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•

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Pq1 14-llie Deily Saaliuel ·

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-

- -

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~-~

Thursday. Novlll'f1ber 17, 1988

Pon•oy-Middlaport. Ohio

--Local news briefs...- - - West gets· second dose of rain, snow ston11s
eonunued from page 1
Lake Drive, Rio Grande, cut all four tires; and William R.
Thoma: Long Bottom, broke a window and cutallfour tires. The
sheriffs department is Investigating the complaints.

EMS has five Wednesday calls

:'

Melp County Emergency Medical Services reports !l~e calls
Wednesday; Racine Fire Department at 1: 39 a.m. to Front St.
for a ~I oil heater !Ire; Middleport Fire Department at 2: 32
a.m. to a stnacture !Ire on Route 554; Pomeroy at 12:18 p.m. to
Americare-Pomeroy Nursing Center for Donna Morrison to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 1: 28 p.m. to
Stcmewoods Apls. for Zelda Taylor to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 9: 12 p.m. transported wnuam
Grueser from Tuppers Plains to Holzer Medical Center.

Columl:,us ... continued !rom page 1
Columbus Inc., a private planniDI and promotion group.
lts whole-house Interior controls will feature wiring for cable
television, elect riclty and telephones combined into a single
line linking all appliances and
lll!rvlce systems.
Communication chips, computer proerams and a mlcroproces·
sor· will be used to control all
systems.
"It's so sophisticated that you
can be watching television and a
signal will be relayed on the
acreen that the washer has
finished Its cycle or a meal is
done on the stove," said Lhota.
"It can be adapted so that the
city ~uld override the electronically ?&gt;ntrolled lawn sprlngllng
system when there is a drought,"
he said. "And because each
appliance sends a signal to the
microprocessor before· it Is activated, It will be impossible lor a
child to stick a paper clip Into an
outlet and gel shocked."
The house will permit the use or

;-

By Unlled Preulnlerll!'tiDaal

''Lon" Roush, 101,
Leain. W.Va., died Wednesday,
Nov. ,16•. 198~. at Pleasant Valley
Hospital tn Point PIC3SI!"I. .
Born Feb. 25, 1887 m Letart. he
was a son of the late SpencOll and
Mary Gray Ro~. . .

~ . ~ precedin&amp;C
E himRushm deahothdi~edas
ora ·

'IUS wuC,

0

, W

:in 1984.

' He was a farmer and a member
.,of the ~l.Malt Llll;beran Olurch.
. S~vmg are his daughters and
-SIIIl»-m-law, Eleanor and James
•
••

'

.., &amp;

• ,

.

.,

was plied up at roadside, while
the Cascades o!Washlngtonstate
were coated with lesser amounts.
High winds, rain and more
snow - up to 6 Inches in
mountainous regions - was
expected through "today in Nev·
ada, Utah, Idaho, Montana and
Wyoming as thesto.r mmovedout
of the Pacific Northwest, National Weather Service forecaster Brian. Smtih said.
Earlier In the week, a turbulent
weather system dumped heavy
snow and rain on many areas and
whipped up gale-force winds and
at least 49 tornadoes, killing at
least 19 people and causing
millions of dollars In damage.
Tornadoes !rom that storm
killed six people and injured 50
others In Arkansas alone on
Tuesday. Three people were
reported mllslng.
Snow from the earlier storm
created h8zardous driving condl·
lions today. In Wisconsin, live
people died In two separate
accidents on Icy roads
Wednesday.
A low pressure system moving
across the Pacific Northwest and
Intermountain states spawned
the second wave of winter

Monthly statement
is released

Pomeroy Vlllage Clerk·
-Treasurer
reports a balance of
volce-recognltlon devices, secur$189,657.90
In
the village treasury
Ity and !Ire· alarms and lndlvid·
as
of
Oct.
31.
Receipts, disburseual room temperature controls.
ments
and
balances
In each of the
Every service will be available
!u
nds
comprising.
the
total are as
at every outlet.
follows
.
.
"It will be the closest thing to
Disney's Epcot Center that we • General, $21,534.26, $22,898.70,
$33,740.48; safety, $300, $19.49,
will have," said John 'K. He!·
$9,741.44; street, $16,347.16,
bllng, the utlllty's manager of
$20,030.21, S87.32; State highway,
marketing and customer servi·
$257.36,$52, $2,270.73; tire, $70.18,
ces. "It will be state-of·the art In
home technology. It should be · ·$2,002,39; $1,161.95; cemetery,
$716.89, $1,010.25, $4,480.06; Wa·
commercially available · by
ter, $22,316.75, $19.212.35,
1991."
$67,132.66; sewer, $8,313.93,
The technology was worked out
$15,799.73, $4,951.30; guaranty
In the laboratory by Smart House
meter, $625, $525, $13,691.67;
Ltd. otupper Marlboro, Md., but
utullty,
no receipts, $2,308.10,
has not been tested In the field.
$14,687.96;
sale of bulldlrig,
Cost of the $1.7 million project
$382.45,
$382.45,
$.19'; perpetual
will be shared by the eight
care,
no
receipts.
no disburse·
affiliates of the American Elect·
ments,
$5,069.77;
cemetery
en·
ric Power Co., parent of Colum·
dowment,
no
receipts,
no
disburbus Southern.
sements, $17 ,8825.11; pollee
"We want to know, and we
pension, no receipts, no disburse·
want our customers .to know,
ments,
$1,761. 77; building fund.
what may soon be available to
$117.55,
no disbursements,
them In terms of home energy
$1,347.35;
recreation, $150, no
systems," said Lhota.
dlsb,lrsements, $1,010.40; per·
missive tax, $$635.10, S830.05,
$395.01; bond retirement, no
· receipts, no disbursements,
$8,210.43; !Ire truck, no receipts;
no disbursements, $12,459.63;
Milton Lewis, Dunbar, Anna Lee
Main
St. sewer, no receipts, no
and Gus R. Douglass, Grimms
dlsbursemetns;
$500.
Landing; six grandchildlen; II '
Total
receipts
for-the month of
great-gtandchildren; one sister
October
amounted
to $11,766.63
Anna May Roush.
·
while
disbursements
totaled
The funeral will be Salllrday at
$85,010.72.
. II a.m.· at lhe Foglesong Funeral
Home wilh lhe Rev. George Divorces 80Ught
Weirick officiating. Burial will be
at _the new Lone Oak Cemetery,
Filing for &lt;llssillutlons of mar-'
Pomt Pleasant
(!age In Meigs County Common
Friends may call Friday after 2 Pleas Court are Bernard D.
p.m. at the funeral home:.
Gilkey. Middleport, and Mary E.
In lieu of 1Iowers, the family re- Gtlkey, Chester; Donna J. Gllll·
quests memorial gifts be made to
ian, Reedsville, and Mark A.
the St. Mark Lulheran Church.
Gillilan, Reedsvtlle.

---Area
deaths-Alonzo RCMI8h
• • - - n.
.ruut...,
r.

Ore.. where 30 Inches already

The western half of the nation,
already reeling !rom tornadoes
and snowstorm~ that claimed at
least 19 Uves. was socked by a
second but less severe wave of
snow and rain moving eastward
!rom the Paclftc Northwest early
today.
A loot of snow was on the
ground at Crater Lake, Ore., and
a 8-lnch blanket of new snow was
measured on the Santlam Pass,

.

-.,--------"-·'' -------- ~---- -- ---

Patrol...
Continued !rom page 1
broadcast pollee messages. Ap·
parent!Y, there was no weapon
Inside.
Rakes Is 6 feet tall and weighs
190 pounds, with blue eyes and
Ught brown hair, and wears
glasses. He has a cross tattoed on
his right forearm and an inchlong scar on his forehead.
Wimmer has dark brown hair
and brown eyes, and is 5-9, 165
pounds. Both are white.
The breakout was the secood
one this year involving
murderers. .
·
Three convicted killers fled
April 3 after breaking Into the
former administration building,
then cutting through a wire
fence. All three were captured
within weeks of the escape.
, In Its 122-year history, the
penitentiary has been a frequent
scene of unrest. Fifteen convicts
broke out .In 1979 and the Inmates
went on a bloody rampage,
killing three of their number In a
New Year's Day In 1986.

storms, Smith said today.
The system was moving across
the Intermountain region, bring·
lng widespread rain, wind and
snow across California, the
northern Pacific Coast, the Great
Basin and the northern Intermountain Region.
Snow fell continuously since
Wednesday evening at Pocatello;
Idaho. Light snow also was
falling over the western mountains of. Wyoming, where Jackson received 3 Inches of new
snow. The Teton Pass In WyomIng had snowfall amounts belw~n 4 and 6 Inches.

Winter storm warnings were In
·effect for the western mountains
of Wyoming, with a snow advisory lor the Green River Basin
and acr o ss north-central
Wyoming.

day. A chance of rain or · snow
showers Monday. Highs will be In
the 40s, except In the mtadle 50s
In southern counties on Saturday
and Sunday. Early morning lows
will range from the upper 20s to
the upper 30s .

Ohio Lottery
Daily Number

851
8527

Page 3

•
Vol. 39, No. 137
. Copyrighted 1988·

Fa•'ln awards feature
Meigs S&amp;WCD fete

Hospital news
Velerans Memorial
Wednesday Admissions - Wll·
llam Morris, Pomery; Suzanne
Wolle, Racine.
Wednesday Discharges
Ralph Durst. Lewis Taylor.

money judgment of $1,182.52
from Douglas Hal !hill, Cheshire.
and Donna Halfhill, Cheshire.
The cases of Diana Whaley and
Brian Whaley; and Sara M.
Stamper against Jeflire A.
Stamper, have been dismissed
by !he court.

Stocks

CT..

•

GOODYEAR HONOREES - David Doblnskl, at the Melp SWCD annual mee&amp;lngud banquet.
left, representative of the Goodyear . Tire &amp; Receiving the awards were Catherine Shenefield,
Rubber Co., presents the Goodyear Farmer of the center, and Carl Sbenefleld.
Year Awards to Re&gt;&lt; and Carl Shenefield Famlly .

ONE .STOP SHOPPING
CHEVROLET, OLDSMOBILE, PONTIAC and BUICK

ALL ON ONE LOl!!

•

.. ,STOP BY TOM PE.DEN'S AND COMPARE GM's
FOUR MAJOR CAR &amp; TRUCK LINE'S
.-' \:"
_......

./

-

~

- ' 30
or

~

~~

TO

~

.

"'··.r-:~&lt;¢·

.

PONTIAC

OVER

i· ~ ,- , ~·

or

CHOOSE 1
FROM •

OLDSMOBILE

CHEVROLET

~
BERmA
"CUSTOMS, GT1"

ar

PONTIAC

·1M

&lt;J

20

TO
CHOOSE
FROM

THE CHRISTMAS SEASON IS HERE •••
DON'T MISS OUT ON THESE LOW, LOW
LIQUIDATION PRICES ON EVERY ITEM IN
THE STORE.

~
CALAIS

"SL'a, QUAD 4'1"

BUICK

We Still Have A Huge Inventory of•••
•Clothing •Furniture •TV'S

'BOllESJ CARS ONTBEMAJUIET"

...,.

PONTlAC

BUICK

~-

•Appliances •Plus More •••

REGAL

GIIAND P11X
"CUSTOMS, LE, SE"

"CUSTOMS, LIIITEDS''
OLDSMOBILE

We're Qalttlng Basi ness .After 124
Years ••• You'll Sa~e With Oar
Low, Low Prlees.

. . TOTOTACMIIDA·-..1,...,..._....,.,_.,,_, ..--.
,_.,...,• .,...,,,_
HOW$11. .
- QIMUJt LIIMCitll CC*V&amp;i&amp;l! • 111111 ;~- .... ...-,
..............,,,. ._______ _._ _ __NOW ......
..,. .... CUT\II'r · ol . ........................ ......

-~· .......... '*-..-!WitSID-- ·- __}Qf
1-IUICK IKYLAIIK·4 ....

.... POIInAC ,.

•

I .

•ALL SALES FINAL
•NO LAYAWAYS
•NO ELIERFELDS CHARGE

SAVE

LII&lt;E
NEVER BEFORE/

tl.781

tiiiNIIc.•OMIIIIDIWif......,.....,.,

fl....
..... ...,..~.,..,- ... *'-

...,.,_,,......._,,........

NOW

=;;;;HOW"""

John and Harley Rice of
Reedsville were presented the
1988 Outstanding Farm Family
Award by the Meigs Son and
Water Conservation District at
Its annual dinner meeting.
The Rices own and operate a
217-acre farm In Olive Township
and rent an additional 32 acres.
The Goodyear Farmer of the
Year Award was given to Rex
and Carl Shenefield, who operate
a 506-acre farm In Salem
Township.
Soli judging awards were presented toSouthernFFA Agrlcultu-.
ral and Urban Soli Judging
teams, and to Brent Rose and
David Custer, twoSouthernFFA
members whO took first and
second place, respectively, In the
judging. Homer Welsh, a Meigs
FFA member, took third In the
Agricultural Contest, while
Southern FFA members Custer,
OUTST~Dn;G FARM FAMH.Y - John Rice, left, and
"ames Langwell and Aaron LauHarley
Rice, rlg)lt, reeelve the Outstanding Farm FamUy
dermllt took first, second and
award
from
SWCD supervisor Alan Holler at the Melp SWCD
third, respectively, In the Urban
annual
meellag
and banquet.
Contest.
The Wildlife Award was pres.r
Emerson Marting, a Iarmer,
Water Conservation Districts Is
ented by Keith Wood, Meigs
auctioneer
and humorist from
County game protector, to David conducting a fund-raising camCourt House, spoke
Washington
Koblentz and Kenny Wiggins of paign lor this purpose. For more
on
"Our
Changing
Times."
details, \contact the Meigs SWCD
the Meip County Litter Control.
Wood cited their efforts and office.
Afflllate membership certifiDistrict conservationist Mike
accomplishments in the past tlve
years in cleaning up 89 Illegal Duhl highlighted a one-time cates were presented to Bank
dumps and various other pro- program being conducted by the One of Athens, N.A.; Baum
Meigs SWCD In connection with Lumber Co.; Bill's Tire Service;
jects carried out In the county.
James Rush, program special· Heidelberg College In Tiffin. In Central Trust Co.; Dairy Valley;
lsi lor the Ohio Department of order to partlclpiite in the'nltrate ·FlCcemyer Lumber Co.;
Natural Resources' Division of water screening test, stop by the Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co;
SoU and Water Conservation, Meigs SWCD office and pick up Ferrellgas, Inc.; G&amp;J Auto
announced a program to honor water-testing bottles, which cost Parts; Harris Farm and GreenClarence Durban, president of $2. The samples that are taken house; Home National Bank;
the National Association of Con- should be returned to the Meigs J.D. DrUI!ng Co.; Jaymar Coal
SWCD office on Dec. 1 or before Co.; Keefers Service Center;
servation Districts (NACD).
Because his term ends In noon on Dec. 2. For more MGM" Farm City; Middleport
February, 1989, the Division's Information, contact the SWCD Trophies; Roy E. Miler; Montgo·
mery Trailer Sales; Ohio Pallet
goal is to honor him with a office.
Co.;
PDK Construction Co.;
Rodney Chevalier and Alan
donation to the NACO building
Quality
Print Shop; Southern
lund lor a permanent office Holter were re-elected to threeOhio
Coal
Co.; Sugar Run Flour
bulldlnl!: In Washington, D.C. The year terms on the Meigs SWCD
Mill; and 3R Industries .
Ohio Federation or Soil and Board of Supervisors.

JER

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi
Am Electric Power ....... :..... 26%
AT&amp;T .................. .. ....... .. .... 27%
Ashland 011 .. .... .. ..... ........... 32%
Bob Evans .. .... .... .. .. ............ . l6
Charming Sboppes .. ,. .. ...... .. 13%
City Holding Co .... ...... .... ..... 33
Federal Mogul .. ..... .... ..... .. .. 47Y,
Goodyear T&amp;R .......... .. .. .. . ..48%
Heck's ............ ....... ............. . %
Key Centurion ... ... ... ... ....... .16'4
Lands' End .. .. ........... :.. ... ..... 25
Limited Inc .. ..... ... ...... .. ...... 24%
Multimedia Inc .... ... :.. .. .... .. :10\!z
Rax Restaurants .. .. ......... L.3%
Robbins &amp; Myers .... ..... ... .1...11%
Shoney's Inc .. .. .. ............ .. :..... 7
Wendy's Inti .. ....... .. ........ ..... 5'4
Worthington lnd .................. ~1

2 Sections, lt Pa1es
A Multbnedla Inc. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. ·Ohio, Friday. November _
18. 1988

--Meigs Court News-Charles R. McCloud Jr.;
charged In Meigs .County Comon
Pleas Court with grand theft, was
given a suspended six month
sentence and placed on probation
for five years when he appeared
recently before Judge Charles H.
Knight. Probation was recommended based upon extenuating
circumstances surrounding the
Incident for which McCloud was
arrested, stated McCioud'sattorney, John Lentes.
A foreclosure action for
$39,835.85 has been filed In
common pleas court by Home
National Bank, Racine. against
Mary Young, Pomeroy; James
L. Schmoll, Middleport; et al.
State Automobtle Mutual Insu·
ranee Co., Columbus; has flied an
action for judgment of $12,130
form Michael T. Manley,
Middleport.
Crow and Crow, attorneys at
law, Pomeroy, have flied for a

Increasing cloudiness.
Chance of ral n tU percent.
Saturday, high In mid 50s.
Chance of rain 80 percent.

Pick.4

A winter storm warning continued for the Cascades and
Slsklyous of Oregon. A snow
advisory also was posted for
eastern Oregon, except the Co· .
lumbta River bBasln, and for the
Slsklyous In northern California.
A total of 6 to 12 Inches of snow
was forecas t for the Cascades.

---~--Weather-----'
developing and continuing SunSouth Central Ohio
Tonight: Clear, with a low
between 25 and 30. Light winds.
Friday: Mostly sunny, with
highs in the middle 50s.
E"tead~d Forecast
Saturday through Monday
Cloudy Saturday, with rain

Prep cage
season starts
this evening

CASH SALES ONLY
OR BANK ·CARDS

MAN ESCAPES SERIOUS INJURY- A Meip
County man, Timothy P. Wyant, 28, Pomeroy,
escaped serious Injured In a truck-train accident
at 11:15 a.m. Thursday on SR. 7, at the railroad

crossing just north of Cheshire. Wyanl was cited
for failure to yield the right of way. (OVP staff
photo).
·

Meigs County man escapes serious
injury after truck collides with train
'

· A Meigs County man escaped
serious Injury when his pickup
truck collided with a train at
11: 15 a.m. Thursday at the
rallrad crossing on SR 7, just
north qf Cheshire, according to
the Gallla·Melgs Post State Highway Patrol.
Troopers said Timothy P.
Wyant, 28, Kingsbury Road,
Pomeroy, was southbound and
apparently failed to see the train.
His 1984 Chevrolet pickup truck

struck the engine of the Conrail
The patrol also Investigated a
frleght train.
one-car accident at 4:31 p.m.
There was heavy damage to Thursday In Gallla County at the
the truck and nilnor damage to junction of George's Creek Road
the train engine.
and Bulavllle Road. Troopers
Wyant was injured and taken said a car driven by .Lana R.
to Holzer Medical Center where Ferrell, 44, Rt.1, Gallipolis, went
he was treated for abrasions and off the road, striking a utility
contusions.
pole. There was moderate damThe patrol cited Wyant for age. There was no citation.
. failure to yield the right of way at .
Ferrell suffered minor visible
a railroad crossing.
Injuries and was taken by car to
Holzer Medical Center.

CLUB MAKES DONATION - Tbe Big Bend
Clvltan Club made _a donation on Thul'lday to the
Melp Industries' van fund. The money was
raised by placing candy bo&gt;&lt;es In several
businesses throughout Melp County. Sue Malson,
president ol Big Bend Clvllan, presented a check

-Local news briefs____, House to vote
•
Meigs woman found dead on porch

Meigs County Coroner Dr. R. R. Pickens answered a call to
Route 1 Rutland about 1: 15 a .m. Friday wl!en Hazel Marie
Williams, 68, was found dead on the porch of her home.
Mrs. Williams had been ill for several years and was reported
missing by her husband when he returned home from his
employment alter midnight. The Department of Sheriff
Howard Frank, the Columbia Township Rescue Squad and the
Rutland Emergency Unit were on the scene with Dr. Pickens.
Dr. Pickens said that Mrs. W.Ullams died from shock and
.exposure and that death had occurred about 11 p.m.

Squads get five calls Thursday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports !lve calls
Thursday; Rutland at 12:11 a.m. to Route 124 for Diane Starcher
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 7:46 p.m. to
Yellowbush Road !or Mona Haynes to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 8:58p.m. to Lasley St. for David Goodwin
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 9:37p.m. to Meigs
Mine No. 1 lor Lawrence Donahue to O'Blenness Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 10:18 p.m. to Welshtown Hill tor John
Glnther to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

on pay -rar,se

lor the sizable donation to Arthur Reeves, center,

a Meigs Industries' employee, and Keith Black,
Melli" Industries' adult services director. Black
says Melp Industries hopes to have a new VM by
summer.

W.Va. hearing examiner may rule
on teacher suspension by Dec. I

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!)
The Ohio House of Representa·
tlves today was expected to take
swift and final legislative action
on a pay raise bill for elected
state and county o!flcials,lncludlng judges and state legislators.

By CHARLES A. MASON
OVPStaf'l
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- A
hearing examiner for the West Vuginia Education and Public
EmployeeS Grievance Bosrd could •
rule on Point Pleasant High School
mathemalics teaCher Bill Webb's
case bef&lt;lre the Mason County
Bom1 of Education meets Dec. 1 to
consider his latest suspension for
insubordination, the school teaebet
said this week.
An auomey for Charles Cham·
bets, Mason County superintendent
of schools, said this week his client
has been treated unfairly by the rest
of the nalion in tl)e conttoversy

The blll, w.hich surfaced In the
Senate Thursday like "Jaws" at
the beach, provides a 5 percent
raise each year for the next four
years lor most of the of!lclals.
Moving so swiftly that observers could have missed the
action by stepping outs_lde the
chamber, the Senate passed ' the
bill on a 17-16 vote that crossed
party lines .
The bill, rumored In the works
lor several weeks, was Introduced and passed In less than live
minutes.

l

which has received nalional atten·
lion by the news media. Several
out-of·state letterS to the editor
c'liticizing Chambers have been
received and published in the Point
Pleasant Register.
"Absolutely," a110mey Charles
Damron said when asked if Ouun·
bets is being treated unfairly. "He's
the one thai has had Ill stand out
front and take lhc heat."
Webb and Chambers appeared
before Hearing El81tliner M. Drew
Crislip in CharlestOn Tueaday.
Webb was represented by his IIIDr·
ney Larry G. Kopelman and Cham·
bets by Damron. Under law, the
hearing examiner has 30 days to is~

sue a decision in the matter, which
is now termed a Level IV
· grievance.
Damron, speaking for his client
this week in a telephone interview,
said the issue is not whether Webb
wore a tie and blue jeans in the
classroom but the fact that he was
insubordinate to Chambers' directive about II times. Damron said
superintendents' directives are used
in 70 pen:ent or" a' school system's
day-to-operation, while school board po)icy applies in about 30
percent of the operation's direction.
"The issue is control, order and
certain standards within the systern," Damron said.

-- ....... .

I

..

---~

�----Friday, November 18, 1988

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Courl Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
I!EVOTEO TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG8-MASON AREA
A~

~m~ ~'--r•I""'T""1!!!!!d·~

'q!V
ROBERT L. WJNGETI'
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

A MEMBER o!The United Press International , Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers AssociaUon.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing Issues, not persooalities.

Bush sweeps
with a new brOom
By HELEN moMAS
UPI White House Reporler
WASHINGTON- The R4lagan top appointees -some 500 strongare jittery. They've all been asked for their resignations. One day
they are on top and the next day they are walking the streets like
everybody else, looking for a job.
Except many of the GOP appointees thought it would be different
thiS time. After all, they had spent their extra hours working for Vice
President George Bush.
But he has Indicated that he wants to sweep the White House clean
and to pick his own .team. It Is part of the self assertiveness he
Initiated when he began his campaign and did not want anyone to view
him as a clone, even If he had learned at the master's feet.
There wlll be the lnevlta ':lie payoffs to the loyal workers who gave
their all over many months to help Bush win the presidency. They will
be the first In line for the jobs. But all will be given the usual litmus
test: loyalty to the party.
But this time around Bush has Indicated that there also will be a
scrutiny of ethics. Nevertheless, some will slip through the cracks.
After all, when Bush's aide, Robert Klmmlt, looked into Sen. Dan
Quayle's credentials to be vice president, he apparently was ·not
aware of the pull used to get Quayle Into the National Guard.
Top appointees will be scrutinized for their finances, their past,
their present, their families, and to see If. there are any skeletons In
the closet. Many of them will be subjected to confirmation by the
Senate.
Bush's criteria for serving the government has not been spelled out.
·aut he obviously Is going to reward those who worked the hardest, and
those he trusts the most.
Thus, the names most often mentioned for White House jobs were
the key advisers In his campaign: Craig Fuller, his chief of staff;
Robert Teeter, his pollster; and John Sununu, governor of New
Hampshire.
He has not tipped his hand. But clearly, James Baker, his campaign
manager, who was the first to be named to the Bush Cabinet as
secretary of state, Is looking Into the credentlalsofthe three men, and
planning the operational structure at the White House.
Baker, as chief of staff In the Reagan White House, eventually
became the dominant power. But at the beginning of the
administration In 1981, he was part of a "troika" of advisers, sharing
the limelight with Edwin Meese, who later became attorney general,
and former depty chief of staff Michael Deaver. Baker became
numero uno In the White House, calling all the shots. But It was not
without a StJ;Uggle. The Infighting was well publicized.
There Is always the question for government workers as to where
their loyalty lies - to their bosses, whoever they may be, or to the
country. Many public officials In the past have become confused on
whether to be guided by their bosses, be they the president or
otherwise, or the law.
Some pay a heavy price to be in government. During the W~;~tergate
hearings, Gordon Strahn, who worked at the White House, was asked
what advice he would give to young people wanting to serve In the
government. Shattered by the scandal and the tainting of lives, hE
said, "I'd tell them to stay away."
·
Many Reaganltes undoubtedly will stay on. But most of them are
preparing their resumes and passing them around.
The Bush transition team wlll be running the show for the next
several weeks trying to get a new government In place before Jan. 20
when the·vice president Is sworn In as president.
Bush has been In the government eight years, and he probably has
some Ideas on how he wants to conduct his business. But there are
signs that his aides will have a lot of power. And like Reagan, he wlll
listen to their advice.

easily merge with the 300 milllon
people who legally enter the .
country each year. U.S. author!·
ties would be hard·pressed to find
that one bad apple In every
300,000 visitors.
Even If a terrorist suspect Is
Identified, he or she must then be
followed by law enforcement
officers. How difficult would that
be? The classified report suggests an example: "How do you
track one terrorist among the 3.6
mllllon dally riders on the New
York subway system?"
There would be no need for
terrorists to bother bringing

WASHINGTON - If lnterna·
tiona! terroriSt organizations decided to infiltrate the United
States, they would be virtually
Impossible to spot before they
acted on their deadly agendas,
according to a secret report
complied by a Defense Depart·
ment task force last year.
There are 12 International
terrorist groups, according! to
the report that direct their
attacks primarily against Amerl·
can facilities and citizens. These
groups have about 1, 000
members. Should they all decide
to enter the United States, says
the secret report, they could

As an alternative, they could
formulate their explosives from
any of a large number of readily
available materials. New guns
are being sold In the U.S. at the
rate of 5 mllllon annually."
,
And where are teri'Ql'lsts who
enter the United States likely to
direct their diabolical efforts?
"For maxlmuin political lm· .
pact," the report suggests, "ter·
rorlsts could choose any of the
20,000 domestic or 45,000 world· ,
wide dally airline flights." An
alternative could be "any of the
vast quantity of utlllty systems
or government facilities located
throughout the country."·

How Dukakis. lost momentum
BOSTON (NEA) - Old-line
Democratic campaign pros are
charging that three major mls·
takes by Dukakls· campaign
manager Susan Estrlch and
those around her allowed the
momentum to swing to George
Bush: disorganization, lack of a
unifying theme, and no clear
response to the GOP's negative
campaigning.
Dukakls emerged from the
Democratic convention with a
big lead In all national polls, but
then his campaign simply drifted
whlle Bush came out swinging.
By Labor Day, the momentum
had shifted completely to Bush:
He had wiped out Dukakls' lead.
Dukakls was relegated to spend·
ing the rest of the campaign
reacting to Bush, and doing so
very lileffectually.
This happened, the political
pros assert, because those In
charge of the Dukakls campaign
were simply unprepared to run a
national presidential contest,
and by the time they finally got
organized, It was too late.
The Dukakls plan, as they see
It, was divided Into three parts.

