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                  <text>·'Page- 14-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 18, 1986::

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'•

:Arab e~tremists pledge to bring terror campaign to
By STEVE HOLLAND
PARIS (UPI) -Arab extremists
that clatmed responsibility for a
sertes of bombings in Paris threa .
tened to extend the terror campaign to the United States following
a bombing on the Left Bank that
killed five people and injured 52.
. "We wUl meet soon your venera
ble state. We w1ll get acquainted
\Vlth your cities, skyscrapers, and
Statue of Uberty. American streets
Will know us soon," the Committee
o1 Solidarity with Arab and Middle
Eastern Potitlcal Prisoners warned
In .a statement delivered Wednes·
day to the An Nahar newspaper in
Beirut.
The typewrltten statement was
·1Sellvered to the newspaper's Beirut
olllce after a bomb. blew up .
Wednesday in front of a popular
clothing store on Paris's l.Rft Bank,
kiltingflvepeople andinjurtng52,18
of them seriously. It was the fifth
and deadliest bombing in 10 days of
terror In Parts. Eight people have
bE'Im killed and more than 160
Injured in the five bombings.
Pollee said the latest explosion
QCCUrred about 5:25p.m. at Tali, a
popular store for Inexpensive clo·
thing on the Rue de Rennes. about
two blocks from the city's tallest
building, Montparnasse Tower.
No one immediately claimed
responsiblllty for the bombing, but
the Committee of Solidarity with
·Arab and Middle Eastern Politicul
Prisoners has said it Is responsible
lor the previous four.
Deputy District Attorney Laurent Davenas said two mousta·
chioed men in a black BMW
stopped briefly in front of the Tali
store, threw the bomb from a
window of the car and drove away.
"The bomb went off seconds Ia ter.
Bul witnesses quoted on French
radio said it appeared the tomb
ex~oded in a metal industrial
garbage container in front of the
store. Police took samples from the
container to determine if the bomb
was inside.
The Tali store - on the ground
floor of a seven-story runding and nearby sidewalks were
cro..ced With sooppers lrowsing
for oorgalns on their Wdy oome
from work when the tomb went off.
"The scene was incredible, a lot
&lt;i women, children and blood
everywhere," said a journalist for
Le Point magazin&lt;&gt;, whose offices
are in the same wilding. "The
explosion was very violent . lx&gt;cause
I was on the 6th Door and
everything trembled.
"The windows of bu Udings
nearby were blown OJ t. ... The most
seriously wounded were cared for
&lt;11 the sldew alk In front rJ the store.
I saw the dying ones." he said.
"I could see t ..o women lying on
the sidewalk," said another wit·
ness. "They didn't look like they
had been hit directly. but they
weren't moving. They were just
lying there as l they were asleep.
Inside you could sce lots of people
lying down and there -was a lot of
crying and rroaning."
A witress whc lives across th&lt;&gt;
street !rom the store compared the
attack to "an a e rial
tombe.rdment."
"The building soook. the glass
door of the building rurst, und
broken glass was everywhere
There were women sitting on the
sidewalk, da7.ed and cry ing. A man

Fire kills 170
inS. Africa
JOHANNESBURG. South Africa
(UPII -Fire ignited by a weldin~
accident erupted in a gold mine
Tuesday. killing at leastl?O miners
and leaving 14 missing. officials
.said.
A dozen rescue teams workPd
·through the night , searching for
.survivors despite constantly dimin
lshing hope that anyone could IJ:&gt;
found alive In the I Y,· mile-deep
.mine.
A mine spokesman told reporters
·early Wednesdty that at lea st 170
Jniners were confirmed dead and
that 14 remained missing. The
O?ath toll hoo stood at .(4 at
midnight.
Dawie de Beer, a spokesman lor
·Gencor. owners of

Kinros~

was crying, 'My Uu·oat is hurt." '
The Committee of Solidarity wilich claimed responsibility for six
tombings in Decemlx&gt;r, February
and March that killed six peoplewarned Sept. I that it would step up
its bombing campaign unless
France freed Lebanese guerrilla
leader Georges Ibrahim Abdailab

woo announced new anti-terrorism
measures Sunday, met with Ca·
binet &lt;iflcials Wednesday to discuss
further rroves and held what
officials described as a "long
telep!Vre conversation" with Pres·
!dent Francois Mitter'rand. whc is
vtslling lnoo~sla.
Wednesday's blast came as the

Astros whip

FALL
FALL
OUTFITS
DRESS
SALE
Play outfits, suits, 2 piece sets,
Special Sole Prices on our ,.w fall

QUINTURA

GOWNS

REG. 110 TO 140

$798 to $31 98
LADY DEVON

SALE!

Sportswear Sale

CARHATT BROWN DUCII

Cotton lined and fiber-filled active bras, camisole shoulder bras
and lace full figure bras.

Reg. $9.00 Bra ..... s6.75
Reg. s10.50 Bra ... 57.8 7
Reg. $11.50 Bra ... 58.62
SPECIAL! WRANGLER S21.95

STRETCH DENIM

JEANS

SPECIAL PRICES!

SA~E

Sitts S, M. Land XL plus big sizes XXL
and XXXL. hullent quality by Da·
kola, Campus and Wrangler. Popular
Tryello light weight flannels indude&lt;! .

S15.95 Shirts .... S12.68
516.95 Shirts .... S13.48
518.95 Shirts .... S15.18
s 19.95 Shirts .... S1 5.78
S24.95 Shirts .... 519.88

25.,.

OUTWEAR
COATS - JACKETS
Layaway Now!
Reg. s27 ... Sale S20.00
Reg. 535 ... Sale S26.25
Reg. S46 ... Sale S34.50
Reg. ssa ... Sale 543.50

order wallpaper. Stop in, look
through our big selection of potterns for every room in your
house.

Save

20°/o

PANTS and JEANS
SALE
Complete stock of little boys' corduroy
pants, jeans and fashion slacks.
Sizes: 12 to 24 mos., 2 to 7.
Reg. 16.00 to 119.00

Sole $419 to $1 S19

·==
•

f,..,,.,,.
•o•IIVf , (ltiiO
oiU ) U f MH

CKJ.WQ[ CAIIIO

PINE OR
PECAN

S1788

$488

LEOTARD SALE
Cotton blinds and IOOOfo nylon scoop necks,
double V-twcks, tank type and short sleeves.
Women's Sizes S, M. 1.. XL.

Reg. $9.25 .......... Sale S7.39
Reg. $1 LOO ........ Sale S8.79
Reg. $15.00 ...... Sale $11.99
F~IDAY

Stro9lt l19 stylt. soft ,
1111~1h ctl"dsny. Shrir*age
cllllrolled. Sizes 29 to 42
waist and big sizes 44 to SO.
Popular colors.
'
Sl9.95 Regular
Size ...............;S1S.99
S22.95 Extra Large
Size ................ SIB. 99

QUILTING

SALE! CARHARTT

HUNTING
CLOTHES

NEEDS
colon - quilt batting
ancf air your quilting needs.

SAVE

20°/o
COTY

LlnLE GIRLS'

MAKE-UP

COfdllf:J:..:.linttd

liquid make -up,
blushes, powder,
cream moke-up,
lipsticks, compacts,
mascaras and eye
shadows.

c:M

leg.

ss .........Sale 13.99
leg.

IB ......... Sale 16.39

leg.
leg.

'

DANS ION
IOO"fo

blend.
Colors: Tan, llack, Red, Whitt,
Royal, lrown, Slcy bl111, H1111lock,
Pink am Wi111.
W-n's Sizes: A, I, Cam D:
R19. ••.so to -.,so

Sale Price

$519.to $7.59

TIL 8-SAUT.RAY &amp; MONDAY TIL 5

ELBERFELDS INPOM.EROY

"The conclusion we have drawn

Is that affirmative action programs
are working well," said Hudnut ,
who opposes administration moves
that he said would weaken affirma·

from the fund . Council tran sf&lt;&gt;rred
$500 into the fund which now ha s a
$6,1Xl0 balance .
The village clerk was authortzed
to make necessury fund transfers
and two grants were discussed as
possbilities for next year's community development block grant
program and Cleland and Carroll
Teaford wUI meet with Kim
Shields, county &lt;J2velopment advisor. to discu&amp;&lt;; the grants.
A report was given on plans for
the Southern High Future Farmers
of America to construct a log cabin
made of railroad ties at the Shrine
Park. The cabin will constructed as
a cltmblng spot lor youngsters. The
village will pa)I~Q( the ties from the
revenue sharlllg funds.
The street commissioner was
auitorized to pUiehase a new
battery for the tractor and to have
the chain saw repaired. The fire
chief was autoorized to purchase a
VCR so tha 1 b·alning films for
firemen can be soown. It was
reported that the county highway
department has done the chip and
seal work on the village streets this
week. All members of oouncii were
present and the next meeting will
be at 7 p.m. on Oct. 6.

tive act ion. "I tbink they are wrong
politically, legally and morally. "
Cities taking part in the survey
are in 41 states, including Ohio, and
the District of Columbia.
Hudnut said results of the survey
would he sent to some congressmen
and administration offkials,inciud·
ing A ttorrey General Edwin
Meese.
Three recent Supreme Cou r1
rulings, including a decision on
Cleveland firefighters, sbow dUes
can employ affirmative action
plans that include raCP-consclous
goals. Hudnut said. He said the
confermce's survey was additional
material to support the programs.
Administration officials last year
delEted whether tv relax affirma·

'

SLACKS &amp; CORDS
Junior sim 3 to 1S, misses shes 6
to 20.

COiond denims, poly/cotton
. llocks with tummy centro! and
Wrangllr canlwoy jlans.
•

.Reg. s2o .. Sale su.aa

Reg. s22 .. Salt ~ 1t~l
Reg. S26 .. Sali S20J8 .

FREE
·PARKING

-··
·'

\

,,

•

26 Cents

Even Cuyahoga Countv Republican Party Chair·
man Robert Hughes, one of Rhodes' closest allies, has
admitted to some concerns about Celeste's large lead.
"The current polis would indicate he !Rhodes) is
down more than you would normally expect," said
Hughes. "But Rhodes i• an excellent latecampaigner
and still has an excellentchanceofwinning. We aren't
about to panic and be misled by false prophets- both
Republicans and Democrats."
Th&lt;&gt; Beacon Journal poll shows Rhodes carrying 01
percent of Republicans and Celeste with 23 percent.
The rest of the Republicans were undecided .
Th survey also shows that Celeste's stronghold is in
nor1heasl Ohio where he drew support ct66 percent of
those surveyed. Rhodes received 13 percent in
nor1heast Ohio and 21 percent were undecided.
Celeste also leads In northwest Ohio by nearly
2-to-1. Rhodes leads Celeste. however, in central and
southern Ohio.

Seniors
• • •
crttictze
discount
holdups

A BAU.OON FOR PEACE - 'l'be United Nations
has declared 1986 the International Year&lt;iPeace and
has proclaimed the third Tuesday of each September

as the International Day of Peace. First through sixth
graders at Racine Elementary celebrated Peace Day
by dlscuS&gt;ing the meaning of pea&lt;!e, the ways in which
peacP may he obtained. and how the United Nations
began . Students also heanl the book "The Ruiter
Battle." by Dr. Seuss. On Wednesday. the students

tlv&lt;&gt; actio n rules for federal contrac·
tors. The Justice Department
asked 51 governmen tal bodies to
alter their affirmative action plans.
It went to coun against three of
them . losing against Buffalo, N.Y .,
and witlxlrawingincases involving
Chicago and Indianapolis.
Justice Department spokesman
John Wilson said the department Is
reviewing the affirmative action
plans In the remaining cities in light
of the "Supreme Court guidance" In
the thrre cases mentioned by
Hudnut and one Involving ex tension
service workers in North Carolina.
"We've mad e no decisions on
which way to go yet, " Wilson said,
aside !rom appealing cases involv·

wrote their own messages of peace which were placed
in an envelope and launched by this six-loot weather
halloon. One message. shared by many of the
students, was "peace hegins with me." To add to the
celebration, sixth graders wore peace badges, made
and donated by Dale and Roberta Maidens. Helium
for the balloon was donated by the Twm City's
Machine Shop.

ing Alabama state troopers and
District of Columbia firefighters.
Affirmative action programs, by
setting goals and timetables. SIX!r
cities to lmprovetheiremployment
policies for women and minority
group members, Hudnut said.
"Utopia has not arrived ... There
is still a need for a commitment
from the top down for equal
opportunity," Hudnut said.
Most of tbe cities said affirmative
action programs resulted in better
standards for r'i'Crultment. hiring.
promotion, discipline and judging
job performance.
On the question of employre job
satisfaction, 33 cities said affirma·
tive action had contriruted to few er

Long suggests possibly that
Collins,
district senator for more
OVP Staff Writer
GALLIPOLIS- Alter the United than ll years, has something to
Mine Workers announced Its un - hide.
"Maybe he Is afraid to debate
animous endorsement Thursday of
Jan Michael Long, Democratic me," Long said. "Maybe he is
candidate for the 17th Senate afraid of letting the people decide
District, Long made it clear their for themselves. I would like to know
was still sometbing he is impa· what his fears are."
Collins' !allure to respond to
tlently awaiting.
Long's
debate requests represents
Long wants a debate with
incumbent Oakley C. Coitins, R· the senator's inability to speak up,
Ironton. Tbe Circlevllle attorney including In Senate meetings. " By
said he has made his request public him not answering my requests, I
at almost every stop he has made feel ft only shows how he has no
throughout the district, which voice and is the reason Southeastincludes Athens. Gailla. Jackson. ern Ohio has no voice In the state."
"I'm trying to turn things around
Lawrence, Meigs, Plckaway, Ross
lor oor district," Long said. "We
and Vinton counties.
"I would like a debate with my need to revltalize our coal resource
oppooer)t (Collins 1," Long said and get the miners back to work."
Long said the enttlrsernent by the
during a brief press conference in
the offices of attorneys Douglas UMW - along with the Ohio
Cqwles and Jolynn Boster. " I've Education Association, Ohio AFL·
made my wishes clear practically CIO, United Auto Workers and Ohio
everywhere I've gone, but yet he ClvO Service Employees Association - sbould prove evident he Is
laDs and refuses to respond.''
By JIM

WRANGLER

' ·~·.

repeatedly refused the challlenge.
Four prominent Republican campaign strategists.
ali asking not to he identified. told the Cleveland
n&lt;&gt;wspaper that Rhodes' present standing could lead
the entire statewide ticket to defeat, including
candidateS for the Ohio Supreme Court and two
Senate races in the Canton and Toledo a reas.
"It has the makings of an absolute disaster." said
one GOP strategist. "Even some of Rhodes' biggest
boosters now think the race is over."
Another said of the Rhod&lt;&gt;s campaign. " il' s a joke."
While Celeste has a massive campaign warchest,
Rhodes has experienced serious difficulty raising
funds.
"There's clearly some big, big problems in this
campaign," said one Rhodes adviser. ".Jim Rhodes is
clearly not the candidate todav he was in the 1960s.
The good news is he's now starting to raise some
money and the election is still six Wf"ks away."

grieva nces and :9 said it did oot; IS
cities said the programs led to less
absenteeism and '!7 said they did
oot: 2..1 cities said the programs
contributed to lower job turnover
and 28 said they did not. In each
instance, the remaining cities
either did not answer the question
or said they could not judge.
One-third of the responding cities
sa id the programs contriruted a
great deal to lx&gt;tter labor·
management relations and about
as many said they contributed to
tmproved productivity.
Ohio cities responding to the
survey were: Akron, Canton, Co
lumbus. Cuyahoga Fails, Dayton
and Uma .

Ohio Senate candidate wins
UMW support; wants debate

2·5°/o

116 ... Sale 112.79

TIGHTS
SALE
nylon or Otlon/ocrylk

race.
"I think the greatest mistakke people make Is to
underestimate the opposition," he said. "Jim Rhodes
didn't get to be governor four times without having a
tremendou s resiliency. This campaign is not over
until the votes have been counted."
Even though Rhodes' inner circle of advisors
continues to voice confidence about the outcome of the
election, the former governor's campaign has
realized their candidate is in serious trouble , the
Cleveland newspaper reported.
As a result, major strategy changes are lx&gt;ing
considered . Among them include taking a less
negative approach toward Celeste's record and
concentrating on projecting himself as a candidate
with a vision for the future.
Some GOP strategists are also suggesting that
Rhodes throw caution to the wind and debate Celeste,
who has challenged him to a debate. Rhodes ha s

SAVE

112 ......Sale 19.59

•

as a resua.

FALL PANTS
lnit pants, strirrup pants,

arll ' or JIGftl. tes:
12 to 24 mos. 2 to 14.

Jeannette Lawrence was em·
played as the collecting agent for
water and trash service in Racine
when Racine Village Council met In
regular session this week. Bills
·can be paid at the Racine Depart·
· ment Store. Mrs. Lawrence repla. ces Beverly Moore. who resignro
from the position as of Sept. 2.
During the meeting presided over
by Frank Cleland , council presi·
dent. Marty Crawford, manager of
Consolidated Communications
Inc., told council that a switchover
by the company to the same cable
programming given in Pomeroy,
Middleport and Syracu~ has been
postponed due to highway work
lx&gt;ing done. The switch will be made
as ·aoon ai&gt;posslble aild representatives of the company wUI go door tb
door to advise customers of the
change.
Council memlx&gt;rs met with a
representative of the state auditor's
office on Wednesday to review the
rocent audit with the final report to
1x&gt; available In about six weeks.
Council suspended the rules and
passed an ordinance changing the
cemetery enciowrnent fund to the
Racine Cemetery Perpetual Care
Fund with only interest to he spent

WASHINGTON tUPil - The
Reagan administration sbouid drop
any tboughts of weakening affirma·
live action programs. Indianapolis
Mayor William Hudnut said, point·
ing to a 121-city survey and three
recent Supreme Court rulings.
Hudnut, chairman of the U.S.
Conference of Mayors civil right s
subcommittee. released the survey
Thursday. It soowed llOofthecities
had voluntarily adopted the pro·
grams and some of them repor1ed
greater employee job satisfaction

Save now an all of your
cottan prints and solid

Sale Prices

1 Section. 10 Pages

A Multimedia Inc . Newspeper

Nation's mayors praise affirmative action ·results

SALE!

Fine quality brown duck
hunting vests with game ·
bag, hunting bib overolls
and hunting coat with
removable game bag. Pkk
your favorite style in your
size and save.

No-iron percale. Set in&lt;ludes flat
sheet, fitted slttet and pillow
casu Goad pattern selection.
Special Prices.
4 Piece Full
Bed Set..................... 119.99
3 Piece Twin
Bed Set ..................... sl3.99
4 Piece Queen
Beet Set ..................... '26.99

DANSKIN

OPEN

included.

sns

20°/o

JEANS

Sale
Prices!
Western leather lelts

SHEET

San now on any of our
blankets in twin, regular
and queen sites. Solid colors
and patterns. all excellent
quality.

CORDUROY ·

Sizes 30 to 46. Fi,.
quality leather made by
Buxton and Leegin. Popular widths in colors
you'lllike.

enttne

Racine employs
collection agent

MEN'S

flare style in sires 29 to 42
waist (lengths S, M, l and XLI.
Pre-washed, no fault blue de nim by Wrangler. Sole Price.

COLOR CONSOLES

BLANKET
SALE

LlnLE BOYS'

.DRESS
BELTS

1987 RCA

SPECIAL

Reduced

MEN'S s22.95 BASIC

S278

SNOWSUITS
Qlihex. Cosuol Tome and Jar.
doche. Huge seie&lt;tion of
styles far iiHie boys and girts.

WALLPAPER
SALE!
Sove 20% now on our custom

MEN'S LEATHER

1987 RCA 19"
COLOR PORTABLE

CHILDREN'S

I

ANOTHER BIG SHIPMENT

BLUE DENIM
JEANS
· Choose straight leg ., boot

25% Off ............. All Sofas
25% Off ............ All Chairs
25% Off ............ All Tobles
25% Off ......... All Dinettes
25% OH ..... All Cedar Chests

$1499
SPORT SHIRTS

Sale Prices

FURNITURE SALE!

Pre-washed straight leg style. Sizes
30 to 42 waist - 80% cotton,
20% polyester for trim neat appearance.

110.95 Matching
Sweat P.onts ..... 18.99

Small 114-14'12), medium (15-15 1/tl, large
(16-1b'il), extra large (17-17 'It) plus 2X-3X
om 4X sizes. Also tall sizes - ragulor styles
om western. Colorft.i plaid camouflage am novelty patterns. Well knOwn brams. Save now.
S21.95 Quilt Lined Shirts .... s17.59
S24.95 Quilt Lined Shirts .... S19.99
S27.95 Quilt Lined Shirts ... .$22.39
S29.95 Quilt Lined Shirts .... S23.99

sizes. Insulated coveralls, bib
overalls, work d111gorees, jackets
om coats (quilt or blar*etlinedl,
hoods, vests. Regular am extra
large sizes. Shorts, regulars and
tolls. Save now.
.

FURNITURE SALE!

sa••

FLANNEL SHIRTS

CLOTHES
Complete selection of styles and

FURNITURE SALE!

tlttwt, fiHu linlll. Sp•ial ").

SALI! MEN'S QUILT LINED

WORK

lockets, sweaters, blouses, vests,
sicks and skirts.
Foil colors itKiude rust, cra"erry, navy,
brown and smoke blue.
Tops sizes 31 to 46
Slcirts and slacks sizes 30 to 40
Reg. 120.00 Lady Devon ...... liS. 98
Reg. 126.00 Lady Devon ...... 120.78
Reg. 134.00 Lady Devon ...... S27.18
Reg. 146.00 Lody Devon ...... 136.78

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 19. 1986

By United Press International
WitH less than six weeks before the Nov. 4 election,
Gov. Richard Celeste appears to lx&gt; sitting on a
comfortable lead over his Republican challenger
former Gov. James Rhodes, two Ohio ne\\C';papers
reported Thursday, but Celeste says the former
four-time governor should not be underesttmated .
A poll conducted last month by the University of
Akron and the Akron Beacon Journal shO\\C'; Celeste
with a W.point lead over the 77-year-old Rhodes.
The Cleveland Plain Dealer also reported the
results of a private poll showing Celeste with about a
20 point lead.
The Cleveland newspaper said Republican political
strategists are privately conceding that Rhodes'
candidacy is in such disarray that it Is threatening the
entire statewide GOP ticket .
In Toledo Thursday, Celeste r&lt;&gt;sponded to the polls
by saying he has no intention to start coasti ng in the

· ~~~~ M, JL.Iig
ofsolid colors lnd..i"9schoot ,
colon - Htw nee•, long
Solt.

•

Mostly cloudy and hwnld
tonlghl and Saturday, with a
chance of showel'!l and tltunderstonns. Lows tonight wDI be in
the upper 60s, with highs .Salurln the mid 80s. The
of
Is 40

Polls say Celeste comfortably leads Rhodes

SWEAT
SHIRTS
S, l,
zolo&lt;tion

gowns om pajamas. Sizes
S, M, L, XL, XXL
Reg.
514.00 ...... Sale 511.00
Reg.
SI6.00 ...... Sale 513.00
Reg.
517.SO ...... Sale 514.00

Reg. sa.OO Outfits ........ 56.39
Reg. 511.00 Outfits ...... 58.79
Reg. 515.00 Outfits .... S11.99
Reg. 520.00 Outfits .... 515.99

Layaway• Are Weleome

523.00 Gowns .... Only 518.39
526.00 Gowns .... Only 520.79
530.00 Gowns .... Only 523.99

MEN'S FLANNEL

rompers and bib overalls.
Sizes NB to 24 mos., 2 to 7.

dresses. Choose jumpers, Ioney
dresses or outfits.
Sizes: 3 to 24 mos., 2 to 4, 4 to
6X, 7 to 14.

Looks like cotton- feels like cotton. It's unbelievmle! Printed
gowns with V-neck bodKe.

FLANNEL
SPECIAL
Special purchase of flannel

PICK-4

8452

Vol.36, No.96

MEN'S "WRANGLER"
om "SPRINGFOOT"

KATZ

LlnLE BOYS'

-Page 4

Copyrighted 1986

BIG SAVINGS ALL OVER THE STORE ON QUALITY MERCHANDISE .~ BIG SELECTIONS
- COURTEOUS SALESPEOPLE TO ·HELP YOU. VISIT EVERY DEPARTMENT ~ SHOP
EVERY FLOOR AND SAVE
GIRLS'

Daily Number
908

at y

F,idsg, Septemhe, 19th-Sstu'd'g, Septembe, 20tb-Mondty, Sep,. 22nd

LORRAINE

Ohio Lottery

Reds, 5-3

government distributed posters bombings.
But, at almost the same time the :
throughout France bearing photographs of two Lebanese brothers bombwentoffatTati, (heAbdaU~
suspected of involvement in the . brothers read a statement tn:.
series of bombings and offering a Tripoli, Lebanon. denying Involve-'
ment in the a(tacks and saying they ·
reward of I million francs $150,000 - for information leading had ootbeen In France in two years ...
"We are strangers to the events
to their arrest - or to the arrest of
others responsible for the in France," the statement said.

SAVE AT ELBERFELDS

mine

'told state-run radio that 23' inju r·ro
miners -llll oft hem bi..-k - were
}J)spltallzed lor in ju rles SJ fferro in
the accident.
Kows OUvler, Kinross genera l
inan~er. said there was "only a
slight chance" os rescuing the
remaining trapped miners.
: About 2.000 miners escapro or
were pulled out by rescue t ~a m s
'1\lesday.
The llre broke oot at ~ : .'lO a.m at
·the 15th level in a passageway
cormectlng t..o main shafts and
.quickly sprmd to thrre other levels
ofticlals said. It was extln~lshed in
lour ttours.
· Olivier said workers who were
pulled oot alive survived becau~ of
. ""rubbles of oxygen" amid swtrUng
Joxlc f\Jmes.
· Officials said rescue efforts were
bampered by thick clouds of gas
rrom burning plastic and electrical
cables n the mine.
· The disaster is the worst In a
South African mine since 1900
"when a Coaltrook mine cave-in
•
Jdlled. 432 mtners.

and two other jailed Middle East·
ern convicts.
On Sept. 8, a oombwerit ell at City
Hall. Restaurants were the targpts
of bombings Sept. 12 and Sept. 14
and another exploded Mmday at a
drivers license rureau in pollee
headquarters.
Prtme Minister Jacques Chirac,

·u.s.

.·

.

POIJTI(lAL ENDOJISEMENT - llaruld G. "Babe" Erdos,
,lnlen t~lllll Unllla Pollical WorkerlorlbeVntted Mille Workers, and
,Ju MJdtael Lottg, Demoenllc IWMIIdete tar the l'Jth Senlte Dliltrld,
llhake hllldl '1111sl'lllla.v followlnr Erdos' eniiOttiiCellllll 111at the VMW
wW eadone Long.

·''

WEIDEMOYER

attempting to promote the working
people of the district.
"I lx&gt;lleve that Jan Michael Long
represents the future Interests of
our memlx&gt;rs in southern Ohio and
not the past politics of neglect and
ineffectiveness &lt;i our incumbont
sta te senator," Harold G. "Babe"
Erdos, International Union Politi·
cal Worker i&gt;r the UMW, said.
"With Jan Michael Long as state
senator, the people ol the 17th
district can ftnaily have voice In the
Ohio Senate who represents their
Interests," Erdos added.
Erdos said the UMW tooroughly
reviewed each candidate's qualifications and records bellre making
the mciorsemenl decision. A 15memter committee comprtsed of
toea I union aRd district board
members erose Long unanimously.
Lo~ and Erdos were In GaWpolis as one c1 their stq&gt;s during their
whirlwind press toor throughout
southeastern Ohio.

By GRETEL WIKLE
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( UPil
Elderly Ohioans who have applied
lor Golden BuckPye Cards
shouldn't have to wait more than
six-to-eight weeks. according to
state officials. but many have
waited months. and the complaints
are rolling in.
While the delay in receiving the
stat e-sponsored discount for senior
citizens has angered some eligible
people, state officials say the
applicant's copy of the application
-can be u!led ln placeotrhe card until
11 arrives.
The backlog in distributing the
cards is blamed on the processing
of com!XIter data transmitted from
the Ohio Department of Aging to
Southwestern Bell in St. Louis, said
Douglas Engelhan. spokesman lor
the department.
The applications are sent to St.
Louis because the Bell company
there is under contract with the
state of Ohio to print the cards and
to compile directories of companies
that boner the cards.
· Engelhart said that when the
eligibility age for the card was
lowered to 60 from 6li Oct. I, last
year. 250,000 new applicants were
received by Thanksgiving. He said
the delay is rmstly among people
whc became "new(y eligible" last
yea r.
"Last spring we were getting too
many complaints atout people
waiting too long for their cards,"
Engeihar1 said . "We did a cross
check of our computer data and
found that qJerators I at Southwest·
ern Bell! weren't reading all the
tapes."
Engelhar1 said the department
sent many of the tapes again so they
could be "repunched" In St. Louis,
and he said the department Is
"ca tching up" on getting cards to
the thousands of people affected by
the problem. But he said some
applications still may not have
cards.
He said anyone who has been
waiting rrore than two m:&gt;nths for
the card should send another
application and include a note
Indicating when other applications
were made to the department at 50
W. Broad St .. Coiumrus. 43215.
But Enl;'?lhart stressed that while
waiting the usual six-to-eight weeks
for the cards. senior citizens may
use their copy of the appiica lion to
get discounts.
"It Is as good as the plastic
Golden Buckeye Card," he said.
" As !DOD as you sign t.ql yru can use
It, and it will be hooored by some
36,fJXl businesses In Ohio."
Most eligible senior citizens know
their application L&lt;; as good as the
card, said Kay Kahrtg, a staff
..urker at the Wooster Community
Center, rut she said there are stU!
complaints.
"We've had really furmy !1lllction
to !hat." Kahrlgsaid. "A few people
say they deserve to have a Card.
They question whether they sbould
be using (the ap~kation). I don't
blame them; they only want what
they are entitled to."
She said some sentorcilizenssald
they were turned down lor discounts when they presmted the ·
applicatln fonn and Cihers hava .
complatned because it wears out.

�•

'

~y-~~=~.~!'::

c. -. o, .mmentary
lll Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

~~

Bm~

~v

r"'T"\-J._...,.., r'""'rE5!d·~

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

F~~~am~19,1986

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
AMEMBER of The United Press Internatio nal , Inland Dally Press
Assoclatlon and thf' American Newspaper Publishers Association.
•''

LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome . They should be less than :JJO words
.tong . All leiters are subjef':t to editing and rrust be sig ned w!th name-, address and

teiE&gt;Phone number. No unstgna:l letters wlll be published. Letter s should be In
good taste , addressing Issues, not pers onalities.

The Lighter Side

The other day, on television
facing three g&lt;&gt;ntlemen or the
moderate left,! was asked, "Would
you, if you were a black South
African, join the African National
Congress?" I (after pausing? I do
not remember! answered , "Yes."
Next question, "Would you resort to
violence?" Answer: "Yes." Suddenly the program was over. No
opportunity to JX!rsue the story line.
But it is worth pursuing, by
Americans who wish to know
thatfful words) empathically what
it is like to be a black South African.
To the extent possible, let us set
aside any special knowledge we
have, for instance of the kind of life
led by most black Africans. If the
average black South African were
taken on a tour of the nations to the
north, he would discover few oases
of personal lil:erty, The dark
continent continues very dark,

bloody, poor, cotTUpt. pestilential.

Perhaps after such a toor, the black
South African would ruminate on
the advantages of the relative
political stability in white-run South
Africa. After all, a lot of black South
Africans are in South Africa
because they Oed their homelands.
But that is to ignore the argu·
ment, really. Although there is
liberal movement by the white
South African government - and
some black intellectuals residing In
South Africa might conclude that so
long as there Is rmvement there Is
hope - in fact white South Africa
moves very closely at the political
level. The black South African
might understandably conclude
that there is no substantial rrr&gt;vement, and that therefore the time
has come when civil disobedience,
leading to civil war, is justified.

