<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12863" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/12863?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T04:47:32+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43835">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/16c90c69db3e45451ee3ef74f27686ae.pdf</src>
      <authentication>0c6c0d6c442a4f0cf8f72cb879949dad</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="40364">
                  <text>Page-16- The Daily Sentinel

E
L
B
E
R
F
E
. ::,~~::.: :~::::-.:.:~ ! ·
.· . ._. L D S'
LowPriee80urSpeeialty!

~

and moat Wooderiul outpour· '
lnf! of BARGAINS that hao
Comeyourway.

f

f

··---······.,

· "-....
G't/Gl

'

coossa
I
I

d
an

unprecedentedG::::-'

I Summer Season, 1986!
' We ha•e an Entirely New and
f qean Stoek. We h..e the

f

Proper Styles. We hne the Cor·

''

"'ct Prices. We always lead,·

Inside:
By the Bend ............ Page 6
ClaljsiDeds ........ Pages 7·fl.IO

THOSE who ca.n may follow.

t

CornlaJ.TV ............. Page 11

~~-------

Deaths ................... Page 12
Edllorlal .......... ....... Page 2
Sports ................. Pages :H

.Cllief under-fd!ti·.

' pige1

-----------------~------~---~~~~··~·· ~··~··~··~0
.. ......... , __ ,,.,,. .

.

F

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

_'"!:'.;~_ .,.,...

.• . .. ·······-·

Clothing For Your Family And Furnishings For Your Home.

Prices That Will Outclass A_ll Competition!
BATH TOWEL SALE!

ANCHOR HOCKING-Reg. 1 7.~

MICROWARE

Cannon Royal Family.

Choice of muffin pan, divided plate with
cov er, bakin g ring &lt;r bacon rack .

YOUR
CHOICE

LARGE SIZE BATH TOWEL

5
Ref!. 1 5.99- SALE 2,99
13.99
1 2.49

3 ONLY -Reg. 125.00

HAND TOWEL-SALE •t.99
HAND TOWEL-S ALE 1 1.29
FLORAL PRINT

Y2
PRICE
BOYS DRESS SLACKS

CUDDLIN' COUNTRY

BEARS
The bears with thumhs.

In regular and slim sllzes 8to 14 . Student
sizes 26 to lJ waist. Soltd colors.

$1488

Regular '17 .95 to 121.95

MEN'S VAN HEUSEN

DRESS SHIRTS

VAN HEUSEN $16 and $18

SHORT SLEEVE
KNIT SHIRTS

Short sleeves, solids and patterns.
Neck sizes 14 ':h to 17.

SALE PRICES

Good Selection!

$499
BOYS' S.S.
KNIT SHIRTS
Printed T-shlrt style.
XL sizes.

·$18

SALE

66

WRANGLER 122.95 BLUE DENIM

WESTERN SHIRTS

s, M, Land

MEN'S and BOYS'
SUMMERWEIGHT

Neck sizes 14 ~ to 20.
Sleeve Lengths 32 to 36.

Hanes S4.25

pick.

Sizes 30 to 36.

Yz PRICE

S, M, L and ZL. Solids, plaids,

. First quality by well known rna·

30% OFF

YOU SAVE!
MEN'S

SWIM TRUNKS

BOYS'

MEN'S WRANGLER PRE-WASHED

DENIM JEANS

SWIM TRUNKS
Sizes 8 to 18. Variety of styles and colors.

Sizes 29 to 42 waist
New Shipment For This Sale.
Reg. Price ' 19.95

SALE PRICES

MEN'S HANES-RED LABEL

MEN'S

UNDERWEAR

SHORTS SALE!

and knit briefs. Also boxer
shorts and big sizes.

Sizes 29 to 50 waist. Big sty le and color
selection at reduced prices.

ENTIRE STOCK

SAVE

30%

LITTLE GIRLS'
SUMMER DRESSES
Sundresses, Casual Dresses,
Fancy Dresses

SAVE

33%

SALE PRICES
THIS HERITAGE
WEEKEND AD IS
COPIED FROM AN
ELBERFELDS AD
APPEARING IN THE
TELEGRAPH
MARCH 18, 1896.

MEN'S S-T-R-E·T·C-H

DENIM JEANS
Sizes 29 to 50 waist. " Wrangler"
and "Lee" . Regular fit and fun fl t.
Regular Prices ' 19.95 to 129.95

SALE PRICES
BIG SAVINGS!
MEN'S SUMMER

HEAD WEAR
Caps and ha ts In summer's best
REDUCED

30%

s~a}!a~~I~~~~~~b~t~~lm.
lng materials tn solid colors and patterns
45 Inches wide. Full 90 Inch width.
QUILT MATERIAL· MUSLIN
QUILT LINING· QUILTING
THREAD

SAVE 25%
WOMEN' S KNIT
TOPS

REDUCED 25%

Sale Prices Start At Only

S525

Since 1864

SAVE
ALL BEDROOMS ........... 25 %

SUMMER
SLEEPWEAR

LOW SALE PRICES!
JUNIOR &amp; MISSY

SWIMWEAR SALE
One and Two Piece Suits

SALE

PRICED

FROM ONLY

$6 75

ENTIRE STOCK REDUCED 25%

Buy any Thank Goodness It Fits Jra
(soft cup or lightly lined) and r eceive a
pastel pink, V·neck, camisole FREE.
All camisoles are ladles' Size L.

AS LOW AS $300
LITTLE BOYS' SHORTS
Casual and Dressy styles
Size 2 to 7

25% OFF

JUNIOR, MISSY, EXTRA SIZE

COORDINATE
SPORTSWEAR SALE

coordinate sportswear Is
In this sale.

~ OFF

1

RCA CLOSEOUT SALE
We're Making Room For The New
1987 Models

ALL 1986 RCA
COLOR TVs

AT LOW, LOW
CLOSEOUT SALE PRICES

SUMMER
JEWELRY

EARRINGS, CHAINS,
NECKLACES and PINS
TWO DAYS ONLY

25% OFF
WHIRLPOOL
AIR CONDITIONERS
5,000 BTU .......... '279
7,500 BTU .......... '369
10,000 BTU ..........
12,000 BTU ......... $5

The Oldest and Largest Dry Goods House'

Front and Second Streets

FURNITU
SALE!
FURNITURE SALE!
FURNITURE SALE!

LADIES'

Right at start of season SAVE 30% on
our entire selection In sizes s, M, Land IBesfltfrcs,rtrnqual!ty by Lorr alne, Katz,
XL.
and Texsheen .

styles and colors.

Y2 PRICE

$IQ99

25%

SPORT SHIRTS

LIMITED QUANTITY

JACKETS
BOXER SHORTS
Good co tor and size selection. Take your

SAVE

SAVE- MEN'S

e

••. ..•-.:.· .. : . ::.· _: ...•...•• ...•• .

SAVE

lf4

LITTLE GIRLS'

SWiMSUITS
One and two piece sulls.
Sizes 6 mos . thru 14

REDUCED
30%!
LITTI.E BOYS'

and GIRLS'

OUTFITS

Onr and tw o plett st'tJ .
bl IK. Most arP mac hi n(l

wuhable.

SALE PRICED
FROM

$ 29

TOPS

TANKS,
BLOUSES
&amp;KNIT TOPS

SAVE OVER

30%

YOUR
CHOICE

CHILDREN'S

SUMMER HATS
and CAPS

Vol.36. No.34
Copyrighted 1986

-~-~---

--'

---

.

.. - -· ·--- _.,. __

-

at y

enttne
2 Sections, 12 Pages

26 Centa

A Muhimedie Inc. Newspaper

Meigs board to reveal
Salisbury plan in July
Plans for redlstrlctlng the area
setvlng till&gt; Salisbury Elementary
School wUI he unveiled at the July 22
meeting of the Meigs Local School
District Board of Education.
This was the word Thursday
nlght when a delegation of parents
representing students of the Salls·
bury School met with the board of
discuss reports of redistricting.
Supt. Dan E. Morris reported that
rumors have circulated as to the
redistricting and he assured par·
ents that no decisions have been
made as tohowstudentsenroilment
will be reduced at the Salisbury
School since tv&gt; has not had
adequate information to make the
decisions.
However, Supt. Morris reported
that, according to project enrol·
lment ligures for this fall , there wlll
be 44 students In the first grade at
Salisbury; 281n the second: 281n the
third; 291n the fourth; 29 In the fHth
and 331n the sixth. The problem. of
course, is with the firs! grade.
Morris stated, since 44 students In
one classroom is neither a good
learning sl!uation nor a good

teaching situation. On ttv&gt; otrer
hand, Morris reported, enrollment
at the Pomeroy Elementary School
has been down for the past several
years and some Salisbury students
could be transported to that facility
Instead of to the Salisbury School.
Supt. Morris said that the problem at Salisbury has not been
discussed with tre board of educa·
tJon at this point and that he has not
made an decision on what his
recommendation will be In regard
to rrovlng students from the
Salisbury School to tre Pomeroy
Elementary Bulldlng. However,
when the decision Is made, he said,
students from grades one through
six In the particular area selected
will probably be assigned to the ·
Pomeroy Elementary School. In
other words, he said, that rt would
not only be first graders who wUl be
moved from Salisbury to Pomeroy .
Parents attending the mretlng
told ttv&gt; board and administration
that treir area Is a growing area
and that they purchased .heir
hOmes feeling tbat treir chUdren
would attend ttv&gt; Salisbury Elemen·

tary School. which Is ilr grades one
through slx. They asked about tl1e
possibUity of a buDding program at
ttv&gt; Salisbury School or the tempor·
ary use cil a modular building at the
Salisbury building since the 44 first
graders mlght be tre same problem
for ttv&gt; six years d elementary
school unless the number reduced
through families mlV!ng. However,
Supt. Morris said that the expend!·
ture for addltklnal facilities would
not be justified since fUture enrol·
lment figures appear to be on the
down side. There also would be
addltklnal staff costs. Trese addl·
tional costs would not be justified
when some or ttv&gt; Sallsbu ry stu·
dents could be transported a mile or
so to another school within the
district, Morris reported. He said
that the decision on which students
are to be transferred wUI be made
with due regard that tre Pomeroy
Elementary Building will not be
overcrowded.
Parents were rrost su pportlve in
their comments on tre educational
program received by their children
Continued on page 12

Board accepts resignations
Several resignatklns from staff
members were accepted when the
Eastern Local School District
Board of Educalion met In recessed
session earUer this week.
Resignations accepted were
those of Blll Buckley, high school
principal who has been hired as
director or the county talented and
gifted program; Valerie RanshOt·
tom as advisor to I he flag CO!lJS and
majorettes: Frances Thomas, high
school science teacher, and James
Wilhelm as band director pending
employment elsewhere.
The board agreed to join the Ohio
Star Investment Program as recommended by the Treasurer
Eloise Boston and Principal Buckley gave an estimate on the cost of
replacing Items stolen at the high
school over the year at $3,000. He
was asked to get add it lanai prices
on the major Items. The board is

also working with estimates on a
1mph case for the high school lobby,
bul wUI keep within the $1,(00 In
donations received for the display
case. Supt. Richard Roberts was
authorized to proceed with the
painting of lheexterior and doors at
Riverview School.
A discussion was held on possible
changes for the student handbook
but the board took no action since a
new principal for the high school
will be hired. Student Insurance
through the Brogan-Warner
Agency was approved. Arch Rose
presented costs to the board on bus
routes for the hall day kindergarten
program to be Instituted this faU .
The cost estimate was based on the
use of two bus drivers. Rose wa&lt;
asked to prepare a second estimate
using four drivers. Vicky Lay!ll',
reading teacher at Chester Elcmen·
tary , reported on three reading

conferences she attended In April .
A second reading was given on a
policy Issue as to who Is responsible
for 18 year old students and was
approved. According to the resolu·
lion. 18 year old students will be
governed by the same rules which
apply to other students of the
district. It was announced a state
report on the special education
program In the Eastern Dlstricl
will be given at the county cilflce at 2
p.m. on July 23.
The board voted tolend300chalrs
to a church group which wiU have a
tent meeting In September and It
was agreed to participate In federal
programs next year. Life Touch
photographers were approved to'do
school photos next year. Estimates
will be secured on the purchase of a
wet-dry vacuum for the Riverview
School and a pickup truck for the
Cont lnued on page 12

MORE ROOF TAKEN DOWN - More of the roof
portion ol the Meigs Inn was brought down Thursday

afternoon by Rose Excavating of Racine. Company
worilers used chains tAl secure too msteady portions

ol Ire roof. A wbtch was then used to puB the sectloM
wthe Inside of too buUdlng. The Meigs Inn !lUitalned
between $400,000 and 5500,000 damages In a lire early
last Sunday morning.

Heritage Weekend activities are in full swing
If you're into being entertained, educated or bot h,
then Pomeroy may he the place to visit over ttv&gt;

weekend.
Heritage Weekend activities moved into swing
Friday and will continue through Sunday wit h
"somet hlng for everyone" being offered by the
Pomeroy Area Chamber ci Commerce and the Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical Society.
DOWNTOWN
Court Street was blocked off this morning In
preparation lor a two day country craft show,
weather permitting, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
The AEP' s last working sternwheeler, " Th~
Jaunita" Is docked at the Pomeroy levy and Is open

for touring noon to 5 p.m. today. Tomorrow visitors
can board tre boat anytime from 10 a.m to 5 p.m.
Other Saturday activities scheduled for downtown
by ttv&gt; Chamber (f Commerce Include an antique car
show on Court Street, 9 a.m. to noon, and an antique
steam engine display by George Francis on the
parking lot from 8:30a.m. to 4:30p.m.
On the parking tot stage, Denver Rice will perfonn
with his homemade Instruments from 1:30 to 2:30,
and Myron Duffield will bring his calliope Into town a 1
the stage area for a concert from 2: lJ to 3 p.m.. after
which the Shady River Shufflers will clog for an hour.
MUSEUM

The museum wlll be open on both Saturday and

LITTLE BOYS'

Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. In addition to ttv&gt; regular
exhibits, a variety of new things wUI be ava il able lor
visitors to see. and several demonstallons will tv&gt;
going on.
Shirley Houston will be doing basket weaving and
slate work. Betty Dean and Pat Holter " ill be
demonstrating traditional flower arranil{'ments,
Eugene WUioughby will be showing how his grist mUI
works, Art Skinner will show his skill In leather work.
and Harold Teaford will display hOmemade wood
items.
Larry Wolfe's display of arrowheads will be on
exhibit, Howard Nolan will be therewith his collectio n
of pollshed stones, and Mary Bradford her
soft -sculptured dolls.
Feature of the theatre will be Captain Charles Stone
with river boat shows, 1 p.m. on Saturday and 2 p.m.
on Sunday.

A pie baking contest 1fruit pies) will take place
Sunday a t 2 p.m. with entries to be at the museum at
1:30. At 3 p.m. the pies will be auclloned off with
proceeds to go to the Pioneer and Historical Society.
All afternoon thert' will be games fort tv&gt; children on
the lot across from the museum. Myron Duffield wUI
he performing on the calliope both days and
Sunshlners from Albany will sing on Sunday
afternoon.
The essays written by the fifth graders who took
part In the Yesteryear program of the Senior Citizens
vRSVP will be judged and the winners announced.
Homemade Ice cream wU he sold both days at the
museum, on Saturday by the Junior Granil{', which
"111 also have sandwiches both .da;·s. and on Sunday
by the Meigs Rowdies 4·H Club . The Sunon Cannel
Church wlll also be on the scenewithdesscns. Sunday
the Pomeroy firemen wilt have a chicken barbecue
beginning at 11 a.m.

Two killed in Gallia County accident

SUMMER TOPS
Buy Now and Really
SAVE!!

25%

In Pomeroy.
POMERO't, 0.

'

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, June 20, 1986

Emerp!ncy penoanel
by a Weat
Vlr&amp;lnla Air National Guard tractor traDer Tlmnday
at lbe lalenectlon of U.S. 85 anct Ohio S2ti at Rio
Graade. Dead are Hilda Perkins, 63, Rt. 2,
DOUBLE FATALD'Y -

SUJTOUDCI tile wreckale ol a car stnldl

·-------·------

•

.·

Ch•)lllllke, aad Juanlla S. Fullra, 74, Chellapske.
Beulah Jlllllloe, 51, owner o1 lbe car, and Cllnlon
JUIJtlce, 58, both of Rt. 4, Chesapeake, are In critical
oondlllon at Holzer Medical Center.

RIO GRANDE - An Investiga·
Uon continued today into the
collision between a car and a West
Virginia Air National Guard tractor
trailer at the Intersection of U.S. 35
and Ohio 325 here Thursday thAt left
two Lawrence County women dead
and two ottv&gt;rs hospitalized.
Dead at the scene was Hilda
Perkins, 63, Rt. 2. Chesapeake,
according to Rio Grande Marshal
John Vance. Juanita S. Fulks, 74,
Chesapea ke, died enroute to Grant
Medical Center, Columbus, where
she was taken by GMC's Llfefllght
tv&gt;llcopler.
Vance was scheduled to meet this
morning with Alr Force officials as
part of the Investigation. Direct
cause cil the accident had not been
determined as of this morning.
The other two victims, Beulah
Justice, 51, and Clinton Justice, 56,

both of Rt. 4, Chesapeake, were
taken to Holzer Medical Center and
reported In critical condition In the
intensive care unlt this morning.
Cli nton Justice Is being treated for a
punctured lung and Beulah JustiCe
for multiple trauma, according to a
HMC spokesperson.
The accident occurred around
6:32 p.m. when the car, owned by
Beulah Justice, collided with the
iractor trailer, driven by Sgt.
James C. McCallister, 51, South
Charleston, W.Va. McCallister was
enroute to base at Yeager Airport In
Charleston after delivering SU!lJius
material In Columbus, Vance said.
Wtv&gt;n the marshal's olflce ar·
rived, the car had reenforced Into a
culvert near the Intersection and a
medic from the Wellston Fire
Department who was apparently
passing by was at the scene, Vance

said. Tlv&gt; Gallia County Sheriff's
Department "Jaws of Life" extrac·
tion device was called but was not
used . The ca r was an apparmt loss.
while tlv&gt; tractor trailer. haullng an
empty flatbed. apparently suffered
minor damage to the front.
Assisting at the scene were the
sheriff's department. tre Rio
Grande Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment, GaiUa EMS and Gallla
Coo nty Volunteers. Llfefllghl was
ca lled shortly aft er ttv&gt; accident and
arrived around 7: 30p.m. to trans·
port ttvi' one victim to Columbus,
who reportedly died before the
helicopter landed at GMC.
The accident blocked rmst west·
bound traffic on li, while eastbound
cars and trucks were routed by
sheriff's deputies and volunteer
firemen through tlv&gt; village.

�Friday, June 20, 1986

Comment
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
1 ~

Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO THE INTERE'&gt;TS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lh

~m~ rT"1......1L-~'~d,-===­
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEM BE R of The Un it ed Press International, Inland Daily Press

Association an d thr Ame-rican Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF O PI N IO~ arl' wr.l co rTl(' . Tht'~' should be less than 300 words
long. ~\lllencrs flrf' subjett to roI l in g and tnJ st b£' sig nOO with nam(', ad dress and
telephone number. No un si.'!; nOO lt'II Prs will be publi shro . L('f1E.'rs should be In
good ta sf(' . addr C'Ss ln~ Issues, not person aliti es

The Lighter Side

Too busy to listen
By DICK

Berry's World
1 1.0'1£

M'1' WORI&lt;

!rn-ilr .

,.

2

Reviewing·SALT II
Umler lnternatlonal law, there
are two grounds !or the Unit!rl
States to end the treaty It engaged
In In 1972 In Moscow, forswearing
anti-ballistic missiles.
The easiest way to oo it Is to
consider the treaty as null and void
on the grounds .t.ha t one ol the
contracting parties Is In violation of
It, and that therefore the other party
Is relieved of any further obligations. To do this Is as easy as
opening the lips and pronouncing
the word "Krasnoyarsk." Because
the Soviet Union has buUt a
phased-array radar facility .flO
miles from Its nearest border but
oriented toward a border 2,000
miles away, In dear violation of till!
treaty. No responsible official this
side of the Iron Curtain would deny
that Krasnoyarsk Is such a
violation.
The second way to go Is almost as
easy. It would require merely a
stro~ of Mr. Reagan's pm,
advising the Soviet Uolon that the

treaty-specified six-month montdown has begun, and that therEfore
In December the ABM treaty wtll
rease kl bind ·the Unit!rl States n
any way.
Now not only was this an q&gt;tlon
read Into the treaty at the tlroe It
was signed, our representative at
the reremony, Ambassador Gerard
Smith, said that the Unlt!rl States
was going along with tbe antiballistic missile ban n pursuit of
general disarmament. "If an
agreement provkllng i&gt;r more
complete strategic dfenslve arms
llrnltatlon were not achlev!rlln five
years," said Ambassador Smith, at
the direction of tbe administration,
"U.S. supreme Interests could be
jeopardized. Should that occur, It
would constitute a basis for withdrawal from the ABM treaty."
Well, exactly that did oa:ur. In
the Interval after SALT I, the Soviet
Union added 8,000 warheads, while
we subtracted about the same
number. The project!rl mutual

William F. Buckley Jr .

------

.,;,__
·

assured vulnerabUity was in shatters: The Soviet Union has heen
busily engaged in defensive activity
looking toward lropregnability,
while we have grown JUles in oorold
air raid shelters. We should have
spotted the weakness of the ABM
treaty in 1m when ,the treaty 's
contractual five years were up; but
that was a year of Jimmy Carter,
and we dreamed our way through
the balance of the decade.
What came then was the declaration of Mr. Reagan In March of 1983
- thaI we would develop a
Strategic Defense Initiative, lookIng to the day when we could so
effectively protect ourselves from
Soviet missiles as, In effect, to make
it )rogressively suicidal for the
Soviet Union to contemplate a first
~rtke .

WeU, could we proceed with the
space shield, given the restrictions
ci the ABM treaty•
On this matter there has been
considerable debate: There are two

.IIIli!•·

,.,. · ·
- -

Today Is Friday, June 20, the 171st day of 19&amp;; with 194 to follow.
The moon is moving toward its full phase.
The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
The even ing stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this date are undE'r the sign of Gemini. They include
German composer Jacques Offenbach, In 1819; author Lillian Hellman 1n
19117; actor Errol Flynn in tro9; guitarist Chet Atkins in 1924 (age 11.!);
World War II hero Audie Murphy in 1924; actress Marlette Hartley In 19«)
(age 461 ; and concert pianist Andre Watts In 1946 (age 401 .
On this date In history:
In IINl. the U.S. Navy seized Guam, the largest d the Marian as Islands
In the Pacific, during the Spanish-American war. TbepeopieofGuamwere
granted U.S. citizenship in 19!Xl.
In 1963, the United States and the Soviet Union agreed to establish a "hot
line" communications link between Was hington and Moscow.
· In 1967, the American Independent Party was formed to back George
Wallace of Alabama for president.
· In 1977, oll began to flow through the$7.7tiUion, 189-mUeA!aska pipeline.
In 1984, British character actress Estelle Wln\\UOd died In Los Angeles at
age 101.
In 19ffi, eight homemade bombs killed six people In Nepal, marking tbe .
Himalayan nation's first polltlcal violenll'.
A thought for the day: author LUllan Hellman wrote, "For every man
who lives without freedom, the rest of us must -face the goUt."

~'"

·-

~~

·
'
$1
•·
fo
•*1,--"CI-.~-·---------------...:::--::;.-..____________..J ·
"
Jti

·

)!"

ways to read the treaty: One is the
so-called restrictive way, the other
the permissive way.
There are great Ironies here,
because when we were bargaining
with the Soviets In 1972 we tried
very hard to get them to agree to
absolute restrictions on antiballistic missile activity. Bu.t the
Soviet Union declined to adopt such
language. What emerged from It
was something called Agreed
Statement D. Depending on how
&gt;&lt;JU rmd it, and the 1\\U clauses II
explicates, the United States is not
permitted to employ fresh technology to -pursue and test SDI (the
restricted version). or it is permitt!rl (the permissive version) . The
Irony Hes In the Soviets' Insistence
that the restricted version is the
correct version, given its historical
resistanre to the binding version
U.S. negotiators s:&gt;ught.
The lega l adviser to the U.S.
Department of State, Abraham
Sofaer, is a scholar o! some renown
(he was the judge who presided
over the libel suit brought by Artel
Sharon agalns! Time magazine).
He testified before tlie Subcommittee m Arms Control, International
Security and Science of the House
Committee on Foreign Affairs on
Oct. 22, 1985, and quite simply
dermilshed the restrictive Interpretation of the treaty. However.
President Reagan had announced_
tlta I he would proceed under the
restrictive version, presumably'
just ID be a good sport. How much
did that decision damage the SDI
program•
Well, an expen concedes, it Is
true Ihal if there had been no ABM
treaty, the structu re oft be research
program would have been differmi. He concedes that there have
been a few "workarounds, :· which
is to say, s:&gt;me zigzagging wi th the
view to abiding scrupulously by the
ireaty, as Interpreted restrictively.
The question just when might
TPsea rch he practically Impeded by

WASHINGTON- When a mysterious prankster calling himself
"Captijln Midnight" Interrupted a
Home Box Office TV broadcast last
April to air his complaint about the
cable network's scrambling ttrhnique, it may have amused s:&gt;me
viewers. But It sent a chUI down the
spines of satellite mmmunicatlons
Industry officials, who may have to
make radical changes In the way
they do business.
Captain Midnight was prqtestlng
tbe scrambled signals that thwart
owners of backyard satellite
"dishes" In their plrocy of pay-TV
programs. What scares Industry
officials Is the vutnerabUity of their
satellite systems, which Captain
Midnight exposed. U he could
Invade their frequendes, so could
other pranksters, hackers or evl!l
terrorists.
"This person practiced video-

terrorism," Showtlroe vice presi- dai U.S. satellites now In orbit,
dent Stephen Schultz !Did our along with a number of weather,
associate Donald Goldberg. "What NASA and military satellites. All
he did was s:&gt; significant. He are vulnerable to such sabotage
tampered with the communications except for the few national security
system of the Unit!rl States ri satellites that have enonnously
America."
expensive devices to protect
Actually, what Captain Midnight against lnterlerence.
did - disrupting a TV broadcast
For example:
being bounced off a satellite and
- According to a space agency
imposing his own message - Is source, its ATS-3 sa tellite can be
heyond the technical ability of "accessed" with equipment that
anyone wbo doesn't have access to costs no more than $5,000.
one of more than 100 licens!rl
- An official of the National
transmitting facUlties.
Weather Service, which lost its
But merely disrupting a broad- backup satellite in a launch mishap
cast is another matter l!ltlrely. a few weeks ago, said the rema in Industry experts agree that making Ing satellite is vulnerable to tama video transmission unwatchable pering. "No one wants to recognize
or the audio unintelligible, wit tout that we're very wlnerable, particuimposing a separate message, is larly since we're so dependent on
relatively easy, well within the satellites for communications," he
ability of tens of thousands of said.
satellite enthusiasts.
- HOO spokesman David Prtt ·
There are perhaps 25 commer- chard said that virtually all com-

I am rrore fortunate,! guess: We
had Posner In person at a questionand-answer session at the American Enterprise Instltu te (my home
basel.
It seems there is a big argument
about Posner In American media
circles. He's often blUed as a Soviet
"journalist" or a Soviet "commentator ." (He works for the
government-run State Committee
!or Television and Rad io.) Some
American journalists, who believe·
(properly! that a real journalist
has to have the right to criticize his
or her government, believe that
Posner Is not a journalist at aU.
They claim he is a "propagandist";
In fact, Koppel described him that
way on the air recently. More
neutrally, Posner could be called a
Soviet "spokesman." Some conservatives have said, take hlro off the
air.

What the argument on terminology Is really about is whether
Posner speaks fDr himself or lor his
government. Observing him firs·
thand, I can now ctter my own
descrtptlon of Posner. He 1$ surely
oo journalist or commentator In the
Western sense. You could call him a
propagandist or a spokesman. He'll
speak for his government, or about
his government, he'll even say lie's
speaking fDr himself (of which,
more later) , but whatever, be is a
sUck pleceofwork, very good at hi$
job. And his prlroary job is thatd ~
''fabulist.''

