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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Braves
humble
Reds 4-1

1=-= -

Pick 3:655
Pick 4: 3563
Cards : 8-H, 2-C
8-D;2-S
Low tonight In mld·60s.
Saturday, sunny. High In upper
80s.

Page-4

2 Socttona, 14 Pag"• 25 cento

Vol. 42, No18

PIE BAKING WINNERS • Addalou Lewis
took first in tbe Meigs County Fair pie baking
contest, a part of tbe "Apples, Apples, Apples"
demonstration program of tbe Meigs County
Extension Service. Veterans Memorial Hospital

sponsored tbe contest and Bob HoeRicb, public
relations director, was on band to present tbe
casb prizes to tbe winners, Mrs. Lewis, Sarah
Houser, second, Margaret Parker, tbird, and
Connie Quivey, fourtb,letl to rigbt.

HOW-TO TIPS· Ways to used dried apples
to make tasty treats were demonstrated by Jackie Graham, GaUia County Extension program
assistant, during the "Apples, Apples, Apples"
program at tbe Meigs County Fair. Also partici-

pating in tbe educadonal program were Becky
A. Culbertson, Gallia County Extension Agent,
seated lett, and Cindy S. Oliveri, agent for tbe
Meigs County Extension Service, sponsors.

Lydia Council makes plans Apple pie contest winners announced _____
for annual homecoming
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr

The Lydia Council of l.he Bradford Church of Christ held its
August meeting at the home of
Nancy Morris in Hamden. Hostesses for the evening were Carol
Anderson and Mrs. Morris.
Karlita Stump presided at l.he
meeting which opened with prayer
request and prayer. Devotions were
given by Nancy Morris and scripture was taken from Proverbs. The
topic · was children with readings
"See Him as l.hc Child He Was,"
and "Yardsticks a Child Uses."
Prayer was given by Nancy Morris.
Officers repons were also given.
Several future events at the
church were announced.
The IOth year homecoming of
the church will be held Sept. 8 with
Mark Seevers, former minister, as
speaker for the morning worshio. A
fellowship dinner will be held at
noon with the church providing l.he
meat. Games and special music
will be in the afternoon and Clif·
ford Smil.h, anol.her former minister, will speak at4:30 p.m.
Mrs. Mary Gilkey, a patient at
Overbrook Center, was given a silk

planter from the council.
It was announced that on Sept.
13 and 14 a ladies retreat will be
held at the Ohio Valley Christian
A~sembly. Speaker for the retreat
w11l be Marla Creamer with her
!.heme being "Molded by the Mas-

ter."

Homespun Holiday at the
Cincinnati Bible College will be
held on Sept. 28 from 9 a.m . to
3:30 p.m. Registration must be in
by Sept. 10.
Bradford revival will be Sept.
22-27 with Denny Coburn the
speaker.
The ~unshine basket was given
by Sylvia Blake.
In September the Lydia Council
will be held at the church with
Madeline Painter and Becky
Amberger as hostesses.
Attending were Janice Fetty,
Delores Frank, Janell Spencer,
Becky Amberger, Madeline
Painter, Diane Bing, Paula Pickens,
Jane Hysell, Sherry Smith, Cherie
Williamson, Gerri Lightfoot,
Caitlin Williamson, Karlita Stump,
Carol Anderson and Nancy Morris.

Beat of the Bend ....
by Bob Hoeflich

:~T~he~Ph~y~s~ic~aii~T~he~r~ap~y~De~p~art~--:~~~~

~-

''

ment of Veterans Memorial Hospital will hold a "David Pratt Day" in
the hospital's Conference Room
beginning all p.m. this Sunday.
Herman L. Dillon, MS, PT, of
the hospital repons:
"We received donations from
various friends and civic organizations from our initial newspaper
article which helped pay to replace
the motor in his van, wheelchair
parts including batteries, transfer
board and other medical supplies.
"Mr. Pratt was in Dodd Hall,
Columbus, for approximately two
months where he received intensive
physical l.herapy and occupational
l.herapy.
"We would like you to attend
this open house to meet Mr. Pratt
and see his various handmade
crafts such as boats, airplanes,
trains, etc. We are also going 10
attempt to provide shingles and
necessary labor to roof his house as
donations beeome available.
"On behalf of Mr. and Mrs.
Pran. I wish to thank each individual and civic organization who
have helped make these things possible and cordially invite you to
attend this open house."
·
Pratt was originally injured
while helping a neighbor. He was
cuttin$ brush when he was struck
by a limb which fell from a tree.
At the time he thought he was all
right but later in the same momin~.
comP.Iained of a headache and h1s
film•ly became quite concerned.
He was taken to the emergency
room at O'Bleness Hospital where
it was initially believed he· had suslained a neck sprain.
While in the emergency ·room ,
he developed a feeling of numbness and heaviness in his arms and
legs and was then transferred to St.
Anthony's Hospital in Columbus
for consultation. There, it was
determined that he had sustained a
fractured vertebrae. Surgery could
not be performed at that time due
to the fact that the neurosurgeon
was out of town for the weekend.
He was placed in traction until the
surgery could be performed. During that time, Mr. Prau developed a
blood clot which caused· pressure
on the spinal cord. Surgery was
performed but paralysis had
occurred. He still has paralysis of
the lower extremities and ts confined to a wheelchair. However, he
has not given up. He has a workshop at home and still works in it
making small crafts. The family is
in a unique situation as Mrs. Pratt
is blind.
Refreshments will be ~rved by

Jackie Starcher, during
Sunday's open house.

County fairs seem almost as
American as apple pie, so as a part
of the "Apples Apples, Apples"
program of the Meigs County
Extension Service at the Meigs
County fair, a pie baking contest
was a natural.
The contest, sponsored by Veterans Memorial Hospital, was a
part of a broad program on apples
- which ones to use in what and
how to prepare and preserve them.
Taking flfSt place in the pie baking competition was Addalou
Lewis of Pomeroy, daughter of
Mrs. Ralph McKenzie, Racine,
who 20 years ago using the same
recipe went all the.-ay to the Ohio
State Fair as Meigs County's pie
baking champion.
Second place went to Sarah
Houser, third to Margaret Parker,
both of Pomeroy, and fourth to
Connie Quivey, Shade. Cash prizes
were awarded in the first three
places with a merchandise prize

going to the fourth place winner.
Becky A. Culbertson, Gallia
County Extension agent, and Jackie
Graham, her program assistant,
helped Cindy Oliveri, Meigs
Extension agent in presenting the
"apple, that versatile and appealing
fruit of widespread popularity."
The trio talked about what to
look for when selecting apples, noting that they need to be fJ.J'!Il, crisp
and free from bruises. They cau·
tioned that once taken home they
should be kept in a cool, moist
place and sorted occasionally since
1t's true that "one rotten apple can
spoil the barrel."
Mrs. Graham gave tips on drying apples in l.he oven, under the
sun and in a dehydrator and suggestions on their storage and uses
once they have been dried.
As snacks, in granoli, over ice
cream, fried, in pie or fruit rolls
were among the uses for dried
apples proposed by the program

assistant. who reminded her listeners of the old adage, "an apple a
day keeps the doctQr away."
The foods prepared in the
demonstrations were then offered
to the fairgoers for a taste test and
several recipes were shared, including one for a delicious apple cake
prepared in a microwave oven, and
another for a tart apple-cabbage
slaw.

biiied.
Pour into a baking dish, spread
evenly, and place in a microwave
oven on an inverted bowl.
Microwave on medium 10 minutes, rotating dish once, or
microwave on high for five min- ·
utes and let stand five minutes.
Cool and then dust with confec tioner's sugar.

APPLE CAKE
I cup sugar, 2{3 cup oil, 1/2 teaspoon vanilla, 2 eggs, 1-113 cups
unsifted flour, 1-114 teaspoOn soda,
314 teaspoon salt, 1-1/2 teaspoons
cinnamon, 1-112 cups shredded
apple, 114 cup chopped nuts, and
confectioner's sugar.
Grease the bottom only of an
eight inch square glass baking dish·.
Blend together the sugar, oil and
vanilla, beat in the eggs, one at a
time, and then mix in l.he remaining
inJUCdients until thoroughly.com-

CREAMY APPLE-CABBAGE
SLAW
112 cup sour cream; I table spoon sugar, 1/2 teaspoon salt; 1
tablespoon vinegar, 112 teaspoon
prepared mustard, 1-1/2 teaspoons
lemon juice, 2 cups apples, pared
thinly sliced, and 3 cups shredded
cabbage.
Mix sour cream and seasonings.
Chill. _Sprinkle lemon juice over
apples to prevent darkening. Lightly mix apples and cabbage together. Pour dressing over mixture just
befo/e serving and toss lightly.

Congratulations to Jay Blackwood and Don Harris.
Named to dean's list
The two Eastern High School
Anna K. Stanley, daughter of
graduates bave completed their one
Olever
and Larry Stanley, Edison,
year courses at the Nashville Auto
Diesel College last week and are was named to the dean's list at
prepared to move into the world of Otterbein College in Westerville
for l.he spring quarter.
work.
Jay is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Lloyd Blackwood and Don is l.he
son of Mr. and Mrs. Alan Harris.

IS SIMPLY YOUR BEST BUY
ON A NEW CAR OR TRUCK!

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Starr
Voters in the Meigs Local
School District will bave 10 candidates to choose from when electing
their school board in November.
School board candidates in all three
districts were among those filing
petitions before Thursday's filing
deadline at the Meigs County
Board of Elections.
Filing for three open positions
on the Meigs Local board are
incumbents Jeffrey S. Werry,
Richard W. Vaughan and Robert F.
Snowden, Roger A. Abbott, John

P. Hood, Paul M. McElroy, Jr.,
Gary A. Phillips, Randy
Humphreys, Iva M. Sisson, and
Leo B. Morris.
Filing for the Southern Local
School Board are incumbent
Joseph E. Thoren, Jr., Carmen Jill
Manuel, Joan Manuel, Clifford
Thomas Roseberry, Thomas E.
Weaver, Leah Rose and Jeff Thornton. Two positions will be filled.
In l.he Eastern Local-School District, where three will be elected,
voters will choose from incumbents
S. Ray Karr and 1.0. McCoy, Ron
Eastman and Mike Martin.

-

Affairs.
Carolyn L. Powell has filed a petition to run as a candidate for ClerkTreasurer in Racine.
Ed Martin will challenge incumbent James M. Fink for the office
of mayor in Rutland, and Jo Ann
Eads will join incumbent Victoria
Fink to fill the two council positions open in Rutland. Incumbent
Sandra K. Smith wiU be challenged
by Judy A. Denny in the position of
clerk-treasurer.
Mintar V. Fryar, Jr., and James
E. Pape will face-off in the race for
Mayor of Syracuse. Two council-

Incumbent Oris L. Smith and
Jeffrey Charles Harris are the two
candidates who filed for two positions open on the Meigs County
Board of Education.
Village Candidates
No petitions were filed in the
race for Racine's mayor's office.
Two candidates filed for village
council - Henry W. Bentz and
Julian Scolt Hill . Two positions are
open on that council.
In addition, incumbents Bobbie
E. Roy and Ivan C. Powell have
filed for the two positions to be
filed on Racine's Board.of Public

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The stage has been set for a highstakes political poker game that
will lead next month 10 the creation
of new election districts for Ohio's
General Assembly.
The important but obscure
Apportionment Board - normally,
it meets only once every 10 years
after the U.S. Census - held its
organizational session Thursday
and agreed on how to proceed to
meet an Oct 1 deadline.
Gov. George Voinovich was
elected chainnan of the five-member board, which is controlled by
· Republic~ for the first time in
tw0 ,decades.
. SCC(etary of State Bob Taft was
ltllllled ~vice chairman of the panel
which rould; .llnl~ pre~led ,by
increasingly stringent guidelines,
give the GOP control of both houses of the Legislature for the first