We are bound to focus on our own
experience. The DEclaration of
Independence Is viewed by some
scholars as an expression of
resmlment by colonists over the
discrimination against them by
contrast with the Uberties enjoyed
by Englishmen who lived in their
homeland, Such scholars hold that
the declaration did not, therefore,
E&lt;Junciate metaphysical absolutes
a bout Uberty and equality.
But there are others who, while
admitting that any author of a
declaration calling for equality who
also owned slaves and had no
intmtion of getting rid of them.
faced philosophical difficulties, that
nevertheless the universalism of
the declaration inspires peoples
everywhere. And it is not easily
maintained that the offenses of
George Ill against the American
colonies were greater than those ci •

A Meese panel
for politicians?
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON 1UPI 1 -I was baking at photograplc' of some of the
1!&amp; congressional candidates and suddenly I had a strong desire to run
against somebody.
The Mee~ Commission on Pornography concluded that reading girlie
magazines in our permissive society has contributed to a rise in sex
crimes. I'm sure there must be a similar relationship between reading and
politics,
The current issue of one of the publications has a cartoon of a man
robbing a bank and saying, "That's the last time I read Money magazine."
I believe government commissions should have the power to ban the
publication of political articles. I mean, we have enough candida tes as it Is.
But who can blame intlOC!!nl American citizens from wanting to g&lt;&gt;t
elected?
As Robert Orben, a former White Housespeechwriter, has pointed au~ a
typical Washington novel gives the Impression that members of Congress
spend their tlrnemakingobsceneconference calls and always are in bed by
10 o'clock. The only question is: with whom?
Maybe that explai ns what happened to James Borf'!l, founder of the
International Association of Professio nal Bureaucrats. He reads too much .
Anyway. two years .,go Boren was running for president on a
professional bureaucrats' ticket and was making light r:i the office. Now he
is a legitimate candidate for Congress.
Frankly, Tnever thought of Boren as being particularly sexy. Perhaps he
was being driven crazy with jealousy by the thought that his cousin. Sen.
David Boren of Oklahoma, was having so much fun ,
Voters. after all, aren't a great deal different from sex fiends.
Whatever his motivation. Jim Boren has defined some of the issues in Ius
own words. Take the word "cloggle," which he derived from "clog" and
"boggle" to describe traffic conditbns in his area .
Boren promised that tf elected to Congress he woold work closely with
federal transportation officials to "decloggify the doggie, reduce the sale
of aspirins and help people arrive at work or~~ home in a joyous state of
m(ltd."
There is some doubt in my mind that commuters would be joyous even if
they drove to and from work in traffic I hat had been oompleteiy
decloggified. But I can agree it is time Congress did oomething.
Boren, a candidate in nearby Alexandria. Va, wants to tllild a new
bridge across the Potomac to "reduce the clogglP nuw frustrating
thousands of commuters and shift much of the hazardous cargo from the
most populous areas around the natbn's capital."
Maybe another bridge would make commuting less hazard&gt; us but it
would do noting to neduce the number of candidates in cloggied races tlus
year.
All want to Improve conditions by building somet hing. Have any of them
proposed Improving highway traffic by reducing the numherol tmtorists?
Maybe we need a new federal commission headed oy the attorney
general to study the matter.

&amp;li~IE,

!

WANT YotJ To MEET
HARRY, M'/ ~lJRRoGATE MoTHER'&amp;

UNCLE·~ CLONE . EJU§IE I~ M'{
~EcoND cou&amp;JN ·~ TE.~T TuBE

BABY

&amp;I~TER,

TWICE REMoVED.

the white government of South'
Africa against tlu! black population,.,
So then, does that add up to a
summons to join the African
National Congress?
Here one asks about alternatives,
and It is unfortunately the case that
there aren't any solid alternatives ·
In Soul h Africa. It Is merely one
more country In which the len has ·
succeeded in consolidating the
effective power of the opposition,
even as It is happening In Chile. and
has happened all over the world.·,
When those disgusted with Chiang
Kai-shek and the oorrupt entourage
that gave the Nationalists so bad a ·
name (until they shrived them· '
selves In Taiwan! sooght to rebel ,
they had very little alternative than
to join up with Mao Tse-tung. Tt was ,
so in Cuba, when moderates made
the awaful mistake of encouraging
Fidel Castro; and io an extent in
Nicaragua. where thE' Sandinistas
succeeded
in obscuring their
strategic design for a militarized.
Ideologized Marxist state.
But whatelsedoesonedolnSouth
Africa if one Is black and as
resrnttul as our forefathers? The
African National Congress Is most ·
certainly directed by communists,
but that Is not what black Africans
are focusing on today. No doubt
those who bold seminars on the
subject In the shanties are asking:
What Is It the rommunlsts can do to
the black Africans Utat would be
worse than wlcat the white govern· ·
ment Is doing? The communists
can dl no worse than to deny us
rights wedomtenjoy, they will say.
They would be wrong, of course:
And if the ANC, in its present
ldeolog1cal composition, ends up
running black Africa, misery will
Increase. not diminish. But that
does not answer the question: Can
you reasonably expect a desperate
black South Aft1can to do something else, given existing ·
alternatives?

By ROBERTO DIAS
UPI Sports'Wrlter
CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
Cleveland Browns were misguided
to be so concerned over the
Cincinnati Bengals' "hurry. up"
offense before matchup r:i AFC
rivals - the Bengals used roore
ronventiofllll methods to rout the
Browns.
Cincinnati's modern and contra·
versial sideline huddles, non· bud·
dies and quick snaps were only
minor factors In its 3().13 victocy
Thursday night before 78,179 at
Cleveland Stadium.
Cincinnati stuck to the basics,
giving the ball to running backs
Larry Kinnebrew and James
Brooks for a 257-yard ground attack
that befuddled Cleveland's defense
and was termed "good old·
fashioned, traditional football" by
Bengals Head coach Sam Wyche.
"Kinnebrew got three touch·
downs (25 carries for 94 yards) and
Brooks took It 14 times for 118
yards, but that was nothing Innovative," said Wyche. "We just handed
the ball to the big guys and they
went up the middle like Jim Brown
and O.J. Simpson."
The last time the 2-1 Bengals held
a n opponent without a touchdown
was on Oct 21, 19&amp;1 in Cincinnati
when they heat the Browns 12-9,
Cleveland dismissed head roach
Sam Rutigliano Ute next day and
replaced him with Marty
Schottenheimer.
Schottenhelrner admitted be dces
not know why his 1-2 team has
allowed 91 points in Utree games.
"At this point, I don't have any
answers." he said. "There's oo
question that we certainly need to
play better than we've played so
far."
Kinnebrew hoped the game
meant that the Bengals' running
attack "has turned the corner.
"We'd averaged ooly l12 1·2
yards rushing in oo r ftrst two
games, and I felt that was an insult

Dangerous to handle __J_ac_k_A_nd_e_rs_on_&amp;_Da_le_~_a_n_At_ta
WASHINGTON- The Pentagon
will soon be picking a new anti-tank
weapon, and the brass seem
determined to choose the wrong one
-again.
The new weapon will replace the
notorious Dragon, a hand-held,
wire-guided anti·tank missile that
turned out to be a disaster. For ooe
thing, tbe Dragon tends to miss the
target. Second, even if It does hit the
tank, the Dragon lacks the explosive power to penetrate thick
annor.
From the, GI's standpoint , the
most serious flaw in the anemic
Dragon is tis wire-guidance sys·
tern, which requires the soldier who
fires It to guide it visually to the
target. This means the soldier must
stand or crouch out in the open for
as long as 20 seconds after the
Dragons' blast has alerted the
enemy tankers - more than
enough time for them to aim and
fire at the exposed Dragonmaster.
After years of delay, the Pentagon has finally slopped buying
more Dragons, and is testing two
new technologies. One ls a slight
improvement over the Dragon . It
uses a laser beam "rider" to hit the
target, and the human spotter is
exposed for no more than 10

seconds. The Army generals favor distraction. They sconed hi ts 87 for a fire-and-forget anti-tank wea- ·
this one.
pon, why does the Army favor Its :
pereent of the time oo average.
The other new technology was
Then the missile gunners wer~ laser-heam version of the Dragon? '
developed by the weapons o:le- told that a harmless exJ)osion Congressional and Pentagon sour&lt;
signers of the Defense Advanced might be set off nearby while they ces su:;pect it's a matter r:i twi: Tile:':
Research Projects 'Agency. It's were guiding the Dragons toward Army designed the ias('f-beam ·
called the Tank Breaker, but the targets. They wer e assured that ridN, while DARPA conceived the ·
soldiers would call it a lifesaver. It's the blast would not hurt them, but fire-and-forget missile,
a "fire-and-forget" weapon, a would merely simulate the noise of
In the hope of assuring a fair test
heat-seeker that homes In on the a battlefield , Actually, the DARPA of the two missile technologies,
tank on its own. The infantryman testers didn't set off any exJ)osion AuCoin Inserted language in the
can fire It and take cover at a II in this second phase - joel the Defense appropriations bill giving a
immediately.
say in the final decision to the
accuracy rate If&gt; II to 71 percent.
Yet when Rep, Les AuCoin.
The third test was the most Marine Corps, which will oot be
D-Ore .. asked Gen. Jom Wickham, dramatic, showing the "Oinch swayed by pride !i' authorship.
the Army Chief or staff, what the factor" at work, Three io seven
MOORE'S MODEL: Many
status r:i the Tank Breaker was at a seconds after the soldiers fired their wealthy collectors of sculptures by
closed hearing last year, the missiles - and were still wire· the late Henry Moore own pieces oo
general said he'd never heard of the guiding them - an exJ)osion was which unknown artisans did much
thing.
set off 75 yards away that was of the work. Moore often !I'Ovided a
Our associate Donald Goldberg roughly as loud as a Soviet artillery small model, called maquette, and
has see n a DARPA stUdy that sheD : 165 decibels . The soldiers had let the stonecutters enlarge and
demonstrates just how Important been assured that the blast was shape the piece, using calipers and
the Tank Breaker's fire-and-duck harmless, and it was.
other tools. Moore then did the
technology would be. Conducted in
But the hit rate fell to 'll pe-a&gt;nt. · finishing touches. It's a practice as
West Germany and the United More than two-thirds oft he missiles old as sculpture itself. In fact, some·.:
States In December 1984, the study were !Ired Into the groond when the sculptors 1though not Moore) ·
focused on what the DARPA gunners flinched at the harmless simply gave the artisans crude
designers call the "flinch factor."
ex plosions. Furthermore, the sketches to work from. One artisan
It was a three·stage test, using 15 gunners did oot g&lt;&gt;t used to the told us that society sculpor once
soldiers who had troved they could blasts when the test was repeated, gave him an IS-Inch maquette and .
fire the Dragon missile accurately. even though they knew the explo- ordered a lO·fool statue made from
First they fired at moving targets sions were harmless.
It . The craftsman threw it out the
about 1,(00 yards away with oo
With Utis convincing argument window.

Today in history
iroday is Friday, Sept. 19, the 262nd day of 1986 with 103 to follow.
n.~ moon is just leaving its luU phd,.,.,
There is no morning star.
irhe evening stars ar&lt;' Mercury , Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
n.ose born on this date are under the sign of VIrgo. They i~clude Irvin
Wtsthelmer. founder of the American "Big Brothers" movement, in 1879;
watergate prosecutor LA&gt;on Jaworski in 1905; auttor William Golding
("Lord of the Flies") in 19U; actors Adam Westin 19~ (agel!) and David
M~Uum In 1933 tage 531; slnger-oongwriter Paul WIUiams in 1940 (age
46j, and model-actress Twtggy In 1949 (age 371 .
Pn this date in history:
)n 1m, American soldiers won the first Battle of Saratoga in the
~volutionary War.
.
U1 1881, President James Garfield died in Elberon, NJ .. of gunstot
wOunds inflicted July 2 by a disgruntled officer-seeker. Vice President
. Cl1ester Alan Arthur was sworn In as his successor.
}n 1981. a fuel explosion in a Tilan-2 mlssUe silo near Damascus, Ark.,
tl¢ew a nuclear warhead hundreds of yards, killing one man and injuring
22•Air Force personnel.
)n 1985, an earthquake collapsed hundreds of buildings and killed 7,tXXI
~pie in Mexico City's worst disaster.
;.. thought for the day: James A. Garfield, ~h president of the United
States, said: "This great nation Is too great to look for mere revenge . But
for the security of the future I would do everything."

I

.,

allies. Does it any longer make
sense for us to finance so many
troops and weapons in such a
di sproportionate manner? Isn't Eu·
rope capable of carrying a greater
portion of Its own defense burden?
No country In Europe is carrying
a national debt load as heavy as
Washington's. No l'Ountry In Eu·
rope is afflicted with so large an
internatbnal trade defiCit as the
United States. The $18 billion
American trade deficit for the
month of July is the lar~st In our
national history. No European
country carries a defense burden
that even approaches American
military spending.
The largest portion of U.S.
military spending In Europe Is for
the maintenance of five full-scale
army divisions. This American
army of llO,tXXI men and women Is
not there to stop the Red Anny
should it begin to roll across
Europe. Rather, these American
forces are there as a signal to the
Russians and to our allies Utat any
attack oo Europe woold trigger an
American response. No ooe he·
Iieves Uta! JJO,!OO U.S. troops could
match the Soviet forees, rut they
could serve as a "trtpwlre" that
would leave Ill doubt of immediate
and then growing American lnvol·
vement should Europe be attacked,
In Qther wor~. our forees are the I:!'
not to win a war butte keep that war
from happening.
Former President Dwight Elsen·
hower - a five-star Army general
- believed that one American
division could serve Utls ttipwlre
function as easlly as five, for much
less rooney, Former U.S. Senator
Mike Mansfield ,of Montana, a
Senate majority leader, favored

cutting U.S. NATO forces in half.
Senator Sam Nunn of Georgia has
advocated substantial cuts in U.S.
NATO lorces unless Europe begins
to carry a greater proportion oft he
cost Recently, !Uinois Senator Paul
Simon has suggested that "in
Western Europe we rould reduce
U.S. forces by 10 percent, while rur
European allies take up the slack,

Florida, barred from live televi·
siOn, two weeks ago .may have
wished the NCAA ban included
even highlight s. The Gators cer
tainlv made newscasts then , when
their 21-game home unbeaten
streak ended with a 23-15 loss to
Miami, currently ranked No. 2.
The 2-1 Gators are home Satur·
day, but to get going on another
successful run at Gainesville, f' ia .,
they wlll have to upend Alabama 3·0 and ranked No. 4 - in their
Southeastern Conference opener.
Alabama has beaten Florida
seven consecutive games, dating

NFl.,"

teams.
TraDing 13-10 at halftime, Cleveland tied tire score t'l-13 on
Du-rtdden Matt Bahr's second field
goal of the game. a 3&lt;1-yarder six
minutes nto the third quarter.
Cincinnati roared back as Kinne brew capped a 73-yard drive by
roaring in from two yards to give
the Bengals a :.ll- 13 lead with 1:47
left in the third quarter.
Kinnebrew then ootched his third
m of the game 4: 29 Into !he fourth
quarter, barreling Into the md zone
from four yards out.
Breech's third field goal of the
game, a 25-yarder, capped the
scoring with 2:02 left to play.
"Larry and Jame; got the JDwer
blocks, and I think we were
well-rested after Sam let us relax a
bit earlier this week," said Bengais
quarterback Boomer Esiason, who
was 12 of 21 lor 152 yards and one
interception.
Kosar completed 28 of 40 passes
for 2:l3 yards, but the Browns'
running attack was hampered by
the absence of Kevin Mack.
Earnest Bynercaugllt 10 passes for
77 yards, but his nine ru shes netted
oniy 16 yards.
After Hanford Dixon intercepted
Esiason, the Bengals regained
possession and took a 3-0 lead on
Breech's 49-yard field goal with3:53
remaining in the ftrst quarter.
Wright's block r:i J eff Hayes p.mt
and Minnifield 's alertness gave
Cleveland a 7-3 lead with 1: 16left in
the fi rst quarter.

PLAYER-OF-WEEK - ,Jeff
McElroy, 5-6, 155-pound sophomore tailback-linebacker. was
named Meigs Jaycees "Player·
of·the·Week" for his efforts
against Trimble on Sept. 12 .
McElroy gained a career·hgh
106 yards (16carries) and "'-'Ored
one touchdown. Defensively, he
had three tackles in the Mar:wd·
ers 28-Q TVC grid victory.

Tonight's games
Ga llipolis at Wellston
Lucasville at Portsmouth West
Athens at Point Pleasant
Wheeling Park at Warren Local
Logan at Circlev ille
John Marshall at Marietta
Jackson at Waverly
Coal Grove at Wheelersburg
Rock Hill at South Point
Kyger Creek at Southwestern
Hannan. Trace at Oak H1ll
North Gallia at Southern
Eastern at Symmes VallPy
Ironton St. Joe at Wahama
Miller at Meigs
Trimble a l Beipll'
Vin lon County at Alexander
Federal Hocking at Nelsonville·
York

Transartions
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Hoo Th;w ·ko •r to llamil:o n Ar1rliiiH'IC'f' ol 1II •

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~·r· . u hfor..., lnnt '

rY'if'll'f' ool lr l t 11li1J! .lntln Shunr.ld ;r nd

rlf'frn..mun .VIikr• Miltlth'

bark to 196.1
"We are looking forward to
Alabama,' ' Florida linebacker
Scott Armstrong said . "They seem
to like to !(find it out on the grou nd
and keep thr hall for a long time."
Florida may be eligible for the
SEC title and a bowl bid. Its
probation, which prevents consideration for tix' Board of Coaches
ran kings, could be commuted after
a rPView in November.

At quarterback, the game tea ·
tun•s two of the nation' s most
consiStent passers in Alabama's
Mike Shula and Florida's Kerwin
13&lt;&gt;11. Shula, son of Miami Dolphins
Coach Don Shula, has completed 59

pPrcent of his passes, but ha s br'f"P _
intpreepted lour times.
·,
"We'll definitely find oot who we
are. pla.ving a team of Florida's
capability," s a~· s Shut a "It 's going
to be a big challenge lor me because
they will he one ci the best defenses
we face ail year, especially the
secondary ."
Florida's task oo dfense is to
neutralize ootside Unebackers Cor· ·
nelius Bennett and Dernck Tho· .
mas. Bell, ronsldered a Heisman
Trophy ca ndidate, has been sacked
eight times in the ftrst two games
and 3111-pound Jeff Zimmerman
must proviclP leMier• hlp on the
offpnsivf' line.

KC volleyball team beats Eastern, ups record
to I 0-0 overall and 7-0 inside the conference
By SCO'IT WOLFE
OVP Staff

EAST MEIGS - During a torrid
and aggressive high school volley .
ball match Thursday evening, the
Kyger Creek Lady Botx:a1s took a
stronghold on the SVAC I! lie race as
they defeated Eastern's Eaglettes
15-U and 15-8.
Kyger Crffk is now 7-0 in the
SVAC and 11).(1 overall while
Eastern drops to C&gt;-2.
The winners were led in sco ring
by Christina Carroll and Kelly
Roush with B serving points each,
while Jill Drummond added 6.
Missy Kitchen pitched in 4, Renee·
Ward 5, and Missy Darst 2.
Throughout the match only two
points separated the two clubs,
however, Eastern coulcin'l quite get
over the hump, pulling close in the
first match at 12-11. F:f!S held
possession, but couldn't capitalize
as the defending SVAC and sectional champs powered to anothpr
win.
For Eastern Lesa Rilcker and
Krist! .Hawk each pitched in 6
points. Rucker was 7 for-9 serving,
Hawk wa s perfect at 9-for-9, and
Arlene RitchiP was ~ ually effective with 8-R
Kyger Creek's B team, al'o
Wllx'aten, also won the resrrve
contest by 15-10 and 15·13 scores.
Becky Price led the way with 7
po ints, while Cindy Lemley and
Tracy Eggleton eac h had 6 apiece .
For Eastern Amy Hager had 10,
Mel Mankin 4, Amy Berkhimer 3,
and Trish Spencer 3,

From the Wild

BOBCATS GO ltHI - The
Kyger Creek Lady Bobcals
hiked their season record to 10.0
and Sou them Valley Athletic
Conference to i.O following
Thursday's loop victory at East·
em, Above, Eagk'S' Ariell&lt;'
Ritchie slaps ball ~ross net
while KCHS defender Missy
Kitchen (9) awaits to bat it huck .
(Scolt Wolfe pltolo) .

It is still unlawful to
hunt on Sunday in Ohio

FAU HARDY MUMS
ASSORTED COlORS

$2 2 5 Each

5 OR MORE $200 Ea.
(2 GAl. SIZE)
10 IN .

HANGING BASKETS $400

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE

Syracuse, Oh.
992-5776
Open Daily '1-5, Clo•td Slrlday

By KEitH WOOD
Meigs County
Game Protector

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL
SQUAD - Members of the 1186 Rio Grande CoUege
voUryhull team are shown in thl!! school plllto. First
row. Jell to right are Debbie Heston. Usu Sduneltzer,

Sharon Seidel. u,a Taylor 1111d Janet Traut"'•in.
RelU'- Sharon Headings, Krls Cochr.UI, Am.v Dlxoo,
SheUa Brammer and Lurcn \\'olfe.

Will try again today to complete Little Brown Jug race

Pick up the tab _______G_eo~rge_M_cG..::....:ov..:....:.e.:....:..:._rn
During the past few years I have
spent considerable time lect uring
and traveling in Western Europe,
These experiences have deepened
my bng·tlrne respect and affection
lor the people and the diverse
cu ltu re of this region that have so
heavUy influenced the character
and development of the Amertcan
nation.
One of the contemporary
st!l'ngths of Western Europe is its
economic and Industrial vitality.
More than 40 years ago when I was
In Europe as an Air Force officer at
the end of World War ll,l wondered
if this war-devastated region woold
recover In my lifetime. Unquestion·
ably, Europe has recovered and
prospened -thanks in ccnslderable
part to the wise and generous help
of the American people through the
Marshall Plan and NATO - and
helpful economic cooperation in
other channels.
Part of the American assistance
to Europe has been provided by au r
contributions to the NATO defense
system. More than :JXJ,!XXI Ameri·
can troops financed at heavy cost to
U.S. taxpayers have helped guard
oor European allies for more than
Utree decades. Few Amertcans
would quarrel withrollectivesecur·
ily arrangements that have worked
so effectively to · stabilize the
East.West mUltary lcalance.
But the question now is whether
Europe Is in a position to carry a
greater share of the defense wrden
carried oo l:lng, and so dispropor·
tlonately, by the United States. No
one can travel today in Germany',
France, Italy, Belgium, Holland
and other European countries
without being aware r1 the JrCSper·
oos, thriving ecommles r1 oor

By United p,.,s International

to our really great offensive line,"
said Cincinnati's G-foot-1, 258-pound
running back. "Sam Wyche told us
to reach down inside and bring
oome inner desire along with every
rush.
"I tried to do that, playing every
down as if It was my last in the
Jim Breech added three field
!J&gt;als to help Cincinnati heat
Cleveland for the ftfth time in the
last six meetings between the two

The Daily Sentinel--Page-a

Florida faces tough Alabama · ~;

Bengals pound
out 30-13 victory
over Cleveland

What would you do ?____W_illUJ_·m_F_._Bu_.ck_ley_Jr._'

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Friday, September 19, 1986

and it would save our overburdened
tlldget many billions of dollars.''
I find much rommon·sense ~ron·
omy - and no loss ol securtty -in
the Eisenhower, Mansfield, Nunn
and Simon thinking about defense
sharing with Western Europe. We
could, and should, move JX"Udently
In that direction.

DELAWARE, Ohio tUPII- All
ryes were on the skies today at the
Delaware County Fairgrounds in
hopes the 41st Little Brown Jug.
postponed Thursday for only the
fourt h time in Its history, can be
run.
Jug official s waited until late
morning Thursday before offlclaUy
postponing the race for the first
time since 1975, when Ben Webster,
behind Seatrain, had to wait an
extra dav to win his only Jug title.
The oiher two delays came in
1%0, when the race was postponed
two days until Saturday and was
won bv Del Miller, driving Dudley
Hano; er, and 1952. Wayne "Curly"

Smart won that Ju!( behind Mea dow Rice.
Thursday·s p&gt;st ponemen l was
caused by an early morning
downpou r, which dropped about an
inch of rain on the old fairgroonds .
It turned the track, parking lots and
most other areas into a sea ol mud .
When the race officially was called ,
a light rain was still falling with the
prediction of more to come.
The forecast for Frida ~ also
callt'd for rain, setting up the
possibility tlus year's race will not
be run untO Saturday. or even
Sunday .
"We can't qlen it It lr track I
today and have it rain again," said
Tom Thomson, race secretary and

The Daily Sentinel

Porter senior on
Earlham grid team

tUSPS 14~8101
A Dh!Bion of MuiHmetlla, Inc.

Berry's World

RICHMOND, Ind. - John Pomr

Publlsht&gt;d rvpry aft £'rnoon, Monday

of Racine, is a linebacker with the

throujZh Frida y. Ill Court St.. Po mf'rov . Ohio. bv thr Ohio Va ll P~ Pub·

1986 Earlham College football
team.
Porter Is a senior at Earlham. He
Is a graduate of Southern Local
High School where he participated
in ibotball, basketball and baseball .
He is the oon of Frank and Mary
Porter of Rural Route 3. Racine.
Porter is majoring in sport and
movement studies at Earllcam.

J is hln·~ Comp8ny/MulllmE'dla, Inc. ,
Pomproy, Ohio 45769. Ph . 992·2Hi6. Se·
cond (']ass pos lagt- pakt at Pomeroy ,
Oh io.

M('mbt-r: United Press Internallonat.
Inl a nd Dally Press Association and lht'
Oh io Nt-wspaJ&gt;('r Assoclaflon . National
Ad\•rrt ls ln ~ Rt-presentalive, Branh111m
Nf'W spap('r Sales. 733 Third Avenue.
Nf'W York. N(&gt;Y.' York 10017.

viC!' president or the Little Bro~&lt;11
Jug &amp;x:iety Board of Directors .
"We could race toda y bv peeling
abou t one-half inch of slop off. But,
once you peel it off, you can't do it
again.
"It 's too shaky to take a chance,"
added Thomson .
Thomson said he didn't expecl
any of the JB horses in the field,
seeking a record purse of $407,001,
to be withdrawn because of the
dctav.
"We've never lost any helore,"
Thomson said, nJerrin g to the
previous delays. "This Is a major
,take race and they want to win it.
Winning the Little Brown Jug ca n
make their career."
Thomson said , however, if the
race is run on Friday, a work da y
for mcst people, the usual crowd of
45,tXXI plus probably will be cut by
about a third .
"There's no question it will hut1
th&lt;' crowd," he said, "tilt the rule
book says you have to rae&lt;' oo the
fir st ava ilable day."

I have had some recent questions
concerning hunting oo Sunday.
Some people had heard yru could
hunt on Sunday now. This is not
tru~. It is unlawful to hunt on
Sunday, October 4th marks til'
beginning of deer row season for
Ohio. Deer populations are high for
Ohio hunt ers to takP advantage r:i .
&gt;
The followin g loca tions will be
~~·
checki ng deer in for the 19136·87 bow
THE SAW.
THE BUCK.
-,
028 super -16" Bar &amp; Chain
A 1m;" hmllluck, the ..n~ ·,
,
season.
K!atrue hardulolpoo.n; J.l2 cubi: ir&lt;h&lt;fOlir&lt;. ilremost molnol - ' ' knh&gt;et.
• ,~
1. Eber's Gull Station , Racine.
EIL'ctronlc ignitbt Quick.stop~J chain brake. Anti· Hand-cr~tcd. IW~-inch~.
: ··~
2. Dan's Exxon , Main St .,
vibr¥m ,,...,._ Sp«~Jinngl;" , 1t;w. Sing!. Brass
SoUd kldling
• ,
Pomeroy :
te-a Muter Control. All the~ lealures,... mechanlSffi. Rf!a1~ for l4(t
•
::
3. Forked Run State Park .
'
• netd ... ""' the tooghcsl jobs.
4. Rapp's Grocery, Snowville .
THE DEAL.
•
good for • FREE Buck lmife. 'i&gt;u'O
::
5. Brown's Taxidermy. C.R. 25 • f'lm:lw&lt;"' 02!1 Super for just 1369.95 and~
own t"" &lt;i the finest look """' built; the
~the-woods ambo. SUhl's Saw-Boa:k o..J. •
'·
near Chester.
Your lime is running sho rt if you
are needing the Ohio Hunt..- Safety
Course. The next course is scheduled for Sept. 2.1, 25, 29, :lO from 6
THff I"MU'I UH1•1MU..W. CM. . U•
'
:
p.m. to 9 p.m. It will be located at '
AWMWU OIM.Y ntiiOIJ('JI PMnCIP.ntC STIHl S£IWICIItC OUI.OS Wttll£ $Uf'rl.t(SlAST
~ :
Southern High School. You must '
attend all sessions and pre-register
POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
by calling John Costanzo at 81:1-:;105
600
East
Main
St.
Pomeroy
r
•
Serving Meigo Co lor 20 yoaro. 1966-t986
~
or myself at 985-4400. If you need a
course try and ~~ in this class
'•
because none are being planned for
the near future.
~-------------------,,•
Also the Trapper Education
'I
Course will be Sunday. October 5th
I
from 1 p.m. till 6 p.m. at the Izaai&lt;
Walton larm clubhouse near Chester. You must pre-register for this
also by calling John Hetzer at
378-6228. This class is r6Julred for
ail first time trappers.

frth1'4!&gt;.
acertifKl lr
""'*"!

i:

: ~rt~!~~·~~~nwi&lt;i7l:·;~•rullli~ol~iMcmin- • .i

J:

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

POSTMASTER: Send address chanRf'S
to ThP Dally Sl&gt;ntlnt&gt;l. 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4.5700.

'

.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrter or Mol or Route

Subscribers not deslrln~ to pay the car rier ma y remit 1n advance direct t~
Tht' Dally Sentin el on-a3, 6or 12 mont!(
oosls. Credit will be glvtn carrier each
we-ek .
·
No sub!crtp tlons by mall permitted In
art&gt;as whert• homf' carrier servl~ It

availabl e.

Moll Soibotrlplloal
l•lde Melp County
13 Weeks .... .... .. ... ...... ...... .. .. ..... $17.29
26 We&lt;&gt;ks ... ,,.. .. , ... ,,,., ,,.. ,,., ., ,,., , $34.06
~2 Weeks .. .. .. ... ... .. ........ .. ......... $06.56
Outtlde Melp Coulty '
13 Weeks ... ...... ,.,.., ,.. , ...• ,,,., .,., m .20,

"What's !his sbouf your refusing to sllend
another MEETING todlry ~~~~~you want to
GET SOME WORK DONE?"

26 Weeks ......... .... .... , ..... ... .. ..... S3UO
52 Weekll ............. ..... ....... ......... 167.fll

'

•

One WN:'k ... .. .... ... ."...... .... ... .. ..... .. $1 .25
On&lt;' Mon th ....... ....... .. .. .. .... .. ..... $5.•~
Onr Yr ar ...
. .. ........ ... .. .... .... $65.00
SINGLE COPV
PRICE
Dall y ..... .. ............ ... ......... ~Cents

"

•'·

,,

.

.•

1978 Oldsmbile 98 Regency 2 Dr.
' The car with all luxury items you an expect.
Loaded.
SALE

$2495

TAKE THE KEY AtiD SEE- •HtA~E AKEY
TO ABEnEt DEAL

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

·500· E. MAIN

POMEROY OHIO

'

•'"
~

'' •

�.fage-4-The Daily Sentinel

R~ds
.

£all again
·as Houston wins
5-3 decision

Meet the Meigs Marauders

.

By SCO'IT NEWMAN
UPI Sports Writer
Major League Baseball and the
:television networks probably hoped
•Cincinnati would sweep Houston
·this week, creating at least one
pennant race In October
Instead, the Astros Thursday
night completed a three-game
· sweep of the Reds with a 5-3 victory
· at Cincinnati and made a New
York-Houston NL playoff a virtual
certainty.
The Mers have chnched and all
the drvisional leaders have magic
numbers m single digits
" Not In my wildest dreams did I
think we'd win all three," admitted
Astros Manager Hal Lanler."J
have no answer as to why we play
. so well against them. We've done
: probably f'very thlng right against
· the Reds."
Houston. which won 14 of 18 from
Cincinnati this season, leads the NL
West by 10 games and their magic
number is seven
· Lanier, who was a coach wrth tiE
National League champion Cardinals last year. wasn't afraid to use
his bench. Krough, 4-3, got the caU
when Lanier decided not to take a
chance on Nolan Ryan's elbow In
the rain that fell through most a tiE
early Innings.
Lopez replaced Krough In the
sevl'llth and pitched one-hit ball In
the final three Innings to earn hrs
sixth save.
After the series, Cincinnati Manager Pete Rose was left to think of
the batt!&lt;' fur second place with San
Franclsro. The Reds and Giants
are tied for second place. ( \
"If we can 't finish first, w~ ta
finish second," said Rose. ·
Rose, who had high hopes when
the series started, said Thursday's
game summed up tiE series.

"We didn't have many opportunltres to score," added Rose. "Every
time we did, something went
wrong. t!Ey took advantage of It
Nothing went right for us during
IlEse games."
In other games. New York shut
out Chicago 5.0, Pittsburgh beat
Montreal J.J. Atlanta bea.t Los
An~les 4-3 in 12 mnlngs and
Philadelphia edged St Louis 4-3.
Mets 5, Cubs 0
At New York. Howard Johnson
hit a three-run homer to cap a
four-run fourth lnnlng and Rick
An&lt;Prson romblned with two relievers on a six- hitter to defeat
Chicago. Anderson, 2-1. pitched the
first five innings before bemg
relieved by Mitchell and Randy
Myers, who pitched tiE last Inning.
Pirates 3, Expos 3
At Montreal, U.L. Washington
and Benny Distefano each hit
sacrifice files to cap a three- run
nlnth Inning for Pittsburgh. Winner
John Smiley pitched the eighth to
wm his first major-leaguereclslon.
Don Robinson pllched the nlnth for
hrs 13th save.
Braves 4, Dodgers 3
At Atlanta, pinch hitter Bill
Sample looped a two-run oouble
down the right-field line with one
out In the bottom of tiE 12th inning
to defeat Los Anwles Sample,
batting for wmner Paul Assenmacher, 7-3, lifted a looper that
landed on tiE right-field line and
sco red Terry Harper and Omar
Moreno after tiE Dodgers had
taken a J.2 1ead m the top r1. the 12th.
Phillles ~. Carclnals 3
At Philadelphia. winning pitcher
Mike Maddux, :\.6, singled home tiE
game-winner In tiE second lnnlng
and reliever Kent Tekulve stopped
a seventh-lnnlng uprising to defeat
St. Louis.

