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                  <text>~i 16-The Daily Sentinel

-r--Local news briefs...
Continued from page 1 .
structure fire at the Dennis Spires residence on Route 554 at
. Kyger; onthesceneonehour; Racineal9: 16p.m. to Pine Grove
. Road for Mary Ann Roberts to Veterans Memorial HospitaL

Thursday; July 28, 1988

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

·Wildfires force residents to flee homes

helped firefighters.
'
In South Dakota. with temperatures In the 100s, reinforcements
Crews tackling a dozen wild- brought to 280 the number or
fires that have charred almost firefighters battling to keep a
90.000 acres of Yellowstone Na- 2,000-acre man-caused lire away
tional Park got some relief from from a Rapid City subdivision.
Seven houses have been des-'
cool~r weather as blazes raged In
CLEVELAND (UPI) - One the numbers to win $88 apiece.
troyed and · the number of resiplayer correctly picked ail six
Ticket sales for the Super Lotto 11 other parched states, forcing dents evacuated rose to 700 alter
numbers In Ohio's Super Lotto game totaled $5,495,158, while the hundreds to evacuate homes In ·
an afternoon flareup Wednesday .,
dra~lng Wednesday night to
prize payout totaled $9,789,184. South Dakota, California and
Touring the fire site Wednesbecom~ eligible to claim the $9
Saturday's jackpot will be worth Idaho.
.Interior Secretary Donald day South Dakota Governor
million jackpot.
$3 mUIIon.
Hodel,
who surveyed the devas- George Mickelson was on hand
The name of the player will be · In the accompanying Kicker
tation
at
Yellowstone by helicop- as a home burst Into flames. ·
announced after the winning game, nobody had the six
Residents were evacuated
ter
Wednesday,
said forest offi, ticket Is validated at a regional numbers In exact order. meaning
from about 30 cabins In the Boise
cials
would
pursue
a
more
lottery office, a lottery commis- the $100,000 grand prize goes
sion spokesman said today. The unclaimed. The Kicker number aggressive policy to confront the
worst fire outbreak In park
winning numbers were 7, 14, 26, was 201185.
31, 32 and 43.
Twelve players had the first history . .
After two weeks, S8,615acres of custody of the sheriff.
· The player will receive the five numbers, which pays $5,000;
the
2.2 million-acre Yellowstone
winnings In 20 annual pre-tax 66 ·had th~ first four, which pays
In the state's case against
have
been destroyed In 12 wild- Ronnie Pickens, Pickens has
payments of $450,000, the spokes- $1,000; 786 had the first thr~e.
man said.
which pays $100; 7,190 had the fires. Including the North Fork been sentenced by the court to a ·
Fire which moved to within 6 -determinate sentence of 12
In addition to the top-prize first two, which pays $10.
miles
of Old FaithfuL
winner, 154 players chose five of
Kicker ticket sales totaled
months In prison for cultivation
When
he finished his flight.
the numbers to win $1,000 each, $815,786 and the total prize
of marijuana. Pickens entered a Hodel told reporters gathered at voluntary plea of guilty to the '
ll!!d 7,218 players selected four of payout was $27f),500.
the most famous of the park's charge _and waived his rights to
3,000 geysers that fire crews counsel and a trial by jury. The12
would suppress all new fires that months sentence Is to.commence
ft.l'i
break out In the nation's oldest Sept. 13 at the Or tent Correcpark. He said he expects the tlonal Reception Center. Pickens
'
policy to eventually apply to all has been released on a $1.000
reared in his home, Anna Gall national parks.
George W. Martin Sr.
Ehrenfels of Grove City; several
Under previous management
George W. Martin Sr., 86, grandchildren and great· plans. fires were frequently
formerly of the Wilkesville com- grandchildren; and one brother, allowed tq burn themselves out
munity, died Thursday at Huston Carl Martin of Middleport.
unless they threatened strucServices -will be Saturday 11 tures or populated areas.
Health Center, Hamden, -Ohio.
-l3orn Feb. 12, 1902 In Bidwell, a .r'n. at the McCoy-Moore FunSeven of the 12 Yellowstone ·
eral Home In Vinton. Burial will fires were being actively fought.
h~ was the son of the late Henry
and Maude Kemper Martin. He be at _the Clark Chapel Cemetery. with 3,000 firefighters using
Friends may call at the funeral flame throwers to start backwas a retired truck driver and
home
Friday, 2 to4p.m. and6to8 tires, dropping l!1rborne retardattended the Wilkesville United
p.m.
Methodist Church.
ant and cutting containment
He was preceded In death by
lines.
Grace French
liis wife, Grace Turner Martin,
"They're scratching some
one daughter, Viva Lauderback,
lines
by hand." Karle said.
Funeral services for Grace
and one brother.
"We're
trying to avoid using
Virginia French, 88, of Middle-.
·He Is survived by one son,
in the park because of
bulldozers
port, who died Wednesday mornGeorge Martin Jr. of Johnstown,
the damage they would do.··
Ing at Veterans Memorial HospiOhio; lour daughters, Mrs. Rital, will be held at 11 a.m.
Hodel noted that some trees In
chard &lt;Gall) Cursey of Myrtle
at
the
Rawlings-Coatsthe
-park showed lower moisture
Saturday
Beach, S.C., Virginia Dunfee of
content
Funeral
Home.
levels than kiln-c;trled
Westerville. Mrs. Ray (Donna)
The
Rev.
Sonny
Zunigo,.Jr.
will
lumber.
J
St&lt;&gt;ne of Pataskala, Ohio, and
officiate
and
burial
will
be
In
Two
fires
were
bu
rnlng
near
Mrs. James &lt;Mildred) Blanton of
the
park'.s
south
entrance,
closed
Riverview
Cemetery
·;rr.;riday
Wilkesville; one granddaughter
at 7 p.m. Order of Eas rn Star since Friday. Despite the pall of
services will be he d at the smoke, park spokeswoman Joan
funeral home.
Anzelmo said visitors continued
Friends may call at the funeral to arrive. She also said that
home from 2 to 4 to 7 to 9 on cooler weather Wednesday
Dally stock prices
Friday.
("As of 10:38 a.m. J
Bryce and Mark Smith
.Divorces sought
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
South-Central Ohio
Trina T. Lee. Pomeroy. has
Am Electric Power'.. :........... 28
Tonight:
Clear. with a low
filed for a divorce In Meigs
AT&amp;T ...... ............. .. .... ...... ... 26
between
65
and 70. Light and
County Common Pleas Court
Ashland Oil ...... ........... .. .. ...73\i
·
·
from L'awrence R. Lee Jr., variable winds.
Bob Evans .... ..... ............. .... 16l4
·Friday:
Sunny.
with
high
Pomeroy. A restraining order
Charming Shoppes ..... ......... 12%
temperatures
between
90
and
95.
has been Issued against the
City Holding Co ................... 34
Extended
Forecast
defendant pending finalization of
Federal MoguL.. ............. ... .41~
Saturday through Monday
the divorce action.
Goodyear T&amp;R ............ ....... 59"V8
Fair
Saturday, with a chance
Also filing for a divorce Is Judy
· Heck's Inc ................ .. ......... 1%
Brooks. Albany. from Luke of showers Sunday and Monday.
Key Centurion ..... ... ............ 37~
Brooks. Albany . Restraining Highs will be between 85 and 95,
Lands' End ......................... 28~
orders have been Issued against with early morning lows between
Limited Inc .................... ,... 21\i
both parties in the Brooks' 65 and 75.
Multimedia ~nc ........ ........... 72~
action.
Rax Restaurants .......... .... .... 4Y,
George Holter, Racine. and
RObbins &amp; Myers ....... ........ .l1~
Betty Holter, Chester. have filed
Shoney's Inc ........... ........... .11%
for a dissolution of tl)elr
Wendy's Inti.. ................ ...... 5%
Continued from page 1
marriage.
Worthington Ind ..... :............ 23
Hazel Maxine Hetzer and county courthouse for use by the
Wayne A. Hetzer have been handicapped and elderly populagranted a dissolution of their tion of the county.
-A meeting to be held Thursmarriage. Hazel Hetzer has been
day
(today) with representatives
restored
by
the
court
to
her
Free entertahunent
of
the
Meigs County Board of
former
name
W
lener.
Free entertainment will be
Mental
RetardationMichelle
Burke
and
Chris
featured Saturday night, starting
Developmental
Disabilities to
Burke
have
been
granted
a
at 7: 30 p.m., at the Shrine Clubb
discuss
a
grant
proposal for a
dissolution and Michelle Burke
Park in Racine. The Country
for the
litter
recycling
center
restored to her malden name
Blend and Bend River . Boys
county.
bands will perform. Refresh- Sisson.
ments will be served. Bring lawn
\ chairs.
By JAMES RYAN
United Press International

One player has all six lotto numbers

Man Pleads

Continued from page 1

···--=..::.::.:=~......:.:.::..:..._

r-----------------------"1
I
•-ea· deaths

I

Church
notices

National Forest Wednesday as· homes before It was contained.
Wildfires also blazed In Mon·
Idaho's raging WliUs Gulch
timber fire nearly doubled In size tana, Colorado, Utah, Oregon,
to 3,000 acres. About 200flreflgh- Nevada, Washington, Arizona
ters were In the steep, rugged and Alaska- where 48fires have
te_rrain as three air tankers destroyed 1.3 million acres.
Several days of rain have
· dropped fire retardant from ·
helped put a damper on fires In
overhead.
But Idaho firefighters licked ~ northwest Alaska, Including a
2,210-acre blaze In the Sawtooth 207 ,800-acre blaze that was con·
tained. Crews were being moved
National Forest.
.
In California, a fast ,movlng '· from that fire to a 409,000-acre
fire started by a 13-year-old boy's inferno rampaging in the Yukon
Flats Natlonal Wildlife Refuge 60
clgarett~: In Mariposa County
near Dogwood burned 25 acres, mUes north of Fairbanks.
Only 17 of the Alaska fires were
destroyed four buildings and
forced the evacuation of 60 being fought, with 1,300 firefighters In the fray.

Pick 4
2334

•

Vol.311, No.li8

enttn·e

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
House and Senate ..Jire working
quickly tp send $6 billion in
drought aid to farmers, but their
relief package contains some
Items President Reagan opposes
as unwise.
Congressional leaders say the
largest disaster bills ever, which
zipped thtough the House and
!Jenate with only a few hours of
debate Tl)ursday, are close
enough to Reagan's desires that
he will sign the final version.
But Reagan asked for legislation devoted solely to drought
relief, and Agriculture Secretary
Richard Lyng sent letters to
,Capitol Hill in advance of Thursday's votes objecting to the

50-cent Increase In the milk
support price approved by the
House and a plan In the Senate to
subsidize the sale of surplus com
to the producers of ethanol, used
In making the fuel gasohol.
"I think we compUed with the
wishes 'of the president." said
House Agriculture Com,mittee
Chairman Kika de Ia Garza,
D·Texas, noting Col)gress stayed
within budget limits and voted
for aid only to farmers.
De Ia Garza and others
stressed consumers would benefit from the legislation by
getting a plentiful supply of food
at affordable prices.
Yet with the magnitude of
dlsas~r aid, , even supporters

easier to get through conference," agreed Senate Agriculture Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., crediting
colleagues with "a lean,
strlppi!d-down bill."
In general, both measures
would pay farmers 65 percent of
their usual Income after they
have lost more than 35 percent of
a crop. Additional payments
would go to farmers who lose
more than 75 percent so they
would get about half of their
usual Income.
'
T~e House and senate use
slightly different formulas to
reach that level. The Senate also
would allow farmers more time
to repay excess crop subsidies,

said the assistance would compensate farmers for only part of
their losses. Rep. Edward Madigan, R-TIL, estimates the drought ·
may cause $10 billion In damage.
The pext step for the legislation, which passed the Senate 94-0
and the House 368-29, Is a
House-Senate conferencetoelimlnate differences. Leaders hope
to have the compromise version
on Reagan's desk within two
weeks.
Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind.,
said the leglsl!ltion now "Is very
close to the model" bill that
Reagan has endorsed. _
"The fact that we haven't
loaded it up with a lot of
extraneous material makes It

'

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Presidential nominee Michael Dukakls, fresh from selling unity to
Jesse Jackson backers on the
East Coast, moved Into the
Midwest today after a late day
downtown rally Thursday. ·
Touting his promise of "good
jobs at good wages," the Massachusetts governor arranged
, tours at auto facilities In Flint,
Mich., and In Stutevante, Wis.,
two sites expected to reflect the
economic themes he used In
~tcceptlng the White House nom I·
nation at the Democratic National Convention lri Atlaata.
The economlf message was
promoted slmu.irly ·1r1 the first
day of his three-day campaign
swing through seven states, but
Dukakis also spent some time
Thursday stressing the party
unity theme with supporters of
his former rival, Jackson.
In Newark, N.J.,- the Initial
response from Jackson backers
was positive, and several

I

.- REGISTER TO WIN A

1988 Chevy Sprint 4 Dr.
DRAWING TO BE HELDSATURDAY, JULY 30 4:00P.M.

WHAT MAKES A ROCKET FLY? - In hill 4-H p!'Oject
demollltrallon for judgln&amp;' Thul'llday afternoon at Pomeroy
Vlllap Ball, 10-year-old Michael Smith of the Queen and King
Bees 4-H Club gave an outstanding demo111tratlon and explanation
on how a rod:el Is launehed. This Is his second year In 4-H club
work. The first phase In judging of 4-H projects In preparation for
the Melp County .Junior Fair, Aug. 111-20, got underway this week.

(NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN)

By KAREN LEE SCRIVO
United Press International ·
The only real relief farmers In
the Midwest may get from the
country's worst drought since the
Dust Bowl days of the 19:lls could
come from Washington rather
than Mother Nature.
While hot air again hovers over
the Mississippi Valley, federal
lawmakers are feverishly workIng on legislation that would
provide nearly $6 billion In
~lsaster relief to farmers.
The Intense temperatures that
have returned to the Great
Plains, however, are not expected to be as bad as the heat
wave that gripped the Midwest In
May and June, Lyle Alexander, a
forecaster with the National
Weather Ser~ce, said today.
The rain In the last several
weeks sprinkled some brief relief
on parts of the Great Plains but
mlssed the northern Plains, the
Dakotas and the northern Rocky
¥ountalns, he said.

2 GE DRYERS
MUST BE

P&amp;ESENT TO WIN

Hospilal news
Veterans Memorial
Wednesday Admissions-Icle
Tucker. Racine; Teresa Bartlett.
Pomeroy; Andrew · Lemley.
Middleport.
Wednesday
Discharges-None.

Record number of
special issues on
Ohio ballot Aug. 2
COLUMBUS. Ohio &lt;UP!)
The 70 school issues on Tuesday's
ball~! represent the
largest
number for an Ohio special
election In 15 years. says the Ohio·
Department of Education.
The local Issues for education
doUars come. from 67 school
districts. Three districts have
two levies each on the ballot
The largest number of the
school !~sues - 64 - seek help
with current operating expenses.
"Repeated requests for local
monetary aislltance are neces·
sary urlder Ohio's current fundIng system, ".said Franklin Wal·
ter, state superintendent of
public Instruction. "In fiscal
year 1988, 29 of . Ohio's school
districts were approved for the
Emerg~ncy School Advancement Fund, which Is not an
ansWer to school fiscal problema.

Entertainment
COUNTRY BLE D

Li~e

\

'

Will Be Appearing From
2 P.M. ~ 5 P.M.

Rain fell early this morning In
Arkansas, eastern South Dakota
and northern Minnesota and was
also expected In parts of the
Mississippi Valley, Michigan,
Illinois and Indiana.
"There won't be ·a Jot of rain,
but there won't be a repeat of the
earlier dry pattern either," Alexander said.
In Washington. disaster aid
bills zipped through the House
and Senate with only a few hours
of debate Thursday. The separ·
ate bills now go to a House-Senate
conference to resolve differences. Leaders hope to have the
compromise version on President Reagan's desk within two
weeks.
A "bubble" of hot air settling
over the central United States
drove temperatures back Into the
90s and 100s across most of the
nation Thursday, giving the
Great Plains another taste of the
Great Drought of '88.
The only areas spared from the

Local news briefs·
CORNER OF
GENERAl ·HARTINGER
PARKWAY AND
PEARL STREET

MIDDLEPORT, ·OH.

992-3471

potential 50-cent cut Jan. 1 but
would not raise the price. Leahy
declined to say whether the
Senate would accept the 50-cent
boost but said the three-month
Increase "may be a good
compromise."
The chambers also disagree on
how much federal help to give
livestock farmers In buying feed.
The House would limit help to
producers who grow their own
grain. The Senate would make It
available to all producers. In his
letters, Lyng said the Senate plan
could cost several billion do liars.
Senators tightened the rules
for the ethanol aid program.
They said no more than 16 million
Continued on page 10

HOW FOSSILS ARE FORMED - Brian Hoffman dlsplsyed
good knowledge on bow foaails are fonned In hi!! demonstration
and dlscu881on on pre-historic animals. A member of the Queen
and King Bees 4-H (:lub, Brian gave color to his display with a
sluffed kelly green dinosaur. Judging the 4-Hers' projects were
Jeanne Braun of the Senior Cltbens Center staff, and Jolm
Costanza, elementary supervisor with the Meigs County Board of
Education.

No one hurt in accident
'

No one was Injured In a truck-car accident Thursday at 12:10
p.m. In Meigs County, on CR 1. 0.8 miles north of SR 143, In
Columbia Township, according to the GaiUa-Melgs Post, State
Hlpway Patrol.
'
Troopers uld a truck driven by Jimmy C. Haning, 46, of Rt. 3,
Albany, wu backing Into a driveway and backed Into a car,
behind him, "'tven by Natascha E. Robb, 17, also of Rt. 3,
Albany. There wu minor damage to the truck and moderate to
the car.
The patrol cited Haning for Improper backing.

.Audience urged to bring chairs
Thoee attending the mock battle at Portland, 2 p.m. Sunday
afternoon are asked to take their own lawn chairs. Costume Is
Continued on page 10

',

..

•

heat were a thin strip of the storm, Phoen 1x Fire Department
Northwest and coastal areas dispatcher Rick Picard said.
Another batch of heavy rain
along the Pacific, where temperatures stayed In comfortable 70s assaulted Wllmlngtori, N.C.,
· Thursday afternoon, bringing
and 80s.
Thunderstorms and heavy the total July rainfall to over 14
rains drenched parts of New Inches. Normal rainfall for the
York State and Vermont. then month Is about 7 ~ Inches.
Almost 3 Inches of rain feJJin 45
headed into Massachusetts and
ConnectiCut. Storms dumped an minutes over a parts of Pike
Inch and a third of rain In 30 County In southwest Mississippi.
Thunderstorms also raked Ok·
minutes at Victoria, Mass., and
whipped Bedford, Mass., with lahoma, producing 80 mph winds
winds that gusted to near 60 mph. that blew a tractor-trailer off the
Showers and thunderstorms road and uprooted trees In the
stretched from northern VIrginia Oklahoma City area and damto New England and from the aged buildings In Atoka County,
Carolinas across Florida Into the 100 miles to the south. The storms
hurled hall the size of golf balls
gulf states.
A sii6Jden storm packing high near the towns of Langston and
winds and hall the size of dimes Coyle, Okla.
A tornado touched down over
destroyed a mobile home park
near Phoenix Thur$day night, Hand County In central South
Injuring one person and displac- Dakota and golf ball size hall
pelted the northeastern part of
Ing 50 others, authorities said.
One person was treated for the state.
Thunderstorms erupted along
minqr Injuries and released from
Continue() on page 10
Del Webb Hospital after the.

Ground · broken for project
'
The-Ohio Department of NaturaJ Resources, Dlvlllon of Recta·
matlon, broke ground Thursday
on a $494,000 project designed to
transform 95 acres of eroding
abandoned mined lands In Meigs
County Into productive pfC!P~!rty.
Since the site was strip-mined
during the early 1950's, flooding
and acid mine drainage have
endangered local residents and
wlldllte, the department reports.
Charles E. Mauger, aulatant
director of ODNR, conducted the
groundbreaklng ceremony, and
observed that the project will
greatly Improve the area.
"At ODNR, we hope to continue projects like thll one In
Melp County until all barren and

emerged from the private session with Dukakl,sconvinced that
he shares many of their views on
issues such as housing, drugs and
affirmative action.
'1 have now removed my Jesse
Jackson button and replaced It
with a Mike Dukakls button and
we're ready to win," decl.ared
Newark Mayor Sharpe James.
The nominee also met with
Jackson supporters In Cleveland,
where he drew about 5,000
listeners to an outdoor rally
during the evening rush 1\our.
Dukakls stressed themes of
e!IR&amp;nded opportunity, health
lli$urance for all Americans,
affordable housing and a hike In
the minimum wage. ··
"Some say we can't afford a
raise In the minimum wage," he
noted. "I say we can't afford not
to raise the minimum )Vage In
this country, with or without the
president and vice president of
the United States."

Mason man killed in wreck

'

Farmers look to Washington for relief

IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING THE DRAWING
2 MORE DRAWINGS WILL BE HELD FOR

YOU

which would give farmers more
cash to pay for next spring's
planting bills.
There would be a $100,000 limit
on overall ald.
The House, on a 217-181 vote,
limited the50-centlncrease In the
milk support price to three
months, beginning next April,
despite arguments It was unneeded and unfair to taxpayers
and other fariners.
The House Agr leu lture Committee proposed a nine-month
boost In the milk support, and
Rep. James Jeffords, R-Vt., said
the Increase would be "a signal''
for herdsmen to stay In business
despite rt&amp;tng feed prices.
The Senate bill would cancel a

Dukakis
in
Ohio
•
for campaign talk

Weather

Annual picnic
The Meigs County Foxhunters
will hold their annual picnic at 6
p.m. Saturday at the clubhouse
on Eagle Ridge. Ali In teres ted
are welcome. Members are to
take a covered dish.

26 Centa

A Muttimedi• Inc. NewiP•P•

Administration objects to parts of rellef blll.

Stocks

Announcements

2 Secliona, 14 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, July 29, 1988

Copyrlghl8d 1888

Ill
•••
Time Is Running Out!

Construction ...

Clear tonight, low
In 70s.
Saturday, partly cloudy,
humid. IUgllll In mid 90s.
Chance of rain 38 percent.

•

at

of a state's witness that WII.S
thought to be a "confidential
truormant" In the Parson's c.ase.
For health reasons on the part
of the plaintiff, the case of Gary
J. Wolfe, et al, against Howard
-Frank, et al, has been continued '
until Dec. 13, 1988. ·
Hogg and Zuspan Materials
Co. Inc., Mason, W.Va., has filed
suit In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court against Richard
Haggerty, Middleport, request·
lng judgment of $3,160.

.

525

Page 6

_ _ _ _ _ __

personal recognizance bond until
time for the sentence to begin.
In a case "against Elmer
Parsons, the state has been
ordered by the court to disclose to
defense counsel the name of an
informant. Parsons Is charged
by the state with cultivation of
marijuana.
Meigs Sheriff's Deputy Kenny
Klein, upon court order and
Instruction from Meigs Prosecutlng Attorney Fred W. Crow III,
had refused to disclose the name

Daily Nuritber

eroding land Is reclaimed," he
commented. Reclamation at the·
site will involve grading and
draining the site and resurfacing
with topsoil and grass seed.
E. K. Development of Cambridge has been awarded the
Pagevllle III contract.
Thll project Is a part of
ODNR's Abandoned Mined Land
Pl'oeram. Funds are generated
through a federal aeverance tsx
on current coal mtnll)g opera·
tlo111. Since the program began In
1977,321 projects, costing a total
of S65 million have been ldenti·
fled. So far, 143 projects have
been completed and 178 are
underway or are being planned.

POINT PLEASANT - A Leon ' work at Kaiser, where he was a
man beoame Mason County's member of a construction crew.
second highway ·fatUity In two
He was traveling west on
days yesterday.
Leon-Baden Road when the vehiJames P. Wilson, 32, a resident cle went off the left side of the
of Rt.1, Leon, W.Va., was found road. It overturned at least twice
dead Thursday afternoon after before landing on it's top. The
the vehicle was driving appar- 1986 Chevrolet Blazer traveled
ently ran off the road Wednesday approximately 185 feet from
night, according to a report by where It left the roadway before
the Mason County Sheriffs coming to a stop. The driver was
Depariment.
thrown from the vehiCle, accordCounty Coronor Dr. Brenton Ing to authorities.
Morgan said that Wilson suffered
Because the vehicle was over
a head Injury and was. killed "an enbankment In dense brush, It
Instantly.
was not visible lo passing
An individual walking by the motorists.
scene of the accident spotted the
Wilson was taken to Pleasant
wrecked vehicle around 3: 50 Valley Hospital by Mount Flower
p.m. Thursday. The victim and Rescue Squad where he was
vehicle were partially hidden pronounced dead upon arrival.
under brush.
The body was then taken to the
According to the sherrlf's state medical examiner for an
report. the accident apparently autopsy, a sherrlf's deputy
happened around 10:30 p.m.
reported.
Wednesday after Wilson left

Battle of
Buffmgton Island
'

.

Official Program
The schedule of events markln1 the 1231h anniversary
celebration of tbe Bat de of Buffington Island at Portland Is as
follows:
Saturday, July 38
Time
9 a.a:n ........................................................ Striking the Colors
9:30a.m ............. Rededication of Buffington Island Memorial
11 a.m ............................ Rededication of McCook Monument
11 a.m to 2:30p.m .. Muzzle Loading Competition by the Meigs
'
Muzzleloaders
1-5 p.m .... .... ...... ..... ............................. ...... . lee Cream SoCial
2 p.m ................................ .-................. Ladles• Circle and Tea
4 p.m .... Chartering Ceremonies of the Gov. William Dennison
Camp of the Sons of Union Veterans
6 p.m .... .... ..................................... :....... Retreat of the colors
8 p.m ....... Civil War Military Ball to be held at Southern High
School, Racine ($15 a couple, $9 singles)
Sullday, July 31
9 a.m ........................................................ Striking the Colors
9:30a.m .................... Non-denominational Religious Services
11 a.m ... Brunch for the Civil War Re-enactment Participants
(closed to the public)
2 p,m .......................................... Civil Y{ar Battle Enactment
3 p.m .......................................................... Retreat of Colors·
Spo1110nd by the Melp County Pioneer and lllltorlc..
·
Society. Inc.

