<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="1541" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/1541?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-19T00:49:23+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="11443">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/69a6d22a4ed8828a45c1b76dd5308dd6.pdf</src>
      <authentication>82c19a07bc16674e57d5d38663fd202d</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="6045">
                  <text>Page-16-The Daily Seutinel

Spy scandal:

More arrests,
defections
now expected

Thursday. September ,9, 1986.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BONN, West Germany (UPI) Investigators are keeping an eye on
a suspected "mole" In the Defense
MinistrY, and more arrests or
defections are expected In the
growing West German spy scandal,
the BUd newspaper said today.
The newspaper, whose reports on
the &amp;-week-old sccandal have
proved very accurate, said security
authorities are on the trail of five
more spies, including a suspected
Defense Ministry "mole" - an
agent planted In the agency. It said
authorities also have suspicions
about a dozen other people.
"Among others, we are watching
someone In the Defense Ministry,"
the newspaper quoted a senior

suspected of spying.
WIDner's husband, Herbert, :i!l, Is
a former Nazi SS member, who
belonged to the East German
Communist party before he carne to
West Germany as a refUgee In 1961.
He worked .for a research found&amp;·
tlon ~the liberal Free Democratic
Party, the junior partner In Kohl's
coalition. He dealt with foreign
affairs and security matters.
The scandal threatens to topple ·
Interior Minister Friedrich Zimmermann, whose ministry Is In
charge of security mailers.
Zimmermann managed · to
weatller the storm caused last
month by the defection of Hans
Joachim Tledge - who was tn

security official as saying. "We
count on more agents defecting to
the East or being arrested In the next
few days."
Theotflclal, whowasnotnamedln
the newspaper report, said a dozen
people whose activity aroused
vague suspicion were under
observation.
Ten suspected spies have defected, been arrested or lett the
country since Aug. 8.
The scandal reached the highest
level of the Bonn government with
the disclosure Tuesday that HertaAstrid WU!ner, 45, a secretary In
Chancellor Helmut Kohl's office,
deiected to East BerUn with her
husband and that the Wlllners were

.;.,. ...

charge or tracking down East
German spies In West Gennany.
But demands for ZJmmermann's
ouster mounted with the disclosure
of tile WU!ners' defection.
Hans-Jochen Vogel, floor leader
In Parnament for the opposition
Social Democrats, renewed his

the Interior MinistrY twice - on
,May 17 and June. 28 - refused to
grant the counterintelligence
agency permission to tap the
WUiners' phOnes and open their
maD.
"Perhaps the wrong decision was
made," Neuse! said.
"We had an uneasy feeling about
·them, butnohardevldence. You can
not act on feellngs, but on hard
facts," he said.
'"There are two elements ... In
such cases. There Is counterintelligence that wants urgent action and
there Is the ministry that has to
abide by the c6nstltutlon and Its
provisions respecting the rights of
citizens."

. campalgntooustZimritermann.He
said Wednesday he would InSist that
Zlnunennann appear before a
ParHament committee Sept. 25 to
answer questions about the scandal.
And a news conference given by
State Secretary Hans Neuse!, Zimmermann's rljl'ht-hand
apparently provided Vogel with
IIJllinUnltlon.
Neuse! told reporters Wednesday

man,

,.,~\r-•"'
j1 HANG liN
· .!..--

SALE I
LADIES'
DRESSES

Sl5 19 TO
$27·19

SA~Ef

MEN'S $9.95
CREW NECK

Beautiful fallttyling in quality

SWEAT
SHIRTS
By Sprinllfnnl nr Wronl{ler

draaaee. Great new colors .
Many, many styles.

JUNIOR • MISSY

Misses Sizes 6 to 20
Half Size~ 1 2Y• to 24Y•

JOGGING SETS

~:; ;~\:.--- s;7;

Two place set includes V-neck
long sleeved top ond elastic
waiat end cuff pants.
Red with White Trim
or Navy with White Trim

$1688

Sizeo S, M. L, XL
Werm fleece lining, poly cot·

's·r 9;9°:o

.ton blends. ChooH vour fa vorite aolid color.

SPECIAL$

$5359

SET

Playtex®
BRA
SPECIAL

Special group of discontinued Playtex br81.
Soft cups and fiber.fill ad cups. Good size
selection.
leg. '13.00 to '15.50

While They

Pants ........... Salt S7. 99

GIRLS'

BATH TOWEL SALE

SALE I

TOPS &amp;
PANTS SALE

.

. .,

~-

'~

PRICE
!

MEN'S AND BOYS'

cal"'hartt
Ruggefl u IIJe men whO wear ltlem.

SALE

MEN'S
REG.
. 514.95

~m~~~ ~~~~Jo~E~f

_Cotto~ pre-ohrunk. heavy duty
brass z1pper, riVets and bartacks at 1tre11

styles and sizes including
bigs and tails. Jackets,
coats, lined coveralls,
dungarees, bib overalls
and matching hoods. Buy
now and save.

pointe, rule pocket, hammer loop. Sizes

32 to 46 walot.

SALE$1199
Reg. '16.96

SALE PRICES

Sizes ~-8 to 52 ..... Sale '12.99

SPECIAL
'IALUE

VCR

BOYS SHIRTS

~I

' . .

t {

_....,.~

I

.'.

.

..

--

forward

slow motion .
•All controls convenientty located on front
panel.
·
•Picture control •Dew Mnsor
•Auto stop · end rewind at end of tape
•Soloctor lor SP, LP ond SLP modeo
•Built-In antenna splitter
•Video and audio input/output jacks.

SPORTSWEAR
SALE

brllnda include Cridcel
Alteen and He-

....._,

blouou.
lopl, poii!U,
.., - . and lkirts.
Minas Sizes 8 to 20
Reg. '12.00
Sporteweer .... . Sale '9 .69
Reg. '15.00
Sportawear ... Sale •1 1.99
Reg . '20.00
Sportswear .. . Sale '1 6 .99
Reg . 124.00
SportiW•r .•. Sale '19. t 9

THIS WEEKEND!

MEN'S
SWEATERS

You'll love our naw fall aelec:tlon. Slipovers In V and
"Craw necka. button
. coat 1tyleo plua alipov•w
button vast lw. .tera.
~~ c:olora and patterna. S, M.
.ax, end 3XL

. '16.96
~S•ovetltet·s ........... •1

"'"·•n" '24,96

Swe1t1ra .... . ...... '19
Rag. '29.96
Sw•atera ... ........ '23

'

CLOSEOUT!

ELECTRIC
GUITAR

SAVE SUO.OO
VAN HEUSEN'

d-

SPECIAL SALEI

SALE PRICES NOWI
MEN'S

MEN'S

DRESS SHIRTS

.Sino
KNIT SHIRTS
o,..

S. M. L, XL
knltll, jaano lhlrts, fleec.
looko and nowlty ltylu.
S... lhll - . n d on the u.~,
, _ ftlll I c1ion.
Reg. '16.96
Knit Shirti ... '13.49
' Reg. •17.96
, Kl)it Shirta ... '14.29 ~
.11 Rag. '18.96
Knit Shirta ... 0 14.99
Reg. '19.96
Knit Shirts ... '16. 79

Reg. '1 .75 .. .. Sale '1.2~
Reg. '2.26 .... Sale '1.86
Reg. '2.50 .... Sale •1

ONLY 2 TO SELL

Hlrch/ rewlnd Jterch,

piiUHI.till fr1me, frame advance and

SA~E

·L _ ,

Rad EX2 STAR Guitar
with caoe. 2 double coil P.
S. pickups, 3 way pickup
selector switch. 2' v:~~;~l
controls, 1 tone c1

tronic tuner.
•Wired five-function remote control unit for

t ..t

14.~

(M,on"o sizes 10 to
Boys 9 to 1 1. White or'
with color topa: le
Red Label Pro'.,
Choice.

S279

•14-poailion/ 82 Chennel elec-

WOMEN'S OPEN STOCK

•'

--~·-

TUBE
SOCKS

~ REG.

FRONT-LOADING
VHS VCR

otock of boys long olaave
shirts. knits, wettarno, sport
shirts. flannels , fleece look
shirts and novelty styles.
Sizes 8 to 20
Boys '12.95
Shirts . . ......... . , ...... . '10.19
Soya '14.96
Shirts .................... '1 1 . 79
Boys '16.95
Shirts .................... '13.49
Boys '18.95
Shirts -................... '1 4.99

~

HANES

BROWN DUCK

®

TEINIIA·

'

Sale Prien!

WORK DUNGAREES

Thia sale includes our entire

l.

SINCE. 16119

100%

SJeelel Frl4ey
&amp; Set•r••• Prlee• ·

$999

. ' ....

~ byWr~ltr-

Spacial Weekend Sale on our
entire stock of knit tops, pullovers and sport shirts. Also
. save on little boys corduroy
jeans. denim jeans and slacks.
Sizes 6 to 24 mos., 2 to 4
and 4 to 7
Rag. '6.00 ....... Sale '4. 79
Reg. '8.00 ....... Sale 0 6 .39
Rag. '12.00 ..... Sale •9 .69
Rag. '16.00 ... Sale '12. 79

a

While They Lad
Your Cholee

1/2

c~:~;.S2388

STAR WARS - Gen. James V. Hartinger, (Ret.) speaking lo
members of Retum Jonathan Meigs Chapter ol the Daugllters of the
American Revolution, 111d many guests, listed the president's strategic
defense Initiative as the most Important lasue In the world today. He
contends that a poslllon Olstrmgth Is the appropriate method lor dealing
with the Soviets.

few '16. 79
'19.99 tufted bath
sets.

Just

SALEI-JUNIOR JACKETS

-~~~-

PANTS AND
TOPS

SETS

Reg. '6 to '10

Corefraa crinkle look. Ughtweight
jackms from Clipper Bay. White and
paatel colora.
Reg . '31.00 and '32.00

I':~~

LITTLE BOYS'

SLIPS

Smoll group of
lull and half atips.
Beige. Not all

•

New fall colors and
styles. Junior sizes 3 to
16 and Small. Medium
and Large.
Reg. '11.00 ...... Sale •a. 79
Reg. '14.00 .... Sale '11 .19
Reg. '1 8.00 .... Sale '14.39
Reg. '27.00 .... Sale '.21.&amp;9

Last

SALE! SMALL LOT
SALE! 5 PC. BATH MAT

S4. 99 Bath Tawels ..... Sale 53.59
53.69 Hanel Tawels .... Salt 52.69
12.39 Wa5h Cloths ..... Sal• 51.49

OUSES &amp;
KNIT TOPS

Reg. '4.79
Albums .... .. .. .... Sale '3.67
Reg . '6.79
Albums .......... .. Sale '6.07
Reg. '8.79
Albums ............ Sale '6. 67
Reg. '12.79
Album• ............ Sale '9.57'
'

Choooe aolid colors or coordinating
floral patter~ towel a. An exceptional
buy. Bath towala alzu 24x48 inches
with matching hand towel and wa""
clotha, Made by Dund""
·

JUNIOR
OPEN STOCK

ALBUM SALE

Our entire stock of LP staraoal~
bums i1 on sale.

$888

$9.9S Matching Sw.at

Wtlmne

SALE - Save on
Wrangler Jeans an'd
In auorted colors
styles.
TOPS SALE - Sale prices .
on blouses. knit tops and
pullovers.
Sizeo 8 to 24 Moa .. 2 to 4
4 to 8x, and 7 to 14.
Reg. '7.00 ....... Sale '6.69
Reg . '9.00 .. .... . Sale '7.19
Reg. '13.00 .... Sale 10.39
Reg. '18.00 ... Sale '14.39
'22 .00 .. . Sale •17.69

799 .

2 Sections. 12 Pages 26 Cents
A Multim•dia Inc. Newspaper

Hartinger says 'Star Wars' necessary

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20th AND SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21st

Sale Priced

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Friday. September 20. 1986

'

Sporty new looks for autumn
in Salmon, Mauve and Jade .
Jr. Sizes 3 to 13 and S . M, l
R't. SJ9 to '34

ONLY

at

e
Vo1.35, No.111
Copyriphted 19!1

SPORTSWEAR
SALE

••

Stop in and see our new long
aleeve dresa ahirta and save.
Neck alzes 14Ya to 18. Steeve
lengthl 32 to 35 inches. Button downa and regular collar
ttylea. Solids. white , neat

'
9

modeto . Full cut and tapered '

' Reg . •16.96
Sale .......... .. ..... '13.60
Rag. '19.00
Sale .................. '16.00~

Reg. '21 .00

\

,Sale .... ..... ... ..... . '18.70

-

S1la ..... ............ '17.150

Reg. '22.00

we want to see It, he added.
By Charlene Hoeftlch.
launched four to five times as many
Sentinel Slaft WrMer,
Making reference to his former
satellites as we have with 70 percent
"A defense against ballistic rl)le as commander -In-chief of
of the Soviet launches being strictly
mlssUo&gt;s - the strategic defense NORAD, the general spoke of his
mllltary with anolher 20 percent
Initiative· or 'Star Wars' - Is the responsibilities In that position
being mUitary related.
most Important Issue In the world noting th!lt on every missile launch
Last year, Russia launched 74
today. It Is a deterrence to nuclear In the world, (and there were over
mUitary satellites while the United
war ..... .lt wUI give us a way to deal 2,000 In Ills four years there} he had
States launched eight, Gen" Hartinwith the Soviets !rem the point of to assess whether It was a threat to
ger said. He also said the Soviets
strength, " GenJamesV. Hartinger, North America.
. have the world's ·only operational
(Ret.} told members of Return
He said that the mlssUe warning
space weapon, a co-orbital sysll'm
Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the mission Is the heart and soul of our
which they have demonstrated for
Daughters of the AmeriCan Revolu- deterrent posture and that U any
years and which Is a threat toouriow
tion Thursday afternoon at Grace retaliatory actions ever have to be
orbiters.
· Episcopal Church.
taken they would start with Norad' s
"We watch them launch their
The former commander-In-chief assessment.
target, theJr interceptor, and we see
of NORAD was emphatic in his
On Sept. 1, 198l, Gen. Hartinger
how well they do,' ' he said.
support of President Reagan's said that the firSt operational space
The four-star general said the
Initiative to develop a defense command was activated.
Soviets also have a solid groundagainst ballistic missiles and said
''We activated the command, not
based · electronic warfare system
there Is no question about the to militarize space, but rather to
and their high energy laser program
preserve our rlght of seU defense
growing Soviet threat.
Is threetoflvetlmesthe U.S.tevelof
'"The question Is", he said, "what and to deter space warfare. our
effort.
are our options In dealing with It?''
motto, 'Guardians of the High
" It Is reported that they outspent
Gen. Hartinger emphasized that Frontier' depicts the spirit and
us last year in the total space budget
the United States must gain a parity determination our forefathers had.
by $5 billion:" Gen. Hartinger said.
with the Soviets to Insure deter- Theyweregolngwest, weare going
"When you add the technology
rence. "Negotiations without arma- up," the general said.
transfer from our open society to
ments Is like music without InstruThe perception of space has
their closed society, you can see that
ments", Gen. Harllnger said, changed, Gen. Hartlngerexplitinl'&lt;l
they are going to he tough
quoting FrederiCk the Great.
·
competitors."
"It Is oowa platn,llkethe land, the
The Initiative Is a "bold step to
lie pointed out the Soviets have a
sea and the air, another dimension,
Increase defense, a golden opportun- and It's justa matter ~tlmeuntilwe major manned space program and
Ity to change directions toward a
that their cosmonauts have logged
treatlt as such.
more 'stable world situation," Gen.
TheSovletsatreadyhaveamajor well over seven man years in space
Hartinger said. It Is time to look at
mUltary space program,. he said, since 1977, compared toArnnerlca 's
the world the way it Is, not as the way
and over the past decadl: have 360 man days through the Drs! 13

flights of the shu ttle.
"The Soviets recognize the potential military value of man ln space,
and we had better get operational in
space- not to militarize space but
to protect our Interests," Gerr.
Hartinger said.
Besides national security, Gen.
Hartinger said the United States has
a growing dependence on space
systems for communications, Intelligence, navigation surveillance.
and warning and weather
forcastlng.
In comparing the military might
of the United States and the Soviets .
Hartinger, said that in the 1960's the
United States had 1.054 ICBM's and
the Sov)ets had a couple hundred.
Today, he said. we still have about
a thousand and they have 1,400, and
are still building.
He contended that theonlyway to
bring the Soviets to the ..,gotlatlng
table Is by convincing them that
after years of neglect weare going to
gain a parity in strategic nuclear
weapons.
The bottom line , Gen. Hartinger
said. is that "we must bring defense
back Into the war making equation ........ we must not lOOk at the
p resident's strategic defense Initiative as the scenario from a science
fiction movie, but rather look at it for
what it is - a bold new step 10
Increase our national security."

Riffe urges ·local autonomy
need.
}
ByLanyEwmg
''The federal government
OVP !Mall Writer
RIO GRANDE - "Whether wouldn't have a dime If it weren' tfor
wider a RepubliCan or Democratic the states; and, the federal, state
administration," House Speaker and local goverrunents an belong to
the people ...They're ours.
Vernal G. Riffe said 'Thursday, "the
"And, yet, ·· Rifle continued, "we
federal government really doesn't
don't
get back What we shOuid gel
lojowwhat lt'sdoing at times."
back.
Each state should get back a
Riffe's remarks- which strongly
of the Income tax paid In
percentage
supported greater autonomy for
by Its residentsandbeallowed to run
state and local governments things as It sees fit.
caJlli, during a dinner meeting of the
"The reality, however, Is that
Southeastern Ohio Regional
more and more. states are getting
Council.
"I was raised In local govern- back less and less; and, that
ment," lhe New Boston Democrat · concerns me .
'' N. the same time,'· Riffe added,
said, "and I was taught that
"I'm
concerned by federal mangoverrunent Is supposed to take care
dates - like seat belt '.aws and
of ·its people. But, sometimes It
seems lhat every tlme local • emission control standards - that
are sent down with the message
goverrunents get their feet on the
'comply with these, or else' ."
ground, the federal government
Riffe Is serving his sixth tenn as
does something to ruin II.
"Local governments are going speaker, longer than any other
speaker In Ohio history. Hewasftrst
through a real tough period today, "
elected
to represent the 89th district
Riffe said. "Its the responslbUlty of
which
Includes Scioto and Pike
· the people who hold the elected
counties - In 1958; and, has served
offlces to supply the money they
14 consecutive terms.

Noting his record, Rlf!e said, "I
would not have served longer than
any other speaker If 11 were not for
the people... Voters are looking tor
elected officials who wUI work for
them.''
Urging bipartisan political action,
he continued, "You can have party
affiliations - and I believe In a
strong twoparty system - but
when It comes to getting the job
done, Democrats and Republicans
have to work together ... lfyou don't,
you don' t get the job done."
In a revjew r1 development In the
southeastern Ohio region, Rifle '
said , "I amveryproudofmypartln
helping with programs that have
allowed this area to grow."
Rlffe referred specifically to
completed highway projects l!i the
area, such as the Appalachian
Highway; and, to planned highway
construction, Hke the U.S. 35bypass
at Jackson.
"We have done a lot, " the House
Speaker concluded, "but we need to
do more ... to let people know there Is
a southeastern Ohio."
'

RIFFESPEAKS-H...,.SpeakerVemalG.Hiffe
Thursday Bllclrei8ed a meetln&amp; ol the Sou&amp;heastem
Ohio Regional Council. The New llootoa Democrat
urgi'Cl grealer aUtonomy lor local govenimenls and

Fann bill passes Senate committee
By SONJA IIILLGREN
UPI Fann Editor
WASHINGTON (UP!)- Republican leaders ftnaUy surrendered In
their losing hattie to bring a farm bill
out of the Senate Agriculture
Committee that would flt within
budget constraints and satisfy
President Reagan.
With tobacco politics apparently
providing the push togetactlonafter
four months of deliberations, the
panel voted 1~ late Thursday to
send the 8enate a bill with $50 billion
in commodity and credit provisions
that are $11 bllllon more expensive
than a three-year congressional
budget ceiling.
The administration said that If
budget counters were honest, they
would admit the bill Is $19 bUilon too
expensive.
The measure has a thrust similar
to a bUI the House begins debating
today, but the House Agriculture
Committee succeeded in maklng
sufficient cuts to put Its bill under the
budget celllng.
Senate Republlcan leader Robert
Dole, who voted for the Senate biD,
said, ''Obvlously,a bii!Hkethlscan't
be sustained on the Door."
He said cuts would have to be
made or Reagan wUl veto the blll to
force Congress to wrlte a cheaper
alternative.
With lawmakers reluctant to
reduce farm subsidies In the midst
of a weak economy, RepubliCan
leaders could nl'Ver garner enough
votes In the committee to get a bUI

satisfactory to the administration.
Chairman Jesse Helms, R-N.C..
had said he did not want to be the
first committee chalrm~ lo vote
against a farm bUI - but he was.
Other senators hinted Helms let
the bUlout of committee because the
Senate Finance Committee was
a bout to link a measure to hail out
the financially troubled tobacco
price support program with &lt;Vntlnuation of a 1&amp;-cent cigarette tax.
"It may help Improve the bUI
here," said Sen. David Boren,
D-Okla. Helms dented any connection, saying, "I don't know how you
could connect the two.··
Helms lost an 11-5 vote on a
budget-culling package that would
have frozen target prices for grains
and cotton for a year and then
permitted reductions Ia ter, an
option palatable to the administration. Targets determine the level of
direct cash subsidies to farmers .
By a ~ vote, the coiT)rnlttee
rejected an attempt by Dole · to
eliminate a provision that would
permit wheat farmers Ill vote in a
referendum for higher subsidies.
In the key 10-7 vote, the panel
agreed to a measure by Sen. John
Melcher, D-Mont., to freeze targets
for four years. Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., joined Sen- Mark
Andrews, R-N.D., and the committee's Democrats to vote lor the
freeze.
The vote by McConnell, WOO "
represents a key tobacco state,
added to speculation that moving

the measure out of committee was
connected to the Senate Finance
Commltteeconslderationoftobacco
legislation.
The committee halted deliberations In the final stretch so some
senators could troop down the hall to
meet wlthmuslcstarsWillleNelson,
Neil Young and John cOnlee, who
will pertorm Sunday at a Farm Aid
concert at the University of IDlnols
to draw attention to the poor farm
economy.
"They'reencouraglng us to do our
uimost to pass something that would
be meaningful for famUy farmers,"
said Melcher.

Clarification
Part of an Interdepartmental
transfer of funds In excessof$ll,!Xll
for Carleton School-Meigs Industries this week wentto budget areas
other than administrative salaries.
The budget change was approved
by the · Meigs County Board ol
Mental Retardation. The transfer
request, made by Lee Wedemeyer,
superintendent of the Carleton
School, was approved by the Meigs
County Commissioners.
Of the total tmnster, $21,500went
to administrative ~!aries to cover
pay raises; $ml went to health
Insurance; $3!00 to employees
salaries; $2500 to supplies; $1900 to
contract repair; $«XXX to the public
employees retirement system; and
$2377 to buDding and vehicle
Insurance.

•

defmded a proposal w expand Sbawnee State
Community CoUege In Scioto County to a foor-year
Institution.

At least 250 dead in Mexico;
workers still search debris
By PIETER VAN BENNEKOM

MEXICO CITY (UPI). - Fires
burned through the night, casting a
hellish glow over the city as rescuers
raced to free screaming victims
from hotels and skyscrapers
crushed by an eartllquake that
killed hundreds, perhaps thousands.
The quake, measuring 7.8 on the
open-ended Richter scale, rocked
central ·Mextco at 7:18a.m. Thursday as rnllllons headed to work or
school In Mexico City.
A Mexico City television station,
Channel 13, reported at least 250
confirmed deaths and thousands of
Injured whUe government officials,
emphasizing !twas tooearlytolssue
any accumte figures, estimated
casualties at 5,000 Injured and
several hundred dead.
"
The death toll was expectedtorlse
as some 50,!Xll workers dug through
pUes of debris In search of an
estimated 1,!Xll people trapped
beneath the rubble of about 250
major buUdtngs crushed by the
quake and untold numbers ot
smaUer buildings.
At least 3,:nl people spent the
night tn government shehers, according to a Mexican television

station, Channel 2. Another 2,500
people who were Injured spent the
night In hospitals.
Twenty-five people were killed
when a church collapsed during
mass ln Cludad Guzman, 2'75 miles
west of Mexico City, El lnformador
newspaper In Guadalajara said.
The paper also reported "extl'nslve
damage" II) the nearby city of
Colima.
In San Sebastian, Spain, the
director of Spain's special fishing
radio link said today that Mexican
and Salvadoran navy vessels had
reported five merchant ships and
lour trawlers missing In the Pacific
Ocean 135 miles west of Acapulco.
"The Spanish crew on a Mexican
tuna trawlertolduslheseawaswUd.
They said they saw 20-meter
165-foot) waves rising from the
ocean," said Jesus Ferreiro of
11

0nda Pesquera."

Bodies were pulled from at least
seven major downtown Mexico City
hotels that were completely destroyed - the Regis. the Diplomatiro, the Versalles, the DiCarlo, the
Prlnelpado, the Juarez and the
Montreal. Major damage was
reported at the Roma, Bristol,

•

Ejecu livo, Palace a nd Refonna
hotels.
Aeromex ico, one of Mexico's two
national airlines , said all communi cations were knocked out in Mexico
City, Guadalajara', Tepic , Nayarit
and the resm1s of lxtapa and
Acapulco. Ham radio reports from
Acapulco said Uu~ resort town
suffered only minor damage but
that hundreds of panicky tourists
were desperately trying to board
planes for home.
Thousands of shocked and weepIng milled 1!bout lhe debris-littered
streets of the capital - confused,
dismayed. homeless - stopping
occasionally to embrace, sha ring
their grief.
Chlldren -on their way to school
when the quake struck - huddled
together, crying.
"Mama . mama ! Where is my
mama?" sobbed one-10 year-old
girl, dressed In her school unlfonn a green sweater, white Peter Pan
blouse and green slacks.
A woman stood screaming outside one of at least seven major
downtown hotels toppled by the
quake.
"Holy Mary! My daughter's In
there!" she cried. "Holy Mary! "

.I

s

I

e
y

�Friday, September 20, 1986

Pege-2-The Daily Sentinlj..
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
Friday, September 20; 1986,

=

The Daily Sentinel
lll Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS 0~' THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

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

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

Brief exposure_:___......._____W_ill_iam_F._B_uc_k_ley_J_r.
One (earns a lot about one's own
culture by slipping on a banana peel
evel7{ now and then.
Last Friday morning, at a bote!
room In Detroit, I awolq! In acute
dlstres8. Awoke, if that is what yoo
call lt, having slepd for only !!I
minutes, before which time I had
been similarly awakened; and so
on, back through the night, which
was supposed to have begun when I
turned off the lights at 1 a.m .,
havtng finished my homework and
taken my routine medlcation to
keep my always freeze-easy respj-

ratory system lubricating away,
the betler to address tbe dlstlnguished members of the MJchlgan
State Bar at noon the next day on
their 50th anniversary.
Meanwhile, I had a VeJ1' concrete
problem. A jab In the center of my
chest hall abruptly awakened me
every~ minutes over a seven-hour
period, resulting in isolated pocket
of sleep, but zero repose. "Wbat
kind of pain, Mr. Buckley?" I was
later asked, and had to remind
myself that Harold Ross has taught
us that "nothing is Indescribable"

I. ETTERS OF' OP I NION are welaom('. They should be Jess than 300 words
long AH )Ot l('rS a!'C' subj ('Ct to ed tling lll'l"t3 must be signed wit h name, addr£'!is and

telf'ph on£' number .. No

u n s l~n ed

good tasw . addressing IsSues .

. ...

before attempting to establish
whether the pain In my chest was
one-tenth what you'd feel sticking
your hand over a burning tire,
two-tenths the kind of pain you'd
feel 11 somebody clamped a .rubber
band around your esophagus.
three-tenths what you feel when
what's in your stomach tries to
move up, instead of down, one-tenth
the feel of an icicle bullet tired
through you from the resident
Bulgarian .... It really Isn't easy.
But everyone sbouid _k now what I
dldn't, wblc)liS that when the hotel

,

IE'tt"n will be publ!sh£'&lt;1. L etters should be In

no l · ~aonallll es.

·"·------··---···

There tbey treat you as if you had
had a heart attack - Identical
motions are lndlcated. And you
learn for the first time (In my case)
that doctors cannot rule out that
what you had was a heart attack for
24 hours. They can, In the course of
three or four hours, tell you they
think it was something else, but
scientific discipline forbids !hem to
exclude "hear! attack" - which is
of course what everybody Is quietly
concludlng.

It's more than welfare
.,. We all know about Social Security- or certainly sbould. One way or
·. . ~nother , the national old-age Insurance program eventually touches
.

;J.llltnost every American.
Most of us also have at least heard about Medicare, Medicaid, the Job
C&lt;il-ps, Heat Start, the Veterans Administration, public housing, food
stamps and the school mllk program.
.
All are part of this country' s vast system of social programs. It is a
system that, dlrecUy or !ndlrecUy, affects the dally Uves of most
Americans. Forth~ least-advantaged In our society, It provides a safety net
that keeps them liom falling ouf of that society entirely.
The basics of the system have been In place now for a hall century,
high time for review In the v1ew of 's ome thoughtlul Americans.
One is Alan Pifer. He Is chairman of the Project on the Federal Social
Role, an ambitious re-examination of the system's overall design, purpose
and impact in light of today's needs and tomorrow's challenges. He is a
former president of the Carnegie Corp., one ol14 foundations funding the
project which is being pursued through study groups In Washington and at
several major universities.
To start with, says Pifer, the project is taking a broader than usual
v1ew of the federal social role. The most people, this role refers primarily to,
welfare programs. These, however, are only a minor part of the
government's total social impact.
Its activities In other areas, such as regulation, the environment and
especially tax policy, must also be considered. Federal social funding
ccimes not only through direct budget expenditures, but also Indirectly
through "tax expenditures." This is the preferential treaiment, accorded
everything from home mortgages to CO!"porate welfare deductions, that
channels private expendltures In desired directions.
"There Is enormous Ignorance," says Pifer, "about all that really
happens under the federal social role and why It is so Jmportant."
Most Americans, for example, are unaware of the degree to which tho
standard of living of the middle class is bolstered by what economists call
"secondary consumer Income," the benefits derived from social
programs. Statistically, 47 percent of all American households receive
some aid from the federal government, either In cash or In kind.
\\'hen everything is added up, according to Pifer, "a pretty small part
of the federal social role is for the poor." Most of the ald goes to the middle
class, for a lot of things that may be very worthwhile, but which the
recipients would be unlikely to regard as "welfare."
. The post-New Deal wave of programs, enacted for the most part under
Lyndon Johnson's Great Society, has been the focus of the most Intense
scrutiny and criticism in r"'&gt;ent years. Ironically, this is in most cases a
consequence of success rather than !allure.
Medicare is a prime example.
"Unquestionably, it has contributed mightUy to the aging of American
society," says Pifer. "People are living longer. And the longer people live,
the more assistance they require. Therefore, the costs are going up, fo·r
Medicare itself and lor Social Security."
·Pifer sees ali the major programs lor the elderly as success stories.
"Until the mid-thirties," he observes, "America treateditselderlylna
barbarous manner. The whole business of their support has now been put
on a non-demeaning basis, and it has been federal programs that have done

It:. "
• But that ~as Involved a huge shift of social resources to benefit older
Americans ; whlcli now poses another problem.
'We are at the point where we have to consider how much more we
can spend on the elderly, when we are not spending much of anything on
children," he says. "That's one of the things that has got to be faced."
\
But just one.

@199!:' fORTWORlll &lt;;TI\V.·TfLe~

IE 1·e
!(;/&gt;.

And it is hard to ~n to express
appreciation as the unldlrec:tional messages of good will (you
are not allowed to get messages
out) flood in. Wile and scln
materialized, and were permitted
to medlate the traffic, requiring a
little improvisation wben quotlng
me, since I was at that point near
torpor.