* EXTRA SPECIAL *
10 LBS.- NEW

RUSSET POTATOES ..........$149

~~~~s!~~~s:~~~~.~~. . . . . S199
38 COUNT BOX ................................. $844

XLf LAllA,. 4x2

FRESH DAILY

SILVER QUEEN CORN.~~:.-.$169

FRESH

GREEN CABBAGE •••••••~~•••• 27c.
FRESH LARGE

HEAD LEnUCE ••••••••••••••2/S1

MEIGS
FARM MARKET
300 West 'Main St. • Pomeroy

Manufacturer's Suggested Retaii.........'12,578.DO
Suggested Retail.........'14,406.00
lnvolce...................................................... 11 ,400.00 llnVe11ce.........................................................12,751.35
Free Tank Of Gas..............................................o.oo ;: Free Tank Of Gas..............................................o.oo
+.....................................................................49.00 . +.....................................................................49.00
;·: Rebate............................................................750.00 : Rebate...........................................................soo.oo

••. T. P. Everyday Low Prlce.....•1 0,699.00

FORD trustee: Elmer Bailey (I);
clerk:, Barbara J. Gruese r (I) ;
CHESTER trustee, Victor A. Bahr,
G. Alfred Wolfe (!); clerk, Karen
R. Smith (I); COLUMBIA trustee,
Truman L. Grim, Gay F. Johnson
(I) and Carrol Woodgerd; clerk,
Gloria Hutton; LEBANON truStee,
Lawrence Hayman, Harry Richard
(!); clerk, Dorothy A. Roseberry
(I); LETART trustee, David W.
Fox, Harry C. Hill (!), Christopher
Wolfe; clerk, Vicki L. Wheeler,
Joyce White (!); OLIVE trustee,
Rick Barringer, Randall Boston,
Continued on paae 3

time since 1971.
Senate President Stanley
Aronoff is the other GOP member:
The two Democrats are Rep. Barney Quilter of Toledo and Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson. The auditor
was on a previously planned vacation but was represented at the
meeting by an aide. Pabick Leahy.
At a 90-minute meeting that
included minor bickering over policies and procedures, the board
announced for hearings to obtain
public teStimony and receive plans
that each party and various groups
and individuals will propose.
Anyone can offer a plan. The
deadline for submitting one is Sept.
26.
AU plans will be available for
·p.ulJijc,inspection Sept. 27. The
board will meet Sept. 30 in the
Rhodes Office Tower to fonnally
adopt the districts for use in the

199i elections.

James Tilling, board secrc~,
said times and places for l.he public
hearings would be announced
today . They will include Toledo,
Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati,
Athens and Cambridge, among
other siteS, he said.
The board has the advantage of
a $2.5 million appropriation that
the Legislawre gave a special task
force to provide research, computer
data and other help. About
$500,000 is set aside for legal services, should the adopted plan be
challenged in court.
Districts must be virtually equal
in population, also compact and
contiguous. In recent years, federal
coun decisions have added other
requirements. tha&amp; ,limit the ability
Of the party that controls the board
to create districts favorable to its
candidates.

construction of sewer treatment facilities. Gregory A. Otey or \.IRS Consultants, CohaiDbus,
right, met witb tbe Steering Committee tci detail
steps to be taken to get funding ror tbe project.

SEWER FUNDING SIGNING - Lindsey
Lyons, chairman of tbe Tuppers Plains Sewer
Steering Committee, signed pre-application
forms Thursday afternoon ror $1.9 million in
FHA grants and low interest loans to be used ror

Tuppers Plains Sewer committee signs
forms for $1.9 million in grants, loans
Application for $1.9 million in
grants and low interest loans from
the Farmers Home AdminiStration
for construction of a sewage treatment system in Tuppers Plains is
being made by the Tuppers Plains
Sewer Steering Committee.
Forms were signed Thursday
afternoon when the Commiuee
members met with Gregory A.
Otey of URS Consultants, Columbus, who presented initial plans for
a gravity system of sewage collection for the village. The proposed
project will include about 175
homes, all of the businesses, the
school, churches, and other buildings in the village and immediate
surrounding area.
According to Otey, the funding
request is for 50 percent grant and
50 percent low interest funds. The
amount requested would include
not only the 17,600 feet of main
lines and lines to the homes and
businesses to be served, but one or

You'll Find
In The Clanlfleds · .........,

men are to be elected there, and
David Lawson, Jeffrey L. Maynard
and Bill Roush will face incumbent
Dennis a. Wolfe for those seats.
Laurence Bbersbach, an incumbent,
will seek reelection to the one open
scat on the Board of Public Affairs
in Syracuse. Janice Lawson will
also seek re-election to the position
of clerk-treasurer, the only candi date to me.
Trustees, Clerks
One cleric and one trustee are to
be elected in townships in November, and those filing in each are (an
" !" denotes an incumbent): BED-

Apportionment Board begins
Ohio apportionment process

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr

And Louise Gluesencamp of
Portland underwent major surgery
at St. Joseph Hospital Wednesday.
She's love to hear from you. The
address is 19th and Murdock Ave.,
Parkersburg, W. Va 26101.
Now that rain really should have
come just a bit earlier for .the com's
sake, if nothing else. Do keep
smiling.

Ten file for 3 seats on Meigs School Board

Who was Junius?
LONDON (AP) - An enduring
mystery concerns l.he authorship of
"l.he Junius Letters," which from
1767 to 1772 savagely attacked
Kmg George lli and leading government ministers and politicians.
The biting and satirical letters
signed Junius appeared in the London Public Advertiser. Of 30 possible authors, research shows the
most likely culprit to be civil servant Sir Philip Francis (17401818).

A Multtmedta Inc. Nowapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, August 23, 1991

Copyrighted 1981

two pumping plants, and a treatment facility.
It was emphasized that, if the
proposed plans are approved and
l.he funding is secured, there will be
no fee for connecting to the system
in its construction stage. As for the
monthly fee, the8lan is to keep l.he
charge under $3 . The initial construction would also include
removal of septic tanks which the
residents now use.
In addition to the $1.9 million to
be applied for under FHA, the
committee plans also to seek block
grant momes, Issue 2 funds, and
Appalachian Regional Commission
monies.
Otey stressed during the meeting that monies from FHA for
sewer projects is on a competitive
basis. He said l.hat made it urgent
that the pre-application be gotten in
as soon as possible.
It will take about three months
before a decision is made by the
FHA. l.he consultant said. After that
the engineering plans would have
to be developed and other funding

Waste plan to move to
population for approval
By MELINDA POWERS
OVP News Staff
The local six-county solid waste
plan will not reflect public-requested changes as it is g1ven to villages
and townships for ratification this
week, officials said Thursday in
Jadson.
The policy committee of the
Athens-Gallia-Hocking-JacksonMeigs-Vinton solid waste district
met Thursday to discuss recent
pu~lic hearings on the plan and to
decide if district offic1als should
delay sending the plan on to be ratified.
The committee voted 16-7 not
~ delay the plan, over the objections of the Athens County faction .
'(he plan must now receive

approval from four of the six
boards of county commissioners, as
well as approval of 60 percent of
the district's population, as represented by village councils and
township trustees.
Gallia County Commissioner
George Pope said _after l.he meeting
that the future of the district is now
in the councils' and townships'
hands.
"They have about a month to
review the plan and to make a deci.
sion," he said. "If they don't do
anything, it is counted as a rejection . If we don't get 60 percent
approval, we could have to start
over.
"And if we don· t have a ratified
plan to the EPA bv Jan. l, 1992,
Continued on page 3

I'

--- - -- .. - ..

.

~

- ..

-

sources pursued meaning that the
construction, at the earliest, is two
years off.
Elizabeth Schaad, development
director for the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce, met with
the committee and consultant to
discuss what provisions were being
made in the plan to handle future
industrial development and expansion. Otey pointed out that in all
such plans, the growth factor is
considered by the funding source in
grantin~ monies to a community.
..,_
Chamnan of the Tuppers Plains
Steering Commiuee is Lindsay
irains, boats, trucks,' etc. • that Pratt makes in
DAVID PRA'IT DAY- David Pratt will be
Lyons and other members are Sue
his workshop witb only the use or bis rigbt band.
honored
Sunday
at
1
p.m.
in
the
conference
Maison, Homer Cole, and Marvin
The publlc is Invited to attend this open bouse.
room
at
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital.
On
disKeebaugh . A fourth is to be
play will be a variety or tbe crarts • airplains,
appointed to fill a vacancy created
by the resignation of Mary Jane
Talbott, it was reported.
Besides the gravity system of
sewage collection, the possibility
of using residential grinders was
discussed but discounted on the
By JULIE E. DILLON
basis of l.he additional expense of
Sentinel News Starr
David Pratt, a Meigs County
installation and the required maingood samaritan who was injured
tenance.
Lagoons were also considered while helping a neighbor cut brush
but it was noted that lagoons would and is now confined to a
take 12 to 15 acres of land while a wheelchair with paralysis in the
low extremities, will be honored
tre~~trnent plant woul,d require only
about two acres. Any system used, Sunday at 1 p.m. in the conference
the consultant pointed out, will room at Veterans Memorial Hospihave to have to meet Environmen- tal.
tal Protection Agency guidelines.
The day has been proclaimed
Rather than form a sewer district "David Pratt Day" and the event is
at this time, the committee has ..Jlosted by Veterans Memorial Hosdecided to form a not-for-profit pital Home Health Department and
corporation. Then once the funding the Physical Therapy Depanment.
Pratt's physical therapist, Heris secured and the system is in
place conven to a sewer district for man L. Dillon, received for Pratt
donations from various friends and
the operation.
As Otey pointed out there are civic organizations through an iniseveral reasons for the not-for-prof- tial Letter to the Editor in The
it corporation, one being that the Daily Sentinel some time ago.
corporation does not have to pay Those donations helped pay to
prevailing wage rates which means replace the motor in his van,
that construction costs could run 20 wheelchair parts including batterHARD AT WORK ·David Pratt, who was Injured
ies, transfer board and other medito 40 percent less.
ing a oel(lbbor cut brusb and who is now confined to a wbeelc:bailr,
Otey noted that his fmn is han- cal supplies.
hasn 'I let bis Injury get him down. He works dally in bls workshop
dling the initial paperwork free of
At the time of Pratt's accident
to
create a variety of cralb. Here, be is completing an F-16 ftghter
charge based on the promise of the he thought he was not injured
jet.
His crafts wiD be on display at Veterans Memorial Hospital on
engineering job if the funding for badly, but later that same morning
Sunday
at 1 p.m. In tbe conference room during "David Pratt
the sewer system is obtained.
he complained of a headache and
Day."
Continued on page 3
Cootnued page 3

David Pratt Day
slated Sunday

oo

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�Ohio

Commentary·

Pomeroy-MI~dleport,

The Daily Sentinel
111 Courl Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
. DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON ARM

II

.I

~MULTIMEDIA. INC
ROBERT L . WINGETT
l'ubllaber

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Ma~~a~er

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers· Association.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed w,lth
name. address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·
ties.

!
I

To Democrats, it may seem
like Bush has magic wand

I

!

I
I

L~!WJll!~#Y!~tF~der~ess
WASHINGTON~ Ten mem,
bers of Congress and ' their
entourage just got back from Alas·
lea whe~e the~ were suppo~d _to
ta1ce an unpar:tiallook at a wildlife
refuge 10 decide whether tt should
be opened up for oil drilling. But
dle hosts for that impartial look
were oil COfllpanies. Eight of die
lawmalcers who made the full tour
stayed at an oil company lodge,
flew in oil company helicopters
and were led around by oil company tour guides.
In the one instance when the
lrllvelers used taxpayers' money to
get around, lhey managed 10 squander die money. J'he delegation flew
to Alaska in a military C-9 at a cost
of $67,774. Commercial air fare for
the members of Congress would
have been a fraction of that, but
dlen they wouldn't have been able
to take along six spouses and a
bevy of staffers.
~e hospi~ty ?f ~e oil comparues was thinly disguised lobbymg, and it may stack the deck
againstdleArcticNationai'\Y~e

. .

"

• t

..•, '

l

by .Brltish Petrcileum-in"Pr!idboe
Bay. And they toured the wildlife
refuge in helicopters owned by the
A~aska Oil an.d Gas Associ~~on
with tour gu1des from Bn~sh
Peuolell!ll who tned 10 convmce
the lawmakers that oil drilling
would leave only a small footprint
on die wilderness wonderl8nd. . •
A spokesman for the House
Merchant Marine and Fisheries
subcommittee, lhe group lhat made
the tour, disagreed widl environmentalists who said the trip was
manipulated by oil companies. l:le
noted dlat Rep. Gerry Studds, DMass., die chairman of lhe subcom·
mittee and die leader of the·delegalion, is 'opposed 10 the drilling. And
the spokesman said, "We ·were
very careful to make sure lhe members were getting a balanced presentation."
But not careful enough 10 stay
away from oil company favors. Our
associa!C Ji~ Lr.n~ asked why .the
deiegauon didn t p1ck a hotel w1thout any strings attached, and the
subcommittee spokesman sa~d
there was nowhere else 10 stay m
Prudhoe Bay.
How about the Prudhoe Bay
Hotel or the North Star Inn, only a

Qhlo

Friday, August 23, 1991

,.

!iJ:OtA$!:,r;;:.

•

short drive from the British
Petroleum digs? They have about
800·rooms between·them and both
had vacancies. 'Jbe spokesman said
die corpora1e lodge was more convenient and claimed that all congresSiOnal delegations stay dlere. A
cledt at die Prudhoe Bay Hotel had
a better explanation: "We're. not as ·
fancy as what they have at British
Petroleum."
The subcommittee has indicated
that it will reimburse ;British
Petroleum if It gets a bill, but it's
not clear whelher lhat bill will ever
come. A British Petroleum
spokesman. told us that catering 10
die needs of Congress was s~ly
"an opportunity 10 show widl pnde
how we do our business up here."
No one is tallting about paying
back die Alaska Oil and Gas Association for die helicopters. They
were a freebie arranged by Interior
Secretary Manuel Lujan. House
ethics officials found nothing
improper about die gift.
In an effort to get a balanced
presentation, Rep. Studds insisted
dlat British Petroleum allow two
environmentalists from tbe Wilderness Society and die Norlh Alaskan
Environmental Center to coine to
·

PrudlioeBay&amp;Jidgiveaslideshow.
But die environmentalists were not
invited alonJ ·on· the helicopter
tours, nor d1d they bunk in the
British Petrolt:Ull! lodge.
Other repreSentatives on die hip
witii' Studds wef!Y: RObin Tallon, Ds.c:;,;; Jolene 'Vnsoeld, D-Wash.;
N&amp;il Abercrombie, D-Hawaii;
GI' .. Ande ' D-Calif.; William
Ie~n, D~; Don Young, R·
Alaska; Wally.Herger, R-Calif.;
Porter Goss, R-Fia.; and Dennis
Hasten, R-Ill. Studds and Young
left the delegation after a public
hearing in Anchorage and did not
lrllvelto Prudhoe Bay.
The Merchant Marines and
Fisheries subcommittee still has the
drilling issue tied up in die House.
The full Senate is expected 10 vote
on an energy bill soon, and Bush
has promised to veto any energy
bill lhat does not include opening
up die wilderness to oil interests.
NO PEACE DIVIDEND -The
United States has a $9 billion
stockpile of minerals stas!Jed away
in case of war with the Soviet
Union - copper, lead, silver and
zinc among them. With the collapse of communism and die need
to save money, the Pentagon is
willing 10 sell $4.81&gt;illion worlh of
the stockpile, but it won't be that

Refuge where lhe Bush admuustra·
By WALTER R.MEARS
tion wants to p~t .ol!l a welcome
AP Special Correspoudent
WASHINGTON -There is no White House wand 10 wave, President mat to oil drilling. The con~esBush remarked, no presidential magic to solve a far-off crisis. It may sional delegation spent twg ,mghts
seem Olherwise 10 Democrats trying 10 ready a campaign 10 challenge him at plush corporate lodgings owned
in;t992.
·
·Their candidate shonage got worse just as Bush gained another push .-~-------------"""1-n---------------, easy. Several powerful members of
on his strong-point issue, foceign policy, widl die collapse of the coup that
Ei:fc:Y'~J"
the Congress come from states
..,...
where further upgrading of Strate·
h~ temporarily toppled Mikhail S. Gorbachev from power in die Soviet
Union.
·
=-~a
gic minerals means more jobs.
Smelters in West Virginia and
The dog-days coup against Gorbathev put Bush at center stage, not
South Carolina in particular stand
only managing a crisis for his administration but, remarkably. announcing
to gairr if their representatives in
WCdnesday lhat it was ending.
Washingtol)
insist that the Pen·
~Bush had said from die beginning dlat lhe hard-liners' coup against
lagon
needs
all
die minerals it can
Gotbachev mi~ht fail against the Soviet people's will b dem~ and
store. The program is ripe 10 turn
freedom. Cauuous at fli'St, he denounced die coup Monday night, said his
into a big pork barrel project
administtation would not tteat the new regime as a legitimate goverrunent,
MINI-EDITORIAL - Presi'·
su$ended economic assistance and demanded Gorbachev's return.
dent JiJiimy C8rter didn't call him·to that end he backed Bms N. Yeltsin, die defiant Russian president
self im' ''i:nvironlflntal president"
who led resistance 10 the coup, talked widl him by telephone Tuesday and
as George Busli does. Instead,
again Wednesday. He said the Soviet people should stand with Yeltsin.
Carter did lhings 10 prove he was.
Bush said Yeltsin told him that public support was helping tum back
For example, he Ulstalled solar panthe coup.
els for hot water at the White
•'I said, 'Now, would it be helpful to have another statement along the
House. Ronald Reagan took them
lines of die ones I made yesterday?"' the president recounted "And he
off and dley have been languishing
said, be repealed, 'Yes, yes, yes. It is very important"/
.in a government warehouse ever
·.Not $iDee a contingent of U.S. ttoops joined World War I allies in an
·sinee. The Washington Post tepons
abbrtive mission against the Bolshevik revolution in 1918 had an Amerilhat Unity College·of Maine found
can' government hied so openly 10 influence conuol in the Kremlin.
out about the panels, a~~ed f~r
·.'fhat carried risks, internationally and at home. Had the old guard held
diem, and gfJI them. N?w they w11l
power, Bush's effort could have heightened tensions with Moscow. And
be used to heat water m a campus
his 'political critics were looking fa a target - one House Democrat had
even ventured die idea that die question of die campaign year might
building. We wish that it was as
easy 10 remedy all the environmenbciome who lost Gorbachev.
·
But Gorbachev wasn't lost, and politically Bush won again.
tal abuses in the years since Carter
Bush announced lhat at he had'talked widl Gorbachev by telephone at
left office.
·
midday Wednesday, that the Soviet president was back in power and
Copyright, 1991, United Feature
would be returning 10 Moscow.
Syndicate, Inc.
It was the first f11111, official word dlat the coup had been reversed.
"It's been an emotional day, in a sense, with being right in the middle
of Ibis history," Bush said.
It also was die day Sen. Alben ~ Jr., a 1~88 ,candidate who had
beat rated aincing leading prospects. for' ~. II()IJIJIIaliOI) 10 oppose Bush
ne1t year, announced he would not-iun-'fa ~~ in,l992. That narrowed a dwindling fteld.
.
· .·•
..
. .
As Labor Day approaches, die made ilu!t die Cold ·war would not money - into Poland.
domestic communists seeking 10
Gore, D-Tenn., said his decision ..,.. ""~• 1 ·SteiiiQied from conc;&lt;rn ritual examinations of the state of have ended, certainly not in the
They raised money from unions conuol American unions. Internafor his family and echoCd the exit !inC"6r~;'~ ~by insis_ting die unions will proceed..Lane Kirk- speedy way it did, had it not been and union mem hers in America. tionally, for decades, U.S . labor
that Bush is.not $Ding 10 be invincible I)CJ[t.year.
'· · ,
. ·. ·
land, president of the A,R.-CIO, for die actions of the American They lobbied for additional U.S. backed free union movements on
But his decision, following~ of Sell. Jay RockdeDc:t of West Vir- . will be in die news, in the c:olumns, labor movement
government funds.
every continent
In December 1981, Gen. WojThere were adventures galore.
ginia and Rep. Richard..A. Gephardt·of Missouri, does nodling·to diSpel and.Hardon~boilt;altedshoJO
•• ~:.. __.will ....
This was more dian just idealisthe impression \hat the president may be unbeatable. Nor does the ~ue.Ul,.......,. ..... ciech Jaruzelski instituled·martial "Yachtsmen," on rented boats fly- tic behavior; it was self-interested
tanee of New York Gov. Mario Cuomo, who could be die dom10ant Kirkland alil&gt;ut the,. decline of die law and declared illegal the Polish ing Polish flags landed supplies on and parochial; Labor wants free
DelndCrat but says he has no plans 10 run.
'· '
labor mo,retna~t- isn't the unlqi· union Solidarity. (Jaruzelski Polish shores. Jury-rigged "torpe- unions abroad- which means free
Democrats at the National Governors Association meeting in Sealtle ized pftiiiOrtion of the wortfon:e claimed that if Solidarity kept does," launched from outside the societies abroad - because in
spent the lhree days of the coup on domestic issues their pany hopes will . down? Hasn'tlabor lost political pushing for democracy, Soviet international maritime limits, aug- unfree societies, · with unfree
ppVide an opening against Bush next year, concenlrating on the quest fa • clout -:. i~ ·~ the MQican ll'lde tanks would crush Poland.)
mented the flow.
unions, workers can't bargain colnauonal healdl insurance.
.
·
~ movmg
OVS' labor'~
Solidarity activ.ists did not
By 1989, Jaruzelski got the mes- lectively and don't get paid well.
•:But attention was riveted'back on foreign policy and so on llush:s spe- objection? ~~the AFL-CI&lt;? out agree, and did not go out of busi- sage. Solidarity was getting
More than any businessman,
dtJty just as it was a year ago this month when Iraq invaded Kuwatt The of touch wtth It~ membership ness. They went underground.
stronger. The government re-recog- Kirkland knows that there is global
~ident•s approval rBtiljg had sliunped after he reneged on his no-newwhy does it op·posc. ~~ar~nce
Over the next eight years, Soli- nized Solidarity. Elections fol- market. He sees dlat if goods can
IJies campwgn pledge; the Middle East crisis revived it His role in the Thomas and suppo~ a Civil nghts darity survived, flo111ished, and lowed. The communists were be produced cheaply by unfree and
S¢.-iet crisis probably will push his standing up again.
bill that may _likely yiel~ qiJO!BS~
prevailed. They published under- dumped. The Soviet tanks did not unorganizable labor, American
• •That comes as Democrats who may run against him- Gov. Bill ClinThe quesbons ure f$r: B_ut Kirk- ground newspapers, distributed roll. Hungary quickly followed die workers can lose jobs, a wages, or
Um of Alkansas, Gov. L. Douglas Wilder of Virginia, Sen. Tom Harkin of land IS a man of conv1cuon and videocassettes, intemJpted govern- Polish model. So did East Gennany bOth.
Iowa_ prepare for Labor Day or mid-September campaign send-offs. In eloqu_ence. I have. recen.tly had ment radio programs with and Czechoslovakia. The Berlin
So labor Iqsts for free polities all
a;ilow-starting campaign, Paul E. Tsongas, a former Massachusetts sena- ot:cas1on to h~ar h1s rephes, and announcements that "Solidlirity Wall came down. Suddenly,dlere over die world. Kirkland believes
..c, is die only declared candidate.
wuhout sp01hn~ the suspense, I lives." They opened up interna- was no empire left in the Evil that political liberty bubbles up
!-There's not much any of diem can say about Moscow except what will tell you th1s: He has tough, tional offices. They pushed for Empire. Even lhe evil began dissi- from the streets and the plants and
Blish is saying,lhat the forces of democracy and freedom have won.
shrewd and pungc~t answel!l that sanctions against die Polish gov- pating.
die shops, not from diplomats in
~ •" ... Some people in this country ... say you ought 10 be able 10 wave a
should make you think, even if you ernment Many Solidarity activists
When it was all over, Solidarity Foggy Bottom or Whitehall, and
~ and solve a problem of this nature in the city of Moscow, instantend up disagrcemg..
leader Lech Walesa, said, many not from corporate boardrooms.
were jailed.
Jy;· Bush said Wednesday while the coup was unraveling. "That's not
But oh, how I wish some _tough
During this time, die principal times, that Solidarity could not It's an interesung point
. , you can do.
re~ would ask another kind of suppon for Solidarity, both fmanhave survived widlout the AFLHappy Ulxx' Day!
; . "But what you can do, if you're president, is putdle full force of lhe ,,uesbo~. Some softb_allltke tb1~: cial and moral, came from the CIO.
(C)l~~l
NEWSPAPER
A4Jerican people ... emotionally, morally, behind the democratic forces."
Mr. Kirkland, how did the Amen- American uade union movement,
Labor's role in support of Soli- ENTERPRISE ASSN.
.•Whatever impact that had in Moscow, Gorbachev's return is an asset 10 can labor movement help bnng often against the advice of experts darity was not a one-of-a-kind act
Ben Wat.tenberg. a.leQior fellow
the campaign Bush will be waging for his second term.
peace an~ freedom to the world?" and diplomats. The AFL-CIO cam- Free labor has always been anti- at the ~erican Enterprise Insti(Note 10 mte!'VIewers: Some of the paigned for sanctions, and sent communist Kiddand- and before tute, is author of "lbe First Unibest questions are softballs.)
printing presses, ink, newsprint, him leaders like George Meany and versal Nation," Jlllblished by The
•
•
A pretty strong case can be computers, fax machines - and William Green - had fought off Free Press.
•
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"'I

LesaNeSe

waTeR ·

ToRTURe

The unions make us free ___B,;__yB_e_n_waa__. e_n_be-=rg

forward

...

..

Will old Americans miss the
lifeboat?
.
By George R. Plagenz

•

One of the country's eminent
brain surgeons has warned that
unless something is done soon
about out-of-conuol costs and die
,growing demands being made on
our overwhelmed medical
resolD'Ces, health care in die {Jnited
States will have 10 be "rationed."
The word rationing raises .die
specter of gasoline, tit' and meat
rationing in World War II.
Unpleasant as dlese things were,
rauoning of health care would
impose die severest form of hardship on great· numbers of the sick

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and suffering.

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80

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COOKING THE BOOKS

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"It will require prioritization of
healdl care in terms of age, nature
of the disease, quality of life and,
of course, cost of technology for
the fli'St time in this country,'' says
Robert 1. White, M.D., director of
neurosurgery at Meuohealth Medical Center in Cleveland.
Are we about 10 enter the era of
"lifeboat ethics" in health care?
Called "moraily undlinkable"
and "brutal and heartless" by

some, lifeboat ethics challenges
traditional Christian and humani ·
tarian ethics by assening thit in
certain circumstances some individuals must be "tapped for
deadl" so odlers may live.
The term has beat used in connection with world hunger. Those
who propose applying lifeboat
ethics to die famine problem say
dlat if die rich nations who occupy
the lifeboats took the ·starving
nations aboard, the boats would
swamp and everybody would be
lost
Lifeboat ethics, if applied to
health care, would mean that some
people would be refused certain
medical treatmCIIt so others, widl a
higher priority, could receive it
Already some ethicists have
advocated that all persons 80 years
of age and over should not be eligible 10 receive any form of extraordinary care 81111 rather be. provided
with only inexpensive medical
management
Lifeboat ethics gets its name

from an actual incident on die sea
that took place in 1841. The
square-rigged American sailing
vessel William Brown was heading
for Philadelphia from Liverpool,
England, when it hit an iceberg. A
jagged hole six feet across was
opened in die bow of the ship.
·
There Were two lifeboats available for the 65 passengers and crew
of 17. Fony-two screaming men,
women and children crowded into
the longboat lhat had a capacity fa
18 Nine made it into die smaller
boat built to bold seven. The 31
·
'dl the William
odlers went down WI
BroZOiw Butler tells die story in
•
L "Ab
d Sh' .. th
h1s boo..
an on 1P· · .e
overloaded lo~gboat rode so low 1!'
die water that II soon became obvtOtiS that unless some of die passengers were thrown off, !he whole
bol!~oad qf 42 woilld pensh.
,
Do wh~t you have .to do,
George Harris, die captatn ~f die
