<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12566" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/12566?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-02T16:23:44+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43538">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/703727415c47d1105bb8262b6255067e.pdf</src>
      <authentication>65de40c75d16612dcf057dc17e0ca018</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39421">
                  <text>•'

' .

'

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

P011181'0y-Middleport, Ohio

Local briefs-- Meigs ...·,·
. Board issues certificates
Numerou$ bus driver certificates were issued Tuesday when
the Meigs County Board o[ Education met In reg ular session.
Issued cer tificates were Paul Baer, kathy Barringer,
Eliz abeth Ca laway, Gary R . Dl1!, William Hannum, Okey T .
Pullins, Mary Rose, Eastern Local District; Don Barnett,
Rufus Browning, Debra Burns, Teresa Cremeans, Da v id
Curfman, Donna Daniels, Katherine Deskins, John Evans, Leta
Hall Goodwin .. Danny Grueser, Juanita Lambert, Carrie
Morris, Leo Morris , ·Steven Morris, Homer Pa yne, Bruce
Stewart, Mont Vance, Lois Wyant, Deborah Grueser; Meigs
Local ~ C. T. Chapman, Tammy Chap!lJan, William Downie, Jr.,
Joseph Drasko, Wendell Erwin, Ne11ie R . Fred~rick, Milliard
Frederick , Roger Hill, James O'Brien, Daniel Riffle; Dan
Smith, Delbert Smith, ·Larry Smith, Southern · Local; Ke ith
Black, Mona Ervin, Patricia Pape, Patsy White, Ka th leen
Morris. Carle ton School.
The board accepted the resignat ion of s peech-therap'lst, Jane
Good, and hired Tracy Bucary , Pa triot, to fill the pos t. Courses
of study in home economics, foreig n language a nd mu s ic, were
. approved a nd will be sent to the state for approval.
The board a uthorized supervisors, John Costanzo and
William Buckley, to attend a supervisors m eeting In Columbus,
Sept. 10 an d 11. Employment of a substitute secretary was
approved a nd Kathy Baker. Racine, was hired as a substitute
speech th erapist to fill a temporary vacancy created by a leave
or absen ce.

Mobile home gutted by fire
A mobi le home at the Country Mobile Home Park , Route 33,
was gutted by fire We dnesda y. The Pomeroy Fire Department
we nt to the scene at 10:54 a.m . and retur ned at 12 : 08 p.m. Ther e
were no injuries. Name of the owner was not available.

I

Area deaths
Russell 5anerfield
Russell Bland Satterfield, 56,
317 ¥., Harma r St .. Marietta, died
Wednesday at the St. Joseph
Hos pital in Parkersburg.
He was born Nov. 29, 1930 in
Belpre. a son of Marie Smith
Sa tterfi e ld of Ca nton and the late
Tye - P . Satterfield. He was a
veteran of th e Korean Conflict
and attended the F irst Church of
the Nazarene at Marietta . He
was employed as a driver with
the Park Trans it Bus Tour Co. ·
Survivi ng besides his mother
are hi s wife, Kathry n Fairclolh
Satt erfi e ld ; two sons. Roger and
Tony of Ma r ietta; two daughters,
Tammie Satterfield, Marietta ,

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Wed nes day Admissio ns
Clara Phillips. Rutland ; Cloyd
Brotherton. Millwood , W.Va .;
Glada Davis, De xter; Ronald
Sykes, Porlland.
Wedn es da y Discharges Ru th Crouch, Lucy Mc Cune, Carl
Autherson.

Weather
So uth Central Ohio
Parity cloudy and humid today
with a c hance of afternoon
thunders torms. Hig hs wi11 be in
the low 90s. Partly cloudy tonight
wilh a low near 70.
Partly cloudy a nd humid Fri da y with a high in t he low 90s.
The probability of precipita tion is 30 percent today, near zero
tonight and 20 percenJ Friday.
Winds wi ll be from t hl' south a t
fi ve to 15 miles a n hour tpda y and
less than 10 miles an hour
tonight .
,
Extended Forecast
Saturday through Monday
Hot a nd humid with little or no
rain Saturday through Monday.
· Highs will be near 90 and low s
near 70.

a nd Kare n Trick. Thornville ; a
grandchild: five brothers . James
of Pomeroy; Robert, Cioudcraft,
N.Y.; Sam, Chester .a nd Charles
of Ca nto n; live s isters, Marian
Peoples and Leah Hallas. Ca nton ; Glenda Bakke, · Kathryn
'G osdick, Portland . Ore., Ruth
Wilmuth, She rwood, Ore.
Preceding him in death were
his-father and a brother, 'Paul.
Services will be held at 2:30
p .m . Saturday at the )"irs t
Church of the Nazarene in
Ma rie tta with the Rev. Robert
Styers officiating. Burial will be
in Oak G rove Cemetery. Friends
ma y call at the McClureSchaefer Funeral Home in Ma rie tt a from this evening until
noon Saturday and at the c hurch
one hour preceding the services.

Daily

stoc~

prices

(As of 10: 30 a.m.)
Provld~d lly
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewi

Firm.
Price
Am E lect ri c Powe r ................ 28
AT&amp;T ........... .... ..... ............. 34 %
Ashland Oil ........ .. ..... ............ 68
Bob Eva ns Farms ...... .. .. .... 25 %
Charming Shoppes .. .. .......... 34'h
F!&gt;d!'ral Mogul. ... .... ............ 48 \lj
Goody!'ar T &amp;R ...... .. .. .. ..... 75 'h
Heck 's Inc ....................... .... 4%
Limited Inc . ......... ... ........... 50%'
Multimedia Inc . .. ............... . 70 ':6
Rax Res taura nts ..................... 5
· Robbins &amp; Myers ................ !O 'lcj
Shoney's Inc . ........ .............. 31V.
Wendy 's Inti. .. ..................... .. 11
Worthington Ind .................. 24 'h

Cant lnueed from page 1
County Engineer Phil Roberts
reported that pa ving on Success
and Forest Run Roads has been
completed by the Shelly Co., and
pavin g on New Llma Road will
begin right away . Roberts and
the commissioners discussed the
establishment of speed limits on
county roads, es peci a lly those
newly paved. Roberts said he
would rev iew recent changes in
state laws to see where responsl- .
bllity lies for establishing s peed
limit s on county roads . In the
past, s peed limits have always
been the responsibility of the
Ohio Department of Transportation, but this may no longer be the
case he sa id. Roberts said he has
always fe lt it should be up to the
commissioners and engineer of a
county to determine county road
speed limit s, not ODOT,
Application for a Cl-C2 license
from the Ohio Department of
Liquor Control for beer and wine
carry out on ly has been received
by the co mmiss ioners !rom
Dabur Inc .. doing 'business .as
BE&gt;aco n G ulf, Nye Ave., Pomeroy. The a pplica t ion mu s t be
s ubmit ted to the state by Sept. 4.
Final day for comments to the
co mmiss ioners is Aug. 26.
ThE' commissioners passed a
r eso lu tion a ut horizi ng Clerk
Mary Hobstetter to submit to the
Ohio Department of Na tu ra l
Reso urces an application for
l!II C'r cant rol funding for 1988.
In final bu siness, the commis·
sione rs appropriated&gt; $6,807.16
into the various categories of I he
dog a nd kennel fund. Thi s is the
second half of the yearly a llotment of funds for dog and ke nne l.

T '-. -

OHIO VALLEY LIVI!STOCK
Market Report tor Auc. 8. 1187

Sale Ellery Satu1'4ay at 1:11 p.m .
TrC'nds : Vt'al Ca lv('s. stE'adv; Fe-t'dl"r
Cat tiC'. SIC'ady; Cow s. steadv:' St rcr" &amp;
Yrarl! ngs, mPd. framE' •t &amp; -2, 250-300 lbs.

$71-$120; 300-&gt;1011 lbs . S11HII9; 100-500 lbs.
$16-$92; 500-600 lbs. $61-S75; 600-100 lbs.
$62-S11.50: '700-1100 lbs. $5350-$70.50; 800 lbs
&amp; up, $58.50-$65.75: Heiff'r!i. mf'd. tramP•)
&amp; o'l. 250-300 lbs . $67,50-$18.50; roo-&gt;10111bs.
SSl.$0-175.50; 100-500 lbs. $i3.50-$1J.50;
500-800 lbs, $60.50-172.50: 600-1110 lbs.
$61.50-$68.50; 100-800 lbs. $58.50-$65.50: 1100

~1!1. 1 5- !12 . 10 ; SprinW'~" rows: iB.v _1he
hradl. $4Rfl..$.1)10: Cow &amp; Calf Pairs: 1Bv
1he un lll. t'i(J(I.$180; V.als: &lt;C hoice &amp;
Pr im a l, $79-586: Bob)' Cal\·~s: &lt;By lh P
ht"adl, $!')(}.$95: Baby Ca!VPS: !By 1hE'
pound!. $12-$128.

Prtc('~:

HoR

1•1 Barrows&amp;

Gtll s12C'J0.2~

so
or
e
Wednesday night that'
the numbers _9, 14, 16,
34.
c ets

hradl . $35-$53.50
ShN'JJ PrtC'f'S: Sla u ~htrr lam~ . $69-$74 :

lambs, - .

lbs. $68.50-.11'1.50; 100:500 lbs, $12.50-$78.50;
500-600 lbs. $68.50-$76.50; 600-700 lbs.
159-$68.50; 700-1100 Jbs. S55.55- IG7.50: 1100 lbs
&amp; ~p.._$55.50·162.25; Holslel n Bulls. 900-500 ·
lbs. ~B- $68.50: BU!Ch£'r ·Bul ls, 1200 lbs &amp;
'!Jp. utlllllf's, $54 - $ ~7; tanners &amp; cutters.
S48-S!i4; Buta hr r Cows. u!lllt!t's. S4l· S4~ ;
cannC'rs &amp; t'U11 &lt;'rs. ·SJ6..$44 : h('[fN{If tr typr
cows. up to $51; Lt. Wt. low jit'r.adf' co ws ,
S36-down : Sprin~C'r Cows. $400-$500: Co w
S70·$R'l: Ba by CalvC's. by lh(' hC'ad.
$100-down .
To p Ho~~ : 2iK&gt;-210 lbs. S5.'U55: 21A·240
Jbs. $~:'5 . 50 : But('h('r Boars, 400 lbs &amp; up.
$38-$4 1: Butt' hf'r Sows. 300-400 lbs. $41·
$44.50: 400-600 lbs, $44-$4~: P igs b.v thrh('ad. non('.
F4'f'df;'r Calf S~ll£' Au~ . 29, 1987. Ca t llC'
l'&lt;'&lt;.'f'IVC'd F'r ldav or £'al'!v S.,..turdav morn·
lng. All .lllllf'.l; H) begi n ai 1:!)0 p. m:

Au~{ .

8, ttK7

Sla1,1r, ht f'r Steers: · S62 .50~ ~luu)! htt&gt;r
HcifNs: $59 . 7~: Ca ttlf' Prl r t"S: F&lt;'f'dC'I'
S t&lt;'&lt;'rs:

1Goot1 &amp; ~h o \ ("(' 1

~- 700

.m~

lb.'l .

lb!'. $68 . :iO · fi'7 . ~ : F&lt;'Ni('r
/Good &amp; ('ho ic-C'I :wl-500 It&gt;:-;,
$ fi-I · S77.~ : :n).iOO lbs. $6!l-S73: Ff'f'(lf'r
Rulls: (Good &amp; Cholre) DJ.5001bs . ~- $86:
!'i(X).j(l() lb~. $62·$79: '!'il ~IU~hl ('I' Bulls: (Ovf'r
HXKl lbsl . S,;(l.S,.I):I.1!1: Slau2 hh' r Co ": ~ :
Ulllll li'S . ~ ~ 2 . 7~ · 54 7 : cannC'rs &amp; rultf'r".

$N6-$93:
Hl'lff'rs:

Lottery numbers

Cartoon covers,

at y

Vol.37, No.68
Copyrighted 1987

sheets, Reg , 99¢

Reg . 39¢

VILLAGE PHARMACY
992·. .o9

MI,DDLEPORT

IRNA , sa id ·•s pecial nav a l uni ts of the Islamic
Republic ' s armed !orces will start mine- sweepin g
ma neuv ers In internaiiorial waters F riday.''
The IRNA dis patch quoted Ca pt. Da riu sh
Am.l r-Yeganeh, the commander of Iran's l!r st
naval zone; as saying "the d ispatched operational
unit s are equipped with helicopters. minesweeping boats, frogmen a nd ot her necessary
facilities." He did not say where In int ernational
waters they would operate.
Iran Wednesday asked the UAE for permiss ion
to clear UAE wat ers of mines I ha t Tehran claims
were planted by t he United States. There ha s been
no public res ponse.
·
Sl ate-r un UAE radio said six mine slghtlngs had
been reported by Thursday, a nd the UAE
declared the exclu s ion zone cover ing a swath 5·
miles wide and 10 m iles long. Ships at sea· were
warned tqstav clear or the area, Whic h Is near the
I

,

UNDERWr\ V Hundreds of e ntries for
exhibits at nrxt wee k' s ~lelgs County Fair were
were reglsten-d Thursday at the secretary's
office on the Uoc k Springs Fairgrounds. lle re

.

m~f ~,Q..,iMm.v.a,;r

fuellafl~ I!'UJ!5. SiM!rldo.

SAlE PRICE

·

1983 MERCURY
WWi.P~IJI,§_

~HM~SJ.tiB~

dM, 6 qt. air CGftd.. lllto hns., PS. P8,

~

door lodls, tit wheel. cruise oontr&lt;i
AMIFM radio. ""'"' tape, radial to., wllite
·~ '"" ltl'dew
~~
SAlE
PRICE

~ ......1 door lldls. ......
cruse control AM/FM rldlo. lllllottr., wllill!
• •. budel ......

By Cl!i\J(; WEBB
WASHINGTON tU PII - P eople who get hom C' equil y loan s ,
use tax s hcl tN s or put money In to
Ind ividual Rellrc m e nt Accoun ts
muSI fi ll ou 1 new lnl crnal RC've nu C' SP r\' ic(' forms. which will
Jake a n &lt;'X tra 20 minutes 10 an
hour a nd a half at tax tim&lt;' .
Tht• IHS al so unveiiNI Thu rsda;· Its rc\'a mped for m for
busin&lt;'sS dcclucllons 10 make il
m ore rt&gt;adabiP and touc hed up
the 1040, 11!40A a nd 10-IOEZ tax
rc tuJ'ns 10 rovrr so me minor
c hanges lor people w ho clai m lhP
s tandard dedu ctio n .
All the c han gC's were prompted
by las! year's tax reforms. a nd
mosl will be lncludf'd In th e tax
packages the IRS w ill ma il to a n
es timaJ cd 90 millio n tax payers in
Decembe r.
An IRS s pokt•swom a n sa id the
agency esti mates the eas ies t of
the thr&lt;'e ne w for m s willtak!' an ·
average o f 20 minutes to co m ple te. while the longes l will
require nca r!,-a n hour a nd a h a ll.

SAl£ PRICI

$hop

$hop

&amp;
$ave

&amp;
$ave

at
Turnpike

at
Turnpike

•
••

•••

-' I'

:J

•

•••
•

••

•••
RECLINERS

2
FOR)
BUY 9NE IECUNEI

GET ONE FlEE .___

~-t.

4

•

1986 MERCURY

1984 PLYMOUTH
RHIANT K, S.W.

Stock

~dial ""'

while walls. rt'N

SAlE PRICE

$4995

~ N78391.2 door.;.4 wheel dM. V-8. air
oond., auto tr.lns.. PS. PR AMIFM radio. ~ ton
llicl&lt;u~ rear sfo!i ""'"""· aux. fuel !In~

door OCI!s, Ill wheel, cruise

contr&lt;JI, .rt.I/FM radio. !fereO tapa lldi~ !if~
-

defog'

JIIIIIROS.

SAlE PRICE

Stock N11310, 4 doors. sedan. 4 cyl.. air con d..

vinyl roof. auto. tr.ln,, PS. PR power windewl
power sat ~ door kiCks. till wtlr!el. cruise
amlrol, AMI,FM;a.1in rad~l ties. w!lite wals,
"'r ~ defilg
.
.
•
SAL f I'IICE

PS, PB, ~lfM radio, ~ereo tap~ 13dial twes.
buck!l seats.
.

.

Wholesale goods that cosl $100
WASHIN GT ON
(UP !)
Wholesa le prices rose a season- in 1967 had risen in price to
ally adjus ted 0.2 percenJ In July $297.80 last month . the depa r tas a downturn in food pri ces ment said .
In July, wholesale pri ces for
helped offset an increase In
e nergy prices, lhe.Lallor De part- co nsumer foods fell a seasonally
adjus ted 0.6 percent following
ment said today.
substa
ntial incr eases In the seThe July Increase In the
Bureau of Labor Statistics' Pro- cond quarter . Pork prices
ducer Price Index was Identical dropped 6.8 percent. breaking a
pattern of price jumps In the
to the moderale Increase r ethree previous months.
corded in June. Wholesale prices
Following hikes In June, prices
advanc!'d 0.3 percent In May.
During the 12 months that led decreased 3.8 percent for fresh
up to July, the Index was up 3.5 fruits , 3.5 percent for vegetables,
percent. although the catE.&gt;gory 1.1 percent for col!ee and 0. 9
for energy goods had jumped 14.3 · percent for beef and veal.
Prices for poultry fell 4.8
percent during that year, the
percent following a 6.2 percent
department said. Still. energy
drop In June. Egg prices also
prices at the wholesale level last
continued to fall. There were
month were 28.1 percent lower
moderate price Increases last
than In December 1985.
month for dairy produc;ts, fish

1986 FORD
~)Nl'U'tG,TReAA

I

SALE PRICE

NEW 2 PC, U.
U¥1110 1M. Sin

$19995

:.¥..!~·~ubi ...,~ ::/.'

-------·----

~.. · - - · -

--~-

I ·---~·-•--~

..
--·

..-·-

-·

-

··-· --~· ~ .....
'

Arlhur Allma n, hea d of the
ms· form-writing co mmitte(',
said the c ha nges mea n tax payers
will ha\'e 10 spe nd more time
filling out !he fo r ms nex t s pring
&lt;ha n th&lt;•y did with the ir 1986
l't't urn s .
" The rules are dl(flc ult, and
taxpayers are goi ng to have to
co nt e nd wit h dlfferenl rules th a n
!hey did In th e past." h&lt;' sa id.
But Altman add ed that his
group tried to make th e new
form s a s pasy to undNsta nd as
poss ible .
"Yo u folk s would not like lo
ha\'e seen the fi rs I cut we took a1
form 8598,." he sa id. referring to a
new four-pa gp s heet on dPductlng
mo rt gage int er es t. " You folks
would not like to have seen the
lOth cui we took. "
The mort gage-dedu ction form
determines the a moun1 of Int eres t paid on mortgages that
people can c laim. depe nding on
how th ey spent the mortgage
mon ey.

If the morlgage was ta ke n out
a ft er Aug . 16, 1986, a n.d was used
solely to bu y a hom e. then
Interest pa id on th&lt;' mortgage Is
comp lcle ly deduct ible a nd form
8598 need no! be fill ed out , the IRS
sa id.
The rules change if a princ ipal
or seco ndary mor tgage was
lake n out a ft erAug. 16; 1986, fora
reason bes ides buying a hou se or
if Jhe mort gage was refinanced
fo r more than the fair va lue of t he
home.
In those cases, the percent ag!'
of Inte res t that can be claimed
will va ry , depending on how th!'
money was used. II the mo'r t gage
went to pay educational or
m ed ica l bills, more of the lnte res l can be deducted than if it was
used lor other purposes. the
governme nt sa id.
In effect , Form 8598 is the IRS
a nswer to home equity loans - a
second mortgage based on the
equity taxpay ers have built up In
their homes.

" Operation Martyrdom ," ma neuvers but the
UAE has s tudiou s ly avoided accusing a ny na tio n ..
I ran on Wednesday asked t he UAE fo r.
permiss ion to clear UA£ waters of min es that
Tehran says were planted by I he United States,
but there has been no _publi c response .
fn Paris, the weekly news maga zine L'Eveneme nt du Jeudi said Thursda y a n It alia n compan y
ha s been selling Iran mines made with French
and Swedish explosives for possib le use in the
Persian G ulf.
The magazine said Swedish c ustom s oflicials
had discov ered after " painsta king" investiga·
tions s ince 1984 that the mines are being sold to
Ira n. The ma ga ain e sa id t he mines had been
made in Italy · by the company Valsellah ,
Meccanotecnlca, with explos ives provid ed by the
Swedis h group, Bofors. and France's sta te- run
Societ e Nationale des Poudres et Explosils .

Suspect in plane too close to
Reagan is take~ into custody_
e nd of the airport ' s terminal,
below lhe pr esidentia l helicoptaping news pa per over I he office ter, sa id Whit e House spokesman
window .
Ma r lin Fi tzwater.
At about 1: 15 a.m.. Secret
The presi de nt' s c hoppe r
Service agen ts ru shed one of the
landed safely a shol'l time later.
men out of the office with a br.own
" It lthe pl a ne! was comin!l
leathe r jacke t over hi s head.
real la st, real low," sa id Rafael
pushing him int o the bac k seat of Maldonado, a photographer for
a gr ay sedan a nd r efusing to _ the Saanta Barbara News-Press,
respond to questions. The agenis who witnessed the incident.
then left the te rmina l, but the
"I thought at fir s t it was a
whereabouts of th e second man sher iff' s pl a ne making a sweep
were not known.
before the landing, " he said. "I
The sec rei Service ea rlie r said
notic!'d if was alinosl simultaneit would have no Immediate ous (with the arr iva l of the
comment on its inves tigation of h!'licopter). "
the incident.
Ken McClain. a gas refu eler at
· The c rew (JI the presldenHal
Johil Wayne Airport, said he_
chopper, Marine One, es tim ated talked to the leather -jacket ed
the renegade plane - bearing men after the Piper landed at
tailnumber N840A- buzzed the 5; 50 p.m. PDT at t he Martin
ranch at a n altitude of about 100 Aviation lot, adj acent to the
fee t and passe d within 200 to 300 airfield .
feet horizontally a nd 150 feet

Child care center available at fair
COLUMBUS. Ohio i UPI 1 ~So
what do you do whe n t he little tut.
is alre_ad y tired from all the fair
excit em e nt , but the ot her kids
don' t want to go home and you
haven'! had a · chance to hear
y o~r favorit e singer?
.
You cou ld ask the tuckered like
if he wants to rest or play at th e
Ohio State F a ir' s Childre n' s
Hospital Chil d Care Cent er.
The cent er , loca ted southeas t
of the giant sa nd sculpture, offers
moms and dads a place lor their
little ones who wa nt a brea k from
the fair 's non -s top. multi di rectional action.
The cent er o!le J'S an airconditioned na p a nd play area. a
large outs ide fenced -in ' play
area . comp lete with sandbox es.
wat erplay table and portable
playground equipment. Many
act iv ities are offered including
arts and craft s. stories. puppefs

and hopes more famili es will be ·
able to come because of the
daycare center.
Last yea r, more t han 200
children and th eir fa mil ies use d
the center. We'd like to see more
families take advantage of this
service th is year ," sa id Hele n
Ohanian Overfield, stat.:; child
care consultant. "Som etimes a
nap in an air· condiioned env ironm ent is just what a young child
needs to compliment a day at the
fair. "
Mir iam Napl es , the fa ir' s program director for the daycare
cent e r , said th e mos t popular
activ ity is dress ing up in hospital
caps and gowns and using the
stet hescopes provided by Children's Hospital. Its purpose is to
accustom children to hospit al

a nd a dramatic play .
This is the fourth year for the
da ycare center that was s tarted
by Dagmar Celeste and the
seco nd year th a t Ohio Child ren's
Hospit a ls · have sponsored the
center. · Celes te says the daycare
center has become more popular
every year.
"People aren't aware that its
here. Thi s yea r we provided·
public service a nnouncements at
th!' fair to let people know it is
here," Celeste s aid . "Ours is the
only state lair in the country that
pro vides child care," she said:
Ce l ~ste has been an advocate
of affordable child care and
wor ked to get a daycare centN
started in downtown Columbus .
The downtown daycare center,
Children First , Is operating the
lair 's daycare cent er.
Celeste . said the governor
wants to bring families to the fair

attire so the experience won'r
seem so alien to th em , Na ples
said.

Wholesale prices rise 0.2 percent

SALE PRICE

wiJite willis. ~ ,ton Pd\u~ bng wide ll!d, &lt;ear
step bumper, lUX. fuel
iliii!IIS. si!lng
rear ljass.
.
.•

tape, radial lit.,

SAlEPRICE

s... $20

cond.. auto. trans.. PS. Pll

~lr

flM"' ,..~, -

1986t'PONTIAC
GRANDAM

tin'

Rtg. '69

drive. 6 cyl..

1.982 FORD
Stock Hnir~A.I:LI trans. PS,
PD. AM/fM radio, stereo

1984 CHEVROlET
C-20 4X4

r n55 SA 9 !.&amp;,, 1ron1 """"'

Stock 11'151~. 4· ~ station WI!Jin, ~ant
wlleel drivo, 4 cyl., air rond .. aUto tr.ls., PS, ·
PB. tilt wheel. cruise control, AMIFM radio.

Kelly Ketchka of Indianapolis, here visiting her .
grandparents, Wallace and Muriel Bradford. and
assisting In the secretary's office, assl•ts Eva
Robson with e ntry forms .

IRS issues new' tax 'forms
for IRAs, second mortgages ·

1984 OLDS

vinvl roof. MJIII ~-- PS. P!l. ~ se!l.

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

critical port oi Fujairah outs ide the perllous Strait
of Hormu z leadin g intp the Persian Gulf.
· One of . the three conllrmed min es was
responsible for ripping a hole in the hull of the
American-operated supe rtanker Texaco Caribbean on Monday, the llrst such incident outside
t he Persian Gulf s ince th e Iran· Iraq war bro ke out
nearly seven years ago .
Saunders sa id a seco nd mine was s unk by
authorities and declared har ml ess, and a thi r d ,
was detonated by police !iring sub-machineguns.
" The Coast Gua r d is satisfied there are no more
mines In I he area," Saunde rs said . " The exclusion
zone has been lift ed.' ·
A sus picious obj ect s ig ht ed by seamen off the
coast of Oman tu rned out to be th e bloated carcass
of a cam el whe n officials went in for a closer look,
Saunders sa id.
·
The United States and gu lf s hipping sources
believe iran plant ed the m ines dur ing the r ecent

SANTA ANA, Ca lif. i UPli One of two men who ll ew wit hin
150 feet of a Ma rine hel icopt er
carrying President Reagan a nd
his top aides was rus hed out of an
airport termin al early today by
Secret Serv ice agent s who had
been qu estioning him lor most of
lhC' nig ht.
1 Th e
me n, fly ing a s in glee ngin e Piper Archer. were
pursued 120 to no mil es down t he
California coast from Reagan's
mounta intop r a n·c h near Sa nl a
Barbara to J ohn Wayne Airport
in Orange Count y, Ca lif. , after
the 3: 35 p.m . PD'Jl Thursda y
lnc\d ~nt . They were ta )c en int o
custody by Ora nge Cou nt y sheriff' s de pulles when they landed
at about 5: 50p.m .
Sheriff's deputies a nd secret
service agent s qu est ioned the
two men in a sm all office at the

·-

1984 CHEVROLET

3 Sections 44 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, August 14. 1987

By ,JACK UEED
DUBA I , Unit ed Ara b E m ir ates tUPil - The
United Ara b Emirates declared a 50-square- mil e
st rip In the Gull of Oman free of mines today and
Ira n sa id lis na vy, would siart " minesweep lng
.m aneuvers" In Int er national waters.
In a nother development , the Dubai coast a nd
border guard sC'Izcd a dhow with 1.1 Ira nia ns
aboard as they tried to la nd In Dubai. the
E ng lish- language Khal eej Times said.
A patrol boatlntercepled the Ara b craft a nd the
11 Ira nians aboa rd il wcrC' arres ted , the rcpor l
said.
Capt . R .M. Sau nders. genera l manag er of the
port of Fujalrah In I he Gul l of Oman, sa id th a t
alter a day long ba n on shipping In th e 50-squ are mil e strip , the exclu s ion order was lilted al sunset
Thursda y. Au&lt;h orl lles said that Jhree rri lnes had
been confirmed in !he area .
The o ff icia l Is la mi c Republic News Agency,

..

Board to meet
Southern Local Board of Educatio n will . meet in special
S!'SSion Monday, 7 p.m .. in the
high school cafeteria.

e ntine

Iran will sweep mines in international waters

•

Reg . 99¢

4 Fl.

Dally Number
169.
Ticket sales totaled $1.341.693,
with a payoff due or $667,337.

•

2 5 C·
MEAD SPIRAL NOTEBOOKS •••••••••• 74 C
60
COMPOSITION TABLET ••••••••••••••••• 5QC
ELMERS GLUE-ALL ••••••••••••••••••••••~. 5 QC
oz.
MEAD SPIRAL NOTEBOOK ............
40 sheet-college/narrow rule.

ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALI!S

Hazy, hot and humid .
High In lower 90s. Clear
" tonight . Low In the upper
60s.

8743

BACK
TO
SCHOOL
SPECIALS

&amp; Ca lf comb., $ii7~S500: V('al Ca lv€'S, ·
cholC&lt;' &amp; prlmr, S87- S9~: mf'd . grad£'.

control. AMIFM radio. radial tires, 1l ton
oidluo. ton~ wide bed. ""'s1op ~lf'IR aux.

- -·

Daily Number
495
Pick 4

lbs &amp; up. S.~ - ~- SM. MI: Bulls. m&lt;'d. fram('
•I &amp; o'l,-250·300 Jbs. 111.50-$88.50; 300-4110

Stock
cond., auto. trans.. PS. P!l. Itt .ne.t. cru~

DRAWER
CHEST

Ohio Lottery

Meigs fair
tab inside
today

CLEVELAND iUPII - Cine,
Su. per Lotto player hOlds a tlckei •
that's worth $6 million, Ohl
•
Lotrery officials said today .
Lottery officials said t
ticket
the
tl k was ldamong
f
th :!i~~:E~-

ibs. SS7.- : ButrhN Sows. ~1.50: But ch l~r
Boars. s-&amp;2.50-SI7; Fr&lt;'&lt;lrr P IR" !By 1he
Ft · ~tcr

Superlotto results ~

Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services reports 10 calls
Wednesday; Tuppers Pl a ins at
2:44 a .m. to Reedsv'1ll e lor
Sh aron Ba rber 10 Holzer Medi cal
Center; Rutland at 5:09 a.m .
tran s ported Clara Ph\li!ps to
Ve te ra ns Memor ia l Hospit al;
Chester Fire Departmenl a t 6: 46
a .m . to a hay lire ori Rout e 248:
Racine a t 8:51 a.m. tran s ported
. Bob Brotherton from the lire
s tati pn' to Veterans Memori al
Hos pil al; Sy r~cuse at 8:52a. m.
to Wat er St. lor Kenn et h Cundiff
to Veterans Me mor ial Hospital ;
Tuppers Plains at 10:20 a .m . to
Route 7 for Amy Conley to Hplzer
Medical Cent er; Tuppers Plains
at ?: 10 p .m. to the Arbaugh
Addition for I saac Jac kson to St.
Joseph 's Hos pital ; Racine at 3: 26
p.m . toB roadwa vSt . forJnez HIII
to Holzer Medi cal Cent er ; Ra cine at 3:51 p.m . to Wells Run
Road fo r Ronald Sykes 10 Veterans Me morial Hos pital; P om eroy at 7:35 p.m. tb East Mai n St.
lor C hris ! in e Pullins to Veterans
Memor ial Hospit a!. .

Continu ed from page l
perlo ~ming ritJlt here In our

At nex t week's Meigs County
Fair you ca n hear the sounds of
th e Great Pr etenders. They'll be
" rocking around the clock" on
the grandstand s tage beginning
at 10 p.m . on Wednesday.
And thi s week- ~I the Athens
a nd Mason County Fairs - it's
Phil Dirt a nd rhe Dozers - yep,
tha t's the na me. T hey're a
five -man group out of Columbus
with a r egional following that's
unprecedent ed. They transport
their audiences back to the days
of saddle s hoes. pony tails and
beach parties. They ' re musicians and comedians rolled into
one, with vocal harmonies that
sound jus t like the records you
once liste ned.to on the juke box at
the !ora l ha ngout , Just ask any
local Dozer fa n - like Carson
Crow. After hea ring the Dozers
once, you ' II ret urn to hea·r them
again and again' - with your
whole family.
The rising success of the
Dozers (Whic h by the way are
already booked for next year's
Meigs County Fair l\Ccordlng to
Wally and Muriel Bradford), The
Great Pretenders- and other
groups like them, Is proof that
this musical style Is an art form
that can no longer be called a
passing fad .
, Rock and roll - and nostalgia
-are here to stay.

I

Market report

Squad has 10 calls

Old tunes ...
area.

