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                  <text>Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Beat of the Bend....
by Bob Hoeflich

Perhaps, you noted that Mayford "Jack" Sensenbrenner who
served as mayor of Columbus and
was highly regarded for the direction he gave the city died a few
days ago.
But clid you remember that he at
one time during his career as mayor
of Columbus did visit Pomeroy?
Mrs. Jean Moore of Middleport,
who is a cousin of the late mayor,
recalls that at that time there was a
big dinner held in Mr. Sensenbrenner's honor at the Pomeroy Elementary School. She and her husband, the late Harry Moore, were
present and also attended a reception honoring the Columbus mayor
held at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Simon.
Jean and Lillian and Ferman
Moore visited the Long Funeral
Home in Columbus Sunday to pay
their respects. Jean reports that
there was quite of bit of memorabilia at the funeral home mementos of Mr. Sensenbrenner' s
terms as mayor and also there was
a police honor guard at either end
of the coffin.
By the way, Jean has e~tremely
good things to say about her
cousin, the late Columbus mayor,
who was always kind and thoughtful to her and her parents.

their daughter, Patricia Circle and
the late Melvin Circle at the time of
their high school graduations. Figuring they would probably not he
around when their other four
grandchildren - ranging in age
from four to 16, children of their
daughter, Jennifer, graduated the youngest in 2005 - the
Blakeslees took the four children
and their parents, Jennifer and Jim
Butcher on the graduation cruise.
The group i'Iew to Miami and
boarded the NCL MS Seaward
there. The first stop was a private
island, Pleasure Island, owned by
NCL. Other stops included
Jamaica, the Grand Cayman
Islands, Playa Del Carman and
Coxumel in Mexico. Shore excursions included swimming, snorkeling, Dunn's River Falls, a sea sub
underwater vessel from which they
viewed the colored fish and coral
reefs , the Mayan Ruins and other
sightseeing. The only accident on
board was a fue in the kitchen but
there were no harmful effects except some psychological ones on
the pan of the passengers. There
were special events aboard ship as
well as on shore for the youngest,
for pre-teens and for teenagers.
The Blakeslees and their guests
returned home much in need of
rest.
Edith Cogar of Syracuse has had
Earlier in July, the Blakeslees
some meclical problems and under- were invited to attend the 55th high
went 12 hours of major surgery last school class reunion of the NewWednesday at a West Virginia hos- berry High School where Mr.
Blakeslee taught from 1933 to
pital.
If Edith gets along as expected 1937. This was in Mrs. Blakeslee's
she should be returned to her borne home area - Michigan as I recall.
here next week to recuperate . She and Chuck used the trip to
Cards may be sent to her at the retrace part of their honeymoon
West Virginia University Hospital, route.
Room 873, 8 East Wing, Meclical
Center Drive, P.O. Box 6401, MorEntries in several open class catgantown, W. Va, 26506.
egories for the Meigs County Fair
must be in place by noon Saturday
Four grandchildren of Charles and judging will even be held in
and Daisy Blakeslee of Pomeroy some areas on Saturday afternoon.
received early hij!h school gradua- Don't be mad at me about it - I
tion gifts -Cam bean cruises yet.
don't make the rules, I just tell you
Mr. and Mrs. Blakeslee had pro- about 'em. Do keep smiling.
vided trips for the two children of

Patty Dyer
is re-elected

MOUNT GILEAD, Ohio (AP)
- · A man whose truck slammed
into a horse-drawn buggy and
killed six members of an Amish
family was convicted of drunken
driving last year, a newspaper
reponed today.
'
Douglas A. Lyons, 26, of Fredericktown, was indicted by a Morrow County grand jury Wednesday
on six counts of aggravated vehicular homicide and four counts of
aggravated vehicular assault, county Prosecutor Howard Hall said.
State Bureau of Motor Vehicles
records show that Lyons was convicted of drunken driving June 21,
1990, in Morrow County, The
Columbus Di~atch reponed.
His driver s license was suspended until Oct. 21, 1990. But
because Lyons did not pay a $100
reinstatement fee or provide the
bureau with proof he has insurance,
his suspension remains in effecL
Lyons was driving between 55
and 60 mph in a 55-mph zone
Monday night when he hit the
buggy, State Highway Pattol ttoopers said. Beer cans were found in
his truck, they said. Lyons refused
to take a test that would have determined if he had been drinl:ing, the
pattol said.
Killed were the driver of the
buggy, Aden Yoder, 28; his wife,
Esther Yoder, 27: her mother,
Sarah Miller, 54; the Yoders' son,
Eli Yoder, 6; Mrs. Miller's daughter, Clara; and her son, Noah, 14.
Four of the Yoders ' children
were injured in the crash Monday
on Ohio 314, about 10 miles west
of this north-central Ohio city.
Allee Yoder, I, and Anna
Yoder, 2, and Susie Yoder, 5, were
listed Wednesday in fair condition
while 4-year-old Lydia Yoder's
condition was upgraded from critical to poor, a spokeswoman at
Children's Hospilal said.
Their parents, brother, grandmother, aunt and uncle are to be
buried today.
Lyons was treated for minor
injuries. The horse that had been
pulling the buggy was severely
injured and put to sleep.

Don and Mary Barnett were
welcomed and gJVen the Fourth
Degree Obligation.
Catherine Colwell, Women's
Activities Chairman, thanked members for their participation over the
past year and for their cooperation
and support. Her safety tip was on
proper sitting.

SUNDAY SERVICE$:
Bible School ................... 9:30 A.M.
Worship Service ............ 10:30 A.M.
Potluck Dinner ........................ Noon
Homecoming Service ........ 2:00 P.M.
Robert E. Purtell, Minister

Heist for hygiene
SAGINAW, Mich. (AP) - He
probably could have become the
best-smelling shoplifter around.
Police were looking for a man
who swept all the deodorant off a
drugSIOre shelf and into a shopping
bag Monday before dropping the
loot and running aflel he was confronted.
"He was just piling it in the
bag, • • Rite Aid Discount Pharmacy
Manager Becky A. Albrecht said.
•'He just had it stocked full.''
Allncht said the man apparently ltad been in the surer~ 10 to 15
minutes and already had set two
12-packs of beer near tlte front
door ~f(ll'e employees spottc:d him
swiping 70 $3 to $4 sticks of
deodorant and confronted him. ·
No arrests had been m&amp;4e by
thiS morning, police.said.

25"

In mid-60s. Saturday ,

I28th MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

cloudy.

AUCUSTI~13 - l~l~l~l7

Vol. 42, No. 68

S49' 900
YOUR CHOia

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services an.d Emergency Managment Agency will participate in a
hazardous materials exercise
involving three states on September
7 designed to test federal, state and
local plans for responding to hazardous material incidents.
The exercise, referred to as the
Ohio River Exercise, is one of the
ftiSt full-scale tests of government
hazardous materials response capability in the county. The exercise
was planned and developed by the
Emergency Management Agencies
of Ohio, Kentucky and West Virginia.
The exercise will involve 19
counties bordering the Ohio River,
eight of them in Ohio. The plan for

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I

MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP)Relatives of one of 17 men who
police say Jeffrey L. Dahmer killed
filed a $4.5 million claim, accusing
police of failing to halt the slayings
and mutilations.
The claim was filed Thursday
with the city clerk on bebalf of parents of Man Turner, 20, one of five
victims who died after three police
officers visited Dahmer's west-side
aparunent without realizing it contained human remains.
Police Chief Philip Arreola suspended the policemen amid public
complaints that they were disinterested in investigating Dahmer
because they assumed he and a
naked, bleecling, 14-year-old boy
he took to the apartment May 27
were homosexuals.
Dahmer, 31, is being held in lieu
of $5 million bond pending an
Aug. 22 hearing on 12 counts of
ftiSt-degree intentional homicide.
Police said he picked up some
of his victims at gay bars and on
the street, drugged and killed them,
then kept body portions in his

CARPET SALE
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INSTAllED

TRACKLESS SAXONY

$1 899 SQ. YD.IN$TAUED
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.-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) When Gov. George Voinovich
served lunch at the Oh10 State F811
to promote agriculture, he did tl m
style with a menu of lamb and wme
_Ohio lamb, Ohio wine.
Voinovich presided and helf?ed
with at least some of the cooking
during an event for reporters
Thursday at the Ohio Departm~nt
of Agriculture's Heartland CuiSine
display.
.
b.
"We're selling Ohto lam m

VINYL FLOOR
COVERING
SALE

$549 SQ•.YD.

freed.

U.N. Secretary-General Javier
Perez de Cuellar acknowledged the
development could complicate
matters, but said he still hoped
another hostage would be set free.
"I hope that the American - I
still don't know which one - will
he released," he told reporters.
"My prayer is not that it will be
Terry Anderson. My prayer is that

it will be all of them," Peggy Say.
sister of the American journalist,
said in Cadiz, Ky.
Diplomats in Beirut kept their
embassies open for a third night,
but there was no word of another
release as the Muslim sabbath
began this morning. Speculation
continued in Beirut that Anderson,
chief Middle East correspondent
for The Associated Press, would be
released next.
On vacation in Maine, President

conducting exercises associated
with hazardous materials response
evolved from the passage of the
Title III Superfund Amendments
Reauthorization Act (SARA Title
III). The SARA program established the basis for state and local
emergency response agencies to
develop plans, train appropriate
staffs and responders and conduct
exercises dealin~ specifically with
the uitiq_ue .IUQI;IIems associated
with hazardous materials.
Past experience has shown the
necessity for improving coordination and communications between
elements of emergency response at
the local, state and federal level.
The river exercise is designed to

Bush told reporters, " I think those
who follow this most closely feel it
is likely an American will be
released.' '
Islamic Jihad, the pro-Iranian
group that freed McCarthy and
holds Anderson, American educator Thomas Sutherland and Briton
Terry Waite, said in a statement
that it was sending McCarthy as an
"envoy" to Perez de Cuellar.
McCarthy told reporters he carried a letter for Perez de Cuellar

suggesting the remaining Western
hostages be freed in exchange for
hundreds of Shiite detainees held
by Israel and an Israeli-allied militia.
Israel came under mounting
international pressure to free the
detainees, but said any deal must
also include seven Israeli soldiers
missing in Lebanon.
The 34-year-old McCarthy,
looking fit and elated, said Thursday that until two days hefore his

release he was held with Anderson,
Sutherland and Waite. Anderson
and Sutherland have been captives
since 1985, Waite since 1987.
McCarthy was driven to Damascus after his release. He later flew
to England on a British military jet,
and spent the night at the Royal Air
Force base at Lyneham.
Meanwhile, a dark vigil began
in Beirut for Medecins du Monde,
or Doctors of the World , a ParisContinued on page 3

strengthen these clements as well
as provide practical training for
participants at all levels of
response.
The Ohio River Exercise will be
used as a pilot project by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) in developing guidance
on the conduct and evaluation of
hazardous materials exercises
nationwide.
Other Ohio Counties participating in the exercies are Adams,
Athens, Gallia, Lawrence, Monroe,
Scioto and Washington.
Meigs County, and most of the
other agencies tnvolved in the
September exercise will conduct a
dry run on August 10.

refrigerator, in a closet and even a city clerk on· behalf of Turner's
filing cabineL
parents, Waddell and Rosa Fletcher
Investigators from Summit of Flint, Mich.
County, Ohio, where bones were
Authorities say Turner died after
discovered in the back yard of the meeting Dahmer June 30 in ChicaDahmer family's former home, go. Had police realized May 27
said they would be in Milwaukee that Dahmer was on probation from
this week to question him further a child-molestation conviction,
about comments that his ftrst vic- they could have prevented the
tim was an IS-year-old hitchhiker.
"wrongful kidnappmg and death of
Police in Columbus, Ohio, said Man turner," the claim said.
Thursday that Dahmer has denied
·Many of the victims were black.
any involvement in a local 1986 Milwaukee has seen demonstramurder-mutilation case.
tions and rallies the last few weeks
Dahmer was asked about his by people who say police show
activities when he lived in Ohio anti-gay and racist bias.
and during a brief stint as an underPolice went to the apartment
graduale student at Ohio State Uni - again July 22 after Trady Edwards,
versity in 1978, police said.
32, ran into the street from the
They wanted to know if Dahmer apanment house, wearing handhad anything to do with the mutila- cuffs and saying Dahmer threattion-slaying of a Columbus man ened him with a knife. It was then
whose body was found wrapped in officers discovered the body parts
a blanket and stuffed in a trash con- of II victims.
tainer near an apartment building in
A judge set $1,000 bail ThursJuly 1986, Sgt. Clifford Davis said.
day for Edwards, who was taken
The city of Milwaukee has 120 into custody Wednesday after Mildays to reply to the $4.5 million waukee police learned he was
claim filed by a lawyer with the named in a Mississippi warrant.

Ohio agri-products get
boost from Gov. Voinovich

IN STOCK

•16 Patterns
•12 Ft. Width
•Easy Care Finish

the Lebanese capilal and threatened
to kill him if another hostage was

l

l

M:ilwaukee police cite,d in $4.5
million Dahmer case claim

ALL TABLES CHAIRS
and HUTCHES ARE ON
SALE NOW!

$949 SQ. YD.

' DAMASCUS, Syria (AP)The families of Westerners missing
in Lebanon waited anxiously today
to see if kidnappers would follow
up their release of Briton John
McCarthy by freeing another
hostage - this time perhaps an
American.
But hours after Shiite Muslim
kidnappers ended McCarthy's
more than five years in captivity on
Thursday, another group said it
abducted a French relief worker in

Meigs EMS, officials to take
part in Sept. 7 training session

DINING R

Doug &amp; Sherry
Shamblin

A Multimedia Inc. Nowop.oper

Families wait to see if second hostage is released

-On-Screen Display
-Remote Control
-2 Styles

SUPER
SALE

3 Sectlono, 54 Pogoo 25 cent•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, August 9, 1991

Copyrighted 1D91

COLOR CONSOLE

Route 143 (37420 Zion Rd.)

7:30 P.M.

Pick 3:497
Pick 4:· 4319
Cards : 4·H, Q-C
J-D;S-S

•

Cbtitl

Doug &amp; Sherry Shamblin

Meigs County
Fair tabloid
Insert

Zion Cbut~b of

Evangelist &amp; Song leader

Ohio Lottery

Mosll} cloud}. Low tonight

HOMECOMING
REVIVAL ·

AUGUST 16, 17, 18 -

Eldon Barrows, legislative cochairman, reported on Nuclear
Energy for Power Plants, Oil
Exploration and Legislative Redistricting.
A resolution was passed sup;
porting the .50 Mill Tuberculosis
Levy for Meigs County.
Pauy Dyer, fair booth committee chairman, reported that Star
Grange received ninth on their subordinate display at the Ohio State
Fair.
Sixteen members and juniors
enjoyed potluck refreshments following the meeting.

..

Jury indicts
pickup driver

Patty Dyer was reelected as
Master of Star Grange when the
group met recently at the grange
hall.
Other officers elected were
Larry Montgomery, overseer;
Eldon Banuws, lecturer; Ray Midkiff. steward; Rick Macomber,
assistant steward; Maxine Dyer,
lady assistant steward; Freda
Smith, chaplain; Waid Nicholson,
treasurer; Opal Dyer, secretary;
Alan Halliday, gatekeeper; Rose
Barrows, ceres; Bernice Midkiff,
Pomona; Jan Macomber, flora; and
Don Barnett, executive committee.

Opal Dyer, youth chairman.
reported that the Star Grange
Youth Group received first place
on their display at the Ohio State
Fair. She also reported that the
Meigs County Youth Group will be
having a clisplay and a pop stand at
the Meigs County Fair.

Thursday, August 8, 199t

'

Ohio and selling our wool products
right here," Voinovich said in
lcncling promotional support for the
Ohio Sheep Improvement Association.
Then he lifted a glass to toast
Ohio-produced wines, samples of
which also were available.
"I really believe that once people taste our Ohio wines _they're
going to be really commttted to
them," Voinovich said.
The menu included barbecue

r---Local briefs----.
Charges filed after altercation
Attempted aggravated murder charges have been filed against a
Pomeroy man following a domestic altercation on Thursday in Rutland Township.
Philip Del "Dale". Call, of Sta~ Rout~ 143 nem: Po!fieroy_is
being held in the Metgs County Jail pencling a heanng m Metgs
c;ounty Coun
.
.
Accorcling to Metgs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Call and
his 18 year old sister-in-law, Gina Arnett got into an argument and
Call began to choke Arnett. She then left the residence and he followed her to the roadway. After returning to the roadway with a pistol, Amen ftred five shots at Call. ·
. Miss Amen was not struck and Call was arrested without resisuince.
Continued on page 3

Iamb served with Ohio-produced
barbecue sauce on Ohio-baked
buns, and coleslaw from cabbage
grown in the garden at the rear of
the Governor's Mansion in suburban Bexley.
Also offered : potato chips,
apples, wine, and sparkl~ng spring
water, all produced m OhiO.
The state ranks 14th nationally
in sheep and Iamb production.
There are about 270,000 sheep in
the state that produce about 1.8
million pounds of wool per year,
the association said.
Sheep are found on about 7,400
farms statewide. Total value of
sheep and Iamb production last
year was $8.4 million.
Grape production in Ohio
amounted to 8,000 tons in 1989,
with most of the crop used for processing purposes. Eigh! vin_eyards
offered samples of thetr wmes at
Thursday's evenL
.
This is the ftiSt time Vomovlch,
who lOOk office Jan. 14, has presided over a stale fair.
"I'm just kind of learning about
the fair, frankly. This morning I
was over there with the cattle people. Let's see, I found out. about
herefoids and, let's see, short hom?
And angus," said Voinovich, who
has spent most of his life in Cleveland and Columbus.

CHECK PRESENTED - Tbe Farmen Bank
and Savings Company hu made its annual contribution to the Melgs/GalllalJackson/Mason Big
Brotllers and Friends 4 Youth programs. Pictured witb tbe $250 cbeck are, left to rlgbt,

Donna Schmoll of Farmers Bank, Judy
Sorranko, Executive Director of the program,
and Bruce J. Reed, Vice President or Farmers
Bank.

Storms slam southern Ohio
By The Associated Press
A storm that swept through
southern and central Ohio left boxing fans at the Ohio State Fair in
the dark, felled power lines and
tore the roofs off barns.
An unconfirmed sighting of a
funnel cloud near Washington
Coun House also was reponed during the Thursday night storm.
The funnel cloud was seen
about three miles north of Washington Court House in central
Ohio, said Fayette County Sheriff's
Deputy Dale Butler.
The National Weather Service
said the funnel cloud was spotted at
about 6:20 p.m. No serious damage
or injuries were reported. but
power lines were down and trees
were uprooted, Butler said. The
roofs of several area barns were
stripped by winds of up to 50 mph,
the weather service said.
Shane Jenkins, a spokesman for
the state fair, said a boxing match
at the fairgrounds in Columbus
Thursday night was halted for
about 15 minutes when a tree limp
hit a power line.
Large hail was spotted in the
city of Xenia in Greene County in
southwest Ohio.
In Warren County, Lebanon
firefighters said they handled a few
small fires caused by lightning

strikes, and said a few trees and
power lines were down. No injuries
were reponed.
A Clermont County sheriff' s
dispatcher said the department had
received reports of trees down,
minor accidents and lightning
strikes. but no injuries. The Butler

County sheriff's department said
only a few trees and live wires
were felled by the storm.
No damage was reported in
Hamilton County.
More rain was expected
statewide today, the weather service said.

Voinovich seeks Ohio
agriculture disaster aid
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Gov. George Voinovich has
asked U.S. Agriculture Secretary Edward Macligan to declare
the entire state an agricultural
disaster area as a result of "the
relentless drought.' ·
His request on Thursday fol lowed a stmilar request submitted two days earlier by the U.S.
Agriculture Stabilization and
Conservation Services and other
farm agencies that make up a
state emergency board.
The board said farmers in at
least 81 counties already have
lost 35 percent of their crops,
which qualifies them· for lowinterest loans and other assistance that a disaster declaration

I

(

would make possible.
State officials say farmers in
the otber seven counties al so
will qualify in the near future.
In a letter to Madigan ,
Voinovich said that for Ohio,
"losses are no longer a matter
of projection or speculation.
Indeed, losses are real and
mounting daily."
Voinovich said he hopes to
receive a response by early next
week.
Some rain fell in northern
Ohio Thursday afternoon and in
southwestern and central Ohio
Thursday night. But the National Westher Service rain showers
that were heading east would
end statewide by this afternoon.

New schools chief sees change in time
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio's new state school superintendent says parents and teachers
probably won't notice any immediate changes after he takes office
OcL I. but they will eventually.
John "Ted" Sanders, U.S.
undersecretary of education in
WashingWn, has been hired by the
State Board of Eaucation to succeed Franklin B. Walter as the state
superintendent of public instruction. Walter, who has resigned,
leaves office Aug. 31.
"The truth of the mauer is most
parents don't even know there is a
state superintendent, much less
who that person is if we were to
take a poll,'' Sandm said in a Jelephone news conference on Thursday.

He said he hopes parents will
notice the effects of a proposed
redefined relationship between the
state and local schools that focuses
not on policY., but on accountability
and what children should know.
Sanders said he would be a visible su~tendent.
"I m going to do whatever it
takes to get the job done. Yes, I
inlend to get to lcnow the key political leaders and others in the state
who influence public policy and to
work with them, but I also intend to
be visible about the state," he said.
Sanders said he brings with him
"a fairly good knowledge of
school finance'· and an undel'Sianding of the tough political questions
involved.
. But he has no predetermined

t

solutions for school finance or
other problems.
"The last thing I want to do is
cause people to believe that I've
got some kind of a canned program
or canned se1 of policies that I'm
going to bring to Ohio and try to
shove down people 's throats,' !
Sanders said.
.
He said neither the State Board
of Education nor Gov. George
Voinovich asked during the job
interview for his views about
whether the board should be elect~
ed or appointed.
..
Voinovich favors replacing the
elected state board with a smallet.
panel appointed by a governor. A
bill that would accomplish the&gt;
chan¥e has passed the Senate and is
pending in the House.
.
:

,.,

-

.

�.....

Friday, August 9, 1991

Commentary
11 I Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DE VOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON ARE\\

t~MULTIMEDIA,INC

· ~OBERT

L. WINGETT

: rubllsher
•

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

•

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
A MEMBER of The Associated Press . Inland Dailv Press Ass ociation and the American Newspaper Publishers Association .

.

LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome . They should be tess than 300

·

words long. All letters are subJect to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published . Letters should be In good taste. addressing issues. not personalf ·
ties.

Letters to the editor
Must keep quality teachers
.

qear Editor: .

.
• Do we as parents JUSt waUl to
k~ep the doors of our schools
OJX:l?
, I should hope not! These buildil)gs, furniture, challl:boards, furnaces, and even textbooks are completely and totally worthless witho~t quality teachers.
•. Alld by gosh Southern Local
School District has quality teachers
\$o deserve their salaries. Many of
these teachers as a matter of course
have bought much of the classroom
supplies and equipment with this
mpney that they so rightfully
rc:it:eive.
_:: Yes, we as teachers, can sometupes be thought of as a sack of
p(ilar,oes. How often have you held
u~ one of those net sacks while in
llie store and whirled it around to
sc;e if you could spot a "baddie"?
Al)d how often do you finally just
pfl:k a sack because you have concl\ided that there is aJways a "baddie"? We have teachers who may
not deserve the money they are

beinl! paid, and this problem can be
era&lt;llcaled in many ways. However,
denying the quality teachers the
money they deserve is not one of
them.
Well-paid teachers do not look
for other jobs, they enjoy coming
to school each day, and they certainly give you your money's
worth. Most of us teachers have
given you more than your money's
worth for years and years. Your
children deserve the best education
possible.
While equipment, books, and
buildings are necessary, the primary ingredients are students and
teachers. Alfred North Whitehead
once said, "Education that is not
modern shares the fate of all organic things which are kept too long."
Teachers need modern saJarics as
well.
Sincerely,
Carla Shuler
49000 Gainer Road
Long Bottom, Ohio 45743

WASHINGTON - Sharon
Arnsberger quit her job with an
Austin, Texas, landscaping company back in 1987 when she found
out her bosses were dodging their
federal payroll taxes. Then she did
what any conscientious person
would do - she reported the fraud
to the Internal Revenue Service.
Now the IRS is doing what it
could be expected to do - going
after Arnsberger for $119,765 in
payroll taxes that her employers
failed to pay. Apparently Amsberger was easier pickings for the IRS
than her bosses were. She has
learned too late that bookkeepers,
clerks and managers who have no
ownership interest in a business
can still be held responsible for
taxes the business owes.
Under federal law, workers who
have even a slight responsibility for
a company's funds, even if they
simply write the checks, can be
stuck with the tax debts of their
bosses. Fairness has nothing to do
with it. If the boss disappears or
files for protection from creditors,
then the IRS will look for an easy
win. Innocent people can suddenly

find themselves owing six-figure wa~es garnished to settle the debt
'The IRS does not want to hear
sums to Uncle Sam.
What angers Arnsberger the the circumstances and does not
most is that she was the one who care how innocent I am," Arnsalerted the IRS to !he wrongdoing berger told our associate Scoll
Sleek. "They just want their
in the ftrst place.
In 1986, Amsberger, then 24, money and they do not care from
became comptroller for the land- whom or how they get it''
scaping firm . She kept the books
An IRS spokeswoman in Austin
and paid the bills, but she never told us Arnsberger is liable because
owned a piece of the company. She she signed most of the company's
grew concerned when her bosses checks and knew about the unpaid
opened another company in CaJi - taxes long before she quit. Amsfornia and started draining money berger told us that she is guilty of
from the Austin office to pay for it. being too trusting when her bosses
There wasn't enough money to pay told her they would get around to
the payroll taxes, and Amsberger paying the government. Now the
warned her bosses to satisfy the IRS won'ttell us whether the owners of the company have been
debt to !he IRS.
When they didn't heed her penalized 100.
John and Susan Heiland also
warnings, Arnsberger resigned.
Then she and another employee know what it's like to be on the
went to the IRS and reponed the IRS hit list. For three years, the
unpaid taxes. They were thanked Iowa couple has been stalll:ed for
and sent on their way. The compa- back taxes owed by a trucking
ny later folded, and Arnsberger company John managed several
heard nothing more until last April years ago. The IRS has seized the
when an IRS agent called her and Heilands' car and money in their
told her she was being held liable checking account and has been lakfor the taxes. She is appealing, but ing pan of John's paycheck for two
faces having her and her husband's years. Ultimately, the IRS wants to

EQUAL

RIGHTS

The rest of the story
·:The bargaming unit of the
S&lt;iulhern Local Teacher's Association would like to clarify points
mlide in recent articles.
First of aJI, there are only 52%
of certified staff receiving their
total salaries out of the General
Fund that make over $30,000. This
pei'Centage is for full time teachers
an~ does not include principals or
supplemental contracts.
Even though this appears to be a
high percentage, it is necessary to
stale that this is due to the number
of :teachers who have many years
of experience and extensive education, which should be viewed as an
~Ito the district
With this quality in the staff we
caJi hope to continue the high acade~ic achievement as reflected in
the proficiency tests administered
thiS year.
:Another point which needs 10 be
addressed is the fact that the teachers went one year without a contract while we worked through
negotiations so that there was no
disruption of the school system.
When negotiations were deadlocked, the board and !he associa-

lion elected to use the services of a
fact-fmder.
The new contract was signed on
June 30, 1990. The teachers
received no raise for the years
1989-1990 and 1990-1991. Beginning in September 1991 !he teachers will receive a 6% increase with
a 4% increase to be added in January.
According to the fact-fmder this
increase was within the board's
means. The contract was voted on
unanimously by both the teachers
and the board.
Although referred to as a
"hefty" raise this amount, which
comes !he last year of a three-year
contract, reflects only a partial cost
of living increase.
Contrary to Charles Norris's
opinion, the teachers feel that a
quality staff is "pulling the kids
flrsL"
"Good day."
Southern Local
Teacher's Association
Bill Baer, President
Vicki Hill, Vice-President
Janice Curry, SecretarY
Carla Shuler, Member

Today in history
.
By The Associated Press
· Today is Friday, Aug. 9, the 221st day of 1991. There are 144 days left
iO:the year.
: Today's Highlight in History:
· On Aug. 9, 1945, the United StaleS dropped a second atomic bomb on
Jal&gt;an. destroying pan of the city of Nagasaki. An estimated 74,000 people died from the blast or its after-effects.
. On this dale:
: In 1790, the Columbia returned to Boston Harbor after a three-year
vQyage, becoming the first ship to carry the American flag around !he
world.
: In 1842, a border dispute between the United States and Canada was
rc)iolved with the signing of the Webster-Ashburton Treaty.
· In 1848, !he Free-Soil Party nominated Martin Van Buren for president
at:its convention in Buffalo, N.Y.
: In 1854, Henry David Thoreau published "Walden," in which he
described his experiences while living in a small cabin near Walden Pond
iii Massachusetts.
: In 1902, Edward VII was crowned King of England following the
doath of his mother, Queen Victoria
; In 1930, a forerunner of the cartoon character Belly Boop made her
debut in Max Fleischer's animated shon •'Dizzy Dishes.' '
: In 1936, Jesse Owens won his fourth gold medal at the Berlin
Olympics as the United StaleS took fust place in the 400-meter relay.
· In 1942, Britain arrested Indian nationalist Mohandas K. Gandhi; he
was not released until 1944.
; In I?fi5, Singapore proclaimed its independence from the Malaystan
Federauon.
; In 1969, actress Sharon Tale and four other people were found brulally
mllfllered in Tate's Los Angeles home. Cult leader Charles Manson and a
~up of his young disciples were later convicted of the crime.
; In 1974, President Nixon's resignation lOOk effecL Vice President Ger-.
al~ R. Ford became the nation· s 38th chief executive.
· , In 1985, a federal judge in Norfolk, Va., found retired Navy officer
AitiuirJ. Walker guilty of seven counts of spying for the Soviet Union.
• In 1988, President Reagan nominated Lauro Cavazos to be secretarY of
education and the fust Hispanic ever to serve in the Cabinet
! Ten year$ ago: On the h.eels of a baseball players strike, the National
League defeated the Amencan League, 5.-4, m the 52nd All-Star game,
18yed in Cleve.land. .
.
.
. .
p ' Five years ago: Pres1dent Reagan underwent a urolog1cal e~armnaoon
at· Betheselll Naval Hospital. outside Washington, and said afterward,
"Everything's normal. eve.rything's fme."
·

~ page

Fair entries up this year

~a~ ~c;F~HlER.

