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'

Paga

, 6-The Daily Sentinel

•

Thursday, July 21, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-- Local news briefs ---. Drought could cost farmers 50 % of income
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Ohio's farmers could be forced to
take a pay cut of up to 50 percent
this year because of the drought,
says an Ohio State University
agr(cultural economist.
D. Lynn Forster estimated that
farmers who . normally have
sales of more than $100,000 a year
will have 80 percent lower net

Driver escapes injury in wreck
A We.s t VIrginia truck driver esc'aped Injury In an accident
Wednesday at 5:19p.m. on U.S. 33, just east of Darwin, In Meigs
County, according to the Gallla-Melgs Post, State Highway
Patrol.
·
·
· Troopers said Arthur B. Duckworth, 59, of Ravenswood, lost
control on the wet pavement and his tractor-trailer went off the
road, and jackknifed. Damage was heavy. No one·was Injured.
The patrol cited Duckworth for failure to maintain control.
Ano!her Meigs County accident occurred Wednesday at 5:51
p.m. on U.S. 33, justnormofDarwln. Troopers said a car driven
by Mary C. Walker, 23, of Logan, Ohio, went off the road,
striking the gliard rail. Damage was minor. No anew as Injured.
There was no citation.

(Continued
Road
.
···--' - - -page-1) - - - fran

EMS has nine Wednesday calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports nine calls·
Wednesday; Rutland at 5:57a.m. to Danville for Barb Black to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 8:10 a.m. to
Rutland St. for Lewis Taylor to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Rutland at 9:23a.m. to County Road 52 for Beatrice Rinehart to
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 9:56a.m. to West
Main St. for Benjamin Carroll to Veterans Memorial Hospit&gt;l;
Pomeroy at 10:19 a.m. to Cole St. for Henry Cade to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Racine at 3:18p.m. to Third St. for Carrie
Stobart to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 5:14p.m. to
Eaton Roa!l for Jackie Ginther who refused treatment;
Pomeroy at 5:28 p.m. treated but did not transport Art
Duckworth from an auto accident at the Intersection of Routes
33 and 681; Pomeroy at ll:l5 p.m. to Condor St. for William
Eakins to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Rains continue in Meigs area
Rain fell In Meigs County the first three days of this week
breaking a drought which played havoc with farming
operations In the county.
On Monday as much.as three Inches of rain were reported in
some locations of the county. On Tuesday, however, •rainfall
was only. about .19 of one Inch. On Wednesday, Gene Grate of
Middleport recorded 1.54 Inches of rain at his weather station
from ll p.m. Tuesday untilll p.m. Wednesday after heavy rains
again hit In sections of the county. Skies were cloudy with rain In
the forecast on Thursday morning.

Dukakis...

Continued from page 1
lowing the .hall to turJl red and man will one day be president of
white, leaving their blue banners the United ·States!"
·
res pecUu Uy lowered. .
Wlnplslnger, . whose speech
brought to reality a long Jackson
journey frOI')'l picket lines and
Veterans Memorial
ghetto schools to peace walks and
Wednesday. Admissions- Le·
farm rallies; described the Chi· wis Taylor, Middleport; Henry
cago preacher as the ''moral Cade, Middleport; James Hea·
conscience of the . populace and ton, . Pomeroy; Diane Fields,
our party."
Mason, W.Va.; Diane Fields.
Seconding the nomination Mason, W.Va.; Carrie Stobart.
were New York state Sen. Olga Racine; Mary Eden, Pomeroy;
Mendez and California Assemlr John Raub, Pomeroy.
lywoman Maxine Waters, who
Wednesday Discharges-Be·
declared despite the outc'ome of linda Roush, Frank Wollard.
this year's nomination, "This one

Hospital news

Rockefeller asks for ARC. support
ATLANTA (UP)) - Sen. Jay
through Ohio since its inception
Rockefeller, D·W.Va., urged
in 1965, and "has literally saved
Ohio delegates to the Democratic our lives in West Virginia."
National Convention Wednesday
But he said that since 1981.
to support a resolution backing
President Reagan has "zeroed
fuU funding of tbe Appalachian
the budget, and I'm very bitter
Regional Commission.
about that. This (resolution) Is a
The non-binding resolution, to
way of trying to say the Appal·
be sent to the Democratic Na·
achian Regional Commission has
· tiona! Committee, is being meant a lot to a portion of vour
pushed by West Virginia in 13 sta te, " said the senator.
·
states as a way of focusing
"Let's just do our part," said
attention on the cuts the Reagan
Rockefeller. "When Wheeling
administration has made ln Its Steel closes, we work together,
programs of rural highway con· ' although West Virginia does own
structlon, vocational education,
the IOhio) River. Pass the
community development and
resolution and we'll give you the
black lung disease Clinics.
river back."
Ohio Gov. Richard Celeste
Rockefeller said the commis· Called Rockefeller "our third
sian has funneled $565 mllllon U.S. senator."

I ·

Area deaths

Nelle Werner

·
Nelle Tipton Werner, 84, of
South Third Ave., Middleport,
died Wednesday at the Pinecrest
· Nursing Center in Gallipolis.
Mrs. Werner was bornlriGallia
County on March .26, 1904 to the
late Charles and Mae Smith
Tipton. She was &amp; homemaker, a
member of the First Baptist
Church of Middleport and the
.. Daughters of America Lodge,
· Chester.
Survivors include two daugh·
ters and sons-in-law, Anna and
· George Durst of Wellst!)n· and
Jean and Norman Stewart of
Columbus; a son, Jack Werner of
·• Belpre; a son and daughter-In·
: law, William and Angelica

_Grain report
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The average closing prices (per
bushel) paid to farmers by grain
elevators in the principal mar·
keting areas of Ohio Wednesday :
Northeast Ohio: No. 2 wheat
$3.41; No. 2 shelled corn $2.%;
· No.2 oats ·$2.77; No.1 soybeans
$8.03.
.
'
: Northwest Ohio:' No. 2 wheat
• $3.44; No. 2, shelled corn $2.92;
• No. 2 oat.s $2.74; No. 1 soybeans
• $8.13.
Central Ohio: No. 2 wheat
$3.56; No : 2 shelled corn $3.03;
No. 2 oats $2.90; No. 1 soybeans
$8.12.
.
. WestCentraiOhio: No.2wheat
'$3.51; No. 2 shelled corn $3.01;
~ No. 2 oat~ $2.87; No. 1 soybeans

·, a.GJ.

. Srlllllnvest ()blo: No, 2 wheat
· $U6; N'o. 2 shelled corn $3.00;
No. 2 oats not available; No. 1
soybeans $8. 0!1. ·
Trends: No. 2 wheat, . lower;
No. 2 shelled corn, higher: No. 2
oats, . lower; No. 1 saybeans,
sharply lower.

Werner, Pasadena, Calif.; seven
grandchildren; 11 great grand·
children; and several nieces and
nephews.
In addition to her parents, Mrs.
Werner was preceded in death by
her husband, G.G c Werner. in
1987; a son, Daniel; two sisters
and one brother.
Services will Saturday, 2 p.m.,
at Rawling·Coats·Blower Fun·
era! Home with Rev. James A.
Seddon officiating. Burial will be
in Gravel Hill Cemetery, Che·
shire. Friends may call at the
fuMral home from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9
.on Friday.

farm income in 1988 because of
the drought.
Add in .off.farm earnings and
those farm families will net
about 50 percent less household
Income this year, he said.
The average Ohio farm household will lose 25 percent of Its net
income because of the drought
and related conditions In 1988,

deserve paving too," he ex· "we'll have more money to
plained, "but why can'tyou start spend."
·
from the end that will service the
So far this year, the highway
most people?" He said there are department has spent approxl·
20 families on the other end of the mately $200,000 on hot mix for
road which Is heavily traveled abOut 11 miles of county roads
because of access to East Letart Including portions of Eagle
and Manual Roads. Fairview Rid
ge, Rac Ine- Bas han R oa d '
Cemetery is also located on the County
Road 19 !rom old Route33
Letart end.
t o new 33, Fl a t wood s R oa d an d
Warner pointed out however
County Road 34. County Road 27
that about a mile of the road on Js
also to be paved and "then
the Letart side has no houses at we' II take a look at our finances
all. He said the highway depart· to see If we can afford to do any
ment would repair holes In that more," Roberts said.
end of the road and apply dust
Roberts also reported the highcontrol to help out families on way department has been assistthat end, but there's "no way we Ing Olive Township with some
can afford to pave the whole excavation on Shade River Hill,
road," he reiterated.
and that plans are being made to
Roberts said he and Warner replace two bridges on Bailey
would meet with Rose to look the Run Road either later this year
situation over again but It is or the first of next year.
unlikely the decision to pave
In other business, the commls·
from the SuI ton Township side stoners approved a requestfrom
will be reversed.
Larry Spencer to attend a Colum·
Warner said the reason Apple bus meeting of the Ohio Clerk of
Grove-Dorcas Road Is not al- Courts 'Association, and In·
ready blacktopped from Mile Hill structed Clerk Mary Hobstetter
to Manual Road is because of the to consider attending one ofthree
Increased travel during floods. Community Development Block
''If you have a flood the year you
Grant training sessions to be held
put down $15,000 worth of paving in August in three different
materials then you've lost your locations.
money because of the heavy
In ·final business, the commls·
traveL Once we build up more stoners accepted an $800 prop·
roads like this one," he added, osal from Danny's United Roof·
ing to relocate and change the
ventilators in the courthouse
roof, and rejected an antmal
claim from Leroy Welsh, State
Route 143, Pomeroy, of$35for the
Dally stock prices
loss of a sheep. The commission·
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
·ers rejected the animal claim
Bryce and Mark Smith
upon recommendation from Dog
at Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl.
Warden Wayne Roseberry beAm Electric Power ............. 27% cause Welsh owns an unlicensed
AT&amp;T ............ .... ...... , .......... 26% dog.
Ashland Oil .. ..................... .72%
Bob Evans ............ ............... 17
Charming Shoppes .............. 14\ij
City Holding Co ................... 34
Federal Mogul. ............... :.. ,42%
.Goodyear T&amp;R .. .................61%
Heck's Inc ..... ........ .... ...... .... 1%
Key Cen,turion .................... 37'1.
Lands' End ......................... 28%
Limited Inc ......................... 24
Multimedia Inc .. .................. 74
Rax Restaurants ..... .. ... ........ 4Y,
Robbins &amp; Myers ....... ... ..... .11% ·
Shoney's Inc ................ ....... 27%
Wendy's Inti ................. ....... 5'1.
Worthington Ind ....... .. .... ... .24%

Stocks

Forster said. Smaller !arms
typically have more oll·farm
Income and 'help buffer the
drought's Impact on the state's
average ·farm Income, he said.
"We're obviously going to see
some significant ellects on farm
income because of this contlnu·
lng drought," . Forster said.
"Next year, we'll know how
farmers dealt with this situation.
"But we're talking about ma·
jar crop damage and skyrocket·
lng feed prices already," said
Forster, "so you get the idea that
net farm income will definitely
decline In 1988_..
Forster's predictions are
based on preliminary results of
the 1988 Ohio farm household
longitudinal study conducted by
Ohio State. This Is the second
year of the study, which tracks

I

Bible School Monday
Vacation Bible school at the
Middleport Church of Christ will
be held Monday through Friday
next week from 9:30 a.m. to 12
noon.
A kickoff parade will be held at
10 a.m. Saturday starting at the
church. Fifth and Main Sts.,
moving down to Har:tl ngter Park.
way, over Pearl St., and then
returning to the church. All
children are Invited to decorate
their bicycles for the parade.
The Bible school will be for
children from the age of three
through junior high school. Those
needing transportation are asked
to call the church, 992-2914.

OIL CHANGE AND
LUBE SPECIAL
LUBE, OIL
CHANGE &amp;

OIL FILTER

Sl 595

Daily Number
248
Pick4
4344

Page5

e
Vot.39. No. 63
Copyrighted 1988

to.ra1se our sights'

ROUSH'S BODY
SHOP &amp;PARTS
I

'

773-5024
PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES - l)j!mo- . Dukakls and his running mate Sen. Uoyd Bentsen
cratlc presidential candidate Gov. Michael
accept the cheer ol the Democratic National
Convention Thursday.

Ohio Dems cheer candidates

•LITTLE BOYS TANK TOPS
•LinLE BOYS 2 PIEC~ OUTFITS
•BOYS AND GIRLS SLEEPWEAR
•GIRLS SUMMER DRESSES
•GIRLS SUMMER OUTFITS
.•BOYS AND GIRLS SWIMWEAR
•GIRLS SUMMER TOPS AND PANTS
·•PRETEEN AND JR. SIZE· SPORTSWEAR
•SPECIAL GROUP
'
RUSS SUMMER COORDINATES
•ENTIRE SELECTION OF SUMMER BLOUSES
•ENTIRE SELEOION OF WOMEN'S UNIFORMS
•MEN'S AND BOYS CORDUROY JEANS
•SPECIAL LOT OF BOYS TROUSERS
•SPECIAL GROUP MEN'S DENIM JEANS
•MEN'S AND BOYS SWIM TRUNKS
•SPECIAL GROUP MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS
'

ATLANTA (UP!) -Buoyed by lstration and, by implication,
the hero's reception given their Vice President George Bush, for
favorite son, Sen. John Glenn, lnsensltlvlty to women, ethical
and supercharged by. the accep· lapses and links to "right wing
lance speech of .presidential zealots."
The noisy reception, which
nominee Michael Dukakls, Ohio
O~lo
delegates punctuated with
delegates to the Democratic
shouts
.. of, "0·111·0," "O·hi·O,"
National Convention returned
helped
take some ofthe sting out
home today confident of victory.
of
Dukakls's
selection of Bentsen
"Absolutely!'' said Glenn
for
vice
president
Instead of
when asked If the Democratic
ticket can win this fall .' 'We have Glenn.
"I'll be very happy to get out
a united party and a good ticket. I
there and campaign for this
think it's all come together now."
.
Ohioans joined delegations ticket," said Glenn.
Ohio House Speaker Vernal
from the rest of the nation in
boisterously greeting Dukakis, Riffe Jr., D-Wheelersburg, told
his running mat~. Sen. Lloyd United Press International he
Bentsen of Texas, Jesse Jackson has access to a recent poll taken
and a host of other Democratic in Ohio showing Dukakls with a
leaders . In a 45-minute unity ' 49-40 percent lead 'over Bush.
"We're going Into this In much
demonstration.
·
Glenn was plainly tickled with better shape than four years
the reception he received when ago," sa id Riffe. "! think that
;he lambasted the Reagan admin·. margin is good at this time. Bush
Is the vice president You have to

looll. ·at Dukakls as the
challenger."
Gerald Austin, Jesse Jackson's
campaign manager during the
primary season, said the Duka·
kis campaign needs to be aggresS.ive, attrart black support and
lind strategists who know how to '
win the Midwest If it Is to
succeed.
"What they need are blacks,"
said Austin, an Ohio political
consultant. "They need to be
gettlng people on board who
know how to beat Republicans in
Michigan, Illinois and Ohio."
Austin said a "pristine, anti·
septic campaign won't work"
and that "Dukakls will have to
spend a lot of time in·Ohio" to
counter George Bush.
Most of the 183 delegates
would have preferred Glenn for
Dukakis's running mate. But It
wasn't to be.

Gallipolis receives state award
By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP News Staff
The face of Galllpolls has ljleen
changing over the past year, and
that hard work has been recognized by the State of Ohio.
Gallipolis was recognized
Thursday In Marietta during the
annual meeting of the Ohio
Conference of Community Development. Represented by City
Commission President Dow
Saunders and City Manager Dale

Iman, Gallipolis was the recip·
lent of two of 11 governor's
awards of excellence in lour
categories.
The downtown revitalization
program, which was funded In
1986, H~as recognized with the
Governor's Excellence Award
for Outstanding Program Jmple·
mentation. The city was also
recognized for Its role In the
project, which has seen 45
bu'lidlngs renovated In the area.

According to Iman, the Small
Cities Community Development
Block Grant Downtown Revltali·
zation Program was a competi·
tlve grant to Improve the down·
town business district.
The program was funded for
$75,000 and Is designated to help
eliminate blighting Influences
and act as a catalyst for job
creation.
Iman sal.d the grant leveraged
Continued on page 10

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

..

JIM1(;0BB

CIIEVROLET-OLDSMOBU.E
CADILLAC .
MAIN ST.

992-6614

POMEROY

26 Cenu .

A Mu-ltimedia Inc. New..,.per

•

CHIEF. E ..z-UNER

•HURRY IN NOW FOR THE BEST SELECTION•

_

Dukakis: 'It's time

We featuno eolli81on nop.lr on lhe

ELBERFELD$

2 Sections. 14 Peg•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, July 22. 1988

•Free Estimates
· •Domestic &amp; Foreign
•All Insurance Claims
•Complete Painting &amp; Collision Work To
Your Satisfaction
•Automotive Parts At Wholesale Prices

Mason, WV

enttne

aty

ROUSH'S
BODY SHOP &amp; PARTS

21 oS 2nd Street

••

•

·'

Bob Roush, Owner '

Partly cloudy lonlcbl. Low
In 608. Saturday, partly
cloudy, chance of afteroooa
stonns 30 percent. Web Ia mid

8011.

r~th;;e;;;fl;;n;;ianiiiciiiliiial;;;sta~tu;;s;;o;;f;;;900;;;0;;h;;l;;o;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiii;;iii;;iii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

Announcements
Plan reunion
Descendants of Tommy Gilkey
and Mllda Jane Hudnall will hold
their annual reunion Sunday at
the roadside park on Rouu. 33,
south of Darwin. A potluck
dinner will be served at noon.
Those attending are to take a
covered dish, table service,
games and folding chairs.

Church
•
notices

farms.
The results paint a good ·
picture of the overall Ohio farm
economy, Forster said.
The latest data show only slight
changes In farmers' financial
positions during 1987. The
changes, however, were for the
better, said Forster.
Ohio farmers reduced debt and
raised the value of their assets
slightly In 1987, he said.
'The Information a bout 1987 Is
promising," Forster said. "How·
ever, It's going to be Interesting
to see what these same people
S'IY next year.
"We're able to project the
f h d
h
t
Impact o t e roug ton arm
househOld Income, but these
projections are just that. The
final story depends a lot on what
the weath.er does the rest of this
summer,"' he said.

Ohio Lottery·

.
AWARDS

ACCEPTING
G!lllpoBI Chy
Maaa1er Dale lmaa, left, aad Oily Commluloa
Prllldeat Dow Sauader•, rllbt, aooepled lwo
GoYeraor'a Excelleaoe Award8 Thunda, al1bl
lor oulalaadlag IJI'OIII'&amp;m lmplemealallon, from
Gre1 Clift', of lbe Ohio Department of Develop-

•

meat, center. The City of
11D1Ied
out lor Ita downtown
propoam,
which wu funded Ia 1888. Since lbat tbne, 45
bulldlap bave been renovated ' In the central
buslneu district •.( OVP photo)

•
·'

ATLANTA &lt;UPI) - Michael
Dukakls, setting out from the
Democratic convention today
armed with the presidential
nomination, vowed to usher In "a
new era of greatness'' If he wins
the White Hou.se and took a
pledge of the Greek ancients:
"We will never bring disgrace
upon this, our country."
In an address that celebrated
the dreams of an Immigrant
nation and the future's posslblll·
ties, the Massachusetts governor
told jubilant Democrats in clos·
ing their 40th national conclave,
"It's time to raise our sights."
"If anyone tells you that the
American dream belongs -to the
privileged few and not to. all ol
us," he said to delighted cheers,
"you tell them that the Reagan
era is over and a new era Is about
to begin.''
Dukakls ended his 16-month
fight for llie the party's prize
Thursday night by accepting the
nomination for the fall campaign
against VIce President George
Bush, who will claim his own
· nomination at the Republican
convention In New Orleans next
month .
The Democrats concluded
their quadrennial gathering In
the unofficial capital of the South
by nominating conservative Sen.
Lloyd Bentsen of Texas as their
v!ce . presidential cahdldate; l·n·•
accepting, he said, "I want' to
help Michael Dukakls maintain
freedom as the most powerful
and persuasive force on Earth."
The new ticket partners decided to start things off promptly
today, launching a three-day
campaign swing through Texas,
California, Missouri, North Da·
kola and Pennsylvania - an
Immediate challenge to the GOP
that Democrats will not waste
time In their drive to·wln Nov. 8.
A byproduct of fresh party
unity also was expected ·today
with the Democratic National
Committee adding a fourth vice
chairman and eight new at-large
seats · in a post-convention
meeting.
Officials said the new party
posts would be filled by top aides
to civil rights leader Jesse
Jackson, who extracted them as

the states and territories rejoiced in their newfound oneness
with hearty demonstrations In
their political home for the last
four days, the tiny Omnl
Coliseum.
Packing the aisles and the ·
tiered seats to the dome, the
crowd offered thunderous ovations for their nominee and !or :
their hopes In November.
In his 45-mlnute acceptance ·
speech, interrupted 99 times by ·
applause and demonstrations,
Dukakls sounded that call to
unity, telling the delegates and a
nationwide television audience,
"We are golngtowln because we
Continued on page 10

part of the peace pact forged with
Dukakls Monday to ensure a
smooth, happy convention, the
likes of which have not been seen
since Lyndon Johnson ran for
president In 1964.
A week ago, clouds of discord
gathered as Jackson supporters.
angered that he was not chosen
as the running mate nor even
notified in advance, threatened
to rend the party. After a
weekend of private meetings and
publiC dares, Dukakls assuaged
Jackson . by agreeing to rules
changes and altered platform
language.
Thursday, the more than 5,000
delegates and alU&gt;rnates from

r--LOcal news briefs--;
Hay show slated at '88fair
The Meigs County Soil and Water Conservation District and
the Meigs County Fair Board will sponsor a hay show at the 1988
Meigs County Fair.
·
Categories for the show will be 75 percent or more alfalfa; all
grasses; 49 percent or less legumes.
Rules of the show state that exhibitors must bring one whole
bale to the fair and that hay will become the property of the falr
board. One slice will be taken from the middle of the bale for
judging. Hay must be grown by the exhibitor and must be
correctly named and labeled. At least 10 exhibits will be
required to make the show. Premiums will be $20 for first place;
$15 for second, and $10 for third In each of the three categories.
The show Is open to Meigs County residents only and
mempershlp tickets are rE;~~11li'ed for entry. ·
Entries must be made with the Meigs County Fair Board by
Friday, Aug. 12. All exhibits must be in place by 12 noon on
Monday, Aug. 15.

Driver injured in accident
One driver was cited In an accident at 3:50p.m. Thursday In
Meigs County on Salem School Lot Road, 0.3 miles north of CR.
7, according to the State Highway Patrol.
Troopers s~ld Darrell E. Buck, 47, Leon, W.Va., stopped to
allow a car to go around a parked car owned by EarlL. Bartlett
of Albany. A pickup truck driven by Gregory D. Peckman, 23,
Middleport, was unable to stop and struck the rear of Buck's
pickup truck. There was no contact between either of pickup
trucks and the parked car. Damage was minor lo both trucks.
The patrol cited Bartlett for parking on the roadway.

Sheriff probes B &amp; E
Sheriff Howard E. Frank reports that his department Is
investigating a breaking and entering at the Carleton Church In
Continued on page 10

Consumer prices up·0.3 %
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Ra·
pldly rising food costs sent
consumer prices up0.3 percent in
June, not quite as high as
expected becau~ aggressive
markdowns on clothing and
lower energy prices helped stem
the rise, the Labor Department
reported today.
Analysts had been looking
generally for a 0:4 percenf.
Increase. . ·
The Bureau of Labor Statistics
said food prices rose 0. 7 percent,
led by a sharp 2 percent Increase
lor meat, poultry, fish and eggs.
Beef priCes shot up 1.3 percent
In June and have risen 10.8
percent this year, despite expec·
tatlons that prices would drop as
drought-stricken farmers took
their cattle to market early
rather than pay for expensive
and scarce feed, the bureau ~ld.
In general, the effects of the
drought seem not to have made
their way to the supermarket.
The costs of fruits, vegetables
and dairy products actually
declined In June, the bureau said.
Higher housing costs also
pushed up Inflation In June.
Shelrer cost renters 0.4 percent
more In June and homeowners
paid 0.5 percent more for their
housing, the bureau said.
Inflation was held down In June
by a 0.3 percent drop In the .costs
of clothing antll.l percent lower
gasoline prices as the summer
vacation season began. Lower
prices for fuel all and natural gas
offset higher electric rates
charged by many utilities, the
bureau said.
Apparel prices shot up 3.8
percent In the llrst live.months of
the year but abnormally large ·
end of the season sales, particu·
larly for women's clothing, were

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responsible for the June decline
"You can't knock this number
the bureau said.
' but the fact of the matrer Is when
The bureau said the Inflation you take food and energy out you
rate would be 4.2 percent for the have 0.4 percent," Dederick said.
year if prices continue to rise at "You have risen clearly to
the seasonally adjusted 0.3 per· around a 5 percent annual rate ...
cent June rate.
and this Is about a point higher
Excluding volatile food and than a year ago."
energy prices, consumer prices
Thomas Carpenter of ABS
rose 0.4 percent In June, the Capital Management, a Wa·
bureau said.
shlngton Investment firm, said
Robert Dederick, chief econo· · the inflation worry was
mist for The Northern Trust Co. exagger~ted.
In Chicago, said that indicated
' 'The momer:~tum has been
Inflation worsened.
declining." Carpenter sal d.

IConsumer Prices
Percent Change
Seasonany·adjusled

Index

Unadjusted

0.5%

0.4•J.

o.:nr.
OJ!%

0.1%

105
.·0.1 % 1 - - - - - - - - - 1

·0.2'Jio L----:--:--:-,.,..,-.,..,.,-,1 100
JJASONDjfUAMJ
1987
1988

JJASONDJFMAUJ
1987
tHe

UPIGIIptic
FOOD PRICES UP - Rapidly rlalllllood co•&amp;s seat COIIHIIIer
prlcle~~ up o.a pereent In luae, aot quiet u hllh u expected*accret~~lve markdowns oa elotltlal aad 1 - eaero prlc• helped
stem the rile, lbe Commeree Deparaneat reportetl Frldq, UPI

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Comment
The Daily SentineL
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVqfED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~j;b

I:Slm~ ~L---r-o....--r=J,.,.
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

AMEMBER of The United Press lnternallonal, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

:m

LE'M'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than
words
lona. All letters are subJect to editing and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In
good

taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

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Boston records eighth win
•
mrow; Yankees . lose, 6-5

Page 2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomaoy-Mkldleport, Ohio

• reIeases
MeXICO
WASHINGTON - It's time to
haul out Teddy Roosevelt's big
stick.
Last week, the Mexican government released a Puerto
Rican separatist who Is wanted
in the United States for terrorist
activities. In response the White
House pronounced the ·a ction
" outrageous" and recalled the
U.S. ambassador to Mexico for
"consultations," a moderately
serious form of diplomatic
protest .
There was only one problem
· with the U.S. reaction: 1t wasn' t
nearly strong enough. This is a
case that clearly calls for a
severe interruption in commercial and diplomatic relations
with our southern neighbor for a

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terronst~_

prolonged period. We would even
suggest sealing the border with
airborne rangers, although the
cautious sages of diplomacy
mlgh.t find that a little extreme.
That is about the only way to get
the message across to foreign
leaders mesmerized by terrorIsts masquerading as political
prisoners - that the mollycoddling of zealots dedicated to the
murder of Americans Is an
egregious and unforgivable
transgression.
The man the Mexicans have set
free Is 37-year-old William "No
Hands" Morales, a leader of the
Puerto Rican separatist movement called the Armed Forces of
National Liberation, or FALN.

Friday, July 22, 1988

By Jack Anderson

___;a=-=nd~J9=: ;sepc. :. h:. . : Sc.:.ve:. =. .ar

The group claims to be dedicated
to Independence for Puerto Rico;
it Is, In fact, Inclined to coldblooded murder.
One Intelligence document we
have seen alleges that the FALN
·is responsible for scores of
"terrorist bombings In the I.J..S.
since Its founding In 1973 .... (It)
has developed an extensive terrorist network stretching across
the U.S. and Into Mexico. Morales Is also developing links with '
Insurgent movements In Central
America."
Morales grew up on the streets
of New York's East Harlem,
picking up his politics from the
radical movements of the 1960s.
In 1978, his face was disfigured

Dems say Reagan
backers ·are returning

and both hands were blown off
when a bomb he was working on
exploded. He was sentenced to 99
years In prison on weapons and
explosives charges.
While being treated In a New
York prison hospital, Morales
wove a rope from elastic bandages. hung It from a window and
shimmied down to freedom . He
disappeared into thi&gt; underground, but the pollee located his
wife in Chicago and soon learned
she was receiving a lot or calls
from Mexico. The FBI later
Upped off the Mexican authorities that Morales was planning to
bomb a Mexican-U.S. legislative
conference In Puebla, Mexico on
May 28, 1983. He was captured
aJter an exchange of gunfire that
resulted in the death of an
accomplice and a Mexican policeman. He was sentenced to .
eight years and had served five of
them when he was released last
week.
After an elaborate clearance
procedure and two trips to
Mexico City, our former associate, Jon L~e Anderson, met
with Morales In the spring or 1984
In the maximum security wing or
Reclusorlo Norte, a model prison
on the ou tsklrts or the city.
Morales described his escape
from the prison hospltai In New
York and talked about the
"imperialist domination" of the
Western world. He seemed every
bit the determined revolutionary
and Marxist zealot that Intelligence reports had painted him to
be. His most fervent expletives
were reserved for the United
States. "I am a member of a
revolutionary movement which
Is at war with the United States
government," he told our
reporter.
This Is the unabashed cutthroat that the Mexican authorities turned loose on the grounds
he Is a "political fighter for the
independence of Puerto Rico"
who had been "politically
persecuted."
For that brutish act,lt seems to
us, the Mexicans ought to pay a
very high price.