William Brown who was m the

·

II b
.
sma _er oat, called to the fust
mate m charge of die !~.gboat
U~~er orders to - hghten the
boat, two burly crewman, Alex
Holmes. and James Murray, moved
medlodically through die l~ngboat
and threw 16 passengers mto the
black, tcy sea. The next day a
schooner spotted die l~ngboat and
rescued_ the 26 surv~vors. The
small~ life-boat was p1cked up by
a fishmg vessel.
.
. · There was a loud public ou~ry
!D the wedcs lhat folio~ resulllllg
m the longboat crew bemg chlrged
with murder. Curiously, only
HQimes was indicted. His' ~al in
PhiladeJphiacreatedasensauon.
Seven survivors of lhe longboat
disasU~J took lhe stand. Some tondemned Holmes. Others said his
actions were "necena under the
circumstances."
wry
Convicted of mlllJslaughter,
Holmes was sentenced to six
monlhs in jail He served his term
dlen returned ir, die sea.
'

Senti

·Twenty-six cases processed in
Meigs County Court Wednesday .

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel

,'

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The

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Meigs County Court Judge

&lt;1 Pahick O'Brien processed 26 cases

costs; Toril Case, Wilkesville, animals running at Jarge, $200 and
costs, $150 suspended, two years
probation; Johnny Little, Middleport, petty dleft, 30 days jail suspended to three, $75 and costs.
restitution, two years probation.
Kerin Layne, Racme, failure to
register four-wheeler, $25 fine. suspended and costs; Cora Wolfe,
Reedsville, failure 10 yield, $30 and
costs; Harold J: Will, Racine, no
valid operatOr's license, $75 and
costs, 30 days jail suspended to
five, one year/robation, jail sus- .
pended if vali 9perator's license
within 60 days; Johnny Adkins,
Racine, no operator's license, 30
days jail, suspended, $75 and costs,
one year probation; Howard Searles, Pomeroy, insecure load, $50
fine, suspended, costs; Leslie
Storms, Pomeroy, speeding, $22
and costs.
Eric R. Field, Long Bouom .

assault, $100 and ~sts, 3o days jail
suspended 10 lhree days, two years
probation; William A. Nutter, Tuppers Plains, D.U.I., $350 and costs,
three days jail, operator's license
suspended for 90 days, upon enrollment and completion of RTP
school, $150 of fine and jail suspended, left of center, $20 and
costs, expired operator's license,
$25 .and costs; Michael Hlndy,
Syracuse, D.U.L, $400 and costs,
si~ months jail suspended to 10
days, operator's license suspended
for one year, three years probation,
alcohol counseling; and Lonnie
Mays, Pomerov. theft. $50 and
costs, restitution, one year probation, 30 days jail suspended tQ
three days, domestic violence, 30
days jail suspended 10 three days,
concurrent with odler charge, one
year probation, costs, restrainins
order issued.

on Wednesday.
Fined were Charlotte Dillard,
POII!eroy, speed, $29 and costs;
Donnie Freeman, Shade, aggrav.ated menacing, $100 and costs, 30
days jail suspended, one year probation; Raymond Litchfield,
Racine, dri vin~ under suspension,
six months ja1I suspended to 30
days, jail concurrent widl previous
driving under suspe~sion charge,
costs, two years probation; Mark
Kimes, Racine, D.U.L, $350 and
costs, three days jail, one year probation, operator's license suspended for 90 days. upon enrolfment
and complehon of RTP school,
$150 of fme and jail suspen_ded. .
Patrick V. Johnson, Racme, failure to control, $20 and costs;
Cooper, Adlens, fail~ to
d8ta l'rocesslul departmeilt. WinDers, who, may Richard
yield, $10 and costs; Bruce Baird,
pick up their prizes in the bosplta1Ipbby, are
The Plains, speed, $26 and costs;
Jim.Holman, Middleport, a lamp; Joau Wolle,
Teresa Guthrie, Guysville, speed,
Raclue, an electric fau; VIola Haning, SR 143,
$25 and costs; Richard A. Peyton
Pomeroy, a badminton set; Ruth Carr,
Jr., Dexter, seat belt violation, costs
Pomeroy, a clock, and George Cummins, Plants
only; Douglas Beaver, Pom~roy,
Road, RadDe, an outdoor thermometer.
·
Limes wiU remain unchanged.
speed, $25 and costs; DaVId E. Coin Club to meet
The OH KAN Coin Club will Creative fun art classes
• ::
Gillispie, New Haven, W.Va.,
Shirin Nuggud, adminislrlltor of
speed, $22 and costs; Eric W. meei Monday at Burkell Barber
Janes, Hamden, speed, $21 and Shop in Middleport. Social hour the Gingerbread Schon!, will begin
costs; John W. Fisher, Kissimmee, and lrlldin~ session precedes the 8 a series of creative fun an classes
p.m. meeung. Refreshments. New on Saturday, Sept. 14 from 9:30-11
The 1991 Meigs County Fair lain, Aaron Sheeu, 1aclti!I.·Buck, winners, listed fli'St through sixdl, Fla., safety_ violation, $75 and members are welco'me.
a.m. for children age three and onewas a success, according to Bill and Geoff Cogar which placed were:
half to seven years old. The cost is .
Rutland
Gardea
Club
6,000 pounds, Roger Stone,
Radford, president of the Meigs frrst, and Charles Keeder, captain,
The
Rutland
Garden
Club
will
$4.
Classes will meet once ea~h
County Agricultural Society, who Harvey Whitlatch, 1r., Richard Point Pleasant; Ken Brewer, Whipmonth
with dates 10 be announced. '·
hold
its
open
ineeting
on
Monday
today extended thanks to all the Gilmore, Scott Frazer, and A.rt ple; Lester Sinclair, New
at
die
Rutland
Methodist
Church
at
A
program
for children age 7-12 is ·
participants and worlcers.
Misner, second. Blue Moon also Straitsville; Terry Collins, Friend7:30p.m.
with
die
flower
show,
also
in
the
planning stage. C!lll..
Continued from page 1
While actual attendilnce figures won die trophy for the best looking ly, W. Va.; Don Johnson, Lancast"Salute
to
AmeriFiora"
to
be
Janette
Thomas,
992-5696, or :
er; and Marlin Evans, Racine. ·
on die six day event have not yet and best cosrumed entry.
Clifford Longenette, Roben Law- judged at 7:30p.m. by Mrs. Joe Susan Baker, 992-7733 for furlher:
8,000 pounds, without turbo: son; clerk, Kaleen Hayman, Wilma
been released, it is anticipated lhat
Winners in the draft show not
Bolin, O.A.G.C. judge. Those
they will show an increase. Bodl earlier announced, and listed here Matt Johnson, Lancaster; Dave Jean Vineyard (1), ~Jane Fitch; entering the invitational class. information.
Revival planned
,,
die sale of membership tickets and frrst through fifth places respective- Hively, Gallipolis; Kin Brewer, ORANOE trustee, Tom Dorst, Japanese Tea Garden, in oriental
The Silver Run Baptist Church ..
gate receipts were up, and several . Iy, were: feed ru", Tim Bearhs, Whipple; Earl Sinclair, Logan; . William Sherman·Henderson, Bob manner, can bring dleir arrangegrandstand events drew record Mialesia Boivin, Glenn Tuttle, Rod . Terry Collins, Friendly, and Roger Marcinko, clerk, Patricia Lynn Cal· ments with them to the meeting. will have revival Monday throuj!R
Sept. I at 7:30p.m. nightly with -,
crowds, it was reported.
Tuttle; and Johtl Rose; meti 's Stone, Point Pleasant
away (1), Susan K. Pullins; RUT· Everyone is invited 10 attend and
Pastor Bill Linle.
:
8,000 with turbo: Russell LAND trustee, Ernest Lamb«;rt,
The three new programs, ATV wagon obstacle, GICIJII Tuule, Rod
participate.
Hymn
sing
slated
.·
pull, motorcross, and die outhouse Tuttle, Waid Spencer, John Rose, Wooten, Meigs County; Tim Stone, Steven Morris, Charles E. Rife, Schools to open
The
Faith
Full
Gospel
Church
ip
;
Dexter;
Eryn
Barrett,
Vincent;
John
races were all well accepted and and Kim Erickson; women's
clerk, Opal Dyer (I); SALEM
Schools
in
die
Southern
Local
attended, Mary Gilmore, fair board wagon obstacle, Mialesia Boivin, Peck, Marietta, and Ken Brewer, trustee, John F. Colwell (1), clerk, School District will open for cla$5- Long Bottom willliave a hymn'
secretary said. Winner in die out- Mary Rose, Brenda Tuttle; and log Whipple.
Bonnie G. Scott (I); SALISBURY es on Tuesday. Classes will begin sing on Friday at 7:30 p.m. at tl)e, .
10,000 lrliCIOr turbo: Eryn Jlar· trustee, Harold Brinker (I), Bernard at die same time as last year and church featuring local talent. PastoJ ,
house races held oq Sab.JI'day night skid, Glenn Tuttle, Tim Bearhs,
was Blue Moon, used in both tbe Waid Spencer, John Rose, and Rod rett, Vincent; Russell Wooten, D. Gilkey, Nathan P. Biggs, clerk, any questions concerning times can Steve Reed invites the public. . '
Homecomiug plauned
.. :·
Meigs County; John Peck, Mariet- Sarah Gibbs (I), Richard Bailey; be directed to die principal of die
fli'St and. second heats. The teams Tuttle.
The
Bethel
United
Methodist
were made up of Jared Sheets, cal)Saturday night's tractor pull ta; Kirk Kieffer, Athens; John SCIPIO trustee, Randy Butcher, building where the student will
Ohlinger, Letan, W. Va., and Tate Donald Weaver (1), Raymond Cot· attend. Bus routes and pick-up Church will celebrate its annual.. ·
church homecoming on Sunday .:
terill, clerk, Betty J. Bishop (1),
C«!ntinued from page 1
Hayman, Letan, W. Va.
beginning at 9 a.m. with worship
._.
•••----------------------------10,000 pro stoclt: Kenny Brian, Connie Kay Chapman; SUTTON
service at 10 a.m. A carry in lunch ..
·
1
b
d
11
Jamestown;
Don
Battrell,
Albany;
trustee
(unexpired
term
ending
his family became f1uite concerned. saw, dril press, an saw, scro
Paul Biehl, Athens·, and Ralph December 31, 1993), James Carnawill be held at 12:30 p.m. with lUI. ,
He was taken to the emergency saw, disc sander and shaper. He
afternoon
program w1th Russ and
han (I), Grover Salser, Jr., William
room where it was initially dlought uses all of these tools to create his Kiefer. Athens.
the
Soudlem
Hills Singers at I :30 .
Am
Ele
Power
.................
.30
crafts which are completed with die
19,500 Road Semi: Chris Naper, Bill Harris, Jimmy W. Deem,
he had sustained a neck sprain.
p.m
.
Everyone
is welcome tg::
Ashland Oi1 ...................... 29 7/8
While in the emergency room he use of his right hand only - and Langsville; Don Rose, Raclne; Stan trustee Delben A. Smidl (I), Ralph
attend.
The
church
is located oU· &gt;
AT~J.:..............................J9
Mona Ervin, Harden, clerk, Paul S. Moore (1).
developed a feeling of numbness in Pratt says it only works half the
Route 7 East between Coolville.'
.l8
1(2
.~
1(crr.' 711!~
.
tUunns and 11f"~ T!fl'l
·and·'Fuppen&gt;PiaiiiB.
[;)'n1if} ..................23 3/4
The Meigs County ubercwosJS
Watt works daily in hiS work."
.
. .
ferreil'lo a nospimcoiurtu&gt;us o1
City Holding ..................... l4 1(2
an~ Healdl Association have placed
consultation. Upon examination iL shop and creates crafts sueh as air- 4Rgsville; Don Rose, ~1ne, .
Federal MoguL ................ 14 3/4
a
half.mill
renewal
levy
on
die
balplanes;
trains,
tracter
trailers
with
.
.Rtgan;
AlbaQy,
and
1t1c~
,H,ollo~
.
was learned he had suffered a frac.
Goodyear
T&amp;R .................37 3/4
lot. That levy, if approved, would
tured vertebrae. Surgery was soon flatbeds, bulldozers, boats and even Chester.
Key
Centurion
.................. 14 3/4
expire in five years.
·
performed but paralysis had fighter jets. .
Lands'
End
.......................
20 3/4
Meigs County Board of Mental
Pratt will have these items on
occurred.
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are . ,
Limited
Inc
.......................
28
1(2
Retardation and Developmental
Even though Pratt uses a · display during Sunday's open
the
Ohio Lottery drawing selec.·
Multimedia Inc ................. 28 318
Disability will, once again, place a
wheelchair and is paralyzed in die house at the hospital. During the
Continued rrom page 1
tions
made Thursday night:
Rax Restaurant ................. I3m
levy before the voters in Novemlower extremities he has not given open house, Dillon hopes 10 raise
Pick 3 Numbers
This is ihe third try for Tuppers ber. This time, die levy is a I mill,
Robbins&amp;Myers
..............
.32
3/4
up. He has a workshop at home and enough money through donations Plains to get some sewer treaUnent
6-5-5
Shoney's Inc ..................... l7 1(2
continues 10 make small crafts. His to provide shingles and necessary facility. The village has been under three-year levy.
(si~. five, five)
Star Bank ..........................22 3/4
Other tax levies on the ballot
workshop is complete with table labor to roof Pratt's house.
Pick
4 Numbers
an EPA building ban since 1973 this fall are: Pomeroy Village, curWendy Int'l... ....................9 3/8
'•
3-5-6-3
because of it sewage problems.
Worlhington Ind ...............27 1(2
rent
c~penses, renewal, 1.0 mill for
(three, five, six, three)
~tlSle
c_o_n_ti_nu_e_d_~_om~pa~ae_1____________
In the early 1980's the Meigs five years; Pomeroy Village, fire
Stock reports art the 10:30 a.m.
Cards
County Commissioners hired a protection, renewal, 2.0 mill for
quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis
the EPA wili make' a plan for us,"
She and others protested the consultant and engineering work
8 (eight) of Hearts
and
Loewl of Gallipolis.
changing of the word "shall" to was done on upgrading lhe existing five years; Racine Villa~e. current
2 (two) of Clubs
he said.
Athens members were also "may" by SCS Consultants of systems. At dlat time an EPA con- expenses, renewal, 2.0 m1ll for five
8 (eight) ofDiamonds
. ''
defeated 16-7 in their request to Cincinnati, die fJmJ hired 10 devel- struction grant of over $1 million years· Middlepon Village, current
2 (two) of Spades
e~pe~ses,
renewal,
3.0
mills
for
change language in the financial op the plan. The change was made was obtained but later lost when
after die Ohio Environmental Pro- public hearings found die residents five years; Oliv~ Town~h1p, mamportion of the plan.
The district will be financed tection Agency had reviewed the were almost solidly against die pro, · taining cemetenes, addmonal, 1.0
through fees collected at district plan.
13.00
13.00
ject. The proposal at that time was mill for five years; Rutland TownSPRING VALLEY CINEMA
BARGAIN KATINEES SAIVR~Y I SUNDAY
landfills, the plan says. As recyThe Athens faction had also for upgrading individual e~isting ship, ftte protection, renewal, 1.0
BARGAIN NIGHT TUES~Y
446 4524
,.,,,;,' 1 ",'"~/
cling expands and less waste is threatened 10 veto die plan due to systems and not constructing a cen- mill for five years; Leban~n Township,
maintaining
cemetenes,
add!;
dumped. fees collected will be less. the change. Because Adlens Coim- tral treatment system.
tiona!, 1.0 mill for five years; SciPrQgrams needed to handle the ty holds 33 percent of die district's
The sewer problem was again pio
Township, ftte protection, half
recycling load wHI be costly and population, a veto from Athens attacked in 1988-89 by a group of
mill,
additional, I year; Rutland
will need anodler means of financ- could make ratification of die plan residents and at that time the
Township,
current expenses,
ing.
diffiCult.
grinder system was proposed. EPA
renewal,
2.0
mill,
five years; RutA.thens County Commissioner
In odler business:
construcuon grant money was only
land
Township,
current
expenses,
Roxanne Groff and others have
• Terry Hemby was appointed available until 1990 and there was
additional,
2.0
mill,
five
years.
objected to the changing of one the "at-large" member of die dis- inadequate time to complete the
word in a clause about cenain fees. trict, replacing Terri Bel~ille. required engineering, it was decidAccording 10 Groff, die plan origi- Hemby is the program coordinator ed, so again the project was sideCOLONY TH E ATR E
nally said "mandatory fees sluJII be of lhe Gallia County Litter Preven- tracked.
~
~ SH~ING !
implemented" in order to raise tion and Recycling office.
TONIGHT ONLf
FRIDAY 7"
' u,.,lu
additional funds.
• District Director Lance Wilson
ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER
SAY.I
SUfU
gave his financial report and a Hospital news
IN
repon on landfill operations in the
district He ·also urged die members
Veteraus Memorial
The Daily Sentinel
of die committee 10 work for ratifiTHURSDAY ADMISSIONS R
(liSfSIU·tll)
cation in dleir respective counties.
Lee Bing and Cora Roush,
A Dhii!CMI of Mulllmedla, lac.
Pomeroy.
FRI. THRU THURS
THURSDAY DISCHARGES •
Publlshal every afternoon. Monday
KEVIN COSTNER
through Friday, 111 Court Sl.. Po·
None.

Meigs trnnouncements

Radford says Me!gs.fair a success ·

Ten ...

Dnvz•d

Stocks

...

!

•

,_.

. h. . . . . . . . . . . . h . . . .

Lottery numbers .' -

Tuppers ...

'

... _____

•I

il:Ut

TERMINATOR 2

Squads have 4 calls

meroy. Ohio. by lhe Ohio Valley Pul&gt;
lllhlng--Company/ Multlmedla, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·21!16. Second class postaae pale! at Pomt"roy,

Four calls for assistance were
answered by units of Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services on
Thursday.
At 11:09 a.m .. Rutland unit
responded 10 Homer Hill for Lee
Bing. Bing was taken 10 Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 5:08 p.m.,
Racine squad went to Trouble
Creek Road. Mary Kerns was talcen
to Ploasant Valley Hospital. At
5:59 p.m., Racine squad went to
Main S~t for Keidl Musser, who
was treated but not tr8IISIJOned. At
11:25 p.m., SyracUS!' umt went 10
Water Street. RebeCca Lavender
was transponed 10 PI~t Valley.

onto.

Mtmbf'r: Tht Asaodared Press, In·
land Dally Press Auodatlon and lhe.
Ohto Newspaper Assoclatlon . National
AdveortiJing ReRretentatlve, Br anham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,

New York, New York 10017.
POSTMASTER: Send address ch1111ges
to 'The Dally Sentinel, Ill Court St ..

Pomeroy, onto mill.

SVIIBCIIIP'nON RATES
By CArrier or Motor Route

One w..k ....... ... ..'.............. .. ....... $1.60
One Month ........................ ..... .... $6.95
Onf' Year ................................. 183.20
SINGLE COPY
PRfCE

Dally .......... ...... .......... :........ 25 Cents
Sublcrlben not dalrlnatopay llu!carrJer may remit In advance direct to
Th• Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 motll~
baill. Credit wtll bt liven carrter @ac~
week .

No su~~~&lt;&gt;rtptton~ b)' mau permtnod In
areas wllt!re home carrier servtct II
avaJ¥bie. .
MaJII!toiKrlplloao
t.lde Melp CotutiJ

13 w..u ................................... ntB4
26W..u ........................ :......... ~.l'
53 w..u .......................:.............. 76

J3·Wiekr.~~-~~-~~ ... nuo

yy I

1

Soutb-Ceutral Oblo
Tonight, mostly clear widl a low
· 60 10 65. East winds S 10 IS mph.
Saturdar, mostly sunny and very
warm w1dl a high in the upper 80s.
ExteJ¥1ed Forecast:
S d tbro b T
1!11 ay
ug uesday
.
Fair Sundiy and MOII(Iay with a
· 'C,~~ce of sho.wers or- t~under,
' ~IOllllS Tuesday. HiP.J in the mid
~· s0s 10 lower 90s. Lows in the 60s .

.,.10 · .

26Woelcl ........ :..........,. ... .'.......... $f$.50

52 w..u:.............~ ....................

ea·ther

'tll.T

RoBIN
"Hooo
PfUNCI a THIEVES

Holzer Medical Center
.

Discharges, WeduesdaJI, Aug.
21 - Amber Dillard, Mrs. Christo· ..
pher Hampton and daughter; De~ta '
Henry, Michael Markin, Laura
McGuire, Katie Ratliff, Ashley
Regan.
Birtbs, Wednesday, Aug. 21
- Mr. and Mrs. Donald Hall, of
Middleport, a son: Mt. and Mrs.
Buddy Wright, of Harnden, a son.

·--=--='
I . ~. --~---·13-

OKE MIIIIG SHOW 7:30
ADIIJSSIOit $1.50
44'-0923

Pomeroy court
~

Three were fined and three oth·
ers forfeited bonds in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler
Tuesday night
Fined were Rodney Geiger, Bid'
well, $48 and·costs, speeding;
Mary Young, Stoc~rt, $20 fine
only, no seat belt; Billy Randolph,
Cottageville, W. Va., $88 and
costs, open flash.
Forfeiting bonds were Pamela
Davis, Racine, $43, failure 10 yield; ,
Paula Hall, Pomeroy, $63, fialure t
10 yield; Willis Davis, New Haven, ·
W. Va.,$47,speeding.
.

--

~

- ..- ....

--~-

'I

·

.FRI., ~T., SUN.·.

;·

NAKED G~N· 2Y2
PG13

II

A·NNIVIRSARY WIIKIND
SAT., AUG. 24 &amp; SUN., AUG. 25
11 A.M.·7 P.M.
B.B.Q. CHICKEN ON OPEN PITS
(Outside)
Menus Includes: Baked Beans, Slaw,
Homemade Roll &amp; Drink.

SAT., AUG. 24, 1991
6 P.M.·10 P.M.

SUN., AUG. 25, 1991

Pt. Pleasaat Restaw•t Oaly

Gospel Sing with
Groups from Hdlslde
Baptist Chardl

Olcles, But Goodies Car
Oub • Car Show with

Pomeroy Rest•ralf O.ly

Music.
2 P.M.-4 PJI.
Do~r Prizes Gl¥11 Away-No Purc•ast Necessary
···-·-_...............___,_;__-r _____ -·-"
~I

�The Oaily Sentinel

Sports

--

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
TBuffalo

· ·.

(1-..-lo::l), 1:05 ,....
.
8oa:10n (Mortoa 3-2) at Califomia
(lokCutill9-1 6). 10:05 p.m.

In the NFL ••.

Mimt!IOllat Baltimcn. 1:35 p.m.
Tu.u at Kan.u Cily, 2:15 p.m.
S..ule at Detroit. 3 p.m..
s-an at CaUfomia, 4:05 p~ m.
Milwaukee at Oilland, 4:0S p.m.
Chlcaao at Clewland, 1:85 p.111.

........ 0 3 0 .000 30 (;I

Ctaln.l Dh'll6ol:
CLEVI!LANil
2 1 0 ,6(;1
"......2 2 0 ..500
CINCINNAn
.1 2 o .3!3
PITI'SBU1lCIII .! 2 0 .3!3

Major league leaders

50 54

12100
1 1 11

N atlonal

60 62

DecLA. llaidcn
SocJMco

I 0 .6(;1 71 41
I 0 ,6(;1 53 4!

....... 2 2 0 ..500 40 54
.... .2 2 0 ..500 64 61

.311.

RUN~ -

...... 1 2 0 .3!3 47 77

lulmiDIYklaa
W L T Pet. PF PA

Ph...U.

PhiWiclpbia
N.Y. Gion~

o.u..

.......3
......3
......2
.......... !

0
I
I
2

0
0
0
0

1.000 19 23
.750 87 71
.6(;1 57 43
.333 56 61

..... 1 2 0 .333 ll 46

Wubinpn

136; Otac:o, OUcop, Ill ; W. Ootlt, Sao
Pnnciloo, Ill: Bonilla, PltllbttrP, 135;

Cu lral Dt•Won
Onal Boy
..... 2 I 0 .6(;1 13 62
T11npo Bay
... 2 I 0 .6(;1 41 41

s - . . Chiclao,134.

DOUBLES - Jon, St. Louia , 36;

80111111, PlruburP, 34; SaM, Cbtdn·
IIIII, 17; Oao~ Atlinu, rl; Mdoynoldo,

..........2 2 0 ..500 Ill ft
...... 1 2 0 .333 61 6'.1
........ ! ) 0 .2l0 3) 46

Deui&gt;it

~

Chici&amp;O

Willen JM•IIIoa
San Fnaoia&lt;o .. ..4 0 0 1.000
Atlut1
.........2 I 0 Mil
New Olloona ....2 I 0 .6(;1
LA. Ramo
..... I 3 0 .250

Now Yolll, rl; 11101'1'11,

. P.,4J.MOa , Atlanta,

. Dica&gt;, ll.
l'RiPU!S 77 57
61 10

Felder. Sin Frandaco, 6.
HOME RUNS - Ooot, Atlut1, 27;
Jobnaon, New York, 26; MeOrilf, San

Dieao. 25; Mau 'flilliams, San Fnnc:iJc:o,
24;"\li. Cluk, San Francisco, 24; K.
Mitehtll, SUI Fraacitco, 24; O'Neill,

TooJcbt's pmes

_ . . , . •• -~ 7:Jtp...
lndian•polis ll Pbilldclphia, 7:30
p.m.
San Fnaoia&lt;oll Solute, I pm.
Kllllll Cily II TIIIJII Boy, I p.m.

Cloehonaii,:U.

STOLBN BASES - Ni&gt;.on, Atluu.

64; Ori.Hom Monl.r'U1 1 53; DeShields,

MoatrMJ, 4!; Bo•d•, Pltt•b•rah, 37;
Coleman, New YC.S:. 37; Buder, U. An&amp;elOI, )4 ; Lankford, S&amp;. LouU., 29; .0 .
Smilb, It L&lt;luio. 29.
PITCHING (II dodai&lt;&gt;ao) - Cq&gt;atccr, St. Louil, 1·3, :rn, 4.30; Down~, San
FranciJco, 10..4, .71&lt;4, 3.&lt;44; HUIIt, San
Dicao~ 14· 6, .700, 3.27; DeJon•,
Phifodelphio, 9-4, .69:1, 3.40; Rljo,
Clnc:lanatl, ,.~, ,,n, 2."; T0111lla,
PlttlbMrJ:L~i:'7, l.J'; Mhch

c........., - . . ,....
Atlut1 at Dollu. 9 p.m.
Lao Acaoloo- .. s.. J!Uiio, 10
p.m.
llor!-11-.a. 10:30 p.m.
Satunlay'slllllll

Now Ycxk Giuu at Now &amp;f,land, 4

....... ,....
p.m.

Clacl• ••ll ,... Grtt• Bly at Mil·

New York IIU vs. Wullin1ton
Columbio, S.C., 7 p.m.
New Odol.u 11 Milmi.l p.m.

, a..t, .667, 2.12..
- c-, Now Yodt,
161: Ooodco, Now Yolk, 150; 0 . IW·
dttx,
Olovino, Atlull, 1&lt;44;
llamiocb,
,132;
pllia, Ill; &amp;a, San~ 120. .
SAV1!S - Loe Smill!, SL L&lt;luio, 33;
Dibble, CladtulotL 34; Milch w;w..,
PhiW!elpltia, 23; Fnaoo, New Yod&lt;, 22;
R;sJ&gt;eai. San Fnnoi-. 20: IA!fcta, s..
JMco, II; llenniJIIOI'. Atlutl, 17.
Williaml,
SlllliJ!O

It

Oti&lt;IJ:;!:!;

Buffalo 11 O!icop&gt;, 9 p.m.

In the majors ...
NATIONAL LEAGUE
GB

,71 4f .JII
............64 ll ..531

6
........... 61 59 ..501 9 lfl

New \'edt
JlhiWjelphia

M-..1

BATTING - Polmobo, Tcua, .337;
FnMo, Teuo,..s:M; B-. B..ten, .336;
331; l'l&gt;oUtt, MUt· .:130; c. lUoMa. Bollilo-. .329;

......... l9 61 .492 lllfl
......... 51 62 .413 lltfl
...........41 71 AOl
22

s..-.. ..

- · Mil........ .

Tanabaii,Xonaoo O.y, .327.

RIJNS - Molito&lt;, Milwoukoe, 97;
Ptlm1Jro Tu.u, 92; C.moco, Oakland,
19; 'J'bamu, ~ U; Siaaw, Tn11,
IS; While, Torca.&amp;o,.13; Fnaco, Tn11,
11.
.
JIBI - FioiAicr, ilelloil, 106; 1bGmu.

Wedtn!Diwii&amp;M

r....
w L
Lao AnP ........ 111 ll

.567

1

54 j5G
61 .492

2

U All
63 .479
...........50 70 .417

11
10.5
18

AWia

.............66
.59
CINCINNAn J l
s.. Dka• .......... 51
HOUlton

GB

Pot.

a-.--

American Lea&amp;ue

PrMSIURGH

St !AWl
Chlcaa•

Z6;

W. Clark, San Fnncitco, 6; Kruk ,
Philadelphia, 6; Candaelc. Howton, 6;

Thursday's ftnal

luiDt. W L Pet.

CladUII~

25; T. Gwynn, San

Lookfonl, SL L&lt;luio, 13;
T. (lwyan, San DibJo, 11; L Ooowlea,
·1: FWey, HouaU&gt;n,l; Orilactn,
Moa\nll. 7: Vu SIJkt, Ptuaburah, 7;

93 43
13 36

Houotonl6, Lao Anpko 1Wn11 3

Teom

Butler. Loe An¢e1, 15;

Sa!ldbers. Chicaaa . II ; Johnson. New
York , 71 ; Oant, Atlanta , 76; lelllla,
Pltllburah~7S: Pendleton, Atlanta, 74;
0 . Smith, St. Loui1, 74.
RBI - W, Ouk, San Fnnciaoo, 96;
Bon41, Pltla burah.. 19; Johnaon, New
Yedt, II; Oml, All&lt;n~ . 71: McOrilf, Sao
Dicp, 78; Dawson, OUcaao. 71; Bonilla,
rttllburp, 77.
Hri"S - T. Gwym, San Oieao. 159;
Butlor, Loe ~· 143: Jooe, St. !AWl,

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
T..,.

Leacu•

BATTJNO - T. 0wyna. San Di&lt;&amp;o,
.333: Pon4lo100, A~oota, .322; !010, ' ' ·
l..ouil • .317: Morrb, Cincinnati, .3141
W. CWk, San Fllltciaco, .ltl; loalllo,
Pllttburp, .JU; Butler. Los Anplu,

w..... IN•W.

IWou Illy
.... 2
s..alo
.. ....... 2

By JOE KAY

9

Chicaao, 96; Cuacco, Oakland~ 92:
Carter Toronto, 81 ; Juan Gonzalez,
Tcxu,
Sierra, Teu~, 86; Joyner, Ctli·

i'J;

fomia, 15.

Thursday's scores

mrs -

' Socfnaoia&lt;oll , - 8

Mcalitor, Milwaukee, 16$;
Paltu:iro, Tuu,163; PUckca, MiMeaoll,
159: C. Ripkec, B.ru..-, 159; Siem,
Tcw.lll:Fnnoo, Touo,I46; Su, Ncw

' Adoalo .. ClodNI.U 1

Yadt,l42.

.....

PhUadelpfllla .-, Pluaburp 3, 11 In ·

DOUBLES - Bopo. BooiOI. 35;

: New YcD 6, SLI..auil 0

Kco Qritf~y Jr., Scettl•, :14; Carter,

Today's camn

;·

T-34; Polmoilo, r ..... 33: Siorra,

r..... 33: c. Ripkat, Ballim-. 33; R.

SUI Dic&amp;o (}hara 14-6) at Cbi.cap (Bi-

1

~ ll·f), 3:20 ~.m.

Alomar, Toron"" 32; Bldl, lteclu Cily,
32.

Soo ,........ (Burktll f . 7) II Pllta(Dnltdt JJ.U~ 7131,...
, Ptliladclpbla (M»N'""" 12--10) al.A.tllotl (011- 1$-1), 7:40p.m.
· Clnclanall (Browalnlll·l) at New

-urp

TIIPLES -

Poktala,Califctaoio,7.
HOMB RUNS-~ Ooldancl,
" • Fi.W., v.oil, 3S; Cuter, Toronto,
21: Tbomal, Olic:qo, ~. c. Davll, Min·
noaou , 26; C. Ripten, Bahimore, 26;
Tartoboll. 11oNu Cily, 25.

, Lo1 An&amp;elc&amp; (Ojeda 9·1) u St. LoW.

~f.9),1 :3!p.m .

Saturday's cames

STOLEN BASES - R. H111donon,
Ooklood. 44; Roioa, OUcor.o. 41; ~ AJomu. loradO. 31; Pclkfta, Califam~~, 37;
Cuyler, Dcaoi• 31: While, Ton&gt;nle, lO;

Clndnaatl (Rijo 9-4) at New York
(WIIIIIIount U), l:U ,.._
.
San Dieao (Benes 1-10) It Ch1caao
(Na&lt;ldu110.7), 4:05p.m.
San Prandteo (Wlllon 1-9) at PUll·
" " " (Wolk 7-l), 7:t5 ......
Philadelphia (Colt 4 -S) at Atlanta

Fnaoo. T-.24.

PITCHING (11 da:ilianl) - lhmoman, o....it, 9·2. .Ill, 2.72; Erii:UIXI,
MiM.a, 16-5, .762, 2.96; Klink. Oak·
lutd, 9-3, .750, 3.77: OW!iA:bon. Deuoi.

(Smoltz9-ll), 7:10p.m.
. Montreal (BIJI\CII 3-4) at HoustOn (Pcrwsal 9-l), 1:05 p.m.
t.c. Anp!CII (Mcqan 10.7) at SL LoW
I :OS p.m.

15-6, .714, 4.11; St.otdem&gt;':"'• ~oronto,

1:1-5, .706, 3.33; &amp;ley, CalifODU.I, ll-7,
.682, 3.90; Lupton. Calif...u, ll-7,
.1112, 3.2Q.
STIUiaiOUTI - R. ! ....... S•t·

Ill"'"'"'"'&gt;·
:

10;

T~lo, I; Do.Yere&amp;Ul, B•llimorc, I;
~. Mi"S"CICI, I; Wbhe, Tonlftto, 8;

r~.:..=r=·:=~ 12·7&gt;"
HouaiOD (llowec 2-2),1:35 p.m.
·

MW~«, Milwaukoc,

Moltao, K.an111 Cit)', I ; R . Alomu,

que,,.,Rrae·

uo.- u3;\a ....... .a...... 173:

Suaday'saamea

Tou o, lSi; l\lcC..weu;
11;
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P·~ IIAtlull.l:lOpm.

fomia; ISI:

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B-

Cllv-...135.

SAVES - EQ.,.Icy, Oaklasul, 36;
AJIIilera. Mill.nuota, 32; Reardon,

Lao An&amp;oioo II St Lawia.l:l5 p.m.
: San Diep at Chicaao. 2:20p.m.

Bonon, 31; Huvcy, CaHfomia, 29;
Heako, Tonxuo, 29; Thiapen, Chicago,
27; Olaon,
26.

- o t -. 2:35 pm.
Clnd11naU It NIW York, 1:15 p.111.

Transactions
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Friday, August 23,,1991
.

.

CINCINNATI (AP) - The
Atlanta Braves polished their rising
star in the NL West by polishing
off baseball's defending champions.
The Braves reached new heights
Thursday night by beating tbe
Cincinnati Reds 4-1 for their beat
record in seven years. The Braves
went 7-4 on a tiring road lrip that
crossed three times zones, losing
just a half-game to first -place
Dodgers.
The Braves open a seven-game
homestand today just two games
back.
"Trips like this CBD hurt you,"
outfielder Oils Nixon said. "They
can make or break you.''
This one kept them a serious
llueat to the Dodgers, and wound
up breaking lhe Reds. Atlanta won
the last three in a four-game series
10 leave the defending champions a
·season-high I 0 games out, Ian.·
guishing in fourth place.
·
"The fat lady hasn't sung yet,
butlhe fmal call is near," outfield·
er Glenn Braggs said.
Left-bander Charlie Leibrandt
and first baseman ,Brian Hunter
provided the last call Thursday.
Lei brandt ( 12-11) pitched eight
strong innings for his third conscc·
utive wili, and Hunter drove in
three tuns with a single and a
homer.
Each' of the Braves' ·three wins
in Cincinnati featured a different
hero.

" I really don'l think about the
Dodgers. You just concentrate on
doing your Job," Hunter said.
"When that umes comes, whoever
is up there steps in and does it.
Titat's what it lakes."
Hunter had two chances 10 Slep
iniO the starring role Thursday. He
botched the first, bul came through
the second lime.
Scon Scudder (4-4) walked
David Justice on four pitches to
load the bases for Hunter in the
fust inning. He then got Hunter 10
Oy out, ending the threat.
The score was tied 1-1 in the
fifth when the same situation
occurred. Scudder walked.Justice
on four pitches. and Hunter came
up with the bases loaded again.
This time, he- lined a secondpitch single 10 left for two runs and
a 3-IIead.
"If tliey walk Dave, I've got to
step up and hurt them," Hunter
said.

That was the Braves' hallmatk