I

•

. Thlnday, August 13. 1987:

"'•

........,;..
• "W

••

-

and bakery products.
For . the past 12 months. food
prices have Increased 2.6 percent , the departme nt said.
Energy prices In July rose 1.5 .
percent follwlng a 0.9 percent
Increase In June. Gasoline prices
were up 2.5 percent after rising 3
percent In June . Home heating
oil prices rose 4.6 percent for the
second consecutive month. Price
decreases for natural gas
slowed.
The Index lo' other consumer
goods rose 0.3 percent. Prices
turned up for apparel , tobacco
products, light motor tr ucks,
leather footwear, sanitary
paper. gold jewelry and floor
coverings. .
·
.
Prices declined for alcoholic
beverages, cosmetics a nd home
electronic equipment.

CALLIOPE LARGEST IN WORLD - Built In
1975 In Seattle, Washington, _the calliope on the
Mississippi Queen Is the largest lti the world, The

Queen maae her way back downriver past Melp
County Wednesday evening after docking In
Marietta, having just returned from Pittsburgh,

Pa.

·

~

~

-~ ---------- -----------~-------------~l------------------------~---------~------------------------~--~~----------~------~------------~'~
'

�·.
.
'•
•

••

Friday. August 14, 1987

• .

Commentary
Jl

The Daily Sentinel
.

Ill Court Street
. Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
A MEMBER nf Thf' Cntt f'd
a n&lt;lthf' AmrricJn

Al:.l~oc·l a tl o n

f! r f'S!ol

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager
lnl(' I nallonal.lnl:.tnd 0.11h Prpss
Publl'•hPrs A"sorl&lt;llion.

N P w~p :.~ p rr

LETTFRS OF OPJ ~ I O!\ ,1n • lq•h'(l nH' Tll f•\ should bf' l r~.; t h~n :100 ~\OHI "
]n ne . All ll'tt c•l" atl' !'Ubt f'l' lt nl'&lt;lllmu ,ln&lt; l mu s t t&gt;t• ~tg nP&lt;I '.\ lt h nam l'. ddc lrr"' " d rul
t('li•phnnl ' num hl't' i\n un s tp:nr'i.l lt•ttr"r" ~111 1 b1
gOt •d Lt ;ih' . I C i cill · ~· ...:ing t .~ .-. u ('s . nnt pP J~n n,l ) t ltf'S .

pulll t ~hl'd

l.f'ttf•ts s hnu ld lw

1n

IJ~e) ______~---B~y_J_a_c_k_A_n_d_er_s_on__an,d__Jo_s_ep_h__Sp_e__
ar
.
Congress
ou t of the gasoline tax trust lund,.

}l()r}t

Our associate Stewart Harris
called the sponsoring membe rs
and asked if, perc hance, they
didn't think the way t he projects
were lobbied and horse-traded
intq the bill did not smack of t he
old pork barrel process.
We should have known better.
While most m e mbers of Congress would willingly define a
pork-ba rrel project as the use·
less expenditure of publlc funds
for purely political pu rposes.
none would admit that their own
construction items were cooked
up just to please th e folks In the
home district. Here are some
typical el&gt;;C hanges:
- The $5 million down pay·
me nt for Improvements on a
s tate roa d a nd bridge to Blount
Isla nd nea r Jacksonvill e doesn ' t

Americans
not prepared
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UPI J -President Reagan has been preoccupied
:~ wtth Central America s ince he took office. Some might say obsessed
·: whe n il comes to Nicaragua and its Marxist-led regime.
·. Early on he threw down the gau ntle t determined to resist the
;: establishment of ·another Cuba in the Wes tern He mis phere.
{ He sent tas k forces to ' the region, and ordered perman ent
', maneuvers of U.S troo ps in Monduras. a constant rotating force of
·. some 3,000 men. some taken from the reserves and s tate National
·:Guards .
:: All of these moves were to Rut the Sand inista government on
:• warning. Under the di rect ion and training of the CIA, the resistance
·: m&lt;Nement, or Con11·as. was formed with its own avowed purpose to
:•overthrow the governme nt in Managua .
·: The Contras are made up of the disenchanted who suffered lhe
.; systematic suppression of r igh ts and liberties in Nicaragua and fled .
( feeling their revolution had been betrayed. The others in lhe
,; guerrillas forces are former me mbers of the ousted Somoza regime.
·: The money has come mainly from the Untied States government.
;.along with donatiOns from wealthy contributors and foreign countries
·:urged to contribute by U.S. officia ls a nd private groups.
.• The publ!cly stated purposes of the U.S. dnve In Central Amenca
;:have changed as time we nt on. At first th e U.S sole ct es tre was los top
,; Nicaragua from exportmg it s revolution as well a·s weapons to le ftist
:•rebels in netghbori ng countries.
:: Later on. the goa l was to force the government of Daniel Ortega to
·:change it s autbonlartan ways and to move toward democracy.
:.Reagan wanted the entrenched Or tega to "c ry uncle'· a nd to give up
·:his ruling power
:: Neighboring countries drew up plans for a negotiated peace. all of
:them rejected by Reagan and the Sa ndinista s.
:: No American offictal has satd publiclv that the policy is aimed at
·:overthrowing the Sandmista gover nme nt, alt hough that is well
;.understood. Why else all the mil itary pressure .
·: Becau se of a lack of public support a nd the Vietnam sy ndrome
:Reagan found Americans were not prepared to get involved
::Congress voted military a td to the Contras under Reagan's relentless
lobbying, then cut tt off after the CIA mined Niraragua 's ha rbor. and
then approved more fin a ncing.
In the mterim. Reagan 's nattonal security staff was ve ry bu sy
making end runs around the congressio nal prohibition against aid.
and using various subt erfuges 19 keep the Cont ras goi11g. The result is
well known - a major equation of the scand a l t hat engulfed tho
presidency.
·
Now there are two Central t\mencan pca c(' plans - one drawn up
by the Ce nt ral America n nat ions and accep ted by Nicaragua: the
other a U.S bipartis an initia t tve by the president a nd Speaker Jim
Wright .
The Amencan plan is much more spect fi c m outlining terms to
move toward peace a nd dem ocracy fo llowing a ceasefire. Th e
Central American pla n cal ls for a ceaseflrt' in 90 day s and
democralizatton is more fl ex ibl e a nd lenient to t he Saridinista
regime.
Ortega s till is seek,i ng direct negotia tions with the United States and
refuses to deal with the Contras But Speaker Wright has suggested
that the Contras can be represen ted by the Red Cross or the Catholic
Church at the peace table .
Since the Centra l AmNica plan has been accepted by all, the
administration a ppare ntly ts now willing to put tts own initia tive on
the back burner. Wright , who is displaying the art of compromise.
more obviou s on Capitol Hill tha n at the White Hou se. ls willing to give
the Central American natio ns a c ha nce to ma ke it work .
There are skeptics on all s id es tha t the Sandinistas may cheat and
not reopen La Prensa, the leading newspaper in Managua that was
closed down, or do any o! the things that would show good faith if the
rebels lay down their arms.
But there is always hop&lt;' tha t the viole nce will come to an end and
that the Central America n neig hbors will keep the pressure on
Nicaragua to live up to its commi tment.
P eace wi ll be welcome to the peasants in the Nicaraguan
countrys ide who have su ffe red the m os t from the violent forays . It
will a lso be welcome to the Central American democracies who will
not feel threatened. And the Ame rican people, divided on the issue of
backing the Cont ras, will be able to put a ny contributtons they want to
make to Central America to worthwhile humanitarian projects
instead of weapons

fll lhe pork profile at all,
according to a spokes man for
Rep . Bill Chappell Jr.. D·Fia.
The proj ect , which ma y cost an
a ddllional $10 million to com·
plete, wlll give the Marine Corps
better access to the is land so it
ca n be used for btgger things, like
a berthing facil ity .
But some port inspec tors we
contacted were ske ptic a l of the
alleged urgency of the project.
T hey pointed out that if lh e
Marines had considered lhe
access improvement vital. they
would have paid for it ou t of their
own budget. The cr itics also
noted that lhe money will add to
the defi cit beca use it is com ing
from genera l fund s - unlike
most highway prowcts. whi c h
are authorized by the P ubli c
Works Committe&lt;· a nd paid fo r

.
;

Today in history
'··

By Unlled Press International
Today is Friday, Aug. 14, the 226th day of 1987 with 139 to follow .
The moon is waning. moving toward its last quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
The E'venmg stars arE' Mars and Saturn.
ThOse born on this date are unde r the sign of Leo. They include
pioneer psychologist Richard von Krafft· Ebing in 1840, naturallsl
Ernest Thompson Seton in 1860, writer Ernest Thayer t ··casey at the
Bat") in 1863, novelist John Galsworthy in 1867, jazz pianist-singer
Buddy Greco in 1926 tage 61). rock musician David Crosby in 1941
1age 42). and actress Susan Saint James ln 1946 (age 411.
On this dale in history:
·In 1900, 2,000 American Marines joined with European forces to
capture Peklng, ending the Boxer Rebellion against' the Western
presence In China.
In 1935. Congress passed the Social Security Act and President
Franklin D . Roosevelt immediately signed it into law.
In 1945, President Harry Truman announced Japan had accepted
terms for unconditional surrender, ending World War II
In 1972, .an East German airliner crashed on takeoff from Berlin,
kUling 156 people.
In 1986. Vietnam War hero Robert Schwab, was freed after 15
months' captivity ln Hanoi, ending hls unsuccessful solo attempt to
rescue two Vietnamese women .
A thought for the day : Novelist John Gaisworthy wrote, "The value
of a sentiment Is the amount of sacrifice you are prepared to make for
it."

!Cubs edge Mets; _Cards lose;
Reds,
·Giants OOth JlOSt·wins
.,

'•

Page- ,2- The Daily Senti~l
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohiq
Friday. August 14. 1987 ••
'·

WASHINGTON bas its own version of the old
quack-and-walk definition of a
duck: If it looks like pork and
smells lik e pork, it 's act ually an
essentia l p'u bllc·works project .
In our usual suspicious way, we
spotted several notably porcine
projects In the Transportation
Department appropriations bill
that recently cleared the House.
The projects arE' not necessarily
useless. But classic pork barrel
tactics were used to fund them.
When Appropriations Committee
members failed to persuade the
public Works Committee and It s
powerful chairman, Rep . James
Howard , D-N.J., to authorize the
fund s, money was taken from the
general fund . That means the
expenditures will further swell
the federa l defici I.

By JOE ILLUZZI
9· 7. San Francisco shaded Hous·
UP! Sports Writer
ton 7-6 in 11 innings, Cincinnati
New York ace Dwight Gooden
defeated Los Angeles 5-2 a nd San
made two starts this week
Di&lt;'go beat Atlanta 5-3:
against the Chicago Cubs . a team
Phlllli!!i 4, Cardinals 2
]\e has handled easlly ln his
At St. Louis , RickSchu doubled
career, and the Mets los t both
home two runs with two out in the
games.
13th inning to lift Philadelphia to
' The Cubs, four days alter
Its fifth straight victory.
p9undin~ Gooden for nin e hit s
Expos 9, Pirates 7
At Montrea l, Dave Engle
and siX runs, Thursday erased a
5-0 deficit against the former Cy . singled home the winning run
Young Award winner to beat
against Pittsburgh in the seventh
New York 7-5.
inning and Tim Wallac h drove in
five runs to take the NL RBI lead
"I wasn' t In a good rhythm
with 99.
tQday , Tdidn't feel com for table,"
saicl Gooden , who entered th e
Giants 7, Astros 6
At Sa n Francisco, Robby
game with a 12-3 record a nd 1.67
~RA ln hls career agai ns t the
Cubs . "Pitching on three days
rest .had nothing to do with the
way I pitched today ."
New York had taken a 2·0 lead
In the first on Tim Te ufel's
lwo· run homer a nd added three
By United Press International
ru ns in the second to go ahead 5-0.
A 5-0 lead with Gooden on the
Mik e Maddux tossed a five·
mound usually ass ures the Me ts
hitter Thursday to lead the Maine
victory but thE' Cubs chipped
Guides to a 7-0 triumph over the
away a nd knock('(! out " Doctor
Pawtucket Red Sox 7·0 In an
K" alter llv~ Innings.
Internationa l Leagu e game at
Dave Martinez hit a two· ru n
Pawtucket, R .I.
Maddux , 5-6, walked one and
homer to cap a three-run third
st ruck out fi\'e In notc hing the
and Chicago tie d it in the fifth on
complete-ga me shutout. Paw·
RBI singles by Lron Durham and
Rvne Sandberg.
tuc ket starter Stf've C'urry--ai·
"A lo t of th e ga mes . we find
lowed five r uns In six Innings and
ourselves down 7-or 8·0 against . fell to 10-11.
Gooden Wt• just believe If we
The Guides scored three times
s tay close. we've got a cha nce."
m thr third , twlc-r In the sixth and
Cubs Manager Ge ne Mi c hael twice in the e i):lhth ag a in st a trio
sa id.
of pitchers.
Jody Davis' two-run si ngle off
Joe Ci pollonl and Tim Cor~o·
Darryl Strawberry 's glove ln ran collected two hits and two
right flPid with one out In the RBI apiece to pace th e l:l·hlt
eighth Inning s napped the 5·5 tte attac k.
to give tht• Cubs the victory .
Keit h Hu ghes . Alan LeBoeuf
In other games. Philadelph ia a nd Ken Dowell eac h had two hit s
edgro St Louis 4·2 In U Innings.
for Ma ine.
Montn'a l out s lugged Pittsbuqlh

- Two mlllion c;loll a rs for . a
lane·widening project on U.S. 1~1
near Prunedale, spoqsored by
Rep . Leon Panetta. D-Callf ..
does n't classify as pork either,.
accordi ng to a Panella a ide. ~~
proof, he point ed out Ihat th~
Ca lifornia Ira ns porta tlon deparl·
ment co nsiders lhe wiMnlng so
crucia l that It will finance 20
percent of 11. Th e pro ject will co.s~
a n estimated $58 mlillon .to
co mplete - a nd the money will
a lso a dd to budget deflci'ts
because it will come from lh;,
genera l fund
.
-The closes t to an adm iss ion
of pohl ical co ns ideration came
fro m the office of Re p. Chris
Perktns, D-Kv., who sponsored. a
$2.5 m illto n 'road widen ing be!
tw ee n Pres tonburg und Paint ~·
ville in the ' 'fa mil v di stricl "
rpprcsc nt cd by Perk.tn s and hi s
late fat he r, Cal'!. s ince 1949. A
P erkins aide was proud lhat his
boss - a seco nd· term co ng ressma n - had garnered th e projec t
for th e hom folk s, and sugges ted
th a t thP Tr·a nspo rt a tion Depart .'
m•' nt also pl a ys politics in the
way it doles out the gasolin e-tax
monev .
P('r.kin 's project Is cxpcl' ted to
ros t $78 millton more tn co m plrl •'. n rul wil l :il so come out of
- Appropri a tio ns Cpmmlltcl'
mcmbN Nor ma n Di c ks . D·
Wa,h .. u&lt;NI his clout to get $2.6
mi lli on for a new bridge In th••
dist ri c t of Hl' P· AI Sw ift . D-Wash.
According 10 a Dicks s pokes man.
thr congrf'ssm nn as ked around
among the s tole delegatio n to S('P
If an yone had a prOjec t in mind .
and Swift mentioned a co n·
dc mncd bridge on U.S lOI ov r•r
the Qu•' &lt;'IS River. Di c k's ai de
sa lrl tlte br id ge projec t wa sn' t
pork . but " n e mergency . a nd
not('rt t h:tl US. lOJ Is th (• onl y
hi ghw av

on

&gt;'

lh('

••

Ol y m pic P eni ns ula 's P aci fi c
coa,t . Th r monc·y will co mf" fr om

•

team ·
•
scrimmages
Saturday

Summing UJl the hearings ___W_ill_iar_n_R_u..~_he_r·

committee

mem~rs

were inter-

es tmg personahttes. At least one
- Lt. Col. Norl h -had ge nuine
s tar quality .
The rathe r for mal, quasi ·

leg a lis llc procedures of t hf" he.1 r·
lngs them selves had the sa me
sort o( [asdnalion I hal has mad('
co urtroom melodramas a s ta pl e
of the British a nd American
s tag!' for man y years T he
subjec t matter - src rrt journ C'ys,

C'v il

fo rci g n t•rs .

t'o d c

names, Swiss bank accou nt s.
a uld hardl y
shredders. e tc . havC' bern improved upon

Viewed from the s ta ndpoint of

on&lt;' wcC'k h ~ ~ave th r America n

l)&lt;.'O ple a co lleg e ('du arion In th e
pott!lc-s or C&lt;&gt;nt ral America . and
mil y have saved the Nica ra gua n
rPslsta nCt.' In thfl pr oc~ss. In
mo ral IC' rrn s. he sin giPhand f'(t! .

ra n th P ball nil thr wuv bac k to
lhr 50-vard lin e.
And whot abOut thr Dr mo·
c rat s" T twy bendJH.•d , of eo urs(•,

from thf' Rr publlca ns' di sco mfl ·
turc owr th f' whold :tffttl r .

th e Reagan administ ration, thf'

Co nvf'r ~£" 1 y ,

hea rings were a seven -month
disas ter. partiall y redef"med by

by Co l. No rth 's pa ssiona te a d vocacy to the sa m e " 'tr ncl !hill tll r
Re public a ns wPrt' hcl pc•d by 1! .

o nr shin mg mom ent . Earl y on.

the Democrat s offered the Republicans the lr c hoice of two
poiso ned c ups: Either the ir pres ·
id cnt was a fool (for not knowing
wha t wa s going o n 1n hi s
ad m inistra tion) or hr was a
knave lfor knowi ng \ Thr he.l r·
ings es ta bli shed that he rlldn ' t
know abou t the dive rsion of the
arms salr proceeds. a nd t ha t the
rest of the story is s impl y too
Byzantine lobe exp lained . eve n
tf accurately. as the ra tional
act io ns o f a sens ibl e- governm Pnl .
Th e s hining mom en t . o f
course. was Col North 's In ju st

t hC&gt;y wf'rf' d ama gf'd

But , far w o r~(' f ro m th rir sla nd·
point. the Big Ont' gol away .

Do n't evc t· lct a ny body lei I yo u
th a i lh!' De mocrats we r e n' t out
to impeac h Rono ld Rea ga n. Tha t
was th e lt' hi g hes t hope - the ir
Imposs ibl e Drea m - a nd the ir
Lli lul'f' to achievP it is a blflt' l 1f
srcrl' t di sa ppo intm c nl. T r ul'.

th ey slowed hi s polit ica l mo men ·
tum a lmos t to a ha lt . and IMdl~
mu ssf'd hi s 1m age . Rut hP ha s
c m C'r gcd fr om their fu 1narc st i ll

prt"s td e nt . s till wel l ltkPd by til&lt;•
publt c a t la r ge . a nd still capa ble
of l.i.rinni ng impor l c-1nt battlf's

1n

Ca rcfu lly o bsru rrd b)' t hr
rn as trrs of thPst: rr vC' l ~ wel'c lht'
rnot ca u ~ ('.ct C':lf th (' ('nl!rf" urtolr:
th e bl tt r r lJa ttlo bcrw,•en tt

--

Re pu !JIIca n pn•s ldc nt an&lt;1 a D~
moc- rutlc Co ngn'ss for &lt;·ont ro l of
U.S. furrign policy. a nd thr• ~&lt;· ny
In whi c·h Congresb 's liberal alllr,
in tl)f' med ia usr lra ks to help
C'o ng rr ss w:tgr th a t ba ttlr. To thr
rxtrn t th a t th r hrar ln gs could
hav&lt;' focuSNI national ;1ttPntion
on t ho;r tes te rt ng rvlls . t hev
w(•n' a nC'ar tota l (n nd quilt'
drltbcra trl fa ilure.
Th e s e ne now shift s to sp&lt;'ci c; l ;
prosec ut or

LJw r encE"

h a s to SI' II IP for rtJ ns pirac or •
obstruc tion cha rgrs. i n thf' ab- ~
sr nr&lt;· of any genu im· {:rl mC's.
•

But that will tJ(• P res ide nt ·
RPag.t n's CuC' to rxr rrtsr hi s:
prr-ro~a li vP to pa r don. And hP:
wi ll proba bly actu a lly gai n a f.;w •
point s tn I he a pproval poli s by;
rto ln g so
I

'''

lh&lt;' month s ahead

Fund-raising, p()litics ______R_o_bl:_'r,_W_c_,Km_a__n!
NEW YORK INEA) - Fund
rai sing in U.S. politics ha s never
been more Important . Now a·
days, building the right ne twork
of contributors can make or
break a campaign. In fact, many
in politics believe the tall has
started to wag the political dog.
Even with federal funding,
someone seeking a major party
presidential nomination has to
raise at least $6 million to finance
a minimal primary campaign.
and perhaps two or three times
that amount to stage anything
approaching a lavish effort.
According to one calculation,
House and Senate candidates
spent $450 million in 1986, up from
about . $375 million two years
earlier.
Everyone believes total con·
gresslonal campaign spending In
1988 will exceed $500 million.
A run-of.the-mlll Senate cam·
paign these· days costs about $3
million. If you are Involved in a
tight race ln a major media state,
the prlce tag can be several times
larger. House races cos ling $1
million or more are now
common.
This means that every senttir
and member of the House must
raise at least $10,000 a week
every week he or she Is in office.
Thus the growing importanceand dominance - of fund raising.
.
Because of changes in federal
election laws, the kind of tndlvid·
ual targeted for donations has .
changed, too. In the old day~

eve r·yone targeted very wea lth y
individual s who co uld sit down
a nd write a bi g c heck But und e r
c urren t law an individual is
limtted to givi ng only $1,000 to
a ny campaign .
So. what Is most coveted today
is an Individual with a lot ol

' or San Fra nci sco hn,vC' h('a rd of

Walt er Shorcnsteln . But to Democ catic in s iders hi s na me ts a
hou se hold word . Thr Ba y area
rea l-Pslate developer Is widely
recognized as one of the pre mie r

Dcmoc r&lt;.~t i c

.
t uno -n nscrs. a man '

whos e wid e circle of friend s a nd :
bus iness associ ates al lows him to,
rm sf' hugP a m ou nt '&gt; for ca ncl i · ~
d at C's h P favor s
~

Berry's World

'

'•

Scoreboard .u
Majors

!'W'llllh • • Mln,.,..tl. , •trhl
Mll•u11k•... 1111 •hlmttrt', nl1ht
n ull.land :tl l 'u llf4~rnl~ nl~:tM

~ \TION,\1. U : \Ia t:
l'r 1'11Mt•fl f' rl'"'" IIUt'f'l'lill .. •llo~ l

·~It!
st.

Tran!lac&gt;tions

\-' I. •••.•. 40ft

u .•

I Atu lo.

l

1\it.,.t hllll

-

1\ :'oil Sid • ••
~~ .l l . ~J
"
.\!! ."1:0. l fll II

Nt-. \urk
~lunlrrlil

1"- II,.
(Jilt·.tall

.:wn

lilt .11
l l 101

l'll l ..hl'j~:h

"'""'

I l•t·ln.W

S.u1 · ·r:.n
H0111!1itlft

1- , \n~~; o·l~
.'UIOUII.I
Sot" IUo· ~oo

11• ,
Ul 111 11

till ll

l li

Iii ll
:U ,\!'!

.l l i
Ul''

I

.\I 1'1 111
.'lit il • fr.t
10 trill

ThuM :u · ~

': 1 1
1'1

tiM

1'! 1 1

Kl'""l'"

t hi• 1111:" i , No •lll \ ur" l

t 'lru ·lnn:ali l , l .rn. \nit•l.,., ~
san Ill• ~· ~ . ,\ ll:utl u ~
S11n t' rando.tn ';, Ho .. ...t"n li. II lnnln~~:;o.
M•ullrl'll•tt l'lu .. htlrlh ~
f'hllad..tphl .l I. Sl I.&lt;1 Uho ~ 11 lnnln,C!o
t~:~n•.,~ jlll

).IJ , l: lltl. m.

1'11hohura-h I lhlnrk 4 I I :11 1Unnlrt'lll
i llt•Oitun l't I ), ~ 'll 1&gt;. 111.
I lno lntuall r l'n"' ,., "ian dHulfmWI 1'- ·n
-.1 S111t llh•~~:;u tS hu"" .01!1 :."d ·'""'"" i- l l, t

•~· .. ''"II''" "" (lllllo•1w. I il l at S. tn
l'"runi'IM1t tUm"'•' ~ti\. Ill :up m
~l&amp;lurdll.\' "!i (o iUI\1'"'
:"ttl'llll t'ur. ,11 ( 'ltiolljiOI
lA.., \nlll' ll'!i 111 SWI fo' ram iM n
l'lthhur~~:;h :•1 Mnnlrt•ul , nl,;hl
f&gt;tllhull'lpW u at Si. l.uni,., nl.-;111
,\lhtnlll at Hou~un. niKhl

U :Am •t :

T11rnnh1
1)1•1roll
~' '"' \ ork
MIIIIIIIIUkt•
Bo,;ion

."
...,
"

1

Ill .:\11!1
,l JK
-~~~

. l~t

1!1 71

!r'/7

t

:!

1!1 .l71
~.l

~2

&amp;lthnur

foR

11 .)AI -

6t
Ia

"'

I lt'\'t'lnd

·

I . I'd

11 1 !

u

II
!~ 1 1

" '1-sl
{ ';,~lllnrnl

4'1~
U~tkl1111d

Kun!ii"

l~
~

T••:r1t:.11•..,

C'tth;.~~~:;u

•

,..

"'"' "

(;lllllt'f'

(.lohn IH), i : :M p.m.
Tt'lltl'l ("'IH 1-lo an• Huu11:h 11· "J 111
Re!.lon 1Hunot 1;\-land " 'oo4WIIrd 11-1 or
Nlppt,. HI. 't, ~: fl5 p.m.
Dtird tTt•rrt'll 1-!1) ul KURiltUI fll)'

HI. 7: :l5 p.m.

Cllh·qo (lhoilon ~Ill 111 Toronto
cnruUJ !'-II. 7: 3a p.m.
!&lt;k-Illik- tMorllliU'I lA-III 111 Mlnnt'llolll
{lllft.•, ..,. 11-111. K:l~ p.m.

MIJ"••k4't' (N\t'YI'IO 11-1) Ill ft•Hlmon•
(BI•II !H), II:M p.m.
O•kiMIId (\'ounl( lf.ll Ill ( '•llfurnla
(I'!UIIun ~1), 10: U p.m
' "lllurdll)'' ll Ollml'fl
T(I!XIIKIW. lk:IMoR

('hln&amp;.., at

"Maybe fhe fish art~n 't biting because they
don't /Ike that heavy-meta/ rock station."
[,

'! 1 1

{ ' h•nluntlt ('andl•lllll· ll)llll Nt•" \"ork

tiUad~

I

~~
~

-

Pf'lrotl I, K~n11111!i { ' lt;v I ,
Frld~~,,.·s

..,•

,JI':I

11111 rmlu.~ · 11 Hr~11lll•
( 'ullfurnl• !',, ~llnnt'tllllll I
Otic 1JU Ill. Toronto !i
ll&amp;lltlmun• s. Mlhu.ukt•t• I

'
'

. 1:~

)41

:WNI · I
.ttl :t
U 'ill 1":! 1:i
Hi e;; 111 11 1 t

!lit• Milko

l

ll

""r; ao

Mhtn.•~

Toronto

( ''"'N•d &amp;at Nrw \ 'or•. nl,;hi
DHraMlll KIIDIIM ('lly, nl,;ht

l'udfh' I 11a1&gt;4 '"'" ~'"' t '' '' '' J.
l ' hit'lllli:U IS I. l - l'liM'l'd plll'llt'r lloh
To·\1 Phur~ un I he• 1)-dlt~' dbo11I~Pd 11114 ,
r•·uillt•d pltc•ht•r Ura-. 111111 frtlm lnwM nl
lho• \nwrlt..- ''""""·llllll/ln j ,\A ,\1 : IIJo~ll(llo • d pllt ho •r llkklt•~u lo .,.and~hlln.,.llp
!'ihw~o~nn
llun~tun
Itt l1111o 11 fur
n •hahllllat lu n
Kun ..a..
l'l tll'l d lnfll'ldt·r ''""' ''
Sal~ar nn lho• ll- d"-,. dt~*hl••d 1\o.l
rt'lrn~at • ll\t ' In Aujt . II: rt'lllllt •d p .. duor
I'll!'\,. t~arr tnm1 Omuh u uf lb!• t\mo•rlt INI
r\-ut h.tlhlft I \ ,\ ,\I ,
l.n~ .\nj!t-11"" Slj~;fto&gt;d ,,,, .. lllll_..l
pitt ht'r Kun lltn~ Md :.&amp;S!'oltmt•d him lo
r\lhuq~~o~•rqtll'

K: ll p.m.

MttF.R1f ',\~

Ralthu urt• - l"llll•t•d IIU!tlt•hiN li.l'n
f~ · rhar1 M lht• '! I 1111,\
dt ..ahh•d II~ ;
r o,·l.tlo-d uutllo-ldoo•r ~tJ .. ,. Hurl frwm
tct.t•ho-N t•r nt Itt.· llllf'f'$tlhii'Ud ,.,. . .,.. ••
' 1 \\\ 1. 11• •tnlrt•d plh· h~'f" fOrt•J t"l'f'l.,tul*
''"'" Tt&gt;\ :1" fur u pili..''' '' 111 h4• n~nw4
I hlt.._:u j,\1 . 1 - •\•·lhLtlo•d l•ft••l ..•r
l)otanlt• Hill lr111n lhe• dl'l:tl&gt;lt•d 11!11; M'tll
lnll ..ldo'l' 11m Hult41 lu Ha!lu.ll ill lho•

nt, -

t 'rld:o·· '!' 1:aJ1H...
""'''"' 11urli ~ Mll• ·ho•tl 'I I ~ :II ndo ·u.-u

t.:U101

\

r:i:.""'"'

,JUST FOR FUN - This young cycil•t turned daredevil leaps
over a dirt ramp on one of the many rid in~ trail• enjoyed by youn~t
adventurlsts at Marlon Stoler's Rainbow Park located off County
Road~ near Buhan. In th~ foresround are three Racine Firemen.
JuniOr John!IOn, Scott Hill , and Kenny Layne. The Racine firemen
·sen relreohments at the Mud Bop every other Sunday. The next
·event I• Sunday JOt Z p.m.

l"'tlllldo-lphill 1tc.tftln ~~ ~ loll Sl IAtUI!&lt;&gt;
iMalhl·•o.; lh , II: .ll p. m.
J\llanlu l l'ulo-n i\· 11 Ul Huw•lnft
I Kn•11PI" t- t:l I, K :n p m

friends or business acquaint an-

ces - a person who can co llect
dozens . or hundreds . of thosE'
$1,000 checks. The val ue of
fund -ralsm g contributors who
know how to lap inlo thi s
resource is immeas urabl E"- and
their powe r over a candid a tE" is
vast.
Already this year we ha ve seen
how fund -raising ca n make or
break a candidate. Gary Hart 's
campaign team ·kne w It was a ll
over in the hours following the
Donna Rice revelations when
they started hearing from their
major fund·raislng donors that
they shouidn' t expect much from
them in the future.
At the other end of th e
spectrum, Tennessee Sen. Albert
Gore Jr. got into the presidential
sweepstakes almost solely be·
cause he was approached by
Nathan Landow, a Maryland
developer. Landow said the team
of 15 fund· raising contributors he
was empowered to speak for
didn't like any of the already·
announced candidates and would
back .a Gore bid. Before Landow
came calling, Gore was ready to
announce he would not run for
president.
Few people outside of politics

.·- ..

.

'

Walsh's:

grand jury.
Wa ls h Is hardlv' I·
•
llkr l.v to wa nt to go home withou t 1
Indi c ting so mcbo&lt;i y - pro bub i~' :
Col. Nort h. A(lm . J ohn Polndex - •
trr. r.rn. Hir ha rd Seco rd and onr:
or t wo bit pla ypr~ - f'vt' n l f hC' :

Elsewhere. Tidewater beat
Richmond 8· 1 in the opener of a
double-header before dropping
lhe · nightcap 4-1: Rochester
trounced Columbus 14-1, and
Syracuse slammed Toledo 15·6.
At Norfolk Va . , Bob Gibson
hurled a two·hitter and Andre
David belted his 14th home run to
power the Tides overt he Braves .
Jose Alvarez took the loss. In the
nightcap, Dave West and Flyd
Chiller combined on an eight hitter to beat the Tides . John
Mizerock , Darryl Motley, and
Dale Holman drove In runs for
the Braves . The fourth run
scored on a wild pitch. Bob
Buchanan took the loss.
At Rochester. N.Y.. Jackie
Gutierrez belted a grand slam
and Jay Ballard and two reliev ·
ers combined on a flve - hitter to
lead the Red Wings over the
Clippers. Guiterrez and Craig
Nichols each collected flve hits.
AI Pulido suffered the defeat.
At Syracuse. N.Y. ,' Rob Ducey
a nd Sllvt'ster Campuslno drove
tn four runs apiece to power the
Chiefs pa s t the Mud Hens Luis
Lea l pitched flvo:&gt; Innings for lhe
victory. Chris Jones took the loss.