By Jack Anderson
and Dale VanAtta
squeeze $400,000 out of him, even
though he has an affidavit from the
head of the company saying Heiland was not responsible for the
payroll taxes.
The Heilands have received
some help from Sen. Charles
Grassley, R-Iowa, but their ordeaJ
continues. "My family is suffering
because of the mishandling and
collection of the taxes," John Heiland said. ''One of our daughters
may not be able to finish college
because we can't help her financially. Another daughter can't have
the wedding she planned.''
Fred Goldberg, the federal tax
commissioner, talks of creating a
kinder, gentler IRS, but that philosophy is not evident yet.
THE KEATING ONE - The
Senate Ethics Commillee spent $2
million on a 14-month investigation of the conduct of five senators.
The "Keating Five" took campaign contributions from savingsand-loan kingpin Charles Keating
and then pulled strings for him with
federal thrift regulators. The committee gave a slap on the wrist to
four of the five, and then singled
out Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Calif.,
to be sent to the full Senate for
stern disciplinary action. Now there
are signs that the Senate is waffling
about laking Cranston to the woodshed. Cranston once told Keating
that the two of them had a ''mutual
aid SO!:iety...
MINI-EDITORIAL
Congress resorted to slealth at least
twice last month to pick the pockets of the American taxpayers.
First, the Senate effectively raised
its own pay in a late-night vote.
Now the House has quietly slipped
in yet another tax hike, attached to
legislation that it hopes the president cannot veto. This time it's a 5
cents-a-gallon gasoline tax increase ·
tacked on to a transportation bill
with the high-sounding purpose of .
modernizing the nation's infrastructure. But this transportation bill ·
has a high pork content, as in pork- .
barrel projects.
Copyright, 1991, United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

Church B&amp;E investigated
Meigs County Sheriffs Deputies were caiJed to the Harrisonville
Church at 11:30 p.m. on Thursday.
'
·
Three subjects were reportedly breaking into the church, but
while the dispatcher was on the line, left in a small-ve~icle and
headed down New Lima Road. One subject was reported ·as carrying a crowbar.
When deputies reported to the scene, it was discovered that no
entry had been made. Deputies were urlllble to locate the vehicle.

Vandalism incidents reported
Nellie Myers of Stale Route 325 near Langsville reported to the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department on Thursday evening that a
vehicle had run over her mailbox and newspaper tube. No information as to type of vehicle or direction of uavel was available.
William Kerr of Albany reported that someone had egged his
house sometime after 4 p.m. on Thursday.

EMS units answer nine calls
Meigs Emergency Medical Services units answered nine calls on
Thursday and early on Frillay.
·
At 11:52 a.m., Racine sqilad went to Greenwood Cemetery Road
for Avanelle Evans. Evans was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 3:21 p.m., Middleport unit went to Sycamore Street; Norben
Neutzling was taken to Holzer Medical Center. At .4:08 p.m.,
Racine squad went to Hayman Road. Esther Powell was taken to
Veterans. At6:03 p.m., Middlepon unit went to Rutland for an auto
accident. Terry Wolfe was taken to Veterans. At 8:33p.m., Tuppers
Plains unit went to Stale Route 681 West Clark Taylor was taken to
St. Joseph Hospital. At 11:31 p.m., Middleport unit went to Race
and Second SlreelS. Chris Rayburn was lrealed but not transported.
At 12:41 a.m., Pomeroy unit went to Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center. Roben Canaday went to Veterans. At 1:21
a.m., Middleport unit went to an auto fue on South Sixth. Richard
Bailey was the owner. At 2:45 am., Middleport went to Overbrook
Center for Leota Shaeffer, who went to Veterans.

on my desk to see if I c·ould redirect the gust elsewhere, to no avail.
The brain trust that designed the
building didn't have the foresight
of the folks who designed my
house, and didn't put in vents one
can manually close when an area is
cool enough.
"If I could just open that window, I could be warm again," I
think, matching the fervor with
which the Lillie Match Girl foolishly struck away all her matches.
I, 100, am willing to let my future
be damned and fling open the windows in the hope of holding off the
chill for a moment, even if it lets
more fossil fuels out that window
than are burning in Kuwait. It's
hard to be reasonable when your
brain is stuck to your skull like a
tongue to a Popsicle.
But of course I can't. Just like
the windows in all the buildings I
have worked in for the last 15
years, they don't open. The brain

It is the most gorgeous August
day one could hope for, unseasonably mild with only the slightest
touch of the Missouri humidity that
usually saps our bones of anything
tensile and leaves us draped,
raglike, across our furniture. The
cool nights have been !he stuff of
great literature, with full moons
flooding our carpets through
opened windows.
Outside my office, birds float
lazily over the picnic tables in our
company's front yard. I think they
may be chirping: Their little beaks
are tilled toward the trees and their
bodies quiver. Beneath our graceful
old shade trees, employees from
the company across the street eat
their sack lunches. A soft breeze
blows a Ziploc bag across the yard.
Inside, I sit at my desk huddled
in a dress, blazer, underalls and old
softball jacket. The air-conditioning vent above me directs an icy
blast at my head and my sinuses
are enraged. I've already climbed

trust. a~ain. They mew.some sman
aleck like me would think that my
body temperature being at 92.1
would be more Important than ~e
temperature at the thermostat bemg
a c&lt;&gt;!'lfonable 70 degrees, and open
a wmdow, or that perhaps some
he~IV~ guy atlhe other end of the
bu1ldmg where ~e system doesn't
work so well m1ght open one to
keep from passmg out
You. see, those boys have been
to archnectural college, and they
understand the. chaos you can ~ve
1f you stanletung people open wmdows.- He.re's how one of them
explained 111o me recently:
' 'First, you open windows and
the next thmg you know a good
stiff breeze slarlS whipping papers
off people's desks. Preuy soon
you've gotta go to the office-supply store and buy paperwe1ghts for
everyone m the place, and that
could run up a horrible tab. say
$14.50 or so. Then there's the fan

alert observers will note· that
George Bush is president. He
signed the bill into law.
But there is more. Journalists
tend 10 equate successful domestic
policy with positive acts. But negative actions may be as important as
positives. For example, Bush's
threatened veto of the minimumwage increase kept the increase
low and was "domestic policy."
(Liberals think that's mean. Conservatives think it's necessary.
Take your choice.)

Marriage licenses granted
Marriage licenses have been
granted in Meigs County Probate
Court to Joseph J. Hart, 63. and
Patricia F. Kllchen , 50, both of
Boca Raton, Fla.; to Mark
Coughenour, 39, Langsville, and
Deborab Sue Coffey, 34, Rutland:
and to Mary Ray Jarrell, 23, and
Aimee LeAnn Hill, 18, both of
Racine.

problem. You let people open win- '
dows, then some wise guy brings in
a fan. A fan! Can you believe it?
Now you gotta put TWO paperweights on everyone's desk and
there's another $14.50 dow~ the
drain. Then that darn fan yanks·
some woman's dress up over her
head, you've got yourself a sexual ·
harassment charge."
Well, he didn't have to go any
further to convince me, although I.
did later suffer a small crisis of ·
faith when I heard a radio report· about the dangers of the air in mod- .
ern buildings, and read that buildings with windows you can open
only use half the energy that seaJed
structures use. Sexual harassment
bas no place in the office - even if .
some of us do catch pneumonia,
large men need occasiOnal CPR
and the company spends $1,800 a
month on its air-conditioning bill.

Am Ele Power .................. 29 1!2
Discharges, August 8 - Mrs.
Ashland Oil ..................... .31
Raymond Andrews and son, Julie
AT&amp;T................................39 5/8
Bolen, Leechona Clagg, Darlene
Bob Evans ........................ 18 3/4
Ellioll, Mrs. Michael Fry and son,
Randy hughes, Belly Merica!, Ira Charming Shop.................. 23 518
City Holding ........ ............. 14
Sowards and Anna Mae Walker.
Federal Mogui... ................ I6 1/4
Births, August 8 - Mr. and
Goodyear
T&amp;R .................38 5/8
Mrs. Tim Deem of Pomeroy, a Key
Centurion
..................15
daughter.
Lands' End ....................... 19 3/4
Limited Inc ....................... 31 3/8
Multimedia Inc . ................ 28 3/4
South-Central Ohio
Rax Restaurant. ................ 13/32
Tonight, mostly cloudy with a
Robbins&amp;Mycrs .............. .32 318
chance of showers. The low 60 10
Shoney •s Inc ..................... 15 5/8
65. North winds 5 to 10 mph. The
Star Bank .............. :........... 21 1!2
chance of rain is 40 percent SaturWendy Int'l... ....................9 318
day,. variable cloudiness. The high
Worthington Ind ............... 25 1(2
around 80. The chance of rain is 20
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
percent.
quotes pro~ided by Blunt, Ellis
Extended forecast:
and Loewl of Gal/lpolis.
Sunday through Tuesday
Fair each day e~cept for a slight
Wendy's is e:r-dl~idend today.
chance of showers or thunderstorms in the southeast Monday
and Tuesday. Lows middle 50s to
middle 60s. Highs upper 70s to
middle 80s.

Weather

And consider the civil
rights/quotas bill. It deaJs with our .
most important question: How are
we going to get along wilh each
other? Are the spoils to be carved
up proportionally, on the basis of
race, gender and ethnicity? I think
that is the signal sent by the Democratic biD. Bush's alternative is less
offensive. His threat to veto the bill
has already made the negotiated
product somewhat helter. That's
policy. That's domestic.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 115-IM)
A Dlvilllon of Multimedia, Int.
PublishEd every aftornoon. Monday
through Friday. l1l Court St .. Po·
moroy. Ohio. by Ihe Ohto Vall ey Publishing Company / Multlmf'dla, Inc ..
Pom•roy. Ohio 45769. Ph. 992·21!16. S..
cond c lass posla~t" paid at Pomf'roy.
Assocte~tf'd

Ohio Nt"wspaper AssOC'Iatlon. National

POSTMASTER: Send addrt'Ss chanl(fS
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No subscriptions by mall permitted. In

areas wherE' home carrier service- Is
avalljlble.

Malll!ubocrlpllou · ,
lnalde Melp CGullly · ·
13 Weeks ............... .............. .. ... $21.84
26 Wl'ekS .......... ................. .. ..... 143.16
52 Weeks ...... ............. ............. .. $84.76

~I.

Outside Melp CGoiM)'
13 Wl'eks ....... .... .......... ... ....... ... 123.40
26 Weeks .. ......... ... .. .................. $45.!10 .
52 Woeks .. ..... .................. .,, ... .:. 1118.40·

'·

' ,)

'

DAV to meet
ADK ran picnic and meeting
The Disabled American VeterThe ADK fall picnic and meetans and Ladies Auxiliary will hold ing will be held Wedne.8jlay, Aug.
its annual picnic at the Syracuse 21, at 6:30p.m. at the home of
Park next to the tennis court on Linda Fisher m Syracuse. Members
Monday at 6 p.m. Bring a covered plan to attend.
dish.
Action Club to meet
Volleyball meeting
The IOlh Congressional District
There will be an organization Democratic Action Club will hold
meeting for seventh and eighth its summer meeting on Wednesday,
grade girls at Meigs Junior High Aug. 21, at6 p.m. atlhe home of
School interested in playing volley- Mary Hunter, 37613 Texas Road,
ball on Monday at 6:30 p.m. at the off Route 7 at Chester. There will
junior high stadium. Parents are be a potluck picnic with meat and
urged to auend.
beverages to be furnished. All
Church supper
Democrats in the 13 counties of the
The Wilkesville Methodist I Oth Congressional District are
Church is having a chicken-noodle invited to attend. Call 985-3355 for
and homemade ice cream supper further information.
on Aug. 17 at 4 p.m. Cost iS $4 for
Board to meet
adults and $2 for children under 12.
The Racine Board of Public
The church is located on Route 160 Affairs. will meet Tuesday at 10
at Wilkesville.
a.m. at council chambers.
Clarification
Two names unintentionally
mentioned as sending a gift for the
recent baby shower of Roben and
Tracy (Manley) Lawson, held at
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
the Middleport American Legion
" "" .. '
446 4524
Hall, were Mrs. Nancy Hubbard
and Mrs. Melinda Venoy.
H

I ill

I'

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....

AND
. . . SIIYZI

.

'
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..

II"' PilE AIIEIIUIE

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... .,..,.,_ .,... ~~
......1111
. .. .....
,

'

.

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IF 111 SIIIEI!"

