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14-The Deily Sftinal

Poma-oy-Midcleport, Ohio

*

i

~allstones linked to eating, weight

Computerized pump
has· diabetic promise
BOSTON (UPI) - An expert·
mental' llnplantable Ins ulin
pump controlled by radio signals
and computl!r chips appears to
help some diabetics avoid dally
Insulin ln)ectlons. resear cher s
reported.
The hockey puck-sized device
performed well in the first tests
In humans - a pilot study
Involving 18 patients with Type 1
diabetes published Wednesday In
The New England Journal of
Medicine. ·
·
· "I'm very happy with the
results so far," said Dr. Christopher saudek, an · associate
professor of medicine at the
Johns HOpkins UniVersity School
of Medicine In Baltimore who led
1 tbe study . "It's an approach that
has promise. "
At least 500,000 Americans
have Type 1, Insulin-dependent
diabetes. They do not produce
enough Insulin to ~ control the
amount of sugar in their blood.
Dally lnsull!llnjectlons usually
control the disease but they are
unpleasant, Inconvenient and
often Imprecise, which can lead
to such complications as blind·
ness, kidney failure and nerve
damage.
The 1mplan table pump Is designed to be more conven lent and
more closely mimic the body's
natural sugar-regulating process, Saudek said.
Housed In a disc-shaped Uta·
nlum ,shell, the pump contains a
reservoir of about 2 teas poons
of concentrated Insulin, a 3.6-volt
battl!ry that lasts up to five
years, a radio ·receiver and
computer chips.
The pump is Implanted under
the skin In the abdomen with a
' . 7-lnch tube extending Into the
abdominal cavity, where Insulin
Is released .
The device releases Insulin on
a regular basis phis at additional
times, such as just before a meal,
at the prompting of a radio signal
the diabetic sends with a trans·
mltter: The reservoir Is reflled
every two months with a needle.
In the study, the device ap. peared to adequately control the
blood sUgar levels of recipients at
Johns Hopkins and the University of California-San Diego for
an average of 18 months.
One pump was replaced be·

Thursday, August 31, 198S:

Women's Hospital ·In Boston ·
examined Information on a bout
88,837 women ages 34 to 59
participating tn the Nurses
Health Study, a contln~lng project begun In 1976.
The researchers compared the
diets, weight and alcohol consumptlon of the women who
developed gallstones that . produced symptoms, or had their
gallbladders removed, to those
who did not from 1980 to 1984.
The more the women weighed
the greater their risk for developlng gallstones, the researchers
found, with obese women being
six times more likely to deveiop
them.
The relationship existed even

and cholesterol that· can cause
pain or infections If they block
gallbladder passages.
Previous studies found a11
cause of a faulty computer c hip
association between obesity and
while the Insulin tubes on iour
other patients' pumps were
an Increased risk tor gallstones.
The new study Is the largest of its
blocked by tissue growing
around them. In two cases the
kind · and the first to show a
·
The
first-of-a-kind
study
of
lubes were cleared but two
relationship between gallstone
patients dropped out because of nearly 90,000 nurses around the riSk and moderate excess
country found the risk for gall· weight.
the problem.
" I'm ve ry satisfied with the stones appears to Increase with
Although researchers are unresults," said Saudek, He added, caloric Intake and Is elevated sure why excess weight and
however, more tests on more even If a woman Is just slightly caloric Intake would Increase the
chances dt gallstones, they ,bepatients for lpnger periods are overweight.
The study, published Wednes- lieve those factors may alter the
needed before the device Is made
day In The New England Journal balance between bile acid . and
widely avaiJable. .
·
The pump w11s developed at of Medicine, also confirmed cholesterol, Maclure said.
Johns Hopkins and manufac· previous reports showing moder·
For the study, Maclure and his
tured by MlniMed Technologies ate alcohol .c onsumption was . colleagues at the Brigham and
associated with a decreased risk
ln.Sybnar, Calif.
for
gallstones .
Dr. Donald Simonson, an as·
''The
Implications are that If
slstant professor of medicine at
you
are
reducing
your weight and
Harvard Medical School and
caloric
Intakecutting
down
on
head of cltntcal resear-eh at -the
and
drinking
alcohol
moderately
Joslin Dl abetes Center In Boston,
said the . find i ngs are - you are probably reducing
your risk _of gallstones," said
encouraging.
Malcolm
Maclure, an asslsJant
"It's a nice advance. This
professor
of epidemiology at the
paper shows the pump cal'l be
Implanted internally and tunc· Harvard School of Public Health
tlon for prolonged periods of · who led the study. "It's basically
time. It allows the patient not to fUrther support for being Jean. "
have to stick themselvs multiple
But Maclure noted that the
times a day," he said.
study does not support moderate
Simonson noted, however, that alcohol consumption by women
the patients still have to monitor because previous studies have
their blood sugar levels and linked that to a possible In·
make periodic adjustments In creased risk for breast cancer.
the pump.
"This not like a pump where
About 500,000 gallbladders are
you can Implant It and forget you removed each year In the United
have diabetes. This requires a lot States because of gallstones,
of work," be said.
which are accumulations of bile
BOSTON (UPI) - Providing
yet another reason for women to
watch their .weight, a major
study Indicated that a woman's
risk for gallstones goes up with
the amount she eats and how
much she weighs .

among women who were just~
sllghty overweight. For exam·,
pie, a ~foot-6 woman · who;
weighed 150 pounds was about .
twice as likely to develop gall· ·
stones as a 5-foot-6 woman whO:
weighed 125 pounds.
.C
The researchers also found a11 :
association between caloric In· .•
take and therlskforgallstones.A :
woman who ate more than 2,000:
calories a day had about twice_:
the risk of a woman who ate half:
that much, the researchers•
reported. .
·
Women who drank the equlval·;

36-13

PICK-3: 450
PICK-4: 8351

Page4

•
•

Vol.40, No.83 M

.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
All Meigs Local school em·
ployees , cer-tified , · non-c ertified
and exempt, were given salary
Increases during a special meet·
lng of the Meigs Local Board of
Education Thursday night In the
board office.
Complying with the terms of
the negotiated contract, the
board adopted a salary schedule
for certified employees at the
same Index with a base salary of
$16,590 for the 1989- 90 school
year. This Is an Increase of $890
on the base salary, meaning that
every teacher will receive that
amount or more.
Also adopted was a new salary
schedule for non-certified employees with an· Increase of 43
cents per hour across the board

PEIMONTH•

12 S-lO's IN STOCK

·

*Payment based on sale price of 86650, 8149 down 60 month term Rebate
to dealer.
'
'

Meeting
The Columbia Township board
of trustees will meet In regular
session on Mopday at 7:30p.m. at
the fire station.

A Muh:imedia

2&amp; Conto

Meigs
al employees
given salary

..

S1495 6

2 Sectiono. 16

__ Pomeroy-· Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 1. 1989

11119

S10EL

p.m. All organizations and fire
departments are welcome to
participate.
•

Tonight, showers and thull·
derstorms early. Becoming
.parlly cloudy late. Low 65 to
70. WindS becoming north less
than 10 mph. Chance ol rain 80
percent early . Saturday , becoming mosdy sunny. ffigh In
the lower 80s. ·

eachweekhadabouthalftherlsk:
of ·developing gallstones than:
non-drinkers.

Announcements

Labor Day barheque
The Chester -Volunteer Fire
Department will be having a
chlc~en and rtb barbeque dinner
on Monday (Labor Day) at the
fire house. Serying will begin at
11 a.m. with over 600 halves of
chicken and 130 pounds of spare
ribs to be prepared. A parade will
also be formed at the Chester

Ohio Lottery

entoftwoorthreeglassesofwlne~

Save On .S-10'5 Now at Jim Cobb

Chapman reunion
The fifth annual Chapman and
Myrta Kerwood Hill family reunIon will be held Sept. 10 at
Racine's Star Mill Park. Those
attending are to take a covered
dish for the 1 p.m. potluck dinner.
All relatives and frlepds . a re
Invited to attend.

Notre Dame
tops Va.

~ INERFLOWINO?

effective JulY. 1, 1989, contingent
upon the fact that the noncertified emplOyees receive 14
percent of any ·new money with
the figure :to be adjusted If
necessary. This •action was also
based on the negotiated corltract
with the non-certified
employees.
All E:xempt employees received an Increase of 43 cents-per
hour or 5.67 percent Increase.
The board also approved salary
increases of 5.67 percent for
administrators contingent upon
the fact that this would be eight
percent of the new money received by the district.
The salary schedules were
adopted by unanimous vote with
the exception of the ones ·for the
non-certified and administrators
where the vote was 4-1 with ·

Richard Vaughan passing.
,
A motion from Bob Snowden
seconded by Bob Barton to
transfer $100,000 from the .Insurance reserve Into another fund
was defeated when J eff Werry
passed, and Larry Rupe and
Vaughan voted " no."
The motion was to make the
transfer to lower the premium
for all employees on their Insurance benefits and alsc:i that the
$41,000 paid to the teachers to
reduce their Insurance premium
be In a true percentage reflected
In benefits to the non-certified
employees. The motion was
defeated after some discussion.
. Attending the meeting were
Supt. James Carpenter, Treas·
urer Jane Frymeyer, and Board
Members Vaughan, Barton,
Rupe, Werry. and Snowden.

Jobless unchanged -_ in August

ClEM It Willi
CLASSIBADS
.

992-2156

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The maybe sometime later this
nation's unemplOyment rate re· month the markets could get showed little growth even though
malned at ·s.2 percent In August nervous that the rates are . car manufacturers posted a
and total non-farm employment staying too high," he said. "The substantial gain. The auto Indusrose by 110,000 despite the effects fear that we'll have a recession try added 25,000 jobs, offsetting
of a wave of telephone company down the line because the Fed is declines the previous two
months. Construction employstrikes, the Labor Department going to keep Interest rates too
ment Increased slightly after
reported Friday.
high too long Is going to be posting a large g'!in In July .
The number of new jobs stirred. "
created by businesses other than
ihere were .l84.000 Jobs
Tbe unemplOyment rale of. 5..2
farm• would have- been about createq In July. the bureau said. percent was t11e same as In July
' twice as large as 110,000 If not for An average of 275,000 jobs were and has shown little movement
the strikes at several regional created each month In 1987 and since April, the bureau said.
NEW MARKERS- Stacey Shank stands beside
a part of his civic leadership requirement lor the
phdne
companies, the Labor 1988.
Unemployment rates reone of the three new high water marlrers niade as
Eagle Scout award.
.
Department 's Bureau of Labor
A total of J08.9 million people mained abol!t the same for adult
· Statistics said.
were employed last month, the men, 4.4 percent; teenagers,l4.5.
People on strike are not bureau said. Total unemploy- percent; whites, 4.5 . percent;
counted on company payrolls ment was 6.4 million.
blacks, 11.1 percent and Hispanused in measuring ef11ployment,
The average work week for Ics, 9 percent. The rate for adult
When the rain comes down and his civic leadership project.
and G and J Auto Parts. then
meaning the jobs of the 108,000 non-farm workers declined by 0.2 women fell 0.3 percentage point
the river overflows, residents
It Involved soliciting the mate· solicited help In creating the strikers were subtracted from ' hour to 34.6 hours, following an after rising a half point during
will find It easier to keep a check rials lot the two 16-foot and one markers from Mike Van Meter,
the total. the bureau said .
Increase of about the same size In the previous five months.
on the flood level with Pomeroy's · eight foot markers and then Tom Werry, Keith Hagen. Brent
The employment figures com·. July. The manufacturing work
The number of long-term unnew markers. a project of Involving others In actUally deZirkle, Nathan Baloy, and Fre~~d with a Commerce Depart· week and factory overtime edged employed, defined as those with,
prospective Eagle Scout Stacey signing and making them. The Baloy,
ment report that the Index of down 0.1 hour to40.9 hours and 3.8 ·out jobs for 15 weeks or more,
Shank, Pomeroy·.
Active In scouting for the pa t Leading Economic Indicators hours, respectively, the bureau declined by 170,000, the bureau
project took about two months to
The Meigs High School junior complete.
six years, the son of Mr. and Mrs . rose 0.2 percent In July provided said,
said.
took on replacing the three old
Shank, a member of the Boy Scott Shank , Union Ave. is evidence the economy is not
Average hourly earnings fell
In the services sector, employmarkers, one at the corner of . Scout Troop 249 got donations of working toward completing his bQund for a recession and may be from $9.70 to $9.69 and weekly ment In communications and
'Lynn and Main, another on Main, materials from Sugar Run Flour 'Eagle Scout requirements some· gaining strength.
earnings were down from $337.56 publiC utilities plummeted by
and the third down by the levee as Mill, O'DeiiLumber, True Value,
time this year.
. ''The (employment) number is to $335.27, the bureau said.
130,000, reflecting the telephone
stronger than expected and may
Manufa cturing employment company strikes.
·
suggest to some that the econ·
omy may be reaccelerating, "
said Hugh Johnson, chief Invest·
-Swisher' s awards and decora- ment officer for First Albany
Capt. Wllltam D. Swisher, U. S.
H.is previous
asslgnm·e nts
Two of the petitions of candi- the basis of insufficient signadacy filed with the Meigs County tures. Don P. Smith' s petition
Army, took command of the have Included SI First Battalion, . lions have included the meritor·• Corp. in Albany, N.Y .
He said that means the Federal
Board of Elections were not was disqualified because of his
Shreveport Military Entrance School Brigade, Aberdeen Prov· · ious service medal, the Army
certified when the board mel this failure to sign his petition prior to
Processing Statton, Shrieveport, lng Grounds, Maryland; Assist- commendation medal with three Reserve is unlikely move away
La. in June.
week, Jane Frymyer.' director. having It circulated.
ant Operations Office and S.l!S-4 oakieaf clusters, the overseas from Its tight monetary policy
to
keep
Inflation
down
designed
ribbon,
and
the
Army
service
·
reports.
Swisher received his commis- Cleveland Recruiting Battalion,
Both candidates can file tQbe a
while
avoiding
a
recession.
ribbon.
The petition of Clifford T. write-ln. Deadline for that is·
sion as a Second Lleutenan t. Cleveland; S-12nd. Brigade, 2nd.
"These numbers are going to
Captain Swisher, his wife. the
Roseberry for Lebonan Town- Sept. 28 .
· Adjutant General Corps, from Infantry Division, Camp Hovey,
make
the Fed stay stuck, and
ship trustee was disqualified on
Ohio State University ROTC South.Korea; and Chief Enlisted former Sandy Curtis, and their ·
program. He holds a bachelor of Management Dlvison, Com· son, Robbie, four , live in
arts degre"' In history and Is a mander,-525th Replacement Reg- Haughton. La. He is the son of
graduate of the AG Officer Basic ulating Detachment, 'l Corps G-1 Mr. and Mrs. William Swisher
and Advanced courses.
Plans and Operations officer, Ft. and the grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Swisher. Middleport.
Lewis , Washington.
. I

Water levels easier to track

.

RT.33

773-5891
Sunda~

Monda~

Septenaller 3

Septenaller 4

Saturda~

Septe111ller z

MASON, WV

(§llJ(jJJJf)J
BAII&amp;IW

8PEDIAL .

. • . Tough and power11acked
with ,....,.. en~~rgy for reedy
cranking ... ptus Crown'•

HEIR'S

low Nlntenance lulum.

·$ 41.99

PD,.Aftl CliPS .
BDYDII
8ft DIE FREEl

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Clll

PEPSI

Candidates' petitions disqualified

'No connection' between two cases
VILLIY
BILL

a Rift .....
Dlft

uow

A'

·N ew commander named for station

BREAKFAST
BISCUITS .

WITH
•BACON

•EGG
•HAM
'

SUBS,
DEUMEATS
AND CHF.f.SES
".ftlaB JfAD. 1'0 ORDBil
SANDWICHES :
n.\rumNO ...

DRDCHICKRN
orBVCDr"

STOP IN

By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP News staff
There are •'no similarities," in
the abduction and murder of an
Athalia woman and the dlsappearano~ of a Galllpoll~ Developmental Center resident In July,
according to lnves tlgators from
the Ohio Highway Patrol.
Gallla·Melgs Post Commander
Lt. Dan Henderson said there Is
"no connection between the two
as far as I can determine."
News reports from several
local television stations and the
Huntington (W.Va. ) Herald Dispatch linked the two. calling
the disappearance at GDC an

abduction.
According to Henderson, "she
(the GDC resident) was not
abducted. "
Barbara Tharp, 35, left the .
center pn June 16, and was
returned to Gallipolis on Aug. 16,
Henderson said.
Tharp was only unaccounted
for durtng the Initial 24-hour
period, Henderson said. Her
whereabouts were known, but
Henderson did not elaborate due
to the ongoing Investigation. •
He did say the two have no
connection as far as he can
determine.
Some reports have linked the

two Incidents by a front vanity
license plate hearing the name
''Juanita," but Henderson discounts that as unsubstantiated.
Tharp may have left in a vehicle
with that plate, but It was never
confirmed.
.
Athalia resident Paula Kelley
was abducted from a convenient
store she managed on July 28 ,
and her body was found near
Miller In Lawrence County by· a
hunter Wednesday morning.
The Lawrence County Sheriff's
Department reported Friday she
was stabbed through the heart
and may have been sexually
assaulted.

Trial ._ expected to conclude today
The State of Ohio's ·case
against Ronald G. Davis should
be decided _,Y late today by a
Meigs County Common Pleas
' Court Jury of 12. Davis Is
charged with gross sexuallmposltkln for allegedly engaging In
sexual contact; but not Inter·
coune, with a minor girl under
age 13.

The state charges tha.t oo April
7, the 12·year-Gid alle&amp;ft .v ictim
WBI lllfllllaa tile D.llt In tile

Davis home with tile defendant's
12-year-old daughter. The sexual
as.sau It allegedly took place
during the time the girl was· a
guest In the home.
Meigs Prosecuting Attorney
Steven Story and Assistant Prosecutor Linda Warner rested
their case aaalnat.the defendant
·early Thunday afternoon.
WIIUam Grim, of Atlrens, reP,I'I!Hfttlna tlte defendant, called

·I'll
I

'

the defendant's 12-year-okl and
16-year-old daughters to the
stand, both of whom tes lifted that
the alleged Incident did not
occur.
Thursday's session ended
about 4:30p.m.
The trial resumed this mornlrig
at 9 a.m. The defense was
expected to call at least two more
witnesses this morning, IncludIng the defendant himself.

CALF BAJSINO -A diii'J toar- COIIIhlitlted
on Thanday at the Holler Fum Jllli&amp; off Route 'l'
near F1ve Points. Arnone tile tblllp Ilion oa die
tour wu thll new calf ralllag ban, built bJ Bob
Thom]IIIOO, 'secoad from ·left, and Auoclated
Fabrlelltan. Pictured with 111m are, from left,
.J•u alee, lllelp C.utJ Extealo• A,nt, AllaD

Bolter, l!ltll
aad Roy RoHer, all of Holter
J'araw. Tile barn Is a h1ter development In calf
raiiiDI where &amp;he animals are separated bJ ages.
Also viewed oa tbe &amp;our were computer feedlna,
com trials, muKIDora I'GIIe control, ma..re
sto~~e Uti hudllaa, and other tblap ef la&amp;erea&amp;. ,

\{;

•

�•

Commentary

Page

. . .

The Daily Sentinel
1ll Cj)un Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTEIU!'BTS OF TIJE MEIGS-MASON AREA
. -·' ~

~lib

.

.

-~~ r-n.....o....-r-o~ci•.==o":
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICIJ
Geaeral Mana1er

PAT Wllll'EREAD
Aulll&amp;aat Publlllher/C~nlroller

LETrE88 OF OPINION are wolcame. 'lbey obould be Ieos tbu Ill
"""*
loq. All !ellen '!l'e nbjeetto edHID1 ud mllli be olpetl wllh
- • · .,..._ •d telophoae aumber. No UMiped lollen wOJ be
pub-

llalled. Lellera - l d be Ia 100d lute, addreoo1D1111ueo, not perooaall- .

t....

-

. '

~ .

-

-

.

.

.

Washington Window

Pomaov-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, September 1, 1989
'
.

.

WASHINGTON - Daisy and
GamGee Thorshov bear the
physical reminder of the cloud of
deadly gas that enveloped their
home 12 years ago.
Daisy, 15, Is partially blind.
GamGee, 13, has deep scars on
his chest and Jep. And the
cb!ldren have no parents. Jon
and lJoyda Thorsbov were killed .
by the anhydrous ammonia gas
that biUowed from a der"led
freight train near their home In
Pensacoil!, Fill., II) 1977."
Twelve years later, despite
hundreds of deaths and Injuries
from I!Ccidental spills, the government stU! cl~slfles anby·
drous ammonia ·under the eu· .
phemlsm "non·fillmmable gas."
The Thorshov' s tragedy, and
many like it, have become an
issue In, of all places, the farm
belt. Anhydrous ammonia Is a
deadly gas when It spUis on

Jack Anderson. and Dale VanAtta'

highways and railroads, but it is
an effective fertilizer when said that a "polson" label would
spread on grain crops.
'
raise their Insurance and freight
Last year, a team of experts In costs. And lurking In the back·
the Transportation Department ground was the Alar scare.
recommended that anhydrous •Farmers won't soon forget how
ammonia be reclassified as a
the apple market suffer ed when
"poisonous gas" when It Is the pesticide Alar was linked to
hauled. Recently, under pres·
cancer: The last thing they want
sure from farm states, the ·is a skull and crossbones on the
department backed down. LaW·
ammonia they use to fertilize
makers from the farm belt corn and wheat.
wsonaiJy leaned on Trans porta·
Evidence of ammo~la's lethal
tlon Secretary Samuel Skinner to side surfaced In 19831n a study at
Jay off. Rep. Virginia Smith.
the Lawrence Uvermore Na·
R·Neb., Sen. Steve. Symms, R·
tiona! Laboratory. Ironically, the
Idaho ·and Seil. Toni Harkin, · tests were sponsored by the
D·lowa, who rely on votes and
FertU!zer Institute, along with
money from the farm belt,
the U.S. Co~t Guard. A Fertil·
kicked off legislation to delay or
lzer Institute spokesman told us
stop the relabeling.
.
that the tests were done to learn
As often happens In Washing·
what happens In "various lnslan·
ton, safety took a back seat to
ces of release," but' that no
money and politics.
conclusions were drawn as .a
Farmers and fertU!zer makers
result.

The man who was blred to do
the testing remembers It differ·
ently. Dr. Ronald Koopman told
our assOciate Scott Sleek that be
concluded ammonia was .a pol·
sonous gas, and that the FertU·
izer Institute was not at aU
phiased with Ills verdict.
The federal government's own
records attribute 25 deaths and
602 InjurieS to ammonia accl·
dents In the· last two decades:
Used properly, ammonia Ia safe,
even as a fertllizer. But when
mishandled, · spUled or lmproP:
erly mixed with other chemicals,
It can kill.
·
Transportation Depar~entof·
flclals told us they proposed the
"polson" label last year as an
Idea to be debated. Not they're
leaning toward calling arrtmonla
an "Inhalation hazard."

TOSSES FIVE-HITTER- Cleveland hurler John F'o&amp;rrelllossed
a flve-I!Uter In Thursday night's g~e against the visiting
Baltimore Orioles. Ills pitching efforts helped the Tribe post an
ll·O·vlctory. (UPI)

'

'Pooh' Richa·rdson signs
with Minnesota Timberwolves

President Bush in
bot purs·u it of sports
By HELEN THOMAS

UPI White Jlou~ Reponer
. WASHINGTON (UP I) - For relentless energy, President Blish
rivals Lyndon Jphnson in his heyday. But Bush directs his zest for
activity to sports, while Johnson was the " can do" president who
wanted to move the 'mountain.
News organizations would have done well to assign a sports writer
to cover the president's three-week zealous vacation at Kennebunk·
port, Maine, and there would have been plenty to write about.
Bush does not pursue rest and relaxation with a low profile in
contrast to his predecessor, Ronald Reagan, who retreated to his
mountaintop ranch near Santa 'B arbara, Callt., for weeks without a
publiC word from him. Only a crisis and the persuasion of his aides
could bring him down from his perch overlooking the Pacific.
::. Bush seems to want to prove his fitness with public displays of
;prowess by jogging, fishing, boating and playing baseball with lime
out to pitch a few horseshoes.
·
: 'Like Johnson, he is a people person and rarely seeks a quiet
Jr!oment to commune •with himself. Both men preferred to bounce
'()lelr ideas off others, except Johnson bad more Ideas on where he
:wanted to go and what he wanted to do.
·' While one might hesitate to cau Bush a fellow Texan since his roots
&lt;~.re more Connecticut Yankee than Southwest, nevertheless the
,president puts on his cowboy hoots and travels to Houston every once
in a while to prove his credentials.
: In some ways, however, never the twain shall never meet. Johnson
)vas a man of action who grabbed at opportunities, chaffed at delay,
~anted to see things happen with his viSion of a Great Society. He did
·'!OI get his reputation as an arm twister for nothing.
·· While the Vietnam War was his denouement and he deluded himself
thinking that ,he could ,provide guns and butter without
-r.eplenish!ng the treasury, his domestic goals were idealistic and his
accomplishments large: .Medicare, civil rights and voting rights
iaws, federal aid to education at all levels. aid for libraries, public
·housing, health, nutrition and concern for the environment.
.
: · No Issue engrosses Bush so much tnat his name becomes !dentitled
with it. For all his desire to express leadership on environmental and
education issues, the label does not stick. since neither field has his
prolonged attention span.
· Bush is probably more in the tradition of Dwight Eisenhower, who
operated on the theory "if it ain't broke, don't flx it." And a Jot of
things were let to sl!de on the thesis that it was best not to do anything.
But Eisenhower and his successors, Bush Included, were often
forced to act by a buildup of events, and they were pushed to the wall.
For example, Eisenhower, with extreme reluctance, had to send
federal troops to Little Rock, Ark. , when the school doors were barred
to nine black children.
II was the first major civil rights gesture of that era to display the
pre-eminence of the federal goverrunent over slates rights.
While he vacations. Bush seems to have put on the back burner
again the future of the American hostages in Lebanon, the possibility
of a peace momentum in the Middle East, and the calls for more
assistance to the budding democracies in Eastern Europe.
· He bas moved aggressively to help Colombia battle the .militant
drug lords with money and weapons. But only when that situation
became untenable and a threat to the entire Western Hemisphere.
The -question is whether Bush is lettlng golden opportunities for
action pass him by. Or perhaps his own long tenure in public office
tells him that passivity is a better passport to survivability.
For sure, he Is no LBJ.

..

·-

•

mto .

Berry's World
.

,..

How to find money for East Europe
So now, after Congress has
committed America' s taxpayers
to balling out the S&amp;Ls with
hundreds ot blJilons of dollars,
and the banks have lined up to hit
them for billions more to pay the
bad debts of Mexico, Brazil, etc.,
Poland - on the verge of
economic collapse after 40 years
of communism - has turned Its
government (or at least that part
of it dealing with domestic
affairs) over to Solidarity, and
we are being told that $10 billion
is needed if freedom is to have a
chance there.
We dare not reject this plea for
help too cavalierly. The world·
wide collapse of confidence in
communism as a workable economic system Is a development
of enormous Importance, and
leaves the free nations of the
world in undisputed possession of
the political and psychological
initiative. If nal!ons like Poland
(and shortly Hungary, and ~hen

others - coneelveably even the
Soviet Union itself) turn their
backs on commu n!sm and seek to
shift to a market economy, it Is in
our highest interest .that they
should not be seen to fail as a
result of any defect in the market
system.
·
Please note that this Is not the
same thing as saying that they
must (or wll!) succeed. As
'r egular readers of this column
know, I have no faith whatever in .
the ablllty of communist economies to evolve peacefully into
functioning free-market societies, no matter how good the
Intentions of the reformers may
be. The apparatus of state
control is too overwhelming in
such nations to be brushed aside
eas!ly. It wiiJ have to be razed to
the ground, and replaced with
brand-new insl!tut!ons. The process may conceivably be voluntary , but it must be essentially
revolutionary.