First was to win the nomina tlon
through a series of state·by·state
campaigns, as opposed to a
coordinated national effort; then
gain control of the national
convention In Atlanta; and fl.
nally run the actual presidential
campaign. The problem, though,
as the political pros see 11, was
that each part of that strategy
was separate. One almost came
to a complete stop before the next
one started.
For Instance, alter each prim·
ary the Dukakls operation In a
given state was shut down as
resources and personnel were
moved to the next state. 'l'hls
continued even after all the other
candidates except Jesse Jackson
had dropped by the wayside, and
it was clear that Dukakls was
going to win the nomination. This
meant that as the national
campa'lgn was started In August,
campaign operatives In most
states had togearupalmoslfrom
scratch.
For Instance, when California
campaign manager Tony Podesta - one of the few experienced national Democratic pol·

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
Ohio's Mgh school football
playoffs head Into the regional
semi-final round of games this
weekend with all five defending ·
champions still alive, but facing
stllf tests.
Ftinceton, the defending Dlv·
lslon I champion, bounced back
from a 8\!ason-endlng loss to
Cincinnati Moeller with a 43·13
win over Dayton Wayne last
Saturday night In Region 4
playoff action.
This w~ek. however, the Vlk·
lngs . meet Cincinnati Elder, a
team they squeaked by 28·27
during the regular season. Last
Saturday, · Elder eliminated
Moeller 24-14 Its second win of the
year over the Crusaders.
The other three Divis ton 1
games match Westerville North
against Warren Western Reserve at MassOlon' s Tiger Sta·
dlum In Region 4, Cleveland St.
Ignatius against Stow at Finnie
Stadium In Berea In Region 1 and

lack Anderson and Joseph Spear

weapons Into the country, thanks
to America's wide open gun laws.
The task force noted that arms
"could be purchased from any of
the 250,000 weapons or over 10,000
explosives dealers Ucensed In the
United States.'' Each of the 1,000
potential terrorists could chose
from a shopping list of 250,000
suppliers.
The task force report
continues:
"Terrorists could choose from
a supply of 250 million legal
weapons and 500,000 machine
guns - not Including m111tary
weapons - In the United States.

Robert Wagman .

!tical .o peratives given a major
Itself.
task In the Dukakls effort This forced Dukakls Into a
showed up In Los Angeles In early defensive posture, and It's a
August he found nothing In place.
given In politics that you simply
"I didn't even have a phone," he can't win If you are continually'
says. Weeks that should have
reacting to your opponent.
been spent In hard campaigning
Then there Is the question ot: ·
were spent In simply organizing.
Bush's massive negative cam· ,
By contrast, the Buslr cam·
palgn, which Is clearly what · ·
palgn was run as astart·to·flniSh· turned things around for the ·
effort from the beginning. Each presldent·elect.
.
state office was kept open after
The truth Is that while most ··
the primaries. As result, while Americans decry negative cam·. ·
the Dukakls forces were just palgnlng, they are nonetheless
gearing up during the critical swayed by it. Expert.• say this Is · ·
weeks of August, the Bush forces
because a J:llajorlty of Americans'·
were able to get a flying start.
are predisposed to believe that·
The second problem seen by most politicians are either .·
hardened Democratic pros was crooks or Incompetents or both.•
that the Dukakls camp did not Negative advertising reinforces :
enter the presidential campaign Ibis stereotype.
"
with a clearly defined message.
Polltlcal operatives who have :
Reportedly, the Dukakls hie- ran local and congressional cam· ;
rarchy struggled vainly to settle palgns know this all too well. '
on a unifying theme. There are Bush campaign manager Lee :
stories circulating about Atwater cut his political teeth on
hundreds of TV ad scripts written South Carolina campaigns. He :
- even ads shot and edited learned early on that you can win ;
only to be finally rejected. The by driving up your opponent's ·
campaign lurched from one day "negatives." He simply trans- :
to a,nother, going In different lated this lesson Into the central •
directions, while trying to find theme of the Bush campaign.

By United Press International
Wittenberg's Ohio Athletic
Conference co·champlons return
to the scene of the crime
Saturday afternoon, Dayton's
not so Welcome Stadium, to take
on the Flyers In the semi· final's of
the NCAA DiviSion III North
Region football playoffs.
The Tigers were mugged 35.0
by Dayton In the opening game of
the regular season, the first
meeting between the two teams
In 50 years.

Prep pairings

Volleyball pairings

COLtJMBU~

Ohio (UPI) - PaArlrlp
for tile re&amp;1o.al ftnal1 of the Ohio Hlah
8dtool A,.lllldk .blottlllion repollll
fotl&amp;ball play6:

DAYTON, Ohio (UP() .- I"Urlnp lor
thlll tr@ekeod'a Ifill .,...._. Prll a&amp;atf'
'oloUeybaU C..-..ntent at lhe UnMrslty

of Da, ._ Anna:

otwllto•l

Clndn..tl ll!lan (H-2) ..,.. War•w
IU~t'!r VIew fU-2), Fl'l.,, t p.m.
(!H) VI!. EJyrta IH-~),

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FrW.,.I::II p.m.
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CIUIAA
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Cladn.ellt Un... (Il-l) \'1 • .U:ron
H•'- (ft-1), Fri.,, 2 p.m .
11\MI: 811Auldlf',l2
CIMIA
Ne.ark c.tholle (11-t) ~L Nf!W w..
•hln&amp;~on llillckl!l'e Cenlnli(Mo!}, Friday,
1:M p.m.
Sl. Rea,. (!7-1) v1. Ver•lllf.l. (tt-4),
PrldaJ, I p.m.
P1.al: S.lll•rd.,-, -1 p:m.

Be.....
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Wmtenllle N.rtll 01·11 wa Warrtn
WetternS.erve 1..1 ),S • ..,..,, 7 p.m.

p....

ae_.. ••

JIM COBB Has Corrall~d ALL Re~aining

AI Weleome Ait.dhnn, O.,.lali
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01¥ ....1111
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He pont

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AUPta • Cllllcacft, 8 p.m.
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Akron SC. Vhaftl.&amp;. MarJ (1-1) va
l'ounptown MooneJ (8-1), Sa&amp;wd._,, 1
p.m.
1Le,to1111

AI F111M ljtadtum, Jleru
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MJhraube Maeveland, nlahl

Reshall

Pbllldti,W•IINew'Yftrk,nlpt
Dec..- at Heu ..... nl ...
~-- tt San Antoalo, niJhl.
LA Qlpp!',. at Denver. nicfll.
Phoealx a&amp; Ulall, allht
In • • • at Sarnm enlo, nlsflli
DaiiM at Se•tlr, •liN

At Spartu I!Jiadhlm, r.n.no.u.

Jront.on Ol.fl n Ucklna Vaile, ( ll.f),

s.tiQd.,, 7 p.m.
ReJion lZ
At Noi'Uimnl Stadhlm, UQtoa
Urb.,.. (11·0) n llroobllle (11-1},
s .. urdiQ', 7 p.m.
.
Dtvt1lo11 IV '
RePa 1J
.U Slam"-Jb Sta.UUm, You-calown
Canlcm Ct'niral Callllllc (1·1 ) VI
W•rr:n KeniEcb' (8-S), FI'Wq, 1: Ill p.m.

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE

11MI ....... ae..atll
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N\' Ranps.e,LoaAIIIpi•S

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greatly appreciated. I'd like to
give a special thanks to Rhonda
Hoover who was my right hand
through all the preparations.
Thanks Everyone,
Kimberly WUJlord
Chairperson,
Rutland Comm. Party.
~

Boslonal DrtNII, 7:Up.m .
RarHonl If Walblntton. 1:05 p.m.

C41umlMI• Academr 00.1) vs Coh.-nbul Hartley (6-4), Frklq, 1:• p.m.

Re,toalt
At Loclr.lMd ltaettcer Memorl.. Stadium, Locki&amp;Rd
Wh!!eh:rtbUI'I Of.l) n VenUUes
(ID-1) 1 Frldaf,'J:Up.m.

TGronio at "'lnmpea, 8:31p.m.
s.tunh•J'R Oams
Cal prJ • Hartfanl, nl1ht
Bullaleat L11 An1flm. nllhl

Otlclll(l at Molllreal, niJN
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MPmber: United Press Internattopal,
Inland Dally Press Association and t he
Otllo Newspaper Association. Ndtlonal
Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue
New York, New Y\lrk 10017.
'

UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS,
Ohio (UPI) - John Carroll was
POS'J¥ASTER: Send addres.s changes
to· Th e Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
picked by both conference
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
coaches and the media Thursday
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
to win a fourth -consecutive Pres·
By Carrier or Mot or Route
idents' Athletic Conference. bas·
One Week ....................... ... . ;, ...... S1.40
ketball ti!le.
One Monttt ....... ...... .... ,............... $6.10
But, Hahn accepted the meOne Year ..... .... ....................... . $72.80
John Carroll received five of
dia's confidence In his team by
SINGLE COI'Y
the six flrst·place votes In the
saying, "someone has to wear
PRICE
coaches' poll and 10 of the 12
Dally ...... ... .......... ................ 25 Cent s
the collar. Our Inside guys have
first·place votes In the media
to develop, though.
Subscrlbct'S not dP.Slringtopay the carpoll.
rier may remit in a dvance direct to
" We want to be the beSt we can
Washington &amp; Jefferson re·
The Daily Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
be lor the second week of March
basts. Credit will be gtven carrier each
celved the other first-place vote
week.
•
for the MAC tourney," added
In the coaches' poll and finished
Hahn. "That's when you want to
No subscriptions by mall permitted In
second In the balloting, followed
areas where home carrier service Is
be the best."
by Grove City, Bethany, Carneavailable.
Western Michigan Coach Ver·
gie Mellon, Thiel and Hiram.
non Payne has among his return·
MaU Sub!lcrlptlons
Washington &amp; Jefferson and
Inside' Melp County
lng starters 6-foot guard Mark
Grove City each received one
13 Weeks .......... ...... .................. $19.24
·Brown, a transfer from Michigan
2; Weeks ............................... ... S37.96
flrst·place vote In the media poll,
State who averaged 19.6 points
5
Weeks ......... ....... ................ .. $74 .36
and were picked second and
Outside Meigs County
·
per game a year ago lor the
third, respectively, followed by
13 Weeks ..................... .. ........... $20.80
Broncos, 6·foot·4 forward Phil• Carnegie Mellon, Bethany, HI·
26 Weeks ....... .. .. .... ............... .... $40.30
52 Weeks .............
. ..... ...... $75.40
Holmes and 5·foot·10 guard Billy
ram and ThieL
Stanback. along with 6-foot-5 Ell
Parker, a top sub who averaged
14.4 points per contest last year.
''This Is my seventh year and
Its the best group we've had at
Western In my tenure," said
Payne, the former Indiana Unl·
verslty star. "We hve some good
players and more experience
AS LOW AS
FRONT
REAR
than In the past."
OTHERS
SLIGHTY
HIGHER
Eastern Michigan, which fin·
!shed 22-8 overall and 14·2 In the
ROTORS TURNED EXTRA
league last year. has four of Its
lop six players back, but missing
will be 6-loot-8 Grant Long, the
MAC player of the year, who was
second to Central's Dan Majerle
In both scoring (23 per game) and
rebounding (10.4).
Majerle, one of the stars of the
6
U.S. Olympic team, also has
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
graduated, along with two other
LICENSED
SHOP
NIASE CERTIFIED
Chippewa starters of a year ago.
Thl~ ye~r's MAC post-season
tournament will Include all nine
teams, instead of the top seven
finishers as in the past. It w111 be
played In Toledo's Centennial
Hall Friday, Saturday and S,un·
day, March 10, 11 and 12. The
championship game will be tele·
vised at noon Sunday, March 12.

Ohio University favored to
capture Mid-American crown
TOLEDO, Ohio !UP!) -Ohio
University got the nod as lhe
team to beat In this year's
Mid-American Conference bas·
ketball race at Thursday's an ·
nual MAC press preview.
'Ilhe Bobcats of Coach B111y
Hahn, with a solid 1·2 punch of
Paul "Snoopy" Graham and
Dave Jamerson leading the way..
received 31 ol72 votes cast as the
probable winner by members of
the MAC News Media, Associ a·
tlon attending the preview.
OU amassed 653 points, with
nine points being given for first
place and going down to one for
last place. Western Michigan,
with all five starters and two top
reserves back, was the media ' s
second choice with 25 first-place
votes and 630 points, with Ball
State a solid third with 10 firsts
and 579 points.
Rounding out the choices for
the nine-team league were East·
ern Michigan, the · defending
champion, fourth with three
firsts and 489 points, followed by
Kent State 421, Miami 367,
Central Michigan 295, Toledo 245
and Bowling Green 209. Miami,
Toledo and BG all had a first·
place vote.
The 6-foot-6 Graham averaged
20 points per game and the
6-foot-5 Jamerson 17 .3 last sea·
son for the Bobcats, who also
have back point guard Dennis
Whitaker, who averaged 6.8
assists.
"We have excellent perimeter
players," said Hahn, starting his
third season as OU's coach, "but
nothing on the lnslcte. You can't
have a championship team with·
out a strong, dominating player
Inside. Ohio U doesn't have a guy
like that. Our lack of size Is
scary."

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JIM COBB

PAC cage favorite

I USPI&gt; t;~!lfll)
A Dlyltdon of Multimedia, lnc.

Mr SprhtJ st. Grelll!ftlllu ra: Green :J.:'i

Ohio Slate at Iowa
Bu&amp;ern Michl II" at Bowii•IG~IHI
Cellh&amp;.l MlchiJIIII .a ToledO Cfo:•)
kelllt Stale at Mlunl
Ball Stale at Ohio tlnlverAI)'

PIZZA

JQhn Carroll is

The Daily Sentinel

I'"'""

Tblt week's

'.

rushing offense and scoring
offense, averaging 30.6 points per
game.
Quarterback Tim Green was
the OAC's leading passer, com·
pletlng 58 percent of his tosses for
1,323 yards and 14 touchdowns.
His favorite receiver was Paul
Kungl, who led the conference In
TD catches, Including the gamewinner a week ago against
Baldwin-Wallace.
Dayton averaged 260yards per
game rushing with five backs
with more than 300 yards on the
season.

The 5·foot·9, 200·pound Haw- .
klns Is averaging 6 yards on 84 :
carries. Lorenzo Davis, a 6-foot, •
195·pound senior, has the most :
rushing yards .:... 563 on 103 :
carries lor a 5.3 average.
J.C. Penny, a 5·fool·9, · 200·
pound senior, has gained 352
yards on 83 rushes lor a 4.1 .
average.
Frank Edie, a 6-!oot·2, 195- ·
pound sophomore ha~i completed
59 of 105 passes for 587 yards and
six touchdowns witll three inter··
ceptions . Sophomore quarter··
back Chris Gamble has com·
pleted 79 of 136 passes for 733
yards.

t;ir l• lM I" W l(h ~'' """~ /141, 1.-!•rlott/1
N• l n/ll·rl
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Ohio ColMa" FnMbUISchedwle
S..tardlll.". No¥ U

*IROC CAMARO
*CADILLAC ELDORADO *CUTLASS SUPREME
*CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE *CORSICA
*SPRINTS *5-10 PICKUP
*FULL SIZE CONV~RSION VAN *ASTRO
CONVERSION VAN *SILVERADO ~ICKUP

Dayton will be making Its third
straight appearance In the
playoffs, Including last year's
19-3 loss to Wagner In the
champlo.nshlp Stagg Bowl. The
Flyers won the title the national
·
crown In 1980.
The first meeting, back on
Sept. 10. was never a contest,
with Dayton racing to a 28·0
halftime lead. The Flyers piled
up 458 total yards, Including 275
on the ground, while Wittenberg
managed just 274 total yards. ·
Despite that 'shutout, Witten·
berg led the OAC in total offense,

Hannan Trace w111 kick off the
1988·89 boys' basketball season at
7; 30 this evening when the
Wildcats play host to Franklin
Furnace's Green Bobcats.
Jn their last meeting, the
Wildcats claimed a 70-68 over·
time victory over the Bobcats In
the sectional ch•mplonshlp
game last February In
Chesapeake.
·
The other seven SVAC hard·
wood quintets will commence
cage play next
week.

.

Girls scores

Growpurt

PorUnlouitl Nolft! Dame (11·0) " '
Newar kCatiiiDIIc Clf-11, P'tldQ. 7: :11,.m.
Be ......

This week's games

. 27

Wildcats open new
campaign tonight

......

Youngstown Is Marshall 's third
consecutive trip.
Youngstown's losses have
come to Kent State 14·3·, Eastern
Michigan 17·12, Akron 33-7, Nor·
thea stern !Mass.) 23-7, Bowling
Green 20·16 and Liberty (Va.)
29·0.
The Penguins average 175.5
yartls a game rushing and 131.7
passing.
.
"Offensively, they don't pass ,
much but they have a strong ,
freshman running back in Leo :
Hawkins ," Chaump said.

Vancouwr a1 St. Lo•ll. nl11ht

.\1 TroJ Memoli at Sladhun, Troy :.
• , MldlldOW(n Ff'nwlct (1-t) va MIMUr
~ (f.t), Frldlt,)', 7:10p.m.

DELTA88

I
teams in the final UP! ratings
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. !UPI)
are still playing, led by
- Marshall's once-beaten foot ·
three- time defending champ
ball team, struggllng . of late,
and No. 1 ranked Newark
takes on a surging Youngstown
Catholic.
State
club Saturday afternoon In
The Green Wave, 'i0·20wlnners
Stambaugh
Stadium In the nor·
.Qver East Knox last week, takes
theastern
Ohio
city.
on No . 4 Portsmouth Notre Dame
"Youngstown
Is a team that is
at Groveport· Madison In Region
coming on strong towards the
19. Notre Dame edged Canal
Winchester, 10-6 last week at endoftheseason,"saldMarshall
coach George Cbaump. ''They
Groveport.
No. 2 Archbold and No. 3 had a blgwln lastweekandbeata
good Indiana State · team the
Monroeville, both 11·0, meet at week before."
Oregon Clay Stadium In Region
The 31-14 conquest of Southern
·18, while No. 5Mogadoretakes on
Illinois
and the 25·7 triumph over
Independence at Sharkey Sta·
Indiana State have pushed the
dlum In Barberton In Region 17.
The Division V Region 20 Penguins' record to 4·6. Their
contest pits 9th-ranked Middle- other victories came 33·13 over
Eastern Illinois and 41-39 over
town Fenwick against Minster at
Towson
State (Md.).
Troy Memorial Stadium.
rallied from a 35·7
Marshall
The sem lflnals will be played
deficit
to
nip
Western Carolina
Nov. 25 and 26 with the P,alrlngs
52·45
last
week.
That came after
.
and sites of games - to be
20-3
setback
at The CitadeL
a
announced.
The championship games are
scheduled lor Ohio Stadium In
Columbus Dec. 2, 3 and 4.

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Waahlal*oaaiNew.Jer•r.ntpt
· Toroni• .. Edmoalon, niJhl

(l·t ), Frldl)', 7:• p.m.

PRICED!

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Ulall ID, Pardand tt
Suttlr 101, LA. I.Uer• 88
Fr._,'1Gam•
W•llln&amp;Mn .. Bol~ 7:31p.m.
CleYel•• .a Newler,ey , 7: 3f p.m.
New Yerk a1 Philadelphia, '7:st p.m.

Repan8

BLAZER

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NewJer..,-MI.MIIwa.AieeH
Houlloalll, Ml.n1117
Dallal liS, Ol.-lotte 13

At Welteme 8tHI!Im. DaJ ton
RarNon Ul.f) n Fr•UI!I (10.1),

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NATmNM. IABKET.ALLMSOC.

(11·1), .... ...,. 7: .. p.m.

Clf!'\'elaad Or an F (S.S)
{ 10.1), S.III:UniiiJ, 1 p,m,

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~sto••
All"'ule IICadlam, Berea
CI4Weluf 81;, IID&amp;IMII (IJ.I) VI Slew
110-11, Salllld~t~, 7 p.m.
ILtP,nt:
,\t GIM• Bowl Sladlum, To led.
Tol~ WWlmer {1...1) va. Sprblafleid
Norfl (t.l), .ht...tiiiiiJ, 1 p.m.

4.1 O.bl..

Expresses appreciation

•

Wittenberg, 8-2, then ran off
victories before being
beaten 31·7 by Mount Union two
weeks. The Tigers then earned a
share of the OAC IItle and a
playoff spot with a 2H7 victory
over Baldwln-Walllace last
Saturday.
Neither !he Tigers nor the
Flyers are strangers to post·
season play. Wittenberg Is a
two-time Division III champion
(1973 and 1975) and alsolostln the
title game twice (~978 and 1979).
seven

Scoreboard ...

Feels Ohio needs GOP gvvernor

I

The Region 5 other DiviSion II
semi has Chardon going agalns(
Solon at Mentor.
In Division III. defending
champ Youngstown Cardinal
Mooney takes on Akron St.
Vincent-St. Mary In Region 9 at
the Rubber Bowl In another
rematch of a ·regular·season

game, won by Mooney.
Ironton, the No. 1 Ill team,
plays Licking Valley at Ports·
mouth In Region 111n a battle of
11·0 teams, while Urbana and
Brookville, also both 11-0, play at
Clayton Northmont Stadium In
Region 12. The other Division III
contest, In Region 10, matches
Cleveland Orange and Lima
Bath at Finnie Stadium.
Columbus Academy, both the
defending champ and ranked No.
1 at 10·1 In Division IV, meets
Columbus Hartley (7-4) at Dublin
High School In Region 15. Those
two also met fl\e opening week of
the regular season, Academy
winning 9-6.
· In other games In Division IV.
2nd-ranked Wheelersburg plays
No. 5 Versailles at Lockland In
Region 16; No. 4 Canton Central
Catholic goes against No. 9
Warren Kennedy at Youngstown
.In Region 13; and No. 7 Bellville
Clear Fork meets'No. 11 Loudon.
vllle at Mt. Vernon In Region 14.
In Division V, the top live

Sentinei-Page~3

Herd takes on Penguins in
final regular season game

Tigers tak.e on FlyerS in playoff battle

Letters to the editor

Dear Editor:
I would like to thank everyone
who helped with our Annual
Halloween Party. I would like to
allo t'lumk all the buslnes&amp;el who
donated prizes, candy or wha·
tever to help us. Everything was

Toledo Whitmer against Spring·
field North In a 1 p.m . game In
Toledo's Glass Bowl In Region 2.
Akron Buchtel, last year's Dlv·
Is ion II champ, puts Its 9·1 record
up against Macedonia Nordonla
(9·1) In Region 6 at the Akron
Rubber Bowl Friday night. The
Griffins won over 38·10 over
Fostoria last week, while Nordonla belted Bowling Green 40·14.
Also In Division II Friday, No.1
ranked Steubenville takes on No.
4 Uniontown Lake at Canton's
Fawcett Stadium In f!,eglon 7.
Both are ll·O. In Region 8,
Harrison, also 10·0 and ranked
No. 2 plays Franklin (9-1) at
Welcome Stadium.

ftelloall

voting your pocketbook. John F.
Dear Editor:
How about a post mortem on Kennedy said something slgnlfl.
the recent election. There was a cant. "It Is not what your country
lot of negative campaigning but can do for you but what you can
some positive things came out as do for your country." The editor
a result. Wefoundoutmoreabout of U.S. News and World report
Michael Dukakls because he said the same thing. "The old
1:0uld not answer up. Negative atnuent liberal elites spoke lett
.campaigning wUI be the bot but lived right and the people of
,pollt!cal .stuff ofthe future. When middle America paid."
:a candidate complains ,about
Meigs County Is dead lastln the
negative campaigning he Is ad· scheme of things In Oiilo and they
mltting that he Is on the little end will be until the Democrats quit
of the stick.
gerrymandering us Into a hope. I voted for George Voinovlch less political position. We were
:tor United States Senate. I will better off when we had our own
-tell you why. There Is an representative to the general
;Imbalance of power In the assembly. I know they say the
:Congress. The political process rules came from heaven but they
•has made It virtually Impossible came from the political bosses.
to unseat an lncumbj!nt. That Is When anything of Importance
not democracy In action. Some of comes up what chance baa a little
those fellows have to die to get county that votes no more then
them out. . Can you name a 6,500 or 7,000 haveagalnstAthens
)nember of Congress who Is not County with 10,000 Students with
•well healed. At least one of the a New York portend and Law·
'Senators from Ohio should be a renee County. The gerrymander·
Republican. Cronyism has got us lng will go on but we need a
Into a lot of trouble. Congress has Republican governor next time
voted themselves all kinds of · to see that Meigs County gets a
:special prlvlledges. Tell me why little better shake.
Gayle Price
you voted for Metzenbaum. I
think you did It beCause you were

The Daily

Ohio.high school playoffs resume

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middlepolt, Ohio
Friday, November 18, 1988 ·

Terrorists hard to spot

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

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-----The Daily Sentinei- Page- 6

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By The Bend

School menus
announced

History and genealolgy
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By BOB HOEFLICH
Sen. Jan Michael Long will be
: guest ~peaker when the Meigs
• County Genea·
' logical ·Society
• ·meets at 2 p.m.
Sunday at the
Meigs Museum.
The focus wut
be on House Bill
790 which deals
with the handling ol various
records In Ohio. I'm sure you
have heard of the complications
so you might want to be on hand
to hear what Sen. Long has to say
about the matter.

Bend Minstrel shows which
started 35 years ago In 1953.
Betty was a performer In the
vocal chorus for years as well as
taking part In other features. Her
mother-In-law and father -In-law,
the late Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Reibel as well as her husband,
!he late Donley Reibel, were all
workers with the shows. Mrs:
Reibel sang In the chorus and
Donley and Henry were terrific
backstage workers. Donna Retbel, daughter of Betty and
Donley, was theshowmascotand
a performer for quite a long t lme
also.
Curly, of course, w111 be re, The December Issue of Read-. membered by show sup!lorters,
er's Digest features a tribute to In his role as a end man In the
songwriter Irving Berlin written minstrel as well as tor other
comedy bits and vocal work.
by President ~agon .
Coincidentally, the Big Bend PeriOdically, over the years
Minstrel Association will salute Curly has returned to be a cast
the music of Berlin at Its annual member and especially when
Fall Follies to be stage&lt;! at 8:10 Sal)ta was scheduled to make an
p.m. on Saturday , Nov. 26.
appearance. As many of you
Berlin celebrated his 100th know, Curly has a knack of
_ birthday the past summer and, of maintaining a good sense of
course, the occasion received humor which he passes along and
national attentiOn because of his I don't have to remind you, I'm
role In popular music - some sure, of his many appearances
1500 songs during his long career. throughout the county over the
At any rate, during the follies years in the role of a very genial
you w111 hear again halt of the Santa Claus.
songs mentioned In the President
I do want to mention also that
Reagon article plus some dozen advance tickets for this year's
more. We've selected someofthe production went on sale ThursBerlin songs which are not as day. Tickets can be purchased at
well known today as they were Farmers Bank, Swisher and
earlier and among these are Lohse Drug Store, Bank I, and
Snookey Ookums being done by The Dally Sen tine! office In
Bob and Deb! Buck; Everybody Pomeroy and at Dan's, Bahr
Step by Bruce Wolfe and Ho- Clothiers and the Middleport
mesick being performed by Department Store, all In 'MiddleAdam Sheets. Of course, there port. Incidentally, with the purwlll be many which you wilt chase of advance tickets you
readily recognize or remember avoid any tieup In a line on show
night and the tickets are 50 cents
from another time In your life.
cheaper
than they will be at the
By the way, each year the
door on NoY. 26.
association honors two former
cast members and the llonorees
If you somehow get the Impresthis year will be Betty Reibel and
sion · that I want you to be
Orval (Curly) Wiles.
Interested In the Fan Follies Both Betty and Curly date back
you're right. Do keep smUing.
to near the beglnntitg _of the Big

Christmas _·flowers
to be seen at center

'

.,

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Holiday !lower arrangments,
wreathes, swags, packages decorations , and an' array of specl" mens and potted plants, along
". with creative Christmas card
pieces-you can see it all at the
annual holiday !lower show of the
Meigs County Garden Clubs
Assocatlon to be staged on the
weekend after Thanksgiving at
the Senior Citizens Center.
· The Sights and Sounds of
Christmas Is the theme of the
show which will be open for the
public to enjoy from1 to 5 p.m. on
' Saturday and from noon to 4 p.m.
on Sunday .
While some of the classes In the
artistic arrangement division
are restricted to· exhibits !rom
garden club members, most of
the classes are open for public
· display. There .Is no advance
registration and anyone wanting
to exhibit in one of the classes
should have their entry at the
Center not later than noon on the
opening day of the show.
And thereareclassesfor junior
. exhibitors In both artistic arran' gements and specimens.
The judging will take place at 1
p.m. on Saturday of the show
with
: ribbons to be awarded In four
places, according to Sheila Cur. .. tis, show chairman .
•
Several special awards will be
presented Including a best ·of
~
show, reserve best of show, and
: creativity award In artistic ar. • rangements and a horticulture
sweepstakes award in the adult
classes, and a best of show and
horticulture sweepstakes award
In the junior classes.
The rules specifY that only one
entry per exhibitor Is permitted
In each artistic class. Baubles,
glitter, snow, backgrounds and
accessories are allowed In all
classes providing they add distinction to the design.
Artistic arrangements must be
the work of the exhibitor and
plant must be owned and grown
by the exhibitor for at least three
·, months prior to the show.
~~
In the artistic arrangements
division, the classes for wreaths,
swags, and other wall decoratiOns, a section entitled Deck the
Halls Include· classes for both
Indoor and outdoor swags and
wreaths, and wall decorations
featuring a stocking and one tor a
favorite choice piece.
Artistrlc arrangements which
. arl) limited to exhibits by Meigs
; County Garden Club members
• only are as follows :
·
Angels We Have· Heard on

"''

Page-4

\

.Beat of the bend

~

OR ou... orne to hunt~

Friday, November 18, 1988

.

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The Daily Sentinel

High , a tallllne-mass design.
From Our House to Your
House , a design Inspired by a
Christmas card made a part of
the design.
Our Song to Mary, Mother or
Jesus , a design using the Christmas Madonna, one for modern,
another class tor traditional.
Hang It High For All to See a
kinetic design.
The Stockings Were Hung by
the Chimney with Care a design
for a mantle, accessories permitted, to be staged on a 12by 481nch
area.
Sleigh Bells Ring, Are Your
Listening , a vibratile design.
Away To the Window, I Flew
Like a Flash , a creative hortiz·
ontal modern design.
Invitational classes which are
open to the public for exhlbts are
It's Chrlstmastime in the City , a
free standing assemblage to be
staged on a table without a
background, and to be viewed
from all sides; They Saw a Star ,
a traditional design lncorporatlngcandles; 0' Christmas Tree,
a design incorporating evergreens and baubles; and The
First Snow of Winter featuring
weathered wood.
The junior classes In the
artls tic dlvison are A Visit from
St. Nicholas , a design using a
Santa; and Away in a Manger•,
Including a Christmas Madonna
or the Holy Family.

