<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12967" 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/12967?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-05T00:03:08+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43939">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/26555a13b5c8a9d37a579699d9e2391b.pdf</src>
      <authentication>184fbf3bb94c9be41c7385735a055cc2</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="40676">
                  <text>. \

,.
Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio

Thursday, October 23. 1986

Ohio Lottery
,,,.,
'·~

'.
'

the ·ctock
back 1~liot.ir

r--·

.

'

I .I

~I

'
·~
.•

·vAN HEUSE~r

DRESS
SHIRTS

•

Buy, now while our
selection is complete.
Neck sizes 14 •12 to 11•11
Sleeve lengths 32 to 35

{1
..

• I

\

f\

NEW FALL COlORS

,..-.

\.·

'

S18 Dress Shirts ...... S14.40
521' Dress Shirts ...... S16.80
523 Dress Shirts ...... S18.40

' ... '. --I
I

BOYS'

WESTERN SHIRT
SALE

DENIM
JEANS

-Made in USA
:-Sewn-in strength and
durability
-2 ply front and bock
yokes
-Sleeve placket with snap
-Long toils

Sale

MEN'S SJG.95

CORDUROY

SWEATSHIRTS

SALE

Lee and Wrangler quality
slims • regulars • huskies.
• student sizes.

BUVNOW

AND SA~E!

''

/

t..t

· S14.95 Jeans. .. S10.47
S16.9S Jeans ... S11.87
S19.9S Jeans ... S13.97

S1869

.MEN'S

Wrangler cords for com·
fort and proven fit.
KHPs fit after repeated
ytallhings. Regular fit
straight leg style in wa·
is! sizes 29 to 50.

NEW FAll SHADES
Reg. SJ9.95
CORDS ........ S15.99
Rag. S22.95
CORDS ........ S18.99

MEN~S ,BELT

NECKTIES

SAVE S75.00

Many new fall st~lo~ This solo includes a
new selection in westem •Its and the
botest in dress and reversible b~ts. Wa·
ist sins 30 Ia ~REG.
to S17.oo

Our new fall collection
in plain colors, stripes
or patterns. Swe to
please!
Reg. 18.50 Ties ..... SS.99
Reg. $1 0,00 Ties .. S6. 99
Reg. $12.50 Ties .. &lt;8.99

SAVE

DELUXE
HIGH-PERFORMANCE
UPRIGHT

DELUXE

ESP UPRIGHT

sa.so
Sale Priced
. $6 79 TO $13 19

SSO.OO

IONUII
6 PIECE TOOL SET

®o®

INCLUDED WITH PURCHASE

YOUR CHOICE

$844

CANNON
BED
BLANKETS
colors

HIGH PERFORMANCE

NEW
SHIPMENT

~:;:,I)Gt.;;;;.M:;;L-;:..:....)

UPRIGHT WITH
HEADLIGHT 4.1
AMP~

SALE

MODEL 194S

• Industr i a l
strength clea n i ng
performance wilh huge 6.5 AMP motor.
• Chrome·plated steel VI BAA-GROOMER

11 has 7 beater bars to deep clean carpets
as ne'ler before possible.
'
• Wide-Lens Headlight

• Dual EDGE KLEENEA
• 6-way DIAL- A-NAP
carpets heights

Enhance the beauty of y~11,1i'
home ·with an elegantly
styled de.sk or secretary by
DMI. Each is accented with
brass plated hardware and
finished in DMI's awn Dyma·
guard protective finishing
process to insure hardness
and durability.

adj~sts

vac 10 all
. Model 2061

Usl$119.95

(,~ ·

MOOel1470

rttltstanl... .keeos suction strong and increases
clean ing ellieiency
• 4 carpel heig~t aajustmen ts
• 8flll1anr neadtlght • 20 loot cord
• Dual EDGE KLEENEA cleans up to blll!bOftltls

KNiniNG YARN

1

20°/o
OFF

· Fot O•ly

$
r-SHOP FRIDAY

NIGHT

9

Our ~ntirt stork sale priced.
Solid colo11, pallor"" Alf first
"ality. !"Y no., for yaurlllf or
Olmtmas Giting.

SAVE
ElfCIRIC

20°/o

Prloul

SLACKS
SALE .
t 00% polyHitr

tladt~
~l•&lt;k, poly·

lattton Ill••· md·
uroys, printed jeans.
lJNOI SZES 3/4 to 10
IIG. I tl Slock1 .... 1 t!.SO
log: S22 Stock• .... SI6.50
log. s27 ll•k• .... '20.ZS

Reg. $13 to S14 lillfolds ...............110.10
Reg. $15 to 117 lillfolds ............... 112.10
Reg. 117.50 ,Ia II 1:50 lilllolds.... l14.40
Reg. 12S to 127.50 lillfolds .......... 120.10

WORK
LOTHES

.......

corry the complete'
line of Comartt Brown
Duck work clothes. In·
sulated coveralls, jac·
kets, roots, bib overalls I'"!:~
(plain
or iniUioted),
vests, matching hoods,
sweat lhirts, dungarees.
All sizes including shorts,
.... rtgulors and tals.

i~l

0 Jl( t
~u\ 1

ELBERFELD

FALL
TOPs
·
Taps •

Knit
Sweatshirts • Shirts •
Swicitshirts
Sias 12-24 mos., '2
REG. 16'Jo 120

to 7

Sale! ·

Stla Pried

$4 50 TO S1517.i'ii~~=-=---;-:--z-~=-=Elh,leldt
POM(IOf. OHIO
~614) U1-367 J

CHIIItll CARD

•

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Fri~ay, October 24, 1986

.By THOM,\8 M. BURNETT
United Press International
• It appears Ohioans will be denied the moderately
• difficult task of choosing bet~n "The Cosby Show''
· and "Family Ties" or the world premiere of "Dick &amp;
: Jim &amp; Paul &amp; Bob" .nel&lt;t Thursday night,
. Democratic GoV. Richard Celeste, In a lett.er
· Thursday to Republlcan challen~r James Rhodes
· signed by his campaign manager. "accepted"
Rhodes's offer to debate next week at Bp.m.
, Except, said Gerald Austin in the letter, It slnuld
• mt include the candidates for lieutenant govermr, it
· ' should not be held at the Columbus television station
· suggested by ,Rhodes. and there should be a
two-minute, not one-minute, limit on replies by the
candidates.
To which James Duerk, Rhodes's campaign
spokesman. replied: "If that Is his final decision, the
· debate Is off."
..
· Celeste.. campaigning throughout the day In

2 Sectlona. 14 Pageo

26 Canto ·

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

southern Ohio, said he hoped Austin and Duerk could
sit down with each other and work out some 9:irt of
compromise..but It-appeared unlikely that either man
would make the first move toward arranging such a
meeting.
Celeste . relterat!,'d his opposition to including
Dayton Mayor Paul Leonard and Hamilion County
Commissioner Robert Taft II, the Democratic and
Republican candidates for lieutenant govermr, In the
same program.
"If it's 'important to know who the lieutenant
governors are. then there ought to be a separate oour
for them," Celeste said. "The people of Ohio deserve
an opportunity to see us·slde-by-slde to focus on the
. Issues and to do it in a constructive way." ,
Duerk said tbetwocandidates'areelretedas·a team
and that since the lieutenant goverrv;&gt;r would ascend
to the office If the event the goverror could mt
complete his term, "the debate audience (should)
have an cpportunlty to see for themselves which of the

candidates for lieutenant governor would be rnc;&gt;re
acceptable."
Austin said. however, there was no history of
~nning mates being on the same platform in debates.
either in gubernatorial or presidential contests.
Duerk also charged Austin was reversing an earlier
position that he was no~ opposed to including the
nmning mates. having said so twice in recent weeks,
to the Ohio State University Lantern and in an
interview with the Ohio Educational Broadcasting
Net-work.
"It Is obvious that Governor Celeste is using the
lieutenant governor question to duck a head-to-head
formal statewide televised debate wjth Jim Rhodes,"
Duerk said. "He spent :WOO.OOJ in television
advertising to challenge Rhodes to a debate' anytime.
anyplace.' and now he is running away from his own .
challenge."
"We started the debate Issue five weeks ago,"
Austin said after hearing of Duerk'sreply to the let ter.

"They turned down so many invitations. I submit, to
you that they never planned to debate anyway. ! ·
1
",Jim Rhodes hasn't debated in 16 years."
Austin said a debate now Is not relevant to the
election because it is less than two weeks away,
Celeste is far ahead in the (lolls and voters have
already made up their minds.
Austin pointed out that Celeste's Wednesday
challenge did not Include "any conditions" and
objected to RhOdes's stlpulatio~ on allowing each
candidate only one minute to reply to questions from
the panel of reporters.
.·
"Some questions take at least one minute to ask,"
he said. "We propose a two-minute time limit."
Austin also said the debate should be held at a
television station other than WBNS, because the
owners of the station have been longtime supporters
of Rhodes.
Duerk did not respond to Celeste's objections to the ·
one-minute time limit or the location of the debate.

!Celeste. tops Rhodes
i in campaign funding
.

; By THOMNi M. BURNETI'
• , COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -The
• Republicans may be accused of
: being the party of the rich, but the
: Del)19Crats- at least in Ohio-can
: safely be called the. party of the
' richer candidates.
Campaign finance reports filed
Thursday show that Democratic
candidates in all the statewide
· races - governor, attorney gen·
: era!. auditor. secretary of state,
· treasurer, chief justice and asso-·
elate justice - have raised more
money than their Republican
opponents.
Gov. Richard Celeste went into
tbe!lnal days of the campaign with
a warchest more than rtve times
that of Republican challenger
James Rhoilci:" "
Celeste's report also showed he
spent nearly $5.1 million through
Oct. 15. more than twice the
approximately $2.1 million spent by
Rhodes In the primary and general
el\'Ction campaigns.
The Celeste campaign had
$728,972 on hand as of Oct. 15, with
outstanding loans, debts or obllga·
tions of $175,763. The Rhodes
campaign had $125, m on hand as d
tpat date. with outstandingdt&gt;bts of
$250,000, the report said.
In the hotly contested race for
chief justice of tllf' Ohio Supreme
Court. the two candidates were a
little closer. with Democratic in·
rumbent Frank Celebrezze report·
ing $JJ6,131 on hand and Republl·
can challenger Thomas Moyer
reporting Wt.B14 on hand.
Among tht' eight candidates for
the four statewide dflces. Anorney
C'.eneral Antoony Celebrezze and
Auditor Thomas Ferguson . . both
Democrats. also had substantial

Hopes dim
for Rutland' .
project funds

UTILE BOYS'

$278

~.,

SALE

LORD I)AA.ll

ONLY

s.,., ••

122.00
Devon ............. IJ7.58
Reg. 126.00
lady Dnan ............ .S20.71
Reg. $34.00
lady Dewn ............. 127 .11
Reg. 141.00
lady Dewn ............. S38.31

S~eclal

RCA 19" diagonal

Auto Program
High Contrast
Picture Tube

BEAUTIFUl FA$11/0N$
$UPERIOR QUAliTY

Polyurethane foam lining,
machine washable. Heavy zipper
front. Attached hood with
drawstring. Regular and tlfro
Iorge sizes. Solid colors.

poly/-1

25" REMOTE
CONTROL

• 6 carpet edjustmenls • 20ft. cord .

Jackets • $locks - Skirts
Vests • Blouses
Colors include Navy, Brown,
Rust and Teal.

Reg. $26.99 ......... Sole $22.99
Reg. 131..99 .......... Sole '27. 99

ALL JEWElRY

$ 49

• Dual EDGE KLEENER • Headlight

SPORTSWEAR
SALE

HOODED
SWEATSHIRTS

htra addtd attractions
for Autumn ...f111 and
fashionable
~wolry
ittms in sparkling gold
and silnr fonts. ·

Many, mon~ solid colori and tariogated
colors. 3 11• ounce slteins, 4 ply moth-proof,
ren-allergeni&lt;.

• Chrome-platecl'steel VI BRA-GROOMER
II bea ter bar/ brush roll gets deep down
dirt.

LADY DEVON

JEWELRY
SALE

' SJ..87 RED 'HEART "WINTUK"

. Motor
• Heavy-duty 5.0' AMP
delivers more cleaning power!

EXTRA SIZES

Reg. 5239.00
DESK ....... Sale S189oo
Reg. 5289.00
D'ESK ....... Sale s229oo
Reg. 5329.00
DESK ..... Sale S2 59.00

SPECIAL PRICE

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

• Top-1111 bag syste m tS clog

· Rain likely lonilht and Satul'
day, wkh a low loalgbt near llO
and hips Salunlay near 81. 1be
probablllly of preclpllatlon Is 'lO
percent to~ and Saturday.

:Disagreements
doom.Rhodes-Celeste debate
..

I

SAVE $40.00

@@(:JII:l-5~

SALE

EAAT

SALE

l'owertlead whh
Power Dri.en
VlbiJ G100mer II

DELUXE EUREKA
SUPER POWER

DESK

Buy Now For Your
Christmas Knitting

Rolo·Malic

$13995

Christmas
In October

C!lAED

LIST'149 .95

'II!Ptor

PICK-4
5170

pal·

INt,lon binding.

• 4.0 Pea~ HllfSOpowet

SALE

and

100% polyester.
72 by 90 inches.

lt~r~oc.

MOTOR
l1sl $214 .95.

Vol.38, No.121
Copyright!ld 1988

SWEAT PANTS
Springfoot and Wrang·
ltr brand in sizes Small
thru Xl.
Crew neck sweatshirts, ·
elastic waist and ·drawstring pants,
flttce
lined. Many colors;

SPECIALI

SALE

Daily Number

749

aty

AND

Chrlllmat l11 October

Christmas
in October

..

on Sunday

VISIT ELBERFELDS NOW AND SAVE DURING THIS BIG SALE - YOU'LL FIND LOW. LOW
'
PIUCES ON QUALITY WEARING APPAREL FOR YOU AND YOUR FAMILY AND FURNISHINGS
FOR YOUR HOME - USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN TO HOLD YOUR S
CTION ·
STMAS ..
MEN'S WORK

.

Chances for securtng a community ·block development
grant through the Meigs Cou nty
Commissioners for a drainage
problem on Salem Street arc not
strong. It was reported when
Rutland Village Council met in
regular S&lt;'sslon this week.
It has been re&lt;:ommended that
the town apply for EPA funds for
a 75 percent grant to be used lor
the construction of sewage
disposal system.
Hol\'ever, a discussion
brought out that the town would
have m way In supplying the
local 2i percent oft he Slnl.OOJ to
$1 million involved In such a
project.
Council discussed steps being
taken in the administration to
comply wlth recommendations
made by a repres\!)tatlve ct the
state auditor who Is working in
the community ..
Henry Eblin appeared before
council to discuss a sewage
problem and council agreed to
provide whatever help possible.
Cletus Harder w.ts given permission to haul dirt from village
property and David Davis, town
supervisor, was autoorlzed to
purchase materials with which
to repair I he bed of the town
·truck. Mayor James Fink presided CNI'f the meeting.

l ---~----~--

balances on hand.
Celebrezze, who is touted as the
party's rising star and woo's won
the endor.;ements of nearly all the
state's major newspapers; had a
balaJtce of $615,564, with m out·
standing debts. His Republican
opponent, former state Rep. Barry
Levey, reported $47,826 on hand,
with $123,739 in debts.
Fergu~n. running for a fourth
term as auditor, reported a balance
of $447,550, with $63.191 in debts.
while Republican chalienger Ben
Rose had $1R.406. with no debts.
The twoother Democratic IncumCANDIDATFS These cwulldates and a
commissioner candidate; BW Wickline, county
bents. Secrerary of State Sherrod
Brown and Treasurer Mary Ellen
~dal~,,';:'=~w~hann:gbro;
1 - ~~~ttllc:;n:~,:;;_~:-._~~r=
Withrow, also had the edge on their
Oak Resort with m.ore than 200 peopl~ llltendlng:
Clarence MWer, and Garry Hunler, cancldale for the
Republican opponents.
,
From the left are, Manning Roush, t'Ounly
state )louse of Representatives for Mel(!!!, Athens and
. Brown reported a balance · of
GaUia counties.
$54,837, with $6.400 in debts. to
$16,008 on hand .for his opponent,
former Cuyahoga County Auditor
Vincent Campanella.
·
Withrow had M3.752 on hand for
numerous cases when durtng the
The emphasis was on getting out
a congressional seSsion.
I he last days of the campaign, while . the vote for the November election
Collins stressed the importance terms . of Rhodes funds were
her opponmt, Republican ·state . when MeigS Cou nty Republicans or keeping the· Ohio legislature directed to help with major Meigs
Rep. Jeffrey Jacobs had $10, m. met for a rally Thursday night at Republican and the necessity ·In Count:v (J'Ojects, which could not
Jacobs also reported having lx&gt;r· the Royal Oak Park Resort.
getting out the vote. while Hunter have been carried out If It had oot
rowed $1 million from three Ohio
Following a dinner. candidates emphasized the lmpo11ance r1 job been fo r Roocrs.
banks to finance a television spoke on the upcoming election. development in· the three-county
Jones charged corruption in the
advertising blitz.
Speakers included Manning Roush, area .
Celeste administJ·ation, citing sev·
Celeste reported receiving ahout · Meigs County commissioner. and
Pomeroy attorney Bernard Fultz , eral instances involving Celeste
$.lffi million In contributions for the Bill Wickline, county auditor, both served a~ master of ceremonies appointees. Jones said that Roodes
period, to $13 million ·fQ,r Rhodes. · ·of whom are unopposro this fall for and introduced Doroth~ Johnston. is for low taxes and jobs . while
A tar~ amount of Celeste's reelection: Jean Waggoner. repres- long-time knowledgable ooard of Celeste, he stated.ls representat ive
money came from the Democratic enting U.S. Rep. Clarence Miller; elections employee, befor0 her of high taxes . .Jones abo urged the
Party and var ious labor unions, but State Sen. Oakley Collins; and retlremf'nt. Mrs . .Johnston received more than llO Republicans on hand
he also had hundrtlds of contribu· Garry Hunter. candidate for the a standing ovation. Fultz thanked for the 1·ally to support Collins and
lions of m. $10 and $5.
house of representatives for the vol unteer workers and intra· Hunter and he. too. urged a get out
Among Celeste's largest contri· Athens. Meigs and Gallia Count les. duced Maxine Goeglein. president the vot~ movPmcnt for the upcomMlons were $100,00l fi·om the
The two local level candidates of the count y women's Republican ing Plection.
American Federation of State, spok~ on fhel~ work in the county club. F\1 ltz.st ressro also getting out
Awarded door prizes, flower
County and Municipal Employees. and than ked voters for support in the vote br the Nov. 4 election.
arrang~?ments · provided for the
$100.(00 from the AFL-CIO, $.10,(00 the upcoming election. Waggoner
Meigs County Republican Chair· ra lly by the Pomeroy Flower Shop
from the United Steelworkers said that Miller will be making a man Richard Jones urged support and Francis Florist, were Steve
union, $25,00) from the Ohio swing through the district next of James Rhodes In hlsbldtoagaln Story, Dorothy McGuffin. Ruth
Education Association. $25.000 week after having just wrapped up be govermr of Ohio. Jones cited Frank. Hobart Newell and Karen
from the Carpenters unlon and
Robert s.
$~.(00 from the Teamsters.
Nearly half of Rhodes's copt ribu·
lions came from two sources $232,551 from a July 21 tundra iser in
Columbus'that featured Vice Pres I·
·WASHINGTON tUPJ1- Having
On the Soviet s iae. U.S. officials removal .of about 260 sOviet staff
dertt George' Bush. and $314,00J
declared
a
truet'
In
a
diplomatic
·assert.
Moscow's Intelligence appa- employees who have been forbid·
froin the Republican Party's GOP
war
of expulsions, the United Slates ratus In America has been."decapi·
den to work for the U.S. Embassy.
Resou l'C('S Committee.
reviewing
the
"devastating"
"It' s a shrewd, devastating
Is
tated,"
with
loss
of
all
leadership
to
A check of contributor.; to the two
battlefield
damage.
blow,"
one U.S. official said
the equivalent rank of lieutenant
candidates for ch'tef just ice demon·
The
casualties
after
four
rounds
coloneL Those being expelled. the Thur.;dav. "It 1·emoves everytxxly
strated how much one candidate Is
of
thrust
and
parry
are
80
Slviets
Americans say, are the cream of from the guy who used to plow the
favored by labor unions and the
expelled,
or
about
be
expelled,
from
U.S.·based operatives, Including snow to the clerk who used to
other bv ·buslness interests.
the
United
States
and
10
Americans
.P.lJH.'eSS. thf. ~ct!ers. ·
.Qll.f.~·JJQyi!CU¥l!!lJJM.liYfllin
Celebrezze. who spent $1.14 mil· .
to
be
kicked
out
of
the
Soviet
Union.
"They will have to he replaced,
the
United
States
more
or
less
lion In the primary and general
Because
the
Russians
began
with
a
but
by pcopleat much hlgherwages
continuously since 1976.
election campaigns, including
larger
base
..
however.
roth
coun·
who
wtll have to be provided
On the American side, the
$7\l3.23S In the latest reportln~:
period, said he received $682,0lfl in tries now wUl have the same expulsion of 10 U.S. diplomats from !Dusing and who will take the place
cont ribu !Ions between the primary number of accredited diplomats: Moscow. who can be replaced, Is of others who provided imponant
2il.
considered less harmful than the infonnatio n."
and Oct. 15.
·
"

a=,

GOP rally stresses getting out vote

Reagan
bashes
liberals
NORMAN. Okla. &lt;UPil- Prest·
dent Reagan stepped up his campaign against what be calli'd a
liberal "over-the-hill" gang today,
asking Oklahomans to re-elect GOP
Sen. Don Nickles for "a new era of
peace, prosjX'rlty and freedom."
At a University of Oklahoma
rally, Reagan said the Senate race
here Is "a classic race between a
big taxer and big spender versus a
responsible leader who ih\nks It's
· belter 10 protect ttre lamlly budget

than' t!U the federal btidget."
Nickles Is far ahead in polls over
former House Budget Committee
Chairman Rep. Jim Jones, but
Reagan poured on t be rhetoric.
'"fir tax-tax, spend-spend crowd
took the American prople for
granted fo r too long," Reagan said.
"That ·over·the·hill" gang, and
Dan's opponent, was right there
with ihem, came close to wrecking
our economy. They've been waiting
in the wings to come back with tax
bills blazing."
Alt In ugh some Democrats and ·
Republicans who put together the
tax rdorm package have clscussed
tl"l&gt; need tor additional revenues If
the deficit continues to soar,
Democratic leaders have been
cautious In their statements.
Rep. Dan Rostenkowskl. [). TIL,
who Reagan Jralsed all year for his
bipartisan leadershlp in the tax
rdorm Dght. has talked of the need
to review revenues.
H9use Speaker Thomas O'Neill,
who Reagan keeps quoting as
caUing iJr taxes "through the
mse." has said Democrats -would
not initiate any additional taxes.

u.s. studies results of ~xpulsion 'war'. ·.

Those Slviets. the official sa'ld.
included prople who made regular
contact with the Russian academic
community and dissidents and even
arranged some low-level rultural
events that madr an Impart In thr
Slvlet Union.
Another official rontended the
Slvlets sacrifie&lt;'d ~methi_Jlg t~ry •
va lued by · pulling out the 260
staffers - bee auS&lt;' the workers
reported on such things as Which
Americans wrre susceptibl'(l,
throul!h P!'r~nal vices. to ap.
iContinuro on Page 7)

Lee retrial reveals ownership of additional guns
GALLIPOLIS - A derringer
belonging to a major prosecution
witness and two rifles owned by her
sori equipped · to discharge .22
caliber long rifle bullets- the type .
which killed Barbara L. Twyman I
- that were not ballistiCally
examined prior to the first trial of
Charles LEe 11. charged ~lth
murder In Twyman's death.
It was established, In the third
day of the Lee retrial in Gallla
County Common Pleas Court, that
·after the derrln~r was examined,
tWo days prior to Lee's sentenCing
In the first trial, It could not have
been the murder weapon.
'
The derrin~r was tested by the
Bureau of Criminal Investigation ,
on Dec. 7, i983. 'J'h.en-Gallia County
sheriff's deP\Ity \Raymond Pope

-

),

testified. based on BCI infonnatlon,
the day before that the derringer
could not have been the murder
weapon.
It was recorded in the first trial
that Pope based his testimony on
hlsown personal knowledge on such
derringers and Information relayed
to him by chief investigator Carl
Langford. from the BCI. His
"personal knowledge" on the der·
ringer was based on a simllar gun
only less expensive. according to
·court records. Pope testified th&lt;derringer possessed a sinooth
barrel. whichprovedtobelncorrect
Information, according to the BCI
report. The bullets found in Twyman's bl&lt;IY wel'e rllsefiargeo from
a rifled barrel, BCI said..
Pope. when cross-examined by

defense attorney .James Casey
Thursday, said he did not have the
derringer examined because Langford advised him, prior to the trial.
that BCI said the derringer would
have a smooth barreL
The BCI report did conclude I hat
the derringer could not be the
murder weapon; but not. because It
had a smooth barrel. The repon
staled the riflings in the ba rrel
could not have made the marks
found on the t-wo fatal bullets.
According to testimony in the
first trtal and statements made
under oath by John Furst Thur.;day, there were six firearms in the
Fu~t hOYsehold. Popesaldhe kl)ew
of only three.
Pope said be never questioned
Furst, Shirley's son, ahout owning

-------·-·---·

---·- -~·~---

- -~- .

any firearms. Prior to PojX''s
testimony. however, Furst said he
then owned. and stU! does, a
12-gauge shotgun and two .22·
ca liber rifles. The two riDes are
equipped toflrP .22-callber long rifle
bullets, he said.
The only weapons that Pope
repOI1edly knew the F\lr.;ts oMied
were a rtvolver, the alleged
murder weapon, the derringer and
a slntgun. Pope said he never had a
chance to speak with Furst, only his
mother. In later testimony Thu~·
day, Langford said heorlgtnallydld
not know of Furst's Identity, let
alone the firearms he owned .
The chief Investigator, examined ·
threE' times by each counsel, also
said he spoke with Ronald Dye of
BCI prior to the trtal and was

informed thai the derringer wou ld
have a smooth bllrrrl. but later was
instructed to send the weapon to
Co·I u m bu s f o·r thorough
examination.
On the witness stand for appro xi·
mat ely two how-s. Langford said be
was convinced he already had the
murder weapon. the revolver, after
he originally spoke with Dye over
the teleplnne. It Is alleged that Lee&gt;
used t tr revolver. In the first trial,
Shirley FUr.;t testified that Lee&gt;
bmTowt&gt;d her revolver f,..que~~tly ,
The BCJ ballistics findlllp «11 the
alleged murder weapon, however,
1D mt (J'OVe conclusively that It
was the revolver lnvolvro in the
crime. The report !4ated that from
oollets test fired from the l't'llolver,
(Continued on Page 7) .

•

�•

~~

Commentary
The 'Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERE,&lt;lTS OF THE ME!GS-MASON AREA
~lb

B m~
~v

•·

............._...... ,,.,.,c:l,..,
.

