo• lor troll« Coli 304-87113218 or 876-2418.

Authorized Service
&amp; Parts
Bnus &amp; Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homelite
Jacobsen

In Memoriam

Who Passed Away June

Off• good 6/ 1·7 / 30

.l--'_

w.,ted to bUy. young whtte
domntlc hen duck. Call 1514742-2853.

FEATURING :
Riviera
Cabinets

614-9n- ms

"DOC" VAUGHN

NEW LISTING - MIDDLE·
PORT - Grand older home
on a good slreet 3 ~ed·
rooms large front Sltt•ng
porch Pnced to sell at

Ooocl u•d wolct... Coli 814992·7983.

Custom Building
Products W. MAIN, RUTLAND, OH.

Church-Home-School
Free G1fi..."Water Me
Please" batt. operated
House Plant Alert light.
with tuning.

11/Z/ 11 tft

· Certified L1censed Shop
5·25· 1 mo pd

POMEROY, OH.

••v

18 yrs .

446·7390

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

llulltl
Cllh •id for ant laue or MIN
qullto. Ar&gt;pllq,., pl-.
conoltlon. Coli 814-992·8857.

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

PIANO TUNING

CALL 992-6756

" In Memory"
In Lov1ng Memory of

,, ...

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
SYRACUSE WATER
DEPT

w•,.,

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

99 2. 2::._1-=-=
:=. 5 6_::--=-:---

Public Notice

gold, titv.r colne,
••ling
old
Top pr&gt;
Shop.

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

'

WANTAD i~~{

•

Wanted To Buy

AVON • All areal Call Marilyn
We~r 304-812-264&amp;.

7 ..

• :: ,

June 17, 1988

Public Notice

/_!;:~
·::.~:_:;"·' ·,.
~

/

June 17, 1988

J

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

1984 Honda VT soo Aoc:ot
Eacet. cond t1210 Firm 2100
mM01. Coii814-311-88CI1 .

86

Gan«ll Hauling

191SHondl7008hodow. 3200
mil• Excel. co nd . 0......
kopt. Cllrome . . .. Coli
8, 4-44&amp;-2478.
90 Oily I •me 81 C81h wllh
opprowd credit. 3 Mil• out
Sulovllo Rd 0p., hm ':
Men thru Ill. Ph 81
e.
0322.

::m

J•Jw.r....-.luut:us••
,.....,
..._ - P h. 114241-1218.

1171 Monte Carlo. auto ..
Mavln!I"Muft •II· Runo alooka
g . . .. $1100. Coli 114-4481112.

Vall~

FurnituN
Nlw and u•d fumllure and
eppllcencea. Cell 814·4487572 Houn 9-5.

1113 C h - . 40,000mlla 4
opd Oood eo&gt;d 01800 or bNt
ofl•. Cotl814-256-1821 .

J a I fURNITURE
1415-nA...
2 bedroom •••· Mldcl~~tort
0111-0181 .... month. 2 .. d 4 4 • - • ah ... e48. I bedroom hou.. In Pomeroy oh.,, eii4.8S. I 110· w ..... 1200.1225 per month. All dln-.oOII, 0188.11.
portly
Aot. . .oo rePICICINI
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oho. 304-878-14110.

0.1! . Heavy duty weaher·
mlnlweth. 1378. Whirlpool
hotory du!Y d - . e71. Coil

114-i141-01Holl•lpm.

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"You think hunting Ilona Is risky? I sell
barbecue nuce to cannibals "
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Honda. .... IW. Y-o.
Port..a...... Ropolro. W. lily
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1970 Hondo 350. - .. 111• Lookl .. d,.... good. nao.
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Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middl~.

Local news briefs. --- Stocks
Patrol probes minor accident
f

The Ga llia-Meigs Pos t of the State Hi ghway Pa trol
inves tigated a minor accident at 1 p.m . Thursday in Me igs
County, on SR. 7, near Tuppers Pla ins. No one was injure d.
Troopers sa id the wind shield of a car driven by Jerry L.
Jo hn son. 20. Middleport, was broken by debris thrown up from
the roa dway by an un identi fied passing vehicle. No one was
injured.
.

Free dental service available
As of July 1. the Me igs County He alth Depar tment's Free
Dental Se ala nt Program will be open to a ny school aged child in
a ny grade. Inter ested parents should ca ll in adva nce at 992-6626
to reserve a Friday only time slot.
·
The dental sealant program was funded with a grant to the
Me igs County He alth Department from the Divis ion of Dental
He alth of the Ohio Department of Health. It wlli continue
throughout 1988 to August 1989.

