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                  <text>Pega 12-The Deily Sentinel

lmnday, September 29, 1988

--Local news

than ...
briefs~ More
. Continued from page 1

EMS has four rolls Wednesday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
Wednesday: Tuppers Plaln8 at 2:56a.m. to Reedsville for Fred
Blse to Camden·Oark Memorial Hospital; Racine at 12:06 p.m.
to Long Run Road for Max Folmer to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Syracuse at 12: 15 p.m. to Seventh St. for .Francis
Adkins to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 2:31p.m. to
Kingsbury Road for Terri Furnla to Veterans Memorial '
Hospital.

~--Area
William Corbin
William H. (Bill) Corbin, Jr.,
69, 812 Elm St., &amp;llpre, died
Wednesday at Camden·Clark
Hospital In Parkersburg, W. Va. ,
following a short Illness.
Mr. Corbin was born at Mineral Wells, W. Va. , a son of the
late William and Amanda Drain
Corbin. He hadlivedlnBelprefor
the past 29 years and was a
frequent visitor to the Racine
area of Meigs County. He was a
member of the Marietta Bible
Center and served In the U. S.
Navy during World. War 11. He
had been employed by American
VIscose In Parkersburg for 18
years, the Kemper Insurance
Co., the Electrolux Corp., and
retired from Union Carbide Plas·
tics at Marietta after 26 years. He
was a former member of the
Belpre Civltan Club and the
Parkersburg 'Lions Club. ·
Surviving are his wife of 47
years, Mary Alene Buckley Cor·
bin; a son, Dr. Larry G. Corbin,
Oreenville, S.C.; a daughter,
Shirley Mulligan, Parkersburg,
four grandchlklren, three great·
grandchildren; two sisters,
Mildred Duckworth, Parkers·
burg, and Mary Jackson, Min·
era! Wells.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by two sons,
Gerry Lee and Terry Dean, two
sisters and a brother.
Services will be held at 11 a.m.
Saturday at the Spencer Funeral
Home, 220 Main St., Belpre with
the Rev. Myron Guiler and Dr.
Larry Corbin officiating. Burial
will be In Evergreen Cemetery,

deaths-Parkersburg. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 7: 30 to 9
this evening; 2 to 9 p.m. Friday
and untu time ·of services on
Saturday .

Mary Damell
Mary Elizabeth Darnell, 74, of
Route 1, Cheshire, died Wednes·
day at her home after an
extended Illness.
·
Born Nov. 13, 1913 In Cheshire,
she was a daughter of the late
Charles A. and Freda I. Jacobs
Thomas. She was a retired
cafeteria worker for the Kyger
Creek School District and a
member of the Old Kyger Freewill Bap tis I Church and the
Cheshire Wayside Garden Club.
Survivors Include a son and
daughter·ln·law, Thomas L. and
Peggy G. Darnell, or Trinity,
N.C.; a grandson, Eric T. Dar·
nell, Trinity, N.C.; a sister. Vera
TI\Omas, Cheshire; and a niece,
VIckie Hill, Marengo, Ohio,
In addition to her parents, she
was preceded In death by her
husband, Marlon P . who died in
1980.
Services will be . Saturday, 2
p.m ., at the Old Kyger Freewill
Baptlst Church wlth Rev. Miles
Trout offlcatlng. Burial will be In
Cheshire Gravel Hill Cemetery .
Friends may call at Rawling· .
Coats·mower Funeral Home on
Friday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9, and
on Saturday at the church, for
one hour prior to funeral. Memor·
Ia! contrlbu lions In Mrs. Dar·
nell's name may be made to the
Old Kyger Freewill Baptist
Church.

Farson read a proclama· .
Uon signed by Gov. Richard
Celeste extending congratula·
lions. to the local group on the
anniversary.
The Rev .. Sonny Zuniga, Jr.,
pastor of Heath United Methodist
Church In Middleport, accom·
panled by Donna Jenkins, pres·
ented several vocal selections
lnej,udlng "Bea~tlfu! Ohio" ; a
Ptilllppine love song; "The Lord
Is )l&lt;ly · Light and Salvation"
closing With " Let There Be
Peace on Earth".
Susan Oliver, Jeanne Braun,
Allee Wolfe and Doyle Hudson,
the RSvP staff, presented gifts
to !0 and 15 ye11-r honorees. Ten
ye~r honorees In the program are
Florence Adams, Esther Bukey,
Anna Rose Filch, Delmas
Kearns, Lee McComas, Ulllan
Napper znd Charles Rogers.
Flftee)l year service honorees
are Trody Andrews, Loretta
Beegle, C. E. Blakeslee, Nellie
Borgan, Marjorie Brewer,
Teresa Byer, Ora· Carsey, Edna
Clark, Thelma Dill, Garnet Er·
vine, Bessie Graham, Lula
Hampton, Mildred Harris, Nettle
Hayes, Dayton McElroy, Kermit
McElroy, Gertrude Mitchell,
Jestle Moklen, Nan Moore, Mar·
garet Parsons, Evelyn Summer·
field, Carol Taylor, Daren Tay·
lor, Henry Turner, Ada Warner
and Mae Weber.
Numerous door prizes were
awarded to round out the obser·
vance. Opening prayer was by
the Rev. William Mlddloswarth.

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Discharge&amp; Sept. 28: Brandon
Allensworth, Cynthia Diehl, Ja·
son Durham, Margaret Geer,
Mabel Harbour, Mrs. Timothy
Lambert and son, Catherine
Law, Jack Miller, Debra Mills,
Joseph Mulhern, Hazel Rice,
Lucinda Roush, Michael Skaggs ,
John Tilley, Jayne Walsh.
Births Sept. 28: Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Dennison, daughter, Gal·
llpolls Ferry. Mr. and Mrs.
Richard GIIIUand, daughter ,
Wellston. Mr . . and Mrs. Robert
McCarty, daughter, Oak Hill.

disq~alified

. South Central Ohio
Tonight: Partly cloudy, with a
low near 60. Southeast winds less
than 10 mph. Chance of rain Is 20
percent.
·
Friday: Variable cloudiness,
with a chance of showers. Highs
will be near 80. Chance of rain Is
40 percent.
Extended Forecast
Saturday through Monday
A chance of rain Saturday and
fair Sunday and Monday. Highs
will be mostly In the 70s Saturday
and ranging from the middle 60s
to the middle 70s Sunday and
Monday. Early morning lows
will range from the mid 50s to the
lower 60s Saturday and from the
mid 40s to the mid 50s Sunday and
Monday.

son, Pomeroy, $425 and costs,
three days In jail, driving while
intoxicated; Larry Martln, Galli·
polls, $25 and costs, disorderly
manner; $25 ·and costs, jail
disorderly; $100 and costs, three
days In jail, resisting arrest:
Robert Martin, Galllplls, $25 and
costs. disorderly manner; $25
and costs, jail disorderly; $100
and costs and three days In jail,
resisting arrest; $100 and costs
and three days In jail, menacing
threats.

Veterans Memorial
Wednesday Admissions -Max
Folmer Sr., Long Bolto!D;
Theresa Marcinko, Tuppers
Plains; Jessie Palmer, Racine.
Wednesday Discharges- Har·
ley McDonald Jr.

VOLUNTEERS HONORED - Pictured are
some ol the U year voluateer workers of the Melp
County Retired Senior Vohmteer Program
honored at a dillner Wednellday night markiDg the
Uth aanlverllll')' of the program loeally. The
volunteers received cUts aa did 11 year service
volunteers. In tbe front row are Gertrude
Mlklbell, Kermit McElroy, Jestle Molden, Trudy

Eastern ...

Continued

Dixie Circle Sayre as a half·llme
teacher for the new school year,
as a half·tlme learning dlsablll·
ties tutor pending certlflcatlon
and as a Chapter I reading
teacher for grades 7 and 8. Kim
Batey and William Robinette
were added to the substitute
teacher list for this school year.
Frona Riffle was hired as a

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

I

.

You have reached a milestone in your lives in
this final year of high school.
·
Let us help you appropriately note the accom·plishment with full color senior portraits taken in
warm and friendly surroundings.
We will show you from 10 to 12 previews from
which to make your final selection, and your portraits do have a lifetime guarantee. You'll like our
reasonable price structure.
For an appointment or more information, give
us a call. after 5 p.m. weekdays, anytime weakends.

Andrewa, Nan Moore, Teresa Byet, Carol TQior,
Daren TQlor; In the back row are, DaytGD
McElroy, Evelyn Summerfield, Mildred Harrta,
Marjorie Brewer, Edna Clark, Mae Weber,
GarliM Ervine, Ora Caraey, C. E. Blakellee,
Beary Tumer, Bessie Graham aad· . Lilla
Hampton.

substitute library aide, kinder·
garten aide, and secretary, and
Diana Nelson as a substitute
secretary, cook, library and
kindergarten aide to be used on
an as needed basis. At the
request of Linda Spencer, the
board reduced her position as
assistant to the treasurer from
full time to half time and hired
Dorothy Calaway to fill the half
time assistant to the treasurer's
position. Glen EasterUng was
hired as a regular substitute bus
driver.
The board entered Into a
service agreement wlih COG ·
SEOVEC for service on an as
needed basis on the district's
computer hardware and
equipment.
The board entered Into a contract
with Ohio University Therapy

is pCeasei to announce fit. wif{ 6e locating
fiis neui office in tflt. !Mu{ica{ Offtu 'lJuilaing
at
Pleasant 'liaf{ey !J{ospitaC.
Office fiours .are from 8:30a.m. ta.S p.m.
·'Montfay tfirougfi :Jriaay.
Jlppointments are now 6eing ta~n.

AnENTION
'

Village Pharmacy
Customers
VILLAGE PHARMACY
WILL BEGIN
.CLOSING AI

Pom1roy, Ohio

when yoU I ant. Repairs don't cost you a penny. Your low monthly rate includes

..

--

0

0

..._____ ..

~

~t

·

immediate repair or replacement. No more expensive repair bills. It's smart to rent.

0

''.

(304) 675-3.400

992-6669

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

AN EXCELLENT SELECTION OF

LADIES COATS
AND JACKETS
CONTAINERS AVAILABLE -Middleport businessman Edpr
Abbott stands beside one ol· the new heavy duty trash containers
wblch were placed In the North Second Ave~. business section In
lYllddlepo~t this week. The llix containers were purchi&amp;Sed by
Middleport VIllage through a state IIIIer control grant.

Hoeflich

liji#J

~R

Bush,
Dukakis
· clash on
taxes

Bob and Charlene

109 High St.

was purchased witb a Sl,OOG donation iiven to
Middleport VIllage by area motorcycle riders aad
S'7to which was provided by lbe vUiage.

•

LADIES· SWEATERS

October is recycling
month in Buckeye state

•COAT SWEATERS
·•PULLOVERS
•CARDIGANS
•SLEEVELESS VEST

'

LONG AND SIOIT
SUI VI

KNIT SUITS

BLOUSES

DRESSES

AND

·oPEN
'MQNDAY THRU
SATURDAY

•

~ ~ - ·~· -~ - •''''

PLAYGROUND EQUIPMENT INSTAUEDTbis playground equipment pictured, a swfniJ set,
sUde aad a sprlnr; hobby horse, has been Installed
at the Diles Park In Middleport: Tbe equipment

''

By London Fog and Shtr'!'ood of Ohio

·The Photo Place

9:30 TO 5:00

BARR MIDDLEPORT
CLOTHIE
•·

who worried that a 0.6 percent
July decrease signaled the begin·
nlng of an economic downturn.
''This might help to dispel
some of the recent speculation
that the economy was losing Its
upward momentum," said Robert Dederick, chief economist
for the Northern Trust Co. In
Chicago.
" I don't mean by that the
growth rate may not be slowing
but certainly II was a comforta·
ble Increase," Dederick said.
The deparlment's Bureau of
Economic Analysis said five of
the nine indicators available Cor
August contributed to overall
economic performance In Au·

gust, a forecast of how the
economy may be doing three to
six months down the road.
These Included lower new
claims for unemployment, Increased manulacturers' orders
for both consumer goods and
plant equipment, higher applica·
tlons for building permits and
hll!her prices for raw materials.
A faster pace of deliveries to
vendors, Indicating suppliers did
not have much business, a
shorter average work week,
falling stock prices and a tighter
money supply all subtracted
from economic performance,
holding the Index to 193.4, the
bureau said.

Man suffers bums in early
morning fire; hom,e destroyed

#

LEVI SPORTSWEAR

O

WASHINGTON (UPI)
Lower unemployment and brisk
manufacturers' orders for goods
and plant equipment pushed the
government's Index of Leading
Economic Indicators up 0.4 per·
cent In August. the Commerce
Department said today .
·Despite a 0.9 percent Increase
In economic performance from
August 1987 to August 1988, it Is
still the slowest s lnce the reces·
slon year of 1982, when the Index
dropped 4.4 percent from August ·
1981 to August 1982, the bureau
said.
·
Tl\e modest August Increase
was In line with analysts' expec·
!allons and should relieve some

•

ON SATURDAYS
TILL FURTHER
NOTICE.

26 Cents

A Multimedlo Inc. Nowst&gt;opor

Index figure increases

,.

Benjamin J.Sol,M.D.
Obstetrics and Gynecology ·

2 Sections, 14 Pogn

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September, 30. 1988

Associates to provide req ulred .
physical therapy services for one
student with special needs and •
entered Into a contract with ·
Llfetouch National School Stu· :
dios, Inc., for student pictures :.
this school year.
A budget modification for the ·
cheerleader fund was app~oved ·
along with several appropriation
modifications. A new budget for
the school newspaper activity ·
fund was approved. Ari e'lecutlve ·
session on personnel matters and
matters on the UPI;Omlng levy
wa·s held . ·
The next regular meeting was
set for 7 p.m., Oct. 24, In the high
school cafeteria. Members prei- .
ent were President Jim Smith;
VIce President Kathy Manlcke
and members, Susie Heines, Ray
Karr and I. 0. MCCoy.

A GOOD SELECTION OF

j

Vol.39, No.102
Copyrighted 1888

-.

f~om page 1

1:00 P.M.

Cong,•tul•tlonl High s~hool g.,;,,/

ParUy cloudy tonight, low In
mid 888. Saturday, cloudy,
high near 80, chance of rain 30
percent.

•

Am Electric Power ............. 27¥.,
AT&amp;T ....... ............. ..... ........ 25'Va
Ashland Oil .... ..... ...............33%
Bob Evans ........................... 16
Charming Shoppes ......... ... .. 13¥.,
City Holding Co ................... 34
Federal Mogul .................... 48%
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... ~7~
Heck's ......... ......... .. ............. %
Key Centurion ........... ......... 16¥.,
Lands' End .. ....... ..... ........... 30~
Limited Inc ......................... 23
Multimedia Inc .. ...... .... ........ 73
Rax Restaurants ...·............... 3¥.
Robbins &amp; Myers :............... lOY,
Revtval slated
. Shoney's Inc ..... ................... 7%
A weekend revival will be held
We11dy's Intl. .. .. ... .... ..............7
at LongBottom United Methodist Worthington lnd .......... .. ... .. 21 Yo
Church this Friday, Saturday
and Sunday at 7: 30 each evening.
The evangelist will be Bud
Hatfield. Everyone Is welcome.

Hospital.news

Daily Number
654
Pick 4
3442

Page 3

.'

- - - MI"ddleport COUrt-·- - - - Announcements
Four defendants forfeited
bonds and six were fined In the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Wednesday night.
Forfeiting were Jeffrey L.
Moore, Cheshire, $41, speeding;
Dale Clonch, Middleport, $450,
driving while Intoxicated: Eddie
Patrick, Middleport, $50, no
driver's license; Susie Abbott,
Route 33, Shade area, $100.
disorderly manner.
Fined were Sandy K. Evans,
Portland, $50 and costs, allowing
an unlicensed driver to operate a
motor vehicle; Charlie Brown,
Middleport, $25 and costs. dlsor·
derly manner; Jerry Armstrong,
Middleport, $25 and cost. dlsor·
derly manner; Richard L. Rob·

Ohio Lottery

USA team

~ounty.

The Meigs County Office of
Litter Control will be promotlng
a recycling drive In Meigs
County as part of the October
Recycle Month all across Ohio.
Last year saw the opening of a
local recycling center, making
available a conven lent location
to market Items locally. Many
Meigs Countlans have already
started recycling and Ken Wig·
gins, director of the county litter
control agency, hopes many
more will join ln. "It doesn't
cost," says Wiggins, "It pays."
Improper waste disposal
creates many problems lnclud·
lng littered highways, polluted
streams, and careless handilng
of toxic and hazardous wastes
causing many health problems.
Wlth the closing this year of the
Meigs County Landfill, Wiggins
says, It becomes even more
Important to find solutions to

By Bt.JD NEWMAN
United Press International
Presidential rivals George
Bush and Michael Dukakls, up·
staged by the space shuttle, tried
to bask In the glory of a
successful liftoff but still traded
barbs over Dukakls's plan to use
more agents to collect dellquent
taxes.
Bush. traveling In Michigan
Thursday· before heading to
Connectlcul and New Jersey
today, also accused his Democratic opponent of "demeaning"
attacks on GOP vice presidential
candidate Dan Quayle, who next
week debates Democratic vice
presklentlal nominee Lloyd Bent·
sen in Omaha. Neb.
The vice president said Duka·
kls's repeated claims that
Quayle Is unqualified to step into
the ·, Oval Office If something
happened to Bush - a view
shared by a majority of the
public, according to the polls ,showed "Insecurity , a certain
weakness" on Dukakls's part.
In Mount Clemens, Mich.,
Bush said Quayle " has my full
confidence, and I made a good
choice and he's going CNer very
well out there around the coun·
try. He'll do just fine (In his
debate) against Lloyd Bentsen."
Dukakls, campaigning In New
Jersey Thursday, picked up four
endorsements from environmen·
tal groups and from actor Robert
Redford, an environmental actl·
vlst whose good looks have
occasionally been compared to
Quayle's. In his 1980 race for th.e
Senate, Quayle himself made the
comparison In campaign ads that
pictured the two side by side ads that angered Redford, who
asked that they be halted.

these problems, and recycling is
a viable alternative.
Recycling Is easy- takes very
little time - and Is an activity
everyone can be proud to take
part In, In addition to the
financial benefits gained from
recycltng. Items used every day
and usually thrown away, II
recycled, can be used to make
new products, thereby helping to
conserve valuable natural re·
soures and energy, and greatly
reducing the amount of solid
Campaigning In St. Charles,
waste to be disposed of.
Wiggins Is encouraging all Mo., Bush criticized what he said
Meigs Countlans (community was a Dukakls plan to reduce the
ballooning federal budget deficit
and civic groups, churches,
by Increasing the number tbe
.scouts, 4·H clubs, schools,
·
Iniernal
Revenue Service audl·
garden clubs) to participate In
tors
to
crack down on tax
October Recycle Month. "It's an
cheaters.
excellent opportunity to raise
"Michael Dukakls wants to
funds for your organization," he
double the number of IRS agents
says.
and set them loose on the
Contlnued on page 6
American people," Bush said.
"And I just don't agree with his
vision Of America where the
government has a hand In every
pocket and a tax agent In every
home.
''Too often the IRS treats
Henry Wells, of the Pomeroy area, has been nominated by the
American
taxpayers as If they
Melp County Republican Executlve Committee as a member
.
were
guilty
until proven Innoof the Melp County BOard of Elections, replacing the late
cent.
And
In
a
Bulb admlnlstra·
Donald Collins. Mr. Wells' appointment will become effective
lion, Injustice In the tax office
as soon as he has been certified by Secretary of State Sherrod
will not be tolerated by the
Brown.
Continued on page 6
Continued on paae 6

Rick Hatfield, 34, Kingsbury
Road, awoke early this morning
to find his house on fire.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Danny
Zirkle reported that the !Ire
department was called around 4
a.m. to the two·story frame
house on Kingsbury Road. The
house was engulfed In flames
wheil firemen arrived and was a
toialloss .
Owner of the house was Leta
Hall, although Hatfield may have
been In the process of buying the
·
house, Zirkle said.
Hatfield was asleep when the
fire started and suatalned ·burns
to the back, and possibly arms
and legs, as he escaped the

house, Zirkle said. He was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
by EMS where he was admitted
with first and second degree
burns. He was lis ted Friday
morning In stable condition.
Although Zirkle Is not sure of
the .orlgln of the fire, he said It
appeared to have started In the
living room area.
Pomeroy Fire Departme111 re·
sponded to two fire calls, one a
house and the other a truck,
around 12: 30 p.m. Thursday.
The frame house on Smith
Road was In the process of bel!lg
torn down, Zirkle said. Although
\he man In charge of leaclng
down the structure did not know

how the !Ire might have started,
he asked firemen to let the
structure burn since It was being
dismantled anyway . Firemen
contacted the power company to
turn off electricity to the house
and then let It burn. The house
was owned by a Charleston,
W.Va. woman by the name or
Horton, Zirkle said.
The 1988 Ford truck which
burned near the gun club, just
past Meigs High School, was
owned by Rutland Furniture and
driven by Herb ·Grate, Zirkle
reported. Cau:w of the fire Is
unknown. The truck was com·
pletely destroyed.

AEP. head says last-minute Senate
proposal would raise electric bills
- Prohibit utilities from choos·
A new last·mlnute acid rain
lng
the lowest cost method of .
control proposal that may be
reducing
sulfur emissions by
debated on the floor of the u.s.
50·100 percent more
requiring
Senate In a few days would raise
costly
scrubber
retrofits at 61
electric bills In Olilo as much as
generating
units.
30·50 percent for business and 23
•This late attempt In Congress
percent for residential custo·
undoubtedly Is the most lnflexl·
me~s. W.S. White Jr., AEP
ble, expensive manner of reduc·
Chairman, said today.
White said the proposal, being lng power plant emissions yet
quietly pushed by Senator proposed. Like many such
George Mitchell of Maine, eleventh·hour proposals, It Is
lll·advlsed and deserves to be
would :
·
- Unfairly require expensive, . defeated, " Mr. White said.
Citizens and businessmen con·
outdated scrubbers on specific
cerned
about higher electric bills
power plants while Ignoring
call or write their Sena·
should
others nearby .
tors
and
U.S. Representatives
- Cause a dramatic downturn
and
voice
their concern this
In the Midwest economy, includ·
lng plant closings and thousands week.
The largest federally funded
of job layoffs.
- Effectively kill the nation's study of acid rain, a $400 million
Clean Coal Technology effort, said In Its interim assess·
ment last year that acidic levels
Program.
- Assess a kllowatthour tax of the natlon'slakes and streams
and sulfur emissions fee on have reached a steady state and
utllltles whose customers also Immediate new legislation Is not
would have to pay for adding required.
' The electric utilities In this
scrubbers.
country
are addressing concerns
- Promote the sale of Cana·
rain," the AEP Chair·
over
acid
dian power by exempllngg from
the kllowatthour tax Imported man said.
White pointed out, while utility
Canadian electrlclly.

coal use has Increased 76 per·
cent, utilities have reduced sui·
fur emissions by 18 percent since
1973 and will continue reductions
by developing and building new,
more efficient power plants with
lower emissions as older ones
need replacing.
' 'The answer for the future Is
clean coal technology ," Mr.
Write said.
"But lll·tlmed acid ralnleglsla·
lion as now proposed by mls·
guided sponsors In the last days
of this Congress will preclude a ·
gradual cutback In emissions
and replace It with an economic
shock we will feel until well Into
the next century," Mr . White
said.
That would be true because the
new acid rain proposal would
require the specific power plants
named to reduce sulfur emls·
slons 90 percent before the end of
1994. If utllltles raised their
electric rates enough to Install
scrubbers by that deadline,
neither the utilities nor their
customers could aCCord to spend
more money to build new , more
efficient power plants with lower
emissions.

-Local news briefs__,
Appointed to election board

VJ'

LOOK MIAT WE DID I - U reqellqmtlft I&amp;
p-lble lor IIIIa II'HP ol Syracu• fifth ;rradenlo
ra11e en0111h money to buy thll borbau&amp;alladder

for the ecbool pla)'lrotmcl, then think~ )'OD eu
do by reqcllac. Laat' rear, when lb- aludeats
were Ia the fourth grade, wllb help from lbelr
teacber, Sandra Baer, the)' woa Slllor helq the
ouC.Ialldiq reeyclen In Southern School Dlatrlct,
o(

•tor be1J1r lbe bat Ia the county; aud 1110 from
Tft.Oouuty Beeycllq Ceater lor brillpq !• the
mDIIt poanda o l - to tile eenter. Tbey eoattuued
lllelr reeyeltq eflorta lbrouellout the echool rear,
raliiDIMGO which wu appUed to the purchllllf! of
tile Nil hortaou&amp;al JadMr. Srracuae PTO kicked
In the remalnlac Pl. Great Job klda!

�F~~~ambw,30,1988

Commentary

Paga 2-The p.ily Sa olinal
Pometoy-Midd'aport, Ohio '
Friday, September, 30, 1988 :

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Meigs, Hannan Trace among USA relay team disqualified
·top gridiron teams m area
I

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA
;t~

~m~ rT'L....IL-...,.....~=•F7' .
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETr
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

AMEMBER of The United Press lnternallonal, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publlsbers AssoctaUon.
LETI"ERS OF OPINION are weloome. They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subject toed lUng and must be sJgned with name, addressancl
telephone number. No unsigned letters wDl be published. Letters should be in

good taste, addressing tssues, not perscrtallties.

Secret memo outlines talks Anderson-arulVanAtta
WASHINGTON - Two years
ago, Iran's second mostpower(ul
leader, speaker of parliament,
Hashemi Rafsan)anl, sent a
trusted personal envoy to Wa·
shington to reopen a dialogue.
The envoy, his nephew All
Hashemi, carried a secret, four·
point message that may have
even more meaning today, when
the aged Ayatollah Khomelnl
reportedly Is faltering, and Raf·
sanjanlls gaining power.
An official "Memorandum of
Conversation" that has been
withheld from the public, details
the conversation between Ha·
sheml and Lt. Col. Oliver North.
The memo outlines Hashemi's
four points, which might yet

become a basis for re·
establishing ties with revolution·
ary Iran.
Poillt No. 1 - All Hashemi 'ted
off with a truculent proposal,
"Responsible officials consider
that Iran and the United States
need to cooperate In opposlllg the
Soviets In Afghanistan ... " he
said. "One ofthe Iranian leaders,
In particular, has asked that I
make this message very clear.
With cooperation between Iran
and the United States, we can
make Afghanis tan a Soviet
graveyard and teach them a
lesson so that they wlll no longer
be able to Interfere In Islamic
countries.''
Point No. 2- "Iran needs U.S.

