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                  <text>Thursday, September 22. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Paga 16-The Daily Sentinel

Summer ends; nation's mid-section has rain

---Local news briefs... - - Continued from page 1
The Country Blend Band and Debbie Powell and her son, Tony,
will be featured entertainers. Residents are to take their lawn
chairs to the presentation.

By United Press International
The summer of 1988 said
farewell today with rain and
occasional high winds sweeping
over the nation's mid-section,
while much of the rest of the
country enjoyed clear skies and
warm temperatures.
The National Weather Service
said strong thunderstorms were
rumbling through the southern
Plains states today, particularly
in Texas, generating high winds
and heavy rain. Showers also
were developing around the
southern Rockies.
A vicious thunderstorm In the
Texas Panhandle produced wind

Southern yearbooks arrive
The 1987-88 Southern High School yearbooks have been
delivered and can be picked up at the high school office.

Four fined in Middleport Court
Four defendants were fined ·Tuesday night In the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred .Hoffman.
They include Robert M. Foreman, Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
following too closely: Kenneth W. Tanner, Pomeroy, $10 and
costs. squealing tires: Jeff Cundiff, Middleport, $25 and costs,
disorderly manner, and $100 and costs and five days In jail,
destruction of property: Jerry Moore, Middleport, $100 and
costs, possession of marijuana: $25 and costs, disorderly
manner: $100 and costs, five days In jail, criminal trepasslng.

gusts up to 60 mph, ripping roofs
off some buildings near Dalhart,
the NWS said . Another thunderstorm In southwest Texas packed
wind gusts to 60 mph at Dell City.
A state official in Texas said a
tornado destroyed barns and
Irrigation systems northwest of
Amarillo, Texas, late Wednesday but no Injuries were
reported.
Jerry Hatley of the Texas
Department of Public Safety said
the tornado was spotted. by
several residents just north of
Hartley, a small farm town 60
miles northwest of Amarillo.
Hatley said the twister des-

troyed two barns and two lrrigation sprinkler systems and damaged two farmhouses . He said
the winds also toppled two

tractor-trailer rigs and moved
another across a road, but left it
standing.

Seyler processes 12 cases .
Twelve cases were processed Tuesday night in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler.
Forfeiting bonds were Kathy Fry, Belpre. $49, speeding:
Almeda Marshall, Pomeroy, $63, no operator' s license, and $63,
expired plates: Frank Reynolds, Mason, W.Va., $375, driving
while intoxicated; Brian Barnett. Point Pleasant, W. Va., $63,
exp ired plates: John E. Miller, Pomeroy, $47, speeding: Tina
Hall, Mt. Gay, W. Va., $63, expired plates: Scott Ferguson,
Cincinnati, $63, traffic light violation: Pete Reynolds,
Whitehall, $51, speeding.
Fined were Terry Brewer, Portland, $213 and costs, assault;
Julian Ice, Cincinnati, $113 and costs, intoxication: Robert
Shamblin and Richard Sanders, both of Poca , W.Va., $63 and
c.osts, each, on open container charges.

Bolin... ·
Continued from page 1
board of directors . and pointed
out that Meigs County has no
active members on board at this
time. At least two board
membersfrom Meigs County are
needed, Koblentz said.
• In discussing the matter, the
commissioners said they would
like to find people to fill the board
positions, but as yet, have been
unable to do so.
The commissioners also conducted \he following other items
of business.
- Reviewed and approved
Meigs Industries' grant application for stale funds to start a
recycling center In the counly.
· - Approved a request from
Recorder Emmogene Congo for
herself and two employees, Judy
King and Kay Hill. to at tend a
Southeastern Dis t rict Recorders' meeting to be held Oct. 8
In Marietta.
Directed Clerk Mary
Hobstetter to confirm reservations for the commissioners at an
Oct. 13 Solid Waste Seminar In
Columbus.

EMS .has six calls Wednesday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports six calls
Wednesday: Middleport at12: 15 a .m. to the pollee department
for Charley Brown to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers
Plains at 12:36 a.m. to Route 88I East lor Barbara Richards to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 12:25 p.m. to a
transformer fire at the corner of Page and Park Sts.; Racine at
4:37p.m. to Rainbow Ridge for Wilma Harris to Camden Clark
Memorial Hospital: Pomeroy at 10:29 p.m. to Union Ave. for
Mahlon Eblin to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Racine at 11:54 p.m.
to Por tland for Kim Beat to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Lawyer says umpire
not in sex scandal
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y.
(UP!) - Major league umpire
Dave Pallone took a lea.ve of
absence from his job so he can
defend himself against allegations that he was part of a sex
scandal involving teenage boys. ,
Several men, Including an
Episcopalian priest and a millionaire insurance executive, have
been convicted on charges of
having sex with teenage boys in
the Saratoga Springs area.
Pallone's' attorney , E. Stewart
Jones of Troy, said his client has
been Investigated by the district
attorney 's office concerning the
sex scandal.
Jones said he was retained by
Pallone after the umpire learned
of a series of anonymous telephone calls to the National
League and to the district attorney' s office. Pallone began a
leave of absence from his job on
Monday.
Jones said the allegations
against Pallone "are without
substance . They are not

form of sexual contact with one &lt;if
the teenage prostitutes who've
been involved in the Saratoga sex
ring cases."
Jones said he believed the
anonymous telephone caller was
the same person who appeared
Continued from page 1
with hls face blotted out and his
voice distorted on WRGB-TV In
tified that he turned over a 12Schenectady. The source said
gauge
shotgun shell casing to
Pallone was Involved in the sex
Lavender.
The casing was found on
scandal.
the
Rutan
residence's concrete
The lawyer called the anonymporch,
he
testified.
ous source unreliable.
Lavender testified Wednesday
"He is a tainted witness,"
that
he saw Staats in the . early
Jones said.
morning
hours of May 23, 1987,
Jones described his job as an
get into his car with his sister, Vera
"attempt to clear his (Pallone's)
Thompson, and drive to the Rutan
name as quickly as possible so he
residence. When Staats arrived
can resume his normal life."
there,
he was placed under arrest by
Saratoga County As sis tan t District Attorney Thomas MeN amthe Mason County Sheriff's
Department.
ara, who has prosecuted several
cases Involving the sex scandal,
Stein asked Lavender if Staats
said he was unaware of any · offered any resistance when he was
"evidence tha.t would. lead to a
arrested. The police chief said he
grand jury presentation Involv- offered no resistance.
Staats is currently out on
ing Mr. Palkme."
"There is no Investigation at $50,000 bond.
accurate."
this point that would lead to an
Jones said the a nonymous arrest of Mr. Pallone," McNamcaller said Pallone " had some ara told theAlbanyTiines Union.

.

40

Page 5

at

of obstructing official business
and to remove any reference to
use of a deadly weapon. These
violations would be second degree misdemeanors.
It is also understood that no
further charges can ever arise
out of the facts which gave rise to
-RAIN
. ~SHOWERS
~SNOW
this matter.
" ' Static _. . Occluded
FRONTS:
Warm "Cold
The defendant is to enter .no
contest pleas to the amended
' WEATHER MAP - A cold front curved over New Brunswick
charges. The firearm and all
Into the Atlantic Ocean, then curved Into Georgia, where It became
associated equipment · and ama warm front. Tbe warm front curved through Alabama and
munition held by the county
Missouri to a low In Nebraska. A stationary front curved through
sheriff's department are to be
Kansas and Colorado Into Idaho, where It became a cold front and
released to Wolfe's attorney,
curved over the weolern tip of Texas Into Mexico. Another warm
Douglas Little, Pomeroy, by a
front extended from Ontario to a low In Saskatchewan, and a cold
separate court order.
front trailed across south-central Saskalcbewan and Montana Into
The defendant Is also to pay a
Washington. Lows were In Arizona Northern CaiUomla. A blgh
$1,000 fine and court costs within
was over Ohio,
90 days, and serve a sentence of
14 consecu tlve days in the Mason
County, W.Va. jail, from 7p.m. to
7 a.m. each morning, so that he
CLEVELAND (UP!) -There - 125118 - In order, seven
may pursue his employment
was no winner of the $6 million players had the first five, which
during the day . Wolfe Is to report
jackpot in Ohio's Super Lotto pays $5,000; 62 had the first four.
to the Mason County Jail within , drawing Wednesday night, but which pays $1,000; 595 players
30 days.
two players are eligible to claim had the first three, which pays
$100,000 each in the accompany- $100; and 5,961had the first two,
This plea bargain ag,eement
which 'pays $10.
was approved by Judge William
ing Kicker game.
Kicker ticket sales totaled
C. Martin, of Jackson County,
No tickets were sold for the
Super Lotto game that matched $656,182 and the prize payout was
who was appointed by the Ohio
Supreme Court to preside over
the six winning numbers -12,13, $416,100.
the matter in place of Meigs
23, 26, 32 and 38, a lot(ery
Common .Pleas Judge Charles H.
commission spokesman said toKnight who stepped down from
day. That means the jackpot wlll
the case.
grow to at least $9 million for
In other court matters, In the
Saturday's drawing.
FRIDAY .
case of Gary J. Wolfe, et al,
There were 134 players who
against Howard E. Frank, et al,
had five of the Super Lotto
DANCE 9 TO 1
It has been stipulated and agreed
numbers, worth $1,000 each,
"FRONT PAGE"
while 6,055 players had four of the
that this action will be dismissel!.
Entries confirming sale and
numbers to win $83 apiece.
SATURDAY
ordering disbursement of proTickets sales for the Super
SO's DINNER DANCE
ceeds from the sale have been
Lotto game totaled $4,420,521 and
flied in the foreclosure action of
the prize payout totaled $636,565.
9 TO 1
Farmers Bank and Savings Co.
In addition to the two tickets
"CROSSOVER"
versus Michael A. Mitchell, et al.
that had the slx Kicker numbers

ft

ThOmas J. Stacy, 69.6606 Ohio
Charlestown, form erly of

Announcements
To Sing Saturday
The Mountain Top gospel sin·
gers will be singing at Middleport's Ash St. Freewill Baptist
Church at 7:30 p.m. on Saturda y.
Pastor Le!i-&gt;Hayman welcomes
everyone to attend .
Game canceled
The eighth grade.football game
sc heduled for today (Thursd ay)
between Meigs Junior High and
Jlelpre has been canceled.
Meet Monday
A meeting will be held Monday,
7 p.m.. at the Rutland Civic
Center. for member s of the
community to make plans for the
annual communliy Halloween
party. Everyone welcome.
Plan picnic
Mt.. Union Baptist Church,
County Road 10, Car penter Hill
Road, is having a Sunday school
picnic at Snowden Lake , Albany ,
on Sunday star ting at 1 p.m.
Sunday evening church service
will be held at the park.
Homecoming Sunday
A homecoming and dedication
• service will be held Sunday at
Vanderhoof Baptist Church. Services begin with morning worship at 9:45 a.m., followed by
Sunday school at 10:45. Basket
dinner wlll be at noon and an
afternoon service at 2 p .m.
Special singing will be featured
throughout the day.

Orders fOr durable g
WASHINGTON (Uf'l) - A surge in orders lor
motor vehicles and aircraft pushed up orders for
durable goods In August by 6 percent to $123.1
b!Uion, the Commerce Department said Friday.
Excluding defense orders, durable goods orders
rose 5.4 percent In August following a 2.2 percent
decline in July.
New orders for transportation equlpf'!lentlast
month rose $6.1 billion, or 20.9 percent from July ,
with more than half of the Increase In motor
vehicles and parts and most of the rest In aircraft.
The 6 percent hike represents a $7 billion
Increase from July, when durable orders plunge~

7.4 percent. Orders soared 8.7 percentlnJune witn
most of the volatility attributed to transportation
equipment.
Excluding transporation orders, durable goods
orders In the summer months have been
relatively flat, around $87 billion, according to the
department's Census Bureau.
Durable goods are "big ticket" Items- from
autos to appliances - designed to last at" least
three years.
All figures were adjusted for seasonal
variations.
Orders for non-electrical machinery last month

·. No ohe has Ohio Super Lotto ticket

Meigs County, died Sept. 9 at
Robinson Memorial Hospital after several years of failing
health.
Mr. Stacy was born Nov. 26,
19181n Pikeville, Ky., a sonolthe
late Ansel and Victoria Farley
Stacy. He attended school in
Harrisonville, Meigs County and
was a U. S. Army veteran of
World War II. Mr. Stacy had
lived In Ravenna for the last 40
years. He was retired from
Harbison-Walker Refractories In
Windham.
Survivors include his wife,
Dorothy; sons, David and MIchael. Ravenna, and Thomas of
Hawaii; five grandchildren:
brothers, John and Roy of
Ravenna: Junior and Ernest of
Virginia and Bill of Idaho, and
sisters , Vlrginfa Kauffman of
Ravenna: hls twin sis ter , Mrs.
Fred ~Lutchie ) Riggs of Pomeroy; Mrs. Paul (Annabelle)
Bebout, McConnelisville, and
Mrs. Frank (Mae) Haines of
Springfield.
Services were·held at the Wood
Funeral Home, Ravenna Chapel,
with the Rev . Jerry Fritz of the
Rootstown Congregational
Church, officiating.
·

By United Preas International
Rain and high winds rushing
down from thunderstorms
rattled ~butters and nerves today
In parts of Texas and lllinols,
while sudden cloudbursts turned
low-lying streets-into streams In
southern Michigan.
Thunderstorms brougl)t heavy
rain to parts of lower Michigan,
the National Weather Service
said. Up to 4 Inches of rain
drenched the northern parts of
Grand.Rapids, and Bat tie Creek
received 2 Inches in just two
hours during the night.
Street flooding was reported In
Battle Creek, Jackson, Muskegon and Grand Rapkis.
A civilian radio operator. with
the Kent County Sheriff's Department said that agency had

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CENTER RING - Patricia White, America's
foremost lion and tiger trainer, shows her skUI
and fearlessness Inside the center ring cage In
Thunday's Carson &amp; Barnes 5-Ring Circus at the
Galla County Fairgrounds. The circus! ~eiH~g

more than 2,1100
WM
GaiDpoHs Area J ayceea.
from tbe tlclkel
sales will be donated lo Big Brothers/BirSisters,
with the remaining proceeds to go toward repairs
to the Jaycee building. ( OVP photo)

belongs, with the county commission," Mayes said. "He (Watkins)
has had time tp see the heartaches
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - · of the people.
"We have made a stand. We have
The Mason County Commission
voted 2-1 Thursday night to ap- stood up for the citizens of Mason
prove a one-page resolution submit- County," Mayes said.
Watkins said aftet the meeting he
ted to it by the Mason Association
has
never been for commercial
for a Clean Environment which had
hazardous
waste incineration; He
the commission "resolve to prohibit
expects
the
county MACE resoluthe siting of commercial hazardous
waste incinerator facilities" in the tion will be challenged in court.
PyroChem, Inc., a Louisville,
county.
Voting for the resolution were Ky., company that has announced
Commissioner Thomas D. ''Tuck- plans to build up to 20 incinerators
er" Mayes and Commissioner Paul on the Donald Kingery tract in norWatkins. Voting 'no' was Commis- them Mason County, has applied
for permits from the West Virginia
sion President R. Kenton Sheline.
The resolution will be sent to Department of Natural Resources
West Vll'ginia Gov. Arch A. Moore and the West Vll'ginia Air Pollution
Jr. The governor last weelc issued Control Commission for those inan executive order on hazardous cinerators.
waste incinerators, changing the
Moore told the Point Pleasant
process under which they are ap- Register last week that the Pyroproved and setting a moratorium on Chem paperwotk, including the
1ssuance of all commercial hazar- multi-page siting agreement the
dous wasre incinerators. His order . company signed with the Mason
brought the issue haclc to a local County Commission last year, enti· control status.
·
tling the county to one-half of I
A resolution against commercial percent of the gross profits of the
hazardous waste incineration has incinerator venture, was all being
been approved by the Gallia City sent back to the company by his
Commission and the Gallia County agencies.
Medical Society has gone on record
"It's (the siting agreement) null
in opposition to hazardous waste and void," Moore told the Register. .
The commission approved the
incineration.
Thursday night's action appeared siting agreement on a 2-1 vote,
a direct response to Moore's execu- with Mayes the only dissenter. That
agreement was taken to court and
tive order.
"It's a wonderful step in the right that court mauer has yet to be
. direction," said Donna Nelson of resolved in Mason County.
Helena Holt, a spokeswoman for
MACE-II in Apple Grove, which
was formed to fight a hazardous PyroChem in Louisville, said this
waste incinerator planned by Aptus, week the com~any had no coma Lakeville, Minn., company. The ment on Moore s executive order or
company has taken an option on the status of the county siting
about 200 acres of land south of the agreement.
The passage of the MA~
Point Pleasant Goodyear Polyester
plant The site is across the road resolution followed lengthy discus-·
from the 20Q.student Sunnyside sian between the commissioners
and the several hundred people
Elementary School along Route 2.
"I'm glad the commissioners wbo jam-packed the Mason County
decided to listen to the people," Circuit courtroom. Many carried
signs, such as, "Up Your Aptus,"
Nelson said.
Bany Redman of MACE added, ''Truck On Back Aptus 1b Kansas,"
"At least we'll rest easier tonight "Tile Wolves Are At The Door,"
(Thursday). The commissioners ~'No A_ptus,M "Stop AptusC8111 and
Pyroscheme," and "Now . Is A
made a stand on iL"
''The first thing that I'm pleased Chance To Save Face."
It was clear that the members of
with illhe decision is back where it
By CHARLES A. MASON
OVPStaff
.

Hospital news

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSEl

rose 4.2 percent to $22.3 billion. Primary metals
fell 1.6 percent to $11.9 billion. Electrical
machinery also declined, down 0.4 percent to $19
· billion.
Industries that showed Increases In orders
included fabricated metals, furniture as well as
stone, clay and, glass products.
Shipments of durable goods last month
Increased 4.4 percent to $118.2 billion, up from a
2.9 percent decline In July. As with orders, the
volatility in shipments was attributed to transportation equipment, the department said.
Unfilled orders in Au~st rose 1.2 percent to ·

POMROYI OHIO

$431.2 bllllon, with most of the backlog in
transportation equipment and the rest In
non-electrical machinery .
New orders for non-defense capital goods rose
5.4 percent \o$38.2 billion last month. Such orders
over the past three months have averaged $36.6
billion, more than 10 percent higher than the $33
billion average for the first five months of 1988, the
department said.
Defense capital goods new orders last month
rose 15.3 percent to $8.1 billion following a 49.4
percent decline In July.

the crowd had made up their minds
on commercial hazardous waste incinerators.
The proceedings opened with
Sharon Dotson of the Sunnyside
Elementary School, who presented
the commission with a petition signed by "every last person in our
school."
Watkins, after Redman approached the commission with the
MACE resolution, said he would
not sign any siting agreements with
anyone for the retiJainder of his
term. He steps down at the end of
this year.
Mayes said there was no doubt in
his mind that hazardous waste incineration is something that has to
hestopped
.
"I was against it then, now and
however long it takes to keep them

ouL"

Mayes
told the
cheering
audience that Moore had placed the
decision in the right hands. "If we
can't make a decision, we don't
need to be elected officials in
Mason County."
"If it's safe, I'm for it," Sheline
said to a chorus of boos from the
audience. "If it's not safe, I'm not

for it"
Or. Charles Holzer of Gallipolis,
noting he has been involved in
health care In the valley for about
40 years, said the people assembled
in the counroom weren•t there for
"fun and games." He said he hasn't
heard of any good, immediate legal
solution for Mason County to combat the commercial hazardous
waste incinerators.
He called on the leaden to "find
some way to get this suclr;er turned
off."
Nelson said the commissioners
we.e elected to C8IIY. out the
people's wishes, noting if the couns
have to make the final detennination on the legality of the resolution, that was something that had to
come later.
"Be men enough to say there will
be no huudous waste."
Watkins pointed out to the group
that his signature would only be
binding Wlill !he end of his term.
Nelson shot back, "Mr. Watkins,
Continued on page 10

received a number of calls from
people whose basements were
flooded up to their main floors .
"A lot of people are upset that we
can' t help them."
Scattered power outages occured In several areas of the
county, the operator said, buut no
injuries were reported.
Showers and thunderstorms
also were lurking over parts of
Wisconsin and Illinois. Madison,
·Wis., received 1.37 inches of rain
Thursday to break their previous
record for the date setln 1959.
Strong winds rushing down
from ominous thunderheads
downed trees in the southwestern
suburbs of Ch lcago.
Showers and thunderstorms
extended from Illinois to tl;\e
western part of New York state

early today. A flash flood watch
was In effect early today for
southern Michigan .
Anything not nailed down in
Texas continued to flap about.
late Thursday night as
thunderstorm-spawned winds
gusted up to 58 mph at Lubbock
and reached 65 mph at Crosby,
Strong winds were blamed for
snapping power lines and blowIng awnings off of buildings in
Plainview, the NWS said.
Rain was scattered from the
Texas Panhandle western Oklahoma across southwest Texas
early today . A few showers
lingered over central New
Mexico.
Skies were mos tly cloudy early
today from the southern Rockies
Continued on page 10

Murder case could reach
Mason County jurors today
By CHARLES A. MASON
OVPStarr

gun, first-degree murder case tur-

Am Electric Power ...... ....... 27¥.
AT&amp;T ........... .. .... .... ...... ... ... 26%
Ashland Oil ........................ 33%
Bob Evans ........................... IS
Charming Shoppes ........... ·... I3¥.
City Holding Co .......... .... ..... 33
Federal Mogul... .................. 45
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................57';4
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Key Centurion ..................... 16
Lands' End ............... .......... 29%
Limited Inc .... .................... 21%
Multimedia Inc .................... 72
Rax Restaurants .................. 3-)l
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 11¥.
Shoney's Inc ........................ 7%
Wendy 's Inti ........... ............. G%
Worthington lnd ................. 21%

Velerans Memorial
Wednesday Admissions - Dorothy Higgins, Pomeroy; Ethel
B. Reeves, Coolville.
Wednesday Discharges - Doris Neal, Charles Blake, Robert
McLaughlin, Mildred Castle,
Gladys Taylor, Danny Buffington, Diana Davidson.

s up6% in August

Mason County officials
OK
A~ta~l::~t~~ev~ot'JJ '
·
resolution -prohibiting -facility &amp;d:~~iiE~~ ml:o~

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Showers and thunderstorms
usher in fall season today

MOOSE LODGE
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2: Sections, 14 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September '23, 1988

Murder trial...

--Area deaths-5,

Vot .39; No.97
Copyrighted 1988

Mosdy cloudy tonight. Low
In mid 50s. Chance of rain 411
percent. Saturday, cloudy,
high In mid 70s. Chance of rain
tO percent.

·-

•

Stocks

Thomas Stacy

Daily Number
738
Pick 4
3988

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 9-23-88

----Court news---Participants in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
action by the State of Ohio
against Gary J. Wolfe, of Racine,
have entered into a plea bargain
agreement.
.
Under the terms of the plea
bargain, the original indictment
charging Wolfe with two counts
of lntimlda\lon and carrying a
specification regarding threat of
harm with a deadly weapon, Is to
be amended to allege two counts

Ohio Lottery

Church
•
notices

'IWenty-nine-year-old Cindy Lee
Rutan testified Thursday afternoon
that she saw Michael Donald Boyd
with a derringer - a pocket-size
handgun having a shon barrel and a
large bore - in his right harid,
shortly before Boyd opened the
front door last year at her home and
was fatally shot once by Herman
Lee Staats. Staats, 45, was standing
on the Rutan residence's concrete
12-gaulle shotgun.
porch with
West Virginia State Police ballistics
expen Sgt. Mark Smith testified
that the shotgun shell ·casing found
by police on Rutan's porch in the
early morning hours of May 23,
1987, was fired out of the gun
which was confiscated by police in
Staats' New Haven trailer. Police
did not discover any identifiable
fingerprints on the casing or the
gun after examination.
The second-gun testimony broke
new ground.
Rutan did not mention the derringer to the September 1987 term
of the Mason County Grand I ury
which indicted Staats for first-degree murder, nor did she tell police
about !he gun. Knowledge of the
second gun later came out in the
ensuing investigation, according to
comments Thursday.
Rutan was on the stand during all
of Thursday afternoon's teStimony,
and although called by Prosecutor
Damon B. Morgan Jr. to testify for
the state, she appeared to he the
strongest wimess thus far in es·
tablishing a self-defense plea to the
coun for Staats.
The trial is before Mason County
Circuit Court Judge Clarence Wan
and a six-woman, six·man jury. It
could be ~nted to the jury today

a

for deliberations.
'Thstimony moved into its third
day today, wilh Morgan expected to
rest his c:aie and attorneys Ronald
Stein and Mike Shaw to begin
Staats' defense. They were expecled ID call 81 least seven witneSseS
to the sllllld today. It is not known
if Staata will like the stand in his
own defense.
Rutan, dre8sed in a whire blouse
and a blue·SII'iped skirt. und.er
qtJeltioning by Mtqan and ci'08S
examlnadon by Stein, described the
love lriangle lliat had enveloped hez

in 1987.
On one side was Staats, a man
who would loan her money to fix
Boyd's van which she wrecked, ~ut
who wanted Rutan 10 stop seemg
Boyd in Ravenswood or in Mason
County. It was a man who she
would wipe the blood off his f~
after he and Boyd got into a light in
Rutan's living room that resulted in
Boyd breaking a finger. Rutan and
Staats, dressed in a blue suit,
looked at each other briefly
Thursday during Rutan's long
questioning on the stand. It came
out in testimony Thursday that they
have talked to each other since the
shooting.
She told the jury that if a choice
was to be made between the two
men she had both dated in 1987,
she would have chosen Staats, the
smaller-sized man of the two.
On the other side of the triangle
was Boyd, a bigger man with
"broad shoulders," who traveled
from Ravenswood to see her, who
had put up items of hers in storage
and who had agreed to start seeing
Rutan again after the two were
about ready to call it quits to a
relationship that had cooled over
several months.
Intially asked about each man by
Morgan, Rutan replied for each,
"We were close: We were dating;
We were friends."
Rutan testified that the two men
had a fight months before the shoot-

ing and also testified that neither
boyfriend liked the idea of the other
man seeing her.
After the shooting, Rutan testified, she picked up the derringer
off of the living room floor and put
it inside the waist of her pants. She
said hiding the derringer and its
holster were what Boyd told her he
wanted before he died , his chest
and lung shattered by the 12-gauge
shotgun blast five to seven fet;t
away.
"Mike (Boyd) asked me to take
the things and keep them and give
them to his father." Later she said,
"! didn't tell them (the authorities)
because I did what Mike asked me
to do."
Rutan's Thursday testimony
refuted earlier statements she had
given the police and the grand jury.
Asked why she had changed her
story, she replied, "I was angry."
Asked by Morgan if she still held
that an~er, she answered, "I'm
angry. I m angry over the whole

situation."
While Rutan had told the New
Haven police just minutes after the
shooting that she saw Staats break
open !Ire-shotgun and put in another
shell, she told the jury Thursday
she didn't know if that really happened.
Asked to review a copy of her
statement to New Haven Police
Chief J.R. Lavender, she told Morgan, "I see it wrote here, but I don't
believe I said it like thi s."

Local news

brief~--.

Marijuana plants confiscated
Meigs Sheriff Howard E. Frank re port s that marijuana
plants were confiscated Wednesday afternoon a t a residence on
Hudson Road, near Reedsville.
·
Deputy Brian Bissell obtalnedo a search warrant for the
residence and marijuana and other dr ug related Items were
cortllscated at the hol)le, the sheriff states . Deputy Bissell
reports that charges will be filed. Deputy Ralph Trussell a nd
personnel from Forked Run State Park assisted in 1h l' raid.
The sheriff also reports that Meigs Hig h Sc hool was
vandaliZed Wednesday night . Deputy Bissell co nducted th o
investigation and reports that through the combined efforts of
the administration of Meigs and Wahama High Schools . two
juvenUes and an adult will be charged In the in cident .

Horse show slated Saturday
A 4-H Horse Fun Show wlll be held Saturday, starting at 2:30
p.m., at !he Meigs County Fairgrounds. The show is open to all
youth and It is not ne&lt;;essary to be In 4-H to participate in the
show. After the show, everyone Is Invited to share In a picnic .
Continued on page 10

�The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

•

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG5-MASON AREA

~~

B m~ l""r'-'~-r• ..,.-e;!=·~

.

~v

. .

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/ ControUer

AMEMBER of The United Press International. Inland Dally Press
Association and the AmeriCan Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welrome . They should be less than aoo wcrds
long. All letters are subject to edit ing and must be signed wtth name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should be tn
good taste, addressing lsSU6, not persooallttes.