EMS has seven calls Thursday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services repor ts seven
calls Thursday; Tuppers Plains at 2:44a .m. to a fire at an
a bandoned house on Township Road 263; Tuppers Plains at
12:10 p.m . to Route 7 for Carl Mat lack who refused
treatment; Racine at 1:49 p.m . to Portland Road ·for Amy
Baker to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 6: 27p.m.
to New Lima Road for Florence Barret( to Holzer Medical
Center: Tuppers Plains at 6:34p.m. to Route 7 tor Carl
Matla ck to St. Joseph's Hospital; Pomeroy at 7: 15p.m. to a
minor structure fire at the Debbie Jenkins' residence at 336
Lasley St .; Racine at 11:51 p.m. to River Heights
Apartments for Mona Lisa Haynes to "eterans Memorial
Hospital.

GARS team first in nation
A Ga!ila Academy High School team has catapulted the area
into national prominence with a !lrst place w;n in National
His tory Day .
The Senior High Group Performance Team of Troy Miller,
Pam Alien, Heather Hastwell, Jill Wamsley and Cindy Mason
took first place in the national competion at Washington, D.C.
Thursday, according to their sponsor John Lester of GAHS.
Their program, the history of deaf education, will be
presented for the public at the Gallia County Historical Society
meeting Sunday at 2:30p.m . at St. Peter's Episcopal Church.
A group of area residents are planning a welcome for the
young people at 5: 30p.m ., beginning at the Silver Bridge Plaza,
escorting them through town , according to Henny Evans of the
Historical Society.
Mrs. Evans also suggested that area business might like to
mention them on their marquees today, so the students will see
them as they parade through town . .
The, students presented the project at Gallaudete University,
a schoolfor the deal near Washington, D.C. earlier in the week,
and were well received, according to Lester.
Gallia Academy High School has consistently sent students to
s tate competition with some advancing to the national level,
Lester said. GAHS also has sent more students into the state
event than other school in Ohio, he added. This Is also the only
school in the nation to send competitors to the national level lor
five straight years. ·

A Ep· · · - - - - Continued from page 1

the cause of higher acid levels in
lakes of the Northeast and
Canad a.
"Since 1975, indus try in the
Ohio Valley has reduced its
emissions of suller dioxide by 25
percent," said Dowd .
' 'And despite that major reduc tion from the source thought to he
the center of the problem, there
really has been no improvement ·
In the acidity of rainfall in the
Northeast. No trend upward or
downward.
"Now I ask the question - if
the 25 percent reduction in
emissions !since 1975) hasn 't
reduced the acidity of rainfall In
the .N!&gt;rtheast, what reason is
there to believe that a 50 percent
reduction as proposed in many of
these (legislative) bills would
produce any discernible environmen tal benefits, either In the
Northeast or Canada?''
He said an interim assessme nt
report, the larges t scientific
study yet done, already ha s
indicated there is no urgent need
for acid rain control legislation.
The $30j) million. 10-year study,
known as the National Acid
Precipitation Assessment Program (NAPAP ), Is now a yea r
and a half away from completion. Twelve federal agencies, 4
national resource Institutes, 11
state researc h agencies and 18
private In s titution s are
partic ipating.
Despite that , Congress could
act prematurely, he sa id.

Powers

I

(Continued frcrn page 1)
A recent federal Environmental
Prolection Agency gave the landfill
a clean bill of heallh, he said.
He explained that the landfill accepled 725 tons from the city of
Point Pleasant in May and about
200 tons from lhe town of New
Haven. Figures on !rash being accepled from Meigs County haulers
were not available Wednesday.
Powers said he receives 80-90
tons a day of commerial or in·
dustrial waste and that Irash is considered the first priority. Powers got
the original pennit from the state
Department of Health based on an
esumate of 920 tons a monlh. That
estimate prepared in 1981 was
based on lhe amount of material he
would receive and the machinery
and manpower needed for the
landfill operation.

Powers said he had ''no idea"
why the DNR has imposed the arbitrary tonnage limit and when asked if the slate was penalizing him
for accepting out-of-state garbage,
he replied. "I don't know."

' 'These are political pressures.
They are not scientific pressures.
They don't take into account the
speculative nature of the environmental benefits. They are
purely political. Canada wants it
(acid rain controls) . Politicians
in the Northeast want lt . It may
happen. I hope it doesn 't.
"No one is questioning that if
you Increase the acidity of Jakes,
at some point environmental
damage Is done, " Dowd said.
"The question that really has
to be answered Is - is that
acidity coming from the skies
and is it being generated by
power plants 600-800 miles away
- or are lakes becoming acidic
from other factors?
''Take for example, the forest
floor. particularly In the coniferous forests that are typical of the
Northeast and Canada. Even if
the rainfall on that forest were
perfectly pure, that rain would
pick up acidity from the forest
floor as it trickles Into the lakes.
"The question that Is still
unanswered Is what is the cause
-and there maybe many causes
- what is the relative contribution of emissions from Midwestern power plants to that
problem?"
Dowd said that the NAPAP
study commissioned by Congress
ln 1980 and paid lor by ta~payers,
Is designed to determine scientifically based findings on the
causes and effects of the acidic
problems of lakes and rivers.
''Let's give it another two
years and see what that study
says," Dowd said.