'i

•

�Friday, July 29, 1988

•

Comment
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

'

"

.Tigers rout Royals, 7-1; Indians drop 5-2 .tilt to · Orioles

I

Page 2-.n.Daily Sentinel
Pomaoy-Middleport. OhiO
Friday. July 29, 1988

:Cotnrnon items hide caches of drugs
Pity the poor drug enforcemen! agents. They can't take
anything at face value. Beer
cans, ·after-shave bottles, propane tanks, all can hide Illegal
drugs. Tbeagentsmustendlessly
bounce bicycle tires, tap liquor
· bottles and test aerosol cans. .
Televislonscrlpt Writers Would
ha ve us believe a cop need only
frisk a drug smuggler to find the
goods. But the smugglers watch
television, too. And they're
smart enough not to walk across
theborderwithheroinlnthelrhlp
pockets.
Aware of that, the El Paso
C
Intelligence Center (EPI ) complies Information a bout trends
and novelties 'in the drug sm~g-

gling business and distributes
.them to drug enforcement agen·
cies. The EPIC Is run prhnarlly
by the U.S. Customs Service and
the Drug Enforcement
Administration.
A recent confidential EPIC
report on concealment methods
eicposes someofthe5ecretsotthe
smugglers.
-British officials uncorked
sealed liquor bottles when they
noticed the bottles didn't slosh
when shaken. Heroin was Inside.
-Similarly, beer and soft
drink cans that don't slosh are a1
dead giveaway. But some
smugglers are smart enough to
pack the drugs In plastic bags,
•

sometimes condoms, and leave
liquid In the can so It still sloshes.
''Tapping the bottom portion
results In a dull, muted sound,"
the EPIC reported as a clue.
"Also, the cans with cocaine are
heavier than those filled with
beer."
.
-Aerosol cans offer numerous
opt1ons to d rug smugglers. They
can be filled with drugs and
resealed ·or can be fitted with an
In
II d
t
· ner cy n er o the bona fide
product so they still spray; No
brandisimmunefrom theactsof
smugglers. EPIC reported the
·
seizures of 1.2 kilograms of
cocalnelnBrutdeodorantcansat
Frankfurt, West Germany, and
small quantities of cocaine In

Jack Anderson

Aqua Net and Right Guard cans
at the Los Angeles airport. Ultra
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA
Ban 5000 and Gillette Foamy
cans
were also used.
~~
-AnY tin can Is a potendal
ts:m~ I'T"L..A._-.-.
~v
pocket. Drugs were fo und 1n cans
0 f grapefruit j u 1ce a nd Chef
ROBERT L. WINGEl'f
Boy
A
macaroni The cans
Publisher
-ar-uee
·
were professionally resealed 50
PAT WHITEHEAD
BOBHOEFUCH
they would appear to be fresh
from the factory.
Assistant Publisher/Controller
Geaeral Manager
-Vehicle ·rue! tanks may be
ryt
1 d
h th
car ng a 08 even w en ey
AMEMBER o! The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
n!gister empty. 'l'he EPIC report
notes one case where agents
LETIERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
tspped on the bottom !If· a gas
long. All letters are subject to e&lt;IIttng an~ must bestgne&lt;I with name. address and
tank and heard a dull, thudding
telephone number. No unsigned letters wlll be published. Letters should be tn
good taste, addressing Issues, not persona !lUes.
sound. They tore apart the tank
':------.,...:..--_.:.--...:...---:,..----...:...--...1. i r-------------------------------~---• and
found a sealed metal container !till of heroin.
In another case, the propane
fuel tank In a pickup truck had
been fitted with an interior
propane bottle. U.S. Customs
Inspectors In Hidalgo, Texas
became suspicious when they
pulled the plug and gasoline,
Instead of liquid propane, came
out. More than 300 pounds ot
By HELEN THOMAS .
marijuana was found In the
UPI While House Reporter
propane tanks ·of two pickup
• "I want to give businessmen an honorable place, but they make
trucks.
.
'
crooks out of themselves."
-A:uto
tires
are
a
favorite
Such was tire expression of President Dwight D. Eisenhower, a
hiding place. A drug-sniffing dog
dedicated friend of business during and after his eight years In office,
In on a tire of a Mercedeszeroed
although the specific cause of his disillusionment Is not known.
EPIC reported. Drug
Benz,
the
Some of President Harry S. Truman's assessments of big business
the tire apart and
agents
tore
were scathing.
found
heat-sealed
bicycle Inner
President John F. Kennedy once observed of businessmen, "My
tubt!s
filed
with
hashish and
father always said they were SOBs." His father was Joseph Kennedy,
wrapped around the metal rim of
a multlmllllonalre, who moved In moneyed circles.
the tire. Agents can spot a
It's not likely that President Reagan 'fill voice a similar
smuggler's tire by bouncing It (It
disenchantment with business leaders who have supported him in all
will be lopsided), hefting It (It
his "get the government off our backs" endeavor.
· will be too heavy), tapping It (It
But the Wall Street Insider deals and the Pentagon procurement
won't vibrate) or putdng the tire
;scandal .should give him pause.
gauge
to It (the pressure will be
• What does It take to appall a president?
low).
As
a last resort, EPIC
• An interesting view of Eisenhower, the man and the boss, is
advises
drllUng
through the tire.
reflected In a new book by former journalist, author Robert J.
If
drugs
are
Inside,
residue will
·Donovan, "Copfidential Secretary."
,
come
out
on
the
drill
bit.
·
Donovan records the memories of A.nn Whitman, who was
Eisenhower's secretary for eight years at the White House, and later
for several years as personal aide de camp to New York Gov. Nelson
Rockefeller.
Whitman helped draw up the guest lists for Eisenhower's famous
stag black tie dinners at the White House, which were heavily
dominated by big businessmen , but also include labor leaders and
For months, Democrats have members of the middle-Income voters, he hardly co ntrots them . .
That Is not to say the dueling
university presidents.
debated "What does Jesse families whose ballots lnvarta hly Millions will vote for Dukakls In between Dukakis and Jackson Is
• Repeated stag dinners' at the White House would cause an uproar
Want?" Now, however, they determine the outcome of pres!·
the fall- regardless of the state about to come to an end. Many
among feminists, although many of the president's luncheons in
have another question to ponder: dentlal elections- became more
of
his relations with Jackson politicians and journalists ashonor of visiting dignitaries turn out to be all male since he has named
"What does Mike want?"
.
.
sympathetic
to
Dukakls
for
the
variety
of
reasons,
sumed
that there would be some·
so few women to top ranking roles In diplomacy.
There is no easy answer to
Race
Is
one
of
the
most
ranging
from
their
traditional
sort
of
conclusion
at the convenThe book, only 193 pages long, Is but a t.easer to what must have
either of those queries because Important but least mentioned
support
of
Democratic
candl·
tion,
but
fallpre
to
attain It here
-really gone on In the Eisenhower White House or any White House but 'the relationship between Michael
components
of
co11temporary
to
their
belief
that
a
dateS
has produced an awa~eness of a
'there are revealing insights.
'
S. Dukakis and his erstwhile politics. Because people are truly
Dukakls presidency will most struggle that could go on for
• Whitman says that at his dinner parties among his Intimates,
rival. Jesse L. Jackson, has free of racial prejudices, the best
effectively advance their polltl· months, If not years.
Jnpor·
Eisenhower was "often remarkably candid and forthright."
become Incredibly complex.
us
can
do
to
surmount
the
most
of
cal agenda.
tant factor contributing to the
''One night a corporate execu live denounced Franklin D. Roosevelt
EarUer In the year many problem Is to struggle to supress
All of those factors have led the perpetuation of that Dukakis·
with a vigor that seemed almost that the speaker was saying
poUtical observers assumed that our worst tendencies.
Dukakls
campaign organization Jackson relationship is the fact
something he thought Eisenhower would relish hearing."
Dukakis wanted what Jackson
to conclude that Its Interest are that It has been a bonanza for
Because of the Issue's sensltiv·
But she recalled Eisenhower cut down the businessman saying
was determinedly ';VIthholdlng- tty, Dukakls' aides are reluctant
best
served by a relationship journalists at a time when they
Roosevelt's high standing In the world had been "a great A~erlcan
an unconditional, enthusiastic to discuss It publicly - but with Jackson that is frelndly have been threatened with a
asset."
endorsement of Dukakts' selec· privately they acknowledge their
rather than hostile, but one that dearth of campaign news.
The book reveals that Eisenhower expounded privately on why the
tlon as the party's candidate In polling data shows that the white
places space between the two
After the outcome of · the
United States should recognize communist China, a view contrary to
the forthcoming contest for the backing they picked up before, men.
contest
for . both presidential
his public position, "largely because of fierce opposition from
presidency.
and
during
the
convention
more
"The
last
thing
we
need
from
nominations became premaRepublican conservatives."
. But there was an unexpected
Jackson right now," says one turely appa,rent early last spring,
Whether Eisenhower could have overcome the opposition of the development during the Initial than compensated for the sup·
port they lost among disen·
Dukakls Insider· who asks not to the Mike-and-Jesse saga was
China lobby In that era is difficult to say, but he decided notto chance
stages ·of the elaborate mating chanted blacks.
be
Identified, "Is the political kept alive for four long months
1t.
dance between the two pollti·
res·
equivalent
of a passionate em- prior to the convention.
That
phenomenon
severly
It Is also little known that when Eisenhower restored his
clans immediately prior to and trlcted Jackson's Influence durbrace or a big, wet kiss."
But there Is anothe~. more
Gettsyburg. Pa., farm, now a national monument, he had a "time during the Democrat!~ National
Ing
the
convention,
because
he
Dukakls'
aloofness
compli·
important
reason ~by the story
capsule" sealed In the bricks of the main chimney. In a copper box
Convention.
could
not
rely
upon
the
promise
cates
Jackson's
life
because
It has become a
has
not
faded.
Will be found many mementos and documents. Among them Is
Every tlrne Jackson or one of to deliver black votes (or the Jackson has become virtually paradigm for the seemingly
believed to be a memorandum of Eisenhower's candid assessment of his supporters appeared on a
threat to withhold them) In· addicted to public adulation and endless search for A dignified
high ranking allied officers who served with him In World War II.
television screen bemoaning his bargaining with Dukakls.
appears to be unprepared for the resolution of the differences that
Copies of the documents are stored in the Dwight D. Eisenhower
lack of full acceptance by Duka·
surely
lnflu·
Although
Jackson
partial withdrawal that Is so long have separated blacks
presidential library at Abilene, Kan., but at the late president's
kis, white voters - especially ences many of the nation's black Inevitable.
and whites.
!llrectton they are sealed for at least 75 years from the time they were
deposited.
· There are several references In the book to Mamie Eisenhower's
coldness to her husband's attractive slender and much younger
personal secretary . Mrs. Eisenhower tried to get Whitman removed
·!rom her job but she was overruled, according to the book. Later as
Eisenhower's secretary In retirement, Whitman found 11 too
If by any chance Mich11el the voters will forget that every
not nearly so good as what he's flsulon about the leanings of their
. uncomfortable to deal with the former first lady's hostility and she
Dukakis does make It to the nickel the federal government doing on Its ticket.
ticket and the meaning of the
quit.
White House this year, the woods spends Is spent at the direct
What he's doing Is providing platform (which Is one of the
, · The latter part of the book deals with the trials and tribulations of
will be full of liberal pundits Instructions of Congress.
lndlspensa ble cover for the De- shortest and vaguest on record)
, Rockefeller, who served as vice president under President Gerald R.
explaining that - after the
They will also argue that mocratic party's liberal leader- will, combined with the natural
Ford. Rockefeller became frustrated when thwarted In his attempt to
nightmare of the Reagan years Democratic foreign policies are ship. The Democratic leaders Impulse for change after an
; take over domestic policy in the manner in which Henry Kissinger
- America has recovered Its no longer "softer" than Mr. know very well that they can't eight-year administration, be
; was in charge of foreign poUcy.
reason and voted to resume the Reagan's, now that he has made carry the country for their enough to put the party over the
· Ford's top aides cut him off at the pass. Astoundingly, at one point
generally leftist course that his pilgrimage to Moscow. But party's policies. But they hope top In November.
Rockefeller decided he would only serve In the next Ford
liberals regard as Its Manifest the American public knows that that a carefuUy maintained conadministration as a White House chief of · staff, instead of vice
Destiny.
the new atmosphere In superpresident. There was no second Ford administration with the
And indeed that would In all power relations Is a direct result
Republican defeat in the presidential race In 1976.
likelihood be the net consequence of tough Reagan policies (on
of a Dukakls victory. The higher rearmament and negotiation)
levels of the Harvard faculty are that the Democrats bitterly opalready discreetly checking out posed at the time.
Dukakis, then, In the preseQt
available rental properties In
suburban Maryland and VIrginia condition of the Democratic
In anticipation of his blessed party, has no choice but t!i'lie a
inauguration.
liberal, and no "new issues" on
But thoughtful observers will which he can campaign as
By United Press International
TilE Mt~,ltLE
remember that, however liberal anything else. He can! however,
Today is Friday, July 29, the 211th day of 1988 with 155 to follow.
Dukakts may act when he finally mute his liberalism as far as ·
OF
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
set ties Into his chair In the Oval humanly possible and surround
·. The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
Office, the campaign he ran was himseltwlthrelatlvelyconserva·
~SACHtiSETrS
.. The evening star Is Saturn.
anything but.
tlve symbols. That Is what he has
I
.· Those born on this date are under the sign of Leo. They Include
The Democrats' long search been doing for months, and that
•
:French historian Alexis de Tbcquevllle in 1805; novelist Booth
for "new Ideas" has come to Is the_slgnlflcance of his choice of
.Tarkington In 1869; Italian dictator Benito Mussollnlln 1883· actors
nought. The truth Is that ge- Senator Lloyd Bentsen as his
:wmtam Powell in 1892 and Richard Egan In 1923, and 'former
nulnely new ideAs are extremely running mate.
'
:rransportatton Secretary Elizabeth Dol~ in 1936 (age 52).
~
rare In politics. In the United
Bentsen Is one of the most
States today, as for many years conservative Democrais In the
On this date in history:
•'
past, the basic division Is be- Senate, outstripped only by HeIn 1914, the first transcontinental telephone linkup was completed
•
tween those forces that favor fiin 11nd Boren and running IJI a
between San Francisco and New York City.
'•
fiscal responsibility, limited go- pack with (Ernest) Holllngs and
, In 1968, Pope Paul VI upheld the prohibition of all artificial means
yernrnent and a tough foreign (Sam) Nunn. In recent years
-of birth control for Roman Catholics.
·
policy (represented by the Re- Bentsen has voted FOR contra
•
THE MESS
·. In 1981, Prince Charles, heir to the British throne, married Lady
publicans), and those that favor aid, the MX missile, mandated
IN
Diana Spencer at St. Paul's Cathedral In London.
deficit spending,, government prayers In publiC schools, comIn 1986, a jury ruled In favor of the U.S. Football League, agreeing
intervention and the softer forms pulsory testing for AIDS, and
that the Nat tonal Football League Illegally monopolized pro football.
of detente (represented by the requiring a timetable for a
But the panel only awarded the USFL $1 In damages, effectively
Democrats).
balanced budget, and AGAINST
.speillng the demise of the rival league.
The Democrats have labored busing, aboutlon, gun control, a
heroically In recent years to shift nuclear freeze and using highA tllought for the day: Alexis de Tocquevllle )Vrote, "The principle
the blame for the huge deficit way funds for masa transit. It's a
of equality does NOT destroy the hnaglnatlon, but lowers Its tllght to
onto Mr. Reagan because It arose good question what he's doing In
"
the level of the Ean.lh."
_.
In his administration- hoping\ theDemocratlcpartyatall-but
Pomeroy, Ol&gt;lo

,...,..,...=·-=-

By JOE IU.UZZI
UPI Sports Writer
Jeff Robinson knows there Is a
big difference between pitching
better than anyone on the staff
and being the best pitcher on a
staff.
Robinson leads the Detroit
Tigers with a 12-4 record and a
2.86 earned run average. Jack
Morris, meanwhile, Is 7-11 and
enduring the worst season of his
career. Despite the difference in
their statistics, Robinson re·
spects Morris' role as Detroit's
No. 1 pitcher.

~ "It's ridiculous to think anyb·

ody but Jack Morris could be the
ace of t~ls staff," Robinson said
Thursday night after pitching his
first major league one-hitter to
beat the ,Kansas City Royals 7·1.
"Jack's been here for 12 years
... you can't forget what he's
done," Robinson cohtlnued. Yet
Morris has struggled all season,
while Robinson has been the
Tigers' most consistent starter.
Robinson's teammates know
what he has meant to the Tigers,
who moved back Into first place

FoUR MoNTHs
WITHoUT A BRAWL?

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Baldwln·Wallace and Witten·
berg were both picked In differ·
ent polls Thursday as the teams ·
to heat In this season's Ohio
Athletic Conference football
race.
Wittenberg, which will be
leaving the OAC after 72 years to
join the North Coast Athletic
Conference In 1989, was the
choice of the OAC's nine league
coaches as the likely champion.
B·W ·got the nod from the 33
members of the news media who
attended the annual pre-season
gathering In Columbus.
Wittenberg drew five of the
nine votes for first place from the
coaches and totaled 69 points,
based on nine points for a first
place vote, eight for second and
on down to one for ninth.
Mount Union, ·with two first
place votes, edged out Baldwin·
Wallace for second in the
coaches' voting, 65-64. B-W gpt
one first place vote.
Musklngum, with 61 points,
was picked to finish fourth by the
coaches, foUowed by defending
champion Capital with 47 points
and one first place vote, Ohio
Northern 30, Heidelberg 26, Ot·
terbeln 23 and Marietta 20.

••

·•

I--I PoN'T TtfltlK
I CAN Jt1AKE IT!

Untangling the Democrats ___R_o_be_rt_~_..:..alt_ers

One

Why Dukakis needs Bentsen __W~ill.,...-i.am_R_ushe_r .

Berry's World

.

:Today in history

by a half-game over the New
Yor.k Yankees.
"I don't think anyone expected
him to pitch like this," said
outfielder Chet Lemon, who
drove In a· pair of runs with a
sacrifice fly and a single. "He's
been so consistent. With Morris
off to a slow start, Jeff's really
given us a big lift."
The only hit off ~oblnson. who
retired the last 18 hitters he
faced, was a clean single to left ·
field In the fourth Inning by
Frank White. Robinson struck ·
out three and walked three in
recording his sixth complete

game.
In 10 Innings.
Kansas City scored its only run
Brewers 6, Yankees 1
In the fourth when George Brett
At New York, B.J. Surhoff
led off with a walk and White went 3 for 4 with an RBI doubt\',
followed with his single. Both and Milwaukee
turned four
runners moved upon a wild pitch double plays to snap a five-game
and Brett scored on Bill losing Streak. Mike Blrkbeck
Buckner's groundout.
Improved to 5·5 and Chuck Crlm
In other games, Milwaukee posted his sixth save. Ron
trounced New York 6-1, Callfor· Guidry, 1·2, allowed three runs in
nia outlasted Chicago 7-6 In 11 5 2·3 innings as New York's
Innings and Baltimore defeated winning streak ended at four.
Cleveland 5·2.
"
Angels 7, While Sox 6
In the NL, It was: Houston 3,
At Chicago, Brian Downing
San Diego 2; Cincinnati 5, cracked his second home run of
Atlanta 2; Chicago 7, Phliadel· the game with two out In the 11th
phia 0; andMontreal4,St. Louls3 and .Devon White reached over

B-W, Wittenberg are
pre-seaso~ choices

A secretary's view
·of Ike Eisenhower

~~

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

,...,

.....o.~
FORCED AT SECOND - The hall wins the race to second as
Callfomla's Wally Joyner (Zl) is forced at second In the seventh
Inning of Thursday night's game against the Chicago While Sox In
Chicago. The play started when Tony Annas grounded to second
b1111eman Fred Manrique, who pllched to •boristop Ozzle Guillen.. in 1backvound.- for the out. The Angels woa 7-8. (UPI)

Verplank leads Buick Open
GRAND BLANC, Mich. (UPll
-Scott Verplank is trying to turn
ljis golf game around with an
attitude change.
Verplank has done virtually
nothing since he shot to lame as
the first amateur winner of a pro
golf tournament In decades by
winning the 1985 Western Open.
But Thursday; showing off a
!lew care-free attitude, Verplank
shot a 6-under 66 to join five other
golfers with a one-stroke lead
~nterlng the second round of the
'$700,000 Buick Open.
' Two three-time PGA tour
winners, Fred Couples and Scott
Hoch, also shot 6·under 66s to
share the leap with Verplank plus
veteran George Archer, Tim
Simpson and non-winner Greg
Ladeholf.
The start of the first round at
Warwick HillS Golf and Country
·pub was delayed an hour by
rain. Seven of the lowest nine
scores scores were turned In by
morning shooters as the emerg·
lng sun turned the afternoon
round Into a 90·degree steam
bath.
Second-best round posted by an
afternoon golfer W¥ the 5-under
67 turned in by M)ke Sullivan,
who joined Jim Hallett and Ray
Barr Jr. a shotoathe pace on the
7,014-yard course.
Winner of the event gets
$126,000 plus t!Je use of a new car
for one year. This Is the 30th
anniversary of the Buick Open,
the first $100,000 tournament.
A group of 11 were at 4-under
68, Including 1985 Buick Open
winner Ken Green.
Robert Wrenn opened defense
of his Buick Open title with a par
round of 72, which means he
probably won'trepeat and Is also
In danger of m.tsslng the cut.

Wrenn won his first tour event
las I year with a tourney record
26-under total.
Verplank's "have fun" atti·
tude was Immediately tested
when he opened his round, which
began on the lOth tee, with a
bogey. He missed a 5-foot par
putt on the 401-yard par-4 hole.

the center·!leld fence to grab a
potential game-tying homer by
Steve Lyons In the bottom of the
Inning. The White Sox had raiUed
four times to either tie the score
or take the lead.
Orioles 5, Indians Z
At Cleveland, rookie right ·
hander Oswald Peraza took a
shutout Into the ninth Inning and
Eddie Murray and Cal R!pken
homered, helping the Orioles end
an 11-game losing streak to the
Indians . Baltimore also stopped
Julio Franco's hitting streak at
an AL season· high 22· games.
Franco went 0 for 3 with walk.

a

MIDDLEPORT

DAIRY QUEEN

B·VV rece(ved 10 of the 33 first
place votes from the media
members and 252 points. Wittenberg had more firsts, 13, but just
248 points, while· Mount Union
had five firsts and 224 points.
Musklngum again was fourth
with 192, followed In order by
Capital with 191 points and three
firsts, Heidelberg 121, Ohio
Northern 106, Otterbein 76 and
Marietta 75. ·
Capital captured last year's
title with a 6·1·1league mark and
was 7·1·2 overall. The.Crusaders'
lone regular season loss was to
Wittenberg, and they also lost to
Dayton In the first round of tile
NCAA Division III playoffs.

ANNOUNCES

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*Grand prize: Win a 26
inch boys or girls 1 0
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$1895 PLUS PARTS
AIR CONDITIONER SPECIAL
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ERTIFIED

992-3322

The Daily S'e ntinel

700 NORTH SECOND

MIDDLEPOU, OHIO

CUSPS 145-9110)
J\ Dl\llslon of Multimedia, ln(i.

Published every afternoon. Monday
rhrough Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
meroy, Ohio. by the Ohio Valley PubllshlnR Company tMultlmedla, Inc.,

Pome&lt;oy. Ohio mw. Ph. 992·2156. S.·

cond class postaa-e paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.

Membe-r: United Pr€Ss International.
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Newspaper Sales, 733 Third AvPnue,
New Yo.rk, 1New York 10017.
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chan~

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Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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Dealers Invoice Posted On Every Car!

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3 DAYS ONLY- THURSDAY, {FRIDAY, SATURDAY
Thursday &amp; Friday Open 8:30a.m.· 8 p.m.·· Saturday, 9 a.m.· 4 p.m.

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�Fnday, July 29, 1988

Pomeroy-Middeport, Ohio

Cubs blank·Phils; Reds

•

WID

Bette Hottman, an emplOyee of
Carleton School-Meigs Indus·
tries for the past eight years, has
been lilred as the new program
director for lhe school, replacing
· Kathy Luebbert who resigned the
position to take a job with the
Southeastern Ohio Special Education Resource Center In
Athens.
In her new position, Hof!rnan, a
teacher of the mentally retarded·
developmenlally handicapped
with a supervisor's certificate
from the state, will oversee all
educational programs under jurisdiction of the Meigs Board of
Mental RetardationDevelopmental Disabilities, In·
eluding the Infant slimulatlon,
preschool and early childhood
programs, the regular school age
programs, speech and language
and physical educatiOn. She will
also cooi:dlnate the MRDD
board' s volunteer programs, .Including the foster grandparent
program, and all federal programs such as Title XX and
Chapter I.
:Also under the a usplces of her
new job, Hoffman Is the chairperson for Preschool CHEERS, the
Community Health and Early
Education Resource Service,
w,hlch Is a- local Interagency
committee designed to assist
children ages 0 to 5 with or at risk
of developmental delay or suspected bahdlcpplng conditions.
New to be Implemented by
Holtman this fall at Carleton

a

Hot Summer Deals

1986 Chevy S-1 0 ............................. SS995

1982 Buick. Regal· Sta. Wgn. Estate •.... S2295
1981 Plymouth Religant Wagon ..... s1295

Ilo:ar Ann Landers: He said he
loved me so I gave in to him. Now,
for the third time, I have been told.
"Get an abortion. It's your rcspon·
sibility.''
He says he doesn't want to get
married. Neither do I. but is it fair
that I should be forced to carry the
entire financial burden alone?
No abortion for me, Ann. I
intend to carry this baby to full
term, just as I have the other two.
No matter what it takes. I'm going
to raise this child myself. I'm happy
that my other babies were placed in
loving homes of childless couples,
but this one I keep. no matter what.
Believe me, I have learned a hard
lesson. Ann, please inform all those
giri$"\Vomen out there of this:
I!Cfore you jump into bed. have a
ring on your linger. Single mother·
hood can be awfully tough.
.Meanwhile, I need some advice
on how to get this guy to live up to
his responsibility. (The other two
weren't his.) - NEED HELP IN
TEXAS
DEAR TEXAS: You have two
major problems - at least. First,
why do you keep getting pregnant?
I ~ it possible that the underlying
motive might be to hang on to the
man? If thb is the case. you need
counseling.
Second, you need to get serious
about birth control . Ask your
'

S995

We Ha~e Several Low Price• Cart On
Our Lot To Choote Front.

RIGGS USED CARS

985-4100

klllmore (B.sllard 4-3), 8: 05p.m .
Ca lifornia 1Fraser 6-10) at Chicago
f LonJ!: 4-5}, il: 30 p.m .
Oaklarld (Welch l fl-6) at Seattle
(L1mpton 7·9), 10: 05 p.m .
Sal urd ll,Y's Games
Mlhnuabe at Boston
Mln..,!fota a1 Clevel" nd
N~ \ 'ork ~t l Toronto
Califor nia at Chleaso

Kan*" f. ll y at Baltimore, nl~
Texas at Detroit, nl&amp;tlt
Oakland at SeaUie. nl~~:ht
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eul
W L P ~ l . GB
50 -10 .IIJO N- \"urk
58 u .580 ~
PttL&lt;Iml'lh
~, .530
7
.f9 :il .190 II

53

Montreal
Chlcagn
St. LouJ11

H

57 .436 111 !4

43 ~ - ·~ li 't
1

l'lllladdpllla

We!it

'Toledo I , Ro~hester 1
MaiiMl 6, Rkllmond I (fnd)
Omaha~.

DenW!r!

Pawtw·ket ll, Tldewater7 ( IHt)
Pa~~~o· tw.:kl'l 4, Tidewater 3 {2nd ), 10
Innings
Friday's G~tmeN
Lflul&lt;ivlllf' Ill Ruflalo
N»hvllle llllndlanapoUK
Syracu~ a1. Ro('hesler
Denwr al lowa
Oklalloma U ly at Omalia
Toledo at (:olumbu!f
Malnt&gt; a1 Rlt'hmond
n•water at Pawtuckec
Saturd~'s Game!!
Denwr ltllowa
Sy I'B.r'U !!I' at Roche!JU.r
Ok b&amp;homa City at Omaha
To ledo al Columbu 11
Maine at P~&amp;w lucket
Tldt&gt;w.·ater rll Richmond , 2
Louh1~illt! at BulfWo
N~t.'lhV III f' at lndl

nounced
Chicago
the football
forrna·
tlon
.of aInnew
college
player of the ye,a r award. The
award will be presented to the
premier football player In each or
the four AFCA divisions.

KIRTLAND, .Ohio IUPI) Cleveland Browns wide rece iver
Webster Slaughter. a third-year
pro from San Diego State, is
unhappy with his co ntract, and
has not reported to the club's
training camp at Lakeland Community College.
Slaughter, one of the emergi ng
stars In the league, originally
signed a four-year co ntra~t In
1986 and has two years rematnmg
on the pact.
The wide receiver's agent,

~

r::::::::::::::::::::::::=::=:;;;;;:=======:;;;;;;;;;~~~~~;;;;;

22 LONG RIFLE SHELlS

NOW

Pa ul Pelosi of Sarita Clara.
Calif., reportedly sent Browns .
general manager Ernie Accorsl
a letter In April saying If
Slaughter's contract was not
renegotiated, the wide -receiver
would not play for Cleveland this
season.
Pelosi reiterated tha t again •
last week with another Jetter to
Accorsi, so Slaughter's actions
were no surprise to the general
manager.

S1295

RC &amp; PEPSI
PRODUCTS
•.

-EBER'S GULF

the county lair and for future
service projects will be made at
that meeting.