The prognosis is not made any
more favorable by considering
the probable views of those in
charge of changing things. Lech
Walesa is no doubt a tine man: a
true democrat, a Roman Ca·
tholic, and a Polish patriot. But
where does he sland in political
terms? Sllghtly to the left of Neil
Klnnock, I daresay.
And what if, some happy day in
the future, and non-communist
parliamentary coalltion takes
over In Moscow itself? Does
anybody seriously think that that
loose cannon Boris Yeltsln,lfput
in charge of things, would drive
the post-communist economy of
the Soviet Union into anything
but a ditch?
So - to return to the problem of
Polan&lt;), which is immediate- It
behooves us to do what we can to
make the new Solidarity-led
government look good, or at least
better than its predecessor. For·
tunately, that oughtn't to be very

· William Rusher
hard. The Polish people remember communism too vividly
to become prematurely lmpa· ·
tlent with a government that is .
laho~lng, howeve~ lmpel'fectly,
to replace it with sometblng else. :
If Poland, and its men\ors in .
Moscow, care to suggest any ·
mutual and verifiable reductions :
In armaments that would enable ·
NATO to reduce that figure '
substantially, It would be reaso- :
nable to apply at least a par.t of ,
the savings to the reconstruction
of the Polish economy.
And - carrying that thought a
long step further - if the Soviet ·
Union were to agree ' with the ·
Western powers on a military ·
stand-down amounting to mutual 1
demilitarization, the West might ·
wish to consider committing
substantial resources to the
polltlcal and economic reform of
Russia Itself.

S&amp;Ls pOint the finger - at themselves
.
:
Robert Walters ·

D
0

••
•

•

PASADENA, Calif. (NEA) Perhaps the most devastating
explanation of why the savings
and Joan scandal was allowed to
fester until It required the most
expensive rescue operation in
U.S. history comes from a
financial institution hl!re.
The Mutual Savings and Loan
Association, an exceptionally
healthy, Pasadena-based S&amp;t,
with more than $360 m!ll!on In
assets, assigns much of the
blame for the Industry's prob!ems to Its largest and mosl
infiuentlal trade association, the
United States League of Savings
Institutions, based in Washing·
ton, D.C.
.
.
·
In a scathing letter explaining
his lnstitut!on'sdeclslontoreslgn
from~heleagueearl!erthlsyear,

Mutual Chairman Charles T.
said:
"Our sav!np and loan Industry
has now created the largest mess
in tbe history of U.S. financial
institutions. WhUe the mess lias
many causes_... It was made
much worse by:
"- COnslant and successful
lnblbltlon over many yeara,
through U.S. League lobbying, of
proper regulatory responses to
operations of a · minority ()f
(S&amp;Lil) dominated by crooks and
fools.
"- Mickey Mouse accounting
_which made many Insured lnstl·
Mu~er

•
•

•
•

••.

l

Indians blast Orioles 11-0; knock Bir~.
out·of first .in America~ League East

2-The Daily Sentinel

Ammonia fertilizer center of controversy

"

'

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

"Well, that about does It! Flyirig Buffalo is gettlng s fsx., too!"

tul!ons look sounder than they
really were.
"- Inadequate levels of real
capital equity underlying
(S&amp;Ls') promises to holders of
savings accounts."
Even when 11 became apparent
that far-reaching reform of the
Industry was imperative, the
league aggressively lobbied Con·
gress to perpetuate the.deceptlve
accounting practices and unrealIs tic capital requirements that
had become hallmarks of a
scandal-wracked business.
The league risked much of Its
lnfiuence on a last-ditch effort to
stretch for decades the length of
time fewer than 750 of Its 3,000
members would have to wr!le off
$23 billion worth of "good will"
carrtedasassetsonthe!rbalance
sheets.
In tne early 1!180s, federal
regulators needed a gimmick to
convince healthy S&amp;Ls to purchase their sick counterparts
rather than liquidating them and
possibly bankrupting the
. government·adminstered lnsu·
ranee fund.
Purchasers were Uterally al·
lowed to create assets out ofthin
air by adding to their balance
sheets positive amounts equal to
the negative net worth of the
troubled thrifts they took over.
The phantom assets are known
as load wUI.

~

When Congress was fashioning
this year's balloutlegislation, the
U.S. League stubbornly refused
to abandon the good-will issue
although a national consensus .
had emerged that the' time had
come for a drastic overhaul ofthe
Industry.
"Despite the obvious need for
real legislative r-eform, involving
painful readjustment, the U.S.
League's ... Jobbylng efforts regularly resist minimal reform,"
Munger said in his extraordl·
narly letter ..... a document that
may have Inspired other S&amp;Ls to
break ranks with the U.S.
~ague.
·
In the weeks following Mutu·
al' s action, other Cal!fornla S&amp;Ls
purchased full-page advertise·
ments In The Wasblngton Post
urging Congress to Ignore the
pleading of a once-Invulnerable
lobbying organization that had
seemingly losttoucb with reality.
"Weak S&amp;Ls, with tbetr hordes

of lobbyists, are fighting to
convince members of Congress
that good will should be kept In
the legal definition of capital,"
said Golden West Financial
Corp. In Its ad. "We resent the
pressure exerted •J)y institutions
with Uttle or no real capital thrifts that are prepared to
gamble once again with taxpay-

:
·
.
:
·
;
:
•
:
:

ers' money.''

:

In· another ad, Great Western .
Financial Corp. said, "We cann()t j
stand idly by while some ·
members of our industry can for :
weaker capital standards which •
could make this problem larger •
and . more expensive In the :
future."
·:
When the House of Represent&amp;· ;
tives rebuffed the U.S. League on •
the goodwill Issue by a margin of
.more than3·to-1, the lobby group
stood exposed as not only greedy •
but iveak. It has never recovered ;
from that rebuff.
'

- ay m
• hJ8•orv
T.00
•

I; ... ,;
·
B)' Unl&amp;ed Pr-IDterllllllonal
Today is Friday, Sept. 1, the 244th day of 1989 with 121 to follow.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
The morning star Is Jupiter.
.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
Those horn on this day are under the sip of Virgo. They Include
German composer EngelbertHumperdlnck In 18M, ''Tarzan" author
Edpr Rice BuJTOII&amp;bs In 1875; boxing champ Rocky Marciano In
1923; actress Yvonu DeCarlo in 1922 (age 67).

~

~

I

MINNEAPOLIS (UP! ) - The
Minnesota Tlmberwolves said
Thursday they have agreed to
terms on a iour-year contriict
with their No. 1 college draft
pick, UCLA point guard Jerome
'-'Pooh" Richardson.
Terms of the deal were not
Cl!sclosed liu t a spokesman for
the first-year NBA franchise said
It was bel!eved Richardson's
contract was along the lines of
those paid other first-round draft
picks. The 6·1 Richardson, 23,
was the.lOth player taken overall
In the June NBA draft.
"We are delighted to have
signed the first draft choice In
our history," Wolves president
Bob Stein said. "Pooh can be a
sol!d block on the foundation of
our franchise and now has a
chance to establish his place with
his on-court ability.
"We're not expecting him to be
an NBA superstar his first
season, but because of his char·
acteristics as a person and as a
player, we expect him to show
sol!d progress and contribu le
slgn!tlcantly to our team as he
develops. "
Richardson Is a three-time
All·Pac-10 Conference per·
, former and holds the league's
career assist record with 833. He
also ranks first on UCLA's career
Jist for steal~ (182) , . minutes
played (4,297), and games started
(115) , and Is eighth in aU-time
scoring (1 ,461).
In the 1988-89 season. he
averaged 15.2 points and 7.6
-assists, a~d shot 55 percent from

the tleld.
"I'm looking forward to the
challenge and I'm excited to get
to Minnesota and get star ted,"
Richardson said from Philadel· .
ph!a where he has been playing in
this summer in the city's Baker
League. "Now I want to get
rested and be well-prepared for
tranlning camp." .
Richardson is the third player
among the Top 10 1989first-round
picks to sign with an NBA team.
He joins George McCloud of the
Indiana Pacers , who was the
seventth overall selection, and
Randy White, who was picked
eighth by Dallas.
The Wolves have 15 players
under contract.

Tonight's games
Hannan Trace at Hunt. Vinson
Kyger Creek at Wahama
North Gallia at Green Local
Ross SEat Southwestern
. Hannan at Eastern
Waterford at Southern
Unioto at Symmes Valley
Minford at Oak H!ll
Coal Grove at Gallipolis
Wheelersburg at Jackson
Nelsonvil!e-York at Logan
Cambridge at Marietta, 8 p.m .
Buckeye SW at Warren Local .
Alexander at Meigs
Belpre at Federal Hocking
VInton Co~.mty at Miller
Trimble at Wellston
Point Pleasant at Barboursy!lle
Saturday's game
.
Athens at Parkersburg, 8 p.m.

CLEVELAND tUPil -Balli·
more manager Frank Robinson
says he's not concerned about his
Orioles being knocked out of sole
possession of first place in the
American League East for the
first time since May 26.
The Clevela nd lntlian s
trounced the Orioles 11·0 Thurs·
day night, allowin g Toronto to
move into a first-place tie with
Baltimore ·in the division. The·
Blue Jays downed the Chicgao
White Sox 5·1 Thursday after·
noon. Both teams have 72-62
records.
"It's no big deal, " said Robin·
son, whose team had held the
division lead alone for 97· days.
"We just got company for a day.
"We'll see how they (!liue
Jays) Uke It and then we'll evict
them ," Robinson added.
Joe Ca.rter ;uid J erry Browne
led the Indians' 15-hlt attack
against four Baltimore pitchers
and John Farrell hurled his
second m a jor league shutout by
· blanking the Orioles on five hils.
·'If we could do this everyday II
would be nice," said Cleveland
manager Doc Edwards. ''To·
night we just had the right people
up there to hit and run, and
Farrell pitched well tonight."
Farrell, 8-13, put two runners
· on with two out in the first lnrilng
but struck out Larry Sheets to
end the threat.
"I had visions of the last game
that I got chased early and -told
myself to bear down and get
Sheets," said Farrell, who struck
out five and wa-l ked two.
"I just tried to stay ahead oft he
count all night. You have to stay
aggressive and get ahead of
people, " added Farrell. "My
goal is to keep us in the game
until the seventh or eighth
innings a nd just do tne job on the
mound.''
Baltimore starter Dave John·
son blanked the Indians wUh one
hit over the first three innings
before Carter triggered a threerun, fourth by smashing his 27th
home run of the ye.ar leading off.
Pete O'Brien foJiowed with a.
single, took third on a single by
· Brook Jacoby and scored on Cory
Snyder's single. Brad Komminsk
singled ·home Jacoby to chase
Johnson.
The Indians made II 5-0 In the
fifth when Browne singled and
one out later scored on Carter's
28th home r.
Browne's one-out RBI single
and a an RBI groundout by Felix
Fermin in the sixth gave the
Indians a 7-0 advantage_ Kom·
minsk's RBI single scored Jac·
oby in the seventh to make It 8·0.
In the eighth O'Brien belted his
11th homer of the year, a two-run
shot off Brian Holton to make II
11·0.

" The thing that mad e Far rrel
tough was runs," said Robinson.
" Ali pitchers Jove to have runs to
work with because they can then
make their pitches."
The Orioles move Into Chicago
for a Labor Day weekend series
against the White Sox starting
Friday night while the Indians
travel to Det roit for a three-ga me
set against the struggling Ti gers.
In other American League
1
games:
Blue Jay s 5, White Sox I
Toronto outfielder George Bell
has always had a theatrical
quality about him , and he pro·
vlded a record-setting matinee
crowd with a good b!t of dramaThursday afternoon.
_With his 21:game hitting streak
on the line, and down to his final
strike in his final at-bat in the
eighth Inning, Bell drilled a 1·2
delivery from Steve Rosenberg
into the left-field stands.
Bell co llected three RBI on the
day, powering the Blue Jay s to a
5·1 win over the Chicago White
Sox and into a first-place tie with
the Baltimore Or loles in the
American League East.
The Or ioles lost to the Cleve·
land Indians 11 -0Thursdayevenlng, surrendering sole possession
of first place for the first time
since May 26. Both Toronto and
Baltimore hold identical 72-62
records.
In addition to eclipsing Mike
Greenwell's season-high Amerl·
can League hitting streak, Bell
broke the Toronto franchise
record of 21 games set in by Lloyd
Moseby and Damaso Garcia In
1983.
"The only thing I can do is go
out there a nd swing a bat, I got
lucky today ," said Bell.
"A hit like that makes you feel
. pretty good, but it's no big deal.
You guys think it's a big deal?"
Bell's teammates were quick
to comment on his performance.
"It was a heckuva way to do it,
it helped the game and It helped
the streak," said Dave St!eb,
14·8, who combined with two
relievers on a slx·hiiter. and
upped his career record against
the "White Sox to 17·4.
BeH's heroics drew a standing .
ovation and a curtain can ftom a
seiJout crowd of 49,422, that
boosted Toronto's home attend·
ance for the season to 2,782,536a new franchise record.
Toronto's victory, Which con·
eluded a s weep of the three-game
series with the White Sox. was its
14th in its past17 games. The.club
finished the month with a 20-9
record , the best August in fran·
chise his tory.
·'The thing we were Impressed
with here is how they pitched
against us, " said · Chicago
manager Jeff Torborg. "You

Scoreboard ...
Majors

S.F.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
East
Team
Baltimore
Toronto

W L Pet. · GB

Milwaukee
Cleveland
New Yorli
Detroit

7%
7%
68
67
.63
59
47

Oakland
Calif!
K.C.
Texas
Minnesota
Seattle
Chicago

West
81 53
78 55
78 55
68 63
68 65
59 74
56 77

Boo~n

12
6%
16
68
70
76
89

.537 .537
.507 4
.483 . 6
.474 8 \&gt;
.437 13 ~
.346 %6

.604 .586
.586
.518
.511
.4t4
.421

2%
21h
11%
12%
21%
24%

Tharoday's results
Toronlo 5, Chlcap I
Milwaukee &amp;. Seattle I
Cleveland II, Baltimore 0
Booton ~. California~
Minnesota 8, T&lt;&gt;x• 6
Kan888 City 3, Detroit 0

Houolon
san Dleto
Clan.

L.A.
Atlanta

West
. 75 58
71 6%
69 65 .
61 69
6% 71
53 80

.5M
.5St 4
•515 6 ~
.481 II
.466 13
.398 22

Thursday's result
San Diego 5, PhUadelphla I

know they can throw a power
line-up at you, two big power
hitters and four switch-hitters."
Tra!llng 1-0 on Ivan Calderon's
RBI·doubie in the top of the first,
the Blue Jays tagged Rosenberg,
4-10, for three runs In their half of
the inning.
Manny Lee's triple scored
Willie Wilson from first, and Lee
scored on Bell's groundou t. With
two out, Kelly Gruber hustled a
biOQp to short centerfield into a
double, a dvanced to third on a
w!ld pitch and scored on a single
by Tony Fernandez,
Bell capped th e scoring and
raised his RBI total to 86 when he
drove home Lee with his 16th
homer.
Brewers 6, 1\larlners I
At Milwaukee, Mark Knudson
allowed four hits over seven and
one-third innings and Bill Spiers
coJiected three RBI. Knudson ,
5'4, allowed one unearned run,
striking out two and walking one.
Brian Holman.• 5·8, allowed five
runs on six hils in five Innings.
Red Sox 5, Angels 2
At Boston, Roger Clemens ·
·scattered eight hits and struck
out a season-high 13 and Jody
Reed stroked four hits. Clemens,
14·9, struck out Lance Parrish
and Jack Howell !our times each
en route to his seventh complete
game. Kirk McCaskill, 14·8,
allowed 10 hits and four runs in
five innings.
.
Twins 8, .Rangers 6
At Minneapolis, Dan Gladden
coJiected two hits and two RBI to
back to lead Minnesota. David
West, 2·0, allowed three runs on
five hits in seven Innings and Jeff
Reardon pitched the ninth for
28th save. BobbyWIIt,l0·12, gave

up slx runs on nine hits In seven ·
Innings. He walked six and
struck out three.
Royals 3, Tigers 0
At Kansas City, Mo., Bret .
Saberhagen allowed five · hits
over eight innings for his eighth
straight win.

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(USPS 115-9111)
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1-85,000 BTU Warm Morning
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Only used 1 winter.

1-20,000 BTU Warm Morning
Gas Heater
1-35,000 ITU Warm Morning

Gas Heater
1-30,000 Warm Morning Gas Heater
Closed Front

2-15,000 BTU Unvented Gas Heaters
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FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED

Fr klay 's games
Cincinnati (Robinson 3-1) at
PlttsbuJ11h (Smiley 10·7 or
Patter&amp;on O.fl), 7:05 p.m.
Chicago (Wilson 5·2) at
Atlanta (UIIlqulst 7·8), 7:40
p.m.

PRO C·AR CARE and -TIRE CENTER
Supports

Friday's nmes
Callfomla (WIII8·11) at New
York (Terrell~) . 7:30p.m.
Seattle (Bankhead IHI) at
Boolan (Smllbson 7-IZ), 7: 36

p.m.

Cleveland (Black 9-11) at
Deerolt (Tanaaa 9·12), 7:35
p.m.
MJaaesota (Guthrie 1·0) at
Toronto (Stolllemyre 11-~). 7:3$

p.m.

Baltimore (MIIackl 9-11) at
Cblcago (King 6-8), 8: 30 p.m.
O.. land (C. Y011n1 4-8) at
Milwaukee (Boslo 14-fl, 8: 30
p.m.
Kan888 City (Genion 16-li) at
Tex• (Hou1h 9-11), 8:36 p.in. '
Saturday'• 1uneo
Seattle at Booton
Mlnnesot. at To10ato
· Cleveland at De&amp; JOlt
Balllnlore at Chlcqo, nl1ht
Callemla at New York,

nllbl

Ben Hickel ·and The Hickel Racing Team
·Ben Would Like To
Give Thanks ·To:

Ben has been a
local racer with fine
sportsmanship and
success for the past
..,__.. .i
1 16 years. Join Pro
Car Care in
supporting Ben in
the seasons to come.
Come out and
mpport Ben at the
area races.

•Mason Auto Glass
•Leroy Joines
•Sorden Tool and
Machine
•Bob &amp; Blanche Hkkel
•Gie~:~da Oliver

1

Set ... I Dlall lllckll for al
your llckll lacing NHCIL

SPECIAL 'hiANIS TO A ·
.DYNAIIITI
CIIW

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2nd &amp; ANDERSON STREETS

. :MASON, W. VI~~

·

�Friday, September 1, 1989
Friday, September 1, 1989

Pomaoy-Midclaport, Ohio

Notre Dame tops Virginia
36-13 in Kickoff Classic ~Notre Dame marched 87 yards
By JEFF SHAIN
pl$ys and 4:14 to take a 7-0 lead.
In
14 plays on Its next possession,
UPI Sports Writer
On the third play of the game,
with
Johnson gq!ng over , from
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. Todd Lyght intercepted. a Moore
(UPI) -RlckyWattersranfor80 pass and returned It to toe ·one yard out for the score. Rice
yards and Tony Rice passed for Virginia 31-yard line. Six plays hit Ismail with a 24-yard pass 9n
·
··
147 more Th11rsday night,leadlng later, Watters went around right the drive.
Rice completed passes of 26
No. 1 Notre Dame to a 3'6-13 end tor the touchdown.
thumping of Virginia In the
The Fighting Irish pushed their yards to Ismail and 30 yards to
Kickoff Classic.
lead to 13-0 on a one-yard dive by Watters to complete the first-half .
Rice. named the game's Most Anthony Johnson. Watters re·
(See IRISH on Pa~e I)
Valuable Player, completed 7 of turned a punt 24 yards to the
11 passes and ran for a touchNotre Dame ·43, and Rodney
down and AnthOny Johnson ran Culver ran 12 yards and Watters
GRAVELY TRACTOR
for two more scores as the 10 to set up the score.
SAlES 8t SERVICE
Fighting lrish scored on their
204 CondOr St. · Po"*'!¥, OH.
Rice's first pass of the game
first five possessions and were
&amp;
52 yardsand helped give the
went
never challenged.
Irish
a
19-0
lead
with
1:26
left
In
OPEN
MONDAY
TIIIU IIIIAY
The Fighting Ir!Sb racked up a
the
opening
quarter.
On
the
first
9
A.M..
s ,...
333-60 advantage in total yardage
play
of
the
possession,
Rice
went
SATUIDAY t A.M.-I , ... ·
by halftime. Rice left the game
with 4:24 left in the first half, but over the middle for ISma!l. who
~THE
returned in the fourth quarter to · wrested the ball from Jason
direct the Fighting IriSh to a field Wallace and went down at the
Virginia two-yard line. Culver
goal.
Raghlb Ismail caught five went over for the touchdown on
passes for 121 yards, andWatters the next play.
had two receptions .f or 42 yards
with three punt returns for 67
yards. Rice also ran eight times
for 70 yards.
Shawn Moore led the Cavaliers
by completing 10 of 22 passes for
85 yards and VIrginia's only
scores. Marcus Wilson led Virginia in rushing with 15 carries for
• Benefit from the seemingly ever-changing tax laws!
80 yards. Freshman running
•
Learn how to prepare your own tax return with confidence!
back Terry Kirby ran 11 times for
• Help others prepare their tax returns. .
31 yards.
.
• Class"" begin September. 6, 1989 at 61 8 East Main Street,
Notre Dame needed all of nine
· Pomeroy. Ohio 46769, Ph. 614·992·66'74.
·

s,rl•l

S•••er He1n

GRAVELY

SYSlEM

Les1n to Es1nI Witl. The
H&amp;R BLOCit

WATTERS SCORES - Notre Dame's Ricky
Watlers ·(l2) eludes VIrginia's Tyrone Lewis to
score the Irish's first touchdown in the first

quarter of the Kickoff Classic Thursday night In
Giants Stadium lnEastntttherford, N.J. The Irish
won 36-13. (UPI)
·

The Cleveland Beat

Income Tax Course

.

For a while. they were content
to stay in the background, paying
$27 a licket, a nd spe nding even
more money on refreshments,
parking and souvenirs.
This year, Cleveland owner Art
Modell did season ticket holders
a favor and aliowed them to see
two exhibition games along with
their eight reg ular season
games. Those who didn't want to
pay for the exhibition games
weren't aliowed to buy season
tickets. but hey, if you can't
afford the extra cost of watching
those important and wei!-played
preseason affairs, who needs you
anyway?
Fans even patronized the
league 'at !tome, watching the
games on television and support· ·
ing the beer and car companies
that use the games for massive
ad campaigns,
All this was fine.
But the recent outbreak of fan
noiSe is the last straw. In
Cleveland, Denver, Cincinnati,
Seattle, andNewOrleans, among
other places, fans went too far.
Because the best football players and best coaches in the
country can't figure out a way to
overcome crowd noiSe, a new

"

'

\'

rule was born. The NFL is known
quarterback can call his signals,
for Innovation, but it's just too
the referee can blow his whistle,
much to ask players and coaches and everyone will be happy,
making seven figures to find a
What does the fan think about
way to get a play off with 70,000 . this? Well, since when does
people screaming.
anyone In the NFL care about
When the rules committee gets that? This rule shows you the
together next year, they ought to NFL has the right approach, with
take this thing one step further. I a heart that's cold and eyes that
suggest that fans be strapped seek only gold.
into straightjackets a nd have
You fans have no place In the
their mouths taped shut upon game. If you didn't think that
entering a stadium.
before, this . new rule tells you
When the home team makes a
loud and clear. This game is for
good play, fans can stomp their the players, coaches, television
feet in unison. This way, the networks and beer companies.

78· 10-0131111!

---------------------------

1
I
I

New NFL fan rule stymies rowdy. fans
By BOBKEIM
' UPI Sports Writer
CLEVELAND !UPil - It's
about time the NFL put fans In
their place.
For too long now, fans have
been disturbing the .game · by
yelling and screaming, creating
too much noise for opposing
quarterbacks to call their signals
at the line of scrimmage.
Take as an example the
bleachers at Cleveland Stadium,
otherwise known as the "Dawg
Pound ." Why, when the opposing
team is backed up there, the fans
make so much noise it disturbs
the visiting quarterback and he
has to ask the referee for help.
In years pas t, the referee
couldn't do much more than ask
for quiet and maybe munch on a
dog biscu it, but this year the NFL
has given th e zebras a new rule.
A ru le that will fix you rowdy fans
once and for all.
If you watched Monday night's
New Orleans-Cincinnati game,
you know how it works. The
referee warns the crowd it has
become too raucous, then starts
deducting timeouts from the
hom e team if the fans don't have
the good manners to shut up.
II thai does n't work, the home
team ca n be penalized five yards
a pop.
You know , this is really a great
idea . Almost as good as the one in
1987 when the NFL decided to
mak e fans pay fuil price to see
footbali games put on using
re jects and castoffs from that
summer's training camp.
'
This ruie is better, though. It
should last the whole year,
maybe forever. .
It's purpose apparently is to
get rid of that home-field advan·
tage thing. God, it's tough enough
trying to win on the road in this
league without having to contend
with rowdy fans .
Maybe the NFL ca n just take
the fans at tlils week 's U.S. Open
tennis championships and plop
them down in the Meadowlands.
Those tennis fans know hOw to
keep their mouths shut. Raid the
go if courses , too. Golf fans would
rather die than emit so much as a
s niffle while Jack Nicklaus is
studyi ng a putt.
Footbali fan s have been get·
tin g too greedy lately anyhow.

.

The league wants your money,
your undivided attention and
your patronage. Now just shut up
and let them get on with their
game.

I1

Please send me fne information about your

!JK' preparition

course.

NAME: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

ADDRESS: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
CITY: -------STATE: - - - - - - - &lt; lP: - - -

P~Nl _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~~---------

~--

-----------------------

O'DELLS

HOrAE

FIX-UP
·SAlE

Three Big Eight
teams start early .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio -

The Daily Santinai-Paga-5

Lendl, Edberg, Sabatini win U.S. Open matches Thursday
By MARTIN LADER
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK iUPI) - . Ivan
Lend!, rushing along to what
would he a record -equalling
eighth consecutive appearance
In the U.S. Open fl!lal, brushed
aside John Fitzgerald with consummate ease Thursday to gain
the third round.
The top seed converted ·seven
of 10 break point opportunities
without dropping his own serve
once in completing a 6-2, 6-1, 6-1
victory over Australian John
Fitzgerald.
Third seed Stefan Ed berg, the
losing finaliSt at bOth Wimbledon
and ~he French Open, was in
crisp form during a 6·2, 6-2, 6-2
wipeout of 'fellow Swede Peter

B i.u Ei.uht'...
~

~

I.undgren.
American teenag·e rs Michael
Chang and Andre Agassi also
were impressive In straight sets
victories. Chang, the French
Open champion and No. 7 seed,
crushed Swede Thomas Hogstedt, 6-1, 6-3, 6-3, and No. 6
Agass! beat South African Ne!l
Broad, 6-3, 6-2, 6-3.
Agassi said later he expects the
young group of American players to be dominant in 1990.
Coming one day after defending champion Mats Wllander and
four-time champion John McEnroe both lost, and No.2 seed BoriS
Becker was taken to live sets, the
sweet successes of Lend! and
Edberg further magnified their
championship hopes.