By ROBERT SHEPARD
ATLANTA (UPI) :__ Democratic voters who supported Ronald
Reagan in 1980 and 1984 are coming back to the Democratic Party and
support Michael Dukakis over Vice President George Bush by a 2-1
ratio, according to a poll released by the party earlier this week.
The poll results show "a very significant change of opinion among
this very Important group of voters," said Rep. Beryl Anthony,
D-Ark., chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign
Committee.
·
·
,
''The party that captures the heart and soul of'these voters is going
to be successful," he told a news conference hours before the
Democratic National Convention selected Dukakls as its presidential
nominee.
The telephone survey conducted June 26-30 contacted 601 swing
voters In 18 Southern and industrial states, Including Ohio, most of
whom voted for Reagan In the two previous elections. Swing voters
represent as much as 18 percent of the voting population.
Among those sampled, 56 percent supported Dukakls while Bush
had the support of just 28 percent.
Anthony said the survey "reaffirms that 1984 was a popularity
"
contest for Reagan."
But Rich Galen, the Republican point man in Atlanta charged with
getting the GOP's message to the thousands of reporters covering the
Democrats this week. said the sur\rey was worthless because it was
taken nearly a month ago.
"That's fraudulent for them to release that," said Galen.
spokesman for the National Republican Congressional Committee.
"Well, if you Pentagon people can't accept a bribe, then do what they do
''They tried to get something together (In June) to release today to
show overwhelming support for Mike Dukakis."
on Capitol Hill ... call It a speaking fee."
''These are very volatile numbers" that will change as media
attention shifts to the Republican convention In New Orleans next
month, Galen said.
The survey found that Dukakls holds a large lead when he and Bush
are compared on a wide variety of personal descriptions, with a
31-polnt lead ·over Bush among those asked which candidate Is a
strong leader.
'
ATLANTA (NEt\) - Demo- cent months.
statewide political organization waged an aggressive bilingual
0!) negative descriptions, Bush also ·came out poorly, with 31
cratic presidential candidate MINew
York,
with
36
electoral
that enabled him to achieve campaign for support In Texas'
percent more people viewing him as dull and boring and 32 percent
chael S. Dukakls' selection of a votes, is the ·biggest political landslide victories in two re- Rio Grande Valley prior to that
more saying he is weak and wishy-washy.
running mate almost certainly prize In the Industrial Northeast election contests.
state's Democratic presidential
Tl)e sampling found concern among the swing voters about the
enhances his chances that counts and Midwest, a region where
primary earlier this year.
Crucial
to
the
outcome
of
this
direction·of the country, with 51 percent believing the country is off on
-In the EleCtoral College.
credible
Democratic
presidenOn Super Tuesday, he not only
year's
presidential
election
in
the wrong track, while only 32 percent think things are headed In the
His
designation
of
Texas
Sen.
tial
contenders
traditionally
finished
first In the Lone Star
Texas
(and
In
California,
New
rlgh! direction.
Lloyd M. Bentsen Jr. as the have fared well.
York
and
approximately
a
half
State
but
also received plurali·
On, the economy, 67 percent said they fear the economy Is on the
party's vice presidential candion
the
list
is
Texas,
with
Next
ties
of
the
votes cast by both
states)
wlll
be
the
dozen
other
verge of major problems because of huge budget and trade deficits
date means that the ticket Is fully 29 electoral votes, untU now ballots cast by the 4.2 million Hispanics and Anglos.
and :the next president should make major changes to avoid a
competitive (and probably has a presumed by many observers to potential Hispanic voters who
Dukakls reinforced that vicrecession. Just 28 percent said the economy Is In good shape as
slight edge now) in the nation's be Bush's to lose, If for no other are part of the nation's fastest- tory and signaled his commitdenionstrated by low unemployment and Inflation.
three most populous states reason than Its status as one of growing minority group.
ment to a Hispanic campaign
A~thony said the poll shows swing voters are most concerned about
California, New York and Texas. his several uhome states."
strategy
when he traveled to San
In
They
generally
participate
the basic aspects of life- health care, education, affordable housing,
That trio accounts for 112
Bush,· however, was born and elections at an abysAillly low Antonio last month for the
jobs.and wages.
· Electoral College votes - fully raised In New England. He rate. Indeed, only abol!t hald of funeral of William C. "Willie"
"These are clearly Democratic issues and this poll shows Dukakls
41.5 percent of the 270 electoral moved to Texas In the late 1940s, the Lations eligible to vote are Velasquez, one of the region's
with&gt;wide margins when voters are asked to choose who would
votes needed by Dukakls or his but ever since the mld-1960s he registered, and only about half of most widely respected political ·
perfprm betler.on those issues." he said.
Republican opponent, Vice Pres- has held a series of elective and those registered actually cast organizers and head of the
Ident George Bush, to secure the appointive posts in the federal
Southeast Voter Registration Ed.f
ballots.
presidency.
government that have made him
But they nevertheless are an ucation Project.
Although California, with 47 primarily a resident of WashingIndeed, If history Is a controlimportant political force because
electoral votes, will be a major ton, D.C., for more than two of their numbers. In Texas and ling fa,ctor, a Texas victory Is
battleground in the autumn cam- decades.
California, they probably will crucial to the Dukakls-Bentsen
paign, the Democrats have a
Bentsen also has spent much account for 10 to 15 percent of all ticket. Since 1845, when Texas
Dear. Editor:
romantic nation, rather than a good chance to win there lor the time in the nation's capital since votes cast In this year's general was admitted to the union, no
H'\S it been a year since I chilling Impersonal one. And first time In more than two being elected to the Senate In 1970 election.
Democratic presidential nomicrossed the Meigs County line since aged stars are dying and (lecades. Indeed, Dukakls has led
(Bush was the Republican oppoThe first presidential candi- nee has been victorious nationheading west?
new ones aborning: "I say why Bush in all of the public opinion nent he vanquished that year), date fluent In Spanish ever to ally without carrying the Lone
For those I saw and did not get not.''
surveys conducted there In rebut he has built a powerful represent either party, Dukakis Star State.
back to; to those 1 did not see, my
We unnecessarlly limit our
apologies and hope for a future perspective and vision. By the
time. I heard ..Wonderful stories laws of man we are shackeled to
from some of you. Let us hear the speed of light (186,000 miles
more and from others as well.
per second) but I object to that
As a friend, whom I had not limitation. At this very moment I
Ever since It became apparent In this epidemic. To be sure, cal Association ~ which came the age-old principle of patientseen since 1946, who alsollves out am In Racine, not physically, of
that AIDS poses a major health numerous public-health experts late to the cause ' of slowing the physician confidentiality, beof st~te said, " Each time I visit course, but by the chemical and
Racine I find less but each time It electrical processes that fuel and
threat to American society, there are convinced there Is no point In spread of AIDS - officially took cause physicians would be taking
Is niore difficult to leave." I drive my brain cells, I can has been a crying need for open, attempting to follow the convothe-p&amp;sltion · that physicians ' information obtained from a
agree.
rational debate about.the conflict lute trail of an AIDS patient's should, as a last resort. notify the patient In confidence and passing
project the image of an old friend
Whatever the reason may be,lt on the screen of my mind or stroll between public-health concerns sexual contacts.
known sex partners of AIDS - It along to a third person seems to intensify as we grow down 3rd Street and "see" fifty and the clvll rights and liberties
And as to t)te concept of infected Individuals that they perhaps against the patient's
of the afflicted.
older. A sense of urgency , to see years ago.
partner notification, again they may haye been Infected. This wishes.
'
This conflict is due to historical ask. what purpose would be would, of course, be a violation of
and ·talk with old friends once
As a race - our senses
more, takes hold. To walk the evolving and maturing- we will timing. AIDS Is the first epi- served? Were this a disease for
path~ we walked as kids; to savor
someday be able to mentally demic of a new, untreatable,
which there was an effective
the events that, as kids, may transmit, Instantaneously, to the fatal disease in the "post- treatment, notification and testhave been crises but now are farthest galaxy. Otherwise, penicillin" era. An entire genera- Ing would certainly serve a
memories to be cherished.
would not all this Immensity tion of American laym~n and worthwhile purpose - it would
'
physlci ans has been raised tak- save lives. But there Is no
As: the salmon retu~ns up- seem redundant?
stream to Its birthplace, to spawn
But before that comes to pass Ing for granted the miracle of effective treatment, and the
and ~le In an age-old retual, so - when our terrestrial sojourn- antibiotics and the Idea that argument can be made that by
does .the human spirit respond to Ing Is done and we are freed from whatever nature could dish out,
the time an individual comes to a
a daWn-age racial rnemory.If not all earthly attachments, then will man could conquer. ·
physician complaining of AIDSa physical migration then one we cross horizons never dreamed
This Is also the first such
like symptoms - and tests
which transcends lt.
and at the crossing be eridowed epidemic In the post-civil-rights positive - he or she h·a s likely
It Is written thaf man was with universal knowledge and In era. Previous great epidemics
already ,Infected his or her sex
made of dust and I Ike to think the twinkling of an eye, as though and plagues oozed~on the scene partners.
that, on a higher plane, It was we have always known - We'll when there was no question that
Every time a public official has
individual liberties could be argued that contact tracing
stardust. As Carl Sagan, the know precisely what we are.
astronomer Is fond of saying,
Floyd Clark limited In the name of the public might slow the spread or the
"We are all made of star stuff."
6504 NE 9th good.
disease, there has been a loud
Let us express It as a warm
But since the consciousness outcry from affected groups Portlancl, Or. 97211
raising or the civil-rights movepartlcularl)l gay males - the
ment of the 1950s and '60s, the civil libertarians. They argue
women's movement of the 1970s,
that partner notl!lcatlon would
and the gay-rights movement or be an enormous Invasion of the
•"
the past decade, the social patient's right to privacy and
Today Is Friday, Jul)l 22, the 204th day of 1988 with 162 to follow .
pendulum has swung to the point that the threet or partner notifiThe moon is waxing, moving toward Its run phase.
where Individual liberties are cation would keep Infected indiThe morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
held to be far more sacred than
The evening star Is Saturn.
viduals from seeking medical
any
concept of the rights, or attention. That outcry has even
Those born on this date are under the sign of Cancer. T~ey include
•
Austrian monk Gregor Mendel, discoverer or the first laws of greater good, or society as a
been so loud that very few public
•
heredity, In 1822; poet Emma Lazarus, whose poem ''The New whole.
, officials or public-health experts
This Is why there has been so have been willing to discuss the
Cl llllt.rHIA.IM,
&lt;;fr ;.,~
Colossus" adorns the base or the Statue or Liberty, In 1849; painter
. Edward Hopper In 1882; Kennedy family matriarch Rose Kennedy In little thought given to contact
Issue seriously. UntO now.
PERFECT BAlANCE
tracing and partner notification
1890 (are 98); psychiatrist Karl Menninger In 1893 (are 95).
Recently, the American Medl-

Bentsen choice boosts

ht

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W L Pet.

Detroit
Nrw Yorll:
B ...o
Mllwau ll!e
Cleveland
Toroalo
Baltlmort

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55 37 .598 53 39 .576 2
51 42 .541t 4 ~
50 4D .526

6~

411 411 .500

9

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30 6.1 .319 26

w...

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Mlnne1oba
K.an.a City
Callforala
Ollcago
Ta ..
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511 38 .611-1 51 U .UR H t
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Tb11nHhW'~t
Ollc~~osn I

Rtl•nalts ·

Bulon 6,

Mllwau tilt&gt; 8, TtmllS I
K.an!IWI City 6, New

York ~

Seattle 8, Toronto 2
Frlda,y·~ G~tmCfoi

Chlcqo1 (l.alPolnt i -10)
ton {Gardner 3-1) , 7: 36p.m .

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Tuu {Witll-6) at Milwauke e (Boslo,

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New \'ork (John 7-3) ILl Kan111..11 Cit)'
{Power HJ , M: l::i p.m .
Torealo /Undecided) al Sealtle {Swift
i-7),10:0$p .m .
DetroH (Robinson 11-S) at Oakiand
(Davllli H) , !0:35p.m.
Cleveland (Can•olll 7·il 11.1 Ca liforni a
(Ciark2·0), 11:15 p.m.
Sal.unlay'8 Gametoi
ChiC.KO at BOlli on
Detratt a~; OakiMd
? NewYOrll:atKan~~&amp;SCily , nl~t

BaltlmQreal MlniKlMOW, nlx~~t
TexllH at Mllwau lil!e, ntxht
Cle¥elan• 1'1 CallforniM. nl~rht
Toronlo at s~ attle, night
NATIONAL LEI\GUE

East
:; ~7 ~~2
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New Yorli
PIUR11h
Monlreal

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St. Loulll
Ph Ilad el pillll
Loa All pi ('Ill
Hou!ao.
San Frllllcl1co

San Die..,

Sift

n s2 .Hi7 14%
II 53 .US 15%

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48 4H .4119

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Frld~U '!I

G11mcs

San Dlt~ (Show 7·9) nt ChiC!ijfO (PIL'U
3-5),

-t :t:S p.m.

Allaaat {GiaYinr·ll·lll nnd Mahler 14-IH
al Nl'w York (Goodt•n 11-:1 and Cont'&amp;-21.

2. 5:35p.m.
Loa Maele. (Belcher H l m Pltt!Du fCh
(Dunne 6·7) , 1:JS p.m .
Molltre!ll (Hoirlllln 1-:11 u.t Clnl.'lnmtl

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IJa~IIAOn

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11-S ), 1 : 35 p.m.
Phlladt"lphla (Palmer 5-61 at
toa {Knep~r t-:1), H:as p.m .

•
•

San Frandsco {ft.ohln110n :J..I) at St.
Louls(Maa:nan('H),S:35p .m.'

••

:'!nt;::!:IICc:~~~~~~w~~

1\thuUa 1M New York
SIUl Dl.-p at Chicago
Lo" 1\a~li!IJ.t PIUshul'lfh, nl~tht

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Basketball
MIIIIW'ti:WI - Named Billy McKin~Yy
penonnel dlr·ector.
NBI\ - Reinstated pard Mlcheal Ray
Rlclwds on U!l a free a1ewd.
Colle11e
New \'oi'k University - N~tmed Eric
Elllenberg Msllltant men'il ha~~ke&amp;hall
cwacl~

wotr~blbult

bulletball coatch.

Foothill!
Bull ala- WUVt!dwlde recelvenJerr)'
Butlf-r and 1\lvln Mlllrr
Chlcqo- Slrned center Jay Hllpn~rg, tackie Hellh V• Horne , wide
receiver Glen KoidOwllld and llthl l'nd

James Thornton.
Cl~tland - Sipd L'Ornerhack An·
than)' Blaylock, Nlfeth!8ThneGuhand •
BrllUl W•lnlf...., whlereceh•ersLaJor-daht Bli-den and Hendley HawkiM and
quarterback Steve Slaydea.
DHroil - Slped rre~ar;ent runnlnlf
b~~elr. David Vorht•ll.
Kan!llllCity-RuMinghad.llllermm
,
Ht·anl and I..Krry Morh~rty 11peed to
~nll'llclll.

Miami- WIIJvt1d kicker Gre1 Cox.
New En ~and - Sl gned wide recet\ler
Ctldrie ,JoJH!!ti toll 4-.,ear conlnwt.
l'hllo.delpNa- Siped def('lllllvc had
Eric Everett to a 3-)eiU' eonh"al1 ud
dclf!nsl\'e tackle Joe Seh1111ter Ill a t--~ar
co ntnu:-1: claimed defeardve tackle Se•
Mdner.ry and cenl.er Woody Myerlt on
wah·en.
WasHngton - Rumlnlt b$Ck Keith
Griffin t;lped a 2-,ear conlnact .
Hot:key
Bo~ton Sl ~d left win« Randy

AAA results
Thun&lt;ld..-'!1 Re111M;5

Denver 5, Buffalo 2
.a, Denwr 2
Toledo at Synu:u!l!-, ppd ., rllln
lndiiWipoliH 2, Oklahoma City I
· Lmlnille"l, Iowa 0, Ill
Iowa .f. IAuts ville 0, 2nd ·
Omaha t, Naah\'llle 7
l'awlucket .fi, Tldewlder 2
Maine at Rl chmond, .11usp.
Columbu~ 6, Roeh~r ~

'uflalo

FridiQ''II Gamf!lrl

Olliahoma City at In cl-poliK
Toledo a1 Syracu 1e
Iowa at LoulnUIII!'
Omaha at N aslwllle
Maine a4 Richmond
Columbu" at Rocll~~r
l'l!lwtuckct Ml 'ndewater
Dca~r at Buffalo

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Brewers 8, Ranren 1
At Milwaukee, Don August
scattered nine hits and Jeffrey
Leonard smacked a two-run
homer to lead the Brewers.
August, 5-3. struck out five and
walked none In his fourth complete game. Jose Guzman, 9-8,
took the loss.
Royals 8, Yankees 5
At Kansas City, Mo., Kurt
Stillwell singled home Pat Tabler
with two outs to cap a three-run
ninth Inning Royals' rally. New
York center fielder Claudell
Washington misplayed a line
drive that could have ended the
ganie with the score 5-4, but the
ball sailed over his glove for a
three-base error. allowing the
tying run to score. Cecilia
Guante, 4-6, was the loser. Steve
Farr. 3-2, pitched one inning in
front of the largest crowd 41,040- at Royals Stadium since
Aug. 5, 1985.

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The Daily Sentinel

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-~

(USPS 14:&gt;-HO)

A Dlvlsloll of Mulllmedla, Inc.

Publtshed every afternoon. Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St .. Po·
meroy, Ohio, by thta Ohio Valley Publishing COmpany t MuUimedla, Inc.,
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Unit~

Member:

' .•r ..

..

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Adverttslng ReprL"S~ntatlvr. Branham
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KIRTLAND, Ohio IUPI) The top three draft picks of the
Cleveland Browns tailed to report to tral nlng camp Thursday
by the 6 p.m. deadline.
A. total of 77 players did arrive
at a motel adjoining Lakeland
Community College, the Browns'
training camp site for the next
five weeks.
Absent were first-round pick
Clifford· Charlton, a linebacker
from Florida; secood-round selection Michael Dean Perry, a
defensive lineman from Clemson
and the brother or Chicago's
William "Refrigerator" Perry;
ahd third-round pick Van Walters, a linebacker from Indiana.
Cleveland did not formally
announce any slgnlngs, but players cannot report to camp until
under contract. Reporting were
cornerback Anthony Blaylock, a
.fourth-round pick, safeties
Thane Gash (seventh round) and
Brian Washington (10th round),
wide receiver Hendley Hawkins
(11th round) and quarterback
Steve Slayden (12th round) -all
of whom indicated they had
signed.
Wide receiver LaJourdaln
"J.J.': Birden, an elght0 round
pick, suffered a knee injury In the
May rookie mini-camp and will
be sidelined the entire season.
Birden also arrived In camp.
The Browns said that negotiations were proceeding with
Charlton, Perry and Waiters,
and expected the trio to report In
time .for Sundav's first workout.
Charlton's agent, David Ware,
and Walters's agent, Ed Sewell,
are In Cl.e veland to meet with
Ernie Accorsl, the Browns' executive vice president of football
operations .

for strikes." Lyons .said. "He did
By T. CLIFFORD WITHERS
a good job keeping us offUP! Spol1s Writer
Dennis •'011 Can'· Boyd flirted balance. I was looking for an
with perfection Thursday night off-speed pitch."
and kept his new manager's
" Believe It or not, I really
record unblemished.
didn't think about the no-hitter
.Boyd retired the first 19 Chi- until after it was over. " said
cago batters he faced and al- Boyl,!, 8-7. "There's too much
lowed one hit over seven Innings.
going on out there to think a bout a
leading th'e Boston Red :Sox to no-hitter. "
their eighth straight victory
Bob Stanley went 1 2-3 innings
under Joe Morgan, a 6-1 triumph for his secood save.
over 'the White Sox.
Chicago, which committed
. Boyd, who entered the game four errors and allowed Boston
with a 2-5 record and a 6.10 ERA, three unearned runs in the
was rumored to be headed contest, dropped to 2-5 on Its
toward the bullpen, but after his current 10-game road trip.
performance, Boyd made It clear
Chicago starter Jack McDowhere he thought he belonged. "I well dropped to 4-8.
had to block out a few games."
The Red Sox, who recorded
said Boyd. '"I'm no bullpen their 13th consecutive triumph at
pitcher. 1 can pitch, just give me Fenway Park. scored two una chance."
earned runs In the flrsl. Wade
Morgan, who took over after Boggs opened the Inning by
John McNamara was fired July reaching first on second base14, improved his record to 8-0, man Fred Manrique's throwing
setting a club record by surpass- ·error, took second on Marty
Ing .Steve O'Neill, who won his Barrett's single to center and
first seven games as Boston third when Daryl Boston bobbled
manager in 1951.
the ball for an error.
"He looked like the old "011
After Dwight Evans flied out,
Can"/' Morgan said. nThat was Mike Greenwell bounced into a
just what we needed, too.''
fielder 's choice, scoring Boggs to
White Sox Manager Jim Fre- make It 1-0. Ellis Burks followed
gosl was equally impressed with with an RBI double off the
Boyd's outing. "That's got to be left-field wall for a 2-0 Boston
the best Boyd's pitched In a while edge.
and the worst we've played all . Elsewhere. Milwaukee
year," Fregosl said.
crushed Texas 6-1; Kansas City
The 28-year-old righthander edged New York 6-~; and Seattle
had a perfeet game until former downed Seattle 6-2.
Red Sox Steve Lyons singled to
In the National League It was:
center with one out In the San Diego 3, Chicago 1; Pittsseventh. Boyd, who threw only 80 burgh 3, Los Angeles 2; Montreal
pitches, left the game alter seven 3, Cincinnati 2; Houston 2,
Innings with "stiffness" In his Philadelphia 0; and St. Louis 6,
shoulder.
San Francisco 4. Atlanta at New
"He was thr,,wlng everything York was postponed by rain.
..-----------------------.,.----,

Big Bend. midget
football sign-up set

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Seattle - Tradeddt!8lpated laltter Ken
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Jay Rullner, mlnor-leiiCUe pUcller Rlclt
Balaban an• " miiiOf' le~~~~tr to b~
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Tnu- Slptd tree-a,entcal.cllerJim
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Transactions

Majors

Comments on visit

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Browns top
three choices
fail to report

Scoreboard ...

Duke~__R_ob_er_tW_a_lte_rs

AIDS debate long overdue_

Young, Ronnie Casto; bl!(lk, I to · r, Jeremy
Gtbnm, Adam Krawsczyn, Coach Mike Young,
Jell Darnell and Shawn lllgle. Other coaches or
the team are Pal Hill and Cleon Pratt.

PAT HILL FORD TEAM- This Is the
Hill
Ford sponsored team of the Pomeroy Youth
League lor 1988. The group includes, front, I to r,
Frank Mut~~~er, Jared Hill, Benny EWing, Pat

Letters to the editor

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4 The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 22, 1988

Pornavy Middleport, Ohio
•

Pittsburgh
pulls
within
half
.
game of idle Mets; Reds· lose
.

ESASKY DOUBLES - Ball above Is hit for a
, douhle by Cincinnati's Nick Esasky after getting

•

•

past diving Montreal thlrll basemaa Tim Wallach
In the second Inning Thursday. The Expos raiDed
to "'in, S.l.

·Neumann is
first round
Open leader

By OOU.INS YEARWOOD
UPI Sports Writer
Perhaps the only thing that
ke~Plttsburgh out of first place
In the National League East
Thursday was a little rain In New
York.
While rain has washed out the
Mets last two games, the Pirates
have won three straight Including Thursday night's 3·2
victory over the Los Angeles
Dodgers -and 12 of their last 13
to pull to within one half game of
the Mets. They gained a half a
game each of the last three
nights.
"I'll take first place any way I
can," said R.J . Reynolds, who
had a run-scoring double and a
two-run triple. "But those gam~s
have to be made up anyway. If
we'rewatchlngthescoreboard to
see what the Mets are doing, we
can't concentrate on what we're
doing."
,
Reynolds, who played right
field last ·night but will most
likely give way to Glenn Wilson,
who was obtained from Seattle
following the game In exchange
for Darnell Coles, concentrated
against one of the game's best

pitchers, Orel Hershlser.
Reynokls was In the lineup
because of a .333 average against
Hershlser this season, and .407
lifetime.
"I really can't tell you why,"
Reynolds said. "Maybe It's because Orel's such a phenomenal
pitcher with such good stuffthal I
sit back, don't try to be too hyped
up."

Doug Drabek, however, outdueled Hershlser for his third \
straight win and an 8-5 record.
Drabek allowed two runs on five
hits, walked one and struck out
seven. Jim Gott picked up his
15th save with one innmgofwork.
Hershlser, 13-5, alklwed three
runs on three hits, and two of his
three walked scored Hershlser
Is now 1·3 against the Pirates this
season.
"I beat them the first time,
another time they got some
chlppy hits, some bleeders," said
Hershlser. ''I only gave up three
hits tonight, R.J. got a couple key
hits and that was the ballgame.
The Pittsburgh Pirates do not
strike any fear m my blood."
Neither team had a hit untll the
fourth.

Roger Maltbie GUO leader

I

Smith switching to
Western Kentucky

The DOdgers scored !lrst on
Kirk Gibson's one-out single.
Pittsburgh tied It In the bottom
of the inning on Reynolds' double
off the top of the center field wall.
The Pirates went ahead 3-1 In
the sixth on Reyno)ds' two-run
triple Into the right !leld corner
scoring Jose Lind who singled
and Andy Van Slyke who walked.
Drabek allow~d just lour hits
until Mike Marshall led of! th!'
ninth with his 14th home run to
make It a .one-run game ani!
chase the starter.
I
•
"It was one of those gamef
where I didn't have anythl'*
exceptional," said Drabek. "I
was hoping my defense woullt
help me out which they dt4
We're going well and we ju91
have to go out every day and tcy
to keep It going."
•
Elsewhere, St. Louts dumpelt
San Francisco 6·4, Montrea',l
edged !=lnclnnatl 3-2, San Dlegll
defeated Chicago 3·1, Housto~
blanked Philadelphia 2·0 anO
Atlanta at New York was postponed due tb rain.
'
In the American League, I'
was· Boston 6, Chicago 1; MIJo.
waukee 6, Texas 1; Kansas City
6, New Ydrk 5 and Seattle 9,
Toronto 2. •
CardiDfls 6, Glaala 4
,
At St. Louis, Terry Pendleton
belted a three-run double to
highlight a tour-run seventh
Inning The viCtory was the third
In a row for the Cardinals, who
had not won thref straight since a
five-game streak from May 31 to
June 4 St. Louis' starter Danny
Cox, 3-5, snapped a personal
three-game losing streak.
Expos 3, Reds 2
At Cincinnati, pinch hitter Tom
Foley singled home Tim Wallach
to cap a three-run sixth and help
the Expos snap a four-game
losing streak Montreal began
the sixth trailing 2·0 against Tom
Browning Frank Williams, 0-1 ,
was the loser In relief. Dennis
Martinez improved to 11·7.
Padres 3, Cubs 1
At Chicago, Ed Whitson scat·
tered eight hits over eight Innings
and Benito Santiago llomered,
leading the Padres past !he Cubs,
who lost for the 12th time In 14
games. Whitson, 9·5, extended
his wlnmng streak to six games.
Chicago's Jamie Moyer fell to
5·9.
:
Astros 2, PhiUies 0
At Houston, Nolan Ryan fired a
three-hitter for his ~5th career
shutout- and first since May 26~
1984- and Buddy Bell broke a tie
with a sixth-Inning single, lifting
the Astros. Ryan, 7·7,' won for
only the second time In his las 110
starts. Houston has won nine of
Its last ll.