·President does not
like kiss and tell books
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White Hou&amp;e Reporter
WASHINGTON - It's all become a familiar refrain at the White
House. Another book, another day, all emphasizing President
Reagan's laid-back, uncurlous style In decision-making and the
response is always the same.
"Fiction, " Reagan says, seemingly unconcerned about the
impression left by the bleak portrayal. " No truth to it. "
And White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater is ever-ready to do
battle using the proper amount of outrage. "The president is taking it
all in stride," he says.
"I don't like 'kiss and tell' books," says the president In a mild
reproach to revelations by aides who were once part of his loyal White
House team.
Each book on the subject of the Reagan White House, particularly
the current opus: "Landslide: The Unmaking of the President
1984-88," are replete with chapter and verse on how top aides made
decisions for the pres !dent and presented him with a fait accompli.
Reagan is pictured as the soul of passivity. He did not want to take
sides. He did not want to hurt anyone's f~llngs.
The perception that his aides all thought they were smarter than he
and were guiding the Republic accordingly comes through loud and
clear. First Lady Nancy Reagan's constant vigilance and efforts of
staffers to appease her also are higliltghted in the books.
Former White House spokesman Larry Speakes saicj he put words
in the president's mouth during the first Reagan-Mikhail Gorbachev
summit meeting In Geneva. reading Reagan's alleged quotes which he had made up- to reporters hungry for some word on the
meetings .
Former White House chief of staff Donald Regan wrote that the
president's activities were being glilded by the firs !lady's astrologer.
He also expressed his astonishment that Reagan never delineated his
economic policy to Regan when he became Treasury Secretary in the
president's first term.
In "Landslide." authors Jane Mayer and Doyle McManus disclose
in voluminous detail the Inattentiveness of the president. -his
dlsengagemen\ and his delegation of duties and even presidential
power.
Apparently he did not even get angry when !ormer national
security adviser John Poindexter told congressional investigators
· during the Iran;.Contra scandal hearings: "The buck stops here."
· News organizations have reported that a book by a former National
Security Council consultant and a participant .in the Iran-Contra
. affair says that when Reagan was asked in a conversation with
Italian Prime Minister Bettlno Craxl If the United States knew who
hijacked the cruise shlpAch!Ue Lauro, Reagan said: "I'm not sure we
: know exactly who they are."
Michael A. Ledeen wrote in his book, "Perilous Statecraft: An
: Insider's Account of the Iran-Contra Affair," that he acted as
; translator. transforming the answer Into: "We know exactly who
· they are."
.
· Ledeen wrote that the president later thanked him ior his "h~ful
· translation."
· In "Lands!!de," Emmet John Hughes, former Eisenhower
speechwriter, said: ''The pulse of the life of the presidency moves by
.·:one Thythm: The making of decisions. To know a presidency Is to
:: fatc h this rhythm. Yet there can be no secret to any presidency as
-;..ct!fflcult to discover as the riddle of precis&lt;;&gt;ly how even one decision
:· i:ame to be made."
::: The authors of the book contend Reagan was '.'strangely
-: t;usceptlble" to the wiles of his staff and wife, easily manipulated,
"•J hat " he o!ten crossed the line from delegation to abdication" and
:-that his "toughess dissolved In the face of human appeals."
·: Although most mortals would be outraged at such portrayals of the
;.;turrent presidency, Reagan is not. He Is serene and enormously
·: &lt;&gt;elf-confident. He has no ego problem . Fitzwater said that he does get
:-;.ngry at times "over policy, and at Congress."
::: Apparently, the perceptions of his style as a president led around by
-: the nose do not bother him. C'est laguerre. He knows who he is. He Is
.•:Still popular. Besides, he keeps a dally diary and will someday tell his
·: -side of the story.

•••

·:·
•

.•.
.•.
•.

.

••

·:--.
.

• Dear Sir :
·••

-:· We would like to take this
:-:opportunity to announce our
:':strong support In the efforts of
·: •the Meigs County Department of
:;·Human Services , Local 3520, In
;. '·their negotiations of a fair and
: equal contract.
'•

.

·:: At this time. we feel It Is
:·:essential that the Meigs County
-:·commissioners, Mr . Jones, Mr.
&gt;•Koblents, and Mr. . Roush, go
.~~

: ~; Today . in
•

back to the bargaining table to
negotiate a good faltll agreement
with the AFSCME Ohio Council 8,
as the services provided by the
D.H.S. workers are very !mpor·
tant to Meigs County residents.
Sincerely,
Gene C. Oiler
President, UMWA Local 1886
David Lawson, II
vice president, UMWA Local1886
Or ley Vore
board member, UMWA Dlstr!~t6

history

By United Press International
Today is Friday, Sept. 23, the 267th day of 1988 with 99 to follow .
The moon is waxing, moving toward its full phase.
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Libra. They include
;. Roman Emperor Augustus in 63 B.C .; edqcator William McGuffey,
;:; author of the McGuffey "Eclectic Readers" for school children, in
.; · 1800; feminist and presidential candidate Victoria Woodhull in 1838;
:•: pioneering surgeon William Halsted, who originated operations for
hernia and breast cancer, in 1852; poet and novelist Edgar Lee
Masters In 18ti9; journalist Walter Lippmann In 1889.
·

By Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta :
the defense Industry, but others
were tightly connected.
Packard Is the chairman and
co-founder of Hewlett-Packard
Inc., a defense contractor. He
was also a deputy defense
secretary in the Nixon
administration.
He gained some notoriety In .
the late 1960s when his firm,
although doing mll!ions of dollars
In government work, refused to
open Its books to the General
Accounting O!f!ce. In 1970, we
reported on a Pentagon memo
that described a conversation
between Packard and a subordinate when Packard was deputy
defense secretary. The subject of
the conversation was defense
.contractors and Packard was
quoted as saying, "We have to do
someth~ng to get (their) profits
up.''
Frank Carlucci was another
member of the Packard Comm!s·
sian. Now the secretary of
·defense, Carlucci was then on the
board of directors of Sperry
Corp., a major defense contractor which later became Un!sys
Corp.
In earlier columns, we dis·
closed that Unisys paid Carlucci

$96,000 last March tor his work on
the board. He also will get a
$14,300 annual pension from the
company when he leaves government service. Unlsys is one otthe
firms being investigated by the
Justic Department, and Carlucci,
has disqualified himself from
any matters involving the
company.
To their credit, the commission
members recommended and the
Defense Department lmple·
men ted a system tor contractors
and their employees to report
fraud. Slitce then, more than 100
cases of potential fraud have
been reported, according to the
defense department's Inspector
General's Office. Most fraud
charges are first brought to the
attention of the inspector general
by contractors or government
workers, the DOD says.
But, Rep. Dlngell thinks Reagan used the Packard Commission to pacify members of
Congress who were pushing tor
more sw~ping reforms. Rep.
Barbara Boxer, D-Cal!!., believes tO,. commission! needed
some critics at the defense
establishment tor balance.
Packard and other commission members we interviewed
said they think the best people to
scrutinize the defense system are
those with f!rst·hjllld knowledge.
Their suggestion, they say, was
to lift excessive regulations on
contractors and allow them to
institute their own controls and
standards.
"All this recent flurry hasn't
changed my mind of the viability
ot that basic concept," Packard
said.
.
'
But defense critics say the
current scandal Is evidence that
self-policing doesn't work. They
say a revolving door carries
experts from the Pentagon to the
private sector and vice versa,
making in all-too-comfortable
relationship between buyer and
seller.
The Pentagon and the contractors hire and same consultants,
and those consultants may be
former Pentagon staffers cashIng in on their Inside experience.
Commission members told us
they talked about the revolving
door, but they also pointed outthe
problem of finding qualified
people who have ttes to neither
side.
·
Cozy connections between the·
Pentagon and defense contractors have become a given. They
reflect the powerful militaryindustrial complex that Dwight
Eisenhower warned about nearly
30 years ago.

Companies go up in smoke __R_o_be_rt_W_a_lte_rs

MISSION VIEJO, Cal!!.
(NEA) - The 10,000 acres of
master-planned homes, stores
and recreational facUlties here
offer no clue that Mission Viejo
differs from other sprawling real
estate developments throughout
California.
But the community Is unique In
one Important respect - It is a
product of the Philip Morris Co.,
best known as the nation's
largest maker of cigarettes.
Thus, . Mission Viejo shares
common ownership not only with
Marlboros, Merits and Virginia
Slims but also with Miller and
Lowenbrau beers, Oscar Mayer
frankfurters, Entenmann's pas·
tries, Claussen pickles, Maxwell
House coffee, Post cereals and
Jeli-0 pudding.
As health-conscious Ameri·
cans smoke fewer cigarettes,
product diversification Is one
strike In Meigs County.
strategy the tobacco companies
George Thacker are using to remain profitable.
President Local 1890 Among the other examples:
United Mine Workers of America
R.J. Reynolds Industries, the
country's second biggest cl·

. Backs Meigs e_mployees

Friday, September 23, 1988

WASHINGTON- When Presi- and other recommendations of
dent Reagan set up a committee . the commission in a classified
to Investigate mllltary waste _ directive In 1986, all the while
three years ago, the list of reaping the political benefits of
appointees looked like a "Who's appearing reform-minded.
Yet, two years later, the
Who" of the defense business.
Included were board members defense procurement system from major defense contractors, still an Insatiable pig - trotted
retired m!lltary officers and ri11ht Into the arms of the FBI.•.
Looking back at the Packard
lawyers whose firms repres·
ented defense contractors. These Commission and ahead at the
were the foxes that Reagan tough task of real reform, some
trusted to sweep out the hen critics, Including Rep. John
Dlngell, D-Mich., are asking
house.
Today. with the FBI and whether defense contractors can
Congress involved In a massive be trusted as their own watch·
Investigation of Pentagon pro- dogs and whether the president
curement fraud, critics of that should have accepted that notion
earlier commission are question· from the defense establishment
lng whether people who make in the first place.
At thll same time, the critics
money off of hefty defense
budgets are the best authorities aren't wasting a chance to tweak
the nose of the outgoing Republ!·
on reform.
Reagan's panel was headed by can administration.
Our associate, Scott Sleek, has
electronics magnate David
Packard and was know as the , obtained an internal draft of a
Packard Commission. The pres!· memo from Dingell' s staff chargdent appointed the commission ing that Reagan's showy effort at
after a series of embarrassing reform - the Packard Comm!s·
revelations about faulty weapons slon - was ripe with conflicts of
interest. The Project for Mll!tary
and overpriced spare parts.
Not surprisingly, the Packard Procurement, a Washington pubCommission recommended that lic Interest group, has reiterated
contractors should adopt and that conclusion.
Some of the commission
monitor their own ethical stand·
ards. Reagan implemented th;it members had only minor ties to

Support workers

• Dear Editor.
. • We. the members of Local1890
-:-or the U.M.W.A., do pledge our
&gt;:complete s upport to til e
:: :AFSCME workers that are on

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Midcleport, Ohio

Can defense industry be regulated?

::Letters to the editor
..

,•.

\

garette manufaCturer,-acqulred
Nabisco Brands, Inc. in 1985. The
successor company, RJR Nabisco, Inc., now is preparing to
launch a smokeless cigarette.
The firm makes not only
Winston, Salem and Came! cigarettes but also Oreo cookies,
Ritz crackers, Planters peanuts,
Life Savers mints, A-1 steak
sauce, Grey Poupon mustard and
a wide range of Del Monte foods.
American Brands, Inc. produces not only Pall Mall, Tareyton
and Lucky Strike cigarettes but
also Swingline staplers, Jim
Beam bourbon and Master Lock
security devices.
The company recently sold its
Samsonlte luggage and Cu!llgan
water treatment subsidiaries but
retains ownership of the Franklin Life and Southland Life
insurance companies.
American Brands also owns
the largest cigarette company in
the United Kingdom, Gallaher
Ltd. But another British tobacco
company, BAT Industries PLC,

owns Brown &amp; Williamson, this
country's third largest cigarette
maker.
BAT also owns the Marshall
Field and Saks Fifth Avenue
department stores, Hardee's fast
food restaurants and several
large drug store chains. It
recently purchased Los Angelesbased Farmers Group, Inc., the
country's third largest issuer of
automob.lle and residential
insurance.
Lorlllard Inc., the nation's
fourth biggest tobacco marketer,
makes Kent, Newport and True
cigarettes. It Is a wholly owned
subsidiary of the Loews Corp.,
which owns a controlling Interest
In CBS Inc., Loews Hotels, CNA
Financial Corp. and Bulova
Watch Co.
··•
Most of Philip Morris' food
products were acquired in the
1985 purchase of the General
Foods Corp. Its real estate
activities are not limited to
Mission V!ej o, however. It also
owns and Is developing the

How to scare conserVatives
When you get to be a leading
political reporter for The New
York Times !ike E.~ . Dionne Jr.,
you don't waste much ttme
chasing facts . Instead, drawing
on your experience and your
liberal Inclinations, you spin
some theory that affords an
opportunity to damage something or someone you disapprove
of. Then you phone enough
contacts to accumulate a batch of
quotes to underpin your theoryand lo and behold, there's your
story.
Recently Dionne thought he
saw a way to drive a wedge
between Bush and the conservative bloc whose enthusiastic
support Is, of course, lnd!spensa·
ble to Bush. Like the late Stephen
Palter, the inventor ot "gamesmanship," Dionne's basic stra·
tegy In his "news story" was to
praise: In this case, to credit
Bush with having shrewdly won
the trust .of conservatives - by
his choice of Quayle as his

running mate, by coming sturd·
lly to Quayle's defense when the
latter was attacked, by firmly
pledging no new taxes, and by
stressingsuch Issues as DUkakls'
attitude toward the Pledge of
Allegiance and his po!icy of
furloughing first -degree
murderers.
With these things accomplished, Dionne explained, Bush Is
now free to move to "the center"
(which Is lib-speali for the left),
and is doing so.
Dionne fleshed out the above
razz-matazz with his usual wei·
ter of confirmatory quotationa
from such sources as John
Buckley, the former Kemp press
atde whom Dionne can almost
always count on to confirm any
allegedly Republican viewpoint
that needs subltantiatlon.
But then Dionne played his
joker. Bush, he asserted, had
made certain conservatives
"apoplectic" by planning to
name former Secretary ot State

Henry Kissinger to a campaign
advisory committee on national
security. According to Dionne,
these conservatives "see Mr.
Kissinger as the architect of the
policy of detente with the Soviet
Union and of arms control
agr~ments they opposed."
He even turned up with a
quotee for that proposition: Burton Yale Pines, senior vice
president of the Heritage Faun·
dation. Pines, a placid man who I
doubt very much was "apoplectic," did point out that Kissinger
"represents all the great U.S.
foreign policy defeats" of the
1970s.
So, wh!le Kissinger's track
record might well, as Pines
suggested, make htm a poor
foreign-policy consultant, knowledgeable conservatives aren't
likely to become "apoplectic" on
the subject. The real danger,
paradoxically, 11 that Kissinger
might actually derail some uae!ulln!tlatlve In a belated attempt

nearby 6,600-acre Aliso VIejo
community and the 22,000-acre
Highlands Ranch south of
Denver.
But the tobacco companies'
expansion In recent years gives
them vast new economic power
- and they appear Increasingly
willing to exercise it.
When Northwest Airlines ear·
Uer this year decided to prohibit
cigarette smoking on all of its
domestic flights, RJR Nabisco
punished the advertising agency
that worked for both firms by
moving its $80 m!lllon account
elsewhere.
Philip Morris mounted a slmul·
taneous campaign that criticized
Northwest's action and attacked
the airl!ne for "its poor on-time
performance and. .. transgres·
s!ons of Federal Aviatlon Administration standards."
Giving up cigarette smoking is
difficult - but now it is not as
difficult as avoiding the seem·
ingly ubiquitous reach of the
tobacco companies.

William Rusher
to compensate for his own
dismally "soft" performance
while in office.
_
.
Dionne, of course, knows all
this very well. But mentioning It
wouldn't serve the devious purpose of his article - so he just
didn't mention It, or quote
anyone who did.
He did, however, rehash the
fact that recently another Times
"reporter.:• Gerald Boyd, briefly
managed tp convince a lot of
con~rvatives who ought to have
known better that bush had
reneged on his policy of testing
(as well as researching) the
Space Shield. Forty-eight hours
of hysteria could have been
avoided by one phone call to
Bush's press office, but no one
made it. Bush himself had to put
out the fire, two days later.
And who do you suppose was in
the forefront of the hysterics,
terrified that Bush had sold out?
Henry Kissinger.

Wahama at Ravenswood for
first of three road games

B. ]. Scoot wins
Little Brown lug
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sparta Writer
DELAWARE -They say it's
better to be lucky than good. Put
the two together and it's a tough
combination to beat.
Michel LaChance had both
Thursday and parlayed them
Into victory In the 43rd edition of
the Lltile Brown Jug 3-year-old
pacing classic behind Ohio-bred
B.J. Scoot.
LaChance, who had won the
first division of the race, pulled
the No. 1 pUI out of the bottle and
got the inside postposition In the
finals. That lett Albert Albert,
the winner of the second division,
and third division winner Camtastic in the No.3 and No.2 spots,
respectively.
LaChance fought off an early
challenge for the lead by Albert
Albert and Chris Boring and held
the rail and the lead all the way to
the finish line for a 11·4 length
lead in 1:52.3.
''If I let Albert Albert go, I was
dead," said LaChance. "! had to
hang on and stay on top. I had no
choice.
"A lot of the race developed out
of the draw," added LaChance.
"Post position Is everything In
this. My horse likes to race on top
and so do I."
But LaChance would not give
luck all the credit for the win.
"Not too many horses could
keep going after a half In 53.4,"
said LaChance. "Today. he wa&amp;
just a super horse."
B.J. Scoot, a son of Falcon
Almahurst, is owned by the
Sybarite Stable of Islington, Ont.,

and was bred by Jack Howell of
Breman, Ohio.
"I'd been praying for that No.1
post position," said John Evans
of ·Toronto, Can., a co-owner of
the winner. "I knew with the kind
of speed in this race, it might just
be the edge we'd need.
. "I expected we'd be challenged
the whole m!le,'' added Evans,
"but when he held of Albert
Albert, then that other horse
(Camtastic), I knew he'd be
pulling away as soon as he hit the
final turn."
Threefold, driven by B!ll Fahy,
finished second and John Campbell's Dare You To wound up
tlltrd.
The 1:52.3 clocking shattered
the national season's record for a
3-year-old pacing colt on a
half-mUe track, which had been
lowered in two of the three
division races.
·
The victory was the eighth in 20
starts this year tor B.J. Scoot and
the $147,030 first prize pushed his
1988 earnings to $667,277.
B.J. Scoot also won his division
by leading nearly wire-to-wire.
Starting tram the No. 4 post,
LaChance took hIs co It to the lead
before the quarter pole and he
coasted to the win In 1: 54 .
Albert Albert, the 1987 sophomore sensation, won a stirring
battle to the quarter pole with
Dare You To and held the lead the
rest of the way In winning the
second division.
Camtastic, with two-time Jug
winner Bill O'Donnell driving .
and considered the race favorite
by many, breezed to victory in

By Gary Clark

Afier encouniering an inierruption in its schedule because of an
open dale coach Donnie VanMeier's Wahama White Falcon
football team anxious! y awaits the
resumption of its 1988 gridiron
card when the White Falcons play
the first of three consecutive away
games beginning Friday night at
Ravenswood.
Wahama, the seventh-ranked
team
in Class A circles according to
DECLARED INELIGffiLE
the first West Varginia Secondary
- Vince Workman, senior
Schools Activities Commission's
co-captain for Ohio State's
ratings, wiU carry a perfect 3-0
football team, has been deslate into Friday nights confrontaclared Ineligible to play !or the
tion with the 1-3 Red Devils and
Buckeyes after admitting he
will hope to improve on that mark
received money from a sporta
with a win over the Class AA Jackagent. OSU Athletic Director
son
County team. The contest will
.Jim Iones · announced the
be the league opener for the local
suspension Wednesday after · gridders while it will be the second
Workman returned home
Little Kanawha Conference enfrom testifying agaalnsl
gagement for Ravenswood. ·
sports agents before a grand
The White Falcons, after posting
jury In ChlcaKo. (UPI)
wins over Liberty Raleigh, Kyger
Creek ahd Eastern, made the initial
WVSSAC's top ten rating for the
the third division in 1:54.1. fourth time in six seasons. WHS
Camtastic, which finished a was ranked tenth in 1987, fifth in
disappointing fifth In the final 1985, second in 1984 and eighth in
after challenging most of the 1982 when the WVSSAC first
way, earned $54,680 Thursday released its state rankings. The
and Albert Albert, sixth in the Bend Area Jearn advanced to post
final, picked up $49,212.
season playoff action in each of _the
Thursday's Jug, run under past two grid campaigns artd has
partly cloudy skies and with compiled a 1-2 mark·during playoff
temperatures In the low 80s, competition.
drew a record 47,218 to the old
A pair of unbeaten future While
Delaware County Fa!rgrounc)s Falcon opponents, Vinscn and Wiland set a handle record of liamstown, were also included in
$1,768,316.
the WVSSAC's ratings as was once
beaten Buffalo Putnam. Vinson, at
4-0, was ranked sixth in Class A
while Williamstown held down the
eleventh position in Class AA with
Currey, who can become only the playing at home after three a 3-0 mark with Buffalo Putnam
By GENE CADDES
fourth UC coach to beat the consecu tlve road games. We clinging to the number ten spot in
UPI Sports Wrtter
, Saturday's Clnclnnat!·Miaml Redsklns three times (the last know the history of the rivalry Class A with a 3-1 slate.
Ravenswood, despite 'its losing
football game at Oxford won't was Sid Gillman, who won four and how Important It Is to our
record, will most definitely be a
,decide any champions])lps, It times between 1949 and 1953). •'It fans and alumni.''
doesn't match two unbeaten always generates a lot more .
''The Game" begins at 12:30 most fonnidable foe for the Bend
teams, nor w!lllt keep any long Interest because ofthe hype of p.m. and will be televised by Area team according to WHS men.winning streaks alive, but It's the rivalry and this game takes Master Video Productions as the tor Don VanMeter. "Ravenswood's
still "the game ot the century" on added significance because it Mid-American Conference TV record is very misleading", commented VanMel!!r. "They opened
Is the lOOth anniversary of the game of the week.
for the Bearcats and Redsklns.
·
; A century ago, In 1888, Clncin· series...
The only MAC league game on with a very tough schedule and lost
a lot of experience to graduation.
For Currey, it has even more tap has Bowling Green at Toledo,
nat! and Miami played for the
"first time. battling to a scoreless significance when It comes to a matchup of two teams st!ll Coach (Fred) Taylor always has a
way of getting the most out of what
. tie In a game also played on the evaluating his team. a 41-7 loser Iook·ing for their first wins of the
he's
got."
at
Boston
College
In
the
opener
Miami campus In Oxford.
season. Both are 0-3 overall, BG
The
Red Devils, winners of two
: Saturday, the Bearcats and two weeks ago.
0-1 In the conference and Toledo
straight
LKC Class AA titles, lost
"It also is a big game because 0-2.
Redskins will meet for the 93rd
14
seniors
from last year 's 7-3
time In the longest continuous we don't know where we are as a
It will be the 53rd meeting
squad
but
return
four regulars and
rivalry west of the Alleghenies football team," he said. "We've between the northwestern Ohio
13
!ettennen.
Veteran
Coach Fred
.and the sixth longest and 12th been on both ends of the score- rivals, with BG holding a 28-20-4
Taylor
will
be
entering
his 23rd
board. We have to have an edge. BG won 20-6 last· year ])ut
oldest series In the country.
season at the Jackson County
: Miami, 0-3 this season, leads intense effort to see how good we the home team has taken the last
school
and haS compiled an imthe series 50-36-6. But Cincinnati. can be.' .....
four.
pressive
152·69-3 record.
For Miami, it's the first home
under Coach Dave Currey, has
The rest of Saturday 's sche·
The Red Devils lost four first, won the last two games. It hasn't game after consecutive road du le Involving MAC teams has
team LKC players and a pair of
. won three in a row for 35 years. . losses to Eastern Michigan (24- Central Michigan hosting Monsecond team selections from a year
17),
Oklahoma
State
152-20)
and
1951. 52 and 53. The Bearcats
tana State, Eastern Michigan at
ago
which led to the comments of
Minnesota
(35-3)
.
enter the contest 1·1 after a 52-7
Arizona, Kent State at Kentucky
''This
Is
an
Important
game
,win over Austin Peay last Saturand Ohio University at Nevada- Taylor regarding this years team.
because of where It falls in .our Las Vegas at night. Both Ball
"Its one of those years to rebuild
day night.
season
and
from
a
historic
and replace", said Taylor, some''The IV! lam! game Is always an
State and Western Michigan are
thing he has done with great sucImportant contest as far as the standpoint," said Miami Coach idle.
cess down through the seasons.
. alumni are concerl)ed," said Tim Rose. "We're glad to be
"We are young and ine~pcricnced,
especially at quarterback, but we
have a good nucleus to build upon

Miami Redskins to host Cincinnati

·eooper looking for 'fanatical' effort
' COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) had 257 yards on the ground and
Ohio State Coach John Cooper 246 through the air.
w!ll be looking for "a fanatical
Meanwhile, Ohio State, which
effort" saturday when his Buck- opened with a 26-9 win over
eyes, minus starting tailback Syracuse, was being dominated
Vince Workman, take on 6th- by Pitt.
ranked LSU In Ohio Stadium.
Ohio State's only touchdown
Workman, a 3-year regular, . came on a 100-yard kickoff return
was declared Ineligible this week by sophomore Carlos Snow In the
· when it was revealed he had fourth quarter.
. signed wl th and accepted money
Cooper said Snow, who has
from a sports agent more than a shared the tailback spot with
, year ago. Prior to last season,
Workman the first two games,
, Ohio State lost all-American likely will get more carries
wide receiver Crls Carter for the starting this week .
same reason.
"We think Carlos Snow Is the
Ohio State, a 42-10 loser at best runner we have," said
Pittsburgh last Saturday n!ght,ls Cooper, "and we haven't been
a 7-point underdog to the un- getting him the ball as much as
beaten Tigers in the nationally· we should. We've got to find ways
televised (ABC, 3: 30 p.m.) conto get Carlos the football, particutest and the way Cooper talks,
larly in the open field where he
that might not be enough.
can use Is running talents."
''LSU Is a great football team,"
Cooper said of the Tigers, who
have beaten Texas A&amp;M 27-0 and
Tennessee 34·9 In their first two
starts. ''They are a dom!Jiating
team both on offeni!E and
de!en&amp;e.
• ''To be honest with you," added
RICHFIELD, Ohio (UPI) · Cooper, "if we're going to win. I
The
Baltimore Blast and the
, think LSU has got to help us a
Dallas Sidekicks will play an
Uttie bit , I mean if LSU plays as
exhibition soccer game Oct.14 at
good as It can play and we play as
the Rlch!leld Coliseum, where
, good as we can play, based on
the Cleveland Force played bewhat I've seen, they'll probably
fore folding after last season,
win the game. It wi!l take a
officials announced Thursday.
. fanatical effort on our part to
The Baltimore roster includes
make it a contest."
former Force players Kal Haas. LSU Is led by junior quarter·
klvl, Carl Valentine, Desmond
--back Tommy Hodson, a 6-foot-3,
Armstrong and Mike Sweeney.
, 195-pounder starting tor his third
The game will start at 8 p.m.
seaaon. A year ago in Batoo
, Roqe, HOdson · passed for 267

Workman's departure also
prompted Cooper to move junior
Marc Hicks from split end, where
he played sparingly the first two
games, back to tailback.
Cooper said the 6-foot-2. 210·
pound Hicks, a talented transfer
from Cal-Berkeley, could see
tailback action against LSU,
along with red-shirt freshman
John Spencer.
Workman also returned punts
for the Buckeyes. Cooper said he
would pick Workman's succces·
sor from among Bobby Olive,
Greg Beatty or Jeff Graham, all
wide receivers. None has ever
returned a punt in coUege.
Cooper said Mike Kurt would
start at offensive tackle against
LSU tn place of veteran Joe
Staysnlak and freshman Scotty
Graham at fullback, replacing
Bill Matlock, Injured In the Pitt
game.

To play exhibition
Tonight's games
tilt Oct 14
Huntington High at Gallipolis

:~~~P~~i:~o~r£:3 ~~~suck·
''I thlntt their quarterback and

. Troy Aikman of UCLA are the

•best I've seen Jn a long time,"
Cooper said of Hodson, who
_completed bls first 12 passes In
last week's win over Tennessee.
Complimenting Hodlon's pass- ·
lng aplut Tennessee wu the
· runntna of tailback Eddie FuDer,
wbo rullbed for 116 yardl ID 18
· cll'l'lel, and Slip Watkins, who
added 59 yards ID 10 carries. LSU

OVER 250 MOVIES
Sl ·OO RINTM

Athens at Vinton County
Ironton at Jackson
DeSales at Logan
Zanesville at Marietta
Newark at Warren Local
Pt. Pleasant at Hurricane
Wellston at Meigs
Coal Grove at Buffalo
Kyger Creek at Hannan Trace
Symmes Valley at North Gal!la
Oak Hill at Eastern
Southern at Southwestern
Wahama at Ravenswood

TANNING SALON
WOLFF BEDS

P11 TAPE

DUWIIG MIY tiGHT
liE MOVIE

$"3 0
SPECIAl

·--FOI-·1-F_____.,.._FOI--------1
ONE ENTIIE MONTH

sa•Y'S VIDEO &amp; TANAIAMA .••
9•9·2171

·--- -

and we will throw the football. My
Woody Hayes days of three yards
and a cloud of dust are over," adde&lt;! the veteran grid coach.
The four returning starters for
Ravenswood include AU-LKC
defensive back Mike McCorkle (5·
8, 155 senior), center Bill Garrett
(5-11, 210 senior), linebacker Jason
Jackson (5-8, 200 junior) and
tailback Breu Southal! (6-0, 175)
junior. Remaining lettennen include senior Scott Jenkins (5-10,
175}, junior Scott Dale (6-2, 190),
junior Bryan Gould (5-10, 165),
senior Bryan Staats (5-10, 185),
senior Matt Ale~ander (6-0, 205),
junior Jon Miller (5-9, 155), junior
Mark Synder (5-9, 165), junior
Chad Able (5-10, 155) and junior
Craig Haught (5-9, 160).
Two of the Red Devils three losses this season have been tQ un·
beaien highly ranke&lt;l Class AA opponents. Sissonville, 4--0 and the
slate's second- ranked Class AA
team defeated Ravenswood 26-0
last week while Wayne (3-0 and
rated fifth iri Class AA) P.inned a
41-7 loss on the Red Devils in the
two teams' season opener.
Ravenswood's remaining setback
was a 17-6 loss to Shennan with a
15-12 win over Spencer being the
Red Devils lone victory so far this
season.
Waharna has captured four
straight
decisions
from
Ravenswood and owns a 4-1 edge
in the series since it was resume&lt;! in
1983 after a several year absence.
The White Falcons defeated the
Red Devils 30-6 in 1987, 9-6 in
1986, 41-6 in "1985 and 14-0 in
1984 while Ravenswood hande&lt;l
the locals a 20-7 setback in 1983.
Last year Wahama jumped out to
a 15-0 first period lead before adding 15 more points during second
half action to claim a 30-6 win over
the Red Devils. Sean Gibbs and
Chris Jewell scored a pair of
touchdowns each for the While
Falcons as Wahama claimed a 22283 edge in rushing yardage. The
Bend Area defensive unit limite&lt;!
Ravenswood to a mere 107 yards in
total offense during the contest and
picke&lt;l off four Red Devil aerials to
account for the win.
"We expect Ravenswood to
throw the football a great deal on
Friday", said VanMeier. "Their
quarterback, Shannon Murray (6'2"
171 junior), can put the bali on the
money so our defensive secondary
wiU definitely be tested. We must

•
•
•
•

put pressure on the quarterback and
we will have to contain Southall
who is a fine tailback in his own
right," added VanMeter.
Wahama will cany a 33.0 per
game scoring average into the 7:30
p.m. contest while the Bend Area
defensive unit is giving up just 4.0
points per game. Senior running
back Rick Keams is the offensive
leader in scoring with 26 and rush·
ing with 315 yams in 42 carrie!
while senior running mate Chri!
Jewel! has amassed 242 yards in 30
attempts
enroute
to
four
touchdowns and 24 points.
Quarterback Sean Gibbs has completed 12 of 23 passes for 168
yards and one touchdown with
Bobby Kincaid on -the receiving
end of five aerials for 87 yards.
Defensive tackle leaders include
linebacker Chris Noble and Chris
Jewel! with . 18 each followed by
Bill Zuspan with 14 and Dave Sigman with 12. Billy Purkey and
Phitip Upton have intercepted a
pair of enemy passes each during
the Falcons first three outings.
''We're in fine shape physically
and mentally," said VanMeter. "I
hope the week layoff didn't hamper
.our level of sharpness. Our boys ·
know what Ravenswood is capable
of doing to you so we won't be
looking past Friday nighL
''This game starts the meat of our
sche&lt;lule and we will have to continue to improve. You can't take
anything for granted anytime you
go up against Ravenswood. It
should be a heck of a baUgame."
Again, kickoff time is schedule&lt;!
for 7:30pm.