____

(Continued from___:__..:..._
Page 4)

defense slmUar to the set used by
Miami (Fla.), one that has been
very successful against the Snon- ·
ers in the past, The Aggtes,
howeverJo are not to be confused
with the Hurricanes so Gibbs
ISn't as concerned as he might be
about starting red-shirt freshman Steve Collins . at
quarterback. .
"Going even back through last
spring's practice and two-a·
days, based on the perfo.,rma,nce
on the field, Steve was the logical
choice," Gibbs said. "He's
earned the position with his field
general leadership, p ~ssing and
running of the offense."
'Collins Is the fjrst freshman to
start the fir.s t game of a season at
Oklaho!lla and can expect a lot of
suppout from running backs Leon
Perry and Mike Gaddis as the
Sooners move out of their tradl·
tiona! wishbone and into an "I"
formation.
. Gibbs also feels his' defense,
the part of the team he directed
be
the previous eight season,
even better than In recent years.
But the main thing, is that the
Oklahoma fans will have scores
to look at rather than a pollee
blotter report.
"It's finally here and I think we
are ail looking forward to getting
under way," Gibbs said. "I have
·been impressed with the attitude
and desire this squad has shown
through tough two-a·day practices. If we stay healthy, we can be
a very good team.
"I have been asked whether I

will

___

would be happy with an 8-3 or 7·4
season in light of all the turmoil
that has surrounded our program
over the past year. My answer
has been 'Absolutely not.' We
plan to win every game. "
' Kansas would certainly. be
happy with a 7-4 mark, stnce the
Jayhawks are coming off consecutive one-win seasons. That one
win that New Mexico State
managed last season came at
Kansas.
"Where we are In our program,
we can't take anybody liglitly,"
said second-year Jayhawks
coach Glen Mason. "We're a Big
Eight football team playing a
1-AA team and people will say,
'Heck, that's a mismatch.' History will tell you otherwise."
Montana State; 4-7 in 1988, feels
if It can hang with Kansas and
then will take its chances In the ·
fourth period. The Bobcats are
opening their season with a
Division I-A team for the fourth
consecu live season, but haven't
beaten a team from that classification since 1984.
Colorado opens its season with
high hopes and a tough schedule.
The Buffaloes are given the best
· chance in the conference to
unseat No. 2 Nebraska, but a
good test w!ll come right away
against Texas. Colroado's schedule shows three games in 12
days .
It is just as big a game for the
Longhorns, who have lost their
las t three openers and are .
pointing to the Colorado game as
a key starting point.

Lend!, making his first visit of forward to In get tihg to the finals every point."
proven himself to be a great
.
.
the week to Center Court, spent Is that It means I have a crack at · Sabatini, the ihlrd seed. was
player, you have to be a great
merely 1 hour and 18 minutes
wlnnlnl!." .·
player
to win a Grand Slam·
disappointed with her serve,
under a hot sun.
Gabriela Sabatini, confident hitting a poor 41 percent of her event," Agassl said. " But now
" Don't worry, It's going to get enough tha( she feels ready to first serves. However, she was
(Jim) Courier and (Pete ) Sammore difficult all the time," capture her first major, defeated broken only once, in the fourth
pras have played well here
~ndl said. "You just take
16-year-old Cathy Caverzaslo of game of the opening set.
against top players.
anything that you can while it's Switzerland, 6-3, 6·2, to gain the
· "Next year you're going to see
The 19-year-old Argentine has
there. "
third round along with French held the No. 3 world ranking the Americans come to the
Lend!, with a 3-4 record In Ule Open champion Arantxa since March, and Is a bit forefront. It will be a good year as
last seven finals, would tie a Sanchez-VIcarlo.
disappointed she hasn't im- fa r as Americans go."
record set by Bill Tilden ·between
''The way I'm playing I'm proved It since then.
Chang totaled only 15 unforced
1918-25 if he matte It to the ready to win the tournament,"
error
s to. 41 for Hogstedt, and
"I thought I had a chance to be
championship match for the Sabatini said. "I'm playing very No. 2 this year," she admitted.
broke service nine times .
eighth year ln a row.
good tenniS now and on a very · "At the beginning of the year I
In the only eve nin g match
"Sure, I'm proud of a tra.ck good level, I just need to th~ught I would be.. I realize I · involving a seeded player, No. 13
record like this," the 29-year-old concentrate more , to play the need a little more time to Jearn Jimmy Connors defeated qualiLend! said. "1 'd be silly not to. . whole match the same and not things and to Improve."
fier Bryan Shelton of Huntsville,
But I don'tworry about getting to just a few gall)es wen.
Edberg required only an hour Ala. 6·7 (6-8), 6·2, 6·2, 6·2 in a
the finals. The only thing I look
"I have to try to be tough on and 36 minutes to win his match, second-round pairing. The ma tch
was Connors' 104th at the Open,
breaking service nine times.
extending
his own men's record .
"I
feel
I
have
a
tough
draw,"
~h
from Page 4)
___:..(Continued
__:__:_:.~:.::.:.::.:....
Edberg said. "I just have to work
my way through it and see how I
onslaught. Rice scored on a the score.
The touchdown was the first for do. If I can improve in each
three- yard keeper to give the
y
FRIDAY THRU
Fighting IriSh a 33-0 halftl!De Virginia coach George Welsh in match, then I am looking for:
lead.
three games at the Meadow- ward to the Open. It w!ll be tough,
The Cavaliers, who fa!led to lands. His Navy teams were shut but I feel positive going into it."
Agassl, suffering through a
penetrate Notre Dame territory . out 33-0 by Notre Dame and 35-0
disappointing
year, required
by
Houston
In
1980,
the
second
until midway' through the third
only
an
hour
and
28 minutes to
coming
In
the
Garden
State
Bowl.
quarter, broke the shutout in the
dispose
of
Broad,
delivering 10
The Cavallers pulled within
openlrig riliniltes of the final
aces
and
seeing
his service
period with the help of an Irish 33-13 with 7: ~4left,golng49 yards
broken
once,
hi
the
final
set.
penalty.
i'n 11 plays after Phil Thomas
Later, he sounded an upbeat
Virginia drove from its own 20 recovered a Johnson fumble at
but was stopped four times from the Notre Dame 49. Moore passed note about the state of U.S.
Inside the Notre Dame live, to Bruce McGonn!gal the final tennis.
"I think Chang already has
Including two tries from the one. two yards for the score. How ..
ADMISSION $1.50
But the Fighting Irish were ever, an attempted two-point ·
called offside on the fourth-down conversion pass was overthrown. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •. .
Notre Dame added a 32-yard
play, . giving Virginia another
field
goal by Jim Sexton with 1:46
chance. !'4arcus Wilson scored on
a dive, but the Cavaliers were left, completing a 10·play, 53Auto., PS, air. .
·
flagged for Illegal motion. Moore yard drive as Rice returned to
the game.
than passed to Derek Dooley for

;
Ir.,.,

... _

___

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.· defeat by Clemson (13-6) to slip to
By JOHN HENDEL
UPI Sports Writer
·9·3, the Sooners have received
A new era in Oklahoma iootball nothing but bad news. First came
opens this weekend featuring a a series of arrests as players
new coach, a new quarter~back were Implicated in crimes rang·
and a new probation period.
ing from rape to shooting a
The Sooners host New Mexico teammate to federal drug
St11te Saturday in one of three violations.
games over th &lt;' Labor Day
Throw in a three-year probaweekend that have Big Eight tion slapped on by the NCAA and
Conference teams at home. Also the subsequent resignation of
Sat urd ay, · Kansas welcomes long-time coach Barry Switzer
Montana State while No. 14 and the Sooners were itching to
Colorado meets Texas Monday hit someone back legally.
night in a nationally televised
That chance comes (l.gainst the
contest. All eight teams will play New Mexico ,State Agg!es, who
Sept. 9.
were J.IO a year ago, so a lot of
Oklahoma is glad it can finally Sooner.s will likely be given a
get to the football field. Since chance to get in a lick. ·
ending iast season with a
New Oklahoma coach Gary
regular-season loss to Nebraska Gibbs said the Agg!es play a
(7·3) and Florida Citrus Bowl (See BIG EIGHT on Page 5)

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•

Page I -The o.ily Sentinel

F~.~ambw1,1989

Pom.oy-Middi&amp;port, Ohio

\

•

The Daily

By The Bend

'
,
'

Sentin~l
Friday. September 1, 1989

Page-7

•
••

"

co~unity calendar .

;

'
•
•'

•

••
•
..
•
•
•
:
..

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•

FRIDAY
will be conducted throughout the
ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs day.
County Pomona Grange will
meet at the Rock Springs Grange
RUTLAND -The Rutland
Hall on Friday at 7:30 p.m. All · Freewill Baptist Church Is hav..
contests wll.l be . Judg~ and lng a yard sale and bake sale on
Inspection will be held. Degree Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4. p.m.
work In full. The Racine Grange Proceeds will go to the church's
will serve refreshments.
· building fund.

PAGEVILLE -The Scipio
Township Trustees will have a
, regular meeting on Friday at 6
p.m. at the Pagevllle Township
.. Building. ·
•

MIDDLEPORT -There will
be a round and square dance on
• Friday from8p.m . tomldnightat
• the Middleport Legion Annex
wltb music provided by True
Country Ramblers. The caller
' will be Ronnie Wood. The public
Is Invited.

·:
:
.•
••
;

•

SATURDAY
POMEROY -The Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church Is having
a hymn sing on Saturday at 7
p.m. Pastor Bill Williams Invites
the public. The Sisson Family of
Gallipolis will sing.

:
.•'
•
;
'••

PAGEVILLE -The Scipio
Township Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment Is having a fish dinner on
Saturday from 1-4 p.m. There
will also be a garden tractor pull
·! at 5 p.m. Cost of the dinner Is $4
, for adults and $2.75 for children.

•

.•j•'
'•
·~

•;
·
·••
•
~t

'.

.,'•
••
•'

~

,:_
+

We take this ·opportunity to pay tribute to the millions ·of men and
women who make up the labor force of this wonderful land of ours. The ·
hourly wage earner and the salaried employee, the commissioned salesperson and the government employee all work hard to build-up our
economy, making our nation strong and a leader in the world community.

•,.

•,.,
,.
'

.

••
.

SALEM CENTER -The Star
Grange and Star Junior Grange
will meet In regular session on
Saturday at 8 p.m. at the grange
hall located on County Road 1
near Salem Center. All members
are urged to attend. A potluck
supper will fpllow the meeting.
MASON, W.VA -The Mason
Ladles Auxiliary will sponsor a
spaghetti with slaw dinner on
Saturday from 11 a .m. to 5 p.m.
at the Fire Department. For
delivery call (304) 773-5832.

RUTLAND-TheRutlandFire
Department and ladles auxiliary
• ' wlll ~ having a block party on
. ~ Saturday in Rutland. Activities
~
~

992-2057

POMEROY

992-2506

POMEROY, OHIO

INGEL'S FURNITURE
SNOUFFER
AND JEWELRY
FIRE &amp; SAFETY EQUIPMENT
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 992-7075

992-26~5

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992-3308

heritage house
OF SHOES
MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
..

992-5627

GRAVELY TRACTOR
•

SALES and SERVICE
POMEROY, OliO

992-2975

I'

·FRUTH
.PHARMACY
MIDDUPOn, OHIO

992-6491

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
992-6454
ro•aot, 0110

OHIO

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

MIDDLEPORT~

CHESTER

EWING FUNERAL
HOME
992-2121

POMEROY, OHIO

SWISHER-LOHSE
PHARMACY
992-2955

POMEROY, OHIO

YOERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
992-2104

POMEROY, OHIO

.f

i'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

wlll be a potluck dinner and all
family and friends are welcome.
Buckley reunion
The 53rd annual Buckley reun·

The Rutillnd Garden Club,
Rutland Friendly Garden Club,
.: Rutland Friendly · Gardeners,
:, and the Friends and Flowers

::