... ' .
~~~;.:i:
•
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NOW SHOIIIHGi

FRIDAY 7 : 20.~: 1 0
SAT .I : 20,3' t0,7 :20,9 : 10
S UH . l , 20,l:l0,7:20,~ : 10

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION $1.50
44b-0923

l«lN . • TH RS.7:

SEARS MIDDLEPORT

SAVE 10°/o
OR MORE

ON EVERYTHING IN THE STORE!*

YES!

Correction

,l SAVE BIG

WE WILL MEET OR BEAT ANY PRICE "~i ON ONE-OF·A·KIND ITEMS AND
THAT OUR COMPETITORS ADVERTISE!'
DISCONTINUED ITEMS!'

The Meigs County Board of
Elections will meet at 4 p.m .,
instead of 7 p.m. for their regular
business meeting on Friday.

ITEM DESCRIPnON
NO.
29841 Waslter
78638 Gts Dry•
69841Dryar
61721 Dryer
32621 Waslti!·Whlrlpaol
42621 Dry•
21721 Waslt11
60501 Dry•
61741 Drf•
19101 Waslt11
69101 Dryer
19501 Wasltor
69211 Dry•
19211 Waslt11
36568 SlS Rtlrigtratar
51271 SxS Rtlrigtratar
31051 SxS Rtlri··Witirlpool
41231 SxS ltlrigtlafar
752S I Ralrigaratar
84968 Ralrigaratar·GE
70051 Ralrig~~atar
61811 Refrigerator
90174 Co~act Rtlrigtlafor
49041 Zeallh 25" Cottstlt IV
49062 RCA 26" CottsoltlV
49064 RCA 26" CottsoltlV
40791 RCA 13" 1V
41005 LXIIf'IV

A. -JACKSON
BAILES, O.D.

SAVE

WAS

47.50 494.99
31.50 339.99

40.oo m.99

33.00
40.00
32.00
43.50
26.60
35.00
27.00
23.00
34.00
25.00
30.00
141JO
117JO
91.00
10.00
76.00
76.00
73.00
41.00
10.00

349.99
424.99
339.79
459.99
215.99
369.99
299.00
249.00
364.00
269.99
324.99
1441.tt
lltt...
944.99
929.99
795.00
719.94
759.99
s14.00
109.99
ss.oo 569.99
62.00 639.99
51;00 599.99
30.00 309.99
22.00 229. 9'

NOW
447.49
301.49
379.99
316.99
314.99
30719
416.49
259J9
334.99
272.00
226.00
330.99
244.99
294.99
I!OO.M
1.2...
153.99
749.99
719.00
71 U4
616.99
466.00
99.99
51'.99
577.99
541.99
279.99
207.99

·sears Brand Center Pric•ng Pledge: Vas we will meet or beat the
ad to local Sears CatalOg Brand Center StOfe.
··
Some items ma~ be one -ot -a-kincl , sold as is.

1;y1•.w 1307.99
l'tii1'..'1S69.19
tit1'·"1247.99
I~"··" 361.99
IOOJMI ~19J6 19916
764.99
IW,,111171'1,, 199.99
199."
64.00
SI5J7
31.00
36U3
27.50
262.47
30.oo
269.n
30.00
269.97
24.00
216.11
22.00
25.00
224.99
30.00
269."
21.30
271.69

197."

15.17

162.10

13.27
24.00

139.40

217."
131J2
13.17
144.10
27.00 21U9 26199

15.17

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30.10
.!

'

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·.

162.10

191;10
292.20

iOentlcalttem. Just bling In competitor't c:urrerw
applies to store stOCk Ol'ltf. Oulntititllllnlted.

'

'.

235."

22.00
12.37

'\\.·.

\

~

$3 . 00
13 . 00
BARGAIN MATINEE S SATURDAY &amp; SUND.IIY
BARGAIN tt\G~T TUESDAY

992-3279 or stop' ·&amp;y the
office at 110 Mechanic Street in Pomeroy to
set up yo\11' appointment.
:f

~

.

,Y~u ·m~y phon~
'

'

COLONY THEATRE

Dr. A. Jackson Bailes, Optometrist,
announces the establishment of new office
hours which began August 1, 1991. The
new hours are: Tuesday, Wednesday and
Friday-9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and is also
open the first and third Saturdays each
month from 9:00 a.m. to 12 noon.
Dr~ Bailes provides total optometric eye
care, fits all types .of contact le~ses and
pro.v ides Jow ·vision care. Assignment is
accepted on ·, :Me~Hcare; and all major eye
car~ il\,s'&amp;irance's .are )Ionore d. ·

Advertising Rf1)rPSt~ntatlvE'. Branham
Nowopaper Sal.,, 733 Third Avenue.
Now York. New York t0017.

I .

__ Meigs announcements_

w

Prt&gt;ss, In-

land Dally Prt'Ss Association and th('o

On{' Ye-ar. .

The following names have been
selected as prospective Grand
Jurors in the Meigs County Common Pleas Court for the September,
199llerm:
Bernice Hoffman, Rutland;
Esta Roberts, Pomeroy; Paula Ann
Rife, Middlepon; Crystal K. Stanley, Racine: Deborah 1. Brennan,
Pomeroy ; Earl A. Black, Jr.,
Albany; David R. Hutton, Albany;
Ronald C. Cozart, Pomeroy;
Harold R. Long, Pomeroy; Donald
E. Roush, Syracuse; Gregory Lee

110 MECHANIC ST.
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
992·3279

Ohio.

Mrmbcr: Thr

Names drawn for grand jury duty

Nine were fmed and three others
forfeited bonds in the court of Middlepon Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night
Fined were Heather D. Thomas,
Middleport, $25 and costs, no operator's license; Catherine Schultzman, $10 and costs, ruMing a stop
sign; John T. Robinson, Shade, $10
and costs, no motorcycle endoiSement, and $10 fme only on no eye
protection; Gerald L. Armstrong,
Jr., Middleport, $25 and costs, disorderly manner.
Vincent Laudermilt, Middleport,
$I 0 and costs, running a stop sign;
Danny W. Kuhn, Langsville, $10
and costs, expired registration, and
$10 fine only, expired operator's
license; Randy K. Lee, Middleport,
$25 and costs. reckless operation:
and Ryan S. Jeffers, Middleport,
$25 and costs, reckless operation:
and Ricky A. Laudermih from
Youngstown, $100 and costs, driving under suspension.
Delmas Goff, Langsville, $110,
disorderly manner: Christina Kirk,
Gallipolis, $110, disorderly manner; and Robert G. Robinson,
Pomeroy. $210, driving under suspension.

Stocks

Holzer Medical Center

High temperatures in the North·
east were forecast in the 70s today,
while highs in the 90s were expect·
ed in the South. Highs in .the 80s
were expected in the Plains and
Southern CaJifornia. Highs in the
60s were forecast for the Pacific
Northwest
The high temperature for the
Johnson, Racine; Carl B. Weese,
Syracuse; David P. Cain, Albany: nation Thursday was 113 degrees
Dale Ray Little, Pomeroy; WiUiam at Phoenix, Bullhead City, Ariz.,
R. Williams, Pomeroy; Jeffrey A. and Laughlin, Nev.
McElroy, Pomeroy; Patricia D.
Humphrey, Pomeroy: Denise K.
Howell, Pomeroy; Charles Mark
Sauters, Pomeroy; Gathel Lee
Shaffer, Pomeroy: Shirley E.
Guinther, Pomeroy; Geraldine Varney, Long Bottom; Gary A. Barr,
Reedsville; Michael L. Barr,
Pomeroy: and Shirley Ann Balser,
Tuppers Plains.

and released .
Tornadoes touched down Thursday in Indiana. A tornado also
touched down in Ohio, about 40
miles southwest of Columbus.

Middleport Court

Hospital news

By· Sarah Overstr·oet'
"'

Huachuca, Ariz., were injured
when lightning hit the pavement
near where they were working.
Three were hospitalized in stable
condition. The others were treated

'

Dissolutious, divorces processed
An action for dissolution of
marriage has been filed in Meigs
County Cummon Pleas Court to
Charle:: D. Barrell, Jr. and Ann B.
Barrell, and to John W. McKinney
and Shelly L. McKinney.
A divorce has been granted to
Terry Walll:er from Sherry Walker
and to Susan K. Koenig from Rickie K. Koenig.

Continued from page I
based relief agency that employs and the French government, denied
the missing Frenchman, Jerome that accusation.
"We h!lreby declare that he will
Leyraud.
Police in Beirut today officially be executed the moment another
listed the 26-year-old Leyraud as hostage is released,'' the caller told
missing, but said they had no con- a Western 11ews a$ency in Beirut.
He provided no mformation or
firmation he had been abducted.
An anonymous caller claiming photograph to authenticate his
to speak for the Organization for claim that Leyraud was being held.
On Wednesday, a .caller claimthe Defense of the Prisoners'
ing
to represent the same group
Rights claimed ·Leyraud was an
intelligence officer. His employers said it set off grenades near a U.N.
office in Beirut to warn against the
unilateral release of a hostage.
The group had not been heard
from
before Wednesday . The
Veterans Memorial
who sounded as though he
caller,
THURSDAY ADMISSIONS was
reading
a wriuen statement,
Sharon Warner, Pomeroy; William
did
not
use
any
Islamic phrases Finkenbinger, Racine; Ellen
unlike
Shiite
groups.
Young, Racine.
THURSDAY DISCHARGES Alice Young and Marlin Morris.

Kinder, gentler, tougher, meanefBen Wattenberg
It's said, by Democrats, that ?resident Lyndon Johnson. After
''George Bush has no domestic five years in office, he went back to
policy," and that "America is grid- !he ranch proud of his hundreds of
locked." They demand of the "signing pens," each signifying
globe-trotting president: "George "major legislation." Bush could
serve for 25 years and not be able
Bush, come home!"
Foreign policy experts who have to express that sentiment, or want
been spectacularly wrong about lO.
What is bedeviling Democrats
foreign policy no.w say the best foreign policy is domestic policy. about Bush is that he is not quite a
(My, doesn't a liberaJ arts educa- "conservative" president in the
tion yields cosmic insights into aU sense described above. His political
fields?)
philosophy seems to combine fow
The implication is that "lack of adjectives: "Kinder." "Gentler,"
a domestic policy " will be a "Meaner" and "Tougher."
Republican burden in the election. Because most Americans would
We shall see.
endorse at least two of those four
There would seem 10 be 1wo words (and some, three or four),
contested ideas in all democratic Bush has ionospheric approval ratgovernments. Always. Everywhere. ings.
One is the activist belief: " Do
The Bush people, for example,
something, don't just stand there!" stress that they have done some
The other notion IS passive: "Don't fine, kind, gentle things on the
just do something, stand there!."
domestic front They point to clean
The policy to Do Something is air, child care, drugs and civil
called "liberalism." It is a perfect- rights for the disabled. You can get
ly respectable view. The policy to an argument about these laws, but
S1and There is called "conser- it's not exactly gridlock. They also
vatism." It was expressed most point 10 proposals that the Democlearly by Ronald Reagan: "Gov- cratic Congress has not acted upon:
ernment is not the solution: it is the crime, energy, enterprise zones,
problem." By limiting govern- educational choice and -home ownment, say conservatives, the cre- ership for the poor.
ative juices of the people can flow
Domestic Bushpersons claim
unimpeded, creating greater pros- the "budget package" wiD cut the
perity. That too is a respectable deficit, pulling interest rates down,
idea.
spurring investment. They say their
• So, in one sense, Democrats are increases in ''research and develright. A conservative president is opment" will make.America more
not going to have an activist, laun- competitive. Bushies c~ credit
dry-list domestic policy. He is .for the new immigration law. That
aJways attaclcable for "not having is fme new policy, but it bubbled
a domestic policy.''
up through Congress, before the
One of my liberal heroes was White House got involVed. Still,

Court news

Families...

A frigid summer blasts the heartland

remain cloudy over Ohio tonight }

By Tbe Associated,Press
Mostly cloudy skies are expected across Ohio tonight. A few
showers may linger over eastern
and southern Ohio early tonight.
Otherwise it will be mainly dry.
Lows tonight will range from the
middle 50s in the north to the middle 60s in the south.
On Saturday, an upper level low
pressure system will pass across
the lower great lakes. This will
likely cause the atmosphere to
become unstable across the state.
Variably cloudy skies are e~pected
Saturday and there is a chance for
showeiS in the north. Highs on Saturday will be from the middle 70s
to around 80.
Record high for this dale was 98
in 1930; record low was 5 I in
1989.
Sunrise Saturday wiD be at6:37;
sunset at8:37.
Around the Dation
Thunderstorms struck the East
before dawn today, while clouds
promising more ram stretched iniO
the Great lakes and into Oklahoma
and Arkansas.
Showers and thunderstorms also
were expected in the Northwest,
the Plains and in the Desen Southwest.
On Thursday, lightning killed a
(an at the PGA golf tournament
near Indianapolis.
Also, 12 soldiers from the 209th
Signal Company stationed at Fon

A total of 2,280 entries, up 530 from last year, were made in the
open classes for the 128th Meigs County Fair which will open Monday.
Entries in the various classes were as follows:
.
Draft horse, 37; dry cattle, 104; bee( cattle, 22; sheep and swine,
22; poultry, 10; farm crops, 38S; hay show, 23; giange 4, Monday
flower show, 556; Thursday flower show, 323; domestic arts, 189:
painting, 7: photo I 16; baking and canning, 482.

IRS isn't picky about who pays the piper

The Daily Sentinel
•
•

r----,_;,_Local
briefs.~.-. Skies WI._II
·Coalillued
1

Pag&amp;-2-The Dally_Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
.!rl~ay, ~ysus~ 9, 1991 .

The Dally Sentinel Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,,

,,

'.

�'

I

'

Friday, August 9, 1991

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Friday, August 9, 1991
Page-4

By Tbe Associated Press
As far as Jerry Glanville is con-

cerned, the good guys wear black.
But they won't be wearing it
tonight when his Atlanta Falcons
meet the Houston Oilers in an NFL

now.''
The Dodgers won three in a row

after a loss to Cincinnati on Monday lhat allowed the World Series
champions to get within 5 1/2
games in the National League
West. Now Cincinnati is 8 1/2
games back, matching its largest
deficit of the season.
" We dug a hole and we ' re in
it," Cincinnati's Herm Winningham said. "Now we'll see if we
can climb out. How deep is it? Not

...

. .

"\

Scoreboar·d
In the majors•••

Saturday's games
Bouon (Harria 7-11) at Toronto (Stottlcmyn: 104) . 1:35 p.m.
Detroit (Terrell 7-10) 11 New York
(Sandcnon7-ll), 7:30p.m.
C~ie1ao (G1n:i1 3-3) u Baltimore
(Smull H), 7:3S p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

..

Eulcm Dhillon
Tum
W L Pet.
PITI'SBURCH 0 &lt;W .515
SLI..ouio . .......... S7 49 531
New Yod
S7 SO j33
........ 52 55 .486
Chiaso
Pt.ihdololll&gt; ....... 49 51 .458
Moouul
........ 44 62 .415

CB

5
S.S

San Dteao
Howtm

Cle•eland (Olio f.%) at IUnou Clly

10.5

(Saberfla. . ""' s:es p.m.

CB

0-2), 9:05p.m.
Oakland CDarlina 1-0) 1t Californi1
~ 14-S), IO:Mp.m.
Minnaota (Ericbon 15-3) at Se.ttdc
(ll.uuon 6-S), 10:05 p.m.

Milwallkoc (Ptuc ~)at Tuu (Boyd

13.5
II

Wellern Dhillon

Team
Loo Angcleo ......
Alilnta
..... ....
CINCINNATl .
San Francisco .. ..

W L Pet.
61 46 .570
56 SO 528
SZ 5&lt; A9l
!52 !i3 .486

4.5
11.5
9
9.5
15

.. !i2 !i6 .48 1
.. ....... 46 61 .430

Sunday's RIUDK

Detroit.1tNew Yolk, I:30 p.m.
Chie1go ll Baltimore, 1:35 p.m.
BOIIOn It Tc:.QCIIO. 1:35 p.m.
CIHtland al Kanau Cl!l!t 2:35 p.m.
Ooklandat Calilomio, 4:1Jl pm.
.
MinneiOta tl Seatile. 4:3S p.m.
Milwaukee It Tau,I:QS p.m.

Thursday's scores
Philadclpbilll, OUcaao I
1M Anaela f, Cincinnati 4
Ntw Ywk 4. Pllllburah 3

·

~

~ajorleagueleaders

San Francilco 8, AtlanLI I
San Diego 5, HOUltOn 3
Montrcllat SL LoW&amp;, ppd., rtin

BATIINO - " " ' - . Allwl, .!31;
T. Gwynn, San Di~:~o, .3t7; NU.ao, At·
hnta, .321; Morrl1, Clnc:l1nal~ .311; ·
Jo.e, St. J..ou.U, .312; Bigio, HOUI\Oll,:
.307; Buii«,Lco Aosol-. .lOS.
RUNS - BuLler, Lot AIIJdet, 71;
SandberJ, Chic1ao, 74£ Johuon, New
York, 72; Pencil....,, Alluua, 61; O..t,
Athnll, 67 : J. lell, PUtaburalt, U;
Nixon, Atl,.ta , 65: 0 . Smith, Sc I..cuis,
65.
RBI- W. Clark, San l'nociJco, 13:
Johnton, Now
Bondi, Pllllburah,
York, 76; Dowson,
7l; lkllllll,

Today's games
New York (Cane 10-!) at Cbicaao
(t-bdchu. 9-6), 3:20 p.m.
Montreal (BamCI 2-4) at Philadelphia

(Gn&gt;enol.4), 7:35p.m.
SL Loull (B. Smlllt 9-7) al Pllllbu111h
(Smiley 13-1), 1!35 p.m.
HouslOil (Deohaia 4-l) ll Alilnta (A•·
ery 12-S). 7:40p.m.
ClndnnaU (Sanford f.l) II San DJeao
(Ra.,_n 3-P), 11:15 p.m.
Loc Anaclcs (Bclcbcr 7-7) at San Francisco (Wilion 7-9 ~ 10:35 p.m.

"i
OUcaao.

Pltllbltrah, ''; o . Bclf, Oti~•ao. ~;

Saturday's ~:ames

Oam, Atlanta, 67; Man Willianu, San
Frutcilco,67.
lOTS- T. GwyM, Sm Dieao, 146;

New Yolk (Whitdnult $-7) tt Chicago
(CIIlillo 4-2), 2:21) p.m.

BUllae, Leo ""&amp;cleo, 126; ·- . . , , At·
hnta , 120; Sandbcra, Chicaao, 120;
Grace. Chi.c:aso, 118; J01e. SL l..ouil, Ill;

Loll Angelcll (R. "Manincz I~) It San
francilco (Robinlon S.l), 4:05 p.m.
Montreal (Haney 1·4) at Philadelphia
(Ddca;U17~). 7:05p.m.
Sl Loula (Hllll-1) al Plllabor1th (undecided~ 7.t5 p.m.
Houtton (Htrniacb 6-7) at Atlanta
(Smolu 7-12), 7:10p.m.
Clndnud (Rijo 1-2) al Sao DJeao (0.

..

Milwa..... l~~;""'*"'--... 131;
c. Ripktln. Bal-. 131; Franco. Teua,
136; Sierr1, Teua, 132; R. Alomtr,

TOIOIIto,l:l!. ·
DOUBLES - hlmeinl. Tau. 32: R.
Alanu, Tora!to, 31; ·Boga, Booton, 31;
Carter, Toroalo, JO; C. Ripbn, BalDmore, 30; Whit.o, Toronto, 29; Brett,
~Cily,21. 1

-'Molitor, MilwauUc, I 0;
R. AJanu, TCJOillO, 7; - · Califorru.a, 7; Wbila..-TCirCIIUO, 7; Mdtao.. x-u
niPLI!S

'i

City, 6; While., Clnela•d,
Dov-ua,Baltimon,6; ........... - .

6o Ralnoa. auc.ao. 6.

HOME RUNS - Pioldc, Dauoil, 32;
Cnseeo, Oakland, 30; C. Davit. Min....... 26:
r......,. :lA: c. Ripk&lt;~~, Bablmorl, 23:,D. llmdonoo, Oak·
land, 23; lltomU. Qticleo, 22; O.,l)o.
uoil, 22; TUIIbuJt'IAmUCily,22.
fTOLBN iiiMI!S-:-R· llenderooa,
\)alilatd, rr:
Cliooao. 36: a. AI&lt;&gt;
. IIIIi. :r-to. 3
loolia. 'CalifOIIlia, 31;
O.yl61.Jltiloai&lt;: ; Wltilo, Taranto, 26:

c.n..

IOkiaioao)- Ezi.a.n,
:ai7J~
. . .J~,.:,.,3, 2.:16; Haaaotnaa.

""-·Cali-

Natiooal League

Hanto W), ti:IS,....

Samuel, LOll AnaeJe.. 118.
DOUBLES - Joae , St. Louit, 32;
McReynaldt. New York . 27; Morrla.

Clndnaall, 26; Bonilla, PllbiMirJJI, U;

Clan~ Alilnta, 24; ""'dl"""· Allwl. 24:
tied wilh 23.

s...

TRIPW -l.WfMI, St Louia, tO; T.

Douoi• 9-:Z.\111,,:1,45;
, ...... 14-~,
• • 3.45; lWoi. o.t.laM,

r-.•o.

1-3,.~
4,.7
t&gt;~. ~ .
• auc.
14-6,
.700,1 •
• OUcaao. !f-3: .700,
12l::Fialoy""""

Hc:~utort, ~:

Sunday's cames

I :3S p.m.
SL Loula II Pllllburah, 1:35 p.m.
HOUilOil at Allwl, 2:10p.m.
ClndnnaU al San DJeao, 4:11! p.m.
1.01 An&amp;dc:~ at SanFrancisco,4:05 p.m.
New York at Clicaao, 8:05p.m.

Firtloy, Hou.ston, 7; KNt,

Pltiladctpltia, 6; C..ndaotc, HOllltOn, 6;

Felder, San Fnnda~o. 6; V11 Sl)'ke1
PIIUbaralt, 'HOM£ RUNS - Gant, Atlanta, 23;
Mau Willlanu, San Franciaco, 23; Joba·
ICI\, New Yodc, 23; W. Cadr., San Fnncilco, 22; Mit.ehell, San Fnnciaco, 2.1;
O'Neill, Cincinnati, 2t; McOriff, San

Di'l•· 20: o. Bell. auc.so. :w.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Easttm DlvWon
W L Pet.
GB
......... 62 47 569
Deovit
........... 56 S2 519 S lf/.
BoolOI\
.......... SO ~7 .467
11
New Yoll:
....... 41 57 .457
12
Milwa\IUc
...... 47 61 .435 141(/.
........ 43 64 .4112
11
Ballim'"'
CLEVELAND
35 71 .l3l 25.5

T..,.
Ton&gt;nlo

STOlEN BASES - Nil.on, Atlanta,
62; Orinom, Monlrell, 41: DeSitieldo,
Montreal. 42; Colan1n, Now York, 36;
Pllllllurp, lf; BUller, Leo Aoscloo, 30; l.WfMI, Sl Louia, 29.
PITCJDNO (10 deci,iont) - RUo,
Clftclaitall, a.z, ..,., Z.tl; Hunt, S~n

a-.

14-6, .700, 4.06:

o••.tn -.14-6. .100. 4.02.

STRlUOI1IS ..... R. - . . . Seaulc,
159; a..-, B - . lSI; Rym, Tau.
145; Mdlowoll, Qicqo.l31; Cadioai,
T-10. 129; .......... CallrOIIlia, 127;

-,c.._,JU.

SA YES - 'llc.tonlaJ,•OUlllld, 30;
Apllaa, - . 2 9 : llamoy, Cali!...
nit, 2!1; Hcakc, Toronto., 2$; Roudon,
11ortoa, 25; Olson, Balllm.,., :!A: This·
,.,., Clicaao, 24.

Transactions

.

BIHbaU
,_
...._

1l!XAS RANOI!KS - Jilaced Jctr llu- inlloldor, lll tho 15-d.ol.t.f~lod lilt.
Rocallcd ~- lfomandea,
• '"""

Tulu tllbe r ............ ~Dow
SdaMil, - · .. - - wlib l1le Ott·
l.oboml&lt;llyolllle--li
....

...._.
.......
llaAVI!S-

OwyM, San Dieao, 10: L. Oonulez,

Monuu111 Aliladelpltia,

A1L\HI'4

WoiWid Riel

Mahler, phehu. Rectllad Armando
a._ pi..... - - . . oflbe

In-Leo-.

CINCIIiNATfliDS-- Mart.

110 Dllta1, IHHd ........ , .,. the

15-UJ ........ 1111. lltclllad Freddie
- ................ -Nullollle&lt;l
lllltMierlcu~·-·

P1TTSIURGH - Placad Vlcoolt
PIIICIOI, c~ 00 liM 1S.day dla·
-~~~·
......
~ pllclto
er,
froa BYrfllo fll
dtt blerulloaal

...._

Sports briefs

Base baD
PHll.ADELPHIA (AP) - The
Chicago Cubs, upset that National
League president Bill White chose
not to suspend Cincinnati Reds
reliever Rob Dibble for throwing at
the legs of baserunner Doug Dascenzo, are drafting a protest to
White.
White announced Wednesday
that he had fined Dibble an undisclosed sum for the incident, in
which Dibble fielded a bunt by
Dascenzo, then appeared to purpo~ly fli'C his throw to flfSt at Dascenzo's legs. The Cubs plan to
send a letter to White recommending a suspension as well as a fine ·
against Dibble.
Tennis
TORONTO (AP)- Second·
seeded Manuela Maleeva-Fragnicre
defeated 16th-seeded Regina
Rajchrtova 6-1,6-2, and third-seed·
ed Jennifer Capriati beat Sara
Gomer 6-2, 6-3 in the third round
of the Player's Challenge.
Maleeva-Fragniere' s sister,
fourth·seeded Katerina Maleeva,
also advanced to the quarterfmais.
She beat 12th-seeded NaOlco Sawamatsu 6-1, 6-3.

Chica3o
Oakland
Texu

SCIOSCIA SCORES - The L.A. Dodgers' Mike Scioscia bits
the dirt and stirs up a cloud of dust at the plate after Reds pitcher
Gino Minutelli drops the baD wbUe covering the plate on a passed
ball iD the sixth inning of Tbursday night's gauie in Cincinnati,
which the Dodgers won 6-4. (AP)

MAKES CATCH -New York Giants wide
receiver Stepbeo Baker (rigbt) makes tbe catch
of a pass arter beating Cleveland Browns cornerback Frank Minnifield to the ball during

Lightning kills man at PGA tourney site

s..we

2

Detroit, Chicago, Milwaukee win
one good thing, it's that we don't
have to play a day game tomorrow.
Otherwise I'd be sleeping on the
couch (in his office)."
Gaston figured the Tigers would
have been a lot more demoralized
than the Blue Jays had lhey lost,
but he doesn't envy them having to
go into New York for a doubleheader.
"It's going to be Iough on
.them," Gaston said. "But it would
have been a lot tougher if they 'd
lost' '
With the win, the Tigen; avoid·
ed a series sweep, but struck out 44
times in the process.
"We're capable of striking out
that many times,'' said Ti~ers manager Sparlcy Anderson. ' But they
had a chance to destroy us, put us 7
1/2 back, and they didn't."
In other games, Chicago beat
Ne.w York 4·1 and Mil waukee
defeated Baltimore 64.
White Sox 4, Yankees 1
Franlc Thomas drove in two runs
and Alex Fernandez pitched eight
strong innings as Chicago completed a three-game sweep at
Comiskey Parle.
The White Sox have won four in
a row and 12 of I4. New York has
lost 10 of 12.
Fernandez (6·8) took a two-hit
shutout into the ninth, but left after
leadoff singles by Steve Sax and
Don Mattingly. Scott Radinsky
gave up an RBI single to Matt
Nokes, but finished for his fourth
.
CLEVELAND (AP) - The had taken it," ne 5810.
save.
: · . Cleveland Indians say a Texan's
Johnston charged that he was
Thomas doubled home a run in
· complaint that pitcher Eric King pushed out of the room, and pushed
the
third inning off Jeff Johnson (4, _ assaulted him after a Texas back at King, lcnocking him down. 5) and
hit an RBI single during a
Rangers game is a private matter King then threw a punch, hitting
between King and the police.
Johnston in the face, according to three-run fourth.
Brewers 6, Orioles 4
No charges have been filed. If the complainL
won a home -run
Milwaukee
charges were pressed, conviction of
Johnston could not be reached
Stadium as
derby
at
Memorial
a Class A misdemeanor could for comment Thursday. The only
Vaughn,
Paul
Molitor
and
Greg
result in a fine of $2,000, a year in Ronald Johnston listed in directory Darryl Hamilton connected to beat
information said he was not the
jail, or both.
Baltimore.
Indians president Hank Peters man involved in the matter.
Cal Ripken hit his 23rd homer
King, who was ll'aveling with
said he considered lhc matter a pri·
and
Sam Hom also homered for the
vate one between King and police. the team Thursday, could not be
Orioles.
"We're satisfied with the explana· reached by The Associated Press
Hamilton hit his rlfSt home run
tion as it was repeated to us," for comment. The Indians were in
since
July 8, 1990. Vaughn hit his
Peters said.
KIJ!IS&amp;S ~ity to open a three-game 19th and
Molitor added a solo shot
"This is a personal matter that senes tomght.
off
Bob
Milacki
(7-6).
he '11 have to deal with."
However, King told The (CleveRiplcen
hit
a
two-run homer in
Ronald Johnston, 21, of Keller, land) Plain Dealer that he didn't
the
sixth.
malcing
it 5-2. Hom hit
Texas, said in a complaint filed want to tallc about the matter.
two-run
homer,
his 15th,
another
with Arlington. Texas, police that
"It wasn ' t my fault," he said.
that
pulled
the
Orioles
within
5-4 in
King had punched him in a scuffie "And now everybody is going to
the
eighth.
at the Sheraton Centre-Park Hotel.
write stories about it I really don'l
BiD Wegman (7-6) improved to
Arlington police were called to want to comment. I just want it to
6-1
lifetime against the Orioles and
the scene about 2:30 a.m., but no be over with."
Edwin
Nunez' got his fifth save.
arrests were made because Johnston indicated he was not interested
in pressing charges. However,
Johnston later chansed his mind
and came to the pollee station to
file the complaint, police
79 Jeckaon Pike 354 E11t Main St.
spokesman Dee Anderson 581d.
Gen. Hartinger Pkwy
Anderson said Thursday lhat an
· GALLIPOLIS
POMEROY
MtODLEPORT
: · :inquiry was continuing, but said "it
614-446-3837
614-992-6292
614-992-6248
· .wiD talce him some time to investi: ·. ·gate."
: · : The allefed incident followed
AUGUST 11 (Sunday Only)
· · .the Indians 9-0 victory over the
:- ·Rangers Monday night, in which
BANANA SPLIT
: : · ~ King had pitched the ·first two-hitBuJ One and Get One FREE
. . - ter of his career.
:
Johnston told police he and
don I monkey around wlth this
·: some of the Indians players had
good treat. Lots of fruity flavors.
: ; · ,been drinlcing in the hotel bar, after
:- :. which some of the players took a
•·. • cowboy hat Johnston had been
: ~ wearing. Some wiUlesscs reported
AUGUST 12·18 (Monday thru Sunday)
: • seeing the hat retlD11ed.
Anderson said that Johnston
:, .apparently went to one of the hotel
This Is Our "Big Big Catch•
'&lt; ·rooms wtth some of the players,
:. :but said he had received differing
With Medium French Fries
: ' . accounts of the alleged incident.
~
"Iii one, the players. invthited
' ~ · Johnston to come back wtth em.
ONLY
; -~ ·In the other, Johnston went up to
; ~: ·get his hat back because the players
TORONTO (AP) - The Detroit
Tigers may ultimately die by the
strikeout this season, but they lived
by the long ball Thursday night as they have all year.
After the Tigers struck out a
club record-tying 21 times, Mark
Salas became an unlikely hero
when he belted a three-run homer
in the top of the 14th inning as
Detroit cut Toronto's lead in the
American League East to 5 1/2
games with a 4-0 victory over the
Blue Jays.
· 'I feel a lot lighter now,'' Salas
_said after connecting for his first
home run of the season and first
since Sepl 19, 1990. "But I'll feel
a bit better when I pul my head
down on a piUow."
Milt Cuyler got the 14th·inning
rally going with a one-out double
to nght-center off loser Tom Henlce
(0-1). Lou Whil&amp;lcer was walked
intentionally before Salas drilled a
3-2 piU:h to righL
"I was getting tired in the
13th," Henlce said. "But I didn't
want to put (Salas) on, so I kept
throwing him fastballs. ''
Blue Jays manager Cito Gaston
wasn't too keen about using his
stopper, but he had no choice.

GRAVELY
SYSTEM

FINAL SIGN UP DATE
Final Sign Up Date
For Big Bend Football League Players
and Cheerleaders
Will Be Held August 1Oth at
Pleaser's Restaurant in Pomeroy
from 10:00 A.M. to Noon.
PARTICIPANTS MUST BE.IN THE 5th or 6th GRADES, BUT
CANNOT BE 13 fEARS OLD PRIOR TO SEPT. 1, 1991.

BRING A COPY OF BIRTH CERTIFICATE

........... l7

4
6 112
7112

51 .S28

121-5, .706, 3.62; 0auna. Houata:J, 7·3,
.700, 2.11; ~to:, Sc Louia, 7-3, .700,
4.61; R. Martinez, Loa Anada, 14-6,
2.36; Gooden, Now York, 12-6, .667,

8112

Oty ....... 5S 51 519
California ......... 53 54 .49~
Kut111

II

Thursday's scores

DiqJO,

SAVES- Lee Smith, Si. Louia, 28;