OII\''S

-~-1f

-

f

-

**~lflj
Spoils of revolution __J_a_ck_A_n_de_rs_o_n__;,&amp;_D_a_le-:-~_an_A_t_ta
WASHIN(ji'ON - Are tbe revo- · president of Nicaragua; lfumbelto
Is minister of defense and head of
lutionary rulers of Nicaragua try·
lng to surpass the late, corrupt
the army. Their key company is
Anastasio Somoza's record as the
Alta Comer,cial, which handles
hemisphere's greediest dlctator- goods imported for the governship? The word we got from
ment. It's like our General Services
Ma,nagua is that the Marxist
Administration, except that the
Ortegas are allowed ·to skim a
Sandlnlstas are making a good run
lor Somoza's title.
percentage off the top of each
In fact, the Sandlnlsta leaders
transaction.
R!vaUng their official pillage is
and their cronies are so blatant ·
about tbelr pursuit of luxury and
the empire being buUt by Borge, the
wealth that the long-suffering Nicaonly survtvlng founder of the
raguan people know all about it,
Sapdinista movement. At 56, he is
minister of the Interior, in charge of
anil some of them cynically refer to
the revolution as "el engagno/' the police and Internal security.
meaning ihe trick or hoax.
Borge walks with a pronounced
From U.S. intelligence and other limp, a souvenir of torture In the
sources, we've pieced together this same Somoza prisons where Ills
story of a people's revolution enemies are now mistreated. Borge
betrayed by the Marxist millio- was ilberated in 1978 durihg the
naires who stole control:
dramatic takeover of government
Tbe three "commandantes" wbo bulldlngs in Managua by Eden
dominate the Sandlnista junta, Pastora, now an embittered foe of
Daniel and Humberto Ortega and Ills old Sandlnista conuades-lnTomas Borge, have dlvvted up the arm&amp;.
country's import market through
Not long after Borge became a
two monopoly COfllpanles. Wbat the member of the victorious junta the
Ortega brothers don't control. following year, he · joked that his
mother wanted him to enjoy the
Borge does.
Daniel Ortega is the 39-year-oid spoUs of the revolution willie he

could - "before the communists
come and take them away from
you." Borge ev1dently took · her
seriously, and the joke Is 011 the
Nicaraguan people.
. Borge's Import company H M
Corp., imports whatever goods the
Ortegas don't. For example,.he has
the monopoly on all television sets
brought In the country.
Like tbe Ortegas, Borge has his
o\vn elegant private restaurants,
off-limits to everyone but · the
Sandlnlsta leaders and their guests.
The government IJ?YS the tab.
Borge also owns the Mau Mau, a
dlscotheque In Managua that is the
favorite of U.S. Embassy Marine
guards.
Borge and the Ortegas don'thlde
their nouveau richesse; they flaunt
it. Each owns more than half a
dozen houses In the capital alone,
accordlng to competent sources.
The Ortega famlly has nine beach
bouses In San Juan del Sur resori,
some of them simply expropriated
from the previous owners. ·
Mansions which once were Somo-

za's are also available for the
Sandinista leaders' use. They are '

known as "protocol houses" in a
transparent at!empt to make them
look official. Four public parks in
Managua have been fenced ott
from the common folk who once
were allowed to use them, and are
restricted for exclusive use by top
officials and their famllies.
This Is the tragedy of the
Nicaraguan revolution. A genuinely popular uprising after
years of repression and exploitation
has been totajly corrupted. The
people still live In poverty. As one
State Department official put It:
"These people who came to solve
the problem of the poor have only
solved it for nine 'poor' people- the
commandants who rule Nicaragua.
Footnote: A spokeswoman for
the Nicaraguan embassy denied
"absolutely" that Borge and the
Ortega brothers owned any homes
other than the ones they Uve ln. She
also maintained . that only one
company imports goods used by the
government and It is state-owned.
All of the restaurants In question,
she added, are owned and admlnis- .
tered by the state.

By Unlled p.._ lutenwlonai
Every lime Dan Foutscallsaplay
for Charlie Joiner, he must chuckle
to himself andthlnkoftheC!nc!nnatl
Bengals.
That is the team, Fouts says, that
was silly enough to let Joiner go to
the Chargers In 1976. Fouts stlll
laughs about It to this day.
"Have I thanked the Cincinnati
Bengals yet this season for sendlng
us Charlie Joiner,'' Fouts said.
Joiner, the 17-year-old veteran,
has paid more than his share of
dlvklendsforSanDiegoslncebewas
acquired for defensive lineman Coy
Bacon. He and Fouts will get to rub
dlrtintheBenga!s'facesonceagaln
Sunday when the Chargers travel to
C!ncinnatlforthelrthlrdgameofthe
season.
Joiner will set an NFL record
Sundaybyplaylnglnhis211thgame,
themos(everbyarecelver.Theold
mark was set Jackie Smith. Joiner
lsjust90yardsawayfrombecomlng
only, the second NFL receiver to

ByGARYTAVI.OR
BOULDER, Colo. (UPI) -TimIng is on their side as the Colorado
Buffaloes under former Michigan
State assistant coach BUI McCart·
ney try to continue a revival
Saturday against the favored 5thranked Ohio State Buckeyes.
The Buffaloes, for years flatter
than a prairie patty, are 2-0 and
ptay!ngtheBuckeyesatat!mewhen
all-American taUback Keith Byars
Is sidelined and wbenOSU'srunnlng
game is sputtering. John Woolridge
replaces Byars.·
"We missed Keith," Buckeyes
coach Earle Bruce said of a 10-7
opening win over Pittsburgh.
Meanwhile, Colorado is coming

By JOE llLUZZI
UPI Sports Writer
A "Ruthian" effort by Darrell
Evans may have destroyed the
Yankees' chances of winning the
American League East.
Evans, who was on th" trading
block earlier in the season, belted a
pairoftwo-runbomerunsThursday
night to power the Tigers to a I0-3
victory over the Yankees and cap a
three-game series In which be
'clouted five borne runs In 11 at-bats.
The loss was New York's seventh
straight and placed them 5% games
behind the Idle Toronto Blue Jays In
the American League East. The
three-game sweep by the Tigers was
· their first over the Yankees since
1970.
Babe Ruth is the aU- time leader In
borne run percentage with 8.5. At
Evans' current pace, he'd have a

II it ran out of arms carriers.
"But that would be war!" Yesexactly the kind of !ow-intensity
war that Iran Is now waging so
effectively against the United
States.
Perhaps there are even better
ideas for striking at America's
Implacable enemies in the Middle
East, but Professor Bernstein's
proposal is one of the first, and

arguably the best, yet to surface.
Wbat ·ls certain IS that retaliation
there must be. Those conservatives .
who defended President Reagan .
against his right-wing critics last
June place!l their faith in Ills patient
determination to select and order
an appropriate response. Just
possibly, Professor Bernstein's
proposal Is the solutlon.

Majors

44.5 percentage. Wblle that Is
unteasfble, Evans' chances of
winning the home run crown do
seem possible. The 38-year-old
slugger's latest binge gave hlm 36
homers for the season, one more

than Chicago's Carlton Fisk.
"Every lime Darrell swings,"
Detroit manager Sparky Anderson
said, "It's out of the park. Geez, he
was about 12 behind Fisk at one
point."
.
Evans went 7-tor-llin the series
with seven RBI.
"I can't go away from what
doing rfgbt now," Evans satd after
raising his RBI count to IIi with 16
games to play. "Right now I'm
confident. Evecy time I go up I feel I
cait hit the ball hard."
Joe Nlekro, 0.1, followed his
brother Phil, who lost to Detroit on
Wednesday night, and gave up twn

I'm

opened with Chicago's 33-24 vlcto!7{
aver the VIkingS Thursday night at

Minneapolis.
Jim McMahon, placed In traction
earlier this week because of neck
inJuries, threw three third-quarter
touchdown passes to poWer ChJ.
cago. He entered the game In the
third quarter and completed lklt-15
passes tor 236 yardS to help the
Bears improve their record to ~Minnesota, 2-1, has lost tour straight
times to the Bears. VIking quarter.
back Tommy Kramer completed
28-ot-55 for 436 yards and three
touchdowns and was Intercepted
three times.
Sunday, It's Hooston at Pittsburgh, Kansas City at Miami, New
England at Buffalo, Tampa Bay at
New Orleans, Denver at Atlanta,
Detroit at Indianapolis, San Francisco at Los Angeles Raiders and
Green Bay playing the New York
Jets at Milwaukee.
Seattle Is home against the Los
Angeles Rams Monday night.

linebacker Barry Remington.
"Now, we've played two steps. CSU
was decent, but Oregon was better.
This week we step up to a
powerhouse. We'relooklngtoknock
off someone to get some
recognition.''
Besides Byars, theBuckeyesmay
miss key linebacker Chris Spielman. He is suffering from an ankle
Injury. At mid-week he was progressing toward playing.
The death of Bruce's father this
week has taken hlm away from the
team. He is expected to rejoin the
squad when it arrives In Golden,
q&gt;lo., today.
"No doubt about it, the strength of
our team Is defense," Bruce said

-

Cl!tkland at cttk'qo, niRhl

L Pt1. GB
9J 56 .616 -

89 57 .610 1
11 m .571 13
71 73 .(13 1!1
67 7S ..S2 ~ 'h

""'

Mnl rl
Phlla.
0.1.
PTslrgh

w...

~liO

f!l !fl

IJJ 61 .58:1
79 66 .Si!i

Cnmnt

«J

'"""

AUnt
.S. F'ran

~89

~~

.Dl28

11urac~Vs Rf~JQMA

San D!tllO II. San FranelSC'o 3

Plt!sbur~o:h

~an'W'5

N•lault.e..,ae

jfb"Ull('1w:&gt;l ].1-7\ at Nf'W York

Hrr. StL

Munln'&lt;ll rSchalzl&gt;ck&gt;r 'M t at St . l..ouls
!COK llt91 , tl:;rlp.m.
C'indnnall IT1bM K-1~ 1 at Houston ! R~ ·an
9-lh . R:3.'t p.m .
Allanta !Bl'di'O$lan 7·12• at San Dlt&gt;RO
iH(\\·t 1-I·MI , IO :Ifi p.m.
l..o!i Anwlrs tRe\l!l8 12·101 at San
f'raocl.o;co tMa.o;on 0.1 1. U:OO p.m.

topr, Ml
Gdmn.
Davbi, Sl&gt;
Mltr, Ml

Clnclnnal\111 HQUston
Los Anfil{'IC1 at San Franclli('O
Mo ntrt&gt;~tlat St . Louts, nlaht
!111anta 111 San DIE'I(O, nll(ht
.WERICAN tEAGUE
J, Pd. GB

.678 .'189 ~ l,&lt;z

C"·lnd

18 61 Ji38 13
76 7!1 .5Zt 15\1.1
73 7J ,!DI 18 ~
64 81 :Ml :l1
54 94 .:Hi .:11 11.!

KC

82 61 .."162 -

""'
Mlwkr'f&gt;

8261

raUL

.~-

74 71 .510

Chi .

71~

OOolnd

7\0;

.M&amp;U

'liJ 76 .t79 12

Snl

EB '19 .463 14\0;
~ !l1 .B 291,\
'111un.lq'alt4!Mb
Mllwaukf(' ~ . Balllmori.&gt; 2

MIM . •

[)(itrolt16, Nf"...' York J
CaUfumlll 8. Chlc&amp;WJ 0
Sl'allk' 6, K111lS81 City -1
l"ridq1 G~~mt~~ (.\I 'llrra EDT)

Mllwaukloe (c:'ocanOWf"r +61
IKt'Y Jl.'J, 7:3.5 p.m.

11

Toronto

Qeolmll tMOn1S l~ · lOt at &amp;.ton tHuf'llt
10·111. 7: .'rt p.m.

J'ri('W York (Whltaon IQ.II\ at Balttrnore
tF1anQ:an HI . R:OO p.m
Oakland (,John -1-81 11 Chlrii'D !Bannister
lH~ l.

8:3.'1 p.m.
Mfnr1('5(1(il tB\YIPYt.'I114·1M "' KansatCI!y

tBiark 9-1-11. 8:;ri p.m .
Sl&gt;atUt• (Mo::ft Ml at Texu (RuiM!IJ
2·51. 8::G p.m.
('le\rNtid tWiddrll S'l al c:'alifornla
,~torrwtkk 1341), m~ p.m.

-·-

MIIw. .lft 11 1'olvoto

New York at Blltln'IOn!
at Bolton

~roll

m .310
170 ..:m
74 174 .l17
M lft .:1)7
~

:m m .])4

6115!1 .298

labrltpd.
!rl %19 ..172
140 '96 97 t66 .n~
14t 58'7 91191 .:m
128 W 129 L'i8 ..120
1"-1573 78181 .ll6
138 53&amp; 97 166 .:uo
Ito 573 &amp;!177 .;m
It~ ~

Bttr. a,.

-__

IJt 445 62136 .n

.m

139 D) ~ 157
l2i m 87151 .DJ

Natm.al l..tolfii\JIIP - Murptw, All 37;
GIJl'rmo, LAJ2; Scllmtltl, Pl\llandCart(&gt;t".
NY 29: ParEr. Cln 211.
American LeaKUC' - Evan1, l)et

..

Chit-ago at Phlladrl.phia

f&gt;lrt

IIIIEill .311

75

36: Fisk.
Clll :11: Balt:tonl. KC J2; G. Thomas SPa Jl :
Murray, Bait :n

Pittsburgh at Nrw 'York

""'~'""

Amerkan u...,

Brtl. KC'
Mttngly

Chicago wanrrson O{lr •• Phlladc'lphla
·
tHOOson 7·1lt , ll :lfi p.m .

5o&amp;
l!(i 9)

loU 5U
tft sn
JJ7 560
Ill !Wl
ll6 .e9
l2ti 37'11
14:'1 ~:w

c.,,

...

92 lU .32f

1:tl ~liM 168 Jlt

PrkT, Cn
91dbra.

Hndrsn.
Bans, Ch

91

llH~

Rns. Mil

~

tDarllnR J6-M, 8:05p.m.

Trnto

ab r h p::t.
J37 5t8 107 197 .:r,9

MrG.SI
Crrr, LA

Sclsr, LA
Mrl114

tAD nmes Erm

W

......

3.1 plat,. ap(V'aranCf'!l" oo. a
Mch te-am has pla)'t'dt .

ON;tr, Cn

Cllll'lnnatllS, Atlanta 5
Plr1SIJUrRh li, Monllt&gt;al 6, 10 !nnl!ij!!'
NMI' York:;, ChK'~ 1
Phlladl:&gt;lphla G. St . Lool~ :J
Houston fl, I .011 An,ll'.•lt~ ~
Frt*Y'•Garnc~~

~Basro on

r

16 'M .S21 9
TJ 73 , .500 12
8) 86 .411 25

""'

Leaders

NatiOMI Lell\lt' - Paliret", Cln Ul;
Murphy, AU and tim". Stl 100: BrookS. M!l
!C; WIIJon, Phll90.
turrrlean i.eiJII.K'- Mlttlnaly, NY 126:
MurraY.. Ball W: BaM, Chi and Wtnlk'ld.
NV 103;' Ria', 8os 1m.

--

NaiJOnlll l.fo~~r~&amp;t' - COicnlan, StL 100;
RaliiUi. Mt.l (It, Sard:JEorg, Cbl ~ Mf"C'.et&gt;,
S!L t~: Rt&gt;l.lls. an 4'1.
• An1f11ean IA-11\K' - Htnclt'rtOn. NY 70:
Pr&gt;ttl5, cat ~ Butlrr, Clfov &lt;l't WIIIOn, KC
«&gt;; SmUh. KC .li.

--

National I.1JpP - Gooden. NY 21-4 :
Andujar, StL 21-t: TuOOr, SIL 19-8; Scoll .

H«! J.B.7: Brawling, Ctnn 16-9.
Arl"wT"ran LE-ague - G111dry. NY IS-6:
Satlf'l'hagett KC ]8.6; BurM. CJII J8.8:
A!ex.ar1dPr, Tor 16--8; Jlx pi1CI.,n !Ie-dwith 1!1
vlct0111'S. •

......

~~.-

.... ~

tBaeE'd on 1 ll'llllnlll r.unbt•r d. Jllmct
each team haS played!
N11tlonal Lf'JI'Ul' - GoGdm, NY l.S2;
TUdor, StL UT; Hershbt&gt;r, LA 2.01:
Rl'u!IChel. Ptlt 1:18; Valfnzut'l•. LA 2.4L
Amt'r~an Llagup - Stll"b. Tor UJ;

-

Lf'lbnuldl. KC 2.111; Sabt'rhagm. Kc 2.81:
Key, Tor 3.(8; WJH, Cal3.18.
NationAl II .~~UP- Goodt'rl, NY ~7; SOlo.
CLn D); RY8n, llou Ill; Vtlfm:UPia, LA lill:
f'ct'nlndeL NY 16.!.
Amf&gt;rlcan Lfo~B'JE' -llyle'Vm. Mlnn 119:
Morris, ~ 11'7: e.nnllier, ChllTl: BumJ,
CN l61; H\lm, Bot lll.

Nallonal ~ - RNn1Dn. Mil ~:
Smtih. CbUt; SmiU\. Ha.~25; Suner. Atllnd
~.SOZJ.
~ ......... -QuMII::It'n)',KCM:
llet ...... D!t lt. JWnft. Chi • Moor~&gt;.

Qlllr '11; HoiWII, Od: 16.

of the five home runs. In tbe lastfour
games the Tigers have hit 16 home
runs. In other games, California
blanked Chicago 8-0, Seattle downed
Kansas City 6-4 and Milwaukee beat
Baltimore 5-2.
Angels 8, Wblte Sox 0
At Chicago, John Candelaria
scattered six hils and Reggie
Jackson walloped two home runs to
lead Call!vrnla, giving tbe Angels a
share &lt;i first place In the American
League West. The victory, coupled
with Kansas City's lOss to Seattle,
left the Angels and Royals tied with
82-64 records.
Mariners 6, ROyals 4
At Kansas Oty, Mo., Dave
Henderson's RBI double In the ninth
Inning enabled Seattle to complete
its first four-game series sweep In
. the franchise's history. It also
marked the first four-game sweep

Eagles drop match
to Kyger Creek

Mll\rll'!lOta at Kans.a• City, night

NATJON.U.. I.E.4.GUE
By Unlk!d PreM hliemM&amp;Ion..l

"""

"You may nor believe lhls, bul !here was a
llm11 when I was sillier lhan PEE WEE
HERMAN."

off a last second goa!Une stand last
Saturday that produced a 21-17 win
over Oregon and a wild post-game
celebration on Folsom Field. Colorado last started a season with two
wins In 1978.
The Buffaloes' 700 yards rushing
after twn games, which Is the result
of a prolific option ct!ense working
against two spt gy defenses, IS 41
yardS more than the team gained all
or last season.
Considerlngthlsweek'sopponent,
some of the comments of the
Colorado players' could be taken as
cocky.
''The last twn years, we've played
Nebraska and Oklahoma. I thought
we played them tough," said

C'lewland at Callbnla, niRht
SeatHt at Texas. nl;atlt

~·.o..ue.

Berry's World

The Chargers' defense must
concentrate on stopping 265-pound
fuDbaclrLanyKinnebrew,whohas
morerush!ngyardsaftertwngames
(166) than the entire San Dlegoleam
(163).
This week's football program

Scoreboard ...

LA

equipped and broadly directed by
the Islamic Revolutionary Guard
Corps, a separate ministry of the
government of Iran and "almost
certainly the most powerful organ!·
zation" in that country. The short
answer to the question, "Wbo is
behind the terrortsts?" therefore
Is: Iran.
·
Very well; now, what can the
United States do to Iran to deter
future acts of terrorism and
retaliate for past ones? We must be
careful here. An outright declaration of total war against Iran would
probably drive that wretched country, sooner or later, into the Soviet
Union's waiting arms. Instead,
Professor Bernstein argues, Iran Is
highly vulnerable to U.S. attacks on
arms shipments In Iranian vessels
and aircraft on or over the world's
oceans - Including, but not limited
to, such home waters as tbe Persian
Gulf and the Arabian Sea. Such
attacks could be carried out by
relatively small U.S. naval and air
units, out of sight of the world's
media, without rish to clvlllans, at a
gratifying low cost In U.S. casualties, and without capture of U.S.
personnel. The reduction In Iran's
anns now would seriously handicap II in Its war against Iraq, and
the tourniquet could be eased or
tightened by the United States at
wtll. Best of all, Iran's ablllty to
retallate elfec:tively against. the
United States is relatively small,
and its options few.
AI; Professor Bernstein points
out, "All the Iranians could do is
what tbey have been doing - and
what they will surely continue to do
anyway as long as it costs tbem
nothing." The United States, on the
other hand, could easlly launch
attacks on Iranian naval patrol
boats and reconnaissance aircraft

Maynard had 11,834.
Both the Benp.ls, 0-2, and the
Chargers, 1-1, are corning off big
lO!IseS and Cinlnnatl coach Sam
Wyche had his defense working
extra hard this week.
Wyche began the Bengals' week
with a "DO bolds barred'' meeting.
He vowed to have his poor-tackling
team "shakln', bakln' and awake"
for the Chargers.
The Beng8is' defense will have to
control Fouts, who Is corning off one
or the finest games of his caeer.
Fouts passed tor 440 yards (lncludlng four toucheowns) last weekend
just four yards shy of his all-tmu:
best.

St. Louis, Which meets tbe Giants
Sunday, IS the second top scoring
team In the NFt. wlth68polntsln tiro
games. The Giants, 1-l,haveylelded
just 23 points, thJed.best In the NFL.
A victory over NE'I\'. York would
provide rmmentum to St. Louis'
fastest getaway since Its 7-0 start in
1974.
Tbe Raiders and the 49ers meet In
a game between the last twn Super
Bowl champions. The game Is oold
out, a first tor the Raiders since they
moved to Los Angeles In 1982.
Both teams are suffering uncharacteristic problems at cornerback.
Los Angeles' Lester Hayes and San
Francisco's Ronnie Lott - tiro
All-Pros - have been beaten this
season. Raiders coach Tom Flores
said he would make some adjustments oo defense after CarlOs
Carson bUrned Hayes deep last
week.
Loti bas given up touchdowns In
each rt the ftrst two games. ·

early In the week. "The otten511 stU!
has as long way to go. We threw the
ball weD, but we have to get a lot
better running the hall. We only had
48 yards on the ground and that isn't

enough.''
The Colorado offense is moved by
quarierback Mark Hatcher. He 1\as
rushed 28 times for a 6.~yard
average gain. He bas passed only 14
times In two games.
Colorado coach McCartney is no
stranger to Ohio State. He was
defensive coordinator at Michigan
State for five years. Colorado
publicists like to point out that
during those five years the Buckeyes scored 44 total points against
the Sparlans.

Tigers hand Yankees· seventh consecutive

W

Slaying the dragon _____W_il_Lia_m_A._Rus_h_er

. record 11,000 reception yards. Don

Buffaloes try to continue revival against Bucks

St. Loo .

During and just after the TWA 847
hostage crisis in June, there
seemed to be an enraged conservative on every street corner demand·
ing that President Reagan retaliate
Instantly and effectively. It anyb·
ody Inquired against wbom this,
retaliation was to be directed, how
Its success was to · be assured, or
even whether the lives of the
hostages were to be forfeited in the
process, he got very little in the way
of specific and satisfactory
answers.
Still, the basic impulse behind the
demands for retaliation was per·
fected sound, and the objection that
-;;~o:=;~~~~~ ways and means were and still are
"'
dlfficult to visualize doesn't alter
· that fact in the least. Wbat was
Inexcusable about the conservatives' criticism of Ronald Reagan
was not their desire lor retaliation
against the terrorists, but their
Infantile lns!stance upon its Instant
gra tlf!cation. Bulge-eyed hysterics
like that simply don't llveln tbe real
world.
Alvin Bernstein does. In fact , he
Is chairman of the Department of
Strategy at the U.S. Naval War
College In Newport, R.I. And
recently, while serving as a VIsiting
By United Press International
Fellow at the Heritage Foundation
Today is Friday, Sept. 20 , the 263rd day of 1985 with 102 to follow.
In Washington, he dralted a paper
Th~ moon is nearing Its first quarter.
In which he asks - and answers· The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Mars.
the tougb questions that the June
Thunderers guided noiselessly
The evening stars are .Jupiter and Sal\lrn.
·
Those born on this date are under the sign of Virgo. They Include novelist past.
Wbo is behind these terrorist
Upton Sinclair In 18'78, and a ctress Sophia Lore.. in 1934 (age 51).
attacks - not just tbe TWI 847
hijacking, but the bombing of our
·· On this date in history :
In 1519, Porl\lguese navigator Ferdinand Magellan began a voyage to Beirut embassy, tbe Marine barracks, and the embassy annex?
· find a western passage lo the East Indies.
In 1873, financial chaos forced the New York Stock Exchange to close. It Professor Bernstein refuses to get
bogged down in the maze of
remained closed for 10 days .
In 1966, Britain's Queen Elizabeth II launched the Cunard llnerQE2, now overlapping Shl 'lte sects In Lebanon. His answer is that the
·: the only ocean liner on the formerly thriving trans-Atlantic route.
: In 197.1, singer Jim Croce died in a plane crash in Louisiana at age:.&gt;. terrorist grou)l'l are all trained,

:Today in history

sends In the paramedics, they
decide wbether there is any reason
to suppose your troubl&lt;: rnlgbt trace
to the heart, and If the answer Is
yes, you find yourself on a gurney
headed right through Times
Square: not less than 400 people
would have spotted .you slithering
out of the hotel Into tbe ambUlance.
And since one hour and 45 minutes
later you were scheduled to address
a press conference in advance of
your post-luncheOn speech, your
nifty Idea of sneaking off for a
quickie test at the Cardiac Arrest
Center In t1)e center of Detroit and
tiptoeing back to do , your duty
becomes a little surreallstlc.

Fouts gives thanks daily to Bengals for Joiner

Afterwlnnlngtheflrst game of the
set, Eastern's Eaglettes dropped a
three-game set to red-hot Kyger
Creek in recent volleyball action.
Eastern won the first set 15-11,
then dropped the next twn, each by a
14-16 score.
After winning the first game,
Eastern led 12-41n the second game,
only to see the Bobkittens rally for
·
thewln.
In the third game, Eastern had
eight opportunities to score after
tallYing its 12th point, butfaUedeach
time.
"We sbould have won the first
game of the match," Eastern coach
Pam Douthitt said. "We played well
·· and really had Kyger down, but we
had trouble serving the ballovertbe
n"t once we got a lead In the second
game."

Beverly Nigalled Eastern with 19
points, Tonya Savoy hfid 11, Lesa
Rucker 5, Krist! Hawk 3, Margaret
Homer 3 and Melissa Nutter 2.
JUt Drummond led Kyger with 12,
Christina Carroll had 8, Kelly Roush
had 10, Michelle Reese 4, Leanna
Nibert 6 and Renee Ward 3.

Tonight's games
SVA:C TEAMIS
Green at Southern ·
Southwestern at Oak Hill
Ironton St. Joe at Hannan Trac&lt;'
Kyger Creek at Symmes Valley
North Gailia at Portsmouth East
Buffal-Putnam at Eastern
SEOALTEAMS
Ponsmouth at Gallipolis
Pt. Pleasant at Athens
Waverly at Jackson
Circleville at Logan
Marietta at John Marshall
TVCTEAMS
Meigs at Miller
Alexander at Vinton County
Belpre at Trimble
NclsonvlllP-York at Federal·
Hocking
Wellston at Warren Local
OTHERS

Pa:~~~t~~:~~~;~~~~c

against the RoyalS at borne.
Brewen ~. Orioles 2 ·
At Baltimore, Billy Joe Robidoux
and eec·u Cooper sparked a 12-hit ·
attack with solo homers to help the
Brewers snap the Orioles' threegamewinnlngstreak. BlllW!!gf~!an,
1-0, earned his first major-league
vlctocy by scattering seven hltsover
5 2-3 Innings. Mike Boddlcker, 12-7,
took the loss.

)

-

BEAIIS WIN - Chicago Be;u- Steve McMicbael ('7G) takes down
Minnesota Viking quarterback Tommy Kramer (9) durlngfll'llt quarter
action Thursday nlgbt. DespHe Kramer's three toucbdowb pa.es, the ·
Bears defeated the VIkings 33-24.

NOTICE
KAISER ALUMINUM AND
CHEMICAL CORPORATION HAS ·
RECALLED THE FOLLOWING
TRADE AND CRAFT EMPLOYEES
FOR THE COIL PROCESSING LINE
OUTAGE RATHER THAN USING
OUTSIDE CONTRACTORS.
18 MILLWRIGHTS
12 ELECTRICIANS
3 WELDERS
CONCERNED STEELWORKERS
GROWING STRONGER TOGETHER
Pd, for by

Concerned

Stulworkers

A NOUNCEMENT
Concerned Steelworkers Have Decided
KACC' s Greatest Problem Is
Their Own Mismanagement
Kaiser is full of troubles and woes,
All from mismanagement seeds it sows.
We are laborers standing idle.
Because of problems Kaiser can't bridle.
For unemployment we stand in line,
While Kaiser says. "We need more time."
Force more overtime, combine more jobs,
Nevermind who it hurts or robs.

'

Take from employees more and more,
Force several hundred out the door.
Lay them off. then call some back,
Idle.hundreds with one whack!
Take insurance, jobs, and wages.
Just write it up in contract pages.
Make many promises, not to keep,
Just a harvest for Kaiser to reap.

,I

Kaiser management paces the floor.
Gotta get that poundage out the door.
They don't care if quality suffers,
Just get that metal to the truckers.
Take it out in one big stack,
Then turn around and bring it back •
Increase the price of metal with this cost,
Not to mention-the time that's lost.
Tell employees more concessions,
Looks to us like more recession.
When what would really make more impression. ·
Would be a Kaiser true confession.
Oh, no! Big wheels are coming,
Gotta get things a humming.
Hurry up, don't be tardy.,
Have a clean-up and throw away party.
Over cost or fit we'll not parley,
We can always give it to ol' Poor Charlie.
He'll take it out on his junkyard trucks,
And if they need it they'll spend more bucks.

,.s
I·

'·

I

Kaiser mismnagement plays this game,
And until it's gone these problems remain.

South Point at Rock Hill
Wheelersburg at Coal Grove
Huntington High at Ripley

Wahama

d~feat

I

at

1•·--co_N_C.EI·N·E·D-ST·E·E·L·W·O·R·I·E·RS_G_••o.w.•.N.o.·.s'.·.o·N·G·E·R-TO_G.ET·H·E·R--

'

�JIU

WEEK

Meigs Co. AutliiO&lt;
GUEST

_NO.

"4
LAST WEEK

10·8
SEASON
18-15
55%
Belpre
Belpre at Trimble
Meigs
Meigs at Miller
Point Pleasant
Pt. Pleasant at Athens
Portsmou1th at Gallipolis Gallipolis
Buffalo Putnam
Buffalo-Put.
at Eastern
Green
Green at Southern
Parkersburg Catholic
Wahama
at Wahama
Kyger Creek at
Symmes Valley
Symmes Valley
Duke
Ohio U. at Duke
West Virginia
. Va . at Maryland
State at Colorado Ohio State
Marshall at
East. Kentucky
Eastern Kantucky
San Diego at Cincinnati Cincinnati
Dallas
Cleveland at Dallas

LAST WEEK

LAST WEEK

12-6
SEASON
23-10
70% .

13-5
SEASON
70%
23-10

l;'
LAST WEEK

LAST WEEK'S GUEST.

13-5
SEASON
25-8
76%

12·6
SEASON
61 "'o
20-13

Belpre
Meigs
Pt. Pleasant
Portsmouth

Belpre
Meigs
Pt. Pleasant
Portsmouth

Belpre
Meigs
Pt. Pleasant
Gallipolis

Belpre
Meigs
Pt. Pleasant
Gallipolis

Buffalo-Put.
Green

Buffalo-Put.
Green

Buffalo Put.
Green

Eastern
Southern

Wahama

Wahama

Wahama

Wahama

Symmes V41lley
Duke
Maryland
Ohio State
East. Kentucky
Cincinnati
Dallas ·

Symmes Valley
Duke
Maryland
Ohio State

Symmes Valley
Duke
Maryland
Ohio State

Symmes Valley
Duke
Maryland
Ohio State

Marshall
San Diego
Dallas

East. Kentucky
Cincinnati
Dallas

Marshall
Cincinnati
Dallas

Nihilator wins Jug

'Nine-run 9th helps
Reds gain on LA
By KEVIN KENNEY
UPI Spona Wrt&amp;er
Don't klss off theCtnctnnatl Reds
Just yet. There ,may be a pennant
race In the Natk&gt;nal League West
after all.
"I think the team Is really starling
to come together again," said Nick
Esaslcy,oneofanumberlioffenslve
stars Thursday night in the Reds'
19-hlt, 15-5 pounding of the Atlanta
Braves.
The vlctory, combined with
Houston's triumph over the first·
place Dodgers, left the Reds 5~
games behind Los Angeles. And the
two teams play each other three
more limes.
"We still have a lot of games left,"
said Esasky, whose three-run
homer In the seventh inning
delivered thegame-wlnnlngnm. ''If
we keep doing what we're doing
now, we've got a chanceofwlnnlng
it. II
What the Redsaredolngrlghtnow
Is winning - five In a row and eight
of their lastlO. What the Dodgers are
doing right now Is losing - tour of
their lastflve.
SUddenly the Los Angeles lead
lsn'tlooldng so safe.
TheRedsexplodedfornlnerunsln
the ninth Inning -four !rom a Dave
Parker grand slam - to make II
easy for Toni Browning to win his
18th game, most among rookies In
the major leagues.
·
Browning, 18-9, yielded nine hits
while walking one and striking out
four before being lifted for a pinch
hitter In the ninth.
"The last two times rut. I've had a
nine-run Inning, and It's nice to see
that," the left-handed Browning
said. "! just made a couple of
mistakes tonight, and It cost me
three runs. Our offense took over
again.''
With Atlanta leading 3-2, Pete
Rose singled off loser Pascual

John Campbell, who drove PershBy GENE CADDES
Ing
Square In the raceoff, said he
UPI Sporis Writer
wasn't dissatisfied with his horse's
DELAWARE, Ohio (UP!)
perlonnance.
Trainer Billy Haughton sale) earlier
"I wish I had gotten dear a step or
In the week Nihilator could run on a
two earlier," he said. "I didn't think
half-mile track. Driver BUI O'Don·
oftrylng to step ootaroundNihllator
nell proved it Thursday.
leaving. It would have taken too
Nlhllator, although pressed hard
ANAHEIM, Calif. (UP!) - The
In the raceoff, held off stablemate much out of him and I'm not sure I
Los
Angeles RamsThursday placed
Pershing Square and Dlgnatarlan could have gotten arQund him
running
back A.J. Jones allll
at the wire to 'win the 40th running of anyway."
defensive
end Booker Reese on
Buddy Gllmour, behindDignatarthe Little Brown Jug 3-year-old
waivers
and
put running back Mike
pacing classic at the Delaware lan, said be got "aperlecttrip"from
Guman on the Injured-reserve list.
County Fairgrounds by a head. It his horse.
The Rams also signed nose tackle
"I though!I had a shot at the top of
was his first race ever on a half-mile
Greg
Meisner and free agent
the stretch," said Gilmour. "It was
track.
guard-center
Tony Slayton to 1985
Nihllator's 1: 531-5tlmeln winning some horse race and this Is some
contracts.
his elimination heat and 1:52 1·5ln bunch of 3-year-olds."
Eric Dickerson, currently on the
Nlhllator's two wins Thursday
the raceoff both were world records
NFL
exemption list, most likely will
for a 3-year-oid pacer on a half mile were his 13th and 14th In l5 starts In
be
placed
back on the active roster
1985 and ran his Ufetlme mark to 26
track for first and second heats.
Friday.
The dlvlslon win was a breeze lor wins In 28 starts.
Nlhllator, owned by the Wall
Nlhilator, but several horses made
Street
Stable and the Nlhllator
runs at him in the raceoff.
LEGAL NOTICE
of LawrencevU!e, N.J.,
Syndicate
"Mickey McNichol had Broad·
The Public UtUitles Com·
way Expresson topparkedoutat the earned $129,770 of the Ui(),7:Jl Jug
mission of Ohio ha.s set
half,'' said O'Donnell, who won his purse.
for
publlc hearing Case
It pushed his 1985 earnings to
first Jug, "and I knew he had horse
No.
85·02-EL·EFC, to
left, but not exactly how much. I $1,092,653 and his Ufetlme winnings
review tt.e fuel procuroto $2,454,!W.
went on and McNichol faded back.
men t
practices
and
Earlier In Thursday's 20-race
"As we moved past the three
policies or Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric
quarters. I spoke to him to check to Grand Circuit program, Falcon
Company, the operation
see how much pace he had," added Seelster, drtven by 'Ibm Harmer,
of Ita Electric Fuel Com·
O'Donnell. "He was getting tired."
ran the fastest race mile ever on a
ponent a.1d related matThat's about the time Pershing half-mile track - 1: 51 - in an
ters. Thts heartng ts
Square and Dlgnatarian made their Invitational pace.
schedulod to begtn at
When asked whether Nlhllator
moves.
10:00 a.m. on September
23, 1985, at the offlces of
"Down the stretch, I knew they could beat the 1:51 by Falcon
the Publ!c Utlllttes Com·
were coming on the ootslde," said Seelster, not eligible for the Jug,
mission, 180 East Broad
O'Donnell, who also drove Pershing O'Donnell said: "I didn't worry
Street, Columbus, Ohio
Square In the second ellmlnatton. "I about that. I just wanted to win the
43215.
spoke to him again. He got himself Little Brown Jug.
down the stretch on heart ."
All Interested parties
will be gtven an oppor·
tuntty to be heard . Fur~ociate
ther tnformatton may be
obtained by oontaoting
PHILADELPHIA (UP! ) - Scott assistant at Lehigh under Tom
the Commission.
Beeten has been named associate Schneider, who was named Quak·
basketball coach and Gordon Austin ers' coach last week after Craig
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
assistant coach at the University of Littlepage resigned to become bead
BY: Mary Ann Orl!nski,
at
Rutgers.
coach
Pennsylvania, It was announced
Secretary
Austin, 25, who played college
Thursday.
Beetep had served as an assistant basketball at American, was an
coach at Penn lor the last two assistant coach under SChneider for
seasons and Austin was formerly an one season.