The legacy of President
Reagan's foreign policy
By HELEN THOMAS
United Press International
WASHINGTON- Ronald Reagan Is winding up his presidency less
hawkish than when he began. Peace Is wonderful. His policies, he has
decided, work.
Reagan came Into office believing that a little nuclear war in
Europe, using tactical weapons In the field, would not wipe out the
world. The uproar over those remarks caused him to change his tune.
His nemesis from the beginning was the Soviet Union or the "evil
empire" that he denounced In 19&amp;3. But as time went on. Reagan
began to change his tune. He decided that a nuclear war should not be
fought and could not be won.
With the deaths of the old line leaders In the Soviet Union, change
was apparent as a new face, Mikhail Gorbachev, appeared.
Gorbachev, a pragmatist, also decided that a nuclear collision was
out of the question.
By late 1985, a new era of superpower summitry had begun. Reagan
started a policy that his predecessors might have Initiated a lot
sooner, and he found the world receptive to moves to reduce nuclear
arsenals.
The achievement of a new arms agreement with Moscow Is the
jewel In Reagan 's foreign policy crown. In retrospect, he has had
some victories and some defeats.
In supporting the Afghan rebels, a policy initiated by President
Jimmy Carter, Reagan kept the pressure on the Soviets, who threw In
the towel and are now withdrawing their forces In Afghanistan.
He also counts a strong NATO, the invasion of Grenada and· the
bombing of Libya as his foreign pollcy pluses. In· using force, he
believes that he esta bUshed U.S. determination to act In Its Interests.
His decision to build up naval forces in the PersianGulftoasslstthe
oU rich emirates, who were threatened by the Iran-Iraq war, also
contr;buted to the cease-fire there.
The president also has been an ardent global salesman of economic
freedom and refers to China as an emerging capitalist nation. The
'
WASHINGTON (NEA)- The
new U.S.·Canada free trade accord, if the Canadiarl Parliament
highly publicized competition
concurs, also is a testament to Reagan 's philosophy.
among
the world's Olympic
The no-win situations In Africa, where both superpowers have
athletes
continues,
but the Seoul
.aided opposing sides, may also be resolved soon to end the bloodshed.
contest
the
tobacco
Industry
Some of Reagan 's pollcies have failed. For the past eight years, he
cares
about
was
resolved
witb
has sought to dethrone the Marxis !·led Sandlnista government in
considerably less fanfare last
Nicaragua. In his valedictory speech to the United Nations General
spring.
Assembly, Reagan said he wanted to take note "of the one exception
ln early May, South Korea's
to progress In regional confllcts."
government
eliminated or reAfter sending a peacekeeping force to Lebanon following the lsraell
laxed most barriers to U.S.
Invasion, Reagan decided the price was too high. The bombing of the
tobacco products, which until
AmeriCan Embassy and the Marine Barracks tragedy signaled a
now have accounted for only
time for retreat.
about 0.5 percent of South KoThe better part of valor was In order, and he pulled out. So much Is
rea's annual cigarette ·sales.
the Middle East turmoil on the back burner that Reagan devoted only
That's the equivalent of about
one sentence to the Arab-Israeli confllct in his U.N. address. And in
$1.3
million In yearly revenues.
listing human rights violations In various parts of the world, he did npt, ·
Under
the liberalized trade pol·
mention the Palestinians.
Icy,
however,
"American ci·
As for the American hostages In Lebanon, the president said he has
garette
companies
should be ..ble
"high hopes" and Is keeping his fingers crossed. But despite his
to
achieve
several
hundred milopUmlsm, aides rushed around to caution White House reporters
lion
dollars
of
new
sales
annually
against taking Reagan Uterally. There is nothing new, they insisted,
in (South Korea," says U.S.
on the efforts to obtain the release of the hostages:
TradeRepresentatlveCiaytonK.
Nevertheless. Iran Is signaling In various ways that it wants to
Yeutter.
come back Into the community of nations. It needs loans and it needs
The agreement Yeutter fashl·
friends . It Is not far fetched that Iran may Influence the radical
oned
with the Seoul government
Islamic captors to release the American hostages and others being
Is
the
most recent manifestation
held, including Britain's Terry Waite.
of
what
former ~'ederal Trade
The hostages held In Teheran when Carter was president were
released the day Reagan was Inaugurated as a snub to Carter. So
when he leaves, Reagan can point to some successes In paving the
way for a new era of peace, but some trouble spots remain for his
successor.
Behind In the polls, Gov.
Michael Dukakis has undergone
a conversion. He's discovered
·
that a little Ideology Is not such a
By United Press International
bad
thing after all.
Today is Friday, Sept 30, the 274th day of 1988 with 92 to follow .
Suddenly,
he's attacking his
The moon Is waning, moving toward It last quarter.
sharp
philosophical
opponent
on
The morning stars are Venus and Jupiter.
grounds,
portraying
Vice Pres!·
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
dent George Bush as a defender
of privilege, a starched and
soulless enemy of the environ·
ment, good schools and the
Interests of disabled veterans.
Tlits Is the same Dukakls, mind
weather
threatened
to
dampen''"'
·
you,
who spent the better part o,f
Ofar Editor:
our
spirits,
it
held
off
and
we
the
year
downplaylng his phUosoOn behalf ol the Coal Miners'
proceeded
to
make
a
profit
ror
phlcal
roots,
suggesting the elecChristmas Planning Committee,
the area children services ror lion should pivot Instead on the
I would like to thank everyone
this Christmas.
bloodless detalls of trade and
who helped make our first
softball tournament a success at
Chris Bailey budget policy. As be proudly
the Middleport Park the weekend
Secy/Treas Insisted In his acceptance speech
Coal Miners' Christmas at the Democratic convention,
of. September 17 &amp; 18. Though the
Planning Committee " ... this election tsn't about Ideo!·
ogy. It's aboufcompetence."
Yet If that's so, why did the
polls reverse themselves once
VIce Pr&amp;Sident George Bush
Dear Editor:
other children. I feel like I let that
went on the attack with a starkly
I feel like God has led me to hate and bitterness lead them to
Ideological message of his own?
write this letter In order to get rid believe that I didn't care any·
And why has so much commen·
of the hate and bitterness I have thing about them.
tary complained aobut tbe slim
carried In me for over 4 years. On
God showed me He took Rusty
pickings In the governor's mea·
Jline 23, 1984 I went thru one of to Heaven and that I have my
sage and asked him to please
tlie most tragic things that ever other ones to live for. He also
stand for something?
happened to me. I lost a son In a showed me I have to foraive the
The answer Is easy: When
fire. That was tragic enough butl ones who I have felt hate and
Americans go to the polls, they
believe that there was alot of bitterness against In order for
don't elect a CEO to mana1e the
neglect done and lies told. I won't met to live a better life and to get
public domain like an outalzed
name any-one but God knows and closer to God.
corporation. They vote for lOmeth:ey will answer to Him some
I hope that It anyone who reads one who believes In the same
day.
this bad any hate or bitterness things they do, who wlll react as
Because of that hate and toward any-one, It will help them. they would to fundamental
Remember God loves every- challenges.
bitterness I almost let It wreck
my life. Hate and bitterness can one even sinners.
That's why Americans were
eat you like a cancer. It might not
Nora Nltz thunderstruck to discover Rokill you but It can ruin you. I
Box907 nald Reagan· had bargained with
thank God for carrying me thru
Siler City, N.C. 27344
Iran over the release of hostages
that tragic time and also for my
In Lebanon. He was supposed to

Influence with the Arab countries
friendly to the United States In
order to diminish support for
Iraq," said the nephew. Then he
offered a startUng concession:
"Iran has also recognized the
need for a U.S. presence In the
region. By this, (we) mean even
a muttary presence."
Point No. 3 - The third Issue
was on. In the words of the
memo, "They (The Iranians)
think that the U.S. object with
respect to the price of on Is the
same as that of Iran, that Is to
say, the United States favored a
sUght increase In the price of oil
and stabilization In the ptlce of

ou:·

Point No. 4 -

crlbed the fourth ilaue, the ,
securJty ot the Persian Gulf, as
the "most .Important." He said
Iran understands U.S. concer11
over :•a flood of terrorism In the
region." He Insisted that "the
Shla religion, under the Ayatol·
lab, Is absolutely . opposed to
terrorism and the taking of
hostages." He acknowledged '
that "there are people In Iran
who do espouse hostage taking;
and terrorism" but pleaded that
"Iran still does not have strong,
effective control" over these
extremists.

The back channel to· Rafsan'
)ani was opened by retlrecl Air
Hashemi des- Force Gen. Richard Secord, who ·
met the nephew In Bru-ls and
arranged bill secret flight to
Washillgton. According to the ·
memo, Hasheml"noted Secord's :
statement In Bru-la to the
effect that the United States
would oppose a Sovlety thrust
· into Iran, with or without support
of the government of Iran. The .
government of Iran found this
statement to be Interesting and
comforting."
•

...
•
Robert Walters i

'.
I

Commission Chairman Michael
Pertschuk aptly characterizes as
a "Third World strategy"
adopted by domestic tobacco
companies to sell their products
in this country and around the
world.
As white males a bandon unhealthy cigarette smoking In
substantial numbers, the lndustry Is focusillg Its marketing
efforts - at home and abroad .,..
on Asians, Hispanics, blacks and
women.
The number of U.S. cigarettes
exported annually never exceeded 30 billion until the early
1970s and was below 60 billion as
recenTly as 1984. Last year, the
figure reached 100 billion as the
result of an ambitious Industry
effort to open new markets,
especially In Asia.
In Japan, purchases of cl·
garettes Imported from the Unl·
ted States more than tripled
between 1986 and 1987, with the
· total well over 300 million last
year. The value of this country!s

clgarettes sold on Taiwan soared
from $4.4 mUllon In 1986 to $119
million In 1987.
As the domestic tobacco Industry Is beset by legal and medical
challenges at home, Its exports to
Asia alone Increased by an
amazing 76 percent last year,
producing an estimated $1 billion
In new revenues.
As In South Korea, the increases In Japan and Taiwan are
directly attributable to govern·
ment negotiatiOns that led to an
easing of tariffs, quotas and
other Import restrictions.
Almost as successful is the
application of that Third World
strategy to cigarette marketing
In this country. "Black males
smoke more and haye the highest
... mortality from lung cancer
than any other sex/race group,"
notes one medical authority.
Finally, there's the case of
women, datillg back to a stillcelebrated Incident In which a
pollee officer arrested a woman
for smoking In public on New

York's Fifth Avenue In 1904.
In more recent decades, the
country's tobacco companies
have posed as "enllibtened
friends of feminist aspiratiOns,"
notes Pertschuk, a longtime
Industry critic and co-director of
the Advocacy Institute here.
Indeed, many women have
been convinced that smoking Is
somehow llnkled to their Iiberalion from earlier social and
cultural restraints - a belief
reinforced by an enduring adver·
!Ising slogan created for the
country's largest cigarette rna·
nufacturer: "You'vecomealong
way, baby."
Virginia Slims, to whom that
slogan belongs, Is only one of the
cigarettes created especially for
female consumption. Others In·
elude Eve, Satin, More and Ritz.
But here's how far you've
really come, baby: In 1985 lung
cancer that kills the most Amerlcan women -an appalling trend
that has continued In succeeding
years.

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Letters to the editor

Tournament a success

On hate and bitterness...

.

)

'4

•

~cEiroy

honored

. Meigs senior tailback/linebacker Jeff McElroy was honored by the Meigs County
Jaycees as Its Player of the
Week.
. He carried the ball23 times for
a. career-high 203 yards and two
touchdowns In the Marauders'
· 2~-9 win over Wellston last week.

hltdng defense, are 4-0 on the
season, with all of their games
coming against TVC opponents.
Tailback Jeff McElroy has
piCked up seven touchdowns In
four games to be one of the top
two rusher.s in the area. Their
offense Is 'ranked at the top,
scoring an average of 27 points
per game. Their detense Is
fourth, giving up an average of
7.5 points per game.
Don Saunders' third-ranked
Wildcats, moving forward with
an offense t ranked fifth, scoring
an average or 17.6 points per
game) that shows it can pass as
well as run with the football and a
defense (ranked seventh, surrendering an average of 8.6
points per game) . that has put
constant and consistent heat on

The Big Bend Midget Football were chalked up by Adam Wyatt
League opened the season last and Dave Fetty whlle Charlie
Saturday with all three teams In Bissell accounted for the two
point conversion. J. C. Albright
action.
. At Middleport, it was the led the defense with numerous
Brogan-Warner Browns and tackles.
Whaley's Dolphins playing a twin
At Nelsonvllle. the F.O.E.
bl U against the spilt squad Eagles ran up against a tough
and experienced 'football team
GaiUpolis team. the Raiders.
The first game saw Whaley's and were shut out 44-0. The
Dolphins stifle the Raiders 16-11. Eagles fought hard but were
Scoring for the Dolphins were unable. to overcome the aggresJared Hill with two touchdowns siveness of a Nelsonville squad
and Ryan Hlll who scored the two that has had a competitive
point conversions. Defensively, program for some time.
the Dolphins were led by Walt
This Saturday's action will
have the Browns traveling to
Williams.
The second game of the night Nelsonville while the Eagles and
saw the Brogan-Warner Browns Dolphins will play at the Middlewinning by a 14-0 score over the port facility. Starting time for the
second GalUa team. Touchdowns Middleport games Is 6 p.m.

Scoreboard ...
Majors

•

'

be the sort of no-nonsense fellow sort through the gamut of policy or hart chosen to conceal it.
who wouldn't do that -couldn't proposals without preconceived
Neither conclusion was \
do that, In fact, ·as a matter of bias. But he Is quickly learning comforting.
·
·
i
political principle. Reagan's that Americans aren't prepared
"Competence'' always was the l
well-known "Ideology" offered to hand a blank check to anyone
rallying cry of an accountant.
Americans a handy ruler with this year. Maybe they learned With his recent broadsides •
which to measure the president's something from the election of against the vice president, Duka· '
fidelity to (or betrayal of) his 1976. Not only do they want to kls has returned to the ranks of ;
own values and promises.
· share In their candidate's vision,
politicians, where a serious can· •
No wonder Buch won't let upon they'd begun to suspect that didate belongs.
S
such Issues as capital punish- Dukakls either dldn' t possess one
I
ment, the Pledge of Allegiance
and furloughs for prisoners.
'•I
Much as Dukakls might belittle
••
these Issues, each reveals something basic about the candidates'
•
moral vision and world view.
•
Take prisoner furloughs. UntU
\
April of this year, Massachusetts
!
was the only state to grant
•
weekend passes to first-degree
t
murderers who could never be
•'
paroled. Not only had Dukakls
•
supported this program since Its
••
inception, be continued to back It
••
throughout 1987 after a fur·
~
laughed klller terrorized a Mary·
land couple for 12 hours In their
~
own home, raping tbe woman
~
and stabbing the man.
'·
~
,.
When the people of Massachu·
•
setts learned of the program, the
grasped It absurdity at once.
•
Killers Wtth no chance of parole
••
enjoying weekend panes? Wer·
~
en't these thugs given harsh
•
sentences precisely because so!
ciety judged them
••
Irredeemable?
•
What odd sense of Justice, they
wondered, propelled their gover' '•
nor Into stubborn dlup-eement?
•
His position disturbed them, as It
...
should disturb tbe rest of us now.
~:;
Admittedly, Dukakis ill not the
_, '
first presidential contender to
SASSO UNLEASHED
·'
flaunt a disciplined, profeuorlal
;.~
intellect and 1\lile&amp;the'd uselt to

Berry's World

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t\MERK:AN LEAGUE

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Transadions
Rer:key

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Am .. rk:an 11 llt'W
Baltlmeft' a1 hronlo. 7( 31 p.m.

.a Clenla1141, 1:11 p.m.
New l'arll .. Det.-ll. 7;3$ p.m.
Clllllol'llla .a Mlnn!lii.C.. 8: 3~ p.m.
lo11ton

Chle&amp;(O a&amp; Kan• Cit,, K: SS p,m,
Trlf.IUI at Sutt~ . 10: Sl p.m.

Mllwawll!r at 01klud, IG: S5 p.m.
• Nallollll ~~
l"'lllhuflh •Die•· t:a p.m.
PhldPiphl;~.a&amp; M011trul. 1:011 p.m.
St. I.Dul11 .. Nl'W York, 1:31 p.m.
1\tl.,... • fhK:111•t1, 1: ~p.m.
San Dl•p at Hou••n. M: S5 p.m.

La• Pnclo w . Muict
I.Aueo. 11, ••Pfr tlanlam~l~~~o

GoB
CGI ...... ,., GL Southern
Open
Ro~twell 1
Ga. - 13H,OID Sf'•ior

'*·*

Challenp

San .loll',

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- sste.oot San Jo!Ol"

Cla!!llil'

Olympic!!&gt;!
Seoli - Summer 01)'111 I*'K

Trnli•
S11.n Fnnclf'l(.-. - S4U,090 Tnlnllllmrr·

In clwnpku!Khlp!l

·

'

This week's games

ftullldq'• Re111ftM

Prllb.J'• Gam..,.

Calendar

baa&amp;amweol.-~

.,. . . .1111 -

PWiadtlphla

Ftllhl!ltJ.
N. Louis - Tnded dtfen~~eman Kf'nl
Carillon and fourth·round 18 hit
chok:et•! Wlftllllpea .. r cene.r PHer
Doul'tllN: traded ceDWr Ernie Val"'(u to
V~UH-'IIUW!r lor k'IC win.- Dan Lowey.

BoxlnJ;
SIUIW Clara, C•lll. - Da\'ld Gon:ull"z
\'&amp; Cl"*k PoMII, II , llkhtwel~~~t!l;
G.!,...., MardnPI ""· .ll'!'l• Mu.U, II,

WLI"d.GB

Cbtca~

Tl......_u4 An eft Vllleltftwo; aoaUrnd·
en SeMI Brewer, Tab)'O'IIrletl,u•Ro•
ScoU; reiNtfd d~leueman .Joe

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Sl ..un " 'Meldon; dete•u~me~~ .Jl'lf

PhOt"DIIl -SipedUahtend Gh'J;BMit:r:
wal\'ed lalhaek Rick)' Moorr.

BaltlmorP l Bll•nt M·lll at Toronllo

Mllwa~~kf'P(Werrnan

NY Rana;HA- Alllllped to Dtn\'!1' at
lh• IHL: forwardl Lurr Brrrard, Pul
Brtl&amp;l!n, .... .., Clly•wtdd, Tocl. Ellk.

Food! all

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IAII !\II piN :.._ Tradetldeft!Mfmud.,\hllll &amp;o PhiiUelpNa for ddflu•eman

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Duke is tardy ideologue __. . __Vi_nce_n_tC-.:. :.a--.:rro:..;,:_ll ;

Today in history

As of today, Meigs and Hannan
Trace have posted eight wins and
one loss between them, with
Charlie Chancey's Marauders
currently the No. 1 team among
~3 area teams from Athens,
Gallla, Hocking, Jackson, Law·
fence, Meigs, Perry, Vinton and
Washington Counties.
. The Marauders, fueled by a
. &lt;:onslstent offense and a hard-

Big Bend MFL play is underway

According to the memo, North,
who was then on the National
Security Councu ·ataff, ~!ted the
Soviets' "naked aggression"
against Afahanlatan and
warned: "We are concerned that
they could do the same tblng In
Iran... " But he assured Hubeml
that "the United States II no
longer afraid to use Its power...It
Is not Intimidated · by the.
Soviets."
Hashemi praised the analysis
Secord had presented In Brussels
of the Iran-Iraq war, wblch, he ·:
said, "was keenly received by i
the leadership otlran." Then he ;
declared bluntly, "Iran needs a ·
vitory." Later, he explained that l
this need not be "a bla. decisive 1
mllltary victory, but some kind '
of victory."
i\

Search for .·s mokier pastures

Odrok - Slped •eren~emaa Ll'r
Norwood l•I·JIU'CO ..... d .

ThiM Wtoeii'PI
Oh .. ('oU•~• Foothidl St•tlfdult•
ISIMimlaJ,Ort I
llllnc* a1 Oll .. Kiatl'
BoWlin~ Grtetl ill Wll'!l ..r n Mlt•hliiiiU&amp;
Krnt Statr 114, Ctonlral MlthiJ;M
Ml.nl .. a.n Slat I!
TGI .... at OMe Unh·trliill)'

Akron 11.1 VoaftC!Itow• !Wale
Cl~tehl•ll . . . . . .,,.

Ol&amp;erhel•lllllai*I~Wallacf'

(nl

raplal .. M•a• Unto•
Hrld!IIIPI'K at M••ldnpm
M•I.Cia at WMII!nber•

Ohio Northern at K;~.lamii.ZOII (Michl

A.llf'lhetl:f I Pat at WoOAWr
Ohio Weleyd at C11.11e Rfo!oerw
Obtrln Ill Dt"ftlll(lft
Krnyo• Mt .4.1Non (MichJ
o\NhiMd Ill Flllllla)' (n)
Blufl011 .. MIIM'hMer (In d)
0.,..,.111 Orah (Ia)
WIIMIIIIPOft at Df'll••u~
..... ._,. 1W Va) Ill Hll'lltm
JoM C. roll at Thlfot (P;t.l
nmn 11 Gnna (Pal
Ollwt 4MieiU alllrto.,.
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the passer. The Wildcats, who
have the seventh-ranked scorer
In senior tailback Brad Cremeens, have posted a 4·1 overall
mark, which includes two SVAC
wins.
No. 4 Oak Hill (3·1, 2·0), tied
with Hannan Trace and Symmes
Valleyforllrstln theSVAC, have
the area's third-ranked scorer In
senior fullback Bobby Ward. The
Oaks will put their third-ranked
offense (averaging 21.5 po~ts
per game! and third -ranked
defense (yielding seven points
per game) to work against the
Wildcats tonight In Oak Hill.
No. 7 Symmes Valley. who has
the sixth· ranked offense and the
11th-ranked defense In the area.
has sophomore fullback Kenny
Daniels, who has racked up
seven touchdowns in four games
to put him In a tie with McElroy
for the area's most prolific
scorer .
Local teams and their respective places among area teams
include North GaiUa (2-2, ninth),
Gallla Academy (2-2, lOth),
Southwe~tern (2-2 . 14th). Kyger
Creek (2-3, 16th), Eastern (0-4 ,
21st) and Southern (0-4, 22nd) .
Other local players ranked by
scoring Include Josh Williams,
GAHS (four TDs. four games;
eighth); and Felipe Beach, North
GalUa (three TDs, four games;
tied with three others for ninth).

Marge's cousin
heads business
operations
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Cincinnati Reds president Marge
Schott announced Thursday that
she has appointed a cousin of her
late husband to be executive vice
president of the club.
Stephen Schott, a cousin of the
late Charles Schott, will supervise all Reds business
operations.
Stephen Schott has been a Wall
Street financial consultant in
New York City the past four
years.
"I'm very pleased that a
person of Stephen's talent and
business acumen Is going to take
an active role with the Reds,"
said Marge Schott. "He understands and appreciates the Importance of the Reds to the
Cinclnatl area and his strong
business background will be a
real aoset to our entire
operation."
Stephen Schott said he hopes to
help Marge reach her oft-stated
goal of winning the World Series.
"I am very happy to be coming
back home to be a part of the
Reds organization," he said.
"The Reds are very Important to
me and are an Integral part of the
city's tradition. I am looking
forward to helping Marge and the
Reds achieve the goal of reachIng and winning the World Series ..
In the near future."
Stephen Schott Is a graduate of
Denison University in Granville,
Ohio, with a degree In communications. He also studied business
at Warnborough College In Oxford , England.

Tonight's games

NEW SUNDAY lOUIS 12 ND0-·9 P.M.

-YDUI SATUIDAY IINIALS STill DUE QIIIONDAYS

95
OIDII YO. COPY Of LT.
WI lOW IIAYI_. GIMIS POl liNT

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11W 'R'UIS AIIIYIIO W-Y

By SCOTr WOLFE
Sentinel Staff Writer
RACINE -The Southern Tornadoes of Coach Bill Hensler
again hit the road this week In
quest of an upset over the North
Gallia Pirates at Vinton.
Southern is now 0-4, 0-2 In the
league, while North Gallla Is 2-2
overall and still ]ooklng for its
first conference win.
Southern's offensive Inabilities
have plagued them all season
long, putting little total yardage
In the stat book and permitting
the oppositiOn to always be In
favorable field position. Last
week,however, Southern showed
vast Improvement In the way of
offense and had several bonifled
drives.
While still adjusting to a new
system, revamping, encouragement. and just flat out getting
"meaner", Southern's line protected its badly battered back·
field /DUCh better last weekend.
As a result the backfield
responed with a 151 yard effort,
its best this season and put
Southern's first points 'on· the
board.
With some lime to throw
Southern's Mark Porter looked
excellent, showing lmucn poise
in hurling a 39 yard touchdown
pass to 6-3 senior receiver Shawn
Oiddle.Porter's PAT put SHS on
top 7-0.
Southern picked apart the
Southwestern defensive secondary In the first half, but didn't
capitalized on scoring opportunlties.Southwestern adjusted the
second half and stole lthe game

·from the Tornadoes 14-7.
Danny Gheen, 25-for-64 yards.
was the main workhorse, whlle
Mike Amos had a fine 15-'10
enhancing the backfield
potentiaL
Chris Stout was out with a
bruised thigh, however. hopes to
return this week, but bulky
lineman Kevin Grueser takes his
place on the disabled list.
Soutehrn will have to watch the
passing connection of Greg
Glassburn and Keith Eleam who
put North Gallla on the board
with a long TO pass and added
another that set up Its second TO.
With Glassburn's arm, Clinton
Kelly Is another prime target as
well as Felipe Beach out of the
backfield.Steve George is at
tailback, joining beac for a
potent duo. Beach had 18-89 last
week. Glassburn was 9·18 for 111
yards passing.
Eastern At Symmes Valley
While SHS goes to North
Gallla, Eastern packs its bags
and treks toward the far off land
of Symmes Valley In Lawrence
County.
The Vikings defeated North
Gallla In Its own backyard last
week. 30·20 . Basically a one man
show, Symmes was led by
sophomore running back Kenny
Daniels. who carried 25 times for
191 yards and four touchdowns.
The speedy and elusive Daniels
Is quick to break through the line
of scrimmage and Is untouchable
In the open field. Eastern will
have to contain this speedster at
the line, and If not, be ready to leg

Lance, Southern line named top players
For the second week In a row
senior Chris Lance has earned
' 'Player of the Week' ' honors for
the Eastern Eagles. Lance again
was the leading tackler and
helped stabilize a worn-out defensive unit In Eastern's loss to Oak

first time this season. As a result
they all stood out for having a
good performance."

GRAVELY TRACTOR
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Southern's entire offensive line
starred In last week's disappointing 14-7 loss to Southwestern.
Showing continued Improvement over !be course ofthe young
season; the Southern backfield
was well-protected for the first
time this season. Offensive linemen Include Kevin Grueser ,Matt
Lyons, Jared Moore, Scotty
Hlll,Ryan Evans,Brlan Weaver,
and Petie Hendrix. Coach Blll
Hensler said, "These boys have
worked hard and allowed us to
move the balicomfortablyfor the
•

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Koreans to show hostility toward
Americans.
·
Korean spectators booed
American athletes and domestic
newspapers issued criticisms of ·
American manners and perceived condescending attitudes
toward Koreans. No Americans
have been directly threatened.
"We have plans to protect
Sunday's marathon race. I'm
sure nothing will happen," said
Lee Jae -hong, a Games'
spokesman.
•Luciano Barra, executive secretary of the International Amateur Athletics Federation, said:
"We heard these stories too,
about the marathon being disrupted on Sunday, but the organizing committee Is taking
measures."
Security, the overriding concern of Korean officials since the
Olympics were awarded to Seoul
In 1981, was tightened as the
Games wind down to their
conclusion. Small student protests have occurred but no
significant disruptions.
.
Louise Ritter, meanwhile ,
pulled off America's biggest·
surprise of the Olympics by
winning the high jump gold

Sprl•f &amp;

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It out in the secondary.

Also successful with the pass
Symmes will pass to halfback
Fred Wilburn.
Eastern, young all the way '
around, with several key senior ·
members scattered In between
for leadership, has for the most ·
part been learning throughout
the year. It still ligures to be •
competitive in the last half of the
season as experience reaps its ·
payoff.
Eastern has been working on
its pass coverage, an obvious "
weakness, but is also anxious to :
put more 'points on the board.
Freshman Jeff Durst Is at ·
quarterback, with Tim Bissell, '
senior Jay Reynolds and Jason
Hager In the backfield.
· Chris Lance caught one pass •
for 22 yards and also excelled on
defense.
Game time for both contests Is •
7:30.