Daily stock prices
(As ol10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power .. .. ... .. .... 28'!4
AT&amp;T .. .. .. ............ ..... .. .. .. .... 26'!4
Ashland Oll ................... .. .... 69
Bob Evans ....... .. .. .. .. ... ........ 17 ~
Charming Shoppes .. .. ...... ..... 12
City Holding Co ........ ... .. .... .. 33
Federal Mogul... .... ... .......... 38%
Goodyear T&amp;R .... .. ..... ~ .... ...66%
Heck's Inc ........ .. ... . ......... .. .. 1%
Key Cen turton .......... ,.. ... .... . 38
Lands' End .. .......... .. ....... .. ... 27
Limited Inc ........................ 21%
Multimedia Inc ........ .... .... ... 69%
Rax Restaurants .................. 4 ~
Robbins &amp; Myer s ...... .. ........ 11%
Shoney's Inc ... .. .... .. ...... .... .. 26 ~
Wendy 's Intl.. ....... ...... .. .. .. ... 5%
Worthington Ind ................. 21 %

License issued
Marriage license hav e been
issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to Joseph Dale Sayre, 46,
Reedsville, and Dixie Ann Circle,
39, Racine; Mark Randall Tackett, 23, Port~mouth, and Leann
Davis Jewell, 22, Langsville;
· Gary Samuel Kapp Jr. , 24,
Racine, and Rita Sue Slater, 24 ,
Racine; Gary Lee Withrow Jr. ,
19. Pomeroy, and Faith Ann
Lambert, 16, Rutland.

Ohio

Friday, June 17, 1988

Weather

Middleport funds total $173,202.27

South Central Ohio
Today: Par tial clearing, with a
high ne ar 80. Northeast winds
about 10 mph·. Chance of rain 20
percent.
Tonight : Clear, with low
temperat ures near 60. Light
northeast winds.
Saturday: Sunny, with highs In
the mid 80s.
o0432ro bx pm-extended 06-17
Extended Forecast
Sunday through Tuesday
F air through the period, with
highs ranging from the mid 80s to
the lower 90s. Overnight lows will
be between 55 and 65 early
Sunday and between 60 and 65
Monday and Tuesday mornings.

All Middleport" illage fund s as
of May 31 totaled $173,202.27,
according to the monthly report
of "IIJage Clerk-Treasurer Jon
Buck.
Receipts, expenditures and t e
balance, respectively , of each
fund making up the total as of the
end of May Include:
General, $50,525.75, $55,692.11,
$11,018,66; street maintenance,
$4,281.82, $8,688.82, $3,391.08 deficit; fire equipment, $75, $931 .42,
$258 .08 deficit; fire truck,
$18,553.40, $577.43, $22,874.41;
sanitary sewer escrow, no re-

Announcements
l;:ouncil to meet
Racine "illage Councll wlli
meaet in recessed session at 7
p.m . Monday In the Shrine Park
building.
Free entertainment
Another of the Racine village
sponsored free entertainment
evenings will be held at the
Shrine Park beginning at 7:30
p.m. Saturday with several
groups to be on hand. Refreshments will be available. Those
attending are to take their lawn
chairs .

Continued from page 1
'Counc.,;l... - - -----

Increase of one cent In Ohio linking up with 35 at Kio lirande.
would raise about $54 million.
The state began preliminary
"I just hope the money, state or work on the first phase of the
federal, makes Itself available, " , project, from 'HMC to Bidwell·
he said.
Rodney Road, in 1983, doing the
The project, which has been on grading and seeding. The projecl
the boards for more than 20 was later placed on the Ohio
years, is to consist of three Department of Transportation
phases, stretching from Ohio 160 inactive list.
at Holzer Medical Center and

Meigs high ...