Rams make moves

· JUG - Nlhllalor, driven by BW O'DonneD, thunders across the llnish
tine to w1n the first heat of the Utile Brown Jug, on his way to capturing
the 40th nmnlng of the $350,000 race. The Jug Is the third jewel of
~year-old pacing's triple crown.

•

Browns' Matthews will be "back' Sunday
By ROBERTO DIAS
UPJ Sporis Writer
BEREA. Ohio (UP!) -Cleveland
Browns' linebacker Clay Matthews
plans to be back In a starting role
Sunday against the Dallas Cowboys
-and "back" Is the key word.
The eight-year veteran from
Southern California skipped Man·
day night's victory over Pittsburgh
~a use of a sore lower back -an
injury that has prove n to be irksome
to head coach Marty Schottenhelmeraswell
"Two reasons," said Schottenhelmer. "First, the injury meant Clay
had to miss the game.

"Second, he was a pest on the
sleellnes, running up and down and
shouting."
Schottenheimer was speaking
with mock annoyance.
"' Frankly , I enjoyed it," said the
coach. "He and (special teams
coach) Bill Cowher had to be
reminded not to run out on tbe field .
"But I'd rather have Clay on the
field. I know hefeelsthesameway."
Matthews admittedly struggled
through practice Wednesday and
said he would not "overpush
myself' the rest of the week in
preparing for Sunday's visit to
Dallas.

Beeten named Penn

20.1986

Friday,

Ohio

Sentinel

Sl. Rt.

: 6 cyl., auto .• PB, PS.

Resurface worn concrete.

Fully equippea.

High strength, sell-bonding cement mix. Has 8 to
10 times the bonding
power of regular sand
and cement mixes. Can
be brushed or troweled
on, e-en loa featheredge.

1978 Chrysler Cordoba ............ S1695

Auto .• PB. PS, air, good condition.

1977 Ford Pinto Sta. Wgn ......... SS95
V-6. 4 Sp.

19 77 Mercury Bobcat .................$4 9S
2 Dr., stand.
Quick-setting concrete repairs.

Quick setting concrete
patching mix. Can be
walked on in just 30
mmutes and driven on
in only 1 hour. For fast
high strength repairs
of concrete dtiveways
and walks.

'1 11 OH

992-2955

~

Homelite saws

Automottve
Service
Locuu &amp; Beech Street
H2·9921 Mi~dteport

'

I

Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,

POSTMASTER:. Send address Changes
to The DaUy Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Pomoroy, Ohio 45181.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier er·MDtor Boate
One Week .... .. ......................... .st.lO

One Month ................................ $4.80

One Year ................................ $57.20
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Dally ................................... 25 Cents

Subticrlbers not desiring to pay the car·
rier may remit In advance direct to
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 monlh
basis . Credit will be given carrier each
month.
No subscriptions by mall permitted In
towns where home carrier service 15
available.
Moll Subo&lt;:ripll001

Iukie Ohio
lJ Wl'eks ............. ............... . $14.56
26 Weeks .................................. 129.12
52 Weeks. .. ......... . ............... $58.26
OutJide Ohlo
13 Weeks .................................. $15.60

26 Weeks ... ..........................•.. S31.20
52 Weeks .................................. $59.80

•

, Mon., Wed .. Thurs., 7 · 1',.."
Tues . . Fri ., Sot ., 7:10 &amp; 9:10
Sat. &amp; Sun. Mol., 2:10
Sat. Midnight. 12·10

earth yield her
Increase; and God
.shall bless us."

Mrddleport
Pomerov . 0 .

- Psalm 67:6

E

7Q y light of the departing sun we find
214 E. Main
992·5130 Pomeroy

TRINITY CHURCH. Rev. W. H. "'""'·
pastor; f)(&gt;bbko. Buck, Sunda y. School Supt.
Church Sch0019: 15 a.m.: Worship Sl:lvl&lt;'10::rJ
a.m. Choir rehearsal, TUesday. 7&lt;l) pm.
Groceriesunder dll'l'CfkJn d Lois Burt.
POMEROY CHURCH OF TilE NAZA·
General Merchandt~e
RENE, ContE'!' Union an~ Mul~rry. RPY .
Racine 949· 2550
Thomas Glen McOu~. pi.'&gt;tor. Oydt:' HN'Ider- ,._,..,..,..,...,..,..~,..,..,...._,..,..-1
son. s~ S. Supt., ~und(!y School, 9:ll a.m.,
momlng 'worshlp 10: .'ll a.m.: £'Venlng sen1C'f' 6
p.m.: mid-W('('k servl('(l, Wednesday, 7 p.m
MEIGS
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH. :rl6 E .
COOPERATIVE P .\RISH
Main St .. Pomeroy. Sunday scrvm Holy
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
nnrununion on ttl(' first Sunday of l'ach month.
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
and romb!nE'd "1th momlnR pray('r on th('
~v. Don A.rdrer
r'hirdd Sunday Morning prayc&gt;r and ~·r mm on
Rev. Roy Deeter
all Olhcr Sundays of th&lt;• month. Qua'Ch S£:h0ol
Rev. Seldon ,JohMOn
and Nur.;('ry cart' provick&gt;d. Coffro hour ln the
ALFRED - Church School 9: .10 a.m.:
Parish Hall imiTlt'dlatf'ly following ltV' Sln•k'f'
Warship. 11 a.m.: UMYF6:30 p.m .: UMW
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRI.~'T. 212 W.
Thtrd Tu('sday. 7 30 ' p.m. Communion,
Main Sl., N('ll PruudfOOI, JB!&gt;1or. Blblr School
flr!-il Sunday. !Archer!
9:.'W.a.m: Momingwm-ship, m::ua m.: Youth
CHESTER - Worship 9 am.; ChUrt'h
JTlf(&gt;tlng-;, 6:00pm .. Evening "on;hlp, i:m p.
SchoollO a.m .: Blblt&gt; Study. Thursday. 7 p.
m. Wednrsday nij!hl pr'ayt"r mf'(llln,l{ and Bibk&gt;
study. 7:(1J p.m.
m .. UMW, rir~t Thursday, 1 p m : Communion. firs r Sunday IArchE'r). ' THE SALVATION AHM'Y 115 But!C"rnut
JOPPA- Worship 9:30a .m .: Church
A\'f'., Porn£'t"O)' Mrs Doro:1 W l nln~ In ctw.rgE'.
S('hOollO· 30 a .m. Bible Study W1odnesdav.
Sundar huUness ffll'l•tlng, 10 a.m.: SUndav
7::ll p.m. !Johnson! .
·
SC'hool. 10:.1'1 am Sunday School, YPSM
LO~G BOTTOM -Church School 9: :10
f;lolst' Adams, k&gt;ad('r. 7:i1 p.m. Salvation
a.m, Worship 7 p.m.: Blblr Study, Wf'd mc'C'ting, various spr.ali:f'I'S and music s])('(.lals.
n('sday, 7:30 p.m; UMYF. Wednesday,
Thursday, 11::0 a.m. 1o 2 p.m. LadlE'!' HOITX'
ti:OO p.m ., Comm"!nlon First SundaY.
IA':JI!\K'. ITI&lt;'mbrrs in rh.trw-. aU ~·cJITIC'n
!Arrhel'l.
tnvttro; fk:J5 p.m. Thursday, Coi'Jl' Cad('!
REEDSVILLE- Church School~: 30 a .
aa......!i 1Youfll: Propi£'-Bibll'l. 7: .l l p.m BlblP
m .: Worship ScorvlcP 11· Oil a .m . ({}t:&gt;('tpr ).
Sludy and Prayt"r lllf'(lflflll, qx&gt;n to 1I'M.• public.
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL POMEROY WESTI;l!)E CHURCH OF'
Church School 9 a.m. : Worship lfl a.m :
CHRIST. 332'4i Chlldrf'n's HohX' Hood (("ounty
Riblr Study, Tu('sday, 7· 30 p m.; UMW,
Road '161. 99'2 -~Zf'l. V01.·al music. Surda\' WorThltd Tuesday, 7. 30 p.m .. Communion
. slhplOa.m.: Blblt&gt;Siud,\' lla.m.: Wor~hlp, 6p.
First Sunday !ArchPr)
m Wf.'dllf':';C]ay, Sibil' Study, 7 p.m .
CENTRAL CLUSTER
'OLD DEXTER BJBLE: CHRJ~i'IAN
Rev ..J.If.rnH E. Corbitt
CHURCH, Cha:rirs Hatfktkl, pastor: Un&lt;b
Rev. Steven NelMOn
Swan, Sup!. Sunday School9:.1l a.m.: prmC"h·
Re\1. Melvin Franklin
ing Sl'rviC'f'S. flr~t .mtl thlnl Sunday foiiCM~ n~
Re-w. (lementr S. Z...l~a. • .Jr.
Sull!Jay &amp;.'houl. Ywth mming. 7:ll p.m f'YKe\1. Andrew Rubenkla1
'
£'1"\' SuOOay.
ASBURY IS,vracUSi') -Worship 11 a .m
GRAHAM UNITED METHOOIST.
: Churrh Sc-hool 9:45a.m., Charge Bible
Preaching 9:30a.m .. nrst and sl'COnd Sun Study, WednPSday, 7:.10p.m.: UMW , first
days of each month; third and fourth Sun·
Tu('sday, 7:30 p.m.: Choir RehParsal.
days each month worship servlct'5 at 7:30
\\'l'dMsda)l 6:.111 p.m.; UMW. fourth Sunp.m. WPdnC"Sday rventn~~:s at 7:30 p.m.
day, 6:.10 p.m. 1Nelson1.
Prayer and BiblE' Sludy.
F'.NTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m :.
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST. MulbChur('h &amp;"hool tO am.: Bib!(' Study. Tuesprry Heights Road. Pomeroy. John S"'el·
day, 7.:30 p m .: UMW, Flrsl Monday. 7: .10
J{art; Sabba1h School Supt. Louise Staats.
p m . UMYF Sunday, tl p.m Choir ReSabbath SehooJ, 2 p m. Sa1U rdday with
hC'arsal. 6· 30 p.m . Wf'dnesday. !Franklin 1
worship service followlna at 3:15p.m.
FLATWOODS- Church School. tO a.m .
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
, Wors~lp. 11 a .m.: Blblr Study, Thurs·
- Sister Harrlell Warner, Supl. Sunda y
day , 7 p m .: UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m.
School 9:30a.m.: Mornln~ Worship. 10:45
(Fianklinl .
a.m.
FOREST RUN - Worship ~ a .m .;
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST. Davtd
Church &amp;hool 10 A.M.: Choir practlt•t•,
Mann , ministe-r . William Snouffer, Sunday
Tul~da\, ti: .1 0p.m.: UMW. rlrsiTUf'sday.
School Supt. Sunday School, 9: 30 a .m .;
7::to p.m {Ne-lson)
Mornlng.Worshlp 10:30 a .m .
HEATH iMiddl&lt;'poriJ - Churrh Si'hool,
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Po·
9·30 a .m .; Worship IU::to a.m.; BiblE'
meroy PikE' David Hunl, pastor; Ja ck
Stud.\', Tul!sday. 10 a.m.; UMW. serond
Needs, Sunday School Oirrector Sunday
Monday , 7:30p.m.: UMW Third Monda ,\ ·,
Srool, 9:30a .m .; Morning Worshlp.lO:JO;
7· :to p.m. (Zuniga 1
f'vening wocshlp, 7:00p.m . Tuesday VisiMINERSVILLE - Worship Sl•r·vicr 10
tallon , 1 p.m. WE'dncsday, Pra)'('r st&gt;rvice, ' a.m.;
Church School, 11 a.m.; UMW,Ihlrd
7:JJ p.m.; Mission Friends, 7:30 p.m.:
Wt&gt;dn('sd&lt;.~v. 1 p.m .: Choir pra,rllr!'. Mon ·
Girls In Action. 7:30p.m
day. 7·30 p.m JN('Ison)
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH. BaiPEARL CHAPEL -Worship Sflrvlct' 9
ley Run Road, Rev . Emmt&gt;lt Rawson, pas·
am .; Church School 11 a m .; UMW S£&gt;·
tor. Handley Dunn supr. Sunday School.
mnd Tut"Sday. 7:.10 p m .: UMYF last
10 a.m .: Sunday ('venln~sE'rviC&lt;", 7: 30p.m .
Tur&gt;~da:-. 7:.10 p m . 1Rulx'nkln~l.
, Bible teaching, 7:30p.m. Thursday.
POMEROY- Church S(ohool. 9: 1:1 a .m .
SYRACUSE MISSION. CHerry St .. Sy: Worship tO::W a.m. : Choir rE'h£&gt;ars&lt;~l
racusE'. Servlef'S, JO a.m. Sunday. Evening
W(l(!n£'Sdav, 7: 30 p m .. UMW, set•ond
services Sunday and Wednesday at 7:00p .
Tuf'Sday. 7:30p:m .: UMYFSund;~y. tip.m .
m
IC"Orbltt) .
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
ROCK SPRINGS- Church Srhool. 9: l~
IN CHRISTIAN UNION. Rev. Ketlh Eblin.
am .: Worship 10 a .m .: BlblP Stud~. Wed pastor. Sunday School 9: 30a.m ., Wade
D('Sda.\ . 7:30p.m, UM\'F (Sl'nlor s ), Sun
Hayman. supt.; Mornln~Worshlp,lO :J Oa.
day. 5 p m: (Juniors ) ('vPry oth!'r' Sun·
m : Sunday evl'nlng servlc~ 7: :wJ p.m. :
d&lt;~.\'. 6 p.m . (Franklin I.
Wednesday Pra~r Met&gt;tlng, 7: 30pm.
RUTLAND- Church School. 9: 45 a m .:
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD.
Worship, 10:30 a.m.; UMW !EV(•nln~ ClrRaclnt&gt;. Re-v. James Saltt'ffield, pas lor .
ciPI srcond Wt'dnC"sday, 7:30p.m.: UMW
Freflllan Williams, Supt. Sunday School
IAft!'rooon Circle-) S('COnd Thursday. 1 p
9:45a.m.; Sunday and Wednesday t&gt;ven ·
m. !RuiX'nklng).
ln11: S('fVices, 7 p.m.
SA:LEM CENTER- Church School lOa
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST.
m .: Worship 9 : ~~ a .m . !Rubenkin~n .
Corner Sixth and Palmer. Earl Ed(&gt;n, Pas·
SNOWVILLE - Wot·ship, 8:30 .1 m .:
tor. Ray Fields. S.S. Supt.; Dan Riggs,
Church SchoollO a .m . !Rubf'nklnJ:n .
Asst. Supt. Sunday School. 9: 15 a m .;
Morning Worship, 10·15 a .m.; Sunday
E\l(&gt;ning st&gt;rvict&gt;, 7 p.m. Youth meellnjit,
7::ll p m . Wednesday : evening sf.'rvicl'7 p.
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
m, Choir prac1iCE' 8 p.m.
Rev.lloprG.....,
Rev. PoUI 11-tre

..

-MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST,
5tfl and Main, Bob Melton, mlni.Ster. AI
Haruon, assoc. minister; Mike Gerlach,
Sunday School Superintendent. Bible
Srhool 9:30a.m.; Morning Worship 10: 30
Evening Worship 7:00p.m. Wednesday, 7:00p.m. Prayer meeting.
·
• MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NAzARENE, Co-pastors Rev. Charles COyle
and Rev. Nancy Coylf. Bill White, Sunday
School Supl. Sunday School 9: JO a.m.:
Mbrnlng Worship 10: 30a.m.; Evangelistic
mfeuna 7:00p.m. Wednesday, 7:00p.m.
Prayer meeting.
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY
OF MEIGS COUNTY
Rev. Kea Wlllda...
'HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH - Sunday: Worship Services

9:00a.m.: ChurchSchooll0:15a.m.i Bible

Study Sunday 7: JO p.m.; Prayer Group
Wednesday at 9:00a.m.
'J.!IDOLI;PORT PRESBYTERIAN Church School 10: 15 a.m . Mornlnl Worstftp 11:15 a.m. Tuetiday.10:00 a.m. Bible
Sflldy; Thursday, 7:30p.m. Bible Study.
· SYRACUSE FIRST UNITEO Pf\ESBY'f£RIAN - Worship service 10:15 a.m.
Church Schoo110:00a.m. Tuesday, 10a.m.
Sible Study; Sunday, 6 p.m. Junior and Se·
nfor Hl&amp;h Youth Groups.
•RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD, Pastor,
.t6bn Evans. Sunday School 10:00 a.m.;
Si.&amp;ftday Mornln&amp; Wonhlp Jl:OO a .m. Cblldl't'n's Church n a.m. Sunday Evening
Sft'vtce 7:00p.m. W~ .• 6 p.m. You111 L.a·
dlfl' Auxiliary. Wednesday, 7 p.m. Faml),y Worship.
•HAZEL COMMUNITY CHlJRCH. Near
I.,Qna Bottom. Ed~l Hart, pastor. SuTWky
Sdlool 9:30 a.m.; Wonhlp 10:30 a.m.;
Pro r meotiRI Thursday, 1:30 p.m.
LEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
, &lt;¥nor Alb and Plum. Rolpb
CUndlft, p11tor. Sunday SCftoollO: OOa.m.;
MornlneWorahJp, U:OO a.m.; Wednesday
and Saturday Evening ~rvlces at 7: 30 p.

m.

lHE DAILY
SENTINEL

"Then shall the

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

New York, New York 10017

..•.................•.............•..........

r;!J • - l,._ ~

Completo

Pomeroy

,

FURNI~~~!ROWAR:tI

Advertising Representa!lve, Branham

MIDNIGHT MOVIES

10%OFF at participating retailers.

EU.I$ &amp; SONS SOHIO

~~!~ 3:t

RIDENOUR

Inland Dally Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Assocla11on. National

NOT VALID TUIIDA Y lVI.
SATURDAY OR' SUNDAY MATINIE OR

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Pomeroy, Ohio

Member: United Press International,

Any Adult Admission

992·2311

- ·lv"

I&lt;ERMIT'S KORNER

Ohio.

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •COUPON • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• ,
Mountaineer Cinema Ripley, W. Va.

'
·

~

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
ltshlng Company/MuiUmedJa, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-21!16 Second class postage paid at Pomeroy,

Please natlca new fall/winter hours! Starting Sept. 20,
9:00 Showing an Tuasday, Prlday and Saturday only.

John F. Fultz

J. Marcus Fultz

NEW YORK .,,_· ~
CUJIHING IDJSE , ~.• .

IIIII

DSun., Mon. , Wed., Thurs .. 7 :00
Tues .. Fri., Sal., 7:00-9 :00
Sot . &amp; Sun. Mat ., 2:00
. Sol . Midnight , 12:00

ft'\1
~i

~

The Interested BUBinesses Listed On ,This
P. J. PAUliY, AGENT
TEAFORD REALTY
GOD'S LOVE LIGHTS THE FIRE
. Nationwide Ins. Co.
·
:Zl6 S. Second
of Columbus, 0 .
~j
Pomerov
104 W. Main
' '
IN THE COLORS OF AUTUMN
992·3321
Po!'flerov

Prescriptions

a·.m.

: 1978 Ford Station Wagon ....... S1695

915-4100

Che!ler

Church &amp; Olfice Supplies
GIFTS
"Mill St.
Middleport

Starll friday, Sept. 20. 1915

, 2 Dr.

CHESTII

AilyAins
911-41111

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

1977 Mercury Mark IV ...•••.•••••• S2195

ST. IT. 7

MEIGS nRE
\ \ CEffiER, INC.

~

Fully equipped.

, RIGGS USED CARS

.~ .

- ~....J.~

:1979 Mercury Cougar XR-7 ..... S1995

1978 Chevy Malibu Sta. Wgn ...... S1695

7 .EXPERIENCE THf JOY Of RELIGION
USED CARS,

Sol . &amp; Sun. , All Seot' 12.25
Adm . Ev•ry Tuetdoy, S2 .2$

~

The Deily &amp;,!atinel-~e 6 · ,

w

lUi

d

and Church

The Daily Sentinel
(U8PSI4 ..... )
A Dtvlalln of Mllltlmecl.la, IDC.

Sc::em,:W 20.1986

~

· lorgoir'l Molin"•

Cinema.,_'?)
" ""'

..

Adminton Price Polic-;

'.1011'/l)I~&gt;[R

~r ['

.

Perez. 1-11, to start the seventh.
Parker then doubled to left and
Esas!IY drU!ed reliever Ge!le
Garber's first pttch Into the left·fleld
seats lor hls19thhomer.lntheninth,
the Reds sent 14 ba.tlers to the plate.
Ron Oester had an RBI single and
another run scored on catcher Larry
Owen'serrortomakelt8-4. With the
bases loadro, Oester scored when
Rose was awarded !lrstoncall'her's
Interference. Parker then blasted
his 28th homer and fifth career
grand slam to make It 13-4. Bo Dlaz
capped the scoring barrage with an
RBI single. The Braves had taken a
3-2lead In the siXth on Owen's Drs!
major-league home run. Owen
homered again in the bottom of the
ninth to make It 15-5.
Altli'CI8 8, Dodlen 5 .
At Los Angeles, Craig Reynolds
had two triples and a single and
drove In the.go-ahead nm to pace a
17-hll attack that carried the Astro~
to their ninth straight victory. The
Dodgers' magic number ~r clinch·
lng their division remained at 12. ·
Dave Smith picked up his 25th save
inrellefofBobKnepper, 15-10.
MetsS, Cubs 1
At New York, Sid Fernandez
allowed just one hit over eight
innings - a third-Inning homer to
Gary Matthews- and Gary Carter,
Darryl Strawberry and George
Foster each homered to lead the
Mets. New York Is one game within
the first-place St Louis Cardinals bt
the NL,East. Fernandez, 7·9, struck
outll.
Phlllles 6, Cardlnala 3
AI Philadelphia, Don Carman
pitched three strong Innings to pick
up his sixth save. OZZie VIrgil and
Luis Aguayo drove in two runs each
as the Phlllles ended the Cardinals'
seven-game winning streak. Dave
Rucker Improved to 3-1. Matt
Keough fell to 0-1.
Plra&amp;e8 8, Expos 6
AI Montreal, R.J. Reynolds led off
the lOth Inning with his second home
run of the season to power the
Pirates. Reynolds,' recently ac·
qulred from the Dodger$. hit the first
pitch from Tim Burke, 9-4, over the
left field wall to make a winner of
reliever Jim Wlnn, 3-5.

coach

DEPENDABLE USED
:CARS AT LOW PRICES

'Friday,

&amp;e..&amp;eltlr.llader

APPLE GROVE- Church School9 a.m.
; Worship, 10 a.m. (First and third Sundays); UMW,SecondTuesday,7:30p.m.:
Prayer meetlnK. Wednesday, 7 p.m.
(Grace)
.
BETHANY - Worship, 9 a.m.; Churt'h
School, 10 a.m.; Bible Study, Wednelday,
10 a.m.; Dorcas Women's Fellowship,
Wednesday, 11 a.m. (McGuire).
CARMEL"':"' Church School 9:30 a.m.;
Worship, 10:45 a.m. Second and Fourth
Sundays; Fellowlhlp dinner with Sutton,
third Thursday, 6:30p.m. (McGuire).
EAST LETART- Church Schoo19a.m.
; Worship 10 a .m. tecond and fourth Sun~ days; UMW first Tuesday, 7::.1 p.m.
'Grace)
LETART FALLS - Worship 9 a.m .;
Church Scbool10 a.m . CGrace) .
MORNING STAR- Worship, 9:45a.m.:
Church School 10:30 a.m.; Bible Study,
Thuroday, 1:30 p.n\. (Roder).
RACINE
WESLEY AN - Church
School, 10 a.m.;- Wonhtp, lla.m.: UMW
fourth Monday 7:30 p.m.; Men'• Prayer
Breakfast, Wednesday, 1 a.m. (Grace).
SUTTON - Church School, 9:Xl a.m .;
Momlnt worsblp 10:45 a .m. nrst and third
Sundays; Fellowship dinner with Carmel,
third Thunday, 6:30p.m. (McG\llre) .

'!II' The heat of summer days is left behind,

And frosty ntghts allow us to behold
The leaves arrayed in flaming red and gold
Before their brilliant colors turn to brown,
And then, detached by wind, come drifting down;
Till every branch is stripped completely bare,
And pungent smoke' of bonfires fills the air.
ll'li harvest time in every farmer's field,
When crops that feed our nation with their yield
Are gathered from the ground and off the vine,
According to the heavenly design.
Whatever House of Worship you attend,
The lessons there wtll help you comprehend
This season that the love of God has planned,
. When autumn's blaztng colors paint the land.
-

ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST. PomeroyHarrisonville Rd. Robert Punen, minis·
teq Steve Stanley, S. S. Supt.; Bill McEI ro)"i Asst. Supt.; Sunday School9: 30 a.m.;
Worship service 10:30 0\.m.; EveninK wor ·
ship Sunday 7 p.m. and Wednesday, 7 p.m.
ST. JOHN LUTIIERAN CHURCH, Pine
Grove. The Rev. Wllllam Mlddieswarth,
pastor. Church service 9:30a .m ; Sunda~
School10: 3D a.m.
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,
John Wright, pastor. Sunday School9: 30a .
m.; Larry. Haynes, S. S. Supt. Morning
worship 10: :J) a .m .
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE, Rev. Thomas H. Collier, pasto'r.
Ora Bass. Chairman of the Board of Christian Life. Sunday School9: 30 a.m.; Morn Ing worship 10:30 a.m .; Sunday evening
worship 7:30p.m. Prayer meeting 7:30 p.
m. Wednesday.
,
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, Dex·
ter. Woody Call, pastor. Services SundaY
10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednesday, 7 p.m.
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, S!('V('
J)(&gt;avPr. Pastor. Robl&gt;rt Smith, Sundav
School Supt. ; Sunday School 9. 30 u .m .:
Mornin~ worship 10: 40 a .m., Sunda:v
('Vl'n!n~ worship 7:30 p.m .: WE'dnesdav
(l\'e nln~ Bible- ~ludv 7:30 p.m .
BURLINGHAM CoMMUNITY CHURCH.
Burlingham. RE''·· Okf'y Ray Lauml&lt;'rmlll.
~sr or. Ph 99'l-7:t.l4 Sunday School tO:OOa .m.
, Sunday E'vmln~ S('f'VIcc&gt; 7 00 p.m : Wl'dll('!i;·
day C'\'e nlng SC'n'IC'f'. 7:00p.m .
PINE GROVF. HOLINESS CHURCH. 1 1
miiP off RL .12~ RN Ben .f. Wall!-i, pas1or.
l.N&gt; Russc•ll, S . ~ . Supl. Sundav School 9: 30
:t.m .: Murnlng Worship 10:30 u m .: Sun·
day l'Venlng st'IVICt' 7::JIJ p.m., W«&lt;nC's·
da.v Sl'rvice, 7:30 p m.
SILVER RUN BAPTIST. Bill I.ittlt'.
pastor. SIE'Vf:' Ll!tlr. S. S. Sup! Sunday
Sehool 10 a .m .: Morn in~ worslp. 11 a.m .
Sunday ('\'E'ninA" worship 7:30p.m. Praypr•
mff'tlng and Bib!(' study Thursday, 7:30 p.
m ., Youth meeting Wednf'Sday at 7 p.m .
REJOICI~G LIF'E BAPTIST CHURCH
- 383 N. 2nd Av&lt;'., MlddiPport . Sunday
Sehool10 a.m . Sunday ('Venin!Ol: 7:00p.m .;
Mld -wN'k servlc(', Wed . 1 p.m .

LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH.
Rolx&gt;rt E. Muswr, pastor. Sunday School
9, :\0 a.m.; Paul MusS&lt;'r, supr.: Mornin!Ol:
" 'orship 10:30 a .m.; Sunday ('\'E'ning S(lrvke, 7 p.m.; mld -wl'&lt;'k SPrvlcP, Wl'dnl'!'
day, i p.m
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA·
ZARENE. R('\' . Glrnn McMillan, pas.tor
Mar;\' .Janie(' L,tvend(&gt;r, Sunday School
Supt. Sunday School 9:30a .m .: Morning
\l.'orship 10: :\ll am; E\'angcllsllc ser\'lcc.
6p. m., Prayl'r and P1 aiM• Wt'dn&lt;&gt;Sd~;~y, 7p.
m.: Youth mN'tlng, 7 p.m.
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST. Elden R . Blakt'. pastor. Sunday
School 10 ,a.m.: Gary RN'd, Lay leadf'r
Mornlnt~: sermon. 11 a.m.: Sunday niJ~:ht
sprvtces: Christian Endpavor 7:30 p.m ..
SonR sen:ict&gt; 8 p.m . Prt"achlna 8:30p.m.
Mid-week prayPr mf.'f'ling, Wl'dnesday, 7
pm.