during the four-game series at
Riverfront Stadium - they took
advantage of second chances.
"We stayed on our game and
kept coming after them," third
baseman Terry Pendlclon said.
Scudder gave them plenty of
chances by walking five in his five
innings_- There was a reason: the
shoulder tendinitis that disabled
him for nearly two months.
"It's still sore," he said. "I
couldn't work on the side between

.soo.

ALMOST only counts In horseshoes and band grenades, as
Atlanta third sacker Terry Pendleton rmds out after missing this
hot grounder off !be bat of !be Reds' Carmelo Martinez in !be ninth
inning or Thursday night's game in Cincinnati, w~ich !be Braves
won 4-1. (AP)

when Gooden mis sed the second
half of the season with a small tear
in the back of his right shoulder.
" It's no big deal. I'm not con·
cerned ," Gooden said . " It happened in the first inning when I
reach ed back for a little ex tra
agains( Pedro Guerrero because he
usually jumps on me. I fell something grab ... felt lightness. I've hf.d
the same thing in spring training. '
Gooden (13· 7) gave up onl y
three hits, but walked five.
Charlie O'Brien, who mostly
catches when Gooden pitches, had
three hits, including a two-run
homer off Bob Tewksbury (8-9) in
the sixth inning to make it4-0.
The Cards failed to score in the
sixth inning after Pele Sehourek
walked Tewksbury with two outs
10 load the bases. Tim Burke then
pitched three solid innings for his
first save as a member of the Mets,
finishing the combined five-hitter.
Pbillies 4, Pirates 3
Darren Daulton singled hom e
the winning run with the ba ses
loaded in the lith inning.
The Phillies loaded the bases

Houston edges L.A. Rams 16-13
By TERESA M. WALKER
Associated Press Writer
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) What it was WI$ football- Cllhibi•
lion style.
A crowd announc:ed at 63-,285,
more than the Libe~ty Bo,I's
capacity of' 62,425, watched the
Hous10n Oilers bobble their way
past the Los Angeles Rams 16-13
Thurtday night.
'.'Pre-season games are funny,' ~
said Rams head coach John Robinson. "You don't get the home
crowd intensity, but this crowd
seemed intense, intelligent and iniO
football."
The teams, meanwhile, were
; into fumble-ball.
'There 'were I I turnovers, including three inlerceplions and one
fumble by Houston quarterback
Warren Moon.
·
"( didn't have a good night,"
Moon said in an understatement "I

underthrew the ball alot, and it
"Too bad for such a nice
sailed on me as well."
crowd," Pardee said. "They were
But Steve Jackson and backup really iniO it the whole game. Playquarterback Cody Carlson rallied ing on a neutral site makes it fun 10
the Oilers, whjl trailed 1().7 at half- play football."
time, to the vi~ tory. Late in the
The final exhibition game saw
third quarter; Jackson blocked a most s1811ers leave at halftime.
Dale Hatcher punt thro;~~lhe end
S1811er Jim Evereulied the game
tone for a safety that
Hous- at 7-7 wilh 5:05 remaining in the
10n 10 10-9 with 3:46 10 go.
first quarter when he hit Damone
Carlson then moved the Oilers Johnson with a two-yard pass to
55 yards in six plays, capping the cap a 64-yard drive. Zendejas put
drive with a nine-yard scoring pass the Rams up 10-7 with his 46-yard
10 Tony Jones with 21 seconds left field goal with 8:43 left in the fusl
in the quarter.
half.
The Rams had a chance 10 lake
Houston's
run -and -shoot
bsck the lead in the fourth period, offense stumbled in the first half
but quarterback Chuck Long fum- with four turnovers as Moon was
bled the snap on third down and intercepted three times. The Oilers'
ex·Oiler
Zendejas hit a 40- ., first drive ended wh. en Michael
yard field
wilh 6:491ei'L
Stewart intercepted Moon's pass.
Houston COac:h Jack Pardee said Darryl Henley picked off two
it was a nice way 10 win, but admit· Moon passes in a 40-second span
ted it was a sloppy game for both of the final I :48 10 slOp Hous10n.
.sides.
(See OILERS on

-=r

.

with one out on a single by Wes
Chamberlain off Bill Landrum ( 13), a walk, a sacrifice and an inlen·
tiona! walk, and Daulton singled
againsl Bob Kipper.
Chamberlain hit a two-run
homer in the' third. MilCh Williams
(8-4) pitched two innings for the
vic lOry.
Giants 11, Astros 8
Jose Uribe went 5-for-5 with
two doubles. Kevin Mitchell hit
three doubles and drove in two
runs.
Jeff Bagwell hit a three-run
homer in the lhird, pulling Lh.e
Astros ahead 3-2. The Giants
scored four times in third, two on a
single by pitcher Don Robinson.
Jeff Brantley (S-2) pitched two
innings and struck out four , and
Dave Righetti got the last four ouiS
for his 20th save. Darryl Kile (5·8)
was the loser.

SVAC football
preview tonight
The SVAC football preview will
begin with the Oak Hiii-Hannan
Trace scrimmage today at 6 p.m.
on Kyger Creek High School's
field.
Nonh Gallia and Southern will
take the field at 6:45 p.m., and
Symmes Valley and Easlem will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Southwestern
and the host Bobcats will play in
the finale at 8:15 p.m.
Ticket prices are $3 for adults
and $2 for children.

THE

..',

BUGLES
ARE

..."

COMING

Weekend ''"''''

NamA Robin Carr Locko dlrsctor o(
Olllllluninril'lll

AT THE

FIIDAY, AUGUST 23 , 1991

Church·,.~

Aug. 2.1·25

!;00 p.m. Nightly
' 6t00 ,p.m. Sunday
Evening

..........
,
D-.l'M Clftfleld.
1

..
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ft• 1Wsllll, IY•

P~ator Herbert GJl'te

FISH
&amp; CHIP DINNEI •••••••••••••a······················ S3.19
2 Pieces Fish, French Fries, Your Choice of Macaroni Salad.
Cola Slaw or Baked aaana

SUNDAY, AUGUST 25, 1991

TUllEY BIEAST W/HOMEMADE DRESSING ••• S4.98
Mashed Potatoet S. Gtavy, Greljn Beant with Mushrooms,
Hot Buttered Roll, Small Drink or Coffee.

OPEN 10 A.ll.·9;30 P.M.

Reeves ·and Jessica CbevaUer. tbe middle row
are Heidi Nelson, Jessica Karr, Patsy Aelker,
Nicole Nelson and Jessica Radford. Behind them
are bead coach Pat Aeiker, Michelle Schultz,
Becky Driggs, Lauren Young and Laura East·
man.

CHESTER UNBEATEN - Tbe Chester
junior girls' sortbaD team completed its season
with a 19-0 record, wblcb was good for r~rst in
tbe league and tbe league's tournament. In the
front row are (L·R) Meredith Corw, Crystal
Holsln(ler, bat boy Nathan Radford , Brandl

t
..

..

clutch single in !be lOth inning of Thursday's
game against the visiting Cleveland Indians sank
the Tribe 7-6. (AP)

GRF.AT JOB, JODY!- BasiOn's Jody Reed
(second from right) gets congratulations from
teammates Tom Brunansky (taU fellow at left),
Tony Pena (6) and John Marzano alter Reed's

Sports briefs
Base baD
WU..L!AMSPORT, Pa. (AP) Jason Barringer had two homers
and folD' RB!s as San Ramon Valley, Calif., defeated Staten Island,
N.Y., 13-4 to advance to Saturday's championship game at~ainst
14-lime champion Taiwan m the
Lillie League World Series. Lin
Wei-Chu and Fang Sheng each hil
two homers in Taiwan's nine-run
rust inning in a 17-1 viciOry over
Glace Bay, Nova Scotia
FootbaU
IRVING , Texas (AP) - Dallas
Cowboys linebacker Jesse
Solomon has walked away from
the team for the last time, head
coach Jimmy Johnson said.
Solomon stormed out training
camp Wednesday after learning
he'd been demoted 10 the second
1· team. Sources said lhe Cowboys
will auempt to trade Solomon
before Monday, when teams must
pare down 10 a 47-man rosier.
Tennis
COMMACK, N.Y . (AP) Top-seeded Stefan Edberg defeated
Peter Lundgren 6-3, 6-3 and Jimmy
Connors beat Nicklas Kulli 1-6, 64, 6-0 in the second round of the
Hamlet Challenge Cup.

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"
FAMILY ~

RESTAURAN,.

I

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................................................··-

"'"•l•r,
lhe
so..u..-.a.....
IAN PRAI'lCISCO OIANTS -

._,

and it shows the lac~ of experience on ours."
With just one day to sell tickeiS after postponements Monday and Tuesday, the Red So~ drew onl_y
14,037 fans fr the series ftnale makeup w1th the Indi·
ans. It was the smallest turnout in Fen way Park since
April 15, !988, when 12,369 braved foul weather.
With five losses in a row and a team record of 3882, Hargrove had more on his mind than a small
atlendance in Fenway Park.
After flying to shallow right in the fourth, Cleveland cleanup hitter AI~rt Belle responded, ap~aren~­
ly 10 heckling fans, w1th an obscene. gesture w1th hiS
anns. Third base ump1re Ken Ka1ser went to the
dugout, but Hargrove already had handled the situation, sending Belle, and his 23 home runs, 10 the
clubhouse.
Asked what had happened, Hargrov e said :
"Titat's between Albert, Kenny and myself. I don '(
really want 10 talk about it."
With an 8-4 season's advantage over Cleveland,
and one pos1p0nement to be made up if necessary,
the Red Sox were three games over .500, 62-59, for
lhe ftrSt time since July 17 as they went to the West
Coast.
Left-bander Matt Young (3-3) was named to open
a three-game weekend series with the Angels tonight
California planned 10 counter with Jim Abbott (12-8).
In other games, Milwaukee edged Toronto 8· 7,
Mimesota slOpped Seaule 5-4 in 10 innings, Oakland
defeated California 2-1 and Texas lOpped Kansas
City 4-2.
.
Brewers 8, Blue Jays - The Blue Jays have got·
ten plenty of hitting, pitching and defense so .far this
season. Lately, though, they've gotten something else
- inconsislency _
ToroniO's edge in the AL East again shrunk to one
game Tburtday night when they blew B late lead at
home and lost 10 the Milwaukee Brewers 8-7.
B.J. SW'hoff gol four hits and singled home the
tying run as Milwaukee rallied for five runs in the
seventh inning and went on 10 win.
"The positives were that we scored seven runs
and had really aggressive baserunning," interim
manager Gene Tenace said. "But we've been inconsistent. One night we get hitting, one night we get
pitching, or the defense malfunctions .... It' s called a
little adversity."
·
Tenace is managing in place of CiiO Gas10n, who
missed his second straight game because of a bad
back.
The Blue Jays led 6-3 in the seventh before reliever Duane Ward (5· 5) gave up a one-out single 10
Willie Randolph and walked Darryl "!tmiiiOn. Ro~in
Yount and Greg Vaughn h11 consecuuve run-sconng
singles and SID'hofr s single off Bob M3cDo~d ti~
it. With two outs, Jim Gantner and B1ll Sp1ers h1t
run-scoring singles for an 8-6 lead.
John Olerud hit his career-high 15th home run in
the bottom of the seventh, bringing the Blue Jays
within one run.
Mike Ignasiak won his major league debut. He
pitched 2 1/3 innings and gave up Greg Myers' tworun homer. Doug Henry pitched two innings, striking
out the side in the ninth, for his flfth save.
Twins S, Mariners 4 - Randy Bush's three-run
homer in the ninth inning tied the score and Scott
Leius won it with a two-out homer in lhe lOth.
Mike Schooler (0-1) was perfecl in five save
chances this season, but could not hold a 4-1 lead in
the ninth. AI Newman walked with one out, Chuck
Knoblauch sint~led and Bush hit his fifth home run of
the season. Le1us hit his fourth home run off Schooler the next inning.
Rick Aguilera (4-4) got the viciOI'y.
Athletics 2, Angels 1 - Bob Welch outdueled
Chuclc Finley_
Welch ( 11·8) pitched a four-hiuer. He struck out
seven and walked two in his seventh complete game
of the season, and lost his shutout on Wally Joyner's
I9th home run in the ninth.
Finley (15-7) pitched seven innings and allowed
five hits, including Mike Gallego's home run and
Terry Steinbach's RBI double.
Rangers 4, Royals 2 - Pitcher Tom Gordon
made a lluee-base throwing error in the eighth inning
that allowed Texas 10 score the go-ahead run.
Julio Franco led off the eighth with a single and
Rafael Palmeiro hil a bouncer in front of the mound.
Gordon (9-11) threw past ftrSt base, enabling Franco
10 score for a 3-2 lead, and Ruben Sierra hit an RBI
double.
Kenny Rogers (9-8) pitched three hitless innings
for the v1ctory.

By DAVE O'HARA
AP Sports Writer
BOSTON (AP) - With two victories within 17
hours in relief, the BasiOn Red Sox' Greg Harri! dug
iniO his;baseball book of knowledge and declared
" Right now , it's one game at a lime."
'
Of course, Harris, like Abner Doubleday after an
immonal game at Coopers10wn more than a century
ago, was unable to explain how any team can play
more than one game at a time.
However, the Red Sox made believers of another
old cliche - "I was just ttying to put the ball in
play' ' - in sweeping a three-$ame home series from
the lowly Indians for the fust ume since 1988.
While making contact with pitches, the Red Sox
capitali~ed on Cleveland 's bullpen and woeful
defense m thetr bid 10 overtake Toron10 and Detroit
in lhe AL East with four consecutive viciOries, eight
in the last nine games and 12 in the las114.
Five-time AL batting champion Wade Boggs, just
trying 10 make hard contac~ put the ball in play with
a two-run ninth inning home run that lifted Bos10n 10
a S-4 comebsck victory and a sweep of a doubleheader on Tuesday. Boggs' homer off Cleveland
reliever Steve Olin was just his seventh of the season
and 77th of his 10-year career.
Then, after falling behind 6-5 on Carlos Baerga' s
three-run homer, his II th of the season and second of
the game, in the eighth inning, the Red Sox look
advantage of Cleveland errors Thursday 10 tie the
score with an unearned run with twa outs in the ninth
and then pull out a 7-6 viciOry with another unearned
run on Jody Reed's third hi~ a one-out ground single
to left, in the lOth.
Ugly became beautiful as the Red Sox welcomed
five Cleveland errors and the viciOry in a makeup
game before flying 10 California and a nine-game trip
to the West Coast
"That was the ugliest rally I've ever seen," Reed
Said after going 3-6 and extending his hitting streak
to II games.
With the help of the Cleveland defense, the Red
Sox bai1ed out very questionable strategy by manager
Joe Morgan, who swck with tiring rookie Mike Gardiner in the eighth inning with Harris wanned up and
closer Jeff Reardon throwing in the bullpen.
Gardiner, who allowed only four hits, including
solo homers by Baerga and Glenallen Hill, in seven
innings, retired the ftrSt bauer in the eighth. Then he
gave up singles 10 Alex Cole and Chris James.
Morgan elected 10 stick with the right-hander who
has never pitched beyond the eighth inning, ignoring
Harris and Reardon in the bullpen. It was a mislake.
And it turned out be a mistake for Brunansky as a
defensive replacement for Phil Plantier in right
Baerga lifted a I -2 pitch iniO the wind. Brunansky
went back to the wall, then leaped. He came up
empl.y. He couldn't hold on10 the ball. it hit his glove
and dropped into the visitors' bullpen, a 380-foot
homerun.
"When you're going good, it's amazing how
many breaks you get and the weird things that CBD
happen in the last two innings to help you win a
game," Morgan said after lucking out on the Cleveland errors.
He did an old Jimmy Cagney song and dance routine in explaining why he stuck with Gardiner
because he had "a strong seventh inning." He
dodged bullets in sayin$ that even though Harris was
wanned up he was gomg to lake out Gardiner for
Reardon after Baerga in the eighth.
There was no resemblance 10 the 1988 "Morgan's
Magic" when the Red Sox charged from 9 1/2 games
back at the All-Star break after John -McNamara was
fired and Morgan was promoted from third base
coach. Under Morgan, the Red Sox won 12 games in
a row and 19 of 20 in rallying for the division championship.
"It' s amazing how things have turned around for
us," said Gardiner, acquired in an April FD&lt;!~'s ~ay
trade which sent Rob Murphy to Seattle. We re
finding ways 10 win. Things are going our way and
we're starting 10 gel."
"Everybody had thai feeling that we were coming
ba:lc again," said Harris (10-11), who earned the victQry after taking over from Gardiner following Baerp's homer in the eighth.
· "ll's prelly frustrating, bu( if you look past the
frustration we did come back and put OID'selves m a
position 10 win the ballgame," Cleveland manager
Mike Hargrove said. "We should have won lwo of
the three games here. That's a tribule 10 their ballclub

my controL It allowed."
Hunter added a solo homer, his
~~ in ihe eighth inning off Milt
HJ!I,' and Leibrandt needed no
more. He allowed just five hits
through the first eight innings,
including a solo homer by Joe
Oliver.
When Cannelo Martinez opened
the Reds' ninth with a single, Jim
Clancy came out of tho bullpen 10
fmish them off for his sixth save.
"I was running out of gas,"
Leibrandt said. ' 11 wanted 10 tty 10
get the complete game, but it dido 't
workout"
Leibrandt is just hitting stride
when the Braves need him most.
He •s allowed just three earned runs
in his last four starts, a span of 29
innings, 10 raise his record above
"I wasn't feeling so good when
I wasn't contributing," be said.
"I'm conlributing now. The team's
geuina it done with somebody dif. .
ferent·every night. It's not the same
guy every night''
The Braves returned 10 AUinta
early today with a 66-S4 record, the
first time they've been 12 games
over .500 since the end of the 1984
season. They've already won one
more game. than they did all last
season, when !hey finished in last
place, 26 games behind the Reds.
"The only thing I look at is how
many games we're back." Pendle·
10n said. "When you consider that
last year at this time this le8lll WBS
about 30 games ba:k, that's a heck
of a turnaround."
In other aames, New York
blanked SL Louis 6-0, Philadelphia
j!Ot past Pittsburgh 4-3 in I I
1nnings and.San Francisco defeated
HousiOn 11-8.
•Mets 6, Cardinals 0
If Dwight Ooodcn stubs his toe,
it's ustially euough of a concern 10
bring in a medical le8lll for instant
analysis.
New York Mets manager Bud
Hanelson and pitching coach Mel
SIOUiemyre nouced something was
wrong with Gooden in the first
inning and spent the next four
innings ill high-level discussions.
The chans were b!Wght out and
they k~t • careful eye on the ri~t­
hander s velocity. Yes, somethmg
was wrong with their $5 million
man.
Harrelson pulled Gooden after
five innings because of tightness
behind the pitcher's right shoulder
even though he had a shutout
going. The MeiS went on to beat
the Cardinals 6·0, but right now
results aren't all that imponant 10
New York.
ThoughiS of a pennant race have
drifted out of the Mets' minds, so
their main concern is the fulure.
Gooden, of course, remains a big
part of that future.
"Doc stiffened up and he was
losing velocity," Harrelson said.
"He wanted to stay in, but with
Doc you don't play games."
The MeiS still remember 1989,

•••
'•.

Reed's lOth-inning R·BI single
gives BoSox 7-6 win over Tribe

'

starts, and dtat's usUBlly what helps

AP Sports Writer

N~ York at T~IO. 1:3S p.m.

·

. .Atlanta· records·4-1
win over Cincinnati

Sunday's CIIID&lt;S

W L T PtLPfPA
... ..... 2 2 0 .500 1'1 r7
Miami
.. ..... 2 2 0 .500 61 57
lodianapolia ..... .! 2 0 .333 &lt;44 55
New Enaland
...0 3 0 .000 13101
N.Y. I..,

Friday, August 23; 1991

LIII111S

IIIIT RE'_."

•'

..- .
--.
. '

...'
•
'" -!'

...•.,

wa~d procress while ·linebacker Frink Stami

HEADING UPFIELD- HOUlton ODers run·
nlng hick Gary Brown (33) buds uprield
against the L.A. R11111s' defense, .but defensive
back Michael Stewart tries to bait Brown's for·

(50) looks on during Thursday night's NFL pre-

season game In Memphis, Tenn., wblcb the OD·
ers won 16·13. (AP)

Oilers beat Rams ... ___cc_on_tin_ued...;.._rro_m_P_,ag'-e....:.4&gt;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Robinson was among those who · ing to attract an NFL expansion

are happy the exhibition seasOn has· team.

.

ended.
· D~vid Lang was a brigllt spat
"We were Q'yina
a Jot of for Loe Angel$ is be filled in fcir
people .... (-~Vitl\OUt) m · g a lot of veteran running backs Cleveland
pre))llllllioli,'' said Robinson; who Gary and Marcus Dupree. He fm!'.9te«&lt;·_~e crowd was in-tense in ished with 68 vards on Zl ' rushes,
MeiDJ)bia; one of 110veral Cities rir-

.IOJ:Y

.

while catching· three passes for 2i
yards.
'
But Houston turned one o~·
'· Lang's two' fumbles intO the firsl
IOuchdown of ~ game on a quarterback sneak by Moon at 9:37.of ·
lhe fii'St ~uart.er.
·

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�Th·e Daily Sentittel

By The Bend

Friday, August 23; 1991

Pome•oy--Middleport, Ohio

CHURCH

Friday, August 23,\1991
Pag~

Ashleys attend Civil War conventior);_, ·
Keith and Emma Ashley and
daughters returned recently from
the I lOth annual convention of the
Sons of the Union Veterans of the
Civil War and the 105th annual
convention of the Auxiliary to the
Sons of Union Veterans of the
Civil War which were held simultaneously' in Indianapolis. These
conventions were held in that city
to commemorate the I 25th anniversary of the fmt annual convention
of the Grand Army of the Republic
the veterans organization of Union
Arm soldiers
Y
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While at,tl}c: conyention, M~s.
Ashley was trubated mto the auxdiary based o~ her Meigs County
ancestor, Levt Deeter of the I 87th
Ohio Volunteer Infantry.
Ashley also attended the meeting of the Sons of Veterans
Reserve, military re-enactment are
of .the 'Son.s o~ Union Veterans .
This group IS still a recogmzed pan
of the Uruted Srates military forces.
Ashley served as a delegate from
the Ohio Department Sons of
Union V~s. He is a member of
the Gov. ·William Dennison Camp
No. 125, which was fonned at the

!25th anmveF:fi~\; ·H:::
Buffmgton I~ an .
· •t Oh.
serves as htstonan of the ·, to
Department.
:,
While at the conven\ton the
Ashleys attended the televtsed ~emonies of c!lmm.;mo~ve
plaques at the In~ .,ar :\ of
rial as weD as~ ~ons ~~ . ~
fmt and las~ 'dilin · n3s 1 ~
encampm~nts m 1n
apo ·
•
ers attend~ngMfedrom th ~~Decampartp
were Davtd d er\ Ch~li' th •
ment Cornman er oAth I teo e,
and Charles Rogers,
ens.

,h

0

FIVE GENERATIONS· Pictured is the five
generation family of Mrs. Vina Preece, Inez,
Ky., wbo celebrated her 88th birthday recently.

Hudnall reunion held in Albany
The fourth annual reunion of
Lenora McNutt Hudnall of Albany

I

and the late Ernest Hudnall was
held recently at the home of
Howard HudnaU Sr. and the Cathy
Jo Hudnall. Albany.
Auending were eight of their
nine surviVing children
The oldest attending was Ray·
mond Brickles. The youngest was
Shawn Allen Dou$las.
Two births dunng the year were
noted • Jamie Renee Jeffers, daugh·
ter of Jennifer King and John Jeffers Jr., Pomeroy, born May I; and
Shawn Allen HudnaU, son of Sam
and Karen HudnaU, Pomeroy, born
June 19 . Both babies are great
JUllll(lchildren of Lenora and Ernest
Hudnall.
Aucnding were Lenora Hudnall,
Howard and Addie Hudnall, Fran
lld'do.ll, Addie M. Hudnall,
llowift1·.Hudnall Sr. and Kathy Jo,

Howard Hudnall Jr, Alfred· and
Rebecca Hudnall , Mike and
Michelle, Jim and Charlotle Hudnall, James, BiD and Chad, Harold
Clark, Lillie Randolph, Gerald R.
and Linda Douglas, Keith, Scott
and Melinda, Bill Sr. and Glenna
Wade Sr., Bill Jr., Ro~er Hudnall,
Carlos Ruuer, Opal Gilkey Rutter,
Edna King, Bob Hudnall, Rob
Hudnall, Tony King, Bobby
Phelps, Shirley Osborne, David
Sanders, Connie Pllillips and David
Hudnell Jr., aU of Albany.
Lavada and Kaycee Pidcock,
New Marshfield; Sherri, Scott,
George and Scott, Mineral; Kelly
Douglas, George and Bonnie Douglas, Stewart; Don Laudermilt,
Rutland; Joan King, Julie,.Jennifer,
Jamie Jeffers, John Jeffers Jr.,
Butch and Lois Haning, Randy,
Amber and Andrew, Ruth Stiffel,
Angie Hudnell, Robert Pickett,

Barney Barnhouse, BeUy Blanken•ship, Dewey, April and Lisa, and
Denise Richards, aU of Pomeroy.
Stacey T.homas, Chauncey;
Mary Willard and Arthur Willisoil,
The Plaiils; Larry and Gloria King,
Nick and Jared, Vicky Jones, Mary
McDaniel, Shade; Willard and
Linda Hudnall Sr., Sharon, Willard
Jr., Faith, Micky, Abbie, Becky,
The · 21st Yeauger family
Shawn and Linda M., Dyesville; reunion was held at the Silver Run
Joe and Mary Christy, Bernie and Baptist Church shelter house
June Sharpe, Christina and B.J., recently.
Lloyd J. and Penny Hudnall,
Attending were Sharon and
Randy, Lloyd H., Eric and Penny Mike Parker, Marvin and Lucille
Hudnall, Randy, Lloyd H. Eric and Yeauger, Sue Ann, Brandy,
Richard, Charles R. Hudnall, John NathB,n, Eric, Laura and Matthew
and Dorothy Napper, Kristen Hud- Smith, Lawrence and Charlie
nell, Jeannette Hudnell, Alan Yeauger, Kenneth Yeaugei', Wanda
Lewis, Tina Dou$Ias. Joarm Lee, Keller, Bob and Gerry Halley, all
JoAnn Willard, Mina WIUard, Dale of Cheshire; Steve, Cheryl and
and Angie McBride, Gerald Dou- Ashley Haney, Ray, Tracey, Jacob
glas, Sherri Hall and Johnny Rat- and Ashlee Smith, Terri, Kevin,
cliff, all of Athens.
Autumn and Nick McLaughlin, all
Out of town guests attending of Middleport; Alfred and Hilda
were Ruth Cline, Marion; and Mil- Yeauger, Racine; John, Ruth Ann
dred Wright, Akron.
and Misty Carsey, Athens; Chris,
Music was played and sung by Cristina, Christopher and Jeremy
Lloyd Hudnall, Joe Christy and Yeauger, Syracuse; Pete Kuhn,
Raymond Bricldes.
Amy, Roben and Joshua Haning,
Next year's reunion and events Dex1er; Perk, Lena Yeauger and
Bring own beverages. $2 per person above 12 with children under will be announced in July 1992.
12 admiued free. County Road 48,
Athens County.

MIDDLEPORT • The Harrisonville Youth League will be
sponsoring a men's class "E" softlhroAY
RACINE - The Dailey Family, ball tournament on Saturday and
Free Counlry with Debbie Moore Sunday at the Middleport Park.
and Country Blend will perform a Entry fee is $65 and hit your own
free concert at Star Mill Park in balls. Call 742-2302. 992-5449 or
Racine on Saturday at 7:30 p.m. 742-3300 for information.
The concert is free to the public.
LOITRIDGE • Country Music
BASHAN - The Bashan Ladies Night at the Lottridge Community
Auxiliary will hold an ice cream Center will be held SaiUrday from
tocial on Friday beginning at 5 7 p.m. 10 midnight Refreshments
!).in. Hot dogs, sloppy joes, ham, will be served and all bands are
S!Uk. hot sausage sandwtches, tce welcome.
c~. pie, coffee and soda will be
' ' SUNDAY
served. Take-out orders will be
HARRISONVILLE - A misavailable and there will be live
sionary service will be held Sunday
entertainment
at 7:30 p.m. a1 lhe Harrisonville
r;, POMEROY - Belles and Beaus Holiness Chapel on Route 684 in
f(eslim Style Square Dance Club Pomeroy featuring the Thompson
w'iU hold a dance on Friday from 8 Family. Rev . John Neville invites
P'.m. to II p.m. at lhe Pomeroy the public.
Senior Citizens Center with Roger
CARPENTER - The Columbia
Steele as the caller.
Township Volunteer Fire DepartLONG BOTTOM - The Faith ment Auxiliary will serve homeFull Gospel Church in Long Bot- made ice cream, pie, sandwiches
lonl will have a hymn sing on Fri- and beverages at 1hc firehouse on
day al 7:30p.m. featuring locallal- Route 143 ncar Carpenter on Sunent Pastor Sieve Reed invites the day from 4-8 p.m.
public.
_
RACINE- There will be a meetSATURDAY
ing Sunday a1 2 p.m. at the Star
HARRISONVILLE - Har- Mill Park in Racine for all imerest·
risonville Youth League will spon- ed parties regarding the bal.lfield
sora men's Class E Tournamem at prOJCCI. Anyone who ts wtlhng to
the Middleport Park on Saturday help with the project ,is urged to
iiriit Sunday. Entry fee is $65 plus attend. Call 949-2643 •f unable to
wo softballs. For information, call ' attend.
742-2302 742-3300 or 992-5449.
REEDSVILLE - The John W.
'
'
, POMEROY -Fraternal Order of Rose reunion will be held Sunday
:Eagles Anniversary Dinner will be al Forked Run State Park. Dinner
held on SaiUrday at 6:30p.m. A $5 will begin at 12:30 p.m.
deposit must be made to Becky
Mankin or Ann Cale on or before
MONDAY
ugust20.
POMEROY - The Meigs County Veterans Service Commission
•
l NELSONVILLE - The Annual will meet on Monday at 7:30p.m.
•Parade of the Hills cheerleading in 1he Ve1erans Service Office in
:~petition will be held on Satur- Pomeroy.
1
&lt;faf at the Nelsonville-York Middle
9cllool. The competition is both a
SILVER RUN • Revival at the
fCJ!J&amp;d, and individual event. For Silver Run Baptist Church will be
aiifcirmation, call 753-2561 or 753- held Monday through Sunday at
:2212.
7:30p.m. nightly with Pastor Bill
Little.
, NELSONVILLE - The Annual
COOLVILLE - The Bethel
•P~ of the Hills arts and crafts
Methodisl
Church will celebrate its
Ishow will be held on Satutday from
a.m. to 9 p.m. in Nelsonville at annual church homecoming Sunday at 9 a.m. with worship service
L Mary's of the Hills Hall ..
at 10 a.m. A carry-in lunch will be
, NEW ENGLAND • Uncle held at 12:30 p.m. with an after•Bj)b's has moved to New England. noon program with Russ and the
!Danees from 8 p.m. to midnight on Southern Hill Singers at 1:30 p.m.
;saturday. Music by Country Grass. The public is invited.

todar.

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GRAVELY TR~CTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

. 204 Condoo St.

Pomii{Oy, OH.

Spring and Summer -Hours
Mon•y thru fr*y
9 Ul.-5 P.M.
Sat. 9 A.M.• I P.M.

GRAVELY
SYSTEM

Come visit us for good home cooked meals and
de1sert.

er's rc(K&gt;rt. .

11'

Erma Cleland read a poem,
"The Autumn Years," and do,or
prizes were won by lnze N.ewell
and Jean Frederick.
· ·
Games were conducted by "'~tty .
Young and Bulah MaXey. R~~~·
ments were served by ll!e hos.'p:&gt;S·
es.
· · . ~ ·.
Attending were Betty Rou.sh,
Elizabeth Hayes, Thelma White,
Mae McPeek, Alta Ballard. Bulah
Maxey, Mary Jo Barringer, F,aye
Kirkhart, Sadie Trussell,, Mary K.
Holter, Erma Cleland,.Opal Hollon,
Inzy Newell, Ethel 01'1'. Lora
Damc'ft'ood, Margaret ~m~rger,
Pauline Ridenour, Goldte E*der- ·
ick, Jean Frederick, Betty Yq~t!l8·
and a viSiiOr, Sandra White. ·

of.,-~

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1991 ~TON
414 SILVEUDO
PICKUP·

1991
CAVALIERS

$13,995

$8488

.

CALAIS

$8999

.

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·---------····;:....·--.,- -----~-

Belhlehtm BapUsl
Put&lt;&gt;r. Rev, Earl Shuler
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30 Lm.
Thunday Service~ -7:30 p.m.
Old Bellto Free Will BapdSI Church