Continued from page 1

benediction by Hartson.
Graduates Listed
One-hundred-forty-five students will participate In Sunday's
ceremonies.
Included in the 1988 graduating
class are Jeff Alane Acree, Toni
L. Andrew, Gerald Lewis Armstrong, Edward Thomas Baer,.
Cynthia Rose Bailey, Julie Ann
Baity, Marjorie G. Baker,
Annette Marie Bare, Michael
Wenden Bartrum, Crystal
Baughman, David Jennings Beegle, Dreama Sue Bentz, Brent E .
Bissell, Nannette Marie Blake,
Cathy Ann Blessing, Marybeth
Hazel Brewer, William Michael
Brothers, Jodi Lynn Brown,
Trena Kay Buchanan, Peter
Andrew Burnem, Kimberly
Kaye Calvert, Ron Capehart,
John Carl. Kenda Kay Carsey,
Penny Marcelle Clark, Melissa
S. Clay, Laura Michele Cobb,
Sherry Renee' Cooper, Jo Ellen
Crane.
Melissa J . Dalley, Lots Gall
Davlqson, Michael C. Davis.
Cynethia S. Denney, Jerry Allen
Derenberger, David Gene Dodson Jr., Sean R. Dodson, Deloris
F. Dorst, Donald R. Dorst,
Jonathan · Duane Dunn, Bryan
David Durst, Tammi Lynette
Eblin, Stephanie Jill English,
Jodie L. Ervin, Michele D.
Folmer, Richard Lee Fraley,
Roger Lee Fraley, Edna Lee
Fry , Sue Ellen Fry, Wendy
MIChelle Fry, Lisa Marte Frymyer, Vonda A. George, Carol
DentseGibeaut, Paula K. Gilkey,
Belinda Lynn Goode, Terri
Grover, Daniel Jeffrey Hall,.
Joseph Clayton Hall Jr., Kimberly Lynn Hamm, Christopher
Scott Hanning, Robert W. Harrison, Charlotte Ann Hart,
Deeanna Dawn Henderson, Riel
Grayson Herman, Orville Ray
Hill, Kelly Colleen Holman, Tracey Michele Holman, Audra M.
Houdashelt, Arthur A. Hunnel,
Christopher Matthew Hutton.
Tlsha Kathleen Jarvis, TImothy Wendell Jeffers, Teresa
Lyn Johnson, Alison Lorraine
Jones, Cathy Lynn Kerr, Kevin
Donald King, Kevin V. King,
Michael W. King, Charles Klein,
Wend! Marie Kloes, Audrey May
Lambert, Leigh Leach, Lester
Michael Lewis, Bradley Steven
Terry Little, Danyan

Magers, Dena Michele Manley,
Phil McCourt, Patricia McGhee,
Kevin McGuire, Lisa Gall Miller,
Don Nickels, Scott Allen Oberholzer, Tammy Tara Olkowski,
Joseph Harry Parker, Lisa
Lynette Patterson, Le'Anna
Lynn Plants, Donlta April
Pooler, Eric Priddy, Charles
Theodore Pullins Jr, Gregory
Pau I Rager, Margaret Ellen
Rhodes, Tina Renee' Riffle, Amy
Beth Roush, John Michael
Roush, Krista Marie Roush,
Samantha Ann Roush, Jasan A.
Rupe.
Susan Marie Sandy, Gina Renae Scarberry, Bill George Scarbrough, Donna Jean Sergenl,
Laurie Ann Shenefield, John W.
Sisson, Shlrlena M. Six, Shannon
K. Slavin, Angela K. Sloan,
Christopher Smith, David P.
Smith, Eric T. Smith, Joseph A.
Snyder, Eric J. Spencer, Charles
Stewart, Kenneth E . Stewart,
Shannon Lynn Stewart, Michelle
Lee Stobart, Johnny P. Swanson,
Kevin W. Tanner, Vermana
Mayrene Thomas, Elizabeth Ann
Thornton, LaLenya Tiemeyer,
Stephen Michael Tracy," lrglnia
Ruth Underwood, Sandra R.
VanCooney, Teresa R. Walker,
James Ray Warner II, Darrin
Warth, Scott Allen Williams,
Amy Wolle. Shelly Kay Wolle,
Martin L. Woodard III, Angela
Marie Wright, Michael Lee
Wright, Tammy }Kathyren
Wright, Stacy Lynn Yankuns,
Barry Alan Yeauger.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Wednesday Admissions
Nancy Hulse, Long Bottom.
Wednesday Discharges
John Imboden.
Veterans Memorial
Thursday Admissions- Oara
Gllmore , Pomeroy; Mary Page,
Langsville; Clinton Faulk,
Pomeroy; John Greenaway,
Pomeroy.
Thursday Discharges
Leonna King, Nancy Hulse.

ceipts , no disbursements ,
$54,872.21; economic develoll'
ment, $67,501 .35, $65,425.07,
$13,488.56; public transportation,
$22,332, $15,929.30, $3,297.60; water tank, no receipts, no disbursements, $99,886 .81 ; .water,
$12,386.35, $12,012.74, $15,965.241
sanit a ry sewer , $9 ,132.85 ,
$10,067.27, $4,762.62; swimming
pool, $1,015 .82 , $1 ,117 .58 ,
$1,582.15; cemetery , $812.45,
$1,669.05, $1,683.15 deficit; water
meter tru s ts, $515, $100,
$13,910.13; miniature golf, no
receipts, $2,992.46. $2,232.81
deficit.
Receipts for the month totaled
$187,131.78 while expenditures
totaled $173,202.27.

