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Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday. June 2, 1988

Pomeroy-Middlilpm, Ohio

Wahama
gains state
baseball
finals

Supplomentto the SuncMy Tlmetl Sentinel

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Comer of General Hartinger Parkway and
Pearl Street
TELEPHONE: 992-3471·

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

Cardinal

Ohio Lottery
Daily Number
130'
Pick 4

Page 3

8 A.M.-10 P.M.

Clearing ·tonight, low
mlds 41ls. Saturday, mo,stll1 l
sunny , highs in mid 70s.

1389

We Accept Food Stamps a W.I.C. Coupons

en tine
Vol.39, No.20
Copyrighted 1988

2 Sections, 16 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, June 3, 1988

25 Cents

A Multimedi a Inc. Newspaper

Syracuse Council seeks first
phase bids on planned marina
SATURDAY, JUNE 4th
Horse &amp; W-gon Rides for the Kids on
~aughan's Old Fashion Wagon
From 1 P.M.-S P.M.
Old Fuhioned Country Music

SUNDAY, JUNE 5th
Old Fashion Ice Cream Social
1 P.M. - s P.M. ·
25~ AScoop. Enjoy Homemade Ice Cream
aad Countrr Mutlc
From 11 A.M.-2 P.M. With "Country Blend"

Meeting in regular ses·sion
On behalf of the Syracuse
Thursday night, Syracuse VII·
Racquet Club, Diana Lawson
lage Council authorized the ad·
presente&lt;t council with a check
vertlsing for bids on the first
for $974.75 to be applied towards
phase of the town's planned
the resurfacing of the tennis
marina .
courts. The courts were res ur·
Bob Wingett who is heading the faced recently at a cos t of $5900.
Project was authorizecd to place
Co uncil authorized Mayor
advertisements for the first Eber Pickens to advertise for
phase bids.
. bids on new fire hose for the fire
Council voted to increase the ·department.
amount of bonds posted in the
Henry Eblin appeared before
local court for persons facing council to speak to the group on
criminal charges .

the additional costs which have
materia lized in trash hauling
since the Meigs Landfill was
closed. Council authorized Eblin
to increase his customer price by
$1 a month . Janice Lavendar.
pool mana~er, gave a general
report on activit ies at the pool
si nce the opening last weekend.
Council agreed that the pool
will be free of charge fo r
members of the Southern High
School Baseball Team for one

evening and it was agreed l.hat
any other groups or persons
council wishes to honor will have
free use of lhe pool on the same
eveni ng.

Attending the session were .
Mayor Pickens . Clerk-Treasurer
Janice Lawson. and counc il
members. James Hill, Kenneth
Buckley, Jack Williams. Kathryn Crow. Ernest Sisson and
Menter Fryar, and Chief of
Pollee James Connolly,

Celeste considers ban on out-of-state trash

TERRY NEWSOME
(New Eagle Scout)

Sliced

Assorted Varieties

Assorted Varieties

Cardinal
Bacon

Charmin
Bath Tissue

Seven

16 ounce package

4 roll package

6 12-ounce cans

Campbell's ·
Pork &amp;. Beans
16 ounce can

29(

Newsome presented
Eagle Scout award.

Up

Terry Newsome. son of Frank
and Jo Ann Newsome, recleved
his EagleScoutaward In ceremo·
nled held Saturday night at the
Chester United Methoidlst
Church.
Richard Roberts ·was emcee
for the program where the
Eastern High School graduate
recleved the highest award In
scouting. Newsome Is a member
of Chester Boy Scout Troop 235.
Jenny Machlr·was at the organ
for the program with Rod New·
some lighting the candles before
the troop membe&amp;s presented the
colors. Bill Cook had the scrip·
ture reading and the Invocation
with Roberts lighting the first
candle which was passed to
Newsome who lighted the three
candles representing the three
parts of the scout oath.

limit three with coupon I '10.00 eurchue.
AdJ:IiJjOnal ~rchUel at regua. *-•I. Ellduding beer, WI Mind ctgarlttel. One coupon per

llmlly. Good 11 caninal Supetmarlcatl wtH 01
May 30, 1Q&amp;a
. QP-00-00

L---·•••••••••••-~

L

-, ..
.

.

.,.

Eagle Scouts Mike and Eric
Slm. Scott Starcher and Floyd
Ridenour were escorts for the
new recipient, Bill Buckley gave
the Eagle Scout challenge, and
Gale Osborne , scoutmaster of
Troop 235 certified Newsome and
read the charge and presented
the badge.
A!ter being escorted In by the
.;couts. Newsome presented the
certificate to his son, and Mrs.
Newsome pinned on hls badge.
Terry presented gifts to his
parents. Rod Newsome pres·
ented his brother with a scout

·-.

Off L.abei•American

Cardinal

Kraft .Cheese
Singles

Homogenized
Milk

IZ ounce package

gallon container

s 19

s 69

Quarters

Blue Bomet
Margarine
I pound package

•Selected

Banquet
Dinner

10-12 ounce package

.(

2

Jobless tate jumps
to 5.6 percent in May

for

RC
Diet Rite
Dr. Pepper

Regular, Electra-Perk
or Auto-Drip

House

Coffee

3 pound can

(

$

79

Regular Absorbency
Med. 48 ct. or Lg. 31 ct.
Disposable

Peanut Butter,
Crunch Berries
or Regular

Pampers
Diapers

Cap'n Crunch
Cereal

each package

s 99

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Un· Chamber of Commerce econoemployment rose lo 5.6 percent mist, said the unemployment
In May an Increase of Increase was not overly signifl·
two· tenths of a percentage point cant and predicted the figure
- sparked by a jump In jobless- would decline again In future
ness among adult men. the months .
government reported today.
"If you look at all the details in
The nation's unemployment · the report, everything' s essen·
rate In April was 5.4 percent. The !Ially unchanged. It's amazing, "
higher figure for May - 5.6 Hunter said.
percent - returned the jobless
"It appears the economy has
rate to the same level as March, reached a comfortable plateauwhen It also stood at 5.6 percent. steady, sustainable growth and
The Increase In joblessness low Inflation," Hunter said.
reversed a general trend of "Further Improvements In the
downward movement since last unemployment situation are
fall.
likely to be reflected over the
"Most of the over-the-month coming quarters and an uneven
change In joblessness occurred downward drift In the unemploy·
among adult men. whose unem· ment rate, rather than a sharp
ployment rate rose 0.3 percen· decline."
The employment picture dete·
tage point to 4.9 percent," the
rlorated
slightly In the finance,
Labor Department said.
Insurance
and real estate
Some 6.8 million people were
Industries
.
unemployed In May, the Labor
Since January, 10,000jobs have
Department reported. ~·disappeared
In the financial
The department noted, how·
sector
or
the
economy.
the Labor
ever, that since May 1987. the
Department
said,
a
significant
unemployment level has declined, overall, by about 800,000 factor because finance had been
people - a reduction of 0.7 "one of the best performers
throughout much of the (eco·
percent.
Continued on page 10
Lawrence Hunter, a U.S.

15-16 ounce package

s 89

2 Liter

I

belt buckle, Jon Karschnlk gave
him a trophy from Cub Scout
Pack 235. Mickle Hollon. Pat and
Cathy Clifford arid children also
represented the pack in the
ceremony .
Ben Spears gave· his nephew a
special certificate noting that he
is registered with the f'lational
Eagle Scout Association, and
Ronnie Dalton, another uncle,
had a special poem.
Newsome presented a pin to
Tammy Roberts In appreciation
for help and support during the
time he fulfilled challenges and
requirements for the Eagle
award. and also presented scout
pins to Lois Ann Reltmlre, Jenny
Machlr, Richard Roberts. Bill
Cook, Jon Karschnlk, Bill Buck·
ley, BenkSpears. Ronnie Dalton,
Dale Machlr, and Gale Osborne
for special assistance.
Osborn, voted Scoutmaster of
the Year, was also presented a
special ·plaque from the MGM
District.
A reception was held In the
church social room. Preparing
and serving It were Miss Ro·
berts, Teresa Perry, who also
presided at the guest book, Mrs.
Lois Ann· Reltmlre, Mrs . Janice
Reltmlre, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Redfern, Ms. Mary Salling, Mrs.
Sandy Roberts. Richard Ro·
berts, Mrs. Katheryn Stewart,
Mrs. Louise Anderson and Mrs.
Lila Van Meter.

. I

. COLUMBUS, Ohio !UPI) Gov . lj.ichard Celeste Is consider·
in!l allowing a legislativeapproved ban on out-of-s ta le
garbage to stand In the face 'of an
almos t certain constltution.al
challenge.
Thomas Katzenmeyer . the
governor's legislative aide, said
Thursday that Celeste Is " weigh·
lng seriously" the possibility of
retaining In a solid waste dlspo·
sal blll the provisiOn prohibiUng

Imported trash unless the gover·
nor. on a case-by-case basis,
decides It would he best for the
citizens.
The Ohio House ofRepresenta ·
tlves sent the garbage bill to
Celeste on an 88-7 vote , hoping he
would veto the ban as well as a
$75-a-ton surcltarge on any out·
of-state garbage that Is allowed.
Legal experts. Including Attar·
ney General Anthony Celebrezze
Jr., have said such provisions

California girl, 13,
wins spelling crown
WASHINGTON (UP!)
hts showing; telling reporters, ' 'I
America's top speller, a 13·year· only wanted to get past the first
old California girl who was born four rounds." He said he did not
in Ind·ia and lived In South Africa. study this time around and was
prefers science and math to the puzzled that "they kept giving us
discipline that paid off for her at all these really weird words ."
the National Spelling Bee.
Robin Covey. 12, a seventh·
Rageshree Ramachandran , an . grader at St. Peter Catholic
elghth·grader at Winston Chur· School In Harper Woods, Mich .•
chill Middle School In Carml· was third and got a $750 prizechael, Calif., won the 6lst annual but only after he officially
event Thursday after a success· protested the misspelling that
ful protest from another finalist had sent him out In 15th place
and a dramatic spelling duel of overall.
almost an hour with the second·
Covey disputed an answer he
place finisher. also a Californian. received to his questlon about a
Ramachandran successfully root word, and as the contest
spelled "eleglacal," a word used came down to Ramachandran
to describe Greek poetic couplets and Wang. officials delayed the
a bout sorrow .
event for 45 minutes .before
''I'm really happy," she said agreeing there had been a
with a big smile as she was "misunderstanding between
mobbed by reporters and photo· Cboth sides." They reinstated
graphers. As the winner from a Covey. but he misspelled again
record field of 200 youngsters, and was out.
she received $1.500, a trophy cup
Then, In a dramatic final hour,
and an engraved plaque from the each of the two flnalls ts stumbled
Scripps·Howard newspaper on four words . After misspelling
chain that sponsored the two-day "balmacaan," a loose, box.y
event .
overcoat, Wang asked In frustra·
"Study as much as you can and lion, "Who makes up these
don't stop after the eighth words?' • The hotel ballroom was
grade," the new champion said filled with sympath~tlc laughter
when asked what advice she had and applause.
0
for future contestants. Students
Wang finally spelled "ovovlvl·
cannot participate In the compe· parous," an adjective meaning
titlon after the eighth grade.
producing eggs inside the mater·
Ramachandran confessed, nal body that hatch upon extru·
however, that spelling Is not her sian. But Ramachandran spelled
favorite subject.
"rnhometer," an Instrument for
"Math Is my favorite subject. I measuring conductants.
like science and math," said the
They both missed "caou t·
bespectacled girl born In India chouc," a substance obtained
and raised In South Africa for from the latex of tropical plants
part of her young life.
- and then Wang misspelled
"stertorous." an adjective that
In the 1986 spelling bee, Rama·
means characteriZed by a harsh
chandran placed 36th. This year
snoring or gasping sound, as
she emerged the victor after a
''sterturous."
lengthy battle with Victor Wang,
Ramachandran spelled that
14, an eighth-grader at . Monte
word correctlY. and then care·
Vista Intermediate School In fully nalled down the winning
CamarUlo, Calif. Wang, who
"eleglacal," triumphing over the
finished two places ahead of field that had topped an estl·
Ramachandran last year, won rtiated 8 mllllon to 9 mUllon
$1,000 as the runner-up.
students locally juSt to get to the
Wang said he was surprised by finals.
'

would be held unconstitutional as
restraints on inter sta te
commerce.
But Katzen meyer said Celeste
Is still studying the Issue. "That's
the reason he did not give them
!House sponsors) a firm commit·
ment on which items he would
veto." said the governor's aide.
"You qon't know whether It's
unconstitutional," said . House
Speaker Vernal Riffe Jr., D·New
Boston. shortly after Thursday's
vote. "Everything we .pass Is
constitutional until proven
otherwise. "
The bill,. adopted in the Senate
last week, requires long·range
planning for garbage disposal .
upgrading of outdated landfills,
cooperation among local govern·
ments 011 solid waste disposal
and criminal background checks
on landfill owners.
As the House ratified Senate
changes In the milder House
version , passed In March. sponsors saId the bill Is now among
the strongest of Its type in the
country.
Katzenmeyer said the two Item
vetoes, plus three others, have
been recommended by the gover·
nor's staff; the attorney gener·
al' s office; Richard Shank, dlrec·
tor of the Ohio Environmental

Protection Agency ; and environ·
mental groups.
"The recommendation is iri."
said Katzenmeyer. " The ques·
tion is whether he is going to go
along with all five." Celeste is
permitted to make Item vetoes
because the bill contains an
appropriation; otherwise. he
would have to accept or veto the
entire bill.
The measure requires counties
to make long-range plans for
garbage disposal , either by
themselves or by joining with
other counties. It requires that
certain efforts be devoted loward
recycling and re-use of wastes.
The Ohio EPA will be in charge
of overall administrat ion of the
program. and of landfill siting,
should local governments dead·.
lock on lhe matter. There are
also provisions for cleaning up
old landfills which were constructed before state standards
were Imposed.
·
A disposal fee is levied. based
on local trash . district tra sh and
out-of·state trash, with the pro·
ceeds used to clean up hazardous
waste dumps .
"This is a good landfill man·
agement program. one of the
finest In the nation. " said Rep .
Continued on page 10 .

Fanners to get help during drought
LIMA, Ohio (UPI) - The
secretary of agriculture Thurs·
day promised western Ohio livestock farmers that federal grain
will be made available at a
reduced cost to help farmers
trying to cope with the current
drought.
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum vi·
sited farms Thursday In Allen
and Mercer counties to view the
problems .t he farmers have.been
having as a result of belownormal preclpltatkin .thls year.
A!ter meeting with a number of
farmers at a 750·acre farm near

-- .

Lima. Metzenbaum called Secretary of Agriculture Richard
Lyng, a Metzenbaum spokeswo·
man said.
The spokeswoman said Lyng
told Metzen baum he had not been
aware of the problem, and
promised to make the federal
grain avalla ble at 50 percent the
normal price.
Lyng also promised to move
quickly on waivers that would
allow farmers to use fallow land
to cope with the drought, the
spokeswoman said.

--

.

-

NATIONAL SPELLING CHAMPION- Ra1eshree Ramachq.
dran, U, of Carmlch11el, Calif., hoM• up her trophy after spelllq
"elegtacal'' to wla the 6lat N allollaiSpelllng Bee Thurllday nl1ht Ia
Washington, D.C. William Burleigh of Scripps· Howard Newapapen preseate her the trophy. (UPI)

--·--:---\.

-44--·

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~

ts:m~ ~._-.-.~=·=

'q:lv

·

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press

Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Assoclation.
LETIERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subject to edltlng and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsign_ed INters will be published. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing Issues. not personalllles.

Letters to the editor

WASHINGTON - When a
Sov let sentry killed an American
Army major three years ago In
East. Germany, the Soviets compounded the tragedy with a
callous act of bullying. They kept
the major's body for 24 hours and
tried to intimidate Americans
Into allowing a Soviet autopsy
against the wishes of the widow.
In a series of columns, we
reported the previously confidential details of this tragedy. U.S.
Maj. Arthur Nicholson was shot
to death March 24, 1985, while
performing his legal "observer"
dulles at a Soviet training area In
Ludwlgslust, East Germany. He
had every right to be there as an
observer under the terms of an
agreemel)t between t~e United
States and the Soviet Union, but a

Soviet sentry shot him without
warning.
The Incident serves as an
Indicator of how the Soviets
respond when they are clearly In
the wrong. The Army has released to us the Investigative
report on the Incident, which
Includes many facts never revealed before - how the Soviets
left Nicholson's body on the
ground for eight hours, how they
refused to let another American
on the scene go to his aid, how
they tried to blame Nicholson for
his own death, how they tried to
prove he was spying In restricted
territory.
· The record describes what
amounts to a day in the life of Lt.
CoL Lawrence G. Kelley, who
was assigned to stay with Nichol-

Appreciates Memorial Day article
Dear Editor.
I read with Interest your lead
story In your Memorial Day issue
of The Trl County ·News. The
article, "I remember a hero who
didn't return" by Tom Tiede
caught my Interest.
It is ironic tha.t you would
feature an article about Bat
Masterson. I knew Bat, and flew
from the same base that he did.
Although he was In the 602nd
Fighter Squadron, and I was in
the 1st Air Commando Squadron
we flew the same aircraft from
the same base. We flew several
\llfferent models of the A1 Skyraider. The aircraft were propeller driven ex-Navy divebombers of Korean vintage.
They were old and tired, and
malntance was constant. Our
missions took us throughout
Laos, and North &amp; South Vietnam. Primarily though we flew
in Laos. Bat's squadron flew In
the northern half, and we In the
southern half.
I remember the night Bat went
down. We were briefed the next
morning that he was down and to
be alert for emergency radio
transmissions. None were heard.
Upon return from my mission, I
found that I had been appointed a
member of the accident investi-

gallon board. It was a difficult
Investigation. The accident site
was in enemy hands, and we
could not get to the wreckage.
Thus, we never knew If Bat had
gotten, out of the aircraft before it
struck the ground. Our conclusions were based upon the radio
transmissions prior to the accident, and the testimony of the
pilot of the other Al that was on
the same mission. The only error
in your article Is a typo that
states his "altitude" Indicator
was out. That should read "attitude" indicator. The loss of the
attitude Indicator at night and In
weather Is the loss of a primary
aircraft control Instrument. Bat
tried vainly to save the alrcrat\,
and could not. He may have
waited too long to get out. We
were never able to find out.
Thank you for presenting the
article. We lost many pilots from
our squadrons In Thialand. Most
of them went down over Laos,
and since that was very unfriendly territory, a good many
of them were declared missing In
action, and nothing has ·been
heard of them since.
Sincerely,
Delmar G. Pullins
Major, USAF, Retired.
Long Bottom, Ohio

"There just aren't many old familiar faces left around here ~ except for
Attorney General Meese, of course.''