DOWNING-CHILDS
MULLEN-MUSSER
INSURANCE
992-2342

POMEROY, 0 ..10

SUGAR RUN
FLOUR, MILLS
992·2115

. 992-5097

POMEROY, OHIO

Rt. 7 North of Eastern High School

MIKE SWIGER
992-6685

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

RAWLINGS-COATS-FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-5141

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

CROW'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT
992-5432

'' POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FERRELLGAS ·

RIGGS USED
CARS

STATE FARM INSURANCE

POMEROY I OHIO

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
992-6669

SMITH-NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
992-2174

POMEROY, OHIO

BAUM
TRUE VALUE
985-3301

CHERER, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES
992-6121

K &amp; C JEWELERS
992-3715

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDUPOO OHIO

~~~~~0sh;~u~n ~~~t. §':~~~~ a~ ~~~!~111~ ~=~ 0~~ret'in10R~Js~

theme for the show is "The
.._ Change of Seasons Down a
',·• Country Lane."
~ Seeking recipes for cookbook
•· When Pomeroy celebrates it's
:• 150th birthday the sesquecenten·
:· nial committee wlll have avalla·
•· ble for sale a cookbook made up
~· of "old time" recipes or mothers,
••-grandmothers, great grand·
:. mothers, etc. If anyone has a
: recipe they would like tocontrib• ute to the cookbook, entitled
: "Treasured Recipes from the
: Past" send it or drop It by the
· Dally Sentinel office in care of
: : Julie E. Dlllon. Any church
•,,women's organizations are also
: , encouraged to coUect recipes for
: the book and turn them in to the
• Sentinel office. The deadline for
: submitting recipes is Sept. 15.
•; Middleport block party
~ ' Middleport's annual block
) party will be held on Sept. 16.
~ . Interested parties should reserve
r booths by calling Debbie or Mike
!. Gerlach at 992-6898, Lennie
.: Eliason at 99~-6485, or Brian
&gt;
r Johnson at 992-3481.. Bootl:s are.
,. reserved on a first come first
~· served basis, so call soon to
reserve a booth.

&lt;
•

' Goodnight reunion
~:
:~ The Goodnight reunion wlll be
•. held at the Zion Lutheran Church

.DDUPORY, OHIO

.

'

ville. A potluck dinner wlll be
5erved at 1 p.m.
:rent meeting
There wlll be a tent meeting
Sept. 5-10 at 7:30 each evening
at the Pine Grove Holiness
Church Yard. The Rev. Tim
Hamaker wlll be the evangelist
and . Rev. . Steve Manley and
family will provide the special
music and singing. Pastor Ben
Watts invites the publiC. The
church is located off Route 124
through Rutland on Route 325'
and Rolesville Road, or slx miles
from Vinton off Route 325.
Meeting
The Meigs Local Band Boos·
ters wlll meet on Sept. 5 at 7 p.m.
In the high school band rqom.
Chapman reunion
The fifth annual Chapman and
Myrta Kerwood Hill family reunion will be held Sept: 10 at
Racine's Star Mlll Park. Those
attending are to take a covered
dish for the 1 p.m. potluckdlnner.All relatives and friends are
invited to attend.

entertainment will begin at 1:30
p.m. The public is Invited to
attend.

· By James Carpenter
·
Superlnten den t
As we begin the new school
year there is one point that I
would like to make to our parents
with children in our schools.
Schools operate for the purpose
of educailng children. Aides, bus
drivers, cooks, custodians, main·
tenance, mechanics, secretaries,
teachers, • administrators, and
board members all contribute to
the education of your children.
They all have the same .goal as
parents ·do and that is to help
prepare children for the life that
awaits them after their school
days are over.
Since schools and parents both
have the'same goal, there should
be colnmunicatlon ~etween the
schools and the parents to .see
that-the child benefits Irani both.
· It seems that most of the

...

.

communlcat ion which takes pate on commtttees of the PTO to
place occurs when something help make a differ ence in your
hlld' · h I ·
negative happens. Schools tell c
s sc oo ·
.
parents when there Is a problem
You as a parent may not know
and parents contact the schools about a policy or a requirement
when ther~ Is a problem:
which requires us to do what we
. Otherwise, . both seem to go sometimes do. We do not neces·
their own ways when nobody sarlly agree with all the laws and
thinks there Is a problem .
requirements of the state in ,all
Our schools need to Improve in instances, but we must follow
the respect that we need to do and obey them. Likewise, we
more to hlform parents of post· may not know about somethl~g
tlve things In which children are which is affecting your child s
involved. Our schools made ability to learn.
improvement in this area last
Improved communication has
year, butwestUlneedtocontlnue to help. We both have the same
to try to Improve.
goal. We may not always agree
Likewise, we would ask you as on the best way to get there, but
parents to visit our schools to talk we do agree on where we want to
with your child's teacher(s) and go.
.
.
.
to keep us informed about more
Through workmg together we
than just a problem.
.
can better reac.h our common
Attend PTO and parent· . goal for our cht)dren . We look
teacher conferences and partie!· for~ard .to seeing you.

~

AWARDS PRESENTED- The Sallsbucy Pack
2f6 recently received awards for the work and
achievements over the past year. The group
~ecelved the Pack of the Year award along with
the Harrisonville group. Webeio, Bert Mash;

received the Scout of the Year award, and the
group also received the awards plaque of
Outstanding CUb Scout Booth at the Meigs County
Fair.
'

Hemlock grange elects officers .for .year
The Hemlock Grange elected
offleers for the coming year
when the group met on Saturday.
The new officers Include Zlba
Midkiff, master; Wallace Brad·
ford, overseer; Harley Haning,
steward; Pearl Smith , assistant
steward; Pattie Smith, lady
assistant steward ; Rosalie
Story, lecturer; Sara Cullums,
chaplain; Sylvia Midkiff, secre·
tary; Leota Smith, treasurer;
Eva Robson, pomona; Margaret
Haning, ceres; Naomi Reed,
flora; and Clarence Story, gate
keeper.
Serving on the executive com·
mlttee wlll be Roland Eastman,

Hllber Qulvey and Robert Reed.
The trustees wlll be Wallace
Bradford, George White and
Roland Eastman.
Activity chairpersons include
Patti Smith, youth chairman:
Jessie White, membership chair·
man; Doris Eastman, deaf activ ·
!ties chairman; HUber Qulvey,
legislative chairman; and Mu·
riel Bradford, news reporter.
In other meeting actlvjtes, the
group's charter was draped in
memory of Russell Cuilums and
Harry Swartz. Reported lll were
Leota Smith, and Stanford and
Allee Stockton.
Building bridges was the

theme for the lecturer's program
and readings were give by Sara
Cullums, Wallace Bradford and
GOldie Reed. Helen Qulvey ,
Roland Eastman and Doris East·
man provided thrill tips.
Serving refreshments were
Roland and Doris Eastman and
Harley and Margaret Haning.

_
........
THEKIDS

HONEY. I

Ohio TOPS 570 meets

Regular meeting
The Middleport Lodge 363 F
and AM will have a regular
Bernice Durst was honored
pre·teen loser was Amy Smith,
meeting on Sept. 5 at 7:30p.m. to . 'with a surprise recognition party and the runner up was Crys tal
work in the fellowcraft degree.
at the recent meeting of Ohio · Smith.
TORS 570 held at thecoonhunters
Suzanne Kibble was named the
Regular meeting
on
the
fairgrounds.
August
queen and she received a
The Olive Township trustees
Peggi
Vining,
assistant
leader,
recognition
. certificate and a
wlll have a regular meeting on
wrote
and
read
a
poem
to
Miss
monetary
gift
for being queen for
Sept. 5 at 7:30p.m. at the.homeof
Durst
and
Lepn!l'
Aleshire,
two
months.
the clerk, Barbara Hannum.
leader, read "A TOPS is a
A game was conducted by Mrs.
Special
Person."
Miss
Durst
also
Vining
entitled "Quiz on
Regular meeting
on
received
a
floral
arrangement
Countries."
There wlll be a regular meet·
The surprise gift was won by
lng of the AmerJcan Legion Post behalf of the chapter.
Mrs.
Aleshire
opened
the
meet·
Doris
Bailey.
602 in Racine on Sept 7. Refresh·
lng
with
prayer
and
pledge
and
ments wlll be served .
conduct~d a discussion on the
workshop
'to be held In Logan.
Meeting
The vegetable and fruit baske!
The Ladles Auxlllary Frater·
was
won by Virginia Dean. The
nal Order of Eagles 2171 wlll have
best
losers
were Virginia Smith,
a meeting on·Sept. 5 at 8 p.m. All
Pearl
Knapp,
Long, and
members are asked to bring a Suzanne Kibble,Maida
with
Doris
Bat·
covered dish for the potluck
ley as runner up. The best

~® llillmllllllllli-ii:·~-til!-~· ..
,

,,.~

•.-,,. ;,.,, •. - AU. NEW

CADILLAC
PG13

PICKUP

Homecoming
The Mlnersvllle United Metho·
dlst Church will have homecom·
lng on Sept. 10. Sunday school is
at 9 a.m. Church services are at
10 a.m. and a potluck dinner wlll

'i~ Thanks expressed by firefighters
•;

The Middleport Fire Dept.

Middleport Department Store,
Middleport Chamber of Com·
:. a lion to the following people and merce, Video Touch, American
•. businesses who contributed to· Legion, General Tire Sales. Val·
· : . ward the purchase of this year's ley Lumber and Supply, Pat Hlll
:: FourthofJulyflreworksdlsplay. Ford, Dr. R. R. Pickens, Ingles
•· Carters Plumbing and Heat· Furniture, Blue Tartan, Dr. Z. B.
: lng, Cablevlslon, Fruths Phar· Dayo, Middleport Fire Depart·
: macy, Quality Print Shop, Dairy ment Ladles Auxiliary, Mr. John
• Queen, I!lueStreakCabCo.,Cen· Byer, Mr. Kenny Byer, Mr. and
~ tral Trust j::ompany, Columbus
Mrs. Jack Satterfield.
~ Southern Power, King Builders, ·
Thank you for making this
: Q·I:'C
year's display a big success.

!; would like to express its apprecl·

~:'t

. meets
. .

1:.:l

Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of
~ the Eastern Star, will meet at
7:30p.m. Tuesday at the Chester
: lodge hall. Past matrons, past
! patrons, and sideliners will be
· honored .. 'Officers are to wear
~ chapter dresses, past matrons to
: wear the chapter dresses of their
t terms, All member are urged to
·~ ~ttl!nd .

QUALITY
PRINT SHOP
992-3345

••

~·
~·

'•

992-2039

.

992-6471

J

Announcements

~·

W. ·MAIN

'

:

:, the Rutland Civic Center. The

·BLUE STREAK CAB
COMPANY, INC.

CHESHIRE -The descend·
ants of James C. Hoffman and
Cimerlon Cleere Finney will
have their annual reunion on
Sunday at the Gavin Recrea·
tiona! Area. A covered dish
dinner will be served. Everyone
is urged to bring something for
the white elephant sale.

~:~ ~====~======================~~~~~==~==~==~==~~~~~~~~~~
Flower show to be held
on Saturday beginning at noon. It
be served at noon. Afternoon

THIS PAGE SPONSORED BY THESE MANY FINE BUSINESSES.

. ADOLPH'S .
DAIRY VALLEY

CHESHIRE -The Ross Fife
reunion will be held on Sund{IY at
the Kyger Creek Club House with .
dinner at' noon.

POMEROY -The Rejoicing
Life Church Will be sponsoring a ·
RACINE -The Racine Volun·
special outreach for youth at the teer Fire Department wlll spon·
Pomeroy parking lqt on Saturday sor a cnlcken bar-b-Que on
at 7 p.m. Special guests are "The Sunday at the fire station. Cost of .
New Life Drama Team" of the dinner is $3.75 and half
Cleveland, Tenn. who will be chickens wlll be sold for $3.25.
doing a variety of skits deailng Serving wlll begin at 11 a.m. The
with many topics and Issues ladles auxiliary wlll also be
relating to the youth. The public serving homemade ice cream.
Is invited, and any churches who
wish to participate can call
POMEROY -TheDunfeefam·
Pas tor Mike Panglo at 992-6249. ily reunion will be held on Sunday
The New Life Drama Team wlll ill the home of Nathan and Betty
also be at the Sunday 10 a.m. Biggs in Pomeroy. A basket
service at the church which is dinner will begin at 12:30 p.m.
located at 333 N. Second St. in
Middleport.
MONDAY
CHESTER -The Chester Vo·
REEDSVILLE -The Olive lunteer Fire Department wlll be
Township Volunteer Fire Depart· having a chicken and rib
ment wlll be having a chicken bar-b-que dinner ·on Monday
bar-b-Que dinner on Saturday (Labor Day) at the fire house .
from noon to 6:30 p.m. at the Serving will begin at 11 a.m. wlth
Reedsviile Fire House. The cost over 600 halves of chicken and 130
is $4.50 per person. Entertain· pounds of spare ribs to be
ment will be proylded by the prepared. A parade wlll also be
Country Blend Band from 7-10 formed at the Chester Grade
p.m. and there will also be games Schpol starting at 1: 30 p.m. All
and contests throughout the day. organizations and fire depart·
A B-B gun shoot contest will . ments are welcome to
take place from 1~4 p.m. andat4 participate.
p.m. there will be a greased pig
contest with three classes. Regis·
The Columbia Township board
tratlon for the greased pig of trustees will meet In regutar
contest is at 3 p.m. Anyone under session on Monday at 7:30p.m. at
the age of 16 must have written the flre ·station.
permission to take part In the pig
contest.
SYRACUSE ~The Sutton
Township trustees wlll meet on
SUNDAY
Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the
TUPPERS PLAINS -The an· Municipal building in Syracuse.
nual Bahr reunion wlll be held on

~

••

LABOR DAY I MONDAyI SEPTEMBER 41 1989
.·

ATHENS -The annual Gu·
lhrie~tory reunion will be held
on Saturday at the Athens County
Fairgrounds In the 4H building. A
basket dinner wiil begin at noon.
All relatives and frtends are
urged to at tend.

Sunday at the VFW postbulldlng
off Route 7 in Tuppers Jliains. A
basket dinner wlll begin at noon.

Looking at 'Meigs 'Local Schools...

....· ---------~

·--·
...........

Plump, juicy strawberries on Shoney's light, ilaky crust.
Covered with our own special glaze and whipped topping.
They're made lresh every day, and you can pick one up
Septem!Jer l-41or just $3.99 .

WITH Ta-a~
ROWDSZIJo
Al'l'lllll.,r;;,;.-e.a

8fONE~

POMEROY

" Til II"

ROWEl SHOP

lf'IIV .......... ........ f.m."

Servel8 or more people. For mutmu11 en)Oyment, pie thould be eaten

........"•"1·5111

.

"'

..

••

.

~.

Yme day as purch.ued.

�••

Friday.

Septemta 1. 1989

The Daily Senmei-Pagr 9

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

People in the news-----......, --Quirks in the news-------~
'

This _M
.Veterans ··
Hospital
115 E. Memorial Dr.
-2104

Pomeroy

992-7075
172 North St&lt;ond Au.
Middleport, Olio

· Nationwide Ins. Co.
,

ot Cotumbu•. 0 .
104 W. Main
99l· lJ11 Pomerov

rJ I)(
·~

Po111110g Flow, S6op
fiOWRS fOI EVElY O«AIION

16141992.2039 or
16141992-5721

........ A'fl., P-rey, Oh.

•

1

POMEROY CHURCH OF n!E· NAZA·
RENE,~- Union and Multmy, Rev.
~ ........McOu~. pasta". Norman Presley, s. S. Su~, Su~J~l~Y School. 9::Jl a.m:
m&lt;rnln&amp;'""'"'ljp :Kl: :Jl a.m: !'Yenlng...-vtce 6
P..m.: mj~- semre, Wedne!di\Y, 7 p.m
· GRACE EPJS(X)PAL OlURQ!, 311; E.
Main St, ~. Su~J~l~Y services: 11o1,y
commu '*&gt;n on Ire 11rs1 Su r&gt;la,y or each mont~
and comlined with m&lt;rring payer on tre
tlird Su~J~l~Y. Marring prayer and""""'"' on
all &lt;1her Sun&lt;l~Ys al tie mcnlll Olurch School
and Nunery care~ coaee lour In t)l!
Parish llalllmmedlllle\y lollowlngtle - ·
POMEROY ClruRCH OF Q!RJST, 212 W.
Main St., LEO Las~ evanl!liJst. BU~e School
9::Jla.m.: Mornlngwa&gt;s~ W::Jla.m.: Youth
6:00 p.m.: E&gt;ellng ....,~ 7:00 p.
m. ,
l!lldliV IWght pnoyermet'llngandBllie
study. 7:00p.m
11!E SALVATION ARMY, 115 Blttmllt
Aw.l'urneroy. Mrs. Dora Wining In charge.
&amp;IIJiliY hollnEIO meEting 10 •. m.; Su~J~l~Y
School 10:30 a.m. .Sunds,y School, YPSM
Eloise Adams, leader. 7:ll p.m. Salvation
meeting ~s speakEI'S andmusicslR'!als.
Thumlay, 11:31 a.m. 1l&gt; 2 p.m. Lad!'" Home
League, members In charge, aU WO'llBl
lnvl!ed; 6:45
Thm!day, Carp. Cad&lt;!
Ciao&amp; (You~ l'l!ople-BltieJ, 7::Jl p.m Bible
Shdy and Prayer meeting.~ totl'r public.
POMEROY WESTSIDE CIRJROf OF
CHRIST, :J:IZl; 01JJ&lt;tm's Home Road !Cau rly
Road 761. !1923117. Vocal music. &amp;lnday Wor·

204 Condor St.
Po1111roy, 011.

John F. Fulll. Mgr.
Ph.992· l101
Pomeroy

'

''·

'

eOO=

I

'
I

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

'&lt;,,
'

BILL QUICKEL

(row's Fami!l Restaw111t ''
"Futa~I•IICUM f

228

FIIH Cllllh1"

w. Main Sl., Ponwroy
992-5432

'

''

••

K&amp;C JEWELERS.

5f•ul !B....Its

212 E. Main Street
992·3785. Pomeroy

FAITH TELLS US THAT OUR WORK
WILL BRING US REWARDS

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH , CornE!' Ash and Plum. Noel
Herrmann, pastor. Sunday SchooiiO:OOa.
m .; Morning Worship, 11:00 a.m.; Wednesday and Saturday Evening Services at
7:30p.m.
APPLE GROVE UNITED METHO·
DIST CHUROf - Pastor, Rev. Carl
Hicks, 10 mils above Raetne on Rt. 388.
Sunday School 9 a.m., wOrStllp service 10
a.m. Sunday evenlna service, 6:00p.m.;
Prayer meeting and Bible Study Thursday, 6:30p.m.
·
MT. OLIVE UNITED METHODISTOft 124, behind WUkesvWe. CharlES JonSl,
pastor. Sunday School, 9:30a.m .; mo-g
worship, 10: 30; Sunday and Thursday
evening services, 7:00p.m.
'
.
MEIGS

A Bible lesson we should heed
Will tell us how we Car) succeed:
To work according to our need
Is what it will convey.
In any case, the text contains
What. using common sen~ explains·'
We do our job with hands and brains,
And thus, we earn our pay.
Beginning with our nation's birth,
Our way· of life, for what it's wonh,
Became the finest here on earth,
To which we worked our way;
And so, because we were concerned,
That Bible lesson has been learned.
Our work is done, and now we've earned
Some rest on Labor Day. ·
.
wak
1
·
.
- Gona
No

COOPERATIVE PARISH

'

'

I

~:ifJICI&lt;fL .• ,, ····~ '
INC.
•
.llRAott:W
.,,,
......
·~ I
_,
.... ,.. .... ww t..,...,,.•

. 992-2975

p.m

,.,.,..,

REALTOI

••
;

•

UNITED MEI'HODIST CHURCH
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev. Don Archer
Rev. Frank Crofoot
Rev. SeldDn Johnlm
ALffiED ,- Church School9: :1&gt; a.m.;
Worship, II a.m.: UMYF6:30p.m. : UMW
· Third Tuesday, 7: :.&gt; p.m. Communion,
first Sunday. (Archer) .
.
s hip lOa.m.; Bllie Su.ey ll a.m.; Woi"sijp, 6p.
CHESTER - Worship 9 a.m.; Church
m. We&lt;ln&lt;Od!IY, Bllie study, 7 p.m Speak..-.
&amp;choollOa.m.; BlbleStudy, Thursday, 7p.
Landm Hope, evanl!liJst.
ZION CHuRCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy· ·
m.; UMW. IJrst Thursday, 1 p.m.; ComOLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
HarrllmvllleRd. (Rt.143J Robert E. Purmu~ion, first Sunday (Archer) .
CHUROf, Jack Clel&lt;11d paslcr. Au:lryGiayd,
tell, minister; Steve Stanley, Bible School
JOPPA - Worship 9: 30 a.m.: Church
&amp;&amp;p. Suadlll' School!D: OO a.m; Youth mEetSupt.; Rodney Howery, Asst. Supt. SUN·
School10
::l)
a.m. Bibl e Study Wedneday,
ing, 7 p.m. every We&lt;ln&lt;Oda,y.
DAY: Bible SChool 9:30a.m.; Worship
7: :Jl p.m. (Johnson).
SACRED HEART CATHOLIC CHURCH
10:30 A.M. and 7:30P.M .: Wednesday Bl·
LONG BOTIOM - Church School 9:30
- Pomeroy. Msgr. Michael Hellmer, Ph.
ble Study,7:00 p.m .
a.m.;
Worship
10:30
a.m.:
Bible
Study,
992·5898. Saturday evening Mass, 5: l) p.m.
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine
Wednesday,
7:30
p.m.;
UMYF
Wedn"'; Sunday Mass, 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. CCO
Grove. The Rev. Wtlliam MlddlE!Iwarth,
day, 6:00p.m·.; Communion First Sunday
classes, 9 a.m. lst and 3rd SUnday of each
pastor. C~urch Serv1ee 9::Kl a.m.; Su,nday
of Month (Crofoot).
month. Confessions: Ohe-half hour before
SchooiiO::.l a.m.
REEDSVILLEChurch
School9:30
a
.
each Mass.
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,
m.; Worship Service 11:00 a.m.
CHURCH OF . JESUS CHRIST APOSTom Runyon, pastor. Sunday School9: JJ
TUPPERS
PLAINS
ST.
PAUL
TQU1C FAITH- New Ltma Road, next to
a.m.; Larry Haynes, S. S. Supt. Mornlng
Church School 9 a.m.; Worship 10 a.m.;
For.t Meigs Park. Robert W. Richards,
worship 10:3&gt; a.m.
Bible
Study,
Tuesday,
7:30p.m
.;
Commupastor. Sunday services, 10 a.m. and 7 p. ·
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
nion First Sunday (Archer).
·
m·. ~,Wednesday wor$hlp, 7 p.m.
RENE. Rev. John Vance, pastor; Sandy
CENTRAL CLUSTI!R
Justice, Chairman of the Board of ChriSGRAHAM
UNITED METHODIST.
Rev. Doo Meadow•
tian Ufe. Sunday Schoo19:30 a.m.; MornPr.~chlng 9:30a. m. nrst and second SunRev. Wooley Tllalchf!'
ing worship 10:30 a.m.; evangelistic serday,s of each month; third and fourth SunRev. Haney Bladlllesch
vice 7:00p.m. Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
da~- each month worship services at 7: 30 p.
lin, Kalhry• RU&lt;IY
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CIRJRCH, llex·
m.; Wednesday evenings at 7:30 p.m.
Rev. Paul Marlin
ter: Woody Call, pastor. Services Sunday
Prayer and Bible Study.
Rev. Arthur Crabtree
10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wedn&lt;Oday, 7 p.m.
SEVENTH -DAY ADVENTIST, Mul,
Rev. Robert Steele
DYESVU.LE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
berry Heights Road, Pomeroy. Pastor Bob
ASJ;!.URY (Syracuse)- Worship 11 a.m.
Lloyd Sayre, Supt. Sunday School 9: 30 a.
Sn}lder: Sabbath School Superintendent.
; Church School9:4~ a.m.: Charge Bible
m.; morning worship 10:30 a.m. Sunday
Ro(ln ey Spir es. Sabbath SchOol begins at 2
Study, Wednesday, 7:l) p.m.: UMW, first
evening service 7 p.m.
p.m . on Sat urday afternoon with worship
Tuesday, 1:30 p.m.; Choir Rehearsal.
serv ice following at 3:00 p.m. Everyone
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Steve
Wednesday 6:30p.m. (Thatcher)
welcome.
Deaver, Paster. Mike Swiger, Sunday
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m.;
RUTLAND F IRST BAPTIST CHURCH
School Supt.; Sunday School 9: 30 a.m.;
Church ScbooliO a.m.: Bible Study, TUes - Sister "Harriett Warner. Supt. Sunday
Morning worship 10:40 a.m.; Sunday
day, _?:OO p.m.; UMW, First Monday, 7: 30
School9 :30 a.m.; Morning Worstup. 10:45
evening worship 7:30 p.m.~ Wednesday
p.m., UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m. Choir Rea.m.
evening ·B ible study 7:30p.m.
hearsal. Chlldr~n· s at 6: 30p.m . Adult fol·
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Stev•
BVRLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH,
lowing: Wednesday. (Riley )
Fu1ler, minister: Saturday evening
BurHngham. Ray LaudermDt, pastcr. RoFLATWOODS- Church School, IOa.m.
evangelisllc services, open ·t o public, 7 p.
bert Cozart, assistant [lBSto-. Suadlll' School
; Worship, U a .m.: Bible Study, Thursm.: Sunday ChUrch School, 9:30 a.m .;
10 a.m.: wcrshlp 7 p.m.: Wemesd~. 6 p.m.
day, 7 p.m .: UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m. (RIMorning Worship 10 :30 a .m.
youth meeting; Wed, 7p.m.churchservlces.
ley) .
"FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Po·
PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH, \1
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a.m.;
meroy Pik e. E . Lamar O'Bryant, pastor:
mtle-otf Rt. 325. Rev. Ben J . Watts, pastor.
Church School 10 A.M .: Choir practice,
Jack Needs, Sunday SChool Director. SunRobert Searles, S.S. Supt.. Sunday School
Thursday, 6:30p.m.; UMW third Monday.
da}: School. 9:30 a. m.; Mornin ~ Worstup.
9:30a.m.; Morning Worship 10:30 a .m .;
(Thatcher)
10:45; evenlngworshtp, 7:00p.m. (D.S.T .)
Sunday evening service- 7; 30 p.m.; Wed·
HEATH (Middlepor1 ) -Church School,
&amp; 7;30 IE.S.T .); Wednesday Prayer Sernesday service, 7:30p.m.
9:l'J a.m .; Morning Worship 10; 30 a.m.;
vl&lt;e. 7:00 p.m. ID.S.T. ) &amp; 7: 30P.M. (E .S.
SILVER RUN BAPTIST, Bill Little,
Youth Group, 4 p.m.; Wednesday, Bible
1' . )~. Mission Friends (ages 2-6), Royal
pastor. Steve Uttle, S. S. Supt. Sunday
study 6:00p.m. Choir rehearsal 7:00p.m.
Arit bassadors (boys ages 6-181. and Girls
Schooll.O a.m.; Morning worslp,ll a .m .;
(Rindfleisch).
tn Action I ages &amp;-18 1 on Wedn esday s, 7 p.
Sunday evening worship 7:30p.m. P rayer
MINERSVILLE - Church School 9:00
• m . (D.S.T.i &amp;7 :30p.m. IE .S.T. l: Tuesday
meeting and Bible study WedneMiay, 7: 30
a.m.; Worship serv ice 10:00 a .m.; UMW
Visl,latlon, 6: 3D p. m.
p.m .; Youth meeting Wednesday at 7 p.m.
third Wedn esday, 1 p.m. (Thatcher)
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH , Bat·
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
PEARL CHAPEL- Church School 9:00
ley,' Run Road, Rev. E mmett Rawson, pas- 383 N. 2nd Ave. , Middleport. Sunday
a.m.; Wors hip Service 10:00 a .m . (Marlor . Han dl ey Dunn, supl. Sunday School,
SChoollO a.m. Sunday evening 7:00p.m .;
tini
l.Oa. m.; Sundayevening servlce. 7:30p.m.
Mid-week service, Wed., 7 p.m.
POMEROY- Church School, 9:1~a.m.
: 81bleteachlng, 7: lJ p.m . Thursday.
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH,
: Worship 10:30 a. m.: Choir rehearsal
~YRACUSE MISSION, Chorry St. , Sy·
Jeff Pattersoo, superintendent Sunday
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. ; UMW, SE!(.'Qnd
racuse. Mark Morrow. pastor. serv ices. 10
School 9:30 a.m.; Morning· Worship 10:30
Tuesday, 7:l:l p.m. : UMYFSunday, 6p.m.
a.m. Sunday. Evening s ervices Su nday
(Meadows)
a .m.; Sunday evening service, 7:3J p.m .;
and Wednesday at 6:00p.m .
ROCK SPRINGS- Church School, 9: 15
Wednesday eveninR service, 7:30 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
a.m.: Worship lOa.m .: Bible Study, Wed·
SYRACUSE CHURCH ·oF THE NA·
IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Dwight Haley,
nesday, 7::KJ p.m.; UMYF {Seniors). SunZARENE . Rev. Glenn McMillan, past(l".
fir st elder: Wanda Mohler, Sunday SChool
day, 6 p. m.: (Juniors) every other SunMary Janice Lavender, Sunday School
Supt. Sunday School 9: :JJ a. m.; Morning
day, 6 p.m . !Riley) .
Supt. Sunday Scho~ 9:30a .m.; Morning
Worship 10:30 a. m.: Evening Wors hip 7: 3J
RUTLAND- Church School. 10 a.m.:
worship 10:30 a.m.; Ev8ngeUsttc service,
lf.m.; Wedn~day prayer m eel tng7 ::ll p.m.
Worstup, ll ' a. m.: UMW First Monday,
6 p.m.; Prayer and Praise Wednesday, 7p.
!)IT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GO D.
7:·30 p.m. (Crabtree)
m.; Youl!l-llleetinK. 7 p.m.
Racine. Rev. James Satterfield. pas tor.
SALEM CENTER- Church School9: 15
EDEN ~ITED BRETHREN IN
Frefman Williams, Supt . Sunday School
a .m.; Morning Worship 10:15 a.m.
CHRIST, Elden R . Blake, past&lt;r. Sunday
9:45a .m.: Sunday and Wednesday even(Steele!
SchooliO a.m.: Gary Reed , Lay Ieeder.
Ing Services. 7 p.m.
·
SNOWVILLE - M;or ning Worship, 9:00
Morning sermon, 11 a.m.; Sunday night
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST.
a. m. : Church School10:00 a.m. (Martln)
services: Christian Endeavor 7:30p.m .,
Co rner Sixt h and Palmer . .Jam es Seddo n,
SOV'1111!RN ·cLUSTER
Song servtce 8 p.m. Preactung 8: 30 p.m .
Pastor. Ed na Wllsoo, S.S. Supt.; Cathy
Mld·week prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7
Rev. Kenaetb Baker
Rig~, Ass I. Supt. Sunday School, 9:15 a .
· p.m .
Rev. Rocer Graee
m.; Mor ning Worship, 10: 15 a .m .: Sunday
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN , David
Rev. Carl Hloo
Evening service. 7 p.m. Prayer meet In~
Prmtlce, pastor. Charles Domlgan, SunAPPLE· GROVE- Church Schoo19:00
a nd Bibl e St udy Wednesday evening, 7 p.
day School Supt. Morning Worship 9:30 a .
a .m.: Morning Worship 10:00 a .m .; Bibl e
m. ; Children's choir practice, Wedn esStudy Sunday 7: 00p.m.: Praye r meeting
m .; Sunday ScboollO::JJa.m.; Evenlngser·
day. 7 p.1n.; Adult choir praC'tlce, Wed .. 8
7:00p.m . Thursday. (Hicks)
'
. vtce, 7:31p.m. ·
P·'l'l·; Radio program, WMPO, Sunday,
MT. \MilON BAPTIST, Pastor: Joe N.
BETHANY - Worship 9 a.m.; Church
8:30 ... m.
Sayre, Sunday School9:45 a.m.; Evening
SchooiiO a.m. ; Bible Study Wedneoday 10
MIDDL EPORT C11URCH OF CHRIST,
worship 6 : ~ p.m.: Prayer Meeting, 6:30
a.m .: Dorcas Women 's FellOwship Wed5th · and Main, AI Hartsoo, mlnlster;
nesday 11 a .m. (Baker).
p. in. Wednesday.
Richard DuBose, Associate Pastor; Mike
CARMEL - Church School 9: :Jla.m.;
TUPPERS PLAINS OlURCH OF
Gerlach, Sunday School Superintendent.
Worship. 10:45 a .m. Second and Fourth
CHRIST. Robert Foster, pastor; Howard
Bible SChool9: 30 a.m.: Morning Worship
Sundays; Fellowship dinner with Suttm
Caldwell, Superintendent; Church school
10:30 a .m. Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.
third
Tllursday,
6::Jl
p.m
.
(Baker)
9
a.m.; WorshJp service 9:45a.m. and6: ao
Wednesday, 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting.
MORNING STAR- Church Schoo19:45 .. p.m. Everyoo.e welcome.
·
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NAa.m.; Worsh.Jp 10:30 a .m.; Bible Study,
OfESTER CIRJRCH OF THE NAZA·
ZARENE, PASTOR Fred Penhorwood. . Thursday,
7 :30 p.m. (Baker) .
RENE. Rev. Herbert Grate, pastof. ·
Bill White, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
Frank Rlffi e. supt. Sunday School 9: 30 a .
SUTI'ON
-Church
School,
9:
30a
.m.;
Sch0ol9:30 a .m.; Mor ning Worship 10:45
m.; Worstup service, 11 a .m. ant.1. 7 p. m.
Morning Worship 10! 45a .m . flrstandthlrd
a . m ~ ; Evening Service, 6:00 p.m .; Wed·
Sundays; Fellowship dinner with Carmel
Sunday. Wednesday, 7 p.m. Prayer meet·
nesday Prayer Meet.J~ 7:00p.m.
third Tllursday, 6:31p.m. (Bak,..) .
In g.
UNri'ED PRI!'SBY
IAN MINIITRY
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
EAST
LETARTMorntngWorshlp9:00
OF MEIG8 COUNTY
•,
a.m .; Cburoh Schcd !O:OOa.m.; UMW ftnt
CHURCH. William Williams, pastor; RoRev . O'Qulnn KeUr
Tuesd!IY 7: :II p.m. (Grace).
bert E. Barton, Director ol' ChrliUan Edu·
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN
cation; ' Steve Eblin, aaa.lltant. Sunday ,
LETART FALLS - Worship 9 a.m.;
CHURCH - Sunday: Worship Services
School9::1l a .m.; Mornlna worahlp 10: 30
t"hurch Scholi 10 a .m. (Grace) .
9:00a.m.; Church SchqoliO:I~ a.m ..
a ,m.; Teena In Action, 6 p.m.; Evenina
RACINEOlurch
School,
10
a
.m
.:
WorMIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN ship lla.m,; UMW tourthMonday at7:;1lp.
· Worship, 7:00p.m. Cbolr practice 8 p.m.
Sunday School, 9 a.m.; Church service,
m .; Men's Prayer Breakfut, Wedneoday, 8
SUnday. Wednelday eventna prayer and
ll:IJ a.m.
a.m. (Grace).
Blblestudy.
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY·
DEXTER
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST,
KENO
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST,
Ro1er
TEillAN - S1111day SchOo~ 10 a.m.:
Sprlnc, mtnllter; Starling Mauar ud OtRoKer Watson. mlnllter; Norman Wlll,
Chlifth service, 10: l5 a.m.
t~ Swain, Sunday School SuptL Preach·
supt. Suaday School 9:30 a .m.: Wonhlp ·
RVTLAND CHURCH OF GOD , Paatc.-,
service 10:30 a.m. Bible otudy, Wecln ...
Inr 9:30a.m. each Su-y: Sunday School
Raymond Cox. Sunday School !O:OOa.m.;,
!0:30a.m.
d•y. 7:00p.m.
.
SundaY Mornlnl Wonhlp ll:OOa.m. Chll·
HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
dren' s Church II a.m . Sunday Evening
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS. Port·
CHRISTIAJII UNION, Tll"on Durham,
Se!JI&lt;e 7:00p.m. Wed., 6 p.m. Yo.u nc La ·
land·Raclne Road. Mike Duhl, put or;
pa1tor.
Sunday
service,
9:
a:l
a
.m.;
evendl,.~uxDiary . Wecln-y, 7 p.m. Fam·
Janice Danner, ehurch aehool dfrector.
Ing service 7:00 p.m . Prayer meettnc,
Wecln-y, 7:00p.m.
Churcb oc:hool9: 30 a.m.: Momtn1 worship
. Uy~~POOMMVNITY CIRJRCH. O!f
10:30 a.m.: Wednl!lday evenlna prayer
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
Rt. ~·-a mils from Portland-Lonl Bot·
· aenolctll, 7: 30p.m.
CHRIST, Jooeph B. lloaldnl, JUtor. Bible
tern; Eclltl Hart, putor. Sunday School,
Clua, 9:30a.m.: Mornlni[Wonhl_piO::Jla.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. Rev. Earl
9:311'1 a.m.: Suoday mornlnl pr•chlnc
m.: EVftllnl Worsblp, 6:l0 p.m. Tlluroday
Shula'. put or. Worship oervlct. t:ll a.m. ·
to :~a. m.; Sundayovenlncat!I'VIctll, 7:31
J!!bleStudy, 6: :II p.m.
.
Sunday Scllool J!l:30 a,m.J!l!J!eStudy and
\}

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Pomeroy

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992·$130 Pomeroy

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and Church
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

By WD..LIAM c . TRO'JT
. .
United Presslnternailonal
PAVAROTTI BEGS OFF AGAlN: "No Show" Luciano
Pavarotd won't be canceling out on the Lyric Opera of Chicago
again. That's because the opera says It will never Invite him
back ~fter he canceled an agreement to sing IJI the Lyric
Opera s 35th anniversary season performance of Puccini's
:'Tosca." Tile opera's general manager, Ardis Kralnlk,. says
Pavarottl now has canceled 26 of 41 scheduled performances at
the Lyric since 1981. ''The Lyric Opera Is now 11nwllllng to take
the risk of one more cancelJittlon by Mr. Pavarottl," she said.
Pavarottl's manager, Herbert BresDn, told Lyric officials tile
fabled tenor was suffering from perslstant Inflammation of his
sclallc nerve, which prevents him from moving much on stage.
Kralnlk said sh!! offered to allow Pavarottl to perform while
seated bUt he declined. "I did everything possible to try to
convince him to fulf!U his commitment with us, " she said, "but
he told me he could not come."
ROYAL SPLD': Tbe stories about Princess Anne and her
husband, Capt. Mark PhWIJIII, are true. After 15 years of
marriage, they are going to live apart and may seek a legal
separation, but there are no plans for a divorce. As news of the
split spread, A~ne, 3~. was In SanJuan, Puerto Rlro, at tending a
meeting of the International Olympic Committee·and declined
to answer reporters' questions. Phillips, 40, had no comment
from their Gatcombe Park home, which he will soon be vacating
In favor of another royal property 2 mUes away . For years the
British media has been running reports about a rift between
Anne and Ph!Uips - mt;lst recently when stolen "personal"
letters between Anne and a Buckingham Palace official, Navy
Cmdr. Tim Laurence, were dlsovered. The princess and
Phillips ·h ave two children, Peter, 11, and Zara, 7.
·
RIVERS RUNS ON ABOUT MARRIAGE: Don't look for .Joaa
Rivers to get married again. "I don't have to," says Rivers,
whose husband, Edgar Rosenberg, kUled himself two years
ago.' "I'm very happy In my business. I support myse)f." ·
Rivers; In an Interview to be aired Friday on "A Current
Affair~" .s ays she doesn't even like dating. "I'm dating and Iflnd
It ho~ndous," she says without mentioning her escorts by
name. "I hate lt. I hate every minute. I hateeatlngbreath mints
all night." Rivers says romantic talk Is the worst part "obnoxious and It gives me the shudders and the willies."
Rivers also says she's very nervous a bouf starting her
syndicated talk show next week In the wake of her flop on the
Fox nelwork.
·
TYSON TICKETED: Mike Tyson found two parking tickets
on his borrowed car when he finished a $50,000 shopping spree at
a Coral Gables; Fla., jewelry store, but one of them was bogus.
Tyson let the parking meter expire last week while he was
buying a gold ladles' Rolex and a diamond and gold bracelet at a
jewelry store owned by Julien Balogh, who also was letting the
champ use his 1989 Mercedes· Benz. Two $10 parking tickets
were on the windshield when Tyson came (JUt, but It turned out
tlult one of them apparently had been stuck on the Mercedes by
some Ioker who had gotten a ticket nearby, Regardless, Balogh
wrote a check to cover both tickets. ''Those meter maids are
very snotty people," he said. "I've got people who come In here
looking at thousands of dollars In jewelry and they have to
worry about a $10 parking ticket."
.
GLIMPSES: Jleports of a romance between .John Kennedy
Jr. and actress Daryl Hannah ares tartlng again. The New York
Dally News says Kennedy escorted Hannah to a New York
nightspot Tuesday night for a 30th birthday party for his cousin,
Tim Shriver. The News said the couple did "a lot of
hand·holdlng." ... Corporate wheeler-dealer T. Boone Pickens ,
Isn't going to run for governor In Texas next year, even though
he says he could have won. "We wanted to run, and we believed
we , could win," said Pickens, a Republican. The corporate
raider says he's staying out ofthe race so he can tend to his Mesa
Limited Partnership, which lost $13.4 mUllon hi the second
quarter.
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' M'i'. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Localed In Texu
Community oil Ct. Rt , 82. Rev. Robert
Sanders, pastor. Jeff Holter, Jay t•der:
Ed Roush, Sunday Scbool Supt. Suaday
School 9:30 a.n&lt;.: morn1n1 worohlp and
children's church lO: 30 a.m.: oven1D1
preet!hlng service first three SundayJ,
7:30 p.m.: Spectll oervlee lourth Sunday
even!!'if· .'~: 30 p.m.; Wedneoday Prayor

.

RAWUNGS-COATS

992-6669

prayer service ThurSday, 7: :l.l p.m.
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION·
AL CHURCH, Kingsbury Road. Rev.
Clyde W. Henderson, pastOI'. SUnday
School 9: 30a.m.; Ralph carl, Supt. Even·
ing worshlp 7:00 p .m . Prayer meeting,
Wednesday 7:00p.m.
OLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPTIST
CHURCH. 28001 State Route 7, Middleport. Sunday SchoollO a.m.; Sunday eVenIng service 7:30 p.m .; ·Tuesday service,
7:30 p.m.
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH.
0 . H . Cart, pastor. SundaySchoolat9:30a.
m.; Morning worship at 10: 30 a .m.; Sundayevenlngservlceat 7:30p.m . Thur!lday
services at 7:30p.m. ,
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob, locat~ on County Road 31. Rev.
Roger Wlltronl, pastil'. Sunday School
9;30 a.m.; Morning Worshl 10: 45 a.m.;
Sunday evening worship 7:00p.m.; Wed·
nesday evening Bible Study 7:00p.m.
WHITE 'S CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
CHURCH - Coolville RD. Rev. Pbllllp Rl·
denour, pastcr. Sunday School9: 30 a.m.;
.worship service 10: 30 a.m.; Bible. study
and worship service, Wedne9day, 7 p.m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF Ci:HRIST,
Bill Carter, pastor. Sunday School. 9:30 a ~
m. ; Morning Worship and Communion
10:30 a .m .
·
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amos
TUlls, pastor. Sonny Hudsoo, supt. Sunday
SchoOl 9: 30 a. m.: Morning worship, 10:30
a.m.; Sunday evening service 7: 00p.m.
Wednesday service 7 p, m. WMPO prDgram 9 a.m. each Sunday.
RUTLAND OfURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE . Samuel Basye, pastor.' Sunday
School 9:30 a.m.: Worship service 10: 30 a.
m. ; Young people's service 6 p.m.
Evangelistic service 6: :JJp.m . Wednesday
service 7 p.m.
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
St., Mason, W. Va. Sunday Bible Study 10
a.m.; Worshiplla .m. and7p.m. Wednes· ,
day Bible Study, vocal music, 1 p.m.
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud·
ding Lane. Masm , W . Va. J. N. Thacker,
pastor. Evening service 7:30 p .m.; Women's Ministry, Thursday, 9: 30 .a.m.;
Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7: 15
p.m.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. Hartford, W. Va.
Rev. David McManis, pastoc. Chureh
School 9:30 a.m.; Sunday momtng service, 11 a .m.; Sunday evening service,
7:30p.m . Wednesday prayermeetine, 7: 30
p.m.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart,
W. Va. , Rt. 1, James Lewis, pastcr. Wor·
ship services 9: :Jl a.m.: Sunday Schoolll
a.m.: Evening worship 7: 3() p.m . Tuesday
cottage prayer meeting and Bible Study
9: 30 a.m.; Worship service, W edneoday
7
'
VIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Walnut and Henry Sts. 1 Ravenswood, w:
Va. The Rev. George C. Weirick, putcr.
Sunday SChoo19:30 a.m.: Sunday w&lt;nhlp
lla.m .
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, locatedoa
Pomeroy Pike, County Road 25 nMr Flatwoods. Rev. Blackwood, putcr. Service~
on Sunday atiO::Ila.m. and7:30 p.m. wltb
Sunday SChool 9: :Jla.m . BlbleStucly, Wed·
nesday. 7:30 p.m.
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
. CHRIST, St. Rt. 338, . Antiquity. Rev.
Franklin Dickens, putor. Suaday mornIng 10 a.m.: Sunday evenlnc 7 :30p.m.
Thul'lday evening?: 30 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOU·
NESS CHURCH, Inc., 75 Pearl St. Rov.
Ivan Myers, actlnc paotcr: Ro-Manley,
Sr., Sunday School Superintendent. Sun·
day Scbool 9:30 a .m.: Mornlns wcrshlp
10:30 a .m .; evenlng wol"'blp 7: 30p.m.;
. Wednesday evenlnl[ Btbleotudy, prayer
and praise serylce, 7:30p.m.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APQS.
TOLIC - VanZ.ndt and Ward Rd . Etdor
Jam.. Miller, putor. Sunday Scbod,
!0:30a.m.; .Wol'lhtp Service, Sunday,?: II
p.m.: BlbleStady, Wedneoclay,_T:30p.m.
·. CALVARY PILGRIM CHAI'a;L, HarrlsmvWe Road. Rev. VlctorRouob, putar;
·· Cllntm F•ulk, Sunday Sc11oo1 SUpt.: su,..
day School9: 30 a.m.; monllJ!a WCII'IIItp, II
a.m.: Sunday oveaiDtl aervl&lt;e T: 30 p:m.
Prayer Meellna, Wednelllay, 7:iltl p.m.
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOO,
noo-Pentemotal. Wol'llllp II!I'YI"" Suaday
10 a.m.: Sunday School lla.m. Ewnlnl
woroblp aervlce 7:00 p.m. Wedaeoday
pnyer meetlnc7:00 p.m.

.

716 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT. 'OHIO

93 MHI Street
Mldcleport. Ohio 41780
(61419B2·8811i7- (9BB·OOKSI
CHURCH SUPPLIES. BIBLES

-

P-roy '

Meellng, Bible Study and Youth Fellowship, 7:30p.m.
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY.
La:cated on 0. J . White Road or Highway
160. Pat Henson, pastor. Sunday SChool 10
a.m. Classes for all ages. Junior Church 11
a.m.: Morning worship 11 a.m. Adult
Choir practice 6 p.m. Sunday. Young People's, Children's Church and Adult Bible
Study, Wednesday at 7:l:l p.m .
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL, 570 Grant
St. . Middleport. Affiliated with Suuthern
Baptist Conveatlon. ·oavid Bryan, Sr., Ml·
nlster. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Morning
worstup 11 a.m. ; Evening worship 7 p.m.;
Wednesday evening Bible study and
prayer meetinR ·1 p.m.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, St.
Rt.l24and Co. Rd. 5.Derek.Stump, pastor.
William Amberger, S. S. Supt .; Sunday
School 9 : 30 a.m.: Morning_ Worship 10:·30
a.m.: Evening worship 7:30p.m. Wednesday worship 7: 30p.m.
. ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Corner Sycamom and Second Sis., Po·
meroy: The Rev. William Mlddleswart,
pastor. Sunday School 9:45 a .m . Church
serviCE' 11 a.m.
SACHED HEART CIRJRCH, Msgr.
Anthony Glannamore. Ph. 992-5898. Saturday Evenin~ Mass 7:30 p.m.: Sunday
Mass, 8 a.m. and 10 a .m. Confessions one
half hour before each Mass. CCDnclasses,
11 a.m . Sunday.
VICTORY BAPTIST, ~25 N . ~nd St.,
Middleport . James E . Keesee, pastor.
Sunday morning worship 10 a.m.: Even·
lng service 7 p.m.: Wednesday evening
worship 7 p.m. Visitation Thursday 6:30 p.

m.

.

·MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: David
Curfman, pastor. Sunday School, 10 a.m.;
worship service 11 a.m.; Sunday night
worship service 7:30 p.m.: Midweek
prayer service Wednesday 7 p.m .
WESLEY AN
BIBLE
HOLINESS
CHURCH of Middleport , Inc. , 75 Pearl St.,
Rev: Iva n Myers, pastor; Roger Manley, '
Sr., Sunday School Supt. Sunday School
9:30a.m.: Morning Worship 10: 30 a.m.;
Evening Worship 7:30 p.m. Wednesday
evening Bible study. prayer and praise
service, 7:lJ p.m.
FAITH FULLGOSPELCIRJRCH, Long
Bottom, Sunday SChool, 9:30a.m .: Morning Worship 10:45 a.m.; Sunday evening
7:00p. m. tsummer 7:30p.m.); WednerF
day night 7:00p.m. (summer 7::rl p.m.).
LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
OF GOD - Gary Hines. pastor. Sunday
School 9::.1 to 10:20 a .m.; Worship srvtce
10:30 to 11 ::.1 a.m.;_ Sunday evening service, 7 p.m .; Midweek Prayer Service,
Wed., 7p.m.
MT. OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Lawrence Bush, past or. Sunday School
9:3&gt; a.m.; Sunday and Wednsday evenIng worship service, 7!00 p.m .
UNITED FAITH CHURCH, Rt. 7 on Po·
meroy By-Pass. Rev. Robert E . Smith. Sr,
pastor. Melvin Drake, S. S. Supt. Sunday
School9 : 30 a.m.: Morning Worship 10: 30:
Evening Worstup 7:00 p.m.; Wednesday ·
Prayer Service, 7:00p.m.
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Rallratd
St., Mas~?'~· ~~Dday ~hool _lO a .m.; Morn·

.........,

tng Worship 11 a.m.'; t:ve-n1ng seN I~ 6 p.
m. Prayer meetlng and Bible Study Wed·
nesday, 7 p.m.
FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rev. Nyle
Borden, pastor. Cornelius Bunch, supt.
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.; Second and
fourth Sundays worship service at 2:30 p.

••

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MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, .F ourth and
Main St. , Middleport. n.v. Gilbo!'! Craig,
Jr.• pastor. Mrs. Ervin Ba1,1mgardncr,

1

,

~-~~~r~~~o~r~~~~~z~:l.~:.'ol9:30 a.

~

. SUCCESS RO.\D CHURCH OF CHRIST ,
- Joseph B. Hosktns, evangellst. ·Sunday
~
BlbleStudy9a.m.: Worship, 10a.J11.:·Sun·
'
day evening serV_ie@ 6 p.m.: Wednesday
~
evening service, 7 p.m.
1.
.PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Racine,
I
Rt. 124. WJIIIam Hoback, pastor. Sunday
School tO a.m.; Sunday evening service 7 ,.
p.m. Wednesday evening servi~ 7 p.m .
~·
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle,
•
Supt. Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Morning &lt;fl
Worship 10: 30a.m. Prayer service, altern·
f
ate Sundays.. .
1
THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST,
•
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd.,
next to Fort Meigs Park, Rutland. Robert
~
Richards, pastor. Services at 7 p.m. on .r
Wednesdays and Sundays.
r
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP· &gt;
TER of the Wesleyan Holiness Church. · Rev. Earl Fields, paslor. Henry Eblin,
Sunday School Supt. : Sunday SchooiiO a.
_m,; Morning Worship ll a .m.; Evening !.
service 7:30p.m. Wednesday evening ser·
vice 7:30p.m .
•
· J
STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH, &gt;
Cary Holter, pastor, Sunday services 9: 30
a.m. and 7 p.m .: Midweek servtre, 7::.1 p.
m. Thursday.

!

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Nancy Reagan pulls support
for proposed LA drug center
LOS ANGELES - (UPI\
Nancy Reagan has ·retreated
from what the head of· a drug
abuse foundation called "Ironclad assurances" the former
first lady would support con·
structlon of a drug treatment
center, It was reported Friday.
Reagan has also asked that 200
donors who pledged $5 million to
the project be offered a chance to
transfer their donations from
Phoenix Ho11se to the Nancy
Reagan Foundation, the Los
Angeles Times reported.
''This Is a major dlsappolnt·
ment to us,'' said Chris Pollcano,
spokesman for Phoenix: House In
New York, a private foundation
that operates drug programs
across the country.
''There has been no prior
dissension. It was a surprise; let
me leave It at that," Pollcano
told the Times.
Pollcano said the scope of the
program would undoubtedly be
narrowed because Reagan's
name Is a fund· raising asset.
· Reagan spokesman ,Mark
Weinberg said she felt she was
"spreading herself too• thin,"
between commitments to other
charities and her own foundation
and work on her upcoming book.
"She felt she couldn't get the
drug center done properly,"
Weinberg said.
The Times also reported that
the Nancy Reagan Foundation
requested and received a $3
mUllon
transfer
..
·-c from another

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Tlllrd
Ave. Rev. Clark Baker, pastor. Carl Not- 1
!Ingham, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
Scbool 10 a .m. with cluoes for oil agea.
Evening services at 6 p.m. Wedneaday Bi·
ble study at 7:30p.m. Youth service~ Frl· , 1
day at 7:30p.m.
ECCLES !A FELLOWSHIP, 128 MDI St.,
Middleport. Brother Chuck McPhm111,
pastor. Sunday School 10 a.m. ; S~nday
~nlng serviCes at 7 p.m. llld Weclnelllay ,

services at 7 p.m.

·-1

ANTIQUITY BAPOST. Kenneth Smith, , "
pastor. Sunday School 9:30a.m.; church
service 7:30p.m.: youth renowshlp6: 30p.
m.; Bible study, Thu!lday, 7:30p.m.
FULL GOSPEL LIGIITHOUSE, 33045 ,'
Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pu·
tor. Danny Lambert, S. S. Supt. Sunday
morning service at 10 a.m.; Sunday even·
lng service 7: 30p.m. Tuesday and Thun·
day ServicES at 7:30p.m.
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA·
ZARENE, Rev, Glendon Str!lld, pastor.
Sunday School 9:30a.m.: Wonhlpservtce.
10:30 a.m.: Youth service Sunday 6: 15 p.
m. Sunday evening service 1:00 p.m. Wednesday Prayer Meeting and Bible Study
7:00p.m.
·
NEASE SE'I'TLEMENT CHURCH, SuDday atternooo services at 2:30. Thurlday
evening aervtcea at 7: ~.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Maam, W.
Va. Pastor, BIIJMutl&gt;hy.SundaySchoollO
a.m.; Sunday evenlnJ 7:30p.m. Prayer
meettnc and Bible study Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. Everyme welcome.
.
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, .Sa·
tern St. Rev. Paul Taylor, put&lt;r. Sunday
School to a.m.: Sunday evealnl[ 7:00p.m.:
Wednesday evening prayer meeting 7: 00 · •
P.•
•
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT . ,
CHURCH, Silver Ridge. Duane Syden- ·
strtcker, palter. Sunday School 9 a.m.; .... ·
Worlhlp Servlce,lOa.m.; Sunday evening .,
service, 7:00p.m. Wedneo!lay Dl&amp;ht Bible ·
study 7:00_p.m.

-Sermonette
. . ··- . ,. . ..
.

HASIT8 WORK TO DO

Time Is that ever present power that sits on ones shoulder .It whispers
In our ears, "Time lost Is never regained", That precious hour of family
fellowship Is tucked away In our memory;That hour lost Is gone forever
and there Is a blank spot In our memory bank. You see time haslts work
to do. Time Is tottckoftminutes, hours, and years. Ittlcksawaythedays
so gradual that the seasons sneak ijp.on us unawares. Times work Is that
steady never ending tick lock of the clock, Then to our surprlae, the
seasons suddenly appear before us In all their glory.
'
The Fair Is now over and school Is upon us. Summer w81 soon become
Autumn and we will wonder where the Summer has gone. It seems like
only yesterday we betlan mowing grass, planting gardens and wearing
abort sleeved shirts. Now the nights are getting cool again, time Is doing
Its thing; tlcklns away the days.
Time has work to do, even as man also has work to do. Mankind has
many tasks to do. We need to Jlnd God, care for the earth and raise a
family. Our tasks must be done dally, weekly and yearly. We rlae with
the sun and !let ready tor the day, wash, dress, eat, say hello to a new day
and then be on our way. Our way Is to serve God and man In any way we
can. A word of prayer will put UJon the right foot as we begin the day. A
word of prayer at night wUI give us a good nights sleep, that the morrow
mllht !liVe us more time for our work to do.
·
We know time bas Ita work to do even as we see rnankthd muat have
work to do. serve God and serve mankllld sounds so simple. It Is not.
nme has that steady tiCk tocltlng day by day. Mankind has more variety
In the talks to be done. Our qe changes u doet! our tasks. The aeaaons
chanp as do the thlnp that muat be done. So we work, serve God and
man, enjoy the seuona and walch lite go marching along day by day.
May Ute Lord continue to give~· tasks to do, II!I'VIce to rtve and a lite'
to live. It' aa wonderful tbneandwonderfulaeuon. Aaweseetbnetlolng
It• work, let ua be busy doing our work. - Putor William Mttldl•wanh

'd.

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organization, the Community
Foundation of Greater Washing·
ton Inc.
Reagan had helped raise the
funds, a permanent endowment
for fighting substance abuse,
while she was In the White House.
Phoenix: House sent letters to
more than 200 donors, notifying
them of Reagan's wishes but
advising them the foundation
believes It has a legal obligation
to use the money for a. drug
treatment center In the Los
Angeles area.
Pollcano said only three con·
trtbutors have asked that their .
donations, a \Otal of $65,000, be
returned or transferred. He said
no decision has been made on·
those donations.
Reagan first announced In May
she was withdrawing her support
for the proposed Lake VIew
Terrace site because of opposl· ·
tlon from area homeowners.
Pollcano said a Reagan aide
notified Phoenix House on Aug. 8
that she would no longer lend her
name or fund -raising abilities to
the treatment center project and
that she "was going to use the
Nancy Reagan Foundation as the
base lor,. l!er post,Whlte House
efforts."
By the""tlme the foundation
learned of her change In hearf, It
had already spent more than
$600,000 on the project, primarily
for the purchase t;lf an abandoned
hospital that was to ~tave been tile
site of the facility.

As of Se~ember 12th we will no
longer be at the Middleport office.
We sincerely thank all. our clients
for their past patronage and look
forward to seeing you at our new
location.
Please come •nd visit us at our
more spadous and· com.forta~le
office in Athens. We have plenty
of convenient off-street parking. ..
. R. (RAIG MATHEWS, D.D.S.
530 W. Union StrHt
Athens, Ohio 45701
Toll FrH 1-100-527-0922
. 592-1413
Wt'R aR lit there, too. Janet, Rhonda, Tonya, Paula

A repeat performance
HARTFORD, Mich. CUP!)
History does repeat Itself. Just
ask Van Buren County Sherlfrs
Deputy Larry Burlingham.
Burlingham stopped a car
Wednesd\).y afternoon because It
had an Invalid license plate. A
check showed the 1989 Buick
Riviera was stolen from Ash
Flat, Ark., and he arrested the
driver for possession of · stolen
property valued at more than
$100.
Back In · 1978, while Bur·
llngl1am was working for the
Hartford pollee, he arrested the
same suspect for driving a
vehicle stolen from Jonesboro,
Ark.
Pollee declined to Identify the
suspect.
·
Rocli guitarist arres~d lor urlnatlag on plane
PHOENIX CUPI) -Agultarlst
for the rock band Guns n' Roses
has been freed on $5,000 bond
after being arrested for urinating
ln. the galley of a commercial
airliner .
. Authorities said Izzy Stradlln,
27, was arrested Sunday when US
Air Flight 350 made a scheduled
stop In Phoenix, en route from
Indianapolis to Los Angeles. He
was c)larged with a felony and
was released Tuesday .
According to court documents,

Stradlln became angry when a
flight attendant told him he could
not smoke In the non-smoking
area ol the aircraft. FBI Agent R.
Scott Rivas said In his report that
Stradlln then got out of his seat to
use a restroom. Rivas said the ·
restroom apparently was occu·
pled and that Stradlln then
unzipped his pants and urinated
.In the galley area.
Minnesotans find adventure In
Africa ·
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) - Sev·
era! Minnesotans were looking
for adventure In Alrlca this
summer but they found a little
more than they bargained for.
The group of 14 left In late July
and returned Aug, 14. They were
rescued after being stranded for
six days In the wilds of Tanzania.
Sa!arl o!lianizer Bob Belllg, a
biology professor at · Gustavus
Adolphus College In St . Peter,
Minn., sald .the travelers got lost
when their truck went through a
game reserve and took a nose
dive Into a gully.
They set up camp more than 75
mUes from the nearest clvlllza·
tlon. Three guides were sent to a
hunting camp where they
thought they could find a radio
and some velllcles.
.''It was a two-day walk and this
was across a country with no
roads," Belllg said. ~·But when

the guys get to the camp, the water on windows of nearby
hunting leader Is gone and tile buildings.
radio Is out of bat terles. So when
"We feel the city did not get
they came. back four days la ter, what they envlsoned," Council
we were still at square one."
President Nancy Selby she said
' Tbe next day two other rangers this week.
sent to a ranger station returned
G~tgnon said the pool, which ,
with help and two vehicles. Belllg keeps overflowing, should have
said the group stayed In good been larger.
humor, trying to remember
verses of the theme song from
"Gilligan's Island."
New peace fout~taln doesn't work
ROCHESTER, Minn. (UP!) By United Pres• International
City officials figure It will cost
Tammy Faye Bakker, com·
$20,000 to fix the new Peace
Fountain, the centerpiece of a mentlng on her husband Jim's
mental condition after his psych!·
new downtown plaza.
atrist
said he sufferM a nervous
The City Council commlssl·
oned the sculpture and It was breakdown:
"We have been under emocompleted by Charles Gagnon, of
tional
stress for 2 lh years, and
Rochester:
,
we
have
been holding steadyfor2
It was dedicated In June but It
lh
years,
and I think he lust
was soon discovered that the
couldn't
hold
steady any more.
12-foot·hlgh jet of water was
And
I
would
llketotell
the people,
spraying people on benches
around the fountain rather than 'You be In our shoes and see If you
cascading over the nine rings of . can hold steady for 2 lh years. U
you came to see me cry, well, you '
bronze doyes.
The wind also Is blowing the got your wish."

Quote of the day

, FOR SALE
1979 CHEVROLET 112 TON .
L.W.B .. 306, V-8, standard shift,
power steering, "Solid Truck".

S1200

1977 CHEVROLET BLAZER

Cheyenne, lots of chrome under
the hood. lockin - lockout hubs,
good ccondition.
'

1979 OLDSMOBILE HOLIDAY 88
2 door, V-8, auto .• on console, sunroof, P.S., P.B .• P.W. "SI)arp".

1977 BUICK RIVIERA
2nd ·owner, 70,000 miles, all options.

'$2200
S1250
S1650

.CALL OR SEE•••
ROGER RIEBEL.
ROGER RIEBEL II
985-3325
985-4457

...:.. ~

'

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KICK OFF ,.BE FO
WI,.H A RECORD
The "Fall Classic"
Certificate.

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ANNOAL
YIELD

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A.P.R .

ONE YEAR TERM

$1,000 MINIMUM

Huddle Under This Warm And
Washable Throw From Blederlack
Of America's College Collection.
Choose From Marshall, WVU, or
Ohio State UniverSity Logos.
$10 With Deposit of.$1 ,000 or More
$5 With Deposit of $5,000 or More
FREE With Deposit of $1 o,ooo or More .
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EARN "BIG GREEN'. AND SUPPORT YOUR FAVORITE TEAMI
INTERCEPT THE •FALL CLASSIC" C.D.
BEFORE TIME RUNS OUTI
ONLY AT

ANK.

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New Haven

Point Pleasant

182-2135

675·1121

Maaon
773-5514

SU18TAN11AL PENALTY FOR IARLY Wll'HDRAWAL

.

·-·· ---·-· ... --

·,

i.

'·'
;

,,

--

�The

.... 1

LEGAL NOTICE
' Olton wll bo rocolvod ot
the offlc;o of lomord V.
Fultz,
Attar- of ,Low,
111'-\ - t Sec;ond lu.t.
Ohio, untM Fridoy,

-oy.

••, .... _

-to
8.

1988. ..

· ~- ~-pu~•o
1o:OOA
·
· M , ,_...,. ~
of the ....
owned by

Edioon
caood,

Hobotett•.
ond
oltuetod Do•
on
Rooo HHI, loMobury T-n-

....... Moleo c ...IIIY.

wn.

......

Dotod: Auguot 28. 1188.
Jemoe W. Hobotetter.
E...,..tor of E~to of
Edlaon Hobototter.
Docooeod.
(8130. 31 : 1811. 3. 11.1

Public N otiee
LEGAL NOTICE
.. County 8udgot
Cammlulon hoe ..,mplotod
ltoApportlonmontoollocel
Giwonvn•t maney to tho
oubcllvloiono
of
Moigo
County.
'
Fall-ing lo a comploto

The -

In

In

Memoriam

• COAL STOVES.
N8ERTS • FURNACES

mont
F nd
u .
TOTAL ........
Cou••• ,

APPALACIUII
WOOD ST0¥15

I:~:40~.~~~·:":':"~"~

... t203. 785.20
.... 112.841. 40

·

JACK WARD
paned IWIY
Sept. 2. 1988;
We mlu tho amliN

and IM~Qhtor of your

fiiCe.

Th•e memori• can-

..

.. .. ... . 15 ...841;40
'508,488. 00

GEAIT'S
IODT SHOP

........ '12. 502.84

550 . . . St.
Midlllloport, Oh.
OI&gt;EN
7 :30 A.M .-5 :00P .M :
8 -23-'88 1 mo.

Choat•
12. 17% .. ........ 18, 801 .41
Columbia
7. 18~ ............ 10.974. 37
Lobonon
9.98~ .... .... .... 16.2114.07 '

ULln,•JlP
&amp; JAZZ
DANCE CLASSES
MODEUNG
&amp; BAlON

Lotort

4.79~ ... ..... ... ... 7.321 . 34

Olivo

8 . 78~ ........... . 14.948. 38

Orotrge

.

7.78~ .. .. ........ 11.891 .415 '

Rutland

Ill -DUPOIT, 01110

8: 18~ ............ 14.031 . 30
lalom
10.19lL ........ 16.11711.06
laliobury
5.99~ .............. 9 . 1115.50
Scipio
7.89~ .. .. .. ...... 12.212. 43
Button
·
1.78~ ...... .. .. .. 10.378.21
TOTAL
(100,.1.., ..... 11112,841.40
CORPORATIONS:
Middl_.t
38.01% ....... . '59.125, 38

Now Taking
· Registrations

,..

5

"At

•N- • Uood n,.

ft. of living

Spoct
REDUUD-1 otl. Y
· AT TIIS PRICE

ONLY

••,•••• 11.....,
&amp; ,.,.

Fabric Shop

124

WITH ROOMS AND
APAR1MENTS FOR
RENT (ly Day or
Weeki

$18PorDay&amp;Up

949-2526
7 -1

614-423-6371

&amp; VIcinity

Middleport

LAFF-A·DAY

41

Middleport, Ohio
45

Houses for Rent

992-2284
POMEROY, OHIO

...........

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SttelllllhH

POMEIOY,. OHIO
We Buy AU Non Ferrous Metals, Plastics,
Stainless Steel

IPATING TODAY
AUG. 30, 1919)
CLEAN, DRY
ALUMINUM CANS
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# 1 COPPER ..........90&lt; II.

#2 COPPER .......... 7S&lt; lb.
RED BRASS ........... SO&lt;· •·
YEllOW IRASS ... 40' ••
RADIATORS ..........35 &lt; lb.
HOURS
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9 a.m.-7 p.m. ·

At. Jet. S.R. 7 &amp; 143
On

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ND SUNDAY

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Middleport,

OPEN 6 AM-9 PM
7 DAYS

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For Moot 2 and 4-cycle
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SUSAN COLlMAN

7·2·2771
C1ll ftr Fill S..el1le
FREE
-PossiblY mort.
visit

ABSOLUTE AUCTION

a•
I.IDUSH
• QEIIWI.

mention.
ALSO: WE WILL BFsct"'o"l
" OTHE
HOII~~ -, ~~~=
RP

~H 0."~ 'leperate~· And With
.. Reeerve.

'

AUcnONEEI: Col• .W. Keith Molden
Ohio lie. #4311

614-742-2041
P.I.C. Scott Shonk-614-992-3293
Not fiiPORIIble for ec:Cidente or lots of'
property
POSITIVE I.D.

Thuredar,

Frklllr,

IIIU ST. SYiaatJI