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CARLISLE, Pa. (UPI) - Washington Redsklns running back
Timmy Smith Is on a mission to
prove his record·settlng204-yard
rushing performance In Super
Bowl XXII was no fluke.
Smith, entering his second
season with the Redsklns, ar·

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LUTHERVILLE, Md. (UPI)Llselotte Neumann of Sweden
knew she could contend In the
U.S. Women's Open after watchIng another star from the European women's golf circuit, Laura
Davies, win the jewel of Amerl·
can women's golf last year.
Neumann went out and shot the
by "an Ideal d~y for birdies"
lowest first round score In the .
CROMWELL. Conn. (UP!) 43-year history of the U.S. Roger Maltbie, who missed a because "the greens are soft and
Women's Open Thursday for a 3-foot put to lose the 1986 Greater the ball stayed In the fairway ."
Starting on the lOth tee, Malt·
two-stroke lead over JoAnne Hartford Open, used a new putter
ble
completed the back nine at
Carlll!r, at 49 the oldest golfer In to take the first round lead at lhls
5-under-par
30, carding ' six birthe Open, and Sally Quinlan year's $700,000 event.
dies,
two
pars
and a bogey on No
heading Into today's second
Maltbie fired a 7-under-par 64
14.
He
added
two
more birdies on
round.
Thursday and took a l·stroke
Neumann said she was In· lead In the rain-Interrupted open· the front nine.
In 1986, Maltbie missed a 3 foot
spired by Davies' victory In the log round of the GHO.
U.S. Women's Open last year In
Using a putter he has played putt for par on the first playoff
Plainfield, N.J., and now Is with for only four days, Maltbie hole, giving Mac O'Grady the
gunning to become the second dropped birdie putts of 6, 8, 10,10, GHO tllle.
Hammond, returning from a
PRACTICES CATCHING FOOTBALL- Tim Jlrown, the 1988
straight European player to 12, 13, 18 and 20 feet and
Helsnna,n Trophy winner and the Los Angeles Raiders first round
claim her first American victory commented, "When you get out five -week vacation, said the
• pick, practices catching a football that It lied to a bunge cord at lhe
In the Open.
of a putting slump, they all go 6. 786-yard course at the Tourna·
ment Players Club of Connect!
' Los Angeles Raiders training camp In Oxnard Thursday.
"It was kind of neat to see that
in."
cut
"played pretty easy" and
she could win last year. I think
An early downpour delayed the
because
of the rain the players
that gives me confidence to come start of play by 90 minutes and a
were
able
to "take 11 right at the
here," Neumann said. "I had second shower caused a 21·
beaten Laura before. If she could
minute Interruption of the morn- pin." He missed sharing the lead
come out here and win, I think I
Ing starters. The rains aided when he bogeyed No 18, falling to
can
come
out
and
win,
too."
golfers
by making the greens sink a 5-foot putt for par.
rived a week early for tral nlng
' PLA'ITEVILLE, Wis (UPI ) Sindelar, who had a bogey-free
Neumann,
who
joined
the
very
soft
and allowing the pros to
William "the Refrigerator" camp to try to prove he Is worthy LPGA Tour this year after three
round, said the playing condihit
approach
shots
directly
at
the
Perry, the massive lineman of of the starling job in ' Coach Joe successful years playing In Eu·
tions allowed him to "be aggres·
pin on each hole.
one-back
the Chicago Bears, is suffering Gibbs' gruel ing
slve.
If I didn 't shoot under 70, I'd
rope,
fired
a
4-under-par
67
Tied for second at 65 were Joey
from an "eating disorder" and alignment.
be
disappointed."
Thursday
on
lhe
rain-soaked
By virtue of his sensational 6,232-yard Five Farms course at Sindelar, No. 7 on the money list;
will miss the start of traimng
The tournament, wh1ch offers
six-year tour veteran Donnie
Super Bowl performance, Smith Baltimore Country Club.
camp to deal with the problem.
a
$126,000
first prize, has only two
Hammond; and Brad Faxon,
Perry, who has fought a weight opens training camp No 1 on the
of
the
Jop
10 money winners .
JoAnne Car112r, who won the
problem his three years In the depth chart. He must beat out U S Women's Open In 1971 and who finished tied for 11th In the Along with Sindelar Is No.lOPau I
NFL. weighed about 375 pounds Kelvin Bryant, Keith Griffin and 1976 and played her first Open In British Open
Maltbie, who hit 17 of 18 greens Azlnger, the defendmg chamwhen the Bears held their mini· three running backs drafted this 1962 - four years before NeuIn regulation, said he was helped pion; who fired a 69.
camp In May. Coach Mike Dltka year.
Among the missing big names
mann
was
born,
and
Quinlan
both
Also Thursday, the Redsklns shot a 2-under 69 to stand In
then ordered him to lose 50
are Masters champion Sandy
announced Keith Griffin signed a second place In the $400,000
pounds by training camp
Lyle, U.S. Open winner Curtis
"William Perry has elected to two-year contract
Strange, British Open tllllstSeve
tournament.
enter a program for treatment of
Neumann played In last year's
Ballesteros, Jack Nicklaus, Tom
LffiERTY, Mo. (UP]) -Her· Women's Open, but shotconsecu·
an eating disorder," the team
Watson and BPn ('rpnshaw.
man Heard and Larry Moriarty, live rounds of 78 and missed the
said in a statement Thursday
"The Chicago Bears are in two of the Kansas Cl ty Chiefs' cut
LEXINGTON, Ky. IUPI) - ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
agreement with Perry that th1s is four leading rushers last season,
Kentucky flanker Dee Smith, II
"Everything was so big and a
a medical ma tter and the Bears agreed Thursday lo contracts.
Jot of people were around,"
trial on a drug traffickHeard and Moriarty joined Neumann said of last year's awaiting
will have no further comment at
lng charge, has decided to
most of the other Chiefs veterans Women's Open experience. " I transfer to Western Kentucky,
this time "
Bears players under contract who reported to training camp at was just uncomfortable In the Wildcats Coach Jerry Claiborne
FRIDAY, JULY 22
were to be In camp at th e Wilham Jewell College. The situation I come this year was announced Thursday.
COMBINATIO N PLAnER"......................... S3,59
Smith, a 5-foot-ll 182-pounder
University of Wisconsin · team still has five unsigned just like to come to the next
Platteville for a pre-camp meal veterans, including \WQ·time Pro tournament ''
!rom Paducah, Ky., will enroll at
J Chicken Fillet, 1 Batter Fish, S Pc. Shrimp, French Fries, Cole
and meetings. Perry was lhe only Bowl nos~ tackle Bill Naas.
WKU
In
time
for
the
1988
fall
Slaw, ond 'Roll.
Patty Sheenan, Colleen
player expected who failed to
term.
Walker, Amy Benz, Vicki FurLATROBE , PA iUPI) -Line· goo, Dollie Pepper·Mochrle and
show.
"Dee Smith has decided to
SUJ4DAY, JULY 24
D1tka sa1d there was no timet a· backer Mlke Merriweather, Shirley Furlong stood three withdraw from the Universltv of
LIVER &amp; ONIONS ..................................... S3.95
ble for Perry 's return. The voted the Steelers most valuable strokes off the pace at 1-under 70, Kentucky," Claiborne said. ,;He
Mashed
Potatoes and Gravy, Corn, Roll or Biscuii, Maxwoll Housa ColiN, or
prodigious weight ol the 25 year- player last year by his team· with Jull Inkster, Sally Little, will enroll this fall at Western
Sanko
Dtcafleinoted,
Bolh Freshly Brewed (a Small Soft Drink or Hot Tta May
old lmeman and tales of his mates, did not report to camp Tamm1e Green, Nancy Brown, Kentucky University and con·
Be
Substituted).
eating exploits have made h1m a Thursday and was said to be at Judi Dickinson and Marlene tinue his education and athletic
hts home in Stockton, Ca.
national celebrity.
career at that Institution."
Brodzlk-Davls al even-par 71.
HOURS: Monday thru Saturday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.;
Mernweather still has two
"These are tough th mgs on
Smith was placed on tempor·
Defending champion Laura
Sunday 10 A.M. to 9 P.M.
everybody," Dltka said " It's not years remaining on the contract Davies, Nancy Lo;:c;: and Jan ary suspension from the UK
a laughing matter. His health is he signed In 1985 It calls for him Stephenson were among seven football team on Feb. 26 follow·
very important He made the to be pa1d $300,000, plus a $50,000 ' golfers at l -over par.
log an arrest In Cincinnati. His
decision on his own. He wants to playing time bonus In 1988, and
Britain's Davies won the 1987 status as far as the suspension
do what Is right for him and his $330,000 with another $50,000 U.S. Women's Open by downing went depended on the process of
playing time bonus In 1989
famllv. It will work ou I."
Carner and Ayako Okamoto In an the legal process. He,ls awaiting
Merriweather's agent Is Mike 18-hole playoff for her first trial scheduled In September.
The team did not disclose
Perry's current wetght, where he Blatt, and he., reportedly Is triumph In the United States The
As a sophomore In 1987, Smith
.
RESTAliRANT
will be treated or details sur- seekmg a new deal that would last three Women's Open started eight games at flanker
ROUTE 7
985·3832
CHEml
pay Merriweather between winners - and five of the past and was among the Southeastern
roundmg h1s condition
WE GIVE SENIOR CITIZENS 10% DISCOVNT
"It's a private, confidential $700,000 and $1 million each nlne - had never prevlousiY won Conference leaders In three
matter, " Bears trai ner Fred season
statistical categories. Smith had
on American soil.
Caito sa1d
Neumann (pronounced Not- 23 pass receptions for 420 yards
FREDONIA, NY . (UP!) '
man) played nearly flawless golf (]8.3 avg.) and four touchdowns.
TAMPA, Fla iUPT)- Miami The Buffalo Bills, on the day of In mastering a course that was
Western football coach Dave
polphlns linebacker Hugh Green their first full tral111ng-camp playing ~nusually long after Roberts was In Florida and
has been ordered to repay the workout, waived veteran wide being drenched by heavy rains unavailable for Immediate
Tampa Bay Buccaneers almost receiver J~rry Butler after he Wednesday night.
comment.
$190,000. the balance of a bonus failed his preseason physical
Butler, 30, entering his eighth
l)e agreed to repay when he was
season, missed last season while
1985 FORD EXP................................. 53895
traded to Miami In 1985
speed, good condition.
: The Bucs said Green received recovering from a broken right
bonus when he signed a new leg
1986 CHEVY S-10 ...............................S6295
Levy sa1d the teaiJl also waived
aontract In 1984 and agreed to
of extras, 4 speed, 15,000 miles.
free-agent rookie wide receiver
repay $350,000 of that to the Bucs
when he was granted his wish to Al11ln Miller of Notre Dame. He
1983 PLYMOUTH REUANT STA. WGN.... S1895
said Miller has not fully reco·
~traded.
Door, PB, PS, air.
.
vered from a severe knee Injury.
: When Green fell behind on
~ayments, the Bucs filed suit in
982 BUICK REGAL STA. WGN........... S2295
KIRTLAND, Ohlo (UP!) April.
982 FORD ESCORT............................ SJ295·
Court records show no plead· The top three draft plc~s of the
and runs good.
lngs were filed on behalf of Cleveland Browns failed to re·
port to training camp 'Thursday.
Green, and last week Hlllsbo·
rough Circuit Judge Morton J .
Door, loaded.
Hanlon ordered him to repay the
GRAVELY TRACTOR
Bucs $182,993, along with more
972 V.W: BEETLE .................................5495
than $6,000 In Interest, $800 In
SALES &amp; SERVICE
attorney fees and $140 In court
204 Condor St
costs.
Pomeroy, OH.

Training camp notes

Ohio

978 OLDS 98.!·································· s1295

We Have Several Low Priced Carda Oa
Our Lot To Chooae From.

"Fallri"' ~lllnlr Ft!H Cilel11"

992-5432

mmt,·'.v OldP"' "'''";,,/
362 EAST MAIN

PrHCr•phon5

614/992·2644

"2·2955

115 E. Mlnloriol Dr.

Pomt"'Y

FlOWIII fOIIYIIY OCCAStOII

t

786 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WAID CROSS

•o give thanks to the

General Mercftandtse
Ractn@t••·2SSO

wonders."

g,., "

CHAPMAN SHOES ·

"p,.,.g ., Q•lllr !NI

THE FOLLOWING MERCHANTS
URGE YOU TO ATIEND YOUR
CHOSEN HOUSE OF WORSHIP
THIS SABBATH:

992-2815
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. Oil
Rt. 124, 3 miJes !rom Portland-Long Bo1tom. Edsel Hart, pastor Sunday Schad,
9. 30 a m.. S~&amp;nday mornln~r preaching
10: 30 a.m .. Sunday evening sPrvtces, 7• :m
pm.
MIDDLEPORT FRE~WILL BAPTIST
CHURCH. Corner Ash and Plum Noel
Herrmann, pastor Sunday School10.00a.
m.; Morning Worship, 11:00 a.m, Wednesday and Saturday Evening serviceti at
7'30 pm
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE Po\BISR
UNITED METHODIST CllURCII
NOBTRE.UT CLUIITEB
Bev.DoaARov.lle7ALFRED - Church SChool 9. 3(1 a.m ;
Worship, 11 am; UMYF6:30p.m.; UMW
Third Tuesday, 7:30 p m Communion,
flrsl Sunday (Archer)
CHESTER - Warship 9 a m : Church
SC11ool10a m: Bible Study, Thursday, 7p
m: UMW, first Thursday, 1 p m., Com·
munlon, first Sunday (Archer).
JOPPA - Worahip 9:30 a.m .. Church
School10. 30 a.m Bible Study Wednesday,
7: 30p.m. iJohnson).
LONG BOTTOM - Church SChool 9. 30
a m., Worship 10 30 a m , Bible Study,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m: UMYF Wedoesday, 6:00p.m; Communion First SUnday
of Month tHicks) .
REEDSVILLE - Church SChool9· 3(1 a.
m: Worship Servlcell·OO a.m. (Deeter).
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL Church SChool 9 a m., Worship 10 a.m.,
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.: Commu·
nion First Sunday (Archer).

da,y.

t:v. km

~~· ·:~~~E~;.;;,;;:~:;,;:·;;.~~;;,

churd DuBon. Associate Paster; Mike
rl~ch, Sunday School Superintendent
!'~Biblt" School9. 30 a.m, , Morning Worship
, 0 30 am. Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.
• edllflday, 7:00pm Prayer m~lng.
!t.:MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NA·
:o.RENE, PASTOR Fred Penhorwood
: g,~n White, Sunday School SUpt. Sunday
a.m: Morntne Worship 10 45
' 1m.; Evangellsllc meeting 7 00 p.m
1
ednesday, 7:00pm. Prayer meeting

•t:hool9·:1&gt;

:···
,.

•: UNlTBD Plllt:IIIIYTIIJIUN MINIBTBY
~:
0P MEIGS OOVNTY
,
llev. Ctwi• Tllball
• , HARRiliONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN
lJHURCR - Sunday: Worship Servlct'l
)too a.m .• Cburcb Schooft0·15 a.m
•' MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN 4Dnc~aY SChool, t a.m., Church lt'rvlco,

•

\I

,

CENTilAL CLUSTER
Rev.lludJIIvdl
!lev. Me!Yio l"ruullla

Rev. Clemeale s. -... Jr.
!lev. RobortM......,

Re11 . Doll Meadowa

ASBURY (Syracuse)- Worship 11 a.m.
; Church School 9:45 a m ; Charge Bible
Study, Wednesday, 7 30p m., UMW, first
Tuesday, 1:30 p.m; Choir Rehearsal,
Wednesday 6:30pm., (Burch)
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m.:
Church SchoollO a.m , Bible Study, Tuesday, '7.00p.m.; UMW. First Monday, 7:30
p.m.; UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m. Choir Re·
hearsal, ChUdren's at 6. 30 p m Adult following, Wednesday (Franklin)
FLATWOODS- Church SCllool, 10 a m .
. Worship, U a m , Bible Study, Thursday, 7 p m.; UMYF, Sunday, 6 p m.
(Franklin).
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a m.,
Church School 10 AM.: Choir practice,
Thursday, 6:30p.m.; UMWthlrdMonday.
(Burchl m. (Burch).
HEATH !Middleport)- Church SChool,
9.30 a.m.; Mornlna Worship 10' 30 am.
Youth Group, 4 p.m.; Wednesday, Btble
study 6 00 p m. Choir rehearsal 7:00 p m
(Zuniga)
MINERSVILLE - Church School 9:00
a.m.; Worship service 10· 00 a m., UMW
tW~ Wednesday, 1 p m. !Burch)
PEARL CHAPEL - Worship Service
9· 30 a m • Church School 10: 15 a.m.
(Mussman)
POMEROY -Church School, 9: 1~ a m.
; Worship 10.30 a m. , Cbolr rehearsal
Wednesday, 7. 30 p m ; UMW. second
Tllesday, 7:30p.m.: UMYFSunday,6p m
I Meadows I
ROCK SPRINGS - Church SChool, 9• 1~
am.; Worship 10 a m., Bible Study, Wed·
nesday, 1-:30pm; UMYF (Seniors), Sun·
day, 6 p m., (Juniors) every other Sun·
day, 6 p.m. (Franklin)
RUTLAND - Church School, 10 a.m ;
Worship, 11 a.m., UMW First Monday,
7:30p.m. (Muuman)
SALEM CENTER- Church SChool9: 1~
a.m .. Worshlp10. 15p.m (Mussman).
SNOWVILLE - Worship, 9· 00 a.m .;
church school9. 45 a m. (Mussman)

•

I•

•

SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF' GOD
noo-?entecosral Worship IK'rYIC'l"Sundav
10 am: Sundav S('hod 11 a m Ev('nlng
worship service 7·00 p m V.. ectnesday
praypr meeting 7 00 p m ,
MT HERMO" UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST CHURCH. Local('(! In Texas
CommuniiV off Ct Rt R2 R(''' Rotx&gt;rt
Sanders pastor .Jefl Holl f't . tav Jrod&lt;'r:
Ed Roush. Sunduv School Sup! Sundav
School 9 :rl a m : mornln~ wotshlp and
chlldJ cn"s r hurrh 10 .Ill " m C'\'C'nlng
prruchinJ: SC'IYICf' flrsl 1htre Sundayo.;
7 30 p m, Spt.:'Cial SCI Viet• (UU ! Ih Sundav
evening 7 30 p m. W('dnf'Sdav Pravt•J
M('ef\nR BlblC' Studv and Youth F'cJioy.,
ship 7 ~ p m
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY
Lor.atro on 0 .J Whill' Ro ad of High\.\"'
160 Pat Hf n:-oon p.1sl m Sund.w Srl\fH) !JO
am. \lasses for all ,/gl'S .Junlot fhu1ch 11
am, Morn in~ "orshlp 11 ,, m Adull
Choh p1act IC&lt;' h p.m Sund:.~v. Young Pt•n
pi(' s, Child! m s Chutch and Adult Blbh•
Studv. Wedn&lt;&gt;Sdav at 7: ,itl p m

HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION Theron
Durham, putoc Sunday service, 9::JJ a.
m., Evening service 7:00 p.m. Prayer
meeting, Wedlleoday, 7·00 p.m.
·
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST. Joseph B Hoskins, pastor. Bible
CJass.9 30a.m.: MorningWorshlplO:JOa
m.; EvmlnJl Worship, 6. :JJ p.m. Thursday
Bible Siudy, 6: 3(1 p.m
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST. Pomeroy·
HarrisCIIYIUe Rd. Roberl Purtell. minister: Sreve Stanley, S. S Supt.: BUI McEI·
ray, A9St Supr: SundaySChool9•30a m:
Worship service 10 :ll a.m , Eveningwor·
ship Sunday 7 p.m. and WE'dne;day, 7p.m
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH. Pine
Grove. The Rev William Mlddleswarth.
pastor Church serviCE' 9.JOa.m. Sundav
SchoollO.:KJ a.m.
1
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST
Tom Runyon, pastor. Sunday Sch0ol9·:1l
a m · Larry Haynes S S. Supt Mornin~
worshtf 10::JJ a m
RAC NE CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE, Rev. Lloyd D Grimm, Jr.,
Ora Bass, Chairman ol the Board o Chris
tlan Ute. Sunday SChooi9.:Ml am.: Morn·
inK worship 10.30 am .. evana:eltstlc s«viCP 7.00 p.m. Wednesday service. 7 p.m
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, Oex·
tl"r Woody Call, pasror Services Sunday
10 am and 7 p.m Wednesday, 7 p m
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Lloyd Sayre, Supt Sunday School 9· 30 a
m., morning worship 10::11 a.m. Sunday
('Venlng "ervlce 7 p m.

ic'"r

RACINE FIRST BAPTISJ, Steve
Deaver, Pastor. Mlke Swiger, Sunday
SChool Supt.; SUnday SChool 9:30 a .m.,
Morning worship 10:t0 a.m.. Sunday
even1n1 wonhtp 7:3(1 p.m: Wedneoday
evening Bible study 7:30p.m

Lau-.

BURUNGI!AM COMMUNITY CHUROI,
Burllnflblm. Ray
pastor; Ro-

-

Ccurt. aDlBlant pastor Sunday School

Ill a.m.: w&lt;n~ 1 p m: WMuods;y, 6 p m
youth met'tlng: Wed., 7 p.m. clalrch sd'VilB
PINE GROVE HOUNESSCHURCR, IS
mlleofl Rt. 325. Rev. Ben J . Watts, past (I"•
Robert Searl.,., S.S. Supt. Sunday SChool
9.30 a.m.; Mornlne Worahlp 10:30 a.m.;
Sunday evening service 7:30p.m .. Wednesday service. 7.ll p m.
SILVER RUN BAPTIST, Bill Llttl•,
puror. Steve Uttle, s S Supt Sunday
ScboollO a.m.; Morning worsip, lla.m.;
Sunday "enln1 worahlp 7· 30 p.m. Prayer
meetlnlaad Bible study Wedllesday, '7:30
p.m: YouthmeetlnaWednesdayat7p.m
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH ·
- 383 N. 2nd Ave.. Mlcldleport. Sunday
SchooliO a.m. Sunday evenlng 7.00 p.m.;
Mid-week service. Wed.. 7 p.rn
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH,
Sunday Scbool 9:30am.; DaUu Janey,
supt.; Momtna warstup 10:30 a m ; Sun·
day eventngservlce, 7:30p.m: Wednes·
day eveninJservlce, 7:30 p m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA
ZARENE. Rev. Glenn McMillan, past..Mary Janlc.'e' Lavender, Sunday Scbool
Supt. Sunday School 9. 30 a.m.; Morning
wor~hlp 10:30 a.m., Evangelistic service,
&amp;p.m.; Prayer andPraiaeWedneaday, 7p.
m.: Youth meet InK. 1 p m.
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST, Elden R. Blake, paslor. Sunday
SChool 10 a.m : Gary Reed, Lay leader.
Mornlngsermon, 11 a m.; Sunday nilht
servica: Chrlltlan Endeavor 7•30 p m.,
Son11ervlce 8 p.m. Preechlna 8 30 p.m.
Mid week prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7
p m,

80U'111BRN CLV8TER
Re11. Debl F01ter
Rev. &amp;oiM' Grace ,
APPLE GROVE- Church SChool9:3(1
a m Worship, 10:00 a.m. lftrst and third
Sundays•; Bible sludy every Sunday 7 p.
m.; UMW Second Tue.tay, 7:00 p m.;
Prayer meetfntl, Weclneoday, 1 p.m.
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, RoR·
(Grace).
/er Watson, pastor Crent&lt;lll Prall, Sunday
BETHANY- Woratup, 9 a.m .. Church
School Supt Morning Worship 9·30 am;
SChoo~ 10 a .m., Bible Study. Wedll-y,
Sunday School 10: 3(1 a.m. ; Evening ser10 a.m.; Dorcu Woma'a Fellowlhlp,.
vice, 7:ll p.m.
Weclneoday, lla.m (Foster).
MT UNION Bl\PTIST. Joe N Sayre,
CARMEL- Church S&lt;:hoot 9·30 a.m.:
paotor: Sunaay SChool9.~a.m .. Evening
Worahlp, tO 45 a.m. Semnd and P'ourt•
wol'lhlp 6.:1» p m. Prayer Meetlftl, 6::.J
Sundays, FeUowllhJp dlnnB" with Buttcit
P m Wednesday,
third Thuraday, 6:31p.m. (Fc.ter).
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
MORNING STAR- Church SChool 9:45
CHRIST. Dave PrentiO&lt;', minister Dory!
a.m., Worship 10.30 a.m.: Bible Siucly,
Wollo, Supt. Church School 9 a.m: WorTh~. 7:3(1 p.m. iFOJterl.
ship Service, 9:4~ p.m.
S
N - Church School. 9:30a.m.:
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
Mornta.aWonhlptO·Ua m.OrJtandthlrd
RENE. Rfv. Herbtrt Grate, pastcr
Sundlya: Fellowllltp dtnnor wkh Carmol
F'rank RJmt. aupt. Sundl)l SChool_, 30 a.
thlrdThul'llllly, 6·31 p.m (P'c.terl
m.; Worohlp .. rvlce. lla.m. and 7 p.m.
EAST LETART- Cburcbscmdh.m:
Sunday. Wodoeaday, 7 p.m. Prayer meet·
Worahltr 1D a.m. aa:.vnd and laur1h SUnlnR.
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
ds;ya; liMW lint Tueadl)l, 7::11 p.m.
(Grace).
.,.CHURCH. David Bell, puler. Robert E
LETART FALLS - Worablp 9 a.m.;
llertOII, Dlrl'&lt;tor of Cbrllttlalt EcluCiltlon:
Church SChool 10 a.m. (Grace).
St.,.. Eblin, aaalltant. Sutlday SChool 9: :11
RACINE -ONrcti SCboot,IOa.m; WOr·
am., Mornln1 wonhlp 10:30a.m; T...,
ahlp Ua.m: UMWaourtb~at7::11p.
In Act ton. Bp.m: EvenlngWorlhlp, 8:00p.
m.; Men'a P r - BnaltfM( Wedneadll,y, 8
m. Wedn•day fVfllln1 praypr and Bible
a.m. (Grti&lt;e) .
otucly, T:OO p.m.
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST. VeriiCMI
Cha't• RuueU Sr., mlnlltor. Rick Ma·
Eldrltlle. mlnllter, Oliver Swain, Sunday
combor, tnipt. SUn4Jy SChool 9:30 a.rn ,
SChool Supt PrPI&lt;hlng 9j 3(1 a m . Hell
Worahlp aervlce 10::11 a.m Bible otucly,
SU1141av
Tueo.t1131, 7:38 p.rn

I

•• • • 992-2975
ll

104 E. MAIN ST., PO.IOY

Rev. Carl Blob
Rev.lloldolllo-

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.

Lord...who alone
doeth great

Grocenlts-

..

(614)992-2039 or
(614)992-5721

•

10• Buttenwt Avt., PDmtroy, 011.

....
-.
:oo~
~··

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

SONS SlORE

,a

992-23tl Pomeroy

PomeHg Flowst $fo'
214 E. Main
992·5130 Pomeroy

'ibm

804 w. Main

992-2104

Pomeroy

SUPPLY

. r POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST. LvSion
. ~ allPY.
minister. Saturday evenlnjit
itvanR:C'IIstlc st'rvlces, open to public 7 p
~rn : Sunday Church School 9:30 a m
MornlnJ!: Worship 10 30 a m
,!• FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. Po
~1-'rov Pik('. E Lamar O'Bryant pastor
' '-Jack 'N£'edl1Sunday School Dheclor. Sun
:11av School. 9 30 a m .. Morn inK Worship.
10:45. ('\'£'nlni[WOrship. 7 OOp m.ID.S T.,
1
7. 30 IE.S.T t WE'dnt'sdav PrayN Sf&gt;r·
•VIce 7 OOp.m lD S.T I &amp;7.:l41 PM lE S.
1' 1. Mission Frl&lt;'nds (ag('S 2·61, Roval
'A.mbcts!ladono; (bovs a~Z;£'!i 6-lM!. and Girls
)n AcTion (aR('S 6·181 on W('dnesdavs 7 p
.tn (OST t&amp;7•30p m tEST I:TuC',.dav
·tlsila!lon, 6•30 p m
·• FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH. Bal
'k'V Run Road R('V Emm('tt Rawson, pas
:wn H~ndi('V Dunn supt Sundav School.
,10 a m Sundav ('V('nlniZN&lt;'rviC£'. 7. 30p.m
·~ Bib!£' 1f'achln~ 7 :Wpm Thursdav.
·, SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherry St., Sy
·racuse. Services, 10 a.m Sunday Evening
'terVIces Sunday and Wednesday at 7 p m.
)lark Morrow, pastor
, • MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
•IN CHRISTIAN UNION Dwl,ghl Hai('V,
'llnu C'ldllr Wanda Mohlt"r Sunday School
:SUPt Sundav SthoOI 9· 3ft a m Morning
,WOI'!fhlp 10· 30 u m Ev('n(n~ Worship 7 :vt
t' m : WrdnC'sday prayf'r rrl('("l!ng 7: ~ p.m
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD
Raf'lnC' Rl'v Jamt's Sattl'rfit'ld. pasto1
f'1irf'rman Williams Supt. SundaY School
~ 45 a.m , Sunday and Wednt"sdav E&gt;vcon.
~pll S('rV!(£'5, 17 p m .
~
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST
~rn£'1 Sixth and Palm('r Jamt"S SMdon
;-Aastor. Edna Wilson. S S Sup! : Cuthy
',RiA:Iit"· Asst Supt Sunday School 9: 15 a
·~ , Morning WOI'"hlp 10·1~ a m : Sund&lt;ty
~i;.V E'nln,~t M'rvlcr, 7 p m Pray('r ffi('(&gt;tln~
~4'11d Biblr ~tudv Wrdnrsdav rvt•nln~. 7 p
-~: Chlldr('n'lo; choir pri.ILiic£&gt;, Wedn£&gt;s·
7
Adult choir practlc&lt;'. WOO . 8

~- ~

of Columbus, 0 .

"6 ' •

RIDENOUR

" 0RAHAM
UNITED METHODIST.
Prl'achlng ~- .W a m flrs1 and se&lt;:ond. Sun
dav:s of t&gt;&amp;C'h month: third and fourth Sun·
(Jav ('ach month warship s('rv!C('Sat 7: 30p.
m : Wt'dnrsday ev£'nlngs at 1 30 p m.
PrayC'r and Blbl£' Study
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST, Mul·
brrry Hel~hls Road, PomProy Pastor
.,ohn $wt&gt;igart; Sabbath School SuJ)f'fln
~....tendl'nl Darllnl' S!Pwart. Sabbath School
o'Deglns al 2 p.m on Saturday afll"rnoon
With worshlpSf'rviCP following at 3: l5p m.
~ ~veryon() wt'lcomt&gt;.
, RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
t.._ SlstC'r Harrlf'tt Warnt&gt;r, Supt Sunday
.School 9 30 a m ; Morning Worship, 10:45

'

Veterans
Memorial ttospital

ru

We Flit Doctors'

POMEROY, OHIO 46769!

Nationwide Ins. Co.

[B

216 s. Se&lt;ond
Pomeroy
992-3325

SWISHER &amp; UIISE
PHARMM:Y -~

'WtiJ(II (

P. J. PAULEY, AGEN[_

TEAFORD REALTY

· John F. Futtr, Mgr.
Ph. "2-2101
Pomeroy

/

FRANCIS FLORIST

J.'

'

A~-~
u
i

22• W. Main St., P-roy

..-.. RJAN - SUnd131 SChool, 10 a.m.:
Cltul't'b oervlco, 11:15 a.m.
'BIJTl.\ND CII,URCH OF GOD, Pastor,
Evana. Sutlday SChool lf):OO a.m.:
y Morntna Wol'lldp Jl:OOa m. Chita Church II a.m. SUnday Evening
tte 7:00p.m. Wed., B p m. Youna LaAuxDtary, Wodneadl)l, 1 p.m. F.,..
Worllllp.
,

CHESTER

Interet!ted.Bus~~es Listed On ThiS Page.