949-9200
RACINE, OHIO

Ann
Landers

_... _

ANN LAND&amp; . . .
.......

a..llaniiJ

'Mil

1

s

$3 plus a s&lt;•lf'addressed: stamped

business·si:t• ent•elotx• (45 cents post·
ag&lt;!) to Ann Londm, P.O. Box 11562.
Chicago, Ill. 606/ 1-{)562

don't fertilize, prune or apply
pest controls.
_Mrs. Elizabeth Burkett presldedatlhemeellngopenlngwlth
a reading, ''Our Creed · Life's
Garden." In ~esponse to roll call
members named their favorite
rose. Rose Reynolds had a
humorous poem, "A Utile
Confused."
The Meigs County Fair flower
shows were announced for Aug.
16 and 18. Traveling prize
brought by Grace Pratt was won
by Bernice Durst. Mrs. Pratt and
Jean Moore won the hostess gifts.
Refreshments · were s&lt;;&gt;rved to
members and guests, Martha
Chambers, Kay Rall, Jen
Chesher, Margaret Butcher,
Esther Bonn Hayes, and Nellie

Personal notes

grated Into the program
activities.
''The concept of teaching functiOnal skills through actual experience In a natural community
environment has been demonstrated to be an effective method
of Instruction for the hand!·
capped student," Hoffman
added.
A nulrltlon grant of $1 ,400
through the Ohio Deparlment of
Education's Nutrition Education
and Training Program will fund
the new MRDD program. The
grant was prepared by Hoffman,
: Luebbert and Keith Black, Meigs
MRDD adult services director.

COLOR BY
COMPUTER

Gerald and Linda Donohue and
children, Crystal, Robin and
Jodi, of Harrisonville spent the
weekend In Columbus visiting
Linda Rae Donohue and Katrina ·
Donohue. They celebrated Crystal's 12th birthday by going to a
Clipper's ball game.
Mr. and Mrs. Loren (Abe) Lee
and Angle spent a weekend with
their son, Eddy Lee and Charlotte Lee or Johnstown .

Never guess about
c•lor again. FREE
. with $5.00 Avon Cosmetic purchau.

992-7180
HEATH UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
PRESENTS
VACATION BIBLE
SCHOOL 1918
Aug. 1-5, 1981

FRIDAYI JULy 29
ALL·YOU-CAN·EAT SPAGHEm DINNER............... S3,99

All You Con Eat !poghrtti Smotlwtd io Our losty H-oolt S,....ttll Souco S..wo4
w~h Your Choice of Garlic lroad or loll ond ACritpy Tosltll Salad wHh Dr•llot of

Your (hDice.

·

Ages 1·12
CALL '992-3039
For More
information

SALES- SERVICE ·TESTING

BlOWN &amp; SNOUFFER
FilE &amp; SAFETY
EQUIPMENT

•

Choice of Homemade Colt Slaw, Macaroni S... or Pololo.. Salad -· •2.28

SUNDAY, JULY 31
3 PIECE CHICKEN DINNER ...........,....................... S4,92
TlwN Gon•ou• Sittd Plt&lt;11 of Got. . Dotp-Frlod Chick., S..wod wHh Moohod l'eta·
tott &amp; Homtmllllt Grawy and ~olidout Homocoobd a,_ lo.,. with ........ A

Fun and Don't
Miss The
Swimming
Party held the
Last Day of
VBS!

172 tlerth SlcCIIId Ave.
llld• .,.rt, Ohle 45760
'"· (6141 992·7075
Gary Snouffer - 992-7446

. - - - - - - - - - - - - _ j L__'7"_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,L______________________

•

••v

_ __

S~e Mike Northup, Pete Somerville, Tommy Sprague, or Dale Hill

HOURS: Monday thru Saturday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.;
Sunday 10 A.M. to 9 P.M.

1!rrhauniJ'i nf a!4rsfrr
·nnA•IIT ·

NORRIS
NORTHUP
DODGE;
INC.
300 'IIIID AYE.
GAWPOUS, OHIO
•

446-0842

You'U Like Our Qualily Woy of Doing Bwineu

IUCIU UP-AND l'tEASE DIIVI 5AFElr

tiS.JIIJ

2nd TIME AROUND

r

••

MONDAYI AUGUST 1I 1988

•

•
•'

GENTLY USED CLOTHING
FOI CHILDREN••••••

•••
•'',

..QUALITY FOR LESS"
HOURS; 10 A.M.·4 P.M.
992·&amp;083
TAKE ST. RT. 881 AT DARWIN 2 MILES
TOWARD ALBANY, OHIO.

'

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'•p

WE GIVE S{NIOR CITIZINI tO%

-

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"''st 31. 19SS.
·res Au..This offer eX.P\

FOR

•

Hal lutt•od Roll • H....,.ooltliocult, Moxwtlt Hou• CoHN or Dtcoffelo.... let.
Fr"hly lrtwtd fA Small SOft Driolk or Hot Tea Moy le loo...lto!M).

z•lill

• OPEN HOUSE •

•

There is a aubscanlial interest penalty for early withdrawal "Compounded
dally.

Call BANK ONE
for more .Information
593-6681 or
1-800-824-6954

•

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Come and
Join in the

•

Our Child 't Portion of Spaghetti is Sonod with Garlic lrlllll ar Roll and A

I

9:30-11 :30 A.M.

Puppet show slated

Thlt·Wttk'e Spee1111

101m 7

doctor which method is best for
you, lhen for heaven's sake stick to
it. Meanwhile, be aware that you
are entitled to child support, even if
it means laking this bird to court.
Get a lawyer.
Dear Ann Landers: My father.
who iS 84, gave me power of
attorney in 1984 so he could die
with dignity. (No machine hook·
ups for him.) He also asked me to
look after his financial affairs when
he is no longer able to do so.
.
Dad's health has been deteriorat·
ing. lie was hospitalized eight times
in the last two years, but he insists
on staying in his house. I have
engaged 'round·the-clock help and
taken over his financial affairs.
Enter the deceit. My son "Frank"
(I have live) rf(Cived a SIO.OOO
check from my father in 1985 and
anmher SIO.&lt;XXl check in 1986. They
were for "secret" tax·frcc invest·
ments that promised high interest
ra(cs. My father never operated in
this manner. lie is a rctir&lt;-d police
lieutenant and straight a.• an arrow.
When Dad called Frank for an
explanation. he was told that there
were no papers on the deal and he
kept no records. Dad was crushed
when he learned that he had been
taken advantage of.
My first reaction was to knock
this kid 's head off and nail his hide
to the barn door. Frank is a
JS·year..,ld liar and con artist. He
noteS has had affairs with several women.
but his wife keeps taking him back
Mrs. Ethel Orr, Chester, vi- for the sake of their children. He
sited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. has a new house and a new car.
Robert Lee Sunday·
At this point only my dad, myself
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Johnson
·
.
of Pine Grove Road visited Mr. and Frank know about tht; mess.
and Mrs. Arthur Earl Johnson Can : take any legal actton . If so,
and Sheryl on Sunday. They also what. Dad needs the money and
called at the home of Eunle soon.- MICHIGAN READER
Brinker.
DEAR MICH .: Your father could
Sixty-four attended Sunday sue his grandson for fraud if the
school at the Carmel church on checks were marked for investment.
If they were not marked, Frank
Sunday. ·
Mrs. Marilyn Young and son, could claim they were gifts and if
Eric, or Sidney are ,spending Grandpa is not sufficiently compcseveral days here visiting Mrs. tent to teStify. ht' could lose the case.
Mary Roush.
My consultant in this matter said
that suing should be 1bc last resort.
It is po~~ible that the threat ' of a
lawsuil might be enough to get the
·Lila Van Meter will present a scoundrel to pay the money back. I
puppet show Wednesday at 2 hope so, for everybody's sake. What
p.m. at the former Diamond a skunk!
Savings and Loan building rePlanning a wedding? Whar 5
cently purchased by the Melws
right?
What 's wrong? "The Ann
Library Board. The show will
Londt•rs
Guide for Brid&lt;'S" will relievr
stress summer safety and Is open
your anxiel)•. To n'C!'il'l' a rop_r, send
I· to all children at no cost.

Members or the Middleport
Amateur Gardeners Club toured
the rose garden of Beulah and
Arthur Strauss prior to the July
meeting held at the home of
Maxine Gask ill, a former
member.
Mrs. Strauss, Kathryn swan·
son and Bernice Durst were
hosteSses . In the monthly news
report by Mrs. Swanson, she
quoted the late J. C. Bridges,
"Cursing the weat her Is bad
farming." Since wecan'tchange
the weather, the best defense Is
three or lour Inches of mulch.
One weekly deep watering Is
better !han several shallow ones,
It was pointed out. Referring loa
. gardening magazine, she said
that -lhe advice Is !hat If you can' t
water during hot dry spells, then

Carmel personal

$ S'CJ"LUSCASETAl

Big Bend Civitan Club
softball tourney a success
A good turnout of teams was
reported for the first softball
tournament of the Big Bend
Clvltan Club staged at Hartinger
Park In Middleport.
The two-day tournament was
wo n by the R&amp;D. Video team
with each player receiving a
tee-shirt with the cl ub logo on It
and the team was presented a
large trophy . Cheryl Hatfield of
Grove City was awarded a 191nch
color television set as lhe resulf
of a special money -making project co nducted In conjunction
with the tournament.
Proceeds from the event will
provide sturdy , contemporary
· playground equipment for the
park. The club Is now considering
several plans for Installation
some time this summer following
the Meigs County Fair. The
Clvllan Club operates the Bob
Eva ns Sausage Booth during fair ·
week and proceeds from ' that
endeavor gp to Sine Cera, lhe
special neeils home for boys In
this area. ,
The next club meeting bas been
set for 6 p.m. on Aug. 6 at the
Hartinger Park and will be In the
form or a picnic for hard-working
members. Plans tor operating at

CHESTER

Special Savings

Slaughter falls to
• •
•
report to tramtng stte

School-Meigs Industries, Is a
functional community based cur·
rlculum tor MRDD students.
"The primary goal of this program," Hoffman said, " Is to get
handicapped students Into the
community to learn to use local
fac!HIIes, thereby making the
handicapped students more Independent." Examples of local
facilities which students might
be taught to utilize Include the
grocery store, bank, pharma~y ,
taxi service, etc.
Hoffman said recent studies
show that handicapped stud.ents benefl~ more by actually experiencing such activities as iroc·
ery shopping and banking than
from simulation of such actlvl·
lies In the classroom.
Also, Hoffman hopes that students will be able to go out for
breakfast or lunch at least one
time a month to become familiar
with restaurants In the area.
Only one or two students at a
time will be taken out to eat or
shopping or banking, and they
will be taken to Utelr own
communities for the outings.
This means If a student lives In making shopping lists, arranging
the Chester area, ·then a res tau· transportation tprough the Blue
rant In the Chester area will be Streak Cab Co., making the
vis! ted. Or If there are no actual purchases necessary to
appropriate facilities In the com· prepare the planned menus, and
munity where the student lives, then preparing lhe meals back at
then the student will be taken to the school's dally living center.
facilities rnost often used by the
Dally functional skills such as
student's parents.
reading, math, money manageStudents will find themselves
ment, telephone use and direcInvolved In planning menus,
tion following will also be lnte-

Sharing the financial responsibility

1978 Dodge Power Wagon ................ S89S
1979 Chevy C-1 Short

Gardeners club tour rose garden

Carleton School hires program director

Sports bne
• fs

Sports briefs

Friday, July 29, 1988
Page- &amp;

-- ..

.,.,

Cross country
practice begins

The Daily ·Sentinal

By The Bend

By LEN HOCHBERG
3-0 avantage In the third, with Hudler, who led off with a single ·
1
UPI Sports WrHer
Manny TrUio stroking a bases- against Larry McWilliams, 4·4.
The Philadelphia Phillles suf- empty home run, his first homer Winner Tim ~urke, 3-2, pitched
fer~ - a "good, old-fashioned this season. The Cubs went up 5-0
two Innings. Nettles entered the
beating" Thursday night, with a In the sixth, with the second run game batting .148 on the season.
revitalized Calvin Schiraldi ad- of the Inning scoring on a slt}gle
Aalros 3, Padres Z
mlnsterlng pain on two fronts.
by Andre Dawson;who finished 4
At San Diego, Houston scored
""""
The Chicago right-hander for 4 with a walk.
~ "
three nllls In the first Inning oJf
hurled a three-hitter, his first
Elsewhere In the National Eric Show, 7·10, two on Bill
career complete game, and League, Montreal shaded St.
Doran's sixth homer this season.
knocked In two runs, Including Louis 4·3 In 10 Innings, Houston Bob Knepper, 11-3, threw six
the winner, pacing the visiting nipped San Diego 3-2 and Clncln- Innings and Larry Andersen
Cubs to a 7-0 rout of the last-place nat! downed Allanta 5-2.
hurled three for his' fifth save.
Phlllles.
In the American League, It
Schiraldi once before threw was: Milwaukee 6, New York 1;
nine scoreless Innings - on June Baltimore 5, Cleveland 2; Detroit
Golf
Japanese pros Katsuyoshl To·
2 against the Mets- but wound 7, Kansas City 1; and California
up with a no-decision lp
2·1 7, Chicago 61n lllnnlngs.
morl, Kolchl Suzuki and Masainl
Chicago loss. In his two outings
·
Reels 5, Braves 2
Morishita each shot a 6-underAt Atlanta , Nick Esasky par 66 In the opening round to
prlor to Thursday's, the former
Met and Red Sox had reversed a smacked his third winning ho-· share tbe lead In the$308,000NST
mid-season slump, going seven mer In the four-game series, a Nllgata Open In Nllgata on the
Innings •no-decision&gt; and eight three-run shot with one oulln lbe Japan Sea coast.
Innings (victory) .
ninth off John Smeltz, 1·1, who
Bone Racing
Forty Niner Thursday drew
Schiraldi, 6-8, didn 't allow a hit was making his second majorfor five Innings, by ·which time league start. Esasky's lOth ho- post No. 2, and was Installed an
the Cubs owned a 3,0 edge.
mer of the season made a winner 8-5 morning line favorite for the
" I wasn't thinking about the of Frank Williams, 1-1 . John $500,000 Haskell Handicap Saturno·hltter, " he said. "Five Innings Franco notched his 21st save.
day at Monmouth Park. Hall of
Is a little early for that. Bull was
Expoe 4, Cardinals 3
_
Fame jockey Larrlt Plncay Jr.
a little upset when they got the
At Montreal, pinch hltterGralg will fly In from California to ride
base hit."
Nettles singled past diving se- Forty Niner, lhe Mr. Prospector
A slxlh-lnnlng single by Juan cond baseman Tim Jones with ' colt who was last season's
Samuel, a seventh-Inning double two out In thp lOt~ t~ &lt;core Rex 2-year-old champiOn.
by Mike Young and a ninth· ,....._ _ _ _ _ _ _ ----.:.::.=:..=::..::::::.:.:!:::;;.:.....___
Jennifer Chasteen, Allison GBannaway, lArena
ZINGERS SOFTBALL TEAM -:- The pictured
Inning single by Mike Schmidt,
Rutland Zingers Girls Softball Team placed third
Oller, Candy Harman; coacbes at back, Iva
along with four walks, were all
In the recent Mlddleporl tournament. Members
Sisson and Kevin Oller. others not plctlired, are
the PhllUes could musler off
are, front, I lo r, Rachel Bales, Michelle Young,
Bob Sisson, a coach, and Rena Youn1, bookSchiraldi In losing for the third
Wendy Glbeaut, Aimee Lemley, Ann Bishop;
keeper. The team Is sponsored by Herald 011 and
straight game and the sixth lime
Gas.
second, I to r, Heather Glbeaut, Mellsa Sisson,
•· In eight outings.
"In the llrst six Innings, he was
outsiandl,ng," Chicago /'llanager
Don Zimmer said. "He struggled
4 sp., lots of extras, 16,000 miles.
_
some In the last three Innings.
Cross coun!ry practice for It's just good forhlm togo out and
1986 Ford EXP •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S3895
lMAa~eA
lit 41 .Ill pitch a shutout and It should help
54 41 _,. 0\i
Meigs
High
School
will
begin
Houl!lon
6
sp., good condition.
Majors
San Franei8CG
!% 411 .:i. 1
him too by giving him the Idea he
Monday,
Aug.
15,
at
9
a.m.
Chtdn.UI
H Dl .4t:i 9~
By United l"rl.$!1 lnh'r ... knat
Practice will be held at the high can go nine Innings."
41 H .UI U
sua Dlero
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Atlanta
35 15 .SDCI 24
The 28-year-old product of the
Eul
.
school.
Cross country Is open lo
Fully equipped.
Tlwrsd!Q' 't Res...:a
W L P~l . Gil
University
of
Texas
Is
In
his
fifth
Houlllon
3,
SIUl
Dle
(Q
t
all
Meigs
High
students,
grades
DP.trult
!8 ... .5~ C1nctn.atl5, Allanr.. '!
New.· Vorl!
511 -II .5.116 • \It
· 9-12, who are Interested In season In the majors and first
Chlc..-o 1, PhlladelphlaO
Boston
UU.SH Hi
with the Cubs (he wa.s traded by
Montreal
4,
Sc.
Loul&amp;
3.
IO!Inn.
Auto,, PB, PS, air.
_
.
distance running.
Mllwau ... l'
52 5I .510 I\
FrldiQ''I Games
Cle, ·eland
51 51 .500 9
the
Boston
Red
Sox
along
,with
PIII~Urth {Smiley 9-6) at New l'ork
so 5! .490 10
Toronto
pitcher AI Nipper for reliever
(0j t'da 1-8), 7:35p.m.
u as .3n 21
Balllmu~
Chi cago cSchlral dl :i--11 J at Phlladcel pH a
" 'est
Lee
Smllh&gt; .
4 wh. drive, auto.
CGt orJs 10-1), 7: 3:1 p.m .
Oakl1111d
6'l -10 .8011 •
Offensively,
he
contrlbu
ted
a
sa
.
L4uls
t
Del..eon
&amp;-11)
at
Monlru
l
Mln ...~ota
n .a• ..&amp;n 51Jt
Basketball
(Perez 1· 4), ~_: 35 p.m.
Callforna
110 31 .495 11 %
0
Bed ..............
Hou ston (Scott 9--3) at l .olJ An ,eln
Los Angeles Lakers center sacrifice fly In the se,ond off
Kan.-s Cll )'
49 ll% .485 l 'll,J
Auto.,
6
cyl.
(HIIIeKM
3-~
)
,
10;
35
p.m.
Shane
Rawley.
5-12,
and
an
RBI
Chit'a(U
48 ss .45$ 151,4
Kl\l'_eem Abdul-Jabbar races two
Atlanta ( z. Smllll-l-7) at SanFrancl~
45 ~4 ' .-154 151fi
Tell a--.
(ReuSJ hel13·:i ), 10:3S p.m.
misdemeanor charges stemming single In the ninth, one of 16
Seattle
39 n .3118 22~
Clnclnral\
(Anns
lroiiJ
2--3)
at
San
T llui'!WI I\¥'8 ~!iults
from a confrontation with a Chicago hits.
Dlep r Haw wkln~t t-8), IO:OS p.m .
Mllwaulel! 6, Nt:'l' York I
,.'That's what you call a good,
Sal urd a,y'!l GameJ
tourist at a PhoeniX shopping
Ralllmore 5, lle\·eland 2
i\llanta
at
San
Franci!ICo
Del rolt 7, Xan•1 Cit y 1
center.Munlclpal Court records old-fashioned beating," said Phi·
Houston at Los M lfteJ
C: allfor~a 7, Clllus;o 6, II Inn.
Chleqo
at
Philadelphia.
nldlt
Frld-.t•'.'!l Ga m et~
showed one count of physical !adelphia Manager Lee Ella, who
Pitt PI '1h at New \'ort, nl1ht
o11lwau lee { Wesman 10-7 and , f11f'r
Injury and one count of property held a closed-door meeting with
St. Loub M Montreal, nllht
~l at Boston ( Hunt 104 Wid Smltlwi on
flnf'l
nrall
at
San
Dlep,
ni
~ht
S.3 J, '!. 5:'5 p.m .
damage were filed July 1 against his players after the game.
AAA rt'!UIMII
Te1uss {IUI JU!i S-t and Will t-8) at
" Their bats showed up and ours
Abdui-Jabbar.
ThUI'Id!Q''S KHuMa
Detroit (TSAIUia ll· l and Klntl· l ), 2,
didn't."
Maine
-1
,
Rl
chmo
nJ
I,
compleUon
of
7·
5:35p.m.
Football
n "'u!iopended gam ~
Schiraldi's fly started Rawley
Mln..,sota 1Rlyle11en l -10) at Cleve! and
Buffalo 9, NIL'i l!vllle 0
The American Football
{Swlndell11·9), 7:35p.m.
en
route to losing his sixth
Indianapolis
6,
LoulsvUJe
0
l'iew Yorlt (Dot!IOn 1\-:S) al Toronto
Coaches Association, In conjunc·
RlcbmonJ 'l. Maine 0 (1st)
(Mus81llman 2-0). 7:35p.m.
straight
decision. Chicago took a
JuWa 9, Oliiahoma Cit)' 8
lion with Domino's Pizza, anKan!Bii ruy fSatlerMgen 10-101 IU

BANKS.ONE.

Eighteen Thousand People Who Care.
BANK ONE. ATHENS. 6HIO. NA IOIIE PART OF rHE CARING TEAM

FDIC

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�Port'MIIoy-Midclaport, Ohio

Friday, July 29. 1988

...

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j

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Pega 7

Wolf pen notes__,_-------~---:Sunday visitors or Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Russell were Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Haggy, Ste·
phanle, Brad, Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Russell, Mandy and
Michael, Racine; Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Russell of Harrisonville,
and Crystal Summerfield,
Medina ..
Stepl)anle Haggy and Crystal
Summerfield were overnight guests of Mr. · and Mrs. Donald
Russell of Harrisonville.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank,
Sarah Beth and Matthew, Texas
Road, spent Sunday afternoon
visiting Mr. and · Mrs. Eugene
Haning and Ronald.
VIsiting Mr. and Mrs. Charley
Smith were· Brandl and Robbie

This "f.tissage and Church Directory Spom~ored Ry The Intemted Rru~inesses iisted On This Page.
~

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SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Veterans
Memorial Hospital
11 S

E.

Momtriol Dr.
992-2104

~!~ ~
992·2tSS

WANT ADS
ARE-PING
WITH BARGAINS

992-5130

,,

ol Columbus, 0
104 w. Maen

I

Pomiroy

m-Ull Pomeroy

~

1

Pomeroy

At some time in our lives, we all feel that
a change is in order, for a variety of
reasons. Perhaps we have taken on too
many things at once, whether they be jobs
or volunteer activities. We find that we
cannot do any of them well, and we may
also be jeopardizing our home life in the
process. Or we may find ourselves locked
mto a job that is boring and without a
future, and which does not make use of
our real talents. If any of these situations
sound familiar, start looking around for
something better, or quit one of the jobs
that you have no time for. However,
before youtake any drastic steps, pray for
guidance at your House of Worship, and
talk to your clergyman. This will prevent
any rash or impulsive moves, and remind
you that God will place you where you
really belong, if you will just give Him a
chance to do it.

lill Work·
~~ ·
Cabinet Makinr w~.~........ - - ~ .
Syracuse

992-3978

•

day.

.

GRAHAM
UNITED METHODIST,
Preaching 9·Jl a.m. first and second Sundays of each month, third and fourth Sunday each month worship services at 7. JO p
m.; Wednesday evenings at ' 7· 30 p.m
Prayer and Bible Study.
SEVENTH·DAY ADVENTIST. Mui·
berry Heights Rc:Jad, Pomeroy. Pastor
John Sweigart; Sabbath School Superintendent, Darline Stewart. sabbath School
begins at 2 p.m 1 on Saturday afternoon
with wcrship service following at 3:15p.m.
'Everyone welcome
, RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
.- Stster Harriett Warner, Supt. Sunday
SChool9:30 am; Morning Worship, 10:45
a.m
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Lystoo
Halley, minister; Saturday evening
,evangelistic seiV!ces, open lo public, 7 p
m.; Sunday Church School, 9:30 a.m.;
•Morning Worship 10.30 a .m.
FIRST SOUTIIERN BAPTIST. Po
'meroy Pike. E . Lamar O'Bryant, pastor.
Jack rlieeds, Sunday School Director. Sun·
... day SchooJ, 9::lt a.m ; Morning Worship.
10·45; eventngworshlp, 7:00pm. (0.S.T.J
&amp;: 7·30 (E S .T.); Wednesday Prayer Service, 7:011 p.m (0 ST.) &amp; 7: 30P.M (E S
T.); Mission Friends (ages 2-6). Royal
Ambassadors {boys ages 6-18), and Girls
In Action (ages ft-18 ) on Wednesdays, 7 p
·m. ID.S.T.l &amp;7 ::1lp.m.IE .S.T .); Tuesday
VIsitation. ii.J) p.m.
' FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, Bai
ley Run Road , Rev Emmett Rawson. pas·
tor. H1.ndley Dunn, supt. Sunday Schoo\,,
10a.m; Sundayeventngservice, 7:30 p.m
; Bible teaching, 7· 30 p.m Thursday.
SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherry St , Sy·
racuse. Mark Morrow, pastor. Services, 10
a m. Sunday. Evening services Sunday
and Wednesday af 7:00p.m.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
JN CHRISTIAN UNION, Dwight Haley,
flrst elder; Wanda Mohler, Sunday SChool
Supt. Sunday SChool 9::.) am.; MornJng
WorshJp 10:30 a.m ; Evening Worship 7: 00
p m.; Wednesday prayer meeting?: 30 p.m.
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
Racine. Rev James Sattertleld, pastor
Freeman Williams, Supt. Sunday School
9:45a.m.; Sunday and Wednf'Sday evenIng services. 7 p.m.
- MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST
Corner Sixth and Palmer. James seddon.
Pastor. Edna Wilson, S.S. Supt. , Ca thy
Riggs , Asst. Supt Sunday Sclloo!, 9; 15 a.
m.; Morning Worship, 10:15 a.m.; Sunday
Evening service, 7 p m. Prayer meeting
and Bible Study Wednesday evening, 7 p
m.; Children's choir practice, Wednesday, 7 p m ; Adult choir practice, Wed, 8
p.m .; Radio program, WMPO, Sunday,
8:30a .m .
~

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST,
5th and Main, AI Hartson. minister;
Richard DuBose, Associate Pastor; Mike
Gerlac~ . Sunday School Superlntendent
Bible School9· 30 a.m.; Morning Worship
10 30 a.m. Evening Worship 7:00 p .m.
Wednesday, 7:00pm Prayer meeting.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NA·
j:ARENE, PASTOR Fred PenhorwOOd .
Bill White, Sunday School Supt Sunday
SChool9:~ a.m.; Morning Worship 10: 45
a.m, EvanJ~:e11sttc meeting 7·00 p m .
Wednesday, 7·00 p.m Prayer meellng.
IJNl'J'ED PRI:SBYTERJAN MINISTRY
OF MI!IGS COUNTY
Reo. Chari• Talbott
HARRJSONVIU.E PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH - Sunday : Worship Services
9:00a.m. , Church School tO: 15 a m ..
, MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN Iunday School. 9 a.m.; Church service,
10:15 a.m.
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY.
TERIAN - Sunday School, 10 a.m.;
Church service, 11:15 a.m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO, Pastor,
John Evans. Sunday Scbool 10:00 a.m.;
llunday Momlng Worslllp 11:00 a m. Chll·
dren's Church 11 1.11'\ Sundty Evening
~vice 7:00p.m. WN., &amp;p.m. YounaLa·

'

dies' Auxiliary. Wedne5d8y, 7 p.m. Fam·
Uy Worship.
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. Off
Rt. 124, 3 miles from Portland-Long Bot·
tern. Edsel Harl, pastor. Sunday School,
9:30 a.m.: Sunday morning preaching
10:30 a.m.: Sunday evening services, 1:30
p.m.
MIDOLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH, Corner Ash and Plum. Noel
Hernnann, pastor Sunday SchoollO:OOa.
m.; Morning Worship, 11:00 a.m.; Wednesday and Saturday Evening Services at
1:341 p.m.