~~~:~. .l'::WrX:

Uurdlly,

lAY'S
BEAUTY SHOP

169 N. 21111

Middloporl

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

NIASE Certified M.chanic

CAL~

247-3522
St. Rt. 331
Fals, Ohio

IIITERIOR·EliTERIOR

Ctrttfled Uc.na.. Shop

TII·CO. TERMITE
&amp; PEST CONTROL
SKI19r.

painting. Let 1M de
it for you.1

VEIY .ASONABLE

HAVE REPIIIIICES
nt:91s-•no

1/4/89-tfn

AlPH.a 992:5612
Tr•••••••l••

Tal

or 992·7121

1-100-535-2199

·

•ANYTHING
AT ALL
Announcements

985-4422

butlniU •pace
lor rent In Mlddioport. Ail
utlihiM lncludod. Air condhionod. $200Jmonth. Coli 1141182-11545 7:001.m.-4:00p.m. or
114-812-8341ovonlnga.

1986 Chovy P.U. outo, $4485;
1988 Dodgo 0-50, oavollko now:
1985 Foret Rang er P.U . aut'o, .
$3995; 1982 Dodge Ranger P.-u.
$1295; 1985 Ford Van $3595;
1972 Chevy P.U.j 1984 Nissan
4114 47,000 miles; 1984 &amp; 1985
910 Blazers ; 1986 XLT Bronco
II; 1979 Ford F250, 4• 4 $2195. B
&amp; D Meters , Hwy. 160 N. 614446-6865 or 61'4-446-61 89,
'

•

!==;;;~~~~~~~~==~~u

l

PIIDIIE

949-2168
&amp;'

MORRIS

•SHRUB
TREE
TRIM end RE·
MOVAL

EQUIPMENT
•UTOiliACTOIS .
eECIIO PIODIKTS

eLIGHT HAULING

•HOWAlD IOTAYATOIS

•Y AIDMAN MOWDS
OINTEISTATt IATTEIIES

•FIREWOOD

MDIII$
EQUIPMENT
742-2.55

EVENINGS

Salolll St.

4/l/88/tln

lllllanii,OII;
6/30/1111

f:=a~~~=:~L~is~t;enin&amp; Dii:ev:;ice=s==~
!: ~:~~~~~= llelring Aid Sales &amp; Sanrietll

EVIIuations For All Aps

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
Licensed' Clinical Audiologist

a

L09T·BIIck and ollvw fonalo
German Sheph1rd1. aniWera to
"Cody". Frloildly. HOWirdl Loll
In Hovon Hoighlo. 304 8~2250
orl14 3111481.
Loot: Malo 9ch,.uzor, loll In
the Pornaray Elem•ntary School
aroa. 114-1182-8078 or 814-1112·
2178. .
.