Newt Gingrich deserves help.

been the spiritual guru o! these
Congressman Newt Gingrich,
the Georgia Republican whose
combative young House Republidistrict Includes Atlanta's Hart- cans, but Gingrich Is thefr
lield Airport, resembles the principal day-to-day spokesman.
also destroyed by the flames airport In being difficult to avoid
Letter to the Editor:
It was he who hit on the Inspired
Sixty eight years ago this past whiCh shot across the road.
idea of reading to the C-SPAN
and hard to be neutral about. At
This business, known as "The 44, with a handsome mop of
March; two devastating fires
cable TV audience, during the
ravaged the Pomeroy Bend area White Rock" salt works was prematurely gray hair and a
so-called ''special orders" period
within three days, throwing over started In 1904 under the manage- somewhat squeakier voice than
when the chamber was virtually
650 employees out of work. The ment of P .L. Clifton and com- would be absolutely ideal, Gindeserted, Injudicious statements
Head lines were "The Heart pleted In 1910, as It stood at time grich barges around the House of
made by Democratic CongressBurned Out of the Big Salt Plant of fire.
Representatives getting on the
men at the time of the Vietnam
This catastrophe threw 50 men
at Minersville." One of the most
nerves of fellow members of both controversy In the early 1970s.
devastating conflagrations in the out of work, employees of this parties whose first principle, like This tactic so enraged Speaker
industrial Pomeroy Bend area, firm, besides shutting down the
the late Everett Dirksen's, is
O'Neill_that he took to the floor
took place Thursday forenoon "Graycllff Chemical" works at flexibility.
himself to denounce Gingrich March 11, 1920. A hard fight was Kerrs Run, which received Its
Now In his fifth term, Gingrich
only to be ruled out of order for
made to save the valuable raw materials from this plant at early became the leader of a
Insulting him.
property, but In vain. This was Minersville. Three Hundred men
band of more than ordinarily
Gingrich and his little band of
known as the "Whlterock Salt employed by the Pittsburg mine quarrelsome and conservative samurai aren't always right. In
nearby, lost their jobs because young GOP congressmen who
Works."
particular they have blundered
Then on Sunday March 14, 1920 tills salt plant furnished electriwere nicknamed the "Yellow
badly on the matter of South
about 4:30 p.m. "Fire Fiend cal power for this mine.
Jackets" (to distinguish them
African sanctions, supporting
The Ohio River Electric RailStrikes Another Heavy Blow."
from a group of conservative demogoglc Democratic proposway
(street car line) received a
"Big Pomeroy Machine ComSouthern Democrats called the als in a predictably futile bid for
pany Plant Rampaged By Uncon- part of their power from this
"Boll Weevils"). In due course black support here at home.
trolled Flames Sunday After- plant, but they were able to make
most of them became supporters
But Gingrich has shown real
noon." Property loss Exceeds arrangements with the Forest
of the concept of the Conservabravery In taking on the most
$100,000." (now Midwest Steel Run mine plant to continue
tive Opportunity Society, which powerful and dangerous adverCo.) A force of men fought all furnishing power they needed.
is Gingrich's name for the kind of sary any congressman can have:
The great plant oft he Pomeroy
night. The foundry , machine
America he envisions: entrepre- Speaker Jim Wright of Texas.
Machine
Co., lay In ruins. It was
shop and pattern departments
neurial and high-tech.
· Wright, who succeeded "Tip"
thOught the lire started by ·
were laid waste.
Congressman Jack Kemp has O'Neill In January 1987, is an
The White Rock Salt Works fire spontaneus combustion, above
started In the power plant, which, the core ovens, In the old part of
with Its valuable machinery, was the plant, which might have been
estimated to be 65 percent of the controlled If proper water presvalue of the entire property, sure could have been
which cost In lean years of cheap maintained.
SANTA CLARA, Calif. (NEAl the purchasing of votes ... with
From the point of origin In the
labor and material $250,000. The
When Jesse Unruh reigned as
Pomeroy Fire Department re- foundry building, the fire fol- California's most powerful politi- campaign contributions," says
state Sen. Ed Davis, a
sponded to the call for help, but lowed the roof to the cupola area,
cian,
he
formulated
the
nation's
could render lit tie aid by the time and then across to the machine most enduring observation about Republican.
"Corruption, In the form of
shop, power plant and pattern
they got there.
the
Importance
of
campaign
special
favors for those special
The power house and boller department.
funds:
"Money
is
the
mother's
interest contributions, not only
The estima.ted property loss
room was a btlck structure, the
milk
of
politics."
continues,
but It's bigger and
frame of the roof being wood and exceeded $100,000 covered by
Moreover,
as
assembly
more
blatant
than before," says
the roof composed of cement Insurance. The loss of producspeaker
of
the
state
legislature
1ournallst
Robert
Fairbanks, a
surface. There were four large tion, priceless patterns, and the during most of the 1960s, "Big
of the state
veteran
observer
300 horse power Sterling boilers loss of wages of over 300
Daddy"
Unruh
devised
techlegislature.
and four large steel stacks over employees, placed the estimate
niques to collect and disburse
To curb those abuses, the
to the point of losing Its bearings.
them.
money
that
astounded
even
his
state's
voters are being asked to
Both of these companies reThis building also contained
most
cynical
colleagues.
endorse
ballot Proposition 68, the
two 300 K.W. Ridgeway genera- fused to the daunted by misforBut
Unruh
also
was
sensitive
to
Campaign
Spending Limits Acts
tors, two large Ingersoll- Rand tune and officers of both companthe
corrupting
Influence
of
conInitiative,
when they go to the
air compressors, a large over Ies said "We'·n rebuild bigger and· tributions from special interest
to
participate
In the June 7
polls
head coal bunker with a capacity better than ever," starting at
groups
and
shortly
before
he
primary
election.
bl 500 tons of coal, the large once. This they did.
died last year, he enlisted In an
California Is not alone, howswitchboard, motors and all
The above article was comextraordinary
effort
to
control
ever,
In its attempt to update
electrical appliances, the coal plled from the Tribune Telethe
flood
of
money
that
already
archaic
statutes governing camgraph, Pomeroy, Ohio Wednes~onveying machinery and mahas
distorted
California's
politipaign
financing.
Similar efforts
day, March 17, 1920.
chine shop In the rear.
cal process.
are
underway
In
Rhode Island,
Compiled and Written by
: The coal hoisting plant which
Three
weeks
before
his
death,
West
Virginia,
Tennessee
and
Victor L. Brown
~tood across the roall which
lfnruh
wrote
to
Common
Cause
In
the
nation.
elsewhere
42960 St. R t. 124
contained the Link Belt Co.'s
Last year, changes ·In state
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 saying, "I wholeheartedly suphigh class coal hOisting outfit was
port
the
(ballot)
Initiative"
delaws
were enacted In Connect!·
'
signed to restore a measure of cut, Hawaii, Idaho, Indiana,
Integrity to campaign financing Kansas, Minnesota, Nevada,
here by Imposing - lor the first New Hampshire, North Carolina,
time in California's history .North Dakota', Ohio and Oregon.
By Un lied Press International
limits on the amount of money
"Many on both sides of the
Today Is Friday, June 3, the 155th day of 1988 with 2llto follow.
candidates can raise and spend money trough have grown
The moon is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
during their compaigns lor seats grumpy," notes California JourThe morning stars are Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
In the state legislature.
.nal, a magazine covering governThe evening stars are Mercury and Venus.
Unruh, a Democrat, was not ment. "Lawmakers Increasingly
Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They Include
alone In his concern about the lind the task of begging camHenry Shrapnel, English Inventor of the shrapnel shell, in 1761;
alarming-trend. "We have wides- paign contributions to be de~eflerson Davis, president of the Confederacy during the Civil War.
pread corruption. We have had ... meaning. Special interests ...

Disaster strikes Pomeroy Bend

anchronlsm In this Age of Accommodation - an unctuous but
unbelievably arrogant parliamentary tyrant In the grand
tradition that stretches all the
way from Robert Harley down to
"Uncle Joe" CannQn.
In previous columns I have
described Wright's brazen Intervention In the federal investigation of certain savings and loan
Institutions owned by contributors to his campaign; his successful effort to obtain $11.8 million In
federal funds for the Fort Worth
Stockyards, In which hiS business
partner had a substantial Interest; and his violation of House
Rule 43, Clause 5, by pocketing 55
percent of the royalties on a book
published by a friend who Is a
convicted felon.
Now the Wall Street Journal
has discovered that when Nathan
Landow, a Democratic fat cat,
was having trouble last year
getting Amtrak to let him buy
some land fromt he federally
subsidized rail line, Wright's
executive assistant John Mack
summoned two Amtrak vice
pres_idents to the Captlol for a
meeting with Mack and Con-

Refomt campaign spending_
have wearied of what many
perceive to be an annual shakedown for cash by legislators."
As a result, support for Proposlt ion 68 extends well beyond
traditional good-government or-

William Rusher ··
'·
''

DRAFI'ED BY ORIOLES - Pete Rose Jr. gets a hug lrom his
mother, Karolyn Rose, as he finds out that he was dralted In the
third round of the major league free-agent draft by the Baltimore
Orioles Wednesday. Karolyn Rose had logo to ·the ballpark to tell
her son, who had walled nearly all .day for a phone call before
leaving for a game with his American Legion learn. (UP I)

Cliffside's front nine
set to open June 11
Galen Herath, golf pro, announced today the front nine ,
holes of Cliffside Golf Course will
be open on Saturday, June 11.
Golf carts will also be availa ble, weather permitting. for
members wishing to play .
Members may phone Saturday,
June 4, for teettmes the following
weekend. All Individuals must
register before playing. '
Members are only allowed to
register one week in advance,
while non-members may call on
Wednesdays for_ weekend tee
·.·
times.
The hours of operation as of
June 11 are 8 a.m. to dusk on
weekdays and 7 a .m . to dusk on
weekends. No players will be
permitted to start before these
times.
Sign-Ups, Memberships _

Majors
By United

Pr~s lnterr~~tlo,.l

AM F~KICAN LEAGUB

"""

Nllw York
Clf'VI!hUid

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Toronto

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KIUII'IIUI flty 3, Seallle II

Teu11 10, Ollcai{U 2
Mllwau R~ 9, Callfornht. 4
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Tororao (Cerutti3-2J Rt Boston (Boyd
W), '7:35p.m.
Cleveland ( Ve&amp;t 3-3) at Det roH ITer ri'.ll
~-21. '7:35p.m.
New York (Johll 3-1) at BaltlmOI'f!
(Bauti!Wt. 2·3),11:05 p.m .
O.. land (Stewart ~) at Mlnrr~DU
ISU'&amp;ker 'lot), ii:OS p.m.
Te.taa ( H.aJ ward J-2) at Chlt:a~O
(LaPoint 4· 4). R::ID p.m .
{'alllor,..a {Will ~-6) at Mllwau ~e
(Flier 2-1),11:35 p.m.
S..altk- (CamjiJell 3-1) at KanNU City
ISabtrtlacm 1-5) . R::IS p.m.
Sl&amp;l•rd•"!f Gama~
Toro.-o at 8oet011
Texa11 .at Chlcq:o. nl(llll
Nrw York at Ballbnore. nl~
Ch!\'tiMd lA Del roll, nl Pt
Oaklud at Mln""ola, nl1lll
Sellltte at Kan~a~~Cit)' . nlpt:

ca111orma at Mllwaultee. nla:ht
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SanDieKO

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1'7 31 .114 II
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St. Lo•l11 3. Phil...,. phi a'!, 14 tan.
Frtur'aGama
OI.ICIIIO {MO)'er J.t) ill New York

lOleta H), 7:11p.m.
St. Loula (0el.eon4-f) at PhiiMifllpNa

(RuHle 4-41. ' : II p.m.
Mon&amp;real (Dopaon 1·11 a&amp; Plltftl'llll
csmu, 4-4), 7:11p.m.
AIIMUI {Colfman Z.S) M Sa Dle10
(Show 1-1), Ill IS p.m.

UndaMCI (RalmlliHII Ul a&amp; LM
AnrelM ~\'alem•la 1-1), II:SS p.m.
Houjjon (8eott 1-B at San Fra.ndiK'O {Krutmw 4-~). Jt:U p.m.

"What's the story behind Gladys Nost and
Perry Strolka?"

(

SaiiP'IIIQ"'• GatnBI

Oalcap al New York
Onda,..la&amp; 1M All lftlet~

Ho••.,.• Su f'rudleo
MolllN .. aiPilbiiii,P.al&amp;hl

'

Transactions
R•eball
Amulean Leacue- Su~tpen*4 New
York V 11111H11 Mu ..erBIIIyMarttalor3
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C&amp;Jir.rma - Optkl.-d lnlehlf·r Gu11
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Recllf.!ld from &amp;lmo.-oa.
KMMII Cll)' - Placed outfl elder Ro
Jaduon on Ule U4"' •sabiN! liM.
Milwaukee Sent pllcluw Mike
BlrldM!d&amp; to · Denvrr ol the American
Alsoci11Uon IAAAI: called up pitcher
Don -'UKWIIl
Mtn~tt.oiiH Slped pl&amp;du &amp;lid
lree-arent draltee .JoM Ard.

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hacl M•k Casale ud llnem• Eric
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NV Jgll - A&amp; reed le &amp;erm11 wll h
cornerhad. Terry WllllamfJ.
Saa Fr•ctiiCO -Traded cenc.er Fred
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Slmpaon lo muiU· ,e• CQnlracl.
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CLEVELAND IUPI) - Charlie Manuel, the Cleveland Indians' new hitting instructor, says
he once got an important tip from
former· Minnesota teammate
Harmon Klllbrew.
Manuel said the future Hall of
Farner told him never to chew
gum at the plate.
"Harmon said it makes your
eyeballs bounce up' and down,"
said Manuel, 44, a native of North
Fork, W.Va. "So, I stopped
chewing gum. "
Manuel's influence since joinIng the Indians last December as
Bobby Bonds's replacement has
been felt In more practical
suggestions, however.
Second baseman Julio Franco
has a 20-game hitting streak
after Manuel advised him to
change his stance. Catcher Andy
Allanson Is showing more power
at the plate after adjusting his
stride.
Those are the success stories.
Manuel is helping third baseman
Brook Jacoby and shortstop Jay
Bell with their slumps In bet ween
telling outfielder Mel Hall that
that first home run of the season
is on the horizon.
"It really takes a while to learn
the habits of all the.hitters on the
team," said Manuel, who had
spent six years with the Ml nnesola Twins organization. "I
really wasn'tfamiliarwlth any of
these players, and It's been a
slow process.
"But I think the results are
starting to show. These guys
work very hard," he said .
Franco Is hitting .365 (31for85)

Bay leaves Yanks
for broadcasting

St. Lou• at Philadelphia, ni1h&amp;
Alla.nta at San Dlea:o. nla:ht

Oikland

•

. Sign-ups are available tor
Tuesday night Ladles' League,
Wednesday night Men's League,
Friday night Couples' League
and the Southeastern Ohio Golf
Association qualifier, the latter
being on June 11, from 1 to 2 p.m.,
and Sunday, June 12, from 10 toll
a.m.
The membership initiation fee
Is $1,500. There will be 80
memberships that will be sold at
a 10-percentdiscount. After those
80 are sold, the regular price will
stand. Payment plans are
available.
When the remaining holes are
open, the Initiation fee will be
$2.000, which must be paid In one
payment.
Family dues are $450, while
single dues are $275 and junior
dues are $50.

Scoreboard ...

\\'l':!llt

gantzatlons. Dozens of corporate
executives have endorsed Propo- ,
sition 68, as has the California •
Business Round Table, whose
members arE' among the state's
business leaders.

"l had too much time off," he
said. "I' m used to working every
three or four days. I hadn't pitched
ror eight days. That hurts my accuracy"
Henry also made what was the
best defensive play of Lhe game
when David Hamilton, the Trojan
catcher, hit a blistering grounder to
the !crt side. Henry dove, came up
with the ball and threw Hamihon
out at first.
"! knew he was a slow runner,"
Henry said. "So 1 knew 1 could get
him even after diving to the
ground. The ball took a pretty hop

that," said Rose, Jr. ''Tha t's
people who haven ' t seen me
play ."
.
The Orioles picked Rose, Jr., in
Wednesday's major league draft
of ama teur baseball talent.
Rose, Jr., said he was happy
th e Reds didn 't select him
because of the pressure that
would be on him because his

Indians' hitting coach
recalls Killbrew tip

Baltlmo"'

•

would get demoralized and it ·they know they can beat anyone .
would put extra pressure on them. "But even when he is not pitching
They know their weaknesses, so it his best, we're still in the game.
really doesn 't do anything to defeat Tonighl B!ian was not pitching the
them there."
best. I've seen him pitch better."
Stealing bases was not the only
Decker said he used the fastball
demoralizing factor for St. Francis to blow by Trojan batters. "We'd
that contributed to Wahama's vic- set them up to make them think a
eurveball was coming, " Decker
tory. •
Brian Decker was smoking. Not said. "Then I'd Lhrow a fastball past
cigarettes, jpst fast pitches. He al- them .
lowed just six hits 81ld used his siz"I didn 'I pitch the best I've ever
zling fastball to strike out 11. pitched, but that's not important
Decker 's record is now 11-4.
The impOrtant thing is we won."
Spencer said the gocxl thing
Decker said he also had some
about Decker is that when he is on, problems with accuracy.