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MELODY MEN- The Melody Men, a quartet,
will be making two appearaaces In the annual Fall
FoUlell of the Big Bend Mlnslrel Association to be
_staged at 8:10p.m. Saturday,Nov.26, lntheMetgs
High School Auditorium. The show, a part of

which Is a salute to the music of Irving Beriln, wlll
feature 41 numbers this year. The quartet
pictured Includes: front, AI Harton, and clock·
wise, Ron Ash, Denver Rice and Des Jeffers.

Cafteria menus for the ca.
rleton School and schools or the
Eastern •and Meigs Local School
Dis trlcts for the week of Nov. 21:
Carleton
Monday - pizza -burgers,
trench fri~. pickles, fruit, mUk.
Tuesday ..,.. Thanksgiving
·dinner.
,
Wednesday - cook's choice .
Thursday and Friday - holiday vacation.
Eastern
Monday - ham patty .sandwich, corn, fruit, milk. ·
Tuesday - fish, trench fries,
fruit, milk.
Wednesday -parent-tea~her
conference, no school until Nov.
29.
.
Meigs
· Monday ..:.. hot dog, mixed
vegetables, cherry co bier, milk.
Tuesday- turkey roast, green
beans, bread and butter, Ice
cream, milk.
Wednesday - pizza, salad,
fruit, milk.
Thursday and Friday - no
school, Thanksgiving holiday.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES 8&amp; SERVICE

semester.
"The class Is invaluable In Its
ability to develop a keen sense of
humor and Is an Imaginative way
of Including humor In speeches,
Introductory remarks for award
ceremonies, commercials, slide
presentations and articles , "
comments Murphey.
The class has grown In popular- ·
tty so that It boasts a sign up list a
year In advance and each student
has to audition to become one of
the few selected for each class .

Pomwoy, OH.

However, fortunately
members of the community,
through the Department of Con~
tlnulng education, can take the
course without having to walt.
Textbook tor the course,
"Comedy Writing Secrets," by
Helltzer Is also a best seller.
The course was begun In 1980
through the school of journalism
and It Is the only course on
comedy writing In the country to
,be Included in the academic
curriculum. Students taking the
class earn three credit hours

Auxiliary eleas new officers
New officers were elected at a
recent meeting of the Ladles
Auxiliary of the Racine Volun- ·
teer Fire Department held at the
firehouse.
Elected were Ann Layne, presIdent; Alana Butler, vice president; Wanda Patterson, secretary; Sandy Patterson,
treasurer, and Sherr! Grady,
reporter.
Plans were made for the
Ladles Auxiliary Christmas
party to be help at the Western
Slzzlln' .tn Parkersburg In early
December.
The meeting opened with the ·
pledge lo the flag and the Lord's
Prayer. Officers' reports were
given. Othersattendlngthe meet·

-

tng were Jean Johnson, Barb
Lane, Jo Ann Grady, Rhonda
Lyons, Emma Lyons, Marlyn
Burleson.

S•rlll &amp; 1-er lem,

OPEN MiiNDAY THRU FRIDAY
I AM·I PM
IATURDAY I AM·1 PM

towards a degree In journalism.
"This Is the best course of any
campus because you get to laugh
and make jokes In class while you
learn how to write comedy ,"
l'Oncludes Murphey.

~THE

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MOCCASINS
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w. Main

992·21 64

Pomeroy, Ohio

The Store With "All Kin do Of Stuff"
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For Pets, Stableo, L~rge It Small Animals, La~r1•.!.!!••dena

ive
By
Fire Truck

fRj . THRU THUR.
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ON£ £V£NIIIG SHOW AI 7:30 P.l.
ADIISSIO_N$1.00

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992·3785, Po11teroy

'

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH . 01(
· Rt. 124. 3 mue from Portland,·Lona Bot·
tan. Edsel Hart, past(l'. Sunday School ,
9:30 a.m.; Sunday momlnK preaching
10: 30 a .m.: Sunday eventna services, 7: 30
a.rt.
p.m.
POMEROY CHURCH OF 11IE NAZAMIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
RENE, Olr"" Union and Mutbeny, Rev .
CHURCH, Comer Ash and Plum. Noel
'lllomu Glal McC!uqr, post&lt;r. NormBII PresHernnann, pastor. Sunday SChoollO: DO a .
m .; Morning Worship, 11:00 a.m.; Wed ·~· S. S. &amp;Ill,, lllnllt' Sc:bool. Ul Lm.:
lliCI'DIIgworsNplll:illa.m.: ewnlng!IOnlt&lt;eS
nesday and Saturday Evening Services at
7:30p.m.
, - p.m.: m1~- - ·
7 p.m.
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCII, 3:IS E.
APPLE GROVE UNITED METHO·
DIST CHURCH - Past&lt;:&lt;, Rev . Carl
Main SL, Pou-. ~nla,y Holy
·communion on tbe ftrSl
of each month,
Hicks, 10 miles above Racine on Rt. 388.
Sunday School9 a.m. , worship service 10
and wtlh mcmna prayer on Ule
third Surds)'. Mm'rtng JX'8YE1' and EmlOf'l on
a.m. Sunday evening service, 7 p.m .;
all- !llnla,ys ct the month. Olun:h Schod Prayer meeting and Bible Study Wednes·
day, 7 p.m.
and Nu!MY care proo.1ded Cl&gt;llee hour In Ule
Parilh Hall mmedia~EJ:Y followlngthell!'r'Vk.'e.
MT . OLIVE UNITED METHODIST POMEROY CIIURCII OF CHRIST, 212 W.
Off 124, behind WllkesvlJle. Charles Jones.
Main St., Leo LAlli, evani'IIIL Bll*! Sctm
pastor. Sunday School, 9:30a.m.; morning
9:l)a.m.; Momngwcndp.W:;JJe..m.; Youth
worship, 10:30: Sunday and Thunday
ME&lt;I'- 6:00p.m.: Everilng--.hlp, 7:00p.
evening gervtces, 7:00 p.m.
m. w.-a,y nigh! prayermeetlngandllll*!
stilly. 7:00p.m.
THE SALVATDN ARMY, 115 Butternut
MEIG8
A..,.. PoJTII!I'OI'. - · Dora Wlnlnglncharl!"OOOPEBATIVE PARISH
~lllly hotiJas meetln&amp; 10 a.m.: ~lilly
UNll'ED MBTIIODIST CHURCH
- . lD: ill a.m. !lllllly Sctm. YPSM
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
E - Adamo, leade&lt;. 7::il p.m Salwtlon
Do• .\reb•
ME&lt;IIn&amp; varloulspoal:ers ond musics pedals.
llov. J'roakCrolool
Thul'!lds¥, U: ill a.m. to 2 p.m. Ladk!l Home
Rev Selda• .JobMCil
ALFRED - Church School 9: 30 a.m.;
Leaeue, memba s In cJuuxe, aU wcmen
lavttA!d: 6:«1 p.m. 'l'hur111a,y, . Cbrpi Cadet Worllltlp, 11a.m.: UMYF6:30p.m .; UMW
au. 4Ywqr I'Ooplo-BII*!l, 7: :II p.m. IItie Third Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Communion,
llrsl Sunclloy . (Arch..-)
ond fPY&lt;I' ME&lt;Ibw. _.to the J)Otilc.
I'OMERO\' WESTSII)E CHURCfl OF
CHESTER - Worsl&gt;Jp 9 a.m.; Churoh
CHRIST,332110llklren'ollomeRood iCoullY SchooiiOa.m.; BlbleSIUdy, Thunda)'. 7p.
Rood 'IS).-. Vocal mu!lc. ~nla,y Wor- m.; UMW, nrst nurlday, 1 p.m.; ComoltlpiOa.m.J BltieStllly U a.m.; Worship, 6p. munion, rant Sunday (Archer).
JOPPA - Worship 9:ll a.m.; Church
m.
Ill*! Stilly, 7 p.m.
OlD OElnER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
School10:30 a ,m. Bible Study Wednesday,
CHURCH. Alvtn C\11b, pastor; Undil Swan,
7::11 p.m. 4Jobnom).
!lljL !lllllly Sctm 9:00a.m.: preachlngoerLONG BOTTOM - Church School 9: 30
vlool, first and lblnl ~lilly followlng!lllllly
a.m.: Worship 10:30 a.m.; Bible Study,
Schocl Youth meeting. 7::lt p.m. every Surr
Wednaday, 7:30 p.m.; UMYF Weclnes·
day, 6:00p.m.: Communion First SUnday
• clay.
d. Month (Crc4oot) . .
GRAHAM
UNITED ME'1110DIST.
REEDSVILLE - Chureh School9: 30 a.
Preaching 9: 30a.m. tlrst and second Sunm.;
Worthlp ServlceU:OOa.m.
days ot each month: third and fourth SunTUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL day each month worship aervlcet at 7:30 p.
Cburch School 9 a.m.; Worship 10 a.m. ;
•\ m.: Wednesday evenings at 7:30 p.m. Bible
Study, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.; CommuPrayer and Bible Study.
nion
First
Sunday .'Archer).
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST. MulCIII'ITIUL CLUII'I'I!K
berry Heights Road, Pomeroy. Pastct' Bob
BeY.MolviDFruklll
Sayder: Sabbath Scbod Superintendent,
llev. a ....8. Zoullo. Jr.
DarUne Stewart. Sabbath School begins at
Rev. Don Meadaw•
2 p.m. on Saturday afternoon with worship
' ........., 'l'lllle~•
service following at 3:00 p.m. Everyau~
-.P..IMartlo
welcome.
,
Bn". Artlntr Cralllree
RUTLAND FtRST BAPTIST CHURCH
BeY. Rober181eole
- Sister Harriett Warner, Supt. Sunday
ASBURY
(Syracuoe) -Worship II a.m.
School9: 30 a.m. ; Morntn1 Worship, 10:45
: Church School 9:45a.m.; Charse Bible
a .m.
Study, Wednaday, 7:30p.m.; UMW, first
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Lystm
Tuesday, 1::1) p.m.; Choir Rehearsal,
Halley, mlnlster; Saturday evening
Wednesday 6:30p.m. (Thatch..-)
evangelistic services, o~n to public, 7 p.
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m.;
m.; Sunday Church SChool. 9:30 a.m .:
Chureb SchoollO a.m.; BlbleStudy, TueJMorning Worlh.lp 10: ~a.m.
day, T:OOp._m,; UMW, FiratMontlay, 7::wt
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Pop.m.; UMYF Sunclly, 6 p.m. Cholr Remeroy Pike. E . Lamar O'Bryant, pastor;
hearul,
Chll4ren's at 6:30p.m. Adult tol·
Jack Needs, Sunday School Dlrect«r. Sun·
lowln(l: Wednesday. (Franklin)
day School, 9: 30a.m.; Morning Worship,
FLATWOODS- Church School, 10 a .m .
10:45; eveniRIWOI'Shlp, 7: 00p.m. (D .S.T.)
; Worohlp. II a.m.; Bible Study. Thurs&amp; 7:30 (E .S.T. ) ; Wednesday Prayer 5er· . day,
7 p.m.: UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m .
vice, 7:00p.m. (D .S.T.) &amp; 7:30P.M. (E .S.
(Franklin).
.
T.) ; Minion Frlendl (ages 2·6). Royal
FOREST RUN - Worllltlp 9 a.m.;
Ambassadors (boys ages 6-18), and Girls
·Church Schod 10 A.M.: Choir practice,
In Action tases 6-18) on Wednesdays, 7 p.
Thurwday, 6:30 p.m.: UMW thlnl Monday .
m. iD.S.T.) A 7:30p.m. (E .S.T.l: Tuesday
(Thatcber)
Visitation, 6:30p.m.
HEATII (Middleport) - Church School,
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, Bai9:30a.m.; Mornlng Worship 10:30 a.m.;
ley Run Road, Rev. Emmett Rawson, pasYouth Group, 4 p.m.; Wedneac.tay, Bible
tor. Handley Dunn. supt. Sunday Schod.
study
6:00p.m. Cholr rehear&amp;al 7:00p.m .
10 a .m.; SundayeveninJ service, 7:30p.m.
(ZUntaa&gt;
: Blbleteachinr. 7:30p.m. Thursday.
MINERSVILLE - Church Scbool 9:00
SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherey St .. Sya .m.; Wonblp service 10:00a.m.; UMW
racuse. Mark Morrow, pastoc. Services~ 10
third Wedaeoday, 1 p.m. ~Thatch..-)
a .m. Sunday. Evening services Sunday
PEARL CHAPEL - Churcb School9: 00
and Wednesday at7:00 p.m.
a.m.; Worship Service 10:00 a .m. (Mar·
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
tin)
IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Dwight Haley,
POMEROY- Chun:h School, 9: IS a.m .
ftrst elder: Wanda Mohler. Sunday School
;
Worlhtp 10:30 a.m.; Choir rebear111
!llpt. Sunday School 9::11 a.m.: Mornlng
WediU!Iday, 7:30 p.m.; UMW, seoond
Worship 10:30 a.m .; Evening Worship 7:11
Tuesday, 7:30p.m.: UMYFSunday,&amp;p.m.
p.m.; Wedneeday prayer meeting?: ~. p.m.
(Meadows)
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
ROCK SPRINGS- Church School, 9: lS
Racine. Rev. James Satterneld, paste.-.
a.m.;
WorsblplOa.m.; Bible StUdy, Wed·
Freeman Williams. Supt. Sunday School
nesday, 7::11 p.m.: UMYF (Senlon) , Sun9: !&amp;5 a.m.; SLi.nday and Wednesday evenday, 6 p.m.; (Juniors) every other Sun·
Ing services, 7 p.m.
clay, 6 p.m. ~Franklin).
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST.
RUTLAND - Ch_tlrch Scbool. 10 a.m.:
Corner Slxtb and Palmer. Janies 5eddon.
Wonhlp,
11 a.m.; UMW First Monday,
Put&lt;r. Edria Wlls(ll, S.S. Supt. ; Cathy
7:30p.~. (Crabtree)
RIUJ, Astt. Supt. Sunday School , 9: 15 a.
SALEM CENTER- Church School9: lS
m.; MornlngWorsh1p,l0:15a .m.; Sunday
a.m. ; Morntna Worship 10:15 a.m. •
Evenlngaervin.' , 'I p.m . Prayer meetlnR
4Steele)
and Bible Stud)' Wednesday t&gt;Venlng, 7 p.
SNOWVILLE- MornlngWorshlp, 9:00
m.; Children's choit practice, Wednes·
a.m.; Church Sch0ol10:00I.m. (Martbl)
day, 7 p.m.; Adult choir practice, Wed., 8
p.m.: Radio program, WMPO, Sunday,
S::Jl a.m.
SOU'l'IIERN CLUIITBII
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST.
Bew.O.bl5tb and Main, AI Hartson, mlnllter;
Rldlard Dt.aBoae. Asao:tate P.utCI": Mike
. . .. Cirllllcb
Gerlach. Sunday_ Scbod. Superintendent
APPLE GROVE - Church School 9:00
Bible Stbool9: 30 a.m.; Morntna: Worablp
a.m.: Morillnc Worlldp 10:00 1.m.; Bible
10:30 a.m. Ewnlng Wonblp ?:00 p.m .
Study Suadoy ·7:00p.m.; Prayer meetllll
Wedaesday, 7:00p.m. Pro)'er meeting.
7:00p.m. Thuroclay. (Hictol)
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF TilE NABETHANY - Wontdp 9 a.m.; Chutth
ZARENE, PASTOR Fred Penborwood.
ScboollOo.m.: Bible Study Wedaeoday10
Bill Whtte, Sunclloy School Supl Sunclloy
a.m.; Doreu Womft's Fellowship Wed·
School9:30 o.m.: .Mornlng Worship 10:45
nesday lla.m. (Footer).
a.m.; EvangeUJtlc meetlnl 7:00 p.m.
CARMEL - Church School 9:30 a.m.:
Wednetday, 1:00 p.m. Prayer meeting.
Wor~blp, W: •5 a.m. Secoad and Fourth
UNITED PIIUIIYTEBIAN MINIITRY
Sunday•: Fellowahl_p dinner wllh SuUm
OF MBI08 OOVM'Y
• tbltd Thunday, 8: :II p.m. 4Footer).
BeY.O'Ijo... lloi(J
MORNING STAR- Chureb School9: f~
HARRISOIIVILLE PRESIIYTERIAN
a.m.; Worship 10:30 a.m.; Bible Study,
CHU~H - Sullday: Worship Services
9:00a.m.; Church School tO: 15 a .m..
ThuJrf6· 7:30j&gt;.m. 4Folter).
s
N - qwrcb Scbool, 9:30 a.m.;
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN Momln&amp; Worlhlp 10: t5a.m. rtnt and third
SUnday Schoci, 9 a.m.; Church ~ervlce,
Sundlyo; FeiiOWihiP c111111er with Comtel
11:15a.m.
tblrd'lbunday, &amp;:!&gt;p.m. (f'osler~ . .
SYRACUSE FD!ST UNITED PRESBYENJT IErART- Mornln(IWonblpli:OO
TERIAN - Sunday School, 10 a.m.:
Lm.; Oturcb Scltod IO:OOo.m.: UMW llrot
Churrh terVIce, 10: 1&amp; a.m.
1'18dllf 7:30'p.m. (Grace).
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD, Pas ttl',
!ErART FALLS - Worllltlp 9 •.m.:
John Evant. Sunday SCbod 10:00 a.m.;
Church SchOol 10 o.m. (Groce) .
Sundoy lllomln(l Worolltp 11:00 a.m. ChU·
RACINE .... Qlureb ScftOol, 10 a.m.; Wordreii'J C.reb 11 a.m. 'Sunday Evening
ohlp 11 Lm.; UMW fourth MonclaY at 7: :Jl p.
Servl"" 7:00p.m. Wed.. 6 p.m. You111 Lam.: lolott'o Prayer Brealclast, Weclntlldi\Y, 8
dlet' AuxUiary. Wednesday, 7 p.m. Fam·
• .m. 4Grace).
~
1\l' Woroltlp.

.ae..
0

w-.

.

.•

au'f

Pom~roy,

-

216 S. Second
Pomeroy ·
992·3325

992-2975

Rawlings-CoaiS"Biower
A LACK OF FAITI-1 IS A HANDICAP
WE CAN ALL OVERCOME
We try to help people who are
handic,a pped In some way, by reserving
convenient parking spaces for them and
building special facilities to accommodate
them. In some less visible ways, however,
we are all handicapped. It may be by
unwarranted fears and superstitions,
insensitivity to others' feelings, a weakness
that allows i.Js to succumb to temptations,
and so on. Regardless of our physical
condition, perhaps the worst handicap of
all is lack of faith. Whether we realize it or
not, we should all learn what God's love
can do for us. As we grow older, various
infirmities will begin to chip away at us,
and we will need help and courage that
only faith can provide. Not knowing the joy
and comfort of faith is the worst handicap
of all, but it is one that each of us
canovercome, if we try.

FUNERAL HOME
"Serving Familin"
264 5. 2nd, Middlopttrt

992-5141

FRANCIS FLORIST
l\leig1 Coutuy '.s Oldest Florfd

362 EA.ST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO 46789
614 / 992· 2644

Oh

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, 011.

John F . Fultz. Mgl".
Ph. "2·2!01
Pomtroy

•

rot IVIIY OCCASION

1614)992·2039 or
1614)992-5721

MEIGS nRE
CENTER, INC.

.P. J. PAULEY, AGENT'
ol Calumbus. 0.

ftOWIIS

214 E. Mal~
992-5130 Pollltroy

992-2156

TEAFORD
-

GroceriesGeneralllerchandlse
Racine 949·2550

Prescriptions

. ~--~~~----~------------~

Nationwide l~s. Co.

_Ru. ~inesses Listed On This Page.
WAIDCROSS
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I

~ISHER

TR!Nli'Y CXJNGREGATIONAL CHURCH,
Rev. Richard Freeman. pUtor; DebHe lb:k,
&amp;I lilly Sctm &amp;Ill. Cl!ureh Sctm ~ 15 a.m.:
Worstip Service :lO::n a.m. Otolr re~.
'J\adleo, 7::11 p.m. unler direction ct Lo~

204 Condor St.

Comedy /class has a funny final
Ohio University In Athens has
one of the tunnlestflnal examinations undoubtedly on any American campus.
A class Is Humor Writing tor
Fun and Profit and the final
exam was held Thursday night at
Baker Genter.
The course prepares students
tor writing comedy material
which can be sold In the humor
market today and the exam Is
graded according to the audience
laughter and applause as stu·
dents present their comedy to a
live audience.
Mel Helltzer, Instructor ofthe
class, tells students:
_"If an act receives a standing
ovation then It gets an A. It the
audience throws fruit at the
performer the grade Is an F,
unless the fruit Is edible- then it
gets marked up to a D."
Tell students performed their
original material on campus last
night and among them was Leesa
Murphey, 108 High St., Pomeroy,
who has been among the students
attending the class during the fall

This Message and Church

'il

POMEROY, OHI0-992·6677
Qui&lt;~ol and Ruth Ana ·foa ; '

(row's Family Re$taurant
"FIIt~tl•l .Kullleig Fll•l c•ld,."
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432