·" MEIGS nRE
\ ~ CENlER, INC.

Family Restaurant

10:111 m.

~

The Deily Seutinai-Pega 6

THf JOY Of RELIGION

This Messege and Church Directory Spgnso.~ By The

~YRACUSI!: FIRST UNITED PRESBY·

RIGGS USED CARS
915-4100

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REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS Port·
land RaclnP Road Mike Duhl, pasror:
JaniC'l" DannPr, ch.urch school dlrMor.
Churehschool9 30a m, Mornlngwc:nhlp
10 30 a.m , WE'dn esday evening prayer
services. 7 :ll p.m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev . Earl
Shuler, pastor Worship service. 9.30a.m.
Sunday Schoo110·30a m Bible Study and
p~:ayer service Thursday, 7:30 p m
CARLETON tNTERDENOMINAl'ION·
AL CHURCH, Kingsbury Road Rev
Clyde W. HE'nderson, pastor Sunday
School9.30a.m.; Ralph Carl, Supt EVPn
inK worship 7.00 p m. Prayer mretlng,
Wednesday 7.00 p.m
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN. Vernon
Eldridge, pasror; Wallact" Damewood. s
S Supt. Sunday School9· :Kl a m , Worship
Service, 10•30 am
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH
0 . H Cart, pastor Sunday School at~· :\Oa.
m : Morning WCI'sNp at 10· 30 a m . Sunday evening service at 1 30 p m Thursday
services at 7· 30 p.m
FREEOOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob, located on Counly Road 31. Rev.
Roger WUiford, pastm-. Sunday SChool
9:30 a.m·.• Morning Worship 10:45 a.m.,
Sunday evening 7 00 p.m., Wednesday
evening Bible Study, 7.00 p.m.
WHITE'S
CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
CHURCH- CoolvUieRD Rev Phillip Rl·
denour, pastor. Sunday Schooi9· 3(1a.rn.:
worship service 10·30 am.: Bible- study
and worship serviCe, We-dnesday, 7 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Bill Carter, paslor Sunday &amp;h.ool9· 30 a
m., Morning Worship and Communion
10·30 am.
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amos
Tillis. pastor. Sonny Hudson, supt. Sunday
School9:30 am.; Morning worship. 10 :lJ
a .m. Sunday evening service 7.00 p.m
Wednesday service 7 p.m WMPO pr().
gram 9 a.m. each Sunday
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE samuel Basye, pastor Sunday
SChool9::rt am.; Worship service 10 30 a
m.:
Youn1 peop1e's serviCE' 6 p.m
Evangellstlcservlce6:~p m Wedne;day
service 1 p m.
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST. Miller
St., Mason, W.Va. Sunday BlbleStudylO
a.m, Worship 11 a.m."8nd7p.m. Wednes·
day BlbJeStudy. vocal music, 7 p m
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dull
ding Lane, Mason, W Va J. N Thacker,
past« Evenln~ service 7:~ p.m.: Wo
men's Ministry, Thursday, 9·30 a.m,
Wednesday Prayer and BiblE' S1udy. 7.15
pm

HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION Hartford. 1W Va
Rev David McManis. pastor Churt'h
SchOO 9. :ro a.m , Sunda) rnomJng M'r·
v1l"f' 11 am .. Sundav evening service,
7 "«I p m Wednesdav prayer m('('flng, 1· 30
pm
F'AIRVIEII' BIBLE CHURCH. Letarl.
\\ Va Rt 1, James Lewis, pastor Worship 'i!ervtces 9·30a m , SundaySchoolll
a m , EvPnlng wonhip 7· 30.f m Tursday
co1tage praver mt'l"tlng an Bible Study
9 :w am , WoJ'8hlp service. Wedne«&lt;l\'

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OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH.
Walnut and Henry Sts , RavenRwood, W
Va The Rev GeOJ'Rt" C Wl'trlck, pastoc
Sunday SChod. 9: 30 a m , Sunday wor~hlp

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CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH .located on
Pomeroy Plk£'. County Road 25JK'IIr Flat
woods RPV Blackwood. pastcr SPrvlces
on SundayatlO:JOa .m. and7 ..10p.m. with
Sunday School 9.30a.m BlbleStudy , Wed
nesday. 7:30p.m.
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST. St. Rt. 338, Antiquity. Rev
Franklin Dickens, pastor Sunday mom·
lng 10 a· m : Sullday evenfntl1:30 p rn
ThuniCiay evt'hlng 7:30pm
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH, Inc., 15 Pearl St. RI'V.
Ivan Myers, actlngpastcr, Roger Mantey,
Sr., SUI!day School Superlnrendent. Suo
d•Y School 9: 30 a.m • Morning worship
10.30 a .m; evenltlti .,onhtp 7.30 pm.,
Wednesday evenlntl Blblo aiudy. prayer
and pnto..ervtoe, 7 3opm
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS·
TOLIC- VanZandt and Ward Rd Elder
James MUter. paoter. SUI!d131 School.
)0:30am: WonltlpServt..,.,SUnday, 1·.lll
pm; Blbi•Study, Wodnl!lllay, ?·:tOpm
CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL. Hani
1&lt;11VIIle Road Rev. Dewey Kina. pulor:
CllntCJI FauDt. Sullday School Supl., sun
day School 9:30a.m.; momllljlwerllllp, 11
a m: SUI!day eventna strvlce 7:30p.m
Prayer MeetiDI. Wt!dn..aay, 7. 30 D.m

HOPE BAPTIST&lt; HAPEL . ~7 0 C.1unt
Affllial rd u II h ~u 1 h t'r n
Baptist ConV£'n1iun Oa\ ld B1va n. Sr Ml
nlNI£'1 Sund.l' &amp;hnul 10 am. Mur ning
worship 1l a m , Ev0nlng won;hlp 7 p m .
Wl'dn('Sdav ('\IC&gt;nlng Ribl1.• s!Ud\ and
pravN mN'IInp; 7 p m

St , Mlddl £'POll

BRADF'ORD CHURCH OF' CHRIST St
Rt 124 and Co Rd ~ Scot I S!i.•Wall, pa:o;·
ror William Amlx'r gf'r. sup! Sundav
Scho(ll 9 .KI .1 m ; mornln~ v. m·shlp 10 ~
a.m. l'H•n!ng&lt;Korshlp7 .. Wp.m Wednrs
da:v worship, 7 10 p m

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POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677
Bill Quidcel 01111 •uth Anft loa " :
School9.30 a.m, Morning Worship 10:30;
Worship 7 JO p. m , Wednesday
Praye1 Serv ke. 7. 30 p m
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F'AITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Railroad
St Mason Sundav School10 a m.: Morn:
lng worship ll .1.m, Evening s{'f'Vlet'6 p
m ?ravt"r m N'llnJ.l and Blbl p Study Wed
nesday, 7 p.m
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F'OREST RU" BAPTIST. Rev Nyk&gt;
Borden. pastor Cornl'llus Bunch. supt.
Suntlav Sch.ool 9· :41 am'.: Second ana
fourth Sundavs "'orshlp sl&gt;rvlct&gt; at 2.30 p.
m
MT MORIAH BAPTIST, F'ourth and
Main St. MlddiC'port Rev. Cllbfft Craig,
Jr pastor Mn;. Ervin Baumgardner.
Sunday School Supt Sundav School9·:r1 a
m . Wor ~h lp Sc'rv Ire 10 45 a.m
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF. CHRIST
- Joseph. B Hoskins t"Yan~Z;Piist Sunday
Blbi('S1udv9.J m Worship JOa m. suR
da y evl'nlng N('JVIC'C' tip m: Wc:&gt;dnPSdav
('Venin~ scn•lc(' 7 p.m
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY Raclno ·
Rt l:l4 William Hoba('k pastor Sunda,·School 10 ,, m , Sund:.~v I'V('ning S£'f'VIrt'" 1:
p m Wednesda\ C'V&lt;'nlng srrv!Cl' 7 p m •
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Ch.l•adl£' t
Supt Sundav School 9 JO a.m MornlnR
Wor!lhlp 10 :rl a m P1 av&lt;'l scrviC't', altern
ale Sundavs
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THE CHURCH OF .IESUS CHRIST,
APOSTOLIC f'AITH - N£'&lt;K Lima Rd. ~
next lo Fort M&lt;'iiZS Pa1 k. Rutland Robert
Richards pastor. S&lt;'rVIC'C'5 a.t 7 p m on
WC'dn~davs and Sundt~Vs.
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP
TER of thC' WC'SINan Hollneis Church
Rev David F'C'rl &lt;.'II past or HE&gt;nry Eblin
Sunda'l' School ~upt Sundav School10 a'
m Mor ning Worship 11 a m , E\enlng
servlce7. 30 p.m. Wl'dnesduv evening ser·
VIe&lt;&gt; 1 30 p.m
ST!VERSVILLE WORD OF' F.AITH,
Garv Holle!" past or Sunduv serv!C!'S 9· 30
a m and 7 p m . M ldWeC'k ser\ !['(' 7 :r&gt; p
m Thursday
Everun~

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PA Ul. l.U.IH~t&lt;I\N CHURCH
Cm n('z SvcamOJ C" unci Sromnd S1s Po
mt'l O\ Th&lt;' Rc•\ WH!l.tm Mlddl~\hll I
pastm Sunduv School 9 45 ,, m Church
S(.'f\1Ct'11 am
SACRED
HEART CHURCff. M'•'
Anthonv f:l ann.1mo• C' Ph H92 5ft91t S;~!ur
dav E\('nlng M,,,..,. 7 ltl p m, Sundav
Mass H .t m o,~nd to .1m ConfC'§slons onP
half hour lx'fo1 &lt;' C'ach M.uo~s C('O class&lt;'S
llu m Sunday
VICTORY HAPTlsT. 5~5 N ~nd St
Mlddl&lt;'l)ort. Jam NO E KC'CSCt'. past or:
Sundav mo1 nln~ "orshlp 10 u m Evl"n·
In~ scrv!Cf' 7 p m , W&lt;•dn l'SdUV &lt;'V&lt;'nin£
worship 7 p m Vlsl1 atlon Thu1 sd.tv il: 30 p
m
MORSE C'HAPFI. 'CHURCH David
Cu1fman pas101 Sundav School. 10 u m,
wo•·shlp "1('rvlcr 11 ,, m Sunda\ mght
worship S('J \'I('(' 7· .VI p m · MldwN'k
pray('J Sl'l\ lt•r W('dnf'Sdf.I V 7 p m
WESLEY AN
BIRLF.
HOLINESS
CHURCH or Mldd!C'pml Inc . 75 Pearl St.
fWv. Ivan Mvcrs, pasi UI. Ro~l'l M.!OIC'V,
!'ir, Sunda\ School Supt . Sunda\ School
9· :10 am , Mol nln.R Wo• ship 10 l:J a m ,
£venin~ Worship 7 30 p m W&lt;'dn C'Sdav
('Venin~ BlblC' st ud'i prav£&gt;r and pral~('
sprvlcc 7 :wJ p m
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LIVINC: WORD CHESTER CHURCH
OF GOD - Gilbert Spencer, pastor. Sun·
dav School 9. iO a.m . Morning servire
10:00a.m , Sunday ev('nlnj:C scrvltx'7·00 p
m • Mid·w('('k p1 ay£'r serviCC' wronesday
7p m
MT OLIVE r·uu GOSPEL COMMUN
ITY CHURCH. l.aw rf'nCC' Bush pastor
Maxf'olmcr Sr S S Sup1 SundavSchool
9· 30 a m Sunday C'Yenlng s£&gt;1'\ IC(' 7 .J(I
m., WPdnl'tidav C'V&lt;'nln!'{ Blbl(' sludv and
pralscservict' 7, 'It) p.m
UNITED F'AITH CHUR\H Rl 7 on Po
merov Bv-Pas-. RPv David Wls&lt;'man. Sr
pastor Melvin Drah s s Supt Sunday

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
Ave RPv. Clark Bak£'1', pastor Carl Not.
!ln~ham, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
School 10 a.m. with classes for all agl'l
EvPning sPrVIC('S at 6 p.m. Wednetday Bi·
ble study at 7. 30 p.m Youth services Frl
day at 7 30 p.m
ECCLES lA FELLOWSHIP. 128 Mill Sl..
:diddleport. BrothE'f Chuck McPherson
pastor Sunday School 10 a m ; Sunday
I:'Yl'nlng services at7 p.m and Wednesday
sl"rvlces at 7 p.m.
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Kenneth Smith,
pastor. Sunday School9:30 a.rn, church
se&gt;rvlce 7. 30 p m .. youth fe&gt;liowshlp6 30p•
m , Blbll:' study. Thursday, 7:30p.m.
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE. 3304l\
Hiland Road. Pomerov. Tom Kelly. pas
tor. Danny Lam~rt, S S Supt. Sunday
morntna service a110 a.m ; Sunday even·
lng service 7· 30 p m Tuesday and Thun·
day Services at 7·30 p m
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA·
ZARENE, Rev Clrndon S1roud, pastor
Sunday School9 30a m , Worship service,
10 30 a.m .. Youlh seorviCf' Sunday 6:15 p
m. Sunday pvenlng service 7:00p.m. Wed
ne-sday Pray&lt;'f MeellnJ and Bible Study
1 00 p m
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH, Sunday aftPrnoon services a 1 2: 30 Thursday
evening sE'rvices al 7 30
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH. Mason, W
Va Pastor, Bill Murphy Sunday School tO
a m , Sunday evening 7: 30 p m Prayer
mE'etlng and Blb1Ps1udy WPdnesday, 7:30
p m. Ev(&gt;ryone welcome.
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa·
Iem St Rev Paul Taylor. pastor. Sunday
School10 a m., Sunday PVenlng7 .OOp m.,
Wednesday evenlnR prayt&gt;r meeting 7:00
pm
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
CHURCH, Sllvt;'r Rldg&lt;'. Duane Syden·
stricker, pastor. Sunday School 9 am :
Worship Srrvl{'(', ]0 a.m.. Sunday evenlnR
st&gt;rvlcP. 7 00 p m WE'dnesday nlr;::ht Bibl&lt;'
sludy 1:00 p.m.

Sermonette
PROGRAM829
You may recall the great American play, LIFE WITH
FATHER, the story or the family of Clarence Day In the late
1880s. Clarence Day was not the most patient of men and was
sometimes unduly Irritable or oversensitive.
And so, It was not shallow advice Mrs. Day gave Annie, the
new maid (one In a sertesof"newmalds"). "Don't be nervous.· ·
VInnie Day tells Annie "You'll get used to hlm .
"That's not bad advice - for us. Whenever faced with an
unpleasant situation, we are tempted to act according to
emotion. Whereas there Is merit In making dertslons quickly,
there can be only folly In making those decisions without all the
facts."
DON'T BE NERVOUS. Few of us are very logical when we're
nervous. GET USED TO THE IDEA. If there Is something toll&lt;'
changed, we'll have more Insight for changl' If we "get used to
It". We al$o have the tendency to prejudge t hl' person or
situation. If we've been told a fellow Is a scoundrel. we usually
walt for him to prove he Isn't, and that may not bE' part of his
personality. How many times have we been tPmpted to act
Irrationally and discover later with such a small amount of
understanding altd reason we were able to handle the situation?
"Iloll't be nervous; you'll get used to it. .. or him." lt'!IIIOod
advice. -Father Lee MUter, Grace Church, PomeroJ.

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The Dail.Y S~J\tinel

By The Bend

FRIDAY
ENTERPRISE
Wllling
Workers Class of Enterprise
United Methodist Church will
meet at the home of Dorothy
Clark, 7:30p.m: Friday.

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jBeat
of the -Bend
A 1· 1
Ann gives good advice, reader says
·· Ann
. Itt e encouragement
Landers
goes a 1Ong Way
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By BOB HOEFLICH
A little encouragement goes
such a long way - and you've
always been excellent In pro. vldlng that.
A couple old
friends of YOUI"Ii
and mine, could
use that encouragemimt about
now, I figure.
Kermit Walton remains confined to the intensive care unit at
the Holzer MedicaL Center. It
has been over 50 days now and I
feel confident that he needs the
p_lckup of hearing from you knowing that you care.
Another longtime friend, Max·
IDe Griffith Is having some health
problems - the kind that can
shoot you down . emotionally .
Maxine has undergone surgery
In Columbus and Is making
regular trips -to Columbus for
further. consultations and treatment recommendations. Cards
will reach her a I home, 34440
State Route.7, Pomeroy.
I KNOW I can count-on you.

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I'm sure many at you re·
member John and Jo Hardy,
former Harrisonville Road residents, who were such marvelous
square dancers.
John died In November and Jo
will be returning to Meigs County
Sunday to sprinkle his ashes on
their former farm. Jcr will be at
the ho'm!' or Phil and Aile!'
Globakar who now reside along
the river below Mason, W. Va.
It's open house Sunday afternoon
and Allee Invites you to drop by
and say hello to Jo.

DwAnDLuders:lam24years
old and the letter from "Miss. Jim"
struck a chord with me. She said
you should
. quit
hentelling people to gel
counseI mg w
you can't come up
with a better answer,
.
I, too, used to think you were
copping out, th~ I real~ that my
self-destructive behavior was killing
me and 1 would never get better
without professional help.
I was bulimic at the ase of 17. 1
stayed that way for five years.
Finally, I sought help by seelna a
psychiatrist and going to .,group
therapy.
Tears are in my eyes as I write
this, and I am shaking. I doubt that
I will ever go back to forcing myself

Most of us are lucky to get a
photo In broad daylight- with a
flash yet. Everett · McDaniel,
Harrisonville Road resident , who
spends his spare time doing lots
of hobbles Is Into taking photo·
graphs of the skies at night . He
recently captured an impressive
picture of the new moon with
Venus close by. He says anyone
can do it. Wanna bet?

Roger and Mary Gilmore and
Jim and Jennifer Sheets and
family returned to their homes
Wednesday from a 10·day vacaOops!
tion trip to Florida - a great
The descendants of Tommy time. Coincidentally, they enGilkey and Milda Jane Hudnall · countered Bpb and Deb! Buck
will hold their annual reunion on and their family at Disney World.
Roger and Mary are back in
Sunday. July 31, and not this
Sunday as announced earller. time to really get into the Meigs
The reunion will be at the Fair. Mary will be serving her
roadside park on Route 33, south first stint as secretary of the
of Darwin _:a potluck dinner will Meigs Fair Board this year and
Roger and his staff will be
be served at noon.
handling the sound system for
With traffic having been so the fair.
stacked up In Pomeroy recently
They said the speed limit
due to the resurfacing of Main St.
and the break In the water main should be reduced and this would
at Butternut and Main, one not only save gasoline but would
'driver dropped In to suggest that save lives. Th.en, they decided to
motorists use their turn signals increase the speed limit on some
more readily at times like this. highways and it was reported
. Without their use, II was kind of that th!' r!'duced speed hadn't
difficult to tell just which.direc- really saved any lives anyway.
tion drlv~rs were headed- sq for lllow the song is to reduce the
your own safety, It's prob~bly a speed again- to save lives. Why
do I feel confused? Do keep
good sugges lion.
smiling.

tOth{Owupsevemltimesaday,but
the memory of what I did and why
I did it is Slill fresh in my mind and
it is very frightming.
.
Ann, I think your responses are
· very good, but there is no way that
you could have ·come up with an
answer that would have made any
ditfemJce. If a person can't afford 8
mental health professional, he or
she . should try the clergy or a
support group. 1 owe my life to
c:ounselin&amp; and you can't get a
better endorsement than that. . _
SCHERERVILLE, INDIANA
DEAR INDIANA: Thanks for
the back-up. Again, fur the record:
Counselors don't solve problems.
They gel
patients to
things

their

see

inaditferentliJbtsotheycanfind
the solution on their own.
Dar AnD Linden: 1 realize that
this isn't an earth-shattering pro~
. .tNii~Ai&lt;DUoo
'
lem, but am 1 the only one who\
_.__
wonders why so many men let thb , ::..::.; .' :eyebrows go haywire?
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The late Soviet leader Leonid ,,
Brezhnev was one of the mOSI
outrageous examples, but one sees \hat look? Bushy brows suggest
and individualism. Mark
many others with long stray hairs
had
wonderfully wild eyesticking straight out, or hanging
oru,ws.
So
did
john L. Lewis and
down in front of their eyes. Why
Learned Hand. Congressman · 1
don't their barbers suggest an
eyebrow trim when they give hair· "-· •.,,,_,_,., of Texas has them, and
Salinger, james Whit·
cuts?- BLOOMINGTON, IND.
Michael Dukakis. And . r
DEAR BLOOM: Did it ever occur
no
tlies on them.
to you that some people might like
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sAkDY KULKIN

24' X 15' Swtm Area

31' X 16' Outside DirMnltOnl

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MrAL&amp;.An0N .lllUNF
ALL I'OOLIINCLUDE
• Filter &amp; Pump

• Pool Ladder

• Huue Sun Deck ·

• Safety Fence &amp; Slaus • Sel·lll Vtnylllnet
(Oifttr nuxJ•Is _..,.,,.,bl, 1001

,.._....._.24,_

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·J-800-345-0946

Reunion ·scheduled

(01 ONY THEATRE

FRI. THRU THURS.

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YOU BELONG AT
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CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
non· profit group working for the
last two years to organize a
Superman museum in the city
where two high school students
created th!' character more than
50 years ago Is planning toftie for
bankruptcy.
Neverendlng Battle Inc. has a
$200,000 debt, with halt of It
accumulated during June's International Superman Exposition in qeveland attended by
10,000 people, one- third the projectI'd attendance.
"We're attempting to file (for

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Sale '21 To '72 Selected
~Dlhn Ready to asseiiible.
Includes utt11ty cart, No. 3106.

Sale 52' To 6.59 Selected
Summer Plalt1c Toys Includes

2-Drawer file cabinet. No. 4502.
Typewrtter stand, No. 4520.
Storage chest. No. 3100. Bu.Uet.
No. 3187. Bu.Uet hutch, No. 3188.
Music center, No. 942.

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sand pa!ls, boa1s. sand molds, ,,,
spiinkling cans, golf sets and '
more. REG. 79' To 9.99
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WIRE GRID SI'ACK CHAIRS .................... SALE 31'10
WIRE CHAIR SEAT CUSHION ..... REG. 2.99 ..... SALE 1.99
'I'EXTALINE CHAIR CUSHIONS . ... REG. 19.99 .... SALE 9.99
TEXTALINE CHAISE CUSHIONS ... REG. 29.99 . .. SALE 14 99
25% OFF ORIGINAL PRICE All TEXTAUNE UMBml.LAS
WIRE MESH TRAY Wl1ll CUP HOlDERS. REG. 2.99.SALE 1 oo
3 CU. FT. PINE BARK NUGGEI'S ................... SA.L.E "2
9-PIECE RESIN PATIO SET ...... REG. 249.99 .... -.. SALE *179
3-PIECE GENUINE REDWOOD LOUNGE SET ................
REG. 149.99 .................................. SALE •99
SELECTED SUMMER PLASTICS ....................
,
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REG. 33' TO 1.39,. ...... ...... . .. .... .... SALE ~0' TO 50'
SELECTED SUMMER CLEANING NEEDS ...................
REG. 55' TO 1.99 ....... .. ........... . ... SALE 25' TO 99'
4-PACK WICKER PAPER PLATE HOIDERS.REG. 99'.SALE 21'1
6-PIECE SERVING SET ........ REG. 12.99 ........ SALE 6.99
ID-PIECE ICE BUCIG:I' SET ...... REG. 11.99 ...... SALE 7.99
AM/PM CASSE'M'E NO 3090WP
.
SALE •20
CAR RADIO, NO.
·.:·.::SALE '16
ALL WEATHER RADIO. NO. A250UP .............. SALE '8
WA~ RESISTANT BOOM BOX, NO. 890WP ....... SALE •35
PORTAU COMPAcr SI'SROO. NO. 53000 ......... SALE '30
TVNCR RACK. NO. 127W ...... REG. 39.99 ...... SALE '25
CHEST ON CHEST DRESSED. NO. 1042 ........ .

i-.2804 ....... :·. :.: :. :·.::: ·.:

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AML0~9~· CJ.N' ik a~~ 'PAiL.'.·~.· .1.. 49:~·~~
AMLOID BATH TUB FLEET ..... .. REG. 1.99 ....... SALE 1.19

Selection may vary bY lien.' Not alllleml CMIIIable In alllklr•. lnlennedlale IIICIItdownl may have been taken
Due lo the IICIIOriCII nal\ft ClllhiiiiiMCIIandlle. rain cMc:D may IICll be avallable.
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The Llthotripter uses shock
waves to crush stones Into small
fragments that can be dissolved
In the gall blader with medication, or pass through the bile
duct.
The spark-gap generated
shock waves pass through the
body untll they hit the solid stone,
breaking It Into smaller pieces.
An ultrasound machine Is used to
locate I he stones and a computer
pinpoints them exactlY.

era lion In Franklin County," said
Dr. Louis ValJy, the prlnc)pal
Investigator In the clinical trial.
"With Lithotripsy, patients are
spared the trauma of Invasive
surgery" and, therefore, are
subject!'d to substantially less
risk, he said.
Officials said there Is a potential of substituting Lithotripsy
for surgerv In as manv as 80
percent 'or patients with
gallstones.

By WILLIAM C. TROT)'
United Press International
METEOROLOGICAL MADNESS: Unfair weather has been a
problem at outdoor performances this week. A good-sized
crowd in New York was enjoying "Much Ado About Nothing,"
part of the city's Shakespeare in the Park series, Tuesday night
when a thunderstorm hit.
Star f\evlnKllne first tried to lake cover under a tree on stage
but.a flash of lightning made him reallz!' that wasn't such a good
strategy. "1 shouidn' t be here," he told the audience and shortly
afterward, everyone scattered.
Bob Dylan managed to work the weather into his show
· Wednesday night alter rain passed through the Washington
D.C., area, soaking Merriwea ther Post Pavillion, an open-at;
concert site, just before he took the stage.
So what song did Dylan play to open his show? "Shelter from
the Storm." His first encore song was ''A Hard Rain's A-Gonna
Fall."
CRUISE NEWS: Jann Wenner must be a Tom Cruise fan.
Cruise Is on the cover of the Aug. 8 issue of Us, of which Wenner
Is editor In chief, and also is the subject of a cover story In the
Aug. 11 Rolling Stone, of which Wenner is editor and pubiJsher.
Jn the Us Interview, Cruls!'.says h!' w!'nt to bartending school
anddld som!' real drink mlldngln New York clubs to prepare for
~Is role as a hot-s~?t bartender In his new movie, ''Cocktails."
I dl,d pretty good, he said or his behind· the-bar e1&lt;perience. •'I
dldn t keep the tips, though. I put them in a bowl for the (r!'al)
bartend!'rs."

WELL DRESSED HORNETS: The Charlotte Hornets, one of
the two teams that will be making their NBA debut next y!'ar,
may not win many games but they will be the best dressed team
in the leagu!'.
The Hornets unveiled the NBA's first designer uniformspleated pants. collars on the warm-up suits and multi-colored
vertical strips on teat. They are the work of prize-wi nning New
York designer Alexander JuHan, who is best known for his
Colours line of me11's clothing.
"We've got a team that has style," said Julian, a native of
Chapel Hill, N.C. "We've got a team that has class. We've got a
team that has energy and is going to be a winner. " Julian
designed the uniforms In exchange for regular shipments of
barbecue from back home.
BETI'JNG AGAINST GAMBLING: Billionaire H. Ross Perot
has anted up$10,000 to a group fighting efforts to open casinos In
Galveston, Texas.
"I believe as we restructure Texas away from an oil and gas
economv to a diversified economy and industrial base, 'the last
thing we need is to try to build a state based on horse racing and
casino gambling and dog racing and lotteries," Perot said.
"We'd better get down to basics and create good jobs for our
people and do It In the old-fashioned way, through a good
educational system and hard work."
Galveston residents go to the polls Aug. 13 to determine
whether they want lawmakers to push for laws that would allow
casinos in the island city.
- MILLIONAIRE FITTED FOR PAINTING SUIT: Fourteen
i&gt;atritlngs or steelworkers by Norman Rockwell are at the center
of legal battle between a struggling steel company and its
chairman, Victor Posner, the multimillionaire who was
co'nvlcted of tax fraud last year.
Sharon Steel Corp., which flied for bankruptcy protection last
year, Is suing to get the paintings back from Posner, who took
them from the company In 1969 to hang In his Miami Beach
office. Rockwell did the paintings, which show welders, furnace
operators and· workers at Sharon Steel, between 1966 and 1968
and now they are said to be worth at least $350,000.
Bankruptcy trustee James Toren wrote Posner In April
asking for the paintings and filed suit in June, still not having
·receiv!'d a response. A Posner aide says he has no idea where
the paintings are. Posner was ordered to contribute $3 million
and 5,000 hours or his time to the homeless in Florida after
pleading guilty to tax fraud .