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Pete
Rose, Jr., 18, son of Cincinnati
Reds manager Pete Rose. says
he Intends to prove that the
reason he was drafted by the
Baltimore Orioles Is because of
his talent, not his name.
"When people say that you're
going to be drafted because of
y~ur naml', I get real mad at

~

•·
•:
'
,
'
"&lt;
'
,

sons had nothing to do with
pronunciations. They were lhe
same. However - the Falcons can
steal on your catcher, no matter
how highly touted he is.
Falcon base runners stole 10
bases, staning with a first-inning ·
steal by Jeff Henry that resulted in
a score for Wahama.
"We heard Lhat their caleher was
good and it would be hard to steal
on
him,"
Gordon
Spencer,
Wahama 's baseball coach, said. "So
we went after their strength rrom
the first inning. We thought Lhat if
we could beat their strength, they

Pete Rose, Jr., says he has
talent, not just famous name

•
:

- ~.=: .:.alt:. : .:.er-=-s ~

Berry's World

No coach, that's Wah-hah-ma,
not Wah mah mah hah mah.
That is the first lesson Greg
Cyphert, Morgantown St. Francis
High School baseball coach got
Thursday night when his team was
beaten 8-5 by Wahama 's White
Falcons.
The White Falcons played Van at
I p.m. today for the West Virginia
Class A high school baseball championship in Charleston . .
The seeond through elevenLh les-

~

__;:_R..:.::_ob::..:.e_rt

(roday in history

II

By JOHN TOLARCHYK
OVPStarr

Soviet forces In East Germany,
CoL V.P. Mel'nlchuk, arrived on
the scene In Potsdam and took
over. He bullied Kelley tor hours,
trying to get him to allow an
autopsy. Then Mel'nlchuk tried
the soft approach - food and
drinks. Mel'nlchuk offered vodka
and light banter. He "steered the
conversation away from controversy and toward more general
and Innocuous themes, such as
the places where he had been,
sports he enjoyed and the like,"
Kelley wrote In his report to
investigators. "He made two
toasts during the lunch, one to
good health and the other to a
similarly Innocuous Ideal."
Mel'nlchuk failed, and the
Soviets didn't get their autopsy.
About 5:10p.m., more than a day
after Nicholson was shot, the
Americans were allowed to take
his body. The transfer was made
on a bridge Into free Berlin. An
American hOnor guard· received
the body and draped ·It with an
American flag.
Kelley had kln.d words for some
of the Soviet subordinates he met
that day. But he was appalled at
the tactics used by the highest
Soviet military officers. "The
unmitigated villain In my narrative Is CoL Mel'nlchuk," he said.
"Abrasive, pompous, aggressive
and, I believe, qUite dangerous,
this individual pressed for the
completion of his Investigation
with single-minded scorn. He
would brook no compromise,
ollel' not succor, and tolerate no .
dissent.
Kelley continued, "He (Mel'nichuk) steadfastly refused to take:
'no' for an answer ... Devious In
his workings, repeatedly threatening, and extremely Intolerant
of opposition, he Is a man who ,
cannot and should not ever be •
trusted.
"Ruthless, tempered only by -,
the force of resistance, and· • .
unbelievably dogged In his stubbornness, l't1el'nlchuk turned an
already tragic personal situation
Into a faceless, bureauctatlc
disaster."

gressman Dennis Eckart (DOhlo) . (Eckart, colncldentally,ls
a member of the committee that
authorizes Amtrak's subsidies.)
Amtrak thereupon saw the light
and agreed to the sale - only to
have Its board repudiate the deal
when another wouldbe buyer
made a higher bid.
This sort of thing mtght be
expected to Interest the House
Ethics Committee, but It has
remained singularly lnen where
matters Involving Speaker
Wright are concerned. That fact
has moved Gingrich to demand
the appointment of a special
counsel to the committee to
Investigate Wright's seamy
antics.
Unfortunately, Gingrich hasn't
received the support he deserves
from many of his fellow Republicans. Accustomed to the "goalong, get-along" style of a
House they haven't controlled In
33 years, the GOP leadership
tends to regard Gingrich as more
of a nuisance than an asset.
They should remember what
Lincoln told General Grant's
critics: "I can't spare the man.
He fights."

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3 •
•
•

Wahama .seeks Class A West Virginia title

Incident in East ·Germany good indic~tor
son's bOdy when · the Soviets
refused to turn It over to his
American commander. NichOlson was shot at 3:45 p.m. About
midnight, after holding Nicholson's driver at gunpoint and
arguing with American officers,
the Soviets released the driver,
but took Nicholson's body to a
Soviet medical examiner's labln
Potsdam.
Kelley's Instructions were to
stick with the body and not allow
an autopsy. Mrs. Nicholson
didn't want it, and the Americans
were not wllllng to allow lt. That
Infuriated the Soviet commandant on the scene In Potsdam, who
had orders of his own from the
highest-ranking Soviet officer In
East Germany to expedite an
autopsy.
The first deputy procurator of

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Friday, June 3, 1988

By Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Friday, June 3, 1988

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

NEW YORK (UP!) - New
York Yankees Executive Vice
President and former Ohio State
athletic director Rick Bay has
accepted a job with Starbrlght
Group Incorporated, the new
communications, management
and television production company announced Thursday .
Bay, who also served the
Yankees as chief operating officer, came to the American
League team In February. He
had resigned as Ohio State's
athletic director In November,
upset with the university President Edward Jennings' decision
to lire embattled football coach
Earle Bruce. .
Starbrlght plans to concentrate on developing, producing
and distributing college sports
television and special features .
"I have missed my association
with the college athletics commu·nlty," said Bay, whO had
spent his professional career In
college athletics before moving
to the Yankees. "And I have
always wanted to work In
television.
''I owe George Steinbrenner a
great deal of gratitude," Bay
said of the controversial Yankee
owner. "He tried to help me land
another job In Intercollegiate
athletics after I left Ohio State
and when that didn'tmaterlallze,
he hired me himself.

SALES • SERVICE • TESTING

BlOWN &amp; SNOUFFII
Fill &amp; SAFOY
EQUIPMENT
171 ...,.. S.CIIIIII Awe•
,,..... rt, Ollie 45760

Pl. (Uti t91·7075
Gary Snoufl•- H2-7446

with 14 RBI in his sll·eak, which
has raised his bat ling average
from .220 to .278.
"Charlie is helping a lot, " said
Franco. who had a leadoff homer
Wednesday night in a 5-4 victory
over Kansas City. " I 've lowered
my hands a little and I think I'm
hitting wtth more power."
Allan son has 21 RBI through 51
games. His career-high is 29 RBI.
set In 101 games during his rookie
season of 1986.
"There's been a difference,"
he said. " l 'm stepping better into
the ball, no question. "
For the struggling players,
Manuel ha s prescribed a regimen of exercises on coordination
and evaluation via videotape
review.
''The tapes have been helpful,"
said Jacoby, who has had only
one RBI since May 4 bu t scored
two runs Wednesday night . "One
thing Charlie has stressed -you
have to work to get out of a rut.
He gets you back thinking like a
hitter and that can only help."
Cleveland begins a three-game
series in Detroit Friday night.
The Indians will semi Rich Yeti
(3-3, 5.88 ERA) against the
Tigers' W,alt Terrell (2-2, 3.98) .

father manages the club.
" I preferred to play tor somebody else, " he said.
This year at Cincinnati Oak
Hills High School, Rose, Jr ., had
44 hits in 100 at-bats, with four
home runs, 41 runs batted in, 13
doubles. three triples and 33 run s
scored. He pla yed third base,
although it's possible he could be
switched to first base in the pros .
Says Rose. Sr., " I'm prejudiced, obviously, bu t I know what
he can do. He can do everything
but run fast. dut he' s quick. And
someday, when he fills out, he' s
go ing to hit with some power.
"My boy is at the top of the
ran kings as far as fundam entals .
And he's at the top when It comes
to hitting a baseball -hitting it
where it's pitched and making
contact. He's got great hand&amp;and
a strong arm. It's getting
stronger every year." Rose said
his so n has learned a lot from
major league players he practices with before Reds' games at
Riverfront Stadium.
"When you're taking ground
balls with Buddy Bell every day,
you can't help but lea rn, " said
Rose. "If you take ba tting
practice with me every day, how
can It not help you?"

r;:============tl
CLOGGING &amp; SQUARE
DANCING
OLD TOWN CAMPGROUND
S miles from Pt. Pleasont on Sand Hilt Rd.

and it was pretty easy to get"
Rick Keams , who went into the
game with a .388 balling average,
led the Falcon hitters in scoring
runs with three runs on two at bats
and one hit
Tom Knapp had two RBis on
three hits and four times at the
plate.
Bob Ash, Henry, Bart DaVis and
Justin Crandol also scored runs,
Davis had two RBls and also stole
·
three bases.
St. Francis errors accounted for
six of the Falcon runs.
Crandol made it 4-3 when he
scored on the front end or a double
steal in the fourth inning and· the
Falcons never looked back. After
the fifth inning, the score was 8-3.

Golf tourney set
for Thursday
The fourth annual Jaycee golf
tournament will be held Thurs- •.
day at the Jaymar Golf Course •
with .48 participating golfers .
There will be a meeting of the
golfers Wednesday at 7 p.m. with
a steak dinner at 8 p.m and the
drawing for teams at 8:30 p.m .
Tee-of! time for the tournament
will be at 1 p.m on Thursday .
Proceeds this year will go to
the golf course for a sprinkler
system . Since the tournament
started three years ago abou t
$7,000 ha s been given to charily
by the sponsors.
Larry Powell will be honored
for community involvement, and
Smith Nelson will give a car for a
hole In one on number 18. Clark's
Jewelry Store will give a watch to
the person coming closest to the
pin, and Locker 219 will award
golf shoes for the longest drive.
There will be other prizes .

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(USPS lt5-HII)
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~

�Page- 4 - The Daily Sentinel

Friday, June 3, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Cards edge Phils in controversial four-plus hour battle
By LEN HOCHBE RG
UPI Sports Writer
Thursda;· nlghl's Sl. LouisP hiladelphia game produced a
controversial endi ng, and a confusing boxscore. ·
The 14 inning game. won by tht&gt;
v isiting Cardi nal s 3-2, co ntained
40 playPrs , Including 13 pitchers :
106 at -bats; 27 hits; a 14-inning
game record 38 men left on base;
and four hours, 47 mlnu tes of
baseba ll.
Tom Brunansky, running from
sc•cond baso on the! pitch, scot'!'d
ih&lt;' game-winning run on Tony
Pena's controve rsial, infield s in~&lt; i e with two ou ts in !he 14th.
Pena's olide into llrsr b&lt;:&gt;at th e
t ht·ow from second baseman
Jua n Samuel, as ruled by umpire

John McSherry
"I beat the throw." Pena said.
"l saw I hat l beal the throw ."
First baseman \&lt;on Hayes a nd
Phillics Manager Lee Ella
argued to no avail.
"It's a tough game to lose on a
queslionable call," Elia said.
Cardinals Manager Whitey
Herzog rolled 1he dire- sending
Bru nansky - and won.
"The way wr' v€' bE'en hit ting
with two outs, I thought our bes t
bet would be a throw int o left
field," said Herzog. whose.tea m
posted 13-inning victory over·
Mou ,ton Wednesd ay night and
arrived In Ph iladel ph ia ear ly
Thursday .
John Coste llo. making his
.major-league debut. picked up

lhe victory by e rasing a basesloaded jam in the 13th, and
striking out the side in the 14th.
"That was a helluva place to ·
put him In," Herzog said. "He
ca me In and did a good job."
"I knew I had to throw
strikes. " said Costello. who
joined the team Monday. " When
I ca me to the mound , tcatcher)
Tony tPena) as ked me what
pitches I had and I said a fast
ball, slider and change.
"But I sa id just call for the fast
ball. When he started laughing,
t hat broke the nervousness .''
The Ph lilies had their chances,
but equaled a team- high with 20
stranded runners. The teams set
a major-league mark for a
14-lnning game by leaving38men
on base. torming the 37 set by

and Lance Parrish 's run·scorlng
single tied It In the ninth .
St. Louts catcher Steve Lake
was the only non-pitcher who
didn't play .
Elsewhere in the Nat tonal
League, New York outlasted
Chicago 2-1 In 13 Innings , and
Montreal downed Pittsburgh 7-3.
In the American League, It
was: Toronto5 , Boston4; Kansas
City 3, Seattle 0; Texas 10 ,
Chicago 2; and Milwaukee 9,
California 4.
Mets 2, Cubs I, 13 innings
At New York, Howard Johnson
cracked his ninth homer of the
season leading off the 13th to
make a winner of Randy Myers,
4-0, and a loser of Frank DIP! no,
0-2. Myers entered with one out

Houston (20) 'a nd Cincinnati 117)
July 2, 1976.
"You just saw two clubs having
trouble get Ung a two-out hit,"
Herzog said.
" We had a lot of chances, but
we just didn't hit when we needed
to, " Samuel said .
Brunansky, who extended his
hitting streak to 18 games with a
fourth -Inning single, started the
winning rally with a one-out
walk, and "stole second. One out
later, Pena hit his game-winner
off Danny Clay, 0-1, Philadelphia 's sixth pitcher of the game.
The Cardinals took a 2-0 lead in
the sixth. Bob Horner's third
homer and Luis Alicea ' s single
delivered the runs . Samuel's RBI
double made it 2-1 in the seventh,

By 'fhe Bend

and the bases loaded In the 12th .
Damon Berryhlll 'gave Chicago a
1-0 lead in the lOth with his firs t
major-league homer. Pinchhitter Lee Mazzilll singled to tie
the score. Starters David Cone of
New York and Calvin Schiraldi
each allowed four hits over nine
innings .
·
Expos 7, Pirates 3
At Pittsburgh, Andres Galarraga had a career-best five RBI,
three with his 13th homer of the
season, to carry Montreal. Neal
Heaton, 2-3, survived homers by
Randy Milligan, his second, and
Barry Bonds, his 13th. Joe
Hesketh pitched three innings for
his first save. Bob Walk. 5-4,
permitted just two hits over
seven innings .

The Daily Sentinel
Friday, June 3. 1988

Page-5

Beat of the Bend

No more outdoor
dances in Pomeroy

Dallas nips Lakers, forces game seven

ELBOW CONFRONTATIQN- After an elhowlng confrontation
under the basket, Dallas guard Derek Ilarper illustrates to Los
Angeles Laker glll'rd Michael Cooper (21) how it's done In
Thursduy night's NBA Western Conference finals. The Mavericks
hPid on to win 105-10:1 and push the series to Los Angeles for the
deciding seventh game Sat u~day. (UP I)

Wilkerson paces
10-2 Texas win
.,

By COLLINS YEARWOOD
UPJ Sports Writer
Curl is Wilkerrson Is making a
strong case for becoming the
Texas Rangers' everyday seco nd
b~seman.

Wilkerson collected four hit s
for the first lime in his fi ve-year
care&lt;&gt;r Thursday night, dr ove in
three runs. and tied a club record
with lhrce doubles lo lead the
Rangers to a 10-2 victoryoverrhe
Chicago White Sox. The pla tooned second baseman is ba tling .&lt;52 in his last l4 games , and
. 3R2 In 1R ga mes this season.
"That's a week for me,"
Wilkerson said. " [' m not tr ying
10 do too much at the plate. The
way I'm hilling. I wan t 10 be out
there . If I get a s la rt agalnsl a
Ie(l hander, [' m go ing to be
ready."
Wilkerson is st ill s ha rin g seco nd base with Rangers' infleldN Jerry Browne. who is
t)atling .207.
.
"To his credit. he has worked
rent hard," Texas Ma nager
Hobb\' \a Ientine sa id of Wilkerson. :. It's rimr 10 g lv&lt;' crcdil to
(coac h Tom I Robson and I coach
Arl ) Howe. Howe ha s,spcnl lots
of time with him on and off the
field He Is doing the lit lie th ings
wei!. He's stE'al Ing bases, turning
the double pia;·. n•o king the big
defensive plays. I ca n' t say
&lt;'nough aboul him."
Th!' RangPrs tlrd a cl ub record
with seve n dou bl &lt;'S in the ga me.
They got 14 hit s and 24 to tal
bases. thanks lo the doubles a nd
(;rno Pet ralli's solo hom e run in
the seco nd Inning.
Petraili's homer was the only
Texas hit through four innings ,
when the score was tied 1-1.
_Against rookie pitcher Melldo
·('et'CZ, o-2. t he Rangers gol four
:tolls and four runs in the fifth
:G-Inlng to break the gam£&gt; open for
••

:~SU,

sla rt er Char lie Hough. o-6.
Houg h gor his third com plete
ga me in his first June sta rt after
going 1-3 with an 8.33 ERA in five
May starts.
" I'm glad I was the guy out
thf't'e pitching, for us," Hough
said. "!got myself in a couple of
binds and ca ught some breaks. "
"It 's good to see Charlie have a
complete ga me,'' Valentine said.
" Hop&lt;'fulty he's gotten over the
hump."
Va lentin e could say the sa me
lhing a bout the Rangers. who had
lost four of five going into t he
ga me
The White Sox los t for· the 13th
tim e in thei'r last 16 ga mes . They
!ailed to take adva ntage of their
opportunities, sco ring only twice
despite gettin g nine hi ts a nd four
s tol e n bases.
" We had nine or 10 hit s. four or
fi ve s tole bases, we had a lot of
c hances to score some runs."
Chicago Managet· .Jim Fregosi
sai d. "!3ut it's lh&lt;'sameold s tory .
We cou ldn ' 1 get the hit to get il
done.'·
E lsewhE're. To ron to edged Boston 5-4. Kansas Cit)' bl a nked
Sea ttle 3-0, and Mi !waukee
c lubbed California 9-4.
In the Natio nal Le ague, it was :
New York 2, Chicago 1 In 13
inn ings: St. Louis3, Philadelphia
2 in 14 in nings and Pittsburgh 7,
Montreal 3.
Blue Jays 5, Red Sox 4
At Bosto n. George Bell hit a
two-run homer with one out in the
sixth inning to brC'ak a scoreless
lie and li ft the Blue Jays. Bos ton
startN Bruce Hurst fell to 6-3.
Dav id Wells, 3·2, aliowed two
runs on two hits and three walks
wit h one s lrik eout over 4 1-3
innings.
Royals 3, Mariners 0
Rre,w rrs 9, Angels 4

Louisville on national TV in fall

•
; ;COLUMBUS. Ohio /UP II- A
·!rip to Hawa ii, a berth In the
J-lo lldav Festival In Madison
~quare Garden and a nationally
tj?levised game at Louisvlllr
hig hlight Ohio State's 31-game
}988-R!) basketball sched ule.
:The Buckeyes. und er th irdyear Coach Gary Wllilam s, will
open the season with three games
tllov . 24 27 in the powerful Mau l
€ )asslc, which a lso lnclude.l
a'Ubu r n, DePaul, Mi chigan,
Ji.evada-Las Vegas, Oklahoma
a~d Vanderbilt , along with host
Cha ml nade.

•'Oh io Slate co ncludes DecJ&gt;mber with the Holiday Fcstl"?ll appeara nce, joining St.
Jqhn ' s Ford ham and Florid a
Llec. 27 a nd 29. December also
has the Buckeyes visltlng Dayto n
a nd South Carolina and home

co ntests against Nebraska and
Ken t State.
The game against Louisville,
in Freedom Hall, Is Jan. 29 .
In a switch from recent years,
the Buckeyes wind up th ei r Big
Ten schEI:Iule at home, March 11,
ag ains t Minnesota . In eight of the
last 10 seasons, Ohio siate has
had to play its la st conference
game on the road.
" ll's the toughest schedule
we've plyed sl nee I've been
here," said Williams, who has
four sta rters returning from last
year 's 20-13 learn and help on the
way from a good recruiting class
a nd Proposition 48 recruits Treg
Lee and Ell Brewster from the
previous class.
Ohio State sees Its first actual
action Nov. 15 in an exhibition
ga me against the Soviet national
team In St. John Arena .