- Meigs

gC'nl'rn l funcl!-. .

" But wh at good came qf lt at
las t•"
Quolh little Peterkin.
The curt ai n has finall y fall en
o n the Ira n/ contra hearings. The
m ajor it y a nd minority reports of
the JOin t m v C's1igating commit tee remij in to be written. but it
doesn't require a very · high·
grade c rys ta l ball to prE'dt cl that
t he Democrats will huff and puff
a nd deplore practica lly every thi ng that happe ned. whtl e the
Republica ns. though concurri ng
tha t many act ion s wer P regretta ble. will find extenuating circ um·
s tances for most of them .
Was the whole extravaganza
jusltfled? To answer tha t ques·
twn we mu sl first ask. "From
whose standpoint? And for what
purpose?"
Viewed sole ly as an alternative
to the ordinary run of davllme
te lev is ion. the hmrings had a lot
to commend them . Mos t of the
witnesses and a number of the

Thompson scored on a error by
Houston shortstop Buddy Bian·
calana with two out In the 11th
Inning to keep the Giants tied
wlth Cincinnati atop the NL
West.
Reds $, Dodgers 2
At Los Angeles, pinch hltter
Tracy Jones singled home two
runs to highlight Cincinnati's
!ive·run eighth Inning.
Padres 5, Bra~es 3
At San Diego, Chris Brown hit a
three-run double to tie the score
3-3 and then scored the g&lt;rahead
run on Garry TeQlpleton' s double
to hlghllght a five-run sixth
Inning against Atlanta .

Clippers bounced, 14-l

the gP neJ al fund.

n01th so ut h

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

nf lht' l'16o•lflt I A..,..l,o•jr;Uill'

(,\ \ 1\ ), 11101\ t•d liMifh-ldt•r IA•n MIIIUSZI'I.:
lrttm 1111· :ll).da,' lo If. dLQ' dl~hlt • d ll!il .
lnlh •lt~·r Rrwd "••lhn~ frum lht• I;J.tn
W.d11~ d"-~lll•· d lbl ~tad pllt ht., lr11d
lla\o•n,. fr11m llw 1;,. 101
dbo11hlo•d
II!&lt;&gt; I: pi~M • I'd lntl••ldt'r!ii 1)"\ ,, .\lllk·~ n und
,J l'illlamtllun nftlht• 1:\-dlly dl~hh•d u~• '
rt'l•l.thod Olllfil•ldt'f' l ' hr~ IOwynn lr01n

21·•.._,-

r\JhlollilH ' fljiH'

\llh•uult• ... 1'1"• •·d pllt•htor lUll
Mt•tpnun nn thl• J:J.du\' dl,.•hl••d 11~1 :
rt•• lll lt•d plh·ht·r I ~· n Rur!Hor lrmnl)t.n\ t•r

uf lhfo

t\m...-l~ · an

tb !itwlalln• i t\ t\ .\ ).

,' lonlrt•lll - St•rat pU..tll'r Hwndy Sl .
( 'lalrt· lu lndl•apnll!i of th4• t\nwi-lt'IUI
,\,.,.,tH,•IMIIrJn t ,\ ,\ ,\ l: rt •t allt•d pllt·t.i•r oltw•
"'"'"'~ h frum •lltt lt.,..otwHit• uf It"' South·
o•rn l.! ' lllli:Ut• , ,\ ,\ l .
St'w l nrk I NL I - t\tllvuh•d plh·ht•r
l)u,ld ( 'otM• trum the• dbllhlt·d 11!11( : st•nt
pll:du-r ll1111 ~ ltut.to• In ndi••ntrr ol lhl•
lnt ... rnaUunuiiA ' II.IV~'i l\ ,\ ,\ ) ,
Tt-.;w; - H• · ~ · l&amp;llt •d pllc·ht•r 1\llk•· l.oynd
Irum Olllwh•m111. fll r of I hi• •\nn-rlcan
t\i'WOC•Iutlon t \ 1\ 1\ J,

ft.uMkoolhlllf
lhunp!ihlrt• - Nun~t·d Frnnk
Monuh"n lli:t'ftl'ralnliln~tlll•''
l 1SRL - ,\nnoant 1•d llddllklnnf '''-Pit"
Mlun 1t•an1 In Nt•w HumJI!"hirl'
(' ulh•lt'
ft&lt;onllt•y - Nam.-d Pt•lt•r Slm11ahd
llll'f1 1ll M(H't t'r (llli.C' h.
faldw.-11 follt'll:f' - Nunwd Ron
~!IANtur,l m••n'" hiUikf'lhllll t ou,1 h.
Salt•m S&amp;ah• - Namt'CI Kalhy O' I.A'IY''
womt•n'" MOftludlt•OI&amp;ch. N•nc•y l'lllllimll
llllllflltlant lil:'ld holi,P)' I'OI&amp;t'h. •Jt•rn
0"'".. 11 I&amp;MIIIMII&amp;Ol ~~~ I'Oilt' h. IJanlf'lll'
\\III•Pr tUil'lllll.anlarmnMik:~~ t•u~~t·k, ~tnd
farl11 teeM Murlla aMKIIIWinl nw11'11 11nd
wom ..n"M t'rO!'I•rounlr)l and lrllt·k v.nd
lll'ld te!rll.'b.
Foothill!
AIIIUIIM - Thtd&lt;'d l'\lftnlftl' hadt-Wiik'
rt'l"l'l~l''f K.-kh "IIIIIURM le T•m,_ Ba)l
lor u uftdbld~d lUll draft chtlt•r .
Mlaunl Aarl'f'd to lrrmM will h
•nrl..,hat·k Don Nlrot·k.

N'""

t\u"''"

Sl~rd wldf' rrt•rl\'l'r
Ron Johnt~~tn ; Wl&amp;l\'t•d c•~r,...rhac• Tt'rr.~

Phii!Mitlphla -

Wt•lth; 1wq•ctll paN Dian Morpn on

··'"""·

Bulfalo -

Ho•11ley.

HodU'')'

SIJIIIN"d deft'la~fiUI l'hll

DdroN - Ml,; ...d t•f!nlrr Mtuk .... mh
and ''-"' wl . . ~brk Kumpel. ..

Metgs Marauder fans w\11 get
thelr !lrst look at the 1987 edition
of the Meigs football squad at 10
a.m. Saturday when Marietta
comes to town for a scrimmage.
The session will begin with
each team alternating posses·
slon of the bail at the 30 yard
stripe . Both will have the oppor·
tunlty to run 10 plays from that
point. After that, they will be in
various situations whereby each
squad m~y maintain control until
they score, may punt lf neces·
sary or turn the ball over 35 yards
!~om the line of scrimmage
should they fail lo galn a first
down
Meigs Coach Bob Ashley stated
the scrlmmage.wtli be a means of
evaluating players and wtll be an
a ld ln helping nail down some
starting positions still up lor
. grabs. This scrimmage, and the
one upcoming at Athens , will be
classified as a teaching session
and fundamental football tactics
will be stressed by the coaching
staff.
The Meigs Athletic Boosters
will furnish refreshments for
both teams after the scrimmage.
The boosters will also make
membership tickets at $2 per
person and 200 club tickets at $25 ,
each available for thosewhowlsh
to purchase them.

Coach Kenny Buckley, Tammi Buckley, Jennifer
Cross, Marcy Hill, Angie Mills and Coach Nick
lhle. Absent from the picture are Carrie Morarlty,
Stacey Theiss, Heather McPhail, Michelle
McCoy, Angie Swiger, Coach Mike Swi1er aDd
Debbie Halley.

SYRACUSE FINISHES FIRST HALF IN
SECOND - The Syracuse soltball team con·
eluded the lirst half of the season in second place ·
in the standings. The team featurl!!l, in the front
row from left to right, Megan Wolfe, Valerie
Connolly, Roberta Caldwell, Amber Cummings
and Nikki I hie. In the hack row, from left to right,

U.S. nets 17
gold medals in
Pan-Am Games

SEED AND MILLING
HEADQUARTERS·

JNDlANAPOLIS (UPi l
Americans enjoyed their biggest
gold medal harvest of the Pan
American Games Thursday- on
Fldei Castro' s birthday .
While Cuba could manage..&lt;mly
one gold medal in honor of their
leader on hls 61st birthday, the
United States amassed 17 gold
medal s to run lhelr total for the
Games to 80.
Jackie Joy ner·Kersee . the re·
c iplent oft he 1986 Sullivan Award
as the nation' s top amateur
athlete, led the way for the
United States by equalllng the
world record ln the women's long
jump wlth a leap of 24 feet, 5'/,
inches.
Joyner -Ke rsee tied the mark
set by East German Helke
Drechsler in 1986 at Dresden,
West Germany , on her sixth and
final attempi On her second
jump. Joyner-Ker see exceeded
Drechsler 's mark but the leap
was disallowed beca use her rlght
foot went over the takeoff ilnC'.

SEE YOUR DEALER NOW

@nation @apuy
MILLING DIVISION

Seeda. Bird Seeds· Oyster Shells and Grit· Fertilizers· Lime
Cement and Mortar · Stock Salt · Water Softener Remedial
Salt. Utters. Vaccine- Roofing- Paints· RadBrandfandngBalar and Binder Twine· Sprays- Gat•- Hay- Straw.

·SUGAR RUN MILLS

Mulltrry Ave.

''

l

I

· P-.y, Oh.

The Daily Sentinel

A SPECIAL EDITION IN THE
THE DAILY SENTINEL
AUGUST 27,1987

(USPS 11,._11811)
1\ Dh I~ ton of MuiUmt-dia, In(·.

Puhli "l hf'C:t C'\'r'l'' ' .tfH•t·noon . M o nda~·
F'rlrln~' · 111 Churl ~1. . Ptl·
Ohln b~' 1h1• Oh io V.llh•\ Pub·
\l!'llln .c ('nmp:.nv Mul11mNIIu In&lt; ..
Pomf'nW. Ohio 4'i764, Ph . '19'!·215fl St:•·
c·ond da~s po~1.1~1· pu ld at Poml"t'ov .
Ohio

lh tough

m l'lll)' ,

.
'

MPmbf'• : lJnl11'&lt;1 Ptl'~l' lnh'rnallonul ,
lnktnd D~tll v Pt'f'l'il'i As~n('i.llion und lhf'
Ohi o Nf'" "P·•IX'r As,.(l(•idllon Nallon,tl o
Ad\"l'rllslng R&lt;'PrPsf'nl ,t11Vf'. Rr&lt;tnham '
N&lt;'w spapt"r Salf'~. 7:\.l Thlrll A\·f'nU( '.
N'•w Ym k. N""" Ym k 10017.

POSTMASTER. Sf'n(l addrf'l'i!' ( haTIJ!:('!o;.
to Thf' OJilv ~lhwl . Ill Cou11 St
Pomf'roy Ohio :l!l71lq.

••
'

SUBSI'RIPTJON RATF-~
By ( 'arrtt&gt;r or Motor Routt&gt;

992-2156~

Onf' W£'f'k ...... .. . .. .................. $1.2~
Onf' Monlh .. .. ..
.. ... $!l4~
Onf' Y('ar .. ...... , ......... W1.00

•JNGLECOPV
PRICE
Dati~ .....

Subserilx'rs not d('slrlnl! lo pay I h(• c a I ·
t IC'r mav rf'mlt In ndvanN' dlrC'cl to
Th&lt;' Dallv ~ntln(') on a :l. ti or 12 month
ba&lt;!.l" Cr.N111 w 1II bC' ~l\"('h cu rriC'r &lt;'ach
WC'C'k

ASK FOR BRIAN OR DAVE

avallabf{'.

Mall

·'

~uhAcrlptl01ut

Inside MPI~ C..nty
l:i WOO!&gt; .......... .-...... .. .. ........ .. .. $17.2!1
26 Wet'ks .................. ............. . ~14 06
fi2 W('('ks . ........ .. .. . . ....
.
OUIIIIde Melp County

•,

********************

No sub!icilptlons by mall permltl('(lln
arC",tS Wh('ff' hom&lt;' cat ri('f "f'rvlc(' i!O

AD DEADLINE IS AUG. 19, 1987

$G6 rl6

13 Wl'l'ks . . .. . . ..... .. ... ... ,. SIR 20
26 Wl'f'ks .. ... . ...... . ... .. . . t\~ to
!i2 Wf'{'ks ...... ... ...... ..... .. ... . Sfi7.fi0

'
I I

992·2119

).

.

'l

�'

Tigers within half game of
first place after 4-1 ·~riumph

Fridliy. August 14. 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-4.,-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday's sports briefs...
By United Press lnterna!lionlll
Baseball •
Teams'. from China, South
Korea , Taiwan, Australia ,
Guam, India and Japan will
compete In the 14th As ian Ama·
leur Baseball Championships In ·
Tokyo lat er this month to select
the Asian representative to nex t
year's Seoul Olympics .... Boston
councilor Maura Hennigan Ca ·
sey has proposed r eserving seats
for non-drlnl\ers at Bos toh
Garden and Fenway Park, say·
lng the s ports fans should be a ble
to enjoy a gaine a1 the stadiums
w itho ut harass ment from
drunks .... Scott Mcint yre's RBI
singl e In the llth Inning e nabled
Red Oak . Iowa, to eliminate
Wichita Kountry Tyme. 6-5 a nd
advance to the semifinals of the
Na tional Baseball Co ngress
World Series in Wichita , Ka nsas.
The game began Wedn esday but
was halted by rain In the bottom
of the e ighth with the score t.led 5·
5.

RUTLAND'S LITTLE LEAGUE TEAM which
finished the season (Including tournament play)
with a 9 and 5 record, Is pictured above. Front
Row (L·R): Bobby Moodlspaugh, Billy Jones,
Jason Miller, Jason Hart. Back Row: Coach

•

••

.•
..•
~

Wayne Adams, Gary Adams , Bobby Wright, Scou
Peterson, Rusty Edmonds, Shannon Walker ,
Terry Powell. Abse nt: Keith Jones, Coach Larry
Richmond.

Basketl&gt;all
Former Kansas coac h Ted
Owens was se lected coach of the
Int er nat ional Basketball Associ·
a tion All -Star tea m . The 12- man
squad will depart In mid·
September on a Far East tour . ...
The Denver Nuggets will open
their eight-ga me preseason sche·
dille in Phoenix Ocr. 20 against
the Suns. Nuggets officials a n·

nounced Thursday . Denver's
first preseason home game w111
be Oct. 21 against the Chicago
Bulls at McNichols Arena. The
Nuggets are also scheduled to
play Phoenix, Portland and twice
against Dallas and San Antonio.
Cycling
Greg LeMond said he has
agreed to a one-year contract to
ride lor PDM , a Holland- based
team sponsored by an electronics
m a nufacturing company . Finan·
clal terms wer e not released
after LeMond signed a lett er of
Intent to ride lor PDM . officials
said. Under Union Cyc llste Inter·
natlonale rules. a contract can·
not be s igned until the season
starts Oct. ) .... Doug Shapiro of
Burlingame, Calif., a three-time
competitor in the Tour de
. France. will miss the rem ainder
of the racing season a ft er relnju·r·
lng his left leg during a siX-rider
crash on the first lap of the Reno
t Nev .l C.rlterium. the lOth s tage
of the Coors International Blcyc le Class ic .
Football
The Atlanta F a lcons traded
second-year running back-wide
receiver Ke ith Williams to the
Ta mpa Bay Buccaneers for a n
undisclosed condi tio na l 1988
draft choice.
.
Golf
· Tatro Ozaki notched a n eag l~
and five birdies for a 6-under- par

65 and a tw&lt;r stroke lead after the
opening round of the $265,000
Nikkel Cup Golf Tournament In
Tokyo.
Hockey
The Buffa lo Sabres announced
defenseman Phil Housley ha s
" contra ct
signed a new multi-year
with the tea m. Hou sley, 23,
e ntering his sixth season with th e
Sa bres. collected .21 goals and 46
ass ists In 78 games las.t year ....
The bet rolt ·. Red Wings announced' center Mark Lamb and
r ight wing Mark Kumpel s igned
two-year co ntract s.

I Bowling I
Mid \\'et&gt;ki&gt;N. BowllnJII.Ril~li '
Nor1hrrn Dl\'l~lon
T1•u.m
\\'
N; t pp&lt; ·r~ Trucking Co ..... , ......... !'lti
1.&amp;.1 C ro&amp; Pin lt .................... fJll
Po tnr C lin l~·- ...... ;.,. .......... , ·: .. .Jfi
C:;d llpolis TnbatTO C'o. ..

!t il liS un(j Y.i r•lj:! ht " ,..
PIJnl !': r.rn . ..... ..

'T'ht; ~lltc h in R,u·n
Ttw lllark ~hPPp~ ..
T1~ u m ~rlf", :