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In search of 1izardman

bankruptcy) in such a way that fired spokesman and group
our creditors can rec!'lve maxi· founder Tim Gorman.
!sa bella said Neverending Bat·
mum benefit," said Tony Isa..
bella, president of Neverending tie lost $100,000 on the Superman
Exposition, and $60,000 on the
Battle.
"We're also hoping we can find movie ppremlere of "Superman
a new horne for the project," IV" In Cleveland last year.
Hills said a number of factors
Isabella said. "We just feel we
contrlbu
ted to the lack of success
need a group that is a little better
for the Superman Exposition.
organized."
'1'he gorgeous weather played
The trust!'es of Neverendlng
Battle this month have cloS!'d
their downtown Cleveland office, !~~~n~ls~s~· ~~\~t!~~d~;
accepted the resignation of Gen. · going on In town. ln~ludlng the
eral Manager Alan Hills and Yanke!'S playing the Indians.
That was something
couldn't

foresee when we put the dates
together. We got great media,
"
advertising and promotion, but
I '
what did P .T. Barnum say? Ifthe
public doesn't want to come, you
can't stop them."
several days shuttling curious
The affair was organized to
BISHOPVILLE, S.C .(UPJ) celebrate the 50th anniversary of Stori!'S of the " Lizardman," a news reporters and tourists into ,
when writer Jerry Siegel and _ 7-foot tall monster with red eyes the swamp where Lizardman is
Illustrator Joe Shuster sold th!' that allegedly attack!'d a car and supposed to live, 4 miles south of ·, ,
Superman rights to Action Com- chased a man from a swamp. Bishopville In eastern South
Ics for $130. The two Cleveland have brought hunters and tour· .Carolina,
Glenville High School students lsts to the edge of the murky mire
Columbia radio station wtos ·'' .
created the "Man or Steel" In to catch a glimpse of the scaly Is offering a $1 million reward for · . · :
the capture of the creature.
.•,
1934.
beast.
Truesdale
said
two
people
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About 75 gun-toting hunters
1,
contend
they
sighted
the
redspent some time this week along
one roadway In a fruitless vigil ey!'d creature near the swamp , •
I wo months ago.
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for the elusive reptile.
Christopher
Davis,
17,
of
"Last night, it looked !Ike a
football
game out there," Lee Browntown told the sheriff last .I
He said bare sunbathers, and
people if done in moderat ton, and
County Sheriff Liston Truesdale week that a scaly. two-legged
It improves the chances for a even those clad In scanty swim-. said Wednesday. "They had a green creatur!' 7-feet tall with
longer and lustier life, a founding wear, radiate the message: "My !Ire going and lset up) thre!' fing!'rs on each hand
hormones are tanked up and
member of the British Society for
chased him after he changed a
campers."
ready for action."
Nutritional Medicine says.
tire near th!' swamp.
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·..we were designed to feed on ·
He also recommended moder·
Deputy Sheriff Chester Lighty
The sheriff said he expects
ate sunbathing as a cure for a rnore hunters to arrive this also had two reports of slghtlngs
sunlight, and we suffer if starved
range or aliments, such as high weekend .
of It," said Dr. Oamlen Downing,
several weeks ago. A couple
.
who conducted studies on the blood pressure, and blam!'d a
Truesdale. has been -b!'sleged blamed Lizardman for stripping
relationship between exposure to number of modern Illnesses on with calls from news media from chrome and a hood oranment
the increasing habit (In Britain)
the sun and recent health claims
all over the Uniied States and from their car, but a state
that people should stick to the of living life indoors.
Canada since the story of Lizard- wildlife official said ma rks left
"After a week In the sun we feel man circulated earlier this week, on the car indicated a red fox did
shade. Taken in small doses, the
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more
relaxed and, therefore, less and said he has 'Spent the past the damage.
sun provid!'S protection against
Inhibited, our sex hormones have
skin cancer. he said.
Downing said Thursday that
been given a boost and our whole r-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;
experimental studies show the bodies are tuned lor reproduclevel of sex hormones In the body tion. What's more, the opposite
doubles when the back Is expoS!'d sex Instinctively knows It,"
to sunshine, and triples after the Downing said.
whOle body Is expos!'d.

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-Quirks in the news---------

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LADIES' SUMMER SWEATERS. S.M.L ......................
ORIGINAllY 9.99 at 14.99 ...... .. .. .' ... . .... SALE '5 8c
LADIES' MIX 'N MATCH. S,M,L 8c 8 TO 18 .. . ....... ......
~~"#ffdtSIZETOSH280.RTS99.. 3.2.. TO
.. ·3·8· ... .. ,SALE '3 TO
.
,
...... ....... , . . . . .
ORIGINAllY 5.99 TO 12.99 .......... , .. ... SALE 13 TO
~IES' SHORT SLEEVE KNIT TOPS, S,M,L . ... .. .. , .. , .....
RIGINAllY 7.99 &amp; 12.99 ................... SALE 14 8c
LADIES' STRETCH JEANS 8c SKIRTS, 3 TO 13 ........... : ...
ORI~AllY 26.99 &amp; 28.99 •. ......... .. ... SAlE 1 10 &amp;
LADIES
TUBE
All
' TOPS ..... ...... ....... , .... SAlE 'I TO '
LADIES SUMMER HANDBAGS .......... SAlE 13 TO
~~~SLEEPWEAR .............. SALE 14T0'11
PRINTED PULLOVER KNITS. S.M.LJCL ........
ORIGINAI.J.;Y 11.99 ... ...... ... .. ... . ........... SALE
SCRUB SHIRTS ...... ORIGINAllY 9.99 ...... SALE
O S KNIT COlLAR WOVENS, S,M,L.XL ..... ' ...........
RIGINAllY 12.99 ............................. SALE
MEN'S CASUAL PANTS .... ORIGINAllY 19.99 .... SA!£
33% OFF ORIGINAL PRICE TODDLER SUMMER
33% OFF ORIGINAL PRICE GIRLS' SWIMWEAR
.
33% C?FF ORIGINAL PRICE GIRLS' SUMMER COORDINATe;
GIRUl TANIC SUNDR~. 4 TO 14 ........ SALE 4.65 TO
~ =RlGINAL PRICE BOYS' SELECTED SHORI' SLEEVE

state to begin gallstone
Lithotripsy. The treatment
eliminates gallstones without
surgery.
The consortium Is one of seven
sites to receive a Llthotrlpter
from Medstone. the system's
manufacturer.
About 20 mlllion Americans
experience gallstone probl.m$,
500,000 of whom undergo major
surgery, officials said.
"Gallstone surgery is the
number-one intra-abdominal op-

Superman group planning bankruptcy filing

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Oil lVEitll SHOW AT 7:30P.M .

DRIVE IN OP£11 WEEKENDS

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPH -A
new proc!'dure that uses shack
waves to pulverize gallstones Is
now available lor the first time in
Ohio as pari of a Food and Drug
Administration study, Mount
Carmel Health officials said.
A hospital consortium,
conslsting 1or St. Ann's Hospital,
St. Anthony-Mercy Hospital, St.
Anthony Medical Center, and
Mount Carmel Health, has
received approva I from the

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33% OFF ORIGINAL PRICE BOYS' SELECTED SHORI'S
33% OFF ORIGINAL PRICE AU. CHilDREN'S SUNGLASSES
ADIItSSIOI Sl.OO

TUPPERS PLAINS - Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 9053,
Tuppers Plains, will sponsor a
public super allyoucaneat salad
bowl beglnnl'ng at 5 p.m. Satur-

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Includes tank 'tops, crew neck
tops and color block shorts.
ORIGINAil.Y 9.99 Ea.

Vacation Bible school at the noon.
A kickoff parade will be held at
Middleport Church of Christ will .
10
a.m. Saturday starting at the
be held Monday through Friday
church,
Fifth and Main Sis.,
next week from 9:30 a.m. to 12
moving down to Hartlngt!'r Parkway, over Pearl St., al\d then
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returning to the church. All
children are Invited to decorate
their bicycles for the parade.
The Bible school will be for
Descendants of Tommy Gilkey chlidren from the age of three
and Mllda Jane Hudnall wlll hold through junior high school. Those
their annual reunion Sunday at needing transportation are asked
the r&lt;iadslde park on Route 33, to call the church, 992-2914.
south of Darwin. A potluck r--------------1
dinner will be served at noon.
Those attending are to take a
. h 1:\~\Uf,,\ .
covered dish, table service,
,
f}J/~1~!11
gam!'S and folding chairs.

POMEROY All/ Meigs
County and Mason County area
boys and girls whlshtng,to sign up
to play football or be ~heerlead­
ers for Big Bend Ml~t football
may do so Saturday from 10a.m.
to 12 noon In front of Elberfeld's
Store in Pomeroy. Participants
must be in the fifth or sixth
graders and cannot be older than
13 by Sept. 1.

day at the post home In Tuppers
RACINE - Annual Charles sixth grade.
Plains. Adults, $3; children, · and Alva Snyder family reunion
$1.50; signs In Tuppers Plains Sunday at Racine Shrlners Park;
RUTLAND- A Kids' Crusad!'
will mark directions to post Potluck luncheon to be served wlll be beld this Monday through
home.
beween 12:30 and 1:30 p.m. ; Friday, 7 to 8:30 p.m., at the
Taf!.e covered dish; faclllttes Rutland Nazarene Church.
ROCK SPRINGS Rock ayailable for all ages.
Prizes, stories, giveaways and
Springs United Methodist
lots of fun will be featured. All
Church Is having an Ice cream
children welcome.
SUNDAY
social on Saturday, at 5 p.m.
POMEROY - The Singer
Everyone welcome.
·
EAST MEIGS- Meeting of all
Family Reunion will be held
Sunday, with potluck dinner at 1 boys lntersted in junior high and
EAST MEIGS - Car show 10 p.m., at the senior citizens center varsity football in the Eastern
School District this year wlll be
a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday at Eastern In Pomeroy.
held at 7 p.m. Monday In the
High School sponsored by East·
ern Boosters; concessions wlll
RUTLAND- The 20th annual -Eastern High School
operate.
reunion of the Taylor-Harper gymnasium.
ram lUes will be held Sunday at
POMEROY - The annual
HARRISONVILLE - Harri· Forest Acres Park in Rutland.
sonvllle Masonic Lodge No. 411 Potluck dinner at 1 p.m. Bring picnic of the Ken Amsbary
will observe friendship night on table service and beverage. Call Chapt!'r ol the Jzaak Walton
League will be held Monday, 7
Saturday beginning with a po- Ruby Fife, 992-3464, for Info.
. tluck dinner at 6: 30 p.m. at the
p.m., at the clubhouse. All
members and famutes are asked
temple.
MONDAY
- RACI!Ii"E ..,... The Southern Lo- to attend. Bring a covered dish,
SUNDAY
cal Board of Education will meet table service and drink. The club
POMEROY - The Singer Monday, 7 p.m., at the high will provide the meat.
...
family reunion will be held school.
MIDDLEPORT- Bible school
Sunday at the Senior Citizens
Center In Pomeroy. Potluck
EAST -MEIGS- A meeting of at Middleport C)lllrch of Christ,
dinner at 1 p.m. Family and all boys Interested In junior high 9:30 a.m. to 12 noon, Monday
friends welcome.
and varsity football In Easlern through Friday. Classes tor ag!'s ·
Local School District wlll be held three through junior high school;
RUTLAND- The 20th annual · 7 p.m. Monday in the high school If transportation' needed call the
church, 992-2914.
·reunion of the Taylor-Harper gymnasium.
families will be held Sunday at
MIDDLEPORT- Oh Kan Coin
Forest Acres Park in Rutland.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Potluck dinner will begin at 1 Church or Christ will hold Vaca- Club meetlni Mondaty evening
p.m. Those attending sbould tion Bible School for children at Burkett Barber Shop In
bring table service and beverage ages three through junior high, Middleport; social hour and
for th!'lr family. For more this Monday through Friday, trading session preceding the 8
p.m. meeting; coin auction and
information, contact Ruby Rife 9: 30 to 12 noon each day.
refreshments.
at 992-3464.
CijESTER ~ Chester Com·
CHESTER - Chester Com·
POMEROY - South · Bethel munlty Bible School at the
New Testament Church, Silver Chester United ' Methodist muntty Bible School will be held
Ridge, will stage Bible school, Church will be held Monday July 25-29, 9 to 11 a.m., at Chester
Monday through Friday, 6: 30 tp through Friday, 9 toll a.m. each United Methodist Church.
8:30p.m. Classes for nursery age day. Classes will be offered for Classes \viii be from nursery age
through adults; public welcom!'. children nursery age through through sixth grade.

Gallstone crushing begins in Ohio hospital .

Young Men's Bncb Group

Bible school planned by church

_
SATURDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS
Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053 Is
sponsoring an "all you can eat"
Super Salad Buffet on Saturday
with serving starting at 5 p.m.
Prices will $3 for adults and,$1.50
for children. The post home Is
lCM;ated one quarter mile nprth of
Tuppers Plains. Follow signs.

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movie tickets, WMOV tee shirts
and more.
As in past years, WMOV's
Drew Hunnell will be the an·
nouncer for the evening's
activities ..
Back up band for the evening
will be Phoenix from Lancast!'r,
Ohio. PhO!'nlx has opened for
many country artists and musicians, including Hank Wiillams
Jr., George Jones, Charlie
McClain, Sylvia, Jerry Reed and
more.
To enter the largest country
music cont!'st in the world,
contact Jean Triplett or Wendy
DeLong at WMOV Radio, 304-2732544 .

DESTINY G. JENKINS

EAST MEIGS - Dance will be
held Friday, 9 to 12 p.m., at
Eastern High School. Everyone
welcome.

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Sandy Kulkin will be the
Inspirational speaker at Saturday and Sunday, JuJy 30-31
services, at the Rejoicing Life
Church, 323 North Second Ave.,
Middleport. In his talks, Kulkln
makes practical applications of
splrl~ual principles to help people.
deal with problems In many
different areas or life. Kulkln has
appeared on the 700 Club and
speaks frequently at . (Charts·
malic Conferences, having been
described as dynamic, powerJul,
electrlfylrig, practical, entertainIng and humorous. Anyone wish·
lng to attend the weekend services is welcome. Saturday's
service will be at 7 p.m. Sunday
services will be at 10 a.m. and 7
p.m.

Camper·honored
Destiny Gallann Jenkins,
daughter of Garrett and Linda
. Jenkins, Pomeroy, was selected
as senior girl youth camper of the ·
year at the summer youth camp
held recently In Albany at tlje
Apostolic Lighthouse Church.
Her selection was based on
Christian attitude and character
as viewed by the directors.
Ribbons, trophies and certificates were awarded In several
categories at the camp,

EAS'r MEIGS - A dance will
be held Friday, !rom 9 to12 p.m.,
at Eastern High School. &gt;Everyone welcome.

Kulkin to speak ~~~~~~~~iiii~1'·:~:

Country showdown set
The _ Seventh Annual True
Value Country Showdown, sponsored by WMOV RacUo Statlon, ·
Ravenswood, W.Va ., will be held
at The Hangar at 614 Green St. in
Parkersburg on Thursday; Aug.
4, at 7 p.m.
First prize to the contestants at ·
the local showdown will be $500
cash as well as ·the c'hance tQ
advance to the finals In Nash·
ville; Second prize is a pair of
m!'n s "Tony Lama" western
boots, a $270 va,lue, courtesy of
Comer Shoes in Ripley.
This Is WMOV's s.lxth year with
the local showdown competition.
This- year the radio station plans
to give away various prizes to
people in th!' audience, Including

POMEROY - Meigs Co'!nty
R.E.A.C.T. will hold a special
meeting friday, 7:30 p.m., at
Pleasers Restaurant . All
members are urged to attend.

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-People in the news__,

Community calendar

Friday. ~.utv 22, -1988

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday. July 22, 1988

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The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

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Ducks not all that ducky:
OCEAN SPRINGS, Miss. t UPI)
- All Is not ducky for a couple or
duck lovers who wound up In
court because or their 150 feathered friends.
"What we have here Is a
problem of too many ducks, too
much duck poop, and too much
odor," city prosecutor Foley
Ranson told Judge Daryl Dryden
fo~owing a hearing Wednesday
night.
Dryden fined James and
Sh!lmsl Hyre $:Jl0for vlolatlng:an
ordinance regulating animal
kewtng in the city and gave them
two weeks to reduce the flock of
1~ ducks to an acceptable level.
1 j)ryden said he wasn't sure
what an acceptable number or
duCks would be, but that Hyre
copld figure It out.
The retired couple claimed
their feathered friends ate hurt·
lng no one as they waddle a bout
their 2-acre plot.
&amp;
'Why are they making such a
fuss?" Shams! Hyre asked.
The tuss, according to retired
de11t1st and next door neighbor
Dewey Metts, is !rom the aroma
that wafts over his property.
~'The odor is so bad It literally
make your eyes water," said
M~tts, adding the ducks migrate
to11ls property and leave traces
o! 't heir travels.
·
:•Ducks are kind of like houseflieS," he said. "Where they
healtate, they defecate."
Yoa e1111 10 llome a&amp;aln:
WILMINGTON, Del. tUPI)- A
loJig-lost mutt that vaniShed
from Its home three years ago
returned thiS week, as quietly
ani! mysteriously as it departed.
•
~He came up to me, and puthls
paw on me, like, 'Oh, well here I .
ani,'" said Joan Okoniewski, 33,
a nurse at a Wilmington hospital.
"I said, 'Oh my IIOCI, It's him.'"

,.

Okoniewski said Thursday she
was In her back yard when she
saw a dog that resembled her
long-lost Beau come Into the yard
and lick her son David, 5, on the
face. The mixed-breed dog then
came to her and placed the paw
on h!'r leg.
Beau, part German- shepherd
and part golden retriever. for
reasons unknown had left th!'
family's home In suburban Wil·
mtngton In AugUst 1985. After
several unconfirmed stghtings In
the first six months, Beau was
given up for lost; that Is, until
Monday afternoon.
The family Is convinced the
dog Is their old friend Beau.
Okoniewski said the golden·
colored dog has the same mark
under his nose and a tiny scar
under his left eye as the family
pet. She said he also has thesaine
habits - sleeping under the deck,
waiting for the children at the
bottom of the stairs and drinking
from the toilet.
Okoniewski said she has no
Idea where the dog has been for
the past three years.
"Either he took off on his own
or he was stolen. A tip cotme In
that there was a dog that looked
like him In Elkton (Md.)," she
said, adding that by the time she ·
got there the dog was gone.
Doctor AJI nadlty In the 1un ill
heallllJ: LONDON &lt;UPI)
Nude sunbathing Ia good for

THE

HOLZER CLINIC

July 25-29

Meigs Co. Branch
Main Phone Number Has Been
_Changed

Time 9:ll - l2 1«!!1!
Place fiFlll AT "'IN
Date ,hy 25- 29

information
call
992-2914

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Church ,of Christ
For mort

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and

MAIN

Middl•port, phio 45760

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This Number Has Been Changed
To •k• It Easier For You To
·ConfC!Ict Us. We Apologize For
Any Temporary Inconvenience.

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=
Business Services
~ntect
:'.!.
ep..,..
Public Notice

SHERIFF'S SAJ.E OF
REAl ESTATE
THE STATE OF OHIO
MEIGS COUNTY
Southo&lt;n Ohio Production
Credit A-dotiOn lformtfly
J1ck1on Production Credit
Aooocllll iOn.
PLAINTIFF

-va.Shermlll' Ray Marcum • .-ka
Sh•m.., M•cum. et el.,
DEFENDANTS
Co.. No. 87 CL 327
tn purwu•nce of ari Order
of s... directed to me in the
.t.ove entitled 1etion, I will
offer for Ule If public auc~
tion, at the front door of the
Court "Hou• in Pomeroy,
Oltio. in the above named
Caunty on Friday. August
12, 1988. at 10:16 A.M ..
tho following doocribed roel
ntete. ~uate in the Stete of
Ohio. ""din lhe Townohip of
Salem. to-wit:
TRACT 1: Situate in Salem

Townohip, Molgo County,
Ohio, and bolngthe E•t half
of the South-t -rter of
Section No. 38, Township
7. Rango No. 15. of the Ohio

CountY. Ohio. and In C.tifi.
cote for Transfer from the Eo·

.,

Being the oeme premi..o
'convoyed to Iormor gr.,.,;.
by dMd of record in Volume

180, 311. Deed Ae·
cordil of Moigo Coumy,
Ohio. .,d in Volume 178,
838. Deed Reco•dil of
Moigo County, Ohio Tract I
baing '"' S8me rMI •tete
deaaibed in deed to · Sherman R-v Marcum and Donna
Key MWcum of record in Vo·
lume 258, 279. Oeod

Recorde of GaHia Coumy,

Ohio.
TRACT II: Situate in So·
Township,

lem

Meigs

County. Ohio. and being the
W•t halt of the Southwest
quarter of Section 36, Sa·
' lem Townahip, (Township

7. Range 16. of the

No.

Ohio Company's Purchase~.
Meigl; County, · Ohio, containing 80 acrH, more or

.....

Being the rlllll estate de-

Kribed in Tract 2 of Sheriff's
Deed In Penhion to Kenneth
Reed ond Robin Reed, of record ;n Volume 166. page
437, Deod Roc:crdil of Meigs
1

Card

of Thanks

In Loving
Memory of

Carshel

Stone
Sadly missed by
his family.
The family of John
II itch wishes to 'express
their sincere apprecia·
tion to friends and, relatives who sent flowers
and food, and for every
kindness shown to us
durin&amp; our recent loss.
All was greatly appre·
ciated.
.
Cecilia Mitch, Terri
Michael and family.
Gary Mitch and family.

Stlte

Route · 3~5

1nd

County Rood •44 (Solmar
Andrews Roedl .)
c-od. to Chf"loo Konnath
Said property apJ)faioed tl
Reed. of roe&lt;ird In volUme · $27,000.00 (Tract II ond
209. poge 615. Deed Rt· S47.000.00 (Troet Ill and
cords of Meiga County, cannot be sold for lest th..,
Ohio . Reference is also made two-thirds of the •ppraised
to deed from John ""d Berty value.
Moe Reed to Chorl11 Ken·
TERMS OF SALE: Tho
WteofRobln Marie Reed. de-

neth Reed ot recOrd in Vo--

lu'"" 247, page 375. Deed
Rocordil ol Molgs County,
Ohio.
SU8J ECTto all legaleos•

mente end rights of way of
record.
Being the nme premises
conveyed to the grantor herein by deed of record In Deed

SUCCH&amp;ful purChller H
SOQf1 u his bid is accepted
Shall be required to deposit
~M

ttt. d•v of ..... in cuh-or
by certified cMck poyoble to

on

the Sho&lt;ilf, 10'14. of the
omoum of ouch occopted
bid.w~hthebll ..codue""

rr:::::;====::::=:::;::;=========i1
Custom Building

Howord £ . Fr..,..,

Sheriff of Meigs County

0 . Oe•n Evane
CHERRINGTON. EVANS &amp;
MOULTON
Attomev. for
the Plaintiff
(7 I 8 • 1 6 · 22 · 3t0

ft 1 1

Ul11f1LL

WJilllf
ADS
t\11

GEARY
BODY SHOP
550 PAGE STRlU
801
E.Moln . . .
POMEROY. OH.
992-2269

NEW LISTING- New home
in Middleport. Spirt foyer w~h
4 bdrms .• 2 baths, 2 krtchen~
2 garages, plus a small commercial building on a main
stre.t You must see to apprecial~ $83,500.00.
NEW LISTING - POMEROY
- Nice 2·3 bedrm., I flott
ranch wrth full basement
and I car garage. Aluminum
sidin &amp; good condition. Onlj
$28,000.00.
PRICE REDUCED- Vacant
land on CR 4, Rutland Township, apprx. 155 acres of
woodland, some timber and
mmerals. ElectriC available.
Reduced to $28.000.00.
PRICE REDUCED - PO·
MEROY - A home lor a
cookl If jOU spend a lol of
time in the kitchen, lhis one
is for jou. Beautiful modern
kitchen compliments this 3
bedrm home wih a deck for
outdoor ea!ln~ Fuli base·
ment. lots of closet space,
nice woodwork. Must Seel
$41.900.00.
.
POMEROY - 3 bdrrn trailfJ
just out oftoon!Woodrurner, 1
car garag~ equipp~ klchen,
A&amp;C back yard ~so has worl&gt;
srop wth hookut:G lor awoodrurner in garage Frul trees.
Make offfJ. $15,000.00.
NEW LISTING - MIDDLE·
PORT - Garage apartme11t,
2 bdrm .• off Hartinger Pky
$12.500.00.
HENRY E. CLElAND
992·6191
Joon Trusioll .... 949·2660
Dollie Turner-· 992-5692
Tracy Riffle ...... 9~9·2807 •
Jo Hill ............... 985-4466
Office .............. 992-2259

AlB

REAL TO!!

MIODLEPORl, OHIO

OPEN 8:30·6:00 P.M.

6-2·11-IMO. ·

Howard L. Writasel

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

IM111 MOVIES i. SUDIS to
VMS tAPE

t.t 111 ronwwt thcKa oiiiMow ill
&amp; !li... ovor to oey VIIS. •
or

CAll AMY CAIIfll
IOI'S HECTIONCS

446·7390

•FREE ESTIMATES•
nRED OF PAINTING?
Cover your home with
beautiful MASTIC or
CERTAINTEED vinyl
siding.

Best Prices Anywhere!
ROOFING and SEAMLESS
. GUnERS

PH. 992-2772

6·13·1 mo. ·

. SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR
Authorizad Strvice
I Parts

a.

Briggs Stratton
Tecumseh

Weed Eater
Homelite
Jacobian

VALLEY lUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY
Mi.U.port, Ohio
992·6611

3-30-'87 lin

Howard L .Wrltasel

ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949·2168

CAR SHOW
10:00 A.M. TO 5:00 P.M.
JULY 24TH
AT EASTERN HIGH SCHO.OL
SPONSORED BY EASTERN BOOSTERS
CONCESSIONS o DOOR PRIZES o MUSIC
• TROPHIES FOR CLASS WINNERS
DASH PlAQUES TO FIRST 25 ENTRIES
OPEN SHOW - '6.00 ENTRY FEE
SPECTATORS •2:00-SWAPPERS '6 .00
For Info. Phone 614-986·4317-949·2603
Help Wanted

REGISTERED
-tECHNOLOGIST

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUllT

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
''At Reasanable Pric11"

PH. 949·2801
ar Rt~•· 949-2860
Day ar Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

Riviere
Rollyson Vinyl
·
Replacement
Windows
Peachtree Doors

CUSTOM
INTERIOR DESIGN

and Windows

PH. 742-2463

SYRACUSE, OHIO
Moat Foreigrl and

GROWING RADIOLOGY
DEPARTMENT NEEDS
FULL OR PART TIME
TECHNOLOGIST - .
EXCELLENT .FRINGE BENEFITS

Domaatic Vahicl•
A/C Service
All Major • Minor
Rap airs
NIASE Caitlllod Mechanic

Sand Resume To:
Kim Shamblin.
Radiology Supervisor
Veteran!! Memorial Hospital
115 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
614- 992-2104, Ext. 237
E.O.E.

5-25-lfn

SOCIAL SERVICES DIRECTOR
Veteran• Memorial Hospital. a JCAHO accredited, not-for-profit hospital. is looking
for I! Social Services Director.
The Social Services Director will ba responlible for tha continuity of care end socll!l Hfvic. . for tha acute cent and long
term Cl!re unite of the hospital.
QueiHicatlon• Include 1 BKhelor of Sci·
DegrM in sociel Work with • currant
Ohio licenee in social work.
Plee18 ceH or eend a resume to:
Margaret Holm, Auistant Administrator
· Veteran• Memorial Hospital
115 E. Memorial Drive
Pomltl'oy, OH. 46769·

CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN
Cenified Licen1ed Shop

YOUNG'S .
CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addona arid rMMtd .. ing
...... Aooflng tnd gunfr work

- Concrete ·work
- Plumbing and etectric.l

w"'k
(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314

Pomeroy, Ohio

. 7-13-'88· tfn

E.O.E.

hold lumiohlng. - ' " Wo&lt;Jo.

mo.

mwer. 11 ... 24&amp;·1152.
Junk c.n with or without
3111-130 3.

MARCUM CONTRACTING

W..t to buy uRCI roof tlatet.

Clll304-372·4019.
w.nted to luv: .Uted IBM
t•pcmMer tnd UHd ledlea rfght
h.,ded
cklbl. Cell 11444120 .

rlf

luvlny.:',~ gold, oolno.
... ertlng were. old
colno. lwgo ... ..-... Top pro
c.. Ed 8..-kelt Barber Shop.
2nd. Avo.
Oh. 614882-3471.
rlnga. · ,

~

Authorized JOm
Daara, New HOtland.
B!IBh Hog Farm
Equipment Dealer

a!:

Far111 E411t11111t
Ptrh &amp;Serflu

on Iashan.Rd.
PH. 949-2168

PH.

D~e~ler

for
YARDMAN &amp; ECHO

. CONSTRUCTION

Products

OWtllll loffroy Snollh

8. 7 Financing on Yardman

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

We can r1p11ir and

radiators ond
heater cores. We can

also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repoir Gas Tonks.

·Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
AI" Tra•••l ..lot
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6·17-lfc

BACK TO SCHOOL
STUDENT ONLY
SPECIAL
'25.90 00 Perm
For '21 00
Cut &amp; blow Dry
$850
NOW THRU SEPT. 3

KAY'S BEAU1Y

SALON

189 N. 2nd
Middleport, Oh.
992-2725
7720/11-1 mo.

J.ll-lfc

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING
•Will Do Houllng With
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Busineu

WAHl TO IUY WIICIEO OR
JUNK CAliS OR fRUClS
-RH ESrl'ltATESFor ony of lhosuorvim call

614·742·2617
letw•n 9 a.m.·6 p.m.

erleonMouz.,r-·aa-ttrt
Tello Peat, Preoent and
Future - Gives Advice
on Love, Marriage and
Busineea.

(-· ..

Wlou Aro

·~PI

.,d
Oot1'llnow Will.. Way To

'"'"
,., ,,.....
ssao OFF With 1111t Ad

- 0111 Vhlt W11 (-loco
Yov Thwo'lt A loti• Way.

LADY IACUL'S
PAlM IIAIIIIIG

302

hlon St.

614:5194".33

CUSTOM BUllT
PRE-FAB
ROOF TRUSSEs·

frH Gift ... "Woter Me

· "'-•" bet!
operoted H01110'Plant
Aler1 Light with tunll'ltl
Oflw good 1/1 · 7130

~- 1.1·

...."'

scon

1·814-2all-11422. nk lor Suo.

EARN EXT!IA MONEY during
tho su.nmor. Got out of the
houoo. bocomo a t;lally Sonllnel
,:.Pill!' c•rfer. Aou• o'*' In

Mldclepart, Call Scott .t -The
Sominel Olfico ·ot 814-992·

2165.

- d l lrobl And 8.... 1 loll

Chrtttmtt Around the Workl
decorMiont untl Dec. Fun )Dbl
...... pt... , ...

uoo kit.

No

collection or: deltveryl Work your
own hourt. Now hiring OemonltrMon. c.n Betty CtrJ*If81,

114-245-5383 To .... l

Mlfntenance p ....on to llve·in
o1p1rtment campi•. catl 304-

8711-5104.

3

Announcement&amp;

FEDERAl, STATE. AND CIVIL
SERVICE JOBS

T·--

age~

In Gattlpola area .....

stntr fDr 2 yr. old• marbelvr.

Meldng repreeenantve in the .. ~ •
PMiga and turrOu~no county
··
erH. Gfeat new productl .n d

AEWARO ttOO.IIOfor lnlormo-

tlon leedlng toarrelt~ndoonvic-­

tion of penon or penons • •

\llndaltred Wlnkler·Tho"'Peon
Farm. C.. l M•on County Sfl•

rill "' 304-175·4018.
Giveaway

2·8 wk. old kftten•1 Calico A 1

lllock • yellow. Coli 814-44117100.
3 kfttena togNtawev- 2 femll•.
1 mille. Can .tfttf' 5 PM,

114-446-71 "¥7.

3 moe. o4d kittens. Mll•t"'Y
ttv-. bro""' ~m.re. can 814-

. ...

•ptrl•ce. EnJoy 10% min.

imum comrnlulon on • low
Hckot !Mm. Evor,ono II o
otpect '"d w.' re number one
ouri.W.. ·E:cpalencedmen 011
women 1hould reply with ,.•.
sume or work hiltOf\' to: P .0.
Box 371 Pert.,auttt, Ohio

r:

48112. ATTN: Sol• Monos•·
De try Firm needs work•. EJcp•
rl•co In mllldllg helpful. Coli

Real EslaiP.
31

• ~· .... with klndlrchitd. Contact Rtta Burton,
11,4-245-1578.

A downtown clothing ltGN I
nowacctpllng...um'• tor •I•
alft. lend ,_lll'fttl to: IOK Cia

814-44 1318.

--~4 -_

992·3721.

far day lhtft3d1Pfspervwaek. call • ' d

304-175-2374.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
'
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

..........

"Free

.

On lind contnurt, 4 rooms end

,\. .

Oar•a• demolition will pey " '~'· '
*110. 00, you keep .,d hMJI ""
material ewav. Ceil 304-67~ 1'. ~o-•

bill: h. On UncolnHeiahts. Pom•

roy. Nice .,.,d. Coil 814-9854103 after 5:00.

- :... .

In Middleport, 7 room• with 3
bedroomt, 8 llrge cloaett, a•·
age. khehan partially furnished.

' ' !I

"' ; ~
() ;.~. •

I'&gt;~'

Callll4-4411-1118.
Hou• for .... Roducad Prlco,
Coli 30~1711-2702 olio 6pm.

Situations
Wanted

6 room hou11 5 ICI'H of lend
834.900.00. 304-5711-2779.

.'C

Room • Board foreldarfy paraon:;r:
In mv home. Lg. room &amp; bath. "L.,
Reeaoi'lable. Cell 814-256· ~~\;
11509.
.
~'tl(,' •

Maln.,free •t. 3 br '.,.ch fernlty
room w-b fif'IPIICe. cen. •·c.
nice lot, lll'ge deck. wooden
lt018ge bldg. Priced mid tiOa.
Owner mutt 1111. Mekean offer.

,..

CarpMtry/remoclellng. hpere, , ., · 1
inced. haneat, 18Monable. Free ~
wtt. Refs. G .M. Gorl:bn, 614- . '\
4*8868 wenfngs. ·
. •;
Thank You.
"~ ·

1304[ 875-7438 '""' 8 p.m.
24KIO do.mle wide horne on
10x11 0 lot. acr..... porch,

utllty bl dg.loncodyord. Cll'l""·
wv. 304-773-5157.

·-;;:::::;======~· . if'1....'•.

;;

lnsurmce

32 Mobile Homea
for ·Sale

lnaur•nce: Miller lnturance .
~~~=f~2h~h. Alto: auto . ... ;.

