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                  <text>·12-The Deily Santinel
Pomaoy-Midtlaport. Ohio
r---Local news briefs............___, Commission accepts.:~ntlnued from page 1
from page 1
·
P.aga

~ontlnued

'

Inside the store. Wilen heTeturned, he discovered that the front
end of his truck had been heavlly damaged.
·
Anyone who saw the accident is asked to contact the sheriff's
depariment.
· ·
·
·
.

No one hurt in accident
No one was Injured In a one car accident at 7: 25 a.m.
Wednesday ori SR. 124 In Sutton Township 0.4 of a mOe west of
mUepost 31, according to the Gallla,Melgs Post, State Highway
Patrol.
Troopers sald a 1988 Honda Civic driven by Julie M.
Randolph, 27, Racine, hit a dog and went off the road. The
v,ehlcle came back onto the roadway, went off the right side of
tbe road again, landing ln a ditch. Damage was minor.

--Area deaths--Survivors include three sons,
Joey, James and Harrison, all of
Audrey Doss Foster, 58, ofOna, Columbus; two daughters; one
W.Va. died Sunday at the home of sister. Easter Brown, of Toronto.
her mother and step-father, 415 Ohlo; a stepmother, Elva Rood,
of Reedsville; a stepbrother,
Fourth Ave., Kanagua.
Born Oct . 26, 1930, In Mason Foster Rood, Reedsville: a stepCounty she was the daughter of sister, Marjorie Rood, Reedsvllle: and several uncles aunts.
the late Everett E. · Doss and
nieces and nephews.
Beulah Doss Wears.
He W&lt;\S preceded in death by
She is survived by her hu shis
parents. two brothers and two
band, Coy Foster; son Jeff
sisters.
·
Foster of Milton; two sisters, ·
.
Friends
may
call
today (ThursGoldie Estep of Rowlett, Texas,
day)
from
6to9p.m.
,at the White
and Elizal:&gt;eth Drennln of Maservl·
Funeral
Home.
Graveside
rietta, Okl.; and brother, James
ces
will
be
held
11
a.m.
Friday
at
" Pete" Doss of Nashville, Tenn.
the
Rood
Cemetery,
wlth
Rev.
She was an e_mployee of FasChek. She was a member of the Jeff Burdsall officiating.
Mt. Zion Baptist Church and the
VFW Auxiliary.
Joint services with her mother
· will be Friday, 11 a .m. at the
Heck Funeral Home In Milton,
wlth the Rev. Richard Black and
the Rev. Charles Gibson.
By Untied Press International
Burial will be in. the White
South Central Ohlo
Chapel Memorial Gardens in
Tonight: Partly cloudy, with a
Barboursville.
low In the lower 50s. Winds
Friends may call Thursday , 6 southwest less than 10 mph.
to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Friday: Partly cloudy, with a
high In the middle 70s.

Audrey Foster

·Weather

Beulah Wears

would be landlocked by the
closing.
.County Engineer Philip Roberts reported that State Issue II
appllcatiOI\S from District 18,
which Includes Meigs County,
"are being processed now " ln
Columbus. Roberts anticipates
that funds for the district may be
released next week.

Stocks
DaltY stock prices
(As of 10:40 a.m.) ·
Bryce and MIU'k Smltli
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power .............. 30
AT&amp;T ........................ ......... 42%,
Ashland Oil ................... ,....40%
Bob Evans ... :............·.......... 14~
Charming Shoppes ............. .14o/s
City Holding Co .... , ......... ..... 15
Federal Mogul .................... 23'f4
Goodyear T&amp;R .............. ..... 52~
Heck's .................... :.............. %
Key ·centurlon ..................... 15
Lands' End ......................... 27%
Limited Inc ............. ... ... ...... 39
Mu ltlmedla Inc ........ ............ 99
Rax Restaurants ........ ........ .. 2o/s
·Robbins &amp; Myers ............... .. 15
Shoney's Inc ....................... 11%
Wendy's Inti ........................ 5%
Worthington Ind ... ... ........... 23%
(AT&amp;T Is ex dividend today.)

Extended Forecast
Beulah Marie Doss Wears, 81,
Saturday through Monday
415 Fourth Ave., Kanauga, died
Fait during the period, Highs
Sunday at her home.
will range from the mid 60s to the
Born Jan. 16, in 1908, in Mason . mid 70s Saturday, ln the 70s
County, she was the daughter of Sunday, and from the mid 70s to
tlte late Matt Long and Thelma
the lower 80s on Monday.
!Wallace) Long Yorke.
She Is survived by two daughters, Goldie Estep of Rowlett,
Texas. and Etlzabeth Drennln of
Marietta, Okl. ; one son, James
"Pete" DossofNashvllle, Tenn.;
two step-daughters, Margurete
NOTICE is hereby given that on SaturEngel of South Side, W.Va. , and
Mrs. Virginia Hansley of Pickeday, September 30, 1989. at 10:00
rington, Ohio; one step-son.
Emanuel Wears of Pliny; two
a.m., a public sale will be held at 1 05
sisters, Mrs. Bernice Stover of 'u
Florida, and Mrs. Edna Wray of
Union Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio, to sell
Apple Grove; one half-sister,
for cash the following collateral:
Mrs. Orma Barker of Glenwood,
W.Va.; three half-brothers, Mat- .
thew Long and Bob Long, both of
Ashton, W.Va.; and Max Long of
Ohto: step-father, Bruce Yorke
4 Dr.
HB - 1FAPP9597 JW377869
•
of Columbus; three grandchild·
ren and two great-grandsons.
The Farmers Bank and Savings
Services will be Friday ,11 a.m.
at the Heck Funeral Home In
Company, Pomeroy, Ohio, reserves
Milton, with the Rev . Richard
the right to bid at this sale~ and to withBlack and the Rev. Charles
Gibson.
draw the above collateral prior to sale.
· Burial will be in Mt . Zion
Cemetefy In Fraziers Bottom.
Further, The Farmers Bank and SavFriends may call Thursday, 6
to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.
ings Company reserves the right to re-

EMS receives $ix Wednesday calls

Units of the Mell!li County · ! a struc-ture flre · on the John
Emergency Medical Services Welch. property ·on Buck Run
Finally, upon the recommen·'
answered
stx calls for assistance ·Road.
dations of Roberts apd Plghway
on
Wednesday.
Tuppers
Plains
at
5:12 .a .'m ,
Superintendent Ted Warner, the
At
~:
3~
a.m
.,
Rutland
was·
went
to
State
Route
7forWUUam
commissioners accepted a bld
called to Meigs Mine No. 1 for . Grueser who was takep to Holser
from Pat Hill Ford, Middleport,
Jeff Kennison who was taken to Medical Center.
of $13 1395 for a pickup truck for
O'I$leness
Memorial Hospital. · . At 9: 5~ .a.m., Rutland treated
the county highway department.
Middleportat4:
18a.m. went to but dld not transport Randy
Bids from Pat Hill Ford and
Page
St.
for
Nora
Mllls to Harrison, Dexter.
Gibson Inc., of Athens. for dump
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital.
At 3:13 p.m.; Rutland was
trucks, remain tabled.
·
At 5: 03 a.m ., the Columbia called ·to Fort Meigs for Matthew
Continuedfrompage 1 Township and Salem Township Cotterlllwhowasalsotreatedbu~
Fire Departments were called to not transported.

hear;ng
• •
Pre l lmlnary
" •••
sta b wound to the neck. AU three
victims died from
hemorrhaging.
In addition, Mrs . Wears suf·
fered bruises and contusions of
the head, along with brain
hemorrhaging. Mrs. Foster also
had major bruises and contu·
sions to the face and head.
Officials are trying to determlne lf the victims offered
resistance during the· klllings.
Scars on Baisden's face were
rtrst mentioned yesterday al·
though the scars were vtslble on
Tuesday when he was first taken
to court for arraignment.
The bodies of the vlctlms were
discovered around 9 a .m. Mon-

Thursday.
September 28. 1989 .·
..

.

day by a housekeeper who
workedfortheWearsthroughthe
week. Mrs. foster was visiting
her· mother and stepf&lt;~ther on the
weekend.
Baisden was arrested ' around
10 p.m. Monday. by the Mason
County Sherilf's Department on
SR. 2 south of Point Pleasant.
Prosecuting Attorney Brent A.
Saunders said yesterday, "
We've asked the BCI crime lab to
perform flrigernail scrapings
from all of the victims to see ilwe
can get a comparison," ( ln other
words, to determine If any of
Baisden's flesh can be found
under any of the victims' nails) .
Officials aree awaiting results
of the tests before they,declde on
asking for the death penalty In
the case.
Two knives, one believed to be
.the murder weapon, were sent to
the BCI crime lab at London for
tests. The knives were found In
the house during a thorough
search of the Wears residence.
According to Gallla County
Sheriff Dennis SaUlsbury there
was was no slgnofforcedentryat
the Wears' house. Time of death.
was placed .between 4 and 7 p.m.
An uneaten dinner was on the
table.
·
Officials say robbery could
have been a motlve for the
killings. However, between $500
to $600 was taken from Mrs.
Foster's purse and a dresser
drawer In the bedroom.

CLEVELAND (UPI) .,.. Ohio's
.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions
None.
Wednesday discharges- Gary
R. Dill, Rose Genhelmer, ThoCarper, Allee Koenig.

mas

1
'Qyt • /2 PRICE
5 OJ-, sH-E-R...-LDHs E

by London Fog
and Sherwood of Ohio

REDUCED

Harrison Ollle Rood Jr., 66, of
Cincinnati Ridge, Coolville, died
Tuesday evening at his home.
Born June 11, 1923 In Toronto,
Ohio, Mr. Rood was the son of the
late Harrison and Daisy Rood.
He was a farmer and a U.S. Navy
veteran.

,through

Monday,
October 2,

Kennoth McCullough, R.Ph.
Ch•t• Rlfllo, R. Ph.
Ronlld Hanning, R.Ph.•
Mon. thru Sit. 8:00 a..,... to 9:00p.m.

E

Sund~

SCRIPTtONS
lin

10:00 a.m. 10 4:00 p.m.
Sen~ice

20°/o

BAHR MIDDUPORT
CLOTHIERS

Vol.40, No.102 M
Copyrighted 1989

Meigs board approves . replacement projects
Rutland Elementary School
will get a new furnace and Meigs
High School a new roof as the
result of action taken by the
Meigs Local School Board of
Education at Thursday night's
meeting held ln the board office.
The board declared both situations emergencies and approved
the lnstatlatlon of a new roof at
-Meigs High School by the Trocal
Co., at a cost of $43,300, and a new
furnace at the Rutland Elementary school at a cost of $30,248 by
the Columbus Heating and Venti·
latlng Co.

Harold Graham was hired as a
Several regular and substitute
teachers were employed Includ- driver education Instructor at a
Ing Julie Hubbard as . head rate of $12 per hour for a total of
teacher for the year at the 47 hours; whlle Sheryl Gibbs and
Pomeroy Elementary School, Shirley Smith were employed as
and Robert Ashley, Jr. as a · driving Ins true tors for the driver
education program at $6.50 per
junior high footbatl ~oach.
Substitute teachers employed hour. The board also hired Carrie
were Penny Burge, cosmetol· Morris as a bus driver.
Maternity Jeavewas granted to
ogy; Grace Hawley, Robin PreKim
Adkins from Aug. 31 through
ntice, and Carolyn Robinson,
Oct.
6, and Marge Barr until the
elementary; Effie Murphy,
end
of the.. semester. Also apkindergarten -elementary, and
proved
by the bpard for Denise
Robyn Ptlzer, comprehensive
Williams were dock days for Oct.
buslnesss education.
.
·
The resignations of Karla 2, 3 and 4. .
The board entered Into two
Brown, Victoria Diddle, and
Marie Mulford · as substitute · purchased services. contracts,
one wlth Shirley McDonald to
teachers were accepted.

WnH REMOTE
•REMOTE CONTIOL eCABi.E READY
•PECAN 01 MAPLE FINISH

$549°0 •
CLOSING DOORS -Today was' the final day of business for

1\J~:f;;~~

LINOLEUM
SALE

Congoleum vinyl floor
coverings
No-Wax cushion floor

-12 ft. width
-New patterns

.Sale $-5 49 Sq. Yd.

$307°0

'&amp;\.E...
WOOD ROCKERs·

.

.

.

SERTA

CARPET SALE
Now you can reploce your old
carpet ond really san.

PREMIER COMFORT

TWIN .
MlniESS 01101 SPRINGS

saaoo
...
OPEN
Mondlyolaturdly

1:30.1:00

(hoost Scotchgard Stoln Rt·
lta11
Dupont Sttinmasttr

FW

MAmESS 01 lOX SPRINGS i

S10800

or

carpth.

,

H•rrv I• ~efore the
Sale E..,, · ·

992-3671
.Downto.wn P.-roy, Ohio

Farm_City, Inc., closing
doors after half-century service

After more than a half-century
of business on East Main Street
In Pomeroy. MGM Farm City,
Inc., originally the Farm Bureau
Co-op and later M'eigs Land·
mark, Is closing Its doors .
The operation will cease at the
close of business today (Friday),
according to George Holter.
corporation president.

NEW YORK tUPil - Borden
Inc., the nation's largest dairy
company, sald Thursday It is
cu tUng back Its dairy business by
one-third and will lay off 7,000
workers. or 15 percent of Its work
force, ln a massive

It's All ON SALE

--

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
government's gauge of future
economic growth, pushed up by
stro.ng orders for co~sumer
goods, rose 0.3 percent in August
for Its second straight monthly
gain, the Commerce Department
said Friday.
The Increase In the Index of .
Leading Indicators, Intended to
forecast economic activity six to
. nine months In advance, followed
a revised 0.1 percent gain in July,
· • the department said.
Economists hesitated to place·
' too much importance In the
Increase, however, because the
index has been· up and down all
'y ear, ctlmblng four months and
falUng four months.
"It hasn't l:leen consistent, "
said David Wyss, c hlef econo·
mist with Data Resources Inc., a
consulting
company in LexingM-G-M Farm Cl&amp;y, Inc.
ton, Mass. "We've had a couple
of up monjhs after a couple of
down months, which suggests
that the economy is. just sitting
there.''
"! don't think It's telling us
much In short-term," agreed
·Jerty Jordon, chief economist
took over as manager when Jack
with · First Interstate Bankcorp.
Carsey af)er 40 years of managIn Los Angeles. "!still think the
ing the lluslness resigned In 1987. . fourth quarter will be very weak
The Farm Bureau Co-op Assowith possibly a slight recession."
ciation was organized in 1937 and
Of the 11 Indicators that make
many years later white remainup the Index. only five were up
ing a co-op changed Its name to
Meigs Landmark. About six
years ago the business was
re-organized into MGM Farm
City, Inc.

Thls Includes all facets of the
business, the feed, seed, feqllizer and farm supply part, as well
as ·the petroleum and gas station
services.
Ten employees are affected by
the closing. a spokesman
reported.
Manager Jack Miller was not
available for comment on the
closing of the business. Miller

Borden announces dairy cutbacks

Huge selection of styles and wood
finishes. Oak, Maple, Pine.
Reg. S119.00......... Sale S9S.OO
Reg. $169.00.;.... Sale S13S.OO
Reg. S179.00....... Sole S143.00 .

tutor a student not t{) exceed five
hours per week at the rate of $10
per hour and the .other with
Charles Leach to transport a
student to the Ohlo State School
for the Deaf.
Stephany Gardner was accepted as a tuition student for the
year, and the board agreed to pay
Mr. and Mrs. EarlFleldsandMr.
and Mrs. Greg Gatrell the
amount as calculated by the Ohio
Department of ·Education In lieu
of providing transportation to the
GaiUa Christian School.
A ·resoutlon was adopted designating thls as the "Year of
Reaching for the Vision" In
accordance With a statewide
campaign. The superintendent

was directed to prepare a policy
for the board on classroom
recitation of the t[le pledge of
atleglance. and If oral recitation
Is recommended, to establish a
time and manner for such.
The board agreed to enter Into
an agreement with Southern
Local School District providing
that Southern Local will trans port a student of Meigs to Rio
Grande, and Meigs Local will
transport a student of Southern
Local to Racine.
A price list on ala carte items
for the limchroorri program was
presented and adopted by a vote
of.four to one, wlth Larry Rupp
casting the no vote.
Dedication of a plaque at the

Meigs football field honoring Bob
Roberts was discussed with the
board voting til take care of the
dedication ceremony.
Approved by the board was a
field Irip for VICA students, and
a payment for footbatl field care
of $683.17 for a period not covered
by a previous contract io Charles
Chancey.
Following Ihe open meeting the
board moved into executive
session to discu ss personnel and
pending litigation.
Attending were Supt. Ja mes
Carpenter, Treas urer Jane Fry,
and board members, Robert
Snowden, Richard Vaughan,
Larry Rupe, Jeff Werry, and
Robert Barton.

Nation's leading economic
indicators up 0.3 %_in August

25" COLOR· CONSOLE

~

3 Secttons. 30 Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 29. 1989

§rLIIAIVIA .

Single, Double or Triple Dressers.
Chests, Beds, Night Stands, Hutches.

Great Se!tction of
Cardigans, V·NecM,_
Puii-Ons, Turtlenecks,
Crew Necks
Sweater &amp; Skirt
Sets

at

FALL SALE

•CABLE READY •REMOTE CONTROL

•

•

I

GS

Bedroom Furniture MW or ou RrtSH

New Fall Sweaters

Page 4

Open w~~ Night• 'til 9

19" REMOTE
COLOR TV

Parrty cloudy tonight. Low
In mid 50s. Chance of rain 20
percent. Saturday , partly
cloudy . High In mid 70s.
Chance of rain 20 percent.

Pick-4
6990

Pom•ov. OH.

OPEN STOCK

LADIES

942

1989

PH. 992-2955

Friendly

SALE - SALE - SALE

REDUCED

Harrison Rood, Jr.

Offer Good

Pharma c y

Further, the above collateral will ~e
sold in the condition it is in with no expressed or implied warranties given.

Coats and Jackets

Pick-3

crown

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Dally Sentinel Stall

SUNGLASSES

ject any or all bids submitted.

LADIES

Super Lotto jackpot ·went uriclalme&lt;l Wednesday night, ln'.
creasing the top · prize to $9
· mUllan for Saturday's game.
None of the tickets sold for the
midweek drawing llsted the six
winning numbers -17,19, 30, 38,
39 and 40, a lottery commission
spokesman sald Thursday. The
jackpot was worth $6 mllllon.

COMPLETE STOCK

19881/2 FORD ESCORT LX

Marvin W. Wears, 94, 415
Fourth Ave.. Kanauga, dled
Sunday at his home.
Born Sept. 5, 1895, in PI In , he
was the son of the late Fran and
Iva (Coleman) Wears.
Also preceding him In
were two wives, Lena
(Dunn) Wears and Beula
arle
(Doss) Wears: step-da ghter,
Audrey Foster: two daughters.
three sisters; eight brothers; one
granddaughter: one grandson:
and one great-granddaughter.
· He is survived by two daughters. Margurete Engel of South
Side, W.Va .. and Mrs. Virginia
Hansley of Pickerington, Ohio;
one son, Emanuel Wears of
Pliny; half-sister, Lena Mackey
of Naperville, Ill.: one step-son,
James ''Pete" Doss of Nashville,
Tenn.; two step daughters, Goldie Estep of Rowlett, Texas, and
Elizabeth Drennln of Marietta,
Okl.; 10 grandchildren; three
step-grandchildren; 15 greatgrandchildren; and two stepgreat-grandchildren.
A World War I veto;oran, he was
a member of the Slloam Church.
He was a former employee of the
Marietta Company and was a
retired farmer.
Services will be Saturday , 2
p.m. at the Mt. UniOn United
Methodist Church in Pliny with
the Rev. Marlin Campbell.
Burial will be In the Slloam
Cemetery. Military rites will be
conducted by the American Legion Post 23. ·
Friends may call Friday, 6 to9
p.m. at the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home.

eye AL East

Super Lotto jackpot up to $9 million .

HOME FURN

PUBLIC NO.TICE

Marvin Wears

Ohio Lottery

Blue Jays

restructuring.
The Columbus. Ohio, company, which also makes a variety
of food and consumer products
Including Creamettes pasta,
Wise snacks and Elmer's glue,
said it intends to close or sell65of

Riffe still not. sure
.
abou~. governor's race
COLUMBUS, Ohio !UPI) Ohio House Speaker Vernal
Riffe, still undecided on whether
to run for governor next year,
will make his decision known In
one week.
The Columbus Dispatch, ln a
copyright story. said Thursday
the Wheelersburg Democrat is
expected to announce that he will
not be a candidate for the 1990
gubernatorial race.
Riffe, who ha·s served In the
Ohio House for 31 years and as
Speaker for 14, Is to reveal hiS
. plans Thursday at a luncheon
' with fellow House Democrats,
then repeat. lt that evening at the
annual Scioto County Democratic dinner.
He told the'n ewspaper Wednes,
day that he Is "just not sure"
about running for governor, but
said he will make up his mind by
next Thursday.
He had planned to make his
announcement around Labor
Day, but that was postponed
when the speaker's father was
hospitalized.

The paper said that In recent
interviews w'ith Riffe about the
governor's race, he often mentions advice from his father- "If
you're not sure, don't do it."
He has also mentioned he
might consider running for governor lf he were younger .
Rllfe, 64, Is the longest-serving
speaker In Ohio history . He was
elected to the House In 1958 and
chosen speaker in 1975.
In honor of his lengthy service,
a recently completed state office
tower across the street from the
Statehouse was named for him .
A few weeks ago, Riffe toured
Jackson wlth former Gov . James
Rhodes for Rhodes's 80th birth·
day celebration. At that time
Rhodes, a Republican, said Riffe
was the most qualified person to
become Ohio's next governor.
The field for Democrats Is wide
open at this point, with no
announced candidates. Attorney
General Anthony Celebrezze and
Auditor Thomas Ferguson have
set up exploratory committees.

Insurance
firtn helps
Hugo v.i ctims ·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) its 265 plan Is around the world
Nalloliwlde
Insurance Cos.,
during the next two to three
whose
claims
adjusters have
years. Spokesman Nicholas Iambeen
handling
record
number of
martino said the company ex·
claims
after
Hurricane
Hugo,
peels some plants will be closed
said·
Thursday
Its
home
office
before year's end, but refused to
employees
will
collect
Items
to be
specify the operations thai will
sentto
help
the
storm's
victims.
be affected.
Beginning Friday and for the
"We want the employees to be
next
week, the 6,500employeesat
the first to know, then our
the
insurance
company's headcustomers," he said. Iammar·
llno said further announcements quarters In Columbus will be
would be made In the next week collecting money and badly
needed-Items to be sent to victims
to 10 days.
in
the affected areas. Some of the·
About 20 closings will Involve
·
Items
needed In the hard-hit
· dairy plants In areas where
Carolinas
are batteries, building
Bardon says Intense competition
tools
and
cannedgoods.
from cooperative and regional
·'Hurricane Hugo has devasdairies has stymied growth.
Borden said layoffs will reduce tated many areas where NationIts work force from 46,000 to wide customers, agents and
39,000. The company has dairy employees live," said Raymond
Wilson. senior vice president of
operations In 38 sta\eS.
corporate
services. "The collecIammartlno said the cutbacks
tion
effort
arises out of concern
- which also Involve pulling the
for
them
and others, and In
company's Borden. Gold Mearesponse
to
employees here and
dow, Viva and Lite-llne milk,
In
our
regional
offices throughout
cottage cheese, yogurt and sour
the
country."
cream from certain markets In
The Nationwide Foundation,
the Easj and Southeast - will
-which
supports corporate human
reduce annual dairy sales by $700
service goals and helps out In
mllllon to $750 mllllon.
·
communities
where the company
Borden said the cu !backs will
does
business,
has contributed
not affect Its position as the
$35,000
to
the
local
chapter of the
country's No. 1 dairy company.
'American
Red
Cross
to assist the
Borden's ·dairy product restorm
victims.
venues amounted to $2.4 . bllllon,
Iiems the employees coUect
or 30 percent of Its $7.24 bllUon
'
will
be shipped to the affected
revenues In 1988. But the division
areas
while cash donations wlll
provided only 14 percent, or $102
be
sent
to the Red Cross and the
mUIIon, of the company's opera!·
Salvation
Aarmy .
lng Income - lagging behind
Hugo
tore
through the Cariboperating Income contribute!! by
Industrial proc!ucts, snacks and bean before hitting South Carol·
Continued on page 10
Contlnued on page 10

goods, a drop in sensitive mateduring August while six fell. But
rials prices indicating less de.a big .58 percent Increase In new
.
mand
for materials used In the
manufacturers orders for consumanufacturing
process, and a
mer goods and materials and a
.24 percent·jump in stock prices decline In consumer confic!ence .
The department's index of
propelled the overall Index upward, ac cording to the coincident Indicators, designed
to track current economic activdepartment.
Other indicators driving the Ity, rose 0.4 percent in August
index were a decrease In average after being unchanged In July .
The index of lagging Indicaweekly Initial claims for unemployment Insurance, increased tors. designed to reflect past
building permits and a rise In the economic performance, rose 0.9
,percent in August after falllng0 .5
nation's money supply . .
On the down side were . a percent In J u.ly.
Meanwhile the department resho11er average work week,
faster vendor performance indi· vised downward its estimate for
eating less demand for products, the June leading Indicators from
fewer unfilled orders for durable ·uncha1Jged to a 0.1 per,cent drop.

Shooting vi~tim
in stable condition
A Pomeroy man is in stable
condition in the Intensive care
unit at Veterans Memorial Hospital as the result of a shooting
incident on Butternut Ave.
Thursday night and his wife is
confined to the Meigs County Jail
pending charges to be filed ·
today .
Dennis Boyd. 45, of 138 Butter·
nut Ave., was transported to
Veterans by the Pomeroy unit of
the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service at 9:28p.m. and
underwent emergency surgery
overnight.
He reportedly had been shot in
the stomach with a 22 handgun
following a dom es ti c quarrel at
the residence. His wife. Betty
Boyd. 35, is being held in the
• Meigs County Jail.
The Department of Meigs
County Sheriff James Soulsby
reports that charges will be filed
against her today through the
Prosecutor's Office. The charges
to be flied against Mrs. Boyd
were not specified by the
department.

~Local

Also arrested at the scene late
last night on c harges yet to be
flied were . Minford J ewell,
Langsville area, and Charles R. ·
Stewart. Florida. Both are con- .
fined to the Meigs County Jail. II
was reported that there were
several other people al the Boyd
house when the shoo ting
occurred .
According lo the Pomeroy
Police Chief Gerald Rought and
Deputy Sheriff Jlmmer Soulsby,
the argument and ·shooting incident took place o~tyide the
house. After Boyd was shot he
reportedly ran into the street
where he collapsed.
Cocaine was founc) in Boyd's
clothing, Deputy Soulsby reported.'· The Ohio BCI has been
called into assist local officials in
the Investigation of the incident.
On the scene las t ni ght and
until abou t 4 a. m. this morning
were several officers from lhe
Pomeroy Police Depar tm en t and
the Meigs Co unt y Sheriff's Department . along with the Prosecutor' s office.

news briefs,-._,

Donations sought for Hugo victims
Area 4-H Clubs and Girl Scout troops will have a bu sy
weekend as they scour Meigs County collectinJ:t donat.ions of
money, clothing and non-perishable food ilems for the victims
of last week's hurricane in Charleston. S.C. The donations are to
be shipped to South Carolina on Tuesday. Any money collec ted
will go directly to the hurricane stricken area via a local church.
Anyone with donations for the drive should drop them off on
Monday at the new Meigs County Public Librar y. between 9
a.m. and 5 p.m. And anyone who has items or money to drop off
and ·can't mak e It between 9 and 5, just call Faye Clifford, a t
992-7201, who will arrange to be at the library parking lot at a
designated time on Monday evening to tak e cha rge of the
donations .
All 4-H Clubs and Girl Scout troops, and any other groups or
organizations, are welcome (and needed) to .participate in the
drive.

.

EMS has six Thursday calls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
responded to six calls on Thursday.
.
At 4:49a.m. the Racine unit was called to Trouble Creek Road
for Raymond Kerns who was taken to Holzer Medical Center. At
4:13 p.m. the unit transported Seth Stobart from Racine to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. The unlt went to Fifth Street at
5:58p.m. for Wanda Powell w)lo was transported to Veterans,
. Continued on page 10

~------------------------------~--~~
, ''

�•
Pomeroy~ Middleport,

Commentary
.