L
'.!4
:ill
~~~

·' ...• .&amp;4

. •.
.. .....
.. ,.
..

40
:U\
,'\()
Hi

&lt;Ill
42
.~il
~i-1

PQinl t llnlt·. 2:16fT ; L&amp;•.J

'-'"'1

Gt o &amp; Pi11&lt;1 , 2.1ti.'\: H;~ll s
WriJ:; hl .ot, 1~u;;
M1 ·n:- HI Sl•rlt""- : Mot' Norm ..1 11 . "i.1i; Bnbh.'
n nu~ h . fll 9: C'~1rl D4' Win . !Ml\J: W•Jmf•n Ill
Sl•rll'.:; · Sh .11 on .Jnhno;on . 4FI1 : ,l ulif' 1-lndj:t(\
41i9 ; S.,nch Wri ~ hl . oiAA;

TPam t.a m " : Po int Clin k . !H:l: Pl:1111 "
Ct o. 1100 : Pnin l C'llnlt'. ~13: M~ ' ll l' HI (;;.~mt" :
Mo!l;t• Not·m &lt;tn ._ 21:Z; 0~,,., . Mull rn ... . 1~:! :
f'h ,ltlr-. H orl ~f' . 190: Wom• •n HI G;tmt •:
~a mi\ Wr\J! hl. 17U; C1111T 'I.I&lt;ht Au-.nn . IAA:
1\1.• n N11 ppo.~1 . ll•i

.: Becker
;ousted
&lt;

.,

By COLLINS YEARWOOD
UPl Sports Writer
Without Jack Morris, the Detroit Tigers dispatched the New
York Yankees In their series
earlier this week. With Morris.
the Tigers soon may prevent the
Yankees and even the first-place
Toronto Blue Jays from claiming
the American 'Leagu~ East tltle.
After going nearly six · weeks
and five starts withOut a victory,
Morris Thursday turned In an
fl-s trlkeout, five- hitter In a 4·1
,triumph over the Kansas City
Royals that drew the Tigers
within half a game o!Toronto for
the AL East lead.
Morris Improved to 13-6 as the
Tigers win for the 18th time In 27
games since the Ail-Star break .
·'This was the first time In a
long time I've thrown all four of
my pitches and had a pretty good
Idea where they were going,"
Morris said. "I had an exceptional fastball and that touched
·everything else off."
JUNIOR NATIONAL LEAGUE ALL STARSY.vet!e Y.ouns, TriCia Baer, Tina Connolly, Holly
. Morris lost his shutout wheri
Front Row (L-R): Meliaa Sinon, Misty Butcher,
Williams. Not pictured: Glnser Findley, Heather
pinch hitter Jim E!se nrelch
Tammy Buckley, Michelle Brown, Chriall Maid·
Hudson, Tina Smith, Jody Caldwell. Coaches:
homered wi th one out in the
ens. Second Row: Lee Gillilan, Crystal Clark, Rich Ash, Ed Baer, Kenny Buckley, Nick lhle.
eighth.
" He was hot and we were not .
By the time I got in there he wa s
just going right at the guys ,"
Elsenreich said. "I knew he wa s
throwing fastballs and being a
CLE VELAND !UPII - The a nd the Browns have offered said .
Rlslen. who started 95 games pinch hitter, I just waited for him
agent lor all-pro offensive tackle about SJ million. In cluding bo·
Cody Rls len Is disgusted with the nu ses, Rlsien m ade about during his fir st s.e ven years with to throw it in there. That's the
progress of negotlal Ions wilh the $41~.000 In 1986, Hendric ks said.
the Browns. sa id he was sur- first hit I've ever gotten off of
him."
·
Browns and said a trade should
"What I'm suqi!sed about Is pris e d by the de!ay In
Morris'
II
strikeouts
m atched
be considered If ta lks do not there apparent negative attitude negotiations .
a
season
hi
gh.
He
retired
16
m ove forward.
"Never In my wlldes t dreams
toward Cody. Our differences tn .
" I suggest that they try to offers were roughly 10 percent. · did r anticipate being out of
·· trade him or sign him." Randy One would like to think tha.t those camp. much less this long,"
· Hendricks said Thursday In a differences cou ld be resolved . Rtslen told Cleveland television
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!) tl:'le ph o ne Intervi e w from What I've had to listen to Is that station WJW. "I'm just carrying
Paul
Page, a Williamstown.
Hous ton.
Cody Is only the second-or on each day ...:. staying In good W.Va., native, has been named
He ndricks said lh&lt;' latest prop- third-best lineman on the team. shape. I know I have to get my athletic director and head baseosa l wa s mailed overnight to the when he made all-pro last year," pads on at some point. ..
Browns on Monday, but he was Hendricks said .
Rookie Mike Junkin. the ball coach at Ohio Dominican
College.
: sti ll walling lor an answer.
"My 17 years In th e business Browns' only other holdout,
Page, 36, is a former as sistant
· Hendric ks sa ld he Is sreklng a tPils me thai II both sides want to signed a lour-year c ontract ear· baseball coac h at Marietta Coltw&lt;ryear contract for Rls)cn In make a deal. they roll up their lle r this week lor $2 million.
"Offensive lin em e n have been. lege. Th e 1973 grad uat e ol
: the neighborhood of $1.1 m !Ilion, s leeves and make a deal ," he
(or what&lt;:&gt;ver reason. the lowes t Mus kingum College also has
paid player s on the . field," served as a graduate assistant
coach at Mississippi State where
Hendricks said. " I'm not sure
linebackers (such as Junkin) he received a master's degree In
should be paid more than offen· physlcai education.
Page has been operating a
slve linem en ...
ca blnet remodeling business in
Rislen said. " I trust that
Vienna, W.Va .
something wlllbe work~ out ."

-R eport no progress in talks

Named to OD post

•

MONTREA L (UPI ) - Former
~ Wimbledon champion Boris
· Becker had a few words of advice
. for the current champio n. Pat
: Cash, after the Au str alian was

• eliminated in a third -round upset
: a t thl' Player's International.
"He has to hang in there and
pla y it out." Becker sai d . ."My
, fr iend . I know what' s goi ng on
:ther e. It' s eas ier to play outthere
"when you 're not Wimbl edon
: champion ."
• • Peter Lundgren. ra nked No.
:Oh2 in the wor ld. pulled the major
•
:-upset
of the round Thursday
·:when he beat No . 5 seed Cas h 6-4.
• 7-6 (7·2).

In other third-round pl ay. No. 2
seed Stefan Edberg came back
; lrom·a 5-2 first set defic it to beat
-: No. 15 seed J immy Atlas 7-5. 6-2.
·• No.· 1 seed Ivan Lend! bea t
-: Canadian Andrew Sz naj de r 6-1,
• 6-1.
r. No. 6 seed John McEnroe beat
'•·• Joha n Car lsson 6·3. 6-2. No.8 seed
• Kevin Curren defeated No.9 seed
·; Wally Ma sur 7-5. 4-6. 7~ 5. No . 10 .
~ seed Sloboda,fl Zivojinovic beat
• Ke lly Ever nden 6-1. 6·4 .
:
No . 4 seed Jimmy Connors
·defeated Jay Berger 4·6. 7-5. 4- 0.
•: Berger was forced to retire In the
' third sel because of leg cramps.
· No. 3 seed Bec ker. the Wim· ·
: bledon champ ion·in 1985 and 19R6.
: had no trouble beat ing Rich ey
• Reneberg 6-2, 6- 2. He
meet
: . Lundgren in the qua rterfinal s
• Friday.
•: When as ked about th e on- court
: proble ms Cas h pxperienced,
• Becker said : " It's not surprising.
In 1985. the first matc h I had aft er
winning Wimbledon. I had fi ve
m a tch points against me."
Cas h was unable to get his firs!
ser\'eS cons istently in play
· aga inst hi s Swedish opponent.
"I have a lot of work to do on
• m y serve ... Cas h said afterward .
" l.t ha s n't been good. I don' t know
exactl y what is wrong."

will

•

l-nor e media a t te nt ion as

!he

13engals' second -str ing quarterpack than he di d during hi s
record -se tt ing co lleg ia te ca ree r
~~Lo ng Beach Stale.
'
:. "What' s neat a bou t it . Is It
· s hows me Cin ci nn a ti is rea ll~·
.('o nccrncd abou t the Benga ts, ..
~a id

Cavnor. ·who inherit ed th e

backup 'r ole to 13oomer Esiason
when Ken AndPrson retired thi s
offseason. Gay nor will sta rt
Saturday in the tea m 's first
pres&lt;;&gt;ason game aga ins t Ta mpa
Bay.
Last year. Gaynor th rew only
three passes. completing a ll
t.hree. In college. he set school
· ·-•records for tota l ol'fcns.e. pass ing
ya rds in a s eason. pass completion s and compl etion percentage.
"I don' t have !he exp&lt;&gt;r ie nce,"
he sa id at the Benga ls' Wilmlng·
ton Coll ege training camp. "But
Jhere's on ly one way to get 11- to
play."
· Gaynor said he Is going to be
nervous Saturday but he won ' t let
the situation overwhelm him .
"I 'd like to think I'll play great
and be awesome ," he said with a
laugh. " Realistically, I just hope
I'm rea l solid. I hope I mak e good
decisions a nd not force the ball
tnto coverages."
·· Gaynor Is the first to admit he
plays much better under game
conditions than In pra ctice.

'

1981 FORDF-100 •••••••••••• S2995

V-8. stand .• P.S.• good condition ,

1979 FORD F-1 00 •••••••••••• S2 595

Auto .• P.B .. P.S .• black/silver. 'long bed .

1984 MERCURY TOPAZ ••••• S4295

4 dr., 4 _c yl., auto., P.B .• P.S .• air.

198.0 FORD MUSTANG ••••••• Sl295

2 dr.• auto .• 6 cyl.

1979 CHEVY MALIBU ••••••••• s1 095
4 dr.. auto .• P. B.• P... air.

1978 FORD GRANADA •••••••• S795

2 dr.• auto.

CITATION~ ••••••••••••••••• S1 09 5

1980

4 dr.• V-6. auto .• air.

1977 MONTE CARLO ••••••••••• S995

Auto .• P.8 .. P.S.

FRIDAY - AUG. 14
SATURDAY- AUG. 15

•

~jPete
. Johnson indicted
.
~~n
cocaine violations
..

•

-: WILMINGTON. Ohio tUP l i Doug Ga .v nor says he's gett ing

to first baseman Steve Balboni.
who bobbled the ball . Nokes wa s
retired on the play, but MadloCk
scored for a 1-0 lead .
In the third, Nokes' RBI doubl e
pushed Detroit's lead to 2·0.
Pat Sheridan's run -scoring tri ple gave the Tigers a 3-0 lead In
the sixth. Lou Whitaker's drive to
deep center allowed Sheridan to
scpre..

-:
PALMER HIT- Houstoa'eDoucSmlth (119) stopaKan~a~~City'•
: Paul Palmer with thll tackle In lint hall action of Thursday's
• pre-lleMOn Ill&amp; In the 1\Mrodome. It was the firs&amp;·exhibition lilt of
:: the ye"f lor hotb lei!JM. (UPI)
•

.•

·lots of media
.attention

straight batters until Danny
Tartabull walked In the seventh.
Royals starter Mark Gublcza,
9-12, lasted two batt~rs Into the
sixth Inning. He walked six and
gave up five hits .
Control problems plagued Gu·
blcza In the first Inning. Bill
Madlock and Kirk Gibson wa lked
and Alan Trammell was hit by a
pitch. Nokes bounced a grounder

LIVE

;Gaynor gets
'.1

The

Ohio

ON VOUCHER ·PURCHASES
in our CLOTHING
and.SHOE DEPARTMENTS
CLOTHING VALUE

·,

$100
$10

LESS 10% DISCOUNT
(2} $45 VOUCHERS

.

: Crites said Johnson, now a
·~sed car salesman In Miami, has
:assured federal prosecutors he
;Wlll be present In federal court at
~olumbus ,for his arraignment
,Aug. 21.
·
:- The ln4Ictment caps a slxoi)'IOnth Investigation by suburban
;IJpPf!r Arlington pollee, the Drug
iti:nforcement Administration,
:t:!te FBI and the U.S. attorney's
pfflcl', Crites said .

.

•.

..

ADVERTISED ITEMS EXCLUDED

;: COLUMBUS. Oht'o tUP H - A
[our-cou nt Indictment charging
; lormer Cincinnati Bengals and
&lt;Ohio Statt&gt; Unive rsity runnlng: back Pete Johnson with cocaine
violations ha s been ret urned by a
federal grand jury.
U.S. Attorney D. Michael
·Crites sa id Thursda y the charges
carry a maxlinum penalty or 65
·years In prison and a fin e of more
' than S.l million.
• Johnson Is c harged with con·
:Splracy Involving the dlstrlbu,tion of cocaine, two counts of
-&lt;Jlstrlbutlng cocaine and travell ng In Interstate commerce to
;further cocaine distribution.

SORRY, NO LAY·AWAYI

:: The Investigation was begun
.,after Columbus optician Ronald
~~nd!'rson was arrested In February by DEA agents and Upper
•Arl!ng1on Pollee with about 14
•qunces or cocaine, Crites said.

•I

I

•. Anderson pleaded guilty to one
cpunt of distributing
~ocalne and faces a maximum
entence of 20 years tn prison. He
f~deral

has not yet bf)en se ntenced.
Crites sa id Anderson turned
federal witness and will tes tily In
Johnson's trial.
Anderson Ide ntified Johnson,
an All-American at OSU, as his
supplier. Crites said.
Johnson was a running back
with t~e Ben gals for seven years
and In 1983 was the team 's
aU -time rushing leader.
He left the Bengals that season
and had s hort stints with the
Miami Dolphins and San Diego
Chargers before retiring from
football .

Boardman cops.
LL state crown
IRONTON . Ohio (UP!)
A
Little League team from Board·
man won the state championship
tournament Thursday and the
right to represent Ohio In the
national tournament starting
Monday In Blair, Neb.
Joe Maceyak, who pitched all
six Innings, led Boardman West,
· giving up one run on six hits and
str.IJdng out seven. At bat,
Maceyak had a three-run homer
In the lH defeat o! Holly Hills of
North Canton.
Jason LaCivita, K.C. Swanson,
Pete DeSoclo and Doug Wolfe all
had singles for Boardman West.
Holly Hllls scored on an RBI by
Bob bwln. Pitcher Clinton Langman gave up eight runs on nine
hits.

BOWL ONE
GET ONE FREE
SHOES RENT -A-PAIR
GET ONE PAIR FREE
HOT DOGS
BUY ONE
GET ONE
FREE
.

p

0 L
MA
E N

R E

0
y

s

~/l_fJ

East 2nd St.

Po111eroy, OHio

Phone
992-3432

NEW FOUl LIGHTS BEING INSTAUED
JOIN A LEAGUE TODAY - CALL

...

I'

'

'

'.

II

..

992-2780
992-2403
992.3432

"

,,

�•

.

..

.

•

The Dai!y Sentinel

By The Bend·

.Friday. August 14, 1987

·.

Page- 6

,..
•'

'•
•'

•

•
•

Salamander tunnels? ·

Star Grange selects
Patty Dyer master
Patty Oyer was elected master
of Star Grange .at a recent
meeting held at tlie hall.
Other officers elected were
John Montgomery, overseer;
Ruby Lambert, lecturer; Larry
Montgomery, steward; RlckMacomber, assistant steward; Max Ine Dyer,lady assistant steward;
Dorothy Bolen, chaplain; Waid
Nicholson, treasurer; Opal Dyer,
secretary; Ray Midkiff, gat.e
keeper: Monica Perry, Ceres;
Bernice Midkiff. Pomona; AI·
oorta Montgomery, Flora; Everett Holcomb, executi~e commit tee; Ben Rife. legislative agent ;
Mrs. Montgomeroy. women ac·
tivities chairman; Opal Dyer,
youth chairman; Neva Nichol·
son, deaf chairman: Mrs. Mont gomery, Information chairman:
Ca therine Colwell, membership

chairman; Alan Halliday. agrl·
culture · chairman; and Mrs.
Mon tgomeroy and Pam Colwell,
junior chairmen.
Reportrs were given by the
legislative agent, youth chair·
man, and the women's activities
chairman . Mrs. Nicholson
shotwed a slide presentation on
farm noises and hearing loss.
Meetings were a nnounced for
.Saturday at 6:30 p.m. a potluck
supper and work session, and the
annual hay ride and weiner roast,
Sept. 5 at 7 p.m. Anyone Inter·
es ted in joining either the Star
Gran ge or the Junior Grange are
encouraged to attend and enjoy
At the Ohio State Fair, Star ·
Gra nge displayed and placed
fifth . The Youth Grange exhibit
receive first place.

·.-Jacks reunton held

...

SSOO CASH REWARD
TO ANYONE WITH INFORMATION lEADING
TO THE ARREST OF THE PERSON OR
PERSONS WHO STOLE THE TRACTOR AND
BRUSH HOG FROM RAY RIGGS' LONG
BOnOM FARM
CONTACT RAY RIGGS ·OR THE
MEIGS CO. SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT

the evening.

•

Annual reunion of the descend·
ants of Levi Earl Jacks a nd
· Virginia Morrison w.a s held r ecently at the old Jacks place in
Rutland.
Following. a noon luncheon,
·gifts were presented to the oldest
attending, Dolly and Sylvan
·
Cleland. Rutland.
Among those attending we re
Mr. and Mrs . Russ Mozingo, Mrs.
Debbie Borah and children,
,. Angel. Ryan and Zach, Tina
Romine, all of Rutland; Mr. a nd
Mrs . Pat Aeiker, and children,
Patsy and Penny, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mrs. Sylvan Cleland, Ru tland; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cleland
and sons, · John and Justin,
Middleport; Mrs , Diana Hutchinson and sons. Dustin and Danny.
Lancaster.
Mrs. Patty Capehart, Racine;
Mr. and Mrs. Randall Gibbs,
Pomeroy: Mr. and Mrs. William
Van Meter. Middleport ; Alma
Zimmerman, Clifton, W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Rober t Wharton
and children, Rob and Jenni,
'Lancaster: Tammy Capehart,
Racine; Mr. a nd Mrs. · George
' Bing ah d daughter, Georgina ,
Lancaster: Trtcia Reeves, Lan.. caster: · Mr. and · Mrs. Stoney
•. Johnson and son. Joshua. Langsville; Mr. a nd Mrs. Ches ter
Johnson of Langsville.

AMHERST, Mass. (UP)) not threatened by automobile
Environmentalists who per· tires, said Beverly Cowdrtck •
suaded officials !o close a road so director of the Hitchcock Cent er.
salamanders could safety ml· an environmental grbup.
grate f.rom hillside · nests to · The salamanders migrat e
mat ing ponds now want to dig from their nests to tiny mating
tunnels for the . crawling ponds when s pring rains start.
creatures.
Hundreds of the nocturnal creaThey are asking Amherst off!. tures crossed Henry Street last
ciais for permission to install a spring with the help of around·
tunnel or two under Henry Street the-clock volunt eers. who donned
so the spotted salamanders arc rain gear a nd carried flashlights .

Mr. a nd Mrs. Daniel Lambert,
Bridgett, Danielle, Melinda a nd
Daniel: Ewington; Mrs. Belinda
Lucas and VIrginia, Michelle,
Sissy, and David, Ewtngton;
Mrs. Janet Grimes and sons,
Eric and Louis, Bradenton, Fla.;
Kathy Van Meter. Middleport;
Mr. and Mrs. Mylie Jacks,
Springfield; Mr. and Mrs. Dannie Jacks and children, Willie.
Mitch, and Deenla. Shade.
Mrs. Judy Bing and Gary
lm go ld, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Leland Wade, Springfield; Mr.
and Mrs. Mickey Hutton and
sons, Marty and Chris and his
friend, Chr istina. Rutland; Mrs.
Betty Rupe: Mrs. Charlotte Stewart and Je ni, Langsville; Dar·
rell a nd Brenda Dotson. Langs·
ville; Mr. and Mrs. Kevin J ewell,
Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Cheland of Lancaster; Tony
Jacks, Langsville, Carol Jacks.
Langsvllle.; Mr. and Mrs. Wll·
llam Gotschall. Sr., Columbus;
Eric Mozingo, Bremen; Rusty
Mozingo, Rutland; John Hankla
and sons, Eric and. Dean, Rutland; Ji m Wells, Ewington;
Danny Walker, Rutland; Mrs.
Lois Snodgrass and children,
Lois . Janni, and Key ln, Langs·
ville; a nd Mr. and Mrs. Randall
Gibbs and childre n, Gina,
Rhonda, Randall, Pomeroy.

Evangline society meets
A shower for the nursery and discussion on articles to be sent
' kitchen of the church was held to Grundy Mou ntain Mission wa s
when the Evangeline Missonary held . Work will continue on ·
Group of the Pomeroy Church of comnforts and the history al·
Chr ist met for a picnic supper in , bums at the next meeting. A
thl' church basement. ·
donation was mad!' from Home
Pat Thoma pres ided at the Mtssons on the kitchen cabinets
meeti ng with Janet Venoy giving at th e parsonage.
the opening prayer. For roll call
A report on financi a l assist ·
members related something per- a nee to Denny and Kim Allen was
tai ning to babies or children. given. Chartdine Alkire had the
.Mrs. Venoy's . devotions were closing prayer. Others at the
from Psalms 84·10. Officers' meeting were Gertrude Anre ports were given artd ca rds dr ews. Gertrude Bass, Eva Deswere sent to Eileen Bowers, sa uer. Bet ty Spencer, and Pau·
Th elma Sines. and Pam Nitz. A line Kennedy.

SCHOLARSHIP WINNER - Donia Rene Crane, left of
Middleport received the $500 Bob Evans Scholarship during the
4-H recopition luncheon, Aug. 10, althe i9870hloState Fair. Mary
Cusick, public relations director lor Bob Evans Farms, presented
the award.
'

••n•s·rwe
&amp;
p!nenl
Equi

MIDDLEPORT- Jenell Kelly
Barker received her masters of
science education degree fr om
the University of Dayto n on Aug.
2, summa cu m laude. The dau gh·
ter of Tom and J ea n Kelly.
Middleport , gra du ated magna
cum laude from Ri o Grande
Coll!'ge with a bachelor of

edu canon in 1984 . She had
graduated from Meigs High
sc hool, class of 1980, as an
honorarian.
Mrs . ,Baker Is ma rried to
Hobart Barker and the couple
res ide nea r Rutland. She teaches
sixth grade at the Salem Center
Elementary School.

.

'
'

•
'..•

TR.rNm' CHUROI. John JHif. ln!C'Iim pa!&amp;o

tor, IA:tbbk&gt; Buc.·k. SI.IMay &amp;~ 9.1p. Olun•h

p.m : mld\I.Wk V'T'\1«', 'yV('(inNida\'. 7 p.m.

CRACE EPISCOPAL CHURcH . :116 E.
Main St., lltJrnPrO, , SUOOay ~1vk'&lt;&gt;s : Holy
(l'iflvnuniOn on tl'w' 11,-,1 ~nd uy ot rac h month.
and ('(IITiblnNi .~·i!h mwnln~C prayf'f on lhr
thlrdd ~~·. Mornlr!$! pn.Yf"'' and !11'1"1Mn n"
alJ attn Surda,vs of thr rmnth. O!urt'h SchOOl
and Nu11'('1")' C'i lff' 111-m'kk'tl Coffl"(' lw.tur In tbrPur~h Halllmll'll:~lal(lfv fol~M'inll· th(&lt;o~.

P0!&gt;1f.ROY CliUflCH OF CHRIST. zct W.

• • • Main St .• Nrit Prru1tro . p1.uu r~·. Bltil' ~hall

THE
BACK TO SCHOOL
SALE BOOK

, "' ... • . 9::t'lll.m.; MomlnR wmthlp. tO: :fla.m.: Youth
·: ·:• rnt.'f'tln~f\: OOp.m .: E\-.'nln~\\'tii'Mip. 7:00p.
: ... : ~ : m. W~ay night priiY("I' tl"ffY&gt;fln~Z ~nd Bible .
... • MudV 7:00p.m.

:·..: --:

INSERTED IN TODAY' S PAPER

• •••
PI&gt;.\IERDY \\'£!-'Tm&gt;E rntJRCI&lt; OF
: ~.. CHR.L~. ·ltllti~lkiwn'l! Hornt- RoM tCounly

a.-.....

fiMd
Yafll ....-.c. Sutl!llv Wor·
.,...: -" WhplOa,m.: 81tWSrld\'lla.m.: Wrnhlp.6p.

• • • m. W-ay. llll&gt;il' 51101 . 7 Jtm.

:• .• . . C'HURC'Jt.
ow ~xn:R
mnu.:
AMn (\fnb. ~stor:

I

•

'•

'•
j

•

:

Name ------------------------------Address- _ _ _ _ _ _, - - - - - - -

,., , •
~

•, •

,-t ~

;
..
..
•
~

611 EASY MAIN, I'OMiJOY

------------------··
992-379$

78· 10· 011361

fte¥. StevH Ntl••
Mel\' til Frukll•

Re~ .

Re~.

Clemmte R. Zll•l«a. .lr.
Rn. Robert M••.n-

ASAURV lSyraCUS&lt;"I- Wors hip 11 a.m .
: Church S("hnol9 : .. s a.m.: Charflr Bib\ ('
JO hn Swf'l,ar1 ; Sabbath· SChool Superln · • Sfud:-- . Wf'dn~d ay . 7:30p.m . : UMW. flnl
tendMtl, l)arUne Stewart . sabbat h School
Tu£'Sda:--. 7:30 p. m.; Choll'l R(lh('8rsal.
bf.Ctnl a t 2 p . ~. on Sat urday afternoon
Wrdnf'Sday 6:;w) p.m .; UMW . fourth Sun·
wllh.wor•h .ip ~l« followtn aat 3 : 15p. m .
du y. 6: :W p.m. I Nelsoro .

'E vrryonP welcome.
·
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
-SI-Ster Harriett Warnf'l'. S1.1p1. Sun~y
S&lt;:hool 9: JO a .m .; Mornlne Worohtp, 10: 0
&amp;.m .
.
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Lyston
Halley, minister; Sa turday e-ven ing
eva n ~t'lll ll c &amp;ervices, opm to public, 7 p.
m .: Sunday Chon: h School. 9:30 a .m .:
Mornlna Worship 10:30 a.m.
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Po·
meroy Plkr. E . Lam1r O'Bryant, pal tor:
Jack Nt•f'ttl, Sunday School Dlreclor. Sun·
d•y School, 9:30 t .m ,; Morning Worship ,
10:0~ evtnlnawouhip, 7:00p.m. fD .S.T .)
• 7:30 ·tE.S.T. I: Wedn..day Prayer S.r·
vice. 7:00p.m . (D.S.T. ). 7:30P.M. (E .S.
T.); Mission Friends (lj'f"' 2-6). Royal
AmbauadOra (boys ages 6-18), and Girl1
In Ac tion (ages 6-181 on Wt'dnesdays. 7 p .
m . (O.s:r.1• 7:30p.m. &lt;E .S.T. i: '1\&amp; ..day
Vlshatlon, 6:30p.m
' FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH. Bat·
ley Run Road. Rev . Emmf'lt Raw lOll, pas·
tor. Handl ~ D~r~nn , supt. Su.nday School.
10 a .m .; SUnday evening serv ice. 7:30p.m .
: Bible tttathlna. 7: l0 p.m. Thurlday .
SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherry St ., Sy·
racuu. ServicMI , 10 a .m. Sunday . Even ing
services Sunday and Wednesday 7:00 p.

m.

'
.,

THRU FRIDAY, AUGUST 21

I'ENTII!IL CLVSTER
IC4,v. Jaml'lt £. CerbiU

at 7:30 p.m.

a•

'

•

pt'('M"tll~ !IN'· 1

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Rev. KelthEbltn,
pastor . Sunday School 9: 30 a .m ., Wade
Hayman.supt .; MornlngWonhlp, tO: lOa.
m .; Sunday evening service 7: 30 p.m .;
Wednesday Prayer Meeting , 7:30p.m .
MT . MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD.
Raclnr. Rev. JamH Satterfield, pastor.
Freeman .WIIItam!l, Supt . Sunday , School
9:t:i a .m.l Sunday and Wednesday even,.
Ina services, 7 p .m .
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST.
Corner Sixth and P a lmer. Earl Eden Pas·
tor. I;Job 'Parker , S.S. Supt. ; Ca thy fttggs,
, Asst . Sup!. Sunday School, 9: 1~ a.m.;
Mor ning Worship. 10: ~ a. m .; Sunday
Evening service, 7 p.m . Prayer meetlng
and Blbl~ Study Wf'dnetday evenlne. 1 p.
m .; Children's c hoir practice, Wednet·
da y, 7 p.m.; Adult choir practiCP, Wed. , 8
p.m .; Radio program. WMPO . Sunday,
8: 30a.m.

ENTERPRISE -

KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST . Vt•rnun
minislf'r: Oll v('r S1A'al n. Sundav
~hool ~Up l . PrC'aeh ln~ 9:.10 a.m . ('3Ch

~unt l :.v

HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION i'lltorman Ourhaml paslor . Sunday service.
9:30 a .m .; evenlng service 7:30 p_.m .
Praye&gt;r meeHn", Wfdned ay ;--'l~ -30 p.m.
AF.ARWAL l.OW RIOCE CHURCH OF'
C1fRIS"f . .Josf'Ph 8 . H o~kl n s. p.ts tm·. Bl bl('
Cl u.li'- , 9: ,'VI a.m.: Mornl nc Wor'! hlp 10: .'Wl ;t ,
m.; En:-nlnjl Wor,; hip, 6; 3fl p.m . Thursday
Biblr Stud,·. 11:.10 p.m
~F: W ·~'TJ\'F:R~VrLL F: C'OMML:t\'ITY
CHL' RCH. ~unclay S&lt;·hool ,q4'r\' l('f' . 9: ~ ~ a.
\\'! w~hl p

'lf'l"\'h·c•

10: .10

;1. m .:

E'·;mgrllsHc· S.•n : IC'r 7::11 p.m . Wrdnr-s
da.v: P1 · a~· rr mN' IinR 7: 311 p.m . Thur~cla~ · .
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST. PomC' r~·­
Harrisawll\t• Rd . Rohf'rt Pu rl('ll. min l~ ­
tr..r: Stf"\'f' Stanle-y. S , S , ~upt . ; Rill MC"F. I·
ro~·. A.~&gt;~ I. Supt.: ~v ntln y Sdt•,.,J !I · '\11 01.m .:
\\'orshlp Sf'n •lrf" 1tl: ;n a.m.: 1:";\'C"TI Inr,: \l'OI'·
iihlp Suml ;:t~' 7 p.m . ••nd Wl'd nt '!'da y. 7 p.m .
ST . .IOIIN l.UTHERAN CHURCH. Pine
GrovC' . Tnr RN·. Willl ;am Mlddi Mt.l';trth,
pilSIOr . Churth !H' r'\' IC'(' 9::10 u.m .: Sund:av
!i=i·hool10:.10a .m .
·
BRADBURY CHU RCH OF' CflR tST.
.lohn Wrla hl . pastor. Sund;ty Srhnol !': :mn.
m : l.arry H.t .vn~ . S . S. Sup t. Morn lnR
worship 10: 30 .t.m.
·
RACI NE CHURCH OF Tlii: NAZA ·
RENE . Rcov. Llo)"d D. Grim m. ,Jr .. pustor.
Ont Bass . Ch;tlr m :tn or IhC' Bo;trd of C'hl'ls·
11.u1 Life-. SUnda y School !1: ;l() ~t . m . ; Mor n·
In,~! \l'Orship 111 :311 a .m.; ·r vangf' llsllc )I.C'r·
\'IN' 7: ()(} p.m. Wf'dn f'Sdn y st'r\' IN'. 7 p.m .
I.IBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURC H. f)(', .
Tf'r. Wrtf•d.' C':tll , p;1s1nr, ~~ · n · h't •:o ~undtt\'
· H! ,.. m . ,1nd i p.m , WC'dnC"Sdl(\1 . 7 p .m .

Wo rship 9 a.m.;

Churrh Schooi iO ·a .m.: Blblf'Stud.v. Tuf"S·
r:lil~·. 7: 30p.m .: UMW. Flnt Mo nday. 7: 30
p.m.: UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m . Choir Rr•
hr~mi&lt;JI. . 6: :10 p.m . Wl'dn('5day. l Franklin I
F'LA1'WOOOS- Church School.10a .m .
: Worship. 11 a .m . ; Blbl(' Study, Thllrs·
day . 7 p.m .: UMYF. Su"day, fi p.m .
lf"ra.nkllnt .
FOREST RUN - Worshi p 9 a .m . ; .
C'hurTh School 10 A.M.: Cho lr prariiCP.
TuNiday, ti :.l) p.m .; UMW, fln1 Tut'!dav.
7::.l p.m. lNei~ML
·
HEATH tMiddJ('port l -Chuf('h Si' hool .
9:30a .m .; Mornln~ Wors hip 10: 30 a .m .:
Youlh Group. &lt;I p.m .; Wrdnrsday. Chu rch

Choir rrhNrsal, 7 p.m.;
Thursday .
Prayrr S(orv\('(', 6: 30p.m.; Bl bi €' Studv , 7
p.m . IZuni~ul .
·
MINERSVILlE - Wor!lhlp S(!rv l«' 10
a .m.: Churt'h Sc-h ool , ~ 1 n.m .: U MW. thi rd
W('(ln ~ay. 1 p.m .: Cholr prae1lcc. Ma n·
day, 1; 30 p.m. INE'Isoo\ .
·
PEARL CHAP EL - Worship Sf&gt;rvle1'
9: 30 a.,m.; Chu rc h School 10: 15 a.m .:
UMW Srrond Tur.'i da.y, 7::\0 p . m .: IM'WS. ·
man \
POMEROY - Ch urch Sc hool. 9: 15a.m .
: Worship 10; .10 a .m .; Choir re hearsal
Wf'dnrsday, 7: :m p.m .: UMW. !if'C"'nd
Tu~day . 7:30p.m. : UMYFSunday,6p.m .
1Corbltl 1.
ROCK SPRI NGS- Chu r&lt; h School, 9: 15
a .m.; Worship lO.a.m.: BiblrSiudy. WE'dnf'Sday. 7:30p.m.: UMYF rSenlorsl . Sun·
day , ~p. m .: rJunlorsJ £&gt;very orh rr Sun·
da.v . 6 p.m. (Franklll'l\ .
'
RUTLA.NO- Chu rch School, 10 a. m .:
Worship, tl a.m . UMW. first Monday. 7: 30
p.m .
SALEM CENTE R - Churc h Sch0oi 9: 15 .
a. m.; Wo rship 10: 15.p.m. rMu!lsmanl.
:
SNOWVILLE - Wonhlp. 9:00 a.m . ; ··
t'hurc h sch0ol9: 45 a. m. (Mussm an\

SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev . ReJtr Or•ceRn. PliUII McGuire

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN . Rogf' r Watson. pastor . Cren snn Prall , Sunda y
School Supt . Mornin g Wors hip 9:30a.m .:
Sunday School 10: 30 a .m.; Evening ser·
\ '!('(' , 7: 30 p.m.
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Donald Shui'.
. past or; JO(&gt; Sayrt&gt;, Sunda y School Supl .
Sunday School 9: 4!) a .m .: EvenLng worship 6:·XI p.m.; Prayl"r Me-eting. 6: 30p.m .
Wednesday.
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST. Dav{' P r('nt lrt•. minister . [)('ryl
W('lls. Supt. Chur('h School 9 a .m .: w o'r.
ship Servlcr. 9: 4!\ p.m .
CHESTE R CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE . Rev. H('rberl CraiE". pas 1or .
Fra nk R i ff iC'. supt,. Sunday Scho()l9: 30 a.
m.; Wors hip sf'rvlcr. 11 a .m . a nd 1 p.m .
Su nd ay. Wf'dn('sday . 7 p.m . Prayrr mf'f'l ·
In~ .

LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURC H. David B€'il. pastor. Robf'rt E.
Barton . Dlr£'Cior of Chr isllan Educallon:
St('\'£&gt; Ebltn. assislant . ~unday School 9: 30
a.m.: MornlnR worship 10: 30 a. m .; T£""rns
inAr1 ion. fl p.m .; Evenlnji!' Wo rshlp , 7:00p.
m. W,f'dnt"sda:v &lt;'Vl'ntn~ prayer and Bible
!:lud,v , 7·00pm C hotrpraC!IC'€'. Thursday,
7
CHURCH "- OF CHRIST .

p.m .
HARRJSONVIL.l..E HOLINESS CHA ·
PEL of the w esleyan Holiness Churcll .
Rev. David F~rrt&gt;ll . pastor. He nry Eblin,
Sunday school s upt . Sunday worship ser·
\' ICPS, 10 a. m . a nd 7 p.m.; you1h meellnfl,