Hospital

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges June 15: Mrs,
Lloyd Baker and daughter,
Nancy Bush, Mlstey Cade, Mrs. :
Kenneth Carte and daughter, .
Eva Curry, Patricia Gould, Mrs. •
Michael Halter and son, Betty :
Lemley, Ronda Miller, Derek ·
Rhodes, Wilda Schultze, anq :
Mrs. Alvin Spencer and son.

Van Meter could not siw whert :
the Pomeroy project will begin,
although he guesses it will be
right a Iter Shelly finishes Olj '
Route 33. Van Meter said that ;
Jim LeBay, district manager for
GTE North's southeast area, and .
Forrest Turner, a GTE engineer ,
were to meet this afternoon
(Friday) with Mayor Seyler to
finalize project plans. Van Metei •
said GTE North is hoping th e.
mayor and Pomeroy "illage
Council will agree to coordinate •
the project with the contractor, •
so that the actual work is done at '
a time convenlen t lor the rest: •
dents of the village.
Van Meter commended Mayor
Seyler lor his efforts on the·
project between Pomeroy and '
GTE North and pointed out tha~
" this has been a good example of ·
people in the public sector
working together with an entity
such as GTE North on a project of
benefit to both the public and the
company . It's much less expen"'
slve to fund a · project like this
together than separately."

&lt;

CALL 992-6601 FOR APPOINTMENT

GET OUT ON
THE

-·

POUSH
TUESDAY

SAUSAGE.................................... $ 349

Samsonite·
FURNITURE

HAM &amp; SCAUOPED POTATOES............... 349

$

WEDNESDAY

u.mu

USAGNI................................................ $3••
THURSDAY

.

SOlD
SEPWnLY

349

CREAMED BAlED CHICKEN.....................
FRIDAY

CHOICE OF 4 COLORS!

SALE

$44900
s PC. sn.

MEAtLOAF •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $349
SATURDAY

$

CHEESEIUIGEI IASDT _.......................

275

MOllS: 1101. tltn SIT. 6tJO I.M.-8:00 P.M.
992·7133
MIDDLIPOIT
l
4-- -~~

DAILY

THIID &amp; OUVE ST., GAWPOUS, OHIO- 446·3045

WILLIAMS DINER

1.--·----___
..
_.,__________ _ ,___________. --···-·

OPEN 9 to S

FREE PAlliNG
FREE DEUYERY

. . - - . . . - . . .--_. . .______. . .

- -~--------&gt;..-

___,_. . . --··-

9 to 8
MON. &amp; FRI.

Inside :
Along the Rh er ......... Bl-8
Business- Farm ... ...... D-1-8
Comics- ............... .. .. Insert
Classlfieds ......... ..... ... D3-7
Deaths ......... ............... A-3
Sports .......... ........ .... . Cl-6

·tmts Vol. 23 No. 19
Copyrtgtnad 1988

Mostly s unny, with .highs in
mid 80s .

•

•

mt

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, June 19, 1988

9 Sect ions; 52 Pages
A Multimedia Inc. New spaper

Ash transfer 'illegal' EPA says of incident
By NANCY VOACHAM
Times-Sentinel Stall
POMEROY -The transfer of ash from railroad
cars to trucks, which took place June 3 at the
Hobson railroad yard below Middleport, " was
Illegal, " according to Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency officials, " because no one
holds a permit from EPA to transfer ash in Meigs
County."
Environmental officials suspect the as h ma terial which was transported to Meigs County by
railroad cars, and then ott loaded Into waiting
trucks, was municipal incinerator as h from
Philadelphia, Pa.
On May 27 in Perry County Common Pleas
Court, the Ohio Attorney General's office was
granted a temporary restraining order against
the Convex Systems company tO stop the transfer
of Philadelphia ash from railroad cars to trucks a t
an incinerator ash transfer station at New
Lexington In Perry County. Convex Systems
contracted to bring railroad can of the ash Into
Ohio lor disposal, and built the transfer s tation at
New Lexington. A permanent injunction against
the company is pending.
From New Lexington, the trucks were going to

~· Welcome

the Fairfield County Landfill near Lancas ter
where the ash was unloaded and burled.
Mike Webb, spokesman (or the state attorney
general 's office, reported that assistant attorney
generals argued tha t the company did not have
the proper state permits for such a transfer
operation. This is a violation of a ir pollution
standards , Webb said, because during the
transfer fr om train to truck, dust from the as h can
be emit ted Into the air.
Convex Systems did apply for the proper state
permits fo r the transfer station in Perry County,
Webb said, but did not wait for the Issuance of the
per mits before constructing the transfer station.
According to Susan Clay,ofOhloEPA'sLogan
office, neither Ohio EPA nor the attorney
general's office know where the headquarters of
Convex Systems is located, although the tetephone number which they have been given for the '
company is In the 614 area code.
Clay said the restraining order prevents Convex
Systems from transferring any more ash at New
Lexington, although the court did permit the
transfer of ash from lour cars which were
" already on site" at New Lexington when the
restraining order was Issued . There are to be no

home-----.