.---------, '
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through Friday, 111 Court St. , Po·
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Ohio.
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stadium, the Korean news
agency Yonhap reported.
It said West German players
en route to the stadium were
forced to get off their bus and
walk down a sidewalk to get past
the protesters. They passed
without incident.
In other events, an American
woman scored an upset by
winning a gold medal in the high
jump, and the favored U.S. mens
4x100 meter relay team ran into
controversy during a prelim!·
nary heat, and was disqualified.
The National Police moved a
bomb-disposal squad from the
Olympic volleyball venue to the
International Broadcast Center,
where NBC television has 1,200
workers beaming the largest
Olympics ever back to the United
States.
The network has been part of
an unusually strong public display of anti-American sentiment
by Koreans. The two are close
allies in strategically Important
North Asia.
A series of embarrassing
gaffes by U.S. athletes and
charges from Korean media and
officials that NBC's coverage of
the country Is biased has caused

. •,

Southern hits road tonight;
Eastern at S,y mmes Valley

FALL SPECIALS
AS LOW AS

U"OWN VIDEO IN MIDDLEPORT
IS NOW OPEN ON SUNDAYS

SEOUL, South Korea IUPI) Small groups of radicals, riding a
wave of anti-American feeling,
hurled firebombs at a U.S.
mUitary compound and protested at the U.S. Embassy today
as oHiclals assured athletes the
men's marathon on the last day
of the Olympics will be well·
guarded.
Five youths hurled 14 firebombs at the entrance of a U.S.
military motor pool in Seoul,
starting a minor fire that caused
some damage but no injuries, a
U.S. Army spokesman said . The
perpetrators fled.
An hour later, five other
students tried to enter the U.S.
Embassy compound to deliver a
leaflet calling for the release of
700 political prisoners held by
South Korean authorities. The
the students were hauled off by
Korean guards.
Neither Incident occurred near
any Olympic facility.
But In Songnam, site of the
Olympics field hockey compeli·
lion 20 miles south of Seoul, 250
students staged an antiOiymplcs protest at Kyongwon
University and marched out the
campus gate to block the nearby

Hill.

Hannan Trace at Oak Hili
Southern at North Gallla
Eastern at Symmes Valley
Kyger Creek at Southwestern
Marietta at Gallipolis
Jackson at Athens
Warren 111 Logan
Parkersburg South at Pt.
Pleasant
Huntlngtun at Ironton
Wayne at Coal Grove
Wellston at Alexander
Nels-York at Meigs
Wahama at Vinson
Zanesville Rosecrans at Miller
Federal-Hocking at Trimble
Belpre at VInton County

.. ...,.

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y

The Daily Sentinel Paga 3

500 EAST MAIN

v

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'l!·2174
. ~ ,.

POIEIOY, OliO
••

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�Friday, September, 30. 1988

&gt; fXrERifN

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BENZINGER DOUBLES - BostAm's Todd Benzinger looks up
after safely sliding past Indians' catcher Andy Allanson on a
three-run double to left center field by teammate Ellis Burks In the
third Inning of Thursday night's game In Cleveland . The Red Sox
won 12·0 to clinch a tie In the American League East. (UPI)

•

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Redwomen victorious
over three opponents

•

R1o Grande's volleyball team
racked up another Mld·Ohio
Conference win and swept two
additiOnal sets Thursday m a
quadrangular meet at Lyne
Center
The Redwomen defeated Ur·
bana 15 4, 15·1, downed Salem
15·7, 16-H and put away Shawnee
State 15·1, 15-4.
Coach Patsy F1elds said the
Redwomen - particularly In a
come-from behind win over Sa·
!em. "played well We got to play
everyone I'm sure they're ex
hausted, but everyone played"
While most of the competitlon
flagged, Salem mounted a strong
comeback in 1ts second game
with Rio Grande to had 13-6at one
point . only to have the hosts
rebound to tie the score and take
the contest
Against Urbana. Teresa Zemp·
ter had five k1lls, Sheila
Brammer had lour , Lisa
Schmeltzer three. Kns Cochran
had two and Shelly Hoop net ted

..

,.

one Sharon Headings had six
serving aces, Schmeltzer had
two block solos and Hoop re·
corded three digs.
In the Salem games, Hoop had
seven kills, Shannon Huston
recorded lour, while Zempter,
Headings and Schmeltzer had
three. Cochran had one.
Schmeltzer had three serving
aces, and one each came from
Cochran, Headings, Williams
and Lori Storer had one. In
addition, Zempter netted lour
block solos
Shawnee Slate fell under the
weight of four kIlls by
Schmeltzer, three from Hoop,
two by Zempter and one each by
Cochran. Brammer and Huston.
Headings hit seven serving aces,
Schmeltzer recorded three solo
blocks, wh1le Hoop had two and
Cochran had one
Now 14·6 and 3-2 In the
conference the Redwomen will
be Idle until Tuesday, when they
travel to Maione.

Cedarville blanks Redmen
An Injury plagued Rio Grande
soccer team battled grimly
Thursday agamst the onslaught
of visitmg Cedarville. but the
Yellow Jackets rolled on to a 4·0
w[n.
John McGillivray 's club goes
to 4·2 overall and 2 1 In the
Mid-OhiO Conference Rio
Grande 1s 3·6 and 1·3 m league
action.
Cedarville kept the actwn on
Rio Grande's side, forcmg the
Redmen mto a defens ive mode.
The hosts attempted three shots
on goal m the first period and
Cedarville tned 14. Derek
Whalen scored Cedarville's first
goal on a penaltY s hot at 23
minutes mto the period
In the remaming half. Dave

•

Kohlmeyer won a goal at two
minutes with an assist from
Loren Tucker. Four minutes
later Kohlmeyer did It again,
without assist. and Kurt W1lson
netted the visitors' final goal,
unassisted. at 31 minutes.
Chrts Krueger had three saves
at the goal hne in the first period.
Paul Robertson's six saves for
Rio Grande were a defensive
highlight of the second half.
Cedarville goalkeeper Dave
Weaver had one save for the
entire game All told, the Red·
men took SIX shots at the goal,
compared to a total of 24 for
Cedarville
Rio Grande hosts Wheeling
JesUit Saturday m a 1p.m game.

Volleyball team defeats ODC

'

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Rio Grande's volleyball team
needed another win In the M1d·
Ohio Conference and got 11
Tuesday when the team swept a
match With Ohio Dommlcan,
played m Gahanna.
Rio Grande defeated the Lady
Panthers 15 5, 16 14 and 15·6 to
Improve 1ts MOC record to 2·2
Overall, the Redwomen are 1J.6
ODC, which had earlier de·
feated MOC rival Malone. played
competltlvely with the visitors
but were held back by what
Coach Patsy F1elds called "prob
ably the best defens1ve game
we've played yet "
F1etds hailed the performance
of her team, which played better
at th e net and co ntained "super"
turns by hitter Chris Williams
(sophomore, Kitts Hill ) and
setter -Kris Cochran tsen1or,
Somerset\
Witllams had s1x kills, a
se rVIng ace and three digs
against ODC. Coc hran had five
kills and lour digs.
''Our pla ying has really 1m·

proved." F1elds said.
Lisa Schmeltzer led the team
10 k1lls w1th nine. Shelly Hoop had
live, Teresa Zempter added six
and Shannon Huston had one.
Hoop and Schmeltzer also came
through with four solo blocks
The Redwomen are home
Thursday lor a tri -match with
Urbana, Salem and Shawnee
State, set to begm at 6:30p.m. In
Lyne Center

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Jay Burson. Jerry Francis and
Tony White, all seniors, have
been selected trl·captalns of the
1988-89 Oh10 State basketball
team by Coach Gary Wllllams.
Franc•s is a three-year regular
!or the Buckeyes. Burson, who
led Oh10 State in scoring last
season. has started for two years
and White started 26 of 33 games
last season
Burson. a 6-!oot guard, averaged 18 9 points per game,
Franc1s averaged 15 4 points and

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COVER CROP MATERIAL
•BARLEY SEED
•RYE SEED
•OATS
•SEED WHEAT &amp;
RECLEANED WHEAT
•LAWN SEED &amp; FIELD SEED

SUGAR RUN MILLS

180 IWIIIIIY AYE.

992-2155
!I

POMIIOJ.

with the Oakland Athletics when •five-run second Inning .
Roger Clemens hurls against the
''Sure, we were worried a little
Indians tonight at Municipal
bit," said Burks, "but we're
Stadium The two-time Cy Young
Award winner, amid an "off· determined not to let this slip
season", is shooting for his 19th away. We just got It ali
together."
win.
They certainly got It all to·
Clemens is 9·0 lifetime vs. the
get her Thursday, banging dut 11
Indians. It doesn't look good for
hits against five pitchers.
the Brewers and Yankees.
"It's not overyet,"NewYork's
"!'he Red Sox played like
Ken Phelps said. "Stranger · champions, kicking our butts
things have happened. Boston pretty good,' ' said Cleveland
Manager Doc Edwards. "They
could lose three games "
He then said, "I'm sure Boston played great team bail, and
is going to win one more game, jumped all over our pitching.
That's the halbnark of a
but we've kept it close."
Somehow, this edition of the champion."
The Red Sox scored seven runs
Red Sox, while not letting us
forget completely about the term In the seventh, with Jim Rice
"choke,'' seems well-equipped to stroking an RBI single, his
handle what llttle pressure 2,400th major league hit.
At Baltimore, Phelps hit his
remains.
"We're not going to choke. We 23rd home run, a two-run shot,
don't know how to choke," said and Don Mattingly connected for
Mike Boddlcker, 13·15, who fired his 18th, with the bases empty.
a three-hitter Thursday. "We're Rickey Henderson stole two
a team, a unit, and we didn't let bases to Increase his major
losing three games to Toronto get league-leading total to 92, leavIng him three games In which to
us down."
Ellis Burks supplied offensive try to attain at least 100 for the
punch for Boddicker, driving In fourth time. His chances are
four runs, three with a double in a about as slim as the Yankees'.

Kent visits CMU for 'must' contest
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
Kent State faces the, first in a
series of "mustgames"when the
Golden Flashes visit Central
Mich1gan in one of four Mid·
American Conference contests
Saturday after noon
Kent Is 2·2 overall after back·
to-back losses at Eastern Michl·
gan and Kentucky, 38-14. and 0·1
in the MAC.
Central Michigan, 2·1 overall,
will be playing Its first confer·
ence game. The Chippewas also
lost to Kentucky, 18-7, In their
season opener.
"We are going to be In a
must-game siluation the rest of
the way because we already lost
game ln the league," said Kent
coach Dick Crum. So, if we beat
Central. then Ball State will be a
must game; if we beat them, then
Western Michigan. If we lost,
then we will probably be out of
the race."
Saturday's game at Mount

Pleasant is the MAC TV game of
the week and begins at 12: 30p.m.
EDT.
The other three MAC games on
tap have winless Bowling Green
at Western Michigan, Toledo at
winless Ohio University and
Miami, another team looking for
Its first win, at Ball State.
Eastern Michigan has the day
off.
Central Michigan and Kent
rank 1 2 in the MAC In rushing
offense. The Chippewas, led by
tallb~ck Donnie Riley's 143yards
per game, are averaging 295
yards a game on the ground
Kent averages 261 per game,
paeed by tailback Eric Wilkerson
(116.8) and quarterback Patrick
Young (92.0 1.

tlve times, but the Golden
Flashes have won the last two
with last second rallies, lnclud·
tng 24-21 last year In Kent. The
Chippewas have won the last
meetings in Mount Pleasant.
The Bowling Green-Western
game, on paper at least, looks
like a mis-match.
The Falcons are 0-4 and ha·
ven't come close to winning
They are 0·2 In the MAC with
lasses to Ball State (34-10) and
Toledo (34·5).

The Meigs golf team had a lull
week of activity starting on
Monday with a TVC match at
Falrgreens Country Club hosted
by Wellston. Belpre continued to
lead the league as they posted a
167 with Vinton County socring
184 in the event. Following the
leaders were Nelsonville· York at
185; Federal Hocking with 186;
Meigs and Wellston at 204 and
Miller wtth 218.
With aan even par 36, Brian
McPherson or Federal Hocking
took match , medalist honors.
Matt Baker and Scott Barton
were the top Meigs scorers with
42 and 44 respectively. Baker Is
presently ranked number five In
TVC play with a 42.16 scoring
average.
Current league standings are;
Belpre-42 points; Federal
Hocklng-28; Trbnble-26; VInton
County-24; Melgs-20.5;
Nelsonville-York·15; Miller-6 5
and Wellston-6.
In a dual match with Wahama
at Riverside on Tuesday, Meigs
prevailed by a 194-213 score. Matt
Baker, who shot a two over par
37, was named match medalist.
other Meigs scorers were Jamey
Little with 50, Scott Barlon 51,

was the team's second leading
rebounder at 5.6, whlle While
averaged 7.8 points and 4.6
rebounds .
'
"It's unusual for me to name
trl-captalns," said Williams .

lOUIE 7

FUNERAL HOME
"Serving Families"
264 S. 2nd, Middleport

992-5141

•'

?

MullEn')·,

~:~~:~and
Rev.
pasttr Norman Pres-

a.m.,
~~t.~lO:l)a.m
..
evenlng!lei"Vk'e6
service, Wemesdsy, 7 p m

~

.

EPISCOPAL CHURCH. 326 E.

Main St., Pomeroy. Sunday servre Holy
oornrrwr*&gt;n on tiE rlrst Sunday of each month.
and romi:Cqed with morning prayer on ttr

ttird Sundlr/. Mor!Uig JU.yer and sermon on

all 0118' Sundiws r1 ttE month Oturch SChool
and Nursery CIIJ'e provided Cotf~ toor in t~

Parish Halllnunedlate~ rolloWlnKth:&gt; servk:e

.."' \•

9l)a.m; MorrUlgwcnhlp 10 lla m.; Youth
meetlnw;, 6:00 p.m Evmtng wen tip, 7:00 p.

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, 212 W
Main St. Leo Iah. Ellangeilst Bllie School

..
·'

m.

Weal~

night prayer meeUngandBII:ie

st&lt;lly. 7.00 !&gt;IlL

TilE SALVATION ARMY. ll5 B&lt;flernut

H

A~.

Pofnerw,

su-

Mrs Dora Wining In chargP
~00&lt;\Y tollnEM II'll'etln&amp; 10 am.: Sunday
Sdtool, JO::JJ am
School. YPSM
Elol.se Ad.ns, leader. 7 ll p m Salvation
meetlng vart:lus SJ:eakEn and music spedals.
lhu~. U :K&gt; a.m to 2 p m. Ladle; Home
League. memles 1n charge, aU wCI'I'Im
lnvH&lt;d, 6 4.'\ p.m. Thuf'9dlly, Corpo C.tlel

t;
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••
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'

Claus IYOOIW l'l&lt;&gt;pie&gt;Bijjel, 7.:JI p.m. BIHe
Stu:tY and Prayer meeting opm to tte putitc
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, :rJ226Chllthn'sHomeRoad !Couo&lt;y
Road 76). !12-~ Vocal music. &amp;!IDly Worship lOam, BltieStlrly lla m., Worstdp, 6p
m. We&lt;llelday, BIHe Sl..:ly, 7 p.m
OlD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH, Alvin c... ts. pasl"' Linda Swan,
SUj:t. SU- Schooi9.:JJ am, preaching services, first and ttvd SUndaY fillbvlngSurQw
Schad. Youth ml'l'tln~ 7::il pm fNery Sunday

GRAHAM

UNITED

METHUDIST,

Preaching 9.30 a.m. first and second Sun

days of each month third and rourth Sun

day each month worship servlcesat7· 30p
m.; Wednesday evenings at 7.30 p m

.-..... .

Prayer and Bible Study
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST. Mull&gt;
erry Heights Road. Pomerov Pastor, Bob
Snyder, Sabbath School Superlntl"lldent,

1982 PLYMOUTH TURISMO ........... S1495
1982 BUICK REGAL WAGON .........S1995

PB. PS, air.

1978 CHRYSLER CORDOBA ............. S995
'

.

COOPER MOIIIS ·

S15 'Upp.r llv•
OPEN Mon.•Sat. 9 to 6

ld~,

2 p m Saturdav afternoon wlth worship
service followln~ at :'l p m

'•'

Gallpohs
. 446-3995.
'I

'.

l

•,•

•

'

•'

'•

•
•
•

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•'

'

.,_

P. J. PAULEY, MJENT
Nationw1de Ins. Co.

216 S. Second
Pomeroy
992-332S

Joj1n F. FUitl,Mtr.
Ph . . .HlOl
Pomeroy

ol Columbus, 0 .
804 w. Main
99'1.·2318 Pomeroy

,.
,.

'. ,,

rMI\

SWISHER &amp; UIISE

PHMMM:Y

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

-~

~~

we Fill Doctors'
Prescr•phons

H2·29~5

""\2':7

115 (, Manoorill Dr.
"2·2104

Pomero~

ALACK

GrocenesGeneral Merchand.se

$.., $,,. "

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
- SL,ter Harriett Warner, Sup! Sunday
School 9 30 a m , Morning Worship, 10 45
a.m
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Lyston
Halley, mlnlstt"r. Saturday evening
evangelistic services. open to public, 7 p
m.: Sunday Chun::h School, 9 30 a rn :
Morning Worship 10 30 a m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Po
meroy Pike. E Lamar O'Bryant, pastor;
Jack Needs, Sunday School Director Sun·
day SChool, 9.30 am .. Morning Worship
10 45, evening worship, 7 Oflp m (0 S T)
&amp; 7 30 (EST I. Wednesday Prayer Ser·
vice, 7 OOp.m,(DS .T.I &amp;7 30P.M (E.S
T ) , Mission Friends (ages 2 6), Royal
Ambassadors ibo:Y sages 6-181. and Girls
In Action (ages 6-181 on Wedn€Sdays, 7 p
m (D.S T i &amp;7·30p m (EST\. Tuesday
Vlsltallon, 6•30 p m.
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, Bal
ley Run Road. Rev Emmett Rawson pastor Handley Dunn. supt Sunday School ,
lOam .. Sundayevenlngservlce, 7 30p m
, Bible teaching, 7·30 p m Thursday
SYRACUSE MISSION, Chercy St , Sy
racuse Mark Morrow, pastor ServiC'l"S,lO
am Sunday Evening services Sunday
and WednESday ar 7:00pm
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Dwight Haley.
first elder, Wanda Mohler, Sunday SchOol
Sup! Sunday School 9: :JJ a m , Mornln~
Worship 10:~ B m : Evening Worship 7: :J)
p m .. W&lt;'dnesday prayer meet(nR7 ;)) p m
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
Racine. Rev James Satterfield. pastor.
Freeman Williams, Supt. Sunday School
9 4.'i a.m; Surtday and Wednesday. even·
lng services, 7 p m
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST
Corner Slx:th and Palmer James Seddon,
Pastor Edna Wilson, S.S Supt., Cathy
Riggs, Asst. Supt Sunday School, 9 15 a.
m., MorntngWonhlp,l0 : 1~a.m: Sunday
Evening service. 7 p m. Prayer meeting
and Bible Study Wednesday evening, 7 p
m., Children's choir practice, Wednes·
day, 7 p .m : Adult choir practice. Wed, 8
p.m , Radio program, WMPO, Sunday,
830am.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST,
5th and Main, AI Hartson, minister,
Richard Du.Bole, AIIIX'Iate Putor; Mike
Gerlach, Suaday Schod Superintendent
Bible School 9· 30 a m., Mornlna Woralolp
10:30 a.m. Evening Worship 7·00 p .m
Wedneoday,_7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NA
ZARENE, PASTOR Fred Penhorwood
BUt Wblte Sunday School Sup!, Sunday
School 9:30a.m .. Morain&amp; Worllhlp 10: ts
Lm.; Evan&amp;ellatlc meetln&amp; 7:00 p m
Wedneaday, 'J·OO p.m. Prayer meet~
IINITED PBBBBYTEBIAN MIN
Y

OP MEIGII COVNTY
.... O'II!IIa ..lb

HARRISONVILLE PRESIIYTERIAN
CHURCH - Bullday· Worllblp Services
9·00 a.m.; Olurch SctlooiiO t5o.m..
' MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN Stlnday School, 9 a m.; Church service,
11:15a.m.
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY·
'l'ERIAN - Sunday School, tO a.m :
Olun:b l&amp;t'VIce, 10: I~ a.m.
...
1lllTLAND CHURCH OF GOD, Puler,
Jolla Evuo. Iunday School 10:00 a.m ;
Slllldof Monilia Wonlllp II :00 a.m. Chit·
dl'tll'l Cllurcb l l a.m -suaday Evealna
liet'vice T:OO p.m. Wod.. 6 p.m. Youne La·
til•' Auxlltaiy. Wedtleoday, 7 p.m. FamUy Wot'llllp.
HAZEL COMMUNITY CIIURCH. Oft
Rt. IIC. 3 rnlloo from Portlond-Lon&amp; Bot·
tom. Edoel Hort, pallCO'. Sunday School,

&gt;I

104 E. MA.. ST~ POMEROY

992-2815
a.m, Sunaay mommg preacbing
10:30 a m ; Sunday evenlng services. 7· 00
p.m.
,
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH, Corner Ash and Plum. Noel
Herrmann. pastor SUnday Schod lD:OOa
m., Morning Worship, 11.00 am: Wed·
aesday and Saturday Evenlng Services at
7:30p.m.
APl'LE GROVE UNITED METHODIST CIIURCH - Paster, Rev (:arl
Hlt'kl, 10 mUe1 above Radne on Rt 388
Sunday Schad. 9 a.m , worship service 10
a m. Sunday evenl,ng service, 7 p m;
Prayer meetlnl and Bible Study Wednes
day, 7 p.m.
MT OLIVE UNITED METHODIST -

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PAKJSH
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NORTHEAST CLU8TER
Rev. Den A.reher

Rev. Roy Deele&lt;
Rev. Carl Hicks

Rev. Seldon IoWan
ALFRED - Church School 9· 30 a m :
Worship 11 a.m: UMYF6;30p.m, UMW
Third Tuesday, 7 30 p m Communio11 ,
first Sunday ( Arcllen
CHESTER - Worship 9 a m : Church
School 10 a.m , Bible Study, Thursday, 7p
m , UMW first Thunday, 1 p m: Communion. first Sunday (Archer).
JOPPA - Worship 9. 30 a m ; Church
SchoollO· 30 a m Bible Study Wednesday ,
7:30p.m jJohnson)
LONG BOTTOM - Church School 9• 30
am, Worship 10:30 a.m.: Bible Sludy,
Wednesday, 7 30 p.m , UMYF Wednes
day, 6 00 p m; Communion First Sunday

of Month (Hicks)
REEDSVILLE - Church School 9: 30 a
m . Wo~hlp Service 11:00 a.m. /Deeter)
TUPPERS PLAINS ST PAUL Church School 9 a m., Worship 10 a m ;
Bible Study, Tuesday. 7.30 p.m., Comm\1
nlon First Sunday (Archer)
CENTIIAL CLUSTER
Rev. llaody Bureh
R.n. Melvie Fraaklln

Rev. Clemenl~ S. ZU1111a. Jr
Rev. Robert MIIIAIIIaa
Rev. 0 .

MeadoW~~

ASBURY (Syracuse)- Worship 11 a m
, Church School 9:45 a.m., Charge Bible
Sh1dy, Wednesday, 7:30pm; UMW, first
Tuesday, 1·30 p m., Choir Rehearsal,
Wednesday 6 30 p m. (Burch)
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 am :

Church School10 am.: Bible Study. Tues·
day •7:00p m, UMW, First Monday,7 30
p m., UMYY Sunday, 6 p m Choir Re·
hearsal, Children's al 6:30p.m. Adult fol·
lowing, Wednesday . (Franklin)
FLATWOODS- Church School, 10 a m
: Worship, 11 am .. Bible Stu~y. Thurs
day, 7 p m, UMYF , Sunday, 6 p.m
(Franklin)
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a.m.,
Church School 10 A M : Choir practice,
Thursday,6:30p m.: UMWthlrdMonday.
(Burch 1.m. (Burch 1.
HEATH ~Micldlcport)- Church SChool,
9· 30 a m : Morning Worship 10: lO a.m ..
Youlh Group, 4 p m., Wednesday, Bible
study 6 00 p m Choir rehearsal 7 00 p.m
(Zuniga)
MINERSVILLE -Church School 9. 00
a m , Worship service 10 00 a m ; UMW
third Wednesday, 1 p m. fBurcht
PEARL CHAPEL - Worship Service
9 30 a m , Church Scbool 10:15 am.
(Mussman!
POMEROY -Church School, 9 15 a m.

: Worship 10· 30 a.m : Choir rehearsal
Wednesday, 7: 30 p rn ; UMW, second
Tuesday. 7:30pm , UMYFSunday,6p m
tMeadows)
ROCK SPRINGS- Church School, 9 15
a.m; Worship JO am. , Bible Study, Wed·
nesday, 7 30 p m ., UMYF (Seniors). Sun·
dav. 6 p.m.: (Juniors) every other Sun
day, 6 p rn (Franklin)
RUTLAND -

Cburch School, 10 a.m.,

Worship, 11 a.m .: UMW First Monday,
7.30p.m. (Muuman)

SALEM CENTER- Church School9.15
a.m: W&lt;Jnhlp 10.15 p.m. ~Mussman)
SNOWVILLE - Worship, 9·00 a m :
church schoo19:45 am. (Muasmant
SOUTHERN CLU!I'l'I&lt;K
Rev. Debt F•tu
Bev. Ro1• Graee
BETHANY -

Worship, 9 a m ; Church

School, 10 a.m.. Bible Stu~, Wed~,.day,
10 a.m., Dorea• Women 1 Fellowship,
Wednesday, 11 a.m. (Foster)
CARMEL - Church School 9:30 a.m.,
Worship, 10:45 a.m. Second and Fourth
Sundays, Fellowship dlnnt'l' with Sultm
third Thunday, 6 30 p.m. (Foster).
MORNING STAR- Church School 9:45
am., Worahlp 10•30 a.m., Bible Study,
Tlt~6· 7:30p.m !Footer).
N - Church SChool. 9:30 a.m.,
S
Mornln&amp;Worshlp 10:~a.m . ftntandthlrd
Sundayo; Feltowllhlp dinner with Carmel
tlttrd Tlturtday, 6.30 p.m. (F,.terJ.
EAST LETART -OiurciiSChoolh m.,
Wors~ lO a m sel'Ond and fourth $undaya, UM\'1 tlrst Tueoday, 7 30 p.m.
(Grace).
LETART FALLS - Wonlttp 9 a.m ,
Chui'Ch SChool 10 a.m. tGrace) .
RACINE - Churdl SChbol, tO a.m., Worttllp U 1m.; UMWiourlhMDndot!-' at 7:30p.
m.; Mon'o Prayer Bl1!1kf&amp;lt. Wednstlot!r, 8
a.m. tGra..,).
KENO CHURCH OF CHRilll',
SOrlna. mlnllter, Oliver SWain. Su
SdloGI Sapt. Preaclllnl 9:30 a.m e

It!&gt;=

~

.