MEIGS

COOPER.\TIVE PA111811
IJNITED METBODI8T CHURCH
NORTHEAST CLIJSTER
Rev. Don Archer
Rev. Bey Deeter
Rev. Carl Hlcka

Rev. Seldon JohttMo
ALFRED - Church School 9: 30 a.m.,

Worshlp, ll am; UMYF6:30p.m.; UMW
Third Tuesday, 7: 30 p.m. Convnunlon,
first Sunday. (Archer)
CHESTER - Worship 9 a m .: Cllurch
School10 a.m.: Bible Study, Thursday, 7p.
m.; UMW, ftrst Thursday, 1 p.m .; Com·
munlon. first Sunday (Archer)
JOPPA - Worship 9:30 a .m.; Church
School10 30 a.m. Bible Study Wednesday,
7: 30 p.m 1Johnson).
LONG BO'M'OM - Church School 9: 30
a.m; Worship 10:30 a.m; Bible Study,
WednPsday, 7:30 p.m.; UMYF Wednes·
day, 6:00p.m.; Communion First Sunday
ot Month (Hicks) .
REEDSVILLE - Church School9: 30 a.
1n ; Worship Service 11:00 a.m. (Deeter).
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL Church School 9 a.m.; Worship 10 a.m.,
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:,30 p.m .; Communion First Sunday (Arcfierl,
CENTRAL CLUSTER
Rev. Kandy Bareh
Rev. Melvin Fnaldln
Rev. Clemente 8. z.t1a, !llr.
Rev. Ko bert MUIII'ftall
Rev. Don Meadows
ASBURY (Syracuse I -Worship 11 a m.
; Churcll School 9:45a .m., Charge Bible
Study . Wednesday, 7. 30p.m.; UMW, first
Tuesday, 1:30 p.m .; Choir Rehearsal,
Wednesday 6:30pm., (Burch)
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m.,
Church Schoo\10 a.m . ; Bible Study, Tues·
day, 7:00p.m.; UMW, First Monday, 7:30
p.m., UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m. Choir Re·
hearsal, Chi ldren's at 6: 30p.m . Adult rotlowing; Wednesday (FrankUn)
FLATWOODS- Church School, tO a.m.
; Worship, 11 a.m.; Bible Study, Thurs·
day, 7 p m., UMYF. Sunday, &amp; p.m.
(Fra nklin •.
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a.m ;
Church School 10 A.M. : Choir practice,
Thursday, 6:30 p.m .; UMW third Monday.
(Burch) m (Burch)
HE ATil (Middleport)- Church School,
9:30 a.m., Morning Worship 10 3(1 a.m ,
Youth Group, 4 p.m.; Wednesday, Bible
study 6.00 p.m . Choir rehearsal7: 00 p m.
(Zuniga )
MINERSVILLE - Church School 9:00
a.m ; Worship service 10· 00 a .m .; UMW
third Wednesday, 1 p.m. (Burch)
PEARL CHAPEL. - Worship Service
9:30 a m.; Church SChool 10:15 a.m.
(Mussman)
POMEROY -Church School, 9:15a.m.
: Worship 10 30 a.m .; Choir rehearsal
Wednesday, 7.30 p.m .; UMW, second
Tuesday, 7:30p m.; UMYFSunday,6p m.
(Meadows\
ROCK SPRINGS- Church SChool, 9: I~
a.m .; Worship lOa.m .; Bible Study, Wed·
nesday, 7·30 p.m. , UMYF (Seniors• . Sunday , 6 p.m. ; (Juniors) every other Sunday, 6 p.m (Frankltn).
RUTLAND - Church SChool, 10 a .m.;
Worship, 11 a.m.; UMW First Monday,
7:30p.m. (Mussman)
SALEM CENTER - Church Schooi9: !~
am .; Worship 10.15 p .m . !Mussman)
SNOWVILLE - Worship, 9:00 am.;
c hurch school 9:45a. m . !Mussman)
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev. Debt Foster
·
Rev. 6oaer Grace
APPLE GROVE - Church Schooi9:J)
a.m. Worship, 10.00 a.m. (first and third
Sundays): Bible stucly every Sunday 7 p.
m .: UMW Seoond Tuesday, 7;00 p.m.;
Prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
(Grace) .
BETHANY - Worship, 9 a.m .: Church
School, 10 a .m.; Bible Study, Wedneaday,
10 a.m., Dorcas Women's Fellowahlp,
Wednesday, 11 a.m. (Foster).
CARMEL - Church School 9: 30 a.m.;
WorshJp, 10·45 a.m. Second and Fourth
Sundays; FeUowshlp dinner with Suttm \
third Thursday, 6::X&gt; p.m. {Foster).
MORNING STAR- Church Schoo19:15
a .m ; Worship 10·30 a.m.: Bible Study,
Thursday, 7:30p.m. (Foster).
SUTTON - Church School, 9: 30 a .m .;
Morning Worship 10:45a.m finland third
Sundays. Fellowship dlnn5' with Carfnel
third Thuraday, 6::.l p.m. (Foster,.
EAST I.E1\I.RT- Church ScOOd 9a.m.,
Worship 10 a.m. second aad fourth SUD&lt;idays; UMW Drll Tues~. 7::11 p.m.
{Grace).
LETART FALLS - Worship 9 a.m.;
Church School10 a .m. (G'ract) .
RACINE - Church School, 10 a.m.; Wor·
ship U a.m.; UMWfourthMonday at7:3lp.
m .; Men's Prayer Breakf.-t, Wednadly, 8
a.m. (Grace),
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Vernon
Eldridge, mlnl8ter; Oliver Swain, Sunday
School Supt. Pret~chtng 9:30 a.m. each
Sunday.
HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRI8T IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, Theron Durham,
pastor. Sunday service. 9:30 a,m.; evenina service 7:~ p.m. Prayer meetlna,

••

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•

Meig• County'• Oldest

Flori.JI
EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO 45789
814/992-2644

352

Olt,

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, ott.

Jonn F Fultz, Mgr.
Pn. 991-2101

I

mid--...-.

~

FRANCIS FLORIST

1614)992·2039 01'
.
1614)992-5721
'"~ , _ . , ,

!

IEALTOI

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Wednesday, 7·00 p.m.
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Joseph B. Hoskins, pastor. Bible
Class, 9:30a.m.; Morning Worship 10:30a.
m.; Evenlng Worship, 6:» p.m Thursday
Bible Sludy, 6· JO p.m.
ZION CHURCH OF' CHRIST, Pome&lt;O!'·
HarrtsmvWe Rd. Robert Purtell, mlatster; Sten Stanley, S. S. Supt.; BJII McElroy, Asst. Supt.; Sunday SChool 9: :m a.m.;
Worship service 10:30 a.m.; Eveningwocshlp Sunday 7 p.m . and Wednesday, 7p.m.
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine
Grove. The Rev. William Middlmwartb.
pastor. Church service 9: ~ a.m : Sunday
School10: 30 a.m.
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST
John Wright, pastor. Sunday School9:aoa:
m.; Larry Haynes, S. S. Supt. Morning
worship 10·:.&gt; a.m.
RACINE CHURCH OF TilE NAZA·
RENE, Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm. Jr., pastor.
Ora Bass, Chairman ofthe-&amp;ard otCtlrls·
tlan Life. Sunday Schoo19•30 am.; MornIng worship 10:30 a.m.; evan.gellJUc service 7:00p.m. Wednesday service, 7 p.m
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, Dex·
ter. Woody Call, pastor. Services Sunday
10 a.m. and 7 p.m. WednESday, 7 p.m
I&gt;YESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH
Lloyd Sayre, Supt Sunday School 9:30 a'
m. ; morning worship 10::l) a.m. Sunday
· evening service 7 p m.
'

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, Rog·
er Watson, pastor Crenson Pratt, Sunday
School Supt. Morning Worship 9:30a.m.;
SLinday School 10: XI a.m.; Evening service. 7 30 p m
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Joe N. Sayre,
pastor; Sunday SChool 9:45a .m: Evening
worship 6:30p.m., Prayer Meet in~~:, 6·:.&gt;
p.m. Wednesday.
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST Dave PrentiCP, minister Oeryl
W~lls , Supt Church School 9 a m ., Wor~
s"lp Service, 9:45p.m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE Rev. Herbert Grate, . pastor
Frank RUne. supt Sunday School 9. 30 a,
m .: Worship service, 11 a m . and 7 p.m.
Sunday. Wednesday, 7 p m. Prayer meet·
tng.
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH . David Bell, pastor. Robert E
Barton, Director of Christian Educa1ton·
Steve Eblin, assistant. Sunday Schoo19. 30
am, Morning worship 10. 30a.m .. Teens
lnAction,Sp m; EveningWorship,8. 00p.
m. Wednesday evening prayer and Bible
sludy, 7·00 p m.
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Charles Russell Sr., minister. Rick Ma ·
comber, supt. Sunday School 9::Kt a.m.,
Worship service 10:30 a.m Bible study,
Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
REORGANIZED CHURCR OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS. Portland-Radne Road. Mike Duhl, pastor;
Janlte nanner, Church School director.
Church school9· 30a m.; Morning worship
10:30 a.m.; Wednesday evening prayer
services, 7:.l1 p.m.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. Rev. Earl
Shuler, paslcr. Worship service, 9:30am.
Sunday SChool10. :1&gt; a.m. Bible Study and
prayer service Thursday, 7, 30 p.m1•
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION·
AL CHURCH, Klnpbufll Road. Rev.
Clyde W. HeJ1deuon, pastor. Sunday
School9· 30 a.m ; Ralph Carl, Supt. EvenIng worship 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting,
Wednesday 7:00pm.
LONG BOTIOM CHRISTIAN, Vernoo
Eldridge, pastor; WaJlace Damewood, S.
S Supt. Sunday School9: XI a m .; Worship
Service, 10:30 a.m.

•

RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Sieve
Deaver, Pastor. Mike Swiger, Sunday
School llupt.; Sun~ School 9;J) a.m.;
Morning worsblp 10: tO a.m.; Sunday
evening wonhlp 7:00 p.m.; WednEiday
evening Bible Jtudy 7: ~ p.m
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCll,
Blll'lllltJIIam. Ray Laucll!nnUt, (IUI&lt;r. flo.
ber1 c.wt. - - t poolor. llundlly School
lD a.m.; wcnliP 7 p.m.; Wem!Odoy, ap.m.
)I&lt;IUIIImatlll&amp; Wed., 7p.m. dun:h . - .
,J'INE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCII,\i
mlleo11Rt. 325. Rev.Ben J. Wallo, putor.
Robort S.arl,., S.S. Supl. Sunday ScOOd
9: :1l a.m.; Momlna Wonhlp lO:JJ a.m.;
Sunday evening serviCe 7::.&gt; p.m.: Wed·
nasday service, 7:30p.m.
SILVER RIJN BAPTIST, BUI Little.
paalor. Sieve Lillie. s. S. llupl. Sunday
SchOollO a.m.; Morning worslp, 11 a.m.;
SUnday rvemnr worship 7:30p.m. Proyer
meetiiiJitld Blbleotutiy Wedaada)o, 7:30
p.m.; Youth meetlnaWeda•day at7p.m.
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
- 38l N. 2nd Aft., Midtlleport. Sunday
School 10 a.m. Sunday evenlnr7:00p.m.;
Mld·Weelt oervlce, Wed., 1 p.m.

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••

GRAVELY TRACtOR SALES

FAITH BIDS US MAKE THAT
CHANGE IF IT'S FOR THE BEITER

RACINE PLANING MILL ,

TRINYrY CIIURCH. Rlchanl Freeman,
pastor; Debtje Buck. SU~ SCixlol Sup.
Olurdl SCixlol 9:15 am.; Worsljp Servlre
I&amp;Jla.m. Cbolrrei\Eersal,"l\lesda,y, 7::1lp.m.
WKler direl11nn d Lois Blrt
POMrnOY CIIURCll OF 11!E NAZA·
RENE, CmH Union and Mulll!ny, Rev
1lK:lmas Gkll Mcnlr&amp; pester Norman Presley, s. S. Suji., Su~ School, 9-:ll a m.;
lllC.IWlgwocstip IJ::tJa.m; f!Vmlng~6
p.m.;
Wednesda,y, 7 p.m.
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHUR&lt;li, 326 E.
Maln St, Pomeroy. Su~ servlres. Holy
romm.tl*&gt;n on tre nrsr Su~ of each month.
1 •d mmtmed with morling Jn,yer on til?
tiD'd Sunday. MOI'Iing I&gt;'!IYer and 9ei'YTlOII on
all d.IB' &amp;uxt~·s U'tlEmomh. Orurch SChool
, and N\ll'9ei'Y care plltrkk!d. Coffee mur in ttl!
Partshllalllmmedl.uiy -gtl&gt;!servtce.
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, 212 W •
Main St. Leo Lasl\ evan&amp;B~st Bilie SChool
~ 9:XIa.m., Morti.ngW«Siip,lO:lJa.m; YOlllh
meetln,p, 6· 00 p.m., EvenJng Y.Q"Stip, 7 00 p.
· m. Wemesda,y nlgltf&lt;l(iermeetlngandBilie
stilly. 7:00p.m.
11!E SALVATION ARMY, 1l5 Butternut
A-.e., ~ Mn. Dora Wlnlng In charge.
91~ lm1lne;s nming 10 a.m.; Su~
Scl1om, lll:J) a.m. Su~ SChool, YPSM
EJoEe Adarll6, leads'. 7::b p.m. Salvation
meeting. vamus s(Eakers and music specials.
Tluisday. ll:Jt a.m lo 2 p.m. Ladies Home
League, memtl!rs ln char~. all wcmen
invlal; 6:45 p.m. Thursdl(i, Corps Cadrt
· a .... (Yoo~ Peopie-BIIiel, 7::11 p.m. Bllie
• Stwty and Prayer meeting. opm to the public.
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
Cl!RIST, 3.12:!1\0III&lt;rm'sHorneRoad !Courty
Road 76) . M2-52;1;. Vocal music. 9.! nday WorsHplOa.m.; BllieSt~Ua . m , Worsi'ip. 6p.
m. W-'11'· Bllie Stody, 1 p.m.
• OW DEXn:R BIBLE Cl!RISTIAN
• CHURCH, Alvin Clltls, pasl&lt;r; Linda Swan.
91!&lt;- !lJnd/1!' SCixlol 9lla.m., preaching ser
vices, !lr9l and tlird!lJnd'IY i'ollowlngSU~
· SChoci Youth met'{ing, 7:Jt p.m. every Sun-

ROWIIS FOI EVElY CKCA!ION

•••

:·

" MEIGSTIRE
\ ' CENTER, INC.

a·~\
~

---

106 . . . ._

m

Pomeroy

992-3325

p,,,,g Flow, Shop

INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Mairi

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nationwide Ins. Co.

- ·

Brogan-Warner

992-2156
'

Pomeroy

IEA~TJ

216 S. Second

GroceriesGeneral lerch1ndise
Raci1e 949-2550

Prescnpttons

Pomorvy

TE.FOJD

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

•

'

LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH,
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.; Dallas Janey,
supt.: Morning worship 10:30 a .m .; Sunday evening service, 7:30p. m .; Wednes·
day evll'lllnlservlce, 7::Jl p.m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA·
ZARENE. Rev. GtennMcMUlan, pastor.
Mary Janice Lavender, Sunday School
Su.pt. Sunday School 9::K&gt; am; Morning
worship 10::1t a.m.; Evangelistic service,
6 p.m.; Prayer andPraiseWednesday, 7p.
m.; Yo\lth meelln&amp;, 7 p.m.
EDEN UNrn':D BRETHREN IN
CHRIST, Elden R. Blake, paste.-. Sunday
School 10 a.m.: Gary Reed, Lay leader
Morning sermon, 11 a.m.; Sunday night
services: Christian Endeavor 7:30 p.m ,
Song service 8 p.m. Preaching 8: M p.m
Mid-week prayer meellng, Wednesday, 7
p.m.
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH .

IU

e

992-2975

•

POIII:ROY, OHI0-992·6677
till Quidtol and

Rawlings-Coats-Blower
FUNERAl HOlliE
"Stning F-ili11"
2" S. 2nd, Milhllttptrrl

Rulh

Am

Fox •

(row's Family Restaure11t
"F""'~

K1111eltg Ftl1i Cii~·~~"

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432

992·5141

'
MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Local ed In Texas
Community off Ct. Rl . 82 Rev. Robert
Sanders, paslor. Jelf Holler, lay leader;
Ed Roush , Sunday SchOOl Supt. Sunday
School 9·30 am . morning worslllp and
clllldren's church 10:30 am.; evening
preaching servl('(' first three Sundays,
7. 30 p.m. Special service fourth Sunday
e\ening, 7.30 p.m.: Wednesdav Prayer
Mef&gt;ting, Bibll' Study and Youth F'ellow
ship 7 30 p.m
CHURCH Of' GOD OF' PROPHECY
Loc3ted nn 0 .J Whit(' Road of Highway
160 Pat Henson, pasror. Sunday School1b
a m. Classes for all ages. Junloi-Church 11
a.m.; Mornlnfl' wbrship 11 a m. Adult
Choir practi&lt;Y!ti p m. Sunday Young Peo·
pie's, Children's Church an·d Adult Bible
Study. Wednf5day at 7·30 p.m.
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL. 570 Grant
St. Middleport. Affllialed with Southern
Baptist Convention. David Bryan. Sr. MI nister. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Morning
worship 11 a' m., Evening worshiP 7 p.m ;
Wednesday evening Blblp study and
praver mPf'ttnv 7 n m .
BRADF'ORDCHURCH OF' CHRIST, St.
Rl. 124 and Co. Rd. 5. Scqrt S1E'Wart, paslor. William Amberger, supt. Sunday
School, 9·."1) a.m: mcrnln~ worship 10:ll
a.m; evenln~wor!;hlp 7:30pm: Wednesday worship, 1 30 p m.
ST. PAUL LUTHEIIA.N CHURCH,
Corner Sycamorl' and Second SIS., Po·
mE'fov. The Rev. William Mrddleswarr.
paslor. Sundav School 9:4!1i a.m Church
serv Ire 11 a m.

m.

MT. MORIAH BAPTIST. Fourth and
Main Sl., Middleport. Rev. Gilbert Craig,
Jr, pastor Mrs Ervin Baumgardner.
Sunday School Supt. Sunday SchoolS. 30 a.
m: Worship Service, 10 · 45 a.m
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH Of' CH RIST
- Joseph B HDsklns, evangellsl. Sunday
BlbleStudy9a m : Worship, lOa.m ; Sunday evening service 6 p m : Wednesday
evening service, 7 p.m
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Racine.
Rt 124. WOllam Hoback, pas1 or Sunday
School 10 a.m ; Sunday evening service 7
p.m. Wednesday evening service 7 p.m.
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cneadle,
Supt. Sundav School 9. 30 a.m. Morning
Worship 10·30 a m . PrayE'rservtce, alternate Sundays
THE CHURCH Of' JESUS CHRIST,
APOSTOLIC F'AJTH - New Uma Rd ,
n£&gt;:\! to F'ort Meigs Park, Rutland Rober!
Kichards, pastor. Services a1 7 p m on

w~AAR~~~~tliu~dHb"i.tNESS

CHAP TER of the Wesleyan Holinffis Cllurch
Rev. David Ferrell, pastor. Henry Eblin.
Sunday School Supt.; Sunday SChool10 a
m : Morning Worship 11 a m .. Evening
service 7· 30 p.m Wednesday evening ser·
vice 7· 30 p m .
STIVERSVILLE WORD OF F'AITH,
Gary Holter. pa!&lt;;lor Sunday services 9· 30
am. and 7 p.m, Midweek service, 7:l1 p
m. Thursday.
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
Ave. Rev. Clark Baker, pastor. Car t Not·
Ungham, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
SChool 10 a .m. wUh classes for all ages.
Evening services at 6 p.m Wednesday Bi·
ble study at 7:30p.m. Youth services Frl
day at 7:30p.m
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP, 128 Mill St. ,
Middleport. Brother Chuck McPherson,
pastor. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Sunday
evening services al 7 p.m. and Wednesday
services at 7 p.m.
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Kenneth Smilh,
pastm-. Sunday School 9· 30 a.m .; church
service 7:30pm. ; youth fellowship 6:30 p.
m.; Bible study, Thursday, 7·30 p.m
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE , 33045
Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pastor. Danny Lambert. S. S. Supt Sunday
morning service at 10 a.m.; Sunday evenIng service 7:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thurs·
day Services at 7, 30 p.m.
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE, Rev. Glendon Stroud, pastor
SundaySchoD19.30a.m. , Worship service,
10:30 a m .; Youth service Sunday 6:15 p
m. Sundayevenlngservlce7.00p.m . Wed
nesday Prayer Meeting and Bible Study
1 011 p.m
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH, Sun·
day afternoon services at 2· 30 Thursday
evening services at 7:30.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH , Mason, W
Va. Pastor, Bill Murphy. Sunday School10
am.; Sunday evening 7. 30 p m Prayer
meeting and Bible study Wednesday, 7·30
p m . Everyone welcome.
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa
lem St Re-v. Paul Taylor, past or Sunday
·Schoo110 a.m ; Sunday evening 7:00p.m.,
Wednesday evening prayer meeting 7:00
p.m.
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
CHURCH. Silver Ridge. Duane Sydenstrtcker, pastor. Sunday School 9 am ·
Worship Servtce, 10 a.m., Sunday evening
service, 7:00pm. Wednf"Sday night Bible
study 7:00p.m

SACRED
HEART CHURCH. Msgr.
Anthony Giannamore. Ph. 992-5898 Saturday Evenln~ Mass 7: ~ p.m. Sundav
dayevenin&amp;servlceat 7 30p m Thursday
Mass, 8 a m . and 10 a.m. Confe5sion~ on'c
services at 7:30p.m.
half hour befOrE' E'ach Mass. CCD classes,
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
1~ a.m. Sunday.
Knob, located on County Road 31. Rev.
VICI'ORY BAPTIST. 525 N. 2nd St.,
Roger WUiford, past&lt;r. Sunday School
Middleport. James E Keese&lt;'. pastor.
9:30a.m.; Morning Worship 10:45 a.m.,
Sunday morning: worship 10 a m : EvenSunday· evening 7:00 p.m.; Wednesday
Ing service 7 p m: Wednesda v evening
evening Bible Study, 7:00p.m.
worship 7 p m. Visit at ion Thursday 6:30 p.
WHITE'S
CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
m
CHURCH- CooivnleRD. Rev Phillip Ri·
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH. Oavkl
denour, pastor. Sunday School 9:30 a.m :
Curfman. pastor Sundav School, 10 a.m.,
worship service 10:30 a.m.; Bible study
worship st"rvice 11 a.m .. Sunday night
and w.orshlp service, Wednesday, 7 p m.
worship servic(' 7:30 p.m.: Midweek
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST,
prayrr servicc Wednesdav 7 p.m.
BUl Carter, pastor. Sunday School9:30 a
WESLEY AN
BIBLE
HOLINESS
m.; Morning Worship and communion
CHURCH of Mldcll cporr. Inc.. 75 P&lt;'ari St ..
10:30 am
Rev Ivan Myl'rs pastor: Ro~pr Mani&lt;V,
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amos
Sr., Sundav School Supt. Sundav School
Tillis, past or. SOnny Hudsoo, supt. Sunday
9.30 a.m.. Mornln~ Worship 10·:10 a rn.:
School9:30 a.m. : Morning worship, 10:30
Evening Worship 7 .10 p.m WcdnE'Sday
a.m., Sunday evening service 7:00p.m.
evenina Bible studv. pravcr and prais'('
Wednesday service 7 p m . WMPO proservice, 7 .'ll p.m
gram 9 a.m. each Sunday,
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZALIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
Oli' GOD- Gllberl Spencer, pastor. SunRENE. Samuel Basye, pastor. Sunday
Schooi9:XIa.m.; Worship service 10·30a
da)' School 9:30 a.m.: Mornln(;! service
m .; Young people's service 6 p.m.
10 OOa.m .. Sunday evening ser:vtce7:00 p.
Evangelistic service&amp;: .:1) p.m. Wednesday
m .; Mld· ~o~.· eek praver service Wednesday
service 7 p.m.
·
7p.m.
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, MUI..MT OLIVE FULLGOSPELCOMMUN ·
ITY CHURCH, Lawrenoo Bush, pastor
St., Mason, W. Va. Sunday Bible Study 10
a .m.; Worship 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednes·
Max Ji'olmer, Sr , S S. Supl . Sunday School
day Bible Study, vocal music, 7 p.m.
9:30am., Su nday evening service. 7:30
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud· &lt; m: Wednesdav evening Bible study and
ding Lane, Mason, W.Va. J . N Thacker, · praise service. 7: ao p m
pastor, Evening service 7:30 p m.: WoUNITED FAITH CHURCH, Rt . 1 on Po·
meroyBy~Pass Rf'v. DavidWiseman,Sr.,
men's Mlnistry, Thursday, 9:30 a .m .:
Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7: 15
pastor. Melvin Drake. S S. Supt. Sunday
p.m.
School9: :J&gt; a m .. Mornln2 Wnrship 10:30;
Evening Worship 7. 30 p.m.: Wednesday
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION Hartford, W. Va
Rev Davkl McManis, pastor. Chun:h
Schori 9· 30 a m ; Sunday morning service, 11 am; Sunday evening service,
7. 30 p m. Wednesday prayermeeUna. 7: 30
p .m .
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart
RAINBOWS ARE BEAUTIFUL THINGS
W Va., Rt l. James Lewis, pastor. Wor:
We
wm
always have dark days, stormy days, happy days, sad
ship !litrvices 9;:10 a.m.; Sunday School l]
days,
sunny
days and just everyday days. Without the dark we·
a . m : Evening worship 7: 30p.m Tuesday
cottage prayer meeting and Bible Study
would not enjoy the light and without the light we would not enjoy
9: 30 a m: Worship service. Wednesday
the
dark. It really doesn't matter what kind of day we have today.
7:34ljl.m
We all know tomorrow wUI be different. It can be good different or
OURAAVIOUR LUTIIERAN CHURCH,
Walnut and Henry Sts., Raventwood, W.
. bad different.
va. Thf'Re\'. GeofleC Weirick, pastor.
If we have a strong faith In God we know there Is nothing that'
Sunday SC'hod 9:30a.m.; Sunday worship
lla.m.
comes along that we cannot handle. Too many people cannot face'
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, located onbad days or sad days. That Is where we can come in and teach them
Pomeroy Pike, County Road 25 near Flatlife
Is worth living. As children of God we can see bauty all around
woods. Rev. BlackwOOd. pasloc. Services
on Sunllay at JO: 30a .m . and 7:30p.m. with
us.
Sunday SchoOl 9:30a .m Bible Study, Wed·
We know for a fact that "Rainbows" are beautllul things,
nesday, 7·:10 p m
happy
things. As often as they look, some people never seem to see'
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST. Sl Rl 338, Antiquity Rev.
or lind a rainbow to brighten their lite. You and 1 can see the
Franklin Dickens, paste.- Sunday mom·
rainbow even during a storm. This means that you and I, who know
Ina JO a.m.; Sunday eveniJII 7:30pm
Thuroday even in&amp; 7:30p.m.
rainbows are beautiful, must become a rainbow for those who can't
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLIseem
to ftnd that glorious bit of color coming !rom God's heaven.
NESS CHURCH, Inc, 75 Pearl St . Rev
We need to be the rainbow In the life of those who are ever sad and
Ivan Myers, acting pelt«: Roger Manley • ..
Sr., Sunday' School Superin..,ndent. Sun:
down and out. We need to be the brightness In their lives as the
day School 9:30 a m . ; Mornlna worship
rainbow Is the brightness In Gocl"s skies.
10:30 a.m: even1111 worahip 7:30p.m.;
Clouds can obscure the sky ancl the sunshine. The day can be
Wednl!lday f'W'nlna Bible Jtucly, prayer
and pnlaeservlee, 7:30p.m .
cloudy or bright but for many people, there Is no rainbow In sight
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST IJ&gt;OS.
for them. As their day Ia covered with clouds, let us be the rainbow
TOLIC- YanZolidl and Word Rd Elder
Jameo Miller, pater. llundoy Schad
that brightens their day. We are that happy face, that smUe and jii
!0:30a .m.; WonldpServtce,Sunday, 7:a0
that gentle kind word that becomes a rainbow beam Into their sad~
p.m .; BlbleSludy. Wedneoday.7i30p.m
heart and mind We need to pray everyday to the Lord Goer
CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL, HarrlsmvUJe Road. Rev. Dtwey King, Plltor;
. Almighty that, aS we know rainbows are sucll beautiful things, we
Cllntm Faulk, Sunday Schod llupL; llunmight be the rainbow of
In the life of ~omeone, somewhere. We
day School 9:30a. m .; momtoaw«ttlllp,ll .
a.m., Sunday I!'Yftllna Rrvlce 7:.10 p.m.
, know there Ia a God and we tell all we can. We know rainbows are
Pzoyer MeeliiiJ, Wednl!ldoy, 7: JO p.m.
: beautiful thlnJ111, so let's ask God to allow outselves to be Ihat
SYRACUSI: nRSTCHURCH OF GOD.
beautiful rainbow In the life of someone, somewhere, every day.
non·Penl!collol. Wonlllp ...-vic. Sultloy
10 a.m.; Sunday khod 11 f.m. Evenln&amp;
-Pu&amp;or Wmlam Mld.eawlll1b, Melp County Luthera111
wonhlp oervlce 7: DO p.m Wl!dttl!ldoy
I
prayer, meetq7:00 p.m.