The Daily Sentinel
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ATTENTION:
MEIGS COUNTY VOTERS
IN ORDERJO VOTE IN THE
NOV. 8, 1988 GENERAL ELECTION
YOU MUST BE REGISTERED BY
OCTOBER 11, 1988
HAVE YOU MOVED, C.HANGED YOUR NAME, OR
FAILED TO VOTE IN THE LAST 4 YEARS?
YOU CAN CHECK YOUR REGISTRATION, CHANGE
YOUR NAME AND/OR ADDRESS OR REGISTER AT

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD OF ELECTIONS
108 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
OR·

PHONE 992-2697
HOURS FOR REGISTRATION:
MONDAY thru FRIDAY: 8:30a.m. til 4:30p.m.
SEPTIMat 27 anti octoat 4: 6:00 p.m. til 9:00 p.m.
SATURDAYS, SEPT. 24 and OCTOall and 8:8:00 a.m. til Noon
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1h 9:00 a.m. til 9:00 p.m.

,,

•

I

�'

.fricllty, September 23, 1988

Mets clinch NL

...

East flag; Reds
post 3-l victory
By LEN HOCHBERG

OESTER BEATS TAG- Giants' eatcberKiriMaawarlaKCBD'I
1ft bls mitt around fut ea0111b lo lalllae Reds' Boa Oester u be

Scoreboard ...
Maj01'8

l.&amp;..... ef.II,II::U •. tn.
. . . . . (S&lt;!eU IU) al Su Dlep
(WIIH . . II-11) , II: IS p.m.
Lot All~es (Jier•tltt' tw) a1 San
li'ruct.co (RamrMhrl-8).11:35 p.m .

.,. u...... ~· .. \er.atlo. .

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

A.'.U.:&amp;ICAN lEAGUE
Eaol
W' L Pt&amp;.

-....
......

S•.-dlf'a G&amp;l'hl!S

GB

New Vorl IU St. lA.
Lea All p!lm a1 Su FPaadlll:il
Ollleqo all PiiW.llb, •l[lht
ct.I.-&amp;IM Allut&amp;, al,._

Ill II .H I 112 71 .J • •

Mllwukee
New Yertl

"
..-

w...

x..o--..

81 71
u 71
1t 74
1! AI
I! N

I ii.
-l l;i
.UI llfl
.-li-1 lfi
J41 Sl lfl
.J.

II SS .141
114 • J41
• '7t .••
11 1t .tl7
II II ,-IS'I
• AI .t•

........
. . . . . City
f'AJ ...r ..a
Tii!IIM
Dlllleap

Sullie

r•••el,.l&amp;,
••Pl&amp;lit

.J .

II •

.tU

M••,... at
•••••at8M1Mep,

NATIONAL F0f11'1.UL LEAGVE

s....,., G&amp;IMII

Attlue. al Dallu, I p.m .
O.kop al Grf!H Bay, I p.m.
OewlM• a1 C.cl...tl, I p.m.
MI .... al ..dl..,olll,l p.m.
NIN' t:aataa•at Ro•ll•., t p.m .
T ... ~.., at New Orle--. I p.m .
Nl' .let • M Det ,.u I p.m.
PIIIIUd. . MMiaoeso&amp;a,l p.m.
Ftlt.-fll• at •n...., 1 p.m.
LA a .... II NV Gtut!l4 p.m.
Su DleFI at Ku . . City,4 p.m .
su FPiulciiC8 M Sunlt. -1 p.m.
WMIIIaJteoa at Pllootabl , -1 p.m.
IMolllllqo Nip&amp;
LA . Rai*"•MIHnwr 8 p.m.

-

u
11li

21~

SJ
Jt
S4 ~

~:-diath.

MYI:I .. •llllf!
.,..,..., •• Re1111t1
Ddrol 1. Bdlmol'l! ...
MJa~~e~•

I, Cal.mlla!

FriU,'a Gama
Bo5toa {Rant IW) at New V•rtr.

cH•...eH),l: ••·•·

aem.. d

'ter.te ,.,.,. 11·1) •
(NJr ..... I·I J, 1: h , ....

w .... ·aoamt~~

Be&amp;&amp;.aa at New Yo111
Oak .... atMJI.... III!e
Ddl'tll. 1M I!Latdmo.,., aiJIII

Tur-'o .. Cln-el_., niPt
Se•Oe a1 Tau, &amp;Iaiii

aa Callo,...., nlllfll
Eul
W L Pc:t .

... J7 .1!1
., .. .J.Y
71 71 .MI

Pttw-rrh

Mo.-rtal
St. t.ub

"'"'...

PhDadelpNa

GB

n:

18 ~

'7S M .411 !!
11 81 417 U'~
II I~ .JIS Hill:

w...

• IJ .S&amp;I 31 li .sa A

Las .\&amp;pits

Oacln.a~l

• '71 .SD I~
71 7-1 . ~II 11%

Holdll..
&amp;a FPud5co
s.n Dt tp

1S ,

Allu&amp;a
•
ll-cli«IIM dh.U._ ttl if!

"

...a ••
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'nlalstht'"• Bet !Ills
ClnclnnMIS, 8MFra.aciKe I
New Yort I. P.II&amp;Hipltt&amp; I
Hoalfo1t J, Atlanta !
8u Dl eJO I, Los Allldts t
FrWQ'a OallM!I
Ollrqo (Ahddllll 11-8) a&amp;
burJfi / Drabe•IW), 1: t~ p.m.

.

Saturd..,., Sept !4

LSU II Ollilo State
Bowll•l Gt'1'8 at Tol1'41o (n)

Keal8tate a1 Kenlucky
(1...-ta.-tlat Ml.nl
Oldo Uatv at Nnoad ..LM Veps ( nl
Akr•at New Mnlt'O (a)
\'a ........ st at Euk-rn Dl"* ( a)
81. IOII!Itll (ld) at Baldwln-Wal .. re
Otll'l'bela at Capital

WIUeaber1 at Ohio NorUier•
CUI! Be.!t' w at Ken)'O n
H•,r (Michl ae Denilon

N.ltTIONAL LEAGUE

x·N"" York

Tbll Week'K
Ohio C.l ..p FooCh aii&amp;:Mdu ..
By Unkcl Presslnter•Uoaal

Mea• U11ioaatHel*lber~
l'*lllkl11pm at Marietta

a.a... City at Cllh:aao. nlatlt
Mla~ncU

•

This week's games

Detnl ('l'el'l'ell l-It) M lllttlmore
CMIIId:ll·ll, 11:11 p.m.
. _ _ C1ty (Salferllqea 14-lfi ) a1
Ollrap(ltat•ll·t•.&amp;:•p.&amp;
Oaklud (Y. . . IN) at M.llwaalet

(NirYtS 1-IJ, II:SI,_m.
Se•Ue ( Moo~ •u ) et Ttxu (Hollll(b
14-IIJ ), I: IS p.m.
Ml&amp;IIKaU. (Lea ._,, at C&amp;Jhr•1&amp; ( flair)' t-It ). It: II p.m .

•I

.UiepMJ 4Pa) al Oberll•

Adrlul (Michl a&amp;t Ohio Wtt)eyan
Grow City ( Pa ) _. W'ooater
Hlllldalfo (Mtc:bt at Aalll11nd I 11)
lllafii•M AJrna (Mich)
Cutral 8&amp; ae Nortlte.- MIIII!IIKUt
Buller (1 . . ) at D~ kin

Def-.ce atOIIW!t IMlrh)
Hiram al Tbltl (Pa)
W A I CPa) at lohll Carroll
Ttmn a1 Wllml&amp;liot~

um.,. atCamt*letiAvtlle IK7l
a - denats

ntpt,;~

Transadions
P'rtelball

Clnelul -

Pll&amp;a-

Molll"'al (B.Smllh 11·11) al r•U.·
del pial a rK .GrH11l·ltJ , 7: 31p.m .
CIM:h . . l (Rijo 13-1) at Atllnla
(8mo•c HI. ~ : tl p.m .
New Yor:k. (O_o~en 11·7) .. st. Lolls

Sl .-• pulllier Max

a...,._..:· walnd p•&amp;er Lre olollftaoa.

la•uapolb: - Slpe• klc•er Kert'J
IIndy, oll'lllfve ll.arll'lf!ll Daa McQuld
_. Bob Brobllk~ wahod off.-.we

llaema~~~

Cllrll Ganilol.

Sill FrudiC8 - Slped noat lack~
0o111 Mlkalu: plac!ed defl!llllwe ead

lhraJ• Board oa laJ•red rHer•.

Redwomen lose MOC contest
to Malone; defeat Charleston
A " disappointing loss" to Mid·

Ohio Conference rival Malone
was overcome Thursday when
-. the Rio Grande volleyball team
; bounced back to defeat the
: University of Charleston In a
• trt·tnatch at Lyne Center.
: The Redwomen are 7-6 overall
·and 1·2 In conference action.
They will participate In a four·
:way match Saturday with De·
. fiance, Central State and Fair·
· mont State, beglnnlngat2p.m .ln
: Lyne Center.
: Malone defeated Rio Grande
• 11·151n the first game and 14-161n
: the third contest. The hosts
:downed the Lady Pioneers 15·5 In
the second encounter.
Shelly Hoop and Teresa Zemp: ter led In kills for Rio Grande
• with eight each. Lisa Schmellzer
; had flve kills, while Krls Coch·
• ran, Sheila Brammer and Sharon
Headings had three each.
' Schmeltzer also had three each.
Schmeltzer also had three serv: lag aces and Zempter had two.
' Schmeltzer also had three
· blocks.
· ''We didn't play as a team,"
, Coach Patsy Fields remarked.
· ''We made too many blocking
, errors. It wu a game we needed
• to win, but we didn't, and It wasa

''

disappointing loss. But we came
back and played well against
UC ."

Play well they did, handing the
Lady Golden Eagles losses of 15·9
and . 15·1. In the second game,
despite good work by the UC
team and former Kyger Creek
High School standout Kelly
Roush, UC was stopped cold until
the final few minutes.
Schmeltzer took the lead In
kills with seven. Cochran had
five , Hoop added two, and
Zempter. Shannon Huston and
Robin Sharp had one each. Sharp
had four serving aces, while
Hoop had three blocks and
Huston two.

@

115 £. Monoariol Dr.
992·21 04

SUIIIIIIv ofeiChmonlh.
and oombllled wl1ll mcrdDg prayer on the
lhlld SUIIIIIIv. Merliag prayer and "'"""" on
au- SUIIIIIIvs of the modi!. O.UrchSchool
anc1 Nuner)' care pnMded. O;JIIee hour 1n the
Parllh Ifill trunedlall!lv lo-lhell!nlce.
POMEROY CIIURCII OF CHI'!IST, 212 W.
Main St., Leo Lub, ..........lat. Bille School
9:30a.m.; MorliagWII'Ihlp, JD::Ila.m.; Youlll
.-tnp, 6:00p.m.; EYealnl....-.lliP. 7:00 p.
m WechslliY nl8hl proyermeetlriiJandlllie
stillY. 7:00p.m.
TilE SALVATJ:lN ARMY. 115 But11ermt
Ave.. POUIOICJY. Mrs. Dora Wining In CharS"·
SUIIIIIIv .-tng, 10 a.m.; SUIIIIIIv
- . 10:30 a.m. SUrd~~\~ ScbW, \'PSM
Elolle Adll'lll, le-. 7: :r&gt; p.m. Salvation
~ vartousspealcenandmuslcspedols.
Ttl.lr:'Jdl¥, U:M a.m. to 2 p.m. Llulel Home
League, membon to char&amp;e. au llMI&lt;d: 6:411 p.m. Thwsiii,Y, Cl&gt;rp C.dEI
a .... (YOUJV l'o!o(E-IIlie), 7:30p.m lllie

St~~:"'r.M!E-~6~

CHRIST, 332'lli Oltlcno's Home Road (Oluriy
Road 'lti). !!n6'l311. Vocal mullc. SUIIIay Wer·
llilpi)a.nt.; BtlesnatYUa.m.:, Worsttp, 8p.
m. W~,&amp;;
StillY. 7p.m.
OW D
' mmE CHR~
CHURCH, Alvin Clrlls, poster, Unda swan.
SU (L S.IIIII,Y School 9: 30 a.m.: pn!aclllni ,... ·
vt&lt;B, tint and llllrd SUJW.\1 !ollowlng&amp;lrdll\l
Schod. Youtll .-lntJ, 7':1) p.m ~ery Sun.

l:J:"

day.

GRAHAM

SEVENTH·DAY ADVENTIST, Mul·

berry Heights Road, Pomeroy. Past« Bob
Snyder; SAbbath Schod Supet~lntendent,
Darline SteWart. 5abbatb SChool begins at
2 p.m. on Saturday afternoon with W(l"shlp
service lollowt.ng at 3:00p.m. Everyme

welcome.

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

- Sister Harriett Warner, Supt. Sunday
School9:30 a.m.; Morning Worshlp,l0:45
a.m.

POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Lyst&lt;ll

1978 CADILLAC ••••••••••••••••••••••51295

lwlll &amp; ....., ....

Several O~eapl11 To O~oo11 Fro•l

OPEN MONDAY THRU PIIIDAY

Halley, mlnlster; Satun:lay evening
evangelistic services, open to pubJic, 7 p.
m.; Sunday Church School, 9:30 a .m.:
Mornlag Worship 10:30 a.m.

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Po·
meroy Pike. E. Lamar O'Bryant, pastor;
Jack Needs, Sunday Schad Dlrectc:r. Sun·
day School, 9:30 a.m.; Morning Worship,
10:45; evening worship, 7:00p.m . (D.S.T.)
It 7:30 (E.S.T.I; Wedneoday Prayer 8er·
vice, 7:00p.m. (D.S.T.I It 7:30P.M. (E.S.
T.); Mission Friends (ageo 2-6), Royal

Ambaasadon (boys ages &amp;-18), and Girls
In Action (ages 6-18) on Wednesdays, 7 p.
m. (D.S.T.) It 7:30p.m. (E.S.T.); Tuesday

VIsitation. 6:30 p.m. '
FAITH TABERNAO.E CHURCH, Bal·

ley Run Road, Rev. Emmetl RawS(Il, pas·
tor. Handley Dunn, supt. Sunday School,
~0 a.m.; Sunday even&amp;na service, 7:30p.m.
; Bible teaching, 7:30p.m. Thuraday.

SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherry St., Sy·

racuse. Mark Morrow, pastor. Servlces,lO

a.m. Sunday. Eventn1 .ervtces Sunday
and Wednelday at 7:00p.m.

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRI!IT
CHRISTIAN UNION, Dwight Haley,
ftnt elder; Wanda Mohler, SundaY School
Supt. Su- Schod 9:30 a.m.; Morning
Wonhlp 10:il a.m.; Eventna Wors. hlp 7: XI
p.m.; Wedneodaypmyermeetlng7,30p.m.
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
IN

I
j
I

I

Racine. Rev. James Satterfteld, putcr.
Freeman Wll1lam1, Supt. Sunday SchOol
9:45a.m.; Sunday and Wednesday even·

Ina services, 7 p.m.

•

.

MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST.

Corner Sixth and Palmer. James Seddon,

'Paster. Eclna WUJ.m, S.S. Supt.; Cathy
Alii. Supt. Sunday School, 9' 15 a.

~IQI,

.m.: MornbtiJWorshlp,IO,l5a.m.; Suaday

Evening servJce, 7 p.m. Prayer meeting

•nd Bible Stu4y Wednl!lday evening. 7 p.
'm.; Chtldren·a choir practice, Wednes·
:Jiay, 7 p.m.; Adult choir practice, Wed .. 8

.p.m.; Radio program, WMPO, Sunday,
8::1Ja.m.

OF CHRIST,

CHURCH, Corner Alb and Plum. Noel
He~rmann. pastor. SUDday. Schoci ~:OOa.

m., Mornlng Woralltp, 11'00 a.m., Wed·

nelday and Saturday Evenlna: Services at

7':JJ p.m.
APPLE GROVE UNITED METHO·
DIST CHURCH - Paster, Rev. Carl

Hicks, 10 miles above Ractne on Rt. 388.
SUnday School 9 a.m., W{Qhip aervice 10
a.m . Sunday evenlnJr: service, 7 p.m.;
Prayer meeting and Bible Study Wednes·

day, 7 p.m.

MT. OLIVE UNITED METHODIST -

Off 124, behind WUkesvUie. Charles Jones,

pastor. Sunday School, 9: 30a, m.; momlng
worship, 10:30; Sunday and l't)unday
evening servlees, 7:00p.m .
MElliS

u~c:=~:T~=JK:R
NOIITJIBAST CLUSTER

lle¥.DooArebor
lie¥. IIOJ Deeter
Rev.CariRtd&amp;o
Rev.S.Idoo.loluuCOI
ALFRED - Church Scho(j 9:30a.m.;
Worship, lla.m.; UMYF6::«)p.m.; UMW
Third Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Communion.
first Sunday. (Archer)
.

CHESTER - Worolllp 9 a.m.; Church
m., UMW, first Thunday, I p.m.: Com·

'SChool10a.m.; BtbleStudy,Thunday, 7p.

munton. ttr.st Sunday (Archer) .
JOPPA -Worship 9::.1' a.m.; Church

School10: 30 a.m. Bible Study Wednesday,

7:30p.m. (Joho.... ).
LONG BOTIOI\I - Church School 9; :JJ
a.m.; Worship 10:30 a:m.; Bible Study,
Wedneoday, 7:30p.m., UMYF Wednes·
day, &amp;:00 p.m.; Communion FlrstSllnday
of Month (Hicks!.
REEDSVILLE - Church SChool9: 30 a.
m.; WorshJp service 11:00 a.m. (Deeter}.
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL Church School 9 a .m. ; Worship 10 a.m.;
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. ; Commu·
nion First Sunday (Archer~.
CENTRAL CLUSTER
Rev. Mehta Fraaldla

Rev. aemeate •. z. ••,~ ,,,
Re¥. Don Meadow•

ASBURY (Syracuse)- Worship 11 a.m.
; Church School 9:45a.m.; Charge Bible
Study, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.: UMW, ftrst
Tuesday, 1:30 p.m.; Choir Rehearsal,
Wednesday 6:30p.m.
.
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m.;
Church School10 a .m.; BlbleStudy, Tues·
day, 7:00p.m.: UMW, Flrs1.Monday, 7:30
p.m.; UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m. Choir Ret~esrsal,

Children's at 6:30p.m. Adult fol·
lowtng; Wednesday. (Franklin)

FLATWOODS- Church Schooi,!Oa.ril.
; Worship, 11 a.m.; Bible Study, Thurs·
day, 7 p.m.; UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m.
(Fraaklln).
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a.m.;
Church School 10 A .M.: Choir practice,
Thunday, 6:30p.m.; UMWthird Monday.
HEATH (Midclleportl - Chu"'h School,

9;30 a.m. ; Mornlq: Worship 10:30 a.m.;
Youth Group, 4: p.m.; Wednesday, Bible
study 6:00p.m. Choir rehearsal 7:OOp.m.

(ZunJaal
MINERSVILLE - Church School 9:00
a.m.; Worablp eervtce !O:OOa.m.; UMW
third Wedlleoday ..J p.m.
PEARL CHAPEL - Worlblp Service
9:30a.m.: Church SChooll0:15 a.m.
POMEROY - Church School, 9,15 a.m.
; Worship 10:30 a .m.; Choir rehearsal
Wedneaday, 7:30 p.m.; UMW, second

Tuesday, 7:30p.m.; UMYFSunday,6p.m.
(Meadows)
ROCK SPRINGS- Church School, 9: 15
a.m.; Worship lOa.m.; BlbleStudy, Wed·
nesday, 7:30p.m.; UMYF tsentors),Sun·
day, 6 p.m.; (Juniors) every other Sun·
day, 6 p.m . (Frankltn) .
RUTLAND- Church School, 10 a .m.;

WorshJp, 11 a.m.; UMW First Monday,

7:30p.m.
SALEM CENTER- Chureh School9' 15
a.m.; Wonhlp 10:15 p.m.
SNOWVILLE - Worship, 9:00 a.m .;
church achool 9: 45 a.m.
IIOtmu!:RN CLUIITER
lle¥.DeMFoolor
lle¥.a.,.or..,.
BETHANY - Worship. 9 a.m.:

Church
School, 10 a.m.; BtbleStu4r.. Wectoeoday,
10 a.m.; · Dorcas Women 1 FeiJawahlp,
Wedneoday,lla.m. (Fooll!r).
CARMEL- Church Scbool9:30 a.m.;

Wouhlp, 10:45 a.m. Semnd and FoPJ1h
SUnday•: FeliOWihlp dinner with Suttcn
third Thunday , &amp;:»p.m. (Foster).

MORNING STAR - Chureh Scbool9: t~
a.m.; Worship 10'30 a.m.; Bible Study,
Th"u'f~· 7:30p.m. (Foltor) .
S
N - Chureb Scbool, 9:30 a.m.:
Morntn1 Wonhlp 10: t!a.m~ !Intend third
EAST LE'I'ART- Chureh School9 a.m.;

PI, PI, Air, gOOd oondhlon. Cl (built In)

PoiMfoy. OH.

UNITEQ METHODIST,

Preaching 9:30a.m. first and second Sun·
days of each month; third and fourth Sun·
day each month worship servicesat7: lOp.
m.; Wedne.day eveninas at 7: :l) p.m.
Prayer and Bible Study.

p.m.
.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST

Sundaya; Fellowlhtp dinner wllh Carmel
third 'Ibunday, &amp;::IJ p.m. (Fatter).

1982 BUICK REGAL WGN
••••••S2 295
·

204 Condor St.

St,

Pome~oy. SUrd~~\~ oervtcel: Holy
CORWO\Din on the llrll

Main

Wonhlp 10 a.m. lee.'Ond and lourth SUnUMW ftrst Tueldo,y. 7' :ll p.m.

Crow's Family Rest llll' ant
"F•mlti IIUIIIAV Ftltl C6WI•"

Since men had sailed the seven seas,
All manner of discoveries, ·
Like ways in which to fight disease,
Have helped us to progress.
We generated heat and ligln,
And learned the way to read and write;
In all these things, achieving quite
A measure of success.
But now we've come to recognize
The helping hand our faith supplies,
With each constructive enterprise
We've asked the Lord to bless.
So let's give thanks each Sabbath day
For blessings we cannot repay;
Then we'll discover in this way
' ....
A·life of happiness.
-Gloria Nowak
ZION Cl!URCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy·
Harrtaoovllle Rd. Robert Purtell, minis·
ter; Steve Stanley, S. S. Supt.: Bill McEI·

roy, Asst. Supt.; Sunday School9:30a.m.:
Worllhlp tervlce 10:30 a .m.: Evenlngwor·
ahlpSullllay7p.m. andWedneaday, 7p.m.

ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine

Grove. The Rev. WilHam Mlddleswarth,
pastor. Church service 9;30 a.m.; Sunday '
.
School 10: 30 a.m.

BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST.
a.m.; Larry Haynes. S. S. Supt. Morning
worahlp 10:30 a.m.
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·

Tom Runyoo, pastor. Sunday School9: 30

RENE, Rev. Lloyd D. Grlmm, Jr. 1 pastm.
Ora Bass; Chairman of the Board ol Chris·
tlan Life. Sunday Scbool9: 30 a.m.; Morn·
ing worstdp 10:30 a.m.; evangelistic ser·
vice 7:00p.m. Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, Dex·
1er. Woody Call, pastor. Services Suoday
10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednesday, 7 p.m.
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH,

Uoyd Sayre, Supt Sunday School9: 30 a.
m.: momtng worship 10: 30 a.m. Sunday
evening service 7 p.m.

RACINE FIRST

BAPTIST, Steve

Deaver, Paster. ,Mike Swiger, Sunday
School Supt.; Sunday ,Schoci 9:30a .m.;
Morning worship 10:«J a.m.; Sunday
evening worship 7:30 p.m.: Wednesday
evenlna Bible 1tudy 7:30 p,m,

BURLINGHAM COMMUNfl'Y Cl{lJRCII.

BurUJIIham. R"3' LaudennUt, (liSter. RoCozart. Ultotant (liSter. Surd~~\~ Scho!i
10 a.m.; wcnhlp 7 p.m.; Wt&lt;l\elday, 6 p.m
youlll meeting Wed., 7 p.m. c~rchservtces.
PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH,\!
mlleotfRt. 325. Rev. BenJ. Watts, puta.

Robert Searles, S.S. Supt. Sunday School

9:30a.m.; Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.;
Sunday evening service 7:30 p.m. ; Wednesday service, 7:30p.m.

SILVER RUN BAPTIST, BPI Little,

pastor. Steve Uttle, S. S. Supt. Sunday
SChool10 a.m.; Mornlnl worslp, lla.m.;
Sunday evenln&amp; wCI'Ih.lp 7:30p.m. Prayer

meetlntJ and Bible study Wednesday, 7' 30
REJOICI!&gt;!G LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
- 383 N. 2nd AVI!., Middleport. Sunday
SChoollO a.m. Sunday evening 7:00p.m.:
Mtd·week service, Wed., 7 p.m.
t.:ANGSVILLE CRRIS'MAN CHURCH,

p.m.; Youth meetln&amp;Wedneldayat 7p.m.

Sunday Schad 9:30a.m.; Dallas Janey,
supt.; Morning w~p 10: 30 a.m.; Su~
day evenlna service, 7:30p.m.; Wedlles·
day eventna: service, 7: :«)p.m.

SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA·
ZARENE. Rev. Glenn McMlllan, pester.
Mary Janice Lavencler, Sunday School
Supt. Suoday School 9' 30 a.m.; Morning
wol'lldp 10: • a.m.; Evangellatlc service,
6p.m.; PrayerandPralseWedneaday, 7p.
m.; Youth meeUng, 7 p.m.

EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST, Elden R. Blake, puler. Sunday
· Schooi!O a.m.; Gary Reed, Lay IEBder.

Morlllna termon. 11 a.m.: Sunday night
services: Chrlltlan Elldeavor 7:30 p.m.,
sana: servtce 8 p.m. Preacblng 8:30p.m.
Mld·week prayer meetlna, Wednesday, 7
p.m.

HEio!LOCK GROVE CIIRISTIAN, Ro1·

er waum, pastor. Crfnsm Pratt, Sunday
Scbool Supt. Mornlnl Wonhip 9:30a.m.;

Sunday School 10:30 a.m.; Evenlnil ser·
vi..,, 7: 30 p.m.
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Dooald Shue,
pastcr. Joe N. Sayre, Sunday Schoci Supt.
Sunday School 9:45 a.m.; twnlni wor·
lhiP 6' 30 p.m.;

Prayer MeetlriiJ, 6:30p.m.
Wedlleoday.
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST. Dave Prentice, mlnlltor. Deryl
Wells, Supt. Chureh Scboal I a.m.; Worship Sei'YI..,, 9,45 p.m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE. Rev. Herbert Grato, puler.
Frank Rime. supt. Suoday Sehooll: :JJ a.
m.; Wonhlp Mrvlce, n a.m. ud 7 p.m.
Sutlday. Wectneoday, 7 p.m. Prayer meet·

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. Rev. Earl
Shuler, puler. Woubtp terYice, 9:30a.m.
Suoday Schooi!0:30 a.m. BtbleStu4y and
prayer aervlce Thurlday, 7:30p.m.
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATIONAL CHURCH, Klnpbury Road. Rev.
Clyde W. Henderscm, puler. Sunday

School9: 30 a.m.; Ralp~ Carl. Supt. Even·
lng w.rshlp 7:00 p.m. Prayer meetlniJ,
Wedneoday 7:00p.m.
LONGBOTTOMCHRISnAN,V~n&lt;ll
Eldrldle. pastcr, Wallace DamfWood, S.
s. Supt. Sunday School9'30~.m.: Worlblp
servtce,ID:30 a.m.
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH.
0. H. Cart, pooler. Sunday SchoolaU' 30a.
m.; Mornln1 worBhlp at 10: 30 a.m.; Sun·
day evenlna I«Vlceat 7:30p.m. Tbunday
servtcea at 7:30p.m.

FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
located on County Road 31 RI!Y.
RotJe&lt; WUI!onl. putor. Sullday School
9;00 a.m.; Morninl Worlhl 10:45 a.m.;
Suodoy evettlniJ worship 7:00 p.m.; Wed·
nesday ovenlriiJ Blbl' Study 7:00p.m.
WHITE'S CHAPEL WESLEY AN
CHURCH- CoolvUieRD. Rev.PhiiUpRI·
Knob,

m.; Mornina Worship and Communion
. 10:30a.m.

S,rw .Q3.,.,,;,
83 Mill Street

7:30 p.m. Wedneoday prayer meetlriiJ, 7: :JJ
P·Wi.JRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart,

Thurwtay evenllla 7:30p.m.

MIDDLEPORTlNDEPENDENT HOLI·
NESS CHURCH, Inc., 7$ Pearl St. Rev.
Ivaa Myen, actlqputcr: RoprManley,
Sr.. Suoday SchOol S..pe1 lolltodeot. SUD"
day School 9' 30 a.m.; Momhl1 wcnhlp
10:30 a.m.; evenlniJ wonltlll 7:30 p.m.;
Wedneoday oveotaa Bible oilldy, prayer
and~....._ oervtce,-,, 30 p,m.
CHURCH OF JI:SVI OHRIST APOSTOLIC - VIIIZiodt llld Wll'd Rd. Elder
Jameo Mill«. pUler. Staaclay Scbod,
!0:30a.m.: Wo1'111tpSorvlel,luaclay, 7:30
p.m.; Btblelltuti!I;Wadlllldar, 7:111Lm.
CALVARY PILCRIM C11APEL. Rllffl.
omvUieRolll. RIIY. vt...-llaulll. .,..tor.
Clbttm l'llolk........., .._Supt.; Ita•
Pr~. l

SYSTEM

IN CHRIST CIIURCH, Located Ia Tau
Olmmtlltlly ofl Ct. Rt. 12, Rev. R-t
Solid........... Jolt Holt..., Ia)' l•d•;

ate Sundays.

THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST,
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Limo Rd.;

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

Rt. 1M and Co. Rd. 5. Scolt Slewart, pas·
tor. William Amberger, S . S. Supt.; Sun·
day School 9:30 a.m.; Morning Worship
10:30 a.m.; Evening worship 7:30p.m.

HARRISONVILLE HOUNESS CHAP-

TER of the Wesleyan Holiness Church .
Rev. David Fernoll, pastor. Henry Eblin,
Sunday School Supt.; Sunday SchoollO a.

Wednesday worship 7:30p.m.
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,

m.; Morning Worship 11 a.m.; Evening
service 7: 30p.m. Wednesday evenlDa•er· .
vtce 7:30p.m.

Corner Sycamore and Second sts., Pomeroy. The Rev. Wllllam Mlddleswart,
paStor. Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Chu reb
service 11 a.m.
'

STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH,

Gary Holter, pastor. Sunday Ervlces 9: 30
a.m. and 7 p.m.; Mldwe~k service, 7: 30 p. '

SACRED HEART CHURCH, Msgr.
day E11011lng Mass 7,30 p.m. ; Sunday

m. Thursday .

Anthony Glannamore. Ph. 992·M98. Satur·

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL. Third

Mau. f! a.m. and 10 a.m. Confessions one
half hour before each Mass. CCD classes,
11 a.m. SUnday.

VlcrORY BAPTIST,

~25

Ave. RE'V. Clark Baker, pastor. Carl Not· ·
tlngham, Sunday School Supt. Sunday ·
School 10 a.m. with classes. tor all ages .

N. 2nd St.,

Middleport. James E. Keesee, pal&lt;r.
Sunday morning worship 10 a.m.; Even·
lng aervice 7 p.m.: Wednesday evening
worship 7 p.m. VlattationThul'lday 6:30 p.

Evening services at 6 p.m. Wednesday Bi· .
ble study at 7:30 p.m: Youth services Fri..
day at 7:30p.m.

ECCLES lA FELLOWSHIP. 128 Mill St. ,'

m.
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCII' David

Middleport. Brother Chuck McPhersoo, :pastor. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Sunday.
evening services at 7 p.m. and Wednesday.
services at 7 p.m.

ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Kenneth Smith."

WESLEY AN BIBLE HOUNESS
CHURCH of Middleport, Inc .. 7~Pear1St .. '
Rev. Ivai\ Myers, pa&amp;tCI'; Roger Manley,

eventng Bible study, prayer and praise
servtee, 7:30 p.m.

day School 9:30 a.m.; Mornlng service

10: OOa.m.; Sunday evening service 7:00 p.
m.; Mld·week prayer service Wednesday

MT. OUVE FULL GOSPEL COMMUN·

praise servtce, 7:30p.m.

UNITEDFAITHCHURCH, Rt. 7onPo-

meroy By-Pass. Rev. David Wiseman. Sr.•
pastor. Melvlli Drake, S. S. Supt. Sunday
School9: 30 a.m. r Mornlne Worship 10: 30;

Evening Worship 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday
Prayer ServJce, "1 :30 p.m.
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Rallrcad

pastor. Sunday School 9:30a.m.; church
service 7: 30p.m.; youth fellowshlp6:30p ..
m. ; Bible study, Thurslay, 7:30p.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-,
lng service 7:30p.m. Tuesday and Tburs· 1

day Services at 7: 30p.m.

NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA·

ZARENE, Rev. Glendon Stroud, pasta.
Sunday School9: 30a.m.; Worshlpservtce,
10:30 a.m .: Youth service Sunday 6: 15 p..
m. Sunday evenlngservlce7: 00p.m . Wed·
nesday Prayer Meeting and Bible Study·

•

~OO~m

NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH. Sun:

day anernoon services at 2:30. Thurslay.
evening services at 7:30.
\

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Masoo, w;

Va. Pastor, Bill Murphy. Sunday School10
a.m .; Sunday evening 7:30p.m. Prayevmeetlng and Bible study Wednesday, 7: 30
p.m. Everyone welcome.

RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa·

!em St. Rev. Paul Taylor, pastor. Sunday
School10a.m.; Sunday evening 7:00p.m.;
Wednesday evening prayer meeting 7:00
St., Maaon. SundaySchool10 a .m.; Morn· • p.m.
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
ing wOI'Ihlp 11 a.m.; Evening service 6 p.
CHURCH. SliVer Ridge. Duane Sydell;
m. Prayer meeting and Bible Study Wed·
strlcker, pastcr. Sunday School 9 a . m~
nesday. 7 p.m.
FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rev. Nyle Worship Service, 10 a.m.; Sunday event~
service, 7:00p.m. We(lnesday nlgh1 Bible
Borden, paatOr. Cornelius Bunch, supt.
study 7:00p.m .
Sund•y School 9:30. .a.m.; Second and

W. Va., Rt. 1. James IA!WII, put or. Wor·
ship services t;30 a.m.i Sunday Scboolll
a.m.j Evenlnl worlhtp 7: 30 p.m. Tuetday

coltatJe prayer meetlnil and Bible Stu4y
9:30 a.m.; Worship service, Wednesday
7,30 p.m.
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH, .
Walnut and Henry Sts., Raveuwood, W.
va. The Rev. Geoqe C. Welrlok, paster.
Sunday SChool 9:30a.m.; Sunday worship
lla.m.
CALVARYBIBLECHURCR,Iocatedoo
Pomeroy Pika. COUnty Road 25 neor Flat·
woodl. RI!Y. BlackWood: pastcr. servtceo
on Sunday at 10:30a,m. aad7,30p.m. wttb
Suoday SchOol 9:30a.m. BlbleStudy, Wed·
neoday, 7:30p.m.
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CIUJSADE FOR
CHRIST, St. Rt. 338, Antiquity. Rev.
Franklin Dlckena, putcr. Sunday mom·
tne 10 a.m.; Suaday OYeJtlniJ 7::JJ p.m.

CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheaclle,;

Supt. Sunday School 9:30a.m. _Mornia1
Worship 10:30 a.m. Prayer service, altern·

prayer meeting 7 p.m.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, St.

ITY CHURCH, Lawrence Bush, pa.st&lt;r.
Max Folmer, Sr., S. S. Supt. Sunday School
9:3) a.m.; Suoday evening service, 7: 30 .
m.; Wednl!lday evening 81bl e study and

Rev. David McManis, putor. Chureh
School 9:30 a.m. ; SUnday momlng aer·
vice. 11 a.m.; Sunday evenina .ervtce,

PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Racine,:

Rt. 124. WtiUam Hoback, pastor. Sunday.
School10 a.m.; Sunday even loa service 7~
p.m. Wednesday evening service 7 p.m. •

St., Middleport. Alftuated with Southern
Baptllt ConvenUon. David Bryan, Sr., Ml·
nlster. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Mornlng
wonhlp lla.m.; Evening worship 7p.m. ;
Wednelday evenlna Bible study and

service 7 p.m.

HARTFORD Cl!URCH OF CHRI!IT IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. Hortford, W. Va.

SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST.

- Joseph B. Hoskins, evan1ellJt. Sunday
Bible Study 9 a.m.; Worship, 10a.m.; Sun··
day evenlng service 6 p.m.; Wednesday•
evening servtce, 7 p.m.
'

Study, Wedneoday at 7:30p.m.
ROPE BAPTIST CHAPEL, 570 Grant

7p.m.

p.m.

Main St., Mldclleport. Rev. Gilbert Craig,•

Jr., pa.stcr. Mrs. Ervin Bar.amgardner,·
Suoday School Supt. Sunday SchoolS: :lOa.:
m.; Wonhtpservtce, 10;45 a.m.
.

160. Pat HenaUt, pastor. Sunday SchoollO
a.m. Clute~ for all ages. Junior Church 11
a.m.; Morning worship 11 a.m. Adult
Choir practice 6 p.m. Sunday. Young People's, Children's Church and Adult Bible

m.;
Youna people's service 6 p.m.
Evangellatlc service 6:30p.m. Wfdnetday

Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7, J5

m.
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourtll and,

ship, no p.m.
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY.
Located on 0. J. White Road of Highway

LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
OF GOD -Gilbert Spencer, puler. Sun·

a.m.; Worshlp lla.m. and 7 p.m. Wednes-day Bible Study, vocal music, 7 p.m.
LIBERTY Al!SEMBL Y OF GOD, Dud·
ding Lane, Maam, W.Va. J. N. Thacker,
pastor. Evening service 7:30 p.m.; Wt&gt;men's Ministry, 1bunday, 9::1) a.m,;

fourth Sundays worsntp service at 2:30 p.

School 9:30a.m.; momtna worship and
chlldrell'l chureh 10:30 a.m.; evening
preachlnl service flrst three Sundays.
?:30 p.m.; Spedaltervlce fourtb Sunday
eventnr, 7: :fO p.m.; Wednesday Prayer
Meetlnlr:, Bible Study and Youth Fellow·

School9:30 a.m.; Mornlngwonhlp, 10:30
a.m.; Sunday eventn1 Jervlce 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday servlee 7 p.m. WMPO program 9 a.m. each Sunday.

MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
St., MUQII, W.Va. Sunday Bible Study 10

CHURCH SUPPLIES • IIBLEB

Ed Roulll, Sunday School Supt. Sunday

TUUs, pastor. Soony Hudlm,supt. Sr.anday

RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE. Samuel Basye, puler. Sunday
School9: :JJ a.m.; Woralllp oorvtce 10: 30a.

Mlddl-soart. Ohio 48710
18141 S82·88117- (188·QOKSI

786 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

Sr., Sunday School Supt. Sunday School
9;30 a.m.; Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.;
Evening Worship 7:30 p.m. Wednesday

RUTLANDWBLEMETRODIST. Amos

992-5432

992-5141

Curfman, pastor. Sunday School, 10 a .m. ;
worship service 11 a.m.; Sunday night
denour,putcr. Sunday School 9:30a.m.;
worship ~ervlce 7:30 p.m.; Midweek
worship aerv,ce 10:30 a.m.: Blble atudy
arid w&lt;rllhlp aervlce, WedDesdly, 7 p.m. • prayer service Wednesday 7 p.m .

RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Bill Carter, pastor. Sunday School9'30 a.

221 W. 'Main St., Pomtroy

264 S. 21111, MWdllport

THE GREATEST DISCOVERY OF ALL
IS TIIEJOYOF FAITH

~THE

'\

lill Quickel and lurh An• Fa• .

"Sening .Families"

dqScbollt:lta.m.: .............p. u
o.m.: ~·-• ...,... 7:30 !Lftl.

GRAVELY

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

992-2975

FUNERAL HOME

Wlrlalldar, 7:10p.m.
SY!IIIallll:
CIIURCIIOFGOD.
oGI&gt;PwiiiHDIIII. Wonldp-Batlllay
10 a.m.; llutlaJ . . _ 11 a.m. - •
wanlllp .mctl 7:00 P·"" Wedllllday
(ll'l)'et' meolllll7:00jLm.
.

. IAM-B PM
SATURDAY 8 AM· I PM

106 lutt•Mit Au., ''""''Y' Oht

o~,~~~RS
10:30 a.m.; Sunday evening eervlces, 7: 30

362 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO 46789
814/992·2844

16141992-2039 or
. 16141992-5721

Rawlings-Coats-Blower

tc:rn. Edsel ijart, pastcr. Sunday School,

FRANCIS FLORIST

FlOWOS FOI EVU'I OCCASION

.H .

992-1101
Pomeroy

9:00 •.m.; Sunday morning preachinK

IIW.!Oic

MPil(.&lt; County'.• Olcle11 Florilt

~ 2:~::.or~~-

F.

HAZEL COMMUNITY Cl!URCII. Of!
Rt. 121, 3 mUealrom Portland·Long Bot·

l...J3

Pomeroy
992·3325

Racine 949·2550

If') 1( Jonn. Ph. Fultz, Mgr.
•

992·3785, Pomeroy

TRINIIY OONGREGATIONAL CHURCH.
Rev. Richard FreEman •.put«; De- - .
Slrdll\l Scho!iSU~ OlllrchScho!i9:J5a.m.;
Wor&amp;Mp s.r.tc:e lO::Il a.m. Choir reheor!lll.
n-ll,y. 7: 30 p.m. ....... dlre&lt;lton of Lots
Burt.
POMEROY CHURCH OF n1E NAZARENE, Oom!r Union and llfulleTy, Rei.
'lborru Glen M&lt;.Oirv, pula. N&lt;mlllll Pn!&amp;l'l!l. s. S. s.p., SuniiiY ScbW. 9::1! a.m:
rnorJUli~ID::Ila.m.; I!W!IIInall!niee6
p.m.; mlclweelt-. W-IlY· 7p.m
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH, 3:1; E.

MIDDLEPORT

PI, Pl. At.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES Ia SERVICE

~

992·3978

Redmen soccer team
hands defeat to Tech

WGN.N53894
1983 OLDS DELTA 88 ••••••••••••54495
4 Dr.. PB, PS. Air.
1983 RENAULT AlliANCE ••••••51295
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992·5130 Pomeroy

,,

RACINE PlANING MILL :
Mill Work·
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P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

216

p,,r,,.g Flow" Shop

INSURANCE@

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TEAFORD REALTY

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WITH BARGAIIIS

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WANT ADS
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SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Veterans
. Memorial Hospital

..

Kent State suspends hockey program

Rv The Interested _Rwcinesses Listed On This

and Church

Infield single that scored Mookle
Wilson from second.
''We 'II take It any way we can ,
getlt. Youdon'thavetohltltover •
the fence," said Darryl Straw- :
berry, who has a league-leading ;
36 homers.
"The Mets are an outstanding :
baseb&amp;ll team, I believe they are ;
the best In the National League • •
and they will represent the East :
better than any one else could," •
Philadelphia Manager Lee Ella ,
said. "I expect to see them In the
World Series."
First, New York will have to ;
get by the West winner, likely to •
be the Los Angeles Dodgers, who : .
have a magic number of three. :
The Mets defeated the Dodgers In •
10 off 11 meetings this season.
•
"The 10·1 thing against LA :
means nothing," Strawberry •
said.
'
"The people who should get the ,
credit are the management - •
they are the one's who built this :
team. We have to play well the ·
res I of the season and somehow •
get Into the World Series."
•
Elsewhere In the National •
League, San Diego nipped Los :
Angeles 54, Cincinnati stopped :
San Francisco 3·1 and Houston •
shaded Atlanta 3-2. In theAmerl·
can League, Detroit downed·
Baltimore 7-4 and Minnesota
beat California 6-2.
Padres a, Dodgen 4
At Los Angeles, Carmelo r,far·
tlnez kept Los Angeles' magic
number three, slamming two
home runs, Including a shot off
Alejandro Pena. 5-7, that
snapped a 4·4 tie In the 'eighth
Inning.
Reds 3, Giants 1
At Cincinnati, Jack Arm·
strong, 4·6, and two relievers,
Including John Franco who,
earned his NL·hlgh 35th save, '
combined on a three-hitter. Don
Robinson, 8-5, yielded runs In the '
first, second and seventh Innings.
Astros 3, Braves 2
At Houston, Craig Biggio homered offTomGlavlne, 7·17, and '
Billy Hatcher delivered an RBI
single In a two-run seventh Inning
to lift Houston. Jim Deshaies,
11-13, earned the victory and ,
'
Dave Smith his 26th save.
Tlprs 7, Orioles 4
At Baltimore. Tom Brookens
and Dave Bergman drove In two ,
runs apiece to help·move Detroit
Into a third· place tie with New .
York, 4 1·2 games behind Idle
first-place Boston In the Amerl· :
can League East.
Twins 8, Angels ~
At Anaheim, Calif., Brtan
Harper collected three hits and
two RBI to help Allan Anderson
Improve his record to 15·9, '
Minnesota stop a !our·game
•
losing streak and extend Callfor· "
•,.
nla's skid to four games.

UPI Spo.U Writer
And so the Mets are back
where most expected them to be
last season - atop the National
League East and heading for the
postseason. New York completed
Its mission Thursday night, mak·
lng up for a well-chronicled fall
from KTace In 1987.
"Frankly, the cream the
comes to the top. I've been proud
every year of this team. This was
the pitcher's year," Mets Man·
ager Davey Johnson said after
his club secured Its second
divisiOn title In three seasons
with a 3-1 defeat of the Phlladel·
phla Phlllles. "They did what
they would've done In '87 except
for the Injuries.
Afier a World Series victory In
1986, Injuries were prevalent last
season, unlike this year, when
New York's pitchers stayed
heal thy. Dwight Gooden (drug
rehabllllatlon), Bob Ojeda, Rick
Aguilera, Roger McDowell and
Ron Darling all went down In
1987.
Thursday, DarUng, 16·9, epl·
tomlzed the staffs season: Six
hits, one walk and four strl·
keouts, Including Lance Parrish
to end his seventh complete
game. That's when the Mets
converged near the mound to
celebrate.
"There's no doubt I wanted to
finish. I wasn't tired an I usually
soores Ia the aevealb IDDIDI of Thursday afternoon's game In
shut out the crowd, I can't here
ClaciJIIIBtl. Tbe Reds won 3-1. (UPI)
them," Darling said. "But this
time the crowd (45,274) got
through to me and pumped me
up.
If It weren't for the. pitchers,
lace blotted out and his voice
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y.
who knows where the division
( UPI) - A lawyer for National distorted on WRGB·TV.
chase might be today? Certainly,
"He Is a tainted witness," It wouldn't be over.
League umpire Dave Pallone
said Thursday his pllent adam· Jones said. "His motivation Is
''We had a bad middle, then we
antly denies allegations by a not noble. His purpose In doing
got bot In late August," first
local television station he was this Is not legitimate. It Is
baseman Keith Hernandez said.
part of a sex ring Involving self-promotion by which he hopes
''We knew In our hearts we were
teenage boys.
to gain some benefit for
the best team. This Is only Step
Pallone, now on a leave of himself."
One."
absence, only wants to return to
Jones would not specl(y what
New york's mldseason slide
baseball, lawyer E. Stewart the caller's motive might be.
coincided with Hernandez's
Saratoga County Assistant Dis·
Jones said, but acknowledged
hamstring Injury, which sidePallone Is under Investigation by trlct Attorney Thomas McNam·
lined him for more than 50
the Saratoga County district ara. who prosecuted several
games. The Mets were 30·11 on
£ases In the sex scandal, said he
attorney's office.
May 23, then played just one
The district attorney recently was unaware of any "evidence game over .500 for the next 81
won convictions against several that would lead to a grand Jury
games as their hitting
men, Including an Episcopal presentation Involving Mr . plummeted.
·
priest and a mlllloitalre lnsu· Pallone."
Johnson couldn't have enough
ranee executive, on charges of
''There Is no Investigation at
good things to say about his
having sex with teenage boys. this point that would lead to an
pitchers: ''They did It this year
WRGB·TV reported Tuesday arrest of Mr. Pallone," McNam·
despite an awful lot of problems
night that Pallone was Involved lira said.
With the offense and a Jack of
In the scandal.
Pallone, 36, joined the National
RB!s up and down the lineup In
Jones said Pallone hired him League staff In Aprll1979 as one
the middle of the season. "
after learning an anonymous of eight minor league umpires
And, typically, they did It
caller to the National League and promoted durtng a seven·week
wlthou t a lot of offense Thursday.
the district at tonrey's office had strike by umpires. Pallone was
The Mets made It 1-lln the fifth
alleged Pallone "had some form Involved In several disputes with
on Gregg Jefferies' RBI for·
of sexual contact with one of the players and other umpires.
ceout, 2·1 In the sixth on a
teenage prostitutes who've been
At an April 30 game In
run-scortng wUd pitch by starter
Involved In the Saratoga sex ring Cincinnati between the Reds and
Don Carman, 10-13, and 3·11n the
cases."
New ~ork Mets, Cincinnati Man· seventh on Kevin McReynolds'
The allegations "are without ager Pete Rose strongly prosubstance. They are not accu- tested a call at first base,
rate," the lawyer said, adding he bumping Pallone. Rose subse·
"
believed the caller was the same quently was fined and drew a
person who appeared with his 30-day suspension.
•
KENT, Ohio (UPI) - Kent rum and beer.
•
State University President Ml·
Peach said one of the freshchael Schwartz today canceled men, TlmothJ Evans, 19, or · ~
KSU' s hockey schedule lor the Claremont, Ontario, had a reac·
1988-89 year · over a hazing lion to the alcohol and had to be
Incident that resulted In criminal taken to Robinson Memorial
charges against 12 team Hospital In Ravenna. He was
members.
released later that n lght.
The fortunes of Rio Grande's Tech's defense. Rio Grande's
"Based on the Information
Evans and the other four soccer team took a turn for the Brian Slate sUpped through to provided to me, I do not believe Roger Gill Jr., 19, of Harvard,
better when the Redmen de- post the Redmen's last goal at 25 that this program Is an accepta· Maine, Michael Gregorio, 19, of
feated West VIrginia Tech4·11na minutes, without assist.
ble representative of our univer- Reading, Mass., John Petropou-.
game played Thursday at Stan·
Goalkeeper Chris Krueger re- sity or of our athletic program In los, 19, of Scar, Ontario, and Ross
ley L. Evans Athletic Field.
corded four saves for Rio general," Schwartz said. "Con· Antonini, 19, of Grand Rapids,
Rio Grande seized control Grande, while Tech's Ben New· sequently, I have suspended the 'Mich. - were charged with.
early and held onto the lead,
house posted three. The hosts proKTam for a year and will underage consumption of alco- ,.
despite a highly physical game took 31 shots and the Bears review the future of It at a later · hoi, a first-degree misdemeanor.
with the Bears, who fell to 1-3 on totaled four.
date.''
They face possible penalties of
the season.
"It was another Findlay-type
six months In jail and$1,000flnes.
Scott Steele got things rolling game," Coach Phil Anderson
KSU Pollee Chief John Peach
Two team member's were
1: 451nto the first period with the commented, referring to the said seven players took five charged with furnishing alcohol
hosts' first goal, an unassisted Redmen' s 5-0 defeat of the Oilers freshman team members to the to minors. also a first-degree
kick. One minute later Ronnie Sept. 10. "Tech didn't appear to basement of a house off the misdemeanor - Kirk Aldridge,
Goodson, on an assist from Scott be very serious about the game." campus, shaved their heads Into 24, of Bloomfield Hills, Mich.,
Hoover, broke to score. At 20
As lor the Redmen. "two things Mohawk-style haircuts and and Timothy Presta, 21, of Erie,
minutes Tony Daniels, on an worked." Anderson observed. forced them to drink a mix lure of Pa.
unassisted kick, scored the Red·
"They were much better In
men's final goal of the half.
passing and they had better
The Bears, coached by Tom communication. Consequently,
Watkins, made their only goal at the game was a lot more fun."
9: 20 ln the second pertod when
Rio Grande Is 2-4 on the season
Shelton Barger, without assist, and Is 0·2 In conference action.
kicked In the ball. The Redmen They travel to Crestview Hills,
received several opportunities to Ky., Sunday for a 2 p.m. game
up the score but were repelled by with Thomas More.
COUNTRY SQUIRE
Fully Equipped. A·1

Pallone denies charge

The Daily Sentinei-Page-5

Pomaroy-Midclapoct, Ohio

Sennonette

.,.

A DOUBLE PROMISE
Ttte Lonl wlllpve at-lib to lila people; lhe Lonl will bleao Hla people
wltb peaee. Psalm 29: 11
Psalm 29 haJ been called tbe "stormy psalm.'' It describes turbulent •
·walero roUtna thunders, roar~ !Ires, and the crashing cedars ol •
Lebanon Then there'aversell.It alike a rainbow tnthecloud, a calm In
the atonn- otferlna sttengtb and peace to God's people. Its truth can
be&lt;ome a reality In llle'a Jt"eat crlaes.
In 15!111, Nicholas Ridley waJ burned at t~e stake because ol his .,

wttaeeafor Cbrllt. On the night before Ridley s execution, his brother .
offered to remain with blm In the prison chamber to be of assistance and ·
comfor Nicholas declined the otter and replied that he meant to go to
bed anci aleep a1 quietly aJ t¥er be did In his life. Because he knew the • :
peace of Gorf. he could rest In the strength of the everlasting arms of his .
J..oar4 to meet his need. SO can we!
·
,
God atvea us strength ror tllose times when we are weak and tearful. :
He provideS It tor each day,.-nd lor every difficulty. God also gives us •
peace that J1118rdl the door o1 our heart In the midst of great perU and
trtall. AI Paul iatd In PhilippianS': 7, a a peace that goes beyond our ,
ability to Ullderllalld II.
.
Are you f&amp;cllll a dltlleuliY - dtvoree, the toss of a loved one, a severe
pbyrdeal or emOtional crllll? Tum It over to God. You'll have many
ti'YIDI: days, but He'll atve )'IRl the streallth to go on and Hla peace to
eoimfiirt )'OUr IOUL Claim thedoubteprom!s of Psalm 29: llaJ your own.
-P.R.V.

u:

Srren.fllt Md peaee are Cod'• own prom;.,.

Fh• Y'* :r'f!ld ,, Hil control:
}e.u COM. . .uidl to....,l.tion:
He 10UI ,..,~ Md keep yoar ,...1, -DJ.D.
'l'h .-et
1a 1e
1011r uxlettoe 1o God.

oe ,._

atv• an

MT. HERMON trriil ED BRE'I'IIRJ:N

\

...

.

.i

I•

I

�Pagl 6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomaoy-Middlaport, Ohio

Friday, September 23. 1988

Southem Cal, Oklahoma clash ·in LA Coliseum Saturday
forward to It for a long time."
Br United Prt!Bs International
Quarterback contalnmenl Is atop the list ot
Both Oklahoma and Southern Cal are 2·0.
worries for No. 3 Oklahoma and No. 4 Southern
Elsewhere among Top 20 teams, No. 1 Miami
Cal entering Saturday's game In the Los Angeles
faces Wisconsin; No.5 Auburn meets Tennessee;
Coltoeum.
No. 6 Louisiana State Is at Ohio State; No. 7
"Rodney Peete Is !he guy who concerns us all,"
Geofllla tackles No. 14 South Carolina; No. 8
Sooners Coach Barry Switzer said of USC's career
Notre Dame plays Purdue; No. 9 Florida State
passing leader. "He's a very talented, g!tted ·
races Michigan State; and No.lOWestVIrglnla Is
athlete."
, at No. 15 Pittsburgh.
Switzer asks Jamelle Holleway to ru n the
No. 11 Nebraska takes on Arizona State; No. 12
wishbone and says that Is what keeps Holieway
Clemson visits Georgia Tech; No. 13 Penn State
from Hetsman Trophy-winning numbers. But
battles Rutgers; No. 16 Alabama meets Vander·
Southern Cal Coach Larry Smith Is one of those
bUt; No. 18 Flordla plays Mississippi State;' and
who appreciates Holleway's talents.
No. 20 Oklahoma State faces Texas A&amp;M.
"What you're trying to do Is defense a Helsman
No. 2 UCLA, No. 17 Washington and No. 19
Wyoming are Idle.
Trophy candidate who would normally be a
running back, but Is now a quarterback," Smith
At Miami, the top-ranked Hurricanes, who
said. "He would be a great running back. He has
defeated Florida State and Michigan In their first
the ability to hit the crease and come back, taking
two games, have a somewhat easier task when
an average play and turning It into a big play. And
they face the ().2 Wisconsin Badgers, who are
he has great confidence."
42·polnt underdogs.
The teams have met six times , but not since 1982
"I can't foresee a letdown because offensively
when the Trojans snapped the Sooners' NCAA
we haven't been consistently as sharp and
record consecutive game scoring streak at 181
effective as we can be," said Miami quarterback
' with a 12·0 victory.
Steve Walsh, who has thrown for 563 yards and
five touchdowns."
"This Is a big game for national prestige,"
Smith said. "Both teams have been looking
!

