<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11122" 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="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/11122?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-01T20:01:12+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42089">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/690716ff571bf46bc6d969905bcc008a.pdf</src>
      <authentication>dbb429b7c64be5b223dc370be21ff386</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="35084">
                  <text>Page--.:14-The Dally Sentinel

Thursday,

Ohio

-Attacks on Miami tourists.
spur anti-crime campaign

.

.....

;
OUT MATCHED. Jeff Williamson, Sr.,
rigbt, a black belt in Tae Kwon Do, shows bis
son, JefF Williamson, Jr., 9, some basic moves in
their Cincinnati home Wednesday afternoon.

Test drive
KOKOMO, Ind. (AP)
Instead of walkin~ a mile in the
plaintiffs shoes. a judge has decid·
ed to drive a few miles in her auto·
mobile.
Lois Featherstone is sui ng
Chrysler Corp., claiming her 1989
Plymouth Reliant is a lemon. She is
trying to recover the cost of the car
and related expenses.
Chrysler maintains there is nothing wrong with the car, and both
sides lined up mechanics to support
their cases.
A Chrysler anorney suggested
Superior Court Judge Dennis H.
Parry drive the car for himself, and
Featherstone agreed, so Parry took
custody of the car for two weeks.
Parry said he has heard fewer
than 10 "lemon law" cases in his
12 years on the bench, ''but never
one where anyone wanted me to
drive the car for awhile."
After one week of driving the
car, he declined to say Monday
how the test drive was going.

·:&gt;\

Tbe older Williamson said be will save his
money on bis son's classes by teaching bim now.
{AP)

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Heman actor Sylvester Stallone ftled a
$25 million libel suit against a
tabloid that said he became impotent from steroid use and received a
surgical implant to correct the
problem.
The lawsuit against the Montreal-based News Extra. was filed

in a high-crime part of town and
asked for directions.
Mrs. Hayward, 59, was shot in
the chest and remains hospitalized.
Her husband, 63, suffered graze
wounds. The shots were fired
through the window of their rental
car.
Two men were arrested and
charged with attempted murder,
armed robbery and burglary.
The Chamber of Commerce, the
Greater Miami Visitors and Convention Bureau, airlines, botels and
restaurants came up with the
reward and arranged free flights
and accommodations for the Hay·
wards' relatives.

Wednesday in Superior Coon.
An Aug. 12 story said that the
star bulked up with steroids for the
"Rocky" films, then underwent
implant surgery "in order to save a
relationship."
A call to News Extra offices in
Montreal went unanswered late
Wednesday.

~

~ t: ·

.......~

~
_,
•
The anti-crime campaign - Ied;:f

by law enforcntent authorities and--i
the tourist industry- includes: ::;
- Printing 500,000 pamp~let(l
listing safety tips and emergenc)'j
phone numbers. They will be dis-~
tributed by rental car companies~
travel agencies and airlines.
~
- Creating a fund to pay foC
tourists to return to testify against:
their auackers.
. .,.
- Improving cooperation ;::;
between police and prosecutors to -:c
ensure suspec!S face the most seri- :,
ous charge possible.
:;
- Encouraging rental car com- ;::
panics to remove bumper stickers-'
that mark the tourists as easy prey. ~

Reds top Giants

Miami

Jumey said about 8,000 crimes
were committed against tourists in
Dade County last year, including
1,400 violent crimes.
Police would not conftim those
figures, saying they do not have
separate category for crimes
against tourists. But a police
spokesman said crimes against
tourists had become the "in thing"
in Miami in recent months.
John and Rose Hayward of
Oxfordshine, England; were robbed
and shot Aug. 29 af!er they got lost

a

defeats
Houston

AHA food festival

PageS

OR 80 COUNT

=-

The building w.ill be brick and
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
contain
three large rooms; each 60
Senlinel News StaiT
by
20
feet,
restrooms and kitchen
Groundbreaking ceremonies for
facilities,
and
will feature an outa new building at the corner of
North Second and Hudson Street in door playground in the center of
Middleport to house the Ginger- the C-shaped building.
It will be built with ramps to
bread House Pre-School were held
provide
easy access to handicapped
Thursday evening.
children.
Construction by Contractor J. J.
Mrs. Nuggud, who holds a masMcGuire will begin this fall,
according to Shirin Nuggud. opera- ter's degree in early childhood
tor of the Ohio licensed facility education, said that the building
which accepts three to six year olds will be constructed to meet requirements for day care for babies. six
for pre-school and daycare.
months
and over, in anticipation of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffexpanding
the program now
man and Council Members Jack
offered
at
the
Gingerbread
House.
Satterfield and James Clatworthy
Currently
there
are
24
three to
represented the village and particisix
year
old
children
enrolled
in the
pated in the groundbreaking.
pre-school and dav care. programs.

FABRIC SOFTENER

13 GAL. TALL KITCHEN BAGS
30 GAL. LAWN &amp; LEAF BAGS

64

$499

oz. !

$188
DOVE

LAMINATING SERVICE
Protects and Preserves Photographs, Recipes,
Membership Cards, Business Cards, Hunting/Fishing
licenses by Sealing In Waterproof, Airtight Plastic.
We Can Laminate Up To A 6"x4" Size In Seconds.

DISHWASHING LIQUID
22 oz.

88&lt;

19¢

------------------------PHOTO SPECIAL
@ -------------------------

PLASTIC
·TUBULAR HANGERS

PHOTO BUTTON
SPECIAL

Bleach With
Cleaner

2 1/4" Bunon for

ONLY

99&lt;

79¢

regular price .99e

2501 JACKSON AVENUE
POtNT PLEASANT,
wv. 25550
(304) 675-2303

JoltMy Canon. who became the
tone-time !lost of NBC-TV's "The Tonlpt Sbow.' wail a staff writer for
~ Skelton'• variety show in 1954
wlten be 10t bil. big brellk. Carson
filled in at tbe last minute for Skelton
after tbe slapstick comic injured him·
~elf during rebearsal.,

---- -- -- -

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP)
- The United Steelworkers union
is claiming a win in its ongoing
battle to isolate Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. after a major brewery
decided to stop using cans made of
the company's aluminum.
The Stroh Brewery Co. of
Detroit will stop using cans made
of aluminum produced by the Jackson County plant. union and
Ravenswood officials said Thurs·
day.
·
About 1,700 union workers
hav e been off the job at the
Ravenswood plant since Nov. I,
when the union's contract expired.
The union contends the workers
have been locked out of the plant,
while the company says they are on
strike and has hired permanent
replacement workers.
"We arc pleased with their
responsible action, and we urge all

union members to take note of
Stroh's decision io support of our
members," said George Becker,
int?rnational vice president for the
union.
Telephone calls to Stroh's
Detroit headquarters went unan-

swercd late Thursday. But
Ravenswood President Donald
Worlledge asserted that the loss of
Stroh as a customer will not affect
Ravenswood's business.
"While we regret Stroh's deci·
Continued on page 3

Woman cited after accident
A Pomeroy woman was cited Medical Service transported Smith
after a two-vehicle accident on S.R. to Holzer Medical Center where
124 in Rutland Township Thursday she was treated for trauma, contu·
afmrnoon.
sions and abrasions and released .
According to a report from the Jacks was not treated.
Gallia·Meigs Post of the State
Damage to the front of Smith's
Highway Patrol, Helen F. Smith, 1991 Plymouth Colt was listed as
76, of Pomeroy was westbound on heavy and disabling. Damage to the
S.R. 124 and failed to stop for a rear of Jacks' 1984 Ford Ranger
pickup driven by Jerry L. Jacks, 46, was listed as l1ght.
of Langsville that had stopped for
Smith was cit?d by the patrol for
traffic. Smith's car then struck the failure 10 maintain assured clear
back of Jacks' pickup.
distance.
County Emergency
The

10 FOR $100

364 JACKSON PIKE
GALUPOUS,
OH. 45631.
(614) 446-6620

NORTH SECOND ST.
MIDDLEPORT,
OH. 45760
(614) 992-6491

,. ;'I

.,

Stroh quits using RAC aluminum

onr~1na1

Sept. 16 thru Sept. 22

Wllo'l Joluuly?

All teachers and aides have been
trained and meet the SUite. Ic.quirc·
ments, the owner said.
Mrs. Nuggud has been operating
the Gingerbread House in Middleport since 1986 at 286 North Sec·
ond Ave. in Middleport. Several
months ago she purchased the cor·
ncr lot and had the house on it
razed in preparation for the new
structure.
She anticipates that the building
will be ready to move into in early
1992.
Dr. and Mrs. Nuggud prior to
the groundbreaking broke a
coconut, a tradition for good luck
from theii' native country of India.
and afterwards served punch and
cookies.

SAVE .20e

Avallacie tram negat1ve or wul use the C\ostol'l"ers

HURRY! QUANTITIES ARE
LIMITED!

ticipating in the ceremonies were, from the left,
Jacob Young, a student, and his mother, Nellie
Young, Dr. J, Nuggud, Middleport Councilmen
.James Clatworthy and Jack Satterfield, the Rev.
Fr. AI McKenzie, and Michael Swishtr, director
of the Meigs County Department of Human Services.

Groundbreaking ceremonies
held for pre-school facility
'

I -

A Mulllmodla Inc. Newopaper

Interest rate is cut to
lowest level in 18 years

GROUNDBREAKING CEREMONIE.&gt;
HELD - Mrs. Shirin Nuggud assisted by two of
her students, Heather Hysell and Frank Shamblin, center, and Middleport Mayor Fred Hoff·
man turned tbe first shovelsful of dirt Thursday
at the construction site for the Gingerbrtad
House, North Second and Hudson. Others par-

FINAL TOUCH

2 Sectlono, 14 Pogo• 25 cents

Ohio, Friday, September 13, 1991

SMinY'·S IN .POMEROY

140 COUNT

Partly cloudy tonight. High
Saturday In mld.SOs. Chance or
rain 40 percent.

The Cost is $1 0.00-Tickets on Sale at

IRON-HOLD RECYCLE 1

Pick 3:214
Pick 4:5443
Cards : 2-H, J-C
4-D;S-S

Page 10

And you can bring your camera to this one.

A' YOUR 3 AREA FRU'R

Ohio Lottery

Page4

Come Out On
TUESDAY, SEPT. 17 at 9:00 P.M.
And Enioy The
INTERNATIONAL CALENDAR MEN
It's all in good fun!
The Pla,e: SMinY'S of Pomeroy

cares.''

Stallone sues tabloid

Water intoxication
for babies on rise
By UNDSEY TANNER
Associated Press Writer
CHICAGO (AP) - Water
intOxication, which can kill infants
by swelling their brains, has
increased sharply because poor parents who run out of formula give
their babies too much water, a
study indicates.
Welfare babies who are not
breast-fed are especially at risk,
according to pediatricians at St.
Louis Children's Hospital, where
34 cases of water intoltication were
treated between 1975 and 1990.
Twenty-four of those were in
the last three years, "indicating a
marked increase in incidence of
this previously rare condition ,"
said the study in September's
American Journal of Diseases in
Children. The journal is published
by the Chicago-based American
Medical Association.
Nearly all of the reported cases
involved infan!S living in poverty,
most of whom were given water
after the canned formula ran out,
the study.Wd.
When 100 much water is ingested over 100 short a time, brain cells
can be flooded and swell. The
swelling can cause seizures, irregular breathing and death, said Dr.
James P. Keating, the study's lead
author.
"It takes an overwhelming
drive, in this case hunger, that will
overcome the babies' natural resistance to ingesting too much
water," Keating said.
An accompanying editorial also
blamed the increase in part on a
move in the United States in the
past IS years to reduce salt in
mfant formula and food.
Less salt may lower babies' risk
of high blood pressure later in life,
but it also makes them more susceptible to water intoltication, said
Dr. Laurence Finberg, chairman of
the pediatrics deparunent at Children's Medical Center in New
York City, who wrote the editorial.
Most of the infants treated at the
St. Louis hospital were 4 to 5
months old and drank about three
B-ounce baby boules of water over
sill to 12 hours, Keating said. All
were otherwise healthy babies of
normal weight.
The infants suffered seizures
listing up to sill bours; 15 stopped
breathing and had to be resuscitated. All recovered, and none sufCered permanent disability, probably because they ~ot prompt medical allelltion, Keattng S8ld.

. ·.!'.

By SANDRA WALEWSKI
Assocla.ted Press Writer
MIAMI (AP) - Headlines
about tourists g~tting s)lot give
•mage-makers tn the city of
"Miami Vice" sweaty palms.
When a British couple became
the latest victims, the toutist industry didn' 1 merely wait for the publicity to die down. It offered a
$10,000 reward, flew in the victims' relatives and mounted a campaign to fi$hl such crimes in the
city that gamed a reputation in the
1980s for drug dealing and gunplay.
"After 'Miami Vice,' it's all
been an uphill battle for us," said
Kent Jumey of the Greater Miami
Chamber of Commerce.
"Somebody can be a victim of
crime in Peoria, but I doubt the
people in Peoria can respond any
better," he said. "The message we
want to get out is that we do have
problems, but we are a city that

,.,

. AN IN USE - The Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center has a new van to be used
tor transportatin&amp; tbe elderly and handicapped
and for delivering meals to the homebound
around the county. While funding tor more than
hair of the $21,130 cost or the van was received
in state and federal grant monies, donations are

still being taker} toward the local match. This .
tbe fourth van whicb the Center now hJJs m
operation. Here Wanda Vining assists Dayton
McElroy, an Overbrook patient, onto the
wheelchair lift of the van. Others preparing to
board are Virignia Walton, Reedsville, and
Caryl Tyler, Dexter.

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP Economics Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Federal Reserve, struggling to bol·
ster an extremely sluggish cconomy, announced today .it was push·
ing a key bank lending rate to its
lowest level in 18 years. The move
came closely on the hee ls of a
report showing consumer inflation
rose a tiny 0.2 percent in August.
The dec ision by the Fed to
tower its di sco unt rate from 5.5
percent dow n to 5 perce nt was
designed to set off a chain reaction
of lower interest rates throughout
the economy:
Within minutes of the announcment, one of the nation 's biggest
banks, Morgan Guaranty, saip it
was cutting its prime lending rate a
half percentage point to 8 percent.
It was the fourth decline in the
prime rate this year and put thi s
benchmark rate for many business
and consumer loans at its lowest
level since 1987.
A cut in the discount rate the
interest the central bank charg~s to
make loans to commercial banks, is
the most dramatic signal the Fed
can send of its intention to push
interest rat?s lower in an effort to
spur economic activity.
It was the fourth decline in the
discount rate since last December

as. the central bank began movi ng
With urgency to combat the country's first recession in neady eight
years. At 5 percent, the disco unt
rate IS now the lowest 11 has been
smcc February 1973.
Many analysts expected the
half-pomt rcducuon m the discount
rat? to be accompanied by a quarter
pomt cut m the federal funds rat? ,
which now stands at 5.5 percent.
The funds rate IS the Interest that
banks charge each other for
overnight l~ans. .
.
The Fed s acuon was certain to
be greeted with ~Ieasure. by the
Bush adminiStratiOn, which had
stepped up the pressure m recent
weeks for further rate cuts to spur
an economy that has yet to prove
conclusively that It has escaped
from recessiOn. .
.
In explainmg Its rate cut, the
:.ed said it was in respon se. to
concerns about the ongomg
strength of the economic expansion." It said the move was also in
respon se to extremely sluggish
growth in the nation's money supply and weak lendmg by commcr·
cia! banks.
.
The Fed satd the rate cut also wnsumcr prices rose just 0.2 perwas taken In light of 1mprovmg cent in August For the whole year,
news on infl ation . The announce- prices have been rising at an annual
mcnt came shortly after the govern· rate of just 2.7 percent, far below
mcnt released a report showing last year's 6.1 percent increase.

Retail
Sales

Ohio Elections Commission will hear
arg~~ents Mon_~ay on violations
.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) She sai d that is not unu sual
Ohio's Elections Commission will because state agencies or officials
hear arguments Monday on a
motion to dismiss charges of election law violations against 24 state
college presidents.
The staff of Attorney General
Lee Fisher will be arguing both
Gallia County Common Pleas
sides, Leesa Brown, Fisher's press
Court Judge Donald Colt sentenced
secretary, said Thursday.
The charges were filed by Sec- a man to at least 50 years in prison
retary of State Bob Taft after an for the death of a 12-year-old girl
investigation that said the presi- who was kidnapped, raped and
dents, whose institutions make up stabbed.
Judge Cox on Thursday went
the Ohio Technical and Community College Association, contributed along with a jury's recommenda·
public money to the campaigns of tion for the sent?ncmg of Wilham
state lawmakers through a lobbyist. Mathias, 24, of Kanauga.
The jury could have recom ·
Fisher is required to represent
mended
the death penally. Instead.
the secretary of state and other
it
recommended
that Mathias be
elected state officials in legal matto life on a
ters. He also is designated by law sentenced to 30
to represent presidents of state col·
leges and universities in their official capacities.
Fisher, in effect, will oppose his
own dismissal motion. Ms. Brown
said.

many. umcs wtnd up on opposite
sides m legal battles.

Mathias sentenced to 50
years in prison by Judge Cox
charge of aggravated murder and
10-25 years each on a charge of
kidnapping and rape.
Mathias was convicted last
week in the death in October 1990
of Stacy Rene Lucas of Gallipolis.
Her body was found in an aban·
doned strip mine area ncar Galli pohs.
The sentencing hearing began
Monday. The jury deliberated
Wednesday and Thursday morning
before making the rccommenda·
lion.

I

Safety, drugs
program topic
in schools
Elementary student s in the
Meigs Local District were treated
to a unique program on safety and
drugs this week.
The "Officer Phil Program" is
operated through local poli ce
departments and program s were
presented at Pomeroy Elementary
on Wednesday and at Middleport
and Bradbury Elementaries on
Thursday.
The program is prcsenllld by Jay
Johnson of Pittsburgh, Pa. Johnson,
a magician, began that career while
he was in the first grade and formerly hosted his own television
show.
A drug awareness program is
presented to the fifth and sixth
grade students and a safety program is presented to students in
kindergarten through the fourth
grade.
The programs feature a variety
of attention capturing ideas ranging
from a ventriloquist's doll to a talking car.
John~n states the main emphasis of the program is to raise the
self-esteem of the students by
expressing to them a lot of people
care about them and that they arc
special beca use they care about
themselves.
In addition to support by local
police departments the program is
also funded by donations by local
businesses and other individual
sponsors.

I
I

I
I

OFFICER PHIL PRESENTS PROGRAM - Officer Phil visit,:
ed students at Middleport Elementary on Thursday to teach them:
about drug awareness and safety. The program is presented by Jay·
Johnson, a magician from Pittsburgh, Pa. Here, Johnson and Offi·
cer Phil, explain tbe importance or safety to students in kindergarten tbrougb the rourtb arade. The programs, made possible
with assistance from local pollee departments and businesses, were .
presented In Pomeroy on Wednesday and also at Bradbury on .
Thursday.

�iddle

Commentary

'

Saturday, Sept. 14Aecu-Weather• forecast for

· By The Associated Press
Showers and thunderstorms,
with sometimes heavy rainfall,
were expected to continue over
most of Ohio through Saturday, the
National Weather Service said.
More warm and muggy conditions
were also in the forecast.
Occasional rain is also likely
through the weekend and into
Monday.
Temperatures generally will
range through the 80s. Heavier
, cloud cover and some rain may
keep readings in the 70s some
places.
·
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather

MICH.

The Daily Sentinel
Ill- Courl Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON ARIM

~MULTIMEDIA, INC
ROBERT L. WINGETT

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Publisher

General Manager
PAT WHITEHEAD
As•lstant Publisher/Controller

A MEMBER of The Associated Press,

Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers' Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing a.nd must be signed with
namt', address and telephone number. No un signed letters will be published . Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personal!·

ties.

Letter to the editor
Family planning
The abortion advocates in the
media tell s us that minority and
poor women need "safe" and easy
access to abortion. They say there
should be no more unwanted children. Aren't the abortion advocates
.really saying - No more minority
and poor children?
Two Black babies are aborted
Jor every three Black babies born.
Abortion destroys the future of
Black America at the rate of a half
million lost lives each year.
A well-known fact is that poor
minorities are a continued sore spot
and a blight to the wealthy and
powerful of this nation, who have
,•hroughout history made efforts to
subjugate and even eliminate the
poor - especially th e poor Blacks.

It takes little imaginatiOn to see
that the unborn Black baby is the
real object of many abortionists. It
is cheaper to abort than to support".
Providing abortion clinics in the
projects (inner city housing), rather
than provide adequate prenatal care
is the answer to the problem of the
poor, according to the abortion
advocates.
Black Americans must unite and
demand that society provide solu·
tions to the problems of the poor
and stop demanding that they sacrifice their babies on the altar of the
greedy, money hungry abortionists
and of those who would perpetuate
genocide on the poor and Blacks.
Alice Click.
Box. 233 Mt Alto, WV

Watt years haunt Yosemite rangers
By Jack Ande"''SOn ·
WASHINGTON
Park
rangers in Yosemite National Parle
got a slap in the face from James
Watt last month when they opened
their mail - bills for thousands of
dollars in back rent for their housing in the park. Now they can
either -pay up voluntarily or have
the money taken out of their government paychecks.
The letters marked the end of a
punishing legal battle that started
nine years ago when Watt was
Ronald Reagan's unpopular Interior secretary. He decided that
National Park employees living in
government-owned housing in the
parks should be paying rent that
matched the prices in the surrounding housing market. Up until that
point, the rangers had paid below
market rents.
The idea may have made sense
to Watt, but to the rangers, it
amounted to a pay cut. Like the
military, the rangers had settled for
lower salaries because they knew
one of the perks of the job included
breaks on housing.
Watt's decision to let the market
be the ~uide hit especially hard in
Yosemite. which is smack dab in
the middle of some of the most

expensive housing in central California.
The Yosemite rangers decided
to fight back, and sued the Interior
Department claiming the formula
for the new rents was flawed. In
nine years in and out of court, their
argument has never been fully
explained to a judge.
Their first suit was thrown out
of cou,r in 1985 by a judge who
said the rangers had failed to bring
their case forward quickly enough.
During the time that the case was
pending, the judge had restrained
the government from imposing the
rent increases, so the rangers had a
three-year grace period.
Since the merits of their case
had never been heard, the rangers
sued again and began paying the
higher rents. The government had
offered a settlement - if the
rangers would drop the legal battle:
They would not be billed for the
difference in their rent that was
accumulating while the first case
was in court. The rangers figured
they had a strong case, so they
went for broke and rejected the
offer.
But the second suit dido 't fare

any better in court.. The judg,e
threw the case out. saymg he didn t

once. Refusing to give up, the
rangers took their case to a federal
appeals court. They lost there too.
The federal government didn ' t
accept victory gracefully. The Interior Department decided to collect
the rent increase that was not paid
during the three-year court battle
when the judge had held the government landlords at bay.
So it was that after nine years
and two failed lawsuits, about 300
rangers opened their mail last
month to find a bill from Uncle
Sam for rent he considers to be six
years overdue. The rangers told our
reporter Jan Moller that the bills
went from $1,500 to $5,200, and
the rangers were given 30 days to
pay up or have the money taken out
of their paychecks in monthly
instalbnents with interest. Many of
them canceled vacations and borrowed money.
The fuss created at Yosemite
may have prompted other parks
around the country to modify their
own rental formulas for rangers. As

HOKEY SMOKE~

BULlWINKLE ...
LQJK!

·'

_ Former U.S. District Court Judge Richard McQuade Jr. recalled a case
. of judicial mistaken identity during a speech before a meeting of judges
~nd lawyers last week.
· McQuade, who left the federal bench to become president of Blue
Cross and Blue Shield of Ohio, was a Fulton County common pleas judge
from 1978-1986. He was talking to the lawyers about judicial ethics and
:campaign financing.
•; "I take this podium with a great deal of trepidation because what I
:know about judicial campaigning is certainly mixed, especially in terms
•of effectiveness,'' McQuade said.
:; "!, for instance, remember one time when I was campaigning for my
; third term as common pleas judge out at Fulton County," he said.
•: McQuade said he had delivered a campaign speech in Archbold.
·: · "I had this ... fellow come up and grab me and (say), 'I want you to
;know, sir, that I'm going to vote for you, and I'm going to insist that my
"W1fe and my Children vote for you. We've got to get that jerk out of
~fhere,' " McQuade said.
••,

•·
~;Excerpts

from other
~)Ohjo newspapers

8 y The Associaled Press
•::•'•. The following are recent
excepts from Ohio newspaper editorials:

THE DAILY TIMES, Portsmouth, Sept. 5: Like a philandering hus; band caught in flagrante delicto, the Ohio Technical and Community Col• lege Association IS asking the elections commission and the people of
:ohio, "Are you going to believe me Or your lying eyes?"
•; The executive committee of the lobbying organization for the state's
:Jwo-year colleges has adopted a resolution which places the blame for all
: the organization's illegal campaign contributions on its former executive
:'direct?r, ~Roach : OTCCA and the college presidents who make up the
•:Organtzauon are cla•mmg that they were led astray and did not k:nowingly
; violate any law.
• The facts are that the body of evidence referred by Secretary of State
:Robert A. Taft to the Ohio Elections Com~ission is so overwhelming as
! to make th•s latest OTCCA ploy seem ludicrous. The college presidents
•claim they did not see Roach's memorandum spelling out the specific
!J:lection law violations and questionable practices, but they have difficulty
; explaining thank-you letters for attending or contributing to state legisla•iors' fund-raising activities.
: - ... For presidents of ~wo -year colleges to engage in illegal political
:activity using taxpayers' money is reprehensible. To use the same taxpay•ers' money to pay expenstve lawyers and public relations consultants to
t'mooth over past sins onl:y makes matters worse. But for distinguished
educators to treat the elecuons comm1ssron and the public as though we
: have not a cohesive brain among us is inexcusable.

=·.0:

'

THE PLAIN DEALER, Cleveland, Sept. 5: If Gov. Voinovich's
:administration practices what it preaches, Ohio taxpayers could save
:untold millionsm f~ for architectural, engineering and other consulting
~!Yices. The' n'o-nonsenSQ prq;U(CIIIent process, unveiled last week by the
:-tovernor's chief of staff, Paul C. Mifsud, promises to _close most of the
;rOQpboles that traditionally led to lucrative consulting contracts bein~t
~

-

a final irony, a recent rent study
comparing rents at Yosemite with
those in the surrounding area found
that the Interior Department was
charging too much as the landlord.
The buildings were dilapidated and
not worth what the government
thought they were, so the rents
were decreased.
Yosemite's new superintendent,
Mike Finley, asked the Interior
Department to make the decrease
retroactive to 1983 when the fuss
began. The government promptly
refused.
RECOUP - The failed coup in
the Soviet Union has not Pill all Qf
the hardliners to rest The Kremlin
is still riddled with extremists who
yearn for a return to the stern
fathering of Josef Stalin. While
most of the Soviet people see the
coup as the fmal nail in the coffin
of communism, these extremists
saw it as an amateur effort. They
believe their country can still be
returned to the Stalinist ice age
with the right people masterminding the overthrow of reformers.
The hardliners blamed the coup
leaders for being too soft, and for
making the huge mistake of not
muzzling Boris Y !-lltsin at the same
time they isolated Mikhail Gorbachev. A special paratrooper unit
had been training to take Yeltsin
into custody, but he foiled them by
getting to the parliament building
and then staying visible throughout
the coup.
MINI-EDITORIAL - The
John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University has
proposed a mega-dose of democra,
cy for the 1992 election - a series
of nine televised debateS, speeches
and interviews with presidential
candidates on Sunday nights, free
of commercials. If Americans are
wise to photo opportunities and
sound-bite campaigning, they will
welcome this format as a way to
help them make informed choices.
The Harvard proposal is also a way
for television to redeem itself. As a
medium, it has failed miserably to
distribute the kind of information
that distinguishes a nation of
informed voters from a nation of
sheep.