&amp;

Now, a fabulist Is one who tells
fables, and some of Posner's fables
are beauts. Consider: He was
asked, was It not a tragic mistake
!or the Soviets to Invade Afghanistan? Here are excerpts of his
answer: "!think that there exists a
vested interest to keep the Soviet
Union In Afghanistan, especially In
the West. Because it's a beautiful
way oL exploiting the anti-Soviet
sentiment. It makes people very
angry and very upset.. The
majority of (Russian) people support (the war) ... I think it has to do
with the Soviet heritage ... to fight a
revolu lion ... There are some people
who remember that. It's almost
like if there were Americans
around wbo remembered George
Washington."
Fable connoisseurs, altention!
It's ail rur fault that Soviet soldiers
have killed a million men, women
and children in Afghanistan. And
George Washington would be on the
side ri the ldllers!
Consider: He was asked wby he
refuses to appear m television with
Russian emigres, like the heroic
dissident Vladimir Bukovsky.
Posner said: "I have always fell
that anyone who betrays his
country by going over to the other
side is a traltor... I have nothing to
oo with those people, and I wW not
discuss - not only. on television, I
\\Uuldn't share the same bathroom
with them."
Interesting fable: Bukovsky did
not "gil over to the other side." He
was deported In handcuffs!
(Posner's taste in bathrooms is his
own business.)
But in aD fairness, in Russian
IJ'Opagantla tenns, Posner is a
fabulist with a difference. In order
to gain credibility with Americans.
he has apparently been given the

franchise to express "a personal
point of view." And so he says his
personal view is that anyone who
wants to leave the Soviet Union
ought Ill be able to leave. He says
his personal view Is that the Soviet
jamming of aU Western radio
programs IS "counterproductive."
Yet, wren asked if, as a Soviet
journalist, he wUI write publicly of
these personal views in the Soviet
Union, the answer Is "nyet."
So Posner wants it -and gets it

...

mercia! communications satellites
are susceptible to deliberate sabotage by hackers or terrorists.
Officials at the Federal Communications Commission claim they
can pinpoint the location of lnterfer~
lng signals a nd catch pranksters or
saboteurs - by methods they
declined to describe. But industry
experts and sources at other federal
agencies dismiss the FCC's claim.
They say the technology does not
mw exist to pinpoint a jamming
signal.
In fact, one Industry expert told
us that at a closed meeting In
Washington last December, FCC
officials conceded that they had no
way of tracking down a prankster
or sa boteur without a Up from
someone who knows the perpetralllr. No wonder the agency didn't
want to discuss Its investigative
mettods.

fhk:ago at NPW Yll'k
Houston at San Franclsro

r-; ,\TIO~AL

IF.AGUE
By t 'nllt!d P""' lnk&gt;mlllklMI

!\t. LouiS at PhlaOO!phlll. n4thr

WLP~ . G8

.J.1 11! 7Jll ll 2'1 .~ 10
Jl .1'2 ,.j.i\.1 U
'.!7 .l li ·129 171 \&gt;
~'ti ,Ji ~~ ~ !H
~ Ji 41.1 181.7

,'l)'

Monl n •;tl
l' lltlot
Ch i
l 'l ~ lM 'Ch

'il I JJU

ll1tJ -run
S.•nFt .m

:111 211 _'lf,l Jl 31 !!21 21t 1

' "''
•\ lli!nl ,t
....Hl UI!II

;{l :'.:1 !"JJJ 1
:r~ :r2 !"OJ · ,

l'm·nnli

:r2

;~1

.f!2

~~ ~

'2b

:~~:;

~1 9

9

Berry's World
... SO TKE S10R'( ON THE
SI-\UiiLE. IS:

Poo~ 'DESifiN
PooR ft\~~~6EME.~T
A~O

fOOR. COMMUN IC~'T 101\1.

I

J u111'S rl o

o\\'. otk ~:1, " ' M n ntrl ·&lt;~ l
o M..t :, Lif i~''" 1 ~1. 7
fl olc\1,1.~ 1 ,S,,I'\I'k, ..:m l-l o .o! "&gt;r'\1 r ror k
, f',• rl. I H (~ c, ";J , i .'! .',prn
St l_.uu, ol"un..t · IJ '•-~ • .or l 'h!lildl'lphi;r
• ll ud~un 1-1 •. i -.1 ~ p rn
S.m Dt•l."tl • IJr a \" 1 '1'~ \ .j , ,,, I JJ~ Alll&lt;!l' lr"

:r, ,,m

p.m
lloosrvn I Kao 'I'l-l' '' Ill-! I .II Sa n r

"''"'*'•

Pkcft@P!i
San Dl&lt;w . ShtJI.I• ~~4 r . Los AniJ'l1'5.
lk•rstu.wr t6-St. PhU ad(&gt;lphla, K. CTTI!'s •6-St
PII!WJrgh, Klpprr r.l-6 1. Hous10n. DNll\aifo~

s.. .

St l.oub :1

(ll

Mlwit'i ·
f M nd

" . L Pel. G8
•Ll 21 1&gt;72 :J1 29 .561 ~
:ti 29 .:.17 ~
:o .)} .~.J !:1' .
:u J ] .:Dl 10'-'J

Tnronto

31 .1.1 .fm 10'-!

Ro&lt;iron

NY

nunu

Ofotmu
TlC,il'
r.il rt

KC
Oakl!lrld

Mlnn

JO ·-'l.~

r;nlf l"l''

pm

"'

....

:n :r2 .8 1 n ,,,
"fi JJ Sl:l-

:W 31 Sll

Jl l! .'a3

~ :ll ..us
'!7 :II .41 ~
~6 :II .Oi

:li

u

I
2
I!
II
1\l.il

.II! 10

Name new assistant
The Daily Sentinel
i\ Uh·l.'ilo"n e~f Multimedia, In c.
'
Pu bll sht'd r v ~&gt;ry artr rn oo n. Monda y
th rou~ h Fr iday. Ill Court St. , Po me r oy, Ohio. by !hr Ohi o Va ll ey Pub li shin g Comp a ny/ Mult imedia. lnc ..
Pomeroy, Ohio &lt;1~769. Ph . 992·2156. S{'-

cond class pos tagr paid a! POI"Yl('roy .
Ohio.
M f' mbcr : United Press Int e rna tional.
Inland Dally Pr es.~ Association and lh£'
Ohio NPwspa pt•r Associa tion . NHt!onal
Adve rli sln ~

RC'Pff:'S&lt;'nlatl vf', Brarham
Nr·w spaper Sal es. 733 Third 1\ venu e.
Nt&gt;W Yor k. New York 10011.
POST\1A'IT ER: Send addr ess c han~
to 'Ot c )),1\ly &amp;&gt;ntinel. 111 COlU1 St .,
Pom•roy , Ohio -15769.

St tRSCRIPTION

R,\T~

8y Carrlt•r or Motor Route
One Wf'f'k ..
. ..... SUO
.... StHO
One Mottlh
Orw Ymr ..
. . $S7.20
!iii NGI.E COP\'
PRICE
IJ iil l ~ ..
. 2~ Crn1 s

TOLEOO, Ohio I UP!) - Universitty of Toledo basketball head
coach Bob Nichols announced the
selection of Marc Comstock, an
assistant coach at Eastern Ken tucky University, as an assistant
for the Rockets.
Comstock, 32, is a native of Nort h
Adams, Mich., and a graduate of
Hillsdale College, where he won
eight letters In basketball. football
and baseball, Nichols sai d
Thursday.
Comstock was an assistant coach
at Hillsdate before he accepted the
Eastern Kentucky post.
Nichols said his new assistant.
who has written a book on
basketball drllls, shares his philosophy toward defense.
Comstock's appointment is subject to approval by President
James McComas and the board of
trustees.

Su bscrlbn ·, no I d£1!o;lrln,g to P&lt;~Y th(' ra r ·
ri(lr ma \' rPm!t tn ad\·anc.·t• dirrrl lo
Thf' D:div Sf&gt;nlln('l on t~3, fi or 12 month
t:xl ~ls . Cr;rdl l will lx' l! h'C'n ro rrlrreach
month .

Ford will return to
Formula One racing

No su b~r-rlp t l o n s by rn a II permltlf'd In
towns wh£&gt;rP hO[T)(I carr ier St&gt;r\' lce Is

By United Press lntemallonal
Ford Motor Co. announced
Thursday it wiU be returning to the
world Formula One racing ci!Cilit
this year after a three- year
absence. Ford said It isenteringtwo
cars in Sunday's Detroit Grand
Prix on Team Haas USA. Alan
Jones of Australia and Eddie
Cheever of the United States will be
driving the cars.

:H"a lla biC'.

- ixlth ways , or three ways: He
appeal'S on U.S. television, he says,
because as a journalist he reports
the Soviet government view. AI the
same tlroe, tugging his forelock, he
wUI leU just &gt;&lt;JU his personal views.
very personally, on American
network television. But they are a
secret; he won't tell them to the
Russian people.
I say keep him on our air. He Is a ·
fabulous fabulist'

4121 S t.louk. L11Vallk'll' I ll . Ptllladt•lphl;•

K GI'0\5 t l •. St'hmldt til t. Plt tsbuf}:h.
f\or1.h t51 Jfou..&gt;ron. Davi s t14 r. Cirlf'i nnat i.

...,

n. hfr,prn

iltUTM'I.l'\111 4.J•

Tn•v loo •2•. Stubbs 1131. Attlnl.'l, liofn&gt;r

1\.'WEIUCM' U:AGLJE

lkou\lfln li, f'irrinnil11 ~
l'hil"aj,.'il a t !\rw Vm~ . Pl•l . ram
J 'rl~· · ~ G lll!V'O&lt;I t.\lln~ HYr i
,\ JI;mta l l'l:llr1Y't .'1-~ and .lohn.-.on t&gt; ~ r a!
I 'mn nn;o ti l llrmnli!ll&lt; .j li .1111 ! fiuiUck!iUil 4
l'i ll ~lllo )~ h

·--

San rnmcl•ii:O. Youngblood t2 1, K utl'tM'r
i l o S&lt;t n Dll'J(U, f\ll'lllr!i 1 1121. Los Arli'~('S,

l'hll.ldl•lpl'lla, Carman 111 Plttshul'):h.
c;uanrf' J.lt

s, ,n ll wcnli. Sm1 Fnmn'-l."t&gt; 'I
[ .!)). ,\ nJ;:~ ·If'!i Y. 1\!llln lu ·I
Pltl~r)!h 4. l\1onln·al 2
~-

Arlattlll at Cincinnati, nlxht
Pl!!~'l!h ar Monti"Pal, night
SanD~ at Ws An~P.! . night

·~ -21.

TtanMiaf~ ll4'!it*.'i

l'h l!.ulrlphJa

tbe ball, but Cruz reached lint base and was awarded
a hit. The Aslros won, 6-2. (UPI)

-·-

Majors

resttictively. is a subfect the
Defense Department doesn't want
to talk about. Because, you see, the
question is a political one, and very,
very sensitive, as we shall see.

Fabulous fabulist _______Be_n_w_au_en_be---.:::rg
Most of you, alas. may have only
seen or heard America's new
media star Vladimir Posner: He's
been on with Phil Donahue, he's a
near-regular on Ted Koppel's
"Nightllne," he's been on CNN's
"Crossfire" In the early evening
and on late at night with Larry

DIVES F()R' BALL- Cincinnati f1rlt baseman
Tony Perez grimaces as he dlvee for ball hit by
Houston's Joee Cruz Thursday nlflhl. Perez stopped

the~ty. part~~if~

Satellite distuption ___J_ac_k_An_d_er_so_n_&amp;_J_os-=-ep_h__;Sp:._e_ar

King.

Today in history

Pitchers shine in NL wins;
Houston ends 2-game slump :

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio
Friday, June 20. 1986

W~T

WASHINGTON (UP! I - You may have heard it said that a Senate
quorum call sounds bel!er on television than it does in the chamber.
If senators in the chamber during quorum calls feel that way, it is
understandable.
According ·ro a spokesman for C-Span, the public affairs network that
began "live" telecasts of Senate business this month. classical music is
played during non-debate interludes.
But senators in the chamher don't hear chamber music during quorum
calls. All they hea r is the droning, largely unmelodic voice of a clerkcaUing
the roll of senatorial names.
A Senate spokesmen swears It is nor true that quorum music is provided
by Democratic leader Robert Byrd. Although the West Virginia senator
plays a fine fiddle. he tE'llds to favor bluegrass tunes.
There may have been criticism of some of C-Span'sselections, but never
of the performers. Could Byrd help ill! he wasn.'t taught to play "In the Hall
of the Mountain King?"
All hough he might think of himself as being king of 1he hi II, he must know
that 99 other senators have use or the hall.
According to a "Glossary of Senate Terms" prepared by the Republican
Polley Committee. a quorum call "is mainly used as a kind of
parliamentary 'timeout' while senators meet on and off the floor to decide
how to proceed on a particular piece of legislation."
"Usually, there are several quorum calls on any given day the Senate is
in session. It is a routine way of suspending debate without recess ing or
adjourning the Senate."
-That is as diplomatic a way of explaining the quorum call as I have ever
read.! was pleased to find the policy committee adheringto thetraditlon of
senatorial counesy even it its "Guide !or TV."
: As the guide booklet points out. "With nationwide, gavel-to-gavel
tele,•ision coverage beginning in June, millions of Americans are oow able
to see for themselves the day-to-day business of the Senate."
· lf that fotm of sell-enlightenment also Includes becoming better
acquainted with classic music, so be it. Sure lx&gt;a ts tuning In during a
filibu ster.
The committee tells us, "The longest uninterrupted speeech in Congress
was by Sen. Wayne Morse of Oregon. who talked !or 22 hours and 26
rttlnutes in 1953."
More than 22 hours is a tong time to go without a refreshing shot of
classical music. Or bluegrass either, for that matter.
Although the guide d()('Sn't deal with "absenteeism," that subject is
covered in a Senate document published last year. Under the heading "if
your senator is not in the chamber," it not es that "senators are among the
b_u,siest of individuals, ha ving a multitude of responsibilities requiring their
personal attent ion.
: "If your senator is not on the floor, or in his-her office a !lending to the
many problems and requirements of his-her constituents, he-she is
probably engaged in a commillee hearing or Investiga tion."
Or possibily in a ~na t e televis ion st udio li stening to a quorum call.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

.\1llll SuMcrlptlon s
Insid e Ohio
rl \..' f'l' k ~ .
2R Wrf'k s ..
~~~

\\'t'r-ks

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

.. $14.56
.. .. fl9 . t 2
..... $58.24

OuiKidt&gt;-&lt;&gt;hlo
13 Wreks ...... ......................... S15.60

25 Wrr ks ..

.. ............ ............. $31.20

52 Wrr ks..

........................... S59.BO

Front
office
problems
still exist

By FRED McMANE
of the season by gett lng pinch hitter
UPI A•slstant Sports Editor
Tilo Landrum on a called third
A bat In the bands of a pitcher strike.
usually acts as nothing more than a
Gross homered off loser Ray
prop. On Thursday night, it turned Burris, 3-3, to cap a four-run fift h
into a weapon.
Inning. Glenn Wilson walked to
Kevin Gross of the Philadelphia 'open lead off and Darren Daulton
PhiUies and Bob Kipper of the followed with an Infield single.
Pittsburgh Pirates eacil helped his Steve Jeltz then lined a ground-rule
own cause with timely hits to lead double, scoring WUson. On the rex!
their respective clubs to victories.
pitch, Gross homered to deep left,
At PhUadelhhta, Gross, 6-5, hit a giving the Phlliies a 4~ lead.
At Montreal, Kipper did enough
three-run homer and also tossed a
six-hitter over 8 2-3 innings in in _five Innings to defeat the Expos
sparking the PhUiies to a 5-3 almost single- handedly.
"Kipper's a baby," said 'Pirates
triumph over the St. Louis Cardinals. Kipper, J.1i, combined with manager Jim Leyland of his
21-year'Oid left -hander. "He's got a
three pitchers on an eight-hitter and
drove in the winning run with his bright future. He was pitching on
first major-league hit to lift the three days rest. and his shoulder go!
Pirates to a 4-2 victory over the stiff, so why take a chance? No
sense leaving him in. The bullpen
Montreal Expos.
Unlike most pitchers who love to dldn 't let me down,"
Kipper allowed four hits in five
talk about their hitting, Gross
preferred to talk about his pitching. Innings before giving way to the
"I'm making a lot of contact this buUpen . Cecilia Guante. the last of
year but the heck with m:; hitting," four Pittsburgh pitchers, picked up
Gross said. "I (ell strong (on the his tlird save with two Innings of
mound 1- I threw long In between relief. Bryn Smith , 4-5, was the
starls and strptched my arm as a loser.
The Pirates scored twice in the
change of pace. I felt strong out
fifth to break a 2-2 tie. Tony Pena
there."
Gross struck out six but needed and. Jim Morrison singled to put
relief help with two outs in the ninth runners at first and third. Morrison
after 'Terry Pendleton singled and stole second and Kipper got his first
Clint Hurdle walked on four pitches. major league hi I with a single to
right scoring Pena for the go-ahead
''I had two guys on and that's
what the bullpen Is for," Gross said. run. Joe Orsuiak singled up the
middle to score Morrison and give
"I was disappointed in myself."
Don Carman ga ined his first save the Pirates a 4-2 lead .
"We tried too hard tonight, and

By MICHAEL BURNS
CINCINNATI (UPII - Cincinnati Reds owners. at least one of
whom was calling fo r the removal
of genera l managing panner
Marge Scholl just a week ago,
pledged their solidarity following a
COLLEGE PARK, Md. !UP! IPollee Thursday sealed off Wa.
recent meeting at Scholl's resi- Investigators today were still seek- shlngton Hall, the dormitory where
dence, but the front office intrigue is ing clues to the cause of death of Bias collapsed, and rifled through
far from over.
Len Bias, the former Maryland dumpsters near the building as part
AI the conclusion of Wednesday' s basketball star. who died Thursday of their investigation.
meeting, Scholl and six of 1he eight of an apparent ca rdiac arres t.
Maryland athletic director Dick
"A t this point, investigators say Dull said he could neither confirm
llroited partners appeared together
before reporters. Whether the there is no indication of foul play or nor deny the reports alleging a
display of solidarity was for show or that drugs contributed to his drug link to the deatli.
genuine, it is apparent the owners death," Bob Law, a Prince
An autopsy was conducted Thu rsare united on one front : kecping George's County police spokesman, day at the state medical exa miner' s
said Thursday night. "We'll have to office in Baillroore, but the findings
details of the meeting private.
Schott answered a few questions wail untU we get the repon from the will not be made public until
!saying the media blew the front stale medical exam iner's office."
toxicology and tissue tes ts can be
Bias, 22, of Landover. was completed , said Dr. John Smialek,
office bickering out of proponlonl ,
but then limited partner Waiter pronounced dead at Leland Memor- the chief state medical examiner.
Bartlett, president of Multimedia ial Hospital in nearby Riverdale at
"We have completed the init ia l
8:50 a.m. EDT Thursday. The phase of the exam," Smialek said.
Inc.. interjected.
"!don't think you want to answer World Champion Boston Celt ics "The rest won' t be completed for
too many more questions, do you, " made the acrobatic forward the seven to 10 days. Until ali of the
Bartlell said to Schott. "I mean. we second selection overall in Tues- testing is complete, I will not he
day's NBA draft.
said we wouldn't answer them."
releasing any results of the
The
Washin~on Post, in Friday's
E-xamination.''
Schott raised the Ire of a few of
WDVM reported traces of cothe llmiled partners by paying editions, and WDVM - TV both
herself a $1.'13,000 "attendance" report cocaine was found in a ca ine and drug paraphernalia were
bonus and cashing in one of her sample of Bias' urine taken aatthe discovered in the dumpsters after
investigators became suspicious of
ownership units for $1.6 million, but hospital.
how clean Bias' room was when
not paying dividends on the club's
they arrived.
$2.5 mUUon profit for 19&amp;5. Will
Police and , hospital officials
~holt find a way to keep from
refused comment on the reports.
giving the disgruntled limited
The television report quoted
partners reason to mount another
unnamed
members of the Maryattack against her?
land basketball team saying Bias
Before the meeting, llroiled
and other basketball players used
partner Carl Krach of Chicago
cocaine in the hours before Bias's
called for Schott's ouster. Afterdeath and investigators believe it
ward. he said, "I agree that Marge
may have been the first time Bias
~hollis doing a fine job."
ever used cocaine.
• Did Krach back oown once he
The report added that detectives
realized he did not have the support
are
looking for the dealer who
to bounCI' ~holt he Irough! he had?
supplied the drugs . saying a charge
Or did the owners actually settle
of manslaughter may be lodged
their diflerences? No one outside
·
when a suspect apprehended.
the tight circle of. owners knows.
" If that is true, that's new
The two limited partners not part
ln!otmation to me," Dull said in
of the show of support were Carl
response to a question about
Lindner and George Strike, who
cocaine use. "I can 't tell you if
together hired an accounting firm
to monitor club records. Was their
absence an Indication of a split from
the front?
One limited partner last week
labeled the meeting a "showdown,"
but Schott emerged unscathed (she
said nothing would change in the
club's operation\. Perhaps that was ,'1Inevitable.
LEN BIAS
(Dies at 22 Thursday)

~reak.

Clues sought in Len Bias's death
there's any basis In fact for that. I
haven't talked to the hospital. I
haven't talked to -medical examiner. I think I'll have to talk toone
of loose agencies before I
commf'nt .' '

Dull said no Maryland player had
tested positive for drug use during
routine and random drug testing

Nothing
has changed but
the Name.
Same great produru.

Sam~ nutritional benefits.

Same great service.

MANNA
PRO
O FIAT t ON

COFIP

SUGAR RUN
110

FLOUR MILLS

•t~~•tTJ

&amp;we.

,_,..., , CHII.

Pit 992-2115

R&amp;G
FEED &amp; SUPPLY CO.

Purina·

Field'n FantJ
1980 Chevette ..............?.~::.~!~~~:~....... s119 5
19 79 Chevette ..............~.~!•. ~.~.~-......... 51295
1977 Ford LTD .........~.~!:.~!~:.~~.:'!~:!'r. .. 51095
R111s good. Hl!#t nileage. 5995
1977 Ford LTD ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
2 Dr., 4 spd. lunt good. S9ito 5
1978 Chevy Mall'bu ...•.•...••..•..••.............

,

TRUCKS

19 7S Ford Club Cab ..... ~.~.s~..~~!:..... S119 5
19 77 Chevy 112 Ton Pickup ..... 1.'l'.'!'!~w..... S89 5
197 4 Dodge 4 Wh. Dr ......~~!f;.~!'l'1.~.... ssoo
1972 Ford 112 Ton Pickup ..........~~! ........ 250

1986 BUICK REGAL
DISCOUNT
SALE PRICE

S13,721.00
1200.00

$12,5210°

307 cu. in. V-8, tilt wheel, cruise control, AM-FM slereo casse«e.
tint•ct &amp;lass. landau tap , remote control mirrors, air cond .. pulsatin&amp;
wipers, lifetime rustproof (G.M.).
SEE: J .

o: Story, Jimmy Deam, Ed Bartels,

Nona Nelson, Peggy Ellis
See Us and You Will See
"WE HAVE THE KEYS TO A BETIER DEAL"

SMITH-NELSON
MOTORS
Pomeroy
. 500 East •In
.

" Outside of that, It was perfect!"

then we had a letdown ," ExpoS
manager Buck . Rodgers said.
"Smith had two bad Innings. We
never saw Kipper berore, so we
didn 't know what to expect.
Kipper's game- winning hit was a
fluke. He hit it off the handle ct his
bat."
EL'I!'Nhere in the NI.., San Diego
whipped San Francisco 8- 3, Los
An~J&gt;tes belted Atlanta 9- 4 and
Houston ripped Cincinnati S-2.
Chicago at New York was postponed because of rain.
Padres 8, Giants 3
At San Diego, Craig Nettles hit a
pair of two-run homers and Garry
Templeton tripled io drive In two
more runs, leading the Padres.
Nettles' two home runs raised his
season total to 12, and gives hlro llO
In his 20 major-league seasons.
Dodt!:ers 9, Braves 4
At Atlanta, Steve Sax, Enos
Cabell and Franklin Stubbs drove
In two runs apiece to back the
nine-hit pitching of Ore! Hershlser.
Hershlser, 6-5, walked one and
struck rut three in tossing his fourth
complete game of the season,
helping the Dodgers -reach the .!XJO
mark. Zane Smith, 5-8, took the loss.
Astros 6, Reds 2
At Cincinnati, Glenn Davis hit his
14th home run and left - hander Jim
Deshaies scanered eight hits In
seven Innings. Deshaies, 4-2, struck
out four and walked three in helping
tbe Astros snap a thrre-game losing

992-2174

R&amp;G "FEED
&amp; SUPPLY CO.
Formerly Modtrn Suppty" Pomeroy, OH .

399 W . Main

PH. ·92·2164

tile ttere with ''tH IWs ef Stvff" -tw Pets, StoDIM.

W.,. l S...H biloth. lo- IIIII Gonkno

•

�Page 4-The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

Come See
r Heritage
Window Featuring Our
Collection of
David Winter Cottages

Sutton
Atlanta·
leader

ALL COSTUME JEWELRY

By DAVID MOFFII'
UPI Sports Writer

ATLANfA tUPI) -Hal Sutton
has won so much money since
joining the PGA Tour 4 1- 2 years
ago he now pJays for more than
financial reasons.
"I play now to win tournaments,
nothing less," said the squarejawed Sutton after shooting a
6-imder-par 66 Thursday for a share
of the first round lead In the Atlanta
Gall Classic. ''There's a distinct
dllference between the guy who
wants to be a consistent money
winner and those who want to
SinCl' joining the Tour in 1982,
WIN!"
Sutton has aone both. The son of a
wealthy oilman has earned $1.6
mUllan - more than any other
golfer in that period - and also
captured seven tournament titles,
including the 1983 PGA Championship and this year's Phoenix Open
and Memorlalk Tournament. He
has totaled $3l5,000 so far this year.
The same does not hold true for
Rick Fehr, the second-year performer from Seattle who has
earned barely $6/i,tmln 18 months
on the Tour. He won alxlut$25,00lof
that total this year with an
11th-place tie at San Diego being his
best finish.
Be that as it may, Sutton and
Fehr were tied wtth a . on~&gt;-shot lead
over seven others who shot fJ7
entering today's second round of
the $500,00&gt; event.

By GERRY MONIGAN
UPI Sports Writer

Toronto Blue Jays reliever BUI
Caudill and New York Yankees
stopper Dave Righetti each popped
olf at their respective front of!lces
Thursday night.
Cau dill, the Blue Jays million
dollar mop-up man , struck out the
only batter he faeed In his llrst
appearance ln a crucial sit uation
since last Augu st, and earned the
victory In his only deelslon of the
season. a 10-9 triumph In 10 Innings
over the slumping Yankees. RlghNti, 4- 4. gave up the winning run
"1thout retiring a batter in the lOth.
" I heard I general manager) Pat
Gillick (before the game\ say that I
haven' t shown him enough," said
Caudill. who last season pitched
himself out of favor with Toronto
management. " If they keep throwing me out there I'll soow Pat
Gillick everything he needs to see.
"'I've pitched three times now in
the th&lt;' last five games. If anyone
has hall-way deeent eyes they can
see I haven't lost any velocity off
my fastball ."
N~w York has lost five straight.
Wl'dnesday, Yanke&lt;'s ow n&lt;'r
George Steinbrenner called a press
conlerenee to criticize his playrs,
and Righetti answered after Thursday"s loss.
"It's a big deficit, " Righetti said
of the seven-game lead the firstplace Boston Red Sox hold over the
·yankees, "but we're not panicking
- not like the guy upstairs
(Steinbrenner) . He's never played

Rinker up by one

a ibleeping\ game lor this team.
What does he know? "
Willie Upshaw, who earlier
belted his first homer In 57 games,
scored the winning run. Damaso
Garcia doubled home Upshaw, who
led off the Inning with a single.

eight Innings to get the victory and
WOlle Hernandez got his 12th save.
Aase, 2-3, sulfered the Orioles' ninth
defea t 1n their last 11 games.
White So&lt; 9, Twins 8
At Minneapolis, Carlton Fisk and
Ron Kittle belted solo home runs
and John Cangelosi hit two RBI
Upshaw singled off Righetti and doubles to enable the White Sox to
beat first baseman Don Mattingly's snap a five-game losing streak.
throw to second on Buck Martinez' Floyd Bannister, 3-4, pitched 11-3
sacrifice. Kelly Gruber pinch ran innings of relief In his !lrst
lor Martinez and Garcia lipped a appearance slnCl', being activated
one-hopper off the wall in center from the disabled list and earned
over the head of Rickey Henderson. the victory. Bob James earned his
Mike Pagliarulo of the Yankees ninth save. Rookie Allan Anderson,
tied the score at !1-9 in the ninth with 0-l, took the loss.
a solo homer. his 15th home run of
lnclans 8, Mariners I
the season.
At Cleveland; Tony Bernazard,
George Bell also contributed a JoeCarterandMelHallhomeredin
two-run homer and Jesse Barfield the first Inning to back the live-hit
hit a solo shot for the Blue Jays. pitching of Tom Candlottl. CandlHenderson homered for the otti, 5-G, struck out nine, Including
Yankees.
the side in the fifth , and walked
In other games. Detroit topped three in pitching his !lith complete
Baltimore 7-5, Chicago shaved game. Mike Moore, 3- 7, was the
Minnesota !1-8. Cleveland clobbered loser.
Seattle 8-1. and Texas nipped
Rangers 3, A's z
Oakland 3-2.
At Arlington, Texas, rookie Ed
Tigers 7. Orioles 5
Correa pitched a lour-hitter in
At Baltimore, Darrell Evans helping the Rangers snap a flvelined a too-run. pinch hit double In game losing streak. Correa,!&gt;-4, the
the eighth inning off reliever Don youngest player in the major
Aase to help the Tigers to their leagues at ll, struck oot S('Ven and
fourth straight iriumph. Jack Mor- walked only one, He retired 10
lis, 6-4, scattered eight hits over batters In a row at one stretch.·

WITH
SPIGOT

I

•12''

ELECTRONIC
INSECT
KILLER

• Unbreallable
Plastic
•Clear As Glass
•Screw On Ud
•Luk PlOOf

Reusable. For bar-b-que, buffet
or snacks.

or \1 Acre
• Killing Grid Voltage: up to

SJ

5000 Vohs

• Size: lOY.t x lOW x 12"
• Application: Li!tlt reoidential

• 227 sq. in. chrome plated cooking grid .
• 4 position positive grid adjustment.

• Removable tripod tub~lar legs.

Oaent£

16'' 3 SPEED

AMERICA
FLAGS

PET
BUYS!

by

OPEN 7 DAYS A. WEEK

$299

Go ahead, drive your tank drybut you'll not find better JUNE

OSCILLATING
STAND FAN

FOR

lubricating motor.

4th

No. 21396

Of
JUlY·

INGELS

6"X9"

12"Xl8"

BREEZE BOX FAN
3 SPEED

Beautiful, non-breakable,
insulated old fashion
glasses with assorted
sports symbols . .

ma:;.':.citin&amp; ulotR~\o .9~
'"on&amp; ~·
•w••• colors- ••·

HALF HOUR A WEEK KEEPS
A BEAUTIFUL FAN

-

7

y plush

"'''
ny ell otttoeatin , 11 njlon
pot· $
li 6 an6 twoe4

FOR THE BOTH OF YOU

()Ill

~~~ II'S prinlod. IO~aut"UIIY - lui~
'u.ot roois!s s~~rllnant cotor co,.b•·
bltk. CMICI o,I19S Ill· y6.
notions. Re&amp;· ·

CARRIER ROUTES
NOW AVAILABLE
IN MIDDLEPORT

II",~ 'IS

VINYL STRAP
e:== OUTDOOR FURNITURE

Rtl· &gt;·

Chair

.