28601 St. Rt 7, Middlepon
Sunday School - 10 Lm.
Evening ~

Thur~day

1:30 p.m.

Services -7:30p.m.

Hillside Bapllsl Churth
St RL 143 jull off Rt 7
Putor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.

Kce~«:

Anlktulty Baptlsl

1991 GEO
METRO

Putor: Kenneth Smith

$,,.,,,

s..,day School -9:30a.m.
E=ina ·7:30p.m.
Thunday Services . 7:30p.m.
Rullancl Fm Will BopUSI
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor

1991
CHEVROLET
CAPRICE

1991
CADILLAC
SEDAN I»EVILLE

$12,499

$19I 9'95,

.

CI~O~E'f

Mt. Union Bapllsl
Putor: Joe N. Sa)'"'
Sunday School -9:4S Lm.
Evenin&amp; -6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m.

ML Moriah Bapllsl
Founlt ll Main St. , Middlepon
P11tor: Rev. Gilben Cnia. Jr.
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evmina - 7 p.m.
Wcdncaday Servic:eo -7p.m.

CatholiC
Sacred Heart Calhcillc CIMirdo

161 Mulberry Ave,, Pomeroy, 992-S898
Paswr: Rev. Waller E. Heinz

Sat Con. 4:4S-S:U p.m.; Man · 5:30p.m.
s..,, Coo. • 1:45-9: IS a.m.,
Sun, Mau- 9:30a.m.
Daily Mm -8:30a.m.

Andrew Miloa

(row's Family Restaurant
"lut•ri•IIC"tulg Ftlti Cild11 ..
221 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432

r~
~ --

11 a.m. June • Auaun

Holiness

Pomeroy WtJI,sldo Church or Christ
332260illdrtn'a Home Rd.
992-3847
Sunday School - II a.m,
Wonhip · 10 a.m., 6 p.m,

Pine Grove Honn ... Church
t/2 mile off RL 325
Pastor: Rev. Ben J. Wa1u

Sunday Sdlool · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servic:e · 7:30 p.m.
Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
75 Pearl St, Middlepon.

Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

Mlddlep&lt;M't Church of Chris&amp;
51h and Maio
Pastor. AI Hartaon

Pastor: Rev. J..,.an Myers

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship, 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Sunday school · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servia: · 7:30p.m.
Hysell Run Holiness Churdl

Wednesday Sef\!ices -1 p.m.

Keno Church or Chrlsi
Wonhip-9 :30 a.m.

Pastor: Robert Manley

Sunday School · 10:30 a.m,

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.

Bea,.,..allow Rid&amp;• Church ot Christ

Mlddleporltndependent Holiness
Church
75 Pead St

Pauor: Jack Colesrove

Panor: Rev. J..,.an Myen

Pomeroy, Harrioooville Rd. (RL 143)
Paooor. Rober E. Ponell
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 am., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services . 1 p.m.

Bradbury Church of Chris&amp;
Putor: T001 Runym
Sunday School· 9:30a.m,
Wonhip · 10:30!,m.
Tuppers Plains Church of Christ

Sunday Sdlool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
Wednt~day Services ·7:30p.m.

Pastor. Roaer Wa lion

Lutheran

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.
Wcdneoday Services · 7 p.m.

Sl. John Lutheran Churdl
·
Pine Grove

Rullond Church or Christ
Putor:

Pastor: Laun A. Leach Shreffler

E.uaene E. Underwood

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip -10:30 a.m,, 7 p.m.
MaSOI Church ot Chris&amp;
Miller St, Muon, W,Va.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Road C~urch of C~rlst
Pallor: Joseph B. Hookino
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wonhip-IOa.m., 7p.m.

Succe~~

Method 1st
Grahlm United Molhocllst
Worsltip -9:30a.m. (ht4 2nd Sun). 7:30
p.m. (3rd A 4th Sun)
Wednesday Sef\!ice · 7:30p.m.

Mt. Olive Unlled Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville

Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Worship - 10:30 a. m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Langsville Christian Churc~
Sunday Sdlool ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

M&lt;lgs Cooperallve Parish
Northeasl Cluster
Alrr•d

Paslor: Charles Jooc1

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

Pastor: Sharon Hamman

Sunday School : 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m., 6:30p.m.
Chester
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday Schooi - IOa.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Joppa

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.

Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services - 1:30 p.m.

Hartford Church or Christ In Christian
Union

Reedsville
Pastor; Rev. Otarles Eaton
Wors hip · 9:30a.m.

Hanford, W.Va.
Paslor: Rev. David McManis

Sunday Sdlool · II a.m.
Worship -9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednuday ServiceI -7:30p.m.

Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Racine
Pu10r: Rev. James Satterfield

Central Clutter

Asbury (Syracuse)

Evening · 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service• - 7 p.m.

Pastor: We~ ley Thatcher

Rutland Churdl orGncl

BelhanJ
Pastor: Kenneth Baker

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worsltip · 9 a.m.
Wednesday Service• · 10 a.m.
Carmel
Putor: Kenneth Boker
SlUiday ~ ~hool - 9:30a.m.

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m. (Ill A 3rd Sun)
Easl Let.art

Putor. Rcv.lvan Myen

Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Coolville Unllod MelhodiSI Parish
Pastor: Harold E. Alloway-Priddy
Coolville Church
Main A Fifth St.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services - 7 p.m.

Bclhel Church
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School · 9a.m.
Won hip - I0a.m.

Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Service~ - 8 p.m.
Torch Church

Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 Lm.

Nazarene
Middleport Churc• or lhe Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. Uoyd D. Grimm, Jr.

Sundoy School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m.

r.Jt

RAWUNGS-CO&amp;TS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-5141

Sunday Sdloot -9:30am.

Worship · 9 1.m.

John f . FuiU.Mqr .
Ph. 991 llOI

O
&lt;...

Puler: John W. Duu&amp;lll
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.

MEIGS flRE
CENTER, INC.

112 E. Main Slreel
992·3785. Pomeroy

RACINE PLANING MILL
Mill Wo•k
Cab1ne1 Maktn~
Syracuse

992 -3978
264 South 2nd
Middleport
Li:.i....~-------'---·-_..;..-""'~-·-·· ··-"-' - · "• "" W "•

HIUI Community Church
011 Rt 124
Pasooc Edtel Hut
Sunday Sdlool -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

su.....ale Word ot Falllo
Pootor: Gary Holter
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Evcnin1 · 7 p.m.

Dyonlll• Community Church
Sunday Sdlool -9:30a.m.
Worship , 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Pentecostal

BurUnaton Community Churd•

Wonhip -7 p,m,
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

ThiniAvc.

Sunday Sdlool · 10 a.m.
Wonhip· II:ISa,m,, 7p.m,
Thursday Service- 7 p.m.

Presbyterian

Sunday ochool - 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdneoday Service -7 p.m.

Wednesda~rvicea · 7:30p.m.
Harri1011vllle
yllrlan Churdl
Worship -9 am.
Sunday School · 9:45 Lm.

Mlddltport l'ral&gt;rllrlan
Sunday School - 9 l.m.
Worship · 10 am,, 4 p.m. (2nd .t 4th S111.)

Mt. OUve Coon11unlly Church
Putor: Lawnmce Bush

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Evenina -7 p.m.
Wednoday Service - 7 p.m.
Untied Fallh Church
Rt. 7on Pantroy By·Pall

PaslOr. Rev. Robert E Smith, Sr.

Syraauo J1lrol Uallld l'rai&gt;JIIrian
Sunday School- 10 LID.

j

Seventh-Day Adventi St

1

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s...-.oa, Ad•..u.t
Mulberry Hu. Rd.,l'omen&gt;y

p.m,

I

....... Chrill

PaslOr: Chuck McPhcnon

Full GO!pd Ughlhowe
3304S Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Putor: Tom Kelly
SIDtday School · 10 Lm,
Evenina 7:30p.m.
Tuesday A Thursday· 7:30p.m.

·

Pa-= Bob Snyder
Sabbuh S.rvic&gt;ea:
Sallblth School - 2 p.m.

E&lt;c:lesla Ftllowshlp
128 Mill SL, Middlepon

Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

j

Wonhip -I IUD., (p.m. (I• A 3nl Sun.)·

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Service -7 p.m.

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evenina -7 p.m.

1

c~wc~o

Teua Community off CR 12
Pa1tor: Roben Sanden
S~mday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servica -7:30p.m.
Eden Unlltd BreiiUtll II Cltrla
Sunday School • tO a.m.
Worship -7:30 p,m.
Wednelday S'ervic:eo -7:30p.m.

Wednesday Service~ -7 p.m.

Forest Run
Pastor: We~l ey Thatcher

_K&amp;C JEWELERS

Calvary Pllcrlm Chapel
Harrilcnville Road
Putor: Rev. Viet« Rouah
SWiday School 9:30 a.m,
Wonhip · It a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service -7:30p.m.

Faith GCJiptl Cburdt
t..naBoaom
Sunday School · 9:30a,m,
Worship- t0:4S Lm,, 7:30p.m.
Wednuda~ 7:30p.m.

I'
i;

Sunday School · 9:3() a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a,m,, 6 p.m.

Wonhip - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Thur&gt;day Services -6: 30p.m.

Syrac:uoo Mission
1411 Br.dgeman St., Syrowse
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evenina -6 p.m.
Wedneaday Servia: · 7 p.m.

Rulland Bible Methodlsl

flatwood.t

Sunday School - 10 o.m,

SWiday School - 10 a.m.
E=ina -7:30p.m.
Thursday Service ·7:30p.m.

Pastor: DIYid Curfm111

Sunday School -9:30a.m.

'

Pu10r: A. S&amp;ewut

Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.
Evenina 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

Mont Chapel Churth

Roeclsvllle Fellowllhlp

Wednesday Service!· 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Emmett Raw100

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

PomerO)' O.urch of lhe Naurene
Pas lor: Rev. Thomas McCiuna

Pastor: Pat Henson

P•stor. Sam Ander~on

PastOr: ReY. ClaJt Baker
S~~tday School ·10 Lm.
Evcnina - 6 p.m.

Church of the Naurene

Sunday Sdloot · 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.

Pu1or. Jama Lewis

s...day School - I t Lm.

Pastor: Roben E. Musser

Putor: Keilh Rader
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m., 6 p.m.
Tuesday Services · 1 p.m.

Church or God II Prophecy
OJ, White Rd. off St. Rt. 160

Tht SaJvalkln Anny

ItS Buuemut Ave., Pomeroy,

Mtddleporl h a -

Racine
Pastor: Roacr Grace

Worship - II a.m.

Pastor. Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 11 1. m., 6 p.m.
Thursday Sef\!ices · 7 p.m.

Fairview Bible Churdt
l.e111t, W.Va. Rt. I

Christian Flllowsllip Center
Salem SL, Ru~and

Wonhip- 9 a.m.

Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Wednesday Service• - 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service -7 p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Won hip - II a.m.
Laur&lt;l ClllrFree Melhodlsl Church
Puler. William Williams
Sunday Scltool - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 o.m.,7 p.m.

Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Wednesday Servia:o ·7:30p.m

SJratu5t First Churdl of God
Wonhip · 10 a.m.
Sunday Sdlool · II a.m.
Evenina · 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
Trtnll7 Con1rqallonal Church
Paotor: Rev, Roland Wildman
Olulch -9:1S Lm.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.

Budin ham
Pulor: R1y f:udennih
Sunday School - I 0 a,m,

Sunday School · 9:45 a.m.
Enterprise

Coolville Road
Paotor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour

Thunday Service-7:30p.m.
Pml-AIHIIIbly
St Rt. t24, Racine
Putvr; William Hoback
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evcnina -7 p.m.
Wednesday SeMcet -7 p.m.

Pastor: Roger Grace

..

While'• Chapel Wflllran

Other Churches

Fallh Tlbernlelt Church
Bailey Run Road

Pastor: John F. Corconn

Sunday Sdlool· IOa.m,
Woroh•p- II a.m., 7 p.m.

Freedom G-' MlllltiMI
Bald Knob, en Co. Rd 3t
Pastor: Rev. Ro,er WiUionl
Sunday School -9:30 Lm.
Wonhip- 10:4S Lm., 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Service - 1 p.m.

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Services -7 p.m.

Syracuse Church of the Nwrcnt
Pastor: Re..... Glenn McMillan

Sunday Smoot · 9:45 a.m.

Pastor: William Justus

Sunday School · 9:30 a,m,
Wonhip · 10:40 Lm,, 7:30p.m.
Wcdncaday Services · 7:30p.m.
Now Haven Church of lht Nazarene
Putor: Glendon Stroud
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Sunday School 10 a.m.
Bvenina -7:30p.m.
Wcdne1day Servia: · 7:30p.m.

Tuesday SeJVJces · 7:30p.m.

Wonhip · 10 a.m.

CarleiOil lnlerdtftOIIIIaaUDIUII Clourdl:
Kinaabuoy Road
Pasoor. Clyde W, Hendcnon
S... day Schoo( -9:30 Lm.
Evcnina- 7 p.m.
wednesday Service -7 p.m.

Portland Flnl Church or tho Nazarene

Soulhern Clulltr
Apple Grove
Pasoor. Cad Hicks

Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

ML Moriah Church or God

Sunday School - 9a.m.

Wonhip - 10 am., 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Service - 7 p.m.

Colvarr Bible Churdt
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
l'lot&lt;&gt;r. Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School -9:30 Lm,
Wonhip t0:30a.m.,7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.
Spiritual Fallh Churdl
Slate 338, Antiquily

Tuppt'rs Plains St. Paul
Pastor: Sharon Hau sman
Sunday School - 9 a.m.

Church of God

Pallor: Sunucl Buyc

Sunday Sdlool ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 Lm., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Service• · 7 p.m.

Mlddleporl c... muniiJ Church
S7S Pead St .. Middleport

Wednesday Services - 1:30 p.m.
Pastor: Olarlcs Eaton

Rutland Churth of lbe Nuartne

Putor: Flon:nce Smith

Hockingport Church
Gr1111d Strut
Sunday School · 10 a.m.

Long Bollom

Sunday Sdlool ·9:30a.m.
Evenina · 7 p.m.

South llelhol New Tllll••t
Silver Ridao
Paooor. Duane Sydenllridcor

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship -9 a.m.

Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

Union
Pastor: Theron Durham

N-~•ICiourdl

Sunday Wonltip • 2:30p.m.;
Thunday aervicea -7:30p.m.

Wonhip · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Brenda Weber

Worsltip · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

Ch..or Church ot llle Nuarene
Putor: Rev, Herbcn Gnue
Sunday School , 9:30a.m.
Worship - II Lm., 7 p.m.
Wodnesdiy Service• · 7 p.m.

Sunday School · t0:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:00 Lm,, 7:30p.m.

Sutlon
Pastor: Kenneth Baker

Sunday School · 9:45 a.m.
Worohip · II Lm.

or ChrtSIIn Christian

Wonhip -10:30 a.m.

Thunday Services -7 p.m.

Worship · ll a.m.

Liberty Christian Church
Dexter
Putor: Woody Call
Sunday Sdlool- 10 a.m.

Hobson Churc~

s...day School · 9:30a.m.

?astor: Rev. George C. Weiri ck

Sl. Paul Lutheran Church

Chnslian Union

Rutland
Pastor: Anhur Crabtree:

Sunday School · 9:45a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Servia:o · 7:30p.m.

Comer Sycamore&amp;. Secood SL, Pomeroy
Pastor: Laun A. Leach Sh"'ffler

Old D""tor Bible Clrlstlan Church
PasiOC Jack Oelapd
Sunday Sdlool - I0 a,m,
Wednesday Service• -7 p.m.

Wedncaday Service~ · 6 p.m.

Our Saviour Lutheran Church

Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Sunday odlool - 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip , 9:30 Lm. 7 p.m.

Sunday School -9:15a.m.
Worship, I0:30a.m., 6pm.
Wedneoday Servia:a -7:30p.m.
Rock Sprl1111
Paotor.Keult lUcier
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Wonhip - IOa.m,

PasLor: Kenr1elh Baker

W.Va.

Hemlock Grove Church
Putor: O.arles Domigan

PomeroJ
Pastor: Don Mc.~dow a

Worship - 10:45 a,m, (2nd A 4th Sun)
MOI'nlna Star

Walnut md Henry Su., Raven1wood,

Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

Pearl Chapel
Aoronce Snuth
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship-IOLm.
Pu10~

Worship -9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

Wonhip - I 1 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdnclday Services - 7 p.m.

Bradford Churdl or Christ
St. RL 124 A Co. Rd S
Putor: Derok Stump
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip, 10:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneoday Service. -7:30p.m.

Mlnerovllle
Pasoor: Wesley Thotdler
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wouhip- 10 Lm,

Latler-Day Saints
Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: William Rou sh

Outer Church ot Christ

Wedncsdty Service• • 6 p.m.

Solem Center
Pallor: Roo Fi01t0
SWlday School· 9:15a.m.
Worship - 10:15 un.
SnoW&gt;IIlo

Roorganlud Church II Jesus Christ In
Laller Day Salnu

Sunday School -9 a.m.
Worship - 9:4S Lm ., 6:30p.m.

Heath (Middleport)
?oslO~ Frank Smith
Sunday School- 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Worship t0:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneoday Servia: - 7:30 p.m.
Harrisonville Hollnts! Chapler
Paooor. Rev. Ead Field
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneoday Servia: -7:30 p.m.

Pastor: Robert Foster

01111

PICK"I.JP......................... ~................$2895 ,

,__ ---···---------

P&amp;~tor:

Sunday School · 9:30a.m,
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m,
Wcdnaday ServiceJ -7 p.m.

992-6669
271 llorth
Sic..,
MhWitport,

1093 MERCURY LYNX WAGON-.-..........- -........$1495
IBB7 MER~ MARqms............~ •••• ~ .....................$7499
l9871VRD ESCORr••• :! ..... a••• .................................... $3995
.1'9 88 CIIEVROLET ~ DR........................- - - -........$2495

I

Rejoicing Lire BapllSI Church
383 N. 2nd Ave,, Middlepon
SIDtday School · 10 a.m.
E=ins · 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Service~ · 7 p.m.

Panor: Rev. Nyle Borden

,,

,.s2,00~ Off

Bapdst
Bill Lit~.
SIDtday School · 10 Lm.
Wor1hip- II a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wedneoday Services -7:30p.m.

SIDiday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 2:30 p,m,

We're Not No. 1-You, Our Customers Are!

· · STORM

Baptist
41812 Pancroy Pike
l'lotor: E. Lamar 0' Bryant
SIUiday School -9:30 Lm.
Wonhip · t0:45 a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service• . 7:30p.m.

Fallh Bapllst Church
Railroad St, Mason
Sundar School · I0 a.m.
Worshtp · II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wodnesdoy Services · 7 p.m.
Forlll Run Bapllsl

•'

1991 OLDS
CUTLASS

· HATCHB~CK

Flrsl Southern

Pulor. James E

4 ·DR.

Groce Epbtopal Church
326 E. Main SL, Pomeroy
Putor: Rev, Or. Roy C. Myen

7JCNI Ch,urc:h ot Chrlsl

Wonhip · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 1 p.m.

I

Pomeroy Church'oiChrlsl
212 w. Maio St.

Pom""y Fin&amp; Bapllsl
Ean Maio SL
Pao10r. Sieve Fuller
S111day School -9:30 Lm,
Wonhip · t0:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

VlctOI'y BapiiSI
52S N. 2nd SL, Middlcpon

6.14·992·66141

Episcopal

SW1day School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Serviceo- 6:30p.m.

Sundar School . 10 Lm.
Wonh1p · II a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Church of Christ

Ruuond Fll'll BapUst Churth
SIUiday School -9:30 Lm,
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m.

Pastor: David Bryan, Sr.

Call Toll Free 1·800-837·1 094

.' / ~ ·

Baptist

Hopt Bapllsl Chapel
570 Gnnt St, Middleport

;:i,,

.
N.fl.l991 GEO

Uberty Asoombl7 otGocl
Duddina Lane, Maaon, W.Va.
Putor: J.N. Thacker
E=ing- 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service• -7:tS p.m.

Sundar School · 10 a.m.
Worshlp . II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneoday Servic:eo -7 p.m.

$8999

'·

Assembly of God

PISU&gt;r.

Millie's Restaurant has new hours
until future notice.
Beginning Sept. 3, 1991
the new .hours are:
Monday·Friday Open 6 A.M.
Closing 6 P.M.
Saturday &amp; Sunday
Open 8 A.M., Close 3 P.M.

CORS.CA'S

..

Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
E=ina-7:30 p.m.
Wodnelday Services-7:30p.m.

Silver Run

992·7713

1991

The Past Councilors' Club of
Chesler Council No. 323, Daughters of America, met recently at the
Pythian Sisters Hall at Long .Bottom with Mae McPeek, Ada Bassell
and Alia Ballard the hostesses.
Bulah Maxey presided at the
meeting and read from the book of
Psalms. The Lord's l,&gt;ray,~r;·al)d, .
pledge 10 the flag were ·given.
'·
It was reported that Ada Bissell
has a broken bone in her fooL
,
Mary Jo Barringer, secrCia!'Y .-_ ·
read the minutes of the last mecu~g
and Erma Cleland gave the treaSW· •:

Wedneoday Service• -7 p.m.

Panor. Sten Dea..,.er

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

·: CBDROIIE!-GLDSMIBIL&amp;.-CIDILLAC-GEO

Past Councilor's
Club holds session

· 7 p.m.

RKino Flrsl Bapdst

DO-l :7AiE

. .

B~ming

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:40 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedne1day Servia" · 7:30 p.m.

BRADBURY RD.

The July meeting or'the Brad- · Attending were Becky and
ford Church of Christ Lydia Coun- Bclhany Amberger, Diane Bing,
cil was held at the home of Jan icc Madeline . Painter,
Cherie·
Felty with Brenda Bolin as co-host- Williamson, Jackie Reed, Carolyn
ess.
Nicholson, Paula Pickens. Jane
Prayer request was announced Hysell, Sherry and Elizabeth, Karand Karlila Stump had the opening lita and Andrew Stump, Brenda
prayer.
Bolin, Janice, Amanda and David
Business was conducted by Mrs. Fetty.
Stump and officers reports w~re
given. Devollons were by Jamce
Fetty and Brenda Bolin.
Thank-you notes were read from
Evelyn Smith family and also Mar·
tina Artez.
Members were reminded of
Debbie Pickens' birthday in July.
Debbie and George Pickens arc
missionaries in Africa.
•
Several projects were discussed.
301
East
Mala Street,
Plans for the Bradford Home~
coming were made and it will be
held Sept. 8 with all day activities.
Lydta Council hayride will be
held Oct.. 12 with plans to be made
later.
Communion for July wa~ Charlotte Hanninlt. The July sunshine
gifiS wee given to Charlie Murray,

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

MILLIE'S RESTAURANT

Bradford Ch~urch group meets

Pastor. Robert W. Richardt

Middleport First Baptist
Comer Sixth &amp; Pabner
Pastor: Rev. James A, Soddoo
Sunday School -9:15a.m.
Wonhip- 10:15 a.m.

~THE

Russell , Marilyn Gaye Campbell,
Charleston, W.Va.; Wayne, Susie
and Heather Yeauger, Elkview,
W.Va.; Marlene Yeauger, Canal
Winchester, and Gene and Sanlea
Yeauger, Enon.

Church or JOIUI Christ Apostolic Filth
New Lima Rtl, next 10Ft Meia• Parte

Putor: James Miller

Larry Jr. and Samuel Ga!I:IJ.C;
Molly, Paul, Clinton and Nichllli
Webb; Monna and Joe Alldreoni;
Teresa, Richard, Preston, ):lr:icyan
and Nathaniel Cook; Na~ha and
Charles Cook; Rachel Bush; Marjorie Banlcs; Bill Ohlinger; Steven,
Cindy, Stevie Ray and Stephanie
Rupe; Bruce and Pat ~iness:
Hank and Karrie Horsley;
. and
Angel Nelson; -Bill and . racy
Feasel; Joshua and Mindi Feasel;
Charlie, Tammy, Bradley and
Brandon Woodruff; David 'Rupe;
Anne Hatfield; Archie, Debbie,
Tyson and Alison Rose: Amanda
Wheeler; Eric, Rhonda Mozingo
and son; Roy and Jayne CrlRJ.

Twenty-first Yeauger reunion
held at Silver run Baptist Church

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and tbe day of thai event. Items
must be received weD in ad vance
to assure publication in the cal-

Lydia Smith; Donald, CarmeUa and
Patrick Smith and Scott; Darrell,
Cathy and Bobbie Jean Smith; Brittany Ricker; Mike, Kelly, Alexandra and Carlianne Sanders; Gar and
Becky Drenner; Betty Schnsemann: Michelle and Will Mitcht!U:
Carla Smith; Rodney, Diana, Candice and ~hrissy Walker; Matt
Smith; Beth Hildebrand; Jim, Darlene, Morgan and VinCe: Vanaman;
Michelle Young; Janice, Steve,
Jeremy ,and Israel Grimm; Gene,
Rose, Barbara and Billy Rupe;
Shauria and Johnny Doucet II;
Billy Tackett; Kasey Doucet; Sher·
ry, Mike and Emily G. ·Davis;
Leslie and Yvonne Whittington;
Loretta and Jeremy Atlcins: Misty
Lane; Mike, Chris, Angie and Vinson Martin; Danny and Kay Walker; Charles Smilh; Ronald and
Ronnie Smith; Larry, Sabrina,

Apostolic

Church ;, Jesus Chrlsl Aposlollc
VanZandl and Ward Rd .

Smith reunion held at Lake Snowden
The 1991 Annual Smith
Reunion of the late Samuel and Lillie Smith was held recently at Lalce
Snowden. The afternoon dinner
was served to Ill friends and relatives in attendance.
For entertainment the group
enjoyed volleyball, swimming,
horseshoes, auction and games.
Special musical keyboard entertainment was provided by Darlene
Vanaman and Debbie Rose with
other relatives and friends participating. Dwr prizes and gifts were
awarded to relatives and friends of
all ages.
An election of offteers for next
years reunion was held. Darlen.e
Vanaman was re-elected as president; Gene Rope, vice prestdent;
Debbie Rose, secretary and treasur·
er.
Attending were Raymond and

The Dally Sentlnei-Paga 7

Pomero~

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE ---; SERVICES
214 E Main
991 -5130 Pomeroy

0~\n
C\'\;(( j,rw £Boof.s
93 Mill SlrHI
Middleport. Ohio 46760

18141992·6667 - 1998 -00KSI

POMEROY, OHI0-992-66ft :
BILL QUICKEL

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nationwide Ins, Co .
ol Columbu\, 0 .
104 W . Mcltfl

991 1lll

Pomerov

Veterans
Memorial Hospita..

~

~
;;,o ,

II 5 I.

Mlmoriol Or.
·1104

Pamtrey .

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
S4LES &amp; SERVICE

992-7075
172 North Second An.
Midolltport, Ohio

GRAVELY TRAcTOR SALES
. . , 204 Condor St.
·.
Pomeroy, 011.
·

992-2975

EWING FUNERAL HOME

"OiJ(ni~•s:~l:~~i·~·~i~lwnv."
992-2121

106 M.... rry Au.
~~·!!,L!-~. ~- · -·-·-----1.--· -·· - ~ '

SWISHER &amp; lOHSE
F•ll ~!
l~PwHAR•

I.

f'rt'icrtphon\

P-r•r

m ms
Pomoro,
...&amp;-......;~;;.......,._ _ _ _ _ _.,J

.

.

�' '•

The Dally
~The Dally Sentinel

Page

3

Classified

SNAFU® by .Btuce
. Beattie

Annou nce menls

OhiO

. ..

42

~

·Announcements

Wo moko groat motchoa. Clrol'o
Slna".!tP:O. Box 58441, Athena

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

OH"UIVl.

I

4

Giveaway
3-motlttr cata ancl2·klllono, 5141112·1302-. '
.

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S. puPD&amp;Ie for more Information

MONDAY thru FRIDAY

8

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to

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3
6

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CLOSED SUNDAY

POli C tl S
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IJd•d
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Announcernenls
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Rates aro for consecuh"e runs. broken up d.-yswlll be charged
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1)1¥

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·t rt!t' ,tds

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Words

Days

and found ads undt.'f 15 words w1ll be

Real

Than~s

Anno ucement s

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Gnolflawly

5
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Happy Ads
Lost and Found
Yard Sale (pa•d •n advance)
Pubhc Sitl e &amp; Auct1011

1;1111

Hctp~v

Car d o t Thank&lt;:.

l.'/a.~.~ifit•tl pa~t· .~

Galhil County
Area Code 614

w•ll ,,lsu ·•P~e&lt;~• "' th e Pt Pll!.ascml R e~ 1• s ll!r .wd the Gall•
poli s O,l •lv T' •hu111:. IC o.Jclllll!J

~HIUAY

PAPER

SU NDAY PAPER

O\lt!r

1 8 . 000

ho r11 es

446 Galllpohs
367· Cheahlfe
388 Vinton
245 Rio Gr1nde
266 Guy1n Otst
643 Artbi1 D1S1
379 Wilnut

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

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MONDAY
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
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Me1gs County
Are• Code 614

MISOII Co,

992

675

Pt Pleasant

458
S76
773
882
896

Leon

937

Buffalo

Pomeroy
Chester
843 Porlland

98&amp;

247

969
742

667

Le1111 Follis
Racine .
Rulland
Coolville

46

47
48

Help Wanted
12 SituatiOn W1ntod
1 J Insurance
14 Business Tramtog
15 Schools &amp; .lnslruc twn
16 Rad1o. TV &amp; CB Rcpau
17 MISCellanoous
1~ Want11d To Do

WV
Area Code l04

M1ddlepor1

45

11

folluwinJ.{ ll'!t•phtim• t•xclwnw•L.

·A ( l ..... ~o h L"' I ;!dll01 11 1~li i11 UI\I pi.Ji.:cd 111 Th l! 0,11ly Suul n1H'I I1!1t
rt-"p l
d.,~s•IIL"'I th'SIJI••V Busua!!.s C;u d dtu11t.~Jai notJcesl

W£0NFSDAV PAPER
THUR SD AY PAPER

I'OI't'r 1II t'

Ath

11 1 M c •nu rldl l l

Hou•s lor Rent
42 Mobile Home~ lor Attn!
43 firms for Rant
44 -..~"Al*tmtnt

Apple Grove
Muon
New Haven
Letart

49

&lt;
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l

tor Sale
· \lHns &amp; 4 wo· s
MotOI'cychs
BoiiiS &amp; Motors lor Sille
Auto Parts&amp; Accessor tos
Auto Repatr
Campmg Eqtupmenl
Campers &amp; Motor HQtJitlS

-for "Renr ·

'73

Furnished Rooms
Space tor A ent
Wanted to Rent
Equipment for Runt
For Le•e

74

75
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77
78
79

·· ~

•
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..
.. ~

H OUI8hOkl Qoocts

81

...

~

( ,-

Home Improvements

82 · Plumbmg &amp; He•111y

83 e-civaling
84 Electrical I Re tuget"alton
85 Gunt~ral Hauhny

'•..

.. ,..
. .~·

86 Mobile Hom e Reparr
8 7 Upholstery

and

~~r:· woaJ:tor, dryer,

Onolong hotrod black ond whlto
lornolo kltton, 304-675-7541
nn To Glvoowoyl614-245:ll246 .

2-BA, lurr)lohld, w...,.r/dryor,
conlral !!!1 • ~ pluo doi'O'II,
l14·192·oaw. ' ·
·

7

I

BULLETIN BOARD
BULLE'l'lN BOARD DEADLINE
&lt;1:30 P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICNI'ION

HappyAds

2

In

Memory

Yip pi Ky- Yi-Ya
Rip is "30"
today.

HAPPY
BIRTHDAY!
Me
In

FALL BUS TOURS
W. Va. Fall Foliage
Oct \2-\3 - 1155 p/ p
Oh ro Amish Oct. \9 $52 p/ p

PLACES TO GO TRAVEL
446·6446 or
Toll Free 1-800·8!2·2292

In Loving
Memory of JIM
EVANS who
pa•ed away 3
years ago August

24, 1988.
Sadly missed
by mother,
Dorothy Evans

and Family

Memory

in Memory Of
JACK F. KING SR.
who went home to
the Father
August 23, 1987.
Aallook into the sky
at night
And wish upon a
atar.
I wish that you
could be here
And wonder how
you are.
You always mant so
much to me;
More than words
can say.
And, oh, how I mi•
you
With each passing
day.
You are always in
my heart;
And often on my
mind.
Forever yours,
Wife, Joan King
and children

Real Estate General

In Memory Of
BESS HENDRICKS
August 23, 1990
She lives with us in
memory:
And will fotevermote .
From husbend,
Lerry; llaughter and
son, Tina and Tom
and daughter-in-law
Kelly; granddaughters Jennifer,
Brandy, mother·in·
Lucille

Grooming

EMILEE MERINAR
Owner

. 614-992-6820
Pomeroy,