Adversity Is not

without comforts

Bacon

Sunday.
HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, Theroo Durham
pastor Sunday service, 9:30 a.m ; even:
lng service 7:00 p m. Prayer meetina,
Wednesday, 7· 00 p m.
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CIIURCH OF
CHRIST, Joseph B. Hoskins. pastor. Bible
Class, 9· 30a.m.: Mornln&amp;WorlhlplO: 30a
m.: Eventn&amp;Worablp.6:30p.m Thursday
Bible Study, 6 30 p.m.
,
•
ZION CIIURCH OF CHRIST, Pom..-oy
Harrls&lt;mvllle Rd Robert Purtell, rit.lnb·
ter. Steve Stanley, s. S Supt.; BUIMcEl·
ray, AJSI Supt : SuDday School 9· 30a.m ,
Worship tervlce 10 ..10 am., Evenlngwor·
shlp Sunday 7 p.m. and Wedneoday, 7 p.m.
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine
Grove. The Rll!'\'. William Mlddle.wartb,
pastor Church service 9:30a.m.; SuDday
School tO· 30 a m.
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Tom Runyon, pastor Sunday School9 .10
a m : Larry Haynes, st. S. Supt. Morning
worship 10.30 ~.m.
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE, Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm, Jr, past&lt;r
Ora Baas, Chairman of the Board ofChrll·
ttan Llle Sunday School9:30 a.m.; Morn
lng worshl.p 10:30 a m ; evangelistic ter·
vice 7:00p.m Wednesday oervlce, 7 p.m
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, O.x
ter. WoOOy Call, pastor Services Sunday
10 a.m and 7 p m Wedneaday, 7 p.m.
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Uoyd Sayre, Supt Sunday School9 30 a
m., morning worship 10:30 a.m. Sunday
eventna servtce 7 p.m.
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Steve
Deaver. Pastor Mike Swiger. Sunday
SChool Supt., Sunday School 9.30 a.m ,
Morning worship 10 40 a.m , Sunday
evening worship 7:30 p m : Wednesday
evening Bible study 7:30p.m.
BURUNGHAM COMMUNl'I'Y CHURCH,
Bwllnlltam. Ray LaudennUt. paslcr; Robert Car.art, assistant pastm- Sunday School
10 a.m; wa:sldp 7 p.m: W£VIE!Ida,y, 6 p m
youth meetlng Wed., 7p.m. churchsE!'VIoes
PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH,\!
mileoffRt. 325 Rev Ben J Watts, pastor
Robert SearlES, S.S. Supt. Sunday School
9 3J a m , Morning Worship 10 :II am ;
Sunday evening service 7:30 p m.: Wed·
nflilday service, 7 30 p m.
SILVER RUN BAPTIST, Bill Little,
pastor. Steve Llt11e, S. S. Supt. Sunday
School 10 a m ; Morning wors\p, 11 a m ;
Sunday evening worship 7:30pm Prayer
meeting and Bible study Wednesday, 7: 30
p.m, Youthm~tlngWednesdlyat7p m
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
- 383 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport. Su.nday
SchoollO a m Sunday evening 7:00pm ,
Mid· week service, Wed., 7 p m.
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH,
Sunday School 9 30 a.m., DaiJas Janey,
supt., Morning worship 10 30 a m : Sunday evening service, 7: 30pm; Wedn('S
day evening service, 7·30 p.m
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA·
ZARENE Rev. G lenn McMillan, pastor
Mary Janice Lavencler, Sunday School
Supt Sunday S&lt;:hoo1 9:30 a.m.: Morning
worship 10 30 a.m., Evangelistic service,
6p.m., PrayerandPralseWednesday, 7p

RYSElL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH
0 . H .Cart. pastor SundaySch&lt;Jolat9 JOa
m • Morning worship at 10 30 a.m., Sun·
day evening service at 7 30 p m Thursday
services ar 7 30 p m
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob, located on County Road 3L Rev
Roger Willford. past or SundBy SChool
9 30 a ni , Morning Worship 10 45 ""m ,
Sunday evening 7·00 p.m , Wednesday
evening Bible Study, 7 OOp.m.
WHITE'S
CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
CHURCH- CoolvllleRD Rev Phillip Rl
denour, pastor. Sunday Scbool9 30 a.m.,
worship service 10 :J1 am , Bible study
and worship service. Wednesday, 7 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST.
BUI Carter, pastor Sunday School9·30 a
m ; Morning Worship and Communion
10 30a m
RUTLANDBIBLEMETHODIST Amo&gt;
Tillis, pastor Sonny Hudson. supt. Sunday
School 9.30 a.m.; Morning worship, 10. .JJ
am , Sunday evening St"''ViCt" 7·00 p m
Wednesday service 7 p.m. WMPO program 9 a m each Sunday
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE. Samuel Basye. pastor Sunday
Schoo\9 30 a m , Worship service 10 30 a.
m : Youn~~: people's service 6 p m.

School 10 a m.; Gary Reed. Lay leader
Morning sermon, 11 a m ; Sunday night
services: Chrllllan Endeavor 7:.» p {ll ,

cottagE" prayer m('eflng and Blbl(' Study
9 «I am , Worship ll('rviC"e, Wednesdav

m:

Youth meeuna:. 7 p.m
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST, Eld('ll R. Blake, pastor Sund41y

Son1service 8 p m. Preaching 8. 30 p.m
Mid-week prayer meetln&amp;. Wednesday. 7

p.m
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, Rog
N Wat son, pa stor Cr('nson Pran, Sunday
SrhMI Supt Mornln$t Worship 9 30 a.m ,
Sunday Sehoul HI :11 u m , EvenlnR ser
\ICC 7 'tO p m
MT UNION BAPTIST JoE' N Sayre,
pastor, Sunday School ~ :4~a m , Evening
worship t:i :Kl p m; Prayer Met11n~. 6:30
p.m Wedn(.&gt;Sda.\
TUPPERS PlAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST DavP PrenUce, mtnllter DE-rvl
W&lt;'lll, Supt. Church School 9 a.m, Wor·
ship Sl&gt;rv lc:e, lJ 4~ p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE Rev He-rbert Grare. putor.
Frank Riffle. supt Sunday School9· 30 a
m, Worship service, 11 am . and 7 p.m
SundaY Wednt'Sday, 7 p m Pra)'f'r mHt·

lng

LAUREL CLIFF FREE METIIODIST
CIIURZII, William wuuams. ~tcr. Dl·
rooter of Chrlltlon Edu&lt;alloa, Rolllrt E.
Bartoo. Stew Eblin. aulltant SundaY
school 9:30a.m .. Mornlnr .,cnhlp Ill: 31
am TeenalnActlon&amp;p.m.: Evenln1Wor·
olttp 7 p.m. Wedn- eventn&amp; prayer
and Bible alutf:v 7 p.m. Otolr practice 8 p.
m. SUndl)l.
Ut;Xl'ER CHUKO.:tl U~ CHRlliT,
Charlea Ruasell Sr , mlnl&amp;tE'r Rick t,ta
rombE'r, aupt Sunday School 9::.) a.m:
Worship aervl~ 10:30 a.m. Bible study,
Tuesday, 7 :11 p m.

REORGANIZED CHURCH UF JESUS
C'HRIST OF LATTER DAY SAtNTS POit·
lnnd Racin&lt;' Road M\k(' Duhl. pastor.
JaniCE' Dannrr. c hurch school direcfor
Chu rc'h srhool 9 :IDa m , Mm nln~w orshlp
10 10 a TTl; Wcdnesdav t"V&lt;&gt;nln2 praY&lt;'r
~t('l v ief!!ii, 7 :11:1 p. m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST RE&gt;\' Earl
~huiPr

p.1stm Worsh\p!lervlre,9 lOam

Sunday SChool 10 lO a.m. Bible Study and
pt elVer Sl'rYICt' ThU I sdav 7 :10 p m •

f'ARl.ETON

I~TF.RDENOMINATION

.\1. CHURCH, Kingsburv Road. Rev
('ly(\(' W Hl~ndt'l son
pastor. Sunday
~hnoJ9·10 am
Rc~iph Carl. Supt Even
lng worship 7 00 p.m Prayet mN'tinS!;
\\oedn~day 7 00 p m
tONG BOTTOM C'HRISTIAI\', Vernon
F.ldlldR&lt;'. pastor \\'allaN&gt; DamPVo'ood s
S Supl SundavSchoo19

St&gt;rvlce 10 30 a m

Evangellatlcservt~6

~B

m , Worship

:11p.m Wednesday

servIce 7 p.m.
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
st .. Mason, W. Va. Sunday Bible Study 10
am ; Worship 11 a m and 7 p.m Wednes
day Bible Study, vocal music. 7 p.m
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dud
ding I..ane, Mason, W Va J N Thacker,
pastor. Evening service 7,30 p m.: Women'.!i Ministry, Thursday. 9 30 am,
Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7· 15
p.m.

o• '"""""' Awa. •-"'· 011.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

1

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES
POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677
.I

lill Cluickal and luth ARII fox o .

a3ooG,

{)trW
93 M111 Street

Mldcloport. Ohio 411780
(8141 992·118117 -1981-00KSI
CHURCH SUPPLIES • BIBLES

Schoo19: ~a m : Morning Worship 10 30·
.Evening Worship 7.30 p m, WednesdaY
PrayE'r Serv lt.'C!, 7 30 p m
fAITH BAPTIST CHURCH. Railroad
S1 . Mason Sundav SchoollO a m , Morn·
lng worship 11 a m , EvE'ning service 6 p
m Prayer mec!ln~t and Bible Study Wed
nE'SdaY, 7 p m
FOREST RUN BAPI'IST Rev NyiE'
Borden, pastor. Cornelius Bunch. sup!
Sunday School 9• 3tJ a m • St&gt;oond and
fourth Sundays 140rshlp service at 20:l0 p
m

SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD .
noo·Penlerostal Wo~hlp Sf'l \Ice Sundav
10 am , Sunda\' School 11 a m E.:\;enlng
wor~h\p servlc&lt;' 7•00 p m \\ ednf"Sday
pra}er mePlln~ot 7 OtJ p m
MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST CIIURCH, Located In Texas
Community of1 Ct. Rt. 82. Rev. Robert

and hopes.

-Francis

(6141992·2039 Dl'
(6141992-5721

716 NORTH SECOND AYE •

We try to help people who are
handicapped In some way, by reserving
convenient parking spaces for them and
building special facilities to accommodate
them. In some less visible ways, however,
we are all handicapped. It may be by
unwarranted fears and superstitions,
insensitivity to others' feelings, a weakness
that allows us to succumb to temptations,
and so on. Regardless of our physical
condition, perhaps the worst handicap of
all is lack of faith. Whether we realize It or
not, we should all learn what God's love
can do for us. As we grow older, various
infinnitles will begin to chip away at us,
and we will need help and courage that
only faith can provide. Not knowing the joy
and comfort of falth is the worst handicap
of all, but it is one that each of us
canovercome, if we try.

WAID CROSS
SONS SIORE

put or. Sunday School, 9. 30 a m.; morning
worship, 10 30; Sunday and 111unday
evening services, 7;00 p.m.

FIOWIIS FOI EVElY OCCASION

WE CAN ALL OVERCOME

214 e. Main
992·5130 Pomeroy

orr 12t, behiDd WllkesvUie. Charles Jones,

LIE
DIAMONDS

,_,.,

PommJy Flow~t $iop

Rac.net49·Z5SO

TilE NAZA·

:~-.. ~-·"~·::·

...

I

TEAFORD REALTY .

CHAPMAN SHOES

..
...."..

'82 PLYMOUTH RELIANT, 4 DR .... SS7.93 mo.
'83 FORD ESCORT 2 DR ................. SS9.86 mo.
•
r81 BUICK SKYLARK 4 DR .............. S79.00 mo.
'78 JEEP WAGONEER 4x4 ......... S82.44 mo.
'85 PLYMOUTH RELIANT 4 DR ..... S87.58 mo. .
'83 MERCURY ZEPHYR 4 DR ........ S89.84 mo.
'83 BUICK SKYHAWK, 4 DR .......... 589.87 mo.
'85 FORD EXP, 2 DR....................... 598.21 mo.
r86 DODGE OMNI, 4 DR ............. 5106.19 mo.
'85 FORD ESCORT, 4 DR ............. 5106.19 mo.
'82 MERCURY COUGAR, 2 DR.... S154.72 mo.
'83 NISSAN 4x4 PICKUP ..........5178.42 mo.
'83 CHRYSLER FIFTH AVENUE ....... S179.89 mo.
'86 CAVALIER Z24 .................. 5185.93 mo.
'88 CAVALIER 4 Dr ..................S196.70 mo.
'86 CHEV. CELEBRITY 4 Dr ...... 5212.54 mo. .
85 DODGE 3/4 TON PICKUP .... 5212.51 mo.
'85 CHEY. S-10 BLAZER .......... S212.S1 mo.
'87 DODGE SHADOW TURB0 .... 5218.64 mo.
'87 FORD TEMPO SPORT ........ S218.64 mo.
'86 CHRYSLER LEBARON GTS .... 5239.09 mo.
'84 DODGE D150 PICK... Gray ..... S239.91 mo.
r84 DODGE D150 PKI..,IIue-... 5239.91 mo.
'85 CHEVROLET 1·10 ILAZEI- S239.09 mo.

I~~i

..,,,.,,., ·, Q•ni!J

,}

PICK-A-PAYMENT

2 Dr., white with red, good condition, 4 sp.

Auto, PS.

Rawlings-Coats-Blower

Darline Stewart. Sabbath School be.lrtnsat

1983 OLD~ DELTA 88 ................... 54195

1978 FORD F-1 00 SHORT BED ....... S995

E

Homelole Saw•

"

WE GIVE SENIOR CITIZENS

MEIGS DRE
~ \ CENTER, INC.

IFUI~Nilsu_URPE~!RDWAR!I -Bl!~

;

915·3131

·"'

RIDENOUR

..
...

-RStAUUNT

4 Dr.. PB, PS, air.

Auto .. PB, topper, good condition.

352 EAST MAIN

A-·•Portioo of Ow Own llomNO- •-•'"' Sor"d -~~ Maohotlhlalooo
101d Horn•. . Gr•y, Hooti&lt;Ookod lru... Sproul' Hot lul,.td lol or .........
. . . . .~~ llonoy, Maxwtll Hou• CoH" ., S..ko DocofftlnitML loth Froohty
••wtd lA S..alt Cold Ot'ink or Hot Tto Moy 1o S.llstRuto&lt;ll.

nf Q!q~at~r

Olde"' Flori!&gt;t

POMEROY, OHIO 46769
614/992· 2844

SUNDAY, OCTOaR 2ND
HOMECOOICED ROAST BEEF DINMR ............. S4.59

SPfCTACIIIR ::::::·

1975 FORD F-100 ........................ 51295

W(••,~e~ Cuunh··~

Ow largo Gourmet Flshlolt Sonodono Splii·Topl• With Our Ownhllclousllo_.,
Tonar Sauct. Hot Gotdoo F,.,dl Fri• ., d Your ~of Ito...,. Ill, Colo Slaw, MIK•IIIi
!GIIII. Pototo s.ttll or lokod • -

1!\~~hauulJ'a

FRANCIS FLORIST

;.••
•

z•ill

•

'

'·

.

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

"FIItlti"' K1111dg Fill~ C~k11"
221 W. Moin St. Pom~roy
992·5432

..

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30TH
FISHTAIL FILLO SANDWICH PLAnEIH.......... S2.79

Phil Hovatter 53 and Tim Peterson 56
The Southeastern Sectional
rournament was held at the
Oxbow course on Wewdnesday.
Eleven teams were represented
In the 18 hole event with New
Lexington being crowned the
winner with a 337 score. The New
Lex team took the championship
by one stroke utilizing the filth
golfers score. Belpre checked in
with a 337, Ironton posted 352,
Sheridan a 368, Chesapeake 389,
Nelsonville· York 396, Meigs 399,
Vinton· County 410, Southpoint
431, Wellston 444 and Fairland
461
The top five finishers will
advance to district play at
Portsmouth's Elks Country Club
on October 5th. Malt Baker will
also advance to district competition as a result of his round of 84
which was the low round shot by
an indivldual not on a quall(ylng
team. This wtll be Baker's third
consecutive trip to district play.
Other Meigs golfers were Scott
Barton, Tim Peterson, Mike
VanMeter, Phil Hovatter and
Jamey Little.
Rounding out the week on
Friday at Cliffside versus Galli·
polls and Point Pleasant, Meigs
came In second with a 190 while
the hosts Galllans socored 168
and the Big Blacks 227. Comedalists were Joey Lane and
Hank Davis of Gallipolis with
rounds of 38. Meigs' low scorer
was Scott Barton with a 42
followed by Matt Baker's 43, Tim
Peterson's 49, Jamey Little's 56
and Mike VanMeter's 65.

·

(row's Family Restaurant

Mariners 5. Rangers 1
At Seattle, Mark Langston,
15·11, ran his sc&amp;e.less·lnnlngs
streak to 34 before Jim Sundberg
ended the left·hander's bid for a
third straight shutout with a
one-out RBI single In the nln:h.
Mike Schooler struck the two
batters he faced to earn his 15th
save.
Astros 5, Braves 4
At Atlanta. Billy Hatcher's
seventh home run snapped a 3-3
tie In the seventh Inning

ROASt BEEF SANDWICH ALONE-.•••, ..... _ ........._............. IUS
SANDWICH lOPPED w/MAS..D POTATOES &amp; GIAYY ..........3.5t

111E JOY Of RELIGION

This Messsge and Uaun:h Directory Spg~o~ By TJI~ In~e,~~ed Bus~~~es Listed On ThiS Page.

This Vleek's Spee·lalt

"This is one tough football
team we're playing, " Central
coach Herb Deromedl sa ld of
Kent'State. "It deserved to be the
MAC pre-season pick
Central beat Kent 10 consecu

2 Door.

"We're going to keep playing
hard even though we have the
slightest of chances." Henderson
said.
Elsewhere in the American
League, Oakland downed Mlnne·
sota 6-2, Kansas City nipped
Chicago 7-6 In 10 Innings and
Seattle stopped Texas 5·1. In the
National League, Houston
shaded Atlanta 5.4 and Montreal
edged Chicago 5·4 .
Athletics 6, Twins 2
At Minneapolls, Walt Weiss
collected three hits and two RBI
to help the A's set an Oakland
record with their 102nd victory .
Curt Young, 11·8, threw six
innings and Minnesota's Fred
Toliver, 7-6, lasted 51·3 .
Royals 7, While Sox 6
At Kansas City, Ed Hearn
registered Ills first RBI since
Aprll18, 1987, on a one-out single
off Donn Pall, 0·2, In the lOth
Inning, to make a winner of Israel
Sanchez, 3-2, who threw three
innings.
Expos 5, Cnb!l 4
At Montreal, Mike Fitzgerald
smacked a two-run homer In the
Expos' three-run second inning,
his fifth homer. Bryn Smith,
12·10, hurled six Innings and Tim
Burke threw 1 1·3 to register his
18th save as Montreal moved
over the .500 mark.

•'

Meigs Marauder golf results

OSU Buckeye cagers name tri-captains

'

'•

By LEN HOCHBERG
UPI Sports Wrller
The Red Sox, whose chase for
their second American League
East titll' in three years has been
anything bu 1 ejlsy, now find it as
easy as 1·2·3.
Boston has a magic number of
one, on two teams, with three
games to play.
The Red Sox, who revived the
seemingly never-ending talk of
them choking this week when
they were swept by Toronto,
Thursday night inched closer to
postseason play.
"We took another step. That's
bow you have to approach all
this, a step at a tbne, " said
Boston Manager Joe Morgan
after the Red Sox routed the
Cleveland Indians 12-0 to gain at
least a tie for the division crown.
" You c~n' t look pasi your next
game and your next opponent.
Boston lowered its magic
number to one over idle Mllwau·
kee and New York, while elbni·
natlng Detroit. The Yankees
downed the Baltimore Orioles
5·1.
TheRedSox try to attain anAL
Championship Series meeting

The Daily Sentinel-Page 6

Pom81oy-Midclapott, Ohio

Sanders, pastor Jeff Holter. lay leader,
Ed Roush, Sunday Scbool Supt Sunday
School 9. .J&gt; a.m , morning worship and
children's church 10· :IJ a m ; evening
preaching service first three Sundays,
7:.J&gt; p.m., Special service fourth Sunday
evening, 7.30 p.m. , Wednesday Prayer
Meetln&amp;. Bible Study and Youth FfiiOW·
llhlp, 7.30 p,m
CIIURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY
Located on 0 J. White Road of Highway
100 Pat Hensen, pastor. Sunday School10
am. ClasES rorallages. Junior Church 11
a.m., Morning worship 11 am Adult
Choir practlce6 p.m. Sunday. Young People's, Children's Church and Adult Bible
Study, Wednesday at 7'30 p m.
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL, 570 Grant
St , Middleport. Affiliated with Southern
Baptist Convenlton David Bryan, Sr , Ml·
nilter. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Morning
worship lla.m; Evenlna worship 7p.m,
Wednesday evening Bible study and
prayer meeting 7 p.m.
BRADFORD CIIURCH OF CHRIST, St
Rt. 124 and Co Rd. 5. Scou Stewart. pas·
tor. Wtlllam Amberger, S. S Supt., Sun
day Schoci 9:30 a.m .; Morning Worship
10:30 am: Evening worship 7:30 p m.
Wednesday worship 7 ~p.m.
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Comer Syeamore and Set»nd Sts., Pomeroy The Rev. William Mlddleswart.
pastor Sunday School 9:45am. Church
service

.n am.

1

VICfORY BAPTIST, 52!1 Nl 2nd St.,
Middleport James E Keesee. pastcr.
Sunday morning worship 10 a.m., Even
lng service 7 p.m ; Wednesday evening
worship 7 p m VlattattonThurlday6:30 p
m.
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH· David
Curfman, pastor Sunday School. 10 a.m ..
worship !lervtce 11 am., Sunday nlghl
worshlp service 7· 30 p m.; Midweek
prayer aervtee Wednesday 7 p m
WESLEYAN
BIBLE
HOLINESS
CIIURCH of Middleport, Inc, 7SPeariSt ,
Rev. Ivan Myers. pastor: Roger Manley,
Sr , Sunday School Supt Sunday School
9:30 a.m : Mornlng Worship 10· 30 am.:
Evening Worahtp 7:30 p.m Wednesday
evenlnR Bible study, prayer and praise
.!iervice, 7:30 p m
LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
OF GOD- Glltxorl Spcnc£'1, pas tor Sun
dav School 9 .10 am: Mornln,g S{'IVi C£'
10 '00a m, Sunda\ ('VC'nlnJlsC't\IC('7 OOp
m , Mld·14'C'Ck pt a\'el scrvlt_
'&lt;' Wedn C'SdaV
7 pm
MT OLIVE F Ul.l. GOSPE L COMMU!\l

tTY CHURCH, I ttY.n•m't' Hush pastor
MaXF'olrncr.Sr S ~ Supl Sund.avSchoul
9:30 a m ; Suncla\ f'V{'nin2 sen iC&lt;'. 7 30
m: Wednrsd&lt;J\ ev('nin,g Rlbh• slu dv and
pralsr sen tee. 'i lf) p m
UNITED F'AITH CHURrH, Rt 7 on Po
merov By·Pa ss RC"v David Wls('ITlan Sr
pastor. Melvin Dra k(\ S S Supl Sundav

MT MORIAH BAPTIST, ~ ourl h and
Main St Middleport Rev Gilbert Craig,
Jr., pastor Mrs Ervin Baumgardner
Sunday &amp;hoc! Sup! Sunda\ Sch0ol9·30a'
m, Wot shlp Serviep, W 45 am
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
- .Joseph B Hoskins, evan~ellst Sunday
B ible Study 9 a m , Worship, 10 a m : Sun
dav evt"nln~ s(•r \'\('(' n p m Wednesday
evcnin2 service. i p m
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY. RacinC'.
Rt 124 William Hoback. pas101 Sunda\'
School 10 a m : Sundav ('Vening Sl'I'V!C't" 7
p m Wednesdav evrnln~ scrvlce 7 p m.
CARPENTER BAPTIST Don Cheadle
Sup1 Sunda'' School 9 30 a.m MorntnA
Worship IO ·;x) a. m P1 ave rs£'tV\Cf', alternate Sundavs
THE CHURCH OF' JESUS CHRIST
APOSTOL.If' F'AITH - Ne" Lima Rd '
next to F'orl Mt'lgs Pat k. Rulland. Roberi

Richards , pas lor Services at 7 p.m on

WednesdaY!:~

and Sundavs
HARRISONVILLE HOliNESS CHAP
TER of the WrslC"Van Holiness Church
Rev Oa\•ld F•&lt;'tT ell, pastor Henry Eblin'
Sundav &amp;boo! Supl , Sunday School10 a·
m. Morning Wnrs;i ll am. Evenln~
sC'rvice7·30p m W esdavevE'ningsPr
VIC&lt;'7l0pm
1
STlVERSVILLE WORD OF' F'AITH
GaT'\' Hol1 E'l. pas lot .lsundav s('fVices 9. :It
a m and 7 p.m . Mld"'-eck service, 7 :11 p

m Thursday

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL. Tltlrd
Ave. Rev. Clark Bahr. pastor Carl Not
tlngham, Sunday School Supt Sunday
School 10 a m with classes for all ages.
Evtn\ng services al 6 p.m Wednesday Bl
ble study at 7 30 p m Youth SE'rvlces Frl·
day at7•30 p m
ECCLESIA FELlOWSHIP. 128 Mlll St ,
Middleport Brot:ht"'' Chuck MC"Pherson,
pastor Sunday School 10 am ., Sunday
evening services at 7 p m and Wl.'dnesday
serv\C('S at 7 p m
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Kenneth Smith,
pas1or Sunday School 9.30 a.m, church
sc1 vice 7 30 p m

youth fellowship 6: JO p

m. Blblesludv. Thursday , 7 30p.m

FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE, 33045
Hiland Road, PomE'I'oy Tom Kelly. pas·
lor. Danny Lambert, S. S Sup! Su11day
mornin g serv1ce at10 a.m: Sunday evenIng SE'rvtce 7· 30 p m Tuesday and Thurs
day Servlct'S al 7 :l) p m
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA
ZARENE. ttev Glendon Stroud, pastor
Sunday School9 30 a m , WorshlpserviC&lt;&gt;
to :IDa m , Youth serviC'eSundav~ 6 t~p
m Sunday evenlngservlce7•00p m. WPd·
nt&gt;Sday P1ayE'r MPetlng and Bible Study
7 00 p.m

NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH, Sun
day afternoon services at 2.30 Thursday
C'\eninR services al 7 30
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH. Mason, W
Va. Prstor. Bill Murphy. Sunday Srhool10
a m Sunday evening 7 30 p m Pra}£'r
mE'E'IinR and Bible study Wednesday, 7.30
p.m. EveryonE" welrome
RUTLAND FREE Will BAPTIST, Sa·
!em St Rev Paul Taylor, pastor. Sunday
SchoollO a m : Sundav &lt;'veninR 7 00 p m :
Wednesday eve ning prayer met"tlntz 7: 00
pm
SOUTH BET HEL NEW TESTAMENT
CHURCH Silvt'r Rld2e Duane 'Syden
strlcker, pastor Sunday School 9 am ,
Worship Service- to a.m , Sundav evening
.serv lc(', 7 00 p m Wednesday nitthl Biblestudy 7·00 p m
.

HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION Har~ord, W Va
Rev. David McManis. pastor. Church
~chool !t. art a m , :-Iunday morning ser
viN 11 am: Sunda\ evE"nlng 9E'rvtce
7 :up Ill Wednesdav praver meeting. 7. 30
fl Ill

'

FAlHV'lEW BIBLE CHURCH, IA'tarl
\-\ Va Ht J , Jam&lt;'8 Lewis, pastor \\or
~hlp !ill'rvlces ~ 30 a m , Sunday Schoolll

a m ; Ev('nlnR worM!Ip 7 30 p m TU('tdav
7 \0 p m

(&gt;UR SAVIOUR LUTI!ERAN CHURCH
\\ainu! and Hen f) St!'i. , RaH'n!lwood W
Va ThPRcv GeomeC Weirick. pasra-.
SundaySChod9 :Mia m, Sundaywor!'i.hlp
llam
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH.locatedon
PomerOY Pike. C'ounly Road 25 near Flatwoods RN BIHckWood, pastor, Sen1ces
onSundavt~tlO·:Wa m and7 30pm with
SundaySch0019.:ma.m BlbleStudy Wed·
nesdar, 7 :lOp m.
FAITH FElLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST. St. Rt ,lJ8. Antiquity Rev
Franklin Dldlena, p.a11tor Sunday mom·
Ina JO am: Sunday e''E'ntnr 7•30 p m.
Thunday even1nfl 7: :.&gt;p.m.
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLt ·
NESS CHURCH. Inc, 7S P•arl 5I Rev
Ivan Myers, acttng,.atCI', Ro1er Man~.
Sr , Sunday School Superintendent Sun·
day School 9:30 1 m.: Mom1111 worship
10:30 a.m., even Ina wonhlp 7: :ft p m ,
Wednesday evenlq Bible study, pnyer
·a~_ pnlll" servtce,'T· 30 p.m.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS
TOLIC- VanZandl and Ward Rd Elder
James Mtlter. paoter. Sunday School.
10: 30a m : Worship Service, Sunday, 7. :M1
p m.: Blbi•Srud.v. Wednooday, 7• 30 p.m
CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL.Harri·
•mvtlte Rood Rev Dowey Kina, putor;
CIIDitll Faulk, Sunday S&lt;llool SUpt.; Sunday School 9:30a.m. ; monunewwilllp, II
am.: Sundar evea1111 •rvtc. 7:30pm
Prayer Mtettnr, Wednesday, 7.30 p,m

.