Gallla Academy High
School's parllolpanls in Na- ·
tlonal IUstory Day returned
home Friday, greet~d al the
Sliver Bridge Plaza by approximately 30 cheering wellwishers. Above, students look
at a front page story about
them In Friday's GalllpoUs
Daily Tribune, while at right,
Edith Gilkey holds a sign
telling passers-by of the feat.
The 19-member team boasted
a first place finish In senior
high group performance.
(Times-Sentinel photos)

GALLIPOLIS - One ' youth
was killed and two other persons
were injured In a one-car accident at 10: 30 p.m. Friday on SR
141, about 13 miles southwest of
Gallipolis.
The State Highway Patrol
Identified the victim as Ritu
Khosla, 16, Rt. 3, Gallipolis.
Khosla was transported to Holzer
Medical Center, where she was
pronounced dead on arrival. She
is the second person in 1988 to die
on Gallia County highways.
Taken to the hospital by the
Gallla County Emergency Medical Service were two passengers,
Nicole Matheny, 16, of 185.
Greenbrier Drive, Gallipolis,
and Scott Shockey, 18, Rio
Grande.
Matheny was treated at the
hospital for minor Injuries.
Shockey was admitted to the
hospital for observation. Hospital officials said Shockey suf-

REG. $563.00

$

In Our Town: Tom Spencer coming home
By Dick Thomas Page D-8

·~

~·

1

NATI 0 NAL
HISTORY OAY
CHAMPS

One killed in wreck

cooklng at the very beat prices around I
MONDAY

B-1

Meigs Health Services, Inc.

IS SUMMER,

Delicious
Dishes!
EnJoy the veryflneat In home ctvt-

Beat of the Bend: Summer sounds coming
June 30 By Bob Hoeflich Page B-4

NOTICE
DR. MANSFIELD AND
DR. WITHERELL WILL NO
LONGER HAVE SATURDAY
MORNING HOURS.
OTHER HOURS WILL REMAIN
THE SAME
EFFECTIVE JUNE 18, 1988

cents

U.S. Open action concludes today- C-

Working
overseas

new~

from page 1
121 ••• _ _ _Continued
__
_ _---.-:
GT'D
By planing down and repaving
the north side of the s tree!, as
well as the south side, before the
sidewalks are Installed, the village will again have a curb to
catch water run off.
In order to come up with the
additional funding needed for the
additional work, GTE North has
pledged and additional $3,000 to
the project, for a total of
$20,000, with Pomeroy to make up
any differences in costs, not to
exceed $10,000.
Mayor Seyler was particular Iy
pleased the financial arrangement was worked out because he
feels this is the village's last
chance for paving the Main St.
area through the business section
until well Into the 1990's. The Ohio
Department . of Transportation
has already informed the mayor
it will be that long before they
pave the Main St. (which is part
of Route 33) again.
The Shelly Company, which Is
presently working on the Route
33 paving project north of Pomeroy, Is to be the contractor on the
Pomeroy job.

i 50

Sunday

!ered multiple contusions and
lacerations. His condition was
reported as sta ble Saturday
morning.
According to the patrol, Khosla
and Shockey were not wearing
seat belts and were thrown from
the vehicle. Matheny was wearing a seat belt. The Gallla County
Sheriff's Depar tment responded
with the "jaws of life." but the
device was not used to free
Matheny from the wreckage.
The patrol said the accident
occurred when Khosla, headed
east, lost control of her 1988
Mazada 929 on a curve. The
vehicle went off the road , struck
the guard rail and then went
airborne over an embankment,
rolling over several times.
Troopers said the vehicle traveled 374 feet after leaving the
roadway. The accident Is still
under inves tigation, according to
the patrol.