Cong. Clarence

Congressional reforms needed_M_;_uer__
Office buildings get renovated ,
private homes get modernized, cars
get tuneups, individuals work out
to improve their fitness and efficiency __ _ everybody and everything, be it a he, she or it, if they
want to remain functional and
abreast of change, has to adapt.
One body, however, that appears
reluctant to keep up with the times
is that body of which I am a part,
the United States Congress.
Though Congress wrestles daily
with problems of great import, it
often tim es appears unable or
unwilling to change with the times
and address the inefficiencies of its
own internal operations. There is
growing evidence that Congress is
in creasingly bogged down in a
morass of detail , preventing the
House and Senate from attacking
the critically important domestic
and international concerns facing
our country.
The work of Congress has seen
an increase in the number of Committees. There are now more than
eight times as many committees

•

,'

~~~ ~h~u~~~~~~ s~~~'Z and Dale Van Atta

-.Justice scotches talk
of early retirement
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associaled Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio Supreme Court Justice Robert E.
Holmes turns 70 next year and will be ineligible to seek another term. But
.be has no intention of early retirement, although he once considered the
-.idea.
· There had been political speculation that Holmes might leave early.
Such a move would allow fellow Republican Gov. George Voinovich to
appoint a successor, who then would run in the November 1992 election.
Holmes acknowledged that he had felt "a little worn and haggard" at
one pomt
"I said to some friends that I thought I'd perhaps consider leaving
· early and do some of the things that I enjoy doing in life," he said.
But he reconsidered the matter.
"A lot of people talked to me in the interim (and said) that my voice ...
. on a number of issues was really needed. And I kind of reevaluated what
· my purpose and cause was on the court and decided I'm going to stay the
term," Holmes said.
Repubhcans have a 4-3 ma]onty on the state's highest court. Three
. seats are at stake in next year's electiOn. Chief Justice Thomas Moyer, a
_Republican, faces re-elecuon, as does Justice Herbert Brown, a Democrat
Holmes cannot seek re-election after his term expires Dec. 31, 1992
because of age limits for judges in the Ohio Constitution.

•

and subcommittees (300) as there rum calls and other procedural major overhaul. Reform of th e
maneuvers such as filibusters. Sen- Congressional agenda and operatwere in 1947 (38).
Each Senator, for example, ators may offer amendments that ing procedures was necessary then
belonged to 2.8 committees in have nothing to do with the subject to meet the global changes facing
1947. The figure today is 4.8. The matter of the bill under considera- us.
Today, with the end of the Cold
average length of bills has tion on the Senate floor. The
increased five fold over the last 20 House, on the other hand, follows Wau and the tidal wave of change
years and now averages over 20 rules requiring amendments to be we're witnessing around the world,
pages per bill. In 1990, members of germane and related to the bill's Congress must move again to adopt
the House and Senate introduced subject.
updated procedures for dealing
The budget process, too, has with the nation's business. Fifty
6,973 bills touching on every major
economic, health, educational, wel- become so detailed and complex years ago, the Monroney-LaFolfare, civil rights and international that it oftentimes creates time-con- lette Committee was formed in
policy issue imaginable. Only 225. suminl( conflicts between key Con- Congress to deal with Congression·
or 3 percent, were enacted into law. gressional committees which battle al reform.
One member of Congress over jurisdiction and legislative
Today, Congressional leaders
described the process as "legisla- responsibilities. As a result the are proposing the creation of a spetive gridlock." This assessment is deficit soars, and Congress Je'aves cial Joint Commiuee on the
quite accurate and should serve as a the disheartenmg Impression that it Reform of Congress to face down
warning that the need for reform is can't effectively manage its own the particular hurdles hindering the
affairs, let alone the taxpayers'.
both necessary and immediate.
legislative process on Capitol Hill.
If Congress, as an institution is To be honest, reforming Congress
Current Congressional procedures oftentimes appear at odds to gain the confidence of both U.S. and the way it works- or doesn't with efficiency. In the Senate, for citizens and emerging democracies will not, by itself, solve America's
example, studies show that 25 per- who look to America as an exam- problems. It will. however, give
cent of that body's legislative time, ple of leadership and progress, it Congress a better chance to address
(th e equivalent of 45 legislative has to shape up. Almost 50 years problems with greater efficiency
days) is wasted each year in quo- ago, with the end of World War 11
and dispatch.
Congress realized that it needed ~

Curtain goes up for final act __m_ill_iam_A_.R_u_sh_er
The curtain has now risen on the time li ving down its d•sgraccful a position of real eminence in
final act in the drama of Supreme performan ce on that occasion
American society. Plenty of Ameri- best that could be struck in the
Court nominee Clarence Thomas. whether Clarence Thomas is con~ can blacks have suffered as much, interests of the black com~unity;
Let us assume they genuine(~
The Senate Judiciary Commiuce firmed or not.
and some have risen as high.
has begun its hearings on his nomiWhat makes Clarence Thomas believed they had earned the praise
(and the far more tangible rewards)
nation, the anti-Thomas lobby has
Luckily, it seems possible that at so noteworthy is the fact that he did showered on them by the liberals
kicked off its $3 million campaign least a majority of senators, this not choose to construct and pursue
to "Bork him," and conservatives time, will turn a deaf ear to the his career on the theory that, as a for striking it. Let us assume, even;
that there was something to be saia
are fighting back as best they can.
snarls of Norman Lear and his left- black man, America owed him spe- for that diabolical dole (without
Ever since President Reagan 's liberallobby.!f they do, it won't be cial attention or special help. All he
nomination of Robert Bork in because they have experienced any ever asked - and this he demand- forgetting, however, such appallin~
1987, which the liberal left defeat- belated influx of highmindedness. ed - was an equal opportunity to blunders as Aid to Families with
Dependent Children, which virtualed by dragging a supremely well- Rather, it will be because the char- compete.
ly
destroyed the black family struc:
qualified nominee through a barn- acter and significance of Clarence
Unless I miss my guess, the digture
in America).
·
yard mud-bath unprecedented in Thomas will have become unmis- nity and power of that position arc
Even
so,
Clarence
Thomas
the history of judicial nominations, takably clear in the Senate hear- going to have a profound impact on
there can be no confidence that the ings.
the national television audience stands forth as a man who never fo;
a second endorsed such a "solu;
confirmation process, now or in the
It isn't merely that Clarence watching the Thomas hearings.
future , will be conducted with any- Thomas has suffered, starting his Some of the senators on the com- lion" to the problems of America's
thing approaching the dignity it life under circumstances of abject mittee can -hardly be expected to blacks. He has fought fiercely foi
deserves. The Senate will be a long poverty and rising, step by step, to appreciate a sentiment so thorough- their n~ht to equal opportunity, but
ly noble (Sen. Kennedy, for exam- has reJected every effort to treat
ple, who weighs these matters them as cripples. And he has
between midnight pub crawls in demonstrated, in his own career,
passed out as pohucal favors.
Palm Bea;:h). J3ut even the Senate's the success that can be achieved by
The Voinovich program sets strict procedures for awarding specialty most abandoned opportunists are an able black who refuses to spend
contraCts. It mandates sealed fee proposals and requires choosing the firm •experts at detecting the way the his life as a "handkerchief-head''·
with the lowest fee. Cost overruns, usually caused by changes ordered wind of public opinion is blowing .(to return professor Derrick Bell' i
compliment) on the plantation of
during construction of state building projects, also would be curbed drasti- - and acting accordingly.
'
cally if the new procedures are adhered to.
The real losers, if Thomas is American liberalism.
The administration trumpets this program as a fulfilbnent of last year 's ultimately confmned, will be the
To ~beral blacks, St!ch indepen_;
campaign promise by Voinovich to eliminate the cronyism that the black " leaders" who long ago dence IS hugely offenstve; for it to
. be rewarded by elevation to the
admmistrauon of former Governor Richard F. Celeste refined into an art
made a Faustian bargain with Supreme Court would be utterly
form .
.
America's liberals to be their lifeintolerable. Clarence Thomas ~
... But the standards offered by thfi Voinovich team last week at least long
political ragbabies in return and through him, black Americans.
hold the promise of bringing a new day to state government, a day when
more than lip service is paid to the term "lowest and best bid." If for the right to administer a crip- gener~lly - must be taug~t tha~
dole to their feUow blacks.
there ts no salvation save through·
Voinovich is able to practice what he preaches, he will be delivering to pling
Let
us assume ther were conliberalism.
·
taxpayers exactly what he promised and precisely what they deserve.
vinced that this bargain was the
We shall see.

I Mansfiel~

r!,9~ l· .·

ill.

IND.
'

'·

'

•

•I Col(!mbusl so• I

...

~

..

Ice

&amp;Jnny

Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

01991 Accu·Wnther, Inc .

------Weather----Exlended forec:ast:
Sunday lhrough Tuesday:
A chance of showers and thunderstorms Sunday and Monday.
Fair on Tuesday. Highs 80-90 Sun·
day and 75-85 Monday and Tuesday. Lows 65·75 Sunday and Mon·
day and 55-65 Tuesday.

South-Central Ohio
Tonight and Saturday, partly
cloudy and warm with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms. Low
tonight around 70. High Saturday
85-90. Chance of rain is 40 pcn;ent.
both tonight and Saturday.

--Area deaths-· He is survived by his wife, Elsie
Eastman Phillips, two brothers-in·
law, two sisters-in-law, and several
Harold S. Phillips, 92, 4729 nieces and nephews.
Glcnn Highway, Cambridge, died
Besides in parents he was preearly Friday, Sept. 13, 1991 at the ceded in death by an infant brother
Guernsey Memorial Hospital in and an infant sister.
Cam bridge.
Services will be Monday at 2
Born Feb. 19, 1899 in Denver, p.m. at the Bigony Jordan Funeral
Colo., he was the son of the late Home. Burial will be in Keebaugh
Persly and Lunena Smith Phillips.
Cemetery.
He was member of the Baptist
Friends may call at the funeral
church and a former employee of home on Sunday from 2-4 p.m. and
.Ohio University.
c
• 7-9p.m.

Harold Phillips

--Meigs announcements-

Stroh's...

fraud , laundering of drug money
and support of terrorists.
In 1981, the Fed approved the
purchase of Financial General
Bank:shares, a Washington-based
bank holding company, by a group
of Persian Gulf investors.
But this summer, the Fed
announced it had discovered that
the Arab investors acted as fronts
for BCCI in its illegal takeover of
Financial General, now called First
American Bankshares Inc.
"This is essentially a case of
systematic and deliberate criminal
fraud," three top officials of the
central bank said in testimony prepared for a House Banking Committee hearing.
"BCCI took maximum advan tage of an unsupelVised (corporate)
structure to conceal and warehouse
... billions of dollars in fraudulent
transactions," they said.
"The Federal Reserve does not
have the power to coerce truthful
testimony from uncooperative
criminal conspirators. Nor can the
Federal Reserve offer immunity to
those willing to come forward.''
The Fed, the Justice Department

Continued from page 1

sion, our business will not be
affected by this action," he said.
Becker said the brewer told the
union of its step in an Aug. 28 letter from James R. Avery, Stroh
senior vice president for operations.
The union has been circulating
leaflets against the brewer's use of
Ravenswood aluminum.
According to a union statement,
Avery wrote that Stroh officials
"believe that we have taken the
appropriate action to satisfy your
previously stated concerns over the
use of Ravenswood aluminum."
The union also said Avery asked
that the anti-Stroh leaflets be
stopped.
Although Worlledge minimized
the effect on his company caused

by the loss of the Stroh business, he
condemned the leaflet campaign.
"It is still sad 10 see that American business can be forced to such
recourse as the result of the ...
(union's) campaign of lies and
harassment."
Worlledge said nothing of how
much business Stroh did with
Ravenswood.
Ravenswood
spokeswoman Debbie Boger was
out of her office and not available
for comment, Boger's secretary
said late Thursday.
Acting on complaints lodged by
the union, attorneys for the National Labor Relations Board have
accused the company of unfair
labor practices. The complaint will
be heard by an administrative law
judge in Charleston Sept. 23.

Society Corporation reaches
agreement to acquire Ameritrust
CLEVELAND (AP) - Society
Corp. of Cleveland today
announced an agreement to acquire
cross-town rival Ameritrust Corp.
The bank holding companies
said in a brief statement that all
existing subsidiaries of Ameritrust
would become Society subsidiaries,
including banking operations in
Ohio, Indiana, Michigan and
Texas.
Terms of the acquisition weren't

Dance to be held
ship hall. The cookbook contains
The Royal Oak Dance Club will favorite recipes of the friends and
. have a dance Sept. 21 from 8-11 members of the church. The cost is
p.m. at Royal Oak Resort. Music $5 per book and can be acquired
will be provided by George Hall from Carolyn Rader, 667-3753 or
and the cost is $15 per couple.
Pastor Harold E. Alloway.Priddy at
Donations needed
557-6672 or 667·3351.
Boy Power Inc. will be sponsorMarauder yearbooks in
ing a fundraiser on Oct. 12 in the
The 1991 Meijls Marauder yearFarmers Bank parking lot begin- · books hav.e arn ved and can be
ning at 2 p.m. Anyone wanting to picked up at Meigs High School
donate items (with the exception of · beginning Tuesday from 8:15 a.m.
clothing) should call 992-5959 · to 2:30 p.m. There is no school
after 4:30p.m. All proceeds wiU go Monday so the books may be
to Boy Scout Troop No. 249 of picked up Tuesday.
Pomeroy, Bob Arms, scoutmaster.
Dues going up
ATLANTA (AP) - Nearly a
Chester Council to meet
National dues for the Veterans
third
of all high school students
The Chester Council No. 323 of Foreign Wars has increased by
smoke
- including almost one in
Daughters of America will meet $1 effective Oct. l, according to
five
seniors
who arc steady smok:ruesday at 7:30p.m. Quarterly Red Carr of the Tuppers Plains
ers
according
to a federal study
birthdays will be observed and a VFW Post No. 9053.
that
also
found
white students
potluck supper will begin at 6:30
Racine Council to meel
much
more
lik:ely
to smoke than
p.m.
The Racine Village Council will
blacks.
Country music night
meet in recess session on Monday
Thirty -six percent of all U.S.
Country music night at the Lot- at 7 p.m. at the council chambers.
high
school students said they had
tridge Community Center·will be
Sbower to be held
·
used
tobacco in some form .held Saturday from 7 p.m. to midA shower will be held for Tere- including
smoking and chewing night. Refreshments will bc 'avail- sa Shuler Powell on Saturday at
during
the
past month, according to
able and all bands are welcome.
7:30 p.m. at the Racine United
the
study
released
Thursday by the
Yard and bake sale
Methodist Church.
federal
Centers
for
Disease ConThe Coolville United Methodist
Retired teachers to meet
trol.
Thirty-two
percent
said they
Women will hold a yard and bake
'l:he Meigs County Retired
had
smoked.
sale on Saturday beginning at 9 Teachers Association will meet
Thirteen percent of the students
a.m. at the Church on Main Street. Saturday, Sept.'21, at the Mason
from
ninth to 12th grades also were
. Puppets to appear
Family Restaurant at 12:30 p.m.
described
as frequent smokers Afterglow services wiU be held Reservations may be made by callthose
who
had smoked more than
at the Bethel United Methodist ing Mary Chapman at 992-3887.
25 of the previous 30 days, the
Church on Sunday at 7 p.m. featur; · Clean-up session slated
CDC said.
ing the Porterfield BaptistPuppeiS;
A:clcan-up day has been sehedForty-one percent of the seniors
CheookCooboo1ksv1_11oenUsan1!eted Me;,.;.A:.. - uled ~or Sept. 28 at 9 a.m. at Sugar said they had smoked cigarettes or
T
u""""' Run ;,cliool to clean away debris
Church finance committee is 'seli· and brush from the exterior of the
-!ng cookbooks for the new fellow- building. The grounds and building
have been donated to the Meigs
County Park District by the Cornett
Realty Company in Gallipolis in Am Ele Power ................. .30
The Daily Sentinel
memory of U.A. and Marie CorOil ..................... .30 1/2
nett. P.l!lns are underway to repair Ashland
(IJSP8 145-t••
A'r&amp;T
...............................
.38 1/8
and restore the old structure. Vol- Bob Evans ....................... .18
A Dlvllloa of Multtmodla, lac.
unteers are needed and anyone
interested should contact Mary' Charming Shop.................. 21 3/8
Holding ..................... 15 1/2
Poweli, director of the park district, City
Federal
Mogul... .. ...... ........ l5 1/4
llshlng
'
'
'at.992·2239.
Goodyear
T&amp;R ................ .42 ·
Pomeoroy,
Ph.
-rond class pootag• patd at
Key Centurion .................. 14 3/4
Ohto.
Lands' End ....................... 19 7/8
Limited Inc ....................... 26 318
Multimedia Inc .................25 1/4
Rax Restaurant ................. S/8
Eour calls for assistance were _ Robbins&amp;Myers .............. .34
SJullley's Inc ..................... 17 1/4
answered by uniiS of Meigs County
Star
Bank ..........................23
POSTMASTER: s.nd · - dl111po
... Emergency Medical Services on
·to Th• Dally Sent tnt!, 111 Court St.,
•Thursday.
Wendy lnt'L. ....................9
Pomeroy. Ohio 45781.
Worthington Ind ...............28 3/4
On Th ursday at 9:08 a.m., RutSVBSCRIPftON RATa
land squad went to the Meigs Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
By cantor or Mot• - ·
Mines. Charles Bolin was taken to quotes proPided by Blunt, Ellis
0 "' w..k ...................................suo
Holzer Medi•"l
Center. At 11:04 and Loewl oJGallipoUs.
Ono Monlh ...............................16.9!1
""
·ono Year ....................... .......... 183-20
a.m., Syracuse unit took Mary
SINGLE COPY
Kerns froiD Trouble Creek Road to
Pally --------------~-~~ ......... . 25
, ffi!!W· ,A t,3:~8 p.m., ~u tian df unit , 11==========;!1
:':(;WCI)t_t~ tate' R.ou~c
or a

Ameritrust had $96.4 million in
losses last year, much of il related
to bad loans.
Bane One Corp. based in
Columbus and Cleveland-based
National City also bid for Amcritrust.
National City, parent of National City Bank, said in May that it
had made a $870 million offer for
Amcritrust. Bane One did not disclose its bid.

disclosed. Offteials from both companies called a noon news conference to discuss the acquisition.
The $1.2 billion deal will create
a banking company with more than
S26 billion in assets.
Ameritrust, with assets of about
$10 billion, has the largest retail
banking operation in Cleveland,
with 16 percent of deposits. Society
ranks third with II percent behind
National City Corp. at 15 percent.

Lottery numbers

More than one-third of high
school students use tobacco

Stocks

Squads have four

5

.c .

8

- - " -' '

1 24

"~'f~r~~l~;::~~;;;:~~~- ·,.~·~
y,.-i'ifotor~~~hiele
.acc•dent. Helen~
Smitli ..Do' Jerry Jacks were' trans-

~

'

~

for in the Great Lakes region and
New England.
Temperatures in the 90s were
expected in Texas, the Plains and
in the Soih, where the following
city records were broken or tied on
Thursday:
Apalachicola, Fla., 94 degrees,
92 degrees in 1947; Beaufort, S.C.,
95 degrees, 94 in 1984; Jacksonville, Fla., 96 degrees , 95 in
1944; Lincoln, Neb., 96 degrees.
96 in 1939; and Paducah, Ky., 95
degrees, 94 in 1980.
High temperature for the nation
Thursday was 103 degrees at Borrego Springs, Calif.

I !I

',..,,

and other government agencies
have recently come under fire for
alle~ed failure to pursue BCCJ's
illicit activity earlier.
A congressional report released
last week charged that officials
ignored 'Oan~er signs concerning
BCCI and m1ssed a chance to stop
illegal activities much sooner.
The Washington Post reported
in today's editions that the Bank of
England told the House committee
recent! y that it knew in 1988 that
BCCI secretly financed stock purchases in First American.
But Fed officials have said tl1ey
did not learn this information until
December 1990.
In their prepared testimony, the
three officials said the Fed "detected evidence" of money laundering
by BCCI in Florida in 1987, and
provided the information to law
enforcement agencies.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
THURSDAY ADMISSIONS Mary Wingett, Syracuse; William
F. Smith, Middleport; John E.
Lyons, Middleport; and Audrey
Arnold. Pomeroy.
THURSDAY DISCHARGES None.
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
- William Adkins, Pomeroy; Heintz
Coates, Pomeroy; Lucy Young,
Pomeroy; and Felicia Grueser,
Pomeroy.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
- Ann?. Quivey, Ricky Johnson,
Anne Davis, Jessie Dodderer, and
Patricia Mossman.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Sept. 12 - Gene
Boggs, India Boykin, James Conkle, Mrs. Ronnie Eblin and daughter, Julia Hayes, Ann Hicks. Alice
Hobbs, Karen Kniceley, Mrs. Larry
McDaniel and son, Paul Pratt, Deborah Tipple.
Births- Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Hubbard, daughter, Gallipolis; Mr.
and Mrs. Lonnie McCoy, son, Gallipolis; Mrs. and Mrs. Todd
McCreary, son, Oak Hill; Mr. and
Mrs. Daniel Rhodes, son, Jackson.
Discharges, Sept. II - Martha
Burton, Ora Cochran, Bonnie
Gillispie, Level Hamilton, Allie
Holley, Brent McGuire, Mrs .
Joseph Simpkins and daughter,
Daisy Staten.
Births, Sept. 11 - Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Calvert, a son, Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. John Duffett, a son,
Wellston.

ll.OO
13.00
BARGAIN MATINEES SATURDAY &amp;SU NDAY
BAJIGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY

Marni Nixon dubbed the singing for
Deborah Kerr, Audrey Hepburn and
Natalie Wood in the movies "The
King and 1," "My Fair Lady" and
"West Side Story," respectively.

CO LONY THEATRE

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio has set for public hearing
Case No. 91-102-EL-EFC, to
review lhe fuel procurement practices and policies of Columbus
Southern Power Company, the
operation of its Electric Fuel Component and related matters. This
hearing is scheduled to begin at
10:00 a.m. on September 16,
1991 , at the offices of the Public
Utilities Commission, 180 Easl
Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio
43266·0573.
All interested parties will be given
an opportunity to be heard. Further IDformation may be obtained
by contacting the Commission at
the above address .

_- ported to Holzer. At 8:16 p.m.,
Middleport 'squad was sent to Ash
lk Street -for James Cramer. He was
J.~·-ta'keh

CLEVELAND (AP)- Here arc
the Ohio Lottery selections made
Thursday night:
Pick 3 Numbers

chewed tobacco in the previous
2-1-4
month, and 18 percent said they
(two, one, four)
were frequent smokers.
"If they're usin~ cigarettes 26 Pick 4 Numbers
5-4-4-3
days a month, they re well on the
(five,
four, four, three)
road to regular smoking," said Dr.
Cards
Gary Giovino, a specialist with the
J (jack) of Hearts
CDC's Office on Smoking and
J
(jack) of Clubs
Health.
4 (four) of Diamonds
Among black students, only 16
5 (five) of Spades
percent said they smoked, compared with 36 percent of all white
students.
The racial disparity may have
been caused by a higher awareness
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
of health and fitness among young
"' "" .,
blacks or a greater infliience of
446 -4524
church teachings, Giovino said.
''Or there may be economics
going on," he said, pointing out
that the average price of a pack of •·
cigarettes has shot up from 60 cents ,
in 1980 to more than $1.50 today.
"We find that as cigarettes
become more expensive, the effect ·.
is more significant on adolescents
than on adults," he said.
The survey, which involved
more than II ,000 students in all 50
states, Washington, D.C., Puerto
Rico and the Virgin Islands, had an
overall sampling error of about 4
percent.

.-~~:~~l~~~:~~~~~.;~:~~~$~~ast 24 hours ';

to Holzer.

'License issued

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMI8SION OF OHIO By: Gary E.
Vigorito, Secretary.

license has been
Probate ,
ONE IV- SNOW 7:30
ADMISSION $1.50
446-0923

-'

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

..

degrees above normal were forecast for the Ohio Valley.
Strong storms were called for in
the central Plains this afternoon,
after a night of severe thunderstorms. Tornadoes touched down in
eastern Iowa Thursday night and
high winds caused damage at Des
Moines and a half dozen other
cities.
Overnight storms in New Mexico produced as much as four inches
of rain .
Cool air from the north Pacific
was expected to lower temperatures
in the Northwest and over th e
Rockies to the 60s and 70s today _
Similarly cool readings were called

WASHINGTON (AP)- "Sys- bank sooner, Fed officials said
tematic and deliberate criminal today.
fraud" by the Bank of Credit and
Lawmakers are trying to deterCommerce International over- mine how much Fed officials knew
whelmed the Federal Reserve , about the operations of BCCI, the '
making it impossible to uncover foreign-owned bank enmeshed in a
BCCI's illegal ownership of a U.S. scandal involving alleged massive

~

Flurries

station was 95 degrees in 1939.
The record low was 38 in 1964.
Sunrise this morning was at
7:10 a.m. Sunset will be at 7:44
p.m.
Around lhe nalion
, Hoh humid air. hung over the
southern Great Lakes early today
and was expected to bring showers
and storms from lllinois to Pennsylvania.
Rain was also forecast in parts