(\\\i(l 5trttl a3oo~s
13 Mill Str..t
Middleport. Ohio 45780

716 NORTH SE(OND AVE.

(6141992·6667- (998-00KBI
CHURCH SUPPLIES • BIBLES

Ed Roush. Sunday School Supt. Sunday
fourth Sunctays worsnlp service at 2:~ p.
Schoci 9: 30a .m.: morning worship and
m.
children' s church 10:30 a.m.; evening
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth and
preaching service firs' three Sundays,
Main St ., Middleport . Rev. Gilbert Craig,
7:30p.m .; Special service four1h Sunday
Jr., pastoc. Mrs. Ervin Baumeardner,
evening, 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday Prayer
Sunday School Supt. Sunday School9:30a.
Meeting, Bible Study and Youth Fellow·
m.; Worship Servtce, 10:45 a.m.
ship, 7:30p.m.
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
CHURCH OF Goo OF PROPHECY.
- Joseph B. Hoskins, evangelist. Sunday
Located on 0 . J . White Road of Highway
Bible Study 9 a .m.: Worship,10 a.m.; Sun160. Pat Hensm. pastor. Sunday School10
day ever;~_tng service 6 p.m.; Wednesday
a.m. Clasaes for all ages. Junior Church 11
evening service, 7 p.m.
a.m.; Morning worship 11 a .m. Adult
PENTECOSTAl. ASSEMBLY, Racine
Choir practice 6 p.m. Sunday. Young PeoRt. 124: WUllam Hoback, pastor. SundaY
ple's, Children' s' Church and Adult BJble
Schoo110 a .m.:· Sunday evening service 1
Study , Wednesday at 7:30p.m.
p.m..Wednesda_y evening setvtce 7 p.m.
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL. 570 Grant
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle
St., Middleport. Affiliated with SOuthern
Supt. Sunday SChool 9: 30 a.m. Mornlni
Baptlll Convention. David Bryan, Sr ., MIWorship 10:30 a.m. Prayer service, alternnister . Sunday School10 a.m.; Morning
ate Sundays.
worship 11 a.m . : Evening worship 7 p.m .;
TilE CHUOCH OF JESUS CHRIST
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, PomeroyBE'111LEHEM BAPTIST. Rev. Earl
Wednesday evening Bible study and
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd.:
Harrt9oovllle Rd. Robert Purtell, minisShuler, putm-. Worshlp servtce, 9:30a.m.
prayer meeting 1 p.m.
next to Fort Mtoigs Park, Rutland. Robert
ter; Steve Stanley, S, S. Supt.; Bill McEI·
Sunday SchoollO: 30 a.m. Blble Study and
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, St .
Richards,
pastor. Services at 7 p.m. on
roy, Asst. Supt.; Sunday School9: 30a.m .:
prayer service Thursday, 7: 30 p.m.
Rt. 124 and Co. Rd. 5, Scott Stewart, pasWednesdays and Sundays.
·
Worship service 10:30 a.m.; Evening wor- .
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATIONtor. William Amberger, S. S. Supt. ; SunHARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP·
ship Sunday 7 p.m. and Wednesday. ?·p.m. .AL CHURCH, Klnpbory Road. Rev.
day School 9: 3Q a .m .; Morning Worship
TER of th" Wesleyan Hollneu Church.
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine
Clyde W. Hendenan, putcr. Sunday
10:30 a .m.: Evening worship 7: 30p.m.
Rev . Oavtd Ferrell, pastor. Henry Eblln,
Grove:. The Rev. WHUam Middleswarlh 1
SChool 9:30a.m.: Ralph CarL Supt. Even·
Wednesday worship 7::Jl p.m.
Sunday
School Supt. ; Sunday School10 a.
pastor. Church service 9:30a.m.: Sunday
lng worship 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting,
ST.
PAUL LUrnERAN CHURCH,
m.; Morning Worship 11 a .m.: Ev.ntng
Schoo110 :30 a.m.
Weclntlldq 7:00p.m.
Corner Sycamore an,d Second Sts., Poservice 1:30 p.m. Wednesday eveningserBRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,
LONG BO'ITOM CHRISTIAN. Vernon
meroy. The Rev. William Mlddleswart.
Ylce 7: :ll p.m.
Tom Runyon. pastor. Sundiy Scbool9: 30
Eldridge, putcr; Wallaee Damewood, S.
pastor. Sunday Schoci 9:45a.m. Church
STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH,
a.m.; Larry Haynes, S. S. Supt. Morning
S. Supt. Sunday School 9:30a.m.: Worship
service 11 a .m.
Ga.ry
Holter, pastor. Sunday services 9::1)
wonh1p 10:30 a.m.
servtce, 10:30 a.m.
SACRED HEART CHURCH, Msgr.
a .m. and 7 p.m.: Midweek service, 7:30p,
RACINE CHURCH OF TilE NAZA Anthony
Glannamore.
Ph.
992-5898.
SaturHYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH .
m. Thursday.
RENE, Rev . John Vance, pastor; Sandy
day Evening Mass 7: 30 p.m .; Sunday
0. H. C.rt, J)IIStcr. SundaySchoolat9: lOa.
Jugtlce, Chairman ot the Board ot ChrisMass. 8 a.m. and 10 a.m . Confessions one
m.; Morning worship at 10: 30 a.m.; SunMIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
tian LUe. Sunday School9: 30 a .m.; Mornhalt hour before each Mass. CCD classes.
day evenlqservlceat 7:30p.m. Thu r9day
Ave.
Rev. Clark Baker, pastor. Carl NotIng worship 10:30 a.m.; evan1eHsttc 9er·
11 a.m. Sunday,
services at 7:30p.m.
tingham. Sunday School Supt. Sunday
vtce 7:,(1(1 p.m. Wedllesday ~ervice, 7 p.m.
VICTORY
BAPTIST,
525
N.
2nd
St..
.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
School 10 a .m. wlth classes tor all ages.
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, DexMiddleport. James E . Keesee. pasta-.
Kncb, located on County Road 31. Rev.
Evening servlc£'5 at 6 p.m. Wednesday BIter. Woody Call. pastor. Services Sunday
Sunday morning worship 10 a.m. : EvenRo1er Wtlltord, pastor. Sunday School
ble study at 7:30p.m . Youth serv.tces Fri10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednesday, 1 p.m.
Ing service 7 p.m.: Wednesday evening
'9;30
a.m.;
Morning
Worahl
10:•5
a.m.;
day
al 7:30p.m.
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
worship 7 p.m. Vl9ltatlon Thursday 6: 30p.
Sunday evening worship 7:00p.m. ; Wed·
ECCLESIA
FELLOWSHIP.128MIIISt. ,
Lloyd Sayre, Supl. Sunday SChool 9: 30 a.
m.
nesday evening Bible Study 7:00p.m.
Middleport. Brother Chuck McPhersm,
m.; morning worship 10:30 a.m. Sunday
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: Davld
WHITE'S
CHAPEL
WESLEY AN
pastor. Sunday School 10 a.m .: Sunday
evenlng service 7 p.m.
Curfman, pastor. Sunday School. lOa .m.:
CHURCH- CoolvUleRD. Rev. Phillip RIevening services at 7 p.m. and Wednesday
worship service 11 a.m .; Sunday night
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Steve
denour, pa11toc. Sunday School9: 30 a .m . ;
services at 7 p. m.
worship service 7: 30 p.m. : Midweek
Deaver, Pastor. Mike SwlKer, Sunday
worship service 10:30 a.m.: Bible study
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Kenneth Smith,
prayer
serVice
Wednesday
7
p.m.
School Supt .; Sunday School 9:30 a .m.;
and worship servke, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
pastor. Sunday School9:30 a.m.; chureh
WESLEYAN
BIBLE
HOUNESS
Morning worship 10:t0 a .m. ; Sunday
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST,
service 7: 30p.m.: youth fellowlhlp6:30 p.
CHURCH or Middleport, Inc., 75 Pearl St.,
evening worship 7:30 p.m. : Wednesday
Blll Carter, pastor. Sunday School9:30 a.
m.: Btblestudy, Thursday, 7: 30_p.m.
Rl'Y. Ivan Myers, pastor; Roger Manley,
evenlnl Bible study 7: )) p.m.
m. ; Mornln1 Worship and Communion
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE, 33045
Sr
..
Sunday
School
Supt.
Sunday
School
BURLINGHAM COMMUNri'Y CIIURCH,
10;30 a .m.
Hiland ·Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pasBurUngtuun. Ray LaudermDt, past«r. RoRUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amos · 9:30a.m.: Morning Worship 10: 30 a.m.;
lor. Danny Lambert, s. S. Supt. Sunday
Evening Worship ""1: 30 p.m. Wednesday
bert Cozart. assistant (Bit&lt;r. !llnli;y Sctm
'fiJUs, pastor. SOnny Hudaon, aupt. Sunday
morning service at 10 a .m.: Sunday even.
10 a.m.: worship 7 p.m.; WemO!Iday, 6 p.m.
School9:30 a.m .; Mornlng worship, 10: 30 evening Bible study, prayer and praise
lng service 7:30p.m . Tuesday and Thursservice, 7:30p.m.
youthmeotlng: Wed, 7p.m.cl&gt;lrehserviCI!B.
a.m.; Sunday evenlna tervlce 7:00p.m .
day Services at 7: JO p.m.
PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH,\!
Wednesday service 7 p.m. WMPO proNEW HAVEN CHURCH OF TilE NALIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
• mlleort Rt . 325. Rev. Ben J. Watts, pastcr.
gram 9 a.m. each Sunday.
OF GOD - Gilbert Spencer. pa9t&lt;l'. SunZARENE, Rev. GlendOn Stroud, paslcr.
Robert Searles, S.S. Supt . Sunday_School
RUTLAND CHURCH OF TilE NAZA- day School 9:30 a.m.; Morning service
Sunday School9:30 a.m.; Worship service,
9::f0 a.m.: Morning Worlhlp 10:30 a.m.:
RENE. Samuel S.aye, pastor. Sunday
10:30 a .m.; Youth service Sunday 6: 1S p,
10: OOa.m.: Sunday evening service 7:00 p.
Sunday evening service 7:30p.m.; Wed·
School9:30 a .m.; Worship servlce10:30a ..
m. Sunday eveningservtce7:00p.m. Wedm.: Mid-week l?rayer service Wednesday
nesday service, 7:30p.m.
m .: Young people's service 6 p.m .
nesday Prayer Meeting and Bible Study
7p.m .
SILVER RUN BAPTIST, Bitt Llttlp,
Evangellstlcservtce6:30p.m. Wednesday
7:00p.m.
MT. OLIVE FULL GOSPEL COMMUN·
_pastor. Steve Little, s . s. Supt. Sunday
service 7 p.m.
·
ITY CHURCH. Lawrence Bush, pastcr.
NE.\SE SETTLEMENT CHURCH, SunSchool10 a.m. ; Morning: worslp, 11 a.m.;
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
Max Folmer, Sr .• S. S. Supt. Sunday School
day afternoon services at 2: 30. Thursday
Sunday evening wonhlp 7: 30 p.m. Prayer
St.. Mason, W.Va. Sunclloy Bible Study 10
evening services at 7: 30.
9: 30a.m.; Sunday evening serVIce, 7:30 .
meeting and Blblesludy Wednesday, 7:30 . a.m. ; Worship 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wedneli·
m. ; Wednesday evening Bible study and
FtRST BAPTIST CHURCH , Masm, W.
p.m.; Youth meeting Wedoeaday at 7 p.m.
day Bible Study, vocal music, 7 p.m.
Va. Pas toe, Bill Murphy. SundaySchool10
praise service, 7: 30 p.m.
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, DudUNITED FAITH CHURCH, Rt. 7on Poa .m. ; Sunday .evening 7:30 p.m. Prayer
- 383 N. 2nd A\Ol!., Middleport. Sunday
ding Lane, Mascm, W.Va. J . N. Thacker.
meroy By·Pau. Rev. David Wiseman, Sr. ,
meetlns and Bible study Wednesday, 7: 30
School. to a.m. Sunday evenlng 7:00p.m.;
pastor. Evenlna: eervtce- 7:30p.m.; Wopastor. Melvin Drake. S. S. Supt. Sunday ·p.m. EveryCIIe welcome.
Mid-week lll!rvlce, Wed. , 7 p.m.
men's Minlltry, Tbunday, 9:30 a.m. ;
School9:30 a.m.; Morning Worship 10:30;
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa·
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH.
Wednesday Prayer and BtbleStl.tdy, 7:15
Evening Worship 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday
!em St. Rev. Paul Taylor, pastor. Sunday
Sunday Scho(i 9: 30a .m.; Dallas Janey,
p.m.
School10 a .m.: Sunday evening 7:00p.m.:
Prayer Service. 7:30p.m.
supt.; Morning worship 10:30 a.m.; SunWednesday evening prayer meeting 7:00
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Rallr&lt;ad
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
day evening serVIce, 7: 30p.m.; Wednesp.m.
St .. Mason. Sunday School10 a.m.; MornCHRISTIAN UNroN. Hartford, W. Va.
day eventnr service, 7:30p.m.
Ing worship 11 a .m .; Evening servtce6 p.
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
Rev. Davkl McManiJ, pastor. Church
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF TilE NA ·
m. Prayer meetbli and Bible Study Wed·
CHURCH, Silver Ridge. Duane SydenSchool 9:30 a.m.: SUnday mom1n1 ser·
ZARENE. Rev. Glenn McMillan, pastil'.
9tricker. pastcx'. Sunday School 9 a.m. ;
vtce, 11 a.m.; Sunday even1n1 .ervtce, nesday, 7 p.m.
Mary Janice Lavender, Sunday School
FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rev. Nyle
Worship ·Servlce, lOa. m.; Sundayeventn~~:
7: 30p.m. Wednesday prayer meeting, 7::11
Supt. Sunday Schod 9:30a.m.; Morning
gervtce, 7:00p.m. Wednesday night Bible
Borde~~, paslor. Cornelius Bunch. supt.
p.m.
worship 10: 30 1.m.; Evangelistic- servtce,
study 7:00p.m.
Sunday School 9: 30__a .m.; Second and
FAIR VIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart.
6p.m.; PrayerandPra!seWednesday, 7p.
W. Va ., Rt. l, James Lewls, past«. Worm.: Youtb meeting, 7 p.m.
•hlp services 9:30a.m.: Sunday Schoolll
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
a.m.; Evening worlhip 7: 30p.m. Tuesday
CHRIST, Elden R. Blake, pal ttl'. Sunday
collage pmyer meeting and Bible Study
School 10 a.m.; Gary Reed, Lay leader.
9:30 a.m.: Worship ~ervlce, Wednesday
Morning sermon, 11 a.m.; Sunday night
7:30p.m.
servlct~: Christian Endeavor 7 ~ ·30 p.m ..
OUR SAVIOUR LUrnERAN CHURCH,
Song service 8 p.m. PreactUng 8: JO p.m.
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravens~ood. w.
Few actors captivated by the role of Shakespeare's HAMLET
Mid-week prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7
Va. The Rev. Geo11e C. Weirick, pastor.
p.m.
are content merely to read the role. They play the character in
Sunday SC:hoci 9:30a.m .; Sunday worship
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, Olar·
lla .'m.
an effort to know him better. This Imaginative projection of
les Domlgan, pastoc. Mtltftd 1Jetler, SunCALVARY BIBLE CHURCH.locatedon
ones
own consciousness Into ~nother human being Is man' s
da,y Scbool !11()1. Morning Wonhtp 9: 30 a.
Pomeroy Pike, County Road 25 nar Flat• m.; Sunday Scbooi10::1Ja.m.; Evenlngmwoods. Rev. Blackwood, pat«. Service~
greatest asset In understanding.
vice, 7:30p.m.
onSUndayatl0:30a.m. and 7:30p.m. wlth
However few can (or will) enter Into the relationship with the
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Doaald Sllue,
SundaySchoo19: 30a.m. BlbleStuc2y, Wed·
honesty
and self-release that Is necessary . In attempting to
pasloc; Joe N, Sayre, Sunday Sckool Supt.
aesday, 7:30p.m.
Sundar Scllod 9: t5 a.m .; Eventna worFAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
understand another Individual, we can only understand In
ship 6::wtp.m.; PrayerMeettn1. 6: 30p.m.
CHRI!in', St. Rt. 338, Antiquity. ReV.
terms of what we think of ourselves. But role playing enables us
Wedneoday.
FrankUn Dlckenl. putor. Sunday mornTIJPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
to become that person ... to. see us (and the rest of the world)
Ing ,10 a.m.; SWiday eventn1 7:30 p.m .
CHRIST. Dave Prenttce, minister. Deryl
Thursday evenl"i 7: :II p.m.
through his eyes. Malcolm S. Knowles tried role playing wlthhls
WeUa, Supt. Chureb SchoOl 9 a.m.; WorMIDDLEPORT INDEPE!IDENT HOLI·
son Eric.
ship Service, 9:45p.m.
NESS CHURCH, Inc., 7~ Pearl Sl. Rev.
CHESTER CHURCH OF TilE NAZA·
[van Myers, actina pastcr; .RoaerManley,
There was a breakdown In communication with elght·year old
RENE. Rev. Herbert Grate, putcr.
Sr., SUnclloy School Supel'lntend"'l. SunEric
and his father .. ..or so It seemed. Tile boy nevercametolhe
Fra•k RIIDe, Supt. SuiMiay Schcql 9:30 a.
day School 9:30a.m.; Morntn1 wc:rshlp
table when he was called.
m.; Worahlp tervlce, 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
10: 3D a.m.; even Ina: worship 7: JO p.m. ;
SUnday. Wednesday, 7 p.m. Prayer meet·
Wednlldly eventna: Bible study, prayer
By the time he did arrive, the food was getting cold and th.e •
tna.
and pralle Jei'Vice. 7:30p.m.
tempers
warm. So, Eric became father .... and father became
, LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS.
CHURCH. WIUiun WUIIanu, IUt&lt;r. Rolittle Eric. At the dinner table, the· father (played by Eric)
TOLIC- VlnZan&lt;lt ond Wa&lt;d Rd. Elder
bert E. Bartm, Dllftlor of Chrtstlon Edu·
Jam11 Miller, put«. SuD4ay Sehod,
called Eric (played by father) to the table. THe father In his role
cation; Steve Eblin, llltslaal. Sundoy
10:30 a.m.; Wonblp Service, Sullday, 7: .:1)
of
Eric gave excuse aftePexcuse but didn't come.
School 9: :ll a.m.: MA&gt;rnl"i wonhlp 10::11
p.m.; BtbloStody, W-eoday, 7:30p.m.
a.m.; Tet!IUI Ia Action, 6 p.m.: EftDIDI
CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL. H&amp;rrl·
Eric, caught up completely In the role, announced furiously
Worship, 7:00p.m. Cholr practice 8 p.m.
ICilvDieRoad. Rev. VIctor Rouab, pastor;
"It you don't come by the ttme I count three, I'm going to dump
Sunday. WednMday evening pnyer and
CIIDIIII Faulk, Sltllday School SUpt.: Sltayour supper In the garbage can." And dump It he did. After the
Bible It~
daySchool9:30o.m.; momiJilwtnhlp. 11
DEXTE_~
CHURCH OF CHRIST,
a.m.; Sunday eveatna llti'Vlct&gt; '7:30 p.m.
Incident,
Eric was never again late for supper.
Charlet RuueU Sr., m.lnil~r; Nonnan
Proyor llleetlltll, Wedtl.....,, 7::Jl p.m.
Just as the role of Hamlet has been the pinnacle of histrionic
Witt, oupt. Sundq Scbool9:30 a.m.: Wol' .
SYRACUSE FIRSTCHVRCH OF GOD.
ohlp ...-vice 10:30 o.m. Btblollutly, Wed·
noo-Pntecotdal. Woralllp .-vt.. Sunday
ambition. so our desire to understand another person to the
ntlldoy, 6:00p.m.
10 o.m.: Suadll)' 11 a.m. Evon IIIli
point of a wllllngness to "become" that person Is the apex of
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
wonlllp ...-vice 7:00 p.m. Wetlneodoy
human Insight and conce~n. - Father Lee Miller, Grace
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS. Portproyer meotlltll7:00 p.m .
land-Racine Road. Mike Duhl, putor;
Cburob, Pomeroy,
MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
1
Janice Danner, church tcbool director.
IN
CHRIST
CHURCH,
Located
Ia
Texu
Church scbool9: lla.m.; Mornlttgwtnhlp
'
Community oil CL Rt. 82. Rev. Robert
. 10:30 a.m.; Wednellday evening prayer...
_Soadero, pastor. Jell Holt«, lay Iader;
IM!'rvlcet, 7: ~_ p.m. _
r

Sermonette

�-----

-- ---

-~----

Peg a 8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Calendar
FRIDAY
RACINE -Annual Thanksglv1111 dinner· at the Racine Grange
Hall, Oak Grove Road, at 6 p.m.
Friday. The ham and turkey will
be fUrnished. ThQse attending
are to take a covered dish and
their own table service. There
will be a pig In a poke auction
following the dinner.
POMEROY Alzheimer's
Disease training session will be
held at the Senior Citizens
Ceater, Friday, 1 to3p.m.,onthe
topic, The Importance of a
Medical Examination and the
Effects of Medications by Dr.
James Witherell.
· POMEROY - Hymn sing
Friday, 7 p.m. at Morse Chapel
Church with Harvest Trio; public
Invited.

,

SATURDAY
POMEROY - The Belles and
Beaus Western Square Dance
Club will sponsor an open dance
onSaturday,frorn8tollp.m.,at
the Pomeroy Senior Citizens
Center. Caller for the evening
will be Homer Magnet. All
western square dancers are
Invited.
PORTLAND - Hazael Community Church Is having a hymn
sing on Saturday, at 7:30p.m. ,
featuring the Unroe Famllly.
RUTLAND- Rutland PTO Is
sponsoring a fall festival at the
Rutland Elementary School on
Saturday from 6 to 9 p.m.
Everyone welcome.
EAST MEIGS - An arts and
crafts show, sponsored by Eastern Band Boosters, will be held
Saturday, 9:30 to 4, at Eastern
HighSchool. At 11 the highschool
chorus will have a concert. The
band will perfili:m at 1 and the
Midnight Cloggers at 3. Everyone welcome.
POMEROY - Residents and
staff of Amerlcare-Pomeroy
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center are sponsoring a bazaar on
Saturday. from 10 to 3, at the
American Legion Hallin Middle-

port. Proceeds from the bazaar
will go toward the purchase of
Christmas gifts for the residents,
and sponsoring special events
and activities . Everyone
welcome.
BURLINGHAM - Word of
Life Church, Burlingham. Is
having a hymn sing and ministerIng service Saturday, 7:30p.m.,
with the Gospel Renectlons. of
Columbus. Pastor Ray Laudermllt welcomes everyone.
LETART FALLS - Letart
Falls PTO Is hosting a fall
festival Sunday at the Let.art
Falls Elementary. Serving of
food will start at 12 noon.
Everyone welcome.
LITTLE KYGER - Little
Kyger Ladles Aid bazaar and
soup supper Is Saturday, 5 p.m.,
at Little Kyger Grange Hall.
· MONDAY '
RACINE - Thli'Raclne Amerl·
can Legion Auxiliary will meet In
special session Monday at 7 p.m.
,at the legion hall.
POMEROY - The Mothers of
Twins Club will meet at 7 p.m.
Monday at thl! Pomeroy United
Methodist Church.
MIDDLEPORT
Meigs
County Churches of Christ Mens'
Fellowship will have a Thanksgiving dinner at the Middleport
Church of Christ on Monday at 6
p.m. All members are Invited to
attend.
HOBSON - Hobson Church of
Christ In Christian Union Will be
In revival Monday through Sunday, at 7 p.m. each evening, with
Pastor Theron Durham. Eve•
ryone welcome.
Clvilan club
POMEROY -The Meigs JunIor Civltan Club will be selling
poinsettias during the next few
weeks. All proceedss will go
toward various projects IncludIng Childrens Hospital, Special
Olympics, travel expenses, etc.
Any area businesses or restdents wishing poinsettias, may

Wolf Pen personal notes
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Bailey,
Sr., have returned from a vacation In Florida. They visited
Silver Spring!!, New Smyona
Beach, and Barbersville, and
relatives residing In DeLand,
Fla.
Recent visitors ot Mr. and Mrs.
Robert C. Bailey, 'Sr., Included
Mrs. Elsie Sutton of Minerva,
Mr. and Mrs. John ZUrcher and
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Mattox,
Mark, Keith and Sandi of Pomeroy, Corey Carnahan, Chester,
and Mr. and Mrs. Wayne

Zurcher. Tim and Monica, West
Columbia, W. .Ya.
Weekend visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Charley Smith were Mr.
and Mrs. Doyle .Knapp, Langsville, Mrs. Daniel Worley, Stacy
Daniel of Daniels, W. Va.;
Charlotte Lambert, Nelsonville; ·
Charles Knapp, Mr. and Mrs.
Kevin Knapp, Michelle and Amy
of Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Warner of
Dayton spent the weekend here
with his parents, Mr and Mrs.
Ted Warner and family.

----

Plans to serve the canteen at Thanksgiving food baskets prothe Dec. 14 vlsll of the Red Cross ject was discussed ~nd the
Bloodmobile to Meigs County church food pantry Is being
were made when Friendly Circle replenished.
A card was signed for Norma
of Trinity Church met there
Louise Jewell, a surgical patient
Tuesday evening.
During the meeting conducted at Holzer Medical Center. Sick
by Diana Hawley, the member and bereaved of the area were
voted to retain the current noted.
Mae Mora presented the proofficers for another year.
Comlttees were appointed to gram using Thanksgiving Is
handle Chrlstmi!S remembran- Thanks Living as the theme. She
ces for the elderly and IU, and read selected scriptures !roll)
plans were made for the circle Psalms, and gave Inspirational .
Christmas dinner party. The ' thoughts on Thanksglv!ng Jnclud-

Parade
MIDDLEPORT
Middle·
port's annual Christmas parade
wUI take place on Monday, Dec.
5, at 6:30p.m. Present plans call
for the parade to start at the
Sears parking lot and end at the
T. All individuals and organizations wishing to participate are to
call Kim Blower at 992-5141.

Turkeys go to lunch in New Jersey
'

Parent-teacher
,
conferences set
EAST MEIGS-Eastern Local
Schools will hold parent·
-teacher conferences on Tuesday, from 6 to 9 p.m., and
Wednesday, from 9 a.m . to 12
noon. Parents are asked to call
their ~hlldrens' schools for an
appointme11t.
·
Mls$lon conference
MIDDLEPORT - Hope Baptist Chapel, 570GrantSt., Middleport, Is having a World Mission
Conference which started Thursday and will continue through
Sunday. Services will be 7 p.m.
each evening In addition to an 11
· a.m. Sunday session. Missionary
speakers will be Mark McClellan, of Guatamala, on Friday;
Audrey Hamrick, of the Amerlcna Indian mission, Saturday;
Judith Richards, Taiwan, on
Sunday morning at 11 a.m., and
Allee Thompson, of the U.S.
Language Mission, on Sunday
evening. Everyone welcome.

for the birds between now and
Thanksgiving In Maryland, Ohio,
Delaware, Missouri and California ln.addition to New Jersey.
"At this farm auction, there Is
a pUe where they throw antmals
that are dead and near death,"
Miller said. "They (Farm Sanctuary) piCk through the animals
and decide which ones are
saveable.
"Belle and Ethel are not going
to he sla~ghtered," she said.
"They are a part of our family

now."
Miller, a vegetarian, also has
goats, a pig, rabbits, a horse, a

goose and "lots of dogs and cats"
on the family's smallish spread
near the Delaware Water Gap In
northwestern New Jersey. ·
Sarcastic comments from acquaintances about her concern
for turkeys are water off a duck' s
back, she said, "because I just
don't have any choice. I love
animals."
The turkey's reputation as a
dumb bird "Is a bad rap," Miller
said.
•'There are real smart turkeys
that read Shakespeare," she
joked. "and there are stupid
turkeys, just like people.

.

BAZAAR

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.
Cozart,
21.21. 74. 74.
Dorral &amp;/or Florence T., lot
01·00660.000 Sautert. 8 McKH Add., 6.96.
•·
L C
09 00321 000 C
E. Loon m/or
. hriltlne,
.
ozart,
Lot Sect. 13-1 NE part ofSE Dorral &amp;/or Florenco'T .. lot
"~ 0 •• NE"
8
00
3
3
122
•
111
1o
;.,, •
• 1. 1.
part O• m
t. ·30-•
2 31
CHESTER
·
· ·
TOWNSHIP-EASTERN
QB-01630.000 Court.
Darrel II/ or F&amp;orence T., lot
03-00618.001
Fitch, 1 M K Add 18 21
Steve T. &amp;/or Tor01o A..
c eo
·• · ·
S oct. 3 Nw Cor. 1 -5 OAout
09 •00628 · 000
HIII·
of 10.41A,1.60. 17.33.
GlennRobert&amp;/orMaryK.,
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP- Sect. 18 W 'V&gt; of SE v, out ol
ALEXANDER
BOO~-~g 5o2~_ggr· Holl.
05-00093.000
Casto,
Jeff&amp; Moore, Larry A., 51st Glenn Robert&amp;/orMeryK ..
Add.NV,,3 .66 .
Ss~"ti.1:0SOOE\480oi9SW8' '!.of
Q6-00094.000
Casto,
'·
· '
· ·
Jolt &amp; Moore, lorry A., 6 ht
09-00881 .'000 Huffman,
Add .. 3.85.
bDaenu zhll,&amp;/or Lu21ad. Lot16SAbr1
06-00268,000 Milliken. 100~ 1 4Q. 22n88
u .
Shalla A.. Sact. 9-10 Fr. 12
•
• · ·
NE part. 49.512. 115.23. F 091d-010!0/B.OOOD'
JNoneort.
011-002~9.000 Millikan.
ron n a or /One, PI
Shella A, sect. 3 sw ol NW 01 9 "O't&amp;4':.0 ~ 4 -:.2·
'4 a. NW of SW '4, 10.00. G
0
.
ognum
26.23.
•
R..
l ht 1 il dine. E4QtAAI, M4Qinerooal
06-00280.000 'Milliken,
g
un or
•
· •
Sheila A., ·Sact. 9-16 Fr. 2S Z409
_
_
MenQ&amp;00859 000
tl· nao'N&gt;LE.ofrood,35.87,
_
deloon,
Jeffrey EtAJ, Soct.
88 8
06-00261 .000 . Milliken, 3 ' 9 NW port of 43 ·4 t&gt;A. port
Shalla A .. Sect. 9 Fr. 3 N ol ex. 1 ·60 A w. 1 ·00 · 2 ·3 1 ·
09-00880.000 MandaiThrockmorton&amp; W ol road. oon, Jaffrey EtA!, Sect. 947 .00. 109.24
1Q E 'V&gt; of42A SE part of...
R~~.-~~0~2i~~ A~~!'J: 2A SE port, 21.00, 48.67.
"'
09-00881.000. MandaiSect. 20 Fr. 25 E part•. 188. oon. Jeffrey EIAI, Sect. 3-9
99
· ·
'
NW port of 43,46A E pert,
06-00622.001
•. 10 A Sanden,
d
J
1.50, 63.48.
R
ld
l
ono
. m r u r.., "
.09-00871.000
Mill•.
Sect. 20 F•- 19 N part8.79 A Roger D. EIAI, Sect. 19 ol
out oiBBA. 8 ·79 • 70 · 71 ·
37A In NW Cor. of 70A
06-00196.Q01 Worner, #120. 2.00. 46.28.
Jq Ann. Sect. 34 N of SR
09 _00887 _000 Miyult348 1 8A out of 69.44A. iro. Wayne &amp;/or Koren Suo.
1!.00. 82.77.
.
Soct. 17 N 'V&gt; of NW '4,
~EBANON TOWNSHIP 80.00, 834.14.
SOUTHERN
Boll
T
09-01220.000
Young,
·07 -00882 ·000
' erry David E. &amp;/or Daphne G..
L..' Bt/orCarla8ue,8ect.19 So~ . 31· NW port of tho NE.
N. 'h.ol 20~.8 toart of 40A 8
"'
'Vo, 1 lf.QO, 88'· 38 ·
•.
Of Nw " ' 4 31 1Q4 88
"·
· ·
· ·
09-01626.000 Zortmon.
Carter.
;07-00079.000
John J .. lot 28 Old Port- Pat EIAI, Sect. 38 SE part of
land 5 31
SW V., 30 .60. 75.36.
. . .
ORANGE TOWNSHIP'07-00181.001
Clerk
EASTERN
Torry &amp;/or Tracy, Sect. 30
10-001118.000
CornoNE Cor. of SW v.. 10.0017, han, David L. •/orJanetK..
58.34.
Sect. 11 NE Cor. ex.
;o7-00106.000 Cooper,
Gary. Soot. 11 s of 10QA 10.60A E,13.00, 94.08.
10-00081.001
Pullins.
Lht 162 66 86 33
\'
'· '
· ·
Joteph William &amp; E. faye,
s~:.-~~~~~-~~\oA !::,i~ Sect. 23 N ol SA 881 out of
8.1 .04A; 1.4Q, 94.00.
37A, &amp;.8Q9, 68.64.
', 07-00.181.000
Deator.
10-006 4.000 Ruosetl,
Eddie Jr., .,.1 Sect. 1Q Mid.
..,nvlo L.. Sect. 3Q Eline W
N I' 8 2 60 6 96
Y,, 19.2483, 55.34.
on
'" • · • · ·
.07-00389 .000 Long, Eu10-00695.0QO Auuoll,
gone v.. Sect. 2&amp; lot 840 EddleJr.,LotSect. 10Spart
SW Cor. 2 .6A out oi1QA,
ol E '1•· 42 ·99 • 160·09 ·
2 50 32 oo
10-00824.000 Sh.-pa.
'o7:00S24. 000
Patter- Williom B. &amp;/or Sharon.
7
sQn. Jam81 8., Sect. 361ide lot. 14-15 E end N "·
~
Of Sw. v•. 3.768&amp;. 109.89. 11.483. 53.34.
10-00390.000 Stutler.
;o7-00487.000 Rile. Ken- DoWoyno &amp;/or Marthe, Lot
n~th Wayne &amp;/o! Donne Sect. 27 Und. 'A of28ANW
Morie,S,ct.19Mrd.onW
rt 28 • 0 8 • 28
llneo!NWV•, 17 ·13 ·4Q· 01 · pa1o-oo':i'si.ooo ·Stutler,
07-00766.000
Sellers, DeWayne &amp;/or Marthe, Lot
Dl:lirrell Lee &amp;/or Wanda, Sect. 33 Und. of 78 .96A
~W,· ~2 ~0:i~=~ ~x 1 A Mi~. on E line 67.71,

6. "

•CRAFTS •BAKED GOODS •AVON
•REFRESHMENTS AND MORE

. '1987 C-20 CHEVY ROADCRAFT
CONVERSION VAN

-- --·

-·-..,_

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

09-00168 .000
Bobo,
Barnard, Fr. 30 2.5A of
98.18A SE of 1A SE Two
Succ•o Ad .• 2 .50. 83.92.
09-Q061 1 .001.
Bobo,
Bern1rd, Sect. 29 nMr Mid.
on W line, 1.00, 4 .12.
09-00304.000
Cook.
John &amp; Peggy, Sect. 9 Sec1 .
0 NW &amp; noor Mid. oiNE 'lo ,
1.007,17 .54.
09-00312 .000 Cozart,
Oarrel•/ or Florenc. T .. Lot
2 McKao Add.' a•. port bet.
rd. &amp; rtver, 24 .44.
09-00313.000
Cozart
Darrel &amp;/or Florence T., loto
2 McKee Add . part bet , rd. a.
river, 1.32.
09-00314.000
Cozart,
Derre4 •tor Floren~ T. Lot
3 McKH Add., 2.31 .
09-003115.000 Court.
Darrel&amp;/orflorenceT .. Lot
3 McKee ~dd. ex. part bet.
rd. &amp; river, 23.14.
09-0031 &amp;.000 Cn,..rt_
Darrel&amp;/or Florence T .. Lot
4 McKee Add. ex. JMtrt bet.
rd. I river, 6 .96.
08-00317.000 Cozort,
Darrell&amp;/or FlorenceT .. Lot
6 McKoo Add.. 23.14.
09-0031B.OOO Cozort.
Oorral &amp;/or Florence T .. Lot
6 M K00 Add • 95
c
•• •·
•
Q90Q319000
C.ozart.
·
Dorrel"/or
Flor•·eT.
lot7
•
'""

l i.

10:00 A.M.-3:00 P.M.

MATCHES ABOVE RING

Dr. Benjamin J. Sol

~~tlh~.•;:_•1 LS ~fh~~'':!·.

AT THE (OLD) AMERICAN LEGION HALL
MIDDUPORT, OHIO

Wolfe, dancer Mikhail Baryshnlkov, actress Loretta Young,
British composer Andi'ew Uoyd
Webber, Nobel Prize-winning
poet Joseph Brodsky, bllJIQnalre
Malcobn Forbes, preacher Bill)'
Graham, football star-turnedpreacher Hosey Grier, opera's
Bever!)' Sills, Los Angeles
Dodgers star Orel Hershtser and
British artist David Hockney.
GLIMPSES: Animal trainer
Gunlher Gehei-WIIlla1111i, one of
the main attractions of the
Ringling Bros.·Barnum &amp; Bailey
Circus, Is leaving the ring at the
end of the circus's 1990 season.
After a two-year farewell tour,
Gebel-Williams will move Into a
management role with ihe grbtest show on earth and make an
occasional guest appearance .. .
Cinematic swimming siar
Esther WiUiams Is finally comIng out with her own line of
swimsuits. The 96-suit line will
come out by the end of the year.

.

DELINQUENT LAND TAX
NOTICE
Tholando.LotoondPonoof
loto rtltumod Dollnquem bv
the Tr_u,., of Meigs
County, whh theTa-. A•
111.-n.na and PllflatU•
ch•ge thereon agreeably to
law, are contained and d•
ocrlbed In tholollowfng llol,
Yrz:
Nom, Dooalptlon. ACtell.
Total Tax•. Al~e~Jmenta.
and Penaitieo:
BEDFORD
TOWNSHIP- MEIGS
01-00033.000 Boo ham,
Gory G . Jr.. Lot Sec. 18 S 'V&gt;
of NE V4. 16.98, 79.38 .
01-00086.QOO 8uroon.
Mark Owen. Sect. 13-18 all
of S 1f2 of NW 114 of r01d,
14. 77, 287.83
01 -00067.001
Burson,
M1rk Owen, Sect. 18 S lhof
NW V., 1.80, 19.93.
01·00364.000 Heulton.
~ J1mes A. •/or Vade J ., Lot
Sec.13-8 N Part of SE 114.
· 17.60, 73.27. 01-00891.000
Nollam
Oil II Ga Corp. lot Sec.-1
(640) SECor... 99. 36.83.
01 -00848 .000 Sou1ero,
E. loon &amp;/or l . Chrlotioe.
l 0 tS·- 1 NE rt 0 'SW"
- ···
•
po
"·
4300
· -00849
• 28976
· .000
·
01
Sauters.