Scoreboard ...
Majors

NFL results

\n-.n iUI I.o:·~·

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DON BUNCE

!&gt;-7, 128-PoWJd

!&gt;-10, 191-Pound

STEVE MUSSER
6-1, 183-Pound

Freshman Wingback

Senior Guard

Senior Guard

boost," said OSU coach Earl&lt;'
By RANDY MINKOFF
BruC&lt;'. "The best thing about the
UPI Sports Writer
Ohio State and Michigan State Washington game i~ that it Is
wUI try to break a couple of horrible behind us."
Like OSU, Colorado ts off to a
records Saturday as the Brg Ten
llies to Improve on its poor slow start al 0-2 after gelling a be rth
non-conference record this season. in the Freedom Bowl last year
"I don't know what's happened to
The Big Ten has JUst a 7-6 record
them,"
Bruce said "They run the
alter two weekends of non wrshbone
efff'Ctively and they have
conff'rence batting Worse yet. the
league has only two wins over a good defensive team."
Mrchlgan Sta tc also rs a disapnon -conf erence Dlvl so n I
pointment after droppmg a 20-17
opponents.
The league will try to rmprove on d&lt;'Cislon against Arizona State last
that situation thts week when Ohio w&lt;'ek The Spartans will be looking
State hosts Colorado; Michigan to beat Notre Dame at home for the
State hosts Notre Dame; Navy hrst time since 1968.
MSU was upset by Arizrna State
visits Indiana; Nebraska v1sits
DllnoJS; Michrgan hosts Oregon last weekend and the Spartans'
NEW RIO COACH- Chel')l State; Oklahoma hosts Minnesota, Helsman Trophy candidate, lnA. FleUtz, West Unity, Ohio, has Army travels to Northwestern; renzo Whttf'. was hrld to only 61
been named women's coach at
Purdue ent&lt;'rtains Pittsburgh, and yards.
IUo Grande College-Community Wisco nsin visits Nf'vada -Las · Against Notre Dame. MSU will
CoUege. Prior to coming to Rio,
Vegas
face a team that nearly upset
she worked at Defiance College
The Buckeyes started the season Michigan last week in South Bend.
and the dlredor ol student
in the UPI top 20 but have lost their
"Somebody "111 come out of this
activities and women's as.&lt;istant
first two games. their worst start
basketball coach. She also sine&lt;' 1894 The Buckeyes were 27 lake part in
served as as.&lt;istant soltbaO whipped 40-7 by the Huskies l&gt;st
Ladie!! Day golf
coach. She Is a 1983 Malone week after dropping a decision
graduate, and began work on
aga inst Alabama last mon th
T\\•Pnty-seven YI'Omen Wf'H' on
her rnasiA!rs at Seattle Pacific
"I am sure that by gett mg back hand for Tuesda y's Ladies Day at
University In Seattle, Wash.
home to
It will
a morale the Jaymar Golf Course
A scramble was played followed
by a catered iunchron
Winners for the day were low
score team, Sui' Burnett , Nancy
Hill, Sarah Owen, and Velma Rue;
second low score team. Joan
Childs. Maxine Gaskill. Ada Nease
and Pal Mills, third low score
team. Norma Custer, Elizabeth
Lohse, Elizabeth Cutler and Grace
Elch. Prize for low putts went to the
team of Nancv Reed. Barb Shuler,
Betty KO&lt;'hler and Nellie Brown
Nancy Reed won the chip i'n hole
1986
Ladles Day will continue at 9 a. m
SALO! CENTER
each Tuesday as long as weather
T BAU
permits.
IJr J 1

tUPtf(~ Co unty'~ 01&amp;&gt;~1

game with a goose egg and two
losses," said MSU corh George
Perles. "Notre Dam&lt;' Is a very fine
team. They showed that last week
against Mrchrgan. (Quarterback
St&lt;'V &lt;' I Buerleln Is throwing the best
of his career."
Regarding White, Perles said th&lt;'
main goal d the Spartans is to " win
first" regardless of who gets the
statiStics.

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BARGAIN t'.ITINEES SAT\JRDAY &amp;
SUNDAY • ALL SEATS $2 50
AIIHISSION EVERY TUESDAY 12.50

•

Jl .... t.

2 II

Nf' l" York

41

II

1 ()

Alf'xandf'r
Wf'll s ton
Belpre
Mil le r
Trimble

2R

9

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12

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27

28

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0
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To tals

al il&lt;'lp1c

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Ff'drra l-Hodo;lng a ! N('!soovilJC'-York
Gc:l ll!polls ."J I Wells lon 1non lruguf' l

63
9 62

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2
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M1!1rr at Me l~"

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55

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8 8 2116 2116

Friday's resuls:
MP1gs 'lS T'n mbl r 0
&amp; tp rp 21 Wetlstoo 0
Vint on Cou nt\' :r7 FrdPrnl Hockin g 0

SLINDERELLA
DIET CLASSES
TUES. EVENINGMASON
WED. EVENINGFIVE POINTS
JO ANN NEWSOME
992-3382

:\l ,ll'h

h~l; l orn f ' l ' llll

ln •m

\1(J.) ~Inn hll,l.'l.l,ol11

!hiI dl' lr ll'olll 1 ncli\111tam Fullror.lnt1
1l r tllollollr.., oltl..,! mund In 19?i. ,u1d
1'),\fC lllih INnd In IlK.
~ ldml H1• 'll)mlod ""''');•rkrt 111
l!nlphl
1\lfll

1hn~ ·

BUTTERNUT AVE. AREA
MULBERRY AVE. AREA
IF INTERESTED, PLEASE CALL

DAILY SENTINEL
992-2156

WE'R

O·PEN
FOR YOU
FRIDAY'S

UNTIL
7 P.M.

"The letter Bank"

500

POMEROY OHIO

PhOne (614 1 742 2177

Pomeroy Flowe~ $hop

B.~BB~
~a.m-

FtOWERI FOR IVERY OCCAIIOH

(6141992·2039 or
(6141992-S721

214 E. Main
992· 5130 Pomeroy

106 Buttlfnut An., Pomtray, Oh .

E

KingsbuiJ tbne Sales
&amp; Service
The

Ftnest

1n

Modular Homes

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES
n late September's golden days,
The wamng sun's departing rays
Will introduce a cooler phase,
Where we are prrvi leged to gaze
At trees w1th dying leaves ablaze,
Whose beauty surely wrll amaze
And match the bonfire that conveys
The arr that's !riled wrth smoky haze:
Whrle skies wrll soon wear cloudy grays
And frost will paint a brilliant glaze.
Your House of Worship thus relays
A message that your faith obeys:
Instructions that we all should praise
Almrghty God, whose lovrng ways
Provrde the season that portrays
The splendrd trme of Autumn.
- Gloria Nowak

&amp;

Pomeroy,l100 E. Ma•n

Rawlings-Coats-Blower

WAID CROSS
SONS SlORE

FUNERAL HOME

ARencg, Inc. {i}
·•..,., . i
0

•

Atross from the Courthouse

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677
Brll Qui&lt;ktl and Rullo Ann

l '---/
&amp;N.

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

MT HERMOt\ !J~lTED BRFT!ffiE:-.J
II'\ CHR IST l HL Rf'H Loc.llf'd 1n i t'xas
C'o mmunilv nff C1 Rl R2 R&lt;'\ Rolx-1 t
Sanders paslor Jpff Holt f'r, Ia\ £- i:Jd t•f
Grocertes264 S. 2nd, Middleport
Ed Roush Sund i:l \ S&lt;'hool Sup! Sund,n
Pomorey
115 I . Mtmoriol Or.
General MerchandiSe
Schoo l 9 10 am, m otllm~ " ot shlp .md
992-2104
Ractne 9419 -2550
r htl drl'n ~ r hu rrh. 111 10 am t'\rnin ~
pr('a ch ln g sf'n It r on I hP st •t ond .m.-J
fou t 1h ~u nd.n s v. 01 ~ h i p srn kP al 2 ,i() p
fou r! h Sundavo;. al 7 ~0 p m . Chr!stl,m E n
m
&lt;k'avot on !hi' ru ~ 1 and !hlrd Sundo\·~ ,tl
Mf MOR ! i\ H BAPTIST F'nu rl h and
7 30 p m Wtodnf&gt;s dav pra\f'l mfft ln g an d
M.iln
S1 Mll lflii'J)m 1 Ht&gt;\ Cllbrrl C" ral~
I&lt;Hifek~ Flit~
Bible• studv 7 10 p m
.1 1 p.i ... IOI M1 . . F.r\l n A.Jum~nrdn {'r
CHURCH OF" r.fiD OF PROPHECY
Sun(hn School Supt Su nd,n SC'hool9·30 a
Main
Pomeroy
MAIN
POMEROY
Loca trd on 0 .I Wh it(' R.o,td ol Hi,R"hwa\
m \\ orsh lpSI'I\1(1' 1[1 -4'J .t m
l fiO Pill Hrnson pas lor Sund av Sth oo l lO
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
a m Class('~ for .ti l U.ll:t"'~ .Junmr ( hu rd! II
- Jn~f'p h R Hos kins rvanJ;:wll~ t Sundav
am . Mornmg ~~oo rs hl p 11 .t m /\du ll
Hlbh' St ud\ 4 .t m . wor~ h i p HI,, m . Sun ,'
Choir prartt rr tip m Sunda v Young Pro
tl.n Nrn ml! sN \ JtC· n pm. Wrdn f'Sda-...
pll''s, C'h1 ldrrn s fhun h ,md Adult R1hlr
: ·. TRINITY GIURCH, Rl'V W H !'min. Church Sf'rVI{'f' 11 15 a.m
f'\IIIIO~Sf'l\ 1 ((' ip m
Slud \, Wf&lt;dn1osdav a1 7 :m p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF foOD Paslor
, ·pas1or; ))e.btiE&gt; El.ick, SuOOav School Supt
PENTF:COSTAI ASSE MBLi' Ro.i('lOP
John
E\·an~
Sund!l\
Schon!
10
00
a
m
HOPE
BAPTIST
CHA
PEl
~110
Gran
t
., Church SChool 9: 15 a.m , Wm hlp Srfvir 10 :W
Rr 1 :.!~ Wt lh,tm Hob,u k p.tstor S und.1~
Sl Mlddl&lt;'port Affllla tf'd with Sou thl'rn
SUnda\o Mor n in~ Wors hip 11 On u m Ch i I
~:a.m. Choir reht&gt;arsal, 1\iesc:lay. 7. 00 p m
~ hnn J HI ,J m
Sunil,!\ I'H'nmg sPrVI€'{' 7
Bapll~t Convf'nll on 0 £1\'ld 81"\ &lt;~n Sr M1
drm's Ch urch 11 am Sunda v Ev('n tng
.. \JIIder direction of Lois Burt.
p m " l'fl n!"~ t1 .1 \' PH•nin g ~f'n 1('1' 7 p m
S!&gt;rvlcf'
'i
00
p
m
WNI
6
p
m
Voun~
Lu
1.
• · POMEROY OiUROI OF TilE NAZA
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · nls ll'r Sundn\ Srhool Jfl .t m Mornlni!
C\ RPF:!'JTFR RAPT TST Don C'hl'ad!P
.,., or~ h1 p l lam
f ,•f'ninRWtlfo;. h•p 7 pm
dks' A.uxl ilarv Wrd ncs&lt;Ln . i p m F am
: RENE. Ccnrr Unk:in and Ml ltJ:on'v RC'\
Supt Su ndo1\ ttchMI Q lO .1m Morning
Tursday.
7
30p
m
W('dnf' 'ldav 1'\ l'nlil i! B1b l£' slud\ .md
ll v Worshtp
. 'nnmas Glen Mr0ur~Jt , JB.'iftr Norman ?rC'!I
ctr\ , ,1 -; l,i!pm
MPno.. P1,1'l'r Br(\ l kf\~1
\' or•hlp 11 1 lil t m PrJ\I'f o,; f'rVIfC' altc&gt;rn
REORGANIZrD CHURCH OF JESUS
pravrr m£'1'1Jn.'!: 7 p m
HAZEL COMMl!NlTY OWRCH Of!
lfy. S S. Sup . Sunday School. 9 :II a m ,
\\r'flni"'O:t\ "ill m tC:r ,wt 1
.o lt' Su n(J,J' ~
'
CHRIST
OF
LA
TIER
DAY
SAINTS
Pott
BRADFORD
CHuRC
H
OF
CHRIST
Si
Rt 124 :l mJko.; from Portl.m d Lnn g Hnl
mornin~ wCf'Stdp 10:,)) a m , rvmin!lS0"\1('(' 6
SUTfO!\ - Churr h S( hm l !t 10 am
land
Rat'lnt:&gt;Road
William
Roush
pas
lor
MJI)OI.FP
OHT
PF~TF
COSTAI.
Third
Rl 12-land C'o Rd 'i Ma rkSt •t'\ C'ts mln1s
1om Edo.;£'1 Hat t p.1st or Sumtn Srll ool.
' p_m; mJd-wt'E'k st'IVIC'E', WE'dnesday, 7 p.m
M(lt nln C WO! ~hlp lf1 ~ ~ .tm flto;J,I ndl hll d
Linda Eva ns church ~chool dlrf'&lt;'lor
!\It ' R t&gt; \ C! 11k R.1kt ·1 (Mslor Ca 11 Not
tf"r Sunda\ Srh11ol Sup t H.mv Hrn
GRACE EPISOOPAL CHUROi 3'!i E 9 10 ,1m . Sundnv morni11_g p r P&lt;H hUl~
Su nd,i\.. F (']l(114 "hlp d ln nPr wi th C.HTTI(')
m
:
Morning
worship
Church
schoo19·30a
llnc
h.1 m Su nrl.1\ Sl'hool Sup! Su nd&lt;!\
dr
lr
ks
:-iundav
Srhool!+
:W
am
Murni
n,e
JO
:lOam
Sundd\
f'\rnln
gsf'rv
lcf's
7
3ll
, Main St , Poll'll'I'Oy Sundav 58'\'1«'5 Ii:&gt;lv
lht id Thul'&gt;&lt;i,IV li JOom tM&lt;'\.u lrf' l
10:30 a m . WE'c:ln E'Sdav f'Vf'n in!l pravf'r
Sch ool HI .1 m '.lll h rlo~o,;~ro;. for a ll 3Jl(IS..
worship 10 :lOa m E\ Pn m ~ wnro;;hlp 7 p
pm
• ~nmunionon ttl' first Sundayci l'ach rmnlh
KF:NO CHURCH OF' CHRIST Vt&gt;rn on
St'J'\IICE'S, 7 . J0 p m.
F \l'nm~.: ..,,., 111 ~ oil&gt; p m Wf'ci nf'S&lt;Iav Btm Wrdnrsd.1v 11. ors hlp 7 p m
MIOOL~ PORT FREE WIL L BAPTIST
and rombinl'd with mornloK trayrr on thr
Eldrld.e:r mm lo;;!r r 0 11 \PrS".J in Sunda\
BETHLEHEM BAPJ'IST R£&gt;\. . Earl
llk
' 'u&lt;h .11 0 ll't p m \'uu t h srn ire'S F'r ~
ST
PAUL
LUTHERAN
CHL
RCll
CHU
RCH
CornPr
Ash
and
Plum
Ra
lp
h
: 1hlrdd &amp;ulday Mornl~prayt&gt;r a nd ~wrm n on
School Sup! Prf'a r hlnJ!: q lt'l a m f'dr h
Shtl!rr. pastor . Wors hip serv iC'f'. 9 .10 am
d,,, ,11 'i 'Jl p m
•
Corm•r Svcamon• ,tnt1 SN'on d S ! ~ Po
Cundiff pastor Su n d ~v Srhool 10 00.1 m .
, all oltrr Sundays cf I tr rmnlh Church School
Sund.l \
Sunday SchoollO 30 a m Blbll' Stud' and
l(f ll SIA~/- 1 10\\'S HJP 1 2H MJ!IS1 ~
merov Thr R1•v Wl lll.•m Mldd lt•sv..uth
Mornin~ Worship 11 00 a m Wt'dn ~ da w
, Md Nu~ Carf' provldrd Coff~ OOW' ln I b:&gt;
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION iThur
pravf'r Sf'rv lrl" Thursdav. 7·3() p m
Midtl i(• pnrt Rnr!hrl Chu1 k MI'Ph('rson
ps1or Sundtt\ SChool tt 4~ ,1 m . Ch ul('h
.t ntl Saturdav F&gt;.. (lntng- Sen !rrs a t 7 10 p
m an Ou.rham 1 pa s lor Sunday se rvkr,
· Parlsh HallllnrmllatE'Iv foUowln$!: !I¥&gt; SavtCC'
C~ R LETON INTERDENOMI NAT IO N
p •• ~l ur Sun d.n St h11trl 10 ,t m . Sunday
~('n lrr II am
fQMEROY GIURCH OF CHRI51', 212 W m
9 30 a m , f'Vf'fllng s£&gt;rvlcE' 7 30 P m
AL CHURCH . King sbury Road Rf'v Da
,., t•nu•l! Sl'l' a"" ,H -; p m 1nd Wf'd nM da \'
MEIGS
SACRED HEART CHURCH Msgy
Main St, N('U Proudfoot , ~=QSICI' Bible School
P raye r mE'l'llnli! Wednf'day, 7. 30 P m
vld Curfman . pa~tor Sundav School 9-:lO
~~· • ~ It P~ .t t i p m
COOPERATIVE PARISH
Ant
hon\
G!annamorP
Ph
99~
~9~
SaiU
r
!'tlla.m, MornlnRwcrshlp. Jl .llam You1 h
AEAR WAI I OW RIDGE CHURC H OF
a
m:
Ralph Carl, 5iupl Evf'f'llng wo r ~l .tp
N\T !QI ' IT\' Ri\PT lST Krn nr l h Smil h
UNITED
Mt!TIIODIST
CHURCH
dav
E\£&gt;nln.l!
M
as~
7
.
V
I
p
m
Sund,t
\
llll'E'Iings, 6:00 p.m.: EvrninJ:: worship 7: 00 p
CHRIST .J o~f'p h B Hos kin ~ past m Blblt•
7 00 p m Praver h\C'f'tlng, Wf'dn&lt;'Sda y
p . 1 ~ 1w ~unti 1\ s, hotni q 1ft :1 m
r hurrh
NORTHEAST CLIISTER
, M as~ I&lt; am Jn d'ffl am C' on ft·s~ 1 0n~ ctH
("],~s ., 9 JO.1 m Mornin g W or~h1p HI '\ll .1
· m W('()n(lsday nll(bl Jr a,.VN' mcMlnJ:: and Biblr
7 oo p m
Stt\11'1 i mpm \ IIUThf l' )i 0 \1- ~ h jp j, top
Rn Don A.rchf' r
ha If hour bt&gt;f nT I ' I'M'h M.1 o;.s ('CD dol "~f's
· studv 7. 1Dpm
'
m
.
E\f'n m ~ Y. orshlp t; 3ft p m Thutsrl.t'
LONG BOTI'OM CHRISTIAN Wrn on
m 1\lhlr~Ttu\\ lhu1 ..d.•i 7 3tlpm
ft(&gt;y Roy Oeeler
11 am Sunda v
: 1i£E SALVATION ARMY 11!\ BuUtTnul
Bib l(l Studv h 10 p m
E ldrldgr . pastor Wallarf' Damrv.:ood . S
l"lll f.OSPI I l iGHTHOUSE J:Kiti
RP\1
Seldon
John11on
VICTORY
RAPTIST
~~)
N
2nd
Sl
, Aw . PorY'I£'f'OY Mrs D:lra Wlnin.A: In dlarJJ•
NE W ~1' 1 VERS\' I LLE CO MMUNITY
S Sup! Sund av School 9 JO a m Worsh ip
l hl.1nd n u,Hl PomNm Tom Kf'l lv paS
ALFRED - C'hurr h School 9 lOa m ,
MlddiC'pOrl J am r~ E K('(&gt;S('I• p&lt;~~ l or
. Sundav Mil~ I'I"'PE'flng 10 a m : ~r~lnv
CHURCH Sunda \ Srhool S(ll" lr£' 9· 4!'1 a
St&gt;rvlrr . 10. 30 am
1\Jr {) Jnn ' I ,tmb('r\ S S Supt Sund.l '
Worshlp . ll a m UMYF'fi. llpm , UM W
Sund &lt;.~v morni n ~&lt;: wors hlp 10 a m Evrn
1 School, JO:l) am SJ.nday Sc tool, YFSM
m.
Wot ship Sf'r\ irf' 10 30 a m ,
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CH UR CH
mmnlng_ o,; 1" l(r •t lit .1m Sunrl av Pvm
Third
Tu
rsda\
7
30
p
m
Co
mmunion
tn
~
~f"rv
trr
7
p
m,
W('(fn
£'!1dcn
o
•vf'nl
n.l!
.EloisE- Adams. teadt'r 7· l) p m Salvatk&gt;n
E .. angpl!stlt ~rvlc£' 7 :il p.m. Wf'dnC'S
Mlkl'
Thompson
.
N""'
HM
vcn
WV
p;1st
or.
mg ~~~' )lC" 7 lllJ.T m Tu f"Sdav and Tht.~nf­
~rst
Sunda
y.
1An•hcrl
w:or
~h
lp
7
p
m
\'lsltallon.
Thursday
6
:10
, JJI('('ting, various s ~ anc:l musk' SpE'CiaJs
da v· P rayC'r m~tln a7 JO p.m T hundav
SLmdav School aT !I· .10 ll m : Mornln,ll' wor·
d ,t \ SC"r'\. I C~ .11 i : l') p m
.
CHESTER - Worship 9 am , Church
pm
, l)lursday, 11: It a m 10 2 p m Ladi&lt;'S Honr
ZiON CHURC H OF CHRIST P o mrrov
~ hlp al 10 10 a m : Sund a v rvt'n in )! srn lt'l'
WORD OF FAfT H 'l:l Mill St , Mk:ldl £'
&amp; hool10 a m. RibJ('Siudv. Thu rsday. 7p
MORS
E
CHAPEl
CHUR('H
-C'ha
rlrs
Harrison\
Il
l£'
Rd
Rob&lt;-r
l
Purtf'll
mint
~
Ua.gue
mm1bPrs
In
charll',
all
wom:-n
1
&lt;I I 7 10 p m Th ur~ d. •v sf'n.irPS al i '10 p
W"' S u n rl d~ mnrn ln g "l'r\ tel' Jfl 15,1 m.
m UMW flrs1 Tt.urstlo\' I p.m . Com
Nnr t ls p&lt;l~tor Sund.tv Sehnol 10 am,
• lnvlt«!, 6:4.'i p m 1ltUT'SQay, Corpr; Cadfot
IN St&lt;'\ f'Sta niM .S S Sup! BliiMrEI
Sum!. II 1'\ ( nm~ ; 10 Thursdi!l morn i n ~
m
mu-nlon.
flrs
t
Sun
dav
1A
r
r
hr-rl
worship
S&lt;'
n
'lrf'
11
am
Sund&lt;l\
nllit:hl
I aasss !YOUI'ijZ Propk&gt;-Bibl('), 7.J:l p.m. Blt»r
rm Ass t Sup! . Sund av SrhOol 9· 3ll a m
FREEDOM GOSPEl . MISSION al B.Ji d
n1b l1 ' 1u1h Ill 1m V. f'd nl'!'dJ\ rvmlng
.JOPPA - Worsh.p ~ lOam , C"hu rC'h
worship sf'n 'le(' 7 311 p m . Mid" f'f'k
' Study and Prayrr moollnll. cpm loti¥&gt; publlr
Worship SC'rvirr JO·l'J a m , E'rn!n~~t " or
Knoh. locat«f on Cou nfv Road :n Rr\
o Ul p m
S( hool 10 -30 a m Bible St udv WC'd nf'sda'
prayrt
~ r\'1('(' , 7:10p m Thur sday
ship
Su
nd
&lt;J
\
7
p
m
and
W
rd
n
r~ddV
7
p
m
: POMEROY WESJ'SIDE OIURCH OF 7 :W p. m. 1 J ohn~o n l
L.awrC'nN" G lu rsmr-c1 mp pa!i.tor Rr \
NF\\ IIA VF 1\ f Ji L' !(CJl OF' THE NA.
, QIRBI'.lJ"Di ChlkJrrn's Hofl'(l Road tCou nl)•
ST .JOHN LUT HE RA N CHLRC H, Plnr
LIVtNr: WORD CHF.STEH CHURCH
Roj;!rr
Willford,
as~T pastor Pr('tlrhfng
Z
\H
EJ\ F: R( \ ( . 11 n1tnn Str ou d JJ.Js tor
LONC BOTTOM - C'hu rC'h School 9 ~ 0
CrOV('
Rl1 \ William Mlddi0'1Urlh,
OF GOO- GlttJt•t I SpPntw p ,t ~ l m Sun
' Rood 161 fe252.1) VOC'a l mll~IC' Surdav Wor
srrvi('P.i Su ndav i :Wl p m Pravf'r mN•I InJ!
,1m . Wo r ~h lp 7 p m · BtbiP Studv Wrd
Sun( l ,, s, h••11 l 'I IAI ,o m Wor•h lp "''" kl'
t "!dhp 10 a m Blblf' ~udy n a m : Wors hi p fl p.
p.t~ l or Chur&lt;h srrv lcr 9 .ll &lt;1 m . Sund.i\'
da
v
&amp;
honl
9
:\0
,t
m
Mnrn1n.c
O.
.
l
'l
\
llt'
Wf'dnC'Sda\' . 7 :wl p.m . r.a rv Griffl l h
(II Ill ,, m
\ uulh '"r\ H 1 !=\undo~ v li 15 p
R('SdaV, 7 30 p m , tlMYf Wl'dnPSdll \'
10 00 ,1 m Sund .n 1'\'f'nt ngs••n ·lu&lt;'; OOp
: ·m. Wednesday. Blbll&lt; Study. 7 p.m
School lfl :'ill tt m
lrad1•r You th aruu ps Sunda \ f'\f' ning .1 1
m tt und ,l\ 1'\l' n llll!~l'r\' 1(1'7 nn p m Wf'd
6 00 p m
Communion r"irsl Sunda\
1
BRADBL RY CHURCH OF' CHRIST.
m Mid Wf'Pk pr,tVI'I sl't\lt'P Wl'fin f-stl.l \
• OlD DEXTER BIBL E CHRISTIAN
fi .1ft p m "l th R~ff a nd Vlol£'1 Willford
n "~ tl . t•, P1 ,1\1 '1 Mc 't'lln g o~nrl Rrb ll' Siu dy
IArrh&lt;'r l
.John \\ riJ!:hl pa~tor Sumi.l\ St·honl Q :IO.t
ip m
; CHuRat . AMn Curtts. pas!or. Unda 9.4 an
IC'ad&lt;'t~ Commu nion sC'rvlcr flr ~ l Sund al
il ~lptn
REF.DSVJLLE- Ct&gt;utC'h S&lt;' hool9 ~O a
MT
OLIVE
C'O
MMl
l\TTY
(
HURf
H
m
L1
r
rv
H
,l\
n
~.
S
S
Sup!
Mmnm.l!
• Sup! Sunda:v &amp;hOol 9: l} a m p-mchln~ S&lt;'l'
ro ch mont h
\FASF SFTTl ~ M~ NT CHURC H Sun
m, Wo r ~ hip S£'rv iC&lt;' 11 110 &lt;l m t 0N' l(lr l
La'oi. !('OU Bu ~ h p&lt;Jslor M,1x Folmr t Sr
· vm, ttrsl and third 9.100av folicM'inK S.u'da-...
" r~r ship 10 ]I .1 m
WH ITE'S
CHAPEl.
1\~" S LEYA N
rl.o \ olfl l't noon ~1 ' 1\hl'~.t ! ! J(J ThUI Sdav
TUPPERS
PLAINS
ST
PAUL
RACINE rHVR CH Of THE NAZA
Sup! Sund,IVSchool .ond Mornmg Worshi p
: ~ Yout h mt"((fln~. 7 ll p.m rvery Sun·
CHURCH- C'nol\ 1111' RO R('\' Phtll ip Rl
(' \I'Oin g ~1' 1 \l(f'S 11 'ill)
Church School 9 a m , Worship 10 a m ,
9 JO ,, m . Su nd&lt;t v l"\ enlng srn I« e 7 p m .
HEKE. R&lt;'\ l.lmd D r.rlmm .It pustnr
: dlv
d('nour p,lo;.Tor ~und , tV S chool 9 W ol m
FIR ST RAPTIST (Ill RCH M.tson W
Blbk Stu dv Tuf'!'dav . 7 :lOp m , UMW
0
1,1
B&lt;~ss Chal rma n oflhrBo,trd nf Chrfo;.
Yoo
lh
m(lf&gt;l
lni!
,1n
d
l:ltbl
l'
Slu
d\
\\
t..:lnf"!..
, GRAHAM
UNITED METHO DI ST
worship sc&gt;n l!rf' Ill JO 11 m · Ribl (l ~ 1 urtv
V,t Pol• lnr fi!Jt MutpJ'l \ Sunrl.n Schoo l to
Thlrrt Tuf'Sda\ 7 30 p m Co mmunion
II.Jn l. tf P. ~und,l\ S('hool 9 lfl .1m Morn
cLn .~ pm
' Preaching 9· 30 a m first and st•ron d, Sun
alld v.orshlp SC'n \('(', Wl'dn !'Sda\' 7 p m
1m
Su n1l 1\ f' \Ptdnl! 7 lll p m Pl,l\ l'r
lng '.1. 0! -.hlp 10 .10 .1 m r\ Jnll:rlts11c sPr
LTNI TF.OF'A ITH CIIL' RC H HT 7 nn Pn
First Sun~t~~~.:r~LI 'STER
: da ys of oach month: third and fou rth Sun
RUTLAND CHURCH Of CH RIST
m1~ 11ni! .•nd n ihil o;. tud \ W o 'll nf'~llav 7 WI
\
lr·r
7
00
p
m
Wt'rln
Psd.1\
spn
icf'
7
p
m
mt•rov
R\
P
as~
Rt'\
0,1\
1d
W!st•m,Jn
St
• dav£&gt;arh m onth worship S('rvlr{'s ,11 7 30 p
Mark .Jonf"S. pastor H!l l Nicholson. Su n
pm E' f'non r· ~~ lcflml'
Rev. James E . CorhiU
t !BERTY CHRISTIAN CHU RCH il&lt;'x
pas loT Ml'l vJn Ot dkf• S S Supl Sunil,!\
m .. Wed nMdaV ('Vc ntngs a 1 7 30 p m
da\ School S up! Sun d;n School9 3(1 a m .
Ul Tl AN [) FRF.F WII I. RAPT IST S,1
Re\1 Sle\'en Nt&gt;l!l.on
S(' hool q '\II a m . Mnr nl ng Wm sh1p Ill .10
tl'r Wood' C'a ll pa-.tor SNvltC'S Sunda'
· Pra vE'r and Btbl&lt;' Study
MornIn~ Worship and Communion 10 :KJ a
!1m "'t H1 ' \ P.tul T.tl ln1 p ••stor Sund.J\'
Rn. Mel\ltn Franklin
Jfl
am
a
nd
-;
p
m
Wl'd
nf'Sdav
i
p
m
Evrnln,e
Worshi
p
7
10
p
m
Y.1dn
0'tl.1\'
' . SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST, Mutb
S.hl)ul 101 m Sumi.J\ f'\f' nln g7 OO p m ,
m
Rtov, Clemen I.- S Zunl~a. Jr
Prav rr SPr\' 11'1' 7 )1 p m
rrry HriJ~:hls Road. Pom£'rov Lrr ov
RAC INE F1RST BAPTIST
S l ~c
RUTLAND B1BL EMF.TK&gt;DIST Am o~
V. !'tl n1sli.n t'\I' Rin R p rl\l'r mN' !Ing 7 00
Re\' , i\ndrew RuhenldnK
FA IT H BAPTIST f' Hl'RC'H ft, •tl trl.ld
an,.ch . Pastor Sabba th Srhool Sup&lt;'rln
Tillis p.1 ~ ror Son nv Hudsnn , su p! ~un da\
pm
Df'nvr r Pn ~ tor Mlk r Swl~rr Sundav
ASBU RY tSvracUSE'I- Wors hip 11 a m
St Mason Sund,t\ &lt;;( hool 1fl .1m Mr 11T1
tmdf'nt, Rhonda Markin Sabbath School
School Sup1 Sunda v School 9· 30 am .
School !I 10 am Morn ing worshi p 10 lll
SOUT H IHTIU I I" ~ W TFSTAMENT
Churr h St·hool 9 45 a.m.. Cha rgr Blbl&lt;'
In
J!
14
orship
11
,,
m
.
1'••n
mg
~
t·t
1
I((
"
p
btRins at 2 p m m Sa lurday wllh wor!ihlp
a m , Sund ;.n ('vrnlng M&gt;rvir&lt;' 7 00 p m
ri l l Rf II S1l\1 t Hu l ~~ Ou.mt• S\dl'n
Morn ing ~or ~ hlp 10 40 am : Sundd).
Stud''. Wf'dnpsdav i 30 p m : UMW rl rsl
m
P
ra
vrr
rJ\('('1111.{.! .1 nd H1bl1 Stwh " (ld
serviCE' foliO\I.' In ~ at J· t !'i E\·rr-... OOl' we i
WC'dni'Sday S('rviC'f' 7 p m WM PO pro
~to \(ki'J
p . t~l n t ~un d :J' School !:1 , J m ,
£'\'mlng worship 7 l:l p m Wf'dnf'Sda\
Th{'sday, 7 lO p m . Choir Rf'hrarsal
ntosd;~v 1 p m
•• C'Oillt
wn,.,htpSf&gt;t\1({' llltm Sund avtV('nlrl ~
r v('n\ng Blblf' stud v 7 30 p m
gr,lm 9 am ra ch Su nda\
Wrdnf'Sda y fi :«) p m , UMW rou r!h Sun
FO REST RU N RAPTIST Rt'\ r•h lr
· . RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH d.:tv 6·30pm tNC'Ison J
.. f' r\11 1 ; l~lpm " rd n r~d•v n l)!h l Htblt•
BURLINGHA MCO MMUNITY CHUROi
RUTLAND CHURCH Of THE NAZA
Bord('n p.:1stor Cm nl'llus Bum h ~ u p I
' • - SlstE'r Harri&lt;"ll Wami"r, Su pt Sunda y
~l uth 7 flOp m
·
RENE
Rf'\'.
l.ow('ll
F'ord,
pastor
SundaY
Burlingham
Rav
l.aud('rml
lt.
pastor.
R.oENTERPRISE - Worship 9 am
Su nda\- Srhonl q :VI am Sl•t on4i ami
: Sdlool 9. 30 a m . Morn In~ Worship 10 45
~hool~ .10 :J m Worship s£'rv lrf' 10 ~OJ
l:rrt Cw--'IJI as.o.;lslanl pas! {I' Sunday School
Cllu i'C'h Schoo1 10 am , B!bl(' Studv. Turs
PSAlMS 120
·· a m
10 11 m '1\oorshlp 7 p m. Vwl'dnrsday, 6 ~m
m
Youn J~: proplro"c: !'f'rvlrt• 6 p m
d tw. 7 Wpm UMW. First Mon dt'l v 7 10
• : . POM EROY f1 RST BAPTIST, LVOl on
youth ffi('('l!n g Wf'd . 7 p m r hurrh sct·vlm
E\ .mprll!i.T lc S('r\'iC'l' f\ :Wl p m wron rsd.l \
p m UMYF Sundav. fi p m Choh Rr
1
In
mv
distr&lt;"is
I
rtied
unto the Lord. and he hrard me.
·. Halley, mtn !stl'r William Snou ff r r, Sun
s('l'\'icr 7 p m
PI NE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH ~
ht•arsal t'o 30 p m Wr'Cinf'Sda ._. I Fran klin I
2:
Df'llv&lt;'r
mv
soul.
0
Lord.
from lying lips. and d('('('itfll l tonguP
: • da y School Supt Sund ay School 9 10 a m
mlf('Off R1 125 R('\' &amp;n J Wa11 11. pastor
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST. Mil l&lt;''
FLATWOODS - Church School. 10 .t m
• · · Mornin g Wouhlp 10 .10 am
3.
What
shali
be
giv~n
unto
thee?
or what sball be doll(' unto th!'P,
Robf&gt;rt
St'MIC'S
,
S
S
Sup1
Sunday
School
St
,
Maqon,
W
Vu
EU
!it:Nl&lt;'
L
Conll:N
m1
Worship 11 a m BlhlP S1urh Thur ~
•. ' F1RST SOUTKERN BAPTIST. Po
nlslrr Su nd av Biblr S!udv 10 am Wor
9 30 a m , MornlnS!: Worship 10 JO a m :
da\', 7 p m . IJMYF. Sunday h p m
thou
falSI'
tongue•
·: m&lt;'l'oy Pike- E Lamar O'Brvanl pastor.
o;. hlp 11 a m an d 7 p.m WC'dn('Sdav Blblr
Sundi:IY ('\"('ninJ! srrv lrr 7· 10 p m. Wrd
1 Franklin 1
4. Sharp arrows of ltv.' mighty, wrth coats of juniper
' _ Jack Needs Sunday School Dlr('('for Sun
m'Sd&lt;l\ wrv lrf'. 7 :10 p m
Studv. \OCa l mu slr , 7 p m
FOREST RUN - Worsh ip fl am .
· • da y School. 9: J) a m : Mor nlnfi!' Worship
LIBERTY
ASSEMBLY
OF
GOD
Dud
SILVER
RUN
BAPTIST
Bil
l
Ul
llr
5 Woc' is me. tha t I sojourn In Mesi'Ch. tha t I dwell In the II'll IS of
Cl\u r('h School lfl A M Choir praC't lcr
: · 10 45. evE'nin Rwon hlp. 7 00 p m 10 S.T l
paswr Sf('Vf' Lilli£' S. S Sup! Sunday
dint{ L &lt;.~ n&lt;' Mason W. Vtt .J N Thaf krr
TuC'~da Y. 6 30 p m UMW first Tu €'Sda v.
Kedar!
• • &amp; 7 30 j E S T l, Wf'dn E'Sday Prayc&gt;r S£'r
pastor Evrnln R Sf'rvirf' 7 ll p m Wo
School 10 a m MornlnJ! wor~lp , 11 a m .
7:Wp m (N&lt;'Isonl
6. Mv soul hath long dw~It wrth him that hatet h peacf'.
• ' vk' f' , 7 00 p.m . 10 S.T t &amp; 70:](1 PM IE S
m('ll'c: Mln islf-v Thuntla v 9 .'lf'l am .
Sunday C\'Pnl ng wurshlp 7 .'KI p m Prayr r
HEAT H 1Mit1diC"port I - Chu rch School,
·: T 1 Mission Frif'nds taR~ 2-6 1, Rfl vll l
mN'tlnJ! ancl B!hlr studvThursdav. 7 30 p
WRinf'Sday Prayrr and Blblf' St udy 7 l'1
9 .10 am .. Morni n!Z Worship lfl ~IJ a m .
7 I am for peace: but when I speak. tlley are for war
· . Ambassad ors l bovs aiH'5 6·JII l, and Girls
m. Youlh mf'('llng Wf'dn es&lt;Ey a t 7 p.m
pm
Youlh Group 4 p m . Wt'dn ,-.sda\, Ch urch
: · 1n Action ( aJt M~ 6-1111 on wron ~day s, 7 p
REJOICING LIFE BAPT IST CHURCH
Choir r('hrttrsa l 7 p m
Th ursda\
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIS T IN
.· m t0 STI&amp;730p m. IESTI Tursdav
- ~lt1 N 2nd Av€' Mtdd lrporT Sunda\Pravf'r Srrvkr 1\ 30 p m Blblr Stud\ 7
CHRISTIAN UNION The RRv David
• ' Vls lla!lon, 6 30 p m
School 10 a m Sunda v even IOiit 7 00 p m .
p m 1Zu n l~.11
McMan is, past or Sund ay S{'hool9 30 a.m
•: FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH . Bal
Mld·,...f'('k S&lt;'fVI&lt;'(', Wt'd .. 1 p m
MINERSVILLE - Worship Srorv !r·p 10
, Sunday m orning sf'rviCf•, 11 a m . Sun
·. 14?)1 Run Road. Rrv Em m£"11 Rawson. pas
LANGSVI LLE CHRISTIAN CHU RCH
a m . Churrh ~ hool . 11 a m UMW .t hlrd
dey nl(l:hl service, 7· XI WPd nPSay ~ayn
GOD WVES YOU VERY MUl'H
• tor. Handi E'V Dunn su pt Sundny School.
Robt•rl E Mussrr . pastor Su nd ay SC'hool '
W('dn('SdaV 1 p m , Choir pract lc&lt;' Mon
meelln(l:, 7 3() p.m
Ever
wonder
why some people oo not seem lo have man1
• to 1:1 m .. Sund av f'VE'niR2 sE'rvJcc 7: 30pm
9· 30 am Pau l Mussf'r, supl , Mornin ll
duv, 7 30 p.m INE'ISOnl
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH. Lmr1
' , Bible t eechln ~. 7 30 p.m Thursda y
worship 10 30 a m . Sund ay &lt;'V('D\nJr sf'r
PEARL CHAP EL - Worship $('r\. ICr 9
problems• I look at myse~ and I sf'€ mou nta ins ol problems Mv
W. Va ., Rt. l , J a"'" Lewis . paslor Wor
: SYRACU!oiE MISSION, Cht-rrv St Sv
vi('{' 7 p m , mid 'ol.'f'('k SNVICf" . Wt'dnt'!! ·
a.m , Churr h School 11 am , UMW Sf'
ship servlct&gt;s 9 30 a m .; Sund ay Sehool 11
neighbor
never Sf'ems to have anythin ~ toworrv abou t All seems"'
rarus£'. S£&lt;1¥'1('('5, 10 a.m Sundav Ev&lt;'nin,l!:
day 7 p m
ro nd Tu('Sda v 7:.10 p m., L'MYF las t
a.m , Evm lna: wor1hlp 7· 30 p.m . Tu esday
_. 5('1'VI&lt;'PS Sund av and Wrdnrsda v a t 7 00 p
SYRACUSF CHURCH OF THE NA
s
imple
and
easy In thf'lr me I beli&lt;'Ve God loves In' and I love C:&gt;d
Tu('sday. 7 l&gt; p m IRulx&gt;nklni L
collaR£&gt; prayttr meetlna: and Blblt" Stud y
•· m
ZARENE Rr\ Giron MrMl!lan pastor
POMEROY -Church Sc hool 9 1~ a.m
9· JO am: Worship service, Wedn esday
but
still
I
have
so many problems. God. whv rs thrs''
' MIDDL EPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
Marv Jan lrr Ul~·r nd('r Sundav School
Worship J(l 30 a m , Choir r('ht"arsal
7 311 p m
How
many
times
have you heard your parrots '"'· "f:xp&lt;'nen('t' I '
. IN CHRISTIAN UNION. R&lt;'V. Krtlh Eblin.
Supt. Sundav Srhool !l· 3l\ a m Morn In ~'!
Wf'dnrosda\ 7 30 p m . UMW srcond
OUR SA VI OUR LUTHERAN CHURCH .
; pastor Sundav Srhool 9 30 a .m .. Wad('
worship lO: 30 a m : Evanji!&lt;'llsl lr s('f"\' il'f'
Thr5da y 7 30 p m , UMYFSundav fi p m
the
best
teacher
"
This may be why we have pmt)lrms. Havln~
Walnut and HE'nry St&amp; .. RavE'nswood . W
... }layman. su pt : Mornln,;~ Worship, 10 30 a
6 p.m . Prav('rand Pral~rWf'dni'Sda)' 7p
1Cor blln
Va Thf' RE'v . ~ rji!e C WE'I rl ck . pastor
solved
a
problem
we
better understand thP ca use and va lue of
• m., Sunday f"Venln~~: St'rYIC'r 7 30 p m .
m. Youth mf't"lln ~~t. 7 p m
ROCK SPRINGS - Chu rC'h Srhool !l 15
9J nday SChool 9 30 a m.: Sunda)' worshi p
o# WE'dnE'Sday P rl\yC'r Me&lt;'lln(t. 7. :II p m
solving them. If it happens again I'll know ju st what to do. The morf'
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
a m · Worship 10 a m , Blb!C' Stud y, Wrd
llam
: MT. MORIAH CHUROi OF GOD.
CH RI~T . Eldf'n R Blak€' pastor Sunday
nr sda y,7·XJp m UMYF!Sl&lt;nlorst,S un
CALVAR Y BIBLE CHURCH, Joc·ar.J on
problems one solves th&lt;' more knowledge one has. II math trechrr
Ra cinE' ~ - JamC'S Satt erfi eld, pastor
School 10 a m Gttrv Ret'd , Ln IC'ad('l"
duv, ~ pm: tJunlorsJ l'\'&lt;'rv olh!'r Sun
Pomeroy Plke, Cwnty Road 25 N!'8r Fla1
gtves
20 problems for homework In one night Wht' n I gro t them all
• Frf'Pman Will ia ms, Supt Sunday School
Morn InS!: Sl'rmon 11 a m , Su nd ay n{Jzhl
da\' 6 p m 1Franklln1
woods. Rev. Blackwood , pasto r Servlcrs
· 9:45 a.m .• Sunday and Wf'dnesda v rvcn
S&lt;"rviC'f'S. Chr l ~l lan EndC'avor 1 30 p m .
finished and done correctly, I'll nf'Ver n&lt;'t'd fear again that I ca n't
RUTLAND- Chur&lt;'h &amp; hool, 9-45 am,
on S1.1nday al 10· :rl•.m. and 7:30 pm . with
' lng Sl"'"VIC'P5, 7 p.m
Song S('rvlrr 8 p m Pr{'arhlnR 8. :J) p.m
Worshlp.10. 30a m UMW (E\enl n ~Cir
Sunday School Y: M a.m . Bible Study , Wt'd
solve that kind of problem
"
M!PDL EPORT FIRST BAPTIST
Mld·We&lt;'k pravrr ffi {'(' l ln ~ Wfdn esday. 7
r iC' I Sf'Cond Wl'dnMday. 7 XI p.m , UMW
neoday, 7-30 p.m
God must love somrone df'arly when be gt\Ps Ih!·m so much
~ Oorn£&gt;r Sixth and Palmf'r Earl Edf'n Pas
pm.
tAft£&gt;rnoon Cirr i(' \ sN'Ond Thursday, I p
FAITH FELLOIWIUP CRUSADE FOR
• t~r Bob Park('r, S.S Supt . CathY RIKK.!I ,
m 1Rubenkln111
trouble.
When we .bave solutions to all these problems. we will be so
CHRIST, Sl . Rl 338, Anllqully. Rev
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN , Rog
• AJsl Supl. Sundav !'&lt;hoot. 9·I5 a m.:
SALE MCICNTER- Church SchooliO a
Franklin Dlckena, pastor Sunday morn·
erWa1soo
,
pastor
Crt'flson
Pratt
,
Sunday
mucnsmarter.
so much more rounded In knowledf:" E '.,,r think rhat
.. Mornln~~: Wors hi p 10· 15 a m , Sunday
m Wors h i p9: 4~a . m . IRul:K'nkln~\ .
ln g 10 am : Sunday
7:30 p m .
School Supl Morning Worship 9 30 a m ,
.. E_vm tn~~: sl"rvlrt'. 7 p.m Pravcr meellnt(
there rl.ten Is one person we go to with our problclns. wit h all our
SNOWVILL E - Worship. J! 30 am.:
Thursday evenJnarq:~ p.m
Sund ay School 10 30 a m , ~vm ln g ser
: abd Bible Study Wedn Ni d~y fvm ln g, 7 p.
Otu l"&lt;'h S&lt;'hool to a.m 1Rubf'nkln Jll
problems. They seem to know what to do about~., man,· things.They
ST!VERSV!LLE
COMMUNITY
BAP·
v
iCf',
7·
lO
p
m
.. m · Children' !!. {'holr pra('fl('(', W('dn('S
TIST CHURCH . p.,tor Robert Byers.
MI' UNION BAPTIST Donald Shuo,
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
must
have had many problems to &gt;lllve becauS{' thrv know so much .
7 p.m , Adult !'holr practiCf', WOO .. R
SundaySchoollO a.m.; Worlhlp service 11
p u tor: JOE' Sayi'E', Sunday Srhool Supt
Be\', Reser Grace
·: p.m , Radio prO((l'am. WMPO, Sundav.
God
must
have loved them much too. We also_,need 10 rf'm&lt;'mberthat
am,
Sunda~
evenlnj'
aervl~
7:
30
p.m
..
Sunday SChool 9· 45 a m : Even In~ wor
1
Rev. Pul McGuire
~ .• 8:30 a.m
Wednetday f'Venlng service-7: 30p.m .
ahtp 6: XI p.m PrayE'r ME'l"llnR. 6· JO p.m
God never leaves us alone In oor problems. fir is there to help If we
APPLE GROVE -CHurch School 9 1D
INDEPDIDENT HOUNESS CHURCH
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST.
Wedne!day
ask Him for help. The moreproblemswehavc!the morcGod needsto
r~ m Wor~hlp , 10·00 a.m . tftrat and third
Inc .. Peart St .. Mttltlloport. Rev 0 '0.11
: · :sth and Mai n, AI Hartson. mlnls ter , Mlk€'
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
Sunda
v
~l
:
UMW
Serond
Tuesday,
7:
30
p
be with us. If Hedld not llke to be wtth usmaybl' He would not give us
Ma
nley,
paalo
r.
Sunday
School9:l)
am
,
• : a.rJach, Sunday School SupPrlrirmdent
CHRIST. Dave P ren tlcf', minister DE'ryl
m Pravrr lm'('lln ~. Wednetday,? p.m
• , Bible ScbooiS:l:l a rn.; MomlnR Worship
Mornlnfi: worahlp 10:30 a .m .; Even ing
Wells, Supt . Chu rch School 9 a.m., Wormany problems. Perbaps we should look at our problems as God's
so
(Gra('(' J,
• • .lQ ~ 30 a.m . Evf'lllng Wonhlp NIO p.m .
wor1hlp 7:30p.m . TuHday,l2:30p.m Wo·
shiP S.rvlct. 9 4! p.m.
love for us. He loves us so much He wants to spentmore tlmewtthls
BETHANY - Worship, 9 a m .; Olurch
: • M'lf!dnHda)' , 7: 00p.m . Pr ~yl'r mf'Prln~
men'• Prayer mft!'tlna. Wedneaday, 7; ll
CHESTER CHURCH OF TKE NAZA&amp; hoot. 10 a m : Blbto Stud1, Wedn ..day,
p.m . Prayer and Pralleo 1er1l~ .
, • MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THENA·
so He allows us to have more problems Ma1r'llf.
He knows ju st
RENE. Rt&gt;v He-rbert Grate , pastor.
10 a.m .; Dorcas Women 1 Fellowship
CHURCH OF JEIIUS CHRIST IJ'~­
, " ~RDIE, Co·poolors Rev. ClariH Coyle
Ftank RiRi e, supt. S unda y School 9: 30 a.
what
can
stand
up
under
also.
Wf'dnesda y, 11 a.m . IMcGulre J.
•
TOLIC - VanZandt ond Word ltd . Elder
•: nd Rev Nancy Coy \f. BUt Wl&gt;llt , Sundo y
m .: Worship service, 11 a m. an d 1 p,m
CARMEL - Clurch Sdtool 9:311 a.m.:
What f'Ver reason for all oor IJ'Oblems. our carelessness.
•,
ool Supt. Sunday School 9·Xt a.m .:
Ja""" Miller, pollor . !Nndoy Sdlool,
~nday. Wednesday, 7 p.m. Prayer m~l ­
Worship. 10:f5 am. Second and Four1h
IO: 311 am; Wonhlp S.....lc., Sundly, 7:30
: • MomlnR Wonhlp 10· 30 a.m : Evanpllafl('
Indifference.
Ignorance, one thing to remember, alt rr we have our
lnl.
Sunda ys; Fe-llowship dinner with Suttm
, .• lntotlnll 7: 00p.m WednNday, 7: 00p.m
p.m.; Bible Study, Wodn,.dly, 7:30p.m.
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METlllDIST
problems,
God
wUI be there to help us through. Even ~ you do not
lhl rd ThurSday, s·J&gt; p.m . fMcGulre l.
, ' Proyer m.. tln«.
POMEROY wtSLE;YAN HOUNDS,
CHIJRCH. D,vtd Belt. pulor.' Robert E.
EAST lEtART- Church Schoo19 a .m.;
• : UNITED PIIJIIIIYTDUM(IIINIITRY
have
too
ll1jiDY
problemS, daa't worry, God st!U bves you. The
HarrllaiVUt•
Rold
.
ReY.
Dewey
Ktloi,
Battm, Dt r'eetor of Cbrl1llan Education;
Wonhlp 10 a.m second · and fourth Sun·
•
OF MDGI COVI\'1"1'
poo111r: Ctlat• FouQJ, Solndly Sdloot
SIOiio Ebllp, Ullllanl. SundoySdlool 9:311
number
problems
you have'lfts not tell you how much God loves
days; UMW f l~ t Tuesday. 7: :D p.m
SUPt.: Sult4ay Sdoool 9:30 a.m.; monotnr
a.m.; Mpmlne worship 1):30 1.m.: TH!Is
(Grare\
you, He loves you a lot, He dld send His only begotten Son Olrlst .
, • HARRISONVR.LE PRISBYTERIAN
wanhtp,llo.m.; SUIIGiyewnlfttlfiVIce
1nActloo,tp.m.; Evenln11Worlhtp, 7:30p.
LETART FALLS - Worship 9 a .m.; 1m. Wedn-y ovtatnr prayer 10d Bible
,• OlURCH - Sunday : Worahlp Servlcl'tl
1 :.!11 p.m. Prayer Meetllll, Wedo•dlly.
Jesus
to die for your sins. His death took away our sins, opened the
Church SchooiiO a.m tGrace\.
•; t:OOa.m.; 0\urdl S.hoot IO: I5 a.m .
.
slud_y, 'I;.!Op m. Cbolr proctlct,Tb)ln\lly, 1:30 p,m.