of New Mexico and the Pacific
Northwest.
Bright skies and low humidity
in the Northeast were expected to
boost temperature readings over
Thursday's. Temperatures 10 to IS

Feds seeking prosecution of all BCCI wrongdoers
W. VA.

Showers T-sl9fll)s Rsin

Senti nei-Page-3

in Ohio forecast this weekend

''

Page-2-The Dally Se~tlnei
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·
Friday, September 13, 1991 ·

The

Ohio

. .. il

•'

FIIDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1991
FISHTAIL SANDWICH PLAnER .. S3.19
f-ell frill, CIMice of a-llllt Colt Slaw,
.._.Ill Willi., lc*td IMM

SUNDAY, SEPYEMID 15, 1991
AU YOU CAN EAT CHICKEN ..... S4.54
Malhttl Potat. . I GraYJ, G- IMM wit•
.......... Nat l.uttwtd lett, SMall Dri... or
CeHH

NEW HOURS: Open 10:00 to 8:30

�;• • ,-\' ,•

The Daily Sentin~l

Sports

Friday, September 13, 1991
Page--4

On the strength of Duncan's homers.
has improved his negotiating position with his hot bat.
"I hope they treat me right. I
want to stay in Cincinnati. I love it
here," Duncan said. But he wants
to play regularly, and that isn't
likely at second base with Bill
Doran signed to an expensive longterm contract.
"If these guys don't want me, I
have a lot of people who want me.
I just want to give them (the Reds)
first chance."
Duncan had a career-best year
last season, batting .306 in 125
games, his most games in a season
since 1985 with the Dodgers. He's
hitting with more power this year
despite reduced playing time.
His two homers Thursday tied
his career high of 10 last year. Last
season, he had 435 at-bats. He's hit
10 homers this season in 27 5 times
at bat.

AP Sports Writer
. MIAMI (AP) -Houston's run-and-shoot did neither against the
Miami Hurricanes, who disarmed
quarterback David Klingler by
storming past his porous offensive
line on every play.
"What could we do?" Klingler
said after Miami's stunningly easy
40-10 victory on Thursday night.
"Our receivers were getting open.
·· We were just struggling to get time
&gt; lo find them. They've got a great
pass rush."
The second-ranked Hurricanes
(2-0) limited Houston's vaunted
point-a-minute attack to one touch. down, which came with three sec.. onds remaining . Klingler, who
:: averaged 467 yards passing per
game last year, managed just 216
in a rout that was supposed 10 be a
high-scoring shootoul.

"I know that I'm not a power Both have come since his reactivahitter, but one of the reasons I'm tion. After straining his left rib
hitting the ball so hard is I spent a cage, Duncan changed his swing.
lot of time in the gym - that and I
"I've just bee~ trying to make
put about 10 more pounds on my contac~" he said. "I shortened up
body," Duncan said.
my swing a little bit and I'm just
He auributed the extra muscle to trr.ing to be short and quick. I'm
work he did while he was on the sull not I 00 percent."
disabled list, and the extra weight
Tom Browning (14-10) gave up
to his mother's cooking. She's been three runs in the first inning, but
visiting him for six week from the limited the Giants 10 a pair of hits
Dominican Republic.
through the next 16 2-3 innings. Rob
"I wish my mother didn't have Dibble got the last
four outs, strikto go home Sunday," Duncan said. ing out two, for his 29th save.
"I ought to keep her around here a
Cincinnati's ftrst five runs were
while longer."
off Paul McClellan (3-4), who gave
Duncan reached the second- up seven hits in 4 2-3 innings.
deck seats in left field with his solo
"I don't know what I'm doing
homer in the flfS~ and cleared the out there," McClellan said. " I'm
wall in the deepest part of right- beuer than today."
center field with a two-run homer
Giants manager Roger Craig
in the fifth.
said McClellan lost his composure
It was the second two-homer after Duncan's second home run,
game of the season for Duncan. which gave the Reds a 4-3 lead.
Hal Morris followed, took two
pitches, then homered.
"After that second home run, he
was out there just shaking his
head," Craig said. "He's got to
Theo Adams, olfeativ. Unean, to tho
pnctice rot&amp;er. Relouod Kevin Thompforget
that, because it's gone, and
son.,aalcty, frcm lho praQico rol&amp;cr.
not let it affect him.''
Hockey
The Giants took a 3-0 lead in
NoUonal Hodcey IAque
the
flfSt on a run-scoring single by
DETROIT RED WIN"OS - Aaaiped
Kevin Bass and a two-run homer
Claude Barthe, Derek Booth, Grea
Bianell tnd Jody Pnlllik. dcfcnscmcn;
by Matt Williams, his 29Ih of the
Crcu Nicol ancl Don Stone., lef't winp;

NATIONAL LEAGUE

I

Easttm Dhillon

Team

I
I

...... 83 S7 .593
.......... 73 66 .S2S

Chicago

....... 69 71

New York
... 68 72 .486
Philadelphia ....... 66 14 .411
Mon~l
........ 61 78 .439

9.5
14
iS
17
21.5

Wattrn Division
W L PeL

GO

........... 10 60 .571
80 61 .561
71 70 .504

.S

Team

I

GB

W L PeL

Piu.sbur&amp;h
Sl Louis

At.l•nll

Lo• Anades
s.n Diego ......
CINClNNA TI .
San FranciKo .....
I louatoo
. .. .

.493

9.5
12
16

68 72 .4&amp;6
64 76 .4S7
57 13 .407

23

Thursday's scores
Clnclnntll1, San Franchco 3
New York 6. OUc::ago 3
Atlan1.1 5, S111 Diego 1
U. AnJdts 6, H0111ton 2, I0 innings
Montreal 6, Philldelphia 2
St. LoJ.is I , Pittsburgh 0

Tonight's games
Monueli (Dcnni• Martinez 13 ·9) u
Chicago (G. Maddu1 I 1·10), 3.20 p.m.
llouslon (Bowen 4-3) at Cincinnati
(Arm1trona 6-11), 7:35p.m.
Pituburah (Walk 7-2) at Phil•delphil
(Mulholland 14- lll. 7JS
Loa Angeles (Moraan 1·9) 1t Allanl.l
(Giavine I 1-9), 7:40p.m.
New York (Viola 12-14) 11 St. LoWs (B.
Smith 11·8). 3:35 p.l'l'l.
S1n Dieao (Dones 3·3) It S1n Francisco
(Wilson 10-9), 10:35 p.m.

r·m·

Saturday's games
Lot Angeles (Belcher 9·8)

It Albnt•
(Smol1Z l2· ll). 3:05 p.m.
San Diego (Benca 12· 10) 1t Stn Fran cisco (McOcllan Jl-3), 4:05p.m.
Uoo11on (Portuaall0-1) tl ClnclnnaU
(Myers '-12), 7:05p.m.
Pittsburgh (Smiley 17-8) It Philadclptu•
(A!hby 0-)). 7:0S p.m.
Montre1l {B unea 4-6) It Chicago
(Bolk.ie 4--8), I :OS p.m.
New Yodr: (Cone 12-12) It St. Louis
(Olivera 8-S), 8:05 p.m.

'

r

I

l

Sunday's games

PittlbW"Jh at Philadelphia, 1:JS p.m.

~

t...c.. A.ngdc:a It Alllllll, 2:10p.m.
I loudon at Clndnnati,2:15 p.m.
New York 11 St. I...wiJ, 2:15p.m.
Montreal tt Oticago, 2:20 p.m.
S•n Oi~go at S1n Fr~nci.seo. 4:05p.m.

!
l

AMERICAN LEAGUE

ir

Team

EtJiem Division
W L PeL

Toronto
Booton

.... .. .. 79 62 .560
.... ...... 75 65 .536

GB
-

35
S.S

Detroit
........... 73 67 .5 21
Milwaukee
.. ... 66 72 .478
Nc:w Yodl:
....... W 79 .432
Ballim(R
........ S8 82 .4 14
CLEVELAND
46 93 .331

'

1\.S
18
20.5

32

Wal.crn Dlvilion
Tum
W L PeL
Minna«....... 85 56 .603
Chica&amp;o
......... T1 6S .542
Tcxu
........... 74 6S .,32
OU.land
......... 7l 66 .l32
Kanw City ....... 71 68 .S il
Scallle
........... 70 69 .,04
C•lifomi•
.... 70 70 .S OO

GB
1.5
10
10
13
14
14.5

Thursday's scores
Bc.ton 7, New Ycxk 2
Cleveland '· Btltlmore !
MilwtUoc 7, Dcuoit 0
Teus 4, MintiCIOU 3
Cal.ifomia 7, Otic•ao4

Tonlghl's games
Bo11on (Gudiner 7-7) It New York
(Johruon S-10), 7:30p.m.
Clenland (OUo 1-' l at Dalllmore
(McDonald 6-8), 7:35p.m.
01kland (Stcwan 11·8) 11 Toronto
(Ju1n G\wne6-2), 7:)j p.m.
Seaulc (Johnson 12-10) at KtnJU City
(A~uino 7-l). 8:35p.m.
Deuoit (Gullicbon 11-8) tt Milw1ukoe
(NmlfO ll·ll),l ;lS p.m .
Minnca:ott (EricUon 18--6) It Texu (K.
Brown 9-10). 8,35 p.m.
Citic•go (McDowell 15-9) at Califomi•
(1. Abbott 16-1),10:35 p.m.

Saturday's games
Boston (Hesket h 1·3) 11 New York
(S•ndmon 14-9), 1.30
01kl1nd (Welch I · II) 11 Toronto
(Candiolli 12·11), l p.m.
Chic::•go (A. Fernanda 8-12) It Cili!or·
ni1 (Unaston 17·1), l:\5 p.m.
Clrvelud (Swindell 1-14) at Balli·
more (MIIaclti9.J), 7:35p.m.
Suttle (Krueger 10-7) u K•nua City
(Appier 11 ·9), I :M p.m.
Oeuoit (Aldred 0.3) It Milw•ukce (PicIIC 1·6), 8:35r_.m.
MiMaou (Edens t-1) at Tcua (Boyd

f.m.

1·5), &amp;,35 p.m.

Clevtltnd tt Baltimore, 1:35 p.m.
Oakland It TODno.1:35 p.m.
Detroit at Milwaukee.. 2:35p.m.
Minneaota at Teus, 3:0S p.m.
Ch.ic•ao at Cal.if'cmi.a, 4 :0.5 p.m.
Bc.ton at New Y~ .1: 30 p.m.
Scatt16U K.tnau Cily, 8:05p.m.

Hunt, San Dieao, lS-7, .682, 3.22; Smi·
ley, Pilllbwah, 17·1• .610. 3.39; Dol""'.
Phihddphia. 10-S, .667. 3.34; Otnine.
AllanLa, 18-9, .667,2.32.
STRJKEOLITS - Cone., Now York,
191; Glavine, Atlanu, 170; 0 . Maddux,
Ch.iciJD, 167; HamiJch, Houuon, 153;
GGOden, Now York, 150; H11n1, San
Die.so. 140; Bene., San_Di.eao, 139._
SAVES - Loo Snulh, ~t. Louu, 39;
Dibble, Clnchmallt 2t; Mitdl Williama,
Philaddpbia, 26; Franoo, Now Yod;, 2S;
Ripui. S.. Franciaw, 22; Lclfona, s..
Dieso. 21; 8. LanUwn, Piusbur&amp;h, 17;
Dtvc Smith.
17; Berenpcr, At·
lanLa,l1.

OUetao.

American Leaaue
BATTING- Franco, feu1, .344;
Doga•, DilliOn, .337; Molilor, Milwaukee.
.332; Pa lmeiro, Tcxu, .327; P'llckcu,
MinnaoLI, .327; Tanabull, Kan5U Cily,
.326; Thomu, Cbicago, .325.
RUNS- Molitor, Milwaukee, I l l ;
Palmciro, Tun, 102; Sicm, Teus, 101 ;
Carucco, Oakland, 100; White. Toronto,
97; Fnnco, Teu1, 95: Thomas, Chicaao.
92; Rainca, Chicago, 92..
RBI - Fielder, Dcuoit, 121: Th&lt;rnu,
ChiCIJO, 103; cu ..cO, Oakland, 101 ;
Siam, To•••· 1"()(}. Canal, Teronto, 99:
Juan Oonulu, Te:ua, 9S: C. R.ipken,

Baltimore, 94.
HITS -Molitor, Milwaukee, 117 :
Palmeito, Texu, 111 ; Siom, Tuu, 178;
Puclccu, Minnc~ou, 171; Franco, Tcxa1,
178; C. Riokcn, Baltimore, 178; Dogs,
Boston, 161; Su:, New Yod, 167,
DOUBLES - Palmeiro, Tcu1, 42,
Ken_Griffey Jr., _ Sc.an.l~ 40; C. Ripkcn,
Balumore, 39: S1cm, Texaa, 38; Carter,
Toronto, 38; Boggt, 801ton, 37; R. Alomar, Toronto, 36; Reed, Boston, 36;
While, Torano, 36.
TRIPLES - L. Johnson, Chicago, II :
Molitor. Milwaukee, II: R. Alomu.
Toronto, 10; McRae, K1n111 City, 9: '
White, Toronto, 9; Gladden, Minneaot•.
9: Deverum.. Baltimore. 8; ~11clt. Min·
ncroLI, 8; Polonia, C11ifcmia, 8.
HOME RUNS -Fielder, Dct.roit, 40;
Can1oco, Oakland, 3&amp;; Cuter, Toronto,
32; ThoMa1, ChiNao, 30; Tanabull,
Kwaa CJil'i.,~C. Dav;., Minooaw, 2&amp;;
C.Rl
' '
cn,28.

ST~N. f'A:SES- R. Hcndcraon,

Oakland, S&amp;,"Ralnca, Chicaao. 48; R. Alomu, tota1lo, ~3; Polonil, Cautomil, 39;
CUyler, ~ 35; White. Toron1.0, 32;
Fnneo, Te.•u,ZI.
PITCHING (l 3 deciaiORI) - Hesketh.
lloiiOft, lll-l• .169, 3.37; Etickaon, Min·
RCIOll, lH, .7SO, 3.13; !.anallOII, Cali·
romi•. 17· 7, .708, 3.11; Jcxe Guzm•n.
Teu1, 11·5. .687. 2.1S; Finley. Calilor·
nit , 17-8, .680, 3.60; Gullicklon, Detroit,
17-&amp; .. 680, 4.2A; J. Abbon. Calilarni&amp;, 161, .667,2.92
STRIKEOUTS - Clemens, Bonon,
204; R. Johnton, Seaule, 191 ; McDowell,
CU.Caao. 172; Ryan, Tu.u, 172; Fmle.y,
CWJ'omi1, ISS; Candioui, Toronto, 153;
l.an&amp;J\00, Califomil, ISO.
SAVES- Huvcy, California, 39;
Aaullan, MinnCIOUI, 39; Eckmlcy, Oakland, 39; Rc.ardon, Bouon, 37; Henke,
Toronto, 31; Thiapcn, Chicaao, 29;
Monlaomer)', Kanw Clly,lL

Upcoming NFL games
Sunday
Mi1mi 1t Dettoi.t, 1 p.m.
New Ensland It Pl.wbwJh, 1 p.m.
Now Yodt OianUI a OUcaao, I p.m.
PhiliCielphia u Dallal, 1
Phoali• at WuttinJlon. p.m.
Tampt~ Bay tl Orccn Ba,:, I p.m.
San Francilco ll Minncaou. I p.m.
CirlciM1U It Cnoltnd, I p.m.
Saulc It Denver, 4 p.m.
Atlanll at San Di.eco. 4 p.m.
Buffalo 11 New Yoa Jeu , 4 p.m.
lndian1polil It L.os A.ngclca: lltiden, 4
p.m.
Lot AnacJea Rams at New Orlean•. 8
p.m.

r·m·

Monday

::::r·

RUNS - Butler, l.oa
t.OO;
Johruon. New Yod&lt;. 94; S
, Cllico·
1o. 90; J. Ball. Piuabuqh. 17:
W.UI, 16: Bonilla, Jliaaboqb. 14

p:;ft!

..... as.

.

· _

1181 - W. Oark. S111 Pn..,_,

!••:

Jolwoe, N•• Yodl, 101 ; Bondi. PiuobwJh, 99;
92: Bonilla,
PitUbwJh, 90; M&lt;Orilr, San o;.,o, 90;

o.-.·ou.a.,

Oan~ Ailaato, 19.
HITS-; T. Owpu~,

..

Sao Die... 161;

,

Transactions
MINNESOTA TWINS - SiJOed Tom
KcUy, m~~n•act. to a two--yell" cmuact ex·

BAITING- Morrll, Cincinnati,
.Jlt; T. Owym, San Dic&amp;o. .317;_Pendleton, Atltnta, .315; J~-, St. Louis, -~14;
McGee, San Fnncuco, .308: Bonllla,
Piuabwah• .307; Sobel, Clndllllll, .JN.

tnd OM Oliver, DaJtt winJ, to Toledo ol
the F.ut Cout Hockey
~CI.UD'i~
Mark My"". riaht wlna. to ..............
of lhe Onwiotfocby
EDMONTON OILERS - Acquired
Troy Mallette. leA wina, rtun tho New
Yodl Ran aen u oompcmttlon for &amp;ian·
in&amp; Adam Orav01, ccrtiCr.

Lei..-

c...,.._

Scioto Downs results
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Scioto
Downs Rault.t for Thun:clay, Sept. 12.
w..""" cJOIIdy, uock I,OOd.

Pim Rtcc-$2,000 C&lt;rtclilion Trot.
Dtwn's Colt (Ma:klo) 9.40, 4.20, 3.40;
Lady 8 Rapid (Andenon) 1.40, 4. 20;
Spoody R,. (Hawk) 3.60. Timo-2:03 4-5.
Abo Raccd·Popp1 D1y, 01)'nin Fan,
Gnn Meaa Bit, Nuctime Smokingun ,
Comchip, Wintton'J De Liaht. Suoker

John Bud.
Triloc:11 (&amp;-5-3) $443.00.
Perfoc:ll (1-5) 1107.60.
Soc:ond R.a~ 1,100 Claimilla Pace.

Aperuure (Sizer) 5.60, 5.00, 3.20;
Youna• Circle (l'tuben) 22.60, 10.20;

Al•aandn (CoiJW)6.00. T...,..2:03.

Also Racod· OoinJ Wild, Belinda
Raven, Good Momina Cindy, Mid s..,..
mcr'a Drum, lfiah Stll)' Troe, Babbe
Amio.

Perf0C11 (1·2)1107.60.
Third Roc:o-$1,400Claiminal'llco.
Suzio'a Hoot (Dv Miller) 9.40, 4.40, ·
3.80; Dozzlina Tw- (Co,.. Jr.) 3.40.

3.20; Dynuty Modto (l!d•uda) 7.00.
Timo-2:021-l.
Allo Raced·Dawutim, Mi.u Ocmilion,
l'lln Ann, J.tr'a Mario, B...tdlold llerlie,
Bmaldiold J lleiw.
Trifocu (1+7) $410.10.
- - (U) $32.40.
FcuM R....Sl,OOOCoadilioo T..._
Continontol Cltiol (Dv Mlllor) 10.60,
4.60, 3.2&amp;, '""' Nail (W Miller) 6.20,
4.40; Bonot\Cr'OI.I (Swu:k) 3.10. Time·
1;03 l·l.
Alao Racod-Rooo Stroot Lobail, R 8
Spood, Clran Samolil, Coauillt Sue, Will
Sum Alimmy. Scntdt·Eaay lack.
Perfoc:ll (7-3) 197.00.
Fillh Rlco-$1,100 Claimina Pace.
Velvet Hammer (Even) 1.80, 7.60.
l.40; Mary'a Oiam...t (llY Millor) 28.00,
14.20, 1.00 (dcad·heat); Snooker P
(Medclo) 3.10. Timo-2:0.2.

en-

All:o Raced-Wildwood SUII, ToWy R•

lcntlea1, lta S1ylish, D1ddy Did, Fone.·
home BlueJrua, Streets or Gold,
Onodaddy Riell.
I at half Twin Trif,... (6-7_.) $379.2D.
(7-6-4) $379.20.
- - (6-7) $148.2D. (7-€) $201.20.
SiAllt Roeo-11,400 Cllimina Pace.
Whirlin&amp; llerviah (CovM Jr.) 12.40,
4.80, 3.00; Suotlina Snilcll (Rieale) 4.61).
2.80; Redwood Fon01t (Mouoer) 3.00.
Timo-2:02 l·l.

Alao Racod-Small Credt. llaalCIIl Skip.
perC, TenaiGn B...W, Rod Bondy, W"lll
Swn fltl Oul, Cooper'• F1lcan, Wind
SiriL

ffrifocu (1-5-2) m..20.
Perfoeti (1-l) 154.00.
Seventh Race-$2,4()() ·Condition Pace.
Cluoy Raider (Dv MUle.) 1.10, 4.40,
3.40; Oood Bye Oypay (Liird) 37.00,
12.20; I A Scoo&amp;« tBur) 6.40. Timo-1:59
l·l.
Also Raced·lim Hood, Loan Review,
Dis Dis, Clttirmsnuo, Ltnen E H1n.
Muaa M.apc, Alclto.
Trilocto (245) $1,723.20.
No winners Twin Trilecla. Cnryover
1&amp;,991.00.
Eiahlh Race-S 1,100 Conditicn l'llee.
Society lloou (Mopn) 3.60, 3.00, 2.40;
Wu Bird (Dv Miller) 4.00, 3.40t Caveat
(R Miller) 6.20. Timo-1&lt;514-5.
Alto Raoed-Crca FU&amp;tu., BiUy Velva.,
MT Skipper, . Ei&amp;hty Proof, Buulcr Z.
Scntch-DWnionNdcr.
- - (6-9) $14.60.
Ninlh Rleo-Si,4000ailnina~
Voodoo Maaic:: (Siler) :8.00, 6.40,
1.&amp;0; T S Skipper (Shaq&gt;e) 4.60, 4.80;
Frilco Jones (R Miller) 1.00. Time--2:01
I ·S.

DasebaU

National Leape

,

Mitchell, San Fnnciaco, 27: W. Cluk,
San Fnnciaoo, 26; O.wwon, Chietao, 26.
STOlEN BASES - Niaon, Allanla,
10; Oriuom, Moalr'O&amp;J, 6S ; OcShicldt,
Montreal, 52; Bonda, Pittabur&amp;h, •o;
Coleman, Now YOlk, 37; BuLlet, Co. An·
acica, 37; Lanttord, SL l..oWI, 34.
PJTCHINO (13 do~iaiona) - RIJo,
Cindnnall, 13_., .765 1 l..Ui Carpenter,
St. Louil, 10-4, .714, 4.23; Oowru, S111
Fran~iaco, 10.4, .114, 4.06; Mitch
Williama, PIUitcldphia, 10-4, .714, 2.08;

Amerlctn Leaaut

Major league leaders

,

HOME RUN"S -Jolvu..,, New Yod&lt;.
33; Gan~ Allan~o, 29; Matt William&amp;. s..
Ftaneilco.l9; Mc:Orilf, s.. Dieao. 27; K.

KaJIIII City It HOUIICIII, 9 p.m.

Sunday's cames

""'·A~

Butler, Lol Anselet. 162; Bonilla, Piwbutth. 157; Pendletoa, Atlant.a, 1S7; Jou,
St.Louia, ISS; Grace, Chicaao, 154;
SandberJ, Chie~a~ IS3.
DOUBLES - BOOiilla, Pillobwgh, 39;
Jos(.. SL l..ou.U, 38; Sabot Cincinnati, 31;
O'Neill, Cincinnati, 32; Morrla, Cindnnall, 31 i GanL, Atlantl, 30; J. Bdl, PitUI·
buflh, 30; McR.eynold&amp;, New Y~ 30:
TIUPLEs -Lankford, SL l..oWJ, 13, T.
Gwynn, San Dieao. II; Fi.nlcy, Hcwton.
I 0; L. Oonz11ez, Hou1ton, I ; Orisaom,
Monllell. I; Candlclc, Houlton, 7; Van
Slyke, Pilllbwah, 7.

By DAVID GINSBURG

AP Sports Writer
BALTIMORE (AP)- It's too
late in a dreary season for the
Cleveland Indians to reach any
goals as a team, so Charles Nagy is
loolcing to accomplish a few things
for himself.
"I have my own personal goals:
I'd like to fintsh as close to .500 as
I can. I just want 10 establish
myself as a decent pitcher," he
said. "The way our 'team 's going, I
think that would be a pretty decent
accomplishment"
Nagy stopped the Baltimore
Orioles on two .runs and eight hits
in eight innin~s Thursday night,
leading the Indtans to a 6-5 victory.
He is 5-2 in his last 10 stans and 912 overall.
"He's one of the better young
pitchers in the league," Indians
pitching coach Mark Wiley said.
'A lot of guys with other clubs
have better records who haven't
pitched as well."
Nagy, a rookie right-hander,
said he gained a valuable lesson
from the nine games he pitched
with the Indians at the end of last
season.
"I'm not in awe of anyone anymore," he said. "I know what I'm
doing out there."
Nagy's biggest problem this
year has been consistency. In his
last start, Sept. 5 against Toronto,
he save up seven runs and II hits
10 ftve mmngs.
"He's been in and out," Cleveland manager Mike Hargrove said .

ten1ion.
TEXAS RANGERS dd Aleunder, pitcher,
di.. bled lisL

Activucd Ger·
(rom the 1S·d•y

Nallontl Laa•
CINCINNATI REDS- Announced
the rula,natlon of Sl.evt SchoU, U«Y·
the "'" prakknL

FootbaU

Nallonal Foo&amp;NIIIM&amp;ui -

DALLAS COWBOYS -Activated
Alonzo Hia)tamilll, Nllhack, frail ~lind

.........
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS- Placed
Bill Sclu.ta, oJfomive pard, ao iriJurod
.........
PHOENIX CARDINALS - Ptacod

Urry Center~, NMina btck, OG lajiUOd
reeervc. Sipod Tcacmce FlaJI•, JUnniaa
book.

SEATTLE SEAHA WitS - Sianod

Also Raced· Wildwood SUvar, Crowntime Rutledae. E C'1 Belt, 0 Yea,

Munc:hman, BCIJ'I&lt; Boy. WIMin.o 0...
Superfocta (7-6-4-8) lt3,7l5.1l!.
Pa1octa (7-6) 1239.10.
Attendance - 2,n7. Handle $191,540.

season.

After Duncan's homer in the
first, Ihe Reds made ii 3-2 in the
fourth when Paul O'NeiU scored on
a force play at second. In the fifth,
Freddie Benavides singled before
Duncan and Morris homered to
chase McClellan.
Cincinnati scored twice in the
eighth off Kelly Downs on a Iworun triple by Luis Quinones.
Elsewhere in the NL it was
Atlanta 5, San Diego I: Los Ange-

RETURN TRIP - The Reds' Mariano Duncan (right) gets his
second handshake or the day from third base coach Sam Perlozzo
after pounding his second homer or the game in Thursday's
encounter with the visiting San Francisco Giants, who fe117-3. (AP)
lcs 6, Hous!Dn 2; St. Louis I, Pittsburgh 0: New York 6, Chicago. 3;
and Montreal6, Philadelphia 2.

Meigs spikers remain
unbeaten; Eastern loses
The Meigs Marauder volleyball
team, under the direction of head
coach Rick Ash picked up three
more wins recently improving its
record to 7-0. The Marauder spikers picked up wins over Trimble,
Miller and Wellston.
The Marauders defeated Trimble by scores of 17-15 and 15-1.
Tricia Baer had an outstanding
game wilh 14 points and seven
aces, Misty Butcher added nine
points, Chrissy Weaver three points
arid Nikki Meier, Chrissy Taylor,
Kim Hanning and Yevette Young
two points each. Hanning added
seven lcills and Meier seven assists.
Meigs had some trouble with
long time TVC power and previously undefeated Miller. The Lady
Marauders defeated Miller 16-14 in
the first contest only to have the
Lady Falcons come back in the second game and s!Drm over Meigs 115 before Meigs came back to win
the third game 15-9. Meier and
Weaver led the way with seven
points, Taylor six, Hanning five,
Baer four and Young three points,
Weaver added four lcills and Meier
had seven assists with Baer adding
four.
In the reserve Miller defeated
Meigs. No other deUlils were available.
Meigs raised its record to 6-0 in
the TVC and 7-0 overall with a 154, 15-8 win over Wellston. Meier
had an outstanding game for Meigs
with 15 points, seven aces, and six
aces, Baer added six points and six
aces and five assists, Hanning.
Taylor, Weaver and Young added
two points each, while Young had
five kills.
Kyger Creek buts Eastern
At Tuppers Plains, Kyger Creek,
which has developed quite a trisport rivalry with Eastern over the
past several years, defeated the
Eagles 15-7 and 15-13 Thursday
evening.
In a game that left little indication as to who was going to win
Kyger Creek whizzed to a com-

manding lead in the firs! set and
won easily 15-7. In the second set,
Kathy Bernard sparked the
Eagleues as they closed a 13-5
deficit to tie the game at 13-13.
Jaime Wilson and Jessica Radford
added to the tally while Bernard hit
five straight serves to tie the game.
KC rebounded, however, taking
the next two serves for the win.
Amy Gindlesburger led the
Bobcats with II points, Sandy
Saunders added a heftylO, while
Keri Black had Ihree, Luciana
Scou, and Jody Nance each had 2.
and one each from Tanya Drummond and Alicia Ward.
For Eastern, Lee Gillilan went a
perfect 7-7 servin~ and scored four
times while Carne Morrissey and
Bema'rd each had 5. Morrissey was
a fine 8-9 and Bernard 6-7. Penny
Aeiker added two and Radford, a
freshman added one.
In spiking, Lee Gillilan went 6-7
with one lciU and Amy Well was 78. Jaime Wilson was 14-22 in setting with yet another fine game.
Eastern won the reserve contest
15-12 and 15-8 behind an eight
point effort from Lisa Golden and
Jessica Chevalier. Marilyn Kibble
added five. Rachel Polcyn led KC
with a fme nine point effort.
Eastern also won the reserve
match to raise their record to 4-1,
winning 15-6, 7-15, 15-5 in three
sets. Patsy Aeiker led the way with
ten serving points, Jess ica Karr
had 8, Rebecca Evans 7 and Martie
Holter 6. Amy Casto had 6 for
Kyger, while Amber Burnette had
five, and Christie Booten four.
Next week, Eastern plays three
contests at home: Tuesday hosting
Southwestern, Wednesday a vars1ty
and reserve match against non league Meigs and Thursday a
tripleheader with North Gallia.

C. Van(ooney
Henry Ebln Jr.
George Fronds
Don Jeffers
Roger'Manley Sr.
Frank Wells &amp; Burl
Putnam
. .

..

.

. .... ,... ,.,:... ...,..

SATURDAY
SEPTEMBER 14
9:30pm·1 :lOam
ENJOY

"DISTURB
THE PEACE"
Must be 21 years of Age
$2.00 Cover Charge

MIZWAY
TAVERN

Corner of St. Rt. 143
and St. Rt. 7
POMROY

c.ood's Ahvah

~e~~f, MASON
rJ'

WE SUPPORT THE DISTRICT SOLID WASTE
MANAGEMENT PLAN
Below is a list of Meigs County Trash'
Haulers to express our support of the
AGHJM.V Six County Solid Waste
Management Plan, which is now ready for
ratification:.
Vancooney Trash Service
Henry EWln GariNage Service
George Frands Enterprises
JeHers Trash Service
Manleys lash Service
Wells·Putman Sanitation

Atlanta, L.A. win
The Los Angeles-Atlanta showdown for first place in the NL West
doesn't really need any hype, but
Tommy Lasorda tried, anyway.
The Dodgers and Braves stan a
sold-out three-game series Ionight
at Atlanta, with Los Angeles trailing by one-half game.
"It's good for baseball, and ii's
good for the city of Atlanta,"
Lasorda said. "I have many dear
friends in Atlanta. I wish they were
10 games behind in second place.
but this is going to be exciting,
three games there and three games
at home. All their fans will be out
there pulling for the home team. I
look forward to seeing 50 or 60
thousand in the stands."
Both teams won Thursday night:
Atlanta beat San Diego 5-1 behind
left-hander Charlie Leibrandt and
Los Angeles survived 10 innings
for a 6-2 victory at Houston.
Atlanta, 41 -20 overall and 25-7
at home since the All-Star break,
(See NL on Page 5)

COo'

FAMILY
~,
RESTAURANT
'

.

RI'. 33

MASON, WV
NEXT TO FAST 4 U AND MASON MOTEL

Sunday thru Thursday, 6:30 am-10 pm; Friday &amp; Saturday, 6:30 am-11 pm

So much for the offense that
can't be stopped.
"On paper, technically il
can't," Klingler said. "But that's
like saying if the Boy Scouts run
the run-and-shoot against the New
York Giants, it's going to work. No
matter wha~ it still comes down to
personnel."
Klingler threw for nine touchdowns in a season-opening 73-3
victory over Louisiana Tech. But
againsi Miami. five sacks and six
holding penalties kept the lOthranked Cougars (1- I) in retreat On
one series, they faced a secondand-54 situation.
"I was so pumped up, I felt like
lightning," Miami defensive end
Rusty Medearis said. "We knew
the way their offense is set up, we
each had on~ man to beat. There
are not too many people that can

COUNTRY FRIED STEAK
Choice of Potato
G,reen Beans
Soup &amp; Salad Bar

8

4.89

~
~

•
~

Or Try .O ne Of Our Other Great Menu Itemst

OPEN SUNDAY, 6:30AM TO 10

/I

t

PM

carry Out Orders Available (304) 773-53~1
VISA • MASTERCARD • AMERICAN EXPRESS ACCEP111:D

extended irs wmning streak to a
season-high seven games.
The Braves had steadfastly
refused to discuss the Dodgers in
recent days, concerned, they said,
only with the next game.
"Now, I guess we can," said
Leibrandt, who gave up one run
and five hits in seven innings to
win his sixth suaight decision.
"We've put ourselves in a position where we want 10 be - on top
with L.A. coming in,"
Leibrandt said. "We've got the
momentum and we're ready to go.
We 're probably playing our besi
baseball of the year.''
The Dodl!ers have won six of
their last eight games on the road
entering the series at Atlanta.
With the score 2-2 in the lOth at
the Astrodome, Darryl Strawberry
hit a three-run homer and Kal
Daniels added a solo shot. It was
Strawberry's sixth homer of the
year at Houston. tying Dale Murphy's single-season record for an
bpponent.
"This has been a big road trip
for our club," Strawberry said.
"We didn't want to die. We have
fought as a team , and going into
Atlanta, I hope we can keep the
iarne aggressive attitude.''
· Mike Morgan (11-9) starts for
ihe Dodgers tonight against
Braves' ace Tom Glavine ( 18-9).
·· on Saturday, Tim Belcher pitches
.: againsl John Smaltz and the
~ Dodgers send Ramon Martinez
• against Steve Avery on Sunday.
;
"Right now the Braves control
~ their own destiny," San Diego ftrst
' baseman Fred McGriff said. "If
~ they beat the Dodgers, they'll win
~ it. if they don'I,they won't. "
•
Cardinals 1, Pirates 0
~
Ken Hill (9-9) gave up two hits
• in 6 2/3 innings for his first vic!Dry
~ in more than two months and Felix
! Jose drove in the only run with a
• bases-loaded walk from Doug
~ Drabek (13-13) as SL Louis defeat: ed visiting Pittsburgh. The loss

:'
:
•
:
•

Featuring

1/

"He'll have three or four good oulings, two or three bad ones, then
two or three good ones. The longer
he goes, the more consistent he'll
be.''

Hargrove took out Nagy at the
start of the ninth, saying later he
wanted to give rookie Tommy
Kramer some work. The move
almost backfired, however, ·as Baltimore scored three limes before
Steve Olin got his II th save by getting Mike Devereaux to hit into a