•VINYL SIDING
o~LUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

ST. RT. 7 - Tuppera Plalna - Look once and look no
mora at this 3-4 bedroom home. Ladies, you have to see
the k~chen in this one. It is equipped and has a skylight...it will take your breath away. !:very room has been
completely redone. It has 2 baths and a detached 2 car
All lor S&amp;B,900.
garage.

beet.
Sadly miasad by
children and Famililll

'

SUMNER ROAD - 67 acres of beautiful rolling hills and
some wooded areas. Great place to build your home. The
perfect place lor growing com, and plenty of mom to cut
your own hay. You could even think about building your
own sub-division. All mineral rights golll!
$38,900

Roofing, Vinyl
siding, Painting,
and Ho• npairs

HOMES

&amp; GARAGES

"41 Reasonable Prices"
PH. 949-2101
ar les. 949-2160

667•6681
After 7:00 p.m.

New IIOtttas luHt
"Free etlimatea"

PH. 949-2801
· or Its. 949·2160

USED APPUAJICES
90 DAY Wlllltm

WASIIEIS-$100 up
DIYIS-$6Y up
lffiiGEIATOIS-$100 op
IANGES-IIoo·DK.-$12$ up ·
FlfEZEIS-$125 up
'
111(10 OVENS-$79 up

KEN'S APPliANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or 915-3561
Arross frant Post Offilt

POMEIOY, OHO

NO SUNDAY CAllS
3-11-lfn
•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting
FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

A&amp;B
COMPLOE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

CEDAR

MIDDLEPORT - Hata to mow your lawn? - It will be
unneceS&amp;ary due to the unique landscaping ol this 7 yr.
old home on Mill St. Has 2 to 3 bedrooms, also has large
wrap-around deck With beautilul view for entertaining
friends or maybe you'd like to just kick back and relax.
Youra for $42,900.

CONSTRUCTION

MAIN ST., MASON, WV.

LANGSVILLE - Look at this nice 1-112 story home that
sits on appmx. 31 acres. It has 3 ~ms. 2 baths, heat
pump, and wooclbumer. Some of the land is tillable plus "
would be a great place fQr hunting . It has a dug well plus
a spring. Hey, this is a great place! Come lake a look.
Only $49,000.

J&amp;l
I.NSULAliON

LETART- Set You'll lovell- Just right lor a family. Has
4 bedrooma, dining room, new kitchen cabinets, new
range, and entira home has been remodeled nicely inside
and out. Also has a view of the river. .
$24,900.
SNOWVILLE - Showa ·nc - A 40 acre farm that is aU
rolling cleared paatura land. Approx. 20 ac:rea fenced.
Large metal bam, and an immaculately clean 3 bedroom
newer homo with free gas, equipped kitchen, and pulllic
water. Muat See.
'
\ ' ~
. ·. "' .~
LETART- MIIMMe F-lilterlef·- of: ~at-.., . 2
baths, 31illlng po~chea, and a'ilnltig room:. ~ .1111
~ard. Fenced 8tH with bam lor animalll, and Iii little
ouse for children. Price waa $42,500.
NOW 131,900.

....

•ss,oao.

...

••
•
•

·.....

..

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
510 4th Avonuo. Loto of 011 olro
"Better not launch her just yet. One of the
gl~o clothing. Mloc. ltomo.
workmen inside spilled collee;"
F~doy, t2,., Sot U.
'----------,r---------~
ALL Yll'd Solaa Mutt Bo Pold In r
Advonco. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
tho doy bo...._ tho od Ia 10 IUn. 11
Help Wanted
31 Homes for Sale
Sundoy odHion • 2:00 p.m.
Fridoy
.•tModondoy oclhlon • 2:00 Wontod Avon rt"-nlatlvaa, Houoo f;or Solo: 3 lodrooMa
p.m. 1 ur y.
cuotomora ond 'iiii"'pora. No With Pitlitlol l a o - In lido
Auguot 22 23, 24th. 10 Old Fon --~- noco-ry. Froa woll, Ro.-..blo. 814-388-8121.
Troll. tot HouH On Lah Stor11ng glh. Clll Koy olll4412o7180.
Up Evono Holghto OH At. 141.
==~~ 3 ~~'t.J=
Moving Solo: 30 Mill Cr~ok 12
Situation
flrolly raoro, wood burner clooo
Rood, 614-446-IIS20, Wodnoadoy,
to ochoato ond hoopltal. Wilton
Thurodoy, And Friday.
Wanted
RHity co, 30U78o3433 or 175-

I

992·6648

1-(304)773-9560

or

69~·6864

&amp;-14·'81-tfn

•VInyl Siding
•Replacement
Windows
•Roofing
•Insulation

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
742-2251
639 Bryan Place
Middleport, Ohio
11-14-tfn

USED RAILROAD TIES

CHESTER
COUNTRY CLUB
Golf

lessons 161 .... sss.oo
New Grips ............ $4.00
Woods ................ S22 .00
Irons .................. $14.75
REPAIRS
Used Irons ............ $5.00
Used Woods ......... $7.00
AWARDS
B-9·1 mo. pd.

B-12·90-tfn

W.H. MOBILE
HOME PARTS
If

you're

in nlld of

Mobile Home Parts
or Accessories...

SEE US FIRST!
992-5800
IT. 33 WEST OF
DARWIN, OliO

: ::

'"""""

...

..... .

742•2656

OilY •SELL O'rlllDI
OPEN
Tueoday thru Saturday
10:00 am-15:00 pm

742-2421
2T/J MI. outside
Rutland an New
Ulllilld.

5-10.11-tf!l.

·, .,~ .

IIOOIS,
ClmUS, nc.

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

I ·•

~. · ·

0

0

I

·BENNETT'S

0

0

0

0

0

o 0

o 0

0

0

0

MOBILE HOME
HEAnNG &amp;

COOLING

LacaiH 0• SaHerd School ld. off lt. 141

16141 446·9416 or 1·100·112·5967

0

'

Immediate

aeoo...

...!:

' ~ '&gt;~ ,
0

For

COnoldorotlon.
Got paid lor compling nomOI
ond odd-,
~_t,ooo.
Clll to800o241-313t (IO ..... In)
0&lt; wrlta: PASS£, S17D, T6t
South
Llncolnwoy,
Nonh
Aurora. m10542.
HAIRSTYLIST
NEEDED:
Oour~l!lood '11'111 Wook Pluo
Mor.l Pold v-tlono. 114-4487287.

. .. /

0

Tooch You To So A llombor Of
Our 'room. Rupo11albllhloa lncludo Admlnlotrotlvo Function
In A Co,_ilmor Flnonoltl Sor·
vlo•
. 01/lco~, Whh Ono '01 Tho
Loodwo In 1hi Flnonclol Sor·
vlcoo lncluot,Y. II You Hovo El·
Clllllll AdmlnlatNIIvo Sklllt
And Top Nolcll Phono Skllla
Ploaoo Cl111 John Brunton, At

11+441-220•

AIR CONDmONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
FIIINACES FOR MOBU &amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES
0

I~

..,....

~/31/'91 ""

,_
-·-

Eooy World Excollont Poyl Aooomblo Product&amp; At Homo. Coli
For tnlormotion. a04-14t-8003
Ext. 313.
Equol O!&gt;portunlty Emplotor.
Non Smoltlng &amp; Drug FNI Envlronmont. Aro YoiW Enorgollc,
Soli Motlvatod, Willing To .:.am
And Wloh To Bo Aocognlzod For
Your Performance? We Will

....... .

DAIWIII OliO

3-14-'91-tfn

0

'

·~

1-100-148-0070

742-2451

0

.,"

., .......

01 YOU FIR

_...,.
''"
.
'~

.....

''l~

·:.,

' ...

SANDY BUTCHER ............................. ................ III2-5371
SHERYL WALTERS......................... .. ............ .387-G421
DARLINE STEWART.......................... .............. 1112-t365
BRENDA JEFFERS ........................... ... ............192·305&amp;

71

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

seoo,

Gnol- living. t oncl 2 bodroom IPI~......a II . Ylllolll
llaiiOf
one!
RApartmento In MlddiiiiOrt From
$111. ~ ,14-192·7711. EOH.

Buy or ooll. Alvlrlno Antlquoo,
1124 E. lloln St!UI, Pomeroy.
HoUN: II.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 1:00
p.m:, Sundty 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.
114-112-2525.

laflntlo IIIII~~ .2 Bolh!1 All
Utllhloa lnol
. 1420/mo.
Do-a Aaqullod. No Pota. 114-

54

. . .7733, ~-441-4222.

llodam t aa•oom

Apa~mont,

114 ... 0310.

Lola l

-n

.

·'

FlEE· ESTIMATES

e20 Y"'~ Exporlonce
•C1Uallty Homo•, end
1 Custom Remodeling

CIII ·~J:to
......
wv. p.m.,

12

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

r"""
Wlnchlllor, Automotlc
pump. Romlngton pump.

tn

Pollrold and movie cam.a. 114-

4441-H35.
2 112 ton Inter Therm central air
unit $300. 2011 lxl oloc polo
whh 200 omp, dloconnoct wl1h

Concroto I ploatlo ooptlc tanko,

Ron Ev1n1 EnterpriMa, Jack-

OH t-80o.&amp;37o8521.
F0&lt; Bolo: Good Uood Rototlllor 5

lOft,

HorN Power, RMr Tina New
Two I P - Interior DooN, Pro-

hung, Biro: 32180. 114-44&amp;-1:m,
Evonlnga I Woahndo.
Groen otovo top lor ulo 140,
good cond~lon, 38"121", 11411112..052.
Llwn tl'lctor, uNd 3 monthe
S725. 2 ton contol AIC $500.

•• !..~

.1

:":&amp;:·

utrao.""

t i l l - Vo4l

,.

-~

I

\

~"":· Lato

Autos for Sale

75 Boats &amp; Motors

ludaol t ...........l.!Jtod

..bullt
. .,

.,lcll Rogo~ '111,000 ml!eo, 81
114-115-4214 0111 .after

c...,_

*·

'

ata~lna o1 lw; Auto
114-24WI77, ·~

--.

Ser v1ces
_.-.:

·-

Home
Improvements

57

coii30W'II-tt5&amp;
tm Monlo Corio, T·Topo,
cruloa, tift, doloy, 30W'IIo4TI5.

Musical
Instruments

Bronc! now Bundy Trombone,
$350. 304..15-341f.
Bundy Flyto, $180. 114-441·70T3.
Bundy II Alto Slxophona,
cond, 304..75·21112.
Bundy _Trom~ N.,wl Uaod t
Yoor. 1225. 81
...03.
Conn Tn&gt;mbono Uoad For 1 1111

a-

PIIYIY Maln1. Yamahli SM15H
Mon., JBL 15" 8111 Blna, Ef·

loctron I (dlgltil doloy). 114-092·
6137.

58

FruitS &amp;
Vegetables

Conning Paoclloa now ovolloblo,
1110 Bl~ltlt Pura ond Pruno
Pluma· lllor In Auguot. CIN 1•
1100-447·3760 lor pil.... BOB'S
MARKET, Mooon or OoUipollo,
OH.
Conning
Tomol-,

IIASEMEHT

WATERPROOFING
u-dlllonol Htatlfno guoranlllmlohod.
tm Ponlloc Flroblnl~ Sllahlly toa.
!!omogod On Drlvero 11klo.lloW F- aatlntotoa. Coli colloct t·
lloltory. Good R1111n11ta Condlo 114-237o0411, doy or night.
Rogore Buannt Wotorpr11on1 seoo. lt4 unn1,
flng.
44U211 Evonlnga.
1110 Pontloc Grond Prix, Good Complotallobllollamo Stt,llpe,
.........; Cotnmorloal, Rtokfin,
Condltlorl,l1,200. IM-357·'N40.
till lmprooomomo. tiiCIUGf"':
1184 AMC &amp;.all 4 WD, Air, AT, Ptumblna, Elootrlctl. lnowoAC, AIIIFM 1 "l.C, 70K 12,100; Ciolmo -plod. 114-2M-tl11.
ttll Civic sw,. Air,
Moine lmpro-nta:
AIIIFitl
llpd, 40 lllloa p.; CUrtlo
Yooro Expor- On Otdtr I
Oollo!'
,
:"
not Ownar, $1,200. Nowor
Homoo. Room Ackl•lon•,
114-2-1.
F.....Wion Worlt, Rooii.t tll Unootn Town Cor, ohorp Windowa I Siding. Frwo E;:
looldng, IIC Working cond, tlmotoal Ra~ No Job To
llg Or ....hllf4.44to0221.
14,000. :ICIW75-2337.
E l ATREE SERVICE. li~g
tilt - · Corio, :104-175-15011. Trimming,
Troe n-ot,
'
1t&amp;a Chrrator LaBoron Connr· Trlmmtnii. Frail Eatfmaloll I
tUM, tz,cJoo. 114-251-1771.
311-7H1:
1183 Chevy S-10 Blollt', Tahoo
JET
pka" euto., PW, AIIIFM, C.• Aaralfoll ....... repallod. Now
IItle, tll5 V.. enaln..l 13500. I rtobulh - - I n llock, RON
Clllofllr 5, 114-1111-1737.
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. ,.-,
1115 Clmoro lrOC, Burgundy, 537-8121.
Whh Rod lnltrlor. 18,1([0, Oi Ron's TV Sorvloe, apaOiiiJilno In ZonKh olio tlf Wlk'l· moel • ·
Ollor. 114-311-1353.
othor
Houle coHo, 1181 Clmoro ~-471oadod, oxc oomo brando.
oppllanco -',.., WY
cond, 14,500. 3
8-1111211.
304..7W3N Oltlo ftHil 2454. .
till Chtvllla, 4optl, Air eon. Soptlc Tonk Pumtllng JIQLOolllo
dHionod, Good Condhlonl
ROll ~~ liNTERPHIIES,
$1,150; 1115 PlymOUih HorllOfl, CO.
Jockaon, ""
Good Condition, 11,400. 814-:llleo
1251.
Oovlo
-Voc
Sorvlco
Crook Rd. Pa~o. o..,.:
1111 Rod Floro Loadod. nn, 0.0,..0
plloa. lllckup, oncl dollvory. IT4Cruloo, Sunroo~ "" Mlloa. 44H:ftl4.
Monl 114-441•187 · 0182.
WIH build patio OOYOrt, ~
ocroonod - . , put ,. vln
aldtna or trollor akirtlna. 1

Locot-....

'*

:i

_,.,.121,

Bollor w/pump l roglatoreo,
00/Busheli Clnnlng Bean.,
hullna avotom $400. Dltll- ...
$12.00/luohol, Wo Pick Or
wllhlr S7S. Pull! mowor 135. 18.00/Buohol,
You PlciL 304-152Gorbogo Dlo-1 S35. /Wotor 2237.
ooflonor S200. 30U75-2ttl.
llaglc Chol mlc-ovo, ulld For Bolo: Rod Roopborrioo, Pick
245-6187.
tn1 than 10 tlrnea, Ilk• n.w, Your Own. IM..a.Q..SOIW.
Will do rlnlodtllng, roofing
$160. 304-875-11188.
Good Homo G,_n Wotorbuilding. lrN trlnimlng oi:CI
lloytag Woohor And G.E. Goo mtlono For Silo, 0 1 - 1111 Oklo Dlllo 18, ez,ooo Mlloa, ramoval, houao palntfnO. For
All Power. Air, Excellent CondlDryw, mo. IM-4-,
Priolo. 114..211W460.
"" lallmot•, caN Gaorfll at 1·
tlon.114-141,4221, Alor 4p.m.
114-11112-5782. '
Queen llln walnut walerbed,
1111 Ford 1E1oort LX loW
hao ohiiVII and olirror. 304,.78I .11m St!f1pl1·',
mlloago, 13100, 114-112·iih5 o~ 82
Plumbing &amp;
1544 ahor 5 or loova a moaugo.
I«I,:GOIML
&amp; L1ves!ncK
Heating
R - M - WoolloN, Dryoro.
1111 Llnootn Town Cor Load&amp;!~,
Guorantatd - . 4 aarvlce tor
!.2,000 lllllaa, t OWnor, b0ii1on1
til Nkat, ~. Tllo Wuhor
Co~::d'*H~:'
~I tt4 441 1117 Allor
DryW Shoppa. IM•4tUt44.
F.:..., and
&amp;p.m.
OoHipollo Oltlo
RH1o Sovogo Mod. ltGE, 22-280
11t
441
,..
I
tHIIEooort
wtt~W~~raY 11t1tro
catlbor whh lx ooopa, 514-7112·
lor1_2f,OOO ~1-ixoillorit oon2221
HEAT PUMP •toi I lotvlco
dlt...,SHII,I--t
304,.'7WG91 or 114-4-.a. '

.

err,

Electl'lcll a
. Refrlg,~lon

-

Building •
SLippllia

2441-1121.

• •c.::O

6/22/tfn

1181 110-Y"":o'::'d, 4oCyt, ohoftdrlvo, runo
$500 010,
114-112-5837.
t181 Hondo Gold Wlna, fuiiV
d-1111. good
t20011.
Clllthw a-p.m. I
-8'137.

tm
Cordobo
All typoo of ........,, INiok,
outo, now ovorythlng, ST400. block ond 110M. F,.o oodoyo 1~·2151. aftor 5:30pm, llmot• 304-'173o8180,

mMor buo $'111. 304-S'IS-2321.
1-Exoorloo Toning Tobloo. Top of
tho llno by Suntonol 614-092. Yura, $275. 114 311 1401.
3033 or 11112-6586.
Gulbronoon Poc-kor Org.,
AT&amp;T collor ID box, Unldon wnh chordomotlo tncl plono
cordloootolaphono, both uood 3 keyboard. Excollont COndition,
$1400. Coli 304-882-3310 oher
montho, 304-ll7!1-t780.
4:30.
Compulor IBM compatible 40
MG HD, 5 1/4 t.2m, 3 1111 T.4m Kimball con10le ~ano, 1 112
Floppy VGl Monitor, Printer, yoor~ old, 814' 092 1 37.
304..75-17T2.

llock, INiok, ........... Win.
.
lntata,
""'·
CI!IUdll
WintiN, ·'Rio Orondo, OH Cia 114-

. "(,.

742·2328

tlllll Hlrtoy Do,_, FlH Point I Tlr•. Extra Cluomol
114-24M421.
ttml Hondo 150, 4 crt. runo
aood, 1ooko ...... HOD. 080,
!04..3'14411.

lululd DR 1500, Runa Rtal
ltrongl 1500 0.8.0. ·~
2183 .llftar 7p.m.

nnnd.:"'

55

WORK
(614)
'696-1006

Motorcycles

11111 Fal-, ltllny parto, IS.500
Ford,
tor Salt
Fol~ono, M II
. ·44412.
S4' llouaoboot Whh Low .........
lit Good Condition. Prloo
Roduoocl For Quick Ball,
115,000. Coli 114-441-4101, 1141m c...,., whfto With rod i"' 3'1Nl110.
1-. LAiolla I 1'11111 Not ......
114 4411012.
.
76 ' Auto Parts &amp;
1178 lulell LaSttbrt 415 4 laf·
Acctuorles
rail, S'IIIO. LAiolla OOOdl Runa

Spm.

'"-'

ESTIMATES)

Tra nspor!;if1on

5332.

WE DO

CARPENTER SERVICE ·
~·

74

=:-:-:-:--::~:.....-=.,.,..,,...­

ol
Exo.
cond. 114o44e.ota:
7371 a~
tarS.
Boby Gulnooo, )lluo, wflho I TURKEYS tor-. 304-17W531.
bluo, whllo, 114-141Wt71
Wrilto laogor Iarina hi,., .78 118'7 Hondo 4 - · ti;IOO.
·-·1003.
Booglo pupa, 3ll4of'l5-l543.
oonta 1 ptoco.lt44A-t25Z.
1111 Kowoolll KX-210. Loolla
Cocker Sponfol .iluPPII1i, roocfr · Zlppo Dill Plno lat Chlatnut And
Runo LIM Now! Navar
1
to go, 304,.75-Mi:l 41tor 4:00.
~: ~::":· :~: ~~ - . Farm IUddonl 11,'100, '
0 .1.0. 114-241-1811.
'
Doubto reglotlftd' -rollon Duolla,- ~
Sh~ord pupploo, IN! loci
tltt KX114-802-3537.
..o. OIIGallolll ·.
mo~u. $150. ooch. 304,.,_
11200.00,

trit

35 Lot• &amp; Acreage

'*

tNt Chtv 4x4, S/4 ton pickup,
good cond. Sotln Nlcklo llmm
Tourua polalot 8450. :104-t71o
1814.
1Ht Ford Ft50, 4x4, SWB, XLT
Lariat, novor Ulld off rood, oil
optional oxc concll aocraflco for
18,1500. JD4-f78.111vll.

1178 :t7th YofoN, 4dr~
PI, NJ, SIOO. I .

Financ1al

4-WD,

11000.

=. ,

do~y mon or In thllr
homoo, ltavo quoll~tlono oncl
,..,_, 1144112-8021 or 11112·
5073
I'

-··

tHl' &amp;-tO Btour, 4x4, T Poolloao, Good Condition,
Socrofrce I'Gr Pay otl, 114-:llleo

tm OtCia
350. - · olr, tilt,
cruloo, oxclllont oontlllion, Polto.
2213.
$1100, 1Mo112o3537.

$.; ' :

(FRE~

--l

Goadl114 1111331

llolilna
With OOflldng"
Atio)l.,., ~ All hall~

Dotalla. t) 8Q5.1182.8QOO Ext. Y·

Specializing in
""'""'·
Custom Fr. .e lapair , . .•
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
~· ·
FOR All MAKES &amp;

992-7013
or 992-5553

POMEROY
'POSTAL J08S'
S1~'18-S14.110 hr. No oxp. noodod.
For eum and application Info.,
call t-216-967-661111 7a.m.·10p.m.
7 daya.
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Elcollont
Poy,
Bont~lllo,
Transportation,
407-2112-41117,
Ext. 571. 9o.m.·t0p.m. Toll
Rolundod.
AVON f ' All Arooo I Shl~oy
Spaaro, 304-671-1429.
Bobyolttor · Noodod In VInton
Aroo. Hood Rotor-. 814-35811157 Altar Sp.m.
CANNERY WORKERS/ALASKA
Hlrl~llarVWomon. Up to 1100
woo . Tronopol1otion,__Houolng.
LL NOW 1·208·130-'11100

10181.

AUTO PAns

MOlDS

Horot o-nock Trollor,
2412411, 2-.totl o¥lrlltod, H
Ll'lll Drllllna Room, 12,500;
h ontranoo - . orootod. Nni 12 1'1. Stook Traitor, $1,785;
llorch tlth tNt AOHA Sorroll
$384V.OO Proclolon Pool Frome Filly Whh Ono Honor Point;
BulldoN 114.flll2·3541.
flllruory Mth 111110 Chootnut
Fllly,:_"':'~ ... aar Blood uno.
114'
56 Pets lor Sale ·
Groom oncl Supply ·Shop Pot I Monlh old Slmmontol buill
Grooming. All ...-_ otyln. 114-Mt-2122.
IOIJII Pol Food Dllllir. Julio
Wobb. Clll 114-441-al:lt, t.-. Boyo&amp;l1lavl1 Producrtion Solo,
w-oy,
Auguot
28th
352-Gm.
7:30p.m.
Foyotto
County
A.K.C. Cooker Spaniol, I Wilko Fol'lrounclo,
Woohlngton
old, whfte &amp; butt. 8t4 411 1081.
Cou~houoo. Soiling Duroco,
Yofllo, Hompa Ai1d erAKC Boaton Torrlor P....... , I B,.dt, Stovo bovlo London,
Wooko, Shoto, And Wonnod. Ohio et-Wsz.:m•. ii1u aayoo
8T4-358-8382.
Orient 114-17'1'o2202.
AKC lamalo &lt;lotdlll Ratlfvor Hone tor Mil. Aloo, 1 goot 114pupploo, $100. ooch. 114o411- 441 1104.
8064 or 441-T357.·
Iaiii A~ 24th o1
AKC Pomoronlum pupploo, -Coli
tp.M. Wllh l!agutor Sotutdol
ohoto I wormod. AKC: COckor IIIII.
AI,._ Uvaatock Solo&amp;. t
Spenlela. Poodlea. Snauzera.
Sail From
304.e75-21113.
·Form. u-k
Con Ona
lo
Auotrollo Shlllhord
Pupa. Chockod In Allor 4p.m. On
Roglatorod, L l - I'Gr Friday. HoUII&lt;&gt;g Avallobla. Cono
alaMIIItla Wo-1 114-812Ouolhy.
- · · Broodod 2322, 114-IM 31S1.
Slnco 111711.All51U'I5-2U7.

... ,oftarlpm. '

$30,ooatfr. Income Potantlal.

r---::W=.:H":":AL~EY~'S~-t :::,:

.

1171. 1'-150 400 .Motor. Runa
......l-oharp.I14-3DOI57.

z

1111 SUtlahlne molllle homo
T41172. aat up at QUill c - . 1o1
53. Dlnl111 ,_,., laige kllehon,
llvl~ room, two ·Dedrooma,
bath wbh aon1on tub (nice),
!1!._000. 114-fll-1245 or sow~

Dri,_: Foot Growing Tronoflr
Drivorw Noodod. Cloon Driving
A-d. CDL Not Noc-ry.
114 4418321
EARN MOHEY Rudlng Bookol

;:::
..__ _ _ _ _,;.;·24;;;.,;;1m::;o;.~ a.---~~31:.:&amp;'-l/90~/~lf~n ;,;

•RHaonabla Aatea
•Ou1llty Wolfe
•Free Eetlmet"
•Carpet Has F81t Dry
time ·
•Hig)J Glou on Tile
Floor Finish
MilE lEWIS, Ownw
II. 1, lutlantl, OH.

W....._

Supplle
,S

moNI-Ion, :IOW'II-7120:

'

!

217 •• S.C.ntl St.
JIOIIUOY, OHIO

IJIDIPENDINr
ca•n CliAJiiiiS
and 11U ROOI CAIE

01-. te , Cu. Ft. Ut&gt;righl
FIMW, Exeou..t CondltiOnl
1200. 114-441-4181..
GOOD USED APPUANCES
dryers. refrlglf'8tora,
Nngoo. Skoggo All!lllanct1,
Uppor Rlvar Rd. Boaldt SIOM

n

ElL 111785.

992·5335 or
915·3561
lcroos ,,.. Pest OHica ' ':;~

0110 45775•9626
614-742•2904

1

··. ~

IUilAND,

11• 1• lox 71·A

co '"'"' -·"'

~-==;J$~~t:3.~~ ~55===~B=u~l;::ld~ln~o:===r:63==:L:Iv:e:st:oc=k==::i =~

rvom hko, 7 r,::·• $11.17 -k,
lnoludio Bodd .,..Country Plno
Dinino Whh Borii:h I 4 Cholro,
$10.M Woak.OPEN: llondly
Thru latunloy, ILm. to Op.m,
hnday 12 Noon TIU &amp;p.m. •
lllloa ot1 Routt 7 On Aouto 141,
lnConlonory.

•. ,'I,

r.

' ,. ..

lEN'S APPLIANCE ... . . .
SEIVICE

.....

Wauar 304-882·2645.

'•

\' · ! 4.1

1.125 UL- SJS·S4S

~ ~= 2v:f, Runa Good,

304-115-;..:'·

~

CALL YOU.

AlliiADS
lrlllfl tt In Or We
Pick Up.

.

W~'Jif

uoat.'urns~ ·:r.v. N!~OIIon

1184 SohURI 14d5, 2 BR, Ill
oloctrlc, undorplitnlna, 2 porchoo, outbuUdlng. lluot bo
movad.lt4o411-1223.
1115 Rod010n Mr711, 2br 2 Fum- ADailmont 1 Bodlatho, Extnol M..t So.;1 - ...Pold. 1m1~ Milo
$14,104!, O.B.O. 114 4111105 illll
ur Ponor. 114 311 -s.
Laavo-oogo.
11811 Shull&amp; mobtlo homo. For

Help Wanted

Ol

&amp; 4 WD's
ten Clio.- 11our, . - • houlod "'1no loodod. f"
orpoaol:l:trlde:

H.itt; ·to 1-.:m. MOn.-. t14441-,.., 117 . lrd. 'Ava. ·•Cit!!llpotlo, 011 , · · . ~ ·

=:.:=:::..\\~~ ~
pr.-..
,~.

a.,,

mlloa,

vana

73

·Qood

Chtoil, 13.21 WOOlf; Pollw Bttl-

acrooga ' m!Joblo tor. Now t·BA; lumllhod opartmont
now homo •-fllclioll 011 In lllddloporl, 114-812-5225 ohor
21
Business
Roybum • Rood. Po.~id road, 1:00pm.
county
wltll',
I'NIOftabll
Opponunlty
r~otriCtlono. Complot;·.lnlormo- ·eomp1111y Fumlohod mobllo
llon mollod on nq,...t; 30W71o holnl, t mloovor·
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO. 5253, John D. Gllloch, no looldna rtvar. No ,.ta, Cl. lt44441oG131.
racomnwnda that you do bull· tlngiHIIdo trollort, plouo.
nHO wl1h pooplo you know1 and 13 ocroo on Soncl Hlft Rood, 822 Notth :ant 81, Mlddloporl, 2 bodNaT lo oond monoy tltrougn tloo n road lrontago, oily wotor, room untumlahld apt ,.,....,.
1
mall until you have lnvatlgatld ownor flnanclng, 304,.78-3030.
- oncl dopoah rtqiArod. 304the oHerlng.
18NIItll.
For 91111: 13 acroa fronlllll on
A~hur'o Chain Unk Fonoo.
CR 28l .!!!'l"h of Boohan, Clll No~h 3rd lt,Middloporl, Ohio, 1
Rooldontlol, Commorclol, In·
bodroom lllmllhod apt, rolorondultrtal, Free EatlmaiMI Com· 114-114...22.
- and dlpoaM requlrod. 304plete lnetall.. lon. Phone: 114· Houoo oncl 4-moblo homa on 182o2He.
384o8277.
ono lot. Good focollon. Good
Nonh ~~ llldd'-'1, Ohio. 2
For Sill: Local AMI•urent. oondMion. Approx. 1100 par bodroom IU'flloliacl apt, tlopooh
Income. Will rat,.n '"'
Good Bualnooo And Location. monllo
S.Voora, Now Ho- inclrt- ....lrod, - Roply To: P.O. Box 117)!,_ Gol· voolmoi'llln
WY, 304-882-24&amp;8 onytl. .l
2511,
llpoii~J _OH. All Roplloa Wll Ia
COnt. .ntlal. Sorloua lnqulrloa llottlowhlll lklbd!vlolon. 2.1 Ona lltd ·two badroom
Only I
mlloo out Sond Hill Rood, hn t~a lor . rent ldall lor
rootrlctod buldl"' Iota lor 1111 amau lllnllloa and ai"'loa. 304u low u a1100, and one acre e'11-2013orl'llo4TOO.
23 Professional
loll lor olnglo llfkfoo avollablo
Ono Bodrooin Aportmonl Living
Services
oloo, 304.e75-3410 or 171o4t00.
Room Furnlahod, Complllt
CUllom Butchering, I doyo o M1rcer Bottom ,...vllkln, Kn.- - · In loth, Goa
wook. Cowo, Hogo, Door, :104- Ot1l lOri loll, At. 2 fftWage,
prlco loducod, chy - .... 304- :l;!;,Air=~~=:.
152-2353.
578-2335. .
Rotor.,... And Depoolt R•
qullod. e!4-44f-t3'111 Aftor Op.m.
Real Eslale
·0no · bedroom unlllrnlRenlals
llrillll opa~monl, gao hta~ olr
......-., P!lvot~, VIIJ nice quill
nolgh-. Aao month. 30431 Homes tor Sale
S711'1580orl14-44f.OIII.
41 Houses lor Rent
ABSOWTELY MUST SELLII
Aoducod To Soli: 2 Story 3br $350/Mo., 1200 Dopooll. 2 Bod- SmaH tbr Aparlmllll, 7 Court
Kllchlll Whh Stovo,
c - Lat In Choohlro, Ohio. rooms, Uvlng Room, Laundiy, Stroot,
Excatllnt Contlllon. FloftiiiCina Largo Khcltail, Slnalo Oorogo. R~~l $1116/mo. Plua
Dillolll, UIIIHioa, Roloronco.
Anlloblt Wllh Poy Pointe. 804- Sman T~rd, tM-441-ftN.
1132..11&amp;1, 804432-71'111, 514-317·~12·.
t ·locfroom Ho- In C~yliPer­
01148.
tlolly Fumlohod Whh orgo Unf!lrnlohod apa~mant. 4Yard.
Coli lt4-441-4TOI, 814-:flt. roomo lnd bath upatalra, 1142-BR houoa, 3-tlcroa, 3-ml lnHn
112..808..
2JIIO.
Cltaatar, OH. 114-1115-2820.
3br Homo, 25Atroi, t IIIIo From 2·BR, buomont, big yord, olf.
!
palklna.
Clly Limbo. Will Conaldor'Trado. otriol
,rangolralfltoralor.
Cill
1~13411.
ovolllngo/WNkondl,
114-7112·
3brAFromoOnt AcrtW- 2172 or 192-2111 doyo.
Lol $2'1,500 Will conatdor Land
Controct With 1111.-..blo 3 boclroom 1112 bllhl, 2 llory,
Fumlshed
Down Poymont. 514-215·11111, ItO Pork b~vo, $375. month, 45
S250. dopooh. 304.e711·1242.
114-2M-T505.
Rooms
Booutllul 4-BA · In
Syrocu.oo.
Baumlntlcooport. A - tor Nnl · - o r month.
Coli IT4412oiZI8 doyo or 112· Stortl:Z II tciO/mo. Ollila Hol&lt;l
S7SV .
11~ 4 .~10.
.

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR

··~,- ·- . '~ ~-. ,\"... .

Cou!1IJ \'Afipis-,; lno.

NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
t-800.255-0242.
AVON ·All 1r111, Clll Morllyn

I

..-:..

Couiill' I'( .... . . ,,.,......

1310. ~ ~

u.

~~· ··

HAULING

STEWlO'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

11

:::0
I "1:'.:'
4:30fl&lt;it
.

S3!10/DAY PROCESSING
PHONE OADEASI PEOPLE

7·15·81- 1 mo. pd.

APPAlACHIAN
WATER

t

Mlloo, Aulolt351 Englno, Air, 114441o4225A w4p.m.
tNt Chivy lotO, ~&lt; AIIII'M

._..

245-678e.

I I

..

949-2168

12115 3BR moblla homo on 2
tcrt lot whh 1'-32 gortgo,
otorago bulldlnaa, rural WJtor,
uklng ·tn;too. ._14-258ol40t or

1117 Ford, F-150 XLT, 83,00!1

Cnlot ~~ . cau 114o411-7311.
Kina at• _ , bad, comploto
boG !ramo one! hladboonl, 30457W819.
44
Aj)artment
LAYNE'S PURNrruRE
lor Rent
Complito
·lllm~~~~J:·
Houra: IIDMiat,
W.
1
1·BR, carpotod, untumlthod 0322, 3 .milia 0111 Bulavllo Rd.
opa""*'l, pa~lll utiiKioa paid. Frwo Dlllvory.
Roror- one! dopod ,..
PICKENS PURNrrUAE
qu!lod, ·~~.
NowMiod
1br Apa~ment, Wltar, a-, Hollaaltold furnishing. 112 mi.
Gorbo111 Pold. o.pooil 11.. .lorrtcho Rd. Pt. Plolioonl, WV,
~:.r. Clll_114-4- Ahtr coii:IOW'IS-1450.
RENT20WN
2 ali ~~~~-. Stovo, a r~lrlg.
tum'od. Wotor I INih piU
Vl'raFumh.,.
tum'ecl; 11t ttl 3140.
Sofa I Choir, 111.10 Wook;
Reali-. $5.47 Woak, Swlvll
R..Ur, SU3 Woak.lunll loci
Complllo SUI Woak, 4 or.-r

labyoltt!nil In my homo, Mondoy thru l'ridty~ ocrooa from
North Point xhoo!r r.vo

I

Downspouts

fntlstlans

tor Sale

llobllt H - For 11¥!. quill
locotion, calilo TV 111ialloblo,
Hud opprovad. 114 441 0801 or
44U32'!.
.
•
Quill .'I!'UniiY -lng eloal to
town. 2 BR, 121'111, lrimt pon:h,
ACil t2SO.mo. plut utllltloo, Dop.
&amp; of. roqullod. Roady to movo
Into. IT4-4411-1125.
Smoll tumlahld 2 -......,.,
lie, obovelocko ond darn on Rt.
2. All utiiHiao paid, $150.
doDOatt. 304,.71-2321.

BobyoK In My Homo
Anrt)ptt.
Rodnoy
Area
Rolollnceo Avollablo. Con 114'

I
I

Gutters

01 Site llstlllllos

32 MObile HOmJS

24!1o8020or30W18-~:Z.

Win

::II

•P'

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

ooklng $31,500, 114-1112:2721.

Wanted to Do

I &lt;

cloud .. ~• •
"'"' ·
the buys you'll find In the
.
clossi(leds.
"' ,,

~·11 be "-'-g 00 0

l1stallla C.U.Iar
Pllous, G. Stereos
or Radios, CB's

8/18/1 mo. tin

Uood Mobllo Homu, Can 614·
446oG175.
Wanted 11 lunk and acrap met·
ol, 304-888.0036.
Wontad to buy, Stondlng tlmbor,
Bdb Wllllomo l Sono 814-11112·

18

(

Cl'lrilttv Drake

992-2269

9

~

Fair,

Vory nloo' 3.. R Allnch, brick

front, .rport, 112 be~,
hordwood llaort, JtO ocr11, :1ml 1nHn Holz• Hoaplttl SR 1110,

NowiiiSoutlloaattm
lull limo auctlonoor, compl~o Rotroln
ouctfoll oorv~. Llconlld Ohio, BUlin- Collogo, StHina Yalloy 44f.l:ll1,1
Plozo. Clll TodiJ, 114o44f.4317H
Will Ylrglnlo, 304·7'73-5785.
Aoglotorotion -121118. · ·

•

my Market
Lambs at the
Mal"gs County

BILL SLACK

Compa~ny.

\

lflt/1

•FIREWOOD

Rlc,1c; _Peai'IOn A!-lctlon

Employment Services

Haffelts Outlet
for purchasing

•LIGHT HAULING

And

7109. .

11102.
For Ront Or F_or lalo: Vtrr Nlco,
Unlurnlohoc!, .14•'111 MobiiO
Homa, With h2ll Ex...,., ~
1 Both, Docii..UndorJtlanlna....,
Control Air lnol-. Coif 114-

Top Prlcoa Pold: .All Old' U.S. Nfwencl:e, 3()4.11'5-4814:.
Colna, Gold Alnga, Dlomonclo Buoh llclg Sorvlct. Roioonoblo
Sll~or Cotno, Slorll!'l, Gold Roloa. No Job .To Smolll 114COino. M.T.S. Coin SIIOp, 1St 378-21142.
Socond Avonll!l, Golllpollt.

thank Fruth
Pharmacy and

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

Uvo~n

Shoro Ront. Apply At: 607
S.concf Avenue, Apt· G, Qal..

lfpollo.
Wontod: Oldor Pooplo To Clro
BIG Yard Sale, Nothing over For In Thllr Homo Night Shih.
$2.00. Lola ol chlld,.n'o clotho 20 Yoo,. Exporililco. Con Olvo
Ina. latur~y. 123 Pork Drlvo.
Excellent Relarancu, 614-4481830.
Public Sale
8
14
Business
&amp; Auction
Training

!S«V.

'

to

Day or Night ·.
NO SUNDAY CALLS

I0/30tl9 lfn

Convertible Tops,
Carpats, Headliner
&amp; Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair.

GOLD RIDGE - Doubtewlde Only - A deal too good to
be true. A 2&lt;1x48 Palriot mobile home thai has 3 bedmoms, two lull baths, a family room, and a living room.
Also at this low price owner will pay $1 ,000 the cost of
moving.
S1B,900.

•

r-----:~---.

7-25 1 mopd.

RACINE- Pine Grove Roed - On a blacktop road. This 3
bedroom, 1-1/2 bath home with a 2 car garage is selling
on 3.2 acres. Make an appointment to see this one
TODAY.
$25,500.

For part of us went
with you,
The day God called
you "ome.
We never thought you
would.get sick,
We never thought you
would die,
i
For all you wen1
through,
God uw you needed
reat.
God'sgarden must be
beautiful,
For He only picks thit

Cltizena are encouraged
to ettend thia meatinil on
September 9, 1991 , to provide their input on the
County'a program.
Melgt County
Commlaaio-a
·
Mery Hobstlltter, Clerk
18) 23, 30, 2tc

card

&amp; Operator

SIDING CO.

alone,

Imminent Threet Grani Pro-

gram.

~==;;;:::1t:======:;r;:::====:::;r;:::::;:;:;:;;:=;r.:;:::::;;:;:;::::::;. '•
THE
PARKER
· 'BISSELL
DAVE'S
Howard L Writestl
.'::..
GROOM CONSTRUCTION
BUI.LDERS
ELECTRONIC
ROOFING .
ROOM
cusTOM BUILT
SERVICE
NEW - REPAIR ' .
...

BISSELL

IN MEMORY OF
BESSIE HENRICKS
A million times we
needed you,
A million times we
cried.
If love could have
saved you,
You never would have
died.
In life, we loved you
dearly;
In death. we love you
still;
In our heart you left a
place
No one elae can fill.
Each thing we do,
each place we go,
We seem to feel your
presence so.
It broke our heerte to
loose you.
But· you did not go

NQTICEOF
tl8a. The aCttvltioa mull be
PUBLIC HEARING
designed to prlmllrUy benefit
The Meigs County Com- law and moderate income
mloatonen intend to apply to pet'aona or aid In l i l a - tho Ohio Department of De- lion or elimination of aluma
velopment for funding under and blight.
tho Community OevalopNo activity In the Formula
mont Block Grant (CDBG) Program can be julllfted
Small Cltleo Progrom, a f• under Urgem Need. tile Of.
dorally funded program ad· flee of Locol Go-nment
miniotored by tho State.
Servlceo hoo fundaoat eslde
Tho County antlcipateo to for thta purpo• through tta
be eligible for opproxlmatoly
$109,600.00 of Flocel Veer
1991 CDBG funding. providing the County meatoappllcable program requirements.
1
of Thanks
On September 9, 1991. at
7 P.M., the first of two publie hearings will be hold at
WOUld like to
lhe Meig1 County Courthouae to provide citiuns
thank Farmers
with pertinent intormetton
B k
d
obout tile CDBG program.
an an
=~r:.~~:.~v~~:.~~:~o~r: Home National
gram
requlrementt. The
Bank for
CDBO progrem can fund o
broad range of tctlvltloaln·
purchasing my
~~~~n:~oi:~~~::;.:~.~:;
market lambs
oupply, drainage ond llnl·
at the Mal'gs
tory sewer improvemonts;
domoliton of un~aft ttrucC
F '
turoo:rehobllltotlon of houoounty 81r.
ina snd nalohborhood facillJamie Drake