At Auburn, Ala .. Tennessee's 0·3 starth&amp;lj taki!JI
some of the glitter off Its annual meettnt with
Southeastern Conference rival Auburn.
In recent years, the Auburn·Tennessee game
has been the SEC opener for both and neither has
gone on to win the conference crown after losing
the game.
''I don't worry about what Tennessee Is doing
this year," said Pat Dye, coach of Auburn, 2·0.
"The only thing I can tell our kids Is to put
themselves In Tennessee's position of having a
chance to salvage the season. No matler what the
record, Tennessee Is Tennessee."
At Columbus, Ohio, Coach John Cooper of Ohio
State, 1·1, said hts team's meeting against
Louisiana State, 2·0, will be an uphtllcontesttor a
squad he says Is •'not real good this year . I think It
wtlltake a tanatlcal effort on our part to make It a
contest."
Ohio State last week lost 42·10 to PittSburgh.
At Columbia, S.C., Georgia meets South
Carolina, each J.O. South Carolina's defense
showed a vulnerablllty to the run last week,
surrendering 232 yards on the ground In a
lackluster victory over East Carolina. Georgia
owns one of the nation 's premiere rushing
attacks.

Eastern netters win
EAST MEIGS - Led by duel
10·polnt efforts from freshman
Lee Gillilan and Trlsha Spencer,
the Eastern Eagles whipped the
Hannan Trace Wildcats 15-11 and
15-3 to claim the SVAC volleyball
match.
GtiiUan and Spencer were both
13·13 on s'uccessfule serves, while
Amy Hager connected on 8·9 for 5
points. Toby Hlll added 4 and
Lisa Driggs 1.
Tracey Jenkins led the Wild·
cats with 4, while Autumn
Adkins, Carrie Waugh, Ttffanl
Swain, and Christy Short each
had two and Tanya Short1.
In the spiking department
Eastern's Lisa Driggs and Trish
Spencer were 3·5,and GIIIUan 2·3.
Settlngwlse Edna Driggs was a
perfect 4·4 and Gilltlan 6·8.
Eastern earned praise from Its
Coach Pam Douthitt who com·
mended the team for an lm·
proved serving game and ·better
defensive game.
Eastern lost the reserve match
15·11 and 15·10. Carrie Bernard
led the way with 7 pts. for
Eastern, Jenny Deem had six Ina
perfect 7-7 night, Andrea Rock·
hold 3·6, Ay Mora 2, Tiffany
Gardner 2, and Alvena Van
Meter 1.
Heather Mooney led the
winners with 7, Tanya Short had
5, and Kim Triplett and Cindy
Waugh 4 e11ch.
Eastern's varsity dropped a
two-match set against Oak Hill,

15·5 and 154, as the Oaks
established an early lead and
balanced scoring attack to take
the SVAC win.
C. Carrey and M. Ingram each
had 7 for the winners. while V.
Adkins had 6.
Eastern was led by Trlsh
Spencer's 4 serving points and 5·6
effort, Edna Driggs had 2 (4·6),
Gillilan 2 points with a perfect 6·6
night, and Lisa Driggs 1.
Eastern volleyed well, set well,
pl.;lyed good defense. and had
several good spikes, however,
Coach Douthitt cited poor serv·
lng as the Eaglet tes decline. Dou·
thltt said, •'This was probably
one of the better played matches
of any Eastern team In the last
three or four years ... the girls
played great except f.or their

serves."
L. Driggs had 2 ktus and 9·10
spikes.
Oak Hill claimed 15·8 and 15·6
wins In the reserve match.
Carrie Bernard and Alvena
Van Meter each had four apiece
for EHS, while other scorers
included Tiffany Gardner,Tabby
Phillips, Andrea Rockhold,Ay
Mora ,and Julie Riffle.
M. Cooper led the winners.
Eastern is 1· 7 at the varsity
level and 1·4 In the league,
posting an 0·7 reserve mark.
Eastern travels to Southern
Monday, then Southern returns
to Eastern on Tuesday .

Korean boxing officials suspended
· OUL, South Korea (UP!) -Five ' were heaved into the ring. One
South Korean boxing officials South Korean coach jumped on
were suspended from the Olym.
the judging table and nearly
pies Thursday for leading a kicked one of the judges In the
5-mlnute brawl in which coaches race .
and a security guard jumped into
While Byun sat in silent protest
the ring and assaulted a referee In the ring for 67 minutes before
after a hotly contested match.
leaving, a bout 40 other people
Across town, students mounted climbed Into the ring, some of
the largest protest since the them joining In !he attack on the
Games opened Saturday, rally· referee. Walker was escorted by
lng 3,000 people at a Seoul almost a dozen pollee officers
' university In a demonstration (rom Chamshll Students' Gym·
• against their governrnen t, the nastum and put on a plane home.
United States and Japan.
The athletics were eclipsed by
a near-riot in the boxing arena.
touched off by South Korean
boxing officials and a security
pard after Korean bantam·
weight Byun Jong·Il lost a
contested 4·1 decision to Bulgar·
lan Alexandar Hrlstov.
After the decision was an·
nounced, a coach punched referee Keith Walker in the side. A
aeeurity officer removed his
jacket and jumped Into the ring,
puahlng Walker against the
ropes, and chairs and bottles

f

,

'I

BEREA, Ohio (UPI) - Cleve·
land Browns punter Lee Johnson
figured he would last at least
until theendoftheweek. Well, he
was wrong.
The Browns waived Johnson
Thursday just three days before
the AFC Central Division mat·
chup with the Cincinnati Bengals
and signed free agent Max
Runager.
Runager, 32, punted for the
Philadelphia Eagles from 1979-83
and the San Francisco 49ers from
1984-88. He had a 39.2-yard
average on 55 punts In I987 and
was released after the first game
of the '88 season.
The 4Sers had selected Colora·
do's Barry Helton In the fourth
round of · this year's draft, re·
leased him during the final cut
and then re-signed him after the
team's victory over the New
Orleans Saints.
"I had beaten out the fillY
!Helton), but they gave me my
walking papers after the first
game," said Runager after practice Thursday. ''They had
planned on keeping htm all
along."
His only punt tn· '88, a 25·

The students were protesting
the arrest of South Korea's most
powerful student leader, and the
clash broke out at Korea Unlver·
stty In eastern Seoul, two miles
from Tongdaemun Stadium,
where OlympiC soccer matches
are played.
Rosa Mala of Portugal won the
first of 42 gold medals to be
awarded In track and field,
capturing the marathon. The
30-year-old Mota, who Is 5·foot·1,
was the bronze medalist In 1984
and Is the only woman to win a
medal foor Portugal In the
OlympiCs.
Randy Barnes of Charleston,
W. Va., earned the sliver medal
in the shotput behind world
record holder Ult Timmerman of
East Germany . On the final
throw of the competition, Tim·
merman won with 73 feet, 8 '14
Inches. Barnes' best effort Wl!S
73-5 ~.
There was one other world
.record In swimming, East Ger·
many's Uwe Dassler capturing
the men's400freestyletn3:46.95.
All three medalists broke the
former world mark of 3:47.38
held by Poland's Artur Wojdat,
and Wojdat, who ttntshed third
tonight, called It "the race of the

yarder, sealed his doom.
other was a 40-yarder which was
"It was a mistake 1 couldn't returned 73 yards for a touch·
make," he said. "Itrled tocutthe down by the Colts' Clarence
.
corner too sharp and It cost me. " Verdin. · ·
Runager, a 6·foot·1, 189For the season, Johnson. a
pounder from South CaroUn11. left-footed kicker, averaged 37.8
has had seven punts bl~ked In on 17 punts, lOth best In the AFC .
his 10-year career. He has He Is believed to be the first
averaged 40.5 yards on 595career bare-footed punter In pro football
punts.
since Henry • 'Hawaiian' '
He said he's not concerned Hughes, who kicked for the
about getting his punts blocked, Boston Braves In 1932.
though.
Browns head coach Marty
"I never worry about that," he Schottenhetmer said Johnson's
said. "That was a breakdown up inconsistency was too much to
front.' I'm fairly quick In getting deal with any longer.
the bali off."
"I felt as though we had come
Runager said he was a 2 ~step to the point where we had to
kicker.
make a change," he said.
Johnson said after practice
When the Browns told Johnson
Wednesday that he was aware Wednesday night, Schottenhel·
the team was trying out punters. mer said "there was no evidence
However, since It was so late In · of disappointment."
the week, he was sure he would
"He understood that these
still kick against Cincinnati.
things happen . in the NFI:..
"If they cut me, fine," Johnson Changing players at mldseason
said. "I'll stU! get paid this Is potentially dangerous, but ... "
week."
The coaching start must have
felt the change had to be made
Immediately. Four of Johnson's
last five punts have been under 30
yards - 22, 27, 24 and 23. The

~~

Earning ' 'Player of the Week'·
honors during last week's game
for the Eastern Eagles was
Senior Chris Lance, who had an
outstanding defensive game In
Eastern's 20-loss against Kyger
Creek . Lance was cited for hi~
Inspirational performance and
effort that kept Eastern In the
game for most of three quarters·
.Lance also doubles as an often·
slve receiver.
Southern's Todd Lisle earned
" Player of the Week" honors tor
the Southern Tornadoes last

p,,,

wet&gt;k as the seniOr put forth an
equally tough offensive·
defensive combination. As well
as putting forth a good offensive
effort, Lisle was among the
leaders In flrst·hlt tackles with
another senior Mike Amos.
Meigs' Wes Howard, a 5·7,
155·pound tailback/cornerback,
was named the Meigs County
Jaycee Player of the Week. He
gained 102 yards In 12 carries and
ran for a touchdown .In last
week's 31·6 win over Miller.

Sps~lsl

10°/o OFF
ON ALL PERMS

Sept. 24-0d. 1

century because there were so
many good people."
Tania Dangalakova, a 24-yea~·
old Bulgarian mother. won the
-women's 100 breaststroke In an
Olympic record time of 1:07.95
and JozsefSzabo at Hungary won
the men's 200 breaststroke In
2:13.52.
East Germany has 17 swim·
ming medals,.~even of them gold.
The United States has five gold
and 10 medals.
It the Olympics are to piCk up
,In excitement, It will be up to
track and field to set off the
charge. The level of anticipation
should be at a peak Saturday
when Lewis and Johnson stage
their expected showdown In the
100meters.
The two men, who received
$250,000 each to .race agatns.t
each other In Zurich, Switzer·
land, last month 1Lewis won)
both made It safely to Saturday's
semifinals, although Johhson al·
most ran Into trouble when he
finished third In his heat Of the
second round. Only the top two In
each heat are guaranteed mov·
tng on, but the Canadian world
record-holder survived by post·
lng the fastest time of the next
four finishers.

Runager h,ad heard that John·
son was having problems.
·
"I heard they were looking;"
he said. "They had contacted my
attorney after he Monday night
game.''

Runager came In for a tryout
Tuesday and dldn' t know what to
expect.
"I was prepared," he said. "I
brought enough clothes for a
week."
Runager said he wants to bring
consistency to the Browns punt·
lng slti!Btton.

REME.ER
WITH FLOWERS

: To-·-....
doolaaedhaneral

UTUIJemetll, )1111 call

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
"Titr Woy

•

America~ndtLo~ ..

.... 9ti-10Jt .. "1·5711

is r.ou can help
reC/uce your own
cancer .risk ...

--------~You can't COfltrol al! cancer risk factors,
such as family health history or heredity, but
the 8~ news is that you can control some by
· ~ control of thlitp in your daily lifewhat you eat and 'driilk, Ifyou smoke and
where you work and play. •

---

992·2550

:Shoplifting statistics

I

:
Community calendar
l! ====================================:;====================================
FRIDAY
will be Kent . Hall of WilHam· featured throughout the day.
~
EAST MEIGS -The Eastern
....,.Athletic Boosters are spOnsoring
r an "all·you-can·eat" soup and
.1 salad supper on Friday, starting
at 5 p.m., at the high school.
• Under 6, $1.50. Everyone else,
: $2.50.

1

.l

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CHESHIRE - Gallla -Metgs
: Community Action Agency free
clothing day wtll be Friday, 9
1 a.m. to 12 noon, at the old high
1 school in Cheshire.

!

,

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: POMEROY Round and
; square dancing will be featured
: Friday night, 8 to 11 p.m .. at the
• Pomeroy Senior Citizens Center.
l Music will be by Larry Hubbard
I and True Country band. Admls·
1 sion $1.50. Bring snacks. The
public Is lnvl~..:_-

l
!

EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
; AthletiC Boosters are sponsoring
l an all-you-can-eat soup and
i salad supper on Friday at the
: high schoolc Serving time has
•J been changed, and will begin at 6
p.m. Under age stx, $1.50;
' everyone else $2.50.

Jack M. Levine, D.O.
GeneralS •
Suite 211 + PVH Medl'!;~c:e Building

I'

.

SATURDAY
l
RACINE - Free entertain·
I,· ment beginning at 7 p.m. Satur·
! day at Racine Shrine Park;
l residents are to take la\vn
chairs; entertainers. Country
Blend Band and Debbie Powell
and son, Tony . .

l

:

,.rt

being planned and will be annou·
lnced soon. ln addition the annual
popcorn sale will begin next
month with the money going to
help scouting on the national ,
council, district and local levels.
With $1.25 of ever y container or
popcorn sold remaining with the
troop , money Is provided to help
the local units become self·
supporting, to assist In pa y in~
registration fees , .buying um·
forms where other funding Is not
available, and providing camp
scholarship.
While the scouts will be out
selling the popcorn. anyone
missed is Invited to call Mrs .·
Smith, 992-3289.
Smith stressed the nr -1 lor
leaders, committee mL Jers ,
counselors, and sponsors and
Invited anyone interes ted to call
him .

l
'

Fernwood club
views slide show

By BOB HOEFLICH
Slides of Colonial Williams·
Shoplifting does get costly for to leave Cincinnati on Sept. 29 so
burg
flower arrangements were
·b usiness houses and It can affect should. be making Its first most
feature&lt;!
as a part of a program
welcome appearance along
' what you are ·
on
history
presented at !he recent
Meigs County shores on the
paying for
meeting
of
the Fernwood Garden
evening of Saturday, Oct. 1.
'•merchanlse.
Club at the home of Marjorie
' For example,
Purtell.
Mike Zirkle, Nitro. w. Va.,
'1,302 ·shoplifters
For her presentation, Mrs.
formerly of Middleport and a
were apprended
Purtell
wore a period gown and
frequent visitor here, was pres·
for the thefi of
gave
a
commentary
on the sUdes.
en ted a most attractive merltot·
'merchandise
With
Suzanne
Warner
presiding
ovalued at $30,281.65 for the first lous service award plaque at the
members responded to roll call
half of 1988 among the 88 stores recent meeting of the Contrac·
by naming an unusual historical
making up the 88 Big Wheel tors Association of West Vlrlnla
!act.
Ida Murphy, Wllovene Bal·
held at The Greenbrier.
dlsc9unt deparlment chain.
ley,
Kathryn Johnson, Helen
Mike Is pictured receiving the
For a breakdown on the 1,302··
Eblin,
Thelma Giles, Evelyn
' these were the ones caught, you award In the West VIrginia
Thomas.
Mrs. Warner and Mrs.
understand, and there could have Construction magazine.
.Purtell
told
of why Geroge
Employed,by Unkm Boller Co.
ibeen more Instances: There
·
Washington
didn't
live In the
"were 848 males and 454 females as corporate safety coordinator.
White
House,
how
the While
'apprehended with 494 persohs Mike Is the association's safety House got Its name, the origin of
and crime prevention committee
J,befng adults and 808 juvenUes;
the pledge of allegiance. the
1n were 12 and under; 643 were chairman.
creation
of the Hudson Bay, the
In the same edition of the
' '13 through 17; 182 were 18
story of the 1883 erupton of the
·through 22; 99 were 23 through magazine July-August , Mike has Krakatoa volcano in the East
30; 112 were. 31 through 46; 54 an excellent by·llne article titled
Indies which was reportedly
were 47 through 60, and 41 were "Fear of the Unknown Con·
heard for3,000m!les with stones,
over 61 . Methods of concealment quered" which deals effectively dust and ashes being hurled 17
were: 123, under coat; 183, unde" with the efforls of labor and ml!es lnto the air. In Mrs.
clot)J.Ing; 198, in pockets; 38, management working together Purtell's response she related
worn; 12, sacks; 146, In purses to meet requirements of the new how the gangster AI Co pone gave
Hazard Communication Stand·
and other methods, 602.
ard
which . went Into effect this her a box of crackerjacks and·an
In the eight states where Big
apple when she as a child
Wheel stores operate, the crlml· year. Tht&gt; purpose of the stand·
traveling by train with her
• pjll penalties tqr committing ard Is to ensure that the hazards mother were seated a few seats
, shoplifting run from fines of $50 of all chemicals produced or away .
' to $300 and Imprisonment up to imported by chemical manufac·
Committee reports were given
turers are evaluated and that
• ,six months per incident. In
and
the yearbooks were com·
, addition. such Incidents become Information concerning these pleted ·for typing. The group
a permanent c~lmlnal arrest hazards are communicated to repeated the Lord's Prayer to
, record and names of those employees that come Into con· closed the meeting. Refresh·
tact with them.
, apprehended are published.
ments were served by Mrs.
Officials at Big Wheel report
With patriotism playing such a Purtell who gave each member
. that the cost of shoplttlng does
small baskets filled with dried
role, do you think that one of the
..affect the price of all merchan·
candidates will don an Uncle and silk flowers which she took
dlse and that their stores are
Sam costume ·before election to from the centerpiece on the
committed to doing their part to
prove that lle's the real .yankee dining room table . Next meeting
~ "help reduce shoplifting and keep
doodle dandy? While we watt, do will be Oct. 18 at hte home of
• prices down.
Kathryn Johnson.
! The Delta Queen Is scheduled keep smtllng.

l

......

the roof has been repaired.
To encourage Meigs County
participation In the overall pro·
ject, a Camp Klash u Ia Res tara·
tlon Fund has been established
and residents are being encour·
aged to gtve to that lund. All of
the monies contrtbu ted will re·
main In Meigs County and go
directly toward overall restora·
lion as well as expansion of the
camping faaclllty.
Smith said that besides money,
men with tools are needed to help
out there. He emphasized the
Importance which scouting can
make in the life of a young person
and stressed the role of campi ng.
"11 builds character, It provides
wholesome activities, it Instills
good principles of life," Smtih
said.
A work day at the camp is

Teresa Kennedy, president, Ohio Eta Phi.
Chapter, Beta Slpria Phi Sorority, present a
check for S200 to Robert Smith, MGM Dlslrlct
Commissioner, Boys Scouts of America.

Beat of the Bend

•
'
:

mUIG STUDIO &amp; TANNING CHill

293 s..th S.CIIIII

. CAMP KIASIWTA RESTORATION - It takes
money to repair, renovate and Improve a facility,
and currently In Meigs Cou11IY a lund ralsiDII
progi-am Is underway for Camp Klasltuta. Here
Judy Cowan, service chairman, center, and

I

TNdy Merahtll, Sutan Sl110n. Cheryl Willford,
Loll Eblin, Liz LuCile • OPERATORS

SHEAR ILLUSIONS

Contributions of time and rna·
ney are needed if Camp Klashuta
Is to become a first rate facility
for youth and family related
activities, according to Meigs
County's Robert Smith, MGM
District Commissioner, Boy
Scouts of America.
Smith says there are plans for
not only repairing and renovat·
lng the cabin Itself bu Ifor putting
up more toUet facilities, building
a shelter house large enough tor
family gatherings , and streng·
thening the swinging bridge
w)llch goes over Shade Rfvpr .
The · cabin Is structurally
sound, according to Smith, hilt
needs considerable repair. Some
money lor that is coming through
the MGM Council and already a
new roof has been Installed on the
back area and the front part of

,.

Haft ~Jar mecllcal dteck1pa. md cllaaaM
your rille ltii:tuu fGr aacer wllh JUDI' famliJ doctor.
And fGr lnfwmalloa about talc'na cuntrul of your
, lllal)'le to help reduct your CIIICU rille, cAll

(304) 675-1460

We U1e Paul Mitchell Products

Scout camp needs contributions

week

-· The good news

Players of week are aruiounced

·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==================~==~~~~~~O~h~b----------------~--------~Th~e~D~~:Iy~&amp;Mtt~~in~a~-~P~~~7

'

Brawns release Johnson, sign Runager

SOVIJITS WIN GOLD MEDAL - Glntautas Umaras of the
Soviet Union powers through the bend to take the gold medal In the
men's 4,000-meter Individual pursuit final at the Olympic
Velodrome Thursday. (REUTER)

.

At South Bend, Ind., Notre Dame and Purdue
wilt match one of the nation's best pass defenses
against one of the moat anemic passing attacks.
The Boilermakers, 1·1, have safeties Mark
Foster and Ronnie Beeks, who have three
Interceptions each. Purdue's defense has allowed
only eight completions In 34 passes for 118 yards .
The Irish. 2·0, have gotten just 90 yards passing
from Tony Rice. TJle quarterback has completed
just five of 21 at tempts.
At Tallahasse~. F1a., Florida State and
Michigan State entered the season with hope of a
national IItle, with the Gators No. 1 In the
preseason poll.
florida State, 2·1, Was blown outln Its opener by
Miami. Michigan State. ().2, must concern I!self
with winning !he Big Ten and going to the Rose
Bowl for a second straight season. The Gators
downed the Spartans last season 31·3.
At Pittsburgh, West VIrginia, 3·0, and Pittsburgh, 2·0, meet for the 79th time, with the
Panthers leading 52·24·2, Including last year's 6-3
victory. A higher scoring game Is expected this
lime, with the Mountalners !Dialing 162 points so
far and Pittsburgh rolling up 504 yards offense
last week against Ohio State.

Matt Biondi cops fifth medal
SEOUL, South Korea (UPI) years ago almost monopolized
Matt Biondi, sticking to hlsdtet of the sport.
a medal a day , salvaged an
With only two days remaining
otherwise dismal night of swim· · In the swimming competition,
mtng for the United States
track and field got underway
tonight by anchoring the men's
today with Carl Lewis, Jackie
400-meter freestyle relay team to Joyner·Kersee and Mary Decker
a world record.
Slaney injecting a much-needed
It was the fifth medal of the
touch of glamour to an Olympic
week for Biondi, Including his Games craving attention.
third gold, and he still has two
Less !han 50,000 people were In
events remaining.
attendance at · the 70,000-seat
Chris · Jacobs, Troy Dalbey,
OlympiC Stadium for opening
Tom Jager and Blond! registered
day or track and tleld, lhe
a lime of 3 minutes 16.53 seconds,
showcase event of the Games.
breaking the old U.S. world
This was the smallest crowd tor
record by 55-hundredths of a
an OlympiC track competition
second.
since 1952.
East German Kristin Otto
The lack of Interest also was of
bettered Biondi's gold standard,
deep concern to NBC, whose
winning her fourth race with an
prime time ratings In the United
Olympic record time of 59 States were off 31 percent from
seconds In the women's 10().
the 1984 Games In Los Angeles.
meter bu tterfiy. Otto Is !he fourth
Coming one day after the
woman In Olympic history to Win
boxing fiasco In which five South
four swimming gold, and she Is
Korean officials were banned
favored In - her two remaining
from the Olympics tor their
races, the 400 medley relay
Involvement in attacking a New
Saturday and the 50 meters
Zealand referee, the image of the
Sunday.
Games was further dampened '
Except for the men •s relay, the
today when radical students
United States was shut out of the
hurled rocks and ttrebombs at
medals In the four other swim·
pollee. For the first time during
mtng finals, a rare humiliation
the Games, the pollee struck
for the country which untU a few
back with tear gas.

•

'

!

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MIDDLEPORT - The Mountatn Top gospel singers will be
singing at Middleport's Ash St.
Freewill Baptist Church at 7: 30
p.m. on Saturday. Pastor Les
Hayman welcomes everyQne to
at tend.
---

POMEROY - The Bellel and
: Beaus Western Square DanCe
l Club will sponsor an open dlliiCe
, onSaturday,Sept.24,8tollp.m.,
"" at the Pomeroy Senior Cltlzena
Center. Caller for the evening

stown, W.Va. All western square
dancers are Invited .

SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Hemlock
Grove Church will hold a picnic
on Sunday at Hartinger Park.
Potluck at 12:30 p.m . Everyone
welcome.
RACINE- The annual home·
coming of Eagle Ridge Commun·
tty Church will be held Sunday.
Sunday school at 10 a .m .; basket
dinner at 12: 30 p.m. ; and after·
noon service at 1:30 p.m. featur·
lng the Bissell Brothers. Pastor
Carl Hicks Invites the publiC.
CHESTER ....: The Chester
Bowhunter and Archery Club
will host a 20 target 3·D broad·
head shoot Sunday at the Chester
Range. Registration Is from 12
noon to 2 p.m. and the cost is $5
per shooter. Payback Will be 50
percent.
CHESTER - Shade River
Masonic Lodge will hold Its
annual family picnic Sunday at
Royal Oak Resort. The lodge will
roast a hog and members are to
take their own table service and a
covered dish. Serving begins at 6
•
p.m.
CARPENTER - Mt. UniOn
Baptist Church, County Road 10,
Carpenter Hill Road, Is having a
Sunday school picnic at Snowden
Lake, Albany, on Sunday start·
lng at 1 p.m. Sunday evening
church service will be held at the
park.
COOLVILLE - A homecom·
tng and dedication service will be
held Sunday at V'anderhoof Baptist Church. Servicell beiiD wltb
morning worship at 9:45 a.m.,
followed by Sunday school at
10:45. Buket dlllner will be at
noon and an afternoon service at
2 p.m. Special •lnllni will be

---

MONDAY
RUTLAND Community
meeting will be held Monday, 7
p.m., at the Rutland Civic
Center, to make plans for the
annual Halloween party. All
Rutland residents are welcome
to attend.
MIDDLEPORT - Bethel 62,
International Order of Job's
Daughters, will meet Monday at
7:30 p.m. at the Middleport
Masonic Temple. All members
are encouraged to attend the
meeting.
POMEROY - Hunter safety
course Monday, Tuesday, Wed·
nesday and Oct. 3 at Pomeroy
Vtllage Hall, second floor, 6 to 9
p.m. To enroll call843·5405.
TUESDAY
SYRACUSE - Meigs Chapter
of American Association of Unl·
verstty Women meeting at 7: 30
p.m. Tuesday at the Syracuse
Elementary School; members
are to take a friend to the session.

Chapter I meeting
.RACINE - An Introductory
Chapter 1 meeting for parents
and Interested citizens will be
held Tuesday, 7 p.m., In the
cafeteria at Southern High
School. This meeting will be a
ttme to ask questions and find out
the exact nature or the Chapter I
program.
Examples of the new te_sts,
which are given In October, will
be available for examination by
the public. The Chapter I staff
will be present to answer ques·
.tions 11nd demon~trate a few
techniques which are used In the
classroom.
Refreshments will be served.

the donors .w ere hll!'h school students, it w ~
reported that there was good community support.

DONATING - A total of 61 units of blood was
donated, up lo 15 over last spriniJ's visit, with 28
flrsl lime donors being recorded. While many or

'

What happened to tougher laws?
Dear Ann · Landers: I · was
outraged when I read the en·
closed article. It's about a guy
arrested nine times for drunk
driving•
The last time, he killed a
24-year·old girl four months
before her wedding. He was
sentenced to seven years In
prison.
W1rat happened to those
tougher laws? Two chances
should have been the maxforthls
guy, then take away his license
tor life, and I mean for life.
Please print the clipping and
tell me If you think I'm right. Furious In Florida
Nlne·Tlme Dr11nken Driver
·
Sentenced
Manchester, N.H. (AP) - A
man with nine drunken driving
convictions was sentenced to the
maximum term Monday for
causing a head-on collision In
which a woman was killed four
months before she was to be
married. ~

Norman Routhier, 44, ofTyngs·
boro, Mass., pleaded guilty to
negligent homicide In the March
1987 death of Sandra Sant, 24, of
Dunstable, Mass.
Prosecutor Robert Walsh
asked lor and got the maximum
sentence - 3~ to seven years In
prison.
Authorities said Routhier's
blood-alcohol level was 0.29 per·
cent, nearly three times the legal
standard for drunkenness In New
Hampshire.
Sandy was burled In her
wedding dress. The flowers that
should have been at her wedding
lined the coffin.
Dear Furious In Florida: And I
am Furtousk ln Chicago.
The sentence was too light.
· That murderer will be out and
behind the wheel of a car In 1995.
The rate of recidivism among
drunk drivers Is appalling.
I've been hollering my head otf
about tougher laws for these
criminals but have been unable
to make a dent. Anybody have
any Ideas out there?
Dear Ann Landen: I recently
read a piece of advice you wrote
to a woman who had genital
herpes. She was worried about
becoming Intimate with 'another
man and asked If she ~hould tell

the new guy about her Infection.
.You advised her to hold off
Intimacy for several months.
"Just keep talking," you said. "If
and when you decide that the
man is someone you want to keep
In your life, then tell him."
ANr'li LANDERSII!II
That was wonderful advice,
,. 1988, Lo11 Angrle
Ann, and I'm glad Iosee someone
Tlm H Syndlrll f' ~o nd
at long last address the emoCrutiiWII Syndin l f'
tional aspects of sexually trans·
mttted diseases .
It struck me that the same
advice could be applied to all · people want it they'll aSk?
dating relationships. Holding off Bakersfield
Dear Baker: Apparently not.
the sexual aspects until many
othpr facets of the persqnaltty Why don't you tell them?
have been ·e xplored ca n lead to a
Everyone l}ne.~ tlrtt#(·~· rip;ht·?
deeper and more meaningful
Wrong. And today, mort• rrnd m.o~r·
people are owon• of lhe dange-r.~
union.
Sex is Important, of course, but involved. If you waul tu IJ,. iu rl1 P
Is too tenuous a support on whlc·h know, too. w rilt• for A n n Lm1dPn '
to build a long-term relationship.
n ew ly revised bool..' (t•t. " Tiw LowWalling could spare both men down o n Dope ." St•nrl $.1 plu .~ · a
and women some unfortunate se tJ·add resSed, .~lamtJed bu .~i nl's..~­
consequences. Walling Is si:e en velope (45 ccnl .~ po., tage) 1n
A nn Lande r~, P.O. Box I 1562.
Worth It (Denver)
Dear Denver: Bravo!! No Chicago, Ill. 60611-0.162 .
harm will come !rom caution.
It's haste that reaps the bitter
tOLONY THEATRE
harvest . Thanks for some
thoughtfu I lnpu t.
FRI. THRU THURS.
•
Dear Ann Landers: I am a
53-year-old woman with preina·
DAN AYKROYD JOHN~
turety white hair, a good com·
plexton and I carry my weight
well. I am not yet entitled to a
senior citizen discount. When I
am asked "Senior's dlscount?" ll
~
~ 'lilt .I ~~~!,~R!
ruins my day.
Don't those Idiots know that if
ONE EVENING SHOW AT 7:30 P.ll.