INGELS KUT 'RITE CARPET
99~-7021

MIDDLEPORT

'

&lt;I

;. ,,.,..·~
..

J

PIK·Itll KING

TABLECOVER
~

'

.

.

EACH PACKAGE. ~ ~;:;;:::::::i~
CONT,"NS
~
• ''STAY PUT' .
ADHESIVE TABS

High quality metal frame
with durable v~nyl straps.
Folds for easy storage :
'

106 N. 2ND lYE.

$_219

99~

..

$3

..

ICE CHEST

Ill . yd .

· t " • Porch
· - f'tor
astro tur
~!d.
&amp;ro'lfn, blUe ~~td

JUMBo
FOAM

HANDLE

ft
..., ft
...,

30 Quart
FOAM
ICE CHEST

50 Quart

WITH
ROPE

q

.

$19''

" N o. ·"108

DOUBLE 6 PACK
FOAM
CHEST

.

lon saxon

$,5

No. P223/M

Ill· jd-

sq. y4.

·.

SET
OF 4

YOU CANT
1111" MOilf
iOFPSIJL'GINA
DIIRII IHfl17

20" PORT AILE

SPORTSMAN
GLASSES
,,

-$39·"

39 e 99 e

..

ft.

..

This 3 speed push button fan has a chrome
safety grill with an adjustable vertical
setting. Whisper quiet air flow and a self

This is tht 1111 lor YOU! 8eout~ut. lirst-quolity brood loom , instollod nll-to-woll in your homt ... ot olow. low
ute prico thot oncupin pro•ts just HOW oHordobletux·
111 is , wllonyou shop ond "" ot

q
CJ

99

o~~~E'39"

~ 11" BRAZIER GRIU.ItOT FUOGIII

..

992-2174

.. " nx'on lOOP
rang
fl(
pallor"
0
, 11,.1tul. 1\nol ~ ~:'1)% continuo•! tt_
·toolsturo!
lute Ill&lt;•· l1
,.th 1 P\ njtonl''"' an6Jbteot~tak·

High lnlen~ty nuorescent

•26

Pomeroy

..a 0111 .shear

MOOR 7315
• Lure: One IS-wall U-snaped

black light bulb
• Cowrage: Up to &amp;"lit . radius

$5995

PRICED AT ONLY

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS

10 TANNING SESSIONS
S2500

992-2156

jSTRUCTD

One local owner, well equipped with air cond.,
cruise. tilt wheel, and much more.

500 East Main

$4"

62768

PATIO SENTRY

J

4 DOOR

See Us and You Will Sea
"WE HAVE THE KEYS TO A BETTER DEAL"

INC.

111!11d •

$449

ONE GAllON

SUN .TEA

PLATE HOLDERS

1983 BUICK CENTURY

n

dr.l!li«nr.d (unenl ·
arran8f.menl~ ju11 r.all
or ,..1811

$199

BAMBOO

SPIING AND SU. . I HOUIS
OPEN MON.-FII.
9 10 5, SAl. 9 10 I

GRAVELY
SYSTEM

oz.

SET OF 4

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

IF INTERESTED,
PLEASE CALL
DAILY SENTINEL

.8

1. 9 liter air pot in the
fashionable Cambridge
sign. Fill it up and take
it anywhere.

Gallon Size

SEE: J . D. Story, Jimmy Deem. Ed Bartels,
Nona Nelson, Peggy Ellis

PJTI'SFORD, N.Y . iUPI) Laurie Rinker carded five birdies
en route to a 3-under- par 00
Thursday and a on~&gt;- stroke lead
after the first round of the $2)5,000
Rochester Internationa l Golf
Tournament.
Rinker faltered with two bogeys
ln "thetypeofroundlhavewhenr
shoot 69." Patt i Rizzo, Marlene
Floyd and Hollis Stacy were tied at
3RD ST.
992-3912
SYRACUSE
70.
DEBBIE POWEll - OWNER
Six players shot 71 at the
KATHY CLONCH and UNDA O'BRIEN, OPERATORS
6,162-yard Locust Hill Country I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:::::~~~~~
Club. Included in that group was ~
1.984 International champion KathY
Whitworth and this year's fifth·
highest money winner Val Skinner.
The field or 107, the smallest
non-lnvllational field on the LPGA
Tour this season. was subjected to
chilly temperatures in the morning
and frequent showers througoout
the day.

REMEMBER
WITH ToFLOWERS
Mautlfull¥

ALOE &amp; LANOLIN
PUMP

Pomeroy. OH .

Toronto edges fading Yanks;
Indians down Mariners, 8-l

PICNIC
JUGS
l/2 $21

JERGENS

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

CAMBRIDGE
1.9 LITER
AIR POT

INSULATED

364 Jack10n Pllce ' 786 N. SecondStn-t
Middleport, Ohio
Point Pll8aant, W.Va.

Phone 992-2976

THE

CQIEE

2601 Jaclc10n Ave'

204 Condor St.

Indian home runs In the llrst mnlng against SeaUie
'lbursday night. Cleveland went on to win, 8-1. (UPI)

PHARMACY

l/2 PRICE THIS WEEKEND

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
FUISTOFTIIREE'-Cie&gt;eland'sTonyBemazard
Is greeted by Joe Carler after hitting the first rt tlree

Friday. June 20. 1986

June 20, 1986

·

•

Chalse _•.1'6~~ - ~
· · :-~~

2 PIJ .
White ar Yelllw

@r
"
.
.............

�The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Page- l

-..

Asbury UM Church honors fathe_rs during Syracuse banquet
Recognition of fathers with presentatlon of gifts highlighted the
Father's Day dinner held at the
Asoory United Methodist Church,
Syracuse.
The Rev. Carl Hicks had the
blessing and was also guest speaker
at the church seiVice In th absence
of the Rev. Steve Nelson on
vacation. Following the dinner
served to 73 members and guests. a
program was held with glf1s being
awarded to Carl Weese, the oldest

Family medicine

father; Kenny Buckley, the youngest father; BW Arnott, "Mr.lnbetween Father" , and Dana Winebrenner, father with the most
chUdren.
The program opened with the
song, "Faith of Our Fathers", a
pJem, "What Is a Father", a history
ot Father's Day, and a reading
about the title of father given to men
of Importance In human affairs.
Poems, "When Daddy Cooks" and

"father", and a circle of love
around the fathers by the mothers
and children who sang "Happy
Father's Day to You" closed the
program. Mary Lisle had prayer.
Tables were decorated with blue
streamers and centerpiece hats
filled with sDk flowers arranged by
Jeannie Buckley. Janice Lisle,
Barbara Lawrence and Judy Pape.
Pens were presented to all the
fatheTs there.
Attending were the Rev. and Mrs.

Carl Hicks. Todd and Joy Klng,
Janie Jordan and Lucas, Karl and
Opal Kloes, Carroll and Adelle
Norris, James and Barbara
Lwwrence, Jennifer and Jason,
Franklin and VVanda Rizer, Charles
and Irene Hoback, BUI and Stephanle Arnott. Jason and Shawn,
Mlck
and Cindy
Winebrenner
and
Bill and
Dorothy
Winebrenner,
Shelly, Dana and Bernice Winebrenner, Bob and Dona Smith. Jean

Stout, Hallie Robertson.
Mark and VIckie Morrow and
Matthew, Lou Ferrell, Martha
Moore, Ruth Crouch, VIrgil and
Helen Teaford, April Harmon,
Wendt and Crystal, Kathleen
Fryar, Laura Tamml and Scatter,
Marcia Karr, Carl Weese, John and

are elbows, latees and scalp. The
cause ot JEOriasls is unlatown.
Question: How common Is
JEOriasis?
Answer: About 4 million Amelicans have psoriasis. Worldwide,
tlis disease affects about 1 In 40
people.
Question: How serious is psoriasis?
Answer: As a skin condition,
psoriasis usually does not affect
general health, but It can lntenere
with a person's job U the disease
seve-ely affects the hands or feet.
On rare occasions, psoriasis can
cause arthritis. The most common
consequence of this unsightly dis-

ease Is JEychologlcal distress stemming from the embarrassment the
patient feels about how he looks.
Sometimes these problems are
seve-e enough to require psychological counseling.
Ques tion: How Is psoriasis
treated?
Answer: WhUe psoriasis Is Incurable, It can be controlled. FamUy
!iJyslclans can treat mUd forms of
psoriasis, but dermatologists speclaUzlng In skin diseases usually
treat roore severe cases. Because
psoriasis requires consistent long·
term treatment, many pecple
become Impatient and frequently
swltdl doctors to find a quick cu re.

Over 00 percent of psorlasls cases
a re treated with medicated creams
applied directly to the sldn. For
extensive or severe psorlasls, ultraviolet light or oral mecllcatlon Is
usually effective. In unusuallnstan·
ces, x-ray therapy or stronger
medication Is prescribed.
Physicians might aiso recommend counseling to cope with
Jl'YChologlcal problems brought on
by the cllsease.

For more lnfonnatlon on understanding and controlling psoriasis,
write for The Psoriasis Help Book
from The Psoriasis Research Institute, P.O. Box V. Stanford, Callfor·
nla, 94305.

I

/

1
¥

BASHAN - PUblic Ice cream
social beginning at 5 p.m. Friday at
Bashan Fire House by the lire
department auxil iary; sandwiches,
pie. cake and soft drinks also
available and !here will be musical
entertainment.
SATURDAY
CHESTER - Bowhunters will
hold their annua l tW&lt;Klay jamboree
Saturday and Sunday with events
starting at 10 a.m. Saturday: free
camping will be available. Those
needing more details contact Terry
Brown at 985-336:1.
POMEROY- Hymn sing Saturday at Freedom Gospel Mission
Church at 7:30 p.m. with a group
from Chester as special singers.
POMEROY - Movie, Star Trek:
Dagger of the Mind to IE shown at
Middleport Library, 2 p.m.
Saturday.
GALLIPOLIS- Grande Squares
Western Style Square Dance Club Is
sponsoring an open dance Saturday, S-11 p.m., at St. Peter's
Episcopal Church, Gallipolis.
Caller will be BUI Bush.
SUNDAY
POMEROY - Rev. Theron
Durham will be guest speaker at
7:30 p.m. services this Sunday at
the Hobson Chu rch of Christ In
Christian Union

PORTI.AND - Annual reunion
of the late Alhert and Eliza Hill wUI
be held Sunday at Portland Park. A
covered•dish dinner wUI be held at
noon. All friends and relatives are
invited.
REEDSVILLE - Descendants
of Ed and Eliza Hayman will hold
their annual reunion Sunday at
Forked Run State Park, Reedsville.
Friends and relatives are welcome.
There will be a basket cllnner at
noon.
Bible Sdlool slaled

Rtm.AND - VacatiOn Bible
School wUI be held June 23-ZT, 9:30
to 11:00 a.m., at the Rutland
Freewill
Baptist Church
on Salem
Street. Classes
for nursery
age
through teenagers. Everyone
welcome.

available both days.

VBS

Rtm.AND - Rutland FreewUl
BaptiSt Church on Salem St. will
hold Vacation Bible School June
Zl-ZT with classes from 9: 30 to 11:30
a.m. AU ages, from nursery
through teens, are welcome.

(~

(j

,;:

ON All 1986's IN STOCK
REBATES ON VANS &amp; WAGONS

Ice cream !ilclal

SlOOO'

~

"

Some 1987's In Stock
PLYMOUTH HORIZON AMERICAS

l'

';.,:

Benefit sing
SYRACUSE - The Mason,
Gallia and Meigs Crusade for
Christ will have a benefit sing at 7
p.m. Saturday at the Syracuse
Church of the Nazaren e. Singers
williE Kh n WUllams, the Winning
Side and trhe Almond FamUy.

The Pomeroy Post Office was
once located in the Remington
House, now the Meigs Inn, which
oomed over the weekend. Martha
Cham!Ers advises that Ward Har tley was postmaster at the t lme.

With plenty of
. ears to go with them.
S500 or S1000 CASH REBATE
,.
Or low Finance Rate of 7.5%

t

OF
~
~

Starting At

~
~
~
~

$5499

DODGE DIPLOMAT

"

' :,

AT$11,678

il;;;.
.&lt;:~.;,~

POMEROY - The Trinity
Church ot Pomeroy will hold an Ice
cream social and serve lunches Dance Saturday
POMEROY - The Ell Denison
Thursday and Friday, from 11 a.m.
Post
467, American Legion, wUI
to 6 p.m.eachday.Sioppy joes, ham
hold
a
round and square danae from
sandwiches, hot dogs, cole slaw.
9
p.m.
Saturday to 1 .m. Sunday at
potato salad, baked beans, chicken
the
)DSt
home. Music wUI be by the
and ooodles with roll, beverages,
True
Country
Band. Donations wUI
desserts and homemade Ice cream
be
taken
at
the
door.
will be sold. Take out crders will be

,,::.

••I

~

d

,,r&gt;
,-

,~

"THE DO IT ALL DEALER"
WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL!

Chry,iler•Plymourh•Dodge, Inc.
399 S Third Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 992·642 1

RABIES CLINIC
PIESlNftD IY

Meigs County Huma111 Society
&amp; Meigs Co•ty Health Dept.
Al '1111

lOCI SPIINGS FAIIGIOUNDS

SAIUIDAY, JUNE 21ST
1:00 I'.M. until 4:00 I'.M.
Dl. CAIOl OSIOIIIE, VET.

UIIS- $3.00

.

.

THE PLACE TO GET THE BEST VAWES IN TOWN ON NEW 1986 FORD ESCORTS

Olt!tr iMOCula~ons a,.ilablo. hgs

must bo on IH,.,oL Cats in &lt;arriors.

Escort Sel~l L2·Door Hatcllback
• 1.9L 2V last-burn engine/
4-speed manual transaxle
with OYerdrive 4th gear
• F'olwr steering and brakes
• Tinted glass - complele
• All-season steel-belted radial

PERM SPECIAL

20°/o OFF

tires

SELECTED PERMS
JUNE 16th·JULY 12th
CEIITIFICA11S All AYAILABll

FOR THE BOTH OF YOU
31D ST.
992-3912

SYIACUSE

DEBBIE POWEil-OWNEI
KATHY CLONCH and UNDA O'IIIEN, OPEIATOIS

• Bodyside moldings
• Bumper rub strips
• Cloth and vinyl low-back
reclining front bucket seals
• Color-keyed removable
package tray
• And much more!

Escort Select L\Vagon
• 58.3 cu. ft. of cargo space

(rear seat down)
• Load floor carpeting
• Color-keyed window
shade-type cargo area cover
• Liftgate aJar warning light
• Plus all other features of the

Marvin and Marge Keeba ugh,
who have operated their dairy shop
In Tuppers Plains for a number of
yea rs, are expanding. They recently took over the fanner Cloy's
Shake Haven In Chester and wUl
offer the same services and menu
as at their Chester location.

~ ~ a&amp;iil iJ1lil' ~~:w

COOPER

Meeting set
Rtm.AND - The Rutland
Garden Club will meet Monday
night at 7:30 at the home of Mrs.
Edith Williamson. Dues are
paya ble.

Bank One of RuUand has donated
a large American nag to tlle
Rutland Civic Center and Center
officials are more than pleased with
the glf1 - you'll have a good chance
to look It over during the Rutland
July 4th celebration.

0

we come acrOss for you

fiiiii~~~~~~~;:lr,:r.~~P.:;niiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;

By BOB HOEFUCH
Sentlnel Sial! Writer
Mldclleport's Ruth Hawkins wbo
has been quite '!U
Is now In Clr'Cievllle. You
send cards
best wishes to her
at Circlev ille
Manor, 3'lO Tart·
ton Road, Circleville, Ohio 43113.
And Wayne LeUhelt Is back to his
home near Pomeroy after undergoIng major surgery at the Ohio Stall'
University Hospital. He's feeling a
bit peaked but is making progress.
There's much activity coming up
lor the weekend and joining the
action are members of the Pome·
roy Volunteer Fire Department,
who will be having a chicken
barbecue at the fire station on
Butternut Avenue Sunday beginning at 11 a.m. Chicken only Is S3
but you can get a complete dinner
for $350.

' of
seats
-. avaUable!

Community calendar I area happenings
FRIDAY
CARMEL - Cannel-Sutton United Methodist Church will hold a·
hay ride and wiener roast at the
Carmel Church Friday at 7 p.m.

and Rose Ann Jenkins, KimlEr~
and Rochelle, John and Jalllce
Lisle, Todd, Scott and Travll!,
Beulah Ward, Mary and Don Lisle,
James and Merrl Amsbary, Kevbi
and Andy Fields.
,
Assisting with the arrangement~
for the observance were Dennis abel

BuckleY, Tammy
and Tyson,
Jimc~hl~e~M~oo~re~
Lawrence and
Kenny
r~Anng~Sa~uv~a~ge~
, ~K~en~n~y~an~d~J~
e~an~nl~Royek.!Ar~
, ~Ra~n~d~
y~~~~

Psoriasis, its cause, treatment

By Edward Schreck, D.O.
Assistant Prolessor
ol Family Medicine
Question: My lB·year-old brother
has severe pwrlasls. Is It usu al for
!llmeone his age to have this
disease?
Answer: Psoriasis (Sore-1-ah·sis)
can affect people of any age, but
usually c.&lt;curs In young adults from
15 to 35.
Question: What is psoriasis?
Answer: Psoriasis Is a skin
disease where sldn cells grow
abnormally fast and fonn red,
raised. scaUng patches. Any pari ct
the body can be affected but the
roost common sites for the cllsease

..

(11&gt;-

6.9°/o A.P.R.
FIXED RATE

hate~ -

12 TO CHOOSE
FROM

Senator seeks ODOT chiefs dismissal

Beat of the Bend

A look back at 'Saga'

Friday. June 20. 198e

Norma Goodwin loaned me a
copy of the 19Z7 Saga - and in case
you're wondering what that is - It's
equivalent to the present day
yearbook and was published by the
senklrs of Pomeroy High School.
Pomeroy High School Is pictured
In the llJbllcatlon and Is called, "the
new bu Udlng" and the book was
dedicated to the late C.J . Rhodes
who was serving as principal at the
time. Superintendent was Wayne
Lutz and other members of the
faculty were Ethel Garland, Margll ret Chapman, Mary Moore,
Ruby Stewart, Helen McCiaOin,
Louis Boyd, Kenneth Welker, Car·
los Peebles and Jesse White. All are
pictured.
There were 56 seniOrs that year
and they Included - now these

names will ring bells for you Allee Louise Russell, Anna Bailey,
George E. Nye, Ferne Reuter,
Leolyn Bailey, Walthoe Allen,
Everett Reeves, Charlotte Bartels,
Mary VIrginia Bing, Theodore .
Baker, Jennie Carman, Mildred
Campbell, Roland Boice, Fred
Blaettnar , Lucinda Carman,
Thelma Daines, Genevieve Castle,.
Mary Elizabeth Daniels, James
Clark, Richard Ebersbach, Rl·
chard Clifton, Velma Daines,
Nanga Fleming, Marlon Ebersbac h, Ellza!Eth Flck, George Faris,
George Hartenbach, Carl Glf!lth,
Loretta Franz, Mildred Joachim,
Gladys Grueser, Irene Gureser,
Webstesr Hodge, Francis McKee,
Mary Ella Kuntz, VIrginia Kaspar,
Lucllle Mees, Gertrude Lares,
MOdred Mcintosh, Edgar Reeves ,
James Russ, Margaretta Rea, Jean
Theobald, Allee Smith, Dorothy
Russell, Adele Schoenlein, Emmett
Scott, Denver Smith, Alma Smith,
Avice Smith, Margaret Smith,
Lawrence Weed, Mary Swartzwalder, Mildred Smith, Edwin
Wehrung and Frankie Weaver.
Class officers were Everett Reeves,
president; George E. Nye, vice
president; Allee Louise Russell ,
secretary and Ferne Reuter,
treasurer.
Underclass mem!Ers were not
Ignored In the Jllbllcatlon but were
not lncllvldually pictured. Instead
there were class pictures and a
history of each of the lower classes.
Junior class officers way back then
were Hugh Davis, president; Marcella Fisher, secretary, and Earl
Stobart, treasurer. Sophomore officers were Robert Elbeneld, president: George Crary, vice president; Russell Brown, secretary;
and Ruth Danie ls, treasurer.
Freshmen officers were Delbert
Rice, president; J ames Fontana,
vice pres ident; Loretta Meier,
secretary; and Martha Slagel,
treasurer.
The fa ll of 19~ was not good for
the football team. In fact, the
Pomeroy High team played eight
games and clld not score at all.
However, lhe tennis team won the
Southeastern Lea gue Tenni s
Trophy after winning all of Its
games. The baskelbail team won
only five games during Its season
but defeated Middleport twice and
tha t was Important.
Why Is the owl called "wise"? 1
mean , he just sits around at the
time asldng "who". Uhe 'ssosmarl
how come he never asks things like
when, where, or why? On second
thOught maybe It 's lEtter not to ask
too many questio ns. Do keep
smiling.

By GRETEL WIKLE
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI ) - An
Ohio senator has demanded that
Gov. Richard F. Celeste dismiss the
director of the Ohio Department of
Transportation for falling,, post
warnings at lntersectlons on Route
32 In southwestern Ohlo.
Sen. Cooper Snyder, R-HIIisboro,
· says()IJOT Director Warren Smith
Is to blame for the deaths of four
people on state Route 321asl week,
and charged that complaints aoout
the lack of warnings and lights on
roads that cross state Route 32 have
fallen on deaf ears.
Snyder said Smith has dismissed
pleas from county commissioners,
township trustees, mayors, local
law enforcement officials and
emergency medical technicians
"as troublesome inten erence not
worthy of serlous attention and that

OOdles and feeling heartache for the
remaining fa mutes."
Kirker concluded that stop signs
resources.''
Smith dented Inaction on the on roads that cross Route l2 do not
request and said OOOT has nearly get drivers' attention. "We need
completed Implementation of a fl ashers overhead ... or perhaps a
five-point safety plan for roads tha t sign that says Killer Intersection
Ahead," she suggesled.
Intersect Route 32.
"There have been accidents
Snyder also released a copy of a
letter mailed to him last week by down there, but they are not
Mona Kirker, an emergency medi- unusual when compared to others
cal technician who res)Dnded to a In the road system," Smith said.
fatal accident June 9 where Route "We have 760 h81arOOus Intersec32 and Route 62 Intersect In Brown tion In the system and only two are
County. The victims, two chUdren, on that highway."
Smith said ODOT crews. have
a teenager and an adull man, were
added yield signs, double-sized stop
from Kentucky.
"I wiSh yru could have been there signs, crossroad warning signs and
with us.'' Kirker wrote. "I wiSh you lines In the median Indicating
could have seen the blood and drivers should stop once they have
mangled bodies. ! w\Shyoucould lie crossed two of Route 32's fo\lf lanes.
awake late Into the night, as I do, He said the low amount of traffic on
seeing the blood covered faces and
compliance would simply resu lt In
wmecessary drains on ODOT

Ohio firm gets Corridor G project
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UP! IA Columbus, Ohio, finn has landed
a $10.8 million contract to bulld a
road in West VIrginia, an AppalachIan Corridor G projeCt that promises mo torists almost -continuous
travel between Logan and Kanawha count les.
The contract. awarded Thursday
to Geu pel Construction Co. Inc.,
was termed by Gov. Arch Moore as
"an Important step toward the
completion of this major Appalachian highway sy st em."
After federal and state officia ls
reviewed bids, Geupel Construction
was declared the winning! bidder
for the project.
Except for a 2.7-mlle stretch,
Moore sa id, the project will provide
uninterrupted travel between.Charleston and Logan County.
"This modem highway, when
completed , will serve as a vital Unk
between southern West VIrginia
and Charleston," Moore sa id.
"It wlll!l'ovlde a much safer and
more efficient roadway for travel-

ers on the ro rridor, and will greatly
enhance development opportunities for the region."
Geupel Cons truction will complete grading, draining. paving and
signing on 1.729 miles of the
expressway from Van Camp to
norih of Lory School In Boone
County.
Moore said the projECt should be
completed late In 191'1!.
The adjoining section of Corridor
G Is expected to IE q&gt;ened for bids
this year. Completion of that

)Drtkln of the high-way wUI provide
ij nlnterrupted travel between Charleston and Chapmanville.
Nearly 53 miles of Corridor G
have been finished at a cost of $274
mUllan, with two additional miles
under construction at a cost d $15.9
mllUon. Yet to be lal d are ~ mlles of
the highway .
When completed, the 81-mile
road will oonnect Pikeville, Ky ..
with Charleston, passing through or
nea r Williamson, Logan and
Madison.

M~wn. OhlO. The mul~vehlcle attldent
occuSTed when traffic slowed down at a coll!!tnlctlon
site and three cars and two trucks were unable to stop.
Charges are pending, officials said. (UPI)

FATAL CRASH - Two Pottstown, Pa., residents
were kUied Thursday when their car was run over
from behbtd hy a tractor trailer oo FlO near

The Daily Sentinel

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF A PRIVATE
SALE
Notice i1 hareby g iven that
on June 30. 1986 01 tO A.M.
a private sale will be t.t ld at
the office• of The Central
Trun Co.. NA of Middleport.
Ohio to Mil for cash the fol·
lowing collateral to wit :
1 1980 AMC Spirit 2 Dr .
Lif1blck Ser. # AOM4368
279906
The Central Trust Co., NA
of Middlepon. Ohio reserves
the right to bid at this sa le .
(61 19, 20, 22 3tc

to HMry Strlito by Lone H.
Koololor, 01 of .• by . - dot.od

Public Notice

Death ends probe

Doco..-4. 1P4t . ondwltid! .

it now ooc:uplod by the north·
orly end of tho Koehler brick
building. Atoo o COI'IOh ~ht al
wr; In conwnon cw«. ecro11
ond ._, obout fivofoel allot
No. t28. in PolllOIOy, Ohio
lllid five foot nrlp fron1ingf1Yo
loot on Sycamo,. Street Alto
the right ond lllllrllnt to lll'f,
inlt8ll. operate. nwi1tain .,d
remove in, oo, ov. fl"d
through the 1oid five footltrip
fronting five IIIII on Sycamore
Slnlll. dl'lin. - •· water 81d
gu plpoo, togothor with tho
right .. ...... ._, Mid ....
fool ltrip fo&lt; lho ~~~- of
loying, lnotolling, ""oiring, ...
toying. reconllrllcting and
moinllining the ....... It being
tho intorttlon "' cleecribe 81d
include herein all rights; righll
of WIV and •amenta 11 ex-

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Antique &amp; Collectible
Auction
Sunday, June 22. 1 p.m.
HOW~llS GROVE PARK

Batpr• . Ohio Chamber ol
Comm,..c. Bl.llld ing

Olk ch inl cabinet. surpenllne olk
hfth boy with mirror and claw fnt,
l)i\ dftSStr, minaturt tsrm woo-

don
woconwnh Iron ""'i·l•. wot·
nut m rblt top drtsstr let box

chtsl rvpe~~ n lnlltJI[IOI' eh1irs ,
seb o' c 1rs, wuh sttnd oak.
drl)fllllf t1 lt 1 ~d upbo•d. Olk
t~owsll . ook hofhboy, ""odon lool

Have you driven a Ford•.. lately?

Wide Selection of Models!
Low Prices!
Top Dollar Trade-In, Too!

HAS MOVED

*

116 E. MAIN ST.

OMEROY,
OHIO
(4 DOOIS WIST Of MEIGS INN)

FREE LIFETIME RUST PROOFING

I"''

ON ALL 1986 ESCORTS NOW THRU JUNE

S1id ptrcel wu appraited

in efore11id d11d.

•• f28.000 .00.
Terms of •••: C11h
Rulllttta cannot be told
for lau then IWO-thlrcla of
the IIPPrlilld Yllut.
Howerd E. Fr1nk
Sheriff of Meigs

REFERENCE DEED; Volume 229. Pogo 29. Meigs

161 6. 13. 20. 27; (7) 3

Book

t44. II Pogo 638 of tho

Moigl County Deod R...,..dl,
but Aid ~~~~~. righll of w-r
end •NITIInta •• contained

c... ntv. Ohio

NOTICE OF ELECTION

The Farmers Home AdminWtretion lfmH AI County
Committ• election this yNr will be hald on June 30,
1986. TIM bellot below mull be filled out. detached
end meiled tnd received orreturned in person to Ftrm·
era Home Administration, 105 Buttamut Avlftua, Pomeroy, Ohio not later than June 30 . 1986. If you do
not vote In parson you s hould meilyou r ballot inside 1
blank envelope mertced ballot to en1urea secret ballot,
Thi1 blank envelope should be placed inside the envelope you u11 to mail your ballot. Your name .. dad drtn must be legible on the outer .,ve'ope. Failure to
provide this information will render vour ballot inwalid.
Ballots end envelopes may also be obtained from your
local FmHA office.
The slate of nominees fo r Me igs. Athens and Vinton
counties ere listed in the bellot below . The qualif icattons of persons voting are de scribed in the " Voter
Certification Statement " . For further information re.
ge rding voting and vote' eligibility, see the county of.
fica lilted above. FmHA elec1ions are open to all eligible voters without regard to race , color, religion. ne.
tlonal origin. ago. political affiliatton , marital status,
18ll, end / or hand icap .
.. ....,,,,,,, ... ............ ............ ......... .... ....... .......... .