I..

GREAT MEADOWS, N.J.
(UP!) - A pair of turkeys were
at lunch - not !or lunch - as
animal rights activists tried to
show Thursday that a successful
Thanksgiving meal need not
Include gobblers as the main
course.
The birds of honor, named
Belle and Ethel, dined on spagehttl ~quash, cranberries and
sunnower seeds, while human
guests made do with oatmeal and
raisin cookies, fruit and dark
bread with jam, Llnny Miller
said.
"We watched them eat. They
are not being eaten," said Miller,
who lives with her husband and
8-month-old son on the 13-acre
farm where the lunch was
staged.
Miller and her family are
adopting the birds under the
pre-Thanksgiving "Adopt a Turkey" program of Farm Sanctuary, a Delaware-based ·animal
rights group.
The group says It rescues
turkeys from "factory farms"
and slaughterhouses and Is organizing lunches and receptions

~-·--

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7 •·
Public Notice

-~---------------,----------------~-r------------~----~------~----~----,-------------~--~---=-=~~~------~------------------~ Partial
Account
Elza Gil·
ESTATE
NO . of26431

lng A Greatful Heart.
The thank offering coins laid
aside In gratitude for blessings
over the year were dedicated
along with the l!vening offering.
A friendshp circle In .prayer
closed the meetlng.
Evelyn Gilmore served a dessert course from a table decorated In the Thanksgiving motif
to the 14 members attending.
Favors were calendars, Inspirational cards, and perfume. Dorothy Woodard was a contributIng hostess.
I.

Revival
HOBSON - Hobson Church of
Christ In Christian Union will he
In revival with Pastor Theron
Durham, Monday through Sun·
day, Nov. 21-27, at 7 p.m. each
evening. Everyone welcome.

..._

Meigs County Delinquent Land Tax Notice

Friendly Circle holds meeting
contact Jason Black, Ohlo Dishie! governor, at 742-2501, or
Debbie Musser, advisor, at
992-2158.

--

Friday, November 18, 1988

Friday. November 18, 1988

--People in the news--B7 WILLIAM C. TROT!'
Ualled Press Jateraatloaal
THE PRICE OF LONELIl'(EIIS: Bill)' Idol reached an ·
011t-of-court $1!ttlement with five
people who claimed they were
" Injured when the singer triggered a mad rush toward the
slageat a show In Portland, Ore ..
In May 1987. The terms of the
settlement were not announced
bill the plaintiffs had sought
$765,000 for bruises, foQt and knee
InjurieS and emotional damage.
; The lawsuit was filed on behalf
of three sisters, Tonja steelman,
21.. AprD Steelman, 23, and Diane
Petenon, 27, and Christie Litnell. 17, and April's 4-year-old
son. They claimed that Idol
started the crush when he told his
audience, "Ifeelloilely up here ...
.(Bother suit related to the
Incident Is still pending.
WRITE HOUSE STARS:
There were some luminaries
without their spouses at Wednesday night's White House dinner
tpr British Prime Minister Mar•aret Thatcher. Tom Selleck
took his mother, Martha, bec!'au$1! his wife, dancer JIIUe
Mack, Is expecting their first
.chlld.ln Jan\l'ary and can't fly .
. Dolorea Hope was with son
.bUittD)' because her husband,
tob, was working. It marked the
last state dinner for President
and Nancy Reagan and the
euests also Included author Tom

-·---

~

8

131o-lo392.000 Stutler,
DeWayno &amp;/or Mortho, Lot
Sect. 27 Und. 1!4 of38ANW
part 9 50 2218
' ' '
' '
10-00393.000 Stuller.
DaWoyno &amp;/or Mortho, lot
Sect. 33 Und. V. of 79:95A
Mid. one llne19.24, 44.73.
10-00394.000 Stutler,
DoWoyne &amp;/or Martha c..
l t S ~ 33 ·
to
o e......
tn cen r sectlon, 46.00, 278.97.
AUTLANDTOWNSHIPMEIGS
1 1 .Q 1 678.000 Cha•arro'o, Corlos &amp; Branda. R.I.
G11 C o- Car101
Herald 0 1'1"·
'1;11
Chovarrla#1 L.O. 4.18.
11-00169.000 Cleland.
Connie Darlene, Sect . 19
lot 1 out of 35.07A, 1.00,
10B.4Q.
11 -00981.002
Dailey,
Robert E. &amp;/01 Carolyn A.,
Sect. 2 NW Cor. of Werrv•
out of 12.70A, 1.70, 43.72.
11 -00316 .0.0 0
Few,
Mo'chael Shay, Soot. 24 N
E
7 37 14 32
line of N '~. . '
. ,
11-00318.QOO
Fow,
Michael Shay, Sect. 24 SE
par ox. .23A E · 141 ·26 7Q2.96.
,
11-00&amp;72.00Q Koo...
Jamoo E. &amp;/or Lindo E.
Soot. 7 Mid. on N line ••·
~~~-O~nd. 3.71A, 47.71,
11-0De79.000 McKnigh1,
Caroltr &amp;/or llelty R.• Sect. B
ofSEV•ec:. coaloutof20A,
2.199, 413.61.
11-00229.000
Noutzling, Char lei &amp; I or C~rotvn.
Soct. 12Mid.ofEV&gt;NofC:r..
1.10. 69.18.
11-00117.001
Powell.
Torrl, Soct.1 Mid. oiS'V&gt;out,
oi86.2.5A. 1.00. 383.25.
11-01083.000 Rile. Kenneth W. &amp;/01 Donno M.,lot
Sect. 25 on E line of NE 'I•,
4.00, 12.87.
11-01084.00Q Rlfo, Konneth W. •/or Danni M. lot
Sect. 19 SW part ox. 1.119A,
115.41, 801.34.
11-00842.000
Smith,
Aon•ld &amp;/or CheriM, Sect.
16 SECor. 2 .88, 19.85.
11 -00843.QOO
Smith,
Ronald &amp;/or Charlei, Sect.

16 Trl NE Cor., .88, 9.20.
15-00128.000
Blount, Yal &amp;/ or Betty &amp;/ or John. Jomoo A. &amp; Thelmo, Sect.
19-00425 .000
White, more, ExecutOI oltho Eotlte
11-00li44.QO
Smhh. Rooemory, lot 15 23' N Lot 89 8901 'V&gt; Sub . 2 30 •. 64. 321 .74.
Herbert J . &amp;/ or Pa lsy S., oiRovoiJoromoCook. ol&lt;o.
Ronold &amp;/ or Chorloo, Soot. lido, 18.30.
14' 0&lt;90'
Off lot 89 -Y&gt;,
18-00283.000
Curtlo. .32A out of 8 .23A In NE Docootld.
16 NE Cor.. 1 .82, 10.29.
15-00236 .0QO CarMv . 10.79 .
Chorloo T.. Sect. 18 port ol Cor. ol A id parcel. . 3 2.
ESTATE NO. 25806 _ ~
11 -01031.000 Snowdon, Joel&lt; W .. Lot 43 38' W Olnd.
16-01927.00Q Wit eo, 0• · 10.64A tract Wo!Wot!Run. 50.82.
Robert L.. Lot Sect. 30 NW 170.18 .
val &amp; l or B8tty &amp; l or John,' 3 .00, 2.7 .74.
19-00421 .000
White. Fir1t Partial Account of ... . ,
pan. 13.64, 86.82.
15-00426.000 Ellis, Oren Lot 89 Y2 Sub. 2 60'x200 ' ·
18-01291 .000 Doerfer, Herbert J . &amp;/ or Pat sv s., Mart Ann Harris. Gu1rdi.,
11-00701 .000 "' Stewart. l . &amp;/ or Peggy L.. Lot 1&amp; NWparteK . 14'x90', 80.93 . Henry &amp;/ or Mary , Sect. 21.. Sect. 16 (840~ 10.47A W of Timothy Eugene Harril, 1
Ro.. J . &amp;/ or Gertrude, Lot Horton&amp; Bosworth Add .
SCIPIO TOWNSHIP s part of lOA NE part of , pan «4 of Racine, 6.234 , Minor.
"'
Sect. 3 NE Cor. E partofNE 61 .30.
.
MEIGS
107A N. 3 .QQ, 267.67 .
780.81.
ESTATE NO . 26263 'I•. 26.46 , 66.15.
15·00727.000 Fox, Mar17-00616 .000
Ander18-00699.00Q Holman. . SYRACUSE VILLAGE Second and Final Account •"
11 -01153.000
Turner. tho L.. Lot 36 Behan'o 2nd son. William &amp; Unda. lot Joseph w .. Sect. 23 SW
SOUTHERN
ol Wen doll A. Brown. Guar· ' ..
Dottie S ., Sect. 28 #2
Add. about 40' x80', 70 .48. Sect. 21 Fr . 30 W end, Cor. QJ .31 A, 110.65.
20-00834 .000 Counts.
dian of Roy Denver Brown. , ~
langovitlo, .27, 291 .14.
15·00519.000
Geary, 8 .236 . 182.66 .
18·00986.0QO Proffitt. Vlr~l~lo A .. 13 Crooks lot
ESTATE NO . 25338 1 1·01164.000
Turner, Max EtAI. Lot pt. 286 W V1
17-00071 .000
Eblin, Dorothy w Se~ w of w Add., 9.03.
Second Annu1l Account of
Dottle S., Sect. 26 out of of S Y2 288 &amp; W 'h N 18' Lot, Gerald S. &amp; l or Linda, Lot 'h: ex. coal.' 4o .oo. 98 .2 4 .
20-00186 .000 Lambert,
Bobby Arnold, Tru.tee of
82.38A NW port, .07,1 .83. .284. 104.87.
Sect. 15 SW Cor . e• . 1 AS ,
18 -Q0987.000 Proffitt, A11ah A.. .7 Crooko Ill Add..
the Trull Creatod by Item 11 , i
1 1-0116&amp;.000 Tumor.
16-00629.000
Gilkey, 18.934. 189.90 .
DorothyW., Sect. 9 E of Ad. 59 .41 . .
.
.
ol tho laot Will and leota· _,,
Dottie S., Sect. 26 pert of Betty, Lott4&amp;) #45 • 23x46'
17-00071 .001
Eblin, ex. 12-'hA
s. 46 .00
And notiCe Ia henbv giVen
mentof Marg 1 ret Ellalewil, ..... ~
83A, .24, 7.71.
Wend, 5.29.
Gerold S . &amp;l or linda, Fr. 2 U0.25 .
' thot tho whole of ouch sOYDoceued .
•
11 -01324.00
Turner.
16-00630.000
Gilkey. N side of Twp. Rd. 269 out
18-00265 .000 Stephen· .,.. trlctl. loti or parts of
ESTATE NO: 25691 _ fj. ~··l
Roget" C. &amp; l or Dottle s.. Betty Lot (461 # 45 46JC90' N of 19.00A. 2 .066, 12.92 .
son, Donald C . &amp; Shir~ A., lott. will be certified for fon•land Distributfve Account ··1
Sect. 26 LangiYille, .34, aide, 300.86.
17-00274 .000
Estep. Sect. , 17 SE Cor. out of retdoaure bv the Co~ntyAu ·
of Maurice Reed, Exacutor . J
164.08.
15-00631 .000
Gilkey, JamBs E. &amp;/ or Debbie l., 2 .29A , 1 .15, 57 .81.
ditor pursuant to law. or . of the Estate of Atvin s . ,
11-01326.600 Turner, Betty lou, Lot Sect.-29 S 29 Lot Sect. Fr. 13Wend 1 .42A
18·01399.000
Stoke. fortlited to the Sute. unless
Reed, Oecea.ed.
Roger c. &amp;/ or Dottie s.. .44A Mid of 5 .41A W of . out of 2 .839A, 466 .77.
Clyde F. &amp;/ or Elsie P., Sect. the Toxoo. Ao-omento. and
ESTATE NO , 25747 _ FlSect. 21 2' on Waide of Lot Carney, .44, 449.34.
17-00947.000 Hill, Fred 29 NW part of E 24 -YJA, Penahielare ~ald.
. .
nal1nd Distributive Account
3 a. Trl., .06. 3.02.
16-01787.000 Harper. B. &amp;/ or Ann1lu , Lot Sect. · 1.00, 7.67.
William W•_cklme
of DouQIM W. Little. Encu- ..·.;
11-00472.00 Wlntbren- Carol Ann, Lot 38 Sheffield 26 1640) und. 112 int. in coal
18-01226 .000 Teaford.
Auditor of to~ Qf the Estate o~ Jay e. ~ j
ner, Roger G. I lor DeloriS #38, 18&amp; .86 .
&amp; other min., 71 .00, 23 .60 . Gordon Bruce, Lo1100-301
Meigs Collnty, Ohio
St1let, Decuand.
· ·
J., lot Soot. '1 SE Cor. of
16-01788.000 Harper,
17-00853.000 ReOYes, NW ol 1/ 1 6A ol Wlttloms ~N=ov==
· 1=0=·=1=7=====l ESTATE NO . 24673 - Fl- "I
22.27A NE Cor. a. Cor. Carol Ann, Lot 39 14' off N Ethel N . EtAI. Lot Sect. 32 lot, .16, 3 .63 .
r
naland Distributive Account
Hgwy,. .90, 218.22 .
oide. 39.80.
(8401 Mid. on NW '4 , 8 .14.
!8-01226 .000 Teolord,
Public Notice
of Richard E. Jonoo. AdmlnRUTLAND VILLAGE
15-01789.000 Harper. 58 _23 .
.
Gordon Bruca, Sect. 13
lstrotor WWA ol tho Eatote
Black Carol Ann, Lot 39 Sheffield
_ 0066·:~: oQO Reo•••· 56'x1 10' bet. rd. a. Berham,
of Orpho M. Jomeo, De17
12_0002 ._
000
•
-24'•98' N oide, 67.73.
IN THE COMMON
ceued . ,
,,_,
Worren G. •· Sharon L..
16 o 1790 O
H
Jenie,lotSect. 11t640)W ·12 · 2.33.
PLEAS COURT
m
.
00
arper.
1801227QOO
T
•
·
Unl-aex•-too'
noorefilod
- •
Soct. 8 (S4Q) out ol 3."3A
ol NE 'I•. 1 .60, 13.80. .
·
Oo•O&lt;d.
PROBATE DIVISION
- laid~
.,.
Carol
Ann,
lot
39
Behan
G
d
B
s
13
thereto,
a
..
.-.nto
will
be
,
,,~
from
Sam Smith•. 023,
17-00664.000 Reeves,
or on
ruca,
act.
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
.............
9
8.08.
~~8· 8 :Q'x &amp;' ott s side. Josaie. lot Sect. 17 E pert ot 5Q'x1QO'
below Juhler
IN THE. MATTER OF
~';; t\',.~~tt ~lor~ ~ld C:;' :.;
12-00408.00Q
House1 S-Oi791 .0QO
Harper. NE '&gt;1. 1.60, 11.Q7.
Store,0.066, 249.90 .
SETTLEMENT OF
1988, at wh,'! ot'-ecu""'o
·d a.;_ . '
hold of Faith Ch h 8 p
17-00872.000 Whitting18- 12 .OQO
Turley,
ACCOUNTS
•n ""
•
Kenneth
18 23 urc '
ar· Carol Ann. Lot 40 Bahan
Cliff d E J S
A
&amp;
Karen
E
.
•
counts
will
be
considered
1nd i ,,
7
oonogo.
. .
Add. ex. 21' S 46'x96', ton.
or
. r .. act.
,
"
PROBATE COURT. MEIGS
continuodlromd-tod-un- . '
012-00296.00 Slooon.
w of NW '"· 1.76. 68.57 .
Sect. 16 W tide of 4.00 A COUNTY OHIO
-·
-·
,
Lucill E••t s
8 640 w 309.90.
17-00867.000 Winner. tract near to Beaver. 1.50.
•
til finally dlopoood of.
'
•
~
·
act.
J
I
16-01792.000
Harper,
Accounts
and
Youchers
of
Any
p•aon
lnt-tod
m·I
of Germon Lot "7 80 82
c aro1Ann, Lot5268'x100', Brylan Edwerd• EtAI, Sect. 129.46 (land Contract to t•-~•---ing
namodfiduco'-•
· .... ·
· ·
ftlll:ll N~~VW
-·
file written exceptioN to11ld
12-00312.000 Spangler, 68
24 1640) of 84A NW ol NW Marion Sloter).
ioo hOYo boon fllod In t•· Pro.69.
·~
accounts or to matt•o parJama &amp;/or PhyiHa, Sect. 8
16-01793.000 Harper, ~~ 81 NW of NE 'A, 1 ~ . 80.
RACINE VILLAGE bate Court. MeiQI Countv
tainingtotheexecution of the
(840~ W of Cr. part. .60, Carol Ann, Lot 631 4. off N 58.23.
SOUTHERN
Ohio, for approval and settNSI, not klls than five diiV• ·
322.64.
SUTTON TOWNSHIP 19-00177 .000 Grr'mm.
tl~ent·
·
th d
~- •
11·de 1&amp; 2 6
· Spangler,
·
· . ·
SOUTHERN
·
·
pnor to a ate •et '"" .,ear~ '
12-00313.QOO
16-01794.000
Harper,
RoderlckEimer&amp;
/ orMorjoE TATEN0
. 16631 - FI- ing.
Jam• &amp;/or Phylit, Sect. Carol Ann. lot 63 Behan
18-00675.000
Casto, ria Virginia.
Sect. 1-16
nalandDil1:ributiveAccount
ROBERT E. BUCK
14-8 (840) E ol St. Rd. N ol 40'•42' SE part back oflot Anllo L. Lot 83, 18.63 .
(100-279) SW port of4.88A . ol Leonard Jewell. AdmlnlaJUDGE
Cr. &amp; olloy, .6.0 . 8.84.
# 39; 11 .46 .
18-00279.000 Cundiff. W •;,, .16 , 18 . 88 .
trotorWWA oltheEotateof
Common Pleas Court,
2
1 -00314.000 Spangler.
15-01795.000
Haroer. l - - - - - -- - - _ _ J L - - - - - - - - - 1 Legrand Gribble aka L. G.
Probate Dlviston.
Jemn &amp;/or Phyllia. Sect. 8 Carol Ann, Lot 53
ex.
71...
~
Gribble, DeceMed.
Meigs County, Ohio 1
i7648041Npartof3.07A ..&amp;6, 46'o64'Spartl!o40'x42'SE
/Arm:
{11)18 1tc
-'
· ·
rt 17 77
: 12-00399.000 Tillis, Jef- po1 &amp;.o1 79 &amp;.ooo
Harper,
freyrt l;8&amp;4/AorEDedbro JL.. NtNW Carol Ann, Lot 54 Behan
0
P2•1 o2.81 32 on ox.
Add. 22'x42' NE Cor .. 8.74 .
.
•
· •
· ·
16-00806.000 K...ee,
SALEMMTOEWIGNSSHIPJomoo E. &amp;/or Undo E .. Lot
86 CollinS Sub. DIY. Sub4J ~3-~0t03.~0~
Bau. 5 87x50', 411.54.
o n .. ot .
. 71 .
16-00967.000
Merlin.
J 1h3-0L04Ql 4.100009 82 Boll. Fronktln &amp;/or Ida Mae. Lot
•
0 n ·· ot
• · ·
13 Bahan Add .. 37' NWCor.
bury,
Gary &amp;/or centerTerooa. 33'x100', 388.?4.
1 3-ooo98.ooo
16 Q1171 000
R-· h
Soct. 18 near mid of Sect. Hor,Yc.Jr.&amp;/orEIIoo:-~oi
TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992·2156
'
18 on W
side, 11 ·00 • 480 Horton' a Add. 70' 2 84.8 1 .
124' 342 89
MONDAY
thru
FRIDAY
8
A.M.
to
5
P.M.
13-0Q200.QQO George, x
·
· ·
16 -0 1 172.000
EYoren &amp;/or Sandy, Sect.
Roooh,
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
31 N 'V&gt; of SE '&gt;I of SW '4. Harry C.Jr. &amp;/orElla D.,lot
10.60. 26.33.
Ploatrt ollpot 477 SE poArtdodl
CLOSED SUNDAY
13-00201.000 Goorgo,
omoroy
·
_,
Ewrott &amp;/or Sandy, Soot. 10.6•70', 3.85.
RATES
•
35 N 'I• of NW '&gt;I ex. 6A ex.
15-00734.000 Scarbor.J."'
0 · 15 WORDS 18-2S WORDS 28-35 WORDS
B
o
d
&amp;/
Froncoa
4.618A, 70.484, 303.58.
ry. orn r
or
•
$7.00
$4 00
55 .00
1 DAY
.,
13-00390.000 Lombert, Lot 4 Webb &amp; Earnohow 4 .
$1
O.QO
$5
.00
06.00
3
DAYS
Ric~ard L. &amp;/or Barbaro S.. 39 .90 .
$15.00
08.00
' $13 .00
6 DAYS
1
Soct. 16-12 E of NE 14 eo.
15-00238.000
Spires,
$25.00
$13.00
$21 .00
10DAYS
•4 ••in cool,
69.88, Jack. lot 146 a. 165.
560.00
933 .00
$51 .00
1 MONTH
229.99.
639 _51 .
_
_
Silvers,
16-01321.000
Stone,
RalliS are for eonseculive runs. broken updavsw1tl be charged
13 00645 000
for eat:h riiW as separate ads .
Danny R .. Soct. 25 Mid. on RGenee M..SLot 4p13 E. pAdortdof
S line of N '12 ex. #4 vein
rant
t. om.
"
•
679 89
·COal. 4.813, 444.44.
· ·
D
'.
13-00848.000 Sllvoro.
15-01130.000Tyree. •Donny R., Sect\ 25 out of VI'd • L0 169C01tPOrt3o·-o·
•v
'
W d 27 70
2 0A, ·391• 6 ·00 ·
.
.
PeOnM.ERO. Y v· ILLAGE -·
13-00817.0QO
StrusMEIGS
man. Joooph, Sect. 6 NE
,b
_000
Caton,
Cor.. 18.86, 621.88.
M 18 0275
~
M
. L
,,
SALISBURY TOWNSHIP
lchoel m/or arjona, ot
_MEIGS
11 Noylors Run, 84.71.
14-0024Q.OOCox.Jameo
16-00276.00Q
Caton,
.
&amp;/or Margaret. Sect. 34 Michael &amp;/or Marjorie. Lot
'•
(327]oiNWDOrt1.10ANE 282.18 SE Cor.ol Farm.
76 3 61
partof22.97AWSR#7, .66. · 1 e-002 SO.OOO
Chap131.12.
14-01417.000Cox,James men, Anna Marie, Lot 208
&amp;/or Margaret. Sect. 34 25·Wx57-W
SW Cor.,
3RD
949·2800
RACINE, OHIO
(100·32710of91806.407A NWnf 3;·:701228 000
Clicl&lt;
MASTERCARD - VISA - GOLDEN BUCKEYE
SR#7, .5'
. .
S 8 b J L .632S" ' l '
14-00247.001
Cox.
ra .. ot
"o. ot
Jomoo C &amp;/or Morr,retA
632 •. 388, 806.89.
16·00339.000
CritBI,
·
·•
'Sect. 34-36 100A ot 329
6 • 100 •
2
11.16A of23.88A. 11.16. ~~~~·u~l::n :!;!~:. 10 _40 .
28 · 81 ·
16-00867.00Q Grueoer.
14-00266.000
Don..,.
James Jr. &amp;/or Bonnie, Allie EtAI. Lot 262-17 .26A
Sect.32(84QIInNportEof SofUnlonAYe.Pom.Wllne
3 part 3 61
rood, 8 · 60 • 29 1. 76 ·
18 o'o8·8a·ooo Grueoer
14-00266.000
DailrtV,
·
·
•
Jomoo Jr. &amp;/or Bonnie, Alllo EtA!. Lot438. 2.79.
16 -01187 ·000 Jaspers.
Sect. 33 (64Ql Mld.ofS line
o'SE"ofSW" • 0393
NoncyJ ., Lo11,198.58.
16 -01168 · 000 Joopers,
'14-00302.ooo··D~ckoi
Stanley 0. &amp;/or Leona G.. Nancy J., tot 2 Plantz Add .
Sect. 27 (262) W of cr, ex. ex. 26 ' E tide, 8 ·01 ·
1.30A to St. rd., 2 .17. N:n6~1T~:i~~~- ;jj~~

S!EI!!!?!!!!i.
A AI/. •
,-rf

cI

46

I

WAKf

5 s•I •Ied

The Area's Num ber 1 Mar ketpIace

t--.. . --------:--=-~=-~:-:-:'~~-=::-::-::-:-----------rt===========# , SEARS SERVICE '
- CUSTOMERS ....-,
FOR PARTS &amp;
SERVICE
CALL

••

1-800-227-2 560

---------1
20°/o OFF SALE!

.,.

•SATURDAY ONLY•

OPEN ALL DAY ....CASH SALES ONLY
NEW SHIPMENT OF ISOTONER GLOVES

..

.':
-

RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE
SDEET

,.

31184~li466.000 Ferry. Oa-

vld A.. Sect. 8 (84QI on
A1:h1n1 Rd. in #7 Radford,
2 84
' '
14-1458.000 Forry. DovidA .. Sect. 8 (840) E of St.
N. of Mllllol, 292.53.
14-00419.000 Forroot.
Edith L. &amp; Homer, Sect. 31
(64QI noor Mid. onS part ox.
2 60A N
rt
54 02
·
pa •
· ·
404.26.
14-00420.QQO Forrost
Edith l. &amp; Hornor, Sect. 38
(1001 E .22A wend olE 'V&gt;,
6 90 158 00
.14·017158.000
'
. .
Grueser,
A. L.. Cool, 1.67.1.11.
14-00497.000 GruHor,
Allie EIAI. Sect. 26 (84Q) SE
E
A ••
port •· 2 • 2 u.u 2 • 83 · 71 ·
14-00599.ooo Hotfield.
Wollaca p &amp;/or Donna J ..
Sect. 18 (8401 SE port of
NW ,A, 9.07. 24.93 .
14-!10897.000
Hyoell.
Roger William, Sect. 31
(B4Q) 1 30 A , a• 69 A
·
O• ....
nr.
Mid. N '12 of N 1 n, .32,
30.24:
14-00981.QQO Jafforo,
John R.. Sec:t. 91282Ioutof
9.34A SW Cor. ox. 10.34A,
.30, 3 .93.
14-00982.000 Jofftro.
JohnR .,Soct . 91282loutof
~~8.f::· ol 9.91A, .67.'
14-0124Q.OOO
Roach,
Roymond, Soot. 27 (282)
Fr. 24 W of crMic out of
32.13A, 2.38, 351.29.
14-01394.000 Sprou•.
Chari• •1 or
Erneatlne,
Sect. a (840)8 port oi7A
NE port of s of Pom Chao,
.60, 21.62.
14-0139&amp;.0QO Sprouoo,
Chorl• &amp;/or
Ernootlne,
Sect. 8 (64QI port oi4.25A
Mid. E ol NE '4. 1.00.
709.83.
14-01474.000 Thom11oon. Lolo, Sect. 36 (84Q),
-~~D~~~JRT VILLAGE_
MEIGS
Blake,
1 B-OQ 828 _000
p 1 ,
172
0

:~ )tYd~:·lot 100 •

133 54
· ·

S~':,'d~

2

3Q'x77' Joining Lot 1 E part,
15
Kinlo.
01897 _000
James B.• Lot 12 Naylor&amp;
Run 80'x113', 317.86.
16 _01586 _000 Klein, WH~~':; o~· lot 308 4 0'•60',
1 &amp;-oi 88 . 000 Klein, Wllllom L., Part of lot 307
40'x6Q', 9 8.76 .
18·01688.001 Klein, Williom L., Port of Lot 307,
3 1.1 9 .
· 18·01587.000 Kloln. Wll·
11om L.. lot40'x60'.19.19
18-01118.QOO
Martin,
Herman.
Lot 63 NayiOrs
R
•
un, 6 •· 69 ·
18-0234&amp;.000
Morris.
Jeffrey A.. lot466 Cor. Lao1 &amp; M lbe
232 97
~ 6 00~ 38r;)'00
J
- W .:
J dorlhrnLs.
omeo · a 1 or u 1
..

,-:?

5

SAIUIDAY, NOV. 19
MARIETTA, OHIO
Af THE HOLIDAY INN
1-77 '11. 7

DOORS OPEN-t2 NOON TO

TO 5:00 P.M.

• LOVESEAT • CHAIR
QUANTITY

COME

EARLY

$118
CASH &amp; CARRY

ITIONAL ·

~~~i 2 ~~-J 7.~· · 0c8o~l 'pa,n·0 ~f··

61 · 5 ·
16-00139 .000 Perkins.
James W . &amp;/or Judith L.,
lot 282-17 .16A Sub. 435
,4
I 16 1389
...coo· · ·
· ·
16-00742.000 Powers.
Robert F. &amp;/or Juno A., Lot
426 Wo11 Add Sub 18
34 40
18-00743.000 Powero,
RobtrtF.&amp;/orJunoA .. Lot
42166SOu1b3.8197.020909.88Q. II
'
uo s.
Jameo Edward, Lot 256
TrainsAdd. W28',116 .40.
18-01371 .000
Quollo.
M
L0 t 31 6 78
ory,
'
·
·
18·00777 .000
SI01:er.
'ltorlon 0 .. lot 172 S 45'
.,;wand, 289.11 .
18-01783.000
Turner.
Donie S .. Lot 377 69' W
oido Trl back. 386.66.
16-01784.000 Turner.
Dottle S .. lot 684 In SW
port. 4.41.
IB-01785.000
Tumor.
Dottle S .. Lot 684. ox. loto
oold a. Elberlald. 18.40.
18-01788.000 Tumor,
Dottie S.,lot681i, 29.68 .
18-01898.000 Von Vronken, Matthew, Lot 189 Burnap Add. Sub. 20 &amp; 19,
44 9.23 .
16-01926.000 Wlleo, Or-

'

450 PillE 5Tq IT. 7 &amp; IT. 35
DOORS
LIMITED

p .;-

°

SUNDAY I NOV. 20
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
AT THE HOLIDAY INN

· '

\

�. . . ... .
..