DALLAS IUP!) - Whether or.
not Dallas center James Donaldson actually blocked James
Worthy 's layup attempt with two
seconds remaining Thursday
night, one thing is certain: the
Western Conference final is
headed for Game 7.
Sparked by Mark Aguirre's 23
points and Donaldson's key defensive play, the Mavericks
forced a decisive seventh game
scheduled for Saturday In the
Forum with a 105-103 victory
over the defending champion Los
Angeles Lakers.
"This is a situation where
every player on our team would
have died to win," said Aguirre,
who scored 19 points in the
second naif. "That's how we
·
were going to play it."
With Dallas leading 104-102,
Donaldson - Inserted Into the
game during a Los Angeles
timeout with 11 seconds left slid over to deny Wortlly the
basket as the Lakers forward
drove the baseline.
The 7-foot-2 center received
credi t for a blocked shot, but was
uncertain if he stuffed Worthy .
"1 don't think I got a piece of
the ball on his shot," Donaldson
said. "I got over. and he saw me
there and had to alter his shot."
Donaldson then was fouled and

made a free throw . After another
timeout, Los Angeles' Magic
Johnson took an inbounds pass
and ho isted a futile desperation
hook from beyond the 3-point
circle, but he was fouled by
Rolando Blackman with one
second left .
Johnson made the first free
throw and intentionally misfired
on the second - but missed the
rim in the process; a violation.
Dallas received possession, In bounded the ball and walked off
with the victory, their third at
home in the best-of-seven series.
"When It was all on the line It
was a real tug' of war, and they
got the last point," Los Angeles
Coach Pat Riley said. "We had
good opportunities, but with a 8-9
point lead lthe visitors trailed
99-91 with 5:14 left) Dallas is too
good to beat at home. "
Despite the narrow defeat. the
Lakers still appear In control.
They play Game 7 in the Forum,
where they have beaten Dallas In
the series by margins of 15. 21
and 17 points .
T~e Mavericks, 0-9 on the
Lakers' court In the postseason,
will play the first Game 7 In their
e ight -year history . Los Angeles
will participate in its second in
two weeks, having defeated Utah
In a West semifinal series that

also went the distance .
In each of their victories, the
Mavericks broke open a close
game with a flurry In the fourth ,
quarter. This time, the takers
answered, only to be dented at
the end.
Los Angeles led 84-82 only 52
seconds into the final period, but
Dallas unleashed a 14-3 blitz for a
96-87 cushion. Aguirre began the
spree with a 3-polnt play, and
Derek HarpPr ended It with a free
throw with 6: 59 left.
Dallas then led 99-91 , but
Michael Cooper capped a run of 7
straight points with a 3-pointer to
make It 99-98 with 3:38 left. The
Mavericks got 2 offensive rebounds before Aguirre scored on
a goaltencling violation by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, and Harper
hit a foul shot with 2: 11 to play for
a 102-98 edge.
Abdui-Jabbar, who had only 8
points, and Worthy scored
around an Aguirre rebound
basket to bring the champions
within 104-1 02 with 1:08 left.
Blackman contributed 22
points for · Dallas while Harper
added 17. Byron Scott and
Worthy led Los Angeles with 27
points apiece.
Aguirre had 13 rebounds and
Donaldson 12 but Roy Tarplay
managed only 7. Still, Dallas held

a 47-45 rebounding advantag e,
winning the battle of the boards
for the fifth time In the series .
Donaldson's rebound basket
had allowed the Mavericks to
match their largest lead at 64 -56.
but Los Angeles responded with a
9-2 run. Johnson, who had only~
points In the first half, scored 5 in
the surge that pulled 1he Lakers
to 66-65 with 6:23 to go In the third
quarter.
In the period, Scott had 12
points, Including 10 of the Lakers'
last 15, but Aguirre matched that
output as Dallas took an 82-80
edge Into the final quarter.
Blackman. who usually plays
on the perimeter, scored 18
points -14 on drives- to lift the
Mavericks to a 53-50 halftime
lead.
The Lakers led 45-42 with 3:43
to play In the second quarter
before Cooper was tagged with a
breakaway foul for hacking
Harper. The Dallas playmaker
a ngrily told Cooper to "Play
ball," but only insults were
exchanged.
Harper made his 2 foul shots,
stole the baU from Cooper after a
Dallas miss and fed Blackman
for a jumper that produce d a
46-45 lead. The breakaway foul
wound up igniting a!) ll -5 burst
that closed the half.

.MORNING CLASS - These are memben 1
kindQ-garten class of the Pomeroy Element.'lJ ·y School who will
graduate at 3 p.m. Sunday In the school audl torium. They are,
front', 1 tor, Michelle Painter, Stephanie Stan~, ley, .Iashua Black,
Brian Klein, Tiffany IDckle, Christy Phallo,t ,Jacquelyn Buck,
Amber Blackston, Kimberly Conde, Shel13' • Kennedy, Arica

second row, I to r, Jot•atlhan
Williamson, Ryan Well, Grant Abbott, Melissa Davis, Marsha
Persons, Melissa Lehew, Timothy Heldreth, Christopher Jeffers;
third row, I to r, Morgan Mathews, Jennifer Shrbnplln, Wesley
Thoene, Patrick Erwin, Joshua Simpson, Zebulon Fletcher, Adam
Shank, Johmdhan Haggerty. Not pictured, Tommy Fellure.

Heintzelman grabs first round Kemper lead
POTOMAC, Md . (UPI) Webb Heintzelman had expected
to spend this weekend tending to
bu siness at the Glenn Dale Golf
Club pro shop, tutoring club
members and, perhaps, playing
some golf himself.
But luck - or fate - changed .
that.
First. Heintzelman's name
was picked out of a hat to
participate in the Kemper Open
with pros such as Curtis Strange,
defending champion Tom Kite.
Hale Irwin and Craig Stadler.
Then Thursday, Heintzelman
grabbed a share of the lead with
PGA Tour veteran Howard
Twitty after the first round of the
$800,000 tournament.
Heintzelman, an assistant
teaching pro at the Glenn Dale
club, fired a bogey -free 5- under
par · 66 at the cool and wet

Tournament Players CLub at
Avenel. just miles from his
boyhood home, Bethesda, Md.
About 200 friends and f~mily
members cheered boisterously
as Heintzelman trudged through
the 6.867-yard, par-71 stadium
golf course, where he plays
practice rounds several times
du,rlng the year .
·
"!never expected to be here."
said Heintzelman, who has failed
to earn his PGA Tour card at the
annual qualifying school four
straight years . "I love it. Having
all these people pulling for me Is
a big bonus .
"This round was a big boost.
This Is only going to help me
when I go to Tour school against
this year . But, believe me, I'm
nor think about winning this
tournamen 1."
Twitty, the 1987 Ke mper run-

nerup, birdied lhree of the first
four holes, on the way to a
six-birdie, one-bogey round .
Kite. Bobby Clampett. Keith
Clearwater and Ken Green were
one stroke off the pace at 67, with
1980 Kemper champ John Mahaffey and Calvin Peete among nine
golfers two strokes back. A total
of 35 players were und er par
after one round .
Heintzelman failed to earn a
spot in the Kemper Open ,at last
week's local qualifying tournament. On Monday, Heinizelman
said tournament chairman Ben
Brundred "threw three names
(of local pros) In a hat, and drew
my name out" for a sponsor's

Dr. and Mrs. Larry D. Kennedy, D.D.S.
announce the relocation of their
dental practice.
You are cordially invited to attend an
Open House
Sunday, the fifth of June

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

II

Strlll &amp; •••er ""

' OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
9 AM-Ii PM
SATURD~Y !I AM-1 PM

~THE

GA•~•e• ~y

..

12 noon to three o'clock In the afternoon
441 General Hartinger Parkway
Middleport, Ohio

il

Delicious Dishes!
EnJovthe vervtlneatln home ttvle
cooking atthe verv beat prices around I

MONQAV - ..

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ROLLS-................................... $349

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p~~f~CUED RIBS .................................... $ 349
FIIID CHICKEN ................. ~..................... S349
FOOnONG HOTDOG BASKET-................ $ 2 75
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WEDNESDAY
HURSDAY

1988 SCHEDULE FLEA MAllET
. MEIGS COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
POMEROY, OHIO
JUNE 3-4-5
SEPTEMBER 2-3-4
JULY 1-2-3
OCTOBER 7-8-9
AUGUST 5-8-7 NOVEMBER 4-5-8

DEALERS WANTED - BUYERS WANTED
COME" ONE - COME ALL

leaiOIICIIIIe Sel•up lam, llllloor Space·Oytdoer Space
We'l SH You at the Flea Market
For lnf.,._tian tall: 13041 422-4169 - 16141 742-2112

r, Ryan Powell, Charles Neal, .Julie Spaun, Christopher Proffitt,
Donald Call, Michael Stacy, T.J. Thomas, Joshua Hooten, Richard
Michael; third, 1tor, April Large, Melanie Blevins, EmUy Dillard,
Rachel Staley, Michelle Ilart, Jeremy Brickles, Christopher
Snouffer, Calvin Freeman Ill. Brooke Hart, not pictured.

Library lines.....
Mondays; 10:30 to 5 p.m. Tuesday thru Saturday.
The Summer Reading Program, Is In full swing. Come In
and get signed up for a Summer
full of fun!

By Ruth Powers

The library Is happy to report
two new collections they ha ve
received. Richard Crow, brother
of Fred Crow Jr. has bestowed
upon the .library, In memory of
his wlfr Ruth (Bolz) and in honor
of his brother, Fred, a series of 39
Mr. a nd Mrs. Robert Reeves; Mrs. Charley Smith.
volumes that chronicles In full
Cindy Lambert lost the most
Brandi, Robbie of Chester were
the events of the Second World
Mr. a nd Mrs. Tom Summerweekly weight at the Tuesday
Sunday afternoon visitors of Mr.
field Crystal of Medina were War. He also has g iven 9 Epic of morning Five Points class of
and Mrs. Paul Darnell, Jeff,
week end visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Flight Books, depict tng aeronauSlinderella . At the evening class,
Melissa, Mrs. Dorothy Reeves.
Robert Russell, Mr. and Mrs. tics at its various stages In
Judy Eblin and Charlotte Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank,
history and 3 books fea turing lost the most weight, and Cathy
Steve Haggy, Stephanie, Brad
Sarah Beth and Matthew were and Mr . and Mrs. Donald
U-Boats. Pirates and Sail Boats.
Hudson was runner-up. In the
Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gibbs , teen class, Michele Folmer lost
Eugene Haning, Ronald and
Mr. Charles Sayre and son have parted with some memothe most weight and Melissa
Gla dys Tuckerman.
were weekend visitors of his
ries, thus benefitting the llbrary.
Foster was runner-up while In
Mr. Eugene Smith was Satur- parent Mr. and Mrs. Charles They have given a collection of
the kids class, Crystal Smith was
da y evening visitor of Mr. and
Sayre local.
Pomeroy annuals (The Pomethe top loser with Amy Smith,
royan) ranging from 1930 to 1966.
runner-up.
The library staff Is sure both
At the Mason class Tuesday
------------------ ~ these collections will be enjoyed
evening, Janice Reltrnlre and
very much by the patrons using Brenda Roush tied for the most
Mr. a nd Mrs. Sherman Clay
Wednesday.
the
library.
There were 60 present for
and Mrs. Zelia Ours from Heweight lost and Lois Ann ReltNew
Sumnier Hours for the
Sunday school on· May 15.
bron, Ohio called at the ho me of
mire was runner-up. Beginning
Pomeroy Library are as follows:
Mrs. Richard Young from
Eun ic Brink er o n Sunday
June 6 the Five Points evening
even ing.
Sidney, Ohio spent the weekend 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday thru
class will be held on Monday
with Mr. and Mrs. Edson Roush. Saturday beginning June 1. The
Mr. a nd Mrs. Roger Four from
Instead of Tuesday, 6:30p.m lor
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Smith called Middleport Hours wUI cemain the remainder of the summer. Jo
Stebron Ohio a nd Mrs. Zann
at the home of Arthur Earl the same, noon to 8 p.m . Ann Newsome Is lecturer.
Gai ner of Pomeroy Wir e at the
home of Eunic Brinker on
~----------------------------Johnson on Sunday evening.

.

SATURQAY

ALL WEEK ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL

REGULAR HOTDOG 8t FRENCH FRIES ....

$99¢

HOURS: MON. thru SAT. 6:30 l.M.-8:00 P.M.

WILLIAMS DINER
f

SlindereUa meets

Carmel notes

Nineteen hundred and eighty-eight

rr=:::=========:rl
GRA V ELV T R A CT0 R ~---;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

MV

1ers of the Pomeroy
Elementary School afternoon
!n class will graduate
during ceremonies held at 3 .p.vn.
, the school auditorium.
They are, front, I to r, Samantha ••, ,~ ... ' leldi Matson, Jennifer
NmL~c. Celan Dillard, PriscilLa
·lstina Hirth, Autumn
Phillips, Llza Zahrnn, Jennifer· Norman,
rU'Travis; second, I to

I .

Although Lopez is the undlspute queen of the fairways as far
as many spectators are concerned, the powerfu I stroke of a
British player. Laura Davies,
turned a lot of heads during the
opening round .
Davies shol a 3-under 69 for a
share of second place with Janel
Coles.
"Laura Is awesome," said Jan
Stephenson, who played In the
English woman' s trio with DeeDee Lasker.
"She actually hit s It like a
man," said Stephenson, who shot
a 2-under 70.

S

I

olfe Pen community happenings

Lopez fires 68 for
Toledo Classic lead
TOLEDO. Ohio (UPT)
Nancy Lopez, twice a bridesmaid
of the Jamie Farr LPGA Toledo
Classic, says she's playing the
$275,000 tournament just like any
other event she competes ln.
Lopez shot a 4-under 68 Thursday to lead 98 other players the
first day of play in tournament.
"! 'm just comingout.oneday at
a time and just trying to play the
type of golf I feel like I 'm able to
play," Lopez said.
Lopez lost to La uri Peterson In
the tournament's 1984 Inaugural
a nd to Penny Hammel the
following year._
The LPGA's number two
money-maker did not compete in
tas t yea r' s event.
Lopez said she Is feeling
healthier after taking a week off
by bypassing the LPGA Corning
Classic.
Her plans now call for playing
three weeks at a time, resting
during the fourth to avoid fatigue
and to spend more time with her
family .
"It really took a lotoutofmeto
play four weeks In a row. I feel a
little better," she said. '"You just
have to pace yourself."

exemption . Heintzelman 's only
previous PGA Tour event was
las t year's Kemper Open- when
he failed to make the cut.
Heintzelman, 26, played colleglateiy at South 'Carolina , and
was named the 1986 Mid-Atlantic
PGA Player of the Year.
Thursday, Heint ze lm a n
started on the back nine, si nking
birdies at the 14th and 16th holes,
then caught fire on the front nine,
with birdies at the fourth. fifth
and sixth fioles. con~ecutively .
"You get in a zone out there,
and you get comfortablr, then
you just go out and shoot
birdies." Heintzelman said.

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sc hool - the entire sc hool's
No more outdoor dances In
alumni association will be hold·
Pomeroy.
lng a reunion on June 25 at the
That ' s the
high school.
word from parAt that time th~ association
ents who have
will be awarding lts'ttrst scholarbee n holding
ship. However , so far , no one
such successful
seems interested in receiving It
teen dances ' In
-no one has filed an application.
the Pomeroy
The scholarship Is for any
Villag e Hall
Meigs High senior or Meigs High
Auditorium . Last Saturday
graduate. Applican ts will be
night, an outdoor dance was
evaluated on grade point averattempted but the audience wa s
age and· compliance requireiar larger than the teens who
ments with some consideration
paid to dance and that doesn 't
to be given to career objectives.
work.
• Those Interested in applying
The dances will be moved back
should send a current grad e
into the auditorium. However,
transcript, a short essay, Includthere will be none this Saturday
Ing their career objectives and
since it Is Meigs prom night and
need for the scholarship, a photo
the auditorium will be the setting
and a copy of their letter of
for prom photographs of students
acceptance from the secondary
stopping by .
school they will attend to the
The group has a neat Idea for
Meigs High School Alumni Assn .,
the Saturday, .June 18, dance.
P.O. Box 25, Middleport, Oh io
That event wo;; carry out the
45769.
graduation :heme. There will be
decorated cakes In t he school
Heritage Weekend Is coming
co lors - for Wahama, Meigs ,
up at the Meigs Museum on June
Eastern and Southern High
11 and 12 and you are being asked
Schoo ls . Free cake and punch . to help by Sarah Fisher; exhibit
will be served and each graduate coordinator.
·
present honored. The June 25th
The museum group needs old
dance will be known as the " big
wedding gowns, accessories, and
surprise" dance with a very
old wedding photos to do a special
specia l d.j . on hand. For the
Heritage Weekend exhibit. Sarah
Saturday, June 11 dance, Steve
promises that special care will be
Rineha rt of WKEE 100wlll bed.j.
taken of all items loaned for the
By the way, teens attending the
occcasion. If you can help call the
dances can expect to pay a $2 museum or drop your Items off
admission fee for a couple_ of
there.
dances . This extra charge is to
By the way, the Modern
help defray the costs of installing
Woodmen of America. Burair conditioning In the auditolingham, is working with the
rium. This should really be an
museum folks and will be seutng
Improvement for the summer
food items across from the
months.
museum starting at 11 a.m . on
Saturday and at 11:30 a.m . on
Some of t\le members of the
Sunday . Luncheon type foods
Meigs High School graduating
along with homemade pie will be
class of 1973 appear to be
available.
dragging their feet a bit .
Linda Faulk and Edle King are
Mrs . Evelyn Knight has been
heading a reunion for the class
returned to her home on lincoln
and tha t will be held on July 3 at · Hill Road from the Western Hills
· the new American Legion Annex
Medical Center in Parkersburg.
in Middleport. That's a month
Husba nd, A. R .. has good things
away . However, reservations
to say about the services and
must be in to Edie or Linda by
treatment of the brand new area
June 6 so that they can proceed to
faciiilty ..
pull reunion activities togetherso members of the class are
Remember when we used to
urged to contact EdleorLi ndaget the blues when it raIned - ?
like yesterday .
Right now a little rain i(eeps us
smiling.
And speaking of Meigs High

992-7833
MIDDLEPORT

NEW PASTOR - Special services were ~
Wesley an Bl ble Holiness Chu reb, 75 Pear 1S~
and Mrs. Roy McCarty, .Jr., fonnerly of u
Durr, Martinsburg, W.Va., general moderl
Bible Holiness Church, was present to con~t
present the church key to the Rev. and Mrs.•
new pastor of the Middleport church and he l
sons, Jimmy, Dan lei and Joshua, are resid~
Middleport.
~

eld at the Middleport
, to welcome the Rev,
ak IIIII. Rev. Bennie
Ltor of the Wesleyan
tel the service and to
McCarty. McCarty Is
.nd his wife and three
•g at 309'(, Front St.,

Nease birthday
A surprise party in celebration
of the 59th birthday of Stanley
Nease was held Wednesday at his
home.
"
Gifts anti cards wero:!presented
.to I he honored guests and a large
decorated birthday cake was
served with other refreshments.
Attending were Stanley's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Nease, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Nease
of Westerville, ,John Nease of
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Nease, Sr., Pomeroy: Mr. and
Mrs. James Anderson, Jamie
and Brian, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Nease, Jr . and 1Travls, Plnf!
Crave Road, Mr. and Mrs.
Patrick Johnson, Atlanta, Ga.