Dibble, Clnclnn~tl, 14; frtneo, New
Yoll:, 22; M;u:it WLiliomJ, l'lliiUcloltil.

19; Ldfata, San Dieao, 17; ~ San
Francilco, 17; Dtve 'Smith. Cbieaco. 16;

Clticago4, NewYorkl
Mil wa\IUc 6, llahimoro 4
Deovit4, Toronto0,14 inninp

Bcra1Jucr, A_tlanu, 16.

..

DAmNO - Palmeiro,"t...., .352;

Dcuoit (Aldred 0.1 ond Leiter 3-2) 11
New Yolll (Taylo.S-6 ond Plwtl: 2.-2), 2.
4:30p.m.
Ch1~110 (Ho\l&amp;h 7-6) at Balli more
(MIIIMI 0.1 ), 7:35 p.m.
B01ta11 (JicUah S-2) 11 Toronto (Wclll
12-6), 7:3S p.m.
Cltnlaftd (Swlndell 7-9) a&amp; Kaaatt
Clly (Cubk:u ..s~ 1:35 p.m.
Milwaukee (Bolio 7-8) at Te-.u (J01e
Guzman7.4),1:3S p.m.
Oakland (Stewart ! -6) at California
(McCukiliR- 14),10:35 p.m.
M&amp;nne.ota (We~t l-2) u Se~ule
•cn I 0- i), I 0:35 p.m.

Franco, Teua, .337: Bv. - · .337:

T1_nabuU, Kan••• City, .332; Puc:tcu,
MinneaOUI, .326; Molitor, Milwaukee,

.3:!A: C. Riol&lt;en, Baltimore, .322; Bainco,
Oakland, 3~
RUNS - Patm.ino, Texu,l2; MolJIM.
Milwaukee, 81; Can1eco, Oakland, 10;
Thomu. Chicaao, 76; Whiae. T«&lt;OIll, 75 ;
Franco, Teua, 75; Siem, Tuu, 73; D.
llmdaoon. Oakland. 71
RBI - Fielder, Detroit, 91; Canaoco•
Oakland, 16: Thomu, auc.ao. 12; Sian, Teut, 78; C1ner, Toronto, 17; C.
Daoil,
77: ).,...., Calilomio,
74; C. Ripkcn. Baltimore, 74.
lilTS - Palmciro, 'l'ew, 149; Molilor,

oom-

ATLANTA FALCONS -

Woi,.d

Coriat-..............

CHICAGO BEARS - Si1ned Ro•
Morril, wide reooiwr, to a tJn.,-r con·

OILERS """'HOUSTON
wilb

A1reed to
receiwr,

lallll
~-.wide
Dill two-)'tll'em&amp;IIGL

KANSAS CITY CIDEFS -

American Leaeue

Today's games

.•'...

I09; B..,.., San Dieao, 101.

FoolllaU

N.-.r........ a-1..

Minn-.

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HOUWJG Oilcn. ror an ~lolod 1992
dnJI pKL A.......... ....,. ............
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Cleveland Browns
Joe Morris was the all-time
leading rusher for the New York
Giants, but Saturday be will be
rushing against them as a member
of the Oeveland Browns.
"I've ~ot to prove to myself l
can play, ' said Morris. "So far,
I've done everything they've asked
me to do. This is the besl I've felt
in years. I'm very much looking
forward to getting ·~~ a game.''

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Detroit LIODS
Andre Ware's initiation as an
NFL quanerback will cbntinue in
Buffalo. The Detroit Lions' second-year player wiU make his second consecutive start Saturday
against the 1-1 Bills, according 10
coach Wayne Fontes.
Ware started in last Friday's 2420 win over Cincinnati, but only
completed seven of 21 passes for
82 yards.
Buffalo Bills
His confidence bolstered by rigorous workouts at trainin~ camp.
Buffalo Bills quarterback Jim Kelly
said his pulled hamstring ha s
healed and he wiU make his preseason debut againsl the Lions.
"I haven't been down under
center for a while. so it will be nice
10 get into it,'' Kelly said.
Chicago Bears
Wide receiver Ron Morris
ended his three-week contract holdout Thursday and signed with the
Bears , leaving tight end James
Thornton as the only un signed
player on the learn .
The terms of the three-year contract were not revealed.
Philadelphia Eagles
The Philadelphia Eagles parted
company with two veterans on
Thursday, trading defensive tackle
Diclr. Chapura to Houston and giving up the negotiating rights 10
offensive tackle Reggie Singletary.
The Eagles traded Chapura to
Houston for an undisclosed 1992
draft pick..
Miami Dolphins
Dan Marino will miss the battle
of Florida on Saturday.

Storms delay Agassi's
ATP match with Gilbert
By TERRY KINNEY
Associated Press Writer
MASON, Ohio (AP) - Flashes
from the cameras of adoring teen·
age fans greeted Andre Agassi
when he took center court. So did
thunder and lightning.
A plea from the chair official
halted the former; nothing could
stop the latter. So Agassi and Brad
Gilben try again today 10 get in
their third-round match in the $!.3
million ATP Championship.
How do other players feel about
Agassi' s adoring foUowers and the
hoopla lhat surrounds him?
"It doesn't bother me at all,"
Ivan Lendl said. "I plliy because I
enjoy it and the exercise. If people
want to watch it, fme; if they don'~
fine.
"It is really their privilege .
They are the ones who paid for the
ticket and they can watch anyone
they wanL"
Agassi is a crowd favorite at the
Jaclc Nicklaus Sports Center near
Cincinnati, and is seeded fifth in
this year's Association of Tennis
Professionals championship.
Gilbert, the winner here two years
ago and the runner-up last year, is
the 12th seed.
Whoever wins the match, the
quarterfinals will be comprised of
only seeded players in this major
U.S. Open prep, which is going
very much according to form.
On Thursday, top-seeded Boris
Becker, defending champion Stefan
Edberg and U.S. Open champion
Pete Sampras advanced.
Becker, trying to finish play
ahead of an onrushinl! thunderstorm, defeated Maiivat Washing·
ton 6-4, 6-4; Edberg, the No. 2
seed, defeated Amos Mansdorf 6-1,
6-2 and Sampras, seeded seventh,
defeated Wayne Ferreira 6-1,64.
Fourteenth-seeded Derrick Rostagno staged the biggest upset of
the day, ousting the third-seeded
Lendl7-6, 3-5, 6-3.
Lend!, who has been trying to
come back from hand surgery, said
he hasn't been playing enough to
return to top form.
"I've always needed to play
quite a biL I missed four months
and didn't play;· he said.
"And look what happeneed to
some of the guys that took some

Page 5

time off before," such as John
McEnroe and Mats Wilander.
"Mine wasn'l voluntary, but I
didn't get to hit enough bails and
play enough, so I have to make i1
up.
"It's going to come sooner or
later. I wish sooner."
Rostagno said he's gained
enough confidence recently not to
fear a match against top· rated players.
"I'm sure lhat on a good day I
can beat anyone, whereas I used to
have doubts and would try to force
myself to have a better day than I
conceivably could bring out of
myself,'' Rostagno said.
"That's probably the difference.
That's why every time I go out on
the court now, especiaUy against a
top player, I'm not going to give
the match away by trying to play
too well. I'm going to go ahead and
make the play."

Coach Don Shula said he·wants
to get a look at backup quarterbacks Scoll Mitchell and Scoll
Sccules, who are bauling for the
No. 2 job, and thus Marino won't
play against Tampa Bay.
New Orleans Saints
Quarterback Bobby Hebert
pulled a groin muscle in practice.
and it wasn't known whether he
will be able 10 take his rum a1 quarterback for the New Orleans Saints
in Saturday night's ex hibition game
agJi nst Green Bay.
Pittsburgh Steelers
Rookie wide receiver Jeff Gra ham , the Sleelers' No. 2 pick , is
expected to miss about two weeks
of practice with a strained thigh.
Graham. who reached contract
terms last Saturday, reported for his
first practice Tuesday with the
injury.

VICTORY
BAPTIST
CHURCH
525 N. 2ND ST.
MIDDL(PORT, OHIO

"Eve ryone Welcome"

GOD'S SIMPLE PLAN
OF SALVATION
I. "All have sinned ." Romans
3:10. "For all have sinned
and come shon of the glorv
of God ... " Romans 3:23
I. "Sin must be paid for:" Rd·
man 6:12. "for the wages of
sin is death but the gift of
God is eternal life .. " Romans 6:23
til. "Jesus Christ paid fo• our
sins:" Romans 6:8, "but
God commendeth Hia love
toward us. in that while we
were yet sinners. Christ diad
for us ."
IV . "What we must do." Romans 10:9 -13, "For Who·
soever shall call upon the
name of the lord shall be
saved ."
V. "How we can know we are
on our way to Heaven: ..
John 3 :36, " He that believ·
eth on he Son has evertaating life .. . "
VI . "Assurance:" I John 6:14
and 15. "And this is the confidence that we have in Him ... "

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"I only had Duane (Ward) left
and he couldn't go tonight. We
used him for two innings in the
flfSt two games. But Henke pitched
well. We just didn't get him anything to work with."
After Cecil Fielder struck out
for the fourth time, Mickey Tettleton smacked his 21st home run of
the season, a solo shot to deep right
to cap the scoring.
Paul Gibson (5-5) allowed two
hits, struck out two and walked one
over two innings for the win.
Henke allowed four runs on
three hits, struck out six and
wallced two over two and one-third
innings and combined with five
pitchers for a club-record 21 strikeouts.
"You can't ask us to score runs
against pitching lilce that," Fielder
said. "We were lucky to win one
of three."
The Blue Jays could have made
it an early night for the approximately 15,000 fans who stayed
around for the end of the five-hour,
12-minute maralhon, but they
stranded 15 runners.
"We just couldn't come up with
the key hit when we needed it,"
Gaston said. "But I guess if there's

Indians to stay out of King's
alleged assault of Texas man

Pictures and Trophies from Last Season Mav Be
Picked Up Then Also.

Dic1•• 14-5, ..7'fl, 3.23; Avery, Allula,

STRIKEOUTS -Cone , New York,
147; Gllvinc. Atlan\1, 137; Goodm, New
York, 134; G. Maddu, Clticaao. 129:
Harniach, Hou1ton, 114; Hunt, Sin

practice Thursday at the BroWDS' tniDiDg camp
in Mentor, Ohio. These teams wUI meet Satur·
day nigbt in an exhibition game in Cleveland.
(AP)

In abbreviated AL schedule Thursday night,

CARMEL , lnd (AP) - Light· the Hamilton County rescue squad
ning killed a spectator at one of arrived and administered CPR.
Weaver was declared dead at St.
golf's major championships for the
Vincent's
HospiUll and 3:42p.m.
second time in two months Thursday during a heavy thunderstorm
that interrupted the first round of
GRAVELY TRACTOR
the PGA Championship.
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Tournament officials said the
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH .
victim, 39-year-old Thomas
Spring
and
Summer
Hours
Weaver of the Indianapolis suburb
Mondar thru Frldar
of Fishers, was struck as he was
9 A.M.·5 P.M.
going to his car in a parlcing iot
Sat. 9 A.M.-1 P.M.
near the 15th fairway at Crooked
Stick Golf Club.
He was believed to have been
~THE
carrying an umbreUa, officials said.
Several doctors were in the
parlcing lot at the time of the accident and assisted Weaver before

3.67.

. 62 45 .519
......... 61 41 .S60
......... .. S6 41 .S38

pute prior to last season.
When Glanville joined Atlanta
last season, the Falcons went back
to a black-dominated uniform simi·
Jar to that worn in the I 960s. The
Falcons' home uniforms are black
with red trim, their road uniforms
white with red numerals.
The Oilers lost their exhibition
opener to San Diego 31·29. The
Falcons beat the Los Angeles Rams
38-17.
Atlanta opened the 1990 regular
season at home with a 47-27 victo·
ry over the Oilers.
The Atlanta-Houston game is
the only one on tap tonight. On Saturday, it wiD be Detroit at Buffalo,
Miami at Tampa Bay, Philadelphia
at Cincinnati, Washington at New
England, Seattle at Indianapolis,
Kansas City vs. the New York Jets
at St. Louis, Green Bay at New
Orleans, the New York Giants at
Cleveland, and Pittsburgh at MinPhoenix travels to Chicago on
Sunday, while the Los Angeles
Raiders are at Dallas and San
Diego at the Los Angeles Rams on
Monday.

.700, 2.59; Orocne, Philadelphia, 8-4,
CR

them (black uniforms) along anyway, but we 'II wear white.''
Glanville developed his "man
in black" image during four seasons as head coach of the Oilers
before he left in a front office dis-

nesota.

.667, 2.12; Gia.U.., Allin", 14-7, .667,

Weatem DlvlskMI
Tum
W L Pd.
Minne&amp;CU
..... 6S 44 .596

exhibition game at the Astrodome.
"They told me we can't wear
black. so we'll wear white."' the
Falcons' coach said. "They told
me I'd be paying the fine if we
wore black . Maybe we'll brihg

too deep. But if it gets ~Y ~per, ci.sco beat Atlanta 8-1 and San
JUSt keep throwmg the din on.
Otego stopped Houston 5-3. The
As much as Los Angeles beat Montreal at St. Louis game was
the Reds, the Reds beat themselves. rained out
Cincinnati gave up three runs in the
PbiUies 11, Cubs 1
sixth inning on a throwing error by
Philadelphia extended its
Winningham from center field, a longest winning sii'Cak since 1984
wild pitch and pitcher Milce Mor- to nine games, routing visiting
gan's sacrifice fly.
.
Chicaao.
Morgan ( 10-6) won for the flfSt
Charlie Hayes drove in a careertime in eight slartS since June 28. high four nms, three with a double
He pitched six and one-third in the fourth inning, as the Pbillies
innings and gave up six hits, completed their flfSt sweep of lhc .
including Paul O'Neill's two-run Cubs since August 1987.
homer. O'Neill hit another two-run
The winning sii'Cak is Philadel·
homer, his 20th, in the ninth.
phia's longest since it won 10
Tom Browning (1 1-8), worlcing straight in May 1984. Chicago has
with a sore right ankle, allowed lost three in a row.
three runs on seven hits in five
Danny Cox (4-4) gave up one
innings. The Dodgers broke open a • run on five \bit in seven innings. He
3-2 game in the sixth against left with a sore left krlee, ca~ by
relievers Tim Layana, Gino a possible small lear in the cartlMinuteUi and Milt Hill.
lage.
In other games, Philadelphia
Danny Jackson (1-3) allowed
defeated Chicago 11-1, New York five runs on five hits in three
held off Pittsburgh 4-3, San Fran- innings. It was- his second start

since coming off the disabled list
with a lower abdominal strain.
Mets 4, Pirates 3
Frank Viola outpitched Doug
Drabek and New York beat Pitts·
burgh for the second straight day.
The Mets won twice in the
three-game series at Shea Stadium
and pulled within 5 1/2 games of
the Pirates in the NL East. Pittsburgh went 4-10 on its longest road
trip in seven years.
Viola (12-8) stopped his threegame losing string. He allowed six
hits in eight innings and left with a
4·1 lead. John Franco gave up
Bobby Bonilla's 1wo-run homer,
but finished for his 22nd save.
Drabek (10-11) lasted just two
and one-third innings. He was
rapped for three nms on five hits.
Giants 8, Bnves 1
John Burkett won his fifth
straight decision and Will Clark
homered as San Francisco won in
Atlanta.
Burkeu (9·5) tied the longest
winning strealc of his career. He
went eij!ht innings and 11ave up
eight bus, struck out ftve and
wallced one.
Tom Glavine (14-7) lost his second in a row. He allowed four runs
on seven hits and six wallcs in five
innings.
Clark hit a two-run homer, his
22nd, and an RBI single off Braves
reliever Kent Merclcer.
Padres S, Astros 3
Tony Gwynn drove in three nms
with a pair of singles as San Diego
won in Houston.
Gwynn leads the league in hits.
His two-run single in the third
inning made it4-0, and he added an
RBI single in the fifth.
Andy Benes (7-10) gave up six
hits in six innings and Craig Lef•
ferts worlced the ninth for his 17th
,.-save in 22 chances.

The Daily Sentinel

Atlanta to take on Houston in preseason contest tonight

L.A. hands Cincy 6-4 loss Thursday
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
Nothing is wrong with the Los
. Angeles Dodgers, after all.
The Dodgers put down their
doubters and the Cincinnati Reds
for the third straight time Thursday,
winning 64 at Riverfront Stadium.
.. , thinlc we mar be headed in
the right direction,' Darryl Strawberry said after doubling and scorin~ one run. " We had a bad tailspm, but we've kind of picked it up

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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CHURCH

Friday, August 9, 1991
Page-6 .

--------~~------------------------~-------------------------------------------------------------------~

'
i'

'I'

'j
l:

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and tbe day of thai event. Items
must be received well in advance
lo assure publication in the calendar.
FRIDAY
CHESTER - The Chester Town ship Trustees will meet in regular
session at 9:30 a.m. on Friday at
the 10wn hall.

auending bring a covered dish,
table service , and gifts for the
games.
REEDSVILLE - There will be a
special meeting at the Reedsville
Firehouse on Saturday at noon for
the purpose of reviewing resumes
for the position of Clerk of Olive
Township.
WELLSTON · "Head Dizzy"
will present a cone en on Saturday
in the Wellston High School Auditorium. Doors open at 7 p.m. and
music starts at 8 p.m. Admission is
$5 per person and tickets are available at the door. Proceeds will benefit the Big W Club Girls Basketball. For more information call
384-3850.

POMEROY - The Carleton
Church on Kingsbury Road in
Pomeroy will have youth revival
Friday through Sunday at 7 p.m.
nightly. Carl Ward will be the
speaker. On Friday there will be
clowns; on Saturday there will be a
wiener roast; and on Sunday
Tabitha and the New Life Singers ·
RACINE · There will be a
will perform. Clyde Henderson
Southern Junior High Football
invites the public.
meeting on Saturday at 10 a.m. at
the
Southern Football Building for
POMEROY - The Meigs Counthose
interested in playing Southty Boanl of Elections will hold its
regular monthly meeting on Friday em Junior High Football.
at7p.m.
BARLOW - The Barlow Volunteer
Fire Dcpanment will have an
LONG BOTTOM - The Faith
ice
cream
social on Saturday beginFull Gospel Church in Long Botning
at
4
p.m.
There will also be a
tom will have a hymn sing on Fribaked
steak
dinner,
sandwiches,
day at 7:30 p.m. featuring MounMiss Flame
salad,
pie
and
cake.
tainiOp Gospel and Crystal. Pastor
candidates will be presented.
Steve Reed invites the pubtic.
SATURDAY
POMEROY - The Southern
Golf Team is sponsoring a fourperson scramble at the Meigs
County Golf Club on Saturday at 9
a.m. Entry fee is $35 for non-members and $30 for members. Teams
will be drawn prior 10 tee-off. For
more information or to sign up call
992-6312 or992-3671.
RACINE - Car wash sponsored
by Southern Band will be held 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. at Eber's Gulf in
Racine, Syracuse Fire S talion and
Pleaser's Restaurant in Pomeroy.
The price is $3 for outside and $5
for both inside and outside. Vans
will be washed at an additional
COSL

POMEROY - There will be a
hymn sing on Saturday at 8 p.m. on
the Pomeroy Parking Lot Stage.
Singers performing will be the
Children of God, the Redeemed
Quartet, God's Little Lambs, the
Joyful Hearts and the Willing

Hearts.

,.

I
\

Troop 1309 begins.registration ~

Community calendar

POMEROY - The annual
Samuel Allen Eblin reunion will be
held Saturday at 6 p.m. at the park
on Route 33. left side of the road
going toward Athens. Those

Several activities have taken Meigs ~ounty Fair.
place with the Pomeroy Junior
The girls made decorations and
Troop 1309 during the months of participated in the Fourth of July
June and July.
Parade in Middleport with five
The troop had five girls working girls taking pan.
·
with the Meigs Pleasure Riders 4-H
On July 8 the girls voted to
Club to earn their Horse Lovers reduce dues from 50 cents per
Badge. They met with the group week to 25 cents. Officers were
every other week at the fair- also elected as follows: Barbara
grounds, learning about horses and Wilson, secretary; Melissa Houser,
their equipment, horse safety, and treasurer; Jennifer Heck, news
proper handling of horses. They reponer; Betty Wilson, recreation;
will be completing this badge wben and Andrea Neutzling, refresh the attend Youth Fun Night at the

12:30 p.m.
POMEROY - Guest speaker at
the First Baptist Church of
Pomeroy on Sunday at 10:30 ;t.m.
will be Eddie Buffing10n. The public is invited to attend. The church
is located on East Main Street in
Pomeroy.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The 56th
annual Parker reunioo will be held
Sunday at the Tuppers Plains Elementary School. Basket dinner at
12:30 p.m. All welcome.

Cheerleading competition set

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Pastors and congregations will
begin Operation Intercession on
Sunday, "Blow the Trumpet in

The annual Parade of the Hills
Cheerleading Competition will be
held Aug. 24 at the NelsonvilleYork Middle School gymnasium.
Zion."
The event is sponsored by the
ROCK SPRINGS - The Modem Parade of the Hills Committee and
Woodmen of America Camp 7230 hosted by the Nelsonville York.
will have a melon supper for the Cheerleading Boosters-Middle
Meigs County Fair opening on
Sunday from 4:30-7 p.m. at the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds by the
Grange building. Family door prize
The Meigs County Health
awarded. The public is invited to
Department has issued the followattend.
ing advisory to area individuals
ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs who want to serve food for a conCounty Ministerial Association sideration at different events in the
will kick-off the Meigs County Fair Meigs County area.
In order to do this you must first
with an old-fashioned hymn sing at
7:30 p.m. on Sunday in the Grand- contact the Health Department,
RACINE - Entenainment at Siar stand area of the fairgrounds. Song- apply for a temporary license and
Mill Park on Saturday at 7 p.m. sheets will be distributed.
be inspected. This license is good
will include Mountaintop Gospel,
for up to five continuous days.
Harvest Time Bluegrass and CounThis is a reminder that all Food
POMEROY - The 43rd James
try Blend.
Marshall Wolfe reunion will be Services that are already licensed
held at the Broad Run Zion Luther- must also purchase a temporary
PORTLAND - There will be a an Church, Sunday, Aug. I I. A license if the vent is not at the food
hymn sing at the Freedom Gospel covered dish picnic will begin at I
Mission Church on County Road p.m.
31 on Saturday featuring the Dailey
Family singers. There will also be a
Cindy Faulk was the best weekMONDAY
wiener roast.
POMEROY - Cross country ly loser and Jaunita Roush was the
practice for Meigs High School runner up at the recent meeting of
LOTTRIDGE - Country Music will begin Monday at 9 a.m. Stu- Ohio TOPS Club No. 570 held at
Night at the Lottridge Community dents in seventh and eighth grade the Carpenter's Hall in Pomeroy.
Center will be held Saturday from who are interested in running in
Cindy Faulk also won the fruit
7 p.m. to midnight All bands wel- junior high rac~s are invited to basket.
come. Refreshments available . attend practices. Practice sessions
A weigh-in only will be held
Public is invited to attend.
Tuesday and there will be no meetwill be held at the high school.
ing due 10 the Meigs County Fair.
SUNDAY
The group meets every Tuesday
RACINE - Southern · High
RUTLAND - The annual Davis School students wishing to play on at 5:30 p.m. for weigh-in and 6
reunion for descendants of Orlando the golf team are to meet at the p.m. for meeting. The public is
and Katherine Sheline Davis will Meigs County Golf Club on Mon- invited to join the group.
be held Sunday at the Eli Denison day at 5:30p.m. For more informaPost NO. 467, American Legion, tion call949-2534 in the evenings.
Beech Grove Road, Rutland. A
basket dinner will begin at noon.
MIDDLEPORT - Students in
Imelda Marcos, wife of Philipgrades seven or eight at Meigs
SHADE - The 67th annual Junior High School interested in pine President Ferdinand Marcos,
Hayes- Young-Holiday School playing football should repon for was stabbed and seriously wounded
reunion will be held Sunday on the an organizational meeting at 6 p.m. in 1972 by an assailant who was
old school ground. Everyone is on Monday at the Meigs Junior then shot dead by her bodyguards.
welcome and dinner will begin at High School stadium. Parents arc
urged to attend.

School.
The competition is both a squad
(Pee-Wee to Varsity) and individual (Pee-'wee to Varsity) event.
Further information may be
obtained by calling 753-2561 or
753-2212.

Health department advisory

TOPS meets

service premises.
To contact the Meigs County
Health Deparunent call 992-6626
Monday through Friday from 8
a.m. to 4 p.m.

Arts, craft show
The annual Parade of the Hills
Arts and Crafts Show will be held
Aug. 24 from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m . in
Nelsonville at St. Mary's of the
Hills Hall (formerly St. Andrews).
This event is sponsored by the Nelsonville York Checrleading Boosters-Middle School.
Call 753-2561 or 753-2205 for
further information.

FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 1991
SANDWICH PLAnER....................... $2.54

o.atoloua Flah Sandwich Served wllh French Frl• and Your Choice
SleW, MKaronl Salad or Baked Ileana.

SUNDAY, AUGUST 11,1991
SALISBURY STEAK DIHHER•••••••••• $4.99

llaahecl Potatoea &amp; Homemade Gravy, Fr. . h Garc!anl
::,c::::~~ Hot Buttered Roll, Small Drink or ColiN, Regular or

The a.... R"taurent will CioN on Aug. 15 et 2 P.M. 10 our employcan attend the ..,,_
OPEN 10 A.M.-9:30 P.M.

Church or Jesus Christ Apostolic Flllll
New Liml Rd., nullo Fl Meig1 Park
Pu10r. Roben W. Richard!
SW&gt;day School · 10 a.m.
Evenins • 7 p.m.
Wedncaday Services- 7 p.m.

Pulor. Junes Miller

·;,..

Baptist

The Meigs County Riding Club -met recently at the home of Pete
and Cindy Scou with I I members
in attendance.
The July horse show was discussed and plans were made for a
speed horse show in the fall. Members are to inquire at local businesses for donations.
A trail ride was planned for late
October. The next meeting will be
held Aug. 19 at 7:30p.m. at the
Scott residence on Flatwoods
Road. All members are to attend so
final plans can be made for the fall
show and trail ride.
For funher information on the
club call 992-6855 or 992-3885.
!'lew members are welcome.

K ..o Church or Christ
Wonhip-9:30 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Hysell Run Holiness Church
Paa10r: Roben Manley
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m.• 7 p.m.

Flnt Southern Baptist
41812 Paneroy Pike
Pastor: EL Lunar O'Bryant
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:4S a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servia:• · 7:30p.m.

BradbU1'7 Church or Christ
Putor: Tom RW&gt;yon
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.
Tuppers Plains Church ot Christ
PatlOr. Robert Foater
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip · 9:4S a.m., 6:30 p.m.

Middleport First Baptist
Comer Sixth &amp; Palmer
Pastor: Rev. James A. Seddon
SundaySchool - 9:ll a.m.
Wonhip • 10:15 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

THOMAS SPENCER, D.O.
Receiving Patients
Starting August 5

Bradford Church or Christ
St. Rt 124 A Co. Rd. 5
Putor: Derek Stump
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednetdoy Servicea - 7:30p.m.

MI. Union Baptist
Putor: Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School · 9:45 a.m.
Evening ·6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30 p.m.

OPEN:
MONDAY &amp; WEDNESDAY
8 am-12 noon and 1 pm-5 pm
TUESDAY &amp; THURSDAY
10 am-12 noon and 1 pm-8 pm
FRIDAY 8 am-12 noon and 1 pm-4 pm
SATURDAY 8 am-12 noon
Appointments or Walk-Ins Welcome

Succao Road Cburch or Christ
Pallor: Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service• - 7 p.m.

Bethlohem Baptist
Pastor: Rev. Earl Shuler
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip - 9:30a.m.
Thursday Services -7:30p.m.
Old Bethe Free Will Baptist Church
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School - I 0 a.m.
Evenina - 7:30p.m.
Thul'$day Services .. 7:30p.m.
Hlllslde Baptist Church
St. Rt 143 jull oCfRt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
S1111day School - 10 a.m.
Worsh&gt;p - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servia:• · 7 p.m.

Faith Baptist 'church
Railroad St., M11on
Sunday School - l 0 a.m.
Worship - 1t a.m., 6 p.m.
Wcdncsday Service• • 7 p.m.
Forest Run Baptist
Pastor. Rev. Nyle Borden
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worllhip · 2:30p.m.

·- .

Anllqulty Baptist
Putor: Kenne111 Smi111
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evenin&amp; · 7:30p.m.
Thunday Servicu ·7:30p.m.

.(..-

leui's 506 Jeans
\Ill\ h •l iltfll

!~