1.
Ill Court Street
P omeroy, Ohio
DEVOTE D TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON .\REA

~t:b

ts:m~ ~.._.,...,~=&gt; ..=.
~v

.

ROBE RT L. WINGETT
P ublisher
P AT WHITE HEAD
Assista nt Publis her/ Controller

CHARLEN E HOE F LICH
General Manager

LETIERS OF OPINION are welcome. Tiley should be less than 300
words long . .\II letters ar e subject to editin g and must be slped with
name, address and t elephone number. No uns igned letters will be pub·
llshed. Letters should be In good taste, addreulng Issues , nol personalilies.

Book about first lady
rolls off the presses
WASHINGTON !UP !)- A new book a bout Barbara Bush te lls a lot
to a nyone who wa nts to know w hat ma kes one of the most popular firs t
lad ies in recent his tory tick.
"Simply Barbara Bush" w ritten by Washington Post columnis t
Donnie Radcl iffe 1s a tn bute to a s trong woma n whose fa mily ca me
first, bu t who ca me to enj oy politics a nd th e role she could play on the
nationa l s tage la te in life.
Mrs . Bush cooper ated m giving mterviews to Ra dc liffe- they have
known each other for years- a nd she has read tt , bu t s he declin ed to
comm en t. No reason not to. It's fla t tering a nd depicts a warm
sparkling woman who ca pti va ted the c ount ry with her di rectness,
concern for the a filleted and off the c uff. down to earth quips.
Her own childh ood was no t a lways happy with a demanding
mother, who ch1ded her abo ut be mg plump.
The da ug hter of a wea lthy m agazme publtsher, she dr opped out of
Smith College to m arry George Bush. who a lso had country club
c redentmls . Their 44 -yea r m a rriage produced fi ve children and
endu red the pa m of th e loss of a 4-yea r-old daughter, Robin. lo
.
leukemia.
Jumping out of the pages is the strength of Mr s. Bush a nd the realit y
tha t she ra1sed the c hlid ren whtle her hu sband was clim bing the
poli tical la dder or scroungmg up inves tcr s du n ng his Texas oil days.
" In a sense tt was a ma triarc ha l family," her son J e b is qu oted as
saytng. " Maybe the re were two of her. My fath er was never a round ."
She se t her priorit1es ea rly tn her m a rriag~ a nd mothPrhood ca me
fi rst. It Is in her matronly days th a t she has become a p~ rsona l i t y tn
her own right
Throug h the yea r s. she has fo und tha t public life ha s 1ts pttt a lls. F or
that reason, she a p pears to have put her own tdeas in a blind trust.
fear ing th at she wi ll be in con fl ict with the views of her husba nd .
When Bush aba ndoned his support for the Equa l Rights
Amendm ent , she d id the sa me thing. She also re treated aft er she sa id
in a n interview tha t assa ult wea pons should be banned. And s he has
refused to say wh a t her own views are on a bortion, except that she
backs up he r hu sba nd. She a lso has sa1d that s he has fri end s · 'on both
s l d~· of the q 4est ion.
Radcl iffe points out tha t Mrs. Bush operates in a different way fr om
her predecessor, Na ncy Reaga n. who sought th e re mova l of some
Whi te Ho use atd es m a roundabout way " We do things differently,"
sa id Mrs. Bush " I have a lways been a ble to go through George "
She has made i1teracy her m ajor mteres t as fi rst lady. "By the time
Georg£' had dec ided to ru n for pres id e nt, I dec1ded tha t I s hould find a
cause," she sat d
Mrs. Bush e ndu red toug h mome nts durmg the pres id ent ia l
campa tgn, bu t cam e to love the roug h a nd tumble of 1t a li. While she
ques tloned some of the persona l attac ks th e pres id ent Indulged in , she
"was no soft ie" m campa 1gn strategy .
She a lso was de fe nsive about Bush's selectiO n of Da n Quay le as h1s
running m ate. say ing. " ! think he's better qualified to be vice
preside nt th an Michae l Duka kis is to be pres id ent. "
The au thor sa td t ha t some adv1sers warned dun ng the ca mpa ign
that the Bushes we re not m a ki ng more of a publ iC display of th et r
a ffectio n "They came up with a routine whi c h they re hearsed a t
Ke nnebun kport a nd p la yed to perfect ion la ter at th e GOP co nve ntion
m New Or le ans ."
Bu t no one doubt s the ir e ndurtng love for one anoth er Bush ts
qu oted m the book as say mg " if Ba rba ra Bush would ever run for
offtce, I 'd li ke to be her cam pa ign ma nager."
As ti me goes on there will be many books wr itten abo ut the current
firs t lady a nd she will wnte her own me mOirs in due ti me. But
"Stmpiv Barbara Bush" ts a sens it tve a nd hones t por trayal of th e
presid e nt's wtfe wh o has had a meteor ic rise m publtc es teem .

Letters to the editor
Regarding, 'Everything I need'
Dear Edllor
Reg ar d tng, "E .v ery thi ng I
Need". a s I read this art ie if' it
brought back man v memories.
a nd enj oyed it very mu ch
I ca n relate I o eve ry word of it
My etght years ot gra mmar
school were spent tn a one room
school ho use Ou r sports were
baseba ll in the sma ll schoo l ya rd.
Jump the rope wtl h a wil d
grapevtn e. hopsco tch. et c: we
were ta ught to rea d. writ e, spell,
a nd wi thout excelle nt grades we
dtd not pass on to the next grade
How many college kids of
todav ca n spell and wrtte thetr
own name ieg1bly ? But. . the
most im porta nt les son we were
taught by both our pare nt s a nd

teachers we r e res pect for our
elders. a nd for oursel ves !
In those days there were no
wel fa re. we wer e poor but ... we
ha d our pride! AN D, we s tili do!
Rig ht? Yes. the brown pa per bag
and ragged jea ns we were once
as ha med of are now high on th e
lis t of the " in crowd", a nd
socwtv's ht gh sty le. Do yo u
suppose tha t " mora ls" will ever
get bac k in sty le agai n?
Let's hope so! After a li ... . it
does n' t cos t a nything.
And who knows? Per haps the
lit tle la rd bucket lunch box will
soon be ma kin g it 's " de- but ''
back to the fu(ure I a lways rea d
"Beat and Bend" a nd enjoy ing it
vE;'ry much.

•

Today m history
By United Prpss International

Tod av is Fr tda v . Sep t 29. the 212 nd day of 1989 "'i th 93 to fo llow
The moon is new
The morni ng sta rs arP Merc ury . Mars a nd J upiter
The eve nm,:: s tar s are Ven us and Sa turn .
ThOse bor n on th is da te are under the sign of L1bra. They includ e
Spanish poet -novelist Mi gue l de CPrva ntPs. a uthor of "Den Quixote"
iDohn Kee- HOH' -tay&gt;. in 1547; pioneer nuc lea r ph ysicis t Enr ico
Ferm i in 1901; singi ng cowboy Gene Autry in 1907 1age 82); act ress
Greer Ga r son in 1908 1age 811; film direct ors Miche langelo Antonioni
("Zabriskie Point"! in 1912 and Sta nley Kra mer ("Guess Who's
Coming To Di nner·') in 1913 1age 76 1; actress Anita Ekberg In 1931
(age 58); rock 'n' ro ll pioneer Jer ry Lee Lewis In 1935 rage 541;
singer -act ress Madeline Kahn in 1942 rage 471 and singer Marilyn
McCoo in 1943 I age 46 ).
On this d a te in his tory:
In 1789, the U.S. War Depa rtment organ ized America' s first
standing army - 700 troops who would ser ve for three ye a rs.
In 1923, Britain began to govern Pales tine under a League of
Nations ma ndate.

1:

ON THE VOLGA RIVER,
U.S.S.R.- Secret Soviet pli! ns to
revive th is shrinking r iver could
have catastrophic effects on the
clima te of t he world, according
to highly class ified Cent ral Intelligence Agency reports
The Soviets are not deliberately pla nning to harm the
delicate ba la nce of the Eart h, but
the words "env iro nmental impact statemen t" never cross the
Soviet m ind.
Sin ce t he time of the czar s, the
Ru ss1ans have toyed with the
idea of divert ing their rivers to
ma ke up for a " m istake" of
nature. The till of the Soviet
Union's la nd mass in th e north
causes more than four-fifths of
1ts fr es h water to flow nort h into
t he Arctic Ocean ins tead to south
where it can irngate crops .
The Volga, th e longes t river in
Europe, flows Int o the southern

heartland where three-fourths of
the Soviet people live a nd fourfift hs of its agricu lture and
industry are based.
As lon g ago as 1830, an early
s u rveyor named Alexan d er
Shrenk .first proposed divertmg
the north -flowi ng Pechora into
the Vo lga to increase the a moun t
of wa ter gomg south. For almost
as long as the Soviets have been
toying with the idea, U.S. intell igence has been secretly cr it iquing the pla ns. We have exa min ed a dozen CIA repor ts on
Soviet river diversion schemes.
No one ca n acc urately predict
what a Soviet d ivers ion project
would do - whet her it would
ca use a global temperat ure
change or simp ly de prive other
cou ntries of ra in.
If the CIA and its scien tists
ca n't predict what will happen,
~o u ca n bet th e Soviets don't

Majors

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By United Press Inter national
players that we are improving,"
Miami and Central Michigan
said Rose. "The payoff Is winhave one thing in common going.- .-nlng. Th is year's league race
into their Mid-American Co nferalready has proven that It makes
e nce ga me Saturd ay a t Oxfordno difference where you are
both are winless. Miam i's 0·3
picket to finish. We m ust elimlnate the mista kes that are
' record comes as no surprise , the
Chippewas' comes as a s hock.
hu rting us . Our offense really
' Miami, 0-10-1 'last year an d
leaves something to be desired."
picked to finish last this season In
The Miami-Central game ,
the MAC race, Is win less in Its
which begins wit h a 12:38 p.m.
las t16 games. The Redsklns have
kickoff on the MAC television
networ k, Is one of on ly two league
opened the season with losses to
Purdue. Michigan Sta te and
games on the sc hedule. T he other
Cincinnat i.
has Eas tern Michigan, which
On the other ha n(! , Central
shares first pla ce with TQiedo at
Michigan was the pre-season
2- 0, visiti ng Western Michigan,
favorite for the MAC crown. But
1-0.
the Chippewas ha ve s ta ggered to
Other ga mes Involving MAC
consecutive losses to Southwes ttea m s include To ledo a t Ind ia na
In an afternoon g ame and Ke nt
ern Louisiana, Akron and, last
State at Nor th Carolina State,
week, 24-20 to a Bowling Green
team that had been outsco red
Ohio Universit y a t Louisia na
69-9 in Its firs t two games.
Sta te and Akron a t Bowling
" We're a football tha t is
Green, all night games.
frustrated by Its star t, " said
The Akron-BG ma tc hup will be
Central coach He rb Deromedl.
the firs t night game In his tory at
" And yet , we're a team tha t can
BG, which is ha v in ~ portable
s till see where It can •Improve,
lighting broug ht in to Illumina te
and now It's our job to get It
Doyt P erry Field .
done."
Bowling Green is 1-2 after Its
Deromedl, despite Miam i's win over Central Michigan last
week, while Akron lost 20-17 to
problems, is n't taking the Redskins lightly.
Youngs town State to fa ll to 2-2.
"Mia mi reminds me a lot of The Zips edged Central Michiga n
Bowling Green In that it 's played
27-26 the prev!ous week.
Akron won 27-22 the las t time
good opponents to get r eady for
th e MAC," said the Ce ntral
th e two teams played In 1985.
coach. ' 'The record doesn't show
Ke nt Stat e will take an 0-4
ityet butMiamihascome along
record to Raleigh , N.C. , for its
game against North Ca rolina
way in one year. "
Miami coach Tim Rose ca n
State , unbea ten m fo ur gam es
point to 11 turnovers in three
and ra nked 14th in this week's
games as his team's biggest
UP! Board of Coaches ra tings.
problem.
_The Golde n F!as ~es of coach
"We ne ed a win to prove to our
D1ck Cr um don t figure to se-

ol

~re e dt. Wrma.W. ...,..
Perry Mo... rorward Bill Martin, ce~Ue r
lim Gl'ddMim ... cf'Merforward llf'n

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leaclers to go a head wit h a ny of
the divers ions. Desperation a nd
demographics could cause Mik·
hail Gorbachev to c hange that.
For his perestroika to succeed,
Gorbachev could use some restructuring of the Soviet geography. One CIA report says the
diversion of the Pec hora River
would stabilize t he level of the
Cas pia n Sea a nd do wonders fo r
the drinkability of the grossly
polluted Volga. Farm ing and
fis hing would th rive. And the
Sov ie ts could a lso produce 11 •
billion mo re kilowat t hou rs a
year a t e xisting hydroelectr ic
power pla nts.
It would be a s hort-hved
heyday m environmenta l te rms,
but the Soviets don't win a ny
pr izes for th inking in env ironmenta l ter ms.

Mlftm S~t

,.,....
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E ..t

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Cflller 8tnr lll... rAciL
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Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
know. Their primitive com puters
force Sovie t clima tologists to
"keep their models as simple as
possible," the CIA reporn say.
And it isn' t clear that the
environment a ll y obtuse Soviets
would be deter red even if they
knew they wer e put ting the
world' s ecosystem out of whac k.
The late Soviet Prem ier Leonid
Brezhnev cam e ·the closest to
implemenfln g one of these disastrous schemes. He app roved the
d iversion of the Pechora. the
Onega a nd th e No rthern Dv ina
rivers int o the Vo lga and committed $40 bill ion. But Brez hnev died
before t he project got off the
grou nd
In spite of th e1r gra ndwse
sc hemes . th e Soviets fortuna tely
have lac ked the will. the means
'
and the politica l longevity
of

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This week's games

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Prep resuhs

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A pandora's box for American h1:1siness .
ties. thi s civ il right s meas ure
would req uire America n employers to inves t in a ux iliary aids to
l'nsur e lhe dJsa bied access to
employmen t sll es.
1 Ther~ is no qu est ion th a t
di scri min a tion agm ns t the di s
a bled ts a problem or tha t
addlliona l ass 1sta nce to help the
dis a bl ed are needed. F or exa mpie. a n est im ated 70', of the
dtsa bl ed are cur rently unempioved. a nd two-thi rds of these
sav tha t thev would like to work
bu·t tha t they are una ble to do so
beca us(' of d1scnm mat10 n in
emp loy me nt a nd a lack of access
to trans portat ion to get to wor.k
These pC'opir now collect federal
dtsabt illy an d welfare checks
amounting to ovPr $:i0 billion per
yC'ar.
t Further more t here are numerous th ings that Ame rica's
emp loyers co uld a lready be
doing to hel p the disa bl ed ga in
access to thetr tac ililies that
many a re not doing.
For example, cha irs or desks
co ul d be placed on b loc ks to
accommod a te wheelchai r users.
or Pm piovee work sched ules

.
dom tn a ted wor ld ht story a lmos t
s ince the end of Wor ld War II. ts
ending as the ma jor communist
powers beg in to recogn ize thei r
ina bility to kPcp up, eithe r
eco nom tca lly or politica lly, a nd
proba bl y even militar il y, with
t he West.
Th e Ti mes may well be right a lthough the U.S government is
slow to endorse its conclu sion:
firs t, because it may also be
wrong; a nd second , because,
even if it 's right, we mu st at ail
costs avoid a dis integratton ofth e
Western a lli ance, whose s trength
and du ra bilit y during the past 40
year s ha ve been the principa l
factors In ha lting the march of
communis m.
But now a long comes Fra ncis
Fu kuya ma who makes the Times
editoria lists look like a bunch of
nar r ow -mind e d geost r a t eg i c
particularists. Writing in the
Summer 1989 issue of The Nationa l Interest. Fukuyama , who
is deputy director of the Polley
Planning Staff of the · State
Department, suggests that what
Is happening Is tha t history itself
Is ending.
Fukuyama arrives a t th is
arresting con clusion by defining

his tory as the ideo logica l evolution of ma nkind. Over the centuries the re have been many competing proposa ls co ncernin g the
bes t form of huma n governm ent,
ra nging from lobedi ence to a
supposedly di v in e king, to obe- ,
dience to the laws of history as
deduced by Ka rl Marx , or to
acquiesce nce 'in ' the will of the
ma jort ty prov ided ther e is s ufficient freedom for mmor ities to
express alterna tive views.
My own theory 'at wha t is
ha ppenin g Is a good dea l more
sa nguine. I believe that the 18th
ce ntury E nlightenment , with its
euphor ic faith In science and
(us ua lly ) fre e dom , te mpte d
many people to leap to th e
co nclus ion tha t with these precious tools m a nkind could be·
come th e arbiter of its own
destiny, with no need of div in e
guidan ce. let alone governance.
Now, two centuries later, s cience
is encountering certain a ppa rently permanent limitations, and
It has been demons tra ted that
freedom a lone Is far from enough
to assure human happiness.
Mankind Is pausing, nose In the
air - looking for a new. or
perhaps a new-old, roa d to
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Symmes Valley second;.
Kyger Creek tabbed ninth
Symmes Valley ($-0, 2-8) is
rated second ln Division V' s
Region i9, behind 'Newark Catholic, according to the Ohio High
School football ranking report.
The Vikings will host No. 16
Norlh Gallla (2-3, 1-1).
Behind the Vikings are Trim·
ble, Canal Winchester, ShadysIde, Howard's East Knox, Green
Local, Portsmouth East and No.
9 Kyger Creek. The Bobcate (5-o,
2·0) will look to keep pace with
the Valley when they host No. 35

Hannan Trace (N, 8-2).
Trailing the Bobcats are
Beallsville, Woodsfield, Portsmouth Notre Dame, Bellaire's
St. John Central, Lancasler's
Fisher Catholic, Grandview
Heights of Columbus, North
GalUa, Waterford, New Albany,
Miller, Marion Catholic, Ironton
St. Joe, Berne •Union of Sugar
Grove, Centerburg, Crestline,
Morral Ridgedale and No. fl
Soulbweall!rn (~. 8-2), who will
play No. 84 Racine So•tllern ( 1-4,

William Rusher
ha ppiness
It isn't mf'n ·lv the Cold War
t hat' s endi nc . no r is it history,
which !l')av "" 1tn a maze us. Wh at
is endin g •.tncl not just in the
Sov tet Unum IH China 1 is the
co nfide ncC' wC' m is pl acC'd , two
ce ntur ies ago. tn science a nd our

1-1 ).

I

own good nalurPs

I Berry's World
'I

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a..~wthAII

Is history really coming -to an .end?
Ther e IS no doubt whateve r
th at we are witness tn g momentous changes on the world scenein . the Soviet Un ion. China.
Pola nd, Hu ngary and elsewhe re
-and it is perfectly natu ra l th at
thoughtful obse rvers should try
to expla in what ts happemn g. in
th e li ght of the laws ofh 1story and
the pa ra ll el ex periences of different na t io ns ana eras . It is also
natura l that their expla natiOns
should differ .
Of cou rse. there are 1hose who
believe that htstory . In Aldous
Hu xley's words, Is "j ust one
damned thing after a nothe r."
But most of us li ke to think we ca n
see a pa ttern in events. Undoubt·
edly , there is a lot of wishful
thinking in the process, and we
certa inly don' t all see the sam e
thing. Bu t wh a t ma kes th e
present moment so Inte res ting Is
that just about everybody agr ees
that somethin g ver y bi g Is
happening.
To the editorial boa rd of Th e
New York Times, it all boils down
to the happy propos ition that
. " the Cold War Is over." The
great bi-polar confrontation be·
tween the Free World and the
communist nations, which has

,\Jhlo,.(MhhJ al Knyon
\hU!IIef' ~ll Oherll•

('ollf..._•
f:Jft'.ad &amp;Kd• Jovldc lo

,.;prtlal w.!!Wanl to
lntramuNI .... d ....

e mployin g organizations must
provide auxiliary aids fo r the
di sa bl ed if this would not constitut e a n " undu e burden" on the
or ga niza tion. However, the meas ure does not spell out what an .
" undue burden" is . By so111e
int erpreta tions of the Act. it is
qultC' poss ibl e tha t a n e mployee
m ay be req uired to hire a blind
e mp loyee a nd the n turn a round
a nd hire a nother employee to
r ea d ma ter tal s to tha t per son. If
th e Act is ta ken to this extre me in
practice, it s consequences could
be fina ncia lly devas ta tin g for
A me r ira's e mployer s in gener al
an d for sm all businesses in
pa rt tcular.
Ult imately, it would be up to
the cour ts to fl es h ou t exact ly
wha t the ac t means .. so a t thi s
poin t it Is any body' s guess what
the full ramifica tions of this
legis la tion wilt be. That is why
the ADA could prove to be a
Pa ndora 's box fo r Ame rica 's
pnva tc sec tor. I , for on e, would
have preferred to see a more
ca refu lly worded bill enacted to
a ddr ess t hi s imp ort a nt a nd
press mg na t tona l co nce rn .

II

Thunold~ ' l'l Spurhl Tnanlllll'llel'lol

Cong. Clarence Miller

could be modifie d to co nform
w1 th the schedule of lift -equipped
buses Suc h cha nges a r£' not
costly a nd ca n help dtsa bied
peopl E' tmm C'asu rabi y
·
However . th e ADA would a lso
impose very rra l costs upon
Ame ric a's pnvate sector. F or
exa mple. the meas ure r equ ires
tha t a nv new fac ilities tha t arC'
built m'ust be acces sibl e to t he
disa bl ed rega rdl ess of cos t . The
bill would a lso require tra nspor tat ion eq utpme nl such as buses
a nd tra ins to be ma de access ibl e
to the disabled. a nd tt requ ir es
telephone co mpa nies to mak&lt;'
the ir services access ibl E' to those
wit h hear ing a nd speec h im pa tr mcnt s. Th e bus ind us trv es ti
matC's th at these mand ates wt ll
cos t the m over $200 m tl iton
annua lly, wht le the tciecommunica t tons indus trv belipvcs tha t
this will cost the m at leas t $300
miiiion per year.
However. tho real problem
wit h this ieg ls la l ion is that no one
is really s ure JU St how far
e mployC'l'S will have to go to meet
the m andates of thi s legis la tion.
Th e ADA on l ~ s p~c i f tes th a t

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•

Spor1s briefs

CoUece
The NCAA has asked the
University of Texas to tnvestl·
gate an anonymous complaint
against the ballketball team. Two
assistants allegedly drove players to summer school classes at
Austin Community College and
to a summer job. . .. Tight end
Stephen Clark of the University
of Texas will miss at least six
weeks after undergoing ankle
surgery this week. .. . USA
Basketball, the national basket·
ball governing body ,will hold a
news conference Oct. 12 In
Colorado Springs, Colo. Among
the Items to be discuued Is
coaching and staff selection
leading to the.}990Worid Basket·
ball Championships and 1992
Olympics.
Track and Field
Olympic great Carl Lewis
called allegations be used ana·
boUc steroids "absolutely false
and untrue" and said hll ac·
cuser, sprinter Darrell Robin·
10n, Is "In dire need of paycblat·
ric help. "

rlously challenge NC Stale, al though Crum was 8-2 against the
Wolfpack in his 10 years as head
coach at North Carolina.
Toledo also faces a tough
assignment at Blopmington,
Ind., against the tough Hoosiers,
1-1. The Rockets are 2-1 overall
and that one loss as a 23-10
decision Sept. two weeks ago at
Wisconsin, another Big Ten
team.
" IV Is very sound with a strong
offense and a very physical
defense, '' sa id To ledo coach Da n
Simrell. "We'll have to play
a bsolu tely perfect in order to
beat them and that's our goal."
UT is just 4-19-1 in the last 24
road games.
Ohio U, which has staggered
ou t of the blocks wit h an 0-4
record, faces what m1ght be the
toughes t task of a ny of the MAC
team s th is week whe n it takes on
Louis ia na State a t Bat on Rouge.
Although LSU is 0-2, OU coach
Cleve Bryant calls the Tigers
" the bes t 0-2 team in the
countr y." And , he may be ·right.
" They have great personnel,"
Brya nt said of the Tiger s. "They
just line up and get after you . Bu t
if we ca n get on track, a ny thin g
ca n ha ppen."
Ci nc innati , coming off a 30-14
win over Mi ami, takes it s 1-1-1
record to Louisvi lle to face an
1mproved Cardinal team .
Louis ville has beaten Wyoming and Ka nsas and led 9thranked West Virgima befo re
fa lling 30-2l to the Mountaineers
" Louisvi lle is by far the bes t
team we've seen this season, "

Bucks meet BC in key non-loop tilt

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.r S• Fnuu. t.c:e

NATIONAL I.F.AGUE

A new civ il right s meas u re ts
on the fast track in Co ngress tha t
is intended to ex tend to our
country's di sa bled cit izens t h ~
same ext ra civ il right s pro!Pc
lio ns tha t Congress fe lt necessa ry to e nact for rac ia l m in ori ties a nd women
That meas ure is the Amer ica ns with Dtsa btlit ies Ac t of 1989
IADA!. an d It Is li ket:-· to be
enacted in tolawbefo re theen d of
this yea r . However. whil E' tht s
ieg isia tioni scert a inlywell tnt e ntioned a nd has strong s upport on
Ca pit ol Hil i. tt may prove to be a
Pa ndora' s box for Amertca's
pr iva te sector .
Th e Act ts intended to pro hibit
dt scrimmat to n m e mploy ment
and in access to public acco mmoda tions aga msl those who are
phys tca ll &gt;· or mr nta llv disa bi Pd
ln tha t respect. the b til is very
simil ar to prev ious civil r ight s
meas ures that ba rred di sc rim i
nation against women and raCial
mmor ities in the workplace a nd
m a public acco mmoda tio ns.
However, unlike prev ious ctv tl
ng hts measures whi ch s1m piv
barred the excl us ion of m inori-

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

•

Miami, CMU looking for first grid

Page- 2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio
Friday. September 29. 1989

Soviets shouldn't toy with Mother Nature!