"Serving Families"

Family Restaurant

CHAPMAN SHOES

C61du" "Po, lOg., Q11Rtg SINI $to,"

Sl.,

104 E.

ST.,

992-2815

:I

TAKE THE KEY AND SEE - WE HA~E AKEY

SMITH
NELSON
MOTORS
£. MAIN

wm . " 81!1" Brown, Owner

.·•t!i:Y.

Peoples Bank

TO ABmER DEAL

Rutland , Oh1o 45775
J

evm m,

Equipped with air, sunroof, 4 cyl., standard trans., AM·FM
stereo, cassette, new tires. Call:
SAil

$5495

Brown's Fire &amp;
Equt·f{nment Sales
and
Serv.ce

SERMONETTE

Includes Lobby.
Installment Loan Department,
Drive-In And Walk·UP
Window

1983 Buick Skyhawk T·Type

Pomeroy

''

992 2318 Pomer oy

nw

Nf'tsonvtl \P- Ymk ?R Mlllrr 4
22 Alf' X&lt;.tn ck'r 7 tnon

Trimbl e

'

i

Southw~tf'rn

Sepl. 19 ga tooi :

Hometilo Saws

992-5432

IACI&lt;SON PIKE · RT36 WEST

SOON! ' NI!RIC.\11 ANTHEM•
6 "FL tiHT OF THE NAV IGATOR"

ts

TVC GI\MES ONLY
Team
W L P OP
Vm lon
2 0 iS
0

Transarlions

lndt.tn.J r 11,•r' 101

0

lfUIINISUTURPE~~RDWAR:tI

221 W.

Htnd: l'
Hit I \I I'll

Nels York
lldpre

Mille'
Fed Hork tn g

n... •prn

3

RIIINOUR

"Futtllfll

TVC standings
Vtnl on

'

of Columbus ,

Complete
f l!III:Z :i
Automot1ve
~
Servtce
Locust &amp; Beech Street
992·9921

992-5141

~J1

w

'

' '" "

TVC GRID gf,\NDINGS
1\LL GI\MES
Team
W L P OP

Flnri."&gt;l

352 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
614/ 992-2844

SALEM CENTER T-BALL TEAM - Members of the 19l!6 Salem
Center T-Ball Eagles team are, first row, left Ill right: Eric Metheny,
Latlcla Metheny, Bobby Harl, Stephanie Jones and Levi Searls. Second
row - ,Jooathan DelaveUe, Larry Ogden, Amber Shepard, LeJo Davl•.
Carolyn Workman and Jesse Ward. Rear - A!lil&lt;!tant Coach VIckie
Metheny, Head Coach Connie Jones.

C k '\ r l.tnrl l I

B•.JI .ot 0. troll 1 pm

P rescnpttons

tB.

EWS &amp; SONS SOHIO

- Thomas Hood

'iit·

~!!!

Middleport

FRANCIS FLORIST

'~' 11 ~~lJ H II UY

Carrier Needed

(

BENNY GOOJ)MAN
IHJ, 141-PoWJd
,Junior End

Bucks try for first win Saturday

Ill

1-llllthtdl

!I • ''

-..n lt ll')..~' llo ~.&lt;kln.'' I J&gt;o 1Hnyo. l fl "'•nr

11 111

"((I l .'1 1 11
fr(t 1· -~~
l U I l\ '1'\

0. 111 ..r .tt Ph l l&lt;.~clo lpl\~1 l pm
1...\ H.un~ .11 lnd 1a napoll~ 1 p m
M1.1m1 .ol ,.y Jrl, I p m

1111h

'\ o'\1 'tM ~

11

RANDY HAWLEY

l 'l

Ntndll,\ Nope !I
.11 illll. oo;; I Ji m

~o n

; l"&gt;j!nl
fl'

_!I

Ra... ~'lh ll ll

1R&lt; onn

99 Milt St.

216 S Second
Pom e r ov
991 3321

I saw old Autumn
In the misty mom

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

GIFTS

=n

The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.
TEAFORD REALTY
P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
GOD BLESSED US WITH THE
Natronwide Ins . Co.
'
0.
FLAMING COLORS OF AUTUMN
804 w Mom
'

Ph . 992· 2t01
Pomeroy

&amp;

I U I!~-~

1111

u

Chester

.I!)

l'itl,hu tl!h 111

Monda,,-

, -,,

7 rtpm

IJIUI'

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j_, ,., ,\n!S'k" 1H!li'W'I t'UII \1 '11 ol I

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71C ..,.., \+&gt;

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tloliJ,IIIn II 1\ ,1 11.-. 1 ~ ( II\ I pm
\\ 1'-tllilL'Il!!l ,II S~11 1\M L:fl I pill

)II,

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l'nl,ll.Jt);(h I \1onlrl ol I

J'htl Klil ]lhhl tCoffl!'l'

II
1111 l !

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It ! !I

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o l-f'ln. o n~tl.'l 'i l

'~I I

Ph. 911-4 I DO

MIDDliPORT
IDIK
SlORE
Church Oflico Supplies

2!111 \!U I'i-lll
1 I II .-"0.1 U ~1

( l\11 I

T &lt;~ mpa

, ~line hood oJI'I l-&lt;1!'" !ttl!• 111ul"'.da,\ ., R•...Wl"
tl uuo.I&lt;Jn ·, Ctl"ll ln n.otl I

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'it•, ,rrlr .11 '\('!.1 ~ n~! ond I pm
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II

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 6

This Message and Church
LLVD CMS,
·" . MOGS nRE
&lt;"J__, \ \ CENTER, INC.
. o·
ft~-~
John F. Futlz,Mgr.
Rav Rrggs
• i

St. Rt.

~ fl It Ifill tl~ :\'•
1 1 0
.,.~ , J.\1, "'

"'' 4.n

\ll mto

M L t"tt lo R

IIIAhloln

~1

n u 1 rrn '•1 , ,

I 111' 1nn.1ll

~.IAIIonlaJ ' "';IIIII'

... .

Ll1 b"; It}

lUI Ill

••nf• fo'fll'

'TltuNia'

I ~ ... o4 .1!10'l ,ol {),\IJund
M1t.. .oukt'l '' R.t ll lmorr 111::111
1\~n'.l' t 1r. ••1 St·&lt;JTT lr' n1ch1

I "1111 l j!lo

:.Ill "ol l!i

• 11

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H ' II

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I h~ .~o ,11 I .olllnrniJ

l'l•h· o:h

""'

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n'\l'l;md

1 IIlli'

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'

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(hlr,tgn oC'oooh 111'1 ,,,
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~ ....

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&lt;ll or. u.:o" Sl:'&lt;iiTk ~

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Friday, September 19, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

MEMBER F0 I C.

2212J_A_
Point PI
·~ w. VI.
1711·,1121

we

;..

5thS-

"-.._,W. Yo.
882.2135

I

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

' • MIDDLEPORT PRISBYTERIAN &gt; Sunday SChool, 9 a.m .. Churctl a&gt;nolre,
.· tO:lh.m.
·
' , SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRISSY .
!'£fllAN - Sunday School, IO am.;

n,fs

ot

l

1
MORNING STAR- Wonhlp, 9:45a.m .;
Church Sdtool, I0: 30 a .m.; Bible Study ' 7~.Xl'ER CHURCH ,OF CHRIST.
Wedn-y 10:00 a.m. tMcGulre) . 1 .
Chorteo Ru... n Sr .. mJntJter, Rick Ml·
IIAUNI&gt; W ~U:Y AN - Clurdl Sdiool, Icomber. supl. Sunctay School 9:30 a.m.;

10 am.: Worship U a.m ; UMWfourthMon·

Worship Str\llce 10:30 a.m Blblf aNdy,

Sl'IIACUSE FIRST CHURCH OFOOD.
non·Pentecoetal. worship lt'rvlce Sulkily

10 o .m.; SUlldoy Sdloot 11 a.m. Ev..,tng

,,

worship le'I"VIce '7:00 p.m . W«&lt;ns41y
J prayf!' meetlnr 7: 00p.m .

gates tt Heavl'll to a heavenly Hte. So God does b ve you. CaU on Him
day or night and He will help you. He loves you, nf'Ver i&gt;rget thal -

Pulor William Mlddleswarth.

•

�Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

J~,.ock

~ were presented to Howard
·
th and Sarah Caldwell at the
"'iiursday nlghtmeetlngofttie Rock
~~i'lilgs Grange held at the hall.
If' It was noted that Alfred Grueser
...is also eligible for the award. Smith
.:spolre briefly of his early member-;§!llll .ln the Grange. The legislative
report was given by Pal Holter.
~. -Barbara
Fry, chairman of
.:iPiimen's activities, announced the
•wuntry winners !rom Rock
~l'Jngs. Bunny Kuhl placed first in
..q_ullt and oven mitts; Roy G111eser,
:lltst In framed picture, and Sue
· Fi:y, first in the junior division of
toys. 11 was noted that new
..~!lllllf!'ll
..
o\lijndows have been Installed at the
''iiprlngs near the entrance to tiY'
~grounds by Charles Kuhl.
·" •.coonty deputies, Menda 1 and
;,!';jiz,;lbeth Jordan, were present and

,

Mrs. Jordan urged members to
attend the Pomona nl!lf'tlngs and

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, will meet
Friday at Grace Episcopal Parish
House, 1:ll p.m.
BURLINGHAM - The Ladies
Auxiliary of the Word of Lite
Church is sponsoring a spaghetti
supper Friday, 5 to 7 p.m., at
Modern Woodmen Hall In Bur·
lingbam. Adult dinners will be $3.~ .
Dinners for children under 12 wUI
be $1.75. Everyone welcome.

Eleanor Circle holds meeting
asked to contribute to the gifts for
the Indian Center and also to begin
saving 111mmage for the annual fall
sale set lor Thursday and Frtday,
Oct. 2 and 3at the church basement.
Jean Cooke or any of the officers
may be contacted for ~ckup of
contributions for the sa le.

A weiner roast and light supper
was enjoyed by m embers of the
Eleanor Circle of Heath United
Methodist Church recently at the
home of Paul and Frances Thomas.
Devotions were given by Scottie
Hayes, and circle and fellowship
ga mes were played by parrots and
children together. Members were

The Daily Sentinel

~·

SI'COnd place.
.
The program by Linl;la Brodertck
con.!listed of readings "The TWelve
Days of Harvest" by Mrs. Broderick; "Country Schools" by Mrs.
Kuhl: "Feel of Fall" by Louise
Rad~ord ;
and "Is Somethl~~
You re Eating Making You Sick.
by Mrs. Broderick. TWo contests
were held . New officers ~ll be
Installed at the October meelmg.

others to join. Members reported lll
were Frank Broderick, and Betty
Conkle. Sympathy was extended to
the Jacobs family , and a thank you
note was read from the James
Bearhs family.
It was noted that the Rock
Sprin!!s Grange exhibited at the
Meigs County fair and received a

POMEROY - A women's retreat wUJ be held at the Ohio Valley
Christian Assembly at Da!"WWn
Friday and Saturday. Registration
will begin at 5 p.m. with a supper at
6:30 p.m. Terry Bradds will be
speaking on rock music and
renewing your mind. Cost is $2.50
per day for the retreat.

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wntt O.atlly
Clauihtd Dept

GALLIPOLIS- Mark Mora will
speak at the Galllpolls Chapter of
Flame Fellowship meeting to be
held Friday evening at Dal.,'s.
Dinner at 6:15 p.m .. meeting al
6:45. The public is welcome with a
special invitation to all young
people.

Sentin~l

II 1 Coufl St . Pomtro~. 01110 4S169

· Public Notice

Public Notice

: ~OMBINED

FINANCIAL
''lti!PORT OF THE BOARD
••~ ~- OF EDUCATION
·..."· SOUTHERN LOCAL
; \':SCHOOL DISTRICT,
COUNTY OF MEIGS
~-:-

Adv. In (Not Totally
Trans I ................. 1.837

Boa 1:'6. Racine. Ohkl

Other UHs .......... 10. 431

Oennie E. Hill

Fund Cash Bal..
Out ...... ... .. .......... (t .866)
Jan. 1, 1986 .. .... .32,341
F d C .h Bal
Adv. Out {Not Total .
" ..... 42,773
Dec . a3t . 1986
Trans.) ................... (8371 un
Refund or Prtor
TOTALS &amp; FUND
Ys. Rcpts . .......... (5 .370)
BALANCE
Total Other fin .
RECEIPTS:
Sources (Uses)
(2 , 708) Taxes .. .. .. . .......... 701.570
Excess Recpts./Sources
Tuition . ............ .... .. 1,177

Treasurer ofthe
Board ol Education
614-949-22t 3
19 ttc

Over (Under) Oisb. &amp;

'I.' · "This is an unaudited

GOVERNMENTAL
FUNDS
'fi.ECEIPTS:
r,... ............... 701 .570
fuitioin .. .............. .... 1 .177
iarningl on
···' Investments .. ...... 17.407
);lnriiCurricular

. .......... 20,850

Fund Cash Bal ..