6: :lO p.m. Tuesday: mid·we~k serv iC"e, 7 p.
m~ WNinf'Sday.
STIVERS WORD OF FAITH . Ga ry Hoi·
tE"r. pastor. Sunday services. 9: .lOa.m. and
1 p.m .; mid-week, 7:30Thursday.

'DExTER

C ha ri~

RusSP II Sr .. mtnlst!'r. Rick Ma·
comber. sup1. Sunday School 9:30a.m.;
Worship s('rv ic~ 10: 30 a .m . Blbl&lt;' st udy,
Tu('sday , 7:30p.m .
REOflGANIZED CHURCH 'OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LA ITER DAY SAINTS. Portland· Racin&lt;' Road . William Roush. pastor.
Linda Evans, c hur ch sc hool director.
Churchschool9: ·3 0a.m .; Mornlnflwor,shlp
10: 30 a .m .: Wednesday evenln~ prayer
Sl"r\'ICPs . 7: 30p.m .
.
BETHLE HEM BAPTIST. Re-v. Earl ,
ShulN', pa stor. Worship serviC"E'. 9:30a.m .
. Sunday School10: 30 a.m . Bible St udy a nd
pray('r !Wrvlcr Thursda.v. 7: 30p.m.
CA RlETON INTERDENOMlNATJON.
AL CHURCH . Klnpsbury Road. Rev. Da ·
vld Curfman, pastor. S\lndav School9: 30
a.m .: Ralph Ca rl. Supt. EvPntng worship
7:00 p .m . Prayer mr(lling, . Wt'dnE'Sda.y
7'110 p.m
. LONG . B01TOM CHRISTIAN. Ve-rnon
Eldrld~E'. pastor; Wallacr DamPWood , S.
s . Supt. Sunday School 9:30a.m .; Wors hip
Servi«. 10: 3P a.m .

HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. Hartford, W. Va .
Rev . Da vid McManis. pastor. Church
School 9::\0 a.m. :· Sunday morning scr·l.
viCE'. ll a.m.; SUnday evenin g service,
17; 30 p.m; Wedn esday pray('rmeetlng, 7: 30
p.m .
FAIRVIEW BTBLE CHURCH, Letart,
W. Va., Rt. 1. James Lewis, pas lor. Wor- 1
ship serv ices 9;30 a.m.; Sunday Schoolll ,
a.m.; Evehlng wotshlp 7; JO p.m . Tuesday
' cotta~e prayer mee11ntc and BiblE" Study
9: 30 a.m.: Worship serviC!'. Wl'dnesday .
7::\0 p. m.
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERANCIIURCH,
Walnut and Henry Sis., Ravenswood. W.
· Va. The Rev. George C. Wei rick, past or.
· Sunday SChool. 9:XJ a.m.; Sunday worship
·11 a.m .
,
CALVARYBIBLECHURCH iocatedon
I Pomernv Pike Counl" Road
near Flat-

APPlE GROVE _Church S£-hool g; JO
a.m Worship, 10. 00 a.m. (firs t a nd lhird
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF OfRIST,
s undays\: Blbl€' st udy f'V('ry- sunday 7 p .
5th and Main, AI Hartson, mlnlater;
'm ..· UMW Sf'c•ond Tu r.~ay
••
Richard OuBoae, Associate Pastor; Mike
, 7 : 00 p.m. :
Gerlach, Sunday School Superintendent.
Prayf'r mrrtlng. WE'dncsday, 7 p.m .
25
IGracf'l.
·
.
-&lt;~
'
"
Bible School 9:30a.m.; Mornl, Worohtp
BETHANY ..:. Wors hip 9a m . Chu h
RACINE f'll!ST BAPTIST
Sti'Ve' .woods. Rev. Blackwood, pastor. S.rvle&lt;'S ·
10:.30 .a.m. Evenlna Worthlp :00 p.m .
Wednetday, 7:00p.m . Prayer meeting.
School. 10 a. m .; Bibi€'Sh~dy. W~nesd~.
~hvr·
s
Pa~tor.
Mik(&gt; SWiger.' Sunday: · ~:::::~h~IO~:~~~~;:.l~~~;·;~~ ·
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NA·
10 a.m .: Dorcas Wo m~n·s Fellowship,
. 00 ~ upl., Sunday. School ~ :30 a .m .; : nesday, 7 :~ p.m.- · ·
•
·
ZARENE. PASTOR Fred Penhorwood.
Wrdnr~a y. U a.m . {McG uirt:').
M~rnln~ worship 10 · 40 a.m., Sunday 1
FAITH .FELLOWSHIPCRUSADE FOR
CARMEL- Church School 9· 30 am.
IP\fnln~ worship 7:30 p.m .: Wednesday ·. CHRIST •
R
'., Blll White. Sunday Schoof Sopt. Sunday Worship,
10:45 a .m . ~rond and Fo~rih ' ' t"venln~tBiblestudy7:.'40p.m.
·
• &gt;lt.
t. 338, Antiquity. Rev.
School 9: 30 o.m. ; Morning Worohtp 10: &amp;~
S\.lndavs· F€'llowshlp dinner lth S 11 . . HJRLINGHAM COMMUNJTY CHURat
Franklin Dickens, pastor. Sunday morn·
a.m
.;
Evangelistic
meeting
7:00
p.m
.
'
thlrdth~rsday G·JOp.m IMc{;ulre ~ on . ,Burlingham. Ray Laudeormlt pastor: n,&amp;
lng 10 a.m.; Sunday evenlna 7:30p.m.
7: 00p.m. Prayer n\eetlng.
'', Wednesday,
EAST LETART'- churChSchool 9 a·m. : bc&gt;rl OEart. assls1anl past&lt;r. Sunday SmooJ
Thunday evenlnl:7:l&gt; g,m.
UNITED J'IUIIIBYTEBIAN MINIIITBY
Wo.,.hlp 10 a. m. s&lt;'COnd and fourth
to
wf'lti(:..!J.·m .: Wedn.. day, 6 p.m.
ITI~IV~~L
MJ:,N.:,V B~·
:'
OF tliEIGB CGIJNTY
::
lev. CUrl• Talbott
1G~!~('
UM':
fiMt TuE'Sday, 7: .l l p.m . : ·~~N~R"&amp;,E aOZfN~~W'u;!~ . ,sundaysCboollOa.m.; Worshlpaervftti
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN
LETART FALLS - Worship 9 am. . mlle offRt . m . Rev. BenJ . Watts !»&gt;St'or
!a .m.: SUnday evenlni~RVIce.7:30 p.m. ; l
•: CHURCH - SUildoy: Worahlp S.rvicel
Church SehoollO a.m. !Grace).
. ., : . Robert St&gt;arlf.'l, S.S. SUpt. SuncJa.Y Sdaooi · . , Wednelda)',evaatna service 7: :1) p .m.
·'
;• 9:00 a.m. : Chu~h ScbooltO: 15 a.m ..
MORNING STAR- Worship, 9:15a.m.: : ,9:30 a.m.; Mornfn&amp; Worohlp 10:30 a.m.: ., _ . CHURCH OF JESUs CIIRIST APOS • .
'
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN - .
Church School, 10:30 a.m.: Bible ST\&amp;dy,
Sunday evening"""''"" 7:30 p.m .: Wed ·
TOLIC- VanZUdl Aftd Ward Rd. Elder
'• Sunday Scbool, 9 a~m. ; Church service,
Thursday, 7:30p.m. (Rader) .
l'lf'Sday .. rvlce, 7:30p.m .
t • James Mill•. pater. SUIIday School .
to: I~ a.m.
RACINE WESLEYAN -ChurchSclool
. SILVER RUN BAPTIST, Bill Uflle
, J0; 30a.m .; WorshlpS!rviClO Sunday
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY·
••
tO a.m.: Worship lla.m.: UMWtounhMon: . ~astor. Steve Little, s. S. SUpt . Sunday ' ! : p.m .; B!bl• Stutly.L Wedneoday, 7:30'p.m '
•, TERIAN ·- Sunday School, 10 a .m.;
~l Church aervlce, 11:15 ·a .m.
. dtoy at 7:30p.m.: Men's Pra,.,.. Breakfast, . . s:;h:;oi 10 a.m .; i!COmlnJ woraip. II a.m.: ; ; ' CALUIVARRoY PILuRIM CHAPEL Harr~ '
Wednesday, 7 a.m. !Grace) .
n ay evening worship 7;00 p.m. PraytT· • r•onv e
ad. Jhav. Dewty Kina. P..tor· .
:1
RUTLAN~ CHUROf OF GOD, Paat..-,
SUTTON - Church Scbool. 9:30 a.m.: . meetln~ and Bible &amp;ludyThursdayi 7:30 p. . ,, ,, Clinton Fautlc, SUnday School Sllpt.:
.11Jhn Evano. Sunday School 10;00 a.m.;
Morning Worship tO:I! a.m , first and third · :m
.
tch moetlng Wedneoday at 7 p.m . : ; day Schoot9:30a.JI1.; -ntnawcnltlp 11
Sunday J,lomlna Worohlp 11:00 a.m. ChU·
0 I lNG LIFE BA1"1'1!1T CHURQI·''• · a.m.: SUnday. eYIIIfoi...,IClO 7·30 'm • ·
dren' 1 Church 11 a.m. SUnday E1lflllnl · Sundayi; Fellowship dinner wtlh carm•l' '
; - 383 J'l. 2nd Av~.. M.lddt.,.ort, Sunday. ) !'.'!"&gt;'..!'~ Meottnc, Wtdnmday, 7:30
, S.ryj_cy:7: 00 'P·"1· Wed., 6 p.m . Yoo111 La·. .•third Thursday, 6:30p.m. (McGuire!.

.,

.'

s.;;..

1

'f'·'

p;:/.,.

Sun: ,

Ri;ou

p.&amp;i. · ·

.

0

\

'

and Ruth Ann Fox .:

'

•I

FUNERAL HONE

..,,.,.,, Kuffdg Filii Clll4... "

"Serving .Fomilies"
264 S. 2nd, Middleport

228 W. Main Sl., Pomeroy

•

'

992·5432

UN ITED FAITH CHURCH, Rt . 7 on Po·
ml'roy By·Pa ss. R(l\1. David Wisema n, Sr ..
pastor. ME&gt; Ivin DrakP. S. S. Supt. Sund av
'St' hool 9:30a.m .: Morn ln.'! Worship 10: 30':
'Evt:'ni ng Worship 7:30 p .m .; WNinPsday
PrayE'f ServiN•. 7:30p.m .
F'ATTH B,APT1ST CHURCH. Ra ilroad
1Sr.. Mason. Sunday Schoo110 ·a.m.; Morn lnJ;r worship 11 a. m .; Ev('nln,::: Sf'rvicl' 6 p. •

:]~~~~~~~~~~~:~· m.
Pra,vc&gt;r
nif'&lt;'tfng
and Blbl £1 Slud y Wed· ·
nrsday,
7 p.m
.
FOREST RUN BA.PTlST. Rev . NviE'
Borden . pastor. Cornellu!i Bunch. su'pt.
Sunday School 9: 30 a .m.; Seco nd and
fourth Sundays worsh ip ~f'rvlc(' a! 2:30 p.

":'cfHlJ·ru~~· ' coF GOD OF PROPHECY .
0 . .1. Wh it(' Road of HIJ!:hwa\'
SchnnllO a.m. S unda ~ f'Vf&gt;Rinlit 7: 110 p.tn .;
. pastor. Sunday Sch(lo \10
Mld ·wN'k service. Wf&gt;d .. 'i p.m ,
a.m . Cll,;.ses for a ll ::~ g ~. Junior Church 11
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIA N OfURCH.
a.m .; ·Morning worship 11 a.m . .Adult
Da lias Janey, Sunday School Supl'. Sunday
Choir prae1lc€' G p.m . Sundav . Young PC'O·
School · 9:30 a.m.; Sunday MornlnR Wor·
piE''s., Ctllldr£'n's. Church arid Ad ult Blblr
ship, 10: 30a.m.; Sunday evE&gt;nln~Worshlp,
St "dy. Wf'dn rsda~· a r 7:,30p.m .
.
7: 30 p.m . WE'dnesday rvrnln~ Prayer
HOPE ljAPTI!JI' CHAPEL. 570 Grant
Meetlng:.1:30 p.m .
St., Middleport Affiii&lt;Jicd wllh Soulhf'rn
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF' THE NA·
Bapfisl Conv€'ntion. David Brvan. gr .. Ml ·
7.ARENE: Rr\'. Glrnn McMillan . p a~ l or .
nlstrr . Sunday &amp;hOQI 10 a.m.: Morning
M;.ry ,Junli-r l.avf'ndf'r . Sunday Srhool
worship l1 a .m .: Evening l.l.'ors hlp 7p.m .:
Supt . ~unda~· SC'hOO I 9:.10 a .m .: Mornln gWC'd n('~day f'V('nlng Blblf' stud y and
" 'Qrshlp 10: 30 a. m .; E\'ane(']l.c.ti&lt;' sC'rvl('(',
. h p.m .: Pray('r and PratS(' Wrdnf'Sda~ . 'T'p. . pravrr m('('llng 7 p.m .
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST. Sl.
m.: Youth m f'('!lng, 7 p.m.
.
Rt
. 124 and Co. Rei . 5. Mark S~ev£'rs, min is·
EDEN UN ITED BRE:TIIREN IN
lr r . Sundav Sc-hool Supt. Harrv Hf'n ·
C' HRIST . C. l (':lii li(' \.lllll;~h . pastor . ~un ·
dric'k s: S~:~nday School9: :lO a.m .: M:ornlnf:
cb" School 10:00 a.m. : Morni ng Wor!'hlp
Wors hip JO : 30 a .m .; E\' ('nln~ worslllp 7 p.
11 : 00 a .m. ~ und ay f'vl'n In~ Sf'rviC'f' 7:00 p.
m . M't"dnrsday wor~Jlip 7 p.m .
m . Wf'l'.inf"scla~· rvcnlng prayrr srrvi C'f'
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH.
·'i; OOo.m .
('ornrr Syr'umoi-(' and Sfocond ~Is . , PO·
; IIYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH .
mf'roy·. The Rr v: 'Willia m Mlddl l'Swart ,
Mlke'J'hotnplo_n , New Haven, WV, pastor.
past or. Sunday Srhool 9:45 a'.m . Church
Sunday School at 9: ~a.m.; MornlngwOJl·
srrvic(' 11 a. m.
ahlp &amp;110: 30 a.m.; Sunday evening service
SACRED
HEART CHURCH. Msgr.
at 1': 30 p.m . 1b,ursday servtces at 7:30 p. · Anthony
Glannamorr. ?h . 992-5R98. Satur·
m.
. da y E vt'nlng Mass 7: 30, p.m.; Sunday
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald.
, Mass, R a. m. a ncl10 a. m. CO nfessions onf'
Knob, located on County Road 31. Rev.
half hour tK&gt;fOr(' ('aC'h Mass. ceo cl ass('S,
LawrPnCP Gluesencamp, pa1tor. Rev .
11 a.m. Sunday
Roger Willford, asst. pastor. Preaching
VICTORY BAPTIST. &gt;25 N. 2nd St ..
services Sunday 7:llp.m. Prayer meeting
Mlddlrport. Jam('s E . Krrs('{'. pastor:
Wednesday. 7:30 p.m.. Gary Grll!ilh,
Sunda~· morn ln!Z worship 10 a .m. : Evt'n leadPr. Youth l'fO\IPS Sunday evening at
lnlit !i!E'TVICE' 7 p.m .; W(&gt;(Jn Niday ('V('nlng
6: ~ p.m . with Roger and VIolet Willford,
wors hip 7 p.m . Viflllafion Thursday 6: :top.
leaders. Communion service ttrs1 Sunday
m.
each month.
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: Chart"'
WHITE 'S
CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
Norrt,., pa"tor. Sunday &amp; hoo t. 10 a.m.;
CHURCH -Coolville RD. Rev . PhUtlp Ri worship .'irrvkr ll a. m .; Sunday night
denour, pastor. Sunday SChoo19:30 a.m .;
wors.hip
-~NVIC(' 7:30 p. m .: M!dW('f'k
worship service 10:30 a.m .; Bible study
prayrr srrVIN• Wf'd nf'sdav ? ·p.m .
and worshlp .servlce, Wednesday, 7 p.m .
WESLEYAN
B!Bl.E
HOLINESS
RUTLAND CHURCH OF OfRIST,
CHURCH of Mlddi('J)Ort . lnc .. 'ffi Pearl Sl ..
. BIIi Carter, pastor. Sonday School 9: 30 a.
Rev . Iva n Myprs, pa!itQf'; Rogc&gt;r Mani('v .
m .: Morning Worship and Communion
Sr.,
Sunday Scllool Supt . Sunday &amp;ho.ol
10:30 a .m .
9:30a.m.: M orning Worship 10:30 a.m .;
RUTLANOBIBLEMETHODIST. Amos
EvC'nlng Wo ~ hlp 7:.10 p.m. WC'dn E&gt;Sda v
TUlia, pastor. Sonny Hudson, supt. Sunday
l'Vc&gt;nlng
Blblt• st udy. prny£'r and pralsf.
SC:hool9; 30 a.m.; Morning worshlp, 10: JO
~f'rVict', 7: 30p.m .
a .m .; Sunday evenlna service 7:00 p.m .
LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH .
·WldnHday service 1 p.m. WMPO proOF Goo- CflbPrt Spt'nCf'r. pastor . Sun·
gram 9 a.m. each Sunday.
da v School 9: 30 a .m .; Mornin ~ service
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
lO:'ooa.m.; Sunday evenlnJZ servlc.&gt;7: 00 p.
RENE. Rev. Lowell Ford, pastor. Sunday
m.: Mid-wet&gt;k pray('r S('!Vict' WM n('sday
Scbooi9:JO a.m.; Worship 11ervlce 10:30 a.
7
p.m.
m .; Yoong people's service 6 p.m .
MT. OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH .
Evangellttic service 6: 30p.m. Wednesda)'
LawrrncE' Bust!, pas tor. Ma x FolmE'r, Sr .
service 7 p.m .
Supt . Sunday School and Morni ng Worship
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
~: 30 a .m .; Sunday ('V'('ninR !l('rvicf", 7 p .m .;
St .. Mason, W. Va. Sunday Bible Study 10
Youth ml'E'tin R and Bible Study, wronrs·
a.m.; Worship lla.m . and 7 p.m . Wed.nes·
day, 7 p.m .
day Bible Study, voc:a.l music, 7 p.m.
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud·
ding Lane, Mason, W. Va. J . N. Thacker,
pastor. Evenlllg service 1:30 p.m.· Wo·
men 's Ministry, 'thursday, 9:30 'a. m .;
, Wedn~ay Prayer and Bible Study, 7: 15

f: ldr ld~(t .

m .;

t

No'

STATE ROUTE
7, POMEROY,
OHe
.
'
'

lill

1---~9....
92-5141~--+----------J

At the place where you -worship the sermons compel
That you comtemplate mending your ways;
After which you are rold 10 temember this well,
For the week has another six days.
You consider that service an hour 'I'ICil-spent,
Where the guidance of God will abound;
And with all good intentions you try to repent,
For temptations are always around.
But those wonderful lessons you ;re apt to ign6re
For the rest of the week, as 'I'IC know;
So i~t carry them with you right out of the door.
And apply them whemer you go.

212 E. llain Street
992-3715. Pomeroy

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISit
UNrfEO METHODIST CH URC H
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Re~ . Doll Archer
Rn . RoJ Deeter .
~ . Seldon .1ohnt~ot~
ALF"REO - Chureh S&lt;'hocW 9: 30a .m.;
WorYllp . 11 a,m.: UMYF 6:.'W&gt; p.m.: UMW
Third Tu.-~day . 7: 30 p.m. Communion.
flr!'t Sunday. !Ardl('f\
CHESTER - Wo rl'hlp 9 a.m.; ChuJt'h '
Srhoo11 n ::~ . m .: BlblrStudy, Thur~ay, 7p .
m.: UMW. first Tllunday. 1 p. m.; Com·
munkm. flnH Sundfly IArc h('f' l .
JOPPA - Worship 9:JO a.m.: Church
$(hOot 10:30 a.m . BlblrStudy WWnf'fidav.
7: 30p.m . rJnhn!I&lt;XlL
·
l.ONC BOTTOM - Cnureh School 9: 30
-a.m.; Wor.ahlp 7 p.m.: Biblr Srudy, W('(l ·
nf'Sday, 7; 30 p.m . ; UM YF . Wed.nt'Sday,
6:00 p.m .; Communion First Sunda y,
IArchrr\ .
·
RE:ED$Vli.LE- Churr h S&lt;;hool9::10a .
m.: Wors.hlp ~rv\c-r 11;00 a .m . IOt'-Ncn .
TUPP f.R~
PLAINS ST. PAUL Churt'h School ~ a . m.:. Worship 10 a.m .;
Rlbl t• St~o~dy , Tuesday . 1~ 30 p. m . : 1../MW ,
Third TuMidity, 7: 30 p.m.: Ctlmmun\on
F'lnt Sunday lArch('!' \.

S£VENTH -DA Y ADVENTIST, Mul ·
bPrry HelghiJ Road , PumProy. Putar

; .. •..

;
.,

City - - - - - State _ _ Zip - - - P~ne _~-------------

m .; Wednesday f'Ytn np
Pnyer" nd Blblt-SH,d)'.

~1 ~
t !/ :
t. ~,

APPlY TilE ~NS OF TilE SABBA1H
All TilE RffiT OF 1liE WEEK

dies' Auxiliary . WE'dneida)'. 7 p .m . Fam·
Uy Worthip.
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. Off
Rl. 114, 3 miles from Portland·Lonl Boi ~
tan. Ed1e1 Hart. pastor. Sunday School.
9:30 a.m .; SUnday mornln1 preaching
10:30 a .m.; Sunday evening tf'TV Icel, 7: 30
p.m .
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH . Comer A1h and Plum. Ralph
Cundlfl. ptstor. Sunda)' School10:00a.m .;
Mornlftl Worship, 11:00 a.m .; Wednesday
and Sat urda y Evening Services at 1:30 p.
m.

:!~ ~=~~~~~'rh~·:~~~r.'':~~~~7~~~:

•
•

SATURDAY, .AUGUST 15

OfRk'mAN
Undll ~'~;~M .

• ~ • ~'htd. Youth Ml'1:'1hvt 7' il p.m. t~'I'Y ~n- •
:.,~. do•Y·
,• '
CRAI!AM
UNITED METHODIST
• ~~-; Preachl niJ ! : 30 a .m . Hnt and second Sun:

•

"

9: .1 h.m.:

.

,; •• ~ . lt~t and lhlrd !V.Jnday follr.~r,d~&amp;.l !Yiay 1

•

opportunities and save you money on your return at lax time.

course .

~~. ~rkla,v ~hOol

1 .. ., •

o~

•

So\L\'A110N ARMY . 11~ Sut!N'nUI

• _ ... ~~\' and Pnwrr II'IA"'IM.. opt'fl 10 thr J)lbUc.

..

Learning Income taxes now could offer you money-making

your tax preparation

'lltl:

.... - • AVI' .• Pornrmy. Mr,; Ocra Wlrina In rharJ!r.
·:•: ~rda.v tJJII.rP.ts mi'\'llnll. 10 a.m,; Surday
• •. • ~-. lUI o.m . !Oird•v ~hoot. YPSM
•... :•, £1Ql&lt;w;' Ad~. k';XIrr. 7::11 p.m. Salvallon
... .. ~ l'\"'l'(''j lnJt \'Urtour. iiitf'aktTS and mu.\lc $ ~a~ .
.- ... " ~ Thu~v . 11: :1'1 :t.m. to 2 p.m. tJU:I('$ Horrr
: ... • • ll'r•J."Yl'· mmlrrl In chi.tr'Jl('. -.11 '!Kml'fl
·• ~ ln\11(-d. 6;.._, p m . Thur'!da,.v. Corp; Cat)ii
..... ; Cla.""c.' /Youna ~J*'-fllt)k\1 , 7:JJ p.m. Blbk'

,•

America's Finest Income Tax Course

••••i••.• • • t Conlactournearestolfice. - - - - -

a.m.: Won tup Stor\11•10:]) &lt;i.m.

Cholr rt&gt;hrW"Sill. 1\wr.day, 7: :l&gt; p.m. uNkt' d._ ,
"""""' otlJJis Bun.
POMF.ROY CHURCH OF TilE NI\7.ARE'NE. Ccnff Unkm afld Multrnv. Rl'v .
Thoma" Cim M&lt;:CIU!lil. pastor. NortnBn Ptfo§.
k'V , S, S. ~pt ., SUIW1.a,_v SC'hOOI, 9:lJ a.m.;
ITIOfnln_~! 14'llr!l.hip )0: ~ l'.m.: &lt;"mlnR!IC'nirt' 6

POMEROT OHI0-992·6677

Rawlir,gs·Coats·Biower (row's Family Resta~rcnf
Middleport. Ohio

0

Pomt!'1y

..2·2104

9:1.'i

..... • 992-2975

Pomtrov

K&amp;C JEWELERS

Memorial Hospital

~

John F . Fultz.• Mgr .
Ph. 992·2101

l

Slif:1

liS I . ......,.., Dr.

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, 011.

BEN .
1FRANKLIN"

· ·,..

-

-

FRANCIS FLORIST

, M•i~1 County'• Olde61 Floriof
362 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO 46789
614 / 992 -2644

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

RALL'S

1

Veterans

.,
r

'

If'\
\il, 1\

~\rt, 'Qt~~~ ·
Cabmet Mikrnc ~~ .

Sy11cuse
992·3978

106 ......... l••· ,._.,, Oh.

"' MEIGS TIRE
\ ' CENltR, INC.

.

RACINE PLANING MILL

(6141992·2039 ar
(614)992-5721

' 214 E. llliq

fj

Mill Work~

~

· •Morning, afternoon. evening classes
•Reas.o nable course fee •Classes begin Sept. B 8o 9
•Held at 618 East Main, Pomeroy
Send for more Information today or call nOw!

of cotumi!Us, o.
104W. MAin
tt2·llll Pomoro•

$6Dp

FIOWIIS 101 EVIIY OCCASION

SE~VICES

P. J. PAULEY, ·AGENT

'••

•
"
•
:.

,.
..

Serv.ce

Nationwide Ins. Co.

I'IDW,

INSURANCE

R•tt•nd, Ohio 41115

r

•..

S•l•~ •nd

1. Wm, " litl" lrawn, Owner
p - (•••• ,., 1177

•

Grad receives masters

Brogan-Warner .

-

m.
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth a nd
M ain St .. Mlddlt&gt;port. Rt&gt;v. Gilb&lt;&gt;r1 Craig.
Jr., pastor. Mrs. Ervin Baumaardne-r,
Sunday School Sup! . Sund ay Sc hool9: 30a.
m . : Worship S£-rvl('(', 10: 45 a.m.
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
- JosC'ph B. Hos kins, f'Vangellst . Sundav
BlblC" Study 9 a.m .; Worship. 10 a. m .: Suri da y f'VE'ninl1: sE'rvlcE' 6 p.m .; W:ednPsday
('V('nin g S£&gt;r vi('(', 7 p.m .'
P E NTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY. Raci ne.
Rl. 124. William Hoba ck. paslor. Sunda y
Sc hoo l 10 a.m .; Sunday t:'V£'nin l1: S('rViC'e&gt;7
p.m. Wedn£&gt;/lday evening servlct' 7 p.m .
CARPENTER BAP"l;'IST. Don CheadlE'.
Supt. Sunday School 9: 30 a.m. Mor nin'g
Worship 10:30 a. m . Pray£'r servlcf'. ait("rn-

ai£'-Sundays.
THE QHURCH OF' J ESUS CHRIST,
. APOSTOLIC F' AITH - Ne w Lima Rd ..
n('xt to Fort ME'ili!S Park . Rutland. Robrrt
Richards, pastor. S('rvicf's al 7 p.m . on
Wednesdays and SJ,ind ays.
MIDDL EPORT PENTECOSTAL . Third
Avf'. RC' V. Clark Bakrr . pa stor. Carl Not fln~h am. Su nd a~· School Sup!. Sunday
SC'hool 10 a.m . with C'lassf'~ ror ul\ a~C'S.
E\'('nlng S('rvic('S a1 6 p.m . Wrd nrsdav BibiC' sludy &lt;t1 7:30p.m . You th !' f'rVl('f's' Fri diiY at 7:30p.m .
ECCI.F.SIA FELLOWSHIP. 12R Mill St.,
Middlf'PM1 . Broth rr Chut'k M&lt;·PhC'rson .
pastor. Sund ;t~ · ~('hool 10 n.m.: Su nd ay
E'V&lt;'nin~ st:'rviC'l'S ~~ ~ 7 p.m . a nd Wf'dn(";)da ~·
H'I'\' ICf'S a1 7 p . m .

.

8APT1ST. K('nnrlh~m l lh .
pas tor . Sunday Srhool 9: JO n.m.: chu rch
. s£'rv lcf'i:.10 p.m .: ~;outh frUowship6:.10p.
m . ; Bib\(' s t u d~' . Thursday. 7: l0 p.m ,
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE, ..l :IO-l5
Hiland Road. P omrroy. Tom Krll.v. pas·
tor. Dunn.\· L1mhr r1. ~ . S. Supt. Su nday
morninJ!' !'t'r\' lf•r ;1t 10 a.m .: S'umtuv C'\'f'R ·
lng s('n·irt' 7:.'«1 p.m. Tuf'sd&lt;J ~' &lt;tnd. Thur~ ­
day Sf'rvkr!&lt; 111 7:.lfl p,m .
ANT~QUlTY

NEW' HAVE" CHURCH OF THE NA·
7.ARENE, R£&gt;\'. C lr ndon Stroud , pH!i; IOr .
Su nda ~· St'hoo i 9 ::IDa . m .; WorshlpsC'rVlcC'.
· 10:.)0 ;t.m .; Youth srn· Jrr ~ und a:v 6:1!'i p .
m . Sunda y C'V('n in g srrvi&lt;'(l7: 011 p.m. WC'd nl:'sda y Pr:Jy('r M erlin~ und Bibl(l Study
7:00p.m.
NF.ASE SE:TTLEMENT CHURCH. Sun ·
, d~v a ftrr noon S('rVkf's a t 2:30. Thursda.v
('V&lt;'nmg 'iC'I'\'iCC'.~ a l 7:30 .
FIRST BAP-TIST CHURCH . Mo ,on. W.
Va . Pa'ito r. 8111 Mu rph y. Sund :~ ySc h ool lO
a. m .: Sunday cvf'n!ng 7: :~o p.m. Prayf't'
mf'f'tln.c: and Bibi&lt;' study Wt&gt;dn ~duy . 7:3(1
. p.m . Evc&gt;ryonf' W('ko mf' .
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST. Sa lf'm St. Rf'\' . P a ul Tny lor . pas1or . Sunda y
ScMollO a.m .; ~unda .\' N'£'n ln g i : 00 p.m .;
WC'dn~ d&lt;:~ .v rvr nin J!: pr a~c· r mc'C'tln g 7:00
p .m .
SOUTH BE:THEL r&lt;EW TESTAMENT
CHURCH . Silvrr Rldg£'. Du&lt;J nt' Svdc&gt;n·
st rlrkf"r . pflstor. ~unduy S&lt;·hnol !i i1.m.;
Wor ship Scrv IC'£'. 10 a.n:.: Sunctu.v f'V('n In ~
s('rvic('. 7:00p .m . W&lt;'{)nf':od;~y night Bihl&lt;'
.s tudy 7: 1(1 p.m .

I

•

Sermonette

In our society today family life is changing. We see a grea t
need to strengthen the home. The two most Important people In
the home are the husband and the wife. I believe Paul gave very ..
sound advice In Ephesians 5:25: "Husbands , loveyour wives, as
Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her". Paul In
this beautiful passage (Eph. 5:22·33), comparpd the relation of
husband and wife to the relation of Christ and His church. He
suggested that just as the church is subject to Chr ist. so the wife
shou)d be submissive to her husband.
In turn, Paul said that husbands, should lovr th eir wives as
their own bodies (v. 28) or as they love themselves (v. 33). which
is possibly simply another way of saying the sa me thing. His
highest admonition Is that the husband Jove hi s wife as Ch rist
loved the church (v. 25). How much did Chrlstlove the church?
He loved It enough that He gave His life for it.
The word for love here Is the distinctly New Testament word
agape. In other words, the husband Is to love his wife with the
same quality of love with which Christ loved the church and with
which God loved the world (John 3: 16).
Wives may chaie at. Paul's admonition for them to submit to
their husbands. Will you not agree, however. that very few
. wives would' object to submitting themselves to their husbands
If their husbands loved them as Christ loved the church?
And It ·Is doubllul If a wife ls any ·m ore obligated to be
· submissive to her husband than he Is obligated to love her as
· Christ loved the church. ,
·
By Lamar 0 'Bryant, Putor
Fln&amp;,lloutbern Baptist Cburch

....
.

.

'

�Page-8-T1w Deily Sentinel
1987

Blue-collar. workers have higher
risk of heart disease and death

••

-:-' \
.

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

i '

·,

\

·HealthN
.\
. . . .et\
\.

The

Ohio

'.

By LARRY DOYLE
UPI Science Writer
CHICAGO (UPIJ Blu e.collar workers are more llkely to
' die of heart disease than are
while-collar workers . possibly
because of "greater s tresses."
bul thl' exact reason remains a
mystery.
Researchers from the Harvard
Medical School report that even
accounting lor differences be·
tween the groups In smoking,
obesity and other coronary risk
factor s, blue-collar workers a re
still 43 percent more Jlkely to die
of heart ailments.
"We can't rule out that just
• IN MEMORY- Helium balloons were released last reunion. A member of each immediate family
being blue co llar Increases r isk,
• at this year's Clrcle·Zirkle family reunion In released the balloon lor their loved one.
that perhaps there are greater
: memory ol six family members who died since tile
stresses involved, but we really
need to look into the whole thing
further," said Dr. Charles Hen. nekens, of Harvard and the
Brigham and Women's Hospital
Tlie fifth annu.al Clrcle-Zirkle mory or Sandra f!arden . daugh · contlucted by Sue Hager and
in Boston. '
Jeffrey Circle. Mr s. Steven Clr·
reunion was held July 26 a t th e ter of Robert and Dorothy Circ le
Hennekens, an author of the
home of Mr. a nd Mrs. Larry Harden, Racine, and was re- cle and daughter Stephanie: Mr.
a nd Mrs . Edward L!etweiler;
Circle in the Carmel area of leased by her sister. Pamela
a nd Mrs . Jack Zi rkl e, attend ing
Sutton Towns hip. Larry Is the so n Harden Foremen . Mrs. Robert
for the firs t time , were welcomed
of Mr. Douglas Circle and the late Lee, Racine, relea sed the second
balloon In honor of her so n, Bob by the group. The birthdays of
E ls ie Circle who died In April.
Last year's re un ion was canceled Blll Lee, who was a special friend · Linda Patterson a nd Nancy ·
By WILLIAM C. 1'ROTT
due to the seriou s illness of Mr s. of Sandra Harden. Both were Circle were recognized . Gift s
United
Press International
a lwa ys fai thful In a ttending the were presented to Rev . Hicks,
Cir cle.
HOT
MARKET
F.OR CELEBoldest man : Mi ss Fiore nce Cir .'
Th e Circle reunions of today family reunion .
RITY
MERCEDES
: First
Th e third balloon wa s in honor cle, oldest lady; Stepha nie Cirreplace " The Car mel Pic nic,"
Warren
Bcat'ty
's
Mercedes
and
when friends. relatives a nd of Mrs. Guy !Freda ) Ru ssell by cle, younges t girl; Jeffrey Circle,
now
Gregory
Peck's.
Peck's1973
neighbors gat hered oti 'a certa.in · her daughter , Mrs . Ronald !Rae ) younges t boy: Mr. and Mrs.
Mercedes 450 was stolen WednesSunday in July or August In the Rey nolds, Minersv ille. Freda's Steve Ci rcle. newes r married :
day
on Melrose Avenue in Holly apple orchard on the far m or lineage followe d the Nease- Rev. a nd Mrs . Ca rl Hi cks,
wood
bu1 is coming ba ck In need
E lias Wes ley Circle. Th e picnic Zirkle line and s he rec eive d the longest married . Rev. Hic ks a lso
of some body work.
was ·heralded in the Ca rme l area gilt for being the oldes t lady a t received the door prize.
Police spotted two me n driving
The meeting wa s the n tu rned
as the soc ial event of thP yl'ar.
the 1985 re Uf\lOn .
the
car early Thursda y in
Balloons four and liv e wl're in over to Mr . Jack Zirkle, prE'si·
This year's potluck dinne r wa s
Southwest
Los Angeles arid there
e njoyed at 1 p.m. wi th grace memory of Mr. and Mrs . Garrett dent of the ZirklP Family His tori· was Gl two- minute chase that
offered by Rev. Ca rl Hi c ks. a 1Mattie ) Circl£&gt; who died jus t ca l Association. who spoke on the
Untied Methodis t Minist er who nine months apart. They were upcoming co nvention In Sep· ended when the bad guys crashed
Peck's Mercedes Into a parked
has lived In the Carmel a rea lor married 63 yea r s . Their balloon s tember, publications of the asso- car. Th e suspects were.arres red
were released entwined by Mr. ciation a nd the need for member· and the car had to be towed away .
the past 20 yea rs.
Circle's s ister. Miss' Flore nce ship. Mr . Zirle vid eoed m a ny of
Followin~ the dinner . a mem·
Beatty' s car was stolen earlier
the day's activities.
orlal service wa s he ld for thP Circle. Ra cine.
this
month while he dined at a
The aft ernoon was s pent visit The las t balloon was in m e·
famil y members who had died
West
Holl y ~ood restaurant and
s in ce 1he I9S5 rf'un lon. Six he lium mory of Elsie Ci rcle a nd was Ing and swimming and the Ja s l was later reeovered after II had
balloons wt&gt;rc released foll ow in!( released by her hu sba nd . Dou- volleyball game end ed at 9 p.in .
Sixty -nine people had been in been str ipped of ils battery ,
rhe group singing of "What A glas. of Racine.
stereo system and co nvertible
The se rvice ended with the attendance.
Friend We Have In J es us" a nd a
lop.
The l988 reunion wa s planned
s h o rt talk o n "Family group holding hands a nd joinin g
PENN WANTS MORE
for th e fou rth Su nday in July at
in pra yer .
'l'ogct her ness ."
PUNCH:
This may fall int o the
the
sa
me
locat
ion
.
A sl]ort bus iness meE&gt;Iing was
Thl'· first balloon was in mrcoals-to-Newcastle category, but
Sean Penn wants to tak e boxing
lessons. Penn , who s till has to
finish a jail sentence fo r punching a n extra on a mov ie set from
his latest fistic outing. was in a
FRIDAY
between Portland and Long · Damewood. Special s in ging will
New York nightspot Wednesda y
. EAST MEIGS - Th&lt;'re will be Bo!lom. wllJ be having Home- be featured. Pas tor Edsel Ha rt
and ran Into Frankie Glo, a
mectln~s Friday lor all parent s
Inv it es I he public. ·
coml n ~ on Sunda y. Morning
chara cter actor and former
of c hildren who will -be a tt!'ndlng s~rvlce at 9: 30. Potluck dinn er at
hea \'ywelght fighter , according
kind~r ga rten In Easter n Loca l
12 rioon . Afl£-rnoon s&lt;:&gt; rvlce at · Women's service