Business Services
For All Breeds

In loving memory of
GEORGE ALBERT
HILL
who passed away
10 years ago today,
August 23. 1981:
loved and sadly
missed by family
and friends

Public Notice

PubliC Notice

~==~===:.=:i!:::::::=:::=:=::u:::=::::::=~-=:_ ,,

Complete

ME~o'IORIUM

Public Notice

:r·a - """'"

Kaniua:·
PartL 114

Noad Somoono To

We love youl

Our heartfelt thanks to the
doctors and nurses at Holzer
Hospital, and to our many
friends who sent cards and
flowers, and called during
Gerald's hospitalization. May
God bless you .
Gerald and Mildred Shuster

2bi:!r A~, Clblo, Now~ ~eo
loon, a..utllul Rlvir v-ln

Yard Sale

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

5

2 bedtootn tNIIor complotoly ·

klltana to good

homo, 114-843-6445.

'.
r'

..

TrJ,~tkl

72

52 - Sporting .Goodl
53 Anttques
&amp;4 Misc. Merchandise
55 Building SuppliM
56 Pets tor Salt
57 Mulicll lnsuuments
58 Fruits &amp; Vegt111bt•
i9 For Sale or Trade

2 1 Busines s Opponunny
22 Money to Loan
2 J ProfesSional Ser v• cvs

'

71 - Autos lor Sale

Mer chandise
51

I'

Transportalion

41

Employmenl
Serv1ces

,, r..

61 · Farm EqUipmvnt
62 Want ed to Bt•y
63 livestock
64 Hay &amp; Grain
'65 - Seed &amp; Fer111iz e r

Rell Elllle 'Winted

Wanted to Buy

d ~ s ;~ I r.u c h•ge

COPY DE ADUNE
MONDAY PAPER
TU ESDAY PAPER

Esl ale

32 Mobil a Hom.. tor s ..a~
33 Firms lor S 1lle
3 I Busin•s Buildings
l!t Lots 6 Acreage
36

C1t1

Far rn S,Jpplies
&amp; LJveslock

31 · Homes lor Salt

In M emory

3

9

·p,.eto o l ad lOt a ll c ~ut a lletten •s doubltqHtCt! ol ad cos t
• 7 IJOHll hn e IVIHJ only usttd
'St:nlnlt:-1 ts ttot re sponstblt! to r error s ahcr f1r st dflll ! C h t~d
lor t!rro r\ tnst d ay ad.f\!!15 111 papm) Call h elot!! 2 00 p m
,,,,.. d llt-'1 pubh C&lt;JIIOIIIO rn a kt-: co rre c tmn
·Ad~ 1ha1 ntu :!&gt;l be piud '" advanct: au:

o-.'fklllh 111. t'~·
on 'fllihl•.,Pol,nl Pliiu.nt,

call :104-7'73-1564.

RATES

TO PlAH AN AD CAll 992-2156

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

tnllllr,-·

,
'

-k-- ·

Livestock · _
'4-llodlll- luilotk E-. 1141112·87Z ohor 7:qtlpnl.

'

'

.

�~

,.,_

-

••

-

-.

-

-

-

- . ....

-

-

-

~

&lt;

•

.~

.. '

'

•

~

~-

..

