<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12241" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/12241?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T19:17:21+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43213">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/9a2d1887a7ddd850998260093162602a.pdf</src>
      <authentication>22517533b82aeae81600dd839a7de206</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="38446">
                  <text>Page-12-The Daily Setltlnal

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Public. hearing...._co_·nt_tn_ued_tro_m_pa_g_e_1- - - - - - - - -

~omeroy Mayor's Court
Fifteen cases were processed vehicle, and $375 and costs,
Wednesday night In the court of driving under the Influence;
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler. Jerry Litchfield, Point Pleasant,
They include: Greg Hicks, $63 and costs, expired plates;
Pomeroy, $213 and costs, petty · Brian Bowling, Reedsville, $63
theft, and $313 and costs, break· operating a motor vehicle with·
ing and entering with Hicks also out reasonable responsib!llty,
being placed on probation for six and $63 and costs, operating
months on (he breaking and under suspension; LaDonna.
entering charge and 90 days on Large, Pomeroy, $63 bond, tral·
the petty theft charge; Aaron Lee fie light violation, and $63 bond,
Morris, Rutland. $113 and costs, ·no operator's license; Mike Car·
possession of a controlled sub· sey, Albany, $63 bond forfeiture,
stance! Jackie McDaniel, Pome· . speeding; Elizabeth Nichols,
roy, $50 and costs, no fina ncia l Middleport, $43 bond, failure to
responsibility; Christopher Cole, yield, and $50 bond, no financial
New Ha ven, W. Va., $375 bond responsibility; Todd Tripp,
forfeiture. driving under the Pomeroy Route, $63 bond, sque·
influence; Jerry Van Kirk, Dex· aling tires; Dennis Persons,
ter, $63 and costs, squealing Syracuse, $49 bond, speeding,
tires; William Whlllock, Syra·
and Jack Hannon, Vinton, $63
cuse, $63 and costs. open con· and cos.ts. driving while under
talner; Jackie Smith. Langsville,
suspension.
$63 and costs, failure to control

mendallon o~ County Engineer
Philip Roberts, the commission·
ers accepted a bid o!$57,835 from
Gibson, Inc., Athens, for a 1989
International Tandem truck,
with a spreader. The truck Is to
be delivered to the county high·
In January,

with payment due within 30 days
alter delivery.
The commissioners also reported they received a call from
a Sutton Township Trustees that
the Shelly Co. Is to start. the
paving project on Minersville's
Welsh town Hill on
This Is

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power ............. 27)'8
AT&amp;T ........... ... ................... 25~
Ashland Oil ......................... 36
Bob Evans .......................... 1534
Charm ing Shoppes .............. 12%
City Holding Co .................. 31 \!,
Federal Mogul. .................... 46
Goodyear T &amp;R ................... 60~
Heck's ................................ . '%
Key Centurion .................... 16\i.
Lands' End ............. .. ........... 27
Limited Inc ........................ 22%
Multimedia lnc ................... (O\!,
Rax Restaurants .................. 3*
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 11\-1
Shoney·s Inc ........................ 7\-1
Wendy's Inti ...................... .. 6\!,
Wortlli ngton Ind ................. 21\-1

House Bill 592, the State's new
solid waste bill which became
law in June, Includes a require·
men! that solid waste disposal
districts wm serve at least
120,000 residents, not 100.000, as
was reported In Wednesday's
Dallly Sentinel.
However, some officials feel
that if a good solid waste district
can be established to meet the
10-year space requirement for
dumping, but would only serve
105,000 people, then the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency might approve that dis·
trlct even though It Is under the
population requirement.

Area deaths
Edna Schaefer
Edna Stahl Sc haefer. 88. 40575
Laurel Cliff Road, Pomeroy.
long-time Meigs County resident.
died Wednesday at her home
following a lengthy illness.
A homemaker. Mrs. Schaefer
was born July 11, 1900 in Meigs
County, a daughter of the late
Bert and Luella Bradshaw Stahl.
She was an active member of the
Meigs County Retired Senior
Volunteer Program for JO years,
· a member of the Meigs County
Council on Aging and was a life
member of the Meigs County
' Pioneer and Historical Society.
Mrs. Schaefer was a member of
the Westside Church of Christ.
Surviving are two daughters
and sons-in-law, Ferndora and
Vern E. Storv, Pomeroy, and

Announcements
Webers reunion
The an nual Weber family reunion will be held Sunday at the
Rodnev Keller farm on Route 248
east o't Chester with a basket
dinner to be served at 12:30 p.m .
Those attending are to ta ke their
ow n table service.
Bowers r eunion
· The annual Bowers family
reu nion will be held beginning at
10 a.m. Su nda y at the southbound
roadside park on Rou te 33.
Dance Friday
A round and sq uare dance will
be held from 8 to 11 p.m. Friday
at the Meigs · County Senior
Citizens Cen ter. The True Countrv Band of Larrv Hubbard will
provide m'usic. Those attending
should take snacks for the snack
table. Admission Is $1.50 and the
public is invited.
Auxiliary to meet
The Ladles Auxiliary of Chapter 53, Disabled American Vete·
rans, will meet at 7 p.m. Monday
at the ~orne. 124 Butternut Ave. ,
Pomeroy.
Representative to vl~ll
A representative of the Buckeye Program will be at the
Tuppers Plains United MethodiSt
Church from 12: 30 to 2: 30 p.m.
Monday, Tuesday and Wednes·
day. Residents may also register
to vote at the same time and
place.
'

j. - ·

•

SEE US TODAY
*CARDS
*GIFT WRAP
*CANDY
*SUNDRIES
* PRESCRIPTIONS

VILLAGE
PHARMACY

notices -

..

DaiJy Number
536
.
Pick.4

Vo1.39, No.87
Copyrighted 1988

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Hoping to entice more young
people to continue their educa·
tlon, the the Ohio Board ol
Regents has proposed reducing
the siudent's share of the cost of
education at state universities
from 40 to 30 percent.
"The notion that a high school
education Is enough Is simply not
so," Chancellor William Coulter
said Thursday In unveiling !he
five-year master plan, which
calls for efforts to Improve
access to colleges for everyone,
with special emphasis on minor!·
ties and rural residents.
To make sure "all Ohioans are
prepared for a lifetime ol chang.
lng careers," the board pledged

SKIRT
SALE

Denims. poly/cotton blends
and polyester. Full length
and mini-skirts. Sizes 5/6 to
15/16.
'

Reg. S20.00 Skirts .•• S15.99
Reg. S25.00 Skirts ••• S19.99
Reg. S28.00 Skirts ••• S22.39

to seek ways of Increasing the tern of higher education at all
state's financial aid offerings for state universities, as opposed to
higher education, and pmposed a
the current "selective" excel·
1Q-year drive to greatly expand lence at certain colleges;
enrollments, notwithstanding
-providing leadership for ecothe cost to the state.
nomic and social change by
Coulter said the master plan coordinating various segments
would require a ...substantial of society In problem solving;
increase" In state financial sup-fostering strong and conportbutoffered no recommenda·
sian! financial support for tile
lions for raising the money. He
state college system.
said the regents will release their
The m•ster plan Is nonspecific spending recommenda·
binding, but Coulter said . It has
lions for 1990.9~ next week.
been closely followed In !he past
The three oiher major goals In as a policy guide for the regents.
the master plan, the fifth one
"ThiS Is an innovative and far
since the higher education COOf· reaching plan to guide · the
dlnatlng board was established . development of higher education
in 1963:
for the balance of this century,"
-Developing a first-class sys- said Coulter. "This Is the most

PAJ
SALE
-fkl•llls, nylons and palyhottan_blends
Pajamas ...... S8.79
Pajamas .... S11.99
Pajamas .... S18.39
Pajamas ....$21.59

MEN'S .TURTLENECK

SHIRTS
Sizes S (14-14%). M (16-15%).
L(16-16Y2), XL(17-17Yz). Solid
colors. long sleeves.

legular Price S12.95

SALE

Sl Q35

FANTASTIC SAVINGS ON:
*Gun Cabinets
*Recliners
*Curios
"
*·Wood lockers
*Dinette Sets
*Swivel Rockers
*Metal Cabinets
*Serta Mattresses &amp;
Box Springs
*RCA Color Televisions
*Eureka Sweepers

CONSTRUCTION UNDERWAY ramps lor the handicapped are under construe·
lion In Middleport. Contractor~~ Ken Hartley, In
the hal, and Gary Slaven, were working al the
comer of Mill St. and North F'ourlh Ave. on
Thursday afternoon. Altogether, Z3 ramps are to

~USTER BROWN

By United Press International
Teachers in the Mad RiverGreen Local School District In
Clark County were poised to go
on strike today after negotiations
failed to resolve a dispute over
salaries.
Schools In the 2,300·student
district were to be open today,
with substitutes handling classroom duties, II the teachers

play outfits In little boys' and girla'
sizea 2Tto 4T, 4 to 7. Buster Brown
quality you can trust.

SPORT SHIRTS

New fall selection in sizes S. M, L
and XL You'lllike 'the new colors
and patterns - long sleeves.

Reg. sa.oo ............... Sale S6.79
Reg. Sll.OO .......~ •.• Sale S9.39
Reg. 516,00 ........... Sale S13.59
Reg. S20.00 ........... Sale S16.99

Racine man cited .by patrol
A Racine man was cited In a one-car accident Thursday at 2
a.m. In Lebanon Township on TR 132, one mile south of SR 124,
according to the Gall!a- Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Mark A. Compson, 27, w~s cited for failure to control and
driving without a license after his 1984 Mercury Topaz went off
the right side of the road and Into a ditch. He was driving east
when the accident occurred.

SALEI

MEN'S
NECKTIES
New selection of .olld colors

Reg: sa.so Ties .... 15.95
Reg. 19.00 Tits .... 16.30
Reg. 19,50 Tits .... S6,65
Reg. 110.00 Tits .. 17.00
Reg. 112.50 Tits .. sa.u

followed through with their
threat to strike, said Robert
Bardnell, board president.
The strike was scheduled to
begin at 7:30 a.m., said Debbie
Tully, president of the Mad
River-Green Local Education
Association.
Representatives oftheassocla·
lion, and the board of education
met for several hours Thursday

•
f:
LocaI news b ne 8

Our S18.95 Shi1 Is ---Salt *15.19
Our 119.95 Shirts ••••• Sale 115,99
Our 124.95 Shii 11 ..... Sale 119.99

and ne~t patterna - readytied ties and four-in-hands.

be constructed
are 12 lo go after
and North Fourth.
Funds for the access rampe were provided by a
59,201' Community Development Block Grant
through the Melp County CommiSsioners.
lh~e.

Teachers in Clark County go
on,strike over salary dispute

CHILDREN'S
·CLOTHING
Cute ·naw tops, penta, dreues and

MEN'S J.J. COCHRAN

thoughtful vision' of the ·higher
education system that we've had.
It Is a vision of higher education
for the 21st century."
Coulter said many small Improvements can be made at-little
cost. "It Is clear that we cannot
achieve everything In this plan
without a substantial iflcrea~e In
state support," he said, adding
that ·state, budget officials will
have to figure out how to raise the
money. ·
A regents' financial expert
said It would cost the state $200
million a year to reduce the
student's share of the cost of
education from 40 to30 percent as
planned.
A student's share was 36

By JOSEPH MIANOWANY
UPI Polhlcal Writer
Republican George Bush
shows no signs of letting up on
charges that Michael Dukakls Is
weak on defense and the Democrat, searching for a way to stem
the attacks, shows signs of
~ hanging his rhetoric against the
''Star Wars" project .
On a day when their presidential campaigns tentatively
agreet:1 to the flrstoftwodebates,
Bush, who has stumped · strl·
den\IY for months against the
defense views of his opponent,
took hts assault to th~ battle·
ground of Texas, where he
watched a pair ·of missiles be
destroved under the U.S.·Sovlet
It.'F agreement.
The vice president used a
subsequent rally to rip the
Massachusetts governor for once
having wanted to "restrain us,
not the Soviet Union," through
support for the nuclear freeze
movement.

'

Reg. Sll.OO
Reg. SlS.OO
Reg. 523.00
Reg. S27 .00

A Mu!lbnedlaloc. Newspaper

percent In !lscall987, but it has Income.
He also said the regents plan to
gone up since then. It was down to
33 percent In 1980, but ballooned work closely with high schools to
improve the teaching of mathe·
to almost 50 percent In 1982.
Coulter said only 45 percent of matics, science, wrlti!lg and
young Ohioans go to college after vocational education. He said 60
high school, compared with 66 percent of Ohio's high school
percent nationwide. He said Ohio. graduates are not adequately
ranks 35th In the nation In this prepared for post-secondary
category.
. education.
Coulter said Ohio's higher
He said reducing the cost by 10
percent "Is obviously a major educatiOn system Is ·" good" but
change and one thai will be not excellent, as he described the
difficult to achieve quickly. But systems In Massachusetts and
California.
we think It's essential."
"This state Is not a highCoulter said the regents want
to Increase theOhlolnstructional spending state 1for higher educaGrants- scholarships which are tion)," said the chancellor .
available to students with less "There is no way you can make
than $25,000 ' annual family that case. It's a high fee state."

Bush, Dukakis agree on two
debates; defense. ·key issue

WOMEN'S

-Sizes 32 to 41

! Sections, 14 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 9, 1988

Regents propose student's eosts be reduced

LORD ISAAC

-Long and short sleeve styles

Clear tonlr;ht. Lows In mid
50s. Saturday, sunny, highs In
mid 80s.
·

6136

•

Parking changes annoll(nced
,.

Middleport village ' officials announced several changes In
parking and traffic now In response to Saturday's Block Party
activities.
The North Second Avenue business district and the east end of
Mill Street will be cloaed to traffic and parking, as most of this
area will be used for activities.
South Second Avenue, from Mill Street to Main Street, will be
closed to traffic and parking, as this area will be used for the car
show.
Two-way traffic will be maintained on South Third Avenue
from Mill Street to Matn Street, but tllere wlll be no parking In
tillS area. The same will be true for North Third Avenue.

992-6669
271 NOITH SECOND
MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO .

Ohio Lottery

Page6

IN EVERY DEPARTMENT

\

Mildred A. andWIIUamT.Perry,
Sr., Athens; a son and daughterIn-law, Norman "Dutch" and
Leora Wyatt Schaefer, Mount
Vernon; two grandchildren, Norman David Schaefer, Mansfield ,
and John V. Story, Pomeroy; a
brother, John Stahl, Pomeroy; a
sister and brother-in-law, Clara
and Pearl Gilkey , Pomeroy; a
sister-In-law. Helen Schaefer
Dunkle, Chancey; cousins, Hugh
Leifheit, .Pomeroy, and Cathe·
r!ne Ryan Quinlin, Huntington,
W. Va., several nieces and
nephews and live stepgrandchildren. Ruth Bolin, Guysville; Thomas Perry, Jr.,
Athens; John Perry, Cinda Polly,
and Judy Jack, all of Nelsonville.
Preceding her in death, besides I
her parents, were her husband, '
Norman E . Schaefer In January,
1985; four brothers, Harry, Fritz,
Mark and Wallace Stahl, three
sisters, Ruth Geary, Bertie
Shawver and Cecil Harrison.
Services will be held at 10:30
a.m. Friday at the Ewing Fun·
eral Home with burial to be in
Beech Grove Cemetery . Friends
may call at the funeral home
from 6 to 9 p.m. Thursdav.
Mr. Landon Hope will officiate.

•

ELBERFELDSI
YOU'LL FIND SAVINGS ·

Nichols family
to perform in area

Correction

Church

Veter811.8 Memorial
Wednesday AdmiSsions Rhonda Hoover, Pomeroy; Gertha Hemsley, Northup; Carrie
Roush, Middleport.
Wednesdav Discharges Kelly O'Brien, Sarah McCarty,
Terry Carpenter, James MeaPauline Derenberger.

'

education In pollee training at
Ohio University on a part-time
basis.
Gardner, his wile Kay and
their two children, J.P. and Tara
will be making their home at
East VIew Estates In Jackson.

The Nichols Family, of Elk·
view, W.Va., featuring Dave and
Rhonda Nichols, will be making
two appearances In the area this
Saturday . From 2 to 4 p.m.
Saturday, the group will perform
at the town celebration In New
Haven, W.Va., infrontoftheflre
station. Later in the day, they
will be featured at the Bend Area
Gospel Sing which will start at
7:30 p.m. at Father's House
Church In Hartford. W.Va. Oth·
ers singing with the Nichols
Family at both locations will be
Narrow Way, the Reflections
Trio, and Tabalba.

a Community Development
Block Grant funded project to
Sutton Township through the
commissioners' office. Pomeroy
Village Is paying Independently
to have a portion of the hill which
lies In Pomeroy corporation
limits repaved at the same time.

Hospital news

. SHOP NOW
AND SAVE AT

Meigs native joins Jackson City Police
JACKSON - Terry Gardner a
Meigs County native and son of
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gardner has
accepted employment with the
Jackson City Pollee Department.
He was sworn In as a lull time
patrolman at a ceremony held at
Jackson City Hall.
Gardner is a 1979 graduate of
Meigs High School and a graduate of Hocking Technical College
with a degree in pollee training.
His past work record Includes .a
brief time with the Meigs County
Sheriff Department under James
Proffitt as a special deputy, full
time assistant Juvenile Officer
with the Meigs County Juvenile
Court. When he accepted this
position, he was working as a
partlme patrolman with the
Pomeroy Pollee Department and
a full :;me position with Mike
Young Carpentery.
Gardner plans to continue his

Thursday, Sept.-nber 8, 1988

Grand Jury indicts four
Four Indictments were returned ThurSday by a Meigs County
Grand Jury.
Indicted by the grand jury ·on two counts of rape was Gary
ConUnued on page 10

f
- - --·~ ____.,______,.. '--~ ,fl

but were unable to reach an
agreement on salaries, said
Robert Bardnell, board
president.
"Nothing's settled," Bardnell
said following Thursday night's
negotiating session.
Tully said the board late
Thursday presented an new
salary offer, which was canting·
ent upon approval by members of
the association by 10 p.m.

Th~~~~~.

she said It was
"Impossible'' .to assemble the
teachers In time to consider the
offer before It expired.
"It was impossible for us to get
our people together In that short
of time," TuUy said. "We attempted to make a counter proposal
but by the time we put the
proposal together the board
negotiators had left."
TuUy said the teachers planned
to meet at 6 a.m. to set up
picketing schedules.
Teachers were asking parents
In the dis trlct to keep their
children out of school today In the
eve11t of a. walkout. They also
asked substitute teachers to
honor any picket lines and turn
down the board's offer of $100 a
day in wages.
The association, which representll125 teachers In the district,
said Its teachers are the lowest
paid In the county, wiih an
average starUng salary of
$15,880.
The union also Biked tile board
to cancel Greenan High School's
football game tonJiht.
"What we think Ia the best .
thing ta to remove all school
activities because thinl* are not
nonnal and should not be treated
Continued on page 10

· DUkakls tried meanwhile' to kis said he would "modernlze·the
bolster his national security land-based leg of the triad If it's
credentials In a tough speech to essential" - but quickly added
the American Legion convention that he still opposes the MX and
In Louisville, Ky. His remarks Mldgetman. On "Star Wars," he
were received well Thursday, said he would not support an SDI
but at a news conference follow- deployment because .It would
lng the address he surprised violate the 1972 Anti·BalUstlc
some observers by appearing to Missile Treaty .
,
alter his stanc~ against "Star
Nonetheless, he said he might
Wars."
proceed with a more Intense
For months, Dukakls has de- examination of the system, ex·
nounced the Strategic Defense plainlng: "If 1 made the
Initiative as a pet project "fan· ment and the Congress m~lde
tasy" of President ~eagan, ques- judgment that It was essential •~\...'"""':..._
tlonlng whether research ever national security, well obviously
could result In a space-based we'd proceed with lt. .. . We don 't
defense rsystem agall)st enemy know that at this point."
missiles. He also has opposed
Dukakls ·· said, "Obviously,
development of any new mobile we'renotgoingtotestanddeploy
MX or Mldgetman nuclear If it's a violation of the (ABM)
treaty." But he also said, "We' ve
missiles.
At the news conference In got to keep our options open.
Louisville, however, the gover· Obviously, as we proceed with
nor said he was "not opposed" to the development of a strong
SDI nor to a modernization of national defense. doing research
U.S. strategic nuclear missiles.
does not violate the treaty. It's
Pressed on the matter, Duka· perfectly apt)roprlate and I'm for
tllat at this point."

River traveling ministers visit
Pomeroy to promote project
Attracting attention Is the
name of the game for Rev .
William Zeyer, of Beverly, Ohio,
and Rev. Bill Lawson, of Hanni·
bal, Ohio. But they don't want the
attention for themselves. They
want it for an organization called
lnternatlonal Child Care, head·
quartered In Toledo, and for
donations to provide health care
for the children of Haiti.
To seek attention for these
causes, and to enjoy an unusual
spiritual retreat, the two minis·
ters are rowing their way down
the length of the Ohio River from
Pittsburg, Pa. to Cairo, m..
stopping at towns along the way
and speaking at
churches,
community facilities, and to
anyone else who wishes to hear
their message.

.The two river-traveling minis· the children of Haiti have ·been
ters were In Pomeroy on Sunday inoculated against the disease,
to spread the word of their Meadows said.
mission through a slide presenta·
This mission in Halt! Is also a
tlon to members of the Pomeroy "mission emphasis" of the UniUnited Methodist Church. ted Methodist Church, explains
Members of the Pomeroy Trlnliy Rev. Meadows. The Athens Dis·
Church and Middleport's Heath trlct of the West Ohio Conference
United Methodist Church congre- of the Methodist Church has
gations also participated In Sun· pledg~ $2,000 to International
day evening's meeting.
Child Care's Haiti program,
Sunday's Pomeroy meeting
As explained by Rev. Don
Meadows, minister of the Pome- with Zeyer and Lawson was an
roy United M~tllodist Church, the evening of fellowship as well as
goal of International Child Care, an evening of education, Mea·
which sponsors Grace Children's dows said.
Next Saturday, VIrginia SnavHospital In Haiti, Is to Inoculate
100 percent of Haiti's population ley, wife of the late James B.
again,st tuberculosis. Grace Snavley who founded InternaChildren's Hospital primarily tional Child Care In 1965, will be
treats children with TB and . so at the Pomeroy UnltedMethodist
far, approximately 90. percent of ·church.

1'08 A MOON- ltev. Wlllun

Z87v ud Re¥. Bill Law-are rowiDJtlae lenph
of the: Ollio Blwr &amp;a attract altenllon to aa
orJUIIatton ealled laierutlollll Clltld Care. Tbe

,,

two mea atapped thafr craft In Pomeroy on
Sulldl!¥. Tba, IPOke Sandi!¥ evening a1 the
PomerGy United Methodllt Church.

�0

.

Friday, September 9, 1988

.Comment
'The Daily Sentinel
111 Courl Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA
0

~~

cs:m~
~v

r"'T'\....1'-"T"',..,..,...=·-

ROBERT L. WINGETt
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller ·

BOBROEFUCH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

'

LETI"ERS OF OPINION are we,come. They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subject to editing and musl be signed with name, address and
·telephone number. No .u nsigned letters wm be published. Letters should be In
good taste, addressln(l:lssues, not personalities. ...
'

Liberal is dreaded L-word
By HELEN mOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON- President Reagan is trying to make political hay
on the campaign trail by waging war against what he calls the
" dreaded L·word ."
And Vice President George Bush has taken up the rallying cry as
they try to identify " liberal" with a card·carrytng you know what.
The use of " far out left" also has come into vogue In their speeches.
Ideologically speaking, Reagan has proudly Identified himself as a
" conservative'' throughout his presidency. And he has advocated the
conservative agenda from top to bottom.
The basic conservative agenda has stressed passage of a law for
prayer in the schools and an anti·ahortion amendment, neither of
which the president achieved.
After painting liberalism of political thought in terms of something
akln to leprosy, Reagan and Bush believe they have found fertile
ground in portraying Democratic candidate Michael Dukaklsas a
"stealth candidate" who is indulging in a "masquerade" to hide his
true liberal feelings . It's difficult to tell whether It has been the telling
blow in Bush's meteoric rise In the polls to the point where he is now
toe to toe with Democratic presidential candidate Michael Dukakls.
The president also reminds audiences that he was once a
Democrat, and a liberal one at that, until he saw the light In the '60s.
He revised his political philosophy in that era and opposed all the civil
rights and voting rights measures that were the outgrowth of racial
protest.
So what is liberal and what would Reagan and Bush change !!they
had the political power to do so?
There are a slew of laws on the books from past liberal
administrations, particularly the New Deal and the Great Societv.
Among them to cite a few are Social Security and Medicare. Would
any presidential candidate dare to repudiate these laws?
Curb them and slice them, perhaps? ·But to advocate eliminating
them would ensure defeat at the polis. Reagan suggested in the '60s
that Social Security be put on a voluntary basis, but he backed off with
some 35 million senior citizens qualified to vote.
Then there are other programs that were put on the books In the age
of liberalism such as Heads tart, federal aid to education at all levels,
protection of occupational safety and health, many of the recent
environmental protection programs. In the Johnson administration,
Congress passed a civil rights blll and a voting rights bill:
Then there was the "liberal'' Supreme Court of Chief Justice Ear l
Warren whose unan tmous ruling In l954in the case of Brown vs. the
Board of Education of Topeka, Kan., signaling the beginning of
desegregation of schools, and eventually public accommodations all
along the line. Would any presidential candidate advocate
overturning that decision?
True, Reagan was the first president in 122 years to veto a civil
rights blil- The Civil Rights Restoration Act -and Bush backed him
up. But Congress overrode the veto.
The president identifies liberalism with the llls of the federal
government, particularly government programs that he feels are
unnecessary when the states and voluntarism under capitalism can
handle the problems. He views the programs as an Intrusion in
individual freedom. And he has made strides in shifting many of the
social programs back to the states and reducing the federal role.
Economic freedom is the key to hi.s philosophy.
Bush has embraced the conservative agenda, butsa:Yshewould !ike
to see a "gentler, kinder nation, " which he surely does not meah to be
a reflection on the present administration.
Dukakis is picturing himself a "moderate" and abjuring the label
"liberal," apparently feeling as Reagan and Bush do that the
description, maybe the philosophy , belongs in the ash heap of
American politics.

Page-2-The Daily Sentin111
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Question farming ·out .mortgages
recently estimated that 78 per·
cent of Its members do not
service loans at all. Many banks
have the resources to or!glnate customers are attracted to par·
more loans than they can ser· tlcular banks in the first place vice. They lend you the money, personalized service. Some not
then turn .the mortgage over tor only otter good interest rates but
someone else to take care of the enjoy rtputations for courtesy,
ongoing details. The Institution friendship and even compassiOn.
that takes over the servicing gets Personal attention is the hal·
a percentage of the payments.
· !mark of the community bank.
If a plant closing throws people
There is a difference between
transferring the servicing and out of work and a long·time
transferring the mortgage Itself. borrower can't meet a mortgage
The banking industry's ability to payment. the community bank
pool mortgages and sell them often shows some patience. But!!
into a secondary market has a meat·packlngplant shuts down
meant lower interest rates and a In Colorado, it Is unlikely that
bigger pot of money. But the bankers in Manhattan will shed
practice of transferring servlc· empathic tears.
Welcome to the fu lure, where
ing is almost always a losing
proposition for the harrower.
banking promises to be less
The way mortgage servicing is personal and less local. Finan·
whisked around the country cia! forces told our associate,
belies the reason that many Michael Binsteln, that since

By Jack Anderson and Joseph ·Spear

THE lAST TEMPTATioN

~oF THE CANPIPAT~ /?1/A /
I'LL RUN A PoSITI\IE
CAMPAIGN! No DIRT, No NAMECALUNG--A CAMPAIGN
ABour ISSUIS!

HAlf!

Congress hawed to the bankers'
demands !or fewer rules and
wider latitude, banks have un·
dergone dramatic changes. Now,
the mortgage borrower may be
the victim of progress.
According to Rep. John J.
LaFalce, D·N.Y., fraud is a
growing threat . .The door is wide
open for an unscrupulous servlc· ,; •
ing agent or an outside con artist
to capitalize on the contusion of
the borrower. And when consu·
mers don't receive adequate
notice that their mortgage has
been trjlnsferred, they 111ay send
payments to the wron11 place and • •
e!\d up being charged a late fee. · i':
In extreme cases, foreclosures
have resulted.
Frustrated borrowers com·
plain that their questions go
unanswered, their payments go
up without an adequate explana· •
tlon and their Insurance terms •
change when the new servicing •
Institution Isn't able to service
the loan on the same terms as the
hank that or!glnally loaned the
money.
.
LaFalce has Introduced a mini
bill of rights tor consumers. It
would require lenders to warn
harrowers about what is likely to
happen to their loan. That •
warning would have to be given
at the time o! the mortgage
applicatiOn. Banks also would be
required to notify harrowers of
any transfers.
So far, bankers have only been .
willing to support a disclosure
requirement under wblch hor· ·
rowers would be notified at the
time of a transfer. Critics say
that is a meaningless gesture
because the borrower won't have
the Information needed to make ·l
an informed choice when shoP'
ping around for a mortgage.
The banking lobby, which has
come to llke the sound o!
deregulation, won't let La Fal·
ce' s bill become law without a
light.

Shrinking LBJ

Ben Wattenberg :

by "the crazy Lyndon." It was, son's eccentricities did not affect major geopolitical argument and
according to Dr. Sigmund Good· serious national policy, which is trivial !zed It into one man's ·,
win (after consulting colleagues) the irnplication of Goodwin's prol)lem. That switch is nothing •
'&gt;
less than substance abuse.
"a textbook case of paranoid · diagnosis.
Goodwin thinks Johnson was
If verified, Goodwin's · Syn·
dislntergration." .4) Johnson's
paranoid,
tint. because he
drome
will
make
medical
annals.
"uncontrollable compulsions"
thought
that
Kennedy loyalists
A
most
peculiar
disease:
LBJ's
played a major role ln escalating
hated
LBJ
and wanted a
symptoms
manifested
them·
the war in Vietnam. 5) That war
Kennedy
restoration,
and, se·
drove a nail in the heart of selves only In foreign policy,
cond,
because
he
thought
com·
progress in America, even caus· never on domestic issues. In·
munlsts
were
trying
to
take
over
ing blacks to riot. 6) We've never deed, the !)eriod of which Good·
the
world.
recovered.
win writes, 1964·65, was when
Curiously, Goodwin's book It·
Johnson cuckoo? His instabll· Johnson was being feted as a
self
provides plenty of instances
ity yielding war? No progress miracle man, a legislative gesince? Fie!
nius, the promulgator of the of the first charge. And ahout
communists: Today the observa·
Admittedly. I speack in part as Great Society.
Johnson, says Goodwin, got lion is made that Gorbachev Is
a Johnson partisan. Alter Good·
win h.ad departed, I was a guidance about VIetnam from a unique among Soviet leaders.
Johnson speechwr!ter. LBJ did · handful of advisers. Odd: All . Why? Because (perhaps) he is
not seem gaga to me. Nor did he were appointed by President the first not to p~bllcly stress •
to long·term Johnson associates. Kennedy. All favored escalation. communist global domination.
Goodvrln,averygoodspeechw· ;
Was LBJ eccentric and extrava· Were they going mad, too? And
riter,loved
alliterative triads; he •
gant? You ·bet. Unpredictable? what aboutJohn Kennedy? Good·
favored
peace,
progress, t'
Sure, on small things, on per· win admits he doesn't know
prosperity.
Hls
hook
can be
sonal lings. Privately, usually whether Kennedy would have·
for dramatic effect, he exagger· escalated. If he had, would he described hi that manner: Inter·
esting, ill·informed,
ated and embellished, some- have been loony, too?
Goodwin has taken a:n issue of irresponsible.
times inaccurately. But John·

About Richard Goodwin's new
book, "Remembering America
(Little Brown): You may buy it,
you may enjoy It, but don't y.ou
believe it.
Goodwin's book Is subtitled, "A
Voice from the Sixties." He had a
unique perch from which to view
the socio-cultural politics of that
time. He was a speechwriter and
policy aide to Presidents
, Kennedy and Johnson, and to
presidential candidates Sen. Eu·
gene McCarthy ,
Intertwined with rich personal
history and anecdote, supported
by trend·trumpetlng, a theme
emerges: 1) Once ul&gt;on a time
there was a great moment in a
great country (the early '60s in
America) -embodied by Pres!·
dent John Kennedy. 2) When
Kennedy was killed, the gargan·
tuan spirit of Lyndon Johnson"the good Lyndon." that is enhanced the '60s·Kennedy im·
pulse. 3) Alas, the passion of the
good Lyndon was soon destroyed

HUNTINGTON. W.Va. (UP!)
-' Ohio University has good
reason to look optim!stica!iy to
Saturday night's game at Mar·
shall, last year's NCAA Division
I ·AA runner·up and the favorite
to win tlie Southern Conference
football championship this year.
Because, In case you missed It,
the same day thatOh!oStatewas
toying' with West Virginia In a
24·3 no-contest at Columbus, the
Ohio University team down In
Athens was conquering another
. West Virginia team - Marshall,

aVoiDeD VieTNaM?