Sermonette

Is It elder making tbne already? Are quilts back on our beds
once more? Can I take a walk down the street and along the lane
and shuffle my feet In newly fallen leaves of many hues? Can 1
wear a sweater and feel the warm sun and cool breeze on my
face? Has Septembers sneaked up on me with the beauty of
Aster and Chrysanthemum and kids once more In classrooms
deep In study? Yes, and It can only mean one thing, Autumn has
come upon the scene. Summer has past by and God Is putting the
earth to sleep that It might restfor the winter. Now the earth will
gain strength for the coming year when God will send forth that
burst of green that signals "Spring" .
How can anyone In their right mind deny the power of the
almighty God as they look at the seasons of the year? God Is
sending us the glory of Autumn to brighten our hearts and keep
up strong in our faith and trust in Him for the winter days when
little will grow. How aad It must be for those who do not believe
In God and trust only In a hope, that spring will bring a rebirth to
the earth. Don't they know that all things man made wlll fall one
day. Do they truly think that things wlll just burst forth as an
accident of late each year without any rhyme or reason?
We who know God and believe ln,Him can see the beauty of all
the seasons. We also know God Is present In all seasons and will
take care of all our earthly needs and one day grant us a
heavenly home and joy forever beyond all our Imaginations.
That Ia why we can enjoy the elder making time of falling
leaves, fire In the hearth, quilts on the beds and cellars full to
overflowing with Gods gttts. Yes, Autumn Is upon us and our
hearts are atlll gay. We know God the almighty is with usevery
day of the year. What a God of blesalng we have to pralle,
always. - Pu._ Wl11lam Mlddlelwarlll, Lu&amp;llenna of Melp

ColudJ •

'

�..
Pea•

&amp;-The

'

o.r, Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

Local news briefs... -

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 10.1-88

Continued from page 1

EMS has six rolls Thursday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports six calls
Thursday; Pomeroy at 8:48 a,m. to Route 33 for Pauline Wolfe
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 10:27 a .m. to llO
State St . for John McKenzie to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy Fire Department at 12:26 p.m. to a structure lire on
Smith Road; Pomeroy Fire Department, assisted by
Middleport Fire Department. at 12:44 p.m. to a truck fire on
Pomeroy Pike; Racine at 1: 31 p.m. to Letart for Mary L.
Pickens to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 6:16p.m.
to Peacock Ave. for Robert Canaday to Veterans Memorial
Haspltal.
·

1n

October is... continued from page 1

c:::2isNOW
FRONTS:
Warm

A recycling cOntest will be held containers (rinsed and separated
tor all the elementary schools in by color -clear, green or brown
thecounty .. Awardswlllbemade - with lids removed) , soft
by the Meigs County Litter plastic jugs (milk. detergent, oil.
Conlr!ll Program to the first and !Iter, etc.), copper and brass. The
second place winning elemen- nearest outlet for newspapers
tary school In "each" Meigs and cardboard Is Athens.
County School District. with a
If you want to be a part of the
grand award to the county Meigs County Recycle Drive.
winner.
call the litter control office at
In addition, the Tri·County 992-6360, · where booklets and
Recycling Center Is offering an brochures are available on "How
award of $50 to the TOP elemen· to Organize a Recycling Drive"
tary schoolln "each" district for and "Recycling at Home. " If
all materials recycled at their needed, someone from the litter
business location. All awards are control office will present short
based on the total amount of talks to groups who are consider·
money received by that school ·lng joining the recycling
for recycling during the month of movement.
October.
Just remember, Wiggins says,
Materials which can be re- "If you're not recycling- you 're
cycled locally are aluminum throwing 1t all away.' '
cans. aluminum siding, glass

--Area deaths-.--Margie Rowe
Margie G. Rowe, 65, Happy
Hollow Road, Middleport. died at
her home Thursday following a
lengthy Illness.
Mrs. Rowe was born at Logan,
W. Va., on July 10, 1923, a
daughter of Mary Boothe Crick·
man and the late Lonnie Boothe.
Besides her father , she was
preceded In death by her hus·
band. Carmel; a daughter. Betty
Owens; a son, Roger Rowe; her
stepfather; Walter Crlckman,
and an infant son.
Surviving are her mother.
Mary Crlckman, daughters and
sons· In· law, Donna and Donald
Pennington and Levaughn and
Arnold Bartley; 10 grandchild·
ren, several great -grandchildren
and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be held at 12
o'clock noon Sunday at the
Rutland Freewill Baptist Church
with the Rev. Paul Taylor
officiating. Friends may call at
the Hunter Funeral Home In
Rutland from 7 to 9 p.m.
Saturday. Burial will be in
Hiland Memory Gardens, Pecks
Mill, W.Va., near Logan .

Ollie Thorson
Ollie Grace Hood Thorson, 67.
Marmet, W. Va., ·former Meigs
resident, died Sept. 2 at St.
Francis Hospital in Charleston,
W.Va.
She was born In Minersville.
tbe daughter of the late George
and Winnie Hood. Survivors
Include a daughter, Winnlfrede
(Wink) Fontalbert, Marmet;
five sons, Curtis L. Winter, C.
Arnold Winter, both of Poca, W.
Va.; D. Michael Winter, Sisson·
ville; R. David Winter, Nitro,
and George tRick) Winter, Tast.

La.

Also surviving are five sisters,
Mrs. Evelyn Asbury, Nitro; Mrs.
:;Genevieve Demoskey , Mlddle~t; Mrs. Mollie Ann Rose,
:Columbus; Mrs. Eula Mae
~aggy Odegard, Pomeroy, and
oMrs, Wanda Wooldridge, Cha·
::Cieston; and four brothers,
):;eorge Hood, Batavia; John
'Hood, Danville, Ky. and Robert
!Hood and Kenneth Hood, both of
.Columbus. Seventeen 2!'and·

;stocks
,ally ll&amp;nclt prices
'(All oliO: 30 Lm.)

'Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blual, Ellill 1: Loewi
; Am Electric Power ............. 27'h
; AT&amp;T ............................ .. ... 26%
• Ashland 011 ........................33'(4
; Bob Evans ..... .......... ........... 16'h
: charming Shoppes .. ............. 14
: city Holding Co ..... .. ..... ... .... 34
• Federal Mogul. .................. .49%
; Goodyear T&amp;R .......... ....... ..57%
· • Heck's ......... .. ...... ... ......... .. .. ')f.
: Key Centurion .... .. .... ... .......16%
~ Lands' End ............... .... ....... 30
! Limited Inc ............ .. ........ .. 23'(4
•Multimedia Inc ....... ... ... ... .. .. 73
: Rax Restaurants .... ........ ... ... 3%
&gt;Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 10%
• Shoney's Inc : ..... ... .. .... .. .... ... 7'h
: wendy's Intl ............ ............ 6l's
• Worthington Ind .... .... ...... .. .22%
~

~Announcements
•t ;dpto meet ·

children and seven. great·
grandchildren also survive.
She was preceded in death by
three brothers. Arthur, Howard
and Donald.
Funeral services were held on
Sept. 5 at the Gat tens Funeral
Home in Poca with the Rev. W.
Riley James officiating. Burial
was In Marmet Cemetery.

Mary Neal
Mary Jane Neal, 52, Holloway
Street, Henderson, died at I :05
p.m. Thursday, Sept. 29, 1988, in
the emergency room at Pleasant
Valley Hospital, Point Pleasant
She was a member of the Church
of Christ in Henderson.
Born Feb. 25, 1936 in Leon, she
was ·a daughter of the late David
and Lona Thornton Herdman.
, She is survived by her husband,
Carl Edward Neal; two daughters,
Diana Carper, Henderson; Ona
Neal, Henderson; two stepdaughters, Shirley Spears, Point
Pleasant, Donna Tucker, Charles·
ton; five sons, Raymond E. Neal
and Merle E. Neal, George Neal
and Delco E. Neal, all of Hender·
son, Micky L. Neal, Point Pleasan~
two step-sons, Carl E. Neal I r.,
Charleston, S.C., Richard Neal,
Charleston, W.Va.; two sisters,
Maxine Hart, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Elieen Oldaker, Columbus, Ohio;
five brothers, Bubby Herdman, Rut·
land, Ohio, Oley and James
Herdman, both of Wheelersburg,
Ohio, Donald Herdman, Columbus,
Delmer Herdman, Circleville,
Ohio! seven grandchildren; seven
great-grandchildren.
Services wiU be at I p.m. Satur·
day, at the Crow-Hussell Funeral
Home with the Rev. Michael D.
Chapman officiating. Burial will
follow in the Henderson Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Friday from 2 to 4 p.m. and
1·9 p.m.
·

II

BJRAIN
@--'?'d SHOWERS
"
Cold
. . Static " ' Occluded

Map shows mirllmum temperai&amp;Jres. At leas ISO% of any snadeo area •s forecast
to receive precipitation indicated
UPI

WEATHER MAP - A cold front curved from a low over west
central Iowa across central M111ourl and·northwest Loulalana to
the central Rio Grande Valley of Texas. A low was also over south
central Arizona. Wgha were over north central Idaho, southeast
New England and south central Quebec.

-----Weather-----South Central Ohio
Tonight: Partly cloudy . Lows
will be between 60 and 65.
Southwest winds around 10 mph.
Saturday: Mostly cloudy with
a slight chance of showers. High
around 80, The chance of rain Is
30 percent.
Extended Forecast
Sunday through Tuesday
Showers slowly ending from

Bush.,. Continued from page
president In the Oval Office."
Bush's comments drew 'th~
wrath of · the IRS agents ' union
and· a sharp retort from the
Dukakis campafgn .
In Washington, the head of the
union that " represents IRS
workers called Bush's attack
"bogeyman politics that could
lead to the furloughing of the
nation's delinquent taxpayers at
the expense of the honest 90
percent who pay voluntarily."
Robert Tobias, president of the
National Treasury Employees
Union, said Bush could set the
stage for "wholesale acceptance
of the notion that it's OK to cheat
on your taxes."
"Perhaps Bush 's attack Is
based on the fact that he was
forced to pay $196,000 In ' de !In·
quent taxes," Tobias said, "and
proclaimed that he was going to
challenge IRS. Is this his
challenge?"
The Dukakls campaign issued
a. statement charging that Bush
"wants middle America to pick
up the tab for big business, the
wealthy, the yacht owners and
the drug-money launderers."
"It's not coincidence that
under the Reagan· Bush admin Is·

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Thursday AdmiSsions - Dora
Smith, Pomeroy; Mary L.
Pickens, Racine.
Thursday Discharges - Robbie Clonch . .

•

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS
.

To lend a beautllull11
desl1ned funeral

arran1ement, JU8t call
or vlalt

•

POMEROY
FLOWER
SHOP
A"'a.\· .t mPriro
l.rJ• ·r•.,

~ Tht&gt;

~n1b

Ph. 992·2Dit er 9U.J721

SEARS'-----..
Replacement
Windows
20D/o OFF
'11·/N.

MAINTENANCE FRU PVC

INSULATED
GLASS

TIL f.IN SASHES allow 11sy.
sale cleaning. HtlplellmiMit
need lor oul1ide clolning.

Sealed with
axtra Mete dud
ail' space, Helps
ellminale flfld
lOt' storm

HIGH SECURITY CAM

LOCKS oro pick reol~an1: helps

ilruetday at 7: 30 p.m. Refresh·
}nents will be served follOwing
ttbe meeting.
lrl 1 a 10 meet
: Letart Towuahlp Truslees will
'11leflMonday, 7p.m. , at the town

·11atl.

~lome«
~ Letart Falls PI'O will meet 7
~p.m. Monday. All parents are
'::urred
...,. to attend.
I

"

Cool rain heads East

CHOICE Of
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EXCLUSIVE "R" CORE"'

Choolofrom
popular llrlf't. ·

Helps 11ve on utility bU" all
yor 'round.

HEAVY-111m'
WEAT!t!JI.

Sale ends

INSULATION

tone or whitt.

THUISDAY
OCTOIII 6

STIIIPI'IIKI
Holpo Oliminoto air
lnflllrllion 1M hotlloss.
fOR A FAU IH·HOIIE, NO

OBLIOAnON ESniiATJ:

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812-2178
MIDDLEPORT

UMW conducts meeting

By United Pres• International
Kentucky .
A cool dome of high pressure
Temperatures around th e na·
clamped down over Idaho early
t Ion early today ranged from 32
today. causing temperatures to degrees at Laramie, Wyo., to 82
dip Into the 30s over parts of degrees at Yuma; Ariz ., and Key
Colorado and Wyoming and ' West. Fla.
prompting weather officials to
Forecasters predicted more
Issue frost advisories ,
rain today in parts· of Texas, the
Thick fog blanketed the coastal
lower Mississippi Valley, along
areas along Southern California
the central Gulf Coast region,
overnight, causing zero vis ibiilty parts of Alabama and Tennessee:
at Camp Pendleton near north·
The heaviest rain was ex·
ern San Diego, the National pected for central and eastern
Weather Service said today , Texas. Arkansas and souther!)
VIsibility was not much better Missouri.
.
.
early today In Long Beach,
Showers also were expected to
Fog also formed over the upper be scattered over parts of north·
Great Lakes, the Ohio Valley, ern New England, while winds
Illinois, the Tennessee Valley, were picking up In the northern
along the central Appalachians Rockies.
In Miami, meanwhile, forecas·
and over coastal North Carolina ,
Thunderstorms over central ters said Hurricane Helene con·
and eastern Texas brought heavy tlnued to move toward certain
rainfall, dumping more than an death in the cold North A.Uantic
Inch of rain in 30 minutes early today as a tropical depresThursday In Corpus Christi, the sion with top winds of 35 mph
NWS said, Some street flooding headed for the Caribbean and
was reported In Whitney and was expected to intensify.
Itasca, Forecasters said the rain
"Some strengthening is ex · .
was letting up today somewhat
peeled within the next 24 hours,"
Rain also was scattered over said Gil Clark at the National
parts of Louisiana, Arkansas and Hurricane Center in Miami. "AlJ
the Florida peninsula. Streets interests In the Lesser Antilles
also were wetted down In parts of should c.Iosely monitor this
Colorado, Kansas, Missouri and system."

Athens District United Metho·
dlst Women will hold Its annual
Enrichment Day at St. Mark's
United Methodist Church, Third
and Maple, Belpre, on Oct. 20.
David Harris, Athens District
program assistant, will be the
featured speaker In the morning.

The Syracuse PTO voted to
give $25 to each classroom and
$50 to the klndergarden for
classroom supplies at this year's
first meeting held at the school.
Rose Ann Jenkins, president,
opened the meeting with James
Lawrence, principal, giving a
report on the installation of a
walkway between the school and
the front sidewalk. Linda Fisher
reported on plans for a chicken
and noodle dinner and the fall
carnival scheduled for Oct. 22.
ELDERWALK - About 30 Melp senior
cltlze118, the oldest being Eunle Brinker of Racine,
now 91, participated In Elderwalk, a statewide
activity promoting physical lltaeas for the
elderly. The ilenlors were transported to the Rock

Springs Fairgrounds In the center's vans
Thursday morning and under sunny skies enjoyed
about an hour of brisk walking around !he
picturesque hiD area.

B Ed Peterson
&amp;!anch Manager
Social Security Administration

office has been trying to dispel
this notion that all benefits are
somehow figured on the last
three or five years of work.
Recently a man visited the
If you were to ask a dou.n .
Athens Social Security office In a
people how Social Security renear panic He stated that he
tirement benefits are figured,
planned to· retire at 55 but his
ove• half of them would say they
nelgbor warned him not to
are figured by averaging the last
because he would lose his Social
tbree or last five years of
Security
coverage. In this case,
earnings. According to Ed Peter·
the
neighbor
had told him that
son, Social Security Branch
Social
Security
would use the last
Manager In Athens, people do not
three years of work to determine
change their beliefs quickly
his benefits. This man. was
when It comes to how Social
relieved when he was told he
Security benefits are figured.
could retire at 55 and not lose his
For years the Social Security

1

tratlon. corporate audits are at
an all time low," said Dukakis·
Bentsen campaign Communica·
lions Director Leslie Dach.
"Mike Dukakis thinks it's time
George Bush stopped protecting
his cronies."
Dach said "someone needs to
audit George Bush's speeches for
the truth" because Dukakls has
not proposed doubling IRS
agents, as Bush claimed.

•

f•, Romine-Bicker reunton

The annual Romine-Bieker
"'reunion was held recently at the
-l EI! Denison Post, American
,,Legion.
\ Atendlng were Charles and
•Otlllla Romine, Rutland; Ken·
:Oeth Bernard, Tina Romine,
' Kathryn Lambert, all of Ru ; tland; Cli1ford and Alice Plantz,
• Dave, Annette and Clay Russell,
' 1\'IIddleport; Mildred Blckar.
~Theresa, Joe, and Richard Bro\Rosky, Huntlngton, .w. Va.
· Charles, Dianna, and Charles
, Morris II, Charles and Melvin
.Romine, Jr., Robert Romine,
(Bev Mitchell. Steve, Tommy and
·Steve Morris, Jr., Terry, Teresa,
"and Missy Fleshman, Roger and
;Sherry Murphy, Bill, Jr. and
. Jl!nnlfer Romine, Bill, Sr. Barb,
' Loretta and Tim Romine, all of
:Columbus.
:. Robert, Jr., Cookie, Jeff and
:crystal Romine, Lockbourne,
:Elmer and Charlotte Morris,
•Melvin and Jessie .Romine,
~Groveport; Leo and Mike Brornosky, Flalwood, Ky.
: Others attending were rela'tlves of Barb Romine, Ronald,
~Richard, Martha, May, Tina.

FALL
AND

WINTER
HOME
IMPROVEMENT
EDITION
.

IN THE

Daily Sentinel
October 17, 1988
RESERVE YOUR AD SPACE

NOW I

992-2156
ASK FOR
BRIAN OR DAVE

Afternoon training sessions will
be In charge of district officers.
Registration and coffee hour
will start at 9: 30 a.m. and the
program will be from 10 a.m to 2
p:m . Local UMW units have been
provided with other local details,
according to Nellie Parker, pub·
!lclty chairman for the district.
I

Syraruse PTO meets

Misconceptions about Social ·Serurity

redUct drafts.

windows.

: The regular meeting of Middle·

i»ort Lodge 363 F &amp;AM will be held

the west Sunday, following fair
weather Monday and a chance of
showers Tuesday. Therewlllbea
cooling trend through the period
with highs In the upper 60s to mid
70s Sunday , in the 60s Monday
and in the mid 50s to m ld 60s
Tuesday. Lows for the period will
range (rom the mid 50s to lower
60s Sunday, mid 40s to mid 50s
Monday and In the 40s Tuesday.

Friday, September, 30. 1988

Debbie, Chrystal, and L.atasha
Conkey, all of Ru !land. ·

Social Security coverage. Like
this man, there ~re manJt

~:~k:!:lywr~~lra;~e~~ rr:'a~a;f~ect

their Social Security, Peterson
continued. Actually, Social Se·
curlty benefits are figured on a·
worker's lifetime of earnings
covered by Social Security.
Early retirement may cause
the worker's benefit amount to be
somewhat lower but It can never
cause the los-s of retirement or
surviror coverage, If the worker
has at least ten years of covered
work.
Additional information about
how early retirement affects
your Social Security benefits can
be obtalnend the Athens Social
Security office. Ask for the free
booklet "Retrlrment." The telephone number is 992-6622.

REVIVAL
Church of Christ
: North Main Street

Rutlqnd, Ohio

October 2-6

7:00 p.m.

Roy W. Carter, min .......................... Song l~ader
Keith Wise, min. Jamestown Ch. of Chr1st
Guest Evangelist
HOMECOMING October 9, 1988 2:00 p.m.
Program
The Branches Quartet
(Southern Gospel)
Carry in dinner at noon.

Bible School
9:30 a.m.
Morning Worship •••••.•••••.••.•.•.•.•.•.....•. 10:00 a.m.
Phone 742-2895

.

~· Parent,
~., teacher

tmeeting set
'''

1

The first parent-teacher con·
'rerence day ·of the Meigs Local
SChool District this school year
will be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
on Thursday, Oct. 13.
· Students of the district will
have a long weekend since they
!wm not be In classes on the day of
~he conferences plus the next
day, Friday, Oct. 14, when
teachers will be attending a
J&gt;(elgs County lnservice day.
• Parents of Meigs Local students will receive a letter desbribing the upcoming conference
1Chedullng . procedures along
with Information on the conferen·
ces through students who will be
Jlrlnglng the Information home to
their parents Monday.
~ Purpose of the conference day
Is to allow parents and teachers
to discuss pupil progress and to
)leep parents and schools In·
·f brmed about student activities
as they relate to school behavior
and performance.
· Meigs Interim Supt. James
tarpenter encourages parents to
take advanta11e of this opportun·
tty to communicate with their
children's Instructors.
"Hopefully, a more effective
education program can result
trom this exchange of loforma·
tlon and Ideas, " Carpenter
~ates.

Further questions regarding
this conferecne day should be
lslrected to the chlldren'sschools
of attendance.
'

_

•opproxtm.to arre

Sitting FH at)$ - Advertised special two poses - our selection.
Special etlects, black l white backgrounds available only in our
Oeelgner Collection. Additional charge lor groups. .

o:Iffirt·'': 13 3~
41300 LAUREL CLIFF
POMEROY. OHIO

....

PHOTOGRAPHY DAYS
SEPT. 30, OCT. 1, OCT. 2

AD DEADLINE

FRIDAY. SATURDAY, SUNDAY

OCTOBER 11, 1988

FRIDAY 11 A.M.-2 P.M./3 P.M.-7:30P.M.
SATURDAY 10 A.M.-2 P.M./3 P,M.·tl P.M.
SUNDAY.11 A.M.·4 P.M.

PHOTOGRAPHY HOURS

,,

I

i

II was decided to continue a

badge recognition program with
the students being able to earn
tickets to apply toward badges
through perfect attendance, good
grades, and good conduct.
The room count award was set
at $10 and at the meeting the fifth
grade was the winner. Lawrence ·
also reported on a new piece of
playground equipment which
was recently Installed. II was
donated by last year's fourth
grade class.

·Reorganized Church retreat held
Five women of the Portland·
Racine Branch of the Reorgan·
!zed Church of Jesus Christ,
Latter Day Saints, attended the
Sept. 23-25 Women's Retreat held
at Camp Bountiful in Jackson.
Anna McHaffie, Eula Proffitt,
Earlene Stobart, Lucy Taylor.
and Juanita Wells were among
the 110 women attending the
weekend meeting. Theme was
''To be Made WhoJe .. A Challenge
of Faith." Guest minister was
Lois Braby, who Is presently
staff executive for the Christian

Education Commission, with re·
sponslbility for the church's
youth ministry resources. She
also serves as coordinator of
girls ministry and the World
Community Religious Emblem
program.
'
Ms. Brady rec~lved her mas·
ter's degrees In sociology and
counseling from Iowa State Uni·
verslty and taught sociology and
counseling in Osaka, Japan. Her
research on the problem of
school dropouts· in Japan was
published In the Japan Times.

Andrew Philson, son of Erich
and Sandy Philson, Pomeroy, !
celebrated his third birthday
recently at his home.
An Alf and Disney theme was
carried out. Attending were the
youngster's grandmothers, Maxine Philson and Gladys Deem,
grandmothers, Rose Deem and
Pat Philson, his grandfather, _
Charles Deem, VIcki and .Ma· ,
thew Peckham, Roy and· Mike
Deem Chris and Jeremy
'
Yeauger.
Sending g11ts and cards were
his great-grandmother, Jean,
Rausch of New Jersey, his
great-aunt, Fran·Casazza of New:
Jersey , his. great -great-,
grandmother, Viola Sleder, and
Sarah Philson.

.

Zuspan birth
George and Becky Zuspan,
Burlington, N. C. are announcing
the birth of a son, George Perry,
born on Sept. 21 at the Alamance
County Hospjtal in Burlington.
He weighed 10 pounds. thrge .
ounces, and was 21 I!! inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
Roy and Teresa Van Mater,
Racine, and paternal grandpar·
ents are Mr. and Mrs. George
Zuspan, Mason. W.Va.

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

'IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIOS COUNTY, OHIO
SHAWMUT MORTOAGE
CORPORATION fko
NORTH CENTRAL
MORTOAOE CORP.
Plain!lff
- VBROBERT L.
SAWYERS, JR., otol.
Defendants
Cooo No. 87 CV 238
LEOAL NOTICE OF SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
Notice io hereby given thot
on Friday the 4th day of No·
vembef, 198S, at 10:00 a.
m. l wMI offer forooleatPub·
lie Auction at the Coull·
hou• in Melp County,
Ohio, the following ...1 eo·
tate. to wit:
Tha. following deocrlbod
property, oituated in the
Townohip of Sutton, County
of Moiga, and State of Ohio.
and clelcribed aa follows. to
wit:
Being in Section 1 I. Town
2, Ronge 12, of tho Ohio
Company' 1 Purchae. and
fulthllf deocrlbed oafollowo:
Beginning for reference at
the 10utheNt corner of said
Section t 8: thence Nonh
2766 feet to a point; thonce
South 88 degre11 1 &amp; min·
utM Wnt 278 feat to an Iron
pin; thence Nonh 0 degroeo
1 &amp; mlnuiH Eoot 92.391aet
to an Iron pin and the place
of beginning of the proporty
herein conveyed; thence
continuing Nonh 0 dogran
1 &amp; mlnutH 0 oocondl Eoot
90 faet to on Iron pin; thence
West 484 foot to on Iron pin:
thence South ·0 degr- 1 &amp;
mlnuteo 0 ooconda Wool 90
feet to an iran pin; thence
North 90 degron Eut 484
foot to the place of begin·
nlng and contllinlng 1.00
ecrea more or lei a.
Excepting to tho Stat• of
Ohio all oil, ••· coal and
other min01olo, with light of
antry for purpooo of PIG. .
cuting far. developing, producing or operating the
11mo. and the right of occu·
panr:v In 10 far u theaameil
ouontlal for ouch proopoct·
ing. devoloplng, oporatlng
or producing, alao reaerving
unto the State of Ohio, the
uM of struma
flowing
through aid Ianda. and 10
much of the bankla may be
necH•ry for auch enjoyment ond the protoction of

ty Rood 28, Racine. Ohio
46771.
Sold propony wu approloed at *32,&amp;00.00 and
cannot -'I for tno thon twothird&amp; of said appraisement.
Sold preml- to be ootd
• the property of Robin L.
Sawyers, Jr .• at. 111., to aatilfy e judgment In favor of
Shawmut Mongego Corporation fke North Central
Mortgage Corp. on llln order
iooued from the Common
Pleas Coun
of Molgo
County, Ohkt and to me u
Shariff of oold County.
Howard E. Fronk.
Sheriff
Termo of Sale: CASH or
CERTIFIED CHECK. Ton
PIIICent (10%) Dopoolt on
day of ule, balance In thirty
(30) dayo. ,
(9) 30: 110) 7. 14. 3tc

for buHclng and maintaining
ooid right owoy oholl .,. In
proportion to ita u•.
Reference; Volume 308,
Pogo 7116 of tho Moiga
County Deed Records.
EXCEPTINO and
RE·
SERVINO to tho grantor
from the above 28 acre tract
the following dncri.,.d rool

Sllid M •Ute ie com~
monly known 11 being 21
acr•. moro or lou. formerly.
owned by Ronold W. Vanao.