Jan . 11 . 1986 .. 529.767
Fund Casl'l Bel ..

Ooc. 31, 1986 ..... 690,841
EXPENDABLE
TRUST FUNDS
Extracurricular
Acti\lities ... ...
Total Receipts -

State Sources ...... 915.9t2
~d. Source• .......... 69.324
Total Receipts-

.. '(Operating) ..... 1. 728,287
DISBURSEMENTS:
lnlitNction .... .... .. .892,067
.. Services

.... 61 8.022

!-Jitrecurricular

'A'ctivities .......... .. ... ~ - 6 . 052

'Focllitiea Acqn .... .. ... 1.800
:rl.flit Serv .. ..... . . 7,562
Total Disbursements·

:: (()per) ............ 1.564.503

Contributions &amp;
· "Donations ....... ..... 1. 662
Operating
· Transfers-In .. .... . .. 1, 866

.. 4. 641

Extracurricular
Acti\lities ..... ......... 8. 884
Total Oisbursements-

(Oper) ....... ........ 8,884

be . Rcpts. Over lUnder}

Disb.. ..

.. .(4.2431

Contributions &amp;
Donations ......... . ... 329
Total Other Fin . Sources

(Uses) .............. ..... 329

Excess Recpts. / Sources
Over (Under) Disb. &amp;:

Other Uses .. ... .. ... (3,914)

Fund Csh Bal. ,

Jan . 1. t986 ..... 8,456

·lift.c. Rcpu. 0o.Jet'{Underl

'I '·Diab ............... 163.784

4.641

{Operating) ..

Misc. Receipts .. .. ...... 2,047

;Supporting

.. 161 , 076

Other Uses

,.... ., 'fin.,ci•l st111tement . ··

Activ~iea

Fund Cash Bal ..

Dec. 31 .1986 .... ... 4.543
AGENCY FUND

(Operating}

:: The family of Dan

Cotterill would like
. : to acknowledge to
our friends and
neighbors all of the
kind remembrances
and expressions of
sympathy in our
recent loss. Your
" support, love and
·prayers will not be
forgolten.

...

8

.41 .821

EJCtracurricular
Activitias ... ......... 25.491
Class Matarials

private sala will be held at the
offices of The Central Trust

&amp;

Feeo .

.. .. 4. 010

Fed . Sources .... , .... 69.324

2 Dr.

Total Receipts(Operating} ..... 1,774,749
DISBURSEMENTS:

2BJBJ62KOBR134833
The Central Trust Co .. NAof
Middleport, Ohio roserves the

lnttruction .

right to bid at this sale .

State Sources ...... 916.912

Supporting

.. 892, 067

Serv1ces ....... .... 61 8.022
Ex:tracurricular
Activities
.... . 53.936
Facili1ies Acqn .. .. .... . 1. 800

Debt. Serv ... ...... ..... 7.562
Employees Salalries

&amp;

Wages ............. 33,810

Employees Retir .

Bon ............... t2 .306

hurchsed Serv .... ... .... . 34
Supplies S.
Materials .......... 48, 744
Other Objects .. -·
.... 150
Total Disbursements·

lOper) ....... .. ... 1.68B,431
Disb ......... 106,318
Donations .....

State Source ..

.. 1.991
. .. 5. 009

Fed Source . . .... 68,645
Operating

Wages ........... ...... 3J .B10 Adv . In (Not Totally
Trant.}.. ........ ........ 1,837
Ben ..
1 2.308 Operating Tranafer&amp;·
Purchased Serv ..
Out.. ......... .... ... .. (1 .8661
3~

11981 DodgeMiredaXS22
Specialty

Ser .

(Oper .}....... ..... 95 ,044

EKe . Rcpts . Over(Under)

Disb

.(53.223)

State Source ..
.. .. 5 ,009
Fed . Source ..
. .. . 58. 645
Total Othe r Fin. Sources

..... 63.654

Excess Recpts . / S o urces

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

·~-----==========-----,!

.,

PUBLIC AUCTION
- SATURDAY, SEPT. 20, 1986
10:00 A.M.

,

l'his is the personal property of the late Hayse
McMurry. localed on Co. Rd . 35, Portland-Sti·versville Rd. Watch lor sign on St. Rt. 124.
"TRACTOR &amp; TRUCK"
John Deere H. cult iVator &amp; plow 1978 GMC Sce rr a 15
p1ckup. auto. 53.000 miles

"HOUSEHOLD'
·· Llvmg room surle. GE ref11ge ralnt [r.n ppe rl onP) . Plec trrc
ran ge, breaklast set. melal diSh cab1n e1 double &amp; smgle
~ ~·en s. dressers. chest ol drawer\. sweeper diShes. pots &amp;

n

19) 17. t8. t9 3tc

Public Notice
MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE

There will be a
picnic Saturday. 5 p.m., al the
Firemen's Park in Rutland for all
individuals who worked at the
annual Qx Roast and Turkey
Supper.

The following were ra::eived ·
/ pr~ared by the Ohio Envir·
onmental Protection Agency
(OEPAI last wool&lt;. EHective
dates of final actions ,std
issuance datM of proposed
actions are stated. Final actions may be appeala:t, in

POMEROY - A family history
workshop will be held Saturday, 1 to
4 p.m., at the Meigs County
Museum. The workshop is open to
all individuals interested ip submit·
ting family histories for publication
in Volumr II "Meigs County
Histol')' ."
HARRISONVILLE -Scipio Vo·
lunteer F'irP Dept. is sponsoring a
public auction Saturday, starting at
7 p.m.. at the fire house In
Harrisonville. Everyone welcome.

become final111less a written

adjudication hearing riiQuest is
SJbmittad wrthin 30 days of
the isa~anoe date; ~ the

director revises / withdraws
Trans.) .. .
... (837) the proposed action. Anv
person may submit corrments
Fhtfund or Prtor
Yrs. Rcpts.... ... (5, 370) and/ or request a meeting
regarding arw non -final action
Total Other Fin
Sources (Uses} .... 61 , 275 wfthin 30 days of the date
indicated . "Action". as usmj
E.~~:cess Recpta ./Sourc:es
~. abo\ledoes not inc11d&amp; receipt
Over (Under} Oisb. &amp;
Other Uses . .. . 167.593 of a verified COr11&gt;1aint. 11
significant public inter881 eJII ·
Fund Cash Bal.,
a public meeting mav be
Jan . 11 . 1986 .. 570.564 ists,
hekl
As to any action, indudFund Cash BaL.
ing
receipt
of verified comDoc. 31 . 1986 ... 738, 157
plaflta.
any
person
may obtain
Cash in
notice of further actions. and
Banks(Net . ..73B. 157 addh:ional
information . Unless
Tot . Fund Bel. .. . .. 738 , t57
othe"""'se provtded in notices
MEMORANDA DATA
of particular actions. al oo rnAssess.
Vallevies
...... 58,033,823
Prop . Tax
...... . 23 . 60 munications shall be sent to :
Inside 10 Mill . .. ....... 3 .50 Hearing Clerk. OEP.O, P.O .
Outside 10 Mill ...... 20 .00 BoK t049, Columbus, OH,

RUTI..AND -Oscar and Charles
Reed Hysell rrunlon Sunday,
Forest Acres Park. Take covered
dish.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Genealogical Society wlil meet
Sunday, 2 p.m., at the Meigs County
Museum.
LANGSVILLE -The Langsville
Chrislian Olurch will celebrate
homecoming Sunday with a basket
dinner at 12:30 and afternoon
services at 2. Featured singers wlll
be the Waymarks, from Huntington, W.Va .
MONDiU'

RAONE Southern High
School Athletic Boosters meet
Monday, 7 p.m .. high school
Soup supper

POMEORY - The Trinily
Olurch of Pomerov will hold a soup
and sandwich supper Friday, Sept.
!i, between 4 and 7 p.m. Vegetable
soup. bean roup, corn breal, sloppy
jOI'S, hoi dogs, beverage and
desserts wUl be available. Carry out
orders will be available also. Quarts
of soup will l:F sold for $2 and
advance orders can be mild• · hv

RlJI'LAND - Revival continues
a t the Rutland Freewill Baptist
Chu reb through Sunday with servi·
ces at 7 p.m .. and Rev . Carl Hicks
speaking.

CHESTER- Shade River Lodge
453
will have its annual chicken
43216. Ph. (6141 466·6037.
ADM ..
. ..... .. ....... 998 Consult
barbeque
for members and their
ORC
Chap.
3745
Md
Number of Non-Cert .
OAC
Chaps. 3745-47 and
families
Sunday
at Royal Oak
Employees ... ..
.. 39 3746 -5 for requirements.
Number of Cen .
Resort . Everyone should bring a
Application tor Certification
Emplo'1ees ...... ........... 64
covered dish. table service and
Huntllgton Oist Corps
SUMMARY
of Enginee"
INDE8TENESS BOND
Salisbury , Sutton , Letart
Outstnading drinks.
OH
Jon . 1. 1986 .... .220.000 Twps.
Penains to 40.1 Cert;ticaRAONE
Morse Chapel
Bal. June
tion.
Public Notice No. (H) Church on County Rd. 3.) between
30. t 986 . . .. 220.000
Racine and Port land, wilt hold Its
I certify the following re· 86·79.
Renew a general permn: tor
annual homecoming sunday with
port to be correct and true.
to the be!lt oi my know!- Aerial Transmission lines.
dinner at 12: 30 p.m. and afternoon
Also Leb.-.on, Olive Twps.
serviCt:'S at 2 p.m. Speaker will be
(91 19 1tc

September 19, 1986

calling 992-Mill, 992-m2 or 992-3117
betbre Sept. 24. On the day of the
supper, ocders can be mal e by
calling the church at ~72.

cutriK of the •ate of Henry

E. Cleland. Sr., doceued ,
late of 102 Holly Lane, Pomeroy, Ohio, 46769.
Robert E. Buck,
Probe to Judge

Revival ... t

HARTFORD -Hartford Church
of Christ in Chrtstlan Union,
Hartford, W.Va., will be In revival
Sept. 24 through Sept. 28 with Rev.
David McMorris, evangelist,
speaking. Special singing each
night with Wanda and Mike
Thompson on Sept. 24; The Reflections on Sept. 25; Dan Hayman and
the Faith Trio on Sept. 26;
Glocyland Believers on Sept. 'll:
Chartty Trio m Sept. 28. Services at
7:.30
,...::.
:::_::nig:::::.ht:::IY:.;_·_ _ _ _ _ __

Lena K. Neaamro•d. Clark

19) 5, 12, t 9, 3te

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT 01
FIOUCIARY
On Augult 26, 1988 In the
Meigt County Probate Court.
C01o No. 23,083, Hazel A.
Jolmaon, 4308 A.- DINe.
Columbia, Soutll Cetollna
29206 wea ij)pointed Adminiftrotor, WWA, of tho of William C. Johnaon. do·
ceaoed, late of Route 2. Pomeroy, Ohio 46769.
Robart E. Buck,
Probate Judga

LEGAL N OTIC'
The Public Utilities Com-

mission of Ohio bas set
for public hearing case
No . 86-02-EL-EFC, to
review the fuel procure·
ment practices
and
policies of Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric
Company, the operation
of its Electric Fuel Component and related matters. This hearing Is
scheduled to begtn at
10:00 a.m. on September
22, 1986, at the offices of
the Public Utilities Commission, 180 East Broad
Street, Columbus, Ohto
43215 .

NEW LISTING - Duplei n
good condition . Gas furnace,
2 baths, 2 kitchens, garage
and lg. lot with river view.
GOOD CONDITION - 3
BRs, bath, new gas furnace,
range. refrigerator , carpeling, garage &amp; riverview. Only
$29,900.
66 ACRES - All mmerals
and young timber.
$2,500 - Small 5 rm.
oome. Edge of Pome roy. All
utililles.
Ml DOLE PORT- 2 BR older
home high on 4th St lg.
family rm, garage &amp; lg. lot.
.MODERN 3 BR rancll w1th
4.76 acres near coal mines.
BRADBURY - lg 4 BR
home with gas furnace, cook
&amp; bake units, carpeling, pa·
tio &amp; 2 porches.
CHEAP - One to work 011 .
All ul ilit1es, lois ol rm., 2
baths. 1as lurance &amp;carpel·
1ng. Pay off balance .
MULBERRY HTS. - Excel lent 20 yr. old 2 BR ran ell ,
gas furnace, garage, carpel·
ing, patio &amp; lot 90xl45.
43 ACRES - 9 rm. home, 3
car garage, barn &amp; other
buildrngs.
Ml DOLEPORT - Modern 3
BR one floor home with
swim. pool. trees &amp; lg. car·
port. Has lull basement.
BUILDING LOT- 200x:ll0
rn Baums Sub. Oiv.
INVESTMENT - Bus1n ess
plus land &amp; bldg Very reasonable.
Stllinc Problems
C1ll 992-3325

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
~P 'l

Orlinski,

S2°

0

Purina'

Hi·Pri
SAVE $2.00 on 50 lb.
bags of Purina· brand
Hi Pro dog meal lor
active and working
dogs.

$2

-·OFF

sgA~

S14.SO

L_~

lEG •.S16.SO

......

R&amp;G
FEED
&amp;
SUPPLY
CO.
399 W• •
"F.,.,,,,_,.,.''"''"
OH•
in
Po1111rey,
The Store With "All Kids of Stuff" - for Pets, Stables,
Large 8o Small Animals 8o Lawns and Gardena

Hou s tng
Headqu ar ter s

"Not responsible for acc idents or loss of property.''

BULLETIN BOARD

1982 Ford Escort Sta. Wgn ...... S1695

4 sp., good condition.

·

19 78 Chrysler Cordoba ••...•.••••. 5119 S

2 Dr., air, wire wheels.

1984 Ford F-1 SO ...................... SS99S

4 sp., topper, running boards.

1977 Olds. Cutlass ...................... S99S

2 Dr., HT, V-6.

It Pays
To Advertise
CALL

1980 Chevette .......................... S1 095

4 Dr., auto., tilt wheel, rack.

1976 Ford T-Bird ...................... S249S

· Auto., PB, PS, like new, 56,000 miles.

110 acres on
Rainbow Ridge in
Chester Township.
Home National
Bank
RACINE, OHIO
PH. 949-2210

949-2263
or 949-2168

ACCENT

FENCE COMPANY ·
PH. 992-6931
After S Call

742·2027

"Free htimat11"
lnstalla1ion hallablt

992-2259
NEW LISTING - Nice I
floor plan home mtown. 3-4
bedrooms. 2 baths, full ba ·
semen!, Indian Sandstone
f11eplace. Extra lots lor park·
ing, all in good condition . For
$39.000.00.
EASTERN SCHOOL DISTRICT
- Alarge modern oome in a
good n~gllborhood. Up to five
bedrooms, located on ~prox·
imatelj one acre lol ~ the
Riggs Crest SulxiiVision. ApIJ'OX . 9 yrs. old w1th 2 baths.
Many other nice features.

$54 ,000.00
MIDDLEPORT - Appro• 12
acres ol woodland plus a se
ven room bnck oome. 4 ll!d·
rooms. F.A.f.O. heat ~u s
woodburner. Enclos~ !Xlrch .
Pnvacy! $27.000.00
RUTLAND- Here ~ a ni:e 10
yr. o~ ranch type oome with
three bedrooms. bath. garage
rna levcllot. Many new fea tures. Want $30.!&gt;!000.

~;;;;;;;~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;~~;;;;~

n

RADIATOR

SER~CE
We can repair and r&amp;'
core 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
1-t3-tlc

J.R.'s REPAIRS
TYs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service
Electronic Organs
Mobile service

614-843-5248
RUSONAILE - REliABLE
8-20-'86 tin

ICUT OUT FOR FUTURE USE!

LANGSVILLE - One floor
plan wnh 2 bedrooms. alu ·
mmum srding, new roof.
Large balh w1th utility room
1\1 acre lot. Screen~ s1de
por ch. $18 000.00

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

SYRACUSE - Beautiful river
v1ew &amp; nver !rootage, pit¥ a
cute little 2 bedroom hoOse
wnh !itting porch &amp; ~..age
sheds. forced alf natural gas
heat "' yoo can use wood &amp;
coal lor alf~iency. A~o a load
of wood and coal go w1th 1!

All M•u•

~
..;
,..

,..

:

~

..-

ONLY 3 LEFT

$2500 OFF WINDOW

78
79
80
84
84
82
86

985-3561
•Wethtrt

aOiehweshen

•R•ngiru
•Refrlger1tors
•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-tlc

Henry E. Cleland , J,.

992-6191
Jean Trussell ..... 919-2660
Dottie Tumer ..... 992-5692

A

~

[H
REAIIOI

STOVES

.COOPER

10-8-tlc

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

F" AH

y,, P1/wlill Nuit

BUILDING

Winter. Have those
furnace motors
checked. cleaned and
bearings oiled for

t ·

•

\'

r

Buick-Pontile , 1911 h1tem
Ave., Gtlllpolit . Call 814 -448 -

2282.

EXTERIOR

WANTED TO BUY uted wood A
COli hetttrt . SWAIN ' S FUANI ·
lURE, 3rd. &amp; Olive St. Gatlipo -

Middleport, Ohio

lit. Cell614-448 -31159 .

28.

Would like to buy good Uled twin
nrolllf . Call 614-448-3181 .

L---------...,..----~~:.;.:.:::::;~14

BUying dally gokl, altver coins.
ringa. jewelry, sterling were, old
coins , ltrgt curr..cy. Top pricea. Ed. Burkttt Barber Shop.
2nd . Ave. Middleport, Oh. 814 -

C!tarr

992·347&amp;

4 drawer file ceblnet thet loeb
and uHd eddtng machifle in
VOQd condidon. Call 814 -949-

FIIER];~~1~ff~;Ol

f

·\
j
\ ....,.,...~

\

F OH F REE E S TIMATE S CA l l

' 1 tH•I~J • ,IH

RUSS EliC111C
MOTOR REPAIR

3080 .

f n1pIny 1111' 111

!

CHIMNEY WORK
INDUSTRIAL
STAINLESS ST£EL LINERS
INSUUN&lt;E WORJ(

S i: rv1 c 1: s

11

.

IH&gt;V

Hl(!&lt;,j

Help Wanted

GREAT BEND ELECTRIC, Inc.

IUYUND, OHIO

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

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

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY

•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

aufflng .,velop•. no phone
calli to nwke; your onty job i•
peinting the product• wich we
dittribute through our own
matte&lt;tJ. Htve the entire family
help vou; thia kind ot work it very

•SATaUTE SALES &amp; SERVICE
ltlle Hm jl, hll Tl•
S~op Tuh1lelu

RAYMOND f. PROFFm (MAC)

educational for dtiJdren. for
more Information, pit. . c•ll ut

ot f213J8t58·2233.

RACINE, OHIO
Emer~ency

Office 949-2438

2

Will be ICotPtJng IPPiiCitions It
Econo Lodge Sept . 22, 23 &amp;
24th, from 7em 10 2pm . No
phon• eallt.

949-2516
mo.

a1e.o.to . 1159.230 yr. Now

IUSINI!! PHONE

work

(Free Ettimates)

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

VINYL &amp; AWMINUM
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remocteling
Roofing of all Types
Worked in home area

20 years
" Free Estimates "

CAll COLLECT:
Ph. (614) 843-5425

BISSELL
BUILDERS

SWEEPER and Iewing machine
repair . pant, and 1uppliet. Piclt
up end delivery, Dav it Vacuum
Cleener, one tltlf mile up
Georges Creek Rd Call 814 ·

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Noat-t · • Ark Animal Ptrk .
Schools. ctlurehM, COf11:' ... Y
picnics, birthday parti• tnd
famity reuniont. Call 614 · 384-

CUSTOM BUILT

"At Reasonable Prius"

PH. 949-2801
or 949·2860
Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CALLS

4-16-'86 lfn

11 -15-ae

V. C. YOUNG Ill
91J2-6215 or '92-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
4-!5-'86-lc

AUTOMAnC

TRANSMISSIONS
REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

"VINYL SIDING
"AlUMINUM SIDING
"BLOWN IN
INSULA nON

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New Homes Built

SAT. &amp; SUN. ONLY

FACTORY GOOFS

PH. 992-9949
IIIII larto11, Owner

B/27186/1 mo.

54 Misc. Merchandise

GH -4552.

In Memoriam

3 Announcements

Pav Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here

- Addon1 and remodeling
- Roof1ng and gutter work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing end tltctricel

houri of 1p1re time. We .will
provide ev.-,thlng you n.Mr-io
get ltartld ~nd «here is no • h
inv.tment. no collecting, . ~
detiverlng Md no tervicech*ft.
We hive two fuM ootored. 01111ogt wlth over 700 txciUna ~·
tnd gifts. all 100 percihl
guaflntead fnturtng the ntiW
anim1ted talking doll Crjckt'l
which will be edvertlud on
national T.V . With Chri.,..l
jull around tt. comw you art
lUte to get 1 great ttert. Oon't
mill this exciting end rew.;dlng

Fo.- more lnfornwt -800-227· 1110.

e~H :

tion

AVON , open territori... ctll

304-875· 1429.

hperlenced medii ul• repreIIW'Itltiwet needed . I•H plul
commission . 304 -787 -71J1 .
Mondty thru Frktey 10:0D-4iQO-

••v

So meone to
w+th •td•tv
genlleman in Point pte . .nl.
phone 304·17! -3891 01'· 875·
2032 .
PART-TIME JOI.
Now hiring demonltrators for
Hoo M of Lloyd toy 6 gtft pirtiM.
No lnvettment. collectinG 'or
dtll'o'lrlng . Forfurtherdetalli Ctll
C1rofyn 304-727-4490, 3 PM
to 9PMfoutoftownPM 1o8PM
CAU COLLECT!.
FUN-TIME

GREAT POSITION!! Don't mlu
thit oppoonunltyt limited N~­
ingl Ntwll Show ~rty ct.auritlont end suppll• tor hoUct..-1.
lpiCill OCCJ!tiont, fr.. trelnlnt
wt&amp;kty paychecks. ldttl jalt far
mottlen. hon.mak~. Pll'tr
plan dulere. C1ll nowll for rDCiN
detellt . Ben., Vertllo, 304· 7•U0924 .
. ...

'u'i.L

ltr\llct tnlist... begin . . ._..
178.00 tor ont week end, AW
month tnd prior 1erviee enliltt•
can qutltfy for u muc:h 1''*
1183.80 tor ontwelk end . H'ig~
school and college ttuderltt _.
dlltY their batie training Wtli1
the tchool ttrm endt In J\lft!.
304-675 -3960 or 1· 800·&amp;42'.

31119

..'

12

Situ a tiona
Wanted

Child care for ~rt-.scttoolere. ~~·
2-6. Mon .-Frt. $ .30 1m · 6 .3()
pm. Relleble ret•an~ fur •
nlshed. Cell

&amp;14· H7-6731.

;

Vec:~ncr for . . tld•lv Wy tn my
Mme . State Ncented,
rlenotd. Loti of T.LC . MOO. pet
m&gt;nth. Coli 6t4-742·2282. :

••l'e'

18 Wanted 10 Do
Exptflenced blby1it1ing in my
hom~~ . Convenient location orl
Second Avenue . Reftrenoa~
av-aitabte. Call 614-448-n82 . ,

Help w..ted: Ceu mtn~ger to

We Carry Fishing Supplies

CARPENTER
SERVICE

•r•. It' s IMy, tun and PfO~·
ble. No experience 11 n - -·
Nry. All you need 11 1 d•tr'e1o
makemon.y, h~Yefun 1111d1;.

Government Jobt Uat .

3000

2 family Y•d Sale, S.t, 9 :0010
12:00, 2918 Meadowbrook
Drive .

SALES &amp; SERVICE

YOUNG'S

Homem1ken andC•rMr PeGRI•.
Ute your sparetlmetOearn .rfrt
monty wh:h Frlendtv HQIU

PART ~ME WORK WITH
11ME BENEFITS-membert' cH
the army national guerd '"'"
good PlY end cp.~sllfy for ·ouf.
llending ben.tlts. Non . pr~

At hom~ - ~life time . Ptint
lovetv homerNide mold• end
toya which we provkle. No
uperlenct neee11ary: our unl·
C~o~e dippr.g methold altowt you
to paint cp.Jickty. We pey UO for
.. eh doz.-. mokls-noveltiHsent
us according to our lflttructiont
1nd we pay the lhipping. No
telling , no ptacing tdt . no

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

New Loca~on:
161 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 41760

PHON!

.

Experienced Medie Stl•s Rept .
needed. Beu plus comml11ion .
Call 30•-1&amp;7-7881 , Mon .-ffi ..
EKperi.-.oed Media Sites Reps
Need . Beu plus commission .
Call 304-71i7 -7881 Mondey
thru Fridty, 10 to 4.

mo.

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTER-985

-

'

3000 Fvamment jabli Mit.
118.040-•II.Z30 ye.- . fMw
hiring . C1ll 806·887-8000 £it.

Pan lirN delivery perton,
heve "liable tttnapartll~ft­
IPPIY in person Vill~ge Plzre Jnn.
Point Pltetent.
• ' L'

814-4U-3358 .

,,1,

lotated hhtnd lloding (r....
Wator DIJII. OH !1. II. 124

,. Dllf

45131 .

Mtke Chritlmea money. 1elt
Avon. Mlkt 45 percent . Call

10-4.

lo1 27 I lotttloto ld.

1121
Galllpolla, · Oh

Third Ave .,

mw.

4 1 mo
HICK I I

446 -2062
ll llli)IJN ! rl\•i1 1,

ft. bush hog . Call 614-379-

2116.

ACHIMNEY FIRE
CAN DESTROY YOUR HOME

1"'......
:i ._

G1llipolit DillY Tribune,

~portunity.

Central City Comics 4347 Eut
Main St., Columbus, Ot-t . Buying
oJd comic• at Attlent Mell
1·tli14-246 -9125. Sept. 27 &amp;

SPECIAliZING IN WINDOW MDOOR REPlAWfENT

'15 .00

190 MULI•• YAVE.
POMEIOY, 011.

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST

GUYSVILLI, rOHIO
Authari ud John DNrt,
Now Holland, lush Hog
Form !quipmant
Doaltr

Fam Eq•I~Mut:
P•rt• &amp; Servlee

1-3-'86 de

l/11 I tin

446-0294.

2108 Of 1·800 ·282 -21 87
Ascine Gun Shoot spontor«&lt; by
Aacine Gun Club. Every Sundav.
beginning tt 1:00 p.m. Factory
Choke, 12 guagt thotgunt.
Coming toon , er1 clusea. Drew·
ing. sketching, wtter cok&gt;n,
aeryliCI, macrame. etc. For more
inlorm1tion . ctll 814 -949 -

3080

Sealed bkll are being accepted
to demolish targt r•id.,OI and
removt an combu1teble materiel
In MalOn. Wett Virginia. Btdt
will be open October 1, 1988.
Deliver to Peopln Btnk , Point
Pteasent. W\1 .

4

Giveaway

1 male beige kinen . 2 ternel1
ttger strtped . Llt1er trained . All 7

TUPPERS PUliS, 011.

Blue Tick pupt to give eway. Ctll

SAVE HUNDREDS

DESCRAMILERS WITH SYS'IIM PURCHASE - $365

SAM! SYSTEM AS AIOVl WnlfOUY IIMOTE Sl,tSO

DESCilMIIII ALONE SJIS

NORMAN WEIEI
667-3074

&amp;14-992-3613.

6 month old puppi11 to givt
away. Pert 8t1Qie. Re11 cute . 1
mtle, 1 female. CeU fl14 -742 -

2962 .

3 kittens to good home, one grey
end whitt, 2 black. 304· ne.

3424.

9-15-'86

SATELLITE IS STILL THE WAY TO GO
Over 100 IWISCrambled chamels.

NOW A COWLETE 10 FT. SYSTEM FOR

S20 A MONTH

Also

Update and Service

Most Systems

LARRY'S SATELLITE SALES
992-6173

lhould IPPI'I · We offer an
uceiiMt w~ge - beneflt ptckege.
Send you oonfidentlal mume
with tel•rv requirem.-.tt to : Mr.
Jam.. Undllmen, Admtnlttra tur, Pinecr•t Cere Center. 85!
J1ckton Pike Road, GtUipotil,

Ohio 45&amp;31 . EEO · M· F

My brother ..,d hit girttriend
Cynttlit •• getting married on
S•amley on the 1 t th of Octobtf
at 8 :30 in the wtnlng. I n..cf 1
ftmelt per10n who would like to
90 with mt to the wedding. S"
me 6n person, I weert hHdbend
tnd writt band tlto ridt 1 bicycle
alot on the roMI. 81 Grtpe St.,

Proteuionet Sewing in my
t1o me . 115 yllrt experience. Cell

614·992·3843.

LOST Bladl muhl, kkts pelt,
Coro-MHI Ad. C1ll 114·245·
8122 Or 614· 24&amp;·5803 .

Coil

lt4 ·

LOST lluec ..v• blllfalcllmportent P..,lrl 120.00. Rtwerd If
found . CoQ 814-388-9122 '1&gt;1

814·318-HII .
LOST Rtwlrd lor informetlon
end or f'ltum of red • whhe
rem.te llltett hound . Weerina
bluo collar took., Stpt. 14 .

VIcinity of AdclwifltSdlool. Cell
114-387-7741.

. ;

in my home . WHit;
dey• only . Call614 -949·2tll .•

B..,y tittlng in my- horrw, Fie-'
trock arM. 304-876-8807.
:

~;nan c i d l

21

Business
Opportunity ·
OHIO

I

•
•,

I NOTICE I

THE

·.:l

VALLEY

PU8LISH-•

lNG CO . rtCOnwntnds thet ~
do buetn•s with people .vp~
know , tnd NOT 10 tend mon
through the mail until you hal.-.
inv ..tig.ted the offering.
1 1

•

23 Professional
Service•
•

I

W•ler well• serviced lnd drilld. I
Free ltltimatn. Csll 114- 992 -~
8006 or 814- 742 ·3147 . . ·.

'

I

I1---:::::::::::;-""""---;-::-::-:;---~:,
'(ard SaleS

~
o(.

_
1
,
-; .

1

• ..

_ • .'

1.__ :..: ., r.
- '~

.. _•
•,.

mf~"-""'1
-'&lt;t,~~,"--...-.: ih~t;Ait'~ ~
...... 'Galllpolis· .. ... ... ;~~~ ..s:r;,, ~:!r...~i'1: .ti:,.
D.

v·ICinlty
••

COVertlllt, tunlemp, IUtdefrint
jacket.

m•ttmity c:toth•. mite ~

·---- --- ............ ------ ..... ·· !:!!::,::.::-,"i::',uoln.:i~'f!:l
8 Family Stlt intent to ldult
clothtna. Antlque1, tools . Between Vinton

a

Ewlngton on

ville Ro.d , firS1 mad .c:rots ;,•
Plant.r Subdivflion, Sat. Sept.;
20. t0-4
' ~

g~~~f~

1eo. 11 • 20 . Remt cenctls to

Movtng Slit Air conditlonlf,
ldng wet•Hd. patio l.tmiture,

••kl.

lawn cart equiptleotrlc hHt••· tJIIerciu
blkt, dog fence. new twin bed .
smeli Cih..t frwur. many . many
wooden
~1.

noon -IPM. Top of Clf'de Dr. aU
lulovflle Rd. 114-448-2024.

Sept 19th 1nd 20th. Lott o,.
good clothing, baby btd end
cloth• . miiC. YeMow lulh Ad.,
Racine. Betty ll'f're r•ld•-~

3 Femlfy 01r,1 Selt 1011
lecand Ave. lturt. a Fri.
1 :00AM to 4:00,M. Nlco cl_,

Fri.. Su , Sun . l-.n . 19th,
2111 . 320Condorlt., ,a,.~.
Fumtture, cloth•. Cfah tt~

more ttem1. Thurs., Fri ., ht.

FOUND Clooa ring ,
441·2114.

Refltf'.-. 1:.1 on requnt. Cell

814-38e-9027

nat wHklnd .

2 ldnent 7 we.tta old. tem•.
litter trelned. 304 ·676-1138.

6 Lo1t and Found

We

Direotor of Nur~ing . Pinecr11t
Care Cent.,, 1 1 1 &amp;·bed ekilted
facility. needt a Director of
Nursing. We offlt a VlfY lfledll
opportunity lor e qutiHied indi·
vktual to join oor mtntgemtnt
ttlm. You muet be 1 Rtglttered
Nurse . Long-term ctrt exptritnct .-.d-or •pervitory txperitnOI requWid . If you ttl
lnterelted in tchlevlng per.onlf
&amp;ICHIS and improving your
profenional akillt , then vou

Q:

PAINT DEFECTS &amp; SMALL DINGS

CHARLES WEIER
667·6235

ClothM. m-ual'inn. pop ctnt.
Cell 814-24!· 5285.