ROBERT L. WINGETJ'
Putjlsher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslslanl Pubiisher/Conlroller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

News Editor
A MEMBER of The United Press lnternatJonal, Inland Dally Press
Associ&lt;itlon and the Amerlran Newspaper Publishers Association .

Pege-2- The DaHy Sentinel ;·

·Ahead for Reagan ________,;_____,;w_u:..,_tia..;,_m_F_.n...,.,....u_ck_ter:.._I___,r.
In hJs new book, "Cycles of but It IS worth noting what The lcally, empirically and philosophiAmerican History," Professor Ar- Ame&lt;ican Spectator has come up cally. It Is a most wonderful tonic.
1 hur
·Schlesinger Jr. wllh that with for Its October Issue.
recommended to all who like a
The Spectator•s a lively m:mthiy, touch of· empyrean ·· spnngwat..-,
~ ldactic flair that has made him so
;)bhoxloils most of the time (actu- one part sheer japeJY, · anotll&gt;r with maybe a touch of Southern
~lly, hels mellowing), speaksoltll&gt;
solemn as Cotton Mather, whlch for · 'Comfort. · . ·
upcoming cycle in American polit- 19 years, under the spirited leader;
The current Issue has as cile of its
fcs. It is due in the vicinity of 199), ship of R. Emmett TyrreU Jr .•. has features a symposium .en what
Nhen what we may well call the traveled from a kind of college Ronald Reag~ shluld focus on in
hJs two remaining years, a wonder"conservatl~e" period. capped by · conservative Animal House to true
Ronald Reagan, will yield to what distinction, with scholarly features fill cornucopia of suggestions wrll we may as .well call another glving extenslveattentiontoprofes- ten, one -hastens to remark, before
"progressive" period, of the kind sors renowned and obscure, jour- · the Iceland Summit, which had It ·
we had under Teddy Roosevelt naUsts with readable opinions, ttl&gt; • been antlclpatoo might have mixed
(19:J11. FOR (1933) andJFK (1961). lot of them having the common up some of ttl&gt; suggested agenda .
Cycle-stuff is perhaps more inter- objective of finding liberal political But we have here 19 conservatives
esting to historians than to laymen, ifogma quite utterly rotten, aesthet- giving out free adVice, some of it .

tongue-In-cheek. some of It dead ly ·
serious and II Is worthwhile ,
pondering this rich assortmen t · ~
before resolving that a Jew year.; ;
from now conservative energy In 1 ·
·the United States will have bjeen ·
swept away by one of those 1
professorial cycles.
i
On ttl&gt; matter of the succession, .
one Is amused by Jeffrey Hart's ' 1
brief survey of the q&gt;posltbn. '
''Maybe for the first time in history, ·~
the presidency will 'remain vacant
for tbe years 1988-92. MariJ Cuomo ,
would be a potent candidate in the ' ·.
year 19ll. He woold certainly carry 1
' he Dust Bowl. 1n 1988, he would '
carry the poor prople of the District 1
of Columbia, period. Sen. Gary ~
Hart 'ls a nice .renow, lllt he}has a I
IJ'Oblem. He seems to be a : ·
Sandlnlsta.''
:
1
On one point. a half&lt;lozen i,.
conservatives liome ln. with nearobjurgatlve obsession. namely the
need to dJ away with ttl&gt; ABM . ;
· Treaty. They judge , it a · bad '
• historical mistake and an impedi- :
ment to ttl&gt; SDI of possibly. faf&lt;!l :
cons£quence. One observer feels •
the Reagan Revolution ''is now
. concentrated in the departments of $
Justice and Education. Attorney ,
General Edwin Meese and Educa- ~
lion Secretary William Bennett :
have bulit ab le ~affs of true •
believers, young persons who have ,
oomehow avoided both the budget- l
cutting blues and the corruption of .1
Washington's money culture."
f
The fi:lrmidable Edwin Feu lner, '
the head of the Heritage Founda- , :
• Reagan h as no ,•
tlon, says that
alternative than to deal substan· '
tlally with Social Security. with the (
view eventually to privatizing care
for the elderly. Vic Gold says tha1
Reagllll needs to IE careful about ,i
the matter a stylistic deteriJratlon, . :
an awful temptatlonduringt ll&gt; last •
two years. "What, for eXample, ~
was the president of ttl&gt; United '
States doing this past spring . taking ~
part in the trendily banal 'Hands
Across America' exercise? ... Who
could p;~ssibly have talked the · '
president Into the idea tha t an Oval ;
Of!lce urin al was a fitting salvo in '
his 'war against drugs"!
1

The Lighter Side

.
,
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UP! 1- One of the PJbllcations on my reading list goes
in big for question-and-answer Interviews, known in the trade as Q&amp;A .
This technique provides verbatim transcripts, which can be helpful or
tedious, depending on the answers. l have no quarrel with the concept
except to wish more attJ&gt;ntion Were paid elsewhere.
Specl!lcally, in the "Letters to the Editor" column, identification Is
sometimes cloudy.
A recent lettJ&gt;r described a local politician as "a seasoned campaigner"
who had "actually done what she promised ,as q&gt;posed toothercandldates
who only talked about it."
Although the mlssive was duly signed, it might have been more
informative had the publication investigated ttl&gt; background of Its
correspondent.
I strongly suspect the author had been working in the campaign, either
as a volunteer or as a paid press agent of the aforementioned politician.
Also suspicious was an irate letter to the editor- is there any cther klnd?
- taking to task the publication's music critic for ignoring local rock
bands.
Investigation might have shown this correspondent promoted local rock
groups.
At any rate, casual readers were entitled to know whether there was
anything In the writer's background that mJght have Inspired a Jetter on
such an arcane topic.
...
And that also goes for other publications that reprlntletters.Sometimes,
tbey likewise wrongfully take signatures at face value.
For instance, a letter to a magazine asked whether Leonard Bernstein,
duly identified as a "composer and orchestra leader, " had a "special
relationship with any one lady" and further Inquired: "Is actress Lauren
Bacall the one"
That question ostensibly was posed by a G. Brown of Marlton, N.J., but!
fancy the letter came from either Bernstein or Bacall.
Brown sounds like 'a pen name to me, as does "Blanche L."
The L. person wanted to know If it were true that Henry Ford II "has
been divorced three times and that each cost him $100 million. "
WASHINGTON - ·The Federal
Note the Jetter was postmarked Binningharn, Mich., which Is i1 the
Reserve Board apparently has
same state as Detroit.
..
•
.
•
money to burn. It has wasted ll'\Ore,
1
I don't blame any editor for wanting to ·share Important queries, but . than $18 million on anti magazine readers could hardly be blamed for assuming that "Blanche L." . counterfeiting technology that it
was a non de plume chosen by a fiancee of Henry Ford II.
tried to ram down the throats of the
Equally flcticlous might he the name Raymond Greenwood.
Secret Service and the Bureau ol
A letter written over the name askerl 1\'hether Ann-Margaret "ever had
Engraving and Printing.
any children."
·
Then. after stubborn Fed officla Is
Readers who look hehind signatures mJght well be wondering whether
flnaUy grasped that the antithe letter really was penned by the actress-singer herself.
counterfeiting experts wanted no
At her age, which was listed as &lt;15, the mind begins to wander and such
part of thelrgooly gizmos. they sold
matters as whether one has given birth becomes a matter of Some
the unused €QUipment back to the
conluslon.
dealer at a sizable loss. They also
She would be justUed in keeping her identity a secret. I suppose we
canceled the remaining technology
should just be thankful tre letter wasn't mailed by !ilmeone divorced by an
contract, bringing on a $4 mJI!ion
automobile m'agnate. Or Ann-Margaret' s husband,
lawsuit from the rontractor.
Here's the pitiful story of bureaucratic bullheadedness:
Hoping to lind a way to thwa rt
counterfeiters in an age f)f increasingly sophisticated color copiers.
the Treasury Department set up a
task force of experts from the
Secret Service and the Bureau or
Engraving and Printing ·- plus
some people from the F'deral
Reserve Board. Sources confided to
our associa te Michael Binsteln that
the only reason for including the
Fed was for Its money. As an
agency that doesi&gt;'t have to get
money from Congress. the Fed has
a reputation for "deep pockets. "
Unfortuna tely, like the kid who

t

'

Berry's World

.

"It was irreconcilable differences. He wanted
to stay with stereo records and I wanted to go
to compact discs."

Today in history
By United Press lnternallonal
Today is Friday, Oct. 24, tbe 297th day or 1986 with ffi to foUow.
The moon approaching Its last quarter.
There is no morning star.
The evening stars are Mereu I)', Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
Those born on thJs date are lind¢r the sign ct Scorpio. They include
pioneering Dutch mJcroscope maker Anton Van Leeuwenhoek In
1632; journalist Sarah. Josepha Hale, author of "Mary Had a Little
Lamb," in 11ll'!; attorney Belva Lockwood, the first woman
candidate for U.S. president, rominated lby the National Equal
Rights Party, in 1&amp;11; fllm producer- director Merlan Cooper ("King
Kong" ) in 1893, and playwright Moss Hart in 1901.
On this date In hlslol)':
·
1n 1648, the Treaty of WestphaUa ended tiE Thirty Ymrs' War In
Europe.
··
In 1861, the first telegram was transmJtted across tiE United
Stales from California Chief Justice Stephen Field- to President
Abraham Lincoln in Washington,
1n 1.9f5, foUowlng·Sovlet ratification, U.S.Secretaryo!·StateJamm
Byrnes annouoced the United Nations charter was in etfect.
1n 1976, fire swept a social club in the Bronx, New York City, kllling
25 people and Injuring many others.

I

!

owns the baseball, the Fed Insisted prices Included a combined ' comCIA CADDY: The CIA 's budget
on pitching - .and the Ideas it tossed mission to the middleman . Optical Is perhaps most sec ret of all the I
around appaUed the real experts. Coating Laboratories. of $150.723.
documents in Washington. Even
The Fed gave a series of contracts
In April 1984, ttl&gt; Fed bought a
Congress does n't know exactly
totaling $17 million to Optical third mac hine directly from the what It's puning up the mo ney for. · :
Coating Laboratories Inc. to de- distdootor for $Z71,~. A month So we can' tofferanexplan ationfor !
velop anti-counterfeit ing devices. later. II bought five more, once this panlcular Item; all we can
They failed 9) percent to 96 percent again going through C4&gt;tlcal Glat- . reporl is that Associated Traders
of the testsronducted by Engraving ing, The $1,939.225 total price Inc., the CIAarms company, spent · ~·
and Printing. ·
included a oommlssion of $365.179. SI!S,OOO last year to have a 19&amp;3
Atnong the Items the Fed forced
By last Decem her, the Fed Cadlllac Sed :in de Vllle ewer hauled ·,
on its reluctant task force col- grudglnly conceded that the Treas- at a body shop in Gaithersburg, 1
leagues were eight "hot stamp" ury wasn't going to use the Md .. and that the car was shipped
machines, which apply a unique, machines. So it re;o! d two of them from Maryland to OlUfornla. Must
and put the fest In storage. When have been !Dme breaktbwn.
hologram-like film to currency.
"The eight machines rost a total the storage char~s began mount'DANGER'S COST: The Senate ·
of $3,022,100," an internal House ing lnexocably. the Fed finally !Did Foreign Relations Glmmittee is ' ·'
Banking Glmmittee memo slates, the remaining six machines back to still keeping an eage eye out for ·
"even the &amp;Jreau of Printing and the dlstrii:J.Jtor.
Foreign Service pe-sonnel who 1
A House Banking Glmmlttee may be getting rich on "danger
Engraving extressed no interest in
the mac hines and had not deter- memo sums, up til:' transactions: pay" - the additional sa lary
mined that thin-film dev ices would "In total, the Fed paid $3,022,100 for awarded for service in posts where
be used as a rount erfeit deterrent." eight Geltz hot stamp machines. All war or terrorism mak e survival a
In fact, ttl&gt; Fed bought the fi rst were resold to (the distributor) for a bit chancy. The State Department
two machines b!fore the I:J.Jreau total of $1.249,ll4, !:&gt;r a loss of recently Informed the mmmittee '
had run any tests at aU. That was $1,773,616."
that, while Khartoum has been 1
As a final touch. the Fed then added to the dan ger-pay list, bnth
tBd enough . What was infinitely
worse was that aft..- the technology tried to persuade the Bw-eau of Kuwait and Uganda have been
ha:l OunkeJ the bu reau's·tests, the Engraving and Printing to take dropped. (The other posts are ·
over the Fed'scontractwlthOptical Kabul, Bogota , San Salvador and • '
Fed bought six more.
The first two "hot stamp" · Coating Laboratories. When the Beirut. ) And !Ecause dan!j'rou s '"
machines were bought in De- bureau laughed at the suggestion, condlt bns . often mean roou ced ·, "
cem!Er 1983 from · the Swiss the ~ed t.erminated the contract, personnel, few employees make '
manufacturer's dlstriootor. One W!IRYhe result that.Optical Coating more than $15,100- hard ly a figure • '
to get rtch on.
•. .
rost $1'/U,OW. the ~ her $142,351. The is now suing for $4 million.

'

Hockey

Only up - to_the upper class. ·
people'
That's good - not bad. ·
What does all this have lo do with
In fact, there used lo be a muchthe middle class that Is allegedly van· used phrase lo describe this process:
illhlng, shrinking, disappearing,
squeezed or stapatlng?
This: Within the last month, the
Census Bureau hu lllsued two poverty
reports. One meosured how many
people fell below the cash.only poverty threshold. The second measured
how many people are below the DOV·
erty threshold if you count in the value of the non-cash items.
The verdict of the two poverty reports are clear and consistent: In the '
two years since the end ol the big double-dip recession and the fall of unemployment rates In 1983, poverty bas
come down. Measured al the official
le•el, the drop hoa been from 16.3 percent In 1983 lo 14 percent in !98S.
Wben the non-c11h items are counted
In, there has been a .similar sort of
drop in all nine
of measuring it.
Of the nine choices, the one I thlok
makes lhe most sense shows a twoyear drop from 10.6 percent to 9.3
percent.

"~pward mobility.'' Rdefiiled American life. ll's a phrase we should start
using again. ll's still wha•· ·
happening.
·

II.

....

.-

L'IHII-' h

W L
Pltb!hurgh ... ~·· · 7
Phll11delphia .... G
NPW J ersey ... ,.. ol
NY Rangers ..... 2

T Pis. GFGA
t 0 14 12 ~9
0 D 12 28 11
3 0 R t7 !9
3 2 6 29 31
NY l11landers ... 2 3 1 ~ ·23 to
WIRhingaOO ...... ! 4 1 !5 27 36
Adams Dlvhlon
Quebec ............ 4 2 2 10 :n 22
BO&amp;tm ....... ...... 4 3 0 R 'lAJ ~
Monlreal.. ........ 3 3 I 7 r; 27
BuUato ............ l t 2 t 'Ill 26
Harlford .......... I 2 1 3 15 22
Camp bell Coofermce
Norrl~ Dl\llslon
W L T PI". GFGI\
Toi'Oilto ........ .... a 1 2 8 ~ 21
Minnesota ........ 3 2' I 7 31 24
St. Lo.is .......... Z 2 I 5 15 It

Detroll ..... ........ z " o 4 19
Chicago ......... .. 1 5 I 3 :m
Smythe Dtvhllon
Edmo1ton ........ .a 4 0 K 311
Calr•ry ........... 3 3 o 6 %5
Los An1eles ..... 3 5 0 6 :..
Winnipeg ......... 2 3 I 5 17
Vancouver ....... 2 4 &amp; 4 • 1!5
11tursttay's R.Mults
New Jersey 5. Los Angeles 3

Foottt.a t'OIM:h

EriP Comrmrilly Coii'KII' -

........

RMkelhall

DonMJd Sllvrrl rflllanH.

~ "":" Slprd llllfety

Dwll!bl

Hkk.oi: wat\redwilll'rtMnrW~rlllft'll.
Miami· - l'llttd lneh*-lwr .IIDI!cy
Tt1lor ork Allr olll'l'll hrl~ and a bare~
rill trram cheew. ~ •--1!1~ •d
be\oMip.."" -.1 Mhulde !lel''oice from LIIGwlrllll kl Shea st.dlum. ·

~·

Who IU'Cl lhe reoonl hotdl'nt l!r rru;t RBI
IIIM I'I~-and M'Y~mw, WtriiSerk'!l~ (!Oef!
.,_l'ltWw).

.......

Climer Rll::k Dem)lley, colri~~~:oiiM . IIR
MM80fl, ~he -.tortheendofhkcarm'
wih tilt Orbletl. lllllrnore .... delided not
ill plrk up tile optkln year m lt!i oonb'ltet.

~ a.fllP'If'Y. who baaed . • In
. . . . Ill! MVP .ant in llr IH " 'Grid
~. to bewme a fm Mlf'lli.
QuoteofllleDa..r
'"1111! ILI'd So11 are ~tl'ellonaltHnr.lf .rou

24
35
30

lalln Bolloll. )'011 1111 II NfW Dtllnd. But If

23
85
19
2t

)'OIIIIIIIn New fork. )QU fall ali .noEl' Ui!
IIIOftd." - Red IIIII GeMni Mmll(ft' Lou
Gor1111n, wbD V4!1 a...w.nt GM Mlh t~
Meb lor lliii'II»&gt;t ilur yeiU'IIo, on ~ln,;ln till&gt;
lwotih

TumoothrUdiiR

Phll""elphla 5, PlltsblU'(h 3
Friday's G&amp;lllefl
Hartford at B•naro, 7:35 p.m.
Sl . Looki at Detroll, 7:35p.m.
Mlnnesttll al WUtUIJfiOII, K:05

Odca(o ~II' llludd WIUihingtoo

io\

.-NIIK lor a Mlnwit ...-tin~~: hdwt&gt;en
Olk_, CulM ofrkllllrl•dJl'llapo ,_,...,_,.
lnjlj Ur Wrt,jley Fk'ld ne4~blrtlooll io ,;ettl('
U.. '-rofllrhlullheCuM' hari llekl,UIE'
Dilly m¥-r lta,t;~te ..,.. wtUDul l,;h&amp;lt.
Mlijor IAII\H" IMrbd ...!i tbreiiiMed lo
ITI0\'1! lulwe MITJ' ~~~ IIIUD"i to 11
ila1lled 1*1'11 lu M:Uirm~Mlair nip~ lcle'Jf.
Ilion. Md 1111- Cul'to!IIIQ'....,. mll!ll ha\'e IIJhbi
al riM or they wll naw- to tilt !1\birliM.
Bu.Upuk NupdiiM
.b. i\aawiUII, ~- .. couple ICIIlk the!.r
· wt'dllnJVCM'III&amp;toneol New Enp.d'!i miN
!lllll: ffd lllw'lool - Joe-111 Park. Nor.,.,
~fr lllld (lift Rlchardllon. Mth ••
lltoi•llflu~ lllllil.-nd wl .. at u~ halpark, dim
Wlltcht&gt;d Gllmt' 1 of tile \\'oriel Sf&gt;lie!l, ~h
ihr Sol kM4 io thl• Nf'W Vork MN n

p.m.

CaiJary at Wlnnlpes: , 8:315 p.m .
BO!dm al Edmonton, !::i~ p.m.
t.: hlcaro at Vancoover, 10: 3S p.m.
Saturday's Game!!

L01 AnKelew at NY l11landers,
nllhl
New Jer!iiey at WasNn~on, night
Philadelphia ~tPIItshurlfl, nJcht
Ruffalo at Hartford, nlrht
Toronto al Queh~. night
NY Ran~ter!ii atl Monlreal, night
Detroit at St. Lolls, n!«ht

'i

Transactions, ·

HeU.Ooodhye

,

Ottdt Bklete. a third bMemlflwhOM' ft\·~
IIIL'I and Ufte RBI llelped the Smllloni

•

and a walk.
His &amp;retch of 15 scoreless Series
innings - the most since Bob
Glll;on In 1967 -was snapped when
Tim Teufel homered in the eight h.
"I dldn 'tthlnk I had my very best
stuff, " said Hurst, who. became the
ftrst Red Sox Jeft-hander to win a
World series game at Fenway since
Babe Ruth in 1918. ''!was getting
some pitches up. !.Just kept trying
tO' change speeds and mix things up.

for life's little
. em"ergenclei
as well as
life threatening
emergencies

premature, says·Rose

Bud~ Ammdok wW ~ aftf'l' lhi'!WW!IIn

WaleoJ Conference
Patrick Uivi&amp;IOI

c-

Cftltral 'Connectkut -

NHL Slandlnp
By lJnlted Press International

son said. "Ourbacksaretothewall, I know
can 't
but we're rot out of 11 ."
The Red Sox are in a p~sitvr to
wear the crown thanks to Hurst,
wbn oorninated the National
League chatl)pions for the second
time In the Series. He pad blaniii!&lt;J
the Mets on four ·hits over eight ·
innings
In Game
came
back
Thursday
night .t.I,o and
scatter
10 hits J:..":,..;.._.._.;;:.......;.._-..-...______..______..,....,

dl'ffllt the Gl.. b! • u.: mr. \\'ortd !irr16,
wu bum N . .lack Betltley, a plicht&gt;r will
l't'l'OI"CCM a .._. mark over IIi Ill! yeWM Md
~ U.. N&amp;mnU i.tllllf! In plnciH*a In Ita

1111 Md tt51') wlh Ur Gimes, ~lr· IM.

EMERGENCY
CARE CENTER

By Unked Press lnlernallonal
. on the roster.
Reds player-manager Pete Rose
"And I think I might stU! be able
says removing himself from the to help the team as a pinch bitter."
club's protected roster to make · In the final weeks of this past
room for a young prospect would be season, Rose said he wruld deterpremature.
mine whether to continue his
Rose's comment was in response playing career In spring training.
to a request by Reds General Rose, 4'i, Is coming off his worst
M;mager Bill Bergesch that he season, In which he batted .219 with
relinquish his spot on the 40-man 2i RBI and 10 extra base hits In 237
roster.
at -bats.
'
·
"I can understand Bill's feelThe «l-man roster has to beset by
ings," Rose said in Tampa, Fla., Nov. 10. If Rose isn't on it, he would
where he is overseeing Reds be ineligible to play until May 15.
prospects participating in the In Bergesch said the roster decision
structional League. "I just don't was entirely up to Rose, but added,
understand the timing."
"I would persmally Hke to see him
Bergesch, attending tbe World get of! the llst now. Then, after he
Series in Iioston. said Wednesday has worked out In the spring and
be wants Rose to remove himself had a dlance to see howhefeelsand
from the protected roster so thattbe at the same time evaluate !ilme d
Reds could plaee a young prospect these talented ldds we are bringing
in, make a decision on whether he
wlll play.
"The whole question Is where
TVC
Pete
would fit In . He has said many
Meigs at Ale~ander ·
times,
when we have the players
NelsonvU!e-York at Vinton Glunty
with
the
talent to replace him, he
Federal-Hocking at Belpre
will step aside."
Miller at Wellston
Asked U the Reds now have ttl&gt;
Trimble at North Lewisburg
players to replace Rose, Ber~sdl
·said, "I helleve we do."
SVAC
Responded Rose: "What (Bergesch)
is interested In andwhatl 'm
Southern at Southwestern
going to do might be two differen t
Kyger Creek at Hannan Trace
things."
Symmes Valley at Nm1h Gal!la
Ber~sch and Rose wlll rnret to
Oak Hill at Eastern
discu ,. the situation next week In
SEOAL
Marietta at GaiUpolls
Warren Local at Logan
Ja)'kson at Athens

J Tonight's g~mes

IAMIIIIIIIII~M

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Minnesota's Golden Gq&gt;hers, who
have muscled their way into a tie
lor the Big Ten lead with Michigan
and Ohio State, help the Buckeyes
'celebrate homecoming Saturday In
Ohio Stadium.
The game, which features the top
two freshman running backs In the
Big Ten in Darrell Thompson of
Minnesota and Ohlo State's Jim
BryliJ1t, Is the Big Ten-Turner
Network Television Game of the
Week and begins at 12: 50 p.m.
EDT,
Bothteamsare3-0n theBigTen,
Ohio State 5-2 overall and Minneoota 4-2 alter edging Indiana last
week 19-17 on a final SECond fteld
goal by Chip l.ohmlller. The
Buckeyes beat the Hoosiers a week
earlier, 24-22.
.
Thompson, a 6-foot-2, 204pounder, leads the Big Ten in
rushlng (second In the nation) with
133.7 yards per game, In scol1ng
..)l'lth 5I points aiJd atl-PJrpo~e
'running, avB"aging 168.8 yards per

i
:

. •'
•
I

I
I

\

•

I

. l

.

,
•I

'

WHITE MILLET
FEED.FOR SMALL BIRDS

I

Preferred by Juncos, Cardinals, Sparrows,
Brown Headed Cowbirds, also Crackles, Murn·
lng Doves and Finches.
U.S . Fish &amp; Wildlife Service feeding test show
no other smaU seed has the appeal of White Millet.

I'·
'

'

'

•

I

I
I

~

,. I

I; '•

:~
,, '
I

\

,_

iI
·,'
• I

••
•

...
·'

SUGAR RUN FLOUR MILLS

180 Mulberry AYe.

Pomroy, Oh.
992-2115

'•

O'lliERs
Point Pleasant at Ripley
Rock Hlll at Coal Grove
Wheelersburg at Portsmouth West

gai1le.

BJYant, at 6-foot and 212 pounds,
wUI be starting cnly hls third game
for the Buckeyes, yet he has taken
over the tmm rushing lead with 517
yards.
1
· "Minnesota seeim to beoneofthe
teams that Is Improving," Ohio
State Coach Earle Bruce said of the
Gophers, who have won three In a
row. "They got of1 to a slow start,
I:J.Jt tll&gt;y're beginning to dJ the
things t!Ey d:&gt; well. They are a
lootbaU team "

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE·
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH .

'Phone 992-2975

FALL I. WINTER HOIJR$

CLOSED MONDAYS
TUES, WED., THURS ., FRI.
9 AM to 6 PM
SATURDAYS 9 to t

OLDSMOBILES

THE
GRAVELY

WE'RE
OPEN ·

PORI· YOU

PRICES SLASHED

The Daily Sentinel
tl.l&gt;PS 115-lliOI

FRIDAY'S

A Dl\'ltloa Of Multtmedla, Inc.
Published l'very afternoon , Monda y
fhrougti Ffrd ay.- 11'1 court- st., PO·
meroY. Oh!o. by the Ohio Valley Publl ~ hl np: Company!M ultlmE'dla, lne.,
Pomeroy. Ohio 4~7&amp;9, Ph. 992·2156. Se·
rond class postage paid a t Pomeroy,
Ohio.
MPmbf'r : United Press Internallonal.
Inland Dally P ress Association and the .
Ohio Newspaper Auoclatlon. Nallonal
Advcrt!slnll Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third AvPnue,
New York, New Yo rk 10017.

\

\

•'

·FEED THEM
THE BEST....

I

•H•

"/KNEW .you'd say 'somebody BUNKED!"

Daily Sentinel- ·. Page- 3-:.
•;&lt;

Gophers~OSU clash Saturday ~~at;;wah;;ama~:;::;-1

I

Berry's World

Question: If there are fewer people
In poverty, whot does that tell us
about the idea thai the middle class Is
"nlshing, shrinking or disappearing?
Answer: If ll's happening, It's good!
Wby?
.
.
Well, If there are fewer· people In
poverty, where could they have gone?
Only up.
Most likely, lhey made their way
into the lower rungs of the 11\iddle
clua. And If the middle cl. . ls atatlsUcally shrinking (as Is maintained),
where could they pooslbly_hove gone?