County (Nome)
Metgs, Athens, Vin1on

0

•candidate(s) Mortho II. Leo

Coc it E. Gillogly
Betty L. Dean

0
0

' ONLY VOTE FOR 1 CANOtDAT E(Si

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

Ucenn No. n-9-86

Pklase detach this notice bftfor e \/ Oting ballot

Ph011e 421-7!45
Not res onsi blt tor accidents

461 S. 3RD
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

County Deed Recordo.

State IName) Oh io

othtr fu rnilun 1nd m1sctlllneo11s
iltm$.
P1trick H. Blcutr~ ..Aut tionttr

PAT HILL FORD

,.....,od

oopt.od ond
bV Lono
H. Kooldor. 01 of.. in their deed
1D Honry Strlito doted Oocombef 4 , t941 . 18004docl in Deed

Public Notice

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRI CULTURE
FIIRMERS HOME ADMINISTRATION
BALLOT FOR COUNTY COMMITTEE MEMBEAISI

bo'" · "'"' .u nd oo1 . doopltll
tlblt. okl cupb01rd, 011 flltW1II ,
hlah boy. M!odlfl tool bolts
olfl wos~ Sllnd. doQplul oi&amp;ij
st111d1
dntL hidof} rtcltr.
will 11 tpllol'lt. utnchls. CIO CU,
-Ids t1bjt and ch1irs, press blcchlit$, non beds 111fht S1lfld!
swor121. round coHn lblt, chest
Of d11Wtrt, lblSWIIt,_piC:tuftlftd
fmlts. stone jlrs coHN trindtr
~n~lnut chtst qu ilt. plus lots i:l

SEE US TODAY...

(TEMPORARILY)
TO

PHONE
992·2156
0. W11tc 0a111, StnhMI Clau ltttd
Dc111.
I l l Courl St . Polllt tOY. Olua 0 761J

2-FREE
OIL CHANGES

CITY LOAN
BANK

the highway, however, may tempt
drivers Into charging through
without stopping.
Snyder, however, said Smith has
rot followed up on hls promise to
Implement cont rol devices and
does not plan to llnlsh the program
completely unt il May 1987.
Smith said an $118,!1Xl contract
was signed recently to place street
light s at nine Route 32 Intersections
and !las ting tight s on stop signs at
the Intersections. He said the
cont ractor was given until May
because the departmen t aptlclpated he will have a hard time
finding the required steel )Dies
IEcause only a few CO!llOratklns In
the country make them.
"When you put things to contract,
you don't llJII them ru t of yru r ear,"
Smith said. "You have to design
and draft plans, lind a utility a nd
take It through the legal steps. This
cont ract has been expedited."
Smith said the fatal accident
described by Kirker happened at
noon and wou ld rot have been
prevented by Ughts.
He said the driver saw a ser ies of
signs, Including a stop ahead sign, a
sign Indicated the IntersECting
highway is divided and a stop si gn
twice the size of rormal stop signs.
A witness told lhe High way Patrol
the driver ap parm tly lrnew the
danger because he slowed to less
than 5 mph before going across the
first two lanes.
·"WhY he went out In to IntersectiOn ro lxldy wil l probably ever
know," Smith said.

Medicare bill
is introduced

Rubber product publication
gives Goodyear No. I status
AKRON, Ohio iUPII - The
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.
remains the industry leader In
sales. profit s and several other
categories, accord ing to research
conducted by Rubber and Plastics
News.
Reports from publicly held
rubber and plastic finns In 1985
showed Goodyear the leader In
sales. net profit s, operating profit s,
asse ts, capital ex penditures.
change In capital expendltu111 and
employees.
Bandag Inc. ranked first in net
profits as a percent of sales.
Annstrong Rubber was No. 1 In
percent change In assets. And
Buckom was the leader In sales
dollars per employee.
Akron-based Goodyear !'€pOrt ed
net Income of of $412.4 million,
compared with No. 2 Gencorp's
tota l of $75.2 milliO n. Goodyear' s

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Friday, June 20, 1986

VOTER CERTIFICAT ION STAT EMENT
Subpart W of Port 2054 of T itla 7. Code of Foderol

Regulations requires that all voters for FmHA county
or 1rt1 commrtt• elections meet lhe following eligi·
bility requirement: (a) be farmers ; !b) derive the princ:i·
pal plrt of their income from latmlng (that is more

fatten yotl wallet
with awant f\d

thlln 50 percent gf their won income must cow. from
agricultural production); (c) havathlir principal firm Ing operation• within the wunty or ~rea for 1which the
election lo being hold .

SEE RICK TOLLIVER, J.R. PIERCE, KEN RICHARDSON or PAT HILL
• Mill FDIC

•

•

•

�Friday, June 20, 1986

The Daily

Ohio

Public Notice

Pu bile Notice

NOTICE TO COMPUTER
HARDWARE AND
SOFTWARE DEALERS
In accordance INith the
Ohm Revtaed Code 118'-d
bids wtll be receN«f bv the
Metgs County Board of Com
mtSSIOn8f'S i'l their Office IO·
catfld at the Cour1 Houae. Po

This Message and Church Directory Spon.11nred Ry The Interested }l,~.;inesses Listed On This Page.
EWS &amp; SONS SOHIO

tnemy, Ohio 46769 unttl 12

noon on July 9. 1986. The
b&lt;ds woll bo opened at 2 P M
oo July 9, 1986. and read
etloud for the followtng comp.~ter/ vidao hardware and
software to provK:Je a t81!11ch·
ng system for 11Udents and

tnstructors
Each bid to meet the con·
d111ons and spectftcattons as

Equ.lpment

outhned for the federally
funded ptlot proJect .
Spectficottons may be obta•ned from tile Metgs County Emergeney MediCal Sar·

Sate• and

Serv•ce

Rultand. OhtoH17S

1. wm " B1l l" Brown , Own ~r

viCes Offtces located on
Mulberry Hetghts Pomeroy,

Pnone (6141 747 ?111

Oh10 45769

,,

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Natoonwode Ins. Co.
ot Columbus . 0

10• W Maut
9t2 2311 Pomerov

RACINE PLANING MILL
Moll Work
Cabonet Makong

.,.
I

MEIGS nRE
CENTER, INC.

l

John F Fullr, Mgr
Ph 9911101

t.f'\
u.. \
\

GRAVElY TRACTOR SALES
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.
ouvny •

Pomeroy

RALL'S

acatoon time this year may not be quite the
same for those of us who normally take an
extended auto trop but do not have unlimited
funds for ot The cost of drovong a car may con tmue to soar for some t1me to come, and on
any case, ot has become both prudent and patnotoc to conserve all forms of energy for more
senous purposes. Therefore, th1s moght be a
good time to explore those places closer to
home that you usually bypass on your quest for
the far horozons. Most of us II ve somewhere
near a forest, beach, mountaon range or some
wilderness area suotable for a camp1ng trop,
with both tleauty and recreatoonal posstbol1t1es
You have learned on your HouseofWorshopthat
God's wonders are everywhere on earth, and so
th1s may be a good year on wh1ch to prove ot

BEN
,
!FRANKLIN

Syracuse

"f

992-3978

Veterans
Memorial Hospital
Pomeroy

II S E. Memoriol Dr

Moddleport. Ohoo

_ K&amp;C JEWELERS
Kee~

()

992 -2104

;-~;;;;:et

212
992-3785. Pomeroy

W H Pmin,
pastor: DeWe &amp;ck, Sundav ScOOol Sup!
Onur:h Sr00ol9 15 a.m , Worship Sl.&gt;r\1e ID lJ
a m COOlr rt'hecmal Thesday, 7 ll p m
TIUNTn' OlUROl. 11&lt;"

under dlrfctlon of l.LIIs Burt

F'OMEROY OlUROl OF TilE NA7A
RENE. Corner Unlon and Mulberry, AN
lromas Glen Mc:Oung Jmtor Norman Pres·
~- S S. Supo Surday School ~ :Il am,
mornln!i: wrrshlp 10 IJ a m , (&gt;'.ettlngs(J'V\c('6
pm, mlct.WPek Sff'1ci&gt; Wedncsda}. 7 pm
CRACE EPISCOPAL CHUROI 32fi E
Main St Po.,....., Sunday services Holy
rnrTVTlunlon on rtF first Sunday of each lll'lnth,
and oomblncd 'ollith morntng ~ayer on the
tlllrdd Sunday Morning prayer and se-Ol)non

all·other Sundays ci the rronth Chun.il School
and Nursery cart:&gt; provided Cofree hour In the
Pa'rish Hall lmnat!ately folkw.1ng the 5£'!"\\irf'
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRBr, 212 W
Main St NeU Proudfooo pasO« Bible School
9::tJam Mcrningwcntdp Dl1am, Youth
Jlle£'!ing'i, 6: OJ p m , Evening worship. 7'00 p
m Wednesda.Y night prawr ml'E'tlng and Blbk?
~O&lt;ly ~00

pm
THE SALVATION ARM'i . 115 Bu111.'frJ.Jt
Ave Po~ Mrs l.bra Wlnlng In charge

SJnday hollnes!; meeting, W a m Surx1ay
School, I~ JO a m S.mday School YP-&gt;M
Eloise Adam:;, l£&gt;ader 73) pm Sal\ation
meellng. various SJl('akB'S and musiC' spxtals
Thursday u · .II am to 2 p.m LadiEs HO!n!

League memben ln

ch~

all

W{J'!')l&gt;fl

invited, 6 e p m Th&lt;U&gt;day, Caps Cadeo
Classs (Young Prople-BibleJ. 7 3l p.m Bible
Study and Prayer TT'I('('l\ng cpm to thP Jl.lbllc
POMEROY WESJ'SIDE CHURCH OF
CHRISI', :n'lliChlldren sHome Road !County
Road 76) !EZ.52lio Vocal musk' Swxiay Wrr
slhp 10 a m , Bible SOW)' ll a.m , W&lt;rshlp 6 p
m W - y . Bible S01ldy 1 ~m
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISI'IAN
CHURCH, AMn Olrtl~ pastor Linda Swan,
Sup! Sunday &amp;hOol 9: lJ a m preachin2 S!!"
111ces first and thl.Jd Sunda} loUowlng Slndav
School Ywth meeting 7 ,l) p m every Sun
day
GRAHAM

UNITED

ME:riDDIST

Preachin g 9 JO am first andserond Su n
da ys of each month , thrd and four1h Sun

da y each month worship st'n Ices at 7 :W p
m , Wednesday evenlnfi:S a! 7 30 p m
Prayer and Bible C:.t udv
SE:VENT H DA' ADVE~TJST Mulb
Nn H ei~ ht s Road Pomerm
Le rO)
Brtich Pa stor Sabbath Sch ool Superl n

tend£&gt;nl. Rhondcl Markin Sabbath School
begins at 2 p m c.n Satu rd&lt;.~ y with worship
service foll o l'. l n~ at 3 15 Everyone wei
COM('

RUTLAND FIRST BAPT IST CHURCH
- SlsiN Harrif'tt Warnt'r Sup! Sunday
School 9 30 a m , Morning\\ orshlp 10 45

am

POMEROY fiRST BAPTIST LY~ I oo
Halley, min ister Wi llia m Snou rr er Su n
day School Sup! Sunda\ School !:1 30a m
, M oml n~ Worship 10 30 a m
F'IRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Po
meroy Plkt&gt; E Lamar O'Bryanr pastor
Jacl&lt; Nf'rdS Sunday School Dlrf'Cior Sun
day School, 9 30 a m , Mornin g Worship
10 45 evening v.: ors hi p, 7 00 p m tO S T)
&amp; 7 30 tE S T ) , W&lt;'dnt&gt;Sda y Prayl:'r St:&gt;r
vice, 7 00 p m 10 S T l &amp; 7 30 PM iE S
T 1 Mission Frlt&gt;nd s t ag('S 2 61. Royal
Ambassadors Iboys agrs &amp; lA 1 and Gir ls
In Action la~es &amp;.18\ on Wedn("!; days 7 p
m rDST t&amp;7l0pm (EST I, Tuesday
VIsitation 6 30 p m
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH llal
l('y Run Road Rrv Em mett Ral'. son pas
tor Hand try Dunn supt Sunda} School,
JO am, Sunda) C&gt;vening,.Prvlce 7 JOp m
Bible te&lt;tc hln ~. 7 30 p m Thursday
. SYRACUSE MISSION CHerry St Sv
rar use Services 10 a m Sunday Evrnlng
sc-rvl&lt;'es Sund ay and Wt'dnMda} a t7 00 p
m

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIS T
IN CHRISTIA N UNION. Rev Kolt hEblln .
pastor Sunda} School 9 30 a m Wadf'
Hayman. sup! , MornlngWor!iihlp 10 30a
m Sunday E'\ enln g SCI"\ IcE' 7 30 p m
Wednesday Pray£-r Met-ling , 7 30 p m
MT MORIAH CHU RCH OF GOD
~ Racln(' Re\ James Sanerflcld pastor
Frl'!'man Wil liams Supl Sundav School
9 45 a m Sunflil}' 11nd Wcdnt'Sday E'Vt't'l
lng sprvlces 7 p m
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST
CornC'r Sl.~e lh and Palmer Earl Eden Pas
tor Ray Fields. S S Sup! Dan Rlgfi!:s
Asst Sup! Sunda y Schoo l 9 l:i a m
Morning W o r ~hlp lU 15 a m Sunda}
Ev(ming service, 7 p m Youtl1 mPCting
7 :10 p m W('()m•sda y (rven ing serv]c{' 7 p
m Choir pra r tiU' 8 p m

MIDDL EPORT CHURCH OF CHR IST,
:ith and M e~! n , Bob Melton, minister AI
Hart son. assoc mi nister: M1kt' G£&gt;rlach
Sunday Sc hool Superintmdent
Bible
Schoo l 9 30 ,1 m Morning Wor ship 10 30
a m Evt&gt;nln~ Worship 7 00 p m WOOncs
day 7 00 p m PtaY('! me.&gt; tln.l(
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OI' TiiE Nh
ZARENE. Co pas10rs Rl"\' Cha rles Coy le
and Rev NilncyCovl£&gt; BII IWhl t{',S und ay
S&lt;"hOOI Sup! Sunda y Sc hool 9 30 a m ,
Morning Worsh ip 10 30 a m , Evan!l;ellstlc
mH~IIng 7 00 p m WE'dn rsday, 7 00 p m
Prayf'r mN'IIng
UNITED PKE;BYTERIAN MINL~TRV
OF MEIGS COUNTY
R.t!v Ken WIIM in !lon
HA RRISONVn.LE PRESBYTER IAN
C!iURCH - Sunday Worship S('rvlccs
9 00 am: Church School 10 15 am
,
MIDDLEPORT PR ES BYTERIAN - •
Sunday School, 9 am , Church servl&lt;'t',:
10:15am
1:'C'
• ;
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PR~BI •
TERIAN - Sunday SChool. 10 am [
Church serv ice, ll 15 am
R!JfLAND CHURCH OF GOD. Pastor,
John Evans Sundo y School 10 00 a m ,
sunday Morning Wors hip U ·oo am Chll ·
dren 's Church ll a m Sunday Even ing

•

992-2975

Alencg, Inc.

(~}

Across from the Courthou11

POMEROY, OHI0-992·6677
· Quickel and Ruth Ann

Rawlings-Coa1s-Biower (row's Family Restall'll11
FUNERAL HOME

"Serving Families"
264 S. 2nd, Middleport

"Fu111lwg /t.utuelg Fll1d Chld1w"
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432

.,_-:::"'9...,92·5 141 ~-+--------~
FAITii BA PTIST f'HU RCH Rt~ilrond
St Mason S und&lt;.~\ School tO am Morn
1ngv.orshlp11 a m , E\t&gt;nin~servlc('6p
m Praver mcrting and Bi ble Stu dy Wf.'d
nesdav 7 p m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rev N} le
:.&amp;...;:;:.:~_ __, Borden pa510r CornE:'IIu s Bun ch su pt
Su ndav School 9 30 a m . Second and
worship servlct- 7 00 p m Wedn esdl1'
fourth Sunda\S y,orsh•p '\f'r'\ IN' a! 2 30 P
prayer mt"etlng 7 00 p m
m
MT MORIAH BAPTIST Foullh and
MT HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
Main St Mlddi C'port Rev Gilbert Craig,
IN CHRIST CHURCH. Located In Tf'lla~
Jr pastor Mrs Er\ In Baumgardner
Co mmunity off Ct Rt 82 Re.., Rolx-rt
Su nday School Sup! Sunday School9 30 a
~.r•&lt;!_o•·s .•-:--· ..•Jet! Hol ter lay IC'a der
SChool Sup! Sunda Y m Worship St'or'\ Ice 10 45 a m
SUCCESS ROI\0 CHURCH OF CHRIST
am mornin g wor,s h1p and
- Josep h B Hos kln s Na ngt•llst Sunday
Bibl(' Sludy 9 a m . Worship 10 a m . Sun
serv icE" 10
on 30theamseconwerdnjit
d an d
da} rvening Sf'J"\' ICt:" 6 p m Wednesday
Sundays at7 30 p m , Chrls!lan En
even in g service, 7 p m
deavor oo lht&gt; fir st and third Su nda ys at
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY. Racine,
7 30 p m Wedn f'Sday pra vN m(lo(lfl ng and
Rt 12 ~ W!111am Hoback pastor Su nday
Bibles!Ud). 7 JOpm
School 10 a m Sunday even lng s£&gt;rvlcr 7
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHEC\'
p m WednPSdaY C'Yf'nlng service 7 p m
Located on 0 J Wh ite Road of High¥. a~
CARPENTER BAPTIST Don Cheadle
160 Pat Ht.&gt;nson pasto r Sunda y School \0
Su pt Su nda y School 9 30 a m Morning
am Class('S for all ages Junior Chu rch 11
\\'or shlp 10 JOa m Pra}er st.&gt;rvice altern
am, Morning warship ll a m Adult
ate Su n da~s
Choir practl('(' 6 p m Sunday Young P!ffl
pie's, Children s Church and Adult Blbl£'
Stud) W('(]n('Sday at 7 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL T hird
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEl. 570 Gran t
Ave Rev Cla rl&lt; Ba kt:'r pastor Car l Not
St Middleport Affilia ted .,..llh South('m
!Ingham Sund a) Sc hool Sup! Sunda y
Baptist COn\('ntlon Da vid Bryan , Sr Mi
School 10 a m with classes [Or all ages
nlster Sundav School 10 a m , Mornin g
Evening servkPs at 6 p m W('dnesdl y Bi
wors hip 11 a m . Evt&gt;ning worship 7 p m .
bl(l stud y at 7 30 p m Youth service!! Frl
W('(]nesday evening Bible stu dy and
day at/ 30 pm
prayer meeting 7 p m
ECCLES lA f ELLOWS HIP, 128 Mil l Sf
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST St
Mi ddiE'p ort Brother Chuck McPherson.
Rt U4 and Co Rd 5 Mark &amp;&gt;eve-rs mi nis
pastor Sunda} School 10 am Sunda)
!er Sun day School Supt Harry Hen
evening sel"\ tees al7 p m and Wedn f§day
drlcks , Sunda y School9 30 a m Mornin g
serv lcf'S at 7 p m
worship 10 ~ a m , £\en lng worship 7 p
ANTIQ UITY BAPTIST Kenneth Smith
m Wedn esday worship 7 p m
pastor Sunda} School 9 30 am C'h urrh
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH
st'rvlcf' 7 30 p m , youth fell owship 6 30 p
Corner Sycamore and Second Sts. Po·
m Blblr st udy, Thursday, 7 JO p m
meroy Tht&gt; Rev Willia m Mlddles warth .
FU lL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE, 3.1045
pslor Sunday SChool 9 45 am . Chu rc h
lilland Road Pomeroy Tom Kell} pas
sf'rv ice 11 a m
tor Da nny Lambert , S S Su pt Sunday
SACRED HEART CHURCH Msgr
morning se rvlcp at 10 &lt;~ m Su ndayrv('n
Anthony Glannamorf' Ph 992 589fl Satur
lng servJcp 7 JO p m Tuesda) and Thurs.
da y EvPnlng Mass 7 )) p m , Sunda y
day Sen •lc('S at 1 .l.) p m
Mass, 8 a m and 10 am ConfPSslans &lt;rH'
WORD OF FA ITH 93 Mill St. MlddlP
half hour before f'ach Mass CCO rlaSS&lt;'S
port Sunda\ mornin g s('n Ire 10 15 a m
11 am Sund ay
Sunday &lt;'\enin,R" 7 30 Thursday momlnJ!'
VICTORY BAPTIST 525 N 2nd St
Bible stud) 10 u m Wcd n('Sda v t"\ f' nln g
Middleport James E Kc&gt;esee pastor
730 pm
Sunday morning worship 10 a m . Even
NE:W UA\ EN CHUHCH OF' THE NA
lng service 7 p m , Wednesday e-.• enln~
ZARENE RN Glendon Stroud , pastor
worship 7 p m Vlsltallon Thursday 6 30
Sunda ) School 9 JO am , Wors hlp servic(',
pm
10 30 am Youth serv]c(' Su nday 6 15 p
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH - Gaf)
m Su nd a} C\!:'nlnR senlcl'7 OOpm W«&lt;
Holter pastor Sunday School 10 u m
nesday Pray('r MN•ttng and BlbiP Stu d}
worship service U a m , prayer m cetl n~
JOO pm
7 30 p m Thursday
NEASE SE.'I'TI. EME NTCHU RCH Sun
LIVING WORD CHESTE R CHURCH
day a ftern oon sE"rvlc£&gt;s a1 2 JO Thu rsda\
l'\ enlng servicE'S at 7 30
OF GOD- Gilbert Spencer, pas tor Sun
day School 9 30 am Mom ing serv ice
F'IRST BAPTIS1 CHURCH Mason , W
10 OOa m . Sundavf'ventngservlce7 OO p
\'a Pas tor Rill Murphy SundaySd'IOollO
m , Mid Wf'i"k pra yer servlc~:&gt; Wedn esday
a m Sunda} eHnbtfol 7 30 p m Prayrr
1p m
mPe lin g and Bible study Wedn esda y 7 30
p m EH•ryon e welcorre
MT OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH
Lawrenct&gt; Bush, pas tor Max Folmer Sr
RliTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa
Supt . Sunday School and Morning Wors hip
lem St Rev Paul Taylor pastor. Sunday
9 30 a m , Sunda y evening sen. Ice 7p m ,
School lOam , Sunday(lvenlng7 OOpm
Youth meellng and Bible Sludy, Wednrs
Wednesda y even in g prayer mee rin g 7 00
day 1 p m
pm
UNITED FAITU CHURCH Rt 7 on Po
SO!JfH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
meroy By Pa ss Rev David Wlsemar. Sr .
CHURCH, Sliver Rldg(' Duane Syden
pas tor Melvin Drak e S S Supt Sunday
Stricker pastor Sunday School 9 a :n
School 9· 30 a m . Morning Wor ship 10 30
Worship Service, 10 am Sunda y evening
Evening Worship 7 30 p m . Wedn esday
service, 7 00 p m Wednl'Sda y nigh1 Bible
Prayer Service, 7 30 p m
study 7 00 p m

l

r:.;~i:~;:,church

l----------------------------'
MEIGS

COOPERATIVE P-'RIIH
UNITED MEI'IIODIST CHURCH
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Re" Don Archer
Re\' Ray Deeter
Re~ Seldon .lollaaoo
ALffiED - Church School 9 JO am
Worship, 11 am, UMYF 6 30 p m . UMW
Third Tuesda y, 7 30 p.m Communion,
first Sunday !Archer\
CHESTER - Worsh ip 9 a m . Church
School tO a m . Bible Study, Thursda y, 7p
m UMW first Thursda y, 1 p m Com
munlon, first Sunday (Archert
JOPPA - Worship 9 .ll a m , Church
School 10 30 am Bible Study Wednesday,
7 30 p m ~ Johns on )
LONG BOTTOM -Church &amp;.hool 9 30
a m . Worship 7 p m Bible Study. Wed
nesday, 7 30 p.m , UMYF WednPSda)
6 00 p m, Communi on First Sunda)
tA rC'hert
REEDSVILLE- Church School 9 30 a
m . Worship Service 11 00 am !Deetf'rl
TUPPERS PLAINS ST PAUL Ch urch School 9 a m Worship 10 a m
Bible Study, Tuesday 7 :W p rh . UMW
Third Tuesday 7 30 p m Communion
First Sunda y I Archer!
CENTRAL CLUSTER
Rev ,James E Corbitt
Re~ SteYen Nelson
Re"' Mel~ln Franklin
Rev. Cl(lmen1c S. Zuntca dr
Rev ,\ndrf"W Rubenklng
ASBUR\f iSyracusel - Worship 11 a m
Churr h School 9 45 a m , Charge Bib]('
Srud~ Wcdn('Sday 7 30 p m UM W first
Tu('sda} 7 30 p m Choir R('hf'ars al ,
WE'llnE'~da't 6 30 p m , UMW fourt h Sun
day 6 30 p m rN('Ison 1
Ef'-;TERPR!SE - Worshtp 9 am ,
rhu rrh Sc hool 10 a m Bib[{' Study TUC'S
da} 7 30 p m UMW First Monda ) 7 :ll
p m , UMY F Su nday 6 p m Choir Re
h('arsal fi 30 p m "rdnesdCI ) Wra nklln )
FLATWOODS- Church School 10 a m
W or ~ hlp I I am , Bible S1udy, Thurs
d1 y 7 p m UMYF Sunday 6 p m
1Franklin 1
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a m .
Church School 10 AM Choir prac til'c,
Tuf'Sday l:i 30 p m UMW first Tuesda y,

7 Jllpm ~Nrlson l
HEATH IMiddtC'pOrtl - Church School
9 30 am . Morn ing Wor ship 10 :JJ a m .
Yout h Croup 4pm Wedn f'Sday Church

Choir l"f'hParsa l

7 pm

Pra\ l'r Scr\ ICC' 6 30 p m

p m tZunl~;a

Thursday,
Bible Study 7

1

MI I'ERS \ ' JLLE - Wors hip Service 10

a m Church School 11 a m UMW, third
Wf'dnr~da, I p m Choir practk(•, Mon
eta\ 7 10 p m ~Nt&gt;lson 1
PE,\RI. CHAPEL - Wor ship S('rVIre 9
a m Church School 11 a m UMW Se
co nd Tu&lt;'sday 7 ~0 p m UMYF las t
Tuesday 7 :ID p m ~ Rulx&gt;nklng l
POMEROY- Church School 9 15 a m
, Worship 10 30 &lt;1 m , Choir rf'hearsa l
\\'l'dn!.'Sda) , 7 30 p m . UMW second
Tuesda~ 7 30pm, li MYF'Sunday 6p m
1Corbllfl
ROCK SPRINGS- Church School 9 15
.am . Wor,.hlp 10 am , Bible Study, Wed
n es da ~ 7 :Wpm UMYF r&amp;&gt;nlorsi,S un
da v, 5 p m , tJu nl orsl rwry other Sun
dav 6 p m 1 franklin 1
RUTLAI'D-ChurchSchool 9 45am
Warship, 10 30 a m . UMW rEvenlng Clr
clel S(&gt;Cond Wf'dnE'Sda y, 7 30 p m UMW
IM!Nn oon Circlrl SPCOnr:l Thursda y I p
m 1 Rubf'nkln g\
SALEM CENTER- Ch urch School 10a
m Wors hip 9 45 &lt;'I m i Rubenkln,IO
SNOWVILLE - Wors hip 8 30 a m
Chu rch School l0 ."1 m rRubcnklngJ
SOUTHt:RN CLUSTER
Rev Rocer Grace
Rev. Paul McGuire
Rf&gt;v Keith Rad~r
APPI F GROVE- CHurch SC hool 9 00
am W01 Sh1p , lO 00 am fflr st and third
Sund ays1, UMW Second Tuesdav. 7 3() p
m . Pra}f&gt;r mer fi n~ WE'dn('sday 7 p m
1Gracr1
_
BE:TiiANY - Wors hip, 9 am Church
SChool lD a m Bib It' Study Wednrsda) .
10 a m, Dorca s Wome n's Fellowship
Wcdnrs dav, 11 am I McGuire)

CARMEL - Church School 9 30 a m,
Worship, 10 45 11 m Second and Fourth
Sundavs: F£&gt;1 1owship dlnnf'r wl!h Sulton
lhlrd Thu rsday 6 30 n m tMcGuire)
EAST LETART- ChurchSchool9a m,
Worship 10 am second and fourth Sun
da} S, UM W (lrst Tuesday, 7 30 p m
1Gracc1
LETAR I FAL LS - Worship 9 t1 m ,
Church Sc hool lOa rn (Grace )
MORNING STAR- \~or s hlp. 9 45a m,
Churc h School, 10 30 a m , Bi bl e STudy,
Thursday, 7 30 p m (Rader )
RAONE WESLEYAN - Church School,
lOam, Worship ll a m., UMWfounhMon
day at 7 30 p m Mens Prayer Brealdas1,
Wednesday 7 a.m (Gra~J
SUlTON - Chu rc h School, 9 30 am,
Morning Worsh ip 10 45 a m first a nd third
Sunda)s, Fellowship dinner with Carmel
th ird Thursday, 6· 30 p m (McGuire)