··-- ---=-~---=--- --~--

-

--~-.,-....-~------·

Page- 8- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-_Middleport, Ohio

Business~

Friday, November 1

Services

6

and

lolt

11

Found

lOIT' Ono dlomond-.. o brocl•

v• ..

1't Hobw MecNCII Cent• on

GUN SHOOT

CARTER'S

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

Basham Buildi"'

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

Factory Cllokt
12 Gaugt Shotguns Only
StJi&lt;tfy lnforctd

HAINES GIFT
SHOP OPEN

Toys, Collectables,
Clowns, Porcelain
OPEN
MONDAY - FRIDAY
10 A.M .- 4 P.M .
992 -7204
• 324 Ealt Main ,
Pomeroy. Ohio
(Behind

10-7-tfn

MEIGS
FURNITURE

lrd St.

FIREWOOD
OAK. LOCUST,
CHERRY

Racine, Ohio

GET ACQUAINTED.
SPECIAl

$3

3 PC. LIVING

s

PEII LOAD
DELIVERED

ROOM SUITE

BILL SLACK

$44995

992-2269

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

•Dozer &amp;. Backhoe Work

•Will Do Hauling With
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard BusineiS

1

WANT TO lUI WRECKED 01
JUNK CARS 01 TRUCKS

Card of Thanks

-FRII ISTIMATIS,
For any of th•tiii'ViOI can '
CARD OF THANKS
Our sin-e thanb to
the ralativea, friends
and neighbor for the
kindnaas and aympathy ahown during
the illness and deeth
of our husband end
father. Kermit L. Walton. Special thanb to
everyone in Holzer
t'lclspital
Intensive
Care Unit and doctors
at Holzer Hospital .

BISSELL
SIDING
CO.
......_ . Built
. "Free Eatimatas"

PH. 949-2801
or les. 94'f-21S60
NO SUNDAY

8-3-88-tfn

ID-25-IIIo. pd.

-v

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM. SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Perhapa you were not

VALLEY LUMBER

SUPPLY

Mic~~r~~1 ~ohio

console our hearts,

s,.,,,,,,,

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Computar Graphics,

Public

lalatio111,
Achartising ~

Phone:

- Concnte work
- Plumbing and eleetrlcal

.1.~~- bid ahotl contoin tho

46

nome. addr••· ond phone
number
sub·
mitting- of
it;--the
Eachperson
bid muat~

figure to be considered.
Biela will beopenodandtaLbu,.,l0et~od.ei ot 4:05P.M. on DoI'
11. 1988 st -thooftho Meigs County

992-6215

}

•

RACINE • OHIO

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS

ONLY

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-662-3121

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

Ftrltl E~alpltl. .l
Perts &amp; Strvlil~
GIIU &amp;'LADIES
SNOW &amp; FASHION

BOOTS
$3, ss,
S6 &amp; S12

Happy Ada

SIMON'S
PICK-A-PAIR

year• we've 1pent together;
Jhe hoppin$88 that we
1h1red.

Ill THE HEAIT OF
POMEIOY .

Fond memories I'll always treasure,
The Way we always
" cered.
The thought• are alwaya with me;

GENERAL~
UPAIR

~

llpeclallzlaJ Ill Chala

u.•
ud Wood FeaclaJ
eC!IUNG FANI INITAlta:t

Specializing in

.n...

IWr ,.,., tltNIIMttr·~rll I

•IIIMOOI!UNG
•"-UM.NG
.ofiVWALL
•OI!CU

•I'AINTINQ
•ROOfiNG
•TIU: WORK
•PORCH II

PRElt IIITIMATEII

. Baete,e CUd Wel ..me

IIII'IIYIICI

992-UU

ID-11-'It-1 M.

Dorer ll Backhoe Worlt- 8150 ·

11'-441-8078.

home wfth home prfvHeg• 802

Fourth A.... 11 .. 44.. 2823.

Wll bllbtalt In"" home-Beside
SouthMttem High School. C:.ll

11'-379-2747.

Blbv stttw .Va..bl• .-..,. dme. '
Aeferen.-. Locll:ed In Ch•
.... Good c.reprovtded. 814387· 7288.
.

SYSTEMS
•R esidential
•Commercial

FutnlluN ll'ld IPPI.,_. br the
pl1101 or entln houllftJicL Fair

r,: llolng tllid- CIUI '-441-

Wented To Buv-UHd Mobile

Hom•. c.ll 814-~0171.

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

DENNY CONGO

Repairs
NIASE Certified Mechanic

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

CALL 992-67 56
"D.OC" VAUGHN

Cartified

BEAUnFUL

,.r-·~

, ·.~. · ~'.'. '1•HAIR
.\~~~E~'"'•CLOTHES
~ •TANS
•' .' '·

T-lng ouooll-. Buvfng gln-

...1 OOorgeluckiO'It14-ll'4711. Houn 2:00..9:00. Closed

on Mondor.

Take the pain aut of
pci~ng. Let lilt do
it for you. .
Very ReasOnal!le.

WANTED

DEAD OR AUVE

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must Bo Rtpairablt"

111 Wilt Soc. P - • J

992-6720

10·21-'88-1 mo.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

BISSELL
BUILDERS

985-3561

10.19-"88-l

2101, Pete Simpson ,
Coiu .....L

AlllllllliiLI: 1111:111'
3

Ker Heaters
Wicks
Ker Blowers
Heat Mate Ceramic

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

'110.00

Blem Bltteries

HILLSIDE MUZZU
LOADING

130.00 &amp;Up
S•lem Street
Rutlend, Ohio
742-24116

••
MODERN GUN

1..-....:.'11'-/ "/.I.'111&amp;1..111;.1

Munleloadi..i i e s
MMtm Gun
ies
G- • A111111o • p .
22 Ammo ' ·
124 EDit of Rutland
Across Htoppy Hollow Rd.

2 eR .. 11 11-1c. .,,,._
17, 000. Ctll304-17.. 1813 or
cens•2mll• outJimH• Rd.

44

Farms for Sala

'

&amp;

35 lots

Acreage

Alhlon. bl.,ttlJII•ae bJiclng
Iota. mobl• horMt p.-mltted.
public w.t•, elso rlvw lola.
ctydl Bow1n, Jr. 304-15712338.

Buein11ss
Opportunity

I NOTice I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISt+lNGCO ..... ....,..... you '
dO busln. . vvfth p·eopre yOu
know. end NOT to ..,.d monl'f
through the mil untl you h••
lnweltiglled the o"-lna.

GroGirf Store/Gil for Ml&amp; Be

your own boa" E.:II lent m.n"'
mlklng. Advnurt for som• ·
one. Good JoCBI:Ion. Own• must
sel due to •n.._ Reptr to:Box
Clo 180. c / oOtllpotlo Dolly
TrlbJne. 1211hlrd Aw., G.UIpallo, Ohio 45831 .

SAlES MUlTI liNE INSU-

HomesforRent

homo. C.AREEA OPPORTUNITY. Call 304-743-8030 or
30'-&amp;82· 3309.
Mod•n Hllr Salon In Pt. Pie..

• •· E.:. high tr1fftc .locethln.
v.., DrOfltlble. Cal HuntWigton

a
011111\t. 111.-y comm.tsur8te
,wtlh •pM•• a qualflc.

··, :Orok...~ .. :?~~~~t

e•••

lo'oll ......L Gtft•

IUm1.

K1ren and Kide .
Mln..,.•l"*"'n barW. 81 Mon..Sot.
.

No huntlngart,...,..lno clleto
t.r:•lllft optn, t.noetomdown.
r-..ltlngln ..,_of ...,_ on Rt.
38. lorm.Hv John Dohtl form.
Ani~ Cotton prop..ty.

w•

Morg~~~'1 Waocl•n Farm
be doMd Naw thruDec. 1. No

or corn • •·
Giveaway

Holidey - lnn , •10 Plk1
Otllpolt
·

MoO-d's In Gtllpolo 1o , _
-Ina IPPM. .Io.._ Stortlng

.,.,..3.111 .,
t4.00 •

...,r,

eo der•

hour. NQ IPPIIcltion

ICCIPiod hm 11 ,30.\M-1 ' 30
PM. Aoollr In - ··
Holpw.tod-Boo-ln. • -

P•I~ttCI

requlr... Nlghls

a

welltendl. No phone cellt.
Aool¥ .. · Econo LodaoJocloton Plk&amp; lot.· 7 AM-3 ""'·
llbv•ltt• v..m:td

m &amp;outhw-

•et•n hhooler-. Partttrn.1 ·

2diV• wk. 8 AM-8:30PM. For S

2 kilt. . to vtvM ~-, M-m
hoir. Litter boo
od. Col
114-441-8311.
FrM to good ho..,..whll:e AI•
' k.. hmele do_g. ApprCIII. 20

moo. 0.1181'-44"8117.
White Clll: • llltttna. Clll 114-

441-2837 ""• 41'M.
z ........._ Colt .,.......
7100.

a rlf••oi

Col 114-379-2179.

ftN'1 en 0111-AIIhlftt. EJCIIIIIYt
banoltt • fllory. lllntlf. . ...
In onlY.

Cft NA·HIJlh.. •lory In Ohio.
M llln.wta. F ...1 time poelthln

'*''

3 ~oom Rench. 1Y2 bethl.
hmltt room dining room. 1 c• ,

g•age. ttorage' buldlng. poo.. .
/ wooden deck. Spring v.u.,

814-448-7903.

01"- 2 tt ory home. 3 BR .•
adcltlonlll 4 room hou..,C.n be
us•
Rlv•fromage.
*31.000 or own. witt fln~W~oe
w•h 1f1llll down prfment, 81/a%
lnt•est. 3mU• I. of Middleport '
on At. 7. CoN 81+44&amp;-7040 •
betw.-, 8-4:30 PM .

•l:lu•tn•..

3 BA . hoult. 'h mi . from city.
Ora.t School Old:. Call 814- "
4411-1541 lrfl•l5 PM .

3 BR. house. Mlxe, AC. •
poc*Sale or Trade. 4 BR . housa,
good loOMion. CIH 304-875- •
.1

Gov•nment Hom•l t1 .o0 (U
Rep*l Foreatosur•. Tu. Oelin-

~- Prop8'1Y. Now Selling. ·

Thll erul C11f (R ... ndlblel '
1-11 .. 481· 3848 EXT. H1822
'"' llnlngo.

,....... IIIIo •d CIYM lorvloo
Jobl. Now l*ln_g. Your • •·

3 beci-oonw. 11ftb•h. b .. tment
~d 1•-ae. Otmral air. In

c.•

•13.110 to •11.410. lmm•
·-~~~1-3t .. 733-

1012 bt. F2718.

Mlddlparl. Ctll &amp;t'- 992-78S2
or 11'-992· &amp;257.

3 blftoonw;. 1221. p• month
dopollt. Coli 11'-112·
1724 or 814-992-81 19.
.:::.::..:.~:..:.,...:.:_:__ _ _ •
3 bedroom ' houoo, 2 b•h In
TuppM"s Pllinl. t275 mon1h
pkls utilltl• 111d depostt. 2
bl.t'oom tnH• for rent In
Tupptrs Pllllnt. t175 month
l utili• .nd depOih. 8147 •••7
·- ·
3 -oom homo with til
b•emtnt l6cllted NIW Hav.,
30'-88Z.3394.

r.

...hCRN.\orlontodAn. . hlo~
olocw group. a .. d ...,.,. to,
aox ne, dtfUicatt., Ohio
481101 .

....

'

197 9

Umltacl

Call ~ 1... 24&amp;- 11040.

.S14-~·7810.

or sooner. c.n 814-40-2201.
ApM'mtntl

for

IIIII Morton Rood. Dollrodfur
the Sonlo• Cltll.. liZ oldlrl

or ctll 514-44.. 4839.

1 •

2 IR oport...... 1300

month. lndudee 1H ut•l•

Adu"'

45

Fumished Rooms

Furnilhed room-919 Seoond
Ave., O.lllpotis; e131 • mo.
UtHki• DBicL Slnalemele.

Sh••
beth. C.M 448-44"telflw7PM.

=~ t.ft~tJtUo~'!:
lt'-44.. 2102.

2 blc*'oorn Ap11. for rent.
Clrp•ed. Nlcesetllng. Laundry

lociMI• ovllltbl• Coli 11'992-3711 . EO H.

63

Antiques

H•d CII'Y.cl Cherry wood AntkllM
Hftlt &amp; I chah. velvet
~~f"•loo Klotlln&amp;

Buy or S•U. Rivertna Antlqu-.
1124 E. Main Str_., Pom•ov·
Hours: M,T,W 10e.m. 10 lp.m..
Sundllr 1 to llp.fn . 814-99225211.

~;:::;;:;::=:;;::::::;;::::;;;::
:
64 Misc. Merchandise

B•arscoll &amp; wood burnarwlth
blow• • acc••or.... ea.
cond. 1225. Call 814-379·

2282.

Sllv•trim Wlltlm I how IIddie.
plltlrl we~t.-n saddle. c.n 814-

448-2222.

2801.

CompMit sweep• whh ettiiiDh·

menu eao.

Porteblt Slno..wlna miChlne
&amp;14-948·

27'1:1.

*3&amp;.

Flndlr Aoou•lc Guitar. L•e
nM, e150. 1973 Ford v ...

•us. 1180ChoovMolli&gt;o8tot~

o~n. good concltlon

t8215
080. Used doon. Call 114·
7'2 · 3073 between 3 :00-

5104.

N-lv IOdecor•od .,....,....,.

Mercildlldise

evehble. Utll•l• paid. *225.

p•month.deposllrequhd. CaH
114-892-5724 aft• 8:00 or
892-1119.

le..oned 0111, Hldtory, Alh
firewood for .. ta. Bkl truck load
UO.OD. Call 814-7(2-2&amp;45.

dlrtCI from menuflcturw
tnd .......... - ··· ttlrtlng ..
e1.no.oo. Call • . - Tech.
30'-523-8288.
Buy

58

•bl•

55 Building Supplies
Building Mlt.tals
Block. brick. sewer pip-. window'" Hm•. lite. c1... dl Win..._ Rio Grande. 0 . Call 814-

71

Fruit

8t Vegetables

Dun rovtn Fruit F1rm win dose
Novanblr 23 .,, the 1 - ' 0 "'

Houre 9·1, closed Mondllw's . Rt.
88 1 SE of Alb-v , 114-8988 298.
Jeckl Market &amp; BiaS Pro clu:e
now combined In one lomtlon.
FanOifrutts. wgttable.candt•
nuts. muc:hmorell0pen9:00tltl
6:00 d•lly, 1 2 :oo tin 5 :oo
Sundw. Food 1t1mps weloome.
J•cks fNit Market. At. 36.

a.

JuotlntlmtforChrllt . .o-111!1 .

Shih Tz.u puDDfel. A•actt for new
hornn In Oilc. e210. Deposit

pap••·

wHt hold. Have •hots.
Oood wtth children. Clll 014-

autltm.. ,,..., 3 ml• out
81r1d Hll Road. t15. 00 and

no.oo.

SURPlUS ARMY, DENIM .
CAR HART. Rental clottMng.
lmal Army Equipment Aco.-

1

59 For Sale or Trade

Nov, Dec, (lnaur.ted ecw..ns

Orlalnal A""" clott*lg. Nonmllltlry camflauge " pants
112.00.

81'-742-2385.

Collie pup for •le. AK C Regiltered. ~II&amp; 3 monthl old.
Caii1J14-742-21•&amp;
Fish Tank. 2413 Jeckson Ave~
Point P I - t 30'-87.. 2083.
10 gelut up .,4,99 and 10 gsl

For ui•Reoondhloned 16 ft.
lold-up bu•h hog. Call 814-281-

4121 .

190AC tractorwHhround bel•.

.........

•plr•

RrMOOd for ..... 3&amp;.000 load.

30'-171-4092.

cuM~•­

ton. tl9150. AC W045 trtctor

with plowo. dilc, ~ft. l•llh ho~
11 ,,18. Ownerwll ttn..ce. C.ll
51'-28 .. 8822.

Lete model 1550 Ollv• dlenl,
p~ow, •

dloc. buth hoD. neso.

8081nt•nllk)nal dl•lll tractor
wtth left. bush hoQ. U210,
Owner wll flnll'lce. Call 814-

2e .. IS22.

57

eooc..edl•eltriCtor, plows&amp;

1122.

Musical.

...... .,oo ......

0.11 81'-

379-2&amp;01.

Sow with 1en pial for 11le or
tr.ta Cell814-9815-3527.
For HI• Ponad Hlrlford Herd

30~17&amp;-

Plgt. 12 Wtllb old. 12&amp;. 00

a. Grain

Llrgeround bll• of h.,.lor ...e.
no eech. Caii114-U8- 1062.

Abio. wUI supp~ and

••hal•t

1977 Pontiac

Qr~nd

Prk. C•ll

1980 Mud1 R)OI tor •Ia. Cal
81'-982-7048.
Am , T - Top ,
•t.llOO.OO. '72 BuldlleSobr'

'77 Tran•

no rust. runs good. t37&amp;. 00.

30'-875-24&amp;7. _ _ _ 2
.::..:_..:.:..::..::....:.:....

30'-1711-23~9.

42 Mobile Hornas
for Rent
In e .. tkt. 2111 . AduMo only. No
• •· 12001 mo. Dip. ~Ired.
Coi181'-Z4.. 1883.

304-1175-1238.

1980Thun·d•BircL auto. 1980
Grenada auto. 4 door 39.000
m"•· 1979MIIIb.l wagon &amp;ItO.
30+875-7858.

1971 Ford LTD Ulnd.,, ont
owner. 2 door, 311W a~to. AC,
PS, PB.. 11tt wheel, .,.to brake
ret . . &amp; CNile control. elec-

CA.

4-1. PM.

30 .. 67 .. 2880.

19711!1LWimlnContlndal. borli
good shape. 30~875-2511 If·
ter 4:00.

72

Trucks for Sale

Kin•• ••· Construetton

Serv1ce s
81

Home
lmprova.m anta
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Unoondttonll litetlme ., ....
tee. loCII rlftrenC* .. ,. . Mel.
Fret 1111ma... Cell OO. .c:l

1-11'-237-0488. dO'f ........

AogersBa•ement
Wtt•prooftng.
SWEEPER and HWingmachlne
rtPeir. pMs. Mtd IUPI'IIa. PICik
up and deltvery, DIVII V~e~~"m
Cle.,er, ane h•lf mile up

Qoorllfl C 44 .. 0294.

~d .

C.M St'-

RON'S Telwl•ion Be,. lee. -,
Hou1e cllll on RCA. OYIUr, .
OE . Specltllng In ZonMh. Col •
304--178-2398 or 114-44..

2454.

Fetty Tr• Trimming. stump
l'lmov•l. C•ll 304-1715-1331. ...

Aot-v or Cllbl'e tool *lllng.
Mo11 wells compiMed •neCS..
Pump •I• lnd
304-

898-3S02

,...,k:e.

RON"S APPUANCE SERVICE.
hou" call a.vlcing OE. Hot .,
Pttint. WMhers, dryers lnd
....... 30'-57.. 2398.
.
Atc... Troo T~"'"*'CdStu...,

304-175-7121.

ea• •

• ·

Ron's Chlmnl'l Sw.ep, epHilal

•

G. G,..,.andson~ConCI'et:eend
Contrectlng. lnt•kw ll'ld
rlor plllntlf'lg, c•pnery .. d..

•t•

82

Plumbing
Heating

8t

1979 ChiW'I 4&gt;14. 350. 4 bb ..
auto., y, ton. black. can 814246-9455.

CARTER'S PWMI:INO

19M Ch..,v Vt ton C.-tom

AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth Md Pine

Deluxe. e cyl.. euto. . ft.,.,
.... ..-........ hloh ml•.

o.n'lfes. Ohio

Phono &amp;1'44 .. 4477

84
&amp;

3888 or 51'-

Ektctrical
Retrigeratlo!'

19n Ford Rln~ XLT pickup.
V·B. tuto, air. Good oond. c.n
81'-44 .. 1109.

.1000. 11'-112-7841.

2 bedroomfu-htd . . .utllti• Plkl. Nf•enoa PhDn•

'111 Chwy trucdl. rune good.
1100.00. Cll'l b1 , ... behind
Clfton po11t afftoe.

30'-II:Z.Hee.

1884 Chevy 8·10 pldl: up,
AM-FM ....,, tlntMiwlndowa.
304-175-8381.

tr•h plckupe provided. M.-lnt•
ntnott'•llvlng doet to lhop1 ping. '-"" .. d oahoolt. For

..._.,..-,aItt. no

Jult In time for de• ""an.
C01chrnan CtMt. 8 ft. truck
camp•. nice, 304-1711-282,,

mMONY.

Boooh Str-. Mlddloport. Ohio,

.

Sl'-112-7275. a.... tao
Beech S~ Mldcloport. Ohio.

Aonnl• Nell.

t982 Oetaun pldl.•up. KlngCeb,
high mllag• but Nna good.

4410txt. 10 or 11

3D ft. campw

Ill&amp; Uh naN. Priced right. Cel

4072.

1970 Ford"*' ton truck t400.00.

304-17 .. 3e70.

For •II• 2 -1•70 lnt•.
1-1871 oa•un
1121.: 19'fl Ford truolo
Phono 1-30.. 17. . .12:
3,30 p.m .

tNokl:

requ ..acl Caiii14-441-I071.
Pl...... VIII'Y oiWI tnd oood
2 ...,.oammobl•homelnolly. oond, will r.n llr,.MCI or
unttr•hed. Adult• orW. Prt- lllllrMhed. no pets. phone
votl porkfn• _IZIO t mo. 1 ::::J04.:.:.::1~71-:..:;138~~~-- - : - --

w.t•.

Sp~iln .

ttwu Dtc•mbsr e39. H . c.1t
30'-'fl!-5348 .. ,773-1140.

APARTMENTS. moblto ho-.
hou-. Pt. PleMant andGIIIIIpollt. 51'-441-1221.
.

-·ltv

19815

.711!1 M udll'lg. front end demaged. good motor UOO. G rauetv
traclar ct.lel whftfs 42' • mower
sulk., 1700. Electric •tart.

198.t GMC 1ft ton pldwp 4x4,

.,.aan.

I'
lmolopt. J .... on .\ .. - ·
..... ,38.00 month
dopoolt - - ·· atll 304-8711-

81'-44.. 18&amp;7.

RtmOVIII . frill lit

high 81..,a1500. toadtct. Excll.

morelnformltlon Cllll304-112·
2 8R mobl• home. LOCittd In 3711. E.O .H.
JohnoOft"t Porte. Rof- • dop. Ono - - opt In Point

OopooM-Irod.C.IIet'-4441•791~ IPM
•
-·
·• .
, ... 70, 3 .... t9e2 u...., lor.
RMt.
eiWII'14gorbooo lor. .Colt 8
25 .. 1010.
Pertl*
10d0mobl•
ho- lt. Rt. 7·UPP• Rlv• Rd.
•• .. 3710..
Ctllet •~...,... Hom• for 1'11'11. In

79 Motors Homes
8t Campers

tronic windows. ehdronfc • •
drlv•• oldo. 30'-871-25015-

eon 81'-.WI-3791
lfl• 5 PM .

tocoptlng IPI&gt;Hootiono far
2 bedroom tp.-lmonto. fully
Urge Hlflna room with ·~do. . ,.... IPPII•'*· ..wt•lftd
Prfvltetot. CIR 114-448-1409,

,

'82 Plymouth Relhnt, 4 cyL 4
•peed. •eoo.oo. 30'· 8915·
3427 Oil 304-676-1&amp;04.

u .ooo.

Transpur 1.111on

tndRivorlldtA ........oln
Mdcloport. From 1182.
· n_..e_7._E_o.,tt_ _-:11;...1_:4-_11;..._2_:

1981 BMW 320 I . 5 speed. sun
root nsw 8 rldglltonetir•. naw
and llrlk•. Mu.t seM.
Call 51 .. 992-2841.

304-875-30:10. 875-4232 and
875-M31 .

Form. Rt. 315- PinY. W.Vt. 8,00
rc;
1~2:00 Man-Bat, ~4-937-

Qwfified r.n. . plY t200.
dtpolh: end no ""' for ttt.
month. Novernbw or December only. VII• Minor

1984Fordelcort. PS. PB, euto.
AM-FM c•11tte. Ell:lllent condition. 12200. See It th\rd
houll ~ Post Office In Long
Bottom 1ft• 5:00p.m.

88Z.7418.

Hay

•

1987. 3011. Tr..,ll Trollw lor

1986 Bukk Som. .et. 1883
Codllloc. 198&amp; Oldt. Cutl1914 CM~•a. 1983 ~cury
OR Marqu... 1981 Pontlec
Sunblrcl. 1981 Oldl. Cutl••·
1984 Ch.,, S-10 a .... 1979
Dodge Ram Chll'p. 1987
Dodge Dekot1 pldwp. 1988
Toyota pickup. 1977 Ford
plclolp. 1980Joop. AIIPrlcedto
s•n a a. o Moton. Hwy. 1 eo.

1981 Buldc: L• S.bre. on•
owntr, II'C cond. t3.SOO.OO.

Ground 1hlll oorn t&amp; 00 P•
100. Premilm AtfMIIfe e3.00,
Btr.w 11.50, Round hill
120.00. Morgan'• WoodMn

1.:.;..:.7=-:::-:-=-=::=-:.:-...:..One Month Frw Rent

vv

•• n• . n40o. 0.11 81'-44•
8808.

Bull, on• young Bul, BornJ1n .
1 , 198a C.l evening~ 114-

dtltver sawdust. 304-7735332.8,00 tHitOOAM .

Effldtncy apa1ment. al ca-·

~

....

Used 0\lltrolll beds. long. No
rust. C•l1304-176-8218.

1983 Ford F-100 pu truck.
29.000ml. , utraslwp- t31!JI50.
firm. 1984 CltM~n 2 tone g~-v
•terlar, light gr-v velour
lntertor- t1995. Clll 814-2815-

1988 Oldl Cutf•• Clere, on•
owner. low' mileeg&amp; exc ODnd.

corn.

trNdl 900ll20 I ptv. 171
11. 1100112012ptv. 182.50ea.
Call 814-245-1584.
For Parts-1977MonteCirlo.
.... 1181•44&amp;-""11 oft IPM

1871 Camp•. 14', slaaps • ·
Good cond 1700, Firm. Ctl

2-T•n. . • Wilking hart•
eeoo. 2 W•m Morning hellllng

64

US~D TRUCK TIRES-(Miit_.,

.unroof. crulle. 14200. Call
81'-21.. 1410.

Livel1ock

Wll hall oorn. lnc.t.lding EFAP

potod. WOrking tca.Mo only.
Olpostt 1nd rfttnOt. Cll
814-992-8142 .... 8,00.

Kan~g&amp;

FOI'•grHI dealonanwv cwunr:l
c•. truckorvln, 111Kennvllla
at Jim Min• Chevrolet·
Oldunobl&amp; 814-448-3172 or
30'-n!-5134.

lnst~ments

51 Household Goods

.t

aft• 4p.m. 814-992-15267.

oach. 30'-875-5950.

2 regltleredAKC Boaerpuppl-.
9 weeki old. 1 ftmale 1 mil&amp;
1200.00 each. 30~87~8043
aft•I!I:OO.

•

e14-4411- 6885.

hoy blnol plows&amp; dllc,

63

evalllble.

198&amp; Ch•ger. 2.2. 5 spd. . AC,

LiV!!SIIIC~

Portlblellahted sign wllh lett. .
U21.00: llghtod win- tlgn

.99.00: ..........47.110: pl. .l.
''". . 1.7.10 boll . FNt dtllfory. 011•
Nov. 2511\
AAA Signs f.IIO().J14:Z.2434

AMF

belowHolld.,· lnn.

I"' 111 Suppl11:s

Shl chick... call
1828.

30'-17.. 2193.

,814-448-0981. Rebuilding

e&amp;2a

a ...oned Oelc ftrewood. eza. oo
Dick up lOad. phone 304-875- :c-omp__:._lot_•_•-:-43-:2:-:&amp;_.--,---=::,304.
'
Registered Norwegian Elk
AnUque o• .....,. mlhopny Hound, 5 monthl old. • • 10
dining room atlt• 4 piece hunt, 304-895-3183.
bedroom suk.. used hosplal
bod. 30'-871-4879.
AKCrogillwod Slbori.. HUikO'f,
Poo«&lt;e. Cocll:• Spanlll. Shots.
wornwd ..d health r-=ord.

au•.,.

nllty inlped. .. 30 dl¥1
tee. w. t..~v tnna,..iorw , Clll

t9S6 Fo•d Tempo. 6 opd .•
. 0 2899. t9B6 Ford EXP. 6 opd.•
t 2999. John' sAutoS•I•· Rt. 7

thln.goodwfthohil*•· BlackS.
brown. •1150 1"1. t. 1200 IMI- Ferm EquiDm•nt ZllorTriCion.
Call 81'-441-1321Howard tlotevltors, Bled•~
Feed• Rings. 8lt(lngoldbatterFull blooded mel• Chow-Chow lot. MorrloEqulomont, Rutl ..ol
puppy-Mother full blood•d- Olio 114-742-24156.
fal.._ AKC t1110. CIU 114379·2745.lhept.d puppiM fol
Nle. ASCA· NSDA reallt•ed.
PuPI on hind .,d new litwdue.