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

Following the Highlanders are
New Washington's Buckeye Central, Columbus Wehrle, Danville
and No. 31 Reedsville Eastern
( 2-3, 1·1), who will face Oak Hill
(4-1, 1-1) . Gallon's Northmor,
Millersport, Southern, Hannan
Trace and Zanesville Rosecrans
round out the rest of Region 19 . .
The Oaks are ranked 18th In
Division IV, Region 15, behind
Toronto, Sarahsville's Shenandoah, Nelsonville-York, Massllon Tuslaw, Cadiz, Crooksville.
Summit Station's Licking
Heights, Bloom-Carroll, Newcomerstown, Apple Creek's Waynedale, East Canton, Heath, Frede·
rlcktown, Amanda Clearcreek,
Hannibal's River, Canton Ce ntral Catholic and top-ranked
Steubenville Catholic Central.
All SVAC games will ~tart a t
7: 30p.m.

progra m ."
COLUMBUS, Ohio &lt;UPII Ohio State a nd Boston College
Cooper consid Pr s it cr itica l to
meet in football for the first time his program, too
"l didn' t get a whole lot of res t
Saturday a t Ohio Stadium in a
game that could make or brea k over the weekend ," Cooper said
the season for both the Buckeyes . earlier ,in th e week. "1 had a lot of
th ings going throug h my mind .
and the Ea gles.
Ohio State, 1·1. is coming off a But, I'm a pos itive per son and the
42-3 embarrassment las t week only course of action we' ve got to
against Southern California a nd take is get be tter."
Cooper was n't looking at BC's
opens,Iiig Ten play next week at
0-3
record . but at th e way the
Illinois. a 14-13 winner over USC
four weeks ago. A second non- EagiPs have los t two of those
conference loss could ma ke fo r a three ga mes.
long s eason.
" Don't le t that 1record 1 mis·
BC Is 0-3, having dropped lead you," sa id Coope r ''They 're
heartbre akers th e last tw o weeks a good, so lid defens ive footb a ll
to Rutgers (9-71 and Penn State team . I don' t think they have the
17-3 ). The Ea gles a nd coach J ack quickness Southern Cal had on
Bicl&lt;nell are In no mood to go 0-4 . defe nse. but they' r e a good
The loss to Penn Sta te came m defen sive unit .
''Their tradema rk on d efe nse
the final 44 seconds after th e
.
is
m ore physical than it ts
Eagles led 3-0 from midway in
the second quart er. Rutgers won quickness, but th ey a r en' t
t •
on a field goal with nine seconds s low ."
The Ea gles' problems so far
remaining. BC's other de feat
was to Pitt , 29-10.
this seaso11 has been on offense.
"Ohio State is coming into the Le d by form er Cinc inna ti
game off a difficult loss," said Moe ller.sta r Mark Ka mphaus at
Bicknell, rumored to be one of qua rterba c k. BC has scored just
those inte rviewPd for the Ohio 20 po ints in three games. Both the
Rutgers and Pe nn State games
State job when Earle Bruce was
we re played in th e ra in.
fired and John Cooper hired
Kamphau s has completed hail
"You can be sure that they will
hi s 74 passes for 397 ya rds , but
be aiming to straighte n things
ha s thrown e ight interceptions.
out before they ge t into their Big
Ten schedule. I cons ider thi s to The Eagles' leading rusher is
6-foot , 195- pound Mike Sa nders,
be a critical game for us if we a re
who ha s 276 ya rds in 50 ca rries, a
going to turn the season around. !
5.5 ya rds per carry avera ge.
would consider it to be jus t as
The BC defense ts a ncho red by
cr itical to the Ohio St a te
inside linebac ker Matt Kelley , a
6-foot-2, 225-pound semor who
leads the te am m ta ckles with 35,
inc luding 29 solos and five be hind
Gallipolis at Logan
Jackson a t Mar ie tta
Warren Local at Athens
GRAVELY TRACTOR
Clearfork at Coal Grove
SALES &amp; SI;RVICE ,
Dayton Dunbar at DeSales
204
Condor St
Pomiroy, OH .
Meigs at Ne lsonville-York
Alexander at We llston
S~rl•t &amp;
Trimble at Federal-Hocking
OPEN MONDAY TIIIIJ FRIIAY
Vinton County at Belpre
9 Uti.- 5 P.M.
Eastern at Oak Hill
SATUIIJIAY 9 A.M.· I P.M.
Ha nnan Trace at Kyger Creek
North Gallla at Sy mmes Valley
~THE
Soutjlwestern a t Southern
Point Pleasant a t Parker sburg
South (Saturday)
Miller at Zanesville Ro secra ns
(Saturday )

the line of scrimmage.
A rebound by the Buckeyes
was made tougher by the loss of
star ti ght end J eff E llis to knee
su rger y. The 6-foot -4, 250-pound
Ellis. Ohio Sta te's lea ding re- ·
celver las t year ,' was in jured
early in the USC game and wil i
not only m1ss the rema inder of
thiS season but a lso nex t year's
spr ing d rill s.
That moved fifth -year senior
J1m Pa lmer into the starting
lineup, the only personnel c ha nge
Cooper sa id wou ld be made.
Ta ilb ack Carlos Snow, who
ru shed fo r 83 ya rds in 11 ca rries
aga inst USC but fumb led on the
Ohio Sta te 11 to set up the
Ttoja ns ' . thi rd touchdown. was
a ble to p ra ct ice this week. A sore
knee kept h1m idle a week ago
Ohio Sta te quar terback Greg
Frey, who led the na tto n tn
pass in g e ffi ciency aft er a 16 for
21 pe rformance for 285 ya rds in
opener aga ins t Oklah oma State,
wa s ju s t 13 of 28 and 13o yard s
a gainst US('

WID

sa id Cincinnati coac h T im
Murphy, "They are big, fas t,
stong and deep The thing that
Impresses me is that they h ave
no obvious weaknesses We will
have to play our best ga me to
hang in there. "
There are four league ga m es
sc hedu led m both the Ohio
Athiettc Co nfere nce a nd the
North Coast Athletic Conference.
In the OAC, Mount Union plays
Capital at Cooper StadiUm and
Muskingum is at He1deiberg in
day gam es, wh ile John Carroll 1s
at ·Marietta and BaldwinWa llace at Otterbe in in nig ht
contests
The NCAC schedule finds Wit ·
tenberg at Alleghen y 1Pa ) , Case
Reserve at Oh10 Wes leyan. De ni·
son a t Earlham and Wooster at
Ober hn , a li in the 111ternoon
Rounding out Sat urday 's schedul e, Ohio Sta te tries to bounce
back from last week's 42-3 1oss to
USC by hosting Boston College,
Morga n State plays at Youngstown State, Hi ram at Bethany .;
!W.Va.), Ka la mazoo !Mich. 1 at · ·
Ohio North ern, Albion (M ich.) at
Kenyon, F indlay at Ashland,
Manches ter !l nd .l at Blu ffton ,
Arkansas-Pi ne Bluff at Centra l
State, Mercy hu rst !Pa 1 at Dayton. De fta nce a t Wi lmmgton ,
Geneva ( Pa I at Tiffin and ·
Urba na a t Olivet (Mich ).

The Daily Sentinel
!USPS 145-91:3)

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record his league-leading fifth
shutout and 17th win of the
season. BlyleveQ, 17-5, notched
his eighth cqmplele game and his
60th career shutout, placing him
ninth on the all-time list. Larry
McWilliams, 2-2, took the loss.

Blue Jays hope to wrap up
AL East title this .weekend

•

•

•

\
•

•
•••

\
r: \

.'
... '
,

CLAIMS 21st WIN - Oakland hurler Dave Stewart delivers a
pitch against the Texas Rangers Thursday night. Stewart pitched
five shutout Innings on his way to taking the A's to a 5-3 win and his
21st win of the season. (UP I )

&gt;Horrible year ends
:bad decade for Reds
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Fit·
tingly , a horrible year Is bringing
an end to a bad decade for the
Cincinnati Reds.
Only one team in the generally
weak National League West
failed to win the division in the
1980s - the Reds.
"The Team" of the '70s became "The Joke" of the '80s. And
,' in 1989. the joke became s ick
humor.
Pete Rose, who proudly drove
"The Big Red Machine" of las t
decade. drove a stake in the
hearts of Reds fan s this year.
Gamblin' Pete not only was
banished from base ball forever,
he agreed to the punishment.
, Never bet on baseball, though.
Just decided it was "fair" to be
banned for life ,!rom the spor t
that was his life.
But the Reds' probl ems go
much deeper than Rose. His
pub! ic ago ny. which wrenched on
from late March to late Augu st,
rea lly ' didn't hurt th e team's
wo n-los t record tha t much. After
a ll . the Reds were in first place in
J une. th ree months after the
gambling in vestiga tion of Rose
had supposedly overshadowed
every throw every Reds player
made .
The Reds went on a 10-game
: losing st rea k when Rose was
· manager and a tO-ga me losing
· , streak alter Rose was gone.
Rose 's ga mbling investigatio n
did not Weaken Bo Di az's knees.
It did not rip Barry Larkin's
elbow . It did no t break Paul
O'Neill's thumb.
But injuries are never. never

an exc use in professional sports.
The orga nlzat ion mu st always
prepare for injuries. because
they inevi tably will hit every
club. The Chicago Cubs were
ripped by key injuries early this
season. but they found a way to
win their division.
l!' s not the field manag er. but
. the general manager and (/W ner
who must ensure that the club
remains competitive when starters s lip for one reason or
another. So. let's take a look at
the Reds, position by position.
Owner Marge Schott - Her
main goa l is to get the Reds In the
' playo ffs and it hasn't happened
since she took over th e c lub. She
once banked entirely on Rose· .~ ­
baseball skill , Now. s he has
lear ned the ropes and must rely
on her own Instincts. That begi ns
with whether to ,keep general
man ager Mu rray Cook and who
- to pick fo r a new field mana ger.
Genera l manager Murray
Cook - Has not made the trades
or formed a strong enough minor
league program to fill in for
Injured or bad players. Looks
tentative compared with bold
moves In recents years of Giants
Channel Cotli•h

I

4" ® .30/eo.
6" ® .45/eo.

and Padres. Schott may or may
not give him another season to
tinker around with.
Inter im mana ger Tommy
Helms - Unlikely to be around
nex t season. Appears to be better
suited as a coach than manager.
The Reds either need a disciplinaria n like Whitey Herzog or a
go-getter like Roger Craig.
Pitching ~ Does not look
promisi ng. because there' s no
tel ling how Danny Jackson and
Jose Rijo will come back after
in juri es wrecked them this year.
Rick Mahler, a flop this year, is
signed for $790.000 for next year.
Newcomer Tim Leary didn't do
much. Only Tom Browning was
decent. Reliever John Franco
wore a little thin as the year
progressed and Rob Dibble has
some problems that go beyond
throwing the ball.
Catcher Bo Diaz - thankfully
has no contract fornexi year, and
failed to recover from knee
s urgery . Can Joe Ol·lver
blossom?
First baseman Todd Benzinger
- fairly decent, although the
player the Reds gave up for him,
Nick Esas ky, fared better for the
Rt&gt;d Sox .
Second base- position looking
for a player, with Ron Oester and
Luis Quinones m ere l y
platooning.
Third baseman Chris Sabo. sta rted 1989 poorly, got hurt and
ended the season with knee
surgery, which doesn't bode well
for 1990.
Shortstop Barry Larkin - his
injury at mid -season rea lly killed
the team. He appeared on his
way to winning the National
League batting title. The Reds
had a bsolutely nobody to replace
him. His full recovery is imperative for 1990.
Left field - basica lly vacant ,
with old ster Dave Collins and
erra tic Herm Winningham platooning for the traded Kal
' ""Di:mleis.

Rio's Hoop named
Player of the Week
Rio Grande volleyball player
Shelly Hoop was named the
NA!A's District 22 Player of the
Week for her efforts in helping
push the Redwomen to a district leading 16-3 record.
Hoop. a 5-8 junior middle hitter
who appeared In each game of
Rio's five match victories last
week. recorded . 36 kills In 66
attempts with 12 errors, gtvlng
her an attack percentage of .363.
She had 18 solo blocks. three
block assis ts and four blocking
error s. She added 78 digs , three
service aces and nine r'eceptions
errors In 104 attempts.
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By ERIK K. LIEF
VPI Sports Writer
Baseball used Thursday's light
schedule to take a well-deserved
breather following two divisional
clinchlngs a nd prior to the
showdown In the American
League Easton the se!json's final
weekend.
With three of the four divIsional races settled, baseball's
sJiotliglit ·will f~us on the To·
ronto Skydome Frl&lt;!ay night
where the Baltimore Orioles and
Toronto Blue Jays will square off ·
In a three-game series that could
decide the victor in the AL East.
After 159 games, the Blue Jays
hold a one-game lead over the
laughingstocks turned contenders Orioles, who finished last
season with 107 losses - 34 1-2
games .out first place.
The Blue Jays need two victories In the three games to clinch
the title. The Orioles need a
sweep to win the division title
outright but · could force a onegame playoff at Baltimore Monday afternoon by taking two.
The winner will meet the AL
West-champion Oakland AthletIcs In a best-of-seven series,
beginning next Tuesday at
Oakland.
"We know what we have to
do, " Baltimore manager Frank
Robinson said of hfs surprising
Orioles, hoping tocapa remarkable one-season turnaround from
cellar-dwellar to division Winner.
"We really can't lose a ball

game."
" We want -to win two out of
three here," Toronto .c atcher
Ernie Whitt said. "If we do. we go
out to Oakland."
Baltimore comes In loose,
secure in the knowledge its
season has been successful already. although Robinson dis·
putes this.
"We're not satisfied yet," he
said. "I know we've had a good
season. But it can be a beitl:r
season. If we do come In and win
three or two out of three and then
three out of four, It will be a very
satisfying season. We're not
going to be satisfied until we
finish out tlie Toronto series and
see what happens. "
Toronto Is hoping to become
the second straight A,L East team
to win the title aJter making an
In-season managerial change.
The Boston Red Sox replaced
.John McNamara with Joe Morga,n last season and went on to
win the AL East crown . Toronto
pulled a similar managerial
change earlier this season by
replacing m Jlmy Williams with
the more relaxed Gaston and the
Blue Jays have res ponded by
going 75-48 under Gaston.
"The l~;~st' time I checked,"
Gaston said, " I haven't gotten a
hltorwon a game all season. Alii
can do Is write the lineups down
and hope they play well. I think
this team would have won two
other division titles, 1987 and
1988, without injuries. " '

Conference races to start ·saturday
Egad, friends! The conference
races of 1989 are beginning In
college football this week. The
key matchups: surprising Tennessee hosts hardnosed Auburn
in the SEC; rugged Clemson
visits Duke In the ACC; and
Southern Cal goes on the road to
meet prolific Washington State In
the Pac-10.
The rejuvenated (and unbeaten I Tennessee Vols boast
victories over Coloardo State,
UCLA and Duke. The Vols have
shown plenty of muscle In racking up69 points while 1\mitlngthe
opposition to only 26. Tennessee
has now won eight straight going
back to last faiL
Auburn'•s Tigers 12·0) have an
explosive attllck of their own. It
has accounted for. 79 points In
their two victories. They've
allowed a total of 'only three
points combined 'to Pacific and
tough Southern Mississippi.
In a br uising battle, we look for
Tennessee to win, 30-28.
Danny Ford's Clemson Tigers,
scoring at a 30-points-per-game
clip, will be too much for ' the
Duke Blue Devils to contain.
Make it Clemson33-21 over Duke.
Southern California's Trojans
and the W&lt;~shlngton State Cougar's will get It on for the 50th
time. Washington State's title
hopes suffered a severe blow
when QB Brad · Gossen, the
nation' s leading passer, was
Injured against Oregon State and
sidelined for the rest of the
season. The Trojans are our
choice to run their series record
to 41-5-4. It's Southern Cal , 28-24.
In major non-conferenc e
games, powerful Colorado of the
Big Eight plays Washington of
the Pac-10 in Seattle; Miami's
Hurricanes visit Michigan State
rABC-TV); and Notre Dame
· goes against Intra-state rival
Purdue (ABC-TV) .
Coach Bill McCartney's
stampeding Colorado Buffaloes,
3-0, move well on the ground or
through the air. They' ve scored
100 points in the three wins while
holding their victims - Texas,
. Colorado State and Illinois - to
33.
Don James' Huskies, mean-

while, are no strangers to the end
zone, averag Ing betier than 24
points per OUting.
In a cliff-hanger the Hoople
•
System calls it for Colorado,
35-25.
,
Miami s pass-happy Hurricanes have played Michigan
State three
tim
-1945 • 1959 an d
.
. es
1982 - and won them all. Chalk
this one up as No 4 as Miami
• '
goes home with a 28-24 victory.
In Purdue's Ross-Ade Sta dl urn, Notre Dame and the
Boilermakers will play the annual battle for "The Shill eIag h"
trophy. According to Webster's
dictionary the "shillelagh" is a
..
..
cudgel, used as a club against
a foe. The Irish have taken !hill
lit era II y, .. CU d geII ng ,. P urdue
during the last three years by a
COm bl n ed SCOre 0 f 137 to 36.
This looks like a repeat performance for Lou Holtz' crew. N.D.
will prevail, 38-12. Har-rumoh!
SATURDAY. Sept:JO
Air Force 42 Colorado State 28
All: ron 28 Bow li n~ Green 20
Alabama 33 Vanderbilt 1
Arizona State 24 Mi!?S OOti 10
Arkansas 31 T£&gt;xas·El Paso 14
Army JS Ha rvard 18

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TO PLACE AN ORDER CAL LABOVE STORE OR CALL: 1-BOG-247-2815

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Indiana 45 Toledo 14
Iowa State 181\tlane 12
Lafayette 35 Columbia L
' Lehigh 21 Towson State 14
Louisiana State 31 Ohio University 15
LoulsvUl e 35 Cinclnnat121
Miami 'Florida&gt; 28 Michigan Stato 24
Michi gan 28 Mary land 20
Minn esota 35 Indiana State 8
Nebraska 49 Oregon Stale 24
North Carolina 24 Navy 10
North
Ca roli na State 35 Kent State 21
North Texas 27 Kans as State 20
Notro Dame 38 Purdue 12
Ohio State 30 Boston College 20
Oklahoma 49 Kansas 19
Oregon 35 Ar~ooa 25
Pacific 13 Long Beach Sta te ,10
Penn State 38 Texas 2l
Rhode !stand 21 Brown 14
Southern Cat 28 Washtngl on State 24
Stanford 24 San Jose State14
Tcnnesse&lt;' 30 Auburn 28
Texas A&amp;M 24 Southern Mtsslssippl21
Texas Christian 21 SMU 10
Tl'xas Tech 38 Ba v lor 28
. Tulsa 31lowa 28 •
utah 42 San Diego State 21
UCLA 35 California 10
Virginia 36 William &amp; Mary 14
Wake Forest 21Ri ce 7
W. Mi chigan 17 E. Michigan 14 .
West Virginia 31 Plt1sburgh 30
Wycmlng 24 Oklahoma state 22
Yale '1:1 Connecllcut17

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well be the comment of Carrie Abbott, this
five-year-old when she's all grown up and
refleCting on the times when her mother, Mrs.
Roger A,bbott, lifted her up onto her lap and the
two enjoyed reading a book. ArleneSilbennan, an
education researcher, says It's never too early to

SUGAR
RUN
MILLS
180 MULBEnY AVE.
992~2115

In 1988, thhe Meigs Library
The Meigs County Literacy
received a Library Services
Program is a joint endeavor of
the county's public library sys- Construction· Action &lt;LSCAI
tem and ·'the Retired Senior . grant through the Ohio State
Volunteer Program (RSVP), a Library Board for funding to
provide literacy materials and
part of the county's program for
tutor training to Interested
senior citizens through the Meigs
adults.
,
County Council on Aging.
The
Meigs
RSVP became in·
By working together, the two
organizations are making the valved by recruiting )loten ti al
most effectlye 0use. of their ·tutors for the workshops since
resources and avoiding duplica- literacy Is a major Impact area
for the RSVP nationwide.
tion of services.

Including Products Formerly
MerkP if!d fl v Urtir(I':Jfi''
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BriRham Young 49 Utah Stat£&gt; 21

Clemson 33 Duke 21
Colorado 35 Washington 25
Co rnell 24 Northeas tern 7

, fly CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Imagine living In today 's complicated society not knowing how
to read or write.
And many are.
In Meigs County, statistics
Indicate that one out of every five
residents over the age of 20 are
fuilctloJU!,IIy Illiterate - l!nable
· to read and write well enough for
everyday JIVing and working.
This mean&amp; · that they cannot
read the papers that their child'
ren bring home from their
teachers, they cannot read and
understand Instructions on a
label, or read street signs .
They cannot read a newspaper
to keep up on events In their
community, understand Information they may receive from
welfare or social agencies, fill
out a job application, look up
numbers In a t~:lephone book.
And even more disturbing . .
there Is clear evidence of a direct
relationship between parents'
educational attainments and
those of their children.
Therefore, children of parents
who fall to acquire basic skUis
are most likely to continue the
cycle of llll~acy - and often the
under employment and poverty
- Into which they have been
born. ·
,ACC!lrding to the Ohio 1981
census data, there were In Meigs
County a total of 1,521 wrsons
over 25 years of age who had less
than eight years of school completed, and 6,250 over that age
who had less than 12 years of
schooling.
Many of these . people are
functionally Illiterate or only
marginally competent In their
basic skllis.
Non-readers practice two
things to keep others from
learning they cannot read -they
avoid situations that require
reading and compensate In other
skUI areas. They frequently ask
for directions, the time and
·"what's on the menu today."

The method chosen for the
tutoring was Laubach which
emphasizes letter recognition
and sounds. Two one-day workshops were held In the fall of 1988
with 19 persons becoming certified tutors.
Durtng 1S89in-service sessions
for tutors have blien held. These
support sessions are importantln
- ~olving difficulties, sharing exhilaration of successes and maintaining awareness that all are

contributing to an Important
·
effort.
Library and RSVP staff have
attended workshops dealing with
the fomuition of a Literacy
Council, hO\f to reach the prospecti'{e reader, !!nd using the
newspaper as a teaching aid.
Nine tutors have worked with
students In the county.
The requirements for a volunteer tutor are to meet lndlvldu-

MilWAY
TAVERN
FABULOUS
SO'S PARTY

"When I was ·a child, my
greatest pleasure was to take
·a plate of oJtlon sandwiches
and a jar of water, and crawl
behind lhe coal heate,r and
read for hours. I wanted to
help someone else find the Joy
I found In reading. I am happy
to know the person I tutored Is
now In the GED program."
-Wilovene Bailey, Pomeroy.

Saturday
Sep.tember 30, 1989

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"No one Is ever too old to
learn to read, and I want to
share the joy or reading with .
everybody." -Erma Yoho,
Pomeroy.

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The cost of Illiteracy Is stagger'
-60 percent of America's
lng, both for Its victims and for prison Inmates are Illiterate and
• society.
85 percent of all juvenile offend,
But It's never too late to learn · ers have problems reading.
to read.
-The cost of Illiteracy to
business and the taxpayers Is $20
bllliori per year.
-51 percent of Illiterate adulty
live In small towns and suburbs,
41 percent live in urban areas,
and 8 percent live In rural areas.
-Youngsters whose parents
are functionally Illiterate are
twice as likely as their peers to be
functionally Illiterate.

1'he Meigs County Library and
the Retired Senior. Volunteers
have Initiated a tutoring program which is free and open to
anyone. Infonnat!on on that
· program may be obtained by
c~;~lling the Meigs Library at
992-5183, or the Meigs County
RSVP at 992-216).
In Meigs County there is also
an Adult Basic Education program where adults who want a
better future are given a second
· chance to upgrade their basic
reading and other skills. It is a
program Of the Ohio Department
of Education.
Here are the facts as released
~l)e U.S. Department of
Educlltlon:
-75 percent of unemployed
adults have· reading or writing
difficulties.
-A 1982 study indicated that ·
approximately 23 percent of
American adults.17 to 21 million
people, age 20 and over, do not
read at all or read below the 4th
grade. level.
,
by

-The aver~;~ge kindergarten
student has seen more tbaJt 5,000
ho11rs of television, having spent!
more time In front of the
television than it takes to earn a
bachelor's degree. .
-People with less than six
years of schooling are four times
as likely to be receiving public
assistance as those attaining six
or more years of education.
-40 percent of Illiterate adults
are between the ages or 20 to 39,
· 28 percent are 40 to 59, and 32
percent are 60 or older .
-44 percent or American
adults do not read even one book
in the course of a year.

ally with one student to teach learn to read or to Improve
basic reading skills for approxi- reading skills. The service is
mately one to three hours per available at no charge to the
week; use Laubach or other student and every effort Is made
resource materials to help the to keep the student's name
student learn or improve reading confidential. Materials needed
skills; keep accurate records of , fQr tutoring are housed in the
.,
time, place, duration and content library.
Other services offered through
of meetings and sessions.
All instruction Is on a one-to- the Meigs Library are a story
one basis. The locations and time hour for pre-school children, a
can be worked out between the summer. reading program for
tutor and the persons wanting to students, cultural programming
for students, placement of large
print readlilg materials at local
nursing homes. and the Meigs
· Multi-purpose Senior Center, upto-date GED mater ials, a bookmobile scheduled to begin In
November and the delivery of
books to homebound persons.
RSVP .has encouraged the
development of reading skills by
placing volunteers In the schools
to .assist with Right-to-Read
Week and assisting at the Library with the story hours.
More literacy tutor training
sessions are being planned for
next month .
The workshops will be held on
Nov. 6, 8 and 13 at the Meigs
Library from 1 to 5 p.m . Jessica
Jones will be the Instructor for
the workshops with the Laubach
series to be used.
"Years ago when I saw the
The class size Is limited .
movle·wllh Johnny Cash who
Anyone in teres ted In becoming a
could not read, II probably
voluntary tutor is invited to
sowed a seed. After learning
contact
the Ll brary or the Senior
that I might be able to help
Citizens
Center, Susan Oliver, to
someone to read, I did it."
register for the training sessions.
-Phebe Roberts Pomeroy.
Efforts are also underway to
form a Literacy Council to be
comprised of community leaders, tutors and agency personnel.

''What came to my mind
was how my grandmother had
taught me to read and write
before I was live years old.
She used the back or a large
calendar for me to write on,
and I would read it back to her.
Also I wrote on her 'steamed·
up' windows." -MarUyn Powell, Racine.

'1'm not much of a teacher,
but If I caR teach someone to
read and enjoy II - like the ·
Bible, or help someone fill out
an application, I am willing to
put fortb my best effort."
-Rhoda Hall, Middleport.

•

r

This Page Sponsored By These Fine Community Minded Businessess!!

2 Dr.• auto .• less than 48,000 miles. Clean.

82 Chev. Citation ••••••• S1988

So yqu have a friend or a relative who can't read but has
become an expert at concealing that fact, and some h9w has
· managed to get along.
Sure they've had some embarrassing times .
Sometimes It's hard to fake It , and It's not easy to admit to
anyone that you can't read.
But you know that down deep they've always wanted to learn
how to read. It's been a matter of pride, how do they ask
someone for help, how do th ey avoid the embarrassment, how
do they tell someone that they can't read?
·
It's not easy .
And sometimes it takes a relative or friend to give some
encouragement, to help In get ling information on what's
avall;l,ble In tutoring programs.
Where do you go for that Information?
To the Meigs County Public Library in Pomeroy, specifically
Ruth Powers, the librarian, or to Susan Oliver , the RSVP
blrector at the Senior Citizens Center .

What motivated you to become a literacy volunteer?

Delaware 35 New Hamps hJrt&gt; 15
East Carolina 24 Louisiana Tt&gt;ch 12
Florida 28 Mlsslsslppl Statt" 21
Fullerton Statt:: 20 Nev ada-Las Vegas 10
Furman 32 VIrginia Military 14
Georgia 28 South Carolina iS
Hawaii 24 New Mexico 12
Holy Cross 26 Princet on 22
Houston 38 Templ l" 14

85 Renault Encore ...... S3388

RT. 35 CYCLE SALES Rt.

35, southside,

e~tLlf!l.

MIDDLEPOH, OHIO

i

The Daily Sentinei-Pi.ga-5

Literacy Program joint venture of library, senior volunteers

POMEROY, OHIO

~~r.• ~~~~ ai!~-~~ ;t•;;;~.Oply $3 788

HAITNGEI PARKWAY

slarl reading to children. Even reading aloud to
babies before they turn six-monthll-old helps them
fonn an early attachment to books, she says.
WIIUe babies won't undersllld what Ia being said
they are likely to absl)rb some feelings about
laDpage wblch help prepare them for the lime
when they do understand.

READING - •'Richer than me you'll never be. I
. had a· mother who read to me." That might very

SPRING VALLE't CINEMA
446 4524

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

One in five Meig~ Countians functionally
Getting -along, faking it
illiterate; link between parents',·· child's skills · embatTassing at times

Central Michigan 28 Miami (Ohio I 7
Citadel 28 South Carolina State 15

4 Dr.• 6 spd.

DELIVERY WILL BE: Friday, October II
PDMEROY- RioG FEED 1o SUPPLY
10 :16-11 :16 a.m.. Phone# 882-21114
BIDWELL- BIDWELL CASH FEED STORE
12 :15-1 :15 p.m .. Phone# 3BB·911BB

Elsewhere .In "the Amerjcan
League, Boston squash"ed Milwaukee 12-6, Oakland dropped
Texas 5-3, Seattle clipped Cleveland 6-2 and California blanked
.
Kansas City 2-0.
No games were scheduled ln
the National League,
Red Sox 12, llrewers 6
At Boston, Rick Cerone and
Nick Esasky h(lmered and Kevin
Romlne .added ·t hree singles and
three RBI. Mike Boddicker,
lti-ll, won lor he lllh time In his
last 15 decisiOns ::!!hough he
lasted just flvt&gt; Innings , allowing
nine hils and four runs. Don
August, 12-12, allowed seven runs
In two-plus Innings.
Oakland $, Texas 3
At Oakland, Calif., Dave
Parker ripped his 22nd hom er
and Dave Stewart picked up hls
21st win. Carney Lansfol"!l remained four points behind Minnesota's Kirby Puckett in the AL
batting race going 1-for-3 to stay
at .336. Brad Arnsberg, 2-1, went
4 2-3 innings for the loss.
Mariners 6, Indians 2
At Seattle, Alvin Da vis
·snapped a 2-2 tie with a two-run
pinch-hit double in the eighth
inning and Bria n Holman tossed
a slx -hHter. Holman, 8-10,
walked two and struck out four In
his sixth complete game. Indians
re liever Steve Olin, l-4 , took the
loss.
Angels 2, Royals 0
At Anaheim, Calif .. Bert Blyleven tossed a seven-hitter to

Kpff-kaff
fly Maj. Amos II Hoople
Pigskin Prophet

Friday. September 29, 1989

Friday. September 29. 1989

Pomeloy-Midcleport. Ohio

"-•

wv.