Ann
Landers

GLOtrroooRS
AOMISSION SUO

.'::s REVIVAL

~::s

SEPT. 26-30 AT CHURCH OF GOD
RUTLAND

OCT. 1-0CT. 8 AT GOOD NEWS BAPTIST CHURCH
GAWPOLIS

7:00 P.M. Each Evening
PREACHING WILL BE BY THE FOLLOWING:

50's D1
DANCE
9 TO 1

Elmer Geiser - Pastor, fellowship Chapel, Vinton
l.tlund Alman - Pastor, Christian Union Church, Gallipolis
John Wood - Pastor, french City Baptist Church, Gallipolis
Bob Calvin - Pastor, Good News Baptist Church, Gallipolis
Paul Voss - Pastor, Church of God, Gallipolis
Robert Mussman-former Pastor, .Rutland
Mlthodist Church
Pearl Coste - Retired Methodist Pastor
Richanl Vl111011 - Pastor, little lygtr Congregational
Church, Addison
AHrtd Holty - Pastor, Elzabtth Chapel Church, Gallipolis
Jim Ronda• - Pastor, lighthou11 Tabernacle, Gallipolis
Marvin Hedctr - Pastor, Church of God, Rodney
Martin Sallee - Pastor, Vinton Baptist Church
John EY• - Paster, Church of God, Rutland

"CIOSS0¥11"

SPECIAL MUSIC EACH NIGHT

MOOSE LODGE
PIESliTS

.•,,

DIIIQ 9 TO 1

"IIIOift' PHI"

SA=IY

'

•

'

•

I

�Sentinel

Friday, September 23, 1988

Ohio

Business Services

Rt. 124, Pornoroy Ohio

Public Notice
ADDENDUM TO PART 1.
ITEM E (51
SOUTHERN OHIO COAL
'
COMPANY MEIGS MINE NO. 2
Southern Ohio Coal 0~
pany. Meig~ Mine No 2, P.
0 . Bo• 490. A1heno, Ohio
46701 . h11 oubmil1ed anappll~ ion to rev&amp;.e a Coal
Mining and Reclamation Perm~ numbered R-0356· 1 1,
to the Ohio Deportment of
Natural R•oui'C8I, Divilion
o1 Reclamotlon. Tho propo~sed coal "!inlng and reel•
,.,lion op•at ion will be in
Meigs County, Sal.-n Township, Section 30. The propOled underground m1ning
ar•a will encompOM 32.6
acres. and ia tocated on the
Wllkeovlle 7'/t Minute U.S.
G,$. quadrangle map. eppr..imMoly
2.6
mlleo
Northeaot of Wllk••lla,
OhiO. The application proPOles to 8XJJM1d the area for

1-3-11-1 mo. pd
to

VHS TlPI
ltl usconwertttltltoldMDYils

I Slidtt owtr lo ••Y VMS.

C~l••AM~~~y~~C~Ait~:OTERtflCS

or 10:~

JilltltMii41llft 1111.,lfl ~

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

•Dozer 8r. Backhoe
•Will Do Hauling

Dump Truck
•Wrecker Serv1ce
•Junk Y1rd Business

WANT TO IUY WIECKID OR
JUNK CAllS 01 TRUCKS
-FlEE ESTIMATES-

IOfpgW'eh mining.
The epplicltlon II on Ita
tho ofllce of tho Meigo County
Raoorder. Melgo
County
Court Houea. Second StnaaL
Pomeroy. Ohio 46789 b
pubic vtowlng. Wrltlen comm..a and/cw requwt1 for en

Far

anr of thiSUII'WKII

614-742-2617
letw.n 9 a.m.-6 p.m.

or lean

informal confwence mll'f be
IHII1t to 1he Divilion of Rod•
million, Fou-. Squwo.

HILLSIDE MUZZLE
LOADING

,,.

Buiding 8 ·3. Columbut, Ohio
43224 witnn thirty {30) dovs
of'1he 1811 dlta of publcatlon

MODERN GUN
SUPPUES

ofJhis notk:e.
(9~2.

c•. , ,...... ..

9, 16, 23 4tc

Munleloadlng Supplies
Modern Gun Supr.lies
Guns - Ammo • S ugs •

22

Ammo
I 2 4 East of Rutland
Acron Happy Hollow Rd.

Ph. 614-742·2355
tl20/thl1 ...

5

Happy Ads

.membered me with
.cards. flowers. gifts
'a nd phone caHs on

and evHappy 64th,

'
ery

one. God B.l esli
·:voul •
.
·: Gretta Carnahan
2 · · In Memoriam

Mom . (Jo Tyree)
We love you.
Lanny, Jeanie, Ch,uck:.l
Sandy, Daidre, Miuy

FEDERAL, STATE AIIID CIVIL
SERVICE JOBS

A.W.rd. toCtll
after
5 p m.
an1wert
name
of FMCid•
304-882·3441

No., hiring. Your • • • 13.5150
10 • 19.410. tmiMIII. . Oo.n·

FIREWOOD

"LET GEORGE

OAK, LOCUS-f.
CHERRY

DO IT"

$3 S

BILl SLACK
992-2269

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVI.lE, OHIO

Softy the leaves of
" memory fall.
Gently I gather and

101

treasure them all.

. ·are always near,

£ . Moln

~nseen,
unheard, you
,

Mastic &amp;Certainteed
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows

POMEROY, OH •
992-2269

~

NEW LISTING - MINERSVILLE - Want a home that
offers a beautllul VIew olthe
nver, isenergy efiiCient. and
newly redecorated? 3 bedrooms, g1ve you comlort (ronl porch w[h anver v1ew
g1ves you en1oymen1 Call for
appointment. $22.900 00
NEW LISTING - MIDDLE·
P08T 1978 Modular
home sittmg on 2 lots '"
Iown 2 car garage. N.G.F A.
heat. garden area. Also has
self contamed A/C ~nit
Many other n&gt;ce features
ASKING $39,500 00

'

EVERY SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS

VAUGHN

Certified Licensed Shop

ONLY

5-25-tln

a. Stranon

GentJy used
consignment
clothing for
children.

Tecumseh
Weed Eater

Homelite

"Free Estimates ..

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

SR 681.

992-5083

8-12 I mo

STREET PIZZA
Back To School Special
MON.' TUES.-WED.

1-13-lfc

HUDNALL
PLUMBING &amp;
168 North Second
Middloport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry F1st}ing Su,pplli.,j
Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here
BUSINESS PHONE
(6141 992-6550
RESIDENCE PHONE

72S8.

COmmercial &amp; General deaning
Excellent ref•ences avaHebte.

Ken- A•. 33382 SA 33.
814-992·5074.

8

C.ll 814-448-7447
McCLURE'S RESTAURANT

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Ride Pe••on Auctioneer, II·
cenllld Ohio and Wnt Virgima
E•t•. antique, f•m. liquid•·
t1on •'"- 304-773-6786.

HIRING Cookl and walt,.....
needed. RttiiR81 befng taken
1:04).4:00 p m. TuNdl'tl end
ThuNd8'{alt 479Jackaon Pike.
GIIIHDOIII. white hou• bllhlnd
McCluftti1'8111U .. nt

15" PEPPERdN •
CHEESE PIZZA

remove!. •t Slack 814-992·
2 289 evening•.

814,441-3872

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
end n8W"er ueed cn Smith
Buiek·Pontlac, 1911 Ealtern
Ave. Gllllpolia. Cell 614-448-

Complllle hou.t1ok11 nf furN·
ture • anUqUts. Al•o wood &amp;
coal heeter1 Sw.ain' 1 Furniture
&amp; Aum:lon, Third &amp; Olive,

8t4-448-3159

wBI bo

at an
ot university.
wh:h the
iflcatlon•

Meigs

OIPirtmenl

Junk C.r1 with or without
motor.. Call Larry LIYely·814-

388-9303.

Furnitunt end appUanCIII by the
Piece or entire hou•hold. F•lr
prices being paid C.ll614-448-

3158.

Nead •f*iMlced feed mill man
and driver. Write Applicenl, Box
418. Pon.roy. Ohio 4!1789.
Give fUll dewHs on elt.,.,len(:e,
training, etc. lntervitWI wll be
1rren91d lmmediltltv All repty1

co nfldentlol.
Oovemi'IW'It Jobl t18.040 ·
t89,230 yr. Now hiring. Cell

: Pick Uf. or lol .. Only

"At Reasonable Prices"

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

NO SUNDAY UlLS

MARCUM

DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON
LARGEST END

985 -4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
References
8-22-1 mo.

Television Listening Devices
Dependable H•riP&amp; Aid Silas &amp;Sen,icf
CJ Hearing Evaluations For All Aces

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

::c

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second AYIIIut, Box 1213
~ Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
_Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

trial. 2 Bedroom and bath wh:h
addttlonlll bedroom and bath
built on. Centr81 Air with wlndcrw elr conditioner In bult on
•dcltlon. Underpinned- front
1ndbadc poroh-. ll:cngebulldlng Furnll:hed Including w.1Mr
• d.,.,. Property VIICtm Buy
tod.,. mow In tomorrow. Price
t 27,000. Shown by appoint·
ma1t. Clll ti14-4.S.3293

____

Standing dmber. Call
5449.

614·992~

__ ,,

EKmulttLevel Di1trtbuter1· If ·
your IIIII hiP/8 the de~ire to
beaome successful call 814-

4411-2141

We buy ll.::k Walnutl Fund
rel•lna opportunity. George

p.m.

16 ft. Alum Hou• TraH• fot
Ill&amp; 2 bRooma. t2400. OBO.
Cell 814-948~2118.
1970 moble horne 12xl15, 2
be droom1. fu rnl1hed, eJC tre
room. •e.ooo.oo. Jtn. Jef·
f . . . 304-576-2814
Appro•lm~~talv

one aae with 2
bedroom m&lt;Dile home. meny

&amp; Acreage

Allhton. l•ga bulding lou.
moble homes permttted. public
Wllter, .. , o river lot., Ctyde
Bowen, Jr 304.576-2331.
Blautlful..- 1ot1oneacreplus.
public water. Clyde Bowen. Jr.

304-878-2338.

2!1•cr• B,.d AunAo.t. New
Heven Owner fh•nclng ewell•

Professional
Services

Lata. one eae, IM. wooded.
Jericho RoMI, ownar
fln111oing. good term1, 304city

Mt•.

Shitback 81~992·3891 For
delivery instructlons clll1·800.

experiance prefM'f'ld. Apple•
tions mav be ~lied out In
per1onnll office. AAEOE.

DEliVERED TO

OHIO
PALLET
COMPANY

E111 plo v1111~111
Servlcl~S

11

Help Wanted

Rent ats

Ann' !l gtft lhop open for busi·

ness 324 Ealt Mani St Porn.
roy . 814·992·72P4
Beginner• Ba1le Ou1h S•1ion1
!darting 7p m Sept. 29th It
Aock1pring1 Gr.,ge Hall, Pome.
roy Fee is t30. For ntgtstration
mill cheek to Bunny Kuhl,
34288 Flatwooda Ad., Pol'nlo
roy. Ohio 45789by Sept. 27th.
STAN LEY PRODUCT Have 111
party or take up ordlra. Free
gifted Phone Roberta M

Swisher 304-6B2·2108.

AVON-Neod 5 lodi .. 10 Soli
Avon Call 8t4-448-3358
2 "tellow Page S.._ peopte
needed. Will train. Onlv 1hol8
with minimum one Y'• •I•
ex parlenoe need eppty Send
rt~umeto: Bo~ Cia 172.c/oG•

Giveaway

7 wk old female puppy. 1m1ll
mbced breed. Cell 61 4~448 ·

4823.

5 kftten1 to give INI/ay. Call
81,.·448·2153 after I PM
2· 8 mos. nld kittens, 1 SiernHt

Coll6t4-448-4413.

Full grown- to giveaway

Call814-4411-2300.

Verynice3·4BR .In Centenary.
1acre. new lidln,. NMiwat•. 1
c• g.-.ga Cal attar 5 PM,
814-379·2703 or 387-0498
Niee 2 BR .• clo•lotown. Green
School Diltrfct Apptiane~~ In~

Hpollo Dolly Tribune. 828 Third
Ave .. GolllpoHo. Ohio 4il83t.

ctuded Coli 6t4·448-3112.

Seh11 Twritory Awllllbi•GIIIIe
&amp; Meigs: County. tf you Ike to
HI. end h...,. pnyfou1 •I•
e~eperiM'Ice, I'd like to dilcun
with you 1hepoaalbUttlel ofAAA
Memt.ahlp Sll• OlrtiCII ....
lnvolvad. cold cllllng. 11 nee•
11ry. Thla II a cormlitslon onty
tob. wllh bonu• for ... produc~

acre, n•• Rio Grand&amp; Good buy
.. $23,000 Coll614·245-9578
... 445-8784

write t1 up end ooll.a yo.
check! P I - .and ...... , of

AAA.~~~3~~~~~~~

7to Wollor s~. ...,,..ou1h.
Ohio 45812 Attorllion: Bob

ainWett,
.....

or raaum• to·
GET PAID to. 10-g IIOobl
• 100 00 per tftl&amp; Wrtle PAlE~
33V. 111 8 Unooi"""'V. N
Aurora. 1110542

3 BR .. msuleted, goad eond. 1

Bnck end ceder ,.noh houae. 1.4
acre• 1n Bradbury behind
WMPO. Larqe 2 c• g~nge. 3
bedroom•. Uvlng room, centl'll
llir·heet. woodbumer, Willet' IDf·
ten•. newly remodeiMI large
kltchln with Jen Air R1nge,
gftage c:Aipoul, dl•hWa•her.
vtltty room, landlciPed nicety.

Soan by opoolnt"""l only Call
814-992-8,5t *81.800.

3 bedroom ho.,... Large b•e·
ment. aluminum sklng, fufty
c•Pit•d. In Pomeroy 0111814-

992·7887.

MAIL CIRCULARS In your..,.,.

tlm1.

Sand ..u lddrhlld

Call 514-379-2798.

otomoad -•po toE Mo..,.r.

To good home. m~le&amp; month old
Dech•hound Hid 1hota. good

.Mwott. Ohio 43888.

IOIDO -'""tt· Ger,...,o Rd..

8t4-992·3543

3 tiger color ktlten1, mother
clllco cet. 61 4·192·3144.

8 Lost and Found
LOST: BiondO a Whh opotiOd

••tne

Beagle pup
blue aon•.
Anlwtrt 10 ''Iunny" , t..t - .
ll'ound atrlp min•. If fountl 0111

Spacious 3 bedrGOm, 2 norv
honw on SR 33. Lou of dottt
•pace, centrlll••· clo•toMelg~

Scnools 114-952-1313.

For •le bp owner. 3 bedrDOtn
hou•. Pllerl It Wrlll P.O lo•

30 Mlddl-. Undor •20.000.

3 bedroom honw. H~ b•ht.
o•PI'I•d. Dtntrlll alr·hut. loc-.ct In Point Pl . . . n1 oaH

814·317-7402 ott• 8 PM.

304-8711-2702 or 304-571·
2147.

LOST IMio Bltok

In New Haven, 3 be*oom,, 2
b81hl. l•ga ltvlng room, fir~

wloi!O

blae on cheat. Point: Ptllllnt

aree. Rew~rd, 304-&amp;71-1037or

878-3998

Adub onfv. Rot. ""'U~od. Ill&lt;&gt;
..... Call814-4~11-0338.
2 BA. unfurnished. g. .ge. 1
ml•218. Onechlkl. t200rent
1110 dop Rot. Coli 814-4489881

loa.tlon. No pe11. AdUh1. [)ep.
&amp; ref. AV8111ableln0ctoblf. C.ll

84S2tlllt0 00.

oro AAA vlrt... lv _,lo bolf· ,....

Lab,

Homes for Rent

remodeled

2 BR .. fuli b. .ment cent.-1
air/heal, low mlliintenence 2
mll81 down Rt 7 Nice river

Announcements

tempered

41

.2 BR., elf electric, n.tl garden.
niCI Y'll'd. utllhy-bu ldlng. 4 mil•

.. _

Call 114-3B8-t88t.

1978 Pinto; 1977 Doctge Van:
1977 Ford LTD: 1973 El C.·
mlno; 197,.Detlon; 19'79Spb.
&amp; Chwy pans 304-458-

•u
tl68

79 Motors Homes

&amp; Campers
19811 Clannce Solo

•a. dep. • nl. Adultl

only,

Sand Nplfoo to loa Cia 1 at
c/ oGalllpollo DollvTrbnw, B28
Third Avo.. GolliiJOIII, Ohio
4513t.

._.ct.

2 bedroom, furriahtd.ln Redne.
C•ll 814·192·1038.

~loco. gorogo, uo.ooo.oo
304-273-247t

For Sale or Aent·2 Br. newly
remodeiMI home. large fenced in
v•rd. l•ndry room Bidwell
tchool dlatrict U7&amp; I mo. C.ll

814-4411-1320

Apt. for rent, 1 bedroom,
P•rtlath' furnish_., olll 30..

Ext• ni01t. ..1 eleotrio, 2 bed-

roommoblehomtlncountrt 7

ml• from Mlddl-. Dopcolt
roqulrad. 814-742-2014.
2 be*oom mablle homt hlllf
mile out J•klho A011d. l'lf..,..
c• required, call after I ·OOPM,

--·ilryor

2 BA . apt:s. 8 t;lo.... kttch.,...

furnlo-.
hook·up, ww c•ptt. newlv
!"'fn1od, dod&lt;. l'nlm •t71
Regency, Inc. Apto. Coli 304875-5t04. or 875-5388 or
878-7735.
eppl.

New completely furnlth•d
.,.rtment • mobile lliome In
ctty Adultt only P•klng Call

fumlo- opt In ""lnt PI-t:
mutt welc:onw my well tlllnld
doll wiRing to poy dopooll. coli
304-878-1333

._.h

Pets for Sale

11.,..4 door Mercury Stlrtlon

8

welconw mv well "lnld dog.
wiling to pay depolh. clll

304-878-t333.

2 Bol!lla doge. Will . . both for
na. Coli 814-892·2218 oftw

1100.

AKC rogloWod
Beogl~304-871I'UPP'•.
good
gun dog ltoc*,

62 Sporting

1

Goodl

~~==;::.::::::;::::;::::;:::

lkly

Antiques
pr

Musical

I _.

t

64

Hay

8. Grain

SOli. Rlv•lno Antiquao.

1124 E. Main Street, Pomeroy.
Hour~~: M,T,W 10..m. to lp.m.,

Sundoy t IO lp.m. 814-992·
2826.

Hey· mbl:ed. round b-'•· Sta-d

In b•n. 800 lb. Coli 814-2&amp;119480.

•I•
•bl•
,_.,. , _ . t&gt;troct&lt;. •too.

For a grut deal on • niW' or Ultd
car,truckor ..n. . . KennyBaaa
at Jim Mink Chevrolet·

19"n Honda for .-rts or .epllr.
bell ott., phone 304-17~

1284

1918 Now Hltchblck.left from
damaged. phone 304· 882·

1978 Chevy Custom ven
t1,800.; 1978FordCUitomwn

------------------- .

from t100. Fords. Mlfced•.
CorvettiH. Ch8VyL Surplus.

e._. Guida. ltl soe.ae78000 E" -t0189.

TN cks for Sale

Jaff W.msley lnatructor, 114-

1184 Bloct&lt; Ford Fl50. 4 opd •
300. I cyl. otop side bod Call
114-4411-1827.

1881 Unooln Town c•. White
u•rlor, low miHO&amp; Extnl

eng, Lelr1. Excel. cond.

W1,.1rlilzer. Fun Mlkw Supw d-. Collll4-4411-,874.
Sprhl. organ, ext,. good conct, 1971 Ford LTD One~. PS.
•10o.oo. 304-773-19...
PB, air. low mil• Good cond.
Cell 614-448-1525 .. 448t339.
6B
FNit
&amp; Vegetables
1971 Buidt S11tlon Wagon.
t400 or best ofler. Call 811114411-381 I anydmo.

Red Rupberne. Pldl your own
Uncol" 4 dr.. (for portol
or we pldc Tt¥1or' 1 S.rrv Patch. 't977
f300 COli 114·448·3815
Coli 814-248-1084 .. 448- any
tim&amp;
8192.

1978 Ctuwy \7 ton pickup, 360
.,.o . 8&amp;.000 mil•. Red &amp; gray
wllh new Delnt Runs good C.ll

114-357-?Bit

1983 Ford F150. Standard
tran1mltelon. Sh•P· s 3100

Call 814-742-293t ... 814742·27911.

1977 Ch.,, Imp. s W. 2 ••a.

8711-2871 .

powsr ,.., wln4bN t898. Cell

1980 Ford Ringer XLT % ton et,
ac. ah•p.: 1980 MwOJry Cou·
v• 2 dr. LoMied
17~

'BIS Ford Letl..t. 39. 000 act--1
mi-. very •harp truck, 304-

.,...p.

1281

Proffitt Farm. ntKt to Hllrrlt

oorwertlbla eKt• stwp. •2750.

Muotboo-toopprool .... Call
814-288-IS22.

73

CM11.d•k.Lot•ofprOII'Im••
dlsct. Coat.,.,., t2000n.w.wlll

Bob'sM•I&amp;MendGreenhou....
Mllon. W Ve. now h• juiOf

1981 Lll•ron GTS. fuel
tion, turbo. 32.000 mlel.

c:ruill. AIMOMble Cell 614448-7025

hwllsher, dls!XJ!III, prhete ..,.

tntnce,

SWAIN

prt-t• endo•d PltkJ,

AUCTION a FURNITURE 12
~·- Sl , Golllpollo.
"'"NEW- a pc. wood ~P" t399.
U.ingroomoultft·f191·fll9

pool, pleyground. UtHbloo not

Included. St... ing M t299 per

Bunk becll wfth bedding- t241.
Full sii8 mlltt1'811 • foundellon
etarting · t99 Recliner•

Furnished apt. Naw . Ne•HMC.

Ap111m111t1 end hou..

otortlng, •sa.
USED--· dree-. bedroom
suit&amp; DMU. wrlnger\Wther, a
co"""Oiellno
ot ueod
NEW~ W..wn boot. tJI.

C.ll

.,mit_.

Workbooto fiB a up. (111801 a

&lt;eft too). Cont14-il48-3189.

Modorn t BR opt. Call 114441-0390.
Fur.nhechpt. ~ 1BR.

County Ar.pllance, Inc. Good
uttd IPDf 1n011 and TV lilt.
Open sAM to &amp;PM. Mon .,.ru

•z40emo.

111. 114-448-1819, 127 3rd.
Ava. Oolllpolio, DH.
GOOD USED APPUANCES
Waohoro. clryoro, oofr-oro.
tongoo . Skoggo Appllonoas,
Uppor Rlvor Ret. boalda llone
C-Mollf. 114-448-7388.

room. t110 • up. UtiiU11 ..I d.
5 roomt. In country. 1 mile up Cell
4411-4418 oftor 7 PM.
Pine Grow Rd • oft Rt 124 In
Roolna. Call 1·704-814-550tot FurNehed .tfld..d•· •145 •
nlghl or wrft:e to Henry OoiMf•. up. Uti bios polcl Call448-44 1.
Box 784. Marrt1vllle. N C oftor 7 PM.
28115.

LAYNE'S 'URNITUR!

Sofa and chM prlold from
US8to •tillS. Tolll• •so and
up to •121. lflciH..,.. nso
lo •198. R - - uzs to
•378. Lampo f:ZS to lt21
Din- fiOiandupto fOil.
Wood tllble w ·l ohllrs e211 to
•111. O..k t100 up • *37l
Hul&gt;heo •400 lnd up. lllnk

2 BA. ept .. l•oa room1. cent..t
lllr, wetlt' ptid. AVIIIIIble Nov. 1
CJIIOQI'Ief', c.ll 114-44S.7025.
Furnlehecl efftclencv lpt.

Cl.-.

qui« a prMio. Singlowcrldng

1Wo bedroom hou• for l'lflt In poroononly. Coiii14-448-4S07
Racine •r• . Call &amp;14-149- or 4411-2802.
f

-1218andupto•381.Bobfbodo
.. .,.,..,. w-m--

3 BR. Afll noo • mo Oop.

required Ol•hlre, Ohio Call

e1 10. Mllt11
fwl or twtn

Gr11cfout ltvlng. 1 and 2 bedroom apanmtnt1 11 VfiiiOt
M•or end Atvtflkll ADen·
manti In Middleport "om

t811. Ou- UIIO • up.
Klng•3SO. 4 - ch8lt •at.
Gun coblneu 8 oun. Iaiii
rnotb II f31 • f4S. Bed
from• •20. t30 • lOng nma
.IO. Goodoolectlanol' I wm
• - · m.., ..bo- UO and up to 188.

o!l• 8 PM. 814-387-0tBt

2bodr00mh- -lv•doc&gt;
otated. Phone 814-952-2304. f1U Coli 114-1192·7787.
EOH.
Hou• far ..,.t, ful b~~ement.
1•;, IIOfY, qulollooolion. I mP• 2 btdroom Apte. for ......
north of PDint Pl..ant:. 304o c ... llllce 01111ng. Lou ndrv
t715-t018.
foal•'- ovolloblo. Coli 114182-3711. EOH.
I 100tn du ..-. b-ment. , ••
ego. pr-. nloalocollon. t 14 Apertm... for tent t221 e
Joflorio• Blvd .. 104-878· month. Dopoolt ""'ullod. 8143751. •
'""' .. 952912·1724. 2 b. .. , . unllmlahed hoult, 1111.

10

_,I for ·~ CoD 114-4483115onrlma

Firewood for

-'e.

Colll14- 448-8127
ICing wood

a."'* h...., wtrh

Ph...... 100- un- ompll-

fler, t 2 !10, progr•mmable
~ner. ~.w ent ..,. rotor.
frtlqu.cy counter. l•ge enter111nmlftt center. t100 each.

Coli 114-448-3340.

Miudhordwood-. 012por
buldo. Conloln"l!: ·~•· m
ton OhiO Pollot o. • maroy,
Ohio. 114-1112·148 1·
Dltoft'MichR·IIIronch•. N-

chlln 1nd Clltllre. l«ge llree

wllh - · lfro ..d wheol ltyd,
clonr biHe end b ...hoe. very
kJwhr. ~e ..d•o.oondJ.
tlon Dltoh Wltoh punching m•
ohlnoii!S ft. of rod. lhreo.,..of
h - . Ant f12000. IGroll or
wHI - -· Call 114-192·
2478. CeoaH08bockhoo,ona
o~ mechlne, working every.
d.,, Dl... with lhlttle 1.-n....

mi-.. Aololng •e.10o 814-

•u. firm t71. .,d

Dlys •me •

~NAFUe

'I

w-

4--~-s-.

69 For Sale or Trade
Wll nde fOr Aeglltered pup or

9

pulllrtger

C•ll

4 4.:.&amp;-:.8::1:.:0..:9_ _ _ __
.:'::t4-.:..:.

tiiBOOidomollllaOmog~ Good
cond. noo. Call 814-448-

1001.

alii for •100 Oflt AKC reg..
tered male Carine T•rlor. 2 1983 Chrvlllr Fifth Awnue . 1
,.. . old. Salt • P'PPI' f.. 1oc11 owner. 34.000ml•. Fvlly
lurao 304-1711-2771.
o q - . Uko now. CoH 8t4:3,:81,:11'8-=t3737:,:B:_·- - - - - OOYERNMI!NT SEIZED Vehid• t.orn f100. Fordo. - · Cor- Chavyo. Sur·
pluo. luyore Guido . 111
8011-817-IOOOEICI. S·10t89

61 Farm Equipment
IH,..mAiwltholl-ohmanto.
V..y ,_onoblo. C.ll8t4-4487028.

tl77 Cad..... looded. Florido
c• Uke ...-. tiSOOO or b•t or
trede P.U or dump truck. Clll
.:&amp;::1::4-..:44::8-:.7:.0:.t..:9_~---

11Bt Piymoulll Horllan MI-.
711.000 ml• 4 aod .. Runs
171 MF wiNo'. 12 bol•. Mf good. fiOOOOIO. e.Jioftll I

Dyne lou nee mowing mechlne
w/8 ,.. ft. bulh hog. tiiiO.
aw- w11 ftnonoo. Coli 114-

llillji

PM. 114--448-4737.

t880 Honds Acconl LX. 5 opd.
AC. PS.
m•• Good
oond.
Coli 71.000
114-3711-2791.

lnt~."mii•Oit-.

,u

8o 4

W.O.

1177 Dodge P1111 Ven

AC.

loed Call 1·800.1537·9528

Peintlng· Interior Ia E Jtterlor
Free 11tlm1tes. Call 614-4488344.
Tree &amp; ltl.lnp 18mo-.el, lhr..t.
mutch. IIOfiB, gravel, flreNood
t 1 10dump IQad. Oak &amp;hickory

Call 8t4·448!9848.