Used tr-mllsk)ns. AI lnt•

t1200. Call 61~44$.2588.

Henclerton, WV .

dlec. G.hl grinder. · mlxert2QIS. 2010 JO with plows.
Chr:lstrnes, AKC r.Q'-tered.- disc Ia bu1h hoct t3995. Owner
ch!TC:~on bloodlln•.,.dlgrH will fln ..... Call 81'-28 ..

A~tn

2220 or =10'-&amp;7&amp;-87111.

an:omltctrans ..
·
ereo
with rell' spelkn. Uh: wi'MNII,
bJdlet sut•. alumiNJm whMs.
Goocti• Eagle SIT tlra Price

OMmen Shepherd puac:HH for

• brod for good cllpoll-

be•lng. W•r'«rty- 12m~. CVC
iolm•·all 1YPI'· C•ll 81 .. 379-

a e

:.:~. bl::erint=i'Pl~~

61 Farm Equipnnent

Hlmalayln kittens. C.ll 014••a-38•4 eft• 7 PM.
.

·Of

tor..•

rekllt

eotwen:.-..
StanCS.d
dutch•.
pr•sur• pllllll.
&amp; ttwow
out

S I

1977 Chevy Monte Carlo,

Groom and Supptv .S hop-Pet

Si.,..••

uta s

Used &amp;

tyl)l

Pets for Sale

Dragonwynd Can.,- Kennel
CFA P•sl.. and
kit·
ten1. AKC Chow puppi•. New

• F

1987 Chryaltr Leb•on Coupe
Turbo. EltCellent condition. All
aptiona. C. It e14-44S.80SO,
keep trying.

Miscetlaneousllemualeprlced.

•

Grooming. All br... ds ... AII
aty .... 111'1'11 Pet Food DMI•.
Jull• W•bb Ph. 114-MI-0231 .

A

1974 VW Bug. Good oond.
Excel. work c• · Call 614-2466040.

248-8t21 .

pr

up.

t-;;:;:::==:;::::;:===::-~;;:~=;::;:::;;:;=="'1

Antiqu•42" IOUnd olk tlble II
4 chlh-11,000; LlbrlrV
t75; Rocklngchllir- $75; 30 Dint
dehumldlfer- 175; over 100
Munleblast magaz.ln• 860. All
In v.,Y good condlllon. Call
814-379-2228 IVtniilp.

Puppl11 'for •'•Doberman
Chow. Clll 114-441-9441.

.,

BUDGET TRANSMISSION Uud Ia rebuilt 111 typn.
W•antv-30 dave. Prla. ttl •

f&gt; 19 aa 11y NEA., Inc.

Rodp•o ,__ eon 814-44..
2807aftwl5 PM .

1 e:;_1:;.'-..:II~2·..:11.:.:.BS;...._ _ __

,~

•

1-K • lens.
E Bulldtn
Transit
wtth
zoom
1-ll..:k
&amp; Declur
10'' Mh• .-w. 1-181n. Rock·
welt door plene. 1-s•m s1w.

56

Auto Parts
Acceeaories

U-lj

379-2871.

127.1501. Jungle Boots U.S.A..

Comm•dll BuMdtng for ......
Pt. Ple•ant. Cllll 304-8715-

&amp;

&amp;

COUNTRY MOilLE HomoPI•k.
Rout• 33. North of Porn•ov.
Rental trail••· Ctll 114-9127479. .

For Lease

76

Men' 1 • Ladl•'a dothin~tlik B

&amp;9'-3578

Pol•• 4 whtlal ...

andused, -,vhtel....

Guarlftttld Qulltty
CETIDE, INC.. Athll11· &amp;14-

OLD ROUTE 21 , NEW EA.\
30..,_273-1155, Noon-8 PM.

49

Selling NtJW

COncr«• blocb- aH •R. . 'l'lrd Arlblan m•a. s.,,.,. old. Gl'l'f.
ordellvtfV. Mlton•nd. Qlll lp~ ~ regid•ed. 11500. '12 qua-t•
Oonle koybo•d. Coli 11'-44• U. Btodl Co.. 1231ft Pine St ..
"*'&amp; I.,.. . . old. BliCk. tSOO.
7421.
Ooltloolo, Ohio. Coli 814-44.. WoodlpUn:• on 111 own trill•.
f300. Coon hcKindl moun1aln
Aug• type wood •plltter fits 4, . 2783.
kern, wlllkWI, redbones. 1110
I . or 8 wood • or truck wheel.
WESTERN RED CEDAR
a up, Roglotorod -~~~ hounol
Allo dell cll11e rack. 1ft1 long
• Ch~nntl Aufllc
mlle. _. • white. 1300. Cal
whtii'-•Chwrolet. Calll14and
Bwll.t Lip Siclng
11 ..742-2412.
25.. 1240.
'O.ckM'It•l•

sort-. SAM SOMERVILLE'S,

30 .. 875-3073.

Rt. 35 Cycle Sal•. SouttwlcM.

Hide-a-bed. brownlt.n. Micra

Awc.do 13 cu. fl. Frostfrel
~bean Refrlg•llor. Ea. Concl.,
t200. Oldelec:trlctraln. t100. 15
old qu:ltts. 2 rlltroecllem.-. 15
•chctoi m•m t.ll. Old stone
1... Antique . . . .. 814-9Q.

Motorcycles

wv. Pn. 1·304-1175-,130. Now

Trt- Stw Vsc:uums w h h unused
powernont ls and attiChmllr'lls.
guarantee. 1 220. Compact vaeu um l also rebu ih. • 180. Call
304-287-6324, Limited qulllty
llso h•e unused 1988 Rlln·
bows. KlrbVs. &amp; EIICtroUx.

Iotsofmilc. C.II114-4411-8412
or ... • 802 Fourth Aw.

Moble Home space for rn.
C..t.n..,. C.l 114-~4634

Spldous motile home lOti for
rent. Femily Pridt Mobil• Hom•
Park. Qalllpolil Ferry, W. Ya .

tank. '350. Call 8 14- 446-0577
after 4 PM .
·

nM', -.,tlque die._.. milk gl.,,
OUhL • mile. 0.11 lt'-44 .. . lodlot
ohotl. kltch.. h... l. •
7907.

I ,OOp.m.

ot._.

74

1-6150 gal. underground fu el

--eel.

lo.......

c•p ...

J Np ~ Wtgo n •

Ldaded. nM" tW-. Eiclll. cond.

2 be*oom hou• ntMI~ ttma- TupPfl'• Plainl. "Aet•enOI end
doled. gr..
Point diPOih
Colll14-887"e•tnt. call eft• 8:00 pm. 3074 or 114-M7-3234.

._,,.heel

i

Dakot• Ferm Ho'me. lullt on
your lot. 112.9915 •up. s.. our
Model Cal 1-11 4- 188-731 1.

198.t Matdl 8·2000. Buck•
••s. oonscie. 5 apd. t r -..
AM ·FM.C.II., ntw dr•. Oood
cond Cel 814-210-8228.

BR ., n.v

4 W .O .

Coli 81'-241-8828.

..d deposit, unfur,._ ono ,I-..:'..:"'..:11.:.:.2·..:12.:.38::..·-:--::---:--;chlol 30'-8711-215t .
':
Two bedroom ept, for rent In

z

&amp;

870.981t.

oond Low ml•. C1H 814-44..

- . . woioo- C.H 51'44..... 8.
(

or ui8CI. 3
wheeled electric scoot.... CaH
Aog.,. MobltV collect. 1·1 14-

8yr11111a For 1
•100.
Houtetor rwnt. 231•Mt. Vtrnon p• month. Pl'l own utlltl• plu1
Ave. 1210.00month. rat.tnaa dapa.il:. c.n &amp;14-192-7180or

room.

Vane

19711!1 Ford y., , Ntw •• •
chrome w~ bett.y· callltl
pl.,-w. lookl • ru• ..... wood.
MUit - to apprecla• t1100.

'Nh•h:l'l -. ~

Fumlohtd om1l
IPWI"*" In
1

···or

Ph."

5Court,2Hvlng•- 3SR .. tl;

Furnilhtd oportmont. 1 BR.

11 '-liZ. til til.

..dt

c......,
lirbMcCIIa. D.O.N ., PlniiCI'.t
&amp;104.
C.eCent•. E.O .E.

T•• Tawnhou.. tpartmente- 2
IRs ., 1 ,_.., bllt., CA.. dis:·
hweshlr. d6tpoeel. prlv8te ...
cloood p•lo, pool. plll'grwnd.
w.t... - ·· • traeh lnc*.lded.
St.,ina 11 t 289 .,.. mo. Cal

b .. h onon••ld&amp; 18R . • Hthon
loth kltohtn• fuf""Nd.
klotl for' llmlly with g , . . -

Pom•GY· 2 bedroom ept. Partir
HouH with bit h. Ne• Racine. llrnllhedin NeylortRun. 8ecurNce yarcl g~dln spiCe. Cll ltv dtpoell. Cal aft• lp.m.

a.p••

Ire&amp; Cell

chi*'"·

P••

ll'ldH•diOIPP .. P"ona.Equll
housing otJportuollty. AppNcotlo .. IN¥ be pldled up at: Spring
Vllltr PI••· 129 Jackaon Pike

anv•-

Fwnilhed home-3 rooms 6
bit h. t18flimo. w... t.nnilhltd.
In town. No ~· Depolil:.
M.ltta. Cell 814-441-2fli43.

4 aR .. Ml botoment • o•'!llo.
fultyo
(some n.....). Ctty

0271 oltw 8 PM. tnYIIme.

Upmln unl.lrNihtd IPt· C•rpeted, utltll• ~hi. No
No
Celll14-'41-1137.

Nloe-2 lA . apt. 4V. mil• from
O.llllloh. Stew•. •lg. a wat•
fur,.htd. e221• mo. No p«e.
Calllt'-441-8038.

month. Depo11t ,.qutred. 81412215- 28 Noll A.... Gollpollo. _992-8724. Alter 8pm or 992Coll 44.. 441hltor 7 PM.
51 t9.

Clbln ... otk wooctNork. ftnilh
b111mtnt. 2 c• a•-aa. 1... 111
l1ndlceped 101:, • ,..--. from
Holzer HoopMol off Rt. 3&amp;A&gt;nwtrook Subdiv•lon. Cll

achoots. Utllhlll low. Woodburner. Na1ul'll a• furnace.
Prioed to sell. C.ll 114-448-

8ENJTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
IUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
BON ESTATES, 138 Jeclr:un
lltke frorn 1183 • mo. Wllk to
lhop tnd mo¥ito. 51'-4412588. E .0 .H.

Hous• 7 rooms. unfurnished.

PIICI. formM dining. l•ge living
room. 30 fl . custom Olk ldtc:htn

Help Wlftttd-Evenlng Cook.
Apptf ~ penon. No phone CIIA1.

cttv. Adutts ontv. Perking. Cel
814-440-0338.

t._ Eklertv.
Gellla Manor A...,.IMnt.. IBS

Nlcet, fur,.hld 1-2 M . Wet•
Ia a•blll•paid. Prlvtt•P•Idng.
Oopollt -~• - Co" 114-44..
43411fter5PM . 1

2511 9· 8 dtl¥.

614-446-4111.

New completelY furnlstMd
epll'tmw.t &amp; mobile home In

equlppod klchon. llr . .\1101 tblo
Nov. 1st. e225 plus chp. Cat!
51'-44•0803 or 441-2118.

Sub.-4 BR .• full b••
mtnt. c•pet. a• rM'Ige. cfty
•chooll. Adutts onlr· on• ohlld.
No o•o. Dep. • Rof. requ~od.
t3150 P• mo. Call 814-4480271 8ftw I PM , weeksndl

3 BR . hoult. 0.,011t ~ulrad.
10 OldFortTrelt. Clll814-446-

tlo... P-grauplnlllllpolt.
I Wid r~M~mt to p.,.onMI. P .0 .
Bo• 810, G1llpolo. 0 H 4813t.

a .. cr. Inc. A,.o. Coli 30'-1786104, or 815-6388 or 1767738.

238 Firat Avo. 1 BR .. Ieitch.. Apartm1nt1 1nd hou.... Ctll
fur,.hed, c•pel... No chl- 30.. 17.. &amp;t04.
dren/ Pfte. • 175 plu• utlltla .2 iA . lilt.. llrge roome. cen1ret
!lop, ••.,. Col lt'-441-4925.
air, wet• peld. A*llllleNov. 1

e2n. Utlitl• plkl. 107 SaNice 1 BR. furnilhld houM. No cond. Gtlllpolll. Call448-4&lt;111
""'· Rol. • Soc. dop. NqU~td- ~ ~
llt_:,or_7_P_M_._,----:-:­
CIIII 81'-441-1759.
ApartmW tOr rtr~t. 1225 a

V.., anr1Ctlve .. ldl4bedroom.
2 bitt\ family room wtth fir•

msn-oa•••L Mecllolllnsu!'8"ot
. . lnetooHectlonll
word pr~

2 BR . apt•. I closllb. kltch_.
appl. furnllhed.. W•hlr-Dryer
hook-up. ww c•plt. newlv
palnta:l, deck.
From •175.
Senior Cltlz.,. Wlllooma R•·

onlv. no polL dop.
Nlcetv t.rmhld 1metl hou.,. requn:l. e.n 014-446-"222 Roonw tor rn-.....-: or month.
St.,lng M 1120 1 mo. Genie
AduHo onlv. Rof. requ~od. No . . _ _ . . ..
Hotef.I-1 4-441-HIO.
- - Coli 81 .. 44.. 0338.
Shod,- lown A.... 728 lloc•uwl
31R .. AC, c•pat. pool, t•eaa Ave. Fwnilhed etfloltncy . .,..
2 flreplac., hnca Oood toe~- k1g • t 171 a mo. ln'*'dina 46 SptEa for Rant

pt.,u

RANCE . Life • h..tth · euto.•

Apartment
for Rent

Moct.n 1 BR . downtown, oomPi«e ktlchen. air, ~p-. DepOifl. no p•1; Clll 014-441o 139 IVIftlngs. 1ft• I. .

.... 0-oko pork••lv•. Wtlk
to ICho• Downtown. I 371 •
mo. plu1 utlftl•. o.poefl a
..,. . .- eo• 1t'-44•49a.
41

Real rslale

lec:rll-viR•ctPCionllt with·P•IInoe .,. lndlp•cr.nt offloe

Apartment
for Rent

I -- - - - - - - - -

,...t ,... No. 1 Mine.
Coli 81'-441-3037.

Nqu~od.

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

21

Help Wanted

yr. old. E..,llna.

•
PH. 949-2801
~r Its. 949-2860

*

HeM~•• for

Z2188/tm

leo1011ablt Prkts"

2 bedroom mobile horne Camp
Coni~, 304-8715-3812 aft•
1180 Sherwood Park 141170 all · 5,00 M. .
lltCtflc with 1trtplace. •tend
rlftp, 2 Hctaonw. 1 beth.
Ttal . . fOr nnt. all unfurn6shed.
hou• type wfndow"s. pkish nice lftd clllft, couple~, •m•l
c•p«s.. mM lneul•kin. •Cii- chlfchn accepted, r.r.ene~~
ltnt aond. br~~tdn.,., 18. OOObtu and deposit. At. 1 Loe~~at Ad.
Whlrpool
oond. Montgonwy fourth mHe b.hlnd K&amp;K. Ctly,
Ward dryer Included , 30 .. 175-1078.
112.500.00 flrm. phone 30+
e9&amp;-3841 .
2 bectoom tnler on .,.ca lot
- u~ 1 ._ 70 3 ..__...._ Ch•hire. Ohio. 1-304-77311 '9 - · · •
-~ 5821
room. 17.100.00. 30'-87.. - - · -- -- - - - 1171 .. d 17 .. 1713.

8211hS.c. EJI::III. cond., 28R.,

bed. Jaczzul ••dte eq~o~ip­
mlnt 4 pc. wlc*• tJrnltura•et.
11'-44.. 7821 .

s.rv-.

4

1871 S.yvi8N' rnoble home.
1~70 with 7x21 •f*ldo.
phon• 304-875-81,1 .

Calll14-24.. 5204.

Tanning 8 u.in•a for Nl&amp; 2
Wolf t .. ntng beds. one tanning

~t:rvu:t~,

11

WI wll haul ooll for ""•~'Mat
HEAP •. Mil go C'"'ntv D..... of
Human
•nd HEAP
vouchn. We clft otv• y~
p r - dollY-. E-lo&lt;Worb. Inc. Pom.-cJ¥, Ohio.
lt4-II:Z.389t .

hiiV

....,.,h•

LR.ruf'81wltw, 3ecr•m1LEC.

Amouncernenta

by

plut dtpotlt. Pay own utMitl•.
SvriiCIUII area. One child •c·
cepted. 111 4-992-78BO or 81 499~ 823•
~
~
2 bed'oom turnistlftd.
and drv•. air cond. 1200.00
plu1 utlll l•. ref•enc:.. 30 ...
e7 &amp;4S?4.

rtnc:h ltylt horne. fireplace in

304-62&amp;:30115 or 1523-7277.

ntO.

We Service All Makes

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

• d Aw..,•wood. t1 4- 84-

iiii!IIIIVIIII!IIi

IZ.00-1215- Toya .4.00-n2.
Country llltch.., end , . . .

Alii

•ddiiort.

614-915-4110

entt.

TOP OF TilE STAllS

Fornw Aeoln• .-ldent n_.
old Nllt5onel &amp;.nk currency
Drintld with bMk n.m• from
tlllellne. Pom•CJY'.
Gllllpollo. Pt. Pl-.... R IO'f

!lavt References.

11-11 mo4 11'1·

Most Foreign and
Domestic Vehich1s
A / C Service
All Major &amp; Minor

entire hou11hofd. 114-742·
2411.

FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-5952

SYRACUSE, OHIO

Ulld tnnllure 1rt tt. pleae or

INTERIOR • EXTERIOR

HUNTER
SECURITY

1 :h80 two bedroom, Furnlahld
and C*p-td. t200. P• month

Compllloly ...,.,doled 3 BR .

F111a nc;a I

lnl:lq-.. Aleo wood •

44

42 Mobile Hornee'
for Rent

1983TriJmph,. 1olx80. newldd
on ,.Ill pump, 11hb8ths.WIIh«
.,d dryer, uncterp ..ni\g .,d
dec*. 1111 t~tc oorid Cell 814387· 7120 or 304-876-2047.

33

Living room IUtlt. bedroom

I~;::;;;:;::;;::::;:;:::::;:::1'":;::;:::::;::======1

For tolo1970 Ch..,plon moblo
hom-.12x10t3.800, wrygood
cond. 304-875-1178.

381-1303.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

10 Years Experi•nce

SUPPUE5

18 Wanted to Do

mDtora. Call Urry llvtfr· l1'4-

698-6121

ALARM

a

Junk Cora with or without

CARPENTO, OHIO (Off St. Rt. 1431

Furnace

LYNCH'S

tuN

F~ aluring1 Contolld.ted, Dutch
Weet, Brunco, Aoh1ey
LOWEST PRICES
WE TRADE

11·11·'88·1 mo.

The good••• of our lfe.
The joy wo found to-

Call44.. 43&amp;7. Reg. No. 8&amp;-11 - .
, 0&amp;111.

ooll ,...., lw.ln'tFumlture
• .\uction. Third • OUvt.
11'-441-3119.

STOVES, INSERTS AND
FURNACES

SPECIAL
OCCASION CAKES
Birthdaya, Holidays

Ask for

·h,l10. ., 900.

Hou.ehold furnttuN fo r ul•

N· ll

"My wife left me for a
younger man, and my job left
me for a younger woman!"

Otr) . .l houaework or offtoa
cl... in_g. HIV• r.terenoe. 304-

tt-1-1 mo.

•12 Years Experience
45 DIFFERENT WOOD

CAKES

"At

COLLEGE. 529 Jilek• on lllka

&amp;7.. 20110.

WOOD STOVES

JUST OPENED

.,• ._.,_.....,1'11._• ... _

2
30.. enZ7zz.

Wlll c•e for eld•lv peraon in
1helr home dll'f' or night 304-

114-44.. 387:1

Deluxe We.tinghouse dothM
dl'yer, nice. Sofa. good. Call

81'-44.. 3971 .

1918 Am•IC*1 12 x 15. Awning. dedi. .. d ,,.,.11 bu l dng. 2
bedroom•. Good c;ondltlon,
d•an. t2100. 814-985-4281

RE-TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS

Bargain-

Used Ch•~ ethen An en "Gtor·
gl., Court' formal dining t1ble.
6 chlirl. IJa China hutch. Asking
ea,ooo. Call 814-.-.,6- 1999.

Coli 114-843-&amp;310 or 81'-

. I '3-11408 lftl(tlma
Olnny.

Schools

Cornpt•1 hou-ldl of a.rfli.

~~=====·9::·1:9-:18=\l=n~
.

Jim M-..k Ch•.-Oidllnc.
Ill Gene John1011

~:S, n'iZtr.~.f:."

1918 Fl...wood. 1211:&amp;4. bottl•
a• h ... and hotw..er. 13000.

Loving c•e for etd•lv lnd
hanclctPPod- 1500 · pkJo. Coli
lt'-992-8873.

73

WHITE'S METAl DETECTORSFor ktw pric.J~ an Quality Carpet Ch.. tor I PICIIII on ALL
&amp; FurnltuNI come t o Mollohan Mo~ . Big dilcou nt-l..t y_e•'•
Furniture-Upper Rtver Rd .. 114- .tocked mod.. Ron AHis o n.
12~0 Stcond Aw .. G1Uipotll.
44.. 7444,
Ohio, 814-448-4338.

C.ll

81'-381-81158.

I- - - -- - - - - -

87.. 1788.

I&gt;&lt;;

2 BR , tral• for . sale.

Situations
We mad

12

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

64 M isc. Merchandise

30'-871-t4150.

83000. Coli &amp;t'-379-2278.

WHI.-dn lld•tt women In my '

u . . . . ..

Complel• hou•hold furnls~
lngo. I; milo out Joo-•lcho.

187328R . NlwMoon.12x65.
In c*lclng pot' eft. 6 u nderp lnnln Q.
ltCWI. Nfrlg. .CII'pM- 1 yr. old
Curtalna. llrnace-3 vr.a. old.
Owvn• movtn""Price r . .u:ed

CHRIITMAS AUCTION 811.
7:00p.m. Toys, gift1, sol'l'llthing
for Wlf'\'one. door prll• 11
A•••uuood Auction. 2 ml•
eouthRIIWtniWOOCIBrldge. 304372-3788.

W• P'V DMh for l.re modtl dun

PICKENS USED RIRNfTURE

e2:100. c.u 814-44&amp;-0390.

Htndcop. Coll114-25.. 8509. :

Wanted To Buy

•114.

1918 New Moan 12x&amp;O, 2 BR .

2858.

Tree wOfk-topplng. t~lmmlng. ,
prunfng. Ia remD't'al. Hilda• ·
trimmed. Free estlmat•. e-11 •

388-B746

8.7 '
Service on
Honor iirini;;;

•

RACINE
GUN CLUB

801,d
MR / DD ret1in1 the right

I'm remembering the

:

Vinton
Tony Cardillo

11-14-'88-tfn

GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
OQ p M

'hnd be d.. ot.c~ to h• work.
so,. lifting. phon• 304-176-

Rldt Pe•son AI.Dtio,._, If.
-Ettfte. Ohio
..d · V~glnlo.
antiQue.
f•m.
liquid~
lion ...... 30.. 'f13-17815-

9

14115 E•R:wn A,.,
4 dr..., chllt. t48. 15 dfiNI•
llh•
95. S pc. woodon
dinnette1eta. •199.9&amp;.

•hlft c•lng for bed t.t .-Ia

Htveroom In PrlvltacateHoma
for elderty men or ledy· •

Owner 8t Operator.

r-or, Ohio

a~·~: ~0: 1J'~~tv

I ,M~h~R,~/"'o\!_ho__ f•om 9:00 A.M.
I:
10:00 A.M . end
through 3:00 P.
M. Monday through Frid1y.
LH Wedemeyer,
Superintenden1
Meip County Boerd of
MR / DD
P.O . Box 307. 1310
Carl•ton St.
SyrocuM, Oh. 46770
11 / 18/ 18
11111a. 26; (12)2 , 9 4tc

Full Excavating and Construction
Residential &amp; Commercial
Free Estimates for Reaidential &amp;
Farm Work

Strvict Ctttttr lor Ryan

cakea
lt. 1, lox

WANTED. w~ to work 8 hr

32 Mobile HomBS
for Sale

Cond. Call 814-215&amp;-1718.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

J. S RIRNTURE

270213041571-2147.

a.._.ty Sllon opening. h1ir
rtvMit needed. fur Information
clll 30 ... 176-200fli .,.,time.

bedroom

&amp; Vicinity

8

Formerly Meiga Excavating

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS

w.

~:..::.:..::...::...._ _ _ _,...,.

3 blrci-oom. 11ft balhl, CM'·
, ..... ,..t ral • · ..... loc:Mtd
i\ PeWit Pl. .lm . 304-175-

87.. 2594.

C111 dDz•. Rt•onllble rltts. ,
Exp•l.,ce op•ltor. C..,.,,.,,

K&amp;T EXCAVATING AND
CONSTRUCTION

1,

-=-•

SomaoMto live in and help
lor dlnblod g ... 30'-

Yard Sale

-------Giillipolis·--------·

51 H ouaehold Goods

1,oo PM phon•30'-87S.S7e:t

Instruction

GALliPOU8 FLEA MARKET1111. 3e • 180. 011.......,. Sot.
• Sun. I AM -5 PM .

-

Located
between
Rt. ~~~t-;;:haro.l
i

V. C. YOUNG Ill

.

reject all or sny bldl.
Thebuscanbeseenattht
Mitige
County Bo•d of

gether
During our yeara u
man and Wife.
.
God chose to uke you
from me;
Although we ore now
eport.
We wMI be together
aomeday;
THI then you are elweya
In my heart.''
Deeply loved end
udiY miaaed by

7

LAFF-A·DAY

Homee for Sale

For tile or rtnt: : 2 ~oom
hoult, good locet lon. nice
nllghborhood. etov•lnd rllfrlvlr•or. no chll*'"' p.._ w11
oo .. lcllr l.. d oontnld:, 1ft• ·

28550.

15

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
::z:: 417
Sec:ond Avenue, Box 1213
z Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hos1pital
. Mulberry Hgts. Pomeroy,

Dealer for
YARDMAN- &amp; ECHO

character and novelty

-~

SALE OF 1981 FORD BUS
The Meigs County Boord
of Mantel Retlirdl1ion Ia of·
fering through tMiod bldt.
thoaoleoh 1981 FordbuL
8ida wil bo
oc-'"d
through 4,00 P.M. o-m·
ber 16. 1988 ol the Moiga
County Board of MR/00,
P.O. Bo• 307. 1310 Corleton Street. Syrocu•. Oh .

5

LOIT Yorkolllrellig. -. 011 40
tooJJIIIt. vloinltylilltC- ond
z mil~ hollow. 304-17&amp;- use.

~

EAGLE IIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949-2969

work
(FREE ESTIMATES)

contain onty a single dollar

IN MEMORIAM
In Loving Memory of
TRESSIE STETHEM
on our 46th enniver~a!)~·-· N·~~'!'.~•r 19th.

or-.

-a: .Licensed Cliliical Audiologist

Rt.

rlen•pr•rtd. Commenaurate
uf.,y .nd t.~.rtlt . E.O .E. Men
r.-ume to Admlnlltrltlr C•r•
Haven of Point Pl-.m. Rt. 1
Bo• 321, Point Pl. .ll'lt. W. Ve.

~

LOeT m-m tbo moo~ blool&lt;
..... -dog ..- . •• "Rott
.. .- In tho Junior High School
lt4-441-537t or 304·17 ..!ZS4.

z LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

MAXIMUM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON
LARGEST END

31

.

WARO. 30'-17 .. M11.

Devices
Dependable Hearillg Aid.. Sales &amp;S.rlli••
C!J Hearing Evaluations For All Aaes

by Donna

- Addon1 end rlmOdlllng
- Aooflng and guM work

• Speachtl,

614·992-31143

IN MEMORY
OFMY
;. BELOVED
HUSBAND
.
WAID
· LEONARD ON
HIS BIRTHDAY,
:;- NOV. 19th.
Your Wife
.
Foraverl
- ~Lois K. Leonard

YOUNG'S.

,,.,..,.,,..

LHs,a M. Murphey
Free-La11C8 Writer

.

CaH 992-2228
or 992-9922
10· 12· 11· 1 mo.

.L101n1 .. lo d lll WOr ker In ntW
kHlg . . m c•• fealltty . E""'

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9 '

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Friday, November 18, 1988

Help Wanted

LOST l•ge Wilt• m.te dog,
whitt wfth brown nwldnga.
,._ltv of ~.Mart 1nd Recine
locka. ertiWin to Buck. RE-

224 E. MAIN ST.
992·9976
THURS. E.B. 6:45 P.M .
SUN . E.B. 1:45 P.M.
DOOR PRIZE
2 H .D . FREE with coupon and pun:haaeofmin.
H.C. Packl!IJe. Limit 1 coupon percuttomerper
bingo aasalon .
WE PAY
110

992-6461

Briggs &amp; Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homolite
Jacob11n

· there at all ·
Juat thought of us that
. day.
Whet ever you did to

CHARLES H. MULlEN
10-23-88
11-19-41
-30.'

Calllf4-IIZ·8121.

POMEROY·EAGUS CLUB

POMEROY, OHIO

Authorized Servic.
&amp; Parts

' .