•••.
•

•f•

"

EWING
FUNERAL
HOME

:,.•'·
•••
•
•'

••

992-2121

'

:• 108 Mulb.-rry Ave.
•

•••

Pomeroy, Ohio

,,'

STATE FARM
INSURANCE
'

Mill $WIGEI

992-6685
149 South Third
Middleport, Ohio
•

PEOPLES
BANK

KNIGHT &amp;
MULLEN

QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

AnOINEYS-AT-LAW
'

992-3345

105 East S.Concl
Ponaroy, Ohio

255 Mill Street
Middleport, Ohio

'

773-5514

Mason, WV.
. 882-2135
Ntw Havtn, WY.
' 675-1121
Point Pleasant, WY •

992-2090

'FRUTH
PHARMACY

PLEASERS .
RESTAURANT

992-6491

'992-2057

786 North $tcond
Middleport, Ohio

691 West Main
Pomeroy, Ohio

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-5141
264 South Second
Middleport, Ohio
-:

-

DOWNING-CHILDS
MULUN-MUSSEI
INSURANCE
992-2342
111 East Second

Pomeroy, Ohio

'

' ·'

RAWLINGS-COATS

"

· "Community-Service"

VEtERANS
MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
992-2104

••••rial
Drive
Po•roy, OW.

'115 East

\·

�29. 1989

Ohio

T,he Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Page-7

..

lU E. ....orial

Dr.

Pamtroy

992·2104

H2·7075
172 North Stcond Au.

P. J. PAULEY, .AGENT
el Columbus, 0 .
104 w. Main
"2· 1111 Pomorov

Co.ll
•

R!w'.

pastor: Debl:ie 8\Ck,
!lrhool Su lX· Church School9 15 a.m .
.,.,.....,. 10: :II a m . Cho~ rehearsal.
~. 6·45 p.m. under directhn of Lois
.BlOt.
' I'ONE:ROY CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
, JU:NI:, Corner Un10n and Mullx&gt;n'y, Re\.'
· ~Git!l McClul'\1. pcu.1a. Norman Pres· loy. I . S. Su!X .. Sundey School, 9·:11 a.m :
: IIW ' t worstip lO:JJ a.m.: evmingservice6
p.no.; - - ~. Wedne;day. 7 p.m.
.. GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH, 3'l6 ~
··lit, Pomeroy. Sunday seiVk:es. Holy
~~·non tk&gt;ftrst Sunday of each monlh.
..•4 ~ed With mornin g prayer on t~
.~tlirfttlhdi\v. Morning payer and sermoo on
.·all-!llndays olthemontn Church School
•"an• ~ care pt"O\'\ded. Coffee Mur m t l'l'!
· ~ IIIII tmrnecU al:ely followIng t te ~erviCE&gt;
. JIOICROY CHURCH OF CHRIST. 212 W.
,. Ml*i lt.. Leo Lash. evan gf'llst 81hle School
, 9:aa.M.; Morrin ~ worshlp, lO:l:la.m, Youl h
· 11
• • 6.00 p.m.; Evm.lnl'!:worship. 7:00p
··JD. W • eday ntghl pr,ayer meE1 mg:and81ble
st11b'.T·Wp.m
'Ia SALVATION ARMY. 115 Bu!lernut
.-Aw.. PWneroy Mrs. Dora Wining in charge.
911_. holiltess lllMing. 10 a.m. Sundey
II::II a.m . Sunday School YPSM
Eklilf Adams, leader 7:JJ p.m Satvatton
~~various s~aka-s and music sil!('ials
, . , _ ., ll:JJ a.m to 2 p.m. Ladle; Home
~. members In charge all women
lnvlllt 6:45 p.m Thursday, Co r~ CadE'I
0 . . (Yilll!l: Poople-Bi tiet. 7::11 p rrt Btble
St\illy and Prayer mE'Eting, opE!'Ilo t I-(&gt; public
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CIIRIIT, 33226Chlldren's Home Road !Courly
MoM 76). !:82-3847 Vocal musiC Sunday Worstjp lOa.m., Bltie-Sttrly 11 am . Worslip. 6 p.
m . .WNI.Em ~. Bible Sta:ly, 7 p.m ~~er.
LaAen Hope, evangelist
OUl DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHUitOI. Jack Cleland pastor; At.rlryG iovd.
Su,._ !lllntlay Schoo!JO·OO am. Yooth mEet·
In&amp; 7 p.m. ""e!Y Wemffiday.
MCI!ED HEART CATHOLI C CHURCH
- P'Mteroy Msgr Mtchae! Hellmer, Ph .
992-5a. Saturday even in ~ Mass. 5: .)')p.m .
: !u•Uy Mass. 8 am and 10 am CCD
e lMS&amp;, 9 a .m. 1s1 and 3rd Sunday of each
mOIIItL Confes!:iions . One-half hour bcfor('
each Mass.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS·
TOUC FAITH - New Lima Road, next to
Fort Meigs Park Robert W Richards
pastor. Sunday services, 10 a. m an d 7 p.
m .: Wednesday worship , 7 p.m.
UN ITED METHO DIST.
GR AHAM
Prilll:riln~ 9 . 30 a m flrst a nd seco nd Sundays of each month. thir d and fourlh Sun
day uch m onth worship sPrvlces a t 7· .10 p
m.; Wednesday evenin gs a t 7 30 p m
Praye-r an d Btbte S1Udv.
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENT IST. Mulbt!rry Heights Ro ad. Pomeroy Pas t or Bob
Snyder: Sabbath School Superintend('nt,
Rodllf")' Spires. Sabbat h School b('glns at'!.
p.m . on Saturday art ernoon wtth 1,1. or ship
service fol lowing at 3 00 p m EveryonP
~

Wti('!Oftlf'

,

I!UTLAND F IRST BAPT IST CHURCH
- Stster Har riet! Warn er . Supt Sundav
Sctaool 9· 30 a m : M o r nm ~ Wor ~ hip lO :1S
a .m
I'OMEROY FIRST BAPTIST. Stovr
J'wUer, minis ter: Saturday f'"YI"nlng
eva•J~Ilsttc services. open to publi c. 7 p.
m.; SUnday Church Sc hool. 9 30 a m .
MeirRlnJ!: Worship 111 ·.10 a m
nRST SOUTHERN BAPT IST. Po·
m erey Pik('. E . La mar O'Bryant. past or
Jack NeE'ds . Sunda y Sc hool DlrPctor Su nday School, 9:30a .m ., Motnin g Wo rship,
10 ·4!1: evf'nin gworshlp. 7·00pm jDS T 1
"' &amp;r: 7· :lO ( E S T ) Wedn esdi!v PravPr &amp;&gt;r vlce. 7·00 p m tD.S T . i &amp; 7;30 P ~ I E.S
... T ,l: Mission F riends tagcs :.l-61 . Royal
Arl'dtassadors I boys ages 6-18!. and Girls
In Action t&lt;:IJ.l f:'S 6-18 1 o n Wedn esdavs, i p
m 10 S.T.l &amp; 7: 30p.m . tE .S.T. I: Tuesday
Visitation. 6:30 pm
rAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH . Bai ·
:. ley ftunRoad. Re\' E mm ett Ra wson. pastor. Handley Du nn supt Sundav Sc hool,
tO a .m .: Sun da vev~ nm g s ervlce, 7 :\Op m
, Bibl e tf'B chln g. 7 30 p.m . Thur sda~· !YRA CUSE MISS ION . Cherry St Sv ·
ranse. Ma r k Morrow, pas t or SE&gt;rV I&lt;'E'f&gt; 10
~
a m Sund ay tvenl ng serv tces Su nday
an«&lt; Wf'dnesd ay a t Q·OO p m
' ' MIDDL EPORT CHURC H OF CHRIST
~ lN CHRISTIAN UNION. Dwight Hal f'\'.
", flrl:il elder; Wa nda Mohler. Sund.Jy School
; Sup1. Sunday Sc hool 9·.}} a.m , Mor nin g
1
Worsl'tip 10 · 30 a m.: EvPnin g Wnr .. hip 7· .r!
' p.m . We dn t&gt;Sda v pra ~~r m ee t in g7 ,1 lpm
MT. MOR IAH CHuRC H OF COD
Ra ci ne Rev. James Satt C'rfl eld. pas t or
FrH'I'ftan Williams. Sup! . Su nd a~ Scho ol
l
9· 45 a .m.: Sunday and WP&lt;ln e;dav (&gt;V('n
• tng Wt"VICE'S , 7 p m
MIDDL EPORT FIRST BAPTIST.
~ Coi'W!I' SIXIh a nd Pal m er J ames Sl?ddon.
,
Plitt or. Edn a Wtls on, s s s~,~pt : Cat tl)
, Rljp, Asst. Supt. Sund ay Sc hool. 9. tr, a
1
m : Mornin g Worstllp. 10 15 a.m.: Sund ay
.. E: venln~ ser v l c~ 7 p m Pra yPr meet mg
a nd BiblE' Stud y We.dnesdav eveni ng, i p
m : Children's choir pract iC£:, Wrdncsday, 7 p m ; Adu lt c hoir pnrcl tce, Wed .. R
'
p rn.: Radio prog1am , WMP O, Su nd av,
1
S30a m
~
MIOOLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
, 5tft aftd Ma in. AI Hart son, mi nis ter.
.; Rtcl'lard DuBose. Assoctar e Past or: Mike
., Ger~ch, Su nday School Superintendent
t1'
Bt.ae SChool9: 30 a m ., Mornin~ Worship
•• 10:• a .m. Evening Warship 7:00 p. m.
w =:y, 7: 0Q p.m. Prayer m e:-ting.
EPORT CHURCH OF THE NA ·
' Zo\111:lt1E , PASTOR Fred Penhorwood .
"' •he, Sunday SChool Supt. Sunda y
~ SdRI t ::.J a .m .: Morning Worship 10. 45
; a .111.: Evening Service, 6:00p.m.: Wed
~
Pra yer Meeting. 7: 00 p.m
,.. U!llrED PRESBYTERIAN MINI§TRY
OF MEIGS COUNTY
'
Rev. O'Qulnn Kelly
•
HAI!RISONVILLE PRESBYTERI AN
~ CHURCH - Sunday : Wors hip Services
.., 9:•a.m .; Church Schooi10:1S a .m ..
•
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN ~
,....,- School, 9 a. m .: Ct)urch service.
d

n_..,.

.. ll:lla.m.
=CUSEF:IRSTUNITEDPRESBY·
Sunday St::hOoL · 1D a .rn.;
~ HI'VIce, 10:15 a, m .
CHURCH OF GOD, Pastor,
Jb;-A cax. SUnday SchOollO:OOa .m .;
_..,. Moralng Wonhlp 11 :00 a m Chll·
.,_., Church 11 a.m . Sunday Eve ning
........., 7:10 .. m . Wed., 6 p.m. Young Ladl•' AUKDiary. Wednesday, 7 p.m. Fam·
Uy Worohip.
HAZEL COMM UNITY CHURCH. Oft
Rt. IJI, 3 mUI'B !rom Portland·Long Bot·
• - l*el Hart, pMtor. Sunday School,
t :• a .m.: Sunday morning Preachln_g
»:•a.m.; $allay evtrntng aervlces, 7: :J)

·"' J.....N -

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~
;.