City applies for marina
GALLIPOLIS - The city of walkway eight feet wide and 143
GaiUpolis has applied for a feet long. Five 24-foot-long finpermit from the Huntington gers would be attached to the
Dis trlct of the Army Corps of walkway and extend shoreward.
Engineers to build a marina
The Corps Invites people to
along its parklront on the Ohio state whatever obj ectlons they
'River.
may have to the proposed work.
The marina would be lor Requests lor a public hearing
private recreational craft. Plans must be made In writing on or
call lor the construction of a
before July 6. Comments should
floating dock consisting of be addressed to the U.S. Army
pressure-treated lumber sup- . Corps of Engineers, 502 8th St.,
ported by plas de foam billets. In ATTN: CEORH-OR-F, Huntingaddition, a 33-toot walkws•· ton, w" 25701-2070.
would be attached to anotl .

.

more transfe rs of ash at New Lexington, nor
anywhere else in the sta te, beca use no tra nsfer
permits have been issued, Clay ex plained.
This past Tuesday, the attorney genera l's office
askedforandwa sgrantedan extensionofthe May
27 temporary res training order through J une 24.
Webb reported.
Webb al so poin ted ou t tha t actual tra ns por ta tlon of the ash Is not illegal by tra in or truc k. U is
the transfer of ash from ra ilroad car to tr uc k that
is the problem, because of the possible air
pollu tion.
The acceptance and subsequent bu ria l of the
ash at the landfill in Fairfield (j;oun ty is not in
question either because the land fill holds th e
proper state permits for ash disposa l, Webb
added.
Although samples of the as h were tak en a t New
Lexington by EPA and at Hobson by Dan
Levingston, enforcement officer lor the Me igs
County Litter Control Program, labora tory tests
of those samples a re not yet complete. Th e as h
was rainsoaked and in more of a liquid form by the
time it reached Meigs County by railroad cars.
However,i some publ ic Interest groups in Oh io
are concerned that the as h may conta in heavy
m etals and dioxins.

Don't forget

w~ter

Acco rd ing to informa ti on !rom the national
environmental group, Greenpeace, detectable
levels of dioxins were found In some of th e urba n
soils near Philadelph ia' s garbage inci nera tor
from which the as h comes. Greenpeace's
information was from E PA 's " National Dioxi n
Study" released in August1987.
Las t fall, E PA co llected and anal yzed soil
samples from yards, playgrounds and other areas
in Roxborough, the neighborhood near P hila delphia's Nor thwes t In cinerator, and detected
dioxins in 16 of 17 sa mples reported, accord ing to
Green peace.
·
On Fe bruary 11 this year , the Ph ila del phia .
Inquirer reported tha t EPA sees no " immediate
threat " to the communit y of Roxborough, and
that EPA was waiting for a full analysis by th e
Agency for Toxic Substan ces a nd Disease
Registry before taking act ion on the matte r.
State and local au thoriti es a re conti nuin g to
Investigate the trans fer wh ich took place in Meigs
County.
Meanwhile, Kenny Wiggi ns , di rector of the
Meigs County Lit ter Control Progra m, pu ts forth
this question. " Aren' t there a ny landfil ls In
Pennsylvan ia?"