~~~~ t l l l

ltUl41

••' !!111 l ldllll wm1 mn I~

SATURDAY EVENING, AUGUST 10
AT 8:00 P.M.
ON THE POMEROY PARKING LOT.
For A Night of Good Old Fashioned Singing
· and Praising God.

.,•

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MONDAY, AUGUST 12 ·SATURDAY, AUGUST 17

st~~:.o

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'

20°/o OFF

l .u~~ . \-Wa~ 'm~
•

For Ha''"
OHIC

To

·,

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Joppa
Pastor: Brenda Weber
Worship· 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Servia:• · 7:30p.m.
I.Gng Bottom
Pastor: Oiarlcs Eawn
SW&gt;day School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip 10:30 a.m.
'Wedneaday Service&amp; · 7:30p.m.

PulOr. Sharon Hausman

Tupp&lt;n Plains St. Paul
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worthip . tO a.m.
Tuesday Services · 7:30p.m.

ML Moriah Church of Cod
Racine
PaslOr: Rev. Iamca Saucrfield
Sunday School - 9:4' a.m.
Evenina • 7 p.m.
Wedne~day Service• - 7 p.m.

Central Cluster
Asbury (Syracuse)
Putor. Wesley Thatcher
SW&gt;day School · 9:45 a.m.
Wonhip · It a.m.
Wednetday Servicea · 7:30p.m.

Rull111d Church or Cod
Pattor: John F. Coroolln
Sunday School • I 0 a.m.
WG&lt;Ilhip- 11 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednetday Service• - 1 p.m.

EnterprlH
PaslOr: Kei.Lh Rader
Sunday School - tO a.m.
Wonhip - 9 a.m., 6p.m,
Tuesday Services - 7 p.m.

Syncvse Fll'll Cburdl or God
Wonhip ' 10 a.m.
SW\day School - II a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wadnctday Servicea • 7 p.m.

Flatwoods
Paa10r: Keith Rader
SundaySchool - lOLm.
Wonhip • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Thunday Services- 1 p.m.

Cllun:b of God or Prop,et:J
OJ. WhiU Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Pu~ar: Pat Henson
SW\day School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip- t t a.m.
Wednetdoy Scrvicea - 7 p.m.

-·'••

l

~( · I ~nul:·

I

I

9U-6669
'

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271. North

SH....r

(

Middleport,
Ohle

..J(:.

212 E. Matn Slttel
992-3785. Pomeroy

~

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l~wUNGS-:&lt;O•n

.

(row's family Restaur.,t
"lt~trtl•l K••nul, Fti•J C61•b•"
228 W. Main Sl., Pomtroy

. . FISHER
FUNERA~ 1HOME

.

99-2-5432

. ' 992-5141'. .