.The

·Career-ending·talk

Utl&amp;h - Cut pard Ray Hall.

Chic. - S6~ forward iWredrtck
lluKfr.pl.
•
fii"Ylobuid - ;ilpd ,;uud RonHarprr.
Mttwauk&gt;,, - NIDI('d fret' .,;ml JUatd
()uclcoy 8raclf:y liD ll I· )'eat Mlti'IW.1 .
l'hoen~- " 'IWC!tl lUNd Sfodrii· ThnP,Y.

act_~~----~B_en:---~-at_te_nb_er_g ;;

tllirds .of all government help to poor

previous start when a line drive off
Clemens will pitch on five days' the bat of Baltimore's John Stt:!ero
rest In Game 6. Pitching in that struck his pitching elbow•.
situation during the regularsea!'On.
pernens started this season 14-0,
the right-hander was 8-1 with a 2.12 was named .the MVP of ttl&gt; AU-Star
ERA. He struck rut 18 batters in '1'2 · Game and won Game 7 of the AL
lnnl!{gs. Oh yes, his 20-strlkeout playoffs. A victory agaln~t former
effori Aprll 29 against Seattle.came Boston Jeft;hander Bob Ojeda
with five days' rest.
woulO make a pretty nice finishing
· "And now we have the pitcher touch, wouldn 't you say?
"If It's a storybook, then it'll be .
with the most wins in baseball
pitching ~turday night," Boston that," Boston third baseman Wade
Boggs said.
Manager":rohn McNamara said.
During the playoffs, Clefnens has
The Mets have their own story.
. pltchoo once on five days' rest. They have wm 114 games this year.
Game 1 of the American League but tll&gt;ir sm5on will amount to a
Championship Series against Ca II· !allure unless they can win two
fomla, and gave up 10 hits and eight more. They have only two chances
runs in 7 1-3 innings. ·Throw that to get them.
performance out. however, since
"We,.arestlll in very good shape,"
Clemens had been injured in his New York Manage~ Davey John-

.........

l

No vanishing
There has been a great hullabaloo
recently about an idea called "the
vanishing middle class." Simply put,
the argument goes roughly like this:
There are more rich people than belore and the rich are getting even
richer - and there are more poor
people and lbe poor are getting even
poorer.
Therefore, it is said that.the middle.
class is vanishing, shrinking, di!"ppearing, squeezed orstagnating. You
may choose your own adjective because no expert h~ ever come up
with a definition of "middle class".
that other experts will agree upon.
For thai matter, no expert.o seem to
hove ever agreed upon a definition of
what "rich" is, either. It's been count·
ed as a family income of about
$40,000 or ,50,000 or '100,000 or even
much more. It has also been measured by accrued wealth rather than
annual income.
Interestingly, the only definition
where there Is any agreement at all
concerns poor people. There iB an "of·
liclal" poverty Une and the Census
Bureau each year duly records how
many Americans are poor, alter adjusting lor Inflation. The current level
for a family of lour is ,11,000 per
year ('10,989 1o be precise). Below
lhal, and you are officially poor. That
figure includes only cash Income.
Moreover, for the past seven yea,..,
the Census Bureau has also develo~
nine different statistical series thai
measure "non-cash" income for poor
people. These non-cash !tenia include
things of true nlue like food atamos,
rent supplements, . Medicaid and
Medicare. Remarkably, the non-cash
disbursements Involve about two-

money

.l

Jack Anderson &amp; Dale VanAtta 1

It's under armed guard.

Scoreboardu .

'

Litt~e re~pect for

.

By MIKE BARNES
UPI Sports Wrtter
_BOSTON (UP!) ~ The fans are
already dancing in the streets
outside Fenway Park.
·
The reason? Not only do the
Boston Red Sox stand · within a
victbJY or their first. World Series
title since 1918. they also have their
IJest pitcher ready to pursue that
triumph,
The Red So~ are ta!kllig World
Series title after left-hander Bruce
Hurst checked the New York Mets
4-2 in Game 5 Thursday nig~t. thus
salvaging one of the three games at
FeQway.
,
Roger Clemens Is scheduled to
pitch the potential clincher Saturday night at Shea Stadium. The
money's not exactly in the bsnk, but •

i

Between the lines

· . Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Red Sox fans dancing ··in .streets after Game ·Five victory · }

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio •
Friday, October 24. 1.986 ·

LET'f.ERS OF OPINION are welcome . They should 1x&gt; ll'ss than 300 words
long. Alllt"ttr.rs ar£&gt; subjl'(t toedltlng.and rrn st be s igned with nam ~. address and
teleph&lt;me number. No unsigned letters wlll be ~bUshed . Letters should be in
good tasie, addressing Issues. not personalities .

...

Friday, October 24, 1986

I
I

•

'

I
• I

•'

POSTMASTER: Send address changE'S
to The Dally Sentinel , 1ll Court St..
Pomeroy, Ohio 45768.

................................... 25 •Cenu

Subs('rlber$ nol desiring to pay Ibecar·
rler may remit ln adv~n ct' direct to
The Dally Sentin el on a3. 6or,12 mon th

oosls. Credit w111 be given carrier et~ch

P.M~

IN STOCK PRICE$ DISCOUNTED

Peoples Bank

week .

No subscripllons by, mall permitted In
area s where home' carrier service ls
available.

7

InClUdes LObby,
Installment Loan Department,
Drive-In And Wallc•Up
Window

SUBSCRIPTION R~TES
· · By CarHer or MOtor Roule
One Wrek .. ............. ... ................ .$1.25
One Month ................................ .$5.4~
One Year ................................. $65.00
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Call~

UNTIL

I.

Mall Subscrlpllon11
.
ln11lde Melp Ceunl:y
13 Weeks ............. .-........... .......... 117.29
26 Weeks ................. .. ............ ... $34.06 I
52 Wooks ............................... ... S66.56 1
Oulslde Melp Conty
13 Weeks ......... ... ;.... ................. $18.20
26 Weeks ..... , .......................... ~.10
52 Weekl ............ ..... . ............... $67.60

"The letter lank"
MEMBER F.D.I.C.

UP TO
'

.'f "

Jlffi
-·OPEN

SUNDAY

2212J_A_
Point" . r~W.Vo.

Now-.W. Vo .

171-1121

882-21311

111.hS-

S3000oFF

1·5

-Obb

_HEVROLET
OLDSMOBILE CADILLAC

308 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO
PHONE 992·6614

•

�.'

l '

..•· ...

Page-4....:The Daily Sentinel

•

Sentinel Slaff Writer
Edy Sisson. a dispatcher with ttl!
Pomeroy Pollee
Department for a
number or years,
will be returning
to work in ttl!
next few days
after having been
otr the job for
more tnan four months.
Edy underwent major surgery
and recuperation during that period
and she's most appreciative to ll!r
many friends for their loving care
and kindnesses.
"It's really a good feelingtoknow
that so many folks cafe about me,"
Edy comments. And those of us
who have been tll!re know exactly
what Edy is saying.
And the Avenue, I'm taking you
to - 42nd Street
E Ueen Clark sent along her
playbill from Broadway show,
"42nd Street" which she attended
recently whtle with a tour group In
New York City. The musical which
plays at the Majestic has had a long
run and seeing It on stage must
have been a real highlight ci the hip
for Eileen.
I'm sure many of you will
remember the movie - gads,
wasn't that in the thirties- by the
same title. Seems to me that was a
RUby Keelor-Dick Powell show.
The music was wrttten by the late
Harry Warren and you still hearthe
title song now and again.
You might be Interested in
knowing that ttl! Jackson Craft
Guild will be staging its lOth annual
winter craft fest at Lick Local
School. Route 35 West in Jackson on
Nov. 1 and 2 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m .
each day. There are 75 artists and
craftsmen from Southern Ohio,
West Virginia and Kentucky ,lined
up to take pari. If the weather stays
good. It might make for a nice
outing.
June Ashley informs me tha t a
very scarce and interesting history
of Ohio has been reprinted by The
Freeport Press in cooperatiOn with
Paul W. Morton of Freeport.
The book was wrttten by George

H. Crow. who was from Meigs
County and became a professor at
Ohio University, and C. P. Smith a
hill)\ school teacrer at Newark.
The book was publlsh'd in 1931,
several months after ttl! death of

Syracuse
PTO
meets
Fund raising projects and activities and the purchase of cheerleader unllilrms were among the
topics discussed at the recent
meeting of the Syracuse PTO held
at tre schooL

·'·

Jill Hobbs presided at tre meet Ing with Ramora Young being
installed as secretary and Sandra
Baer as vice l:l'esident. The secreta ry 's report was given by Teresa
Drummer and tre treasurer's
report included a lreakd:Jwn of
monies, showing a balance In the
general lund o! Sl.!!Y.!. and in the
athlellc savings acount of $454.
PalntinJ:( the windoW&gt; In the
building
was discussed and Jeannie
1
CoMolly will secure more volunteers to help paint the remainder ol
the wind:J..s before the scaffolding
is returned . It was noted that $662
had been collected In Powell
receipts wlth tre drive to end this
month. Sherry Buskirk noted that
$144 has been · received In
memtJ&gt; rshi ps.
The PTO voted to give the
kindergarten Sfil. A IJU was
presented ror the six th grade
cheerleaders uniforms, '$4J6 total,
or $45 each. II was vot.ed on
recommendatiO n !tom Jim Lawrence. that the iBrents of the
cheerleaders be fllld t re cost of the
uniforms from the athletic fund
unless the parent wlsres Ill keep the
uniform.
A $5 registration fee was set for
· those wishing Ill participate in
extra-curricular acttvlles. The PTO
approved Sffi for the purchase of
trophies ahd it was voted that not
more than $100wlll be spent ilrnew
basketballs. Lawrence's (I'Oposal
that any fund raising activity have
the endorsement of the atlietlc
committee was aprroved.
The third and sixth grades lied
for the PfO banner In the room
count. It was voted to have a
cheerleaders tag day and anotll!r
fund raising project wlthtre money
to go Into the athletic account. Plans
were made for a skating party with
the rri:mey to come from the candy
bar sales collectiOns which totaled
$1495. Arrangements wUI be made
to have rEPairs made to the cotton
can!IY machine. The PTO JliiVe
approval to Marvin McKelvey as
fifth grade roach and Ray Profitt as
sixth grade coach. \
'

Mr. Crow· who was killed at an
Ufllrotected grade railroad crossIng at Costoctoo.
The book has 14 parts and 48
chapters. Publls~ during · the
depression, Ire book became
scarce not only because It was
publisred at that particular time
but It was published by a small

firm.

It Is •believed that l would have

become more widely clrcu lated and
In demand had it not been for tre
untimely death of Mr. Crow
because he would have pushed the
sale of the volume as a textbook . .
At any rate the book Is again
being sold. I d:m't know If June has
had the opportunit'y to look It ewer cr
not However. I'm sure she can tell
you how to !IE'cure a copy if you're
Interested.
Since d I and gas drilling activity
has been widesprrod in Meigs
County , I d:J want to advise you that
ttl! 011 and Gas Regulatory Commission wUI hold three public
hearings In November to receive
public comment regarding oil and
gas drilling In Ohio.
The hearings will be reldonthree
Thursday evenings at 6 p.. m. The
schedule includes Nov. 6 at the
Lakeland Community College Performing Arts Center in Mentor;
Nov. 13, McKinley Auditorium,
Costocton, and Nov. 11 at the
Marietta High School Auditorium
In Marietta.
The commission was created to
assess environ men tal problems
associated with oil and gas drilling,
productiOn and waste disposal
activit ies and wUI examine Ire
current regulatory program and
recommend solutions to any and all
problems to any and all(I'Oblems II
ldent~les.
·
1 tillught , pe-hap,s. you might
want to go to one of the sessions to
. provide )I&gt;Ur Input
__
Is ttl! Pomeroy-Masoo bridge
one of the least likely places where
you want to sit? It is for me.
I found myself hung upwell rut on
the bridge ooe afternoon this week
waiting In a line of traffic lilr what
seemed to be. but wasn't, forever
while workers treated an oU spill
along the highway and the bridge
entrance oo the West Virginia side.
I know - trey say the bridge will
last rorever- but! d:Jn't know woo
"they" Is and I'm not that confident
U yw're like me, yw can't get
across that bridge fast enough. Do
keep smiling.

Finalist named
Tracy Ann Ellis has been accepted as a state finalist In the Miss
American Coed Pageant to be reid
at the Hyatt Regency In Cincinnati
on April17 and 18.
She will take part In competitions
including swtmwear, Miss Coed
Personality, Miss Coed Model and
¥iss Coed Personality with cash
awards and trophies to be presented · winners. Overall to win the
pageant, she will be judged on an
interview, an application, evening
wear and an Interview, poise and
appearance. The winner gets a
vacation trtp to Honolulu, Ha\fali In
August, 1987, to represent Ohio ilr
the national title of Miss American
Coed for 1987-88.
Tracy Is an eighth grader at the
Meigs Junior High School where
she participates In band, choir,
basketball, tack and softball teams.
She Is the daughter of Bob and
Peggy Ellis, Middleport.

Reports on. th e new family
plaJ)nlng clinic and the new dental
program for children through the
Meigs County Health Department
. were given at the ,recent meeting of
the Child anp Family Health
Service Advisory Board reid at the
department
.
Carol Tannehill. R.N., director,
presided at the. .meeting. Yvonne
Brown, R.N ..dlscussed the current
client load of the lamily planning
clinic noting the operating tours
· and mettoci; of contracepton
available.
.,, 511! noted that·Dr. Wilma Mans, field Is the (l'oject physician ilrthe
pre-natal clinic as well as the family
planning clinic. Charges are based
on a sliding fee scale. but no one is
refused services due to inability to
pey. The clinic Is funded through
tre local levy.
The new dental component in
. conjunction with the ChUd Health
Cllnlc was discu ssed by Mrs.
Tannehill who noted that t ~arted
In July with Or. Margie Lawson and
thrl;le members of her staff, two
certified dental assistants and a
dental hygienist, lulding a dental
clinic on the third Wednesd ay
morning of each month.
The chlclren are assessed by the
dentist after having a complete
physical examination in the Child
Health'Cllnlc. On the first visit the
teeth are clearred, and appoint·
ments given if follow-up ror sealants are necessary. The charges ror
the dental clinic are based on a
sllding fee scale and the program is
agaln funded through t II! locallevy.
It . was noted that Planrred
Parenttood of Southeast Ohio has
assisted the family planning staff

.

, ' .'

PhQne 448· 452&lt;1 .'
BAROA1N MATINEES SATUBqAY I

SUNDAY- ALL SEATS $2 .50
ADMISSION EVERY T~ESDAY ·

.•
•

CAREER WEEK - Middleport Elemootary
School chUdren have been given a look at pbs which
might be available to them as aduks wring lhe
Career Week actl\lltles at the sdloolthh·week. Here

'

\~ .

\'0~\ \\

POMEROY - Carl Radell!! will
be speaker at revival services to be
reid at 7 p.m. Thursday through
Sunday atthe South Bethel Church',
Silver Ridge. There wiU be special
singing each night.

\'
Yt
,~ .

$AVE IJP TO
Now rl.-an-up

M:J \' in~M

~110

on a Lawn-Boy

durin~ tht· ft~ll Cl. t&lt;an-up With ta"· n- Bo~·
. ~ll lf'. II '!&lt; your ••han4't' lo jtt&gt;l lu"n-Ho~ I]U alit~· a nd

rlf'Jlf'ndahilil~· "'·hilt· .~· ou lmK "a' in~ up lu I 110.
1
For u limih••ltimt• only.

Lawn-Boy Mowers
20" s.. tr t•mJwll ,..t. Powt•rrul 2
f~·rlf' Enl(in t',
,\lumlnum 0f'4"k ,,
2 Yt'nr l.imilf'rl

the members and thanked the
group lor treir support during the
year and treir work for the
banquet
Clarice Erwin, Geneva Tu tile
and Mrs. Evans were on the
decorating committee; DorothY
Roach, Farie Cole and Nettle Boyer
on ttl! ticket committee; Coleen
Van Meter, Thelma Boyer and Flo
Grueser on the program commit ·
'tee. Gifts were presented to Dan

\

.•

-

.·

..

{Formerly Modem
OH.
The Store With " All Kinds of Stuff" - for Pets, Stabtas,
Large l!o Small Animals l!o Lawns and Gardens

==OPEN

SUNDAY
.

•

1 TO 5

\~

UP TO

$1500

1-614·992-7022

•,

•'~

OLDSMOBILE CADILLAC

308 E. MAIN ST.

POMEROY, 0

being Invited to join the supportive
organization.

the delegates, Leah Ord and Mrs.
Swackhamer, Helen Smith, a nd the
president. Patty Struble on the
theme "Progress of Women In
Teaching over the Years. "
A discu ssion was held on acllvl·
ties for Della Kappa Week. The
ways and means committee held a
whit e elephant sale and a dessert
course was served by Miss Smith,
Mrs. Swackhamer, and Nanga
Robert s.

SUNDAY
. MIDDLEPORT- Homecoming
wUI be reid at the Middleport
Church of Christ Sunday with
Danny Evans, pastor of the Guyand:Jtte Church of Christ, Huntington,
W. Va., speaking at lhe morning
and evening services. Morning
worship will be held ,a l10:30 a.m.
(ollowing the 9:3(1 a.m. Sunday
school hour: Evening services wUI
be at 7. A pitch-In dinner wUl be
served at 12: 15 p.m.
RACINE - Practice ror the
Southern Alumni Football Team
which will play Eastern on Nov. 15
will begin this sunday at I p.m. at
the Southern field. For more
lntJrmatiOn contact Brady Huffman, Jr., 992-26.56. or.Steve Hill at
992-ffi95.
RliTLAND -Captain D' sdlnner
Sunday from ll::lla.m. to 5p.m. at
the Rutland Civic Center under the
sponsorship of the Rutland Emergency squad.

protector. Columbus; Shirley Taylor, .grand outer guard, Ashley;
Linda Kn app, grand press correspondent, Marengo. Other guests
were from Alexandria, Canal Win·
chester, Pataskala, Walbridge. Cotumbus, Durward, Ashtabula, Gal·
llpolls, Rockland. and Wilkesville.
The Gallipolis temple Invited lh~
district for the 1987convention. The
grand chief's projects for the year

Fo.r a

are rerrtodellng the kit chen at .the
Pythlan Sisters Home at Medma .
and the Heart AssocJaiJOII.
Election day dinner
SALEM - The Salem Township
Volunteer Fil·e Depar tment will be
serving an Election Day dinner at
the firehou se. The menu will consist
of vegetable and chili soup. hot
dogs, slopy .Jocs. pie a nd

G~od

Clean Used Car Check us out ....
We Have The Best Deal In the
Area
NICE SELECTION!

Kirk Reed, Eastern High School,
was a winner in the preliminary
round of Ohio University's 4lth
annual American History Contest.
More than 14 .~ students in 400
Ohio high sctools took the prelimi·
nary examinatiOn at their respective high schools earlier this rrnnth.

"CATCH THE SPIRIT"
CHRIST invites you to Homecoming at
HEATH UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Corner Main &amp; S. Third, Middleport

SUNDAY, OCT. 26, 1986
9:30A.M. Sunday School
10:30 A.M. Wor~hip Service
'

1

112:00 Noon Carry-i.n Luncheon
1:00 P.M. Program

Let '1 ptai~e HIM, have lun and lellowfhip togefhet and tenew
old acquainfancu on thif jogouf occa1ion.
REV. C. (Son

ZUNIGA, PASTOR

MONDAY
RliTLAND - The Rutland
Garden Club wU meet Monday at
7:30 p.m. a t the home of Mi:s.
Robert Canaday. New officers wUI
be Installed by Mrs. Harvey
Erlewine.

NEW '86 GMC SIERRA 1500

r-;:::::::=;::=:::::::::::;1
II

•3 speed automatic transmission
•4.3 litre V6 engine 3.08 axle rat io

MID-STATE' WRESTLING
SAT., OCT. 25

Power steering, power brakes,
painted mirrors, styled wheels,
P225/75R 15 All Season Steel
Belted Radials, gauges, 2 tone
paint, vinyl bench seat, AM radio,
dome lamp, rear step bumper and
· rr1uch more.

8:00PM

RUTLAND CIVIC CENTER
Flying Paul Harley, 1he
Executioners, Crazy Bill
Ca..Ver, Plus others.

ADVANCE TICKETS AT
MILLER BROS. GROCERY
Adulll $5; Children $3

DISCOUNTED
TO

•

:;

$9,438

1986 G.MC.
''New''.
SIERRA 1500 ~~~~~~~

'·

:,·. I•

Ill,
l
Ill
l
·Ill

Obb

OPEN
· SUNDAY

$1,244.81; band camp, $1,140;
music, $2,0'l7.ffi; fair booth. rent
and repair , $2,119.'15; awards,
$G!8.13; parties and banquets,
$56.144, and flowers. $148.25.·
·
The Band Boosters meet on the
first Monday of eac h month In the
band room at 7 p.m. Membership Is
$1 lor a full year. Residents are

The 56th Annual District Convenlion of District 11 was held recently
at WUkesvllle with Alta Ballard,
distrtet deputy presiding.
Special music was presented by
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Ward on the
zither. The Rev. Kay Puckett had
prayer and there was a welcome
from Marshall Richard Travers
who also gave a history and
Interesting facts on the village.
Betty Thompson of District · 6.
Walbridge gave the response.
A bullet dinner was served by the
WUkesvllle Temple at 5 p.m. and
durtng ttl! evening session,. fou r
candidates were Initiated Into tre
order.
Guests were Doris Taft, grand
chief, and her husband , Clifford, of
Jefferson ; Julia Burton, grand
senior, Clrch!vllle; Pauline
Trickey, grand manager, Cin.c i·
nail; Beverly Hammond, grand

Winner announced

meeting starting at 7. The annual go
to church Sunday for the lodge will
be held at 10::ll a.m. Sunday when
members are to attend Heath
United Methodist Church . .

.

~

_HEVROLET

.

'•
••

DISCOUNT

boon ox -

Opport11nity

•
·:
'

IN STOCK CHEVY

Must 1M 62 pan of ag. or handicapped

FOR FURTHER DETAI.S CAll TODAy

A candlellghtlng ceremony In
observance of Founder's Day
highlighted. the recent meeting of
Ohio Alpha Epsilon Chapter of
Alpha Della Kappa held at the
Meigs Meuseum.
Eileen Buck conducted the ceremony assisted bY Jean Lee,
Lucille Swackhamer, Edna Price,
Helen Smith , and Frances Robert s.
Reports from thedlstrtct meeting
held at Chillicothe were given by

•
: ..
·•

~

STAY WARM This Winter!
All PRIMARY UTIUTIES PAID

Eq ua 1 Houa ing

,

·'

CHEVETTES·

LETART FALLS - The Letart
Falls School !all carnival wiD be
held Saturday with a soup supper
starting at 5 p.m. There will be
·games and prizes.

.· Alpha. Delta Kappa has meeting

.

are~~!u~~!~~~g

. ;~::;,- guidotlnos hove reoonttv

The Meigs High School Band wUI
be out oollecting fo r tag day on
Saturday, Nov. l
Following are some of the
expenses lor purchases the Meigs
Band Boosters have Incurred for
tre band since May, 19M: band
uniforms·and auxlllruy J):Julpment,
$12,:fl9.04; Instrument s and stereo.
$3,534.82; Insurance on lnstruments. ll346.81; bus driver fees.

,•

R&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPLY
CO.
s-.plyl
Pomeroy,

. CHESHIRE - Kyger Elemen·
tary School P .T.O. sponsored fall
festival Saturday at the schooL The
· kitchen will own at 6 p.m. and
games will start at 7. Door prtzes
wut be awarded every hall hour
until 9 p.m. There wut be a cake
decorating contest -and numerou s
games for children.

Band Tag Day planned Saturday

Warronh·.

399 W. Main

of Shade River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM,
will be held at 7 p.m. Saturday with
wort&lt; in the E.A. degree.

RACINE - Racine American
Legion Post 602 will hold a hayride
PTO.
.
Saturday wllh tmse attending to
meet all he post home at 5 p.m. The
GALLIPOLIS - The Grande ride wUI begin at 5:30 and Is for all
Squares Western Style Square . LeglonandAuxll!arymembersl\nd
Dance Club wlll sponsor a round their f3!llllles.
and square dance Satrurday from B
to 11 p.m. at St. Peter's Episcopal
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Church In Gallipolis with Herb Lodge li3, F&amp;AM, wUI observe past
Shelton calling.
masters night Saturday with a

NOW SAVE ·oN

. ..

~.

SATURDAY
HARRISONVILLE -A costume
dance will be held at the Harrtsonvllle Elenentary School from 7 to
lO::ll p.m. Saturday for all ages.
Charlie Barrett, Rutland, wUI
provide music. Admission Is 25
cents a person. 'The dance Is
sponsored by the Harrtsonvllle

IM"'f'r

display at Sunday's bollll'Co.mlng.

' I

·,i (:
'l·( f •'
\: f

LONG BO'ITOM - Square
dance wUI be held .at the Long
Bottom Community Hall Friday
beginning at 8 p.m. Adoor prize will
be awarded.

r' /~)'·~~~u =r; rt

·/· ' / Rents
\\ \ : 1 \ · ' ;
to your income. • Lovely apart~'.-.---!- ,=4 I . menta featuring wall to wall car·
1\ 1 / peting, all appliances.
1

Community ,calendar I.area happenings

=~:::::==============:===========
FRIDAY
CHESTER- A special meeting diMer to beservedat6p.m.andthe

CONSIDER:

'"'

mines

.· =-

WILL YOUR
UTILITIES
PUT YOU IN
THE POOR
HOUSE THIS
WINTER?

Tii

.PhWip Ball ol A.E.P.'s Southern Ohio Co ..
Company's mine rescue unit, gives lnfonnatlon on
mining and the safety leatu,.... which are practiced at
the
to a group of fourth graders.

.

..

-UP WITH

J

Tampa, Fla . to make tre story introduction loactiv it ies which met
come alive for the st udents.
the objectives of Ire ww·se of stu ely
Stuents paidtreirownadmlsslon. in roodlng and language arts si ncP
but the Tri-Cou nty Car&lt;l"r J)(&gt;velop- th story of Rip Van Winkel is a
ment Program wU I rei mbu~ e the classic.
district for the transportation costs
Mrs. Patly Stuble, S'J uthem
of ttl! study trip.
Local Distric t talented and gi ft s
The (l'esentation was considered coqrdinator-teachcr hru1dloo a rrannot only an enrichment program gements for the trip .
bu! also provided t.eachhers Kan

Pythian · Sisters conduct meeting

.

.

-

I

·:

•.·.

r.:========::r=========::::::::;j

,l

"· ~·

'...,, .

'

'·

sacrifice .

~

''

' .,
.' ·

Th Scioto Valley Fall Presbyterial of the Trinity Southeast Area
met recently at the Middleport
First Prebylerian Church wltli
about 60 persons representing six
different counties attending.
Works top; were offered tiroughoul the day Including "One Woman's Walt fur GJd", "Ministry With
and To ttl! Aging", and for the
various offices of Ire organizatiOn.
A luncheon was · preparE~:! and
served by membel's of· the Middleport Pres byterian · Women's
AssociatiOn.