game-ending double play with the
bases loaded.
"We had a chance to win the
game right up until the final pitch
was thrown," said Baltimore manager John Oates. But the Orioles
still fell to 13-28 in one-run games.
Carlos Martinez and Reggie Jefferson each drove in two runs for
the Indians. Baltimore starter Jose
Mesa (5-10) walked six in fourplu s innings . and five of them
scored.
Cal Ripken hit his 28th homer,
matching his career-high, and left
fielder Joe Orsulak had three
assists. Orsulak has 17 assists this
season, tying the Baltimore record
for outfielders, set by Chuck Diering in 1954.
"Usually the guy who leads the
league or is high in assists, the
report is that you can run on him,"
Oates said. "But that's the case
with Slak. He doesn't have an outstanding arm or outstanding accuracy. all he docs is throw people
out.''

stay with our defensive linemen
thai way."
Klingler, whose Heisman Trophy chances may have been ruined
by the loss, completed 32 of 59
passes but rarely had time to throw
downfield. Unheralded counterpart
Gino Torretta, meanwhile, hit 16 of
35 passes for 365 yards and touchdowns covering 2 and 71 yards 10
Lamar Thomas and 51 and 33
yards to Kevin Williams.
"Everybody asked how we'd
stop Klingler," Torretta said.
" Nobody asked how they'd stop
us. Usually everybody talks about
our offense. It was nice being the
underdog."
"We knew we were going to
move the ball, " Thomas said.
"Their whole team is offense. I
don't know if they even practice
defense."
Inflammatory remarks by the
Hurricanes about Houston last
week had prompted Miami coach
Dennis Erickson to order his players not to talk to the media before
the 2ame. The barbs aooarently
resumed on the field .
"There was a lot of trash being
talked," Miami linebacker Micheal
Barrow said. "This was the badboys bowl game. It was a lot of
fun. That's what the game's all
about - if you dominate someone,
you talk trash to them."
Miami dominated from the outset. scoring on three consecutive
possess ions to take a 21-0 lead 90
seconds into the second quarter. At
that point, Houston had one first
down.
"It's got to be as great an effort
as I've been around in my coaching
career," Erickson said.
Houston coach John Jenkins
attributed the trouncing 10 Miami' s
talent and his team' s 17 penalties
for 158 yards.
"We're not going to sw im
around in tears and self-pity,"
Jenkins said. "We can't afford to
with another big road game at Illinois (Sept. 21) staring us in the
eye. We've got to close ranks and

SURROUNDED nY LINEMEN - Uni\·ersity of Houston quarterba(·k David Klingl er (7) is
surrounded by several of his oll'ensive linemen
while passing in the third quarter of Thursday

night's game against the host Miami Hurricanes
in Miami, Fla., in which the Hurricanes held the
Cougars to one touchdown in the fourth quarter
to win 40-10. (AP)

Steve Schott resigns as Reds' executive VP
CINCINNATI (AP) - Steve
Schott has resigned as exec ut ive
vice presid ent of th e Cin cinn ati
Reds. The club sa1d Thursd:1y th;~t
Schott, a cousin of tea m own er
Marge Schott, wanted 10 pu rs ue
other business interem.
" I have enjoyed my time in the
professional sports indu stry but

alter mucn conSJ tl er;,t,on nave
dec ided to return lO the busin ess
worlcl," Steve Schott said in apr~ ­
parcd :-; l~ll cmcn l.
He joined th e Reds in September 1988 after four ye3rs 3S 3 finan ·
cial consulwnt in New York .
"It ha.&gt; been a pleasure working
w11h someone rrom the Schott fa~ -

march on.''

The Hurricanes led 30-3 at halftime and coasted to their 39th consecutive victory at the Orange
Bowl, tying Notre Dame for the
second-longest home winning
streak in NCAA history. Miami
also kept intact a streak of II consecutive wins over Southwest Conference teams. including a seasonopening 31-3 victory at Arkansas
and a 46-3 rout of Texas in the Cotton Bowl last season.

•
:
:
;,
•

t

Gallipolis at Point Pleasant
Athens at Waverly
Jackson at Circleville
Logan at DeSales
Marietta at Parkersburg
Fort firye at Warren Local
Meigs at Nels-York
Greenup at Portsmouth
Wheelersburg at Coal Grove
Wahama at Eastern
Kyger CrCCk at Waterford
North Gallia at Ross SE
Rock Hlll at Oak Hill
Alexander at Southwestern
Chesapeake at Symmes Valley
SatUrday
Southern at Ironton SL Joe

kept the Pirates' magic number for
clinching the NL East at 14.
Mets 6, Cubs 3
Howard Johnson had three
RBis, giving him 101 for the season, and scored the go-ahead run ,
leading New York over Chicago at
Wrigley Field. Rookie Anthony
Young (2-1) was the winner and
Mike Bilccki fell to 13-9 .
Chicago's Andre Dawson hit his

26th homer.
Expos 6, Phillies 2
Larry Walker had Ihrce hits,
including his 14th homer off loser
Bruce Ruffin (3-7), and drove in
three runs as visiting Montreal beat
Philadelphia for its seventh victory
in eight games. Chris Nabholz (57) gave up seven hits, struck out
four and walked three in 7 213
innings for the victory.

Redwomen post first victory
of season over visiting Urbana
Despite a disappointing start last
weekend in the Elmhurst (Ill.) Invi tational, the University of Rio
Grande volleyball got back on
track at home Thursday with a
three-match sweep of Urbana.
It was the Mid-Ohio Conference
opener for th e Redwomen. who
defeated the visitors 15-5, 15-4 and
15-8.
"This was a good w1n for us
because some of our people were
beginning to get down about
thing s ," Coach Patsy Fields
remarked. "I think we're still
young, with a 101 of inexperience,
but wcve got to be patient because
we 'II come around."
With former all-around Jackson
High School athlete Billina Cooper
leading the offense with a total of
14 kills, the Redwomen held off
the Lady Blue Knights' stubborn
attempts to gain control through all
of the matches . Teresa Zempter
backed up the offense with II kills,
while teammates Andrea Hedges

and Robin Sharp supplied four kills
each, and Tiffany Neff and
Michelle Spears added three
apiece.
Zemptcr was also credited with
six solo blocks and Cooper had
three to shore up the defense. In
digs, the Rcdwomen held onto the
lead with 10 each from Cooper and
Sharp, nine by Spears, eight by
Hedges, five from Zcmptcr and
three added by Neff. Cooper also
recorded four serving aces, while
Sharp and Shelley Wray had three
each.
Now 2-4, the Redwomen travel
this weekend into West Virginia
Intercollegiate Athletic Conference
country for the Fairmont State Invi tational. The team must defeat
Glenville State, Wheeling Jesuit
and West Liberty on Saturday to
enter tournament play.
"I feel confident we can win the
tournament if the team gets up for
it," Fields said.

ily, " Marge Schmt said.
Tom Browning (14-10) said it
took a three- run first inning,
including a two·run homer by Mau
William s, to get him settled in!D a
rhythm in Thursday's 7-3 victory
over the San Francisco Giants.
"I was a little tentative just
because I've been strugg ling," he
said. ''After the home run, I settled
down a little bit. I just tried to set
th em out as quickly as I could w1th
as little damage as possible."
Browning had lost two straight
games si nce his last victory on
Aug. 28.
"I'd like to finish strong," he
said .." It's been a fairly poor year,
but I still have 14 yictories."
Hal Morris, who went into
Thursday's game tied for the
National League batting lead, wem
2- for-4 with a double and a home
run, raising his average two poiniS
to .319. The last Reds player to win
the bmting title was Pete Rose, who
hit .338 in 1973.

NL gameS ... --~C:::::Co~n::!lin:.::u::::ed::...:::fro:::.m::.P:..:a:!!g:.e4:. :.l_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

:•• Tonight's games

Make Plans To Have Sunday Dlnner With Us

• • .,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Indians beat Orioles 6-5

Scoreboat·d
In the majors ...

.~

Miami Hurricanes post 40-10
. win over pass-happy Houston
By STEVEN WINE

Cincinnati beats San Francisco 7-3
By TERRY KINNEY
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATI (AP)- Mariano
Du ncan, who will become a free
agent after this season, says he's
playing for fun, not negotiating
chips.
Since com ing off the disabled
lis t Aug. 23, h ~ has seven home
runs and 17 runs batted in. He's hit
four homers in the past three
games, including two Thursday in
the Cincinnati Reds' 7-3 victory
over the San Francisco Giants.
"I don't want to talk about contracts. I just want to play," said
Duncan, who lost his regular second base job this year but has staned at three different positions for
the Reds.
"The only time I have fun is
when I go on the field and play the
game. I love the game."
Duncan acknowledged that he

Friday, September 13, 1991

i'" , • ·

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

.204 Condor St.

Pomeroy, OH .

Spring and Summer Hours
Monday thru Friday
II l.M.-5 P.M.

Sat. II A.M.·1 P.M.

NO CREAKS HERE -Tim Hell (left), director or the Sports,
Industrial and Rehabilitative Medicine Department at Holler Clinic checks University of Rio Grande studenl Erk Leas, ll member or
tl;e Red men baseball team, during the rree athletic physicals offered
by the Clinic to Rio Grande athletes.

~THE

GRAVELY

SYSTEM

DON TATE

CHEVROLET-OLDSMOBILE-CADILLAC-GEO
308 East Main Street, Pomeroy, Ohio

614·992·6614

DON TATE'S 1991 CLOSEOUT SALE HAS BEGUN!!

0- -LL~
c•
I 991 lUMINA Z34
IN STOCK

1991 GEO PRIZM

$7999

--=1991 CAVALIER
Best Selection
Anywhere

I q9 I CUTLASS SUPREME

$11,599

.a:::::y_

....
"~
a

NEW 1991 ti1 TON
4x4 PICKUP
Stodt #1147. loadtd

As Low As

9999

1991 CAPRICE

$11,999

McClure's
Family Restaurant

1989 FORD RANGER auto, air, low miles .................... $7995

u F,lsnd D•g
2 FOR 1SALE
2 HOT FUDGE CAKES
FOR THE PRICE OF ONE

1985 CHEVY CELEBRITY............................................... $2995

•

suNDAY, SEPT.

•

MONDAY-SUNDAY, SEPT. 16·22

BAR·B~QUE RIB SANDWICH
WITH MEDIUM FRENCH FRIES...........................
Cleo. Harli"'JJI' Pltwy
ltii!DlEPOIT
614-992-5241
))

479 Jack1011 Pikt

GAWPOUS
61··446·3137

•

1988 DODGE RAM 50 4x4 super clean ....................... $5995
1987 CHRYSLER leBARON .......................................... $5495

1988 OLDS. 98 REGENCY

•

53 • 19

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $999 5

1985 NISSAN P/U ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $2495
1987 OLDS CIERA•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $4995
1984 CHEVROLET P/U ............................................... $199 5
.1986 CHEVY CAVALIER............................................... $1995
1991 CHEV LUMINA EURO, Red·Yery Sharp.............. $13,995

354 Easl Main St.
POf!laOY

614-992-62.2

.. - ....

----·· .... -····-··

�Page

~The

Daily Sentinel

Friday, September 13, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•"

Support These
Fine Area
Businesses!

Air Force
27
• Arizona
24
Arizona State
23
27
• Army
• Aubum
23
• Boise State
27
·California
27
• Colorado
28
• Duke
28
• East Carolina
24
• Rorida
24
·, Florida StaiB
49
Geo~ia Tech
34
• Hawwi
34
Illinois
26
Iowa
31
• Kansas State
27
• Miami FL (Sept 12) 33
• Miami' OH
23
• Michigan
27
• Michigan State
35
24
• MinnesoiB
• MississiPPi State
24
• Nebraska
30
• Norlh Carolina
38
• Norlh CaroWna State 40
• Norlham IHinois
23
• Ohio State
26
• Ohio U.
26
• Oklahoma
42
Onagon
27
Oregon State
27
Penn Stale
30
• Pinsburgh
27
Rica
30
' San Diego Stata
40
South Carolina
28
Syracuse
20
'T.C.U.
24
'Tenne"ee
31
·Texas A &amp; M
29
Texas-EI Paso
34
Tulsa
22
'Vandetbiit
24
41
• Virginia
• Wake Forest
38
• Washington State
26
·Wisconsin
31
• Wyoming
28

Pomeroy

992-6891

VALLEY LUMBER
555 PARK ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992-6611

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER
INSURANCE

• Akron
AllbamaA&amp; M
Allbama State
• Angelo State
• ~lanS1att
• a.thu,..·Cookm&amp;n
Bollon U
Cermal F~rlda

' Ch-

• ·Eullt'n Ullnoia
Eu1ern Klntuciy
Florida A &amp; M

992-2342

• Furman
Grambling
HalyCtOII

'Idaho
• lndllna St••

Jactu.on Stitt

• Lllayent

Lllllgh
• Loulllana Ted!

Dairq

• Maine
' WatthaH
Milslltlppi VallfY
• Wontana81.aa

Queen

' NE Loull~a
• Nft.t•Reno

• New Hampthlre

• Nonnern IOWa
Rtode ltland
' Sam HOUlton

Samord

Soulhlfn 11\lnDis

• SW Mllsourl

992-3322

VilanO't'a
'WtbtrSta~

• W•tern Kentucky
• Wltl'-m &amp; Mary
• Wlnaton·S.m

NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Young11own

TRACTORS and
RIDING MOWERS

Peoples

Bank
3 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS
MEMRER FDIC

ISECOtiiD STREET JACKSON AVE.

Sth STREET
Pt. Pleosont, W. Vo.Now Hovef1, W.

~·Ridenour

Supply
CHESTEI, OHIO
915-3301

a

',

•'

882-213()

IIMnoll Stolle
Alcorn
SoUihern U.
Pralrlt Vtew, TX

"

2'l
28
45

V.ll.l.

27

21

27
20
28

.
35

:..

28
:M
2'l
23
24
27

J3

37

""20

· Worlftn
r...., Stale

• Vllcloata
WOitOid

Eutttn Waat~lng!Oft
• SE llluoun

·-Aid

0

..

..,_

Shipptnaborg
• SuiQINihanna

Unloo, NY

' Weal Cheltll' Statl!l

Weatminster
• Widener
0

o

"2827
28

.

21

Hendltfton

' Mllsouri VaJ•

' NE Oklahoma

· st~

Southtrn Ulah
· St . Francis , IL
St. Olaf
SW Wlr1nt1011 State
• W•tmar
Whtllon
WUIIam Jtwtll

• Wltc:Onain·LaCroalt

Albany, GA
· Arkansas Tech
• Arkansas-Monticello
Capital
• Ctnttl
' Clark
Cumberland
Delta Stale
• Eaat TUII
Elilabeth City
Elon
• Emory ' Henry

24
27

22
31

Ferrum
Fort Valier
Guilford

0

7
23

Iowa Wesleyan
KnoxVille
lenoif· Rhyne
Llvlngaton
MIIIIIPI
• MtlsllspPI Collage
• NOffOIK

7
14

17
17

Ouachita

0

10

•

7
14
13

·Claremont

Nonh Carutin. A. 6 T
• Oelawatt Sta51

W•tern lhtyland

' C.t POly

.0

• M.caiHt.,
o

Eut C.nual Oklahoma

41
33
22
24
23
48
28

°

VaiDaralao
NW Millourl
Alma
St. Norbln
' Cttlltll MathOC:hll

2&lt;1
28
34
21
30
27

• Kllrntr

Elmhurst

20

7
0

10
7
14

:22
7

•

14

•

Harding

Grand Valley

Moorhead
lndlaf\II)Oiit
Sterling
Grinnell
WArne Stile, MI

'Z1

South~tn

2-4
21

2o4
31
35
J8
47
21
23

23

o

14

41

22
40
31
21
24
23
28
24
27
24
28
41
23
35
24
22
24
2&lt;1
28
28
41
21

o

....

North•n ColOrado

• Pomona

23

24
21

28

21

23
40
30
22

o

31

21

• Sonoma
St. lllarys, CA

30
27

13

• W•ttrn Slatt

26

Penland State
' RedlanOa
Santa Clata

2•
2•

DISCOVER WHY
PEOPLE. SAY,
~
...t I I

P~

17
17
21

12
17

13
20

•
10
•
10

•

W! ha vt t ht

Serta you
in the size you

wont
nnd
at a price you'll Hke.

Pomeroy, Ohio

7

20

13

21
10
2'l

•

10
7
7

WARNER
HEATING .
AND

COOLING

21
12

Arkanau

Cot
Central Oklahoma
Winona State

' Auglburg
o Minot
Concordia, NE
• Aurora
o HMUngl
WIIIOOntin-Stevens POint

Miltt
Fon Hap
lambuth
• Bethany, WV
Hampden-S ydney
Livingstone
• Glenville
o Central Arkansas
Pinlburg
o

Faytctevillt

7
14
21
13

10
17

••

14

:22
14

7

21

••
10

20

20
14

22

13

•
•

13

14

23

•
•
"•

23

7
13

10

21
7
13

Albtlgnt

13

Whhl•

NOI!htldQI

C.tUAMran
' COiofadc» WlnM
Abilene Chtiltlan
Colotado Colleg•

20
14

21
21

20

•

7
20

LaV.rM

12
10

Sanla Bllblra

10

w•sowrl Southern

' San Ffanc:taco Stale
' Humboldt
Menlo Park

UW11NGS.COATS

Fisher
.Funeral Home
IIICI FISHII •
Owsotr/Oporator

• DDUPOII

992 ·5

14

Savannah Stale

• W.t VIrginia State
' W.t Llblny

Super Efficiency

7
7
20
13
14

21
20

M.,-,vll\t
Tenntlatt Wesleyan
Waahburn
Welt Georgia

XL 1200

s

• MidwHttfn
Kentucky State
o Newberry
o Gardner-Webb
• Trln~y. TX
North Alabama
J.C. Smhh
SW OklahOma

Weller.. DE

Heat Pump

•

20
14

MMhOdltt

Air CotMI!Ion•s
Kith Elficioncy
En•n fawing Heat Pumps
lopoirs All lllokos

17

North Carol ina C.ntrai
Wuhlngton l L..
• Bridgewater, VA
• Morehouse
o

SALES • SERVICE
INSTALLATION
fiii'IMKtl

14

13
7

CROWS
Family Restaurant

992-5432

Pomeroy, Ohio

FRIDA~

NICHT SPECIALI

BAKED PORI CHOPS &amp;
DRESSING
SALAD, ROLL and
CHOICE OF POTATO

$525

FOI SDIDAY 8 MOIDIY UD MONDAY, $£PI EMBER II and 18
BUFFAL0............ 30 .. NEW YORK JETS............ l3
Billa looking for 8th llraisJtt over Jet1, including 30-7, 30-27 wino in '90 •.. Buffalo scored TD in final 19
aeeond1 in 2nd came ..• Jett won 7straight from Billa, '84to '87.
CINCINNATI ............ 27 . . CLEVELAND ............ l7
Bengali swept Brown• in '89 and '90, winning in Cleveland last fa1134-13, QB Boomer Esiason completing
two TD puae1 ... in aeuon fmale, Cincy won 21-14 on 4th quarter TD,

••DALLAS............ I3

PIDLAD"ELPHIA.......... lO

Cowboyalooking for upset after losing 7 in a row to Eagles ... in Dallas last year, Philadfelphia rallied in 4th .
quarter to win 21-20 ... at home, Eagle defense locked out Cowboys 17-3
•*GREEN BAY............ 20
TAMPA BAY............ l7
Two of the four 6-10-era in NFC Central last fall traded victorieo ... TB won 26-114, Buca intercepting Pack
Stimea ... in 20..10 win, QB ADthony Delwig led CB with two TD paaaeo.
**DENVER............ 28 SEATfLE ............ 20
Teams oplit two close onea in '90, Broncos edging Seahawko in wild one at home 34-31, Dave Trudwell'o FC
· fmally winning it in OT.• •Seattle won aecond meeting, 17-12
. . L.A. RAIDERS ............ 23
INDIANAPOUS ..... ....... I4
Two NFL "moven", originally Oakland and Baltimore, meet for juot 3rd time since franchise•
awitched ... each hu won once oinoe '77 ... Coltslast won AFC Eau title in '87 .
MIAMI.. .......... 31
••DETROIT.. . ......... l3
Schedules haven't matched these two teams in 5 yean .. . Dolphinalead brief3.game series, 2-1, Lions·
winning Jut meeting 31-21 .• •Detroit laal appeared in playoffs in '83.
NEW YORK GIANTS ............ l7
• *CIDCAGO ............ l3
These old-time rivala (teaw aplit two game series in 19251) met in playoffs last year... QB Jay Hostetler
completed 10 of 17 passea, 2 for TDa,leading Giants to 31-3 victory.
SAN FRANCISCO ............ I7 . . MINNESOTA ............ l6
In season fmalelut December, 49en ttunned Vikea 20..17, S . F. QB Steve Young throwing 34-yard TD pass
to John Taylor in lut29 aecondo ... 19th straight road win for 49ers.
. . NEW ORLEANS............ 23
L..A. RAMS .......... l3
Saints took two from Rams in '90, rallying from 20-10 deficit in 4th quarter to win f1rst meeting 24-20 ... in
Monday niter, Sainta won 20-17 with FG in fmal two seconds.
. . Prrr5BURGH ............ 24 NEW ENGLAND ............ IO
Steeler 24-3 win over Patt laot fall gave Pitt coach Chuck Noll hia 200th career victory, joining only four
other coae~ to win 200 ... win gave Steelero 7-3 series lead.

••SAN DIEG0............20

'(

·-·- - · - - - · - -- - - - -- ' - -·""'"'

r-- , .

MIDDLEPORT

992-5627

Zion Ch.urch of Christ
Pomeroy, Harrismville Rd. (R1. 143)
P:s10r: Rober E. Punoll
S~mday School • 9:30 r .m.
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Uberty Assembly or GQd
Dudding Lme, Muon, W.Va.
Pastor: Dan S. Eatoo
Sunday W01ship • 10:30 p.m.
Thunday Servicer • 7 p.m.

Bradbury Church of Christ
Putor: Tom Runyoo
S~mdry School · 9:30 r .m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.

Baptist

Tuppers Plains Church or Christ
Pastor: Robert Foster
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip . 9:4S a. m., 6:30p.m.

Free Will Baptist Church
Ash Sl!Ul, Middlcpon
Pastor: Mart Morrow
Saturday Service: - 7:30p.m .
Sundoy Sdoool· 10 Lm.
Wonhip ·II a.m.,
Wedncoday Service-7:30p.m.

Dater Church rl Christ
P.stor. Roger Watson
Sooday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesdoy Scrvicco · 7 p.m.

Rutland First Baptist Church
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:4S a.m.
Pomeroy First O.ptlst
East Moin St
Pastor: Steve Fuller
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 o.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.
First Southern Baptist
4 t 872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: £ . Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
W01ship · 10:45 a.m.. 7:30 p.m.
Wedneoday Service• · 7:30 p.m.

QUALITY
PRINT \
SHOP

255 MILL ST.

MIDDLEPORT

Muon Church rl Christ
Millers._., Mason, W.Va.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Worship · 11 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Bradford Church of Christ
St Rt. 124 &amp;: Co. Rd. S
Putor: Derek Stwnp
Sunday Sdlool ·9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 r.m., 7:30p.m.
WcdAeodry Servicea ·7:30p.m.

Racine First Baptist
Pastor. Steve Deaver
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:40 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.
Sliver Run Baptist
Pastor: Bill Little
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship . II a.m., 7JO p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.
Mt. Union Baptist
Pu1or: Joe N. Sayro
Sundry School • 9:4S a.m.
Evening ·6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.
Bethlehem Baptist
Pastor: Rev. Earl Shuler
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m.
Thursday Services ·7:30p.m.
Old Bt'lhe Free Will Baptist Church
28601 St. Rt 7, MiddlepM
Sunday Scboot • tO o.m.
Evening · 7:30 p.m.
Thursday Services · 7:30p.m.
Hillside Baptist Church
St Rt 143 juSl off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sundoy School · tO Lm.
Worship · II r.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
Hope Baptist Chapel
S70 Gnnt St, Middleport
Pastor: David Bryan, Sr.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worsh1p · II a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Victory Baptist
S25 N. 2nd St, Middlepon
rastor: James E. Keesee:
Worship- 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Faith Baptist Church
R.ailroad St ., Mason
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonh•p·llo.m.,6p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Forest Run Baptist
Past01: Rev. Nyle Borden
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wo"hip · 2:30p.m.
Mt. Moriah Baptist
Founh 1k Moin St. Middleport
Pastor. Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip · 10:4S a.m.
Antiquity Baptist
Pu1or: Kenne1h Smith
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • t0:4S a.m.
Thunday Service~· 7:30p.m.
Rutlond Free Will Baptist
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Ash SUeot Freewill Baptist
Middleport
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.
Sawnlay Service · 7:30p.m .

Catholic
Sacred Heart Catholl&lt; Church
161 Mulbeny Ave., Paneroy, 992.5g9g
:
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz
· Sat Con. 4:45·5: IS p.m.; Mau • S:Jil p.m.
·
S~m . Con. • 8:4S·9: IS a.m.,
Sun. Mass · 9:31la.m.
Drily Mau · g,30 r .m.

992-3345

Church of Christ
Pomeroy Churcb or Christ

212 w. Main St
Pa1tor: Andn:w Miles
Sunday School· 9:31la.m.
Wonhip • I0:30a .m. , 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvicea • 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Walllde Church of Christ
332260rild='s Home Rd.
992-3847
Sunday School • 11 a.m.
Wonhip·l0a.m.,6p.m.
Wednesday Semw • 7 p.m.

786 N. 2ND AVE.
MIDDUPORT, OHI.O
992·6491 ~

00 Veterans
--=--~Memorial HosPital
115 E. Mamoriol Dr.
992·2104

,,

Latter-Day Saints
Reorpnlrocl Clourdt of J-• Cloriot In
Latter Day Saints
Ponland·R.a~ Rd.
P:s10r: William Roush
Sunday Sdlool · 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip - 10:30 o.m.
Wedneiday S.JVices · 7:3,0p.m.

Cannel
Pastor. Kenneth Baker
SW1day School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip. 10:45 a.m. (2nd .t 41h S~m)

,

Mornln1 Star
Putor: Kenne1h Bolter
S~mdry School • 9:4S o.m.
Won hip • 10:30 r.m.
Thunday Services· 7:30p.m.

Lutheran
St. John Lutheran Church
Pine Gro"¥e
Pastor: Laun A. lelch Shreffler
Wonhip . 9:30 Lm.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
Our Snlour Lutheran Church
and Henry Sts . Ravenswood,
W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. George C. Weirick
Sunday School · 9:30 Lm .
Worship - II Lm .

Walnul

Sutton
Pas1or: Kenne1h Bolter
Sunday School · 9:31la.m.
Worship - 10:4S a.m. (l11.t 3nl Sun)

0

Sl. Paul Lutheran Churcll
Comer Sycamore &amp;. Sewnd St., Pomeroy
Putor: Laura A. Leach Sbreffler
S~mday School • 9:4S a.m.
Wonhip · 11 Lm.

United Methodist
Graham United Methodist
Worship· 9:30a.m. (tst.t 2nd Sun), 7:30
p.m. (3nl &amp;: 4111 Sun)
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

,_,.,

Success Road Chureh rl Christ
Pastor: Jooeph B. Hosldns
Sundry School · 9 r .m.
Worship · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesr:lay Service• · 7 p.m.

Off 124 behind Wilkc•ville
Pastor: Charles Jones
Sunday School · 9:30 r .m.
Wor.hip · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.
Meigs Cooperative Parish
Northeast Cluster
Atrred
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Long Bottom
Paswr: Oiarlea; Eaton
Sooday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 r.m.
Wedneodry Sc!Vic:es · 7:30p.m.

Langsville Christian Churc•
Sunday School • 9:30 r.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Ree&lt;lsvltle
Pastor. Rev. Charles Eaton
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Servict:s- 7:30p.m.

Henlock Gron Church
Pu1or. Cltarles Oomigan
S1mday ocl1ooi·I0:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 9:30 Lm. 7 p.m.
Old Duter Bible Christian Church
PallOr. Jack Cleland
Sunday Scbool • I 0 a.m .
WcdAeodry Services· 7 p.m.

Chnstian Union
Hob11111 Church or Cbriatln Chrlsll.:n

Tuppers Plains St. Paul
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship · 1(} L m.
Tuesday Scmces · 7:30p.m.

Unloa
Prrtor: Theron Durham
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Evening . 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Services - 1 p.m.
HU'Ifonl Churc• of Christ In Christian
Union
Hartford, W.Va.
Putor: Rev. David McManis
Sunday School • II a.m.
Wonhip ·9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneodry Service• · 7:30p.m.

Church of God
Ml Moriah Church or God
Racine
Pastor: Rev. James Satterfield
Sonday Sdlool · 9:4S a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service1 -1 p.m.
RuUand Church of God
P:r10r: Jobn F. Con:onn
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip · ll Lm., 7 p.m .
Wedneodry Services · 7 p.m.
Syracuoe First Church of God
Wonhip - 10 a.m .
Sunday School • II a.m.
Evenins . 7 p.m.
WcdAeoday Services · 7 p.m.
Chun:h or God r1 Prophecy
OJ. White Rd. off St Rt 160
Pastor. Pat Henson
Sunday Sdlool • 10 a.m.
Wonhip ·I I o.m.
Wedneodry Service• • 7 p.m.

Episcopal
Grace Ep!Jcopal Church
326 B. Moin St, Pcmeroy
Pastor: Rev. Dr. Roy C. Myc~&gt;
Sundry odlool and wonhip • II a.m.

Holiness
Plose Gn&gt;ve Bible Holn. . Clourdt
1/2 mile off RL 325
Pastor. Rev. O'Dell Mlllley
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Se!Vice · 7:30 p.m.

w...eyrn Bible Hollnts1 Church
7S Pearl St, Middleport.
Pas10r: Rev. Roy McCuty
Sunday ochool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · I 0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wodneodry Service· 7:30 p.m.
Hysell Run Holiness Church
P:o10r: Robert M:nley
Sundry Sc:hool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Harr11011vllle Hotl,_ Chapter
Pastor: Rev. Jobn Neville
Sundry SchooliO o.m.
Worship · II o.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wedneoday SeMce · 7:30p.m.