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN.
Roflt&gt;r Watson, pasror. Crf'nson Pratt.
Sunduy School Sup! Morn ing worship9· 30
a.m .. Sunda\' S£·hool10:.10 a .m .; EvPnlng
S&lt;'l"'l&lt;·t•. 7. 311 p.m .
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Donald Shul.',
PJStnr: .Jo(' SuyrC'. Suntlay Sc·hool Supr.
Sunday S('hOOI ~· -15 a m . Evening wor·
!-ih!p ti: :~o p.m .; PravC'r MPC'I !n~. 6: 30p.m .
Wt'finE'sday.
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST .Jody Hollnnd. mlnlstC'r . Deryl
WC'IIs. Sup!. Mornin~ worship, 8.00 ~a.m .;
Church School !l 00 a .m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE. Rev . Herbrrl Grare. pastor
Frank Riffle, sup! Sunday School 9: 30 a.
m.; Worship service. 11 a .m . and 7 p.m .
Sunday. Wednesday, 1 p.m. Pra y('r mt'E't ·
lng.
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH. Re-v . Robert Miller, pastor Ro·
brrt E. Barton. Dlrf'Cior of Christian Edu·
c;~tlon, Stl'H' Eblin, assl,.rant. Sund;~v
School 9:30a.m.: Morning worship 10:.10
am .: Choir pra(·fice, Sunday 6 :KJ p.m .;
F.vr&gt;nlng worship 7·30 p.m . WE'dnesday
Pra:vf'r and Bibll.' Study. 7;.10 p.m .
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST.
Charles Russell Sr .. mlnlstt:'r. Rick Ma ·
KENO CHURCH. OF CHRIST, Oliver
combf'r, sup1. Sunday St'hool 9: 30 a.m.;
Swain, Supt:Sunday School9:30 a .m. ev·
Worship sPrV!Ct:' 10:30 a .m Bible study,
ery week.
.
'1\wsday, 7:30p.m .
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION. Rev.
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
Tom Staten, pastor. SWidaY Sehool9: 30 a .
CHRIST OF LA TIER DAY SAINTS. Port ·
m.; Evenlnaservlce 7:30p.m. Wednesday
land·Jbclne Road . William Roush. pastor.
prayer meeting 7: :ll p.m.
Ul1da Evans. church school dltt'Ctor.
BEARWA.LLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
Chureh school9: ...:. a .m .; Mornlnll worslp
CHRIST, Duane Warden, mln.llter. Bible , 10: JO a.m.: WC'dnC'Sday f'VPnlnR prayer
services, 7·:11 p.m.
clua 9::.1 a.m.; Moml"t Worship 10:30 a .
m.: Eventna WorUlp :30 p.m. Wedneo·
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. Rev . Earl
Shuler, pastor. Worship !K"rvlce, 9:30a.m .
!loy Bible Study 6: ~j';;
NEW mYERS
COMMUNITY
Sunday Schooll0:30 a.m. Bible S!udy and
CHURCH, Sunday k•ool ttrvlce, 9: fr5 a .. prayer .!lf'rvice Thursday, 7: JO p.m .
m.:
Worship ...,...., 10:30 a.m .:
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATIONAL CHURCH, Kingsbury Road Rev .
Evanaeii•Uc Servtee 1:30 p.m . WednesdaY: Prayer meettna7:XJ p.m. Thurlday.
David Curfman. patitor. Sunday School

Gloria Nowak

•J· Jn.t m : Halph Cart,Supt E:v£&gt;nlngworshlp i .10 p, m. Prayrr m&lt;'rtlng. WC'dnrs ·
d:n i· :\11 p m
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN. Jodv
~l o lland. paslor: Wallac£&gt; Damewood .
Sund,! \ St hool Sup! Worship S&lt;"f\'(Cf'. 9 a .
m .: Blbl r Sehoul 10 a. m .
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH.
Rev . Thereon Durham, pastor. Sunday
School at 9:30a.m,; Morning worship at
10:30 a.m.: Sunday evening service at 7: 30
p.m Thursday services at 7:30p.m.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob, located on County Road 31. Rev .
Lawrence Gluesencamp, pastor. Rev .
Roger Willford, asst. pastor. Preaching
services Sunday 7:30p.m. Prayer meeting
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., Gary Grlfllth,
leader. Youth groups Sunday evening at
6. 30 p.m . with Roger and VIolet WUiford,
leaders. Communion service tlrst Su'nday
each month.
.
WHITE'S
CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
CHURCH- Coolville RD. Rev. Phillip Ri ·
denour, pastor. Sunday School 9:·30 a.m;
worship service 10:30 a.m. ; Bible study
and worship service, Wednesday, 1 p.m .
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST.
Mark Jones, pastor. Bill Nicholson, Sun·
day School Supt. Sunday School9: 30 a.m.:
Morning Worship and Communion 10· 30 a.

m.

RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amos
Tillis, pastor. Sonny Hudson, supt. Sunday
School 9:30a.m.; Morning worship, 10:30
a .m .; Sunday evening service 7:00 p m
Wednesday service 7 p. m . WMPO pro·
gram 9 a.m . each Sunday.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE Rev. Lowell Ford, pastor. Sunday
School9: 30 a.m ; Worship servlce-10: 30 a
m.;
Young people's service 6 p.m.
Evangelistic service 6:30 p m , Wednesday
service 7 p.m.
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
St., Mason, W.Va. Eugene L. Conger, mi nister. Sunday Bible Study 10 a.m : Worship 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednesday Bible
Study, vocal music, 1 p.m.
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dud ding Lane. Mason, W.Va. J. N. Thacker,
pastor. Evening service 7. 30 p.in .; Wo·
men's Ministry, Thursday. 9:30 a .m .:
Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7: 15
p.m.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. The Rev. William
Campbell. pastor Sunday School 9:30 a.
m.: James Hughes, sup!. EvenlnJt service
7:30 p.m . Wednsday evening prayf'r m('(&gt;tlng 7:30p.m. Youth pray~r service each
Tuesday
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH. Letart,
W. Va .. Rt . 1. James Lewis. pastor Wor·
sh!p servicE's 9: .'Jl a.m.; Sunday Schoolll
a .m .: EV('nlng worship 7. 30 p.m. Tuesday
cottag(' prayer meeting and Bihll' Study
9:30 a.m.; Worship service, Wednesday
7:30p.m.
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Walnut and Henry Sts .. Ravenswood, W.
Va Thp Rev . George C . Weir ick . past or.
Sunday SChool9; 30 a .m .; Sunday worship
11 a.m
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, located on
Pomeroy PlkP. County Road 25 near flat·
woods . Rev. Blackwood, pastor. Services
on Sunday atlO: 30 a .m. and 7: 30p.m . with
Sunday School 9: JO a .m . Bible Study, Wed nesday. 7: 30 p m
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST, St. R1. 338, . AntlquH y. Rev .
Franklin Dickens, pastor. Sunda~· morn inR" 10 a.m.; Sunday even inA 7: 30 p.m .
Thursflay f'VPnlng 7:30 p.m.
STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY SAP·
TIST CHURCH Pastor Robert Byers .
Sunday SchoollO a .m .: Worship service 11
;~ , m., Sunday evening servlce,7: 30 p.m .;
Wednesday e-vening sPrvlce 7: 30 p.m
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH
Inc., Pearl St., Middleport. Rev. O'Dell
Manley, pastor. Sunday &amp;hool9:30 am.;
Morning worship 10: 30 a.~n.: Evening
worship 7::1J p.m Tuesday,l2: 30 p.m. Women's Prayer meeting. Wednesday, 7;30
p.m. Prayer and Praise service.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS·
TQLIC - VanZandt and Ward Rd . Elder
James Miller, pastor Sunday School,
10· 30 a .m .; Worship Service, Sunday, 7: 30
p.m. , Bible- Study, WE*dnesday, 7::JJ p.m .
POMEROY WESLEY AN HOLINESS,
Harrisonville Road. David Ferrell, pas·
!or; Clinton Faulk, Sunday School Supt.;
Sunday &amp;hool 9:30 a.m.; morning wor·
ship, 11 a.m.; Sunday evening service 7::.1
p m Prayer Meeting, Wednesday , 7:30 p.

m.
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD.
non -Pentecostal. Joy Clark, pa&amp;lor. Wor·
~hlp service Sunday 10 a.m .; Sunday
School 11 a .m . Evening worship service
7: 00p.m. Wednesday prayer meellng 7: 00
p.m.
MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST CHURCH, l..ocoled tn Texas
Community ott' Ct. R.t. 82. Rev . Robert
Sanders, pastor. Don Will, layleader. Sunday Sctlool 9·30 a .m .; Morning Worship
10:45a.m.; Eventnc: pre~~chlng tervlce ~eo
cond and fourth Sunday at 7:30 p.m.;
Chrlstlan Endeavor, first and third Sunday, 7:30p.m. Wednesday prayer meeting
and Bible Study, 7:30p.m

I

-

Equl"pment

Rutland, Ohao 45775
~ Phone

m.

MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Fou rth and
Main St .. MlddiPporl. Rev . Ca lv in Minnis,
pasr or. Mrs Elvin Bumgardnr r . sup!.
Sundav School 9: :lO a.m .; Worship S(lrvict'
10·4~ a .m

(614) 741 7717

Attend Church
this Sunday

tft

LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
OF GOD- Gl1bert Spencer, pastor Sun·
day School 9:30 a.m.: Morning service
10:00a.m: SundayPvf'nlngservlce7·00p.
m.: Mid-week prayer service Wedn£&gt;sday
1 p.m.
MT OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Lawrencl' Bush, pas1or. Max Folmer, Sr.
Supt . Sunday School and Morning Worship
9: 30a.m .: Sunday ('Venin~ servi('t'. 7 p.m .;
Youth meeting and Rible Study, Wedne-sda y, 7 p.m .
UNITED FAITH CHURCH. Rt . 7 on Po meroy By·Pass Rev. Robe-r! E. Smith, Sr.
, pas lor. Melvin Drak(', S. S. Supt. Sunday
Sc hoo19: 30 am.: Morning Worship 10:30;
Ev('n[ng Worship 7: 30 p.m.; Wedn('Sday
Prayf'r ServicE'. 7: 30 p m.
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Railroad
Sr., Mason . Sunday SchoollO a .m.: Morn
ing worship 11 a .m. ; Evening Sf'l'\'i~G p.
m Prayer mflt'ring and Bible- Study Wed ·
n~C&gt;sday, 7 p.m .
F'ORF.ST RUN RAPTIST Rf'v. Nvlf'
Bord('n, pastor. Cornelius Bun{'h, su'pt.
Sunday School 9 .30 a .m : Second and
fourth Sundays worsh ip srrvi&lt;'(' at 2· 30 p

Servtce

J . Wm. "Bill" Brown, Owner

~ · .~

on . J .
160. Pal Hensm, pastor. Sunday
a.m,, Classes tor all ag£"5. Junior Church 11
a .m. ; Morning worship 11 a.m. Adult
Choir practJce6 p.m. Sunday. Youf1k P~
pie's, Children's Chun:h and Adult Bible
Study, Wednesday ar 7:30p.m
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL, 510 Grant
Sl .. Middl~rt. Afrtllatl'd with Southern
Baptist Convention. David Bryan, Sr., Mlnlstf'r. Sunday School )0 a .m .; Morning
worship 11 a m .; Even in~ worship 7 p.m ;
Wednesday evening Bible study and
prayer ml'ellng 7 p.m .
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, St
Rt. 124 and Co. Rd. 5. Mark S£'evers, minis ter. Sunday School Sup! Harry Hf'n drlcks; Sunday School9: 30 a.m. ; Morning
worship 10: 30 am: Ev£'nlng wor~hlp 7 p.
m . WE-dnesday worship 7 p m.
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH.
Corner Sycamore and Second Sts., PomC"roy, The Rev. William Middicswarth.
pstor Sunday SChool 9: 45 a .m .; Church
Sl'fVIct&gt; 11 a . m .
SACRED HEART CHURCH, Ms~r.
Anthony CiannamorP. Ph. 992·5898. Satur·
day Evening Mass 1 · 30 p.m .: Sunday
Mass, 8 a.m . and 10 a.m . ConfMslons on(&gt;
half hour be-for£' C"ach Mass. CCD classrs,
11 am Sunday
VICTORY BAPTIST. 525 N 2nd St ..
Middleport . James E KC'esf'e, pastor .
Sunday morning' worship 10 a .m .. Eve n ·
lng service 7 p m .; Wednesday l'Vf'nlng
worship 7 p m. VIsitation. Thursday 6 30
p.m .

Salesan~

SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
-Joseph B. Hoskins, e-vangelist. Sunday
Bible- Srudy9 a.m .: Worship, lO a .m .. Sunday evening sf'rvice 6 p.m , Wednesday
evening servlcC", 7 p.m .
PENTECOSTAL A.SSEMBLY , Racine,
Rt . 124 . William Hoback, pastor . Sunday
School 10 am.: Sunday evening service 7
p.m . Wednesday evening servicE' 7 p.m.
CARPENTER: BAPTIST. Don Cheadle,
Supt. Sunday School 9: 30 a .m . Morning '
Worship 10:30 a .m . Pr&lt;\Yersl."rvice , altern·
ate Sundays.
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL. Third
A.ve Rev. Clark Baker, patJtor. Carl Not·

tlngham, Sunday School Supt . Sunday
School 10 a.m. with classes tor all ages.
Evening services at 6 p.m. Wednesday Bl·
ble study at 7:30p.m. Youth services Friday at 7: p.m
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP. 128 Milt St..
Middleport Brother Chuck McPherson,
pastor. Sunday School 10 a.m .; Sunday
evening services at 7p.m. and Wednesday
services at 7 p.m .
ANTIQUITY BAP'tiST. Kenneth Smith,
pastor Sunday School 9 : ~ a .in.; church
service 7:30p.m.; youth fellowship 6: 3(J p.
m.; Bible study, Thursday, 7:30pm
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE, 33045
Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pastor. Danny Lambert, S S. Sup!. Sunday
morning service at 10 a.m.: Sunday even ~
lng service 7: 30p.m . Tuesday and Thurs·
day Servkes at 7: 30p.m.
WORD OF FAITH, 93 Mill St., Middleport . Sunday morning service 10: 15 a.m .;
Sunday evening 7:00. Thursday morning
Bible study 10 a .m Wednesday e-vening

:m

7

; ~:l~HAVEl{CHURCH

OF THE NA·
ZARENE, Rev. Glendon Stroud , pastor.
Sunday Scboo19: 30 a.m.: Worship service,
10:30 a.m ., Youth service Sunday 6:15 p.
m . Sunday evening service 7:OOp.m. Wed nesday Prayer Meeting and Bible Study
7: 00p.m.
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH, Sun·
day afternoon services at 2: 30. Thursday
evening services at 7: 30.
F1RST BAPTIST CHURCH, Mason, W.
Va. Pastor, BUI Murphy. Sunday SchoollO
a.m .; Sunday evening 7: 30p.m . Prayer
meetlng and Bible study Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. Everyone welcome.
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Salem S1. Rl!v. Paul Taylor, pastor. Sunday
SchoollO a.m.; Sunday evening 7:30p.m .;
Wedn(&gt;sday evenin~ praye-r meeting 7: 30
p.m.
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
CHURCH. Sliver Ridge. Duane Sydenstrlcker, pastor. Sunday SchOol 9 a .m .;
Church .servict&gt; 10 a.m. Bible Study Wed·
nesday at7: 30 p.m .•June thru September.
1 p.m. October thru May. Sunday evening
Fellowship 7 p.m. June thru September, 6
p.m. October thru May.

Sermonette
School days, school days, dear old golden rule days, reading and
wrlllng and arithmetic, taught to the tune of a hickory stick. Sure
September Is here and school Is In session once more. It's a good time
of the year and a good time for those going to school. Many pupils will
not think these are good times but they are. For most people school
days are tbe happiest days of our lives. A tlmeoffew worrtes and lots
of fun and excitement. Learning can be and Is fun. It Is something we
never get over. From birth until the day we dle we are learning.
The most Important learning beside reading Is learning about
God and His ways. What Is It God has planned for us tQ do? It Is
different for everyone of us yell! Is tbe same for all. Just~ in school
we all must learn to read, write and do a llttle figuring, so God wants
us to learn His ways, His rules and to be of service to our fellow man .
God gave \Is the 10 commandments as a guide through life. They
help us to be good neighbors as well as good God-feartng people. We
need to study and learn them. He gave us the goldenrulesowemlght
put our neighbors' needs and welfare before our own. We may get out
of school In 12 years but we never stop learning more about the 10
commandments during our Ufetlme. If we live to be 100, we will still
be learning how to better o()ey and make use of the 10
commandments.
School days are happy days we all most all agree . They are the
golden days of youth when we are crefree and eager to learn new
things. In the kingdom or God we never graduate so we can say all
the days of our lives are golden days of learning and sharing with God
the Almighty. Even when we reach oor seventies and we learn a new
truth or a broader truth about God, we are excited, We have that
happy glow we had wben a youth In school. I-am wiser today than
yesterday say students In school and also students In God's school.
God's school days of learning never end but the lhrlll of learning
never ends either. For this we may thank the good Lord Almighty.
Amen, Amen. - Father WllUam Mlddleswarth, Lutherans of Meigs
County.

-

.s

,.
'i·
e
y
'
'

....
..
~

''

~

~

'lc
t
~

..

t

�Area organizations have meetings
tor, conducted scavenger hunts tor
lock, art; Rosalie Story, Hemlock,
Heath UMW
the various agect children.
stuffed toys; Sarah Cullums, Hem·
The oldest group went through
"Modern Famllles and Their lock, qullt; Alma Louks, afghan;
town
finding answers to clues which
Problems" was the program topic Ann Lambert, Rock Springs, can·
they
were given with OCIIna
used by Betty Fultz at the I'E'C('nt dlewlck pll!ow top; Mary Virginia
Grueser and Cathy Riggs leading
meeting of the United Met hodist Easterday, Racine, cape; Maxine
the way. 'The hw younger groups
Wome n at Heath Church, Dyer, Star, doOle; Ruby Lambert,
stayed
at the church for their hunt.
Star,
plllow
sUps;
Barbara
Fry,
Middlepon.
Wanda Shank. Adell White, and
Emlly Sprague and Juanita Rock Springs, OOey Gooey Barsj
Marla Roush had charge of one
Bachtel assisted with tlx' program Patty Dyer, Star, blonde brownies;
group,
and Suzy Heck and Mrs.
which dealt especially with tht" Sue Fry, Rock Springs, stuffed toy,
Waibu111
were leaders for the
economic crisis and was followed by and Patty Dyer, Star, banner.
younger
children.
CWA chairman, Elizabeth Jora gt"nE'ral discussion. Kathryn
Swanson Op!'ned the mecting with dan, requested members not to stan ' Refreshments were setved. Eric
devotions and Pauline Horton on tbe oven mitts for the 1986 state and Jeremy Heck put on a skit,
"Who's on Base." Favors were
sewing contest until she receives
presided at the oosiness mi"Cting.
given to the children.
A letter from a missionary who furtlx'r instmctions from the state.
Attending tbe party were Ginger ·
Eldon Barrows, Arthur Crabtree,
will be sp!'aking at the church in
December was read and members and Chester King, were appointed to and Keith Darst, Bridget and
were reminded of tlx' district UMW a committee-to write a resolution to Bethany Roush, Jason and Josh
fall rally to be held Sept. 26 at the send to the state convention, Witherell, Joe and John Hlll,
Logan Church, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. opJX)sing hunting on Sunday. Fo~ · Autumn and Amber Thomas, Stacy
Transportation wil l be provided. A one members attended themE'&lt;'ting. and Adam Shank, Eric, Jeremy,
Josh, and Jennifer Heck, Eric,
Sp!'Cial offering was taken for the
Adam. Shawn, and Andy. White,
Rock Springs Grange
project ol that group.
Tracy
Grueser, David Riggs, An·
Mrs. Swanson led in a devotional
Barbara Fry, women's activities
Fry,
and Brittany Walburn.
drea
litany to conclude the meeting. chairman. gave a report of the
Refreshments were served by county eontest held at the Pomona Adults helping beskles those named
Beulah McComas, Mary Rinehart , Grange meet)ng at Thursday were Jerry_Pullins, Danny White,
Dorothy Roller, and E lizabeth night's meeting of the Rock Springs and Jean Eden.
Mourning.
Grange session held at the hali.
Star Grange .
Winners from Rock Springs were
Star Grangt" members enjoyed
Elma Louks, fi rst on afghan; Mrs.
their annual hayride and weiner
Evangeline Missionary
Fry. baking; Sue Ellen Fry, first on
roast preceding the regular meeting
The Evangeline Missionary stuffed toy.
recently.
Group of the Pomeroy Church of
II was noted that the community
Four candidates were voted on
Christ held itsAugusi mE'elingat the service project of which Bunny Kuhl
and elected into membershp. Get·
home cf Mrs. Betty Spencer with a was chairman, has been completed
well cards were sent to Bernice
picnic preceding the meeting.
and the material sent totheNational
Midkiff and Ben Rife. A birthday
Mrs .' GertllJdE' Andrews openend Grange.
card was sent to Grace Colwell.
the meeting w_ith devotions entitled
Reponed iU was Homer Radford
Announced were the ci!lcers' con·
"God to be Honored" with scripture and Susan Pullins. Noted was the
· ference to be held on Oct. 5 at the
taken from Romans. Mrs.Charldine 60th anniversary of Charles and
Friendly Hllls Camp and a halloAlkire had prayer. Mrs. Sp!'ncer Leona Karr and a card was sent .
WE'&lt;'n party to be held oo Oct. 19. It
read an article on how to bakebread,
The time of meetings wlll be was also annourn&gt;d that the Meigs
and Mrs. Laura Proudfoot gave changed in October to 7:ll p.m.
County Youth.wlll have a booth at a
'Grandma's Day. "
Louise Radford had the program "flea fair" to he held on Oct. 4,5and6
A letter was read from Op!'ration with Agnes !:lixon giving "Make It a
at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
Evangeline Ministries of Chesa· GOoct Day"; Mrs. Fry, "A Time to
pcake. Several meetings were Say No"; Mrs. Radford, "Fun VFW post
discussed and it was decided to send Things"; Opal Gru&lt;'Ser, "How to . Commander Lawrence E. Hysell
a card or letler to a different Take Your Medicine" ; and Mrs.
was in chargt"of a meeting of Jimmy
missionary eve('\• month since tlx' Kuhl, "More Within."
G. Stewart Memorial Veterans of
group is interested in several
Refreshments were s~rved by Foreign Wars Post 7756 which met
mission fiP!ds. Mrs. Anna Lockhart Ada, Roy and Pat Holter.
at the Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
will host the meeting I hi s month with
American Legion Home in
roll cail to be on a new beginning.
Columbia Grange
Middleport.
Cards were signed to several who
Hysell gave a brief report on
New officers were elected when
arP iil. Mrs . .Janet Venoy rmd a
location
of a p!'fffianent home and
Columbia grange 2135 met I'E'C('ntiy
letter from Kenny and Kim Allen,
will
report
on further progressatthe
at the hali.
Mrs. EiiCCn Bowers r1ead onr from
next
meeting.
Post Quartermaster
Elected were E idon Barrows,
Richard and Betty Lou Evanson. master; Mendal Jordan, overseer;
Paul E. Clark repo11ed on member·
News was recc-ivcd from the Bill
ship
stating that memberships for
Atthur CrabtfE'&lt;', lecturer; Rose
Morgans and the Hoyt Ailens. A Barrows, steward; Richard Man·
1986 are now being taken with a goal
letter was read by Mrs. Sp!'ncer
of 110 members set for the comlng
zey, assistant steward; Bertha
from the Cincinnati Bible College,
year. He also reported on requireCrippen, chaplain; Gene Jeffers,
with Mrs. Proudfoot giving an
ments for membership In the VFW
treasurer; West ina CrabtreE', secre·
upda te on Jessica Lucas. Mrs. tary ; Clifton Fraley · Jr, gate which are anyone who has served
Andrews had the closing prayer. keeper; Rilia Rhoades, Ceres;
honorable as an officer or enlisted
Others a ftrndin~ were Mrs. Gertie
D-•rlcne Carr, Pomona; Carolyn p!'rson, on active duty, honorably
Bass. Mrs. ElizabethOhiinger.Mrs.
discharged, released to inactive
Fraley, Flora; Patty Manzey, lady
Paulin~ Kennedy, Mrs. Eva Des·
duty or rellred, shall be eligble lor
assistant stewart; Eldon Barrows,
sa uer, Mrs. Helen Miller, Mrs.
membership if service in the anned
executive committee member;
LaDonna Clark, and Mr's. Nancy Martha Jetter, pianist; and Eliza·
forces of the United States in any
Griffith.
foreign war, insurrection or expedi·
beth Jordan, women's activities
lion is recognized as campaign
chairman.
Pomona Grange
medal service and governed by the
Meigs County Pomona Gr;mgr First Baptist
authorization of the issuance of a
received a scoreof92.5 perrent out of
campaign badge (medal) by the
The Middleport First Baptisl goverrunent of the United States of
a possible 100 on their annual
inspection held recenlly a t the Rock Church recently held a back-toAmerica and the individual ls a
school party for the children of the
Springs Grange ha II.
.
citizen of the United States subject to
· earlier stated provision.
Janice Wetrr and Diana Rice, church.
Several of the children came
local home economics instructors.
All interested veterans meeting
judged the County Women 's Activi· costumed for their grown-up career
these requirements are Invited to
ties' contests with the winners as choice. The Rev. Earl Eden gave a
attend the next meetingofthepostto
follows: Patty Dyer. Star Grange, sermonette to kickoff the party after
be held Oct. 1 at which veterans
photography; Naomi Reed. Hem· which Marjorie Walburn, coordina·
rights will be discussed.

'The an1M181 klckot! for the Rock
Sprinp Junior and Senior Youth
Fellowship was Jleld Sunday even·
ing at the Rock Sprinp United
Metmdist Churcb.
'The Rev.' Melvin Franlclin, pas·
tor, had tbe qJenlng prayer for the
get-togetrer. Plans for activities
during the coming year were
diSCUliSed. Garnes were played, and
the evening was concluded with the
young people preparing andeatinga
nearly :II foot long submarine
sandwich. Also served were potato
chips, fruit "'~lad and koolaid.
Attending '\'ere the mirllster,
Susie PullinS, senior youth advisor,
Thelma Jeffers, Junior youth advi·
sor, and Lee Cadle, Dale and Mandy
Eblin, Tammy and Tracy Eblin,
Danny and Michele Folmer, Missy
and Ryan Foster, Carol Hendrix,
John Michael and Tim Jeffers,
Marsha and Michl Klng, Jerssie
Morris, Lisa and Scott Pullins, .
Cjuckie Mash, Sally Radford, Amy .
Roush, Glila Scarberry, Angle and
Chris and Tim Sloan. VIsitors were
Reta Eblin and Unda Foster,

Salem Center PTO
Several fall actMties Including a
festival on Nov. 9 and a playground
workday on·Oct.12 were planned al
the recent meeting of th Salem
Center PI'O.
The festival will be held at the
school from 5 to 8 p.m·. · with
committee members to report to set
up at 2p.m. Volunteers are needed.
On Oct. 12 PI'O members will
meet for a workday on the
playground with benches and bal·
ance beams to be Installed, some
equipment to he moved, and
concrete slabs to he pouned. Tractor
tires are nE'&lt;'ded to become a part of
the playground equpmenl.
On Sept 28, volunteers will
remove tbe stage !rom the auditorium to make additional room for
basketball courts. On thai day the
PTO will furnish coffee and donuls
for the workers. Wire to cover the
windows In the auditorium will be
purchased by the PI'O to allow for
the Installation of a haskelball
backboard. The unit wlli also
purchase material for curtains
which wlll be made by Mrs. Terri
York.
•
Charles Halliday gave an over·
view of the new Houghton Mifflin
reading program which has been
·.initiated this year in Meigs County.
The new texts were on display and
questions concerning their use were
answered.
'
The annual Halloween dance will
be held on Oct. 28 from 6 to 8 p.m.
Students and their famllles are
Invited to attend and re!reslunents
will be sold. It was reported that both
the school haridbooks and the 1984-85
school yearbooks will be available

soon.

member,DeanDowler,saldthatthe
MMI is very q&gt;timist ic for the future
of dairy producers and the industry.
Schacht said that much of the
decision making conducted by the
MMI board of directors this year
was centered around solutions toaid
financially distressed members.
One solution noted was the development of the Milk Quality Premium
Program established to reward
producers for high quality milk with

a 10 cent premium if all criteria are
met.

During the meeting an update on
the Dairy Unity Plan was reviewed.
The five part bill, supported by
MMI, calls for fair dairy provisions
in the 1985 Farm BUI within the
budget restrictions established by
tbe Reagan administration.
The National Dairy and Research
Board reported a successful year
with its print, broadcast and

Schultz reunion held recently
The first annual Schultz family
reunion was held on Sunday at the
home of Albert and Faye Schultz. A
covered dish dinner was served.
· Horseshoe. card games and a
soflbail game were enjoyed by the
group. Plans were made lor the 1986
reunion to be held at thehomeofJim

and Lisa Burke.

Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Schulz, Bill, Linda, Christine and
Billy Schultz, Pomeroy; Frank,
Ann; Seanna and Rhonda Fahner,
Springfield; Linda, Rob, Kelly John
Johnson. Steven Wears. Jim, Lisa,
James and Ashley Burke, Jon

research campaigns. They reported
increased sales &lt;i dairy products by
nearly thfE'&lt;' percent.
MMI is a 8,500 member dairy
farmer-owned cooperative encompassing an eight state midwestern
area Including Ohio, Indiana, Pen·
nyslvania, Michigan, New York,
Kentucky, Maryland and West
Virginia. Last year MMI marketed
more than 4.4 bllllon pounds of ~
million gallons of mllk.

!Jgnes of God' set
as OU theater show
By BOB HOEFLICH
Seatlnel Slllfl Writer
I'm looking forward to personally
meeting Alison
Cauthorn of
Reedsville some
time.

Couple
appointed
to area work
Lt. Duane Harris, 23, and his wife,
Lt. Kim Harris, 22, have been

named to serve at the Salvation
Army Headquarters In Athens,
working also in Meigs COunty.
Both were born in PottsvUle, Pa. ,
and both started work in the
Salvation Army at an early age.
They both entered the Salvation
Army's Future Officers Training
School in New York in 1983. They
were commissioned In June, this
year, and were appointed to the
Athens station. They have two
children, Aaron Duane Harris, 2,
and Sara Marie Hartis, 10 months.
Last Sunday everting they con· ·
dueled their first meeting at the
Pomeroy outpost on Butlernut Ave.
They swore in Janet Darlene Boring
of Carp!'ilter as a senior soldier. Lt.
Kim Harris conducted the meeting
and Lt. Duane Harris was the
speaker. Y.P .S.M. Eloise Adams
and Major Glenna Rummel (Ret.)
were flag bearers for the service and
Mrs. Dora Wining gave the closing
prayer.

(Highest ratinM).''
''A II~l.\Y, MO.. ! I.,,.

PH·W&amp;HERMAN

MULBERRY AVE.

PH. 992-2115

'

'

POMEROY, OH.

for Oct. 31 from 7 to mldnlght.
"Hometown Christmas" will he
the theme of the real hoUdaysmson
with open houses at the various
business bouses to be held !rom 12
noonto5p.m. on0ec.1, the Sunday
afternoon after Thanksgiving.

She appears so
Specialslgnup limes for the senior
capable accord·
citizens Golden Buckeye Card and
ing to reports I
the Sliver Savers Passport - one
receive on her.
She does exceptionally well scholas- card which selVes two purposes tically and now has been cast as have been set. ·
To receive the card which allows
Mother Miriam Rutb in Ohio
Wesleyan University's production you a dlsCQunt at a number ci local
of "Agnes of God". As I recall this , stores and discounts at oul of state
play was done by a professional businesses, you must be at least 00
company at Ohio University a few and you will havetoproveyourage
months ago and was excellent, I'm Whe!l applying. Wrinkles just won't
do it - so have a driver's ilcense,
told.
The play wlli run Oct. 1Q.l31n the bir1hcertificateorsomeevklenceof
university's Chapp!&gt;lear Drama yourbirlhdateon hand.
Now alxru t those special signup
Center Studio Theatre. Written by
John Pielrneier, "Agnes of God"ls a times and locations ...
You can signup from 9 a.m. to 4
drama with three women who
p.m. on Oct. 9, 16, 23, and ll at the
explore moral and spiritual values.
AUison, a senior humanities· Pomeroy Ubrary; from 10 a.m. to
classics and history major, ls the noon on Oct. 8and0ct. 21attheLong
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Bottom Community Building; from
Cauthorn, 66144 State Route 12&lt;1, 10 a.m. to noon oo Oct. ll and Oct. 24
at the Harrisonvllle Senior Citizens
Reedsville.
Club. Or you can sign up for the card
Frances Brewington, well-known at anytime in Pllmeroy when the
Middleport resident, remains In a Meigs Senior Citizens Center is
coma . at University Hospital In open.
I'm told that the card- which ls
Columbus. It has been over a week
since she was lound ill at her home the Golden Buckeye on ooe side and
and takE:~~ to the Coiumoos hospital the Silver Saver Passport on the
by Life Flight. She remains, of other- can be quite beneficial.
course, ln intensive care.
'
John Mohler, Route 1, Middleport, again has to be the first p!'rson
Members of the Bend Area to have his Christmas cards In the
Merchants Association will again mail this year. His card an1ved on
tbls year observe "Christmas in Sept. 19. I think John ))as the right
October" witltspecial promotions to idea. There's really nothing wrong
encourage early Chrlslmas shop- ailoutextendlngfriendahipandgood
ping at home. And - the midnight wishes theyear'round. Thlnkalxrut
madness sale has been scheduled it and keep srnlling....

Past Councilors gather
The Past Councilors Club of
Chester Coonctl 323, Daughters of
America, met recently at the hall
witb Belty Roush, Sadie Trussell
and Mary K. Holter as hostesses.
Inzy Newell presided at the
meeting which Op!'ned by reading
scripturefr'omMatthew.TheLord's
Prayer and pledge were given in
unison. Margaret Amberger read
the minutes of the last meeting.
A reading, "Kindness" by Erma

Cleland was given, and Goldie
Frederick gave tbe treasurer's
report. Games were conducted by
Mae McPeek, Leona Hensley and
Ada Bissell. Sandra White, a guest,
wcin IN! door prize. Others there
were PauUne Ridenour, Laura Mae
Nice, Lora Damewood, Jean Fred·
etick, Ethel Orr, Elizabeth Hayes,
Opal Hollon, Charlotte Grant,
Thelma White, and Cora Beegle.

..

ALL WESTERN

HATS, COATS &amp; VESTS

1/2 PRICE

NO GUARANTEES - ALL SALES FINAL

MODERN SUPPLY

399 W. Main
, 992-2164
Pomeroy, OH.
THE STOlE WITH "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
FOI PETS, STilUS, LAIGE &amp; SMAU ANIMALS
LAWNS AND GARDENS

BEGINNING FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1985

POMEROY SHOP ONLY
99'2 -6648

5 P.M.-11 P.M. - 7 DAYS A WEEK
POMEROY, MIDDLEPORT AND MINERSVILLE
PIZZA - HOT SUBS
SPAGHETTI AND USAGNA DINNERS
AN11PASTA, CHEF &amp; TOSSED SAUDS

FRIDAY
ROYAL OAK - The Belles and
Beaus Western Square Dance Club
wUI have open dance at Royal Oak
Park Friday from 8-11 p.m. Caller
will be Eldon Pittlngt"r, Chillicothe.
POMEROY- Full Gospel Bus!·
ness Men's Fellowship Interna·
tiona! meeting at the Meigs Senior
Citizens Center In Pomeroy Friday
with dinner at 6:30 followed by 7: 15
meeting. Speaker will be Robert L.
Swang('r, pastor of Christ the Klng
Lutheran Chunch in Columbus.