•

1978-14470 mobllo homo, 3
bedrooms, fire place. •10,000.

.... ·
-=~== ·~·
15
Schools

Cell

~

electric. underpanning and parllalty furnlhted. will oo.-d•

. .. '..

...

Ohio 48831.

614-912·~847.

1174 Chomplon ·14•1&amp; tOIOI

1rado. . tl.900.110. 304-57523a3.
1970 Wlndtor. 12xll wtth
10x1 2 add on. woodburner.
w1sherand
tlr cond, muft

*"''·

old. Coli 114-4411-7848.

bo movod. 304-895-3802.

2'.-\ yr. old Gre.r:

Dono. Femolo. Coli 614-44111132 _eh., I PM.

1982. 12•70 Kno•. All alec. 3
8R. very good condh:ion, tlllce
owor poym"""~ 304-176-2921.

'
94 Schultz 141115. 2 ..,; ucollent cond. Plu1 two tl8ated
da&lt;*o. 304-175-7113.

Rrowood. - 1 - g t . Youwt
up. Cellll4-e43-&amp;253.
·
Avenue.

+....

71.0110 biu - - , ......
lurnoco. 304-175-2411.

"POmeroy...........
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Lo11 and Found

-··

33

Gar•ge" Sale-New VIctor 50so'
Dot Matrix" JWiner. cookwar8 .t 1' pole lamp, rocking chair. en~ ~~ 1
•ble. cul'181nt, tre1dmll .,.d ' ' '
mON. F1lrvl.,.., Sub. 525 Mall" ; ·:
nolle Dr. Stt. •July 23. 8 AM-3

vourlot only. tll.914•up. Coil
614-886-7311.

2 f~t for ..... Alhton. 83
•cr•. prMite. 2 wells. 2 b•na,
old hou•. timber and mineral
rlghtt, lobtcco allotment •

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

• 40.000.110. 304-743-3815.

······"Pt. ·Plaiis.iiiif ······':; ~

.......Giillliioliii ........ ..
I &amp; Vicinity . .
···••h••···- ---· --· ..... _·-- ·····

Public Sale
8t Auction ·

d-

. 8 to 4.

Mony

Rick . Po.-- - - · 11tOMid Ohio ..
VIr .....

•

- · '......... l•m. liqUid.
- .... J04-773-1711.
'

· ~:

&amp; Vicinity

Yerd Sale. Thura and Fri, 120- •
PM"Ic Drtve, lot• of mana and. f.WDmM'II clotNna. large and;;1 . ;
ln'WII. electric l.wn mower. , ..,.""':..,

• I

Cant-lon of ....,_ld oolo • ·
ot 1401Lowit St. Sot. July 23. bthtnd Power Co. Great prices .
nothing sold before 8:30 a.m: ·... •,

36

·

..

1M P8fk Dr. Ollldrena clothe~ • 1•
I~ A .....0 men • women• "• ",
clothet:. tlec. mawtr, crib, J ., •

furniture.

-.''·

Lots 8t Acraege

..clnt
1111. ,.lklna.-coto
All - - - ·
, 8blo.
P.-o.
· - · Phono 114-182-2343.

ti 1

:01:-,,-,..,~,::-lc=..
-,d:-.-1:-o-::s.
..-.J-u-,v-,-23-'' '" ! .

NO SUNDAY

StON buldlng wllh living prtwL Formerly known .. OlenwOOd 0.. . .1 St.,. lor ....
1. . . or .ant. Pho• 304-171-

2181.

0.. mnge •110.

PH. 949·2101
or Ru. 949·2160

Buaineaa
Buildings ·

M•llteonA.,.,Frt22MidSet23 ... "'
"Nioo olothlng. Antlq..o, etc. ·: :
;::::;::-:::~'-.:-:._::..:..:,:;_+.·.I ,

Eattmetei~·

34

-· · - -. - -- -· . u- . . .. ·--· ...... ·- ...

lig tour family ~rd lite. 1114,=- : ~·

"

114-.Molrh-.-....
Pontt vory prt.o... 20 mlnu . .
from Atllena or Pomeroy.
*37,100. 114-141·2243. '
lot~
8412.

I;

'

I room,l.an
e.
.moM
plut dep
. 'IWDi 1pDI'CNICI

"""""'• coo or10qulred.
1!4-

Coil 114742•3149.

-•e.

3 be*oom country horne. Att-

ached
Oopooh 10qulrod.
Avolt-.o Auguot111. Coll814742-2427.
I

,,

oro.

Rd. J04-1711-

room l,..rtmentt at VIllage
Manor ! and Rivertkle, Apart~
manti in '-'iddlepQrt. From

o182. Coli 814-992-7787.
EOH. '
j.2....::...b_o_dr_ooon
_ _A_pt_o_.-lo-,-,..-t.

Cerpetitcl. Nice 18tting.lalndry

1oo11•1• ovollllllo. Coli 814882'3111. EOH.

Newly ...tecoreted apartment•
Mliltbla Utftlttel pold. t2215.

.,.. month. dopoolt 10qulred. Coli
814-982-5724 olror 8:00 or
892-5119.
.
2 bedroom aptt. Mlckleport.
• 1H-.1815.per month. 2 •d 4
b'*oom hoUIII In Pomeroy

-

t%00.122&amp;.,.. month. All

_..,.,ce

Double Wide 'on prlwte lot. 3
bdrm, 2 b•!&gt;o. AC. from pooch.

1 room unfumilhtd apartment.
O!llllpolls Forry.l325 • utHHiol.l Coli 81 4-812·5434 or 304Coli 304-575-3087.
• 882·218&amp;.
1 ho
tu•· APARTMENT&amp; mobllo h...2b• d room a II .~. . r c me, " hou... pt. Pl-ntendO.IIiftft..
tize b. .ment. anve. 304·••
.... 675-3217.
· llo. 614-4 1 11-8221.
2 be"'-" hou• Clomp Conlor 2 bodroom lumlohod opt N~
tfllilen, ret.-.nce and •curltv
0200· d epaIll: 1110' month ·' depo"t
required, 304-882·
30
R " ' - - 10qulred.
4-8?5- • 32&amp;7"' 304-773-5024.
2828.
:;;~:;;:::;::;;:=;;:;::====• Booch Stniot, Mlcldlopon, Ohki.
42 Mobile Hom81
1 2bedrooon.lurnlthedoportmont,
..._r Rent
udhllo .. Id. 101-nc•. Pho,.
IU
304-la2-2588.
Now accepting applcatlona for

2.31R.AHutllnllopoldiiiCIPI 2 bodr- oportmont~ fully
electridty. conwnlent Joc•k)ri. t c.peted,applancet, water and
Col) 114-4411-aSIIII ., 4411- · trooh pickupo provided. Main•
· nanca free living cl~ to .,..~
ping. bMks end IChools. For
Moblte Homet for rent. Call more Information call 30..882·

4001.

, ·, _3:_7_1_1_.E_._D_.H_._ _ _ __

cond. Coli 614-4411-6725.

2 aR. M~lllloHomolumlthodor
unfurrUMd. In Porw .,... C.ll

Clun new 3 room, beth, c•·
p•d.
dryer hookup.
ttiM • retrlgellltor furnl.,.ed.
rent .-gotl~t with good ref•enc•. 304-171-1802 or 676-

---•'* •

4680.

614-3811-9604.
1hll fumithed plut water.

46

o200. Oop. 1 or 2 poopla. No

pelt.

Furnished Rooms

Furrilhed

room-919 Second

A..... Oolllpolit. 1125 • mo.

3 bedroom tnlll• for fWd In ' Utllhllo ..Id. Blnalo mole. Sh . .
Syi8CU •. 11 .. 992-7181 tft• Iboth. Call4411-44"11oltor 7PM.

1:00.

1

i!olloorns for tent-week,. month.
~ bodroomo. fumllllod. t100. ~ 911rtfng at *120 • mo. Gillie
dopoolt. t1 50. p.- momh pluo ·Hotol-114-4411-9580.

inlkllo. Clllll4-982·3122.

2 bedroarn mobile horne Middl•
port, Ohio, Nference end IICUr·

lty dopoolt IOqulrod. 304-112·
3267 .. 304-773-5024.

Apartment
for Rent

2 BR. eptt. 8 clo••· kltahen-

46

30 dl';'t .minimum. Pricet
t99 &amp; up. Rebuilt torque•
co"*"d •• tow •
t39.
Standard clutch•. pr•ture
pint• • throw-out belrinP. All
typtt12moa. w.ranty. We buy
jur* ttanln*tlcSn~. Call 304tH

56 Building Supplies

•75-1758 or 114-379-2220.
llock. brick. _...., plpa, winBuilding
MtterWI
dowa.
lint"•·
etc. Clll.lde \Nin-.
t•a. Rio Ortnde, 0. Cllll14-

ans. ,.. ··-r·
~....:~=::::::::::::::;======·=-=~=-=·M::.~ Ut«&lt;
~.ran• milol30devagulr.,..
••1 ~
nifty lntJ*=I:ed.

cOncrete blocks- Ill .... yard
ordeiMtrv. M11on..,.d. Gtlltpo~ Block Co .. 123'h Pint St ..

7572. Hours 9·15.

Oilllpolls. Ohio. Coli S14-44527U.
,
WE811!RN RED CEDAR

• Ch tnnel Rustle
i&lt;· and Beveled Lap Siding

J . S FUFINITURE
'1 415 Eut•n A,re.
4 ckewer chert. ••· IJ drawer

ch_,, 154.85. 5 po. woodon
dinnette tetS. t119.81.

•o.ckMIIterilla
Guaranteed Quality

Space for Rent

'
CO UNTRV I\IOIILE Homo P•k.

71 Auto's For Sale

1030 CUetrectorw/10 ft. bush
hog, t4350.. MallY Hlrria' pony
tractor w/cuttMitor S. mOONing

1987 Omni. Auto.• AC. PS. PI,
and more. 12.000 m11 ... eo~
alder Mde. 114-742-30 20 after
&amp;p.m .

mochlno. good •hoPe. t988.

Owner will finance. Clll 114-

2811-6522.

1983 Pontiac Phoenill:, exc

Oinettet, bedt, bedding,
dree••· chill, co.-chet. ch*•·
lam~. oo.,.._end tabl•. Evwy
dll'f Speclell. Y.:! mile out Jerri-

56

t8110. Ow- WHI
114-2811-1522.

cho. 304-875-1460.

gr~p.

'&amp;OOflrm. Clll614-44··7015.
Woohor ' • drjeo tot. UOO.
Counter top electric renge. t40.

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Qroon)lna. All breed.... AII
ttvf•. ltm• Pet Food Dealer.

t2385. 990 Oavkl a...... tracIC1r, UISO. N- I ft. pul!ypo
ft""'!CO.

Coli

Whitt farm tractort coat plu•

1%. Sldaro Equlgm.,t. Call
304-875-7421.

Julio Webb Ph. 814-4411-0231.

Oregonwynd c.tterv Kannel.
CFA Persian end Siam. . kit""'· AKC Chow puppiB. Ne~N

Hlghlond whfto Terrien AKC

63

Livaatock

•Ia Coli 514-

4411-1437.

puppl•· IIMII A Snwrt. Call

.14-38 7-0824.

9411-2017.

Washer • dryer tet-t12&amp;.
Stereo-•50. Call 814·'411-

e.llo1ton terrier pupP•. Ready

BUIDhering hoga. cenarr.gefor
b.Jtchwlng. freezing and WI'IIP·
ping plua deltv.rv. 304-875-

e.tv American couch. chair •

7422.

7398.

in 2 week._ Depotlt wiU hold.
Coli - " ' 8 PM. 514-387·

I 319, 5 p~. oak dlnOOO· 1225.

AKC Pomennl., pup. tiny,
choc., fenutl• t110. 3 adull
Pomarenl••·•ll Thr_. 8200.

1 yd .. oomm010ill coroot-13.g9
a yd. Llrgeselec:tlonofroom•lze
remrwnu. No job too big or

2 femele full blooded PeklnttH
pupo. 5 wko. old. Coli 814-992·

cut bop a•pet •rting It .1.915

tmlll. FlnMdng It Installation
IYIIIable. Mollohan Furniture.
Up~

River Ad.. 446-7444.

21 cubic ft. green, troatfree
refrigWitor fl'eenr wtth toe
rNker. Good cOndltk&gt;n. 8150.

Coli 614-4411-1827.
30"¥7.

'

AKC S.uett

p~pt.

·

Mother 1 AKC
German -S hepherd . 820.00

llch, 304-675-1159.
AKC ~:lli8Mfed Cocker Speni ...

lnoulatlon·lotl. Coli 114-38119126.

Comppund • Aecurw bow•
.See King ina.table boat, .22
IUIOI'ftltk: Diteol. Sele!Trtde lor

!Ina...... Celllt4-4411-8131.

Metal beuJ cabinet. •mall

wooden hutch: Coli 814-44118878.

22.900 BTU air conditk'mer. 2
yra. old. a yr. trantfenble
lltrvloe contract. •aoo. Cell

67

1987 Clmtro Sport• Cou ...
PS. PB. OD, AM·fM·Cio~
reclining seats. V-8 fu•l lnja~:&gt;

675-2193.

Musical
Instruments .

Organ for tele. Paid 83000
new-aaldng tBOO. Very good

Couch with hldO-o·bod. Slngw

Sewing M8chlnefncabll'l~· T.V.
antenna tower. Cell 814-949-

3083.

Moo!'e't Cttapel Centennial
Pl. . . with platul"' •nd history.

Spoco lor -II tiOII-. 1&gt;11

110 -h. Call304-171-2282
or 5711-2203.

1988 ChoVv Covoller-typo 10
CL ltllndlrd, 4 cyl., 2 lane
point. CC. PS. PB. AC, AM·FM·
Ctu. deluxe cloth lnteior.
38,000mll•· &amp;15500, Arm. C.ll

304-675-7342.

[ndlvldual gutt.r l.,ont, beglnrwrs. •rlouaguhllrl1t. RrUri·

1912Toyoll ClllcoGT. AC, P8,
I tpd. C111814-2511-5439.

c..... Muslc. 114-4411-0187.
Jeff WamaltV Instructor 114448-8077. summer apeninga.
Fn~it

58

8t

Vegetables

Cartnlng tomaloH already
piCked, ·•4.00 a bu.-your co•
talner. Baughman's Farm- 7
_m il• a. of Oalllpolhl on SR. 7.

Cotl 814-2511-8535.

59 For Sale or Trade

.

lruck. Coll814-2511-1124.

Fdrill SlliliJIIes
&amp; liVI:,IUck

T!Ucks for Sale

72

1979 4 WD Chevy V2 ton
pick-up. Recenttv IHtored badv.

rima. lool bolt, ' 11)(1. • 1800.

Coli 614-446-0162. au. 27,
357-038a eher 5 PM .
1978 ~ ton

Ch81r'T. pickup. new

body with 1987 t1 do In oomper.

Both like new. Call 114-258-

815112.

1984 Nia•n King Cab. DIMI'I.
high mleaga tilt. PB. AC. nBW
fibtral ... topper. a2495. Call

condition. 814-941·2237.

4

W.O.

1-----1977 Jeop CJ 5. 5 cvl .. 3 spd ..

• .... top. 1800. Coli 814-245.6022.

t7110. 814-992-1881.

1981 Pontloc Sunblrd·liko •-· 1-------~-41.000 mil•. auto., AC. tilt,
AM·FM -ao. Coli 114-3811-

1 9 79 Mereu ry Cau !JIIr XR- 7.

EliCOL cond. Only 13.0110 mil•
814-~&amp;.8591

Cell 11'-441-0191.
1979 Monti Carlo. Excel. cond.
New br.. -. 327 encjne. 202

ho... El-rock lnllk o/Elfto

Up. .lfo unlurnlohod opt. C..·
p . .d, ...._
...... No """No pot~ CIIII14-44S.1137.

1300. Coli

~14-255-1224.

11 Court 11.·2 lA .. 2 bollia.
--od.wlw~•
No-OH- .
t32tomo. oluoutll•llo. Dop.
rof. CIIII14-44M12S.
,........... :1 .-no • both.
c1-. No Aof. • t11ttoo11
•oqulnld. lftllltlll lu"*hed.
AdUito only. Coli 114-44111111.

FM ••r., Cast., cruile control,
lug gaga r11cks. • oom.-rtmenta.

1972 Suzlld 750.

FiUOI good.

198&amp; V 86 Hbnde In mlntcond.

18A. opt.neorHMC.h.. ll. No
CII1114-441-47U.

l-:-:,.-:--:":"-:---:::-::---:::---

boMt. piM• repo'd. Sur·

Good condition. 814-992·

327. 4 lpood Coli 114-247·
4851.

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

1182 Cutloulu,s;ro. 2 door,
va. outo. o1r. •
.firm. eo11
114-tllo431'httor s:oo.

star.t lnO· I II. Recliners

...
1. _ . _
u.~....
.........

Qolllpollo, Ohio

PhoM 114-4411-318a or 814-

4411-4477

Excavating

773-5838.
84

8t

Electrical
Rafriger81ion

114-912·3703.

, • • Chry~or lmporlll cr-.
114-742-2323.

.

•

R811dential or commercial wiring. NeoN tervice or repairs.
Ucen•d electricirr.. Eslimatt
free. RidenoUr El8ctriC.I. 304-

675-1786.
85

General Hauling

Dillard W•er S•vlce : Pools,
Cillerna, Weill. Delivery Any-

2315.

limo. Coli 614-446-7404-No
Sund-r calla.

1981 Hartev Davidson Super·
Oood oondttton. '3500.

'
'

J A J w... r Service. Swimming
pool1. cia•rns, wells. Ph. 814- .

•

Co11814-742·2175.

1983 Hondo Sh..ow BOO. Uko
2188.

Chevypldcup. »14 ton. 3150euto.
1180CR 2150 Btlnoredinbika.

114-742-2323.

I;;,;:::::;;;::;:;:::;:;===
76
Boats and

245-9285.

A &amp; A Wtt•r SefVIce. Poolt.
clltetnl, wellt . Immediate·
1,000 or 2,000vallonsdeUvery.

•

Ptul Rupe. Jr. W111:er Stirvlce.
Pools, ci••rna. weU1. Call 114-

446-3171 . .

Schuler WMer H.,ling. Jam•

Schuler ot 514-742·2478 ..

87

••
"'

Uphohtery

MoWIWY'I Up-Inti. ...,lftt .
trl aou ..yarea 23v-•a. Thebtst
In furniture u-rtng. Con
304·871-4 114 lor !roo
ootlm-.

-....,.111
•
'- ___.
1184 l,.•uon
II 11.. ~-bo~.
out...,ood. All oc-01 pluo
tnll•. co..t. U80D. Colt
114-448-3212.
. .:::;;;;;o...._._........._

'

..

Coli 304-575-6370.

Motors for Sale

1111 Ch•y Covollar. Pl. Pl.

Alo. nit Wltool. Ro• Oolol!lllr.

,,

·,

Cor. Fourth and Pine

1918 Hondo 300 4 l.hoolw &amp;erene Schuler 11t 814- 742·
1187 Ponttoo 1000. 4 door. 4 ATV. 120110. Coli 304-175- 30!16.
cyl.. fully oqulppod. 30,1100 1335.
ml• w•h ..,. rodlol tlroo. 1..:..::..:..:,_ _ _ _ __,_.:.,.- Watteraon'a Water Hauling.
17000. Coli 614-112·2811 II• 1188 Hondo 4 _ ....: 125. I"HHontble rates, Immediate
tor 5:00JIII'.
Cu. ln .. El&gt;col eond. Gooo-. 2,000 glllan deiMry, cltWnt.
poal1. well, etc. call 304-171fl80. Coli 304-8711-2411.
2919.
1188 eo-•· •d. 2.111or 1uo1
ln(ootlon. VB, T·t- 11,0110 1188 Hondo XA 280 din bii&lt;O.
ml•. AoNng t10.1100. Col -oond.Meny..t,.o. U180. Dump truak deiNery and bush
304-773-1144 or 114-112· Coli 304-871-2188 from 9:30 hog mowing phono 304-1753190.
2a11.
toiPM.

,,. liD milt- • foii-n

,.

82

Call 114-4411-4134.

Aad Hot bargolnol Drug doolort'

1911 o ... Plymouth Fury. 4

-1&gt;

'

t 3fi0. Colli 14-4411-07e2.

1986 Black Honda 700 motor·
eycle. Uke new. Ctll 114-379·

1818 Corvette Conwrtlble.

oultos, t118·*211. Onko,
- . - - · a oonrplatollno
of u... tlrnlturo.
NI!W· -I·
130.
We-..
l l .bo.,.
up, (lteel •
ooA u.~. Callll4-441-:1118.

deling, 1-304-273-2705 be·

1812 Honda C X cuttom 500.

cto ... PI, PI, Pw.lriqulrol72 - · f1100. Coli 814-982·

IWIIIIN
AUCTION • rtiiiNITURI 12
(llhio .... Oolllpollo.
NIW· I po. wood
t389.
IJVIri~- f111-tlla.
lunlt
with-. .. 1111.

•

1913 XA 100 Hondo dirt bike.

Good cond. Newly rebuilt .

...,._ ... tve covera,&amp;lircteen•.
Lot1 of extra, dual uh.,st.
*22QO. Call 114-379-2424.

1)805·187-60110 E&gt;rt. 8-leiiO.

Goodl

•

tween 9:00 and 5:00 leave
mea•ge

Trenching saMoa. water, 911
and electric lin• burled, 304-

*1400. Col1814-985-3597.

61 Haueehold

•
,•

JaCk of iu tred•. home hendv
man, repelrt, tddltionl, remo-

1981 Suzuki Mtdure. 1200cc.,

2201.

aEAUnFUL APARTMENTS AT
8UOOET, PRICES AT JACK·
SON EIUITEI, 131 J o PIIto from e1U a mo. Wolk to
ohop ond movloo. 114-44112511. E.O.H.

•

458-1785.

125 HP.. sholt drMI. 83000.
Cllll14-3ae.a743.

1911 Buick Century for toto.

114-4411-033a.

''

Miahael' a R•ldential Air Conditioning tn,d ,refrigeration, recharge and repair •rvlce. 304-

Coli 614-388·8240.

Wagon. 36,200 mi~M. auto.,
cruiw. dlt. AC. AM-FM 1tereo,

ca'l,

•IIIWfill' furn6ahed. Loa.tat
Ad. Rl. I. 304-1715-1071.

8711-7121.

83

'------~---"----------of rlu1. Your Area. Buyers Guide. 'glide.

wat•

Ak•tTreeTrlmmingandStump
Rem&lt;MII, free ntlmltet. 304-

19ae afl..y CalovlorRS Slotlon

«448·70711.

I

1985 CR260. Good cond.

New co milt etely fu rni1hed

city. Aduht only. P•ldng. Cell

RON'S APPIJANCE SERVICE,

01.000. Clll614-2511-8414 ...
25&amp;-1627.

2 lullloced holmott. Coli 614444-8042.

~•c• for tint, nil• BPH•·

Starks LI'Nnend Shnb Ser.l'ce,

..

Motorcvcles

1971 Gl 1000 Hondo. loirlng
ond •dtlo· b119f. 01200. 19711

moblo homo In

1!1&amp;-3802

74

N. Znd. Mldll-. Pho,.814892·70711. 1785.

.,.,....., •

Rotary or cebte tool drilling.
Molt well•completedaame dly.
PUmp Nlet and ttrVIce. 304-

'78 Chevy . 4x4 350. 3 speed.

r
lumloMd. W.~~ W.Vo. Coll304-773-&amp;851 .
hool&lt;·up, ww c•pot. nowly
SNAFUe bJ Bruce Beattie
Poln•d. dock.
From 11711. SpiCiouo m,..• ho. . lotolor
............. Apto. Coli 304- rent. l'ctmilyP,idaMoblloHomo
178-5104. or 175-&amp;381 or ~.k.87o:'3110PGI
73il" Forry, W. Vo.
J C~
~
175-7738.
op~.

Fetty Tree Trimming. tt.mp

removal. Coll304-175-1331.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

on enQine. Call

•

304-5711-2398 or 61 4-448·
2454.
'

.

18al ToyOIO Tercel. 5 dr. Nil
bock. I tpd.. AM·FM-Cooo..
ltom dr. 33 MPG. E•cel. cond.

nowoverr...,gdutch.Collollor
9 PM. 304-1711-1381.

•

• 1,800.110. 3.04-875-381i2.

1878ChevyVon. Call614-992·

CROSS. SONS
U.S. 35 Woot Jockoon. Ohio.
814-2all-1451 .

1aN Ford wfth tide mcw.er 1110

RON'S Television Service.
Hou• calla on RCA. Oue•r.
oe. SpiCIIllng In Zonlth. Coli

ot...... 304-&amp;75-2_398.

1982 Toyaca ••tlon wagen.
good rumlng cond. t1. 000.
Book COlO 180. 304-895-3422.

&amp;

••
•
••
•

hau• can aerviclng OE, Hot
Point. wa1 hera, dryen end

Vans

••

114-4411-891111..........

1977 Ford. 4x.4. 3.4 ton. 4 spead
tren1., 4&amp;0 cubic Inch 111glne.
new 8 ply ttrea. Very goad

73

II

Th.,kYou,

304-875-3961 or 304-5762903.

61 ...2 4lr-o2~48

OQulp"*lt. Lorg_, •loctlon In

C.rpentry/Aemodellng. Expehonett. reaaonable.
Free eatt. Refs. G. M. Gordon-

814-446-1738.

Wotor ooolod. wln*hiold. AM·

S.E. Oltlo.

8344.

o1160. 1984 Ch...u •. 4 spd ..
stereo, new paint .tob bv
Ch ........ 12700.1978t'ord .1
ton truck. Coli 614-4411-7872.