PAPER
FOR

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OPEN FOR
4TH, 5TH,

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liscuit, Maxwoil House CoffH, or Sanko Dtcaffoinated, Both Fretllly Brewod
lA Small Soft Drinl or Hot Tto May It Subttitutedl.
NOODLES &amp; CHICKEN ALONE:..... Small Bowl $1.99, Lorge Bowl $2-19
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Served on China Plllf-. and Drink Your CoHoe ar Tea from Chona CuPII

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'

j

�f

'
Pomeroy~ Middleport,

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

I

Ohio

Friday, June 3, 1988

N

7 fXrERifNCE 111E JOY Of Rl :u

Meigs County school honor rolls
SY RA CUSE ELEMENTARY
HONOR ROIL
The sixth six weeks grading
period honor roil at th e Syracuse
Elementary School has been
announced. Making a grade of B
or above In all their subjects to be
named to the roll were·
First Grade Erron Aldndge,
Jason Allen, Becky Collins,
Bridget Cross, Justin Jeffers,
Tara Kn ighting, Elicia Rttch
hart, Kim Sayre, Brian Thomas
Second Grade. Mick Barr..Cynthia Caldwell Valerie Cun
dlff, Shaun Harris, Alicia Mul
ford, Lisa Russell, Evan St ruble,
Billy' Young, Sean O'Brien
Third Grade Frances Adkins,
Bnan Allen, Chris Ball, Jason
Lawrence, Philip Hamm, Thomas Powell, Amber Slaven,
Amber Thomas
Fou rth Grade Rochelle Jenkins, J ennifer Lawrence, Jay
McKelvey, Mandy Mills, Samm1
Sisson, Rayan Young
Fifth Grade Brian Anderson,
Randy Bing, Ma son F1sher,
Andrea Moore, Matt Morrow,
Amy Weaver, Ryan Williams
Sixth Grade Trenton Cleland,
Aaro n Drummer , Andrew
Fields, Jod i Hobbs, Michael
McKelvey, Joy O'Brien, Amber
Ohlinger

~~~

(row's Family Restaurant
"Futllring

Kentud~

Fried Chlcksn "

228 W. Main St. Pomeroy
992-5432

FRANCIS FLORIST

MEIGS TIRE
~ \ CENTER, INC.

\
\
1
i

~

POMEROY,

Pomeroy

@

Preoscnpt1ons

Pomeroy

• I

•

~a.rvto.

78() NORTH SECQ. IDAVE •
that annual period of euphoria
that means no more books,
teachers, homework or classroom discipline for the next three months; unless
for some reason summer school is indicated, and then some freedom from
studies will be forthcoming. Moreover,
the Sunday school is also in adjournment at this time. Therefore, wise
parents will make sure that their
children do not drift away from the lessons they have learned. Manners and
respect for authority should never take a
vacation; and above all, children should
be reminded to be ever grateful for the
blessings of God's love. Regular visits to
the House of Worship will help keep all
these thinks in their minds, and remind
you that the resumption of their education in the fall will be much easier if
they haven't been allowed to wander
too far away from it during the summer.

WAID CROSS
SONS SlORE

"Servmg Famihes"
264 S. 2nd, Middleport

GrocenesGeneral Merchand• se
Rae me 949· 2SSO

992-5141
TRIN1TY CHURCH, Rev JolurIUlt, pastor,
Debbie Buck, Sunday School Sup! Church
School 9 15 a m , Worship Serv1ce 10 lJ a m
OIOir rehear&gt;al, Thesday, 7 :IJ p m urder dl
rectlon ol Lois Burt
POMEROY CHURCH OF' THE N/&gt;JJI
RENE Corner Union and Mulbeny, Rev

Thomas Glen McClung, Jlastor Norman Pres
ley s s. Supl Sunday Schoo( 9 :11 a m,
rnornlng \llorship 10: :.tJ am everung servioetl

CHAPMAN SHOES

"Pommg ·, Quefltg Shoe Stoi'B"
104 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY
992-2815

p m , mJd.week service, Wednesday, 7 p rn

GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH, :ll6 E
Holy
corrununton on the first Sutxlay or each month,
and combined with morning prayer on the
th1rd Sunday. MornLng prayer and setmon on
an other Sundays ot the month. Church School
and Nursery care pmvi!X'd Coff~ hooJ in the
Parish llalllrtun!.&lt;llately following Ihe serv!c&lt;
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIS!', 212 W
Main St Leo Lash, evangeUst Bible School
!I::J&gt;a m, Mornlngworshlp,10:lla m, Youth
llll'etlngs, G00 p m , Evening worship 7 00 p
P1 Wednesday night prayer meeting and Bible
11\ldy 7 00 !&gt;ffi
THE &amp;ALVATION ARMY 115 Bul!emut
AYe , Pomeroy Mrs DJra Wining In chal ge
Surw:&amp;ay OOilness meeting 10 a.m . SUnday
S&lt;hcol, !It~ a m SU!Idny Scooot, YPSM
~Ioise Adams, leader 7 :JJ p m Salvation
meeting, various speakers and music specials
'Thursday, 11 ,'1) a m to 2 p m LacUes Home
Main St, Pomeroy Sundav SE;TVJces

League, members m charge, an

women

Invited, 6 45 p m 'ThW'Sday CoC]&gt;i Cadet
Classs (Young Pecple-Biblei, 7 ~ p m Bible
Study and Prayer ITieelin&lt; fiP&lt;!!liD the public
POMEROY WESTSIDE Ctn!RCH OF'
CHRIST :l1226Chllclren'sHomc Road (County
Road 11il . !192 5235 Vocal music. SUnday Wor
ship 10 a.m , Bible Study 1J a m , Worship, 6 p
m WedneSday Bible Study 7 p m
OlD DEXTER BIBLE CHIWiTIAN
CHUROI, AMn CUrtis pastor Linda Swan
9Jpt SUnday ScMol 9 Il tt m , preaching ser
vices, ftrsl and lhirtl Sunday following Sunday
School Youth I'TI€eting, 7 l) p m every Sun
day

GRAHAM

UNITED METHODlST
1 Preu chln ~ 9 30 &lt;1 m fils! and second , Sun
days of each month , third ami fo urfh Sun
daY each month v. 01 shi p se 1viers :.11 7 30p
m, Wedn Psday ('\enlngs at 7 30 p m
Praver and Bible Study
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST
Mul
bf'r ry H€'ig ht s Road , PomPro} Pas tor
John SwPI~arl Sa bbat h Sc hool Supetln
tendt"nl Darlh1£' Stewart Sabb&lt;tth School
begins a t 2 p m on Sa tu1 day afternoon
wjth worship SE'l vice roiiowlng ;~t 3 15 p m
EJ.Ier vanE' welcome
•RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURC H
~ Sister Harr iett Warne r , Sup! Sund ay
Sc;hool 9 30 am, M or ning Wors hlp.lO 45
a m
POMEROY Fl RST BAPTIST Lvst on
Hallf')l, min iste t , Saturday t'vf&gt;nlng
f:'va ngeoll sllc serv tcf's open to publi c 7 p
m Sunday Church School 9 30 a m
Mor ning Wo rs hip 10 :m u m
FIRST SOUTHE RN BAPTIST Po
mE.&gt;roy Pik e E La mar O'Bryant p.ls!(,lr
Jack Needs, Su nd ay Sc hool Dh ector Sun
dav School, 9 30 o m Morn in~ Wors hip
10 45. evPnlngworshl p 7 OOp m 1D S T 1
&amp; 7·JO !EST) Wedn esda y Pt aver SPr
vlcf' 700pm tDST )&amp;73n PM rEs
T J Mission 1- rlends tagcs 2 6) Royal
Ambassador ~ (bovs nge:o; G 18) and Guls
In Ac1lon li!lji!;C'S G IRI on Wednesday .. 7 p
m ! D S T I &amp; 7 30 p m IE S T ) Tul•sday
VlsLtatlon 6 30 p m
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURC !l Bat
IE'Y Run Road RPv Emm£'11 Rawson pas
101 Ha nd!ev Dunn supt Su nday School
lO a m Su nd av e vcnlng srrv1cr 7 30p m
• Blbl&lt;' H.•ach ln ~ 7 30 p m Thuts day
SYRACUSE MISSION Ch t rr) ~~ , Sy
racusr Sf'IVicPs lila m Sunday Evenl nt:t
S&lt;'l vlces Sunday and Wedn esday aT 7 00 p
m
' MIDDLEPOil'l CHURCH OF CHRISr
.N CHR ISTIAN U~ ION, Dwight B.llt.'y
fhst eldf'r W and11 Mohler, Sund.:~y Sc hool
Su p! SUndav SchOol 9 30 u m MOl ntng
Worship 10 30 a m . Evcnlnl'! Worship 7 30
p m Wr ::lnf'Sdav pra,.rr mef't\n!{7' ~lp m
' MT MORIAH CHU RCH OF GOD
Aacinr Re\ Jamf's Salterf]('ld past or
•rt"'rman Willlttms Supt Sunduv Sl hOOI
!r. ~5 am, Sundav and Wednt-sday f'Verl
th~ s(' rVICt'S 7 p m
" MIDDL EPOR'l FlRS1
81\P mT
Cornt•r Sixth antJ Palm{'! Ja mes Sed don
Pa stor Edna Wil son, S S Supr Ca thv
Rl~~s Asst Supl Sundav Sc hool 9 15 a
m Morning Wor sh ip 10 l5 a m Sunday
Evrnlnp: serv ice, 7 p m Pr1:1yt'r mf'f'lln,E
and BiblE' Studv Wednesdav ..~"Pn \ ng 7 p
m Chil dren 's choir practice Wf'&lt;lnes
da y. 7 p.m Adult choir prttc i!C(' Wt&gt;d , 8
11m , Radio program WMPO Sunday

B;JOa m
• MIDDLEP ORT CHURCH OF CHRIST,
5th and Main, AI Hartson, m l m :~;ter ,
Richard DuBo.se, AssociatE' Past or, Mike
Gerlach, Sunda y Sc hool Super intend ent
Bible SchoolS 30 a m , Morning Worshi p
10 30 a m Even ing Worship 7 00 p m
Wednl"Sday, 7 00 p m Praye r mecllng
• MIDDL EPORT CHURCH OF THE NA
;tARENE PASTOR Fred PenhONood
8111 White Sunday School Supt Sunday
'I..School9 30 a m Morning Worshi p 10 45
m , EVangelistic m ~t n g 7 00 p m
Wednesday, 7 00 p m Praye r meeting

*

' UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY
:
OF MEIGS COUNTY
Rev Chari• Talbott
•
• HARRISONVILLE PRESSYTI':R!AN
CHURCH - Sunday Worsh ip Services
00 am., Chu1ch SchoollO 15 am
, MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTE RIAN Sunday School, 9 a m . Church service,
IO·IHm
SYRACUSE F'IRSTUNITED PRESBYTERIAN - Sunday School, 10 a m
{llurch service, 1115 am
, RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO, Pastor
John Evans Sunday School 10 00 a m '
Sunday Morning Worship 11:00 a.m Chll·
Gren'e Church 11 am. Sunday Evening
Servlce7. 00p.f11 . Wed .. 6 p m Young La
dies' Auxlllary Wednesday, 7 p f!1 Fam
I!Y worship

t

f

HAZE L COMM UNITY CHURC H Off
Rt 12':1, 3 nule:.--s tram PoLiland Long Bot
tom E:ctsel Ha~ t, pas tor Sunday School,
9 30 a m • Sunday m m mng pre&lt;:tt:hlng
10 ~0 am , Sunday evening services, 7 30
pm
MIDDLEPORT FRI':EWILL BAP'l!ST
CHU RCH Corner Ash and Plum Noel
Her r mann pastm Sunday Schoo1 10 OOa
m Mor mnj; Worship n 00 a m , Wed
nesday and Saturd ay E\enln g Services at
7 30pm
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
UNI1'ED -'IETHODIST CHURCH
NOR'I'HEAST CLUSTER
Rev. Don Archer
Re\' . Roy Deeter
Rev. Carl Hicks
Rev Seldoa Johnson
A LF'REO - Church School 9 30 a m ;
W01 ship, 11 a m UMYF6 30p m, UMW
Th u d Tuesdtty, 7 30 p m Communion
first Sunda y (A1cher)
CHESTE R - Wors hip 9 a m , Church
School lOa m , Bible Study, Thursday, 7p
m , UMW , firs t Thursday 1 p m , Com
munlon. fi rst Sunday (Archer )
JOPPA - Worship 9 30 a m . Church
School10 30 a m Bible Study Wednesday
7 30 p m (J ohnson 1
LONG BOTTOM - Church Sc hool 9 30
am , Wors hip 10 30 a m , Bible Study,
Wednesda y, 7 30 p m , UMYF Wednes
day , 6 00 p m , Comm union First Sunday
of M onlh (Hicks )
REEDSVILLE - Chu1ch School9 30 a
m Worship Serv tce 11 00 a m (Deeter)
TUPPERS PLAINS ST PAUL Chu 1ch School 9 am .• Worship 10 am
Bible Study, Tuesda y 7 30 p m , Commu
nlon F irst Su nda y I Archer)
CENTRAL CLUSTER
Rev Kandy Burch
Rev Melvin Franklln
Rev Clemente S. Zunl1a, Jr
Rev . Ro}M,rt Mll!iMman

Rh

Don Meadows

ASBURY (Syracuse} - Wot s hip 11 a m
, Church Sc hool 9 45 a m , Charge Bible
Study Wednesday , 7 30 p m , UMW, first
Tuesday, 1 30 p m , Choir Rehear~al ,
Wednesday 6 30 p m , {Burch )
ENTEHPRISE - Worship 9 a m ,
Church SchoollO am , Bible Study, Tues
da} 7 00 p m, UMW, First Monday, 7 30
p m , UMYF Sunda y, 6 p m Choir Re
ht•aJ sal, Ch ildren s &lt;It 6 30 p m Adult fol
lowi ng, Wednesday (Ft a nkll n )
FLATWOODS - Chur ch SC hool. lOam
, Worship 11 a m , Bible Sturly , Thurs
da y 7 p m
UMYF, Sund ay, 6 p m
( FI a nk lin)
F'O REST RUN - Wors hip 9 a m ;
Chu1 ch School 10 A M Choir practice,
Thursday, 6 30 p m , UMW third Monday
(Burch) m (Bu rch)
HEATH (Middlepor t)- Church School,
9 30 a m , Morn ing Worship 10 30 a m ,
Youth Grou p, 4 p m . Wednesday Bible
study 6 00 p m Ch oir rehearsal 7 00 p m

(Zumga)

MINEHSVILL£ -Ch urch School 9 00
a m ; Worship ser\ Ice 10 00 a m UMW
third Wednesday 1 p m (Burch )
PEARL CHAPE L - Worship Service
9 30 am , Church School 10: 15 am
(Mussman)
POME ROY - Church School 9· I~ a m
Worship 10 30 a m , Choir rehearsal
Wednesday, 7 30 p m
UMW second
Tuesday,7 30p m., UMY FSu nday,6p m
(Meadows)

ROCK SPRI NGS- Church School, 9 15
a m Worship 10 a m , Bible Study, Wedn~day , 7 30 p m, UMYF (Seniors) , Sunday, 6 p m (Ju ni or~) every ot her Sun
day, 6 p m (FJa nk lin)
RUTLAND - Church School. 10 a m ,
WOT shlp 1 11 a m , UMW First Monday,
7 30 p m !Muss man)
SALEM CENTER - Chu rch Schoot9·!5
.t m Wors hip 10· 15 p m (M ussman)
SNOWVl LLE - Worship, 9 00 a m ,
chu rch school 9 45 a m (Mussm an)
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev Debl Foster
Rev Rullt!l' Gra.ce
•\PPLE GROVE - Church School 9· :1J
a m Worshlp, 10 00 a m (tlrs r and third
Sunde~.ys), Bible st udy every Sunday 7 p
UMW Seco nd Tuesday, 7 00 p m ,
m
Prayer meeting, Wednesday , 7 p m
(Grace)
BETHANY - Worship, 9 a m , Church
Sc hool, 111 a m , Bible Study, Wed ne~~day ,
10 a m , Dorcas Women s Fellowship,
Wednesday, 11 a m (Frni ter)
CARMEL - Church SchOol 9:30 am ,
Wo1 s hip , 10 45 a m Second and Fourth
Sundays, Fe llowship dinner with Suttoo
Ulird T hurSday, 6 30 p m (Foster)
MORNIN G STAR - Church SChool9 45
a m , Worshtp 10· 30 a m , Bible Study,
T hursday 7 30 p m (Foster)
SUTTON - Church School, 9. 30 a .m ,
Mor ning Worship 10 45 a .m first and third
Sundays, Fellowship dinner with Carmel
third Thursday. 6 30 p.m (Jo""oater)
EAST LETART - ChurCh School9a m.;
Wors hip 10 a m second and foul1h Sun·
days UMW first Tuesday, 7 :Jl p m
(G race)
LETART FALLS - Worship 9 am.,
Church SC hool 10 am (Grace) .
RACINE- Church School, 10 a m · Wor·
ship U a m., UMW fourth Monday al7 iKl p.
m Men' s Prayer Break!.-1, Wednaoday, 8
am (Grace)
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST Vernon
EldJ ld!le, minister, OUver Swain', Sunday
School Supt Preac hing 9 30 a.m ' each

Sundav

r

FIOWIRI FOR EVERY OCUSION

HOBSON CHRISTIAN U NION Everett

Dl:'l.tney. pastor Sunday service 9 30 a
m , evening serv ice 7 00 p m P1 ayer

meeting Wedn PSday, 7 oo p m
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST. Joseph B Hosk ins, pastor BLblc
Class,9 30am MornlngWorshlplO JOa
m Even ing Worship, 6 :KJ p m Thursday
Bible Study, 6 30 p m
ZION CHURCH OF' CHRIST Pomerov
Harrlsonv llll' Rd Ro bert Pu rtell mints
ter, Steve S!anlc."Y. S S Supl Bill McEI
r oy, Asst Supt, SundaySchoo\9 JOa m
Wo1 ship service 10 30 am Evenlngwor
s hip Sunday 7 p m and Wedn esd ay , 7 p m
ST JOHN LUTHE RAN CHURCH Pin e
Grove 'J:he Rev William M iddles~ arth ,
pastor Church serv ice 9 30 am Sunday
School 10 :ll a m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST
John Wr lght , past or Sund&lt;.~y Scho ol9 .lO a
m, Larry Hay nes S S Supt Mor nin g
worship 10 30 a m
RACINE CHURCH 0~ THE NAZI\
RENE:, Rev Ll oy d D Grimm, Jr pas tor
Ora Bass, Chairman of the BoaT d of Chr is
tlan Life Sunday School9 30 a m , Morn
lng worship 10 30 a m , evangelisti c ser
vice 7 00 p m Wednesday service, 7 p m
LIBERTY CHRISTIA N CHUR CH Dex
ter Woody Call, pastor Sc1v lces Sunday
10 am and 7 p m Wedn es da), 7 p m
DYESVILLE COMMUNl'fY CHURCH
Lloyd Sa,H C Sup! Sunda., Sc hool 9 30 a
m , mo rning worship 10 30 a m Sunday
evening ser vice 7 p m

RACINE FIRST

BAPTIST .

Steve
Sund ay
School Sup! . Sunday School 9 30 a m ,
Morning wor!ihlp 10 40 a m , Sunday