264 Stuth 21Mt

'

~~~ltport

RACINE PlANING• MILL

Mill W01k
~· !.. ' \~ '"-!'·I
-Gab1net Maktn~ ~ . 1 .. . . ..
Syracuse

992 -3978

j

•'

While's Chap&lt;! Wesleyan
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenou.r
SW&gt;day School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip ·!0:30a.m.
Wedne~day Service · 7 p.m.

SyracuN Million
14ll Bridgeman St., Synaue
SW\day School • I 0 a.m.
Ev..U., - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Calvary Plltirha.Chap&lt;t
Harrisonville Road
Putor: Rev, Victor Rouah
SW&gt;day School9 :30 a.m.
Wonhip ·!I a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service -7 :30p.m.

Morn in&amp; Slar
Pastor: Kenne111 Bilker
SW&gt;day School • 9:45 a.m.
Wonhip - !0:30a.m
Thursday Seni.l%s · 7:30p.m.

Haul Community Church
OffRL 124
Pattor: l!dael Hart
Sunday Sdlool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Sllnn•llle Word or Faith
Pu10r: Guy Holter
Sundoy School9:30 a.m.
Evenina · 7 p.m.

Sutton

Dyenltle Community Church
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Pentecostal

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip - 10:45 a.m. (lst &amp;. 3td Sun)

Burttnaton Community Church
Budin ham
Putor: Ray ~udennill
Sunday Sd!ool-10 a.m .
Wcnhip - 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Service · 7 p.m.

Ball Letart
Pastor. Ro&amp;er Grace
S1111day School- LO a.m.
Wonhip · 9 a.m.
Racine
Putor. Roaer .G11a:
Sunday School- to a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.
Laurel ClllfFroe Methodist Church
Paator: William William•
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7 pm.
Wednetday Services • 7 p.m.
RuUand Bible Melllodlst
Putor: Rev.lvan Myen
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Coolville Untied Melllodlst Partsh
PaslOr: Harold E. Alloway-Priddy
Cootvllle Church
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Tuelday Servicos · 7 p.m.
Bethel Churc~
Towmhip Rd ., 468C
Sunday School · 9 a.m.

Middleport Pente&lt;,.lll
ThUd A\'e.
Pu10r: Rev. Clark Bal:er
Sunday School- tO a.m.
Evening · 6 p.m.

Morse Chapel Church
Paator: David Curfman
Sunday achool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip . tt a.m., 7:30p.m.
WcdnCiday Service · 7 p.m.

Presbyterian

.

Hocklnrport Church
GllOdSt...,
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip- 1I a.m.
Wednesday SeNicet - 8 p.m.
Torch Church
Co. Rd. 63
School· 9:30a.m.
. • 10:30

Middleport Church ot tile Nuarene
Pas10r: Rev. Uoyd D. Grimm, Jr.
SWiday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvicca - 1 p.m.

.,

..
"

'

·,

Wednetday Services· 7:30p.m.
Harrlsc•n111e Pmtbylerlan Church
Wonhip · 9 a.m.
Sunday School -9:45 a.m.

Faith Goepel Church
Lon&amp; BotlOm
Sonday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip·l0:4S a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Middleport Presbyterian
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Wonhip • lOa.m., 4 p.m. (2nd&amp;: 4th Sun.)

ML Olive Communlly Church
Putor: Lawrau:c Bush
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Evenina - 7 p.m.
Wodncday Service · 7 p.m.

Seventh-Day AdventiSt

United Faith Church

Wonhip - 10 a.m.

Wednesday SCJVices · 10 a.m.

·,

Thursday Service - 7:30p.m.
Pentecostal All&lt;mbly
St Rt 124, Racine
Pu1or: Williun Hoback
Sundoy School · 10 a.m.
E•cnina • 7 p.m.
Wedne•day Serv1ces ~ 7 p.m.

Chrllllut Feltowsblp Center
Sa1csm St, Rutland
Paator: Robert E. Muuer
Sunday School - I 0 a.m.
Wonhip · ll :IS a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Servi« • 7 p.m.

Rt. 7 on Pcmeroy By-Pus
Putor. Rev. Raben E. Smi111, Sr.
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednetday Service · 7 p.m.
Ecctesla Fellowship
t28 Mill St, Middleport
PulOr. Chuclt M&lt;:Phcnon
Sunday School - I0 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednelday Service - 7 p.m.

•

SyracuR First Untied Presbyterian
Sunday School - LO Lm.

Wonhip- !I a.m.,~ p.m. (I at &amp; 3nl Sun.)
Seveniii·Da7 Adventist
Mulberry Hu. Rd., Pomeroy
Pattor: Bob Snyder
Sabba111 Service&amp;:
Sabba111 School - 2 p.m.

Brtlhrc,.tn Christ

Full Cotpel Lltlhllloue
3304S Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Tom KeDy
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evenina 7:30p.m.
Tuctday ol: Thunday · 7:30p.m.

Tout Coqununil)' off CR 82
PatiO!': Raben Sanden
S101day School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednetday Servia:&amp; . 7:30p.m.
Eden United Brtlhrtn In Christ
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wor111ip - 7:30p.m.
Wednetday Servie&lt;a . 7:30p.m.

Syracuse Church of the Nazarene
PatlOr. Rev. GlOM MoMillan
SW&gt;day School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Servicea - 1 p.m.
RHdovllle Ftllowlhlp
Churc• of the Nazarene

Pu10r: John W. Dousl••
SW&gt;day School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Pomeroy O.urch o( 111e Nazarene
Pastor. Rev. Thomas McCiuna
Sunday Sdlool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonllip • 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wodnelday Service• - 7 p.m.

0\\;{(

S,rw Q)••r.,

93 Mill StrHI
Middleport. Ohio 415760

11141 192-6117 -1998 -00KSI
CHURCH

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.
John F . Fultz . Mqr
Ph . nntol

Pomeroy

Brogan~Warner

INSURANCE ---. SERVICES
214 E. Main
992 -SllO Pomeroy

GIAVELY

•

POM£ROY, OHI0-992-6677
BILl QUICKEL

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Na!ionwide Ins. Co . ~
al (()lumbu\, 0 .

101 W. MJ1n
9f1 1111 Pomoror

Hospital

]

'= .

Pomeroy

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
S~US

&amp; SUVICE

992-7075
172 ljorth Stund An.

Midtlloport, Ohio

SALES
204 Condor St .

''""'''·
011.
992-2975

EWING FUNERAL HOME
"Dil(nir,· and &amp;n·i•·• .-il&gt;rn., ..
Established 1913

.-JLH

&amp;

PHARMACY
~··
Ftii·Ood!)n·
ttl,.,,
----- - -- . ...... __ 'tlf'
Pre\crtphon\

992·2121
106 Mull!erry Au• .

.

..,
•

Freedom Gospel Mlsalon
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 3 I
Pu10r: Rev. Roger Willlord
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worthip- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednuday Service- 7 p.m.

Spiritual Faith Churdl
Statt 338, Antiquity
Pastor: A. Stewart
Sunday School · tO a.m.
Evening · 7:30p.m.
Thunday Service ·7:30p.m.

,,

i

Church
Kinssbury Rood
Paa10r: Qydc W. Hcndcnoo
Sunday School ·9:10a.m.
Evenin&amp; -7 p.m.
Wednetday Service. 7 p.m.

Fallh Tabemade Church
Bailey Run Road
PaslOr: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Evenina 7 p.m.
Thunday Service r 1 p.m.

Pastor: Kenneth Baker

·

lnterdenomln~donal

Cllrar7 Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pu10r: Rev. Blacltwood
S1111day School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip !0:30a.m. , 7:30p.m.
Wednetday Seovi&lt;e - 7:30p.m.

Carmel
Pu1or: Kenne111 Baker
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m. (2nd&amp;: 4111 Sun)

I

C1rlet011

Middleport CommunllJ Church
S7S Purl St., Middleport
Pallor. Sam Andenon
Sunday School tO a.m.
Evenina - 7:30p.m.
Wednclday Servi« • 7:30p.m.

Forest Run
Puwr: Wesley Thaldlcr
S1111day School· tO a.m.
Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Thunday Services • 6:30p.m.

K&amp;C JEWELERS

I

'·

Chester
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Wonhip · 9 a.m.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Thunday Services - 7 p.m.

.

LEVI WEEI&lt;

Levi's For The
Entire Fami
no
~

Thun ay Services · 7 p.m.

Church of God

Sacrtd Heart Calhollc C~urcll
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pattor. Rev. Walter E. Heinz
SaL Coo. 4:4,·5:15 p.m.; Man · S:30 p.m.
Sun. Coo. • 8:4S·9: IS a.m.,
StDl. Man - 9:30a.m.
Daily Mau - 8:30 a.m.

•••

Graham Untied Melllodlst
Worship· 9:30a.m. (latA lndSIDI), 7:30
p.m. (3Jd &amp;: 4111 Sun)
·
Wedn01day Service - 7:30p.m.

Reeds\'llle
Pastor: Rev. Chulu Eaton
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Wednelday Servia:• - 7:30p.m.

Catholic

' ·\'\.

ll

Methodist

Hartrord Church of Christ In Christian
Union
Hanford, W.Va.
Putor: Rev. David McMania
SW\day School - I La.m.
Wonhip- 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednaday Servicea · 7:30p.m.

Rutland Free Wlll Baptlll
Satan St.
Panor: Rev. Paul Taylor
SWiday School - 10 a.m.
Evenina- 1 p.m.
Wednelday Services- 7 p.m.

.

•w•lid lt 11 h~1 ud

SL Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore&amp;. Second SL, Pomeroy
Pastor: Laura A. l..each Shrcffier
Sunday School - 9:4' Lm.
Worohip - 11 Lm.

South Bethel New Testament
SiJ'&lt;~er Ridge
Pastor: Duane Sydcnalrickcr
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wonhip · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

The SllniJon Anny
I IS Buucmut Ave., Pomeroy.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Wonllip - 10:00 Lm., 7:30p.m.

Southern Cluster
Apple Grove
Pastor: Carl Hicks
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Service&amp; -7 p.m.

Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood,
W.Va.
Pas1or: Rev . George C. Weirick
Sunday School- 9:30 Lm.
Worship · t t a.m.

Neue Setdement Church

Sunday Worship · 2:30p.m.;
Thunday services · 7:30p .m.

Fairview Bible Church
Le&gt;art, W.Va. RL t
Pastor: Jame~ Lewis
Sunday School · 11 a.m.
Wonhip- 9:30a.m.• 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service - 7:30p.m.

Snowville
PulOt': Flo= Smi111
SWiday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 9 a.m.

Our Saviour Lutherln Church

Chn stt an Unton

Pastor£James E. Keesee

.Wedneaday Servia:• - 7 p.m.
Trlnlt7 CClll&amp;ftlaiJonat Church
Pattor: Rev. Roland Wildman
O.urch- 9:15a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.

Pastor: Ron Fierce

SL John Lutheran Churcb
Pine Grove
PaAor: Laun A. Leach Shrdller
Wonhip • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

Hemlock Gro'" Church
Pastor: O.arlea Domi&amp;M
Sunday achool - 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 9:30 Lm. 7 p.m.

Worship - 10 o.m.,7 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Other Churches

BelhanJ
Pas1or: Kenne111 Bilker
SWiday School • tO a.m.
Wonhip -9 a.m.
WednctdayServicea - !Oa.m.

Meigs Cooperallve Parish
Northeast Cluster
Atrred
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- It a.m., 6:30p.m.

Hall- Cllur.. of Clorlstln Chrlltlln
Unloa
PaAG&lt;: The1011 Durtwn
Sunday School ·9 :30a.m.
Evenins - 7 p.m.
Wednetdoy Services· 7 p.m.

Putor: Glendon Stroud
SW\day Sdlool -9:30a.m.
Wonllip · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 9:1S a.m.
Wonhip -IO:t:i a.m.

Reorpnlred c~.r.h or Jesu• Christ In
LaUer DaJ Satnta
PortiMd-Rac:ine Rd.
Pas10r:
Roush

Langsville Christian Church
Sunday Sdlool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip -10:30Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wodneaday Service 7:30p.m.

Vldory Boptlst
525 N. 2nd St., Middleport

New Hnen Churtb of the Nazarene

Salem Center

latter-Day Saints

MI. Olive Untied Methodist
Off I 24 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Charles Jones
Sundoy School-9:30a.m.
Wonhi:r.
· - 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.

Old Dnur Bible Clorlstlan Cburcb
Pa-= Jadt Coland
Sundar School - I oa.m.
Wedneaday s.Meoa- 7 p.m.

POO'tland Flnl Church or lilt Nuarene
Paator. William Iuttul
SW\day Sdlool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip-t0:40a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednelday Service• - 7:30p.m.

RuUand
Pattor: Anhur Crabtru
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Sctvicea • 1 p.m.

Harrllonvltte Hollnea Chapter
Pastor: Rev. l!arl Field
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wr:dncsday Service· 7:30p.m.

Llbe117 Christian Church
Dexter
Putor: Woody Call
Sunday School- tO a.m.
Hvenina • 7 p.m.
Wednoaday Service -7 p.m.

Hope Baptist Chapel
S70 Grant St, Middleport
Pastor: David Bryan, Sr.
S1111day School· tO a.m.
Worsh1p- Lt a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

RuU1ncl Church of the Nazarene
PaJtG&lt;: Samuel Buye
Sunday Sdlool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m .. 6:30p.m.
Wednelday Services- 7 p.m .

Rock Sprlnr•
Pa1&amp;or:Ketth Rader
Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
Wonhip · 10 a.m.
Wcdnesday Services • 6 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Ivan Myen

MlPI Church or Christ
Miller St, Muon, W.Va.
Sundar School - LO a.m,.
Wonhip- II a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service&amp; - 7 p.m.

Rejoicing Lire Baptist Church
383 N. 2nd Ave., Middlcpon
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Mlnenvllle

Pomeroy
Pastor: Don Meadows
Sunday School · 9:1S a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m. ,6p.m.
Wedne~day Service• · 7:30p.m.

Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Wonhip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wr:dneaday Servia: - 7:30p.m.

Rudand Church or C~rlst
Pattor: Eugene H. Undenvood
SWiday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Silver Run Baptist
PatlOr: Bill Liule
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip - Lt a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-7 :30p.m.

Chnt.- Chur&lt;:h of the Nuarene
Pastor. Rev. Herbert Gnte
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- It a.m., 7 p.m.
WedneJday Service&amp; · 7 p.m.

Peart Chapel
Pastor: FloruteC Smilh
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.

Mlddteporllndej&gt;&lt;ndent Holiness
Church
7:i Purl St.

Dater Church or Christ
Pattor: Roaer Wauon
SWiday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.
Wednelday Servica • 7 p.m.

SW&gt;day School - 9:30a.m .
Worship· 10:40 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servia:• - 7:30 p.m.

Located S Miles East of Rt. 33 On Rt. SO East, Athens
1972

Pastor James R. Acree Sr. Invites you to bring a lawn
. ._____
ch_a_l_r_a.nd__c_om
__e_e_x~~--ti~n~g~a.n_e_v~e.n-~~
· ~o~f~.b~le-s~s~ln~g~.----~

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
7S Pearl St., Middleport.
PaslOr: Rev. han Myers
Sunday tchool • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wodneaday Servia: -7 :30p.m.

Zion Ch.urcll or Christ
Pomeroy, HarrisaJvillo Rd. (RL 143)
Pastor. RoGer B. Purtell
SWiday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonllip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednelday Servica -7 p.m.

"Whf'rf' St&gt;niC'f' Aflf'~ lht' Salt&gt; 1~ AM Important
AM Tht&gt; Salt·"

108 ON
SATURDAY MORNINGS AT 9:00 AlllD HEARD OUR
BROADC.AST, OR SEEN OUR TV PROGRAM ON. SUNDAY
MORNING AT 8:00 ON CHANNEL 3. THEN THIS IS YOUR
OPPORTUNITY TO GET ACQUAINTED WITH US.

Middleport Church or Christ
jill and Main
Paator: AI HartiCII
SWiday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 8:15,10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Serviecs -7 p.m.

c r .... . ,..

Pomeroy First Baptist
Ban Main St.
PaslOr. Steve Fuller
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Servia:• ·7:30p.m.

Cole's Mobile Homes

IF YOU HAVEN'T YET TUNED IN TO WEMM-FM

Pastor: Rev. Ben I. WaUl
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
' !'?*~••MMy'SeMce"' ?taG p.m.

Heath (Middleport)
Pastor: Frank Smith
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 6 p.m.
Pastor: We~ley Thalc;her
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worthip · 10 a.m.

Holiness

Burwattow Rltl&amp;o Cburch rJ Christ
Putor: Ja&lt;k Colesrove
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wcnllip- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedneaday Servicea. 6:30p.m.

Rudand First Baptist Church
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Won hip · 10:45 a.m.

ML Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middlepon
Pasaor: Rev. Gilbert Crug,Ir.
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · t0:4S a.m.

Featured Singers For The '!vening Will Be The
Children of God, The Redeemed Qu.rtet, The
Joyful Hearts. God's Little Lambs, Tha Willing
Hearti and Linda Jones.
.

Plat Grove Hollnea Church
1/2 mile off RL 32,

Pastor: Steve Deaver

OVER 1S NEW SINGLE WiDE HOMES ON DISPLAY

BAPTIST CHURCH
IS COMING TO TOWN!
You're lnv ited .to Join Us On

Pomeroy Westskte Cburch or Christ
332260tiJd...,'a Horne Rd.
992-3841
Sunday School - II a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
1

Racine Ftnt Baptist

wath courteous treatment before and after
the sale!

~ILLSIDE

Gnce Epllcopat c•urch
326 H. Main St, Pomeroy
Paator: Rev. Dr. Roy C. Myen
I t a.m. June • Auauat

Liberty Assembly or God
Dudding Lane, Mason, W.Va.
Putor: J.N. Thacker
Evening-7 :30p.m.
Wec!IIOI(Iay Services· 7:LS p.m.

S~tll the same great selection, great price

1
Plus inhrtst ratts as low· as 11.7 5%

Pomero7 Churcb or Christ
212 w. Main St.
Putor:
Mile•
Sunday School - 9 :30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdnctday Scrviecs -7 p.m.

Assembly of God

Monday-Friday 9 am-7 pm
_ Saturday 10 am-5 pm

$11 99S

Episcopal

.w.,

Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
. ...t"'·(&amp; " Ia&amp; • 7:30p.m.
:Wiiliilliiy Servic:et -7:3op.m.

NEW HOURS:

Starting As Low As.......

Church of Christ

And,...,

Church rJ Jesus Christ Apostolic
VanZandt and Watd Rd.

992-6418 or 992-6588

Downs, G!ouster.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson
were visitors of Ida Murphy. Also
Larry Barr were Wednesday visiting was Roben Punell on Sat. urday.
evening visiiOrs of Ida Murphy.
Murphy was a Saturday visiRecent visitors of Ida Murphy tor Ida
of Mrs. Barbara Davis and famwere Adam Downs and Elaine ily, Minersville.

Singing By The River!

Weekend Spec1111

Apostolic

224 EAST MAIN • POMEROY, OH.

News briefs

Bole, Mrs. Greg Davis and family,
Mr. and Mrs: Joseph Ev~ns and
sons, also Eltzabeth Hanmg and
Jane Russell, Columbus.
Tuesday vtsttors of Mr. and
Mrs. Charley Smtth were Mr. and
Mrs. Doyle Knapp, Mr. and Mrs.
Daniel Worley, Stacy, Daniel,
Stephen, Kat! Knapp, Judy and
Ashley Knapp~ Michelle Knapp.
Mrs . Dante! Worley, Stacy,
Dante! and Stephen returned home
Thursday after spending several
days wtth Mr. and Mrs. Charley
Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Bryan (Susan
King) Reeves: Kingsbury Road,
announce the btrth of a daughter on
July 25 at Holzer Med1cal Center.
Mrs. Dorothy Reeves IS the great
grandmother.
Mr. and Mrs. William (Tammy
Johnson) Dummitt, Rodney, have a
son, Joseph Baren, born July 30 at
Holzer Medical Center. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson.
Ida Murphy, Elaine Downs and
Adam were recent visitors of
Roben Murphy and Robbie.
Ida Murphy and Robbie were
Friday morning visitors of Carrie
Wears.
Mrs. Howard Thoma and Mrs.

Riding club
plans trail ride

..

POMEROY HEALTH CARE

Wolfe Pen _community news
Mrs. John Downs, Adam and
Dickie, Glouster, were weekend
visitors of Mrs. J.R. Murphy.
Adamr.'mained for a week's vacalion w1th his grandmother.
Jeff Bole, Homer Hill, is spending a few days with his mother
Mrs. Bole and helping with farm
work In StoekporL
Crystal Summerfield, Medina, is
visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Haggy, Stephanie, Brad and Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Russell.
Mr. and Mrs . Leslie Frank,
Sarah and Matthew were recent
visi1ors of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Haning and Ronald.
Peggy Bole, Horner Hill, is
helping at the Christian Church
Camp at Darwin.
Recelll visiiOrs of Mr. and Mrs.
Jeff Bole Homer Hill, were Mr.
and Mrs: Larry Bole, Farwell ,
Mich., Amanda and Brandon and
Mrs. Mary Bole, Stockpon.
Tuesday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. J.R. Murphy were Mr. and
Mrs. Harley johnson, Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Holley, Mr. and Mrs. William
Thoma, Becky, Mr. and Mrs. Curt
Thomas. Newark; Roben Murphy,
Robbie, Mr. and Mrs. John Downs
and sons, Mr. and Mrs. John Murphy and Chris, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff

!
ments.
Fair projects were discussed
with a total of four girls to be
ellhibiting. One will be ellhibiting
with Brownie Trooc 1271 as a flyup. They will have three group pro- ~
jects on display.
·~
The girls visited Manley's
Recycling Center on Tuesday . .
They have also done a study on the
cost of using the landftll for all
waste as opposed to recycling.
They will be making recycled
paper in the near future to complete
the recycling patch. .
. .
The troop w!J!I~ reg~tenng
for the new ye
tembei. Any
girl attending Pomeroy Elementary
that is in grades four through SIX, or
9-12 years of age is ~ligible to)~in. . ~
For further informauon on JOmmg ,;
call Brenda Neutzling at992-5770.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel-

By The Bend

'

Friday, August 9, 1991

'&gt;
- ·~

�Friday, August

usiness Services

Classified

CHESTER
COUNTRY CLUB
Golf

Lessons 161 155 00
New Gnps ............. $4.00
Woods
122.00

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992 2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 AM to 5 PM
8 AM. unhl NOON SATURDAY
CLO

Days
1
3
6
10
Monthly

Y

"Re c.-, e s 5 0 d scou nt to lids p 111 d n adv an c

run 3

d~ s ll

no ch•ge
• o l flrl cos

• &amp;enttntlts not respon s tbl e for e rmrs a he{ f rs t d il\l
for a"o" t • • day ad

follou lllf&lt;

C' h f!Ck

un t n p a p e rl Ce l b,. lo ,. '} 1") 0., ,.,

dltt aher publ C-' on to m llk e c o ree l on

•Ad• thlt must be e111d

1n

1dvan ce ere

675

387 - Ch•h re

Mddlt!()cr

Pomerov

WV

Aree C d e 304
Pt

Pl t! IIIIO

458 - l .,on

Aio Gtande

911 5

Ch es te

843

576
773

M~tsnn

258 - Guyer 0 st

247

P o tllln d
letart Ftlh

892

New Have n

643

949
742

Rae he
Ru t land

895
937

l .. tll t
8 fl11l c

667

Coolv ll e

318

nton

'II

24&amp;

Ar•b • 0 st
W e "ftt

3 79

poht D11ly Tr1bune re•ch ng over 11!1 000 ho nes

COPY OEAOLINE

O alhp? l s

Appl .. G

REPAIRS

Used

lrons ............ $5

Used

Woods
AWARDS

OV JI

Convertible Tops,
Carpets, Headliner
&amp; Seat Covers and
Mmor Auto Repair

MAIN ST , MASON, WY

1-1304)773-9560

2 00 PM MONDAY

WEDNESDAY PAPER

THUI\SOAY PAPER
FAIOAl PAPER

2 00 PM TUESOAV

2 00 PM WEDNESDAY
2 00 PM 1HURSOAY

t'!lt.Atlll£

let Ruulfs fast

2 00 PM Fr'l DAY

lUNDAY PAPER

SIGNS
tlck lf1DII!'U¥
B~rby
by

'

Public Notice

BULLEtiN BOARD
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4·30 P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

BASEMENT SALE
EWING RESIDENCE
MECHANICST

FRI &amp; SAT
ALL DAY

Public Notice

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTICE
We the Board of Truootees
of Dlova Townohop Moogo
County Ohio ore occeptong
application• for the poa1taon
Df Townohop Clerk All ra
aumea must be gaven to a
Tru.tee prior to noon Au
guilt 10 1891
By Order of tho Board of
Truootoeo of Ohvo Townohop
PaulE Ufo Joe E Lantz
Ernest 0 Borrongar
(81 7 8 9 3tc

PUBUC NOTICE OF AN AP
PLICATION TO PURCHASE
THE ASSETS AND ASSUME
THE UABILITIES
Nollce 11 hereby g1ven that
applocatoon has bean made to
the Comptroli91'ofthe Cu1T8ncy
1114 Avenue of the Amencas
Suote3900 NewYook.NowYoo1&lt;
10036 lor approval of the pur
chase of cena1n assets and as
sumptoon of certain loabililies ol
a branch office of The Central
Trust Company of Southeast
em Ohoo N A Manetta Ohoo
locatad at97 North Second Ave
nue, Middleport OhiO 45760 to
The Central Tlust Company N
A Cmcmnali Olo10 The applo
cation was filed July 22 1991
Thos notice I&amp; published pur
suantto 12USC 1828(c)and 12
CFR 5 This notKl8 will appear
at approximately two week 1n
tervals beg1nmng July 22 t991
and endong August 22 1991
Any person desonng to oom
ment on the purchase and as
sumpt10n applicatiOn may do so

1

card

of Thanks

The Family Of
RAYMOND
HATFIELD
Would hke to
express thetr
apprec1at•on to all
the netghbors and
fnends who sent
food flowers and
cards dunng the
pass1ng of our
loved one Thank
you to the
Pomeroy EMS and
the staff of F1sher
Funeral Home
Thank you all for
canng

2

In Memory

11

by subm1ttong wntten comments August 14 1991 Saod sale
~UALITY
to Office of the Comptroler of 11 •ubject to the approval of
Pa111t Pleasant 67~92 &lt;
the Cu"""cy t1t4 Avenue of the Probate Court
I C•rson Crow Attorney
the Amencas Suite 3900 New
for the estate of
Yor11 New York 10036 Wiihln
Barbaro A Whottongton
30 days of the date of the first
Public Notice
P 0 Box 668
pubiiC&amp;toon of thiS nollce The
Pomeroy Ohoo 46769
publiC file 1s avaolable for on
Ph (614) 992 6069
spect10n 1n lhe distriCt office
(8) 7 9 11 13 4tc
dunng regular bustness hours
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Vlllaga of Middleport
July 22 1991
p
bll N II
The Cent1al Trust Company of ___u_ _
c_o_ce
_ _ public waler oupply hao
Southeastern Ohoo N A Mari 1
completed the monitoring
ette OhiO
MEIGS COUNTY
cycle for volotlle organic
The Central Trust Company N
1992 BUDGET
The Tax Budget for Maogs chemical• (VOCo) ao roqulr..t
A C1nc1nnab OhiO
County Oh1o for calendar bychapler374H1 olthaOhlo
(7) 22 (8) 7 22 3TC
year 1992 woo adopted July Admlnlatrallve Coda (OAC)
10 1991 by lhe Meogo Upon completion ol ..ch VOC
monitoring cycle, olete regu·
PubliC Notice
County Board of Commoa
110nera
latlono also roqulrethe own·
A summary of IBid Tax era or operator of a public
IN THE
Budget may be rev1ewed 1n water supply to notify Ita
COMMON PLEAS COURT
the offoce of the Maogs conaumera ollhe availability
PROBATE DIVISION
County Comm1s~oner s bet
of the VOC analytical reoulto
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
weanthehouraof8 lOAM
IN THE MATTER OF THE
for the period tHted
and 4 30 P M Monday Reaullo of these t"ll are
ESTATE OF BARBARA A
through Friday on or after available lor public revlow at
WHITTINGTON
Auguoot 9 1991 al the the Mayoro office, 237 Race
DECEASED PLAINTIFF
Courthouea Second Street
- VSSt Middleport, Ohio between
Pomeroy Oh1o
BRANDY ANN GROVER
the houro of 8 00 a m and
Me1gs
County
at al Delandanu
4 00 p m Monday through
CommiSSioners
CASE NO 26781
Mary Hobstetter Clerk Friday
NOTICE OF SALE
(8) 9, 1TC
181
S
He
OF REAL ESTATE
Not1cB11 hereby gwen that
the undera1gned will sell to
the hoghes1 bodder the real
Real Estate General
eotata owned by B a r b a r o ! - - - - - - - - - - . . , . . - - - - - - - - - - Ann Whottongton daceaald
and Dalbert Frodl&amp;y on the
14th day of August 1991
Sa1d real estate IS located 1n
Rutland Townshtp Section
6 Town 6 Range 14 and
conta1na 60 acres Sa1d deed
descrtpt1on 11 described m
Volume 301 Page 91 on
Meogo County Dead Re
cords wh1ch 11 Incorporated
herein by referanca There 11
an act1ve gas well on sa1d
premaaes and all utdtttes are
available
OFFICE 992·2886
Sa1d real estate ts ap
pra1sed at seventeen thou
10nd dollars ( $17 000 00)
HOME 992 5692
and cannot be sold for leas
Sard sale wtll be held m the
(I(Af(lllifielfl IHI ht•U .......
office of Crow and Crow
205
NORTH
SECOND
AVE
Allornevs at Law Second
St and Mulberry Ava Po
MIDDLEPORT OHIO
meroy Ohoo at 1 30 P M on
DOTTIE S TURNER, BROKER
CLOSE TO TOWN· Yet Private · This 2 1/2 acres IS
easy to mow because n 1s level Comes wnh large
livmg room and dining room Also has a family room
2 bedrooms and central a11 conditioning
$26,900

Help Wanted

R.N.'s
Medical· Surgical • 08
&amp; Pediatric Registered Nurses
EXPERIENCE PREFERRED

Opportunity To Cross-Train
In Speciality

DANVILLE • Red Hill Rd • You ve got to see thiS
one A 3 5 bedroom home has 2 1/2 baths Also has
a f1mshed basement woth a fireplace an attached 2
car 9arage an 1n ground sw1mmmg pool and a well
equipped kitchen It all s1ts on approx 1 0 acres
ASKING $120,000

CONTACT

RUTLAND. How can you beat a dealloke th1s? A 2
story hamew1th 3bedrooms and a n1cellat lot Apnea
too good to pass up
ONLY$7,500

PERSONNEL
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
POINT PLEASANT, WV
(304) 675-4340

POMEROY· No Down Payment Owners Will carry
2nd mortgage on th1s 2 story home on a good street
Has a large lamoly room some hardwood floors 3
bedrooms and a dimng room Has vmyl s1d1ng lor low
maintenance
ONLY $24,000

EOEIAA

'

Speu al l rt

~

r

r Pt pk Wh An Spt., I T Y

TO Registe red Nuoses
Lice nsed Prac tical Nu rses
Ou r rapid growth as th e a rea s newes t a nd finest
Skilled Long Te rm Ca re Facilit y has gene ra led op
portuntttes lor RN sand LPN s to become a pa rt of a
well m a na ged e mployee orte nled Health Ca re De
live r y Tea m
Comf' for a visit talk to us a bout your px pecta
tlons a nd we wtillalk to you a bout our e mploy me n1
benefit s which Includes the followong a nd are offe red
tn what Is a truly State Of The Art Nu rsing Faclllt)
-.h lch supports the effec tive d elivery of responsive
reside nt services
-Cho ice of 8 hour or 12 hou r s hift s
-12 hour shift compensation Includes workong
36 hours and paid for40hours for any three
12 hour shifts worked tn a 14day p ay pe riod
-Experience compensation shift dlfferen
tial. pafd IN ADDmON tocompettttve ba se
hourly rates of $10 50for RN s and $7 50 lo r
LPN s
Stop by tot an Interview o r p~ one Sally
Gloeckner DON at (6141 992-6472 and let us show
you that a il Nursing J!omes a re not alike
l 'n

TT."r&gt;T&gt;ni"\1"\T:T

CENTER

~t&lt;!~le~10rt,

OH 45760

and Home repairs
667·6611
After 7:00 p.m.

J&amp;L
INSULATION
•VInyl Siding
•Replacement
Windows
•Roofing
oln1ulation

MIDDLEPORT· VIne Street· A mce area to live 1n
This home could have 3 4 bedrooms All rooms are
mce s1zed Has dishwasher stoVe 1elngerator dis·
posal and fireplace What more could you want? Sits
on 2 fenced flat lots Plenty of playroom for kids
TAKE A LOOK AT $38,900
NEE!;) A SMALL BUSINESS BUILDING • to start
your own bus1ness 1n Langsville? ~sa mce building
on approx 1 acre lot Has water sewage and
restroom Bu1k to state regulations

$30,000
POMEROY. Laurel Cliff · S11t1ng on a little less than
1 acre ol levelland IS th1s 3 bedroom house wrth an
open stairway fireplace and maontenance lree s1d·
1ng

DARLINE STEWART
SHERYL WALTERS
SANDY BUTCHER

{
I
I

IANGIS- Gcoolttc.-$125 up

- Concrete work
- Roofing

FIIIIIIS-$121 up
11111(10 OVENS-$79 up

639 Bryan Place
Moddleport Ohio
II 14 tfn

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD

Pointing
(FREE ESTIMATES)

Aaoss From Post OffKI
POMEROY,

992·6215

Pomeroy,

Specializing In

Curto111 Fr..nt Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR All MAKES &amp;
MODflS

992-7013
or 992-5553
01 TOLL

71&amp;91 1mo pd

DAVE'S
ELECTRONIC
SERVICE

l1stallaa Celhdar
r•o•es, (• Stereos
or Radios, CB's

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Nawlr- lullt
'Free Estuftatal"

PH. 949·2101
or Res. 949-2160
NO SUNDAY CAUS
3 11 tfn

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES
OIUY •SELL •TIADI
OPEN
Tueoday thn• Saturday
1000am 600 pm

742-2421
2112 Mi. outside
Rutland on New
Li111a ld.
5 10 '91 tfn

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR
AUIIlDS

lri .. H In Or
Pick Up.

We

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVICE
992· 5335 or
985-3561
Acro11 From Pelt OHico
217 I. Socallll St.
POMEIOY, 01110
3/6190/tfn
•Remodeling and
Home Repa1rs
•Roofmg
•S•dmg
•Pamtmg
FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION

POOlS,
CISTERNS, Ere.
1,625 GAI,.cr S35·S4S
lt.I,M 71·A
RUtlAND,
OHIO 45775·9626
U'-742·2904
724

and nU FLOOI CAll
•Reasonable Rates
•Quality Work
•Free Estimates
•Carpet Has Fast Dry
T1me
oH1gh GIOII on T1le
Floor Finoah
MI.E LEWIS, OwIt I, lutland, OH