CAR accepts Ashley membership

/

. ...
'

Presbyterians meet

Jeffrey Burdsall. pastor, will feature guest organist, Wesley
McCune, minister of music at the
First Baptist Church in Parkersburg and a facult y member ·at
Parkersburg Community College.
Contrtbutors to the organ f\lnd
were local church members and
friends from Floria, Texas, Massachusetts, Arkansas. )ndiana and
California. Durtng remodeling processes lor t.re installation of the pipe
organ. Coolvtlle Church Conference
r~ords dating from 1856 to 1891
were round and these records,
which reveal valuable historical
in!bnnatk&gt;n pertaining to the
church and community wUI be on

and Jeanette Thomas, teachers.
and Mrs. Evans, class president
The program consisted of humorau~ skits narrated by Flo Grueser
with Willard Boyer, Mrs. Van
Meter, Bud· Wilson. Glen Evans,
Farle Cole, and Clarice Erwin
taking part . AI Hartson had a
couple of songs, Mrs. Erwin played
a medley on the plano, and Clay
Tunle had the closing prayer.
Attending were Geneva and Clay
Tuttle. Bud and Hazel Wilson,
Donna and AI Hartson, Dan and
Jeanette Thomas, Bill and Flo
1 Grueser, Farie and Raymond Cole,
Marte Curd, Virginia Buchailan,
Dorothy Long, Clarice Erwin,
The Chldren of the American mother, Mrs. June Ashley, and
Revolution has acepted into mem- mother are members of the Return Willard and Nettle Boyer, Thelma
bership Emily Denise AsH;:y of Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daugh- Boyer, Evelyn Casto. Coieen Van
Meter, Dorothy Roach, and Glen
Crew Road , Rock Springs, daugh- ters of the American Revolution.
and
Kathryn Evans.
.ter of Keith and Emma Ashley.
Emm&lt;! AshleY is the CAR
Her eligibility Is based upon the chairman br the Return Jonathan
Revolutionary service of her ances- Meigs Chapter and will provide
tor, George Holter Sr .. a private In applications for any children, age!; 0
the American Revolution. She joins to 21 who wish to join.,
her sisters, Rachel and Whitney, as
members oltre organization
The CAR is -the chlldrm 's group
affiliated with tre Daughters or the
American Revolution and ttl! Soi)S
r:i the American Relitllutlon. She Is
r:i III! third generation belonging to
tll!se groups. Presently her grandfairer, Robert D. AsH;:y, grand-

? ~;;;

..

Organ dedication set
The Coolville United Methodist
Church will dedicate Its recently
acquired pipe organ during a
tomecoming Sunday.
Morning worship and church
school will be from 9.to 11 a.m. ; a
potluck dinner at noon and the
dedication at 2.
The pipe organ was installed by
David Gillilan with assislsance
from Phil Thomas, Joe Rader,
Wayne Caldwell, Ralph Hen.derson,
Ray Dunfee, Joe Owens, Craig
Seals. Don Hughes, John Breedlove, Russ and Harold Nutter, Paul
McPherson and John Siler, Coolville, and Boyd Thomas and Lakin
Casto, Parkersburg.
The dedication ceremol)les
planrled by David Gillilan and Rev.

The first and second grade
students of Letal:t FaUs, Portland,
Syracuse,.and ROC,Ine Elementar·
ies.attended the-children's theater
presentatiOn; "Rip Van Winkle", by
!'lemorial Audltori~m, Ohio University, Wednesday.
~puppets , weighing from 45
to 00 pounds eac h were used by the
Bites and Pieces Puppet Group of

'·

531 JACKSON PIKE ·111: 3S WEST

The Daily· S!!ntinei- Page- 5

OU program. attended by classes

'

.....'

'

. The 47th annual banquet of the
Homebuilders Class of the Middleport Church of Christ was held
Tuesday night ar the church.
AI HariSon had the opening
prayer for the d!Mer prepared and
served by the Phllathea Women.
Pumpklns.-candles and fall flowers
were featured In the decorations
and ceramic pumpkins were given
as favors.
Coieen Van Meter had the class
history. Kathryn Evans wl'lcomed

~: ~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

r------------,.

by lending Dims and IJ'OViding
pamphlets "It's OK to saY No", for
use In the clinics.
A pamphlet "Questions and ·
Answers about Haemophlus by
Polysaccharide Vaccine" was
given to the boa rd members and
dlscu ssed by Norma Torres, R. N..
nurstng supervisor, The Hill vaccine Is provided by tre Meigs
County Health Departmen t free of .
charge and Js administered to
chUdrm from the age of two years
to five years on regular Immunization days.

Homebuilders club has annual banquet

~

Friday, October 24; 1986

Health department reports_
· ---:------=

Going back to work
By BOB HOEFLICH

Friday, October 24, 1986

I '

Beat of the bend

Q

I

1
:L

THE SAW.
028 Super~ 16" Bar &amp; Chain
It's atrue handful cJpcmer. 3.12 culi: Inch engine.
Electronic ignition. Quickstop®chain brake.
Anti-vibration system. Speciallonglife cylinder.
Single lever Master Control. All the rugged features you need for even the toughest jobs.

.

THE BUCK.
Aknife from Buck. the
world's foremost maker
of sports knives. Handcrafted. Four-inch. blade ..
Brass ft~tmgs. So~td lockmg
mechantsm. Retails for $40.

THE DEAL.

Purchase an (rl!l Su)JE'r !:&gt;r ju st $ll9.ffi and gY' I a a- rtiflcate good lor a FREE Buck knife.
You'll own 1\\.:l of IN' !Jn!'!lt tooLs evcrbuUt; the JX'rf&lt;'Ct go-to-the-woods combo. Stlhl'sSawBuck !)(&gt;a!. Cut out this ad and take It to your participating Sllhl dealer. WheJ'€ a full line of
Stlhl chain saws start s as bw as $184. ffi.

•

1111
•
. Ill .
•

Ill
•
Ill
Ill

~: .,

lllt.i

.,HII-&amp;11'1 Ulltlll., ......

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO, 600 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio

in g. power brakes. 2. 73 axle ratio, tilt steering wheel , styled wheels . .
AM-Fm-Stei'eo radio, deluxe molding package. P205 / 75R15 All
Season Steel Belted Radials, gauges, dome lamp, bright mirrors .

SAVE ON THIS SALE
DISCOUNTED TO•••••

111111

STIHJ:.
·
:
.: I
-·*
...
'
J
. ............................ '
·
.

3 speed automatic .transmission. 50 litre V-8 engine. power steer·

$9,948

SMITH 'NELSON MOTORS INC.
500 E. Main St:

Pomeroy, Oh. '

PH. 992-217 4
•

�.

-

The Daily Sentinai-Page-7

Friday, October 24, 1986

~;;.....;.LOcal

Briefs:,....
, ~--;

Officials' group plans class
The Athens Assoctallon of BasketbaO Olflcla!s wlll conduct an
adult education class In Pomeroy for anyot;~P interested in becoming
a high school basketball ofDc!al.
The claSs wUI begin at 6. 30 p.m. on Oct. 28 at the Ohio Power
Building behind the Meigs High football field In Pomeroy TIDse
needing further Information may contact David Jenkins (J' any klcal
basketball official '

EU.IS &amp; SONS SOHIO
Complele

r

IJ Oil

\.

~~!~! ~

~
-

Automotive

Servtce

~ ' WAID

SWISHER &amp; lOHSE

locust &amp; Beech Street

Prescr1phons

991 9921 Moddleport

Pomeroy

Brown's Are &amp;
and
Equl"pmenl Sale•
Serv1ce

MAY GOD GRANT US A WISE
SELECTION OF LEADERS

••

Natronwrde Ins. Co
of Columbus, 0
804 W Ma1n
f9l ZllB Pornerol

RACINE PlANING MILL

\ I
,....\ \

\Ill, 1

1

Mtll Work·
l•ri'..~~~lrt! 1
Cabtnet Makmg ~{-!-"
Syracuse
992·3978

MEIGS nRE

CENTE~

Po111110g FlowS~ $6op I FRANCIS FLORIST
FIOWRS FOI EYm OCCASION

lfe.g• County'• Oldim Flor131

16141992-2039 or
16141992-5721
106 lutlorMII a.•• ,_,,, Oh.

352 EAST MAIN
POMEROY. OHIO 46789
814/992·2844 '

INC.

. 204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, Ott.

Mgr
Ph 9911101 •

John F Fultz,

FUNERAL Ho•

I

"SerYing fomilit1"

Mtddleport, Oh1o

992-5141

POMEROY Qit;RCH OF THE MZA
R8'JE: CornN Union and Mullrm fU:ot.
Thomas Glrn McCiun.ct IAI"IOr Norman Pre;
tC'\ S S Supr Sund1\ School !t:ll a m
morninJ! ~~t ors hip 10 l&gt; !l m ('\ rn tngsO"vi(.'(l ti
p m m1d "1'1: k Sf'!Vl('(' W{1.1nf'Sd.'l\ i p.m
GRACE EPISaJPAL GiURCH I!6 E
Main Sr PoiT'I('fO\ Sund.:w sC'!VlCJ'S Hoi•
communion on tl"f&gt; fir~! SundJ\ or (\lch tTX&gt;nTh
and nm buwd l't Jth rrKJrrun~ ]')' 1\ff on the&gt;
Thirdd ~nda\ M01 run~ pr .rt,.w and:\(]' rmn on
aU 01 hrr Sunda' s 01 1tr rmnt h Church &amp; hool
and Nursf't'\ r rtr f' pm\1dro Cotf€t' hour In 1tl'
Pansh Hall lii11'1lf'dta!f'l\ folii::AA rn ~ ttl' sm l«'
RJMEROY CHURQi OF Clffil~ 211 1\
Mmn St Nf"ll Proudfoot JXL&lt;;for B1blr School
ll-:11 rm MorntnJ! \\ Qn:hip J) 3U J m Youth
mff'ltn~ 6 Ill p m F.\'f'mn~ \\:Orshlp 7 lll p
m Wl'dr~ 1\ ru~ht PI 1\ f'r mf'f'llnl! mel Brblj
Sl udv 7 fll p m
TilE ~ VATIO'\ &lt;\RM't

11~ Butlf,.nut
mrng m dlar~
Sundav ho)JnfS." ffif'f'l lll~ J() I rf'l SIJn&lt;l&lt;l \
School 10 fl am Suntlm ~OOol 'I P'\M
EJoiq- Adam~ lf',td&lt;'r 7 JJ p m S.th 1110n
M ('('tl n~ \ ar1ruc; spr:tkrrs and mu~ir s pxl dls
Thur.&gt;da' U ]) a m 10 2 p m Ladt("' Hom'

A\f' Po!TI('ra\ M1-.; D:!!

U~

1 \-\

I"I'IC'mbt'"- In charw

'X~

all \.'.'Qmt:n

p rn 1llu ~dav r orl=fl Cndf'1
Cla.c;.o~;s tYOU nJ! Proplr B1iJIC'1 ~ l) pm B1blr
STud\ &lt;.~nd Pl&lt;JH'f m~·tin(! q)m rn til' publll
POMERO\ 1\'ESTSIDE C'H l ROJ OF
CHRIST l1Di Ctuldrm ~ H o rn Ro td tCounT\

• lnvtt&lt;'d

R,o;.~d 76 :fil~r, Vc.. &gt;JI mu'-1( ~u rrln \\ or

~1hp

10 1m Blblr ~um. 1J 1.1 m \\ nn:.hip n p

m V.f'dnf'Sdt\ 81bl('

01D

~uch

i' p m

DFXIT.R RIBI E CHR!~ L-'&gt;'
GfURC'H Al\ In Cw1 L'- JJJ~IOr I tnc:b ~\ m
SUp! SurldavSc:ho-•1q. II .Jm jJ (rll hJng&lt;.n
\1«": ftr" l tnd Ihird ~nd i\ IO!JN- tn(! ~nd;1\
&amp;&gt;hml Vourh rl'l({lllng i tl p m

f'\ f'!'\

Sun

d:J\

GRAHAM

L~!TED

MF.THODIST

Pn&gt;a ch lnl!9 lOam firs! ;.t ntl sP('Ornl Sun
cl.n i; ot rurh mnnt h thud _.nd fou rT h C\un
dJ y t ,lt'h month " or~; h l p ..,., ..... ref's 11 7 :«1 p
m
W1tdnt'Sda\ f'Vf'nm gs 31 i JO p m
Pra\rr Jnd Blblr Stud Y
SEVENT H DAY AD\EN rtS I Mulb
rrf) Hrljl ht .;. Ro ad Porn( ro\ 1 ( r o\
Bn1 ch Pa ~ I OJ Slihbilh Sl'Mnl Sup1 rl n
tf' ndf'nl Rh onda Murk ln Sabbath Sthool
lr 1Zi n ~ ar2pm nnS,t!UHI I\ "lt h~ m;;hip

'f'f\IC"(' toll o~ln g Jl IV\ F W' l\un('

\\(I t

CO m&lt;'

RLI LM;: O

FIR~l BAPTI ~ T

CHLIK H

- S1str1 Harnf'tt Warnt'r Supt Sun d:-~ v
S1 hool !t J'l ' m ~1 o rmn g W o r~h iP 10 -1 ~

om

POMERO\ FlllST n,\ fYflST I \ !;ton
Hr lll'\ mlnrst!'r \\ lllia m Snouffrr !'1un
du \ Slh•Xll Supr Suntll\ !"-ithool 4 30 .1m
Mnrnin a \\ ore: hlp 111 ~n 1 m
Fl HS J son HHU\ BAP11S1 Po
mf'rO\ Plk• I I •m 11 0 Bn 1n1 p • ~ t o r
lnck i'II'Ni" Su nd ' " ~~ hool Dr 1N 101 Sun
d&lt;i \ ~ch oo l If «l 1m Mnr n rn ~ \A. ur;;hlp
10 4:1 1'\f' nln ~ &lt;A O!!&lt;t. hlp 7 OHp m rD~ T I
B. 7 m 11:: s I I \\ N.inl''d 1\ Pr 1\f'f Sr'r
, lei' i oo p m •D s r 1 &amp; 7 ~n PM rE S
T 1 Mls!-. lon fl rrncl'- 1 1 ~1''- 2til Ro\,JI
Am1 to:l liS id OJ '- b l\'- H!l..., h I ~ I 11\d f.trl"
]n t\II IOn ! t g~ ll)RI Q n\V('{.]nf'li d l V~ 7 p

m lO ST

1&amp;~

:\llpm tF:S T I luUHl/1\

\ ls !lllton ti IOpm

FA11 ft

TARER~A&lt;I

IN RunRoarJ H1"

F.

CHLRCfl

E m mf' t!R:\ ~ "' on

R&gt;l
Pa"'

tor H •n~\lf\ Dunn ~upt ·~u n Qav ~rnool
Jtl r m Sundl\ f'\f'lltn )l 'lf'rv\tf' i :rt pm
• Rlb) C' tr,l r hlng i Itt p m Thursd n
~ YH Act SF: MISSJOi\: Ch&lt;•rn !-it
S\
f IC' USC' S('f\ l1 NO
~rr\ ltf'li Sund.1v

m

II 1m Sund ,l\ E\ f'niM ):!
dnd \\ f'(!nf'Sd:t\ •t7 00 p

MIDDI.f.l'ORT r HLRC H Of ( HRIST

~ l fl"\ Hf'\ Kd thfblln
Sunda \ "'hUll q 'I ,1m \ ~ tdf"'
ll:l \m m supl Mornm~ \\ 1 o r 'l: hlp 10 :IDa
m Sundr\ r Hnini? o.,('r \lc • 7 )11 pm
\VI '(int-sll n flt 1\ I J MH rrn u 7 U"t p m

INC HR1 S11AN I

pJ~ I o r

M1 MOHI.\11 CHURCH Of'. C.OD

S Jllf'rflrld p ~ ~ t r u
1 rrt' m 1n \\1tltl rm" Sup! Sunt1.1 v Sr hool
~ '11m Su ndl \ Jnd\\c'(i nf~lll\ t\tn
H H 11\f"' HP\

:q

IMJ,!~ IJ \i ('f'!l

.J

1m1"

7pm

MIODI EPO H I
I 111Sl
flAPTI~T
rr1tn fr S1x lh tndP1 Imf'r ~ ttl f llt n P as
1/H Aoh !JI I kf' l ~" S.upl ( 11 h ~ H l~l!'1\""' Supt Suml n St hool 11 1"1 am

~\ 111 "hrp
10 n J m Sund.n
..:flt\lrf' 7 p m P n\f'l mN'IIIIf!
mil R1hl1 Stud\ Wl'dn r&gt;Stl.l\' l'\rnln!! 7 D
m ChUrl! l'fl "' rhoI! pwcll t e W!"&lt;lnrs
d tv i Jl m 1\dult choi r pJ.::~cl\cr W&lt;'d ~
pm
H•dlo pto~ru m \\MPO Sunct1'

M111 oln.iZ
hrnln ~

~

ltJ 1m

M! DDI.EPORT CHURCH OF CHRIS r

r,th ntl M[IJn AI H t~ r ls on mlnlst0r Mik(•
111~ 1 t H h Sunda \ School Supcrln!rndt'MI
Alhlr Sr hnol 9 3ll 1 m Mo rn t n ~ W or ~hlp
10 10 ,1 m Evf'nlng- Worship 7 00 p m
W('(jn1 sduv 7 00 p m Pr avt'r rn ('('lln~

MlD!JLE:PORT t HURCH OF&lt;r HE NA

7.ARF.NE to pa11.10r'&lt; RC'\. ChariPS CIW II-"
1nd Rr' N.1nrv Cov lr BH I Whltr Su ndu\
School Supt Sunda Y School 9 30 1 m
MornlnQ: W01 ship 10 30 a m Evangl'ilstlc
ml tln 2 7 00 p m Wcdn~da y 7 00 P m
Prn\ f'r

m~¥tln ~

UNITEDPREliBVTERIAN MINJSTR\'
OF MEIGS COUNT\'
Rev Ken Wllkk't~
HARRISONV[LlE PRESBYTER IAN
CHUR.CH - Sunday Wors hip S£'rvlc&lt;'S
9 00 a m Chu rch Sehool 10 I~ a m
MIDDL EPORT PRESBYTERIAN Sundav Sthool q a m

10

I~

Church scrvi f'r

am

SYRACUS EFIRST UNITED PR~BY

TERIAN - Sunday SChool
Church serv icE' 11 15 am

10 a m

RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD Paslot

,John Evans Sundav School 10 00 a m

Sunday Morning Worship ll 00 a m Ch i I
dren 's Chu rch 11 am St.UJda y Evt&gt;nln g

Servlcr 7 00 p m Wed , 6 ji ~ \'oung La

St~

Pomeroy

992-5432

pastor Melvin Drake S S Supt Sunday

School 9•Q«l a m Morning Worship 10 30
Evening Worship 7 30 p m Wed nesday
Prayrr Serv iC'(' 7 30 p m

FAITH BAP'l 1ST CHURCH, Railroad

992·2104
W H R?rrln

228 W. Main

dlrs Auxillalj WN!nesoay 7 p m Fam
lh W01 ship

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH Off

Rt 124 3 miles fr'om Portl and Long Bot
tom Edsel Ha rt pastor Sunday School

Sunda Y momin~ prE'itch ln~
10 30 a m , Sunday evmlng sPrVIces 7 :lO

9 311 a m

pm

Meigs County EmeTJ(ency Medical Services reports three calls
Thursday
Middleport at 4:54 a.m. to Rutland Street for Cassie Hudson to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 8:20p.m. to Edmondson ·
Road for Minnie Thompson to Holzer Medical Center, Middleport at
9 15 p m to Dock Street for LawrB!ce Boyd to Holzer Medical
Center

~-+--------

Pomeroy

TRINITY OfUROI RE'\'

"Fiflftl'l K""liV Ftltl C411il•"

264 S. 2nd, Mldtlllport

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

pastor. Drbblc Buck Sundav Sclnol Sup!
ChUI'C'h SChool 9: 15 a m WOJ."Ship Srrvw 10 ,'J)
a m C'holr rf'heanal Tuesda\ 7 l) p m
undt r di rrctim of I.ole; Bw 1

Squads answer 3 Thursday calls

Rawlings-Coats-Blower (row's Family Restawcnt

SEN
~FRANKLIN'

•

The Meigs County Health Department w!ll ba administering
Influenza shots to the first 100 people who are already on the waiting
list, from 9 to 11 a m and from 1 to 3 p m on Monday, Oct. 27
The lmmunlzatlons wUI be given at the health department waiting
room These 100 people Involved wUI lie mtH!ed by the health
department staff. If these people do not notify the department by 3
p m. on Oct. 27tomakearrangementsforpaymenti&gt;rtheirvacclne,
the department will give their shots to someone else
The demand has been so high and tlie.suwly lower this ~ar for t he
lmmuruzatlons that the department must make good use of each
shot, officials report.
/

• 992-2975 '

Pomeroy

t-""""":::=!!!!!!!!

115 E. Memoroal Dr.

I

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

RALL'S

l

Flu shots sla~ed for Moruhry

· GrocertesGenerll Merchlnd1se
Rac1ne 949·2550

I
"

'•

SONS STO~E

Rutland. Oh1o 45775
J wm ' 811! ' Brown, Owner
Phone (614) 741 1111

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

•

CROSS

S1 Mason Sunday 1School JO a m Morn
In~ W()rshlp 11 a m -evPn!ng service 6 p
m Pray€'r meetlnJ! and Bibl e Study Wed
nesdav 7 p m

Southern Boosters meet Mo"4ay
Southern High School Athletic Boosters will meet Monday, 5 30
p m., to clean the booster building. Abusiness m:oetlng wUI follow at 7
pm

FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rev Nyle

There IS one thtng better
than good government and
that ts government m whtch

all the people have a part
- Walter Htnes Page

MIDDl EPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST

Blessed IS the man whom

thou chooses!, and causest
to approach unto thee, that
he may dwell 1n thy courts "
- Psatms65 4

C' HURCH Corn er Ash and Plum Ralph

Cundiff pastor Su n d&lt;:~ ySch ool :10 OOa m
Morning Worship ll 00 am WPdn es d.n
md Sa turda '. Eve nln ~ Sri"\ ]C('S at 7 30 p
m

SYRACUSE F) RST CHURCHOF GOD

non Pentt'COstal Worship service Sunday
10 am Sunday School ll am Evening
worship servlc£' 7 00 p m Wednesda y
prayer me-eting 7 00 p m

MT HERMON UNITED BREI'HREN
IN GiRIST CHURCH, loca ted In Texas
Community off Ct Rl 82 llfv Robert

Bordt&gt;n pastor Corneliu s Bunch supt
&amp;lnday School 9 30 a m Second and
fourth Sundays worship service at 2 30 I)
m

MT MORIAH BAPTIST Fourlh and

Main St , Middl eport Rev Gll~...r t Craig,
Jr pas tor Mrs Erv in Baumgardner
Sunday School Supt S und a~ School !l 30 a
m Worship Servlc(' 10 45 a m