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...,..-.;..c.~

-

~~~! i~l

Cabinet lakin&amp;

Syracuse
992:3978
.'

Prescriptions

PomProy

991 1955

~

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1l

. 1

f

I

1

21 z E.

Maitl Street
Pomeroy

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHU RCH. Corner Ash and Plum. Noel
Her rmann. pastor Sunday School10 :00a
m. , MorninR Worship, 11:00 a.m.; Wednesday and Saturday Evening Services at
7:30p. m .
APPLE GROVE UNITED METRO·
DIST , CHURCH - Pastor, Rev. Carl
1-;llcks, 10 miles above Racine on Rt. 388.
Sunday School 9 a.m .. worship service 10
a .r'n. Sunday evening service, 6:00p.m .;
Prayer meeting and Bible Study 'ntunday, 6. 30 p. m.
MT . OLIVE UN ITE D METHODIST Off 124, behind Wilkesville. Charles Jon a ,
past or. Sunday School, 9:30a.m.; morning
worship, 10:30: Sunday an~ Thunday
evening services, 7:00p.m.
MEIGS
.
COOPERATIVE PARISH
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev. Don Archft'
Rev. Frank Crolaot
Rev. Seldon John•on
ALFRED- Church School9:30 a .m .:
Worship, 11 am : UMYF6 · 30p.Tli.; UMW
Third Tuesda y, 7 30 p.m. Communion,
. firs t Sunday. I Archer )
CHESTER - Wors hip 9 a m.; Church
SC hool 10 a m . Bible Study, Thursday , 7p.
m . UMW. first Thursday, 1 p.m .: Communion. first Sunday (Archer ).
JOPPA - Wors hip 9. 30 a .m.; Church
Sc hooll0 :30 a .m . Bible Study We&lt;lnesday.
7: 30p.m. / Jo hnson)
· ,
·
LONG BO'I"fOM - Church School 9:"
a .m .: Wor ship 10:30 a.m.: Bible Study. _
Wed nesday, 7·30 p.m. ; UMYF Wednesday, 6 DO p m., Communion F,lrst Sunday
of Mon(h tCrofoo1\.
REEDSV ILLE- Churc h Schooi9· :fl a .
m . , Wot·ship Servlcell :OOa.m .
TUPPERS • PLAINS ST. PAIJL Chu rch Sc hool 9 a ln.: Worship 10 a .m .:
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7. 30p.m., Communio n First Sunday t Archer).
CENTRAL CLUSTER
Rev. Don Meadows
Rev. Wesley "n.alcher
Rev. Harvey KlndDI.ch
Rev. Kathryn ROO!'
Rtv. Paul Martin
Rev Arthur Crabtree
Rev . Robert Steel•
ASBURY t Sy ra cuse)- Worship 11 a .m .
: Churctl School 9·45 a m ; Charge Bible
St ud y, Wed neiday, 7 : ~ p.m.; UMW, fir st
Tu esday. 1:30 p m ; Choir Rehearsal.
Wednesda y 6 30 p m. (Thatcher)
E NTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m.;
Church 5c hool10 a.m .: Bible Study, Tiles·
d ay. 7· 00 p m · U MW, F irst Monday, 7: 30
p.m ., UMYF Sunday , 6 p.m. Choir Re
hearsa l. Children's ar 6: 30p.m Adult fol-'
iowlnp:; Wedn esday / R iley !
F LATWOODS- Church School.lOa .m .
: Wors hip, 11 a .m.: Bible Study, Thu rs·
d ay, 7 p m . UMYF , Sunday, 6 p.m . IRI·

R£ALTDI

These sheets of inexpensive paper you are
now looking at are among your most
priceless possessions; not for their intrinsic
value, but because of what they represent. In
your hands at this moment Is a fair, unbiased
account of eV-erything happening in your
town, as well as In many other places. You
'willlearn ,about government meetings, at
which you are asked for your Input. You can
read letters from other citizens like yourself,
and are given the opportunity to underscore
or rebut them, as you can wi~ the editorial
comments. Your own club activities,
fund-raising drives, etc., are publicized at
your request. Most of all, you can thank the
Lord for the freedom represented by
everything you can read here, by attending
the House of Worship of your choice; another
freedom,· listed here in your newspaper.

lie-

aa•

w...,...

J?

-

It was announced that the rush
party will be held on Oct.l9 a t the
home of Sonya Wolfe when
members of the XI Gamma
Epsilon Chapter. Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority met recently at the
Senior Citizens Center.
The group will meet at the
Syracuse Pool parking lot at 6: 15
p.m. to go to Mrs. Wolfe's house.
The sorority will be making
necklaces this year as a money
making project.
Tentative plans were also
made to have a family skating

Crow's Fanily Restaur•t
"Futt1l., ICHifllr Fll•~ C61•tl•"
228 W. Main St.,. Ponieror

992-5432

•

C\\\ifl S••UI (&amp;a~,
13MHISttMt

Mldcl~tport,

716 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORt. OHIO

PRE

Ohlci 41710
11141 812·1117- IIIB·OOKS)

RAWUNGS.(OATS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

in
f '"·""

llorth ·
Secentl
Middleport,
Ohio

992-5141
264

EWING FUNERAL HOME
"Dignity and Service Always"'
Established 1913

992·2121
106 Mulberry ln.

Certificate
to be awarded

CHURCH SUPPLIES • BIBLES

SHOP

Iouth 2nd

Mldol•ert

lng worship 11 a.m.; i::venlng servtceti p.
m. Prayer meeting and Bible Study Wednesday, 7 p.m .
FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rev. Nyle
Borden, pastor Cornelius Bunch, supt.
Sunda y SchOol 9· 30 a.m .; Second and
fourth Sunday s worship service at 2:30 p.

m.

Po1111roy
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourlh and
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. Main St.. Middleport. Rev. Gilbert Craig,
Jr., pastor. Mrs. Ervin Baumgardner,
Sunday School Supt. Sunday Schoo19:30a .
Meeting, Bible Study a nd Youth F ellow·
m.: Worship Service. 10:45 a.m.
ship. 7:30 p.m .
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
CHURCH OF COO OF PROPHECY
- Joseph B. Hoskins, evangelist . Sunday
Loca ted on 0. J . White ftoad of Highway
BibleSiudy9a.m. : Worship,10a.m.: Sun.
160. Pat Henson. pastor. Sunday. School10
day evening service 6 p.m .; Wednesday
a.m . Classes for all ages Junior Church 11
evening service, 1 p.m.
a.m.; Morning worship 11 a.m. Adult
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY. Racine,
Chair practice 6 p.m . Sunday. Young PeoRt 124. William Hoback, pastor. Sunday
pl e's, Children's Church and Adult Bible
School10 a.m .; Sunday evening service 7
Study, Wednesday ;lt 7:30p.m
p.m. Wedn esday evening service 7 p:m .
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL. 570 Grant
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle.
St. , Middleport. Afflliatf'd with SOut.hE:rn
Supt. Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Morning
Baptist Convent io n. David B ryan, ·Sr., Ml·
Wor ship 10 · :l1 a .m. Prayer service, alternnls ter. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Morning
ate Sundays.
worship 11 a. m .; Evening worship 7 p.m .,
THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST.
Wednesday evening BlbiP study and
APOSTOLI C FAITH - New Lima Rd ..
prayer meeti ng 7 p.m.
next to Fort Meigs Park, Rutland. Robert
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, St
Richards, pastor. Services at 1 p.m . on
Rt. 124 and Co. Rd . 5. Derek Stump, pas tor
Wednesdays and Sundays.
William Amber ger, S. S. Supt.; Sunday
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP·
Schooi9:Xl a .m. , Morning Worship 10:30
TER of the Wesleyan Holiness Church.
a.m .: Evening worship 7: 30p.m. Wedn esRev Earl Fields, pastor. Henry Eblin,
day worship 7· 30 p.m .
Sunday School Supt.; Sunday School 10 a .
ST.' PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,
m .; Mornin~ Worship 11 a.m.; Evening
Corner Sycamore and Second Sts .. Poservice 7:30p.m. Wednesday evening serm eroy. The Rev William Mlddleswart ,
vlce7:30p.m .
pastor. Sunday School 9:4 5a.m. Church
STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH,
service 11 a.m.
Gary Holter, pastor. Sundoiy services 9: 30
SACRED
HE ART CHURCH. Msgr.
a. m . and 7 p.m.; Midweek service. 7:30 p.
Anthony Glannamore. Ph. 992-5898. Sat urm. Thursday.
day Evening Mass 7: ao p.m.: Sunday
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Thl~d
Mass, 8 a .m. a nd 10 a m Confessions one
Ave. Rev. Clark Baker, pastor Carl Not·
half hour before each Mass. CCD classes,
t lngham, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
11 a .m . SUnday.
School 10 a .m . with classes for all ages.
VICTORY BAPTIST, 525 N 2nd St ,
Evening services at 6 p.m . Wednesday Bi·
Middleport . James E . Ke esee, past or.
ble study at 7:30p.m . Youth services Frl· ·
Sunday morning worship 10 a.m .: Evenday at 7:30 p.llT.'
Ing servicE:" 7 p.m; We-dnesday evening
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHlP,128MIIISt. ,
worshlp7 p.m . Visltat io nThursday6:30 p.
Middleport. Brother atuck McPbersm1,
m.
pastor. Sunday School 10 a .m.; Sunday
MORSE CHAP EL CHURCH· David
evening services at 7 p.m. and Wednesday
Curfm an, pastor. Su nday School, 10 a.m.:
services at 7 p.m.
.3
worship serv ice 11 a.m. : Sunday nlghf
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Kennotb Smith,
worship service 7::JJ p.m ., Midweek
pastor. Sunday Schooi9~:MJ a.m.; chureh
prayer service Wednesday 7 p.m.
sorvlce 7:30p.m.; youth fellowship 6:30 p.
BIBLE
HOLINESS
WESLEY AN
m.; Bible study, Thur9day, 7:30p.m.
CHURCH of Middleport, Inc .. 75Pear1St.,
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE, 33015
Rev. Roy McCarty, pastor; Roger Man- .
Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pasley. Sr. , Sunday School Supt. Sunday
tor. Danny Lambert, S. S. Supt. Sunday
Sc hool9 :30 am.; Morning Worship 10. 30
a.m. ; EvenlngWorsh1p7:~p. m. Wednes- · morning service at W a.m.; Sunday evening service 7: 30p.m . Tuesday and Thurs.
day evening Bible study, prayer and
day Services al 7: :m p.m.
praise service, 7: 30 p.m .
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA·
FAITH FULL GOSPEL CHURCH. Lon g
ZARENE. Rev. Glendon Strwtl, past&lt;r.
Bolton, Su nday School, 9: 30 a.m .; MornSunday School9: 30 a .m. : WorshlpservJce,
Ing Worship 10: 45 a.m.; Sunday eveni ng
10:30 a .m .; Youth service Sunday 6:15 p,
7:00p.m. fsummer 7:30 p.m.l : Wednesm . Sunday evening service 7:00p.m . Wedday night 7: 00p m (summer 7::11 p.m. L
nesday Prayer Meeting and Bible Study
7:00p.m.
LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
NEASE: SETTLEMENT CHURCH, SunOF GOD - Gary Hines, pastor. Sunday
day afternoon services at 2:30. Thursday
SChoQi 9:30 to 10 :20 a.m.: Worship srvtce
evening services at 7:30.
10:30 to ll .:JJ a. m .: Sunday evening serFIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Masm, W.
vice, 7 p.m .. Midweek Prayer Service,
Va. Pastor, Bill Murphy. Sunday !lchod 10
Wed., 7 p.m.
a.m .; Sunday evening 7:30p.m. Prayer
MT. OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
meeting and Bible sludy Wednesday, 7: 30
Lawrence Bush, past or. Sunday School
p.m . Everyone welcome.
9:.Jl am: Sunday and Wednesday evenRUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa·
ing worship service, 7.00 p.m.
!em St. Rev. Paul Taylor, pastor. Sunday
UNITED FAITH CHUR&lt;;H . Rt. 7 on Po·
SchoollOa.m.; Sunday evening 7:00p.m.;
meroy By-Pass. Rev. Robert E . Smith, Sr.
Wednesday evening prayer meetlng7:00
pastor. Melvin Drake, S S. Supt. Sunday
p.m .
Sch0ol9:30 a .m .; Morning Worship 10: 30;
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
Evening Worship 7:00 p.m ; Wednesday
CHURCH,
Silver Ridge Duane Sydon·
Prayer Service, '7 :00p.m .
strtcker, pastcr. Sunday School. 9 a.m.;
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH. Rallrmd
Worship Service, 10a.m.; Sunday evening
St., Mason. ~"!nd ay s.:_hool _10 a .m .: Morn·
servlco, 7:00p.m . Wednesday night Bible
study 7:00p.m.

NO MORE TOMORROWS
As bed time comes we think about what we will be doing In the
morning. tomorrow. We follow our routine and fit In the
unex!)ected. We really do not know what tomorrow will bring.
We often are suprlsed at the unplanned things that happen.
Our life Is built on what we did yesterday. aredolngtOdayanil
what we want to do tomorrow. We often say ''lntoeach life some
rain must fall. •' We plan on the rain always to come tomorrow
not loday. Tomorrow we always plan will he bigger and better
than today or yesterday.
Just think that not too far In the future, we all will have no
tomorrows In our life. In heaven above It Is always going to he
today, right now. There are no more tomorrows when we are In
kingdom come. In kingdom come we wlllllve for the 'day and
make no plans for the morrow. It Is always today In kingdom
come. We never will be putting ott until tomorrow wha(we can't
do today. Each day or what ever we will call It In heaven above,
will he complete when each day ends. Nothing will ever he
"until tomorrow/' We will never close the day with unfiniShed
business for there will be no tomorrows when we are In the
klnldom come. That will Indeed be a happy day. We Will be In
that place where sin does not abide, where righteousness Is the
rule for the day and no one will be less that perfection. You see tn
heaven above, kingdom come, all mankind will be as God first
made us to be, as In the garden of Eden, perfect. Klnadom come
Is where God abides and rules and reigns to all eternity. There
.are no more tomorrows when we are In His )dngdom come.
·Make your plans today, for kingdom come will be soon enough
when there wUI be no more tomorrows.
Pastor WIIUam
Mlddleawarth, Melp CouiiQr Latllerua.

milk.
Wednesday: sausage gravy
over biscuits. mixed vegetables,
cheese wedge. fruit , and milk.
Thu rsday: toasted cheese
sandwhlcb. tomato so up ,
crackers, fruit, and milk.
Friday: cook's choice.

A layette shower was he ld
recently for Mary Spires, Ru;
!land, at the hom e of her
sister·in·law, Tina Lamber t,
with Brenda Bolin, sis ter-in-law:
also hosting.
A cake decora ted in blue an"
white with "Welcome Timmy ·:
on it was served along with othe r
refreshments.
.
Games were pla yed and won
by Cindy Hut ton, Jani ce Fetty,
and Tammy Fry.
Others attending were Lola
Harrison, Elaine Quillen. Kathy
Wyatt and son. Jerod.
Sending gifts were Charles
Spires, Ve)ma Tay lor, Cla ra
Phillips, and Verna Sturgeon.

. Sorority chapter meets

BILL OU ICKEL

WHATEVER
NEwSPAPER SAYS,
IT REPRESENTS FREEDOM

~JRmsA

-·-·-~'·-----

~

POMEROY. OHI0-992-6677

992 ..2975

prayer service 'fhursday , 1· JU p .m .
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy·
Harrisonville Rd. 1Rt.ll3) Robert E. Pur·
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION·
tell , minister: Steve Stanley, Bible School
AL CHURCH . Kingsbury Road Rev.
Clyde W. Henderson, pastor. Sunday
Supt.; Rodney Ho~ry. Asst. Supt. SUN·
DAY: Bible School 9: 30 a.m.; Worship
Schoo19: 30 a .m.; Ralph Garl, Supt. EvenIng worship 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting,
10:30 A.M. and 7:30P.M.: WedneJday Bl- '
Wednesday 7:00p.m .
bleStucly,7: 00 p.m .
OLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPTIST
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine
CHURCH, 28601 State Route 7, Middl eGrove. The Rev. William Mlddleswarth,
pastor. €hurch service 9: :l) a .m.; Sunday
port. Sunday SChoollO ·a m .; Sunday evPn·
lng serv ice 7:30 p.m.; Tuesday service,
Scbool10: 30 a.m.
7: 30p.m .
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST.
Tom Runyon, pastor. SundAy School 9· ~
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH.
a.m.: Larry Haynes, S. S. Supt. Morning
0. H. Cart, pastor. Sunday School at 9: .lOa .
worship 10::.1 a.m.
m.; Morning worship at 10: 30 a.m.; SunRACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
day even in&amp; service at 7:30p.m. Thursday
RENE. Rev. John Vance. pastor. Sandy
services at 7: 30 p m.
.
Justice, Cbatrman of the Board of ChriSFREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
tian Ltfe. Sunday School 9:30a .m .; MornKnob , located on County Road 31. Rev.
inK worship 10:30 a.m.; evangelistic set:·
Roger Wtlltonl, pastor. Sunday School
vtce 7:00p.m. Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
9;30 a.m.; Mor-ning Worshi 10:45 a.m.;
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCJI, !lex·
Sunday evenl,ng worship 7:00p.m.; Wed·
ter. Woody Call, pastor. Services Sunday
nesday evening Bible Study 7:00p.m
10 a .m . and 7 p.m. Wednesday, 7 p.m.
WHITE'S
CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
CHURCH- CoolvUieRD. Rev. PhllllpRI·
Lloyd Sayre, Supt. Sunday School 9: 30 a .
denour, past cr. Sunday School9: 30 a.m.;
m ; morning worship 10 · ~ a .m . Sunday
.worship service 10:30 a.m., Bible study
evening service 7 p.m .
and worship service, Wednesday, 7 p.m
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Steve
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Deaver, Pastoc. Mike Swiger, Sunday
Bill Carter, pastor. Sunday Sc hoo19 :30 a .
School Supt.: Sunday SChool 9:30a.m .: . m ., Morning Worship and Communion
Mor ning worship 10 40 a m.; Sunday
lO· JOa.m.
evening worship 7: 30 p.m.: Wednesday
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amos
evening Bible study 7:30 p.m.
Tillis. past or. Sonny Hudson, supt. Sunday
BURLINGHAM aJl\JMUNITY CHURCH,
School 9:30 am.; Morning worship, 10: 30
Burlingham. Ray Laudern~Ut. pastcr. Roa. m ., Sunday evening service 7:00p.m .
bert Cozart, assistant pt!lt&lt;r. Suntloy School
Wednesday service 7 p.m. WMPO pro10 a.m. ; wcrshlp 7 p.m; Wedne;day, 6 p.m.
gram 9 a.m. each Sunday
youth meeting: Wed, 7 p.m. chun:h ser.ices.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
IC'.' ).
PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH, \1
RENE . Samuel Basye, pastoc. Sunday
FOREST RU N - Worship 9 a.m .;
mile off Rt. 325. Rev. Ben J. Watts, pastoc.
Sc hool9:30 a .m. ; Worship servlce10.30a.
Churc h School 10 A.M .. Choir pra cti ce.
Robert Searles. S.S. Supt. Sunday School
m., Young peOple's service 6 p.m.
Thursday, 6:30 p.m .. UMW thlrdMond ay .
9 30 a m : Morning Worship 10: 30 a .m .;
n"hatchM' l
Evangelistic SC'rvtce 6:30pm. Wednesday
Sunday evening service 7:30p.m.; Wed·
service 7 p.m.
HEATH t Middlepor tl -Church School,
nesday service. 7:30p.m.
9:30 a m . Mo rning Wo rs hip 10: 30 a .m .:
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST. Miller
SILVER RUN BAPTIST, Bll1 Little,
St , Mason, W. Va Sunday Bible Study 10
Youth Group, -1 p m . Wednesday. Biblf'
pastor. Steve Little, S. S. Supt. Sunday
a .m .; Worship 11 a.m. and7p.m. Wedn es·
st udy 6. 00 p.m. Cho ir rehearsal 7 00 p.m .
School10 a.m. ; Morning worslp, 11 a.m .;
rRi ndfl elschl
day Bible Study, vocal music, 7 p.m .
Sunday
evening
worship
7'
30
p.
m.
Prayer
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud·
MIN E RSVI LLE- Chu rch School 9·00
meeUng and Bible study Wednesday, 7: 30
a .m .; Wors hip servlre 10:00 a m.: UMW
ding Lane, Maaoo., W.Va. J. N. Thacker.
p.m.; Youth meeting Wednesday a t 1 p.m .
third Wedn esday. 1 p.m . (Thatcher \
pastor. E venlni service 7·30 p.m .; WoREJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
PEARL CHAPE L- Church School9:00
men' s Ministry, Thursday, 9: 30 a.m. ;
N.
2nd
Aw
..
Middleport.
Sunday
383
a .m ., Worship Service 10 ;00 a. m. (MarWednesday Prayer and Blble Study, 7:15
Sch0ol10 a .m . Sunday evening 7:00p.m .;
p.m.
lln l
Mid-week service, Wed. , 7 p m.
POMEROY - Churc h Scho ol. 9. 15 a .m .
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH.
, Wo tship 10 30 a m. , Choir rehearsal
CHRISTIAN UNION Hartford, W. Va.
J erf Patterson, superintendent. Sunday
Wcdn ('Sd aJ. 7· 30 p m . UMW , seco nd
Rev. Dav id McManis, pastor. Church
Tues day, 7 30p.m , UMYF Sunday, 6p m . · Sch0ol9:30 a .m .; Morning Worship 10: 30
School 9:30 a.m.; Sunday morning sera.m.; Sunday evening service, ,7 ::ll p.m.:
rMeadowsl
vice, 11 a.m .: Sunday evening service,
Wednesday evenina- service, 7;30 p.m.
ROCK SP RINGS- Church School. 9· 15
1: 30 p.m. Wednesday prayermeetlnK. 7: 30
a m .. Worship lOa, m,; Bible Study. Wed·
p.m .
SYRACUSE CHURCH ' OF THE NA·
nesday, 7: 30p.m .; UMYF (SE'nlorsl , Sun FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart,
ZARENE . Rev. Glenn McMillan, pasttr.
day. 6 p. m . rJuntors) every other SunW. Va .• Rt. 1, James Lewls, pastor. Wor·
Mary Janice Lavender, Sunday School
day. 6 p. m (R iley)
ship services 9:30a.m.; Sunday Schoolll
Supt. Sunday School 9: 30a.m .; Morning
RUTLAND - Church Sc hool. 10 a m .:
a .m .; Evenlngworshlp7 30p.m . Tuesday
worship 10:30 a . m.; Evangelistic service,
Wo rship. 11 a m ; UMW First Monday .
cottage prayer meeting and Bible Study
6 p.m .: Prayer and Pralse Wednesday, 7p.
7 . 30 p m tC rabtreel
9:30a.m .; Worship service, Wednesday
m . ; Youth meetlng, 7 p.m.
SALEM CENTER- Church Schooi9· 15
7
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
a m . Morn In ~ Wors hip 10 15 a .m .
VI OUR LUTHERAN CHURCH,
'
CHRIST. Elden R. Blake, pastel'. Sunday
ISt e&lt;&gt;](')
Walnut and Henry St s., RavenswOOd, W.
School10 a .m .; Gary Reed, Lay Ieeder.
SNOWVIL LE- Morning Wor ship. 9:00
Va The Rev. George C . Weirick, pastor.
Morning sermon. 11 a.m.; Sunday night
a m : Churc h School lO·OOa m ( Mart in)
Sunday SChool9:30 a.m.; Sunday worship
services: Christian Endeavor 7:30 p.m.,
11 a .m .
Son&amp; service 8 p.m. Preaching 8: 30 p.m .
SOUTHERN ·cLUSTER
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, located on
Mid-week prayer meeting, Wednesday , 7
Rev. Kenneth S.ker
Pomeroy Pike, County Road 25 near Flat·
,
p.m.
Rev. Roa:er Gr•ce
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN . David · woods. R~ . Blackwood, paste.-. Services
Rev. Carl Hlckl
on Sunday at 10:30a .m . and 7:30p.m . with
Prentice, pastor. Charles Domlgan. SunAP PLE GROVE - Church School 9. 00
SundaySchool9:30a.m. BlbleStudy, Wed·
day SchOol Supt . Morning WorshJp 9:30 a.
a .m .' Morning Wor'ship 10:/.Kri.m.: Blb1 e
nesdaY,, 7:30p.m.
m., Sunday SchoollO:JOa.m.; Evenlngser· ,
Study Sunday 7: 00p.m .; Prayer meeting
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
7: 00p.m. Thursday (Hi cks )
vice. 7: 30 p.m .
CHRIST, St. Rt. 338, Antiquity. Rev.
MT UNION BAPTIST, Pastor· Joe N.
BETHANY - Wo rship 9 a.m.; Church
Franklin Dickens, pastor Sunday mom·
School10 a. m.; Bible Study ,Wednesday 10 - -sayre,. Sunday SChooi9 ~ 4S a1m .; Evening
tng 10 a.rn.; Sunday evening 7:30 p.m.
worship 6;30 p.m .; Prayer Moetlng. 6: 30
a .m .. Dorcas Women's Fella"(shlp WedThunclay evening 7:30p.m.
nesda y 11 a .m. (Baker) .
p .m . Wednesday.
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLI·
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CARMEL - Church School 9:30a.m.;
NESS CHURCH, Inc.. 75 Pearl St. Rev.
CHRIST. RObert Foster. pastcr. Howard
Worship, 10: 45 a .m. Second and Fourth
Ivan Myers, acttngpast&lt;r; Roger Manley,
Caldwell, Superintendent; Church sc hool
Sun days: Fellowship dinner wtth Sunm
Sr., Sunday School Superintendent. Sun9 a.m. ; Worship servlce9. 45a.m . and6:~
th ird Thursday, 6 30 p.m . IBa.kerl.
day School 9;J) a.m.; Mornln1 wocship
p.m , Every me welmme.
MORNING STAR - Chureb
9: 15
10; 30 a .m .; ovenlnl worship 7: 30 p.m.:
CHESTER CHURCH ' OF THE NI.ZA·
a .m .; Worship 10:30 a .m.; Bible ltUity
Wrdnelday evening Bible ltudy, prayer
Thursday, 7:30p.m. !Bakor).
·
RENE. Rev. Herbert Grate, past or.
and praite service, 7: 30p.m.
Fronk Rltne. supt. Sunday School9:30 a.
SUTI'ON - Church School, 9: 30a.m.;
m .; Worship service, 11 a .m . and 7 p.m . ' CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS·
Morni ng Worshlp10: 45a.m . flrstandthlrd
TOLIC - VanZandt and Ward Rd . Eldor
· Sunday. Wednesday, 7 p.m . P rayer meet·
Sund ays, Fell owship dinner with Carmel
Jameo Miller, past&lt;r. Sullday School,
ing.
third Thursday, 6· 30 p m. !BakE!').
10:30o.m.; WorsblpServlco,Sundoy, 7:30
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
EAST LETART- MorntngWorship 9:00
p.m .; Blblo Study, Wedneaclay, 7:30p.m.
CHURCH. William Wllllams. J&gt;Uior; Ro·
a.m ., Oturc h SchOO !O:OOa .m.; UMWftrst
CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL, Harrt·
bort E . Barlon, Director of Christian Edu·
Tuesday 7: lJ p.m. (Grace) .
s t11vUie Road. Rev. Victor Roulh, pastor,
c ation; Steve Eblin, asalltant. Sunday
LETART FALLS - Worship 9 a .m .:
School 9:30 a.m.; Morning worship 10:30 ' Cllntm Foulk, Sunday Schod Sup!.; SUn·
Church School10 a .m. I Grace) .
day Schod 9: 30a.m.; monillli wonhlp.ll
a .m .: Teens In Action, &amp; p.m.; Evenln1
RACINE - Cttureh SChOol, 10 a.m .; Wor·
a .m .; Sunday evenlna: serviCe 1:30 p.m.
Worship, 7:00 p.m . ChOir practl«! 8 p.m.
ship 11 a.m.: UMW tourthMonday at 7:30p.
Prayer Meetina, Wednesday, 7::1l p.m.
Sunday. Wednf!lday evenlna prayer and
m .; Men's Prayer Break(aJt, Wedn..aay, B
SYRACUS!i1 FIRST CBURCH OF GOO.
a.m . IGracet.
Blblest~~
non·Penlecolfal. Worlblp service Sunday
DEX
• CHUftCH OF CHRIST,
KENO CHURCH 01' CHIUIT, llllur
Jtoaor Watson, minister; Norman Wni. 10 a.m.; Sullday Sehool 11 a.m. Eventq
SprlnK. mlnlotor; Starllq..._
bllver Swain, SOlliday llelleol ~plf. ...._.
oupt. Iunday 9; 30 a.m.; Wonhip wonhlp oervlce 7:00 p.m. Wedneaclay
prayer meetlnl 7:00p.m.
oervloo 10:30 a .m . Blblt otucly.
Ing 9 30 a .m . eacliSunday; lhlniiJa&lt; lelool
day, 7:00p.m.
10: 30 a.m .
MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
REOftGANIZED CHURCH Or JESUS
HOBSON CHURCH OF CIIRiliT IN
IN CHRIST QIURCH, Located In Toxu
CHRiliT OF LA'M'ER DAY SAINTS. Port·
CHRISTIAN UNION, 'nletca Durllom,
Communi!)' oil Ct. Rt. 82. ~. Robert
land-Racine Rood. MUte Du111. puler.
pastor. Sunday service, 9: 3Q Lm. ; eve.Sonden, putor. Jeff Hdter, loy I,.der;
Janie&lt;! Dannl!', cburdt ocmol director.
lng service 7:00 p.m . Prayer meettna,
Ed RDush. Sunday Schod SUpt. Sulldly
Chur&lt;h tdlooU:30a.m .; Mornlncworship
Wednesday, 7:00p.m.
Schod 9: 30 a.m.; morning wonldp and
10: 30 a .m. ; Wedntodoy eYODitll! prayer
BEAR WALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
chlldrm's chureh 10:30 a .m .; evonlnl!
oervlceo, 7:30p.m .
CHRIST, Joseph 8 . Hoattns, pttlor. Bible
preachlRa tervlce first tllree SUndays,
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. R«v. Earl
Class. 9: 30 o .m.; Mornln11 Worship 10:30 a .
7:30p.m.; Sptelal service fourth Sunday
Shuler, putCI'. Worohip JIOI'Ylce. 1:30 a.m.
m .; Evontna Worship, &amp;:a! p.m . 'lbundly
evenfna. 7:30 p.m .; Wodllesclay Proyor
ljlble Study, 6: p.m.
_
-.nday !lchOd 10:30 •:m· !JI~!• Study and

•

Avo. Pomoror. 011

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.

John F. Fultz. Mgr.
Ph . 99H101
Pomeroy

992·3785.

m

The lunch menu oft he Car leton
School, Meigs Industries. has
been aonuonced for the week of
Oct. 2-6 ..
Monday: turkey and noodles,
mashed potatoes, green beans.
bread and butter, and milk.
Tu esday: cheeseburgers,
french fries, piCkles, fruit , and

ROWElS FOI EVElY OCCASION

(6141992-2039 or
(6141992·5721

Layette shower-.
given Spires ·

Carleton menu named

Pom1Hg· Flowi, Ship

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

~

Pomeroy
992-3325 .

106 luttwnut

K&amp;C JEWELERS

-~16- s. :econ~

Mill Work·

214 E. Mairi
992·5130 Pomiror

Ohio

N•lionwide Ins.

·-

INSURANCE .---.
SERVICES

SALES &amp; SERYIC E
. . .ltport,

Listed On This Page.
RACINE PlANING MILL TEAFORD REALTY

Brogan-Warner .

filE &amp; SAFETY

•
'"

-~'i.J~l·nes:se..s

This_Messal!e and Church
SWISHER &amp; LQHSE

.Veterans
Memorial Hospital

•

Friday, September 29, 1989

LECTURN DEDICATION ·-The Middleport
Mlnlslerlal Association recently donated a
portable lecturn to the Overbrook Center In
Middleport. Represendngtbemlnlsterlalassoclallon and Overbrook Center are, from left, Rev.
Harvey Rlndfllesch, Heath United Methodist

Church; Richard DuBose. Middleport Church of
Christ; Judy Thlvener, asslslant activity director
at Overbrook; Terry Stotts. activity director at
Overbrook; Rev. James Seddon, First Baptist
Chunlh; and AI Hartson, Middleport Church of
Christ.

Middleport gardeners hear program .
Dorothy Morris presented the
program "Take a Flower With
You. " at the recent meeting of
the Middleport Garden Club
when the group met at the home
of Mrs. Ray Reynolds.
Mrs. Reynolds discussed how
potted plants can be placed In the
·front of flower beds and as they
fade can be replaced. Those done
blooming can be placed in the
background. This Insures a constant display of blooms at their
peak blooms. She also noted that
potted plants need to be watered
more frequently than those In the
ground plantings.
Roll call was answered by

members naming a favorite
program of last year.
During the business meeting a
letter. was read from Mrs. Rita
Hamm thanking the group for
flowers received during her
'recent' Illness. A letter was also
received from Dorothy Roller
asking that she be placed on the
associate member list due to
Illness.
Plans for the coming year were
discussed as were the exhibits at
the Meigs County Fair.
It was decided that last year's
officers will again serve this
year.
Plans to visit Stahl's Nursery
In Belpre during November were

also discussed. .
Refreshments were served by
Mrs . Reynold s. The table )VaS
decorated with a hand embrol·
dered table cloth made by Mrs .
Reynold's mother . The center
piece was of blue and white
mums flanked by blue a nd white
tapers and candelabra. Mrs.
Betsy Horky presided at the
coffee service.
The arrangement for the meet·
ing was made by Mr s . Gudren
Schaekel and was of burgundy,
yellow. and pink muums with
foliage of Joseph's Coat and
Wond ering Jew In black bowl.
The next meeting will be held
on Monday .

Announcements
Games will start at 6 p.m. There
wlll a lso be a count ry store. door
prizes, cake walk and a spilt the
. pot. Admission ls free.

The Pomeroy Church of. Christ
will be awarding a certificate for
"Studies in the Bible" on Sutlday
to Rilla Lowery of Pomeroy.
These lessons are offered free
of charge to anyone who wishes
to take advantage of this service.
For more information call Leo
Lash, minister, at 992-2926 or
992-3926.

Slinderella meets
New members are now being
accepted in the Sllnderella diet
classes at Five Points and
Mason.
In this weeks Tuesday night
Mason class there was a tie for
runner up between Lois Ann
Reitmire and Connie Goodn lie.
There was also a lie for runner
up between Jean Vaughan and
Winifrede Clark.

Udies' golf
has last scramble
The last party and scramble
for the season was held on
Tuesday by the Tuesday's Ladies
League of Jay Mar GoU Club.
Eighteen holes were played
and a catered luncheon was held .
First place winners In the four
lady scramble were Sue Bennett,
Nellie Brown, Velma Rue , and
Nancy Reed.
Second place was tie between
two teams, Margaret Follrod,
Julia Hysell. Ada Nease. and
Mary Grueser; and Joan Childs,
Kathy Gard, Jeannie Powell, and
Mary Bowen.
The team of Dee Teaford.
Penny Complon, Elizabeth
Loshe, and Mary Fraught won
for low putts.

Soup and sandwich luncheon
The Trinity Church of Pomeroy will sponsor a soup and
sanwlch luncheon on Friday,
Oct. 6. from 11 a.m . to 7 p.m.
Vegetable soup, bean soup,
sloppy joes. hot dogs, beverages
and desserts will be available.
Advanced orders for quarts of
soup are being taken and the
price Is '$2 per quart. Orders can
be placed by calling 992-5480,
992-3222, or 992-3777.

9 a .m. and the fee Is $5. Call Gene
Whaley at 992-7013 or Bill and
Sharon Neutzllng at 985-4317.

PERI meets
The Public Employee Retirees
Inc. Chapter will meet on Thurs·'
day at 1 p.m. at Maples in
Pomeroy. The guest speaker will
he Calvin G. Lyons, a native of
Jackson County. He is the direc·
tor of PERI ln Columbus. Ap·
polntment of a nominating com· ·
mlttee, review of activities to
date and a discussion on " where
do we go from here " will take
place. All members are to urged
to attend this last m eeting before
election of officers on Dec. 7.

Portland PTO Carnival
The . annual "Fall Carnival"
In the recent report of the
will be held at Portland ElemenRacine Firemen's Auxiliary the
tary on Oct. 7. A supper will be
following name was omitted.
served beginning at 4: 30 p.m.
Wanda Patterson. Also lncor·
and will Include chill, vegetable
rectly reported were the spelling
soup, sandwiches , desserts. and
of these names, Ann Layne, Gene
chicken and noodles . "Sliver
Lyons. Emma Lyons, Mae Cle·
Wings," a country ahd western
land . Valerie Patterson, and
band will provide entertainment.
Mlstee Grueser.
There will also be games, door
prizes, a country store. cake· Revival
COLONY THEATRE
walks. and a dance. Admission Is ·
The United Brethren In Christ
free.
Church, located two miles north
of Reedsville on Route .124. will
Quilt show
have rev ival Oct . 8-15 at 7 p.m .
The Mason County Extension nightly . The evangelist will be
Homemakers Cultural Arts Com· Robert "Bobby" Wiseman from
mlttee Is sponsoring Its annual Point Pleasant , W.Va. There will
Harvest of Quilts II Show on Oct. be special singing each evening.
7 and8at theWestVIrglnlaFarm
Museum. The show Is open to all FOE Auxiliary lo meet
exhibitors. Call ( 30-1) 675- 3435 or
The Ladles Auxiliary Frater·
675-2198 for Information.
nal Order of Eagles 2171 will have
a meeting on Tuesday at 8 p.m.
Square dance
All m embers are to bring a
There will be a square dance at covered dish for the potluck.
the American ,Legion Annex on
Mill Street In Middleport on Oct.
6 from 8 p.m. to midnight. Music
will be provided by Bernard
Connolly and the Travelers. The
cost Is $5 per couple and $3 single.
FIIDA Y, SEPTEMBER 29th
The public Is Invited to attend.

OES meeting
The Past Matrons of Evang·e·
llne Chapter 172 Order of the
Eastern Star will meet on Tues·
day at 7:30 at the home of
Kathryn Knight. Members are
asked to wear halloween cos·
tumes.
Sorority meeting
The Xi Gamma Epsilon Chapter , Beta Sigma Phi sorority will
meet Oct . 5 at the home of Darla
Staats at 7 p.m .
Missionary service
The Harrisonville Holiness
Chapel will have a missionary
servlceon0ct.4 at 7: 30p.m. with
Jerry and Jackie Kwaslgroh who
are home on leave from. Bollnla.
Pastor Earl Fields Invites the
public.
, Open house
The Sacred Hearl Catholic
,, Church will have an open house
on Oct. 8 from 4-6 p.m. Vespers
service will follOw at 6 p.m. The
publiC Is Invited to attend.
Car show to be ltekl
The Oldies But Goodies Car
' Club of Meigs County will have
Its flnt annual car show Oct . 14
on the Pomeroy parking lot.
There will be 17 classes offered to
exhibitors with two trophies
given per class. Dash plaques
will be given to the first 50 cars
that enter . RegiStration begins at
\·

George Hall to perfonn
George Hall, well known organist , wlll perform at the Reedsville United Methodist Church on
Oct. 8 at 7:30p.m. Hall will play a
variety of gospel and lnsplra·
Ilona! music, Including audience
requests. The publiC Is Invite d to
attend.

Salon to meet
The Meigs County Salon 710
Eight and Forty will meet Tues ..
Oct. 3, at the home of. Rhoda
Hackett at 1 p.m . Dues a re
payable at this tim e.
Date changed
The Bashan Ladies Auxiliary
has announced that th e Smorgasbord dinner, which was to be he ld
on Oct. 7, has been changed to
Nov. 4.
Chill soup supper
The annual Bissell chill-soup
s upper has been set for Oct. 7.
Special music will be by the
Bissell Brothers gospel group.
Other musicians will be announced a fter confirmation.

Correction

TURNER
I HOOCH

party during the end of October.
The next meeting will be held
on T hursday at the hpm e of Darla
Staats at 7 p.m. This will be a
model meeting .
Refreshments were served by