Dyenllle Community Church
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:30 r.m., 7 p.m.

Coolville United Methodist Parish
Pastor: Harold E. Alloway-Priddy
Coolville Church
Moin &amp;: Fif1h St
Sundoy School · 10 r .m.
Wonhip · 9 a.m.
Tuesday Servi~• · 1 p.m.
Bethd Church
Towmhip Rd., 468C
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.
Wednc:aday Service• - 10 a.m.
Hockingport Church
Grond Suea
Sunday School· 10 r.m.
Worship · II a.m.
Wednesday Service~ · B p.m.
Torch Church
Co. Rd. 63
SW1day School • 9:30 r.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

Racine f1nt Church of the Naurene
Pastor: Them•• L. Oalea;,ll
S~mday School · 9:30 r .m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service.s - 1 p.m.
Middleport Church or the Nu.arcne
Pastor: Rev. Uoyd D. Grimm, Jr.
Sunday School · 9:30 r .m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 1 p.m

Reedsville Fellowship
Church &lt;I the Nu.arene
Pas~: John W. Douglar
S1111day School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m.• 7 p.m.
Syraaue Church of the Nuarene
P:s10r: Rev. Clem McMillan
Sundoy Sc:hool • 9:30 o.rn.
Wonhip-10:30a.m.,6p.m.
Wedneaday Services • 7 p.m.

Enter~rlse

Pomeroy O.un:h of 1he Nu:rene
Putor: Rev. Thomu McOung
Sunday Sdlool · 9:30 o.m.
Wo1&gt;hip · 10:30 a.m. rnd6p.m.
Wedneodry Services · 7 p.m.

Aatwoods
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School· 10 Lm .
Worship · II a.m., 6 p.m.
Thunday Services · 1 p.m.

Ch..er Church or lbe Nuarene
P:110r. Rev. Herbert Onto
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worsllip • II a.m .. 7 p.m.
Wednuday Services · 7 p.m.

Forest Run
Pastor: Wesley Thlllcher
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 9a.m.
Thursday Services - 6:30p.m.
Heath (Middleport)
Pastor: Frank Smith
Sunday School · 9:30 Lm.
Worship-10:30r.m.
Wednesday Services · 6 p.m.

RuUand Church of tile Nazarene
Prrtor: Samuel Buye
Sunday Scbool • 9:30 a.m.
Worship . 10:30 Lm., 6:30p.m.
Wedncoday Services • 7 p.m.

Portland Flrot Clourch rllbe Nuaront
Pastor: William Ju1w1
Sunday School • 9:30 r.m.
Worship· 10:40 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Scrviceo · 7:30p.m.

Minersville
Pastor. Wesley Thatcher
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.
Pearl Chapel
PasLor: Aorence Smilh
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship · tO a.m.

Sundoy School9:30 r.m.
Evening · 1 p.m.
Thursday Service · 7:30p.m.

Christian Fdlowshlp Center
Solem St, Rutland
Putor: Robert E. Mwser
Sundoy School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip -11 :15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service- 7 p.m.

Rejoicing Life Church
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middlepon
Pastor: Rev. Michael Pangio
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Mono Chapel Church
Panor. Davtd Curfman
Sundry sdlool· 10 a.m.
Wonhip . II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

..
~I

'I

•.

-.

'·
'

I

.

Pentecostal

•

Pentecostal Assembly
St. Rt 124, Racine
Putor: Willi om Hobock
Sunday School· 10 o.m.
Evming · 7 ~.m.
Wednesday Servtces • 7 p.m.

Faith Goopol Church
l.oog Bouan
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Wo~&gt;hip • 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Middleport Pentecostal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Oark Baker
Sunday School · tO o.m .
Evening · 6 p.m
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Mt Olive Commr.anlty Church
Putor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service · 7 p.m.

Presbyterian

'•

Harrison "YUle Presbyterian Church
1
Wonhip · 9 a.m.
•\
Sunday School · 9:4S a.m.

·'
Middleport Presbyterian
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
:
Wo rship. IOa.m.. 4 p.m. (2nd&amp;: 4th Sun.) ;

Ecciesla Fellowship
128 Mill St, Middleport
Pastor; Chuck McPhcnon
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening - 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
Full Gospel Lighthouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor. Roy Hunter
Sunday Sdoool · 10 a.m.
Evening 1:30 p.m.
Tuesday&amp;: Thunday · 7:30p.m.

Syracuse flrst United Presbyterian
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship . tl a.m., 4 p.m. (h1.t Jnl Sun.) •

''I•

Seventh-Day Adventist
S.v011th-Day Adv•tlot .
Mulbeny Hta. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Bob Snyder
Saturday Servic:es:
Sabba1h Sdoool • 2 p.m.
Wonhip • 3 p.m.

Neue Settlement Churth
Sunday Wonhip ·2:30p.m.;
Thunday serviceo -7:30p.m.

South Bethel New Testament
Silver Ridge
Panor. Duane Sydenatricker
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service -7 p.m.
Carleton Interdenominational Church
Kingsbury Road
Pastor. Clyde W. Hendersoo
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Evening - 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service ~ 7 p.m.

~

-.

Umted Brethren
Mr. Hermon United Brethren In Cbrist •
Church
Tens Canmunily off CR 82
Pastor: Raben Sanden
S~mday School · 9:31la.m.
•
Wonhip·10:30a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servicea · 7:30p.m.

Freedom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pas10t: Rev. Roger Willford
S~mday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:4S r.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

•
\

Eden United Brethren In Chrig
SW1day School· 10 a.m.
Worship · 7:31l p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

•

•

•
•

•

•

•'

White's c•opel Wesleyan
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 r.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday Sdoool · 9:30 r.m.
Wonhip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

The Solvadon Army
Sunday Sdoool · 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip ·IO:OOa.m., 7:30p.m.

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

RuUand
Putor. Arthur Cnt.rec:
Sunday School· 9:31la.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
Thursd1y Services · 7 p.m .

992·""'
271 North

S.Cond

Salem Center
Pastor: Roo Fierce
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Wonhip-IO:IS r.m.

214 E. Main
992·5130 Pomeroy

Snowville
P1119r: Florence Smi1h
S111dry School · 10 r.m.
Wonhip- 9 a.m.

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY

Cluster
Apple Grove
Par10r: Carl Hicka
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wonhip · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Service• . 1 p.m..
Southern

SALES &amp; SERVICE

992-7075

i

172 North S.Cond AwL
llliddl-rt. Ohio

MEIGS nRE

CENTER. INC.
John F . FuiU. Mgr ·
Ph . nt-~to•
PnmPrOY

Fll1d Ckldu"
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

nnrl St•rl"it"P ..t/w-n~- ~
Established 1913

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
264 South

"f111111~1 Ke~ludg

· ·f)iJ{rlif~-

RAWUNGS.(OATS

992-SUI

Middl•pert,
Ohio

(row's Family Rfltourant

EWING FUNERAL HOME

992-5432

2nd

Middleperl

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
t
we Fill Doctors· ·[•·_
.,.._...
Prestrtption\

Pom@roy

99j.J9S5

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE

Homthteo ~.1w~

Posntroy

nl~

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

0\\ifl S,rttl Q3....f.J

93 Mill StrMI
Mldcleport, Ohio 41710

716 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
'

Sllvenvllle Word of Faith
Pastor: David Dailey

Calvary Bible Churth

992-2121

)

Burlington Comrwunlty Churth
Burlin hun
Putor. Ray r!udermilt
Sunday Sdlool·lOa.m.
Won hip • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 1 p.m.

·,

liS Buuem1,11 Ave., Pomeroy.

Rock Springs
Putor:Keu.h Rader
Sunday School· 9:15 a.m.
Wonhjp • 10 a.m.
Wedneaday Servicet • 6 p.m.

I 06 Mulberry Au.

Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m

Other Churches
Oiurch - 9:15 Lm.

·.
•,

Fairview Blblt Church
l.etart,W.Vo.Rt I
Pu1or: James Lewis
Sunday School · II a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.

·,

Calv~ry Pilgrim Chrpel

New Haven Chr.an:• or the Nazarene
Putor: Glendon SLroUd
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m .• 7 p.m.
Wedneodry Serviceo • 7 p.m.

Trlolty Confl"ladonal Church
Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman

Pomeroy
Pas10r: Eunhae (Gnce) Kce
s;.,day School· 9:1S a.m.
Wonhip · 10:31la.m.,6p.m.
Wednesday Service• - 7:30 p.m.

Spiritual Faith Church
State 338, AnUqu1ly
Pastor: A. Stewart
Sund•y School · 10 Lm .
Evening-7 :30p.m.
·munday Service · 1:30 p.m.

United Faith Church
Rt 7 on Pomeroy By-Pru
Pas10r: Rev. Robert E. Smi1h, Sr.
Sunday Sdlool • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 r.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Nazarene

Pastor: Kellh Racier
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m., 6 p.m.
Tuesday Servitts -7 p.m.

.·.·

Hazel Community Church

Radne

Rulland Bible Methodist
Pastor: Rev. lvan Myers
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

C(!ntnl Cluster
Asbury (SyracUS&lt;)
Pastor: Wesley Thatcher
Sundry School · 9:45a.m.
Worship· II Lm.
Wednesday Servitts - 7:30 p.m.

Syrrarse Mission
1411 Bridgeman SI.,Syncusc
Sunday School · 10 r .m.
Ev...... ·6p.m .
Wednesday Service· 1 p.m.
Off Rt 124
Pastor. Edael Han
Sunday Sdlool · 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip. 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.

Lruret Clltr Fro&lt; Methodist Church
Pastor: William Williams
Sunday School · 9:30a .m.
Worship · IO:Jila.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor: Brenda Weber
Wor.hip · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Faith Tabemade Church
Briley Run Road
Putor. Rev. F.mmcn Rawsoo
Sundry School · 10:00 a.m.
Evenina 1 p.m.
Thunclay Service · 7 p.m.

East Letart
Pastor: Roger Grace
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 a.m .
PallOr. Roger Grace
Sund•y School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip · II r.m.

Chester
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School · 10 Lm.
Thunday Services . 7 p.m.

Liberty Christian Church
Dexter
Putor: Woody Call
Sunday School · 10 r.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 1 p.m.

Middleport Community Church
S7~ Pearl St., Middleport
Putor. S1111 Andenon
Sundry Sdoool 10 r .m.
Evening · 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30 p.m.

Bethany
Putor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday Sdlool · 10 o.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 10 a.m.

MI. Olive United Methodist

Rutland Church of Christ
Putor: Eugene E. Underwood
Sundoy School · 9:30 r .m.
Wo~&gt;hip · IO:Jila.m., 7 p.m.

Wednetday Services · 7 p.m.

ATLANTA ............ l4

Falcon•, Chargen have met jutt three times in 18 yean, S.D. winning defenaive battle in most recent game
in '88, 10..7... Charger defense held Falcons to 57 yarda rushing.
••wASIDNGTON .. ........... 23
PHOENIX. ........... I4
Redakino' treatment of Card• unkind to uy the leaot, winning12 oflutl3 meetinga .•• ecoreo were 31-0, 3310 lut fall, Skin QBo Mark Rypien, Stan Humphrieo ripping Cards.
(Mondar) . . HOUSTON ............ 35
KANSAS CITY............24
Oiler QB Warren Moon put on on•man offenoive •how vo. ChieCo in '90, completing27 of 45 paeseo for 527
yardo, 2nd hlsJt.. t in NFL hiotory, 3 TS,Ieading Hou•ton to 27-10 win.

Bearwallow Ridge Church rl Christ
Pastor. Jack Colegrove
S~mday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · lOJO a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m.

Middleport First Baptist
Comer Sixth .t Palmer
Pastor: Rev. James A. Seddoo
Sunday School· 9JS a.m.
Wonhip ·lO: ISun.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

20

Middleport Church of Chrtll
S1h and Main
Prnor. AI Hans..,
S~mdry School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 8:15, 10:30r.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Services · 7 p.m .
Keno Churc• of Christ
Wonhip-9:30 o.m.
Sunday Sdlool · 10:30 r .m.

Church rl Jesus Christ Apostolic
VonZandt rnd Want Rd.
Pastor: Jam~ Miller
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m
Evcning · 7:30 p.m.
WcdAeaday Serviceo - 7:30 p.m.

,-J,

ANDERSON'S
992-3671

New' Uma Rd, next 10Ft Meigs Park
Pasl.Or: Rob:n W. Richards
S ~mday Sdoool · 10 a.m.
Evening· 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 1 p.m.

Assembly of God

•

7

Btntdk:'llnt

Other Gam•• - Fer Well
21
Austin
27
CII·Divlo

• East.,n New We•loo
'Haywald

20

2'l
7
17

Stilt

o

21

Northttn Atl:ona

• NorthwOod
.... hland

28

17
7

M~ay

M~o~~klngum

33
24

TuskeaM
Vlrglnli. State
W•t Virginia Tech

12

Otlawart-

'

20
23

27
26
21
21

• Riclii!Dflel
Ttxu Southern

14

Carttcon
John Carron
AnCIMson

23

o

•

Buckntll

24
21

Rhod•
• S.WaiiH
• Tenn..I8•Martln
o Troy
o

..

o

Winen~g

28

' Ra11dolph-Macon

ConntctkM
AugUitana. SO

24

27

10
10
13
13

• All.lla

_

W&amp;balh
• NOOh Central

Other Cameo- South &amp; Southweat

21

.

Htidelb«'g

30

N8bruka·Omaha
• North Dakota State
• North Oakola U,
' Northern Wiehigtn
Onawa
o Principia
' Saginaw Valier
' SE Okla.homl

27

• Auatln Puy

ArMfiun lnttrnallonoll
ClariOn
Gtnytburg

S1. JO&amp;epfl'l
North Park

31

• MIChigan Tech
Mld· An.rlca
' MiiKkin

14

• Eutlennes'"

Oel...,ara Valley

''I w~.,
bi®I

14

10
21

20

• Franklin &amp; Marshall
• California State, PA
• Musachutatll Marlt lmt
Stony Br*
• Sloomtburg
.. ..,,._,

21

HltlaOalt
' M&amp;nkl.to
• Marietta

8acramen10 Stille
Georgia Soulhern
NW ...IIIIna

L"'o

~anatltl6

22
28

:1)

o Concordia, '-'N
• Dayton
• Oelianc:t
o Denison
Edinboro
o Ferrill
Ou1tnu1 Adolpllul

10

23
28
27
28

• Won:•tar Ttch

2e
45

Catthagt

WOtthead State

••

2'6

21

· Baldwin-Wallace
Butler

7

14

WaynMburg
• C~ntral Connecticut
• Lock Hav.n
St. Lawrence
Siena

23

• Aorlan
o Albion
Auaustana. IL

10
20
10

TtnHNMSla1e
BvftiiO u.
• Fordt'ltm
Montlna
Notlh..atlfn

SOuthttn Conntclicut

o

23

Other Gamea -lllldweat

14

13

Albany, NY
Juniata
Canlliul

21
:IS
4D
l8
30
24
20
27
4D
:18
23
27
~

· Wagner

21
7
20
17
21
15
20
7
17
17
10
20
15
13
20
20
10
6
24
10
21

'M•DuHCtt
SWTexat
Centr• MIHourl

21
24

0

17

Lbofll
VWglnla Union

24
21

• Allred
• Allegheny
Butlalo Statt
Ea11 Stroud1burg
o O.neva
Hofaua
Indiana U.• PA
o Ithaca
l.latisl
• l.lontclair
I.!Ofavlan
New Haven
Plymouth

24
23
20
14
21
13
10
14
20
21
17
6
10
7
13
13
8
27
10
24
10
22
14
13
7
10
13

•

.,.

IJIBE BOB lARMON PRO FORECAST

r .....

CHESTER, OHIO
985-3301 or 985-3303

• Utah
Stanford
• Oklahoma StaiB
Colgate
Mississippi
Long Bead1 State
Purdue
Baylor
Rulgers
Memphis SlOta
Alabama
Weslem Michigan
• Bo&amp;ton College
New Mexico
• Missouri
• Iowa State
Idaho Stele
Houston
.Eastem Michigan
No~e Dame
Cen~al Mid1igan
San Jose State
Tulane
Colorado State
Cincinnati
Kant State
AOOinsas State
Louisville
Tennessee Tedl
North Texas
• Texas Ted1
• Nevada-Las Vegas
• Southem California
Temple
• Northwestern
Pacific . .
• West Virg1n1a
• Maryland
Ball State
U.C.L.A.
L.S.U.
• New Mexico State
• Kansas
S.M.U.
Navy
Weslem Carolina
Fresno State .
Western ll1n&lt;•s
SW Louisiana

Major Collegae • Dlv. 1·AA

111 East Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Baum
Lumber

Other Gomea - E11t

Sat., Sept. 14- MajOr COlleges· Dlv. l·A

FIVE POINTS EXPRESS
and DRIVE·THRU

675-1171

.,
'

THE BOB HARMON FORECAST

COMING SOON:
OHIO SUPER LOTIO

773-SS 14

1

For AD Your Prescription an~t ..~,
Sundry .Seeds See Us"
·•

Stop In Fo, You,
Fsro,lte le~sl Beretsge~.

llaMft, W.Vo.

~

253 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992-2635

r

..
&lt;Church of Jesus Christ Apostolic Faith

992-6669

106 N. 2nd, Middleport

'

Apostolic

Prescription
Shop

FURNITURE, JEWELRY
and RADIO SHACK

St. Rt. 7 at fin Points

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, September 13, 1991

Football '91!
Catch All The \.
Excitement!

INGELS

,·

..

(1141992-111117 - t881 ·00K81
CHURCH SUPPLIES • BIBlES
I •.

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

·:,~~:;;.,,,

(1.

POMEROY, OHI0-:--992-6671,.:
BILL QUICKEl
j.

�.......

Friday, September 13, 1991
The Dal

Sentinel

GUN

8 A.M.

until NOON

Words

Days

15
15
15

1

3

SATURDAY

6

15

10
Monthly

PO

I

·~eceNe I 50 d1tcoun1 tor edt perd rn advance
" Free ads - Grveewey 1nd Found eds under 1 5 wNdS will b e

·~ •c::e

or •d for all cepJtellerters 15 double

pn~

ol td c;;os l

"7 po1nt hne type only used
•Sentmel•s not retpont•ble for errors afte,r f1rst diJ~r 1Check
for errors

r.,u

dr, ed n.1n•

paper I Call before 2 00 p m

1!"1

d.v atler publ•c.t•on to m-'te corfectron
'Adt tkat must bt patd tn advance are
Card or Thtnlts
Happv Ad 1
Yard Sales
In Memonam

1 - Card of Thanks
2 - ln Memory
3- Annoucemertts
4 - Gtveaway

5- Happy Ads
6 - lost and found
7 - Yard Sale iP&amp;td '" actvan cel

SUNDAY PAPER

ClasSifred paf{es co t cr the
jollou·tnf! 1elephonf' exchanf{es ..
Glllia County
Arta Code 614

Ma•gs County

Mason Co

Area Code 614

Area Code 304

446 - Gallipol s

991 ~ M•ddlt~J~ort

675 - Pt Pleasanl

31!7 - Ch•h"e

Pomeroy
995 - Chaster

458 - leon

388-Vmton

949 - Ractne

j?9 ~ Walnot

742 ~ Ru11and

247-letart Falls
667 - Coolvtlle

.

, 8ef Rucdfs fad

42

s!rOO

80
05 / doy

613 00

S1 30/ day

Merchandise
52 - Sporting Goode
53 - Anttques
54 - M •sc Merchand•te
56 - Butldtno SupphM
66 - Peu for S.IA
57 - M uslc.ll ln s trumentt
56 - Fru•t1 &amp; Vegetables

59 - For Sale or Trade

11 12 13 14 -

Starting Sept. 28
Fadory Clloke
1 2 Gauge Shotgun Only
St ridly Enterced
9 13 '91 tfn

HOWARD
EXCAVATING
BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES,
LANDSCAPING
WATER and SEWER
LINES
TRUCKING AVAILAIU
fREE ESTIMATES

992·7458

Farm Supplies

Services
Help Wanted
Snuellon Wanted
lnsurance
BustnMS Tr1tn1ng

15 - Schools &amp; lnstruct•on
16 - Rad•o TV &amp; CB Rep111

&amp;

8-28-81 1 mo pel

Livestock

5-2 - Wanted to Buy
63 - Ltvestock
&amp; Gratn

64 - Hay

&amp; Fert1h1er

Howard

L.

Real Estate
31

~ Homes

tor Sale

32 - Mobtle Homes for Sale
33-Farms lor Sal~
34 - Bu!litneu Buridii1QS
35 - Lots &amp; Acreagf!

71 Au101 for Sale
72 - Truclts for Sale
73 - Vons &amp; 4 WD s

74 - Motorcvcles
76 - Boau &amp; Motors lor Sale
76 ~ Auto Parts &amp; Acceuor~es

77 Auto Repa11
78 - Camp•ng Equ1pmenf

Gutters
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
9/ 9/ 91 / 1 mo

l;fMIIijll
41 - Houses for Rent
Mobtle Homes for Rent
Farms for Renl
Apartment for Rent
f:u rn•sked Roo m s
46 - Space tor Renl
47 - Wanted to Rent
48 - E.qutJ'mflnt for R&amp;t'lt
42 43 .64 45 -

49 - For leMe -

81

Home lrnpravements

82 - Piumbtng &amp;. Huung

83-Exc.vatmg

84 -E iectueal II.

Refr~gershon

85 - General Hauhng
86 - Mobtle Home Repaw

87 - Upholstery

Call Sentinel

CLASSIFIEDS!

pd

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

992-2156

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING
Limestone. D1rt.
Gravel and Coal
Licensed and Bonded
PH. 614-992-6691
9-t1-1 mo pd

614-949-2210
OFFICE 992-2886

I

IT! ACREAT DEAl

HOME 992·6692

···'···•.
.'.•..$·
.·... .

(lp.C.tiW .... '""'• ...,...

205 NORTH SECOND AVE.
_ MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
DOTTIE S TURNER. BROKER
.~EED A SMALL BUSINESS BUILDING? Wanl
to slart ).'OUr own bus;ness tn Langsville? ll's a
n1ce bulldrng on approx 1 acre lot Has waler
sewage, and restroom Bui~ to state regula·
lions
$30,000
ST. RT. 7· Tuppers Plains-Look once and look
no more at this 3·4 bedroom home Lad1es, you
have to see the krtchen ;n this one .It ;s equ;pped
and has a skylight
11 w111 take your brealh
away Every room has been completely redone
It has 2 balhs, 4 bedrooms, and a delached 2
car garage
ALL FOR $68,900
MIDDLEPORT-Hate to mow your lawn? It w111
be unnecessary due to lhe umque lanclscapmg
of th1s 7 yr. old home on Mill St. Has 2 to 3
bedroom. also has large wraparound deck wnh
beautiful v1ew for enterta;ning friends or maybe
you'd lrke to JUSt kick back and relax
YOURS FOR
$42,900

THE

ClAlllflfD ADl
992-2156
LEGAL NOTICE
Ohio Pallel Company, 2
In Memory
34606 Rockepringo Road, _ _ _ _ _...;...:,__ _
Pomeroy, Ohio, hao flied al
coniplaint wllh the Public
Utllllleo Cornmlaelon oiOhlo
agalnol Columbua Soulhern
Power Company alleging thai
lhe Company unluolly and
unlawfully overcharged II lor
electric ..rvlce. TheCommlsolon h•• ochedu1ed lhlo
matter for a he.,ing to begin
&amp;11:30 p.m. on Oc:lober 16,
19t1 at the office• of lhe
Commllllon,180 Eao1 Brood
Slreet, Columbuo, Ohio
43266-o573. Furlhlr Information may be obllined by
conlactlng lhe Comml11ion.

t------.,;,-'1
In Memory Of
CORNELIA BUNCH
VVho Passed Avvay
Three Years Ago
Today
eptember 14, 1988
God called you home
three years today,
To come with him to
h1s home far away
We stood by your
s1de as you closed
your eyes,
For there wasn't11me
to say our goodbyes.
VVe love you. Mom.
though you've gone
away,
For we knew in our
he arm you weran' t
here to stay.
S1dly Miesed and
Deeply Loved By
Your G1rll and
Grandchildren

PH. 9C9·21101
or Res. 949-21160
NO SUNDAY CALLS

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

Contact Bill Nease At

L-------~----~"

1-Spm, TV 1ntenna,
dlnttte tat, clothing, mlac, lnler·
jectlon Ttxaa &amp; WICkham roada

~lck Poaroon Auction COmpony,

or Accessories•••

auction oarvloo Llctnood Ohio,
Wool Ylrglnlo, 304-773-5785

CUSTOM BUILT

GOLD RIDGE·Doublewlde Only-A deal loo
good to be true A 24X48 Patriot mobrle home
that has 3 bedroom, lwo full baths, a famrly
room, and a liv;ng room Also at thiS low pnce
owner w111 pay $1,000 toward the cost of movrng
$16,900
LETART-Maintenance Free Exterlor-4 bedrooms, 2 balhs, 3 srlting porches, and a drmng
room N;ce b1g level yard Fenced area With
barn lor ammals, and a little playhouse for
children Price was $42,500
NOW$39,900
LANGSVILLE-Look at thiS nrce 1 1/2 story
home that s1ts on approx 31 acres II has 3
bedrooms, 2baths, heat pump, anclwoodburner
Some of lhe land 1s tillable, plus it would be a
great place for huntmg It has a dug well plus a
spnng
$49,900
LETART-Bet You'll Love It-Just nght lor a famrly Has 4 bedrooms. drn;ng room, new Mchen
cabrnets, new range, and entire home has been
remodeled nrcely inside and out Also has a
vrew of the nver.
$24,900
MIDDLEPORT-Hudson Street·This IS a niCe 2
bedroom house wrth a detached garage, vinyl
sidrng, and a new root. A very neat place.
FOR ONLV $19,000
LONG BOTTOM-FantastiC River VIew· This
one story, 3 bedroom home is almost rn the
middle of two bends of the Ohio River Has new
carpet1ng lhroughoul lmmedrate possess1on
and comes with alllurniture.
$28,000
SANDY BUTCHER .............................................9t2·5371
SHERYL WALTERS..........................................387.(1421
DARLINE STEWART . ....... ............................Oi2-11365
BRENDA
...........892-3058

ATTENTION
FIREWOOD
SELLERS
Hardwood Slabs
For Sale

12

Gauge Fadory
Choke Only
9-6-tfn

NO SUNDAY CALLS

CALL

OHIO PALLET CO.

•New Homes

•Garages
oComplett
R1modtling
Stop &amp; Compare
fret Estimates

985-4473
667-6179
5 31-'90 tin
INDEPENDENT

CARPET CLEANERS
ond TILE FLOOI CARE
•Reasonable flates
eQuality Work
•Free Estimates
•Carpet Has Fes1 Dry
T1ma
•Hogh Gloss on Tile
Floor Finish
MIKE lEWIS. Owner
Rt 1, Rutland, OH

742·2C51

-R"oom Additions
- Gutter wort:
-Eiectrlcel and ptumbing

-Concrete wortt
-Roofing
-ln1•1or &amp; bterlor
Plinting

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION

THE

GROOM
ROOM
Complete Grooming
For All Breeds

BILl SLACK

EMIL££ MERINAR

992-2269

Owner

Every Sunday

7/31/'91 tin

MICROWA E
OVEN IEPAIR

INTERIOR • EXTRIOR
FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
painting.
Let me do it for you.
VERY REASONABlE
HAVE REFERENCES

W1

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

(61C)
915·Clll0
a-28-91- 1 mo pd

6
Lost &amp; Found
LOSTl 15" hubcop lor 1V63
Buick Electnt Will offer 1
reward for h II found! PluM

7

Aao11 Fre111 Post OHice
217 E. S.C.IMI St.
POMIIOY, 01110
316/90/tln

Trenching Work

Rom1nc1, A Few WHtema
Kitchen lt1m1, Utenall11 ManY

t l sss
essom 6 ··•• ·00

Gollf

N1w

Grips ........... $4.00

~0:..:=:=::::::::·;~::~
REPAIRS

UHCI Irons •••••••.••• $5.00
UHCI Woods ........ $7.00
AWARDS
B-9-1 mo .. pd

SlemWifl,

Glauware,

Flatware, Bud Vaus/Fiower
Pota, Boob, What•NOtl, Pic·
lurn, Some Jewelry, Mlacel~
l1neoue HouHhold Goode, And
Meny
Sm~lltr
hems Too
Numarout To List! Note. Terms
Cnh All Salte Final, No

Rofundsl

Wednesday

All

Remaining ltemt Will Bt Sold AI

You! "Not AHponslble For Ae~

cldenlo."
ALL Yard Soln Mull Bo Pold In
Advance. DEAOLlNE 2.00 p m

Custom and log Homes
Remodeling and Generul Contracting

the day before the ad 11 to run

Sundor odhion - 2 oo p m
Friday. Monday odlllon - 2 oo
p.m. Soturday.

Cornrneniol Development
See us about Sunshine Room Solariums
Jim (lifford -992 -720 1
Greg Bailey 992-681
9 ·~ l

0

1110

'$toeU/

AIR CONDmONERS • HEAT PUWIS and
nr
'
FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp;DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

BENNETT'S

"Early Blrdo" Walcomo • Will
Hove COHN FOf Youl Homo To
Bo Sold: Display Unlto, Lamps,
Mony Paperbacks (Hari~uln,

Hall Pricel COmo And Bring A
Frlondl Wo Will Bo Loofdng l=or

Utilities: water, gas, sewer, electric.

••· ••••••••••• ••••• ••

WHI 81 On lawn Of Home

Mens CoatiiVnta, M1n1 J11ns,

K&amp;J (omlruclion )

nn::rrJliiiiiiR
_,._

Slgno Will Bo Pootod Porl&lt;lng

Flit aox, Plastic Buckets Nice

9-6-1 mo.

JIIm!IEIIII

Yard Salt· September 16th, 17th,
18th 7~? In Kanau~ Across
From Super America Station At
Rtaldlnct Of Dana Ralke Drive
Carefully, Heavy Traffic Areal

Dlehu, Plaatlcwara.. Decorator
Pl1t11, Clothing, "roup Now
Sockl (Ladiii/Mono), corner
Shol!._ Modlclno Cablnol, Smoll

HOME CREEK ENTERPRISES, INC.
Dozer, Backhoe,

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

MOMLE ·HOME· ·

Friday And Sllurdoy, St R1 554,
3 MIJH From Bidwell Toward
Rio Gr1nde OuNn Slz• Water
Bid, Winter ClolhH, Lauver For
Lynx Or Eocort, Somo Furn11uro
Largo Gorogo Solo! La&lt;lrando
:!~a Thursday, Fridoy, SaturThurodoy, Frldoy, s.turday, ,
Sundar. 144 Jackson Plkl, Pork
Lane Trolllr eoun. l.ol23.
Garage ula, 2 mlloo N. oflntor-uon 5114 ond 180. Frr, s.t 11-4

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

Safford Scllool Rd. off Rt. 111
(6141446-9416 or 1-'IOO·Iif2··596
••
On

Pt. Pleasant
&amp;VIcinity
Garago Sola, 2805 Jelloraon
Avo, SltL_!i'PI 14 g:00.3.00,
baby c101.,... 8rownl. uniform

!:==:;;;;:::::!
h11~:::;::;::::=============~~
(HESTER
of
l:.llry·
COUNTRY CLUB

Yard Sale

Aro Nawl), PotiiPana. Tupper-

992-6289

(onlra&lt;lirlg and

Is Your Roaf Ready For Another Year Ice an4 Snow'l
Now's The
t• Flncl Out.

Dme

CALl JACKS RO()FIHG &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
•
992 2653
For Old &amp; New ioofs, Shingles
Repair~ Gutters

Rummago
Sill Burdolto
Addn
Fricley,
1:00-4:00,
Homo Interior'
woolomo'
m1ec "· glaoaworo, oaby crothoo:

.....,"',

;r,~:,~~~'i:.'r..~.:3,ing3011.h
Pomeroy,