AQUa'{Le.

Today in history
By United Press International
Today Is Friday, Sept. 9, the 253rd day of 1988 with 113 to follow.
The moon is nearly new.
The morning stars are Venus. Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury and Saturn.
Those born on this date areunderthesignofVIrgo. They inciudethe
Due de Richelieu, French statesman and Roman Catholic cardinal, in
1585; Capt. William Bligh of the HMS Bounty in 1754; Russian author
Leo Tolstoy In 1828; Alf Landon, Kansas Republican who lost the 1936
president!~! election to Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt, in 1887;
Kentuckv Fried Chicken founder Harlan Sanders in 1890; oddsmaker
Jimmy ,; the Greek" Snyder In 1919 (age 69); actor Cliff Robertson in
1925 (age 63), and singer Otis Redding in 1941.
On this date in history:
·
In 1776, the second Continental Congress officially changed the new
American nation's name from United Colonies to United States.
ln 1850, California became the 31st state.
In 1956, rock 'n' roll singer Elvis Presley appeared on national
television for the first time, on "The Ed Sullivan Show."
In 1971, more than l,OOOconvlcts took over the state prison at Attica.
N. Y.,and held 35 convicts hostage. Four days later, 28 convicts and
nine hostages were killed as state pollee re-took the prison.
In 1985. parents in New York City kept 18,000 public schoolchildren
home on opening day to protest the city's allowing a child with AIDS to
attend class.
A thougllt for the day: Leo Tolstoy wrote, "The strongest of all
warriors are these two - Time and Patience."
~

\

beneficiaries of the Welfare
State.
But. as Jack Kemp has pointed
out, If you subsidize something
you get more of it. Soon critics
had noted the growth o! a large
"underclass" of people whose
whole lives, over a period of two
or more generations, were organ·
!zed around the receipt of food
stamps, welfare checks, and
similar subsidies. A few years
ago, ln a devastating book called
"Losing Ground,' social analyst
Charles Murray demonstrated
what many liberals were already
beginning uneasily to suspect:
that the Welfare State as It
existed, from helping matters,
was makin~ . them Infinitely
worse.
Since then, the more thoughtful
liberals have gone back to their
drawing·boards, and number of
proposals for "welfare reform"
(e.g. those that purport to re·
quire welfare recipients to work)
are currently In variOus stages of
consideration by Congress.
But now Charles Murray, in a
highly perceptive article In the
September issue of "Comrnen·
tary," has identified a new policy
tendency among liberals. By the
mkl·1990s, he predicts, "liberal
intellectuals and policy·makers
will become comfortable bellev·
ing something like this:
"(1) Inner-city ·blacks are
really quite different from you
and me, and the rules that apply
to us cannot be applied to them:
(2) it 18 tutDe to seek solutions
!hat aim at bringing them Into
participation in American life;
and (3) the bumaae coul'!le Is
therefore to provide 11enerously,
supplying medical care, food,

OUT ON STEAL ATTEMPT - California Angel Chill Davis
looks to umpire Rocky Roe for the call aa his steal attempt In the
second Inning falls. Holding the ball 18 Texaa Ranger ahorlstop
Scott Jltelcher. ( UPI)

Scoreboard ...
Majors

Calendar

-·

By Unllt'dPreuiBter•tlonal

'I

,

state."

BuebaJI

AMERICAN LEAoGUE

Bo1ton

""'""
Mllwa111Ee
New York

Toromo
ClewiiPd
Baltimore

.4merk:u Le ape
Ddroll at New York, '2 : 31p.m .

L Pet.
77
11
7!
14
ll

tt

u
H
68
11!1
II lt
.. 81

w...

Oakland
Min .nola

81
,.,
74
7!

..
.....

Kan. . cH,.
C.llfornla

GB

.$$4 -

.aa
.112
.Ill
.117
.481

t%

4~

4%
·~
8

.sss 2'7%

5! .lSI I'! .sst 11

141 .Ill 141h:
.. .Ill 17
it 78 .t• n
.. 18 .(135 Z71h:
51 u .407 31%

,.,.

Chl~qo
~

ThUmdiiiY'II
Nrw York
7, Delrok ~···
4, 10 lin.
Oaklllld S, l u - Clly I
CaiHornla 41 1Tna11 !
Frw.r'll Gamm
Dftrall (Term l 7-11) at New Vorll
IDehon 1-1), 7:a p.m.
Clevelud {VeU IH) ld ...loa
jBoddh:ker IO.IS). 7:J5 p.m.
Toronto (CIUJcy 8-ISI at Baltmore

(Jkwdtta 1-U), 8:11p.m.
Mlnauota (Toll\rer NJ at Chlcal"l

8:38p.m.

(Lo . . 7-1) ,

Oallland(!kwart 11·11)atKan.aCity

ti».J8•0.t), A:SI p.m.
Se•de (LaniMOG 11·11) at MII..Uift

(Hipra 1$-A) , 11:11 p.m.
Callfclrnla (Pfteyl-1) at T@IRII (WIUI-

MID-1\MERICAN CONFEREN((Ii:

DetrGII at New York
MlnOI!tOhl at Lbie&amp;IO, llpt
Tnronlo al Ballmore, nll(hl
Oaklan•at Kaa•• Clly, alpt
Se auk! It Mllnalee, niA"Jit
CalifOrnia at Texu, niJN
N-'TIONAL LEAGUE

ConfP.rf'nCle

W L P~t. GB
8!H.&amp;N1S U .l!t t

PkhiNqh
Montreal

Chlcaco
Sl. Loula
Phlladelphil&amp;
Los An pie~~

w.. o

11 68 .111 Jlltl
18 71 .4Rt 14%
17 73 .471 II
5t 8J .fitS 21%

Atlanta

71 • .111 I
48 • .1411 31

Ohio Northern
OUerbeln

.U

•

••

••

•

I

1

This week's games
Ohio Colll!p FootbaiiSc bedule
Sat ani II¥ , Sept It
8)'11t'Ue at0hlo8tate
Ball Stale at Bowllllll Green

EultraMidlat Y . .aploWnSt (fi:M)
Allr• .. Keat SCale

Mariec .. at Kdiii&amp;HO (Mict.)
Allea:hetiJ (Pal at.Mou• Un•o.
llrb-MMulld..-n
Mr ... flllclll a1 O.lo Northern

.....

........ ..

o•.. W•lefu a1 Otterbein (a)
~

(

''
'

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

•'

•
•

'•

'•
•

'

•
•
••

••
I

'

Wlwi•Wal .. ceal~d(a)
lletlllur (W Va) al Caplal
Ollwt (Micl!J at Hel . . bers (a)

Cue Reaene at Biram

I

.'

e eo

Mutldi~pm

A 0 0
It 00

0 00
8 00

Wltlle•bPrx

OltD

DOt
0 Ot

t

00

eo

BIG TEN
eo.rerenllt!

.......

W LT
• I 0

o 10

MlcWran

000
0 00

t

ties.
Those totals came after a mlsera·
While Marshall picked up ble start In which he was held to
steam later in the 1987 campaign, 30 or fewer yards passing in his
the Bobcats skidded. As a result . first three collegiate outings.
of the J.lO l!nish, the three-year
Thornton has his top three
coaching record of former Bob- receivers on hand, plus ali but
cat quarterback star Cleve Bry· one starter on the offensive
interior line.
ant dwindled to 4·29.
Both teams have a slew of
The Ohio quarterback gives
· performers from last year's the visitors an advantage over
battle at Athens. The Ohio his Marshall counterpart and
veterans include quarterback fellow left·hander, John GreAnthony Thornton, whose fresh· gory, since he is a productive
man year produced 75 comple· runner. Gregory's mobility is
!ions of 180 passes for 949 yards. slowed by leg and ankle injuries

received in a June 2 motorcycle
accident at Ironton, Ohio.
Gregory completed 17 of 37
passes for 209 yards and one
touchdown with one interception
in the rainy game at Morehead.
Like Thornton, the Marshall
quarterback has an array of top
receivers on hand ..:. !our of the
top live on last year's team which
produced more than 5,200 yards
passing.
"Our offensive line is bigger
and stronger than last year and
our backs are working hard,"

Marshall coach George Chaump
said . "John Gregory needs some
work but he did real well for not
having started a game in nearly
two yea rs and for having to start
this game ln the rain."
Those !our receivers of a year
caught all of Marshall's passes in
the opener - split end Mike
Barber 8 for 105 yards, tight end
Sean Doctor six for 62, flanker
Bruce Hammond · 2 for 35 and
tailback Ron Darby 1 for 7.
Darby ran the ball 35 times for
154 yards.

Overwll

W LT
0 10

to

MlaOhloStale

.

0 00

II 10

0 ItO

0 00

0 418
0 00

8 ID
0 10

WIKOIIIIn

It 0 0

0 I0

0 tO

0 I0

hJdu~e

IIIIMis.

...

Nol1hwe~ ter 11

NEW YORK l UP I) -TheUnttedPreu
Board ol ·c .aehel Tep 20

~nter•Uo ...

eolleae

loothall nat~t~p, with I'I!COn:l ad
nr•·place' vatea In pWI!IIIh..es. total
pelntll (baRd on 15 points for lnl place.
14 r.r ~~emnd, etc.), utd p~Mon

raaWnr-

........ Carroll

DeaiNa a1 Ram ... a8rtiM)' (Va)
~e.,.

'hllliP&amp;)atO--.

M7 I

I.Ciemaon~l·ltl

t.OklaMma (G-tl)
S.UCLA ( 1·1) ~I)

I.S.••ernc.J {l·t)
1.AIIbllm (I ..I
lGeol'lla(l-t)
~.~.......... 9L (t·l) (I)
li.MI ...... IN)
II.NM 111 U.me (H)
II.PhrNaltate Cf.IJ
1LWeM VIral ... ( l-IJ
lt.Midll.- Male 1... 1
ll.&amp;oua CaroU• U·l)

...

......., ...,
(

511 II
11

na

383 ,

..,,.
Mil 141

II:Zit
11'711
117 I

'" '

Itt 15

111 18
lilt

...

""
•""•

n.Peanlhte (... 1

IUo•(t-l)

.......

•.'" .'

r•lnh
11~ 5

l.Miaml (1·1) 1!11
t.Nelntk.n ('l-0) ~15)

li.S)'IIaiR (I-G)

• .rtt ... rp 11·1)
~.

Oilier• l'l!eetvi•l nks: Aria••· Ar-

k . . . . ,.......

a.-u, Jacn••· Ollio

(a)-ala'tJMMI

T1'8118adions

·-..."......................
..._...,ll'totpo-•.

-lood
Pitt........, ..................
- ....... ,..,.,.
..

. . . . . . . . if ........ " ' - '....

IUAlo• _ _ ..

-·

r. Cr.- I&lt;&gt;M) -II . . . _ . ...

Tonight's games
Pt. Pleasant at Gallipolis
Waverly at Athens
Circleville at Jackson
Logan at Miami Trace
Parkersburg at Marietta
Warren at Fort Fry
Meigs at Trimble
Wellston at Belpre
Coal Grove at Wheelersburg
Huntington High - Open
Eastern at Wahama
Green at Hannan Trace
Waterford at Kyger Creek
Southeastern at North Galila
Oak Hill at Rock Hill
Huntington Ross at Southern
Southwestern at Alexander
Vinson at Symmes Valley

lllate, 011......,. llltate, TaM, Taa.
-'Alii, w.-1...••
,..,.
........

w•l ...••

&amp;la&amp;e,

W"o...., aa .We• (Mich)

C'.e•tlll l&amp;lte ai \II rill nla ka&amp;e
...........oft... {I&lt;Y~
wu.na.at•atMic:Wp11Ted

OUSTS CONNORS - Andre
Agassl raises his arms In
victory after defeating Jimmy
Connors In stral ght sets (6-2,
7·6 and 6-1) to advance to the
semifinals of the U.S. Open
Thursday In New York. (UPI)

. WANTED
DOCKMASTER FOR
OALUPOUS BOAT CLUB
.....,_ ... wlfl ..•50
, ........ $1.GOO.OO -tltly.

..,,rrl.ce.lllltllt""'*
IOU hltn Ave.
• 'lilt; Oltlt
614-444-0175

A*hr.w.tsw•

SALES • SERVICE • TESTING
•oWN &amp; SNOUFFEI
FilE &amp; SAfE1Y

EQUIPIIINT
'
172 North Second Ava.
Middleport, Ohio 45 760

PH. 16141992-7075
Gary SnouHtr- 992-7446

~

struck aut seven and wa Iked none
over eight innings.
Greg Caderet pitched twothirds of an inning before Dennis
Eckersley got one alit for his
major ieague·lead!ng 39th save.
Bret Saberhagen, 13·14, was the
loser.
Elsewhere, New York tripped
Detroit 7-4 in 10 innings and
California defeated Texas 4·3.
In the National League, it was:
St. Louis 1, · Philadelphia 0;
Montreal 5, Pittsburgh 4; New
York 13, Chicago 6; Cincinnati 2,
San Diego 1; Houston 2, Los
Angeles 1; and San Francisco 3,
Atlanta 2.
Yankee~~ 7, Tigers 4
At New York, pinch hitter Gary
Ward cracked a three-run homer
in the lOth inning to move the
Yankees within 4 1-2 games of
first·place Boston in the Ameri·
can League East. The Tigers fell
11·2 games behind the Red Sox.
With two out in the lOth, Don

Mattingly doubled off Mike Hen·
neman, 8·5, and Guillermo Her·
nandez relieved. Dave Winfield
was intentionally walked before
Ward, batting !or Ken ·Phelps,
homered to left field to make a
winner of Hipolito Pena, 1·1.
Angels 4, Rangers 3
At Arlington, Texas, Mike Witt
allowed six hits over eight
Innings and Brian Downing
broke an eighth· inning tie with an
RBI double, lifting California.
Witt,. 13·12, struck out none and
walked two. He walked Steve
Buechele leading off the ninth,
Bob Brower pinch ran ·and Cecil
Espy sacrificed. Witt fielded the
bunt and threw wildly to first lor
an error, . leaving runners on
second and third.
Bryan Harvey relieved and
struck out Jim Sundberg, got
Jerry Browne to pop out and
Oddibe McDowell to strike out
looking tor jl!s 16th save. Mitch
Williams. 2·6, was the loser.

Bellevue hex continues

By FREDERICK WATERMAN
predicted a 6·3, 6·3, 6·3 victory.
UPI Sports Writer
"He made a mistake there,
NEW YORK (UP!) - From which I will remember the next
the stage he most wanted, Andre time we play." Connors said
Agassi announced by word and tersely.
deed he is ready to become the
Agassi, pounding his tOi&gt;'SPin
leading man in American tennis. forehand and two·handed back·
The l8·year·old showman from
hand from behind t.he baseline,
Las Vegas, Nev . earned a berth ran Connors from corner to
ln the semifinals of the U.S. Open corner. The veteran's counter·
by dispatching 36·year·oid punc)l!ng style could not stand up
Jimmy Connors 6·2, 7·6 (8·6), 6-1 · to the youngster's power and the
Thursday night, then said, "I Joss of the second·sel tiebreaker
think I'm ready to lead the show. effectively decided the match.
"I think I've proven to a lot at
" If lt was 1·1, he might have
people I'm ready to· handle the been more nervous ," said Conresponsibility," said the teenors. But the five· time . Open
nager, who becomes the young. champion committed an un·
est men's semifinalist since the forced error on his forehand and
Open era began in 1968.
hit a backhand service return
long to give his opponent the set
The match was the first·ever
between the two. Connors, and a 2-0 lead.
seeded sixth, was irritated by
On Saturday, Agassi will play
Agassi telling he had privately
defending champion Ivan Lend!
in the semifinals and will be he
first seeded opponent faced by
the world's No. l player. The
other semifinal pairs No. 2 Mats
Wilander against unseeded
Darren Cahill. The Australian
'becomes the lowest·ranked man
since · r973 to reach the
semifinals.
. Agassi, the winner of six
tournaments this year, won hls
23rd consecutive tournament
match.
"I played all year just to peak
at this tournament ," saidAgassi,
who has won his last 23 matches .
"!was going out there tooutrally
him. As the match went on, I
started picking up the pace."

o ot

1

place Minnesota in the American
League West. That matches
Oakland's largest advantage of
the season. The A's also topped
the division by 11 games on June
4.
Young, 9·8, had yielded just
two singles before allowing Jose
Tartabull's homer to spoil his
shutout bid.
Young gave up a hit to Kevin
Seltzer in the first, but Seltzer
was out on a pick·offplay. Young
then retired the nextlObatterson
three strikeouts and seven groun·
douts, ·bU I didll't feel he was
pitching well.
" Early on I felt I was strug·
gling," Young said. "! wasn't
pitching that good, but there are
times you 've got to get by the
first few innings."
Tartabuli hit ihe first pitch to
him in the eighth inning for his
21st homer. He was the only
Kansas City batter to get as far
as second base off Young. Young

Connors ousted from
U. So Open tourney

0"
'018..
OCHI

Mlchlpn St

r ..m

ama•••

.'

MouN Union

0 00

o eo

, 010
• 00

Marietta

W LT

Loa

Mltml at Ollllhoma Sla&amp;e 1•1
Ohio Uaher-yM Mar.all (n~
WMitU MIIN!pn ai Telella (a)
Bella eo•~

•

0 01

Cap IIIII

SaaDieao

Ret ....

W LT

Balll-Wal .. ee

HelldkrJ

New t'orkal Monlre ... alfhl
Hou••n aa Su FrandM:o
Atlanta • San Dlep, •IP.
Chtcln...a l .a .... Anpfs, niP.

•

Kutstate
W•teraMicb
Olllo U•h'
Bowlla1 Green
CeftlrUMich
Ml.nl

1t " .5'12 'JI II .5. S
1~ M .US
1~,
'71 . . .111 •

Qndallltl (olukaoa II,.)

••

I DO
I SO
lOI ' tOO
0 0 II
I 00
t IG
I DO
ltOO 088
0 DO
0 10
0 ..
0 10
0 It
0 10
Tok!do
010
flO
OHIO CONFERENCE
Cetlerence OVerall

Euter. MJcll

.,..,

Nrw Vork

Overall

W LT · W LT

.U.IISt.. e

An plea tMU'Uaft J.l), If: IS p.m.
Bontlo• {lllepper 11-4) at San
FrandKo (a.tlll!'htl11-l),lt:H p.m .
Satlll'dlf''• Games
Chi~ ... .a sa. Louts
PlllladelpNa at Plt.tlbu 'Ill, nl ....

Berry s World

Ohio College
Oh lo Cnlte1e
Foolball Reoonl"

(DunneJ.11l. 1:11111.m.
New York (FeriiUida 8-lt) at
Molireal (•o lrru 1-t), 1:15 p.m.
llltcaao (Sclllral4 ~Ill .a St. Lou6a
(Mathewsl-1). 1: ~~ p.tn.
"uanta tdlmeon l·il M s .. Dleao
(Jone~~ f-l!},ll:ts p.m.

.

"""

Fru Win, WlJ. - l'JIIMI,OIO Grelller .
Mllwa1llee Open
Portlu4, Ore. - S!!UIO Cellalar
O.e-PI11 0.11 O.ample•hlp
Tentlls
New Vorl- U.S. Open
l'.::Wtnr
San Dlero- America'!I Cup

Sliard!Q''II Gam a

New York 13, Clllcqo 1
Montnlall, Pitta rib 4
St Loiii11I, Phlllltelpllla 0
cfncln•U 2, San Dlep I
Hou!&amp;oa J, LH MpiH I
S.. FrUJI!bccl 1, Atlanta J
FriU,'• Gamftl
Phlkl.l!lphla tllet.. I -I I at Plttllhu lfh

Murray rightly fears that such
views might "then become the
baseline from which other, more
extreme measures to segregate
the underclass could be contem·
pia ted." The danger Is certainly
real, butlt is not the only possible
outcome of such a policy.

Mt...-elahlll
AUutte CMy, N.ol . - Mlki! Tinley vs.
Jolll! ct-liloDN

Cll!\'eland .. BMion

'nllllndQ''~

.

Clt\'elaad .. Bosioa, 1:35 p.m.
TorGIIIIo at BaJUmol"t!, II: 05 p.m.
Min••• M Cblcqo, 8: 30 p.m.
Oaldud .. llaa•• Clly, 11:35 p.m.
Seattle .. MIIMIUkee, 8:3$ p,m ,
Caltl•rnla at THU, 8:3$ p.m .
N aUoll&amp;l I.e ape
1'111Wi!lplllaat PIUitM!qh, 7:05p.m,
New l'orkat Monb'f!IJ, 7: 35p.m.
Dllc.,o .u St. LGult, 8:31 p.m.
AU..III at Sa.a Dle10, 10:15 p.m.
Clncla-*111&amp; La11 As piN, tlt:3:1 p.m.
•oulfon at San Fr~~ndlco, 10:35 p.m.
BulnJ
I• Nor Welterwelafl•
Atlanu~ CUy, N.d. - 8•al Mamby va.
MlclcyWard

8),JI:Up.m.

s.n Francltco

effect be treated as wards ·of the

housing, and other social servl·
ces - much as we currently do
for American Indians who live on
reservations.
"And so we will have arrived in
the brave new world of custodial
democracy, in which a subs tan·
t!al portion of our population,
neither convicted as criminal nor
adjudged to be insane, will In

23-15. As it turned out, that was
the only victory bagged by the
Bobcats last season.
Marshall, 10·5 last year, has
rung up victory No.1 already this
year, while Ohio is playing its
first game. The Thundering Herd
overcame a slow start at More·
head State to post a 30·17 triumph
last Saturday night.
.
Besides last year's satisfying
performance, the Bobcats hoast
a whopping lead in the Marshal!
series dating back to 1900 - 28
triumphs, nine losses and six

. By United Press International
The Oakland Athletics, who
have dominated the American
League West all foeason, have
found another source of strength
to rely on down the stretch.
Curt Young, outrighted to the
minor leagues two months ago,
continued to shine by yielding
four hits over eight in.nings
Thursday night to pace Oakland
to a 5·1 victory over the Kansas
City Royals .
Young, outrlghted to Triple·A
Tacoma. July 19, rejoined the
club in August and since then is
3·1 with a 2.03 ERA.
"I'm just trying to work myself
back in, after the trouble I've had
and do something good the last
couple of months," Young said.
Young faced the minimum 22
batters through 7 1·3 innings to
help Oakland win Its first game in
seven tries this year against
Kansas City and improve the A's
lead to 11 games over second·

Clncln•U

Is the Custodial State next?___
wi_llia_m_Rus_h_er
Beginning with the days of
Lyndon Johnson's Great Society,
one of the deepest divisions of
opinion between liberals and
conservatives has involved the
efficacy and therefore the wis·
dom of that whole mass of
legislation that created what has
come to be known as the Welfare
State.
To liberals the problem was
obvious, and the solution was as
obvious as the problem. Owing to
economic depriVation (they
argued), certain groups of people
In this country failed to get a
decent education, failed even to
receive adequate nourishment,
and as a result lacked both the
motivation and the know·how to
compete for jobs on an equal
footing with other Americans.
Their children, growing up in the
same underprivileged circum·
stances, simply repeated their
parents' failure. It was a vicious
circle.
The solution, liberals insisted,
was to break the circle: to make
sure that the children of the poor
received adequate nourishment
and decent eductlons, and (no
small point) to make very
certain, if . they were black or
Hispanic or members of some
other group that had hlatorlcally
suffered from dlscrbblnatton,
that no obstacles based on race,
color, sex, or gender were
allowed to stand in their way.
Conservative doubts were dis·
missed aa thin excuses 'for
opposition based on mere bigo.
try. Hundreds of billions of
dollars were poured Into all sorts
of programs aimed at feed.lng,
educating, training, motivating,
and just plain supporting the

Page 3

Oakland continues march toward crown

HOUIIon

WJfaT DoYoU GaLL
a HaWK Wf1o
.

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio University opens 1988 gri~ campaign at Marshall

. Friday. September 9, 1988

WASHINGTON- I! you have a
home mortgage, you probably
think that you know ·which bank
pulls the strings. Chances are,
you're wrong.
A growing number of consu·
mers are startled to learn that
the mortgages they got from
their friendly local banks have
been scattered across the coun·
try lor servicing. · A faceless
bl!nker in a nameless metropolis
is calling the shots on the money
you borrowed from your hometown lender.
Mortgage servicing includes
collecting payments, assessing
penalties , adjusting Interest
rates, (!! it is an adjustable-rate
mortgage) and other detalls. It is
likely that the bank where you
' got your mortgage has farmed
your account out to another
institution to service lt. The
Mortgage Bankers' Association

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Agassl had never had won a'
match at the Open bef~re this
year. losing twice in Hie first
round. Connors, appearing in a
record·tylng 102nd singles, has
:won 88 matches, more than any
other man. He was seeking his
14th· trlp to the sem!llnals.
Agassi expected some form of
gamesmanship from Connors,
tennis' one·time bad hoy.
"I thought he'd try beating me
mentally, rather then just pound·
!ng away at me," said the
teenager of his Idol.
''I always said I wanted to play
Jimmy Connors before he re·
tired. I couldn't ask lor a better
surroundings."

By·GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS Ohio high
school football notes from around.
the state:
_ Maybe Huron should consider
dropping Bellevue from its foot·
ball schedule. The Tigers. now
under new coach Tony Legando,
.dropped their eighth consecutive
season's opener to the Redmen
Friday night, 7·6. Ben Dennis'
second·quarter PAT provided
the winning margin. In the last
seven years and one game,
Huron has a 52·22 record, with
eight of those losses to Bellevue.
A year ago, Huron lost to
. Bellevue 34·0, then won its next
nine games to make the playoffs .
The open!~g week of the high
school. football season was .not a
. good one for the coaching Snively
brothers - Terry at Hannibal
River and John at Richwood
North Union. Terry's River team
came close to snapping the
23·game winning streak of
L!nsly, W. Va., the longest in the
Mountaineer State, before bow·
!ng 21·18. Brother John's North
Union club led Marion Elgin 12·0
after three quarters only to lose
· 14-12. Better nights for hath lie
,
ahead.
Cambridge junior Darin Ford,
who figured to be one of the top
backs in the state this season,
didn't disappoint in the season's
opener. Ford, a 5·foot·10, 185·
pounder, accounted for 268 total
vards and 'scored four touch·
downs In the Bobcats' 26·21 win
over Marietta. Ford rushed for
148 yards ln 15 tries, caught two
passes for 70 yards, returned two
punts foP 28 yards and a pass
Interception 22 yards. His 46·
yard TD run in the fourth quarter
decided the outcome.
Senior tailback Monte Cozzens
ran for 160 yards and three
touchdowns to lead Westerville
North to a 28·9 decision over
Chillicothe Friday night. Cozzens
had first half TD runs of 9 and 10
yards and broke open a 13·9 game
with a 53· yard run with just 1:40
left to play. The regular season
loss for Chillicothe was its first
since, a 14·8 defeat at the hands of
North in 1986.
Junior Eric Bartley. raced 50
yards for a touchdown with 5:23
to play to lift Ashland toa 10·7 win
over Galion Friday night. The
140·pound Bartley finished the

night with 144 yards on 27 carries.
St. Marys Memorial's Scott
Schlosser rushed for 239 yards
and five touchdowns to lead the
Roughr!ders to an opening 49·21
victory over Sidney. Schlosser's
ll·yard TD run with 23 seconds
left in the half broke a 21·21 tie
and the 'Riders scored 21 unans·
wered points in the second halt:
Schlosser also had TD runs of 6,
12, 5 and 17 yards.
Robert Smith, · Euclid's out·
standing junior running back,
ran for 189 yards and a pair of
touchdowns in just 13 carries in
the Panthers' 35·12 victory over
Cleveland Heights Friday night.
Beallsville. whose 13·12 loss to
Bridgeport 'a ·year ago was Its
only blemish and cost the Blue
Devils a spot in the Division V
playoffs, avenged that defeat
with a 7·0 victory Saturday night
at Bridgeport.
Brent Meredith rushed for 209
yards and three touchdowns to
pace Perrysburg to a 35·0 win
over Toledo Rogers. Meredith
scored on runs of 45, 11 and 46
yards.
Junior Mike Will scored five
touchdowns and 32 points, hath
tying school records, in leading
Sandusky St. Mary's to a 34·7 win
over Norwalk St. Paul Saturday
night. Wlli's TDs came on a
58·yard punt return, a 16·yard
pass reception and runs of 23, 5
and 27 yards.
Columbus Academy ran its
regular·season win streak to 28
Friday night with a 6·3 win over
Columbus Hartley. Fullback ·
Mike Morosky ran 48 yards in the
second quarter for the onlv
touchdown of the game. After
Mike Dixon's 32-yard field goal
cut the margin to 6·3 midway
through the fourth quarter. the
defending Division IV champ
Vikings controlled the ball nearly
the rest of the way before turning
it over on downs inside the
Hartley 10 with less than a
minute to play .

The Daily Sentinel

'

(USPS 1111-Nil

ADlvlalon of Multlmedla,-lnc.
Publlshed every aft ernoon , Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St. , Po.
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
llshlng CompanyiMuJtlmedla. Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. Se·
cond class postage patd at Pomeroy .

Ohio.

Member: United Press International,

Thl• *eek'• Speola
FIIDA'I SEPTUI•I 9TH

AU-YOU·CAN·EAT SPAGHEm DINNER ____....................... '3.99
Al·fou.C...IIIlp"lhotlllootthlloolln'"' Z.ly -.lito Sou.., Sonoolwith Your

Inland Dally Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
AdvertiSing Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, , 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.

POS'IMASTER: Send ad~ess changes
IO The Dolly Seoollnel, Ill Court St,

Cloolao of &amp;orNe IIHII or ollol loR •ol• Cri&amp;py To~tooiScohoi w~h tht Dr•llnt of
, .., Chalet.
CHILD'S PORTION .............................................. ., ....... '2.29
lOur Chills PortlconiiSoroool wMho lotl•d• Chcolclof Colo Slow, Mac•oni Sottodor
Pollio Solool.)