•

KENO CHURCH OF CijRIST Vf&gt;rnon
Eldridge, mln is1cr, Oli ver Swain Sunda y
School Sup! Prea chin g 9 :ro a m Pach
Sunda }
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNlON, Gt'orgf'
Ant'do pas1or Sundav serv ice, 9 JOa m .
evening service 7 30 p m Prayer mPellng
Wednesda}' 7' JO p.m
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF·
CHRIST Joseph B Hoskins, pastor Bib le
Class 9 :I! am, Mom ingWorshlp 10 30a
m . Evening Worship, 6 30 p m Thursda}

Bible Study, 6 30 p.m
NEW STIVERSVILLE ffiMMUNITY
CHURCH, Sunda y School !el"\ Ice, 9 45 a
m
Worship service 10 30 a m
Evangellsllc Servlcf' 7 30 p m Wednes
day Prayer mee11 n8 7 .Jj p m fhursda y
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy
HarrisonvillE' Rd Robert Punell, minis
ter Steve Stanley, S S. Sup!, Bill McEI
roy, Assl Supt .. SundaySchool 9 .lOam
Worship service 10 JO a m Evening wor
sh ip Sunda y 1 p m and Wednesday, 7 p m
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH Pine
Grove Thf' Rev William Mlddl es warth.
pastor Church serv ice 9 30 am Sunday
School 10 30 a m
BRI\OBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,
John Wright , pas1or SundaySchool9 30a
m. La r ry Ha ynes, S S Supt Morning
worship 10 30 a m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE Rl'\ Lloyd D Grimm Jr pastor
Ora Bass Chairman of the Boar dofChrls
II an Life Sunday School 9. 30 a m , Morn
lng worship 10 30 a m • evangelistic ser
vice 7 00 p m Wednesday servic-e. 7 p.m
LIBERTY CHR ISTIAN CHURCH , O.x
ter Woody Ca ll , pastor Services Sunday
10 a m and 7 p m Wednesday, 7 p m
RAC INE FIRST BAPTIST
St""e
Deaver Pastor Mike SWiger SUnday
School Su pt Sunday School 9 30 a m ,
Morning worship 10 4() a m , Sunda y
e\enlng worship 7 30 p m , Wedn esday
e\ening Bible study 7 30 p.m
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH,
BurUngham Ray Laudtrmnt, pastor: flo.
lx&gt;rt Cozart assistant paslcr Sunday Sdtool
10 a m , worshJp 7 p m , Wednesday 6 p m
you th meelln~. Wed , 7p.m church st!VIces
PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH, \l
mile off Rt 325 Rev. Ben J Walls , !)IS lor
Robert Searles S S Supt Sunday School
9 30 a m . Morning Worship ID 30 a m ,
Sunday evening service 7 :II p m Wed
nesdav service, 7 30 p m
SILVER RUN BAPTIST. Bill Lillie.
pastor Swve Lillie. S S Supt Sunday
School 10 am Morning worslp, 11 am,
Sunda ye\enlng worship 7 30 p m Prayer
mN&gt;IIng and Bible study Thursda y 7 30 p
m , Youth meeting Wedn esda y at 7 p m
REJO ICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
- J83 N 2nd Ave Middlep or t Sunday
School10 am Sunday evening 7 00 p m
Mid week serv1ce Wed , 7 p m
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Robert E Musser, pastor Su nday School
9 30 am, Pau l MussH supt Mom In ~
wors hip 10 JO am Sunday even ing ser
vice 7 p m mid week serv ice, Wedne;
day,7 pm
SYRACUSE CHUROJ OF THE NA
ZARE~E Rev Glenn McMillan . pastor
Mary Janlcr Lavendf'r SUnday School
Supt Sunday School 9 ~am, Morning
worship lO 30 am , Evangellsllc ser.olce
li p m . Pra y£-r and Prai 5f' Wedn esday. 7p
m Youth meeting, 7 p m
EDEN UNITED BREI'HRES IN
CHRIST Elden R Blake, pastor Sunday
S&lt;'hOol 10 a m . Gary Reed, La y leader
Mornin g sermon , 11 a m : Sunday night
Sl'rv lces Christian Endeavor 7 .10 p m .
Song service 8 p m Preaching 8 :11 p m
Mid week prayer metoting, Wednesday 7

pm

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN Rog
er Watson, pastor Crenson Pratt , Sunda y
School Supt Morning Worship 9 30 a m ,
Sunday School 10 30 am . Evening ser·
vtce,7 30pm
M1' UNION BAPTIST, Donald Shuo,
pastor, Joe Sayre, Sunday School Supt
Sunday School 9: 4~ a m • Evening wor·
ship 6 l'.l p m, Prayer Mt'f'tlng 6 30 p m
WIX!nesday
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST Da\e Prentice, mtnls1er Deryl
Wells, Supt Church Schoo l 9 a m , Wor·
ship SPrvice, 9. 45 p.m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE Rev Herbert Gra te, pastor
Frank Riffle supt Sunday School 9 30 a
m , Worship serv ice, 11 a m and 7 p m
Sunday Wedn esday, 7 p m Prayr r meet
lng
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METIDDI ST
CHURCH Rev Robert Miller, pastor. Ro
bf'rt E Barton, Director ot Christian Edu
cation Steve EbUn, assistant Sunday
School 9 30 a m , Moming worsh ip 10 30
a m , Choir practice. Su nday 6 l) p m ,
Evening worship 7:30 p m Wed nesday
Pra~r and Bible Study, 7, 30 p m
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHR IST
Charles Ru ssell Sr , minister Rick Ma
comber, sup!. Sunday School 9•30 a m ,
Worship service 10•30 a 11) Bi ble study,
Tuesday, 7 30 p.m
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESLS
CHRIST OF LAITER DAY SAINTS Port·
land Racine Road William Roush, paslor

Lmda Evans church s(huol dlrt&gt;etor
Church school 9 30 am Morning \.\-Or slp
10 30 a m Wedn esda} rvC'nln J;l pra} N
srrv iCC'S. 7 30 p m
BEl HLEHEM BAPTIST RM Earl
Shuler pastor Worsh ip service 9 lOam
Su nda y School 10 30 am Bible Study and
pra \{'r !if'rvlce Thursda~ . i 30 p m
CAR LETON INTER DENOMI NATION
AL CHURCH. Kin gs bury Road Rev Da ·
'ld Curfm an pasto r Sunday School 9 30
a m Ralph Carl Supt Ewnlng Mrship
7 00 p m Prayer met&gt;tlng, Wedn es day
700pm
LONG BOITOM CHRISTIAN Vernon
Eldrldgf' pastor \\oall acr Da mf"Wood S
S Supl Sunday School9 30 a m . Worship
Service 10 30 a.m
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH
Mike Thompson, NE'W Ha\en , WV , pas tor
Sunda y School at 9: 30 a m , Morning wor
ship atlO JOa m Sundayeveningservlce
at 7 lJ p m Thursda y serv ices at 7 30 p
m
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob, located m County Road 31 Rev
Lawrence Gluesl'ncamp pastor Rev
Roger Willford ass! pastor Preaching
serv ices Sunday 7 l:J p m P rayer meeting
Wednesda} 7 30 p m , Gary Griffith
leader Youth li(roops Sunday even ing at
6 30 p m with Roger and VIolet Willford
leaders. Communion service firs t Sunday
each month
WHITE 'S
CHAPEl.
WESLEYAN
CHURCH- Coolville RD. Rev Phillip Rl
denour pastor Sunda y School 9.30 am .
worship service 10 30 a m : Bible stud}
and wor ship service, Wednesday 7 p.m
RUTLAND CHUROI OF CHRIST
Mark Jones , pastpr 8111 Nlcholsoo Sun
day School Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m ,
Morning Worship and Co mmunion 10 30 a
m
RUTLANDBIBLEME:THJDIST A.mas
Tillis, pastor Sonny Hudsoo , supt Sunday
School 9 30 a m , Mornlng worship, 10 30
am, Sunda y eventng service 7:00pm
Wednesday service 7 p m WMPO pre&gt;
gram 9 a m. each Sunda y
RliTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE Rev Lowell Ford, pastor Sunday
School9 30 am., Worship S('J'VIce 10:30a
m, Young people's .service 6 p m
Eva ngelistic serv tce6 .ll p m Wednesday
serv l ~ 7 p m
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
Sl Mason, W Va Eugene L Conger, mJ
nlster Sunday Bible Study 10 a.m • Wor
ship 11 a m and 7 p.m Wedn esday Bible
Study, voca l music, 7 p.m
LIBERTY ASS EMili. Y OF GOD, Dud
ding Lane, Mason , W Va J N Thacker,
p&lt;Jstor. Evening service 7 30 p m : Wo
men s Minist ry. Thursda y, 9 30 a m :
Wednesda y Prayer a nd Blblt' Study, 7 15
pm

The spectf tcatiOn s wtll desertbe a computer/vtdeo 81·
ststed tratneng ptlot program
part1ally funded by a Federal
DOT grant
The front of the enva&amp;ope
enclostng the btd ITIJ st be

54 Mosc. Merchandise

AUTO
FOR SALE
1984 CHRYSLER
FIFTH AVENUE
EXC. CONDinON
CAU

TOM ANDERSON

992-3348

AFRR 5 P.M. ,,

Real Estate
216 E 2nd St
Phone
1-(614)-992-3325

EASTERN - 9 acres w1th 3
BR home Full ba sement,
fumace woodbumer trees,
garden spaces, ootbu old·
ongs, on blacktop road but
p!ovate
RIVERVIEW- 6 rooms. tub
balh basement. some onsulalton All on one floor fo r
JU St $12.000
TRAILER PARK - 'l2 spaces
~us several acres on Slate
Route woth city water &amp; sewer
sy~em

MINERSVILLE - Noce 3 BR
home overlookong the beau·
lful Oh10 RIVer New gas lu1
nace, range, retngmtor
carpetong &amp; 2 porches
BAUMS DIV - Modern 4
BR bt level Central aor &amp;
heat formal dm ong, sun
deck, coppeo plumbing at
tached garage and lg lot
JUST IT - [lJ 2 story tew~ of
a home 4i lot, trees. shrub
bery, b asemo:~ t . 3 proches
coly sewer, water. gas &amp; ~ec

MGM FARM
CITY
POMEROY

992·2181

RT. 7 BY-PASS - Thos aoe
floor. 3 bedroomer IS 111st
nght lor you lead 1ng Creek
wate1. carpetmg, panelong &amp;
near WMPO
REAL NEAT - Everythmg
enclosed on the basement
Has lg hreplace on the lam·
oly room . wet bar, 2 baths,
dbl garage woth a gen~ and
2 47 acres Lovey lovely
place
MIDDLEPORT - One floor
3 BR frame home New gas
furnace. lull basement. 2
porches &amp; nvmoew woth
shade
SElliNG PROBLEMS
CALL992·3325

Housiny
!Headquarters

J&amp;F

YOUNG'S

CONTRACTING

CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addon1 and r•modeling
- Roofing end guner work
- Con cr•te work
- ptu_mblng and tltctrtC:Ii
wort.

(free Eatunatet)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or 992 -7314

Pomeroy, Ohio

4 15 '86-lc

WATER WELLS
SERVICED
AND
-DRILLED
FREE ESTIMATtS

INTERESTED IN BUYING
APPROXIMATELY 2 112
ACRES OF ST. RT. 7 NEAR
EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL?
IF SO, PLEASE PHONE
HOME NATIONAL BANK
949-2210.
Real Estate General

"AI Reosanable

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Aulhorizool John DMrt,
Now Hollaood, lush Hog

wavel)

Doolor

614-843·5241
614·949·2145

EUGENE LONG

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

VINYL I AWMINUM
Comple1e Gutter Work
Complete Remodeltng
Roofing of all Types

en home area
20 veer•
"Free Estimate~ "
UU COllECT:

Ph. (6141 143-5425
5·12-'16·2 mo

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGER~TDR
•SATnUTE SAlES &amp; SERVICE

We Hue AF1ll Tl1111

ShpTu.. lelu
.. l&gt;rty
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

10-8-cfc

RADIATOR
SER~CE

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

PAT HILL FORD
992 · 2196

Middleport, Ohio
t -13-cfe

HENRY E. CLELAND JR
JEAN TRUSSELL... .. ..
DOTTIE TURNER ....... ..

..

................... 992-6191
.. ............ ... 949-2660
. ........ ..... ,.... 992-5692

Want to buy metal shel..,n ior
store, 304· 676 -2782

Annou ncem en ts

"'"'

•flAYS
I(HAIMI

011 fttkt StrwKt,
landKDpktt, lost~~t ..tJ,
Land Cltanng. 'onllt, Stpru
Systems, Htny Hauling.
StOM &amp; Graul Hauhng
Elodmal Work
RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL
6 INDUSTRIAL

ICertlftld Elecuiclenl

3-D AUTO CENTER

DON lOSE, Own11

949-241J3

Home 143-5340

5121/'1611..

TOWN &amp; COUN1RY
VETERINARIAN

Pomlfoy, Ohie,

992-6771

aif:·

'73·' 80 GM Fenders

446 0294
NOAH 5 ARK ANIMAL PARK

139

73·80 OM
Rocklf Pane\t "';········· 016
73 -79 Ford Fendert
139
Truck Bed

ltnttrl

FAEf INSTALLATION

2 VR WARRANTY
lillltftctlon Guararu•d
F... Oet,.,.,., n Tu Stet• Aru

CLC COINS

CLINIC
PT. PUASANT OFFICE
305 Jackson ln.

SUIGIIJ IY APPT.

BEND AIEA CALL

Buying /Selling
Gold, Silver
14K Chains, Coins,
Collector's Accessories
Bullion
SUMMER HOURS
1·7 M·TH

168 North Second
Middloporl, Ohto 45760

SAl£S &amp; SERVICE
Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bolls Here
IUIIHEII PilON!

t6141 992 6550
!!IIDENCE PHON!
16141

985-3937
6·16· 86· l mo.

NEW- REPAIR

•Vinyl Replacements

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

•JA" lnaulated Gleu
•Tilt In To Clean
•Mos1 Wmdowa Pr~eed
under •300

J&amp;L INSULA110N
&amp; SIDING CO.
992·2772

367-0317
If NO ANSWER CAU:

3117·7560- 367-71171
CHESHlttl, OHIO

Licenoed IIo Bonded

Ph t814) 992 · 2834.
992 ·6704
FREE ESTIMATES
5 7·2 mo

Sizes 4 Yrs and up
ALSO HUNTING,
SURVIVAL and
VARIETY ITEMS

GREAT BEND ELEcrRIC, Inc.
N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

5·15-'16·1 mo.

9620
N•c:ektnen Caii6U 446 7075
Fulls1lt mattress &amp; boll spnng1
t~ger k1nens 10 weeks old &amp;
motherc•t Caii6U· 4Ui 8264

4

e. e

wee'~

Cell

old k1ttens

614·446 7100

•Industrial

Experttnced wood worktng per
son Apply 2-lO J.ckson Ptke.

2 5PM

lady to dltfk m rettd s tore. age
ro problem RefMenoe reqt11red
Part-ttme RtPIV to P 0 Bo.IC
208. Gtlhpolts, Oh 46631

Matu re l.ty to stay with 1c:hool
age ctulelren Call 614· 446
2188
Ea1y Assembly Work! 1714 00
per 100 Guar~nteed P1ymern
No Sales Oetetls·· Send
stamped envelope Eltn-5847
3418 Enterprt .. , Ft Pierce Fl

33482

EASY ASSEMBLY WORK !
t714 00 per 100 Guaranteed
paymeru No ••I• Oeta1ls·Send

rtamptd envelope

Elan· 716

3418 EnterpriSe Ft P•arca. Fl

'l'ard SaleS

· · .. Giilli'polis....
&amp; Vicinity

RACINE, OHIO
Emergen·cr

2 flm•ly Yard Sele Fn , Sat 20
&amp; 21 9 Wtute Ave Watch tor
~tgns

Old Bidwell School, Arnokl
Subdtv1110n Cuntlnt,
home mterlor etc: 9 00 ?
3 F•m•lv Yerd Sale Thurs S1t
311 Sanders Ortve Clothing

Fn &amp; Sat 28 Centfll Ave 81by
ckHh• . 1ewetrv records. ml•c:

Petta Sale June 20 21
Mad11on Ave

60

01tls clothe•.

led till! clothes baby cloth•

Yard Sale SAt 9 5

J une 21

lmcoln Street

(lldult·c:hildren). shoes toys.
g1met.

mite

G1rege &amp; Petto Sale B.g 4
Famlllet Mens sh1rts IWeaters.
womens c:loth.ng allsaee beds ·
pre.ds, rug1 freezer oonteinen ,
10me an• 8t ctahs. hou•Cihold
1tems too numerou s to m...,hon
4U lanat Or Ju1t beyond

Holzert June19· 20 · 21 , 9·?
Saturday 9 00 Mt ZIOn Rd out
AI 36 Hoo~er c:onc:apt One
aweaplll' 150, hght f1xt1.1r• . fltp
chair, small appliances, ch ildren
full stu badtpread good
dothes . mtt c

5 F1m1ly Centenary Town ·
house Jun1 20 8t 21 clothtng ,
owl lampa, ]eWelry.
tools
piano , c1nne1.
Vard Sale Thufl 19th , Frt 20th
on Llnca ln PJka JUst off 141 at
Centenwy Cth trailer on lift
01shet gla11ware rattlltr. lawn
mowers, dlH1r.,t lin clothl'lg.
Jew•lry , tools ven•tv of mise

Afaghan! clo th• 10rr. ceum·
IC! end mt!celleneous 47 Vtnton
St 9· 4 In case ol ratn ,

cancelled

.. · Ponieroy
Middleport

&amp; Vicinity
................
3 f1m1IV vard sale 43991 Forest
Run Rd , M1nmv1Ue June 20th
and 21st 8 00 6 00

Th1td and Cen!M Sts '"Mason,
W Va Thursday Friday •nd
Saturday Jun~~ 19th , 20th and
21st $400 Chine for $100
302 eng1n11 parts c tothu
d1thes Tupperwere toys , car
bodv etc 9 00 5 00

9 00 to 6 00 S1turday, June
21tt only R•lfl orsh1ne Gravely
Tre&lt;:tor w1th mower, mohair
INtnQ room 1urte, m11c located
'h mtle off St At 7 on Leadtng
Creek Rei Watch fGr s1gns

Petlo Sela 203 Ba1tien• o,...,a
Thur1d1y June 19 , FridiY June

838 E Matn St In Pomtroy

20, 9am-8pm

June 2 1
•tem!

Mtsctllllfleous

~arietv of c:lothtng mens
women• teen• tizea

Vtrd Sal• June 20 July 3 New
1o1110odburner desks. baby bed .

half bed sweeper g81

sto~e

sheets. games, charr•
1 1h miles out

Office 949-2431

OH ,

33482

ttemt. drver. older maplec:oum,

•Residential
•Commercial

ACROSS FROM
POST OFFICE IN
MASON, W. VA.
304-773·5222

Femate ca ltco eat, 6 yrs otd
Must g...,eaway no pets ellowed
m apartment Call 614 246

mtlcellantoul

AIMY SURPWS

For Hours
304·372-5709

Giveaway

5·20-'86'1 mo

!

4 Slk

Pomeroy , Ohio 46769

4

Cab~net mehtrl lmmechata op·
en11gs tor cab~net mekers &amp;
madune op•atorl Hours 8 4
470 South Front St ColuiT'bus,

FREE ESTIMATES

SEWERS · BASEME8TS
WATER UNES · SEPTIC
TANKS • CREEK &amp; FIELD
DRAINAGE PONDS · MOBILE
HOME SETUPS · ROAD
BUILDING •
· LAND

•Refrigaraton
•Dryers •Fuwuers
PARTS and SERVICE

Rt 4. Hyoell Run Rd

9194

Mason. W Va 304 773

abllil111 prlferred) a pan ttme
bookkeeper, Gir1Fnday" Send
tnforma110n dtsued 10 P 0 Box
428, Pt Pteaunt , WV 25550

Wtndows

•BUUDOZING •END
LOADER •TRUCKING
•TRENCHING
•CRANES •DRAGLINE

Meku

WIJIAMS 1RENCHING
SERVICE

tributor for the bend are1 Join
V~r lan.

Streel

•Wuher1 •Dt1hwe~hera
•Ranges

Backhoe ServiCe
Plumbtng Servtce
Custom Welding
Lowboy Hauling
Septte System•

Fuller Brush tnd Aawl•tgh 01s·

S1le Fnday S1bJrday Beth11d

985·'3561

Trenching of Any Type

prepere- no fut foodf Wet

Call 614 367 7225

FOR THE BEST IN
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

Locel Buslflnt w1ll be 1n nt«f of
aaveral employ111 be111nnmg
August Saptember Mld Oc·
tober Cooks (mu1t be lble to
trMSII Of wart"' lmust be 21
years of tgt· 10me ber tending

C0"1JIRY
partlft 1nd

btr1hday

We CI"V Fishmg Supphes

Call for Directions

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

&amp; CAMOUFLAGE

WANT ADS
ARE JUMPING
WITH BAfiWNS

New loco~on:

!CUT OUT FOI FUlURf USEI

Ripley Office
10 14 He

PLUMBING &amp; HEA nNG

Help Wanted

ptCJHCI,

The M81QI Co Ftsh end Game
Club w1ll have 1 work teniOn
Sttl.lrday. June 21st ltlrltnq It
7 00 am Brtng weed and gr111
c:utt1ng equ.pment Thare 11
someth~ng that fNery member
ca n help do We need althehe~
we can get fur preparehon of
KKb F11h111g Oerby

Full 1176

Mini *185

11

Schools, churches,

tamdy reun10ns Call 614 384
21 08 or 1 800 282 2167

2·11-16·1fn

TRENCHING IS OUR LINE

Servtces

SWEEPER and sewtng mac:h1ne
repllr. pert1. and SUJ'phel P1cll
up and dehvery D•~•• Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mtle up
Georges Creelt Rd Call 614 ·

110 1h W Ma~n St.

949·2263
or 949-2168

~II

Employmenl

3 Announcements

ROOFING

PH. 304-67 S-2441

OWNER WANTS OFFER!- RACINE- Have you been lookn 101 acreage woth a noce house' Thos 3-4 bedroom ranch IS
~.:hi lor you and yOU I fa moly room, noce wolkshop, electnc
BB heal

992 3478

PH. 992.-6931

FENCE COMPANY

SIUU ANIMAL HOUtS
Mon.·Wooi.-Thurs. 3-S pm
Tuos. 6:30-1; Fri 1-2 pm
Saturrlay 10-11:30 om
LAIGE ANIMAL &amp;

WNER WANTS OFFER! - LONG BOTTOM - Aneat 3 bed·
0 om ~an ch woth spac oous fa moly room , kolchen woth buolt·m
~:nge and oven unols sepa~ate donmgarea Gas I ale~t ptu;
woodbumer 2 car garage, approx 1 acrewoth gar en spac
and outbuold ong Many features

Buymg da1ly gold 11lver c:otnt,
rtngt , teWetrv. rterhng ware. otd
co1n1 large currency Top prt
c:et Ed Burken Barber Shop.
2nd A~o~e Middleport Oh 814·

Howard L. Writtsel

MIDDLEPORT _ A real steal on a 2 story home WI~~ bed •
rooms. garage. kitchen woth bar. and ll'l a IIJO
ree1
$14 500 00

$27 000 00

WANTED TO BUY used wood 8t
coal heaters SWAIN'S FURNI ·
TUAE 3rd S. Olwe St G1lhpo·
hs Call 614 446 3159

ACCENT

Paul E. Shockey, DVM

3

2282

6-4-'86·1 mo

'

LAN 0 CONTRACT - I 4 acres wtlh a 3 bedroom lobtlte
home lhat os furnoshed Has a sel up tor woodburner oo
buoldnogs. small pond N1ce at $11 &gt;10 00

NEW liSTING -T UPPERS PLAINS - Log home for rusttc
ltVong woth modern conven 1ence' 2 bedroom~,lull ~~l~~:~,
Neslled '"the trees woth approx I acres arn

Jtm Mink Chev · Okls In c
B1ll Gene Jotlnson

614 446 3672

Mobilfl

F1r111 Equl~111ut
Partl &amp; SeNiee

UCIIII, OHIO

NEW LISTING - Yo u should see lhos house' Row voew2
comple tely 'emodeled ln sod e and oot 3 4 bedlooms
baths deck. cen tral a~r, and more $36 9JO 00

uled CMI

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
anel new&amp;r used cars Smtth
BU1dc · Pont1ac 1911 Eutam
Ave GalllpOh! Call 614 446·

18Nie8

FREE ESTIMATES

By GEORGE R. PIAGENZ
Methuselah Uved to be 969 years old, says the au lim of C&lt;&gt;nesos
casually, as If there was nothing unu sual aboul lhao, no need for
exclamation points.
In a way he was right noi to get excited. FivP Old Tesw men I
patriarchs before Methu selah - and Noah afore hom - approac hed
the l,(lX).ycar milestone It was like being in you r 00s loday Willard
Scott, If he ha,d been on TV back tben, may noI haw I'Ven ronsldercd
flletr longevity worthy of mention
Did these people really push the age or l .IXXl lx&gt;forc they dted?
Those who believe that everything tn the Blbll' lllcralty os tru£' say
yes.
A Seventh Day Adventist book say s, "When one considers how
close these pioneers of the human race lived to the creation of ol'(&gt;
world, their longevity does not seem unreasonable
"Not only were their constitutions nearly perfec t ( unaffecto:l by
hereditary disease) , but their food was of the hlghest cxcellenCI'grown in soU that had not been denuded of health giving materials
"The stream of life also flowo:l more genlly There were oont• of
flle fierce tensions which make lhe people old so soon today "
Many of us will settle lor 69 years on thls earth. Forget 969. W&lt;•
don't want lo add years toourllfeso much as life- the good llfr-oo
our years. It won't happen unless we slarl to lak£' ttx&gt;
envlrorunenlailsts more seriously tllan we have.
Eddie Albert, star r:i the old TV series "Green Acres," can he seen
on television today pleading on behaH of tbe Environmental Defense
Fund to " keep our world green." We must Usten to hom.
Nature Is our most precious possession.

5123/'86/1 mo

lawn

Alao

mower repair

Form Equipment

ROSE DCAVA11NG

Precious possession

IJ92-5232

All maJor appliance repatra (tnclu ding mecro-

tOAVILI

NEW liSTING - CHESTER - Really a mce 3 bedro
home woth full basement an d l a~ge level yard Ca~ port &amp; "'
great localtOn on tow n $34 9JO 00

We pay caeh for l1te model clean

TVs, Antennas
Satlllite Sales
lnstallatlan 11nric1

•ft.AOUIS

POMEROY

Wanted To Buy

J,R.'s REPAIRS

BOGGS

•MIDALI

608 EAST MAIN

9

Se1 of hang1ng sceles ior pro
duce Call614 256 6870

I

7J0pm

Lost . 10 month ltior1 legged
Angushe1fM' loltVIC:Inltyof01k
Grove Ad 30C· 896· 3601

388-9303

742-2027

CLELAND REALTY INC.

IJ92·7089

992

FREE ESTIMATIS
992·3525

Prices"

"Free Estimates"

JOJ'

Middllport

Of

614 742 2328

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Afhr S Cal

YOUR KIND OF FOLK!
Y'ALL COME SEE US, YA HEAR?

ketvtlle Cell 614 669 4985

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Installation bailable

HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION The Rev William
Campbell pastor Sunday School 9 30 a
m, James Hughes sup1 Evening service
7 30 p m Wednsday evenin g prayer meet
lng 7 30 p m. Youth prayer serv ice Elich
Tuesday
fMRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Lelarl,
w Va., Rt t , James Lewis, pastor War
ship services 9· 30 a m : Sunday Schoolll
a m • Evenin g worship 7·
m Tuesday
conage prayer mee-ting an Bible Study
9 30 am, Worship service, Wednesday
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH ,
Walnut and Heney Sts , Ravenswood, W
Va Th e Rl'V George C Weirick, pastor
Sunday SChool 9 30 a m , Sunday worshJp
llam
CALVARY BIBLE OIURCH, loca led on
Pomeroy Pike. County Road 25 near Flat·
woods Rev Blackwood, pastor Services
onSund ayatlO 30a m and7 30pm. wlth
Sunday School9 30 am Bible Study Wed
nesday, 7 30 p m.
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSA DE FOR
CHRIST, St Rl J.lll, Anllqul!y Rev
Franklin Dickens, pastor Sunday mom
lng 10 am , Sunday even ing 7 30 p.m.
Thursday evening 7.ll p m.
STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY BAP
TIST CHURCH Pastor Robert Byers
Su nda y School 10 a m , Worsblp servtce 11
am. Sunday even ing strvlce,7 30 p m :
Wedn esday evening service 7:30p.m
INDEPENDEI'IT IDUNESS CHURa!
Inc , Pearl Sl , Middleport Rev O'Dell
Man ley, pastor Sunday School 9:30a.m.;
Morning worship 10. 30 a.m, Evenlng
worship 7 30 p m Tuesday, U ;:() p.m Women 's Pre~yer meetin g, Wednesday, 7, XI
p m. Prayer and Praise service
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APC6
TOLIC - VanZandt and Ward Rd. Elder
James Miller, paslor Sunday School,
10 30 am., Worship Service, Sunday, 7 30
p m , Bible Study, Wednesday, 7 30 p.m
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS,
Harrisonville Road Rev Dewey Ktnr.
pastor; Clinton Faulk, Sunday SchOOl
Supt , Sunday School 9 30 a m.: morning
worship, 11 am ; Sunday evening service
7 30 p.m Prayer Meeting, Wednesday,
7::10 p m
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD
non.Pentecostal Worship service Sunday
10 am.: Sunday School U a m Evening

JIM CLIFFORD

Ne•t D. .r To ""'"" Auto

LOit Black ctt wnh 4 wh1tefeet

Wearing collar Melt Near W1l

•Lomestone
•Water Line
•Basements
•Gas Lone
•Land Clearing •Fill Dirt
•Top Soil
•Septic Tanks •Ponds

59 N. 2nd AYI.

Small m•roon pur•• .,

814 742 3095

POMEROY, 01110
Backhoes, Bulldozers, End Loader, Dump
Trucks, Sell Loading Pon, Heovy Ha~ing and
Winch Tnucks

PO SHOP

Lost

1/ICKUty o1 ANIIfbalt Inn [»rkmg
lot Don t c.r.,bout money, JUI1
retum papers Ravnrd C1ll

6-4-'86-1 mo .