~~~~~~~~~

2 Yood So1oo, Slpt t2-t3, Hyaoll
Builcllng an R81110d8Dng
R111 Rood. off 12•, m:I Homo
We Guarantee Your Satl!lraetlon
overythlng -p.l14- ·52715.
RIIISTIIIIATIS
JOSirH D. JACKS 4-Fomnr yord aata lllflt, 12·1314. Porker homo, Beld knob Rd
11
_--_, 1 Clolhlt, dl-, 10011, turnlturo.
I

L..------------------•-

Employment Services

Avon-Start your own Buslntas
for Christmas Reeelvt $20 00
Free Avon Glfttl Call 614-6ga..

4370

pat1, $2&amp;5. 304-4~1875.

31

l'room, t-belh. Oo-'1 r~ulrod
ln Mldalaport,St4-i1112-2607.

Homes for Sale

Help Wanted

Accaptlng oppllcatlono tor luilion lrH Ohio Compatoncy
Nuroo Aid Clau, upon completion of clea, .. udent will be

ollglblo

lor tmploymont

at

Pomeroy Nursing and Rehab

Center, 311759 Rocklpringo Rd,
614-192-6601

OH

EOE
ACTIVITY DIRECTOR

Energetic And Enthual ..tlc

In~

divldual NI&gt;Odod To Coordlnalo
Tht Actlvhln

Pr~ram

For Our

too Bod Nursing Foclllty Educ•·
Uonel Preplrttlon And Ex~
parionco In Actlvlly P~rommlng In A HooHh Ca,. Foclllty

T.V. REPAIR, lull-limo, IX•
porioncocf only, par noaotlabll

pretarred. S1nd mum~ to Bo1
P-5, % PI PH. Rogla.l!"1 200 Main
St , Point PINNnt, WY 25550

Wtnttd motlvttH laiHparaon,
$26,00·$52,000 1st yNr, tn~lnlng
provided, exp1rianc• preferred,
send resume to Dally Sentinel
PO Box 729B Pomeroy, OH

45180
Wanlod Mo11votod Sallo Poroon
• $26,000 • $52,000 111 Year Trolnlng Provided. EXparlancocf
Preferred. Sind R1tum1 To.
801 CLA 090, c/o Gollpollo

Dally Trlbu~ 1 825 Third Awonuo,
Golllpolla,"" 45831.
Situation
Wanted

12

Prtfarrld Excllltnt Written And

Oral Communlclllon Sklllo Eostntlal

Dodrill's Privata Home Cart·

This PosiUon Ollero A COmpatl·
tlvo Salory, Uniquo Bonelli
Progrom, And Opportunlly For
C1retr Growth. For Prompt,
COnlldentlal
Conslderallon,
Plu• Forward Retume, Includ-

Ing Sllory Hlllory To:
Pomeroy
Nursing
And
Rohobllllallon ContorL 3117511

Ohlo 457611. Attn. Bill Bloo
Attontlonl Eam Up To $500
WNkiJ Aoodlng Booka And T.V.
Scripla At Homo. Mony Audoro
Noododl Fuii/Port·Timo 1-sot·
484·7000 Eal. 268, 24 Houi'L
AUSTRALlA WANTS YOU
Excellanl

Bentflts,

Pay,

Transportall&lt;01,
407-2112-41117,
Exl 571 9a.m.-10p.m. Toll
Refunded

AVON 1 All Aroat 1 Shlrloy
Spears, 304-t'/S-1429
CABLE TV JOBS1gh School
Bonollts Offorod Sond Rnumo
To. FA.CTS At. 2 Box 273-A,
Bldwlll, OH 451114. By Slptomber 271h, 19~. MIFIH, E.O.E.
COMMUNITY SKILLS INSTRUCTOR WANTED Uvo In lnllructor
(weekdays) noodod to Inch
community and personal lk.ilt
to

2... duht

whh

turning

llmltatlono In Molgo County
Hour~

6 301m-&amp; 30am

3.oopm-11 OOpm,

Mon -Frl

tnd

or

$170

W•k Plut

Moral Paid Vacotlont 614-448-

7267.
Hel~t

Wanted On Dairy Farm

Walnut Hill Dairy 814-3'111-2744
Join a winning INm 01 • llldlr
In the F1noncll1 Servlc• A...,.l
Being 1 nwmbtr

or

our con-

oumor ftnonce INm '"""'
having a good place to olort.
Are you 1111 mollvotod, uHrtlvo end onjoy dialing wHh
pooplt? A ploooanl poroonornr

1nd good phone aklla are 1

mull. Rnponalbllllloo Include

activities relatH to credit, Nlea.
account managamenl and IC~
counting For ~1mmodlall con-