1178 Ford LTO. 2 dr .. 1mooth

Hog Sol• i. Service. Over

PAISES, Jackaor1. Ohio. 1·800:.

rienc;~d,

N ~1 ng.. h!oh m.llooga. AC. Coli

MutiY fer~J~aon, NtM' Hallen d.

ohop. RON EVANS EN11!A-

&amp;943.

ca~a.

••

gel .. 1 1500gll. tndJat Aer81ion
tyttem. Factory trained repair

Painting: Interior . S. Exterior.
Fr• ettimat•. Clll 614-448-

61 Fann Equ 1·prJ1ent

Suo~

Craok Ad. Coli 614446-0294.
Qoo-

1977FordThUnderblrd 302niiW
engine-not rebuilt, 115,000
mll-.. .. bultt tnlna., newbrtkee,

82-40.
Sell or trad•3 hor.... for boM
motor. elr conditioner, or pickup

SW£EPEA and IIW'ing mechin8
repafr. Plf'IL and tuPPN•· Pick
up•d d"Mry. Dfttl Vecutm
Cleaner, one half mile up

1983 BuickCentury,at, v-1. •·c,
c-c. exc. cond. 30 .... 87~2938.

1883 Chryller "E" class. · - - - - - - - - 44,000 actual mil•· Cell 614441-2188.
1975 wn equipped fOr tithing.
hunting. camping. New brak-.
1978 Z 28. I!Kcol. C:ond. *38110. paint job, 318 motor. headers.

Coli 614-367·7105.

AogertBatement

Wa~•prooflng.

comertfble. 304-876-2719 at.
t• &amp;p.m.

1979 Mon• Carlo. Ught blue.

130110 II Is. llikJIC .... Coil
614-4411-1741.

Girts Junkn dotting for Ill e. ' 40 uted tNctort toehoOII from
Excellent cordtktn. Sizes lend &amp; complllte line of new &amp; uMd

I. 514.1411-2880.

lion. Coli 814-2511-11000.

'cond. Coli 614-445-9631.

1798.
614-992-2aee.

1985 Iuick Skylork. 4 dr.. PS:

PB. AC. ttereo. cloth in•rtor.
Good condllion. Cell 614-4'8-

male. bUff colr:., •100.00. 304-

l•biedoUa, g.n•. old reoorda,
glrll blevcl•. girl• clotNng.
electric motor. riding_ mower.
wal• pump. Call 814-25...
9 HP Balin• Riding Mower. Call

e 1200 R1m. Call 114-44111143.

0&amp;77.

Dining room tebl•l chalr1.
buffld. bad, dr•..,· chBI, S.

night otond. Sotolllll clth •
oqulp_.t. Cll1614'2&amp;11-1932.

ovl .. auto.. PS, PB, crutee. air.
10.000 mil-. new 11ret. Clean.

Unconditional liffl'l:ime guaran-

tee. Local m... caa furriahed
Free ettimetK ' Call collect
1-514-237-04aB. dor or night.

RON EVANS ENTEAPAISESIeptlc tonk pumping- 190 per
lood. Coli 1·800.537·95~8 .

1971 Dodge Atp., SE. 2 dr .• 6

870-8881.

Stinting ..am rooftng. 7 piece~
of . angle Iron. 3- "I" baem•
different 1iUt, aheeu of

RED HOT b•Qiinal Drug dHI·
.,.,. c•a. bottt, pfan• fiiP'd.
Surplus. Your area. Buyert

1980 Oldo Cutlou Supremo:
1988 Chov. lmpolo Supor - "

1878 Ford F 110 4114. E.tro

Peawy Mu1ldtn Mark Ill amp,
or used. 3" bultt in effect•. 4twelve bOttom,
wheeled electric ICOQftM'S. Cell · Oulld gultor. tiiDO. Call 814Rogan Mo..ty collect, 1-114- 3all-8221.
.

Call ehor8 PM.I14-256·6325.

71 Auto's For Sale

BASEMENT
WATEAPAOORNG .

8"¥7·952a.

446-4015.

Wh•lchllra~new

alumlltum bed- sell with or
without bed. f971 Mack tractor
With 1978 30ft. S.111... h 11011•.

4480.

4 opd. Runo grtlt. Bhwpl Coli
614-446-7849ofter 5 PM.

1\11 is c. Merchandise

1877 GMC triOKIO. 15 ft.

1187 Plymouth Horizon, &amp;
- d . Q .. C. IS.OOO. 304-875-

Tr~r1s p o r 1 alton

Home
lmprovtlrnents

mlloogo. U.300. 304-175Don.,.. Bopllo.Tonko · 10110
3213.

IWW peint. meoynaw •rt•.310.

BlltCk puppi•.

64

1983 Grand Prbt, good ·cond.
Mutt sae to appradM, high

AKC Mlnieture female
Schnauzer. 7monthaold. 8176.

AKC 8 months old Slberi1111
Hulky. 8150. Cell 614-,652·
76...,1_.- --,-..,.,.--,--::
-4 .,..

Sund.. 1 to &amp;p.m. 114-992·
2521.

1971 Chev't No,., 2 door. V-8.
air cond, PS. PB. dual eJtt.uat,
•r llhockt. lllllreo. 3B.OOO•ctutl
mil.., eKC COncf, t5.000.00.
304-175-4230 dor• or 87548153 evenlng1.

1971 Mon• Carlo. AM-FM·
Can. AC. til power. tttt. nice
lnlll"ior, good tires. Call 814-

Dining room t.ble. 8 chairl,
hutch, 0200.00. Cl11304-5751030.

Buy Of' Sell. Aivei'lne Antlqutl,
1124 E. Main Slretd, Pomeroy.
Houl'l: M.T.W 10e.m. to ISp.m.,

4308.

B1

'82 Oodao Mlrod~ PS. PB. AC.
304-871!;.14Sa. '

Francil

Bonodum. 814-817·3858:

Coli 614-812·4761.

53

1878 Oodgo Omnl, 4 door. 4
_.t. olo cond. 11100.110. 304675-21i06.

Ouldo. (1) 806·187·8000. EKI.
5-4562.

Coli 614-992·1594.

Antiquaa

SHrVICI:S

1988 Fol'd F150 XLT Lllriot. &amp;.
Condition. Coli 304-773-9105.

08,300.110. 304-675-37&amp;8.

truck. Coli 114-251-1824.
jHgo for

304-875-4382. .

'IU Buick'R8gtllmtd., 4 door.
low milea-ge, uc cond.

Sell or hid&amp; 3 hor-· forbollt
molor. air eondiUoner. Of' pickup
Bo~

191!18 'stlrcraft pop-up camper.

Sloops I. heel. cond. f2100.
Call614-256-1932.

cond, no rutt, 12400. Phone

1275 lntlrnatioMI dillel tl'llctor. new" ltret, new bush hog.

Pets for Sale

79 M01ors Homea

&amp;Campers

buth hog. hewv duty ga. box, .

Routt 33. North of Pomeroy.
Rentll trllilert. Call 11 .. 912~
?471.
hook-upt. Cable. Aleoefflal..c:y
rooms. elr lind oebla Mil on.

61 Farm Equipment

CETIDE, INC., Athens·114·
594-3578

PICKENS
FURNITURE

tee. Cell 114-4.q.09!86. ·R•
buHclng ovollllllo. ·

•

245-8121 .

114-256-6471.

AI. 7-3 mil• .auth.

Qolllpollo. CIII814-441-0B22.

8di&gt;GET TRANSMISSION·

Used &amp; rebu lh: all types; Quar..,..

Kttchen ca.,.nltlw-bultln O'lr'Bn ,

Fur nil~ opt. N-. Nur H MC.

Groclo~o living. 1 ond 2 bod-

Auto Parts
ACC8110ri88

I

60'" toblo w·bonch11 • hutch.
lllcrclo. 304-875-1494.

Stop&amp;. Check out our Inventory
of quality furnh:ure &amp; cerpet for
low pricel. 8 pc. wood 1uft•·

814-982:1888 o-1:00pm.

2- 2 BA. tl'llfl . . for f8t'lt. Nice

Fuel oil heater. lo~ooo btu

co,.otB whh . . k 0280: 304175-6412.

2 BR. apertment. All utliliel

"

76

8t

ottoman. Gold colored. Good American Eskimo pupt. UKC
oond. 180 foroll. Calll14-379- 'Aeglttered.
$100 each. Call
2609 ..
~14-38a-0890.

I 8R. '285. Utllhllil pold. Coli
441-4411 olter 7 PM.

Coli 304-175-7127.

885-3111.

matched pafr.green. Call 61C.

peld. C.. I 114-446-l723ofter 7
PM. I

1985 Aln._ 170 HP In-board. ·
out-board. ()pan bow. Muat atll
buving lwgor bOol. Salt offer.

HtU eir OOnd tnd o• furnace
combination, reaOMble. 304--

Weaks Weatle Kennei·Weu

2 BR. lpilrtnwnt, Bidwell ar111.

e. ce11 304-171-7285.

.

Hot Point refriQeratOf' a renge,

Colll14-386-80114.

1171 Swcooft Cobin Cruloor.

306 Mer. Cru ... oUI-drlw, ful
cam-• tap, dBL llove. SlertPe

Oracobebv ev,tlnganderacUe•l,

PM.

llt. No UZI mo. Coli
11.4-4411-a038. .

tlooo. Coll514-441-4110.

iloklng 1300. 304-882-3318.
304-875-3688.

Boateand
Motors for Sale

10 HP motor. 18 ft., new
blt*Y. Qoodoond. Treilllr- n.w

Portlble •Wm•llle pump. 100
gil P• min, % hp, 1 1 a volt,
automatic. new cott *140.

Furnished efficlency-920

Nco 2 aR opt. W-. lofriQ . •
tta. tum. 41f.t mi .. frama.lllpo-

75

Wedding gcwn. olzo 7. coil
304-675-1851 ehor 6:00PM.

ond uood lurnltu,. end
oppllconcoo. Coli 814·446·

10 pc. choc. brown pit

'N' CARLYLEit by Larry Wrlaln

KIT

•tetltht cHah

Hlmoloyon ~o. Coli 114.W&amp;-3844 alter 7PM.

Hou • for ~~tnt in Ml~dlepon. 3
bedrooms. 1 Nih. utHity room quiNd. !loy 114-982-238,1 ...
\.
family 10om, nloe .-pet. centrli ...... 114-982-6723.
air. t281, per month plus • 150.1
dopoolt. No pou. Clll814-t92' Pomorciy. 2 bodr-.... bock
yord, portly lumlohod. Soarrity
661111 doro .. 114-192-51SI d.,_,
r*luired. Clll
evenlnp and weekendt.

614-4411-0527.

tu,.,_...

10 ft .

&amp;cal. cond. Clll614-4411-2153
eher 1:30PM.

pertly furrithed. Aef..,ce re-

Fanns for Sale

Big naw 3 lA. horne, bult on

· ~,

PM.

udlkl•. Cllll14-448-3934.
:;r'l 8200
h

44

M;,.

FuH aln mlltntu, 2110Jackaon

8

.

108 State St.·, Pomllf'OV· 2 or 3
be•OIIIM. c•peted. No I"NNonable offer rwfu•d.1 Phont 81._

..
Reliable person to ttay with ledy •.. R,

une, 82! n.lrd AW., Getltpalla.

IBIDIIICE 'HONE
16141

rent. Call 814-4 1-1318.
3 BR. hou• In Maon. w. Ve.
•
llef,ollt IICIU 1red. 1300 a mo.

3 aR .. utility, gorogo. khch.,
wMh ~pll.,ces. EJCelfant op. portu
, Price to tell Clll

' kin*'• to good home. I wks.

6

S•CI'illoe. 2 BA. hame. 1 acre. 2
mil• pes..- VInton School.
Compl. .ly romadoled. Now
wiring. lightt. windowt, blown~

023,000. CIU14-388-a482M 982 7281

-·

188. c/oQoll-1 Dolly Trib-

-vnlc:o.beoutllullocotlon.CaU
814-982-1841.
•

3a8-BaM~IIO~M.

Telephone talkera and clerk .. ...
typist (80 wdl) nHded, wil .1 ;.~·
train, call 304-8715-850:8. -· _
I:OOrlim ta3:00pm.
· ..&lt;, ~ ,

Instruction

Homea for Rant

Col1614-4411-7208.
2BA ·'holdouiii .. I20StoloSt.
•226 monthly. Reterenc. a
.._ d~o* .equirad. Calll1444"0 54.
~
'
28 A.. g. .g"' o.r.oolt•toomo.

cabinea. c•pet lhroughtout.
drep••aheers. AISOWIISher/d·
-.,er, ·otovo. rolrlg. 0 ordon _..

304-875-4340. E.O.E./A.A.E. ,' .~·.

~

41

3 BA .• 2 betht fully c•peted.

cond. Coli 614-

Lu~uritu• Tare Townhou•
epartmlnta. Ele(llftt 2. floors. 2
lit. NH b•h u.-.lrs, powd•
room downstlllra, CA.. dis·
hwlthlr, dl1poul, prtvate entren ce, prlvete enc::lo•d patio,
- . ployg•ound. Utllhl• not

Fourth. Gallloollo. 0180. UtHI11• pold. Clli4411-4416oftor7

3 BR, hou•. Fenced 5n biCk

in lnoulodon, plumbing. khch..,

lt:·

13

Renlill~

r:d. In
44-371

-·~ ·~

" .1... .. '

~~

rod

cond. Oolllpollo. Clll4411-4416
ehor7pM.

lnoludiMI. ltortlng ot 1289 por
mo. Coli 114-367·7860.

·

OftRt. ?by-pa••Hou•.mobile
homo. -~1-clth. Bothho-

Immediate opening- Ultra ~ &gt;"' •
Sou N:t and/ or Nuclear Me~cal ....
Techno.oglllt. One ye• npe• _;·, .•
rtence required. 0111 penonnel..,,-.-;
office Pl.....,t V.Uev Hospital, • _

~

372-a405 or 372·2571.

:J

or 258-1219 enytfme.

, • -:

'

.._lcho Rood. oWner
.finandng, good tern'lt. 304chy wotor•

Nicely lu mlohod omol ho...
Aduht on~. Rof. ~uloed. No
pets. Coli 1"44"0
.... v- 31.
:..N-Ico_2_po_lli_bly_3__'""aA'"".-h-o-u•-,-ln
Ow,., Moving &amp; Mxi9ut to Mlddl_.. AC., dlo-tlw.
..11-4 BR .. 1 both, lui-mont -"'l•dloRO•I.Iuh .._,.,~,
total elec .. lnground pool. Coli 614-441-9205 after 5:30
Qgnde VIBW Hgta. Mid t40'• PM.
No-blo. Coli 614-2111-1448 2 or 3 8A. Coli 814-4411-1218.

-·
AVON ~ AH er .... Call Marilyn ," : ~

12

LOTS. one acre. lwei wooded.

lui
3 I a olory • &gt;L
Oldor
"'
b...m.m. ""'
1h 1cre. Centenary.
CIIII14-4411-3044.

.,.Ji.

Furnlthed opt. 1180. Ut•l•
peld. Shore both. Slnalo molo.
liB Soooltd Ave .. Golllpollo.
Coli 4411-441 8 oft• 7 PM.

we•. Clyde Bowen. Jr. .._,..,..t, 2 IR .. unlumlohod.
f175. w.,. pold. 1131 s.

water, Jerrys Run Road.
t4,900.00each. conskl• ..de.

flnondng. Call 114-4411-1408

·'vi"

304-$7~1145,

ao ..tllul ....... lotoonoacroplu~

1\No 1 tcra Iota with p..-lc

11• Marlen. Moduler Home,
IDK28. All el-lc. Co. 3 8R .. 2
b•hs. g,.. room. dlnlna room.
To many extn1s to lat. MUst •e
to epp.-cllte. f41.000. owner

... ~J\
FuH time ActiYiti11 Oirector. -.
Skilled Nursing Faoillty Meklnt...._,
en•getlc. c•lng Individual to _ .
tuperviM Ill •stMctt of retldentN"' ; •
acctvttle&amp;. "-'at comptv ,O if be '\· .... ~
willing to oblllln the necetMfy'o. t,~ i,
credentllll• 11 required bv Certi- ~ _
flcM:Jon Reguletlona oft he State , "' ..t. ~
of Ohio. Yau rnayapptvln peraon9 ,; .., •
or ,caH the bu ..neu afftce for ..... _
further Information. Arcadia~: "'·,
NureingCen•, Bo•A.MainSt.'. ~ _
Cootvlle. Ohio 45723. 614r 1 .. ~~
817-3158.
~ ...

amen

Witter. 1110 rNer lou, Qvde
Bowon. Jr. 304-5711-2331.

Homn fot,§:!lle

eft• S PM.

Apartment
&amp;..r Rent
ru

304-8711-2383.

n: At .. t Footblll Coac:h. Head"·fl"l'
VDR'N'bafl Coach, Au't Vo"ev· .,.;..~
ball Coach. High Schaal Cheer- ~ ~ .j, ._
leader Advieer end Junior High-~
Cheerleader Advlter.

~

44

you 304-5711-2331.

--.::....----'---:-

P.n-ttme ttttlr w.ntld. Pref•· ------ ---- -~•bl•
In my home. Ato G...., de
..... 2 dl'fSeWMk. J1A: .,.. ofd, Call ua for your mobile home

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry Flahlng Su1ppllooj
Pay VO&lt;Jr Phone
and Cilbla Bille Here
. IIUSINESS l'ltONE
(614) "2·6550

P-"

-lgoted tha ollorlng.

614-185-4282. Tho poohlono - ..

.

Acreage

mobllo homoo ~mlttad. public

know. •d NOT to lind m~~~WJ
throulfh the mil untl you hwe

been • • · itullr,._ poe-a- t-.:."1
ing a valid •aching certtftaata .. ,~ ~
and who are inlertsted thould ~ "\•
co•ct the Superintendent' 1 ~ ~ ·i
office of E11tttrn Loctl School M ;, ~

WUI bebvatt In mv home.

l[lt

Alhton, large bulclng Iota.

lNG CO. recormwndl th.. you public

ll-"'""'..:..

__________. ,...

3111-8271.

~

Buaineaa
Opportunity

do buoln- with

.. .

OUTSIOE SALES REP .
WANT£D
.
Wonted lor the Atheno. Galllo.

114-414-2780.

4

-

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·

,

children. CMya. C.n hllll8 ref:

mutt have prevtoueoullid. .el•

Ph•nwcv.

21

'· ~

11
: l ;/itr~

3120.

12211. King
1350. 4 d r - choot f88. Gun
oebln ... I gun. lib¥ m.uns...
131 • 148. Bod hmoo 120.
130 • King lromo f60. Good
..........
of - tultn.
mldll ceblneta.
headboards
t30
. end up to tiS.
'