11-1

BINGO

OHIO
PALLET
COMPANY

REPAIR

I -~

Found: hout1 kt¥ 0t1 ptrldng lot
of Molgo Hoolth Dopt. Nov. 10.

DRIVERED TO

planter or a spray;
If 10, WI IIW it thiH'e.
Perhopa you apoke the
kindest wOrds
As sny friend coul~
aay.

In Memoriam

Reforencea

S14 PER TON

Perhaps you sent a

2

II:Z.7015 lflor SoOO or 1·80034.. 81711 dO'ftlmo.

GENEIAl CONTRACTORS

Our Delivery Staff
Knowo Where You
.Live.

16141

992-2196
Middleport,

r-R

An-. to Ebony. 0.11 t14-

915·4141

MAIN STIEO PIZZA

RISIDIN a PHON I

PAT HILL FORD

We thank you so much,
whetever tha part.
,Jane, Scott Geri and
Sean Welton

lOll ' blooi&lt;C-·Chow In H..,.

!oak Or... orOo. 3 yooro olcL

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

HOME COOKED
LUNCHES
EVERY DAY FOR
UNDER 5300

1&amp;141 .992-6!!0

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

- chair.

Mon.. - ·

ALSO •..

We Carry Fishing Su1ppli•""
Pay Your Phone
Cable Bills Here
lP.!IF - · IUSINISS PHONE

SER~ICE

lovely card
Or aat quietly in a

..... ...... gt¥111 • • •. 514-892·
ZZH. ld.nt~- In - ·
,.. ..., Double bod olio quit.
ts. lt'-IIZ·
IIH.

•HOME BUILDING .
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS - BATHS
•ROOFING
•P.EMODEUNG &amp; REPAIRS

SALES &amp;

2-1r;.·ss.tfn

Found: 11M bonil hound. Fe·

CHESTR, OHIO

Has always offered
THE BEST PIZZA
At The BEST PRICES.
H any local
competitor offers
you a better deal,
tell us and we'll
match it!

168 North Se&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

letw•n ' a ....-6 p.m.
or loa., Mtss-

"••rd. .

3785.

MARCUM CONTRACTING

Your Hometown Place

HUDNALL
PliiMIING &amp; HEATING II

614-742-2617

Perhapa you sent a

11-10..11. a.m.._...
c.ll Colltct. 304-1123-

MAIN STREET
PIZZA

1§88

eo

73
Deye Hmt .. Cllh with

aAd credit.

3 Ml• out

l.iov•• Rd. OtiM tllm to hm

Vane&amp;

2· ton
tiUCk

port•
z ,31).

4W .D.

85

w•.

JaJWIIerS.VIcaSwl.,....,g
~ clltwns.
Ph. eu.:
24 .. 9281.
-R- .-R- w
- . -.,-=Son-v-=-loo.---:P::-o-a-11.
ci•Urns, welll , lmmedltt•
1.000 or 2.000 ge~o,.. dlllv .-,.
Colt 30'-87.. 1370.

w••
1000 a•Re•onabf• prloa lmm..,•e
del~.,..

dollY..,.. Coiii14-112-12715-

Wetttfton'l Water Heullng,
,_oMble rll-. vol11ne de2.000., 4.000copoolty,
....
- -.....
30 .. 17.. 2818.

COli-

Mon. thN ••. Ph. 814-441-

F.... htd
- . 30'-tr7S.ZU7.

auz.

1 bedroom ..... tl utllt. . pold
....... ol-Io. Oolllp. . Fony,
30 .. 871-1371 .. 171-3812.

Mtw •d used furnhuN end

7172. Houn e.s.

4 room apt. utlltle ~d.
UO. OO por 304-1713100 or 87.. 110e.

Good Ulld DOlor lV'o fur oolo.
Cal1114·44 .. 1141.

87

VtiO'I Fumltu"'

1pplla.ncm. Cell 114-448·

"Looking back, the happiest moments of
my life were spent doing funny things
with~ ... "
-~
•·

... .

'

General Hauling

upholatery

�----.·Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

----

·-

Pomaoy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday. November 18. 1988

shire: Franklin; Beverly Abbott.
Kitchen,
Va.; Paula VanCooney, Fla. , and Stanley Eugene
Aleshire, Jr. , Fla. A number of
grandchildren also survive.
Services will be held at 2 p.m .
Saturday at the Helm Funeral
Home In Green Cove Spring.

w.

James Cllfton..Mulh(lland,, 57,
Star Route, Radcliff, Wilkesville
· Community, died Thursday at
his residence. He was a retired
employee of the Capitol Fire
Pcotection Company, Columbus.
A United States Navy veteran,
he was a member of Vinton · Betty Swan
Baptist Church, VInton F&amp;AM
Betty Louise Hood Swan, 70,
Lodge 131, Vinton Order cJf the
Eastern Star 375, Sportsman
First VIllage, The Plains, for·
merly of Meigs County, died
Club of Wilkesville, and a 40-year
member of the Sprinklers Fitters
unexpectedly Thursday at her
Local 669.
residence.
She was bor!l.Jn Pomeroy, a
Born Jan. 21, 1931 In Wilkes·
ville, he was the son of the late
daughter of the late Raymond
James Clarence and Male Mable and Florence Neutzllng Hood.
Fletcher Mulholand.
She was employed as a psychlat·
He Is survived by his wile, • ric aide at tbe Athens Mental
Healtb Center. Mrs. Swan was a
Phyllis Harder McClaskey Mulholand; three sons, Rick McClasmembel; of Heath United Methokey of Gallipolis, Anthony Mulhodist Church In Middleport.
land of Wilkesville, and Eric .
Surviving are a son and
daughter-In-law, William H. and
Mulholand of Vinton; twodaugh·
ters, Mrs. Joseph (Joyce) Vititoe
Suzanne Swan, Russell, Ky.; a
of Wellston, and Penny Shepherd daughter and son-In-law, Ma·
rllyn and Tom Anderson. Middleof Wilkesville; seven grandchild·
ren; one brother, Charles Mulho·
port; a granddaughter, Kristen
land of Columbus; six sisters,
Swan, Russell, Ky.; a brother,
Milton Hood, Middleport; two
Helen Browning of Middletown,
nephews and wives, John and
Ohio Kathaleen Simpson of Flor·
Crystal Hood, Middleport, and
ida, JoAnn Lanier of Lancaster,
lrene Raines of Vinton, VIvian
Jim and Lori Hood, Maryville,
Tenn; great nephews, Jeff and
Smith of LaRue, Ohio, and Sara
Rlcob of Columbus.
Todd Hood, Middleport, and
He was preceded in death by
great nieces, Jolene and Leslle
two sisters.
Hood, California.
Besides her parents, she was
Funeral services will be conducted Sunday, 1 p.m. at Vinton
preceded In death by a nephew,
Baptjst Church )Vlth the Rev. Sam Hood.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Marvin Sallee offlcaling. Buriill
Saturday at the Ewing Funeral
will follow in Vinton Memorial
Home with the Rev. James
Park. Mllltary graveside rites
Sedden offlcating. Burial will be
will be conducted by tbe Vinton
In Beech Grove Cemetery.
American Legion Posts 161.
Friends may call at the funeral
Friends may call at McCoyhome from 7 to 9 this evening.
Moore Funeral Home in Vinton,
Saturday from 2 to4p.m. and 7to
9 p.m. Eastern Star services wlll
be by Vinton OES 375, Saturday,
8:45 p.m., followed by Masonic
Soulh Central Ohio
services by Vinton F&amp;AM Lodge
Tonight: Increasing cloud!·
131.
ness, with a chance of showers
In lieu of flowers, the family after midnight. Lows will be In
requests contributions be made the mid 30s. Southeast winds 5 to
to Vinton Baptist Church, Ramp 15 mph. Chance of rain Is 40
Fund, Norlh Main Street, Vinton,
percent.
Ohio, 45686.
Saturday: Occasional show·
ers, with a 'hlgh between 50 and
55. Chance of rain is 80 percent.
Hazel Williams
Extended Forecut
Sunday
lhrOIIIh Tuesday
Hazel Marie Williams, 68, of
ending
Sunday, with
Showers
Route 1, Rutland, died unexpect·
fair
conditions
Monday
and Tues·
edly early Friday morning at her
day. Highs will be between 50 and
residence.
A homemaker, Mrs. Williams 55 Sunday and between 40 and 45
was born Feb. 15, 1920 in Monday and Tuesday. Overnight
Plkevllle, Ky. , a daughter of the lows will be In the 40s early
late Andrew and Charity Muncie Sunday and between 25 and 35
Maynard. She was a member of Monday and Tuesday mornings.
the Order of Eastern Star,
Chapter 558, Albany.
Surviving are her husband,
Dally Number
Vlrgle Williams; a son and
851.
daughter-In-law , Jack and .Susie
Ticket sales totaled $1,210,731,
.Williams; two grandchildren, with a ·payoff due of $904,968.50.
Allison Marie and Paul Williams,
PICK-4
all of Rutland; one sister, Susie
8527.
~uster, of Wayne, W.Va.; two
PICK-4 ticket sales totalj!d
brotbers, Everett Maynard, of $210,440, with a payoff due of
Levette, W.Va., and Johnny $94,950.
.
Maynard, of Pikeville, Ky .; and
PICK-4 $1 s!ralghl bet pays
~everal nieces and nephews.
$5,136. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays
Besides her parents, she was $214. .
preceded in death by a brother,
0scar Maynard, and a sister,
Rebecca Thompson.
· Services will be Sunday, 2
p.m., at Bigony-Jordan Funeral
Veterans Memorial
Home, Albany, with Rev. Joe
Thursday Admissions' -Joyce
Sayre officlath\g. Friends may Manuel, Racine; Brenda Roush,
call at the funeral home from 2 to Pomeroy; Monda Haynes, Ra4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday.
cine; David Goodwin, Pomeroy.
Eastern Star services will be
Thursday Discharges - Roy
held at 6:45 p:m. Saturday.
Proffitt, Weber Wood, David
Goodwin, Sharon Pierce, Cella
Hite.
~tanley Aleshire

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

Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 12'h
Shopey's Inc ........................ 7',8
Wendy's Inti ........................ 5'!1
Worlhlngton lnd ....... , ... ...... 20~

Am Electric Power ....... .. .:.. 26%
AT&amp;T ...................... ..... ...... 27~
Ashland on ........................32""
Bob Evans .......................... 15 34
Charming Shoppes ............. .13i(,
City Holding Co ................... 33
Federal Mogul.. .................. 47~
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. .48%
Heck's ................................. ""
Key Centurion .: ..................16*
Lands' End ......................... 24""
Limited Inc .............. ..........24*
Multimedia Inc ...................70%
Rax Restaurants .................. 3%

Program tonight

-

_ . , _ ......._

--- -

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

50 cents

College football results

Magic
white

MeigS County Ohio Unlverslly
student, Scott Justis ·Is the
associate producer for a program to be aired on television
station WOUB, Athens, at 9 this
evening. The half hour program
will deal with the status of school
funding In Ohio, particularly In
Southeastern Ohio. Dr. Apllng,
Eastern Local School Admlnls·
trator, will be among the
panelists.

sand

Beat of. the Bend: Holiday season moving. in...

81

In Our Town:
Page A6

Page 86

JFK assassination recalled;..

Val. 23 No. 41
Copyrighted 1988

NAT'L C

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, Nov91Tlber 20, 1988

POMEROY - Approximately
16 miles of county roadways '
which were paved during this
year's paving program were
safety striped on Friday, Meigs
County Engineer Phil Roberts
reported when the Meigss County
Commissioners met Friday
afternoon.
A State IssueTwomeetingheld
in Marietta on Wednesday was
discussed, the sessions being
held In conjunction with a meeting of Southeastern Ohio Re·
glonal Commissioners and Engl·
neers. Roberts serves on the
Issue Two Integration Commit·
teee for District 18 of which
Meigs County Is a part. Commls·
stoner Richard Jones serves on
the District 18 Executive Committee. The Integration Commit·
tee was the group which met on
Wednesday and the committee
adopted rules and regu\!ltlons,
project ellglbllty an_d lrilnlmum ·
stardards during the !ll!sslon.

ARMORY CONSTRUCTION- A worker places concrete blocks on part or tbe outside waD to
the new National Guard Armory being built oa Hi~hway 62 j~t outside P,oillt PleiiSant. Tbe $1.68
million facility will be ready ror liSe by next October iC construct1on progr\!115 contilllaes.

N~tion~ ' ~u~ Armory ~s

tWice as. b1 from old bu11dmg
jJ'

·

1987 NISSAN STANIA

-lng.-

Q;~~~~~~~
•! l o' • • •

•. . , ., •· ··•
, , .,,

,

l

"

1 .•.

•r

"

, ,

f O\'OI\IOoiO••I&lt; .,,,.. ''" o• o

h~ " ''

, c .~ .... ,,, •·•·•• ,., ,,, .,.,, ;,.. ,..,

1985112 FOlD ESCOI1
WAGON ·

1987 FORD E-150

Stock #40272
4 door IIden. from wheel drive. 4
cyl. ongino, foctGr( olr cond.. outomotic trona .. power
lwoll-. cruile control. AM /FM ro·
dlo-lloreotopo. radioltlr•.g-.

Stock #8948 1
4 door hordtop, ltltlonwaaon.
front whMI drive. 4 cyl. engine. ou·

V-1 engine. ~actory air cond., automatic tqna., powtr ..eerlng.
brlk•. tilt •-Ina whMI,
·
cruile control, AM/ FM rodlo.

WAS S9295

WAS sm5

114,995

NOwS8295

1983 PONTIAC
BONNEYI.LE

Stock 1188042
8 cyl. engine, fectorv oir cond ..
vii!J'I roof, automatic t111n1., P.S.,
P.B .. P.W .. P. toot. P. door lodce,
tilt -lng wheel, cruloe control,
AM·FM rodlo-llllftiO tape, rodlol
tlr•. whltewallo.

WAS S4995

NOW 53 799

1981 FORD F150
I t - -83281
2 door, I cyl. engine, p-eroteor·
lng. powor brak•, AM/FM radio·
otoroo .tope. Y, ton pickup. long
wide bod, roer atop bumpor.

WAS S3195

JEFF WARNER
302 West Second St., Pomeroy
992·6479

~

$1.68 million.
By GLENN McCASLAND
Brown said the new building wiD
OVP Staff
triple
!he size of the office area,
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. !he locker room area and
double
Brick by brick, a new National
provide
four additional classrooms
Guard Armory is rising to house
Point Pleasant's 3664 Malnte· · as well as renovate the kitchen into
a modem facility.
nance, Non-Divisional Direct
In addition, there wiU be an ap·
Support Unit.
proved
shooting room and !he cur·
\ The structure, which will replace
rent
supply
area will be tripled.
the building constructed in 1964 to
"When
this
is linished, we wiD
house a unit with 120 people assigbe
able
to
function
and train as
ned, is expected to completed about
we're
supposed
to,"
Brown said.
Sept. I and will double the size of
ru;e
being
held in .
Currently
drills
the building.
!he
midst
of
construction
work,
but
"It will be a major addition for
the
unit
is
continuing
its
work
community programs," said Capt.
witl1out missing a day, Brown said.
Larry 'Brown, who commands the
"Everybody is too pleased to be
unit - the largest National Guard
upset with having to step around
operation in West Virginia.
something or the other," he said.
The new facili~; will care for
The construction project is a
252 persons currently assigned to
federal and state matching program
the unit, twice !he number of perby which 75 percent is federal dolsonnel the c!d building was to
1
lars and 25 percent is state funds.
house.
The armory has been available
The const."llction began in Oc· .
for
community use over the years
tober, ending almost eight years of
and
will be offered on a rental basis
planning for the facility which
once comP.Ietcd, Brown said.
.
.
began in 1980.
"We w1ll have classrooms avail·
Total cost for !he operat1on IS

Divorces sought ·

Call on us lor all your insurance.

Chrutce of rain near 100
percent.

10 Sectlano, 88 Pag!ll
A Muttimedi• Inc. Newepap•

Project updates given
to Meigs Commission

IONSHIP? FIESTA BOWL?
R $800 CASH BACK? I•

.

We Can Ease the Pain!

Along the River ......... B1·8
Business .................... Dl·8
Comics· ................... Insert
ClassUleds ................. D2-7
Editorial ...... ................ A2
Deaths ....... .................. M
Sports ....................... C1·8

•

Hospital news

Hospital
Bills Hurt!

lnsidt&gt;

tmes

Lottery numbers

A divorce action has been filed
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Julia A. Moodlspaugh,
Middleport, against Robert W.
Moodlspaugh Sr., Pomeroy. A
restraining order has been issued
by the court against the defend·
ant In the action.
Ml&lt;;hael Eugene Cunningham,
Pomeroy, and Susan R. Cunningham, Pomeroy; Everett T.
Calaway, Coolville, and Dorothy
M. Calaway, Coolville, have filed
for dissolutions of marriage.
A dlssolu tlon of marriage has
been granted Karen S. Wheeler
and Allan L. Wheeler.

Cl

•

Weather

; Stanley Eugene Aleshire, 69,
former Meigs County resident,
died Tuesday evening In Green
Cove Spring, Fla., following
ljear I surgery.
· He was a son of the late Molly
and Elmer Aleshire and was the
las t survivor of nine children.
The others were Harsh Aleshire,
Catherine Lunsford, John Aleshire, Otto Aleshire, Harland
Aleshire, Genevieve Bogden,
Emel Aleshire and Freeman
Aleshire.
· Sons and daughters surviving
are Qulncey Aleshire, Calllor·
nla; Jimmy Aleshire, Xenia;
Joann King, Florida; Joyce
Godby. California; Ca rl L. Ale-

-

Sunday

---Area ·deaths-- ------Stocks---James C. Mulholand

.~

Now$2995

tom a tic tran1., power ateerlng,
power brok•, AM/FM radio.

NowS3995

1913 SUIAIU WAGON

Stock 1189171
4 door -lanwogan, 4 wheal
drive, 4 cyl. engine. factory air
cond., automeUc trana., P.S., P.
widowa. P. door locka. tit 11-lng
wheel, cruloo control, AM/FM ro·
dlo.

WAS S4295

NOW$3295

1986 CHEVY CELEIIRY

Stock #87131
4 door Helen, front wheel drlvo, 4
cyl. engine, foct"'Y air aand .. outomatlct,.na., P. •-lng. P. brok•.
P. door lcicka, tilt •-lng wheot.
oruile aomrol, AM/FM rodloatoreo tope. rodlol Ur•. gougoo.

WAS S7995

NOW$6995

Stock No. 84211

WAS

NOW $13,299

1986 CHR. CUIAIO

Stock No. 811 22
2 0 - hordtop, V·8 ongino.foctory
olr cond .. powor -lng. - · · powor win-o. power
door locka, tit - · wheal. cruile
control, AM/FM radio--eo tope,
gougoo.

WAS Sl995

1986 FORD BRONCO

Stack -89491
2 door, 4 whtol drl¥e, V-8 engine,
fectarv air cond .. eutamatlc trent .•
P. -lng. P. broil-. P. wln-1,
P. door lei cleo, tilt •-Ina whMI,
cruile control,

AM/FM radlo-

lloroa tope, radial tlr•.

~~995

NOW $13,499

1978 UNCOLN
=~~8 ~0NTINEN1'AL

-w.

2 dr. coupe. V·l ong.,foc:L air concl.,
...... roof, OUIO. ....... P. - · · P.
lrnk-. P.
P..... P. door
lodoa. 111--..,whool, cruilecontope, rolnll. AM/FM ...... _
cfill tir-. whtt...u '1, bucflllt 1Ht1,

~~295

NowS1699

·····--·-··-······-·····-···-·

NowS8299

1987 FORD F-150
St-1184341

~

aaor. 4 wheel drive. 8 cyl. engine.

fiCtory air cond.. euto. tNna ..
power •-ing. powor brlkla. tilt
•-lng wheel, cruile control.
AM/FM radlo·otoreo topo, redial
tlno, '12 ton pickup, lang wide IHHI.

WAS
112,995

NOW $11 1 99 5

1981 V.W. RABBIT
Stock 1188801
4 door sedan, front wheel
drive, diesel, 4 cyl. engine, fac·
tory air oond.

WAS 11295

NowS900

·

able for small functions, plus the
training area for functions like
Christmas panics, political rallies,
the Boy Scout Jamboree and Girl
Scout functions," he said. "We have
even held wedding receptions in
the past and I'm sure we will
again."
The guard unit housed at the armory is just what its name says the maintenance unit for all other
guard operations around West Yorginia. There are 43 other units in
the state and the Point Pleasant unit
cares for their problems.
The local guard unit's payroll is
about $350,000 annuaUy which
does not count the funds spend by
members of the unit on a dailv
basis since the majority of the per·
sonnet are Mason County residents.
Brown is planning an open house
for the community once the new
suucture is rea'tly for public inspei:lion, He plans to combine the open
house wilh a drill weekend and to
invite !he families of the
(See NATIONAL, page A5)

Bossard M~morial Libra'( to charge
Mason County residents for usage
By GLENN McCASLAND
'The last cut, he said, came in
OVPStaiT
July, although Mason County
Librarian Am Winter reportedly did
POINT PLEASANT, W. Va., Mason County residents using the not become aware of the cut until
Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial September.
Louden said 10 .percent of the
Library of Galiia County, Ohio,
Gallia
County library usage came
wiU be charged $50 per family
from
Mason
County in the past few
beginning Jan. I for that privilege.
years
and
that
since September, that
Librarian J onalhan E. Louden
had
increased
greatly.
announced today that the fee would
''The library board dctennined
be charged because of increased
that
we no longer can allow the
ilse of !he Ohio facility while fund·
ing of the Mason County Library officials of Mason County to
System has declined over !he past simply neglect the funding of
several years and shows no hope Library service in Mason County,
and in turn have !he handy option
for increases in the future.
Families over 65 years of age of full library service 10 !heir
will be asked to pay $25 annually residents at the expense of Gallia
County," Louden concluded in the
to use the Gallipolis facility.
The action would end a nine· press release.
The decision to charge the $50
year-old a&amp;!'cemcnt between the
two library ·systems that allowed fee per family will be reviewed
Mason County residents use of the next year, Louden said.
In Point PleiiSant, the decision
GaUia County facility without
brought
mixed reaction from
charge.
library
board
members and county
In announcing !he fee, Louden
said the action was taken because officials.
County Commission President R.
"we have seen continued cuts in local support o( the Mason County Kenton Sheline said he hoped the
Library. We have also se~n no 1m· decision in Ohio would not cause a
provements in state support of problem with relationships between
Gallipolis and Mason County
libr.iries in West Virginia."
Louden, in a two page press residents.
"I understand !heir feelings, but I
release received by the Register
hope
that we can continue the good
Wednesday, said local support for
relations
we have with them,"
Mason County's library system had
Sheline
said.
"They · must realize
declined from $100,000 to $20 over
that the $20,000 we cut from the
the past several years.

The committee is now waiting
on state regulations necessary
before any further district actions can be taken. ·The Executive Committee of the district
Will meet in Marietta on Dec. 14
and Is hopeful that additional
information from th~ state will
be available at tbat time.
Commissioner David Koblentz
updated the commissioners on a
boat launching facility on the ·
Ohio River and It was reported
that an Ohlo-Musklngum River
Resource Development Program has been sent to the
commissioners for review by
Meigs County Agricultural Agent
John Rice.
This is a river resource development program . which will be
established by the Washington
County Commissioners In cooperation with Athens, Meigs,
Monroe and Morgan Counties.
The program will be conducted

through the Washlngton_ County
Office of the Ohio Cooperative
Exten.slon Service via a contract
with the Washington County
Commissioners.
The comlssloners voiced· no
objection to a liquor department
transfer from Karen S. Werry
doing business as Summerfield's
Restaurant In Chester to James
R. Stewart doing business under
the same name.
Commissioners reported on a
letter received in regard to the
county's MR..OD Board. David
Weber cannot be reappointed to
that board; Richard Ash has
Indicated he does not wish to
serve again and John Rice and
John Karschnlk have agreed to
serve for terms beginning January. 1989 and running through
January, 1991. The commissioners will act later on the appointments which must be made by
Nov. 30 . ·

1Opponents dismayed by decision\
By GLENN McCASLAND
OVP Staff
POINT PLEASANT W. Va. Opponents of PyroChe.;,, Jnc,'s application to consbUct a hazardous
waste management facility in
Mason County expressed dismay at
action taken Thursday by county
commissioners to reverse a resolu·
lion prohibiting the siting of incinerators in the countv.
"I can't believe they would do
tha~" said Paul Washington, presi·
dent of Mason County Association
for a Clean Enviromen~ MACE,
this morning when notified of the
commissioners' 2-1 vote reversing
their Sept. 22 resolution. "I had no
idea this would happen. I'm taken
by total surprise.".
.
The commission's action says
that !he applications filed by Pyro·
Chern wilh the West Virginia
Department of Natural Resources
and Air Pollution Control Commis·
sion contain adequate assurances
for !he protection of "the pubhc

health and safety and !!'e environ- ,
· ment of Mason County.
Even as the ink dryed on the
~esolution, u.s. Rep, Bob Wise, D·
w. va., and Sen. Jay Rockefeller,
D-w. va., called fo~ tou1l_h. but frur,
investigations of' l'yrO(.:hem's applicalions by both state and federal
enviommental agencies.
Wise, saying the county c~mmission "cannot grant approval of !he
PyroChem application, said from
Washington that "my concerns wilh
PyroChem are with the background
of the operators and the enviromen·
tal questions raised .
.
''These must still be answered m
the permit applications to the state
government. The Department of
Natural Reso~ces , Air Pollution
Control Comm1ss1on and, perhaps,
the U.S. Envionnental Protection
agency, will be rev1ewmg all of
this," Wise said.
.
.
Wise said that followmg his request, !he DNR agreed "not only to
conduct pubhc heanngs, but mves·

tiga~W100theSlUdapplicant's
backgrou!id."
the next step w1U be

the close monitoring of the applicalion process to. "~ake sure the
PyroChem apphcatJon ..sets the
toughest and f3.!"ess look..
Rockefeller 1sood a bnef .statement which expressed s~nse at
the county commiSSIOn acuon .
·:The commissioners rever~. (of
theor first resoluuon) ts surpnstng,
given !hat many questions remain
unanswered," Rockefeller said.
"Working with the state, I wiD seek
to insure every residents' concerns
are addressed. I will push for a
complete and full rev1ew by the
state before any pennit is granted."
Both Wise and Rockefeller request~ copies. of !he commiss1oners resoluuon for study by
staff members, pending further
statements.
Washington, who among others
led the campaign against the incinerators, said he felt it was too
(See O~PONENTS, page A4)

.:t;loard pleased .with findings

report. The policies clearly rePOMEROY The Meigs peers. There is also a planful
effort
to
provide
education
and
flect a cllent·centered philosophy
County Board Mental Retardatraining
in
these
and
other
and an attention to clients' and
tion and Developmental Disabilifamily rights ' issues. It is to the
ties, and Superintendent Lee natural environments.
"And the County Board is
credit o! the Meigs County Board
Wedemeyer, are pleased with the
that the rights of the people
announcement of the findings of beginning to use computer.s lo r
the Ohio Deaprtment of MR-DD paper-work and programming . served are strongly emphasized
Early Childhood Montorlng, with students , as well as other in . program policies. Meigs
library budget was caused by court Evaluation, Training and Tech· state-of-the-art equipment, suc.h County Board of MR-DD , their
superintendent and staff are to
orders about the asbestos problem nlcal Assistance (METT) Team as switching devices."
The number of non-compliance be commended for provld lng a
in the courthouse. It was something program inspection. The survey
that the commissioners could do covers the period of May to Items in Meigs MR·DD Board' s quality program to the young
nothing about. Every agency was October this year.
Inspection report is few and the children in Meigs County, par.tictrimmed."
.
county
board Is to be commended . ularly in Umes of limited resourHap Hinkle, team leader, proSheline said !he commissioners vided the following summary of for outstanding policies and ces when quality Is most often
"are working wilh the Mason the team's recommendations .
procedures, according to the effected, the report said.
County Library Board to help with
"The Meigs MR·DD Board Is to
funding and will continue to do be commended for emphasiZing
so."
the concept of 'least restrictive
''The problem i&gt; there is only so · environment' with their young
much to spend and that's all we've children, and for their concerted
got to go aroun~ with," Sheline effort to prepare all children for
said. "I would point out that the public school enrollment at some
Gallipolis city budget alone is lar· poin)ln time.
ger than our entire cc&lt;onty budget in
''The admlnlstrators provide
Mason County.d"
much support and direction to
Mason County Librarian Arn staff members. They have lmple·
Winter said he understood where mented a system to ensure all
Louden and the Gallia County staff read and understand prolibrary board was coming from, al· gram t&gt;Oilcles and procedures.
though he felt the $50 fee was "a
''Tea~hers are trained and
bit high."
encoural(ed to collect on-going
"When the agreement not to student data which becomes tbe
charge was made, the library sys- basis for program reports and
tems were comparble. But that isn't revisions in teaching
so today," Wimu said. "They methodology .
operate on a $500,000 budget and
"There appears to be a very
we have about $120,000 annually, good professional working relacounting everything."
tionship between teachers and
Winter said the·Gallia library has ancillary staff In the class, a!ld
REVIEW REPORT - Debbie Richardson, at left, pre-school
nine full-time and nine part-time much useful information is
tnatructor at Carleton School In Syracuse, reviews with Bette
employees for one building while shared.
Hoffmllll, program director, a report from the state of the school's
in Mason County, the library sys·
"I'he staff have organized
early childhood program. According to the report, the Melp
tern has two full-time and six part· frequent trips to such places as
Board
of Mental Retardatloa-Developmental Dlsabllltles Is on
time emolovees for four buildings.
the library, so the children can
target
In
meetlllg early childhood needs. (Times-Sentinel pho~o)
(See BQSSARD, page A4)
engage In learning and play with

of

'i

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