eve ning worship 7 30 p m , Wedn esday
evening Bible study 7 30 p m
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Burlingham Ray LaudermUt, past or; R~
bert Cozart, assistant pastoc Sunday School
10 am, wcrshlp 7 p m, Wedne;d;zy, 6 p m
youth ma&gt;tlng; Wed., 7 p m ctNrchsE!'Vtces
PINE GROVE JIOLINESS CHURCH %
mlleoffRt 325 Rev . BcnJ Watts, pastor
Robert Searles S S Supt Sunday School
9 30 am., Morning Worship 10 30 am,
Sunday . evening servlcf' 7 30 p m , Wed
nesday set vice 7 JO p m
SILVER RUN BAPTIST, Bill Lil lie,
pastor Stev(' Little, S S Supt Sunday
Schoo llO a m , Morning worstp 11 a m ,
Sunday even ln~ worship 7 30 p m Pra yer
meeting and BiblE-study Wednesday 1 7 30
p m ; Youth m eeting Wedni!iday at7 p m
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
- 383 N 2nd Ave, Middleport Sunday
School 10 a m Sunday evening 7 00 p m
Mid-week serv ice, Wed , 7 p m.
LANGSVILLE CMR!S'fJAN CHURCH,
Sunday School 9. 30 a m , Dallas Janey,
s upt , Mor ning w orship 10.30 am, Sun
day evening service, 7' 30 p.m ; Wednes
day even ing servtae, 7 :ll p m
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA·
ZARENE Rev Glenn McMitlan pastor
Mary Janice Lavender, Sunday SChool
Supt Sunday School 9 30 am Morning
worship 10 30 a m , Evangellitlc service,
6p m , Prayer andPralseWednesde.y, 7p
m, Youth meeting, 7 p m
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST. Elden R Blake, pastor SundaySchool 10 am Cary R eed, Lay leader
Morning sermon, 11 a.m , Sunday night
services. Christian Endeavor 7 :ll p m
SOng service 8 p m Preaching 8 30 p m
Mid-week prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7
pm
Deaver, Pastor. Mike Swiger

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN. Rog
er Watson, pastor. Crenson Pratt, Sunday
School Supt Momtnc Worship 9. 30 a m ,
Sunday School 10. 30 a m , Evening ser
Vice, 7:30pm.
MT UNION BAPTIST, Donald Shue,
pastor; Joe sayre, Sunday School Supt
Sunday School 9 15 a m , Evening worship 6· 30 p m 1 Prayer Meeting, 6 30 p m
Wedneoda~ -

TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST. Dave Prentice, minister. Deryl
Wells, Supl Church School 9 a .m , Wor
ship Service, 9 45 p.m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE . Rev. Herbert Grate, pastor
Frank Rltfle, aupt. Sunday School 9. ~a
m.; Wonhlp aervtce, 11 am and 7 p m
Sunday Wednesday, 7 p m Prayer meet·
In[
AUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH David Bell, putor Robert E.
Barton, Dlredor of Christian Education,
Sieve Eblin, aasil,.nl. Stllltlay School9 ~
a m , Momlnc wonhlp 10.30 a.m.: Teen~
in Actton, 6 p.m.; EvenlnrWorshlp, 7 OOp.
m Wednesday evenlna pray~r and Bibleo
st\ldy 7 OOp.m Choir practice Thursday,
7pm
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Charles Russell Sr , minister. Rick Ma
C&lt;llllber, supt Sunday School 9:30am.:

Worship service 10 30

Tuesday, 7 30 p m

am

Bible s tudy

REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LAITER DAY SAINTS Pori
land Racine Road Mike Duhl, pastor,
Janice Danner, church school director
Church school9 JOa m Morninlil: worship
10 30 a m , Wedn esday evening prayer
services 7 30 p m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST · Rev Earl
Shuler, pastor Worship service, 9 30 a m
Sunday School 10 30 a m Bible Study and
prayer service Thur sday 7 30 p m
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATIONAL CHURCH, Kings bury Road Rev
Clyde W Henderson, pastor Sunday
School 9· 30 a m . Ralph Carl, Supt Even
lng worship 7 00 p m Prayer meellnJiil:,
Wednes day 7 00 p m
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN, Vernon
EldridJiil:e, pas tor, Wallace DamewOOd, S
S Supt Sunday School9. 30 a m , Wor ship
Service. 10: 30 a m
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH
0 H Carl. pastor SundaySchoolat9 30a
m , Mor ning w01 ship at 10 30 a m , Sun
day eve ning service at 7 30 p m Thursday
services at 7, 30 p m .
FREEOOM GOSPEL MISSION al Bald
Knob located on County Road 31 R ev
Lawr~nce Gluesencamp, pastor
Rev
Roger Wtllford, asst pastor Preaching
services Sunday 7 JO p m Prayer meeting
Wednesdl:l.y, 7· :Jl p m . Gary Griffith
lea der Youth groops Sunday evening at
6 30 p m with Roget and Violet Willford,
lea ders Communion service first Sunday
each month
WHITE 'S
CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
CHURCH - ContvUie RD Rev Phillip Rl
d cnour, past or Sunday School9 30 a m ,
worship service tO 30 a m , Bibie st udy
a nd w or~hlp service, Wednesday, 7 p m
HUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Bill Carter pastor Sunday School 9 30 a
m , Morning Worship and Communion
10 30a m
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST Amo•
Tillis. pastor Sonny Hudsoo, supt Sunday
School 9 30 a m Morning wors hip. 10 30
a m Sunday evening service 7 00 p m
Wednesday servtce 7 p m WMPO pro.
g ram 9 a m each Sunday
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE Sa muel Basye pastor Sunday
School9 30 a m, Worship servlcelO 30a
m ,
Young people's service 6 p m
Evangelist lc servi cP 6 30 p m. Wednesday
service 7 p m
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
St . Mason, W Va Sunday Bible Study 10
a m , Worship lla m and 7 p m Wednes
d ay Bible Study, vocal music, 7 p m
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dudding Lane, Mason, W Va J N Thacker,
pastor Evening service 7 30 p m Wo
men' s Mlnlstry, Thursday, 9 30 am
Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7 15
pm

HARTFORD CHURCH OF' CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION Hartford W Va
Rev David McManIs pastor Chu n:h
School 9 JO a m , Sunday m orning ser
vice ll am Sunday evening service,
7 30p m Wednesday prayer meeting, 7· 30
pm
FAIRVIEW BIBLE ClfURCH Le lart
W Va , Rt 1, James Lewis. pastor Wor
s hip services 9 30 a m , Sunda y Schoolll
a m , Evening worship 7 30 p m Tue!lday
co1tage prayer meeting and Bible Study
9 30 am Worship service, Wednesday

7 30p m

OUR SA VfOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH,
W'iilnut and Hen ry St!i , Ravenswood, W
Va The Rev George C Weirick. pastor
Sunday SChad 9 lOam.; SUnday worship

llam

CALVARY BIBLE CHURCM,Ia:aledon
Pomer oy Pike, County Road 25near Flat
woods Rev BlackwOOd, pastcr Services
on Sunday at 10 30a m and 7 30 p m with
SundaySchooJ9·JOa m BlbleSiudy,Wed
nesday, 7 30 p m
F'AI'fH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST, Sl Rt 338, Anllqully Rev
Franklin Dickens, pastor. SUnday mom
ing 10 am , Sunday evening 7:30 p m
Thu I'Bday even Lna 7 30 p m

MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT ROLl
NESS CHURCH, In&lt;, 75 Pearl Sl Rev

Ivan Myeu, acting past~. RoeerManley,
Sr , Sunday Sc~Ool Superlnlelldenl Sun
day School 9 30 a m , Mornlna worship
10 30 a m , even lng worship 7: 30 p.m ,
Wednesday evening Bible study , prayer
and prallt service, 7.30 p m
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS
TOLle- VanZandt and Ward Rd Elder
James MJller, pastor Sunday Schod,
10 30a.m: WonhlpServlce, Sunday, 7 30
p m , Bible Study, Wedneocta~ . 7· :10 p m
CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL, Hart1
sMvtlle Road Rev Dewey King, pastor,
Cllntm Faulk, Sunday School Supt., Sun
da~School9:30a m, momlnawocllhlp,ll
• m .: Sunday evenllli service 1: 30 p m
Prayer Meotlnt. Wednesday, 1 30 p m

(6141992-5721

l06 Bullernul Ave., Pa""!ay, Oh.

1---------t
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•'

GRAVELY TRACTO 1R SALES
204 Conde 'r St.
,
I
Pomeroy, OH.
....., • 992-29 75

~~.. Uti, ..

I

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6()77
Bill

Qui&lt;kel and Ruth

Ann

Fox\·

-~-1o•r

I

0

SY RACUSE F'!RS'f CHURC ' fi-O•F•G•O•D- 1 -S.c.h•o•ol•9• 30
- a•m-,
vlceSu nda'

to a m. Sunday School lJ ,1, m Evening

worship se1vlce 7 00 prn
prayt-r meetin g 7 00 p m

Wednesday

MT HERMON UNITED E
IN CHRIST CHURCH Local[
Communltv off C t Rt 82 f
Sanders pastor Je ff Holter ,•
Ed Rou sh Sund a\ Sc hoo l ' it
School 9 30 a m mornin g y
children's Ch urch 10 30 a h
prmc htn g St?nlcc fl r.s t tht e
7 30 p m Spcciu l servlC(' f('JlU
evenin g 7 30 p m Wedn e .c
Meeting Bible Studv an d Yc ~t
sh ip 7 :JJ p m

RE:THHEN
ed lu Texas
tev Rober 1
lay leadt&gt;r,
1pt Sumlav
1or,sh lp .md
I
1?\' Cnlng
c Sundavs
Tth Sund,IV
lav P raHr
rt h F'elloiA

CHU RCH OF GOD OF P ~ OPHE Cl'
Located on 0 J While Roa d o r Hlghw rlV
160 Pal Henson pastor Sund, ~ ' Sc hoo l10
a m Classes rora ll ages Junio.r Chu rch J\1
a m . Morning worship l 1 il m Adu l 1
Choir pract Ice tl p m Sunday ~~l oung Peo
pie's, Chlldrt.'n s Church and 1 1~ dull Blbll'
Studv Wedn es da\o at 7 30 p m I

I

BRADFORD CHURCH OF CH
Rt 124 and Co Rd 5 Scotl Stl'\1
tor WtlliilfTI Amberger supt
Sc ho ol 9 30 a m • morning wors
a m evenin g" or s h1p 7 30 p m ,
day worship 7 30 p m

1

LIVING WORD CHESTER ,
OF GO D - Gilbert Spencer pa
day School 9 30 a m Morn ln
10 .00a m , Sunday evening serv
m. Mld-wet!k prayer service\\
7 pm
MT OLIVE F' ULL GOSPEL C
ITY CHURCH Lawren ce Bus
Max F'o lmer Sr S S Sup! Su n&lt;
9· 30 am Sunday f:'vening serv
m , Wednesday evening Bible
praisE&gt; servlcf' 7 30 p m
UNITED F'AITH CHURCH, R
mEf'OY By·Pass Rev David Wls
pastor Melv in Drake, S S Su1

Eve ning: Worship 7 30 p m

Wed nrsday

Prayer service 7 30 p m

School of Dance, Syracuse, tap dancing to the
s ong "Sisters." The recital at Southern High
School wlli begin at 7. 30 p.m. Th e public is Invited

FAJTH BAPTIST CHURCH R&lt;:~IITwd
St . Mason Sunday School 10 a m Mm n
lng wot s hip ll am, E veni ng scrv JcC'6 p
rn Prayer me&lt;&gt;tin g and Bible Study Wed
nesday, 7 p m
FOR EST R U~ BAPTJST Re'' Nv te
Borden, past or Cot ncl\u s Bunch supt
Sunday School 9 lJ am, Second i.lnd
fourth Sundays \1. 01 shtp sen tee at 2 30 p
m

M'l

MORIAH RAPTl ST. Fourth and
Mlddlt_&gt;port Re\ Gil belt Ct dig
,Tr. pastor Mrs Ervin Bau mgat dncr,
Sund ay Schoo l Supl Sunday School9 30 a :
m Wor s hip SE&gt;rv lce, 10 45 a m
,
SUCCESS ROAD CHUR CH OF CHR!Sr &gt;
-Joseph B Hoskin s evan~el ls t Sunda'y
Blbl eStudy9a m , Wor s hi p lOam , Sun •
day eve ning service 6 p m Wednesday
evemng s~rv Ice. 7 p m
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Racin e
Rt 124 Willi a m Hoback pa.slm Sund&lt;W
School 10 a m Sunda\ evening serviCE' 7
p m Wedn es dav evening ser v lcf' 7 p rn
CARPENTER BAPTIST Don Chcadl f"
Sup! Sunda}o School 9 30 am Morn ing
Worship 10 30 a m Pr a\eJ service .J!te1 n
M ain St

CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD
CHRISTIAN ACADEMY HQNORROLL
The sixth six weeks gradmg
period honor roll at the Chester
Church of God Christ tan
Academy has been announced
Making a grade of B or above in
all their subJects to be named to
th e 1oil were
Fourth Gra de
Jalmee
Spencer
Fifth Grade. Crystal Taylor
Sixth Grade· Tim Clem
Seventh Grade Tim Deem,
Mindy Harris
Ninth Grade: Wendl Taylor
Tenth Grade· Janeene Wilson
Eleventh Grade. Jas on Arnold, Jeremy Combs, Timothy

THE CHUR CH Of JE SUS CHR IST
APOSTOUC f'AJTH - Nt&gt;" Lima Rd
nex t to f ori Meigs Park, Rutland Robert
Ri chards pas t or Servrces a t 7 p m on
Wednesdays .'l nd Sundavs
HARRISONVILL E HOLI NESS CHAP
TER of the Weslevan Holin ess Chur ch
RPv Davt d Fer rell, pastor Henrv Eblin
Sundav School Sup\ Su nday Sc hoollO a
m Morning Worsh ip 11 a m , Evemn lil:
service 7 30 p m Wedn es dav evening ser

TO Pll(( AN AD UU ft2 2U6

AATEB

MONDIT thru FlmiY I AM. t• S P M.
I Ul Unhl NOON SATUIUY

CLOUD SUNDAY

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, Pearl St,
•r Manley ,
lav School
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praise
CHURCH
stor Sun
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1«&gt;7 OOp
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OMMUNh, pastor
lay School
Ice, 7 30
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Oh1o Eml1ronmental Pro1ec·
toon Agency

I

THAT'S ENTERTAINMENT - Barbara's
School of Dance students, Katie Sanders, Jessica
Chapman, J ennifer Lawrence, Jessica Karr and
Jessica Radford, I tor, will he lapping to "That's

I

Entertainment" at Saturday night's annual
spring recital at Southern IHgh School In Racine .
Curtain goes up at 7:30 p.m. Dancers from ages
three and up will be featured in tap, jazz and
novelty numbers.

Community calendar

IOEPAi lut

week EHectNe dates of final act1ons and 1aauance
dates of proposed actions
and of Draft Actions are
stated Final acttons may be
appealed. an wrtttng, withtn

30 days of tho data of this
notice to The Envtronmen tal Board of Rev1ew, Rm
300. 236 W. Town St. Columbus, Oh , 43216 Not1ce
of any appeal shall be filed
w1th the dereclor withtn 3
days Proposed acttona will
become f1nal unless a writ·

F RIDA\'
HARRISONvILLE - Sctpto
Townsh rp Trustees, 6 p m Fn
day at Pageville Towns hip
Bu1ld mg

Saturday starting at 6· 30 p m ,
al the southbound park on Route
33 Bring covered dtsh a nd lawn
chai r Members, frtend s a nd
ne1ghb01 s welcome

EAST MEIGS- Eas tern Band
Boostel s emergency meeting
7 30 p m Friday at high sc hool,
thts wtll rep lace regu la r
meeting

SUNDAY
RACINE - Piano rec ital Sunday, 2 p m by students of J une
Buchana n a t Racine F1rst Bapt J"t Chu rc h Refreshment s
se rved followin g progra m

POMEROY - Me tgs Cou nty
R.E.A C T
wi ll hold thetr
monthly meeting F'tlday evenIng, 1·:10 p m , ai P leaser's
Res laurant tn Pomeroy All
membet s are u1ged to at tend
RUTLAND- Rutland Chu rch
of God ts sponsorin g a yard sale
on F'ttday at the churc h
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
PythJan Sisters will have a yard
a nd bake sa le on Ft1day and
Saturday, from 10 am to4 p m .
at the Ken You ng Building In
Tuppers Plai ns, next to the post
off tee
SATURDAY
SYRACUSE - The John Wilson reunion wi ll be held Sal urday
a l the Syracuse Municipal Park,
.beside the te nn is courts The
reunton will slart at 12 noon
• RACINE - Free musical en"terlamment will be offered Satutday mght al the Shrine Park In
Racme The Bend River Boys
·;sand and the Country Blend
Band will perform Music will
start at 7 30 p m Refreshments
will be sold Bring lawn chairs
•

BURLINGHAM - A cookout
sponsored by the Modern Woodmen of America will be held
I

RUTLAND - The Sons of the
American Legton are sponsoring
a fi shin g derby on Sunday at the
Rutland Am ertcan Legton Hall
$2 per pole Prizes for most and
la rgcs l