0 . H. Cart, paslor. Sunday School at 9·30a.
m.: Morning worship at 10:30 a.m ; Sun-

Sermonette

Joy

-

Prayer Service, 1: 30 p. m.
FAITH BAPTIST CHLIRCH, Railroad
St., Mason. Sunday SchoollO a. m ; Morn·
tng worship 11 a m .; Evening service 6 p
m. Prayer meeting and Bible Sludy Wednesdav, 7 p m
f'OREST RUN BAPTIST Re''· Nyic
Borden, pastor. Cornelius Bunch, supl
Sunday School 9· 30 a m ; Scrond and
fourth Sundays worship scrv!Ci' at 2·30 p.

'

atlmlnlstra&amp;or, looked on were Terry LaudermUt,
~ecolld from right, d11111hter of Mr. and Mrs.
Walter McDaniel, and Carla Kimes, daurbter of
Henry and Nara Hartmaa. Both received S400
BCHlanhlpa to be 1111ed for their lralniDg at
Hocklnr Teclmlcal CoUege In the licensed
pradlcal D11NID&amp; prosram. Both LaudermUt and
Klmet1 are employed at lbe hospital.

Community calendar

•

786 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

,.

SCHOLARSHIPS AWARDED -Three nunlar
acholanhlpa were awarded Friday by lhe Ladles
• Auldllary of Veterans Memorial Bospl&amp;al. Robyn
Smith, Pomeroy, (not pictured) reeelved aaiiiOO
to help on her two year repa..red
• acbolanhlp
nuntnr prorram at Hockln11 Teclullcal CoDep.
- Sbe Ia lhe d11111hter of Mr. and Mrs. Keith Smith.
Pre8eated tbelr cbecka Friday by Mary Fobner,
• auxiliary preaklent, u Scott LuCM, holl)lltal

••

New Haven and Mason In Mason p.m., at the home of the clerk,
Counties eligible provided they ·Dorothy Calaway.
are not 13 before Sept. l.
'
I
MIDDLEPORT- Bible sChool
RACINE - Free entertainat
Heath United Methodist
ment will be featured Saturday,
Church
will be held Monday
starting at 7: 30 p.m., at the
Racine Shrine Club Park. Eve- through Friday, Aug. 1-5, from
EAST MEIGS - All girls, ' ryone welcome. Bring lawn 9: 30 to 11: 30 a.m. each morning.
grades seven through 12, Inter- chairs. Refreshments will be
POMEROY - Meigs Band
ested In playing volleyball at served.
Boosters will meet Monday, 7
Eastern High School should
report for a meeting Friday, 5
EAGLE RIDGE
Meigs p.m., In the high school band
p.m., tn the highschool cafeteria. County Foxhunters will hold room.
their annual picnic at 5 p.m.
LETART FALLS - Letart
ROCK SPRINGS - The public Saturday at the clubhouse on
Township
Trustees will meet
Is Invited to attend a square Eagle ·Ridge; open to Interested
Monday,
7
p.m.,
at the town hall.
dance on Friday, from 8 to 11 persons. Members are to take
p.m., at the Meigs County Fair- covered dish.
POMEROY - The Ladles
grounds. The event Is being
Auxiliary
2171, Order or Eagles,
sponsored by the Meigs County
SUNDAY
Is
hailing
a
yard and bake sale on
4-H Committee and proceeds will
DARWIN - Descendants of
benefit the 4-H program. Admis- Tommy Gilkey and Mila Jane Monday and Tuesdayfrom9a.m.
sion Is $2 for adults, $1 for 4-H Hudnall annual reunion Sunday, to 4 p.m. each day. The sale will
members and young people, and roadside park, Route 33, south of be held In the parking lot behind
free for children undet 9 and not Darwin; potluck dinner at noon; the F.O.E. Club on Second St. In
In the third grade. Refreshments
those attending take covered Pomeroy,
will be available.
dish, table service,. folding
POMEROY - Meigs County
chairs.
Salon
710, Eight and Forty,· will
TUPPERS PLAINS- A repremeet
at
6 p.m. Monday at the
sentative of the Golden Buckeye
POMEROY. - Reunion of
home
of
Julia Hysell. Partners
PrOIP'am will bt! at the United relatives of late Theodore and
Methodist Church In Tuppers Lelah Mora will be held Sunday are asked to wear white for the
Plains, In the basement, on at the home of Woodrow and Installation of officers.
'Friday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., to Kathryn Mora; basket dinner at
TUESDAY
fill out applications for the 1 p.m.; guests to take lawn
HARRISONVU.LE - A mls·
Buckeye Card and take reglstra· chairs.
slonary service will be held at the
lions for peoRJe to vote.
SYRACUSE - Annual picnic Harrisonville Holiness Chapel on
SATURDAY
of Carleton Church Sunday at Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Rev.
WILKESVILLE- The Wilkes- Rock Springs Fairgrounds In Raymond Rice will be the guest
ville Volunteer Firemen's Asso- coonhunters building; Sunday speaker. Pastor David Ferrell
ciation will hold Its annual fish school altO: 3D followed by basket Invites the public.
fry on Saturday with lots of food, dinner at 12 noon.
LONG BOTI'OM - The Long
fun and prize giveaways. A street
dance will be held from 9 to 12
POMEROY- The 17th annual Bottom Flame Fellowship Chap·
midnight with music by the River Farrar reunion wl\1 be held ter will meet Tuesday, 7:30p.m.,
Junction Bluegrass Band. The Sunday at the farm of Ernest at MI. Olive Community Church,
band will also entertain In the
(Junior) and Bess Miller at the Long Bottom. Speaker will be
afternoon. The Midnight Shelter house on Sternberger Jack Bell from VIenna, W.Va.
The public Is welcome.
Cloggers, under the direction of Road In .ia ckson.
Bruce Wolfe, will perfonn before
Court of honor
the dance.
MONDAY
POMEROY -A court of honor
SYRACUSE - Sutton TownPomeroy Boy Scout Troop 249
for
POMEROY
Big Bend ship Trustees will meet Monday,
will
he held Wednesday, 7 p.m.,
Midget Football Program slgnup 7; 30 p.m., al the Syracuse
'
a
t
the
American Legion in
lor players and cheerleaders Municipal Building.
Pomeroy. Refreshments will be
Saturday 10 a.m. to 12 noon In
front of Elberfelds; all filth and
TUPPERS PLAINS - Orange served and the public Is Invited to
sixth grade students of Meigs Township Trustees will meet In attend.
County and from the areas of regular session Monday, 7:30
Farrar reunion
JACKSON - The 17th annual
Farrar re11.nlon wlll be held on
By WILLIAM C. TRO'IT
didn't steal anybody. I !ell In love July 31, at the farm of Ernest
(Junior) and Bess Miller at the
United Pret111 Internal.,nal
with her."
shelter
house on Sternberger
WVE MATCH: Chris Evert Is
PENN-DEMONIUM: Char~es
Road
In
Jackson.
ready lor Saturday when she against Seu Penn were dropjled
sUps Into her $20,000 wedding Thursday after be agreed to pay
• gown and marries former Olym· for the damage he Inflicted on a
: pic skier Andy Mill at the Polo, photographer's car but his hopes
Club In Boca Raton, Fla. Fonner for a quick getaway from the
• Indy 500 champion Danny Sulll· court were dashed. Penn's case
• vaa, who Introduced the couple at was dispensed of so quickly-In the
~ a party In Aspen, Colo., a couple New York courtroom that his
of years ago, will serve as an limo driver was caugbt nosing
usher and the 100 friends a·nd around under the hood when
relatives on hand will Include Penn came rushing out. Penn
tennis stars Martina NaVI'aiD· slouched In the backseat, allowova, Wendy Turnbull and Pam Ing a horde ot photographers a
, Shriver and actress Uncia Car· chance to snap away as the
• ter. Everett, 33, Is divorced from startled driver slammed the ·
tennis player .Johll Uo:yd while hood shut, jumped behind the
• Mill, 35, also Is divorced and his wheel and drove away. Penn had
stood silently In oourt as his
1 ex-wife, RebiD MID, bas sold
stories to the tabloids under such lawyer explained that he would
headlines as "How Chris Evert pay the $800 or so It will take to
, Stole My Husband." "My divorce repair the car of New York Post
• was terrible," he said. "I had a photographer Pol Ad110, which
• very arduous last five years. I Penn kicked on July Sin his latest
I really tried to work things out. run-In with the camera-carryt111
; But once I fell In love with Chris. set. In return, a criminal ml·
' she (Robin) became vindictive schlef charge against the actor
: thatl was happy ,In love and with was dropped.
• a very famous woman. Sbe was
' wrltlna all thOle Uee and It was
:
for Chris. Cbrla Evert
FRIDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - The Salisbury Township Trustees will
meet Friday, 7 p.m., at the
township hall on Rock Springs
Road. The public Is Invited.

--People in the news·---

•

•'

••
•'

l
,.

A17:30 P.l.
SI.OO

The Garfield BAR-B-Q Group
Will Be Jamming. At Oscar's
This Saturday Evening,
July 30, 1911
.
1-11 P.M. in Ordinance Room

Public Notice

Public Notice

STATEMENTS
Combined Financial Report
of the Board of Education
For The Fise~~l Year Ended
June. 30, 1988
. SOUTHERN LOCAL
SCHOOL OISTRICT
Governmental Funds
(Revenue RectMpta)
RECEIPTS :
TaxH ........... 1,237,499.96
Tuition ............. 8,074.32
Earnings on In·
vHtmento ...... 35, 176.72
Extracurricular
Activ~ies ... ... 87,366.00
Misc. Rcpt1 ........ 7,999.B6

Oisb ... . ............... 775.20
OTHER FINANCING
SI&gt;URCES (USES)

-Grants in AidState
Sources . ... 2,008,031 .07
Federal
Sources .. .. .136, 384.60

Total
Receipts) ... 3.520.621. 53
tExpenditure
Oisburaemental
DISBURSEMENTS:

Instruction ... 2,177.278. 29
Supporting
Services ... 1 ,634,879. 60

Extra~curricular
Activ~ies .. ... ... B6,362.58

Debt Servlces .. .. 33,062.52
Total Diabursemontio ....... 3,931,582.99
Exc. Rcpt1 Over/(Under)
Oiob........... (41 1,061.46)
OTHER FINANCING
SOURCES/fUSES)
Contribution• and
1
Donation• .... .... 6,184.98
Oparating TransfersIn .................... 2.662. 1 8
Operating TransfersOut ............ (2,862 18)
Total Other Fin. Sources
tUoes) .............. 5,1B4.9B

Exc. Rcpts./Sources Over/
lUnder) Oiob. and Other
u-/Net .. '406,876.48)
Beginning Fund Cash
Bolonce ..... ... 819,574.06
Ending Fund Caah
Belance ........ 413,697.57
EXPENDABLE
TRUST FUNDS
RECEIPTS:
EJitracurrlcular
Activ~ieo ........ 23. 1 04. 86
Total Rcpto ....... 23. 104.B5
DISBURSEMENTS:

Extracurricular
Activ~iM ........ 22,329.66

Total Dlob ......... 22,329.66
Eac. Acpta. Over/tUnder)

•

Hardy.
Mrs. Ida MUrphy was the
Wednesday visitor of Mr. and
Mrs. William Kennedy.
Mrs. Ida Murphy and Peggy
were Wednesday evening visItors of Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Johnson and Tammy. Mrs. Joseph Evans, Tyson and Jona·
than, Racine, spent Tuesday
afternoon with Mrs. Murphy and
Peggy.

Reeves and Stephanie Haggy and
Crystal Summerfield.
Sunday afternoon visitors of
Dorothy Reeves were Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Reeves , Brandl and
Robbie of Chesler and Ronald
Haning. Bryan Reeves was the
Monday evening visitor of Mrs.
Reeves.
Sunday visitors of Mrs. J. R.
Murphy and Peggy were Mrs.
John Hardy of Delray, Fla. Mr.
and Mrs. WaltShawklnsofSoutll
Charleston, Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Davidson and Wilma and Mrs.
Mildred Phillips. While here
visiting, Mrs. Hardy sprinkled
her husband's ashes on the
Murphy farm which was for·
merly owned by Jo and John

Contributions 8t
Donations ......... 769.40
Total Other Fin . Sources
(Uses) ............... 769 40
Dlabursamentt &amp;. Other
Uoes/Net ......... 1.534. 60
Beginnng Fund Cash

Balance .......... 7,469 52
Ending Fund Cash
Belance ............ 9,004. 12
PROPRIETARY FUNDS
(Operating Receipts)
RECEIPTS:
Food Services
Sales ............. 75,659.47
Claas Materials
&amp; Feoo .. ....... .. 11.035.36
Misc. Receipts ...... .. 471 .08
Total Reccelpts
(0perating) ..... 87,065.91

(Operating Diaburaamants)
DISBURSEMENTS:
Employees SolariM &amp;
Wagn ............ 74,017.96
Employees Retirement
Beneflto ......... 26. 822 .4 7
Purcltaoed
Servlceo ... ....• .... 280.40
SuppliM &amp;
Materiols ........ 93,601. 19
Capital Outlay .......... 71 .98
Other Objects ....... . 150.00

Total Diabunements
(Oper.) ......... 193,844.00
Exc. Rcpta. Overo(Under)
Diob .......... (106, 778.09)
State Sources ...... 7,831.50
1
Federal
Sources ......... 99,816. 10
Total Other Fin . Sources
/(Utes) ........ 107,647.60

Exeeas Recaipt1/Sourca
Ovor/(Under) Dioburoo·
manta and Other Uses/
Not ..................... 889 .51

Beginning Fund Cuh
Balance ...... .. .. 43,939.68
Ending Fund Caoh
8alance ..... ..... 44,814.59
TOTALS
RECEIPTS:
TaxH ....... ... 1.237,499 96
Tu~ion ................ 8,074 32
Earnings on Invest~
manto ...... ..... 36. 176.72
Food Servicea
Saloo ............. 76,569.47

Extracurricular
Activities .... 110,469.85

Clus Materials
&amp; Fe.......... . 11.036.36

. SMALL
WANT ADS·

mD&lt;

ABr; PLJOI

Public Notice

. Public Notice

Mloc. Roceipu ..... 8.470.94
!GRANTS IN AID)
State
Sourceo ... 2,008.031 .07
Federal
Sources ....... 136,384.60

Total
Recoipto .. •. 3,630,692.29
DISBURSEMENTS:
lnotruction ... 2, 177,278.29
Supporting
Servicel ... 1,634.879.60

Extracurricular
Activitleo .•.... 108,692.23
Debt Serviceo .... 33,062.62
Employe&amp;~

Employeeo....... , ... .• 6e.oo
Number of Cert.
Employeeo ............. 43 00
SUMMARY OF
INDEBTEDNESS
BONOSBalance Beginning
of Period ...... 200.000.00
fledHmed-Durlng Flocol
Period ........... 20.000.00

Balance
11-30-88 ....... 180.000.00
I certify the preceding raport to be correct and true.
to the boot of m, know~
ldgo.
DM"rnie E. Hill,
TreMUrer of the

Salarie.
&amp; Wagoo . ....... 74.017.911
EmployMI Retirement
Benefito ..... , .. 25,822. 47
Board of Education
Purchased
614-949-2213
Serviceo ............. 280.40 (7) 29, 1tc
SuppiiH &amp;
Materiolo .... .... 93,601. 19
Public Notice
Capital Outlay .......... 71.98
Other Objecta ......... 160.00
NOTICE OF SALE
Total Disburae·
menlo ....... 4. 147,766.64
By virtue of an Order of
Exc . Rcpto. Over/(Under) Sole lnued out of the ComDiob ........... (51 7 .084.36) mon PI- Court ol Moigo
County, Ohio. In the cooo ol
OTHER FINANCING
Diamond Savings ond loan
SOURCES(Uoeo)
Company, Plelntllf, vo. Frank
Contribution• and
Donation• ........ 5,944.31 W. Hou-. • 11.. OeflnclStateo SourcH .... 7,831 .50 anto. upon a Judgment IMr·
eln rendered, being Cue No.
Federal
Sourceo ........ ,99,816. 10 88-CV-24 in Mid Court. I w11
Operaling Tranafer1
ollor to&lt; llle Ill the front door
-In . .. .... ....... 2,662. 1 B of the Courtt.:»u• in Po.
meroy, Melgo County, Ohio,
Operating Transfers
-Out ............. (2,662.18) on the 9th day of Saptllfllber,
1988, at 10:16 a.m .• the to~
Total Other Fin. Sourcoo
(UIH) ....... ... 113,591.98 lowing Iondo and tonemento,
Exc. Rcpt1/Sourcea Over/ located on Long Street in
lUnder) Disbursemenu &amp;. Rutlond, Ohio 45776; the
ot- bounding on the north
Other Uooo
/Net .......... (403,472.371 io Long Stt'Ht; the otreot to
the wool II State Route 124;
Beginning Fund Cash
Balance ........ 870,983.25 tta.e are no ltreet• to the
south and eut of the reeles·
Ending Fund Caoh
Balance ........ 467.516.28 tete. A complete legal de·
scription of the real estate is
as follows:
~
Caoh In Benko
(Net) ............ 467,616.28
Being situated in the
Total Fund
County of Meiga. in the
Balanco ........ 467,516.2B State of Ohio and In the Vjllage of Rutland, Ohio, 10
MEMORANDA DATA
wit:
l
Aueaaed
Beginning South 9'/J da·
Veluotlon ..... 57,912,283
QtHI Eatt 30 feet from the
Property Tax levi..Intide 10 Mill .. , .. 3. 5000 Southlat corner Lot Nine- ·
Outoide 10 Mill .. 20.000 lllen (19) of Rothburn'oSe·
ADM ........... ....... 87.00 cond Addition to the Villoge
of Rutland, Meigo County,
Number of Non-Cart.
Ohio, and running thence
Continued on
8

PEOPLES BANK IS
PROUD
TO SPONSOR THE
MASON COUNTY
FAIR
UEEN PAGEANT!
'

/Ve. 4tN'te r'P«
~tlfut

#t~r .f/u,./ 11"11-art,
f987 ~~a.fO( eP«IIfj h.li-

~UU/1
tll(ltk
19M f"a~i- ~uwr

ealll!latt.t
T«ul~, 11"/«.rt.?'7:00- 9.·00 P.t#.

Pu;ft.t8a(f
ofP#t~t Pkra11t
2212 J.ef.rM lfH-(11£.

p,.or• B'l'~' lit 7:JO P.t#.
Special Guests
Many of the
Folmer Mason County Fair Queens &amp;: Fair Board Presidents
'E~'E

IS I9{'llfl!F/D!

PEOPLES BANK
. MEMBER F.D.I.C.

of Mason, New Haven,
and Point Pleasant

�The

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

~he

Daily Sentinel

29. 1988

Business
Services

PHONE
992-2156
Or Write
St11111t1 Cllssillld Otpt
~i•'

4

13

ln.uran~

31
Calli Ul for yaur mablle horn1
lnauranoe: Miller Insurance,
304-812·2141. Aloo: outo.
h - . life. heolth.

'II Couft St.. '""'"''· Ottici4S7"

•'

Friday, July 29, 1988
Hom•

for

51

LAFF·A·DAY

Sale

Contmued from Page 7
touth 9 tf:a degrees East 277
f~ to a point 12 feat Nonh
of the center of Section 8.
1ownship6 and Range 14of
the Ohio Company's Pur·
chue. thence Wast 66 feat
to the place of beginning.
~ntai..,ing .035 acre. more
or leas_ in the Village of Rut . land, Moigo Counw. Ohio.
Refarence Deed : Volume
286,
Page 459, Meigs
County Deod Recorda.
APPRAISED AT: $12,000.00.
The real Htl\e cannot be
Sold for leu than two-thirds
the apl)raised value.
TER llo!S OF SALE : Cash
01'1 dali:val"' of deed.

Howard E. Frank,
' Sh4:tnff of Meigs County
('7) 29; {B)&amp;. 12, 3tc

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
DR AWING JURORS
Office of Commissioners
of Jurors

Metigs Courttv.' Ohio
'

July 25, 1988
To All 'VJhom It
May Concern.
On Frifll'!lhe 5th d..,. of Au·
!P'st. 1988,119:00 o'cfod&lt;A

M., at the office of the Comm•siones M Jurors of Meigs
County. Oh~. Jurors wll be
"!'blidy drawn for the Sep.
to:nber 1988 Term of the
Common PI• Coun of said
County.
Wallac'e Bradford
. I. 0 . McCoy,
Cornm1u10nrs of Jurors

{7)29 . 1tc
'•

Public Notice

'

dead recorded May 20.
1963, ot Page 301 of Vo·
luma 218 Meigs County
Dead Recorda; thence North
6 deg. 16 min. west a c;list•nce of 82.8 feet to an iron
pin located along the 181 t
side of aforesaid 30 foot
street; thence north 88 deg.
2 min.
1 distance
of 175
feat
to eut
an Iron
pin located
on
•h• wei• line of what was
the Weaver lot now known
as the Elsie Croulot; thence
south 3 deg. 30 min . aut a
distance of 62.8 feet to on
iron pin loc•ted 102.2 feet
from the north side of the
efor•aid Buffington Island
Road; thence South 88 deg.
55 min. West a distance of
about 173 feet to an iron pin
located •t the place of beginning on the aforesaid 30 feet
street,
containing 0 .25
acres, more or less.
APPRAISED AT:
820,000.00. Tho reel estate
cannot be sold for less than
two-thirds the appraised va-

tion, age, or ability to pay.
Lasfy Chaot ...n, lnforma·
tion •nd Aet.rel Coordin•
tor, IJ the 'd•ignMed Equ•l
Employment
Opportunity
(EEOt Officer for ttu. egency.
If an applicant, employee
client, or potenti•l client feet
they h8ve been discrim·

1-----------l
WANT
ADS GET
'
'

381-8411.

'

UKE
DIAMONDS

Faurtd: '""- femolo dog. Coli
~14-812-3888.

Wrltesel

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

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
FREE ESTIMA'I"ES

949-2168

7-14-'88-1 ma. p4

YOUNG'S

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Public Notice

New

AFFIRMATIVE ACTION
PROGRAM

HOIMS luill

PH. 949-2801

In consonance with Title
VI !Service Rendered) and
Title VII {Employment) of
the Civil Rights Act of 1964
{Amended In 19721; Section
504 of the Rehabilitation
Act of 1973; and 46 Fed'eral
Regulation 26024 - April
11 , 1980,MEIGSCOUNTY
COUNCIL ON AGING, INC.
/ MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR
CITIZEN CENTER is totally

or Res.

949-2860

- Addona and remodeling
- Roofmg and gutter work

work
!FREE ESTIMATES)

BACK TO SCHOOL
STUDENT ONLY
SPECIAL

V. C. YOUNG Ill
Pomeroy, Ohi'o

7·1 3-'88· lin

equal opponunltv in employment and service ac-

cess, without regard to race.

NOW THRU SEPT. 3

lAY'S BEAUTY
SALON

169N2nd
Middleport. Oh.
992-2725
7/ 20/ U.l mo

SER~ICE

E M•in

I.AI;Q.Ii.L.I.

POMEROY. OH.

992-2259
NEW LISTING- App101 . 55
acres of ground wtlh amce 3
bedroom ranch home lo
cated mI he co unly but only
15 mmules from town Garage, palio, new kttch en cabt·
net s, equipped krtch en, 80%
tillable land. Many other lea·
tures. $45,000.00

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY
Mlddllport, Ohio

992-2196

J.J0-'8711n

992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, Ohip
1-28-'Si-tln

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949-2969

SYRACUSE - Really nice
ran ch type home 3 bed·
rooms, equtpped kitchen
and a yard for the ktds Gar·
age, storage bu1ldm g and
many other mce features.
Call for your show tng today!
ASKING $42.500.00.

Located Halfway be·
tween Rt. 7 8a Bashan.

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS

VANCE RD.- 72 acre farm tn
the country, nice farm house.
barn and olher outootldtng;. 3
bedrooms, gorgeous woodWCJ"~ many unKjue features.
Also free gas lo house AMust
See' $49.500

Strvitt (enler for Ry..,
Products
.

HUDNALL
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
161

North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SE~VICE

DANVILLE - Ltkr new modular m a little town m the
country, 2 car garage wrth
shed and on an1ce lot Plusa
9'x47' add on room PRICED
TO SELL $31,900.00
Mf DDLEPORT - Nicely remodeled home on a good
street 1n town. l 'h story, 3
bedrooms. basement! Really
Cute! PRICE REDUCED TO
$22,900 00
BAS HAN • KENO RD. - Ap·
pro• 50 acres ol vacant
land. 20 acres gently rolling
ltllable Balance tSwooded.
Home site has sept ic, TPC
water, electric &amp; phone lin es
on stte Road frontage
$35,000.00.

5

,

Pay Your PhoAe
and Cable Bills Here

IUIINESI PHONE

5·25-lfn

Re .. nice hom. plut mobil•

Authorized John
Deere, Now Holland.
Bush Hog Farm
Equipment Dealer

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling With
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Business
WAN! TO lilY WR£CK£D OR
JUNK CARS OR TIIICKI
-FRE£ ESTIMATESFor any of thnesenic:es call

or leo•• Me&lt;s-

'DEAD OR AUYE
•Washers •DI)'ers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must Be Repoirable"

NEASE HOLLOW RD.

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
We Service All Makes
1122188/tf~

GUNS- AMMO
GUITARS
STRINGS
Signs
on Bashan Rd.
PH. 949-2168

Co. property and need

3

•' '&gt;' •'

r

•

Oon,, eollrr 1.. 1
Look who'e 2311
We Lewe You,

Office .............. 992 •22 59

DIWI.

•••••i ,..
(
r'

~I

Announ~ments

A'AIIIIbte • Fruth

Need room for clothing ttoraae.
Clothing in beg•. Aeaonable
rent. COli 814·992-1144.

Pl.... pray for lie Roblnton

famftv . Satan II trytngtokMp ua
epert.

4

Giv•wav

~I:IVII."

11

Help Wllnted

chREhn. Oeys.

304-171-t 141.

c..

h.,. ref.

Blbylitter evelteble fleti1ble
houn. pwt or ful timl. fenced,
.,.,d, doN to tchool. 304-175-.
2714.

A.. You111 en•g81:1c~ndpaopfe
orl.,.d dmtll hygl•in? lntereeted In worWng In 1 modern.
Pl'o;n•IW dlftlal offiCII Prevention lf'ld helfth orlented1
EJmll)tianll In werbll end communiCMion aldllll' tf 10. our
offlca It looldno tor • "lllke
ch•ge" per~~on who h• lnltl•
tlw Md cen mllntMn her own
reOII aydlm whl• being •
memb• of e tnrn oriented
denll~ Pl. . . lend typed
rwum o 441 Qeni(al Hertl~
o• •tcwtv. MlddiiMOf't. o.

'

Busln&amp;ls
Opportunity

32
I NOTICE I
tHE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
INO CO. - d o lhet you
do busln.. wfth peopte you
know, lndNOT to 11ndM...,.
through the m~ll untl you hiMI
lnvntlgotod tlw ofloring.

lmmedl1te openlng.Uitrl·
SOund •nd/or Nuc::lw Medicel
Technologlot. Oria
•P"·
rlenoe required. Cll pertonnel
offloo P I - Vofl"' Hooplllil.
304-171-43.0. E.O.E.IA.A.E .

r,•

31

1M a1111 t11nd Wl're numbtr one
In owft .. d. E..-..ncedm... ar
should ,....., with ,..
tume or work hlltory to: fi'.O.
eo. 371 Portom-. Ohio
45Q2. ATtN: Sot• Moneg•.