•

-= " - -

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

•

~

Friday, August 23; 1991

Curtis family holds 84th reunion ··
The 84th annual reunion of the ine Spiger Foster.
ley, Johnstown; Ruth Muska,
Hoyt and ~ Cathecine (Foster)
Gifts were presented to Ruby Columbus.
Corns family was held recently at Curtis of Granville for the oldest
From the Mollie CurtiS Swank ·
· . th~ I:ong Bottom Community woman; John Brewer of Reedsville Grimes Pullins family werc ·Don
· Bulldmg. The descendants of the for oldest man· Cameron Curtis, and Yvonne Griffith,. Granville;
So~ma (Curtis~ Osbo!" Mc':Hclde Granville, you~gest child; Roger Ruby Sarbaugh, Newark; Dora
fam1l~ hosted this Yeal; s reumon.
and Elaine DeWolfe, Talbott, Crispin, Westerville; Paula Kelps,
Ketth ~s()le~, president, opened TeM., ttaveling the farthest; Walter Westerville; Stormy Weiland,
the .meet!ng With prayer _and the and Ruby Curtis, Granville, mar- Columbus; Sarah Hamilton,
fam1~y enJoyed 8.JK&gt;tluck dinner.
ried the longest, 57 years; and Don, Columbus; David, Sherry and
Ptctures P.rovtde~ by Yvonne Janet, Casey and Cameron Curtis, Linda·Griffith, Newart.
(Swank) Gr!ff1th were on dtsplay Granville, for being the largest
From the Chloe Curtis Anderson
and th~ prestdent accepted updates household .attending outside ihe family were Kermit and Ann
on family stausdcs. Noted were the hosting family.
Anderson·, Alexandria; Perle and
deaths smce the last reumon of
Yvonne Swank Curtis was elect- Margaret Anderson, Newark.
John Sarbaugh, husband of Ruby ed president and the Filure Curtis
From the Alban Curtis family
Swank Satbaugh, New!l"k; Ruth Palmer family wijl host next year's were Perry and Sylvia Curtis,
Brown Palmer, forme~ w1fe of Cur- reunion in East Liverpool.
Reeds~ille; Doug, Catolyn, Matt
us Palmer of East L1verpool; and
Attending from the Sonoma and Jodi Bissell, Tu_Ppers Plains;
Earl Cross, hu.sband of Geraldine Curtis Osborn McNickle family Sandy, Tommy, SylviB an(! George
HolterC~ss. R~ine.
.
were Robert and June Ashley, MacDonald, Pomeroy; Paul and
New discovenes on the hneage Racine, Keith, Emma, Rachel, Sheila Curtis, Pomeroy; Chuct and
, of the fl!"'ily were announce:&lt;~ . Mrs. Whitney, and Emily Ashley, Liz Curtis, Springboro; Jennie ·:
Geraldme Johnso~ Patchm, Las Pomeroy; Harold DeWolfe, Jr., Eynolds, Parketsburg, W.V~~o.; John .
Vegas, ~ev ., who IS a descendant Newark; Roger and Elaine and Majorie Brewet, Reedsville; AI .
of Cynthia Curus Rob1nson, locate DeWolfe, Talbott. Tenn .; and and Marilyn Pooler, Miilmisburg. ·
the ancestry of Susanna Brooks Heidi, Cody and Ashley Smith,
From the Filura Curtis Palmer
the celebration. Pictured, f'rom Jeri,· are 'Travis
CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY. Mrs. Vina
Gro~. g~t grandmother of Hoyt Clifton, W.Va.
family were Bill and Mary Powell, .
Hysell, his mother Terri Hysell, Ann Zirkle,
Preece, Inez, Ky., celebrated her 88th birthday
Curus. Thts was shared wllh the
From the Sarah Catherine Curtis East Liverpool; and Curtis Palmer,
Roberta Swisher and ViDa Preece.
recently and nve generations were present for
famliy.
Rose Hilton family were Gordon East Liverpool.
:rwo poems were read. One was and Beuy Rose, Newark; Brian and
From the George Curtis family .
wntten thts year ~Y Betty Rose Donna Bradford, Wooster; Randy were Hobart and lnzy Newell,
Duke on the Curtis fam1ly . The Rose, Newark; Kenneth and Betty Chester; John, Maty, Scott and /
~ther .w,!ls wnttcn by Ehzabeth Duke, Alexandria; Dick, Gail and Mike Newell, Long Bottom.
Mrs. Vera Breece, Inez, Ky ,, Bryan Rarich, Columbus; Mr. and Samantha, Jessica and Travis,
L1zz1e Foster, SISter of Mary Elaine Roberts, Johnstown.
Guests attending were Trenia
celebrated her 88th birtllday recent- Mrs. Paul Maynard, Jessica and Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Cecil May- Cathenne Foster Corns. It 1s esuFrom the Arta Curtis Johnson Buch8JI(Ifl, Long Bottom; and Tim,
ly at th e home of her daughter, Courtney, Point Pleasant, W.Va.; nard Jr., Jesse and Arnbel, Racine; mated to have been wnttcn around family were Don and Maxine Bai- Heather and Justin Gano.
Mrs. Roberta Swisher in New Mr. and Mrs. Russell Maynard, Mr. and Mrs. David Zirkle and 1900 abom her other, Sarah CatherHaven, W.Va.
Samantha and Rusty, Mason, Brenda, Racine; and David Warth,
Five generations were present.
W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hysell, Pomerov.
A blue and white, rose decorated birthday cake was served along
.
with drinks following dinner.
Attending were Harley Swisher,
Tile 64th annual Hayes Young William H. Rose.
Steavers, William H. Rose, Audra ~
Mr. and Mrs. Ermal Preece, CamHoliday School reunion was held
Music was provided by Tami Hayes, Jim, Garoldene,:Jamie •
bridge; Mr. and Mrs. James Ray
on the old school grounds Warmke and Colleen I;lrickles. Boyd, William Mullen, Fern :
oCe and Dallas wiU be perform- val in Rutland on Aug. 31 at 2 p.m. recently
Preece, Pilgrim, Ky.; Faye and
with
87
in attendance. A basket Songs were sung by Craig Dougan, Cheesebrew, Robert, Gladys ;
. ing at the third annual street festi- 1
Other events throughout the day lunch was served with blessing "God Bless America Again;" Tami Chaney,
Oden, Kay, Russel EUts, •
will include a fish fry, games. asked be Leroy Sauters.
Warrnke,
"Blue
Eyes
Crying
in
the
Joe,
Lynette,
Billy Mace, Jeremiah, ;
dunking machine man·ned by the
The afternoon .program was Rain;" Ian Steavers, ""God's Not Jerod Jordon, Tami, Ciara :
Meigs High School Cheerleaders called to order by Hollie Hayes
and the Meigs High School Flag who asked AI Friend to open with a Oead;" 'Shannon Steavers, ""I'll Do Warmke, Chad, Brad Bean, Rex, •
Corps, craft tables, bake sale by the moment of silent prayer and also It for Jesus;" Joy Sauters, "He's · Kathy, Adam, Cumings, Joyce, ;
Been Faithful;" Melinda Chancey, Leroy, Joy Sauters, Gladys Cum- •
fire department auxiliary, Cruise-in opening prayer.
"God
Bless America ." Mandy ings, Whttney, Breydon Hapton- :
Car show, hourly door prizes and a
The secretary's report was read Eastman read two poems. Winners slall, Charles, Dianna, Kelsey, Brit- ;
Mister and Miss and Prince and by Ka!by Dougan and officers were
of the melons were Gladys and nee Sauters, Mary Hayes, Joey •
Princess Contest.
elected.
They
include
Hollie
Hayes,
Robert
Chaney and Colleen Brick- Jarvis, Kara Dearil!g, Virginia Gib- :
Other entertainment throughout
ks.
· son, Grant, Drew Gibson, Juanita :
president;
Craig
Dougan,
vice
presthe day will include the Meigs
ident;
Kathy
Dougan,
secretaryRichards, Manda Eastman, Mr. and •
Attending
were
Craig,
Kathy.
High School Marching Band, the treasurer; and Garoldene Boyd and
Mrs. Lloyd Hayes, Theresa, Tracy &gt;
Kandi,
Stevie
Dougan,
Floyd,
Midnight Cloggers and the Country
Craig
Dougan,
game
commiuee.
Shaffer,
Estelhi Colburn, Roger, ;
Colleen
Brickles,
Albert,
Kim
,
Misfits.
Gifts
were
presented
to
the
oldDea
Hayes,
Don, Margaret Wolfe, .
Rachel,
Holly
Friend,
Rex
,
Diana
There will also be a pic baking est man, William Mullen; oldest
Lori
Hayes,
Sharon,
Ned Swindell, :
Dixon,
Grace
Richardson,
Robert,
and cake decorating contest with
woman,
Clara
Gilkey;
youngest,
Ken,
Dorthy
Chaney,
Pearl Gilkey, ·
Stephanie, Miranda, Jason Alscpt,
entries to be in by noon and judgCiara
Warmke:
farthest
di"stance
,
Carl
Brickles
and
Mr.
and Mrs. :
Chuck
Karns,
Flora
Yates,
Hollie,
. ing at 2 p.m. The pies and cakes
Leon
Sautcrs.
Linda
Hayes,
Ian,
Shannon
will be auction at4 p.m.
For more information on the
days activities or to register for a
craft table or the Mister and Miss
or Prince and Princess contest contact Joan Stewart at 742-2421 or
The 5i&gt;th annual Parker reunion
Kim Willford at 742-2103.
was held at the Tuppers Plains Ele- sen ted gifts to· youngest girls, Sarah Parker; traveled farthest,
mentary School recently. Frances Misha Parker, age four; and Gail Miller; largest family, PooleFrederick asked the blessing before youngesl boy, Tyler Lee, age two; Parker family, Martha, Joe, Wlll
oldest woman , Irene Patkcr, age Poole and Nellle'Partet. A special
the basket diMer.
Willis Parker, president, con- 79; oldest man, Robert Ashley, 70; present was presented to Francis
recently man~ed. Homer and Frederick who had not been able to
ducted the business meeting and
Officers were elected at the asked
attend since 1982 due to family illthose attending to give their
recent meeting of the Racine names and the name oftheir family
ness.
Grange held at the horne of Mr. and
branch.
All
branches
or
the
family
.
. Attending from Parkersburg,
Mrs. Chuck Alkire.
were represented. The group voted .
W.Va., were Jerrod, Dian and
New officers are Dorothy Smith, to change the meeting time to the
Misha Parker, Ted and Gladys
master; Chuck Yost, overseer; flTSt Sunday in August at the same·
Parker, WiUis Parket.
Emma Adams, lecturer; Laura Cir- place with dinner at 12:30 p.m. The ·
From Meigs County were June
cle, Steward; Helen Pickens, assis- same officers were elected for next
and
Robert Ashley, Nellie Parket
tant steward; Geraldine Cross, lady year.
Wilma
and Howard Parker, lren~
assistant steward; Mary Easterday,
Mary
Parker.
11ift
chairman,
preParker,
Mildred Caldwell, Leland
Dear Readers: {am on vacmion,
chaplain; · Jean Alkire, secretaryParker,
Martha,
Will and Joe Poole,
bur I have left behind some c! my
treasurer; Nita Yost, ceres; Mary
Homer
and
Sarah
Parker, Albert,
favorite coiUIMS that you may have
Kay Yost, Pomona; Shirley Sayre,
George
and
Mary
Parker, Tyler
missed the [ust time arorwl.l hope
. Flora.
Lee,
Keith,
Emma
Whitney,
Rachel
you enjoy them. -- AM l..alrlkrs
The executive committee is
and
Emily
Ashley.
Others
attendANN
LANDERS
Dear ADD l,e""n: rm anochcr
Emma Adams, Aaron Sayre and
ing were Aaron Parker, Columbus;
" 1"1, Lot Aa&amp;ela
Chuck Yost.
one who "nevet thought rd end up
nm.. SyndiCIIIe anc1
Gail Mills, Elizabeth, W.Va.;
The grange endorsed the tuberwriting to Ann Landers," but I
The Harrisonville OES held its
Creators SyncBcate."
Frances Frederick, Smithville,
culosis
levy
for
the
November
elecrmaiiy got ~~~ere, like an the rest
regular meeting recently with worW.Va.
My problem isn't serious, just always in the presence ot my tion.
thy matron Janet Bolin and worthy
The next meeting will be the
Grange dues for 1992 will be patron Charles King in charge.
awfully annoymg.
husband and children. I nevet even
first
Sunday in August 1992 at
While riding the bus to wort and knew the girl and I had no interest $10 per member.
There were 34 members and two
12:30
p.m. at the same place.
The by-laws were amended and guests present, Mr. and Mrs. Lew
back I always cmy a magazine or a in her whatevet.
TRAVELED THE FAR·
the
meeting
time
will
be
for
7
p.m.
Schoenian.
newspaper to read. The bus is
THEST · ·Gall Mills, Eliza.
One evening at dinner my mother- during the year.
The worthy matron read a poem
usually crowded, but since I get on in-law was going on and on about
beth, W.Va., traveled the farand an introduction.
thest to attend the annual
early, I always get a seaL Within Mary Beth until I fmally intenupled
All of the past matrons and past
Parker Reunion held recently
five minutes !IOIIleone is sitting next and asked her to please change the Cindy Faulk claims
patrons
of Harrisonville Chapter
at Tuppers Plains Elementary.
to me. Two minutes lata I have subject.
weekly TOPS honors were presented and welcomed. The
this sttange feeling, like his eyes
She accused me of overreacting
worthy matron told them how
Lanny and Rena Longstreth, .
are wandering ovet my reading and made a big &lt;bl out of iL I, of
Cindy Faulk was the best week- much they had helped her and as a Golf results released
Harrisonville,
are announcing the •
Results of play at the Tuesday
material. I glance quickly to see if course, ended up looking like a ly loser and Virginia Pooler was token of appreciation she read a
birth
of
their
daughter, Alyssa •
my hunch is right and, of course, it damned fool, jealous wife. Suddenly, the runner up at the recent meeting poem to them and presented each Morning Ladies League at the Rachelle, born July 5 at Holzer ·
Meigs County Golf Course on Aug.
IS.
I realized it was the moment she of Ohio TOPS Club No. 570. The of them two candles.
:
13 were Debbie Sayre, low gross; Medical Center.
best KOPS weekly loser was LinI then feel that I should ask had been waiting for.
Lew Scheonian, honored mason, Norma Custer, low net: Elizabeth
She weighed seven pounds and ·.
permission to tum the page. Maybe
So perhaps "Seething's" mother- nie Aleshire.
was presented and invited to sit in Lohse, low putts; and Debbie four ounces and was. 20 inches ·
KOPS members will be honored the East
long.
"
my seatmate llasn't finished reading in-law is laying a trap, as my own
Sayre, chip-in-hole.
at
Tuesday's
meeting.
the article.
All
those
having
held
former
Maternal
grandparents
arc
Lee
~
mother-in-law did. I hope she
Results from Tuesday were
Anyone interested in losing grand appointments were presented
I am not a selfish petSOD, but I ign&lt;m the bait and keeps her mOUth
and
Rachael
Lefebre,
Harrisonville
.
•
Debbie Sayre, low gross; Norma
weight is welcome to attend the and welcomed.
Paternal grandparents are J{enny .
would dearly love to enjoy my bus shuL •• OUI'SMARTED
Custer, low net; Debbie Sayre, low and Betty Longstreth, Langsville.
weekly meetings on Tuesday at the
The
charter
was
draped
in
memreading without worrying about the
DEAR OliT: You might have a Carpenters Hall. Weigh-in begins
ory of Iva Johnson followed by the putts.
They also have a son, Corey,
person sitting next 10 me. What do point, in which case I would alter at 5 p.m. and meeting is at 6 p.m.
Starting Tuesday tee-off time age five.
worthy matron'l'eading a poem,
you suggest? -- NETTLED IN my advice to: "Your mother-in-law
.. instead of 8·30 am
..
entitled "Come Meet Me in the will be 9 am
PITISBURGH
is no mind reader. TeU her bow you
Garden." Johnson was the oldest
DEAR NET: Carry a magazine feel - privately."
Pam Walburn honored
member of the Harrisonville Chapand a newspaper. While you are
De.- AU Lucien:. I.reid IOday with bridal shower
ter.
reading the paper, offer the where a 73-year-001 ~er: .fathered
Announcement was made that
magazine 10 your seatmate. You twins. Is this possible? .
Gen. Hartinger Pkwy !479 J.c:kaon Pike
Pam Walburn, bride-elect of the reception of Betty Schenkel.
364 Eaat Main St .
GALLIPOLIS
MIDDLEPORT
mi~ht even confess it bothers you to
My husband says the old goat Raymond Roach , was honored deputy grand matron, will be held
POMEROY
814-448-3837
614·992-5248
have someone reading ovet your must have had some help with recently with a bridal shower at the Septl5 at Maxsburg.
614-992-8292
shoulder.
the project •• like perhaps a Pomeroy Nazarene Church.
It was announced that Alice
Attending were Shari Blackwell, Young is in the hospital, that Lois
And please don't feel like a lieak. young farmhand or a close
Your problem is shared by thousands friend. How about it? -- ALSO Madeline McClung, Sis Stephen- Pauley is a little better and Frances
son, Barbara Colmer, Marcia Young is not well. Get well cards
-- including me. Only it's not the SUSPICIOuS
bus, it's on planes.
DEAR SUSPICIOUS: That man Houdashelt, Loraine Venoy, Molly were signed for them.
A thank-you' letter from the Iva
Dear Ana Landers: About that of 73 may well have fathered Roush, Patty Roush, Doris Lewis,
rnothec-in-law who kept the phoco twins. Male fertility often continues Virginia Smith, Dorothy Roach, Johnson family wa's read.
Zora Rawson, Pam Sellers, Sue
Larry Well thanked the chapter
album with snapshots of her son and indefinitely.
Stewart,
Kvla
Sellers,
Reva
for
the get wen cards sent to him
his fonner Sweetheart on the coffee
Incidentally, multiple births have Woyan, lona Brickles, Nathan
while
he was in the hospital.
table •• your reply to "Seething no relalion to virility.
Cheri
Thomas,
Mary
Matherton,
Birthdays
were as follows: ~I
Wife" didn't quite make il
Wlte11 pltwWig a wedding, who Walburn, Tammy and Kimberly
Canaday.
Sabra
Gibson, Jane Wise,
You aid, "Your mother-in-law is pays for wltol? Who strwls wltere? Johnson, Guyla Walburn and JackFrances
Young,
Charles King ;
no mind reader. Speak up and tell "Tite AM Lalldtrs Gllidt for Brides" ie Walburn.
·
Chester
King,
Gracie
Wilson, Neva
her how you feel. •
luJs all the answers. Send a
The cake was baked by Sharon Nicholson and Lew Scheonian.
One needn't be a mind reader to stl/· addressed, lo11g, bluiMss-siu Stewatt and games were played
Bob Reed gave the blessing
have a IiUie sensitivity. I went enwlope Olld a check or money and prizes won by Pam Sellers, before
the group entered the dining
through a similar eqlerience with order for $3.65 (this incl11des Lorame Venoy, Sue Stewart and area for refreshments and fellowWRH MEDIUM FRENCH FRIES
my motber-in·law. My husband's pollllge iJNI ltaNlling) to: Brides, Shari Blackwell.
ship.
former sweetheart was ,!he girl next c/o Ann /,.liN/ers,P.O.Box 11562,
The wedding will be an event of
refreshment committee was
doOr. For eight yean. I was trealed Chicago. Ill. 606I1·0,562 . (In Sept. 7 at the Pomeroy Nazarene Mr.The
and Mrs. Joe Bolin, Mrs. Neva
Church.
to the latest news on "Mary Be~" .. C/UIIlda, send $4.45.)
Nicholson and Jane Wise.

Vera Preece celebrates 88th birthday

Sunda.'

75 cents

3 Gallia
churches
consolidate

Florida State top AP poll choice- C-1
Syracuse native receives Doctor of
Ministry Degree - Page B-5

B-1

Finding peace, solace in old world
craft of woodmaking- Page E-1

Vol. 26, No. 29
Copyright-.! 1001

MOSCOW (AP) - Mikhail
Gorbachev, who remains Soviet
Gorbachev resigned as Commurtist pres ident and a party member.
Party chief on Saturday and urged staunchly defended Communism
its central leadership to disband the while leading six years of sweeping
institution that has ruled Soviet life reforms. He shed the troubled party
through intimidation and force for as he sD'Ilggled 10 preserve his perseven decades.
sonal power and prevent the disinThe resignation culminates a tegration of the 15 republics that
stunning Kremlin shakeup that fol- make up the Soviet Union.
lowed last week's failed coup and
Th e Ukraine on Saturday
indicates the scope of the anti- became the latest Soviet republic to
Communist groundsweU headed by declare independence, and jubilant
Russian Federation President Boris crowds around the nation continued
Yeltsin, who led the coup resis- to topple symbols of the Commutance.
nist Pa:rty, which has ruled nearly
Moments before the announce- every aspect of Soviet life since the
ment was read to millions of Soviet 1917 Bolshevik Revolution.
television viewers, Gorbachev
Yeltsin, meanwhile, continued
appointed a new committee to to flex his muscle over the Kremlin
select new members of the discred- by ordering the seizure of Comm uited Cabinet of Ministers who nist Party and KGB archives.
failed to fight the hard-line coup.
Yeltsin on Friday suspended the

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Chance of rain 20 pen:enL

activities of the hard-line Russian
faction of the Communist Party,
banned the party from the KGB,
and temporarily shut down the
party newspapers.
Party archives and documents
also were sealed at the Smolny
Institute in Leningrad, Lenin's
headquarters during the Bolshevik
Revolution.
Earlier Saturday, hundreds of
thousands of Muscovites gave a
martyrs' funeral to three men killed
in battles against the coup. Yeltsin
and Gorbachev, wearing red arm
bands, attended the ceremony.
Gorbachev charged that the
party leadership did not stop the
coup and said that party leaders and
mass media supported the conspiracy.
"In this situation. the Commu-

rtist Party of the Soviet Union must
make a difficult but honest decision
about dissolvinR itself," he said.
Gorbachev also ordered all the
vast holdings of the Communist
Party be turned over to the parliment.
Although the Communist Party
appeared doomed, Gorbachev indicated he supports a refonncd vision
of the party.
"I believe that democratic minded Communists loyal to con·
stitutionallawfulness, to the course
of renewal of society, will call for
the selling up of a party on a new
foundation, " Gorbachev said.
The party, which officially has
about 15 million members, for
decades ruled all sectors of th e
nation - from defense policy, to
agriculture, to pensions . Under

Gorbachev's reforms, opposition
groups were f II'S! allowed last year
and the most influential official~!
left the party .
At the funeral , both Yeltsin and
Gorbachev gave emotional eulogies, calling the men crusaders for
freedom.
''We say goodbye to our heroes,
our defenders , our saviors. or
course, we arc not saying goodbye
to their names - because their
names will become sacred to Russia," said Yeltsin, who led the
resistance to the hard-line coup
plotters.
"This is a difficult day for us, a
hard day, but it could have been
even worse, because the enemies
are already like cockroaches in a
bottle, trying to eat each other,"
Continued on A-4

Blood in car did not
match Lucas, Mathias
'

By MELINDA POWERS
Tlliles·Sentinel Staff

Dee and Dallas
Seeks suggestion for reading
newspaper while riding bus to work

SPECIAL! AUGUST 25th

I

,.

Gorbachev quits as Communist party leader

Racine Grange
elects new officers

McClure's Family Restaurant

j '

12 Soc lion a, 104 Pages
A Multimedia Inc. Nowopapor

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, August 25, 1991

Fifty-sixth Parker reunion held recently

Couple announce
birth of daughter

I

tmts--

at Rutland Street Festival

Harrisonville
OES has regular
meeting recently

Along the river .............. Bl-7
BusinessJFarm ............. D-1-8
Comics......................... Insert
Classified ....................... D2-7
Deaths. ............................... A3
Editoral .............................A2
Homes .................... E-section
Sports............................. Cl-6
Weather ........................... A-3

)- .

•

Dee and Dallas to perform Hayes-Young annual reunion held .

Ann
Landers

1.,

....

.

,_

'

'

I

. ~·"; .'·

WRECK SCENE - A Rodney woman,
Mindy S. Colvin, 18, was transported by Life·
night Friday afternoon to Grant Hospital in
Columbus following a two-vehicle accident at
the intenection of U.S. 35 and S.R. 325 near Rio
Grande. Pictured is Colvin's 1979 Ford Mus-

tang after she was extracted
by use or an
air chisel and the Jaws or Life. Her passenger,
Cindy L. Burton, 22, of Gallipolis, was admitted
into Holzer Medical Center with lesser injuries.
The driver or the other. ~ehicle, Keith .E. Rath·
gardner, 35, of Wellston, was uninjured. (OVP
photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

Woman listed in serious
condition following wreck
Bl JIM FREEMAN
T1mes-Sentinel Staff
RIO GRANDE - A Rodney
woman was listed in serious condition Saturday morning following a
two-vehicle accident at the intersection of U.S. 35 and S.R. 325 just
west of Rio Grande at 1:30 p.m.
Friday.
According to a report from the
Ga!lia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Mindy S. Colvin,
18, of Rodney, pulled from S.R.
325 onto U.S. 35 into the path of a

westbound ouck driven by Keith E.
Rathgaber, 35, of Wellston.
Rathgaber's vehicle then struck
the left side of Colvin's car kn&lt;icking it off the road to the south side
of the intersection.
Colvin was trapped in her 1979
Ford Mustang for 30 minutes
before rescue personnel could free
her using an air chisel to remove
part of the roof, and the Jaws of
Life to remove the door, officials
said.

Noi&gt;ody runs for election
in small Ohio community
CORWIN, Ohio (AP)The mayor's post and two
council seats are up for election in November, but nobody
seems to be running for office.
No one ill this town or 225
on the Little Miami River bas
riled a candidacy petition with
the required 25 signatures by
last Thursday's deadUne•.
"One reason I was lax is
that aobody runs against me,"
said Mayor Howard Purkey
Jr., who bas been mayor for
about 30 years. "But"l didn't
Intend to be that lax about it."
Purkey, 51, whose father
and grandfather also were
mayors or Corwin, did get
petitions. But be said be
thought the riling deadline to
declare candidacy was Moo·
day.
Purkey said be aod some

council members probably
will run as write-in candidates.
"We bad a council meeting
Monday," council member
Charles Hollandsworth said.
"Two said they were interest·
ed, but they didn't go get peli·
lions."
Effie Patton, a resident for
30•years, said she considered
running for mayor.
"But I thought it would be
a hassle to run for mayor and
would take a lot or time," she
said.
Annetta Stapleton, who
moved to Corwin about a year
ago, said residents tend to
expect certain people to be
ma1.or and council members.
'The mayor ill my landlord
and owns most of the town,"
she said.

GALLIPOLIS - Genetic tests
performed on blood found in the
vehicle of Kanauga man showed
the blood did not belong to a 12year-old Gallipolis girl, an official
testified Thursday.
Paula Yates, a molecular biologist with Selmar Diagnostics in
Germantown, Maryland, explained
her findings after she performed
DNA tests on several biological
samples that were submitted to her.
Her results carne on the fourth
day of testimony in the trial of
William A. Mathias, 24, who is
charged with the alleged kidnapping, rape, and murder of Stacey
Renee Lucas, 12, 1ast October.
Yates stated she received two
stained pieces of vinyl cut from a
seat in Mathias ' car, a piece of

stained cloth cut from Mathias'
jacket, two cuttings· from lucas·
panties and one st~ined Cll\!il,lg
from Lucas' shirt, two vagntal
swabs, head hair and two blood
swatches from Lucas' body anJ a
tube of William Mathias' blood.
These items had been gathered
by agents from the Bureau ofCrimina! Identification and Investigation
and sent to Selmar for analysis.
Yates testified that she wa s
unable to get positive DNA results
from the items taken from Lucas'
body.
""We did not have DNA in the
amount that we needed - of good
quality DNA - in order to do the
testing," Yates said. "' It could be
because it was degraded by environmental factors - heat, humidity, bacterial action. It could be that
the sample size was insufficient"
Under direct questioning, .Yates

said that the biood tak en from
· Lucas·was·]reen and putrid and the
. degradation of the sample could
fulve ieSUiied" fti&gt;ril oxj'jc)sure to the
elements over a period of time.
Lucas' body ts believed to have
lain in an abandoned strip mine for
a week.
Postive results, however, were
. obtained from a blood stain on the
vinyl car seat and Mathias' blood.
Yates said she compared Mathias'
blood to the seat sample and found
that the blood on the seat "coui(J
not have originated from William
Mathias."
She also stated that a blood sampie received from Raben E. Mathias, the brother of William Mathias
did not match the blood on the c~
seat
Because a positive DNA result
could not be obtained from Lucas'
Continued on A-4

Meigs Local School District
classes will begin Monday

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
POMEROY - Classes in schools
The Galii a County Rescue of the Meigs Local School District
Squad, the Rio Grande Fire Depart- will begin Monday with a full, regment and the State Highway Patrol ular day of instruction, Superintenall responded to the scene of the dent James Carpenter announced
accident.
today.
The Grant Medical Center LifeCarpenter advises bus routes are
Flight helicopter was dispatched to the same as last year and that the
the scene of the accident. The heli- starting and closing times at the
copter landed on U.S. 35, backing various schools are unchanged.
up traffic for about a mile in each
Children who have not been
direction according to Gallipolis previously enrolled in a school in
Daily Tribune reporter G. Spencer the district or who have not regisOsborne.
tered to attend this year should
Colvin was then transported to report to the principal's office at
Grant Hospital in Columbus where the nearest school on the operting
she was treated for a pelvic injury, day of school.
a closed head wound and a rupCafeterias will be in operation
tured spleen (which was removed).
the frrst day of school, Supt. CarAs of Saturday morning. she penter said. There has, however,
was said to remain in serious con- been an increase in the charges.
dition according to a spokesman Breakfasts will cost 85 cents,
for Grant Hospital.
lunches, $1.15 for kindergarten
A passenger in Colvin's car, through eighth grade, and $1.25 for
Cindy L. Burton, 22, of Gallipolis, students, rtinth through 12th.
was transported by the Gallia
The Meigs Board of Education
County EMS to Holzer Medical has adopted a policy for the 1991Center where she was treated for 92 school year regarding free and
abrasions and contusions. Accord- reduced price meals for children
ing to a Holzer Medical Center unable to pay the full price of
spokeswoman, she was listed in meals.
stable condition as of Saturday
Application forms have been
morning.
distributed to all homes in a letter
Rathgaber was reportedly unin- to parents or guardians, and those
jured in the accident according to forms must be completed and
the patrol.
returned to the school before a
The report indicated that Colvin, determination can be made as to
Burton and Rathgaber were all whether a student qualifies for free
wearing lap and shoulder belts.
or reduced price meals.
Damage to the entire left side on
Supt. Carpenter explained that
Colvin's 1979 Ford Mustang was all information on the forms is conlisted as severe and disabling.
fidential and will be used only for
Damage to Rathgaber's 1987 the purpose or determining eligibilFord F-350 was listed as moderate.
ity. However, to discourage the
No citations were issued by the possibility of misrepresentation, the
patrol.
application forms contain a state·
By

ment above the space for signature
certifying that all information furnished is D'lle and correct.
Households will be notified of
the approval or denial ofbenefits
once the building princ1pal has
reviewed the application.
Application for free or reduced
lunches can be made anytune during the school year or students may
be removed from eligibility on the
basis of income increase. Any
income changes m a farn1ly wh1ch
is on free or reduced lunch should
be reported to the building principal, Supt. Carpenter noted.
The income eligibility scale for
free lunches is $11,544 for a house-

hold of two; $14,482 for a household of three; $17,420 for a household of four; $20,358 for a household of five; $23,296 for a household of six, $26,234 for a household of seven, and $29,172 for a
household of eight. For each additional household member, the
income scale increases $2,938.
The income eliRibilitv scale for
reduced price meals ranges from an
income of $16,428 for a family of
two to $28,971 for a family of five,
to $41,514 for a family of eight.
For each additional household
member, the income scale increases $4,181 for reduced price meals.

RETIRES • Freeman WUllams, rlpt, retired Friday alter 23
years of servlce with the United States Postal Service. He Will preseated a service award f'rom Tom Reuter, left, Pomeroy Postmas·
ter, and was given a small reception by feU ow workers.
·I

.

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