SUNDAY
MINERSVILLE -Homecoming
Sept. 22, Minersville United Methodist Church Sunday School, worship
service begin 9 a.m., basket dinner,
noon. Afternoon seJ:VIces, 2p.m .
MIDDLEPORT- Annual picnic
of the legionnaires of FeeneyBennett Post 128, American Legion,
and their families wUI hli held
Sunday at the Mill St. Legion Park
next to the Middleport Post Office
Sunday at 1p.m. Barbecued chicken
wlll be provided and !bose attending
are to take a covered dish, their own
table service, and a chair. ln the
event of rain, the picnic will be held
at the legion hall.

MONDAY
POMEROY - Monday Night
Women's Golf League wlll meet al
Jaymar Golf Club 'ind hold a
scramble and potluck dinner Sunday, at 3 p.m. at the Jaymar Golf
Club. AU league members and
substitutes welcome. Bring a covered disb and gnlt partner,

TUESDAY
POMEROY - The Women's
Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial
Hospital will meet at 1 p.m. Tuesday
In the East-West Dining Room of the
hospital insll!adofonthateveningas
earlier plannEd. The ofllcers will

serve refreshments.
R.tn'LAND-Adancewillbeheld
at the Rutland Civic Center Frtday,
from 8 to 11 p.m. Music will be

~

DI!ICUSSiS PROGRAM - Dr. Howard Linder and Holzer Clinic
nuroe Mary Steinbeck d!Ba•• !be upoom~n, Malnteaance ol Health
series, which will be bt Melp County 'J'umday, at tbe Senior Cltlzell

Center.

The seventh in the bi-monthly · Hospital In Cincinnati prior to his
series of programs on Maintenance internal medicine residency at
of Health, jointly sponsored by the Washington University Affiliated
Holzer Medical Center and the Hospital in St. Louis, followed by a
Holzer Clinic, planned for commun· two-year fellowship in pulmonary
ity residents age 55 andover, will be diseases at the same Institution.
in Meigs County on Tuesday, Sept. From 1973 to 1984, when he came to
24, at 1 p.m . In the Senior Center, Galllpollf. to join Holzer Clinic and
Pomeroy. Featured sp!'aker will be the medical staff of HMC, Linder
Dr. Howard E. Linder, a member was Director of the Respiratory
of the Holzer Clinic and the medical Therapy Department and Assistant
staff of the hospital, speciallzing in Chief of Medicine at Missouri
Internal Medicine and Baptist Hospital in St. Louis, Mo.
PulmonoiOgy.
Mary Harrison, R.N., Staff De·
Linder will talk about "In· velopment Coord Ina tor for the
Ouenza," its impact, seriousness, hospital, alongwithAlice Wamsley,
treatment and the most effective Director of Senior Citizens Center
ways to avoid contracting what we activities, is making local arrangecommonly refer to as "flu."
ments for this community informa·
A 1961 graduate of Asbury tion service of !he hospital and
College, Wilmore, Ky., Linder clinic. The public is invited to
obtained his niedicai degree from attend.
the University of Cincinnati College
For tu'rther information, contact
of Medicine. He completed a Mrs. Hanison at 44&amp;-5246 or 4464311
rotating Internship at Bethesda at the Holzer Medical Center.

Flower show winners·announced
A fl&lt;&gt;Wer show, "Golden Memoties," was staged by the Rutland
Garden Club reCently at the home of
Ruby Diehl and Stella Atkins.
..
Ribbons were awarded by the
judge, Sheila Curtis, In three places
ineachclassasfotlows,flrst,second
and third respectively:
Artlsllc Arrangements
"My Mother's Favortte Recip!&gt;,"
a kitchen arrangt"ment including
fmits and vegetables: Binda Diehl,
Pauline Atkins, Roberta Wilson.
"My Favorite Holiday Table
Arrangement,'' a design suitable for
.any boUday: Ruth Erlewine, Pau·

llneAtkins,andPearleCanaday.
"My Favorite VacatiOn," inter·
pretivedesign: Pauline Atkins, Eva
Robson, and Anna Elizabeth
Turner.

1

HorilcuJiure

African violets: Ruby Diehl, all
three places.
Fern: Ruby Diehl, first and
second, and Stella Atkins, third.
Other potted plant: Edith Willi·
amson, Ruby Diehl, and Dorothy
Woodard.
Hybrid tea roses: Ruby Diehl, ali
three places.
·

Other roses: Neva Nicholson, Linda Riggs, Missy Howard, and
first; Anna Elizabeth Turner, Lisa Riggs.
"Memories·.of 4-H" shwing some
second and third.
phase
of 4-H work: Lisa Riggs,
Zinnias: Pearle Canaday, first
Linda
Riggs and Cheryl Lynn
and second, and Eva Robson, third.
Marigolds: Eva Robson, first and Jewell.
second, and Roberta Wilson, third. ·· Roadside materials: Debbie Al·
Other cut flowers: first class, klre, Cheryl Lynn Jewell , second
Edilh WUiiamson, first and socond, and third.
Dish gardens: Gay Lynn Gihson,
and Eva Robson, third; seend class,
Eva Robson, first and third, and Cheryl Lynn Jeweil and Lisa Riggs.
There were special displays of
Octa Ward, second.
materials
suitable for arranging,
Junior Division
educational
division on books
and
an
"Memories of the First Day of
or
literature
relating
to garden club
Scbool," including a school item:
work.
•

Moore reunion held recently in Pomeroy
The annual reunion of the
descendants of James C. and
Ethelinda Stone Moone was held
Sunday at the home of Fred and
Bertha Smith, Route 3, Pomeroy.
Over 50 relatives and friends
attended the reunion. The Rev. RoY
Bookman gave grace for the basket
dinner. Blair Windon, presided at
the meeting, with Becky Lee giving
the secretary and treasurer's reports.. The birthdays of Bertha
Smith and the Rev . Carl Hicks were
noted.
Sue Hager read a copy of the

Kennith and Betty Davisson, Me·
James C. Moore last will and Bertha Smith.
Officers were elocted and include chanicsburg; Roy Bookman, Buch·
testament dated Jan. 17, 1875 and
gave informatiOn on the Sutton Rick Koblentz, president; Jenny tel; Rodney and Charlene Book·
Chunch concerning the Moores. A Machir, vice president; Becky Lee, man , Logan; Verna Rose,
picture of James C. Moore and secrtary-treasurer.The 1986 reun· Reedsvile; Helen Bookman, Glousion was set for the third Sunday of ter; Norman and Virginia Feli,
Hannah was shown.
Gifts were presented to the oldet September with the location to be DeGraff.
man, GerogeGenhelmer; theoldest announced. The ' Rev. Mr. HJcks
A card was signed by those
woman, Ethel Orr; the youngest . gave the benediction.
attending for Florence Circle, a
Attending the reunion were Gary patient at Veterans Memorial
boy, Scott Payne; the youngest girl,
Pat Wolfe and family, Rick HospitaL
and
Amy Beth Lee; the largest family,
Kobientz,
Jennifer Machir and
Geroge Genhelmer, and those
family,
Roger
and Rosemary
traveling the farthest, Kennith and
Betty Davisson. A gift was also Keller, Alvin, Barbara Jean, Todd
GRAVELy TRACTOR
presented to the hosts, Fred and and Rodney Tripp, Virgil: Kathryn
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Blair and Becky Windon, Betty Lou
204 Condor St.
Dean, James Harlan Eiselstein,
Pomeroy, OH.
Fred and Bertha Smith, Marsha
Phone 992 -2975
Keller, Debbie, Rodney and Adam
SPRING &amp; SU~R HOURS
Chevalier, all of Pomeroy.
MONARI. 9 TO S
Doug and Elsie 'Circle, Martha,
SAT. 9 TO 1
BobBlll, Becky and Amy Lee, Sandi
Harden,PauiMoore,SueHager, the
~:~
Rev. and Mr~ . Carl Hicks, Racine;
A party in observance of the first GeorgeGenheimer, Ethel Orr, Long
birtlv:lay of J.P. Varian was held at Bottom; Roger and Janet'Grueser,
the home
of hisRutland
parents,
Teresa
varian,
. Bob and ...~iii~~~~~~~~~iJ~::~::::::::~~~::::~
Logan; Dorothy Ca ll, Nelsonville;

r;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;::;

Varian birthday
is celebrated

Calendar/ happenings

~~ DAN'S
SUGAR RUN MILL

Flu topic of session
on health maintenance

Beat of the bend

Burkes, ali df New Concord; Terry,
Julia and Jason Murdock, London;
Dave, Alberta, and Any Hysell,
Middleport; Edna . Heiss, Joe
Pfeeffer, Janet and Chad Augenstiene, all of Lowell; BUI and Gladys
Dunham, Clark, Randy, Tim. Curt •.
Troy and Joey Dunham, Belpre.

For Any Fertilizer Need •••

Page- 7
·,

.

Mrs. Wykle Whitley's fin grade
won the $10 monthly room count
award with 44 percent parental
attendance. It was voted to change
meetings to the first Monday each
month at 7: ll p.m. Officers' reports
were given following the pledge to
the Hag which Op!'ned the meeting.
The principal introduced the faculty
forthe year.

Friday. September 20, 1985

By The ·Bend

Fellowship

Milk Marketing elects vqting delegates
Members of District 10, Local 7,of
Milk Marketing, Inc., elected voting
delegates at their annual district
meeting held Monday night at the
Salisbury Eiemetary School, Pome·
roy. Thomas Hamm, Racine, and
._ Dan P. Smlth, Racine, were elected
• delegates.
Highlighting the MMls theme for
1985, "MMJ, on the Move", local
board member· Harold Schacht of
Canal Winchester, and MMI staff

The Daily Sentinel

provided by the Itomlc Sounds.
Admission is $2 single and $3 a
couple.
POMEROY - Shade River
Lodge 453 annual picnic Sunday at
Royal Oak Park; all members and
guests invited.
CHESTER - Bowhunters and
Arclx'ry Club safari shoot, Sunday;
open to public. information call
Terry Brown at 985-3364. ·

MONDAY
POMEORY - Southern Local
School Board meeting Monday, 7: 30
p.m. In high school cafeteria.
POMEROY - Southern Local
Athletic Booslersmeetlng, 7; Jtlp.m.
Monday at athletic building.

J.P. Varian

Keller birth

POMEROY- The OHKAN Coin
Mr, and Mrs. Larry Keller of
Club wUI have a regular meeting , Canal Fulton are announcing the
Monday night at the Riverboat bir1h of a son, Daniel William, Sept.
Room, Diamond Savings and Loan 3. The infant weighed seven pounds,
Co., Pomeroy. Social hour and seven ouncesandwasrotnches long.
trading session wlll begin at 7 p.m.
Mr. and Mrs. Keller also have a
and a coin auction and refreshments daughter, Laura, three. Maternal
will follow. Anyone Interested In grandparents · are Mr. and Mrs.
coins is invited lo altend lhe David Holter, and maternal great·
program.
grandparents are Mrs. Elma Epple,
and Mrs. Elma Holter, all of
Pomeroy. Paternal grandparets
Soulhem yearbooks are In
POMEROY -The1!&amp;Southern are Mr. and Mrs. Dale Keller,
High Schooiyearbookshavearrtved MassUon, and the paternal great·
and may be picked up during grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Daniel Keller, also of Misslion.
regular school hours.

A Mickey Mouse theme was
carried out with cake, ice cream,
potato chips and pop being served. A
Panda Bear cake was presented to
the hononed guest by his great aunt.
Betty Longstreth, for the occasion.
Attending were his maternal
grandmother, Llla Fetty and grand·
father, Wallace Fetty, hlS paternal
granctParents, Mllton and Maxine
Varian and · paternal great·
grandmother, Lousie London, and
Cindy and Michael Fetty, Missy and
Betty Longstreth, Larry Parsons,
Norman HendriX, Margt" Fetty, Iva
Powell, Jeff Belcher.
Sending gifts were his maternal
great-grandmother, Clarice Calll·
coat, Eloise Amith, and Larry and
Teresa Hoffman.

T HE
GRAVElY'
·sYSTEM

WD..LIAM C. CAILBIAN, ll,
M.D.
PEDIATRICS
I would like to announce
the opening of my new office in
,. Point Pleasant, West Virginia
OFFICE HOURS

Monday through Friday
9:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.
(304) 675-7300
LOCATED: Suite l 13 Medical Oflice
Building at Pleasant Volley Hospilol
Point Pleasant , West Virginia

Make this
Day special lMth e gift of
Krementz 74KI. gold overlay
jevvelry. Choose from our
selection,of NEIN fashion
french wire earrings in ,
assorted shapes, textures,
and styles!

s

,.
I,

a
e

MEMBERS EMERGENCY
SERVICE

y

(New Listing!

MIDDLEPORT

MIDDLEPORT AUTO CENTER
PHOJIE: DAY: 992-3053

fiGil: 7.az.zo.aa

The Automobile Club of Southeastern OH
3110 Second Ave .• Gallipolia, Ohio

.ott'·

~etleler.s

212 E. 18ain, Pomaroy

'

~

n

�Sentinel

The

Friday, September 20. 1986 .

The Daily Sentinel

Business Senric~

PHONE 992-2156
Of W•it• Dtillf StntiMI Clasllf•4 Ottt.
Il l Co~~tt St .. PeMJO, , llllit 45719

4

FOR SALE
3 BEDROOM
HOUSE

Located on St. Rt. 248 just out of Chester, ~hio. This
is the personal property-of the late Jess11 Weber.
LISTING: Coins, 2 ~ gal. galvanized buckets. 50 gal. drums,
12 ft wood exten~on ladder, milk cans. wooden benches,
12' aluminum ladder, plush plow, seed spreader, m1sc.
tool~ 21" Lawn Boy push mower, chest freezer 20 cu. ft,_la·

992-5815

IPOIIERilY -

prepareatklD for Tuesday's Emergnecy MetUcloe
series m orthopedic emergencies. It wDI be held In the
Physician's Lounge al the Gallipolis hospital,
Tuesday, 4 p.m.

HMC emergency series topic
scheduled as orthopedic injuries
The ninth in a series of monthly
"Program s presented by the Emer·
gency Medicine Department of
Holzer Clinic a nd Holzer Medical
Cente r will be held on Tuesday 4
p.m . in the phys icians lounge.
The topic to be presented is
"Orthopaedic E mergencies. " Mak·
ing the presen ta lion will be Dr.
Donald ·M. Thaler, Thale r Ortho·
paedic Clinic a nd senior orthopac-

Payne reunion
The fou rth annual Payne reunion
was held Sept. 15 at the Slate Run
·State P a rk in Columbus.
Attending were Freda Payne
Carsey, Middleport ; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert J acobs of Columbus; Cathy
:Branham and Carrie of Han isonville; Mr. and Mrs. Ja mes Payne of
Reynoldsburg; Kenneth Payne,
Harrisonville: Mr . and Mrs. Wayne
Payne, Scoit, Kim and Jackie,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Welsh. Marysville; Mr. and Mrs .
Rola nd Spradlin , J ulie a nd Roland
Jr., Obe1z, and Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
Marcum, Columbus.

die surgeon on t.he HMC staff.
years as a member of the Joint
A native of Niagara Falls, N.Y.,
AdVisory Committee for Sports
Thaler received his Bachelor's
Medicine for the State pf Ohio and
degree from Ohio Wesleyan Unl·
Chairman of the Holter Medical
versity and graduated from the Center Emergenc y Room
Ohio State University College of Committee.
Medicine. He did both his internship
Following Thaler's presentation,
and his two years of residency at a period for discussion and a
the Buffalo Veterans Hospital, question and answer session will
before coming to Gallipolis In 1963 take place.
to join the medical staff a t Holzer.
Physicians and nursing person·
Thaler is board certified and a nel in area emergency departments
me111ber of the American Academy and nursing homes and emergency
of Orthopaedic Surgeons. He Is a
medical services personnel from
past president of the Ga!Ua County Gallla, Meigs, Athens, Jackson and
Medical Society, a member of the Mason Counties are inVited.
Ohio State Medical Association and
Anyone wishing additional Inforthe American Medical Association, mation on the program should
as \fell as the Ohio Orthopaedic contact Mary Ha rrison, R.N., In the
Society, Tri-State Orthopaedic So-. St.aff Development Department of
c!ety and the Buffalo Orthopaedic the hospital by phoning 446-524ti or
Society. He has served· for many 446-5311.

fuM
garageon 2nd tot.

the stores.

ANTIQUE AUCTION

M.. Chamber of Commerce

Middleport Book Store

BIBLES
'

------.,.--WEEKEND SPECIAL--------·

Buildin&amp;, Howell's Grove Park.
Belpre, OHio.
Wicker couch &amp; chair, maho·
pny drop-leaf table, mahopny
drop-front desk, oak

10°/o OFF

side-

board. oak dress"'· 2 hi&amp;fi·
~ack beds. oak 1-soction book·
case. oak chairs, 2 parlor
chairs, 3- stack bookcne, Oik
flatwall cupboard, oak tobles &amp;
stands. oak HaNest table (Re·
pro.). 10 cun JUn cabinet. oak
stool , oak low-boy dresser,
sewina: rocker, walnut knott-

ON ALL CAROLINA CANDLES
IN STOCK
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
SEPT. 20 &amp; 21 ONLY!

down wardrobe. 7-ft walnut

wardrobe, walnut drop-leaf ta-

ble. walnut chest with desk in
top drawer, 6¥1 ft. poplar wardrobe, poplar sideboard, wooden shoe stretchers, Jersey
coffee bor. blanket chest.
Misc.: Glassware, depression
glass, pictures &amp; frames,

dolls. quilts, woven picnic
basket other &amp;lassware . lol
more furniture &amp; misc. Refreshments served . Not res ·
pons ible for accidents or loss
of me rchandise.
Patrick H. Blosser, Auctioneer
599-86 lise. No.
428·7245 (304) Area Code

992··2 259
"OWNER INTENDS TO SELL in
September"' Make an offe~
Property will be purchased for
half the appraisal made 4
years ago! Th1s. close to down·
town Pomeroy, needs work
but could be good home or investment. Call today and
make your offer!

FARM - 98 acres. house,
barn. other buildings, and
mmerals, etc. $48,900.

Middleport,

FREE PARKING
Sue Murphy, Mi~on Jloush,
Holen, Villil &amp; a.-.

Sales I Sen·ict
Air Conditioners
~eat Pump1. Furnac1111

OPENIN6 AU6. 21

.

PICTUIE "PERFECT"

PHOTOS

Many Package~ To Choose
From - Lowut Priced
SENIOR Pactt.gea in Town

$28,900.

We do Wtdtlings, familiH
I Chilcl;tn
Call or Walk In For An
Appointment and Pric;es
301 3rd St., RCKint, OH.

BEAUTIFUL OLDER HOME
with up to 4 bedrooms, parlor, sun porch, basement. all
in good condition . On a good
street. $39,900.

Home: 992-6712
Or Ius. 949-3031
Afttr lug. 21

8·19·1 ro'o. pq.

992-6191
Joan Trussell 949-2660

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

Dottie Turner 992-5692

AW

We'd lib to introduce you to
Enpae-A-Cir, the modern way
to drive the vehicle of your
choice.

No Down Payment
Lower Monthly Payment

S~LE
SPLIT LEVEL HOUSE with 3 bed rooms, 2 complete baths, dining
room, living room and large recreation room. Located on 8
acres. Large farm 'pond. Racine
area.

REAL ESTATE FOR

Pomeroy, OH. 45769
For Faster Service

Call 614-992-6737

YOUNG'S
-

HOME NAnONAL BANK

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Addon• •nd r•modeling
Roofing and guner work
Concre1e work
Plumbing end electrical
w"'k

Misc. Merchandise

(Free Eetimatas)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
12·8-tfc

Pomeroy, Ohio

EUGENE lONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING

OH.

CO.

PH. 992·5682
3-24-Hc

HUDNALL
PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

Ph. 614-843-5191

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

349 N. 2nd

Door

Ash Pan

OFF

81lllpelle,

•1•
1/ 11 / tln

OLD6 TIME HEATING CO.
7
mite• below Oelllpolla on Rt.
DAILY 12 TO 7 P.M.; SUN. 12 TO 6

P.M.

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

PEISONAUZED
POOLS
VINYL LINER POOL

ACRYLIC WALL POOL
ABOVE GROUND POOL
Ch•r 410 Chake1

"SPAS"

_..,.,t,

491 Gen. Hart....,. Pkwr.
Ollio
MIS. 10 a.m. to S p.to.

~14

992-2549

I~

773-5634

6-l!·tln

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•R•placement WindoWa
•New Roofing

Middleport, OH.
PH. 992-3559 ·

13 -10 Chery lr.

.

" FREE ESTIMATES" ' ·

JAMES KEESEE

PH. 992-2772
7

F" All

Doors ........................ 1135
10-IS FO&lt;d 1r.
·
Doors ........ ........ :......$1•5
11-79 Ferd lr.
lo~itF;;;ri;:.......... $52.50

Grilles ..................... '31.50
73-19 Chorr. lr.

Hoods ......................... 1145
13 -U FO&lt;d langtr

Rl. 611 Wost Darwin Ohio -

STYUNG &amp;
TANNING SALON
Fall

992-7013

Kkkoff -

Ill

Sept. 9 thru 20

HAIR CUT &amp; STYLE ... $7.50

TaJming Special 1..............'.!.~............ $35
AI month lan
•·•·1 mo.

CHESTER-915-3307

Television Listening Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

Cl

z

4/ 1/ tfn

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

:5:r:

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE

!

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Alllllllllll:l~ IIII~IIIS

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

: .

t:t

co:·,·

107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.

t

PHONE 992-7075

Now $sl'ring All OF
Mslgt County
t
end $ul'l'oundlng',
__ . Are• 9(20/1 ~

~-~--

•VINYL SIDING
"ALUMINUM SIDING
0 1LOWN IN
INSULA nON

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

New Homes luilt
"Free E1tlm•1ea"

Pll. 949·210 1
or 949·2160
· No Sunday Calls
1111/tfn

3

8·13 Hn

raLU( STREAK CAB

FIREPLACES &amp; WOOD STOVES
• CLEANING INSPECTIOH

• FLUE CAPS INSTALLED

~

• CHIMNEY REBUILDING
,.r;-· ~

l -

,\ j
... I

\

I

·- -:..-'

" TOTAL FIREPUrCE
AIYD CHIMIYEY WORK "

INDUSTRIAL
STAINLESS STEEL LINERS

Announcements

SWEEPER and sewing m•chine repair. .,.rtl, and

supplies.
Pick up end
dellv•rv. Davia Vecuum
c ...ner, one half mile up
George• CrNk Rd. Colt
614-448-0294.
Belloona for Get Well, AnniVerearys, Blrlhdaye, partiea.
Singing Go1rlllo . Colt Bel·
loon•• Co. 61 4·446-4313 .
Jeannie'• Ceramics ,
Georgoo CrHk Rd. 814448-4888. Beginner cluo4 weel&lt;o, Mon. 9-23-81 .
6:30 to 9 :30PM.
AA Crisis Pregnacy Center .
Confidenlilf. Free preg~
nancy test and·or inform•·
tlon . Phone 814-742-2829,
collect if neeeaHry.
R•cine Gun Shoal tpon101'811 by Rocine Gun Club.
Evwy Sundey. beginning 11
1:00 p.m. F~~etory Choke 1 2
gue.. ahotgune.

Qiftimnry

·

•

- - tmmedletely: 100
people Nrioualy lntereat:lld
In loolng w.lghl. 1·800912·1111. Robert • Judy
Ho..-. Rl. 1, Box 310,
C - . NC 28811. 1· 919·
311· 8806
MOBILE HOMES MOVED,
lnaured, f'Meanable ratea.
Ctll 304-171·2338.
SINGLES CLUB lor Wel1
Vlovlnleno only. I t o - .
AH agea. Do••n• of
,.mllen. Detelll: •z.oo.
HMibllly HNrtl Club, Lelv·
ooy, WV 26&amp;71 .

18 Wan1ed to Do

l•llne offere frM elotMs.

m•'•·'

1
'•mete.
tltlerlrtlnod. Colt otter 5PM ,
•14 44• 2•1 1
v

Help Wanted

v· v

·

loveble small dog, 4 yeen
old . Coli e -1 4-241-9148 or
114-441-3441 .

ment. Work your own houn.
Celt otter IIPM. 814· 281·
1237.

Will pelnt trailer roofa &amp; cut
tob1cco. Call 61 4 -256 ·
1&amp;2B.

Fr• lingerie. good time,
undercav•r w•r. p,erty plen .
Colt elter IPM. 814-2811237.

Cero pointed . tl 00 end up.
20 yean ••pedence. Phone
614-981-4174.

Casting
Four regional TV comrnM·
clal. Allegea. No.experience
Bag of clolhll . Call 114- MCIIIIry, Will be interview448·2804.
ing In Southealt: Ohio area .
WMk of Oct. 1. For eppoint·
Free kltMna 6 weeks old. • I1Min1 ce" between 1 O:AM ·
Cell 614-•48-2393.
7 :PM. Mon.-Fri. 614-890·
0222.
Male 6 femele Auatrialian
HHien lomolll lo good One certified Mlldicel Tochhome . Shotl. Call614·367· nologlat. wMkdaye. Send
7781.
re1um• to bok 300. in care
of tho Gotllpoti• Doily Trib·
Kitten• Garfield &amp;. frienda. une, 826 Third Avo,, GetllNMda ilood home. Long polll, Oh 41131 .
haired. golden-gray . 7
weeka, one femele cet. Cell Mele' or tem•. no lnvut814-379·2197 ..
ment. flexible hou,., No
- -- - -- - - - - tw08 lnve1tment, Nrnlnga oppor7 Collie puppl01 to give lllnity •160·300 - k to
awey to good home. Call otort. Celt 814-446-8237
614-843-52Btl.
between 8:30-9 :30PM ,
- - -- - - - - -- lwOB Mon.-Fri .
Three kittena, ~k wMkt old.
Ready to go . 1 bleck mal•. 1 Model• needed for pnttion
gray male, 1 tabby femele . with legitimate eacOUrl·
81 4 -992-8&amp;71.
modeling ogency. Coll814·
466~61 1 1 between houn of
1 feme~ puppy. 7 weeka 1PM &amp; 8PM .
old. mi..d breed . 304-671·
7659 .
Wanted : Full time live in
houaem.,.ager (5PM-9AM,
Large maple tree, muat be M-F. deytlrno hours off! for
removed. 304-882-2956 or an int•mediate care facility
8B2-2478.
for d•velopmentelly dit·
abled aduh1 in Gallipolis.
8 wHk old puppiea. "h: High school degr" end
Beegle, 1h Nor. Elk. 4male. 3 current driver'• licente refemale. 3 atub tail. Eveninga quired; experience in work304-896-~681 .
Ing with paraona with man·
tal retardetion and
3 cut• kittllna, 8 weeks old . developmental diaabilitiea
304-875-8714.
preferred . A one-year min·
imum &lt;:ommitment to' poai·
lion required . Salary renge:
t10,400-•14,680year. E•·
callent vacation and ln•u6 Lost and Found
ranoe benefita. Sik paid
holideya end 5 paid peraonal
deya~yur . Weekends off.
LOST: Whit. 9 mo. old Paraon hired will be provided
temele Germen Shepherd. with a minimum of 80 hours
Lower River Rd. &amp; At. 218 of formel training related to
erea. Cetl8t4-448-7881 o• tho job which to pold by tho
I 14-441-9430.
agency. Sand raauma to
Robin Eby, ' Buckeye Com·
LOST Copper noae Beagle munity Servicea, P.O. Box
red &amp; white. male. Call 804, Jackoon, Oh 46640.
614-448-9463.
0Hdlina for applicanta : 9·
30-86 . Equal Opportunity
Found: black male, mixed employer.
Coekar Spaniel with white - - - -- - ---lcnoM. Rut gentle. In Langa- Easy Auambly Work!
vltte. 814-742 -2667.
$800.00 per 1 00. Guoran· '
teed payment. No
experience-No Alea. Details
aend aelf·lddreased
8
Pubilc Sale
stamped envelope: Elan Vi·
&amp; Auction
tal -716 341 B Enterprise
Rd ., Ft. Pierce , Fl. 33482.
- - - - -- - - - - lw08
RICK PEARSON AUCTIO· In Rutlllnd. Need retired
NEER SERVICE. Eatate. carptlnter to do odd jobl.
farm, antique, liquidation Mutt ~ rellebla and reaao·
oatH. Ltcenaod Ohio end noble. 614-742-2230 .
West Virginia . 304-773·
678&amp; or 304-773-6430.
VETERANS: Do you wioh
you had ttayed In ·the
military? Regret loalng that
9 Wanted To Buy
retlr•ment incorM7 Sorry
you didn'llake edvant~ of
We PIIY ceah for l.lte model tho Gl Bill to get your collage
clun used cara.
degree 1 Maby lt'a not too
Jim Mink Chev.-Oids Inc.
1111. Join the Army National
Bill Gene Johnaon
Guard and receive a monthly
614-448 -3172 · ... . .. paycheck, lite insurances,
retirement benefita, and the
WANTED TO BUY u•od New Gl Bill. It p,eya full time
wood &amp; coal heaters . uudenu t1•0 .00 par
SWAIN'S FURNITURE, 3rd. month. 3AI time audenta
• OHve St. Gotllpolto. Coli t10&amp;.00 per month. end
614-446-3169.
half time 1tudant1 e70.00
per month, up to maximum
AU or part of mail, whole- of '6,040.00. We hove tho
ule. or urvice bu1ineu in best part-time joba around !
Gallit or Meig1 Co. Call Celt 304-875-3950 or t 814-446-2639.
800-642-3619.

1----------

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE . Bocl1, iron ,
wood, cupboarda, chaira,
cheata.· beaket1 , diahea ,
atone fara, antlque1, gold
and ailver . Write · M . D .
Miller. Rt.2. Pomerov. Ohio
41789 or coli 814-992·
7780.

PH. 992-3982

Sign up ond win o free pus to the loco! Homo·
coming Game of your choice.

We "'" Afqll Tl••
Shop Ttehtlel"
•• Detr
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPliANCE

4/ /tl

992-2198
Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

~.....~

BOTH OF YOU

•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATElliTE SALES &amp; SERVICE

"'fret Estimates"
Installation Availabl1

PAT HILL FORD

i~

, FOR THE

•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY

I

repair Gas Tanks.

I

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH

After S Call
742-2027

core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also

9-13-Hn

WHALEY'S AUJO PAllS

3/ 2/lln

FENCE &amp; SUPPlY
PH. 992-6931

We can repa.ir and re-

Hoods ...•.- ................. 1 13G

ltocl• Pontls ............... '25

992-3345

ACCENT

13· 79 fDfd Tr.

13-79 Cho•y. lr.
13·15 fDfd IMgtr
Cob Cor-1 ..................120
Griltos ........................... 175
Ntw and UsH Auto Glass- tat• MMitl Parts

PlUS: Office Suppli11 &amp;
Furniture, WHiling
and Grodoatian
Sta~ion•y, Magn•til
Sigm, R......, Stamps,
lusinels forms.
Copy S•wim:, II,.
255 Mill St, Middleport
104 Mult.lrry A,,, Pomwoy

. 1·3·tfc

Fenders ,,_.,, ................S41

..,;:.... . ........

y,., ,,1111111 Nllir

RADIATOR
SERVICE

1!-79 Ford Tr.

fend.rJ ..............._,,, ....s41
ll-10 Chtrr Tr.
Doors ........................ I I OD
13-ID Chorr. Tr.
HOOIIs ......................... •t 50
13-14 Chorr lr.
n-~'1.:!;
$70

LICENSED INSURED CE"TtFtED

HYDIOTICI CHUIKALS

WORTH A TRIP FROM ANYWHERE

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

9-20·1 mo.

THE QUALm
. PRINT SHOP

F1r11 EqalpMellt
Ptrls &amp; Ser-lee

AUTO
St.RENTtL
Rt. t60 trtll

9-11· I mo.

1/22/tlt

Under Now MaNtgomont (FatiRirly Giovanni's)

•Wa1h11n •Di1hwasher1
•Renges
•Refrigerator•
•Dryers •FrHz•rs
PARTS ond SERVICE
4·5-tlc

20 years

u~SAVE

Free E•timatn

16141 H!-7.754

•

All Mtbt

··Free Ellimates"
CAll COllECT:

"Wt R11t F11 lm "

Ph. 985-4141

RESIDEIICE PIIONE

985-3561

Dealer

446·4522

Long lotto•, Ohio

16141 H2-6550

•SUBS *SANDWICHES
*LASAGNA •SPAGHETTI

(CUT OUT FOR FUTURE USE)

Roofing of all Types
Worked in home area

RENT A CAR
CALL

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

We Also Carry
Fi1hing Supplies.
IUSIIIESS PHONE

"12 Varieties of Pina"

10-6-tlc

Authorirod John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hoa
Farm Equipment

7/IZ/Z mo. pd.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

ANGIE'S PIZZA

Racine, Oh.

VINYL &amp; AWMINUM

16141 843-5425

Middleport, Ohio 45 760

· ·tfn

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

•Complete Remodeling
•Room Additions
•Roofing
•Sid inc
•Garaps &amp; Pole
Buildings

317 North SHand

A.A.A.
304-675-6276

to 24'x36'
Insulated Doc Houses

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling

OPEN

or 992-7121

RT. 62 SOUTH
POINT PlEASANT, W. VA.

if

CHOOSE YOUR PAYMENT PLAN
•NO MONEY DOWN
•90 DAYS SAME AS CASH
•NO PAYMENT TILL DECEMBER
•SPECIAL DISCOUNT FOR CASH

Ebersbach Hardware C,o.
PH. 614-992-2811
"Ever

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
· TRUCK LEASING .
Box, 326

Real Estate General

0 Air nght

992-5875 Or
742-3195

•live entertainment
•free HBO •Re$1auranl
•Olympic Pool

Sizes Start From 12'd6'

811212 mils .