7

Gallipolis

&amp; VIcinity
1131 Cholhom Ave. Frl I 8aL
3 lomlly Gar- Solo: 8oDl 2 3,
4. Slllurdoy • -sunday, MOnday,
Rain, .Shlno1 5 112 miln ·from
HoiJor Hoopllol on 150, llrot
haUu CIM Auto Porto.
Lote of men• uniform work
~ ohlrto, all olz- Womono
olothlng.
naugood.
Somtlooll.

...~BQK~S:·~~~~~::::.::~~
...........
Stop B;y lild See Ua! - Ftnucla1 A..Ufble
MASTERCARD and VISA WELCOME

IIUIW _ , -.INIIIOA. . _

&amp; VIcinity
2 Family Yonl loll, Fd and Sal.
Sllpt 1 6 2, • lhllo bit of
ovorythlng. 174 N. Park Dr. Pl.
Pll NO ·sALES boloro I:GO.
T - will oloo bo 11uobo11
ca,.lo lrodt or ooU.
Communny 'lord Sill, Loon
Sod., Roiul. So~ Sllpr . . 2 thN
4111, Rain or ohlno.
Garogo Bolo, Fd 6 BilL Sept. 1 I
2. 1:110-3:00. MiRon "&lt;1, Camp~
Conley. Llltlo bit olovarythlng.

.

.

Goroga Sill, Thuroday1 Frldoy,.
Ap.
Slllurdoy. 2923 Mapil ,.,._
pllancao, lompo, lOla mloc.

Yard Solo Thurw1 l'fl, 811. Rod ,

briolc houoo
- Fotry.
Jowolry
Shop, Ollllpalio
410 Shotgun. ~UM Clnner,.::whol nolo, plllowa, dollllo,
oiOihoo, B·B gun.
. • .
Yanl, lale, 4 lamiiiM, Frl' and
8aL 8:00 1111 ?. 3 pooP
tho Flatrocl&lt; G,_ry Slorw.

3

YIUd lola, Fd-811, 1:00 1111 ?. •
laby olothlo llzo 0 Up Knick
KnaCko, more, 103 E,;gllah "
Road.
•
=,-=a-=:z.:-,:::o-=
:oo-=,_-:3:-:&amp;:-:Ma::-:-in-S:-t, :
boOido
J.R.
Homo , lm' ·
,.,.._,.nto. Rain localld 111 ·
lrtllor GrHr Rd.
·'

.

.

=
..-...

4 laonlly janl - · 114 milo oil
Bulovillo, Gaorgao c-k Rd.
...... , ... 2nd, :lid.
.

nu--

Pomeroy,
Middleport

e lamlly. Frl I Bol. Lolo at . _
too
10 . .- .

·~

, . . . ., botoro a.. od .. Ia run.
odltkln • 2:00 p.m.
Ptldo¥.. _ , odlllon •· li:OO

caro

Services

-·

-'

33

3 family. Clothing, oralla1 !"loo.
Tlnn, ~d1 · ' lot W . Br&lt;Cil Rd.
--villo8chool
.

..

-..

_......;===----·'

Pt. Pleasant

3 family. 2 Bolmont Drtvo. (011 of
VIne SirtOil Bopl. 1, 2. 1-8'. LOll
1
boby, chll....., mono
womiiW clolhlng.

lamilv. Clothing, Iampo,
dlolloo. lloclalftodo, chonglng
lablo,leyo. Frl, 811, H . ..-I.e'
Grandi.
4 lamltloo. Clothoo. mloc, .....
nltwe. tt Nln, on beck porch.
~ 11-SIIpt 1. 411 llrtalllr...

=·

e

Yard Solo 34011 Monman
A,.nuo, Sopl. 4 and I, Moci. and
Tuoo.
..

••thokl,

il.,y:!LO:

aeoo.

from

Bluo Fountain MOiol. Bomolhlng
tor.,.ryonol

3 tomlly lumnu,. and yard ..lo:
Fdl Sat, 81111. lot I 2nd. R•ln or
oh no, oil Fourth Galllpollo.

Rd. In
.
·lldwoll.
11om
llodnoy
ALL YaniBoloa lluol Ia Paltl In
Advonol. IIEAOLINI: li:OO p.m.

UGLE RIDGE
· SMAU
ENGINE REPAIR
PARIS &amp; SIRYICI

Eaatem Av.nue, acron

.

YARD SALE· 4G1 Chootnul '
StrHI, HendlrMn. 1 Lm.... p.m.
81orllng T-y. Bopl. I.

~17

•Washers •D ryers
•Range •F reezera
•Refrigerators

Yanl Solo: Sot. only. 2301

-. 1-. *·

!

Plno St Gonloolla. { - l y boo' .
hind Bupor Amorlool 811-y •
only. 8:00a.m. to 4:00 p.m. 114'
~......

.._. .....

..

=~k~":l ,':,:""~~mora~

YardS&amp;ie

::z:: ,614) 446-7619 Cl' (614) 992·2104
Second Avenue,llac 1213
- .Gallpolis, Ohio 45631
or at
I':1v:~~r~:~ Memorial
Hospital
Hp, Pomeroy,

•r.·

&amp;

;:'n

L09T·22nd 6 Jofforoon, oman· Yonl Bale: Hll aNI her 12 !'Pd. ·
blkH, Iota of adult Winter
boagloio17 roars old, brown '
white male. Need• meclclne. clothoo, - - . . cooto. ole., ·
R-1304-1711-7342.

LAWN lOWER REPAIR

BILL SLACK
992·226.

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

Giveaway

.

&amp; SERVICE

RSIIIISS PIIDNE
li' ·I&lt;IUI M2•6S50

Crook Rd.

Llltor llllnod ldtl..., 304-6711S57t.
ThrM lomll)l glloawo,., clothlo
all olzn, FU, sat, Mon, Roinoit,
Malo G.oldon Rolrlovar mlxld Cherry SL Vinton.
·
PUP!o1· Hod oholo, -rmod,
houtebroken, well-trained. To Th.....SOI. 3 lornlly, intonl, lad-.•
oxceillnl homo. 614-742-2011.
dlor I aduH ololhing, g l o - ·
mloc. 112 milo cxa Goorgo'o
6 Lost&amp; Found
C..okRd.

Wo Cony Flohlng BuPIIII•
Your Phone
I C-l,ble Billa Here

FREE ESTIMATES

1r1.-,

.•c-

r,..

Female Golden Retrlev.,, real
aood wllh kldo. 3 yooro old. 114-..114.

Midllll•art, Olio 4$760

Gutter Cleaning

z

.:"'.J:

No Hunting or TrenP.RI?.:;
lha properly ol Hollie
,
Signed Emlo Grimm.

161 North 5ocllllll
SALE~

3

es

1-n-·a-lfn

WANTED

KEN'S APPUAIICE
SDYICE

1971
Ford
pick-up, :i02
Automatic with Air Cond. 11.,.
448-mo.

ns.

New,_....,

Downapouts

....

-:-.:;gii"'":;.J,.,!:•t;:

Control Assn.

loyo.

"Must Ia llpolr..le"

112, 1..:1, Kklll and aduH
_.,... houooworoo, mioc. AI.
141 ol CoiOIWY.

lleMbor llltional Pest

Pli.NG IIIEA111NGI

Gutters

z

1978 GMC Caballero hall lon1
PS, P B, AM·FM stereo, air, gooa
cond, S1,800. 304·875-2U5.

sm.

..

So~

:rERMITES • ANTS
SPIDERS
BEES •WASPS

.........,.ow.

NEW- REPAIR

~~

·

ont t djust
sta-nd
. there
h
.
,
'
...pre en e ISn t

~

-~ Solo: Ru-11 Folluro'o,
ou
ono onllo out AI. 218 on
dghl. rldoy Sopt 111. Sill. 2nd, ·
and Mon. 4th. Glaa.wart,
clolhlng, mllkg-. Iampo. atc.

992-7479

ROOFING

0

Rod, RNII, tOOII qulhl, cu,..

lolno1 _'!!hal~lo, Morot Sopl 4,
I, I . :J22 SpNOI St. Ext.

ROACHES • FLEAS

lt.' 13 North of

FREE ESTIMATES

Takt the pain out of

Plrlclng. Coli 814-4411-4241, 4411-

·

=

HomePerta
eMoblle Home ·
· Rentels
•Lot Rentals

5113/ft till

•Fill Dirt
.
742-2421

LINDA'S. ·
.PAINTING

VAU.GIIN

Rooi*nco. Thu,., frl, Sol. Lolo
of merchancllle, ota, new.

-Mobile

992-2371 .

Painting

11 D

..

Near North Gallo H.S., al. loon'o

MOBILE
HOME PARK

Call Anytime

LW.STEW
TRUCKING
•Gravel
•limestone

. 1977 Ford F·350. Automatic, air
cond., PSi · PB, $650. 61.4-37J..
2812.

eommo1011t opoca1 1400 oq.ft.

Comor Bocond ana Plno. A!nPIO

'J,"Iol

Announcements

CISTEIIIS

Howard L Wrlt-1

1976 Ford F700. Cab Over, Cib
and · Chassis, 391 engine, 5
1pnd , with 2 speed rur end.
614·742-2511 .

tor Rent

2321, or 446-4421.

Trucks lo r S ale

1972 ford short whoot booo,
whHe •poked Wh11ls, du.al •x·
haust, $1,000. 304-675-2457. ~·

On&amp;ce or email

.&amp;::,

Moving Silo: Opon
Evotythlng G-1 Wiclcor
kilo, - · lurnll..,.. loyo.
WD111011 and bobf clothn
11511p flborglloe flohlng
1111 Pathlindor. Locote!l
Rt. 321 nur South-orn
Sllpl. 2nd lhN :Jrd, all dly. .

mo.

WATER
SERVICE

1+1

992-1!756

"DOC"

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

CUTTING &amp;
WELDING

992-2725
.

ltfc S•vice

Roger Hysell
Garage
lt. 124, ,_.,. Ohio

B&amp;W
GARAGE

POOLS, WELLS

72

Sloaplng raomo whh cooking.
Aloo lrailor opoco. All hook-upo.
Call Ifill' 2 :00 p.m., 30C.713MI1, Mason WV.