Sonya Wolfe, VIckie Ault, and
Mrs. Staats.

MARTIN'S FURNITURE &amp; MORE

222 t Main St.

lttidt Iutton• &amp; Bow•
Mike 8t Chris Martin, Owners

NEW FURNITURE SIDPMENT IN
New
New
Naw
New
New

2 pc. L.l. Suite ............ - •• from 1319.00 to 1349.00
4 Drawer Chest of Drawers .......................... s52.9 S ·
Bunk Beds with bedding .............................. '249.00
ltclintr .................................. Reg. $199.95 '169.95
Table with 4 padded chairs ......................... S249.00
BECKETT MONTHLY S2.00
CLIP AD AND GET BECKETIS FOR $1.75

CALl 992-6872 ar IIOME: 915-4396
HOURS 10 AM -6 PM

Buying Good Clean Furniture-Complete Auction Service
B1nk Financing Available'

COLLF.GEFooTBAU
S A T U R. D A Y
Start your Saiurday with
College GameDoy at
11 :30AM and stay tuned
for all the days action
featuring the best in
CFA, Big 10 and Ivy
League lootball action.

.,_!Dial.&amp; IJUIIIIWMIM

&amp;r

Available On

675•3389 or I•80G-344•333I
Your Hometown Bank
Hires Hometown People!
In our community, we're committed to offer·
the kind of services and personal attention you want and need. When you bank
with us, you'll find that we're much more
than just a financial institution, we're a
hometown friend.
MEET SHANNON
Shannon Hindy ha s
been employed with
Farmer~ Bank for 5 .
monlhs a s a tell e r .
Shannon re s id es in
Middleport, Ohio. She
is a 1987 graduate of
Meigs High School.
Her hobbies include
volleyball and
softball.

THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS

PTO Carnival
The annual Fall Carnival will
be held at Riverview Elementary
In Reedsville on Oct . 7. A supper
will he served beginning at 5 p.m.
and will Include Kentucky Fried
Chicken, steak. noodles, mashed
potatoes and gravy, cole slaw.
green beans, and roll, as well as
other desserts. Hot dogs and
popcorn will be sold after 7 p.m.

Pomeroy, Ohio

SHIIMP BOAT PUnEI ......._.......~............... S2.94
Su•..._ Pllcn ef Golden Sltr,:C S.nol
with Our 0 - No- - Cockt.ll Sa••• N.t GaWen F
f.rin, and
Slaw, • ·
..,., or P.tote Sakld, or .,.1111-.

c•

Ten (1 01

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 1st
lAKED SAUSBURY STEAl DINNER ................ S4,79

A '-ous Part!• .t Our Own P.....r labtl Shalt Sllltnttred 1ft a
Crea111y . . . . . . . Grw~. Sernol wltlt M had P.totaft CHill • -

Malle Grwwy, lloMKMitH • - Ita• w1t11 ...,._ 111111 , _
Cholet af a N.tlhltt...tl• or Nan•lllada lllatlt Caffee, ......, or
"-ffll•tlll, Taa or 11111111 S.H Drink.

SIEAI SANDWICH MO.................................... SJ.79
NEW HOURI: 10:00 A.M: to 8:30P.M. s - D•y• A -

...

"We're Committed To Our
Hometown ... "

The Shining Light In Banking

(FB)

Farmers
Bank

,

Your Community Owned Bank
MEMBER FDIC

992-2136
221 WEST SECOND
PO.IOY, 01110
.'

915-3315
STATE ROUTE 7 ,
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO
'

.. . '

.

·-

-

__ ......

�-

~

•

Sentinel

Business Services

Classifie

~---------,

BINGO
POMEROY -IAGliS

992.21 S6

8 A.M. to 5 P.M
NOON SATURDAY

MONDAY thriJ FRIDAY

8 A.M.

until

SUNDAY
G~ IIHI

o r Maso n cO uf111 85 m us1 04!' p r +-

Words
15
15
15
E
15
1C
15
Mon t hh
to1consecu11\1e runs

Over , 6 Word5

R•1e

THUIS. E.l. 6:45 P.M.
1.1. 1:45 '.M.

s•.1001 Pllll

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry Flahlng Suppli•
Pay Your Phone
-nd Ca)&gt;le Bolls Hera

RATES
Dav •
i

ClUI
224 E MAIN ST
992· 9&amp;78

New locatton:
168 North Second
Middleport. Ohio 4 57 60

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

Friday. September 29. 1989

Ohio

20
64 00
30
56 00
42
S9 0 0
60
s 13 00
05 / dov
S1 30 dav
br o111en up dav s w1ll be charged

2 HD FREE wrth coupon 111d
pun:h11o of m1n HC. Pack·
11• L1mrt 1 coupon Jill. cus·
tomer P« bini) sesston.

IUSINESS PHONE
16141

u,

VAUGHN'S

you want it ...
~·ve got it ...
Public N ot1ce

Pubhc Not1ce
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO

&lt;!

NOTICE
Elfe&lt;2Ne October 18, 1989
Loading Creek Wat ...shed AsSOQaliOI\

Inc. monthtv meat-

ongr wil be held lhe Third
Wedn&lt;~~dav of Each Momh
191 29 11c

Pubhc N ot1ce

NOTICE OF
· APPOINTMENT OF
• FIDUCIARY
On ~eptember 1 8 1989,
1n the Me1gs County Probate
Court Case No 26312 De
lares R Frank 50757 State
Route 248 Long Bottom
Ohto 46743 was appOinted
E"~tecutor of the estate of
Harhs E Frank deceased
late of 50757 State Route
248 long Bottom Ohto
45743
Robert E Buck
Probate Judge
Lena K Nesselroad Clerk
(9)22 •• 29 110)63tc

Publtc N ot1ce
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE ts hereby g1ven
that on Saturday September 30th 1989 at 10 00 a
m a pubhc sale wIll be held
al 106 Unoon Avenue, Pom·
eroy, Oh10 to sell for cash
the followtng collateral
1988% Ford Escort LX
4 Dr H8
1 FAPP9597JW377869
the Farmers Bank and
Savmgs Company Pomeroy Oh10 reserves the
r1ght to b1d at th1s sale, and
t o withdraw the above collateral prtor to sale Funher
The Farmers Bank and Sav
mgs Company reserves the
nght to r8Ject any or all b1ds
submitted
F.urther, the above colla
teral will be sold m the con
dttton It IS 1n wtth no ex
pressed or tmphed warran
t1es gtven
l!ll 27 28 29 31c

WANT ADS
ARE JUMPIIIi
WITH BAR&amp;AIIS

Business Services

Fa~rfax County, V•rgtma Notice as further gN"en that all

aeditors of sa1d estate who

&amp; COAl STOVES
INSERTS &amp; FURNACES

APPAlACHIAN

WOOD STOVES

In Corp•tor, OH. Off 143

698-6121

992-2156

deswe to assert thetf hens on
the reel estate Qf he s.-d dec~

dent located tn this state shall
present thar ciBfms duty
sworn to to this Court within
lhree (3) months aher the fil·
1ng of satd letters of appotnt
ment 1r1 thiS Court or S&amp;ld hens
shall for ever be
deemed
barred and cancelled
Robert E Buck
JUDGE
APPROVED
Jenn1fer L Sheets
ATTORNEY FOR
O.PPLICANT
191 21 29 1101 6 31c

L. W.

STEWART
TRUCKING
•Gravel
•Limestone
•Fill Dirt

742-2421
9 20 tfn

5

Happy Ad$

--~....:...:....:;_ _ _ __

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING co:

~ FURNITURE

Rutland, Oh.

and MORE

SUSAN COLEMAN
742·2771
C1ll hr Fill Speeitle
ht wisit FREE

949-2101
les. 949-2160

Po.E.oyr OHIO

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone - D1rt

•FILL DIRT

SPREAD

NO

DIRT HAULED

992-5275

SUNDAY

5 17 tfn

KENNY UTT
If 40 IS prime.
Then this is
your time!
Love.
Terri

SMALL ENGINE

THE
BASKET WEAVE

REPAIR

Located at Valley Lumber

GALLONS

In Moddleport, Oh.
PARTS AND SERVICE
For Most 2 and 4 cycle
engmes
Stock Parts for
Homehte Weedeater
Tecumseh Br1ggs &amp;
Stratton

992-3922
62 189 tfn

Help Wanted

"At

Reasonable Pnces"

IASICETS
BASICET WEAVING
SUPPLIES
CLASSES OFFERED
New Faii/Wmter Hours
HANDWOVEN

992-2371
1113/ 89 tin

-HOUSE FOR SALE
BR ranch home. 2Y,
baths full basement. 2
car garage 10x60 It
deck 3 acres plus 11/ ,
acre lake Mmt cond
$120.000 f1rm All new
drapes fully carpeted
Bu•lt·m lg TV stove &amp;
refrtg See through lireplace

Veterans Memonal Hospital, a JCAHO-ac
credtted , not · for-prof•t hospital, IS lookmg
for a Pat1ent Rev1ew Coordmator The Pat•·
ent Rev1ew Coordonator Will be responsible
for the assessment plannmg, Implementa tion , and evaluatton of the hospital's Qual
tty Assurance and Ut1hzatton Management
Plans
Qu&lt;!ltftcat•ons mclude a Reg1stered Nurse
w1th a current Oh1o nursmg ltcense Pnor
Quality Assurance and Ut1hzat1on Management expenence preferred

FOR SALE

VERY REASONABlE

,

HIGLEY FARM
RUTlAND TOWNSHIP

145 acres. barn.
bottom, hill land.
timber. 2 producing gas wells.

•NEW HOMIES
"'1\( f IIJM

DUIIIY IT. SYUCIIII

992-7611
5 25-'89 lfn

BOB'S
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

$45,000

742-2143

9 25 89 1 mo

Please call or send a resume to
Margaret Holm, Ass1stant Admm1strator
Veterans Memonal Hosp1tal
115 E Memonal Dnve
Pomeroy, OH 45769

1614)992-2104

Howard

L Writenl

ROOFING

SPIDERS
BEES • WASPS
Member Natoonal Post
Control Assn

97891mo

949-2168
911 19-1 mo oc1

HIGHEST QUALITY
FREE LOCAL DELIVERY

Pizza-Subs-Salads-Daily Specials

•Mobile Home ··
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

992-7479

Televts1on L1stenmg Dev1ces
,lependable Heanng A1d Sales &amp; Sm•icll
Hearmg Evaluations For All Ages

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Rl 124, Pomeroy Ohoo

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Trunliulon

~

It. 33 North of

Licensed Clinical Aud1olog1st-. ,

::t: (614) 446-7619 Of (614) 992·2104

z

PH. 992:5682

-

or 992-7121

417 Second Aveme, Box 1213
Gall1pol1s, Oh1o 45631
or at
Veterans Memonal Hosp1tal
Mulberry Hats. Pomerqy, Oh10

1--:~~~~-t ~.:::!===

992·2198

Middleport, Ohio

B·lllfn

------~-

MODUUI HOMES

We con r~r and r•·
core rad1atora and
hlater corts. We can
also acid bail ond rod
out radiators. We aho
rlpGir Gas Tanks.
FOlD

--- ---

EED A HOME?

SER~ICE

.PAT HILL

992-2'228
9 / 111,/ 1 mo pd

4-25 tfn

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK

d

LOWEST PRICES

Roger Hysell
Garage

SINCE
lant:h,

1970

Cape Cod &amp; 2

Story •

MODEL OPEN DAil MONDAY THIIU SATUIIDA Y
1:00 P.M.-6:00P.M. or Col For Appoint111111t

FAMILY HOMES INC.

614·992-2471
P. 0. Box 207
Pen11rov, Ohio
Locally Owned lo Operllted by Bill,

1·13·1fc

t

Oulttl
Pre 1940 qulltt Any condition
Caah Paid can &amp;14-192·5657 or
114-512-2461
Set of flrl IICipll 111p1 Pill ..
catl614·992-6822.
TOP CASH paid tor 1983 modol
and newer u..d cars Smith
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 Eastern
Ave, Gallipolis Call 614-446-2282
Ue~

turntl ure and household
appliances
Phono &amp;14 742·
2048

"J also
tha place or
selling

Uetd furntture
entire househol
614·742·2455

Usod pla~pen &amp; hogh chair 614·
245--5445

•
•

It you are a llcaneed Practical
Nurs1 and enjoy a challenge,
pltase take thlllme to raad tfll•
ad This Is 1 tull-tlme l P N
positlon In two community
group hom11 for ptl'lona with
dovolopmonlal dlaobltllln In
GaUia County 40 houra/waak,
al achadulad Current LPN
LltiiiH" NAPNESIOOPNES/or
Slate tloard appr,oved Pharmacology Courte requkac:l·
valid drtver'a licenM gOOd
driving record and willing Co
drlva In heavy volume traffic
areas, good communication and
organization akllla, punc1u11
and able to work •• part of a
tum
rtqulrad,
axperianca
working wllh persons with menIal rttardaUon and danlopman·
tol dtabtlhlft p.wforrod, but nol
OOihour, to
required Salary:
8tan Llberll benefit _par::kaga..
Sand reeume to C.Cilla Baker,
Buckeye Community S.rvlc11,
P:O Box 804, Jackeon, OH
45640 Dudllna for applicants
1G-3-89
Equal Oppor1unlly
Employtr:

ae

AVON • All orooo, Call Marilyn
W11var 304-882-2645

1

good

giVIIWiy,

614-446-4479 Or 614·

446·7646.

6

Lost &amp; Found

Ca1h Reward! Lost Golden
Rlllrolvor, Gallla Conloroolnt Rd
Uittlng 1lnce Aug.6, Anawares
to luka 114-37i-2l47
14~-617&amp;

MAIN STREET
PIZZA

or

=";a,

Whllo lluffv kllfono to

lost· Tan wlblack pug t.ca
Raccoon CrMk 11'111 on 141
Anewara to Butch hard of
hearing Reward offered 814·
379·2957

7

992-9922

Fumlluro ond oppllonc:H by tho
pi- or onllro hounhold Folr
priCOI bling paid Coli 614·4413158
Junk ..,. with or whhout
co11 t.orry Liv••~ e•4·

AVON I All Areal 1
SpolltW, 304-675-1429

l

Found Kyger CrNk clan ring
Sopt 23rd, In Mlddlopon lt&lt;f·

Tol Fret
1-800-535-2199

St Rt 124
Middleport, Qh
(Next to H1ll Top Grocery)
6 16 tfn

742·2455
Sale..

4,

TERMITES • ANTS

LOCALLY OWNED PIZZA SHOP.

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

• Good Investment Property! Fmancmg
ava1lable through Central Trust or make
preferred arrangements. Central Trust of·
fers compet1t1ve rates and friendly serv1ce!

ROACHES • FLEAS

992·3897

Locate-d Behond
Traclor Dealershop

992-6661

1976

FREE ESTIMATES

liVING ROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES
DINEnE SETS
"NEW" RECliNERS

Central Trust -

SINCE

POMEROY AND MIDDLEPOIT'S ONLY

Gutter Cleamng

USED FURNITURE

CONTACT: Manning Kloes

PEST CONTROL

Pamtmg

NEW- REPAIR
Downspouts

NEWLY REMODELED -In-town two story, 3
bedroom, vmyl s1dmg Low Mamtenance'l58
S 3rd St , Middleport Old charm, modern
conven1ence pnced at 80"o of appra1sed
value•- $36,0001

&amp;

JONES TIRE

Ano Sox, 814-446-4477

Kittena. Malt 5 wka. old, 1 .vlld
ray, 1 brown alrlpe wllh white
14.g92·2095

homa, 304-lt95-3013

TII•CO. TERMITE

SERVICE
992-5335 or
985·3561

Gauge OnlY.
9 6 89 tfn

tan 614-446-7741

Young tamaltl bugle dog, to

Now!

KEN'S APPLIANCE

Starts at 1:00 P.M.
Factory Choked 12

Hno 2 kllfono, 7wko old, IIUor
lra&amp;necl, yellow eyes, 1 gr~y, 1

RUUO

Checked.
We Serv1ce All
Makes - Gas or
Electric Also Parts
for All Makes.
CAll NOW

17

FroM Free Ret , nMde repairs

9 22 I mo

CENTER
•New &amp; Used T~res
•Custom Ptpe Bend.ng
•01I Changes
•Grease Jobs
•General Chassts
Matntenance
•Computertzed Balancer

Gutters

Real Estate General

Beginning Sept.

FrM to good home, 2 yr Dober·
man Sl1tpherd mixed, good
wotch dog 304-t7&amp; 3143

SYRACUSE
992-2621 or
992·6CJ44

Have Thai Furnace

EVERY SUNDAY

a lATHS

•EXT£NBJVE REMODELING
•VINYL SIDING a ROORNG
•METAL BUILDINGS

614-985-4180

It's T•me

CO!IIIIERCIAL

•CUSTOM KITCHENS

HAVE REFERENCES

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

CONTRACTORS
RESIDENTIAL

8/ 4/ 89 tfn

PATIENT REVIEW COORDINATOR

GEN£RAL

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
2 Family, Vard Sale 11t lrailer on
..n Cl pper Mill Sol Mon &amp;
Tuoo
3 Fomll~ Yord Silo Sl Rt ns
Juol off 141 Sod· 8·7
3 Family S1111 Rl 160 In Vinton,

Frl, Sopt 291h, thru Sol Oct 7
h m ·Sp.m Everything Cheap!
Chlldrena, adult clothaa

Shi~o~

Admloolon Coonllnotor·Soolol
Worker tor long term cart
facility experience perterred ex
aalary 1: benefits Modtm&lt;laan
facllily grul ltlff a raaldenla
Apply CareHaven At 1 Box 328,
Point Plaasant, WV 25550, 304·
675-3005
Americas 8181 Sal.. Poaitlon
Male or female It you have aold
cosmetics, lnaurance, real ntatt, or any product •ucc~&amp;stully, you may be the per·
son who will .. rn $40,000 or
more this yaarl Ntcassary
producl, no cradll tum downs
Complete traini ng No travel
614-446-3615

Assl8tant Managtment 1 Hourty
Employen, now nNdad, tor
Natlonel Pizu Rattaurant comIng toonl Plaa.. 11nd reaumaa,
to P 0 Box 70 Barbourevllla,
wv 25!104
Branch Librarian nlldad DuiiM
Include Children's Sarvlc11,
Aaltrence work, Circulation
Dutln Experience working with
chlldr•n and/or llbrtry back·
ground nectsury librarian will
work approx 30 houra weekly at
the Mason City Branch Applitallons ar• availabta at lha
Mason County Public Ltbrary
and will be acctptttd until 5 00
PM Monday Oct 2nd
COSMETOLOGIST
Fantastic
Sam s w1ll open soon Guaranteed wages plus commlsston
pa1d vacations Managers &amp;
stylists needed 614-682-7018
anyt•m•

Do you have lhe spirit of
caring? There are many job opMichigan Solo Evorythlng Muol portunities tor htalth cart
Qot Rt. 141 Winter clothH and workers Become a valuabll
mloc Sopt 30th.OC:t 12
member of tha health care tum
In just 11 WHkl Enroll now In
Sal, Sun, 11-4, McCormick Rd the Nur11ng AttialantiOrdtrly
behind American legion lola program
at
Tri-Counly
of ovorylhlng.
VocatJonal
School- Adult
Sopt 21~30, 4 Fomfl~ Solo Old Educat1on C.ntar NHd money
180 In Porter, chain uwe, I tor lratnlng" Wa have 1 variety
mlec., chlld,.n clothM, adun of tundtng aourcn l'&lt;fallabta tor
those ehg1bl1 Raglttar now tor
cloth-.11&gt;1-311-MII
tha cltssn baalnnln1 October
TWo F1m11y Yerd Saja· 1-3, Sat, 2nd, call 614-753-351 Ext 14
Sopt 30 Rl 141' 3 ml peot Con· Catch lht Spirit'
llnlry, clothing, Ill 11111,
drl~, mlac llouMhold, &amp; Oon I mill Chriatm11 prof111
S11r1 selling Avon Now! Call
llob~Homo1
514 992 7180
Yord Solo I mi. out 2111 Sopl.
30th, Ool «h, Chlldrono • ocluH EARN MONEY typing homo
hO 0001yaar Income polahhal
clolhM
0.11111 805-687-6000 Exl a ..
Vonl lito Sat...? 1220 Soc..,d 4562
Avo lnlorucdon af Saoontl Avo
EARN MONEY tvplng Ill homo.
I Mill Crolfo
$30 000/ytar income potanllal
Detail• 1·605-167-eooo E11 a ..
10161
Pt. Pleuant
EARN MONEY tvplng Ill homo
&amp; VIcinity
$30,000/yaar Income potential
Ootollo, It) 1105-187-&amp;000 Exl B·
Go-.
- I 00
Joctkoon
""'" 45&amp;2
Thon, Frl,
lol,
Hft ? LHtiO
bll of ••rthll'l
Eom ma,.~ typing It homo.
Clorop ..... l.tu. .~. 1:00 to 130,000/yoor lriComo~ polontlol.
J.OO, latt• olarw on llrch 4ve Ooollllo, lt)IOW87-GOOO Exl B·
1805
In M11dawtlh:Mill Addn

\

I

/

Fumllhod opt 1 br, $225,
111111111 pold, 1120 Fourth Olio
llpotlo, 114-441-4411aftor 7p m
Fumlohocl opt. 1"!, 1210, utllhft
pold. 701 Fou~h "llllpollo,ll"'
:4 448-4411 after 7p m.
Oraclou. living 1 and 2 bedroom apertmentt et VIllage
Manor
and
Riverside
01"\ ~~ 1• ., • • • ••&lt;; ................... Apar1mantaln Middleport From
$184 From Sept•mbar 15th to
Nov1mbar 15th, tll'lt month rent
troo to thooo who quollly. can
1St4-IU·nl1. EOH.
11
Wille
Nlco 2 BR, 4 112 ml trom Gol·
llpollo No ,.to $235/mo 81&gt;1"::~:::=======T::::==::::::::=====1
::44::&amp;..:-1:::038=.......,,....,----:-1
,
18 Wanted to Do
Oullll ono bod room untur35 Lots &amp; Acreage
nlohod opt, nlco nolghborhood,
Ntaronco ond do~olt '::'Julrod,
t ,.,. kQ Oolll~lo Fony, elf~ s1 •
,. ~•7•- 560
W1 nlod to do ho uMCnnn~,
I I
•••
•
•
8• per mon "•
water,-7.2
hav• ret•rancn 114-256.-171 ,
Regency, Inc. 2BR, apt, new
814·256-9323
plush corpol, now point,
utllltln,,g:rilll~pald $175/mo
Will
caro
of
or do
••
h toko
nl
• 1 o':': ~~222
Call 304 7.,....1
1
ouooc •• ng •
=:..;::,.:..:.:..:..::.;.:.::....-;:--:-;--;--::Small turn hou11 aultable for 1
41 Houses tor Rent
or 2 114-446-ll338

and ESPN•

4 6

Wanted to Buy

Help Wanted

Apartment tor rent, 304..07&amp;2211.
BEAUTlFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATE~&lt; . 131 Joclcl001 Pika
1rom l1tta~- Wolk lo ohos&gt; I
maviM Colt 114-4415-2111. EOH
Fum Elllcloncy 1150 utii~IIO
ltd. ShiN lloth 507 Socond,
Oolllpollo, 114-4-411 oltlr
'P m
,
•-•~ "' 1 d Ito - · •7~
Fum-''"'
u •225 7•

'

Hair 9ty11tt wanted for Hair
Ho.,...nlng Styling Solon Full or
patlotfmo Monagl,. llconoo
roq'd For lntorvlow coil 114446-3353
HalrlltyllotwllhOitloMonogor'o
Llconso Bond ....,_ to PO
Box 12•
., Mldd'-"
-..-~ OH
H n11 ? Nlod lklll? w
Job U ng
1
•
train _ . . lor jobl I I Auto
Mochlnlco, Corpontoro 1 Coo~•-·, Dl~ralllod
molot....,.......
p 11'o"'-ol
UKI
Worken,
aralepla,
Food
S.,lco
Eioctrlclono.
Workere, EIIICtronlce Tech·
- · 1 M1 lntantnca
nIcIan•, Ind u.ma
Wortooro Nurolng Aftiodtllllo
0rdarllet,
Mach Inlet•,
and
Ofllco Worlooro ond Woldoro.
~11o 1
Rag I11 • now •ur cia.... gJng~nt~:.f....~rtu~cl.J~
E
•
ol &amp;14-713-3111
Ill 14. A 21
Business
vorloty ol tundlng oourcu lo
OpportunHy
pey tortrolnlng oro ovollobto tor
thooolllglblo
Nood horoo lrolnor to I how &amp;
]NOTICE!
lroln quortor horon In wootorn ~~=~~y "::.:tiS~~~G ~
plouuN 11W&amp;H522
buolnoao wllh pooplo you know,
OCcllllonal IH!by ahter tor a and NOT to Hnd money
handlcop child, Sylvlo Johnoon, through tho moll until ~ou havo
304·773-1140 or773-6541
lnvnUgalocl lho allerlng.
Cruloo
Agency 11 you oro Into,..
Point PluNnt Buaintu, ....
tabllthm•nt ntada Plrt tlma elted In ownlnp your own
l•nHorlol holp, opprox1mototy cru I•• a~ency ca I Cru I•• World
1D-12 hN par WHk, avanlna 1·800-62 ·5533
hour., $35. wNkly S.na Shoo Stott ond Vldoo Store
resume to Box 8-26, care Point comblnad for tala In Pomeroy
Plunnt Roglllor, 200 Moln 81 , .,11 614·192·3830 or 81&gt;1-1112·
Point Pl1101nt, Wv 21560
2571
Sklllo got you lobo Tho 1duff
welding program at Tri-County
-atkinll School gill you
Real Estate
s~llla Woldoro oro highly oklllod
workers Receive tha trtlnlng to
lloco- thol hlghty·oklllod wol·
dar In lan than ona year CIIN 31 Homes for Sale
tha Adult Education C.ntar at
114·753-3511 Exl 14 to roglotor a br, cottage Nice Nllremant:
tor cl111n l?t;lnnlng October homof locottd 215 Lowor Rlvor
2nd You may bt eligible to Rd R vor Vlow 814-441-2300
receive flntncral aid to fillp pey 3 bedroom homo tlvlngroom,
for your tr.alnlng, call and lsk kitchen,
bath
Comp&amp;at•ly
about our financial aid 1ourc•
remodeled lnalda 1nd out.
Silln per1on naadtd muet M $32,500. Ownor flnancod, Loon
1bla Co lift &amp; work flexlble howa. oroo 304-588-2462 or 588-4374
Vl'ra Furntture, 4 ml out 141, 4 boclroom hou ... 1·112 bolh
eppty In peroon
On Grovel Hill, Middleport, Ohio.
Someone to aiHP ovar in home Garage Immediate potHulon.
of ek:terty lady no work or car• Coll814·982-5714
Involved, plaaa-&gt; ..... 11klng 5 roomo ond both Bulh·ln
wage and refrancet In flret lit· porch $13,500 Neacl1 eoma
!."! wlr1e to Box P·25, care of ropalr. 114·1112·2383 61&gt;1-1112·
I'Oinl Plononl Roglodor, 200 5601
Moln St, Pt Pn, WV 25560
molnlalnocl. ProtarTYPIST Mull 1&gt;1 oblo lo typo 80 B11utlfully
rod
nolghborltood.
Wolk lo
wpm. Knowledge of word ovorythlng In Golllpollo
Dot~
procn81ng equlpm1nt htlpful. nhaly a mutt to Ma 114·25&amp;Knowledge
of U55.
madlcal/psychlatrtc Cannlnology
preferred. S•nd resume or call Exc cond , 2 atory brick
Sandra McFarland, Par1onnal w/biSemanl 3br, 2 batM, heat
Officer, Woodland Canters, nc.•l pump. CA, now gorage, 23
412 Vinton Pik•, Galllpo11s, OH acrn Naar Lact1 Altar-., 11445131, 814-446·5500 Woodlond 258.e412
Cantara 11 a EEOfM action
employer and do.. not dl• For 1111, liVen ynr old rtnch
criminate on tha basil of ~~~·· houoo 3 bedroom with
religion, race color, ttx, aga, two yNr old Lennox Hut Pump
natroNtl origin, hanalcap or an· on 1.1 acre, Fllltwc a i:le Ad. at
Flva Polnto. Conloct Diva Faa
cattry
111 S14-11112·7701 or 11WHTho Molgo Locol School Dlotrlct IIMI
it.
curranlly Making
ap3BR ho- 10% ,_,
plication• from certlllld lp- Llka plicant• for 1 Boya' 9th Grade ovarythlng rwnodolod, with
brick Prlcod rlghlt .....
BaaketbaH Coach, Boye' 8th Grade Batkatball Coach, Boy1' 358.e711
7th Grade Basketball Coach,
Boye' Head Track Coach, Junior Portland Rd 7 room ..._., tr•
High Track Coach, A11i1lant gae, compllt_.y renovated New
.Junior High Trtck Coach, Head oldlngl roof, win-. dooro,
Banball
Coach,
Alllltant -pot 11f1, plumbing wiring,
tfock on 2 oilin. potlo,
B•••ball Coach, Glr1t' Raurva llghto,
lg wolk In closoto,
Softball Coach and Qlrlt' Junior londlcaplng,
lg atoraga, completely prlvala
High Balkttball Cach tor the on
2 acre• $52,000. Up to 100
1989-90 school year Appllcantl
mutt hold a valid Ohio teaching acr• availabla 814-843-5281 afcertificate and lor colchlng ter 4:00
po•hlont mul1 mHI cartltf. Prlco roducocl, nlco 3br, 2 bllh
cation raqulremerw• of Ohio for AC, baumant, garage, tencea1
tpor1s madlcine and CPA Per- blck yard, larg• deck, fruit
tone lntlf'•tld ahould con1act trna, 1 54 acrH Backyard
Jim Carpenter, Superintendant llshlng &amp; booting, Roccoon Rd
of Meia• Local Schodt at P: 0
614-44&amp;-:M31.
Box 212, 320 Eut lhln SUMlin
2br, houN wf2 car
Small
Pomeroy, Ohio
goroge. 2 mlloo out 141 134,500
Tobacco Workers Wanted, Nor- 614...f48-o335 ahar Sp m.
man Young, Buffalo, WV, 304137-2530
32 Mobile Homes

or

12

for Sale

Situation

12160 Buddy, 2br, all gas, new
corp«, AC. 1170 IIlio now
Have room, board and e~re tor through out, $5450 8t 4-4ti-otdorly
lloooonablo,
In OI71
Pomeroy 114-982-1101.
14170, 1 3 ocroo, 2 BR, 2 bolho,
Lovlflil Mother, wl24 yeara of flroploco, 101120 front porch
np 4 chlldcoN, will llobyoft In Prlcod to HH 112.500 114·258my home, Mo....Sal, alltga, day &amp;702.
a afternoon tlmal Clll atler 187'.1 Ublrty mabllo homo.
Gp m 11&gt;1-388-M:Ie In VInton 12ltt51, upendo, good cond,
muot oofl, 304-171·1231.
Mother, wlfl ot tuchar would 11112 Oakbrook 14170, 3 bodHko Ia babyolt In hor homo, room•. 1 owner, exc cond, 304Mlddloport fl4-tt:l.fi31.
171o74!11
W.nlod . PuN nwtol lold olngorl 3 llodroom
121170 Stove,
Sooklnt • puro -•1 group to rolrlgorotor, AC , lotol oloclrlc.
up wMh I nood grouf thll Gooil cloon condition, untlor·
II willinG to go to tho top 11&gt;1- plnnod, winlorlud Rooo:ty to
258-1Uhok lor 1.10
move In At Naw Hev•n $8000
w. care for eklerty and han- 30WIII·24U
dlcoppocl In our heml 21 ,..,. Would ~ou llko • now mobllo
nporlonco U'N on coli Law IIDma befol'l winter? Call ue at
lncomo homo Conl14-8112o&amp;l7'.1 1.aOG·72fl.4041. Wo loko riding
oftor 7 00 p m lor mort Info&lt;. mowers, tractorw. motorcyclaa,
eutomobllll and tNckl on
Wll do lloby .. lttlng In m~­
Mondoy through Frldoy 11"'
982·7454
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Wanted

....

,,..

_.....

15

Schools &amp;
Instruction

•

e5 Acrn, Clly Schoolo, 5
minute• from town, tobacco
baH, mineral rlghtt, QOOd hom.
11110. J25,000.114·:z51.1UO

RE·TRAIN NOWt
SOUTHEASTERN
B~NEIS t 04 ocr11 oft Eogll Rldgo
COLLEGE, 121 Jock- Plko Rood,
vory
prlvlllo,
opo
Coli 114-4411-4317. Ro .. No IIIIo proxlm1tely four aero 11
11·105151
ho~tlold ouhobla tor bulldlnt
ond tho root Ia -land E1c•
18 Wanted to Do
tent hunllng ,,.. Eloctrlclt~
ond TPlC Wolor ovolloblo
Do oarpontry work. Building noorby. 110,000; ar wnloolltotol
ho- to rornodol~ Hovo H ocrH pluo cobln tor 127,100.
, . . . , _ Aok tor Clirlo. .,... cau 114441-2381.
~-&amp;~

~ ~~~~~"-----~

-'!I'·

Alhfon, booutltul OM ION loiO
Milo Poula'o Doy CotW Conlor wHh rlpubtlo wlllor,
Solo, oflonloltll, chltdolro M.P Clydo - · Jr _ . - - .
1 1 m. • I 30 p.m. Agoo l\to1 0.
- . oftor ool1aof. Orop.fno
latgo ltuUcl111!1 loll.
Wtlaa•. 114 •• 1224,
rnobNe ...... .-mltMd; ~btll
wotor, . . , - roduood, ClyM
Pointing - - '
11 ....... .,. 104.e7WS31

-on.

-rtor. ~=.;:.:::...::::::,.~.=-=.=-:--1
1'"'..:=:-~ ~ 1:,_
_ . _ lt+a71430.

IOfOIIpOnd. OWner llnanclna.

t100. -

10 ••- MIL
REMODEUIIG '""~a· Moodow/Wo~J oprlng, 1J1
="IIETIPMmNO,
WOR~ ll'l".:-3114-e.:-~· Gunvllll
ELECTRICAL I '~UIII~• 1 :::::::..:::..;.:~.:::.;.;-::::-::::­
81 W-ond, 132 ICrH. 131,000,
HAI REFIRENCII. P • ~
CAU. A1'T111
tlit.

1NL

1 1 - lit. 7, llll'lkl, Coli 114448-4411 oftor 7 p m.

t300 month plul dapoett Jack·
oon St, Vlnlan. &amp;14-388-1310

2 bedroom In Eaotorn Dllllrtct
$200 monlh ptuo dopooh
Rolor- roqulrocl. 81&gt;1-Mfl.
2101.
lloth
I

~.':""..!in,

nlco' 61 .\',~

5858

2 ~L houH. located 52 Mill

c.w.., Stove a .wlrlg, tum'od
$1&amp;5/mo $100/dop. 114-4413870
bod
2 11oth1 Mobil1
Jho- room
·~~7" •~• or 171-••31 • ~ · 3 bodroom homo $400 4 bod·
h
.... ~ "7"3030
room omo ...,.. 3 ~ ~
ori7S.343t
3 br, farm houoo 1 112 mllft
1rom Rt. 7, Euroka, OH 304-1755104
4 bedroom brick, llonmont,
;orogo, largo ~ord. Gunvlllo
RoacJ. leaN, dapotll:, references $450 month (lncludn gal)
304-875-7887.
4 bedroom houu tor rant $250
month. Cal 614-8824531 or
114-1112·2e51.
For Rant· Houu In Rio Grande,
1275/mo. pluo dapooh, S1 4-112·
7874 oHor 5p.m

For rant or ule, two •room

houoo, Lincoln Hto 1200/monlh.
Coli 11&gt;1-982-2720 or 8f &gt;1-982·
3581
HouM tor Rani or S.la 2103
Chotham. 814-448-3134.
Nlco
31tr
houll
newly
,.modolod Aont t2101mo lncludn w.tar, tralh, MWII"
•100 dopooh. f.lrgo Yord SH ot
314 Thlid St. Kanuogo. 114-441747'.1

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 8R, $t7&amp;, 3 br, 1200 On 588.
Dopoon You pa~ utllllloo It"'
381...104.
2 BR, NloNnCH a dapoolt ...
qulm. 114·258-1922
2
baclroom
fumlthH.
Wllhlrldrylf' $235 per morwtt
pluo ulllltiM ond dapoolt 81"'
912·7471.
2 br mobllo homoo, Dlpooft, •
.wt. roq'd. Coli oltlr 2p m 11&gt;144H527.
2 br1 mobllo homo, dap &amp; Nl
Nq'o Coli oft• 2p m 814-441a527.
2 br, opeclouof onochod family
room AC, opplonCft tumlohocl
2 mllal from HoiZir $250/mo.
plua utiiHies Depolh and rafernocn roqulrod 614-44&amp;-1825
2br, tumlohodl o1r cond I coblo
TV, Balutifu River Vew In
Kanaugal Fosters Mobile Home
Pork. 614-4415-1102.

T1111 Townhouse Aptl, 2 br, 1·
112 bllho, CA, dlohwoohlr, dl1P9MI, pnvatl 1nci0Nd patio,
pool, ployground Wolor, _.,,
&amp; t.woh lncludod Sllrllng ot
$2811/mo Collll&gt;l-387·7160.

Twin Rl-. Towor-Houolng lor

lll:.~~ll'ly, H~~~c.1ptd n'!~
downlown
Point
Plo111nt,
phone 30U75-8571
Equal
Houolng Opportunhy
Upper Rlvor R~ 2 opt upotolr.
2br, llovo, rot, walor, garbogo
picKup
Oe!1:'h req'd
1
downoto~o, 2 , wotor, -~·•o
"
-r-•
plck·up 114-441-3840
Uplllol'!1 unturnlahocl opl Corpettcl no pats, Inquire at 300
Fourth Avo

45

FurniShed
Rooms

Fumlohod oHicloncy, 111 utll~loo
paid, ohlro lloth, 1135/rno., tit
Second Avo 114-4415-3845

$150/mo.

&amp;pm

tiOO/d-h,

114·746-81128

oftor

Apartment
for Rent

•r.·

Lltrga recliner chair, matching
coffee • and tabiM, 1 maple
rocker Wlcuohlono, 1 ont1quo
toblo, 114·3118-11331
Mo~·g Wahor-"-or, $400
F ,_ troo
trl~,,
127"
gonlor,
•
Doub._
oven "nnga,
•275 DlthWUh'!, $75. lf4olll2•23&amp;3 or
114-19•·5601.
-"'P"'tc"K"'E"'N"s'"'FU=R"'N:::tTU=R=E-,
NoWIUaod
Houoohold turnllhlng 112 ml
Jorrlcho Rd. Pt. Plo-nt, WV,
colt 304-175-1460.
SWAIN
AUCTION l FURNITURE S2
Olivo Sl • Golllpollo. Now l Uood
tumRuro, hullro, Wolllom l
Work booto &amp;14-448-3151
Trl Stu Com~ol vacuum
c111ner, runs llka naw wlal·
t1chmants, $18G 114-445-0411
Vl'ra Fumhurt a Appllancn
Rt 141, 114 ml on Lincoln Plkt
Mon·Sat i am~ p m. Sun 12·5
Cllllllll P m for appolntmenll,
114-441-3158
Financing
1vollable whh no money down
Soto l Chair, Rog. $191 now
11229 (It In odock). Wood
Groupe,
Reg $529,
, _ So
1291
(11 In otockl
Sloopor
to,
Voughon Bouott lnto.wprlng 54 Miscellaneous
Rog, $8!11, now 13111 ( I hi
h
dl
lllockl Quoon Anno Coffoo l
Mere an Se
,
End
Tobt11
$148. .I., oot a
• Two automatic tran•mlttlont,
varlet:IH
of Bunk
1141
uf;Twln &amp; Full MattretMI Wll Old
1 k• 3 1 P"d Chivy
1• 1 "c
$49 85 60 1
I
• "!P. Now
(
n tl'lntmlsslon, 3 goat•, 2 nanltock).
Ouoin
Motlrno
Solo
bill~,
MoHrooo nlft ond
G E1 Re!lstorod
,
V top- ,
124.,
•
• R-• SISO, Kin"
"aoc1 por,
co or ••v,
cor·
1
$121 I valietln asut
• bo111tor and fuel pump, almolt
room Suho, Rog 11100, now now 814-667-6680
$198 30 do~o worronty on oppUanc11, Mavtag Wuhlr $H l
U~ furnlturt, amall tpup Dryor $7S &amp; up
plloncoo, gas rongo, Lab dog 1
rr old, could be raglstarad fias
Antiques
had olf ohota, pertfatly tro1nod,
53
=.:--:--::-~~~=::::::::::- 304-675-1485
Buy or 1011 Rlvorlno Anllquoa,
E Main Stroot, Pomorov Vlvllor
Photograph~
ond
1124
Houra M T W 10 00 I m. to I 00 -oping equipment tor ato
P m, SUnda~ 1 00 to 1 00 p m. $750 814·9112-2tl5t oftor4 30
.:11.:..4:..:·1::1:.2·:.252:=:.6:...,..;.-::::-;--:-== WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
Top Caah paid Old furniture Ron A11180h, 1210 Second Ava,
cubotrdo,
qullll,
orlonfll, Golllpollo, OH 614""6-4 336
pllntlngo, tol'l, or onllro ..toto Wont To Buy, old lullo rodloo,
coli catloct 304-525-3275, or woniOd mado bolon 1942, pas·
304-823-8854
tic or wood, large or lrNII
::::..::::.;:::;;;.._____ Oon"t have to work at •II Pa"'
54 Miscellaneous
$10 IO $100. lor mood brlndl,
304-882·2220 ook tor Chuck
Merchandise
25 Inch Conoolo Color TV
N - tubl $50 114-441-0407
ILocoiJ
Au1o woohlr 1100 Schwinn
blka $40 Lown mower $15
SoloiiHo dllh 1900 Mlc..-vo
1100 304-175-6485

H

Household
Goods

2 eiiiCftrlc munl pattltlon ldjuetabl• bade $150. 17 cu ft
Frlgldoro ro/, !root ltoo 304-87S.
Uf3.
111&lt;12 corpot, 150, rotl corpot$4 1
~ord a up, Mollohond Fumlturo
114-4415-7444.
Bro~hlll

-.pllllo bedroom
ouno. Full olro Llko now 11&gt;18112-2733 1ftor a 00 p m

Four Royhlll Uvlng Room
Tablll, Exe Cond $50 aach.
114-448-1415.
FrtaldoiN, 17 cu ft,_top tr.ozor,
100"-. !root troot20&lt;1. Birch gH
logo 135 304.e7S.3223

Klng .. lzod wotor bod. Asking
$250 614 141·3038
Ladln sl1• medium blue fox
lockat, bluo toper &amp; dioonond
ring, 111 porcelln collectorl doll,
814"-44&amp;-2564
Uvlng room auhl, for eala llka
new, 614-44~774
Londen Fog C01t size 14, long
country atylt dratt wom twice,
toatter oven, stroller 114-245547S
Lumm Trallor Awnlngo, 35ft,
$171 114·245-UT.I
Panasonlc Vldao Camara &amp; VCR
$950, 11 4-441.Q844 or 114-4467802

Porllbto Llghtld Arrow Slgno
Ute IFroo Dollvory/Lotlo.wl
Ptollllc Loollora tHotf Prlco1 $60
box Explrft 111211181 1-800.5333453 AnyUmo
Roro :Ill Chevy, 2 d&lt; Sodon, xx
ohorp $71100 or lrodo 114·111117'.111
=Ro-:ot:-o-u-=ront=--;:Eq:::u:::l:-pm=o=n7t,-:l:::oc::o:;:lod::;
In GaiUpollt, for mora Information 304·343-,611
Sogo S~oolom with light phooor
4 glmOI $120 114.g92-3561
Stoto of tho 111 Puvoy XR1200
mixing consolt with manual
guldo 1350. 304-182·

;r.;for

SUrpllll, Army, Donlm, Rontol
clolhlng. our 25th yoor, rogulor
lu111 comotla~ Smoll •
qul..-nt "UnciO Som rvllto'o, Sal. U.S.A ~ Rlllrod
Old Rt. 21; Now Era, Jockaon
Co. F!', Sot, l 8.., till
1.00 P• 304-27W&amp;58
Tono:ty Computer with color
monitor l ... than 1 yaar old
$3SO.I14-tt2·74S7

1 BR untum
A""" l rotrlg GOOD USED APPLIANCES
cmldod WI or, IOWigtl, gar- Wlahefl!, dryere, retrlgerllore,
' paid. Dop l Rot 11,._
rong11. Skaggo Appllancn,
4 •
U - Rlvor Rd. lftldo llano
1br, turnl1hed efflc..ncy, car- Cloot Molol Collll4-441·7388
pet: ad, AC, private, very nice,
ldaot toUJ'.:=.1 729 ~ Ooocl Glboon Rolrlgo.wtor ond
• - 1•
-02
111 ......., , A...onable. 614- Woodbumer tnd •cc ...orin
'
••
'
1112..:taei-:'
lor olio. 1200 or llolll after. 11&gt;1lbr, pe~lolly tum'od,ln Vlnton.J:=========.J!74~2:..:ttll2~~·~ft~or~l~p=m::_._ _ _ _~
114488-1121

to

2 BR, 112J::~: (llrllolly furnlsheCL
hhaitlaad
Rei.
AVIIIIItll
1It 1210/m0.
114-441-1117 .... 7pm, 11Mo
4501 .... lor f.lrry

55

Building

Supplies
Blaclo, brick, _ . , plpeo, win- · llnlola, otc Cloudl Wlnt - Rio Grondo, 0H Coli 11&gt;1245-5121

56

2 odun Rod Chow Fomoloo, 1
blu• mala chow, $100 each 614·
379-2 566
3 Chow Pupplao $50-$75 614·
445.g3011
3 poundt, 5 mo okl Peking•••
614-446·6375.

O.:..::.._.:,.:.'="':'":-.-,---::-":":-:"::
3yr. olt!z Rat Torrlor, 2 ur old
flmale Hat Tarrlart: 6 wk ~d Rat
Torrlor Fomalo, Soli all togolhor
614-4411-3413

AKC Ba1111t pupplaa. Ready to
got Francia Banadum 114-e&amp;73851
AKC Ll11SI·Apeo puppln. Now
J• High Bond Jockot, Coli 304675-3638
Boaglo pupo $25 ooch, 304-6755456.
Drlgonwynd Canory Ktnnll
Pereian,
Slam•••
and
Himalayan klnana Chaw alud
ltrVICI 614-446-3844 alter 7
pm
Fish Tank, 2413 .Jackaon Ava.
Point PIIIHnt, 304-675-2063, 10
gal Ht up $14 99 ond 10 gol
compltta $43 25.

:;
••

rune

~"&gt;

-

1874 International Tractor 335
Cummlnt, new tim, 38 rnra, :.
cab over, plus loa trail., 114-- .....
Nl·22~3 or 614-6111-6191
_ :

•

1979 112 ton Chevy pickup

.

38,000 ac1Utl milts $3500 or

trodo 614-446·1052.

~.

1171 GMC 700 Sorln Dump
Truck Naw bid, 366 angina.
Callther Sp m 614-742·280:!

._
::

1983 Dodgo Rom D 50 4WD
Sharp, low mileage Call &amp;141112·265hffor 4 30 $3500

":..,
-J

-,

1986 Chavy pick-up S·IO 13800
•....
614·14fl.2607.
F-360, 1 ton, 12ft. llatllod. Now -:·~:
tlru, tla-rods, king pana,
mufflor $1600 114-4415-1052

73
st k
ve OC
ATTENTION Hora Ownoro,
Point Ptuola now carrying tack.
Paint Plus, 2415 Jackaon Ava,
Point Pleaaanl, phone 304-6754084

63

Ll

4 WD S
1

Vans &amp;

Good ealtction of Duroc Boart
Roger Bentley 513-58&gt;1-2398.

Plge $20 oo oach Rico'• Pig
Farm, Ton Milo Road oil Rt 62,
Loon, WV, 304-458-1583.
LE
SPECIAL FEEDER CALF SA

:=~~'[,,?'',:,: BtJ.:I~dl~~

Holotolno Cottlo occ•c••d on
day Tuesday, and ur, t II 4p m