'

We clean tD rrws &amp; oHic• . .Cett'
betwten 9-1 for frM ntlm.tt...

Will bllbysH

ti600.

woako old . Coll814-o148·91i3&amp;
G11 dryer 484 UppBf Rkler Rd .
Lot 3 , 814-448-0366 .

2 free kinent 7 wub old. Ctll

STAR GAZER SYSTEMS

work with nwntalty ditebled
edultt in Gtllie, Jtckaon tnd
Meigs COllnti.. . Bachtlora d•
gr• in .octal work or tqUtvelenl
education pr.tened. hp..-ience
with duonic mtnttll'l ill would
bt help lui. For more information
contect Sendre McFerlend tt
Woodland Centen, 614 -446 ·

Gellipolie, Oh ~831 .

6t4-445·4027 .

I 0' 2" All ALUMJriUM BLACK MESH SEA IIIEEIE
SATELliTE SYSTEMS. Full Rtmott. lmtalltd ........ 11,650

OPEN• MONDAY lhru SAIURDAY 9·5; SUNDAY 12-S

•

TOP CASH Plid tor '83 model
tnd nMer used cars . Sn-Nth

LICENS ED-t NSURE D-CERTIFlED

Get ahead of Old Man

No Sunday Calls

FACTORY OUnET
701 2ND AVE.
GALUPOUS, 01110

992-6421

8t4-446-3672

PHONE (614) 992-5009

3/2/ Hn

8127116/ l

Jim Mink Chev.-Oidt Inc.
Bill Gene Johnton

COMMERCIAL - RESIDENTIAL
-FREE ESTIMA'IIS-

. (With Larry's Ca!pet Outlet)

'"

PAINTING

C!t~imnrg

F•ll oliN Yu1 $,,1,1

Wanted To Buy

used an.

GENERAL REPAIR
REMODELING

317 N. Second

992-3345

co mrnercilll rtfri'a·
S•ut ;8aumn to Box T·10 in CMI of1tle

Parti81, 1 nttionwide CDftV..,Y·
lmmtdi1te opening• ior MaMa·

We P-v cuh for late model cletn

BANKS CONSTRUCTION CO.

Copy Sorvicas, !tc.
2SS Mill Sl, Miltdloport
104 Mulberry Av., Pomeroy

PH. 742·2070

9

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

INTERIOR

lusiness Forms,

Experiln~d

era1lon MtVict m.n .

era and Oemonstrltort In ' tf)NI

8-13 tin

PWS: Olli&lt;t !u.. lios I
Furniture, Wodditg
and Grtlluafion
Stationery, Mognotic
Signs, Rubber Stamps,

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND

OLD nNIIIAnNGCO•.

Middleport

814-667-6932 .

6-17 -lfc

" Free Estimates"

WE GUARANTEE YOU
WON'T FIND AN EQUAL
QUALITY STOVE ANYWHERE
AT THESE SAVINGS...

83 Ply. Horizon ................... S319S
82 Ply. Champ ..................... S289S

399 So. Third

-z

IH!R! ARE STill APPIIOX . 100 UNSCRAMR!D CHANNELS

(Warranty)

heifer. We~hl 600 lbs. Off
Succ"' Rd. Call Bill Nuner

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

'' .J '

R-9805.

Loa1 : BrindiM white · f•ced homed

::t Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Al11 Tran1111iulon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

614-992-8122 .

tiring . Ctll 805-687-6000 ellt

16U) 992-

10 ONLY

86 Dodge Wl SO 4-WD ....S11,S9S

:i

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

PLUMIING &amp;

~E!IOENCI

NOW YOU CAN SAVE EVEN MORE
ON YOUR NEW IUNDLEWOOD
STOVE OR FIREPLACE INSERT ...

(Warranty)

-a:

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

pu"'

Found : Child• change
11
Mktdleporl B'oclc Party. C11l

Anrwu nr.emenIs

OLD TIME HEATING COMPANY
.HAS MOVED THE KINDLEWOOD
STOVE DIVISION FROM
COLUMBUS, OHIO•••

Ply. Horizon •••.•.•••••••.......• S499
O~lds Omega ••.•••••.......••• S189 S
VW Rabbit ...................... S189S
Mercury Topaz •••••••........ S499S
Dodge. Aries .................... S419 S
Chevy Cavalier ............... S249S
Dodge DSO Pickup ......... SS89S

lo11 or 11r1yed, brown femelt
Terrier, h11 t-s~ tnd collar on .
Oitlpptlred from llncaln St.

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAVS
CJ Co1111uterizad Heari~ Air Selection
z ·Swim Molds - Interpreting Services

$14,000.00.

ARE NOW BEING ~NUFACTURED
IN GALLIPOLIS...

**************
***********************
NEW 19 8 6
!
LeBARON
$2 41 00 ;
*
*
LOADED-GTS PREMIUM •m

Roger Hysell
Garage

2-17 -86-tln

Real Estate General

~DilWOOD

Chrysler, Plymouth, Dodge, Inc.

99-2-2156

Unimproved
Land For Sale

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

54 Misc .

USED

DAN SMITH-AUCTIONEER
614-992· 7301 or 614-949-2033

Real Estate General

NEW- REPAIR

1614) 99HSSO

t*********************************:

Positive ID

ROOFING

E. Mai11Wrlrll
POMEROY,O.

All interested parties
Wtil be gtven an opportunity to be heard. Further information may be
obta.ined by contacting
the Commission.

BY : Mary
Secretar·.

Howard L. Write•!

4

216E . 2nd St ..·
Phone
t . rP ; 41-992· 3326

Lost and Found

&amp;14-992·
trNofMiddltPQrt.••Rew1rd
. C1ll

(9) 5, t2, 19, 3tc

Real Estate mulll

6

-992 ·5252
~;:========tr:=========~;:========::t=========1~ 6t4
6276.

Lena K. Neaselroad. Clark

TEAFORD · ·.

The Daily

Business Services

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Auguat 28, tB88, In
the Meiga County Probate
Court, CoM No. 26.246,
Leona V. Clolond, 102 Holly Lane, Pomeroy, Ohio,
46769, wea appointed Exa-

RUTLAND - This Friday's
dance at the Rutland CMc Center
has been canceled due to the tDme
Meigs · football game. The nexl
dance at thecivlccenterwlllbe held
Oct. 10, 8 ID 11 p.m... .t1th music by
Flashback. Admission $2 single and
$3 couple. Everyone welcome.

••

Ohio

Public Notice

Dance clllceled ·

SAVE

SUND"\'

OWNER, PAUL McMURRY
Eats

RACINE - MI. Mortah Church
of God wUJ have Its annual
homecoming &amp;mday with Riilph
Woods, of Jackson, speaking. Spe·
cia! singing wUJ be featured. Publlc
welcome.

HARRISONVILLE - The Scipio
Township Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment will hold a public auction at
the fire house in Harrisonville
starting a t 7 p.m. Salurday.

'MISC."

Cuh

CHESTER - The James C. and
Ethelinda Stone Moore ~union ha s
been planned lor Sept. 21 at the
Rodney Kelter farm, just off Route
7 at Chesler on 248 about a mile.
There will be a potluck dinner at 1
p.m . and those attending aretotake
lawn chairs.

CHESTER - There wiil be a
special meeting of Shadp River .
Lodge 453, SaiUrday, 7 p.m. Work
will be in the master masondcgree.

Table saw. all kmds ol hand tool s. anVIl. g11n der layt he. ladd ·
er s. lot lumber . old lurnrture oreces prpe dw. vr cP. mrsc
/cyhnder motors. &amp; mo1e
•'

RACINE - Till! Gideon and
Artemesta Roush reulion will be
Sunday, 1 p.m., at Shriner's Park In
Racine. Relatives and friends
Invited.

RACINE -There will be a hymn
Mh:i'lg, wittm 30 days of the sing Saturday, 7:30p.m., at Free·
date of this notice, to the dom Gospel Mission Church on the
Environmental Boerd of Re·
·w.w. Rm. 101. 250 E. Town Bald Knob-Stiversvllle Rd. near
St., Coturnbus. OH. 43215 Racine. Gospel singing by the
Notice of any appoal shalt be group Saved wlll be featured.
filed with the director w~hin 3 Public Is invited.
days. P10posed actions wiU

pan s. m11c Jmen . chaus. desk. s ew~ ~ machmt•. Maytag
wnnger washer &amp; more

·~

Charles Norrts. Special Stnglng by
"Sheklnah" and other bcal talent.
Everyone welcome.

RIJTLAND -

COUNTY :

Adv. Out (Not Total.

Materials
.... 48, 744
Other Objects ............ 150
Total Disbunements -

Uses}

sell for cash the .following
oollateral to wrt:

Emptoyees Retir .

Supplies &amp;

Co., NA of Middleport, Ohio to

Misc. Receipt1 ... ...... 2, 21 8

Transfers-In .. .. .... .. 1, 866

Employees Salaries &amp;

NOTICE OF A

SATURDAY
POMEROY - A square dance
will be held at the Eli Denison Post.
I American Legion, Saturday night .
from 9 p.m to 1 a.m. True Country
Band wilt be playing. Donations wll
betaken at the door.

PArvATE SALE
Notice is hereby givll\ 1hat

Contributtons &amp;

... 171

Public Notice

on 9130/ 86 at 10 A.M. a

Class Materials &amp;
Misc. Receipts ..
Total Raceipts -

- - - - - - -- -

Food Serv. Sales .. .. 37.640

Exc . Rcpts . Over(Under)

Salas ...... ............ 37 ,640

(9)

Earnings on
Investments ........ 17. 407

Food Service

Fees ............ ..... .4.010

1 Card of Thanks

edge:

Operating Transfers -

45771
,., ' Dolo 9-tS -86
,:;~OR THE FISCAL YEAR
'"'iNDED JUNE 30, 1986

·,

Over (Under) Disb. !lo

..

Community calendar I area happenings

Spring Grange honors members

-:' ~CiQ!den Sheaf Certificates and

Friday, &amp;!Jltember 19, 1986

dDthlna a nunWroua
ltema. Allin or thine.

mite.

1----- - --V«d Stlt Trtller Pwt on lob
McCormlcll Rd . Toyt, toolt.
clothet , fl1hlng, M~Ufpmtnt.
mitt. Friday . Saturday.

Y•d lele 1818 ChMhiM Ave.
Fri. •

Sit. Lots of werythlng

9:00-1:00.

Gtr~ge 1•1• 23 Mill Creek Rd .
lopt . 20, till. l ,oo.m to
1:00pm. Moving mu• ttt1 toiM
tumhure, mtny other hemt.

all.
~

nWtc.

. PfPiiiiiliiiil ,.,.
&amp; Vicinity ·.:J
. .... ... .. .... .............. ... .. .
Yard talt 2904 Mt..OWbrook
Dr. Saturday, 10·3. Wlnt•
clo,hing • oth•ltem1.

Ytrd llhl2801 ltV.eaOr,

Vlll~t•

ptu:•. lookl, ..,...-:

clothing, bol&gt;y • milo. ...... 19 • 20 . 1·5. Sh~·-

..

ol
~

'·

�••

•

Ohio

.

•

LAFF-A-OAY

Ki:,JI tSI.IIt'

31

Wrlghl

74

"'Ill.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62

1981 Suzuki motorcycle G.S,
•so. 1.000 1ct milll!ll Show•
room floor condition . 304 · 88 ~

USed 580 C11e backtwe end
R65 Ditch Witch trenct.•. 1 ·

711

County Appliance, Inc Good
used appliance~ and TV sell
Open BAM to 6PM Mon thru
Sat. 814-448· 1199. 627 3rd.
Ave. Gallipolia. OH .

814-888-6222 or 81•· e88·
6•7o
32 acr•. 4 milea outlid• ctty
limits! Seven room, 1 atory
home. Popular Additon School
dill. Fi1hing pond, bam. out·
building McGuire R11hy Co ,
1402 4th Ave.. Huntington,
25701 or 304· 629-1033.
Onlv 2 month old 1 986 Sun·
wood 24x44, 3 bdr, 2 btths,
OW. AC. all furnished . elec
$19.900 Calt614-446·3040or

Motorcycles

"Lisa and J quarre· 1e d over

log cabin hand cut&amp; hand hewn
oak 16-.20, 2 •tory. Barn approx.
24K30 oak wood ptnnld. Ctll
614· 446·4307 after 6

our wedding plans. She
Wanted SOmebody else "or
1'
the groom. n

5 "'om houoe. foroplaeo. herd·
wood floofl, buament. au
ached garage about 6 mil .. from
town . Call 614-446-1881 or
614-446 -3837

3 bdr bath &amp; '12. total electric.
heet pump, washer &amp; dryer.
average 11lec bill S100 month
Garage. PfJOL fn.~it tren. large
garden space, almost 1 acre
ground, w1ll conskler land con·
tract with down payment or can
a11ome loan Call mornmga
614-446-4703

1-----------..,..----------..,
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Liberty Trailer tor aale 1 2x60,
two bedrooms, total electric
with central air. Call 614 -949·

Mobile home for rent. 2 bed·
rooma. located on Ashton Upton
Road. 8150 .00 month. Plus
utilitiN. 304-875· 4088.

Government homea from 81
IU·r&amp;pair). Delinquent tax prop·
erty. Repo11ts110na Call 806·
687· 6000 e~~:t GH -4682 lor
curr1nt repo list
6 room house. 1 .2 acrn. Double
car 911'19e. located on RoN Hill
Bargain priced $20,000 Cell

514·678 ·2513
7 room house. 1 11:. bath, 4
bedrooms. gar11ge no Ash St .
Middleport Call 614 · 992 ·

5714 .

2588 .
All electric, 2 bedroom mobile
home. Cement stepl, awn1ng,
underpinning 86000 Hospital
bed, manual. 112&amp; Call 114·

992·5281
MOBILE HOMES MOVED m ·
sured. reasonable rates, Call

Houae in Pomeroy, near bu11·
neues Very good condiiKln 2
bedrooma . 1112 baths Asking
pr1ce t16.5 00 Call 614 -992·

5769
4 bedroom. 2 bath. n!I'W kit~;hen .
outbuilding, IPPfOII: one acre,
financing available, m1d 40s.

1 973 Oouglu 3 bedroom mo·
bile home. good cond. undet"·
penning, Bx10 detached porch,
stove, rtfrigtretor, t4,600 00
Must aell 12~~:66 , 1971 New
Moon. good cond. furnished.
wood burner. air cond, washer
and dryer, porch , 16,800 00.

3o•-n3·5687
1981 Fairmont. 14xfi6, 2 bed·
room&amp;, factory Installed fire
place. underpennttd. te.ooo.oo
firm 304· 876·2802 .

33

Farms for Sale

304·882·2095
3 bedroom home letanapprok 3
acrn. write Mn Gunnol. 404
Grand Blvd .. Hunt1ngton. W Va

30 Acrn
H11 tillable land,
houae, bams, pond Southwestern School D11trlct . Call 245·

25705 . 304·522-3828

92U

3 bedroom. 2 batha. half acre lot ,
garage, will conaidltl' mobile
h(lmfl trade in , Of 8 '11% toan .
304 ·875· 3030 or 676-3431

60 1cre term 8 ttlllble. 40
pasture &amp; woodland F1rm pond
&amp; green Muse Good 3 bdr
house. central air. rural water,
reduced, price to sell. U2.600.

Sale by owner, Greenbner Estates. 3 bedroom hous e. 2V,
baths. lerge hv1ng room, dining
room, e1r cond. I amity room with
wet bar and WCXJdburmng fireplace. 2 car Qllrage. 2 111 acre lot
Shown by sppomtment only
304· 676 -1458 or 614 ·2B&amp;·
3441 even1nga.

Coli 6U ·367·0136.

MOBILE HOMES Used mobile
hometorsalebyowner 12-.862
Dedcroom An e~~:c buv. Ju.t
completely overhauled. new
lo cks, new carplfts in bedroom &amp;
halls only $5900. Deltvered and
leveled on lot Financing .va1l8·
ble. Can be teen on ptrking lot
Peoples Bank 304-676· 1 121 .
Owner J1m Manin 762 -2226
For Sale by Owner. Frame &amp;
bric~
5 rooms and bath, lot
7611400 Elec baseboard heat.
a11c conrl Sale priet11n k»w JOt
100 Pereent financ1ng, Rt 2.
tour miles from P1 Pleasant.
304 815 2600 After 8 p m
6754112
-;:;;:::;:;:::;::;::::;;:;=;=;==:._ll8
-;:

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

34

Business
Buildings

749 Third Ave. 1800 sq. h .
Commercial or warehous1
Parlung on 11de AdJacent to
third &amp; Pine St Call d14 -4(8·
2382 for appoinement.

36 lots

&amp; Acreage

Lllnd to build on verv nice &amp; flat,
conventent location 2 Iota 400
ft by 166ft 250 h by 166"
Call 614 446-7827
'h acre lot with mobile home
hookup &amp; 35•36 garage for

saleorlealll Evenings614-446·
3243
1 •ere ground at Porter Trailer
furnished with washer • dryer,
large pat~. garage 20-.30 PI·
neled, alee. &amp; rut.ll W8t61' Call

For ule or rent 1411'70 3
Mdroom total elecrtrlc. blocks.
underpinning. 1un deck In·
eluded t11 .000 CaU614·387

bllds complete w-m•nresse&amp;
8296•ndupto$396. Babybads
011011o $175. Mott.em•o•bo•
springs full or twin $63, firm
1!1113, and 883 Oue&amp;n sets S226.
King 8350 4 drawer chestt66

•sa.

Dressers
Gun cabinets 8.
10, &amp; 12 gun . Gae or electrtc

flnge e:ns. B•bv rnanressea
S35 &amp; t46. Bed hmes 820,
S30 &amp; K1ng frame S!iO Good
aalaction of Dedroom su ttas ,
metal cabin en. head Doards UO
and up to $66 .
Used Furniture. Waaher &amp;
dryer, electric range, g11 range
&amp; refrigerator. wood table &amp; 2
benchaa. beds. dresser, &amp;
reclinlll'. l miln out Bul!lville
Rd Open 9AM to 6PM. Mon .
tMN Sat. 614·446· 0322
Checlt us out on our livrtg room
suites 8349 &amp; up Webb11r S.
Bushhne. New Gibson applian ·
cea. Mollohan Furmture Rt. 7
north, Kan1uga Call 614 · 448 ·
7444
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waatlers. dryers. refrigerators.
rangea . Skaggs Appliance• .
Upper River Rd . beside Stone
Crest Motel. 614 · 446 · 7398.
6 automa1ic wastier 876 your
choice wh1lethey toast 7 dryers
e75 each. Skaggs Apphancu

614·446·7398

2, bdr 2 baths, kitchen furnished, 1 1 Court St . t325 ~
mo. plus uulltlea, referen~ &amp;
deposit Call 614·4(6-4928 .

Sean Kenmore heavy dutv elec
dryer, e-.c. cond. t75 Cell
614-446-6606 anytime

Furnished efficiency 8150 mo.
utiltties paid. 7VJ Neil Ave Call
446·4416 after 8PM

P1ckens Used furniture. Good
quality uaed furniture Open 9 to
6 OJ Clll for appo10tment
304-875·6483 or 676· 1450.

Furnished apanment , second
floor . 3 rooms with private bath
Referenet!ll required Call 614·
446· 2216
Furnilhed apt 1dult1 only C•ll
814· 446· 9523
OupieJ. for rent 646 Second
Ave .. Gallipolis . 3 bdr Hvm·
groom, diningroom. new kit·
chen. btc:kyard, refrlg. &amp; range
8296 plus utilities &amp; security
deposit Call 614-448 ·0&amp;90.
Modern 1 bdr apt. Call 814·
N1cely turn11hed mobile home
CA &amp; heat. excel. location,
adults only. Cat1814·446·0338.
1 bedroom 1pt lor rent Basic
rent 111rt1 S215 1 month that
indudes ali utilities. Deposit
requ~ted of S200 Contact Vii·
lage Manor Apt Middleport
614·S92·7787 Equal Housing
Opponunity
2 bedroom furnished apartment
for rent. Adults pntlerred 61 4·

992 -2749
Apartments for rent 111 Pomeroy
One and two bechoomt . Call

81.·992 6215
bedrGom apartment upstairs
Newly et rpeted throughout
Pertly turni1hed Call 814-992

1

5908 .

Kenmore 17 cu tt refngerator.
frBOZor . 3 yn old. 8350.00 Full
size sofa bed e11c cond $200 00 .
304 ·896-3422
Custom drapes, 1 inctt vanet1an
blinds, vertical louver drapes ,
installlild . P. A Sayre. 304-45B·

1078

Searl portable d11hwuher
175 00 304·676 · 5043
Mattau, 2 end tablea dresser.
spread end curtains. 9 :00-S 30,
2311 linooln Ave , Pt Pit

53

Antiques

Several room1 full of antique
collectibles . used furniture ,
mise and yerd sale Item&amp;
614· 698 · 616:1 larry
Hardwick wood cook 1tove wRh
warm1ng oven •1 60 .00 Refm·
11hed wood chest type ice box
S200 00 Refinished 1mall kit·
then t•ble 140.00 Pot belly
stove with 2 lids $76 00
Refinished oeh kitchSl cabinet
$260 .00 . Phone 304-676 ·

2508
54 Misc. Merchandise

Rentals
Houses for Rent

2 bedroom unfurnished Mouse m
Mtddltpor1 1200 rent Ctll
814-992·3•67 evenings
3 bedroom houso ready to move
in Pr1calow 6U ·992·7244

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Mob1le home for rertt , Upper
River Rd C1ll 814·446-0497 or
81 4· 446·0808.
Nice delltl 2 bdr Uppw Rt 7,
furnished . water paid, UOO par
month. Call 814·246·5118
2 bdr with 12•16add· Gnroom,
utllltV shed, garden tpace, rural
ere•. Ref. required. Call 114·

made tool bo11 for small
pickup. wM1te, hkenew , t70 Cel
614 379-2162 after 6PM

For rent 3 mom. bath. turn1shed
apt $145 month or unfurn11hed
1136 614-742 -2460 ucept
Sundrtl

U•ed RlttJWey wood &amp; coal
heater. large Firele~~: thermoatat
control . •• cond Call61 4-256·
1172 attar 6 pm

APARTMENTS. mobile homes.
kouiM Pt Ple .. anland Gall•po·
lis 814 446 -8221

200 amp disconneet ra1n hub.
n1pple, 30 ' 1ead in wire 1100 30
amp squtre D breaker panel
SJO Call614 ·387·0682 .

One bedroom fum11htd apt on
Mt Vtttnon low1r duplllll , ..,,,...
ruc1, prll'flf sift9ieworlcing adult .
t200 DO includas Milt end
wtter Deposh and reflfii"'C81
304-876·26!5, .

Wood burning lumace. B tt
tru ck topper. 1 6 ft . ah.J rrinu m
boa1 Calllf) good condition . Call
614-266·1691

46

Furnished Rooms

6PM

For rent Sleeping Room• and
light kouse keeping rooms Park
Central Hotel Call 614 -446

kl.d

0758 .

Ford uactor n.- Kutter bruah
hog 81 .600 Wards freattand ·
ing fireplace niWM used 82&amp;0
Wtrm morn1ng heater 1276.
Fuel 011 tan~ . Call 814· 24&amp; ·
6812

tor rent , day week
month Gallia Ho1el Call 614·
446 -9680 Rent as low n t1 :ZO
month

46 Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33 . North of Pomeroy
Llrge lou C•ll 814-992-7479.

2 houterralter fram• complete.
C1!1 evenings. 614-258·1309.

892·5118
1171 Skyline trailer 12xl&amp;. 2
bedroom, fulty CllfPited, g•
fumect. I ecret. $2150 month

pful IIIIUtioo. 8U·II2-2018 or
·1··912·77. ..

Garage door, goad cond. all
hardware. 12 ft wide and wid fit
up to 12 ft high, t 11!50 00.
40 gal water prtla tank, old
motor block. 304·675-1484
Surplus - Army Regular lsaue
camouflege. all accessories field
gear. used rental ctothin;, big
overalls. n8'N 816.00, lined
denim jackets 821 00. blue
jeana 14 oz. 810.00 Sam
Somerville's East of Ravens·
wood. Old Rt 21 . Fri. Sat. Sun.
12 00 · 8 00 p.m.
Gold Tapptn electric stove
8100. OelulU!I Touch micro ·
wave with cen. exc cond S160
30~· 871 · 7107 .

Mov1ng from Pt. Pleuant real·
dance. Used work clothing sale
304·676 · 3334, 57 Burdette
Addn Trailer for rent · Sale
10 ft . campllf' for sate Make
offer. Gas cook stove S76 .

304-n3·5397.
66 Building Supplies
Bulld1ng Materiels
Block . brick, sewer ptpea win ·
dows. Untels. etc. Claude Win ·
tara. RHJ Grande. 0 . Call 614 -

245-5121
Concrete blocks all silts yard or
delivery. Mason seud Gallipolia
Block Co, 123'&lt;'1 Ptne Sl ,
Gallipolis. Oh1o Call 614 -446 ·
Pole Buildings by Quality
Bwldera Workshops, carports,
animal ahelterl, garages Fr&amp;e
estimatea . Phone 814 · 689·

7121

56

Pets for Sale

Dragonwynd CaHery Kennel.
Cf A Himalayan, Persian and
Siam•• ktttens AKC Chow
puppies C1ll 814-446-3844
aher 7PM.

Rabbit• big &amp;little in cegea. Call
614 ·446· 1149 .
AKC Reg. Seagle pups S76
each. Call 614· 246· 9578.
AKC Collte puppi•. Ltstie type.
Sable and whitt Price reduced.
614·698-4179 after 8 00 p m.
All day Sat . and Sun

1.000 galkln w•ter ttnk on
silid• Call 614-2&amp;d 8801 after
Ftrew-ood tor sale UO 00 PU
Call Roger Meade, 614·
388· 9341

Ber jolsts-17 24 tt long 14 deep
52 4~~:4 8 h . long . 280 ft: . 3x3
1ngle misc. rem bar. misc. "•In ·
less 1teel plata. mt.c. tubest"l,
1teel wor.. ctbinet. 8 ft steel
worlr.btnch, 7x14caD6n-.mlsc
elec . lights. pig pole S3.!i00.
CaU 614 ·448·2971 .

Warm Mofnmg woodburner
with 3 speed blowtf. thimble
and triple well pipe 1225 Call

5,.·2•H292 .

colf11toblo. 3Cif-111·338•1ooloro 1.00 171-lltot ottori:OO .

Club Calf 50% limousin Charollia, bom 3-20·86 ••col181'11 PfOIPect. Cheltnut Hill
Umou•n. 614·258· 1989.

Meytag wring"' wahtf'. Good
condition . t160 . Antique
wagon, t26 Cell 814·742·
Good uNCI tllfrigltflllor.

a..n

Far ule: 3 ••I laga 21 111 30
fttt tong top lin. • I in. lottom
10 ln. x 8 ln. G• hMter with
blowO&lt; 81,000 BTU. C.H 81··

9SI·f271 lh• 1 :00 p.m.

71

• • c. •••

Autos for Sale

· i}fAT WAS itfE

.4

i

57

Grain &amp; hay elwator. New Idea
com pk:lctr, gravity bed C1ll

814-441-3358 .

843· 1115.

Wuhburn acoultic guitar,
Bondy clairnet, band check and
feady , both exc cond. S100 00
each. 304· 87&amp;-1907.
PIANO FOR SALE, wanted:
reponstlbe par1y to 811UmtlrNII
monthly paymenu on spinet·
console piano Can be ,..,.
localty. Wrhe: (incfud• phone
number) Credit MM'IIgtr, P.
0 Box 620. Beckemeytf, II

62219 .
Ctairnet almost new. 304-676·

2029 .
Kimbell console piano SBOO
Baldwin Easv Play . $800. 304-

671·1281.
Baldwin Acro10nic plano be
Cond 30(· 882·2471

30•· 623·158&lt;43
670 OT grain dryer, 500 bu·
lhals. good cond. Morg~n ' s
Woodlawn Farm. 304- 871-

1288 or 300-623-IBU

'89 Impala 2 door, 327. pg, PI
HI milu, rust. Runs. t160. C.ll

81. ·992·2968 .
1178 Anninrury Edition
Corvette. Exc•lltnt lhapt .
30.000 mil... 2 Mtl of tops
$10,500 firm Stl'iousinqukies
only

81•·949·222•.

1985 Citra Old1 Brougham
Low mlll8ge. extra cl1an.
loaded Cell 114-992·5361 or

61··992·8o458 .
perforrMnct. 327. 4apeed, hard
1nd aoft top. black-black. First

n•oo talo•
3708

~.

Coli 30•·882·

1975 ChMty lmpall . 4 door, 360
•uto.. 13,000 actual miles.
ThoQ11.,n Cent• Arms 50
Cllibur Muu:le Loader 81 4·

742-2187.
'82 Pontiac Bonneville, 4 door,

VInyl top, V-8, Air, Auto, PS. PB.
AM -FM stereo, tlh, rear window
defogger, velour intetior, body
e~~:c cond, high mtleege, 304·

62 Wanted to Buy

882-2798.
Now buying ahell corn or ••
corn Cell forlateatquotts. Rivtf'
City Farm Supply, 114·448·

2981.

1983 Old1 Cutlau Supreme. air
condlllan, crulae. new tlr111,
automatic trans .. Y-8. 15,996.

300-171-21192 .

63

1983 Dodge Charger Shetby, 5
speed, AC, AM·FM. blue and
slt\lar 14,000 . Phone 304-882·

Livenock

22a&amp; .
Jersey cow. red &amp; white cow
pert Slmmental cow, 111 will be
frnh il'l ll)rlng. Hereford bull.
Whit• faced heifer. Cell 814·

Dodge Shelby Ch•gar. priced
r•IOnllbJI, 304·882·31 45 .

379· 2609.

'78 Chwy MeliMI. 304·675·

2 rear old Atglatered Simmantal
bull with pep... 4 b• tide
deliv•ry h-vrake. Call 814·448·

11M Mera.rv Monterey. 4
door. herd top. runs fOOd, call

4410.

30.·111-3283

S1m mental tt•r end heifer club
calvn 814· 9'9· 2822.

72

Far ..le: ClubCitvM . Cro11bted
Anget and Chianina 814-247-

28•1 .

B1. · 2•&amp;-560M
Red Delicious. Goldlf'l Oeii·
cious. Jonathon, Empirl, Mcln·
tosh. cidlll' &amp; peara Dunrovin
Fntrt Farm 681 Southeast of
Albany Hra. noon - 8 daily,
closed Mon

Farrn S ll illlllr~~
/', l i VI!, I III.~

Farm Equipment

Hay

&amp; Grain

1971 8 cyl., Chovy. 1971 Ford
V-8 IUtomatic . Evening &amp;1 4·

814·288-MSI .

Maseey Fergueon. New HOIIMd,

o..r

40 ue.:t trtiCIOrl to lllhooae fntm
&amp; co"')..,ellne of MW • ulld
equipment. llro•t Mteotlon kl

I .E. Olila.

JIM'I FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTiR . IR 31 W. OoRipoNI.
Ohio. Coli 114-44e·11777, ....
114-&lt;141-3112. Up lront 010ton with WMT&amp;r'lty aver 40 UNCI

WE"

'".'
0

"'

PEI-lV~.

J: GOT C~EAMt:l&gt; flY

_.

•'
!

•

Autos for Sale

tJtOd . Call 61 -251-1288.

197S Docie• D-100 plc:llup with
.....
"'"' good . ..... .. body
84 Dodge Daytona PS, PB. auto.
31 IIWO .,.,ellautotran•.
air cond., tltt wh1el, AM·FM good.
01 ... 0. C.K 8U-448-4422 or
1t1r110, S38,500 miiM, uldng
n .oso. Coli au.379-23•1. S1.· 441·9100.
UBI Cllovy C· IO V·S. outo. olr,
19n Cldlllac D1L. n.w pe'nt. cruiH. AM· FM. dual t6nkl,
nM' tirte 11 ,200. 1110 Elc:• 17,999. John' s Auto Selt8,
mino loaded t7,200. Calll14·

.. 6· 1512.

Bulevill1 Rd Ga1UpoHt. Otlio

1974 Dodge. automatic. new
•ttery, good tlr•. Must
make offer. Cell 114·216·1772
.,.., lpm

1912 Da111.1n Plc*-up. 4 cvl.. &amp;
ipeed . Very nice condition.

••II.

1980 Pont. Flreblrd, Ford Fairmont, Dattun PU . n Ch8'V.
Monza. 72 D1ttun 240Z. Call
81•·2411-9893 oht&lt; JPM.

1178 T· blod laodod. 17,000
mU•. ex1ra ciNn. '2.000. Call
814· 387-!)682.
38 ft. bus. private coach. very
good ccmd . Slttpt I, good fot
gotptl or llnging group. Ready
for the road . Call 114· 371-

21100.

1981 Olda Cutlass luprtmt
Brough8m. Excellent condltk)n,
t3.000 fltm Call 814·371·

2111 .
1983 Plymouth Rtll•t wegon 4
opd . olr, AM·FM 12,G9. 1982
Plvmouth ChamR. • spd .
•1 .999. John'• Auto Set•.