td lhf' New York Dally News.
POMEROY - Th e wome)l of
Schools. Pare nt s or children 1::!0. E vf'ryo n~ welcome .
Penn sai d he couldn ' t underce Episcopal Church will
Gra
a tt cndln~ ChPS t&lt;' r El~mentary
sta nd why a recent Ring magaWill meet 12 noon Prlday at th e ' RUTLAND - Faron Franklin se rve the canteen when th!' Re.d zi ne story didn ' t lis t him a mong
Cht•st.rr schOOL Parents of chlld- wlll be guest s pea ker at Sunday's Cross Bloodmoblle Is at the the top til fighting actors !Ryan
Pome roy Se nior Citizens Cent e r O'Neal was No. 11 .
r·en a11cndln~ Tuppers Plains homecoming !es tlvltles at Zion
on
Wednesday, Aug. I9 .
El~m~ntary will meet 2 p.m . a t
Churc h of Chris t. located on
"You should learn to box," Gio
H outl? H3. Sund ay Sc hool at 9: 30. Eastern pictures
the Tuppers Plains sc ~ ol.
re portedly told him . " It 'll give
EAST MEIGS
Charles
Worship at 10: 30 . Ca rry-In dinner
you confidence and you won ' t
Mora . pr inci pal at Easter n High,
SUNOAY
at 12 noon. Aft ernoon program at
i hr ow punches carelessly . If you
GAL LIPOLI S- Bill Ward wil l 2. Special mu sic by Kathy . wi shes to inform me mbers of th£&gt;
know how to handle yo urse lf. you
1988 senior cl ass that senior get a self-assurance." Penn was
be guPsl sp&lt;&gt;aker at Bell Chape l Franklin . Everyone welco me.
pictures wlll be taken Wednes- all for it . "Will you teach me? " he
on Bell Ave. In Gallipolis, Sunday,
Aug. 26. at the high school. . said. " I'm serious."
day, s ra rt ing at 7: 30 p.m . Sp&lt;•cla l
LAN CASTER - Th e Dorst
Par
more
information . ca ll the
fa mily reunion will be he ld
s!.nging. Everyone welcome.
FORMER CBS HONCHO OUT
sc
hoo
l
as
soo
n as possi ble.
Sunday, Aug. I Ii, a t the Lan cas ter
OF WORK: Van Gordon Sauter.
:CHF.STE:R - Th e Curl is reun - lalr~rounds . Di nne r a t noo n.
the former president of CBS
Car wash
ion will be held a t the Ches ter Re latives a nd fri end s urged to
News, has left his job at KTTV in
POMEROY- Cub Scou t Pac k Los Angeles, where he did
Fir('house on Sunday with a all end .
245 is havin g a car wash Saturpo tluck dinner a t l2 noon.
day,
from 9 to 3, at Pleaser s
REEDSVILLE- The desce nd·
.
.
Res
taurant
In Pomc rov .
LANCAST ER - Th e Dorst an ts of E:d and Llza Hayman will
Bean
dinner
·
r&amp;unlon wil l bE' held Sunda y a t the hold a reu nion Sumta y, Aug. 16,
RUTLAND~ Rutland E MS is
at Forked Run State Park.
L~n cas l e r fairgrou nds. Di nner
By Untied Press International
sponsoring
a bea n dinner and
Covered
dish
dinner
a
t
noo
n.
at 12 noon . Rrlallves a nd fri ends
President Reagan, speaking to
fl ea marke t yard sal e ori SaturFamily a nd friends Invited. F'or
we lcome.
In North Platte, Neb. :
a
crowd
day, starling a t 9 a .m ., at th e
more informatio n co nl aet Jim
"There are only 17 months left
Rulland Civic Cent er grounds .
HEEDSVILL £ - Th r Ed a nd Hay man a t 843-5286.
in
this administration .. Some
Homecoming
Lfza Hayman rc&gt;unlon will be
say thai rna kes me a lame
people
RUTLAND
Faron
Franklin
Hazel
Church
,
PORTLAND
held Sunday :rt Forked Run Sta te
duck
and
I should s it back and
will
be
gues
t
speaker
at
the
Zion
Park, Reeds ville . Covered di s h. between Portland a nd Long
I've never seen a
enjoy
m
yself.
Chu rch of Christ Homeco ming
dinner at 12 noon. All famil y and Bottom on Route 124. Is ha ving
happy
lame
duck
.- The wa y Tsee ·
this Sunda y . Sund ay Sc hool9:30:
homecomi ng on Sunday , Aug . l6.
friends invited. For more Info,
it,
back
in
1984
you
hired me for
worship 10: 30; dinner. l2 noon;
Morning serv ice at 9: 30; potluck
call .lim Hayman a t 84:1-5286.
four
more
years
with
'no time off
afternoon program at 2. Special
dinner at noon ; after noon service
lor good behavior.':
mu sie. Everyo'W welcome.
PORTLAND - Ha zel Chu rc h, at 1: 30. Speaker wlll be Linda

..

'

CREW PICTURED - Pictured at the Meigs County Helipm11s
the crew of HeallhNet Ill. From left are Terry Hatten, paramedl_c;
Beverly Cavender, llight nurse and Charles Madden, pUot of the
Rocky Mounly Helicopter Service, which contracts with Cabell

Huntington Hospital lor the A-$tar Helicopter. The crew was part
ol a speclallnservlce training presented Saturday to Meigs EMS
personnel. (Sentinel photo)

Local EMS has tr~ining
session with HealthNet
Personnel of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
attended an lnservlce program
Saturday at the EMS Training
Center on Mulberry Heights In
Pomeroy. The lnservlce was held
by personnel of Healthnet lll, the
aeromedical transport team
based at Cabell Huntington Has-

Moose jewelry
draws raves
GLENBURN, Maine iUPI) .An

;' DISCUSSION - Don Stivers, EMS training coordinator, and
: Larry Alred, chief flight nurse lor Cabell Huntington Hospital,
; discuss further inservices following Sat,.rday's training sessions
• at the Meigs EMS training center. (Sentinel photo)
'.

---Quirks in·· the news___,

' '

Boys steal cab, lead pollee on chase
ST. LOUIS (UP!) - Four police cars were damaged in a
oO-mlle chase of a 14-year-old and three younger companions
who stole a taxicab and look a joyridE' tha t reached IOO mph ,
a uthorities sa id.
The chase ended when th!' cab c ra s hed int o two policE' cars at
a roadblock early Thursday, a uthor ities sa id.
Investigators were unsure what prom pted the inciden t.
"They apparently were just doing 1\ for fun." police Lt. Nick
Fit zenreider sa id.
The 14-yea r -old driver of the sto len cab su ffered a head Injury
and was hel d for observa tion a t Regional Medical Center,
authorities s aid.
,His companions, two 13-;·ear· olds a nd a 10-year -old, were
trea ted lor minor injuries and put in the c us tody of juvenile
authorities. Police Sgt . Michael Indelicato, whose car was
struck at the roadblock , was treated at St . Louis University
Hospita l and r.eleased.
The boys s tol£&gt; a ca b in Fes tu s, about 30 miles sou th of St.
Louis. ju st before I a .m. Thursday, a uthorities said.
The s uspects sp&lt;&gt;d north on I ni C'rstat e 55 with police in pursuit.
The cab forced one pollee car int o a parked tra ctor-trailer.
Festus Police Chief Ronald Scaggs said his officers chased
the cab at up to !OOmph. In St. Louis, the ca b rammed a hlghwa ~
patrol car.
The chase led Into Illinois, where more police officers joined
in the chasE'. and th en back into Missouri over a bridge spanning
the Mississ ippi Ri ver' 111 miles south of downtown St. Louis.
The cab again heade d north on I ·55. a nd th£-chaseended at the
roadblock about 1:45 a.m., authorities said.
The bo;·s lace traffic charges and violatlons of _the juvenile
code.
Bank robbers stuck In first gear
BERLIN. N .J . !UP! ) -Three suspected bank robbers in an
aging Ca dillac tried to get out of town but just couldn't get it in
gear.
The bandit s were pull ing .away from the Mldlantic Bank
branch just as a police cruiser arrived at the scene, Police Chief
Dennis Chance said.
· But the getaway driver could not get th£&gt; 1970 Cadillac out of
first gear. and what might have been a high-speed chase wound
up being a 3-mile crawl.
Two of the suspects allegedly entered the l&gt;ank Wednesday,
threatened people with handguns and stole an undetermined
amount of cash before running to a walling car driven by an
·accomplice.
"The officer gave pursuit, and he kept saying, 'I can't believe
they ' re not going over 50 mph,"' Chance said. "It turned out
they could only get their transmission Into first gear."
Other pollee officers joined the rather leisurely chase, and the
suspects abandoned their vehicle about 3 miles away.
"The driver, a heavy-set man, he just stayed by the car. He
. couldn't run ," Chance said. The two other men were arrested In
nearby woods, where they were found changing clothes, the
chief said.

insurance

salesman

pltal, Huntlngton. W.Va.
· Squad personnel from Po.m eroy, ~fddleport, Rutla nd, Syracuse, RaCine and the Columbia
Township First Response Tral·
nees attended the class taught by
Larry Alred, chief flight nurs&lt;'
lor Cabell Huntington.
Subject's covered Included hiS·
tory of aeromedical transport.
the golden hour, candidates for
aeromedical transport , lnfllght
medical procedures, landing
zones and safety while fu nctlon·
lng In the landing zone.
Names were drawn and some
personnel were given helicopt er
rides .

who

moonlights by fashioning jewelry from oven-dried moose
droppings says hE' Is flooded with
orders lor the odorless baubles,
Including a request from a
bride-to-be.
An avid hunter and outdoorsman , David Bowley said Thurs·
day he has seen moose droppings
In the woods for years. "I always
knew you could make jewelry out
ol·these things," he said.
"They don't look anything like
what .they really are." said
Bowley, who soaks the droppings
in hardener, lacquers them and
strings them with colored beads .
"I just started showing them to
different peOple, and the ladies
and gentlemen alike went bananas over these things," he said
Thursday.
Bowley now has 200 orders lor
his Maine Moose Dropping Neck·
lace and Earring sets. People
pay $22.50 lor a set, but Bowley
thinks he could easily charge $40.
"Th ey don't care what It
costs." he said.
Bow ley said one bride· to-be
placed an order for the jewelry
lor her bridesmaids, who gave
her gag gills at a shower.
Two months ago he made a
necklace apd matching earrings
from the ·droppings for his wife,
Ann.
"They came out so nice.
Everyone she showed II to
wanted a set," Bowley said.
"They 're quite attractive. really
they are."
Last weekend, Bowley lllled a
sack ' with 40 pounds of moose
d(oppingn !rom a moose yard
near his camp In Brownville
Junction. He has them drying all
over his garage in Glenburn.
Bowley has ,dried some in the
oven. His wife wasn't pleased.
"She sprayed the whole oven
wllh oven cleaner," he said.

Quality at

Engine Tune-Up

•2995 •3495·
S3995
6 ·cylind•

• ·cylind..-

8 -c:yltnd•

• Price includes mopor·l
Champion spark plugs
• Inspect emission
components • Set

timing • Idle adjustment
(Engines equipped with greater
than 2-bbl carb and standard
ignilion slightly higher.)

" Th ere may be differences in
diet w P have been· unablt:.' to

det ect , or ta m ily or psyc ho-soc ia l
factors, but right now it' s an
interes ting mys ter;·." he said.
The di ffere nce in the risk of
hear t di sease ha s b&lt;•e n appa r·.ent
for more than a deca d£&gt;. It
generally ha s been a ttribut ed to

,:Circle, Zirkle reunion conducted

Chrysler, Plymouth,
Dodge · ·

.

399 So. Third
Middleport
Mon.·Fri. 8-15
8 -12 Sat. -Appt. Only

992-36061Z

.....

State fair schedule... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

...
•••a

111111.

FS-51 -At the top of the lineup,
this Stihl lri""""r hils grau and
weedl hard and holdo its graund.
Lightweight wilh loop handle lor
easy meneuverabilfty. 'Electronic
ignition provides ourt otmo.
Antivlbfllion IJIIem and
safely clutch offer safe and
steady trlmml"g.
$139.95 wilh
Rotocut head.
$149.95 with
String held.

FS-80 - This Slihl hard '-.&gt;'PK
· hitter cleans up even the
"'_....,...
toughest opponent. Rearmounted engine imp"""'' balance.
Electronic ignition provides last,
sure staru. Ant.lvlbration ')'Stem
· When il comes lo servicing
allows quicker, smoother cuthng.
what they seD, Stihl is balling
Shoulder harness and prote&lt;live
1000! Unlike many competitors,
·goggles included.
Slihl produtls are sold exclusively
$299.95.
lhrough highly-trained Stihl "Ser·
vlclrtg" Dealers, who provide you with
dear-cut answen_lp your questions and
!he best servrte 8\'lrlable lor all your Stihl
equipment.

CAN BE YOURS FOR
lJTI1.E AS SZS PER MONTH.

STIHI.:

NCIIM.It Oft WCNU.OWIN

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
ST.

POMEROY, OHiO

Q

a burgeo ning hea llh co nscious-

nes s among white-co llar worke rs
a nd a rel uctance among bluecollar workers to g ive up smok·
in g. fa tt y diet s a nd a sedentary
iifPstyle .
But Hcnnckcns a nd his co l·
leagues found tha t even after
accounting for 1hose eo ronC:.t l')'

were white men 'betw een 30' and

70." Black men have a higher ra te
of heart disease tha n white men,
a nd wom e n a nd Asian me n have
a lower rate .
Despit e.the findin g, He nnekens
sa id. there is much a person ca n ·
do short of changing jobs to
reduce the risk of heart diseasE'.
"ThP oceupation thing. is int erest ing, but the public hea lth
message doesn't cha nge at a ll. "
he sa id . "Clearly the important
message here is whether you are'•
a blue-or a white-collar worker at ,
this time, t.he three great~st risk

People in the news

Quote of rhe day

COOPER

...,

600 E. MA

thcm sc lv f's .

Community calendar/area happenings

a savings!

·-· ------ - I 0

THE SMITHS- Smith may ben co mmon nanw. hut whcn~rnlth
marries Smith, and In the next gcncr:olion, Smilh murrlrs Smith,
that can create a hit of confusion and ht' a topk of coll&gt;rrstli lon.
Four generations of Smiths pictured arc Mrs. Melvin (Olive) .
Smith of Pon;'leroy , hack, who&lt;&lt;' daughiPr Thelma marrkd Oalt·
Smtih of Rceds&gt;illc, Dale and Thelma'• daughter Teresa married
John Smith and they ha\'e a fi&gt; e·y&lt;•ar daughter , Melissa, and IIU'y
ll&gt;c In Reeds.illc. The qu..stlon Is. will Melissa m arry u Smith'!

risk fa ctors, blue-collar workers
'
had the much higher risk or dying
from heart disease compared
with White-collar workers .
In fact. in the study of 568
matched pa irs of blue-and whiteco llar workers , tqc difference In
risk was less before accou nting
lor these factors because the
while-co llar workers were more
likely to be overweight · and
Jewish, two factor s significantly
assoc iated with heart disease.
Other !acwrs associated wi th
hea r t disease death control led
for in the s tudy includ ed high
blood pressure, .h igh blood eho les terol levels, diabet es. pre·
vious heart attack . a ngina . ci·
garette s moking, level of leisure
tim e a nd job-relat ed ac tivity,
and consumption of coffee, tea,
additives, alcohol and asp irin.
All of the Sllbj ecis in th e st udy

Ha rvard st udy in toda y 's Journal
of the American Medical Association, said he suspec ts subtle
differenees in diet. medical care
and cultu ra l fac tors may pla y a
greater role in the increased
hea r t disease r isk th a n the jobs

By United Press International
Saturday, Aug. I 5
7:30 a.m. - Eas iE'rn Regional
Clydesdale Halter Show, Taco
Bell Coliseu m; Shire Halter
~how, Taco Bell Colis eum .
· 1l a .m. - Junior Spot and
'tamworth Showmanship,
O'Neill Arena : Open Holstein
Show (Bull and Heifer classes),
taco Bell Coliseum.
! 8: 30 a.m. - Sheep to Shawl
contest, Brown Arena.
• 9 a. m. - Ca mp Fire Style Show
j\ldglng, Rhodes Center; 4-H
Writing and Verse, 4-H GenealOgy Day, Lausche Building;
e,eplacement Agriculture and
Hortlculture judging, Donahey
Ilulldlng: Sheep Shearing Dem&lt;tnstratlons. Brown Arena; JunIor Tamworth Show, r· O' Neill
Arena; Open Angus Show
t:ROVl. Cooper Arena; Cheerleading contest, Rhodes Center
lawn (also at 1 p.m :1.
' 10 a.m. - Open Tamworth
Show, O' Nefll Arena.
' to: 30 a.m . - Blue JacketOklahoma, Natura:! ·Resources
~mphltheater (also at 12: 30
p,m. ) . .
•11 a.m.- Rose Show, Donahey
Bull~lng; The Ward Family,
dulcimer players, Bob Evans

Barnyard talso a t 2 p.m . I ·
12 noon - Replacement bee
judging, Donahey Building.
12 :30 p.m. - Tim Fields.
Mu sic
Gospel
1 p.m.
- Pavilion.
Mules, Halfllnge r
Ponies, Draft · Ponies, Draft
Horses, Taco Bell Co lise um:
Buckeye Lamb Cook-Off, Brown
Arena.
1: 30 p.m. - Open Shorthorn
Show, Coope r Arena.
2 p.m. -Junior Sheep Shearin g · Contest preliminaries,
Brown Arena; Ohio · State Fair
Strings, FinE' Arts Theater.
.2:30 p.m. -Kevin Mabry and
Liberty Street, Country Music
Pavilion (also at 7 p.m. ); Brick
Masons Project Dedication, HerItage Hall lawn.
3 p.m . -CampFirestyleshow,
Lausche Bulltllng; Senior Sheep
Shearing Contest preliminaries,
Brown Arena.
4 p.'m. - Grace Brethren
Chorale, Gospel Music · Pavilion
(also at 7:30 p.m.); lndlari
Storyteller and Drums, Heritage
Hall Park.
6 p.m. -Square Dan.c e Day,
Rhodes Center; Boxing semlfl·
nals, Davey Arena; Open Square
Dancing, -Rhodes Center.
7 p.m. - National Holstein

.,

Futurity, Taco Bell Coliseum:
Junior a nd Senior Sheep Shearlng Contest finals, Brown Are na .
8 p.m. - Senior Sheep Shear-

lng Champion of Champions
Contest, Brown Arena; Open
Square Dancing, Rhodes Center; ·
Dwlg~t Yoakam, McDonald's

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

This Week's Specials
$

. FIIDAY, AUGUST 14TH

09
2
'"'a Hat S-.y G&lt;w·

FISH SANDWICH PLAnER ...................

Alpocial Diamond Clot ~atttr-,:rr: flllr P&lt;l'tion Sonirlol
~
rilhod with Our Own llwrw. , _ Saoa and Our Hat Goldon Fnnch fries and
,.. Choice of llwrwr • ~ !law, MrKDaoi Sala4 ar Potato Salad, ar lWcerllllcn.

1

SUNDAY, AUGUST 16TH

BAKED SALISBURY STEAK DINNER •••••• $43 2
A G....,.,. Porti'"' of Dtllcious W.od Stoam Siororwod lor a Creamy Mutlrroom
Gravy S.md with Mathod Potoloos and ""'-• Grtlil, Dllidous lirMn .....
• and Mushrooms and Your Cholet of a Hat lulltnd Rol ar ~·-•lliocuit, MaJ.
wt1 Houot Cofftt ar 5a... Dtalffti•tod, lutli FrotHy hwod oo o $mal DrW.
May lo Substilulod.
·

·SALISBUIY STEAK SANDWICH ALONE ••••••••••• $2,69
NEW HOUIS: .N.-TIUIS. 9:00-9:30
Fll. 9 A.M.-10 P.M.; SAT. 10-1,0; SUN. 10-9:30

i!\erbaugl(a nf m4e.nter
•

IOUTE 7

RESTAURANT
915-3132

•

CHEml

C'o mm e nle.tr~ ·

ltnee 1im es a week.

His depar ture was by mutual
agreE&gt;ment and hi s future plans
are unannounced. SGtuter, DC:.tn
Ra ther 's old boss. le ft his CBS
post ·after a boardroom battle a t
CBS In c. las t yea r but hi s son,
Mark Sauter , was jus t named
genera l assignment r&lt;'porter for·
KIRO, th e CBS affiliate in
Seattle.
THE REAL McCO\' BURIAL
Sl'I'E: Th e remai ns of .old-time
West ern sta r Tim McCoy will be
bu ried not on th e lone prair ire but
in Saginaw. Mich .. in accordan ce
with his wishes.
McCov was cremated when he
died in ·1978 at the a ge of 87 in

factors for heart disease are

smoking, cholesterol level and
blood pressure - a nd those are
all things that can be changed." •
The Amer ica n Heart Associa- :

tion estimates thai nearly a :
mllllon people die in the United ~
States every year from heart
disease, w.ith annual costs from
hearHela ted illness topping $85
billion.

r~~i~~~~~~!ili.

Nogales. Ariz
.. and
ashes
had
remained
the re.
Buthisrwo
months
ago, McCoy's ashes a nd those of
.h i s

second . wife.

ln ga,

were

shipped to Saginaw and will be
burled in a cemetery next to hi s
parents.
· · " If these things aren't take n
eare of right at the tim e, they
have a way of dragging on," said
McCoy' s son. Ronald . "After a
while, you e nd up with 1he family
ashes s itting on the mantle. "
McCoy had a long career I hat
included Wild Wes t s how s, 96
Western mov ies, including two

12-part serials, a TV show lor
which he won an Emmy and an
Old West c ir'cus act.

SARGAIN MATINEE SAT/SUN &amp;WED
ALL SEATS 12.75
ADMISSION EVE~Y TUESDAY 11 .75

LAUGUST 14 thru 2!_j
F-"IIHllY tkr11 Twmu:;nA't''

-r.•-llln.

CAN'TBUY Mf

0V.E
P.M .

G~~&amp;s~~'G

JUMPIN'

I
1.1

JACK I
li
FLASH
~
[IJH

BARGAIN NIGHT EACH WEDNESDAY

DAILY .

�Page-1 0-The

Sentinel

*VINYL SIDING
*AlUMINUM SIDING
*llOWN IN
INSUlA nON

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL

Rivenne Anficlues

,_,.,

BISSELL

HOUIS Tuo Wttl fro
11 a 111. to 7 p.m

New Homes IUIIt
Free Estimates

Sunday: 1 p.m 7 p m
ly ~· or Appeint-1

PH 949-2860
or 949-2801

RUSS MOORE
992-2526

Calls

No Sunday

I ttn

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
CElli, OliO

PH. 992-2772

d

REFERENCES

TAYLOR BUILDERS

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

40% OFF Ott WlttDOWS
THRU JUlY

VINYL

Ahodotiolng.....q....._
CAll FOR fill ISIIMAtl
992 6116 or 367 7220
79871mo

S\1Al L
1

v.rr~rH

[I

Ans

CK

&amp;

ALUMINUM SIDING
•lnsulat on
•Storm Doors
•Storm W ndows
•Replacement Wmdows

•New Roofmg

FREE ESTIMATES

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

Real Estate General

TEAFORDm
Real Estate

992-21 S6
5

Happy Ads

9

PARTS

NEW AND USED
WIDE
SELE'CTION
ALL MAKES AND
MODELS
CALL 742-2315
8 13 I mo pel

730871mo

A8GPU~~CHI

Wanted To Buy

WANTED TO IUY

BABY ITEMS

Strollers Beds Ores
s1ng Tables Play Pens
Walkers Clothmg (new
born 4T) H1gh Cha1rs
Car Seals
Must be m good
cond1t1on

REALTOR

216 E 2nd St
Phone
1 (614) 992 3325

NEW
LISTING-S
m
anch 5 y s old on 2 acres
near langsv lie Range e
fr g db s nk carpet ng
e ec BB heat wood burner
gas we and att c fan
$38 000
NICE &amp; LARGE-8 rms 3
baths lg lam ly rm wth
wood un t cook and bake
un ts Dsposal d shwashe
pant y d n ng m cent a
heat g lot fo the ch dren
$50 000
I 55 ACRES-Nea Porn
e•oy Just off Rt 7 Ask ng
$4 000
SYRACUSE-One II mod
ern 2 B home B rch cab
nets cook un Is refr g oak
f oors and g co ner ot Ask
ng $37 500
3 YRS OLD-One II 7 rms
2 balh s 3 B s cook un ts
rei g ca pet ng basement
rec m 30x20 g f rep ace
ga age 30x30 an d tenn s
cou t $97 500
SYRACUSE-7 m anch 2
ba hs equ pp ed k tchen 3
Brs carpet ng a elec an d
eve ot
HANDY ANDY-Want a 2
bath home has up to 5 or 6
B s Fam ly 1m pane ng
ca pet ng and 2 lots Offer
Wanted
RT 7 BY PASS-N ce y re
modeled smal 5 m one
I oor house Carpet ng new
bath 2 po ches and ga~den
space Only $21 000

No Fooli• Aroa ..
We Meu Batlltllll
992-3325

"Fifes"

711 S 3RD ST
MIDDLEPORT OHIO
PHONE (6141 992 7494

l£!

Housinq
Headquarters

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

Addons and remodel ng

Roofing .and gutter wo k
Concrete work
-P umb ng and elect t:al

wook

(Free Ett metes)

V C YOUNG Ill
Pomeroy Oh1o
4 15 86 c

J.R.'s REPAIRS
TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
lnstallatton
Servtce
Electromc Organs
Mob1le serv1ce

614-843-5248
REASONAilf

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt 124 Pomeroy Ohoo

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Al10 TrutMiuloa
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6 17 tic

J&amp;L

INSULATION
992-2772
FOR THE BEST IN

REPLACEMENTS
WINDOWS
CERTAINTEED VINYL
THERMO BOSS
8 4 I mo pd

Local1on

Pay Your
Phone B1lls Here
IUSINISS PHONE
C6141 992 6SSO
RIIIOINa PHONE
(6141 992·77:54

NEW LISTING- Ranch ly pe home n lhe counlly rest ngon
ove 2 aces ol g ound Fu basemen 3 bedrooms On y 12
yea s old Wants $29 500

-

I~

sto y home n Rift and 3 bedrooms
stoo"age " "''"'"'" lront s11 ng porch all on a n ce ot

~ L1censed

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CALL

614 9

&amp; Auct1on

9

Wanted To Buy

TOP CASH pad tor 83 mod-'
and newer \11M c•• Smhh
Buck Pont ac 1911 E11t..-rt
Ave O.ltipollt C1ll 114 440

NO SUNDAY CALLS
4 16-86 tin

DENNY CONGO
Will HAUL
JUST CAW

Ph 949-2969

8 7 1 mo

Buy ng dally gold 1 lver colnt
r ngs Jewelry 11•1 ng ware old
cotnt lerge currtn~ Top pone• Ed Burkett Bar.,_ Shop

2nd Avo Middl992 3471

Oh

114

W1ntMt to buy stand ng timber
Cit AI Tromm II 814 .l'f4-2

2321
QUILTS

Ant qu•Pre 1840 1 C1l Mere

61.992 2101 ldoy•l 0

,

192

Wanted 10 bUy strap atHI 1nd
metels A dert Stlv891 114

Sf~n.'lt P:-:

co-

lon

CAll 992 6771
H - IT I mo

985-3561
All M1ku

11

Help Wanted

Oriv..-. w•n ad for Oom no 1
Pzu 18 _.,.. of aga. drNif 1
cen•• nsurence ~tnd depend•
bet v.tl cle Cell 11' 4'1 4040

E. per Part t m• bllby litter tor
2 ch ldren RioQ tnd•G• I!pols
ftll Cel Rita Burton 114 182

6704

Ful time bebltue tn my home
to even nt• Retereneea •
qu ed C•lll14 441 1723efter
lpm

ACCENT

•Washers •D11hwashers

FENCE COMPANY

•A•nges

Lit Ut Feaea Voa Ia

•Refngerators

epplicet.ont now being
ec:cepted for fu I t me poshion
Pte. .nt Valley Nur~lng Cere
Center 1ppty ~onnel off ce
flte. .nt V~lay Hoep 304 175
RN

Pen t m• coM; postHon Even

Someth "9 New
Under The Sun!
Reps need.cl to Busln..• Ac
counts. part time t18 000
potent It full '""' tao 000
plus potantiltl Work own hOun
1 lin 'ng provMtect CaiJ 1 I 1 2
9380019MF lam &amp;pm

41131

23

Profa1110nal
Sarvtces
~----------~---

3430

1977 Nashun 1 411.70 3
oom 1 !12 ba h gas drve
fumace Good co nd t eon

614 667 f536

New 3 bed oom and'l h o~u
w th Ia ge fenced n ya d Tot a

e act c 1350 pe mon th Lo

Homes for Sale

cat edR 160 7mesfom
Ho te Hosp t8 No ns de pe 1
Reference eq u ad 614 388
9755 afte 6 p m

Home to

Slle by Own.,
GrHnbri• Est 38R bi lwei
on 2 4 1cr11 AC W 8 F P Wit
blr 2 Clf gw~a. Ph lefor•
4 OOPM 114 448 4009 All•
Ph

12•60 M ob le Hom e Com
p etely fu n slled
614 992
6 146 0 614 99.2 3048

304 875 3111

l,.owly n.- :J 8R home buiH th •
sprlng 2 ur gerege n ce .,.,
Cll'f • chy school1 mil• from
Gel ipolit Wll con1id4w mobile
home
n U7500

e

"''•d•

Call

114 441 8031

1968 12•60 w nd so 2 bed
oom
a a
T p out PaM y
fu n sh11d Wood bu na 61'
691) 1227

4 BR lp full ba..ment 3 ml
to

o1 Gt I pot • 34 tDO Ctl
&amp;1•
1615 Afte

o•.,,

••a

f14-24&amp; 9234
~ond

18950 Call 11'

Dod iN tPtNateHomec.re W II
c•• feu lh• .. d•ty In rrrv home

W I do baby thttftt In mv home
E•perlenc• and R•f•ence 304
875 , •••

l bedroom 1 ~ b .. h corn, kn
Oto.. tO IChoolt and to.-n C1
814112 Jill .........
lc-

33

Pom.,oy
Behmd C ly Hall

lo

Opon 10 AM

4

Howard L Writasel

PM

ROOFING

Mon thru Fr or by
Appotntment

Call C6141 992 7204

Gutters
Oownspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Pamtmg
FREE ESTIMATES

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

949-2263
or 949-2168

CUSTOM BUILT

4 22 87 lfn

GARAGES
POLE STYLE or
CONVENTIONAL

r

DABBLE
SHOP

PIANO TUNING

Recetve 50-to Off
SECOND tuning If
done w1thtn one

PH. 992-2772
730871mo

Ho-•

Gooolilwouglo Aug. 30 1917

Chmcal Aud1olog1st

7 Zlooo

~--l

ANYll Mf
llliii:IIIH SHIIP

lh · - wt.ro ... louf OS.
......._ ... ,...for
.............4proatli...
W. ..tidy or JW ... I poy
FIB IITCIIIIIIG

WfliiiS COUPON
Gottlthl'o ,..,., I

CALL ANYTIM£
44.6-1311

711110

Boll

Cia

3rd Ave
.t5131

Otll pol 1

Oh o

Bebv srtter needed n my home
to 1 3 month old 2 o\ d.,, per
we..._ Ple111 m11 rtf and phone
number to At 4 Box 147
O.llipolta Ohio 4&amp;131
RN Want 1 chtngt tnd 1
chall•ge plut • good s~ary1
Ttl en klok to P nKrwt Car•

Rental property to ule. Gall po
I 1 4 unfta. t 1 0 000 ennr..ll
nc:oma ....-toua nqu ri.. ollly

Coli 814 251 1128

New Holland lush Hog
Form Equ•pment
Dealer

free pupp 11 A•ccoon
614 446 4982

Far111 Equlpllltltt
Partt &amp;Ser•lca

Free to g0&lt;1d home hat German
Sh11pherd puppin V•rv cute
Mae good watch dog• CaM

EOE

W.nt 10 bra.dan y_,.,r
nurtmg sk Us n long term c••7
P ntcrnt Care Canter h.. lull
time and pan dme posh10n1
evailable Vantill'tor ppertllftce
helpful lnter•ted LPN 1 mey
conttct Maro•et l•ller Don It
P necr•t Care C•nter 5156
Jtclcson Pike GaUtpolia M f
from 9 AM 4 PM or e ..l
614 4'1 7112 EOE
LPN

Two Femily V •d Sele Poner
Brook Subdlvis on on Fe rf eld
Centenary Rd Fri Aug 14
9 li Set 9 12 Ch ldrent clo
thing ICWI mise n:ems

Aug 1 1 15 Behind lldwtH
Po1t Off ce 10 7 Adult child
ren c:lothM tv etc

leiNng you

p-

trae

I 731 7371 "" 2P

tor currentltlt 24 Hou,.

YARD SALE SATURDAY 9

H1lf Beeg e Pups 6 mele1 1
f~~mele. Call 11' 367 7214 or

317

Vmyl &amp; Alum Sodlng
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodelulg
Roofmg of AH Types

Worked '" Home Area
25 han
FREE ESTIMATES
CALL

1-614-843-5425
7/23/2 ... d

3

7750

month old fMnala klttan

Docl...-.1 Collll4 992 1124
mlxad braed

7411

Dane Neuter_. mel• a
month1 old Cell 814 981
4288

Cont ect Position AvallllbleCI•III Typing 11dllt requlr41d
knowledge af offtow praetlcw
and procedures ability to mHt
the public computer ekiHa and
wo d proceu'"t helpful experience preferred ADPIICitionl
wKI be till• through.thundey
Auau01 20 11B7 ot the 011111
County Helllth Oep.nment in
the leHment of the Court
hoult Equal Opportunity
Employer

hJ~y~ou;;;n;1 -;:i;i;T.;;h.;;-,~0~0~.,~..;.;l Gowmm.,..t
304-891 31B1

Kluena 304 8711419
I

3 o 4 Bed oom house n K'llg e

C eek Schoo 0 1

c Ret6fen

ces Ph 614448862

For lease

Jobs

f11 040
ue 230 yeor Now hwlng con

1 801 H7 1000 hi A 8801
for current fedwel Ult

446
1932 o 446 46 3 9 0 e Bed
oo m ap11 ment w h a ge
coun v k lchen new appl an
ce• ut I tv oom wa e sewe
find rras h se v ces p ov ded
Qu et area

~OR LEASE
one bed oom
apa tm en ove ook ng c y pa k
517 5 pe mon n Ca 614 446
2325 0 448 4425

FOR lEASE Apartmen w tt'l
completely emode ed k tchen
ba h bed oom and v ng oom
Ava abe m dd e of August
Second f oo co ne Second and
Pne Pa kng aea povded