E-lntl Coott. Apply 111 pnon.
Holldoll-lnn-410 Plko St. Oofl~
polil. No Phone c.lle.
Pr.atiOII Nu,..lor two ltilli iiN--

dl• . . . foollltloo for d"':Z
-~~-~~~........
~
poloi._L 0111o. c LPN Llaen ... NAPNE8/00PNEI Certlfl- or do..,.
Golden Aetrl- malo dog. to m-tonofo,._loo. . . .
glvo ~Y· Coiii14-37B-2791. tlan of PhM'ft'IIOO.._ Trlhllne
_.net IIOod-lilllton ..
Pu~ to glw• ·~ .., etowlno oanwnunl•lon Jldlll. punDt\111.
lomlly. Coli ltot-3811-8088.
Mtd aloiHty • . . . •..,. o1 o

a

...., rllllllllld: .,.,._. . wan.
lng with with -

Holf lord• Colli•hoff Sh...,d
8h- dog pul'll'l. 7 ,_, old. ,.._..ion .,d - - 1
H81 heel elltho1t. Hou• brolllln.
- ..,.,_ Hourt: 7
LD- chll-. Coli 114-2511- ~M-8 PM, 1._/Sun.; 7-1:30
1177.
AM.I-ttAM.Wod.;7·8:30AM
ond t-1:30 PM. l'lturo.; 7-1:30
1 pui'II'I·P. . Aogloler.O-ton AM Fri.; or •
ellt•
T•rl•. Smart • toveabta. Call
dulod;
2·heurwultlr
-114-37&amp;-2 t 39.
Ina. Sofory:
ea.oolltr.Yoootfon181 ell./ Per 1 onel/lneuranoe
2 - · t ........ t bled&lt; benlflla.IMtd,.....•d•wr
w/whlle ftrtpe~ • white f. .. 1 - .......... lily, . . . . . .
Cutol Call 114-441-4431.
~llertl
,P.O.Iu
104.
J
Olllo
Dog Houoo. Coli 114·441- rwwn• mull be poltorMrllld
1830.
by 114188. l!quol
fmplojor.
'
Dog Houoo. Coli 514·4418830.

at._...

-·All

Op"""""""

; ' : ..pu""'·· Coli 114-371-

~";:.:::l'l.~ glw -

·

Colli

"""'• dog ....... _ ,......
loagle. Coli 114-378-2UII.

-.. _...T.--..
1 yr. old
Good
-

~~"' lltohHod
-·
ohll-.
..

form. Cofll14-241-ltl4 '

..v::.m: .• -..,-.

--portiJiowta ....

;t~r
I'

--

2 ae•oom hQme In country.
VInton eree. W. .r. tnllh fur.
nlthed. *171month. *110dep.
..... c.lll14-388-llll.

Met turni1hed 1pt.- 4 rooms •
blth. Cent18lly located. Rlf. It
IIC. dep . .eqW"red No petl. C.ll
814-441-0..44.

1 BR.In Crovwn City next to n. 1
lDdge Hofl. 0175 o mo. Coli
114-448-1511.

Furnished 11pertment In town.
Coli 814-441-t423.

Pomeroy, good locetlon. •
room. 2 bedroom ho ....;--ful
bMim ..., g. .ga. SJ• fumaca
*12&amp;. month . References
needed. Semlnel. lox 72a.
2 wrynl~ hou ... 1171month
!)Ius ref.-nce end depoelt
qund. 114-742-2728

111-

Nice 2 bedroom hou•. Moe
c•petlng, cllblnetl, neighborhood. Middleport. 51-4'982·
68158.
Small. In SYtllcu•. Clll &amp;14992-70t4.,..nlngo.

flreplec• with 1 0 1cret of
gr ...... 18.ZO 2 c• gngo.
t21.000. Colll14-445-8710.

2 bedroom, dlp08it.., d ,.,....,_
required. locllted behind
Krodal Pork. 304-175-1811 of·
ter 8:00PM.

Cel

1977 Fe-112dl, - · ......
3 BR., n.W o•~ Wll'h lr •
drier. Extr11 nice tftrouah out.
e1810. Coli 114-441-0f75.

~Sidle

1919 Uborty 12ae5. All oloc..
und•plnnlng. AC. Coli 114379-2148, 11-1 PM.

Hom• for Sale

11• Hou• t•ll• 14x70, 3
be•ooma. 2 blth. Set up on
ren•d lot. t15,000. Call 1148112·7t03.

•

1881 Marlen. Mocllllr Home,
IO.ZI. All of.,.rlo. Co, 3 IR .. 2
bllht, graet room. dining roam.
To ,...., txtMI to Itt JIIU1t . .
10 I!Ppted...
owner
fl,.n-. Coli 814-441-1408

treU•. ()u hi•. Centl'll Mr,
*lllod woll, low utlhlao. front
811 d b•ck ~. Net to For hid

Olclor 3 IR .. etorv • V.. ful .
b•ement. ~ •en. C.nWnery,
Coli 114-441-3044.

1919 Potriot 14111&amp;. Gao fu~
MC&amp; elr coldtlo,.., fireplace.
underpi":ti\ Nfrlgemor and
atcwe. •
, PhOIW No. 114143-1141.

4'n

••.000.

acnos,

...., s JfM.

Uoc70 fumloltod

2. 3BA. Allutflltilaptld.cept
..... rlclty. eo ........ iontloclllon.
Call 8t 4-446-88Se or 4414008.
12x10 unfumlllhed. cent•l a
on At. 31. Coli 304-1711-9710
or 814-4411-4318.

1919 Potlfot. t4•80, fl...,laco.
llr. u• tum1ee. nice thlpe.
U99S llrrn. 014-84~1188.
1113 New Maon. 10xll.
1 :Z.14 adcltlon. Very
condition. Coltl14-t41-2

8ood
n.

Farms for Sale

Neighborhood Rd. off of 14 t.
Frtdilw..luly 29th• • III.·July
30th. I:OOAM·S:OOPM.lDtsof
children'• tore end clothlll
Joclt•·N. . ..,.,,
eS.Hof-*"12-11.
·

o-. •-

Cllrecll III•R•In or Shin•. July
28. :to • Aug. 1. 2 ml• peet
Centln•ry on Rt. 141. or 3rd
-upfromJct.-Rt. 775.

m.,.

4 mi. out ltNw ... Cllrlo •
.. omoll'l'...._ ""L
oofloel•d•lof• TV. 31
mrn • - · bebr bod&lt; ........
fl'ldo!l• ...rd ... 1·7
Yord

lot• tO:DO to 1:00.

1lturod.....IOII... 7 ml• N.

ontiO.,_onHomMOr.Nioo~-·mloc.

.,...-.·hH-···

(Jaroge Sof•MIIoholl Rd. FuH

.... bod. 1
1dult

olothlng,

houtehold•..Thurt.-let.. July

30. tO AM·S PM.

--·-·

1 1 0 - N. Oofflo H.S. loon's
--·Mon. , TUM.• Wod.
ldto......., • o•

A....,._,

Moving fromColumbus•le. On
SA 124111 Min .....lo. S._,ing
It h .m. Aug. 1,2. en4 3rd. We
haw many hau•hold ttem1 ,
Including fumttu ... dreptl, cur• .
tlllna, bedspreeds end dothlng
ofofl-.

vn

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

IE.&lt;WT1FUL APAIIlMENTS AT
BUOQET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES. 131 Jaobon
Pike tram *183 • mo. Wllk to
tftop end moviM. 814-44•
2168. E.O.H.

Aahlon. I•Dt '"'Icing lots.
mobHe hornM perml*d. pubUc
wetw, elto ......., Iota. Ctyde
eo-. Jr. 30~171-2331.

Aug. 1.2.3. Chetter
Rt. 241. Bottom of hill. Sowing
mechtne. coneole
1nd
morw.

,.,eo

Ups•lr• unfuf'l'hhed ipt. C.rp . .d, utllh)oo paid. No chllthn.

a..,ttful rMr lattoneecreptu&amp;
public Wllttr, Clyd1 8o.Mn, Jr.
104-171-2331.

2 f~mlty -.ct Nle. July 30. Aug.
2. R~ 33 ln lurtlngh...,.

No ..... Coil 114-441-1137.
11 Court St.·2 IR .. 2 baths,
Wtlchen furnlthld, w IW c•~
No pets. Off ..... PI'
U2Sa mo. oluoutllltloo. Dop.
.t. Colllt4-441-4828.

Two 1 •en Iota With piAtflc
Wlt8r, Jlrrys Run Road,
e4.BOD.OO•ooh. ........ ,.d ..
104-1711-2383.

August 2. O,.ke r..tdence.
Eoglo Rlctoo Rd. Nloo glrlo
clothing. 1 -"'1.
"
leverll lntiqUIII Md aollecti-

Furnl1hecl- 3 rooms • b8th.
Cleon. No peto. Ref. • dopoolt
roqulrod. UtHitiM fumlohod.
Adulto only. Call 114-44111519.

HouelotL 30"711-1808.

CNoll---··-

bl... V1rlety of m•chen•••·
1~Gienn 8t., 8y .. ou• . Mon- .

AorMII tor .. 110 IONI

:;r2 .:;~ W.dnoodaw. &amp;tot-

t ond 2.
Rt. 7 1oo• from Memort..
Olrdtnt C.metery.
.;.

Cr~b

oflotmont. mlnnt- P ' on '"'-lo" :IOU711-IIH.

s fomlly l"t'd oolo. Aug

Furnl- ... t. 1110. Utlltloo
pofd. lh . . both. Single mofo.
818 Sooond Aw .• Qolftpoflo.
Call44fl.441hfter7 PM.

~

----------~-------- •!

&amp; Vicinity
-~ ·-- ---·· ---· .... ····-- .. ·-·- .. --

41
'

Hom• for

-.,, tmento 2 BR ., untu......._
ll71. pold. 1131 s.
contf. Oolllpoflo. Co11446-4411
oflor7PM.

Rant

·
·
·
0111!1.
1\01......- . No
- · Calllt .. 446-D311.
2111.·'-'•f-o. tiOitotelt.

-.......

4 ...0:114.

pool. -.•· ot
llllftloo
lncfudOd.
, . .Ina
e211 ...
P•
mo. Coli lt..,e?-78110.

LuJCurlout T1r1 Townllou•
.,.,.,_,,, E l - 2 • ..,.. 2
IR .. lui bOOh .,....,._ fiOtltd•
room do!Mit-t, CA., dhl·

Mooty fumloltod .,.. -

I Femly Y..t _.., Union Rottd, "
2mHMbld&lt;of_H_July
21.21.30 ..d Aug 1,2.

•a21
........,. "....,.. •
- d...... . . . - Coif 814-

Yerd lele lur4l1tt1 Addn,
21,21.30; t:OO Ill 1, roln or
-

Orocfouo living. '1 .,d 2 bodroom IIPirtmentt et Vllllge
Menor •nd Rlvertlde Apartmentt In Middleport. From
•t 82. Call 614-992-7787.
EOH.

'

tel. 8omlthlng for everyon..

Hou•lor-oonbouood•2
_
_..._. .... 2 ....111.2

8lg Fomlly Y•d lof• 2t10

- o n Awo.. Mondoy Aug. 1.

-

Yed w .. Roberti Tr•H• P~rk
-from Botlelohoot. Gallf.
poloflor'Y.I'rldtry•dlatun!oy
July 21 end 30.
•

Coflll ......... 70:11.

1 lp,..o . _ houoo on

' ......... s..· .......

Fur1l1h1d •tflolenay-120
-rth,
ttlll. Utili... ...... Coll44~4thflor 7
PM.

Qoll-.

Yordlafo. t10lhlrdlt.. M•on. ,
W.Vo. Toole, o h - olothlna.
,., _ . .. furniture,-·

.......... Yarlil 11111-••·

I

•0on1111
.._'IIU-~~~

u ...oy. 114-

w-.
'""~
,.,mL.
fram

Nfoo 2 IR apt.
• ... fum.•

nM......,nMWh•••a.tlull lit. ... -

r•·

_.. ....... _

.,., ... prhoto - - patio.

-··.....
.
....................
. .....................
--h-._. .-./. ,.

. _ ,.. enoyclopodio •

Auto Parts
Accessories

8 5
' Houn ' ·
J • S FURNITURE
t411 - n ""'·
Chtlt.
drM'It
*M.9B.
Chllt. I pc, IIiwooden
drewer
din-• ...s. et 18.95.

.48.

Oln1tte1, bed1. btddlng.
--.cheot.couch-.chalro.
lompa, cofl-dtobl•. E•ory
dl'f lpecl • . Y.t mile out JerrJ...
cho. 304-171-1410.

79

W.....-. dryer. loth for 1100.
C:::alll14-211-1171.
VIRA"S FURNITURE
enter.lnnwntclnler'l.cornputer
deelt, Wllrdrobea-m•l•wood.
bedroom tuitel, 111 n•w
mllttNIJ--•Ie prloed, refrlgerlt'ors, ,,_.....
• dryera. Much moM. All M
dltocnmt prlcll. Rt. 141 In
ClnMMry·1f• mill on Uncoln
Pike. Open Mon .·Sit., 9-8.
114-441-3t58.
UMd comrnerclel c•pet. Color
tOiet. 12K11 plus. MenyiVIII•
bl• now. Halldly-lnn. OllllpoNt.
Call 114-4411-0080.

-.,_,WIS._..

Kenrno,. •2" OM range, white,
110.00. 304-773-91561 .
Gl- -.p-Ouanw aoffH •bl1
121.00: ane II•• lhetf llterge
t80.00; 18.7 ou II Whirlpool
gold refrto-tor 1200 DO; Ali·
tlque l~slet 2 met~hinQ
chi... e700 00; 2 ho,.,...,.,,wwoodood
bedt, apt111d1. pillow• and
mltahing ltarage tlble unh
11011.00. 304-171-1238.

Otk dln6ng room tutte I ch1irl.
llahlld chine cllblna uc cond.
304-1711-1732.
•

,

v.., beeutlful 1 bedroom furniiMd •p•nment. On Ohio
River . Al•o hou1ekeeplng
fOOII'I· Bv we.tc "' momh. CAR
114-94!1-2521.

63

Antiqu91

8"'' or Boll. R-lne Antlquoo.
1124 E. Main It,..., Pomtroy.
Hour~ : M,T,W 10rl.m. to 8p.m.,
Suncloy t to lp.m . 814-992·
2821.
Two hlrdwaod COrnlt' clbineta
1271.00'ooolo or both 1500.00.
Four 4 ft. h.-dw'ood fire piiCe
mll1•1a. Compl• Olk ltllr·
.... 3(/4-875-1130.

0-

Eloctrlc wloHichoit, now, with
Ml'ftCWible
ll'mt. el ..... lng leg
COUNTRY MOBILE Home .... k. ..,, BotNry
p - . Colt
Rou• 33, North of Po.,..y. It 4-448-1478.
Renttl trell••· Call 11 ..992.
7479.
I wloHiod Irk ... n-. bottary
power.d, pneumetlc thw, reer
Spec• for m.ll tr8Rflf'l. All wheal
hook-upa. Clbfe. Alsoeffldency 147S. drhle. Coli 6t4-448·
roomt. elr tnd clble. Melon.
W.Vo. Coll304-773-1851 ., )
Port•bl• · dlahw•sher· t30 .
1,000 BTU air oonclltlonor-3
SpiiGiou1 mobile holM latt far mo1. old-PIId •211. tlke belt
r..,t. FlmHy Pride Moble Home ofler. Bebv blllinlltl-111.
P•k. Gotlloolll "'"· w. vo.· Strollor- 110. Coli 814-2411304-171-3073.
1237.

VW Compor. 81- flw. Good
condh:lan. lc• box. tebl1. 1lr
condH- 11200. Coli 1149411-2521.

56

Building Supplies

Bulldng Macen. ..
Bloc:k. brick. .Wif' pl..-. windows, lintels. etc. Cla.tde Wlntera, Rio Or~n•. 0. Clll 814241-5t2t .

eoncr.. bloofuo. oil !Wd
or delivery. M•on . . d. Q.elllpo111 Block Co., 123'h Pine St.
Oofllootlo. Ohio. Coli 114-44,.:
27U.

141 Ford Work Mlltllr actor,
high •lowrenge. hydra~ lie lin..
wlih now Sit. buoh loog.l2910.
176 MF Df•el trector, 1•uso.
Ownor will finance. Coli 8t4281-1522.
1000 Ford 018101 lfOctor with
Ford OyntBounce mowing ml·
c:hlrtt, NH HI•. SJ r81ke.
• 3650. Ow nor
ce. Coli
114-281-8122.

wll-

1118 Ford f.-m ne1or 881 &amp;
Grid.- bfede. One ownM" . Cllll
8t4-441-932t.

WEStERN RED CEDAR
• Olennel Ruttlc
tnd. t:-J~~~~~ng
\\tilte ferm lntciOI'I cott ptu1
Gutrln'"d Oualh:y
5%. Sidef1 Equipment. Clll
30~175-742t .
•
CETIDE . 594-3578
INC .. ~1hono·614- 1------------------Fllr Special buv one IIW chain
got •oood FREE. tqoeroent off
chlin IIWs during 011168 and
MMon COunty Ftirs. Sider1
56
Pats for Sale
Equipment 304-876·7421 .

Houaahold

Americlr'l Etldmo pupe. UKC
RegloWed. e1o0 oach. Coli
814-388.0880.

Gentle TennMIM Walker ho,.
with ooddle. Call 6t 4-245·
9t43.

1979 4 'WD Chevy 'h ton
pldl· up. Recentty •tOted bOdy.
n~M paintmlftynew partt. 3150,
4 opd. Au no gr.,. Sh•pl Coli
81 4-441-7848 oft or I PM.

AKC Ponwaniln puppy, tiny
ChOCOlate femtle. 1150. AIIO
for ltud-AIC.C Mlnilture Oachound. Coli 814-441-8927.
Milk Gottt Nubl.n'&amp; Alpine's.
AKC mele Codllf' Spenill. exctllent ltud. Two uptight vecc:um cl•neta. Cll 614-44 ..
41158
4 reg. AKC Mnletu,. SchnltUzer
pups. 2 msl•, 2 ferrel•. Seh
111d pepper In color. A11o hiMI
mg. AKC Mln ..ture SchniUZif
Stud service. Phont 114-99271113

Slem818 k~•· 8wks. old. Sell
or Lll IC p«Mnl. Allo PedlorDutch R1bbll1. 814-192·7201,
Boby Rabbllo. os.oo. Pu,.brlll
R.. 110.00. Ploono 304-8813810
.

----AIg. Slmmentll bJII for ule.
Coiii14-241-91U
4 Hor .. blllck goose nd t•ller.
l!xcaL oond. Call 614-256-8808
1fter I PM.
For•ro.PollodHorofoodeull, t6
monthl old, gentle. Clll liVen·
ingo 814-892-745a

64

Hay

8t Grain

AKC Gar.,.n Shophords. 1
whtte 2 b4eck mlln1nd 1 biiCk
fems11. Shott 1t1rted end
wormlll. 30 ..4111-1528.
AKC oogl-od - f e Boo_,.
Hound 1"!1: yn old. 304-1711513.

57

Musical
lnstNmenta

Kimbell Pl~no, I mot. of d. Excel.
c:oncl. Tille over peyment1. C.ll
114-21 .. 1521.
lndMdulll guMir I•IOnl. b..
olnntf1, llrioul gu..r.... Brunlo
c•cls ~ole. 114-441-01187
Joff W"""IIY lnotructor 11..:
44&amp;-8077. -..mm• openings.

58

FNit
8t Vegetables

Cennlng ton\etou elrtldY
picked, •4.00 e bu.-your contllner. hughmen'l Ferm-7
mil• t. of GIIIIDalla on SR. 7.
Coii814-211-IUI.

....

b-.. '""'

Full ~-with
... rnMt: • • • tounctMion
ttlrtlng- til. "•ollner•
_,lng.eH.
uao.: •c~~.d»
a. b•4oom
ounn. et II·U81. Oeokl.

REO HOT bargolnol Drug deal·
••· c••· boett, pl~n• 18p'd.
Surplu1. Your ere•. Buyers
Oulda. (1) 801-187-1000. Ext.
B-4182.
Credft Cera- 1978 Omni. 1978
Hondl Ctvic. 1978 Pinto, 1974
a.lclo.1980Vot ... t9Bt O,.n.
ed1, 1983 Etc:or1, 1 987
ChtMI'ttll. 1983 Colt. Re•one·
ble ml•. A••on~ble off• or
ben. C.ll 114-441-1775-devt.
441-19110-oWn.

.....901 ....................

1977 Ford LtD. llorno g,.ot.
LDok good. ln,_lor good. Muot
..._ Col181 "' 241•5040 .

*•

....

11000. 1110 Do=iNdo
piclc· up, n ...
ood ... ndltlon. u
· Coli
t4-448-34et.
1179 Monte Clrlo, T·top.
.1600. Colll14-4411-8741 .

l

L1D·2 Wogon. R•
•oln•
41.000
14000.

~
with
m.._ Oooil ooncltlon.

Colll14--1138.
1881 ToyOIIO T-. 8 door
llflb80k On1 OM*. AM-FMCuo. 33 MPO. Elcol. oond.
U800. Cofll14-441-0111 .

bloclt. t-top.
act..,
Vllroo-whoolo. ... IOOflrm.
~.

mM•.

Coflll4-441-7213.

llod Hot ......... Dnrg doof. .
o n . - jifon• topo'd ......
Diu&amp; Your • • • ......_.Guidi:
1--7-to(IOEiit. 1 ·1 -.

e22811444110• .

"The llfllllman uld you'll hi¥B to - r lila
flBII collar wflh t~fOr I week."

191J2 Dodge Aem. 80.000
mil•. olr. 4 opd. topper. Coil
814-367-7475.
1978DetsunKingCab. !speed.
Aunt good Asking U50. C.ll
814-992-7841.
1978 CheYy pick·up. 6 cyl., 3
speed. Se1 .. 713 Shortfoul1h,
Middleport. A1k for Ron or
Hue!. 0700

1;;;::::::;:;::::;:;:;;::;;:=

,_od. 41.000

A... aot....... OH.

1973 bodge pickup with
eemper 1op. Autonwtlc. 1425.
Coil 614-'-41-97 11.

For •leornde1978Ch ... rolet
truck 50 •rl•wtth 14ftcettle
·bad. Edison Mev••· 304-87&amp;188t Olclo Delio 81. 350outo.. 1858.
iNr,
lui - · Oood cond.
11500.
Coli ""'""8710.
73 Vane 8t 4 W.O.
1178 Gr~nlde. I cyl, Excel
oood. 114110 Coli lt4-211- 1988 Ford Alrostlr XL Mini
8359or 446-1797.
V1n. 3. 0l, I cyl., IUtO.·
GYerdrlve 1ntnl. 7 p..s. 8-110
1977CimM"o. V·8.euto. cnns .. Wltftn1y. Deep blue. c.tl814PS, Pl. Call 81~448·1115, 448-9349.
ofter I PM 441-1 244.
1977 K-5 Bluer. 4 WD sutoUBI AMC COnoord SW. 8 cyl .. matte. 11200. Call 814-448IUto. No Nlf. "-'n• good .
11800. Coli 814-3811-8478.
Bne.

1171

~:':'r'--=:!..""":n:Otv ~
()pMt T.Gi to-· Mon toru
••. 11..441-1111. U7 3rd,

1913 Ford pickup. Goodcond.
UOOO. Coll614· 441-464t.

t971 Hoitldoy Rombl• - •
troll • • 22ft. twlnulo. ol-5.
self comsln.t, A... hltoh.
304-171-1314.

81

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unooncltlo,., llfotlmo - ••· Locll ref_..,cat furnlahed. ,
FtM lltltnltal. C•ll coMeat
t -114-237-04el. daw or nlglot.
Aager18e1ement
W-prooflng.
SWEEPER end .ewing mechlne
- l r . PartL and oupplla Plclo
up .,d delivery, Dw .. VIIOLitm
Cle•ner, one helf mil• up f
0ert011• CrHk Rd. Coli 114446-0H&lt;l

r-

Concmo &amp;optic Tonks • 1000
got .. 1100gal. ondJotAortotlon
oyotem. Fsctory trofnod
ohol' RON EVANS ENTER·
PRISES, _....._, Ololo. 1·800.
I"S7·9128.
RON EVANS ENtER PRISI!S·
Sot&gt;tlc ,.nk pum- t80 pol
lood. Co111-800-837-ee28.
·
Plllntlng; Interior • Edrlor.
Free aotimotM. Coil 114-448-

e344.

RON'S Telwltlon Service.
Hou• Cllt on RCA. Clu••r.
0 E. Sp.:laflng In Zenith. C:.ll
304-171-23*8 or 514-441·
24114.
Fetty T~• Trimming, l'tlmp

rem4WII. Clll304-1715-1331

Aot.ry or cllble tool drlllng
Moet...,.llscomplet:edMmedly!
PUmp Ill• 1nd llfYice. 30..
895-3802
Stlrka Lawn1nd Shr~ ServiCI,
304-171-3911 or 304-178·
2903.
RON'S APPLIANCE SERVICE.
houOI call - n g OE. Hot
Point. wethlts, dr¥1f't 1nd
...-.. 304-571-2398.
Nt.ers TrH Trimming end Stump
Remowl. f'" - - · 3048711-7121.
Michool's Raoldontlal A~ Conditioning llld refrtgwatlon. , .
cherv• 1nd rep~lr liMe• 3044511-17~5.

IW,:'d'Jing.In

end out. roofing,
c•pentery. 12.00
P• hr. 304-175-6709.
,

r11

El.-ctrlclan.. Stete CWtlfltd, tr•
ettime:tel, clll Ed Shltnblln
304-871-8459.

82

Plumbing
Heating

8t

1187 Ford Tempo. 17000. Call
814-44 ..8199.

18711 ...... OlnttoY _
...
good oond. King waod l ooll
· - 3 Y'"' old. Coli 114-4462211 .

ofuoodlu-.
NIW- Ww•n t.ooe.• tiD.
"Nate ata 111• up. ...... •
.... Clllll14--1111.

1983 Plymouth Scemp pickup.
A••l gaod condition. With
camper top . Dnlv 40.000 mN•
ueoo. Coli 114-211-8251.

T onsport

19114 -

'

1981 .... plcliup, 8 cyl.'' opd.
lodv In grMt ..._.. nM I pfy
s... boltld rodlata wtth wtolte
apok• whellt. •4-0oo. Cll &amp;143efl.8478.

Shell corn, whMth-..endlti'IIW.
Dally lrom 8:00 till t2 :00,
Morgen WoodiMn Ftrm. At.
1811 Dodg•Ytton
31. 304-937·20t8.
clean.
No rull. Newpickup.
•re•. 4 Vwv
1pd.
t 2000. Ctll 114-.46-1387.
Soyb..,s. Oet:S.IIIIIWendhay,
1978 Ford Roncharo V-8, 3&amp;1
304-675-8081.
1------------ c:ube. Good rt.bb•. air, b'lr.
hitch 1700. 66,000 mi. Coli
114-441-7522.
r
nlion

=====~ ton.
12200.
1178tl,..,
Oodgo280V
.. 'A
new
rurw good,

. ' ... .
.......... ..
..... :
. : :·: .

Trucks for Sale

Tandlm M1c truek 6 Tendlm
low boy tlllller. Good eond .
I 57150 or will •IIIIIIIIP .... C.ll
114-441-8038.

AKC regll18r8d Alrdel1 pupe,
l•ra• brted. 111 thou .and l=,..-.,---.,-~--~--;";.".'n'tt'125·00 """"· 30 "" 71 Auto's For Sale

.........
. .•.

.

1980 Ford Mustang. ltlndlrd
trMtmitslon, $1,200.00. 304876-'!480

72

Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 82
Olive II .. Oolllpoflo.
NIW- I po. _ _ ,_ e:na.
Uvir!ti room Ull-'8911.