By C&amp;rrler or Mot_. Route
One Week .... ............. .. ................ $1.40

SUNDAY1 SEPIEIIIEI 1 IYH

One Year ............... .......... ........ $72.80

AU·YOU·c:AN-EAT FMaY STYLE CHICKEN DINNER--····'" '4.39

SINGLE COPY
PRICE
l&gt;aily ...................... ............. 25 Cents

'"Coo

T•IJ Moo
oa• Clti••IAI
loll lonool wMh Matlwol-1• I OMoloOnty, llooo•Nool _ . _ ........._ A Mctllllllloollolwon... -illwtllt ....,, ............. C-'1-. or DtcoH-o4 loth frodolr
1-0111 to lid! lrlnk • Hot Too ..., lo ldothutoll•
CHILD'S PORnON ................................................ ...... . •2.113
NEW HOURS: OPEN 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK

=-=·!ill
nfC!I4rnter

!Cerhaug~·.a
Wil7

Pomeroy, Ohio 457m.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

one Month ...... ......... ..... ..... ........ $6.10

su'bscrlbers not deslr1fl&amp; to pay Ihe car·
rler may remit In advance direct to
The Daily Sentinel on 13, &amp;or 12 month
bull. CredJt will be given carrier each
week.

No eublcrtptlons by mall permitted In
areat where home carrier eervtce Is
IVIIpable.

Mall Suloo&lt;rtpllono
IMide Melp Coull&amp;y

13 w....................................... l19.2t
116 Weel&lt;o ................. ................. 137. 96
52 w..u .................................. 171.36
Oollol•• Metp Coaolr
13 .....
120.80
116 ....... ................................ $10.30
52 WHb .................................. I7UO
0

WEGNI
II

)•

•

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

')

.,

�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Logan, Meigs and Oak Hill
·· picked as pre-season champs
•.

Logan. Meigs and Oak Hill coaches handed their remaining
were picked to win theSo4theast· ·vote to Athens.
ern Ohio League, Tri·Valley
Area media gave Meigs six out
Conference and Southern Valley of a possible 15 votes to take the
Athletic Conference, respec - TVC , while the league's passed
Uvely by coaches and sports four of their eight first-place
media members In south!'astern votes to Nelsonvllle·York. Area
Ohio In a poll conducted by media listed Belpre second (four
telephone and mall between Aug, votes), N. Y third (four votes)
26 and Saturday, Sept. 3.
and Wellston fourth (one vote).
To win the SEOAL, Logan Theconference'schlefsgavetwo
received 14 of 17 possible votes votes to Belpre to finish second,
!rom the SEOAL-speciflc media. one vote to Wellston to claim
16 of 22 possible votes from area third and one vote to Meigs to
media and live of six possible come In fourth.
votes from SEOAL coaches. The
Oak Hill, a unanimous pick to
SEOAL media gave Athens (wo take the SVAC crown, took 16 of
votes to place and Warren Local 17 votes between the area media
one vote to show. Thea rea media and the SVAC's coaches, with the
gave Athens four votes to take loneothervotebeingcastbyarea
second, Gallla Academy one to media to Hannan Trace, picked
come in third and Warren L'ocal to come In third. Oak Hill took all
one to finish fourth. SEOAL of the coacnes' six picks.

Rio Grande runners
showing improvement
The men's and women's cross
country teams at Rio Grande
College/ Community College
may ha ve finished last In the
Marshall Invitational Sept. 3, but
"tremendous" improvement by
nearly all runners left Coach Bob
Willey encouraged.
" We saw some positive
· things ," Willey remarked.
"Overa ll, our people. race well."
The men finished the five-mile
course fifth in a field of five
sc hools with 122 points. The other
sc hools, in aider, were West ·
Virginia University, 21 points:
Marshall, 55; Glenville State, 83;
and Morehead State, 88. The
women runners ended fifth with
124 po:nts. Finishing In the
women' s race were Eastern
· Kentucky University, 25: Mar·
shall, 43; Glenville State. 97: and
Morehead State, 98.
Individual results saw · junior
Troy Cochran finish first for Rio
Grande at 27:26. Others, In order
of finish, were Tim Warnock,
27: 10; Bob Fritz, 27: 55; Tony
' Fatica; 28: 59; James Peck,
29: 10; Doug Horne, 28: 40; Vince
Fatica, 30:27. Among the women.

Friday, September 9. 1988

Pomaoy-Middleport, Ohio

seniorMaryDowlerflnlshedflrst
at 19:23; Atsuko Yamazaki,
24:17: Gina Kllchenman, 26:50;
and Paula Sydenstrlcker, 28:02.
Willey noted that for the
veterans who had raced at
Marshall In 1987, improvement
was seen in their limes. Dowler
was eighth to finish In the
womep'.s race. having been 15th'
at last year's event. Kllchenmait
cut her previous lime at the
invitational by three minutes, the
coach added.
"We were pleased to see how
her (Dowler's) time had im·
proved so much," Willey
commented.
The teams . were to travel to
Wittenberg University, Spring·
field , tnday for an Invitational.
The women were to run at 3:30
p.m. and the men at 4.
Willey said that compared to
the regional powerhouses the
teams faced at Marshall, compe·
titian at Wittenberg should be
more on Rio Grande's level.
Other teams taking part will be
Cedarville, Defiance, Ohio
Northern, Musklngum, Ohio
Wesleyan and Denison.

•

Cards edge Phils; Reds nip Padres, 2-l

'

By The Bend

By LEN HOCHBERG
UPI Sports Writer
The St. Louts Cardinals, known
for speed, defense and a lack of
power hitting, are making a
late·season pitch to salvage a
disappointing year.
Jose DeLeon shut out Montreal
Tuesday; Joe Magrane blanked
Philadelphia Wednesday; and
Larry McWIIllams, Ken Dayley
and Todd Worrell Thursday night
combined on a five-hitter In a 1·0
victory over the Phllltes .
.
The Cardinals are rkllng a
scoreless streak of 29 Innings,
their most stnce a 32·1nnlng
streak In Sept. 1973.
And St. Louis has turned the
trick after trading two starters
last month. John Tudor was the
staff's ace and Bob Forsch was
tied for the team-lead In victories
when they were dealt to Los
Angeles and ~ouston,
respectively.
The Cardinals, 67-73, who real·
!zed early In the season they
weren't going to defend their
National League pennant, are
OUT AT THIRD - The Reds' Nick Esasky,
lltird sacker Tim Flannery made the putout
within a 1 1·2 games of the
bottom, Is out at lltlrd as hohied for lite extra base
during the second Inning of Thursday night's
fourth· place Chicago Cubs.
on teammate Ron Oesler's single, but Padres'
game In San Diego. The Reds won 2-1. (UPI)
And second or third place Isn't
entirely out of reach.
''This shows what this team Is
"It just goes to show you what Cardinals Manager Whitey Her· allowed eight hlts In his second
complete game.
made out of,'' Worrell said. ' 'We we've got underneath," Worrell zog said .
Reds 2, Padres 1
Sounds like the same old
were In the cellar earlier In the said. "Our two best pitchers
At
San
Diego, Jose Rljo, 12·8,
year. We still can get to .500. We leave and then everybody else Cardinals .
and
two
relievers
combined on a
Elsewhere In the National
stlll play every one of the teams · comes through. It bodes well."
ahead or us, and I think we can
St. Louts scored In the !lith orr League, Houston nipped Los four-hitter , with · John Franco
get to second place.
Kevin Gross, 11·13. With the Angeles 2·1, San · Francisco earning his league-leading 32nd
"If we do that, that would be bases full and a 3·2 count on Ozzle stopped Atlanta 3·2, Cincinnati save. Ed Whitson, 12·9, yielded a
amazing considering all the Smith, the shortstop checked his shaded San Diego 2·1, Montreal run In the first and his sixth·
things that have happened to us swing to walk In a run. Phlladel· edged Plttsbugh 5-4 and New Inning error led to Cincinnati's
second score.
'
this year."
phla turned to third base umpire York ripped Chicago 13·6.
Expos
5,
Pirates
4
In
the
American
League,
it
McWilliams took the mound lit Steve Rlppley, who denied the
At Pittsburgh, Tim Wallach
was: New York 7, Detroit 41n 10
search of his first win since May appeaL
went
.J for 4 and had three RBI,
31. And he was thinking or more
"It's a tough way to lose a Innings; Oakland 5, Kansas City
Including
the winner with an
than just himself.
game when the umpire blows a 1; and California 4, Texas 3.
eighth-Inning double off Je!!
Astros 2, Dodgers I
"I was aware of II the whole call," Ph lilies Manager Lee Ella
At Los Angeles, Nolan Ryan, Robinson, 9·4. Pascual Perez,
time," McWIIllams said of the said. "We didn't hit, but we
shu'ibut streak. "I saw a good should still be playing zero-zero.. 11·11, fired a five-hitter to help 10-6, won for the first time in five
game !Wednesday) night, and Threre' s no doubt In my mind he Houston move within five games starts and Tim Burke notched his
of West-leading Los Angeles. eighth save.
saw that streak of shutout swung."
·
Mets 13, Cubs 6
Innings building. I didn't want to
"Either I swung or I didn't, " Buddy Bell delivered an RBI
.
·At
Chicago,
Howard Johnson
single
off
John
Tudor,
S.8.,.to
snap
.
blow it ."
Smith said. "There's no use
went
5
for
5
With
a three-run
a
J.l
tie
In
the
eighth.,
McWilliams, 5·6, didn't blow It getting bent out of shape either
home
run.
oneofNewYork'sfour
Giants 3, Braves 2
through 6 1·3 iimlngs, though way. There's no sense making a
At San Francisco, Will Clark homers. Darryl Strawberry hit
Dayley Inherited a first -and· big deal out of II."
second situation and Induced
St. Louts managed only six homered and Brett Butler went 4 his league-leading 33rd homer
pinch hitter Jeff Russell to line hits, but had opportunities to for 4 with three doubles as San and Gregg Jefferies and Lenny
Francisco stopped a six-game Dykstra also connected as part of
Into a double play. Worrell threw score: Four men reached third .
losing
skid. Don Robinson, 6-4, a 20·hlt attack.
two Innings for his 28th save.
"We couldn't get a clutch hit,"

'•

'
'
,

Lyons. who will discuss team
defense and building a defense,
played basketball at Kent Stale
Universly, later servi ng as an
assistant coach at Kent and
/ Yo ungstown State Universltv.
•· Considered one of the bes t
defensive coaches in the nat ion,
Lyons' Ashland squad defeated
' collegiate powerhouses Ken·
lucky Wesleyan and Souther.n
', Indiana last season on ther wav
to the NCAA Division ii
tournament.

Montgomery's Trlway team
captured Its regional tournament
earlier this year and was one ·of
the final four teams In the state
basketball tourney. Montgomery
was an assistant coach at Walsh
College until 1983 when he
assumed the coaching job at
Trtway, where he has compiled
an 85·31 record. He will discuss
the 1·2·2 passing game offehse
and conduct drills on the concept.
Lawhorn Is scheduled to speak
on matchup defense and offer
drills on the subject, while
Assistant Coach Earl Thomas
will conduct drills on Improving
defense. Assistant Coach Doug
Foote will speak on running a
break after a score and direct
drills on improvement of offense.
Members of the Redmen 1988·
89 basketball team, led by
co-captains Jimmy Kearns and
Marc Gothard, will also be on
hand for the clinic.
·'One of the things that l&gt;xcites
us is that our players wlll be on
the floor for the demonstrations
for a teaching standpoint," La·
whorn sa id. "It wlll help us to see
the players go through the things
t hat the coaches will
demons trate."
Pre-registration for the clinic
is $20 per coach and $30 at the
door. The fee includes lunch. For
more information, contact La·
whorn at Rio Grande College/Comrnunlty College, 245·5353,
extension 294, or (toll free In
Ohio) 1·800-282· 7201.

Rio kickers lose opener, 2-1
TIFFIN
Rio Gra nde 's
soccer tea m played evenly with
Heidelberg Wednesday In a non·
conference game, but fell to the
Stud ent Princes 2·1.
lt was the Rio kickers' first
game or the season and " they did
well," in the estimation of Coach
.
Phil Anderson.
"We had one weakness," And·
erson explained. "We didn't start
playing defense far enough up
the field. We have to work on
stopping people at the mid·
field ." ·
Heidelberg right wi ng Tony
Schweppe scored the team's two
·, goa ls (with 24' 14 and 6:48 re·
malnlng on the clock, respec·
tively) during the first period,
assisted on both by left wing Troy

.

•
•

•·
.,

llnduM 'II Clllcbll, .........,anti loll

.••
•

.•
•.

•

~

CHICKEN BAR·B·Q
SATURDAY, SEPT. 10
MIDDLEPORT FIRE DEPARTMENT
112 CHICKEN $400
DINNER $450

·:
•
;/

•

Wilson. Both goals were made
close to the net. Rio Grande
newcomer Willie Merrick scored
the Redmen's only goal with 6:45
left in the first perlnd. He was
assisted by Tony Daniels.
The Student Princes, coached
by Tom Bartlett, racked up 16
shots In the first period , while Rio
Grande had 14. In the second
period, both teams had eight
shots.
. 'Both teams played reasona·
bly good defense." Anderson
noted.
The Redmen will )lost Findlay
on Saturday at 2 p.m. and will
face their first Mla-Ohlo Confer·
ence encounter on Tuesday at
home, 4 . p.m. against MOC
champion Tllfln.

..

I

By GENE CADDES
Kent State hosts Akron. Ohio Oklahoma and Nebraska .
Miami, · behind tailback Bob
UPI Sports Writer
University opens Its season at
Youngstown State also faces a
Foster's 132 rushing yards.
It didn't take long for Bowling Marshall, Miami is at Oklahoma tough test in Eastern Michigan,
Cincinnati opens Its season at
Green and Toledo to paint State and Eastern Michigan the defending MAC ch~mplon.
Boston College, a 34·7 loser to
themselves into a corner. •
plays at Youngstown State. Cen· The Hurons came back from a
Sou'thern Cal last week.
Although It's only week two of tral Michigan is idle.
17-3 ha'lfllme deficit to beat
the college football season, both
"I still feel good about our
the Falcons and Rockets face, at · team," said Bowling Green
the least, "key" games Saturday Coach Moe Ankney. "We're not
as they try to bounce back from In the class of West VIrginia right
.•
opening week losses.
now , but I think the effort was
For Bowling Green, battered there. We just got off to a bad
62·14 last Saturday at West start.
Virginia, the question Is how
"We will bounce back real
much confidence was lost in such well," Ankney added. "We don't
defeat. Toledo, a 13·31oseratBall have any serious Injuries. I think
State, must win to avoid early our kids learned a lot. We had a
•--·----·...-· IN MEIGS COUNTY ·-----~-,
,f
elimination In the Mid-American lot of young guys out there."
Conference championship race.
It won't be easy. The Ball State
I
Both have difficult assignments. defense held Toledo to just 143
I
BG makes Its first conference total yards last Saturday. A
I
start when It entertains Ball victory for the Cardinals would
I
State In the MAC's television give them their first 2·0 MAC
I
game. Toledo tries to rebound at start In 10 years.
I
Offer Good On c..l) T111nNCtlon1
Western Michigan overcame
I
home In a night game against
I
Western Michigan, WhiCh opened an 11·0 Wisconsin lead and the
Thl1 Coupon R~~quired
I
with a 24·14 win at Wisconsin last absence of starting quarterback
EXPIRES SEPT. 30, 1988
.I
Saturday.
Tony Kimbrough In beating the
The rest of the MAC's teams Badgers.
~~·-·-.,.·-------=---~---...-~----J
play non-conference games.
Toledo, with one league loss
already, can ill-afford a second
defeat so early In the MAC·
season.
W.VA. 1·100-oll3·4419
The Akron-Kent State game
OliO 1-100-423·4399
matches a pair of northeastern
Qualty #1 and
Eight teams from the Trl Ohio rivals.
Kent
State,
one
of
the
favorites
Valley Conference vied !or first
Q. .ty 12 Haatl• OH
place In a golf match at Forest to win the MAC title, opened with
Hills Golf Club with the Belpre a 34·3 win over Youngstown State
Golden Eagles capturing the top · last week behind sophomore
spot. Belpre finished the course quarterback Patrick Young. Ak·
ron dropped a 7·6 decision at
with a total score of 164.
Behind the Eagles, the Trimble Northern Illinois.'
Young, who missed last season
team and VInton County posted
scores of 173 each, Federal due to injury, rushed for 172
Hocking came In with 183, Miller yards against YSU, with touch·
was fifth at 185, Wellston sixth down runs of 70 and 81 yards.
Marshall, which beat More·
with 186, Meigs also posted a 186
head
State30·171n Its opener, was
.and Nelsonville York had a score
Ohio
U's only victim In 1987, the
'of 189.
Auto .. PB. PS, to~per, running boards, 61,000
Bobcats
winning 23·15 at Athens.
Meigs' low scorers In the
Miami,
which
dropped
a
24·17
miles.
6 cyl., auto.
match were Scott Barton at 40
decision
at
Eastern
Michigan
a
and Jamey Little with 44.
Total league points to date has week ago, faces perhaps the
Belpre with 21, VInton County-14, toughest assignment of any of the
Long bed, auto.,
PS. rebuilt 35.
Trtmble-14, Federal Hocking·13, MAC teams In Its · game at
Metgs-9, Nelsonville· York·6, Oklahoma State. The Cowboys
have 12 starters back from last
Mlller-4.5 and Wellston-2.5.
The next TVC match will be year's 10·2 teain that lost only to
2 Dr., runs good, PB, PS.
•
hosted by the N·Y Buckeyes at
the Ohio University course on
Sept. 12. On Sept. 14, the
Marauders will meet Gallla
4 Dr., runs c(ood, stand.
Academy at the Jaymar course
and then will go against Wahama
at Riverside on Sept. 15.

•.

The cafeteria menus for
schools of the Eastern and Meigs
Local School Districts for the
week of Sept.12,are announced:
Eastern
Monday: hog dog, sauce, peas,
fruit, milk.
Tuesday: tuna salad sandwich,
tater tots, fruit, milk.
Wednesday: spaghetti; cheese,
garlic bread, butter, green
beans. fruit, milk.
Thursday: grilled cheese,
stewed tomatoes, relish tray,
fruit, mill&lt;.

BUILILE OIL COMPANY

1979 Olds 98 ............... S1195

BLOCK PARTY
SPECIAL "ENTS
SATURDAY
SEPT. 10, 1988

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; .SERVICE

Wn T-SHIRT
CONTEST - 3:00 P.M.

204 Condor St.

Pomerov. OH.

lttlll &amp; ..........

PRETTY LEGS

OPEN MONDAY THIIU FRIDAY
IAM·I PM
IATUIIDAV I AM·1 PM ,

CONTEST - 6:30 P.M.

· ~THE

FRIENDLY
TAVERN

GRAVELY
SYSTEM

MIDDLEPOIT OHIO

\

1981 Plvmouth Horizon •••• $995

J ~Z!ut~.~~,s.~~naco •••••• 5895
1981 Plvmouth K-Car ..... 5695
2 Dr., runs g&amp;od, little rough.

1972
vw
............
·
.............
s2oo
Looks good, as Ia.

Keep in mind Monday Is the
last time couples can get Into the
new lesson classes of the Belles
and Beaus Western Square
Dance Club. If you want to learn
about how to do that smooth type
of dancing just call 985·3351,
742·2329, 992-2500, or 985·416l.
Don't loolnow, but members of
the Pomeroy Area Merchants
Assoclaton will be discussing
their annual Chrlsimas proino·
lion program when they meet at 8
a.m. Tuesday at Bank One In
Pomeroy. Can't believe It's that
time alreacty.n
You can look !or t!Je active
members of the Ladles Order of
Aerie 2171, Fraternal Order of
Eagles, at Saturday's Mlddld·
port Block Party. They will be
offering food Including baked
goods, beverages and grab bags··
and that's always fun.
Edison Hobstetter- and don't
ask "who's he?" - will be
marking a birthday anniversary
at his home on Lincoln Hill Road
Tuesda)'. And, If you'veobserved
-he's still smiling.

Friday: cooks' choice.
Meigs
Monday: toasted cheese sand·
wlch, mixed vegetables, . fruit,
,
milk.
Tuesday: pizza, said, fruit,
milk.
Wednesday : hamburger
gravy, mashed potatoes, bread
and butter. fruit, milk.
Thursday: turkey roast sand·
wlch, green beans, applesauce,
cake.
Friday: cooks' choice .

Flower show slated

WITH FlU UP OF MORE THAN 1SO
GALLONS OF HEAnNG OIL

!fa.

copywrlting, photography and
theme development.
Also students were assigned
the task of designing a yearbook
theme package In their free time
and at the end ' of the week
Sabrina and Laurie received an
honorabvle mention award In
small group theme package
development and thecommenda·
ttons ot Doug Richardson, coordl·
nator of the seminar.

· Menus announced for schools

SlO OFF

1976 Chevv C-10 ••.•••.•• S1795

You party animals...

Two Meigs High students,
Laurie Wayland and Sabrina
Wilson, ·attended the Taylor
Publishing Co. Yearbook Seminar held at West Virginia
University In Morgantown.
During the week long event,
students were instructed In var·
lous areas of yearbook produc·
tton Including graphics, layouts,

HEATING OIL CUTOMEIS

1980 Chevy C-10 ••.•••••• S3895

"

By BOB HOEFUCH
You · can just party to your
heart's content Satrurday ..
Besides
·• Mlddlepor
·• Block Party
scheduled
Saturday,
Town of
Haven Is sta~~~~
day of fun
entertainment on Saturday.
Entertainment will be pres·
ented by Fair Warning, a rock
band, 12 until 2 p.m.; gospel
singers, Narrow Way Singers.
Reflections Trio, Nichols Fam·
•, lly, 2 to 4 p.m.; Joe and Karen
Jarrell, country western, 4 to 5;
the Midnight Cloggers from 5 to
.6; theGrandSquares!rom6to7,
and the Clark Family, country,
Western, Blue Grass and gospel,
7 to 8:30 p.m.
Barbecued chicken, hot dogs,
popcorn, as sorted baked good
and pizza will be available
throughout the day and there will
be games for kids, a cake walk, a
dunking machine, speed ball, a
tractor puU for kids, and a video
Up sync for all. Arts and crafts
tables will offer interested
novelties.
Proceeds from the day will go
to the recreation building fund.

WANTED

Belpre cops top
honors in golf

Friday, Septerriber 9, 1988
6

Beat of the bend

Cage coaching clinic ·Falcons, Rockets face difficult ·assignments
set for .RGC Oct. 8 .· ·

Basketball as defined by experts will be the focus of the 1988
Rio Grande College Redman
Basketball Coaching Clinic, set
for Saturday, Oct. 'g at Lyne
Center.
Roger Lyons. head coach of the
Ashland Co llege cage team , and
Randy Montgomery fr om Woos·
ter Triway Hi gh School w.I!J be
the guest speakers. The Rio
Grande coaching sta rr will be on
hand for additional presentations
and drills.
Sign-in for the clinic begins at
8:30a.m. The day willl conclude
with the District 13 men's and
women's coaches meeting. The
meeting Includes a ll coac hes
from Gai!la , Law rence, Meigs,
Jackson, Athe.ns, Vinton. and
Hocking counties.
"It will be a gond day In which
to exchange some great Ideas on
the great game or basketball,"
Redmen Coac h John Lawh6rn
remarked.

Th·e Daily Sentinel

·'
,.
·,

i
,

'
•
•
.••
•
.•
•
•
•
•
•

Something new anddl!ferenttn
artistic display has been In·
eluded In the schedule of the
weekend flower show to be
staged at the Rutland Civic
Center.
The show will be open for
publ 1c viewing from 1 to 6 p.m. on
Saturday and from 1 to 5 p.m. on
Sunday.
As explained by Janet Bolln,
show chairman, the class Is
"Antique Artistry" with exhlbl·
tors displaying home furnishings
such as chairs, tables, and lamps
to create the feeling of a room,
and then adding floral arrang·
ments and plants as a part of the
overall beauty of the room.
"The Interest In Interiors and
furnishings to suit the personal·
lty or the occupants opens up a
whole new field of artistic endea·
vor," Mrs. Bolin, Immediate past
president of the Ohio Association
of Garden Clubs, said.
She conceded that for ·this
flower show. sponsored by the
Rutland Garden Club, jhe Ru·
tland Friendly Gardeners and
the Friends and Flowers Garden
Clubs, the exhibitors will be
strictly amateurs In the field.
The floral design will be the
'focal point - but also to be

considered will be the comblna·
tion of drapery fabric, carpeting,
wallcovertngs, furnishings, and
acessorles to create the mini·
room decor. The exhibitor may
or may not use authentic an·
tlques In the class.
The class will have four entries
and each exhibitor has one·
fourth of a circle with a diameter
of eight feet. Walls between each
fourth of the circle will be eight
feet tall.
Judging will be on a point basts
with 25 points for porportion and
scale, the relationship fo flowers.
foliage, accessories, to space and
each other, 25 points for design,
balance, dominance, rhythm,
relation of flowers, container and
accessolrles; 20 points for color;
20 points !or distinction and
expressiveness; and 10 points for
condition.
The show features 16 artistic
arrangement classes, some res·
trleted to members of the sponsoring clubs, others open to the
public and junior exhibitors,
along with 17 junior and senior
horticulture classes, and two
educational classes, "Grand· .
rna's Herbs and Everlastings"
and polson plants to be displayed
with handouts.

Grover family reunion held
The annual Grover reunion
was held recently at the Forest
Acres Park near Rutland.
Attending were Virginia
Grover McClelland, Norma
Grover, Gloria Grover, Slayton
and Bradley. Bob, Joan and
fl.obble Eads, Cindy and Aaron
K'ruatter, Louise Eads, Kristen
Dassylva; Jim, Darlene, VInce,
and Morgan Vanam,n, Rutland;
Loralue Grover Venoy, Marcia
Grover Houdashelt, Pomeroy;

Lisa Venoy, Jake and Josh
Venoy, Hartford, W. Va.
Stephanie and Nell Barrett,
Langsville; Bessie Grover Wade,
Rosalee and Linn Keller, Chuck
·and Vicky Gilkey. The Plains;
Pau I and Joan Grover. Amy,
Kim, and Michelle, New Lexlng·
ton; Roger, Patty and Amber
McClelland, Galllpolls; Kenny,
Becky, TractandAaronmanken·
ship, Debbie, Kelly, Brandson
and Mandy Delong, Uma.

PINEWOOD DERBY WINNERS- Winners Ia
the Chesler Cub Scout Pack 231, Den 6, pinewood
derby were I tor, front, Jack Beeker, fifth; Rickie
Hollon, fourth; and back, Bobby 'Keaton, third,
Robbie Reeves, second, and JaQ1es Clifford, fil'!ll.
Assisting with the derby were JoAnn Newsome,

'

Rod Newsome, and John Teaford who made the
trohles. others attending were Bob and Marrle
Reeves, Brandy Reeves, Mickle Hollon, Eric and
Chaslty Hollon, Pat, Matlltew and Kevin Keaton;
Cindy Clifford, Shawn Beeker and Cathy Clifford,
Den 6 leader.Sn,bl,Rpom:n

What's she ·got to look toward?

••

.

·.

•

TUESDAY'S BunONS AND BOWS AD
IN THE SENDNEL SHOULD HAVE READ

::~~(~:~::~~...................$300
n.

~~;:;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:;:;:9~9=2~·~5=1~7~7;;:;;;~~~~~~~
"TO GOD BE THE GLORY"

Victory Baptist Church
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

IS NOW COMPLETED

You Are Cordially Invited
To Our Dedication Services

11

]aymar ladies' scramble conducted
A two-person scramble was
played Tuesday when the Jay·
mar Tuesday Ladles Golf League
met. First place went to Sue

Burnett and Joan Childs and
second prize to Penny Compton
and Mary Bowen.

-r-------,-------------...,--------1

DANCE FOR JOY

CAIUTON SCIIOOL, SYRACUSE, OHIO

10 WEEK FALL SESSION 20 CLASSEs ••..$42
.CLASSU IIGII SIPIDIII 11, 1911

MONDAY and WEDNESDAY-7:00 P.M.-8:00P.M.
TUESDAY and THURSDAV-11:30 P.M.-8:30 P.M.

For ltgldratlon CallJOY lONG, lnstrudor - 992-3794
HANNI OWEN, Alit. llllfrudor - 992-6193
'01 YOU MAY IEGISTEI AT FIRST CUSS

SU-ER BLOUSES &amp; SLACKS ......... 1/3 OFF

WE DEEPLY APPRECIATE
· THE FARMERS BANK of POMEROY
FOR OUR FINANCING

"THANKS" ...TO THOSE WHO DONATED
MATERIAL, EQUIPMENT &amp; LABOR
•Buckeye Builders-Pomeroy, Ohio
•Valley Lumbtr-Middltport, Ohio
•Frank Zuspan Coal Co.-Clifton, W. Yo.
,eKing luHders-Middleport, Ohio
•Brtnt Manley and EmployHs-Middltport, Ohio
eCharlt Halfitld-J.U. Canstruction-LangsvHie, Olio
•3-R Construction-Langnillt, Ohio
elob Jones-General Tire
•Jay Mar Coal-Cheshire, Ohio ,
etoger ll~~tii-Langsville, Ohio
•Rtv. Art Martin-Canton, Ohio

Victory Baptist Church

"OVB PRICE - MOST BBASONABI.E"

North Second An.

Middleport, Ohio

...............
992-6772

lAC. . DIPAIYMEIIT StORE
949·2100

Sunday, September 11, 19 88
2:00 P.M.

"All Our Faithful Members"

WEDDING GOWNS, FORMALS, DRESS
MAKING, ALTERATIONS
PHONE 848·2308

J• 511111

Ann
Landers

Dear Ann Landers: I~m .25, selves. Warmth, kindness and divorcees in my ll!e. What's the ~
well-educated, pleasant-looking friendship are the most yearned· matter with you women,
but not beautiful, better than for commodities In the world. anyway?''
average figure, fairly well-read, The person who can provide
Sis stared Into his eyes and
sell-supporting, not a prude but them wUI never be lonely.
replied, "Do you know that !or
have good moral standards. I
every divorced woman you've
moved to Chicago from a neigh·
"When you are in a group and met there ts'a divorced man?"boring &lt;State, eager to make my !eel uncomfortable rest assured Sacramento Fan
way In the world and, of course,
that there are others In the group
Dear Sac.: Beautiful. I hope CBS Is planning to air a Garbage
Pall Kids cartoon In September.
lind the man of my dreams.
who feel the same way. Introduce she gave him a heel In the ankle.
Sign
me - Horrified In Vancover
I have met lots of nice people yourself to a stranger who looks
Dear Ann Landers: I agree
Dear
V.C.: You heard wrong.
through my Job and some attrac· lost. Pushy? Not at all. You will with your Houston reader about
It's not CBS. It's TMC (The
tlve men at a health club where I be viewed as asavlor.lfyougeta those Garbage Pall Kids cards.
work out two or three times a
dead-fish handshake or a cold They are awful! I just heard that Movie Channel) pay TV.
week, but It's "hello" and
stare from
so what?
"goodby." I haven't had an This
meanssome
he snob,
or she
has ·a r-;:======~~::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;======::;
honest-to-goodness date in seven
problem, not you. Get a conver·
m.onths.
satlon going with someone else.
I would hate to think that at25 I
For every clam In the crowd
have nothing to look forward to
there are 30 people who are
but business promotions. To put
longing for someone to talk to.
It bluntly,! want a man'lnmyllfe.
Ask questions. People love to tell ·
I see women all around me In you about themselves. It's hu·
relatlon~hlp - meeting men for
man nature. When you see a
lunch, applying fresh makeup for group photo, (or example, whose
dinner dates, going away for face do you look for first? Your
weekends. I'm beginning to own, naturally. We all do. Evewonder what's missing in me.
ryone yearns to be Included and
220 UST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO .
These women are not gorgeous or accepted. The best way to get
brilliant, but they must have
acceptance
to giveIs:
lt.""How to
. something I don't have.
Again, theIsbooklet
, In short, Ann Landers, why am Make Friends and Stop Being
I alone and lonely? What am I . Lone!)'." Send $3.50 plus a
l
doing wrong or not doing right?
self·addressed, stamped busl·
Any answers? - Unlisted Per· ness size envelope to P .0. Box
sonallly Ia llllaolo
11562, Chtcao, ILL. 6061].(1562.
Dear Unlisted: I have just I've received more positive feed·
written a booklet that may back on this booklet than any I
provide some answers. It Is have ever written.
called "How to Make Friends
Dear Ann Landers: Here's my
and Stop Being Lonely." The entry for a prize 'comeback.
following lines will give you an
My sister was out with friends
Idea of what the booklet Is about. .. recently and they went to a bar
"Everyone wants recognition, and dance club. A nice-looking
attention, praise and accep· man came over and asked Sis to
tance. We bristle at criticism and dance. He seemed taken with her
respond warmly to a compll· and asked, "Are you single,
ment. We steer clear of people married, divorced or what?" She
who make us !eel uncomfortable. replied, "Divorced." He looked
We gravitate toward those who at her ' with disgust and said,
make us feel good about our·
l'vee never met so many

•
0

WINNER- ~arc A. .Jones,
wolf cub scout of Chesler Pack
235, was lite winner In the
eight year old division at lite
cub scout bike rodeo a1 the
Rock Sprlnp Fair Grounds.
Scouts took a written lest on
bicycle salley and traveled an
obstacle course to accumUlate
points.