oldorollon, contocl T1n1 Morgan
ot a14-992-2111. Equ~l Oppor·
tunity Employer. 11-F-H NonSmoking ond Orug·FrH Envlronmont.
~~~ I
Port Time Babyolnilr , _ n
Woahlnglon School Dlllrlct. t
Hour Balora And 1 Hour Allor
Sc'-1. Aetoranco Roqulrod.
Pitonii14-446-Zt01.

of cllonto. Service.=·
'BN "" ~~~-bl• Iota nu!!f'l.!
-lllng I ••'"'"•
home pliCM1001.
Ragultor
WHkday ocltedu11. excilllnl
bonoffte end Uti 0PP04'1111Hy to
ho1p tldlro U¥1 loidopondlnlly
In tholr bornol. Polltlonl In Alhlnl 'and llarltitla.
Mlnumum
_,
$20~~·
Rnum11 mull be aon1 by _,.,
26th fiend roiUrnl 1o Dell)' Sonunor,_ P.O. loll' 721C, P-roy
0H . . . EO£.
mont

II

11

1

cnlf Kd Call 814-992-13118.
GOVERNMENT HOMES From 11
(U Rops1r). O.Unquent Tax
ProPirtr· R1poue11Jona. Your
Aroa (1 805-912-8000. Eal. GH101a9 For Currenl Ropo 1.111.
HOUSE FOR FRE£11 Mull move
off lot ln Mldcfloport. Fill In
baHmtnt, 1Hd and ttr1w. Mutt

olgn contract1 2-BR, Largo LA,
DR, Both, hu now roof and gut-

tar, naw copper and PVC plumbIng, n•ed 10m1 work. You pay
tor th1 moving! Only arloua

colloro1 Call 6f4'11112-2071 aftor
7.oopm
House for sale In Dexter wf2
lots, 2 s1ory, 3 bdrm, 114~742~
2102 or 8711-5894
In Gallipolis Nt1r Schools
Beautiful lntorior, Basement,
Garage
Fireplace, Possible
Financing. Will Consider Trade!

614-256-6)55

mini, IIC Cond, 1&amp;000, 114-885-

3394 after apm.
~
111116 Cho~8-t0, 88,000 Millo, 4 1
IOOICI. 4 I~ Rolly WhHlo,
C14-m-24 1, ..,.-676-164a

~:·

Dlpoell A~ulrocl. 114-446-21111,

llllweon lp.m. And IOp.m.

t890 Ford F·150, XLT Lariat, 4x•. ~
pw. AMIFM Olo- duel goo, ~
loaded lruck. t7,0oo ml, $V5oo .,;:

Mobile Homes
for Sale

14x801910 F1lrmont mobile
homt, 3 Hdroom, 2-bJth, lOIII
al1ct, fireplace, real nlct~, 614~

843-5368

Aolroln
NowHISouthllllom 1970 Champion mobile hom1,
Buoln- Collogo, ~f~~i Volloy 304-676-35511 or 875-11147.
Pfou. C.lt Today, 6
-438711
Rog111-lon .-s.t214B
11172 Flomlngo 12llll0 2 BR, goa
fumece, carpatlng, good eond

18

Wanted to Do

Bulh Hog Sorvlco. Rouonablo
Rain No Job To Small1 814379~42.

Dozer for hire, c111 Ray Pntston,

304-618-2784 or 304-525-18311.
Goorgoo Portobll Slwmlll, don't
h1uiJ:: loa• to th• mill )ult
call
'15-1151
HouH clunlng or offlco Cllln·
lng, call 6t4.V112·3541
HouHCielnlng, wlnclowt, fall
yard work and Clr claanlng.
Rouonobfo rot• by tho lob,
hav• relerencH Call J'D'a
Claanlng S.rvlcn, 8am-4pm

21

Business
Opportunity

$3800 614-388-9724.
1m VanDvko t4x70 Mobile
Homo, 614-388-9054, 1l No
Anewor 614-388-9606
1975 FIHiwood t4x70, 3br, 1 112
Bathol Wlth Woodburnor, Totol
Eloctr c. $8,500 614-446-6075
1984 Schullz 14x65, 2 BR, 111
oloctr1c, undorplnn1ng, 2 porchoa, outbuilding lluot be
moved 814-446-1223
1986 14x70 two bedroom mobite

home, 304~75-7i88.
1911 Sunahlne 14x72 mobile

homo (llko

now)

$17.000 olso

130x40 lot in town wilh garage

CHRI
FOR
SALE:
ST1AN
BOOKSTORE ctrow1ng, roward·
Ina bualnna. Plrty fiiOCIIfng.
614-384-22715, anor 1 114-3841:2311:_;::2.:;.,=-::c=::--=-:--=:--:VENDING ROUTt: Got ,Rich
Quick? No Woy1 Bul wo Havo A
Good, Slllldv, Affordabta, Buol· - Won'i Lui. l-800.284·-YENO.

2 bedroom•, full

baMmlnt
porc'iJ.'':f•

19 cu.

tt Glbaon "frigtnttor,

bin &amp; Snyder Fumhu,. 614-4461171
5 pl.ct bedroom IUHI, quHn
box •PI'Ina• and mattrus. 3Q4.

675-52115.
Clrpat 11x12 $50 &amp; Upl Solo On
All Ouloldo Clrpat. $31111 &amp;
$4.1111, Kllchln Clrpal, $7, Ylnrl
$3.118 &amp; $4.911. Solo On All Corpol In Slockl Mollohon Clrpllo,
1114-448-11144.
Counly App11ance, Inc Good
uoodappllanCOI, T.V 1111. Opan
8 a.m. to I p.m Mon.-Sal 614446-169!,1. 827 3rd. Avo Gol·
llpollo, un
Flu: StMI tola, chtlr, loviMtt
$600. CuMn .tz1 box tpringt &amp;

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complete

tuml~~~~~·

home

Hours. Mon-Sat, 1-5 6
60322, 3 mUM out Bulevlll• Ad

Sol-Up And Dlllvwyl Call Elaoo
Home Canter, 1-100.58g.5'711
Mobile home for ale or rent,

very nlc1, unfurnished, 14x70
w/8x28 txplindo, deck, undtr·
penning, cantril air, lncludlld
Prlvoto lot Golllpolle, Ohio, 304-

575-2312.
Now 1992 14x80 throe bldroom
2 full betho, ohlnglo rvof, vlnrl

siding,
ahuUtrw,
carpeted
throughout, all drywall Interior

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

Loll &amp; acroogo avo11abla for
niW home eonttructlon on

Roybum Rood. Povod - ·
county
wllor,
roooonoblo
,.llrlcUono. Compflll 1ntormaUon rnoollad cwt ~-· 304-6'155263, John D. Qartaclt, no
o1ngie-w1clo trolllro, pta-.
1-Yacant 10C In MlcfdliDOrl all
ulllh1H lnd 1-llorago bulkllng,
114-992-2807.
2 ocro 1ota, Union Road bock ot
Now Hoven. county waler, haod
lop road, 304ol711-4b!l.
71 acru1 cly wator\ Hpllc,ture ana uc hunt ng, 2 mil•

oncloMd
22:i0 from Konowfto Rlwor, Loon,
Lincoln Avt'47 301 or l$2=8!:,606:::·.:
304:::-4::58::.:15::22.=---aJ8-14ta.
I:;:::;:~-=-:--:--:=-:--8 oern obovo Handoroon look·
3 boclroom houH on 10 ..,.., lng - n o1 volley, $7,500. 304400 w. tronllga, on Bracfbllrv 5715-2194
Rd. 7.82% poeolbfo, $29,11011;
.21::1-::315-21::::::::1111.::.,.---,-- 801ut11uf L.oclllon For Home. 2
Acru MIL, Frontage On 2 Pavad
3br A Framo On 1 Aort Woodod Roode 2 lllloo From Hoopllal
l.ol. W.SOO Win Conolclor Land And aallliJOIIo. CitY Schoofo,
Conlrtct WHh Rooaonablo Cly Dr Counly Wiler, CHy
Down Plymont, 114-258·11Nig, fllwor Avallobll, Du. 114-446:a14-:::;:251-::.:150::::••··~---- 31151

2548

P1CKEN9 FURNITURE
N1w/Uted

Houuhold tumlohlng t/2 ml
Jorrtcho Rd. Pt Ploount, WY,
3br Mobllo Homo Roloronce coil ~75-14110
:Sz~ Oopooll Roqulrod 814-446- 1----::
R::;ENT=z:-:O::;WN;:;--- 614-446-3158
For 1111 or rent t,.u., a 3 acRt,

Vl'ra Furniture

SR 143, call oftor 5pm 304-882- Sofa &amp; Chllr, 111.10 WHk;
21104
Rocllnor, $5.47 WHk. Swivel
Rockor, $3.53 WHIL'Bunk Bod
CornplOio $8 41 WMk. 4 Drowor
Apartment
44
Choat, $3.21 WMk, Poll« Bod·
for Rent
room Sutte, 7 pc., $11.17 WNk,
lncludoo Bedding Country Pine
t &amp; 2 bdrm
In Mldcloport, Dinette With Bench &amp; 4 Chair~,
U11111oo Fum, op r~. no polo, $tO 88 WHILOPEN Mondoy
814-992·2218.
ThN S.turd1y, II m. to lp.m.,
12 Noon Till ap m 4
1br Apartmont, 1 E111cloncy Sunday
Apirtment, CloH To University Mlloo Off Roulo 7 On Route 141,
In C.n11nary
01 Rio Grando. 814-38fl.llll48
Solid
oak chino cebinll wnlghto.
2 Bedroom Apartment Aero••
From University Of Rio Grands, Glou ehoiYH. t yur old $800
old $300
Ohio. All UUlhlla Paid 814-38fl. Oak plo 111~, 414
Aftar 4pm 61
oo
9946
SWAIN
2br Furnllhld, Water, Hilt Fur·
nlshtd W11htr, Dry1r, Carpet. AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
No POIII 20 Grapa StraOI 814- OUve St , Galtipollt New &amp; Uatd
fumlture, haattra, Western &amp;
448.0544

1.

10:;

:S:rmenta For Rent, 114-448-

Apsrtmante lot rant In Pomoroy
and Middleport 1-2 boclroom
C.lllrom 9 lo 5. 614-982·2403
Apartments for lho Eldorly GaiUa Manor

A~rtm1nt1.

155 Buhl

Handlc1ppad ptNone

houalng

opportunHy.

Equtl

Ap-

eon Pfke or cell 61,. 44&amp; 46311
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 531 Jecklon Plko
from $1112/mo. Wolk to ohop 6
movloe Coil 614-448-2588. EOH
Cornplololy Fumlohod Smoll
Hou11, No Pita, Yord, Pluo
U111111n $235/mo a14-44fi.0338
Colllgo, good for t, carpllod,
lt0¥1 relit;, blth, qUHn IIZI

couch, A/C, total oloct, 304-6758042.

EH1cloncy, otovo,
w/ahower1.tJc 111

rof,

al~t. full

belh
car·

petod, HuD occplod, 304-t758200
Fumlohod Apsnmont, 1 Bod·
rooml..Woltr P1~1 $275, t/2 Mllo
Eaat uo Portor. tll4-388-111163
Furnished

Apartmentt,

1br,

$225 U111Hln Pold. 1120 Fourth
Ave, &amp; 607 Second Ave,

Gtl~

llpo11o. 114-448-441a oftor 7p m
Fumllhod apl. 807 2nd Go111poUe. 1 BR, $226._ ut11Hioo paid.
114 44a 441a onor r p m.
Fumllhod EHic1oncy, 1155/mo.
Ut11HIIa Pold, Sharo Both, 807
Slcond Avo, Qalllpollo, 114-4464411 After 7p.m.
Gracloua living 1 and 2 bodroom apartmonta al Vlhgo
Manor
ond
R1voralao
Apartmtnle In llltldlaporl. From
$1116. C.11114-992·7781. EOH
Now 1-BR, tum1ohocl aportmont
In Mlddloport, 614-11112-6225
Nlca cllan curronl1y ova11oblo
apl, 1 boclroom !Of tldor1y, hondicopjled ond dl11blod. River
Bond Placa, 3CM-882·3121. E.O.H.
Compllllr Fumlohod moblo
homo, t mlla bolow tow_!11 over·
looking river No Pe

Cfl'.

114-

448.0338
North 3rd St, M1
, Ohio, 1
bldroom tumllhad apt, ,.,...,.
ell and depoeft r~ulrod 304882-2588
North 41hluMiddlaport, Ohio. 2
bldroorn mlahocl opl, dopoaft
and ,.,....,.. roqulrod, 304-8822586.
ono Badroorn Apartmonl Uvlng
R - Furnlollotf, Complllt
Klchln - e r In IIIII. Gu
Holt, Air Condftlon, Wuhlr And
Oryor, Good Ntlghborhood.
R , _ And Dopolh Ao~ulrod. 114-441-13711 After Sp.m.

54 Miscellaneous

61 Fann Equipment

CRAFT SUPPLIES

daluxa t..turee, 2 yrt ofd Cor·

Depotll And Rafar.nca A•

pllcallont m1y be picked up 1t
Spring Vtliay Piau, !:zi Jack·

Free

1

Household
Goods

qulrod. $210/mo. 814-448-34t3.

$1100 Down WHh Aprrovod
Credit! Grtal Selection

L.::::=:========T-==========1

Hud 1ccaptH, no pate, 304-675-

4088.
2 BR mobllo homo $245 mo ,
pluo utlllloo, $121 clopoolt. In
lho country. at4-446-3688.

Mull

Drawer Chill, $44.95i Bunk

Bod, $229; Complolo Full Mon
Sel, $105.00 Sot; 7 pc C.dar
Bedroom Sullo, $8118 00 OPEN·
Mondey Thru Saturday, lla m to
6p m , Sunday 12 Noon TUI
5p m , 4 M11H On Route 7 On
Route 141 In Centenary

warm Momlng stove, G14-742·

21)25

Hand M1dt Craft•
Slraw wroaths, dried flowers,
baskets and more Tri County
Spons Shop, Point Pl•aaant,

304-675-21188
For Sale 1971 Moblla Homo,
Very Good Condlllonl Aoklng,
$4,000 6t4-251l-6m
Guns, guns, gunt, 3()4..875..&amp;132.

Homt Ouun wood cook llove

$200 oo, woodbumor $2110 oo
men's Lavl's 501 olzo 30w.:l21,
614-742·2562
Howard Showcase Commercial

Froozor 49cu ft $2500 00 Aloo
•r,proxlmatety 300 prevloutly
v twtd movlat, 614-.,..2·2903

Husky Ho.. Lho ond McCul·

loch chain sawa marked down

Sepl Salo Sldoro Equlpmonl,
Henderson, WY 30W7~7421
Ono Anllquo Ubrary Table, $tOO,
One Antlqut Drop Leaf Ttblt,

$75, Ono Antiquo Brut Bod,
$400, Ont New O.humldifitr,

Novor Uaod, sso, Ono Now Shop
Voc Novor UH&lt;I, $110 614-311711101
Reconditioned Washers, Dry•ra
GuarantHd prompt urvlc1 for

tractore &amp; lmplamente. Buy,
Mil, tr1de. a Q0-5 00 wNkdtyt,
S.t till Noon

To Ferguoon traclor, good
llroo, In good condhlon, $1600,
614-1112-26715
Tobacco Sllcko For Sola. Shar-

1 End, 22 Canta Each
Both Endt 25 C.nta Etch 1145-51113
24
pt~ned

63

Livestock
32 Dairy Cottle, Ed loon Moyoo,
304-175-1658
Grsdo Holotoln Holfora, $900
Each Bred To Llmouoln Bull
614-245-9525.
Pure brHCI regllter.cl Umoutln
&amp; calf plirl, COWl &amp;

COW

1124 E Main Slraet, Pomeroy
Hours MTW 10 00 1m to 8 00
p m, Sundly 1 00 to I 00 p m

614-992-2526

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
16 Inch Glrlo Blcyclo, Purple
And White, Now Tiroo, $25 00
304-675-1433 After 5p.m
1951 John Dloro Model B
Robuln, Exco11ont COndHionl
Hyllor 4 Slago Fork Ll", 3
Trailer Axl11, &amp; Tralltr Bed. &amp;14-

446-236V
2 14" Rally WhHie, S-15, S·10, 2
t5'xT Rallr WhHII G.M. 4 Now
Gtntntl Tlrn 1gS.75·14 Fr1me
Tralllr HltchJ S·15, 5-10 Bumper
Guardl, S·lo, 5-10 614-446-2415
Momlng, Evenings

2T' lon opaad bfko. $75 21 cu ft
rolrlgoralor $425 Wotw Sottoner 1145. s.• propel mower
$45. C.nlrol olr cond $475 3046'15-2618
270 go1. tuel ol1 lank. 304·7'13-

58n.

511127 Plctu,., $tO, Plold Qu. So.
SIH!Mr Sofa, 175i 2 Gr. Valvtt

Chofra, $21;, Br. Laathor Cholr1

$40; 7 t12 HP Slora Outboara

Boll Mofor, $300 at4-44fl.3063
8ft. Flborgloll Topper,_ Bought

~nnrudt

Motor And Tank Exctlltnt condlion1 tn4-3111'7927.
BHr Can And BHr Slgn COlloctlon For Solo. 8t4-44H527.
Chlldcraft beby bod oonverto to
youth 11!~ 1 flOod cond, $250.
304-8115--1.
Cluoter Ring, 1_ Clrot, Diamond,
24 KGo1~. 5500. 114-446-3040
Concroto I ~1c ..,tic llnko,
Ron Evono Entarprluo, Jtck·
oon, OH 1.aoo.a3'7.el28.

l '

=::

UHCI Sllalllta Equipment, In·
eluding. Whole Syatemt Wllh
Oocodora, Rocolvoro, Dloh 6

Hay lor oolo 40-451b blloo
mulch $ 90, gr111 $t 00, mixid
$t10.t21 Cllf614-742-2083.

dacodtrw,

receiver,

a

dish

Wolghl oot, 6351be of llondord

cast Iron weights, 4-bars, dum-

bolla, Wolder bench, $450 00,
614-11112-6728

71

Autos for Sale

Block, brick, IIWir plptt, win·
doWI, 11n1111, ate. CJ1udl Win-

,.,., Rio Granda, OH Call 614-

245-5121.
Slx oil IIHI bldgo

detls

Musl Hll

1973 MGB $1000 00, 614-9921976 Lincoln 4dr Town C.rLf.olr
COndllion, $1,200, Or Boot unorl
614-446-11104
1m Ford LTD good mochonl·
cal cond,

gOOd t)ody, $400, 614.

843-5 380
t971l Cldl11ac El Dorado Good
Condition

unn

Ahor Cp m ...,..

614 ~256~278,

twtl Chryolor COnlobo 3110,
1uto, new everything, $1400
doyo 614-992-2155. onor a 30pm,
call 304-175-18511

Building
Supplies

55

Faclory

now

can

dollvor Will oroct Two 30x40,
2,40xll0, Two 50x1oo Call now
and ro10rv1 303-743-4860

56

Pets for Sale
Groom and Supply Shop-Pot
Grooming All broodo, llyloo
lamo Pol Food DoaiO&lt; Julio
Webb Call 614-446.0231, 1-800.
352~231

Pupplttl 112 Austr~llan
Shor,herd, 112 Auetr1llan Blue
Hn ar From Working Paronla,
7

Fsr Salt Blue Htlltr Puppies,

Two Monlho Old

614-256-t~lS

Pats
and
11tlng
rabltta
{drusld). Burnann R1bblt1ry,

304-675-:1526
Roglottrod
black

poodle,

female, 2 112 yra old, ehots, e1ll

aHor 5prn 304.SS2·2904
Squlrrol dog, 304-675-6132
Musical
Instruments

Band equlpmenl, Bundy Alto
Sax, bookt, whlta p1nt1, gloves
and thoas (8112 womana) 304·

6715-2112.
Bundy Clorlnof $200 614-7422025
Plano, $25 114·388-1017 Ahar

5pm.

Stlmar Cl1rlnet &amp; e1rrylng eue,

t yr old UIIO, 614-1118-6129

58

Frulls &amp;
vegetables

canning PMChll now available,
1110 S1rtlllt Pure and Prune
Plume 1e11r In Auauat. Clll 1·

800-447-37110 for pilcoe. BOB'S
MARKET, Mooon or Golllpolla,
OH.
Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

61 Fann Equipment
11184 I100c 1ntornotlonaf o ..or,
runo ~1 fi.Woy blodo, winch,
614-H:I-23114, or 9112·3951
For Sole: Corn P1cka,., 1 And 2
Row Wltool Dfoke. Pickup Dlok.
Whlot Dnlta, ~= llotaN,
Utllhy Trollor.
Troflor:.
Slandard Bred Coli, - · ·
Farm llaohlnory, Rt. 124 And
Mayhew Rotd, Jookaon, Ohio.
114-28WM4.
H-Formall 5ft. Pull Typo Brulh
Hoa•• t/2 Ft. lnlornatlOnal Dllk.
lw:M7-7V21
JD 2010 Tlootor Wllh 8ulh
l:foa·
t388
01ooa1
Wll1t Plair, 'riO'Mi.Vi Dlle And
811111 Hoci ii~N6:--0wnor WIU

n.210;

ou-

FJrtanot. r14-211tl22.

11185 Ford F250, 4x4 wJ460 a..
motor, high milttgt, hNdy duty -"
supentlon, b8d liner, dull :::
tanka, good tight lruck, $7,000 ~

3

304-458-1522
111611 Chevy 4x4, 3/4 ton, 3110
on9lno, 4 opaod Touruo 11mm ..il
plllol, utln nlcklo, 304-675- ~
6864
('

~

I am wanting to look at the {...
grttn and w'hltt Fotd Bronoo .......,
fh t 11 1o1 1010 01 11 304-t75- ~

a
6878
74

•

...,

.,.

::t

Motorcycles

=:--7:--:-=:=-::,.---,;..,.
"'
1U2 Hondo V45 Mogno, 1600 ~

mlloa, oxc ohopa, $1,200 304- ""
675-5979
"rt
....

UJ84 Hond1 lnllrctptor YF500R, "
new tires, matching hetm.c, "1,800 mil11, rebuilt 1nglne, ~

"

"

1981 K1wasakl ZL 800 st,..t ~
blk•, naw lira, bl«ary &amp; lu"e

up, llC cond, 3()4.875-6858

1989 Hart1y Dtvldeon Custom '
Soft Ttll, w/molorcycll trallar, ~
17,000 mlloo, $11000 114-11112- "'L

"

~----------------·-c

7870

docodor, 114-11112-6173

:i

.:.:v':::'"':::hl.=...:.w=a":::lor.::.:..:·a:::14-.:25:.:fl.:::t.::oz:::o:._
1984 Ford plckup lhort bid, 4
WhHI driv•, IIUmn whHII, 4' 1
body lift • •'2 •1100 304-tV5-3641
•
..
..

6244

Transportation

cludlng, whol• eyatem wlth

UHd ootollhl ~ulpmont, lneluding whole eyotom with

11180 JHp Now
800, Good
CondH1o~
3!50 ...
::!
1 CJ-6,• $2WhHlor

111118 GL. 1500 Gold Wlng, Exco~
lint COndltlonl Ellro Chromel ""&lt;
5,000 Millo $7,200 514-446-8621 ~::

-:=::-==-=-~==-=~-:":":-::::::­

and

..

Hay &amp; Grain
64
,.,.....-.,.-.:...-.,.,...=-.,.-:--

Oocodora 614-11112-6173
Uiod utolllto ~ulpmont, In-

~==~· 8':-:~~~'ndloh

614-448-1037.

$1,1100 304-6'15-1118

m~ku, mod1la The Washlr
Dryer Shoppa 614-446-21144

,.----::-=:-'-:---:-.:-Buy or saU Rlvarl111 Antiques,

HP

No : .

holfora. 114-982-1190
Roglotorod Morgen llud hor11.
eon 614-446-6078 -klnda
only

all

Antiques

Ntw, $522. I

1mmodlatoly

='

Jlm't Form E~ulpmont~SR 35,
Woll Gornr:,lo, 614 11-8777,
Wide ul.ct n new A uted fann

1971 Pontiac LAm1n1, 301, V-8,

good condition, call onor lpm
614-11411-2379
1981 Mercury Cougar, mutt 11e,
good work car, CIIJ and luve

m-ogo 304-175-6871.
1982 Cutlall Supremo, V-8 dual

exhaust, niW Urn &amp; Pllnt, good

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

'

l

12 A S.ara Boal And Trallfl',
With SoliS Prico $400 614-4q. ,
08111
~

...

1987 Rinker 20 112ft opon bowr "
175hp OMC ltern drlvt, trailer, ...,

i

$8500, 614-9112-2368
76

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

!

198V 4 3-Vortoc onglno and "'-~

trant. out of s~10 4-wftHI.ctriv. ""
12,000 mll1a, 11hau1t. radiator, ,_

$1000, 814-742-2675

.:•

Budatt Transmlatlont, Ulld &amp;
rebullt, ettrtlng •t $99, Auto
Parts 614·245-5677. 614-379-

i

2283

New gal tanka, one ton truck '
wheals. radlttora. floor m1t1, ,.
ate. A &amp; AAu!3G:Iploy, WY 304- ~

372-3933 or t

79

273-8585.

'•

~

campers &amp;
Motor Homes

l

cond, eharp, 304-675-8838
1982 Oldo Cutlaoo $1,750. 304- 1971 17 H. Soli COnlolnod Con· ~
6'15-5301
tlnent1l C.mpar, Battery Or
Electric. Eacollont COndlllonl ~
t982 Dido Cutlau Broughom $800. 614-388-118t8.
::
PS, PB, PW, POL, Cru1oo, Tin,
Excallont COndH1on1 Aoklng
$3,000 304-t75-7158.
Services
1983 eomoro, V-6, outo Floor

l
l

i

IUmiCI, firlpllct lnten, 114-

9112·7184
1U3 Dodgo Arloo, $!100, good

$50 Eoch 114-446-7157 After
4pm
work c1r, call betwMn !pmoo
Work boot• &amp;14-446.3159
AKC Chlhuahuo tiny 3-t/2 lb Bpm, 614-992-5803.
V1'RA FURNITURE
malo, t yr old $200 614-3117·
1983 Dido Delta 88, 304-675614-445-3158
7026
1.1V1NG ROOM: Sola 6 Chair,
4008
$tllll.oo·
Rocllner
$148 oo, BtauUful Btlglt Pupa, 7 Wukt
Swlvol Rockw, $1111.00; COIIH &amp; Old $25, 3 Maloa And 3 1984 Celebrity, 4dr, AT, AC, PS,
PB, Extn Cloanl $3,250 Call AfEnd Tabla, $811.00 SII.DlNING Fomoloo 614-446-4958
ROOM: Tabla W1th 4 Podded Dragonwynd cattery Peralan, ter 5p.m. 614-446-1244.
Chalra, $141.00i Country Pine Slam1ae and Hlm1layan kitten• t984 Cutlall C.lolo, loaded,
Dlnotto Wlth Bench And 3
graat cond, ooklng $3,000. 304Chalra, $299.00, Matching 2 614-446-3844 after 7 p m.
575-213t
Door HHch $3411 Or $588 00 Fish Tank, 2413 J1cklon Ava.
Sot, Oak Toblo, 42182 WHh 8 Point Pllallnl, 304-675-2063, 1984 Ford Tempo Wrockod,
Bow
Back
Chalra, full Uno Troplcol llahl bfrdo, Good Engine And 'rrono Aolo,
$629 oo BEDROOM: Pooler Bod- small animal11nd auppln
$450 614-367-7a91
room Sullo (a pc.), $348.00; 4

53

1111

reatoneblt offer rlfuMd Eves,

milt,... (brond now) $300. 3046'15-1431.
2405
GOOD USED APPLlANCES
Wnhoro, dryoro, rolrigaratoro,
42 Mobile Homes
rangu. Sklgge App11oncoe,
for Rent
U - R1vor Rd. Boelclo Slona
Croll Mota!. eon 614-446-7398
14x70 thrN bedroom trailer,
11~ country lot, Bud Chattin Hoblrt Commtrclll Dlahw11htr,
Rd, Point Pleaunt, 304-675- Whh Hatco Eloctric Wotor
35011aftor a ooPM.
Hutlr Unh, Rtv Mlkt Smllh
814
448 4082
t988, 14x70 mobllo homo, 3046'15-7VB8.
Hot Point dllhweohtr, QuHn
Ann IOIIL_good cond, antiquo
2 bldroorn Aohlon Uplond ~d. dnk. 114·M2·2524.

Morton Rood O..llnod for tho
Sonlot Cltlzon (82 older) ond

Bank Reclalmtd Mobile Home

11
~~

Merchandise

51

••

'&gt;I

1888 Attro Yin, loedld, colOr """'
tv , vcr, cb, mlnl bflndo, mony ~
tJtraa Mull tH to tppraclatt .,.

~~

Realty, 304..e7&amp;-5540 or 304-882·

apl rodono $17,000 Mull Sill,
304-675-482l
Looking For A Doal? COnoldor A

and 3-boy window. $t7,8W.OO
Call t-800-7211-4045.
!NOTICE!
Now Clayton, Sh11p Ao A Tock,
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO 14x70, 3 Bedroom, Totol
racommonde tho! you do buo1· Eloctric, $13,11115. Nowhoro Eloo
n- wHh pooplo you know, end Bul ElHI Homo Cantor. Coli t·
NOT 1o 11nd money 11vougn lhe 814-772-1220.
moll unlll you hav, lnvottfgotod
lho ofltrlng.
Business
34
3br HouN And Buolnno In
Buildings
Spring Valley Aroa. Buolnou
Will M1ke Your Plymentel At- OFACE SPACE FOR LEASE on
king $90,000 a14-44fl.ll280, 304- 2nd Av• , Gllllpolla CION to
875-5806.
Court House 1 room, 2 rooma,
roomo, 4 roomo. All nicely
At1hur'o Chain Unk Fenco 3d-ralld,
olr conc1Hion1ng,
Roo1dlnl1a1, Commorclol, IndUIIrial, Frao Elllmotu1 Com· y9ur Wit., &amp; ...., bill an p1lct.
plllo 1111111tatlon. Phono: at4- M1k1 your choke now. No
quot• over tho phone you
:Ja4-6m
mull - thom Phone lor on
AHontlonl Slyllng Solon For oppolntmont. 814-446-1899 day,
Slltl PrhM Locallon. Call 114~ 448-9538 ....
446-8803, 114-446-83!5.

8
14-IIV:I·J11711.
Merchandise

2br Total Eloclrtc, 1 112 Mllo
FrQRI Golllpolla, On St. R1 588,

CLA0111, c/o Gafllpolll Dallr.
TrlbtlnoJ..!1,25 Third Avonuo, Go • 12185 mobile horne, needs
somt work, 304-458-1870.
llpollo, "" 45831.
Business
Training

pump, ganga. $400. month1

reftrtnce, no pttl, Homtatua

Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Loll, ....tilt, porto, IIIII Coli

Rio Grande, 3 Bedroom, 3 lots,

Link Fenc:e Cionlo Everything
In Town! Ready To Mov1 lntol

chor11, S111d r1ply to: Box

14

Very nice 3 bedroom homt, t1111

'i 1~

~­

vvo·s

73 vans &amp; 4

46 Space for Rent

614-446-0038

Avanut, Galllpolit, 2 Selt'II.L NIW
30x30 Block Garage, With ~hain

32

living on linn &amp; helping wllh

4br, 2 Sotho, Doubfawldlln Rio
Grondo Ohio Arlo. 814-245-5588,
Anrtlme.

::.'':"":·:·14-=11112=1~=26====::;.. ,:;
""

country Mob11o Homo Pork,

Froo0o11vory.
2 hmlthod homll, 2 Lg. oola·bld, good cond., $40
bldroome, $200. &amp; $250. p1uo af4..742-3026
ullllllll, 1100. dapooit. 304-675L.ov-1, llka now, 304-88211512 or 176-3900

NICI 2 Story HOUII, Second

P1rson 01 PI'I'SORI lntll'llted In

R01111torod nuroN and llconlod
aoeiol worko,. noed for on I
counly oldoriy horne . . .
program blood In Mar1111o 1 - - - - - - - - - Prlmory lllncliont 1nc1uc1o , _
31 Homes tor Sate
phone oc,_lng, In-homO . .

....,...,. 1nd cua mlnllfP'

For salt by ownlf', 3-BR hom•
whh carport, 18x33 1bov•
ground pool, 10.12 etor1g•
blda.,_ choln link fenco cwt Laurol

LA, Largo Fr, Dr, 1 t/2 Baths,
VInyl Slalng, 2 C.r Garage, CA,
Jacuul, $59,000 814-24~8295.

lnternted ctll1.aG0-531-2302 no

Geurantttd

Will M1ke Your P1ymantal As-

Havo Room In My Homo For t
Elderiy Mon And 3 Elderly
Lodloo 614-388-81113, 114-38882611

dally II 614-11411-3051
olherwlH scheduled
SIHp
over raqulrad, dlytlmt houri Mlso Pou1a'o Doy Coro C.nlor
oH Informal uHCng VlrioUI Safl, affordable, chlldc1re. M·F
oklllo ond talonto noidod. 11 you a a m.• 5:30 p m Agao 21&gt;-tO.
like to cook, exc1riH, Qlrdln, Blfore, attar achool. Drop-Ina
rood or drl~!. wo rnooy hove a lob wolcomo. 614-446-8224 Now ln·
lor youl1 wo oro looking tor font Toddler Caro, 614-44M22l
paopll who c1n enJoy othlr W111 Babyall In My Homo Or
PIOPII who Cln teac'h Ylrloua Youra,
Anytime!
011~
aldlft to othtra who 1re crwatlve llpollo!Kygar
Crook
Aroo
ond wiRing lo,porlt u part ot on Roforoncoo Avolloblo
814-448onorgollc lHm High ..dograo, drivtrl llconM, good drlv· 8264, or flt4-441·1721.
rna racon1 end adlqualo
aulomobllt coverage required.
Financi a l
Solary: $5.00 par HR to ofort. 11
Iller than 9·13-11. Aok for Chrt.tlo E.O E
EARN MONEY Roodlng Bookll
$30,000/yr Income Polont1al.
Dotollo (1) 805-1182-8000 Ext Y·
10180
HAI~STYLIST
NEEDED

Spring Valley Aroo. Buo1neaa

king $90,000. 614-4411-11280, 304- 2br Khchen With Stove And
Ra(rigtrltor No Pitt Aeftren~
coring for partially· 675'5806
Aod Oopoolt. S265 Pluo
ambul1tory ed1rly women In her 7 room, t Both, 2 C.r Gongo 3 coo
homo.
1nc1u Joo
Ughl Lola &amp; Hall Aero, Bldwoll 614- UUIHloa. 814-446-4V26.
houttkMplng. Sind reaume ~311.
Small tbr Stove &amp; Rolrlll'ralor
Including reflrencu, cJo Boi
Fumlohod, Woshtr &amp; Dryer
7211-D, lho Dally Sontlnel, Flatwooda Aru, Pomaroy 2 Hook·up,
$225/mo
$200
Pomeroy, Ohio, 457&amp;1
Story Homo. Now Khchon~ Depaoli, 6 Monlhe IAau. 142
Pomeroy POSTAL JOBS $1178- Balhroom &amp; Clrpetlng. 1r Fourth Avo, Gelllpolla, 614-4463687.
$14 90/hr: No axp naed.ct For Acru. 614-4411-23118.

$400 WHkly Or Mort Sluffing
Envolopae AI Homo. R.. h $1.00 "'Succ..• Kay"' Included O.tallt
S A.S E. 110 To: D&amp;A Suppllao1 24/hr 216-655-:!213, oxt 1111-1
~0
Box 1443, Fairborn, 0~
45324.
Wanted motivated 11looporoon,
$26,000 lo $52,000. flrat yur.
AVON - All arNt, Clll M1rllyn Training provided, oxparionco
Wttver 3~·2645.

3br HouM And Bualn••· In

Nice 3-BR BuHornut Avo
Pomeroy Ponlally tumlohod
balh &amp; 112, rollroncoo, dopoan,
...... 614-992·5g30
R..r 238 Arlt Avanue, Smail

Pon~lmo

S7.00hr. min, HEC 381 W Mtln,
Pomeroy, OH

Diploma, Ezperl•nc• Desired,

ware,

Help VVanted

1xam and application lnto.1 c1ll
1·216-167-15377am-10pm 7atyl

Rocksprlng8 R011d, Pomeroy,

White malt cat In vicinity of

THE DANCE
COMPANY

992-5335 or
985-3561

LocctMd

old 614-985-4288
Kitten 4 mo old, rna~. yellow I
fuay, 1Htorlralned, 614-982-7823
Moll gray otrii)Od kiUon. to good

12 Noon

3-14-'91-tfn

LINDA'S
PAINTING

Gtnnln Sheperd dog, male, 2 yr

Koobough.Follrod Ad Childs
pet R-ard Ca11614-985-4463

BALLET, TAP &amp;
JAZZ CLASSES
AGES 3 and UP

AU MAliS

J&amp;f

lion Coli. 614-446-2398

lnlorma~

Forohoad 614·256-9340

Factory Guns Only
9/9191/2 mo.

DAIWIN OliO

ve nt ure of

Hu.ky, Malt. For More

Begins Sept. 15

01 TOU flEE
1-100-III.OOJD

(A

2 groy Angore klltono, 6 wks
old, good home only, 614-4467340 after 5 00
FrH To Good Homol 8 Monlh
Old Half Como, Half Siberian

Brtnany Sp1nlt1 Scar Across

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB

992·7013
or 992-5553

1 mall collie, 1~1 112 yrs old,
good farm dog, 614-092-2070

Clll 6t4-9112·5712
Loll Orang• And Whitt Fomalo

GUN SHOOT

151 Second Avtnua, Galllpolla

Pomtrov,

Giveaway

home, 304-67!-51 10.

Pomeroy, Ohio
2-11-91-ffn

SjMCialblng in
Custo111 f r - Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR All MAKES &amp;
MODRS

Iring It In Or
Pick Up.

&amp; Operator

614-9f2-6820

WHALEY'S
AUTO PARTS

We Make Grut Match11 Carol's

Shots, Good With Chlldron1814446-1271

1114 '90 lin

USED RAILROAD TIES
1-12-10-tfn

lng.

Medium Size, Spade, Curr•nt

Pomeroy, Ohio

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

Now Open, Pomeroy Car Wash,
will do hendwlth, wax &amp; clnn·

1 t/2 Yoor Old Fomalo Dog

992-6215

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

Announcements

4

V. C. YOUNG Ill

or

3

11

TELEMARKETING lrom yow
homo $20.11r. ot mora -lblo

Slngloa, ~ 0 Box 5846, Alhons,
OH 45701

(FREE ESTIMATES!

69_~·6

992-6461
9 1-91- 1mo
BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

CARPENTER SERVICE

Gold Colne M.T S. COin Shop,

11
Announc ements

LITE &amp; RITE· No moro dieting
wolght loll program; 100%
noturoL 814-379-2469 after 4 30

YOUNG'S

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting
FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

Great Price!

Coins. Gold Rings, Silver Colnt,

Starting Sept. 22

Day or Night

992·6648

0013
Top Prlcll Paid All Old US

. PACK
ABIG PUNCH!

SUNDAYS

9C9-21101
or lu. 9C9-21160
PH.

Wanted To Buy Junk Autos,
Sen1p Metal And FI'M R•movat
From Wtlt VIrginia 814-441·

SMALL
WANTAOS

3 bodroorno, 2110 N Main St,
- - - - - - - - - - 1 1 1 1 1 1 , deposit, roforoncoo, no

Wanted to Buy

II, 304-6&amp;5-3o311
Wanted lo buy, Standing !Imber,
Bob Wllllamo &amp; Sona 614-992544V.

8/ 19/ 1 mo tfn

1:00 P.M.

f----------.. .

Wanttd all Junk and ec111p mtt·

home close to

ochoolo ond hoopllol, Nforonco
and dopoon 304-875-3165

11 s 50% off on anylhmg caugh1
downslream ol lhe nuclear power plant

full time auctlon~~r, complete

9

3 bedroom

Public Sate

&amp; Auction

1m lnlomallonal Troneotar II
lllrtll, mocltl 40708 400 Cum-

ronl·-

13~14,

Mobile Home Parts

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT

"BISSELL
BUILDERS

36 - Real Estate Wanted

RACINE FALL FESTIVAL
ARTS &amp; CRAFTS SPACE
FOR RENT, OCT 4 &amp; 5

BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE
AT $5.00 PER DAY

6-6- 91

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"4.t R1010nable Prices"

Downspouts

79 - Campet's &amp;: Motor Homes

Real Estate General

THIS l"xl"

(614)
696-1006

Mi. outside
Rutland on Ntw
Lima Rd.
5-10 111 tfn

N£W- R£PAIR

"Free ettlmatee"

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

2 1/t

Writesel

New IIOnles luih

BULLETIN BOARD

742-2421

41 Houses for Rent
2 bldroom homo Honford WY,
304-882-2018
2 Bedroom, Ewlngton Aru 614388-8710

Roorno lor
or month
Stlrtlfttlll $1201mo. Qallla Holll
814 4lll'll580.
SIHplng ,.,.,.... w~h cooking.
Alto lroUer - · AU hook-upo.
C.11 allor 2:00 p.m.. 304·7'135851. Maoon wv.

Ill, and mlec ltomo, 6t4-11411-

SEE US FIRST!
992-5800
RT. 33 WEST OF
DARWIN, OHIO

=

Moving Solo (Siturdoy onlyj

take Old Portland Ad off o
SR124, nln•t1n1h of a mile furnllure, guna, 200 amp braakar
for trailer, loya, clothu, ewing

you're in need of

Alngtr, 11 aJ)IId trana., 411
,..,....,, lf4-381.1182t.

4-11_., balh

Furnished
Rooms

8

1875 Pof-M oonvonllontl 4QI)..
cummlnge email block Ro1d

114-lfl2•22711ofter 1:30pm.

:::r.d~=-

-•

72 Trucks for Sale

No pola. Rofwonoo ond cloJ!o.lft,

45

2724

If

lloar, Pomorvy.

Rentals

lngf Choapl Fri.-llot , 320 S 3rd
Mfddloport, Oh.
'

W.H. MOBILE
HOME PARTS

KIT 'N" CARLYLE® by Larry Wnght

Apartment

Large yard 11111 Lota of tvtryth·

day blfo,. th1 1d Ia to run

Sundoy odH1on- 1:oopm Friday'
Monday edition
10·ooo m
Slturdly

1·(3034)·
773-9560

44

&amp; Acreage

O.J. Whlta Rood, 2 Acroo
Woocfon Bulldlng Lot, Roody To
Build On Roolriclod $7,900.
814-245-9585
Ono ocra lot, Point Pl1111nt,
owner wlllllnanco, 304-675-3024
or 675-7883.

Sept.

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZfR and
BACKHOE
WORK

OPEN
Tuesday thru Saturday
10 00 am-5 00 pm

All Yord Soloo Muat Bo Pald In
Advonco Doadllno· 1•00pm lho

MAIN ST., MASON, VA.

639 Bryan Piece
Middleport. Ohio
11-14-tln

•BUY •SELL •TUDE

r1in eancelt

Convertible Tops,
Carpets, Headliner
&amp; Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
742-2251

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; ~UPPUid

ROOFING

Transporlalion
21 - Bustness Opportuntt y
22 - f'Jionl!'( to loan
23 - Protess•o~a l Servtces

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Windows
•Roofing
•lneuletion

POMEIOY, OHO
I0/30tlt

Sopl.
12-13-14,
Noyloro Run R01d,