NICE I'll STORY HOME in Pomeroy on a good street. Base·
ment, garage, other leatures.

"Glass

$2 399 or 6FT. $2 588'

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

446-9416- 446-2112

"Heats to 3,000 Sq. Feet PRE-SEASON
•use Free Standing or SALE
As Fireplact Insert

YOU CAN CHOOSE FROM

110 West Main St.

HEAnNG &amp; COOliNG mrEMI
Quality lntertherm

NOT JUST A STOVE
IT'S A WHO'LE HOUSE
HEATING SYSTEM

*Pail Shelf with To·p Holder
* 2 pc. Locking Spreader Bar
.*Slip Resistant Steps
5 Ft.

IENIIm'S MOillE &amp;
'tuiiUFACTURED HOISIIIG

Ph.

ARE BUILT WITH YOUR SAFETY IN MIND.
THEY ARE BUILT WITH SUCH SAFETY FEA·
TURES AS:

Coli:
8·8·tfC

SINGLE S24.95

Sizes from 6'x6' Up

YOUR WERNER®

ALUMINUM
STEPLADDERS

REPAIR

Also Transmission

~

UTILITY BUILDINGS

ALSO:
We have just received the "Time Maker Organizer" as advertised on TV.
992-2641

.

Business
Services

Shop Early for Best Color Selections!!

PH.

4129/ lln

8 miles from
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

START YOUR FALL DECORATING NOW!

83 Mill St.

WIRING NEEDS

949-2263
or 949-2969

12Vomtroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

Residontiol &amp; Commercial

FREE ESTIMATES

I

DLEPORT. Need some work
but will produce income.

54

lt.

FOR ALL YOUR

Painting

949-2033 OR 992-7301
(all
Posltivt I.D.
for auidtnts or lou of

Cash
"Not

2 RENTAL UNITS IN MID·

$16,900.

Gutters • Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

Roger Hysell
Garage

DAN SMITH - 'AUCTIONEER

POMEROY.O.

-COUNTRY ESTATE- Over 4
acres of ground with a beautiful new ·home. 1\\ story.
home, full basement, 2 car
garage, in-ground pool, and
many other features. Call to·
day. $64.500.

NEW-REPAIR

Cost No. 24,7U
DOUGlAS W. UT11E-ATTORNEY

349 N. 2nd
Middleport, OH.
9·20·1 mo.

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERYKE

ROOFI-NG

~ND

GIFTS

PH. 992-7201

Howard L. Writesel

ESTATE OF JESSI£ M. WEBER

REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.

BOOKS, SUNDAY SCHOOL CURRICULUM,
GIFTS; JEWELRY, MUSIC, GREETING CARDS.
Sunday, Sopt. ZZ . l9851:00 P.

6 rm. home

fire~ace,

·

JIM CLIFFORD

10 _8_11c

ble leaf, round table, refrigerator, Tappan, range, m1sc.
dishes, foot stools, couch/hide-abed, hall tree, lamps, ptl·
lows, humidifier, pictures. couch &amp; charr,.card Ia~, seWtng
machine, dining room table w/ 4-6 cha1rs, ch10a cab1net,
small desk &amp; chair, cleaning rod &amp; shtigun shells. m1sc. linens, knick-knacks, 4 pc. bedroom surte, books, chest of
drawers, electric heater, sweeper, old woodworking tools,
frame hook rugs, stone crocks, pitcher, dryer, wnnllt!r
washer, stands, wash tubs, table, baskets, and other mtsc.

MEXICAN
PonERY

DOZER. BACKHOE.
TRENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS. WATER.
GAS t1o SEWER LINES,
RECLAMAnoN. PONDs.
SPRING DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS.
DUMP TRUCK STONE
.atRT

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

SATURDAY, SEPT. 21, 1985
10:00 A.M.

Real Estate

Cal Aft• 6:00 P.M.

TOPIC SET- Dr. Donald M. Thaler, rip&amp;, reviews
x-rays with Jeanie Miller, R.N., a slalf nurse at
Holzer Medical Center eme~y department, In

JUST CALL!

· ESTATE AUCTION

TEAFORD

OWNER WILL TAKE
REASONABLE OFFER

E . Main

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

11

good money, no celh inveat-

Celt
elter
Smell 614-281-1436
amount barbed wiN.

992 " 3410

ON WEHE TERIACE
IN POMEROY

608

8

Rnl Estate General

Giveaway

-========::;-rr========~r.========:;i
D~~~ ~x~~O CONT~~~TING
LINDA'S
:p:~

r
R1111l Esta1a General

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

r lllolll:lol
21

8uslneas
Opportuni1y

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB ·
USHING CO. recommends
that you do buain111 with
people you know. and NOT
to Mnd money through the
mall until you have lnvaatigatlld thll offering .
22 Money to Loan
HOME OWNERS-Refinance
to low fixed r11te. Uae equity
for any purpoae. Leeder
Mortgoge · Co., 614-692·
3061 .
23

Professional
Services

&amp; Vicinity
Lawn, Garden , a nd Basement S1le . Seturdav Sep·
tembar 21st on Neighbo rhood Rd. Two tantht mile
from At . 7. aouth. Boat,
furniture, lawn equipment,
Franklin furnance , other
itema.

Tho 'Venery Shop Tuoo.Thuro . 9 :00-I :OO; Fii. . Sot .
9:00· 7 :00. Uood dothing otl
lizaa. Und furniture, ap·
pliancea. miac . itema . Rt. 36
below Rodn,y.
Llrge 6 Family Sale mena.
women a, childr.ens clothing.
Furniture. booka. tova. ate.
Atlnterllclion of St. RouMI
664 end 1 80 . Starting September 20 lhru

?

Yard Sele1 8 Edgemont Or.
Sat. Sopt. 21ot. 9 to 6 . 2
reclining chaira. 1tudy deak,
2 de ak. 2 desk lamps, 130
Yard Sale Sept. 20 ·21 . 91o hou r clock. 1 clark apoul
5 . 2 Families Moving Out. cabinet. plua much more.
Plant.z 1ubdiviaion .

Yard Sal e Sept. 19, 20, and
21 at Bidwell. on R t. 6 64. By
feed mill.

Two Family Sat. 21, 495 498 Maple Drive (Spring
Valley Eat.) Electric typewri ter. area rug1. etc .
Garage Sale 4 Family Thura.
19, Fri. 20, 9 to 6 . Fairfie ld
AQ,res. Fairfield Centena ry
Road .
4 Familv SalurdeV 9 -21 -85.
First one lhil year . Furniture,
gun1, tools, clothing, whet·
noll. Kemper Hollow Rd . 1 .
mile past Holzer on 160, 1 sl
road to right 2 miles .

......'Pcimerov .........
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
··· ·-··-····-· ····---- --· ·· -··

,,

Sa turday, Sept. 21 on
Spring Ave . Rain cancels .
1 0·4. Electric furnace. end
tables. lampa, lots of other
thing1.

l

...... 'Pt'i&gt;ieasa·rii.....

Water well1 drilled and serviced . Price• on raqueat. Call
814-742-3147 or614· 992·
6006.

498 Oek Drive Saturdav
21st. 8 -7 Jr . size clothe s.
aome men's.

&amp; Vicinity

PIANO TUNING AND RE·
PAIR, back .to acho~:tl die·
counts, tree eetimetea.
Ward's Keyboard, 304-6766600 or 675 -3824.

4 Faniily Yard Sale Fri . &amp;
Sat .. 9- 5. Rain or shine, baby
clothes. furni ture, tupper ~
were. tool1. everything from
A-Z. 2 miles -waat of Rio
Grand e on right .

Thurs. &amp;. Fri. Sept . 19-20.
2218 Jeffe,..on Ave. Leal
thi1 year . 3 families, all
different itema, doll1, baby
clothes, 2 canarays, much
more .

Firat Time thi1 ·year Qerage
Sala . 608 Circle Ave. Across
from Spring Valley Shopping Plaza. Sat. 9 · 6.

Sat . Sept. 211t, 9 -4 beaide
Maaon Bowling. Clothes,
beby clothe•. stereo' a, floor
model color TV Mt .

31

34

McDeniel Cuatom Butchering; open 6 days a w•ek,
304-8B2-3224.

Real

31

Eslale

Homes for Sale

2 bdr .. fully carpeted. vinyl
siding, large lot, atorage
bldg.. garden, restricted,
*27,500. Coli 614 ·268·
8200.
Newly remodeled; carpeted.
furnance, basement. car·
port, deck. new windows
and doon. 64 Mill Creek,
Gallipolia.
4 bdr. , bath. · utility room ,
living room . kitchen, end
diningroom. Big 2 car gar·
age with attached greenhouse, on 3 ecres, fruit
cotter . Call614-446· 8181 .
In Rio Grande. new 3 bdr,
just finished, full basement,
nice lot. large rear deck. with
vaH-v view. priced to sell.
839. !500. Will conelder mobile home trade-in . Call
614-446-8038.
Muat aell--40 acre. 4 bdr .. 2
baths hoqae, farm equip·
mont. Colt 614-256-6790.
Modern 3 bdr. homa frame ,
large l;dtchen, plenty of
cabinets, refrigerator &amp;
electric range. di1poul. din·
ingroom. 2 full beth, cer·
peted. full basement tiniahed, central air, new gas
tumence, fenced in back
yard . large carport. ready to
mova. in to, good location on
Sunaet Drive on Upper Se·
cond Ave. Call 614 ·446 2673 or 814-446-1171 .

WANTED: HIGH SCHOOL
SENIORS AND GRADU·
ATESI The Weat Virgini1
Army National Guard need•
Individual• who are looking
tor e pert-time job with a One of a kind log cabin good future . Are you wond- Raccoon Creek . 7 miles
ering where you will get the from Rio Granda. 11 miles
money for college? The new from Gallipolis . Air conditiGl Bill will PlY . lull time oned. electric furnance ,
Buy!ng daily gold, ailver atudenta t140. · per month. waaher , dryer. county waeolnli. rlnga, jewelry, Jterling up to 1 maximum of e&amp; ,040. ter. priced under $30.000 ,
ware. old coin1, large cur- The aludent loan repayment furnished . Call 614-379rency. Top prk:aa. Ed. Bur- program repay• a major 2141 .
kett Iorber Shop, 2nd, A,., portion of outttanding Fed·
Middleport, Oh. 81 4·!f92· aral 11uden1 loan•. up to 3 bdr., family room , 1109
3478.
t10,000. You may alao be \ Adrian Ava., $39.000. Call
alegible for a *1.600. or 814-448 ·3716 .
Aluminum serep. Sell your •2.000. enlielment bonua. 1- - -- - - - -- aluminum scrap direct to the A combinetiOn of Guard 7 room house . 1 Y:1 bath,
amelter. Buying all gradea of program can provide more garage on Gravel Hill . 4
aluminum. Premium peid for than •20,000. on educe- bedrooms. Middleport. 614·
large lotda. Cal for quote. clonal benefits, PLUS. you 992-6714.
Scipio Energy. l0&lt;:1ted 1',4 receive a monthly peycehck,
mUll Hll of Pagetown on life insurance, and you can In Pomeroy. 5 room home
Township Roed 141 . Meiga ulllize the delayed training with beth, carpeting. storm
County. 614-992-3488.
·option and the aplit training windowa. new gas furnace,
option to attend basic and partial basement , storage
Wanted:old planoa. Paying edven~d training without · building . Rea1onebly priced.
UO end t40 ooch. Firat mlsaing ~ehool . We have Mull sM to appreciate . Call
floor only. Write giving whet it Ilk•• to make yaur 614·992 -6783 .
directiona. Witten Pienoa. futuro! Call 304-871-3910
3 bedroom• and bath . larkin
Box 188, Strdia, Ohio or 1-800-642·3819.
St., Rutland. Can be 1old on
43946.
Som•one to drive kidney land contract with small
dielysil pet~nt to Hunting· down payment . Call 614ton occalionelly. For more 992·&amp;869.
l lllploynll~lll
int. 304-675-309B.
S1' 1v11.1~~
Six room house on 49 ac res.
Hiring Nowlll Tau; guldea Full ba1emant, free heat ,
needed . Guaranteed excel · private, closa to towns . Call
lent earninga, training, have 614-992-7082.
11 Help Wanted
fun ahowing people around
our reaort. Call Friday, Sat- !5 rooms, bath, utility room .
utday, Sunday. Monct.v 10 Moving . Reduced price .
ern --6 pm . Aaktorfrenk . We Good condllon. 8t4-992·
Sett AVON ""'ko 45%. Celt ara a local compeny with
6204 .
6 1 4-448-3356.
tott-lrM No. Ohio 1· 800·
8317 w.v •. 1· 800-331· Older home in Racine. Good
Babysitter for 10 yr. old boy. 8318 .
condition. Cerpal . oak
Father workl ahiftwark. C a l l l - - - - - - - --:-:woodwork , a•• F.A. furnace
614-448-6660.
E-rienced cerp..,tor with with edd-on wood furnace .
toola end good reference• Urg• lot. double gerage .
Poaition: City Manager- for temporary or permant~nt Excellent location. Priced
Heatth Commi11ioner. City work. Realdentill Window rNIOnobly. l14-949·2071 .
at Gottlpotlo, Ohio (pop. ond Awning Co. 304-1711· - - - - - - - - -- lwD8
1 .1001. Sotery negotiobte 62 12.
9 room1, 17 acres, garage
wtth a hop overhead. cellar,
upon
Com · I·
1
mlsalonquellflcetlon1.
form of govamoutbuilding•. minaret righto .
mont. Fuii-HfYico city. 8B 12
Situation•
Contact A.T. Stewart, Ru ·
employMo. BudgetexpondiWanted
tl•nd . 814-742 · 3008.
turea approximately t4 mil·
lion . au.nllcttlono dHirod : 1- - - - - - - -- - 3 bedroom home. 8 ~!.1 per·
DegrNin public odmlniotrecent a~tumlbleloan , gerden
tlon or equivelent with at Room and board for 1enJor 1pot. Reduced down to
.....t I yMra er.perlence 11 cltirene, retlr•• and dia- •4&amp;.ooo. 304-876-6047 .
alty manager or 6 yun ea obtod. Spoclol cere. 874
aAiatant city manager end 2 Plum St .. Middleport . 01 4 ·
Byownar, 2 bedroom ranch ,
.,..,. es city men..-. wfth 992-3698 .
704 Marlette Road. Point
proflc~ncy In grant• m•n· 1 - - - - - -- - - I
eaement end fOOd fiiCIII Have vecancy for men or PIMunt, nicaloc•tion, ow
60'•.
1
-809-463·
2092
.
monege,.nl lldllo. S""d -men. Elderly only. Cere,
flllpllcetlon• lo City Clerk, room, boenl end teundry.
1819 2 br 1reiler lor 111e
Blltllpotll Munlclpot 8uHd· Colt 614-M2-8022.
10xl0, fum.. oil tonk •
lng, .18 lecond A.... Gettl· 1 - - - - - : --:-::--:pallo, Oh 41631 . Mtrk VocMicy few the elderly In und-Mint. 17200. • 09
not coli unlftli .;e.tty liMo&lt;
enwlape ' City M••oer'. our home . T111lnod end Ill·
Coli~ 10 11m ·
Appointment will be m1de t.n y•n experience. Cell fttod,
6 pm. 304-076-1219.
mld-NovemHr.
1114·892-7314.

::;::=:;=::;: ====

...... Gaiifi)oifi·--······

Homes for Sale

6 rooms and bath . Near
Pomeroy-Middleport , 1 Y:
acres. Cell614-992 -7453 .
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

.

Busineu
Buildings

1- -- - - - -- -

Commercial buildingforule
or rent on Main St, New
Haven , W. Va_Call304~ 882·
2056.
35 Lots &amp; Acreage

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL' S QUALlTV MOBILE HOME SALES,
§ MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,'
RT 36. PHONE 614-4467274.

Lot on Bear Run Rd . . Rae·
· coon Crook, 83,500 . Coli
304-622-2076 .
- - -- - - - - Lota for Hie on land contract
--=----~-:-:-1 with amall down payment.
Rodney Home &amp; Supply Call614-388-871 1 after 5.
Center. Rodqey, Ohio lo·
cated between US 36 &amp; St . 5"h acr81, 2 houlle, 2 cer
Rt . 581! . Cell 614-246- garage , pond. several buildings t26,000. A1hton. 3045308 .
576-2320 .
Sale on Clayton Home!
1148 1q.ft . Statesmen re Rentals
duced to $23,996 . Madi ·
son, Yorkshire , and Lake front at 1imilar 11vlngs. Wa -------,....~
have a Brookwood and 41 Houses for Rent
Elkton on diapley. We ' re
Elsea Home Canter- Chilli - - - - -- -- - cothe and Circleville . Open 3 bdr . ranch, located on Rt.
18!te-Open Sunday. Both lots 160. near NGHS. $300mo ..
conveniently located on US $150 dep.. no peta. Cllll
23 .
614-3B8-871 1 altar 5PM ,

----======

1974 Celebrity, 1 2JIC60, eKe . 3 bdr . air cond .. within citv
cond. Cell614-245-9146or limits. Call 61•-446-41 10.
614-446-3445 . .
3 bdr., double garage ,
1979 Liberty 14•65 2 bod- brae.zeway, College Rd ..
room . furnished mobile Syracuaa. $300 plus dephome. eKcellenl condition. oait. Call 814-446-1478.
gaa furnance. Muat sel..l
$6, 500 . Call 614- 446 - House 4 rooms &amp; bath.
furni1h8d . Call 614· 4463681 .
3870 or 614·446 · 1340.
1972 Flamingo 3 bdr .• 11h:
bath . total electric. CA. Eureka , nice ona storv 2 bdr.
refrigerator, aome furniture. will rent , lease or land
8x1 0 dock, $ 1,400, tek~ contract. Oepoait &amp; referenover paymenta. Call 614- ces required . Blackburn
Realty, 814-446-0008 .
245-9647.
In Lakeland Florida - inland
area. Excellent condition.
Colt 614-446 -124&amp;.
1976 Festival mobile home ,
14x70, 3 bdr ., 2 full baths ,
AC, ceiling tan , metal slor·
age building. underpinning
&amp;. declc , completely set-up in
Park Lana, $9,000. Call
614-446-9763.
1973 Schult mobile home
14K70 3 bdr ., 1 bath, new
carpel, 22,00G BTU air
conditioner, &amp;6,500. Call
8t4-367-0577.
1974 Hillcrest 1 2•65 . 2
bedrooms . Good condilon.
Partially furniahed with underpinning end 2 porchea .
$4, 800 . Call 614-992 ·
6283 or 614-992-2478 .

- - - - - : - - - -lc -

1976 12x56 2 bedroom
mobile home on 8 acrea of
land . Double garage 1torege
building . Kingabury Rd ..
Pomeroy. Phone 614-9922664 or 614-992·2774 .
On rented lot . Excellent
condition. Claan . With or
without AC. furn ishings,
wa1her-dryer. awning . Call
61 4· 992 -2459 after 6 :00
p.m . .

1.:.,________

1968 Royal mobile home.
12x42. Good condition.
t3 ,000 it you move. 814949-2996.

1--- -- - -- -

MOBILE HOMES MOVED.
Insured, reaaoneble retea.
Call 305·678 · 2338 .
1981 Holly Perk mobile
home , 14x70, mu11 aelf,
304 178 294~

1- -·- -·--·-·- - - -

Kirkwood. 12JIC65 mobile
home . Good condition ,
t4,ooo. 304-&amp;75· HoB.
1980 1 4x70 Liberty mobile
home, 3 br, 1 bath, gard en
tub, total alec. central air,
fireplace , 1tove -ret ., mu st
19900 F
be moved .
· or appt.
304-875-3860.

1-- - - - - - - -

3 bdr. ranch on Jay Or .,
kitchen, livingroom, family room with fireplace, utility
room , 2 car garage , $44 gas
budget , $376 mo. plus dep.
Cal61 4 -448·4829 .

y
Is

1r
)-

2 bdr. Plantz Subdivision •
new 3 bdr. 2 beth house in
Pomeroy . Call 614 -446 1552 after 5.
4 bdr. house. Buleville Rd ..
stove furnished. $275 plus
dop . Coli 614·446·0276 .
Modern 3 bedroom, double
garage. 2~d ., Svrecuse .
$300 month plua depo1it,
nice location . Ca11814-9927032 or 614-446-2340 .

:0
l·

House and bath , large yard in
Recine araa . Call 614-9926858 .

I·

For rani, option to buy~ 3
bedroom. 2 bath , large living
room and kitchen. Over·
look s rivur . $500 . deposit,
$350. per month . For appointment , call 614-992·
3841.
2 bedroom house fully carpeted in Pomeroy . S 180 e
month. e50 deposit . Cali
8, 4 -992 · 30S4.
-

.e
d
y
p

I,
l·

n
IS

d

e
)f

3 bedroom home in Midd[e.
port fo r rent or 1ale. Cell
614 -992 ·2698 .
-

- - - - - - - - - - twOs

Nice , small4-room end bath
house in Middleport with
attached garage . Ideal for
lingle or couple . Sorry no
children or pets. Available at
end of month . St ove, refriQ·
erater provided . Hoeflich .
614-9 92 -5292.
•
3 br partially furnl1hed ,
excellent well. wood heat.
private . Point Pleaaant ar$ .·
$260 . per month. Depoait
and refe rences required .
304·695 ·3006.
3 to 4 br on 4 ac re• and plus.
Children and peU OK. Ab•O·
lutely no drinking or druga.
$260 . month . . t100. dep·
oalt. 7 miles ' from Pt. Pt .
1-919 ·351 -4812wMkendo
_,_· 8_1_4_·3_a_a_-_B2_7_8_._ _~

l984 Laville Briotel mobile
home with Hi· rill. kllchen ,
fireploce . beth, ceiling, 3 br,
2 beth 14x70. New 9 ft. 1
3 br houH, carpeted. exC.
Soteltlte • new 10K18 born
typo bldg. •4,000 down •
cond . and neighborhood,
near Ordnenca School. 30,!1·
uoume loan . 304-676·
575-4580 or 676-1982 . •.
8 B74.

&gt;

lS
I"

n-

s,
a

�LAFF-A-DAY

42 Mobile Homu
for Rent

68

Stroller. very goqd cond.

Doberman . Call 304-8755682 ,

. nlent location. 1ecurity dep·

We have a new copying
machine. Our old one, Xero•
660 I. doesn•t work but It
would if someone hed knowhow. We'd like to sell the old
one tor •200., aa Ia. The

Now hours: 11 :00 1UI 5 :00 .

osit reuqired . Ca.11814· 448·

8668.
Furnlehed. AC. c.bla. no city
taxet, beautiful river view, in

Daily Sentinel.
2165.

Kanauga. foster'• Mobile
Homo Pork. 614-448-1802.

TONY'S

614-992-

REPAIRS.
hot dip reblueing, all typea of

2 bdr. air con d .• new carpet,

GUN

gil heat, private lot in
Gallipolis . Call 814-4481409.

gunsmith work, feat tervlce,

2 bdr. AC, fully furnished,
utilities paid . Cai1614· 448-

Flashirtg arrow 1ign •289.

Save 82641' Lighted non-

4HO.

arrow,

Ti-ailer for rent, 2 bdr. Call

0J 63,

6-14-446-4480.

coon Rd. Call 614· 446·
9)146.

"Now see here, Martha,
when I told you to 'shape up
or ship out' you knew darn
well what I meant!"

14x70 2 bdr. super nice
adulta onlv, no pets. near
Holzer hospital , private lot,

$250 mo . Call 61 4!4462300.

Baby bed,swlng. walker, car
seat. coat, snow suit, good
cond .. for sale. 304-676-

4603 .

A.ntique treadle .sawing machine. antique blue jara,
winter clothes, Thura. Fri·

44

51

Apartment

Household Goods

for Rent

bedrooms, stove, refrigera·

. ~79&amp;0t.BP,Cal~n~1 ~ 1-09c;~ :

Electric clothea· dryer, good

One bedroom apartment.
convenient location, call
304 ' 6 7 5 "2441 ·

2 bedroom furnished mobile
home, $75 deposit required.

paid .

1 br apt. carpeted, washerdryer hook up. Exc. cond.
and neighborhood near

Phone 304· 676-6512 after

5 p.m .

PVH . 304-675-4580 or
675-1962.
Apartment
for Rent

45

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equol
Housing Opportunity)
monthly rent starts at $1 69

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleepjng Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.

Coli 614-446-0766 .

for 1 bedroom and S204 for
2 . bedroom, deposit &amp;200.

46 Space for Rent

located near Spring Valley

Plaza and Foodland. pool
and Cable TV available,
office hours as po11ible 10
am to4 pmand7pmto9pm

Mobile home lot, 12' x&amp;O' or
smaller, $76 water paid. 4th
It Neil, Gallipolil. Call 446-

Monday-Friday. Call 814446 - 2745 or leave

4416 after 8PM .

mellsage.

Trailer space for rent $86
mo. includ•s water &amp; gar·

Nicely furnished mobile

ho.,e. eff. apt., central air
and heat in city, adults only.
Cali 614-446-0338 .

bago. Call 614-367-7267.
3 offices wilh small kitchen,
1218 Eastern Ave $200 mo.
6 room unfurnished

Furnished efficiency $160.

utiltias paid, share bath, 607
2nd . Ave. Gallipolis, adultt.
Call 446-4416 after 8PM .

opt.,8200 mo . Coli 614446 -7572 or 614 -4461980.

2 bdr. apt .. good location,
redecorated. utilitiea partly
paid. Call 304-675-5104 or
304-676-6386 .

Large trailer space on
BUiaville-Addison Rd. Call

614-367-8232 or614-4464265 .

Furnished apt., 2 bdr .• 131 "h:

COUNTRY MOBILE Homa
Park, Route 33, NQrth of

4th, Gallipolis. S19&amp; water
paid. Call 446-4416 after

cond, 880 . Call 614-2666251 after &amp;PM .

8 ft . wood 6 upholstery
antique sota. good cond..
&amp;100. Cell614-446 - 2166 .
Sewing Machine' Close- Out
Sale. On Necchi sewng
machine•. aet color code dial
and watch magic happen .
Zig, zag, button holes any
size. blind hem. invisible
blind ham. monogram, satin
stitch . embroidery , a ppliqua. sews on buttons and
snaps, top atich. overcaating, profenionalstitch, elal·
tic stitch. All without old
fashion cams. Sew• on all
macerlals, stretch, denim
even leather. Must aell by
Dec . 1, ,985. Theaearenew
machinea with 26 year warranty , Suggested retail

$499 .00. Now 8198.00 .
Call collect 614-385-8026
any day but Thuraday .
Vance -leach Home Furniture. logan , Ohio. Authorized Necchi dealer 28 years
in bu1ine11.- Local service.
1 0 pc . Pitt group furniture . '
Wine colored . Ex.cellentcondition . $400 080 . Bar

otools 820 pair. 614-992 6102.
.

614-992-7479 .
- - - - - - - - - - lw08

740\7 2nd. Ave .• 3 bdr.,

Upatain office or buainep
apace tor rent. 2 rooma.
218Y2 E. Main St. Inquire at
218 E. Main St . Or call

tliiO mo .. 1 bdr .. $135 .
Deposit required . Call 614446-4222 between 9 &amp;. 6 .

614-992 - 6484 . 8 -: 00

Newly redecorated 2 bdr
apt, with AC, large tp1cious
rooms , immediate occu·
pancy, $250 mo . Call 614·

a.m . to 10:00 a.m ., 2 :00
p.m .to 4 :30p.m .

.

Mer c handi se

3 bdr. duple~~:, new carpet,
new bath, new appliances,
&amp;:t4 Second Ave .. t275mo.

Call 614-446-0890 .
U,patairs unfurnished apt.,
carpeted, all utilities paid, no
children, no pets. Call 614·

446-1637.

•14.99. Fish Tank. 2413
lincoln Avo . 304- 675 2063.
Musical
lnttruments

APartment for rent $226
mo. All utilitiea paid. Call

614 -446-9596 before 6.
2 bdr. apt. convenient to
down town. stove &amp; ref.
furniahed. S250 mo . Call

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St., Gallipolis, New
II used wood ~ coal stoves, 6
pc wood LR suite $399.
bunk beds $199, antron
reclin&amp;f'1 $99. new &amp; used
bedroom auitea, ranges ,
wringer washers, II shoes.
New livingroom suites

$199· 8599,

lamps, also

buying coel &amp; wood stoves.
614 - 44~ - 3159 .

Call614-446-0429.
Kindlewood burning stove

$660 . Cal1614-446-8681 .
Shredded bark 820 pickup
load, Yewa 810 each.
·scotch Pine 824 each, 2
mila• North of Silver Bridge
on Upper Rt. 7 . Call 6,4.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Jenny Lynn baby bed with
mattress, good cond. $70 .

Call 614-448-3492.

$286 . to 8895 . Tables, 850
and up to $12&amp;. Hide·• ·
beds , $390 . and up to
$650 .. aofa beds 8145,
Recliners, 8225. to $375 .,
Lempa from *28 . to $125.
pc. dinettes from $109., to

, 978 American Pligrim
alide·in truck camper .
Sleeps 4 . stove, icebox &amp;
furnance. Very clean , 8750.

Call 614-488-9780 after 5 .
1984 VHS-VCR like now.

chairs

top load, 1 0 day- 1 program

$286 to &amp;745 . Dook 8110

timer. 8326 . Call 614-4467375 .

si~~:

up to t225. Hutches. 8560.
Bunk bed complete with
mattresses, $276 . and up to

8395 .

Baby bedo, 8110.

Riverside Apts. Middleport.
Special rates for Senior
Citizens . $, 30 . Equal Houl·
ing Opportunities . 614 · .

Mattre11e1 or box springl,
full or twin, 863 .• firm, $73.
and $83. Queen Mts, $226 .

992-7721

chases. $69. Bed frames.
e20.and 126.,10gun- Gun
cabinets, 8360 . Gaa or
electric ranges 8375 . Baby
mattreiiBI, *26 &amp; *36, bad

614-992 - 7787 . Equal
Housing Opportunity.
One or two bedroom apart·
menta in Pomeroy . Fur·
nished or unfurni1hed . Rent
negotiable. Call 614-992-

5723 .

4 dr . chests. 849. 5 dr.

frames $20, 825, S. $30,
king frame 860. Good setae·
tion of bedroom suites.
rockers , metal cabineu,
headboards $38 &amp; up to

865.

paid . 614-992-5084 after 6

Used Furniture -- Metal
office da1k1. 3 miles out
Bulaville Ad. Open 9am to
6pm. Mon. thru Sat.

614-446-0322
Waahera, dryers, refrigeraa
tore, rangea. Sklgga Apa
pliancel, Upper River Rd.
baalda Stone Creat Motel .

p.m .

814-446-7398.

2 bedroom second floor apt.
T.otal electric. Acroaa from
Pomeroy Fire Station . Call

County Appliance , Inc .
Good uud appliance• and

- - - - - - - - - - \w08

514-992•7314 .
APARTMENT's . mobile
homet, houses. Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolis . 6, 4 · 44&amp; -

&amp;221 .
L..ureland Apartment•. New
Haven , Equal Houaing Op·
portunity. Haa vacancy. For
more information cell 304-

882-3718 .
2 br ap•rtmtnts In Hender·

40 ft . Fruehauf flatbed
tamden trailer, good cond.

Call 614-379-2668.

815.00i120' to30'- $20 .00)
130' to 40' -$25.001 .
Aliminum aiding 8.' woodgrain an twin 4' with foam
Marble vanity 's tops. Seconds all sizes ch.olce

614 -446-2166 .
2setsof Encyclopedia's $25
each . 10 gal aquarium with
eccessorie1 •, 6 . 60 gel
aquarium with accessories

and otand $1 00. Call 614448 -6583 .

TV ooto. Open SAM to 8PM .
Mon thru Sat. 614-4461699. 827 3rd . Ave. Golllpolls. OH .
Valley Furniture. new 81
used . large section of qual·
ity furniture. 1216 E11tern
Ave .• Gallipolla.
UMd Refrigerator. roll away
t.d,
range and dinette
tet with tix chairt. Corbin
and Snyder Furniture. 955

ve•

Second Avo.. Go\lipollo.
614-446-1171 .

Hot

water

radlatora.

Phone 614-992-7853
614-992 -6364 .

U47. Unlighted 8199. Unquelityl

17'x 19' white gold vanity
with top $29 .96 , marble top
&amp; vanity 839 .95 .
3 or 6 pc . tub wall kits, white
or color S-39.95 to 889 .95 .
Embossed 2 '~~: 4 ' ceiling tile
some fire rated 81 .89 ea.
Suspended ceiling grids f 12'
main tee $2.60) 4 ' tee 80
cents) (2' tee 40 centa) (10'
wall angle 5,.99) .
Colonial clear white pine
casing. Window and door
trim 32 cent ft .
Veneered interior while pine
door Jamb's $8 .99 pr.
3'x 15' foil face fiberglass
insulation 88 . ,2 aq .ft .,

$15.95 roll .
lnColor longated comodes's
siphon jet $89.95 .
4'x10' P.U.C . sewer and
drain pipe with ball 11 pc .

$3.49 ee .l 1100 ·pc-83.00
ea .)
4x8 wood an masonite
paneling woodgrain and
printa, 85 .99 to 8, 2 .99.
Valves to $24.96 .

PENN'S

WAREHOUSE.