UCIIII, OliO
aMI!!Q SOOII! DUL tO ESTMI

a C!M.lE Sl!EQ

'

tn

•yw w•

�- .. ~

Paga

Friday, September 9, t9BB

Poma ov-Middlaport, Ohio

Friday, September 9, 1988

Community Calendar
•

ome

FRIDAY
POMEROY Round and
square dancing will be featured
Friday night, 8 to 11 p m , at the
Senior Citizens Center In Pomeroy Music by Larry Hubbard
and True Country Band. Bring
snacks Public invited.

This .M~sage and Church Directory Spommred Ry The Interested Ru.~inesses Listed On This Page.

SWISHER &amp; lDHSE

Veterans
Memorial Hospital
II S I. Momorial Dr.
992-2104

~~!~ r~l

Pomeroy

992 29SS

WANT ADS
ARE JUMPING

WITH BARGAINS

992-2156

INSURANCE .---.
SERVICES

of Columbus, o
1CM W Mt11n

ft2·2l11 Pamerov

,.

MEIGS nRE
\ CENTER INC.

~

ft'\ 1\
a.

lult~rnut

Ave., PoiMI'oy, 011:

~-

Ful~z. Mgr
Ph 992 2101

Jonn F

Pomeroy

Condor

Pomeroy,

.

.-~··,.•.•

992-2975

,,.01

Rawlings·Coats-Biower

Mill Work·
l•.li!.~ :'e'~Jl\
Cabmet Makmg ~~
Syracuse

FUNERAL HONE

HONOR YOUR ELDERS; SOME DAY
YOU'LL BE THERE YOURSELF

School9 15a m WorshlpServfcelO JOa
m Choir rehearsal Tuesdav 7 :JJ p m
undor direction It Lnls Burt

POMEROY CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE, 0...... llnlon and Mulbe!ry R&lt;v
'llmmas Glen Mc0.111:. pastoc Norman Pres
~. s s. SUpt. Survli\Y Scrool 9 ll a m.

nu.mgwcnljp lD:ll am fNmlng3ei'VIce 6

p,m,

Wedn""''Y. 7 ~m
GRACE EPIS(X)PAL CHURCH, 3l6 E
lllaln Sl., l'or!tetw SulfdiiY servk:es HolY
midweek 5EJVIce

mnvnurW:&gt;n on tre 11rst SUOOay or each month,

and comtmEd with morring (X'ayer on t~
ttu'd Surdlt' MorrMg prayer and sennon on
aU otle" Sttnd.!\Ys &lt;tilE month Clwnoh School

.,d Nurwry care provkled. Coffee blur In ttlePartshHaU inmediolle.b' following tiP service

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, 212 W
lllaln St Leo Lash. evan!IOIJst Blij• School
9:JJ a.m. Mmingwcrslip, lO:lJa m. Youth
rnet'I:ID-., 6 00 p.m Evenin~ wtrShip 7 00 p
m ~""''Y night prayer m"'ingandBIItle

llutly 7 00 p,m
THE SALVATION ARMY 115 Buttermt
A~ ~ Mrs Dora Wlnlng In char~
~tidilY h&gt;Uness ~ing JO am. sunday

Schod. !lUI am Sunday School, YPSM
Elolle Adams leader 7 ~ p.m. Salvation
meeting. varlowi speakiYS and muslcsjX'lials
'nursday, U .'ll a m to 2 p.m Ladles Home

1

League, memt:ers in char~ all wcrnen
lnvlle¢ 6 45 p m Thursday Corp; Cadet
Ch118S (Yourg Prople-Bilie~ 7 :D p.m Bible
Stlli.Y and Prayer meeting, cpe1 to the public.

POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
OIRJST, 33'l.!i Chilcren s Hom" Road (Courty
Road M) !82-5%1) Vocal music. Sunday Wor
srip lOam., BltieStudy lla m. Worship 6p.
m. Wed'lesday Bltie SI:Wy 7 p.m

OLD DEXTER BIBlE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH. Alvin C\1115 pasltr. Linda Swan.
9Jpt. Su~ School 9 XI a m preaching ser

vla&gt;s, lint
~

and third SulfdiiY tolto.vingSulfdiiY

Youth meeting 7 :JJ p m every Sun-

day

GRAHAM

UNITED METHODIST

Preaching 9 30 a m first and second Sun
clays of each month third and fourth Sun

RUTLAND CHURCH OF liOU t'astoc

John Evans Sunday Schod 10 00 a m
Sunday Morning Worship 11 00 a m Chll
dren s Church 11 a m Sunday Evening
Service 7 00 p m Wed 6 p m Young La
dies Auxiliary Wednesday 7 p m Fam
lly Worship

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH Olf

Rt 124 3 miles from Portland Long Bot
tom Edsel Hart pastor Sunday School
9 30 a m Sunday morning preaching
10 30 a m Sunday evening services, 7 30

pm

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST

Corner Ash and Plum Noel
Herrmann pastor Sunday School 10 OOa
m Morning Worship, 11 00 a m Wed
nl'Sday and Saturday Evening Services at
730pm
CHURCH

lilt Qut&lt;kel and Ruth Ann Fax

am
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Lyst on

Halley, minister, Saturday evening
evangelistic services open to public 7 p
m , Sunday Church School, 9 30 a m •
Morning Worship 10 3tl a m

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST Po

mercy Pike E Lamar 0 Bryant, pastor.
Jack Needs Sunday School Director Sun
day School, 9 30 a m Morning Worship
10 45, evenlngworship 7 OOpm lOST 1
&amp; 7 30 (E S T ) Wednesday Prayer Ser
vice. 7 00 p m (D S T I &amp; 7 30 PM (E S
T ), Mission Friends (ages 2 61 Royal
Ambassadors (boys ages fHB), and Girls
In Action (ages 6-18! on Wednesdays 7 p
m (0ST)&amp;7 30pm IE.ST),Tuesday
Vlsltatlon 6 30 p m
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH Bal
ley Run Road Rev Emmett Rawson. pas
tor Handley Dunn, supl Sunday School
lOam Sundayevenlngservice 7 30p m
Bible teaching, 7 30 p m Thursday
SYRACUSE MISSION Cherry St Sy
racuse Mark Morrow past or ServIces 10

a m Sunday Evening services Sunday
and Wednesday at 7 00 p m

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST

IN CHRISTIAN UNION Dwight Haley
first elder Wanda Mohler Sunday School
SUpt Sunday SChool 9 ;., a m Morning
Worship 10 30 a m Evening Worship 7 :J)
p m Wednesday prayer meetlng7 llp m

MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD

Racine Rev James Satterfield pastor
Freeman Williams, Supt Sunday School
9 45 a m , Sunday and Wednesday even
lng services, 7 p m

MIDDLEPORT

FIRST BAPTIST

COrner Stxth and Palmer James Seddon
Pastor Edna Wilson, S S Supl , Cathy
R.lggs Asst Supt Sunday School, 9 15 a
m , Mornlnl Worship 10 15 am Sunday
Evening service 7 p m Prayer meeting
and Bible Study Wednesday evening, 7 p
m , Children's choir practice Wednes
day, 7 p m Adult choir practice Wed, 8
p m Radio program, WMPO Sunday
8 JOa.m

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF GHRIST,

5th and Main AJ Hartson, mlnlster
RJcbard DuBose Assochtte P:tslor Mlke
Gerlach, Sunday School Superintendent
Bible School 9 30 am, Morning Worship
10 30 a m Evrning Worship 7 00 p m
Wednetday 7 00 p m Prayer mee1lng

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF TilE NA

ZARENE PASTOR Fred Penhorwood
BUI While Sunday Scho4ll Supt Sunday
School! 30 a m , Morning Worship 10 45
a In , Evangellslfc meeting 7 00 p m
Wednmday, 7.00 p m Prayer meeting

&lt;\PPLE GROVE UNITED METRO
OIST- Past&lt;r. Rev. carl Hlclcs 10 mUes
a-RadneonRoul!381 SuntlaySehool
1 a.m., -.blp M!rvlce 10 a.m Sunday
eW!IIftll ....... 7; Prayer m..tlnpnd Bl·
.." 1tully Wedllelday 7 p m
UNftKD . . . .n:BIAN !IIJNI8111V

OP -OS COUNTY
.... O'Otl•lloll.t

IWIR!Sa'M'LU: PRESBY'Ml:RIAN
cHURCH -8unlloY: worshlt&gt; services
9:110 a m Olln"b Seltool 10 I~ a m
M!Dili.EPORT PRESBY'Ml:RIAN 111,.,_, Seltool t a m • Otureh oervlre,
li:~'&amp;JSE FIRST UNTED PRESBY
~!ll!ntlay!khoollOa m. Otut&lt;h
..met JJ: 15 a m.

ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Pomeroy

Harrlsoovllle Rd Robert Purtell minis
ter Steve Stanley, s s Supt Bill McEll
roy As$1 Supt . Sunday School9 30 a m ,
Worship service 10 30 am , Evenlngwor
shipSunday7p.m andWednesday 7pm

ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine

am

Worship 10 30 a m , Bible Study,
Wednesday 7 30 p m UMYF Wednes
day 6 00 p m Communion First Sunday
of Month (Hicksl
REEDSVILLE - Church School 9 30 a
m Worship Service 11 00 a m (Deeter)

Grove The Rev William Mlddleswarth,
pastor Church service 9 30 a m , Sunday
School 10 30 a m

BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,

John Wright, pastor Sunday School9 30a
m , Larry Haynes S S Supt Morning
worship 10 30 a m

TUPPERS PLAINS ST PAUL -

Church School 9 a m Worship 10 a m
Bible Study Tuesday 7 30 p m Commu
nlon First Sunda~ {Archer)

RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA

RENE Rev Lloyd D Grimm, Jr pastor
Ora Bass Chairman or the Board of Chris
tlan Lire Sunday School9 30 a m Morn
ing worship 10 30 a m , evangelistic spr
vice 7.00 p m Wednesday service 7 p m

CENTRAL CLUSTER

LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH !lex

Rev. Randy Burch
Rev Me1vl• Franldla
Rev Clemente 8 Zunl1a 1 Jr
Re\'RobertMuumaa
Rev Den Meadows

Snvder Sabbath SChool Superintendent

- Sister Harriett Warner Supt Sunday
School 9 30 a rn Morning Worship. 10 45

BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF

CHRIST, Joseph B Hoskins, pastor Bible
Class, !t 30a m , Morning Worship 10 30a
m Evening Worship, 6 30 p m Thursday
Bible Study, 6 30 p m

LONG BOTTOM - Church School 9 30

erry Hetghts Road Pomeroy Pastor Bob

service toUowing at 3 p m
RUTLAND FIRST BAP'I lSI CHURCH

716 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
MT HERMON UNjTED BRETHREN

IN CHRIST CHURCH Local('d In Texas
CommunitY on Ct R1 l:l2 Rev Rotx&gt;rt
Sanders pastor leU Hol1e1 Ia\ leader
Ed Rou~h Sunday School Supl Sundav
School 9 JO a m mornlnJ!: \\ orshlp and
chlldr('n s chu1 ch 1fl 30 a m t&gt;ventn2
preaching serviC&lt;' first thret&gt; Sundavs
7 30 p m ;;tSpE'Cial serviCE' fourth Sunday
l'venlng 7 30 p m
Wcdn('Sdav PravC't
Meeting Blblc Studv and Youth F E"ilov.
ship. 7 Wpm

-Deuteronomy J2 7

Wednesday 7 tNJ p m

ter Woody Call pastor Services Sunday
10 a m and 7 p m Wednesday 7 p.m

DYESVILLE COMMUNITY,CHURCH.

Lloyd Sayre, Supt Sunday School 9 30 a
m , morning worship 10 30 a m Sunday
evening service 7 p m

ASBURY (Syracuse)- Worshiplla m
Church School 9 45 a m , Charge Bible
Study, Wednesday, 7 30 p m , UMW firsl

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN

Tuesday, 1 3U p m
Choir Rehearsal,
Wednesday 6 30 p m. (Burch)
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a m
Church SchoollO a m , Bible Study Tues·
day, 1 00 p m UMW. First Monday, 7 30
p m . UMYF Sunday 6 p m Choir Re
hearsal, Children's at 6 30 p m Adult following, Wednesday (Franklin)
FLATWOODS- Church School lOam
Worship 11 a m , Bible Study Thursday, 7 p m , UMYF Sunday, 6 p m
(Franklin J
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a m ,
Church Sc,hool 10 A M Choir practice,

Thursday 6 30pm

viet&gt; 7 JU p m
MT UNION BAPTIST

Joe N Sayre
pastor Sunday School9 4f; a m Evening
worship 6 30 p m PrayE'r MeE'f tng 6 :n
p m Wl:'dncsday

TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF

CHRIST Davf' Prf'nllce ministf'r Deryl
W£'11s Supt Church School 9 a m Wor
ship ServiC'f' 9 4~ p m

CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA

RENE

Rt"v Herbert Grate pastor
Frank Riffle sup1 Sunday ~&lt; hoo19 30a
m Worship Sl•n.lce 11 a m and 7 p m
Sundav WC'dnl'Sday 7 p m PravN meet

UMWthlrdMonday

(Burch) m (Burch)
HEATH (Middleport)- Church School,
9 30 a m Morning Worship 10 30 a m ,
Youth G1oup, 4 p m. Wednesday, Bible
study 6 00 p m Choir rehearsal 7 00 p m
tZuniga)

lng
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST

CHURZH William Williams pastor, 01
rector of Christian Education, Robert E
Barton Steve Eblin assistant Sunday
SChool 9 30 a m, Mornlnlt wcrship 10 .))

MINERSVILLE - Church School 9 00
a m Worship s~tce 10 00 a m UMW
third Wednesday 1 p m (Burch)
PEARL CHAPEL - Worship Service
9 30 a m

Ro~

Watson pastor Crt&gt;nson Prall Sunda\
School Sup! Morning Worship 9 30 a m •
Sunday School 10 30 a m Evening SL"f"

C'f

am TeenstnActlon6pm, EvenlngWor-

shlp 7 p m Wedneoday evening prayer

Church School 10 15 a m

and Bible study 7 p m. Choir ~act lee 8 p
m Surday
DEXTER CHURCH OF t:HIUSi
Charles Russell Sr minister Rick Ma
comber, supt Sundav School 9 30 a m
Worship sef\ic£' 10 30 am BlbiP' study
Tuesday 7 JO p m

!Mussman)
POMEROY- Church SChool, 9 1~ am
Worship 10 30 a m Choir rehearsal
Wednesday 7 30 p m , UMW. second

Tuesday 7 30 p m UMYF Sunday 6p m
(Meadows)

ROCK SPRINGS- Church Sehool 9 15

REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS

Worship 10 am Bible Study, Wed
nesday 7 30 p m UMYF (Seniors), Sun
day 6 p m \Juniors I e\'ery other Sun·
dav 6 p m (Franklin)
RUTLAND - Church School 10 a m
Worship, 11 am, UMW First Monday,
am

CHRIST OFI ATIER DAY SAINTS Port
land Racine Road Mike Duhl pastor
Janl~ Danner, church school director
Church school9 30 a m Mornlngworshtp
10 30 am WC'dnN!day evening prayer
~ervlces 7 ~ p m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Re\ Earl
Shuler pastor Worship service 9 30 a m
Sunday School tO 30 am Bible Study and
praver senlc(' Thursday 7 30 p m

7 30 p m (Mussman)

SALEM CENTER- Church School9 15

am

Worship 10 15 p m (Mussman)
SNOWVILLE - Worship, 9 00 a m ,
church school 9 ~5 am /Mussman\

CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION
AL CHURCH Kingsbury Road Re\'
Clydc&gt; W

SOUTHERN CL!JSTER
Rev. Debi Foster

Rev Ro1er Grate
BETHANY - Worship, 9 a m Church
School, 10 am, Bible Study, Wedneaday,
10 am
Dorcas Women's Fellowship
Wednesday 11 am !Foster)
CARMEL - Church School 9 30 am
WorshJp, 10 45 a m Second and Fourth
Sundays. Fellowship dinner with Suttcn •
thJrd Thursday, 6 30 p m (Foster)

MORNING S&gt;AR - Church Sehool9· 45

a m • Worship 10 30 a m , Bible Study,
Thursday, 7 :1) p m (Foster)

SUTTON - Church SchQol, 9 ll a m

MornlngWorship10 4~a m flratandth1rd
Sundays, FellowMip dinner with Carmel
third Thursday, 6 30 p.m (Foster)

EAST LEI'ART- CllurchScllool9o m,
Worship 10 a m semnd and fourth Sundays; UMW nrst Tuesday, 7 :1) p m
rGrace)

LETART FALLS - Worship 9 am,
Church School10 a m {Grace)
RACINE- Olurch Schooi.IO am, Wor
shlpUam UMW1ourthMonda;yat7:1)p
m , Men a Prayer Bn!llklut, Wl!&lt;lneoday. 8
am (Grace)

KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Vernon

Eldridge, minister, Oliver Swain, Sunday
SchOol Supt Preaching 9 :JO a m each
Sunday

HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, Theron Durltlm,
pastor Sunday service, 9 30 a m, evea·
lng service 7 00 p m Pr1yer meettna,

pastor Sunday
Ralph Carl. Supt Even

Henderson

School 9 30 am
lng worship 7 00 p m Prayl'r meettnr.
Wt'dnesdav 7 no p m
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN, Vernon
Eldrlda-e, pastor Wallace Damewocd, S

S Supt Sunday Schoo19 JO a m Worship
Service 10 30 a m

-

RACINE FIRST BAPTIST
Steve
1 beaver Pastor Mike Swiger, Sunday
SChool Supt , Sunday SCbool 9 :KJ a m,

Morn1ng worship 10 40 a m , Sunday
evening worship 7 30 p m

evening Bible study 7: :1! p.m.

Wednetday

IIURUNGHAM COMMUNliY CHUROI,

Bur11niJ(wn. Ray IAIIdermlll. putor; Rober! Colan. aalltanl paola Suntloy Scltool

!OLm, w&lt;nHp7p,m., W~,6p.m
youlhmeotlllr: Wed., 7p,m.dttlrdloPINE GROVE HOUNESSCIIURCH,\1
mlleoi!Rt.m Rev. Boa J Watts, pat or
Roborl S.orls, S.S Supt. SUnday Sehool

:.»

9 30 I m : MOfDinl WOI'IIdp 10
a.m ,
Suaday eveniDa aervtce 7::11 p m, Wed

n-y .....,Ice, 7 ll p,m

SILVER RUN BAPTIST, BUI LWJe,
putor Steve LIIUe, S S Supt Suiiday
Seltooi!O a m.. Momtna worlfp, 111 m..

SUIICiay fYI!IIIDJ w&lt;rshlp? 311 p.m. Prayer
meetlll&amp; and BlbleoludyWednsday. 7:ll
pm. YouthmOOIIUWedn,.dayat7pm
REJOICING LIF£ BAPTIST CHURCH
- 313 N 2lld Ave. Middleport Sunday
Sehooi!O. m SUnday even1n11 00 p m ,
Mid week •ervlce, Wed., 7 p m

-- ----11;------- . . --..

LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH

Sunday School 9 30 a rn, Dallas Janey,
supt Morning worship 10 :1) a.m , Sun
day evening service 7 30 p m Wednes
day evening service 7 30 p m

SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA

ZARENE Rev Glenn McMillan, pastor
Mary Janice Lavender, Sunday School
Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m, Morning
worship 10 30 a m , Evanitel~ttc service,
6 p m, Prayer and PraiseWednesday, 7p
m, Youth meeting 7 p m

EDEN

UNITED BRETHREN IN

CHRIST, Elden R Blake, pastor Sunday

School 10 a m Gary Reed, Lay leader
Morning sermon, 11 a m , Sunday night
services Christian Endeavor 7 30 p m,
Song serviCe 8 p m Preaching 8 30 p m
Mid week prayer meeting Wednesday, 7
pm

Located on 0 J WhltC' Road of Hlgh\o\av
160 Pat Henson pastor Sundav SchoollO
am Ciass(&gt;s for all ages Junior Church 11
3 m
Mornln~ v. orshlp 11 a m Adult
Choir praciiL'&lt;'Ii p m Sunda\' Young Pl'O
piPs Childrrn s Church and Adult Bibl&lt;'
Studv Wt'dnesdav at 7 :ll p m
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL ~70 Grant
St Mlddi['POrt Affllla100 "Uh Southc&gt;J n
Baptist Convrnllon David Brvan Sr Mi
nlstcr Sunda\' School tO u m Morning
worshlpllam Eveningv.orshlp7pm
WednesdaY evening Bible study and
pra\'et mf'f'linP 7 n m

BRADFORD CHURCH Of CHRIST Si

R1 124 and Co Rd ~ Scott StNarl pas
tor William Amtx&gt;rgcr supt Sundav
School 9 30 a m morning" or ship 10 30

am (".1Cnmg\\orshlp7 30pm WN!nes
day 1.1' orship 7 30 p m

ST

PAUL IUTHERA' CHURCH •

day evening service at 7 30 p m Thursday
services at 7 30 p m
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob, located on County Road 31 Rev

Cornror: S\C'.1morc&gt; and S&lt;&gt;rond Sis Po
ffiffO\ Thc&gt; RC\ W1lll 1m Midrl!csv.arl
pastor Sunrl;J\ School 9 4~ u m fhurch
S£'1"\ IC&lt;' II a m
SACRED
HEART ( HURCH Ms~J
Anlhonv Glann tmor £' Ph 992 58911 S~ILtrJ
dav EvC'nlng Ma~ ~ 7 JO p m Sund tv
Mass R a m aM 10.1 m \onf('!;sions onC'
half hour lx for{• £':.1Ch Mass C('O class a;
11 a m Sunda\'

9 30 a m, Morning Worship 10 45 am
Sunday evening 7 00 p.m Wednesday

Mldd!epor:t JamC'S. E KC'CSf'l' p.1s101
Sunday mornrn~ v. orshlp 10 1m Ev&lt;'n

HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH

0 H Cart, pastor SundaySchoolat9 JOa
m Morning worship at 10 30 a m Sun

Roger Wlll!onl, pastor Sunday Sehool

evening Bible Study 7 00 p m

WHITE'S

CHAPEL

WESLEYAN

CHURCH- CoolvUleRD Rev Phillip Rl
denour pastor Sunday School 9 30 am
worship service 10 30 am Bible study
and worship service Wednesday 7 p m

RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST

Bill Carter, pastor Sunday School9 30 a
m , Morning Worship and Communion

10 30a m
RUTLANDBIBLEMETHODIST Amos
Tillis, pastor Sonny Hudson supt Sunday
SChool 9 30 a m Morning worship, 10 30
a m , Sunday evening sel"\'lce 7 00 p m
Wednesday sel"\'lce 7 p m WMPO pro- '
gram 9 a m each Sunday

RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA

RENE Samuel Basye, pastor Sunday
Schoo19 30a m. Worshipservice10 30a .
m , Young prople's service 6 p mEvangelistlcservtce6 ~ p m Wednesday
service 7 p m

MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST Miller

St • Mason W Va Sunday Bible Study 10
a m , Worship 11 a m ~nd 7 p m Wednes
day Bible Study vocal music 7 p m

LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD Dud

din~

Lane Mason W Va J N Thacker,
pastor Evening service 7 30 p m , Womens Ministry, Thur.sday, 9 30 am
Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7 15

pm

HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN

CHRISTIAN UNION Hartford. \\

David McManiS pastor Church
School 9 30 a m Sunday morning ser

viet:! ll am Sunday evening service
7 IOpm W('(fnesdavpra}ermeetlng 7 30

pm

F AIRVJEW BIBLE CHURCH Letart
W \Ia Rl 1 James lev. Is pastor Wor
ship M&gt;nlce~; 9 W am, Sunday School.ll
am Evcningv.orshlp7 30pm Tuesday
conage pra\er meet in~ and Bible Study
9 30 a rn \\orship sen ice Wednesday
7 ::tOp m

OUR ~VIOURLUTIIERAN CHURCH

Walnut and Henn. Sis. Ravenswood W
Va Thf'Rev Geo11eC Wetrlck pastoc
Sunday SChod 9 30 a m Sunday worship

llam

CALVAR"r BIBLE CHURCH loc.atedon
Pomeroy PlkP, County Road 2!i near Flat
woods Rev BJackwood pastor Services
onSundayatlO lOam and7 30pm wllh
Sunday~choo19 30a m BlbleShKh,Wed
nesday 7 10 p m

FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST St Rt 338 Antiquity Rev
Franklin Dlckms pastor Sunday mom

10 am

Fami~

ROADS, OHIO - An oldfashioned ouldoor gospel songfest will be held Saturday, startIng at 6 p.m., at the Berlin
Wesleyan Holiness Church,
Roads, Ohio The Gospel Out' reachers Quartet, the Dalton
Family and others will perform
Bring Ia wnchalrs In case of raIn,
wlll be Indoors Evl!ryone
welcome.

Restaurant

"FullllfR lt..-tr g Flied Clll~o•"
221 W. Main St., Pomeroy
992-5432

VICfORY BAPTIST

In~ ~ervicc

7 pm

~2~

N 2nd S!

WE'dncsda\ C'\ c&gt;nin,g

v.orship7pm VisilallonThursdavD 'l.lp

m

MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH Da\ id
Curfman pasror Sunda\ School 10 am
"orship suvlcc 11 am Sunda\ night
worship SC'rvic&lt;' 7 30 p m
Mldv. rek
pravcr sc&gt;rviC&lt;' WNincsdav i p m

WESLEYAN

BIHLE

Hot !NESS

CHURCHofMlddlc&gt;pnrt Inc 75Pc&gt;ariSI
Rev lvan MvC'rs p 1sl or RogR ManiC"V
Sr Sundav Schuoi Sup! Sundav School
9 11 am Morning WOishlp 10 JO am
Evening Worship 7 30 p m WPdn('Sclav
evenln~ Blbl£' sludv pr;.tver and pr tls&lt;'
scrvicc 7 :J! p m

LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH

OF GOD- Gilbert Spencer pastor Sun
day School 9 :J:) a m Mornln~ service
10 OOa m Sunda} £'VenlngserviC&lt;'7 OOp
m Mid "«'k praH•r s('rvlC&lt;' Wednesdav
7pm

MT OLIVE FUI LGOSPEL COMMUN

ITY CHURCH LawJCnt.X' Bush, pastor
Max F'olmC'r Sr S S Supt Sundav School
9 30 a m Sundav evening service 7 30
m • Wednesday cvconinR Bible study and
praisP servlct&gt;, 7 iiO p m

UNITED FAITH CHURCH Rl 7on Po

meroy Bv Pass Rev David Wls&lt;man Sr

pastor Melvm Drake S S Supt Sunday
School9 :Kl a m Morning Worship 10 30,
Evening Worship 7 30 p m Wednesday

F AJTH BAPTIST CHURCH Railroad
St Mason Sunday SchoollO a m Morn
lnJ: worshtp 11 a m Evening s('I'Vice 6 p
m Prayer m&lt;'&lt;'lin~ and Bible Study Wed
nesdav 7 p m
FOR EST RUN RAPTJST Rev Nyle
Borden pastor Cornelius Bunch supt
Sundav SChool 9 iO a m Serond and
fourth Sund lVS "mshlp sel\ Icc at 2 ~ p
m
MT MORIAH 8AP1 IST Fourth and
Main S1 MiddlpPort Rev Gilbert Craig,
Jr past or Mrs Er,; In Baumgardner,
Sund3V School Supl Sundav Schoo\9 30 a
m \\orshJp Sen let&gt; 10 45 am

MIDDLEPORT - The annual
Middleport Block Party w!ll be
held Saturday. Crafts, concessions, music, horseshoe pitching,
an antique car show and the
official Ohio State Paper Air
plane Flying Contest w!ll be
featured

SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
Joseph B Hoskins C'vangellst Suriday

-

RACINE - Free entertainment w!ll be featured Saturday
night, starting at 7 p m , at the
Racine Shrine Park. Music by
the Mountain Top gospel group,
the Bend River Boys and the
Country Blend Band Bring lawnchairs Refreshments w!ll be
served. Everyone welcome

Bible Stud\ 9 a m Worship 10 a m Sun
dav evening service 6 p n'l Wednesday
evening s1 ''Icc 7 p m
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY Racine
Rl 124 William Hoback pastor SundaY
School 1fl a m Sundav C'vening service 7
p m Wednrsdav C'V&lt;'ningservlce 7 p m

CARPENTER BAPTIST Don Cheadle,
Sund J\ School 9 30 am Morning
Worship 10 -lOam Pravcrser.ice ai1Nn
atC' Sundavs

Supl

THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST

APOSTOL lC' r AITH - Nl'W l.,lma Rd
n('xt tof'oll M('JJ.,:S Park Ru113nd Robert
Richards pastor Sen IcC'S at 7 p m on
\\cdn~davs and Sundavs
HARRISONVTI LF: HOLINESS C'HAP
TER of the W&lt;'SI('Yan Holln&lt;'Ss Church
HC'\ Don id firrr£'11 pas1o1 Ht&gt;nrv Eblin

NEW HAVEN, W VA • The
Nichols Family, of Elkview,
W Va, will Saturday from 2 to 4
p m. at the town celebration In
New Haven, In front of the fire
station.