R,ON "S Television Service '
Hou• calls on RCA, Quarar,
GE Specleling In Zenith C.ll

304-6711-2398 or 814-4482454.
Fetty Tree, Trimming. ll~p
renHMII Call 304-67fi..1331 .~

Ro•rv or cable tool drHIIng .,
MottMIIscompletedllmeday "
PUmp ••'• snd service. 304-

8911-3802

c..

1976 Ford wtndow V1n. Aun•

Ak••TreeTrlmmingandStump "
AemDVIII. Free estlmatet. Cell
304-1575-7121
: ~

good. t6oo. Call 81 4-245·

1214

1979ChevyYVIndowVen Good

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE ~
houae
lervlclng 0 E. Hot
Point, wethers. dryars end

82

1982 Chevrolet .._4 New motor. tires and whe.e.. n~SW plint,

cuOiomiPd. . .800. Coli 8t4992·73t5

Plumbing

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

Cor Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 814-446--31588 or fl1t.: ·

1979 Volkl Wagon VW. 7
pauanpr van. Aeeaonable

4411-4477

1970 lnternltion bu1h, chu!Ch

84

114-948-2202.

Motorcycles

1------~---

t9811 Mo dol yz 121. nooo.
Coli 8t4-2411-838B oftor 7 PM
t987 Hanclo XR 25011 Good
cond COli 8t4-448-tOSI
ttBI Hondo 4 -

2110 A. Two

Reedy., 18o&amp; 304-812·20915.

Elt~ctricBI

&amp; Refrigeration

buo. iioc cond. $1,800.00 Coli
304-882·3270.
74

•

&amp; Heating

cond Caiiii4-4411-I001

*Ne, clac bnlk-. •1150 ftrrn

c-

PRISES, Jackson, Oh10. 1-800.

...... 304-578·2398.

lfOod. Call- 5 PM, 814-24115829.

till AMCCo-DLStandorcl Good •ncltlon fiOO. C.ll
814-952-1424 or 304-882·
2411

eu......

Concrete Septic Tanka · 1000
g ..., 1&amp;00g ... andJet Aar•tlon
•vttem. Fact~ trained "'l!f!llr

1971FordVen V•vci..,,New
lim • chtom. wheel1. New
........ pl..,. a blltl'8rV Alk·
lng t2000. Looks &amp; run• reel

sllslll'le, tDomanyeKtMitOiilt

AettdentiAI or commerctal wirIng New Mrvu:e or MPIIrs
Ucensed electr~ctan Ettl.,._te
free Ridenour Electncal, 3041576-1786

General Hauling.

B5

Olll1rd WMer S•vlce: Pnot.-.,
Cisterns, Wells Delivery Anv· ,
time Call 814-446-7404-No .
Su ndiY calls

1178 Y-1 710 Spoclol
4000 mil•. Wlndlom- SS
Faklngo and •ddlo bOll. Shsh

J &amp; J Water Service Swimnlng •
poola; clttttrnl, well• Ph 814- •

Colll14-11112-17118 anv•mo.

A &amp; A Water Serv•c• Pools~
cllternl. well1 . lmm.edlete ·
1. 000 or 2.000glllonsdelivery.
Call 304-675-1370
•

oaJCvoloPort-dS.vlcefo&lt;

ell

Jlp~~t-

blk• 111d ATV.

245-9286

•

r•~

Fectcwy nlntd t.ahnlden, Otry
IOn...... 304-8711-IIIS

------------------WMer delivery 1000 galont :·

-.....

dol... ry Call 814-992·5275

1177 Clm•o. Low mfl•. new

'88 Ho- TRX 128. 4 whlolor.
-b...,., and bod&lt; tlr•good
oand, . .00.00. Aftor coli 3041715-2888.

e;•

Chlldo FourTroa 70Hond&amp; ono ~~._":'4~~04-1711-2311 or
11• Old. 1110 ool"'d1 t7IO.OO.
3Q4.1711-2St4.
B7
Upholst.-y
76
Boats and
Motorl for Sale
Mowrey' 1 Uphol1.. h1g .vlng

1tll4 Honda Blacll Nlghl Howk
1110, ohafl dr,.., wlndohiolcl
1.800 mloo. f1.200.00. Phone
104-02-2471 or 8S2-3812.

104-t711-,4110.

For low prlaao .. Jlltlllly•""1111..upp
""""*- • · River
• to IW..It-4Matlalian
4411-7444.

Vans

Buy Government lllled and
surplus vahld• from f100.
Fords, Chovyo. Coo ••••· ole ..
In your oraa. For Info coli 111021
842-t051 .... 8411

, . . Cldllllc Clnam01on. A-1
oondlllan. ~-oll-IlnGiudln1 .,,. root.
-.Movllo!-•" 1211 I . "'-·
114--S812•d•kfarProd.

PICKINI UIID PUtt 41TURE
Comlflatt
fumlolt-

,_,liM' -oom.

n-

Ou•ran~

tiroo. nso. Coiii14-74Z·3t41

a I PUMITUIIE
t41S-Aw.

hau-

opd..

818t~DnMaon. AC, AM~FM
dlo. Coli ll4-. .2-8S12

Call t14-441·
7172. HouiOI-1.

chelt. . .4.11. I jiO.
- - n l t . I S,

4

t977 c.,rloa Wogon AC. PS.

tt73 01c1o

~olloonoo•.

J

a._,.,

PB. tltt

WIIIL

VolloyFurnltuN

=.:O:.~C:.-=~
...

4 t 82
''

IIJ ar- Beattie
,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .

GMh wfdl

1980

teed not to u• oil. PS. Call
FrHZWbllef.cornfed.304-875- 814-44e.7071.

~=9:52:·:24:78::::::;;;::::::::J~2=8:11-:1;;;12:2======~

NM' and ..ed furnltu,. and

3 bo*oorn-- - ·
1271.00 ........... dopoolt. 112·8887 .. 114-192-1,70
104-1711-2471.
l~·~·~·~·h~~~~~~~~lbrwlltb-ont.lca-Mt. 1
111-. - • • •
va;arha•l
• ..., A•·•IZ2S.
I
W11 ""'• HUD. 402111 - y
m
\tl:. fourth tt. Pt. P l - . t14dulltl ....... 304-1711- ............
M8711-J41, .
~~--~----------

lllow rasdv.

Dl"boiiC .......

lui-•

r,r..

e•den mum•.
phono 304-773-

crop h..-dv f .. l

6721 or n:J..I900ap•7d.,a. plktt. Florida c•. Air.

fan Nloo. Coli 114-4411-3971
Good Doll---· I.B.M.
'""
PC
Junior oluo " " -· A•ortad
IOftwlre. C:... 814-446-7313.

opproved Ctedlt. 3 Mft• out
Ret. Open 11om to 1om
Mon. lhru Sol. Ph. 114-44110122

507'&gt;\
N- Hwan. - l r r o c t - •
bl II
•1to.oo. 11oooo dopoolt . _ 1 ..., .. iitiiii~~~;r~
,0.....7 •• 278.
n;.'ti~n":·=oc:
3 -oomhoqlo.gordan IIIOCO. II" •ttl
noo.oo onontll •. dODOIIt ... , ==~:.:v:.:..:.::·-....,..,.~=-~
qultod, 311~112-1....
t - - opt. .. Mlddl-

t21 • IDtld.

cannlngpoachol. Bor-p-., f78911. CoH 114-448-0938 or
StonloyMc.,.toM
O&lt;una plums.
2.:811-:..:l•::9;_4.::__~--new
applel. Crtopy
Llf'ge :

Goorgoo CrHk Rd Coli 614448-0294.

RON EVANS ENTt;R PRISES· ,
Septic IMk pumping. •80 per ,

a mloc.
-• .F
• F food
lit SE··
of
0oarghum

'"I""'

SWEEPER 1nd .wing machine
rtpalr. parts. end suppll• Pidt
up and dal..,.rt. DIN' is V-.cur.n
Cl11ner. one half mile up

1979 Ford F250 Camp• Spe-

c:lli Ouol ... k•. 1001 bo•. 400
Cu. ln. motor. c1... truck
814-912·3403.

- - · · PO&lt;IIandat4-8435112

monitor~

Roger1B111ment
Wet• proofing

537-9528.

Radio Shacll Com- 1000
b . oxtto doc 380·K.

printer OMP 130.

UnconditMJ,.I lifetime guulf'l·
tee. Local ref•Ma. furnished.
Free eltimetn Call aollect

8t4-4411-8815 .. 4411-11B9

1984Mont1C.Io,lowmleeg..
teke 0\oW' PIVmenll Call 304875-4150 or 304-87&amp;-5380.

114-44&amp;-t345

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

ohop. RON EVANS ENnR.

P.U. toppen, 186 e.::h. Clll

golden ~
Jon~thln~Molntosh·Grlmea ap.
ples. elder. pear~ , honey.

3015 eng. PB, PS, 1ir, cruU.

Home
Improvements

t-8t4-237-0488, doy or night

1978 Dodge 4. 'NO 'h ton. long
whool baoe, fiBOO t988 ATV

Luxurious Tare Tcwnhouse
apertmentl. Eleglnl 2 floors. 2
lA .. ful ~h u--'ra. powdw
room downat1lr1, CA., di1~

51 Household Goods

Services
81

111,100 ' firm. Coli 114-3888434"' 38J.I2SB.

ROifOIO Mobllty coHect, 1·114-

1988 SunStr..., Motor Home.
27 ft., AC, GenMitor. 2100
ml• Pho.. 814-992· 7329

good cond. •t.OOO. 304-6757371.

lndMdull guhlr l•aont. b•
glnntrt. llf'foul gutrarttt Bruf..

doyo.l14-198-1298

•2000. B 11o 0 Motoro·SI AI.
t80. Coll814-448-l815

1184 Ford E100r1 GL . .1-. air.
PS. PB, 43,000 mllu ,

Honda 4 wloeol• Coli 814-44113289

Whaalcholr•,_ or · - · 3
Wheolocf oloctrtc oco.-. C.ll

lntlriiCiionSt At 7andl515
Uttle Hoctclng. Ohio 614-989-

3270.

t t87 Monti Carlo 9upor Sport.
19,000 mll01, llurllunctv. PW.
1'0, 1111. olr, 308 lilgh out-put

u •• ....,.n run arm~
Albany. Hou.- 1·1 CfOIId Mon·

IRVINE'S CAMPER SALES

S.iii•Servloe415uppii•*Ren111a

8th Wheel \Nider,... Camper,
1978. fultv .. f oontained

72

4411-1077. Umbod .... ln...

484

1979 Dodge Colt Stillion

For Sale Bundy Cl•lnet. One
-uaoct..,. 2 ..,..,•. Good
concllion. $t78 Firm. Call 114-

cordlo Mulic. 114-448-0887.

A

v
,..ce rrow,
0\wy .. 6.5 KW gen . dual roof
air, n81N ..dill! ttr11. twin bedl.
microwave. 33.B08 mlla1
• 34.900.

229!

.1300; t980 Eogol 4-whoel
drive .1.200 304-418-1588

Bundy Trumpet. Excel. cond.

mleo. t26,900
•t9"5 34L -

0idomolllo. 114-448-3172 "'
773-5134

Bundy Clolrnot. boel. cond. 71 Auto's For Sale
c - lncludod. UOO. COII8t4- 1---~-----4411-7445.
Government seized Vehld•

~

*·

'78 Mon• Clrlo V·8 Mltornltic,.

.......... Coll8t4-248-589t.

446-1080.

6 5 KW gen .. dusl roof lir.
ow nlng , 3 3 . 741 m llu .
$22900.
'1952 27 H. Pace A"ow. 454

13.300.00. 304-178-t23B

King M•pu• suaphone • aet:

Melro•e · red 6

64 Misc. Merchandise

W-n. 579 Beoclo St. Mlddl•
Port. Oh. COli 814-992·3736

Wogoo, phone 304-8711-68Bt

na.rumen 8

•2711. Coli 114-4411-3044.

114-448-4048.

53

57

mat-olo Vulcan 700. Vt&lt;Y

low miluga ucen.nt conclUon. CAl 814-182·2707

1»1111

Uti~'- pold. 243Jod&lt;oonPiko..
Galllp..._ Call4411-4418oftor7
mo. pluo clop. Call 8t4-379- PM
2430.
Furnl1hld epartment ...1 bed-

•••

I·"';;'";·

1

3 BR. hou• lo country ne•
Cadmua. Aef. .-qulred $175 •

-St.

,_n'lllltnt«orwhhendotolder.

fiSOO. 30 • 4• 61 ••••
.,.. ~~~- ~~~-

15t9.

ou-•

p m. Of anytime week..ndl.

Chwy.
gen , roof53, 193rniiM
leveling
jlckl. dd'ublebed.
t2&amp;,900.
A
El •
•1914 23' Pa011 rrow
g...-, 454 ChiVy.. naw gen ..
roof .tr. miCfOWIV•, 29,730

a• mHoogo. IB.OOO mH•.
-ng U810. Coli 8t4-992·
2
510 .
ta-G,.,dAm
Looded E-·or.
011
....

Be- lor "'lo. f8.00 buohol. 19B7 Doavy Covellw. ti.OOO
pick own. l.Oct~ted .. C.W. mll•·t48&amp;0. 19&amp;9 Pontl•c

~ ~·

PomMOy, 2 bedroom. 01&gt;1&gt;11.,.
c•. g •ae, biHiftent. Ne•
school. Aet.-nc• required.
Call 8t4-742-2872- 7:00

Spaclou1 rnoblle home lots for
rent. FamMy Pt'ldl Mobile Home
P•k. o.lllpolla Ferry, W. V&amp;

47 Wanted to Rent

Furni•hed- 3 room• •
a - 111o poto. Rof. a dopcolt
required. Utlttill fu rnilhed.
Acktlta only Call 114-448-

•to
3 room llplrt!Mftl.
Coli 304-1711-1104. 0 • mo.

:2848.

Ch•• •

Gentlemen n. . . one bedroom

furnlohad houso on

a 14-BB2·8723.

IDadol Sofas. chliro U9. up;
dfn-3-7pl--f3S up;
8 pc. wlolll lull -oom oulto
fl48.; Whlta twn canopy bod
1110. Moplo bu'* bod 1110.
Compl....
dr-en
t41• up. Pick- U1ed Furnl·
I, ;'0:4-:;87;8-:;14:10;;.::;:::::;::

Winch- Modol 37. t2 go..
COUNTIIVM081LEHomaP•.. . 32" fuN choke. Call 814-4411Roue 33. lllor1h of - o y . 8911
- 1 tooll . . Coli 814-952·
7479
Romlntltan 870. 20go. o!IOIVun.
tulclooloo.Mintcand. f211o Call

Pl. PI-tot Y off Rt. 2 a 82
304-8711-3818.

Up. .irs unfumlshtd apt, C.r·
petecf. lllilltl• paid. No children.
111o pots Calll14-4411-t837

lentaandtlon. t10.~0. or tllke
- -mont•.. t9....
•••
......... -.0""
S10. Lolded. hclllant cod
tlon t7295. 1985 Kew ... kl

Lalo Model 4000 ford diMOI
tl'lator with F'""*' loldw,
tSIIIO. 1010.JDwl:lli,....S ft.
bush hog. _t21150. Owrw will
fln~nce. Celll14-211-81522.

11 ciiiSJJDfloi iOII

Trill• IPIC&amp; 3 mil• South of

BEAUTIFUL APAR1MENT9 AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·

1981 ptymaUih Horkon. 4 cyl.,
euto. lfr. PS. PB, front "-~h ...
drive, 2.211terenglne Excellent
oondll:lon lnlldeandout GrHI

63
LiVestock
Groom and Supply Shop-Pot 1-----~---­
Groomfng. All bretdl .. All
dyl•. 11m1 Pet Food 0.111•.
t&amp; Buohol PAX
llalo hog
Julie Webb Ph. 114-446-0231. f - . Lookl now. Coli 8t4., .,... one bedroom tumiJt.l
1pt In Paint Pl_,.t. mull 248-1398 oft• 7 PM.

304-578·

f100. 304-418-

tllltl.

Furnilhed Rooms

304-17&amp;.3073

"4-448-0338.

1 8A

3 bedroom houM 2 c• g . .ge.
fu I hument, w•aher ~dryer
ho-~ up . Refertnc• required.

Olo-···

46 Space for Rent

304-17&amp;.8104.

•200amo. Colll14-4411-4t09
or 379-2740

•llhad. .700 00
2129·

Slertlng at •120 a rno. Gillia
H01o1-at4-44&amp;-115ao.

Apartment
for Rent

814-4411-4344

1 IR. tur. .hld houll on
Medlaan Street. Urge yard.

and buHII. ttu been ,..,~

Aooma for lllftt·Witek 01 month.

from Gollloollo oft 811. Good

•-

Antlqueoolld ... _a4oholro

Furnished ,...,..9t9 Be11&gt;nd
Avo • Gollipollo. fl 31 o rno.
UtPlleo polclSinalomolo. lh..
bolh.Coll448-4418afl0r7PM.

utlbl... fiOO. Oepcolt. 304871i-8Bt2

44

·-

II YHiege

66

801 Ford Work MIMif nctor,
nia~wllhl01rnowlngm8Chlne.
1911 N•w Hall•nd baler ,
•3188 8NFordw/,.,ploW11
a dloc, ., 48 11. Ow- wll
finance Call 814-288-1822