$225 pe, month o 8250 w th
k chen app ances fu n shad
Cal 614 446 2325 o 446

4426

Houses for Rent

Aug 14 111 D111., 1
441 Third Avo 9 AM IPM
F•ttilonsbl• cloth• some fum ..
ture tnd much more

Coppertone Gene e elec1 c
stovet26 1912Camao Runs
As 1 S260 1918 Fo d
ton
p ck up 4 wheel dr~o~ e a1700
1973 Chrvse boat 1 0 170
Vol,o eng ne Cuddy Cab n wrth
po rt ab e ponv t2800 Ten
14•10 580 Sea at J m Pes n
ge s es i:tence M le H
Rd
Recne Oho
Used M 476 and v•34 Ve meer
T enc::hers 1 614 694 7842 o
Va~uum
c eane w th
attachments and sc ubbe
5158 Rebut And s
gua an
teed Cash o tam s Cal614
992 7142

8un~v

2724

TONY

S

GUN REPAIRS

ho1

eblue ng now tak ng o de
orde s for custom Mauters call

304 675 4631

58

0 ve St Ga pols

dep Ref equ red Ca 614
446 1615 A1t e 5 00 PM ca ll
446 244

NEW 6 pc wood {I oup !399
l\1 ng oom sutet 5199 S599
Bunk beds w h bedd ng t199
Fu s lB mat eu &amp; toundat on

house o n 1 ace Ellett
ocat on Ref Ca A 1 Real
Estate 8 o ke Catl 304 675
5,04

sta rt ng

Fu n shed Cottage 3 ooms •nd
bath one o two adu ta Rat and
Oep Wa e fu n shed No pets
Call 614 446 2543

YARD SALE 814 Second Ave
Gell po 1 8 AM noon Sstur
day onty 2 sweepen emp1
bookt elbums •nd mo 1

3 BR 1 !12 baths fDm y room
Ref g and stove ncluded
Loca ed on AI 688 Ret and
Dep a~:~ul,ed t325 a mo No
pets Ca 614 256 6789 or
266 6205

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VICinity

3 bed oom house fo rent n
Syracute Also 3 bed oom on
L 11co n He ghts Pome oy Ca
614 992 7689 afte 6 00

New 3 bed oom anch house
wnh large tenc•d In va d Tota
electr c t350 per month Lo
cated on Rt 160 7 m lu tram
Holzer Ho1pltal No ns de pets
Aeference requ ed Call 614

Nice 3 BR Apt stove wattt
gas AC fu n 1hed Dep and
Ret
equ ad Ca 6,4 446

1643
sto~o~e &amp; af g
furn shed Wale pad No pet.
Call614 446 3617

N ce 1 BR Apt

2 BR apll 6 clo1et1 k tchen
eppl turn •hed Wether Drve
hook up ww cerpet newly
pe nted deck
Regency Inc
Apt1 Ca 304 676 7738 o
676 6104
util t at paid

607 2nd

8225
Ave

614 446 4416

Reduced rent Make offer on
remode ed llou1e In Chester For
people with good reference~
Shown Au 16th and Aug 16th

YAAO SALE ._.. Lott of nice
n1m1 b and clothe~ baby smell
children and email •nd medium
adults Some Indian cloth•
friday a. Seturday 8 14 8/11
8 II 404 22nd ltrftt Polm

, 861 4886
3 bedroom

G ec out living 1 end 2 bedAdults No pets

304 676 4394
f

YARO BALE Sot Aut lllh, I
K

Avenue, Point,......,.

4 J

B11utllul :J bedroom home 2
baths f n shed ba~ement dou
ble garage prime location rent
t460 month Phon• 304 876

3030

0

875 3.31

$99 A ect ne s
1 art ng S99
USED Bed• d esse 1 bed oom
IU tas
8199 S299 Desks
w nger waallt.'f a comp fit a Ina
ofusedtuntue
NEW Waste n boote $30
Wo kboots t18 &amp; up S1eel &amp;
soft toe Ca 614 446 3169
Coun y App ance Inc Good
u.sed app ances and TV sett
Open SAM to 6PM Month u
Sat Gal
614 pols
446 1699
627 3d
Ave
OH

Aed atpbor es P ck you own
Call r..., o s Be ry
Patch 614 245 6064 ar 446

o we p ck

8692

room apertments at V I age
Manor and R \/Its de Apart
menta n M ddl.eport From
t21 6 ncludlng ut t 11 Ca I

&amp;14 992

7787 EOH

For rent Eff c ency cottage Mt
VIJ non Ave Pt Ple•ant Hud

epprovod 614 992 IBIS

CampmQ
EqUipment

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

1963 Corveue col)v or 1964
lmpa a Super Spot conv One
mu1t go P 0 I Serous calle s
on y Frank Case 614 992

1979 Fleetw ng 8 h p ck up
caJllper S ova oven et g
tu nace Seeps 4 Good c:o nd
1978 Chavolet 2 door Call Ca16144461352
614-742 2728 o can be 1een 1 --~--------­
on Depot St Rut and

614 843 5318

1987 30ft. f fth whee Scampe
Camper w til o wh:hout 984
Fo d p ck up Ca 614 992
2794

Sta nless steel exhaust systems
Now custom made lo you
truck moto homemc:lass cca
W th fe-t me warr8ntv Muffler
Man 9 St mpson Ave Athens
Oh o 1 800 843 3767

24 h ca mpe w th tandem
whee !I ful batft Good cond
1 on Seeps s.-: Call 614 992
7272

1975 Cutlass Sup ame V 8
automat c Runs good no ust

1970 Chevy mo o home 350
moto se f c::onta ned 60 000
m les 10 m las per ga lon Exc
Cond S4 000 304 896 3864

1983 Chevelle Ma bu auto
PS a cond 6 cy 4 doo
s2 600 after 5 phone304 675
1982 AMC Spsrit eal good
cond S1 600 304 882 3389

8 Hols en ha~fen due to ca fIn
fal
Call 614 446 1323 or

2459170

64

Hay &amp; Gram

loo bedd ng

60c 304 676

1984 VW Jet1a GLI 304 675
1769
--~~------------1984 Olds Cutlaa1 Supreme
37 000 m las exce lent cond
1 on Take over payments Must
Sell 304 675 3638

T

72

k

fUC S for

S I

a e

6679

M ud hay

grass

Alfalfa
c:: ova
easonab e pr ce 304

576 2026

Feed Spec al fo

August Oat
Alfalf•Hey-Strlw S1 50 bale
Mo gens Wood awn Farm Rt

36 304 &amp;76 , 286
Ve l ow F eestone cann ng
peaches now ave abe Cal fo
111 et as and p ces
Bob s
Ma ket Mason 304 773 5721
Open 7 Davs

Transporlation
71

Autos for Sale

59 For Sale or Trade
TRADE o SALE
1979
Che okae Ch et 4•4 good
shape W II trade fo ght dutv
p c:kup 1 uck phone 304 6 75

6210

.

Fmn Suppli es
&amp; Livestock

61 Farm Equipment
CROSS &amp; SONS
U S 35 West Ja ckson Oh o

614 286 6411

Massey Fe guson New Hoi and
Bush Hog Sa es &amp; Set'V ee Over
40 uted t acton o choose f om
&amp;. comp eta I ne of new &amp; used
equepment largest se ect on n
E o~.

s

1 982 P ymouth Rei ant Slat on
wagon
one owner $1995
1982 mpala V 8 auto
PS PB
velou Inter or AC
$3295 Ca 614 286 6522
1983 Dodge Colt 4 spd Sha p
51799 Ca 614 446 4782
1984 Ford Bronco II Spec ill
Edt on 40 000 m lea Excel
cond Ca l 614 446 1211
1 984 Honda Cw c o\ doo
Sedan 33 000 m las AT AC
AM FM stereo Cass new steel
bett Aad e t as w tft 60 000
m les wer antv Exce eond Call
1983Fo dFn mont oneowne
ke new S2496 1981 M•zda
p ck up truck N c:e No ust
$1696 Call614 286 6522
1983 Nuen 280 ZX 2 plus 2
turbo coup auto trans AM
FM Cass w th ste eo T top
cru u c:optro PW powe door
locks S lver with b ack st pes
88300 Call 614 379 2853

1977 Fo d P nto stat onwagon
good cond t300 1978 Olds
Omeg1 S 600 1981 Honda XL
260 8460 Cell614 4-16 0840
orafter600PM clll614 448

13 !1uc27 12JC16
rust w th pad 11 Jt18 green

304 676 4166

John Deere 40 3 pont h tch
W de front end Runs good
Brusll hog Included $2200 Call

1983 Z 28 Camero 32 000
m esonbOdy 500m lponl60
eng ne 5 •pd oaded louver•
bra and car cover nc uded Ca I
614 245 9497

614 742 2574
Water bed good condit on
$11.6 304 876 2613

B1rs chams and sp ockets to fit
elmos1 anv uw S DERS
EOU PMENT CD Henderson
W Va 304 876 7421

1966 Ford Mustang V 8 mota
re-built over S1000 spent on

r[,:~~~;;~~~~;:::::::~~=:=~::::::::::1~m~o~t~oo~B~o!dy~no~e~d:•:•:•:•:hed:~C:o
614-,4&amp; 1362

1976 Che ger SE Good wo k
car 1979 MuS1ang 4 cyl 4
spd Good wok car Call 814
1978 Dodge Aspen Stat on
wegon •300 1977 Dodge
Aspen Stat onwagon 8600

Sof11 •nd c:ha • p iced f om
8396 to 8995 Tables $60 end
up to t126 H de-a beds $390
to 8596 Reclines $225 to
t376 Lamps 828 to $125
0 nette• $109 end up to $496
Wood tab e w 6 chatrs $286 to
t798 Desk t100 up to t376
Hutche• $400 and up Bunk
beds complete w mattresses
t291 and up to $396 Baby beds
$110 Me«rnseto bo111prngs
full Of IW n "8 fi m a78 and
t88 (luean set• S221 K ng
t350 4 drawe ch11t $69 Gun
cabinet• 6 gu., Gat or tlect:r c
range •371 Baby mattr1111s
136 &amp; t46 Bed fram11 UO
$30 &amp; King frame 860 Good
selection of bedroom tultes.
meta Clb nets headboa dl t30
and up to 866

Coll614 388 9724

1983 Chevet:te Standerd 4
speed
n ggood con die on
49 000 m let 132 Butt•nut
Pl)metoy Oh o

1972 Wh te Fretghtl ne COE
360CummnsEngne 115000
m es out ot fr•me ma1o RTO
9610 1 ansm u on Rockwell
411 eto eas 1022t eson
budds 614 986 4422

Uncond t onal fet me gua an
tee Loce reierences furn shed
F ee est mates Ca
collect
1 614 237 0488 day or n ght
Aoge •Basement
Wate p oof ng
SWEEPER and sew ng mach ne
repa parts and supp es P ck
up and del \lery Dav s Vacutlm
C eaner one half m le up
Geo ges C eek Ad Ca 614

446 0294

RON S Talev 1 on Se 11 ce
House calls on RCA Quazar
GE Spec al ng n Zen th Cal
304 576 2398 0 614 446
2454

1986 Ford P ckup S6 000 Cal
304 676 74 76 after 4 p m
weekdav anytime on Saturday
and Sunday

Sta ks T ee and Lawn Se v ce
awn ca e andscap ng stump
removal 304 576 2842 o
576 2903

1973 Dodge 21on p clcup 318
et ps pb good cond ton
11200 304 576 2816
1986 S 10 4 wheel drrve eJCc
cond 32 000 m lea 86 700

304 896 3082

1984 Dodge Ram 50 truck

304 676 2737

1976 :4 ton Chevy uck. V 8 4
speed 56 000 m es One
own&amp;r call afte 5 p m 304

576 2376

W GGINS MASONRY W do
any b ck b ock stone t re~ a
ces Yeas e~epe enced Ca
304 372 8244

82

Plumbmg

8o Heatmg

t 969

Chevy p ckup 1977
Dodge Aspen au omat c w II
sell moto or transm ss on o ell

304 676 6394

73

CARTER S PLUM BING

Vans &amp; 4 W D

1980 4 WD
Good cond

ton Chevy 350
Cal 614 446

2618

AND HEAT NG
Fourth and P ne

Co

Gallpols Oho
Phone 614 446 3888 o 614
446 4477

84

1986 Fo d Ranger 4x4 2 3 te
d e.. 5 speed ong bed with
I ne 304 676 7855

74

Motorcycles

1984 Shadow 700 5ow m las
Many e•t as Pr cad to sell Call

Electncal

&amp; R efngerat10n
Res dent al o com me c el w
ng Nei(V se v ce o
epa rs
L cansed electr can Es male
fre e R denou Electr cal 304
675 1786

614 446 9664

85

1985 Ha lay OavkJson FLTC
E C always ga aged M•nv
acceuo n Asking S6500 Call
Day 614 446 633&amp; Even ng

D a d Wate Se v ce Poo s
C • e ns Wei s Delve y Any
t me Call 6,4 446 7404 No

General Hauling

614 446 4411

Sunday ca

1986 Hond• CR 126 Good
shape water cooled Ca 814

J &amp; J Wate Sarv ce Sw mrn ng

379 2662

&amp;

pools c ste ns wells Ph 614
246 9286

1982 Yamaha moto cycle
Good eondit on Cell 614 742
2728 or can be ••en Depot St
Rut and
1979 Honda CR 260 •xceltent
cond ton 8600 30' 676

2786

Wane son s Wate
reasonab e ate•
mmed ate
2 000 ga on de Ivery c:: ste ns
pools we etc call 304 676

2919

1986 Pont ac Le Man1 2 doo
hard top high pertorm1nce built
engine. 4 apeed Good cond
tton 12400 can 614 742
2373 after 4 00 p m

75

Fo marly Ken 1 now John s
Wate Serv c:e. John Watte son
Jr Owne 1 000 or 2 000 ga
te v ce 304 576 224B

1977FordWagonLTD2 $700

36 HP Ev nrude motor Pr c:eto

0

814 949

1972 Ford Gelu.y auto good
condition ntlde end out t&amp;60
Cuh Cell 814 98&amp; 3669 or

114 992 2107

a hoard of locuats In 1507
want a wake up call In 17 years

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

85 Honda XR 1 00 Can be uen
Lot36 K&amp;KMobleHomePark

814 949 2283
2168

•

Home
Improvements

CARS JEEPS &amp; TRUCKS under
1300 Buv 0 ract Local govern
men1 58 es SIEZED S. REPO
veh cles Ca NOW 1 618 459
3636 ext J2284 for d acto v
24 Houn

Boats end
Motors for Sale

14 ft Boat tra ler excel cond

-----------11me 81 cash

81

992 6092

0368

8 ue carpet

Services

1963 Fo d Cab Ove Dump
Tuck 82000 frm Ca I 614

614 246 9417

1973 Delta 88 good cond new
ekhau•t new breket V 8 auto
uan• Call 614 446 8196
May tag w nge wash ng mach ne &amp; Sea s con.ale hum d
fe
8o1h n ekcellent cond
304 89S 3393

S de n t uc:k camper 11 ft fully
self c::onta ned 304 675 5589

2663

304 676 4439

Hay

lAYNE S FURNITURE

0322

1976 Buck Rebu It engine..
47 000 m es Good t res new
b ekes $150 61¢..843 5274or

awn ng
Loaded
1352

SO Pon1 ac Phoen x au1o ac
hatchback garage kept n ceca
81500 Can see Flatrock Rt 2

379 2662

90 Dev•
wieh
approved cred t 3 M let out
Bulavllle Rd Open 9•m to &amp;pm
Mon thru Sst Ph &amp;14 441-

1983 Fo d bcort Wagon Good
cond ton 82600 Call 614
247 4675 afte 3 00

75 Ford LTD good cond Make
offer 304 895 3955

Mxed hay $1 baa on w•gon

SNAFU ® by Bruce Beattie

4 rooms and bath ca pet ef g
and ange Ref and Se c: Dap
Adu t1 only NO pets Cell
614 446 11&amp;3

388 9765

am tolpm H12MtV•non

Du oc Boa a Brad ust ke 1he
boar• we tested a1 the Oh o
Testat on that ga ned ove 2 6
lbs per dey Roger Bent f1'f
Sab na OH 513 684 2398

SWAIN
AUCT ON &amp; FURN TORE 62

4 BR house to enl 3 m so of
Oa po s 1:300 a month pus

4 BR

1982 Cama o Bar netta PS
PS auto t h AM FM cass VB
Cregar Louve s Sunroof eke&amp;
entcohdton Ca 614992
6512 afte 6 00 p m

304 676 7376

Frwt
&amp; Vegetables

51 Household Goods

Sat 16th Sun 11th 9 5
H11t ng ston beds d nettt 111
eha ra coHH tnd end tebiH
lemps books d11hn g 11111
tilverwa t
puzzles bleycln
metM catMnet bookelltl trunk
tv IIW n9m1chlnn whst not•
trath bar alt too 1 mow• 1
CIMert to many to It Ptu
Denney co ner of Rt 664 end
Rodney P 11.1 n B dwell Oh o

Pfe... nt

L1vestock

Back Strav va us
Cond $375

K by

Caulyl c conve t e n
only
S89 96 Mott modes Jnstale
1 on also eva ab e Muff er Man
"9 St mpson Ave Athens Oh o
1 BOO 843 3767

63

15 month old Cha o IS Bull A I
bred Call814 446 44-17

Y•d&amp;ela 1 ml•••totPort.,
on 6&amp;4 9 1 Fn • 8a1

of Little lllulltkln on
Ad Thurs Fri ·~d

Frl Sat

2985

MUSICal
Instruments

00

814 448 7571

CONSTRUCTION

47 Wanted to Rent

untH 2 00 164 S•c:ond Awnue

Annual H•v•• g gant c yard sale
1n C fton W Va F day 14th
and Setu dey 15th A1 n post
pones t I Frdey 211t and
Seturday 22nd

Call

Ca

Sp ace tor sma l 1 a e • AI
hoolc ups Cable Alao e H c encv
oom1 8 and c ab 1'1 MAs on
W Va Ca 304 773 6851

Merchandi se

Do vou Ike yard aeiM1 Then
come out •nd lhop n the open
I r at ViR II I IMIII&amp;. t ill•
It oUer•
beds high chiWt
d " ' " ' 11wb Ides lemps
much more plus 111• ...,wy
week Look kir ou •d In the
block adt

$75

1978 F ank n Sk dder new
che ns
antm 11 on stee ng
pumpl P enlen ce oadltf on
1966 Chev
uck 2 Fo d
backhoes 1977 John Dee e
dote
A good cond 1974
Inter log truck w th buncks
Phone 606 83.6 3257 aile
6 00 PM 606 836 6823

SPACES FOR RENT
Ta e
lot• Rt 1 Locus A~:tad b1ck of
K &amp; I( 304 675 1076

8 oaks de Apa tmentl

Black poodle to good hom a C•R

LONG'S

Busmess
BUll dongs

hom

41

Gallipolis
8t V1c1mty

1976 Starcraft camper seeps
8 VGC S1 200 7•16 t a I'"
S600 1948 Chevy Sty emas
ter orlg nal eng ne runs good
S900 Call 614 446 6637

6006

814 216 8189

13861fc

Apartm11nt
for Rent

57

Sa11 and case A so
fold ng send Ce 614 446

Magnavo• conso a tte &amp;O AM
FM sd o tu n table eel eel
E•ce cond 175 Cel 614
446 1561

oo

Renlals

G1veaway
Rd

44

273 4715

Truck Toppe fo 8ft bed S75
32 cal p s ol
a SO Ca I

614 446 9660

62 Wanted to Buy
Now buy ng shell corn or ear
co n Call fo latest quotet R ye
C ty Farm Suppy 614 446

C 8 almost new R ad o with
ee phones snd speakers Call
61, 446 8398 3

Off ce Space to Aen E•c::e en
fo At o neys Acc:ounte nt e c
C on to Cou
House C1
W seman Rtu Es a1e Agenc\'
81' 446 3644

49

Centtt
where
your fuMaldHs
twneere
Of
part t me
supervisor
d•Wtd •nd rtw•rdtd wkh every
compet•ttve Nlery •nd sh ft
d ff•ent:lal end ben.th: PK;kege
RN 1 nter•Ced nQU81itypett.nt
C:lft may conttct Mtrgeret
Bekw Don P n.crnt C.r• O.n
\er 665 J•ckson Pike. O.ll;,olit
from9AM 4PM M FCM"C.II

Ambitious person tor kitchen
end dallvary wo k Must hwe
own ctr and ntu~ance Evening
hours Apply n p.,.on Don..ll 1
Spr ng VrM., Plaze At 31 No
phone cells

4

46 Space for Rent

500PM

Buainess
OpponuMy

16 F fltt Wheel Catt e Tra e
14 d•c 24 gan conveyo
c eep feeder 304 675 69?9

Hammond E egante w th lesl e
speaka topofthel ne &amp;kce ent
cond on $6900 P octo v 1&amp;614 886 5440

446 4060

Soi"Y Colll14 44f 0711 oft•

y••• experrence Apptv n per
•on It Certer 1 Plumbing end
Heating. o\th Ave end P ne St
Gallipolla

3 Announcements

Furn1shed Rooms

Roo ms fa
ent day week
mon h Ga a Ho e Ca 6 4
44 6 9680 Ren as ow as $120
mon h

d..,, • we ... FrH room board

21

4216

t anche s 1 614 694 7842 or
69¢..5006

45

7627

f lrl.!lt l 1.11

NewHolend717ForgeHa ves
ter New Hoi and 7 H11vb ne..
Geh 95 Gr nder m •er A ek
ca lent cond ton 304 273

Used M 476 and V434 Ve meer

depos t and e e en ces
304 773 5944

1 84 ac &amp;I
n c: e t a land
Conven o cat on Cal 614 446

Lsdy to lve wtth .tderty tady 6

614 266 9391

78

1 8•96 lathe brown and sha p
meal 304 675 1769

102

t oning mechanic with at Hit &amp;

SALES &amp; SERVICE
Authomttl Jolin Dure

to

Two ma le AKC Pak ngese pup
p as 3 mos old G100 each Call

Auto Repa1r

St utA a 119 95 pa
nstalled
Most models Muffler Men 9
St mpton Ave A hens Oh o
1 800 843 3767

Dragonw¥nd Cattery Kennel
CFA H malayan Pers an and
S amasa k ttens AKC Chow
pupp et New tcittent S emete
and H malayans Ca 614 44&amp;
3844 afte 7PM

AK C eg ste ed Chespeake Bay
et ve pupp es 3 males Make
good gundog o a fam ly pet
Good w th ch d en 5200 304

35 lots 8o Acreage

tghl ndivktual Bend

Plumbing. hut ng end air cond

An nou nee 111 en Is

BOGGS

PLASTIC CRAn

Month of lulr.

1n

992-3718

U S RT SD EAST
GUYSVILLE OHIO

fo tht
Muma

814 448 7112

15 Yn Experttnce
Sthools
Churches

2283 or 114 949 2118

77

Groom ng A I b eeda All
11 yes Julie Webb Ph 814 446
0231

9669

Com rn&amp;rc a bu d ngs to a.. a
Downtown P Plo••ent S o 81
ott cea A One Rea E1 a t •
Ca o Yuge 8 o lcet Cs 304
675 5104

HOUM n Aec.tn• nMf NV., tulty
fun lhed •13 000 114 949

off• an ucet ern opponunh:y

----------t\1

FREE ESTIMATES

N 2nd AVE
MIDDLEPOO, OH

exper
tnct .,.d
pot.-1
SUpefVIt6onel
akillt
We

Pets for Sale

2 BR Mob a home on Bob
MoCo m ck Rd Cal 614 446

Galtipol 1 Oa tv Tr bt.'"' 121

NEW- REPAIR

Wholesale &amp; Retail
8 10 1 mo pd

you mullt have pdor men. . .

56

141166 2 BR loa elect c wi1h
woodbu ne on p wete lol 10
m n f om own $200 a n o
Oep and e e
equ ed Ca
614 256 1393

1978 P n o auto $800
ada
to p c:k up cas h be ter p ce
Hot day Rambler trade to tra c
to h itt Older 16 ft Alum
num boa Me c: u v 9 9 t a e
t1500 Co 614 446 7019

34

I good
ment

Aeadv mtx concrete and all
co ne eta supp as Call us Valley
Brook Cement and Supp es
304 773 5234

9360

18 Wanted to Do

Can tiD ight hwllng end roofing
Plsuon11ble •tea IIIia ion
lnldoo 114 948 2821

j 14 446 0966

7843

17 600 BTU AC
614 446 7916

• , .. 6

,----------t

Mob e Home fo ent
bahs38R totae ecJ m
down R 218 Ca I 614 256

o n R I 218 4 BR
ho u
2 ca g~W"Age 40•60
b&amp;
0 IC 81 t abe w th
obacco ban W cons de land
eon ac Cl at • 2 PM 614

• 5 '

tn Galt polis .,,, To be ellgeble

54 M1sc Merchand1se

40 ac "

20 ~t c e f11 m w h 3 BR houu
Hann an l ICI Road G 1nwood
W Va lo ,
• ntormal on c.al
304 173 6118 0
773 6tB6

Groc•v stOfl maneg• nftd.d

14 ~t7 0

Farms for Sale

•n•

RES DENTAL COMMELIIClAl.

ANN S
G1ft Shop &amp; Toy Store
Collectors Items
Costume Jewelry
Action Toys MUSical
Toys &amp; Tnnket Boxes

lnttrnsltv nsp•ct4KI and gueran
teed 1n_.allat10n avadeble We
buy junk trensml11 ons Call

Concrete b ocks ell 1 zea y11rd or
del very Meson und Gall pol s
Block Co
123 !12 f' ne St
Gall pols Oh o Ca 6:t.§ 446
2783

Chow Chow pupp es Mathe
AKC eg ste ed Fathe 1 2
me as 2 females 6 wks old
Al.lg 30tll Cute $40 each Call
614 446 2108 0 446 9516

1 000 es sz.us12 13 14 16
16 165 8 mlesoutRt 218
Call614&lt;256 6251

1

cons dM and

FREE ESTIMATES

•Dryers •Freezers
PARTS end SERVICE'

Auto Parts

Used and Rebu It transm 111ons

246 5121

Good u1ed color TV fo sa e
too mode and porteble Ca
614 446 1149

Ca ahan s Used T e Shop Over

CII"Pt't VtJV

Fur Sate by Ownlt 4 &amp; BA 3
b~hs Apprordm•tetv 4000 1q
f1 25
wtth ttnn • court
t173 000 W H sen with onty 5
ecret fOf t 1II 000 C11 for
eppotmm.,t 11.\ ..... 3381

Bu d ng Materials
Bock b ck 1aw• ppes wn
dows I ntel1 etc Cleuda W n
te s AID Grande 0 Call 614

Rabb s fo a•le 6 weeks o d
S3 00 each Ph 446 0196

for Rent

5849

1411?0 1974 Concord 3 BA

nac•

for Rent

197 4 H 1 c eu 2•&amp;6 2 bad
oom• fu n shed wa e bed
'f'l'lliShiH' drye b o c:k af\d vnde
pe nn ng 55 500 304 6?5

1971 Lb«ty 3 BR on 1 14
aer .. oH At tao 1t Porter t:s

n""

76

&amp; Accessones

EqUipment

PR CEO A GHT - 1971 Schutt
mob e home 1 2•60 2 bed
oonu on ent&amp;d kn b ock and
vndMpenn 1"19 nc uded P• t ally
u n s hed 14200 00 304 882
2048

at• 251 te&amp;2

tote! I Kt

r::=::::::::~::::::,-~;=~:=~:=::;::=~
Mob1le Homes
44
Apartment

52 CB TV Rad1o

14•70 W dso wth 14• 30
!Kid on 3 bed oorns pand
app o• 3 ac us Gall PQ 1 Fer v
304 675 6930

tn C own C ty J BA home. A I
newty lmOdetiMS Ownar t1Ndt
to t ansf..- M d 40 • Ctll

441 0175

Ce 814 318 IU3 anvt me.

"Where else but m baseball
can a fifty-thousand-dollar
a-year man chew out a
mllbon-dollar-a-year man?"

lc

1983 F eedom 1 41170 3 bed
oom fun s hed Ce 614 992
7479

Aucnon.., CDI Oscar E Cl clc
I Oln" # 754 88 304 89&amp;

31

®br Lar!J Wright

G oom and Supply Shop Pet

CARPET 9~~;12 as ow as $50
ots to p c::k h om A so cut
co pel $6 00 a yd end up
F nanc ng ava Sw val rockers
$100 Mo ohan Furn tu e
Uppe R ve Rd Call614 446
7444

R~AOING

Situation•
Wanted

oom
v ng
oom su tea from $179 95 to
S700 Chest of drawers 4
drawer 648 5 d awe $69 95
End tab e1 1 om $69 96 set
Used Fu n tu e bed oom su ea
full s zed beds tw n beds and
ocke s Reel ne s1 om $99 96

KIT N CARLYLE

THE WORKING

t100 00 Pet- n t
W ite ACE 1517 2 Pima Nape
vile IL80140

BABYSITTER NEEDED Vwhiltl
schoolsterts 2 VIII" old end flrlt
Qfldll" aher tehool Point Pt . .
Mnt .,.. Aaf•ence pref•red
but not nec••rv 30' 175
32111 aftet' &amp; p m

New wood 6 pc
v ng
su tea S399 95 New

MANS FRIEND

BOOKS!

12

PARSONS FURNITURE

55 Bulldmg Supplies

and up

5 oo CoM 814 4411244

GET PAID FOR

1984 St.uttz 3 BR w th e.w.pand
816 000 or but

For • ••vice type busiMII wtl"
en e~tcellent ncome potentlel
thet requir• only 1 trMII Wwett
mant7 Thl1 .. en o~unlty
worth irwlst~etlng H you lfl
will•• to undergo 11 .xtenliv~
t111 ttatning progr1m FranchiH
oMIIbll in the Pom•DY • 11
FCM" mare lnformeUon Write
O.nT• Inc PO Boll C .. 111
c oGillpolsDellyTrlbune. 126
3rd An Qellipolll Ohio

AA EOE

S d4n9 inttaMers end hell*"l
hperleneed p efet -.:1 Must
hwe d.-ndlble truck Cell
304 175 8&amp;39 bltw•en e
900

SJ250

.,.tt

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

AU ar•• C1ll MIKUvn
Wew• 304 882 2846
AVON

CST I

r111plnv""'''t

lliYIIG AU IUIOI IIA!jDS OF
IIIMISIIIOID ll'rtlAijCfl AU
IIPAIII GUAIIAIIltiD 1 TUI
PAITIA!jDUIOL
Stnt&lt;NUJ refriteralort,. fr•z
.,... AC lwaw
onfrJ
wothtn 4r,.,-s. r..,... llit
hwashers mterowans, ,...
bop disp010ls, lrosh

OUT FOR FUTURE USII

earning money now tor
ChdnmM S•ll Avon Ft~ Mile
k t Call814 992 7180

PIll Inn 3004 J•clc•on .Ave
Pont Pl. .•nt

MIKE S APPliANCE
REPAIR SERVICE
Serv1ce Call
Onl~

a..rt

Want to buy used Mobile Hom•

992 5418

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Ohio

k\ot Ontyl Inquire el V lltgt

2411 even no•

BUY SELL - TRADE

992-3410

We Med • c•. . minded people
or!Mted ,..-.on toworllln 1hlgh
qUIIIV Hntet office The perf.O.
job for the rlf"' per11011 Pl. . e
und aamptM• reaum• to D•lly
Sentinel ·8o• 729 K Pomeroy

4340

WEST GALL POI;IS AT 36
PHONE 614 446 7274

USED APPLIANCES
Weshe 1 dryers etr gerators
ranges Skagg t Appl ences
Upper R ve Rd bel de s,one
Crest Mo1el 614 446 7398
GOOD

M c: rowave

4PM

PUTS SERVICE
Repa~rs on All Makes
Transaxle Repa1rs
locatod Halfway lotwlt 7 ............
HRS 12 00 6 00
Monday Saturday
CLOSED SUNDAY

Day ar N1ght

high queiMy
dentll office. leftd cmnpleta
num, to Deily Sentinel lox
728 • PometOy Ohio

Tobec:co .tickt and wnnger
wether Ca1111' 379 2180

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
CENTER

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

NHdM Oantll Hygent'-t fo 1

2282

Cal 114 446 0176

CUSTOM BUilT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
At laasonoble Pnces

tin

lf2 PltCE

992 6191
949 2660
992 5692
949 3080
992 2259

~PubhcSele

114 441 3172

Must. see to apprec1ate

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992 6601
417 Second Avenue Box 1213
Galhpohs Oh1o 45631

CERAMIC BISQUE

HENRY E CLELAND JR .,,. ......
JEAN TRUSSELL
DOTTIE TURNER
TRACY RIFFLE
OFFICE

Middleport Oh10
1 13 lfc

~ LISA. M KOCH M S

and

Don t 1111kl tit• .,,.., elll.
Call "Ciel1d R11ltv.

992 2196

Computenzed Heanng A1d Selection
~ Sw1m Molds lnterpretmg Setv1ces

NEW LISnNG - He e s a cute 1ne one floo• plan 3 bed
room home look ng o a new ow ne n ce k lchen and baCh
shed equ pped k tchen and olhe c ean eat ures $16 500

people o..._.4KI

WeiNIY cesh tor 1111 model ct. . .
u11d cars
J m Mink Chev Oldt Inc
8 II Gene Johnson

year

!:

•hephant mill He1 bl•clll coH•
on Friendly H11 been htr. .lnce
MondiV e 1 A H2 2134

»&gt;

PAT HILL FORD

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES 4 Ml

324 E lla n Sl

SALES &amp; SERVICE

NEW LISTING - Nce ga age apartment n M ddlepo t 3
bedrooms fuJ basement a r cond toned a on a evel ot
c ose to shopp ng $21 900

w..-

A ell P. .rson Auction.. li
c~~nsed In OhiO end Wilt Virginia EIIMI entiQu• farm 6quidtllon Ololn
773 1788

Carter French
Residence
Corner of Fourth
and Palmer
Middleport

NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO riiCOmmandl thet you
do bulin•• with people vou
know end NOT to sand money
through the mall until yo..~ hftll'l
lnvlllttgtt.cf, the offlfinl

51 Household Goods

offo Ca 61 4 446 6726

Nloa ll!dy to ltv. in and Girl for 2
smell cfllldren while moth•
workl: For room baird and
cell 114 742 2710

_"T_,,.,~-:Co:=-.11;..1_1-:-4-_44_:_8:..._:;2::,30:_1~
::lo
found Tan and •own t.m.le

comaaoas

MODULAR HOME'

for Sale

0 118 412 0011

7-JS '7 I 010 p4

We can repair and re
core radiators and
heater cores We can
also ac1d bo1l and rod
out radiators We also
repa1r Gas Tanks

I CUT

i .IOQ 227 1110 or c.U conect

LAFF·A·DAY

Opportunity

OPEN FOR BUSINESS

Wa Carry F shing Supp es

NEW LISTING- SYRACUSE- Br ck and f arne anchlype
home w th basement I car ga age 3 bedrooms on leve
a ge o La ge lenced ea play area Home s n excellent
co mfit on n a g_ood oca on Ca Co appo ntmenl $39 500

GillUM

10 8 tic

Ntw

NEW LISTING - SYRACUSE - I! you ke spac ous rooms
and wan the neatness of tastelu decor make an appo nt
men \ to see h s on e y 4 5 bed oom hom e w lh 2 baths
k c en w th cozy b eakla s nook forma d n ng room ul ty
oon u base men t La ge neat ac e lot 2 car ga age Many
ot he1 featu es $62 900

985-4141

992 621S or 992 7314

168 North Second
Middleport Ohoo 4 57 60

UW LISTING- RUTLAND- 3 bedrooms I ~ sto1y home
Enc osed f on1 po ch eq u pped k tchen sto age bu ld ng
and pa t basement $2 1 000

..... Day •• hllli. .

v.w.

lost and Found

LOST VIcinity of MHI Creek
ta Toy Poodle AMWert to

•WINDOW REPLACEMENT
•REMODELING •
ROOM ADDITIONS
•GARAGES • POLE
BUILDINGS

ctt-... Over 100 items.

Top oomm... lon end holtNI
Dlftt C.ll for fr" cetaJog.

Wf)

•ROOFING •SIDING

FREE ESnMATES

6

32 Moblla Homes

Help Wanted

Friendly HomePwt... h .. open
..... rn811. . . . .nd de.!trt in
your .,.. l.arg•t lne Jn party
plln free lilt brend new chrilt
m• o8tltlog. toy gift. Mel home
dtoOr

•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS

8 4 I mo

11

Giveaway

ing~

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

1124 East Maio Sl

SIDING CO.

Business

J&amp;L
INSULATION

4

The Dally Sentinei- Page-1 1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh1o

Friday August 14 1987

14 1987

Ohio

1986 Buick Somerset LTD V6
PS PB •lr cruise loed..t d•k
aroy OJ&lt;IOrlor dovegroy
interlot 28 000 ml• for more
lnfo.-lon oo1114 149 2B20

ell•-

I

••

87

Upholstery

Cell 81.\ 448 2055 Even

Pon1oon Bo•t 50 HP John1on
tre ler U7150 Call 114 441

40.3 ef1o I 00

PM

198316 fl S.yl ner boat wtth
trail• 16 HP Chrylfer moto
614-992 7163 after 4 30

18 11 flag lou bol1 125 Hp
ski 1 f2o\OO

Cell 814 385

9333

•

R • M Custom Couches and
Rtupho ttery St Rt 7 C own
Ctv Oh 8142681470 Eve
814 446 3438 Ol)en daly 9 to
430 Sat930to130 Olda
new Uphosterad
Mowrey • Upholster ng eervlng
tr countyare•22yea • The best
n tum ture upholttenng Call
304 616 4164 1or 1 ee
ettlm11el

-'"
,.
.,.

'
t.

�'
Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Local briefs--..... Weather
South Central Ohio
Hazy su ns hine hot and humid
today. High in the ·lower 90s .
Sout h wind 5 to 15 mph.
Mostly c leat· tonight . Low in
the upper 60s. South wind less
than 10 mph .
Mostly sunny hot and humid
Saturday. High In ttle lower 90s .
Extended Forecast
Sunday through Tuesday
Hot and humid Sunday, possi·
bly bPcoming a Ut ile cooler by
Tu esday . A chance of showers
Monda y. Hi ghs near 90 Sund ay
and in !he the 80s by Tuesday .
Lows near 70 Sunday , and In the
60s by Tuesda y.

Seeks court. action for injuries
An action requestlng damages for injurles's urrered In an auto
accident ha s been filed In Meigs County Common Pleas Court by
Steven A. Musser, Pomeroy, J ohn Musser, Pomeroy, and West
American Insurance Co., Hamilton, against J erry J . Haning,
Rutland, and Ray Ha ning, Pomeroy . On Aug. 10, 1985 on Route