Sundav School Supl Sund1:1v SchoollO a
m Morning Woro&lt;hlp lJ a m Evenln~
SC'I\JCC'7

JOpm Wc&gt;dnPSIILIV('\f'ning:sE'r

dt'&lt; 7 Wpm

STIVERSVII! E WORO Of FAITH

HARTFORD, W VA. - The
Bend Area Gospel Sing w!ll be
held Saturday, starting at 7 30

Garv Holler P&lt;t~lor Sunday services 9 00
am iJnd i p m Mldv. eek service, 7 30 p
m Thursdav

SUncla)' evening 7 30 p m

Thursday evening 7 :tOp m

MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLI

NESS CHURCH Inc 75 Pearl St Rev
Ivan Myers acting pastoc, Roger Manley,

Sr , Sunday School Superllltendetll Sun
d11y School 9 30 a m Mornlna wcnhlp
10 3G am, eVf!Rin&amp; wonhlp 7:30pm:
Wedneeday evening Bible 11\Miy, praytr
and pr'IIIH' servlct. 1 30 p m

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOSTOLIC - VanZandt aDd Ward Rd. Elder
Jams Miller. pater Sunday Beltoal,

10 30a m. Wonltlp!!ervlct' Sunil~. 7 ll
p m, BlbleSttoly, Wedneoday. 7:30p.m
CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL, HarrJ.
ICIWOle Road Rev t:Dvey Kin&amp;, pastor:

Cllnlm Faulk, Sunday School Supt, Sunday School9 30a m , momina worlhlp,ll
a m , Sutxlay evenlna: Rrvite 7 30 p m

Prayer Meetllll, Weclneoday.? 311/ m
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH 0 GOD

non Pentecostal Worlhlp ervlce Sunday
10 am, Sunday Schod 11 am Evenlna
worship servlc~ 1 00 p m Wednesd1y

ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP 128 Mill St

The 64th annual Hayes-Young
Holiday School reunion was held
Aug 14 on the old Hollday School
grounds
A basket dinner was served
with Roger Hayes asking the
blessing. The afternoon program
was called to order by Floyd
BrJckles. The secretarytreasurer's report was read by
Colleen Brlckles. Officers
elected for the 1989 reunion were
Hollie Hayes, p~esldent, Floyd
Brlckles, vice president; Colleen
Brlckles, secretary treasurer;
and Camille Bolin, Paula Chancey, Craig Dougan, and Garol·
dene Boyd, game committee.
A moment of silent prayer was
held In memory of those who died
during the past year Including
Ida Young, Della Stahl, Florence
Sloane, Ernest Wood, and the
Infant son of Mark Sauters
Music for the prP.gram was
provided by Mr and Mrs Floyd
Brlckles Albert Friend read a
tetter to the group written by
Hollie Hayes who was unable to
attend Craig Dougan sang "God
Bless America Again", De a
Hayes presented "! Want Us to
Be Together In Heaven", and
Manda Eastman gave a poem,
"A Little Mixed Up " Theresa
and Tracy Shaffer sang "I Keep

Middleport Br01her Chuck McPherson,
pastor Sunday School 10 a m , Sund~y •
evening services at 7 p m and Wednesday t
services at 7 p m
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Kenneth Smith
pastor Sunday School 9 30 a rn church
service 7 30 p m youth fellowship 6 30 p
m , BlbiP study Thursday 7 30 p m

FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE 33045

Hiland Road, Pomeroy Tom Kelly pas
tor Danny Lambert S S Supt Sunday
morning service at 10 a m , Sunday even
ing service 7 30 p m Tuesday an{l Thurs
day Services at 7: 30 p m

NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA

ZARENE, Rev C:iendon Stroud, pastor

Sunday School9 30a m , Worship service,
10 30 am Youtll service Sunday 6 15 p
m Sunday evenlngsC'rvlce7 OOp m Wed
nesday Prayer Meeting and Bible Study

700pm

NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH Sun-

day afternoon servicE'S at 2 30 Thursday
evening services at 7 30

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Mason, W

Va Pastor. Bill Murphy Sunday Schoo110
a m , Sunday evpnlng 7 30 p m Prayer
meeting and Bible study Wednesday, 7 30

pm

Everyone welcome

RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa

lem St Rev Paul Taylor pastor Sunday
School10 a m Sunday evening 7 00 p m ,
Wednesday evening prayer meeting 1 00

pm

SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT

CHURCH, Silver Ridge Duane Syden

strlcker, pastor Sunday School 9 a m ,
Worship ServiCE&gt; 10 a m , Sunday evening
service 7 00 p m WPdnesday night Bible

~tudy7

OOpm

America has been a prosperous countty lor aboui200 years We have
been the beacon light to the world as "THE" place to live and In which to
grow old One ollhe over riding things thai has helped America Is Us
desire lor education Reading, writing, arlthmetlc. spelling. geography
and the moral teachings of the Bible has been the basic curriculum or
American education Ito chanll&lt;!d In the lui 25 years or so when the
Federal government became 1nvolved alon' with the A C L U and
other "lets have rights and no l'fllponslblllty" groups
Martin Luther wrole "The proaperlty o! a country depends not on the
abundance ollts revenues, nor 011 the strength or Its !orllllcallons nor on
the beauty Dilts public buildings; built consists In Ihe numbOr ollts
cultivated citizens, on Its men or educallon. enlightenment and
Her are to be found Its true lnlerest.lts chle! strength I Its real
character
power
Of
Today where are our cltlzeM &lt;t culture, honesty, and education who
lltlnk and lalk In more than one oyUable words. Our music today Is like
Dr Suet~~ bookla handful of words uoed over and over again and again
The TV Ia fiooded with the soap operas and their vulgar lty greed and
Immoral aexualattltudeoladullery,lornlcatlon and lust Thecrlnilnal
!he pornoiP'8Jiblc pervayers, the me only attitude gets delended by lhe
courts and Dewlllledla and aelllnlerest iJ'OUPS whose aim seems to be
lets lear down America and ltnore God the Almighty Rjghts have
prececlettt over reapon~lblllty. Amans word Is nol worth anything today
Unleso a lawyer drawn tloaim•tll signed between p,artles, one or lhe
other wW try to pi oul of the agreement, li:WD then they often try. God
said let youran~werbe yea, yea or nay, nay God wants us to he true to
oar wont and love God, oerw our fellow man and lastly think about
oanelws.
Edllcatlon should be teachllll y&lt;Nih u well as adults a moral code of
conduct, patriotic valueo aad at leut bow to read and wrtre and 1111ow a
little lboittlllatory, JIOII'IPiqT and arithmetic. The Bible hu bet!n In
every home tor a•eratlottl o1 Amerlcaao and been the bulc reader
untD the Jut 110 yeara maybe. Wbat are we really mllllnfl In our
~er~.• today? How often do we hear today the word "Gentleman" or
Lady ? CUlture, ealldtenment and chafacter are worthy llllnp to
, have. ReiiJfoul valaet liave In the put laid CNt the path tor Gelllleinen
and Ladle. In &lt;Nr IOCietY.Maybe Ill lime tolD bo.ck to tlte~ehoola ot ~nl!
ago with the bulc teachlnp at a moral bo.cbr&lt;Nitd ol God, Country and
III'VIce to my fellow man. - Putor Wlllllm Ml•diiiWIII'IIa, Melp

SYRACUSE - A benefit softball tournament for the family of
Mindy Diane Taylor wlll be held
Saturday al the Syracuse Park
Entry fee $75. Hit your own ball
Games start at 9 a m.

CHESTER - Annual Weber
family reunion Sunday at the
Rodney Keller farm on Route 248
with basket dinner at 12· 30 p m.

POMEROY - A series of
gospel meetings will be held at
the Red Brush Church of Christ
beginning Sunday and continuing
lor a week, 7· 30 each evening.
Guy Malory of Winter Garden,
Fla will be the speaker each
evening The public Is Invited to
attend.
Reunl01111
The Bowers reunion will be
held Sunday at the s9uthbound
park on Route 33 The reunion
will begin at 11 a.m
The Wood family reunion wlll
be held Sunday at the V lrgll King
Farm, 38858 Smith Road, Pomeroy. Picnic lunch at 12 noon
The 52nd annual Buckley reunIon will be held Sunday at the
Belleville Dam Park In Reeds·
ville, beginning with a potluck
dinner at 1 p.m.
Homecomlnp
Minersville United Methodist
Church will have their annual
homecoming this Sunday. The
publiC is Invited
The annual homecoming of the
United Faith Church, will be this
Sunday. A basket dinner will be
held at 12 noon, followed by a
gospel sing at 2 p.m. featuring
Jan and Kathy, the Johnson
family, and the United Faith
Four.
RACINE - The annual Harvest Festival at the St. John
Lutheran Church, Pine Grove
Road, Racine, will be held
Sunday Worship at 11 a m ,
covered dish dinner at 12 noon,
afternoon program all: 30 1;1 m
MINERSVILLE - The Ml·
nersvllle United Methodist
Church will have their annual
homecoming on Sunday The
public Is Invited.
POMEROY - The annual
homecoming of the United Faith
Church, on the Route 7 bypass,
Pomeroy wlll be held Sunday.
Basket dinner at 12 noon followed
by a gospel sing at 2 p m ,
featuring several singers Everyone welcome.

MONDAY
POMEROY - The Disabled
American Veterans and Ladles
Auxiliary will meet 7 p m
Monday althe hall, 124 Butternut
Ave , Pomeroy
TUPPERS PLAINS- A repre
sentatlve of the Buckeye Program wlll be at the United
Methodist Church In Tuppers
Plains on Monday, Tuesday and
Wednesday,
30 register
to 2 30
p.m Personsfrom
may 12.
also
to vote at the same time and
place.

Falling In Love with Him "
Tracy Shaffer sang "Psalms
100"; and Jamie Boyd played two
violin numbers, "Song of the
Wind" and "Pick a Dilly-Pick a
Dilly " Garoldene Boyd sang
"We Have This Moment Today "
Shannon Stevers had a song
a bou I birds.
u
Gl !Is were presented to lhe
oldest man, George Gilkey, the
oldest woman, Clara Gilkey; the
one traveling the farthest distance. Albert Friend, the young
est person present, Cory Lee
Ringer, and the one having the
most children present, Catherine
Stevers
Winning gilts were Pearl Gilkey, Brent Bolin, and Cheri
Sauters.
The progarm concluded with
group singing of "Precious Memories." Games were played by
the children and prizes awarded
to the winners
Attending were Catherine
Sievers, Shannon, Fawn and Ian
Stevers, Gladys Cumings, Paula
and Melinda Chancey, Mr and
Mrs Robert Chaney, VIrginia
Gibson, Cheri and Joy Sauters,
Manda Eastman, Mr. and Mrs.
Pearl Gilkey, William Qulvey:
Theresa and Tracy Shaffer,
Pomeroy.

Committees for the coming
year were appointed by Patty
Dyer, master, when Star Grange
778 met recently at lhe haiL
Harrisonville Grange
members were visllors for the
meetlng. Appointed committee
chairmen were Catherine Col
well, women's activities, Opal
Dyer, youth; Linda Montgo
mery ,junior; Ray Midkiff, legislative, Maxine Dyer, membership, , Neva Nicholson, deal
program, Opal Dyer, Information; Blll Holcomb, agriculture;
and Bernice Midkiff, community
service.
It,was decided to exhibit at the
county and state fair again next
year.
Mrs. Montgomery reported on
tbe following contestl and projects for lbe coming year. J'hey
are state baking, honey nut
bread. alate aewlng. one piece
street dress, and project,
Friendly Hilla Granae Camp.
Anna ()edln and Mra. Nichol

'

r

I

1

son were reported Ill
The literary program on the
theme "September and School"
and Included "September" by
Eleanor Nelson, "Back to
School" by Ben Rife, 'We,
Teachers of Yesterday' by Keith
Ashley; "An Old Covered
Bridge" by Catherine Colwell;
''SchoolMarm"; by Becky Rite;
"Dear Classmate" by Patty

Shawna Ann Manley, daughter
of Rod and Angle Manley,
Pomeroy, celebrated her third
birthday recently with a party
Attending were her parents
and sister, Chelsea, Dena and
Jim Lawrence, an aunt and
uncle, John and Sharon Manley,
paternal grandparents, and Rick
and Jamie Blaettnar and daugh
ter, Jessica, Kellh Ann and Jodi
Sisson, Susan and Jo Sandy, Todd
Dorsey, Charles and Sherry
Knight.
Sending gifts were paternal
great grandparents, Ann Hysell,
Mr and Mrs. Charles Manley,
paternal great - great
grandparents, Mr and Mrs
Homer Hysell, Teresa Fields,
Ashley and Chris Fields. and Mr
and Mrs David Pratt, maternal
grandparents

ANTIQUES AND
COLLECTAILES
OPEN

SATURDAY
SElTMER I 0, 1911

1fi. .••••an.
.IIPOir. OliO

'

SHAWNDA A. MANLEY

r--~~~~;~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~--'

l

'I•'

RACI"'"E - Southern Junior
High Boosters will meet Monday,
7 30 p.m , at the junior high
school All parents welcome
KYGER CREEK - Women
Alive will meet Monday, 7p m at
the Kyger Creek Clubhouse
Speakers will be Mary Beth
Smlthern and Rebecca DeLong
Monthly membership dues are
$2 Refreshments will be served
RACI"'"E - OAPSE Chapter
453, Southern Local, will meet
Monday, 7 p m , at the high
school All members are urged to
a I tend
REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Elementary PTO will meet Monday at the school, startlng with
open house at 6· 30 p.m., followed
by the meeting at 7 p.m All
parents and friends are urged to
attend

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Ohio Eta Ph I
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Soror
ity, will meet at 7 30 Tuesday
evening at the Senior Citizens
Center lor the opening of meetIngs for the new chapter vear
Revival
A revival Is underway at the
Apostolic Church of Jesus Christ,
New Lima Road, Rutland,
through Saturday night Everyone welcome

Mr and Mrs Floyd Brlckles,
Mr and Mrs Craig Dougan,
Kandt and Stevie Dougan, Mr
and Mrs. Jim Boyd and Janice,
Mrs Hollie Hayes. Mr and Mrs
Brent Bolin and Lindsay, Daryl
Young, Sharon Swindell, Estella
Colburn, Audra Hayes, Shade.
George Gilkey, George Gilkey,
Jr , and Sandi Cullison, New
Marshlleld, Elizabeth Hayes,
Chester
Dllana Womble, Bill Allphin,
Stewart; Fern Cheesebrew,
Shawnee, Grace Richardson,
Linda and Corey Lee Ringer,
Margaret Canter, Carol Brick
les, Lois Hayes, Mr. and Mrs.
William McClannahan. Athens;
Mr and Mrs Donald Wolfe, Mr
and Mrs David Baker, Eva
Hayes, Jeff Yates, Steve Yates,
Flora Yates, Chuck Karnes,
Logan, Margery Doulgas, Mary
K Hayes and daughter, Kara,
Mr and Mrs. Roger Hayes,
Jason and Jeremy Hayes. Hart·
ford,\\' Va, Mr andMrs Jamie
Greene. Albany
Rev and Mrs Albert Friend,
Holly and Rachel Friend, Hamil
ton; Wllliam Young, Rutland,
Juanita Richards, Dayton, Mr
and Mrs Oden Ellis, Glouster;
Mr and Mrs. Lloyd Hayes,
Rockbridge

Oyer, and 'Grandparents Day'
by Bernice Midkiff Jokes were
by Rick Macomber.

TO PlAU All AO UU. "1·11 s•

MONDAY flirt ,_AY I A.M. tt S PM.

...
,..
....w•
_" .. ···-"'

--.-.--.....
_
_
_____
--..... -............ -.. __
___
·
1----___===
.. = . ".:' ,"
...---==
--=·=-.=- - ··--I AJl Urttll NOON Y1UID.lY

lo.loYI
IIJ,O,ft

(lKfl SUNO.n

:::..."_ . . ... .........
,_..,.
................
. .,_,
..... _0_ ...
. ..-·.--..

001.01;. . .

INtYI

'==.·

·-·

1:1,11111

o»
···-~
••

ooe•

....

--

trllll

ttl•

OWDII
••

u••

...

~-··---· ...

,...,._
=- ...~:::..,
,.,_ ..........
CWo4-

••
,,,.

......

~-

••

,.~.,..

Clunbed pqe• cover th~
followm6 htlcplwM ucltGnJ••

--

-:.:-::.--=c:::J!i'!::.:=..:.
;"'. .~-c.: ':::...."':"1:.r...:::-....

=-~.

::r.=.r.

-~"

_,.,-

:nij?--

••
a--r- ~ ~:t... ,,._
:.-~~=

n--a..-.
a==:....'"'r-

Public Notice

Public Notice
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE COURT.
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
Accounto Mid vouc:h•o of
the to~ nemod ftdud•·
,. h.,e _,lied In tho Probite Coun. Meial County.
Ohio. for epprovaf end,.,._

Public Notice

Public Notice

In wrlttng. wlthln 30 diiVIOf Street,
Syracuse, Ohio
tho date olthio notice to Tho 46779.
Envtronmontol Board of Ro- 19)9, 11, t2. 3tc
view, Am. 300. 238 E
Town St • Columbus. Oh .
Public Notice
43215 Notlceofanyoppoal
ohall be filed wtlh 1ho Dirac
tor wilhon 3 dayo Propooed ADDENDUM TO PART 1.
actlonowllbecomelinalunITEM E 151
looo a wrttt.n adjudication SOUTHERN OHIO COAL
h-lng roquoat Io oubmlttad
COMPANY wlthtn 30 dayo of the IaMEIGS MINE NO 2
.,ance det... or the director
the pro-.

Southern Ohio Coal Company. M1191 M1ne No 2, P

nrvlee~/withdraw•

mont·
eatotte No 22482- Eighth
Annual Account of Robert B.
Titus. GuardiMI of Slophan E
Titua.
Eototo No 211790- Flrot

pooed action. An¥ peroon
oubmlt commonta and/or a meeting ragardlng
any draft action within 30
daya of tho data tndlcatad
"'Action", ao uaod above

and Flnel Accountof Ruth A
Smhh. Gu1rdiM1 of Homer
Smith. Sr

Chanen. Dece•ed.

Eotato No 141129 - Dlo·
trlbutlve Account of Jon p
Karochnlto; Spacial Admlnlatrotor oftho Eatote of Bertha
Cook. Dac-ad.
Emte No 17011 -Final
Account of Jon P Karoch·
nlk. Spacial Adminlalrator
of the Eotota of Auguat
Snyder. a-ad
Unlaoa axcapt- ara llod
- · aald IIOCOUntl wit be
for ....... bef&lt;n oald Court
on tiM 111h day of
1888. at whloh time oald ..,.
CGOntawll bo co-ed ond
contlnuodftomday today unII ftnally dlapoMd of
AfP( lnt-ted may
llo
~~~- 11&gt; uld

Oct-.

w-

plaintt, any peraon may obUln notice of funher ac·

poled undergrouOO m1ntng

• • will ancompoea 32 6

ular action•. all communicabe sent to

t10n1 shell

OEPA. P 0
Box 1049. Columbu~ OH
432611-0149. Ph 1614) 11442116 Conoul ORC Chop
3746 Mld OAC Chopa. 374647 .,d 37411-6 for roqun.
manto.
Flnallaouance of Notlca ol
Ragiotratlon Sohlo 011 Co
Slta 082&amp;. Beach &amp; Locuot.
Mtd..oport. Ohio Efflctlve
Oato 09/02/88. Appllca·
tlon No(o) 0853009998
G001
(9) 9. 1tc
Hearing Cl.-11.

Public Notice

26

proalmately

NorthaMt

Ohto Tha appltcatoon pro-

~~~~to~~~x~pe~~n~d.l.ha area for
mining

1

1

recy-

cling contor Optfatlon
through tha Ohio Liner Pr•
ROBERT E BUCK ventlon and Recycling ProJUDGE gram. Dlvlalon of Utter Pr•
vantk»n and Recycling

Probata Dlvlalon
Tho purpoH of thio pubhc
MlliQI County. Ohio ho.-lng lo to datomtlne If

191 9 1 tc

auch

----------1
PUBLIC NOTICE

affact the economic
otonding of axlotlng racycling oparatiano, buolnaoand/ or lnduotrioo
The date fora public hoar-

1n opereUon would

du·
pll011ta the efforts or ldveraaly

Protection

tng il aetfor September 14.

Agency JOEPA) loot - ·
Effective dotao ol flnel ac·
1ttona and loouance datoa of

1988 Tho IChodulad ITmO
for tho hearing Ia 11 ·OO a m
Tho haarlng will be hald al

propoHd action• end

the M•111 County Board of

Environmental

of

draft actlono are otatod Fl·
nal actlonomaybeappealed.

MR/00 main fadlhy tocated 11 1310 Cariaton

Lama road, Rutland, Oh1o

mintttratrlx. W W.A., of the
11tata of Ru ..efl l Priddy.
deceased, late of Route 1.
Box

84,

45776

Oh10

Robert E Buck. "

Probate Judge
Lena K Na11elroed, Clark

191 2. 9, 18, ltc

•
-----~~----·
Public' Notice

Wrilten com-

the Me1g1 County Probata

manta..,dlar requ81t1 for en
lntormel con.,..enca m8'f be
- . t 10 the D"'Bion of Rod•

Lima road. Rutland. Ohto

public
mtllon.

Court, Cue No 26940, Ed·
oth A Clark. 34179 New
46775 wu appointed Ad·

Fountain Squar&amp;
Buldng 8 3, Columbus. Ohto
43224 wHIWn thirty 1301 day a

mtmstretrtw;. W W A , of the
estate of Ahca M Prtddy,

of thia notice
191 2. 9. 16 23 4tc

Box 84.
46776

of ~ IMt date of pubhcabon

sion of Oh1o ha1 permitted
Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc
to.pasacertatn ptpellnetak•

daceaaed. late of Route 1.

Rutland.

Ohto

Robert E Buck, '...
Probate Judge

Lena K Neoulroad. Clerk
(91 2. 9. 18, 3tc

3 Announcements

or-pay ch•g• approved by
the Federal Energy Regula·
tory Comm11110n through itl

a• coat

recovery rate aub·

ject to refund pendtng the
outcome of a heertng In

Cue

No

88-1182-GA·

•

UNC The Comm11110n hu
scheduled a hurmg tn Ca1e

No. 88·1152-GA-UNC 10
determine whether Columbia 1hould be permttted to
pa.. thaae
take-orwpay

chargll through ita a• colt
recovery rete The heerlng

will begin at 1o ·oo a m on
Saptembor 27, 1988. althe
offiCIII of the Commi1;1ion,

T1ma Is running outl Work

now 'til Chriltmea Show
toyt &amp; gifts for Hou• of
Uoyd No mv.atment cot
lectlng or delivering Call
814 949 22518 •fttf 8 m

Lrttlt thtngs

,.

arr Worth 1\lo&gt;t

tht

""'"'ittl

5&lt;dlll•

1

992-2156

REVIVAL
Sept. 11-16, 1988

POMEROY

ST
BAPTIST

CHURCH

•••••••If

10:30 A.M. Sunday &amp;
7:30 P.M. Each Ev•li'l

Richard Halley, the son of Rev. and Mrs.
Liston Halley, Jr., •• bt alvinl a concert
at tho Pomeroy Flnt laptlst Church this
cemln1 Sunday, Stpt1111btr 11. Rkhard
wll bt playlllt and slngln1 durint the
10:30 Wonhlp Hour. the pubUc is invited
to at...d. Yo God bt tho
•J

'

Rutland

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Auguot 29, 1988, tn

LEGAL NOTICE
Tho Public Ulllklao Commto·

The Meiga County Com·

Court. CaooNo 25941. Ed·
oth A Clark, 34179 New

mtlea

miiSioners are planning to

The following wora rocal·
ved/praparad by Tha Ohio

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIOUCIARY
On Auguol 29. 1988, on

Wrlk•ville,

of

ILibmh. a grant for

~'-=.~~iiC"NOti;;--1
Public

Public Notice

pa.ed coal mtning and reel•

1ht truA.

Common Pia• Court.

(91 9, 1tc

cant public intereat llliltl. a

account• or to mmn p•
tainlng to the excecutlon of
-lng

Comm111ion

46776, waa appoonted Ad·

Public Notice

dltyo prior 10 the date HI fo&lt;

Further ~nformatton m.y be
obtained by contacttng the •

Nltuf'll Raources. Drv1110n
of R.clemlllon The pro-

PUBLIC HEATING
NOTICE

not •a th.. five

Broad Street, Col·

do• not lndude recetpt of 1
verified complaint If stgnifl

Emto No 16601- Flrot tiona. and addltlonol lnfor- acrao. and 11 located on tho
and Final Account of Jon P mal ian Unloao olhwwloa Wlikoavlle 7'/a Mmute U S
Karoahnlk. &amp;p-al Admlnlo· provldod on notice of partie G S q1111drangla mop. aptrator of the Eltlte of Ira 0

e..t

the Melp County Probate

e.-No 16107-Final publlcmeetlngmaybohald matlon OptfaiiOn wtll be on
and Dlotrlbutlvo Aooount of Ao to any action, Including MlliQI County. Salem TownJon p Karoahnlk, Special rwcaipt of varlflad com- ahlp. Section 30 The proAdminletntar of the Ellate
of An nil Chanin. Dece•ed

180

umbuo, Ohio 43286 0673

0 Bo• 490, Athena. Ohio
46701, hao oubmittod an opplication lo rovloa a Cpal
Mining end Red emotion Parmit numbered R-0365· 1 1,
to tho Ohto Department of

Mil'!

Jamis M. Warfield,

PIECES OF OLD

Carrie, Cathy and Donna WOQd
of Pease Air Force Base In
PoriSmoulh, N H have returned
home alter spending the summer • •
with lhelr grandparents and ~
uncle, Jean , Norman and Ronnie ::
Wood
Jean and Norman Wood visited •
recently with their son and
famtly , Kenneth, Yong, Carrie,
Cathy and Donna Wood In New •
Hampshire, and also thelrdaugh· 1
ter and her family, Sue, Steve, I
Jeffery and Michael Brlckles of •
Germantown, Md They spent •
time In the Pocono Mountains In :
Pennsylvania and attended sev- :
eral concerts obtaining auto- l
graphs of Jerry Reed and Patty ~
Loveless
1
Ro nnle Wood also recen lly '
visited the Kenneth Wood family l
In Portsmouth and his sister and :
her family In Germantown He
also spent a few days in Atlantic
Clly,N J

DARWIN- Bedford Township
Trustees will meet In regular
session on Monday, at 7 p m, at
the town hall

Star Grange conducts recent meeting

•

prayer meeting? OOpm

--

ATHENS - Mt Zion Church,
Athens, will have homecoming
on Sunday with morning service
atlO a.m , dinner at12 noon, and
afternoon service at 1 p m
Everyone welcome.

Reunion held for schoolmates

Sermonette

CauiJ l.deu

P m , at Falher's House Church
In Hartford, W.Va The Nichols
Family, Narrow Way, Reneelions Trio, Tabalba, and other
singers will be featured Everyone welcome.

SUNDAY

Personal notes

Manley birthday is observed

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
Ave Rev Clark Baker, pastor Carl Not
1ingham Sunday School Supt Sunday
Schod 10 a m With classes for all ages
Evening servlt't."S al 6 p m Wednesday Bl
ble study at 1 30 p m Youth services Frl
day at 7 30 p m

Va

Rev

lng

(row's

.'

Prayer Se-rvtce f 'Ill p m

CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY

Don Archer
Rev Roy Deeter
Rev Carl Hleb
Rev Seldon Johuon
ALFRED - Church Scbool 9 30 a m ,
Worship llam, UMYF6 30pm UMW
Third Tue~ay, 7 30 p m Communion.
rtrst Sunday (Archer}
CHESTER - Worship 9 a m Church
School lOam BlbleStudy,Thursday 7p
m UMW !Irs! Thursday 1 p m Corn
munion, first Sunday (Archer)
JOPPA - Worship 9 30 a m Church
SchoollO 30 am Bible Study Wednesday,
7 30 p m (Johnson)

SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST 'Aulb-

Darline Stewart Sabbath School beflt\nsa1

992-5141

Be~

day each monthworshlpservlces at 7 30 p
m , Wednesday evenings at 7 30 p m
Prayer and Bible Stud_¥ _

2 p m Saturday afternoon with worship

-Morv L Becher

MEIGS

COOPERATIVE PARISH
UNITED METHODIST CHUBCH
NORTIIEAllT CLUSTER

Families"

264 S. 2ntl, Middleport

Age Is the odometer by which we mark the milestones on
our journey of life, and yet some people seem to get better
mileage than others. For reasons of vanity, good health or
the absence of any signs of aging, they walt longer to
proclaim themselves as senior citizens. In tact, It Is hard
to believe that some of these youthful-looking people can
be grandparents. Nooetheless, regardless of how they look
or act, our elders deserve our respectful attention and
Jove. Children should be taught this by the example we set
for them, so that what would otherwise be an
uncomfortable generation gap can be turned Into a
rewarding exchange of Ideas and experlences for both
young and old, whether they be grandparents or just
acquaintances. Our House of Worship teaches us to revere
our elders, and to remember that we will be there
ourselves some day.
We grow neither
"Ask thy father and
better nor worse as
he will shew lhee,
we grow old, but
thy elders and they
more like ourselves
will tell thee "

992-3978

TRINITY
CONGREGATIONAL
CHURCH. Richard Freeman pastor.
Debbie Buck. Sur¥10)' Sehool Supt Olu rth

"Serving

.tll~·1"'

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

~

RACINE PLANING MILL :

DARWIN- Modern Woodmen
of America Camp72301s having a
potluck picniC on Saturday at
6· ;tO p.m. at the southbound park
on Route 33. Bring potluck dish,
table service and lawn chairs
Gues Is welcome

•
'•

St.

011.

RUTLAND - The Rutland
American Legion Is sponsoring a
!Ish fry, using Little's Recipe, on
Saturday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m ,
at the legion hall on Beech Grove
Road in Rutland Everyone
welcome

362 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO 457891
614/992-2844

GRAVELY TRAC~OR SALES
204

SATURDAY

IIPIIf' County'• Oltksl FloriSt

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

106

IUIIOI

FRAN'CIS FLORIST

~ FIOWRS FOR MRY O&lt;CAIION

214 E Mam
992·5130 Pomeroy

"

Pomeroy

992-3325

'""'"f Fliw~t $hop

Brogan-Warner

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nat1onwlde Ins. Co.

Pomeroy

rn

216 S Second

GroctrtesGeneral Merchlndtse
lllctne 949-2550

Prescr.pt1onS

POMEROY - Mary Shrine,
White Shrine of Jerusalem, wU
meet Friday at 7· 30 p.m at the
Rock Springs Grange hall. Prac
lice lor Inspection will be held
Potluck refreshments w!ll be
served following the meeting

TEAFORD REALTY

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

...r.tUTJ.

The Daily Sentinel-Page 7 ;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

�Page 8-The Daily Sentinel

2 Lincoln Terrace
P-eroy, Ohio

It, 124, P-oy Ohio

haler fill'

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto T, •.,..d,.lo•

YARDMAN &amp; ECHO
Located tlolfwoy
between Rt 7 • a.. h•n.

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
ar Night
NO SUNDAY CAliS

REPAIR

to

VHS TAPE
let us cennft thoseoldMo• •
&amp; ~~~ o'4tr to eaty VHS.
CALl AMY UUIR
or lOB'S ELECTRONICS

Aulhonnd

.

I

SerfKt

&amp; Parts
Weed Eater
Homehte
Jacobsen

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY
2

Middleport,

In Memoriam

TOP SOIL •
FILL DIRT

Ohio

10-8-tfc

992-6611

WOfk

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
7 13-'88- tin

IJCIII

Howard L.

Service on All
WeH-r

Writfl•l

-ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR

J&amp;L

Gutters

INSULAnON

Mastic &amp; Certainteed
Vinyl Siding
RoofinJ
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blawn Insulation
Storm Doo11 &amp;
Windows
Free Estimates
Call 992-2772
1115/Ho

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

8-11-1 mo. pd

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL

MARVIN
McGUIRE SR.