~~~:~~2 :,&lt;:, 4 -s~~;:;':Jion

Transportation

chromt Windshield lncluclet 2 '
tull taca halmett, ona bill, one
AFG Phone Bob Hoeflich aher
5p m 614-192 5292

Autos for Sale

75

for Sale

1173 Plymoulh Duoolor, S cylln·
d•r automatic, 78,000 actual
mil•, 15M &amp;14-446-01141
1Ut Muetang 11, good work car,
$350 Sea It on lot acron from
VIllage PllZ.I
19n Ct..vy Nova, 6 cyl , autoh2
dr, naw tlrH, ahockt, rebu d
corb , $800 304-88:Z.:Ie25.
117e Iuick Rogol v.e~..,2 door,
good cond, 1900. 304·5ro·2361

1988 Baho 1!111 s ...sport 350
Chevy s s. Prop, AM-FM st•reo
Open bow, ohorp boll. $12,600
614·892-2529, 814-592-4241
Lowe 15 1/2 It aluminum bass
boat Mercury 25XD motor Ex•
trat, with tra1lar Clll avanlngs
614-182·5,81

1971 C.dlllac Sedan DeVille,
pow•r everything axe cond,
well malntafned, 8a,ooo mllas,
prlcad on lnapection, 304-6752580
1971 Chavy Malibu Classic
Wagon $995. 614·992·3090.

1878 Taurut Camper 22 h Exctllent condition $3300 614843-t4H.

1972 17 I Ston:ron Tri·Hull
Boot 125 HP, Evlnrudo Englno, '
.::.:.::...::-:--:---:---=--- ·1 complete top new upholstary._ 1
1961 Dodge two door Runo $3500. Coli 614·2BII-13t6 oftor , ..
good, has good tlr11, graan, 7 oo p m.
r11s than 50,000 mUll 61 ~-992·
3383
1986 16H L•- Ball Boot, ns ·,
H P. Mercury outboard motor
1g12 Ford pickup, 350 auto, PS,
Mercury toot controlled trolling
runo good 614·2511-6051.
molar $5600. 114-446-1890•

m~~ehanlcally

1NO Datsun 310 Runt aood,
dopendoblo $650 11&gt;1-992·~48

1984 Oodgo Doylono Turbo Z
155,000 mlrn, black, gr~y lnlerlor All turbo optlonol $3600
614-9815-3313 oftor 6 00

VIolin (ouono, hlghl~ lrolnod
profnalonal,
experlenctcl
trodnlonol &amp; Suzuki tochlng
Roglllorod with Suzuki Aoooc.
of Amorlco, 304-675-4323

58

•

Fruits

&amp;

Vegetables
Rod Roollorrloo tor SoiOf Fralin
Borrlool Pick ~our own or rood~
plckad. To~lora lorry Potch.
.:.11;.;4..;..:t;.;4;;..S.;;..5084:..:..c.;__ _ _ __

81

1985 Toyoto Von, LE, loldod,
axc. lhape, priced fc;w a quick
Nil.. 614-388-8734.
1985 Chryolor Fifth Avonuo Ex·
lro ohlrp 52,000 mlln 814·37..
2728
1181 Doll• 8ll Oldo, 2 door Bur•
ond~ loll ol oJIIIons good
roo, $1,900 1961 Ford Camper
runs and lookl good, $2,500
304-t71-2929

ft

1981 Dodge Amnl, automatic &amp;
air, 43,000 mu-. $2500 614-37927M
1981 Dodge Arltl, 4dr, Ice Blue,
auto, air, cloth Interior, $2950
114-441-17&amp;1 orl14-441-7604
1988 Oodgl Ooylonl Turbo Z,
autom1tlc l AC 56,000 milat
114-37fi.27M
1t8t Plymouth Rallant. 4dr,
PSIPB, eul:o trantL AC, real nice
S:MOO.II4·250-62o1

I bedi'OOIM. fn lllddl1port. Nllr
$178-h
...... t100 tlopook. 11.._

c.

350 JD o-, I woy blodo. good
- · Rlody to -*- 114-4411044.

!IOhoot ond -

'

Ford,,_, ...... I-.
DUfllvatar, lfl. buoh ltaa. h,IOO.
100

....... ~ caoe. ..
~ • - a ohepplngr.r,
---i2elliiiiL
..-:~ .......
provldld.
II ..

.Rm'l , _ -:.~-rot. Qol.

=".=,'"

ii4Hm.

"I'm-.~ lht lid for the ,.,chic you
juat dlcldlld to put In next WMI&lt;'eiiiiJOI'."

)

trrn.

,

Ntw hiH Cam 1-tor. Uka
now 11200 114·t4N102.

...

Services
81

•
•

Home

"

Improvements

'

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional llfatlm1 guaran..
tH local references furnished
FrH estimates Call collect 1814·237.0488, doy or nlghl R o
geraB1samant
Waterproofing

•
•

C W Dovloon, Plumbing &amp;
trenching, tor all water &amp; drain
lines, 614-446.0159
Fattr Tr11 Trimming, 1tump
removal, cau 304-67S-f331

,

Aon't TV Strvlce, apeclallzlng
In Zenith alto nrvlclng mosl
Olhlr brands House calft, alto
aoma appliance rtpalre WV
304-el'l-2398 Ohio 614-4462454.
Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most Willi completed aarna day
Pump IIIII and IINICI, :J04..
815-3802
Davit
S.w·V.c
Service,
Georgn CrHk Rd Parta supplln, plc~up. ond dolivo'Y 61&gt;1446.0294

-·
••

S.ptlc Tonk Pumping $90~Golllo
Co RON EVANS ENTERPHISES,
.Jackson, OH 1-800-537·9528
Trw &amp; .. ump removal Shrubs
...eonld firewood Chy $4S
Country $55
load
Oon'a
Landacapes 614-446-96416

I

•

~
~

•

----~-:--:~~~----'· ::"
Cartar'l Plumbing
~:

oflond
11&gt;1-2815-

car- 1874 ponllaa Grand Prix,
$371,304-&amp;75-312elftor3pm
For Sale 1111 Ford 4 wMtt
holvy duty 3141on truck ••,ooo
~ llot·
octull mlloo. 1100. Coli Joy
•gp m 11"'251-e511
GOVERNMENT IIIZID Vohlcl11
trom/1100
--11-1.
Corvlffft.Cho¥yo.
SurpiUI
luyoro.Quldo
IOH87-IOOO
iloi.I·IOIIt.
""
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Volllclll
1100. Fonl. M - o .
·
· Chavyo.
Surpluto.
..,_Guido
(1IIOH87-IOOO
~ 1187 Clllv-o. 4 eonp•ej 2 ... . . , poltli
~ utro...,... tiOO. 114..fU-

Truckl for Sale

,..,. 1or11

Plumbing

&amp;

Heating

and Hntlng
Fourth and PTn1
Galllpolle, Ohio
514-446·3888

...

'"

•-. "'.
·~ ••
"'
'·

- - - - - -• :·:•.
84 Electrical &amp;
~ ,,

Refrigeration

7111.

IMplomanlo In llaclo. Poltl • IOIW. Klntl Kutllr - · 114-441-

1878 TauN• Hit-contained
campar1 24 ft Good condition
Locatta on lot In Hockingport
$3000 S14-912 2528, 114·582·
4241
t ft ollda In lruck camper, llolh,
tum1c1, good cond $500 3C)4..
175·3570
Mull oolt 1186 Torry Tourus 281
Travel Trailer In storage hi'"
Florida Claan, extra nlca
$8,500 Strioua lnqulrlu only
814.gll2·2t10

1981 Corolco 17,000 mltoo. Toka
peymonto &amp;14-317·7485
1981 Dodge Davtono Shelby Z
AU optlono. L- mllolgo. Exclllonl condhlon. 81&gt;1-742·2978, or
114-982·3384 0 Wollo&lt;

.:r. . . .a...'"to =72

wlU ..,.__ 114..:t811122.

Motor Homes

82

lbt. lo1G11t.
. , , JO . . , ..... Owner 1.;;:::.:::~::::::===-=-::::=

II W.IIJ!I.I_"!o. 1 111111, , _

Campers&amp;

1981 Covollor Z24, root oood,
oxo. ohopo. block, 814-843-6247

eo
Sotvogo caro 3 ..whh 28130 bu1ldlng

Fann Equipment
r..
1i
103~ _ .., 'I 101 witrochtl"'tt'
13,
-·n1 trootor
buoh
, 13,350;
1200 Doovld
B-..
ool with Colt, $4,1110;
114..:teeazl
1177·78 .50-C JD Dozor, I WIY
blodo, ~~ good GOIHI.,
117,()(10. 11
1(14,11ono:ty.

79

1 N1 Escort SW, SO Transmleolon, good cond $895 614·2455873

1M3 Clm•ro Z28 305 auto, PS,
PI, olr, cruiH!Jcl~~' T·Top, now
lttreo,$5,800
~"7'8-2383

Individual
gu1t1r
laasons,
lloglnnorof ooriouo gultorlool.
Brunlcord 1 Muolc ~14-4410187 Jeff Wameley Instructor,
Sl4:441-80n,llmlto&lt;l apenlngo

Boats &amp; Motors

IM7 Ford LTD 390 outo, Into,..
lor, perfloll Extra' par1e, ,....
to.wblo. Aoklng $1000 304-t751112

UK If Roglotorod molo Bluo Tick.
1 montht old $150 or trade for
gun 614·149·2453

2 ClariMIA for sale, 1 tor marching, 1 tor concert Baldwin
org•n wlbullt In tun machine
6n-44S.t475,
614-245·50117,
114-245-5381
Iundy Flute for ula, $175 151,..
448-442e.
Clorlnot Uood ono Yl"' 1300.
114-446-46t8 or 304.e7S.3281
For Solo· Ctorlnol, flute, 1171
Audl 11000 114-44&amp;-1429 oftor
lpm

74

Reduced 1987 Suzuki GS 450 l,
I speed mint condition 1,600
mila• Matallc maroon, lo1a of ~

1981 Old• Boughln tun~
loododJ. .only 31,000 mil Uko
nowl ...,, oftor lp m 814-441o
1748
1812 Cllmero T·Topa, V-8, 4
opood,30W75.f301

Instruments

trentml11lon, 318 engine. Capoo
loin sooto. Mull s" 1o Approclllloll 45,000 octuol mlloo
114-245-5152.
:0:~'::':::'-":---:-::::-=:;1980 CJ5 JNp, IXC cond,
$3,500. 304-675·2316oHor 5 00
1987 JH~, Ranglor Roal nlcol
814-446-6 48 aftar Sp m

Strow lor •••• $1 50 balo. 81&gt;1446-4111 EYonlngo 614-4417157

Hoppy Jock Skin Bllm Chockl
ecratchlng &amp; rallavat Irritated
skin without starokta Promota•
hlllintl a holr growth on dogo &amp;
Clfll R • a FHd a Supplv 381
W Main St , Pomeroy

Musical

a'doc:l

Cond~lon PS, AC, ou1omotlc

Motorcycles
1964 Honda motorcycle or trade
for 250 Honda 4-whteler 614·
742·2545
Honda 800 wflow mileagt, 614388.g331

1971 Honda Civic, nHdl paint
good, $800 614448-3413

57

1171 Conversion Van

•

Hay &amp; Grain
~--...:,-;-,---:--:--:::-:
':lar~a
""
rou nd b aln of h1y, s15
... 052
81
ooc
""-·1
Mulch tor Sololl4·388-8287

64

Groom ond Supply Shop-Pol
Grooming AU breadl All alylaa
lam1 Pal Food Dealtr Julia
Wobb Coli 614-441.0231.
HAPPY JACK SKIN BALM
Check• KrJtchlng It rtllavaa lr·
rflal~ ekln wltfiout tteroidl
PromoiH hilling 6 hair growlh
on dogt &amp; catal Bldwllr Caah
Food J-0 No~h Produco

1975 Oodgo Von Good con·
dillon 814.~ 9 •2871
1175 JM~, CJ5, now Uroo now
HI
•
8 4 '4"414' ol
mu or, •600 1 ~
• •
tarloronwealcand
.. ~

1171 GMC Von I cyl, 3 optod
Auna, naedl: work. S400 firm.
Corrloclalo ohHp owes, tor 814-i 92-.....
...1 anar
M
5•00 pm
ooto. 40 head 814-742·2252 3
mlln w11t of Harrlaonvllle, 1178 Ford Bronco 4 whtll drive
Mudtork Rood
Good condition 114·742·2276

1522.

.... _. __

E ., ..._.....