411/tln

"CLELAND CLAN"

EXOTIC BIRDS,
TROPICAL FISH,
HAMSTERS,
KlnENS , BIRD
SEED. CAGES &amp;
AQUARIUMS

Lost and Found

W.-.tad JUnk eutot Call 614

CH£STfR-98S-33D7

SEE ONE OF THE

DOZER. BACKHOE.
Tl!ENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER ,
GAS &amp; SEWER UNES,
RECLAMATION, PONDS.
SPRING DEVELOPMEIIIT,
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
IIo DIRT

PH. 992-7201

JEFFERS EXCAVATING

THE BIRD CAGE
&amp; FISH POND

Call
992·5006
or 742-3147

Worked

Real Estate General

6

1·13 cfn

tEAFORD

~oc

2 TRAILERS
OF
FREEZERS
ON SALE
1 WEEK
ONLY

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Real Estate General

Fr1day June 20 and Saturd1y
9 00· 5 00 All mce
Movmg Sale Setulday 21st
Gold Ridge Ad at Snow . . •lle
Follow s1gns from A1 681

Pt "Piiiasiiiif .. ·

Rd

&amp; Vicinity

Salt June 18\t. • 20th,
ouiRI 218 ffomRt 1
, dtnllttellt. CUrtelru

Yard Sele, 2105 Jefferaun Ave.
Ttlurs and Fri June 19 .,d 20

S•l• Fairfield Cenlan-v

Fairfield AcrN, "h house on
Frt &amp; Set June 20 &amp; 21

Ytrd Sale 821 '1l 30th Street,
Thurs Fu . S1t. Watch for signs.
ckl1hn. game~ . etc

---'

.

�Friday, June

Page-1 0- The Daily Sentinel
11

LAFF-A-DAY

Help Wanted

44

Govemm.nt Jobs. 11S,Oot0
t59.23G-yr. Now hiring. CaU

805-887-8000 bt. R-9105 tor
current flder1lliat .

Ap81'tmtint
for Rant

64 MIIC. Merchandise

Furniah.. 2 bdr. 1pt. utllitl•
p.tlally pakt. C1ll 304· 8715·

Slight paint dam!. Fluhlng
lfrOW elan UHI
ht... non•2791 Noollg tod t2481
Free lalteq;l Few left. s ..
locally . 1· 100· U3 · 0163 .

5104"' 671-1386

Art1 .nd crafts wtnt... For
N1donwide Mail Ord• Mlltkllt·
i'lg. For morelnform~tlon . Mnd
name. eddraa, phone nui'Nier
end ltlf •drtuld 11ampld
envelope, plua lnformttlon
about the type of product you
produce to Meigs County M.te.
Bo)l 346 , Pomeroy, Ohio

C.

2 bdr. 1pt. niWiy rtdecoratld,
nlc. location, adultl only, no

pah. Calll14·441-2404.
Fuml1hed iffkl.,cv tpt. clf'P.t
throughout, private &amp; quiet.
Single worl(lng p...,n ontv
1175. Including water. Call

614-448-4107 o• 814-4482602.

45769
LIVe-In COfT1'11'110ft with elderly

1 bedroom ept. for rent . B11lc
rent ttarta e215. a month that
Includes all utllitl•. Deposit
required of 1200. Contact VII·
lege Menor Apt. Mldclleport.
814-992 -n87 . Equal Houelng
Opportunity.

llldy 1n Huntington. W Vt . Call

304-173-11&amp;51.

'liP'•

World Boo k-ChUdcrah ,
untatiVM needed Part time, full
time , guarantees 1\llillble. 304·

882 -2485 .

2 bedroom. total elec. apt in
Pomeroy Across from Fire
St•tlon 114-992-8215 or 814-

18 Wanted to Do

992-7314.
Will do mowing working in hey
or tobaceo Hauling jun•. or any
odd JOb Ctll 61 4-266 - ~488 .
Wtlltah oare of ahut -ins in their
homes. 20 year e11p . Call 614 -

..6-2590.
I will 00 l=f"Ofeasional 111111111ing. 8
years experience and good re- 1

trences. 304-675 -,195.

21

waste"t dump killed all your

t ermi es. ..

31

tt

Homes for Sale

House In Ch•ter VIllage. 7
rocms, btnment, g•~ge, one
tenth acre. e•y «:ere, nic:e
neighborhood. •26.ISOO C.ll
61 t-986-3671

Business
0 ppo rtu n ity
I NOTICE I

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO recommends Htat you
do buainllt With people you
know . end NOT to stnd money
through the mail until voo have
lniiNIIQited the off~ting .

Establishad buain811 for sale.
Indoor rrinieture golf course.
Downtown Gallipolis . Call 614 -

446 -8222 .

For sale actiVe QIHage butin••
111 "owing convnuni1y Proctor·
~nile , Ohio Call 814-888-8286
after &amp;PM 614-886-&amp;670
A golden opportunity - join
friendtv homt 1ov part••· the
l11ader tor 31 yeaf1 , Openings for
managers and detlers. We nave

the largett and best line in p.~rty
plan. No cash tnvntment . no
delivering or ooll.cting Eem big
rmney plus bonuaet and travel
inoentivM Cetl now tall free to
C1rol Day 1·800-227 -1510.

23

"First the good news, the
seepage from the toxic-

Professional
Services

11f.t Jtory home. 3 beclrooma Ott
12 acrn 1 mile from Middle-

PIANO nJNING AND REPAIR .
rediscover your piano'• beautiful

tone. call tod1y, W1rda Keyboard . 304· 675 -5600 or 675 -

3 bedroom brick ne~tltcl 1n
woods on 5 1cres, bas.-nll'lt, 2
b1th, 2 car garage, fire place,
mim barn, call for tppointment

304-675· 2365.

Mult Sell· OwnersiMving 1t1t1,
3 bedrooma. din1ng. femltv
room, baaemtr't1. geriQe. neet
and nice, low 40's. 304-6715·

3030 .. 675·3431 .

4YJ 1crn With road frontege on
counly rold 8 Tick Ridge Road,
half land, levtl g11den land good
trail"' lite or hou~e site. Joint
Clyde Welker llf'ld on thrN tid•
11 Thurman, Ohio, jutt off 35
Wnt from Oellipolis, Ohio. Call
614 -246-9105.

By owner- small 2 bedroom
home wtth 1h aerehillaic:lelotand
outbuilding. 6 mtlet south of
Gall ipolis. Krtner Ridge Ad . Firtt
houte on right from At. 218
&amp;14.000. Pay ••.ooooownand
owner will help f1nance balan ce
Call 614 -«6-2917
3 bdr. home. cloll to town . 2
baths. partly furnished . Gat
heat , low utilttiM. Call61 4 -245 -

9248.
3 bdr , large llrtchen, bath.
utilitiy roo m, single garage, 2 c1r
driveway, nice yerd . garden
space. f1nished garage. Call
614 -446-1358
Handyman ' s Speciel dupllllil rental. In need of repair, Vinlon ,
Oh10. Priced cheepl 810.000
Call 614 -246 -5818
Ni ce eucutive type home 3100
h hv . aru. inground pool,
wM or Without acreage, S.R.
1 60, 4 mi. from Holzer. Leaa•
option a po11ibility. Call 814Outl ity home, newly remodeled
choice locatton on College Rd .
Syracule, new complete kilehttn
end laundry. 11r conditioned.
lergelot. 614-992·5324.
2 bedroom Duplex house par·
tially furnished . Low utilitl•. in
Pomtroy. Call days, 6a-992·
2381 or 614 -992 -2509 even·
ingl.
2 bedroom house in Pomerov.
*200 furnilhecl , *186 unturnttl'ted. Pty own uttlltiM , wood
bu1ner, llrQe yard Call dtya
814 ·992-2381 or 614 -992 2609 eveninyt
Goverment hornet from 81 . (U
,_,air). Delinquent tax property.
Repo11111ion1 . Call 806 -6878000 Ext. H-9806 for current
repo lilt.
70.:100 lot . 11fJ 1tory house. 3to
4 bedrooms. d ~ hw11htf . double
ranga sto~e. fully c.rpated.
wood 1nd coal burning atova.
Clote to acttool end hospital.
Call 814·992-8080. Any rtnonlble offer may be conlldertd.
&amp;room house. 1.lacr• Double
c• garage. Locattd on Rote Hill.
Bargtin priced 820,000. Call

Sele or tflde. New Hl't'en. 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, tiriiPitce,
gerege. 838,500.00 or 8300.00
month p4us depostt, 304-2732471

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

12ll60 Shultz covered porch,
rural watet', metelstoraga bldg ..
with Jot. Crown City. Call
814-266·1444 or 614-268 1 389 or 304-675-1328.
Make otter lue thtn 86,000
mobile home, overlooking river,
nlce home for old• iolltl C1tl

614-448·2378.

1986 Mantion 14.:70, CA. ell
electt1c, livid in 1 mos . C1ll

614-992-2259.
1972 Ac1derny hou11 traitw
12x86 with 1 4x12 tip out, 3
bedrooms, fully cerp.ted, new·
completely furnished ex cept tor
bed1 Get furn1ce, 88,6000.
Cell 614 -«6-1912 . May be
seen on l1ttle Bull Skin Rd . First
tftiler on left.
Price reduced 12x60 2 bdr. 2
lots, At. 218, mtny elltru. CtU
11 4-245·6049 ..-~ttings .
1973 12•70 treiler partly fur ·
nished with an •ere otl.-.d must
sell. 15.000 firm. Call814· 256 ·

_

All ~ectrlc. 2 brldroom home.
8a81board hel1. 'h basem~nt
with woodburn..-, garage, cable
TV tnd MWage. Low utllltiM.
excellent condition. SA tcre. on
Yeltowbuah Ad . In Sutton Town-

ohlp, Racine. t33,000. Call
814-949-2110.

•

'·

Nice 2 bdr •partmenta in duplex
house. Main St. Chahira. Ohio.
Fumishld • Wltlr Ptid. CaH

814· 888·6222

mi . out At. 588, U25 month
Ref. S. d.,osit required. Call
614· 256-6789 or 814-266·

6205
2 bedroom furn11hld houte 1n
Middleport. Call 614 -992·

6304.

underpinning. 2 bedroom, bath,
kitchert , living room, aU fur nished but living room . 614·

742-2281.
MOBILE HOMES MOV ED ;n.
surtd, re11ontble retn, Call

304·576-2336
1982 Clayton 12-.60 111 elec:.

In Middleport, 3 bedroom, fully
cerpeted, carpon. Limited to 2
chiktrtn. No p111. UIO. per
month plus depostt. Awilllble

33

Farms for Sale

142 IC:ftfarm with 3 bdr. houae,
l1rge bam, 2 pondl. Cell 814-

245 ·9248.
&amp;8 Acrn At. 180 in Ewington,
o~erlooking Raccoon Creek.
Clun puture land , s o me
woGdt. Bt~utitully r•toredtwo
1tory home with atone flrepltce.
fuel oH furntce. L1rge barn,
workShop, grainlf'Y, milk hou11
end hunting cabin . Rurel w•t•.
Shown by eppointment onty.
Call 388-81510.
6 acre mini farm for 1111
McCumbef- Rd.. Rutl~nd . 3
bedroom houae. bern. pony
ahad. chrcken coop. Cell 614-

992 ·2143 o• 614-992·2724
after 4 :30.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bdr. fum . or unfurn . convenient loCition. UPPif River Ad .,
all utllitill peid except electric.
Sec. det- req. c.. 614 -446·
2 bdr 12d0 Holllff Perk,
w11her-drver hook-up. Y, mi .
past Holaer Medicel Ctnt•. Rat.
Itt dap . required. Cell 614-446 -

4369 .. 304-671·9710.
14x70 3 bedrooma, 8280 mo
Call 814-387-72HI or 814·

367·0522.
Furnished 12•60 in Centenary.
w•shar ·dryer, AC , water peid.
1225 mo . plu1 dep . Call 814-

446-2390.
Nic. 2 bedroom mobile home on
Routh Line in Ch•hire, Ohio.
On nlc•lot CJI1304-773-5828.

5914.
Furn ished, 2 bedroom, utilitl•
pertitltv paid No pets Call

0338.
2 bdr. utllhlet panlett¥ turn.,

•115 mo. Coii304-17B-5104.
New 1 bedroom 1pertment. Ctll

614-446-0390.
Completely furnished, all elect1 bdr. 1200 mo. Adults. mer eneM. aec. deposit. 458 Second
Ave. Ctll 8U· 448· 2236 or
Furnlthed room e1315. Utilitl•
pd 919 2nd Gallipolis. Share
bath. Singll mala. Call 614-

&amp; Acreage

Fumlshld 1pt. 2 bdr 1175.
131 'h 4th Gallipolil, Wtt• pd .

Call614 ·441·4411 olt• 8pm.
Lot tm A•ceoon Creek. Privata
seeure, quiet, 40x100, blth
house. boat dock, water 1nd
elliCtric •v•ilabte. R..eonlble
priced . Cit I 8 14· .48 ··305
Norm Snydtr. 1-304-372· 15588
Mike DtYton.

tcr•

Building ah11 3 to 17
3
mll11 Wed of HMC. Ctll t14-

446-8221 .

1 to 5 tcrll, pltrtillly- wooded
lots. Tupplt'
and Ch11ter.
wat•andapprovedroldtoetch
lot. Reaaonlbly priced, wll
finance. 10 peroant down. Cal

P'.."'

514-981-3184.

Fumlahed tpt, t bdr. 920 4th

Galllpolll. '250. Utllkl• pd.
C.. lll1.t· WI· 4410 1ft• 8pm.
Old.,- COUplll 2 bdr .. utlttt•
panly paid •150 mo.. Call

304·175-5104 •• 304·6751311.
Hou11 • iplrtmant for sinal•
Call 304'· 1715·151 04 or 304·
6715· 15381.

1----------2 bdr. lpt,, ®wntown. t180
whhoUt utiVti... *281 whh
UIHhlel. Depo8h reqult'ld. CaM

114·441·2121 1:00am - llpm.

CENTER. SR 35 W. Gallipolie,
Ohio. Ctlt 114· 448-8777 , eve.
814-448-3592. Up llont uactort with wtrrantv over 7&amp; ulld
trtctors, 1000 toole.

Camping
Equipment

Autoa for Sale

198" SS Monte Carlo. Whitt
and blu1. AC, PB. PS. Tilt,
AM · FM cauette. raclinlng
bucket Hltl, 4 new t1r11. Price
•a&amp;Oo. Good condition. Call
after 5:00, 614-367-7191

3588.

24 ft. lkalecon type hey elwator,
•lao Slmm....,talshow cattle. len
Bickert 88 Feri!J. Ca11814· 387-

71 Ponti.c Ll Mans Sport
Coupe 3&amp;0 .-.gina. 2door. v1nyl
topwithcreglfli Call!14 -992·

Over the cab truck campe1
Sleeps 4. Call 61 4· 992 -3090

3507 .

4265.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Routa 33, North of Pomlfoy.
Urge lots Call 814-992 -7479.
Trtilar lot ior rent in Portland.
Acro11 from Pott Office Treil•
hook-up. 870. per month . Phone

614-843·5185 .

304-458-1078.

7727.
66 Building Supplies

8-N Ford Tractor. Naw patnt.

rebuilt, Nnt good. t1310. 614Building Meterlall
Bloclc, brick, IMWtf JHpet, Win·
dowt. lintels. etc. Cl1ude Win·
ter1. Rio Grande. 0 C•ll 614 ·

245-5121 .

985·4222 ..... 6 pm.
New HoU~nd 310 Baler. Defuu
Model. Like new. t4200 . Cell
614-986-4143 .tter 8.00 p.m .

Trllltr IPICM. Stnd Hill Road
con\lenlent to schools, 1tore111d
hospitll. City sewer 8'1/llllble
Inquire Ros•lea, 304-876-4800
betwlMI"I 9·00 tnd 4 :00 weall
deyl .

Building meterlalt, cement.
blockl IH IIZH, Ytrcl or delivery .
Gtllipolit Bloc:lt Co., 123"11 Pine
St. , Oalllpolla, Ohto Call 614 ·

448-2783.

Oli~•

4 7 Wanted to Rent

Bloclc, brick , mortar and maIOnry .,ppli81. Mount•in State
Block, Rt. 33, New H1ven , W.

3a55.

Vo. 304-882-2222 .

62 Wanted to Buy

Wanted like to rWit 3 bdr house.
prefflf batement, in or around
Gallipolis Need b'jl July 16th
Call 614-448-4448.

56

ball!', John Deere hty
rake 1500. tor both 304-896-

2985

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE U
Olive St., GelhpoHt. NIM'. used
wrood-coll sto~• . e Pc wood LA
atite *399, bunk bed1 1199,
antrcn rl(l!in.. 899, ,..,., &amp;
used bedroom 1uit11. rang11,
wringer wethera. &amp; tho•. New
liYingroom su1t" 8189- 8599.
lampt, also buying coli &amp; wood
sto~et . Call 814· 446 -3159 .

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wathen. dryan. refrigerators,
rltnges ; Skaggs A,pllances .
Upper Rivtf Rd . betkle Slone
Crtlt Motel. 614-446-7398.
County Appllence, Inc. Good
uted appllancn and TV nts.
Open 8AM to IPM . Mon thru
Set. 61 4·446 -1899, 627 3rd.
Ave. Otllipol11, OH.
VIII~

Furniture, new &amp; uaed .
Large sec:tkJn of qJIIity tum•tura . 121tl Eutern Ava .,
Gellipoli1.
For Nle H•rlequin Romance
boob 270 for 876. whrte
wooden tabla 1215. yellow k1t·
chen chint cabinet 160, ell in
good conditfon . Set at 265 So.
Fourth Ave ., Middleport, Oh.
30" Frididalre electric range,
look• like new, t100 or best
otter C•ll61•· 446·7729

446-1149

3 UKC bltck

7B62.

Pickens Uted Furniture. Good
quali1y used furnitur•. Op., 9to
8 or cd for eppointment.
304-676-6-483 Of 875· 1480.

54 MiiC . Merchandise
Csllehan's Used Tire Shop . Over
1,000 titM, Iil" 12, 13. 1• . 15,
18. Hl.5. 8 mllll Cllt Rt 218.
Ctll614-21i8-6251 .
Plutic cittem 11111 approved .
pl11tlc 1eplic ttnk.t, P'lltlc
culverts, metal culvens. RON

EVANS ENTERPRISES. Joel&lt;·
oon, Oh. 614-281· 5930.

Echo trlmmera 888 .75 tO
t299 .96 . Hu1qvarna uws.
Echo uws, Yardm1n mowers.
New • uaed. 111 mak•. Childera
Saw Supply, Koontz-Stilor Rd .,
VInton , Oh. ,C ttl81 4-388-8164.
RCA -VCR recorder, .exc. cond.

Call 114-446-4423 o• 614 ·
251-1856.
WhHI chair, Everest &amp; Jennings
folding 111Vtler· new condltfon.
utllng 1260 . C1Uifter 6:00PM.

e.

tan. 6 months
old, 1 male, 2 female, t76 each.
1 htlt bleck • tan halt mountain
ear female I mo. old •ao. 1 2 yr.
old bladl Itt tan femele 8160
Cell 81 • ·388 -9614

AKC Reg i1tered Cocker Sp~niel
puppiea 8lond tnd Buff colors.
T1111 tnd Ouklng CIIWI done,
elto de· wormed. 8125 Call

614-742-2738 .

Coon Hound dog. part Red -Bone
part Blue Tick, 2Y.t yelrt old.

304-173-5475.

PR UKC treeing W1lker. mela, 3
months old, tire: Gr..,d Nrte
Champion D1m Hard Tree dog

304-875-1070.
57

7 Cro11brld OOWI with Clfvll,
tee Bred It B &amp; S Produce, 205
Viand St., Poinl PINitnt.
Appro.:lm1tely 1,800 laying
hens, ceg•. 71/t, ton Bin ancl
Auger egg Orldar with con~eyor. San or ulde. Buffalo. W.

64

Hay

&amp;

4295 .. 114-985-4333.

Mixed hey llrge equtra baln,

&amp;

You pick 8.150 quan . Roush's
Berry Ftrm. Union Ctmpground
nNr New Htven. WV Call

304-882·2237.

Glutburn 't Farm Market, St.
At. 180 near Porter. Open tn
buain••· Fr•h vegeltblet &amp;
fruits. We eccapt iood tt1mp1.

114-388-9027.

Vine ripe tomttoll, Oeorgla tnd
Caronna P..chet, home grown
broccoli and til typa fNk tnd
vegs . B &amp; S Produce, 206 Vian d
St.. Po int Plu11nt. W. Ve
Mc:Ctuallnd Ftrm and Garden,
2 Mad• broceoll71 cent• buahel
87.00 . Cabbege 4 helds 81 .00 .
Sweet com In 2 weekt. US Rt.
36 S, 15 mUll, Southtide. W

v•.

Autos for Sale

814-245-91109.
1979 Rlbbitt. Coli 614· 3881426 ....... 5 614-38B·BI23.
F1bergl111 Nova 327· 325 HP.
chrome .,,lne. m-22 tttntmls·
lion c •• e ·-992·89 .. 1 .
84 Chryatlt' LIIIH automatic AC.

18.000 mil•. PS. PB. nice,
05,500. CoD 614-379-2721.
1976 Buick Electra ftlr condl-

don, 1600 CaH 114-388·9832.
79 Oldt Cutl111 Brougham.
Southem Clr, no rult . All power.
New tirM. U295 . Call 814·
~46 - 0785 . MulliN to believe.
1984 Dodge Ch•ru• tir cond.,
auto , exc. cond. 22,000 mi. Ctll

Atbblt buck, dO•. fryeu &amp;
bunni11 t2 to •e Ctll81 4-387-

0824.

For tale or trede 6x8 U· haul
trail• 1800 velue 7 months old.
wm sell ro, 8500 ca•h 01 trade
for good Grtvely tiller-mow• or
riding mowtr heevy duty . Cell

614-379 -2556.

814-992-7401 .

1976 Ford LTD

I Mill Supp lie s

441·0155.

1\ i IV I! S iill.k

1975 CX500 Honda. AM-FM

814-2156·1148.

Wither, drvet. coucn. ch1ir. and
1abl•, limp, bdr . .,ite. drt81ar

61

Farm Equipment

Call

CROSS I SONS
U.S. 35 WMt Jo-n. Ohio.
a 14-216-14&amp;1.

Coachmtn pop-up t.,t camp•
a boets &amp; traMar 1500 each.
1979 Toyot• ST wtgon 1uto

Muny Fargu10n, NIW Holland,
Bueh Hog lttel Service. Over
40 wed trtc:tDre to Clhooae from
• OOfT11 .. tallne of new und
equiptNnt. laflllll •lectlon In

•3.300. Call 514· 446· 7018.

a

a

s .e. nJ~I~

C1ll

1981 POtttiac Grande LeM1n1. 4

d• .. n.ooo. Call 614·446 2577.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Trucks for Sale

1982 Muda. 5 IPitd, AM -FM .
82499 John•'• Auto Salu,
BuiMrllle Rd . Gallipolis, OH
1980 Dodge D-60, 4spd.. fldio,
topper, t2, 199 Johns' s Auto
Salu, Bullwille Rei. Gallipolis,

OH .

19n FOI'd F· 100 PU, 6 c:yl.,
AM -FM cnsette. e.:c cond
Priced to sell Call 81•-2t5·

5040

1981 ChiV Silverado one ton
with '17 Jer Dan roll beck bed,
IIIIICfllltnt candrtion Call 814·

AM -FM Clll., ••tn clean. exc.
cond. c.n 81.· 2•&amp;-15040

1979 Pinto 4 C'/1 .. 4 19d .. ano.
1974 PlyiiiiUth 8atell~a t360.
C.H 814· 318-9303.

1983 Dodge Power Rtm . IUIO·
matlc:, 4114, tow mileege , excel·
lent condition. 861500. 614986· 4222 attar 6 pm.

2473.

19715 Ford F100, pickup , auto
trenemiuion , PS, 304-175 ·

73

Vans

&amp;

4 W .O.

2518 .
198&amp; CheYyconvtrsionvtn, low
mlleqt, AT, AC, AM -FM axe.
cond. C1ll 114· 448·4141 eft•r
Itt on weetends

1978 Sportater 82,100. Cell

614·245-11426.
1982 Chav. 4x4 3015 V-8 , auto,
ltlort bed, 12.000 mil•. e8,500
to ... Mil tl5 ,200. Ca1181 4 -446 -

.4.195. CaR 614-446 ·7322 .

___

71 Dod'- Dlptomet 1utomatic.
AC , tully lotded, t1 .500.
82.000 mil•. C•ll 114· 4418·

9178 Mytlmao•614-446-4671
olt•I:OO.

1171 Ford Grenade PS. PI, air,

like • -· C411114· 258·6228 or
114-2111· 1417.
197&amp; G. Ply"""'tll F"'V. 197S

Mercury Mon•rd't. Both 4 dDor.

••· Coli 114-992-7075. 8 :00
am .· 7:00pm,

Motorcycles

114· 446-7904.

1978 Harley Davidaon tow rider .
10.000 mllet. Like br1nd new
See at Bostic Motora. C1ll

114-446· 9211 .

81 Honda 8150 11 good oondi11on. t91i0 Ctll614-992-61•4.
1810 Ktw. .kllTD750 . Excel·

lent condklon . 1950. OBO. Call
114·992· '11192 8
188. KIWIIIkl KX80. Cell
114-982-!11168. Syrtcute.

TO HAVE MY FIRST
FAINTINI:&lt; SF'E"LL.

AND I OFF!:R

Y65TERD&lt;'-Y

NO~~~:v

AND IT RAINED
ALL. DA-Y.

I'

325-6136

•

Need repeir 1n11de or ouli' Call us
at 61 4 -992 ·6658 or 61 4·99 2
2934 . 20 years experience.
RON'S Tele~o~ l tton Ser\1 1ce
House ca lh on RCA , Quuar.
GE Speci1llng in Zenith Cttll
304-576 -2398 or 614 -44 6
2454 .

'- ·21

FRIDAY

6/20/86

RINGLES 'S SERVICE , expe
rien ced c trpenter, electrician.
m.1.11on. painter. roo fin{l jin clud ·
tng hot tar appl1catton) 304·
675-2088 or 675 -7368

EVENING
0
(])
PM Mogozl no
7:00
I]) Man f•om U.N.C.L.E
(J) SportsCenter
(I) En tertai nment Tontght

Rotary or cable tool drilling .
Most well• completed umeda¥ .
Pump sales and 1ervice 304-

895-3802

Carpenter. remodeling , room
.cldltlon, build ing tepatrs. bloch.
roofing , peinling, cemont worh .
304-675 -&amp;152 .

82

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

ET talks to country mus1 c
star Tanya Tucker a bout
her recent career come·
back w ith he r h1t sing le .
"One Love at a Time"
fl) ffi Hogan's Heroes
Q I]) Joopa•dy
([) Nightly Business Report

liD News

(Jj) MacNeil-Lehrer Newsh-

our
tl) (f]) Divorce Court
@ Private Benjamin
® Wheel of Fonune
7:30 0 CIJ I]) Now Newlywed

Game
I]J NFL Yee•book
W CD Taxi
Q I])@ Wheel ol Fortuna
([) A_9_0ny

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and Pin e
Gallipolis, Ol'l io
Phone 614· 446 ·3888 or 614·

II) (1.2) En1ertainment Tonight ET talks to co untry
mus1c s tar Tanya Tuck e r
abo ut he r recent career
comeback with h er h1t Sin·
gle, " One Love at a Time"
(]]) Major League Baseball:
Chicago Cubs at New York

Excavating

Good-1 E• cavating. basements.
tooter!! , dri\lew.eys, sep tic tanks ,
landscaping. Call anytime 614446 -4537, Jemn L. Davi11on.
Jr. owner.