114-941-2t79

45

Mobile home, 2 b..Jroom. fur.
*Md. t185 per month plu•

114-3578

•ta78 23' Allegro 454 Cloavy.
gon. ""'f .w. oloopo 5. 81.530

mH• t10,1500
*1979 24' Tioga mJnl motd'
home. 380 Dodae. 4K 11 811 •
radial tm. ewnlftg, roof elr,
34.784miM $14,900
•1980 30' HIICe 464 Chwy,

~~~--=·
~nr=-::n.:
48 8-1808.
dHp freeze, phone 304- !:
':8::88=·=:::::======
DebiMII Dining
lrU Wflh IIMII
ochoolo ond shopping. By appolntmenl, 304-4111-8317.

l.....d llallloollo Farry. 3048715-40811

• o.~ -ariolo

""'
G....,.,.teed Oulltty
CETIDE. INC .• A1h.nl·814-

41,728 mt1e1. Aeduce1 td
~~
440.
4K. gen. roohlr. liMp• l.

71 Auto's For Sale

c•pot.l•gooollng_.fon, 2

lauGy 8Jid 8lqlllge
..... Off · - porldng. . . .

3 bedroom, aM electric. 14x70.

•.,...,..,
- not Ruodo
•nd llwled t.p lhlng

't978 28' Soulfow"'d Oodao

61 Fann Equ'lpment

300bltl• ofh-rfor
t1.71
e.ah. s...
model ,..,.,,

PGfCh•

304-6711-1052.

1 BR. U7S. Utllltl• polcl Cell
4411-4411 oft• 7 PM.

~

M

man~g•

•or -·•·
1711-11811
Geld- door oofrlgorotor,good
2208 Joff.-soro Avo. 2-oom cond. f711.00 phone 304-178-_... • • - · now both. 1•._ 313S.

mo Coll8t4-387-7810.

..,~- ~-. L•- -d. •

•n•wer . .

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

llo Blodl Co.. t23'h Plno 81..
Gallloolio, Ohio. Call 814-il4112781
WESTt;RNREOCEOAR

114-44S.11411nytlme.
Futl.- bedwhhmlttrellabo"

opri.,.. •10. Call 814-44112 - .... o p - . . . fullv 100=6=15:..
· ----,.--corpoud.
appl•-·
-a
n d 2 n1ca motchi09 ''·In
lrooh pld&lt;upo
provided.
Mol...
~ 1g room
0 . , 00 -living- 10 ohoi&gt; cholro. Coli 114-448-2222.
ping. benb end schoall. For fu~
3 p1
mo.N lnfomlnlono-'1 304-812·
oom
rm~.lftl,
.,..,
(choot. night ...,cj. - 1.
e.
0
37t E. .H
Dork wolnut, Coli 114A-ant far ront In ""lni 1.:.99.:.2:.·.:.88:.t:.:2::.,- - - - - 1'1-. HUO •
8t4- Usodnlrlg-onandot-for
4411-2200:
•lo. Cell 814-892-7787. If no

COli 114-3811-1813.

plu•

oddo a ando. Coli 814-28118818.
S
-• -~-rv 11
For olo gqod u - - · Co

W• A Huge Succenl
Sw•r.. Pr.Owned Units to
Select From
~

Conore18 blo«lks~ allel. .~ 'fWd
qrdellvwry. M•..,_.d.GIIIIpo-

p,_o, pr-.ure._._,,ladct.r•.

Boach St.- Middleport. Ohio.
2 bodroom furnlohed epert.,..t,
utlltlel ..hi. ...,.,..011 . Phont
30111-182·2118
Now occopllng opplleltions lor

Fw-IHhed, 1 to 2 lA •275 1
mo. ptu1 •200 dapo~lt. lwtter
Included. I ' ~ mile E. of Po,.,,

dowt. lintels, etc. Cl•dt Wintert. Alo Ortndl. 0. Call 11424...1121 ·

moe. old. Guns, bect-oam auiiH.

lis 814-448-122t.

month plu1 •100 dep. plus
water &amp; utHitlea. VInton ••._

25. . EO.H.

Vrvettractlw ._lck 4bedroom,
2 blllh. famlty room wtth fire~
place, formal dil')lng, l•ge living
room. 30ft cuttom oak ldtchen
cablnett. oak wooMork. finish
b. .ment. 2 car g•ega l.,el
l•ut-=aped lot, 4 mil• from
Holzer Ho1pillil off Rt 3&amp;·
PGrterbrook Subdivision. Cell

nioa 2 bedroom , acre W11her,
dryllr, lf(Mt, rtrfrlg, new curtain• Included. 823,000. Will
Mil lend cont,.ct. CIII614-388-

Annou ncam an Is

Collie~

___ _

Vinton~completly

992-6461

4

Bea~ttful Holcomb Hill. add..
tlonel lot 3 BR , Ce Call
814-44f..0338.

8t4-448-4189

POMEROY I OHIO

3

Homes for Sale

1.:~~:....:.:.:,:::__

APAR1M ENTS, mo.. e hGrl'*.
hou••· Pt. Pl . . .nt.ndo.tllpo-

.s.....

SON ESTATES, 531 Jacklon
Pike from t183 • mo W.. k to
shop end movl•. 814-448-

Nicely' furriehed 1melt hou"

expll'lance neces11rv. ho•pit•l

t4&lt;81, 2 lA . on I ..,. 101. 2
chll&lt;hn ocoaptod, f185 por

2 BR .. furnlohacl nao • mo.

blo. 304-882-3394.

Real Eslate
31

ol-lc. Soc. dop . .ulrod. COl
814-4411-8181

992-2403. 114-952-2t8t "" Mov.,g -&amp;tiro hou-old114-982-2780.
- IGrJodc or
......_
Dobbl
rofrlg.. -hort-......
•
flYing room IUIII~ eH under 4

carpM:ed. •II ""11'- pili d ~epl

Must •111•c:relandwlth1 h81
trail• 1 2x24 room 8dded on.

Plano Tuning. Dependable ser·
vice Iince 1966 A11o grand
piano for Ill• lane Daniels·

Pl_..t Valli¥ Ho1pllalll •ek·
lng full time cook. ~ to 5 yell'l

On e. two, •n d ttne bedi OtWft
1p.-tment1 for ..nt. C.ll 814-

Furnished 2 BR Adullo orofv . No
peu. 322Thlrd A... Coll8144411-3741.., 25$-t903.

Coli 814-742-2235 oft• 8:30

814-448-7388
Skoggo AppH.,oeo. 189 Upper
lllvot Rd.

N-!v do0010tod, 2 IR., fully

197314x84,2BR bcol.cond.
te.OOO. Call 814-4411-0362

372-8405 .. 372-2578.

999-0727.

TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

CONTRACTING~

Galllpollo .. Gtoen School Dis-

614-992-5857

$14 PEl TON

GRAVEL-- SAND

CHESTER, OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

lliE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. reconTn~~~nda that you
do buslnesa with paople you
know. end NOT to send money
through the mail untl you hwe
lnYHtiglted the offering.
.:.,.

Ce1h peid for quits Pre
1960's Pieced, appMqued,
unu1ual-any conditiOn. Call

MAXIMUM

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE

9·1-81-ltll

For •leb¥ owner: 12x63moblle
hon. •lind ~ •ere land m/1.
Pr-y bordoro- hl,_,_y
end oounty ,.,.d. 4 mil• from

33 ecret, por.;l, fenced. water
well *400 .,., ICI'IIJ, Puture

I NOTICE I

~-.:...

t972 Ford F280 lruck. 304882-2471 or BB2-3152.

ARMY SURPWB (1\d. . .lolng
Sp"'!iolt'-. Buolneoo. ""lblcol.

au...
N ~ ~olorlolo

QUILTS

Sorry, no deliw•r or other
coupons cembined with lhis
off•.
9/6/11/1 -

DHier for
YARDMAN &amp; ECHO
Located Hellwl'f
between Rt. 7 &amp; Bashan.
NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
Servico Canter far Ryan
Produ&lt;11
8.7 Financmg on Yardman
Service on All Makes
We Honor MC/Ditc/Visa

Business
Opportunity

tor

W~ntldtobuylle~tingwhHI

40.000 nu•40o. Both-on

wl-.CAll 814-912·2141

66 Building Supplies

end timber. 814-949-2067.

23

Morning .....

m-•· 304-8711-2722.

35 Lots

t-8011-187-1000 E,. R-9805

for current federal Utt.

lrMtmilolon 304-773-1151 .

•zoo. w..m

B_.,.rd el.,. htMitert &amp; tt.r·

$t2.500. S01iouslnqulr'-onlv.
304-8711-3t17 oftor 7 p.m.

FillnllCiill

County Health Department Ia an
EqUid Opportunity emplnyee.
AppUCIIlonl mev be ab11lned at
the Meig1 Cnunty Health

- c fumoco. 81.380 BTU.

196301dlmobUe9$ Mo10fllld

tlonlndopendenoa Rood. At. 21 .
304-273-6115.

Mc01nlel CUllom Butchering,
open 6 days a 'Nitalc, call

21

avslllble.

8:00 PM. Sam SomoM!Io'o

1984 1 .._85 Sohultz, 2 br, 1Ya
b•h.. til elec niMI' a ·o urlt:,
range, refrlfl, Willi' bed •
covered porch Included,

Oaol·

Parts

far solo. UIOO voluo. - ·
- · Coiii14-IIIS2-at2S.
For ..... Wood opllttor. II 4182·1411 -.o 4p.m .

Ah l•maJ . Fri. lat. 8u n. No onto

.. , _ U3,000.00. 6t4-2748247.

304-BB2-3224

mo.

BUlL T

bobybeds

814-742-2951

,P: .~~~••

II - - - et ... IS.

iiWib

bu'* •bodo with boddlng-U29.

Hou• cleaning and office cleen·
lng, have references, 304-876-

4462 ... 875-8457

: SUPER LAIGE DIIINIS

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949-2969

Galllpollo City Umito. Call 8t4448-4981

ha~Nng,tomet.-etrimmlnglnd

PM

10·8-tlc

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Will do bat:Ptlitting In 111¥' home.
dav lhlft ontv Uvi J~lt outside

Y •d c•e. bruth cutting. light

2 ~ In Centenery-Northup
area Call614-446-31641fter7

· s•.so + 4 FlEE

16141

weekctav•. C.ll 814-446·9489.

W1nt to Buy·U18d Mobile
Homet. Clll, 614-446·0175

!~~'!'! !~~~~ .s.•,.tr~~·.:

~ =!~·!~ ..·.P~P.

Wm do betJttitting in my home-

Painting • roofing ill c.,.,.ntry
work by the hour or job Cell
814-371J..2416

Wanted To Buy

Co11814-388-9312

992-2221 or 992-9922

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

Cent•l OI•Nr• Lar~
home Anytlm._ Clll 614-367·
CBL

We're moving Slle Item• toO
numerous to m.nlon. Sat 9·4.

Wanted To luy~Stending
nmber. Ref•ences available

MAIN

•
:

f.":

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Do

Mottwr of two provtde loving
c.a Craft• A sklglng. flefwen~

Yard •le. Ruttend. Slturd.y
Sept 24. 9·5. Bob Eldl re1t.
dance on Salem St Rain or
shine.

m-. 614-2411-1152.

Evenings by Appointment
2 m1les toward Albany on

992 -66,1313G-'Bl lin

3-11-lfn

Wanted to

Auto

UMd 'ft'anamiMiona All imer·
nelly intpect:ed. 30 dan 9Uit'lf'l·
••· We buy trlnamltlk)nl. C.ll
11.4 ~ 446 · 0188 Rebuilding

..eldon

a.h~m~'•

Bloclr. rid&lt;. _ . , plpeo, win-

Dozer • Backhoe Work·S&amp;O
CIH dozer Ae•onabla retes.

Want to buy Used furniture and
antlqUH. Will buy ent... houl8·
hqld furnishing. M•Un Wed&amp;-

Hours 10-4

Middleport, Ohio

NO SUNDAY CAllS

!l-19-881tn

SECOND TIME
AROUND SHOP

Authorized Serrice
&amp; Part1

Jacobs an

18'

2282

SMALL ENG1ii"1
REPAIR - I
Briggs

tol""""'c..,.., dolllo-t48.111S
•• 271,
up.
ftantIUita
IP'• ·
oom
ful..

1055B

We pay c•h fQr 1818 model dean
Ul8d C.l
Jim Mink Ch•. ·Oidllnc
Bill GeneJohn•on

RACINE, OHIO

CALL 992-6756
"DOC"

-h--f219 ..... bolo. .
........,g.ti.TV ...do.-·

elate. 304-8711-83&amp;3.

Call448·4387 Reg. No. 81-1 1 ~

S-'•AIIin or Shine.
Charolafa Hltll·off O.J While
Rd. Fri. a S~. 9 to 6.

O.l'l(lt

9

RACINE
GUN CLUB

NIASE Certified Mechanic

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

large ·lot ball\ 2
Ael) roof and

GUN SHOOT

Moat Foreign and
Domestic Veh1cles
A/ C Sarvtce
All MaJOr &amp; Minor
Repa1rs

New Honitt Built

CUSTOM

~ lAND CO fl..

Pomeroy, Ohio
7 13 88 lin

SYRACUSE, OHIO

PAT HILL FORD
l...l:l.a;

997-6715 or 997 -7314

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

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

Alice and George.

Y. C. YOUNG Ill

9/15188/tln

INSULATION

g.-g .. 281172 ft Su toappre.

RE-TRAIN NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COUEGE, 529 Jockson Pike

127 State 51 Sat ·Sept. 24 2
temlll•.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

(FREE ESTIMATES)

446-3487

J&amp;L

1
--eets-e141
· .. f11.111S,• wood
dinette
up.

Uka , _, 3 br vinyl tiding. 2 ••

Flo,.. and

FIIMood IGr ulo. 304-89833911.

Conld. Call 814-2156-1718

alectflcal

2 po.-1219.

Schools
lnstru ction

Would •• to do bei:J¥1hting in
myhome Dayornigllt t1 .00a
hour C.ll 814-388·8886.

WQrk
- Plumbing •nd
work

GALLIPOLIS, OH.

1· 3·'86-tfc

8undlly, 12 - 8 I'M

U.lng · - -

Cell Ul for your mobile home
lneur~nce : Miller lnturance.
304·882·2146 Also: auto,
hon., Ufa, hllllth.

Experl.noe operator. CrlltmQns

~ Concrete

56 STATE ST.

Far111 Equl~ment
Partt &amp; Servlee

Open7d.,aaweell

Mo...,......... I AM·I I'M

Insurance

15

78

111lnce 1184. Regular :army
'--j denim. ,.,.. dothlng.
Jt umoufl111e blk 1nd white.
Pont 1971 llle or trede. JUnc-

YOUNG'S
- Addons end remodeling
- Roofing and gutter w9rk

IH11011ablt latn

Equipment Dealer

13

8-11·1 mo. pd.

Service
FREE ESTIMATES

Authorized John
Deere, New Holland.
Bush Hog Farm

Gill~

IUT 'N' CARLYLEe by Lorry Wri&amp;hf

64 Mile. Merchandise
Ort!inlol Wolfo ... _
""""'"'
1280o Coli 114-i14ti-..,1Z.

F~nltu..

Vlfle't

949-2168

Complete Drywall

614-662-3821

Meln free Mtlftor: 3 br •nch
temlly 100m w.b fhptec .. new
cent•l e-c. Iaroe dtck. ~ooden
lllftle bldg. Pflced mid tiO' ..
Owner mull 1111. Mihan off•
304-87... 7438
p,.,,

Goodl

The Daily Sentinel Page- 9

• Ohio

&amp; Accessories

oldlrfv PlftOO. Calf 614-44113024

FREE ESTIMATES

TRI·STATE
DRYWALL CO.

61 Houallhold

LAFF·A·DAY

repty to: Earnest

C111 11ft in or by the dey ••
c.mpanlon or hou•keeper to

NEW- IEPAII

' mo. pd.
8·8-1

8-8-88-tln

Pt ...e

Homes for Sale

eft•.

wanted

MciC.innev. ?a Court St. ,
poll1. Ohio 415131 .

ROOFING

FILL DIRT
985-4487

All 1reu Call Marityn

Situ ationa

12

dor11.

Howard L. Writesel

SAND-GRAVEL
LIMESTONE

~

GentMm111 need• room a board
lnQeiiiDolil Will PIYfor-.ndry

We Service All Makes
1122/88/ tln

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning'
Painting

AVON

Wo- 304-882-21.S.

Yard Sale

985-3561

HAULING

PER lO~O
DEliVERED

lngo. Coli t-(3tl)733-1012.
Ext. F27..
·

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

1-28-'88-ttn

6-17-tfc

SERVICE

lri loving memory of
Frank and Anna Holmes
.Family, Elmer and Fran~
cos. Ray and Mayme,
Wm . and Dorothy. and

Still loved. still missed.
still very dear.
•.-'
Sister Dorothy

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, bhio

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

mv 95th birthday. 1

from each

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

I would like to thank
everyone who re-

hearing

992-6282

Free Estimates
Call 992-2772
1/ 15/ tln

' 1 • Card of Thanks

;appreciate

"leo TtUtllllstln

31

•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
" Mutt Be Repairable"

&amp; HEATING

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Help W.nted

do!&gt;

Blacll and whl1e -

t;:;;::;;;;::;::;====:::;tr=========~r=========it;:========:;i
TAnoos
•• St•er Roger Hysell
WANTED 7
CARTER'S
2 Lincoln Terrace
DEAD 01 AUYE
· Garage
Pomeroy, Ohio
PLUMBING
•Waahera •Dryers
992-6857

11

Loat and Found

6

Pomerov- M'

Friday, Septembal: 23, 1988

Re•oneble .,,~ lmmedi11a ~ "'"'

Weuenon' • Weter HIMIIing,
,..1oneble rltft, lmmed•et•
2,000 gallon dellvMy, cistel'n8,
poQI•. 'Mill, etc. c.. 304-!17&amp;.

2119.

Pltrfck' l

Wat~r

HIUIIng. 2.000

trlaountyarH23,..... Thebwt
5n furnllut11 u.rrall••lng. Cltll
11 ft. Alum. bUt. motor end

-

....... St4-112·1888.

'

,

S04·111·4 84 for !roo

ntlmMM •

r

-

I

�10-The Deily Sentinel
'

Local ~ews briefs...-· ----- Mason ...
Continued from page 1

EMS has 11 calls Thursday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 11 calls
Thursday; Middleport at 12 ·a .m. to Powell St. for Emmett
Lightfoot who was treated but not transported; Middleport at
12:49 a.m. to Powell St . for Grovle Lahman to Holzer Medical
Center; Syracuse at 2: 13a.m. to Salser Road lor Phyllis Baker
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 8:42a.m. to Hysell
Run Road for Dora Smith to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 12:04 p.m. to the food stamp office for Gregg
Hopkins who was treated but not transported; Rutland at 12:45
p.m. to New Lima Road for Ethel Lambert to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Racine at 3: 02 p.m. to Route 124 for Ron
Jones to Veterans Memorial Hospital ; Syracuse at 6: 29p.m. to
Southern High School (or Russell Singleton to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Racine at 8: 28p.m. to Route 681 for Floyd
Barringer to Holzer Medical Center; Middleport at 11: 59 p.m. to
Hartinger Parkway for Susie Abbott of the Shade area to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

--Area deaths-Joseph~Godwin

COOL VILLE .,- Joseph B.
Godwin, 57, of Route 1, Coolville,
died Thursday at Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital In Parkersburg, W.Va.
Born Feb. 8, 1931 at Kingstree,
S.C., Mr. Godwin was a son olthe
late Rev. Arthur and Bessie
Gaskins Godwin.
Survivors Include his wile.
Vivian Cooke Godwin; three
· sons; Joseph E ., Richard W. and
· Don L. Godwin, all of Cqolvllle;
one daughter, Vickie Varfier of
Parkersburg, W.Va.; four grandchildren: one·stster, Irene Wells,

of Beaufort, S.C.; four brothers,
Clifford Godwin, of Allendale,
S.C., Roger Godwin, of Aurora.
Colo., Herman Godwin, of Beaufort. S.C., and Rev. C.C. Godwin,
of Westminster, S.C.
Another brother preceded him
In death.
ServiceS will be Saturday, 2
p.m., at Torch Baptist Church
with Rev. Gary Kendall offlclat·
lng. Burial will !le In the Torch
Baptist Church Cemetery.
Friends may c a II at White
Funeral Home today !Friday),
after 6 p.m., and on Saturday at
the church for one hour prior to
services.

Divorces sought

· Weather

Filing for dissolutions of their
marriages
In Meigs County ComSoudl Central Ohio
mon
Pleas
Court are Leonard
Tonight: Moslly cloudy, with a
Dailey
Jr.,
Reedsville,
and Cryschance of showers. Lows will be
tal
Dailey,
In
care
of
Ronald
between 55 and 60. Winds mostly
Jacobs,
Racine;
William
Boyd
northeast less than 10 mph.
Deem,
Long
Bottom,
and
Beth
. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Orva
Ann
Deem,
Long
Bottom;
Saturday: Considerable cloud: !ness with a chance of rain. Highs Jean Holter, Long Bottom, and
' will be near 75. Chance of rain 40 Harold H. Holter, Long Bottom.
James E. McKnabb, Albany,
percent.
has
filed for a divorce from
Exlended Forecast
Christy
L. McKnabb, Albany.
Sunday throuJ!h Tuesday
Fair through the period, with Christy L. McKnabb has flied a
highs In the 70s and lows In the separate action for a divorce
from James E. McKnabb.
50s . .

Licences issued
Marriage licenses have been ·
. Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Thomas Arthur Klein,
28_, Syracuse, and Becky Lee
Hudson, 21. Syracuse; Bruce
. Wade Humphrey, 23, Pomeroy,
and Pamela Sue McNerlln, 22,
Oak Hill;• James W. Wolford, 46,
Racine, and Goldie Marie Carson, 45, Racine; Randall Glenn
Browning, 27, Reedsville, and
Cindy Lou Boso, 23, Reedsville.

Lottery numbers

Sunday

Continued frOID page 1
we don't care if you are leaving
tomonow. We're just asking you to
examine your conscience. Take a
stand. Sign the resolution. If the
companies want to take it to coun,
fine."

With that prodding, Watkins said
he would second Mayes' motion
that lhe resolution be put up for a
vote. Once it was voted on and approved,
an
excited
Merle
Armstrong ran up to Watkins and.
slapped him five like the .s~rts
ligures do after a wmnmg .
touchdown.

Continued !rom page 1
through the heart of ·the Mississippi Valley to the western New
England · stales. Clouds also
obscured the sun over the Pacific
Northwest. .
Clear skies and mild temperatures prevailed across the rest of
the nation.
Temperatures around the nation early today ranged from a
frigid 33 degrees at Butte, Mont.,
Mccall, Idaho and Yellowstone
National J;&gt;ark, Wyo., to a balmy
82 degrees at Corpus Christl,
. Texas and Tampa, Fla.
Thursday's high was 97 degrees at Fort Smith, Ark.,
Lakeland, Fla., and Wichita,
Kan. The first official start of the
a11tumn season also was the first
day without any 100-degree readIngs across the nation since May
30, the NWS said.
Showers and thunderstorms
were forecast along a cold front
from New England across the
Ohio Valley to Oklahoma, the
NWS said. The most moisture
was expected to fall over eastern
New York state and the New
England states.
Clouds were forecast for the
upper Great Lakes and the
middle Mississippi Valley.

WAS S26,900

88 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS
INTERNATIONAL SERIES

: $497.

Stocks
Dally stock prices
. , (As oliO: 30 a.m. )
· : Bryce and Mark Smith
. of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power ... .. .. ...... 27'4

AT&amp;T ... .. .. ............ .... ... .... ... 26%
. Ashland on ........ ... ...........,.32'!\
• Bob Evans .................. .. .. ..... 16
: Charming Shoppes ... ........... 13'4
:City Holding Co .............. ... .29%
: Federal Mogul. .. .............. .. .45%
·Goodyear T&amp;R ............. ......57%
' Heck's .... .. .. ... .. .. .. .... ...... ..... . %
Key Centurion .................. ..16%
Lands' End .. ....... .... ...... ...... 29%
:Limited Inc .. ............ .'......... 21%
·Multimedia Inc .................... 74
:Rax Restaurants .................. 3%
;Robbins &amp; Myers ........... .. .. . ny.
;Shoney's Inc .. ...................... 7%
Wendy's Inti ..... .. ....... ... ... .. .. 6%
Worthington Ind ........ ......... 21%

Correction
Testimony this week in
Milson County Circuit Coon
shows only one shot was fued
from the 12-gauge shotgun
police say was used by Hetman
Lee Staats to shoot and kiD
Michael Donald Boyd in May of
last year in New Haven. A report
published in the Point Pleasant
Register on Thursday stated that
testimony revealed Boyd was
shot twice by lhe gun. That infonnation was Incorrect and
does not in any way reftect the
comments of any of those who
had testified in the case up to
. Thursday afternoon.

.,

UPJ While Houoe Reporler

880~~-~lE~~;~~~~

-WAS 114,900

WAS '10,900

88 OLDS,~~E _9~_!~ENCY,...,..._

WAS S11,900

NOll S16,700
CAMARO

~'""

(

WAS S7,400

86 CHRYSLER LEBARON

1

172 North Second An.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
PH. (614) 992-7075
Gory Snouffer - 992-7446

WAS S3,500

84 PONTIAC PARISENNE

.,,.,,, Storewide Sale
.

t

WAS $5,600'

NOll 54,400

OFF EVERYTHING
DON1 MISS TillS FINAL DAVI

WAS S6,300

This Week's Speelale
Two perfil• tf ltrlaity IMt•~Dipll'llfilhl«'ttl wit hour Ho.._cle Tartor Slue.. Hot
Gohlln fr•dt Frits •d your choice of tlo1Mmadt Ctlt Slaw, Mocaroni Sal .I. PototoSalocf

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

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 25th
BAKED SAUSBURY STEAK DINNER ................ S4.32

A... Portloo II Dolldoot lak"'lt.,.. _ . . , in o cro_, Muthr- ~
........ h . .hoolhtot. . .,~ ...........,..,,Ho_obdGr... lt.,.wBh
'
• - •4 , _ O.iao ofo Hot, lutllrt4Roll• - - - B . Mawtll- Colloo
or S.ko
lloth frailly lrowo' lA Small !oft Drink or Hot THMoy ltlul&gt;nB.W.I

Docalf_,.

STEAK SANDWICH ALONE ..................:..........$2.69

COBB

=-=·lill
J!\rrhaugl(s uf

NEW HOURS: MondiiV thru Sunday 10 A.M. to 9 P.M.

Qt~ratrr

liST

WAS S6,400

83 CHEVROLET MALIBU 4 DR....................... WAS S3900.oo
83 CHEVROLET CHEYmE 4 DR.................. WAS S3000.00
83 PONTIAC BONNEVIUE 4 DR.................. WAS '4100.0o
84 DODGE OMNI 4 DR.................................... WAS '3000.00
82 DODGE MIRADA 2 DR-------····-··--··- WAS s32oo.oo
74 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS SUPREME_.•....:. WAS S1900.oo
80 CHEVROLET CITAnON 2 DR.................. WAS S1900.00
80
CITAnON 4 DR.................. WAS snoo.oo

FRIDAY, SEPTEJIER 23rd
FISH &amp; CHIPS PLAnER ................................. S2.34

.

IOUII7
WE GIVE 8£.NIOR

Sunday: Mostly sunny, with
highs in the lower 70s.

tmts 9 Section a, 56 .Page~ ·

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant. September 25, 1988

By HELEN THOMAS

WAS '10,500

WAS S17,900

... ,

20°/o TO 50°/o

Along the River ......... Bl-8
Area deaths ................. .A3
Buslness ...... ... .. ............ D1
Comics- .................. .Insert
· Classllleds ............. .. .. D2-7
Sports ............ .. ..... Cl-602

A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Chemical weapons ban on Reagan's agenda

Meigs court ·news

BROWN &amp; SNOUFfER
ARE &amp; SAFElY
EQUIPMENT

..

Inside•

•

•

Vol. 23 No. 33

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24th
IS THE FINAL DA Yl!!
t\'o•~

In Our Town: Jack Massie to retire
Page B6

Copylig- 1988

PJCK-4

3988.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$211,681, with a payoff due of
$95,302.
PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
· $5,964. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays

Bl

88 CHEVROLET CORSICA

Announcements

' CLEVELAND (UPI)- ThursVelerans Memorial
: day's winning Ohio Lottery
'Thursday Admissions - Phyl1 numbers:
lis Baker, Racine; Mary Page,
Dally Number
Langsville; Ronald Jones, Ra738.
cine; Basil Haynes, Langsville.
, Ticket sales totaled
Thursday Discharges - Bon$1,202.126.50, with a payoff due of . nle Ransom, Larry Hudnall,
. $232,403.50.
James Owens, Russell Cullums.

Beat of the Bend: Get involved in AAUW
Page 87

11011 S19 ,800

swas '21,900

Cl

College football results

The simpler
pleasures of
life...

Showers...

Arthur clark and Kim B.
Clark, Bremerton, Wash., and
Peter F. Klein and Carla C.
Klein. Arlington, Va., have flied
suit In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court against Dennis I.
Boothe. Pomeroy, demanding
cancellation of a coal lease and
damagel( of $10,000.
In other court matters, BancoSpecial meetlns
hlo
National Bank has been
A special meeting of Middlegranted
a $3,265.24 judgment
port Lodge363F&amp;AMwlllbe held
from
Donald
Deskins and Kathe7 p.m. Tuesday. -Work will be In
rine
Deskins.
.
the fellowcraft degree. RefreshDismissed
by
the court were
ments will be served following
the
cases
of
Beth
Deem against
the meeting.
William
Deem;
and
Veterans
LodJ!e picnic
.
Memorial
Hospital
Care
Center
Shade River Lodge Is having a
Inc.
against
Kenneth
W.
Hartley,
family picnic on Sunday at Royal
·
Oak Resort. The lodge will roast et aL
a pig, and everyone planning to
attend Is asked to bring a covered
dish and table service. The picnic
SALES - SERVICE - TESTING
will start at 6 p.m.

Hospital news

50 cents

NOW
NOW 52200
NOW $3800

WASHINGTON (UP!) -In his final speech to
the United Nations, President Reagan will call for
an International conference to seek a world\VIde
ban on deadly chemic~! weapons, White House
officials said ~aturday.
The president, spending the weekend at Camp
David, Md. , planned to fly to New York Monday
for a two-day whirlwind visit highlighted by his
seventh and last speech to the world organization.
In a prelude radio addreSs Saturday, Reagan
said: "This year, as we survey the scene ofle last
time, we can see that our strength has Indeed
proven to be the engine of peace and hope In the
world.''
White House officials said that one of the new
Initiatives In Reagan's speech to the U.N. General

Assembly would be to propose an International
conclave to recommend ways to tighten curbs on
chemical weapons. Reagan's move, the officials
said, reflects growing concern over the use of
polson gases In regional conflicts.
The While House officials, who asked not to be
Identified, said Reagan would Issue a "general
call" to the signatories of the 1925 Geneva
Protocol, that outlawed polson gas and germ
watfare, to return to the drawing board to
recommend better ways to enforce the ban on
deadly chemical weaponry.
National security adviser Colin Powell acknowledged last Wednesday thai the superpowers both
have such weapons In their arsenals. Powell said
lhe chemical weapons the United States has In Its
"force structure" are obsolete and have to be
destroyed.
Most of the world's nations. Including Iraq,

have signed the protocol. But lraq recently has
been accused by the United States of using poison
"gas in a genocidal attempt to crush its rebel
Kurdish minority.
Both Iraq and Iran used gas and other chemical
weapons In their eight-year Persian Gulf war.
The war has been halted by a cease-fi(e
promoted by the United Nations and last week
Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq Aziz Insisted that his
country "respects and abides by all provisions ...
accepted by the International community ," such
as the Geneva Protocol.
The United Slates welcomed that statement but warily .
Administration officials said that Reagan will
not single out any nation but will express concern
that the enforcement of sanctions against polson
gas have weakened since they were largely
observed In World War II. Such weapons were

Total harvest
acreage lowest
in century

Gallia ballot features
local, national races;
one tax levy renewal
· By MARGARET CALD,WEU..
Tlmes-Sendnel Staff
GALLlPOLIS - With the
forest of political signs up and the
flood of commercials airing,
area ri!Sklents are reminded and
encouraged to register tq vote
. befo~ the October ckoadl!ne for
the 19!!1! General Election.
Deadline for voter registration
Is Oct. 11, with the Gallla County
Board of 'Elections office open
untlll · 9 p.m. Applications for
general election absentee ballots
are due by Nov. 5 at noon, with
absentee ballots returned by 7:30
p.m. election day, Nov. 8.
Gallia County residents may
register to vote at any of the
county high schools, Galllpolis
Municipal Building, Gallipolis
Deputy Registrar office (license
bureau) and the Gallla County
Board of Elections at the county
courthouse.
The Nov. 8 election ballot,
featuring the U.S. presidential
race, w!ll have six local contested positions. Among the local
offices on the ballot. senatorial.
representative and justice posi·
lions also are contesled.
Local contested positions Include two Gallla County commls·
sioner posts, prosecullng allor·
ney, sheriff, recorder, and
treasurer. Other local positions
Include clerk of court, county
engineer, and coroner. Only one
levy will be proposed on this
year's ballot.
This year's ballot will open up
to the presidential race with six
slates. Top candidates are Republicans George Bush and Dan
Quayle. aild Democrats Michael
Dukakls and Lloyd Bentsen.
Also running are Lenora Fulani. and Joyce Dattner. Lyndon
Larouche. Jr. and Debra H.
Freeman, Ron Paul and Andre
Marrou, and Edward Wlnn and
Barry Porster.
Next on the ballot will be the
race between Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohlo, and George Volnovlch, R-Ohto, for U.S. Senator.
Running lor lOth District Representative to Congress are
Democrat John Buchanan and
Re'publlcan Clarence Miller.
State Represntatlve candl·

dates for the 94th District are
Democratic Incumbent Jolynn
Boster and Republican Scott
Sigel.
The two positions for Gallla .
County Commissioners are one
of the more heated local races,
atona with rae~' Lor pro5t!CUlJnli
attorney and sheri«.
•· '
Running for county commissioner, Jan. 2 term, are Republican Incumbent T. Kall Burleson
and Democrat Clyde Burnett.
Running for the Jan. 3 term are
Democratic Incumbent J.E .
(Dick) Cremeens and Republican George Pope.
In the race . for prosecuting
attorney are Republica!) William
Conley and Democrat Brent
Saunders.
Running uncontested for Clerk
of Court of Common Pleas Is
Louise Burger. Republican.
In the race for sheriff are
Democrat incumbent James
Montgomery and Republican
Dennis Salisbury.
The contested race lor county
recorder has Karen Waugh
Brownell, Democrat, and Molly
V. Plymale, Republican.
In the race for county treas·
urer are Democrat Claudia Lyon
and Republican Incumbent
Myron L. (Bud) McGhee.
The final local positions listed
on the ballot are the uncontested
races tor county' engineer, with
Incumbent James Baln;l, democrat, and coroner~ incumbent
. Edward Berklch.
Four justice positions will be
on the ballot. Running for the
Jan. 1 term for Justice of the
Supreme Court are Paul Matta
and A. William Sweeney . For the
Jan. 2 term for Justice of the
Supreme Court are Joyce George
and Allee Roble Resn!~k.
Running for the Feb. 9 term as
Judge of the Court of Appeals, 4th
District, Is Lawrence Grey.
The contested race for the Feb.
10 term as Judge of the Court of
Appeal, 4th District, has William
Harsha and Gerald Radcliffe.
The only tax levy on the ballot
Is In Harrison Township for a tax
renewal for maintaining and
operating the fire station.

widely used In World War I.
A recent study by the Defense Intelligence
Agency listed about 20 nations suspected of
having chemical weapons and said another 10
countries were considering them .
Reagan devoted his weekly radio broadcast to
his forthcoming swan song before the United
Nations. He Indicated he plans to extol his foreign
pollcy In _the last eight years as a tribute to his ·
dOct rine of "peace through strength."
"One thing is certain," Reagan said. " If we' re .
to continue to advance world peace and human'
freedom , America must remain strong."
In an obvious swipe at Democratic presidential
candidate Michael Dukakls, who Reagan called a
" born again George Patton" earlier in the week,
the president said: "We must turn a deaf ear on
those born again patriots who talk about strength,
while serving .up the same old menu of weakness ." .

~'

CONSTRUCTION UNDERWAY - Dirt Is
flylns on the Syracuse marina project. Workers
for Rose Excavating, Racine, have starled
construction on the 188,000 plus project which,
when completed, will provide Syracuse with a
ramp, a courlesy dock off the ramp, a parking
area and a paved road to the Ohio River access
laclllly. Thill Is considered the first phase of the
marina project. It Is being funded by two Ohio
Department of Nalural Resources' grants, one
through the Bureau of Outdoor Recreation and

WASHINGTON IUPI) - The·
amount of land being harvested ·
this fall Is the smallest total In
this century, lhe resull of the·
brutal drought and government
land-idling plans. )he Agricul·
ture Department said Friday.
"Crop failure. mainly from .
widespread drought. is expected
1111-...,.,,n call-.., !armerB ro.. -'DCion
harvest on about14 million acres, .
twice the normal rate In recent
years," the department's Economic Research Service said In a
report on agricultural resources.
The harvest is estimated to
cover 284 million acres, which is 9
m1lllon acres, or 3 percent, fewer ,
than last year and 67 million
acres below the peak year of 1981,
when no cropland was Idled In
federal programs.
More than 78 m1llion acres,
were held out of crop production
this year, about 54 million as land
setaside so farmers could qualify
for farm program .benefits and
the rest In the long-term Conservation Reserve.
another through the Division of ~tercraft. The
About 328 million acres was
two 11ranls amount to 75 percent of the total cost
planted to crops this year, 3
with the remaining 25 percent to be provided by
percent less than In 1987. There
Syracuse Village. The local share has been
are
999 million acres In farm use
financed through Home National Bank, Racine
In
the
United States.
and Syracuse. Plans for the marina were
"While
well above normal for
,
'designed by Meigs County Engineer Philip
crop failure Is
recent
years,
Robert!;. Funding proposals were prepared by .
substantially
below
that which
Robert Wingett, grants administrator lor the
(See TOTAL, page M)
Village of Syracuse. (Times-Sentinel photo)

Bentsen says Democrats ·giv~ Ohio hope
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI)- Sand- middle class get squeezed."
Much of his audience was
wiching his remarks between
peals of thunder and jeers from · comprised of students from
Republicans on the fringes of a nearby Ohio University, and
courthouse rally, Lloyd Bentsen their loyalties were divided.
" I love the Democratic party
said Friday the Democrats bring
and
he's a Democrat," said OU
a message of hope toOh loans and
student Byron Ward of CleveAmericans.
Bentsen spoke to a noisy throng land, explaining why he was
of about3,500as part of a political holding aloft a Dukalds-Bentsen
trip taking him from Illinois to poster and cheering lor the vice
Pennsylvania.
presidential candidate.
"He's for civil rights," Ward
"Michael Dukakls and Lloyd
Bentsen believe In the promise said of Bentsen. Ward, a black
and thepotenllal of America." he student, said he orlglna lly was
for Jesse Jackson, but now wants
told cheering Democratic supporters. "We're not going to let Dukakls to win .·
However, Andy Ball, another
the rich get richer while the

student from the affluent Columbus suburb of Bexley, was at the
rally , waving a Bush-Quayle
sign.
"I've always been a very
conservative Republican," said
Bail. He said Democrats favor
government support ·or lndlvidu:
als while "Republicans say who
doesn'l need support of
government."
Bentsen concentrated much of

his message on educat ton. saying
that he was at the site of
educational excellence in Ohio
University.
The Democrat said the educational costs have doubled since
George Bush became vi ce president. He warned studems that a
baby born today would face cosls
of $60,000 to go lo college 19 years
from now.

On the road----

NOW $2200
NOW $2400
NOW $1 300
NOW $1200
NOW $1

500

CHEVROLET
OLDSMOBILE
CADILLAC

Switching system ready to go
POMEROY - The Wkstern
Reserve Telephone Co. which
serves part of the Meigs area will
be Installing new digital telephone switching systems In
October.
The systems, Stromberg Car·
son, will replace older, mechanical type central office equipment
which has been In used since the
1960's.
. A system will be Installed on
Oct. 1 which will provide the new .
switch service for 1,600 Cootvute
customers; over 320 Reedsville
customers; over 360 Tuppers
Plains cus!Dmer• and on Oct . 29,
a system provldlll8 . the new

'4

switch system for 720 Chester
customers.
''Installing th!! dlaftal switch Is
just one , of many steps In the
company's plan Ml continually
upgrade our equipment," said
Hugh Hlnemanl.ylee president of
operationS at weatern Reserve
TelephOne Co. ·'With state-ofthe-art equipment such as !)tis
switch, ALLTEL c~ provide Its
customers with the best possible

service."

·

The new equipment will provide cuswmera with the company's ''Hello" telecommunlca·
!Ions services Including: call

forwardlll8. automatically torwarding calls from one telephone
to another; call waiting, alerting
the telephone user of Incoming
calls when the line Is already In
use; speed calling, connecting up
to 30 frequently called numbers
by dialing only one or two digits;
three way calls, adding a third
party to a conversation already
In prQireSS.
'In addition, the new systems
wlll impro¥f! reliability and In·
crease call-handling capacity
through the use of fingernail-size
mtcroprocesstns chips.
The system has the capacity of
automatically checking the cus-

tamer's line and Its own software
for signs of trouble and then will
alert maintenance technicians so
problems can be taken care of
even before the customers are
aware of them.
There Is also a malicious call
trap featured that Is used to
obtain the telephone numbers of
harassing callers.
ALLTEL. Ohio, Inc., Is a part
of ALLTEL Corp., one the
leading telecommunl&lt;:atlons
companies provldlll8 local telephone service In 19 midwestern,
eastern and southern states as
well as other services.

Democratic vice pretltlentlal candldale Lloyd Bentaen wears a
cowboy hat pven to him after hla apeeell Friday on the sleps of the
courdlouoe In Athens. Alons with Benlaen t. his wife, Beryl Ann.
(UP I)
t

oJ

•

''

•

.•'
•'

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