Bulovlllo Rd. Oo111pollt, Ohio.
1878TtMsAmbladkrldlntlf'lor
70,000 mu... ane OWHt, • • •
lint cond~lan. uklnll •4.700.

Coli 1,.· 448-&lt;1283.

111• Plyrnoulh Duotor rvno
fiOOd,goodooomH-M.OOO
miles, ~ good

"'"fa·

wortr. car. body

0210. CoN 11......

03881. Coii11•·MII-2113 .
1971 Chevy lw truck Auto
Call 114· 982· 7722 or 814274--3124 •vtlme.

Toyota 4x4 p u tenders ,,
U9 .00 .' 81 -up Ford and G.M • •.
p u. fenders. t45 .00. Hoods. '
SII .OCI. ' 73·' 80 O.M . tailgates, ;·
and burrpera, t56 .00. '81 -up 1
G M. tailgates and buiJ1)ers, :
S65 .00 . '73· '79 Ford tailgates (
and bu,..,ers, $66. ' 8()..up Ford f
talfilat• and buf'111&amp;fl, $75.00 .
Only a limited quantity to be sold 1
at these prlcet, so huffY! Delh/·ery eva1llble
-~

77

1973 Ford F-210 ph:tc up tRick.
71,000 act mil•, 310 engine.
autometlc. ,, .000.00. 304·

117&amp;· 4436 lh• 5:00 PM .

'72 Chevy pldliup 307 eng-.a,
with 1opplf, 304-571· 2479 af·
tlf 5:00PM

'78 Ford pickup, euto tr~nmil·
rtlon. 1788.00 . 30•·875· 41122,
1879 FOf'd Tn.~ck F-180 PU 2
w .d. R•ger. IOOcf oond Can
IH and ....ulre at 10 Zutpan

Street. Maton. WV .

nn

D1101rn plc:llup. 82,000
mHH. Eac. cond. tl700. 30•·
1171-737S .... 8:00.
Vans

&amp; 4 W.O.

_ , . • =30 pm "' 81•·9482831-.
1·1:cs:ca:-:e:-:F:-.,-d:cR:-..,-,_.-:.:-••-:.-:1::3-:.oo=o
m11oo. t8800 lrm. 61•·819·
3381 ·
1111

lin'""'' AM 1.200,
.,.. trono. •nPI,"·
ongln•

.. oo .oo . 300-171· 1313 o•
I1I·MIZ.

w~h - . . . AM·FM ••~
mariy n.w ...... c.n 114-441·
27 • .

1171 Chovy lmpolo. Col 814·
1112•11t72 ott• I :OOp.m.

Ford ltep Y• IC.Ing,

mi...

'78 Oodgt Y• loolll •d runs

•lr.

03 •• 1.00. 300-171-1731.

,.,......,II&amp;\'IIM1t.fromond ,_7_4_ _
M_ot_o_rcv_c_le_•_ _

clllm,od. - . -

VI.
.I .nllln•· ,.._. &amp;n
In-Ion. lf4·MI·UOZ lilf
IPPOifttmtnl.

,..,,_lllh,

r1111 Hcnrlo Oold wing uc.
GDnd. •mautr•. 1111Kew•

lh~~tl ......

ultl 4M ICOd

ocnd. Col oft•

3PM 11•·» •·•17.

doponfllbll, UIG. 010. 1H7 ~_:;~~~~:---:-­
--~.11- e1 H.....,D-nofloppor.
tHO. 010. 114·JIZ·
oc. t2,000. C.K
:M?I·
ott• IPM. 30"-e1l·lltq.

·-•1000

c

'

Vv'€-'Rf HAV If.lG

:i)Mt.

rROJEU

FIIJDIIJG fWY [XUJIJ H8&lt;E

HARD "10

'SAY . .

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

'

1975 franlthn 28 h . 6th whMI
camper with air condition
t5,BOO Call61,·246·6022

J.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

1985 Sun Ray Travel TraiiiiW . .A
Sleeps8 AC , twning. Used onfl
month. Fully equipped. Call

.'

. '·

Sr:rvJ r. r:s

' ~

CINDY~ HAIR THIS

MORNINS,

r'M uLJ6rAN OLD,
LJNRE6iENS&lt;ArED
MALE" CHAUVIN16T.

WHAT5 A Gii&lt;L.'5
HAl R R:JI&lt;, li= NQr

WKY' DID'&gt;'OLJ PULL

30.· 882·2230 .

'TO

NASTY~

PULL~

1-11, 6FOTLE66 .

IIIQW.' HOW 01 D 't'OLJ

r

GET 50 DIRTY?

WA LKED PA'.31 A FIELD
O FMAGN EIIC DIR1"
/

J

,.
,.

81

Home
Improvements

.'

BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guaran·
'"· local reterenc• furnished .
Free ettimates. Call collect
1·614· 237·0488. day or n1ght.
Roger• Basement ~
Waterproofing
· .t

EvergrHns. shade &amp; fruit treea.
tr" &amp; ttump removal, und
grtvel. mulch. cotl • firewood ·
delivered. Don' • Llndlcape' a:-

81•·. .8·9U6 .

\
•.
'
(

Evening Television Listin
_9/19/~6
£VENING

•mCIJID([)iltG !Thur

8 :00

:~

'

(])Green Acroa
(!) Mazda Sportalook

• m Jefferson•

([) Rudlng Rainbow !CCI
(jjJ 1..-otlon
® One Doy at a Time
([) Andy Griffith
• (I) (jJ) NBC Nowa
(]) The Riflemen
(!) Flohlng: 1 9B6 Arthur

2•a.

8:011
8:30

Fetty Tru Trimming, atump
removal. Call 304-171·1331 .
RINOLES'S SERVICE . expt·
rienced carpenter. electrician.
mMon, painter, roofing linclud·
ing hot tar appllcet~n~ 304·

Smith

Rotary or ctblt tao/ drilling
Most wellacompltttd atme day.
Pump ul• and strvlca. 304·
815·3802
..;

Plumbing
8t Heating

emM·A·s·H

G ([) Pooplo'a Court

Cor Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 114 -448-3888 or 614·

448· 4477

(I) Nightly Buaineas Re·
port
®Nowa
(fil
MacNeii· Lehrer
Newahour
(jJ) (jJ) Wheel of Fortune
® WKRP In Clnclnnali
7:06 (I) Benford and Son
7:30 • I]) ([) Now Newlywed
Cl.omo
(!) Wc&gt;rtd C1aoo w ... ot11ng
[80 mon.l
e (!)Too Clooo for Comfort
D([)Judge
([) Wodehoulo Pllyhouse
(]D WhHI of Fortune
• (jJ) Clll Jeopardy
CBI Allee
7:311 ([) Mo)or League Seoeboll :
Bon Froncloco It Allonta (2
tv1 ., 30 min.)
8 :00 • (IJ CBI A-Team iCCJ The
ta•m sets out to stop a
shifty crime boas who faked
his own death and is planning to revolutionize the un·
dorworld. 160 min I IR,

e

Excavating
\

'

Good·1 E•cwatlng, basements. ..
footers . drivewaya, 1eptic 1ank1. ·
landscapmg . Call anvtime 614·
448·4537, Jam• l Davison.
Jr OWRIIW

B6

e (!) Hogen'o Heroes
([) Doctor Who
(D • (jJ) CBS Nowa
(jjJ Body Electric
® Wolcome Beck. Kotter
8:36 ([) Beverly HIUblllloo
7:00 • CIJ PM Magazine
(]) Alleo Smith ond Jones
(!) SportoCenter
([) Emertalnment Tonight
Patnck Duffy talks dbout h1s
return to the hit CBS· TV ser~
ies , " Dallas"

CARTER' S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING

83

General Hauling

James Boy1 Water Service Also
pools filled Call 81 • -256· 1 141
or 814· 446· 1176 ar 814·446·
791 1
. \
Dillard's Water Delivery Ciat·
ems. pool, A well. Anyt1me but ""
Sundey, 814·44d-7404
Watterson'• Weter Hauling,
rauonable ratea. 1mmediete
2.000 gal~n daliv1ry, ctltlml.
poolt, well. ate . call 304· 676·

([) Daklorl
([) • ([) Sldeklclto !CCI

2918
87

An 11 --;ear-old boy . who
hetleerned manialarts from
hll gr1ndf1ther, it placed in
the cuatody of a New York
cop after the elderly man

Uphol1tery

dleo. 180 minJ IRl.
• (!) MOVIE: 'The Con ·

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

quoro•'

1183 Sac Ave., Geillpolis.
114· 448· 7133 or 114·441·

(I)

MacNeii ~ Lehrer

Newt~hour

1833.

Clll e (jJ) Scorecn&gt;w and
Mre. King SEASON PRE·

a

R
M Custom Couchn and
Reuphollttry, lt. Rt. 7. Crown

MIERE Amanda and Lee are
accused of double·crottlng
TM Agency aher a revenge·
m1nded Ruuien •eta them
up In a deviou• operation.

Chy. Oh. 114·211-1.70, Evo.
61.·448·3UI. Opon doliv I to
I . Sot. 8 :30 to 1:30. Old a. now
Uphottered.

leD mln.l Port 1 of 2 .
hlngton Weak In
Aevlew ICC,
CDl MOVIE: 'The H.,.• •

Mowrey' • Uphalaterlng ..,...lng
ttl countvarea21 .,..,.. ThebMt
In fumhurt uphollterlng . Call
304 - 171 -4114 fo' fret

tttlnwt•.

Tourna ·

([) II (I) ABC News

Bttrkl Tree and lawn Service.
llltld1capmg 304-676·201 0

82

Bluefiah

monl

171·2088 or 875·71•7

men·
Lucky Lights Darts
Challenge From Atlant1c
C1ty
liD Wall Street Week

8 .30 C!J

Newa

RON ' S Talavlalon Service .
HouM calls on RCA. Ou•zar,
GE . Spec:ialing in Zenith Call
304 · 678· .2398 or 614 ·•48·

pod. ......
.1.200.00.
311"-1178-2841 ony-.
19M V• E110.
cull:om
ptln1. chram• whuh ,

,,

1176· 4414.

lnt"l. &amp;oout 11. 79.000

miiM. •••· Co1181•·1112·1889

00 t,OO 1l-IIIJI&lt; WE'LL E.VER FHJD MH
REAL I1-JTE.U.IGlkJC£. OUT THE.RE. _.,

BUr IAJiiHCOT LEGAL
f&lt;E.PR€SWTA1101J, 00
OOUBI

Want good 306 or 360 Chev '
angina for '77 '78, call 304- ,

MOl MI. Vernon Avt.

11n

EEK &amp; MEEK

Auto Repair

Clll 30•·111·2107.

73

RIGHT I'JOW MV MAit&lt;J
COI'JCSRN IS DOC'S
HEALTH! LEf'S G O'

h~-=:e. ~~ocJ:!:Un.E·;t~.a~:.'.

1871 OMC hllf ton with IOPPif

ID 0.

1•

ALLEY OOP

.,

1979 Dodge Club Cab. J,f. ton.
4x4, PU, r.ow mileage, air,
tlodHJuta. like n.w In &amp; out.
Mud Hll. bought houl8, aaklng
loan vak,.• of $4,100 or bed
offer. Clal 81•·441-.2746
...., 45• goad cond. Call after

3PM 81.-258-1887.

Row ..,,. bull(ly, hlallwoy 1oflll
..., ....... c .. e1 4-317·011. ..

CROSS lo BONB

PoN'r

Mountaineer Auto Body Pant. ~
Inc , 1318FifthSt., NawHaven, ,
W. Va. Phone 304·882- 372A r
has a full line of body part1 for '
cart, truck• and van• Sep·· •

Trucks for Sale

+18· 32•3.

bolt oil•. Co11 81 • · .. 1·27•1 .

Red rasberriea Taylon Berry
Patch . C1l 614· 448-8892 or

~

M~AN.&gt;

~ THf' HU()OI-~l&gt; MAS.&gt;~.&gt;.

1970 Chevelle, good front end
Chevy 4 .d .· cof!1'1ete. 1973
Chevy truck-grill• bufl'C)er. 302
Ford engin•rod oond. Cal,l
814·446·461 after&amp;
,..

1888.

1980 frena AM auto, 8k, exc.
cond., must aelll, bought houH,
asking 1o8ft velue of 14.200 Ot

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

....,.... 1000 toolo.

1977 Oetta 88 Royale. euto·
matlc. pt. pb, am-fm radio. 360
~ngino, -od condition. Call

72 Ford pldor: good body. "'"'

814· 698·6113 L•"Y·

Bulh H.,. ••,.." s ... ~u.

614 ·379-2220

89 Corvette Convanible. H lgh

One I .OOO •and 4,000 gtain bin
tor rent. Morgan's Woodlawn
Farm, Rt. 315, 304·178·1281 or

Musical
Instruments

Winter stud10 piano Mehogany
finish Needs hammers worked
on . Best oHar over t400

61

247·ol292.

., •. :z.17·ol292.

Send LhrmEquipment. 52214
Portland Rd , Portland, Ohio.
End ol Summer Sell S"llng all
farm equipment at our COli . 3
bottom ptows, corn chopper.
hiY condition••· ......1 mow·
••· Cub equipn.nt, Hemmer
M1ll, com pidcet, lime IPruder,
hay flutter, Farmall Cub whh
Belly Mower, New Holl•d 310
le1er, Jpr,.,.,, aluninum alevl·
tor, 2 bottom plows. cultipackera. 3 drag dllc. lntemettonel Hey Rake, Z50 ford Baler.
lingle bottom plow. Cell 814·

71

58

Transmiuion1. all types, ov6r,
front, rear, 4 wheel dnve, prtcn ·
rtart 8100, will deliver Call ·

1110 D•tsun I ~d . wire rlma,
•1 . •1 . John't Auto StiM.
BulftiiJI Rd. OatlipoUt, Ohfo.

Beautiful Orcoa Excelsior eiBCt·
ric organ, welnut clbintt. $126
Ctll 61 4 · 247 ·4292 .

9

IT"

ALL ~l&lt;it-fj. · -

;

1980Ch....en•. 4~peed.4door.
tilt wheel. rear delrolter, good
condition. 1109&amp;. Call 614·

SiATUE=

oF L1 ~t:~T'Y PLAY,

{ /

84 ChtNett• •21.000 milll,
..c. 1hapa, *3.500. C•ll 814·
+18-7872 .

CAR UPHOLSTERY SHOP
• '1111: TAKE A BACK SEAT TO NO ONE'·

, ' •I

Old elf com for aalo. Call
81•· M9·2237.

U.S 35 W•t. Jackeon. Ohio.

Cold Spot. 1128. Co1181•· 111Z·
3323.
Ott.. style tewlng JnKhine
cMilntt, 4 pc wood frtmef.mlly
room ut brown paid like new,

81•-2•1-15812

Hall Peking•• &amp; half pood1a. 7
month old, white and light tan
304-882-3463 .

8o461 .

2778.

61 Household Goods

19 73 John D1ere 310 dozer
power takeoff. Owayblede Call

64

Commercisl or storage building,
150 Third Ave, Gallipolis, Oh10,
304·876·4473 or 875·1•158
a1k for Gary

M1: rr: hMllll s1~

Farm Equipment

3 purebred Bugle pupplea, 7
weeks o4d, 304· 896-3353

Mixed hardwood I Iebi, 11.2 . per
bundle Containing approJ. 1 'h
tons FOB Ohio Pallet Co ,
Pomeroy, Ohio . Call 814-992·

3CM-876· 1078.

61

2783 .

Spactous trail., toll for rent with
playground end Plcn•c fecilltln,
at Family Pride Mob1ie Home
Park, ~~ 2. OaUipotis Ferry. W
Ve 304-676-3073.

Trailer spec.. . ameli children
tcceptad. Rt. 1. locust Road
ba&lt;:k ot K a K Mobile Homea.

•

304-876·4082 .

YeUow Free Stone Canning
P1ach• now svailable. CaW tor
Ant.que chma cablnet. tab!• prices and varieties . BoD' s
chairs, buffet. Sean color TV . Mar.. et, Maaon. W. Va 304·
Thomas organ. depreuton gla11. n3-15721 . op.., 1 ~eva.
Call 814· 388· B185 .

&lt;148·0282.
Nice 2 btdroommobilehomefor
rent . Netr Racine Call 814-

Tn.~ck

Small turniahed apt No pets
Adult only Utilit t91 paid Call
614· 992-3190

~ ooma

FRANK AND ERNEST

All English sheep dog pupp1e1.
pu,. bred OtiO 300-876·ol249 .

Full size bo• springa 8. manress
f1rm like new . only 2 months
old Cost SBOOwitlseltfor S3SO
Call 614 ·256· 6261

41

6a07.

2 yr. old mmiature red Dac·
shund Evenings 614·448 ·
3243

One bedroomunfurni1hed apart ·
menl. Your secunty deposit now
Wtll Mid apt until Oct Call
614· 992· 2094

7267 .

1874 Stardutt 1Zxl0 with
livingroom exp•do Mutt •II.
witlacceptoftert Cell614·4•1·
3917 evening•

7928.