WHO PASSED AWAY
TWO YEARS AGO
SEPTEMBER 9. 1988
A

mHIIon

timu

I've

needed you.
A million times I've
cried.
If love could have saved
you.
You never would have
died.
1n life I loved you dearly,
deeth I love you atHI
n my heert you hold 1
place

I"

No-one else can ever
fill.
It broke my heart Ia lose
you,
But you dod not go

alone.
For pan of me went
with you.
Tile doy God took you
home
Sadly missed by
Wofe, Bettie, Children
and Grandchil
5

Hpppy Ads

BOGGS

Authonzed John
Bush Hog Farm

Equ1pment Dealer
Fat11 E••lt111111

,,d

flood lud,
\\Shte TIDDP""
Kerin TetiD'd.
Lm, &amp;dg

Repairs

NIASE Certified Mech8mc

CALL 992-6756
"DOC"

VAUGHN
Certified Ltcensad Shop
S-25-tfn

Parts &amp; Ser• lu

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

l 3 86-tfc

•Dozer Ia Backhoe Work
•Will Do Haulmg With
Dump Truck

TRI-STATE
DRYWALL CO.
Compl•te

•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Busmess
WAHT 10 IUY WIECMED OR
JUNK CAliS 01 TRUCKS

Drywall

S.rvice

-FREE ESTIMATESFor any uf thesnerYices lall

ACOUSTICAL CEIUNGS

614-742-2617

FREE ESTIMATES
Reasonable Rate8

Between 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
or leave MoiS-

56 STATE ST.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING

'N

•BLOWN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New H-sluHI
"Free Estimates..

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949-2860
N'O

SUNDAY CAllS

3 II tin
General

"A CURE MAS 8EEM FOUMD FOR YOUR
HOUSIIIO BLUES! PRESCRIPTION
IIUIIIBER 992·22591"

Hours 10-4
Evtnmgs by Appointment
2 miles toward Alb1ny on
SR 681

992-5083

8121mo

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

2 1tr-''88 lfn

GALLIPOUS, OH.
446-3487

Gently used
consienment
clothing for
children.

SYRACUSE, OHIO
Moat Foretgn and
Domestic Vehtcles
A/C Servtce
All MaJor &amp;. Mmor

Deere. New Holland.

8/18/18

c,,,,,,ulttlo,,

SERVICE

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-662-3821

SECOND TIME
AROUND SHOP

MAIN STIHT PIZZA
MON.-TUES.-Wm.

FIREWOOD

~.'!~
!!'!!~ .!:"P'~~:.•
• 15 .. PfppE'Iidtij •

OAK, LOCUST,

Back To School Spet'lol

PIZZA
:
$6.50 + ' FlEE •
: SUPII LAIGI DMNIS :
:

CHEESE

: Pidc

't, or Eo! In Ooly

..

:

! =~~!~ oP.P.'!J: .~~~.!
992-2221 .. 992-9922

Sorry, no dtllw«y or otlw
ceu,_. camlinld with this
off..
•/6/11/l n•

"LET GEORGE
DO IT"
HAULING
SAND-GRAVEL
LIMESTONE
FILL DIRT

CHERRY

$3 s

3

BILL SLACK
992-2269

WANTED

DEAD 01 AUVE
•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must Be Rtpalrablo"

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

985-4487

PAT HILL FORD

NEW LISTING

FlATWOODS - 10 73 acres of va
cant ground Would make a noce home sole Call for more mlormatiOn $21,500 00

161 North Second
Middleport, Ohio '5760

(6141 992-6550
RESIDENCE PHONE
(6141

992-2196
Moddleport.

MIDDLEPORT- PRICE REDUCED- Very noce neoghborhood' 2 story home woth 3 bedrooms, !;moly room, 2 w g;rage, full b;semenl. 2 balhs Much More' ONLY $33.900 00

CHESTER. OHIO

lAND CONTRACT - Noce house m Pomeroy $1.000 00
down, 12% onterest. 12 year term on • b;l;nce of
$15.500 00 $203 59 mo p;ymenl lOCI P&amp;l CAll TOOAY'

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS - BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING S. REPAIRS

MIDDLEPORT- OWNER WANTS OFFER on thos very noce
home on town Gre;t street' 3 bedrms. 2 bths, large walk-m
closet~ I car garage, large lot and much more' MAKE OFFER
$45,000 00

To a good horr. 2 mo old
PUPPY, IJi small Betale &amp; 'h
Pekingese. m.tlo(IIRY color &amp;
tofthllred Cllll14-448-2041
To give r.v.y-11 wb old full
blooded Beagle pup 2 recliner

eh,... Coli Blil-441-3413.
2 kittltnt to give .w.y Call .tier

B PM, B14-441-0&amp;40
Nine month old Beegle. Smart.
good watch dog. Playful Lots of
anergy 814-992-2102

Kittens to give rNflt to good

home Call B1il-992·73821fttr

600

GENERAL CONTRACTORS

NEW LISTING- HARRISONVILLE -Ill oar pl;n home w1th

References

3 bedrooms noce lot ;nd much more' FMHA quallfoed Call
tor dela~is
MIDDLEPORT - MAKE OFFER on thos 1\\slory homesoltong
on a noce street m Moddleport1 Close to p;uk &amp; pool &amp; shop
pmt&gt;. New kotchen new patoo, 2-3 bedrooms, mce bath
$32,000 00
•

&lt;!I

8-22-1

mo.

, Television L1stenmg Devices
Dependable Heanng Aid Sales &amp; Servic~
Hearrng Evaluations For All Aees

z LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
a: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

-

SYRACUSE- Noce 111oor plan home w[h 3 bedrooms, I car
garag~ noce iol &amp; patoo Rustoc Holls Subdovos10n ONLY
$35,900 00

~ (614) 446-7619 01 (614) 992-2104
J: 417
Second Avenue. Box 1213
z Galh poll$,
Ohio 45631

CARPENTER - N1ce doubt e wode sntong on I 86 acres m a
n1ce country settm~ 4 yrs old wnh a I \\ car gar;ge, deck,
equipped kotchen. fenced yard and many other n1ce lea·
lures BARGAIN $32,500 00

-

HENlY E. CLElAND ................ ... ...... 992-6191

JEAII TRUSSELL... ..... . . ........................949-2660
DOmE TURNER ...... :'...................... 992-5692
TRACT RIFFLE ........................................... 949-2807
JO HILL ............. .... . . • . . .. .•. • ..... 985-4466
OFFICE................. ........ .. . ..... . ...... 992-2259

or
Veterans MemoriaiHOjlpital
_ Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy.

Weot, Brunco, Aohley

LOWEST PRICES

WE TRADE

CAIPENTD, OHIO (Off St. It, 143)

691-6121
\

•brsltt•neededb2chllcnn
'Aft•naon shift Call 814-4484107 or 4441-1847

Good little tree dog
814-742-2521

Young

Bl..:k half Cock• Spantet. 8
monthl old. mlle. phone 304875-8087

30il-675-4038

Hair Styffmi. Acroa The Str•
atyflng aalon hi IHid"g one
•ddltlonll ttyllat who II looldng
tor rnoN tMn _1utt .,~ )ob

Clll Tor•let llil-448-9510 lor
detlill.
•

e59,230 .... Now hltlna. Your

Dt••

Lost ctulds John
Trector
Dusky St on way to Post Office
TuM mom1ng 114-912-&amp;171!1

nll'ltt of fec:tCMY 1qulpment In

tho Adu M ln&lt;Notrlll Moln•nenCI ProgNm M The Aduh
Educ.tion c.n ......Tri-County
Voc.tlo"" School We h..,. •
wrltty of funding IOUIQI ev•t.
•bl• for ells;ble applicant•
Cl•- begin October 3rd, c•
713-31!11111Xt 14 to . . . . . .
OUILlERS
Elrn $100 -nso • qulh.
working at yOUr home .t your
own IPMd Wa •u:r.ly f'le top
air- ~~~- ., ...ovthlng
elM IJCC..,t 1he nMdle. Call
Holtv Hill Inn tor more
lnforrMtion Call 814-992·

110000 per title. Wrle , ....
IF1538, 111 S. UnrDinway, N.
Aurcn, II 80542

MeCLURE'S RESTAURANT
HIRING Cooklend wlihret. .
n.ded R•un• being a.k _.
1·0().4 00 p m Tuesd-vs 11nd

Thurtdavt., 479Jecklon Ake,
Olllk»ooil. whhe hou• behind
McClu.-.....,rant.
DIRECTOR OF NURSING A 75
bed akllled nuf'ling fldllty 11
tMklngln ANforfltDirectorof
Nuulng poaltlon
mu8t,.......
•ana I
p,
communiCMionmdpftltntc. .
sldllt tn retum. Wit off• • vtty
competlt~ wege end beneftt
p1ck.ge. For lmmecH• con.ld-

. .tlon, _.d riSlii'M In confidence to K8vln Ruffing. Arcadia
Nu~g Center. loK A. COo).
vile, Ohio 48723.
Need someone to ftiPIIr ch*•

Fourd. Medh.lm abed white dog
in Five Points ••a Call M4992-3388

AVON · All lrMI CaU Merltyn
Weftlr 304-882-2148

Public Sale
S. Auction

Ru:k Pa•son Auctioneer, ltcensed Ohio end Wtlt Vir~nll
Ettete anteq.-. f•m. hquld•
tion •1•. 304-ns-&amp;785
Buy

We pay c•h for late model cl..,
Ulld c.a
·
Jim Mink Chill Oldllnc.
Bill Gene John aon
61il-'l46-3872

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and neoNer used c•• Smith
Buick Pontiac, 1911 Eastern
A"" , Gllllpolll Coil et 4-4412282

FurntluM lind epplencee by 1he
piece or entire hou•hold Fllr
prk:oobolngpold Colll14-4413158
10-20 •c,...Bidwel
School District RtMOnlbtl.
Clll 81ii-4411-IZ97 .....
after 4:30. ~¥11m• WIJiilcMdl.
Appr01:

Wan•dto Buy-IUn&lt;lngtlmber
Coil llil-3711-27151.

Clll etil-992-2021

AVON, 111 lrtalll Shtrley
Span. 304-175-1429.
CHARGE NURSE
P I - Vollov llurolng Core
Center, 100 bed tldll«f nurwlng
faclltyloc8tltd In Point Pla-nt
WVa It _.lng a regidared
nune to •••urn• the duties of
ful-ttme chM'Qrl
Thlt
potiUon II open 1mmediiMIY.
c.ll Klthv Thornton It 304-1751231 p f - n V.Uey Nursing
C.e Cent• .. • lq'fll opportunity empSooter and 1tfltmh:hle
O.iry f•m wort. for 10C81
Meton Countvf•m. Experience
preflrt'tdWIIImltkh'-'cead-r.
operltl f.-m equipment Hou•
fur~ plua •7150 00 per
month Wagea.,dYtbeel•v-•
1 wttk: VIIC•ion. RefeNncet
oequlood ApplY In ponon Pt
Pl....,tJoblervice. 22 IShcth
Sl . a 00.4 30 Mon-Frl.
Earn ntN Income Mothers •
Subnftlltl teechen ••n Mtll
Income tn E&amp;tc•ton 11111- Sel
your hou,._ World Book Inc. Call
collect 11•-1715 2813 Sue
Con..-

Situ ation11

12

Wanted
oldoo!y m"' looldil for 0
feme!• com,.nlon to d . . .nd
1p1nd dme with. Pl . . . send
reeponae to EerMII McKinn.y,
71 Coout Bt. llolltpolll, Ohio
l.onoly

45131
Will Cll'l for ltdlrlv mM or
women ., our home 814-112·
11115
WII Cll'l for lldert\r m.. or
women In my home. 19 'f'l.
experience. Tuppers Plaine••·
CAll 114-817-3402.,, time.
13

llliiUrii'ICB

16

School•
lnmuctlon

111-TMIN NOWI

SOUlHIAiliRN IUIINEII
COLIIa Ill It I o 1'1111.
Ololo ......,_ G - Doodo
11M A... 11. Dill 4441-41a7
llot-110. 11-11-10111.

Halp ll'lllnted

EARN I!XTRA MONEl' Ill ring
tho lllmmor. Got out of tlot
- · - - I Dolly hntlnol
- ·Clll
RouIcon
.. _
n
Mlddt...,
et lTho
-lnol Offtoo • 814-1122151

HIWIC. . frM-.oMion. ttou•
liner. EltCollont .., _ _ Call
81il-246-11274.

21

Business
Opportunity

QJ..

33

40 1cra Raccoon Ad- Mobile

MaigsSchoola 81~892-1313 •

I NOnCE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO • .-commendt th• you
do busln. . whh people you
know. end NOT to llt'ld money
ttwough the mil untl you hwe
inveetiglt_. the oft.tng

home *38,000 Cell 304-622
7279

Homeend3acrn Y:!mlleoutiR
143 off Rt 7 Coli 114-1122804.

•I•

For
by owner approximately
39 ecre term located 3 m1lea
from PolntPI . . .nt ewt S..d Hill
Rood. 30il-675-8787

1 Olprhlateaer•w/e.-yeco.•
Golllpollo fefry, n.., homo oloo
2 1011 whh wolle •10.000 Coil

3bedroomhom.on4klt&amp; ~
Ao1d, Hillview 3Dil-1711-4011

74acre f.-m, no bullclngs. good
paltuNI ., d rural water IIVail•
ble. price negotieble. 304-8756315.

Onnd ..,.., Hgta.-3 bedroom
home with family room, wood-

34

30il-1711-4131

23

P1ol911ional
Services

Plano Tuning. Ou .. tty HrVice
1181!1 L..ne Denfels 814742-2951.
lllnoe

burner, 2 ecrea of lend
*65,000 00 Sh.-obyopp&lt;*otm.,t 30il-1711-l 175.
3 bedroom. 2 botho, fu lllnlohod
b..em ..t, new furnace &amp; CINItl'll atr. g . .g., f•ced yard
2414 MI. Vernon Ave Pt
PI-nt Prloed on lnepecl:ion
30ii-B711-1774

35

2 b•h. femlty room wtth flr•
piece. for,..l dining. IM'g8 living
room, 30 fl custom Olk W.Chen
~:~bin .... 01111: woodwork. flnilh
b~~~ment. 2 c• o•eae. 1we1
l.,diCIPed lot. 4 milll from
H - Hoopitll off Rt. 311f'DrterbroOk Subdivision Call
llil-4411-4119
TWo M«oom hou•. lot end
half, ch• link fenced yt~rd
2119 Ol•tnut St call 814-2411-5278

Be.&amp;~tlful rMr

lots oneecnplus,
public wt~t•, Clyde Bowen, Jr
30il-571-2331
26acres a,_d Run Road New
H•en Ownet ftnanclng IIIWII&amp;ble. 30il-882·3394
53 ecrn, 6 Jt11• to Pomt
Ple81enl, phone 304-8765018

'.

18

W.nted to Do

Pointing • roofing • -pomry
work liir ... hour or job. Cltl
llil-37).2411.

Camp tfte ebow Collt Guard
St8tion In d Henderson Rl 35,
h• efec &amp; septic sptem. 6 of
acre Cllll an'Vtlme 304-87&amp;.
6372
Sale · rent trliiiiW. 4 lots,
clty· w.ll weter, •·c, buMdlng
lito, N1nc:v 30il-8711-6540
30 ecte f•m small hou!IB.
prlwlte, back af Hllnderaon
30il-8711-7589

3 BR . Good cond. 11.000 Coil
11il-3811-9144

Renlals

197ZForHtP•k.12x80,28R,
oppl.,-. CA. dodl.owrlng, •
underpinning Call 814-441·
0500
41

REDUCED-28 x 5I "Log
Hou•"· ·~lngs: on our Log
Hou• dlt
. Stop end . . It

Homes for Rent

Nicety furnished •mall house
A&lt;N ho only Rol ""'...d No
.... Coil 61il-448-0338

.we.

bleHom. .

9340

Acreage

Ashton, large buldlng lou,
mobHe homes permitted, publ1c
wet•, elso ,..,.,. lots. Ctvde
Bowwo. Jr 30il-571 2338

1409

Frenllh City

Lots S.

11h •ere with garage Cement
floor •5ooo Coli 814-992
6313.

.ft.

VfltY att11ctM brick 4bedtoom,

Businees
Buildings

2 bedroom apartment. carpet
teparete utMitlel 2208 Jaffer
ton 30...175-83157

Har11 lowrs. buutlful 80 ft
ranch home, 2 blthl. 2 ltone
31
Homes for Sale
flr..,a.c•. 2 c• , ..... .b•n
.. d pond. l-ed ...... lou. .
19• Mart«te Mo-*'llr Home. 111Wf 'llrd, must.., rHuced to
101121 Allol-k:. c.. 3BR .. z ..u... 8.ooo.oo. 304-411bat ... ar• room, clnlng room. 1l42
'
To m..-; .xt,., to ht r.fust ••
to appreci•• • 46.000. owner A~· kl 2
ho
"h
flnandn~ CMI 114-44f.1408
._.c ...
e. on 1norv
u•
Wn
b..-m
8ecrM.
Higtw.y
5
•d rMr fron1aae with outJu Hd77.:_11-ll-.:.:.~
48
1 _ __
.:;:.
Boartlful Holcomb Hill, odell- ll:::n.:""':...::3::;0_:"-_:11_:.
tlontl lot 3 liR • Co Coli In Now Hoven, 3 bodr..,., 2
llil-441-0338.
bothl. Iorge Hvtnj, room. ftroModular home on large lot In place. gerege. • 0 •000 304Mercervltle. Poal, AC nM 27 3- 2471
c •oot Clll 81il-25t-8752 o•
&amp;1il-2411-9020
32 Mobile Homaa
for Sala
Mo ..llr home on large klt In
Mtfcervlle. Pool AC. nM • - - - - - - - - - - &lt;•oot Coli 114-251-1752 01
81il-245-8020.
L..td co nt.. ct. largeltving room
w/expando room, 2 BA ,
Myrtle D"""-3 bedroom, 4 ,.... w /Willi c•'*· air cohcltion.
old home, g. .ge. fenced lwei w/or whhoutturnltu,., Nat. t•
...,.d, ltOMge builclng Call 1urnece on prtv.ie lot. M.., llitnt ~
llil-441-1111.
lot Coli 5 to 8 PM, ltil-441I aR ho..,.Modloon St • 2·2
IR mobfle ho..,....Ctntenery.
Call llil-4411-4109 01 3792740

Farms for Sale

----------

2 SR unfourlohod, D~~'~8" 1
mH•218 •20orent t1&amp; dap
Rol On a ehKd Coli 814-4419181

NEED EXTRA ROOM? Slg - -

lnp an ourVEMCO 1 2a2• room
adcltion dlnll¥-hont ~HJ~Vh a

ootlo doO&lt; ~ronch Cltv Mobile
Hom•. In c., 448-8340.

1 BA home. 2 SR . mobile home
Both furnished 8200• mo Call
61il-441-410901 379-2740

3 IR. hou• c•petthroughout.
••ooo dawn. Allaume 1&lt;*1
Kyg• C ..... dlotlm Coil 11"4411- n57 oftll' 4 PM

3 or 4 BR houM·Eureka. 1Yz
b..,a 1275 • ma Dop re
qulrecl Coli 814-4411-4222 bohWen S:.fJ
2 BA hou•. air co ndltloned,
largefencedln.,.rd 8300amo
Clll llil-441-8320
3 lldroom houae between
O.lllpolle 6 Haber Hospkal. full
b•ement, two c• g•1ga a•
furrt~ce. cenlfllelr. chy schools
Clll 814-441-1288 oltor 5 PM

··---··Golliii·or.s··------&amp;Vicinity
1 Femlty-Tu11- thrv Fri 9 to 6.
123 Fourth Ave l!liaycle,
clothel. ho.-lnt 6 m....y ather
hem.
f

2 omlly·Sopt a. 9. 10 8-4 2V.
mMM·MIII Creek Ad Lota toy1.
clathlng. etc Rein/Shine
2 mil• from 141 on Neighbor·
hood Rd Thun . Frl , • Sat lept. I. 8. 10 Good f.. l and
winter clathlnt In wrloua • - .
t.,.. holtllhold MdmMymoNI
J.:h•=••:_1_ _ _ _ _ _ __
Yard S.l•1038 S.cor.t Ave........ 1.10.

Two Fomlv-boyo • gk11 clothoo.
windows. fumttuN.Kinchwood
INOOdetove 4 mff• outBuiiVIIe
_R_d._Th_u_,._.
a_F_ri_.- - - 1
Yard Sale farMias6ons-,prox
20 femMI• Oentwllf'Y ownhou• Fri.-1 til B. Sot -9 1111 ?

·····-·pomerov··-----·Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

3 BR hou• In country,.. .. Rio
G'""do No- Soc.dap. U40
o mo Clll 61il-2411-6439

Five femlly g . .ge 1111. 7,1!1,9
Nate 'MH rea , Ruttend

Hau•forNnt.2badroom Nice.
cl•n, neturel g• 114-9925868

Sept 9th, 1 Otto. 11th. 9:00.
5:00. Trlller behtnd Jetra C.r~
ryout !opt 1 1th, 11 00 I bag.
lots of niDI. ciHn clothes.

2 bedroom. unfu rnlahed FullY
c•peted Nice 1nd claen Oepoah required Call 114-992·
3090

Pameroy \ltdnlty. Sept llh end
10th 11 Smith's, 1881 Unaoln
Heights. ,..,..,.oy Clew oodlo,
Sn11pp1r t..wn Mo.,..., puul...
2 , _ ATV tileo, popOib-

2 bedroom unfu rniahed house.
607'11 Second St, New Haven.
304-8711-5271

lhund-1. _ , oppl-

doOfl. 2 young ~~pptl•'*,..,'•

3 piece suits (llkenew),lllOtillent

women' a clothing fncludlnt like

-h

Raymond Rot~W'a. 1 mlleofflt.
At. 3311 ebow Racine. MMUII
Rood
to• ..!!""· ......
lth, 9th, 10th. Boy. clothoo
(8·14), entkl• toala. skltes,
9omot etil-247-4292

Gongo -MY"'• D• fbolow
lllniUgll Drlv-ln) S.t 8-10.
9•30-1:30 01111 door ceblnet.
trUnk. quiltl, mleoiiiMIOUS.

car,., of Fourth end Mill.
lllflddloport Setuntov. s.,, 10.
School d11ka. ch-.. office
delkt depression 11-

4 Flimll¥ Ywd Ill•Thura , ftl.,
s.t. on Routh a..ne. Ch•'*•
Good r.ms Prlotd ChMP

Sopt 9,10,11 110,000 BTU
0.. Furn~ce. Lots of various

•

-...

Fri. ............ 9 • 10. 11-1.
Home lntwior, tv, babt alott.e.
mlaa 413 Aallraed ItOld 110 - - ffom 81-1
liMn. llbt olo"-t ••sart.d
"' . . . . 1-4
1 127 - n d Awo.•Fri•Set. R•
lrl-01. lonopo. pool llblo. 2
a• -.... llebr swlnt. lnf•t...,11 dothoo. lith . . . wllh
lllnd.toyo.oto.

-Ina

III•Movllfl _ , _ •
...... bed fNmM. •tomoblle
- 1 w-.lft.,.lbe•d

-lo14""d
trudl tldlngw-..
....

lehlndJIIRiportShop E Mein
Pomeroy Fri. - Sun ClothH.
MWing mechiM, bell¥ Item ..
•reo. m1ny more lt4HM

----··-prPfeaaiinc··- :.
&amp; Vicinity ~ , ·•
----- ...... ···---..... ···- ---· ....
1970 Windsor, 12xiB whh
10x12 ldd on. woodburner.
welhlr a"d ....... elr contl. must ll
be - d . 30ii-HII-3102
•
Clorlgololo.ltpt. I 11tdl !03

81-.- - ....

1:00 Ill 4 00.

Uontly-Pif..- ltoS.IIt. 7,

Goroao lllo. Bopt 1.1.10.
lUJ
Awo llcvolo.

otothlng.
Interior.
muoh mcnl

·...._-- ----·""
hou••••• •

- · 410 JIG!l- fllko. I AM
to2PM.I&amp;-Iopt.10.

~

Yard llle, 101Jon• lt., ThUrs.
Plf, Bol ltpt 1.1. 10. If raining
Olft. .ed. .... nett . . .

Ml•

==-11.-

I

...

-mloo

Vlldlll&amp; 1101Jolloowollvd..
Frl- .... 1:001111·00.
Ylld Bolo, I l l -

htlt.

10,
174 N Perk Drt.o. i:OO W I

COnd, Cali

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright
•

75

Radio Shack Computer 1000
EK , IKtra dlac drive 380 K ,

811aboerd alec. hNt:era &amp; ther
mottlts. 304-875-2722

1987 Bl1a Tndcer Tourni'I'Wit
TX1 7. 46 hp motor. 3 ~~­
life il&lt;koto. LCR ZOO Onoph
trolling motpr, 41 lb thrust.
11 000 00 end Wee over pey*
manta, owe •3.400.00 304578-2833

2 BR apts 6 closets. krtcf1 en-

Rooms for tent-week or month.
Starting at $120 a mo Gallia
Hatol 614-448--9580

hook up, ww carpet, n ewty
pa1ntad. deck
From $176
Regency, tnc. Apt1 Call 304675-5104. or 876 6388 or
675-773a

46 Space for

appt furnished, Washer40ryer

New completely furnished
apartment &amp;: mob1le home in
city Adufta only, Parking Call
614-448-0338
8EAUnFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES. 536 Jackaon
Pike from $183 a mo Walk to
1hop and movies 614-4462568 E 0 H
Upa•1rs unfur01ahed apt Car*
peted. ulllrt1es pud No children
No pets Call814-448-1837
Furnflhtd· 3 rooms S. bath
Cleen No pets Ref &amp; dapMit
requ1red Ut1ht1ea furnished
Adults only Call 61•·446·
1519
Furn~ahed

ept $150 Otllltlos
pa1d Share bath Single male
919 Second Ava, Gallipolis
C.U 446-4416after 7 PM
Luxurious Tara Townhouso
apartments Elegant 2 ftoors, 2
BR, full bath upstair• poiNd•
room downstairs, CA , dit·
hwllhet. dlt po•l pnvate entrMce prlvlttt enclosed patiO,
pool, playground Utilities not
Included. Start1ng at $299 per
rno Call &amp;14-367·7860
Furmhed apt New NaerHMC

1 BR t 296 Utilities psld Call

448-4416 after 7 PM

Apertmentt and ttouaes
304-875-5104

Call

Furnished apartment $260 a
mo 1 BR Utllh1et pa1d 920
Fou rtfl Ave , Gallipl)lie Call
4411-4418 alter 7 PM
3 room epartment 8100 a mo
Coli 30il-675-5104
Modlt'n 1 BR apt C.ll 814448-0390
Nice 2 BR 41f.t miles from
o..thpoUs Stove. refrlg &amp; water
furllllhed S225 a mo No pets.
Coli 61il-441-8038
Bachelor apartment-Firlt class.
New furniture, large fireplace.
Mutthevegoodrllf &amp;t100dep
Cha1ce locet1on Call 614-4461 816 or 446-1243
Smell furnished aplrtment Cen·
trallylocated Sultablefor1 or2
aduftL No pata Raf &amp; sac dop
Call 614-446-0444
Furnit:hedspt.·1 BR t240amo
Utllit1at ,aid 243JacksonPika ,
Galllpohs Call 448-,418after 7
PM
Furnished eftiaancy- $1 60amo.
Utilities pel d. 701 Four1h Avo ,
O.lhpol11 Call 446-4416 after 7
PM
Newtv-18modeled, unfurrnhed.
one-bedroom stove and rafrlgllr8tor, water included References and depoalt required $225
permonth Caii814-44S.4249.
446-2325 .. 441-4425
Gracious living 1 and
room apartments at
Manor and Rlvtrtlde
ment• m IIA!ddleport
f1 82. Coil 814 992
EOH

2 bedVIllage
Apart·
From
7787

2 bedroom APts for tent
C1rpeted. Nice alttlng. Laundry
fedlltl• avllllble. Call 61499243711 EOH

1

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
Rou'le 33 North of Pomeroy
Renl81 tm1lers Call 614-9927479

Harvest gold atove-$226,
Spaces for mnt, 1r111ler spsces. refrigerator noo Movtng Ea
water &amp; sewer furnished locust cal cond Call 614-44~6211
after 4 PM
Rd Rt. 1, 304-67~ 10 76
T111der space. 3 m1los South of Nice refrigerator. 2 dtnatte sets,
Pt PleaantatVoffRt2&amp;62 tiNin bed. box tpringa &amp; mattrill, couch, oak desk &amp; chan
30il-675-3818
Coil 814 441-3224

51 Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Ohve St Gallipolis
NEW- 6 pc wood group. S399
Uvmg room su11es 8199-8699
Bunk beds with badd1n~ $249
Full size mattress &amp; foundation
ltartmg- $99 Recliners
ltartmg,. $99
USED Bada dras.,s bedroom
auttes Desks, wringer wether, a
complete line of used furniture
NEW· Western boots $ 36
Workboota $18 8t up !Steel &amp;
soft toe) Call 814 446-3159

2 becioDm mollllle honw hllf
mlo out Jorlaho Rood. ..,.,.,_ Beech Slnll'. MlddlopOfl, Ohm:'
olllolon,.. opt, utl-loo
............ -1:00PM. pI ..roam
li . . , _ _
130il-1711-10112.
30"-182-2181
Mololt ho. . .!Omlthod •185
• 1100 plus ldAftlto. 304-1711- 8 ml• out Jerry Run Aoed, 3
bedroom apt, 30 ...171-23150
1112
.

""'"Ired.