RUTLAND- Rev J)m Randls
will be the spec tal speaker al
Sunday morning services at the
Rutland Church of God
MONDAY
SYRA CUSE - Sutton Towns hip Trustees will meet Mond ay,
7:30 p m , at the Syracuse
Municipal Building

needed are now available ApplicatiOn a nd payment for such
permlls are to be made at the
billing faclltty tn th e Racme
Departm em Store Farewell
POMEROY - A fa rewell get
together will be held at 6 p m
Sunday at the Sacred Heart
Chu rch Audi tori um in Pomeroy
honoring Msg Anthony Glanna
more and Sister Jan who have
been It a nsf erred to the Ironton
area Parishioners and friends
are lnv1ted Light refresh ments
wil l be served

ten edJUdiCitlon hearing request rssubmttted within 30
days of the •nuance daht; or
the director rev1s•l with·

Water perm Us
RACINE - Quantity water
user permits for Racine residen ts needing addltonal water
for such things as filling swi m·
mtng pools, watering and
gardens and other uses whc1 e
larger amounts of waler are

'

,...._

Weekend revival
POMEROY
A weekef\J;I
revival is underway through
Suund ay at the Faith Tabernacle
Church on Bailey Run Road
Eva ngelis t Is lhe Rev Danny
Vance Services start 7 30
nightly.

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suit ORC Chap 3745 and
OAC Chapa. 3745-47 and

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On May 1l. 1988. 111 tho
Meigs County Probate Court.
Ceae No 26832, Sh•lov M
lambert, Rt 1 BOll 247, Ruolll1tl, Ohio 46n5. was oppotntod admoniltratrlx ol tho
estate of Edna
d&amp;ca•od lalo of 63828 S R
338, Roane. Ohio 46771
Robert E Buck ,

NPOES

perm1t .

Oh1o

Power Company
Racme
Hydroelectric, State Route

338, Rac1na. OH . Ellectwa
Dolo 05 / 26/ 88 RoceiVJng
waters Ohio R1ver Permrt
No OIB00019"BD Th1s to-

nal action not preceded by
proposed
ac11on and ts
appealable to EBR
i6) 3, 1&lt;c

,_
....

~ s:--~o:::--

1 Card of Thanks

Public Notice

Final 111uance of renewal

___ ..,
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Public Notice

of

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3746· 5 for requirements

The family of
Flossie Story
wishes to thank
those who have
helped during
the loss of their
loved one.

Bek•.

Proba1e Judge
Lena K Nesselroad. Clerk
161 20 27. (6) 3. 3tc

Read the Best SeDer
Read the

ClRSSIFIED RDS

FRI. THRU THUR
KANE HODDER

IN

•rr
•••
·-·,.,

ltiDAY
-

43281-0149.
644-2116 Con

OH

INVITES YOU TO
ATTEND THE
SERVICES OF THE

FIRST
BAPTIST
CHURCH

........

. . . . .i
7 20 &amp; 9 30 PM DAILY
5AT I SUN MATINm

1·20 I 3:30

..

Plans for a potluck dmner to
honor John and Martha Wright
willbeheldSu ndayafterworshtp •
services a I the Bradbury Church
of Chnst
Wnght has pasiored the ,
church for several years butSunday wtll be his flnal day m the ·
pulpit Th e fam tly moved to
Glouster several months ago but
have commuted here for Sund ay
se r vices
Clea ning at the parsonage was
discussed and It was dec1ded to ,
purchase a range as well as a '
lawn mower. Larry Haynes, v1ce
pres !dent, conducted the meet •
lng, w1th Gary Bares giving the :
opening prayer Bill Kmg had.
devotions using "The Hands" as ·
his topic Refreshment s were
served by Btil and Noami King •

draws
the proposed
Any person
may actton
submrt 1
t-----r---------_:~===l
comments and / or a meet·
mg regardtng any drah ac COLONY THEATRE I
tton within 30 days of the
da1a tndtcatad. " Action". as
used above does not tnclucle
receipt of a verified com·
platnt If s1gn1ficant public
tnternt exiau. a public
meet1ng may be held AI to
any action. mcludtng rece1pt
of verified complaints. any
penon may obtaLn notiCe of
further actiOns, and addt ·
ttonal tnforma1ion Unless
otherwtse provided tn no·
ttces of particular acuons. all
ONE EVENING SHOW AT 7.30 P.M
commumcattons shall be
ADMISSION 11 00
aent to
Hearing Clerk.
OEPA, P 0 Box 1049, Coi -

TUPPE RS PLAINS - The
Orange Township Trustees will
meet Monda y, 7 30 p m , In
r egu lar session, at the home of
Dorothy Calaway, clerk.
POMEROY- Meigs Salon 710,
Eight and Forty, will meet at the
Legion hall m Pomeroy, Monday
at 7 p m

-!1:-J

l~tPAV

Public Notice

\,

IU - -

1"UUOAY

PUBLIC NOTICE
COUNTY: MEIGS
The followtng were received / prepared by
tho

Bible Class dinner

,

follow•hflelepl!one exdton!f!•

CO,...DIADl!M!-

Si nclair, Jody TaylOr, Kathy
Thomas, Susan Trader, Momca
Turner. Melinda Riggs , Debbie
West , Allyson Wolfe, Melissa ·
Woods , Renee Young, Wesley
Young
Sophomores. Nancy Baker,
John Barton, Steve Bass, Me
lanle Beegle, Cary Betzing, He1dt ,
Caruthers, Henry Cleland, Jerry , •
Cleland , Eddie Crooks, Lisa ,
Dars t. T1m Du1 s t. Rya n Harper,
Rebecca Kerr , Krtslen King,
Rober! Lambert, Tammy Lambert. Tracey Lee, Mike Parker,
Melissa Perrine, Jim Reynolds,
Cheryl Stevens, Natalie Tromm.
Homer Welsh , Anne Williams
Freshmen Randy Corsi, Kip
Grueser, Dave Frymyer, Kim '
Ewing, John Evans, Kelly John
son, Susan Houchms, Er1c Heck,
Pam Haggy, Sand y Landaker,
Cath y Lambert, Missy Nelson, •
Mary Morton, Knsten Slawter: ;
Joseph Smnh , Aaron Sheet s, •
Tracy Sm 1lh, Susanne Sprouse, l
Jennifer Taylor, Michael Van
Meter, Amy Wagner, Slephante ,
Walker, Amy Warth , Jennt · :
Werry, Pamela Whaley, Darct •
Wolfe
•
,•

,,

,,_,

IUOD~Y OAr( II
WtnNI I O. . PAPOII

07 011

Cl ab•J•ed PD!t!' co1.1er lhe

ho """'"" .. - " ' ' " ' " " ' ' " '

ST! VERSVILLE WORD OF F'AIT H
GarvHolt er past or Sundavsctvlees9 30
a m a nd 7pm Mldll. eekserv tce 7 30p
m Thur sday
MIDDL EPORT PENTECOSI AL Third
Av~ Rev Clark Ba ker pastor Car l Not·
fingham , Sunday School Supt Sunda y
School 10 a m with classes for all ages
EvenJng serv ices at 6 p m Wednesd ay Bll:lle study at 7 30 p m Youth ser vices Frl
·day at 7 30 p m
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP 128 Mill So ,
l\11ddlepoJ1 Brother Chuck Mc Ph erson
pastor Sundav School 10 a m Sunday
E ventng se rvices at 7 p m and Wednesd &lt;:~y
servi ces at 7 p m
ANTIQU11 Y BAPTIST Kenneth Smit h,
p as tor Sunday School 9 30 a. m , church
wrvice7 30 p m youth fell owshlp 6 30p
m, Bible study , Thursday, 7 30 p m
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE, 33045
Hiland Roa d Pomer oy Tom Kell y, pas
tor Danny Lambert. S S Su pt Sunday
morning service at 10 a m . Sunday eve n
lng service 7 30 p m Tuesday and Thurs·
da) Services at 7 30 p m
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA
ZARENE, Rev Glendon Stroud, pas tor
Sunday School9 JOa m ; Worship service.
10 30 am, Yo uth serv ice Sunday 6'15 p
m Sunday evening service 7 00 p m Wed
nesd ay Prayer Meeting and Bible Study
700pm
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH, Su n
day afternoon servi ces at 2 30 Thursday
evening se rvices a t 7 ,UJ
FJRSr BAPTIST CHURCH , Mason, W
Va Pa~ lor, BUJ Murphy Sunday School lO
a m Sunday evening 7 30 p m Praye r
meeting a nd Bible study Wedn esday , 7 30
p m Every one welrom e
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST Sa
lem St Rev Pau l Taylor pastor Sunday
SchoollO a.m , Sunday evening 7 00 p m .
Wednesd ay rvenlng prayer m eeting 7 00
pm
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
CHURCH , Silver R idge Du ane Syden
strlcker, pastor Sunday School 9 a m
Worship Service, 10 a m , Sunday evening
service, 7 00 P m Wednesday nigh ! Bible
study 7 00 p m

M Oll

If"""'

__

,,e...••,

···-01

I OUI

q

vlce730 p m

ST
PAUL
iURCH
Corn er Sycamore
;Is • Po
merov The Rev William
Jes" art,
past or Sunday School 9 45 am C hurch
service J1 am
SACRED
HEART
I Msgr
Anthony Glannamorc Ph 992~5~ 1 18 Sa tur
dav Evening Ma ss 7 30
Sunday
Mass 8 am and lOam
, Ions on e
•, half hour be for(' each Mass
• cl asses ,
11 am Sunda y
VICTORY l!APTiST, 525 N 2nd St ,
past or
Middlepotl James E KeesEe

worship
Sf:'rv \c\io e~7ir;lll~Elfi'~
prayer service
WESLE YAN
CHURCH o( Middleport Inc
Rev Ivan Mvers pastm, Rog€
Sr , Sundav SChool Sup! Suq~
9 30 a m , Morning Wor ship 11
Evening Wors hip 7 30 p m V
ev ening Blhl f:' s tudy prayer j
serv ice, 7 30 p m

SISTERS - Real life sisters, Cynthia, Roberta
and Keri Caldwell, 1 to r, will be featured at
Saturday eve ning' s spring recital of Barbara's

•m•
n•g •W•o•rs•hi•p,.l•0•30
-'

Frederick, Melissa Marcinko
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL HONOR
ROLL
The fifth six weeks gradmg
period honor roll at the Meigs
High School ha s been announced
Making a grade of B or above m
all their subjects to be named to
the roll were
Se nior s
Margie Baker ,
Annette Bare, Susan Baum ,
Dav1d Beegle, Brent Bissell,
Ma rybeth Brewer, Jodi Brown,
Trena Buchanan , Pete Burnem.
Kimberly Ca lveri , Penny Clark,
Melissa Clay, Sherry Cooper,
Lois Davidson, Jerry Deren
berger, Jonathan Dunn, Tammi
Eblin, Terri Grover, Christopher
Hannmg , Char lotte Hart ,
Deeanna Henderson, Tony Hendrix . Orv1lle Hill, M1kki Hupp,
Audra Houdashelt , Kevin V
King, Leigh Leach, Brad Little,
Danyan Magers, Mel a n1e Mankin, Dena Manley, Patncia
McGhee, Kevm McGmre, Lisa
Miller , Raymond Myers, Traci
Newlun, Domta Pooler, Amy
Roush, Krista Roush, Mike
Roush, Laurie Shenefteld, John
Stsson, Shannon Slavin, Angie
Sloan, David Smith, Shelly Sto
bart . Kev m Tanner, Kelly
Thompson, Ehzabelh Thornton,
Sandy \la nCooney , Teresa
Walker, Shelly Wolfe, Angela
Wright
.Juniors Ronnie Bachtel, Chris
Bass, Henry Buchanan , Nicole
Bunch, Ltso Butcher, Charlene
Cad le, MeiQCII Carl, Lesley Carr,
Charles Carson, James Cleland,
Carolyn Ela m, Shannon Coa tes
Decker Cullums, Jody Cusrer,
Pa tricia Davis, Beth Ewing,
Shawn F etty, Terry Fields, Stacey Gibbs, Shannon Halfhill,
Dena Hall, Shiela Hendri cks,
Wesley Howard, Stacy Hysell,
Ada King, Tosha Landaker. Jody
Levingston , Vincent Laudermllt ,
Elise Meier, Martha Nelson,
Kelly Ogdm, Frank Parker, Kaci
Parsons, Matt Peterson, Tina
Romin e, Lynn Roslinski,
Danelle See, Jared Sheets , Chad

al e Sundays

MOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL
St Midd lepon Affi lia ted "11
Baptlsl Conv(,'ntlon David Brv r 'l ii~ ; ~·~;~.
nt.s1e1 Sundav Sc hool 10 a m 1:
w or ship 11 a m Evenin g wars
We dn es day C'v enln g_ Bibl e s
pra yer m eet ing 7 p m

Sunday
mornl~g
lng service
7 i~~:1~~1~I~Oda;~n~ ~
wors hlp 7p m
m
MORSE CHAP EL
Curfman , pastor Sunday
worship serv ice 11

'

'

Ill 141992-2039 or

MIDDLEPORT, IJIH
;.;:.:;10_ _

nonPentf'rostal Wonshtp SE'r

'.

Pometoy Flo wet \Shob

CY

214 E . Maon
992· 5130 Pomeroy

FUNERAL HOME

'

•

992-2104

WiER~
Rawlings-Coats-Blower

'

Yete1 ·ans
Memorial Hospital

115 (. Momortal Dr.

Pomeroy

992-2951

• I ~

•.,

Nat 1onwide In Co.

-v

m.

~~!~

OHIO 45769

614 / 992- 2644

Jonn F Fultz, Mgr .
Ph.9921101

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

\t,'K" ( 'nunl\ \ Oldl'"'' I liH •~'
352 EAST MAIN

m

2I6 S. Second
Pomeroy
992 -3325

, AGENT

P. J.

TEAFORD I UALTY .

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
SCHEDULE OF SERVICES:
Saturday PM Evangelistic Service ...... ...... 7:00
Sunday AM Church School.. ......... 9:30-10:25
Sunday AM Worship ................... 10:30-11:45

PASTOR - Rev. Liston Holley, Jr. - 992-2111

�Page- 8- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-

Business·
MANTIS
PreciSIOn
Gardemng
System
• tightwelght

•T!IIer/ Culhvatol
•Easy to 0 per ate
•Makes Garden &amp; Yard
Care a Snap!

FOR MORE IN FORMATION

MORRIS EQUIPMENT
742 -2455
RUTLAND . OHIO
5 2 1 mo

That Fit Your Body
FEATURING
SUNTANA
WOLFE SYSTEMS

20 SESSIONS

S35

CA~p~~R 949-2414
OWNIO &amp; OPERAIED BY

ANGIE TAYlOR

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO

992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.

Farm lqu1pment
Dealer

Middleport, Ohio

flr1n Eqalp111ut

Authonud

Parh &amp;S111tlee

I 18- 88 tfn

CUSTOM BUILT

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
\\At Reasonable Pnces"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
Day or Nighf
NO SUNDAY CALLS

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling W1th

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL

SIDING CO.
New Hamil Built
"Free Est1mates"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
NO SUNDAY CAllS
J-11-tln

4 16 86 tin

Dump Truck

614-742-2617
or leave

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

NEW LISTING - Hamson
VIlle - 23 acres vacant
•round water &amp; elec available Buy part or alii Want
$8 000 00 for the whole th
In &amp;

M1ddleport, Oh

992·6611

l JO 11 tin

GEARY
BODY SHOP
550 PAG£ STREET

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OPEN 8.30-6:00 P.M.

G288lmo

HOUSE OVERFLOWING?
CLEAN UP WITH
CLASSIFIED ADS

992-2156
HAVE YOU SEEN THIS
CAT?
"JOE"

NEW LISTING - Tender
Lovmg Care always shows'
You II see th e results of Ihe
e&lt;eellenl upkeep here a
well kepi home beaut1lully
decmaled lovely grounds
everythm g 1n lip lop shape
by people who look PRIDE 1n
lhe11 home an d hate lo part
wrth 11 Approx 47 acres
wrt h 2 ponds huge 36 x22
lam1ly room w/ f11eplace sa
lellile diSh 2 ca1 brtck gar
age cenlral a11 and much
more 2 balhs 2 large bed
rooms pari basemen! 6
room bnck ranch 1n good II&gt;
cation' ASKING $89 000 00
MAKE OFFER
ST RT 338 - R"e' lront
property w1lh a mce cabm
Has a lull basemen!, 2 bed
rooms sunporch w11h a nver
v1ew fru11 cellar approx
42'x30' metal storage build
In&amp; ASKING $27 900 00
POMEROY - PRICE REDUCED' Neal home w1lh 2 3
bedrooms New carpelmg,
corner lol Small pnce B1 g bargam' $14 500 00

GENERAL
CONTRACTORS
RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL

• CUSTOM KITCHENS Ill BATHS
•EXTENSIV E REMODEliNG
•VINYL SIDING &amp; ROOFING
•METAL BUILDIN GS
HOUSING 8o APT PROJ ECTS
;-,1\( f lfifl9

last seen Thursday
n1ght, May 26.
I have lost 2 &lt;Dis 1n the
post week. One I found
dead, the one above has
not bHn found. In less
than a week SIK &lt;a Is tn
the Monkey Run area
have e1ther bHn found
dead or m1ssong. If you
have

any •nformot1on

&lt;oil 992 · 3633, Sally
Owens.

5

Happy Ads

PALMER STRE£1 - Hou se
wlh polml•~ 2 apls in good
condrt~n Upsla11s rented' for
$17 500/mo
dowmla11s
renled for $20D/mo also has
a garage apt lhat renloo for
$225/ mo NOW $20,000 00
IF TREES ARE WHAT YOU
WANT on a lot su•lable for
bu•ld1ng lhen thiS IS rtl V1
suahze Ihe house you ve al
ways wanled on lh1s 1 acre
shady lol Elec available
ON LY$2 500 00
ST RT 681 - tO acres va
cant ground wllh some
wooded area Has a great
bu1ldmg Sile wrth some road