Sanders, pastor Jeff Holter lay leader,
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
Ed Roush Sunday School Sup! Sunday
- Joseph B Hoskins evangelist Sunday
School 9 30 am momin g worship an d Bible S!Udy 9 a m Wor shl~ 10 am Sun
children 's church, 10 30 a m , evening
day evening sen Ice 6 p m Wednesday
1 . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - l o p r e ach lng service on the second and
E'\ en!n~ servlc r 7 p m
fourth Sundays at 7 30 p m Christian En
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY Ra cine
deavor on the firs! and thJrd Sundays at Rt 124 William Hoback pastor Sunday
MEIGS
7 30 p m Wednesday (l'ayer meeting and Srhool10 11m Sunday evening servlcf' 7
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST Vernon
COOPERATIVE PARISH
lAN GSV ILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
BiblE&gt; study 7 30 p m
p m Wedn esdav {'ventng service 7 p m
Eld
rld
~f'
min
ister
Oll\erS\\
aln
Sunday
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Ro])(&gt;rt E Mu ssC'r pastor Sunda\ School
GiURCH OF GOO OF PROPHECY
CA RPENTER BAPTIST Doo Cheadle,
School Sup! Preachin g 9 30 a m eaeh
NORmEAST CLUSTER
9 30 a m Paul Musser supt Morning
Locale&lt;! oo 0 J While Road of Highway Supt Sunday Scho&lt;ll 9 30 a m Morning
Sundin
Rev Don Archer
worship 10 30 am Sunday (&gt;V('n!n g Sl'r
160 Pat Henson pastor SundaySchoollO
Worship 10 ~ a m PrayE'r service altern
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION tThur vier
Rev. Roy Deeler
7 p 01 mid Wt'{'k SE'rvlcl.' Wedn es
a
m
C'lasse~ ror all ages Junior Church n
ate Sundays
man
Durham~ pastor Su nday service
Re\ Seldon J ohnson
d IV 7 p m
am Morning worship 11 am Adult
9 30 a m , eve nin g service 7 30 p m
ALFRED - Chur ch School 9 30 am
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL Third
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA
Choir practlre 6 p m Sunday Young Peo
Prayer meeting Wedneday 7 30 p m
Wore; hlp II a m UMYF 6 lJ p m UMW
Ave Rev Clark Bak(&gt;r pas tor Carl Not
ZA REN E Rl'v Clrn n McMillan pastor
pie's Children s Church and Adult Bible
BEARWALLOW RtllGE CHURCH OF Ma rv Janice Lav('nd('r Sundav Schoo l
Third TuC"sdaY 7 30 p m Commu nion
tlngham Sunday School Sup! Sunday
Study Wednesday a t 7 l'l p m
CHRT ~T Jos('p h B Hoskin s paslm Bibl e
fustS unday IArchrrl
School 10 a m with ctassPS (or all a~es
Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m Mornin g
HOPE
BAPTIST
CHAPEL
570
Gran!
Class 9 30 a m Morni ng Worshrp 10 30.1
E\ening S(&gt;rvlc('S at 6 p m Wednesday Bl
OIESTER - Worship 9 am Chu1 ch
worship 10 30 a m E\ ang&lt;'llstk st•rvit'f.'
St . Mlddlepon Afllllated wllh Southern bll'
m Ev('nlnJZ Worti hlp 6 30 p m Thursdav 6p m Prayrr andPralseWednesda y 7p
SChool lO a m BibleS!udy Thursday 7p
study at 7 .Jl p m Yout h services F rl
Baptist Convention Davkl Bryan Sr Ml
Bible• Stud\ 6 3f1 p m
m UM W fi rsT Thursda y 1 p m Com
da ya t 7 30p~
m Youth mN'Iing 7 P. rri
nlsler Sunday School 10 am Morning
NEW STlVERS~ IlLE COMMUN ITY
mu n1on til st Sunday (Arcberl
ECCL EStA FELLOWSHIP 128 Mill Sl
EDEN UNITED JiR ET IIREN IN
worship ll a m Evf'nlng worship 7 p m
CHURCH Sundav S['hoot ser\l lct j) -15 a
JOPPA. - Worshlp 9 30 am Cllurch
Middleport
Brothr.r Chuck McPhNsun
CHRIST
E)den
R
Blake
pasto,r:
Sunday
Wednesday evening Bible study and
m
Worship !lf'rv!C'(' 10 ~ "m
School tO 30 a m Blbl('Study WPdn es dav
pi'lsTor Sunday School JO a m Sunda~
SChool 10 a m Gary R!'f'd I ay leader
pra
yer
meetin
g
7
p
m
Evaog(•listic Service 7 30 p m Wf'dn es
7 30 p m IJohnson I
e\ enin ~ services at7 p m and Wednesda ~
Mornln ~ Sf'rmon 11 a m Sunda y nigh I
BRADFORD CI!URCH OF CHRIST S!
day PrayN mwt rng 7 :ro p m Thursda\
1 ONl. BOTTOM - Church School , 30
S£'1'\ ices at 7 p m
~u vlco Chr is tian Endeavor 7 30 p m
Rt
12hnd
Co
Rd
5
Mark
Seevers
minis
ZIO N CHURCH OF' CHRIST PomPr ov
" m ~\ or shlp 7 p m Blhlf' Stud v Wf'd
AN'f'JQUJTY BAPTIST Kenneth Sm it h
Song sf'r\ lcl 8 p m Preaching !I 30 p m
ter
Sunday
School
Supt
HarfY
Hen
Hurrlsonvlllf' Rd Robert Purtt"ll mlms
npsdav " 30 p m UMYf Wedn&lt;'Sda y
pastor Sunday School 9 l) a m church
Mid ~('(&gt;k prayrr meetin g W£'drresday 7
dr
tcks
Sunda~
Schoo19
30
a
m
,
Morning
trr
Sll'\
f'
~t
a
n
If'\
S
S
Sup
r
Bill
M&lt;'E
I
ll 00 p m Communion F1rst Sunday
pm
sf'rvl r&lt;' 7 30 p m youth fellowship 6 30 p
worship 10 30 am Evening 14orshtp 7 p
roy Asst Sup! Sund av Srhool 9 10 a m
1Ar Ch f'rl
m Bib!«:&gt; s tud ~ Thursday 7 30 p m
m
HYSELL
RUN
HOLINESS
C
HURC
H
Wed
nPSda
y
worship
7
p
m
Worshlps ' rviC'f'lO lOt~ m EHrrlng " or
REEDSVIL LE - ChuN.' h School9 30 a
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE 3304~
Mlkf' Thompson Nev. Havrn WV pas tor
ST PAUl LUTHERAN CHURtH
ship Sunda~ 7 p m und Wr&lt;:!n f'ISdaY 7 p m
m Worship Servlc(' 11 00 a m !Def'll'rl
Hiland Road Pomr roy Tom Kellv pas
Sundrl)
School
at
9:
30
a
m
Mornrn ~\\or
Conrer
Sycamore
and
Second
Sts
,
Po
ST
JOHN
LUTHERAN
CH
U
R
C
H
Pme
11JPPERS PlAINS ST PAUL lor Dannv Lamber T S S Sup! Sunda}
s h lpatl~ .10 a m S un d::~vr\ rnln ~srrv lcr
mer oy The R.Pv William Mlddi(&gt;Swarth .
Grow• Th£' R('\ Wil liam Middl rsv. a r lh
Chu1 r h School 9 a m Worship 10 am
morning
sPr viet&gt; atlO a m Sunday even
at 7 :10 p~ Thundav servlu-s al 7 30 p
pstor Sunda~ SChool 9 45 am , Church
pastor Church sen Ic c 9 30 am Su nda\
Blblf' Study Tuesda y 7 30 p m UMW
ll'
l
.Q"
Sl'rvlce
7 30 p m Tuf'Sday and Thurs
serv
ice
11
a
m
m
&amp;-hool 10 W a m
Third Tursday 7 30 p m Communion
day SrrvlcC's a t 7 30 p m
FREE
DOM
GOSPEL
MISS
l
O~
al
Ba
ld
SACRED
H
EART
C
HURCH
M
sgr
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST
Frrst Sunday IArcherJ
II ORD OF FAITH 93 Mill St , Mlddlr
Knob Jocatrd on Countv Road 31 Rl'v
Anthony Giannamore Ph 992 5898 Satur
Jottn Wr!JZhl pastor Sunda\ Srhoo19 10 a
CENTRAL L'LUSTER
~rt Sunday m qrnlnf!: ~C'n.lce 10 15 a m
La" rr nCf' Glues&lt;'nra mp pastor Rrv
day Evening Mass 7 ~ p m , Sunday
m Larrv Ha\nrs S S Supt Mormng
Rev ,JameA E Corhitl
Sund ay PVE'nl ng 7 30 Thursdav mornmg
Rog&lt;'r Wlllt&lt;lrd asst pastor Prrnrhlng
Mass Aam and 10 a m Confessl&lt;lns on e
" ors htp 10 30 .1 m
R e~ Sleven Nelsoo
Bible studv 10 a m WNln t'Sday e.. cn mg
Sf't
\
lcr.;,
Sundll
\
7
30
p
m
Prayf!r
m('(lf
ln
t
:
r
ha
lf
hour
before
f:&gt;ach
Mass
CCD
classes
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA
Rev Melvin Frankllq
7 30pm
11
am
Sunday
WrdnPsd:r
y
i
30
p
m
Gan
Gn
lflth
RENE Rr' Llovd D Gri mm Jr pasTor
~" rremente S Zuniga Jr
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA
I• 1drr Yout h l!roups Sunda\ r vt'nln g at
VICTORY BAPTIST 525 N 2nd Sl
Ora. Bas.;, Chair man of 1h&lt;' Board of Chr It;
Rev Andrew Rubenkln~
Z4RENE Rev Glendon Strou d pa s Tor
Middleport
James
E
Keesee
pastor
fo
l{)
p
m
"
lth
Roger
;;~
nd
Vlolf't
Willford
111n LlfC' Sunda\. School q 30 J m Morn
A."iBU RY t S\ raCUSf'l- Worship 11 a m
Sundav Schoo19 30 a m Worshlp st&gt;rvie(l
INHfC'J s Co mmunion srn Ice rtrst Sunda\
Sunday morn ing worship 10 am , Even
In ~ v.orship 10 JO ;.~ m C'Va n£rl!stlc " (' f
Chu r('h School 9 4fi am Cha rgf' Blhlf'
10 30 a m, You Th s~r.lc(l Sunday 615p
f'nLh mont h
lng servlcp 7 p m Wednesday evening
\It l ' 7 ()() p m WNinfl~d.r V sen Jrr 7 p m
Stu dv WC'd nN&lt;dav 7 30 p m UMW first
m Sunday evrntn g St'rVICC' 7 00 p m Wed
WHITES
CHAPEl
WESlEYAN
worship
7
p
m
Vhsltatton
Thursda
y
6
30
LIBERTYCHRISTIANCHURCH De'
T uc~o~ dJ\
7 30 p m Choir Rf'h(\ lnal
nesday Praye r Merlin)! and Bibl e Study
pm
CHL
H(
HCooh
lllr
RD
RP\
Phillip
Rl
trr Woodv Call p u~ I OJ S1 n kl'!l Sund rv
Wrd nf'Stll} fi ?.0 p m UMW fou rth Sun
700pm
d(•nouJ
pastor
Sund
av
School
9
30
a
m
MORSE
CHAPEL
CHURCHCharles
10 am 1nd 7 p m WC'dncsd t\ 7 p rn
d.n ti :\0 p m INr J.;,on r
NEASE SE'ITLEMENT CHURCH Sun
OrShtp lif'r\ llf' 10 30 a m Blbll' study
Norris pastor Sunday Sch ool 10 a m
ENTERPR ISE - Worsh ip 9 am
da~ af tl'rnoon S&lt;'rvlcf s al 2 :JJ Thur sda y
HEMLOCKGROVE CHRISTIAN Rog ;.~\\ nd
~ o rshlp Sl'r\ lr r Wl"dn ~dav 7 p m
worship
serv
ice,
11
am
,Sunday
night
Chut( h School lO a m Blbl£' Stud v Tuf's
cwnm g servlcrs a1 7 lO
Pr Watson pastor CrE&gt;nson Pra tt Sunday
lWTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST worship serv ice 7 30 p m Midweek
d.1v 7 30 p m UMW Firs t Mondav 7 30
School Supt Morn ing Worship 9 30 a m ,
fiRST BAPTIST CHURCH Ma•on W
prayer
~ervlc(&gt;
7
30
p
m
Thursdav
Mark lonC'S pastor Bill Nicholson Sun
p m UMY F !=iund:r v 6 p m Choir Re
Va Pastor BlJI Murphv Sunday School 10
Sunday School 10 30 a m Evening st&gt;r
dav
School
Supt
Sund
tySc h ool~ 30 a m ,
LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH a m Sunday evening 7 30 p m Prayrr
h('ursal 6 ~0 p m Wednl'Sda v I Franklin )
vtce 7 30 p m
Morning Y. o r ~ hlp and Co mmunion 10 30 a
OF COD- Gllbf'rt SpC'n ccr pa stor Sun
FLATWOODS- Chu rch School 10 am
ml'f'tlng and Blblr study Wed n es da ~ 7 'l0
181' UNION BAPTIST, Donald Shue
m
da y School 9 30 a m Morning st'rvlr&lt;'
Wor-. hlp 11 a m Blbl&lt;' Studv T11ur11.
p m Everyone WelromE'
past or Joe Sayrl' Sunda} School Sup!
RL [LA NDS! BLE METHODIST Amos 10 OOa m Sundayevenlng servire7 OOp
d.'l\ 7 p m
UMYF' Sundav h p m
RU1 LAND FREE WILl BAPTIST Sa
Sunday Sch ool 9 45 a m Evl'nlng wor
T ltl l:o~ p.tstor Sonn\ Hudson su pt Sunday
m Mid ~ e£'k prayer S('rvlcl' Wedn E&gt;Sdu v
IF' ra nk lln t
lf'm St Rev P;;~ ul Taylor patilOr Sunda v
ship 6 30 p m Pra)er Mee!lng 6 30 p m Sl hool q lll u m Morn ing wo rship 10 30 7pm
F'OR E!\T RUN - Worship 9 a m
Wedn esday
Sch6ol 10 a m Sun da v e\£'nin~7 OOp m
m Sundli V f'H n t n ~ st'J'\IIC'C' 7 Of) p m
MT OliVE CO MMUNIT~ CHURCH Wcdn rsda~ £1\'f'nlng pray('r m('('tlng 7 00
C.1"1u 1r h School 10 A M Choir practlr&lt;'
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURQi OF ,,Wrdnl'sda'
srr
\
!('('
i
p
m
WMPO
pro
Lawrrnre Bush pastor Max Folmer Sr
TUf'&lt;l.da\ 6 lJ p m UMW fir st 1 U Md~ v
pm
CHRIST Davl' PrenUcP mlnlsiN [)('ry]
grum !1 1 m C'Jl h Sund,1y
7 :m p m ! Nelson !
9Jpt Sunday School and Morntng Worship
Well s Sup ! Ch ur~Sch ool 9 a m Wor
SOUTH BETHEL N£W TESTAMENT
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA
9 30 a m Sunday Pvf' nln~ service 7p 01
H F~ AT H iMlddlf'porl l- Church ~h ool
ship Service :9 45/p. m
CHURCH Silver Rldll'&lt;' Duanr Sydf.'n
REi\
F.
Rr'
LowN
t
Ford
pastor
Sunday
11 ;j) 11m
You th m(l('linJ;t a nd Blbl(&gt; Study Wf'dn es
Morn in~ Wm shlp 10 30 J m
strlrkcr pAsTor Sunday School 9 &lt;1 m
CHESTER CHU RCH OF THE NAzA S( hon!!l JOu m WorshlpsC'rvil:l' 10 30 &lt;~
da y 7 p m
You th Group 4 pm \\ l'dn€'5duv Church
\\ orshlp Scnlrr lOam Su nda} CV€'11 ing
RENE Rw Hrr~rt Grate pastor
m
' oun g I:WOplr s srrvlcf' 6 pm
CMir rl'hrarsa l 7 p m
Thu rsday
UNITEDFAITHCHUR
CH
Rl
7on
Po
Frank Rlfrlt&gt; sup! Sunday School 9 30 ~
sNVIC't'
7 00 p m Wffinf'sda y nl~h l BiblE.'
£, L.tll grlls t It st&gt;n.lct' 6 lO p m Wrdn rsda\
Pr.I H 1 SC'rvirf' 6 30 p m Blblr Stud v 7
m&lt;'rov B\ Pa ss Rt•v David Wi seman Sr
sTudy 7 00 p m
m Worship S('rvlcf-' 11 am and 7 p m
Sf' f\ ifl' 7 p I'll
p m tZUili.(!J 1
Sunday \\ ednesda y 7 p m Prayer meN
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIS1 Mlllrr
MJ NERSVJLL.E - Worship S('rviCf' 10
In ~
Sr Mason W Va EugC'nf' L CongC"r ml
1m Church SChoot 11 a m , UM\\ third
lAUREl CLIFF FREE METHODIST nl;; ft r Sunda v Blblt Stud v 10 a m Wor
\\rdn f'S du ~ I p m Choir pra!'llrf' Mon
CHURCH David BPII pastor Rob(&gt; rt E
shlp J1 am und 7 p m WE'dnC'Sdav Btb le
d:.l v 7 311 p m rNt•lsonl
Bar ton Dlrroior of Christian Educa tion
Stud v \OCJ I mu slr i p m
PEAnl CHAPEL- Worship Sl'n ]('(' q
Stevl' Eblltr assistan t Sunday Sdl ool 9 30
LIBEHT\ ASSEM BLY OF GOD Dud
am Church School 1l a m UMW Se
a m Morning worship 10 30 a m T('("nS l;lm,r:: l anr Mason W Va J N Thacker
m ncl Tu rsda v 7~ 30 p m JJ MYF last
•
In Action 6p m Evening Worship 7 30 p
'
pasTor EHn!nR SE'lVICt' 7 30- p m Wo
ThP!idJ Y 1 30 p m IRubrnklnJ;O
m Wf'dn (&gt;!day ev&lt;'ning prayer and Bible mr n s Mtnlsl rv Thursday 9 30 lim
Jly GEORGE R. PIAGENZ
POMEROY -Church Sehool 9 1~ am
study 7 JO p m Choir practice Thursday
Wed m•stla\ Pta\rr and Rlh le Stu dy 7 15
In my father's diary entry for one Sunday In 19re, when he was 19,
W&lt;lr~h l p 10 :lU am
Choir rehea,csal
7 pm
pm
Wftd n N~ d ~~
7 10 p m UMW St'COnd
is a wonderful One that strikes .today's ears as abnost Impossibly
DEXTER CHURQi OF CHRIST,
TuesdJ\ 7 30 p m UMY F Sundav 6p m
Charll's Ru ssell Sr mlnls tf'r Rlrk Ma
quaint. He had been visiting new friends after church Then, he
!COT bill I
comtx&gt;r supt Sunda y School 9 30 a m
HARTFORD GiURCH OF CHRIST IN
wrote, he "went home, sang a few songs with Ben "
ROCK ~PRJ NGS- Church School 9 15
Wors hip serv ice 10 30 a m BiblE&gt; study.
CHRISTIAN UNION The Rev David
1m \\ orsh lp lOam B ! bl e~tu d~ Wed
1\Jesday 7 30 p m
McManis pastor SundaySC'hool9 30 a m
Ben v.las my father's brother-In law; ~»;&gt; was married to my
nrsda v 7 iO p m UMYF tSC'nlors1 Sun
REO RGANIZED CHURCHOF JESUS
Sund11y mornin g serv ice 11 am Sun
father's
older sister The young wuple had come over on tl!e
da y fi p m 1Junl01sl {'\.Pry ot hpr Sun
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS Port
day night service 7 30 W~nesay J]'ayer
da v 6 p m rFranklin \
streetcar
to pay a Sunday'Bfternoon call t11 "the folks.' ' &amp;! Ben was
land Racine Road William Rou sh pastor
m{l('tl n ~ 7 30 p m
H. trY' I ANO ...,..€h\.Jrch Sthool 9 4S a m
Linda Eva ns chu'tt'h ~Ch o&lt;sl t!lfeetor
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Uliiftthere
when
myotather gorliome.
Wo1s htp Ill :via m 'UMW l EVC'nln gCir
Chu reb school 9 30 a m Morning wor ship
W Vu Rt l 1 J:r mes Lew&amp; pastor Wor
They
went
over
to
the
parlor
plano
and
"sang
a
few
sodgs
"
clc•t ~r((md Wl'dnesdav 7 3Q p m UMW
10 30 am Wedn esday evening prayC'r
s hJp servlcc&gt;s 9 30 a m SundaySchoolll
u\[t('rnoon Cir cle~ SlCOnd Th u1sda\ 1 p
servi('('S 7 30 p m
It would make a strange picture to Imagine t \'1) ha~py -go·lu cky
a m Evening worship 7 30 p m Tuesda y
m t Rulx•nklng J
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl rouagr prayer mc(&gt;tlng a,nd Bibl e Study
youth
In these days passing tbne on a lazy Sunday afternoon singing
SAI f.MCENTER- Churr h SC'hool10 a
Shuler pastor Worship service 9 30 a m
9 30 am Wor ship service, Wednesda y
songs around the piano
m Worship 9 4~ a m (Rub&lt;'nkmJ! t
Sunday School 10 30 am Bib](&gt; Study an d
7l0p m
•
SNO WVILLE - Worship 8 :ll • m. prayrr serv ice Thur!ilda y 7 ll p 01
OURSAV IOURLUTHERANCHURCH '
Anyway, these two fine male voices - Uncle Ben slngmg
Chu rch School 10 a m (Ruben king)
CARLETON INTERDE NOMINATIO N Walnut and Henry Sis, Ravenswood W
"whiskey
tenor," my father singing bass -led the harmonizing at
AL CHURCH Kingsbury Road Rev Da
Va Thr RC'v George C Weirick , pastor
famUy
gatherings
for more than 00 ~ars after that U I wanted to
vid Curf man pastor Sunday School 9 30
Sunday SChool9 30 a m Sunday worship
am Ralph Carl Supt Evening worship
llam
add another reason for the stress we moderns are experiencing, It
7 00 p m Prayer ~tln g Wedn esday
CAlVARY BIBLECHURCH, located on
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
would be that we no boger sing together
7 00pm
Pomeroy Pike County Road 25 near Flat
Rflv &amp;~er Gr~ttf'
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN Vern on woods Rev Blackwood pastor SerVIces
At the annual Episcopal con!erenre I attmded last summer at
He\' Paul McG uire
Eldrid~e pastor Wallace Damt&gt;Wood S
on Sunday at 10 30 a m and 7 30 p m with
Kenyon
College 1J1 Gambler, Ohio, we had a sing-a long one evening.
S Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m Worship
Sunday Schoo19 30 a m Bibl(&gt; Study Wed
AP PI EGROVE- CHurch School 9 00 &amp;&gt;rvlce,
We
will
probably never have another.
10
30
am
ne~da y 7 30 p m
,1 m Wm shlp 10 00 a m tflrst and third
FAITH
FELLOWSHIP
CRUSADE
FOR
It
wasn't
only that most of thoseattendlngdidn'tknowthe words to
Sundav:r11 UMW Second Tul'sday 7 30 p
CHRIST Sl Rl 338 Anllqulty Rev
m Prayrr mcE&gt;!ln~ Wedn l"5day 7 p m
"Moonlight
Bay" or "Waltzing Matuda " We also sang songs
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST. Steve F ranklin Dickens pastor Sunday morn
IG r &lt;tCl'1
Deaver Pastor Mlk £' Swiger, Sunday
1!\'erybody
knows,
like "You Are My Suf\Sh!ne" and "This Land Was
lng 10 a m , Sunday evening 7 30 p m
BETHANY - Wor ship 9 a m , Olurch
School Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m
Thursday
evening
7
30
p
m
Made
for
You
and
Me.'' '!be response was baH-hearted
~h on l 10 a m Blblf' Studv Wf'dn {'ll day
Morn ing worship 10 40 am Sunday
S!'IVERSVILLE COMMUNITY BAP
10 ,1 m Dorras WomPn s Fdlo"' ship
When the conference was over and we gathered to plan the
e\ ('nin,;; worship 7 30 p m Wednesday
TTST CHURCH Ptstor Robert Byers
Wfdn C'S dH v 11 a m I McGuire)
t'\ Pn lng Bible study 7 JO p m
Sunday School tO a ry} Worship service 11
program for next year, the vote was overwhelming to drop the
CARM EL- Church Sd1ool 930 a m
BUfU.INGHAM COMMUNITY CHURQi
am, Sundav evenllg service 7 30 p m
Worship 10 4 ~ n m Sf.&gt;cond and Fourth
slng·a·long and go back to "Amateur Night" for our free evening (It
Burlln~ham Ray Laudermlll pastor RoWedn ('~da y evening ~erv lce 7 :Jl p.m
Sund,tvs Fcllo" ship dln ner wit h Sutton
was nice to know you, Mitch Miller )
bert
Cozart,
aulstant
Pashr
Sunduy School
INDEPENDENT HOUNESS GiURCH
third Thursdav, ti :Jl p m (McGulrf' \
10
a
m
worship 7 p m Wednesday, 6 pIll
Inc.
Pearl
St
Middleport
Rev
0
Dell
Granted these were Episcopalians, mt known lbr their spirtte:l
EAST LETART- Church SehOOI9 am,
Manley pastor Sunday School9 30 a m
Worshi p 10 a m o;('('()na and fourth Sun ' yooth mretin,: Wed , 7p.m church services
singing With MethocllaUI, it may have been different But even
PINE GROVE HOL!NESSCHU~CH ~ Morning worship 10 30 am , Evening
&lt;Ia' !II. UMW flrsl '1\Jesday 7 XI p m
mile ott Rt 32:&gt; R(&gt;V Ben J Walls pastor
worship 7 30 p m Tuesday 12 30 p m Wo
Methodistshavechangl!cl Weal! have Wemaynev~see areturnto
i Gr.t&lt;'C'I
&amp;bert Searles S S Supt Sunday School
men's Pray£'r mP.etlng Wednesday, 7 lJ
LETART FALLS - Worship 9 a m ,
famllies
singing around the plano
9 30 a m Mornln~ Wors hip 10 ;KJ a m ,
p m erayer and Praise service
Chu rOO Srhool 10 am l Crac(&gt;)
The
churches
were our best hope to keep communal singing allve
Sunday l'ven ing service 7 30 p m Wed ·
CHUR
CII
OF
JESUS
CHRIST
APOS
MORNING STAR-Worship 9 45am
serv ice 7 30 p m
TOLJC - VanZandt and Ward Rd Elder
But with the excepttmofsome evangelical dlur~es, theyhave&lt;Dne
Church School, 10 30 a m , Bible Study nesday
SILVER RUN BAPTIST, Bill Llltle
James Miller, pastor Sttnday School,
Wednesday 10 001 m !McGuire)
only a lair-to-poor job.
pastor Stev(&gt; Lit tle S S Supt Sunday
10 30 a m , Worship Service, Sunday, 7 ~
RACINE WESLEY AN - Chureh School School
10
a
m
,
Momtng
worslp
lla
m
,
'!be secret to good congregational singing Is to have a song l(lllder
p m. Bible Study Wednesday, 7•30 p.m
tOa m Wo,..hlp I! am UMW fourth Mon Sunday eveni ng worship 7 30 p m Prayer
POMEROY
WESLEY
AN
HOLIN~S
up
front. Congregations always sing batter with a song leader
dav 1t 7 ll p m , Mt'n s Pra,YE'r Breakfast
meeting and Bible study Thursday 7 30 p
Harrisonvill e Road Rev Dewey Kbtg
W&lt;'&lt;lnrsday 7 a m IG race)
because wheil he looks In your general direction you have the feellng
Youth meeting Wednesday at 7 p m
pastor, Clinton Faulk Sunday School
SUTTON - Chu rch School, 9 :ll a m ' mREJOICING
LIFE
BAPTIST
CHURCH
Supt
Sunday
School
9
30
a
m
,
morning
he
is looking directly at you and you don't want to be caught with your
Mornln f{ Worship 10 45 a m first and !bird
- 383 N 2nd Ave Mtddleporl Sunday 1 worship, ll a m , Sunday evening aervlce
mouth
closed. So you sing
Sunda ys F'('llowshlp dinner with Carrnel
SchoollO a m Sunday even lng 7 00 p m ,
third Thursday 6 ~ p m) (McCulrf')
I 1 30 p m Prayer Meellng Wednesday,

We don't sing en~ugh
.

Mid w&lt;"f'k service, Wed , 7p m

7 :10pm

OH KAN Coin Club to meet
OH KAN Coin Club wUI meet Monday at Burktt's Barber Shop,
Middleport SOCial hour and trading session at 7 p.m preceding the
meeting. Coin auction and refreshnnents will illlow Local
Individuals Interested in coins are Invited to attend.

Commissioners plan public hearing
Meigs County Commissioners have schedule!! a !llbllc hearing for
Wednesday, Oct 29, 1 p m ,in the oommlssloners office at the Meigs
County Courthouse, to discuss a request from Facemyer and
Sabnons Lumber Co •Salisbury Township, to use salt brine for dust
and Ice control on 12 acres of property on Bailey Run and on Dve
acres at Hobson.