742-2451

•New Ho11111
•Garages
•Complete
le1110cWing
Stop &amp; Co111pare
Fr11 Estl•ates

985-4473

667-6179

5 31 90 tfn

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK
(614)
696-1006

ROOFING
•

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH

TROMM BUILDERS

FREE ESTIMA TIS

Years Experience
•Quah~ Homes and
Custom Remodeling

3

Announcements

Slnglo oorvlco ond ,_1o11or
ror aroo llngloe All
Con·
ftdontlal oncl ollonlobll Wrlto
Slngloo~., p0 Box 1043, Gol
llpollo, uoo 4!831

•a•

4

9

1 Uolll Admiral Doop Freeze• 25
Cubic Fool, IIUII Ill Ablo To
llovo MAway 114 Ul 05n
3 Kitto..,. to good homo, phon•
304-4175-7121
4 Port Rotrlovor Pupploob 3
lloloe, 1 Fomolo, I Wookl ld,
114-245-11185 Aftor 5p.m
Frllnclly Klttono Thlt Nllll A
Poot.cl lt.I"A 114-44e-31tll
lril IMIIIII, 30W75-3020
Largo Tractor Tlro llokl Good
Flowor Bi!!1 Hu iiMft Polntlll
y11r1

Employment Services
11

old, vary

HappyAds

Chriotlon lody looking lor
gontlomon lrtondlpon pol Wrlto
ltox ~ Ntw Haven, WV 25265
6

Lost &amp; Found

Loot-&lt;lold Bulovo Wotch nur
Clorkl Joworly and Pomoroy
POll OHico, 814-1140.2630
7

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
2 Fomlly Yord Solo Soturd•r,•
Auguot 1oth g 00 • 5 00 80 Yo •
Rood Bldwolt (1 IIIIo Woot 01
SA 110) Knick Knockl Clothing
Sm Toolo.
2 Family: 17 Bolmolll Drtva
Auguot lith 1 1oth Fumnura,
Houllhold hlml IIIIC Clolh·
lng
2 Fomlry Lincoln Plko And 141,
Auguot llh1 .10th U ColioCIIW
ttema And MONI

742-2328
5/22/tfn

3 Family Sooturdly, August 10th,
8 • m 1ot Trallor On l.aft Poot •
Honnon Troco High Uttlo Glrll
Aduh Clolhoo1 Crofto, Homo In•
torlor, - · llol81

~A"'LL:-':Ya-od"""So"'Ja-t"'M""u-11--=Bo--=P-old,...,.ln~ '

Advanco DEADLINE 2:00 p m
thl day llllora lha Ill II to run
Sundly lllltlon • 2 00 p m
Friday llondoy lllltlcn 2 oo
p m Saturdly
BulovUto Townhouoo Ono Ooy
Onlyl Augull 12 Good School
ClolhM,Andllol811-7
Friday And Sotruday, Augull81h
And 8th, t a m To 7 Addloon
Plkl Nolll To Bllzar Rood
Clothtng Vorlouo Sl:r111, 1C.
Speed Blkl, llllc.
Garage Solo Thurlllooy Frldoy,
Sotuo'day 0.? Acrooo FI'Oill Boptl81 Church. VInton Fumhurt
HouHhold h•ma. Womens
Mono, Chlldrono CIOihoo Toy•
NleNIICOI
Glont Yaod Solo 44e Spru..
Slrlll Eltonllcn Auguot 1·12, 8
To I p m Babr Fumhure._Goo
And EIICirlc RangH 1oy1,
Bumper Pool Tal&gt;la Tool• Fano
OIUIWirt SWIIP"Fa. Unenl,
Drlpoo, Whll NOto, Antlq111o
Dol• And Doole Cholro Mloc
Fumhura, Llmpo Largoot Sola
Evlrl

A.VON 1 All Area• 1 Shirley
Spoora 304-675-1429
Mature Babysitter Needed In My
Homo In Tho Cliy of Gallipolis
Prefer Someone Who Lives In
Town 614-446-6872
CANNERY WORKERS/ALASKA
Hiring Man/Woman Up To $600
W•kly Tronsportatlon Hcuo
lng CALL NOW 1205 736-7000
Ext 1617B4
CJINNERY WORKERS/ALASKA
Hlrjng MerVWomen Up to $800
WMkly. Transportation Hous
lng CALL NOW 1 206 736-7000
Elll 181793
Cuotomao Sarvlca Raprasanto
tlve
Fofrollgas, 1 prlvotaly ownod
m1rketlng comp1ny and a
recognlzid leader In our In
duotry, 11 soaking 1 Cuotomar
str.tce Reprenntatlve tor our
Galllpollo locotlao Raspon
olbllltlao lncludo providing
..Cretart11 •upport tor our
oHic., and handling cul1omer
Mrvlce r.qu•t1• and AccQ\Inta
AocoiVIblo COIIOctlonl Thl
succenful candld1ta will have
two plua years gener11 office or
HCnt:arlel experl•nce 50 wpm
lyPing obllltln 10.kay by touch,
arid PC experl•nc• Additional
r8qulr•menta Include excellent
cqmmunkatlon skills auperlor
telephone etiquette and a
g•nulne commitment to provlcl
fl'lg euperlor customer 11rvlc•
We offwr a competitive aalary
and an •xcellent Hneflta pack..
ogo Including prollt ohortng
1~ an lnv..t:ment plan option
lnlorntod candldaln ohould
toowood thllr reoumo and salary
roqulremonto to FERRELL.GAS
10095 us Rt 35
Gallipolis, OH 45831
Equal Oppo~unlty Employar
EARN MONEY Roadlng Booksl
$30 000/yr: Income Pot1ntlal
Dolelio (1) 805-962-8000 Ext Y
10189
Easy World E&lt;collont Payl A..
samblo Product• At Homo Call
For Information 504-641~003
Ext 3t3
FuU time night cook position
open Apply In person 3004
Jeckson · Avenue Village Pizza
Inn.

GET PAID lor Compiling Names
ond Addrossoa $500 por 1 000
Call 1 900 246-3t31 ($0.9tlmln)
or Wrlto PASSE 31Y 161 South
Llncolnway North Aurora IL
60542

llovlng Solo Augllll lOth eon;- ,
lonory Good Clothing, Encycropodlu Hooter Homo lntor
lo, Hinging toblo, Lololllocl

t:.:t :~~l'=: ~"'f.~

Avenue,
MnBUGI,
Behind
Sooll-orn Equljlmtnl
Soturdoyl I:OOI.m. llllumnr:
And Cllldron Clolhlo, Toyo, '
Houoolookl - . 1 lllloii
~- Oolllpolll - Rolli
Thllrlllly, Friday N FI'Oill Portor Oo 1 IIIIo bOWio Bulavtllo
Plkl, Booloo, Clollllng Curlalno,
Houoohold lilac

Help Wanted

AVON All arNe Call Marilyn
Waav•r 3()4.882 2645
ADDRESSERS WANTED lm
mldlltelyl
No
Experience
Necessary
Process
FHA
Mortgage Rolundl Work AI
Home Call1-405-321 3064
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Excellent
Pay
Boneflts
Transportation
407 292-41111
Ext 571 9a m 10p m Toll
Frolundld

lrtondly
115-3430
Old mattrno ond box opringo
304-4175-7341

5

Wanted to Buy

Wanllll To Buy Usod 1991
Buckeye Hilla Nursing Booka
LPN Poogrem 614-3811-9751
Wanled 111 Junk and scrap mol
11 304-895.3o38
Wanllll to buy Standing tlmbor
Bob William• 6 sona 614-992
5449
Top Prlcoo Paid AU Old US
Colna Gold Rings, Diamonds
Silver Coins Sterling, Gotd
Col no IllS Coin Sflop 151
Second Avenue Gallipolis

Giveaway

Male B•;t, 3

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

Rick Psaroon Auction Company
lull time IUCtionHr comptell
auction Mrvlce Llcen11d Ohio
W•ot Vlrglnlo 304 773-5785

114 81 tfn

6 6-91

•20

Announcements

992-6648 or
691-6864

BISSElL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

WATER
HAUUNG

It

IM-44e-1141ll

7/ 31 / 91 lin

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Mise lttmt, some clothing var
IOU I
IIZH
Ill half ·price
Thuraday Friday tCJ.3 1675 Un
coin Heights Pomeroy

Downspouts

1/lf{l-. ...

DAIWIII, OliO

CALLS

ROOFING
Gutters

Would Llko To Buy 3br Trollor
Or Ho&lt;ooo In Hannan Trace Or
Bldwoll 0lotrlcl 114-44Uiltll
AftorSp m

1

31

L

742·2656

1·100·141·0070

Pmes"

4 16 86 tfn

NEW- REPAIR

Real Estate
Wanted

&amp;-family, ltrg• women• sizes
like new 2 compound bows In
faJit &amp; toddler clothing, about 3
Rentals
ml,ln out 124 Thurscfey Friday
Aug 8.JI I 00.77
All Yord Sol• Must Bo Paid In
They re all rus ty I d say you re
Advonco Doodllno 1 oopm tho
a good candodate fo r a tetanus shot
41 Houses for Rent
day bolore thl od lo to run
Sundoy
t OOpm
Hou11
IIOnday lllltlon
lllltlon
10 Folday
ooa m r~=~==~==:===lr-=========11735Blllroom
Roor ThirdFumllhod
Avonuo S1501mo,
11
s.turdly
Help Wanled
Homes for Sale
U~ ~r.""· 814-446-3870 614

PH. 949·2101
or Rts. 949-2860
Day or N1ght
NO SUNDAY

Oa Sltelnstalatlal
frM Estimates

FlEE

WE DO

"~ Reasonable

Pomeroy,

949-2168

36

7

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

614-992-6820

992-2269
WHALEY'S
AUTO PARTS

It 14 90 tln

BISSELL
BUILDERS

GROOM
ROOM

FREE ESTIMATES

11280tfn

1 112 mile not1h of ChH1er Frl
sat 9-5 Antlqun and mise 614
985-43SMi tor mer• lntormallon

Oh1o

3-Fomlly yard solo 0.10.11 lrom
V.5 on St Rt 143 114 milt ol Rt

THE

BILL SLACK
USED RAILROAD TIES

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992-5335 or 915-3561

Patnt~ng

Moodowhlll Subdlvlolon 2 8
mlln out Send Hill Road hae
reotrlctlll building loll lor oolo
11 low •• $1100, and one acre
lote for alngle wldn avall1ble
oloo, 304_.75'3460 or 175-4100
Mo,..r Boftom Soll&gt;dlvlllon
ono ocra loti, AI 2 lrontogo,
Prlcl rtducld, ctty wlter, 3Q4..
SJ8.2336
Trailer Lot For Rent 3 Mlt.a OH
Rt 7 On Bulovlllo Plkl Nlco
Quill Country LOI 814-245-11428
Troller 101 lor rent1 Rutlond VII
lago ciOH to ocnool 614-742
2110V

- Interior • Exterior

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Gutter Cleantng

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

"

4 famlllu Frtdoy, Aug 0.Tlll All
Camp Conley Fairview
Road lllldred Sturgeon Anti
qu11
Girogo Solo 5 mllao lrom At 2
01) Jorry 1 Run Road Appla
Qrovo air lmpoct anil powar
toolt , glau wara boll motors
tumHuro ctolhlng ltams August
8 9&amp; 10 V.5pm

- ftoom Addltlone

Pomeroy-Middleport,

SNAFU@ by Bruce Beattie

Gone,

- Gutter work
- EieC1ricll end Plumbing

EMILEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operator

992-2772 or
742-2251

Pleasant
&amp; Vlclnlly

CARPENTER SERVICE

WASHEIIS-$1 00 up
DIYI!-~oy up
IEFIIGOATOIIS-$100 up

(omplete Groo111ing
For All Breeds

JAMES KEESEE

Pt

YOUNG'S

tODlYWAIUNn

7251

CAIIPn CIIANIIS

ROUTE 124· Have you ever d~eamed ol owning your
own bus1ness Well now s the tome to buy Th1s bus1·
ness 1s eqUipped with shaka mach1ne 4 lreezers 1ce
cream machme deep fryer 1ce machme gnll and
LOTS more S1ttmg on approx one acre corner lot
along a state route
ONLY $60,500

I

i

Public Notice

Roofiag, Viayl
siding, Paiatiag,

B 9 1 mo pd

OAY BEFOR E PUBLICATION
11 00 AM SATURDAY

MONOAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER

00
$7 00

COMPLOE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

lrrltll!.l'

992

446

Yad Sal es

PI••• lt R . g11Utr • nd thf' G•

('H

$14.75

A&amp;B

tl~r·

Meso Co

H appy AdA

Pt

IPieplwrt P

cr

Me gs C ounty
Area Code 614

Card of Thenks

"A clantfted edll enttement placed n Th e De tv Sent e e'
~;ept - cl•t•l•ed dttplty Bus nes.s Cer d 1nolegJ~I rot r.es

col

G111i1 Counly
AruCode 614

In Memouam

wMI •lso •PP IIIIr n th e

O ver 16 Word1
Roto
20
$4 00
30
• • 00
42
$9 00
60
$13 00
$1 30 / doy
05 / dov
bro ke n updftY!w I b e chi ged

Class1(1ed fin!!&lt;' I

G vea w ay an d Found ld ! under 15 w ro d1 w It b e

• Price of a d fo al CliP 1111 ~ti e s s doub" pr
•7 pomt I n e type o nly used

Words
15
15
15
15
15

" ' ' " ' ' e to r co rt Mr:utl'le u ru
ft1r 1 1t:h rf~t~o~ 1 1 Mplrlte 1d1

out stcle Me qs Galt a or Ma s on c ount es mu st be p ,.

plld
• free ad 1

Irons ...................

PARKER
CONSTRUCTION

USED APPUANCES

9, 1991

1

LABORATORY TECHNOLOOIST
MLT (ASCPl Or Equlvolont For
Holzer Cllnfc Lawrence Countr.
Branch At Proctorvlllo Ful
Tlmo Position~ llonday Friday
Competitive ::talary Excellent
Benefits S.nd Reaume To Per
sonnel Department
Holzer
Clinic P 0 Box 344 Gallipolis
OH 4563t No Phono Calls
Pliny Truck Stop Restaurant
now accepting applications lor
a cook Call 304·'1'57-8357 bel
WHn 9 am-6 pm or 304..g3r.
23t2
Rec:eptlonist/Sacratary
With
Provan Office Skllla IBM Per
sonal System Computer/Word
Procnsor Mull Enjoy -lng
And Working With Pooplo
Pleasant Worllng Conditions
Sand Raoumo By Auguol 161h
To Raceptlonlat/Secrelary Box
465 CIO Tho Galllpollo Araa
Chamber Of Commarce Gil
llpollo, OH 45631
Shon•y • will be taking ap-

plications Friday Saturday and

Sunday

Someone to care for 4 mo old
prolarebly In mv homo bogln

nlng Sapl 3 non-omokar raf
roq
12

Situation
Wanted

Naaded Room &amp; Boud Can
Mow Grass Do Work Around
Tho House &amp; Help Out I Roply To
Box CLA 080 CIO Gallipolis
Dally Trlbu~ 1 825 Third Avenue
Golllpollo ut1 4563t
14

Business
Training

Rtlraln
NowiiiSouthaastem
Business Collage Spring Valley
PIIZI Coil Today lt4-446-136711
Roglotoratlon t9().(15 t274B
17 Miscellaneous
::--.-----:-~---:::
Hand woven rugs for aale or will
do woavlng 614 992 3090
18

Wanted to

Do

~2~F~om~.~~.~.~tu~d~~~w~~
••~.~~~ng~a

person who commutes to th•
Unlvorolty ol Rio Granda and
Ohio Unlverslly willing to help
w/gao monay 614 992 Z463
Bush Hog Service A11sonable
AetH No Job To Small! 614379 2942
Dunlavy Welding Shop Will do
small Jobs 1nd manutac1ure
omall ltomo 304-!137 2733
Georges Portable Sawmill don I
haul your logs to the mill ju11
call 304 675 t957
Mlsa Paula 1 Day Care Canttr
Sofl aHordabla chlldcara MF
8 1 m 5 30 p m Ages 21'1-10
Balooo aftar school Orop.lno
wolcoms 814-148-8224 Now In·
lint Toddler Caoo 614-146-8227
Will babysit In my home on the
Rutland area Call anytime 614
1112 2612
Will build patio covoro docks
acruned rooms put up vinyl
siding or trallar skirting 614245-6651
Will Oo Babysitting In My Home
1 112 M1le Out Rt 218 Referen
C88 614446 7565
Will do brush hog and flnlsll
mowing, Point Pleasant ar11
304-876-8799

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bust
ness with people you know1 and
NOT lo send monty througn the
mall until you have lnvtstfgatad
the offering
Arthur 1 Chain link Fence
Residential Commorelal In
cluttrlal Free Estimates! Com
plet• Installation Phone 614
:J84-6271
VENDING ROUTE Gat Rich
Quick? No Way! But W• Have A
Good, Sltady Atfordabie Busl
ness Wont Last 1-800 284
VEND

MI\UIO Babyolttar NNclod lm 23
Professional
medl1lly In My Home Monday
Services
Thru Friday Doyohlft 5 Yoar
Old, And 2 Yur Old Non
Smoker S.nd Anume To CLA Custom Butctlering 6 days 1
085, clo Galllpolle Dally Trlbun!1 wHk Cows Hogs Doer 304
882 2353
1125 Third Avenue, Galllpolla OH
4931
Modlcal Tochnologlotllladlcal
Real Estate
Laboratory Tochnlclan
MT
ASCP),
MT
(HHSI
MT
AIITl!MLT (ASCP) Port Tlmo
oaitlon
32 Hours Per P1y 31 Homes for Sale
Portod Aflor 811819\ Starting
Rllluclll To Soil 2 Slory 3br
Sollnoo Will Bo 112 4219 47 Por Comer
In Chtehlrl Ohio
Hou• Conoldarotlon Wll Bo ExcellentLotCondlllon
Flananc.ng
Glvon For Provlouo EXplriiOCI Available Wllh Pl y Pointe
90(..
ShiM DIHorontllil Are $ 601$1 10
Per Hour For Afternoon And 932_.95V V04 932 7670
Midnight Shlflo Call 0 Blonooo 12 yr old 3-BR, 2-both homo
Memorial Hoaphal, Athena OH Daylight basomont
1 ocro
614-$13-5551 EOE
dealr1ble location new root
new 3-c•r g1rage lntll'lor nNdt
Now Taking Appllcotlono ot tlnlahlng,
28951 Bashan Rd,
Domino o Pl:rn GaUl polio
Raclno OH $1~000 Coli 1141182 7305 or 1149 2784
P111~1m1 help Wlnlod. Apply II
Duka Cltanera, 24UI J1cklon 2 llory, 3 BR houu locatlll 11
Avo, PollOI Ptolllnt botw11n I
am-;,pm
6t2 Gronl 81 lllddlopoot
Situated on large double Sot
P•r80nal
Cont.ct
Salas (SII2861 with 2-otoll looroo
Spoclollll Entry l.lvll Pooltlon boom With otllchld ,....,rock
With Abovo Avmgo Eomlng room ond lanclll pooddock.
PotontloiJI Baud On Eflo~ And Houoo loU lull buol!llnl with
Ablmy p To II 000 Por WNk new roof, furftlnot, water
IIUII 81 Aggr-lvo. Por hsalor, met oump pump lloy bo
oonabla Rollablo And Hovo - n by cotllng 114.ell2-3015
Dopondlblo Tronoportollon II Alklng 140.000· Offlno ICCipllll
You Aro A Soli Startor And SIU It 1-411-447•7230
IIOIIVIIod, Sind Brill Work HI•
lory To Claoe&amp;, c/o Gilllpollo 3111' - · 21 Acr•, 1 IIIIo F111m
DollY Trl1u~ ~5 Thlnl Avonuo CJ'h~lto Will Conlldor Trodo
8
1340
Galilpolll, un1 4!831

~

3br large Khchen L R Laundry
Slnglo Gonogo Rodnoy Vlllogo
12. Ul500 lr14-446-1358
4 bodroomo, 1 ocro lot ru11y
carpeted heat pump 10Xt2 out
building 10 mlnutn from town
on R1 2. raasonobly prlcod 304·
675-2188
5 room cozy home extra lot
Clifton alumn •ldlng frontlblck
porchos 304-77.!-6235 IIIVI
mesaag•
6 room hoUH tor 1111 In upper
Tuppor Plalno 614-lliZ Sll30
1110 261h Stroot 2 bodroomo
living room bath kttchen
famiry room vinyl siding car
pet cedar closets electric heat
air cond chain link back t.nce
excellent location low 30 1 304
675-5418 oppolntmont only
A Frama Hom. 3br Prlcld
Rlghll614-256 1989
Flatwoods ArH 1. Pomeroy 2
Slory Home NIW Kitchen
Bathroom &amp; Corpotlng 17
Acru 614-446-2359
For Solo By OWnor Ouollly
Brtck Ranch Cion To Holzer
Hoapltll 4br Full Baument
Largo Shadid Lol 614-446.(1647
after 5p m
GOVERNMENT HOMES From $1
(U Repair). Delinquent Tu
Propertr Ftoposs~t1lona Your
Araa (1 805 962-8000 Ext GH
10188 For Curr•nt Aepo List
HOUSE FOR FREEII Muot movo
oH 101 In Middleport Fill In
basement seed 1nd t1r1w Mut1
sign contract! 2-BR Llrge LA
DA Bath has new roof and gut
tar new cop~r and PVC plum~
lng need aom• work. You pay
tor the moving! Only Hrlous
calleral CaU 614 8;2 207'1 after
700pm
Llka Now 2 Yur Old 2br
Mobile Homo~ Pormanatly Sat
Wlih 14x70 o.;ovarlll PatiO/Car
Port And Storago Building On
Llrgo LOI In Ook Hill Ohio City
Utllftlso. Appllonc11 lncludlll.
614-6112 7518 For Appolnlmant
One story brick nmeh .tyl•
house1 with thrM beclrooma at
tachea two car garage, t &amp; 112
baths hot watw Dluboard
heat'r ga• furnace with central
1lr he room• ere large and
roomy haa • marble llraplact
carpot and vinyl llooro with
opoca lor oftlco Thlo quolltr.
homo Ia locatlll o1 724 McCu •
loch Road, Point Plusanl WV
ond alto on 2 booutllul lots
Prlca Rllluclll Tho houu II
locatlll In one of tho bolt
nolghborhoodl In tho orao For
tunn.r lntorm1Uon piiiH con
taCI C Oalloo K1y11r Exocutor
ot (304) 675-6440 or 675-6595
Unique 3 bedroom house on 10
1cru, extr.. 1 mlle from Mid
dloport Low 301 218-3e5-239i
32

Mobile Homes
for sale

$500 Robot.On Any 1990 Or
1991 LOI Model At EIIU Homo
Clntor Froo Sot Up • Dollvory
Call 1.S00.580.5110

t br Houoo, i3l Flrot Avonuo
OvartookiO&gt;g Rlvor, Portly Fur
nlohod Raforoncn $185/mo
814 448 4038, &amp;14-446-1615
2br In Country Vlnton Area
Watar And Tr11h Pole!, Stovo I
Refrigerator
fuml•h•d
S200fmo O.poalt And Referen
614-388-9686
3 bodroom housa Polk Drtva
Polnl Ple111nt Reftrencu &amp;
Oepoolt 304-675-1242
3 Bedroom HouH For Rem Gal
llpolls Cloy Umlto St:l-884 3440
3 Bodroom Ronch
City
Sohoolo $300/mo 814-:J88.8305
After 5 p m
3br, 2 Both!', 2 Cor Gorego, 8
Mllu From n01:ror Mllllcal Contor On 160 -.,_ From North
Golllo Hl'll'.:hool $400/mo
Oa~•&amp;•
1t Reflrwncea
11
0708
Fumlohod 3 Room Coltogo Ono
Bedroom In Town No Pet:a
Aoloronco Roqulrlll O.pooll
114-446-2543
Houu tor rant, union Ave,
Pomoroy Oh Coli anor 4 OOpm
114-1182-626t
Lovoly 3-BR ButtorM Avo
Pomeroy Pertlelly fumlehecl tmonthl INH Security deposit
Referencea 814-843~445
lloodowbroo• Drtvo 111 brick
ranch whh 3 btdrooma. double
gorogo llraplaco In lomlly room
All opplloncoo $475 month
S.curfty d. .h r.c!ulrwcl
Available Sept 1, 1111 304-67So17111 or 675-3618
Nice 2 bedroom trailer large
yard comor of Rond onil Porch
St Kanougo OH 814-1411-11173
42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

12x60 two bedroom unlur
nlohlll mobllo homo. hall milo
poll Hol:ror MC depooll ond
reflrencea requlr.d 6*441a
4361 or 304-67!1-2330
14x70 3br CA Kemper Hollow
Road $300 mo Pluo DopooM
114-446-7903
2br Located In EvergrHn
$175/mo Pluo O.poolt 61~-14113697. 614-245-6223
2br
Mobile
Home Near
Evergreen lt4-37'0o2878.
2br AI• Cobll, Now Clrpot Nlco
6 Clun, Belutlful River VIew In
Kanauga Foattr 1 Mobile Home
Pork. 614-444·1102
3-bdrm, 1 bath double wide Ia
yard 2-car garage 8 ml back ol
Roclno $375 mo $275 dopooH
rol roq 614-1143-5228
3-BRil lumlshld, w11horldryor
AC, 14-992 5800
3br Tr~~ll•r For Rent On Morgan
Slator Road 114-379-2311
Fumlohlll 2br No Polo Wotor
Pold $300/mo $275 Dopoolt 112
Milo Eoot 01 Port" 614-3881963

Mobile Homn For Rent construction workers and Hud welcome 81of.446.0508 or 446-832t
NICII 2 bedroom moblla home
l1r01 private lot w/centr~l air
Golllpollo Forry 1r11 304_.75.
1228

44

Apartment
for Rent

Nicely Fwnlehtd 2br Garage
Apartment No Peta, C.ntraDy
11r78 Fr•edom Mobile Home Locotlll 1114-1411-2404
t2&lt;65 Good Condftlon $6 000
614 256-9301
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
1904 Springbrook Mobil• Homo ESTATES 536 Jacklon Plko
2 ICrtl 304-675-1988
from $1112/mo Wolk to ohop I
1985 14x70 Redmon 2 BR 2 112 movloe Coll814-446-2558 EOH
ball'1 whirlpool tub skylight
EHk:lency Apanment
Fur
CA patio cloorw must move nishtd Deposh 6 Reference
$12 000 114 258 10SII
Requlr•d No P.ts 01~0-.m
1985 14x70 Rlllmon 2b~ 2 EHicleney
apartm1nt
Extrool ll111t ~101 living/kitchen baUVshower AC
Baths
$14 900 Or B 0 814-446-8605 nice neighborhood 304-375LaaveMtauge
6200
t986 14x72, Fleetwood 3br 2 For rent 1 bedroom apanmen1
betha total el•ctrlc 614-245- $225 utllltlll lncludod. dopooll
5900
roqulrlll no poll 614-!IV2 2218
1986 throe bodroom 14x70 g11 Furnished Apartment
1br
stove refrigerator washer &amp; Sharo Bath 70t Fourth Avo. Gal
dryar bod $1500 304-675-8813 llpollo 1185 Ullllll11 Paid 61470 plu• ac,.. ,..~ lor home 446-1411 Aftor 7p m
city waler •xc hunt ngh$29 000 Fumlohod Aportmonto 1br
$4 000 buys mobile ome al- $225 Utllltlll Pold 120 Fourth
r.. dy on property, 304_.58-1522 Avo &amp; 107 Socond AYI G a ~
llpollo 614-446-1416 ohor 7p m
34
Business
Nicely Fumlahed Apartmant
Buildings
t br next to Ubrary parking
central heat air, reference r•
OFACE SPACE FOR LEASE on qulrlll 614-441.0338
2nd Ava Gilllpollo Clou to
Court House 1 room 2 roome Fumlohlll
Aportmont
All
3 rooms 4 roome. All nicely Utlllllu Paid 1 Bodroom
decorated 1ir condillonlng Upatalf'l Second Avenue New
your water It Hwer biller• paid Corpot No Poto 614-448-11523.
Malee your cholct now No
quotn ov•r the phonelo you Fumlohlll EHicloncy $175/mo
mutt ... them Phone r 1n Ulllltln Paid, 701 Fourth Ave
appolntmont 614-446-7691 day Golllpollo 614-4411-4416 AHor
7pm
446·9S39 eve
Fumlohlll EHicloncy $185/mo
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Utllltln Pold Shoro Bath 607
Socond Ava Gallipolis 8t4-4411Lots &amp; acrl8g• available for 4418 After 7p m
new home conatrvctlon on
Rayburn Rwd P1ved road, Fumllhod EHicloncy 1150/mo
county
water,
reaaoneble Ulllltloe Pold, 7 112 Nol~ Oo~
re•trlctlona Complete lnforma
llpollo. 1114-446-1411 Aftor 1p m
lion mailed on requelt 3D4-1755253, John D Gertach, no FumlaMd aHicl•ncy w/stava &amp;
,.frlgorator Shore bath Itt 2nd
elngt.wkie traiiiN pleue
AvL 1100 por month All UtiiHin
2 acre lot,_ Allllon, W'l Com- Pokf 814.4411-3145
Pill• -IO•IYII1111 and wotor
Con 114-441-1205 or 304-518- Graci- living 1 and 2 bod
room •.-rtmentlt II VIllage
:105~
Manor
and
Rlverelat
2 Building Loll, 011 R1 7, In Aportmonto In Mlddloport From
Clelrvlew llubdlvlelon One H•• $118 Colll14-1182 7787. EOH
W.tor Top. 614-4411417 Allor
Laloyotto Moll 3br1 2 Bathl All
8pm
Utllltln lncludoa $425/mo
3 lcrH1 Sind Hill Rood Wlllllll DiDoslt Roqutrlll No Pot1 514on lana contract, .arne rtltrlc
444·7733, 814-446-1222
tiona, 304-675-676
New Hlven 2 bedroom fur
40 Acr11 With Moblll Homo
nlohlll oportmonl, dopoolt ond
814-317 7064
rer.ronco, iJOW82 2186

44

Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei- Page-9

Apartment
for Rent

m

• N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlaht

n

Autos for Sale

1188 Clvollor Auto &amp; Air U.295i•
1986 Chry LaBiron $3,295 11117 "
Pontloc Floro $211115 111117 VW
Fox $1111151 .!986 Oodgo Omnl $2115 1...
Chovy Novo •
11 &amp;9&amp; 1DB5 Chavy C1valler •
$t 415 1185 Cavollor S9V5 1vu:
Ponlloc Trono Am S2 19S 1185
Plymouth Rollont $1"500 tl81
Ford LTD $515 •&amp;D Auto
Soln Highway 160 N 614-448'

Nlco 1br, Kitch on, Both&gt; Wotor
And Traoh Fumlohod, $240/mo
PI,. Dopooh 114-4411-11S68
Nlco cloan cuorontly avalloblo 1
bodroom lpl, tor lndlpondont
living, tld•rty, hlndlcapped 1nd
dlatiled pec:~pae Low Income
may qualify If Income I• under
$11,350 year Electric, w1ter
garbage Included with rent
Rent 11 30% of adjusted lncom•
River Bend PlaceJ_ New Ha v•n,
W~ EOE 304-682 :so21
Complotly Fumllhlll mobllo
home, 1 mill below tow.!'1 ovtr
lOoking river No Petl, \;A 614.446.(1338

11865

72 Trucks for Sale
1975 Ford Rongor F 100,_ Truck"
Cub Cop With 1!1711 V.a •nglno "
112 Ton PS PB Ani Two Dooro.
With Lay Down Bock Soot Fair
Conclldon Call Anytlmo 304'
491811

North 3rd St Middleport, Ohio 1
bedroom fumlehtd ept referen
Cll ond dopooll roqutrlll 304
862-25&amp;e
North 4thiulllddloport Ohio 2
bodroom mlohlll opt dOfiOIIt
1nd refertnct required 304-882
2588
One
and
two
bedroom
oportmonlo lor rent ldool lor
small famlllea and alngln 304S75-20S3 or 675-4100
• • nJ hod
0
bod
na St1 rotorenco
room ••rand
s dopoolt
opt
Main
roqulroa 304_.75·2330
ono bodroom unrumlohlll
g•ro:r. .,.~mont,
hut olr
con 1 private v•ry nice quiet
nolghDOrhood $250 month 304
67s:.1550 or 614-441-0985

a••

Unlurnlohlll 3 room oportmont
t04 Spring Avonuo Pomeroy
Coil 614-9i2 5908
45

Furnished
Rooms

Rooma for rent week or month
St1r1lng al $120/mo Gallla Hotel
114-4441-9580
Sl•plng roomo with coo~ng
Aloo trollor apoco All hook-upo.
Coil aftor 2 00 p m 304·7735851 Moson WV
46 SpaceforRent
Country llobllo Homo Pork,
Routo 33 North of Pomoroy
Loto,_ranlalo, porll, ul• Coli
114-w21117ll

Merchandise

t

H'l~ 1

I)JRioMT
C 1tl 1 ftr NEA

54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

16-foot tandam Cllr trailer
w/alectrlc wench rNI nice
$2100 614-371J.112711 or 86U846
liSt .lohn Deora llodot B
Robulh Excollanl Conclltlaol
Hyotar 4 Stago Fork Llh Dock
Ploto 3 Traitor Axlol 6 Trollor
Bill 114-44!J.23SI
Winllll To ~ Slondlng Tlm•
bor orocy
noon LOgging
614-3677StgAflor7pm
4 r111y wh...., rlnge, cape, t1re1
~r: ~~=:"'•r carbllm
•"-" I bottl1
hot
t t k
,_,.I
~·
wo or on
4
loruloStoo 14-W2.ut
Boowno Football Tlckoto p,.
Soaoon ~Inning Auguot 51h &amp;
R~~~~ SOuon 614-258·1287,
, -~::---228...,1=----' Computer 1911 compoilblo 40
MG HD 5 114 1 2m 3 112 14m
Ftoppy VGS Monitor, Print•r,
304-875-1712.

Household
Goods

2 Supor Slnglo Wotor 81111
Comploto With Droworo Undar·
n111h Ci14-446-0005
County Applloncol. Inc Good
uaed appllancn Tv aeta Open
8 1 m to I p.m lion .Sot 614446 169i 127 3rd. Avo Go~
llpollo OH
GloutBruo dlnetta Flnootool
1011 trundl• bed, dtlk and
drnoor 114-1182 5883.
GOOD USEO APPUANCES
Wooho,., dryoro, rlfrlgtoratrong• Sicaggo Alll&gt;lllnooo
Uppor Rlvor Ra. Boolcle Stono
Crest lloool Coiii14-UII-73tlll
LAYNE S RIRNrTURE
Complooo home rumlo~~~:
Houro lion-Sot 9-5 61
0322 3 mil• out Bulovlllo Ad
Froo Dellvory
Lova Sut good condHion
:ulck ulo goOd prlco 814-1182·
523
PICKENS FURNrTURE
NIW/UIIII
Houoohold lurnlohlng 112 ml
Jerrlcho Rd P1 PIIIUnt, WV,
Clli 304-675 1450
RENT20WN
114-4411-3158
VI ra Fumlture
Solo I Cluol• $1~10 Wook
Rocllnor $5 47 Wook, Swlvol
Rock" 13 53 Wook Bunk Bill
Comploto $141 Wook 4 Orowor
Chill 43 28 W•k. Pootor Bodroom Suho 7 pc , $18 17 Wnk
lnctudn Bidding Counlry Plno
Dlnotto WHh Bonch &amp; 4 Chllre,
SIO Ill Wook.OPEN llondoy
Thru Saturday, ta.m to Bp m
Sunday t2 Noo~ TJII 5p m 4
Mlln OH Routo 7 On Route 141
In Contonory
Solo On All Clrpot &amp; Vinyl Floor
Covering In Stock! •ollohan
c arpotl At 7 North 614-446111 44.
SWAIN
AUCTION I FURNrTURE 82
Olivo Sl , Golllpolll Now &amp; Ullll
furniture hNtar., Weatam It
Work boolo 614-446-3151
VI RA FURNrTURE
614-4411-3156
LIVING ROOII Sofa &amp; Choir
$199 00
Rocllnor
$149 00
Swlvol Rockor Slli 00 eon.. &amp;
End Tabloo $11 00 Sot DINING
ROOII Tobll With 4 Poddlll
Chalro $149 00, Coulllry Plno
Dlnotlo With Sonch And 3
Chalro1 • $299 00 llotchlng 2
Door nltch, $341 Or $58!1 00
Sot Olk Tablo 421102 With 6
Bow
Back
Ch1lrw,
$629 00 BEDROOM Poator Sad·
room Sullo (5 pc ), $341 00 4
Drawer Chnt, $44 15 Bunk
Bod $229 Comploto Full Man
Sol $105 00 Sot 7 pc Codlr
Bedroom Sulto $899 00 OPEN
Monday Thru Seturdlly, Ia m to
6p m Sundoy 12 Noon Till
5p m 4 MIIH 0H Rout• 7 On
Route 141 In Centenary
Whirlpool waohor $15 Kin
more dryer $75, Kenmore dryer
$95, g11 dryor $ 15, Cold Spot
rolrlg 11 $125 Copoprtoow Ad
mlrol rarrlg, H $150 , Whlrtppol
rorrlg $125, lroo:rar upright,
$150, White Me rang•, $85
M•ytag wringer neher, aquare
tub $150 Skagga Appllanc•s
Uppor Rlvor Ad Gt4-4411-7398
52 Sporting Goods
Romlnglon 22 llodll 541-8 Now
In Box Prtco $421, Belgium
llodl Browning 12 Gogo, 32
Inch Full ChokO, Bont Alb. Ex
collonl Condltlonl $110 614-4463413
53

Antiques

Buy 01 1111 Riverine Antlqu.a,
1124 E Moln Slroll Pomoroy
Ho&lt;oro IITW 1000am toiOO
p '!',.!undly 1 00 to I 00 p m
at....,.-2121

54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Froo:rar B•l For Solo Uvo
Wolght 70 Conti A Pound 614
3711-2358
Pitteburgh Paint Interior tlal wall
palnt $10 49 gal lnt1rlor Nml
gloss S13 01 _gf!l exterior flat
houoo polnl $13 IIi 2415 Jack
son Ave Point Pleas1nt Pt Pit
304-67s-4084
Porlll&gt;lo llghtod chongublo lot
tor
olgn
$299
Fr11
dollvory/llllore Plootlc 11111rs
$4750 tool 1-801).1533-3453.

Soga Gonlolo Entortolnmont
Syotom, pluo II&lt; gomoo $150
::114-'-'79i.:;2:..2:;,44.:;1;__ _-:---:--:Tonk with pump ond 112 hr.
motor !01 drllllll wotor wol,
$125,114-643-521 I
Thormol Wlndowo 1 Picture
Window 1 Pallo Ooor Six
3h3ft Wlndowo $125 814 388

58

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Extra Good Canning Tomatoea
Clll 304-882-2237.
Sllvor Ou•n com $2 00 do:r
King cool woodbumlng ootovo
llkl 111W1 $300, homo 614-742
2088 wor&lt;·JII2-2421

55

Building
Supplies
Block, brick, _., plpol win
dowa, llnlell etc Claude Win
te,. Rio Grande OH Calt 614
245-Stn
56

Pets for Sale

~---:--=-~--=~-=~

Groom ond Supply Shop-Pot
Grooming All brood• otytoo
lame Pet Food Dealer: Julie
Webb Coli 614-141.(1231 I.SOO.
352.0231

AKC Amorlcon Cockar Sponlll
Pupo Wormlll, Arot Shoto 1
Bull. 2 Golden BuH 1 Whlto &amp;
Bull 814-448-8088
AKC Boxer Puppi .., ready to
go 304-675 1556:
AKC Chow Pupplu For Solo
114-44112011
AKC Golden Rotnovor flmolo
puppl11 $175 each 614-4468064 or 441-1311
AKC Golden Retriever pupplet
$200 f•matea $175 maa.a 614
593-3731 Atilano
AKy R,lotorlll Poodll Pupo 2
MIIH,
Brown 1 Apricot, 7
Wllkl Old $150 EICh 614 38811111

D-17 N::. Dl•ll Traclor With
Cultlvotor And Groin DrJI!.,
u~.
D-14 N:., Whh ""
LOidor, U,IGS, 7030 AC, Supor
Shorpl $8 NO, 424 llllornatlonal
Dlooll TreCior With 6 Fl. Buoh
Hog, U M
ow... r Will
Flnonco 814-2811-6a22.
F01 Silo Corn Plckl,., 1 And 2
Row PTO Manure SpreadiN
Fortlllzo SproodiiS l l a - For
guoon l.lvor Dlok, Whool Ol1k1
Cultlpockoro Poll Holo Dlggor
Whlol Ortlfo. Olhor Flold Roady
Equlpmontl
Howoo
Form
llochlnory At 124 And Moyhaw
Rood Jocklon Ohio 114-2865144
Jim 1 Form Equlpmoni,_SR 35,
Woll GolllpoUo 114~11-vm
Wlde aelectlon new &amp; uNCI farm
ti'Kto~ &amp; lmp.-menta
Buy
Nil, lrade, I 00-5 00 wHkd1ya
Sol till Neon
Now Holland Supor 717 2 Row
Choppor
Ollvor
16-lool
Transpori.Oiac
cl••n
whuVotrow
lt4-W2 7302
evenlngl
63

Livestock

Brooding otock. 8""onth old
Polltd.fferwtord bull AnguHJ'ol
1111-llororord cross 1!1-moroh
old Gontlo 614-1182 11111
FMder Celt S.le Oat•• are
Sapl 7.12 Oct 518 Nov 216 23
U:l~l1 Slockyord Co 814Uood 4 Horsa Goooonack Trollor

$t 995, 12 Ft HoriO And Slock
Trallor Sl7115b 3 HorH Siont

Load Wnh
r-Ing Room,
$4 595 1986 Big A HA Roa
Rom• Marw Shown By 10 Y•ar
Old BoybNico 2 Yur Old Gold
lng, 30 aye Riding Tim• And
Shown In Halter Blg February
14 19i0 Chnlnut FIMy, Yoo~lng
Polnl Filly 614 2811-6522

19110 Ford F 250 XLT La~ot 4x4
17500
304 7
~~
mllao
-6 6-.
_ __ _ _ _ _ _ __ :
73 Vans&amp;4WD's
•
•
111180 Ford F-250, 4 wheel drt~• :
$1,000
304-8'15-3185
2207 .
Waahlnaton
Av•
Point
Pl-nl.
1117 Plymouth Voyogor L E ,
EXCIIilnl Condlllon V-8 Tl 000 "•
111110 114-4411-3281
.:

.

-:::74::-:~M~oto=rc~y::-c-le..;..s.....,..._ :..
1880 Hond1 750-K new tlree :
blttlry, ..., recov•red )ut t • "
tuned~ excen•nt condition $800 ._,
304.0/6-1572

n

"'

:;1901::::;--::12::5~Ho:;-nd";l-:4.,.
~hN'71o-,-~~14.:;. :

114V 2651

•

•

tQ88 Kaweakl ZL 600, now •
runa grut look• new
$1200 Will Trodl 304-675-Sesa
1887 &amp;OR XR motorcyCI8, llCII
11nt cond 614.JIV2 2441
Urn

76

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

350 automatic 1ransmlatlon nt
14.. wheele wlw ur.. Pontiac

tpok• hubcaps Grand Prix
porto 304-675-7363
73-81 Chovrolat truck hood
$50 00 T.l.at Chovrolol llldoldo
po-ngor lldl $50 oo 6t4-9i2
1121oftor 5 00
8udg81 Tranamlaalone UHd &amp;
rebulH atartln'l at IH Auto
Porto 114-24 5871 114-3712263

Covor lor lull olzo Chivy truck
on aluminum fr1m1 lila 1aaa..
up. Coli 304-773-6841
campers&amp;
Motor Homes

Transporlalion

1V72..CO.chman Cadet camper
trall•r, new awning good condl
tlon, 614.JitiUOII5

Autos for Sale

Services

1968 Camero Runa Good
S1 000 614-387-7064
t986 Mustang Coupo.J!Ir cond~
lion, $1.000 coli 304-o/11 2720