Firewood for aale M111:ed sea·
toned hardw'ood $36 tor 14
card Call 814-379-2602 No
SundiiY cella, PleMal
BatJv bed/ bumper pads, sheets,
diaper stacker· $40 car teat·
$20, potty-02 Coli 814-3889734 after 8 PM
Kenmore wa1her and dryer
Harvett gold Exc.tlent shape
6226 firm Call Cheshire 814367-0322
Set of dark pine bunk beds wrth
ladder and rnattrns Very good
condlt 1on Cell 614-985-41B 3

County Appliance Inc Good Mvced twd wood •lsbs $12 per
uaed appliances and TV sets bundle Containing approx 1%
Open BAM to 6PM Mon thru ton Ohio Pallet Co, Pomeroy.
Sat 614-446-1899, 827 3rd Ohio 61il-992-8481
Ave Gallipolis OH
Seasoned oa1c firewood for •I e.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES •361oad 814-742-2545
W11het'1, dryers, refngerators ARMY SURPLUS (Advert•lng
ranges . Skaggs Appliances
Upper RIVer Rd beside Stone Speclaltiet. BUlin•• Politu:al
Crest Motel 614-446·7398
Allltema) Fn.Sat,Sun Noonto
1!1 00 PM
Sam Somerville's
since
1984 Regular 1 rmy
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
lssuu, denim. rental clothmg.
Sofas and chairs pr~ced from Jr camouflage blk and wtdte
5395 to $995 Tables $50 and Ford 1976 •Ia or trade Juncup to 8125 Hlda-e·bads t390 tion lndependanoe Road. At 21
to $595 Recliners $225 to 304-273-6656
t376 Lamps 828 10 8:126
Dinettes $109and up to '496 Seasoned oek firewood call
Wood tabla w-6 chan '286 to 304-876 2757 after 4·30 PM
8:795 Desk 8100 up to 8375
Hutches $400 and up Bunk Plattic letttrl for portable s1gn
blda complete w mettl'811et 842 50 bOK free ahlpplng Offer
t295andupta$396 Blbvbadl expir• Sept 1 o wva 1 800..
8110, Mattresses or box Ctt"lnga 842 2434 ar Ohio 1 800-533full or twtn $68 firm $78, end 3453anydme
S88. Queen sets • 260 &amp; up.
King t360 4 drawer CJheat •89 Portablellghted11gn with letters
Gun cabmats 6 gun Baby $299 00 Free delivery Offer
mattresses 835 &amp; S46 Bed e•J*• Sept 10 WVa 1·80()..
frames S20. •30 &amp; K~ng frame 642 2434 o• Ohio 1·8011-533850, Good selection of bedroom 3453 enydme
suites metal cabinets. fleadboards 830 and up to $86 Oarton trail rnut1r bow complata vary good cond, 304-77390 o.ws 11ma as C1B1f1 wttf1 5923
approved credit 3 Miles out
Bulaville Rd Open 9am to Spm Kenmore electr1c dryer axe cond
Man thru Set Ph 614--446- f160 00 10" RAD ARM saw
wtlh attachrnentt 8250 00
0322
1986 Alnkerl-0 120hp,lotaof
tKtl'll, 304-676•4486.
Valley Furniture
New and used furniture and
appllcances Call 614-446· 24 while p1nas, 3 ft tell
Amplflor 304-675 1484..
7572 Hours 9-5

PICKENS USED FURNITURE
Complete household furnish1
Ings. •L
n
Ml e out Jerricho.
30i1-675-1450

Dow.wown modern 1 tl11froom
tu.-od. olr cond CorP - Cllllft•4:00 30il-17113788

RCA cotor TV 26" consoleexcel cond · $150, Lowery organ !encore) with Magic Genu~
8 300 rabbit hutches, goat
milking stand, nest boxes, moo
betor, brood• Call 614-245
9157

Merchandise

NewlY redecorated apartments
.... liable. Utlfhles paid. 1225
per month. depoeit ,.qull'ed Cell
614-992 67 24 after 8.00 or
992&gt;5119.

opt

Aldlng lawn mower. Dynamark
1036 $350 Coli 814 448
6793

1 1 HP, 36" cut rid1ng mower,
Off1ce or small busmess space used two seasons Like new
for mnt located at N Second $800 Coll614-367 0149
Aw In Middleport busineu
district Call 614-949 5545 or Brande new-McCulloeh ProMack 610 chain 'IIINI· 1aw has
614-949-2216
been started but hat never cut
Spacious mobile home lots for any wood. RaMon for soilingrent Family Pride Mobile Home injury New cost $36!§, will sen
Park. Galhpol1s Farry, W Va for t26Q Or bMt offer Clll
614-317 0274
304-675-3073

Apwtment for rent •226 a
month Depolft required. 614992 6724 After &amp;pm or 992
5119

2 bedroom mablle home In Now ICCtiPfing IPPDcatlont for
Mldcleport Furnished. 1ir con- 2 bedroom apertmenta. fultv
ditioner. Wllher end dryer o•,_.d. eppii•C*• ..wter and
tnsh pldwps provfded. M1lnt11~
llil-112-1304.
nanoe free ltvlng cto• to thop2'nJ Will, aniHverAunAoed, plng.. banb and schoots For
1\Mdct.-ort For ktfornwtlon c.tl mo,. lnformetio'h clll 304-8823711 E 0 H
l1il-lt2-7409

Winchester Ranger 12 ga auto
vent nb with wmcho.lilcenew
$236 Call814-4,6-8963

Rent

J &amp; S FURNITURE
1416 Eastern Ave
4 drtiWer chest, $48 6 dr•wer
chest. •54 95 5 pe wooden
dinnette seta, 8199 95

Beech StrHI. Mlddl'f)on. Ohio.
2 bedroom furnt.hed apartment
u1R'-1• p1id. 18fenmc• Phone
30il-882-2558

Gravely tractor, alectr~e start 8
spd, with rotary mower &amp; plow
Call IJ 14-446-4149

30' alec l'l!lnge-harvett gold•95 30" elec range.avlcado
green-$95 30'' gas rengetop 111
bottom oven-white- •1&amp;0 Q,E
washer-$9&amp; 'Mmlpool dryer.
• 95 R trl h
.. gold tr 0..
arve-whhe
tree-•sse gRefrlg
frost
f,...t96 Refrig 2 door W'hftet76 Hot w.tar heater 30 gal. 4
•e5
Skaggt Appli.,CBI Upper
RIVo• Rd. 814-441-7398
For low prices on Ouelity Carpet
&amp; Furniture came to Mollohan
Furnfture-Upper RIVer Ad , 814446-7444

BUilding Materials
Block. brick. a~M~ar pipet, windows, llntf)ls etc CilllUde Win·
tors Rio Grande 0 Clll 614-245-5121

Groom on d Supply Shop·Pet
Grooming All breeds . All
stvl• lams Pet Food Dealer
Julie Webb Ph 614-446 0231
Dragonwynd Cattl!lry Kennel
CFA Persian and Siamese k1t
tent AKC Chow pUppies New
Himalayan kittens Call 814·
446·3844 after 7PM
Happy Jack Skm Balm Fer
scratch1ng and gnawmg do~s
and cats Soothes 1rrrtated skin
Contains na synthetic pyre
throldtl Bidwell Cash FeedJ 0
North Produce.
New arrival AKC 8o~~:er puppies
Ready to go n 6 weeks Call
614 388-8801
AKC Reg

6100~ech

Brittany Spaniels
Call614-446 8714

Full blooded Pekinese for sale
Three month old female Call
814-992-7259
Male Mmiature Schnauzer pup
Wormed. shots oar1 cropped
Call after 4p m 614-949-2794
Black labrador Retriever pup
pi" 8 wkl Full blooded Not
reg11tered Worl118d shots 860
614-898-6390
German Shepherd puppies
AKC. blk and tan, sable good
pedigree, e~~:cellont temper~nt.
8160 00 814 886-!1085 or
304-736-3023
57

Musical
Instruments

Conn trombone With case used
very little Very good condlhon
Coli 614-445-7421

Bunk bed with 4 drawer chest
and bookcase attached Good
cond 304 876-6924 aftao- 4
pm

I:::=...,.--------For •leHort",poni• •ddle&amp;

71 Auto's For Sille

7 ton silage wagon Gehl.
$800 00 304 - 675-1487
anytfma;

1978 BUickllmrted PS PB, AC,
cruise aleclnc seats Call 614992-6575

Tobacco sticks for !181 e. 20 cents
each Morgan Woodhr.vn Farm,
Rt 35 Phnv w Va 3P4-937
2018

One owner 1981 O,evrolat
station wagon Good running
concht1onendgoodbody Excel
lent work car 61 000 m1les
$2860 BobHoefl1ch, 614-992
5292

68

S.

Fruit
Vegetables

Red Raspberries Pl&lt;:k your own
or wa pldc Taylor's Berry Patch
Call 814-246-5064 or 4468692
Apples pears grapes. miacel·
laneout food Items Ounr!Nin
Fruit Farm-Rt 691 southeast cf
Albany Open 9-6 Closed Mon
dava 614*698 6298
U S No 1 large yellow Frees·
tone canning peach now available Bob1 Market. Mason WV
Fresh from the ShanadoM Val
ley 304-773-6721 or 7?3·
5900 Canning ar,ples, pears &amp;
plumbs available ate August

Farm Supplies
&amp; Ltvestock
61 Farm Equipment
I.Dcust Post1 Call anytime
614-256-8739
IH Farm All with all attachments
V&amp;fV 1'8asoneblo. Call 814 448
7025.

rnrac 304-876 3180

S1lage wagons fer sale. 304875-2586
•

Hande &amp;0 Mini bike. Stihl chain
uw 1978Sten:reftcamper 10
ft Moohootollltedlah 30"87"
or
7988

6808 c818 end loadiW back flOe,
......- oond 2 buckets, Aops
•·canopy, .8.500 00 304-4581542

':::::::::::.1:::::::::::::::::::::::~
~
SNAFU'"' by Bruce Beattie
..,

1977 17 It VIking pop- up
camp• Good concltlon •aoo.
King Wooclburner Good condition e225 CAll 81il-9925893

5 pigs
3025

$150 Call 614-446

Reg Pure Brad L1mousln Bulls
for sale Gallipolis OhJO Call
814-256-1187
Reg1sterad Holst81n Bufl for !IDle
Breedmg age. Call 614-9927261
Feeder calf Grand Champ1on
Mason County Fa1r would make
good Ba bv Beef for fair pro)ac:t
304-882 2359

Pigs for sale. &amp;25 00 each
304-675-5950
64

Hay

S.

Grain

nmothy Hay Call 614 379
2128 evemngs

Plnd good eond, $1,600 00
1978 Colt wagon •350 00

304-458·1642

1982 Pontiac Fireblrd,alr a·t,
new tires EkC. ConditiOn Char·
coal gray S3 500 304-6762749
1980 Citation 0\EN' 4 door
standard, 4 cyl 8460 304-8922714

Government Seized Veh•cles
from $100 Fords Mercedes
Corvettes Chevys Surplua
BU)'ers Gl.nda {1) 806-687
6000Ext 10189

1980 Fa~rmont Ford statiOn
wagen, exc runrnng cond &amp;
shape $1 600 304-676-2058
or 675 5141

198S Buick Skylark. 4 door. Sl)(
cylinder. AC crUise tilt PS
Good cond 94400 Call 614445-0577

72

1979 Blick Wagon 19n Lin·
coin 4 dr (fer pertaJ Make offer
Call 614-446-3615 anytime
1976 Monte Carle PS, PB, dlt,
pov.er Windows AM· FM-Ca111
Cell 614-446·4015
1974 Jeop e•cel cond manv
new parts S1600 KX60 excel
eond • $600 250 Elsmore. very
fast. many new Jlllrts 8500 can
614-992 5883
1983 Trent-Am, V-8 crossf1re
InJection auto recaro mter1or
Hops, loaded 25 000 miles
$8,975 firm Call 614 446
4031

1986 RV. 28ft. cl•lic OtiiVy
chalt, loaded with Btrlla, rosd
Nody, 30il-1711-4551
1984 Terry Ta~rut 24 ft nvet
trailer. bunk btdl. Hit contained, 11r oand, awning. mlcro..... ve oven, 81.HO 00 EqMe
Hanet cell after 5 00304-89~
3838 doyo 30ii-6711-19H

For a great deal on a new or ultd
ear, truck or \8n, Ste Kenny Ball
at Jim M1nk Chevrolet*
Oldsmobile 614-448 3672 or
773-6134

1984 Chevrolet Chevette CS, air

Trans ortation

Trucks for Sille

1981 ChEWy Truck Also 1981
Olds four door Call 614-9853839
1983 FordS 150 larurt Truck
302 standard Cell 614-7422795
1982 Datsun KmgCab 61 ,000
miles atuo PS, PB, rear window
defogger, nice truck 304-6756758
Pick up bads Ford Chevrolet,
long or short no rust 304-6756286

73

Vans

S.

4

W.O .

Services
81

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG
Unconditional llf•lme guar ...
tee Local reference. furNehed.
Free attlmates C•U collect
1-61il-237-0488. dov or night
RogersBesement
Waterproofing
SWEEPER and 11twlng m1chlne
l'llpalr, parts. and suppll• Pick
up and deUvery, Davit Vecuam
Cleener. one helf mile up
George• Creek Rd Cell 114446-0294.
Concrete Stptle Tanks * 1000
gal , 1600 gal ..,dJet Aerltlon
1ysttm Factory trained ,...,...
shop. RON EVANS ENTER*
PRISES. Jackaon, Ohio 1 800537-9528

Tree &amp; lt..-np remo.,.l, ttone, ,._
muk:h topSOtl. thlde • stwubs.
Dump truck for lila Don'a
LandiclpM, 814-4•1-9148
RON'S Television Service.
Hou• calls on RCA. Cluear,
GE Sptcilllng in Zentth Cell
304-676-2398 or 814-4482,54
Fetty Tree Tr/mrTHng. ltwnp
remove!. Cell 304-171-1331

1984 Bronco II XLT 4a4 V-6
auto crwse air tilt AM-F M
E)(Ctl cond Call614·3&amp;7-0531
or 446-1092

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE.
"ou~~t call .rvlclng Q E. Hot
Point w11htr1, dryers tn d
ltOVII 304-676-2398.

1989 Z 28 Camnro partially
restored 350 194head S10 lift
cam 780 Hollev OP Muncy
trans, $4000 Cali 614-245
9122

1988 S15 GMC 4 WO Jimmy
V 6 2 9 litter, loaded 15 000
miles S14 500 Call 614-245·
9122

Akers Tree Trimming and Stump
Remo\11111 Free estlmatee. Cell
304-675-7121

1978 FordFa1rmont Stmlght 6,
new tires $600 Call614-2459122

1979 Chi!YV Suburban 9 peasanger EJCCallent eondlt1on R•
bt.ult 350eng~ne Call814-9921789

1972 Volks....ugon Real good
concl1t1on Call 614-446 9799

B2

1983 Olds Cutlass Supreme
Broughman V 8 aut a, PS. PB,
air crmse t1lt 70,000 m1las
E)Ccef shap&amp; Call 61 4·2455095

1979 Plymouth Window VDn,
$1 500 00 304-675-8429
19 79 Jeep CJ5. lots of ex tra1.
$1 800 00 304-675-1703

1987 Nlasan Sentm , Manual
PS PB, AC Ste(eo sunroof
24,627 rn11es Assume payments Call G1ry Williams. 304875-1473

'79 BRONCO RANGER XLT,
n fiN radials. $1 800 00 30._
675-4631
74

1978 Ford Thu nderb1td crulta
moon roof, dualaxhauat $2100
or bett offer Call 614 266~
6704

Motorcycles

1980 Honda Interstate One
owner like new Clll614-4461079

1981 Eagle. 41200 Call 614446-4641 after 5 PM

1983 Honda 50 3 1NhealerS300, Go can 1 mo old, nMwas $365 Asking $276 f1rm
Call814-448-4031

1984 Pont1ac Grand Pru. LE,
V-8, AC PS, PB tilt CC R'AO
auto, buck01 soall. 27 MPG
Good condition Negotiable• 5500 Call 614-256·6267

3 wheel Tnka Craig• rims &amp;
tires, AM FM Cess. Captain
seats TV, luggage compartment $2500 Call 614...2581655
1985 Su~~l LT 230 Quad
runner 81500 can 614--3792797
1986 Honda XR 200Ft Approx
400 orlg1nal miles 614-949·
2414"' 304-675-5693
Rt 36 C.,.daSales partltervlce
tnd accaMII'i• evellabl• for
Honda. KIW'&amp;Ukl, Suzlld and
Y1maha, 304-1175-4130
1 9 86 VZ 490. exe cond. 304862-3397

Plumbing
Heating

S.

CARlER'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor Fourth •nd Pine
Gall ipoHs, Ohio
Phorw 614-446-3988 or 814446-4477
84

S.

'

Residential or commercial wirIng New Mrvlct or repairs
UcenNd electricl.. Estimate
free Rl d~our Electrical 30 ...
875-1788
85

Moving out of ltllte must lltfl
*1 100D0blko179500 1910
Handa 900 C8 Custom. eKtfl
001 30il-8711-4038

Buy Gowrnmant ael~:ed end
aurplu1 vehlcl• from 1100
Fords, Chwys. Corwttet etc
In your area For k'lfo c.tl !802)
842-1011 ... 54!515

'

'

Genaral Hauling

Dillard Wiler Service· Pool1,
C1sterns Wells Otlhlllry Anytime C.l1 814-446-7404-No
SUndav cilia
J S. J Wiler Service Swimming
pool a cia terns wells Ph 814246-9285
R 6 R Water Senrice Poole,
cltternt, wells lmmediltt ·
1,000or 2 OOOgellontdtftvery
Coli 30il-6711-8370

•

Water dtlhleiY 1000 gelona.
Re•on•bl• prlc. lmrnldl•
dollvery Coli ltil-992-1278

'

Wetterso" 'l Weter H1111Ung,
reasoneble "'"· lmmecHate
2. 000 geM on defhlwy, cll•n ..
pools. well, etc: ell 304-15712919.

'

•

.,'
87

Upholstery

'

G &amp; J CycleP•tun dB•vlce tor
all Jepen . . bfk• end A.TV
Fectorv trelned technldan. Qary
Klnnol•d. 30ii-B711-1 115.

I

•
...
•

Electrical
Refrigeration

Y1mehaTrump... 2yeersold.•ll
aUwer. t32&amp; DO Phone 3046 711-4229ofler I 00.

Oovernrr....t Seized Vehlcl•
from •100 Ford•. Meteed11,
Corvett11, Chavy• Surplut.
Buyers gu Ida 1-8011-887-6000
Ext. s 9806

•
•

Painting· lnterkn • EJCMrlor.
Fret estimates Call 814-4488344.

Rotary Dr cabte tool drMing.
Most ~N~IItcompletedumeo.r .
PUmp Hill and service 304895-3802

1987 Dodge Shadow loaded
1980 Dodge 050 4WD Call
614 388 9301

'

'

RON EVANS ENlERPRISESSeptlc 18nk pumplnv- $90 pw
load Call 1 800-&amp;37-1528

1977 Dodge Paas Van AC.
cruise Reasonable Call 814446-7025

1856

"Is your favorite travelers-cheek
commercial the one In which the tourists
get distracted?"

1980Chevette Gocdcon(ht1on
614-992-2201

MUST SELL 1988 VolksW!!Igen
golf am-fm cassette, 11r condition, 5 speed Good c• 304675-3641

1983 Camaro. 31,000 mil-.
loedtd, ne~N paint 6 Cl'llg•
wheell • redlllll E~~:a.l eond
18000 080 Coli 814-256-

lna IIVelllbte with spproved
orodlt
At 141lnCentenery-1Amllean
Ul\ooln Pike. 114-44&amp;-311!18

1981 Chevrolet MahbJ Stat1on
wagon well equipped, including
C B md1o new fronttlrea. good
back One!!, good body, 51,000
act:uel mi1es, asking $2850. Bob
Hoefheh 614-992 5292 lifter
5p m orcanbeseenat109High
St Pomeroy Evenings or
weekends

1979 Corvette. loaded blue,
asking 99 50000 614 992
5636 or 304-675 6332

1969 FordMuttangMachl,351
Windsor, euto Reel Sharpt
*3800 Coli 61ii-888-B453.
ProctorvRie.

l.lyrNeyt • • wermme Flnlnc-

1988 trailer King cemper. ·
Sleep• 8 or make e nloaWflgon
*200 Coli 81il-2511-8010, ..
441-1749

1979 Mercury 302 V8 enuina
auto goodtires Call61...,§92·
2866

Rog1stered Charolais Bull
$1200 Registered full blooded
Ctu' Bull 91800 Call614 3877458

1981 Datsun 200SX. $2000or
beat offer or trede lor Pt&lt;*up
Call 614-367*0641

••t •

79 Motors Homas
S. Campara

1 8 ft Avalon csm,_., _."up 11
the Ohio River, Mlf contained.
t 1200 CAll 81il-887-4389

1984 ptymouth HoriZon 4 dr 4
apd $2100 Call 814-379·
2728

EKcell.,t used appH1nces wtlh
30 d.,a guarantee W•her•
up, dryers, freeaers,
refrlg.,.tora, •nge~

Wanted Motorfor1978Dodge
.,.plomet 304-nl-1193

1982 Pontiac J.2000 2 door,
auto good eondit1on $2100
Call 614-992-5085 after 6 00

1984 Dodge Colt 2 dr 46 000
miles 4 spd $2150 Call
61il-379-2726

boby . . .

llo"'

2 ve&lt;lr old Stall1on Call 614388 8272

REO HOT bargains! Drug dealers' cars boats planet .epa'd
Surplus Your area Buyers
Gu1de j1J 805-687-6000, e~~:t
5-4562

/ ,----~----Individual guitar IMaons brtgmne,., aenoua guitarist Brui
&lt;:ardiS MuSIC 814 446-0687,
Jeff Wamsley Instructor, 614446-8077 Umited operungs
Plano. ex:c cond call 30 4-87 5
4874 after 6 00 PM
Bundy Trombone, good cond
, 100 30 4- 675- 6141 or 875
2068

1•-

1978 Chrysler La Baron 4 door
newpemt 1ires.bllftery,br•k•
$995 Call614-992-7214

Wanted To Buy-Good used
plano P.lay~ble condlt1on call
614-258-1423

Bundy Alto Saxaphone Good
playmg condition $160 Call
81 4- 98 5- 4288

nr" end bll:tMI• Ill• !Sept.
1tt-17tht Auto tlree, '28.50
pair Ug_httrucktlr-. t15.each.
New 500 AMP btitteriea,
028 9&amp; Pine
L end
L n.e
33861
Oro~o~e
Aoi!Cf. R•
&lt;Ina. Ohio
Five ""'mot
614-992 5344

livestock

63

71 Auto's For Sale

Open 7 daya 1 week
Mondly-Saturdey, 9 AM 8 PM
Sunday, 12 noon-5 PM
Uvlng roam suhea 2 pc · 8289
lamps starting lit t19 915, wood
dinette tttt·•149 • up,
hutches·U19 6 up. b•ers
rtdca*819 96, TV standi antertalnrntnt c•tera, deaQ-849 98
&amp; up. gl•• front gun csbln••
•279, bedroom tultn, ful . .
mettrM• rtJrtlng If •49.81.
bunk bltds with beddlng-t221,

••

61 Farm Equipment

Wanted-Good uted small Plano
Call 304 468-1997

VfRa'• Furniture

2 .,,b b... 1 solo. 2 Nlcln~r~.
White Iewing machine, 3 kitchen chelrs C.ll 114·381*
8983

1963 OldlmobUe98 Molannd
transmluJon 304-nl-11&amp;1

Lowery Piano Good cond Call
814-251-8230

G1bson Master Tone 88nJO
RBL250 E~~:cel eond $1000
firm Call 614-266-1665

Accessories

Used Trantmltsions All internally inspected 30deysguerentea We buy hnlmiaalona C.ll
I 14-446*09158 Rebuilding
8VIII1bfe.

-;:;;:::=:::;;:=::;:=::::== ~----------,...---------~

KlngWaod orColl burning stove
with blower, 304-675-1232
9x11 ft, red c•pet with Pfld,
almost new, i100 00 503
McNeil A'Ill P't Pit

S.

WESlEAN REO CEDAR
• Channel RustiC
and Beveled lap Siding
• Deck Mat•lals
Guaranteed Quality
C ETIDE, INC Athens 614594-3578

Pets for Sale

Auto Parts

76

Concrete blocka all tlzet· yard
or delivery Mason sand Gallipolis Block Co. 123'1.1: Pine St
Gallipolis Oh10 Call 614-4482783

;;;;
56

Boettand
Motore for Sale

1967 27 ft Criacrlft Cavell•
Cabin CruiMr. P•tillly' . .tared.
327 motor . . . . 4 •nk.
stOYe. b•~ w .. h t..U•.
• 5000 Clll 81 il-2411-9122.

Antiques

'r - - - - - - - - - - - . , . . - - - - - - - - - - - - prmter
OMPLotaotprogrems&amp;
130, mon1tor
CM11 desk
dlsca Castover•2000naw,will
sell for 61100 Call 614-446
Now Is the time for g-r-r-r-eot 45 Furnished Rooms 3816anytlme
buys in the clossifieds
Confl1eated cars, trucks vens
Furnished room 919 Second bOats, pl.,es. j8W81rv &amp; much
Aw, Galhpobs $126 a mo mora Sa1zed in drug &amp; crime
44
Apartment
Utilitlllll!lli'ld Single mala Sham nuda Up to 90 pan::ent off Call
for Rent
bath Ca I 446-4416after7 PM
1 304-429·4676, tKt J8

APARTMENTS. mobile homtl,
hou- Pt Ple...nhndGIIIipc&gt;
Us ' 61il-446-8221'
CINn 2 BR , air, large ger~~ge.
Upper Rt 7 Coil 61il-4412511.

I!IIC

Wheelcf'lelrs-new or ul&amp;d 3
wheeled electnc scooters Call
Rogers Mobilty collect, 1 114870-9881

"If I had money, I'd hire
somebody to do that for me."

1 bedroomapenmentln Middl•
FurnltMd 2 BR Ca. cable, water port. $160. per month plus
' tewege peld Foster't Mobile utdlta Call 114 992 6&amp;46 or
Home Perk. Call 114-4•8- 8til-94fl-2216
1102
2 bedroom. nice location 1n
2 BR. rnGbllehome t3001mo River. Ulllltlll lncfuded 814Rll • dol). roq ...d Coli 992-6949 or 81 ... 992-9903.
llil-446-7282
Comptetety flfrnlahed Adult•
2 BR furnished ~I• home ontv. In Mlddtsport Clll 614•180emo p4us•c. dep. 6r.t 192-7751
Adutts ont¥. lend lnqulrl• to
Box Cll118.c/oGolllpolloDIIIy Apt for .ent 1150monlh 1100
Tribune. 821 Third Ave, Glllt- depoth No belli' or drugs
61il-882·2904
poU.. Ohio 41131 .

Sot. 11-5. Jun stout 2281 7th
It SyracuN

- . - -. lftd
- - - O n e ... only--lopt.10.0no-ollllt. 7
out
-·
·
Rd right
111
MaC...
IIil~
flrotCrllll
ho- on
on Maeully "d.

Clo-. Cloll-' t
b•br 1t1m1, home

42 Mobile Homes
for Rant

hems 2538 RflhAwe Middl•
..... 9-?

-.--... -- ·-h

_bu
__
_
bll&lt;t •'*-_
"Cauntry
c-tort"

Hou • for ule or rent. 3
bedroom houu, 304 8767281 .

n.- dress I'Mtl f12. 14. 18t
beddfng, GI-Mre, much mare

Living room tulle, house awnIng .. ove &amp; refrigeretor. car
parts '- gl~t~Mre, mise 304773-5842

64 Misc . Merchandise

2 Mdroom. netdl ...,.lr •7&amp;0 2
bedroom · r1actv to u • and
alr•dv ho'*-d up 81900
30il-1'711-2722

Sp.cious 3 bedroom, 2 ltory
home on St Rt 33 lot• of
do• ... ce. centNIIir. olo• to

Glbton Sld•BorSide Rafrlgaralor Frte~tf t100 Clll 814992 5352.

Buy or Sell Riverine Antiques.
1124 E Main Street, Pomeroy
Hours M,T.W 10a m to 6p m,
Sunday 1 to 6p m 614-9922526

1981 t4x70 Exc Cond 3041715-7988

1982 Cl-rtcm Doubte wide in
Sy ..
3 S.droom. 2 b.h.
toc-1 .. ec.. centntl 1ir, w.llc
•ound deck. out bu Icing. menv
...... t34.000 814-112·
2109

Re.e trader hitch. complete
30ii-675-U72

53

*

3 bedroom~. 1 Y.t blth, blllmW
.nd g. .,.. Cent•l ..,. .,
Middleport Clllllil-982-7812
.. llil-992-5217

Good u~ t;alor TV. for •le
Call814-•48-1149
·

The Daily Sentinel-Page 9

65 Building Supplies

1973 Hollev P•k. A-1 cond
ecre lot, reduced. 304-6753030 .. 875-3431

11'1

64 Misc . Merchandise

Atut.ale Couch,
304-8711-1238

'BIFiemlng 2 bedroom, 1 beth,
lfvlld In I montt,a must tell
eto,ooo 00 304·876-5841
ewnlnQI.

J- ,_...,.,.

Alliable math• wll bebt 1ft
my honw, 30i1-8711-350?

.'

_.0\11

Wll do odd
Cundiff llil- 49-2314 ott•
5p.m

51 Household Gooda

2 door refrigerator $85 DO Call
30il-882-3627

1971 Ao~~mont mobil• home.
1'•70, 3be*oorna, 'IIWiherllld
dryer. air 1Xtnd,
lnd ref,
• 8.000 00 negotiable 3048911-3427 or 3Dii-175-8B08

Y•d ewe, bru~ GUttfna. light
ha~llng, tomet,..trlmmfngend
rem~ 1111 Sl.:k 814-99222• evenings.

~tonempfowter

Hou• Mil• tho. w~h or
without whMII. RtiiOnlbl&amp;
Colt 114-H:I-Ht&gt;l

11

3111
1-..:_
________

nu,.

Call ua for your moble home
lnturlnoe: Mill.., lntu,.nce,
30il-112·2141. Also: outo,
ho..._lllw. hOIIth.
QUILTS
Collh pold lot~· Pro
1980'~ Plocod.opplquod,
unuul-eny condition Call
etii-H:I-1817.

1970 Fewn 12K70 3 bedroom.
tlpaut Nving room Call 8142"-91519 after S PM, or 2455539

Cell 114,..441J.-

Don't be teft behind bv 1hi!WIIId
Chlrlgt In menufac:turfng •ch-

nnlogy. A1cerv1 tpeclallnd
tooinlng In "'" moch.,lcaf. hychuUc .. d eleatttc.l compo-

Exool

cond CA. 2 lA , large b•h.

hbr lttUnt in my home In

c.n...ary 1r•

PomerDy-MiddiBport, Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

newer cerpet, undllf'~nnlng,
dec* &amp; buldlng Call 814-2'59594

IVIIIII:tte for tho• ellgib11.

Small whfte dog In Ftve Points
oroa Coll61il-992-3386

Loat l•ge whita Engllah Bull
dog wt 8&amp; lb UO Aewardfor
retum •·lnf 304-875-48 32

Homes for il!ll•

Wlldohlbt-..ingfnrnyhome
City 1m11o. Hove rot.... _ Call
llil-441-1312

Mo-

::.r'':"'

FOUND Slemt~t Tom Cit.
Vicinity of GOC Cell 61il-4467678

31

c...

Got (Mild fo• reeding bookll

and locust Easy ., get You cut
up 61il-843-5253

Do

Mediclf Bllltng Cl•k..lob in- Hencllr10n&amp;enlorCitflenwlftdo
chided oompl•fn• ln..,..~ qulting Cell Matde K811y. 304forrns .. d 01._ mtdtCII Nfated 175-5214.
"""" E_..,_ hllplul lut 1 - - - - - - - - - not IOCfuiNd. - ... 11-8. Bond
.-ume to Bowman'• Ha,...
lllidlll:liil
13 Pine It , Gellpdllt,
Ohlo45831

Good firewood Papt.r, cherry,

WOOD STOVES
•12 Yeat'l Experience
45 DIFFERENT WOOD
STOVES, INSEm AND
FURNACES
Feoturlngo Conoolldoled, Du1ch'

AM-Tu•-Sopt.13.

5157

Junk Clf'l with or withOut
motors Coli Lorry Uvely·etil386-9303.

986-4141

9-9 30

41ong hllred t1fJV lcltttnt 6wkt
old Coli &amp;til-949-2794

W.nt to buy Uaed furniture and
entlques Will buy entire houllhold fumJthlng M.rlln Wed•
m.,..., 114-241-1152.

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

c.n.r, Room 14

Me-leo. Cor-1. Cuomo•
- • · Bectridll\l,
0-olflod Food llf·
Worlc.n.
vlcl Wor..,., EIIICtrcriol Techaddrnted . . mp.t envalapl to nldlftl.. lncllstrl-' ,...,........,.
Worlctrl, NuningAIIIIanttlnd
Eva Duncan. Box 2854. US At
Ordlfll-. MIChiniltt. Office
315S. Southside. WV 2&amp;187
Worklrl • d w.ldlrl Reg6ntr
n~Nt far cl__. beginning Oc·
tobef 3rd Call Trf..O:tunty Vocational Aduh Center It 763-3511
4
Giveaway
ext 14. A VWIIIY of 'funding
toun:• to~ for nlnlng.,.