46 Space

Sentinei- Page= '11

1'WD tr~~lt.r lpiGft, Route 1
Locuot Rood on rlghl, 304-67112
br.c
moblio
.
,
_
11
Evorgroon.
1
1078,
814
2878
1987 Sierra ·aMC low mil eage
--------"'78·
lorlar, . ._ dlohol, mioc.
2BR
lum'od
will!
woohor
i
Merchandise
11
Ct liei br NEA, Inc.
$6, 950. 3Q4-675~~2 29.
ours~
dryor, 112 milo E. of POJter on
21,000, v.s ruel InJection,
carport Sat. Sopt.2, Mon.
11'1. 114-3111-11863.
Household
1989 GMC Step Sido holt ton
and 1llae. Boot. 415. 1tJ.4. 118~_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __;_..::,
·· _:·~-----1~2b;r.~,iilu;;;m~io~h;odf,,~..
~bbilo;;,-;,;~,lr:-jciOon-n: 51
truck, V-6, Vortl-c engine, AM. fM
G od
Soulh Tl*d,lllddloport.
dlllonod, boautllul rlvorviow In -...,.==O=~S==,....-lloroo cossotle, 814·742·24112 or
Comor ·l - o y and Main
Kono~oo. footoro Moblio Hcmo
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
5(' MIIC&amp;IIaneoUS
30Hj75-4830.
llroeto. Rlclno Ohio, Don 11
Help Wanted
31 Homes ' for Sale
Porlt.B'14-4411-1102.
Solao and cholrt poicod !ram
GMC 6.2 dlou l, 58,000 oclual
8-or'o. lopt]nd !ram I lo ? -----":;..._..;;;..;.:.:;__
Farm Supplies
Merchandise
mlloo, original ownor. ox. c,o nd.
Clolhl- houoohold • - lllloc:.
2br., 1nobllo ho-, dop I rot. ntlto Sill. Tobloo ISO ond up
lo $121. Hld. .-bodo 1310 lo
614-446-2957.
,_,
-·~
requlrod. 814-4411-0527.
&amp;
PH; Rocllnoro U25 to S375.
~-- •-•h
lbporloncod otootrloal OGuntoo 3 bedroom ranch, 2112 bolho, 2
and lumoco wHh
Ho.~ _ , , . . . _ on aalnport(!ll, lor 1 8oulhoootom - garago, nico r141ghborhood, 78 ocroo with old !ann houM Lompo S25 lo $121. Dlnolln Coal
blowt.r 1ncl controll, $250. 30473 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
PI no
- · 1 Rd.
Sllpl. «;;IIIo oloctrical dillrlb&lt;Jior, Bond lomlly """" lOhh ll,.plooo, Potnl Pluoonl oroa, 304-8711- S101 and up lo $491. Wood 175~115.
·IOblo
w-8
~hOirt
$2115
IO
$785.
~~·=it~ ':.:~
rooumi to 8oula lox 011LGo~ clooe to alomontary ·ochooi, 1741. 304-711-6252 or 304-77111975 Jaap, CJS, naw tlrt•, new
Oooko S148 up lo
Hulohn FlreplacolnHrl ollllooi 2 opood 61 Farm Equipment
- • - machlno, mioc.
llpotlo Ooily Trlbuno, 825 1hlld H2,000. Pioplor Hoighlo, Pl. PH. 8051.
muHier, $1750. 614-44S..141 af·
bl-r.
304-175-35011.
S400 6 up, bunk bodo cornplllo
-~
Avo., Gallipclio, OH 41831,
304-8711-1317. ·
ter 6 or on weekendt.
1874
lnternatlon•l
Tractor.
335
Fumlohld houH ll'ollor, lor '""'· wllh .,....,... 1215 and up to
Moving: OUr funk oou1c1 bo your
Cummlnl, new tlrea, 38 rears, 1982 Ford E·250 van, 154,000
~-- s:fl 112 E. lloln
IN A RUT
3br. hornol lull bo_,.nl, 2 3 mlloo on AI. 7. AC,
S3tl. baby bodo $110 Moll- For Sill· ConcreY ancf Pialtlc cab
over, plul log trailer. 614- mlle1, 16 It Sq~are Stern Low•
Po-.,. lohind Epl.c;;paf Tlrld o1 minimum wago? fl..,._, • mi. from town, coli nalghborhood S1751mo.
luo ... or baX 1prlng• full ar twin MPIIc lankt. All tlzea. RON 848..:1283
or 814-69~-6191 .
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jockalumn canoa, good cond,
Church and Municipal building. 9ortng, dood and lobo; Wo'ro anytime 114-4411-rn5.
do;ioall; 114-4411-1071.
na, !Iron .... and $18. Ouoon acn,
OH. 1-800-837·8521.
$250.00 firm. 304-6/5-2039 1.h11
ooto
U75
I
up,
King
S3$0.
4
8aL Sllpt.2, II,.?,
looking lor a ll,.ly 1&gt;001111 who 3BR, 2 both, P'"ll"• 2100 oq. ft. Brnoll 2 bod_.,. lroilor,
Livestock
drowor ohoot 111. Oun Clbinola For Sola ' Sopl only. PRo.Mi1 63
5:00PM.
"'
Ona-"'4a=-.,-on.:...,-IY_
. ""So_pt_.2._I3_R
_ ut
_· :=,:~ 1: , :~1: ~"" ~':: ~.~ ,lf.~~l. ochcalo, ::,,~~~ ~:,onlh pluo l c!• l 10 gun. Baby &lt;11111-H $12.00
per
Mr.,
IIH ""2-:A-ng-,u-a"'H.,..o_ro..,.lo-rd.,...,-b""ul,-lo_on_o"":'8 1984 Dodge Custo m Van. 55,5100
,.,. 6 S45. Bod !rom• S25, GrMnhouM SUppiiM lnter'll mo old red &amp; white face, other
(11412111-1422
land 81., Mi&lt;lcloport. Kld'o
miles, $9,000. 1974 Sea Star
_.,...-:--::":-•:-=to'::-:11-12.=-:::--.:-:c-:- CloHd Tuoo. 1 Wid.
3br., both, 1 oulbulldlngl2 112 Troilor nlco cloon unlumlohld, Ouoon Size 131 6 king lromo S29.00. II ole S33.00 Cloo. Kon &amp; chocolllo $450. ooch. 1i77 Ford Boat, 70 horsa outboard, $3,000~
7
miiM South of Gan polfa, re•rlf"'cH r.qulred, Route 1 out 110. Good oollcllon olliOdroom Ed'• CirHnhou... 1577 Evant F-100 302 3 1pe1d pick up.
1968 Troutwood Camper, $1600.
m11a1
cablnl1s, Rd. Jocklon, OH.•
lalurday, Sllptombor 2nd. 1-4. JOB VACANCIES AVAILABLE IN lliLOOO
• . • 6.14-4411-8511 or 114-46- Loculi Rood on, rlghl, 304-1711- euHn.
1969 Chevy Camero, 67,000 ac;
Moln Stroo~ Roolne. · Roln or THE ARMY NATIONAL GUARD. •••'
1071.
.
holdboardo 130 and up lo Pl.
I yr. old Glidon Pony lo lrado luol miles, $2,000. Coli 614-742;
ehl,.,
Enilal tor lrH aklll lrtlnlng.
10 daya ume •• Cllh with ep. For Solo: Hio ond horw, 12 opel. for calf. Call ah• 5p.m. 814.41462578 after 6:00.
, •
1
room
houH
on
Sl
At.
7,
Unlurnlahtd
"
2
br.,
total
elec.
monthly
payceck,
college
aul•
pn&gt;Vod crodM. 3 mi. outllulavlflo Hully bicycloo. Aduft ownld.
. .pt.1ol,
3 bath•, walhlr I. dryer hook-up. C.p. Rd. Opon I A.M. lo I P.M. Men, Liko now 180 oach. 114-4411- 3021.
•4th • I Ia mIly. lonco;.~·limo milllll~orvlce. beloW Raccoon
1985 Plymouth Voyager, 4
Ri,._
CIOH' Sloro
•• t. now vinyl oidina. 3 gorogoo on roq'd. 1250/mc. 114-388-8311 or lhiU Ill. Cli1114-441-0322.
1188.
ATTENTION H01H Ownoro, cyli nder, air, AMIFM, · crUin •
Raclno. • LOlli of boyo and 304.a 31150 or l-800
_,
Paint
Plul
11
now
carrying
tack.
.01
114-{.18.1211
01
...
814-448;1004.
81 ln. TraciiHional lOla, chair, For Solo: Pool lablt $100, Paint PLu1, 2415 Jackson Ave., more, ta ke over payments. Call
w._om_,._no-,..,clol,....,hl ng:::...,.,..._ _ _ _ LADIES (or mon) NEEDED FOR Oorron 'WIIoon, 1/4 mi. abovo - -_.._ _ _ _ _ __
7
~
.,.
GOOD . PAYING TEMPORARY R-oon Brldgo.
Thcrnonlllo
ColiN lablo. Uko $11,500 BTU air condition•, Point Plauant, phone 304-675- In evenings 614·388-Bfn.
44
Apartment ·
lapl. 1ol,2nd,4th,llh. 1:00-4:00. OFRCE LIKE WORK. NO EX·
now. AI tor $400 or wUI ooll S121. 814-4411-8253.
4084.
1966 Ford Bronco II, 56,000
Ouy ~. Arl&gt;lugh Addition, PIRIENCE NECESSARY. ALSo All ooporlloly. 114 44104113.
for Rant
3 br., homo loealld on
CherrY llby Pigmy g011t1, 7 week• old, miiOI. 5 - d . 614-446-7720.
Hondcroftld
~ Plaine. R-illor~.: NEED LADIES (or mont WITH AI. 110. Pllcod lo mo... 1141 BR unlum.
Ringo I rolllg. 20.1 cu 11 · - typo doop i:obinotlbookcaoo .JVC AMIFIJ Clllafter 5:01fPM, 304-773-5189. 1166 GMC 314 ton, 4 whool
=~
CAR FOR LIGHT DE IVERY 31U't11 .
fiiOvldld. We or, HWOQO, gor- ,_.,, ... - - 304-882-2211. tuner, cun, deck, reel to rWII,
drl~, 614-446·2516 or 304-&amp;7S.:,
__ ,_ ~of
clot~o,lla.
WORK.
GAS
ALLOWANCE.
AP.
bogo, pold. Oop. I Rol. 114-4411- 8 Toll Chy dining room chllro, lurntabio, Booa 301 Bpoakora. Hall Tonn- Walker and hall 5725.
•--. - - . 0
••
PLY IN PERSON ONLY. (NO Loa • •
tor
1110
by
·
3
Quarter
hew.-,
G•ldlng,
1,1
oo
lt4-448-13t14.
PHONE CALLS! TO: MRS. CAR· beirDOtM, In ground pool, 4345.
.. 2nd. I • I0 I
. .pi,
OuNn
AM
oyllo,
oolld
illlhoa·
lbo, seoo. 304-11711-43,12.
• •
ut-'llte, bllrn on 15 acre•,
Chapman'o,.
booldl.m.
DIM '-p.m.
Pizzo, TEAl: ECONO LODGE MOTEL $82,000.
13131 lllhll In ltock euper
74 Molorcycles
on Plain Valley Rood, 1br. - largo ·khchon, wuiHiry nay1Iabrie 00110, very nico, $50. Jet
Syrocuoo. L-~ Iota ofglrll APP Y TUES. 1-1:30 P.ll.
ulo
pflco
S3,015.
Blue
Ridgo
Roglllorld Corrlldolo Rom. 3
OICn.
304-178-1104.
h;;;;lcup, aduno only. No plio.
304-8. . . . ·.
1976 500 Yamaha StrHtbikt, 2
Moohlnory and Tcalo, 304-182- yuro ald. 1131. 114-882-7802.
olothlng neumom to ala I, Lady to ciRn houu • .,., othtr
Total electric. can 114 411 1827
County Appliance. Inc. Good 3138.
cycle. New tlrtt, new chain, exc•
anor
lp.m.
~'::'
=~~~~=.lot• woek. Will nogOIIIIO . . .. 114- 32 . Mobile Home~
Regllttrtd purebrltd Llmous ln cond. $350 .. Price firm. Serious
uood applioncoo. T.V. oolo. 01&gt;0n
1
44
2 bedroom aportln&lt;lnt, .Mld- I a.m. Ia I p.m. . Uon ..Sat. i14- Large m1t1l . .k, chair, $150i .bull, 4 yrl old, Wt. apfUOX 2,000 lnquirloo onlyl 614-446-7572 o.l'
11-1324 """' p.m.
for Sale
lb. S1,!100. Culton Umousln, 304- lor 5:30p.m .
.
llapi.2,W. One dly onlvl Yard Loroino Orono Dporotor, Dnlg
d!oport. Partially lum!ohod, 4&lt;41•11'!1. 127 3rd. Ave. Go~ Crltl1m1n 1r tablt. naw,
cnoarln, S750; Hondo 125" 3 895-3o77.
uloo out F.-oodo Rd. lr mlloo Lino, Salary dopondo on ••·
· •• -llo H
314
uiMIIIH not lncluclad. Oo- llpolio,....,
1981
Yamaha
750
VIrago-Harley,.
· omo.
acro. requlrod. S175.00 por month, fnwhMI 1750 now; 14" drlil pro11
!ram lplo. Noiocn and Yonkor f:rlonco. AC::y 11 Jooco Inc., l2li1id1 plpee, H ll $1 000"" or lracht
For •I• or lrodl on ploco cl clud• garbage. l-114-1182·2381 fdgldoiro Eloctrlc Ringo. Al- 112• cop. S15!1;. 85 H.P. More, 64
raldertoL Fumltur~, tub. toltt,
wv
-·
-·
Hay &amp; Grain
around.
Qo
out
Rt.
248,
tum
da
mond. 114-1182-1083.
tor car or 4-whNier of equal"
Lovotory. Kldo to lduft ololhlng.
AI. 33, lrl.
Elcc.
cond.
Slow.
814-4411-36i1
:::-:~-:--::::-:::'-:::::::--31
11
vlaue. 304·576-2818.
~ :
Groat..- clolhoo buya. Lalo I ,.,..._· --,.---:-:---::-- ~ghl, go pool Kino Church to 1_;..r•...,·,....---:--:---:--=-- GE 11.2 ou 11 wllllo nlrlgorotor lt4-448-7361ollor 7p.m.
Ear Com. 304-675-4308.
IDf ...,....
M1n to do general farm work on Boohon Rd, oul 1 milo, 2nd 2 bedroom opto. tor rwnt. Clrtroa.r on lift.
potld. Nico -Ina. laundry wllco mokor, 4 yra. 304-875-1378 Straw lor oolo. S1 .50 bolo. OH Round baiHJ. exc q_uallty, graB• 1988 Hondo CR 500. Vory goOi(
• 1101 dioc lor ..lo. USO. 814-849- and Allollo •18 • $25. Morgan condition, one owntr, $feoe;.
1111. Yanl Ioiii Slllllombor 111, I :d::-o-'lry:...to_rm=.1::-1:-:4-44=11-::;2;:41::;2.=:-7-: 1174 Klrkwcoci, 12xl0, 2 bod- laollhiooava[llblo. Cill114-ll:!- oftor5:00 PU.
Phono 614-992-8115.
~ ,
2rill,
3nl.
Oftlo
Rlvoo Now aco..,tlng applloaliono lor room. 2 ICrH ol land, oUI 3711 EOH.
OE •"'-lie W.oi!Or, 191. 3058 oftor 5:30p.m.
Fonn, AI. 35, Pliny, 304-137·
~....,.., S.... Clrpot lull 6 porl·llmo ornployooo. .lpG &amp; J Cycle, we now bore cylln,.r
wooho•
, 191. Whooleholrt • now or uood. 3 2018.
building wHh oloclric, chlckon 31 W. ofll. 2 br.. 1 both, privolo Whirlpool
8ham-, guitar .,plllor, DIY In · l.ofobl'o Pizza.
dryor, SIS. ~er.
whlolld -ric ocootor. Coli Strow tor oalo. $1 .50 bolo. 614· ders, flit service for boring atf1t
toni, oollao .,......_ ~ Sllvw Brldgo Piau, Galllpal111, houoo. bonk ooillr. 114-1112· onclooed polio. Cl- lo Whirlpool
Maytag auto. wuher·.: dryer RogoroMidi..l, 1-800-88~104 .
pilton delivery, Gary Klnn~lnl.7121 .
:
grocory otoroo • ohot&gt;fllng con- HI,
boroo, - . . . u-. clothing 11a.m.-4p.m.
441-4111 Evonlngo: 114-4411- 304-6711-1665.
• •
5150 oach. Rotrtg., trOll
and morw. Rootr10 tor ronl by
rer,
wit•,
MwerL.
tralh
1178 141.70 Elcana loa~~tMI on
7157
nlghlot-.
R.D•.only wanlod. 11 hou'"i IIIIo AI. 790 nlilr MorcoNillo, providld. S:llllmo. ""II &amp;14- lrw1 1150. Sldo by oldo rofrlg,, 55
Building
1
SUo. Elocitrlc • - · 30 ln., Sill.
75 Boats Motors ·
-k. W.I.C. OGUnoollng. II
4&lt;41-8727. .
Frlgldoiro dryer, S71. OE *Jer,
ombor 111,2ndL3nlli4th,51h. Cciunly Haollh [)opt. 114- • pflco roducoa lo S7500 114-256Supplies
1177
01114-256-1528.
for Sale
MooN, Al.r
ypooo. ••Aportmonl lor ronl, 304-1711- avacadD, Stl. On range, 30
Transportation
Inch, S75. Bkagga A~~~~troncoo, 11 ft. 4•4 Inch O.k tlamboro,
ll 1111 Rd.
-•·
2218.
1171
.........
14lcll,
2
br
..
11412 11 V-bcllom baso boot andThe Molaa .Locof School Dlllrtcl
Uppor AI- Rd. f14-441·73INI.
Morgon Farm, Rl 31, Pliny. 304.
trailor, $700. 304-675-1229.
·
Yard Slllol 8olurday only.. 1:00. lo -lUng quallflld •:r,pllcanle m..:~ll2tl. . .
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
·837~011'
71
Autos
for
Sale
3:00 _p.m. 40130 llurol Cllll Rd. lor J11o poaillon o1 R.. or Guida 1m Clalnnonl 3 bod-.n, HI- BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON GOOG USED APPLIANCES
1985 Sunllner pontoon boat 24
Wlilhlrl, drytl'l, relrlger..ortl, llock, · brick, _ . , alpoo, win. ' Tho Ebllno.
tor o vlouolly handlolllllod up ......,lol, 304-8711-IOIIZ.
ESTATE~,, 538 Joci&lt;Aon Piko
-~~--.
Claildo Wln- 1W4 Ptvm0\ftt1 fury 1tl. Has 1Ir, ft. 40 hp Johnson motor wllh
!ram l1~r.. mo. Walk to I
Yonl u1o1 Five Aofnlo aroo, lludonl 111-ng Buckovti.HIIIo
~
1112 'Naohua 14x'l!)l 2 _.,. ... mcvioo. Clll114 Ill 2511. EOH. U - Rlvor Rd. Boolclo llano loro, Rio G,.ndo, ·o H cau 114- 1hock1, nMd1 ellgnment. 614· trailer, $4,700. 30W75-3978.
Joint voeotlonlr
SOhG&lt;Ilcontact
'"'"'" panda.
251·1887.
.
24W121 .
C..ll Motel. Call 114-441-7388.
Pomeroy. 45029 WI 111111 Ad• ~·
~ oolod
porocino ohould
I14,:44S:01ou.
Pum. Apl. 1 br., 240 utiiHoe Pd.
Auto Parts &amp;
""'algtiL 8apL lla; 1-?.
Dr. R. Qlo~ll Holliday ol 8141175 Formulo Firoblrd l porto. 76
1883 Trlumph, 14l&lt;IO, 2 bodFourth Avo, Gaillpalll, 114Sllurdoy. 413 Onnl 742-3113 or 114-112-2153. Thlo roomt, 1 ~ blthl. central air, 120
Yonl 114-4411-11118.
.
Accessories
Sl., Mi&lt;lcloport. FrM•il owing poohion to bo ftllod lm- w11hor/dryo&lt; 8110 dock, un- 448-4411 aftor 8p.m.
I mo. old PHk-a--. block l
1175
Marcldn,
450
Sill,
oun~ildreno clolhol. 14-882' mldllloly.
dorpln,nlila.
condition Fum. EHicloncy 1175 lllillloo
whHe. HouH tralned. Sholl. root. All option•. Naw . paint. Ford Sllver•Spoka tactorY M1g1
centers and blauly~
Want to ..,., eome eJdra on rented" SOC.
754047 or pd. Short bolh. 507 Bocond,
114~41-1811.
Lool&lt;o, Nno vory good. $5,000. w/chi'oma
rings, alze 5x5112·15 lnchla.
Gollipoho, 114 441 4411 .allar
_ , ·Wily not •II ol 114-317·7120. .
114-378-2211.
304"-882-3401 or 304-173-9586.. 1
lp.m.
, 9 Wanted to Buy
No ouppiiM to buy. No 1111 Rodmo~ Bocllonol 28'156'
1978
Comoro.
Biuo,
80,000
-=eom-p~o~-:-:-.---=....
- ..
=-=.~:-:-lu-:-,. cal &lt;ICIIng. No dollvorl&lt;lfl. Fr• :Jbr., 2 both, CIA. mull bo Fumlohod
2
bedroom
mlln. 114-985-3374.
· 79
Campars&amp;
apartment, $250. per mo::.:'u•
nh..-o I onllq-. Aloo -.1 I 1300 kh. liow hiring tor 1011.,114- rnovod. 114-448-11584 ol1or 1.
.. . . .
7
eloctrlc.
$100
dopooH.
711448-7002.
"'
1
1::7::-11
'='
'M'
"
'
o
n:-:1.,-o
'=c,-orl7:o-a
1r:-o
:o
nd.,.-,
-w-;:;111
coal hfll... SWAin'• Furnllure
MolorHomes
1887
Oorivilio,
.
tolol
oloclrlc
3800.
1 Auction, Thlnl 1 on.._ I141nde far •mtlter auto car In ~,o:-::,,::-2-:-,,~uc:':'k~c~om"",,.=r.-::
. $::-600:::.. -=eo-::11:;
Wonlod: l.ody~o
ala wllh ol- 14170, hool pump, 3BR, 1·112
441411L
good cond, 304-675-7649.
dorlr ......, In
pllyolcol bol.h . 114-2411-8244 onylimo, Groclouo living. 1 and 2 bodahor 4 p.m. 614-446-4015.
::
room aplrtmtnta .t VIllage
-Ilion In o
ny. From 1:00 2411-N77 ~aorl.
1e7t
Oldlmoblle
Custom
~11
Inch
81ocll lor until 1:00 -luloyo, Bond 1:::~:.::;,:;;;:~=:-:-::c-:::::-.­ Molie&gt;r
and
Rivoroiao
Fonllruoll. Coll-14-112-3140.
Cruiser. 4 door etallon wagon. 7 1973 Seiro Scotty Sportsman
ruumo lo: Tho DollY Sonllnol, 1881 CLOIEOUT SALE. Wont o ApallmWIIo In Middleport. From
pasaenger. Llkt new, lull power, camper (Deer Hunter Special) ~
Fumhlft and oppl._.. by lho Box 721C P - - 0"
lullury .Homo lor lho ,prloo al • 1184. CIII114-IMI2-7787.
19,000 miloo. $1995. 614·992- Sleep• 4, gas stove, gas light , ·~
'
·
.•
,.
'
&gt;
'
Dlaln
Jtina?
Cho
..
1~
2
good cond . $550. 814-446·0804. 1
pioCo ot h o u - . Folr
17111.
bod""""' lolond tub
ol, Now occopllng 'I'Jpll..liono lor
~ bolng paid. Call ., 4-4411- 12
Situation
11-. poddte tan; dolu1o cor- 2 bedroom apt, lly carpolld,
1980 Chev. lmaplt Station 1978 Campor, 14 ft. 111epe IS, )
Wanted
fill and . mirrored wordn&gt;bo or.plllncH, Wltlt 1nd trlth
Wagon, air, cruis e, automatic, stove, furnaces. refrigerator,.:
-..
f1 1,800.
lnciUdol p1ckupo fiiOvidod. Malnle,.nco
eld:ra clean (texaa car) Diesel good condition. ~\.200. 304·773- ·'
5361 .
~
Wo
lo( oldorly and · han· dollvery ond HI up, pluo control frM Mvlna c.l oH to •hopping,
$2600. 814-256-1964.
~~~~~~~~--·~
dlcappoct In ..., horilo. 21 yoaro air and vinyl oklrllng, IMIIIIod. bankl and IIChOOII. For mort ln1880 Ford Thunderbird, air
lormollon coli 304-182-3718. E·
oKporlonco. LPN on ..11. .._ Col 1-aoo-721-4048.
Boccond.,
cruise, $1500i 1964
qual
opporlunHy
houolng.
Income homo. Colll14-1112-8873 Largo ooloellon of uood homoo. lion 8 accoplod.
Chovrolll Bololr, 4 doer, $1500.
ofter 7 =00 p.m. tor - · lntor- 1,10",12""" 14 wldo. Prico !ram
Phono 304.a75-4891.
motion.
·
1300 lo
1-aoo-721-4041.
Ono bedroom lumllhod opt,
Qui no
11110 Ponlloc Grand Prix, good 81
Home
Pte 1140 qulno. Any condHion. 15
SChOolS &amp;
Roooociesood doublo wldlo, :::=~ 30~;-::ila~~ oloon, no
oond, $1 ,200. 304-8711-7158.
,,•I
Cloh Pold. Coli 114-H2.all7 or
111U Horton 24140, 112,500, or
Improvements
at
ctl
I
1980 Pontiac Setf11rl Station
11-1-512·2411.
n N
on
1178 Homlhon HouH, 24lt55, Prlvolo
mcdom
lumlohld
Wogon. 11500. 814-446-2624.
BASEMENT
-·
S12,500. Kona"!l Mobilo Homo oHicllncy opl. WHh goroga I
RE-TRAIN NOWI
TOP CASH poid lor 1183 rnodot
Runs good, looka fair.
WATERPROOFING
:
llorogo. Walor pold. 114'4411and nowor uood ..,., Brnhh SOUTHEASTERN
BUmNESS SliM. 114 UHI52.
Unconditional llfatlma guaran- ...
8720.
Bulok-Pontlac, 1111 Eollom COLLEGE. 521 Jack- Plco. 12150 mobllo 1881 Chovy Challon $450; 1977 tee.
..,..,. furLocal ,.ft rencn furn ished. •
Ch•liY Monte Carlo, $350j 304- FrH estimates. Ca ll collect 1· •·
~ Glllpallo. COli 114-4411- CIH 114-441-4317. Rog. No. 1111Inc. 2BR, opl., now
"""'"' lot 10111!0 1111 lol on Sun Rogoncy,
11·10551.
578-2818.
Valley Drive, I'NidY to move Into. pluth carpet, new piilnl,
614 ·237-0468, do~ or night. R o •
Prlcod nagolionoblo 114-4411- ulllilloo, porholly pold. $175/mc.
a a r a B 1 1 e m • n t,
1982
Mazdo
RX7.
$800.
614-992Ueod .lumlt... """ llouoohold
Clll304-675-8104.
Waterproofing.
.
~1. I&gt;
'
6848 after 6:00 p.m.
oppilanooo. · PhDM 814-742- 18 Wanlad IO Do
2041.
All typo _,.,.,. - . 33 .Farms for Sale
1982
Old•
98
Regency Fetty Tree Trimming, stU'TIP
• ...
Brougham AC, auto, crui11, All ,.moval, call304-675-1331 .
Ueod lumllurw by lho ploc&lt;t ot DllloO, oklo 111&lt;1, garagoo, ate.
onliro houoohold olio ooiilng. 814-4_, ovonlngo. and 22 ..,. !ann. 1 milo from Go~
power, extra clean, diesel Ron 's TV Service, ep~ela llzlng : ,
114-4411-1113 oll&lt;lmoono.
(Tox0o
Clrl
814·256-1964. In Zenith also 11rvlclng most ..
114-742·2455.
=~.• on ~llcklop rd. 11,._.
$3,000.
lobyolltlng In Chrlollon homo.
crthor brands. Hous e calls. also .
Rot. 6 dlyooro a1p. Rodnov VI~
1984 Rero, $4,300. AC, Cruise, aoma a ppliance ,.pairs. WV ..
Employment Services :1"2.II, cal allor 3p.m. 114-245AM·FM ca11et1a, tih whHI, PB, 304-576-2398 _ Ohio 614-44&amp;, ..
2454. '
auta, 304-e75-5339.
1165 Chryolor Now Yorker, good Ro1ary . or cable tool drilling.
11 Help Wanted
Most wells camplatad s ame day.
ohopol"'dld, 304-875·2722.
Pump •ales and Mrvlce,· 304S310tDoy _..,;ng ~ .,.
1885 Ford Mullong GT. 5.0, 302 895-3802.
dii'OI I'Hplo coli you. No ox""fine. T-Top. AJC, 111 pawar.
SWEEPER and t ~wl ng machine •
porlonco - ~eon (rotun- Holp wllh thf oidlriV in tholr
., -885-44117.
repair, parts, and s uppli es, Pick ~
utonalon homo. dlyo ollly.lt4-441..:1427.
dobloJI-3111-7
1981 Chevrolet Spectrum 2 up and dallvary, .Davis Vac uum •
Po2732A..
.
lllao Paula,. Day' Core Cll)lor.
door1, r.ct, 5 apeed, lour wheel Cleaner, one half mile up "
2 nurHo ai&lt;IH, ohol'_ cllrlt, . In- Bolo, allonloblt, ohldcoro. 11-F ·
drive, 47,000 mlle1, one owner, Gaorgos Creek Rd. 614 -44~ :
quire 11 Oddo and Endo Shop. I o.m. • 1:10 p.m. Aaoe 2,._10.
economical 41 mpg, $3,500. 0294.
MiddllpOit
Before, 1ft., .ehoo[ Drop-lM 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
304-812-3200.
•
warcame.l141111224.
Septic Tank Pumping $90, Gallla
Fumlt hld
eHiclency,
111
AVON I All Artoa I Shirley
1D8t Utrc. Lynx, IUIO, &amp; a ir, Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRI SES,
1 ocro lolo Galilooll Fo~ry, clly Second Avonuo, Golllpollo. All
Spearw, 3~71-1421.
Atmadtli\g Interior, exterior ..aer, IOW?I-2'722.
$2895i 1885 Ford E~r1 S1695i Jackson, OH 1·800·53 7-9528.
•
utllhlt• paid, lhl,.. • ltath.
pointing.
rootlno, cone,..•
1185 Muolong $2585; U87 Pont.
S135tmo.
11
4-4411-3841.
AVON • All .,.,, Coli Marilyn work. :o;octrlool 'I alumblng.
5000, nlco $4895; 1887 Dodgo 82
Plumbing &amp;
304-812·2141.
Eip. HH rofo....,n, P I - coli
&amp;00; 1885 Uncoln Town Car
17800; 1884 Lincoln Morlc VII,
~la.;,b:;.:•ro.;,ln,;.ar..:.:...wo
""nt-"ld-;-,'"ln-my=ht:oot=mo.=- allorlp.m. 114-211·1111. •
Heating
$5815i 1184 Lincoln Town Car,
114-2411-- Cllloftor 5p.rn.
Roof painting I COOling. l&lt;'llllor
Caner'• Plumbing
1uper
1Gas Pont~ sunroola, - · ' ........-.......
and Heatln9
bird· 188 Ford Thunderbird
nd lndl .·~-lo tor ,_._114471-2320.
Fourth and Pmt
12tH; 1881 Comoro $4U5; B e.
bu nooo of yaur ...,., Local
Galli polio, Ohio
D M'"oro Hwv. 180 N. 814-446Amwor dlolrlbulor -110 ~ Wll blbvall In my ho1110.
1811 or lt4-4411-8181.
614446-3888
tor arillndi&lt;l
f14- - b l o rll-. R.,.,..
111·71a.
.
anlllblo.
All - · aloo
1111 11-10 Blozor, 4wd rod 6
-ndo.
Cltii1W411-1711.
Electrical &amp;
;
block, Ill opllono, oxco11on1 84
EARN MONEY Roedlng - I I i;~~~~;;;;;;;i;~iil,
condHion,
ooidng
o1450.
814130,000/YI'. lncome IIOtentlaL 1~like to do hot 11 • cnlng,
Refrigeration
'
~364,
Oolollo (1) -.ea7-IOCIO Ell. Y· .,1:..;,14-4,;.,;.4M711;.:_;=,;_·- - . . , - - 10181.
,•
Resldent.ial· or
commercial :
1117 Clvollor Z 24, ioodod, wiring,
new Hrvlce or repalre. ~
11,1100. 304-876-8524.
licensed electrician. Ridenour J
Fmanc1al
,.
1tl7 Cutlaa Citra, elr cond., Eloctrlcal, 304-671-1786.
AMIFM·, auto., dark blue mtalllc,
33,000 ....... $1,850. 304-6711- 85 General Hauling
3140 day or 175-4128 ovoning.
J &amp; J Water Slrvlce. Swimming 1
1881 GMC 3 quarter ton INck DOOtt , cl• t•m• , Willi . Call 11~ ~
4lc4, 4 opel., t11o1 lnjoclld. 350 ~45-8285.
llodol. Blom FL 114-441-2212.
A I R Wttlr Service. Poola, cl1- :
1881 01* Cllalo, Quad 4, tem•, w.,ll. lmmedlate-1,000 or j
luciH, 11,000 mhl, IKC. Con- 2.000 gallono doiiYOry. Coli 304- ,
dllon 110,000 11~411-5077,
175.a370.
'
1111 Hondo Accord XLI, I
Watter1on'1 Wattr Hauling,
opaod, loodod, 104-52M1114.
rusonable rat• volume dli- '
counto,
to 4,ooo copacHy I
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vthlcl• clotorno,2,000
poclo, wollo, ole. Coil
1ram
,,oo.
Fordo.
M-o.
lif'.il f ·,t.Jk
304-178-2918
Corvotloe. Chovyo. Surpluo.
Q,.poe tor oolo, call after 5:00 Buyo,. Guido 1-8011-187-8000,
87
Up hols tery
lbl. 11-10188.
41 Houses for Rent
Pll, 304..711-1881.
Aug.31-laJ!1.2. 1:00-8:00. 811

,

Ali'Mojor I Minor
Repelra

992-

8-21·19-1

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Lury WriRhl

Furnished

Ona ocro lot, lrollo,. alloWid,
ohy Walor, GolliPolll Fotry. 30417&amp;..:1722.
.

Monday.
· ·
Giant Yard Slllol 4&lt;41 Spruce St.
Ell, Fri,.Bot, Bun. 1-1. FumHuro,
QUnl, ........,., toye, ICMIII; I.
oniac.

SYIACUSL OHID
Molt For•un 1nd
DomMtic Vehidll

LIIIESTOIIE
SPREAD
DIU HAULED

SINCE 1969

Letart

Mobile Homes
for Rent

AUTO - DIESEl
SERVICE

'MOO GALLOII ·
WATEI SEIVICE

1 0% OFF AU PIRMS
WALK-IN WELCOME

VAUGHN'S

ALLEN'S
HAULING

DEAD 01 AUYE

FIXTURES : Manuel Cash Register, Scales.
Outdoor Sign, Peg Boar!l, Peg Board
Hooks. Reeks, Stands.
INVENTORY: Beads. Pom Poms, P1inta,
Mold Compounds, Asst. of Doll Heed,,
Ribbon, Christmas Kits &amp; Cr!lfts, Paper
Goods. Artificial F~era, Doll Fabric,
Cnadle Molds &amp; Acceuorih, Cord. M1ke
- Bake Kits, Chenille, AI Types of Mold a &amp;
Forma, Cake Decore1ing Supplies, Pipe
Clelners. Plus many items too numerous to

42

ooroga Solo: Aquodum, llirgo
JnOtor a truck mat, tan, br~u
Utile, largo otono Jor, ~llhoo,
lorgo alze IodiN ciOiho~,
ohildrono and boby
o,
1own ,_,.., blcyclo liN placo
..,_, top, tooio, niloc. nlllo I
bolt8, chlln aaw, com at.ner,
grlftc*', fruh
Wptliblll,
..ndl• lnd hol&lt;lora. VIOO'!J
win- yam curlalno, - . •
oniiM Wool o1 Galllpallo an 141.

Daily

L;vestock

ROUSH
CONSTIUCnON

1,000 GALLONS

•FILL DIRT

3

Fd 1 Sal. I I 2, mloo. homo, I

a-lldotv.tloyL.....,

LltMRtl.

.

Hau• lor · rent In country. 2
bodroomo. B14-742·28M anor
.
1:00 p.m.

1111. W. of Oalilpolio on 141.

DAVE'S
SULL INGINE
IE Pill

In lutlallll, Oh.

Id

Racine. Roln ........

2111

6·5·'19-tfa

1-1:1-Hc

21/t . .s Out

Ere:.

houoo lor rent. Clrpotld
lhrouahout, IOial ollclrlc. FonCid rn bock yard. Locolld I
mille !ram Holzer Haopltol on
AI. 150 nNr North Galho High
School. S350. por month, 1310.
dopcialt. Coil 114-all-1311 eliot
l .p.m. .
.

4 lomlly. 8epl. 111.2nd. Curloino.
~·· d alzo clothing
and much more. Bony S.yro
rtaldonce, Yollowbu.tl RoOd,

Enlllf'tlll
nt Cent.,., clothl"f,
hand 111rdon lcalo, lawn - ,
ontlquoo, . _, Wad. J boyond Jumbo Contonary.

LIVE BAIT

992-6172

Ohio

Now thru Sept. 9, 1919

•LIMESTONE

CASH

992-2181

SeamltH GuHit'

CHEMR, OHIO

Entire Contents &amp; fixtures
· Over 10,000 Items

PAT HILL FOlD

MastiC - CtrlaintoNII&gt;
VInyl Sieling

· •GRAVEL

10:00 A.M.- AT GRANNY'S CRAFTS
128 MULBERRY AVf., ~OMEROY, OHIO

rtplirGatT...._

1-1·1••·

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

614-98

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1989

M acid !toil IIIII rod
eut radiators. Wt aha

3 b0dr0«r1, 1000 oq. 11. ronch

MAmN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE

The

Rooms

4 family, llaplombor ·2nd. Brlck
81., Rutland. Todd- clothoo,
truck, 1800'. Roln ..ncolo.

TACKLE BOX

MODELS

4

TRICOUNTY
RECYCLING

Eastern Meigs Co. 8 room house. 3 BRs, completely remodeled inside and out. Furniture,
carpet, drapes &amp;all kitchen appliances including dishwasher. Covered front porch, full
lencth of house. Approx. 1Yz acres of land with
2 storage buildings &amp; fruit trees. Additional
acreage available with 101 cabin. Rural water.
Located on pa~ Co. Rd. 2 miles off Rt.7.
Priced to sell at just $29,950.

.

PH. 949·210 1

NOW OPEN

Seelt Now At
Miller Homn

AU MAKES AND
rs.

- - , • • • • • atll

992-3897

CAMPGROUNDS

$17,995

SEIWICE
WtCIIII . . . . . . .

core radlahlri _.

BISSELL
SIDING
._ CO".

Oh .

10 n. IY 14 FT.
1990 MODEL
3 BR, 2 BATH

EATS

Pomeroy,

D&amp;R

SWEEPER REPAIR

OfFERED AT

-cuotom Pipe Bending
•Oil ChMgoe
•G,...eJobo
-Gen•al Cho11io
MllintMI•ce
•Computerizod Balancer
St. Rt.

MILLER HOMES
614-423-6371

15th.
81rtUay
Julie Buek!

Prices"

JONES T•E
CENTER ·

New 1919 Model

... f

ReaiiiiiCIIM

PH. 949-2101
or les. 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS

SECnONAl HOME
COMPLETE

HeppyAde

House

Galli poll I

1-{4-'lt-1 ....

CUSTOM IUft.T
HOMES I GARAGES

not be repiiiCed.

1,269 sq.

992·Siel

BISSELL
BUILDERS

38.80 ............ 119.304.40
Roolno
11.78 ... .. .. ... .. .... 8.849.81
Rutland
7.83 .. ........ .. .. 12.120.72
8yracuoe
8.47 .. ........... .. 12.941.09
TOTAL ·
'
(1~J .. .. ... t162,841.40
Wllllorn R. Wickline.
Moito County Audhor
(911. 1tc

Wife JoAnn,
daughters} Drerna
&amp; P1ttl

DRY .CLEANING
SERVICE

Ol.lff 141

Pomoooy

memory of

Pomeroy- .

&amp; VIcinity

Ohio.

conolellnll of o1 -8/10 - •
~on whfch thero 1o oltuotod
o aiK room -ldonce (3 bodroomo. living and dining
room. ldtch.l both, boo•
monL fuel ol lu.....,., corport ond
The roel • tote io
opproiood
It
*27.000.00. ~ "'"" bo
.,bmlttod ilhher in wrlt•a
or In ot tho tinM of

2

1, 1989

Ohio

&amp; VIcinity

•

1/4mllo •II of Rutland on
8R.124. Mllornlly _....,mono
and womono...Mfoo ""'"'· Sllpr·.'

.....

l!UndiJ

p.m. . . . ., .

w-or

•h•r;

eou:·• -

op,......,...,.

'

::--==:---"---=-,.- '

'

'
'
l

•lAwn Mower•
•Riders
•Chain Sawa
•Weedeaters
3 mM11 off of Rt. 7
•t Meiga Memory

l

I. 4 br. ••• ad ·,

O.rden1
8-17-1 mo.

___

__ _______---·
I

,

,

,.

ir hO., • ·•

- - Wllh
· ._
pond.
No _ ......
wlthr•• ••111xlh
11~1.
' .
•••

n

Rod llooborrloe tor 811111 Pick GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vohicloe
, _ own "' roodr plokod. !ram S100. Fordo. llorcodoo.
~ larry Patch: 11W411- Corvolt- Chovye. lu[l'g';'D
. _ Oul. ,,, 1011-117
lbl. 11-10188.

'

Mowrer '• Upholllterlng ..,.. 1
violng lrl - y oru 2t.-e. •
Tho
In
lumllurw ,
upholllodn1. Call 304-llMtA
lOr frll "tlmlln.
~-

�1

~111

12-lht I!Wy II olil ..

PMneroy Middleport, Ohio

Three injured
.in accident

-·---Area deaths-----

Three were ln)urled and there
was heavy damage to both
vehicles In a two car acclden ton
East Main St. In Pomeroy
Thursday night.
Chief of Pollee Gerald Rought
reported !hat the accident occurred at 9:13p.m In front of the
Food Shop on East Main. He said