1873 Pontiac Venlurl 350Chevy •nglne SSOO, very
d•pandable 614 802-2077 or
118211171
1!1711 Lincoln 4dr Town Ca'J!IIr
Condition $t 500. Or Bolt uororl
814-446-11104
19711 Chryolor Cordoba 380
euto, new •verythlng $1400
doyai14-W2 215S. oftor 5 30pm
call 30W75-8155.
1110 Thundorblrd 8 cyl runo
good rnl good cond sgoo coli
oftor 4pm 6"14-618-2529
IV81 Cad Coupo O.VIIIo Runo
Grootl Lookl Good 70 000
Mll11 $2 ooo Or e o 614-387098
1981 llonto Carlo 304-4175-1505
t981 Pontloc Grond Prl'!! Good
Condition V8 PS Pg o..,.
OWner $1150 614-4461478
1082 Dido
till
Rogancy
Brougham 4--dr aedan •very
option like new new tires 150.
v.a $1850 &amp;14-1192-6718
tV63 Oldo O.ltl Ill $3400 304075-4008
1984 IZUI U 4 cyl, 4 l pud
AMIFM ceuette, 851000 mU••
good body, motor J2t00 304
675-3S14
1981 Comoro lrcc, Burgundy
With Rod lntortor $5 900 Or
Boll Olio• 814-388-8353

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

81

me ~=rl!.=ttrxt."'J::·

olll 113481, 1181 Nlllan Pullar
12615, 1114 Food Bronco U
I31.00F!f lla:rar 4x4 170M11
1111
Rangor, $1800, 1HO
Cllovy Truck CUllom 30, utllhy
bod, $3100, Other Yahlclll Unliar
$t ooo Phono
lfl2.
3712Hortford, wv

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconclltlonal lifetime guaran
IM Local rtftrancas fumlthed
FrH e1tlm1111 C1U colleel 1
114 237-0488 doy or nlghl
Rogel'l Baumenl Wlterptoollng.
Carpentry and remodeling of all
aorta Aeaeonabl• rate• Call
~~m• 6t4-742 1400 or 192
Compllll Mobllo Homo Sol Upo
Ropolro Commorlcal Rosldon
tlol lmprovomonto Including
Plumbing, Eloctrlcol lnouronco
Clolmo Accoplod 814-258 t611
Cunle Hom• lmprovem•nts
YMre Experience On Older &amp;
Newer Homaa Room Acldltlons
Foundotlcn Work
Roollng
Wlndowo &amp; Sldln; Froo Eatlmatnl Aeter1ncet No Job To
Big Or Smoiiii14-141.(122S
JET
Aeration Moto,. rep1lrad New
I r•buiH motore In otock RON
EVANS JACKSON OH 1-801).
53H528

Sopllc Tonk Pum~lng S90~.,Gaillo
Co RON EVANS ENTERPHISES
Jocklon OH 1-800-637-11528
Dovlo
Saw Voc
S1rvlc1
GIO'VH Crook Rd P1~1 oup.
pll• pickup ond dollvory 614446.(1294
WIU do remodeling roofing
bullclk\g, tre• trimming 1n~
removal, houH palnllng For
trw MtlmatM call George et t
1!+1182-6752
82

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
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Galllpollo, Ohio
114-4411-3818

84
IICOITY'S USED CARS1185
Oklo Cull- Clara S21t5 1183
Uncoln Contl..,.nlol, eL oluorp
13215, 1Nt Buick ClniOKy
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11112 Kowoukl 750.._!'~11 Dr- ' '
Old $1300 114-367 rlVO
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111115 Low Rldor Horloy Dovloon ....
Low 1111..1$5 000 1114-4411-2415 •

79

Dog ond Cot grooming 111
-dl, opocloll:rlll In Poodle
grooming 12 yre experience,
304-87U332
Drogonwynd Clnory Porolen
Slomosa ond Hlmoloyan klttono
114 448 3844 oftor 7 p.m
Fish Tonk, 2413 Jocklon Avo
Polnl Ploasalll, 30W75-2013,
ru11 llno Tropical lllh 1 blodo,
lmlllonlmoto ond oupploao
Poadlo pupploo, toya,_ ond tu
cupo AICC Champion Bloodllno,
Coolvlllo 114.e&amp;7-3404
Slud Strvlco 11 llonlh Old 11811 Rod Floro Loodlll TlH
WNlo 6 Bull Cocklr Sponlll Cruloo1 Sunroot Low l.t1111
Hu Pn&gt;duolll 2 Utora Alrallly, llol81o14-44H18r.
114 441 lOBI.
1117 Clmoro lroc Z. amlfm
auto 1r1n1 l01dtd See to 1po
57
Musical
procloto T~opo 304-fl71.2587
oftor 5 pm
Instruments
1i81 Iuick Park Avenue, fully
Lao Poul Eioctro Throo Plok Up oqulplllll 4 d~ 51,000 mlloo
EIICirlc Guller Fondor Amp 304_.tH050
or or5-616D
With Princoton '!win Coli Rovorb
(1\lbo Typo) Bolh Poofocl eon.
dltlonl li!IO 114-2511-8614 aftor
7p.m

58

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King Cob43 v_.
Air Conditioning,
000
1111• $8150 114-388-1731
1887 S.1_!),_4_Cyclo 4opd u 800
114-441..-r.Jt
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19§ Nl110n 4&lt;4 P U $4 895
1888 Nlnan 4x4 PU S4 695
1888 lautu Club Cab 4x4 P U
Nlco 1987 Chivy S.1o p u
$3 495 t986 Food Ranger Club
Cob 1987 Ford La~ot P.U 1985
Chavy S.10 PU S21U5 1986 "
Chavy 5-10 Blo:ror $5 9i5 1904
Ford Bronco II $2 995 1984:
Chovy S.10 P U $1795 1982Chivy S.tO PU Sl[j295, 1987
Chavy C-20 4d• P &gt;2 500
1978 l'ord Bronco $2 000 B&amp;D
Auto Solo Highway 160 N 614
448~B&amp;a

61 Fann Equipment

11628

ClnniO&gt;g P - - ovalloblo
1110 llirtloll ...... lnd Pn~no
Ph1011 lotor In "-11. Colt 1•
1-Da¥tnpor1, ,~,_lr, tlblt, •
chllro 1..hoo~ 1-dr-r, mloc 1100-141' mo lor pr1coo BOB S
hem1, 1 month old, 4140 SA IIARKET, M- or Gllllpoilo
OH
338 Lalort Filla, 114-247-2800
Conning
tomoat.. llraady
13~nch color TV 180, 12-&lt;laugo
I!UmP ohOI g~n $150 Kliig plaklll or plclt yOII' own ot
Zophya Sal $171, .\i!UIIIc guller Jolo.- • 111m 114-247-2111
llko new tlla, IIIII Ptloc Phoonlx SVOO, 1181 Dolto
Old• fiOO, and uud - , 1141112-2"11. 10om-7pm

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aon OH 1-800-537-1528
Craftmatlc
chair
blue
1
dodbld
w/mattrna upholalery good conclltlon 304bedapru and pillow 1ham11 175-4116
like new $1SO firm, 614-812 EIICirtc llghtod garoll'! door
11505
oc:ner with r•mote. 16 x7 white
1-dork plno coptolno' bod 1· II rgl111 door Will oall
saporotoly
lor $150 oo uch
whit• twin •r bed white drHUr togatllor for $275
00 con 614-742
w/mlrror
white chHt of 2001 tor Information
to He
dr•w•r• 814--)12 2901

51

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Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

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battle
Soldier settles famil ·" ----

Dear Ann Landers: This is in
response 10 ·vancouver" who was
gra1eful that her divorced parents
didn't bad-mouth each other in front
of the kids. I gl:nerally agree with
that philosophy, but there are
circumstances where one must light

and her lawyer was censured.
5. My ex-wife owed money to a
great many people. When the house
we owned jointly went on sale,
I tipped off all her creditors as
to where and when the settlement
hearing was to be held and they all
back.
showed up with liens on her share
My ex-wife I)Ot only tied 10 our of the house.
children about my support payments
The bouom line is that my
but wrote to my commanding ex-wife now has no friends and
officer and had her lawyer write, no monc y, and our children want
also. Here is what! did:
nothing to do with her. The alimony
I. I showed those leuers 10 my and support payments are over. I
children and I also showed them the have a wonderful second wife and a
canceled checks proving what she lerrilic career, and all the friends my
had written were lies.
ftrst wife and I shared are still my
2. I sued that lawyer for libel and friends. I P!lid almost $300,000 in
slander and I won~ The settlement alimony, support and tuition and was
was modest, but the personal never so much as a day late, even
satisfaction was tremendous.
when I was in Korea, Honduras and
3. Since my ex-wife had IOid all Saudi Arabia.
our mutual friends that I was always
I had to light back and I did, as
behind with the support checks, I vigorously as the Air Force in
photostated the lctlers I had wriucn Desert Storm. Nobody messes with
10 my commanding officer along me! -- FAITHFUL READER IN
with the canceled checks and I scm MASS .
these to every person I could think
DEAR READER(You are also a
of who knew my ex-wife.
pretty good writer): Thanks for a
4. I also sent photocopies 10 the well·dctailcd primer on how to
local county bar ethics commiucc handle yourself in the clinches when

Racine Fall Festival Parade Entry Form
October 5, 1991
10:00 a.m.

iI
' I

I'

:I

I

l
I

Clinic turns anti-abortion
protest signs into dollar signs

By LAURA MYERS
Associated Press Writer
SAN MATEO, Calif. (AP)Nwne--------------------------------------Planned Parenthood worker Alice
Stem can't help but smile when she
Addre101 ------------------------------------sees anti -abortion pickets. The
more the menier at the San Mateo
Phone Number-----------------------------clinic, where protest signs translate
into dollar signs.
During the past year, the clinic
Type or Entry-------------------------------has raised $25,000 with an "adopta-picketer'' program in which
Ir you ha•c any qucstiono, call 949-2465.
abortion rights supporters pledge
Send entrieo to Racine Fall Festival
donations for every protester who
P.O. Box 114, Racine, OH. 45771
shows up each day.
The idea isn't new, but the program in San Mateo, about 20 miles
south of San Francisco, is apparently unique in that it's continuous.
Other clinics use adopt-a-picketer
programs as shon·tecm, fund-raising gimmicks, Stem said.
•'When we first heard about
BANGOR, Maine (AP) - A begin Wednesday in County Supe- this, we thought, 'Well, this is a
man accused or breaking into the rior Court.
sort of fun approach to raising
home of horror writer Stephen
District Attorney Chris Almy money."' Stern said. "Then, it
King and terrorizing his wife said the state wants to convict turned into a real moneymaker for
intends to represent himself when Keene of the felony offenses so he us.
the case goes to trial next week.
can be exttadited to Texas, where
"The prolesters might not think
Erik Keene has pleaded moo- Keene had been paroled before he it's so funny," she said, "but that's
cent to lhe burglary charge and came to Maine.
pan or the beauty of the program."
innocent by reason of insanity to
Keene, 26, of San AniOnio, has
The San Mateo clinic has more
the charge of tet;orizing King' s filed several motions, including a than 100 regular adoptive donors,
wife. Tabnha, wtth a fake bomb $7.2 million lawsuit against the which it bills every nine months,
during the April 20 incident
state of Texas for failing 10 appre- S1ern said.
Keene has been held at the hend him after he notified officials
Each Friday, Planned ParentPenobscot County Jail since his he planned 10 violale his parole to hood posts a sign so regular
arrest. The trial is scheduled to go to Maine.
protesters can keep track of how
nilfC"h"inoney they have uninten·
tionally raised.
Gloria GiUoglcY,. chairwoman of
San Mateo Pro-L1fe, said the men
and women who regularly pray
against abortions outside the clinic
ignore the fact that Planned ParentNEW YORK (AP) - A new list compiled Thursday for publica- hood profits from their protests.
book that gives detailed instruc- tion Aug. 18. It's the book's ftrst
tions on a variety of ways to com- appearance on the best-seller list
mit suicide - which some say since it came out several months
could be misused by depressed ago.
A meeting will be held Aug. 20
people or even killers - has
"That is an indication of how at 9 a.m. at Lhc Tuppers Plains Elereached No. I on a New York large the issue of euthanasia looms
Times best-seller list
in our society now," said Dr .
The book, "Final Exit," was Arthur Caplan, a bioethicist at the
written by Derek Humphry, execu- University of Minnesota in MinJean-Bedel Bokassa, ruler of the
tive director of the Eugene, Ore.- neapolis.
Central African Empire, crowned
based Hem lock Society, which
"It's the loudest statement or himself emperor in 1977 in a ceregives advice for committing sui- protest of how medicine is dealing mony believed to have cost more
cide.
with terminal illness and dying," than $100 million. (Bokassa was
"There's tremendous desire for Caplan said.
deposed in 1979.)
personal control and choice over
Many doctors say the book's
San Francisco got its first
·one's dying," Humphry told the message is unethical. They argue female mayor in 1978 as City
newspaper.
that such information shouldn't be Supervisor Dianne Feinstein was
The Times reported today that offered without professional coun- named to replace the assassinated
"Final Exit" reached No. 1 in the seling.
George Moscone.
hard-cover advice category for its

Trial set for man who
broke into writer's house

How-to book on suicide
book tops best-seller list

"We don't really care what
they're up to," Gillogley said. "In
fact, the more money they raise
themselves the better because theq
maybe they won't use as much
government money.' '
When the San Mateo adopt-apicketer program began last
Sep1ember, donors selected specific
anti-abortion demonstrators, but
that plan was too hard to track,
Stern said.
Now, donors pledge a certain
amount per protester per day, say
$2 per picketer.
"We get anywhere from a half
dozen P,rDtesters 10 more than two
dozen, ' Stem said. "If the demon·
sttation gets big, we can raise a lot
of money."
The clinic, which performs
abortions and provides family planning and health services, hasn't
seen huge protests like those in
Wichita, Kan .. where I ,900 arrests
have been made in the past month.
However. most abortion clinics
have regular protesters, said Ann
Tubbs, associate director of
Planned Parenthood's western
region.
She said adopt-a-picketer programs appeal to "someone who
sees picketers and gets angry about
them." The programs generally
don't slOp protests or raise much
money, she said.
In the late 1980s, Rep. Pat
Schroeder, D-Colo., pledged to
contribute money to Planned Parenthood based on the number of
pickets who showed up at a massive anti-abortion rally. ·
"I don't know how much
money was raised, but she thought
it worked so well that she did it one

more time two or three years ago,"
said Schroeder spokesman Kip
Cheroutes. "And she challenged
others to do the same."

Kindergarten meeting Aug. 20

NeWS notes

Dry cleaners charge women more
By STANLEY D. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
CHICAGO (AP) - Are laun derers taking women to the cleaners?
The Illinois Human Rights
Department says yes: Dry cleaners
routinely charge more to clean
women's shirts than men's.
Dry cleaning industry officials
say that's ttue, but there's a good
reason: Women's blouses typically
require mQre hand-cleaning than
men's shirts.
The state now is trying 10 determine if there is sufficiently serious
gender discrimination to warrant
negotiating a formal price agreement with five Chicago cleaners
that it recently studied, a
spolcesman for the Human Rights
Department said Thursday
· If one can't be reached, the next
step would be to file a fOODal complaint with the Illinois Human
Rights Commission, which could
send the case 10 an administrative
law judge, . according to the
spokesman, Dick Baules.
At five Chicago clelllen studied
by the state, women were charged
·35 cents to more than S2 more ror
exac:lly the same services, Bauies
said. The Ulinois Human Rights
Act prohibits ..y COmpany providing a public setvice from disaiminatiag beciiiSC: of gender.
"We understand that the prac0

lice is universal. We are aware that
it has been a longstanding procedure," Battles said.
Dry cleaning industry officials
say price differences have been an
issue for years, and they acknowl·
edge charges often are higher for
women's cleaning than men's.
But they say the difference is
dictated by economics.
Machinery used to finish men's
shirts can't be used on smaller
women's shirts, said Alice Laban,
spokeswoman for the International
Fabricare Institute in Silver Spring,

Md.
"Those shirts have to be fin ished by hand, so it naturally takes
longer and costs more," Ms. Laban
said.
"We don't support any kind of
sex discrimination, but we do
understand why dry cleaners
charge a different price," she said.
The average price to dry clean a
blouse ranged from $2.74 in the
South to $3.37 in the Northeast,
according to International Fabricare
Institute statistics from November
1990.

NOW ENROLLING
~ GINGERBREAD HOUSE
]If..
PRE-S'CHOOLS

.J.

TWO lOCATIONS
State lictn1td -

Title XX Funded - Open Year Round

PRE-SCHOOLS and DAY CARE
Pre-School
Only

446-2413
541 S..end Au.
Gallipolis

Limited
Enrollment

Pre-School &amp;
Day Cnre

Call

Forlges 3 to 12 ·

Mrs. Shirin Nuggud - M. Ed.
Administrator

992-7321
116 N. Sec. Au.
Midllll!lorl

* .... ,..,

u

.•.

,.1 • • •,

,,

...

9, 1991,

Ohio

STATE FAIR WINNER- Jamie Ord or Pomeroy took a rust
in competition at the Junior Fair Horse Show staged Friday at the
Obio State Fair. He won tbe first in tbe cloverlear barrels class.

... .. . -

mcntary School for the purpose of
kindergarten orientation.
If you have not pre-registered
your child for kindergarten plan to
be in attendance by 8:30 a.m. Parents who did not attend spring registration or who arc new 10 the district will need to provide a copy of
their child's birth certificate and a
record of the various vaccinations
and shots already received.
For further information contact
the superintendent's office at 9854292. .

Sunday.

Ann
Landers

ANN LANDERS
"1"1, Loa AIIJeleo
nm.. Syodcale ooc1
Crealon Syndlcale.''

the fighting gets nasty. can see
nobodv messes with you.
Dear Ann Landers: Your
Boston correspondent wanted a male
heir to carry on the family name
and the best advice your Harvard
geneticist could offer was "keep
trying."
There is one sure way to have a
male heir and that is to adopt one of
the many available children here or.
abroad. The world already has roo:
many unwanted children. And·
consider, please, what life would
be like for a female child whose
parents wanted a boy and got bee
instead.
Please !ell Boston not 10 "keep.
trying" if her daughters wiU merely·
represent failed attempts 10 produce·
a boy. She should do the right·
thing for our overcrowded planet
and for a child without a home -adopt. I'U sign this ·• ANOTHER
GENETICIST IN DAVIS, CALIF.
DEAR DAVIS : Well said.
For those who are interested in ·
adoption, I suggest either or both of ·
the following: National Committee
for Adoption, P.O. Box 33366, ·
Washington, D.C. 20033, or the ·
Adoptive Families of America. 3333
Highway 100 North, Minneapolis,
Minn. 55422.

Southern Local District to have band
this fall - Beat of the Bend - Page B-5

B-1

Initial Sunday Times-Sentinel issue
is recalled· James Sands- Page A-6

Vol. 28, No. '£1
Copyrighted 1991

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel StaiT
POMEROY -The Rock Springs
Fairgrounds is coming alive as
preparations are being completed
(oday for the opening of the !28th
Meigs County Fair.
The fair officially opens at 8
a.m. Monday for a six day run closing at II p.m. on Saturday.
However, the kickoff will come

with a hymn sing at 7:30 10night at
the grandstand under the .direcuon
of the Meigs County Mm1stenal
Association.
.
Friday and Saturday commercial
exhibits were put into place and
concession stands siOC~ed up w1th
supplies in preparauon for the
anticipated hundreds of hungry
fairgoers.
Some exhibits in open classes

are already in place. Domestic arts,
photography, paintings, and the hay
for the hay show were among the
entries brought in yesterday for
early judging.
Mary Gilmore, fair board secretary, reports that membership tickets will remain on sale through
Thursday. The tickets are $9 and
provide not only admission to the
grounds but to all the entertainment

PIZZA

t

CLOSED THURSDAY FOR THE FAIR

D&amp;M PIZZA

'
'

992-7287

INGELS FURNITURE
NEW STORE HOURS
MON.· TUE.·WED.·FRI. 9·5
THURS. 9·12
SAT. 9·2

EXIDBITS IN PLACE - More than 1100
....exlliltitl prepared fly·Melgs County School students were put on display Friday artemoon in
the senior fair building on tbe Rock Springs
.Fairgrounds ror viewing by rairgoers this week.

Here Bill Buckley, secondary supervisor, tacks
up another exhibit He and several members or
the Meigs County School Board staiT worked on
arranging the exhibit

Lawsuit against Meigs County
Agricultural Society settled

INGELS FURNITURE
1·800-446·8084
MIDDLEPORT

POMEROY - A lawsuit filed by

a Meigs County family against _the

Meigs County Agncultural Soc1ety
has been settled, with several of the
plaintiffs in the case now being
permitted to participate in the 1991
Meigs County F8JJ'. .
.
.
The suit was filed m Me1gs
County Common Pleas Court in
July by several members of the
Carr family of Coolville.
.
.
Red Carr his wife, Rose, thetr
adult childr~n and their grandchil-

1991 Carrollton Sabre Supreme 14x70
',: . ·, ~l '

Kidnapper.~

t •

IIIII

Sunm
Sunny. High In lower 80s.

A Multimedia Inc. Nowapoper

at the grandstand, in the show arenas, and on the h1U stage.
.
. For those who have membership
uckets, there 1s a S3 nde charge a
day . The gate charge of $5 for
every one over one. year old
mcludes the ndes. The ndes on the
midway will operate Monday,
Tuesday, Thursday and Fnday
from I to 4:30 and 6 to II p.m., on
Wednesday from noon to 4:30 and

6 to II ~.m. and on Saturday from
noon unul5 and 6 to II p.m.
Kiddie Day Will be observed. on
Wednesday when gate admiSSIOn
w1U be reduced 10 $3 from 8 am. to
2 p.m.
.
.
..
Thursday IS Seruor C1Uzens Day
and residents 60 or over will be
admitted 10 the grounds free. Some
proof of age must be shown at the
gate, however.

The Senior Citizens Center has
made arrangements for the tra~sportauon of semors to the faugrounds. Buses will leave the ceo1er at 10:30 a.-m. and afler the noon
meal and w1ll be makmg return
tr1ps from the fau:grounds at2 p.m.
To help allevrnte parking prob!ems on the fairgrounds, t e Fatr
Board has made arrangements for
Continued on A-4

liST PRICE ............................................................................................. '21, 900

SALE PRICE ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S17, 995

dren were all banned by the fair
board from participating in the fair
due 10 an allercation involving Red
Carr and another fairgoer in 1990.
The ban, issued by the fair board in
October, 1990, was to be in effect
for three years.
In an entry of seulement and
dismissal filed by Common Pleas
Court Judge Fred W. Crow Ill on
Friday, the board's ban of Red Carr
from ap~g at the fair or participating m the fair for a three-year

period remains in effect.
However, Rose Carr and the
Cares' son and daughter, Douglas
Carr and Marcia Guess, are now
banned from the fairground and
activities there for a period of only
one year.
All other members of the Carr
family will be permitted to aucnd
this year's fair (which begins on
Monday) from opening to closing
with none of them bemg perm1tted
to stay ovemighL

GALLIPOLIS - The results of
last week's Gallia County Fair Poll
conducted by the office of I Oth
District Congress man , Clarence
Miller, have been tabulated.
While public opinion was
divided on such issues as the potential threat of the Soviet Union and
the security or federally in sured
financial deposits. on other issues,
such as usc of the military to prevent illegal·aliens from entering the
country and the need of a national
health care system, public opinion
was strongly supportive.
More specifically, concerning
health care, 70 percent believed
Congress should institute a national
health care system, while only 25
percent had confidence in the solvency of the Medicare system. In
regards to medical research . 70
percent supported the use of lab
animals for medical research.
When asked about the Social
Security earning ceilings, 63 percent said they favored repealing
limits on the amount of income
Social Security recipients can earn .
As to the public's confidence in the
Social Security program , only 41
percent of those polled said they
felt confidence in the long term
financial imcgmy of the system.
With respect to military preparedness an utilization of our
armed forces. 87 percent of the
respondents had confidence in the
readiness of th e military and 89
percent indrcatcd Iheir support for
using the milit.ary to assist the U.S.
Border Patrol in stopping illegal

aliens and drug 1raiTickers.
In the area of foreign policy, 85
percent believed the United Nation
coalition forces in Iraq should have
continued the war until Saddam

Hussein wa~ removed from power
and 52 percent of those polled no
longer viewed the Soviet Union as
a potenti al threat to the United
Contiued on A-4

Pope heads agency

Vinton commissioners
accused of corruption
By MELINDA POWERS
Times-SeDt!Del Stan
GALLIPOLIS -A Jackson
County citizen accused the Vinton
County Commissioners last week
or "political corruption" in the way
they handled an incentive package
from a landliU operator.
According to an article in the
Aug. 9 issue of the Jackson Journal-Herald, William C. Martin, of
Jackson, wrote a leuer July 29 to
the commissioners addressing the
Vinton County plan to allow the
construction of three new landfills
there.
Martin said in the letter that
their recent actions "show the sale
and purchase of political influence
for money, which is political corruption," the article said.
Martin 's letter came after MidAmerican Waste Systems, Inc .
offered a package of economic
incentives to the county in
exchange for its approval of a new
landfill, the article said.

The proposal offered a total of
$95,000, whioh Marti!'l qkt ;wu

accepted by the Vinton County
Auditor on May 7. The commissioners accepted the p.oyments
before they had reached a decision
on approving the landfills. Martin
charged. Thus, he alleges, the
county took money in direct
exchange for their stamp approval
on Mid· American· s operations.
"What happened in Vinton
county is morally wrong and
should be stopped," Martin wrote.
"If the Solid Waste Disaict is now
or will become as corrupt as the
Vinton County Commissioners
have proven to be, then perhaps the
organization should be disbanded
and its members sent home."
The article said that the commis· ·
sioners were conferring with their
anomeys over Martin's charges.
In a related story, a Gallia County Commissioner was recently
elected chairman of the six-county
solid waste district, even though at
Continued on A-4

Housing bill vote delayed until September
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) Senate President Stanley Aronoff
has postponed until late September
a vote on a bill letting state and
local governments finance housing
with tax revenues.
Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, on Friday cancelled a session scheduled
for the end of August after being
told by Gov. George Voinovich

and sponsors of the bill that the
delay would not create a problem .
He said the delay was prompted
by the addition of an emergency
clause by a joint commlllec that
worked out Senate-House differcnccs on the proposal. Emergency
clauses need a two-thirds majority
- 22 voleS -in the Senate.
Thc ori~inal bill passed 23-10,

hut Aronolf said some who voted
for it would have missed the
August session because of vacalions or other commitments.
Senators will reconvene for a
session beginning Sept. 24,
Aronoff said.
The House voted 73 -17
Wednesday to accept the comproContinued on A-4

say American to be freed

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)- One
hostage- holding group said Saturday it would free an American
within 72 hours, but another threatened 10 kill its French captive if a
Westerner is unconditionally
released.
· The developments suggested a
sharp rift amon~ kidnap factions on
whether to parucipate m a deal that
would free the 13 Western
hostages, and what its terms would
be.
Despite the confusion, Saturday
brought expressions of optimism

This home is standard with vinyl lap siding, house type shmgled roo I
and fomecore wrap on the sidewalls, end walls and roof, 3 bedrooms
and 2 baths.
Pe~

I

National health care system
gets favorable vote ~n fair poll

ANY SMALL, MEDIUM or LARGE

As low As ................................................... 5203 •.38*

• 0' ••
., , _

10 Sectlona, 134 Pagea

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, August 11, 1991

Sl 00 OFF

992-2635

Along the river .............. Bl-8
Business ............................. Dl
Comics.........................Insert
Classified ....................... D2· 7
Deaths................................ A3
Editoral............................. A2
Farm ............................... Dl-8
Sports............................. Cl-8
Weather ........................... A-3

128th Meigs County Fair opens Monday

FAIR WEEK SPECIAL! I

SYRACUSE, OHIO .

Inside

•
tmts

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPT.

from some quarters about prospects lowing day with McCarthy. who
for another hostage release follow- wiU hand over a scaled lctler from
ing Thursday's freeing of Briton his former captors, the Islamic
John McCarthy.
Jihad group.
"Generally speaking I think
Two days before McCarthy was
there's an expectation" that anoth- freed, Islamic Jihad released a
er hostage will be set free, Presi- photo of American journalist Terry
Anderson, raising expectations that
dent Bush told reporters in Maine.
"At this stage we already have he would be freed.
McCarthy spoke by telephone
one back, so I think there are rcasons for believing they are going to . Saturday with Anderson 's sister,
move," said U.N. Secretary-Gener- Peggy Say, who said he told her
Anderson is "in good spints and
al Javier Perez de Cuellar.
He spoke as he arrived in Lon- expectant" that a release may be
don Saturday for a meeting the fol- soon.
Anderson, 43, chief Middle,East
correspondent for The Associated
Press, was kidnapped March 16,
1985 and is the longest held
hostage.
The announcement of a planned
release came from the RevolutionApPeals judges William Harary Justice Organization, which
sha of Circleville and Lawrence
claims to hold Americans Joseph
Gray of Athens concurred in the
Cicippio and Edward Austin Tracy.
The stlilement was accompanied by
ruling while Judge Pete Abele
of McArthur dissented, Harsha
a photograph or Cicippio, 60.
The families of Tracy and Cicipsaid.
pio said they were afraid to get
About 700 roosters seized in
' their hopes up that their loved ones
a raid May 11 are being kept at
would be freed after five years_or
the former Bescoe poultry farm
captivity.
near Wheelersbufg ill Scioto
"All this week has been hopeful
County.
·
Continued on A-3

Court rules gamecocks
should be.sold at auction

Month

Other features included with this home are: R19 roof insulatiOn: ~lfst~r.Ing storm wondows, upgrade carpet and ped, upgrade drapes wi~h sheers. _cathedral ceiir~.g. ceohng fan. house type door
with storm. microwave cabinet. extra Window'" hvrng room. 14 shutters. 15 cu . ft. 2 door re·
.
.
frigeretor, braas patio light and much much more.

McARTHUR. Ohio (AP)Gamecocks seized in a Vinton
County raid should be sold at
auction, an appeals court ruled.
The ruling by the 4th Ohio
District Court or Appeals on
Friday reversed an earlier ruling
by Vinton County Common
Pleas Judge Michael Brame,
who had ordered the roosters
destroyed.

Stop in and see this beauty because at th1s pnce, it won't be here long!
th a. 10"- down• 1 1.76% APR to q_.lified buyers. Sale ends Augutt 24th,, 1991

"Paym-,nta flg\Ued for 1 80 mon

COLE'S
MOBILE
HOMES
located 5 Miles East of Rt. 33
On Rt. 50 East, Athens

f\'lason County Fair livestock sales - D-1

American
Cancer
Society

Are You Looking For Value?

.

75 cents

592-1972
· ·-·--

---- --!
I •

UPGRADING LAND • Swain Enterprises or
Gallipolis recently began work on property
owned by the Community Improvement Corporation, located near Airport Road, Gallipolis.
According to Jack Fowler, CIC executive vicepresident, work is being done to tbe property to

make It more marketable and attractive for a
possible ruture site or a sewer system or lndiJ5oo
trlal park. Tbe land will be leveled off from
Riverside Marine to SR 7. Work Is expected to
be completed ln 30 days. O'imes·Sentinel photo
by Kris Cocbran)

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