'72 f"o¥1 V-8 four speed. good
cond 11,000.00. 304·175·
7~6
_._
• . _ _ _ _ _ __
19815 .ford EXP. aun roof. uc
concl. 46,000mll•. t4,000.00.
304-875-3963.

Hol••n cow- 4 yn, old. good
mlk•. V•v gentle. Veal ealf It
hor oldo. Coli 114-388-97t8
lftytime.

SNAFUtt by Bruce Beanie

61

19e&amp;Oollllof.C811oll•typt tO
CL pkg.IUto trantmisllon. AMFM aweo, rear detoaa•. 304871-19t5.

1984 Mon• C.rlo. V-8 lo
mlleaaa. clll •fter 11:00. 304875-4150.

1881 Plymouth IIPporo. one
owner. wry good oondttlon,.

~

74 Mon• Carlo~ lots of • •
perta. nu• good, *310.00. See
Rt. 2 b•lde Plltrock CJroc.

Con_., Konno!.
CFA Per1ltln •nd Sl~m. . kit·
tens. AKC Chow puppl-. Naw
Hlmofoyon kl-o .. Call 814441-3844 efler 7PM.
Oragonwynd

Liv&amp;ltock

T,.H• 1 :Z.II, totof olectrlc.
Sp.c• tor ent. nil•
*1100. Sltelllte, •100. Tools.
C•nr*ig torNtoes for Hie.
Wltlll' •nw•furrithld. La cult whet-knob. cloth•. fumflure. Ad1m1 F1rm. Letert Fell1. 114Rd. Rt. 1, 304-171-10711.
===.L:2:47:-2:0:8fl::,

C:o::ll::l::14-=24::11-::114:1:7::.

1979 Ch....-tte. 41.000 mil11.
AM·FM ........ '1.000.00
might go lower, ' " 2431
Unooln Aw. Pt, Pit.

63

t918 Ptymoudo ViNiont. PS.. •
auto.12.800mH• •Hoo. Call
114-211-1117.

•'*·

1975 Monti C1rlo, txe cond,
AM-FMCMIIt18, 87,000ml-.
•1.soo.oo. 3o4-n:~-1214.

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming. All brnda ... AII
Jtyl•. lemt Pet Food Desler.
Julio Webb Plo. 114-448·0231 .

C.nnlng tomltOII for •le. t3
buohol. you plclc. Bob Morris.
Loaort Falls. Olllo. 114-247·
3421 .

Mt:rcildlliiiSI~

Motors Homes

lit Camp. .

Stop • Check out our lrMntory
of quoltty fumhtn • c•pet for
low prlceo. I pc. MIH•
e399, 8 pc. oolc clneno-1221.
out loopo•ptt .-rtlnget 11.915
e yd .. COmmlrci .. CMpet-13.81
a yd • ...,.gelelecttonafroom.remnenet. No Job too big or
omall. Financing • lnoallatlon
tvelllble. Mollohln Furniture,
Uppor R,..r Rd .. 446-7444.

2 bedroom APts. for rent.
Cor-d. Nice •ttlng. Laoud'Y
flldlftl• avelltlble. C.ll 8149 92·3711. EOH

'

····· ··pt·Pfeaiant... ····

Yord laf•l'rl. • lot.·July 28 •
30. t 0 AM-4 PM. meno.
·bod,
· •110.
o42
hUnooln
l - ci-a.
baby
St.

........,omerov·...-.....

New complet1ly furnished
mabtle hon. In
city. Adults onty. P1rldng. Call
., 4-441-0338.
IIPirtmlnt •

I1WII• hoofo.up, _,.. woiL ploy
1p1ce for children. •7o .,...
month. Coiii14-U~5185

te~e

Apartment
for Rent

.,p;, furris- W•ltor-Dryar
hoak-up. ww carpet. ntwly
poln•ct. dod&lt;.
From 1171.
R...-v. Inc. Apto. Coli 304171-1104, or I 75-8381 or
875-7738.

Lot for rent In Portland wtth

8t

75 2

Now accepting 1ppiiC1tlons for
2 bedroom .,.,.....,.,._ fully 54 M iac. Merchandise
'*~ applon-. _ . , ond
trlilh plcllupt provided Mtlntl· Wheelch.We-nwt or ulld. 3
nenae frH llvtng clo• to ~op- whMIICI electric IC0011t'l. C.ll
plng, b1nb end sohool1. For Rogoro Mabllty oollect. 1-814moNinformallonclll 304-882· 870-9111 . •
3711. E.O.H.
Towmotar lorllllft, engin• holat.
Downtcr.Nn 1 bedroom IPI. polloi )oclo • L·ooof•. Offl ..
furnlthld. c•pilted, AC, 1~tts d................ ·-lat.
only, no "''· call efter 4:00. time clock, I ton Am1111 hMt
304-875-3788
pump • fumoct. Coli 8t4-4462319.
45 Furnished Rooms Muat Sell- 14 kim gbld nu1111•
t.aolot. Ro-ly .......toed for
Futnllhed room-911 Second t1400. Firat perton wtlh tiOO
Avo.. Oofllpolla. 1121 a mo.
h. Coli 114-367.05811
Utllftl-. ~lei. Single male. Sh•e -7:30PM.
both. Coli 441·4(18oftor 7 PM.
Olboon orpriglotlr-. 1leu ft.
Room~ for •nt·Wil· «month. GNit INpl. *300. Clll 114SIIortlng at $120 o mo Gallla 441-1503.
Ho..f.lt4-441-9580.
----------1919 142 XL Fronltlln Sklttor.
Furnlthld rooms In aoulnry good condHion. O·IC·Pronti ..
honw with utilities ,-I d. edultL kledll", good condition on 1985
• 300.00 month. 304·575· Chov. truck. 1888 OMC T.,_
dom truck. f8ir oondhlon. ntw
714 1 wenlngt.
log bu.... For morelntormltlon
c• 114-256-1312 or 2161281.
46 Space for Rent

2 BA. 11pts. I cla.et:e, kttchen-

3IS Lots lit Acraaga

76

U,rlgloC . . . __ 13.3 oublc ft.
Almond co lot', lMs th1n 1 yeer
odl. Excell.-t condltton. 1200.
814-892-71Sfl.

2 BA.· Approx. 2 mi. from
Gallipolio. •uo a mo. 110o
clap. Unfurnished w..., ,.lei
C811 114-448-3888 01 4454491
•

3 _.,... 11011• for,.,. In
..,.. cu •. 114-992·71891:00.

1~13t.

19711 Flblrform t I II boiL
lnboord 140 hp - .........
304-871-22t4.

AfrcandttlonerTfor •le. 10.000
BTU. Coli 114-892-3883.

fumist.d 11p11rtment,
utlitJ. pel d. ntferenc:•. Phont
304-IB2·21H.

44

t 8771mperiof 1~ -haal t711. t 40
hp lnbowd outbolld. Wllk thru
wtndlhleld. wry good oond,
• 4,800.00. 304-875-3523.

14 fl. Lon• Star Bo.t. 21 HP
motor 1nd trail•. 400 c.c.
rnolore'lcla Uh . -. 1200
mil•. 3 grwe plot tin Grwei Hill
Comooorv. Coli 814-892-2385.

Nlca2 bedroom, furnilhed ~
bedroomt unfumlahed. Lg, rd.
Kanouga. Coll8t4-441·?4 3.

Fo••••

10 I prhlte HrW with . .Y
•c-•,...Gallipolilferry.ntw
3 -oom homo. wor-p. 2
ut• lot• with wellt for nlhn
or bulclng, •70.000.00. 304-

.,~,,.7019 .

APARTMENTS. mobile homtl,
hou•1. Pt. Pl .... ntendGIIII~Kt­
llo. 8t4-44&amp;-e22t .

Furnishecl2 BR. C., cebll. Mter
•ewaoe peld.
Mobfle
Home Park. Call 114-4411802.

'2.7 1c:re f•rn. 4 ml down rtwer.
12 •~ mlldoWI. bal. woods.
......1 Wltlr. Hlrd top tOld.
Behoof, alo., maH rt. Oood lofdg
lolL Coli 814-4411-2101.

t9711Chockrno•loll11ft.and
1978 MerGiry mOtor. 111 HP.
Clll 814-892-3817.

Lux-Aire furMCe wh:h 3 tan 1ir
condttton./ heel pump. 4 yrt.
old. Porfeo:t oond. 1800. Coli

F•nlahecl 2 BR. mobile hame,
AC. Loc ...d ttK aKonEeltern
Aw Dop &amp; Ref. ooqulred. Coli
814-251-1 187.

Nice 2 SR. trill• for tent. C.ll
814-379-2409,1t'no•n 1..wrclll
441-8721.

"'-·

TwoF•mltyY..cl s.t•1 mH1out

Hau• COrMrted ln10 1 6 2 8R
ipl:rtmtntl C.n be rented 1
hou• or sep.... iplrtmartt.
Cell 814-448-7021.

li:;;;;;;:;;;;:::;;-;:;:;:;;::;::::;;~Bo~o~ch~S:t~f'8M, Middleport. Ohio,

1974 Ot1mpion 14•1&amp; 1 total
8lectric, undtrplr,nlng, Furnflhld Of unfurnltt.d. Reldv to
mow.. ti,IOO.OO. 304-15'712383.

Seturdoy, July 30-Moncloy, AuguM 1. Crew Ad., behind F1ir
Oroundl. Antlbue rou..t oak
tllbl., 4 chlire. old••mpt.gr...,
conning lOll. cheot. bobr bod.
•h&lt;hwr doora. night ltlnd. Dloturw. costume jMelry, bed
sprad. WDmllt-boyt dothlng,
thoel, toya, lite.

Apartments •nd hou••· Call
304-87&amp;-5104.

Newly redecomed epertn.nU
twlllble. Utlllll• peh:L *2211
per month, deposit ~~quhd. Clll
8 14-192·5724 ottwr 1:00 or
Two Bedroom hou•. hllf mile •992·1111.
out Jericho Roed. cell304-8752 be-m opto. Mlddl..,..
6483.
1115-1181.por month. 2 ond 4
3311 Franklin Av.nta, aal bedroom hou•t In Porrwroy
. .e. t200. •221 per month. All
304-171-1887. '
pertt, 'hi rnilhed. R•....,.ce requl,.d. Doy 814-192·2381 evenings 814-992·8723.
42 Mobile Hom11
for Rant

1 Ill tertii ..1Ctrlc.2 bldroom1.
1'1.1 bit... exc cond. Gruuer
Lin•. Ctmp Conley. Point

.......GiiHij)OTis ..........
&amp; Vicinity

Furnl1hed UPI'tllrs 3 room 1P1 .
utllhltl paid, 9• Locuet. 1210
per month. 175 diOQiit C.ll
814-448-1340 or 441-3870.

1\No room cot•o• furNihlld.
utllt._ peld, 118 week. lingle
pen.on. c .. l 304.-871-3100 or
175-11101.

llun P•k. Doy 114-742-22t1.
night 114-11?-3222.

S1c:rlfloa. 2 88. home, 1 1cre. 2
ml• pas•cfl VInton School.
Campi~ romodofod. wirmt. II •· wlndowa. blo_,.
tn lnll
n. plum bing. kltcll en
Clblnetl, c•pet throughtout.
drlp••thlera. AIIOMihlr/d·
.,.r, ...,., rofrlg. Oarclon Of&gt;OI. ,
U3,000. Caltet4-386-8482or
311-8814 til10 PM.

OUTSIDE BALES REP .
WANtEO
Wontlll for the A-L Ooflla,
Melli county ,,... AeDII01nt
mull hiMI pNVioutoutlldeiiiM
•l*lonoo. fnlov 10% minImum conmlalon on a low
tlcklt lttm. Everyane il 1

Furnl1hed efflc1ncv lpt.·3
roomt &amp; blth C.rptt throughout. Prlwte &amp; quiet. ~nal•
wortdng """'"'only. Coli 8f4441-4107or 41-2802.

18801oy-t4•70wlth7•2t

For 1•1• or Le. .commerctal
Bullclng tloitlble for eny type of
bulln-. Off etreet partdng.
Fori'MI'ty Birr' I Sui* Mlr•t.
Third • VIne. (Jalllpolo, Ohio.
Colllt4-4411-1030.

•a780.

1-----------------AVON • All er. .. C.ll M1r.,n
w.- 304-182-2145.

Rio Qrln. . 4 bedroom, •lr
co ndltloned, cerpeted. dis._.._,I.,SIIIkhctten. RefwenDopooft. Coli 114-4419430, -lnp.

expando. 3 IR .. 2 fuN baths,

114-992·5722 or lt4-9U332S.

Nted HorMt Kd!WH Trimmed?
Coil Joff. 114-441-7307.

PICKENS
FURNITURE

Furnish•hpt. New Ne•HMC.
1 IR . 1211. Utllltloo oolcl Coli
441-4411aft00'7 PM.

Mobile Homee
for Sale

1711. flblrgl-bMoboot.21,..

well .. Mlgnlm Trollng Motor.
115 HP motor. Plus -~···

Vlllev Furnttul'l

Apartmant
for Rent

COn...., In 2 bedloom cottlge
In GlllipoU1, t210 per month
pius utMitl•. Call 814-441t890.
~

3 Dlechams, 2 baht. ful
flrHIIMtd .._ment, nMfumtc•
• cennl 1lr, , . .,., lenctd
,_rd. •12.000.00. 2'414 Mt.
V.nan AlA .• Pt. Pl. . .nt, clll
304-171-1774.

FlllilllCiill

Real

Homes for Rant

3 -oom homo, 1V. botho.
c.peted. centrllllir end hel't,
IOOI'Ied Point Pl...-at, 304875-2702.

Boats and
Motors for Sale

N- and uood fumhu .. .,d
op~lconcn . Coli 814-448·

r;;=;;::::::=::;=:;:;::-r.;:::=:.;:==:::;:==:14
44
41

Spldout 3 bedroom, 2 nory
home on .St. RT. 31 Lot 1 of
do.-t: ... ce.cenl1'811ir.do•to
-pSchooto. 114-892·1313.

Hou• k...,.,heve relisblerlller-•
eno. upon n.qwet 304-&amp;753828.

21

t

ffi

•brllttlng In my horMFIIIrocll
••· experienced Md re•on~· ·
bl1 rlfel, avaM lble lnY ~ Clll
oft• 4:00PM, 304-1711-427,11.

'

"Were not elopmg·. We're
sneaking in to Hve with her

31orgo-- .,..ch...,.._ 2
living room~, dining raam,l1r~
kltDhen. O• hut, oent_. elr, 2
Clr' ltlachtd 08fal&amp; 28x34
aeperlte g1r1ge. 18x38 Inndloot, IPPfOX· 2 acno.
It 742·2211, nlghtl14I I ·3222.

Pl. . . Hftd 1 typld r11um1 to
441 Oennt HartlnaorP•"-•·

HIRINOII
Gowrnmlftt Jobl - your .....
et8,ooo.eea.ooo. eo11 cso21
8311-1203.

WANtED: FuiHime U-ood

FOUND: 1-8wk. oldmolokltt.,.
White with o111nge tab¥ m•klnp. ,,.. toi.OOd homo. Coli
114-441-135
'

or
Veterans Memorialllos1Dilal
. Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

GENERAL CONTRACTORS
References
1 1221 1 mo.

llillll'l'llllllll

I Wlllbebyoitln my homo. 2 ...11

Big new 3 IR . hot"'W, bult on
vourlfttmolv. 118,994.up. Call
11 .. 8811-7311.

Ph•m~cy .

7-5·'11·1 - · d.

986·4141

forlf'lt;

Oullto
C.sh pillet
or,_
quits. Appllqul. -.f. eny
condition. c.ll 11 112-1117.

.,proc~..d for

c.,.,.....,,

Odd job•pelntlng,
worSt. Ole. Coli 114-892· 7838.

75

Wright

0322.

'"'do•- parents."

YIFd c••· brulh auttlna. light
hading. liOrM tree trimmfngMd
.emoo.el. •1 Sleek 114-9122288 ..

•lllfl••

wh•• our

2 - - homo. In Aodno.
1Mgo IOC on dood .,d St. To.. l
aloctrtc on e19 month
Oua.
Ctly - Ifill.· gaod
llllllfiiQ8
n .. ghborhood.
lnd CIIJII.
.-lklng dlo•n•to oo:hoofo ond
b u - . Ao•onoblo ortoe. Will
Lond CO-co with 10 per coni
do-. Colll14-423-8257ofl•
4 p.m. for ll)polntment. If no
ln1MrCIII814-M9-2141.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry

furn•ca-100.000 BTU. Cell
114-441-tlle.

10 Dlv• •me • c:llh with
IPDI"(Wed credtt. 3 Mil• out
luliW'IIIe Rd. Open •m 10 Spm
Mon. lhru let. Plo. 814-441-

·7·.&amp;.9

W•W

Cll'l*. fln•hld aerao.. concr•te drlv•w•y. A1klng
$411,700. or boot off•. 114182·7111.

lobrotttlng In my homo· Aa•
3-1. Country Air &amp;t•t••·
Oeorgo' o C,... Ad, Call It 4441-0804.

Ourbuoyg- dentldryoffloo
It •lnhlng for I bright. ..,.,_
getlc .-.on wfth chllireicle
or th1 dllire to ...,n
·
0 ...
peoe. W. offll"will
1 •10¥
cli..englna
oriented envir__.t

-~ 1Y, b•h. flrepiiC&amp;

II. 1 101 136, VIRtOII

Follow

CHESTER, OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING 8t REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

Junkeuto't. Top lll'ice peln. Cell
6'4-992·1848 aft• I p.m.

Cerpenw work. remodeling.
roollng. .... _
.,.., ..,N&lt;Ing.
Colllt4-446-1tt2.

33

Water Pills

MARCUM CONTRACTING

992-6191

AI ..., Article IX, Trtnlfert end
PoltinO.
of
tho
Aslr•..bM-.n the MLTA Md the
lo.d of Eduootlol\ the Melgo
lDoof lohool Olot~co II pooling
the tono;:,:Y.,wceney for Its
._...
g otoff: Moth
TooOh• II Meigo High School

v.c.. ol•.•ectlon 8.

- · f o r ... by-=..,...
cu•. Ohio. 'Allert, 3 b...oomt.
LA. I'll, kltchon with clnlng

SMITH'S SEAMLESS
GunER &amp;
CONSTRUCTION

COntrol your Wetglrt-T ake ''New
ShiiiUt Diet Plen" Md E-Yep

to Sell!"

Joan Tru11oll .... 949-261&gt;0
Dollie Turner ... 992-5692
Tracy Riffle ..... 949-2&amp;07,
Jo H~l... ............ . .S-44611

op"""""""

Rooting •

•d-01. Call

.,1_

2 or 3

nabl1 off• .-fu•d. PhiDM 814882-3721

An nuu nce 111 en ts

Need Your Property

HENRY E. CLELAND

Junk Mlto's wfth or wtthout
motOfl, Cell 11,..912-I.U.I.

type~.

roof ropofr. fNe

,.,_oy.

bedroom~, cwpeted. No "'"~

7-13-'88-1 mo. 4

homes to sell. Call lodiY.
'We

pN--

108 Sto,. St..

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

6U-7ot2-2235

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
~ Licensed Clinical Au~iologist
:z: (614} 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104
z 417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
- Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
,

WII'Dd: Pull-tim• 1mpla,mlnt
In your own ,_..,. • • Home
• ..._ with Btoek.,.
Oommurtlty . . . . . .. We provide . ..,Y plu1 benlfltt In d I
dilly room end·"-d r8tl. You
prowlde e holM, .,...... Md
frlondohlp In 0 fomily ........
plwe, Roq'*•.ablllly to •ach
- g oltllla .,d •
cammltment tD the growth ud
dMiopm1nt of 1n lndhridull
wtth ...,. ,......, ,..rdldon.
Coot•otlyhllo0oyet446-7108
oft• 1:00pm. Appl_,, muot
....... In Melp Countv. l!quol
om.....,.,.

Do

OWNEI: loffroy Soolt.

Listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Salas &amp; Senrio~
C!J Hearing Evaluations For All A&amp;es

" LISTINGS NEEDED"
We have buyers for Meias

2nd. Aw. MlckiiP&lt;III. Oh. lt._:
992-3471.

2 BR. homo .., . . _ now
plumbing. wiring, c1blnet1,
blllh, Thtrmo~M•• windows.
vinyl sklng. 41 Vine lt. CaU
It 4-4411-UOI.

12

2 · 1~· ae. un

RACINE
GUN SHOP

rinq.,J.welry, tt_.ln9 ....... old
coint. l•ge ourNncy. Top price~ . Ed Burkftl S.rber Shop,

Wllnted to

114-216-1111.

MiddiiP(III. 0 '

cln'

18

H..,_

••

loaallful Holoontb Hill odd~
·t - lot. 3 BR.. Co. Coli
It 4-441-0338.

RE-TRAIN NOIM
IOUTHEAStERN IUIINESS
COIUOE, S29 J a - . Plh.
Ohio ,_..,....... a .... D..d.
line Aug. 19. Coli 441-4117.
.... No. 16-11·1011811.

Plllntlng ..1

Mddetl... Ff'MtNIInlng. Commllelon up to 21 ..,cent.
h.,._• .w1r*. no
dlllvwlnt • ooRICitlng. no hlndllna or - - Oh~~Ge- o..r
IOOdy..,.tc-softQ¥Lglfto.
hoJM decor Md OwlltmM
decor. For "• Cltelog c..
..,,_ t-11~227-15 to.

W.-cl to luy-Mo..e Horn-.
Colll14·448-0171.

•Seamte11 Guner
•Roofing
•Vinyl Siding
•Roofing
•Home Roofing
•Wood Crefta
FilE £STIMAT£S

1-3-'16-lfc

lllB/ 11n

-dyttomePootloohol-

. . . lnvotwment lnd tlltnt.

Wtnlld to Buy Stan
timber
• pulp wood. Coif I 4-317·
7519.

Schools

lnstru ctlon

ln11 1ft tHI • • fDr "*'II.,

ll / 2f Q.IIc

F1r111 Equlp111ut
P1rts &amp; Serv lu

992·17l4

ICIIah., Roclnoorcai1114-84JI.
2324.

....-

1188 R o - Bootlonal homo.
Zldl. 31A.. comrol olr. Mow
.. your lot Cllll14-441-8194
•fi•IPM.

Merchandise

Qlbeon AlrConcll'oner- ~d 10
dr,'t·I,OOO ITU. U•d lux-Air

Sof• .nd chlirs priced from
t311 to •eaa. T•bl• •schnd
up to 1121. HldH·- 1390
to t591. flecllnera 1221 to
0371. Lomps 128 to ., 25.
Din.- e10tlllduptot48tli.
Wocxl t11bl1 w-1 ctl*a t281 to
1191. Oook etOO up oo 1371.
Hutch• f400 1nd Up. Bunk
b.. complete W•mlttrHIII
1298onduptoe391. lobrt110. M.nnt ... orbox_tprlngs
ful or twin M8. firm 171. Md
188. OuMn 1225. King
t350. 4 clf.w.r chllt 111. Gun
cMinets e gun. lab¥ mlttre.IH
•~s • 148. Bod fnrn• 120
190 • King hm1 150. Good
telectton crt bedroom tultlll,
mlllll 011bln .... hNdbDerds t30
tnd up to 1115.

home lndud• ec:n-ue. C.U

•mo kltt:htn

let us convert I hut old Maw •
&amp; llidos owor to oaoy VHS.
CAll AMY CAITII
or BOB'S RECTIONICS
446-7390

U. 5. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, DHIO
II 14-11112-3821

le1w•n 9 o.m.-6 p.m.

Pomeroy Ohio

lmm MOVIES &amp; SliDES lo
VHS TAPE

SALES &amp; SERVICE

RllJDIN(I PHONE

ond ,.,

Buying furniture •d •r,Nonby tho pleco or by tho ot. Folr
ptl-. Coli 114-441-3111.

6·17-tfc

BOGGS

WANTED

POMEROY - Frame house
wrth upper &amp; lower one bed·
room apartments Good rental
Investment! $ll0.00/mo. in
rome potentia. ASKING
$14,500.00.

Happy Ads

"DOC" VAUGHN
Certified Licensed Shop

614-742-2617

124,

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Tra•tlllllllu
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

CALL 992-6756

1~_41 992-6550

16141

Rt.

Repairs
N lASE Certified Mechanic

We Honor MC/Dist/Yisa
4-18-' 88 Ifn

We Carry Fishing Suppli

SYRACUSE- If aneat home
w~h a mce lol IS whal you are
looking for, lhis 1s I' 3 bed·
rooms, electric he;t, I car gar·
age, rear deck, all lhe comforts of hom ~ $35,900 00

Domestic Vehicles
A/ C Service

8 7 Financing on Yardman
Serv1ce on All Makes

CHESTER 248 - Choose
the s ~e you like' I acre lots
Wtlh 150' road frontage.
Many s1tes avatl able- TPC
water avatlable and elec.
available ONLY $5,000.00
ea.

Roger Hysell
Garage

OHIO
Most Foreign and

YARDMAN &amp; ECHO

Wanted To Buy

Buyinv d.ty gald. ,,...,_ coins,

1-13-llc

SYRACUSE.

D1111l1r for

9

PAT HILL FORD

992-6611

All Major &amp; Minor

w.._

c.... opportuMy '" • ,....,

Middleport. Ohio

101

304-77~1715.

mo-. Coli IM'Y LNofy-1143811-1303.

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil ond rod
out radiators. W1 also
repair Gas Tanks.

Jacobsen

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

f•m. liQuid•

Junk C.s with or without

Weed Eater
Homelite

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

E-.. lfttklul.
lion_..._

hold fumlohlng. -lin Wodom-.114-2411-5152.

Aufhorizool Serwi&lt;e
&amp; Pari&amp;
Briggs &amp; Stratton
Tecumseh

1850

color. religion. national Origin, handicap, sex. educa-

Alck Pawson Auctla,_, IJ.
conOid Ol!lo ond WginiL

Wlnt ta buy; Used tumltu• 1nd
antiqun. Will buy •tire hou--

SMALL E,NGINE
REPAIR

'25.00 Perm
For 121 00
Cut &amp; blow Dry

providing

' Public Sale
8t Auction

ComploOo hou-ldo of fumi'"" • ent5qUH. Allo wood •
call heltere. Swaln•s F•nllure
• Auction. Third • 01 .....
114-441-3158.
•

992-6215 or 992-7314

J.ll·lfn

8

TOP CASH pold for ' 8 3 and ,...,... UMd c... 8mtth
luldl-Pontloc. 1911 Ent. .
Aw .. Clollipollo. Coli 114-4462212.

- Concrete work
~ •
- Plumbing and etec:lric.l

NO SUNDAY CALLS

LOITm•IW- Md.,. DoiJir.
- · Pt. Pit • • • - d ...
Rolli, chRd'o pot. H polcoli 304-115-1212.

W.povcMhforlota_cl_
u.cl 0.1.
Jim PAwk Cttw.·OI*Inc.
BHI Oene John...,
114-441-3172

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Hfree Estimates' '

- ..
OM
odllllonol Ol'jflot wllo 11 - g
for moN th.n just 1nother job,
Coli T- .. lfot-4411-1110 for
d11811o.
hofp - - in&lt;IW• 11 Kounlr(

Painting

TERMS OF SALE: Cash
on delivery of deed.
Howard E. Frank.
Sheriff of Meiga County
171 29; {8) 6, 12. 3tc

to

LOIT: C h - k In o1o1n1ty of
Vfnton. Would epprecle1e
.,...,. flnclna M to coli 114-

Bust· ness .
L.
servi· ces NEWROOFING
REPAIR
Howard

Acr-lh•oofon io -lng

lfofr .........

6 Lost and Found

11-:=---~-----jr:========:::;rl

lue.

committed

or obwtthin
ahould
contact the EEO Officer at
the Senior Citizen Center. P .
0 . Box 722, Pomeroy. Ohio
46769 .
17} 29, 1tc

16

54 Misc.

Householcl Goods
LAYNE'S FURNITURE

114-112·1141 .
Nood-... .....
oontab...,..,..,rn...,lng
Nonmber. Gelllpolla •rea.
Man.-1'11. Coli 114-441-8143
1ft• I PM.