!hat Matt C. Van Vranken, 24,
Pomeroy, pulled from the Food
Shop lot In front of a car owned by
Daniel E. Normal), Middleport,
and driven by Dawn G. Thomas,
Middleport.
Van Vranken. was attempting
to tum east on East Main from
the lot when the left front part of
his car struck lhe car driven by
Thomas who was traveling west.
The Thomas car spun around In
- !he road, the pollee chief reported. The heavy damage was
to · the left front parts· of both
vehiCles, Rought said.
The Pomeroy unit of the
Emergency Medical Service
transported Van Vranken, Thomas, and Ju\ly L. Tyree, 20,
· Middleport. a passenger in the
car driven by Thomas to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
VanVranken and Tyree were
• treated for contusions and released. Thomas has possl ble
head injuries and was held for
observation.
VanVranken has been cited for
failure to yield and DUI, Chief
Rought reported.

Tennle Sturgeon, 66, of 336
Norfolk Ave., Payton, formerly
of VInton, died Wednesday at St.
Elizabeth Hospital lit Dayton.
Born April 27, 1923 In Jackson
County, Tenn., she was a daughter of the late Mounce Stafford
and Minnie Bell Mea.
She was preceded In death by
two husbands, Robert Lawson
and Clarence Sturgeon; and a
daughter, Lois Blevins.
Surviving are two daughters,
Mrs . .Bradford (Hazel) Lewis of
Rutland and Mrs. Charles
(Joyce) Ledford of Dayton; two
step-daughters, Jean Blankenship of Trotwood, Ohio and Gall
Sturgeon of New Lebanon, Ohio;
two sisters, Sally Horner of
Englewood, OhloandOvaPiggof
Dayton, Ohio; one brother, Jay
Stafford of Jackson County,
Tenn.; six grandchildren and two
great-grandchildren.
She was a member of the
Pentecosial Church of God In

n

Injury not
•
as senous
Dravo emplOyee Raymond
Canter, 33, of Racine, was
Injured in an accident Thursday
evening at the plant in Apple
Grove shortly after 9 p.m.
Accordil)g to · Alfred Lyons, of
the Apple Grove plant, Canter's
heel caught In a moving conveyor
belt. His ankle was pulled from
the socket and his the side of his
leg was cut by the belt, Lyon.s
said.
It had been rumored that
Canter had lost a leg in the
accident, however, this did not
happen, accordi~Jg to Lyons. A
doctor at Riverside Methodist
Hospital in Columbus, reportedly
told Dravo officials this morning
that Canter would not lose his
foot.
Canter was transported to
Riverside Methodist Hospital by
LlteFIIght.

Theft reported
A theft at the Doug Reeves
residence on Union Ave., just
outside of Pomeroy, is bell)g
Investigated by the Meigs County
Sheriffs Department. AccordIng
to a reportfrom Sheriff James M.
Soulsby, Reeves reported to the
sheriff's department that his
home was entered sometl me
between 7 p.m. and 11 . p.m.
Thursday evening. A VCR and
two sate!Ute control boxes were
reportedly taken. Entry was
made by forcll)g in the front door.

Holiday closing
Planned Parenthood of Southeast Ohio Patient Services
offices will be ciosed on Monday
in observance of Labor Day .
Offices will reopen on Tuesday at
10: 30 a.m .

Anniversary set
Mr. and Mrs. Otis Knopp,
Racine, will celebrate their 50th
wedding anniversary with an
open house hosted by their
children on Saturday II\ the
fellowshp room of the Bethany
United Methodist Church at
Dorcas. Relatives and .f riends
are invited to call between 2 and 4
p.m .

,Pool closed
The London Pool at Syracuse
will not be open over the weekend
as was planned due to ,problems
with the main pump.

Meeting changed
A meeting of the Meigs County
Board of Education will be held
at 7 p.m on Tuesday in the board
office Instead of Sept. 12 .as
earlier announced.

Tennie Sturgeon

Englewood, Ohio, and the senior
citizens of Englewood, Ohio.
Services will be conducted
Sunday, 1 p.m .. , at Wlllls Funerav ·
Home, with burial In Vintorl,
Memorial Park. The Rev. Jessie
Tipton Will officiate.
Friends may call Saturday, 4 to
8 p.m. at Willis Funeral Home.

Diana D. Estridge

(8) 1.

Diana Daniels Estridge, 49,
former Pomeroy resident, died
In Palmetto General Hospital,
F.rlday: Aug. 25. ·
She w~ lhe daughter of Hugh
al)d Esther Daniels of Boynton
Beach, Fla. and was a member of
the Broadmoor Baptist Churc_h.
Besides her parents, she is
survived by her husband, Hern, a
son, Kirk, •two daughters, Sharinon and Michelle, a brother,
'R ichard, and a nephew, Ricky.
Burial was In Hollywood Memorial Gardens, Miami, Fla. Contributions In her memory may be
made to cancer research.

No Till.com yield contest .set
The first annual no-till corn ·
yield contest Is being sponsored
by the Megis Soil and Water
Conservation District.
Any no-till corn grower In
Meigs County may enter. Contest
plots must be a minimum of five
acres and not be Irrigated. Fields
may not be plOwed, dlsced or
have received any other tillage
after the previous season's crop,
except for ,planting of the fall
cover crop.

EMS gets
six calls

PUBLIC NOTICE
Following Section 67111.17
of tho Ohio Reviold· Coda,
tho Moigo COunty Bo•d of
Aovilion h01 compl81ed tho
tax voluotiono for tho tu
yoor of 1988. Tho voluotion
wli only roltoct chengeo due
to new conatruction or
buidingo dMtroyed.
Tlie valuation moy be revi-ed at tho Moigo CQUnty
Auditor' 1 Office.
wuu.., A . Wield ina,
Mli111 County Auditor

The contest crop must planted
directly Into residue or vegetalion. Only one entry per grower
will be allowed.
Anyone Interested in partie!paling In the coniest should
contact Blair Windon at the
Meigs SWCD Office, 992-664476
or stop by at 221 West Second St.,
In Pomeroy by. Sept. 30 to enter
ihe contests. The harvest methods and final entry Information
are provided at the time participants sign up for the contest.

Stocks
•

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

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
answered six calls for assistance ' Am Electric Power .............. 30
AT&amp;T ................................. 40')1.
on Thursday .
Syracuse · at 1:02 a.m. was
Ashland Oil ........................ 38%
called to Third St. for Eura
Bob Evans ...... .. ................. .15\1,
Charming Shoppes .... .......... 17~
Largent who was taken to VeteCity Holding Co : ................. 153,4
rans Memorial Hospital.
Federal Mogul... . ................ 26%
Pomeroy was called at 7:37
a.m. treated butdid not transport Go&lt;JQyear T&amp;R .................. .. 54
Heck's ................................... ~~
Erma Yoho, Wolf Pen Road.
Rutland was called at 9:57 a.in. Key Centurion .......... ......... .12%
Lands' End ..... ........ ...... ...... 27%
to Meigs Mine No. 2 for Jim
Limited Inc·........................ 37~
Vance who was transported to
Multimedia Inc ................... l07
Holzer Medical Center. At 5:47
p.m., Rutland was called back to Rax Restaurants ........... : ...... 2~
Robbins &amp; Myers ..... .... ....... 16~
Meigs Mine No. 2 for Gregory
Jones who W&lt;!S taken to O'Ble- Shoney's Inc ............ .. ......... 12'!1
Wendy's Inti .. ... .............. .. ... 5%
ness Memorial Hospital.
Worthington lnd .. ............... 23%
Racine EMS and fire depart· (Bob Evans Farms and IJment were called at 9:06p.m. to
mlted
IJ1c. are ex dividend today.
the Dravo Plant at Apple Grove
Charming Sboppes' August retail
for Raymond Canter. LifeFllght
sales rose 16 percent. Shoney's
made an on-scene landing at the
third-quarter net S~l&amp;/share . vs.
scene and transported Canter to $.39.)
Riverside Methodist Hospital in
Columbus. ·
Pomeroy at 9: 14 p.m. transported Judy Tyree and Matt
VanVranken
frQm an auto
The Pomeroy Lodge 164 will
accident on East Main St. to have a · regular 'meeting on
Veterans Memorial Hospital. A ·Wednesday at' the Middleport
second Pomeroy unit trans- Temple at 7: 30 p.m. for work In
ported Dawn Thomas from the the F .C. Degree. Refreshments
same accident to Veterans Mem- will follow.
orial Hospital. Pomeroy EMS
was assisted by the hre
department.

Masons to meet

a. 2tc

Public Notice

----------I

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY ..
On Augult 18, 1989. in
tho Mligo County Probite
Coun, Coo a No. 26362. Abbie Stretton, Box 346, Oakwood, Ohio, 46873, wu
appointed Exocutrbc of the
ntote of Ada A. Warner. deC811ed,llteof298 Mulberry
A111111ue, Pomeroy, Meito
·County, Ohio.
Robert E. Buck.
Probete ,Judge
Lana K. Neouolroad, Clerk
18) 26; (9) I, 8, 3tc .

. -

Friday, Septanber 1, 1989

Public N atice

·Public Notice

Public N atice

Dofondantl. upon 1 judg-

doocribed property ore ao

ing CNo No. 88-CV-1831n
llld Coun. I will e&gt;tlor for
ule, 11 tho fr0111 door of tho
Coun Hou• in Pomtroy,
Meigo County, Ohio. on tho
Bth day of Sept., 1989, ot
10:30 O'cl\ldo A.M . Ihe lot,lowing Iondo
and tone·

From tho Rou!e#1Bypuo
llko 143 North to HorrisvHio, go right on Route 884
to Pogovlle, take tho firot
gr- rood to tho right.
which is Tawnohlp Rood
142 ll'8tlevlle Rood), proceed w, milu. the plant II

Jen\01 Protootant Epiocopol
Church, whoM l01t knawn
oddr011 II unknown; you ore
hereby notified thotvou hove
bMn named ao Dofondlnt in
1 legal
action .,tkled
Tru- ot Corl81on Church,
Plointlffa, vo. Tru- of
Selnt Jamoo Prot-t Ep.:
copat Church, Dolendanta:
Thil lction hll ..,
ligned .... numb.- as-cv;
188 and II pending in tfJI
Court of Common Piau of
Meigo County, Ohio, in Pomeroy, Ohio~ 46769.
The object of thil Complaint II to quiet title to real

ment therein rendered, be-

menta, to~wit :
SitUIIted in the County of

Meigo, in tho State of Ohio,
and in tho Townohip 'of Scipio. end bounded ond doocrlbe&lt;' ao foilowo:
The foil-ing rul lltltl
litueted in tho Tawnohip of
Scipio, County of M•illl ond
State of Ohio, end in Free·
lion 12, commencing at a
point where the eaol line of
..ld Fraction inleroectl tho
centerline of
Townohip
Road 142: thence South
665 teet; thence Nort-·
terly and parallel to ToWn-

lhip Road 142, Hl33 feet:
thence Nonh 665 f"tlolho

centerline of

Towqahip

Road 142; thence SoutheaotMiy following the conterllne of Townohip Road
142, 1883 feet to tho piece
of beginning and containing

follows :

on the right hMd side with •
•gn in front
th•t aaya

"Meigo Non-Ferrous Me-

tela."

Seid porcel wao appraised

It •60,000.

Tonno of ...., 20% of tho
llle price, on dey of lllo, but
in no ..,_
lao .t hen
e6,000.00. in cah or conified check It tho time of llle.
wkh tho bal.,ce in c•h or'
certified check wkhin alght
IB) d"VI from tho dov of uoto.
Aeol Mtate cannot be &amp;Qid
for lao thon two-thircll of

Sunday
..

]4yMar league

results posted
Winners of 'J ay Mar's Ladles
. Tuesday Le!igue were Norma
Custer, low gross; Julia Hysell,
low net; Clarice Krautter, low
putts; and . Mary Frought,
chlp-ln-hole.
Starting time· is 9 a .m . every
Tuesday morning.

•

estate by advar• pOIIM-

'

You ere' requir~ ' to an-

Lunch rnenus for the Eastern :
Local Schools has been an- ·
'nounced for the week of Sept. 4-8. :
Monday: closed for Labor Day .•.
Tuesday: grUled cheese sand- •
wlch, pickles, green beans, apple
crisp, and milk.
Wednesday: taco salad with ·
corn chips, peas, fruit, and milk. :
Thursday : macaroni and ,
cheese , corn bread, lettuce ·
salad, fruit, cookie, and milk.
Friday: ham slice, bread and .
butter, scalloped potatoes, fruited jello, and milk.

WEEK'S SPECIALS
FIIDA Y, SEPTEMIEI 1st
f..fGISHioS1A
!"fDWICH PLAnER ....................................... s2•34
0

~
Iamond Cut laHII'-Dippod fish Pwtion Sorwlll on a Hot Stoamy 1un
a . Gantllhlll wit~ o,.. Own HG~Mmado Tartar Sauet; Hot Golden fr.,ch
Jnos..,. Y- Choice of H_,de Call Slaw, Maaoroni or Potato Salad or
loklll loans.
' ·

.:l

.
SUNDAY, SEPTEMIEI 3rd
'All-YOU-CAN~T' FAAtY STYlE CIICKEN DINNER .....s4.54

Tasty Homemade Chicken (AI Yeu Can Eat) Sonlll with Matlttd Pototot1 &amp;
H!""~. Grawy, Hot ...tll'lll Ume loans, AHot lltittlf'ed Roll or H~~m~~t~~~do
IISC~f!t lw1th Hontll and CoffH, lltgular or Dtcof,.inatlll, loth frllhly
·
lrowlll lA Small Drink or Tea May Ia Suktituted).

CHIL~'S •o•noN ..........•.••....••..•..•. ~·············-·····- st.sa

W-

drama company
David Woodrow and the New
Life Drama Company, .a Christian drama ministries, will be at
the Asbury United Methodist
Church in Syracuse on Tuesday
at 7 p.m. The public is Invited to
attend.

Vol. 24No.

30

GALLIPOLIS - A Lawrence eighth person to die this year on center and collided with a northCounty boy· died at' 11: 20 a.m. .GalUa County highways. The bound 1987 Chevrolet Cavalier
Saturday in Cabell·H~ntington . patrol has Investigated six fatal
driven bli' Angela France. There
Hospital, Huntington, W.Va., of ·accidents this year, . Including was heavy damage to both
'
vehicles. .
injuries suffered In a traffic · one ·.In February on State Route
accident Friday afternoon in 325, that ·took the lives of three
The accident is still under
. Galli a County.
people:
· .
investigation, the patrol said.
One person was Injured In a
Three-year-old Joshua NewThe LlfeFUght medico,pter was .
man ·and his mother, Sheila R.
three-car
rear-end collision at.
called to Gallia County after an
Newman, 32, of Ironton, Ohio,
2:45 p.m. Friday on Buckeye
accident · at 3· p.m. Friday on
Hills Road, 1.5 miles west of State
were Injured and airlifted by State Route 7, about one mile
Route 325 .
HealthNet medlcopter from the south of Eureka to transport two
The patrol said Freddie D .
scene to Cabell-Huntington Hospeople to Columbus hospitals.
pital, where Saturday afternoon,
Angela G. France, 22, Rt. 1, Mat thews, 16, Wellston, O!tio,
·Mrs. Newman was listed in Kit Is Hili, Ohio, was taken to
driving a 1979 Chevrolet Camaro,
braked for as top. His car was hit
critical condition, after undergo- Grant Medical Center with multi~
ing surgery late Friday night.
!rom
behind by a 1978 Pontiac
pie Injuries. Saturday afternoon.
Flrebird; driven by Julie L.
The accident occurred at 4: 45 her condition was reported as
8oyer, 16, Rt. 2, McArthur, Ohio.
· p.m. Friday at the lnter!;ectlon of stable.
·
Boyer's car was force4 Into the
Routes 7 and 35 and Fifth Avenue
Her son, 15-month-old BrettW.
at Kanauga, according to the France, was taken to Children's
back of the Matthews car when It
was hit . by a 1982 Chevrolet
Gallla-Melgs Post of the State Hospital, with minor Injuries. A
Highway Patrol.
Chevette driven by Sarah E.
spokeSperson for Children's HosAdkins, 17, Rt. 3, Oak Hill.
. Troopers said the· accident pital said Saturday afternoon
occurred when a 1986 Buick that young France had been
There was minor damage to
Matthews' car; moderate to the
LeSabre driven by Sharon A. discharged from the hospital.
Jeffers, 48, Rt. 3, Gallipolis,
Three others were Injured in Boyer vehicle; and heavy to the
attempted to turn left Into the
the same accident and taken to Adkins car.
path of an eastbound 1985 }fonda
Adkins was Injured and treated
Holzer Medical Center . They
at
the. ~ene by the Gallla county
Accord driven by Carl A Newwere:
man, 32, Ironton, and the vehi-A-nthony Fran~e. 22, Rt. 1, Emergecny Medical Services.
cles collided. There was heavy
The patrol cited both Boyer
Kit,!$ Hill, multiple Injuries In·
··damage to both vehicles.
eluding a·· fracture of the' right and Adkins •for failure to stop
Newman was injured arid · leg, condition guarded ... ,,.~
wlthln · ·the assured · clear
t;1ken to· Hol7,er Medical Center
-Ashley A. Erance, 4, Rt. 1: distance.
where · he was reported in
The patrol Investigated an
kitts Hili, multiple lacl!rlltions,
guarded condition Saturday afInjury accident at 1 a.m., Saturcondition, stable.
ternoon, .suffering m .u ltipie
-Herbert . E. Rowland, 65, 12 day, on US 33, Oc4 miles east of
Injuries. ·
Cruzet St., Gallipolis, laacera- milepost 10.
The patrol .cited Jeffers for
Troopers said a 1986 Chevrolet
ilons and a possible concussion,
failure to yield the right of way at
Nova driven by Richard E .
condition stable.
a stop sign. The accident Is still
The ·accident occurred when a Miller, 27, Goshen, Ind., went off
under Investigation.
southbound 1986 Chevrolet van the road. struck a road marker
(See KANAUGA, page A3)
Joshua Newman became the
driven by Rowland slid left of

Ag~ncy

·

SCENE RESPONSE ...., IJfeFIIght.medlciopfer
was called to GaiUa County Friday afternoon to
transport a Kitts HIJJ woman to Grant Medical
Center after a two-car collision. Four other people

B CHAKLENE HOEFLICH
Y Tlmes-SenllneiStaff
POMEROY _ Cindy Farson,
director of the Area 8 Agency on
A 1
ill be h
s t 22 to
gl)g, w
ere on ep ·
discuss the application process
for designation of pilot sites fo~
the first urban and rural Elder
care Options funded by th~
General Assembly in the Bien
nluAm bu8dgeth.l hI
I d f
rea , w c s compr se .o

eight counties, Meigs, Athens,
Hocking, Washington, Morgan,
Noble, Monroe, and Perry, will
be applying for the rural Eldercare Options demonstration project lhefundlngforwhlchwlllbe
'
$3 000 000
·
m~~- ~=~so~ wu't be. s akin at
the Mel s Count ~nell g on
Agl
A~visory ~ard meeting
to b':fheld at the Senior Citizens
Center The advisory board was
·

HOURI 10 AM·II PM
f1ur1nt Good CIMn Fumiture-Compteto Auction Service

active in promoting support for
the legislation which funded the
Eldercare Options.
The program Is geared to give
senior citizens who prefer to
receive long term care (n their
home an alternative to nursing
home care and to demonstrate
the effectiveness of that care.
The proposal presented Ineludes a package of communitybased long-term care services to

Include · homemaker, home
hea.lthaide, respitecare,houslng
assistance, chore transportation,
adult day care, home delivered
meals , and mental health
services.
While the program will serve
people 60 and older regardless of
mcome, services will be provided
on a cost sharing structure based
on a sliding fee scale.
(See AGENCY, page A3)

Ohio unemployment at 15-year low COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) cent, the ·s ame as It was In July .
Ohio's 4.8 percent unemployDouglas J. Holmes, deputy
ment rate last month was its administrator for the .Ohio Bu.
lowestlevel in 15 years, but state reau of Employment Services,
officials feel the sharp drop from said the figures appear quite
the month before may just be positive; with Ohio's unemploy temporary.
ment rate reaching Its lowest
Figures released Friday by the point since August 1974 when it
Department of Labor show · wa&amp; 4.4 percent.
- Ohio's unemployment rate fell
"However. we are cautious
.from 5.4 percent In July to 4.8 . about the figures ," he said. "Job
percent In August. The national growth may not be as strong as
unemployment rate was 5.2 per- this month's household survey

suggests. Our employer survey
has shown more modest growth,
arid Ohio's manufacturing employment has declined every
month In 1989.
"Also, since the unemploy ment rate often changes erratically from month to month, the
sharp decline In the . rate for
August may be temporary," he
said.
~.
The number of Ohioans employed rose by 52,000 in August,

reaching an all-time high of 5.209
million. That's up from the 5.157
million In July.
·
The number of Ohio workers
without jobs In August was
260,000, down 33,000 from the
293,000 In July. The August figure
of unemployed workers Is the
lowest since July 1978 when there
were 251,000 unemplo ye d
Ohioans .
One year ago, the state's
unemployment rate was 5.6
percent.
·

Construction not a 'license to litter'
· By LEE ANN WELCH
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS- "Just because
!here Is construction going on
downtown, that's not a license to
litter," Gallipolis City Manager _
Dale E. Iman said after the first
week of school.
Students at Gallla Academy

MARTIN'S FURNITURE &amp; MORE

Following it11111 are just a few things you will find at
llartln's Furnlturt I Mort:
50" Projection 1Y, Kitchen Callinets, China Closets,
Fontoll Glallwartr Westnoorelanll Glau, Carnival
Glllu, S~ Glass, Finton lnlntah, D11111er Sets,
c...., Chest ef Drawers, IAomps, Cnt•• lntllpte
Jew*f, Cr. . .rry Opl. Glftl, laskets, StOIIIwan,
Seta led, .............................., s••,.,
lap I hits, Clocks, las..all Cards, and IYEJI FBI
CoJnL C01111.On ho, and See Us.
CA&amp; "2·6172 er IICIMI: 915·4396

were Injured In the accident,
a
15-month-old boy and a four-year old girl.
(Times-Senllnel photo by Margar.e t Caldwell)

to discuss Eldercare site .options

SELECT
ITEMS•• ~.

222 E. Main St:
hlidt luttons &amp; low1
P-roy, Ohio
Milce I Chris Martin, Ow•en

13 Sections. 84 Pog"'!
A Muhimedla Inc, Newapeper

Kanauga .wreck kills
3-year-old Ironton boy

ONLY ON

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

day.

•

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, Septanber 3, 1989

Copyrighted 1989

POMEROY - The 'c ase in U.S. District Cou~t. Southern
District of Ohio, Columbus, against the United States Corps of
•Engineers; and Pomeroy resident and property owner Dottle
Turner; and a co-property owner with Turner, Jimmie Cain, Is
bell)g dismissed. The case was filed against the defendants by
the VIllage of Pomeroy, Office of Mayor·.
.
Cain reports that he and Turner received a letter earlier ln the
week advising them that · all charges have been dropped and
asking for their signatures on a document to be returned to
attorney Sally Cremeens-Strong, of Cincinnati, counsel for the
plaintiff.
Once.the document Is flied in Columbus by Cremeens-Strong,
the case against Turner, Caln and the Corps of Engineers will be
. officially dismissed, with prejudice.
The district court action was Initiated after Turner and Cain
refused to bring a halt to excavation on their 'East Main Street
property bordering the Ohio River , and the subsequent building
of a boat dock. Turner and Cain, and their bulldoz-Ing
contractor, Terry Matthews: of Middleport, were ail arrested
on local charges for continuing excavation despite Pomeroy
Vlllage Council's and Mayor Richard 8eyler's charges that such
excavation was Illegal accordll)g to Pomeroy's flood plain and
hlstorclal preservation ordinances.
Turner and Cain maintained that they had every right to
·
(See CASE, page i\3)

'ALL SALES FINAL!

.~

Sunny and mild , high In mid

!lOs. Chance of showers MoD-

lUttS

Case dismissed
.again~t landowners
·202 EAST MAIN .
POMEROY, OHIO

All interested parties will be
given an opportunity to be
heard . Further intormation
may be obtained by contacting the Commission .

Along the River ......... Bl-8
BusineSs .................. .. D1,8
Comics- ................... lnserl
Cl asStfleds ................. 02· 7
Deaths ......................... A3
Editorial ••••. ••...• .... .• .•... A2
Sports ....................... Cl-6

Light for sight...Page 'B6

•

for colts.

Menu released

C-1
Inside

Pretty proud folks".B8

forectoH: an interelt pur:.·
pOnedty owned by you end ·..

Drama planned

The Public' Ut ililles CommiSSIOn of Ohio has set lor
public hearing Case No.
89-102-EL -EFC. lo . review
l.he luel pwcurement practiCes and policies of Columbus Southern Power Com·
pany. the operat1ori ol its
Electric Fuel Component
and related matters. Th1s
hearing is scheduled to
begin at 10:00 a.m. on
September 5. 1989. at the
oftic~s
of the Public
Utilities Commission . 180
East Broad Street Columbus. Ohio 43266-0573.

season

Beat of the Bend:

oion. ond the prover io to.

NEW HOURS: 10:00 A.M. to 9:30P.M. Seven Day1 A

LEGAL NOTICE

.

Page Bl.

1----------

District and the Cooperative
Extension Service. Control of the
multiflora rose must be maintained for a minimum of two
years following the year of the
cost share treatment.
Also required is at least one
equivalent acre of multiflora
rose to qualify and the cost share
rate is $100 per equivalent acre.,
Resident may sign up at the
Meigs SWCD Office on the second
floor of the Farmers Bank
Building In Pomeroy.

•

In our town:

24.93 ocroo, more or lao.
Excepting and rooerving
from the property above described ell minerato underiying the same w~h the right
Public Notice
' to mine and rem01101iid mi- - - - - - - - - nerali w~houl encumbrNOTICE OF SALE
ance to the surface.
By vinuo of an O.rder of
$ubject toellleaooo, easeSole iooued out of tho Com- menta and rights of way of
mon Pleas Court of Meiga record.
·
County. Ohio. in the caoe of
Rolwenoo Deed: Vol. 291,
Centre! .Trull Company of ...... 467, and Vol. 289. Page
Southoeotern Ohio, N.A.. 676, Meigo County Deed RePlaintiff ageinot Scipio En- cordi.
Directions to the 11bove- TO: Trunea.
of Saint
ergy Anociotu. Inc .. at al ..
~,__ _ ____.:t:..__ _ _L.._ _ _ _ _ _ ___J:.._~------......1..,;__ _ _ _ _ __

The Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District is' taking
slgnups for participation In the
multiflora rose control program
beginning today.
SlgRups will be taken through
September with the rules of
previous years to remain effective this year.
To participate Meigs Countlans must be a cooperator of the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation Dis trlct and be willing to
follow prescribed plan of conservation on those fields where
treatment is approved.
Residents are required also to
at tend a workshop on multiflora
rose control sponsored by the·

wvu wins

·Haskins
Memorial
Park

ow&lt;\r thio Complaint within , .
28 doyo after the iut d"'e of
the appraiaed value.
publication of lhio notice.
Jameo M. Souloby which wYI be pubtiohod once
Sheriff of Meigo County, a week for lix (6) IUCCIIt!ve
Ohio woeb. 'The laot pubtlcotiot~
17) 28; (8) 4, 11, 18, 25; (9) . wi!! be medeontho 16th d..,
· __
. ,..------., of September. 1988, and
1..:,.1::.8;:1•:...,_
Public Notice
tho ·28 dayo for an•-· wnl
commence on thet dlte.
"~~ cooe of VO!Jr foHure to
IN THE
aniW'I!IIr or otherwise retCOMMON PLEAS C()U AT . pond il r.equirecf by tho Ohloo
OF ·
Aula of Civi! Procedure,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
judgment by dofeull~wUI be
TRUSTEES OF .
ninderecf agoinot you for the.
CARLETON CHURCH,
reNof demon dad in tho 'Com•
Pllintlffl plaint.
-VS.Lorry E. Spencer,
TRUSTEES OF SAINT
Clerk of·Couno, •
JAMES PROTESTANT
Meigs Courq- Common
EPISCOPAL CHURCH,
Dofondanta 18) 11. 18.2&amp;; PIOII Coun
CASE NO. 89-CV-189
19) 1, 8, 15, 6tc
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION

Multiflora plan slated

50 cents

have an open campus policy, ani:!
come over to the downtown area
for lunch, leaving litter all alo~Jg
the streetscape project. In addl·
lion to the empty containers,
Iman noted food Is also being
dropped and left on the new
concrete.
The construction phase of the

nearly-$1 million project has
been underway nearly two
mol)ths, and completion of the
concrete bands on
300 block of
Second Avenue should be late
this week , according to supervisor Rob Holbrook.
Concrete. brick-look pavers
(See CONSTRUCI'ION, page A3)

nw

·Meigs man guilty of sex charge

HOUSEWARES
'

•.
•

INSTALLING BRICK- Appraxlmatelf half of
the dowiuiver llde of Co1111 Street hu had
, eoncl'f4e brick-like paven luaalled Ill tile Plllll
week 1111 a p11rt of t!te GalllpoU. lrireet~eape
•

.. 'L

..

-'

POMEROY -After approximately two hours of deliberation,
a Meigs County Common Pleas
Jury of 12 returned a guilty
verdict against Ronald G. Davis,
45, of Pomeroy, for gl-oss sexual
Imposition. Following the verdict, Davis was sentenced by lhe
court to two years In prison for
the crime.
The jury began deliberations
shortly before 3 p.m. Friday and
returned to the courtroom
shortly befOre 5 to deliver !he
'g uilty verdict.
.
Davis had been indicted on the

project. Here, F'ullly Blevlu o(AGE aoatracton
of Porlllmoath worb -.. a ~n of JN~Ytta We
lut week. ('l'llnM-8enllnel photo b)' Lee Aim .
Welch)

charge earlier this year. The
Indictment stemmed from an
incident on AprU 7, In which he
was to have engaged In sexual
coniact, but not Intercourse, 'ivlth
a minor girl under age 13.
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney Steven L. Story and
Ass is tan t Prosecutor Linda
Warner charged throughout the
trial, which began on Wednesday, that on April 7, Davis
assaulted a 12-year-old friend of
his own daughter, when the girl
was spendll)g the night In the
Davis home.

··i

...
I

Attorney William Grim, of
Athens, represenilng Davis,
cha'rged throughout proceedings
that !he girl was either confused
with some other incident which
may have happened to her
previous to the stay at the
Davis's, or she was fabricating
the story for some unknown
reason.
In closing argument, Grim
pointed out some discrepancies '
In lhe testimonies of wltnesaes,
InCluding the testimony ot tbe
victim and testimonies ftom
(See ~EIGS, pare All) ~·'

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