Practice session scheduled
Jobs Daugljters will hold a practiCe session at 2 p.m Sunday at the
Middleport Masonls Temple
The semi-annual Inspection of the gorup will be held at 7:30 p m
: Monday at the temple All Masons and members of the Order of
Eastern Star are invited to attend the Inspection

Divorces filed in court
Filing for divorces In Meigs County Common Pleas Court, both
char¢ng gross negl«t of duty and extreme cruelty. are Randall S
Russ&lt;'il. Pomeroy. from Sherry Lynn Russell, Pomeroy; Elmarla K.
McFadden, Pomeroy, from Timothy E. McFadden, Holmesvllle.
Filing for a dissolution of their marriage are Debra L TIDmas,
Pomeroy, and Tbnothy J Thomas. Middleport.
Granted divorces on grounds of gross neglect of duty were Susan
M Baer from James E Baer, Marty F~rgumn from Charles Rav
FerJ(U9Jn

Meigs County Court
processes 45 cases
Forty five cases were processed tlon and costs, six months In jall. aU
In the Wednesday court of Meigs but three days suspended, one year
probatkln, Keqneth Russell, GaiU·
County Judge Patrick O'Brien
ForlelllnJ( bonds were WaU110e polis. failure to display valid
Reuter, Middleport. $750, driving registratbn. $10 and costs; C)Jarles
while Intoxicated, WOllam Allen, M Canter, Syracuse. reckless
Parkersburg, W Va , unsafe vehl operatbn and faOure to sl~al
rle. $00, John G Andei'Siin, Ann Intention to turn, $100 and oosts,
Arbor. Mich .. Sill. Chrlstln~ Beebe. each offense. fine suspended. one
Cheshire S50; Gary Drummond, year (rObatlon; Cyntlia Sauters,
Gallipolis,~. Susan joseph, South Pomeroy, stop sign vlolatbn. $10
and costs, James M Drehel.
Point,~. Corrine Lund. Gallipolis,
$50, Kim Hodge. Marietta, $50. Ml!klleport. faUure to control, Sal
Richard L St~art, Vinton, S.~. and costs; James L Hess, PomeCharles Coffman. Jr.. Rlp!ev, roy, failure to display valid license
WVa $00, Robert McNabb, Ra plat~, $10 and costs; no motorcycle
venswood. W Va , $42. all posted on license, $75 and costs. three days In
jall suspended, six months proba·
speedinJ( chaff(es, Jeffrey Ohlin
ger. Pomerov, failure to yield the tlon; Carl D Hughes, Pomeroy, no
opeFatoF's lieense. Sl25 and costs
right of wav. $50
Flnro In the court on speeding five days In jail. ~of fine and jail
charges were Samuel Alexander, time suspended Is Ohio license is
ParkersbuTJ(. $25 and costs; Harold obtained within 00 days, Burl
Pettit, Vienna. W.Va, $:JJ and Blevins. Middleport. driving whUe
costs, Rodney Simpson, Perrys- Intoxicated, $250 and wsts, three
huTJ( $27 and costs, Mar~rel days In jail and 90-day license
Weaver. Long Bottom, $25 and suspension, failure to control. costs
costs, Russell Trefz. Gahanna. $~ only; lalluretowearseatbelt,costs
and costs; Dewayne R Fisher. only: Morris Bumprner. Middle
Middleport, $28 and costs, Timothy port, driving while lntoxlcatal, $250
Butt. Mount Washington, Ky, $~ and costs, three days In jail and 00
and oosts. Roy A Holler. PpmProy, days Urense suspension; Barton
Meatge, Millwood. wva .. driving
$:!! and costs; Rose Yocum.
Hemlock $Ziandcosts. PauiPratt. while Intoxicated. $250 and costs,
Westerville. $23 an\1 costs, Stanley three days In jail. 00-day license
, Little. Crystal Lake, Dl,. $I) and suspension; driving left of center.
c:osts, ,James E Roi(E'rs, Athens. costs only; Thomas Kle!Jl. Pome·
rov. Raymond Klein, R&gt;merov,
, $Z! and costs; Jan&lt;'! Tipton.
disorderly
conduct, costs ooly; P R
1 Gallipolis, $23 and oosts; Johnny
Pomeroy. failure to
Cosaetl, Marietta, $22 and costs,
Martha May, Chaurrey, $:!! and display valid license !Iates, $10and
costs, K-enneth Bol!'ll, Albany,
costs
Qtt»;ors fined Itt the court were assured clear distance, $10 and
Donald Peterson, Albany, parked costs.
on roadway, $10 and costs; Paul
Carn!co, South Point, assured clear Veleran!! Memorial
Admissions , Detner Roush,
distance, ~ and Cllosts; Joyce
• Martin , Columbls. faUure I!! wn· Racine. Cassie Hudson, MlddJe.
trol. $ll and costs; Lera Bailey, port; Shirley Smith. Rutland; Otto
Middleport, criminal mischief, res· Falls, Reedsville
dtutbn cl ~. costs, 60 days in jaO
Discharges - Bennie Rhodes.
with all but thrre days suspeoded, Thomas Parker, ROdney Spires,
John Hayes 1
Qle year probation; arson, restitu·

.

Betty Jane Roush
Betty Jane Roush. 56. Monroe.
Mich .. died Thursday In the Monroe
- Mercy Hospital.
She was born April 21. l!m, In
Mason, W Va., to John W and
Laura M Stewart McDaniel of
O!fton, WVa
• Also surv!v!ng are her husband
Ivan L. Roush of Monroe, M!ch ,
three daughters, Mrs Henry (Shir
ley) Lan~ d Arizona, Pa.mela and
Cyrstal Roush, both of Monroe.
M!ch • two sons. Rodney and
Kendall Roush, both of Monroe,
M!ch : two sisters. Mrs Anne
Davis of . Middleport, and Mrs
Juanita. Chapman of Cllfton; a
trollEr, Gene McDaniel of Middle·
port; 15 grandchUdren and several
nieces and nephews
Sill! was preceded In death by two
chOdren, and one brother, Gerald
Lee McDaniel
Funeral services wUI he Sunday
at 1 p.m at the Foglesong Funeral
Home, Mason, with the Rev Jack
Finnicum otflclatlng Burial will be

In Graham Cemeterv Friends may
call at II»;&gt; fUneral home on
Saturda\ !rom 2 4 and 7 9 p m.

Del('ia Al!lh

Park project allows
county to gain share
of tourism industry

(EDft'OB'S NOTE: Dd8 18 the
11000nd ID a series of lour lnfonna·
Uve articles outunlng lbe Melp
County Park Dlltrlct Projed. 'lbe
Melp Cwllly Park Dlsirlct Board
She was born In Oenlda. Tenn , to ol Commlulonen conailts of
the late James and Lily David Stev111 L Story, CharleS D. Barrett
Marklns
'
and Stephen E. Po\Vell. A slide
Survivors Include two daughte• '· presentation of the Park District
Kathleen Rosette of Powelllon. Project II available for viewing by
WVa. and Wanda McQue of any group or organization. To
Columbus, four sons. Woodrow and llclledule the preaentatloo or If you
Desmond Ash, both of Athens
have lillY queallona or comments
Clarmce Ash of Dayton. Ray Ash of regardln1 lbe project, oonlact the
Columbus, 24 grandch!ldren and Melp Cwnty Park Dlslrlct Board
several great-grande hUdren.
of Cormnlll8loiner tbrough the
She was preceded In death by he1 Melp CouDiy Development Office
husband, Clarmce and thnoe at 98U861.)
sistE!'s
The Meigs County Park District
Graveside S£!'Vlces wUl he Sun
is tasked with the responsibility of
day, 1 30 p m .. at WeUs CemPterv. rescuing remnants of our rapidly
PaJ(etown Friends may call at vanishing natural environment,
Blgony Jordan Funeral Home, Al
and through their wise manage·
bany, from 11 a.m Sunday until the ment, deVelopment and use, pretime of services
serve and protect these areas for
the edification, lnspirallon and
enjoyment of present and fqture
generations of Mt;!igs Countians.
Whlle endeavoring to meet this
primary Intent of the Park District
organization, the facllltles and
programs provided by the Meigs
County Park District wUI be
The Amerlean Civil Liberties cleslgned so as not to destroy or
WASHINGTON WPI ) - Attar
Union criticized Meese's comments threaten significant natural and
ney General Edwin Meese·s com
ments that Supreme Court rulings Thursday as "an Invitation to historic phenomena. Additionally,
do not bind the country haver atsed lawlessness and a breach of (his! these programs and faclllties will
the hackles of the legal community constitutional duty to uphold tiK' provide increased recreational op·
portunlt!es within Meigs County,
from the staid American Bar law"
develop
and promote local ecoACLU DlreGtor Ira Glasser said
Association to the liberal ACLU
Meese, In a speech this week at Meese Is "fast establishing himself mm!c stlmulallon through In'1\llane University in New Orleans, as the most dan(J!rous public creased tourism, increase educa
said the high court'srullngs are not clOclal since Richard Nixon " He tlonal and employment
the same as the Constitution and, as comparal Meese's posltkln to the opportunllles, broaden the local
a result, only bind "the parties In a actions of some politlcans In the economic base, and promote a
case and also the executive brand! South In the early 1900s who sought greater understanding r1 wr natu
for whatever enforcement" the to avrnd complying with Supreme ral environment. These objectives
will be accompUshed, In coopera·
Court civil rights rulin~.
case requires
Constitutional scholar Laurence Uon with, and without dupllcallng
"But • such a decision does not
establish a 'supreme law of the Tribe of Harvard University said. or Interfering with the tuncllons of
land' that Is binding on all persons " If the attorney general's views other city, township, county, state
and parts of government hence were correct, every legislature or tederaluenc!es
All !Ianning by the Meigs County
forth and forevermore." pro· would be free to ban abortkln If Mr.
Park
District Board d Commls
Meese
had
his
way.
every
school
claimed Meese, the nation's No 1
sloners
has been oonducte:l with
board would be free to adopt an
law enforcement officer
these
obJectives
in mind. Initially,
Meese Insisted the nine justices extreme affirmative action
the
Park
District
was sbnply to
deliver "constitutional lnterpreta program'
Others defended Meese's re- provide recreational facUlties In
lions." which are not "the same as
marks.
notinJ( Sup1 erne Com1 Meigs County. As the researd! Into
the Constitutbn itself. My message
today is that such Interpretations decisions have been challenged the project (:I'OgTeSsed and more
are not and must not he placed In historically in an effort to overturn detail was gathered regarclng the
history of Meigs County and her
them
·
such a position "
resources
for recreational actlvi
Conservative constitutional schoEugene Thomas. the American
ties
were
cafakl&amp;ued, It became
Bar Asoclatton pro!Oidrnt, said lar ~ce ~. a ~lJntl' Julllce
apparEl!!
that
here Is an qlpOI'tlln·
Thursday the high court is charged Department ctriclal, saki he agreed !ty for Meigs Count!ans to actively
with Interpreting the meaning of with "95 percent" of Meese's confront Meigs County's . tresent
comtltutlonal provisions and "that comments but felt lie should have and future economic nreds
means that Supreme Court decl emphasized that restraint he used
Since the mid !BOOs, the economic
In defyinl( high court rulings
slons are the law of the land "
II
Is
"wholly
legltbnate"
to
Established constitutional princl
pies aUow that fut~re disV.lles are challen~ a oourt ruling "If there Is
governed by past declsklns and plausible likelihood the rourt would
"untO overruled, public officials rule the ether way If )J'e5ellted the the evidence bullets may have reen
and private citizens alike are not issue again," Fein said "Other
fired from the revolver; but there
free simply to disregard that legal wise the evolution of law would be were an Insufficient number of
stalemated "
holding," Thomas said
matches for positive ldentlDcat!on
purposes
The revolver was all the physical
(Continued from Page 1)
evidence oo which the state based
its case Lee's maroon Chevrolet
(rOaches by Soviet Intelligence with resolution of the larger Issues Monte Carlo was !earched for any
either In the Soviet Union or later In affecting the US -Soviet relation· evidence linking Lee to the murder,
ship and buOdon the IJ'ogressmade but none was found. It was reported
their careers
In declaring a truce Thursday, In the d!scussbns In Reykjavik "
to Langford that blood was spotted
Referring to the superpower ori the car the day of the murder
the State Depariment responded to
Wednesday's Soviet order remov· summit m Reykjavik, Iceland.
In continued testimony, Langford
lng the 200 staffers by banning Redman said tt»;o United States said he stopped tiE !nvestigallon
about 10 Americar ~. mainly trans· stood bv all proposals made by after a oouple of months and
lators, from worldng at Soviet President Reagan mhis talks with admitted that he found no more
&amp;!viet leader MikhaO Gorbachev.
misSions In the United States.
physical evidence during the
Gorbachev reviewed the summit
There was no direct action
summer
to submit to the
In a speech Wednesday that BCI for months
countering the Wednesdav expul
InvestigatiOn Langford
strongly criticized the US expul· also stated that without the reslon of ftve mo1e American dlplo
sbns
of &amp;!viet diplomats but also volver. he has no peys!cal evidence
mats. however
rette1ated
that he is ready to move
"We hope that this set of issues
Lee to the crime
ahead
on
the basis of proposals linking
can mw be put behind us," said
AlSo taking the stand Thursday
department spokesman Charles made in Iceland
was Gregory Holcomb a resident
Redman "We now have to get on
c1 Alice Road, who testHied to
seeing a 1979 tan Monte Carlo with
West VIrginia license several times
on the day of the murder
, NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 1 AM Es:rro-25-86
The first lime was at approxl·
mately noon. passing the home of
his cousin , Edward Holcomb in
E wlngton
Former Meigs and Athens Coun
til'S resident, Detcla Ash. 85, now of
Gahanna. died Thursday aile• noon
at Bon-Ing Care c.'ente•, Gahanna

.Meese comments irk
various legal groups

track record of Meigs County shows ·
a oontlnuously decreasing Indus·
trial base, rising unemployme9t
and an ever more limited economiC
diversity As IUustratbn, oonskler
the number c1 businesses anJl
Industries yru can remember once
having baen here, that have let!
Meigs CoUnty or gone out r!
buslpess altogether.
In Meigs County's labor Ioree
today, 4ll percent commute to jobs
oumlde the county, 33 pl!l'cent are
employed In mining related occy·
pallons, 8 percent work In govern·
mental positions and n pl!l'cent a,l,e
unemployed This means that aJI
other business and industry within
Meigs County can support only 8
percent clthe available IaborlofC!!.
Considering tt»;o possibility that the
mining Industry of today, like ~
mining lndusirY of til! past, wUI not
he here forever, the need lO
diversify the ecommy of Meigs
County becomes VEf'Y apparent.
In (J'der to improve the quality of
IHe In Meigs County today arid
make preparatbn br Meigs Coua·
ty's future, lmplemmtatbn of !IX!
Meigs County Park District will
aUow Meigs Countlans to tap !nlo
Ohio's $58 billion tourism IndustrY
The Ohlo Department of ~velo~
ment figures l:lr 1984 state that each
county In Ohio saw $63 m!Ulon !rom
tourism Meigs County certainly
did mt enjoy that level cl erommlc
benefit from the tourism industry.
We have m entity currmtly active
In developing that Industry here.
However, with voter ap(roval of
operallng funds for the Meigs'
County Park District. Meigs
County can begin partlclpallng in '
and garner her share of that
tourism Industry.
The planning oft~»;&gt; Meigs County
Park District Board of Conunis·
sklners has targeted, to date, 35
separate projects for development
within the Meigs County Park
District which constitute the Meigs
County Park District Project. Each
of these takes advantage of the
naturally existing assets of Meigs
County In such a manner that while
they wUI provide recrmtional
q&gt;portunlty l:lr Meigs OJunty's
citizens, they can be IJ'omote:l and
packaged as a county-wide tourist
facility, in the same way the U S
Department of the lntffklr pac)&lt;IIPI and punotes the nalkll!!ll
park system The next article wUl
be devote:! to explainingwhatmme
of these projects are, how they wUl
be developed and marie tal, and
the bnpact this project can have on
the economy of Meigs County

Lee retrial reveals (Contmued from Page 1),

U.S, studies

On his wav home approximately
one hour later. the witness said he
saw two prople oo the Lauchey
McCoy prope11y as he traveled
Alice Ri~e Road. but couldn't
identify either
After arriving home, and begin·
nlng to put a muffler on his car. he
saw the tan Monte Carlo again, with
Barbara Twyman in the passen~r
side and a yoong lDy - blonde,
clean cui - driving
A short time later Holcomb said
he heard two distinct gun shots.
fo Oowed by the same car passing
his home again, at a high speed
Under cross exam!nati&gt;n. the
witness admitted to "having fun"
with the !nvestiga tor hired by Lee's
former attorney, Hamlin Kin~
This 'having fun" CO!!Slsted of falSe
statements because Holcomb
knew the Investigator was attempt·
lng to get Inform alion on anything
seen the day of the murder
Holcomb knew of Twyman's
disappearance S('lleral days after
Marchal, and was aware when her
body was discovered The witness
stated he didn 't come ilrward
durin!( the initial Investigation In
1983 recau se Twyman had been
d!scoveral near his home

Injury .lawsuit filed
in cC)mmon pleas court
An action for $100.tm has been
filed In Meigs Countv Common
Pleas Court by Anna D Clonch,
Pomeroy, against JohnS Thomas,
Pomeroy
The ~ctlon stems from an auto
accident on or about March 24,1985,
in which the plaintiff was a
passenger In a vehicle southbound
along Ohio 143 near the Intersection
of Salisbury Township Road 20A

Harrison:

Plaintiff alleges that the defendant negligently backed his vehicle
Into the side cl the car n which she
was riding. 13ecause of this al·
legedly negligent action by the
defendant. plaintiff sustained serious and permanmt bodily lnjur
les. pain, sufferinJ( and mental
anguish
A trial by jury Is rrquested.
to 15 mph tonight
A notice cl appeal has been filed
Ohio Extended Forecast
Jn the case of Hubert W Stewart
Sunday tilroulh TIH!tday
dl!ceased. and EIIZillietnJ Proctor.
A chance of rain ea~h day, with , rex·wl!el. Westerville, against
highs In the lower Ills Sunday and In James L Mayfield, administrator
the 50s Monday and Tuesday of the State of Ohio Bureau of
· Overnight lows wUI be In the «ls
Worker's Compensation, Colum·

-----Ohio weather----South Central Ohio
Rain likely tonight and Saturday,
with a low tonight near ~and h!Rhs
Saturday nea~ 00.
The proba bll!ty of precipitation is
70 percent tonight and Saturday
Winds will be from the east at 10

'

.,

bus, and Gboserun Coal Co
Paul Mille• Ford Inc . has tx&gt;en
granted JUdJ(IDent of $2.203.14 from
David McDonald
Dismissed WCl'&lt;' the CaS('S of
Thomas Glen n Cooper agamsl
Caley Yvette Cooper, State Farm
Insurance Com pan' . el al against
Pontiac Motor Division. General
Motors Corp ct al , and Charles
Bradbury agamst Carl Wolfe

:u

South gt&gt;t" ;;oakt&gt;d
By Unih'll Prt"s lnternatkmal
A low pressuro system 1ha 1
triggered flooding in Texas mo1ed
from the Gull of Mex1co mto the
lower Mlsslssippl Vallt&gt;y toda1
spreading heavy 1,,In uc1oss lh~
South. whilt' cool Canadian ail
chilled the Northeast
'Westel'll Kenlucky Tt&gt;nnt'«l'C
and parts of Al abama, MISSS!SS!ppl
Louisiana and ,\J kansas tan expect
a fair amount of rain." Bill Barlow
of llie Na tional Weathe1 Selv!C('
sa1d

�Page-8-The Datly Sentinel
Oh10

Northern Ohio ·newspapers
issue campaign endorsements
By Unlled l'resslnlematlonal
The Toledo Blade has enoorsed
two Incumbents and two chal
Ieugers for state offices to be
decided m the Nov 4 election, and
the Akron Beacon Journal an
nounced Its endorsement of Sen
John Glenn
The Blade Thursday backed
Republican Ben Rose m his contest
against longtime Incumbent Thomas Ferguson In the auditor s race
while supporting Republican chaJ
Ienger Vincent Campanella In a
contest against Secret3JY of State
Sherrod Brown
The newspaper enoorsed Demo
crat Anthony J Celebrezze for
another term as attorney general
and gave a vote of confidence to
mcumbent Democrat Treasurer
Mary Ellen Withrow
The newspaper saJd Rose JS
fighting an uphill battle against
Ferguson, who has occupied the
position 12 years and his fallEr for
20 years be(ore that Rose has

served 13 years as a member of the
Ohio House
It ts past time the Ferguson
dyn3®' was ended and new blood
l)rought into the office d. auditor •
the Blade said
The newspaper faulted Ferguson
for ' lapses in investigating some
unsavory practices In the adminis
tratlon' and took htm to task for his
failure to Investigate an $48 mUllan
non bid tourism contract granted
by the Celeste administration
In the secretary of state race the
nev.spaper said Brown has blun
dered several times It called
Campanella well-q~allfled to dis
charge the responsilllltles of the
dflce

The Blade said Brown perfOrmed
adequately In Ills first term rut was
lax In auditing campaign finance
reports, wlicll It said ls a prune
task of the secretary of state s
office
Attorney General Ceiebrezl&lt;' was
enoorsed because he has functl

The
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co
reported Thursday that sales for
the third quarter improved 9 8
percent to a record of $2 6 billion
Income totaled $182 3 mlllion or
$1 68 a share for the period ended
Sept 30 up 18 percent from $154 5
mUlion or $144 a share for the same
period a year earlier
Ohio (UP! ) -

We are especially pleased that
operating Income In our core
ruslness segments during tbe third
quarter showed strong Improvement over a year ago ' Chairman
Robert Mercer said

Roger Hysell
Garage

lEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

'While results for the three
months reflect Improvement, our
objective Is Ill improve them even
turtber " be said
Net Income fOr the ihlrd quarter
included an after tax gain of $152
rnllJ1on !1-om a partial settlement d.
the company s pension plans but
also Included a $11 2 million
after tax CharfF br restructuring
Sales for the first nine rronth&lt;; of
1986 totaled $7 !il lllli&gt;n up 6 6
percent from the jrevlous year
Income for the first tlree quar
ters however, was $2!6.9 millbn cr
$2.18 a share, down from $327 9
rnUilon or $3.00 a share il 1985

Or W1it1 hilly Stnhrttl tlass~ttd Otpt
Ill Court St Palllt!ray Oluo U7&amp;9

Public Notoce

Pubhc NottCB

ORDINANCE NO 568
l•lirloohoid SugorRun51rNtto
WHEREAS lhe Voltage 101 1011 ood o1 1he SoulhNit
Crunat hoHOC:Onmll'lded the Corner of lo1 459 oftha toid
- · of th• orcm .... n
acoordoonc:e with 1he Ollllor

of tho Vilogo of Pomeroy

THE VILLAGE COUNCIL of
the Cll'j of Po"*Oy Sure of
Ollio

-

loiiOwio

henbv

ordiM •

THAT the Volege Cwncil
wtll sell the real 011ate des
crobed below 111 pubhc ooctiOn
on the 17th dey of Nov-.
1986 on 1toe Meigs Cwmy
Ccurthouoe steps begnnong 11
10 00 AM The Vilego Ccuroo:i
htneby reoeov• tho right to
~~:c:ept or rOfOC1 lilY or oH bids
THAT tho Mayor of tte
Villege ol Pomamy • htntby
authonzld to ••ocute a to 1he purdl- of ,..,
estate oocconlng to 1THAT this ordinonouhol be
ldvermlcl n a ,_...,., of
genonol CKtUtll1ion wi1hin the
mumctpahty of Pomeroy

Ohoo 11ea&gt;rding to 1THAT al
CIIS P'""""'liv enactld n111n
oiS1'"'1 with th• ordin"""" ""'
hereby !epoltod
THAT tl1is IWdinlllce Jlool
taka ellect and be enlorced
loom and otter Ill - · a n d
pu bticanon ICCOrding lo low
DESCRIPTION
Srtu.,. on Salisbury To""'
shop M- County s..,. of
Ohoo .,dbeing n thoVillageol
Po,_y FractiOn 17 Town 2
Nortto Range 13 WOS1 of the
Ohoo Con-4iany s Po.dl11e
and bemg descnbed u
lotlowo
Beg~nnr~g at an amn rod at
tho Norlhoort ""'- of Lot
467 of the oeid Volego of
Pomemy 11id rvn ood o1oo
bong on the W•llinool Su!J!Or

VIllage

thenc:e

Sootth

80

dogr• 30 00 Wttt 62 211
l8ot olong the South 1ne of
-lot 469 to on 10t1 rod uid
_, rodlloing ottha SouthoOot
of a ..... col owned by Smith ond bogM
detcriboclntha Meigs Crunty
Deed Rec:onll Volume

250

pogo 389 thenc:e North 9
degree 30 DO West 150 00
l8ot along tho Ettt tine of tha
- Smilh porc:elto onoron rod
a1 the Northeott comer of the
Slid Smilh poroet uidimn rod
beiig on the North line of llld
lot 467 thenClO South 80

dogreo 30 DO Ettt 100 DO
footlliongthoNorthmeofSiid
lot 467 to tho po01t of
beg"'"ng conllinng 0 2112
acr-. more or lou o._g
oN logol .......,.. ond righta
of WfiY
The bearings n fle lbove
booed on cur
Pomorov Volege T..
Plato Rolerorlc:e 31 1
REFERENCE DEED Vo
fume 181 Poae 485 Meogs
County Deod Records
The ~n •
buld on aouovev moyloll Edoo
SIJIV8YI Inc., bv Roborl R
Eooon I'Joloooionat su,.,..,..
Ohio P S NO 7033 h Mly
1986
Authority 10 oell r•l-te
ORC Set:1ion 721 01 721 211
nctu.,.. P - b\'theVIIego
CrunQt of tho City of Pomo
description ore

or"""'"' ordin., ""''

Run Slreet (not n use} "''"'""

South s dtopree oe 51 Wort
157 41 feel along tho West

5

Happy Ads

1180

a-lot

1W27JAB408026

HAPPY 29 th

office of leodong Croolt Con
1180Voncy Oistne1 on tho 10th
cloy ol 1986 bv
twelve o clod! noon AI bids
witt bo opor~ld on the 12th dey
of N..,• ..,.,., 1986 ott-o
o clod! noon at tloe offiat of
Leodong Creok c.... ...,... CII
Oit1rict

leldMg Creole ConiiiYIIlcy
Dollnc:t reo.,eo tho right 10
ICCepl or OOjec1. lily or an
bids
110!24 31 111!7 3tc

BANK 116 E111 MMI Sire~
Po"*Oy Ohio
Termo of Sole: Colh
. _ ....., bo •td h , . .
~_
.... nght 10 bid
and the right 10 rejec!..., and
ol bide. Prior 10 1he dote of
olle. orrongemonta moy be
mode 10 llllpiCI this merdl ..
dloe bv calhg 982 2171
bebu•• tMt hou,. of 9 1m
and 5 p m Mmdoy thooul#l
Friday
{101 24 1tc

64 Mtsc Merchandtsa

r

3 Announcements

SEPT. 29-NOV. 8

.

NEWEll'S SUNOCO
Cloostor, Ohio
... ·Sat......s I'll!
985·3350

rtplll' part a and tupplin Pick
up and deiNtry Dev11 Vacuum

..1·02H

Racine Gun Shoot IPIHIIOre:l by
Racine Gun Club Every Sundty
beginn~ng tt 1 00 p m Factorv
Choke 12 guege thotguna

92286Jmo

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

We can repa1r and reo.
core rad~ators and
heater cores We can
also acid bo1l and rod
out radiators We also
repatr Gas Tanks

Iathan Building

PAT HILL FORD

6:30P.M.