The Daily Sentinel--Page 9

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

1117 . . . . . . I oyl., •oto.
1111 ..,.... .. Dodtlo
NOD. Coil 11 .. H2·
7t03.

nooo.
a._,

t98t Ford Bronco. Auto .. 302

Y· B. VII"( good cortd. 13995.

CAIITER'S PLUM81NO
ANDi!EATINO
COr. Fourth and Pine
Gslltootl1. Ohio
PhoM 114-448-3888 or 814.
448· 4477

83

Trenching 11rvice. wlter, o•
tnd electric llnet buried, 304-

l -7~~;:1:8:3~9-~~~;:::::
184

t919 Jeop c.-. Hordtop. 380
engine. Coil 514-992·72t4 or
814-992·3224.

74 Motor-clas
1----------~~·------

.,,...,1

(

11ee
Intruder 700.
Excel. cond. wtlh &amp;1Ctnl. U300.
Coli 114-4,1-3083.

•

t977 Kowo. .l KZ400. U21.
Cofll14-441-9711.
1178 CXIOO cuetom

wet•

cooled. 11.000 mM-.1100.00.

3114-4711-22"11112 lfonclo Cuotom CIIOO.
lheft drive, ea.,.., 17,000
rnlel. for Ill• or tMde. JD4Ill·ll3114.

76

lloats and 1
Moton for Slla

10 HP

mot..-.

11 ft.,

Electrical

8t

c.tl 814-241-11117.

19711 """ equipped lor fiohlna.
hunting. cemplng. New brek-.
paint job, 318 motor, ha.t•&amp;
1700. lt~982-1881 .

Excavating

Refrigeration

Anidential or ca rnmercill wirIng. New' •rvlce or NPIIrt.
Uc«t•d electriciln. &amp;t~
free. Ridenour Electrical, 304671-t786.

85

Gen~ral Hauling

Oflt1rd Wst• Servl011: Paola.
Cla..,ns. Weill. DttMry Anytime. Coli It 4-441-7404-No '
au ndav c•U•.

lwl"'"""'

J • J W11ter l•vtce.
poole. cls.,.ns. .-Us. Ph . 114-

2411-1285
R • R w...r Servlco. Poolo. ;
cltternt. wellt . tmmedlete • ~
t,OOOor2,000gol-doltwory.•
Colt 30"75-1370
'

Pall ftUP', Jr. W_, s.rvtc•.
Pooll. ci••rns. Willie. Call 1144..,3171 .
Wett•non'• W1ter tteullng,
,......... e ................. ..

2.000 goff ... d -....... .
poofL wol. 110. • • 104-1782111 .

n..,

-.ry. a»odooncl. Tr1H•n.,

- · Caill14-441"4tto.
1111 "'""' ••u bo-. es HP
E - - · tft. trim. 2·1
goi.WOito.2-..-.n-

irofllntl- - llsoool.
· - oortd.
.......
'now
Coli.
onytlm• 114-31..8711.

87

UphollteiY

lri--U-'llto-·:
''

Mo ...... Upfllols• . . . . . . .

In a.nt11101e ullltal
.... Coli
304·171-4114 tor ,, . .

--r

•

�-

••
•
~ljj)B

Farmers ... ~

,--Local news briefs.. ,_.,
Continued !rom page 1
not required to attend the ClvU War Memorial Ball which will be
held Saturday night at Southern High School, Keith Ashley,
. chairman, reports.

The Meigs County Board of Elections Otnce, Mechanic St.,
Pomeroy, will be open from 9 a.m. to 12 noon Saturday for the
convenience of absentee voters !or the upcoming special
election Tuesday. The special election Includes a no cost bond
ISsue In the Meigs Local School District and an additional tax
levy In the Alexander School Dis trlct which Involves a part of
Columbia Township.
·

School funds distributed

MaiTiage licenses
· issued in Meigs

Meigs County's three local school districts received
$573,986.50 In !he July distribution of State School Foundation
subsidy payments.
Amounts received by each district, after deductions lor
retirement, Include Eastern Local, $125,826.63; Meigs Local,
$319,263.46, and Southern Local, $128,894.41. In addition, the
Meigs County Board of Education received a direct allotment of
$31,068.42.
.
1

Tuberculin skin tests

Marriage licenses have been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Wilbur Wesley Fetty,19,
Racine, and .Kimberly Jo Cogar,
18, Racine; Donald Ryan Hall,
21, Lancaster, and Paula Kay
Gilkey, 18, Middleport; Timothy
Dale Lawrence, 21, P,omeroy,
and Dena Michelle Manley, 18,
Pomeray; Jason Allen Riggs, 19,
Rutland, and Lois Gall Davidson,
18, Middleport; Gary Lamar
Grube, 18, Scottown, and Anna
Marie Mohler, 19, Middleport;
Allen Lee King II, 22, Middleport,
and JaniS Elizabeth Carnahan,
26, Racine; Ronald Lynn Skeen,
23 Kenna W.Va.' and Shawna
Marie Davies 18 Kenna ' W.Va .,·
Clyde Vernon Henderson, 70,
Pomeroy, and Margaret LouiSe
McDaniel, 53, Pomeroy.

w be given

Joan Tewksbary, R.N., Meigs County Tuberculosis Nurse,
will be giving tubercuUn skin tests to all Metgs Local School
District employees who have not yet received their tests for the
1988-89 school year.
These tests will be given Monday and Tuesday at the
tuberculosis office In the Meigs Multi-Purpose Building,
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. Those who
are unable to report during these times should call the
tuberculosis office to arrange for another time schedule.
Also the tests are open to anyone who will be working with a
food service at the Meigs County Fair. There Is nochargefor the ·
test and residents needing It are encouraged to make
arrangements to be tested oil the designated dates.

:Administration...
••

bushels oi corn a month can be
sold and that the program will
end In September 1989. Sen. Steve
Symms, R· Idaho, at one point ·
· asked If the plan would put the
. government Into competition
: with farmers selling corn.
• Both chambers would allow
: drougllt·hlt farmers to keep their
' advance crop subsidy payments
and wo\lld encourage farmers to
plant more soybeans and oats
next year, although with different rules. The bills also encour. age tenders to exercise forebear-

I

Denzel Cleland

'

Denzel M. !Billy) Cleland, 94,
died Thursday at Ills home on
State Route 248 In Chester
following a brief Illness.

...

Stocks
•
Dally stock prices
(All ofll: 8G a.m.)
Br;:rce Bfd Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis 6 Loewl
Am Electric Power .............. 28
AT&amp;T .... ............................. 26%
· Ashland 011 ........................37%
Bob Evans ........................... 17
Charming Shoppes .............. 13%
City Holding Co ................... 34
Federal Mogul. .................. .. 42
Goodyear T&amp;R .................... 61
Heck's Inc .................... , ...... 1'%
Key Centurion ....................37J.fz
Lands' End ....................... ..28%
Limited Inc ......................... 22
Multimedia Inc ...................72l.fz
Rax Restaurants ..... ............. 4Y.
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 11 l.fz
Shoney's Inc ....................... ll'%
Wendy's Intl.. ............. ......... 5')j,
Worthlrigton Ind ................. 231){,

1

Mr. Cleland was a crane
operator for 35 years at the
Parkersburg Rig and Reel. He
was a lifelong resident of Chester
• and was the oldest resident In
Chester for many years.
He was born Oct. 9, 1893 In
Chester, a son of the tate David
and Hannah Orr Cleland .
Surviving are a daughter and
son-In-law, Clarice and Clayton
Allen, Chester; a grandson and
granddaughter-In-law, Dr. Billy
Robert and Karen Allen, Westerville; two great-grandchildren,
Robert and Katherine Allen,
Westerville; a nephew, John
Benson, Columbus, and a niece,
Doris Davis, Tuppers Plains.
Besides lils parents, he was
preceded In death by his wife,
Mabel Will Cleland In 1972, whom
he married In 1915; four brothers, Max, Vern, Wayne and
Darrell Cleland, and three sisters, Ella Kimes, Cora Benson
and Lelah McLane.

'
Graveside services will be held
at 3: 30 p.m. Sunday at the
Chester Cemetery with the Rev.
Don Archer ofllclatlng. Friends
may call at the Ewing Funeral
home anytime alter 2 p.m.
Saturday.

Retired teacher Edith clllian
Lambert Forrest, 85, Qf Route 1,
Middleport, who died Sunday at
Holzer Medical Center, was a
member of the Bradford Church
of Christ, not the Bradbury
Church of Christ. Services lor
Mrs. Forrest were held Wednesday at Rawling-Coats-Blower
Funeral Home. Burial was In
Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire.

Hospital

"The heat wave Is being entire state a disaster area
bro111ht on by a bubble of hOt air because of the drought, despite
that extends well Into the almos- ·recent rains that have mitigated
phere and Is forecast to settle Into some crop damage.
And MIDDeSOta Gov. Rudy
the middle Mississippi Valley
over the next couple ol days, j' Perpich ~mmended that the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
fo·recasters said.
"It's certainly going to put release water from Lake Wlnnl·
some stiess on (crops and blgoshlsh, a northern reservoir.
Uves tock} again," said Raymond
Lottery numbers
Saxby, Columbia County agrlcul·
ture agent In Portage, · Wis.
CLEVELAND (UPI} - Thurs''We'll probably S!!e reducing day's winning Ohio Lottery
pollination on com and wet corn.
numbers:
Therefore, It eventually wut
Dally Number _
reduce some yields."
525.
Saxby said livestock also will
Ticket sales totaled $1,146,713,
be hurt by the high with a payoff due of $502,802.
temperatures.
PICK-4
Meanwhile, two Midwest gov2334.
ernors moved to combat the
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
return of dry, hot weather.
$189,480, with a payoff due of
Michigan Gov. James Blan- $85,271.
'
chard asked Agriculture SecrePICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
tary Richard Lyng to declare his $4,272. PICK -4 $1 box bet pays
$356.
:

Weather
Sou tb Central Ohio
Tonight: Clear, withalownear
70. Southwest winds 10 to 15 mph.
Saturday: Partly cloudy and
humid, with a slight chance of
shOwers and thunderstorms.
Highs will be near 90. Chance of
rain 30 percent.
Extended Forecast
Sunday lhrouch Tueaday ·
It will be fair through the
period, with highs between 85 and
95 and overnight lows between 65
and 75.
'.

,Racine merchants will meet at
7 p.m. Tuesday at the American
Legion Home In Racine to make
plans for the annual harvest
festival. Representatives of community organizations are also
Invited to the meeting.

r-;:==~~;;;;;;;;;:;===~
1,

n~ws

Veteran• Memorial
Admitted - Clarence Gans,
Pomeroy; Leondus Lee, Pomeroy; Renee Stone, Middleport;
Debra Scarberry, Racine . .
Discharged - Norma South,
John Rauk.

.,.--. . _.

WITH FLOWERS

e
.

'l'e .... a hM :thD:y

II'I'IASS

rt, J..t call

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
"The&gt; ltev

A~WrifG.S.ad• l..n~'f""

LABORATORY SUPERVISOR

HORIZON

Air, power oeat, power lock,
trans.

NOW $7995

1986 OLDS. CUTLASS
QERA2 H.

WAS
'6296

.

.,

AND THEIR BAND

"THE DEPUTIES"
Will APPEAR AT THE

ROYAL ·OAK RESORT
FOR DANCING AND ENTERTAINMENT
FOR MEMBERS AND THEIR GUESTS

SATURDAY, JULY 30-8 to 12
Terri and Melisa present a unique
blend of Country/Rock and Old
Country favorites and a variety of
music for all ages.
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT
THE GUARD STATION - $5°0 PER PERSON

The Marshalls and •heir band have appeared at
the 1987 Weat Virginia State Fair, TheW. Va .
Festival Showcase, Pioneer Days at
Marlington, Wirt Co. Fair and Three Rivers
Coal Festival at Fairmont, W.Va.
,

NOW$7595 .

1.986 FORD
TA.US LX

Power seat. power lock, tilt·
/cruioe. ca11etta.$
WAS
7
'
'10.900

NOW 92 ,... 5

1986 MERCURY TOPAZ
GS 4 DR.
:;~;uto. trano.
'7996

NOW

$(, 2 9 5

1986 FOlD ISCOn
POllY 2 DR.

NOW$3.995

1914 FORD TEMPO

1987 CHEVY A$110

4 DR. GL

CONVERSION VAN

WAS
'4296

NowS3295

1983 OLDS 88

Z-24

2 DR.

NowS5995

WAS
•7996

WAS
'6996

1986 IUICI SUMERSO

1983 OLDS 88
4 DR.

2 DR.

V·8. auto. tran1., air, curil•

~:s
•a995

NOW $7~95

1986 CHI¥. CAVAUER
4 DR.

Auto., llir.
WAS
•899&amp;

1984

Now.S5495

•c1 Clrm.Y
UMIRD

Now53695

NowS3995

WAS
•&amp;9911

NOW$3995

~~~oo NOW$12,800
1987 FORD RANGER
412 XLI

· ~~=6

WAS

'8996

By NANCY YOACHAM
'
Tbnea-Sentlnei Slaft
. MIDDLEPORT - A strike by
members of the Meigs County
Department of Hum~n Services'
collective bargaining unit Is
~heduled to begin 7:30 a.m.
MOnday.
I
' However, Michael Swisher,
Meigs DHS director, says his
\lepartment "has made preparations to ensure the QOntinuatlon
of public service programs" general relief, food stamps, Aid
to Dependent Ch lldren, Medicaid, chlldrens services, social
services and the Issuance of child
support checks -and he "anticipates no Interruption of those
iervices to the publlc." At least
not In the Immediate future.
.: Says Larry Robldson, president of the Meigs DH~ coUecttve
bargaining unit, "We do not want
to. ~top service to the public, we
just want to take a stand for our
' rights."
five Issues remain unresolved
In contract . negotiations for ·
Meigs DHS. Those Issues are fair
~hare (meaning enactment of a
fair share fee program to require
non-union members to pay for
representation), contract duration, management's rights, Insurance and wages.
I
HoWever, on Fr!Qayafternoon,
with the strike only two days
away, Swisher reiterated earlier
statements that the. last offer
made by management was the
best offer the collective bargainIng unit could expect. Sw!sber
said that on Thursday, the State ·
Employment Relations Board
appointed mediator told him by
telephone that after reviewing
the situation, It would appear
that additional bargaining sessions would not be productive.
SwiSher said It was •his understanding that any future meetIngs would be scheduled through
the media tor.
·Although management opposes any across the Q&lt;Jard wage
Increase lbr DHS employees,
management has conceded to

pay 100 percent of medical
Insurance !or DHS employees,
Swisher said, up to the maximum
amount which was recently establlslled by the county commissioners. This means that In the
future, If Insurance costs go
beyonel the maximum, the employee will pick up the
difference.
It was only recently however
that management decided to stop paying 100 percent of medical
Insurance costs lor DHS' employees. A few weeks ago, a
memo was sent to employees
Informing them that starting In
August, they would be required
to ·pay a percentage of their
Insurance through payroll
deduction.
A union spokesman pointed out
that If a three-year contract
would be signed with no wage
Increases, then employees could
be out more money If' Insurance
costs go above the maximum
that managment will pay.
"That's what we havetolookat,"
the spokesman said.
As for the wage Issue, employees say they have received
no pay Increases since 1984, with
the exception of step raises and
longevity raises. Prior to 1984,
county DHS employees were
Included on the state pay schedu.le and would automatically
receive any statA!·~&lt;~
Increases. State employees were
granted raises as of July 1, 1986,
and had county DHS employees
been Included In the 1986 raise, It
would have amounted toapproxlmatly $1.67 to each Meigs DHS
employee per hour.
The un ton Is proposing em·
ployees receive an hourly wage
Increase of 75 cents the first year
of a contract, 45 cents the second
year and 40 cents the third year,
with current step Increases and
longevity provisions ~emalnlng
the same as they are currently.
Management opposes an
across the board wage Increase.
For step and longevity raises,
Meigs DHS continues to operate

under the state pay schedule, as
It has In the past.
Although management has
maintained that salaries for
DHS' employees should be kept
In line with other county ·employees, such as the courthouse
and. highway department, Bar.ry
Bolin, representing the American Federation of State, County
and
Employees, re-

NOW $4995

1971 VOLKSWAGEN
HG S49S

NOW 7495

Gallia County Junior
Fair :begins Monday
B;:r SUSAN BAUITER
_
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - The 39th annlllll Gallla County Junior Fair
kicks off at noon Monday, providIng one of the largest youthoriented fairs In southeastern
Ohio.
Fair activities encompass entertainment, livestock events, a
rodeo. high school bands, contests, and rides.
The opening night ~lghllght
comes In theforrnofthe1988Miss

Gallla County Queen Contest.
This year, 11 young ladles, all
1988 high school' graduates, will
compete for the queen title.
There are two contestants from
.each high school and one contestant from the Christian school.
The contest will commence at
9:30 on the main stage.
Tuesday, rell'glous and senior
citizen day, encompasses entertainment by the Grubb Family
Singers, the LeWis Family and
the Nor)h Gallla concert band.

Junior Youth Board day Is
Wednesday with 4-H demonstrations and 4-H cats, sheep and
activity building judging. The
KiwaniS garden tractor pull and
Girl Scouts awards also provide
activities for the day . Evening
entertainment Includes a band
concert and the local band
Odyssey.
Thurday Is Kiwanis Youth Day
Includes balloon bursting, bubble
gum blowin11 and watermelon
Continued on AI

Y-6,51p0011.
WAS
'79911

NOW$5995

,1984 tiiSSAN 414

~~=6

PICillll

,

NOW $4995

1979 DODGE lAM

CHAIGII
WAS
0

38911

NOW$2895

'
One ol &amp;be lite
Olilo BASS Clreull

BE'I'WBBN THE PIERs -

e~lllllllUtl 110 aa~~en In tile

.

Ta-ea&amp; pte eome pi'IICltlce betweea lwo of

--·---- ·---·-·~

---- -·---- --·

13 Sectiona. 92 Pagoa
A Multimedia Inc. New~paper

"

tbe lee plera off lbe GallpoBe abore on.lhe Ohio
River In pre-lounameal usJI•JaclklnSII&amp;urdey.
(TI~~datl plloto b;:r G. Speac•O.bone)

i

jects ttre comparison. Bolin says $53,404, according to Director
DHS employees must be com- Swisher. With the exception of
pared to DHS employees In other the county's mandated share, the
counties, since counties are relm· rest of the operations' costs were
bursed by the state for the reimbursed by the State of Ohio.
According to the last county
majority of their DHS operating
. payroll, the highest paid pub! lc
costs.
This past year, Meigs County assistance case workers for
DHS was about a $15.5 miiUon Meigs DHS are grossing $9.82 per
operation. Meigs County's share hour, or $20,425. The case
of the total operations' costs was workers at this top salary have

been with DHS for many years.
The lowest paid Meigs DHS
employee Is currently at $6 per
hour or $12,480 per year, before
deductions.
Starting salaries are based
upon the job classification under
which an employee Is hired,
Swisher said. The first step
Increase comes 120 days after the
Continued to D2

felllow worlcers1eta out of
lite way, a JOUDI man, a1 r•.rm. to!lleS a ha;:r bale Into one of the
stalls In the horse barn at
County Junior Falrgrouads

1986 FOlD RANGER

1983 •RcURY

GRAND MARQUIS

$

V-6 speed.

Partly cloudy, high 1!1 110&amp;.
Chance of rain 30 percent.

Meigs DHS bargaining unit schedules strike

,..

1986 CHEVROLET

Auto .. air, 6 op!llld, tilt, cruloe.
WAS
'8996

NOW $399 5

Midcleport Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, July 31, 1988

COprotglnod 1888

FINANCING AVAILABLE

1986 PLYMOUTH

Along the River .. ., .... B-1-8
Business-Farm ......... E-1-~
Comics- ..•....•........... Insert
ClassUieds ................ n·-a-7
Dealhs ......... ............... A-3
Sports ...................... C-1-6

..

VoL 23 No. 26

SALE
2 DR. CL

ln~ide:

tmts

...'

. PAT HILL FORD
USED CARANDTRUCK
14J87 FORD TEMPO

C-1

•

... "l·lilt ..

REDUCED PRICES

Hall .o f Fame inductions
hood i88ue vote Tuesday
B-5
In Our Town: A visit to
•
the Air Force Museum By Dick ThomM

HELP WANTED

For modern fully equipped ph,sician's office laboratory. Qualifications necesury: MT (ASCPI,
well versed in instrument operation and trouble shootina. Com·
petent in all lib areas. Excellent
benefits. Weekends off. Apply in
person to or call 446·9620. The
Medical Plaza, 203 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis, between 8:30 A.ll.·
5:00P.M.

50 cent s

Buckeye

THE MARSHALL SISTERS

Racine merchants
to meet Tuesday

Correction

ance on farm loans and the
Agriculture ~partment to dlrect Its small business loan
program toward hard-hit rural
communities.
During debate, the House
added an amendment allowing
up to $40 million In aid to grain,
cotton and soybean farmers who
suffered ball or drought damage
In 1987. It also approved $5.5
million to lower tl]e temperature
of the Sacramento River below
the Shasta Dam In Ca!Hornla to
encourage salmon spawning.

·Richard Winebrenner
Richard Arthur Winebrenner,
· 83, 36759 Rock Springs Road,
Pomeroy, died Thursday at Veterans Meamorial Hospital follow ing a brief Illness.
A farmer, Mr. Winebrenner
1
·was born Aug. 9, 1905 In Syra: cuse, a son of the late John
: Wesley and Mary Jane Grimm
Winebrenner. He was a member
of the Guiding !\tar Church at
' Letart. W. Va.
Surviving are a son and
. daughter-In-law, William P. and
: Jo Winebrenner, Stockport; a
· daughter and son-In-law, Doris
: and Donald Muncy, Sidney; two
· brothers, Ross Winebrenner, Le. tart, W. Va., and Robert Winer brenner, Sycamore, Dl; . two
sisters, Mildred Howerton, Hun; ttngton, w. Va., and Mabel Wears
. , Point Pleasant, W. Va ., three
: grandchildren, · eight great. grandchildren and several nle. ces and nephews.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded In death by two wives,
Della and Ernestine; three brothers. Roy, Ray and Raymond
Winebrenner; three sisters,
Laura Stanley, Myrtle Huffman
and Olive Winebrenner.
Services will be held at 1: 30
p ..m: Sunday at the Guiding Star
Church with the Rev. Mark
Morrow offlclatUig. Burial will
be In Evergreen Cemetery, Le. tart, W. Va. Friends may call at
· the Ewing Funeral Home from 2
: . to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday .

.

continued from page 1

Area deaths

while Intoxicated, and $10 and
costs, passing In 'a no-passing
zone; Perry A. Mayes, Pomeroy,
$425 and costs, and three days In
jail, driving while Intoxicated;
Mark McCloud, Middleport, $50
and coslll, no operator's license;
$50 and costs, reckless operation,
and $50 and costs, fleeing pollee;
Patty Boyles, Pomeroy, $25 and
costs, disorderly manner, and
$25 and costs, littering; ChriStopher Cole, West VIrginia. only
address listed, $425 and costs and
three days In jail, driving while
Intoxicated . .

One defendant forfeited a bond
and seven others were fined
Wednesday night In the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman.
Ronald E . Neal, Bidwell, forfeIted a $450 bond posted on a
drMng while Intoxicated charge.
Fined were Timothy E. Shane,
Middleport, $150 and costs, 10.
days In jail with eight suspended,
domestic violence; Tina Hendricks, Middleport, $25 and costs,
disorderly manner; Lester M.
Lewis, Jr., Cheshire,' $425 and
costs, three days In jail, driving

Board open until noon Saturday
1

of temperatures In the 100s.
Fresno and Bakersfield In the .
San Joaquin Valley ljoth hit 106
degrees.
But Bullhead City, Ariz., and
Laughlin, Nev., were tbe hottest
spots In the nation at 112.

I ·Middleport Court news I

Four callS were answered by local units Thursday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services reports.
At 7:50a.m., the Pomeroy Unit took Clarence Gans !rom
LasleY St., to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Sy111cuse at 11:38
a.m. took Laura Parmlta from the Pomeroy Health Care Center
to Veterans Memorial; Syracuse at 12: 21 p.m. took Renee Stone
!roni the Pomeray Health Care Center to Veterans Memorial;
Pomeroy at 3:24p.m. took Rodney McKee, Jr. ,-!rom Darwin to
Veterans Memorial.

,

Sunday

Continued from page 1

the front range of the Rockies
!rom southeast Wyoming to
Colorado and marched over
much of New Mexico, Arizona
and southern Nevada.
California's lush Inland valleys
baked under a 13th straight day

Squads have 4 Thursday calls

Friday, July 29, 1988

• J

Pomlroy-Midt.lapcMt, Ohio

10-The Daily Sentinel

Souther11 schools propose
district-wide writing program
By NANCY YOACHAM
Times-Sentinel Stall
RACINE - A proposal for a
district-wide writing program In
the Southern Local School District has been formulated.
This proposal has been made
possible due .to the generosity of
Farmers Bank, Pomeroy; Bank
One of Pomeroy, and Home
National Bank, Racine; the donation of consultant services from
Educational Services, Inc., Cincinnati, and the giving of time
and effort by a committee of ·
Southern Local Teachers.
This proposal, when Implemented by the Southern Local
SchoolS, will fuUIII the requirements for competency education
as set forth In the Stale Minimum
Standards.
With the 1989-90 school year as
the deadline, schools across the
state of Ohio have been steadUy
working to complete programs of
Instruction In reading, math; and
written expression which provide stated objectives, testing of
those objectives and Intervention
for those students who fall to
master the objectives.
For the past three years the
teaching staff and administration of Southern have, with the
help of consultants, ' created
programs In reading and math,
unique to their district, which
provide remedla tlon based on
mastery-non-mastery of curriCulum objectives. With the deadline
only a year away and money In
short supply, a truly cooperative
effort was necessary to make the
resources available for completion of the )Vrltlng proposal,
At this point, Ann Grooms;
P.hD, director of Educational
Services, Inc., offered a free
workshop at the agency's headquarters and a groupofleachers,
representative o~ll buildings .In

•l

the district, volunteered their
time for the two day workshop.
Travel expenses then remained
the only barrier to holding the
workshop. In the spirit of community cooperation, the three
named local banks donated the
required funds to complete t~e
project.
With Fwerrls house , historic
home In Mariemont, where Educational Servclcsws Is house, as
the setting of the workshop, the
commltteea composed of Jennings Beegle, junior high principal anbd teacher; Barbara Beegle, high school teacher; James
Lawrence. Syracuse principal
and teacher; William Downie,
special education teacher ;
Mickey Kucsma , Portland prln-

clpal and teacher; Joyce Ritchie ,
Chapter I reading teacher, and
Leah Ord, school counselor
made the decisions necessary t~
put the plan together.
While examining the requirements for remediation In writing,
Bobby J. Ord, district superltnendent, determined that a program of written composition
should not only provide remediation for minimum competency.
but should also challenge the
talents of all stutlents, even those
Identified as gifted. With tills
challenge as a guideline, the
committee along with Dr. Melissa Patterson, Dr. Anne
Grooms and Dr. Charles Waple
serving as consulants, workE'd to
Continued to D2

Gallia records third
1988 highway fatality
GALLIPOLIS - Gall!a County recorded Its third highway
fatality of the year Friday, according to the Gal!!a-Melgs Posl
State Highway Patrol.
The patrol said a man died alone lri a field, over an
embankment, outside Ills wrecked vehicle, and the body was not
discovered until more than 24 hours later.
The victtm was Identified as PIIUI!p W. Sloan, 21,' Northup.
who was pronouced dead at the scene, according to the patrol.
A Gall!poUs man, Layton D. Rutt, 19 Vine St., discovered· th&lt;'
wreckage when he went to check on a fence on his property,
Friday morning. The patrol received the call between 10:30 and
11 a.m. Friday.
The accident occurred at 7:25 a.m . Thursdav on Bob
McCormick Road, about one mUe south of SR 160, according to
the patrol.
Troopers said Sloan was headed north on Bot&gt; McCormick
Road when he apparently lost control of his 1978 Toyota on a
curve. The vehicle went off the road, down an embankment, and
crashed Into a tree.
According to the patrol, Sloan was not wearing a seat b~ll. He
was thrown frorll the vehicle.
The accident Is still under Investigation, the pAtrol said.

I

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