IUCh ltltem8 from WOiion,

2(8x10s), 2(5x7s)," 10 wallets,
16 Memorable MomentsrM Portraits &amp;
16 Christmas Cards with Envelopes

Philson birthdayj

contamination or depo1it of
oedimMt.
Subject to a aewer •••
mont with the right to uoo.
repair and malnteln the
aame, which covers 1 larger
tract of land of which the
above deocrlbod to o pan.
arid which eewer euement
io 10 feet In width ond 1111 &amp;
feet on olthel olde oft he cen·
torllno which II deocrl&gt;ed ao
followo: Situate In Sutton
Townahp, MeiDl County
Ohio, in Soction 1 II, Town 2,
Ronge 12 of the Ohto
Company'• Purch•e. and
commencing fo• ..,....,co
at tho South-t corr111 of
Section 111; thence North
2718 feet to a point: thence
South 89 degrHI 18 mlnutll Wool 278 feet toan Iron
pin· thenoo Nonh 0 degr1&amp; 'mlnutoe Eaot 87.8f to101
to the truo place of beginning; thence North. 72 d•
gr- mlnu• 34
Wnt 117.23 fHI: thonco
North 2 d . . - 1g mlnu ...
&amp; eocondo Woot 134.82
foot: lhonca North I II d•
gr- tiO minutae 44 oocondo Woat 71.32 - .
thMCO North 21 dlgi- II
minutae till -lido Woat
123.37-.
Prior Deodlloler11-. Voluma 218. pego 423, Dood
Rooonla of Molge County.
Ohio.
tho above -rlptlon lo
the ....ult of a auMy of
Rlahard c. Otoogow. Rogto.
Wed luMYOr No. 1181,
POi' auMy of Februarv 22.
1877.
ALSO KNOWN AI: Coun·

e

'l

·-nell

ntete:
Being In Section 2, Range
13. Ohio Compony' o Pur·
ch•e

Seld ..... ..... WM .a.ci'

prO¥ioualy owned by Joyce1
Coole. Bold 111111 •tote II';
looeted in the 1outheut,
corner of the oouth-t,
Quoner of Section 2. Town
Numbor 3, Ronge Numbel·
13 of Ohio Compony' o Pur·
ch•o In Bedford Township.,
Meiga County, Ohio. Bald
rool -toio bordered on the ·
n - ond - t olde by Kingo.l
burr Cr-andon the north-',
w•t by re.r •tote owned by,
John E. Werry ond Margoret.
J. Worry, on U.. •"""'-t
oide by ....
by
Jonot 6. Orueoor Md unv.
H.rn• and on the oouth by
111111 ntota owned by John E.
Werry ond
Morgoret ' J .'
Werry and the ·Nonh nne of .
Section No. 1. Th.,. io """
cepted trDm 11ld real ,H tlite. 1
on the southwest portion, a.

bounded and de·
acrlbed aa followa: Begin~
ning 20 feet eoat of tho
southw.t corner of above
dacr&amp;bed 10 acre parcel
prO¥touoly owned by Joyce
Cook. now owned by Ro·
noldW. Vance; - c e n 120 feet to o otoke; the line
being parallol to the boundary of tho above do,.;, R&gt;ed &amp;0 acre poroot;
thence oaot3&amp;8.88 feet too
otoko on a line porallolt 0 tho
Public Not ice
..,uth line of the above de·
ocrlbod 50 acre parcel;
thence oouth 120 feet to o one acre parcet of real •· •
LEGAL NOTICE
'
atake
in the 1outh line of the tlta.
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
Said rut •tate WU IP- 1
obovo
deocri.,.d
80
acre
REAL ESTATE
porcol: thence wnt 388.88 proioed at Six Thou•nd ond
IN THE COMMON
feet
to the place of begin- 00100 Dollorotf6,000.001.)
PLEAS COURT OF
ning,
containing one acre. The terms of uid ule l1
MEIOS COUNTY. OHIO
c•hmore
or
let1.
BLENNERHASSET
Sale of ooid real •toto io
OrMtor
Ronald
W.
Vance
FEDERAL CREDIT UNION
tD be aold for not .... thM.,,
r•ervea
1 right of way over
2910 River Road.
111d acrou the 20 foot par- two-thlrda (2/3) of the
P. 0. Box 60&amp;7
cel
which lieo -~ of the ofor-id oppraiood value.
Vienna, Woot VIrginia
Sold oalo il aubjoc:t to op- "
above
one acre trtK:t for ln2610&amp;·&amp;067
proval by the Common Pie• ..
gre
..
and
egreu.
PLAINTIFF
Re-ce io mode to doed Coun. Meigs County, Ohio.
vs.
· Howard E. Frank,
of
Ronald W, Vance to
JAMES R. VANCE, at ol.,
Sheriff ot •
Jam•R·
VanceandBarHra
DEFENDANTS
Meigo County, OhiOL
Vance
doted
Septomber
29,
Ceoe Number 88-CV-141
,~,
1187. u recorded in Vo· Approved:
NOTiCE OF SALE
Fred W. Crow,
lumo
307,
Page
273
of
the
Ao Sh.,.iff of Meigo
. ''
Attornoy for the
County, Ohio, I hereby off01 Melva County Doed Re· Blennerhoa- Federal
for -'• at 10:1&amp; A.M. on corda.
•
Said rul utate is subject Credit Union
Friday, tho 4th day of No·
,
VIenna,
Weot
Virginia
vombor,1988. A. D.,onthe to all lain, eesernent1 and (9) 30; (101 7, 14, 3tc
•'
front otepo of tho Molga right of way1. if any, of reCounty Coun Houeo. Po· cord.
•f·
m•oy. Ohio. the following
dncrlbld raot ntote:
11 Help Wanted
The following doocri!J1d
real estate. situ.ted in the
County of Molga, Townohip
.'
of Bedford and State of
Ohio, bounded and do·
scribed u follows:
Being in So&lt;tlon 2. Town 3.
RMige 13 Ohio Company' I
Pulch-. bou- .,d d•

-··owned

..

.

AUTOMOTIVE
SALES

ICribod • to-o:

Beginning at the aouth·
east corner of the aouthwut
quonor of Section 2; thence
wool 60 rodo: thence n t090 feat to the center of
Kingoburv Crook; thence fol·
towing the contor of Klngo·
bury Creek eMt to
Hne
of the aouth-t quarter of
Section 2; thence oouth on
thellno of the..- - e n
Junia Caatle end Willl8m
Coote to the p...,. of begin·
nlng. containing twenty· obi
(28) acroo, more or tau.
Thlo -ty·obl acre tract
1o pon of the following de·
ocrlbod real •tote: Situated
In Section 2, Town 3, Range
13 Ohio Company' 1 Purch••· bounded ond d•
oorlbod ao follows. to-wit:
Beginning at tho oouth-t
corr111 of the oou-..t
quarter of ooid Soctlon 2;
thence 80 rodo -1: thance
110 rodl north: thence 50
roc1o -1: thence oouth on
the line of the cr .... bet\ ae..
Junia Castle ond Wllllem
Coote to the p...,. of billlln·
nlng , to contain fifty (110)
acra. more or ••·
Roleronce: Volume 283, 1
Pego 711 of the Moigo
County Deed Raoordo.
Orontor fu,lwg~ento ond
oonvoyo to IIIIo grontoe the
following d-bod ...... of
way which wee rwwued by
a """' gro- In tleod to
Wtltlom DIIVId Grollam, !Vot-

••t

urH

NO EXPERIENCE NEC.ISSAJIY
we are loold.ng for exceptional people.
who want a career In automotive sales. W
are one of Ohio's most progressive tu1cl,
hlgheat paying new car clealersblpa ancl
will teach you how to aell new ancl used ve-1.
hlclee. We currently have succesafulsalea·:·
representative• from various backgroun9,;
Including conetructlon, mining, buslnesad
and profeaslonal occupations, ancl recent .•
college gracluatea, earning from $:ZO,OOO' ~
• $40,000 clurlng the first year.
,:

Kin.....,
"""' whl..,,..... ac.-

'

'i

WE OFFER:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

Complete training program
Hoepltallutlon Plan
·l
VaCIItlon Plan
rf
Llle Insurance
11
Fantastic New and Uaed Car Inventory
,:
s. Chanco lor Advancement to Management Laval•
1. Oomonstrator
~

:1

Call -Mr. Gilmore·
Monday &amp; Tuesday

301, P - 7111: - .

a right of woy ell~ fMt
wide from Coote lloed !TR
1121 acroao
.rong t1111 ant bound·
ary of the fifty - · tract
to·
lion. Tile ......... hie Mira
and aaolgna lhalt- a
oommon rfllht to tho uoo of
oald rfllht of woy llong with
the grontoro, their holra and
........ Tho rooponollltlty

,,

October 3rc1 &amp;

4th

..

•

.,

(•1:4) 44..,8~0
Between The Hours Of
'

10 a.m. • 12 DOOD
a: 4 p.m. - 8 p.m.
I

..

.,

�Ponwoy-Middleport, Ohio

_..............___
.......

11

11 Help Wanted

Public Notice

...

_,.,_,

fled A.rcitlle'•ln•tnJcton. Con-

pltlll cell
11._44..4812. nt. 211.

r111tlon

-. .-· .... -·
.......
"..
..___
. .. ...--_.__
__
__
...... -·----·-"
.
·-.______
--··__
___
-.______....
---·---··
---""'·-·__
·-··__.
--_·-··___ .,.. .. _
.....c.,. ....._.,.,
...
,............
.,_
..... . .... ..
.,
,,_
_,
- ~.,
......
... .... ..
... f.:;:::.;::-

1 1&gt;4WI
1 116..
I M 'fl

llATII

."

,

.. .
. ...
....

... ·~--

.. .
....
111..

...

,

~

·':.:"":.- - ·r- .,~~;-:::.:~
~1:..-r--::.

fol/qwing telephone excllan6u...

..

u o•• ...,_,
·-·~·01
lllllg&amp;•

, . .~.·
. --"""''
_DAY
·,.oo••
110 ~ ·

bonoijt or!&gt;llllm. II QUilllod.
-cottbYOct-1.1-100282-80!14 .. 114-113-~22

and uk for Director PwiCI"'Mt
SINI-. M EQUII ()p_.....,.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

MARCUM CONTRACTING CHESTER. OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS ·BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND

·•' TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

bed nunlng hloHity In Southellt

Ohio. Oaod co.,.......6on ptut
bonua. hllllth .. d life lntldftot.
retirement end mote. Sind
r-..me to: Admlnt.trator. 401
North P•k Aw .• Wellston, Oh'u

MAXIMUM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON
LARGEST END

9B5-4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
References
8·22-1 mo.

10-8-tfc

HILLSIDE MUZZLE

BISSELL
BUILDERS

LOADING

Prices"

'' At Reasonable

PH. 949-2801
or ln. 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16-86-tln

MODERN GUN
SUPPLIES
Mu:nleloading Supplies
MtMitrn Gun Supplies

Guns • Ammo - Slugs •

22 Ammo

124 East of Rutland
Acro11 Happy Hallow Rd.

Ph.

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

AND

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

$14 PER TON

6141-UI2·~i:S5!

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-662-3821
Authorized John
Deere. New Holland,
Bush Hog Farm
Equipment Dealer

F•r111 E•ulp111ent
P•rh &amp; Smite

DELIVERED TO

45192.

Announ c~ 111 en Is
4

r:.m hind needed in uch•ge
for ..-.t and utllt. .. Re.,.,..011
..,u~od.

Giveaway

oft., 5 PM.

R•pon~lble

Full ... IMttftU • fDund .. lon

OHIO
PALLET
COMPANY
POMEROY, OHIO

992-6461

.W• to

ew~y .

LPN-PH. ... time &amp; Pllrl tlmt

Coil 814-387-0600 otter 8 PM.

tppiiCitlonl lrl bllng ICCip•d

tor 1'1-t Vol., Hoepltol
'*'rolna Coro Otntor. Comoot

Kitten to • good home. Cl1..._.

992-58110 dOI'tlmo. 614-9926086 ovonlnge.

Pertonnel

AAEOE.

9 month old part Springer Md
pert Beegle. Hid ell thota. Cell

goc:m

Sp.~nlel,

eldlrlywonw~.

hornet. Haft
htlf Border

A,. you 1 tingle
we 1

PH. 949-2969

0

-az.: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
:5
-z

. ....... for

YARDMAN &amp; ECHO

Ucensed Clinical Audiologist
(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
::1: 417 Second Avenue, Box 1213

loCMod
betweenRt.
N£W &amp; USED MOW£1S
S...ico C•t• lor Iran

·

Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

Pro~ucts

8. 7 Financing on
Service on All

ll'lt " -

'TRI-STATE
DRYWALL CO.
Complete Drywall

Servke
FlEE ESTIMATES
... . . _

...,latH

56 STATE ST.
GAWPOLIS, OH.
446-3487

SAND-GRAVEL
LIMESTONE
FILL DIRT
985-4487

YOUNG'S

FIREWOOD

SER~ICE
We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also D&lt;id boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992 -2196

Middleport, Ohio

1-13-tfc

9/ 15/ 88/ tfn

8-8-1 mo. pd.

OAK. LOCUST.
CHERRY

$ 3S6l~v~tfo
BILL SLACK
,_ 992-2269

CARPENTER
SERVICE
- AdCions and remodeling

- Roofing and gutter work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and electrical
wo•k

(FREE ESTIMATES(

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

~oger

Hysell
:: Garage ,

II. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
. REPAIR

Ba~k

To School Sperial
MON.-TUES.-Wm.
(Good thro\'9!1 Stptomhor;
~- ' Ts'•1';fp;E'Rc:IAI '('. ·:

:
CHEESE PillA
:
: SUD+ &amp; FHE :
: SUPEI LAIGE DlltiiS :

Alto Tt111111i11ion
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

161 North Second

SYRACUSE, OHIO

Middleport, Ohio

Most Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles
A / C Service
All Major &amp; Minor

45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry Fishing Supplli..j

Repairs
NIASE Certrtied Mechanic

Pay Your Phone
and Cobia Bills Here

992-2221 or 992·9922
Sorry, no dtUv•y or othtr

CALL 992-6756

.,..,. - - IUSIHII! PIIONI

coupons mmbintd with this

Certified Licensed Shop

: Pidtlt ar lot In Only

:

~ =~~!P •••.PJil~P. ~~-( .~~~-~

6-17-tfc

HUDNALL
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

off.-.

"DOC" VAUGHN

you mar be lllglble monev to
pey for tnlnlng In one of ow
tul·tlrno pr0f1romo ot tM ,.,.,.

·.. Twocutegnyand bteck kh:tens
new e good . home, 304-87&amp;-

Education Center·-Tri-Cbuft1Y
Vocotlo.. t School. Cot! 7633511 at. 14 for lnfomwtlofL
Flit ....,... ....... Oct- 3rd.

6186.

Two II week old puppie1, Brittany Spaniel mixed, 304-458-

McCLURE'S RESTAURANT
HIRING. Cookl 111d will-

1904 •""• 4:30.

needed. R11..n11 beintJ Ilk•

lWo ntcllntn, needa tome repairs, 304-8715-240&amp;.

1:00-4:00 p.m. TUIIICWtt Md

ThurldOJIIf 479 J o - Plko,
Gollpolll. whlto hou• botllnd

3 lo... ble kltMna. 7 weeks old.
, McCiures:
304-876-1928.

6

· IIS!DINCI PHONE
(6141

EVERY SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.

RACINE
GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHIO

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY

9-19-88 ttn

INSULA nON

Mastic &amp; Certainteed
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
Free Estimatas
Call 992·2772

1/U/ tfn

WANTED

DEAD 01 AUVE
•Weshers •D ryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must Be Repoirolllo"

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
We Service All Makos
1/ 22/88/ lfn

EUM HOME

loom &amp; loard For
Senior Citlz- and

•n•-Coti814-448-0780.

or Pauley lowland
20'1 South 4th St.
Middleport Oh.
"LOW 1111(0111 lOME"
Joo

Howard L.

Writestl

ROOFING

NEW -REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

BrSSELL
SIDING CO.
New HenoosluNt
"Free Estimates"

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

CARTER'S

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
992-6282

PH. 949-2801
949·2860

' or Res.

NO SUNDAY

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
1-28·'88-lfo

1-18-1 mo. pd.

to

TATTOOS •y Sttey
2. Uncoln Ttrract

SECOND TIME
AROUND SHOP
Gently used
con&amp;iJnment
ciothmg for
children.
Hours 10·4
Eveoiogs by Appointment

2 miles toward Albatl)' on
SR 681.

992-5083

1-12 1 ....

For UFE

v••

•-••Y• Ohio
992-6857

1· 3-11-1 ma. pd

EXCAVATING

Authorited Strvict
&amp; Ports

•Dozer • Backhoe Work
•Will Do H1uling
Dump Truck

'Brigp &amp; Stratton

•Wreck• Service

Tecumteh
Weed E1ter

•Junk Yerd

Bu*'••

WANT 10 IUY WIIUID 01
JUNI (AilS 01 IIUUS
- FRH ISI.ATISFor '"'' of Ihoot 011'¥1101 •:alii

Homelite

J•coblln

VALLEY LUMBER
. &amp; SUPPLY

614-742-2617

. . . . . . rt. Ohl•

.lotw•n 9 o.m.-6 p.111.

Ht-6611 .

H0·'11tfa

'

orLoavo . .:ll!i

lnsuranca

llill*l..ce Md IS d. . . . In
butln... tf lnllt'..tld COntiCf

penonnll office, 304-871-

lDif L 0 btld&lt; dog while btOIO.
80 lt.. Mls•lng
since 9-18. REWARD. 304676-6037 after 6 p.m .

aorel.-.d.

15 · Schools

35 lots 8o AC~itage

lnstru ctlon

v...,ott,.otlllo-4-.......
2 . b•h. lomlty """" with llroot- fo,.t dining. ._,. llwlng
room. lOft. aultomCIIkllllchlft

RE-TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS

19

Wanted to

Do

c.ta~n-.

"

r

Conot. Coli 814-288-1718.

one • hltf bMhl, lg.

porWng.

Oo.totchoola church. Priced
1n "'" om·o. Cott 814-448-

1734.

'

2 ltory ......... brldl t.:tu..
Ap-.122yrs. old. 48Ro.-lul
b•h u-h. oortor- LR· DR-

'

. . ... 4 room --..nt qulrtan
on bile* of ldtchlft,; 4 flr~pl-=- .

hour. Cotl 814-3e....ae5.

a

roofing &amp; a•pentry
work bv the hour or Job. Call
Peintlng

114-37..2418.

•

8t Vicinity

ICNI, LoCIIed on At. 7-Eunlll
bohlnd C!O¥ Elom. School. Colt

for appointment, 814-215t-

t878.

Ni•2ttoryhomiWttHoareaea
- k thop. U8,aoo. Colt 114-

oaQ, ltnlldtd
"""' blkot, c t - ...... lUCk
stove. kttch .. IIJpl.,lottof misc.
henw.
cuh

Wanted To Buy

,...,._. pumpWns. craftt, yard
Mle ll:enw. 2 ml• ....n uf

OottlpoAe on Rt. 14t. Fri. • Sot.

Yord 8oi•Fridt¥ • Sotu......

TWo mtl• on AI. 218, off Rt. 7.
t.ota of clott., woodburRII',
miJC.

Sot.·Oct. I. I AM tift 1. 133&amp;
138 Stoto St. M..., -.1

ttemt. Rain cana.llld.

Junk Cars wkh or whhout
motora. Clll larry Li¥1tv· l14--

4 Famii•·LimPI. b•.mette.
bath llble, cu ............. loti
of clothes h..f priCI lat. llfllr·
noon, 218 laOI'Indt. off 141.

3811-9303.

Furniture 1nd 11ppll.,c. by the
piece or entlrl houllhold. F1W

Fri. &amp; Sot. 9-1.

pr- bolng pol d. Cotl 814-44631&amp;8.

unu-1-.ny condition: C.ll

814-112-0887. .

Ch11p clothing, furniture,

crafts. Rt. Ill ,... Rodney.

....... , ., Sot""'OJ- 10-8.

Y.-d S.l• '1,4 mile out ltul•ll•

Rd.-otfSR 110. Oct. 1-7. 12·1.
Mon.•Oct. 3. 1-5.

w....,.

dothea·lg .• 1m.• chM. . .I -3T·
I , LRoult. Hy·tnrf. , homo Int ••
aur11tn1. bldlpreedt, mile.· I
mH• _below D1mn, Rt. 7. Log

..

..,

3 P.,Niy Y.-d Sll••o V•lety.
Oct. 1. 9-8. 1 flO Ollttl-o Rd.

We buy ENICk Walnut.. Fund ,lloyd•. ah*'. t1'811• hitch.
r1l1ina opportunity. Georg•
ShlobiCk 814-192-3811. Far Glatt., Willi own • •tow top.
""""' .......
dollwrv lnotructlofto colt 1-100- Choohlfo.plct-.
Fri. &amp; Sot.
999-0?27.
CorportSoi•187Wood... dDr ..
Wanted to Buy, Ford 218engWie Sopt. 3,4,5. 9 AM·3 PM. Good
1nd ..,..tmlnfon, c.ll ......,lngt ciHn clo1MI, tupperw.re,
8t4-247-4304.

d-.

~I'IVILI ~

g-·-·

bol11nd
P.O. Oct. t -5. o....,,

elf• doorl. milk c.,,
mite.

dot~ng.

YlftiSII•IIIuodOJ-Oc:t. 1. 124
M l - 8ol•tnf.,. lhru 3X Fourtll Aw. Antlq .... b!cydo.
••• ctotfriM·lJ!J prlc•.. crib, ..... - ·· rMnY ottwr illmt.
ltuffed anlmalt, Chrl•tm•
ltomt. 10 Noll
Gtrogo Soi.Stt.-001. 1. 9-1

Complete tlou•hokll of .,rntture 6 entklwt. Alto waod S.
coal heaters. Swain's Furnh:u,.
• Auc11on. Third &amp; Ollvt.

QUILTS
Cooh poid for ....... Prt
19tiO'L PL-. opotlo-.

l.orgo ..~...

Ch•nut St.

1nd MINtr UMd en. Smith
Bufck-Pontiec. 1911 hatem

1196.

tl-

Yord Soi•Giorao't C - Rd.
Wttch lor tlgno. Clothol. - motor cycl-. houllhotd ltemt.
Yonl SII•Fri. llo Sot. 9·4. 181a 2nd(!, 3od.

' TOP CASH pold ''" '83 modo!

Want TO Buy- Underpinning tor
• mobile home. Call 614a250..

700 Thkd. 9 AM-8 PM. Oct. 1 t1o
Oct. 1-7. ........ g ltotnl
- 3-4-5, glrto blcycto. IOddtw
1riko.

30&amp; ctlw:~ engine, garMI,
)Nns,•mONdothel.

814-448·3872

814-248-8600. 11-4.

reg~~._,

Sot.-Oc:t. 11!. 10 dt 4. 331
De- Dr. Metot lttM. oator tv.

We pevcuhforl... model dNil
, usedc.rs.
Jim Mink Chw. -Oidllnc.
Bill Gene Jo hnton

Middleport
8t Vicinity

Alln or lhlna. 3"h mM11 out
Bond Hit Rallna - ·· CtnOP¥
. .nfng bod. 1~/1' bo.. Chelf
,.,...,, tpece ........ clothing.
•ma..
..

2 Fomllv Yord lol•211 1..00randl dM:I..CJr..-. Acr• lubdtvlllon. So,. holM Interior.

Sot.-Oc:t. 1. 1-1.

2FomltrYMISot•8-5.0ct. 3&amp;
4. 201 Part.nouth Rd.

C~rpon hi•Raln CM Shine. 10
to l.lund... Only. V•loutbiN
lncludlnl",.._.,, drum tet. etc.
4th hou• on rltltw. Kott,'t Drlw
o~~-.o·ocroo~&lt;.

FEDIIIAL, ITATE AND CIVL
IER'JICE J01111
Nowhlrfna, Your..., e13.110
to 111,410. . . . , _ lntlf. Colt 1-13151733-1012,
&amp;t. F2711.

l•ge bulclno 1011.

mollllo homOI r-mlnod. pul&gt;llc

AduHt ont,.
un9.

Beattlfulrfwr lotsoneacreplua.
p_.lc weter, Ctyd• Bowen. Jr.

•VIII•

c1tv -··Jericho Rood. ownor mo. eon 814-387-78110.

fln1nd~9-:

goad terms. 304-

llenl rllo

Hamal far Rent

Fvr'*hediPt.-1 BR . 1240•mo.

Nicety furni1hed '"''" house.
AduMo
ontv. Rot• .., ...... No

UtHMIII pold. 243JocbmPika .
Qottlpotlt. Cttt 448,4418.tl• 7

pets. Call 114-448-0338.

For Sale or Rent-2 lr. MWtv
romodllld IIOmt. torgofeftcod In
..rd. falndry rOom. B t IChool district.• 271J I mo. Can
814-448-1320.

JniiiOit St.. VInton. Lots of
betty cloth••· chlldNn •nd
adulta. bed, dr-,lot1 vfmiiC.

···--·-POmerov...........

hell. Plu•

l•unlotr. Oct. 11!. TJroo Stvd ..
AIOIM. Jane Ply.

laturdiY. 9·1 . Corn~r of
Broad ..,·Millin. Raciftl,. fllodllng IIIII*. doH ........ babr' llemt,

Sot&gt;t. 30 · Oct. 4&lt;h. lt.m . til
408 Po1108t MlckllfiOrt.
Clothe~

La'*" ..

ioll•ol ...hlo.ootfeil .....~ YMI ... and c• .-h l•urt01 ........

~

t!or. Oct 'Itt

1•. 1-4•tllt•n
...... ,.,_,ll_o.Ottlo. Roln

. . . . GMnbrlouhnHigh

....... a.ew~.~ ....

..... aW - - ·· ..... toDI
---lillofiiMfotll.
lin I DUll llluiDM,.,,.._a1 ""'"'loet- JD ...... Oct. 1.
. . . . . llf ........, ......

ln-.atdo

3 -r.mlly · .,.,d •Ie. Thun.,
FrkMv. Slt:urd.,, Sept. 29th end
30th. OC:t. 1ot. 440301'1&gt;moroy
Pike. 8:00·15 :00. All 1l1e
clotlllng.

through _7lh. Dor- "'dwk.

fletn ..- lhln•. Wetcfi for- tignall
Forwt Acret P.lc. Nrlw Um•
Rd .• Rutllnd. Boo Wood. 814-

---

Man . • liM. -Dot.

3. "'

1n New .....,.,., 3 br home. 2
bltlll. 11rf10 lvmg """"· ftr•

· - g-o. 130.000. 304273-2471 .
Mobile Hamal
far S.la

1401.

2 famity . Aou.7. 1 mila north of

,·
1

887-32221o• lnlormotlon.

814-912-8723.

2827.

3 bedroom houte. D"Pf• · Hot

• a• tunwc.. big atUa. b••

m•t. piiCe ta perk c.-. Ref•~
enoerequlred. •118. s-rmonth.
wr11o Tho Dolt, Sootlnll. Box
7HG.
Hou• for ,.nt. fu I b•ernenr,
11h ttorv. qulllloc.tlon. I mn•
north of Point PINMnt. 304-

"'"*""·

878-1071.

1Wo bldroom hou• In Polm
PI-" with gnge. no J)MI.

304-178-1318.

ref•·

for Rent

_.., de-ed. 2 8R .. Mlv
, . _ 10 ..... 11JI20 2 .......... oltutlttlelpoid-...
Ua.OOO.Colll14-448- ol-Io. Soc.dop. .oqulnod. Cot!
710.
814-448-81118.

423 F&lt;Grt St. Mlddlopon. 10·6.

1_._

-------Pt-Pfeaiianc···
8t Vicinity

..4 F•mllr Ywd Solo. Oct . 1.
mltto out C&gt;tb c -

-·-·
fllo•d.

114-111-

m-. dopollt ..... - No . .L
utiHIII pold. lt4-8t2-2937.

a pc.

dlnnene 1111. •199.95.

wooden

P!CKENS USED RJRNtTURE

Complete hou•hold fu rnllh·
1!19'· 'Ia mUe out Jerrlcho.

304-178-14!10.