992·2198

Mtddleport, Ohio
1 13·tfc

N1te fftea
Wh"''i it• Aloo boylng Gin
~eng George B~o~dcl.y 814
114 4781 Hrt 2 9 pm Mon
Set Cloted Sunday

GUN SHOOT

No hunt1ng or lfftPIIItng
Mvnes Farm Joe~ted Chestnut
Ridge Rold

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

4

Gtvaaway

Smell bltek Elkhound Call 814
441 2329 Ilk for H1rold

fartarr Cldlt
12 Gauge Shotg111s Onlr
10 8-tln

khttns 8

mo • 2 mo

Good horN for 4

BISS~ll

BUILDERS

okl C11l

814 ..a 1a22

mo

otd mile

blac;k Lob pup Coli 814 .. ,
3839

AUTOMAnC
TRANSMISSIONS

Wooden 1creen door 32x.,

Colling light
. .71

REBUILT &amp;REPAIRED

Coli at• .. 8

2 kittens prefer same horne
Utttred train.t Call 814 448

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND

Day or Night

PH. 992·9949

• bltek kittens to give aw1y 7

701 2nd An.
Galhpohs, Ohio

OPEN 9 AM·8 PM

UKE
DIAMONDS

10 27 16 I mo

FuU 1ize m1ttrtas to give twty

Coli a1• 992 77M

Lost and Found

1100 fiWard for return Of
lnfarmadon IMdmg to the whe
rNbouta of m111 b'-tk lib tolt
tn OJ White Rd arM
Cttl

a1• ..a 0370
I

7

RACINE, OHIO
Off tee •49·2431

Yard Sale

fEAFORD(H
Real Estote

llllrOR

216E 2ndSt
Phone
1 16141 992 3325

l.G &amp;NICE- Famt,o rm wrth
woodburn11g freplace unrt
Dislloasher d~~l cook and
bake units lg lormal dt11&amp; 31g
BRs Big bajement Vllth garage
and lg lot
RACIHE - 6 rms 3 BR full
basement 2 JXJrches dbi
garage on attractwe rorner lot
near the bank ~ore and

schoot

n

the

•r•
YOU
11 P'l!llrlng
come tu return• Ire
lin9 to undergo 811enslve
tr11ning •nd would like

10 conven • •mel lnvM1
ment onto • heo~hy 1n

come -

send your re

•umeto
DonT-• Inc
Bo• 721X

Real Eatata General

Unimproved
Land For Sale

RACINE, OHID
PH 949-2210

Off 33 - 485 acres near
Bllrt11gllam 2 IJl lratler Ill
baths ·garden trees and bklgs
IIJCKSPRINGS - NICe older
7 rm home m!POd condton
Cook and bake units tefrtgera
tor furnace 2 biths 4
bedrooms, &amp;arage and almost
level lit
MIOOLEPORT - ~ 7 rm
brick near slttes and schoo~
Full basemm~ 2 kivellots Obi
garage and caiJ)Ort
RACINE - 8 rms central atr
and hea~ basement niCe
pecan k!chen 4BR 4JXJrclles
n !POd cood~on
MIDDLEPORT - 3 BR
rernodetell home on rorner lot
Range refngerator dts~t
carpetilg, gas FA furnace 2it
porches and near the sclloo~
2 HOUSES - ()le tn good

cood!1011 wlh full basemmt
TP water avatlabe Ask11g only
$1511XJ
RUTlAND M£A - 3 BR
rancll on 2 acres FuN
basemen~ 2 baths carpeting
carport With slttage, ai e1ec.
11StJiated home
SEU.INQ PROII.EM?

Celt 992·3325
We Don't W111t To
Be The Blggnt
JIIIIThe Belt!
HnltSif'l'j

iiL'iidqu.:r l1·1 ',

992 225f

NEW USTING - ~vestment
property Small rouse ' 111th
lJ)!Xl rent track record Call for
yrur showl1&amp; $9 500 00

PatiO &amp;lleant~quedlshea encrc
&amp; cloth~ng 111 aaes
Blhnd !lolly Choopel Churcli

lop•••

Mitldlilport

UR PIERCING, MANKUIING, PE•MS AND
AU YOUR STYliNG NEEDS
Debbte Meedowt-Owner: lmojun Blevona
loratt1 Hollinger. Shelly Ohltnger
Mel1111 Downing, Marrl An,.~ury

POMEROY - Realty mce
modern bUlking formerly the
Otamond Savmgs &amp; lo~
ll11ld11&amp; All n excellent
cood!on Owne~ wtl nego
tiate ~k for detat~

FREE HEARING TESIS WEDNESDAYS
C!J Co-.rilld H•n~t An Selection
z SWim Molds - ln11!P11ti111 SeMCes

-~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
a:

POMEROY PIKE - Beaubfui
home Beautiful setttng! Newer
3 bedroom rancll oome Vllth 2
car garage deck11g, full
basemMt 2 baths !lean
elec~~ heat at ocres d
woored land lor hhg and
hunttn&amp; $62 (00 00
PRICE llfDUCED - ~iN[
- Hete IS a I ~ story rome
with up 10 4 bedrooms lull
basement woodburnmg Ireplace pato garage and n
excellent cond1t10n wtth
~wpped klchm $39 ~ 00
PRICE RmUCED - MORN
lNG STAR IliAD - Here ts a
beaublul ranch lype rome w~h
a lull basernmt l'oi!FP on I
acre ol ~nd with plenty of
extras Qluntry setltng 111 a
great ne tghborhood
$56 !mOO

RACINE - Awrox•mately 3\1
acres ol land wth a 3 4
bedroom home Also smal
mobil horne lor retial tnCOITI!
Many other features

$24 000 00

H111ry E Clel1nd Jr
992 6191
J11n Trussell
949-2660
Dolttt Turner 992·5&amp;92
Olftce,... ...... ....... 992 2259

AW

992 6536
Open tau tones
ava table 304 675 1429

z::1:

-

a

Larue 3 Famlty Glllawtre beds
P'Mdl

dllldr.n1 clothlflg 1
tenlhoflmi11Northof&amp;!i4 tum
right on Citric Chspel Ro.t fir..
houH ..,loft 24th &amp; 25oh
ln1id1 V~rd Stle Wtntlf colts It
......,. flllmc panems 1m
lpplllnCII giHIWifll PIIPtr
back book• Fri &amp; Stt Herman

Northup Ad Cententrt

Y1rd Sele S1t 25tfl George~

Creek kelly DriYe

Yard S•leS1turct.v 33 Holcomb
Hill Aain cancel• 10 5

Licensed Cl11al AudioJoltst

Pomeroy
Middleport

(614) 446-7619 ,. (614) 992-6601

&amp; V1c1ntty

417 Second Awooe, Box 1213
Galhpohs, DhtO 45631

PlUMIIIG &amp; ntll l'll'fti t
Now location:
168 North Stcend

Midtlltport, Ohio 45760

SAlES &amp; SERVI((
Wo Ca&lt;Ty Fishing 8-lloo
Your C1ble &amp;

Pho&gt;ne Billa Here
,.-:lr- IUSIIISS PHON!

t6141 H2 6SH

IISmiN(II'HONf

16i41 "'·"'••

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

-Addona and remodtNng
-Aooflng end ..,..., worfl
- Con crt'- work
- Piumtmg •nd eiKtrletl

work

IF- Eotirntltol

Y. (.YOUNG Ill
99J.b21S or 991-7314

POIIIII'Iy,

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALLI

M ONEY FOR COLLEGE Qu al f ed men 1r1d women of the
t\ tmy Natio nal Guard can re
ce 11e more than $18 000 for
the11 educatton Jon now end
beg in earnrng a monthly pay
chec k~ Your act111e duty trammg
cfln be delayed until the school
yen r ends nnclyo 1 Will earn S639
o r more J) er month whtle m
trarnrng CALL 1 BOO 642
3619 for FREE rnformat1on
packag e
VETERANS Put your e11.pe
r enee to work An E 4 earns up
to &amp;128 00 for on e week end
per mon t h an E 5 up to
$ 159 I)() S50 000 hte tniU
ranee Gl 8 111 Ret rement And
mueh more to quallf ed men and
womeo n the Army Nahonal
Guard Call 304 676 3950 or

10 8-tfc

IUGINI LOJIG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

v•n&amp;A..,..••
Compieto
Work
Gutter
Complete RemodiMng
Roat1n1 of oil Typea
Worlled In home • •

20-

"Fr• Eotim•~·

CAll COLLECT
Ph. (614) 143-5425
11 1111

I

/

Sttuattons
Wanted

FIREWOOD lo cust maple
elm walnu t S30 per ptck up
load del vered Call B1ll Slack

614 992 2269

18 Wanted to Do
Need help w1th your tall cleanmg
chOres ? We clean homes off1
ccs chu rch es sm all bu li nesses
Reasonabln rat es Call 6 14 388
9027
Sep t1c Tank P fllllllg Ca mmer
CIAI &amp; relud en tl al 2 tru cks for
pr Otlllt serVICe 580 per 1 500
gal lo ad RON EVANS ENTER
PRIS ES
J ackson Oh
Call
coll ec t 614 286 5930
A.TIENTION CAMPERS Will
mo 11 e your comp ert from camp
s11e to w in t er storage area Call
6 14 742 3166

Movtng to H1w111 S•te S,at
Oct 25 9 5 Furmture pool
tlble Wishing_ mec~!!:lt moun
t1tn bike kttchen and dmlng
goods hn en• tova limps tools
cloth .. ml~e Between Rutltnd
•nd Dexter 32864 McCumber
fC 4} It Nrcholson ti•ll 814

7.2 2t15

9

6 room house 1 2 acres Double
ear garage Located on Rose H II
Bargatn pnced $20 000 Coli

614 678 2613
tiart sonvdle 1 /~ story 3 bed
room bat!\ central heat cellar
garage large ou.tbu1ld.ng ~ AC
$14 500 814 693 7060

WANTED TO BUV Ulld wood &amp;
COli huters SWAIN 5 FURNI
TURE 3rd I Olivo Sl Golllpo

No Coii8U ... 3189

Ustd mobile homu C111 814

..a 011s

W1nt.ct to Buy ltlnding timber

phone 30• a78 .. 12
5:00 PM

oltor

8 00

8 00 PM 304

a78 382... 304

37~

5182

Ntce house for sale or rent tn
Crow,n C1ty on At 7 Call

tiouse for sale by owner m
Mrddleport
Older house 7
rooms on large lot 614 992

Houae for rent 609 Cherry St
V nton OH C1U 614 446

5662

8507

In Rac.ne nice 2 bedroom
duplu Partly fum shed $200
per month plus depos t Call

2 3 bedroom house n Pomeroy
Unfurmshed Suger Run area
close to school very ntce Pay
own OUt ltt1es and daposn re
quued Day 814 992 2381 or

114 949 2801
2860

or 814 949

614 992 2720

2 br k1tchen bathroom With
laundrt room ltv.ng room &amp;
dmlng room all elec Appr011. 7
miles from Pt PI on Rt 62 2
traetsappro• 1 acremoreorless
overlook ng Kanawha R1ver
840 000 Call 304 676 6440
between 8 30 end 4 30
Log home 3 4 br all alee fully
carpeted flntshed basement
Ambro s•e 7 m les from Pt PI on
Rt 62 Ctty waler paved
drivew1y &amp; sept1t tanll sttuated
on V:! acre overlooking Kanawha
Rwer SSO 000 C11ll 304 675
5440 between B 30 and 4 30

14x70 eommuntty tra ler com
pletely fum1shed w1th water bed
underpenn1ng
a r cond
porches Evarythrng goes 304
GallpolsFerry new3bedroom
2 baths dmlng and tamtly room
l"!alf
will take mobil e home
m 304 675 3030 or

1,675:3431

- - - - - . . . , - - - : : - -----:
Sale or rent New Haven 3
bedrooms 2 baths frreplace
garage $38 500 00 or $300 00
month plu 1 deposrt 304 273
2471
3 bedroomhouaeforrentorsale
25 11cres land gas heet Galhpo
1 s Ohio call 304 875 3636

3 4 bedrodm house n Pomeroy
tully furntshed w d mtcrowave
n~rNIY remodeled rec room Pay
own utrl t es dePOSit reqututd
Call days 614 992 2381 or

814 992 2720
6 room house m Pomeroy 2
bedrooms 1 ba•h laundry room
1 Clf g1rage bUilt n krtchen
completely earpeted draper.es
furmahed Very prtv1tentt ng S
mtn from town No pets 8276
pl us ultltttes Dap011t reqUired
See Beth Schne1der rn person al
Vaughn Cardinal n Middleport
OH
Beautiful 3 bedroom house tn
Syracuse Deposit and referen
ces requtred Call 614 992
6298 9 6 Monday through
Saturday
2 bedroom home large yard m
country Oepos t required Call
614 742 2541
3 bedroom double wtde With
large vard Part1111y furnished 3
m1les out of Pomeroy on Rt
143 Ava•lable November 1st
$276 Call 514 992 7401
3 bedroom house m Hendet'son
304 676 7448

w v.

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES 4 Ml
WEST GALLIPOLIS AT 35
PHONE 814 446 7274
1976
2 full
AC 1
offer

14x70 Gettysburg 2 bdr
baths porch &amp; awmng 2
all alec exc cond Best
Call 814 266 6620 or

614 448 8672

has the larges
t mventort
of
market
parts73
fl 80
th e GM
area fenders
at after
low
lo w prtces
$39 G M doors S79 73 79 Ford
fender ' S36 Coors S99 We
now have short and long P u

6 00 P m
Ona.bedroomunfurn1shedapart
menta w1th free water 1nd trash
p1ckup 614 992 2094 and
614 992 6742
Now aecaptmg appllcat1ons for
1 bedroom 1partmentsat Stone
wodd Apartments 1100 Powell
St M1ddlapon Oh1o from 9 00
1m 3 00 p m Monday through
Frldav Only elderly mobility
1mpa1red or ha,dteappad need
1pply Fmanced bv Farmers
Home AdministratiOn Equal
Houamg Opportumty Please call
614 992 3066 or atop et ofttce

367 0622

RCA SelectaviiiOn VIdeo
pl•yer 34 moves 5176
814 3&amp;7 7645

diSC
Call

Gratn fed frBezer beet

Call

Deep freezer 16 eutt 1 vr old
Askmg $200 Call 614 446

8073
long woodburner front loadmg
wnh glass door 14ft chtmney
p pe and acceu hm t1ed used
Call 614 446 1966

Furnrshed one bedroom 1pt all
electrtc no pets adults onlv call
after 4 00 PM 304 676 378B

Sears black heest1ndmg frre
place automatiC fan Ul ap
proved for 11 mobile home exc
S300 Ca ll 614 367
cond

Smell furmahed apt 1 bedroom
frrst floor 8215 00 month Heat
and wa1er furnished adults

0502
F r&amp;W"ood deltvered 01k &amp; htck
ory spht HEAP voucher ptckup
load S35 Call 61 4 446 22 23 or

614 .. e 3028

45

Furntshed Rooms

For rent Sleepmg Rooms 1nd
light ttouae keeptng rooms Park
Centr1l Hotel Call 614 446

0756
Rooms for rent d1y week
month G1iha Hotel C•ll 614
446 9680 Rent as low as f120
month

Infant &amp; todd ler car seat and
h gh chair C1ll 614 2~6 6307

20 acres and 1973 Eagle Trailer
with 2 bedrooms plus 1 add on
bedroom G81 he•t T up pen
Pltuns Chester water system
W 11 sell aeparately SuecessRd
Tuppers Pl1rn s 614 667 6437
81 Windsor 2 br large hv1ng
room &amp; k1tchen 2 porches &amp;
underpenntng great cond Must
sell 304 882-3715
1984 14~t64 Mans•on mob le
home lived n one year &amp;llcel
lent cond t10n $9 700 304
676 6039 aher 5 p m
1982 Clayton 1 2x60 all elect
de e11c cond best reasonable
otter 304 576 2486 e
B &amp; R Mobrht tiome Movers
Insured re• sonable retea call
304 676 6512 or 676 2•85

12x60 mob1le h(lme 1nd lot on
Hereford lane Apple Grove and
1 ~ a c re lot 304 576 2953
Mob le home for sale 8x46
Marlette good cond 304 675

383:~4------~~~~

Two bedroom mobtle home
located Burdette Addn Pornt
Pleasant W Va PhOne 304

675 3334
10K50 tra1ler 2 bedroom l P
gas &amp;135 00 plus $50 00 dap
ostt water and trash ptckup
mcluded n rent 304 676

2247
Two bedroom trl ler wtth large
add on room plrtly furnished
GalhpolsFerryvcmty $16000
per month 304 675 1206
2 bedroom aU electnc S126 00
month plus utll Ues Gallipolis
Ferry 304 675 4088

44

Apartment
for Rent

Tr11ier space c ty water and
sewerage $76 00 month call

aher 5 00 304 895 3838

Merchandise
51 Household Good.

N1cely turmshfld mobile home
CA S. heat IACel loc1t on
adults only C•ll614 446 0338
51 3 'h 3rd Ave 1 bdr prlv1te
b1th S140 per mo Deposit
requ~red
Call 614 446 4222
between 9 &amp; 5
Furm1hed apt $236 Ut ltttet
patd 1 BR 920 4th Gllllpohs
446 44 16 after 7pm

FurniShed 3 rooms and b1th
t;;lean 1dultrs only no pet1 C11i
614 446 , 619

34

Bustness
Butldtngs

Commetctal or storage bUilding
tor rant 140 150 Th1rd A11e
Galhpol s Ohio Call 304 676
4473 ask for Gary

36 Lots &amp; Acreage
Ohve Town1hrp 28 acre lot 1nd
2 room c1bm Call 814 992

7044

Re nl als

446 2359

Houses for Rant
3 bdr 1 bath new earpetlt wall 41
papDf ou1a1de newly patnted
~J art furnished good location &amp; oHtlUIII foo
nei ghborhood 668 Jay Dr CaM 1,
rent on Rt 141 3 bdr
I 114 448 1875

Ntcely turnr1hed 2 bdr 1pt
Adulls only lnqurre If cOfner
F~rst &amp; Olive St •• Sheppard•
S1les S. Service
1 bdr apt over looking city perk
K D $180 pet month C1ll P J 1
614 446 1819 or evening•

Used Furniture Washer &amp;
dryer electr c range gas range
wood table &amp; 2 benches beds
dre11er &amp; rechner 3 m1les out
Bulavrlle Rd Open 9AM to
5PM Mon thru S1t
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
We1hers dryers refrigerators
renges Sk1gg1 Apph~ncea
Upper R1var Rd beside Stone
Crest Motel '614 446 7398

New &amp; used refrrg

ranges
wtahers 6 dryers 6 pc wood
l room su1te 1400 Mollohan
Furn Rt 7 North GaiHpols

Oh 614 .. 6 7U4
Good used color TV for sale and
rapal:_311 614 446 U 49
Couch&amp;. char Call614 446
3714 after 6PM
Small upnght freezer exc cond
1160 C•ll614 388 9969
Ray 1 Used Furntture Add1stetn
Oh 614 367 0637 Book beds
S85 ch11t $36 bookeau 125
otk 1t1nd table 116 maple
hutch lfiiO ehlna eabrnet S75
flrepl1ce screen $115 khehen
cabinet $45 htgh ch11r S10
refrtgltl'ator t75 3 coal &amp; wood
he1ters and 6 911 h11ter1
An1~qu" 01k chlftarobe t&amp;O
oak schoolhouse clock t36
w1lnut bed 126 Iron bed 136
walnut buHet •76 o1k rocker
$20 walnut chest f100 01k
dak 140 Open 10 111 6
Men Frl

814 ..8 2326
3 bdr 1pt notfurnl•hld 91119e
2 bdr 1pt 2 bdr furm1hed 1pt
Call 614 446 0284
1 bdr newly dtcorlttd new
e•rpet 1ultableforonel1dy 841
2nd Ave C•ll 814 448 2455

Picken• Uted Furnrture Good
~•lity used furniture Open 9 to
6 Of c•ll for ippO.ntment
304 875 M83 or 875 14 60

64 Mtsc Merchandtse

1 bedroom 1pt tor rent B111e
rent at1rt1 t2115 1 month th1t
mcludea 111 utUitlts Depo11t
required of S200 ContiCI Vii
leg• M1nor Apt Middleport
814 992 7787 Equal Hous4ng
Opponunhv

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

Aptrtments for rent In Pomll'oy
One 1nd two bedroom• C1ll

Used ft 8a Dilch W1tch Trendu1r
and Bob C•tlold• C1U 1 814

61. 992 6215

C1111h111 s Usld T1re Shop Over
1 OOOt1rn sizn12 13 14 16
18 16 5 8 miiN out Rt 218

Collet•2e&amp;8251

184 7842 or 1

2220
Turmps for sale You ptt;;k $4 00
bushel 614 247 2541
Large 1elect1on APPlES $7 50
bushel 1nd up All other fru ts
ctder sogrhum and honey
8 S. S PRODUCE
Patnl Pleasant

Pre cast concrete steps 2 steps
plus 2ft landtng $75 Wrllload
Call 614 992 7312

Used S1nger sew.ng mach ne
Model 534 Styh~t w th open
arm In good conditiOn $60
Call 614 949 2202

•

11• 8U 8008

Coli 6U 992 1200
Ftrewood for ••le Sphl and
delivered $36 per bad C1ll

814 985 3582
Personal computer Comma
dore 12B 1671 drse drrve 7
program• 9500 Call AI 614

992 2914
3 HP two st~~ge teNree statiOn
type 11r COfiJ)renor Ask1ng
8760 OBO Call 614 992
7354 even1ngs
Half prtcl'l'l Flash.ng arrow s gns

82891 lighted non arrow S279
Unlghted S249 t Free letters
See locally Cell t oday I Factory
1 800 423 0163 anytime
Stoker Stove New Anger good
condltton $375 Also rabbtts for
sale S6 DO 304 882 3796
4x8 ft ultllty tra ter $150 00
304 675 42B6
Computttr TRS 80 Mod Ill 2
dtsk drNe Scrrpstt nventory
oonuol lnd busmeu ma hng hst

Farm Supplies
&amp; Liv eslock
61

Farm EqUipment

CROSS &amp; SONS
U S 36 West Jackson Oh•o

614 288 6461
Ma11ey Ferguson New Holland
Buatt Hog S1les S. Servrce Over
40 used traeton 10 choose from
&amp; oofll)lete hne of new &amp; used
equ1pment largest select on m
S E Oh10
JIM S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTEA SR 35 W Galltpotts
Ohte Call 614 446 9777 eve
614 446 3592 Up front trac
tors With warranty over 40 used
tr1ctors 1000 tools
Grain hd treeur beef Ch•r
lunouam lleer 1 200 lb Call
after 7 614 446 3929
8rdwell Cash Feed Store Spe
c als thru Nov Wrld bird seed &amp;
26% Super Spon dog food
Along w1th all drarr p pe Call tor
pr1cas at 614 388 9688

2927
Roug~

lumber 01k and poplar
8125 00 to S160 00 per 1 000
assorted length seasoned wal
nut Can dehver 304 675
4412 8 am to 5 p m Can see
Walkers Wrecker Henderson
WV Rt 36

55 Butldtng Supplies
Building M1terlals
Block bnck sewer prpes w.n
dow, 1ntel• etc Clavde Wm
tan R10 Grande 0 Call 614

Pole Bu ldmgs by Quality
Butlders Workshop• carports
1nimal shelters gar~ea Free
est1mates Phone 614 384

6762 •

Used gelvamud roofmg proctr
callv new 8 1130 •bout 26
ga,uge S3 60 foot After 6 00

PM 304 675 6559

56

Pets tor Sale

Dragonwvnd Cenery Kennel
CFA Htm1layan Pers1an and
Stlm.. fl kittens AKC Ch ow
puppiN Call 814 448 3844
aher 7PM
Schnasu1er Min Male AKC
Sitek &amp; Silver 16 wks Etrs
eropp&amp;d Shott C1ll 614 446
2817 after 8 p m

Nuw and used parts for Whites
01 vers M M Oeutz tracton
Stders EqUipment Co
304

675 7421
TRUCKLOAD GATE SALE F1VIl
panel galv ppe heavy 2m prpe
On sale thru Nov 1 Yauger
Farm Supply R1 3S Souths de
W Va

62 Wanted to Buy

675 2159
2 mah R1bblt dogs
&amp;leh 304 675 2075

t76 00

Puppies half Beegle h1lf Blue

Tock $26 00 ooch 304 878
4281
Boogie pupo UO
3353

304 996

1981 Phoer1111 4 cvl a r h1gh
m~ l es but looks and runs Ike
new S2 350 Call 614 682

7164
1982 Dodge DIPlomat AC w~re
rtms low m1leage 52 699
John s Auto Sales Butavllle Rd
Gathpol•s Oh

1971 Bu1ck Skylark New tires
runs welt 5325 Call 614 992
5420 after 4 00 p m
197B Ford Fa rmom Extre
sharp low m1leage S1800
1978 Chevy Capdce W11gon

19n 01ds Cutlass S850 Call
1969 Camero 350 auto Also 4
Crager spoke wheels on whtte
leHered rad1al t res Call 614

949 3093
1984 Chevy Cav1her 4 door
low mtles auto trans PS Call

814 992 3703
1973 Olds Catatin• Good
shape New tires battery
pornt&amp; See at 983 Beech Grove
Ad Rutland
1978 Chevy Nov• 4 door V 8
good eond 304 675 3997 •fter

6 00

2620

1980 8 0 ell

Sllyl1rk

4 dr

1976 Chevy Vega make an
oHer 304 675 4667

0638
8 fl w1de t ruck camper Water
tank furnac e s1nk stove w11h
oven Porto pony sleeps 6
S750 614 985 3839

n

Ford motor 00 me 24 ft self
contamed generator arr and
c1rp et bath w1th shower

$1 1 ooo oo 304 n3 5986
Mournamoor truck camper f ts
prck up 1 1 ft fully con tamed
S2 500 00 304 675 2072

Services
81

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond honal hfetrme gu ara n
t ee Local references furn shed
Free est mates Call colle ct
1 614 237 0488 day or n ght
Rog e rs Ba s ement
Waterproofing

For .sale or trade 74 Corvette
St ng Rav 360 auto arr T top
new t res 1nd new pant 304

72

Trucks for Sate

1974 66 passenger lnterna
ttonal bus auto tran s
new
11fes runs great 11000 C1ll
614 256 1393
Wrecker 68 Chevy 440 Holmes
.swrngll'lg booms $2 000 Call
Ford Bronco go od cond 1 on
Call614 256 6658
1978 Chevvluv 4 spd rad10
Jhlrp 51 199 With th I t'ld
John s Auto Sal~ BullVIll e f'd
Galllpol s Oh

&lt;: arJ:~enter work Pa1n1
ng remodel ng roofmg Free
estimates Call614 446 4505

RON S T elevi SIOn Serv• ce
House calls on RCA Ouazar
GE Spec1al ng n Zemth Call
304 576 2398 or 614 446
2454
Fetty Tree Tr mm ng stump
remo11al Call 304 675 1331
RINGLES S SERVICE e 11p e
r enced carpenter electr e1An
mason pamter root ng lmclud
ng hot tar lpphcaflonl 304

675 2088

00

875 7147

Rotary or cable tool dr1ll ng
M ost well s completed sam e d ay
Pump sal es and Sfll'\llce 304

895 3802
Ashby Con stru ct iOn carp en
tery remod ehng room add t on
cem ent block work roo f ng
1nteuor and exter or pa ntrn g
1 d ng Roof ng Free estimates
304 676 5 445 or 675 5152

82

Plumbtng
&amp; Heatmg

CARTER S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and P ne
Galllp ~ U s Oh1o
Phone 614 446 3B88 or 614
446 4477

83

Excavatmg

Good 1 Excavat ng base ment s
toote rs drlvewav s sept c tank s
l andse ap n g Call anytrm e 6 14
446 4537 James l Davt so n
Jr owner

85

General Haulong

19n Burek Rag1l v B power
slaermg brakes automatic atr
condrt10n ng stereo 8 track 2
door good oond11ton Call 614
388 9680 after 6PM

1985 FOfd Ranger eKe cond
C•ll814 256 1411

JAmes Boys Wat er Serv1ce Also
po ol s flied Call 614 2561141
or 614 446 1175 or 614 4 46
7911

1986 S 10 4K4 ex\ cab wnh
lopper V 6 &amp;speed loaded axe
cond S10 600 00 304 676

Volklwagon tl.lne buggy S300

6739

D liard "' Wat er Oel ve ry Ctst
ern s pool &amp; w ell An ytim e bu t
Sunday 614 446 7404

Call814 258 1393
1982 Suberu 4 WO wagon VG
cond $3 750 C1ll 614 446
4141
76 Butt;;k La Sabre AT AC TW
CC PS PB V 8 radto 8T exc
cond •1 196 Call 614 446
U176