Matol3 h.s.)
@ Jeopardy
B:OO 0 CIJ illl Kn1ght Ride• (60
min.) In Ste reo
(]) Doris , Day's
Best
Friends
00 Auto Racing ' 86 : Mint
400 Off Road Racing Fror11
Las Vegas. NV (60 mtn)
I]) Iii I]) Webs'"' ICC)
Webster plays Cup id for
Ka thenne ' s
glamorou s
a unt and Geo rge 's fa th e r

Trenching Service wa1et , gas,
and elaC1 ri c Free ast1matas

304-773-5839
B5

General Hauling

JamO'II Boy a Water Ser\lice Al so
pool s ftlled Call614 -256 -1 141
or 614 -446· 1 175 or 614 · 446·

(RI

f.il CD MOVIE : ·M;dnight
OUerings·
(£) Mountain State Cale·
bration (2 l'l rs )
@! II) [Z) Twilight Zone A
b oy com es f ace to face
w1th the ph a ntom unde r h is
bed. a patr of p are nts a rt"
terrif1 ed by the v1deocas
sen e th ey re nt fo r thetr son
a nd a man unde rgoes a b1·
La rre pe rson a lnv c h ange
when he murders hi s lover's husba nd (60 mm ) \A )
(j]) W ashing ton Week tn
Review (C C)

Ken 's Waler Service We ll s,
cisterns, pools and watetbeds
ftlled. Call 614-367-0623 or
614 -367-77 41 or 304 -675 ·

1247.

Coal. limestone, grav el et c:
Delivered 1 ton and uP J1m
Lanier, 304-675 -1247 or 675
7397

87

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLST ERY SHOP
1183 Sec Ave .. Galllpotl !i
1514 · 446 -7933 or 614 -446 1833 .
R &amp; M Furn11ure Manufacturtng,
St. At. 7, Crown Chy, Oh Call
614-268· 1470, call Eve . 614
446 · 3438
Old S. .new
Upho stered

MowreY' s Upholstermg serving
tri county area21 y&amp;afl. The best
780 Hond• Shadow. 1984 low , In furn iture upholttertng. Ca ll
mll~~te. ctndy red. 81•·992 ·
304 - 675 -4164 for tr ee
7339 .. 114-992·6382.
&amp;ltlmates .

CAN'T
FORECAST
ASGOODA5

~

'!OL.lo&gt;.N
RHYME .
•

j__

-~
_.a
_

E1'ening Television Listing s - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Ftttv Tree Trtmmtng. stump
removal. Call 304·675 1331

Starkt Tree an d lawn Serv1ce.
landscap ing. 304 -576-2010

TOO MD'rQ.J

METEOROLOGY ,

;•

79t 1.

'88 FOI'd A1nger XL, 4 wh"l
drlva, crulee, euto, 14,000
mil•. e11tendad wtrrtnty. V-8.
lhort wheel ball. Older fullaize
trudc •• trllde in and assume
loltl, phone 304-675-7842

HOT M.AR5HNALJ..ON AND

MY FRIEND, Tl-lt.TS

'rOW SAID IT
WOULD BE SUNNY

.._,

7018 .

1982 Dattun 4114 PU nice. sherp
clun truck , a.:cellent condition,

I THIN K I11A ABOUT

STIQ\W8ERRY BITS .

U ,OOO. CoU 614-256-1393.
1978 Ford F-150, 4•4, 400,

TUNA FISII PIZ.ZA WITI-1

Stanley Staemer 2 room mm
imum 820 per room Gall1a
Meigs· Vinto n Counties. 1-BOO

83

lutO , PS , PI, •II major mechen·
lcs ntbuilt. Neeclt tome body
work, t2. 200. Call 61 • ·441·
1761 or a14-388-9811 1fter &amp;.

(AI-.J'T \VAT(t-1 CABL!.
IJI'.UJS N...H/./'CM. .. .

Exterior &amp; intertor stucco PlaJ
tfr &amp;: pluter repairs . low rates
Call614·256 1182

1988 Wrecker 440 Holm t
wench with swing booms,

1980 Fiat X· 19 27.000 mll11.
Cell eft• 5:00 pm. 114· 448-

:____
Sundey c.+lt.

WI'ZER AND 1 NEED
'fOUR HELP!

OLD' OOT'· A· CHAtJ&lt;E. OOoiiJA'r'·
JOSE., GET-lOST' S~ 1

E11tenor &amp; intertor stucco Plat
tttr &amp; plater repai rs Low rates
Call614-266 -1182

446 -4477

15 ft. fibeftlau boat, 40 tiP
motor • trailer. 8700. Call

77 Oldsmobile Om-oa good

IN ANP ouj.

... B-ECAUSE THE

DON'T \AORRY,
YER HIGHNESS.
WE1LL GET 'E M!
COM E O N ,BOVS!

CCU.D IT' HAVE. &amp;EtJ AT~

Un conditional lifet1me guetantee local referenc" furnish ed
Free estimates Call coll ee1
1·614· 237 -0488. day or night
Rogers Bas ement
Wsterprooftng

e

74

..,nd. Coli 114·388-8417. No

81

1979 Con~.,.lon v1n, 1986
Chevy truck, nlc•. 1978 Chevy
Luv. Ctll aftiH 5 , 814· 448·

82 ChMr.rte Scooter 415,000
mlln. t111, therp•t vltte In
O&gt;wn . Coli 614·445-4347

S MOKE S IGNAL!

448· 7322 .

1994 VW GTI 5 opd.. AC,

3821 .

Carpeting for •ale Cell 814·

M50

614-387-7187 "'" 6.

KOOGIE'S RIGHT,
CAPTAIN' THAT'S
DEFINITELY A.

Servi ces

' 84 Chevy S-10 wuck. V·6, 4
epeed. mtnv opttons, spony,
22.000 mil••· 88.000 00. 304 -

5181.

1967 Chevy lmptla 398·326
HP , red . black intartor, PS, PB, 2
dr . ftndtr ekirte. exc. cond,
good lhow ctr. t3,000 Cill

~N,fiAI&lt;IN!i

t\LLEY OOP

304-875-6399 aft• 5.00

Home
Improvements

1972 Dodge, camper tpeci1l.
phone 304-875· 4681 .
1978 Ford MuJtang 4 cyl., new
!Wbuilt motor, low mlie-ue. Call

EV£:~ygopy Jc.f'~P,S

L..IFE ON THE' eDGE-.

1980 Coact! man camper. 22 ft.

8930 .. 1175-3346 '

1968 Ford Log Truck. New
motor. •1200. Call 6U-742·

614-446-2323 .

59 For Sale or Trade

tub, awning, air oop d, lleeps 8 .

1970 Ford Dump Truck. Call
Oeve at 814· 992· 6461 daya,
514·992· 2941 or 814-992·
3301 evenings.

814-256·6417.
Fruit
Vegetables

1973 Dalt• Oldsmobile
noo.oo 1976 Muatang
tliOO .OO. 304-675 ·1252.

445· 7904.

For 1111 Style 100 lyon &amp; Heaty

Large round Hetlton Baler and 2
..,t equlpm~nt trail•. Call

cae1ttt:e, vane ftanlng, 1816
l TO Ford 2 door hardtop fair
cond, 3 famtl• Bugle pup1 a
weekt old Can after 6:30PM

Grain

Good mix.t condltion.t hey tor
1111 in field . Eety ICCIII Ready
June 18th on. 81 00. 1514-986-

71

harp . Plea11 call 304-

3662 .

1974 Chevy C· 10 62 .000 mtln
IICC cond., 82,000. Call 614 -

Hammond organ with drawbtr
11ops, ate . ld ..l for1mall church
or home. exc.Htnt, 81 ,000 Ctll

Grl\l..., 8 epeed, elactric start,
30 In mowlf. rotary tiller, tulky,

~amo .

458·1082.

Tran spn rlalinn

18 Ford pickup truck &amp; 72 Chevy
lmp•lt. Call 814-441-2430 .

I twin bed , baby
614·441·3224.

Ar~lbien HOI'e•. purebred Are·
bien ttud ...-vice. Special discounts to youth groups A. &amp; J .
Arabians, Leon, W. Ve. 304·

WORf&lt;t:O , 71f?-

1978 23' Star Crah, carefree
awning , .. c. cond , fully car·
petad . 304-!182· 2476 or !18 2-·

1980 AMC Spirit, call after

a,oo. 304-675-6574

72

Musical
Instruments

614·446-7322 .

1982 Chevy Cevalier. 4 cyl.
1uto. 4 door. 82,660.00 Mil or
wide for truck. 304-676 -41 a 1.

boar. Call

01 25. 304-171-5879

614-11&amp;9·8311 .

7.6 HP. Coll814-446 ·1721

614-245-9241 .

Ve., 304-937-2266.

AKC raglstwed Beegle puppies.
304-675-6072 .

cona~n

2 end t1bl11 end coffee tabla. All
aolicl oak . Pree1ictlly new . Atking 875. etdl. Cell B14-992-

2 brld gll1a, 1 Duroc

AKC Reg . Britteny Spaniel pup pies. 10 weelut old, 2 males,
8100 each. Clll 61 4·682·715•9 .

1912 Trevel Tre1ler. Sleeps 6

1979 Chevcnte892!!i. and 1974
Cam1ro M60 . 304-896-3865.

Rabbina 83 00 each . Clll 81 4·

51 Household Goods

1903 Studebaker, runs good,

675-7330.

Livestock

Hou~s

THE'N E''f~NitiJ' LIVING

good body, t750 00. 304-676- Twenty teet . Very good cond1
tion . Call 614· 992 ·2941 or
UB4 .
614-992 · 6481 .

1977 Olde Cutla11 auto tr~ns ­
mittion, tir cond, good oond,
with many new perts, 304-875 ·

Now buying thtll corn or Ill'
com . Call furlatnt quotll. Ai~er
City Ferm Supply, 614· 446-

63

895·3638.

1973 travellrailer. 18ft Good
oondition 81500 Call 614 992 · 7403

1975 Dodge Dart 8450 304-

tMpoS"SIBLE' ib
lt=l:~ i"RAGIC OF

1976 Starcraft foldout campor,
lleept 8, COIT'C)Itte with stove.
ice bo• . light• S. 11nk, a~~:c cond ,
like new Call 614 -388-9755
1fter &amp;PM .

'79 Corvette, white 1nd red.
34,000 miln. 304-876-7478.

Pets for Sale

Oregonwynd Cattery Kennet
CFA Himalayan, Pertlan lf'ld
Sl.-n•e kiHans . AKC Chow
puppiu. Ntw puppiM &amp; kitt.-.s .
Cell 446-3844 after 7PM.

Merchan dise

New Holltnd 7 tt htybind,
OICCtllent. Get'tl 86 Grtnder
mixer. 21" mill m11n11. Exc
aJnd, 304· 273· 4215.

2 •cellent C~ill•c• . 81 Sedan
De Ville end 82 Fleetwood
Brougham d"Eiegance. Both
cars perfect. Mobile phonea
IVIilable in both Clrt . 614 -992·

IT":&gt;

CIA

t&lt;NOWLE'-DciE'

IS A DANGE'f'?OUS' THING,

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

18 ft. camper good co ndition ,
1'h m1111 At 141 . Reatonebl a

Farmal M 1rtctor 8850. C1ll

IF A LITTLE'

1980 G. Plymouth Fury, AM · Reese hitch adjustable ball
FM, eir. 1980 Oltton 210, &amp; mount. loiK.I levelert &amp; sway
speed. Cell 814 · 992 -7075 contrail $300 304·876-46 79
8:00am.· 7 ·00 pm

Utility bklg. SPL: 3D'x40'x9'
with 16'•8' tlkler • 3' aerv.
cloor. t5.255 erected. Iron
Horae Bklgl. 614-332-97415
collect.

304-675-4154.

Nicely furnllhed mobile home,
eft tpt , central tir end haM in
dty, adulta only. Call 614-446 -

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT

71

U111d J20 Ditch Witch Trendier
and Bob Cit Loldtf'. 614·894-

814-742-2339 o• 614-698 8817.

MENTS lEqual Housing Opportunity) monthly rent 1t1rt1 at
•178 for 1 tt.droom end *212
for 2 bedroom, depo1il *200.
laceted netr Spring VIII-, Pl.u•
and Foodlend. pooltnd Cable TV
tYiillblt, offl~ hourt 11 pollible10 tmto4pmtnd7pmto9
pm Monclt¥· Frklrt. Call 614·
448 -27415 or IHve m•s~ge.

F arm E qu1pment
•

814-318· 9303.

Mobile home for rent, 2 bedroonw. •160.00 per montk.

JACKSON ESTATES APART-

~:;::::;::::;:~:::::-r-;;~~~~;:::;:;:178

19,600 btu air cond, csll 1fter

For Sale Custom DJWperi•. Mini
V&amp;n.tien Blinds. Vertic•IBiinda.

TO

FRANK AND ERNIE

0756.

large trttleJ space on BulavilleAddison Rd !1. Rt 7. Call
614· 387·0232 or 614·448-

BUD. AND ANYWA'I-

3- 6cyl engineforule. 2 Ch8Vy.
1 Ford Call 614· 446-442 3 or
614 -266-1656 .

C.ll 614-2118-1984.

46 Space for Rent

M•· ~"-

Auto Parts

Two 4 piece jaCket outfita, lizea

5 00. 304-675-1139.

MAYB E YOU' D W &lt;E
COMe ALONG .

l'D LIKE TO, 8UT I'M
60 1Nf:J FIS.HINP WIT H

&amp; Accessories

For rent Sleeping Rooms tnd
light houte keeping moms. Perk
Centre! Hotel. Call &amp;14 -446-

814-367-7148.

Apartment
for Rent

76

ted t2491 FrNlett. .t Few lahr. 1 &amp;1
enytlme.

10 -12, phone 304-175-2766.

I'M 6t'VtN6 A ~PSEc. H .
TOMORR:OW TO THC NEW
ADUlT READfR$' GROUP, ''THEU5E5o OF YOUR LIBRARY."

2949.

SM locally. 11800)423·)0163,

68

44

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1973 long «&amp; trtetor 8 ft.
tiller. gradtr bl .. a, ditc .. fertilize
tprlld.,, boom poll, 14,800.

Furnished Rooms

Ui.W ATT~IWef.lT
€J/i&lt;~'l 'lEAl': ' ~ ..-....

1972 PipBitone Mariner 18 ft.
120 horse 1nboercl motor and
trailer. 83.800 00 . 304-676 -

Buy A.wleigh Producte whol·
tale, Dale and Wilma Wood,

Medlum -lilld wood or coal
burning Buck Stove, M50 .
Electric range, 1200. 080 . Call

In Recine. 2 bedroom. large
yerd, clolt to schOols. Call

441·4416.
36 Loll

Beef Sale, Sklet 11.21, Fronta
81 .0!, Hinds 11 .&amp;2 . Price In·
cludlt cutting. wrapping tnd
freezing. Whole Primal Cute
Whole RibtyH12 -14 lb av.-IQe
U .80 lb. Whole ~ York
Stripe 12-14 lb IYtriQI• t4.015
lb. Choice Tand,.tlon •1. 99 1&gt;.
Short LcMn U .51 b . Full Loin
13.26 lb PrlcelnctuO. cutting
Depoait required . Guerante.t
tender. C1ll 304-675 -5313,
Point Pln11nt, w. v 1.

676-1318.

514-446·2581 .

ott ... 1-904-596·8429

75

qto. t1.70. u .8 .D.A. Choice

2 piece liYingroom aulte. like
new . Clll614-266·6083.

614-949-2253.

ric. 2 bdr. apertment. 12215 mo ..

188 ecrn in letert, large home.
2 blrnt, own.- fin., cing, 304-

Williamson Mut Merkel,
U.S.D .A. PttmtEIHt Sala. Ski•
*1 .29, Front Qtt. 11 .08, Hind

Two girls regular bicvcl•. one
28 inchet and one 2• lnc::h ...
good cond, wilt tell , ...onlble,

OOW HE 6\1/E&gt;S ~

1983 Honda 6&amp;0, CUllom deluxe, 1, 100 mlllt, bc cond,
mutt ... to tpprecltte. celleftet
5.00 304-576 -2408 .
1981 KX1215 Kaw11kl. good
c:ond. 304-773-15128

Winm•tll' Model 37, three 18
gauge, one 20 geuge. Set
RemingtOn 141 riftn ior 111e or
trlde. 304- nl -1685.

d

-

Motorcycles

304-882-2903.

45

July 10th. Calll14-992-7853.

09.500. 304-576-2485.
1983 Knoolwood, 3 bedroom
trailer , IIIUITII loan with a low
down payment, 30 .. ·675-8208
Of 676-1600.

1509.

3090.

Cion to IChoolt tnd ator• In
M•dd leport. Call 814-992 -

-------------------·
New Moon. 1 Ox60. Porch.

pertitly furnished , 860.00
Wllk, 304·676 -3100 Of 676·

Houte for rent 2 bedroom,
unturnithed. fully carpeted
Deposit uquired . Cell81 • · 992·

1980 Liberty 1 4x54, 2 bed·
room, unfurnished, vinyl undlf'·
pinn ing included. Must sell. Call

304-773·5873.

2 blll•oom opt, utiUtiet paid.

3 bdr. blth 6 htlf, FR , locl1ed 3

2 bedroom mobile home tor rent .
Near Racine. 614 -992 -6858.

7 room house 1 v~ bttA. 4
bedroom, gerage. 770 Aah St.
Middleport Ohio . 814 -992 6714 .

Phone: 614-949· 2140.

367-0440 .. 614-448-3780.

1131 .

34 A. Farm. At. 1 Leon. Make

Rntored home. Vine St., Recine Kitchen. new oak Clblnlla.
living room, dining room. 3
bedrooms. beth. lnclud• •"
c urtains . Price . 835.000 .

4 bdr. carpeted. refrig. e. atove,
tree gu. Kyger CrM ar11 .
A"erencet &amp; deposit. Call 814-

8518.

895·3450.

7861 .

Houses for Rent

3 bedroom home bath &amp; 111, full
g1r1Qe. central tir, 1 mila from
Holzer. Ctll 614-448-4U6.

N. Park OrNe, 2 blclroom, Ml
basem.-.t, F-A gtt he1t, central
AC. det1ched g•rage. enun·
ble 8.6 pflf cent loen if qualify

61•· 4415·8221 .

Sentinel -- Page-- 1 1

1

20, 1986

175-4831

SLIGHT PAINT DAMAGE.
Flaahing tnow aign U99 Ugh·
tiel, non-trrow t2791 Nonllgh-

The Daily

Ohio

7758

bore •lahtlng, factory rtbtuling,
hourt 11:00 dll dark, ctll 304-

Fumished, 1 bedroom. ut1lit1•
patrtielly paid. No pltl. C111

Po~oy- Mic!&lt;ll::egrt,

1986

1981 Honde CB 900 F. Super
Sport, 8900 00 . 304-676 -

TONY'S GUN REPAIRS, ocopa

304-675· 1090.

APARTMENTS, mobile homee,
hOUIII . Pt. Plautnttnd G•llipo-

June

74

1nvt1me.

8886.

614-949·2263.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®bf Larry

""'w

7842 o• 114-194-15001.
41

304-675-3030"' 875-3431.

614-678-2513.

Pomeroy School District 3
bedrooms. cerpet throughout.
1 Vt bath. Mu.t see. Shown by
appointment Call 814-992 ·

Rr. ntal s

4 room houll, wtth ex1ra lot. In
Crown City. 618,600 Call

1q

446-7322.

By owner 4 acree. axc loc.wtion
near Sencl Hill Rold and Rolling
A.crM, 304-675-1991 .

Split level. 5 , ..,.. old. family
room. fire place, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, 2 car gar1ge. large corner
lot. uau mabie 8 .6 piN cant toan,

MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT 35.
PHONE 614-448·7274.

4 bedroom house, firiPIItte, 3
mi. aouth ofG1IIipoJis. 829.900
Call dtys 614-448 -1615 or
evttnmgs 614 -446 -6222 .

304-576-2336.

614-245-5818

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY

Homes for Sale

&amp; Acreage

Aehton building lot• with public
w1ter, mobile homes permitted,

1971, 14JI70 Kirkwood, 3 br, 2
iull b•tht. some remodeling
304-n l-506!1.

3824 .

Real Estat e

36 Lot&amp;

pen. o36,000. Call 614·992·
3702

304-875-6260.

Watlf wells tlr'llk:td 1nd drtled
Free estimates . Call 614 -9925006 or &amp;1•· 742 -3147.