••

good $1400 or batt offer SM at
1BOS Cholllnut St. Golllpolll

1971 Ford, Town f.lndu T·Bird,
76,000 eun roof, all power,
good 1lroo, $1000,304-175-4402

&amp; Livestock

I bod"'""' u n l u - IIIII
- o d Hoi• ctlnloofWV. 11"'

1dlotthln
ar,
t!IIOIIno.,- pluo
1!11!. ~.~liD polo. I

1173 Chivy 1 ton rwcker,

Full blooded !tOur pupploo otlor I, 614·25Ha67

Fcrm Supplte..;

......,

3br,

1171 Ford Flolbod Ton Truck.
&amp;5,000 origlnol mlloo, good
condhlon $1200 114 8112·}2112
orl14412•7&amp;11, both avanlng..

71

Pets for Sale

::..:~::-::::-:;--:::;:-:=-;::::::::-~

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Zoporl_,..,-4.......,.•
llolh, 1 tumlohod1 1 unturnllhod, 114 441 044•.

tilt.

Trucks for Sale

Englno noodo robulO, noldo
t~=====~====r-==~;~;~~~~ 1958
wloool drlvo
oomo CJ5
bodVJoop
worlo 4814·992-7492

a

51

72

Goods

1 seo •

Courtly Appllanc:o Inc Good
uood oppllonc:ft, T'v olio Opon
I Lm. to I p.m. Man .Sod 11&gt;1448·1at.!o. 127 3rd Avo Go~
lpollo,""
Eltlto Sola: Wo oro Hillng .,..
2br, mobile home, near AG4MY, tiN houllhofd. Anylhlng you
nood. Somo onllquoo 61 ...258Dop l Rof. roq'd S14 446 4:144
1155.
3 bodroom In K~gor Crwok For Solo Frl;ldolro Choot
Schoof Dlllrlct HUD oppr- F'"lO' 41x27 lncho $50 S1"'
114-317.0U2
245-6147.
TraiiM nice clun unfurnished,
refwencee requlrad, Route One For Soto Brown-lllrlped ooto,
out Locuool ROad on right, 304- ohll&lt;l rockar roclln~&lt; Good
cand lion. Prlco 1300. 114-446171·1071
2340 anytime
43 Fanns for Rent
For Solo Eloctrlc Ronga, 175,
clrvor, S60; Sldo bv oklo
3br, firm hoUII, unat1achld Nlrlaorator, 1160; All In goOd
garqe on JacUOn Ad near concl". e1 4-44&amp;-2390

Mudoiock.

KIT N' CARLYLE®

Household

Bluo couch ond chol• Good
Roorno for ronl·- or monlh condition Aloo whHo opoka
Starting 111 $1201mo Gollll lrl'::'m
.c.•:.:•;;..B:'Iu.:g::c•·:-=6,-1&gt;1-.'-..':.m::-·3_17:;4==::-:::
Hotel. 814-\41-1580
CompUiar for u.lei TASO-IO
liMping room• whh cooldng. MARK IV, computer, monhor,
Alto trollor opeco All hook·Upl. t&gt;rlnlor, covor l pepe~ dlok IY..
Coli oftor 2 00 p.m, 30"'773- linT 6 ·~· ocrlpt. ~xc. cond
Hl1, M•son WV.
114-245- 27.
Dlkolo Form Homo bull on
46 Space for Rent
your lot, $13/i:tll l up. Soo our
7'.1'1
inod.. 81 • •
......,;~
•
1 •maillot R1 7, 3 large tot, Addloon Rd $75 Worilo TroUor Flrwwood for 1111, $30 lood,
Pork.l14-446-4211
304-458-1981.
:,FI.:..row~ood.:...:.
:..:t.c.co:.._rdo-:-o-:t-o-u-oon
-ocl-:
Commercial opeco 1400 oq.ft.
Corner Second ;;;(/ Plno Amplo hardwooa.
cord, all lor
pertolng. can 114-4415-4241, «e. $600 You hlul. 61&gt;1-742·2114.
2321, or 446-4425.
For Sale • Concr•tt and Plastic
Counlry MobUo Homo Pork, Hpllc lanka All alza.. RON
Routo 33, Nortlt of P-roy EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jock·
LDtl, rentale, parte. Mill C.:ll ton, OH 1.aoo.537·V528
114-9112-7479.
For Sila; Amsna 1lr condhlon•r,
f.lrvo mobllo homo lot 1•1!181•1 11300 BTU $260 614-4411-0842
on lllrm 20 mllft trvm POint
PL11aantt.. Rl 17i county watar, Good hord oplh llrowood $35
MWir
Hefaranca• requiNd load. 614·992-5707.
304-ltlo3001 or 304.e76-4138
Hay tor ••• Round balat,
timothy Stoktrmatlc
Ona acr1 lot, trallan allowed, clover
clly wotor, Golllpolll Forry. 304- IIIOVI 1MB Sllkl bod~ truck,
ood condition 2 new front
17
122
,._5_-2_
...,-----:---:-ret, ~ rear tlr11 Hydraulic
Two trailer tp1CII1 Aaute Ona tollllh. 614·245-5117
locUit Road on rlghl, 304..f75Holiday FrHztr, llka new, 1014
1071
;;;;;;0;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii cu It $150, Sttelllta dish com·
pllta wfAnderson control I
Merchandise
rec•lv•r, $500,114-441-0038

2br, turnlohod ldaltor workln'
po.won, ulllllu paid On Rt
clou to d1m Rent br w11k or
monlh 61 &gt;1-258-8378
2br, mobile hOlM at EvergrMn
614-37fl.:le78, no Sunda~ Collol

44

51

for Rent

/I

'

A baby female white or tan
Chuohuo 114·245-9558

11

GREG I ROUSH

to give away.

Day or N1ght

' 9

Apartment

"A Inaf Of bread, a j'ug Of

Sopt 30,0ct 2nd 3rd,4th Rt 124,
Mlnarsvllll 2 famillea 2 color
TV'a, .awing machine Cllblntt,
ptcture developing aqulpmant,
ahot gun shell k)ader, Intercom
Ol'ltlm, 10 opftd blko, 3 opood
blka, many wlntM' cloth•.

Employmenl Serv1ces

TEMPSTAR

FREE ESTIMATES
luke the pain aut of
puin~1ng. let me do
1t for you.

4 tomll~ Suo
Hager, l.lm St Racine Ctothet,
ctlolhos. cloth"
Oct
2,3,4
1D-?
Emeraon
Johnaon rnldenca, Por11and,
OH New, Ulld clothing, Ill
ailM, Knick-knacks, ate
Mondoy, Oct 2

ROUSH

t!h "

INTERIOR-EXTERIOR

5 family yard ula Cartllyn
Adams raeldtnct Ytllowbuah
Ad, Racine
Monday ahd
Tuoldl~ Oct 2&amp;3
810 Soulh Second Mlddloport
Sopt 211.()c:f 7 Complolo bod·
room aulta, bedding, lklant,
cur1alna, drapn;, dllhft, milk
glaae, pana, clothing, amall apoo
jollancoo, Lo._ mloc

Wanlod To Buy Uood Mobolo
Homoo, 614-446·0175

~Nil:

LINDA'S
PAINTING

4 16 86-tfn

Announcements

HEU' WANTED· TYPIST Muot
11o oblo to type so wpm.
Knowlodgo of word (&gt;fOCftolng
oqul..-nt hltplul. Knowlodgo
ot
mocllcollpevelllllrlc
tor·
mlnology
proforrod
Sond
r~~umo ar coli Bondro McF•~•nd.
- . n i l Offl-,
Woodlond cenloro, Inc, 412
Vlnlon Pika Clolllpolo, OH
45631, 11 ~1-5500. Woodland
ConlltW Ia 1 EEOIAA IICIIan
employtr and don not dl...
crlmln... on lhl belli or
religion, race, color, Ml, age,
natronal origin, handicap or an·
coolry.

VIcinity

Thursdays 10 00 3 00
Saturdays 10 00 3 00
9 28 89 1 mo

9 21 89

NO SUNDAY CALLS

1 · 28 1 mo

CONSTRUCTION

3

949-2801
or Res. 949·2860
PH.

992-5114

At Jet. S.l. 7 &amp; 143
On The Bv·Pass

992-6855

Call Anytime

HOURS
Days A Week

9 a.m.· 7 p.m.

lacksprings ld.
P-roy, OH.

CISTERNS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

7

36425

POOLS, WELLS

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Metals,
Plastics,
Stainless Steel.

9 23·89· 1 mo pd

992-2571
DAVE'S

Non Ferrous

985-4422

WATER
SERVICE

1,000

We Buy AI

•ANYTHING
AT ALL

7 18 89 tln

A.M.
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
Fortory Choke
STRicn Y £Nf0WCED!
9 21 89 1 mo

UMESTONE

•LIMESTONE

(614) 667-3271
Grant A. Newland

11:00

WATER SERVICE

111

•GRAVEL

EVERY SUNDAY

GALLON

t---.·(....;0_U_NTY
__-1

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

SPORTSMEN'S CLUB
Rt 124 lotw•n
Wolkesv11le and
Salem Center

PH.
or

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

IE(Y CLING

RACCOON VALLEY

1600

Miles Out New
Uma ld.ln

CHESTER, OHIO

GUN SHOOT

ALLEN'S
HAULING

I'OIIfn5,

-Possibly more.
9 28·'119 1 mo d

CLEARING

4 / 6 / 89 / tfn

New Nomes lullt
"Free Estimates"

PH.

11

EVENINGS

21/z

992-6872

SITEWORK • ROADS

BILL SLACK
992-226t

344

44

LAFF-A·DAY

Help Wanted

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9 •

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Full-lima bookk..-r nHCI•d In
the Galllpolll tl'llil Exc oppor·
hmlty National Co, 6 be.
bonotho. Poolllon ovolloblo Oct
2 1881 lntarattd applicant•
send reauma &amp; cov•r lett•r to.
Voca Corp. CSO Second Ave,
SUho tOO, Gllllpotlo, OH 45131 .

Middleport

&amp;

SUN'S UP
TANNING

222 East .Main
POMEROY, OH.

DOZER

25

WANT ADS bring
Vacation Money

FIVE

2 J ttn

MARTIN'S

Cer1if1od Ltcensed Shop
5 25 88 tfn

•liGHT HAULING

29, 1919

614

MODELS

CALL 992-6756

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL

•FIREWOOD

--

205-IS"

L&amp;L TIRES

ALL MAKU AND

' DOC" VAUGHN
60 DIFFERENT WOOD

Ptr Gamt

n

tlwough

SEPT.

SWEEPER REPAIR

DI~SEL

SERVICE
SYRACUSE. OHIO
M o st Fore-gn and
Domestt c Vehicles
A I C Servt ce
All MaJo r &amp; Mmor
Repa1rs
NIASE Certifted Machan1c

Estate of Jean Vander

mark deceaed Case No
26380 Dockel N Page138
NOTICE
NOtice IS hereby giVen that
on the 191h dav of September, 1989 Robert G Vandemark. Executor of the Estate
of Jean Vandemwk. late of
670 Potomac RNer Road
Mcl.aan Vorgonoa22102, filed
•n this Coun under Case No
26380, Docl&lt;ot N. Page 138
an authentiCated copy of lett
ers of appo~ntm~ tssued to
h1m by the Probate Court of

•ool

;J.

AUTO -

I
I
1

Wo

HSIIINCE PHONE

Pomeroy,

13"

'1 •so.oo '" Gamt
Om 10 '"pit '65.00

16141 992-6550

SALE STAITS

I

I

11

&amp; VIcinity

Mounted and
lalotKtd "FREE"

USED TIRE
SALE

I
I
1
1

Pt. Pleasant

Vord Salo, 2325 Lincoln AVI, Frl
end Sol, Sopt 29 &amp; 30 I 30 til
4.00, complllte twin bed, canopy
twin bid, dl.tln, gllnware,
tampa, bicyCle, Ndeprwada,
cur1alna, coppetona etova lOp
and wall oven, Barbie tbyl,
clothH, galvanized rinH tuba,
1011 of mlec, rain or thine

I

Friday. September 29, 1989

tan lrUDII. llootorod.

IIIII lt44tllo7111.

...... 1100.

::--:-:-""":":"-:-=----.....,,.,. ~ .,

Anldenllll
or
commercial "'- ~
wiring, now oorvlco or ropolro , '
Llcen11d •lactrlc:lan Aldanour .....:
Elaclrlcal, 304-675-1786

85 General Hauling
J &amp; J Water S•rvlc• Swimming
DOQis1 cltltrna, w1111 CaQ 614·

•

~45·1285

'

A I A Water Sarvlca. Pools, ciatam•, Willi. lmmadlate-1,000 or
2,!100 QIIIDnl dollvory Colt 304ltU370.

.

w.noraon·•

Hautl1111,
..-blo ratiO, YOIU- cllioounllo, 2,000 to 4,000 c-n~l
clotorno, _ . , ..... otc Col
1114-171-ztlt

B7

W.tor

•

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UphOlstery

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vlclng ln counly • - 24 ywo.
•
Tho
In
turn•uN •
uphelllorlng CoM 30W71-41M
•
for- ollllmtot-.

I

__...,..

�Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

Friday. September 29. 19._9..

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

--;_,_Local news briefs... ----.
Continued from page 1
and at 8:02 p.m. the unit responded to a call on Dewltts Run.
Road where Irene Wilford was taken to Veterans.
The Pomeroy unit was called to Butternut Ave. at 9:28 p.m. ·
for a shooting Incident In which Dennis Boyd was transpor.ted to
Veterans.
Finally, at 9:59p.m. the Rutland unit went to Larking St . for
Beulah Bell Wright who was taken to Veterans.

Southeast hit by thunde.rstorms

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT ~3G-89.
. By United Press lnternatlo.._.
85 on Sept. 28, set in i970. Astoria
Showers and thunderstorms reached 83, 5 degrees above the
swept across the Southeast a!'ld old mark set two years ago.
40
the far West early Friday while
It was much cooler early
the East warmed up after sev· Friday In Pennsylvania, with
era! days of bone-chilling temperatures In the 40s to lower
temperatures and widespread 50s. Just 24 hours earUer,
frost.
temperatures were about 10
The National Weather Service degrees or more below that.
said heavy rain and wind gusts to
Clear skies and a southwest
56 mph pelted Pueblo Colo., and wind brought warmer overnight
local flooding from heavy rain temperatures to New England
was reported near Cottondale, Friday as a large high pressure
east of Tuscaloosa, Ala.
system moved to the southeast.
Showers rolled over Kentucky,
After two days of W\Jiter-llke
people are going to understand
the Tennessee Valley, across the nighttime ·cold, temperatures
that this has been a total team
lower Mississippi Valley and Into ranged from 49 in Concord, N.H.,
effort. ... We'll be alert to do what
the Carolinas, Georgia and Flor· to 53 In Providence, R.I. and In
additionally we mtght do, butl'm
Ida, the NWS said. Rain and the 50s In much of Massachusetts
proud of those federal workers,
thunderstorms also stretched and Connecticut. Some extreme
and those civilians, that are out
from southeast Wyoming, across northern areas and Isolated
60
there doing their level best to
Colorado and Nebraska and Into Inter lor valleys experienced
snap back after a terrlble
[1E) SNOW
RAIN
f}3J SHOWERS
the Cal ifornla coast to west below-freezing temperatures.
tragedy ."
Nevada.
FRONTS: "
Warm "
"
Static
Occluded
Before making the trip south,
Temperatures were several
High
pressure
remained
Map shows minimum temperatures. At least 50% ol any shaded area Is forecast ·
Bush and his administration had
degrees below normal In the far
stretched
from
New
England
to
to
receive p&lt;ecipilatlon indicaled
.
UPI ••
come . under fire for not moving
West due to the rain, which was Texas Friday morning, but an
WEATHER
MAP
Rain
Is
forecast
Saturday
for
parts
of
the .• :
faster to help the hurricane's
expected to continue throughout
upper-level
low
pressure
system
Coast,
upper
Intermountain
region
and
parts
of
the ·:
mid-Pacific
victims. Sen. Ernest Hollings,
the day, forecasters said.
channeled
moisture-laden
air.
Ohio Valley, (UPI)
D·S.C., accused the government
•
Oregon had Its second bout of across far East Texas, Arkansas
of dragging Its feet.
"Everyone should understand "' record-breaking temperatures In and Louisiana, bringing showers
a week Thursday, but the NWS ·to the region.
the magnitude of this dlsas ter,
said
cooler weather was on Its
Temperatures were In the 40s
and everyone should understand
way.
High
pressure
In
the
Rock·
in
West Texas, parts of New
the magnitude of generosity
les
and
low
pressure
along
the
Colorado and most of
Mexico,
displayed by the American peo·
coast
brought
dry
easterly
winds
Kansas
and
Missouri, with 60s In
pie since it happened," Hollings
across
the
state
that
sent
the
South Texas and along the gulf
said. ''There has been one
mercury
climbing.
Coast, and 50s in the rest of the
glaring exception: the Federal
Portland
warmed
to
89
de'region
early Friday, the NWS
Emergency Management
grees
,
breaking
the
old
record
of
said.
Agency . We had to call out the
military to get help while FEMA
The Perfect Answer .To
just stonewalled."
percent.
Hollings said ·government aid
By United Press International
Sunday Dinner Out for the Entire Family
Ohio Extended Forecast
would amount "to $4 ·billion
South Central Ohio
Sunday through Tuesday
In The
before It's over."
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low 50
Fair
Sunday
and
Tuesday,
.
Officials In South Carolina
to 55. Winds becoming light and
praised Bush's decision to visit
variable. Chance of rain 20 chance of showers Monday .
Highs In the 70s Sunday and
the state.
percent.
Monday
and In the 60s Tuesday.
of the
·'It will do a lot for the morale
Saturday. partly cloudy . High
50
to
55.
Lows
generally
around here," said Bill McCau·
70 to 75. Chance of rain 20
ley, a spokesman for Charleston
County, one of the 17 South
Continued from page 1
11 AM-1:30PM
Carolina counties hit by the
0
···--------storm. "Hell, the president Is the
specialty products units.
THIS SUNDAY'S.MENU INCLUDES
Bache Securities Inc. "It did not
man. (His) stopping by here
Analysts said the pressure of look like they could meet goals of
Homemade Vegerable Soup
should boost everyone's spirits."
significant increases In the cost 15 percent earnings growth and
Gov. Carroll Campbell said he of raw dairy materials -and the 20 percent retul'n on equity, so
•
Fried Chicken, Swiss Steak
wanted Bush to get a better
realization by management that they've restructured and
Broccoli Stuffed Sole with Mornay Sauce
perspective on the disaster.
Borden probably could not meet slimmed down. If you can't raise
Mashed Potatoes - Baked Potatoes
·'I want him to understand this
aggressive financial goals the bridge, you lower the water. "
Broccoli _Normandy - .Cauliflower with Cheese Sauce
tragedy Is not something that's
triggered the restru.c turlng,
going to end with quick fixes,"
which will result In a one-time
A crisp and delicious Salad Bar with twenty choices.&lt;
Campbell said. ''I do think there charge to earnings.
1\ full Deli Bar with Sandwiches and Burgers.
will be a realization that we have
Borden said It will create a $404
a long-term problem, and when million reserve to conduct the
Assorted Desserts including
I'm back up there (in Washing· restructuring that wlll go Into Its Dally stock prices
Soft Jce Cream and Yogurt.
ton) in ihree months or six books as a $571 million pretax (As of 10:40 a.m.)
Make your own Sundaes with Multiple Toppings
JllOnths from now (to seek charge to Its ' third-quarter Bryce and Mark Smith
of
Blunt,
Ellls
&amp;
Loewl
. Your Favorite Hot and Colcl Bev~rages
further assistance), he'll have an earnings .
understanding of what we're
Despite the charge, per-share, Am Electric Power .... ..... ..... 30
facing."
pre-reserve earnings for the AT&amp;T ........................... ..... .44~
Bush spent more than two quarter are expected to increase
hours In South Carolina before about 10 percent, from 62 cents to Ashland 011 ...... ..... .... .... .... .403,4
returning to Andrews Air Force 67 to 70 cents, the company said. Bob Evans .................. ........ 14%
Base outside Washington, where Borden's 1988 third-quarter per Charming Shoppes ............... 151h
he took another helicopter to the share earnings amounted to City Holding Co .................. . 15
U.S. Naval Academy at Annapo· $1.24, but Its stock split earlier Federal Mogul. .... ........ ....... 23%
Goooyear T&amp;R ............... .. .. 52%
Hs, Md ., to speak at a ceremony this month.
l:teck's . .................................. 3,4
for retiring Adm. William Crowe,
"Dairy was dragging down
Key Centurion ................... .151h
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of earnings," said John M. McMII·
Lands' End .. ... , .............. ..... 281h
Staff.
lin, an analyst with Prudential· · Limited Inc ... ..... ... .............39%
On his l'eturn to the White
Multimedia Inc .... ..... ... ........ 100
House, Bush planned to have
Rax Restaurants .................. 21h
lunch· with Vice President Dan
Robbins &amp; Myers .... .. ......... .. 15
Quayle, who was to report on a
Shoney
's Inc ..... .................. 113,4
10-day trip to Asia. Quayle was
Veterans Memorial
Wendy's
Inti ........................ 5%
due back in Washington on
Thursday admissions - Cha· Worthington Ind .................-23%
Friday morning.
rles Heck, Portland; Irene Wit·
Later In the afternoon, Bush
ford, Long Bottom; Dennis Boyd,
'
was to meet with Crown Prince
Enjoy the Delicious Menu Selection.
Po!TJeroy; and Beulah Wright •.
Felipe of Spain and then fly to
Dexter.
You Can Eat a Little or Eat a Lot
Camp David for the weekend.
Thursday discharges- Homer
WITH
On Sunday, Mexican President . Roy, Carl Findling, and Lovle
At
Carlos Salinas de Gortarl will
Watson.
join him for private talks at the
Holzer Medical Center's Newly
Divorces sought
presidential retreat in .western
AT THE
Designed Dining Area on the Ground
Maryland.
In the Meigs County Court of
Floor at the Hospital.
Commori Pleas, Margaret Ann
DivorceS granted
.Siek, Middleport, is seeking a
Try It Once and You'll Make it a Sunday
SAT., SEPT. 30th
divorce from Edward Moris
In the Meigs County Court of
Habit to Enjoy Dinner at Holzer.
Slek, Jr. , Middleport.
10:00 pm-2:00 am
Common Pleas Carolyn M. Tay·
Also seeking a divorce Is
lor has been granted a divorce
Veronica L Wright, Columbus,
from William A. Taylor.
from Joseph Curtis Wright,
Everett See has been granted a
Pomeroy.
divorce from Edna Mae See.

Bush surveys Hugo
damage in Carolinas
CHARLESTON, S.C. (UP!) President Bush flew to South
Carolina Friday to see the
ravages of Hurricane Hugo,
approving more than $1.1 billion
in relief en route but still hearing
area leaders criticize the pace of
federal aid.
Bush traveled on Air Force
One from Washington to Charles·
ton, the coastal city Hugo pum·
meted as it made landfall last
week. but then fog prevented a
morning helicopter trip to devas·
tated McClellanville. Aides
quickly arranged a motorcade to
nearby Summerville and can·
celed a trip to Myrtle Beach, and
the president later managed a
brief copter view of the coast
when the fog lifted.
Bush was accompanied by
many of the state's congressional
leaders, who were present
aboard Air Force One when he ·
signed a measure providing $1.1
billion in disaster aid to South
Carolina, North Carolina and
Caribbean Ocean islands .
It is the largest single package
of such assistance ever, accord·
ing to the Federal Emergency
Management Agency, topping
the $812 million provid~ for
areas surrounding Mount St .
Helens when the volcano erupted
in May 1980.
The president also approved
$1.1 million in Justice Depart·
ment 'funds to repair taw enforcement facilities and equipment
damaged by the storm that killed
at least 26 people in the United
States and left 50,000 homeless
and 250,000 unemployed. He also ·
signed a $1,000 personal check to
the Red Cross.
"Even though the trip was
short, I had a chance to talk to
some of the people and I
co mmend (their 1 spirit," Bush
told a news conference at Cha·
rleston Air Force Base after
touri ng the area. "You couldn' t
help but be impressed to hear the
people saying, 'Look, we're going
to bounce back. '
·'And I was grateful to them for
their understanding of the fed·
era I government 's role here," he
added pointedly.· 'I do know that
there's been a critic or two,
per haps less than I would have
ex pected. But to the critics I
simply say, 'I understand.'
"We are trying very hard ...
and I think when all the dust is
set tl ed and the debris removed,

Insurance ...

Continued from page 1
ina and North Carolina before
downgrading into a tropical
s10rm and dumping heavy rain
as it moved northeast and died
out.
The hurricane could be the
nation 's most costliest storm as
damage amounts range from $1
billion to $3 billion. Nationwide
es tima tes its policyolders in the
Carolinas a lone suffered $150
million in damages, far more
than the $31 million caused in
Hurri ca ne Elena in 1985, the
previous storm with the greatest
damage loss.
The company has sent more
than 100 agents from other parts
of the co untry into the affected
areas to help process claims .

Col~

------Weather------

NEW DINING .AREA

Alma Pearl Cartwright , 91 , a
. resident of Americare-Pomeroy,
formerly of Ravenna , died
Thu rsday evening at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
She was born Oct. 21, 1897 In
Pennsylvania. She was a home·
maker and a worker for the Isaly
Dai ry in Ravenna . She was a
member of the Ravenna Church
of Christ.
Survivors include a son and
daughter· I n·law, Frank and Ruth'
Powers, Middleport; a daughter.
Olive Ord, California; a sister
and brother-in-law, Olive and
Roy Dustman , · Ravenna ; 11
gra ndchildren, two great grand·
children, and two nephews,
. Perry Dustman, Westerville;
and Charles Dustman, Ravenna.

Market offer aid to
hurricane victims
. Bob's Market, Second Street,
Mason, will be donating a tracrortrailer for collecting items needed
by the Hurricane Hugo victims.
Canned foods, charcoal and
'paper items and building materials
will be accepted at the market IDitil
$p.m. Monday.

•

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

B rden

Stocks

Hospital news

Make Sunday Special...

Rock .&amp; Roll

"Biitzkreig"

Watering Hole·

Name contest winner

___ Area deaths-Alma Cartwright

fW

She was preceded In death by
her parents, her first husband,
George Powers; second hus·
band, Harry Cartwright , and two
great grandchildren.
Services will be announced by
the Rawling·Coals·Fisher fun·
era! home.

Brandon Werry of Chester
correctly identified the mystery
farm in the Meigs Water and Soil
Conservation District ' s contest.
He ·was one of 18 who correctly
identified the farm pictured In
the Sunday Times-Sentinel as
that of Pauline Adkins, Rutland.
• Werry will be awarded the $5
prize from The Daily Sen tine!.

ATTENTION:
MEIGS CO·UNTY RESIDENTS
Have You Recently Moved or Married?
Are You A New Resident of the County?

1987 Pont. Grand Prix ..• S9250

IN ORDER TO VOTE IN THE NOV. 7, 1989 ELECTION
YOUR REGISTRATION MUST BE UPDATED BY

1978 Mercury Cougar ...• S1295

OCTOBER 10, 1989

1978 Olds Toronado •..••. S1295

YOU MAY UPDATE YOUR REGISTRATION
AT OUR PERMANENI.ANCH, THE MEIGS PUBLIC UIRARY

1981 Ford F-100 ..•••.•.••• S2195
4 speed.

MONDAY, FRIDAY &amp; ·SATURDAY.

1979 Ford Mustang ••..•••• S1295

TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY

Auto., PB, PS, Air, Cruise, 24,000 miles.

6500 miles, loaded.

Auto., Air, Cruise, Tilt.

Auto., PS, PB. Air.

SEVERAL CHEAPIES M CHOOSE FROM

,9:00 A.M. TILL 5:00 P.M. ,

, · 9:00 A.M. TILL 8:00 P.M.
THE lOUD OF ELicnONS, 108 MICHANIC ST., POMEROY
WILL. II OPII fOI YOUI CONVINIIICI 01 SATUDAY,
SEPT. 23, SEn. 30 AND OCT. 7, 8 A.M.-12 NOOI AND
,TUESDAY,·OCT. 10, 1989, 9 A.M. nLL 9 P.M.

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