19TI Ford 260 customplus400
rebutlt motor to be nstalled
Pr1ced to sell 304 8B2 ~37
1967 Chev short wheel base
step 11de 327 engine manu111
tr1nsm nton
run1 good
S860 00 After 6 00 call 304

895 3638

7&amp; Oodge Dart SE V B AT AC
CC PS eke cond new parts
$2 796 Call 814 448 0776

73

1979 VW D•sher 1uto ex cond

B1 Jt~ep CJ 6 37 000 •etual
m1le1 V 8 stereo Celt after

Vans &amp; 4 W D

Call a14 992 2790

1975 Olds Cutin• V 8 1uto
m1tlc runs good new paint tob

1982 fOfd F 260 4x4 V 8 4
speed dual exh1u11 $6500

Coll81• 268 8887

814 985 4108

1976 Chevy w1gon 4&amp;C engme

1977 Chevy 4"4 pickup lock In
lock oot hub1 350 suto new
tires t1500 304 675 7929

•sao Coli 614 .., 1771
1980 Chevy Cltttlon no nnt
good work car front wheel
drill ~ C1ll 814 387 72215
77 Novt 360 eng auto PS PB
TS newtirea&amp;shockl 11200
Calllfter 5 814 388 9B19

Watt er son s Wehr Haul n g
reaso nabl e rates
mme dtat e
2 000 gallon dehverv CIStf'!rn s
pool s w ell etc ca l 304 5 76

291 9
Limes tone find Coa l Del ver y

304 675 3190
Coal hm ouo ne 9 " I ot c
Dahvered 1 t on and p J m
Lanier 30 4 67 6 1247 or 676

7397

87

Upholstery

8 00 61• N5 9497 13 900

1973 GMC pochup $850 Coli
814 387 Ofi41

1983 510 Blazer V6 air auto

1978 CJ7 1!8P turkeys 304
~UPI!t
1979 CJ6 J1ep 4 apeed B cyl

Eke Cond •3 100 304 875'
1185

•

All types

304 576 2010 or 578 2842

614 255 1393

1985 Dodge Omni 1 7 lttre
eng1ne 4 door 4 apd Call
614 246 6693

1971 Supertor motor home 26
tt tully equrp- power pack
el ec plug tn for elee
gas
applan ca s AC awnmgs a~ m
good condtttOn Call 614 367

1980 Plymouth Horzon TCJ
new baHery new brakes 4 e1tra
tlrOS 304 468 1559

9332

Autos for Sale

27 tt Trotwood camper self
eonta ned goC'd shape S2 000
Call614 256 13 93

S1.ark s Tree and lewn Servrce
H e dg es
shrub s b u sh es
tr m med land sc apm g and
stump remo&gt;Jal leaf removal

1984 Ford LTD LX 302 V 8
Loaded wuh optiOn s Automattc
w1th overdrtve 1 614 3BB

71

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

85 Oodge Daytona AM FM
stereo PS PB 29 000 m le s
:J)4 676 3168

63

6799

79

614 742 2187

1981 VW Rabbrt LS 4 doo r
det&amp;el wMe an cond AM F M
radiO e11econd 304 675 6733

Reg1nered CfJ&amp;rtet horse geld
rng 6 veafl old good SIZII well
broke trailers well has been
shown Payment plan whh ap
proved ctecht Trail ndes well
Pr ced to sell S800 304 675

:J729

1979 Ford Mustang Auto PS
PB 302 eng ne 2 door sun
roof AM FMS track runs go od
$1200 614 985 4302

Wanred to buv CCC Generrc
Cert1ftc1te1 Phone 304 675
1807 t\len.,gs

Ltvestock

GM bed s1de blazer sdes and
early and late Ford bed s1des 1n
sto ck Also part s for ears and
vans bed! ners step bui'TlJler!!l
Sh1rp 775 spray gun and cup
$99 whrle they last Batterres
and ect Also ava table a 3 year
rust through warranty on our lop
quahty body parts Outs•deWest
Vug1nra Call 1 800 523 2013
In West V rgrn 11 1 800 654
46 57 Local calls 304 88 2

$950 Call 614 949 2801
- - - - - --:-- !c-

2585

1974 Pont•tt LeMans S1 200

Puppies German Short h11red
polnten EKe btrd dog1 304

1986 Chrysler laser turbo AT
AC all opt tons Call 614 446
4160 111ter 5 00 PM

78 Ford LTD 351 4 door au to
AC PB PS newt res 108 000
mdes asktng S, 800 00 304
675 2645 before 2 00 PM

Now buytng shell eorn or ear
corn Call for latest quotes R 1ver
C ty Farm Supply 614 446

1010 Cell at4 448 4211
...., Colll14 ... 2•s1

,979 Mercury Marqu ts 4 door
AC PS PB radiO dean good
runnmg cond pr~ c e S1 995

576 2953

Coli &amp;14 388 M85

136

1973 Cad Eldorado conv on e
owner full power e•c cond
wh te on white Call 814 446
3607 attar 6PM

$1 000 Co11304 675 1293

AK C RII!Q German Shepherd
pup1 Ch1mp~n bloodhnn Sne
&amp; dtme Ready for tf1}mad11te
2 Bt~glltl 8 montHs old

Oh

45 HP Ford dtesel PS remote
tiC wtth Freeman bader ei(C
cond Call 614 379 2768 eve

Transportal ion

2783

auto
wrre
Auto
polls

1976 Chev Mal bu class c ps
pb ac am tm radro 360 V 8
good cond 1 S2 000 304 882

245 5121
Concrete blocks all11zes yard or
dehvery Muon 11nd Gall polls
123 ~~~ Ptne St
Block Co
Gall•poh• Oh10 Call a14 446

1983 Plymouth Rei ant
AM FM tape new t res
rims S2 799 John s
Sales 8ulavtlle Ad Gall

Holstein helfer celves Call 614
388 8624 no Sunday calls

u5o oo 304 ea2 2529
Squireitreplaee lf'lsert top oi the
hne electrtt;; blower used me
wrnter only S660 00 304 676

Autos for Sale

1 957 Chevrolet good cond
S1 800 Call 614 446 0352

.:._...:.__ _ _ _~- · lc -

F rewood for s1le S36 ptCk up
load Oehvered Heap Vouchers
accepted Call 6, 4 742 2466

71

Call 614 367 7217
White Poplar Rost Sweet Pota
toes for sale Call 614 742

Mu1ed hardwood slab• t12 per
bund le Cont1m1ng 1pprox 1 V:!
tons FOB 011 o Pallet Co
Pomeroy Ohto Call 814 992
6461

62

Sofas and cl\a rs pr ced from
S396 to S996 Tables $60 and
up to $126 tilde a beds S390
to S595 Aechners S225 to
$376 Lamps S28 to $126
D1nettes $109 and up to $49 5
Wood 1able w 6 ch81rs S286 10
S795 Desk S100 up to S376
Hutches S400 1nd up Bunk
beds complete w motueues
$296 1nd up to $396 Baby beds
8110&amp; 1176 Mathesusorbok
spnngs full or twfl 163 f~rm
$73 and $83 Queen setrs 8225
Ktng $360 4 drawer d"lest S65
Dressers S89 Gun cabinets 8
10 &amp; 12 gun Gas or electrte
range 1376 B1by maHresses
136 &amp; 146 Sed fr1mes S20
$30 &amp; Kmg frame S60 Good
seleettan of bedroom IUttes
metal ctbtnets headboards 830
1nd up to S65

FrUit
&amp; Vegetables

Mov ng must sale K1ng water
bed 111lue $450 will sate for
S150 Call 614 446 2106

2 aquanums One 65 gel tank
and cablnent stand lots of btg
ftsh One 20 gel Evervthmg
goes 614 992 2754

814 .. 8 0322
Regency Inc apartment 2 bdr
uhhtres partly PI d mce Call
304 675 6104

58

$36 ptck up
toad Oehvered Heap Vouchers
accepted

LAYNE S FURNITURE

3487

Splllet Console Prano Barg1rn
W•nted Responsible party to
takeover low monthly payments
on sptne'l eon tole ptano Can be
sean locally Call Mr Wh1te at
1 800 644 1674 ext 608

F~rewood for nle

COUNTRY MOBILE tiome Park
Route 33 North of Pomeroy
Lerge lots Call 614 992 7479

MUSICal

Instruments

_:__-----~-· lc­

46 Space for Rent

House muter for rent 3 bed
rooms Call614 992 3229

Borg e n pr1ee large corner lot
12x60 mobile home extra mo
b le home hook up l)tus 24 x28
metal pole building 10 8 to
the square Clll614 379 2282

57

614 388 8419

1 500 lb hand fork lift $260
Call614 532 4610

304 676 2851

9815

~~'!"~'~oo~t~o~nl~on=t~ca::rr:•er::_~G:a:IIJ.!:==========r==========;:;y

APARTMENTS mobile home$
houses Pt Pleasant and Galhpo
Its 814 446 8221

B19 uvmg &amp; b1g selectiOn of
used bank repossessed mob1le
home Call Kanauga Mobile
Homes 614 446 9662

Homes for Sale

614 446 1593

Mounlatneer Auto Body P1rtt
1318 5th St New Haven W Va

814 258 8502

Furm1htd efflctency S150 utili
t1e1 patd 1hare bath 701 4th
Galhpohs C•ll 446 4416 after 6
pm

Country home 2 1tory 9 rooms
rftmodeled new carpe'l lntchen
&amp; bath Fl1twood• erfta of
Pomeroy s37 000 Call 614

Sptnet plano young girls White
desk Bentwood rocket Infant

Valley Furmture new S. used
large section of qu1hty furnr
ture 1216 Eastern Ave
Galhpohs

12 x65 tratler utility bldg
storage bldg ~A acre land At 2
4 m les North from Pont Plea
1 ant Anne Schmitt 304 675
5422 or 675 7976

3 bdr a1r pool garage Nice
Commerc•al property corner
lot• &amp; t11ghway frontage ltst
with us We h1ve buyers A One
Real Eatete Broker Call 304
674 6104 Of 304 874 6386

Pomeroy Oh1o Large pat10 and
vard Call 814 992 6886 after

a

Profess tonal
SeiVtces

Real Estate

Fnewood seasoned oak spht
stacked &amp; deliver~ $35 very
large load C11t61ot 446 7993

2 bdr all utlh}res Qltd ''~;~"-! · ""'"'" oeolln•••
elec
turn ... or unfurn
used bed room su tes ranges
shoes New
depoSit requtred Con11ement wnnger washen
locatron C1ll 614 446 8668 or llvlngroom su1tes S199 $699
614 446 4778
lamps also buv ng coal &amp; wood
atoves C•ll614 446 3159
2 bdr fullyfutnllhedldulttonly
utll pad Call 814 446 4110
Countv Appliance lne Good
used apph1nces end TV sets
1974 Ktrkwood 2 bdr unfur
Open BAM to 6PM Mon thru
mshed total elttc central • r
Sot 814 .. 8 1199 a27 3•d
Goad cond Ewlngton area C1ll
Ave GalltpoltS OM
614 388 9706

Furn11hed apt 1 bdr 1236
ut1htles P!l d 701 4th Galhpolis
Call 446 441 8 1her 8 pm

Starhs Tree and L1wn Sftrv1ce
bu shel
H e d g e s s hr u bs
tt mmt.&gt;d
land sc aJ)tnQ stump
an d lea f removal 304 676
2842 or 676 2010

partly furnished
apartment oft Sprtng Ave

for Rent

2 bedroom traiiEH' n Tuppers
Plams $176 month plu s depos t
and ut llt1es Call 814 667

2220

2 bedroom

10Jt50 2 bedroom mob1le home
near Racine Call 614 992
5858 Ava1lable Nov 2

a.

~o Parts
&amp;cessoroes

Tran smiSSIOns all types over
ffont rear 4 whe al dr ve and
perts W II delver Call614 379

Cabinet Zemth style stereo
$275 Gas hot w1tertank 30 g•l
Tra1ler steps 20 1n dirt btke 24
m x 26 m 10 apd b1ke Call
614 387 7216 or 1fter 3 614

Two cemetary Iota at Me1gs
Memory Gardens for sale S700

32 Mobtle Homes
for Sale

76

lg couch •nd cha1r good t;;ond
S160 Brunswick pool table very
good cond $200 Call61 4 446
7617

Codr II s Auto Part a 2 V1 m1
North of Vmton on St At 160 a
the place to buy your used auto
port s You II reee 11e fast
frtendly serv ce 9 the best used
part s avarlable Cell 614 38~

42 Mobtle Homes

3137 .... 895 3895

31

2282

4347

1976 Cam eron 121150 Mobile
Home 2 br all eloe 83 000
Kelvtnator Jet Act1on washer
S700 Se1n 14 000 BTU a1r
condrtroner 8275 00 304 675

We P•Y Cl!h fOf late model clean
used cars
Jim Mink Chev Olda Inc
ltll Gl!ln1 John10n
TOP C"SH Plkl mr 13 model
•nd newer used Clfl SfTllth
Buick Pon1l1c 1911 Eanem
Ave G•lllpolls Call 614 448

a

604 256 6009

Wanted To Buy

114 ... 3872

2 bdr house w th gar1ge c•r
peted curtains dishwather &amp;
refng Near new c ty pool , 06
Krneon Or Rent $300 mo dep
lease requ tred Ca11814 448

I NOTICE
THE OHIO VALLEY f.':UBUSti
lN G CO reco mmends that you
do buSin ess w t h peopl e you
kn ow 11ntt NOT to send money
t hrou"' the mall unttl you have
nves t \lat ed the oHenr g

23

Remodlhng sale 1406 Elm St
S1turd1y Oct 25th 8 00 11111

t-;;::;:;;:;:;:;;:;;:;;:-r;:;=;~~;~:;;;;;:1
31 Homes for Sale
41 Houses for Rent

~ 1 ~59~5~8~--------~~
Bus mess
Opportumty

111

"Lay off the w ea germ.

1Ox60 housenalier Fleetwood
$1200 304 882 3239 or 713

21

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

In•

Coli a1• 258 11ea

Ytrd Sa .. Sing~ bed pltypen
chltr peds clottles Avon Fh •
s.. 11 00 until Jotln10n Aidt•
Rd
ml out

h t

773 5946

REPS NEE OED for l:nJs1ness
account s Full Tlme S60 000
S80 000 Part Ttme S 12 000
S18 000 No Selhng repeatbtJ S
n es s Set your own hours
Trutrng provKted Call 1 612
93 8 6870 M F Bam to 5pm
(Central Standard Ttmel

&amp; Vicinity

OPEN Mon -Fn 8 am-9pm-Sat 8·6
' Wale-ins Welcome
POMEROY,O.

lm med1 ete Opti'Hng for g rl
tra ned 1n shonhand and typmg
Must ltke to mee t pubhc Book
keep ng t'lelplul Wr te grvmg
OO!t1ll ere quahf1eatt0n to appl
c ant Boll: 426 Pomeroy

12

Gallipolis

271 N. 2nd,
E Ml,•n•lllo

19 57 Dodge 2 door coupe VB
auto 39 000 actual m11es Call
614 949 2693 before 10 30
pm

I BOO 642 381 9

Emergency '49· fS 111

Rea I Estate General

Estate General

61 4 992 3561 o• 614 992
6654 or 614 992 6729
- - - - -- $o b2 fclas71

wko old Coll81.192 2751

WANT ADS GET

OLD
HEATING CO.

Need women who are lookmg
forward to Chmtmas Help put
the g1fts under t he tree by havmg
8 Fr endly Horne Party at home
or JUSt by ask1ng your fnends for
an order from a book Over 700
11ems to moo se from Get yours
free from your party Call your
Fr endly tiome dealer now and
bo ok a party Magnoha N1t1

A vo n

, ~-·

RAYMOND E. PROFFITT (MAC)

•

Clean roomy 2 bedroom •part
menta New Haven W Va Call
614 992 7•81 Also eommer
c1al space

Columbus Oh

Wanted Somuone to tear down
hO use for mat enals Call 614

8

~~//RESULTS

992 5304

7 wk pups mtxed mtd •~:•
Cutt euddty 1nd just Wlti.,SI for
t home C1ll 1814 941~ 2682

,,.., a oo

1 bedroom turn shed apt 1n
Middleport Also for rent trailer
lot w1th all utlldres Cal~ 614

sell
Cell

46769

190 -RBY AYE.
POMIOY, 011.

4-1&amp; • tfn

614 992 2749

3S.7

PH. 949·2801
or 949-2860

.....,.,..

2 bedroom furmshed apartment
lor rent Adults only C1ll

H eat ng and a•r eondrllon ng
Ill Staller Add on and commer
cral Pay depend ng on ell:pe
r anee Call James Harmon Sr
be tween 7 DO 9 00 Men
tl"!rough Fr 9 00 9 00 Sat and
Sun 614 843 6301

Trapping tupplln

Boats and
Motors for Sale

675 9726

Earn up to $5 000 monthly &amp;sa
Real Estate foreclosure asso
crate No I cense Of e•peuence
requ red National Company
pfOvides ass stance For nto
call 216 453 3000 mdud ng
Sunday Ext F533

Cleaner one half m111 up
Ooorg11 Creek Ad CoH 114

RIDENOUR

75

Wrtght

A ssume loan on 1984 l ow e
Sprte 16 ft bass boat 304

3000 Government Jobs Lrst
S16 040 ss9 230 vr Now H"
1ng Call B05 687 6000 Ext
R 9805

SWEEPER tnd aew~ng mldt .. e

10123/lti/lfn

110 acres on
Ra1nbow Ridge 1n
Chester Townsh1p.
Home National
Bank

APPY
BIRTHDAY

H1mrnons Huller

up""'* ..

t"emetrv

BIRTH 0 A Y
creo~e c.......,.,cv Diltriot
offoce
during stondeod bu•
RUTH
ness hours
L_.:;:K:.,:R~A:;;:.:::.:..::..:;:.:..._&amp; I AI bids mJII be filld 11 tloe

M•ch•gan Ave

4 321 5

1977 ford pldc
# F10GNZ01898
Sole of tho ...,rity lilted
above wilt bo held on tho
p,.,_ of tho aTY LOAN

PUBLIC NOTICE
leldng Creole Coosorvancy
DiSinct wilt occept sealed bid&amp;
at ns office loaotod at 34481
Com Hollow Rood Rut11r1d
OhKI 46775 for tho purdlao
systam and 1 t\\10 way ,.I.,
OOmmunteah:lnsJVstem
Bid IPOC~oaotiono mev be
acquwtd for e price of
$500 DO a copy 11 leld01g

A11:1 0unr: 1:111U nl s

ter •

1988
PASSED Th• 15th day of
Soptember 1986
Rlc:lolrd Seyior Moovor
J.,t W - ctonc TrAPPROVED this 15th d1y ot
Sept 1986
ACCEPTED th• 15th dey of
Sept 1986
110110 17 24 31 (11}7 6tc

a t_, way radiO

WE

Per Hundrld Poundt
After Huii"'D on

KIT 'N' CARLYLE

1981 Harley Gold Wrngs Cl
1100 loaded lots of chrome
ben offer 304 676 9726

Ufe Insurance Superv ;ror One
of Amer1ca s great hfe Insurance
agMcles has an opportunity for a
su pervtaor 1n th a Gall1pohs area
A n md\)dual wth a successful
sales background ot at least two
veers should SEtnd h s or her
bu s ness card to Mr Whrte 870

1·3-16 tic

2 .....

Ct1aslc

A11on Make 45 percent
614 446 3358

,.,,. &amp; ,,,.,..

Startl111 Prlco ..... $800

64 Mtsc MerchandiSe

Apartment
for Rent

16 ft ftberglan bass boat 50
t-IP Even rude w1th edras Good
cond
S1 800 Call aher 5
614 367 7563

Help Wanted

Make Christmas money

fir• E41lt•••t

CAU 992·11505
992-5427 or

PUBUC SALE

M•Ubu

11

Dealor

Hum1ne Soatly

Tho following doocribod
rtemo wil be ollwld lor Jllblc
. . to 1he highOS1 bidder on
tho 5tlo dory of N""•ubet
1986 11.., o clod! • m

roy Stlte of Otdo un~nm­
oolly on 15th dey of Sept

of

Auttlonllll .r.hn Dltrt,
Now H. . nd. lush lleg
form fll.,ent

NOTICE OF

Pubhc Nottce

-

GUYSYIW, OHIO

.lust Bnng your BIIICk
Walnuto otolt In the hull
to

44

LAFF-A-DAY

Employmen l
Smmes

U. S. IT. SO EAST

HALF COST of SP4Y/
NfUT£R II 111111 of Allopt10n
Ballntt P1ld monthly ~

NO SUNDAY CAllS

Public Notoce

SAUS &amp;SDVICE

lnt1ocullt1ons

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Wanted To Buy

The Dally

992 3476

BOGGS

II.ACI WALNm

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh10

Buyrng dally gold srlver co~ns
ngs jewelry S1erllng ware old
co~na largu cumm~;:y ToP pr
ces Ed Burkett Barbef Shop
2nd Ave Middleport Oh 614

ADOPTION
SSOO A~ti., f•
lnctudts Warllld 1nd First

"At Rtaronablo Procos"

PHONE 992-2156

9

SOCITY HAS IEAUflfUI.
limNS and CAn FOR

CUSTOM IUILT
HOr.S &amp;GARAGES

The Daily Sentinel

Fnday, October 24, 1986

Business S

oned exceptionally well ~inoe 1982
and deserves to bere&lt;!lectedtotllat
Rt 124, Pomoror Ohio
post '
The Blade also said Ceiebl'e22e
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
has been conscientious In handling
REPAIR
environmental and crtmfnaJ issues
Al•o Tn••!llllllo•
Challenging Ceiebrezze Is attorney
Barry Levey
PH. 992-5682
The newspaper also reminded
or 992-7121
voters rot to rontuse Celebrezze
with Supreme Court Clllet Justice
6 17 He
Frank Celebrezze The paper en·
oorsed challenger TIDmas Moyer
for the chief justice s !llat
THE QUAUTY
In the treasurer's race Withrow
was selected over challenger Jef
Pllf6 SHOP
frey Jacoll; a state rEpresentative
F11 All l'ut ,,.,., N,.
from Bay VIllage
PWS: Off11o !upplltt I
The newspaper said Wltlrow bas
furllitvro, Wo41101g
modernized the state's nvestment
and Graduation
practices and created a successful
Slat-y, llo!tnotk
I••· lllltbor St..po,
program under whicll state invest
lu-of.,...
ment llmds are cllanneled into
Copr
StnKK1 Etc.
low-rost bans for small businesses
2JS
Mill
II Middleport
and farmers
104
Mulloorry
Aw, P-roy
Glenn who Is seeking Ills tltlrd
992-3345
six year term in the Senate, is
3/2ftln
q&gt;posed by US fllop 'Immas
Kindness of HamUton Tbe Beacon
Journal called him "diligent and
principled
!CUT OUT fOI FUIUII: USEI
Whlle still best kno'M! as a
natlonalltero the first American to
orbit the earth, he has roUt a
rEputation as an lnfluentiaJ and
thoughtful lawmakE!' " the news
paper said
985-3561
The Beacon Journal stresSed
All M1k11
Glenn's ef:!orts to curb tbe spread of
•W11hera
•DIIhWIIhara
nuclear weapons and said he has
•Ranges
'long been among tiDse lawmak
•Refrigerelora
ws rightly stressing tbe nred for a
•Dryera efretl&amp;rl
greater natbnal Investment In
PARTS and !lF ,AVI~F
research and educatbn
Jolln Glenn remains his own
man Few In Congress have as
much integrtty or are as dedicated
to reaching posltbns based on tbe
merits of issues "

Goodyear earnings imporve
AKRON

Friday, October 24, 1986

TAl STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 163 Sec Ave
Galhpoh s
114 446 7833 or 6 14 44 6
1833
R &amp; M Custom C ouches an d
Reupholslery St Rt 7 C1 own
C ty Oh 614 256 1470 Ev e
614 446 3438 Open daly 8 to
5 S~t t 9 30 to , 30 Old &amp; new
Uphos1ered
MtJwrey $ Upholl tftrmg servmg
trl eounty llrfl8 21 years Th e belt
m turnrture upholstenng Call
304 67 6 4164 f o r lree
est mates

•

�I
~

Page~ 10-

.. ...

'

..
Frida~~ber24,

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel '

1986

ANNOUNCING THE··

..

'

~

~

•"w

'

-r

I

•
•

•

'•'I
j

~

..

~

~

&lt;

.....

...
.•

'

•

0

CHECK US·OUT!

ct

I

COMPARE OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICES
AGAINST WHAT YOU'VE BEEN PAYING...
YOUR POCKETBOOK WILL BE GLAD YOU DIDI
l

-

%

....

9
I

c

I

Ll.l

~

..

'

STO~ BY AND REGISTER FOR .A25" SYLVANIA

(I)

COLOR T.V. CONSOLE TO BE GIVEN AWAY
.SATURDAY, NOV. 1st AT 8:00 P.M.
No purchase necessary, need not be present to win.

WI CUI COITI AC.OII IHIBOAID! We cllcl away wlth .the -thlngs you
didn't need ••• To give you what ;ou want the most ..• LOifiR PRICESI

c..

HERE ARE 7 BIG REASONS WHY

~

...
...

. YOU REALLY
DO SAVE·A·LOT·
.
'

0

WE DO THE WORK!
You do not b'ag your own groceries. We Do!

MINIMUM PRICE CHANGES
We don't change prices every day or every week, only when
the market changes. We don't pay someone to make price ·
changes eyery day so neither do you .

LOW UTILITY COST
We carry only the best seiling packaged meats and produce
to eliminate expensive equlprpent and high utility costs. We
save on this expense and so do you.

.

c.

..

SMART BUYING
We carry many name, brands but if we find a product of equal
qual.ity but at a lower price we buy it. We don't pay for fancy .
labels and neither do you.

BEST SELLING ITEMS ONLY
We carry only 'the best. selling items and sizes. 'this
eliminates extra inventory and wasted space. We don't pay
Interest on the cost of.excessive Inventory so neither do you.

BUY ONLY WHAT YOU N'EED

.

You don't have to buy big quantities to SAVE·A·LOT. Our
prices are the same for one, two or three items or a case.

~·

MINIMUM ADVERTISING

. '.

.-·.

We don't have to prom6te weekly specials, our prices are low
every day of every week. We don't have to pay for excessive
· advertising and neither do you.

. ~-'

'

WE ACCEPT M_ANUFACTURERS' --

'

' '

WE lACK
OUR QUALITY

STORE HOURS:

.'

Monday-Saturday
9 a.m. tO 9 p.m.
I
Sunday
Noon • 8:00 p.m. I:

WITH A
MONEY lACK
GUARANTEE I

·.

.

WE WELCOME
FOOD STAMPS

.•

Rt. 62 North

(304) 675-1155

Point Pleasant,· W.Va.

•.'

.

We Reserve the ·
. · right til !lmlt quontititl

e 1984 SAVI-A·LOT Ltd.

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="200">
    <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="2790">
                <text>10. October</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="40678">
            <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="40677">
              <text>October 24, 1986</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1068">
      <name>ash</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="784">
      <name>markins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7050">
      <name>medaniel</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