31

Pomeroy 2 bdr, NtYtofl Run,
t175 mo. tlOO deposit, yard,
patio, Call ahlf 8pm 814-992-

~~~;"~~~~~~~r;~:;::-~~~~~~~~, lis

Financial

Friday,

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

20,

B.30 (3) Flippo•
l~

Between Games Show
(!) Iii I]) M•. Belvedo•o
(CC) Marsha ' s d ec 1s 1on to
Qu it la w sc hool IS met Wit h
de f1 ance by Mr Be lv e d ere
and th e ch ildren (A)
(f'O Wall $treat Weak

9:00

0 · 00 [5I Miami Vice
Cro c ke tt a nd Tubbs use a
bea utiful women as bait to
trap a bruta l d rug d ea ler.
(60 m1n .) (A) , In Stereo

(3) 700 Club
llJ Top Rank Boxi ng from
Atlantic City. NJ (2 hr s ., 30

m1n J Ltve
(J) Major League Baseball:
Atlanta et Cinc1nnati (2
hrs .. 30 m in .) Live
I]) MOVIE: 'Chinatown'
0 I]) M•. Sunsh1na iCC)
Wh en Grace describes a
woman who seems ideal
for Pa ul. she arranges a
date between th e m- with
unexpec ted res ults (R)
lfO) lEI (j]) MOVIE: 'To Be
Announced'
[D G reat Performances:
Ma n from Moscow {CC)
Pan 2 of 3 Wynne jo ms
Penkovs ky on h is return to
Mosc ow but the threa t o f
the KGB places both men
m d ange r (60 min .) (A}
9 :30 1iJ I]) ABC Comedy Special : The Faculty (CC) S 1x
ed u cators seek to adva nce
t h e t eac h ing p rofession b y
th e tr work 1n an urb an
schoo l syste m (A ).

10:00 O

CIJ !lll Stingray 160 mm I

ball 'BB (60 m on .)
(I) Entertainment Tontght
ET talks to country mus1 c

® Whet's Happening Now
cr:J It's a Living
(]) Profiles of Nature

star Tany a Tu cker abo ut
he r recen t career co meba c k with he r hit s mgl e,
" One Love at a T1me".

(fil Wild America (CCI
(Rl At the Movies

f.il CD MOVIE: ' Lady f•on.
tlenstein'
0 I]) ABC News
(U SCTV
@ MOVIE: 'Stone
Deod'
'

12:30

0

our
@ Newswetch
10:30 (3J Jack Benny

@l (l) INN News
[D Sneak P reviews In
S tereo
@ New s
11 :00 0 ~ ® 0 I]) ®I lEI (j])
@ News
Bill Cosby Show
f!l C1J Love Connection
(]J In Search of the Trojan
W a r: The Singer of Toles In
Irel a nd . a Gae li c tale-teller
d e monstrates the o ral tra dittan of tell1ng s torieS over
10 or mo re ge nerat1ans
(60 min .)
{J1) Non -Fiction Telt.v1sion
Two hun dred years of
Sh ak er hi s to ry a re re vea le d m tl'l ree 1nterv1 e w s
With Sh a ker s . a re l1g10 US
gro up w hose e ffect s have
gone far beyond th e ir num b e r. (60 mtn )
1 1:30 11 00 lUJ Tonight Show Toni ght' s g u es ts a re Cuug T
Nelson
and
wa itr ess/
c o lum niSt V1tg1e Wh1t e .
{60 m1n ) In Stereo
(j) Burns &amp; Allen
(4) SportsCenter
(5) Night Tracks Power
Play In Stereo
(6) WKAP in Cinci nnati
@) ('f) One Step Beyond

m

Iii

1: 15
1 ·30

2:00

3:00

SATURDAY

6/21/86
EVENING
7 :00

ClJ Campbolls
(4) flshin ' Hole (60 min l
(R I
(S) Major League Baseba ll.

Atla ntu at Cincinnati (2
IH s ., 4 5 min .) ltve .
(B) W (7) Small Wondo•

0

( i!) ~ Hea Haw 160

min)
(91 Wild America (CC)
~ Wheel of Fortune

[11) Newton's Apple !CCI
lEI ll"2l Solid Gold

(f(\ lt's a

7:30

Ll~lng

IJ Cl) Oos Rlo s
(3) Guns of Will Sonnett

18 VJP's
Cai'JX't

9i"ap&lt;lrt

26 S ubju ji(ate

27 Undress 36 Sau cy
28 Lambkm '~ 38 Stripli ng
40 StatuLe

cry

Z9 Threefold
( preI)
30 Accele rate

33 Borde r
34 Mom's
admon1tion

35 Orink

by

brl---t-

up

37 As a total
39 (}is!jolve
&lt;:hf'mi..:ally
41 Rost•

Even man-hungry Bl anc h e
f1nds 1t diff1 c ult to tolerate
her ni ece's prom1scuo us
nature (A). In Stereo

m'fl

32 flr az1lian

25 Living

28 Interdict

0 (]) illl Tho Golden Q;rls

1J'fl~~

lo r Dolly
3 1 fla m e

24 Seaman

27 Rational

Ste reo
I]) Benson (CC) On a
busmess trip to Germa ny .
Be ns o n and Kraus a re mi staken for sp1es. (A).

fraJ(nwnt

Bob

1'jlJ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ·

10 Disprove

30 Greeting

22 Colorado
India n
23 Canunnas
film
24 Spice
26 Converge

® Q

9 .00

8 Paid hill

color
12 Utensil
19Great Rood 17 Mature
21 Yellow
20 American
ocher
publis her

(]) ill! 227 (A). In

Henrl A.rnotd and

42 "M'A"S"H"

rolt•

Lee

Unscramble these lour J umbles.
one leuer to each square, to form
fou r ordmary words

DAILYCRYFI'OQUOTES - H•re'show to work il :
AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

ALVAN

r

.. __ _J
..
NIFTE

letters.
apostrophes the length and formation of lhe words are a ll
hint... Each day the code letters are different

I K

6-20

1

One letter s tands for another. In trus sample II ts used

I•• the three L's, X for the two O 's, e tc. Smg le

-- -- -- ~ - ~

l}J Too Close for Com-

fort

lEI lnl MOVIE: 'Tho Heart Is

{1"1 Australian Rules Foot-

U

or Koppel
5 Barter
15 Trawler's
6 "Hannah and
necess ity
-Sisters" 23 C losely
16 Sty le craze 7 Superintend
confinf'd

14 Betel palm

(1Zl Airwolf Hawk e
mu s1 battle a second verSIOn of Airwo lf that m a v b e
more powerful than th e origmal plane. (60 mm) (A)
G] Austin City Limits: John
Anderson/ Lisa
Gilkyson
Tonight's guests are John
Anderson and LiSa Gilkys o n . (60 min)
[jJ) MOVIE: 'Biuoboard'

(R)

fl) Cl) MOVIE : ' Brewster
McCloud'
@ MOVIE: 'This Gun fo r
Hire'
4 :30 lJ) MOVIE : 'Last of the Desperados'

ruler 's

decree

UJ EJ

0

ove r

(studted)
3 Egg-shaped
4 Turner

13 Muslim

()J Seei~ Things

8:30

in a way
2 -

II Spree

setion'

CIJ MOVIE: 'Gunf;,o o1

IAI

missile
9 Floa t

W ffi MOVIE: 'The Convor-

News

[jJ) Comedy Break
3 :30 [ §t lnday News
4 :00 @ Auto Racing ' 86 : Mi nt
400 Off Road Racing From
La s Vegas , NV . (60 m1n .)

ACROSS
43 Restyle
1 Dick and 44 R1dge
.lane's dog DOWN
5 U.S.
I Climb

(CC)
Arnold 's
En g li sh
teacher plans a f1tt1ng pun·
1Shment wl'len he dlsco~o~ers
that Arnold has not reed an
assinned book. !A) .

I]) 700 Club
@ Mazda SportsLook (A)

Indian Gap·
® Auto Racing ' 86: American Racing Series From
Milwa uk ee, WI (60 mm)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

(CC) When the pol1ce stake

160 min I
® 0 (JJ Dlff'•ont S1•okes

([) Puttin' on the H1ts
(j]t MOVIE: 'One Million
Years B.C.'
(I) Father Knows Best
(1) News

Devil'
2: 15 ® CNN Headline News
lEI (j]) News (R)
2 ·30 (!) SportsCenter

(D) ABC News

12 :00 (:fl Jack Bonny

0 (]) illl F•;doy N;gh1 VI·

O CIJ

0 (]) illl The Facts of L1fe
out the g1rl's shop in en effort to catch a group of
cou nterfei1ers , the g1rls decide not to tell Mrs . Garren
(A). In Stereo.
(I) America's Junior Miss
Pageant (60 min .) Live.
(]) Golden Gloves Boxing

Cold

f.il CD MOVIE: 'E ye of 1ho

lllll Taxi

a Lonely Hunter'
(14) Trapper John , M.D.

8 :00

(RI

CD Soap

I]) Tho Love Boat (CC)
W hen a priv a te weddin g
party boards the shi p , the
bnde's father fa ces imm e dutte bankruptcy . th e b est
man fa lls m love w1th th e
brtde's SISle r, a nd a wed dm g c rash e r is o ne of th e
pa rty guests (60 mtn .) (A) .
I]) MacNeil-lehrer News h ·

6S,..._-.."u(

® Jeope•dy

deos In Stereo.
(I) Best of Groucho
([) Night Tracks In S tereo
I]) ABC News
Iii I]) Haweli F;v..o
(I) Austin City Limits: The
Gathns/ Nency Griffith The
Gatl 1n Brothers and Na ncy
Griffith are the guests (60
mt n.)
C1]l MOVIE: 'E lmer Gantry '
1 :00 C3) Dobie Gillis
(!) Roller Derby (60 m1n )

In S1ereo .

W

f.i)

CRYPTOQUOTF.

J

IUNBART~

YX

I KI X

WHAl'THE CON FI~MEI' EJACHE~Oit: '~

tTALCOE±
.J I (

Now arrange the c1rclcd lett ers to
lorm the surprise answer . as s ug·

VIEWS WEI&lt;:E.

J I
·Ms-8°11 J-( r l I 1 ]-( 1 I 1 )"
."'"~::~;~~::::~~~:ges::ted;b:;ythe above cartoon

(Answers tomorrow)

Ycsterda~·s

Jumbles: BANJO HEFTY JACKAL SIZZLE
wtlat a coward might do when he gets tnto a
'' tarn ''-SHAKE Uf&lt;.E JELL't

I Answor:

c

X l ' 1..1 X Y
X I' X Y

N S M M

s

t-~

A

1\

I!

' .I

K Z

I'H: M •AXY

Ao X

~

&lt;I

~

T I

1-:t J XI-: T

D X A

(;SJIIi.SHII

I'

I' X

~:

1·: I '

M K u II

I K .I

K Z

A (I

S U

V

~;

" X
r\tiX

H II I' .

N S IIII &lt;lX MM

'Yettterday'" Cryptoqunte: Till·:

TI { I IE 1111-:i\1 . IS 1'\11'1'

tii'I'OSEII 1'0 Til~: Ht-:/\1. 111 1'1' 1. 11·:~ IN IT /\N il
Ul.t:SSW AIU: TilE t:n:s TIIIIT 1-"I NP IT
l o\~11-:S
I!I I H.~t:IJ ,

IA!Wt:l.l,

/

�..... .

~

Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio .

,..---Local briefs:-_,
EHS Band Boosters meet Monday
A meeting of the Eastern LOcal Band Boosters has been set for 10
a.m. Monday at the high school.

Chicken barbecue set Sunday
In conjunction with the Heritage Weekend, the Pomeroy Volunteer
Fire Department wlll stage a chicken barbecue Sunday at the fire
station with serving beginning at 11 a.m. Chicken dinners will be
$3.50; chicken only, $3.

Benefit sing slated tomOITOw
The Mason, GaiDa and Meigs Crusade for OrriS! wUI hold a benefit
sing at 7 p.m. Saturday at the Syracuse Church of the Nazarene.
Singers wlll be Kim Williams, Winning Side and the Almond Family.

Coin club meets Monday
The OH KAN Coin Clulb will meet at 7 p.m. Monday In the ·
Riverboat Room ct the Diamond Savings and LOan Co., West Main
St., Pomeroy. TherP will be a social bour and trading session at7wlth
a coin auction to foUow the meeting. Refreshments wlll be served.
Anyone Interested In coins Is Invited to attend.

Sherry Arnold presented awanl
Sherry Arnold was presented the OJtstandlng Student Science
Award at the 12th annual awards and recognition program by Dr.
Ray Skinner at Ohio University's College d Education.
This award Is presented to tbe undergraduate and graduate
student In education majoring In science and Is In recogniton of
accadernic achievement, creativity, personal characteristics and a
strong commitment to excellence In science teaching as judged by
members of the faculty In the College d Education.
As an undergraduate. Arnold held the highest grade point average
In the field of science In tbe College of Education for the J985.86school
year. She !sa 1~ graduate of Meigs High School andwlllbeajunior
at the univerSity In the fall. She Is the daughter of Bobby and Bonnie
Arnold, Horner HOI Road, Pomeroy.

Friday, June 20, 1986

Sum sought in judgment
Westfield Insurance Co., Co!um·
bus, has flied an action In Meigs
County Comrnc,n Pleas Court
against CindY Warden, Pomeroy,
and Martln McAngus, Pomeroy,
requesting judgment of $19,761.94.
Plaintiff charges that on or about
Feb. 23, 19!r&gt;, as a result of the
defendants' negligence, a fire occurred at the defendants' rented 916
Locust St.· ~partment In Middleport. In settllng the claim of the
insured landowner, the Insurance
company paid the landowner the
sum of $19,761.94. The action has
been tlled by the plaintiff to recover
damages.
A conllnnation of sale and order
for deed and distribution has been
!Ued In an action by James Stewart
against P.M.A. Enterprises Inc.
The plaintiff has been granted a
deficiency judgrnentd$24,597.38by
the court.
Home National Bank, Racine,

has been granted a default judg·
ment of $5602.50 from Roger Dean
Miller, et a!.
A motion to supress evidence In
the state's case agalsnt Mike T.
Manley was heatd by the court on
June 12. The motion was made by
the defendant with his counsel, D.
Michael Mullen. The court has
sustained the motion and ordered
the evidence In question lnadmlssl·
bleat trial.
A case IUed by the State of Ohio,
Department or Mental Health
Reimbursement Services, against
Daniel Talbott Jr., has been
dismissed.

Weather forecast

SoulhTA!IIIral Oldo
Variable cloudiness today, with
scattered thunderstorms through
early this afternoon and highs In the
low SQs. Clear tonight, with a low
near60. Sunny Saturday, With highs
Legion dance Salurday In the low 80s.
The probablllty of precipitation Is
Ell Denison Post 467 of the 50 percent tnday and near zero
American Legion, Rutland, span· tonight and Saturday.
sors a round and square dance from
Winds wlll become northerly at 10
9 p.m. to I a.m. every Saturday to 15 mph today and light and
night. Music by the True Country northeasterly tonight.
Band. Donations at the door.
Ohio Extended Forecast - SunEveryone welcome.
day through Tuesday: Fair Sun·
day, with a chanced showers and
Correction
thunderstorms Monday and Tues·
day. Highs will be In the !lJs Sunday
The Grande Squares West Style and Monday and ranging from 75 to
Square Dance Club Is sponsoring an 85 Tuesday. Overnight lows will be
open dance Saturday, June28, at St. In the 50s early Sunday, climbing
Peter's Episcopal Church In Galli· Into the 00s .Monday morning and
polls, not this Saturday, June 21 as ranging from 55 to 65 early
erroneously announced.
Tuesday.

Afe~s b~rd __~co~n~tin~ued~fro~m~pag~e~1--------------------------------------at the Salisbury School and said
they wanted their chlldrm to
cont tnue attending that school.
They said they also felt that lt is not
good for children to be transferred
from school to school and objected

reacty for that session.
In other actions last night, the
board accepted the resignation of
Zelma Stewart, a cook; Debra K.
Buck, as a substitute teacher and
named Rebecca Windon as high
to this.
school cheerleader advisor.
Supt. Morris said that there are Coaches employed for the next
no statistics to prove that children school year include Bob Ashley,
In one school of the district are assistant varsity basketball; Rusty
receiving a better education than Bookman, boys' assistant reserve
!bose In another building and he basketball; Cliff Kennedy, boys'
Indicated that he felt that some of freshman basketball; Gordon
the parents attending Thursday Fisher, high schools girl's track;
night's meeting were over COn· Jim Oliphant, high school boys'
cerned Individually on the upcom- track; John Arnott, girls' varsity
softball; Rick Blaettnar. assistant
Ing changes to be made.
Board President Robert Snowden high school track.
Indicated that parents can have
Mlck Childs, social stud!&lt; s;
Input Into the recommendation to Michele Mowrey, English and Bob
be made by Supt. Morris on the Oliver, mathematics were em·
matter by contacting the superin- played to teach In the Meigs High
tendent. The board also would not School summer school. Monies for
be above holding a special meeting the summer school program will be
to discuss the matter further with reimbursed to Meigs Local through
parents, he stated. The next regular the Meigs County Juvenile Court's
meeting was set· lor 7 p.m. on July youth grant funds.
Hired as full time secreta•les for
22rather than on the regular date of
July 17 and the recommendation by the next school year and to work a
Supt. Morris on changes to be made sevl'll hour day, 183 days plus 10
to relieve the enrollment at the days before school starts and 10
Salisbury School is expected to be days after school closes were

Board....

Continued from page 1

rus garage.
The board voted to rescind
professional leave for one non·
certified staff member going on the
senior trip since profession leave
cannot be granted In accordance
with state law for non-certified
personnel. It was voted to hire a
part time person to work for the
treasurer pending funding. The
Individual wlll work 20 bours a week
with the pay to range between $5
and S6 an hour depending on
qual'lftcations. It was agreed to
make necessary appmprlatlons for
participation In the SEOVEC pro·
gram and to the county office for .
the speech and hearing program.
HH!red were Vicky Layne, Chapter 1 reading at Chester; Carolyn

Reunion scheduled
The annual reunion of the late
Albert and Eliza Hill is erroneously
announced for this Sunday at the
Portland Park. A covered dish
dinner wUI be held at noon. The
reunion wUI be beld on Sunday,
June 29 and not this Sunday.

'l'rlpp as cheerleader advisor. The
contract of Bruce Myers as a part
time janitor at Chester was
terminated.
The next meeting was set for 8
p.m. on June 26. Attending the
continued session were Supt. Roberts, Principal Buckley; WendY
Haller, Tuppers Plains Principal;
Grace Weber, head teacher at
Riverview; Rick Martin, Chester
Principal, board members Roger
Gaul, Jim Smith, Kathy Manicke,
Susie Heines and James Caldwell
plus other staff and residents of the
community.

Lottery winners
CLEVELAND (UP! ) - Thursday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers: Daily Number

Granted professlonalleaveswere
Martha Vennarl and John Redovlan, Aug. 11-13, a counselors'
workshop In Dublin; Blll Williamson and Tom Werry, Aug. 21·22, an
automotive and diesel Instructors
update seminar In Lima; Dale
Harrison, Tom Werry, Becky CotterUt, Gloria Van Reeth, Kay Proffitt,

attend the national VICA leader·
ship conference and skill dymplcs
In Phoenix, Ariz., this month and
she was also granted permission to
have eight students attend and
demonstration cosmetology tech·
niques at the Ohio State Fair, Aug,
8-11.
Supt. Morris presented a list of
students In the distrtct who have
received recognition for oulstandlng achievement and perfonnance
durtng the past school year. The
board wUJ look over the list and see
If It wishes to present formal
awards to these students over the

myer, July
28-3!,and
vocational
Linda
Yonker
Karen educa·
Face·
tlon conference In Dayton; Ron
Logan, July 27-.'10, vocational conference, Dayton; Kenda Wlutams,
elementary physical education
workshop, Athens, July 14-18.
Treasuer Jane Wagner was
authorized to advertise for bids on
school accident Insurance, Heet
Insurance, gasoline and ott pro·
ducts, bread and bakery products,
milk and dairy products, tires and
tubes and Wagner was also autborlzed to advertise for sealed bids on
the sale of used buses and \'E!hicles
no longer needed by the district.
Non-certificated job descriptions
approvedbytheboardlncludedbus
driver, cook, custodian, library
aide, maintenance, secretary,
teacher aide and bus mechanic.
Linda Yonker was approved lor

A special meeting was set for
summer.
June :ll for the board to consider
appropriations. A resolution of
thanks was approved to the Middleport and Pomeroy Fire Departments for their work In providing
lighting so that graduation could be
held on June I when poiW'rwentoff
due to a storm. A second resolution
of thanks was addressed to Carl
Hysell and his group for cleanup
services being done oo the athletic
fields in Pomeroy and Middleport.
The board moved Into executive
session With principals to. discuss
personnel at the close d the
meeting attended by board
m e mbers, Snowden, Dick
Vaughan, Larry Powell and Bob
Barton; Supt. Morris, Treasurer
Wagner and assistant superintendent, James Carpenter.

Cheryl Batley, Lots Hawley, Donna
Nease, Donna Ohlinger, Carol
Riggs and Unda Stobart. The
secretaries wUI be placed in the
same schools In which they have
worked as secretary-aides.

an extra trip for two students to

Hospital news

Veterans Memorial
Admissions - EverPtt Roush,
Pomeroy; Paul Michael. Porno·
roy; Ernest Lambert, Rutland;
Hattie Frederick, Pomeroy; Ber·
tha Dill, Pomeroy; Edith Sisson,
Pomeroy; Judith Lambert, Middleport; Robert Baker, Reedsvllle;
lshi Grimm, Pomeroy; Raymond
Justis, Middleport; Earl Shephard,
R.eedsvllle.
Discharges - Robert Curry,
Addle Bumem, Blanche Wlisen,
Melvin Manis.

I

Area deaths

Dayton Strickland

Dayton Strickland, 66, Portland,
Oregon, a native of Pomeroy, died
Thursday at his home following a
lengthly Illness.
He Is survived by his wife,
Lucille, a son, James B. Strickland,
and a daughter, Janet Faye Elliott,
all of Portland, Ore. Also survlvlnng are his mother, Flo Strick·
.land, and a sister, Pandora Collins,
Pomeroy; and a brother, Joho
Richard Strickland, Woodsville,
five grandchldren. and several
nieces and nephews.
Memorial services will be held at
the Caldwell Colonial Mortuary In
Portland at fp.m. Monday.

Margaret Hammer
Margaret M. Hammer, 66, of Rt.
I, Uttle Hocking, died Thursday at
Scenic Hills Nursing Home, Galli·
polls, following an extended Illness.

EMS receives six calls Thursday
Meigs County Emergency Medl· dleport at 3:13p.m. to North Second
cal Services rPports six ca lls Ave. for Della Roseberry to VeteFrlday; Middleport at 4:47a.m. to rans Memorial Hospital; Middle·
Second Ave. for Kathryn Warner to port at 5:18 p.m. to North Third
Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy Ave. for Raymond Justis to Veteat 9:11 a.m. to Pomeroy Health rans Memorial Hospital; Salem
Care Center lor Hilda Fredericks to Township and Rutland Fire Depart·
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Mid· ments at 12: 02 p.m. were called to a
dleport at 9:39 a.m. to Pomeroy brush fire on County Rd.lO. The fire
Cliffs Apts. for Bertha Diehl to was extlngulshed In two hours.
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Mid· r------------

Filing for divorces In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court are
Richard Whited, Middleport, from
Dorothy M. Whited, Middleport,
and Belinda Sue McClure, Middle·
port, from Eddie Ray McClure,
Middleport, both charging gross
neglect of duty and extrcme
cruelty.
Filing for a dissolution of their
marriage are Paul Russell Pullins
and Diana Lynn Pullins, both of
Middleport.
Granted divorces were Lisa c.
Zuspan from Kenneth w. zuspan,
and Barbara Rupe from Bobby G.
Rupe, both on grounds or gross
neglect of duty.

appv
40th
ROBERTA
ROMINE
SAWYER

r~~~~~~~~~~~d~=====~~~~~;

HEATH U~~~h~h~dE!tH,2~~~T CHURqt
Middleport, Ohio
PH. 992-3039
'

REV. C. SONNY ZUNIGA WILL PREACH ON

"Witnessing Is Our Business"
SUNDAY, JUNE 22, 1986

9:30 A.M.-Church School For All Ages
10:30 A.M.-Morning Worship
"We Love Because God Loves Us"

..
,

Sund il y

'

.

I·

Mrs. Hammer was born In Little
Hocking to the late Andrew B. and
Amella Clrr!lla Walldendorf. She
was a homemaker and a member
of the Decatur United Methodist
Church.
Surviving are her husband, Ed·
ward at home; one daughter and
son·l~·taw, Sandra and Bill Syden·
stricker, Belpre; four grandchild·
ren, Chris, Brian, Angela and Eric
Sydenstricker,all of Belpre; several nieces and nephew; one
sister-In-law, Ethel Belyus, Little
Hocking; one brother·ln·law, Leo·
nard Massar, Belpre.
In addition to her parents she was
preceded In death by five brothers
and two sisters.
Services will be 1 p.m. Saturday
at the White Funeral Home In
Coo!vllle. Officiating will be Rev.
Wesley Thatcher and Rev. Don
Kochersperger. Burial will be In
Decatur Cemetery. Friends may
ca ll at the funeml home from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 today (Friday) .

Couples seek divorce

~·

r.~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;~:::::::::::::::::::::~

Learning for
themselves
-Page B-1

Vol. 21 No. 19

June

Copyrigh18d

By JIM WEIDEMOVER
'flrnes.Sentlnel Stall
GALLIPOLIS - The goal of
Gallipolis Developmental Cen·
ter Is to assist its clients in
learning how to lead a
somewhat-closer-to-average life
outside the centPr.
The center's vocational train·
ing program has done such a
good job that Superintendent
Pam Matura feels it s tim e to
move the clients one step closer
to that goal.
The clients have progressed so
well. according to Matura and
Program Director Debbie
McCoy. that an expansion to the
vocational program has been
planned for the near future.
The vocational program cur'
rently consists of four stages,
ranging from a readi ness class
to actual small task work.
But the interest of many or the
clients ha s been so great and
they have advanced so much
that Matura and McCoy said
they plan to sclect approxi·
mately 25 clients wbo have
made exceptional pmgress from
the program and hope to be able
to pay them.
"Many of them tlhe client SI
have progressed further then we
ever thought they would," Mat·
ura said. "So we're going to tr,·
· to Improve what we have now
and take a certain portion of
them and pay them for their
work .
" We may even be able to gel
some contract work lor them,..
she added .
Matura's ~oalls to prepa re the
client s for work life out side of Ihe
cent er. But she was quick to
point out that the center will not
be a sheltered workshop.
'
"We won't he as complex as
Guiding Hand or Gallco ... she
said, refening to Gallia Count y
Board of Mentral Retardation

and Developmental Disabilities
operations. "We are just going to
expand on our current
program."
The plan focuses heavUy on
community assistance. The cen·
ter's newly-formed Vocational
Advisory Board, which wlll
direct the expansion of the
program, Is made up of arre
wsiness people.
The chairman of the board Is
Ca rl Waugh, a Gallla County
Local Board of Education
member and former GDC em·
ployee. Included on the board
are Mike Allen and John Hood,
city 001ists; Clinton Smith, a
former greenhouse worker; at·
torney Donald Andrew Cox;
Denise Shockley, a Buckeye
Hills Career Center teacher;
and Walt Stowers, a ret ired
school principal.
The board, assembled for the
first time In January. wUI assist
In making decisions affecting
the vocational program's
expansion.
"We're just looking for the
community to help oot." McCoy
said. "We just want to he
suppliers."
The expansion wUI offer the
clients the opportunity to learn
more advanced skills and hoperuDy, Matura said , make them
feel more proud of what their
doing.
"We want our people to have
meaningful things to cl:&gt;." she
said. "To give the additional
training that our peopll' need to
know -to make It In the
community."
McCoy said GDC officials
have no plans to include any
more than the approximately
110 people In the program wbo
are oow participating. They plan
only to select the top 25 for
advancement and perhaps add a .
few teachers. she said.

JACKSON PfKE · RT.JS WEST

- 4 4 8· 4524

We

SAT · SUN A
WEDNESDAV ·All SEATS 12 .50
ADMISSION EVER¥ TUESDAY 12.50

The
Postage

\

--

Muon,W. Va..

m-mt4

BANK

tnt J•U.

fteuant,
Q.U%1

"ft.
w.

:Wh~

Sew lbven, W. V11 ,

Member FDIC

...zw

SEARCHING - Galllpoli~ volunteer firemen are seen preparing to
return to thP Ohio River Saturday afternoon to seareh for Ouistopher
Laron Close, 15, St Pine St., Galllpolls, who drowned near the Ice piers
below First Avenue around 3 p.m. Close's body was recovered at 6:28
p.m .. city poHce said.

Area youth drowns in river

Pay

EXCLUDES CIERA COUPE, CUTLASS 442, 98's &amp; CORYEnES

JIM COBB

CHEVROLO -OLDSMOBILE-CADILLAC
::~~o~~~:H~·

"FORMERLY SIMONS OLDS.-CAD.-CHEV.''

PH. (614) 992·6614

HOUIS:
Mon., Wed., Fri. 8:30·8:00
Tu... &amp; Thurs. 8:30-5:30
Sat. 8:30·4:00; Sun. 1:00·5:00

SOON TO EXPAND - A GaOipolls Developmental Center reildent
teams Jdtchenworil In one section of the GDC acttv•y center. GDC's
vocational program, preparing the re.tdenls to be able to work rutslde
of the center, Is planning to expand In the near future and hopefuDy even
lnelude some contract work.
Before entering the actual
work aspect of the (l'ogram, the
clients gc through a readiness
class to prepare them to remain
a11ent\ve and be able to work
with people.
Afler the readiness prepara·
tlon, a pre-vocational period
prepares the clients even further
towards working.
The third step is what Matura
terms "small task assembly."
. Here the clients actually build
and construct o~ects using
assembly klts. Worklng In the
center's recently reopened
greenhouse Is the final step.
Matura said they would llkr to
add some adult baste educa·
tiona! classes to the Jl'ogram to
help the people further adapt to
working with others.
This plan would result in the

clients going to school one-half of
the day and work the other,
Matura said.
"We are Ill ping to makr them
took forward to tbe weekends
like we do," she said. '' If we get
them working during the week
then they will appreciate the free
time durtng the weekends."
By appreciating 1he weekends
the clients will have adapted one
step closer to ur.. rui.Side d the
center. Accorcllng to Matura and
McCov the clients will feel as
trough' their free time is more
meaningful U they are expected
to do rmre than just sit amund In
their rooms all day.
"And If It works urn we can
plan for the weekend," McCoy
said . "We can plan field trtps
and our other recreation events
on weekends."

Reagan polyps
·are 'benign'

PICK 4 $1 straight bet pays
$7,476. PICK4 $1 box bet pays $623.

GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis
!€('Dager drownl'd Saturday after·
noon In the Ohio RIVer near the ice
piers below the 400 block of First
Avenue.
Emergency personnel recovered
the body of Christopher Laron
Close, 15. 81 Pine St ., at 6:28p.m.
after searching the area for three
oours.
Gallipolis City Police reported
hat
Close and two lrlends were
1
swimming out to 1he pier nearest
the shore around 3 p.m. when Close
began having difficulty swimming.
One of the friends who had made 11
10 the tee pier went hack to assist
him rut was unable to hold onto
Clo;e beCause of the current and
waves caused by a passing hoat.
The friends contacted the Gallla
Coonty Emergency Medical Ser·

vic&lt;'. The EMS not~ied the fire
department, which placed its
r!'SCU&lt;' launch and a three-man
team into the water shortly after·
ward. Close's bodY was found by
David Lovejoy, a diver from Point
Pleasant, officials said.
Police and the Ga llla County
Sher~f's Department blocked off
the entranre to the Upstream
Public Use Area as numerous
residents watched from the river·
bank end ooaters on the river
observed the activ ity.
The sheriff's department sent In
two divers, while the Mason County
Sheriffs Department advised the
West Virginia Department of Natu·
ral Resources of the situation.
The bodY was released to Waugh·
Halley-Wood Funeral Home .

1986 ·

1 1 Section I, 75
A Multimedia

Area candidates
reveal expenses

GDC plans vocational
•
program expanston

7078.

ALL CARS
AND
TRUCKS
IN
STOCK
(EXCEPT THAT LISTED BELOW)

Ohio weather:
Partly cloudy
-Page A-3

tmts -

*{Inventory Reduction Sale)

O~ER STOCKED CLEARANCE SALEf

i\long the Rlver ........... B-1-H
Business....... .. .... ..... ..... D-1
Cornie&amp;TV .......... ..... Insert
Classllled&lt;i ......... Ih'l-4-5-6-7-8
Deaths ........ ...... ...... ... .. A-8
Editorial ........... .... ....... A·2
Sports ........................ C·I-8

•

243.

USE THE U.S.
POSTMAN TO DO
YOUR BANKING!

Page C-1

Inside:

A Mason County man is killed in
an early Saturday accident - P118e A-3
Bob Hoeflich discusses the history of
Pomeroy High School - P118e A-6

Ticket sales totaled $1,126,990,
with a payoff due of $481,146.
PICK4

~3 1

Atlantic Classic results

r,oc

By IRA R. ALLEN
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - The
two tiny polyps removed from
President Reagan's Intestine Fri·
day were found to be benign, White
House physician T. Burton Smith
announced Saturday.
Doctors giving Reagan his regu·
tar six-month postoperative
checkup following cancer surgery
last Ju ly 13, found and removed two
small growths from his intestinal
wall Friday during a five-hour stay
at Bethesda Naval Hospital.
"The final laboratory evaluation
of the two Intestinal polyps removed durtng the president's rou·
tine follow-up examination yester·
day has been completed , and both
are benign, " said a statement from
Smith.
Reagan was Informed of the
results at his Camp David, Md.,
mountain retreat shortly before
delivering his weekly radio
address .
Three small polyps removed
during a January checkup were
also non-cancerous.
Doctors found the two small
growths, I to I ~ mU!Imeters In size.
during a cotonoscopy. a visual
examination of his DWI'r Intestine
through a lighted tube.
The medical team &lt;;onductlngthe
physical pronouned the 75-year·old
president In "good health."
The president had almost two feet
of his colon removed last }')ar after
cl:&gt;ctors found a large, cancerous
polyp attached to the Inner wall of
his l:lwer Intestine.
"The results d all other tests
were normal and the president Is In
good health," Smith said Friday.
He said Reagan wruld be re·
examined In six months .
Smith said Reagan also under·
went blood tests, X-rays, CAT
scans, an eye examination and a
dermatological examination of his
oose.
Reagan had a mallgnan I growth
on his nose removed several weeks
after the abdominal surgery last
year and later had a benign patch
(Continued on A.J)

Celebration
begins
Heritage Weekend fe&lt;lllv•les
began Saturday In Pomeroy. but
on Friday the Juanita, the mb
working AEP stemwbeeler out
of Lakin, W.Va., was docked at
the Pomeroy levee to give
residents free totu!l oltbe boat.
In the above photo, enloylng a
tour ol the craft, are Jane
Thompson of Pomeroy, two of
her children, Amber and Aaron,
and crew member Nathan
Moore. Meanwhile, this display
by Southeru Ohio Coal Co. on
Coon Slreet, ar right, shows coal
baa always played a vital role In
the berllage ol the county.
StafiJng the display were loll,
Roben "Butch" Meter, left,
pel'!lllnnel supervisor a&amp; Raccoon Mine No. S, and Tent
Trlmper, 1111 AEP public relations repl'l!!lelllatl\'e. Reoelvln,;

free balloons at the dlllplay wileD
the pholo wiiS taken were B.J.
Workman and Sha~m Workman.

By KEVIN KELLY
and JIM WEIDEMOYER
Times-Sentinel Slaff
GALLIPOLIS - Garry E. Hun ·
tl'r, the Republican candidate for
the 94th House District seat, s(l'nt
$4,482.62 in his successful bid to win
the nomination in the GOP primary
May 6, his post-primary expense
rPport showed.
The report was filed prior to
Friday's statewide deadline for
llstlng of primary expendit ures and
contributions by candidates and
organizations In the primary.
Hunter's report, that of his GOP
opponent, Gailia County Treasurer
Myron L. "Bud" McGhee and that
c! incumbent State Rep. Joiynr
Boster. D-Gallipolis. w('re filed in
Athens County , which has the
largest populat ion basc in the
district .
Hunter. Athens Ia ~&lt;· direct or since
1977, had brought forward a
balance of $2.760.29 from his
pi"P·prlmary report and received
contributions of $832.50.
McGhee brought forward a bai·
anCP of S1.645.81 and listed conlrihu ·
tions in the sa me amoun1. His tolal
expenditures came to $1 ,264.1Ji. the
.
report showed .
Boster, with a pre-primary ba l·
ance of $5.567.64 and contributions
of $4,624.50 listed, spent $604.14 in
the primary race, her report
Indicated.
All candidaiC'S and organizations
in the Gallia County prlmaiy filed
reports prior to the deadline.
In the race for county commis·
soner, Republican candidate G.
Gordon Fisher, who won the
nomination, spent $1.315.11.l, accord·
lng to his TElJOrt. The largest
exprndlture was $422 for caps paid
to The Put -On Shop in Gallipolis.
Incumbent Commissioner Verlin
L. Swain listed no contrirutions and
spent SUi81.48. all for signs and
matches.

Dr. Dan C. Notter, who won the
Democratic nomlnatl:ln lor com·
missioner, spent $ll3.03. A single
contribu tlon listed came from Terl
Toler. Bidwell, lor $i0.
Incumbent County Auditor Ronald K. Canaday listed no expendi·
tures, but received a $100 contriW·
tlon from Dean and Karen Brownell
of Kanauga .
R. Rosalee Walker, Canaday's
Republican opponent In November,
listed ex(l'nditures of $1,338, with
the largest amounts, $317.lll, paid to
French City Press. Gallipolis, for
flyers and cards, and $311.56 for
pencilS from ESCO, Columbus. She
listed contributlorLS of $944.al from
herself and $1!3.88 from Denver
Walker.
Her opponent In the GOP primary, Marton E. Caldwell, listed no
contributions and $2.169.88 in ex·
penses. The bulk, $1,005.56. was
spent on printing materials, his
report said .
Incumbent Common Pleas Judge
Richard C. Roderick Jr. reported
no expelditures ru tslde d the filing
fee. hut his Republican opponent In
November, Gallipolis attorney D&lt;r
nald Andrew Cox, reported spend·
ing $747.26.
Cox's largest expense was $!i05.54
paid to Vernon Co. for pens and
paper. Cox informed elections
officials he brought forward $48).77
from the pre-primary report and
listEd contriruttons or $701 from a
fund -raiser and $221 from Armella
Cox, Patriot Star Route, for total
contrirutions of $1,402.77.
The Friends of the Library Levy
Committee, which passed a reduced levy for the Dr. Samuel L.
Bossard Memorial Library, re·
ported ex(l'nses of $498.52. The
largest ex(l'nditures were $210.29
for ads on WJEH Radio and sal3.92
paid for ads In the Gallipolis Dally
Tribune .
!Continued on A.J )

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="160">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2750">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="40366">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="40365">
              <text>June 20, 1986</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3232">
      <name>hammer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4466">
      <name>strickland</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7030">
      <name>walldendorf</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