Wellston, Ohio, hours 8 -5.
Building material. conCrete
blocks all size•. lentils. flu
blocks. clay tile. Delivery.
Gallipolis Block Co.. Pine

St.. Gallipolis, Ohio Call
614-446-2783.
Block, brick. mortar and
masonry auppliaa. Mountain
State Block, Rt . 33 , New

Hoven. W. Va. 304-8822222.

or

Slight paint dllmege . Flashing arrow sign. t269. Save
•2541 UghCed non· errow.
believable

Prehung 9 ft . thermal glass
steel door's crossbuck or
panel S139 .96 .
1 pc . fiberglass tub and
shower white and color

Call 614-384-3645 .

MCS programmable turnatable 24 function remote
control, e175 firm . Call

Six

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

One and two bedroom furnished aptl. for rent in
Middleport area. All utilitiea

0 . Call 614-245-5121 .

$199 .00 to 8229 .95.

Baby strollsr. good cond.

446-4530 .

Sofuand chaira priced from

Wood table with

1 bedroom apt. for rent .
Nicely located. Contact Vii·
lege Manor in Middleport.

Building Material•
Block, brick. sewer pipes.
windpws. lintels . etc.
Claude Winters, Rio Grande.

54 Misc. Merchandise

, bdr. apt., laundry room. no
pets, water S. trash paid,
8225 mo . plus deposit. Call

992-7481 .

Building Supplies

$30.00 oa .
Prehung 6 or 8 panel 1teal

814-246-9596 .

2 bedroom apartmenta.
New Haven. WVa . Newly
remodeled . In town . 6, 4·

55

back $39 .96 sq .

435 . 7 pc. $189 ond up.

614-446 -3474.

8300. 304 -675 -6868 .

$360. OBO. Call 614 -9492801 .

Firewood-cutup slabs. ,
truck load $100, 2-S,SO .
Pickup load , you haul $16 .
HEAP accepted. Call 614·

local.

Foctory:1 (8001423-0163.
anytime.

56

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS

mory Word latho . •75. Call
6_14-992-1789 . .
For ule:Firewood. Cut your
own. •15 , a load . All hard

wood. 814-742-2473 .

Oragonwynd Cattery Ken ·
nal. CFA Himalayan. Persian
and Siamese kittens. AKC

Chow puppies. Call 448 3844 after 7PM .

814-992-7688 or614-9922318.
- - - - - - - - - - lw08

Mala Bluetick, 1 year old.

Price Warl Flathing arrow
•28" Ughted non-arrow,

U47. Unllghtod t199. Free
lattaraJ

Sae

locally :

1(8001423-0113, onytimtr.
- - - - - - - - - - lw08

,.'

8126. Call614-992-2262,
- - - - - - - - - - lw08

Saxophone for sale. Excellent condition. $360 . Call

614-742-2843.
304-875-4034 after 6 p.m.
$380.
Used

trumpet. 304-675-

6428.
Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Bob's Market. Maaon. W.

Fm11
&amp;
61

Not reglltorod. U6. Call
814-9B8-3540.
Fish Tank and Pet Shop,
2·413 (Jickton Avenue,

Point Pluunt, 304-8762063. ~ish, bird• end more.

Autos for Sale

L iv est ock

erm Equipment

CROSS&amp; SONS
U.S. 36 Watt. Jackson.

Ohio. 614-286-6461 .
Massey Ferguson. New
Holland, Bush Hog Salea &amp;:
Service. Over 40 uted
tractors to choose from Ill
complete line of new &amp;
used equipment. Largeat
selection in S.E. Oh.io.
135 MF tractor, New Holland baler It Allied bale

$3,795 . Call 614286-6622 .

!~rower.

3000 Ford tractor It one row
corn picker. Grain bed &amp;.
grain elevator. Call 614·

286-6622 .
- - - - - - - - - - lw08
New Idea Picker-Sheller. 30.
inch rows. Ex.cellent condt.'
tion. $2600. Ford 3 poin1

Call

New Holland has no-intereat
financing for 24 months on
new or used hay and forage
product•. grinders, mixers
and manure spreaders. New
Holland Specials for Saptember. 1 -New Model 329
manure apreader 140bu.

Cash only 82900.; 1-Now
Modal 356 grinder mi•er,
100 bu larger tires. Caah
only $6900.; 1 -Used Model

707 3 point Now Holland
chopper with both hoado
81900.; 1-usod Modo\ 619

1981 Ch...tta. One owner.
low mloogo. Alloxtroo. Cell
614-992-2431 after 5:00

1975 Corvotto. A-1 shape.
•1.900. 1971 Monto Carlo.
A-1 shope. t995. 1970
Eaetern Ave .. Oolllpolis. Call Monte Corio. A-1 shape.
814-446-2282.
Con - at T S. G Auto Solos
undot Pomeroy bridge. 6141981 rod T-blrd Town Lon- · 992-1848 .
dau excellent condition. new
- - - - - - - - - - lw08
tiros. Col\ oftor 5:30 814- 1977 0\do 98, 2 door, one
246-9460.
owner, axe cond.
$2,496.00. 304-676-2495
1976 Cordoba , very good after 6:00 PM.
work cor, UOO. Call 814·
258-9367.
1978 Rabbit, good running
cond. 304-175-4359.
77 Mualang new pertl, new
tires, new paint, e•cellant 1975 4 dr. Impala, ps, pb,
shape. U.ooo. CoN 614· auto. trans .• ec. good condi266-6417.
tion. 304-675-3184.

t2,800 or boot ollor. Coli
614-44.6 -7414.
19n Chav. Monte Carlo,
ralley wheela, air, cruiM,
stereo. no ruat, nla c.r. Call

814-446-0498.
1980 Chrysler 5th Avenue,
good condition, one owner.
Bl.-ckbuurn Realty. 814-

448-0008.
1989 Plymouth Sotollito.

low mileage, newcarb .• new
draa. good running cond.,

•eoo

or boot offer. Coli
814•388-9043 oltor lpm.

1972 Ranchero good ohopa,
t500. 1971 Novo 8 cyl., 3
lfld ., •6oo. Call 814-4482000 or 814-448-4514.
1979

Nove

one

OWIIM'.

58.000 mllos. •1.980. Call
814-288-8622.
1977

0\do

Cutlau

Brougham 350 auto,
loaded, 4 new tires Seara
radial, looks· rune goods.
Call 614--441-4482.
1981 Cemaro V-6. AM-FM
can,.. air, tilt. PS, PB,
68,000 milea. exc. cond.,
00. Call 814-448·

•e.1

8175 ahor 8PM.

1981 VW Rabbit RMdl
repair. Call Holrer Clinic

Mon.-Fri. 9AM to 4PM. Call
614-448-5179.
·

' 83 Comoro Z28. all x-trao.
27.000 miles, mutt 1011,
Price negotiable. 304-8752799 before 3 p.m. or after
9 p.m . .
'
1975 Coprk:o
Clooolc. pb,
po, pw, tilt ot-ing whool.
oc. runs good. 304-8753124 ohor 8 p.m.
1976 Dodge Coronet. 2 dr.
318 engine. runt good, exc.
mileage. •100. or beat

a••
offer. 304-675-4203.

1982 Type 10 Chevy Cavalier. Good cond. 304·875·
6782.
'78 Malibu Clooolo. •100..
Go~ cand. 304-882-3727
or 882-3108.
1981 VW Rabbit. Needs
repairs. Call Holzer Clinic,
Man. thru Fri . 9amto4pm.

814-448-5179.
1983 Ford F~ura, 4 door,
ec. tow mileage. 304·171·

8429.

1978 Mustang, good aond.

with oxtroo. 304-676·6403.
1980 Monte Corio U2oo.
304-675-7746 oftor 9 p.m.
1977 Plymouth Rood runner, 360 ¥·8. auto, good
lhape, mult tell. Call after

5:00. 304-6711-8523.
1982 EXP - 4 sp. air.
ounrool. 14000. 304-6766868.
Trucks for Sale

268-1905.

camper top. Aoklng •8.900.
Call 814-268-9387.

$,900.; 1-Used Super 717;
chopper with 1 row head

good work car, new paint.
C.ll 814·448-8024 after

1976 ~ord Gronodo, auto.

$1600.; 1-Now Holland 311 ..s_P_M_._ _ _ _ _ _ __
baler demonstrator 1·

$6.000 .; 1-Now Holland
488 9' harbine demonatrator $6200.; 1-Usod Now

with economy shifter.

Holland blower used 1 seaa

1880 Chrysler LeBaron 4

oon No. 25 81300.; 1-Uaed
No. 8 Now Holland forage
wagon $1900; 1-Usod Gehl
lorogo wagon 81600. ; 1-

dr.. 8 cyl.. auto. 43.000
mlloo. t2.600 . 1985 Dodge
Charger 5 opd., 98 mllo.o
•8.800. 1984 Oodge Day-

Used L· 425 New Holland
skid steer loader $6900.;

tone 3.000 miles, lapel. , air
cruise. •&amp;.860 . . Call 814·

1-Usad 718 choppar and 1

379-2726.

row head $3300. Keefer~
Service Center, Rt . 2 Leon
St . Rt. 87. Ph . 304a896·
3874 1

1979 Mercury Marquis very
good cond •• auto. power.
air, good Cirea. 4 dr. Cell

1981 Dodge Colt 4 opd.

42,000 mlleo. AC, 12,200.

814-387-7217.

1980 Olds Omega front
whool drlvo. 2 dr.. PS. P8.
71,000 miloo, t1,960. Coli
614-446-6183.
1976 Chevy Nova tB&amp;O.
2 ~ 15'

Co~veue

ralley
rings in-

4-H capable . Call 814-246- wheela. capt 6
cluded, t70. Call 614-4465038 .
8031 .
7 yr. old quarter horH mare,

1977 Grand Prix. 1978
well broke. Call 814-218- ChOYY 4x4, '1&gt;1 ton, good
9354.
cond. Call 614-448-4746
botwun 6PM S. 9PM.
Butcher goata for sale 50

cents lb. Call 614-388,
9688 til 5. or 614-4460169 altar 5.
2 yr old 'bull Heretord ·red

1--=--------0
1976 Ford Pinto good tronoportotlon, t300. Coli 614448-0782.

----1978 Chrysler New Vorker,

Angus crou. Coll814 -24&amp;- t1,900. 2 door, block-oliver
9695.
Interior, high milllge, good
cond. , loodod . Call 8142 Black Angus bulls for sale .

448-7404.

1----------

stereo. bucketaeats. custom

1975 1 ton OMC pickup 4
dr.. camper special, dual
whHII, auto, clean inside 6

out, *3,200. Coll614-4484219.
1982 GMC von 'Lando Dosign' captain chalra. dual
heel &amp;. air conditioning,
power windowe &amp;locks. tilt.
cruiM, AM-FM ca111tte.
305 cu.in. with direct driver
transmlulon 44.&amp;00 miles.
new tlrea. Can bl ,..n at
Plc - Pac Supermarket,

•10.300 . Call 814- 4488098 leave measaga.

8 11. Chevrolet truck bod for
ule. Calll14-446-8628.
F-750 Ford good cond., 900
tlros. 361 onglno. Coll614388-9833.
1988 Dodge with topper

1

1882 ·Oids Cutlou Clore. 4
baloa •1 .25 bolo. Call 814- door. oliver-grey. 14,000
mlloo. Alvvo~ gorogod. Eo388· 8720.
cellent condition. •1.000
Mix.ed graas hay for aale. firm. Call 614-849-2387.
Call 614-949-2424.
1979 V.W. flobblt. bcollont
condition. U200. Co\18148 5 Seed lit Fertilizer 371·6311.
- - - - - - - - - - lw08
1978 Oldo Cutlou. Runa
Seed wMd, cover crop good. body lolr. tiOO.
WMd. load WMd. rh~. 1170\&gt;1 Co......,. Al-lnunl
barley. Altizer Farm Supply. slol Whollo. N- olr - ·
1110. call114-892-6187.
Call814-245-5193.

BASEMENT
WATERPIIOOFINO
Uncondhionolllfetlmo guoranCM. Local references

n
r

furnlahed. FNI eatimetea.

,.

Call collect 1-814-2370488, day or nlgh1. Rovoro
BoMmonl Wot--ng ,

n

D.and M. Controctoro. VInyl

s

aiding. replacement windOws, inaua.t:lng. roofing,
new and remodeling. con·

r

..s

creto. Coll304-773-5131 .
J .and L. lnotollotlon. Root.

lS

lng, vinyl aiding, storm doora_~
end windo~. F,.. · eatl'~ ·

IS

mot11. Coll814-892·2772.
COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLING
Pump ulea, urviCII.

R-ei•:

terod In Ohio. All -rk
guorontood. Coli 304-2732811. Ro,.nowood, W. Vo .
RON'S Tolelriolon Service.
Houoo oollo on RCA. Quazor.
OE . Spociollng In Zenith.
Call 304-676-2398 or 814·
448-2454.

GASOLINE ALLEY

f-low did Stepped in a
you hurt hole at Booq's
your
place1

Fetty Tree Trimming. stump

Spring Volley Plaza or call
814·992-7844 oflor 6 .
1988 Chevy pick-up truck.
PS, PP, V8, outornotlc . 900
mHoo. ta.IOO. 814-949 2680.
1978 Chovy \&gt;1 ton . E•tra
nlco. •1100. Call 614-9412801. No Sundoy calls,

ploooo.
1981

Chovy

pickup.

air

condiUon, AM·FM stereo,

automatic, 304·875·8431 .
1871 Ford pickup 302, good
condition. 304-671-2080.

73 . ' Vena &amp; 4 W.O.

And pushed you
out on the dump
no waytoqet
home!

Not while
you were

there, but...

RINGLES'S SERVICE, ex-

oppllcolionl 30 -878-2088
or 876-7368.

Starks ~ Tree and Uwn Service. atump removal, 304-

678·2010.
Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Moat wella comptet• ume
day. Pump Mles and HrVice.

Building and ..modeling,
roofing, m~~aoMrv. electrl·
cal framing, flooring~ drywall, bathrooms, kitchent,
doors &amp; window lnatalle-

1ion. 304-6711-2440.

82

Plumbing
Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Golllpollo. Ohio
Phono 814-446-3888
114-446-4477

EveningTelev~ion L~tings----------------~~------------~----------------~~~--~~------~~~~----matters.
Lady Chotterley'
(I)
Hollywood
Beat
(f)
College
Football :
pionshlp 1985
FRIDAY

or

JIM'S PLUMBING. HEATING. Rt. 1. Bo• 355. Gallipolis. Call 614·387-0576.

83

1178 Storcroft Storfllto I
pop-up compor. euoo.
Firm. 304-882-2717.
Mo1orcycles

1973 Horloy Dovirloon 8uper Olirlo wkh oldo ..,,
U.IOO. Harley Dolridoon
8portotor. Noodo minor
WOIII. e1100. Con . . etTa
0 Auto hlea- , _ .
10y ........... .
4t.
--..

,4-.12-..

9:00 C1J 700 Club
(!) PKA Full

9/20/86
7:00 U ()) PM M_.lno
CIJ
Courtohlp/Eddlo's

Excavating

Cil Wh""l of Fortune
llJ (I) Wheel of Fortune

Good-1 Excavating, bill·
menta, footers, driveweya,
•ptic tanka, landaceplng.
Cell anylima 814-448 ·
4637, Jemea L. Daviaon, Jr.
owner.

(iJJJ Newa
(j])
MacNoil/lohror
News hour

ID G2i New Nome That

motas. Call 81 4-448-8038
or 814-992-7119 anytime.

7:30

Tune
fit Jeffersons
U (l) New Newlywed

Game
(}) Pleaoo

J.A.R. Conttructlon Co.,
Rutland. Oh. 814- 7422903. Baaements. Footers.

Don't

Eat

Daiai"
I]) NFL Yearbook: 1984
LOs Angelos Rams· (A Family Tradition).
CIJ Sanford and Son

Concr•te work, Backhoe'•·
Dozer &amp; Dltcher, Dump
trucks, &amp; water·911-MWirelectricalllnes.

(I) D []) Family Feud
Jeopardy

rn

Nightly
Bualness
Report
(!0 Wheal of Fortune ,
at (j}) Entertainment
Tonight
fit WKRP in Cincinnati
(I)

85

General Hauling

Jemas Boys Water Service.

Also pools llllod. Call 814258 · 1141 or 814-441 - .
1176 or 614-446-7911 .

8:00

814-387-0623 or614-3877741 night or day.
Waugh'a Water Service.
Wtlla, ci•terns, pools. Fait,
reli1blt Hrvice . Call 814·

lllinoia
(I) II) (121 Webster (CCI
(SEASON PREMIERE!
D (I) Bugo Bunny Won

268-1240 or 814-21181130. Reaaonable rates.
Haul limestone sand, grl·

bag

vel,dirt, bulk or
lortlllzar
and limo. booloior lok
Works Inc. 831 E. Moln 81..
Pomeroy. 814-912-3891 .

poolo. Coll814-992-11888.

87

Uphol1tery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP ,
1183 Sec. Avo .. Ooll\pollo;
8H-448-7833 orl14-44118 3
1-;:--;;-3-;-.~~::-~--­
I
R • M Furnku.. Monufocturing, St. At. 7, CroCllv. Oh. Call 614-2861470, coli Ew. 814-4413438. Old
now
-U!IhOIIIIrod.

a

•

•

lHBO] VIdeo Jukobol&lt;
0 Cil Cil Knight Rldor
(SEASON PREMIERE! A
new K ITT is. built after a
near-fatal encounter with a
deadly turbo-charged vehi·
cle . (2 hrs.)
(I) laaaie
(!) NFL Yea.-: 1984
los Angelos Aaid~rs .
·
([) Portral1 of America:

Ken's Water Service. Wells,
ci1terns, pool• filled. Phone

cistern and flU twlmmtng

Powers. (2 hrs .l
(]) Washington Week/
Review Paul Oukp is joined
by rap Washington journalists in analyzinQ the week's
news .
CID Great Performances
(CC) ·oance in America : Balanchine Celebrates Stravinsky .' Three ballets choreographed by George Balanchine are performed in honor
of Igor Stravinsky's 100th

(I) Second City TV

Dozer Work land clearing.
landiCBping, etc. FrH eatl-

'

West (CCI Denver Pyle
hOsts this animated and liveaction story about Bugs
Bunny and his friend a cleaning up the Old West. ~A)
(])
, MacNeil/lehrer
Newahour

®

Notional

Alcohollom

Teat
(j]) Washington Week/
Review Paul Duke is jo+ned
by top washington journal ·
ists in analyzing the week ' s
news.
• Cinema: •1nterleurs'

IHBOI MOVIE: 'C.H.U.D:
[MAX] MOVIE: 'Swing
Shift'
8 :30 (}) Lono Ranger
I]) NFL Game of tho Wook
llJ (I)® Ooltos !CCI 8obby
chooses between Pam and
Jenne, J .R. plots to have
Sue Ellen inslitutionalized
and
Cliff gives Jamie
ground• for the annulment.
of their marriage . (R, (90
min.,
(j]) Wall BtrHI Week louia
Rukeyser enelyiea the ' 80s
with e weakly rewiew of
economic and Investment

Contact

Karate: &amp;-Round
Ught
weight Bout featuring (leo
Loucks vs. Jerry Trimble)
from Pon Huron, MI .
CIJ World of Audubon
(j) Gl (jJ Sponoer: For Hlro
IPREMIEREI Private eye
Spenser searches for a
client's runaway wife and
tangles with crime lord King

EVENING

Father
(]) Sportacenter
CD Mary Tyler Moore
CD Entertainment Tonight

Will do wotor houling, 1111
1980 van '1&gt;1 ton. Good. Pull
boot or t ..nor. •4200.00.
Coli 814-949-2121.

74

You look almost
disappointed!

perienced carpenter, ..ectricien, maaon, painter. roof·
ing (includinl hot tar

exc. cond., t2,800. See at

1968 Muotong. Excellent

condition. 289, A.T., P.S.

Club Colvos. Coll614-949- CIIH 814-992-6359.
2822, John J . Roso.
~~=:-::--------­
- - - - - - - - - - - - - 1979 Ford LTO. 4door, P.S,
P.a. air. cruiM, tilt whool.
64 Hay &amp; Grain
reel nlng seeta. •1.995.
614-892-6819.
Timothy hay mixed •quare

..••_

Home
Improvements

Cor. Fourth and Pine

72

Modo\ 847 round baler
85!100.; 1 - Usod Model
1090 9 ft. Gahl · hoyblno

Horsa vary gantla, bay color.

81

lit

1982 Toyota 4x4, 6 lfld..
longbod, 40,000, AM-FM

Livestock

vtl.t'·

304-8911-3802.

1978 Ford Feirmont4cyl., 4
spd-.• atandard. Horticulture
beans ·t10 bu. Call 814--

63

St:t

removal. Col\ 304-876.1331.

Naw Holland manura
spreader 217 bu; with hyd and gate $2100.; 1-U•ed

1- - - - - - - -- - -

Netful,

Autos for Sale

model and new• uud c.ra.
Smith Buick-Pontiac. 1911

1980 Toyota Corolla many
extras ex. cond. Muat Hll

F

THAT PHO'f:O OF 1'H&amp;

"eA
MON~nlt F~OM
MV ,ATHfP:.'S &amp;TOIU!l

p.m.

1979 Rabbit. 1978 Ford
LTO. Coli oftor 6PM. 614388-8823.

SlilliJIIRS

diac . 8 h.. UOO.
614-378-6311.

71

71

TOP CASH paid for '80

Stradivanut Bach trumpet.

Semmentll Cattle. Heifers.

388-9790.

Tr ,111:-; ptlf I .1111111

Artley B flat Clarinet tor ule.

Sti:HLService . Call 614-446Briarpatch Kennell All breed grooming . Indooroutdoor boarding facilitiea .
Englith Cocker Spaniel.

..

1P'1

quil-l.

WHY DID VOU STeAl-

Ohio River Cllmpgrounds.
Tent Camper, •e.OO; Full
Hookup, t7 .00; Wook.
t3&amp;.oo; Month. 171.00.
Aloo ..aoono1 reteo. Recine,
Ohio 614-848-2128. Furniollod opt. end troller- lor
,.., by,_. o r - - ·

~~==========r.;;~~;~;~e~··;~~~-~~-1

Call 614-742-2880.
- - - - - - - - - - lw08

3 handmede quUt1. Regular.
qu"n and king tize. Call

olgn U59. complete. Sovo

Call
Both in
814-446•4881
excellent conc:lttlon.
after
6:00.

Boarding all breeds . Heated
indoor-outdoor faciiUias .
AKC Doberman puppies:

779~

10 inch Crtftman radial arm
MW. Good conditon. &amp;260
or best offer. Oldar Mont go·

8325, Artley clarinet 8150.

773-6665 .

C i oseout'a - Surplus Satvage.
Root truaa (up to 2Q• .

1 oak table, I mahogany drop
leaf table with 6 chain. Both

.UJIL

Bundy alto aaxlphone,

Va.

BUILDERS
Antiques

t:==~~uo

like new

Guns fo~ sale . R8mington
model 31, 12 guage, 30 in.
full chock. Wincheater

614- 332-9745 collect .

53

trumpet

CAPTAIN EASY

Motors Homee
lit Cempere

YNraround

uoocl 12 wooko. Call 814448-0390 after 4PM.

limited , 304-773 -5721.

Waaher and dryer for sale

$160.00 . 304-676-2676.

Band inatrumenle. Frank••

304-773-5758.

Antique bra11 bed , full

79

Pawn S~op, 430 Second
Ava .. Cal\614-448-0840.

Canning peachea now available, open 7 days waek. call
tor price• aa tupply i1

Baby bed complete, high

'/ES · I"'E SENT

HIM~VIA

0

Wood and coalttove. wuh ing machine, cook stove.
Corning top, two TV ' s.

chair, omall chest of drowers. 304-882-3327.

·.

Boett end •
Motors for Sale

Bundy trumpet, atand &amp;.
books. Call 614-448-038&amp;.

in. full chock. Wincheater
model 50 skeet gun. 304·

DICK TRACY

1910 Torry boU -t. 2B
HP, oloc. trolling motor-, dlt
ti'IIH•. unv11 cover.
lent cond. Coli 114-2419113.

•

model 1400. 12 guago 30

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

••eel-

57

58

Call 614-949-2424.

245-6804.

Coli

Apt. for rent, 238 Rear First
Ave ., 2 bdr .. $226 mo., ref.
&amp; dop . Call 614-446-4926 .

'

Coekatiela, fancy parak"tl

Clearance Sale . Cabbage
Patch dolls $,5, to $20. Mr.
T. $2&amp; . Elec. ice cream
maker $,6. FloOr stereo.
tapa deck, radio am-fm. K &amp;.
K. lot 45 . 304-676- 6460.

$89 .95 ...

51

Furnished apt.,, bdr ., $225
mo., 920 4th Ave., Gallipolis. Utilities paid . Call 44&amp;44,6 after 8pm .

tery. 304-676a1126.

inaulated exterior doors

2 bdr . apt., 11 Court St ..
$325 mo., ref. &amp; dep . Call

514-446-4926.

-B-u-ri_o_l _lo_t_a-._C_o_n_c_o-rd_ C_o-'m-o--

Utility bldg . special:
30'x40'x9 ' with track door
&amp; serv . door , $6256
erected . Iron Horse Builders,

Mixed grass hay for sale.

Pomeroy. large loll. Call

8pm .

day. Saturday; 126 English
Ct.

"'

7479.

son. 304-875-1972 .

76

Monday thru Sat. 10 gal.

lonk Ml up t14.99: Young

Bundy

304-676-7980.

r-

1973 vandolo 14x70, 3

446-7025 .

anytime.

'----------.;..-.,------------1-:--:----------

2 bdr.
mobile
tor rent
in
Eureka
. Cehome
ll 614-2,566640.
___ ;.,._ ______ lw08

44

Unlighted

10 ft. truck camper, ba·
throom. atoYe wi'h oven.
reffrigerator, sleeps 4,
1$900. Copy machine $40.
Old time ca•h register, t,O,

2 bdr $170 mo .. or $335
mo. all Utilities paid. Rae·

partially

$247.

$199. Unboliovoblo quality!
local Factorv: 1 18001 423-

friday, September 20, 198&amp;

Motorcycle•

Clooo•out All uood Hondo'o
ot roducod o-. Con bo
- • at Hondo 8hop.

304-676-4631 .
SLIGHT PAINT DAMAGE.

74

KIT 'N' CARLYLI ®bJ Llwrr Wrltfll

Pe1s for Sale

54 Misc. Merchandise
116. Call 614-448-8342.

2 bdr. furniahed, all utilltet
pd.. eKcept elect.. conve·

Utilities .

fmM~~am~20,1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

9:30

birthday. (Ri(90 min .! ·
(I) Wall Stroot Wook louis

Rukeys~r analyzes the '80s

with a weekly review of
economic and investment
matters .
MOVIE: 'Son of Kong'
(HBOl MOVIE: 'Hot Dog,

·.m

The Movie'
10:00 D Cil Cil Miami Vlco
Crockett' is unea 5 y about

working with an undercover
cop because or painful memaries both men share . (R)
(60 min.)
CD Major League BaMbaU:
Atlanta at San 0\ego

12:00. (}) Beat of Groucho
C!lMazdaSportalook

CIJ Entertainment Tonight

Horse'

Ill CiZ News

12 : 4~ ~ ~.i9ht Tracks
1 :00 (]) Wendy and Me
CIJ Star Search
18GtCNNHeadllneNewa
1 : 15 l]lJ CNN Headline News
1:30 (I) Love That Bob
[MAX] MOVIE: 'Alphabet
City'
2:00 D (I) News
(I) 700 Club
()) Doctor Is In
(!) News/Sign Off
@Ill MOVIE : 'The Moon Ia
Blue'
2 :15 !HBOI MOVIE: 'The Blue
Lagoon'

3 :30
4 :00

MOVIE:

' Africa

Screams'
[MAX) MOVIE: 'Alligator'
Cil Sportsc:enter
(J) Senior PGA Tour:
World Seniors Invitational

Cassandra's mother pre·
sents Angela with shocking
news, while Lorraine lakes a

Returna'
lHBO] MOVIE: 'Under the
Voleano'

Proteot

Edwi,,

Newmon

hosts this special chronithe American consufller
movement. (60 min.)

(!) Heme.. Racing : 1985
Breeders· Crown Championship Series~Raca tl 1 from
Chicago. ll .
&lt;Ill Newawatch
11 :00 D Cil (I) (!) llJ CIJI» Gl
(])News

[])Man From U.N.C.L.E.
CIJ J ... ln W .V. •
(j]) SnOOk Previewo
D Bonny Hill Show
11 : 15::'f~n~on : Stovon

11 :30 D Cil Tonight Show
()) Sportecenter

(I) Newlywed Gomo
ID Tyn~- Show
D (I) MOVIE: 'lunbum'
CIJ Lltentght Arnorlco
~ ~-:w of c.toonlng
~
ABC
No..•
""
-·
Nighttlne

D Ono Stop Beyond
11 :45 IMAXl MOVIE: ' Younn
•

its

l

34. Exd.-t.e;;m~ ek;n;;'i- l!n-+--135 Not v
36Go by car
38 Dress
fabric
40 Sluggish

1

-

Clooe

())

~fnollogo

ed
tty
ls~lp

be
ty,
~n­

ln
Ill S

nd

ce

for
;rn
18S

Thomas

ct"

L.....L...J.~I.-J.....-

t&gt;n-

AXYDLBAAXR
isLONGFELLOW

rJ

I

t)

WI-IA'T A 60017

"001&lt; U&amp;UAL-1-Y 15.

ISCUMELt

. (l)

Football:

k6wer: .. (

. 9-20

)

Now arrange the circled letters to
fonn U'le aurprlse antww. •• aug.
geatetl by the abOVe cartoon.

I I I I )" TO( I I I )
(Answers tomorrowt

Wild Amorico ICCI
8 :00 D (Jl Cil Olrnmo o Pan 1 of 2 . Noll reluctantly
(fl)

Yetterdaf'a

takes a singing Job with her
ex-husband on a cruiae ahip.

I

JUI'I'Iblee: OEABV

COLON

NAPKIN

WF'

sR
W F

WN
K N

wN

XDF'
RXL

F' C A

fll

YXIlS~ALTA

EARXN
SWRR

n

SA
F D

R

z ·v,

M 0

~·

SIPHON

Answer: Wl'lat 1 worklf who alwaya w1tchea tl'le
clock aenaratlr, remelni-

F C A E

ONE OF THE 'HANDS"

W X FD

AIIAZF . -

RBIVAL'

JRXLAVGWBF'
Ysterdof'• Cryptoquote: TilE MYSTIC BONO OF
BR&lt;Yilii;:RHOOD MAKES All MEN UNt:. - THOMAS

· (}) MOVIE: 'Tho Pawnbroker'
(Jl D ~ Coli

"

a
ree

One leiter stands lor another. In this sample A is used
lor the lhree L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letlers,
apostrophes, the length and lonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
·CRYPTOQU&lt;rrE

tGONALOt

Tuma to be Announced
® J-rly

Foo boll
""
"""
t
:
W- Vlrginlo
ot Mary-

he

&lt;:&gt;s,

GD Newton' • Apple
Gl (121 Solid Gold

• Small Wondor
!HBOI MOVIE: 'On Golden
Pond'
Small
Cool
7 , 30

to
th·

"

for

®I Wheal of Fortune

•ar
lp-

or

DAILYCRYPTOQU&lt;rrES-Here's how to work it:

(]) Laramie
(]) Coii1!1J• Football Scores
(I) C!l (I) Hee Haw
CD America
(I) Dr. Who

a

!ty

.f8 Pauses

41 Welcom e
wort1
42 Actor

EVENING

7 :00 U
Cil Too
Comfort

J

DOWN
I Furnish
2 Unaccompanied
3 Acting
group
4 A Gabor
5 Celtic
May Day
Yesterttay's Answer
6 Ouplicate
7 Glutton
ending
8 Healthy 20 Reing(Sp.) 30 'The -·s
16 Healthy
exuber- 23 Paintings
co lor
Over"
18 St.ag pony
ance
24 Set free
( 1956 song)
&amp;Day gu ests
25 Varnish
31 Gentleman·~
19 Press
dream
ingredient
gentleman
statement 10 NJ. ('ity 26 Reiterate 32 PitchNs
171''it 21 Skill
28 MinC't&gt;d
37 Hockey grear
22 Sicilian
fiddle
oath
39 United
·city
23 PotpOurri
24 PholO
finish
26 Up in
the air
27 Yearn
28 Catch om•'slb-+--+hreath
29 Born (Fr.)
30 Melan'choly
33 Actress
Hagen

KJ [j

9/21/85

cling the birth and growth ol
!MAXI MOVIE: 'Topper'
10:30 [])Jock B•nnv Show

SEGIN

SATURDAY

-ar
re-

I Spy in
Canaan
6 Graph
11 Breathing
12 Solit.ary
one
13 Complet("
14 Pointed
arch
15 Common

Unscramble these four Jumblea.
one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

(!) Thoroughbred Racing:
louisiana Super Derby
{MAX] MOVIE·; 'Jeremy'

_,. . . . .,. ,.