DO !&gt;OME'TH\1-IG
A&amp;OUT THI!&gt; WACt&lt;O-

~~~!~·:~~Jo~"~p.~ ·:~:.

2 II!'Ve11ots. 6 m•les from town,
304 -676 -5689 .

2931

For ule A 1975 Community
Mob1le Home 141170 set up on
1 34 acres The unit has 1 built
on porch. there Is al1o an open
tram• tMed tnd a cellar houM on
tht property The proper1y 11 to
be so kt •• is The setling price ••
t11 . 900 00 The property is
lo cated on Kemper Hollow
Road. tn SDrln9field Township
Tlke the 1st tOed to the rlght
put the CMI!drt~~ ' l Home on
Route 160. go approll'lmmety .8
mile and the mobile home is on
thl left a little below roed lwei.
MPe mquirl• at The Central
Trutt Company, Gallipolis, Ohk)
Cltl 8,. ·446-0902.

Regency lne epartmflnt 2 bdr .
utililies panty paid, nice Call
304 -875· 5104 or 304 -875-

W~'KIO GON~A

ssoo.oo. 30.·871· 7147

Wood loblt W·6 cho;., 0285 to

Unfurnished, 2 bedroom apart·
mEM'lt m Middleport $185 . per
month Oepos1t required . Call
614 · 992· 6611 or 614 -992 ·
6763

- - -- -

8812

Fum. 4 rooms &amp; bath cla11n. No
pete, 1dults only. Ref. &amp; dep.
required. Call 614-448·1519.

IF

1375. Lamp• 828 to 8126

PIIIStiC clatern rte1e approved,
plastic septiC tanks. plast1c
culvena. metal culv&amp;rts RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jack son. Oh 614· 286· 6930 .

House 3 bdr stove &amp; 1efrtg
Must sell 1969 Holley Parlt Rodne'-1 Vtllage II 1276 mo
12x60 2 b&lt;h , d1mng1oom. un- ~efet"encn Call446 ·4• 1 8 tfle'
derplnmng , porch. AC. refrtgiiWI· 8PM
tor. stove &amp; asking S5 000 Call
3 bdr. house Por1smouth Rd
614·446 7020
Call 614·446·1875
76 Rosemont 14 •70 AC . WB
tl oo ~up , undetp1nntng
porch Furn•sMI!Id 3 room eonage D
Call 614 ·379-2865 or &amp;14 town ell newly redecorated n ice
lor ontt ledy or mamed couple,
37 9-2608
w•ta.- f\lrni1hed. 1166 ft() pets.
1984 Oe~wood 14x60 2 bdr ref &amp; deposit Call 61 4-446·
elec . good cond . 510 .00 Of 2643
allumetMeloanpymut167 31
per mo Call 614-246-9693 Nice 3 bedroom hou1e. family
room. g~rage. basement, FA
attar 3 PM
heat, 5 wooded aerel· barn
1970 New Moon 12 ~t 60 , 8 x1 2 1260 per month, $100 deposit
No tnsNie pets 10 Eaat St
e~tpando , 8x1 4 add on. wood·
burner mostly turn . on rented Pomeroy 814-423 8289
lot 14.500 f1rm . Call614 266
Beautifu l 3 bedroom house tn
9305
Svracu" Deposit and releren·
1969 Monarch CrMt 12x60 en required. Call 614-992
new cerpet. woodburner. 2 bdr , 6298 , 9 ·00 -6 :00 . Monday
utal n~ce . t3 ,000 firm Call through Seturday
614-367 0682
5 room and bath Has 1 1 acres
For sale 2 bdr 121165 tretlet' &amp; Quiet . 1n country References
and dep011t Call 614-949
lot Cai6U· 367-7492
1973 Arlington 12•50 2 bdr
sttml furnished Call 614·256

2 bdr unfurnished apt 1n Crown
c~ Call814·2 56· 6620

I""" """15 ...

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Omettes 8109 and up to $496 .

for rent furn1stled 1 bedroom
apt 1n Middleport Csll 614·
992 -6304

Ashton building Iota with public
water, mob1le homes permrtted,
304 · 676· 2336 or 304 ·576·
2267

1 h60 mob•le home E11c cond

)

Half caratdi1mondgokl ring, axe
cond, $2 , 200.00 304-876·

I...

1980 Bomber bus boat witt\.·
60HP Mercurv motor Fully
equipped Coal turn.ce 81 Seart
alec. range. Call814· 387·024•_
.tier &amp;.OOPM.
.1-r

304-773·5551 .

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

C1llahan 'a Used Tin Shop Over
1.000tires.sizes 12. 13 14. Hi ,
16 16 6 8 m•les out At 218
Call 61 4 · 266·6261

1976 Gettysburg, 14 -. 70. ell
electnc, 2 bdr , 2 full bathl,
QBrden tub 2 au cond1tlonMs.
porch lf'ld awning Exc cond
Catl 256 -6620 Of 256-6502
w1ttl appl anrl underptnnmg
lest than S4 000 C111t 614
446-9601

Apartment
for Rent

445·0390

614 ·•46·0312

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUAliTY
MOBILE HOME SALES . 4 Ml
WEST GALLIPOLIS . RT 36
PHONE 614 446-7274

44

30•·178-2336

30.· 671-0038

Conven1entty located low utili·
ttet Must see $22,700 Will
negotieta 614-992 -3798evenings or 614-992 ·3345.

Furni1hed, 2 bedroom treiiBf,
911 heater, 1 4x65 Burdette
Addn 304-676-6372 anvtime

2 Remington 1•2 c•libar 30 08
and 243 wilh 3d 1cope. Remington 870. 12 gauge. Win·
cheeter model 37, two sixteen
gauge and on• 20 gauge .
1973 Mui Van good oond
•1200 00 . Camping trailer
$9.25.00. 17ft. flat bed trailer

"'

3&lt;153 .

814·890-7842 or 69•·6008

Valley 'FurnitUre, new 6 uud
Large section of quality furnt ·
ture 1216 Eastern Ave
Gallipolis.

Sofas and chatrl pnced from
$395 10 8996 Ttbles &amp;60 and
up to 8125 . Hide-a-beds 4390
to $696. Reclinen t226 to

513·653·5909

(!)FA~~~

SALEIIIO 1* cent oHI Fl•hlng
&amp;l'fOW s.gn *2191 Ughted. non·
arrow t2691 Nonlighted t2291
Free letters! Few lefU See
locally 1(800)423·0163.
anytime.

Olive St . Galhpoli,. New &amp; uted
wood-coe1stoves, 8 pc wood U.
tulte S399. bunk beds t199.
antron rec11nera 199. new &amp;.
uaed bedroom suit•. range1.
wringer wa1hers, ·&amp; shotl. New
livlngroom tuitM 8199-$599,
lamps, alao buying coal &amp; wood
1tovea. Ca11814· 441- 31159

~'(, R:U:-'5, I'\Cii 001" 1\liS U"TTLE
DIT1'( I.~ es!'ECIALLY ~ 11115
~AAC&gt;ITec£S ~ltj!,

SIVa!.S .6+lD

54 Misc . Merchandise

.

4 room house and Iota property
runa from strut to
in
Crown City, 81&amp;,600. Call

A91~.~

61 Household Goods

Homes for Sale

Gonvenient location off 'Upper
Rt. 7, 3 to 4 bdr. F P. In LR,
co,..,t.te kitchen, build In .Ua·
hwaahBt'. r.nge. ovtn, microwav• a washtr·drylr, TV room.
1800 ()r 2700 down &amp; 30 Ylln
linanceing IYIIItble. Kyger
Creek Schoot s.a.ooo eura
land twaitabla 814-448·7827

.,

Krt:'N'CARLYLI!®by

..,'50 1111&lt; !#MElt ~D, '1¥:1, all" 'bJ CAIJSLE.6P
I~ 1146 AAYl.Ct=r~'' ~-'AA::-~ ~ 13Ur

'ft:V~lJ$

Page-~-The DailyfSel;.;;;.;.ntin;;..; ;e;.;.l--;-:-;;;-:-;~~----:-r:;;::P~o:me=;ro~y~-~M~idd~lepo~rt;,·~O;h~io;;:;:::.;::-r-;.;:;;:;;:;";::7=::=-....;.F~ri.;;;da;;.:y;.;.•lSep~t~em~be~r;,1~9~,1~9~8:6:

Sentinei - Page- 9

The

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•'

w..

9 ·00

0

CD @

12 :00

12 ·30

I urns to Earth 10 help the son
he left behtnd, but 1s con s tantiV on the run from a

!60

mm)

I 0 :06 CD Sanford and Son
10:30 (]J Clll To Be Announced
1!11 (!) INN News
1 0 :3ti (I) MotorwiH!!Ik llluatrated
1 1 :00 D CIJ ([) 0 ([) 11t ID IUl CBI
Newt
CD Bumo 6 Allan
M•A•&amp;•H
([) I. Claudius
@Soap
1 1 :06 ([) Night Tracko Power
Pley In Stereo
11 :30 • I]) (j]) Tonlghl Show

• m

Tonight ' s guosts aro David
letterman and musician An·
dreas VoUenwetder . (60
m1n.1 In Stereo .

ill Boot of Groucho
ffi SporlaCenter

(I) WKRP In Cincinnati

fll (!) Ta•l

Ill ([) ABC News Nlght11na
®Allee
(fil Diva in Concen Interne·
tiona! opera 1tar Wilhul·
men ia Fernandez, star of the ·
French film " 01va, · performs with the Miemi Cham·

ber Symphony .
D CDI MOVIE: "Tho Huotler llf Muscle Beach'

of

tho

0

CD@ Foiday Night Vi·

deos Out s tand1ng moments
from th e past three years are
featu rt&gt;d on th1 s s pecial an·
n1ve rsary s how fea tunn g
clips from Bruce Sprmgs·
teen, Ml ck Ja gge r, Tma Tur·
ner and Jay Leno j90 mm I
in S 1ereo
CD Father Knows Best
(]) Australian Rules Foot ·

(I) Starman PRE ·
MIERE ICC) An ahen re·

(I) lemon Grove Incident
ICC) lnt erv tews, dramatized
scenes a nd h1s toncal footage are featured tn thts exammatton of a U S school
desegregation case
(60
m1n)
® (jj News

T alos

pionships
[fOj MOVIE: 'Ben'

m•n.l

([) Of Principal Interest
CliD llil iTh MOVIE: 'Many
Happy Returns' [CCJ
(ffl Adam Smith's Money
Wc&gt;rtd
9 .30 ([) Wall Stroot Week
(]j) To Be Announced
10·00 0 CD@ Crime Story Torello and the Chtcago c nm e
un1 t must catch a psy cho·
path1c ktller terronzing th e
cny whil e mobster Ray Lu ca
plans a senes of maJOr JBW
elry he1s ts (60 m1n ) PAEV·
lEW.
([) 0 Cil Funny [CCI The
world of comedy IS explored
10 this magazine format spe·
C1al featunng performances
bv 8111 Cosby. Richard Pryor
and Gallagher (60 m1n.1 (RI
Ill ffi Odd Couple

(l)C.mpbella
(!) College Footboll Scoreboard
([) College Football · lllo·
ll&lt;ookeot llllnoial3 hrs .. 15

([)

UneJ~:pected

Cil 0

off1t 1al

W (!) MOVIE 'Chastity'

ba11 '86 [3 hos 1
(I) ABC News Nightfino
till MOVIE: 'Four for
Te•as'
1 :00

(I) WKRP in Cincinnati 8 :00

e

CiJ
(jJ) CBS News
[!) IIIFL Game of 1ho Week
I1D This Old Houoo !CCI
rJJ Jeffersons
7:00 II I]) (I) Smell Wonder

lF World Chess Cham -

CD 700 Club
ffi Top Rank BoJ~~:ing rrom
Adantic City. NJ 12 hos , 30

government

•

0

Miami Vice

Tubbs IS shocked when he
learns he IS th e father of a
son by a former drug mobs·
ta r's daughter . (60 m1n) (RJ
In Stere o

CHI Trapper John. M . D.
ill Dobie Gi111s

(]) Bachelor Father

{]) Puttin' on the Hits
[[I Night Tracks Power
Play In Stereo
1 . 30 (I) I Married Joan
()) News
llil @ News IRI
2 :00 D CD Newo
ill 700 Club
fJI CD · MOVIE· 'Good
Times '
2.05 CIJ Night Tracks Power
Play In Stereo
2 :15 ~ CNN Headlina News
3.00 CD MOVIE · 'Apache War·
rior'
lf.l) Comedy Braak

1 :05

(D NlQht Tracks Powar
Play In Stereo .
3:3
(!) Spo&lt;UCenter
®INN Newo
•1:00 CIJ Golf: Senior PGA Tour:
Polne Webber World Sen·
kM's Invitational hat round
lrom Charlone, NC 12 hrs I
IRI.
e (!)MOVIE: ' Green Bar·
3 ·''5

'Captain EO ,' the shon Walt
Disney World film s tarring
Mtchael Jackson. 1s prev·
1e wed m th1s spec1al ho s ted
by Patrick Duffy and Jusune
Bateman . (60 mm ) In
Stereo
by THOMAS JOSEPH

CD MOVIE: ' To Be An·
nounced'
(I) Ill (I) Ufo with Lucy
PREMtERE
!CCI Free·

min)

•0 m
Solid Gold
([) CBI HM How 160
min)
(I) Notional Audubon So·
ciety Special Loretta Swtt
narrates thiS look at the
black· footed ferret , thought
to be the most elusive of all
endangered spec1es (60
m1n .)
(jJ)
(jJ) Wheel of Fortune
I1D Newton'o Apple (CCI
® lt'o o Uvlng
7:30 1J (]) ([) Throb
(1) Guna of Will Sonnott
(!)College F001bolli3 hrs .
30 mtn.,

9/20/86
EVENING
6 :00

DCIJ ® G ~ Ne­

(]) Gun•mok•

(!) SportoConter
. •

(I) WKRP In Cincinnati

(]) Maaterplece Thelltre:

Wlnoton Churchill: The
Wlldomooo Yuro ICC,

6:30 •

(I) (jJ) NiiC Nowo
(])
lcholutlc &amp;porto
AmeriGo
CIJ Wild, Wild World of An ·

Imol•

h t· ~ t

IRI

Tf'apo t"

(jJ) Ill ITh Murder. She
Wrote Murder s tnkes when 21 Rom anmn
C' ll)'
Jessica. Sheriff Tupper and
22
I
lt•rm&lt;ll!
a group of bus passengers
ll&lt;UIH'
are s tranded at a road s1de
pn•fi x
diner durmg a storm (60
23 ()ouhh•
mtn .l IR,

®Jeopardy
I1D Wild America iCC, The

®

8 :30

Yesterday ',~,;

An11wer 9tl9

24 Cha tlt•r
25 Ba.sf'hall
stal
26 Mmtmal
27 Rirthpl act•
airpon
of lnst•ph
16 l.1ft ut.~t·
Srmth
19l.aun•J tn•t• 28 ('unt l',lll'tl
23 \'(•nth•r
29 I lr&lt;~ ' l ttr' ... or~

:12 Sornh Pr
33 Artist'~
suppnn
37 SatH'Y

39 .. Onwn
undrr "

hinl
40

S t~·al

1~ I l

a~t&gt;nt

CID Austin City L1m1ts

MOVIE: 'Honky Tonk 25

Rani' ~

adve rh
Freeway '
(I) Ill (I) E11on Buostyn 26 Gra.zmg
ground
Show PREMIERE !CCI
While author Ellen Bre wer 27 rlattl £'

T::~;~:~' S©tt~lA-ltt.trse

::::

me me,lto

so~~~.~:~~

- - - - - - ' - - Ult.~ ~r CLAY 1. POLLAN--------- 31
34
Rearrange lett1u of the
3~
four acrcmbled word1 be·
low to form four tlmpl• words
36
38

0

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Reverence
WlnR
Polyne·
s ian drink
- ses."ion
Stringent
40 LeRal job
41 Sei smo-

graphic
recordmg

42 lleyond

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have lhe grMtest
One letter stands ror another In lhis sam,Pie A is used
life. They h - H all. .. lldmlretlon, ror the lhree L's, X ror the two O's , etc Single letters, ;
an endleN lleep and company apootrophes. the length and ronnatoon or the words are au · '
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you develop from step Na. 3 below.

Churchill exposes a senior
cabmet m e mber' s 'illegal
doings to Parli ament (60
m1n.)
(jjJ Roughing It
GJl Fame (60 m1n.)

Gil Muolc City. U.S. A.

5 Par&lt;

43 Small onf'
44 Sk 1n
DO Will
I Solvl'nly

a

eto'
@ MOVIE: "Mozambique'
4 :05 ([) Night Trocko Power
Ploy In Stereo.
4:30 CIJ MOVIE: 'Gunfire et
lndl•n Gop'

ACROSS
I No1 1n •

sp1nted grandmother Lucy 9 - - Tlt y
Barker feels that life 1s full of
()01'
N ('1~ hlH1r "
e)(Citement no matter what I 0 .lnu r m·y
~ Oppns lll'
one 's age
13 Palm kaf
3 E~ ·shap~ · d
CD MOVIE · ' True Con · 14 Ita li an
4 Briti s h
feaaion• '
&lt;' h t•f•st•
my-.t. •ry
(I) Wonderworks: Who 16 Oral'ul a .
Hoa Soon tho Windl !CCI
5 i:'~~~;,
at llm4·~
W .O. Mitchell's
class•c 16 Bla(' kKu:trd 6 fo~&lt;~l ~&gt; n aw:J.y
novel of a boy who !earns 17 Oron p
7 K1d s dad
about life while hving 1n th e JR Panial
8 Quthh llnJO:
harsh env;ronment of rura l
11 Hecharm
r efund
Saskatchewan (60 m1n I 20 ~- Lllth•
12 Hnslon's

e

wolvenne IS exammed 1n the
environment it shares w ith
the red fox, deer and the
snowshoe hare .
•
(jJ) Bluogrooo Show·
piece A behind·the·acenes
look at a Bluegrass tho·
roughbred farm mclud1ng
the history. show ring and
stables
@ At the Movloo

cont ends w11h a p roblem
st ud e nt 1n h er wr.t1ng class
her grandson N1ck grow ~.
ClCI !Cd ovm th e imm1n en1
b •Mh of h1 s doq's pupp1e s

D I]) CBI Disney's Captain
EO Grand Opening Special

CRYPTOQUOTE
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Glamor - Tllltf - Diety - Hugely - DAUOHTER

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1011, but you don't want him 10 mM1 your DAUGHTER.

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,.----Local Briefs:-_, Meigs County Court concludes.41 cases .:
EMS chief details activities
A total of 241 runs were made by all units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services durlng tile month d August,
Administrator Bob Byer reports.
Calls made durtng the month tly each unit include: Pomeroy, 54;
Racine. 30; Syracuse, 7; Rutland, 45; Tuppers Plains, 14;
Middleport, 46; transfer units 45.
There were 153 patients transported, 99 of them going to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; 26 to Holzer Medical C..nter; nine to Pleasant
Valley and 19 to other Institutions.
All vehicles were driven 7,542.6 miles during August, an average of
3Ul miles per call. Llfefllght answered one call to Columbia
Township to transport J. Scott from the scene of an auto accl!Ent to
Grant Hospital in Columbus.

WIC coupons schedule announced
The schedule for participants In the Meigs County WI C program to
pick up their coupons at the Meigs County Health Deparunent has
been announced.
·
·
No coupons wUI be given out on Oct. I duetoa clinic being held by
the department. Coupons are to be picked up oo Oct. 2, 3 and6!rom 9
to 11 a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m., all three days. Those unable to make the
appointed schedul!' are to report oo make-up days, Tuesday, Oct.15,
and Monday, Oct. 20, 9 to 11 a.m. and I to 3 p.m. both days.
The county health departrn!'Dt wm he closed on Oct. 13 In
observance of Columbus Day.

County receives license revenues
Meigs County will receive $55,841.54 as Its portion of $17,1l15,540.47
helng dlstlibuted in the state In the August collection of license tax
revenues, Michael J. McCulllon, state registrar, reports.

Marriage licenses issued
Marriage liC!'nses have been Issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to Timothy James Bearlls, 28, and El~heth Ann Hartis. 22,
tloth of Pomeroy; Tracy William Taylor, 11!, Pomeroy, and
Margaret Irene Homer, 17, IU&gt;edsvUie; Max L!'roy Knopp, 39, and
Jlll Lynn Heslop, 2!1, both of Racine; Brian Eugene Whaley. 22,
Shade, and Melinda Ann Mankin, 19, Pomeroy.

Three divorce actions filed
Divorce actions have been filed In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Norma J . King, Pomeroy, against Thomas King,
Middleport, claiming they are living In a state of separation; Nancy
L. Griffith, Pomeroy, against DannyM. Griffith, Pomeroy,charglng
gross neglect of duly and extreme cruelty; Jodi Lynn Henderson,
Vinton, againsr .James Wllllam Henderson, APO New York, gross
neglect of duly.
Filing lor a dissolution of marriage are Michael Jeffrey Meldau,
Racine, and H!'len Marie Meldau, Racine.

Sale confirmation filed in court
Aconfirmation of sale and order lor deed anddlstlibution has been
llled In the City Loan and Savings Co.'s case against Richard D.
Blessing, et.al.
Property of Everett L. Crow Jr.. et.al .. will be foreclosed and an
order of sale lssul'd unless payments due and owing are mad!' to
parties Involved In an action tly Moore's. a division of Evans
Products Co.
Farmers Bank and Savings Co. has flll'd foreclosure actions
against Nancy Jaspers, Racine, and Corbett Cleek. Racine. et.al.;
and against George Stitt. Pomeroy. and Greg Sheets, Hemlock
Grove, et.al.
Judgment of $3,313.78 has been granted Capltol Savings &amp; Loan
Co., Pomeroy, from MichaelS. and Deoorah L. Faw, Rutland.
In other court matters, a warrant has been Issued for the arrest of
Jimmie Jude, charged In Meigs County with raping a minor, who
fled the Athens Mental Health Center where he was confined ibr
treatment.
A restraining order has been issued in the caS&lt;' oil err! L. Smith
against Rick J. Smith.
Dismissed were the cases of Norman Weber, et.al. against James
i.e&lt;' Norman. ct.al., and Betty Jane Williams against the Board of
Coon!)' Commissioners.
'

EMS units respond to 4 calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
Thursday.
.
Pomeroy at 2:26a.m. transported George Folmer Jr. to Veterans
Memolial Hospital; Syracuse at 12: IR p.m. transported Bryan
Anderson from the elementary school to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 6:37 p.m. transported Kenneth Daniels
from Eastern High Stadium to Veterans Memortal Hospltal; Racine
at 7:38p.m. to County Road 35 for Mary Kearns to Holzer Medical
Center.

Square dance slated tonight
There will be a square dance at the Long Bottom Community
Building tonight !Friday I beginning at 8 p.m.

~;

Forty-one cases were processed
Wednesday In the weekly session of
the Meigs County Court presided
over by Judge Patrick 0'13r·leJI.
Forfeiting tlonds were John S.
Strebb, Columbus. $48; JoyC!'
Wallace, Marietta. $50: Karl Feler,
Athens, $42; John Ruth, Belpre,
$45; John Bender, Huntington, $11;
Archie Mundy, Sun Valley, Ariz ..

Ex-Ohio agricultural director
died of self-inflicted wound
a clean .slate from the last bank catllnet appoint!'!'s. He served as
examination and no major excep· agliculture director for almost the
tlons were found."
entire 16 years Rhodes was goverIn addition to president. Stack- nor. Between terms, he was vice
rouse also served a' the bank's president of the National Agriculdlroctor and chairman, Carpenter ture Chemical Association in
said.
Washington.
Stackhouse had been in poor
"He had more to do. other than
health lor approximatply two years Jim Rhodes, with building the Ohio
and was hospitalized several Stat!' Fair to its current propor·
months ago with an infection. He tlon." said .James A. Duerk, a
suffered high blood pressurt• and Rhodes business associate and
doctors have been trying to deter· campaign aide.
mine the b!'st medication, Carpen·
"I was .extr!'mely shocked, and
ter said.
couldn't helleve It when I heard It,"
"We had no idea of the apparent sa id Rhodes. ".John Stacktlouse
gravity of it, " Carpenter said of his was the finest agriculture director
illness. ··He has had a continuing in 1he history of Ohio. and one of the
series of problems. HP was not a finest persons I've ever known . I
hypocondrtac, no t one who was grieve for his family.''
always complaining about this or
"John Stackhouse will long be
that wrong with him."
remembered as a soUd supporter of
A .38 callher Smith &amp; Wesson agliculture In Ohio," said Steven D.
hanQ;un and one cartlidge were Maurer, current director of the
found near Stackhouse's tlody. said Ohlo Department of Agriculture.
Jane Holman. secretary to the "The numher of friends that he
Huron County coroner.
leaves is testimony to his fine
The body was· discovered by an reputation in th!' agricultural comunidentified family memher, who munity. Our prayers go out to hls
called an amtlulance. Sheriff's family and friends oo this sad
deputies rocplved the call at 8:20 occasion."
p.m .. Dunlap said.
Stacktlouse is survived t1y his
Stackhouse. a fa rmer b!'fore ll'ife Ruth. his rmther Fiorene. and
joining the Rhodes admlnistmtion two daughters.
in 1963, was On!' cf. Rhroes' Oliginal
A memorial service wlll be held
Sunday afternoon at tho Wak!'man
Congregational Church in Wakeman. Buria l will be private.
A ,;cholm'Ship fund has been
established in his memory at the
Citizf'ns• National Bank in
Services wUl be I p.m. Saturday Norwalk.
in Foglesong Funeral Home. Ma ·
son, with the R!'v. George Hoschar
officiating. Burial wlll he in Kirk·
land Memorial Gar!Ens. Fliends
may call at the funeral home today
COLUMBUS iU PII-1\voSteu
from 2-4 and 7·9 p.m.
benville city officials found guilty of
extOJ1lon
will be sentenced Oct. 2.
Eslie E. Mossman
Steubenville Law Director An·
thony DICarlantonio and .John
EsllP E, Mossman. 73, of Stan- Prayso, the city's fire chief, will be
hope Drive, NPWark. died Thurs- sentenced by U.S. Distlict Judge
day morning at the LickingMemor- .loseph Kinneary.
lal Hospltalln Newark, following an
DiCarlantonlo and Prayso were
extended Illness.
convicted last week of extortion and
A former Meigs County resident. conspiracy to extort $30,@ from
Mr. Mossman was born Aplil 20, Joseph "Jody" Glaub, a Steuben1913, In Wilkesville. He was retired \1lle propane gas distlibutor.
from the Phillip Sporn Power
Each charg!'carliesa maximum

WAKEMAN, Ohlo tUPII Former state agriculture director
John Stackhouse. whose death
Wednesday was ruled a suicide.
had been In poor health for two
years, friends of the former cabinet
memher sald.
Stackhouse. 57. dll'd of a sing!!'
bullet to hls head. Huron County
Sheriff Thomas Dunlap said. Cor·
oner Dr. William 8. Holman rull'd
lhe death a suicide.
Stackhouse. who served 16 years
in the cabinet of former James
Rhodes, had served as presid!'nt of
the Citizens' National Bank of
Norwalk for the last two years.
He became the second topfonner
GOP official to commit suicide this
month. Earl Barnes, former stat!'
Republican party chairman, com·
mltted suicide in Flolida last week.
Stackhouse's body was found
lying a few fret away from his car.
whlch was parked on his drive
between two cornfields near the
\1llage of Wakeman. about fiv!'
miles east of Norwalk. No note was
found, officials said.
No irregularities were reported
at the bank, sa id Paul Carpenter. a
tloard member for Citizens.
"There were no problems whatsoever.'' Carpenter said. "We have

Marv• Lorena Hill
Mary Lorena Hill. 73. New
Haven: dled Wl'dnesday at her
residence.
Born April &gt;. 1913. in Snow Hill,
W.Va ., she was the daughter of
Branch and Nellie Spencer
LawrenC!'.
Preceding her In death were two
sons, Robert and Jerry: a daughter. Joann: and two tlrothers.
James and Robert Lawrence.
Surviving are her hUsband. Regi nald Guy Hill; a son, HomerS. Hill
of Chester; six daughters, Mary B.
Drerfer and Helen S. Thelps, both
of West Columbia. Doris J. Gillispie
of N!'w Haven. Patricia L. Smith of
CUflon. W.Va ., June C. Blight of
Springfield. and Kathryn A. 01·
daker of Hartford, W.Va .; a
brother. Joe Lawrence of Florida;
and 29 grancrhildrrn and· 42
great.grandchlldr!'D.

Sentencing set

Plant, New Haven, W.Va., and was
a memher of the C..ntral Church d.
the Nazaren0 ln Newark.
Surviving are his wife. Frieda.
and ooe daughter, Sue Morgan,
ooth of Newark; two s:&gt;ns and
daughters·in-law, Earl and Patti·
da Mossman of Rutland, and
Robert and Patlicla Mossman of
Mason, W.Va. ; a son Harley
Mossman. of Dundee. N.Y.; nine
South Central Ohio
Mostly cloudy and humid tonight grandchlldren and nine great·
and Saturday, with a chance of grandchildren.
Services will he Sunday, 2 p.m.,
showers and thunderstorms. Lows
tonight will be in the upper ros, with at Criss Brothers Funeml Horne,
179 Granville Road, Newark. Vlew·
highs Saturday In the mid !IJs.
lng
hours wUI be from 2-4 and 7·9
The protlabilily of precipitation ls
p.m.
on Saturday. Graveside servl·
40 percrnt through Saturday.
ces
lor
family only will he held
Winds will be Ught and variable
Monday,
10 a.m .. at the Wilson
tonight.
Cemetery
ln Newark.
Ohio Extended Foreca.o;l
Sunday through Tuesday
A chance d. showers Sunday and
Monday, w1th falr weather Tues·
day. Highs wUI range from the
PIESENrED BY
upper 70s to the lower !IJs Sunday
MEIGS CO. HUMANE SOCITY
and Monday and be in the 70s
AND
Tuesday. Overnight lows will be
between 55 and 6.1.
MEIGS CO. IIALTH DEPT.
AJ1HE

RABIES CLINIC

A jury of eight returned a unanimou s verdict Wednesday in favor
of the defendant In a civil tlial which began Monday in Melgs County
Common Pleas Court.
Rohert C. Wright and Sandra Wright, Hamilton. brought action
against Slurry Seal of Southern Ohio Inc .. also of Hamilton, for
$!0},00lln personal damages.
The suit, filed Aug. 15, 1983, stemmed from an accident durtng
construction of the Appalachian Highway. The action has been
dismissed tly the court. A second defendant ln the sult, the Shelly Co..
Thornville. had previously been dismissed !rom the action.

.ROCK SPRINGS FAIRGROUNDS
SAT., SEPT. 20, I P.M.·4 P.M.

Admissions - Michael Gilmore,
Rutland; Lois Schoonover, Ru tland: Gladys Barrett, Pomeroy.
Discharges - Opal Barr, Ml·
chael Meldau, Mer!!' Davis.

Dr. Carol

JackA Colllns. New Haven, W.Va., •.
$.ll and costs; Gordon Young, ·
Asher, Ky., SZl and costs; TerryW.
Johnoon, Lakewood, $%i and rosts;
Beth L. Beck, Bidwell, $22 and •
costs; Steven K. Gardner, Ewing· :
ton. $24 and rosts; Troy Brooks, :
Pomeroy, $22 and costs; Cynthia •
Gagle, A!hens, $21 and costs, fine :
suspended; Carl Cline, Mason, ;
W.Va ., $al and costs.
Other hearings included Ter- :
ran&lt;l' W. Matthews, Potneroy, ·
driving while intoxicated, $250 and ;
costs, three days In jail, 00 day ;
llcens!' suspension; Danny Mot- :
gan, Albany, assault, three mont~ ~
In jail, supended all but flve days:, :·
six mont lis probation and $75 and. 1
costs; Timothy Curtis, TupperS ;
Plains. parked ln the roadway, $10 ;
and costs; Denver R. Persons, •
Long Bottom, domestic vkllence, 30 :
days In jail, 2ll suspended, one year :
proba tlon and costs; Jeffrey Haenf- :
tling, Akron, driving whlle intoxl· .
cated, $250 and costs, 10dayslnjaU, ;
license suspended 120 days; no '
operator's license, 10 days In jaU :
and costs; Duane Tuttle, Racine, ·
failure to display valid license :
plates, $10 and costs; Wilbur J. :
Johnson, Rockblidge, unsale vehl- :
cle, ~ and costs; Brian Keith ·
Hartis, Rl!edsville, failure to dis· .
play Iicense plates, $1() and costs; :
Wayne Hubbard, Pomeroy, driving .
while Intoxicated, $250 and costs, :
three days In jail and ffiday lcense
suspension; failure to yield one-half :
roadway to oncoming vehicles, '
costs only; Kevin Stout, Athens,
failure to display valld registration :
sticker, $5 and costs; lAJrelei ··
Vogler, Pomeroy, driving while
lntoxicatl'd, $250 and costs, three ·
days In jail and 00 days license :
suspension with the jail sentence and $100 of line suspended if driving ·
school attended: left of center, $25
and costs; James Pierce, Racine, •
fa~ure to control, Sal and costs; :
Van Evans, Racine, no motorcycle •
endorsement, $00 and costs, three ;
days jail suspended, one year ·
probation; failure to display liC!'nse ·
plates, $10 and costs; Brian Kelth
Harris. Rl!edsvllle. no motorcycle :
endorsement, $!il and costs, three &gt;
days in jail suspended and $25 of .
fine suspended If molorcycl!' II- :
ccnS&lt;' obtained ln fil days; Michael ·
Hudson, Pom!'roy, assault, ll days ·
in jail suspended, one ye~r probation and costs.

GRAVELy TRACTOR
SALES D. SERVICE

o•-••
Veterinarian
ua•s ,,

Other lnlloculatlons Awallablco
DOGS MUST BE ON LEASH
CATS IN CARRIERS

p~::•~':2.~~7 6

SPRING AND Sl. .l HOUIS

OPEN MON..fii.

9 TO S, SAT.

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COME AND WORSHIP
WITH
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•
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9:30 A.M.-Sunday School IAII Ages!
10:30 A.M.-Morning Worship

e
------------------------~~
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY TO 5
FRIDAY 8 TO&amp;; SATURDAY 9 TO 3
30e E. MAIN
. POMEROY. OH.

· ... .. ...

~· , • w ·

•·•' , ........ , .. ,,. • . .,... •

.. ......

· • · ~ •- .

~

..., . .,, ..,.,..

,..w ~ • ·•

,.,., _., ,.. .

,.,..... ,. ......., ..

'

.... . •. 1, . - -

Pete Rose rates umpires.
Art Buchwald dissects the possibilities
behind using troops to fight drugs - Page A-2
Bob Hoeflich describes the headaches .
involved in dealing with the system - Page B-8

Page C-1

Along the River ........... B-I-B
Buslness ....... ........ ........ D-1
Comics-TV ............... Insert
Classilleds ...... D-U4-5+7-41
Deaths ......................... A-41
Editorial ...................... A·2
............. C·l·7

today will be near 85.

probabllty of preclpHatlon Is Sl

+

tmts·
Vol. 21 No. 32
Copyrighted 1986

11 Sections, 80 Pogos
A Muttlmodio Inc. NIWIPIP•

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, September 21, 1986

Revenue sharing's end may lead to sales tax
' By NANCY YOACHAM
Tlme&amp;Seatlnel Staff
POMEROY - Meigs County is
one of 14 counties ln Ohio currently
without a permissive sales tax.
However, If the tederal rev!'Due
sharing program Is ellmlnated,
Meigs could easUy join the 74 counties with a sales tax.
Current autho~tlon for federal
revenue sharing expires this fiscal
year, which ends Sept. 30, and as
yet, funding to support the prograin's continuation has not been
included In the federal 1987 budget.
However, explained Meigs
County Commlssloner Richard
Jones, various biDs are pending to
continue a lower-cost version of the
federal program, or to fund only
areas which show the greatest
need.
"If revenue sharing was designed

to help those plaC!'s ln need, then
Melgs County would beneflt.''
Jones said.
Jones contended that revenue
sharing is "one of the main reasons
we are one county which has yet to
enact a one cent sales tax. "
If revenue sharing Is ellmlnat€d,
Jones belleves "It will be necessary
to mise· some type of new tax mo·
ney In order to continue operating
Meigs County government as lt mw
exists. I say this beeause I think It's
something all county people should
be made aware of at this time."
Mary Hobstetter, clerk for the
county commission, noted that the
county's general fund would be unable to absorb the loss of revenue
sharing dollars.
Meigs County has always received approxlmately $130,00l an·
nually ln revenue sharing.

· "As much as possible:· JoDI's explained, "we have used the funds
for social programs such as
crippled chDdrens', the county's
share of public assistance, senior
cltlzens, and as supplemental Income to !be Soil Conservation Service and county fairboard."
At ooe time, revenue sharing
funds were used to qJerate the
county's school for the mentally re·
tarded and the landfill, Hobstetter
added.
Altrough neither Jones nor Com·
missioner David Koblentz could
say lf a new tax would he a sales rr
Income tax, they pointed out that
state law gives county commissions
authority, if they oo choose, to enact
a one rent sales tax wltrout the vote
of the·people.
Jones added that It's his understanding an additional ooe half-cent

could be tacked on to the one cent
tax. Money generated from the one
half-cent could be used for capital
Improvements only.
"Take approximately $130,1XXJ
!rom our annual budget wlttlout a
way to make It up and lt would be a
crucial blow to the financial condition oil he county," JoDI's said.
Revenue sharing has alway s
been distributed to counties. town·
ships and municipalities based
upon population. In other words,
more populated areas recelv!' mor!'
revenue sharing dollars than Jess
populated areas, regardless of
whether they are In need. Some
areas have even reported revenue
sharing carry-overs !rom year to
~ar.

Meigs County's population. ac·
cording to U.S. Census ligures, Is
about 23,00l at this time and ls pro-

jected to he 25,00l by 1990.
.. The fairest thing atlout revenue
sharing," Koblentz said, "is that
they send lt to you with no strlngs
attached." He mtes that townships
and villages within Meigs County,
which are also dependent to a degree on revenue sharing, wUI suffer
greatly if the program Is
eliminated.
Before the U.S. House of Repre·
sentatlves at this time. according to
communicatiOn from U.S. Rep.
Clarenre E. Miller, R.Ohlo, Is a bill
"which reauthorizes the General
Revenue Sharing program ror
three years at $4 .6 bllllon
annua lly:'
Miller sald there Is "a distinct
possibility the bill, H.R.l400, will be
considered tly the House before the
end of Septemher...
The bill has cleared tloth the

Excursions offer
a touch· of history
Ttmes&amp;nUnel staff
GALLIPOLIS- It was a tlip into
another time, another ' mode of
travel and another way 'of life as
area residents boarded the excursion sternwheeler P.A. Penny this
weekend lor a 1~;,ho~r JiPl&lt;?l!fD up
November. ,.: . t (!,,
and doWn .the Olilo fuVer. :
Holbrook, a South Point native
The vessel, brOught here under
tile auspices of the Ga.IUpoUs Retail who pllotoo to\Woats for various
Merchants AssoCiation, arrived at barge Hnes lor 20 years prior to
the parkfront Friday afternoon lor taking over til! captain's chalr on
a two-day schedule of sightseeing the Denny two vears ago, said the
dlroctlon til! craft takes Is usually
and dinner excursions.
determined
not tly the elements,
The dinner !lips were sold out
but
tly
tile
more scenic route. ·
weeks prior to the Denny's arlival,
Duling .Friday's tour, he left the
part of a new promotion designed
parkfront and went upriver to the
t1y Its owners. Crew members noted
that the addition of the dinners has mouth of the Kanawha at Point
tloosted the Denny's popularity and Pleasant hefore turning back.
··This kind of turns Into fun more
requests lor stops from other liver
than
work.'' he sald.
towns have Increased. During the
Built
In 19ll for the U.S. Army
Gallipolis stop, live ·entertainment
was provided tly Mary Lucas, who Corps of Engineers as a to\Woat,
not only played the organ for the the Denny was remodeled In 1976
diners but operated the caUiope on for the tourist business. It's owned
by Charleston area resident Lawthe top deck.
son
Hamilton and is chartered to
"We have people asking from all
.the
Charleston
Festival Cornmls·
over, up and down the liver," said
First Mate WIUle Tackett. "Weve slon. At 100 feet long and 26 feet
heen trying to share with !'veryb· wide, the Denny is powered by a
Caterpillar 343 model engine and
ody this year:'
The Denny's main business has makes 12 miles an hour at top
been centered in Its home port of speed. It's licensed by 'the U.S.
Charleston, W.Va., and at Hull!ing- Coast Guard to carry up to 244
ton, W.Va., explained Tackett, a passengers.
All rough in top condition. the
first-year crew member. Earlier
Denny
Is entered u5ually In one
this year, the ()enny made stops at
sternwheel
competition and that's
· Point Pleasant. Response there
the
annual
regatta at Charleston,
was enthusiastlc and helped
Holbrook
said.
prompt a call from the Gallipolis
The trip Friday prompted oome
merchants.
"The folks in GaUipolls wanted us memolies from Al Workman of
to make a stop, to let everybody Rodney, a retlrl'd mernher of the
Army Signal Corps and employee
enjoy lt a bit.'' he sald .
of
American Electrtc Power Corp.
The Denny operates In what
Workman,
whose lather was once
Capt. Tony Holbrook called "the
Iockmaster
at London, W.Va.,
party boat business" from the
noted
that
In the past people
beginning of April untO New Year's
!Continued
on A,J)
Eve. depending on the weather.

Travel- via
sternwheeler

*

The excursion stemwheeler
P.t\. Denny arrived In GaiBpolls
Frldll)' for two days of exru,..
skms up and down the Ohio
River. In the .above photo,
Ell7abeth VlaU, 4, 404 Third
Ave., GaWpolls, points to a sight
on shore while her mother,
· Becky, falher, Jolm, and brother

\ .,
\ ..
\

Chrlslopher enjoy the cMilse.
The Denny tied up during Its
slay In the boat Iauncll area
below the city park and oaerecl
dinner and mldnJ&amp;hl cndses.
The dinner crui'les, a first from
lhe boal's cuiTelll management,
were booked well In advance r1

the Denny's arrival.

s 'p an preserves link between 2 counties
POMEROY - What Is the the towns through which the
lifelong expectancy of a bridge?
highway passed 'and It tlrought an
Stlould preparations begin for Interstate interest In a road bond
retirement when they approach 00 Issue ln West VIrginia as early as
or unlike most people, do thin' · 19!1 and the development of Ohio.
continue forever as long as they get
The present structure, nearing Its
the proper "faCSlllftlng" and "cor- OOth birtMay, has a cantilever S()IUt
roctlve surgery"?
oll,l86feet, theoveralllengthtielhg
The Pomeroy-Mason Bridge Is 2,100 feet •.The steel s1ructure Is on
atlout to undergo another overhaul· fOur concrete piers with two anchor
lng - probably early In 1987. Will spans between the shoreward plers,
the link between the economic and each 260 feet bng.
social connections between Melgs
The greater piers · were tuUt
County, Olllo, and Mason, W.Va., be Inside bulkheaded chambers by the
forever dependent upon these caiS5on method and run oown !il to
nverhaulB or does the thllught ever Ill feet . underground under tile
occur to anyone that perhaps, some rtver, and six feet into the solid rock
day, one more overhaul won't do foundations.
the job?
The nmln span was coooected
It took two prominent Pomeroy over mid-stream on f,ug, 22. 19J!,
citizens some 14 years of work to just two m:mths from the date the
see the mllllon-doilal' span rNer tile first !teel was laid, making a record
Ohio River to Mason CoUntY for Ohlo River bridge 'WDdlng. The
become a reality. Tliese tWo masonry and mrerete \\Ofk took
citizens were the late W:A. Comp· eight rmnths, lll)d the palnt!DI! and
ton and lite late W.F. R,eed. The gerierai co,xlltbnlng after the steel
pair took the leadership as early ~s . . work.
ftnls)¥!d req~ t1W.
1914 1n promoting tile ..present mo~t~ miklng Just • year n the
bridge and a highway project.
complete erecting a( the lllructure
They received assistance from w!tleh was ba~k then declared to be
~
~
(
.,:

House Government Operations
Committee and the House Rules
Cornmlttee and will be reported to
the full House lor debate with 85
co-sponsors.
"It Is critical to point oot," Miller
noted, "that II passed tly the House
- mthe measure faces stiff opposition In the U.S. Senate and from the
Administration.'•
Whether or not federal r!'l!'nue
sharlng ls eliminated remains to be
seen.
Whether or not Meigs County
ends up with a sales tax depends oo
the elimination or rontlnuation of
revenue sharing.
Gallla, Athens and Vinton counties, surrounding MeigS, all have
sales taxes, and Jackson County
has a tax measure on the tlaUot In
Novemher.
!Continued on A.JI

Celeste
unveils
• •
tratntng
program

After leaving Galllpolis, Tackett
sald the stern wheeler wUI go up the
Kanawha River to Putnam Fab,
tllen rurn around and go to
Portsmouth for a five-day stop. ·
Following that, the ll:onny goes to
Huntington and is scheduled to be
back In Charleston by early

was

'

... .

It's more
than a game
-Page 8-1

.

ex
204 Condor St.

J

II
I
II
I1

50 cents

By KEVIN KELLY

r:20~-y~e=a~rp:r~lso:n~t=e~rrn=an:d~$:10:,1XXJ:::fln:e~.~===========-

Ohio weather

Veterans Memorial

Civil action end~ in court

Middleport. $24 and rosts; Jerry
Caseman, Winchester, Ky., $26 and
rosts; Dwight R. Bissell, IU&gt;edsvllle, $~ and costs; Donna Hysell,
Pomerov. $24 and costs; Wilma J .
Collins, ·Falls Church. Va., $Z! and
costs; Cheryl L. Myers, Evans, W.
Va., $21 and costs; Mark R. Mazzie,
Bridgeport. W.Va. , $21 and costs;

Charles Livingston, Polnt
Pleasant, W.Va., $00, and John M.
Fultz, Athens, ~. &amp;11 posted on
speeding charges; Sti!ven Barber,
IU&gt;edsvme. $40, tallure toweat seat
belt; James P. McCloud, Middleport, $1.1, follow1ng to clOsely .
Fined oo speeding char!J!s were
Bryan Blankenship, Proctorville,
$21 and costs: Stephen Wheatley,

Sunday

"Ohio Valley's !!nest brtdge."
The Dravo Co. of Plttsllurgh.
promoted .the ananclal program of
the project and was tbe general .
contractor. The Mount Vernon
Bridge Co. did the steel and
finishing work. No local capital was
even asked in the promotion and
constructkm of the brlxdge.
The bridge, which has served the
area well, was freed to tolls oo Oct.
31, 1946, lind became a part ol
Ohio's hiW!way gystem r1 Ohio.
Heavy traffic during World War II
yeal)t by local workers to plants In
West VIrginia was a shot in the arm
In freeing !be bridge r1 tolls.
Late this year, the Ohio Depart·
mmt d Transportation will be
~king bl&amp; on another overhaul d
the bridge connecting tile two

counties.

George Dougan, deputy director
of DIStrict :)1)1 ODOT, reports that
fllr¥15 for getting the. wcrk done wUI
be no pro~Jl4!m b@cause d the hJah
.prlbitty ~· the IJ'Oli!Ct: .
· The firm winning lhe mntract for
the work·wW probilbly be selected
In NOvember r1 December, and

according to !he terms of the
contract, wUJ not be permitted to
close the bridge to trafftc before
Feb. 1 and the bridge cannot be
closed for longer than a four-month
periOd. Tl)e contractor can do oome
of the work earlier than when the
actual bridge closing occurs while
making sure that his structural
steel and other materials lor the
major repa1l's will be on the site
when needed.
Of course, residents oo tloth sldes
of the &lt;lllo River are concerned ·
about the bridge closing · - a
necessary evlllf the bridge Is going
to be kept sale. Tile closing will
affect both till economic and social
relationships belween MeigS and
Mason countles. Residents wlll
have to make· plans on tlow their.
necessary trtps across the river wW
he made. Again, as In previous
closings, aitempts will be made to
secure a lerry service.
Undoubtedly, the. design ot the
proJect js ooe thai will ensure safety
of lravelers on too aging bridge.
HoM"Ver, one can hardly keep from
(Cootlmied on A-3)

.~

Y,OUNGS'IOWN, Ohlo. (UPI) GOv. Rlchard F. Celeste says he
hopes to ensure that 50 percent of
the state's workers have their sklllil
upgraded during the next four
years.
At a n!'wsconlerence Friday, the
governor unveiled the job training
programs he plans lor hls second
term, lf he Is re-elected In
November.
He sald he wants to publicize
educational opportunltles that can
Improve job skills, and provide a
response within seven days to
employers who want customized
training lor employees.
C..leste also embraced the con·
cept of having able-bodied relief
recipients work lor their benefits,
proposing an "Ohio Fair Work
Program" operated tly county
welfare offices.
In the past, the govermr has been
reluctant to support wholesale
Implementation of "workfare,'' the
same program devised tly tile Ohio
General Assembly and now in
operation In 10 counties.
Celeste said more than 8J,OOJ
workers have been retrained
through tile Ohio Indust1ial Train·
lng Program because of a 11ve-lold
increase in state funding since he
took office.
" The foundation Is in ~ace," said
C..leste. "Now we must tufid on
Ohio's strong track record in job
training. On·the·job training programs are giving new tlope to
workers and a new vitality to
Youngstown and all of Ohio."
(Continued on A-31

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