follow a gne near Big Whool,

COMPLnE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

Lots

Four Iota 100ll1110, city Wlllr 1----fo_r_R_e_nt
_ _ __
and oopllc oyalom, plooao con Small lbr APartmonl 7 Court
:;'~~~~;,_ Roo~y. S04-675-3030 StNII, Kllchon W1th Slave,
Aelrlg-OfL 1188/mo. Pkll
Moroar BoHom Su1Hflvle1on, DopOioll. utllftloo, Rallrlnce.
ono aero loto, R1 2 tronlage, 114-44&amp;-4112t.
prico reduced, oily water, 304·
1'15-2331
Untum- oportmont, 2nd

Pomoro~l

61 - Farm Equtpment

66 ~ Seed

1 7 - Mtscellaneou 1
18 - Wanted To Do

W'\/

576 - Apple Grove
773 - Mas on
882 - New Haven
895 - leta rt
937 - Buttalo

843 ~ Porlland

245 - Rto Grande
266 - Guvan D•st
643 ~ Aubfa D•st

30

Si,,OO '

Employment

polls Oatly Trtbune reachmg over 18 000 hom e1

THU~SOAV PAPE~
f:RIDA."(' PAPER

20

00

51 - Household Good11

8 - Pubh c Sale &amp; Auct on
9 ~ Wanted to Buy

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
11 00 AM SATURDAY
- 2 00 PM MONOAY
~ 2 00 P M TUESDAY
- 2 00 PM WEDNESDAY
~ 2 00 PM THURSDAY
- 2 00 PM FRIDAY

$4

Announcements

"A clatsthed adventtement placed m Th e Oatloy Sent melle.-.
'ept - cl•t•f•ed d~tplay Busm~s Card and legal not• cesl
will also appear m the Pt Ple••m fleg1111!rr •nd I he Gal •
COPY DEADLINE ~
MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER

15

Over 16 Words

Rate

A ales •• e lor conseeut Ne runs b,oltan updav1w11l bflch•rged
lnr ea,.h rt ..... •• uparatll ads

•Ads outt•de Mergs Gell e or Muon count res mu st be pr e
p11d
run 3 d~s 11 no cl'1•ge

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

WASIIEIS-$100 up
DITIS-$69 up
IDIIGUAfOIS-S 100 up
UHGIS-Gos·0... -$125
FIIE%115-S 125 up
'
.(10 OYENS-$79 up
KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or 985-3561
Acrou From Pest Office

35

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
5-Fomlly,

A&amp;B

J&amp;L
INSULATION

90 DAY

Bashan Building

RATES

CALl 992-2156
FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.

USED

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
TO PLACE AN AD

1991

Business Services

Classified
MONDAY thru

Friday, September 1

Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1985 Ctritaro lroe, Burgundy,

Wlth Rod lntorior $5,1100. 114388-6353A"" 5p.m.
1985
Oldllrtlobllo
CutillO
Supremo Broughom All Extrul
Low 8~~·:JL''-4053
Exca11ont COnd~
llonl

81

Home
Improvements

•

~

~

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG

~

t• local rlftrancH furnished f.
FrH Htlm1tn Cell collect 1· )

814-237.(1488, doy

or

night ••

Rogart B11ement Waterproo-

llng
COmplllo Mobllo Homo Sot·Ups,
Reptlra, Commarlcal, Rllldln·

tlal Improvement• Including
Plumbing, Elaetrlcal lnturance

Clolmo Accoptod 614-258-1611
Curtla

lmpravtmenl:a

HarM

Yoara Exparlonca On Oldor &amp;
Nowor H-• Room Addition•
Foundation Work. Roollng'
Wlndowo &amp; Siding. Frao E,.:
llmaloo1 Aeforencn, No Job To
Big Dr Smoll1614-441o0225
E &amp; R TREE SERVICE. Topping

1V88 BMW 13111, I Cvllndtr, I

Trimming, TrN R1mova1, Htdg~
Trimming FrN Eatlmattel 6f4-

lint COndHion1 $tt,500 814-4461642 Ext 221 Dayo, 614-603-5081

Aeration Motors, rtPIIrld New

s.,_,d , All Power, LNfher Interlor, Sunroof, 78,000 MIIH, E1cel·

EvtnlnQI

1V88 Rlvlrfl, L1kl _ , Gorago
Kepll 25,000 Mllll Aoklng,
$8,1100 a14-448.V280, 304-67155806.

11187 Horizon $2,100 11185 Mor·
cury Lynx $800. 11185 C.vollor
$900 1084 Trono Am $2,500
304-1711-2440.
11187 Dido Doll 88, 82,ooo llllao,
All P_.r, Air, Eacellont COndition. 114-4411-4221, Aftor 4p m
11188 Clmero RS Black olll,
go.y Int. 37,000 mhoo. All pwr
options,

lranaferabll

e

yr

eo,ooo mill warrentz Tradn
occoplod. $58110 81 -448-038t
or 614-445-81114
1088 Chovrolol Btrllll, 41,000
mil•, Air cond Pow• Windowaldoorl, 2 81hor V.t onglno,
$5,200, good cond, 304-675-1510.
1081 Oldt Cullin Supreme,
17,000 MUM, 1 Own•r, AMIFM

Storoo/Cuaollo, 4-Now T1roo,
Exclllln Condftlon, Alklng,
$7,1100 114-317.ol49.
11188 Ontnl Automlllc AII!FM
Claaotto, $2,1GO; t883 Chovlllo,
4 Cyllndor, Automa11c, $4110 For
Sola Or Traclol 114-2!1fl.t270.
Scolty'o UHd C.ro, Now Havon.
Wll 304-682-3752. 1088 Pont1ec
Flro Bird $3,all5 11187 Bluor 4x•
$8,8110 10115 Fifth Avonue
$3,500 11185 s-to v.e 1one1 bid
pickup $3,100. 1982
Chav·
rolol ~ Claoalc 42 000
original mlloo 11,100. 1• CUilUI Cortla Y.. $2,1118. 1114
Oldt CutillO Cort1a 11.-. 11111
Blllck Century Llmllod 11.1100.
11183 Dodge 400 oonnrllofolo
$2,1118. 1flll Coachman no
~. "'500' 1111 Dido 11
$1,410.

Y..

12 Trucks for Sale

t

Unconditlon1l llftUme guaran-

3117-7V5T.

JET

&amp; ro-bul" moloro In otock, RON
EVANS, JACKSON, 0H 1-800531'8528
Ron't TV S.vlca, tpaelallzlng
In Z.nlth eleo aarvklna moat
other brand• HouM calla, alto

oomo opoflonce ropalro. WV
304-678-2!188 Ohlo 114-446-2464
Slptlc Tonk Pumplng~hO• GoUla
CO RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
JockiOn, OH t-100-637-9526
Otvle
S.W-Vtc
Servlce,
Gtorgn Creak Rd. Parte, eupplloo, pickup, and dollvory 114441.02114
Wlll build pallo covoro, docki
ocrHnod roomo, put up vinyl
oldlng or lrollor oklrtlng a14- c
245-5651
'•

82

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

.

'

--:-:-~~-.....; ·•
Ctrttr't Plumbing

and Holling

Fourth 1nd Prne

Golllpolio, Ohlo
614-446-3888
HEAT PUMP Slln I Sorvlct, ·: •
304-17~301111 or 114-44M308
•
.

84

Electrical

~

&amp;

~~R~at.;.;rl.:.ge;.;.ra;;;;t;;.;lo.;.;n~- .'~
Rnldtnll1l

or

comm1n::i11

wiring, new etrvlce or Npilra.

Mollor Uconllld lloctrlclan.
Rldanour Eloctrlcal, 304-175-

17118•

85 General HauUng
W1M haul unci, gravol, dlrl ond
cooL 304-lt5-3881

'01
Upholstery
,.,---,.....:,,...,-,...,..,.,...:...-;_
-roy'o UpholoiOrlng - .
lng trl county •roo 21 ,...._ THo
bHt In tumHura upllolotOrlng
eon 30W75-4154 1or • • .._
tlmalH

I

·I

�1 • , ~· '·•

, .,

.~

~

•

•

,

,

&lt;¥

,.. • •

~

:

&gt;i,l. ::,.,'\

,r

1'

11 "

,

,&gt; . "- ~ •· ,,

~

•

.

.J ' , • •

.

.

.v.

• • ' •• . •

~

1,' •

• •••

Friday, September 13, 1991

Sunda~

AHA, Meigs groups team up
for annual Food Festival

RECORD BREAKING NIGHT - The Middleport Church of Christ had a record breaking
night at its youth group kickoff recently. The
theme was ''World Record Night" and 121 children attended. Total attendance was 154. There
were cookie, animal cracker, cupcake, hot dog

Birthday observed

I
I

I

I

'
.
:
,
:
:
'

A binhday party was held
recently for Scou Authcrson in
observance of his 13th birthday at
the home of aunt and uncle on Butternut Avenue in Pomeroy.
Cake and icc cream were served
to Rebecca Authcrson, Kirk Lcm ler. Anna Lemley, boris Lemley,
K1mberly and Crystal Lemley,
Amanda Autherson, Jason Autherson, Richard Warencke all of
Pomeroy; Laura Authers~n. Roy
Buchanan. Tuppers Plains.
Sending a gift was Dewey
Autherson. Winston-Salem, N.C.

and pie eating contests, as well as bubble gum
blowing and hula hooping. To top the evening
o~f, a record breaking seven-foot by four-fool
p1zza was made. Richard DuBose is the children's minister. Youth groups med every Sunday from 6-7 p.m. for children ages three
through high school.

Hymn sing slated

SCOTT AUTHERSON

Rev. James R. Acree Sr., invites
the public. Those attending should
bring a lawn chair.
The church is located off Route
7 on Route 143.

:
:
·
,

FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM · The Faith
Full Gospel Church in Long Bottom will hold revival through Saturday at 7 p.m. nightly with Jimmy
, Stewart, Albany, the evangelist.
· Pastor Steve Reed invites the pub. lie.
FAIR PLAIN, W.VA . - The
· Libeny Mountaineers will perform
· at the Jackson County Jamboree in
: Fairplain, W.Va. on Saturday.
, CHESTER · Dr. and Mrs. Glenn
• Irwin, missionaries to Papua New
: Guinea will appear at the Chester
: Nazarene Church on Friday at 7
: p.m. The public is invited to attend.

'I

. POMEROY · The Pomeroy
. Senior Citizens Dance Club will
: have a round and square dance on
· Friday beginning at 8 p.m. w1th
: music by the Happy Hollow Boys
· of Athens. Admission is $2 and
: those attending should bring snacks
, for the snack table.
POMEROY - The Return
: Jonathan Meigs Chapter, D.A.R.,
; will meet at the Episcopal Church
· Parish House on Friday at I p.m.
: for a reception followed by lun' cheon at 1:30 p.m. Officers bring
: white gloves.
MARlETTA - The annual meet; ing of the Sons and Daughters of
: Pioneer Rivermen will meet at the
· Lafayette Hotel in Marietta on Fri; day and Saturday.
. LONG BOTTOM - There will
· be a dinner at the Faith Fuli Gospel
· Church in Long Bottom on Friday
; at 5:30 p.m. The church will be in
: revival until Saturday and the evan: gelist is Jimmy Stewart. The public
; is invited to auend.
SATURDAY
DARWIN· Modern Woodmen
· of America Camp 7230 will have a
: potluck cook out on Saturday at
: 6:30 p.m. at the southbound park
: on Route 33 ncar Darwin. The
• camp will furnish hamburgers, hot
: dogs and condiments free of
: charge. Members bring a covered
: dish. The public is invited.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. ; Square dance and clogging al the
' Senior Citizells Center, Second and
Main SU'eet, from 8·11 p.m. Music
· by Bluegrass Revival, with West
· Virginia State Fiddle Champion,
Bobby Taylor.

DANVILLE. Weekend services
at the Danville Church of Christ
will be held Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
· and Sunday at 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m. Denver Hill, Foster, W.Va.,
will speak. The public is invited 10
· auend.

I
l

RUTLAND - Descendants of
. James and Bertha Cremeans will
have their annual family reunion on
: Sl\h,lfday at Forest Acres Park. Din·
!..cr will be served at noon.·AllHam•
',jly and friends are invited.

PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
Township Fire Department will
have a chicken barbecue and tractor pull on Saturday with dinner
from 1-7 p.m. Tractor weigh-in is
at 5 p.m. and the pull starts at 6
p.m. Classes for 12 horsepower and
over and 12 horsepower and under
arc: children, 800 pound; and adult
classes, 900, 1,000, and 1,100
pounds.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Boy
Scout Troop 249 will sponsor at car
wash on Saturday at Plcaser's
Restaurant beginning at 9 a.m.
POMEROY - There will be an
outdoor hymn sing at the Hillside
Baptist Church in Pomeroy on Saturday at 7 p.m. The public is invited to aucnd.
HARRISONVILLE - The Harrisonville Lodge No. 411 will meet
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. for work in
the master mason degree. Refreshments will follow. All master
masons invited.
MIDDLEPORT · Shirin Nuggud, administrator of the Gingerbread School, will begin a series of
creative fun art classes on Saturday
from 9:30-11 a.m. at the Middleport Arts Council for children age
three and half to seven. The cost is
$4 and the class will meet once
each month with the dates to be
announced. A program for children
ages 7-12 is also in the planning
stage. Call Janette Thomas at 9925696 or Susan Baker at 992-7733
for information.

Hysell and Oscar Hysell family
reunion will be held Sunday at Fort
Meigs in Rutland with dinner at
12:30 p.m.
RACINE · The Gideon and
Artcmcsia Roush reunion will be
held Sunday at Star Mill Park in
Racine beginning at I p.m. with a
basket lunch. Relatives and friends
arc invited to attend.
PORTLAND - The annual
homecoming of the Morse Chapel
Church will be held Sunday. Regular morning services will be held
and afternoon services begin at 2
p.m. featuring the Conquerors of
Ripley, W.Va. Rev. David Curfman invites the public.

Learning how to read food
labels, prepare low-fat foods, plan
nutritious meals without give up
good taste, and recognize and order
low-fat , low cholesterol meals
when eating away from home arc
some of the Food Festival activiLics.

"The typical American d1ct is
rich in egg yolks, fatty meats, butter and whole dairy products. These
arc the main sources of cholesterol
and saturated animal fat," according to Blake. "They tend to raise
the level of cholesterol and contnbutc to the development of fauy
depos1ts along the lining of your
arteries (arthcrosclerosis), a root
cause of heart attacks and strokes."
She went on to say "what we cat is
important. What we don't cat, or
cut out, can· be equally important in
our efforts to prevent heart dis case."
During this annual education
week of Food Festival the American Heart Association has suggcsllons on ways you can reduce the
inventory of high-fat, high cholesterol foods in your refrigerator.

WWI
veteran gets
Purple
Heart

Dairy products
Substitute one percent milk (27
percent calories from fat) or skim
milk (zero percent calories from
fat).
Buuer, cream and ice cream
have even more fat than whole
tnilk. Substitute products lower in
saturated fats, such as margarine,
evaporated milk and low-fat frozen
yogurt.
Eggs
It is a good idea to limit your
egg yolk consumption to three or
four per week.
Meat products
The American Heart Association recommends a total of six
ounces of poultry, fish or lean meat
per day. Choose lean cuts and eat
them without the skin or visible fat.
Chicken and turkey are excellent
choices of lean meat, if the skin is
removed. Lean cuts of veal, pork,
beef or lamb arc also acceptable, in
small portions, if the visible fat is
trimmed.
For more heart healthy suggestions. contact the American Heart
Association atl -800-282-0291.

Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Reeves and
Kaylie, Kingsbury Rood; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Reeves, Brandi and
Robbie, Chester; were Sundoy visitors of Mrs. Dorothy Reeves.
Mrs. Danilcl Worley, Stacy,
Daniel and Stephen, were weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Charley
Smith.
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Chorley Smith were Mrs.
Daniel Worley, Stacy, Daniel and
TAMARA HAYMAN

Vol. 26, No. 32
Copyrlghled 1991

Tamara Hayman, Syracuse, a
junior at Southern High School, has
been accepted by the Who 's Who
Among American High School
Students.
Only five percent of the students
in the United States arc honored in
Who's Who each year.
Miss Hayman is one of less that
half of one percent who have been
honored for two or more years.
Her biography will appear in the
25th silver anniversary edition of
Who's Who Among American
High School Students.

l

POMEROY - A 12-step AA
meeting will begin Sunday at 7
p.m. at the JTPA office 117 West
Second Street in Pomeroy.

SUNDAY
ROCK SPRINGS · The Rock
Springs United Methodist Church
will have its annual Rally Day on
Sunday. A potluck dinner will
begin at 12:30 p.m . and the afternoon program will begin at 2:30
p.m. with the Gospel Notes. The
public is invited to auend.

MONDAY
POMEROY · "Crusade for
Christ" revival will be held Mon day through Sunday at the
Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene
at 7 p.m. nightly. There will be different singers and speakers nightly.
The crusade is sponsored by the
Mcigs-Gallia-Mason counties Crusade for Christ. Pastor Glen
McClung mvitcs the public.

EXPLAINING BEES - Fred Purdell, in the
bee-keepers hood, and Steve Little, Gallia County Bee Inspector, explain bee facts to six-yearold Scott Saunders at the ninth annual FarmCity Day held Saturday at the Boggs Family

By BRIAN J. REED
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - The Meigs County Board of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities has
been ordered to provide adequate
services to Meigs MR/DD clients.
while the Ohio MR/DD board has
been ordered to provide any necessary funding to the local board.
Those provisions were made by
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Judge Fred W. Crow III in
light of a civil trial held in June.
The order in the case of State, ex
rei. Joan Cottrill versus Meigs
County Board of Mental Retardation Developmental Disabilities.
and others was filed on Thursday.
The civil case was filed last last
spring after the Meigs MR/DD

• Washers • Dryers
• Dishwashers
• Aehigerators

'

Partly Cloudy
Partly cloudy. High today In

mid-90s.

A Multim edia Inc Newspaper

By MELINDA POWERS
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS- Four Gallia
County music teachers were denied
a court inJunction Thursday allow ing them to return to work after
being laid off.
Gallia County Common Pleas
Judge Donald A. Cox refu sed to
grant the order sought by the Gallia
County Local Education Associa tion and four of the district' s laid·

off music teachers in a hearing
Thursday at the courthouse.
Two of the teachers, Hayden
Lloyd and Winston Sheets. had
been re duc c d ~ in ~ force (R.l.F.'d) in
1990, bu t were returned to work
wh en an arbitrator rul ed that the
board could not lay off teachers to
sa ve money.
Th e GCLEA' s attorn ey ,
Mi chae l 1. Hunter. told the judge
Jhat th e teac hers were, again .

wrongfully R.I.F. 'd when the board
cut mu sic pro gram s earlier thi s
year. Hunter told the judge that the
group was seeking the injunction to
"maintain the status quo" until an
arbitrator's hearing Sept. 24.
In a related matt er, Jud ge Cox
stepped down from hearing a second class action suit fil ed by the
GCLEA against the board. Because
Cox has a sister who teaches in the
Cnntinued nn A-3

board announced that it would lay
off 12 staff members in light of
financial difficulties . Several
aucmpts to pass tax levies fof the
program have failed, and Program
Superintendent Lee Wedemeyer
resigned from the program during
the summer.
Voters in Meigs County will
again be faced with an MR/DD
levy in November.
"The MR/DD board did prove
that it was in need of additional
funds and took all reasonable steps
to secure the funds necessary to
comply with the mandatory duties
owned to the MR/DD plamtiffs,"
Judge Craw's 17-page entry reads.
"The services provided to the
plainttffs which were eliminated

RACINE - Lawrence Adam s,
expansion chairman for Ruritan' &gt;
Ohio District, will be in Racine
Tuesday, Sept. 17 to meet with citizens interested in forming a new
Ruritan Club. The meeting is set
for 7 p.m. in the Racine Village
Council chambers.
The national civic-service organization is trying to form a club in
Racine at the invitation of it s
mayor, Frank Cleland.
Cleland said Ruritan has more
than I ,300 locallv-affiliated clubs

Jhroughout Ohio and tlle country.
"Its purpo se is to foster a beucr
under standing among peopl e
through volunteer community se rvice," Cleland ex plained.
The Ruritan slogan is "Fellowship, goodwill and community scr·
VICC.''

Dean R. Kenny, club buildin g
speciali st from Ruritan National' s
Dublin, Va., headquarters, will also
meet with local officials and residents and proscnt a videowpc presentation, "1:hifl. is Ruritan." during

.

,

' "

the 1-1/2 hour organizatiOnal meetmg. Letters of invitation to allcnd
the meeting have been sent to more
Jhan 20 leading citizens, Cleland
said, who signed the inviwtions on
behalf of the community.
The mayor noted that Ruritan is
America's leading community servi ce organization with more than
37,500 men and women members
throughout the country.
"I feel Racine is a rural commu nity that needs a civic service club
Continued on A-3

after January, 1991 were necessary
to meet the basic health and welfare needs of said plaintiffs, including basic hygiene practices."
"These represent fundamental
needs of the plaintiffs," the order
continues. "The state (by law) has
created for the plaintiffs an entitlement to receive programs and services in accordance with their Individual Habilitation Plans. While
the state may elect not to iniliale
such programs, once they have
been established, they became
rights of the MR/DD plaintiffs
which must be provided ... "
Specifically, the entry orders the
Ohio MR/DD to provide the local
board the sum of $275,000 as sup~
Continued on A-4

• Microwaves • Ranges

• TV's!Stereos
• VCR's!Camcorders

IT'S OFFICIAL . The new Bank One sign was in place on the
300 block, Third Avenue, Gallipolis when Rank One, Athens, N. A.

opened Saturday. The conversion from Central Trust occurred
between 2 and 3 p.m. Friday.

Open house planned for officials

TAFT VISITS MEIGS COUNTY • Secretary of State Bob Taft, foreground, attended the
district meeting of the Ohio :4.ssociation of Elections Officials which was held at Royal Oak
Resort on Friday. Taft discussed several elections issues in a "questions and answers" for-

mat. Pictured next to Taft is Meigs Board of
Elections Director Jane Frymyer,' who serves as
the secretary or the group, and Chairman Evelyn Clark. (Times-Sentinel Photo by Brian J.
Reed)

Secretary of State Taft encourages
voter participation November 4

Come Out On
TUESDAY, SEPT. I 7 at 9:00 P.M.
And Enjoy The

INTERNATIONAL CALENDAR MEN
It's all in good fun!

SMIT'l'Y'S IN POMEROY

.....
I I I I I

~·

• Freezers • Compactors

LADIES!

The Place: SMITIY'S of Pomeroy
And you can bring your camera to this one.
The Cost is $10.00 ·Tickets on Sale at

Dairy Farm. The display case allows people to
watch 7,000-10,000 bees at work. The glass sides
or the case keep the bees conveniently inside
where they belong. (Times-Sentinel photo by
Jim Freeman)

MR/DD ordered to provide serv~ces
for clients; board must provide ·fiinds

POMEROY - The Meigs County Genealogical Society will meet
RUTLAND · The Leading
Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Meigs Creek Conservancy District will
Museum.
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
RUTLAND ·The Charles Reed office.

ATTENTIO N~

..• ..

Ruritan to organize in Racine

• Vacuum Cleaners

home-appliance and electronics Items
IN·STOCK In our store• It's simple! Come
11110 our store. choose from super brand names --'""---,
at great low prices. and take $1 0 to $30
off INSTANTLY

;_

15 Sections. 112 Pages

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, September 15, 1991

Stephen, and Mr. and Mrs. Doyle
Knapp. ALso visiting was Harley
Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Knapp
Michelle, Amy and Ashley, and
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knapp and
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp enjoyed
a w1cncr roast at the home of Kail
Knapp and Tonda Salser, Dexter.
Mrs. Leslie Frank, Sarah and
Mauhcw , were recent visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Haning and
Ronald.

WILL MAINTAIN REGULAR HOURS
BEGINNING MONDAY

Get an extra $10 OFF••.
$20 OFF... up to $30 OFF

···-

Four Gallia teachers
denied injunction

RACINE -The James C. and
Ethelinda Stone Moore reunion
will be held Sunday at the home of
Larry and Pauy Circle. Carmel
Road in Racine. Basket dinner at I
p.m.

POMEROY - "Noah's Animals" and "All the Money in the
World" will be shown at the Meigs
County Public Library in Pomeroy
on Saturday at 2 p.m. The movies
will be shown at the Middleport
Library on Monday at 7 p.m.

Majestic moored in Cincinnati; visited
here often in 30s, 40s • Sands ·A· 7-8

Along the river .............. BI-7
BusinessJFarm ............. D-1-8
Comics . ........................Insert
Classified ....................... D3· 7
Deaths................................ A3
Editoral............................. A2
Sports............................. Cl-R
Weather . .......................... A-3

Iowa 29 Iowa State 10
Pittsburgh 26 Temple 7

•
lmts

THE
PRESCRIPTION SHOP
IN MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
WILL CLOSE SATURDAY
AT 1:00 P.M.

Hayman
recognized

Tennessee 30 LJCLA 16
Central Michigan 20 MSLJ 3

Ohio State 23 Louisville 15
Michigan 24 Notre Dame 14

When time comes, ex-newsman wants
it done his way · Beat of the Bend • B·3

B-1

POMEROY - Rev. Eddie Buff.
ington, Gallipolis, will be the guest
speaker at the Naomi Baptist
Church in Pomeroy on Sunday at
II a.m.

POMEROY - The annual homecoming of the Mt. Hermon U. B.
Church (Texas Community) will be
held Sunday. Sunday school will be
at 9:30; worship service at 10:30,
following by a dinner at noon. The
afternoon service at I :30 p.m. will
feature the Grubb Family of Gallipolis. Rev. Robert Sanders, pastor, invites the public.

College
Scores

Weekend visitors call

An outdoor hymn sing is
planned by the HillsJdc Baptist
Church on Saturday at 7 p.m. on
tho church yard.
Singers include God's LiLLie
Lambs, The Joyful Hearts , Linda
Jones, The Redeemed Quartet, and
The Children of God.

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received weU in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.

The American Heart Association of Meigs County is teaming up
wit Meigs High School and the
Meigs County Cooperative Extension Service to help individual s
lower their cholesterol levels with
the annual American Heart's Food
FestivaL
The American Heart's Food
Festival, scheduled Sept. 23-28 is a
national nutrition education event
designed to increase the awareness
of the relationship between diets
high in cholesterol and saturated fat
and diseases of the heart and blood
vessels. High blood cholesterol is
on e of the major risk factors for
cardiovascular disea1c, the nation· s
number one killer, according to the
American Heart Association.
This year Meigs High School,
under the supervision of Margie
Blake, and the Meigs County
Cooperative Extension Service,
under the supervision of Cindy
Oliveri, will participate in a variety
of informative activities to show
that good nutrition is worth cclc-

75 cents

2WAYS
TO SAY

'
·

.

INTER
'

"CHARGE
IT"

~:

-

locally Owned and Operated By Bill Haptonstall
788 North Second Avenue
·
Middleport; OH.
992-2178

I

By BRIAN J. REED
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - Secretary of State
Bob Taft (R-Cincinnati) attended
the disll'ict meeting of the Ohio
Association of Election Officials
on Friday afternoon, when that
group met at Royal Oak Resort
near Pomeroy.
Meigs County Commissioner
Richard E. Jones and Board of
Elections Director Jane M. Frymy•

er joined forces to welcome and
introduce Taft to the audience,
which is made up of directors,
deputy directors and board members from Boards of Elections in
several Southern Ohio counties.
Frymyer serves as secretary of that
state-wide organization.
Frymyer, in introducing Jones,
credited )lim 'With the idea of hold·
ing the meeting at the resort, mak•
ing it possible 10 host the associa-

-~

Lion's members at a Meigs County
location.
'
Among the counties represented
at the mCC'ting were Meigs, Gallia,
Lawrence, Noble, Washington,
Ross, Athens, Vinton, Jackson,
Hocking, Monroe, Muskingum,
and Pickaway.
In addition to {'3'1icipating in a
general diseuss10n of election
issues, Taft encouraged voter parContinued on A-3

Ry CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
POMEROY - Eleanor Thomas.
retiring executive director of the
Meigs County Council on Aging,
and Susan Stewart, the new director, will be honored at an open
house to be held next Sunday from
I to 3 p.m. at the Senior Citizens
Center.
The open house is being held to
give residents the opportunity to
extend retirement wishes to Mrs.
Thomas and to meet the new director. Mrs. Stewart comes to Meigs
County from Williamstown , W.
Va. with an extensive background
in working with the elderly, as well
as expertise in securing program
funding.
Mrs. Thomas retired in August
after 19 years in the position of
executive director. She saw the
program· go from a one-room
upstairs office to a spacious modem facility , from a staff of two to a
full-time staff of 30, and from the
very minimal to a broad range of
personal, health, social and educational services to Meigs County's
elderly residents.
Under the leadership of Mrs.
Thomas, the senior program has
shown continual growth and development since it was started in
1972.
The center opened in 1973 in
the old Pomeroy Junior High
School buttding and then in 1980
\.

moved to the lower level of the
new Meigs Multipurpose building.
Highlights of the years for Mrs.
Thomas include the construction of
the $1.4 milliOn county-owned
multipurpose fa cility, and the 42
units of subsidized hou s1ng adja -

ce nt to the center lor low 1ncome
elderly and handicapped.
The former executive director
played an 1mportant role in sccur~
1ng direc t services to senior citizens
and the funding for those services.
Continued on A-3

Efforts begin to bring
Christian radio to Gallia
Ry KRIS COCHRAN
T-S News Staff
GALLIPOLIS · The Moody
Broadcasting Network of the
Moody Bible Institute of Chicago,
Ill., ha s begun a project that will
provide the mini stry of Christian
radio to Gallipolis, along with the
efforts of two local individuals.
Mike Zirille, former resident of
Youngstown and Holzer Clinic
physician, hopes area residents will
join together and bring Christian
programming to Gallia County.
"When I lived in Youngstown,
there was a Christian station in
Cleveland I would li sten to," said
Zirillc, a member of the First Baptist Church. "' I moved to Gallipolis
about a year ago and I began lo

miss it."
Assisting Zirille in the project is
Kenny Coughenhour, director of
the Black Lung program at Holzer

Clmic.
Accordin g to Zlfillc, MDN can
he heard worldwide, featuring
hourly rciJ gJou s newscasts, tradi -·
tiona! hymns and children's programs. "I also feel this could be an
altcmallvc for teens," commented
Zirillc.
The cost of the Gallipolis project is $25,000, which includes the
purchase and installation of a transmitter, professional servic(\s for filing the application with thd Federal
Communications Commission
(FCC) and administration expenses
and the first few months operating
expenses . The radio signal is
received through a Satellator, pro-·.
viding 24 hour listening enjoyment. : ·
Bringing Christian sounds ..
across the airwaves of Gallipolis ·
will be up to local individuals and :·
organizations.
"'We have until June 1992 to ·
Continued on A-3

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="314">
    <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="9605">
                <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="35086">
            <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="35085">
              <text>September 13, 1991</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="318">
      <name>phillips</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