ACROSS

1}jfjl~ fii)lt ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~~~~IS
by Henri Amoid.and Bob Lee

4:30 Cll MOVIE: 'love Happy'

00 College Foocball Report

.,., Jl:"
by THOMAS JOSEPH

(f) Sneak Previews
.
9:00 D (l) CD Golden ' Girls
Blanche
must
decide
whether or not to donate
one of her own kidneys to
her hated s1ster.
0 (]) I]Q) MOVIE: 'Used
Cars'
(I) Tripods
ffi) Dr. Who
(HBO] World Championship Boxing : Larry Holmes
vs. Michael Spinks
9:30 U Cil Cil 227
(]) Lime Strea1 (PREMIEREI Investigator J .G.
Culver and his English partnet tnvestigate a possibl~
cospiracy to eliminate a
Royal family. 190 min.I
(I) Hitchhikor' o Guide/
Galaxy
10:00 U ([) Cil Hunter (SEASON
PREMIERE) Hunter and
McCall enter the world of
porno films to nab a film maker suspected of murder.
(60 min .}
[l) I Spy

[J)
Auftralian
Rules
Football
(I) ABC News Nighttine
(I) Star Hustler/Sign Off

® ID

l.lV

~~

(MAXI MOVIE : ' AU That
Jazz'
8 :30 U (l) Cil Facta of life(CCI

Vldeoa
(}) Bill Cosby Show

3 :00 Cll

~

(I)

~~~:!u·n · llfe

[MAX] MOVIE: 'Android'
10:30 (fi) Wortd Cheaa Cham-

Alcatraz'

12:15 fHBOI MOVIE: •nghtrope'
(CC)
t _2 :30 D CD ClJ Friday Night

11 :00 0 Cil CIJ Cil 0

Marshall at E..t Kentucky
IIIStorSearch

fits. IRII60 min.)
(j]) Austin City limits
-~ MOVIE ·. ' Birdman of

Ill MOVIE: 'A Men Called

from Charlo~•- NC
fJI
MOVIE:
'Topper

turn lor the worse . (RI (60

old friend attempts to sabotage his former government
bosses after b eing cheated
out of his retiremenl bene -

GQ) MOVIE : 'Terror on 'he
BiiNICh'
(fD Star Huatler/Sign Oft
Ill (121 Eyo on Hol\ywt&gt;od

DCIJ®FolconCrest(CCI

min .l
Cl) America at Al•k: A
Hlatory
of
Conaumer

(PREMIERE!
DCIJOOAirwoiiHawke's

'•

•CARLYLE

lin
lOR

Irk

~
eel

�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

~--Localbriem:--~
Meigs EMS makes seven runs

Friday, September 20, 1986

Pomeroy-Midtllaport, Ohio

Area death
Edna Faulk

Edna Faulk, 89, of 3ll6'19 Rock
Springs Road, Pomeroy, died
Friday morning at the Holzer
Medical €enter.
She was born at Oak HJU on April
17, 1896 to the Jube and Edith
Sherman Canter.
She Is survived by six sons and
daughters-In-law, Ora and Lucille
Faulk of Winchester, Ky., Glendon
and Eleanor Faulk, Charles and ·
Betty Faulk, andClintonandWanda
Faulk, all ci Pomeroy, Robert and
Sandy Faulk of Urbana, and Arvin
and Mary Jo Faulk of Columrus;
one daughter, Garnet Golding of
Taylor, Mich.; three other daughters and sons-In-law, Irene and
Registration for the fall quarter at Rio Grande Col• and
CU!ford Klein, Shirley and Richard
Community College will be Sept. 23!rom 9to11::lla.m., l ::ll to4 p.m .
Friend, all of Pomeroy, and Ruth
and 6 to 8 p.m. at the Tech leal Careers Center.
and Kenneth McKinney ol Urbana;
Classes will begin on Sept. 24 and wUl end Dec. 6.
a brother-in-law, Elsworth Faulk rl.
For more Information, contact the RloGrandeCollegeAdmlsslons
Columrus; 32 grandchildren and 57
office at (614) 245-5353or toll free ln Ohio at (800) 282-72()1.
great·grandchlldren.
F'IIRtlS PLACE WINNERS- 'l,be quality ct tennis
Lynne Crow, Diane Law!lln, whoteamedlotakeftnt
I;lesldes her parents, she was
ID llle Big Bead -laapparmlly bnprovlngthrough
place 1n the women's doubles; Law!lin and Rick Crow
preceded In deatll by her husband,
llle eftorts ol memben ol the Syraaue Baquet Club,
who teamed 1o take first place In the mlXed doubles,
Walter Faulk, and a daughter,
'l1Ml8e lour D1Mlbon bralp.t home three lint place
andJohnBentleywhotookftntplacelnlllemen'sover
Myrtle Faulk.
tropNee frGm the umaal Belpre City Open Tennis
311sln(lles.
Fwieral services will be 2 p.m.
Touruameat
over 111e weekend. From llle Jell are
Marrtage licenses have been Issued ln Meigs County Probate Court
.
Sunday at the Ewing Funeral Home
to Ira Carl Baker, 35, and Rosemacy Marie Althouse, 19, both of
with Rev. Robert Miller ctflctatlng.
Albany; Carl Ruben Alley, 25, and Stella Louise Sarson,~. both of
will be In Beech Grove
Burial
Racine; Earl Michael Johnson , 35, Thppers Plains, and Marie Elena
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
Marcinko, 22, Thppers Plains.
Meigs County Coort Judge Pa·
Fined lor speeding In OJuntyOJurt
funeral home anytime after 11 a .m.
trick
O'Brien
concluded
55
cases
in
were
Jeffrey Little, Columrus, $22
Saturday.
All units of the Meigs County
Wednesday proceedings.
and costs; Michael Shepperson, Emergency Medical Services made
Fined were Jeffrey Hysell, Ra- Bowerston, $!/A and costs; James 237 runs during August, Admlnlstra·
cine, $250 and costs, six months In
Anderson, Huntington, $21 and tor Bob Byer reporis.
jail with all rut 50 days suspended, a
costs; Winton Anderson, Millfield,
Included In the calls answered
A divorce has been granted in Meigs Coonty Common Pleas Court
year license suspension, five years $22 and costs; Harcy Wllllams, Jr., were 176 emergency runs and 61
to Shirley A. Smith, Middleport, from LlnOJln E . Smith, M!ddl€port,
probatkln, DWI; Howard Peck,
Vincent, ~and costs; Gerald Linn, transfers. During the emergency
on grounds of gross neglect of duty.
·,
Cheshire,
$150
and
costs,
suspended
Cambridge,
$22 and costs; John runs with 151 patients being
By DENIS G. GULINO
A restraining order has been Issued against the plaintlfflnadlvorce
till
day
jail
sentence,.
a
year
$:!&gt; and costs; transported, IOOpatlentsweretaken
Mears,
Huntington,
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
action flied by Robert L. Reeves, Pomeroy, against Marjorie M.
probation,
selling
intoxicating
11·
$22 and to Veterans Mel)'lorial Hospital; 29
Wllllam
Howell,
Pomeroy,
nation's economy Is oo the rebound,
Ree.ves, Chesler, pending final action In the matter.
quor
on
Sunday;
Randy
Staats,
Paul
Walls,
Lancaster,
$19 to Holzer Medical Center, slx lo
costs;
rut the rate of growth Is much less
Lena Kay Riffle, Reeds9ille, has filed for divorce from Bruce F.
Racine,
$75
and
costs,
suspended
and
costs;
Michael
VIllers,
Parkersthan the robust surge the White
Pleasant Valley Hospital and 16 to
Rille, charging gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty.
five day jail sentence, six months
rurg, $22 and,costs; Wesley Deem, other inslltutklns. Runs made by
House
hoped
lor,
private
eronoLor! Anne Howard, Middleport, has flled lor divorce from Jerome
probation, no operator's license;
Belpre, S23andcosts; RlckMac!ocl , units include Pomeroy 51; Racine
mlslssay.
Keith Howard, Pomeroy, charging gross neglect ci duty and extreme
Larcy
Oe!and,
Rutland,
$75
and
Lancaster,
$21 and costs; Don M.
The Bureau ol Economic Analy17; Syracuse 16; Rutland 36;
cruelty. A restraining order has been Issued against the defendenl
Rose, Portland, $21 and costs; Clyde Thppers Plains 23; Middleport 33
sts, a plivate forecasting group, costs, suspended three day jail
pending final action.
comes up with Its own esthnate sentence, six months probation, no Sayre, Racine, $22 and OJsts; Jercy and transfer squads 61. All vehicles
A restraining order has also been issued against 1llomas Hysell,
Deems, Point Pleasant, W.Va. , $24 were driven 7,482.6 miles or an
today about the economy's current operator's license; Stephen Taylor,
Pomeroy, pending final action In a divorce filed by Brenda M. Hysell,
$75
and
costs,
three
days
Pomeroy,
and
costs; Tracl Mearns, Racine, average of 31.57 miles per call.
performance, publishing what Is
Pomeroy.
In
jall
to
be
suspended
It
an
$:!&gt;
and costs; Herbert Hunt,
known as a flash projectlon or the
Karen S. Grate and David L. Grate, both of Pomeroy, have
operator's'license
Is
obtained
within
Marlon,
$26 and costs; Michael
gross national product.
petitioned the court for a dissolution of their marrtage.
60
days,
no
opepator's
license;
MeEntee,
Huntington, $aJ and
The group settled on a range from
A divorce action filed by Iva Kathecyn Logan, Pomeroy, against
$100
and
Danny
Morgan,
Pageville,
costs;
John
Carllsle,
Hender!lln, $21
v~ Memorial Hospllal
2.5 percent to 4 percent growth for
Dwight E . Logan, Pomeroy, has been dismissed.
costs,
suspended
flve
day
jail
and costs; Wllllam Russell , Racine,
Admls.slons - Kalhtji Oliver,
the July-September perkxl. Anything outside of that range wUl be sentence, six month's probation, . $23 and costs; David Cunningham, Pomeroy; Mildred Gilmore, CheBelpre, $ln and costs; Lenna shire; Johil Leach, Mlddleport;
either exciting or depressing lor drug aruse; Randall Carl, Pome$50
and
costs,
no
motorcycle
roy,
Duckett,
Pomeroy, $22 and costs; Ernestine Werry, Pomeroy;
Wall Street and foreign exchange
endorsement;
Marshall
King,
GalliRoe, New Haven, $28and Brooke Lyons, Pomeroy; Gertude
Lawrence
markets.
$711
and
costs,
overweight.
polis,
co's
Is;
Christina
Pullins, Pomeroy, Pellegrino, Racine; Charles Lee,
A defau II judgment of $50,00J.!ll has been granted In Meigs County
Some analysts thought 2.?percent
$22
and
costs;
Connie Back, Syracuse.
Common Pleas Court to People's Bank of Point Pleasant, In a
would be about right.
Also fined were John Y ales,
$23
and
costs; Peter
Huntington,
Discharges - Betty VanMeter,
foreclosure action against Thurston Stone, Jr., Mlddleport,et al, for
"My guessls lttherelsgoingtohe Pomeroy, resUtutlon and costs,
Gayer, VIenna, $23 and costs; Kathryn Moore, Bernice Smith.
property in Middleport Village.
a SU!llrtse lt Is going to be on the high suspended 10 day jail sentence, a
Kenneth McCullough, Jr., PomeDiamond Savings and Loan Company has been granted a judgment
side rather than the low side," said year probation, passing bad checks;
of $19,658.57 plus Interest In a foreclosure action against N . Jean
economist L. Douglas Lee of the Danny Kuhn, Middleport, costs, slx roy, $21 andOJsts.
Forfeiting bonds In county court
Burnside, Fort Myer, Fla ., for property in Sulton Township.
WashlngtonAnalysisCo!ll. forecast months in jail with all but two days
Bank One of Athens, has flied suit in Meigs Coonty Common Pleas
flrm. "It looks Hkethere area couple suspended, a year probation, do- were Bruce Hart, Columbus, $42,
Court against Elden C. Blake, Jr., Splingfleld, and Helen Blake,
things going which would make the mesllc violence; Sheldon Lowry, speeding; Kermit Gilkey, Shade,
$35, Insecure load; Raymond Par·
lhlrd-quarter GNP tlgure look Athens, $50 and costs, possessing a
Palatka, Fla., et al, requesting judgment ci $18,181.36 for property In
T, ,.., d ·'
Olive Township.
firearm while pUrsuing a raccoon ham, Columbus, s;o, speeding; Lor!
pretty robust." .
ht•.tutilullj· olt"):'~ ' l
Belpre,
$70,
speeding;
Klinger,
Lee's estimate would take the with a dog during the closed season;
lurwr ~l Jfr,UI_!:t n&gt;&lt;."tll .
I'"' ,,,II "r ""'
Lyle Sinclair, Athens, costs only, Marshall King, Gallipolis, $45,
growth figure up around 4 percent.
POMEROY
failure
to
display
valid
registration.
"My feeUng Is about 3 peR-en!, disorderly OJnduct; Steven TrusFLOWER
SHOP
perhaps more, would be a fair sell, Long Bottom, costs, failure to
,. w-.,, lm ,.,-1,... "-•Hofo/ ,..,,•·
ftHOJt Dr "2-51ll
estimate ol what the economy Is display highway users tax strker;
doing," said economist Lawrence Melvin McQueen, Reedsville, $10
Chtmerlne, head of the Chase and costs, assured· clear distance;
Pearl Hutchinson, Wellston, $10 and
Econometlics forecast firm.
A rule of tllumb used by most costs, running a stop sign; Cynthia
economists Is that a sustained Mayle, Long Bottom, $5 and costs,
growth rate of between 3 percent unsafe vehicle; Elmer Parsons, Jr.,
and 4 percent Is necessary to keep Racine, $10 and cost, iefl of center;
unemployment from getting worse. Norbert Neutzllng, Jr .. Long BotThe GNP figures are the changes tom,
and costs, left of center;
In the dollar value uf all goods and Willie Jacks, Long Bottom, costs .
seJVlces adjusted for lnfiaUon. The and retrain from complainant,
first formal report on third-quarter disorderly conduct; James
GNP, likely revising the flash Lofgren, Homestead •. Fla .. two days
report, will be made next rmnth.
In Jail and costs, petty theft;
"I'm sort of looking for a number Gregory Davis, Long Bottom, costs
of about 3 percent," said economist and obtain license, no operator's
Nigel Gault, a forecaster for Data license; Jeffrey ShtOet, Rutland, $10
Resources Inc. Gault said Thurn- and costs, Improper passing.
day's figures on in&lt;X~me, spending
and savings showed consumern are
already hurting.
Tax revenues received
The savings rate for August
Registrar Michael J. McCulllon
dipped to the lowest monthly figure
on reOJrd 2.8 percent of announced thai the Bureau ol Motor
Vehicles has the August, 1985
disposable Income.
lndustrlal production data for the distriru lion ot license tax revenues
third quarter so far "Is not lhal totaling $17,396,(8).96 ready for
strong," Gault said.
disbursement to local governments.
ON TilE LIGHT SIDE- While Gen. James V. llartinger'sconunenls
But other factors • figure Into Meigs County's share Is $57,972.94.
1o the nearly 50 persons gathered at Grace Episcopal Church sor an
Member FDIC
measuring the GNP. For example,
address on the ''Star Wars" lssuewere1110141ym the serious side, Hwas
the buying spree at auto dealerships
not without his usual humeroussldellgbs ...... Uke p.......,tlng this VSAF
will perhaps deplete auto inventoSpace Command cap IAl Rae Reyolds, regent ol Retum Jonathan Melp
ries enough to spur extra strong
Chapter, DAR.
production. ·
The trade deficit lor July was
SU!llrislngly small rut typically
bounces back even harder after a
Many years ago families at the time of a death would
low month, cutting Into eqlllomlc
hi(e death cryers. which would go out into the com·
growth.
munity and publicly announce that a death had taken
By MICHAEL O'MALLEY
earlier this week reported Incidents
place. Then as lime went by people began using :he
However, the fact remains that
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Supertn· of alleged sexual abuse and mystewindows
of local businesses to display death notices.
the economy Is ooly gently relx&gt;und·
tendent Thomas Mandryk of the rious deaths at tlle centers. In one
In
modem
times the daily newspaper and now radio
ing from Its 1.1 percent growth rate
Northeast Ohio Developmental Cen-. Incident, a wbeelchalr·bound resihave
become
the method to give notice of death . This
or the first hnlt of the year and does
ter for i he retarded resigned
new
display
is
just another method of giving notice of
dent at NEODC's Broadview
not seem to be near the 5 pel cent
Thursday in the wake of published Heights campus was raped, became
death.
second-halt rate the White House Is
reports a lleging rape, sexual abuse pregnant and gave birth.
We feel thai it is very important for all the friends
INa,.. of D-cned)
predicting.
and mysterious deaths at three
and
relatives to be made aware of the death of a loved
Reports also said that three
The Commerce Department also
(TiJH of Callna Hours)
Cleveland-area campuses or the deaths at the centers were not
one.
Many limes we have heard the regrets of a friend
revises !Is measure of GNP growth
of
Service)
stale-run Institution.
they were not there to comfort a widow or wibecause
properly reported.
during the second quarter, last
dower. Friends and relatives are very important and are
"I'm not going to speak lor Tom
(Place
of
S.rvict)
reported to be just 2 percent. The
needed to help comfort the survivors.
personally," said Patrick J . Rafter,
David Hasara, :ll, died at the first quarter saw almost no ad·
a state commissioner of re~&lt;m~at!on Broadview Heights campus last
vance, at 0.3 percent.
The followina are just lwo instances where we think this type of display would be helpful.
programs during a news confer· May. NEODC officials said he died
I)
llny people In our community have trouble reading the smaller basic print found in the regular newsence. " I do bell~e that he was of a seizure, but the newspaper said
paper obituary. This we know by the many calls we get daily asking about the time and day of services
basrally tired. And he felt that the a coroner's report showed Hllsara
2)
In today's fast pace world many people ilo not read the newspapers faithfully. W• hope this display
emotional tension at this point was died with bruises on his chin and
wi.ll b!inaatte.nlion to the d~th of. friend if someone .is just glan~in' throuc~ ~~~1 ,
Today - Suney with a high IIlio
hindering hls abUlty to do his job."
lace, his neck was broken In two
Th1s d1spl1y wtll only be published an the newspaper wtth thelamtltes authoriJ#.\~ _'
J.\Q.St im85. Southwest winds 10 to 15 mph.
Meanwhile, It was also announced places and his spinal cord disloportlnt thin&amp; to us etthe Rawlincs-Coats-Biower Funerel Home is the !emily we \~ ' !ltl lhat is
Tonight - Partly cloudy. Low In
that a formallnvest!gatkln Into the cated, which paralyzed him.
why we take tile time to plen uch and every detail the !emily hn requested and then ca(ry,• the best
the upper 50s. Winds becorn!Jag
alleged a ruses at lbe centers would
ponlble service we know how. If you have eny questions or comments please let us know.
Hasara was kept In a campus . northwest 10 to 15 mph.
be conducted immediately by the
"Service Plus ... Attention To Detail"
cUntc lor 24 hours before being
Saturday-Partlycloudy.Hlghin
Ohio Highway Patrol.
themk17Us.
BILL ILOWEI
The Cl~eland Plain Dealer moved to a hospital.
Meigs County Emergency Medical SeJVIce reports seven callS
Thursday; Middleport at 11: 02 a.m. to Laurel Street for JohnLeach to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine Fire Department was called to
a structure fire on Bashan Road at 12:48 p.m. where a room ln the Pal
McCarty esidencewas des toyed; Raclneat3:.54 p.m. to49ll2Manuel
Road for Portia Fluker!lln to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy
at 5:03p.m. to 8J6 East Main Street for Dooglas Dupler to Veterans
Memortal Hospital; Pomeroy at 7: Oil p.m. to Monkey Run for
Clarence Lee to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracuse at 7: 09p.m to
Chercy ~tree! for Charles Lee to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 11: 48p.m. to34560Rock SpringsRoadforRichardFlnlaw
to Veterans Memorial Hospital . .

Second 'quake hits Mexico

War games
for 'Weekend

.

55 cases heard in Meigs Court

Divorce granted in Meigs court

· Emergency squads
answers 237 calls

Economy
•
growmg

Hosnital news

$50,000 default judgment granted

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWE

m

Starting $ePtember 3Q CRntralTrust is
JwvingaSale on somethingyou really uxmt.

til
. ..,..

WHAT IS THE REASON FOR THIS NEW DISPLAY
I HAVE SEEN ON THE OBITUARY PAGE?

NDC superintendent resigns

RAWLINGS-COATS

BLOWER

FUNERAL HOME

SHYING THE FAMILY OF

m-

Weather fo~si

.

'

'

Inside:

Bob Hoeflich discU88es a Pomeroy street
resUrfacing project - Page B-8

Aloagthe.River ............... 8-HI
Bullloeill.'''".- .... " ....... ' ..... D-1

-Page 8-l

F..dltorlals ......................... A-2
Sports ''' '.'.·..... ' .. " .......... ' C.1·8
Take-On.e ....... ....... ~ ...••. lqaeft

Humorist Art Buchwald explores the 'alphabet-

. neurosis' - Page A-2 .

Rio Grande registration scheduled

Marriage licenses granted

Page
Ohio weather:
fair weekend
in forecast
--Page A-3--

•

tmes
Vol. 20 No. 33

11 Sectiont, 78 Pagel 60 Cent•

Sunday, September 22, 1985

A Multimedia Inc . Nowapapor

~~==~;;=:::-===~~
- ~"

.
al
.
.
•
FISC . CftSIS: it wouldn't happen here
Copyrightod1Hp

ees, "OJnstantly checking" with the board of county

County's by a fEw thousand, rut 1985 general fund
appropriatiOns w.ere nearly the same for both
counties. Jackson Coonty fell from a $2 mW!on
general fund ln 191M to $1.8 mUlion this year.
At this time, county government operations are
nearly at a standstill in Jackson Coonty where
offlceholders spent in eight months their 12 month
allocations lor 1985.
Says Meigs County CO!l)mlssloner Rich Jones, "I
can see how this coukl happen but I can tell you It
would not luippen In lhlS county."
Jones attrtbules this statement to the fact that
Auditor Bill Wickline and Treasurer George Collins
are "constantly monltorlng," Meigs County's flnan-

By NANCY YOACHAM
'l'lmel 8enth I S&amp;a!f
POMEROY- Meigs County government spending
for the cutTellt year Is well within ~etary
guldeiines established at the heg1nnlng of :19115, unlike
nearby Jackson County.
With a popu1atlonol23,641, Meigs Countyhegan this
year's operations with a total budget d $7,(61,5311.56.
This amount was up about $100,00J frOm 191M's rudget
ot $6,956,046.
·
· ·
Meigs' general fund appropriations for 1985 totaled
$1,718,493.25 while In 1984. the general fund totaled
$1,643,993.
Jackson County's population Is larger than Meigs

commissioners and "constantly reviewing and
updating'' the commissioners in regard to the
county's finances. "I give the highest credit to those
two Individuals," he says, "because I think they do an
outstanding job."
Perlodlc review of county funds Is not mandated rut
periodic review takes place In Meigs Coonty because
as Jones puts It, "we find It necessary justlo keep up."
Jones says that at beSt, "Meigs Coonty operates on a
shoestring." Under these circumstances he adds,
"you must continually monitor yoor finances or
you're going to have trouble."
Colllns says that he and Wickline review the

Jones

county's finances on a montllly basis " just to stay on
top." These meetings are held In addition to regular
rudgel OJrnmlsslon meetings which Include Prosecu·
tor Rick Crow, the third commission member.
Jones says that in the nine years since he has been
In public office, all Meigs Coonty offlceholders
"generally have tlied their beSt to stay within their
budgets." He adds 'that "there are exceptions to lhlS
and always wlll be, because of so-called emergencies
that might develop -'- a piece of equipment breaks
· down, suppUes are needed or a change o~.law comes
Into effect requiring Increased spending.
·
(Continued on page A·3)

Shawnee plan could
devastate Rio Grande
Community College In Portsmouth
to a four-year lnstltutkm.
~staff
In Gallla County, how~er, many
GALLIPOLIS - Residents of ·
fear the proposal strongly
Scioto County are rallying around a
suppnrtedbyHouseSpeakerVernal
pto•Jl06al to expand Shawnee State
G. Riffe, Jr. - will have a
"devastating effect" on Rio Grande
· College and Community Colletle.
A Rio Grande task force appointed to study the lmpact ci the
propoeal CODCiudes: "Sucb an
8I'I'IJW!II*It W08Id be counter to
llil! blat Interest of Rio Grande
College and Community Colletle.
"Inordinate competition for students and development dollars In an
era of projected enrollment decline
and lnad!!Quate ~ilar $1ppnrt
constitute the most serlousobjectlon
to·- Shawnee State becoming a'
tour-year Institution," the tasklorce
writes.

By I.ARRY EWING

. EQUITY IN THE MARKET
- "'The propoeed change would
benefit Shawnee Stale, a public

Institution, at the expense ol a
private Institution," said Rio
Grande Collep President Dr.
Clouclus R. SrnJih said. "'11118
would create a problem where
none needs lo exlst... Equlty 1D
lhe marketplace Is our primary

concern."

counties.
H Shawnee Stale had achieved
four' stalus In the 1984-85 academic
year, thestudyprojects,RioGrande
would have experienced a potential
loss of 217 full- Ume students, with a
resulting loss of $QI6,9661n tulUon.
"While the change In status of
ShawneeStatewUlhaveane!fecton
the higher education system In Ohio
as a whole," Rio Grande President
Dr. Oodus R. Smith said last week,
"as ltscloaest!ll!lghbor, ltwWhavea
devastating Impact on both. our
four·year private college and 1\royear public colletle.''
'Equity ID the Markel'
"The proposed change would
benefit Shawnee Stale, .a public
Institution, at the expense of a
private Institution," Dr. Smltll said.
'"This would create a problem
Slpllleant a where none needs to exlsl."
Rlo Grande's Director of Admls·
"Equity in the marketplace Is our
RIO GRANDE IMPACT- Many fearllle pro(I08al College and Community College. A Rio Grande task
primacy concern," Dr. Smith said.
slons and Records Dean S. Brown
to convert Shawnee Slate Cornniudly College In Ioree appointed 1o study the hnpacl of lbe proposal
said last week a study conducted by
"We have no queslion about our
Portsmouth lo a four-year oollege - a plan strongly concludes: ''Such an arrangement would l"l oounler
the . task force Indicates "slgnlfl·
abll!ty to compete quality-wise.
IAl the best Interest ol Rio Grande College and
supporied by Hou!ll! Speaker Vernal G. RUle, Jr. However, when you put a public
cant" losses to Rio Grande In terms
ContnlUnity College."
will
have
11 "devlllltllllng effect" on Rio Grande
of both student population and . tnstllutlon against a prtvate one, we
development dollar~
might find It hard to compete
develop third and fourth year
four-year system rather than to
cost-wise."
.
and Community College lose Its
Since both Rio Grande and the
academic programm!I)g, while ·re·
transfer at the beginning of their
Dr, Smith further points to the
juniors and seniors whO now have
proposed four-year institution at
talnlng Its status as. a community
junior year."
recent completion or the Appalachtheconvenlenceofamajorhighway
Portsmouth would be pulling from a
college.
The Shawnee Plan
tan Highway as a complicating and Increased access1b!l1ty to Shaw·
service aree of overlapping adjaIn order for the OJilege to meet its
The Shawnee State proposal neeSiateatlowerrates,"Dr. Smlth
cent counties, the study projects factor for Rio Grande, If Shawnee
planned
1988 opening as a four-year
which Riffe reportedly plans to
said "but will lose freshmen and
potential losses (ranging from 10 to State shoukl achieve four·year
institution
- as unanimously supstatus.
pote~tlal ·four-year students as well Introduce to the Ohio Legislature In
90 percent) of studlentsattendlngRio
(Contlnued
on page A-4)
November- calls for the OJllege to
Grande from southeastern Ohio
"NotonlywUlR!oG::,r:an::;de;:;,;C~o;;;Ueg=e;....;w:;;h:;;o;..:;;,;:;~;;;lo~sta;;;rt;.;..l;;.n.th_e.;pu_bl•lc

1

Foote Mineral plant
closing 'a sad thing'
By Judy Morg1111
OVPStalfWrlter
PT. PLEASANT, W.Va. - The
planned dismantling of Foote Minera! Company's 28-year-old Gra·
ham Station plant at New Haven Is
"a very sad-lhlng" rut "afactofllle
1n the metals industcy" today, says
Frank Hurley, vice pl'e!'ldent and
generalma&lt;tagerforthecompany's
ferroalloy division.
Company officials announced
Friday the Mason County ferroall.oy
plant will cloo;e Dec. 31, putting :JD
people, lnclud!ng250hourlyworkers
. who took concessions two years ago
to help keep the plant operating, out
of a job. Hurley blames the decision
to close the plant on declining
market condltlonscausedprlmarily
by large volumes · of Imported
ferroal!oys. "Imports are lncreasing, prtcesaredecreaslng,"hesays.
. "If you heard the President talk
(Tuesday) night, It was obvioushels
not interested In gtving (trade l
protection to any Industry In the
United Stales." Hurley adds.
While Foote Mineral over the past
several years has been ma~&lt;~ng

closing was forced when the
companyenteredintoanagreement
withSKW A!loysofN!agaraFallsto
transfertoSKW, adlvtslonolaWesl
German firm of the same name, lis
specialty foundry products line
Including technology, trade names
and patents.
Foote will continue to produce
fermslllcon, which has been produced at the Graham Station plant,
as well as vanadium and boron
products at Its Keokuk, Iowa and
Cambridge, Ohio plants.
·
The OJmpany wUl also provide
technical assistance through 1986 to
SKW which plans to produce
foundcy alloys at lis Calvert City,
Ky., plant.
•
Workers at the Graham Station
plant are wondering "why us?"
AlthOugh Hurley says Foote
Mineral has been sulfering losses
for the past lour years, Bernard
White of Mason. vice president for
Local 5171 of the United Steelworkers ol America and a 24-year
employee at Graham Station, says
indicatiOns were that the local Plar!t
.was oo the upswing.

Joint. effort to push
Meigs tourism begins
By NANCY YOACHAM

Tribune Staff Writer
POMEROY - · When the stale
disperses $.1X),OOJ In of travel and
tourism grants late this fall, Meigs
County hopes to have a piece of the
ple.
A cooperative effort among the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce,
the Meigs County Historical Society
and the Meigs County Park District
Is underway to secure a $15,00J
matching grant from the Ohio
Department of Development's Of.
- . • flee of Travel and Tourism.
If awarded, the grant would have
to be matched locally through
In-kind services, donations and what
Stephen Powell, a Meigs County
park dlstrlct commissioner, describeS as "creative financing,"
bringing the total amount Invested
In the project to $ro,OOJ.
The purpose of the state funding Is
AFTER 'DIE NEWS _ Aboul M workers at Foote Mineral
to promote loulism ·throughOut the
CompuiY'aGraluun S&amp;atloa, aome of whom are shown here leavlnglhe
state, provide local jobl and market
pliant durtnllhe t.p.m. lllllll chan&amp;e, were lold Friday of the company's
the state's hlslorlcal, ethnic and
deelllon to d.., 111e ZS..,.,..-old fen-oalloy plant on Dec. 81. The
cultural value In the process.
uiaouncement came on 111e ume clay Foote Mineral disclosed II has
II Meigs County receives a grant ,
m1erec1 1n1o an eemeat willa SKW Ailo)'sof Nlqara Falla to transfer
the money would be used by the
111 opec1a11y feuntlry produll line.

..

. . .-

..

*''

three sponsoring organizations to
develop a county brochure high·
lighting local points of Interest. The
brochure would be distributed
statewide and a map of the county
would be included. Sale of advertls·
ments In the brochure would help
pay the required match.
Part of the grant would also be
used to develop a high quality,
well-researched slide show presen·
tatlon to he shOwn in sch09ls and In
meetings of local organlzallon5
throughout the county.
Development of I he brochure and
slide presentation should produce
some parltime jobs in the areas of
research and photography.
Says Powell , "the opportunity for
the development of the tourtsm
industcyln Meigs County Is here."
Powell ci1es national averages as
he explains the "multiplier effect"
which toulism has on local economy. According to national figures,
each tourism dollar spent In a
particular area Is multiplied three
times before leaving that area.
Meigs County, sltu~ted directly
(Continued on page A-5)

p~;;;~· b;;k;A~ trend; will remove 190 parking meters .
y
.
the

POMEROY While many
communitieS are looking to adding
more parking meters, Pomeroy Is
110tng against that trend and wru
remove 190 meters from village
parking lots this . week 10 provide
free parking.
Mayor Dick Seyler and councll
annou. that all parking meters

- a total d 190 which bring about
$1Dl a monlh Income into the
village treasury -will be removed
ftrml the tw.o parklng lots running
alongtheOhloRlver.
Oftlclala lilY that the action will
permit all bullneu eanployes ct the
towntohavetreeparklngaswellas,
hopetully,eiiCO\Ii"tllllbuf'-lnthe

rtune lime as the holidays
:::do:'Christmas shopping peliod
approach. Council wants to make
parking as convenient as possible
for people to shop at local business
establishments.
The action to remove the meters Is
an expea bu.,nt and otrtclals exaeneraledbythevtllageiDcornelaX.
pressed hope lhallhe free parking
Thlachange, tlleysay,allocomesat ·
,
downtown area.
The vlllage, however, will retain
the parking meters on the rallraod
rlflht ctway and In front ci the stores
In therustnesasectlon.
Thla c~~an&amp;e Is poalble, offldals
report, because ci the I'I!Yenue

privilege will not be abused . They
are requesting that all employes of
businesses 1n town continue to park
on the rlversldeo!the lots to free the
street side to shoppers.
Parking meters were first In·
stalled in the Pomeroy ruslness
section inl948 when the late Delmar
A. Canaday was mayor. Then
1

t

'

I

meterswereaddedlothetwolotsln
1956 when the late E. F . Robinson
was In the mayor's post.
Motorists have been able to park
at the meters along tbe parking lot
wallsatfivecentsan hourwhtlethe
cost for use of meters on the street
side of the lots has been 10 cents an
hour lor several rears.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="189">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2779">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="6047">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="6046">
              <text>September 20, 1985</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1845">
      <name>faulk</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