Complete hou•holdl of furnl.
ture 6 ant ktl* Alto wood &amp;
co.. heeters Swllln't FurnlluN
• Auetlon. Thl•d • Olive.
S!il-446-3159.

MARCUM C

calltl to Mrt

Paying 10c ormoreforeverybox
top libel or coupon vou ""d to
us according to one limPie
in1tructions. Dttllll lllf·

SALES &amp; SER.V..I1CPPE1 ;~ 9 Wanted To

We Corry Fishing ~u
Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here
IUSINHS PHONE

persononly(abl~nDphone

Job huntlng1 Need • eldll7 'Nit
tnin f*Jple for lobi at Auto

8

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We tan
also ocid boil-and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gos Tanks.

l.odl• ... good _...
tempontry office IN!.• weft: No
•Diritnce nec.llf'Y. Al1o need
ladl• with cer for 1-"t Hltvwy
work. Ou en.... -. Apply In

Announcements

Fr" puppi11·Raccoon Rd Cell
61il-446-4982

Wantad to

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
19711 14x70 N•hul

Pen dme Aeglster.cl X4r1y
To....,loiM V•lod 1oou1o- No
- • · eol. or ho-~
Apply ...... " ' - 203
Jeckton Pike. Gallipolis beboWen I 30-1 PM
AVON-Need 5 1111• to Soli
AVOft. Call 814-~33158.

. ., 8011-187-8000 Eit R·
9805 for cu~ ftiderll lilt

We Service All Makoos

HUDNALL
PWMIING &amp; HEA nNG

1B

Government Jobl. t11,040-

SfW Poodle to a good home,

PER LOAD
DELIVERED

Help Wanted

AlliHJLJ 11 ce 1111~111 s

3-3(). 87 lfn

IN MEMORY OF

11

Econo Lodge Motel,

8 7 F1nencing on

992-3410

Briggs &amp; Stratton

Tecumseh

Sonice C1111,.. IO&lt;
Product•

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

SMALL ENGiif1

-Plumbing •nd alectrlc.l

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS

6-17-tfc

4 16-86-tfn

- Conaata work

PH. 949·2969

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

Day

- Addona and rtmodeltng
- Roofing a,nd gun• work

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

CUSTOM lUllT

Garage

1-3 11-1 .... pd

&amp;

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Roger Hysell

992-6857

8mm

YOUNG'S

BISSELL
BUILDERS
"AI R1&lt;1sonablo Prices"

TAnoos •r stu,

9,1988

Ohio

Business Services

Friday, September' 9, 1988

'

l

'
•

�Paga 10 The Daily Sentinel

r--LocalContinued
n-ews.
briefs···-~
from page 1
Rood. 19, or Reedsville.
James Hannah, 21 . of Route 2, Albany , was Indicted on one
count of burglary, two counts of passing bad checks and one
count of grand theft.
Johnnie Keith Harrison, 33, of Mlnersvllle Hill, Pomeroy, was
Indicted for grand theft.
And Michael Pierce, no age listed, Rutland , was indicted on
one count of domestic violence and one count of vandalism.
More Information regarding the~harges against th~fourmen
wlll be released later today by Meigs County Prosecutor Fred
Crow .111.

A Pomeroy man was cited by the Gallia-Melgs Post, State
Highway Patrol In connection with a one-car accident
Wednesday at 7:08p.m. In Bedford Township on U.S. 33, four
and a half miles south of the Meigs-Athens County line.
Johnny 0. Hawley, 21, of SR 143, was cited for driving an
unsafe vehicle after his 1977 Chevelle hit a guardrail and a
utility pole. Hawley was driving west when he reported having
steering problems. He went off the right side of the road before
colliding with the guardrail and the utility pole.
The Galtla-Melgs Post reported a total of three accidents
· Investigated Wednesday, with two non-injury and non-citation
accidents.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports seven
calls Thursday; Middleport at 12:43 p.m. to South Third for
Kevin Kline to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at S: 04
p.m. to Route 7 for Earl Wines Sr. to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 3:05p.m. to Route 7 for Myrtle Gore
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutlaod at 6:16p.m. to Depot
St. for Charles Bowles to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Syracuse at 6:51 p.m.n to Welshtown Hill for Lawrence Kline to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 8:54 p.m.
transported Matt Dowler from an auto accident on Success
Road to St. JOS!!Ph's Hospital; Middleport at 9:41p.m. to Poplar
Ave. in Cheshire for Joey Curtis; Gallla SEOMS transported
Curtis to Holzer Medical Center.

Levi Tyo

Levi "Lee" M. Tyo, 63, Route 2,
Ripley Road, Point Pleasant. died
at 11:37 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 7,
!988.
He was a retired shift engineer at
the Gavin Power Plant He was a
United
member
of Trinity
Methodist Church and a World War
II U.S. Army Veteran. He had
membership in the following organizations: The American Legion,
Mason County Post 23, The Ohio
Power Company, The Veteran
Employees Association, 32nd Degree A&amp;A Scottish Rite of Free
Masonry Valley of Charleston,
Orient of West Virginia, Beni
Kedem Temple, A.A.O.N.M.S. of
Charleston, Pomeroy Chapter 186
Order of the Eastern Star, Grand
Lodge of A.F.&amp;A.M. of Ohio,
Middleport Lodge No. 363, Middleport, Ohio, Clan No. 7 Southern
Oh10, Grand and Glorious Order of
Hillbilly Degree, Galli)&gt;OliS, Ohio.
Born Dec. 6, 1924 m Zanesville,
Ohio, he was a son of the late Levi
E. and Aorence Martin Tyo. He
was also preceded in death by, five
brothers, Ovid, Gerald, Paul, John,
and Delbert.
He is survived by his wife,
Dorothy Perkins Tyo; lhree sons,
Lance :rr.o, Toledo, Ohio, James
Tyo, Wilmington, Ohio, Jeffrey
Tyo, New Haven; one daughter,
Nancy Jean Clift, Bridgman, Mich.;
. one brother, James Tyo of Canfield,
Ohio; two sisters, Aorence Pryor,
Philo, Ohio, Audrey, Risten,
Frazeysburg, Ohio.

Dally slook prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi
Am Electric Power . ..... .. .. ... . 28
AT&amp;T ................ ..... ... .. ...... .25\l
.Ashland 011 ... .. ................... 35%
Bob Evans ........ ................. .. 16
Charming Shoppes ..... ........ .12%
City Holding Co ..... .... .... ... .. 31\)
Federal Mogul. ..... .. ... .. .. ..... 45J.o;
Goodyear T&amp;R .. ... ...... ........59)'8
Heck's ... :.: ... .... ... ...... . -·........ l(,
Key Centurion ....... ..... ........ 16~
Lands' End ......... .... .. .. ........ 27%
Umlted Inc .. .. .... .... .. .. ..... ... 22J.o;
Multimedia Inc ...... .. ........... 70\)
Rax ResiJIU{IInls .................. 3ift
Robbins &amp; Myers ...... ..... ...... 11
Shoney's Inc ............ ..... .. .... . 7%
Wendy's Inti ....................... . 6\2
Worthington Ind ................. 21%

r

Pase 88

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Thursday Admlssldns -Virgil
Lewis, West Columbia, W.Va.;
Lois Pauley, Pomeroy: Debra
Edwards, Pomeroy; Earl Wines,
Cheshire; Merle Davis, Rutland;
Crystal Cole, Coolville; Charles
Bowles, Middleport; Everett
Grant, Racine.
Thursday Disc barges - Ronald Jeffers, Lawrence Scarberry, Opal Barr, Ethel Lambert i Wilbur Smith, Wilbur
Ashjey.

·j

Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. 10, at the CrowRussell Funeral Home with the
Rev. Steven E. Dorsey, officiating.
Burial will follow in Gravel Hill
Cemetery at Cheshire, Ohio.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 10 4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
Friday.

Mary Russell
Miss Mary E. Russell, 56, 25
Hocking St., Athens, formerly of
Pomeroy, died Friday at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital In
Athens following a brief Illness.
Employed as a bookkeeper in
Michigan, Miss Russell was born
July 31, 1932 In Meigs County, a
daughter of the late Alpha E. and
Esta Jane Arnold Russell.
Surviving are a· brother, Harold C. Russell, Pomeroy; three
sisters, Dollie Hayden. Tomball,
Tex.; Marcia Mulllnlx, Fairfield,
and Rachael Young, Linden,
Mich., and several nieces and
nephews.
Besides her parents, slie was
preceded In death by a brother,
Kenneth E. Russell, and a sister,
Elma I. Coleman.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Monday at the Ewing Funetal
Home with burtal to be In the
Bradford Cemtery. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 6 to
9 p.m. on Sunday.

tmts
Vol 23 lllo. 31
Copyolgti-.1 il88

man indicted
on 23• counts in W.Va.
By

IHIIODS by Patty Dyer of the GaJDa County Sol
Conservation, alfalfa Importances by Ed Vollborn, Gallla County Exientlon Agent Agriculture, and soU lllllag~ampleti by John Underwood,
Bill Wilson and Mike Har;hes. (Suad&amp;)' TimesSentinel photo by Margaret Caldwell)

IN LINE !FOR LUNCH - Among the farm
equipment e):hlblts and musctal performaaees by
the Kner preek Wgh School Band and Idle
Tymes, Farm City Day featured a bean and
cornbread lunch. Ice cream, cheese and sandwiches
also available to the more than 80!1

at the

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of CHRIST
YOUTH GROUP KICKOFF
(3 YRS- -:- SR: HI)

Taste tho GIANT milkshake, dress In SO's
dothos and maybe win a prize If your
outfit Is tho best.

SEPTEMBER 11th at 5:30
L

"BE COOL - BE THERE"

visitors to the Hughe~~ Jo'amUy Jo'&amp;rm. Olher
activities opened to the crowd Included a plant
disease clinic, landacaplnl suggestions, and
wheat weaving demonstrations. (Sunday Tlm.!!SSentlnel photo by Margaret Caldwell)

.

.Agre~ment reached on TNT area

?.

'

JUST 84.99

Right now at Shoney's, you can get a terrific shrimp dinner for
just $4.99. You choose between boiled, fried or bite-sized shrimp.
Each includes French fries (or a baked potato after 5:00 p.m.) and
our famous all-you-care-to-,eat Soup, Salad and Fruit Bar.
If you have a craving for shrimp, come into Shoney's this week for
the best shrimp deal around.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.The turning of state's evidence
by a 23-year old Point Pleasant
man has led to the Indictment of a
25-year-old Gallipolis man on 23
counts of breaking and enter lng
and larceny In a series of
burglarieS' that pollee say began
In November of 1986 and continued through this year, accordIng to Mason County ProsecuiJ!tg
Attorney Damon B. Morgan Jr.,
on Friday.
The September ttnn of the
Mason County Grand Jury which
met Wednesday, Thursday and
Friday returned indictments on 25
people. Armignments before Circuit Coun Judge Clarence L. Watt
are set for Wednesday at 9:30am.
The grand, 'ury indicted Robert
E. Lee, 25, GallipW!, Ohio, on

the 23 counts after Delano Vanso
Jackson Jr., also known as Dale
Jackson, 23, of Point Pleasant. IUr'
ned state's evidence in the investigation of several Mason County
buiglaries and thefts, the prosecutor
said. Jackson recently pleaded
guilty to an infonnation for • the
breaking and entering of the 22nd
Street Shop-A-Minit in Point
Pleasant in November of 1987.
Jackson also pleaded guilty to an
information filed by the prosecutor
charging him with April 1987
burglary o( the Isabel Lutton
residence in Point Pleasant and the
breaking and entering in May of
this year of Power Disuibution
Products in the Mason County Jndusuial Park. Sentencing is pending on Jackson, wbo is housed in
the Mason County jail, Morgan
said.
Lee's lengthy list of indictments

and items authorities say he took
includes:
Breaking and en~ng at
Power Distribution Products in
Mayofl988.
- Grand I;D'Ceny at Power Disuibution Products where
estimated $8,()()(). in various items
were taken according 10 police.
Those
items included
lwo
microwave ovens, live telephones,
four cases of wine, a mine tight
with charger, an electric calculator,
a computer tenninal, typewriter, a
laminating· machine, , two boxes of
candy, pneumatic tools and
mechanics' tools.
Breaking and entering of
Merit Contracting Services in the
county industrial park in April of
1988.
- Grand larceny at Merit Con:
bllcting Services of nearly $6,000
(See GALLIA, A4)

an

Four indicted by Meigs grand jury

COLONY THEATRE

-.

tbe OVP staff

of

Marriage licenses have been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Clarence Douglas Fulton, 21, Pomeroy, and Michelle
Lea Shuster, 17, Pomeroy;
Dwayne Edward Qualls, 28,
Pomeroy, and Gwenn D. Husk,
31, Bidwell: Douglas Wayne
Beaver, 19, Pomeroy, and Kelly
Anne Morris, 20, Long Bottom;
Phillip Andrew Burish, 22, Akron, and Katherine Louise Lunsford , 17, Middleport.

HEY!

CHARLES A. MASON
of

licences issued

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;1

10 Section&amp;, 64 Peg01
A Multimedil Inc. Newap~p•

Farm City Day... ~~-----~ Gallia

Lodge to meet
Racine Lodge 461 F&amp;AM will
meet 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Work
will be in the master mason
degree. Refreshments will be
served. All masons urged to
attend.

EVENING SHOW AT 7:30 P.ll.
ADMISSION 11.00

Showers likely- Chance of
rain 70 percent.

,.,

Middleport Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Plaaaant. Septem~ 11, 1988

Announcements

0~£

Along the River ...... ... B1-8
Business.------·----- ----...... Dl
Comics- ---------- --....... Insert
CIIISIIIfleds ............... ,. 1)2..1
J)eatbs ........... .............. AS
Sporm ........ ............... CI-8

Jim Sands: Court Slreet history
Page B6

•

r--.

lnsid..-

Beat of the Bend: Gifted sehool a1 OSU

Bi
. '

------Weather------:

Cl

College grid results

Politics
a family
affair

three drownlngs Wednesday and
Thursday In the Tampa Bay
area.
In addition, nine children and ,
three others were slightly In- ,
jured In the colllslon of a school
bus and a car near Tampa during '
heavy rains Thursday .
'
Most rivers and creeks In the
Tampa Bay area were above
flood stage and ponds and lakes .
were overflowing, sending flood- :
waters Into low-lying subdM- :
slons throughOut the area, off!- •
clals sal d. ·
•
Forecasters held out the hope :
for cental Floridians of lmprov_.
lng weather today, predicting 5o •
percent chance of rain, com- ' .
pared with the '8(1-100 percent :
chanc~ estimated earlier.

Extended Forecast
South Central Ohio
LAKEVILLE, Minn. - West- engineering oftlce In Midvale,
Sunday
through Tuesday
Clear
tonight,
with
lows
of
50
to
Utah,
and
a
project
office
In
Inghouse Electric Corporation
Fair
through
the period, with .
55
and
no
winds.
Saturday,
sunny
·
announced that It has purchased Apple Grove, W.Va.
mainly
80
to 8~ and lows In ,
highs
with
highs
of
80
to
85.
100 percent of the stock of
president
Thomas
B.
Johnson,
the
50s.
National Electric Inc., (NEI) to
become sole owner of Aptus, an . of Aptus, s~ld the purchase by
_eo_n_un_u_e_d_fr_om__;,p_a_ge_1_ _ _ _ _ _ ,
environmental services and ha- Westinghouse will allow Apt us to
enha
nee
Its
presence
In
the
zardous waste management firm
as normal," said Tully.
Salaries for · teachers range
headquartered In Lakeville, fast -growing hazardous waste
Meanwhile, spe'clal education
from $18,000 to $36,497. Teachers ·
management marketplace.
Minn.
teachers In
eve land walked
are asking for a 10 percent raise ,
''This new alignment will give piCket line§ for a fourth consecu.
Aptus, formed In November,
for the first year and 7 percent
1987, as an equally-owned part- Aptus direct access to Westing- live day today.
raises In the second and third
nership company between West- house financial and technical
The Cuyahoga County Board of year of the contract.
Inghouse Specialty Services Inc., resources to support the design, Mental Retardation was keeping
The special education teachers .
and NEI, operates a laboratory permitting and construction of classes open for the 1,250 stu- were preparing a legal challenge ,
and hazardous waste. transfer nationwide operating facilities - dents but the Association at
to the board's cutting off their 1
and storage faclllty In Lakeville, that are crucial to our continued Cuyahoga County Teachers of health benefits.
a slagglng rotary kiln incinerator success," Johnson said. "As a the Retarded claimed student
Superintendent Michael Don- :
and PCB service center In result, Aptus wmbe able to more attendance Thursday was only 18
zella, citing Ohio Revised Code, ;
Coffeyville, Kan., a sales and effectively service Its growing percent.
said the board could not pay the
customer base."
Teachers were urging parents
benefits during the walkout but :
Johnson said no personnel to keep their children at home,
Divorces sought
teachers said federal law pro- :
changes are planned for any of arguing that students were not . tects health payments for strikDivorce actions have been filed
Aplus's offices or operating recelvlng proper Instruction
lng employees for at least 60
In Meigs County Common Pleas facilities. ''This change in owner- from non-teaching personnel and
days.
Court by Terry Timmons, Mid- ship will enable us to create teachers who crossed picket
"Under revised code, when .
dleport, against Loretta Tint- additional growth opportunities lines.
people are on strike, the board '
mons, in care of Opal Conger, for our employees," he said. "We
The. dispute centers on salary, · may not pay compensation, •·• ,
Racine; Wilma Chapell, Middle- are confident that by working benefits, class size and classsaid Donzella, whose salary Is ·
port, againsi Tony Chapell, In more closely with complemen- room assistance.
$75,739 annually.
care of Carolun VanMeter, Midtary Westinghouse businesses,
dleport; and Melissa Manley,
Aptus wlll be able to make an
Middleport, against Michael even more significant Impact In
GREAT BEND BAniST CHURCH INVITESlOU TO
the marketplace."
Manley, Middleport.
l PICNIC AND APPRECIATION SERVICE
Environmental services now
A restraining order has been
issued by the court against the available from Westinghouse Inhonoring
defendant In the Chapell case.
clude electrical transformer deGranted dissolutions of their commissioning and reclassificaEARL AND MILDRED SHULER
marriages · were Charles M.
tion, risk and environmental
Sunday, Sept1111bor 11th
Lemley and Rebecca S. Lemley;
assessment, analysis, remedial
engineering, site remediation,
Racine Shrine Park
Debra A. Nease and Paul M.
Nease; and Timothy M. McDa·
emergency response, waste min·
Bring your favorite covered dish or dessert and join
nlel and Teresa A. McDaniel.
imizallon, off-site treatment and
us fo~ dinner at 1:30.
disposal, compliance audits and
an impromptu appreciation sarvice, conducted bY
technical assistance to waste
Charlt!l Norris, will begin at 2:30.
generators.
Band Boosters
Eastern Band Boosters will
meet Tuesday, 7:30"p.m., in the
band room at the high school.

~~

Stocks

50 cents

Sunday

a

the spokesman said.
He was then transported to the
State Medical Examiner's Office in
Charleston, by the Putnam County
Ambulance Service.
The incident is still under investigation by ~eputies of the Putnam
County Shenff's Department
Sebrell was employed by the
G&amp;C Towing Company of Point
Pleasant.

Area deaths

9, 1988

Teachers ...

Southside man dies·
in lock at Winfield

I

much of the nation Thursday, but derstorms were forecast from
smoke from western wildfires eastern VIrginia across the Cas haded the sun over the Great rollnas to central Florida and the
Plains and Mississippi Valley Gulf Coast
and tropical storm Florence
Atleasl17cltleslnsevenstates
continued to swell In the Gulf of and the District of Columbia
Mexico, growing less rapidly but reported record low temperastill threatening to become the lures Thursday morning, with
season's second hurricane by
the official start of autumn still
today or' saturday .
two weeks away .
Sunny, dry weather. was preMost of the nation enjoyed
dieted for most of the nation · \!lear skies with mild
today, with highs in the 80s most temperatures .
places, save for 70s across the
In )"lorida, steady showers
northern states and the Pacific continued to trigger flooding that
Coast and the 90s and 100s In the closed dozens of roads and left
Southwest.
•
some homes In 15 feet of water.
Scattered showers and !hunAt least seven deaths have
been blamed on the downpoursfour In the crash of a small plane
· ·on Wednesday near Williston and

Westinghouse becomes
sole owner.of Aptos

EMS has seVen calls Thursday ·

Septem~

Tropicai- stomt Florence creeping north..
By MICHAEL MOLINSKI
United Pressllllernallo1181
Florida's worst floods In 60
years swept through the state for
a fourth straight day , causl~
seven deaths, shutting down
schools and businesses and leaving some homes in 15 feet of
water.
More than 20 inches at rain fell
over the central part of the state
between Labor Day and Thursday, but forecasters said the sun
Is · struggling to get out and
predicted only a 50 percent
chance of rain today .
Meanwhile, a pre-autumn chill ·
and sunny skies lingered over

Patro_l cites Pomeroy man

A Southside, W.Va
man
drowned in the Kanawha River
Wednesdly night. as he and a coworker were conducting locking
procedures on a barge at the Winfield Locks in Putnam County, according to a spokesman for the
Putnam County Sheriff's Department
Gordorr Morris Sebrell ill, 21,
apparently fell over the side of a
barge when working at the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers Winfield
Locks, the spokesman said.
The 5p(lkesman said that Sebrell
and a c()- ·vorker were attempting to
tie off a l .~e. and as they worked,
the co··"\ orker noticed that Sebrell
was mi&amp;&amp;ing. This was around 9
p.m., the spokesman said. After attempts to locate Sebrell failed, the
Putnam County Ambulance Service
and the Rescue Recovery· Dive
Team were notified.
Sebrell 's bod; was recovered by
the Rescue and Recovery Dive
Team at approximately 10:43 p.m ..

Friday,

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

settlemen~

if approved, should help
the county development authoriiy
in the future, since it can now plan
for another county industrial park
site.
"I'm delighted that it has been
resolved," Wise said.
Wise was not pleased with the
len$thY
negotiations
process,
notmg since the site was controlled
by the U.S. Department of Defense
for clean-up rather than other Superfund sites being cleaned up by
the federal EPA a ''bureaucratic uncertainty" developed in the hi&amp;h
levels of government
·
''This has dragged on two years
longer than i.t should have," Wise
years.
.
said. The congressman was inThe Anny alsO agreed to pay the strumental in setting up meetinp to '
push the negotiations along 1111111!1 ,
industrial park's, two busmesses,
Power Disuibulion Products and
also said assistance in resolvin,B tbo ,
Merit Contracting Services, Third
maUer came from West Vlll!tnia's '
two U.S. senators, Senate M,ajority
District U.S. RC~~- Bob Wise, OW.Va., announli:d today. The
Leader Robert C. Byrd, J&gt;..W.Va.,
amount was not disclosed by public
and U.S. Sen. Jay Rockefeller, J&gt;..
officials.
Power
Distlibution
W.Va.
Products is 011 a 7.21-acre site and
WJSe did not take part in the acMerit Contracting Services is m a
tual negotiations.
·
2.64-acre site.
One soun:e clase 10 the
The total site is about 60 acres.
negotiations said Wise was inThe plan is stjll subject to ap- slnlmental in getting the opposing
proval by dt6 ~ral Environmen- forces to meet and talk., calling the
tal Proteclion Apcy. W"JSe said congressman "a shepherd." The
public bearing~ are expected to be consressman said . today the
held by the federal EPA on the government is paying a "just price"
clean-up of the federal Superfund for the land.
lite which is under the contiOl of
Aocording to the qrcementll
the U.S. Dq:cbnellt of Defense.
reached, once tho site is cleaned up,
The nesotiated ~Uiement comes · the state of West V1111inia ha.s
about lhree weeks after formal talb qreed to ac.:ept the property after
between the Army, and the county it has been decontaminated fer use
development authmty, but in ac- in the McOintic Wildlife preserve.
lllllity, informal discussions have
"We
are espeeiallYPleased the
.
been conclucted about the con- uIlilllale use of the property wiD be
tamiDadon problem fer about two in the state of West VUJirila." said
yean_ Once !he contamination wu Lee, "because · the existing indiscovered in the poundw81a' at frastructure and facilitiol will bethe lite. tbe county development come pan of the McClintic Wildlife
1~was stymi~ in its efforts area."
to
the pat. Wise said the

. By CHARLES A. MASON
of the pvP staff
POINT PLEtSANT, W.Va. The U.S. Army, has agreed to pay
the Mason Co'lnty Development
Authority $80(),000 for the 50.9acrecountylndustrlal'jlllrkat the
old West Vll·glnla Ordnance
Works In UghtofTJio'Tcontam(natlo!l discovered In May of 1981,
officials said F)'lday.
"We are pleased with the outcome of the long and protracted
negotiations," said Frank Lee,
Mason County economic development director. The negotiapons
have been bottl¢ up in various
governmental idvels for several

i,

'

\
I

Lee said the money will be used
to retire the debts of the county industrial park. • A lot depends on the
closing date itself, but the
development authority will not incur a financial loss. All lenders will
be paid in full," he said.
Debts include a $313,800 federal
Fanners Home Administration
grant which Lee said could be
redireCted - in discussions to
begin with the FmHA this weekto belp pay for seaing up another
county industrial park; a mortgage
to Citizens National Bank in excess
of $53,000; a mongage to Peoples
Bank in excess of $27,000; and a
loan from the West Vilginia
Economic Development ... ulhority
in excess of $340,000.
Lee said the county development
authority will now tum its attention
10 doing everything possible to help
assist the two bpsinesses in the ind.uSI!ial park in locati"l on another
sue 10 Mason County. We want to
malce swe every assistance is
made," Lee said. "We want to assist
them in re-location in Mason
County. It is uncertain when the]
will actually vacate their ProPertY·
Wise said the key 10 the settlement was reaching a situation
where the site would be cleaned up
and the businesse.o and county
development authority
would
receive just compensation to allow
them 10 make plails for the future.
WISe Aid thai he didn't anticipate any problems from the EPA
on IIJ)II'OVal of the nepllialed set-

tlement.
"''m not swe that we 'II Ft baclt
to 11CJ'11111," be said, lddinr; it is 1101
a situation of 111y entity cominS

"out abeld" in the deal. "The only
way we come out ttbead illmowina
thai there is a problem.•
The CClllllly lndastrial p8lt was
established in 1975.

POMEROY - Four Meigs
County men were 1ndlcted by a
Meigs County Grand Jury Thursd•y morning In the first session
of the ~ptember term. ProsecutIng Attorney Fred W. Crow Ill
P-124 ~-..to. the grand
jucy aa~ reports the following
lhdlctments were returned.
Gary Rood, 19, of Reedsville,
was charged with two counts of
rape In connection with two
separate Incidents involving attacks upon two separate women.
The first Incident occurred In
March and the second In August.
One of the females Is a minor,
said Paul Gerard, investigator
for the prosecutor's office.
Rape Is an aggravated felony
of the first degree and carries a
possible penalty, on each count,
of an Indefinite term of actu,al
Incarceration of 15 to 25 years ln
prison, and a fine up to $10,000.
Rood appeared Friday morning in Meigs County Common
.Pleas Court before Judge Charles H. Knight,andentered a plea
of not guilty to both charges.
Eiond was set In the amount of
$50,000. The judge lncldated a
likely November trial date.
Rood was remanded to the
custody of the Meigs County
Sheriff.
James Hannah, 21, of Route 2,
Albany, was charged with one
oount of burglary In connection
with an Incident July 4 In which
the Charles Eastman residence
on Elk 'Run Road ·was entered
and several Items taken.

Burglary Is an aggravated four years.
Tllat charge resulted from an
felony of the second degree and
Incident
In July In which Harricarries a possible penaHy of
'
son
broke
Into a van belonging to
eight to 15 years in prison and a
Foreman
and
Abbott. In Middlefine up to $7 ,500 •. Gerard said.
port,
and
stole
approximately
Hannah was also charged with
$2,000
worth
of
tools, said
two COIII\ts (!f passing bad checks
Gerard.
and one count of grand theft.
Harrison had Initially denied
PasSing bad checks Is a felony
all
knowledge of the crime but
of the fourth degree and each
admitted
to It after being concharge carries a possible penalty
fronted
with
the physical eviof up to 18 months In prison and a
dence,
according
to Gerard.
fine- up to $2,500.
Prosecutor
Crow
had
argued that
The grand theft charge, which
Imprisonment
was
the proper
Involved a video recorder, Is also
the subsepunishment,
citing
a fourth degree felony.
quent
·shoptlftlng
Incident
as
Hartnah was arraigned In comevidence
of
continuing
criminal
mon pleas court Friday morning
behavior, but Judge Knight
and pleaded not guilty to ali
chose
probation, Gerard said.
charges. Bond was continued as
Harrison
is expected 10 be
previously set In the Meigs
County Court In the amount of arraigned on the new charge
$20,000, and a trial date of Sept. 22 early next week.
Michael Pierce, no age listed,
was .s et.
of
Rutland, was charged with one
Hannah was remanded to the
of domestic violence and
count
custody of the sheriff.
one
count
of vandalism, In
Johnnie Keith Harrison, 33,
connection
with
an Incident In
Minersville Hill. Pomeroy, was
June
at
the
residence
of his
charged with grand theft In
former
wife.
Each
count
of the
connection with a shopllftlng
indictment
Is
a
fourth
degree
Incident on Aug. 31 at Fisher's
felony and carries a possible
Big Wheel.
Grand theft is a felony of the penalty of up to 18 months In
prison and a fine up to $2,500.
fourth degree and carries a
Domestic violence Is consipossible penalty of up to 18
dered
a felony because Pierce
months In prison and a fine tip to
had
previously
been convicted of
$2,500.
the
same
offense,
Gerard
Harrison appeared In common
explained.
pleas court earlier In the week,
A warrant to arrest Pierce on
on Tuesday, for sentencing on a
the
indictment was Issued. He Is
charge of receiving stolen prop·
expected
to appear for arraignerty and was placed on probation
ment
early
this week.
by Judge Knight for a period of

ELIMINATING POSSmLE DANGER - Tbla
oeCltion of Rolde ut, on lhe upper e11d of Syracu~e,
hM beea a lraffle buartl for more lb&amp;a • yelll'l.
~ ofllelala ud tile Ohio Department of
'l'raMporlatfon bave tried lo -•lve lbe q-llon
of rllllloof-wQ 011 lhe alrelcb of roacl. Ofllel&amp;ls
have eollllderetl wiHIIfac or
lhe
road 1o &amp;llllw more , _ . for molorlllll. Earlier
lui week, ODOT equlptnellt wu moved to the

_truet....,.

·r

,,

area and workers bepa to add a four-foot benn to
the river aide of lhe roadway. According to Melp
Coanty's State Wpw&amp;)' Sapertnlendeat, Jamee
Prlllfllt, arnnpmenla were made whh two
property owners for ODOT to fllllhe area bealde
the road. A aloped drlvew&amp;)' will opUt lhe two
reoldeacea. Piau were prepared by Don Johnson;
m&amp;lntenaace eac~Mer ODOT Dlalrlct 10 In
MU'Ietla. (lllanday Tlmet-8entlllel photo)

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="192">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2782">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="38448">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38447">
              <text>September 9, 1988</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="275">
      <name>russell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2721">
      <name>tyo</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