2181hr• Dhlle 1100.00 e•ch.

hou. .. Pt. Pl__,t M dGIIIIpt&gt;

Boooh Str.._ Mldd!opon. Ohio.

2 bedroom furnWted ~plrtment.
utlftlel lllid.
Phone

,_...,'*-

Yord Silo Sot. Mon. Tu0o. Oct.
I ,3,4. Tl-: 1:00 'AM til 1.
814 Ti&lt;lod ... -

Wedding gown, ch..,.t t.-ln.
Hquin •nd tlmulltld Pt•l trim.
. . 7, 112&amp;.00. Oownl lin
14,11, •eo.oo each. sile 18.

.40.00. PPJHS bind toctc«.
modlum. 110.00. Ctll304-171127112.

VIRa't Furn'ture

Hewn. W. v.. 8o1M new
m.ohandiH, lomlthlnt for

_.,..,._

IUft•.

Block, brlc*. IIWII' plpel, windows. llnltlll. lll:a. Cl.,d• Wn1•1. Rio Grenell. 0 . c.n 114-

·--.... -...

Exoelltnt U18d appllanc. whh
30 diYt gu1rantft. WMherttll a up. dryer•. fr.atrs.

l.lrewev••• "Micame. Fln.,clng 8Y1Hable wtth approved

114-446-8897.

fr-er,

gaod

COnd. 1128. 304-875-4210.

54

Misc. Merchandise

Ro-

Whllfchalrt-ntM or ullld. 3

whMIMI electric .oooters. Clll
Mobltty catloc:t, 1-114-

870-9881 .
llcvd•

a

-

CEriDE. INC .• Athone-814·
694-3878

Pets far S.le

AKC Coct&lt;trlpWIIIipupo. 1180

•ch. UKC Reg. Am•lcan Et~
klmo Sptu pupa. noo eltCh.

Cot! ltoi-3811-8190.

Bob-•11 Rlt TlfTI•

nckCoonHound. Cllll14-441-

3413.

2· Dech•hu~ puppl•·•hOrt hair
fernlll. long hair male. 8 wid.

otd. Cotll14-258-1704.

Now laCIPIInt IIPploetlont for
2 t.troom .., en..,..,., h.t ltv
c.-peted. .,.,..,.,... w.t• .. d
truh plckuPIINOYidad. Main•·

814-448-4871 .

FA fumece. nllura4 gM. Clll

Ju-.,

.

Livestock

SPECIAL FEEDER CALF SALEWEDNESDAY-OCTOBER 5. 8
PM. 41! broodt Including Hol-

ltelnt. Cllttlewllbeaccepledlll
d.., TuNdiP(·Oct-. 4 lf'ld up
to 2 PM. Wedn.clav-Oclober 6.
H•lln_g_..,allllble. ATHENS ll·
VESTOCK SALE-1 mile till of

Albonv on St. Rt. 80. Cltt

Stoalcyard 814-1192-2322 c.118-3531 ewnlng~.

Stanct.d bred horaet. 3 mMM.
1 th.S, 2 coltt. 114-7•2· 2•65.
4 ye• old bhtck Tennet••
Wllk• gelding. Oentll. well
broke. 1400. Clll 814-742·

2525.

84

Hey for •le. Llrge round b .. II.

814-9411-20!58.

One bid room ~p.-tment In
Hencllnon. call stter 6:00PM

•lo. Colt 814-048-0840.

=

1 room unfurNihed ·IIP•rtment:

King wood • cool ..,,_ _Oood
cond. U26. Coli 814- 4 48228t.

tndlvldull gufllr

cords

Mu~c.

•
Jeff W.mo!OJ

b•

oulto•lot- .....
-e~

~ ~'•
fnOtruCtOf
114-

4 411-1077_u~d -l·n-.

~.:==========1;;;;:~;;;"~"'"~~~-=~

turbo. 400 1r1n1. Excet cond.

45

-

1171 Ch.,rolat Lagunl. Excet
m~C~~M~ctl cond . $1200. Call

814-448-0899.

Fumilhed Raom1

Low

m0.110- 11100. Colt 114-2118704.

1111 Oldt. Cultoll Brough...
4 dr .. bod¥ • In goad
oand. Coii14-448-IIIO.
1113 Cll ..... lm ..... 100!1 of
orglnlot. •1100. 1117 Ctrnoro
aonvertlllle, ••oel. aond .,
17.000 ........ · - . Coil
104-1711-11108 ~M

S p - far Rent

lou-·-

La-

Oftt•
tor
- or
- N. 2nd. Aw. tn
Mlddl'!t!ort ... _ . dlttriot.
Colt 114-1112-11148 "' 114141-2111.

11.4 • . Colollrlly• ...., .. ad

w-

oo .... fPor ........ tlon ... 11.t.
441-1112 .. 441-1117.

11711 llnooln To- Cor. -

.. p -

olr,

orutoo. • · Co1Le14-:SS7-0411.
"We

didn't find lny dlnoteur banta, lust
lkln... and that gigantiC zipper."

'

1800 Sorloo ft-d. 1988 tn·

t"al. Good cond. 11600. Call

114-379-2331 .

1953 Ford Pickup truck.

R•·

torod. 11800. Cotl 814-44110899.

1910 4 wheol drlvo truck.
F-180. Cotl 814-379-2409111...
8:30PM.
1911 OMC plcl&lt;· up. Pl. P8. 8
ayl. Standlrd trent. Very good
condition. 82,000 mil•. 814-

949-214t .

oo- '

Unconcltlonel 1n.1me ~..,_
tae. local .ef..anCII fu"'*"e4

'*---I.

1171 lll&gt;nl
" ...........u... CloodWOI\Oir.
..()(). Colll14-241-1122.

•

J
Fnt o n -. Cill
1-114-237-0491. d"' or nfthl. ·•

'!

Roger•l•••men1 •.
WMerprooflng.
""'

SWEEPER .,d IIWinv m.chf,. "'
repair, parts. and tuppllll. Pidl "
up .nd deltvery, DIVIs VIICIUini··Cieaner. one half mile "- ~

Goo- Croolc Rd. Cotl 8t4- \
~
441-0294.

t

.10.900. 814-112-3884. 9-5.

19;&lt;7 Foo-d F100. 8 cyt.. good

body. lot• of uns. 11 .. 992·
3943 tfter 8 :o·o p.m.

Pick up bedl. 01wrolat, long or
short, no run. 30 .. 11711-1281.

73

•

RON EVANS ENn:RPRISES~ '•
Septic tonk ...,.olna- no por \
l•d. Cot11-80D-U1-9821.
~
Painting: Interior &amp; E...,IO.L,
Fret Mtimlfft. Call 814-44-.,

8344.

UP,

70.000

Vans &amp;

4

W . O.

fill••·

4411-7026.

1988 S-15 GMC 4 wheol ~'­
Jim"" whh V-8, 2.8 !Mor.
loeded. 15,000mll•. Mu•tlttl.

•

S111e Money. Kllflp werm In ~
wtnw. Coal In summer. lnt&amp;~o_ _
l1te . Fr11 estlm1181. John_ ..
Gtr .... C.ll 114-. .8-0731.
RON·s TelevltiOn Service:
Hou• ellis on RCA, fM8111r,
OE . S.oclollng In Zonlth. Coil

304-5'75-2318 or 814-44824154.

.
1

:
·•

..
1
'

It~

,........,1. Coll304-8711-1331 . ..
Rotlry or c•bl• tool drlllng.
Most wellsaompleted ..rneQwl:
PUmp •I• Md ...nee. 304a

8911-3802

,;
~.

'

RON'S APPLIANCE SERVICE.

oe.

hou• c.rl ........dng
Hot
Point,
drr.rt and

w••Mr•.
ltOYII. 304a5715-239 .

11

~:

Ale. . Tr• Trimming .,d BtumpM-..
Removal. frl• enlmat•. can . -~

304-875-7121.

\

A &amp; 8 Aernodellnll. m.-,anc. ~
•nd•cc.torl•. wedoflnlworli ~·
forftnepeopitJ,gM ..adyfortall. ~

...-.

304-875-2&amp;71.

..

82

''..
••

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

••

•'I.'

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

·,

Car. Fourth end Pine
· .,
G•llioolt. Ohio
""
Phone 814-44&amp;-3888 or 114- ~
. . .4477
.. ......_jk

.- ._.,.
84

&amp;

•14.soo. eon 114-248-9122.

'79 GMC v... '80 Fa.d Folr·
mont ltltlon wagon. phone
304-175-8.1 21ftar 4:00PM.

l..,
~

Flll:ly Tree Trlrnnlng.

Going back tocolleg&amp; Must 1111.
1988 Chevy a.~,. Auto,
V8, AM-FM c•~~~tte. PIIV off

Electrical
Refrigeration

"•

'· ;-.

••
·'•_.'

FC•identllll or COmrrtltCIII wlr, ,
lng. New •vlee or repsln. Jo
Uc.n18d electrid.,, E1tirnlt1 ill.
1r• Ridenour El-ctricsl, 304-- ~

875-1780.

~
1-----.,----- ;;;::;;::::;~::~:;
85 General Hauling ~
., :19S8 "'""" Hondo 1 100 cc.
V-18, Megno. Mlm oordtlon.

Vry klw mil•. Call 114-4o414134-.

1918 28011 3 ......... Hold

, . ,, Excet oond. C.lll14a379-

1982 Vemllh1 MX 100. Good
concJUon. Au n1 good. •210.

••t~t~•.

,

:&gt;

lhop. RON EVANS EN'II.It- 4 ~
PAISES. J1aklon, Ohio. 1·100. •
1137· 9628.
.
.,.

Trucks far S.la

8t4-381-8142.
Lot• of

•

72

2::8::7~4.:...__ _ __

oonct.

8ASEMENT
WATERPROOANG

- 10011
oil .. 1800 gil. ond.Jot AorttiOn· -1
,,....,_ Foctory wlnod , •

1974 Dottun 8 -210• • 400.
1974 LTD Wogan, .300. Cotl
1979 Ford Thundorlllrd. &amp;ell.

••'
•
,•'
•

Home
lmprov amanta

eo ...... Sopdc T.....

:c,.--..,--;:,----..,..---015-187-8
Ext. s-t0189 . . 74 Motor...,clal
~r
19-Ch
'" .. yMo .... Goodcond .
1380. Colt 814-248-8182.
11711 Oldt.. 456 cu . ln. engine cond.
1917 Coll448-1055.
Hondll XR 2BO.A . Good

to• - •-Ctlllm. 304-878-3218
SNAFUe by Bnce Bealtle
t 200. Coli 114-379-2824 oft•
or1 7 1 - 2 4 1 1 . 8
-_:P,::M:::·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

., _., ..... _

81

• 376.00. 304-878-8889.

boordt. loldod. Ctlt 814-445-

bu- with

l••ot~~,
''"'*"·-~....11•44•

197t0odge ManKO ruN good.
nHdl bodv work. IC. atweo,
front 1nd b1ck lpelktr .

8778.

OOV£RNMENT Sl:lZED Vehl"'• t.om 1100. Fordo. - Cldee. Corvfttll. O.evys. Sur·
~lui. Bu~t Guide. (1)

~

~

•

19110 Bul'* 1..0 Stbro. !tot th1n
80,1100 ...... 304-882-2718.

1987 Fo.-d Aarottar XiT v ...
Excel. cond. CUitom running

1987 Chwy C.V•II•. 1 I , 000
mii•·•4850. 1 988 Pontl•c
corwrartlbla ex 1n1 • Mrp. •2750.
IAII11M s-.to appredete. Clll

...•

~l:rVICI~S

Coli 814-448-1028.

Auto's For S.le

~

'

v ... 19820.ev.• 464. 11'
alum., riMY 'paln1-generatar,
burger !lyl1em, 1lr. •14,000.

Tr ansp urI a111111

••oo oao. :

2- hoiW, horw

troltw. 1700 080. Call 814- '
4411-3168.
•

&amp;tap

s.v.rll Iundy lnetru'nentl for

304-178-1972.
•-. .m.,t 1 ~...,
~ -,.,.
Ap.,m.,t Rentot. 304-17
2072·

448-4788.

19 77 Dodge
V.,, AC.
cruill . Re•on~bla Call 814-

Uc• new King wood &amp; coli

cord IIMOMCI
114a318-l382.

1987 EX P Ford Etoort. AC,
AM-FM Clllltl, 28,000 plu1
mM•. ea.IOO.OO or •h owr
P"Ymente. 814-448-0038 or

2223.

large round bal• of hay. 120
each. Clll 814a446-10&amp;2 after

~o

.. Robblt GTI.

'77 Ch ...alot plcl&lt;

3718. e .o .H.

blo-.
•215. 1
wood. •a&amp;. Ctll

Ford Coup•.

mil•. 11,300.00. 304-678-

Hay &amp; Grain

Specfal.

nice.

Cotl 114-982-8118.

4318.

•zoo. Cotl et4-3711-21t1 .

p• - 114-74Z-ZJ'tl.

Ylftl .te
lit. 2 •
Jor-lld. Ma'!'fo¥. ,.....,
~Got=.:3.:•:.4.:·.:1_·.:1:.
- _ _._ __:&lt;•

63

hunWrt

8 fl owr clb truck camper. ~
U80. Cotl 814-992-3490.
110¥1. refrialmor and lklk. ,~
..,... cond. t110.00. 114-448- ,
1912 Arl• Wegon, 4 apeed. ' 1977 or 814-381-1701.
,
Well m llintllnld. 8o.ad belle
•
transpOrtttlon. •1 00. 080 .

Abergl111 toppw, fitt Toyatl
lonvbed. U&amp;O. Call 114--441-

81 "" 28 8-8622 ·

Bundy Cl81rrwt. Excel. cond.

lllttftl

_Cotll14-44ll-1442.

1070 Cue . .ctor. Super lh..-p-

71
Musical
Instruments

1979 Chevy N11llbu Cla111·c . 2
door, 306 engine. Good condl-

burning

304-878-2193.

fDr Nllt. t:aoo.
~Rd ..

,,

3~wood

4 yr. old - · -· ·150.
MCC,.ach 14" chtln - - Colt
114-448-2824.

48

•••••n ...
._,11'1

Ford dl-'

bulh hog. t2150. Ownlf will
flnsnce. Call 814-28.. 11122.

nl•l•, Chow Chow; ehou.
wormed ll"ld hlllth guarent ...

Hatol-&amp;14-441-9110-

Fllll'll for S.le

flnonoo. Coli 814-288-8&amp;22.

..AKC ,.giltlrld puppl• rnlna·
ture S~n.,Mf. Cock• Sp•-

57

evenings.

4090.

101 Ford Work MMter Wctor,
nlct with 501 mowing mtchlnt.
1118 New Holl1nd baler,
13881!1. 9 N Ford w /rwtW plows
&amp; diiC, 81495. c&gt;Nner will

•ooo

'

54,000mll-.•klna •3.200.00
grest shape. phone 304-875-

81 Fann Equipment

j
I

11ft. c.-nper. SIHIM I . Com- :
diii'IIY 111f codllned. oe..-

1983 v.u..._

5PM.

AKC Bal- Hound pui'PI•· 8
wkl. old. Wormld .,d r~Mv .,
go. 1121. 114-982-2991.

1982Pond.cJ2000, 1Uto.•lr,
goad condhlon. 81..,992-51&amp;0
daytime , 81 4 -882·10 15

79 Moton HomH
&amp; Campen

u .ooo.oo. 304-1711-3134.

pu.-. 18monthotctEnotltlt8t,.

811ttlnD It •120 e mo. Galla

33

-not.

CFA P. . l., .,d Sl1m- kitlent. AKC Chow puDI)I-. New
Hlmllsyan ktttlnt. ·e..l 814448-38~ aft• 7 PM.

Nltur.l

n&gt;Of. Cot( 814-448-

_9_442_._ _ __ _ _ __

Two 1941

&amp; Ltv ~slock

814-992-5490.

Guwantlld Qualhy

trolling motOf. Clll

814-448-7411

F.Jr'll Supplli'c

Tractor for life. CUb Cadet. 18
HP. &amp;0 itch mo~r deck.

.. Dick Mll•l...

... tl. Webb Ph. 814-448-0231 .

\filM.._ • ........ Oood thlflo.

19830tdtmob1fe98. Motorll1d ,
tnnomlttlon. 304-773-a881. - -

1 977 Oldl CUIIMI. 360 IUtO.
Excelllftt c:ondhlon. Call 114247-3891!1i.

814-288-1522.

WESl£RN RED CEDAR
• a....... Rustle
and Bovolld Lip Siding

Groom and Supply St~Gp-Pe't
Grooming . All brnds . .. AII
lfYI•- lln'll Pet Food Deller.

uprl~

250 CZ dlr1 bike. sell 01tNde for

• 3881. Ow...- w•l11nence. Call

2 end
(Une).
round
-

....

For Sale or Trade

5000 Font dl-' with
eon 814-441- 169!10.
bller. ralke. rnowfng machl,...

Drogonwynd Coltory

814-448-99&amp;1.

1974 Oldl Cutlal. 310englne,
4door,lll po..,..-. Needs tune up.

.._

ordlllvery. M•on..,d. Gllllp~
!tt Ca.. 123'1&gt; Plno St ..

56

Good UMd color tv'i for •le.
Coil 814-4411-1149tnydmo.

lntern1tt0Mt dump 1rUak. Clll
evenlnp. 114-2.15-1087.

Freuer beef, corn fed, 304-87114182.

Concntll blodts- •II .... prd

At. 1•11nCentan•ry-"Amleon
Uncotn Pika. 814-448-3181.

8!1114.

1984 Otdt. 81 Royol Brhm LS

lion. Colt 114-143-6244.

corn wsgon.

crodtt.

tlbl•. 1 coff" llble
2 living room l.np~,
Ieitch.. dinette. w 12
cl&lt;olro. Cot! 114-4411-

3ao &amp; 40o ...n block Ch.V.
rotiC engln-. lllo pertlng out

otrood¥ pl'*od- 814-247-2083.

1 · 1 I foot hay 'Nigon. 1-0r...,li:y

bu'*- with boddlna-U28.

814-248-8079.

19815 Cutl811 lroughtm. 2 dr.•

248-8121 .

Goltlpollo. Oltla.
2783.

111.1tomltlc. AM-FM 1t1reo. Call

Sedll'l. Low mii811Q&amp; All options.
Excellentoandhlon. •8496. C.ll

Melrose-red • gold•n· .
Jon1than·Mclnt01h·Grim11 apples, elder, pears, honey,
1orghum a. mE.c. food Item•·
Dunrovln Fruit Ferm-881 SE of
Alblny . Houf'l 9.8. Clo18d Mondays. 814a898-8288.
H•lf runner.,..,. _ You pick. t1t

59

Gorontood

Au1om•tlc Rebuilt
Tren1milllons

814-441-0918

1 986 Honda Civic OX. PI,

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

U880. 1010J0whh-61t.

Bultdno Motorlots

bolrt b . ..

304-182-2188.

tr11 ltvlng clo• to lhoJ&gt;
ping. b.-.b 1nd IChooll. For
more lnformltlonc ..l304-882·

379-2853.

p"'-

tr~cror whh Freemen lo8der:

Roome for ...._..... • month.

'·

58

Ute Modi!

Opan 7 diP(s • week
Mo .....·llfu ...... I AM-8 PM
SundOJ. 12 noon-a PM
Uv ... room oun.. 2 oc-·•289.
lampsltlrtlng It 119. 915, wood
dlnelt• ••t•·•149 a up.

•ZJ't.

Supplies

b•to. Colt 448-4(18oltor 7 PM.

.

304-176-5370 •"• 4:30

1300.00. 304-898-3028.

A.... Ollllpolla. •1 31 1 mo.
UtMII._ -'d. BlnaMrnllle. Sh. .

,.

Stag• light systam conailtlng o1
14 colar llthts, 2 while ltrobn.
2 color wheel• ttrobll wtth
couole and all In road c...1.

Suaphone 1175.00 •net Hutch

55 Building

APAR'IMENT&amp; mobllo-.
tto. 814-448-8221 .

1987 OMC JlrrYnv. Automatic,
4 WD. Excel. cond. C.ll 814-_

lAndou

unh he-• two

cookltove and

Cltll-. -·

r:;t.--·· -............
-

a•

Fur. . hod -...919 Seoond

· · · · ·· ··· ·· ··· ··--·~ ··· ···· · ···-- - ·

Yord IIIIo, 70 Burdtnt Addn.
Fri ..d~ot.a,.t.30tnd0ct . 1 .
lolrt ~- lrld milo.

ch..._ •84.98.

_.., rod-od • - •
.,oltolllo. UtAHioo poid. •220. 53
Antiques
por momh. dopollt .oqulrod. Cttt
8t4-192-5724 ..... 8:00 ...
992-8119.
Buy or S..l. Rlvtrln• Antlqult,
t 24 E. Moln St.- Pom«oy.
1 bedroom apt. In Mlddl1port. · tHour~:
1DI.m. to lp.m..
11a0 month plut dopallt. 814- lund.,-M.T.W
1 to lp.m. 114-912992-8541"' 814-114&amp;-2218.
2528.

n~not

11711..,.70 Nootu. Ex. cond. ...,• .equlred, non-~. no
CA. 2 M. Lo. btlh. - • ..... 304-178-2309.
C81'pet. VInyl underl'lnnlng.
Oo'* • touldng. ,.,.. - to 31 bedroom hou11. New H111en.
.,..,.al... •t Quell CrMk 1278. momh ptuod...... 304' * ' - ... Cot! 814-248-8194 178-247t .
"' I 14-448-1747.
K l r - ....,.,. homo. 2 bod- 42 Mobila Hamal
114-371-210.

14115 &amp;...-nAve.
4 drMWr c:h•. . . .. IJ drawer

Fur'*hed. 1 bedroom 1Pif1·

3b"*""'"'-· 1428.00!*

room. Real nloa 131500. 0111

1

Instruments

304-878-2385.

Uke niW. •.250 for lit. ~I

1118.

-.,unlry

For .wnt. 1 be;±
home. Clo• to ~&amp;c ..l.,.
for couple. OtpOIIt and refwen ce req ylred. Oily clll 81 4a
882·1841. after 6ciii814-99:Z..

11110 . . , _, 1 ... 70. 7x21
......... 3 IR .. Z blllll. llro-

Oct. 1 . lnfanc thru adult a
clothe~. -... •. tNn ...

982·3711 . EOH.

3 be*oorn hou•. 2 c•

month. HCUrtly depoeh:.

742-2710. .

104.,.... --· .._. _ _

Rd. 2 &amp; 4 / 1 0 - - l l t. 7. ··~...._

*·

hook-up. Ref.-.nce required.

Lend oontllc:t, Wge Mvlng room
w/. . rndo room, 2 BR ..
W/ WII C.-pit. air oonlltion.
w/orwlthou1:fumfture. Net. CIM
fum~o• on prlvllte lol. M8y .-nt
lot. Colt I to 8 PM, 114-448-

4 fomlty .-rd ..... Oa. 3rd

u• from dowmown. 1221 •
month. He• pump, cen11'11

Hou•. cor,_ lot 11 108 Ch.-ry

........... Oct- 1. 33208
HlfiP¥ Hollow. Ruttond. 9:0().
2288.

2 bedroom Aptt. far IWit.
Cor-d. Nice .-nlng. lou r)dry
fecltt. . IYaillbla Clll 814-

g.,....,
lult..t-.-'-onddryor

32

9 :00-1:00 p.m.

Ott I I l•tndlld.I:OO-I:OO.
.. flmlly a.,. •• lote, ._ _ lld.-2 .... hm lllln · - l i t . 7,101hi0Uih
ot • - . ' - Tum loll
14f. ""-- 1•.• Man.-loet-10. Couoty lid. I, ..... c .. Ioiii.
ilot. 1, 3
f!otltt.oi ......
olethe1.
toya. lleo~welua

._ .........

,,

New 3 bedroom hom.. II rnln-

otM .oqutrod. 814-742-3171 .

•OoniOJ.
.. ·-~
r.,Lor Rood Comp
304-8711-1351
•

1182. Cot! 814-982-7787.
EOH.

.,,...,.,Ohio. 120,000. 814192-1105.

For Mle by owner. Ike new. 3
b...._ _ .... lonood yard. 2

Yord Solo. Mory loyM. 0.•
t.hlro. Ohio. Oct- 1. 2. 3, 4.

Olgantic Gerage Ilia 1'h mil•
Iouth of TuppenPIIinti on SA 7 .
Every1Nngfromhou•toa-ge
for men lftd women. Oont mi..
thlt one. Ott. 1. 7.1. Call 814-

ar.dous llvlrtg. 1 and 2 bedroom .,.rtment1 et VMiege
Menor 1nd Rlv.,.lde AHrt·
m.,t, In MlddiJIPorl. Fram

utH from Holzer Hoap.' 5 mfn.

Cot! 814-048-8710.

atv. Cot!

For ,.,. : Uke new 3 bedroom · Apertmant . for ,.,.,_ •221 •
rench horne. Wit,. •ttaahed month. O.pollh r~qulred. 114··
gnge. 127i ,.. month. Dep-- 9 82-5724. Altor 8pm a. 992·

304-882-2380.

- - 2 9 t h . 30th, Dot. 11!.

Chu10h. Rain DMc=-11.

UtHMioo potd. tn
814-448-7815.

Hou• for ala 2 . bedrooms.
Cor- tot, 238t Fourth St ..

81., Vlmon. Ohio. 11.000.00.

9:00.1:00. 1'~ mite out S.lll¥'
Run Rd. Loti of clothing Md
fumlthre, Jenldnt ••idtnce.

Yord Solo Soturdoy. Oct1et. Hctu• tt.lkle the Bntdbury

Aolwle, qui-. 3 roama • 1 lA.

b•h- No-- Rot. ""'ulnod. Coli
814-441-1734.

•

-.No• ..- -...
,
--:allllllhlt....-.n ....._RIInor----~~~-·­
~---.

.........

• .. 114-982-7409.

9 :00-1:00.

an4

••.-Dot. z.

•bile. baobw. _,.._ ..,.....

I room hOUII far •Ia. On
IP~· 1 aore. For lnfomwtlol\.

I.

accetiOrill, dl• .... mile . . Oct.

Oat 1,2,3. PoutHIIt-.._1
Hup-Oot. 3, 4. I • 1 Loto at mite Rlctno
d
t . o • &amp; - o t ' - - -Juot o.....
o1 Ct., lolloot on Rt. 7.
CorJoort .... lot. Oct. 1, 1-1.
1&amp;-0ot. 1,
I WIS. - o f - R t 7 u --

.....
__ , . --. ....

Hemlock Orove Ad. Baby
cloth11. baby •wing and
ch•oer. m8tef'nlt:y cloth•. ""·
nil racket. Avon. creft1 and
mlsc. a..urdey, October 1tt.

"' ........ Colt 814-448-7028.

room. lg. kftchll'l, one II hlllf

'"'""""'~'· 814-112-5848.

a

2 BR . -_,,,, l•ge r~mt. c.,t111i
llr, Wllter Pilei. Awllllbl• Nov. 1

11011 dopollt. eon 814-4413870a. 114-448-t340.

..

78 Auto Pllrll .
ARMY
SURPWS
(Advtrttllng
L.:==~~:::::;:::::~~:"'i:~::=::::=:;:::::;:::;:~::1
&amp; AcceSfQrial
SpeallltiN, lusln... Political, 1
Alli-•1-F•I,
Sot.Sun.
Noonto 67
MusiC
· al
71 Aut.o"a For S.le
--------1:00 PM. Som
eo..-to'o

ceiling radl.,t helt8r 1100.00.

Furnished llpll1ment•1 bed-

oft• 7 PM.

Modlrn 3 Br hou• for lllrtt or
Mia La Cited In Pltriot. ltD'A &amp;
refrkl. .tor furnkhed. •210mo.

Home In country with 18n'd.
Good hunting. 1B mlt•
from Athln1. 12 , mil• from

31H.

P- •Ha.oo. o..o 3.ooo wn rltto. 304-4511-16 69.