safety, DNR says

- four or more bias ts- da nger
operate any mo !orcralt "or ma unbroken. For gasoline -inboa rd
engines, a Coas t Guard - nipul a te any water skis, surf· s ignal
When two boats meet head on,
board or similar device while
approved flame arrestor is
both skippers should honk the
intoxicated ."
required.
"There 's not that much of a horn for one short blas t (one
In addition, boa ts with inboard
drinking problem with boaters second duration ) wh en pass ing
gasoline engines built on or after
around here than is true upriver port to port and head to head, and
August 1, 1980 a re required to
in Kanawha County (Charleston two shOrt blas ts when passing
have at least two ventilator ducts
that "ventilate every closed area)," said Sweeney , who starboard .
Sailb oa t s a nd ma nua llycompartment containing a gaso- started as a game warden in
Kanawha County in 1984 befo re powered cr aft have the right-ofline engine and a gasoline tank."
Also, power-opera ted exhaust coming to Mason Co unty in 1985. way over powerboats In nea rly
"People here have a little more all cases, a nd as such, powerblowers controlled from the
respect for th e river ," he added. boats should generally sta y clear
instrument panel are required
Alcohol consumption is not of such craft so as not to crea te
lor engine compartments containing a gasoline engine having only dangerous in the operation wak es tha t co uld cause t-hem
of any motorcraft, but it is also · troubl e. However. sa ilboats and
a cranking motor.
Every vessel less than 39 feet 5 dangerous if the person find s manually-powered craft must
Inches in length must carry an himself In the water by accident. yield the right-of-way when overefficient sound-producinjl: de- Alcohol increases heat loss by ta king powerboa ts and when a ·
vice, while longer vessels (up to opening up the blood vessels poowerboat is in a nchor. In
65 feet 7 Inch es long) must carry close to the skin, which gives the narrow channels, powerboat s
a whistle and a bell. The whistle false feeling of warmth. And a nd othe r craft under 65 feet in
bell must be audible (or at least since water is notorious for length must not ha mper the
half a ..nautical mile, while the dra ining heat from a normal operation of large vessels una ble
mouth of the bell must be at least human body in a matter of to nav igate outs ide the channel.
minutes , especially if the wa ter
eight Inches In diameter.
From dusk until dawn, vessels temper ature is less than 50
less than 26 feet long mu st carry degrees, exc essive alcohol conat least one red light on the pori sumption decre ases one's c han(left) side, a green light on the ces of survival that muc h more.
Watercra!l Operations
starboard (right) side and one
When
operating on the wa ter ,
white ligh t on the bow and stern.
boate
rs
have
a number of rules to
"essels 26 feet or longer must
remember
,
but
only a few of
have bright white mas thead
them
a
re
used
on a constan t
lights mounted a ccording to
basis.
diagrams Illustrated in the sma ll
Such rules include maneuver craft primers found in packet s
ing
and warning signals thai give
provided by both state agenci es .
won't hurt me..."
other
boaters an idea wha t they
AJcohoiConsumpdon
Famous last words. These and
should
do when they come Into
" Unlike the roa d, the wat er
other excuses have been uttered ·
close
quarters.
These s igna ls
by those who choose not to wear moves , which mean s that if you
personal floating devices (also drink alcohOl while operating a ar e:
-one long blast - warning
known as life jackets ) , the boat. you're more likely to lose
non-use thereof being responsi- your balance and fall in than If signal
-one short blas t - pass on the
ble for 75 to 80 percent of deaths you didn't drink," said Sweeney,
in boating accidents. according 26, who has been employed with por t s id e
-two short bla s ts - pass on
the West "irglnla DNR for eight
to Coast Guard statistics.
the starboard side
Coast Guard-approved life years.
-three short blas ts - engines
He pointed out tha t under West
J .D. SWEENEY
jackets have a label designating
them as such, and are required Virginia law, It is Illegal to · in reverse
equipment on all boats by West
\1 irglnla and Ohio laws.
There are live types of life
jackets available, and Coast
Guard regulations call lor certain types of these devices for
specific sizes of boats. For more
information on these devices and
regulations, consult the boating
regulation booklets made availa ble by the Ohio and WestVIrglnla
Departments of Natural
Resources.
J.D. Sweeney, a West VIrginia's deputy game warden stationed in Mason County, said that
' ' most of the citations we hand
out around here are lor Insufficient number of life jackets and
expired registrations ." He
pointed oul that in the fatal
boating accident on April 22 on
the Ohio River near the Kyger
Creek plant, In which Shane
Smith. 18, and Pete McDonald,
19, drowned, no life jackets were
found on the boat they were
using.
~
Another vital piece of required
equipment, which is required for
all boats with gasoline engines, is
the Potomac River BASS tournament In MaryANGLING FOR BASS - These fishermen
the appropriate, Coast 'Guardland In September. These men were among the 40
maneuver clo11e to the Ohio shore of the Ohio River
approved lire extinguisher. Such
fishing enthuslull aboard 20 bass boats In
al GaiUpolls, hop,nlf thai their luree will catch a
extinguishers shall bear an apSalurday's first-round action. ( Times-senllnel
winning bass In the Weal VIrginia BASS (Bass
proval number, be readily acphoto by GeoH Osborne)
Angler Sportlmen) Chapter Federation quaiUy·
cessible lor use in the event of
II!« tournament. The lop eight winners will go to
fire and fully loaded w)th the seal

By GEOFF OSBORNE
Times-Sentinel Stall
GALLIPOLIS - Whether they
are fishing, water skiing or just
cruising up and down the Ohio
and Kanawha Rivers to cool off,
residents from Gallia, Meigs and
Mason Counties have been operating their boats on the river
since early May.
However , the Fourth of ,l u ly
weekend will see more bo.iU.e iS
from the tr.l-county area and
beyond on the Gallipolis-Point
Pleasant portion of the Ohio and
Kanawha Rivers running with
the wind In their faces and trying
to catch some sun at the same
time. In many cases the last
thing on their minds will be the
watercraft regulations of Ohio
and West Virginia.
The following Items are some
of the things boaters should keep
in mind. For more Information,
contact the District 7 office of the
Ohio Division of Watercraft,
10556 McKelvey Rd. , Cincinnati
OH 45240 , at (513) 851-1755, or the
Mason County branch of Dis trict
V of the West Virginia Department of Natural Resources, Rt . 1
Box 484, Point Pleasant, W"
25550, at 675-4380.
Required Equipment
' 'They're tOO uncomfortable ... I
can't get a good suntan if I wear
one ... the river's not that cold . It

. \

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