143, the defendants, in a vehicle owned by Ray Haning, drove
into the side of a vehicle driven by Musser. Plaintiffs allege
negligence on the part of the defendant s and request judgment
of $33,223.64 for Injuries a nd a trial by jury.
·
Otis McClintock, Racine, and Emma J a ne McClintock,
Racine, have filed action agai nst Racine Ball Assodaf:!on, in
care of Joe Kirby, pres ident, a nd Souther n Local School
Distrim, In care of Bobby Ord. superintendent, requesting a
preliminary injunction to enjoin the defendants or their agents
from trespass ing on property owned by the plaintiffs adjacent
to Sout hern Junior High bailfield, pending final action in this
matter. The plaintiffs also reques t a permanent injunction to
prevent ball tea m s, from pony league age and up , from using ·
the junior high field. Plaintiffs ask for compensation of $8,000.
Francis Shaeffer, Pomeroy, has filed suit against Alvin
Tay lor, Pomeroy, requestlng an injunction to prevent the
defendart from closing or obstructing a right of way owned by
the plaintiff across the pre mises of the defendant. Shaeffer also
asks fo r $1.000 in damages and a mandatory Injunc tion
direc ting the defendant to remove materials from a culvert on
the right of way. Title to property has been quieted in an action by James W.
Sullie and Greta M. Suttle against Clay Wilson, et al.
In other court matters, the name of the Judicial CorrectioM
Board for At he ns, Hocking, Meigs, Morgan, Perry, Vinton and
Wa shington Count ies shall be SEPTA (Southeastern Probat ion
Treatment Alt ernative) Judicial Corrections Board with
Monda H. Wilson appointed as director. Carl Hysell and P aul
Gerard will represent Meigs Cou nty on the citizens' advisory
board.
A restrain ing order has been issued ag ainst Esther Ward as
requested by James T. Ward, defend ant In a n action flied by
Esther Ward.
An e ntry ap proving the purchase of property at its appraised
value has bee n filed in the case of Richard Kibble aga in st
Ernest L. Kibb le.
'
1'he case of Krys tal Lynn Bolin agai nst Joseph Craig Bolin
has been di smi ssed.

'

I,

'•

'

'·

I
i,,

Marriage licenses
Marriage li censes have been
issued in Meigs Count y Probate
Court to Richard William Dav is ,
20, Syracuse, a nd Kimberly Lyrin
Eblin. 19. Pomeroy ; Michae l
Todd Smith, 25. Pome roy, and
Nancy Jean Hayes , 29 . Pomeroy.

Seek divorce
Ke nda Gibb s, Little Hocking,
a nd Bryan A. Gibbs, Reedsville.
have fi led for a disso lution of
marriage in Meigs Coun ~ y Com mon Pleas Court.
Nicky Ray Barber has been
gra nt ed a di vorce from Ka thry n
E . Barber.

Senior citi:tRns
danct&gt; is tonight

Squads receive five calls

P om eroy Sen ior C itize ns
Da nce Club is sponsoring a
squa re a nd round dan cf' toni ght
1Friday! , from 8 to 11 p ,m . Mu sic
by Larry Hubba rd and · Tru e
Country. Everyo ne is as ked 10
bring s nacks for the s nac k tabl e.

Meigs Cou nty Emerge ncy Medical Services reports five calls
Thursday: Rutland a t 2:20 a .m. to Danville for Carl Bright to
Holzer Medical Center; Rutl and at 9:03a .m. to Mei'gs Mine No.
2 for Steven Mic hae l to Holzer Medical Center; Racine a ll : 05
p.m. to Sharo n Road for Jerry Mc Phers.on who was trea ted but
not transported;. Pomeroy at 7: 15 p.m. to Mulberry Ave. for
Lana Gibson to Vetera ns Memoria l Hospital; Salem Township
Fi re Department a t 3:45 p.m. to a brus h fire on Rout e 124.

I

Area deaths

Charlt&gt;nf' Guerriero

Cha rle ne Spencer Guerrie ro.
59. 169 Minna St. . Brookly n, N.
Y., died Mo nd ay evening at at
Brookly n Hos pita l foll ow ing a
lingering illness .
She was bern Ja n. 27 . 1928 in
Belpre. a d&lt;! ught er of the la te
Cha rles R . and F ra ncis Roof
Spencer. She was a 1946 gradu a te
of Belp re Hig h Sc hool and
a tt e nded MoUnta in State Bu siI

,.

ness Coll ege in Parkers burg. .
She was a mem ber of t tie
Belpre Congregation al Chu rch,
the Auxiliary of Blennerhassett
Pos t495. American Leg ion, a nd a
for mer member of Chapter 541.
Order of Eastern Star. Lev it·
town . Long Is land. and the
Wa ntau gh Co n gregat ional
Chu rc h. She was emp loyed as a
secretary atr the Levittown High
Sc hool, la ter as a sec re tary for a
Brookl vn physicia n, and for the
Ne w Yor k City De mocr a tic
Par ty.

ted Methodist Church , She was a
member of the Cent e r Poi nt
Far.m Women; s Club.
Surviving are her hus band.
Rome; a so n, Pau l Fisher , a t
home; a son and daughter-in·
law, Harold a nd J a nice F isher,
Li ttle Hocking; t hree gra ndso ns,
Mike. Randy and Darrin Fis her;
a brother, Wilbu r Atlee Monroe,
Parkers burg, and several ni eces
and ne phews.
· Besides her parent s , she wa.s
preceded in deat h by a brother
and two sisters.
,
Serv ices will be he ld at 2 p.m.
Sunda y at the White-E thridge
Funera l Home, 125 Lee St.,
Belpre. with the Rev . Don
Kochers perger officiating. Bur·
ial will be in the Evergreen No rth
Ce m eter y in Par ke r s bur g .
Frie nds may ca ll at the fu neral
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Sat urda y.

I

are her

DeMolay to meet

Daily stock prices

Meigs Chapter Order of DeMo·
lay and Mothers· Club wlll m eet
Monday eve ning, 7: 30, at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.

(Asof10:30a.m.)
'
· Provided by
.Bryce and Mark Smllh
of Blpnt Ellis &amp; Loewl
Firm
Price
Am E lectric Power ............. 28\jl
AT&amp;T ...... ....... .. ..... .... .........
Ashland Oil ......... ..... .......... 66"
Bob Evans Farms .. ... ......... 25\o\
Charming Shoppes ..............·... 33
Federa l Mogul. .. .. ....... ....... ,48\o\
Goodyear T&amp;R .. ................. 74\o\
Heck's Inc . .... .. .................... 4%
Limited Inc ........... : ... .. ....... 50"
Multimedia Inc ......... ......... . 70\o\
Rax Res taurant s ....... c•••••.•••. 5\jl
Robbins &amp; Myer s .. ..... ... ...... 10%
Shoney' s Inc . ... .............. ......... 31
Wendy's In ti. ...................... ... 11
Wort hington lnd .. .. ...... .. ...... 24\o\

Bailey reunion
slated Saturday

Sunday

•

·

Vol. 22 No. 26
Copyrighted J 987

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
The f ollowing · were rece i\l ed / prepared by the
Ohio Environmental Protec·
tion Agency {OEPAI last
week. Effective dates of
final actions and issuance
dates of proposed acti ons
are st at ed. Final actions may
be appealed. in writing,
within 30 days of the date of
this noti ce, to the Environmental Board of Review .
Rm . 300 . 2 36 E. Town St .,
Columbu s, OH , 43215 .· No·
t ice of anv appeal shall be
fil ed with th e director within

diys. Proposed actions
will become final unless o
writt8n adjudicatio11 heafin9

public mee ting rnav be hold .
As 1o any action . inc luding
re·c eipt or verified com -

Draft N PUt.S Permi1
R e n ewa l Stlbject· t o

30 days of the issua nce date;
or the director revisea/ w i1h·

obtain not ice of forth er
ac t ions. and add• l ional mfor-

a ny

person

may

draws the proposed action .

mation .

Any penon may submit
comments and / or request a
meeting regarding any n o n·
f inal action within 30 day s of
the date indicated. " Aclion". u used above does
not include receipt o f a
~erified complaint. If sig nifi·
ca~ t pub lic interest uistt,, a

provided in not ices of pan icular actions. all commu nications shall b !' sent to :
Heaong Clerk, OEPA , P 0
Bo 111 1049. Columbui OH .
43 266 -0149 PH . ( 614 )
481 -21 15
C onsuh ORC
Chap . 37 45 and OAC
Chaps. 37 46- 4 7 and 37 4 6 ·
s' f or· requhemen1s.

~-

Unluss otherwise

Revision
Village o f M iddlepon Wastewater Treatment Plent
East of SR 7

Salisbut'( . OH
Public Noti ce Dat e
08 11 4 / 87
Receiving Wa tera : Oh to
River
Fa c ility Oesc rl ption 1
Sewage
P e rm

i1

No

OPB00025•Bo
18t 14. H e

Louery numbers

4 WHEEL DRI\IE MUD BOO
SUNDAY, AUGUST 16TH, 2:00P.M.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

GENERAL ADMISSION ~3.00 - KIDS UNDER 12 FREE

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH .
. Phone 992 ·2976

~5.00 ENTRY FEE
CLASS A STREET LEGAL TIRES UP TO AND INCLUDING 38'S
CLASS 8 STREET LEGAL TIRES 40' S AND 44 'S

SPRING I. SUMMER HOURS

PRIUS WILL BE AWARDED BY AMOUNT Of INTIY fEE
PLUS - TROPHIES AND DOOR PRIUS
GATES OPEN AT 12:00 NOON-ENTRIES 12 TO 2

Monday thru Friday 9 to 5
Saturday 9 · 1

THE
GRAVELY
SYSTEM

LOCATED IN I I INlOW PAiil, 1'11 MillS UST Of lA SHAN
STORE OFF CO. RD. 28 ON RAINBOW IIIDGf.

WATCH FOR SIGNS

1

SUPER SATURDAY •••

DUBAI , United Arab Emira tes (UP IJ- Amine
In the Gulf of Om an $ank a supply s hip Saturday .
k llllng one sa ilor and leavi ng fi ve missing , a nd a
huge fire erupt ed at petroleum plant In an area of
Saudi Arabia see n as vuln er able to Iranian
subversion.
Four people were Inju red In the !Ire a t an
Arabi an Am er jean 01 1Co. lique fied gas pla nt a t AI
Juba yl In eas tern Sa ud i Ara bla 45 miles northwes t
"of Bahra in. the s tat e-run Saudi Press Agency
sa id.
The agency said the !Ire wa s an accident
tri ggered by an e lectrical fa ul t. But Indu stry
sources sa id the , fi re was very large a nd was
brought und e r control ·a ft e r several hours .
Gulf ana lys ts have said the Saud! Arabian
eas ter n provin ce Is v uln Prable to I ranian·
spo nsored subversion becau se of its large Shiite
Moslem population . But political sour ·es In Saud!
Arabia said there was no e\· lden ce the fire wa s
sabotage.
Iran ha s vowed to avenge the death. of 1ran la n
p!l~rlm s killed du r in~ protests J uly 31 out side In

th e holy ctiy of Mecca In Sa ud! Arabia.

The sinking of the 156-fool, 245-lon shipping
suppiy vessel Anita was the worst such inci dent
and the first time there were casualties outside
the Persia n Gu lf since the near ly 7· year-old
Iran-Iraq war began.
" We have not lost hope,' ' a spokesman said a t
the Dubal· based Gulf Age ncy. which owns the
ship. Telev!siori crews that flew over the scene of
the attac k spotted wreckage including an empty
llfebeat, debris , oranges a nd two mines .
United Arab Emirates coast guard cutters a nd
helico pters ra ced to the scene a nd plucked six
people out of the sea In strong wind s. One of the
s ix, an Indi an crewm a n. di ed in a hospital and two
s urvivors wete hospit alized, the Gulf Agency
said .
Four crewmen and one of four Korea n sea me n
being ferried to a s hip off the port of Fujairah
were missing. The Gulf Agency said the missing
Included the . s hip's British captain , Gerry
Blac kburn , 36, of Humberside, Engla nd .

BROADY lEW HEI GHTS, Ohio m ajor so lid waste landfill or have
IU Pil - Gov . Ri chard F. Cr- one with less than five years
lestr. sayi ng th~ b!l! would ca pa city remai nin g. An est!·
pre vent Ohio from beco min g mat&lt;.'d 5 percent to 10 percent of
" th e nation' s so lid was te dump , .. the waste filling those la ndfill s
Friday e ndorsed IPfl lsia t!on to co me from ot he r sta tes, the
reduce out-of sta t&lt;· w ast~ d ls po· EPA said.
sal In Ohio.
" This b!!J Is a n Im portan t tool
The b!J! wou ld make It more In making sure Ohio doesn't
&lt;'Xf)('n s tvc for ot h ~ r sta l~s to 11h!p becom e t he na tion· ~ solid wast£'
th ~!r g&lt;l t"bug&lt;' to Ohio, a nd would
dump ,·· el es te said.
prohibit an~· dump from accep t·
t he bi ll wou ld a lso Increase
lng wa st£' from mor~ 1hen 100 fundin g for the s tate EPA's solid
miles away.
wa ste program from $1!50,000 to
The pro jJOsa ! also ca ll s for $1. 5 ml !l!on In l989. Inc rease the
crim inal pe na lties of up to$50.000
and four .v ars In prison for
peo pl e reck lessly v!o l&lt;ll!ng the
"Th e volu m e of wa ste is
gr·ow lng wh!JP the num ber of
accrptable so l!cl waste la ndfills
Is shr!nk lrr g, .. Ccle&gt;.te sa id. "" If
wr fall to · tak e ac l!on now In
add rcss! n ~ th ese pr·oblems , the
crisis will only beco me· more .
SC'V(' J' (' . "

.

·

The Ohio EPA sai d 50 of the 88
counties p,!t her do not IHlVC a

KIHDLEWOOD
DESIGNER SERIES

FIREPLACE INSERT
OR
FREEST-ANDING STOVE

SAVE TO 40°/o
Also Receive

La ud erm !!J , 16, son of Larry and
By NANCY VOACII AM
Hcdy
Laudermilt , of Antiquity,
Tlmes-Scntlncl Staff
when
he
won the go ld. II was also
POMEROY - " He 's winning!
th
e
th
rill
of a li fe time for the
He's winnin g! He's wi nnin g! He
mem
bers
of
his cheering section
won!" sc reamed Pat ty Hays a nd
his
mot
her,
He dy , a nd his
He dy La u derml lt a s they
coac
h,
Patty
Ha
ys,
of Gallipolis.
cheered Larry Ray La uderm ilt
La ude rmllt still hasn't come
on Ia a go ld medal In the 100
meter da s h a t thi s year's lnterna · down out of the clouds since his
tiona! Spec ial Olympics Summe r · victory . . But It Is n' t only the
wi nn in g th at he's talking abeul,
Ga mes . Aft e r the shouting a nd
it
's all those differe nt people
the jumping up and down, came
from
all over the world who were
the hugs and tears .
·
In
South
Bend with him.
It was the th r ill of a lifetim e for

r

I

LIMITED SPACE - 3-S YRS.

COMPARE AT $249.
YOUR CH.OICE OF COLORS

JoAnn Newsome-992-3382
BREAKFAST AND LUNCH .SERVED

Toys
'

~~-

Games - Crafts

..J..
. ----~-·.!_ ..__

-

-

Paintings

r
----- -- - --·--- - -

&amp;

PAnERNS
RECLINER CHAIR ·
YOU WILL NOT FIND AN
EQUAL QUALITY STOVE AT
THESE SAVINGS ANYWHER E

) Guaranteadl

OLD TIME HEATING CO.
FACTORY OUTLET
701 2nd AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

PLATFORM ROCKER
'50 WILL HOLD YOUR
· STOVE TILL FALL
90 DAYS SAME AS CASH
PLENTY OF FINANCING AVAILABLE

-....._,..

E PA' s a uthority to require older
!a hdf!lls to m eet Improved stand·
ards a nd regul a te certa in for ms
of was te the EPA previously had
no co ntrol over .
" We need new a uthorit y to
Insure that five yea rs from now
we don ' t have the sa me problems
that ma ny Eas t Coast sta tes are
experiencing, " sa id Ri ch Shank ,
direc tor of the Ohio EPA.
Celes te, speaking at ~ landfill
In the. Clevela nd suburb of
Broadview He ight s. agreed with
Sha nk .

Antiquity youth earns Gold Medal
in J nternational Special _Olympics

FOR ONLY

Baby Sitting-Hourly or Weekly

The Gulf of Oman formerly was considered a
safe area where s hips could refuel, unload and .
c hange cr ews. The inci den ts have seriously
worried the authorities in the UAE whose
President Sheikh Zayed he ld ta lk s wit h Syrian
President Hafez Assad in Damascus Saturday in
hope of easing gulf ten sions. Syria is Iran' s only
significant Arab ally .
One shipping source told United Press In ternal tona l he thought the si nking of the Anita would
" affect trade w ith the Emirates considerably."
The source said that although the mines were
aimed at U.S. warships In the area the dev ices are
· hu r tin g al l s hipping. "Th e min e has no brain . It
has no eyes . It is a very indiscrimina te weapon,"
he said.
Riyad h Radio said ·a Saudi navy officer was
killed and another injured In an Incident involving
a mine Wednesday. T he officer was killed when
the mine was detona ted too close to a bomb
disposa l unit on a beach in the " neutra l zone"
between Saudi Arabia and Kuwait.

POMEROY - The Ohio Departme nt of Transportation and
the Pomeroy Chamher of Commerce will sponsor a ribbon
c utting cer emony celebrating t he reop ening of the Pomeroy·
Mason Bridge at II a.m. Friday on the ramp of the Ohio si de of
th e hrldge.
Featured I{Ucsts Include Bernie Hurst, Ohio Departme nt of
Tra nsport11tlun Ullslstant director; George Dougan, deputy.
. director for ODOT Dlstrl cl10; Stale Senator Jan Long and State
Represe nt ative ,loly n Boster.

YOUR CHOICE

I

Me anwhil e, Iran said Saturday its m inesweepers began operations Friday in international
waters of th e Gulf of Oman and the Strait of
Hormu z and had found "nothing suspicious, " the
stale- run Islamic Republic News Agency r e·
port ed. Two warships are escort ing the m ines·
weepers th a t are being aided by helicopters, it
said .
Th e s inking of the Anita was the second lim e a
ship hit a min e in th e Gulf of Oman in a wee k. The
American-operated superta nke r Texaco Ca r ib·
bean s truck a' min e in the sam e area Mo nd ay
while carrying a consignment of Irania n crude oil .
But the supertanke r took no casua lties.
Port authorities at Fujairah reimposed a
50-squ are-mile exc lusion zo ne just no r th of
Fujairah because of t he danger of mines, which
shippers be lieve were sown by Iran.
The UAE introd uced the exclusio n zone for a
day Thursday but lifted it the sa me day saying th e
area was cl ear of mines. The UAE Friday turn ed
down an Iran ian offer to sweep its waters.

Gov. Celeste endorses bill to
•
limit waste dumping ID Ohio

taw.

TWO DAYS ONLY
BUY ANY

BURNS WOOD or COAL

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Bridge ceremony scheduled Friday

WORTH A TRIP
FROM ANYWHERE

husband ,

10 Sections, 68 Pages

Middleport- Pomeroy- Gallip&lt;&gt;lis-Point Pleasant, August 16, 1987

Supply ship hits mine; one dead, five missing

Public Notice

pla ints ,

•

Hazy, humid Sttnday .
High In low 90s. Prohah!llly
of rain near zero.

tmts -

Public Not ice

requ est is submitt~d within

.Mason County livestock sale success
Pages - D-2-8

Inside

Along the Riv er ..... ... B.J.8
Business ..................... .D-1
Co mics ... ............... .. lnsert
Classifleds ....... ..... .... D-3-7
Deaths .... ................... . A-5
Editorial ..... .. .... .......... A·2
Sports .... .................. C·1·6

•

Public Notice
3

Helping more than people - Beat of the Bend
Page B-5

-Page B-1

8:00a.m.- Gates Open- Flag Raising Ceremony
8:00a.m.- ARBA Rabbit Show-S how Ring
10:00 a .m. - Wa termelon E a ting Contest
11:00 a .m. - Open Mason County Youth Horse Show
{Spans. by Peoples Bank)
1:00 p.m. - Pe dal Tractor Pull {Finals).
Horses hoe Pitching
Chapel Opens
. 3:00p.m. - Entertalnment.Mai n'Stage- P ake McE ntire
. 3:30p.m. - Crosscut Sawing Contes t
(L.WIIliamson Pallet,Inc.)
4:00p.m. - Wood SjJI!ItingContest
5:45p.m. - Robert Lutton Awar(j
6:00p.m. - Stylettes 'f\v!rllng Corp. (inside stagel
Ma son County Open Horse Show
7:00p.m. - Grand Square Squaredancers-lns!de stage
7:30p.m. - Mason Cou nty Horse Pull Contest
8:00p.m.·- Midway Cloggers (outside)
8:45p.m. - Sweep 0tak&lt;'S Award &amp; Donnie Hlfl Award
-Main Stage
9:00p.m. - E nterta! nment.Ma in Stage- Pake McEntire
11:00 p.m. - Thanks for Attending the 1987 Pair
-Gates Closed

Veterans Memorial
Thursday Admi ss ion s
Bo bb y S tewart , C hes hir e;
Wayne KPnn edy, Middleport ;
Jerry Mc Pherson, Portland ;
J immy Hayes, Pomeroy; Carol
Diddle, Pomeroy; La na Glbsbn,
Pome r oy;
Opa l Barr,
Middleport.
Thursda y Disc ha rges - Clara
Phill ips.

10 AM TO 5 PM

Life
in the
slow lane

SATURDA \:', AUGUST 15, 1987

Hospital news

CLEVELAN D &lt;UP it - Thu rs ·
day's winni·ng. Ohi o Lotrer.1·
numbers with ticke t sales J nd
payou ts:
Dai ly Numbe r
495.
Tick et sa les tota led Sl. 29i.9t2.
with a payoff du e of $:lRR.Il0·1. .JO.
E'ICK -1
874:1.
PICK-4 t icket sales tota lt&gt;d
$187.066. with a payoff due of
$84,377.
PICK-4 $1 stra ight bet pays
$4,800. PICK -4 $1 box bet pays
$200.

50 cents

The Bailey reunion will be hiohl
Sa turda y, 5: 30p.m ., attheShr.ln ~
Park in . Racine. Family and
friends we lcome .

Mason County
Fair Schedule

34"

Roger Walker

Roger L. Walker. 57. died
un expec tely Thurs day a t his
1· John Guerriero. three daughters. · hom e a t 12.1
Union Ave.,
: Mrs. Joseph La Roero. West Isli p, Pomeroy . Mr. Walk er was dea d
N. Y.; Mrs . Bevery DeCrugh,
1, Windso r Locks , Conn ., and Mrs. upon the arrival of the Pomeroy
Emergency Sq uad . ArrangeGinger Jacobs . Cro mw e ll. ment s wil l be announced· by the
Conn.; two st epc hi ldren, John Ewing F uneral Home.
a nd Grace Guerr iero, both of
Broo klv n; two brot hers , Oscar
Barhara Butcher
E. and ~H . Clifton Spencer, both of
Belpre; a s is ter , Vivian Whit ed .
Barbara F-. Butcher, Cil , Upper
Vien na, W. Va ., s ix gra ndc hild· River Road . Ga llipolis. died at
ren, and one great-g ra ndchild.
JO: 30 p.m. Thursd.a y. Aug. 13,
Besides her parents . she was 1987 ln.Holzer Medical Cent er.
preceded in dea th by her hus·
Born Feb. 6, 19.36, in Logan, she
band, Wa rren T. Crandall , who was the daughter of Morgan and
was a former chief of police in Mae Dyer Francis of Hurricane.
Belpre:
She was a teacher for the
Se rv ices were held a t 9: 30 a .m . Mason County Boa rd of Edu caThu rsday at ihe St. Cat herine of tion, a graduate of Logan High
Alexa ndi·ia Church In New York. School and a graduat e of Bob
The body was I he n ta ken to the Jones Univer s ity in Greenville,
Spence r F un eral Home in Belpre S.C.
where services will be he ld a t 11
Surviving In addition to her
a.m . Saturday wi th the Rev . Jean· par e nts are two daughter s, Cas·
O 'Brien officiat ing . Buria l wi ll sandra R. Bu tc her , Chicago, Ill.,
be in Rock land " Cem ete ry. and Leah L. Burris, Orlanllo,
F riend s ma y ca ll a t the Spencer Fla.; two sons, Pvt. First Class
Funeral Hom e from 2 to 8 p.m. Lawrence .D . Butcher JJ, with the
toda )· and unt il tim e of serv ices U.S. Army a t Fort Polk, La., and
on Sa turda .v .
Winthrop M. Butcher, Ga llipolis;
one brot her, John Francis, Cu lMartha Fisher
lode n; and former hus.b and,
Ma rtha A. Monroe Fisher, 81, Lawrence D. Butche r I of
Rout e I , Coo lville, di ed Fr iday Chicago.
Funeral will be at 2 p.m . .
m orn ing at Ca mden -Clark Has p!·
Su nday in the Crow·Hussell Fun·
tal in Parker sburg, W. Va.
A hom em a ker, Mrs. Fisher era! Home with Dr. Donald W.
was born at E lizabeth, W. Va ., on Johnson officiating. Burial will
Dec. 2, 1905, a daughl eroft he la te fo liO'¥ In Kirkland Memorial
Willi am and Carrie Monroe. S he Ga rdens.
Friends may call at the funeral
wa s a member of the Wea ley
Methodi s t C hurch at Vienna and home from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9
' ·attended the Li ttle Hocking 'u ni· p. m. Saturday .
Sur\' iv ing

Friday. August 14. 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

___ _

A WINNING TEAM
After winning a gold medal at the
International Special Olympics Games, Larry Ray LaudermUt
presenled his coach, E'alty Hays, at right, with the rose he receiVed .
when he was presented his medal. Laudermllt's mother, Hedy
Laudermlll, at left, comprls.e s the rest of the winning team.

· :I.!a ude rmil t wa s one of 4.500
Spec ial Olympians from 72 dif·
ferent countries parl lcipa tin g In
the gam es on the ca mpu s of
Notre Dame University In South
Bend, Ind. , Ju ly 31 throu gh
August 8.
When all of those a thletes.
along with their coaches, hosts
a nd ambassador s, participated
In the ga mes' ope ning cere monies at Notre Dame stadium ,
they did so before a se ll out crowd
of 60,000, just like a Notre Dame .
football game.
·
Among many dignitaries wav·
lng at the parading delegations of
a thletes were E~ n!ce Ke nnedy
S hr iver, founder of Special Oly mpics, and actor Don Johnson.
According to Coach Hays, the
opening ceremonies' " Parade of
Champions" reinforced the Spe·
c lal Olympic goal of "Uniting the
World."
Special Olympic competition
took place In eight official sports
- aquatics, track and field,
basketball, bowling, gymnastics,
soccer, softball and voll ey b ~ll.
Six demonstration sports In·
e luded road cycling, eques trla p
events, roller skating, . ten nis,
table ·tennis and we!ghlllftlng.
Clinics were held In rowing,
sailing and sylicronlzed swim·
mlng and ~oneball was also
Introduced for the first time.
Pele, the world famous soccer
s uperstar, even led" a soccer
clinic during the week, and for
the first time, network television
(ABC) allocated prime tim e to
televise the tes Uve opening
cermonles.
.
The $5 million l!udget for the
International games was raised
through donations from lndlvldu·
als, service organizations and
Conilnued on ·A:a

__._·· ----------

~ ·-----·.----···___]

,,

GALLIA LANDMARK BEING RAZED -The
old furnitur e factory at 121 State St., Gallipolis Is
helng raze d by B &amp; B Wrecking, Cleveland. ·
Gallipolis City School officials said the project Is
to he completeil by th e· time school starts on
Tuesday, Aug. 25. The old Gall!polls s wimming
pool will be covered with ' debris from the
stru ctu re, built around the turn of the century. II

s urvived two major fires 68 years apart- one on
April II, 1911, which destroyed a siste r section of
the building and another O!lAprllll, 1979, which
caused 570,000 damage. A . portion of the old
factory was torn down In the early 1970s to make
room for a parking lot at Gallla Academy High
School. The project was contracted at a cost of
$52,340.

Kevin Nicholas of Gallia County
4-H club among state fair winners .
COLUMBUS, Ohio {UP!) The 4·H youth activities club isn't
only for future farmers or rura l
kids .
And the diverse activities the
organization offers ca n be seen at
the Oh io State Fa ir in the
Lausche B uilding.
One of the 4·H categor ies
outside the traditional agricul turaJ rea lm was spotlight ed Friday
at the fair' s Engineeri ng Day.
Many young engineers were on
ha nd to display their engineeri ng
creations to judges .
Winning In Friday's 4·H com·
petitions In the engineering dlv·
lslon was Kevin Nichola s of
Gallla County, for rocketry. He Is

a m ember of the Triangle 4-H
A large emphasis of the 4-H
club.
program is on conserva tion ,
E ngi neer in g projects ra ng~d Miller said . There are a lso
from mode l rockets a nd _alf· learning activities invo lving mo·
pla nes t~ rope tying, magnells m, ney manage ment , cooking and
electromcs and sm all engines .
nutrition, sewi ng a nd decora ting.
Jeff Mill er, a 4-H spokesman, The traditional argrlcultura l
sa id the former elec trical ca re- ca tegories a re stlil a la rge part o f
gory was cha nged this year to 4-H organization; he said .
engineering because t he scope of
Other winners Friday In the
the category Involves much more · e ngineerin g division Include : ·
than electricity· Miller sai d there Mike Da v is, Je fferson County,
ts an Increasing em phasis by 4-H for airplan es; Andy Rehm,
m embers on science projects and Holmes Count y. for e lectronics ;
less on farm production.
Bern .Woodruff, Har din County,
Th ere w!ll be a creative wr iting for adva nced electronic s; Robb:t
a nd photography compe tition , as
Gleaso n, Clinton County, fo r.
well as writi ng computer pro· electricity I; Lu c;as Wallac e:
grams today, Miller sai d.
contlnu erJ on A-3
'.

Thursday deadline to file petitions
POMEROY- Residents wish· .
!ng to run for loca l offices to be ·
filled In November have un til 4
p.m. Thursday to file their
petitions of candid acy with the
Meigs Co unty Board of
Elections.
The beard office, located on·
Mechanic St., Pomeroy, will be
open from 8: 30 to 4: 30 p.m .
continuously Monday through
Thursday this week for the
convenience of ca ndidates wis h-

··-·----·---

lng to file.
This fa ll a trustee a nd a clerk
will be e lected In e ach township
with the exception · of Salem
Township where two trustees wil l
be elect\l€.
Rutland, Syracuse and Racine
voters will elect a mayor two
vUlage cou ncil p1embers and a
clerk· treasurer with Syracuse
·and Racine voter s also to elect
two m embers to their Board of
Public Affairs. Pomeroy ami

'

Middleport voters will name
officials a lso but those candl;
dates were named In May.
,
In the school districts , voters of
the Meigs Local Dis trict and the
Eas tern Local District
e lec t
three board of educ ation
m embers In November while
there wUl be two members
elected to the Meigs County
Board of E ducation and the
Southe rn Loca l Board of
Education .
·

v.: m

----\------ ---~-~·---=-'---------

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="181">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2771">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="39423">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="39422">
              <text>August 14, 1987</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1323">
      <name>butcher</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="22">
      <name>fisher</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="864">
      <name>francis</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6957">
      <name>guerriero</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1137">
      <name>monroe</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="208">
      <name>spencer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="91">
      <name>walker</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