71572. Moun 9 -1 .

talnmentcenws. d•••49.9&amp;
a-~ giUI front gun cllbln.ttbedroom
ful lin
iiWtli . . tWtlng .. .49.IS.

up. UtiHioo Ptld. Cot! 048-4418

a...

IlVIa A•o need plact to ttont
boat far winW. t.III14--992-

7,100 wtt 480 V th,.
::;r.owd credit. 3 Mil• . OU1 Dna
a wlto Rd. Op., Bom to Sr&gt;m · ohMI •1110.00. One 7,1500 wtr
208'""' , ........ 1180.00.
MOn. tlwu ••· Ph. 814-441- Ono
4.000 wtt 277 V olnglo
03:12.
ph- 1100.00. Ono 1.000 wn
277 V llnolo p - •100.00.
v•ev Furnhure
New and ulld furntture and One 4 KW recMIICI cabinet
eppllcanca; , Call 114· 4•8- h - 208. 240. 277 v llnolo

huc....-Ut9 • up, boll.,.
rlll&lt;o-119.98. TVotondt.tnttr-

Fur'*hed effld.-.d• 11415

.,.... bodroomo. ttvlng. '""'"'

PDinll. lo!ot ctothol ond
4-5. 9:00-4:00.

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

one .... ,....

Ftl .. Sit .. Bun., Sept, 30, Oct.
1at •nd 2nd. North of hnctr'•
Auto, Rt.. 33, 5 hou. . up on
right. 1:00-8:00.

011h with

PM.

room. •180 • up. UtiHioo poicl
Colt 448-44 t I oftor 7 PM.

1917 27ft. ChriiCfoft Cololl•

Cabin Cruller. P•tllllr ..........
327 Chwy motar, lfiiP• 4. 2
olnkl, ...... b · -- With
troll•. RuM goad. Doclod ot
Gllllpotlt aaot
o411oo._
Call 814-2415-1122.
J

_.,.do71t.truekt-lor8
ft. truck toppor. Smolt tNCk

- - u n i t 280.000 wn
10 O.,s •m• •

304-178-8104.

eon 814-

387-0447.

Kodlk Super 8 mOvie cam••·
Kod1k Projector. 61•·742·
28&lt;&amp;11.

n.., g• 15,000 btu lnh red
..d ...t ceiling hutlr • 120.00.

Apartment• 1nd hou•. Clll

Modtrn 1 eli . ....
448-0380.

co...,, AM·FM-CIIII ltlriO, ~
top. drive on Eloort Mil•·
•MOO. Call 814-317·04815 or

814-982-3890 ... 814-9921057.

Furnftu,.(lppor Rlwr Rd .. 1144411-7444.

4411-4418 ott.. 7 PM.

lng~ .

cl-.

1910 ltv Lln•C..rl181t .. tit _
HP U.S. Mwlne Foret. Maoriog •

•8000. 1984 Ford E•cort
•2300, 1987 C.m•o •2000.

160.000 btu 1200.00 ooch.
One IOoOOO btu t130. 00. One

Fur'*hed _,., New. PM• HNIC. · ,.,.tow pri- mQ.ollltv Carpet
1 IR. •27&amp;. UtiHt._ Plld Clll &amp; Furniture come to Mollohln

372-1401a. 372-21711.

41

1984, 14.S4 Mobllo home

.. AntiQuo •"" bullot. &amp; log oak
•ble. 3 pi~ lolld maple
bedroom Ute. 304-1711-4879.

J • S FURNITURE

poot, pl-ound. Utlltlll not
lncludld. Starting It &amp;299 P•

••. Colt 814-387-7287 ......

840 Grtnt. Ml.._rt. Oclob•
3rd. 4th. 5111. . ......
dlohol. ooott, t&gt;lcturoo. Jowofry,
c ...tt,, mite.

eon 814-448-

Luxuriou1 T1r1 Tow"hou11
...........,. •. Etog.,. 2 ftoon. 2
M., ful blth uDIUirs. powder
room downmlra. CA.. dlt·
hwootw, dlo ..... orll&gt;oio .,.
trance. prlvlte enclotld pltiO.

21 ecr• Broed Aun Road. New
Hwan. Ow,. ffnendng
bla. 304-882-3394.

w.... ••Hue •

1 :00. · 3 f•mlll•. 114-742-

Y•d Sot•Mondov •
,4_Fomlfr
_,-a...
3 • 4. 9-4.

-·-·
n---- --:c:·
1 (!, 3 thru 7.

.

tw.

AVON-Nold 8 fldl• to Sol!
Avon. Colt 114-446-3318.

IV'Nihed- 3 room• • bllh.
Cl.... No Pl'ft. Ref. 6 d1posil:
riQuftd. UtHttlll furnllhed.

No . .L Coli 814-446-t837.

3 IR hou• in Rutland. •325.

••

814-44t.

Alhton,

U1.000. Colt 814-112-8239.

NlceiMroom~wtlhappra~t.l . 8

'

.

Up. .irt unturnl•hed 1pt. Carp. .d. utiMioo pold. No child-...

kitch..- lui b•h- t.. nd... do-

In Potrlot. Colll14-3711-2113.

&amp;Vicinity

Thurs .• Fri .. Stt.-Sopt. 29-0ct.
1. 9-6. No oor1y b!rdt. Oolc tob!o,

Rick ~•ton Auctloneer, Ncenaed Ohio and Welt Virglnle.
Estltte, antlqUlll, f•m• liquid•
tlon • ' •· 30+ 773-57815.

LMv- round bat• of hev.
delivered or picked up. Call

••e.

lolt. one acre. lwei. wood•d.

-.ld Nko to do llolrt&gt;olttlng In r
mv holM. O.V or Ngh1. • 1. 00 • :l

movie~ .

150 lcret for
8 mil• from
~'~&gt;rnerov on Rt. 141 Fnt -

304-171-2338.

Bride Pld oloo lnctudocl I :ioO.
11.4-742-2717.

UMd

2118. E.O.H .

."

Se. . belt wood ll'ld COIJ ltOYI.

Wftch. 304-273-31811.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUOGEr PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES. 538 Jo•on

Boats and
S.le

Motors for

H•rll Pontoon INt. 24ft. d•dc.
311 HP Mercury motor. bell.
cond. 13210. Coli 814-387·
0 " ' or 317·04e6.

36o eo.. e """ b!ldo.
vorygoodohlflo. eo •leo Ditch

814-441-0338.

lhop and

Third Aw.. Ooltlpollo ' Uvlngroom. faml.,room, ~ bedroom~,

75

3 wood .,d co.! 1100at11 for ....
. . . lot llde rolrlftrot... M...-.
dHpwott......,. ttootboom

c.. l 30..812-3387 •Iter 1:00.

Pflce from •11 3 a mo. W.. k to

.WIIter. ello river lots. Ovde
Bowen, Jr. 304-178-2338.

tdtcften. Off -

-304-878-1431
• bllttrv- •e110. Coil-

King-.COI• wood burning stove.

New completely furnlthed
aprlment 6 mobile home 'n
city. Adultt onty. P•kirig. Cd

304-~7~ 11558.

Ollc woodworll. flnilh
biiii1Mfttt 2c••.,..... lwei
londJGipod lol. 4 mlto from
Haopltol all Rt. 38flblllibiook l&amp;lbdtvlllon. Call
814-448-4 I 89.

Ho._

Dozer • ..ckt.:Mt Work·IIO "~'
C... donr. Re..anllble ,...., .J
l!!r;pef'lenc. opeNtor.
1

c,.....,

for S.le

•

S.eboard elec. h•ert • thlr-

AptL Colt 304-878-8104. or
878-1381 .. 178-7738.

9uain 8111

a-• 30•40.
hoist, 8 room hou-. 2 bit,., 1

Hamal

-tr. lko now. 21 .2
cubfc h .• po10h 1urnttuN, 8lr

304-273-88118.

oppl. lurnlohod. W•htr-Drvor

34•3&amp;. 2 bOJ

···----G-allipolis -·-------- ·------aallipoliii---------- -----··po·marov··----------- •
:-

Auction

Ap11rtmant
far Rant

hac*-up, ww a•pel. niMI'ty
painted. deck. From 1175. Now
accap1tng HUD . Regency, Inc.

Store buldlng for ••• or rent.

31

mM-.. New dutch clblt. go~ ·~•

tlnce 1914. Regular army
Is...... d.,im. r•llll alotNng.
k . clmOUfl-ae btk Md whtt•.
Ford 1971 •e or tnde. Junction lndlpendlnCI Road. At . 2 1.

2 BR. apu. I cla.tt. kltchen-

•200•curftyd~lh6ref..,_

O..ge 8••114 Flrtt Ave.

9

34

t.ll ut for yOUr moble home
lnturence: Miller lnturence,
304-812-2148 . Alto: •to, -..
hom~, life. hllhh.

'

lllijiiiiVIIII''ll

WANT
ADS
WORK!

Pl.-.t Vllllt¥ tto.phal eur-lv••-'"Oiflolcttlonotor
lluelniM offtoe mlnecJ•· mult
h.,. bu•"- oftloe ~'~~••d

Buildings

appro~~;lmatefv

1 1 Help Wanted

IE PAIR

.. lolrt - · owing llhlft. mott!y
mornklge. Muon lfN. c,.
I :00. 304-773-1997.

-ion OYIIollle for tty•
Nit In PDint Pfllllnt 1r11.
Inquire 304-8711-2711 ...,.......

317-0t38.

~-.

a few pennies spent here
comes back folding money

13

ton. Ohlo Pill• Co., Po..,..ay.
Ohio. 114-812-8411.

m-tt. 304-878-2722.

-or.

lluldngo, olty
ctooo to
bleck top rCNid. call et.ttnlng~
304-4811-1823.
- - - - - - -- - -

k-.

31118.

814-988-3877oftor 5:00.

446·

SMALL ENGl.

done. Pt... reply 10: hrMtt
McKinniJ. 78 Court St .. !Jolt•
poh, Ohio 415131 or 114--148-

'lard 51)\es

LDtt in Sumner Rd. er•. 2
old, mWe Beagle. Not hunter,
lust femltv pM, Sc• owr eye,
sometlmH limps;. Anlwtft to
Bitcull. Reward. no qUH1ion1
liked. 114-992-3233, diP(s;

Itt .... _ ,

oldMo•ill
&amp; Sli•• onr to easy VHS.
CAll AMY CAIITIR
0&lt; IOI'S EIICTRONICS

Pt~t.w.ve.

Aw. Goltlpotll. OH.

onLaonBidenAoad, 8
room hou• ..,d bath. 3 out

THE OHIO VALUY PUBLISHlNG CO. ,.........,. • • yau
... bUIIn- ""h .........
ond NOT to -dmoniJ
tflrqugh tM mol und you h lnvioilgoled .... oft-mg.

3 BR.. fomlly room. 2 blllll.
centlll*, ~mall btmt on 1~ lot

1

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

In Goi11Dotlo. Wilt !111' lor ... .,.....

'

hold fumilhing. ~lin Wect.
meyer, 814-245-5162.

992-6173

I NOncE I

·:

W1nt to bu_'l: Used fumitu"' .nd
..,tiq.... 'Mil buy entft hou•

25 Yr1. Exp.
References

a board

FOUND:B"cll: lemale...;adeon
Event Height• h• c:oiW but no

814-448-3169.

Good Rates
T.L.C.

·Oentlem., n•ds room

AVON olt - - I t Sh~fo¥ Sp-o, CO LLEOE. 1!121 Jacbon Plk1.
Colt 446-4387. R~ No. 88-11304-8711-1429.
101188.
Coemltologlst with w.v•. lnq.... In peraon 1t MUe'e HIJr
Doolgo, 1010 Vlond St .. Point

County=phn• Inc. Good
.....
..011 lnd lVIItl()pen
M to - Mon ttwu
Stt. 114-448-1819. 827 3rd.

18~er•

'•

Avo.• Gollipolio. CoH 014-048-

J&amp;L

,_.,,..,t,

178-18'10.

Of

lost and Found

2282.

GUN SHOOT

44

-'II'Y· room•nd

4340. EOE·AA.

(6141 992-6559

.

5·25-lfn

916/N/ 1-.

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

you w.nt tD diVIIIo:r.;job •111111 .,_

c••·

2
15 weekt old. c.ll
814-949-2859. .

8o

MAIN STREET PIZZA

H vou

• - II

Pomeroy, Ohio
7-13-'88- tin

8-8-88-tfo

~?

''"t.("*''
or your
dllltolld Md

Collie. 614-742-2359 1fter

"LET GEORGE
DO IT"
HAULING

·'

-d. ell 304-878-3747

5:00p.m.

, Television Listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Senric4
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

304·1715 ~ 4340 .

"I'm adjusting ·beautifillly to
our separation ...it was our
marriage I couldn't adjust
·to."

Situations
Wanted

llol'*'"tolo ildv to tM In with

814·992-27 23.

Pu pple1 to

Ill lhtfts. Com-et

nll. 304-178-4340. A.A.E.O.E.

Blu:e·grav kittens 10 give

oolt tool- Coll8t4-448-315H.

1111&lt;1111:1011

P I - VoW.., HotpltOI I'Woon-

814-387-7120.

Cocter

....... Mitt btl

• • • • ..,.

cornpfetl line of ueed furniture.
NEW- W.Wn boota- t31.
Worid&gt;oott Ul • up. 18toll &amp;

114-ltl-7832.

12

•89 . Recliner•

ltOrtlna-111.
USED· · ........ bodroom
1u1t11. DeeD. wrm.-we•Mr. •

homt. Lat• of low andlltllntlon.
hot lunch•.. IIJef.ence provide.

t1toJo.,dwopoy,.uhlpplng.

Port tlmo MLT. 20 hro porwook.
2·3 ._..,.~. t .........

814-446-8161 .

ltvlng room..-. 11911-•ltl.
, ... - w i t h -.. 1249.

HOME WORK • .... TL . ..
l'llm lcMiy to• ., bul&lt;lng

8 kittens to giv• away. Call

Y"'· old. Coli 814-268-1343.

011v1 at .• G•lllpt*.
NEW· I pc. wood group. •399.

orov~• ahld . . . In my

- ·fi/1:

concltiotw. ott. mlac itema.

Household Goods

uartlng ~

Motarr:td•

-----~-.~
-~
71 Sua:~ GS liiOE:. taoi~

Mlud ...d Wood-- t12..,
burdo. Contotnlno lfloro•- 1'n
Upright

SWAIN
AUCTION llo FURNITURE 82

*' .,.

.Wlt1

74

18•31 ft. long. 114-949-21915.

... to
Colt 814-218-1191 .

AVON • Alt or-. Coli Mtrllyn
W•- 304-182-2841.

morolnlo&lt;n*lon cllt31418793002. Eat 213:1.

51

mother of 2 would
limo bolotllttlng.

- 8t4-112-87711 ..
814-112-1101.

Female Pekingese. Approx. 3

Gentle kitten.- 7 wka. old. C.ll

1-3-'86-tfc

• EAGLE RIDGE
SMAU ENGINE

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Misc. Merchandise

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814-849-2909.

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'Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Ponwoy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, September, 30, 1988

Community calendar
FRIDAY
CHESTER - Revival services
at the Chester Nazarene Church
continuing through Sunday at 7
p.m . David Canfield, evangelist.
Public Invited.

with the annual church homecoming on Sunday, starting with
Sunday School at 9: 30 a.m.,
dinner at 12 p.m., ending with
gospel ·singing at 2 p.m. Everyone welcome.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Church of Christ In Christian
Union Is sponsoring a benefit
hymn sing on Friday starting at 7
p.m. Narrow Way, Reflections
T;lo. the Clark Family, Kim
Herdman and the Charity Sin·
gers wlll be featured. Everyone

SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778 and Star Junior
PORTLAND - Portland EleGrange 878 will meet at 8 p.m. mentary School Is having Its
Saturday at the grange hall, annual fall carnival on Saturday,
county road 1, north of Salem from 5 to 9 p.m . , with something
Center, and wlll be presenting 55 for everyone.
and 60 year seals to members;
WILKESVILLE -A smorgasInstallation of officers and offlc- .
ers conference will be held as bord supper will be held Saturday at the Pythlan Hall In
well as degree work.
Wilkesville. Serving starts at
TUPPERS PLAINS
4:30 p.m. Proceeds to the PyTuppers Plains Elementary thlan Hall building fund. EveSchool will be holding the annual ryone welcome.
fall carnival this Saturday, 2 - 7
p.m., with a cakewalk, prize
SUNDAY
drawings, sweet shop, country
POMEROY - The annual
store, bazaar, games of all kinds meeting of the Meigs County
and refreshments. Admission 25 Pioneer and Historical Society
will be held at the Meigs
cents.
Museum, Pomeroy, Sunday; a 1
LONG BOTTOM - A hymn p.m. potluck dinner will be
sing wlll be held Saturday at followed by a program and
Hazel Community Church, near business session.
Long Bottom, starting at 7: 30
p.m. The Gospel Messengers of
POMEROY - The annual
Rl'pley, W.Va. · wlll be the fea- homecoming· of the St . Paul
tured .s ingers.
United Methodist Churcli will be
held this Sunday . Sunday School
KENO - Eddie Jones of starts at · 9 a.m., followed by
Pennsylvania will present an worship service at 10 a.m. with ·
hour of music at the Keno Church
of Christ on Saturday, startlpg at
7 p.m. Everyone welcome.

wel~me.

MIDDLEPORT
Public
square dance Friday at Middleport American Legion Annex, 8
p.m. with the True Country Band
providing music for dancing.
LONG BOTI'OM - Long Bot·
tom United Methodist Church
wlll be in revival Friday through
Sunday, 7: 30 each evening, with
Evangelist Bud Hatfield.

Math program helps.
kids learn numbers
"Mathemagic"·-no, its not a
magic show but a clever series of
events showing the fun and
fascination of manipulating
·numbers.
. Students in six elementary
'schools in the Meigs Local School
district have participated this ·
•week In the federally funded
• "Excellence in Education" pro'. gram ·brought here by Wendy
Halar, federal programs director for the district.
. Using a creative and fresh
ap proach, and presented in an

SATURDAY
WILKESVILLE - A smorgasbord supper will be held Saturday, with serving starting at 4:30
p.m., at the WllkesvillEf Pythlan
Hall. Everyone welcome.

SYRACUSE - A pig roast,
sponsored by the Meigs Association for Retartded Citizens will
be held Saturday, from 5 ·to 7
p.m., at Carleton School In
Syracuse. $3 per serving: Eve-

JOPPA -Joppa United Methodist Church will be In revival
through Saturday at 7:30 each
evening. The revival will end

enthusiastic manner with some
teacher and student participation, Mark Maher who Is with All
American Programs used chalk,
·video, puzzles and tricks to teach
and stimulate the students toward better understanding
figures .
His . visits this trip were to
Pomeroy, Salem Center, Ru tland , Salisbury, Middleport and
Harrisonville, and he'll return in
the spring for a similiar program
at Bradbury and again at
Pomeroy.

.Moore reunion held
Descendants of James C. and
Ethelinda Stone Moore held their
annual reunion recently at the
home of Larry and Patty Circle,
Racine.
Grace was glveri by Roy
Bookman with the 45 relatives
and friends enjoying a picnic
dinner. Sue Hager showed pictures of her recent trip to the
· ranch of the late William Moore,
Prey, Montana . Paul Moore also
had pictures of the Moore family

·Riverview Garden Club meets
Installation of officers was a
gardens. A tljank you note wa's
feature of the recent meeting of read from Mrs. Gene Wilson for
the Riverview Garden Club held
the flowers and cards sent her
at the home of Mrs. Frank Bise.
during her illness. Mrs. Putman
· Mrs. Okey Connolly. installing gave a report from the program
officer, used a bird theme for the planning committee.
ceremony and presented eac h of
For the program an article on
the 1988-89 officers with a
"Drought Recovery 1988'' was
carnation.
given by Mrs. Denver Weber. She
• The new officers are Mrs. , gave several tips on the care of
Donald P utman, president; Mrs. lawns during the drought , and
Ray Young, vice (lresident; Mrs.
suggesting applying one inch of
Ronald Cowdery, secretary, and water twice a week and mowing
Mrs . Nola Young. treas urer.
at the highest setting of the
Mrs. MamiP Buckley was a
mower, about three Inches. Adeg'ues t at the meeting hosted by quae
t IY wa t er 1ng 1an d scape
.Mrs. Bise, Mrs. Curtie Cauthorn,
plants and trees was also dis•and Mrs. Lyle Balderson. Devo· cussed along with proper insect
'uons by Mrs. Ernest Whitehead control and fertilizer apJ?ilcation.
were on autumn
and her
Plans for dining at 'Sebastian's
readings included "Doorstep of in Parkersburg were made for
Autumn" " Autumn Day". and 6:30 on Oet. 27. Games were
"Believe in the World" conclud· conducted by Mrs. Connolly and
·ing with a prayer. She also led in Mrs. Ray Young, with prizes
:Singing " How Great Thou Art."
going to everyone. Mrs. Ronald
; For roll call members brought Osborne recieved the door prize.
~uquets of flowers from their
Refreshments were served to

RUTLAND Round and
square dancing will be featured
at the Eli Denison Post of the
American Legion on Saturday
from 8 to 12 p.m .

---·

HARRISONVILLE - A yard
sale to raise proceeds for missionary work among the Navaho
Indians wlll be held Friday and
Saturday, starting 9 a .m. both
days, on Vance Road near
Harrisonville.

TRICKS TO NUMBERS- Using a "did you know", Mark Maher
showed bow to correctly guess what's on the front of the dice being
held here by two fourth graders by looking only at the back. It's all
a matter of addition but you have to know that added together the
opposite side always equals seven.

ryone welcome.

those named and Mrs. Harllss
Frank, Mrs. Paul Thomas, Mrs.
Thomas Boggs, and Mn. Donald
Myers.

I

Poet's corner

I

We're lelllnl lrl.,... bi!IIIDd tbe wb ...,
where IIIey ....... ae.er be.
Qe've wa&amp;ebal lbem lip llle boiUe_wblle
readll•rlor lll..r key.
we•w laupal
aboallhe wa,.
~h;!'~;"t!.,ta:,•bold!fr.:'.:':o~plhem
10 u.eir car.
We'wllaleaal ulhey'w laid ..., lhey're
"not too drunk to driVe."
Knowta,lbey'd
behlciiJ lltbeymadett
bomeallve.
We're
, .., "B"'"· lo lrlendl wbo'w
dial..
aDd weabare 1a llle blune;
FQr, had we keptlhem oau.eraad, lhlap
mlllbl aat be lbe ume.
11 '• Ume,.. ad ..,.p-1111)', ud INip to
..ve our lrleadllFor,wh .. ourlrl,...aredrlllldal,ll'oo•
ualhl!lr Ule depeo~dl.
In memoey ollllooelrl..,. now roae, II'•
llmewelallea vow ....

::J'*•

and one of James and Ethelinda
Moo~. The group bonored the
Rev. Carl Hicks on bls 75th .
birthday.
New officers elected Wife Rick
Koblentz, president: Raernary
Keller, vice president; Debra
Cheavller, secretlry, and Kathryn Windon, trea&amp;urel!.
Next year's reunloa WI&amp; set tor
the third Sunday In September at
the Circle home.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Davisson, Mechanicsburg; Mr. and Mrs. Rodney
Bookman, Nelsonville; Mrs.
Helen Bookman, Glouster; Roy
Bookman, Buchtel; Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Grueser, Logan; Mrs.
Verna Rose, Reedsville; Fritz
and Chris Bookman, Buchtel;
Paul Moore, Florence Circle,
Betty Lou Dean, Harlan Eisel·
stein, Kim Follrod, George Genhlemer, Sue Ha~r. Rick Ko.. blentz, Cindy Warner, Marcia
Keller, Becky CotterDI, Douglas
Circle, Mr. and Mrs. Fred a.
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Windon, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Keller, Mr. and Mrs. Rodney
Chevalier, Adam and Abbie
Chevalier, Mr. and Mrs. Keith
Bentz, AmyBethandJohnBentz,
the Rev. and Mrs. Carl Hicks,
and t he h()S ts, La rry and p at ty
Circle, Grant and Shane, all
local.

Don Archer, mll!lster. Carry-In
dinner at 12:30 In the church
basement. Afternoon service at 2,
p.m. with special singers from
Wllllamstown, W.Va. Everyone
welcome.
•
MONDAY
•.
POMEROY - Meigs County.
Salon 710, Eight and Forty, wm.
meet at 1 p.m. Monday at tb~
home of Mrs. Lula Hampton. •
•

SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees will meet Monday.:
7:30p.m., In the Syracuse Munlc,
!pal Building.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Orange
Township Trustees will meet
Monday, 7:30p.m., at the home.
ot the clerk, Dorothy Calaway.

011£ EV£111116 SIICIIi AT 7:30 P.l :

ADIISSIOII $1.00

'•

-·· The good news
is Y,OU C0!1 he/p
reduce your own
cancer risk... •
--.--..-----~- ~-

You can't control all cancer rilk factors,
such as family heaJth htJtory or heredity, but
the )lOOd news Is that you
by
tUing Control of thinp in
·
Ufewhat you eat and drink,~smo and
where you work and play.•

caa caa=10me

Have rqular mecllcll check-upa, 11\d dllcaa
your risk factors for cancer with yoar fam!ly daclor.
And for information about taldD&amp; eonllol of your
.lifestyle to help reduce your cancer rllk. aill.

Jack M. Levine, D.O.
General Surgeon
Suite 211 + PVH Medical Office Building
(304) 675--1460

• Tbe Amerlcu Cancer SocleiJ

ATTENTION:

TAKE A STAND 'GAINST DRMNG
~!lfNK, with lrlendl lhal we bave

-B)' Debbie Oaborne

I

It's Ar~hway Cookie Time.
Coffee time. .

U'

MEIGS . COUNTY VOTERS
IN ORDER TO VOTE IN THE
NOV. 8, 1988 GENERAL ELECTION
YOU MUST BE REGISTERED BY.
OCTOBER 11 I 1988
HAVE YOU MOVED, CHANGED YOUR NAME,
,
FAILED TO VOTE IN THE LAST 4 YEARS?

~R

Y~U

CAN CHECK YOUR REGISTRATION, CHANGE
YOUR NAME AND/OR ADDRESS ORREGISTD AT

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD OF ELECTIONS
108 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
. '01
EXPIRES JUNE 30, 1111

COOKIE-TIME SAVINGS
Mr. "'-r: W. will-., lhi• "'""""' lur lloled- pluo llf kw ........
wtM'fl term.-. uf thi~ 11fter haw~~ nlft1plted with byynu and lhr n..,....,

luupufl wiiii;Jt' hunun.•d 110ly if MJbmhted by rt'falter •• tU ~ nr 1
dt•a n~ hiJUR apprtNtd ~ UAMd IK1i"R 'ur lnd II thf rllk ulsuch 1 rtiiiRr.
lll'VUK't'S JKINi"H purthue Clf MJik•itnf !MOdi: to CfM!I' l'OOpUIM prarnlld lur
mUll lx• ' ""'"' 141'"' ·Any Mlos IIX...,. bopold bylhr
,.,.,,,.,..,. (uup"" w&gt;kl illued. ,...rk.1ed or pruhlbited by law. Coopnn oubjo&lt;·l
1!1 tclflfi:'IC.'ation whfotllf"f'rM 1rf ulff hwt nul bet-It t'1JR'oplied wilt\.tuh walur
12111J lt. FclfJM)"'lHHt ,IMIIruupnMtn:
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Archway Cooklea, P.O. Box ..... Newport Bach, CA tZU8

27500 63307 OH

L------------------------·-·
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PHONE 992-2697
HOURS FOR REGISTRATION:

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Y thru ,..AYa laJO a.m.
C:JO p.m.
27 .... octo•• •= ••• ,... ,. 9:00 ,....
SA1UIDAYS, SIP'r. 24 _. OCIO.I 1 . . 1: 1:00 a.m. Noon
IUISDAY, OCT_. 11a 9100 ...... 9&amp;00 p.m.

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