35 Lots

~·:-

f

• 88. .:..- -

ngand

"In my day ther~ was · no
..... such thing as 'Children's
304-5711ollor 6:00
Television.' We jubt called it :~proO:.i :i~·;~ •,:,':,.v:::,~
' Watc"h'1ng CartoOn.,.
.!:. '"
aulovllo Ad. Opon 9om to Spm
Mon. thru Sot. Ph. 614-446~llliillWI
~~~~~~::::::~;;==~==~==~==~-03_2~2-·--~--------I;
Vlllei! FUrniture ·

INSURANCE SAlES ·

•

1110. Mttt,_orbox ..-lngs
ful or twin til. firm •71. and

nur. . lid tnd

Old .Mtlbllehecf oo,.....y .. ,_.,

old. BtginnlngAug. 2""'. Reter~
enc.a mqulred. c.ll 114-4482111 boforo I PM.

Meig1 county .,. . . AppHcant

Control your Weight·Take "New
lhiiP• DIM Plan" and E-Vap
w.... PAls. Awllable · Fruth

2219 WMingt.

Ohto for IPO't• medicine end,-CPR. Pertontln. . . . ..d thou'Jf 11 ...~&gt;. 111:.
contact Jim Car pent.,, Superift- ~..,,;·-4 ·
t.ld.nt of ,..gs Lo~ Schoola. :.al•..'...
et. 821 South Third Ave. ln r.l'l--·~
Mhtdl~. Ohio
N"to' if\ .

wa- 304-e&amp;2-2845.

128&amp;onduplol391. Bo~bo*

11m-l. 8111 SliCk 114-812·

,. •. . ,

certfffeattan requlr.,....te of ~~

Smol - t o g . , . - · Coli
Sl4-4iJII-3318.

1111 Narth Secottd
Middleport; Ohio 45760

18 Y~e~n
Churdt·H-·School

Annuu nc~ 111 en!~

•Dozer • Backhoe Work

HUDNALL
PLUMBING &amp; HEA T1NG

CHESTER
986-3301
H·ll-1,...

FILL DIRT

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

~•
BAUM
LUMBER

condlliont. A really fun pi~ to
wariL Frt..dtv. ne.t &amp; depandable .,.. the nQufNmtnta. call

11

PAT IILL FORD

1·28-'88-tfn

Roger Hysell
Garage ·

Help Wanted

~ilfrtg

core

hiiUIIng.IOIMt,..trl

potltlont-:-;,been offered to ell ' · -·
m.,.,Ma oflhecertlfled staff, 111 - pw the Matter Agreenient, and;l&gt;-;"" 1

Ol&lt;t.
DENNY CONGO · lngt.·Colll-315-733-8062
f2751.
.
Talented, Cre•live individual
WILL HAUL
Wllftted tDr .. -'tlflg c. . . In
Cell fur .n
JUST CALL!
.,.,....mont.Bel•.
304-727·7811.
992-3410
CHI!okle Golf Club It tolclng
epplalll:iona for ..-t·ttme aMOk
LIMESTONE
lpM' help. Appll-ornuot apply
In person
tiM OoN Cour11
e d .. 100 Clllfllcle o •. '
GRAVEL - SAND -Qolllpollt.
AR oppll..,tsmuotbo
21 Yl•• of
oldlf.
TOP SOIL

re·

Appllc.nts mu.. hold e Ylllld ~, ,~,,.

Ohio •ocltlngc.tlllcotoondlor ·"~"·

Pomeroy, Ohio.

Wood table w-e c:hlllrt t285 to
f78S. Oook 1100 up to *"¥1&amp;.
Hutch• 1400 tnd up. Bunk
beck complete w-mattr~t...

Wont to do bo~Jtoltrlnt In ,.,.,
home. By the d.,, wHk. or
- - · · Coli 114-4411-8312.
Yood c•e. blu~ ou:::; Ughl

for .,. 11811-89 .....,.. yoer. - -

' Fringe .,_.effta and lncenttva
prognma. Firat ye• potential

1"¥75. Lompo f28 to t125.
Oln.tt. t109end up to lUI.

Will do Bo~llltllng In,.,., homo.
AteiOIWIIIe ..-. VInton ••·
C..ll14-318-1114.

Due to the fact that the following

to 15•• 480. tmmd•• open-

SER~ICE

.... aoti-117·8000 r.... R· •· .,, .
1801 for..,,_ Fe- llot. • ·~-.:-

large cuttomer ba:e. v.,., ·

t 3915 to 1991. T•bl• 150 and
up to t125. HlcJo.o·bodo f380
to 1695. Aoollnon 1225 to

jobo. Coli 814-4411-1257 "'
4t5-2070.

Govemrn.rt Joh. •11,040 ~ '' ""'•·
•sl, 230 yr. Now htrlna. Your ~ -

coactoiing postlioM muet mMI

SQfu and chain priced from

end t\we recommeruktlons.
Ooodhoodworklr. Wlldo .,..II

•· ;.!,;

o.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

awrlorwark. Ae•onabl• •tn

CO ACHES· A OVISE R S~
.
NEEDED

Now hiring. Your ANa. *13,1150

7-5·'11-1'- 4

hH' mo,. ,,_. Ju.t 1no1her job. . •~ , ~

T•ri ot 11"4-444-8810 for ·n .
ctColi
eM
r.
01

'

TourOuidei·M••• fem.le. Our
top peaple e•n taQ0-•1200
pw . , . . Sel-v to ltlrt plua
con.m4nton. Pl...ant working

lt. 1 BOX 136, VllllON
614·1'1li~!'!'.U

Service on All Makes
Wo Honor MC/Disc/Vlta
4-11-" a 1111

...,.l_.ce.. Bullclne· homet, ,..
pair rooft. paint. interior-

becatteth.,.potftionshwenol ~ i ""!ti

GUnER &amp;

NEW I USED MOWERS
Strvict Center for Ryan

ftollne oolon 1o -lng ono ,_.,..
od..,tonoi ttyht wt.o 1t - n u •• ·

have

nnm•m
SMITH'S SEAMLESS

located Halfway between Rt. 7 &amp; lluhen.

Work w...ed-Co.-or·11 yn.

Coeching~Advlle'r

•Seamless Gutter
•Roofing
•Vinyl Siding
•Roofing
•Home Roofing
•Wood Crafts

949~2969

H81r • ..,...,. Acroa The ltrMI: · )l; _.

Cr_, Motel. 114-441-7388.

Woohort, drioro, oolrl-0&lt;1.
ranges . Skaggs . AppHanoet.
Up.., Rlvor Ad. bookie Stono

814-2&amp;6-1568.

614-9,5-U48 ofter 5:00pm. . ......

11

Avo. Oolllpolo. OH.

with KLM Sltytyo roo-r, 304175-3028.
.

Painting .. 1 tvw-. Rooftng A
roof repeir. FrM •tim~~•. Call

we..
Ser v!Leo

Food ~n. 304-875-4281 .

m.rt b•nea. free rent
to •lght ~. Coil 814-245- , •..., .
55a8.
w,

to do houiiWork Mi:l • ~ ••1
Uve ln. Furnlth referanoe. 1 dave •. ·~.
off. Mutt hwe own~ ;
trent~tlon. Stile price per ~-·- ··
weeiL Floyd Weber. Co. Rd. 28.

ltnpluyn1e1ll

County=lltnct. Inc. Good

0000 USED APPLIANCES

Wan.~~

(614) 446·7&amp;19 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second A-. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hats, Pomeroy.

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

•wav• , ""'

54 Misc. Merchendi1e

'"'*

4080.

.. d.:~ .... to Mr. F..,.clsco,

Coif 114•982·6157.

condition.

a: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

614·662-3821

Pr-• loOking tor..,,_ .,...,...

The Daily-Sentin--Page-9

Ohio

51 Household Goods
..cf ap
Md TV lell.
()p•
M to IPM, Mon lhnl
Sot. !114-441-1888. 127 3rd.

homo all SR. 31. CIII614.4411-

bM'idlwffe 1o m~neo• contn• _ _

The Oolly lontlnel. Bo• 729U.

qulltt. AfloMai.... pieced. •ny

a!: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVUE, OHIO

vo"'

L.AFF-A-DAY

Mother,.. provldogooddopen·
daWe a . . for vour chNd In my

:;,~~;

,

· 122.0110. to 131.0110. For __
P•IOIIII intwvkw. •nd name

Qllto
Cloh DOid lor ......... "' -

. . Television
Dependable Hearina Aid
Hearina Evaluations For All Ages
0

SALES &amp; SERVICE

NEASE HOLLOW RD.
GUNS- AMMO
GUITARS
STRINGS
Follow Signs

814-882-5148-5 p.m.

Mol1 Wells Drilled In Ona Day.
Air and Mud Rotary Drilling
We Also Instal 8t Service All Types
. -· Weter Pumpt
6.J.'aa.1110.

BOGGS

114-446-4134.

Pomaoy-Middleport.

Do

18 Wentad to

Oeyt""o - - noodod In
eo.,.,.... Rot. requioed . eou·,c•.

unique marMtlng svttem. - -

JuM auto'•· Top price p1tn. Celt

Call Collect (304) 372-4331

1/22188/tfn

T..
s.... - ExS*'i.,ce ~ ~
_
_
...
Wo
,.
•• - - .
' kfr OM h· 0 - · ~- ·• &lt;v
• _•• _
814-789-87114.

mo-. Colll14,912-5468.

Rt. I, Box 74-A, liply, W. Va. 25271

Wa Service All Makes

RACINE
-GUN SHOP

Junk .,to't with or without

B&amp;C B.DRILLING
CO.
H•. Beeglt, OWner

KEN'S APPUANCE
·SERVICE
985-3561

1·3-"1&amp;-11&lt;

Mld!l-.

NEED WA
CALL

"MMII It Repairable"

Lorrv Uv11V· 61 •

Friday, July 22. 1988

Help

""• Metg~local School Dlttriet - :~ .
luytftg furniture .,d . . . . . OM It CUPfllnttv '""'J!:"CMlonl ,~{'·
by the _.~ or bv the lot. Fair from c«tlled •
centa for"" r._. ..- 1) •
prlc.e. Ctfl 11~441-31&amp;8:
· A.-..rttV.,.tty
JIICoach i"''~"

CHESTER. OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS - BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODEUNG 8t REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS
986-4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
References
112211 mo.

•Washers •DI'(ers
•Ranges •Freazers
ciRefrigerators

(.F.

16141 992-2104

wonuobuy: IIMd lurnltuie .,d

._,..._., WIH buy •tint hou...

motora. Coli

DEAD OR AUVE

1111 e - n

2282.
_C_om_pl.. ---....-.-of-lu-,-,.'"
.
tuno • ... _ . Allo wood •
cool-o . .Bwoln'o F..,nitu,.
• -lon. lhifd a. Olivo,
11 4- 4411- 3119·

Cabinets

WANTED

4·16-86-tln

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERYtCE

lluldt·Po-.

11/ 2/11-tfc

7-14·'88-1 mo. pd

J&amp;L INSULA110N

end fWIWI' weed c... sm•h

Aw. , Olflipa18, Call 114-441-

1

Business Services

m..,,.
nc.
Ill oo. . Johot..
114-446-¥72
TOPCAIH,..dfor'l3moclol

FEATURING:

PACK

,,

W.P1¥C•hlor1Memodefd..,
uled
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Products W. MAiu·~ RUTLAND, OH.

A8(1 PlJtDi•!

45686 . (located . . or n••r
Reel E11ate General

w.ntect ro .Buv

9

date of delivery of deed.

. 6·10·11-1 mo:-

11

Notice

Boote No. 286, , Page 91 , in
the Records Offico of Meigo
.
County, Ohio.
PROPERTY AODDRESS:
Route I ,
Vinton. O H . I - - - - - - - - - - . 1 . . . - - - - - - - - - o f

Company's Purth•e. containing 82.26 acres. more or

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P.ublic

Public Notice

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�Paga 10-The Daily Sentinel

,..._Local news briefs... _ ___,
Continued from page 1
the Kingsbury Road area. The church was entered sometime
after 2 p.m. TueSday and the church plano was stolen. Evidence
indicates that a vehicle was backed against the front entrance of
the church.
Sheriff F rank requests that any person who may have
observed this vehicle or have any assistance to offer in the
investigation, call the sheriff's department at once. All
information given will remain confidential Frank says.

Foreclosure action filed
A foreclosure action has been filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by the Product ion Credit Association of the Fourth•.
District, Jackson, against Richard J . Schultz, Albany, and
Claudia Schultz, Albany, et al.
In other court matters, a restraining order against the
plaintiff has been requested in the. case of Vicki Gloeckner
against Charles W. Gloeckner. The defendant requested the
order.
'
An action by Crystal Lee,' now known as Crystal Hood, against
Randy J. Lee, has been dismissed.

Residents asked to conserve water
Syracuse Village water customers are' being asked to
conserve water because the town's main well Is down. The
secolldary well ts currently being used to supply· the town's
water needs.
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. Squads have seven calls Thursday
Local units answered seven callS Thursday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services reports.
At 7:20 a.m., Racine took Dorothy Thurston from Long
Bottom to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 9:25a.m.
, took Clero Baker from Sixth Ave. , to Veterans Memorial;
Middleport at 11:34 a.m., treated Cindy Lewis on Palmer St.,
but she was not transported; at 7:40p.m. Middleport answered
a false alarm call to the nursing home site; Tuppers Plains at
7: 59 p.m., treated Kay Sheridan with no transportation
required; Middleport at 8:49 p.m ., received a second false
alarm fire call to Gilbert's Texaco Service Statton.

Meigs ASCS funding avaiwble
The Meigs County Agricultural Stablllzatlon and Conservation Service has received funding under the Emergency
Conservation Program to assist producers with spring
developments, pipelines and tanks-troughs for livestock water.
Farmers ellglble for this program are livestock producers
who had sufficient water supplies during normal conditions but
who need additional water supplies due to the drought.
The ASCS Office, located tnThe Farmers Bank Building, wtli
be acceptllng applications for participation in this program
through Aug.- 31.

ODI wants to .hear·
from state's farmers
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Lawyers and investigators from
the Ohio Department of Insurance are to visit nine Ohio cities
next week to hear frrom farmers
concerning drought insurance
they purchased from the Chubb
Insurance Group.
As many as 625 Ohio farmers
sent applications and premium ·
checks to Chubb representatives
for drought insurance. But
Chubb claims to have oversold
the insurance and has begun to
return the premiums.
Ohio Insurance Director
George Fabe said Thursday
meetings also wtli be held in
Columbus to gather testimony
from agents and Chubb officials.
These preliminary meetings
are necessary before an admih lstrative hearing can be held, Fa be
· said. ·
Under Ohio's civil justice reform law the Legislature ap·
pmved last year, the state
insurance department must have
"substantial justification" before holding lts administrative
hearing, Fa be said.
"We are ·sending investlga(ive
teams to meet with farmers"'-~

collect all the facts," Fa be said.
"We could help them more
effectively if we were not restricted in our abtllty to hold an
administrative hearing."
Other states affected by
Chubb's drought insurance program . have already scheduled
hearings, Fa be said.
Ohio's hearing schedule:
Tuesday, July 26: Kenton,
Municipal Building, 8:30 a.m.,
for Hardin, Allen, Auglaize,
Wyandot, Marion, and Logan
counties. Marysvtile, City Hall
Municipal Court Room, 8:30
a.m ., for Union County. Van
Wert, Municipal Building. 2 p.m.,
for Van Wert County.
Wednesday, July 27: Hillsboro,
AdminiStration Buldling, 8:30
a.m., for Highland, Brown, Ross,
Pickaway and Fayette counties.
Lebanon, City Building, Council
Room, 8:30 a.m., for Warren,
Greene, Clinton and Butler counties. Napoleon, City Building,
Municipal Court, noon, for
Henry, Defiance, Wood, Lucas,
Putnam and Paulding counties.
Urbana, Court House, 8:30a.m .. ,
for Champaign, Clark and Mad!·
son counties.

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Continued from page 1
Dukak
are the party that believes in the .stand the responsibilities of pub~

------,-.,--'---:-:-~...,..-,­

American dream."
The three-term governor said
the era ·he foresees -unlike, he
. suggested, the Reagan years will allow citizens to be "proud Of
a government that sets high
standards, not just for the
American people, but high stand·
ards for itself;"
In blunt references 'to the
Iran·Contra scandal, the legal
troubles of outgoing Attorney
General Edwin Meese and the
"sleaze factor"- more than 100
Reagan administration officials
either indicted or out of olftce
under an ethical cloud - the
nominee added:
·
"In the Dukakts White House.
as in the Dukakls statehouse, if
you accept the privilege of public
service, you had better under-

I Area deaths

lie service. lf you violate that

trust, you'll be fired; if you
violate the law, you'll be prosecu ted; and if you sell arms to the
ayatollah, don't expect a pardon
!rom the president."
After eight years of Repubiican rule, he said, a dream needs
to be revived for the country's
children &amp;lld grandchildren; he
noted he expects to become a
grandfather himself for the first
time "on or about January 20."
Declaring "a new era of
.greatness for America" could
come with a Democratic victory,
thesonofGreektmmtgrantsthen
recited a pledge he said was
taken by the citizens of ancient
Athens "on important occasions
like this one."

Licenses issued

·1-

Alice Balser
Alice E. Balser, 83, Bucktown
Road, Racine, died Friday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital. Arrangements will be announced
by the EWing Funeral Home.

Divorces soughl
Melissa D. Kisner, Langsvl(le,
has filed In Meigs County Com·
mon Pleas Court for a divorce
from Sherman K. Kisner, Rutland. And Sherman K. Kisner,
Rutland, has !lied a divorce
actiOn against Melissa K. Kisner,
Langsville.
Melanie A. Black has been
granted a divorce from Keith 0 .
Black.

Friday, July 22, 1988

Pom.-oy-Middleport, Ohio

Marriage licenses have been
issued in Melg$ County Probate
Court to David Allen Reed, 40,
Reedsville. and Rowha G.
Schimdt, 33, Coolville; John
Timothy Cook, 30, Pomeroy, and
Patricia Ann P~rker, 25,
Pomeroy.

HELP WANTED

LABORATORY SUPERVISOR

For modern fully equippeil pltysician's office laboratory. Qalifi·
cations necessary: Ill (ASCP),
well versed In instru~~~tnt opel'lltion and trouble shootina. Com·
petent in all lab 1111s. Excellent
benefits. WHkends 6ff. A_pply in
person to or cell 446·9620, The
ledical PlaD-:--203 JKkson Pike,
Gallipolis, between 8:30 A.M.5:00 P.ll.

.,.

Dry spell resumes following 'brief
By JEFF BATER
the !.ower MissJsstppt Valley
Unlled Press Inlernatlonal
Thursday, and some spots tn
Soal&lt;tng rains this week gave Texas. Nebraska and Colorado
only brief pause to the ruthless reported record low tempera- ·
drought endangering drinking lures for the date.
water and killing crops across
But National Weather Service
America, and forecaster s say the spokesman Don Witten said
dry spell isn't budging from the Thursday that the "hot weather
nation' s Farm Belt anytime .is expected to be Intensified In the
soon.
. Midwest and the East" as the
And adding insult to injury, heat wave broiling the West
heat-weary residents of the East spreads across the country.
residents looking for relleLI)ave
Temperatures In the West
only hotter days ahead.
soared againThursday,hovertng
Showers and thundershowers in the 90s across much of the
cooled New England, the mid- area, with 100-degree readings
Atlantic states, the lower Great reported as far north as
Lakes, the Tennessee Valley and Montana .

paus~

In Reno, Nev., the temperature months in jail tor violators.
~.
hit 103, a record for the date, and
The Regional Water Planning_
a worsening drought prompted and Advisory Board . asked that.
anadvisoryboardtorecommend
restaurants be banned from
drastic restrictions on water use serving water unless a customer:
starting Aug. 4, with heavy asks for lt.
penalties of $500 fine and six
.
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 7·23-88

Bengals open season July 30

Re-enactment
of Buffmgton
Island

a

B-1

Carr also noted the Gal Upolts
central business district was
special, not just because of the
revitalization but due to the
history involved. He said most of
the buildings are on the National
Historic Register, having been
constructed in the 1800's,..- ·
The downtown p~oject will
continue, !man said foliowingthe
cermon!es. He said the next
phase, through different grant
programs, is the streetscape
project and a parkfront marina .
"We want to improved the
entire environment/ ' lman said
of the downtown projecls, mak·
lng them more attractive for
tourism and shoppers.
At the July 5 city commission
meeting, !man told its members

the streetscape project grant
application had been submitted
and approved by the state for
f1,mding. The grant ts for $212,000
!rom the Applachtan Regional
Commission (ARC), and the
appitcatton "looks favorable,"
he said.
The streetscape project intcudes concrete curbing, demolition of existing sidewalks, brick
paving, historic streetlamps and
benches and flowering trees.
The marina project is for a
total of $220,500 - funded at
$147,000 from the local sources,
and the remal nded from the
Waterway Safety Fulld.
It will .include 10 slips and a
143-foot by eight -foot dock. The
large docking space ts to allow
vessels Uke the Delta .Queen and
West Virginia Belle to stop over
in Gallipolis.
Other Governor's Exceilence
Awards were presented In categories of Cooperation Between
Units of Government, Involvement of Minority and/or .
Women's Business Enterprises
and Innovative Public/ Private
. Partnerships.
The Ohio Conference of Com' munity Development is a group
of over 100 cities in the state
whose purpose is to enhance the
Uvabllity of the cities, towns and
communities.

Taylor transported to Orient
Joseph Taylor, 43, has been committed by Taylor, he refused
transported by the Meigs County
to accept the plea bargain as
Sheriff' s Department to the Or- presented by Crow and withdrew
ient Correctional Reception Cenas presiding authority in the .
ter where he ,will serve not less case.
than eight nor more than 25years
Retired Jackson County Comfor involuntary manslaughter in mon Pleas Judge Thomas W.
connection with the . July 1985 Mitchell was appointed by the
shooting death of his wife,
Ohio Supreme Court to replace
Marilyn.
_
Knight.
Two years ago, Taylor 'was
Mitchell accepted Taylor's
convicted by a Meigs County jury written plea of guilty to a charge
of murder in connection with the of Involuntary manslaughter an'd
death. However the decision of sentenced him to the eight to 25
the jury was reversed by judges years, with credit for two years,
of the Fourth District Court of five months and five days of
Appeals due to an error during . penientiary time and eight
the trial by Meigs County Com- months and 21 days of jail time
mon Pleas Judge Charles H. already served. Taylor also
Knight. The three appelate entered a written waiver of a
judges voted two to one . to trial by jury.
overturn the murder verdict,
Mrs: Taylor~as. 35 at the time
making a new trial necessary. of her death. She died as a result
However, the decision of the of a single gun shot wound to the
judges was based on a precedent neck.
from a case tried "after" the
A spokesman for the sheriff's
Joseph Taylor case.
department said that Taylor
Taylor was returned to Meigs would probably in the near future
County a few months ago for be transported from Orient to the
retrial but inste'!d, a plea bar- Marion Correctional Facility to
gain between the defendant and carl'} out his sentence.
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney Fred W. Crow III was
proposed to Judge Knight. Be·
cause Knight felt the plea bargain was too lenientfor the crime Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce 'and Mark Smith
of·Btunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi
Special meet
A special meeting of Middle- Am Electric Power. oooooo•oo•oo27%
_port Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, will be AT&amp;T ... oo ......... .. ........ oo· oo·• ··26~
held at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Ashland Oil 0000 .. ........ 00 .. 0000 .. 73~
temple with work in the EA Bob Evans.oo .. ooo0oooo ........ oooo.17~
Degree. Refreshments will be Charming Shoppes o0 00 00000o 00 . .14~
served following the meeting.
City Holding Co .. .oo .... oo ... oo .... 34
Federal Mogul..oo .... .,oo .... oo .. 43~
Goodyear T&amp;R .... .. 00 oo ... oooooo60V,
Heck's Inc .. oo ..... oo ..... oo .. oooooo.1%
Key Centurion ... .. ... .. oo .. .,oo .. 37~
Veterans Memorial
Lands' End .. oo .... oooooO•oo•oooo•oo28%
Admitted - Janet Jenkins, Limi.ted Inc 00 oo .... .. ...... 0000000023%
Middleport; Dorothy Thurston, Multimedia Inc .. 00 .. . 0000 00000000 72~
Long Bottom; Me bel Tracy, Rax Restaurants ..... oooooo. : oooo:4~ ·
Pomeroy; Faith Roach, Racine;
Robbins &amp; Myers .... 00 .. 00 .. 000011'!4
June Stover, Racine .
.
Shoney's Inc .. oo .. oo• ... oo ...... oooo 27
Discharged - Carrie Stobart, Wendy's Intl. .... oo .. .. oooo oo ... oooo5~
Ethel Hatfield.
Worthington lnd :..... 0000000000 .23~

Along the River ...... 00 B-1-8
Business-Farm ......... D-1,8
Comics- ...... .. .... 0000 ... Insert
CiassHleds ..... ... :... oooo D·2·7
Deaths ................... ~ .••. A~5
Sport. ................... , .. C-1-8

In Our Town: It was a hoi year in 1934
By .Dick Thom8!1 Page D-8

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Vol. 23 No. 24
Copyrig- 1988

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Mostly sunny . IUgh In mid 80s.

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,Gall tpo
_ _ _ __
over $400,000 'in total loans. He
said ·that for every dollar of
federal money in the program, tt
leveraged $6.60 in loans.
The first building front improved In the project was Dollar
General Store in 1987, Iman said .
Since that time, storefronts have
been in constant improvement
and the downtown has taken on a
whole new look.'
Greg Carr of the Ohio Department of Development said the
grant programs were working
because of strong, lntellegent
leadership at the local levels .

Inside:

James Sands reealls Keystone Furnace days
Page 0.3

mt
9 Sections. 68 Pages
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant. July 24, 1988

Some area crops benefit from recent rains

a@ SNOW

II Warm

FRONTS:

-RAIN
"

Cold

rmJ SHOWERS
"'Static 9W Occluded

WEATHER MAP - Showers and lhunderslonns will exlend
from New Eagland and New York state to central Florida as well
""over the central GuU of Mexico cout aad the Mllllliaslppl Delta.
Showers and thunderstorms will also be Widely scattered over
weslern Nevada.

Weather

Public Notice

••...

ORDINANCE NO. 1199-88
An Ordinance to eetebli•h
a Uner Control Fund and
to Approprlote Additional
Fu"do.
Be it ordolnod by the
Council of the Vllloge of
Middloport u lollowo:
Sec. I. That there lo hereby
eetabliahlfd 1 Utter Control
Fund within the vHI-ae trea-

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South Central Ohio
Tonight: Partly cloudy, with a
low between 60 and 65. Light
variable winds.
Saturday: Partly cloudy, with
a slight chance of afternoon
thunderstqrms. Highs will be
near 85. The chance of rain is 30
percent.
Extebded Fol!ecasl
Sunday lhrougb Tuesdq
Fair Sunday and Monday, with
a chance of showers Tuesday.
Highs wil~be in the 80s to near 90,
with overn.ght lows In the 60s.

sury account.

S.c. II. That aU grant
funds received from the
SUite of Ohio lor litter control purpolft and 111 other
Iundt apecilicolly designated lor llttet' control be
dop ..itod in thio lund.
Sec. Itt. That all expenoos
relatacl to the operation of a
little control program be
paid from this fund.
S.c. IV. Thot thero io hereby appropriated the follow·
ing additional fu nda for the
operation of the Vllloge of
Middleport lor 1988.
liner Control
Fund oo ............. 13000.00
Soc. V. Thio Ordinance
lhall take effect end be in
force from and after the urliest d1t11 permitted by law.
Puood the 11th doy of
July, 1988.
Attut: Jon P. Buck,

lottery numbers
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CLEVELiAND (UPI) - Thursday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers: :
Dally Number
248.
Ticket sales totaled
$1,206,578.50, with a payoff due of
$475,630.50.
PICK-4
4344. '
,
PICK-4 lllcket sales totaled
$198,740, with a payoff due of
$89,546. • I
I
PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
$6,172. PICK·4 $1 box bet pays
$1,543. ,.

Clert.

Dewey M. Honon,
President of Council
(71 16, 22, 2tc

MIDDLEPORT

DAIRY ·QUEEN
I

ANNOUNCES
'

NA'ME THE OWL
1CONTEST! ·.
up to age 13
•a• have the chance to
n - the owl located in
front of the store. Con·
test starts July 18th,
and ends e~ugud ·14th.
Children

Stocks

t\nnouncements

*G r1.nd prize: Win a 26
Inch boys or girls 1 0
Speed Bike from Western
Auto of MiddlejJort.
Just clip the entry coupon below and drop it off
et the Dairy Queen.
No purchase · neceuary
- Need not be present to

Hospital news'

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By SUSAN BAL'ITER
percentofthecropbecauseofthe
Times-Sentinel staff
small size of the .plants due to
RIO GRANDE - For some little early rainfall. Now, he said
area farmers, the recent rainfall he and his sons are expecting to
was too late in the growing earn a.bout $50,000 from this
season to help their crops. But year's crop, · but before the
farmers growing crops such as drought hit had expected to earn
tobacco say the rain will help as much as $100,000.
significantly tn their crop
Hamilton's tobacco plants are
production.
mostly between knee and waist
Bob Hamilton works about 15 high when they usually are
acres of tobacco on four different shoulder high to over the head by
. farms off SR 325 In Rio Grande.
this potnt'tn the summer. he said.
· Before the recent rainfall,
He is In business with his two
sons. Bryan and Randy, and Hamilton said he had been
son-in-law, Arthur Daniels. The lookingtoharvest10to15percent
family team raises cattle and of his crop.
"If we'd gotten rain a week or
grows corn and hay but tobacco
Is their main sourc~ of income.
two earlier it would've been
Ali his sons have other jobs but better," he said.
Hamilton concentrates on' the
In Hamilton's fields, his to·
bacco plants are on hills as well
farming.
The rain came at a good time as close to a creek bottom.
The tobacco on the htlls !aired
for tobacco, but It can withstand
heat better than other crops such much.worse In the heat than the
as corn, Hamilton said.
lower plants did, he said. He
' The rain lias really helped the added \hat with being lower, the
tobacco," he said.
plants had more moisture to
The tobacco is still behind In its develop with.
growth with July usually being
"The hills really dried up .
the time to top the plant. Topping something f)erce," Hamtlton
is a procedure of cutting the said.
flower off the tobacco plant in
With so much hot weather and
order to let the plant expand at not much to do aboutit, Hamilton
the bottom. H¥milton said the and his sons tried to control the
plants should l!e ready to top the weeds and plowed wheat and
finst weel&lt; in August, two weeks barley under the soil because the
process helps the soil maintain
late.
. "If (the plants) are waist lilgh ITJ()Isture.
and f)oWI;!r out, we'll do-well,"' he
Hamilton said this was the
said.
year he and his sons had pla~n_ed
Despite theTaln, flamtitonsald - to e!IJ18116 .their business With
he expects to harvest 60 to 75 more tobacco plants, more cattle

and new buildings , The lack of
rain, however, halted their plans
for this year at least.
"The dry weather just had
everything out of whack," he
said.
Hamilton said he is a little
more optimistic with the recent
rainfall, but he would like to see
more.
'The rain made some of (the
tobacco plants) worth cutting,"
he said. "Our crop Is still nothing
to brag a bout."
Paul Butler, who farms about
400 acres of land off SR 7 by the
Swan Creek Bridge, Crown City,
mainly grows corn, about 200
acres. But, he said the rain has
mostly helped his tobacco crop.
Along with corn and tobacco,
Butler and his son raise beef
cattle and grow hay.
Butler said he expects to
harvest 25 percent of his corn
crop, but before the rain . expeeled a "zero crop."
"The rain didn't get here quite
quick enough for the corn, but It
will probably give us a small
ear," he said.
The prolonged heat stunted the
tobacco, Butler said, but it can
stand • the drought more than
other crops .
"We expE~ct at least a half a
crop of tdb!!fCO now," he said.
lfthepll\lltsdonotflowerfora
c~b~o.t weeks, the crop will be
In
condition, Butler said.
With an investment of about
$35,000 tn crops, · Butter salt! he
expects to take a loss thiS year.

SANTA BARBARA, Calif.
(UP!) - President Reagan accused the Democrats Saturday of
"covering their tracks" with a
gloom-and-doom song of "mid·
night in America" that distorts
his recot'll arid masks a secret
agellda of discredited liberaliSm
. and higher taxes.
Speaking from his mountaintop ranch near . the end of a
week-long vacation, Reagan
launched a spirited rebuttal to
the rhetoric heard at the Democratic National Convention and
took aim lor the first time at the
newly chosen ticket of Michael
Dukakis and Lloyd Bentsen.
"They said America can do
better. I wholeheartedly agree,"
he said In his weekly radio

It's the same sad song they sang
four years ago."
Just as the Democrats time
and again raised the question of
"Where was George?" to belittle
the role of Vice President George
Bush, Reagan ticked off a litany
of economic and foreign policy
achievements of the last 7 12
years, including a new era of
improved superJ)ower relations,
and wondered of the opposition,
"Do they want to turn that
around?''
Reagan was not alone in taking
to the airwaves to reinforce the
battieltnes of the campaign.
In a Democratic response,
Rep. Beryl Anthony Jr., D-Ark.,
said he fully expects Bush to brag
about the economy, but predicted

address. "But the people also
know that the last time . our
opponents were in charge, AmerIca did a heck of a lot worse."
Seizing on Democratic promises o~greater opportunity, Rea·
gan said the picture of America
painted in Atlanta ignored the
realities ofthe longest peacetime
expansion in history, the creation
of 17 million jobs, low inflation
and increased productivity.
And in a play on his 1984
campaign theme of "morning
again in America" - the reas·
suring message of a nation at
peace, reinvigorated by strength
at home and abroad- he said of
the DukaklS·Bentsen ticket: "To
them, It's midnight in America.

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Owl's ~am•---------""'-----,-•

Your N¥me - - - - - - - - ' - - - .

Address
I

Phone No. _ _ _ _ _ _ Age _ _
Pare~t'f Name _________
Date +r _______ Time.___ _
•

Middleport
Dairy ~ueen
992-3322
MIDDliPOIIT, OHIO

'

on bls farm off SR 325. Hamlllon expects lo
salvage 7~ percent of bislobacco crop because of
the rainfall. (Times..Se~n-el phol.,o)

ON ITS WAY - Bob llllmUton, of Rio Grande,
shows'hls tobacco plan &amp;IWillch have been helped
wllh the !our-Inches oJ rainfall recently received
I

''We usually produce 20 tons
(of corn) per acre, but this year
we expect about four tons l¥!r
acre," he said. "We're hurtsome
financially, but we have our farm
paid f9 r."
.
.Alon!§wltllhelpingtobacco, the
rain aided alfalfa growth. Butler

said he and his son may have a
third cutting because of the rain,
but they usually have five cuts In
a season:
·
"We'll probably get half off
(what we had) lastyearlnalfalfa
rr we ·pt nu:he &amp;tlhi," he' llliltt.

question about it."
AccordingtoButier,lthadonly
rat nee;! 0.9 inches &amp;ince he planted
Aprtl20.
•'I've been farming for over 50
years, and I haven' t seen it as
bad as it has been." he said-..

"But the rain has hetped, no

the GOP record wlll not sell well
In the industrial Midw.est or in
rural areas, which have lagged
behind the rest of the country In
economic recovery.
"Voters who supported Reagan and Bush are now disillusioned because this administration
couldn'! keep Its promises,"
Anthony asserted. He contended
Reagan offered "empty prom·
ises" twice before and .satd Bush
"wlil try to hood -wink the public
again."
Dukakis, campaigning in Modesto, Calif., declined to respond
to the Reagan broadcast. "We
want to stress a postive mes- '
sage," he said. " ....Theyknowwe
-are going to have the chance."

over wastewater treatment

GALLIPOLIS -The State of for five years, and tha t the
plant is polluting the waters of
Ohio, through AttorneyPaint Creek.
General Anthony Celebrezze,
The State is asking the court
Jr., has filed a complaint tn
to issue an injunction requiring
Gallia County Common Pleas
the county to comply with the
Court against Gallia County
permit;
to order the county to
Commissioners for alleged viopay
the
State
Treasurer, a oivli
lations in operation of the
.
pena\ty
for
violations
of $10,000
Meadow look wastewater .treata
day
for
each
day
of the
ment plant on SR. 141, two
and
$10,000
a
day
for
violation,
m lies west of Gallipolis.
each day of violation after July
The State charges that the
21, 1988; and to retain jurtsdic·
county is In violation of its Ohio
lion of the suli for making any
Environmen'tal Protection
order when it may deem
Agency permit, originaliy
necessary a I any time to
issued Feb. 3, 1975 and relsSjled
the last time on March 19, 1986,
(See STATE, A5)

.--G' DAY, GALLIPOLIS ...-----. Employment climbs to record -level .

·--------------------------1
I

• CLIP COUPON e

·

.Reagait ·iccuses Democrats of 'co~ering tracks' State sues Gallia County

win.

I

.

·

'

'

More than 120 Gallipolltans
gathered In the GaiUpoUs park
Saturday !or the town meellng
honoring the ExecuUve Director of the Keep Australia
BeauUful Council, Barry W.
Wilton (beloW). Wilton Is
presently on tour, visiting
, many countries around the
world, Including the Untied
Kingdom and Japan. Invited
by Bob and Jewell Evans, he
stopped for a day In Gallipolis
to see the beauty and clean·
ne~~~~ of lhe town. Dale Jman,
clly manager, presen!ed Wilton with a key to the clly and
Invited him to retum to
·GalUpoUs (left). Wilton, In
tum, Invited Iman to Auslra·
Ila. Wilton spoke to the town
gathering on the Australian
beauUflcatlon project, Tiny
Towns. He atressed thai Tiny
Towns Is a warm aad wholelome, community-hued organlza&amp;Ion. And he emphasIzed the crou-sectlon
conunlttee o~ Tiny Towns,
comprlled of "fun people
Iooklag serious" diAcuulag
concerns and needS of the
envlroamenl.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPi) Ohlo's ·nonfarm payroll employment rose by 8,000 jobs during
June and total employment
climbed to a record high of 4.680
million jobs for the month, the
Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services announced Friday.
Since June 1987, nonfarm payroll employment has risen by 2.5
percent, representing a gain of

113,000 jobs, OBES said. Total
emploYment in May was 4.673
million jobs.
Manufacturing employment
was 1.098 In June, virtually
unchanged from the May level,
according to an employer survey
conducted by the OBES.

Nonmanufacturlng industries
added 8,000 jobs In June,

reaching a total of 3.582 million.
The largest gains were 3.000
jobs each in service industries
and government.
Construction, wholesale trade
and retail trade sectors each
increased by 1,000 jobs. Employment was unchanged in mining,
transportation and publ ic utilit-ies, and finance, insurance and
real estate.

Innovative program offers
weekend classes at RGC
RIO GRANDE - An innova· portfolio development, will be
tlve weekend program designed available to weekend college
to allow non· traditional students applicants.
He said the program is dethe opportunity to earn an
associate or bachelor degree will signed to meet the needs of
be offered this fail at Rio Grande various student populations. Including those with existing col·
College/ Community College.
"Rio Grande's mission Is to lege credit who have not com·
meet the needs of all students pleted their degree program, and
who may proltt from a college- non-tradlllonal students who are
level education," said Dr. Ray unable to attend during the week.
According to Dr. Boggs, pros·
Boggs, Vice President for Acapecttve students will be encourdemic Affairs. "The weekend
college opens a new aven,ue of aged to apply for "Life Expeopportunity for those individuals rience Credit," which is granted
who are unable to attend during for learnjng from independent
reading, t&lt;otunteer service, conthe week or in the evenings."
The weekend college offers an ference, workshop, ln-servioe
alternative to those prospective training, vocational interest; or
students who, because of per- from work experience.
•The college acknowledges the
sonal or occupational commitments, are unable to participate value of experiential learning In
In the traditional college pro- . many areas," Dr. Boggs said.
"Learning from experience Is
gram, he said.
recognized as a valid means of
Dr. Boggs explained that weekend college classes will be held awarding credit."
The awarding of credit follows
Friday evening, Saturday morntpg and Saturday afternoon. This accepted guidelines developed
fall, three regular college by recognized educational organclasses, plus a ~.,vected study In Izations and as~latlons. ,

'

•

A special 1w0 cr edJt ·hOur dt·

reeled study in portfolio develop·
ment will be offered as a part of
the fall weekend college curricu·
lum. The completed portfolio wi II
be used to a s sess I he c•'edil lobe
awarded by the college for li fe
experience.
A student may earn up 24
quarter hours of Life Experience
Credit for an associate degree
program, and up to 48 hours of
credit for a bachelor degree
program.
In addition to the directed
study In portfolio development.
three regular college classes wtll
be offered during this fall 's
weekelld program. English 113,
an entry level class in composition, wtu meet on Friday night.
Saturday classes include "Introduction to Anthropology" and
"Western Civilization I."
"Flexibility is a key to success
in today's educational and occupational markets," Dr. Boggs
said. "The weekend college
serve• to provide that needecl .
flexibility."
iJ-

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