fronlage Call for more mlor
mat1on ONLY $10,000 00
USTINGS NEEDED' We h111e
buyers lor lhtp County
properties and need home
to sell - CIH Todly• We
need yoor property to sell!
Henry E Cleland, Jr
992-6191
Jean Trussell •.949-2660
Oottre Turner _ 992-5692
Tracy Riffle __ 949-3080
OffiCI .. ,
•. 991-2259

A JB.
'

$14 95

Qls, 01l

GIVe away Ktttens to good
home Call 814-448-3454

~

CHESTER. OHIO

;;;

985-3350

992-7583

:;:

S 25 1 mo

BEETLE-BUS
RABBIT
NEW AND USED
PARTS

742-2315
5 21 mo

OPEN FOR BUSINESS
324 E Main St
Pomttoy
llhind (tty Hall

ANN'S
Shop &amp; Toy Store
Collectors Items, Clowns
Act1on Toys, Mus1cal
Toys &amp; Trrnket Boxes
Gift

Open 10 AM to 4 PM
Mon thru Fn or by
Appotntment

Coli 16141992·7204
WholtJale &amp; RttGII
5 19 88 I mo

TUNE-UPS, BRAKE
JOBS, BUMP and
PAINT WORK
We Buy and Sell Used

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SYRACUSE, OHIO

Most Fore1gn and
Domestic Vah1cles
A/ C Serv1ce
All MaJor &amp; M1nor

Cars

ALBANY ARIA

Repaus
NIASE Certified Mechamc

CALL 992-6756
'DOC" VAUGHN

FULL AUTO
SALES &amp; SERVICE
614-698-7157

Certtf1ed l1censed Shop

525lmopd

5-26 Il-l mo

Roger 1-iysell
Garage

WANTED

DEAD 01 ALIVE
•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrrgoratora

Rt 124, Pomeroy

"Musl It Rtpcnrable"

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
We Servcce All Makes

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

6-17 tfc

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949-2969

161 North Serond
Middleport, Oh1o 45760

DCHIIer

For

YARDMAN &amp; ECHO

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Carry F11h1ng Supplies

Pay Your Phone

Located Halfway Between Rt . 7 l!r Bashan

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS

and Cable B•lls Here

8 7 Financln g On
Yardman

IUSINESS"PHONE
16141 992-6550

RESIOENCE rHONE

90'' -""

ftee puppl81 8 Wkl Old Call

Servcct On All Makes
We H-r MC/Dtn/VISa
4-18 ' 88 tin

Need someone to • • down old
hou• (In Vinton} for #lelumber
Call 814 3B8-8327

7 cute kitten a· 7 wkt old. Ntter

tramed Solid oolors &amp; stripes
All colors Male1 &amp; femalet Call
814-251 1793
1v

PU p1

P "
to g e IW•Y
614-245 9557

Now hiring dthlera Make up ta
84 a hour plus mll.-ge • tips
A _.,,
• Plz
p...., nDw Domino's1 za

Call

WANTED Goodt•mhornetor2
yr old fem~le Ger,..n Sheoh"'d Call 614-446 3539

R•ponaible beby'sttter In my
home Mon Tuft Wed &amp; Frl in
RloQr.ndeviclnlty fltNHtend
...ume. m ...non: to Box Cia
153 c / D GlilllpDIIt O.itv Tribune, 825 Thtrd Ave GallipDHs
Ohio 45831
Scenic Hills Nursing Center It
now accepting •pVcat10na for
tuM time IM.Indry PM'IGn for
evening ahlft AppiV In pertDn
Mon • Frl , 8 4'30

BAR MANAGER •
Pnwlout e.llplllfienGlt plut good
knowledge of bever~~ge and
lllbor controlfs Shoukf be promotion m1ndtd .,d uperienced
In boaking entertainment C.ll
Roger Geldenal 81....,288-1990
or 288-7511. Jolty lounge
Jackson, Ohio
Hair StyMttl Aero• The Str..c
styling Mlon It •Mung one
adcltlo..t lltytist who It looking
for more thM just ano1tler job
Call Tarrlet 814-441-9610 tor

Job hunting1 N. .d • sk1117 W.
train people for jobl as Auto
Mech~tn•ct Clrpent••· Eltdfi.
Food S.vk:e Wor...,l
BectrontCI Technid.,t, lndu•
trl•l Mstntenence Workers
Nursing A11IIU1nU 1nd Order
1111. Mlchinllta, and Welc*t.

c;.,,

ning Juty 5th c.tl Trt-Countv
Voc•tio,.l Adu tt eenw at e 147&amp;3-3511 ext 14 A vsrlety of
fu ndlng sources to pay for
tr111n1ng art IVIilable for thoM
ehgible

ExcetiMt VWI981 tor spare time
work; et~ronlcs
....
erafts Othera Into 1 (104)
641 ·0091 Ext 3028 Open 7
davs

&amp; Vicinity

2 Famlty g.,.ge MI•Saturday,
June 4 9 10 5 327l.e0rande
Blvd

OnetemaleCahcocat1yr old 1
male kitten. 8 wks oM Gtve to
DDod home 614-992 7382
Long Hair 8 wkS old ktttent 5
B1ege, 1 wh1t11 814-992 5885

ye••

Frae to good homes, 4 kittens
Utter tratned ,.ry friendly 7
~ek• old Call 814 378-8178
Smell black dog to give away
Vfllry friendty and Ilk• children
Alao c:ltt Cal1114 196-1290

6 wk old klt•n• to good home
Call 614-843-5445
5acreshay lw11tmowendrake
1t 'fQU bele ..dilkeit Twomll•
out of Pomercay Otuo 814-992·
2466

6

lost and Found

FOUND Bl1ck wtth while
Shaggy Dog Med 11ze Near
city Nmlte on old 1 10 Had eoltar
No I D Caii614-4-0II-3073
Brown Duffle Ng with 4
tepe1 A colege pepers- On
Coli 814-379-22&amp;0

Yard Sale-Saturdll¥' June 41 9
AM 1 Furnitu,., wick•. w.nl·
till. medicine ceblntt llghl:
fl.lltures wooden shelves, •1lpap• &amp; much more Firat hou•
on Rodney Cor• Floed
Ant~que

Yard S.I•June 3 &amp; 4
9 8 . Pstrlot Ad Patriot Obla

Garage Slle Frid.y, June 3 &amp;.
Set June4 Flrsthou.. onUttle
Kygor Rood Just off At 7
AntlquH dolt Mon Ro•
chtn., 1 set or 1 I" plow.. 3
point hitch, clothing. Nit &amp;
P8Pt)ll'l, dishes. mise
Yard S.le June 1·4 B AM·5
PM V•mllepntNGHS SR.
160

3 Famlly-475 Kathv St Sat,
Jurw4 9 5
Huge Moving S"ale Entire
hou ..tui-Furnlture, linge •
srn11ll •ppN ..cet. curillnt, Nil.
dlthel ctothlng, Iota of hou•·
hold and decor itt'"' boytblka
macrame hanQIM'I June 3 •. 5
9-1 Keystone Rd -VInton
(•crop from Vinlon Elem

Scl)ooll

Olgenlc Moving Sai .. Saturdey.
B AM 136 So..... Allll T V,
beds. ,.cllner HWing mechme
In cabinet.
trwnpet,
drauer cu rtllna, sheett, xMttch quilt bookl deco clka
.-na. chldren-edull clothing.
much more

••eper.

SehnaJHr gray •n d
We•ing rBd collar In
Run eree 814· 992·
Found bleck chow IAI.,_ col
lar GnNnbr1er Estates SandHill
Rd 304-875-3818

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

3 Famlfv G~~n~geSai•Frl a. Sat
11h: mile out Rt 141 Golden
drepert•
Four F•mlly 1141 SeODnd A....
Gallipolis Saturd.v June 4
8 15 B•bv ch itdren. m., &amp;
woman's clolhlniJ. ho...ahold
ttem• mlac fumtlu,. couch.
twin btd dinetta set. d•k •
chair. tllaech Come

••tv

Rick Pell'aon Auction.- lfcent&amp;d Ohio end Wtat Vlrginl8
Ett.le. ent~que f•m hqulda
tton 111181 304-773-578&amp;

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cuh for lne model clean
used cars

Indoor Yard Sele-Frl Set June
3-4 10 AM 3 PM Rodnoy
Gnlnge Hall

Friday lrd CentMiary Townhou• Drep• bedspreed,
aheets tllvarwere Mikua
chhel home interior oil •mp,
TV
Yard S•le Mise June 4. 8 4
Adrian Ave oft Fourth A~ ,
cloaa to pool

Jtm Mink Chev Oldllnc
Bill Gene Johnson
814-446 3672

7 F•mHy At 31-Below Euon
station at Roctlev Blb\'·kld•·
women• mens clothes, ltDrm
doors &amp; windows mise u,.d
Kenrmrew•sher Thurs , Frl a.
Sat
Sat· 180 acroa from Bidwell
School hem1 furnitu,._ bebv
clothet, m.nrett &amp; aprings
rol eway bed

3 F•m•tr Y1rd Sai.. Lots ot
..cellent ciOihlng-ehil*en• •
•dYtbl Friday &amp; Saturdlf¥, June
3rd S. 4th Starting 1t 11 AM.
Frld• • 8 AM. SeturdiY Rain
or Shine 1 mile Dut Ingalls Road
off SR 218
Y•d Sei•June 3 &amp; 4, Fri &amp; S•l
3femli• 571 J..,. Drive lJitsot
children's dun clothet, equ••
danGe aho•
Yerd SIII•Sat. June 4th 8 00
87 O.illicothe Ad C.nnlng
lnt.nt girl clothee (some like
.-w), toy1, m6tc

I••·

YerdSai•113SeoondAve 9·2
...... 3-4 Kids dot'- o e.
stereo ~e~uipment m1sc
Two femity -Seturdav. June 4th
10-5 &amp;ZOFourtfiA,. Appllc:on
CM turriture clotheaandmore
Yard S.. Nune 3rd 6 4th
Pr•cticelly giving .wey antiq~. bebv h1rn1 Nkt..hold
Hem. and •nythlng .._ Lllfvnt
Sele ever 488 Jackaon Pike.
Look for •en wtth beloons
Vent Sai•Frl &amp; SM on Bidflltll·
Ro..,fl\' Rd , just oH At 35 9
AM-4 PM
Yerd Sal•l FMIII'(, Ff1 • Sal
George'• 0 Rd off Bulevllle
5th hou• on dghl
Yard 811•1 23 Portsmouth Rd ,
Sat JuM 4th Radios ...,..eper
ChristrNI tret. boob miiC
Yard S.le-Junt 4 &amp; 8 Green
Acres Subdlvltion 323 LeGrande Clothet, t.llerciM equip.
ment 6 household Items 9
AM-4 PM
Y•d Sai•Oid Rt 315 II Rodney
Hill Sat V AM Antlquoa Ook
drea•r chest of drawers
bl.-.a..t chest, etc Storm doors
children' 1 clothing (lnf.,t· 1 41
boob. toys. dols. gam" and
much mltctll.,eous
June .4 Quail Creek. Lot 78 12
ft flbaral•• boat. l•ge lnven
tory b•eblll Cll'da, llngl• •n d
set Baby cto- and adu~
cJothel&amp; 3 8R Moble home 2

.;,

Prlvlte home o•e and boerd tor
Seniors and Mrulcapped Elem
Home 814-992 8873

F1n anc1al

_..'

8. H. B..gle, Owner
Rt. 1, Bo• 74·A. Riply, W.Va. 25271

Call Collect (3D4) 372-4331
Most Wells Dnllod In One Day
Air and Mud Rotary Drilling
We Also Install 8o Sorvtce All Types
Water Pumps
6-1- 88-1 mo

Custom Buil~ing
Products W. MAIN, RUTLAND, OH.
FEATURING.
Riviera
Cabinets

Junk Cers with or wilhout
moton Clll Larry Uvety-114388 9303
BuYing furniture and apr,ioncos
ot Feir
..... Call 614-448 3168

In Pa-. 3 Famly llnldo ME

ChufCh Sat Clothet. hOUM
piMtl furnh:u... tools, mise
10-1

12

WAN~D

Good u•d Exerdae
Bike C.II814--245-I026etterG
PM

Real Eslale

Aoom &amp; bo a,u
~ 1oretd er1y perton
in my home Bed patient or
handicap Large room • beth
Call 814--2158-6509

31

CUSTOM
INTERIOR DESIGN
PH.

HDu• tor •1•12 Vlntewt Street
1 'h story freme.
Cll'ptt.
n fiN roof tu II b-mem det
1ched Qaf89e with tool shed.
f8rtced In beck Vlrd Good
condtt1on Call 814-448-8824
after 15 30 PM

n..,

2 bedroom 2 batt. 2 c.
garege lewl lot Dn Rt 33
Swimming pool •telite. clo•
to Meigs H1gh C.ll 814-992
32&amp;4

Large 41 family •le. New Um~~ ' '
Rd . •pprox 1 mila from Herri .,
tonvlle Furniture Keystone
wheeh:, t!Jn, btket clothing.
dlthet booka. etc June 2 3 4

8rooma bath.n11Wiyc•peted.1
floor flat lot quiet locat1on
deck pon::h. privacy fence, tn
Ruttand 814-7412 2007or8147 42·2880 for ep pointment

"t..
"
~

4

Home for 11le or rent Cell
614-992 2484 .. 992 2291
5 room• bath a.rge biiCk ~rd

Has been ,.ducad Good shape
Cell 814-992 7244 MakeoH•

Saturday June 4 Dit:het, 1irn
nice cloth• end crafta Herris'
tum by WMPO In Bradtury

8 roomhou• 2utNttybuHdlngs
1A acre ReduCed to 11tll Call
814-742 20 22

Saturdll'f, June 4th from 9 00

om 1111 d•k On Old 3 3 poot
Felrgroundt first hou• on the
right

Midclepon ae.,ttful 2 vr old.
total electric. bl lwei horN 2 Of
3 bedroom l•ge llvlngroom
spaclout kitchenwtthh•lt.vDOd
c•blnets hmllyroon'f with
woodburnlng fireplace, lots ot
clo. . s.-c• wr11p around deck.
cerport concret• driveway
b•ement, beeutltullv lsnch·
caped 1 r•l . .el•t *37.500
Owner will consldlr land co~
tract to qUill fled
•lao tak 111
other property u r.rtlal tflde
Call 814-992 805

Don't mill 1,. Three Family
Yard Sal• Millti· JU"'IOrs-Mins
clottung-ln excellent condition
Medicine cabinet, end tabte
1hoee • t.w Avon botthtt. and
other mlacell•neous items
Good prices S.turd• June41t
n3 Grent 51 Middleport 9 AM
to4PM

bu.,.

Y•d Sllel June 5th end 8th
Onperi11, bedapread, dothln g.
atereo mite S•llng Mu•r' 1
•bow Eettern High School on
Rt 7

Smell 2 bedroom hou• with
besement, comDiettv ramo·
dolod. chy n7 ~00.00 304675-6331

Biker's Moving Back Sele June
4 8 00 I 00 Tuppers Plelna
Rt 7 Old Ceramic Studio New
patterns. tuft llama CeNmlc
gift ltemt ceramic bisque , niiW
blfl.io111uhlr. m!K

3 bedrooms all ehtelnc. cantil
elr, heltecrelot O.IIIDOIItFerry
low 40'1. 304-876-2932 after
400pm

Sat. Juno 4 9 Oo-5 00 Mens
womens. boys and girls clothes
(to •ue 141 other ilems 33120
Children• Home Rd between
Mulbeny Height• •nd l..alrel
Cliff Rood ""meroy 614-VV2
7328

32

Y•d Sale Set
June 4th
9 0().5 00 Many ittmt Main
Sl Radne Teaford•

1979 14•7Q molclle home Call
614-245-5851 ofter 5 30 PM
1 2.1lG3 2 BR mobile home In
goad cond Call 814-448-7603

19B3 Shu.. 14•70 26•30
9 . .0.. 1 6 •cr• central lir
firepl1ee. front porch. bee*
dock. 614-742-2997

Yerd Mle at 31954 Hvlllll Run
Ad Sat June 4th 9 00·7 2nd
houM on right

1979 P•kwood 14x70 Mobile
Home Flatwoods Rd , Pomeroy,
Ohio 814-992-2227

Set June 4 Indoor outdoor
Nle 103 Condor St 10?

1973 Chemplon. 14x70. total
el ectrk. undwpenning •n d hook
up. 304-5711-2383

L1stenma Devices
Dependable Heanna Aid Sales &amp;Sentict
ltearm1 EVIIuatlons For All Aces

ve•

Mulberry Hats. Pomeroy,

3 family Ju,. 2. 3, 4 Smoll
applancse. late of
mlac tte.... Md fr.tbl• 303
at • PonwG¥

Big Y•d Sale. Rt 2 Chert•ton
Road on ~ 1 mil• from Clty
llmht June 1 2 3
Yard Sale Thun
Burdette Addn

I;

Frl

15

I rllplil\1111'111
S1·' ~· ~~
1

1

•

'-

11

Help wanted

GOVERNMENT JOSS
118 040 - 151,230/ " Now
hiring Your .,.. 101-187·
8000, • t A-10111 tor cunwnt

,._1111

Yard Sale. 28015 Meadowbrook
Df'lve Friq.,. •nd Saturd-r

Arbeugh Addition, Tu ppen
Pl-. Ohio Ju,. 2nd. 3rd. 4th.

&amp;-famNv•rdtal.,11911thSt &amp;
Uwil St New Havan, June
7-8th Ant6ques Home Interior
TUPJIIIf'Mrt, dlshet ell si~
clotNng, furnttu", jiWBfry

Cloth-.
toy&amp; · antiquo
turnttUN, ulovee.
dith•
Yard loi•Mon.ladlwarcdahllll, .., clothmg babv furn a mllc
Frlcloy • latunllll' IH 280
J-Piko.
U... Aid VOid •••In, Juno
4th 1·1 1 mleeOUihoftown an
Lo-. llhror Rd , lit 7 Lots rr1
ttema Rlfn canoels

Carport Solo. Ju,. 3rd. 4!11 9-1
Loo R o t - Ty- - ,

Racine

June 2nd, 3rd, 4th 124 Unton
Aw, P a - Vortecycrl~..., ••
furnltu ..
• femll• Em . .on Jo hnlon
r e o - atl'onltnd. June 1-4.
I 30-1 ~..... wrlngar washor,
clothing

··-ng

3 fomllr !Ordolla Cll•ry It,
ey,.au• June 1,2 3

(

1182 Kno.11. 12JI70, 3 bedrooms.
all 81-=trlc. moltty turNshed
goad cond, 17,orl0 00 304773-91108
3 bedroom mobile home. •II
olectrlc. n &amp;00 flrm Located
Golllpolllferry 304-882-2688.

35

Sat June 4!11 9 I Clothn.
al•av.e o• •dlo bedlpre8d.
f ml out San!IMII on lett Not
reaponslble for 1cddtn11

Y•d Ml• hlurdiiV June 4th
2211 JeHIIf'lon Aw 8 4

&amp;

Acreage

•

,, ,

River lot • moble horrw Crown
City- 19B6 14•70 wkh 8" lido
Mil. 7x24 txpMsk)n, 3 BR 2
tul balhl. all alec.. pert fur
nlshod. $29100 Call 81"-6B58855

.'
.':

"' ,

154acr• 1200equereft mobile
holM, pond, !too gea lla, 000
Pomoroy oro&amp; 114-112-5388
batwo..,.,a:Oo-1 o 00 pm
Alhlon l•ge bu I ding lou.
mobile hom. permltiN. public
•lso ,.,_ lott. Clyde
Bawon. Jr 30"-675-2338

•t•

'

I • - '""' prhet.. goad llou•
200
vela off lclock top rood. ...,lngs
30"-875-2SG

'.

1\No bul..,l lois wtth Counry
we*, on J•rv"• Run Road It

1ft . . MM' OOUftly . . . . .

Monday, Ju,. 8th 10 1 2512
Jeffnon In ,_.

Rumtn11ge •le June 4th 9 4
New Ute Lutheran O'lu rch
Jlokson Pike 0111 Ohio

Lots

..0 ecr• 2 mobile horn~~.
ReoooonAd 1000ft fronllge.
I 38 000. negoMbla c.ll 304SZ2 7279

Yerd Sele. Frtdwv Juna 3 21 11
Mt Vernon Ave 9 00 till 1

al_._...

w_..

Quits

:; Licensed Clinicaf Audiologist

Veterans llemonal Hosprtal

&amp; Vicinity

mise

bDok Cell

C..h paid tor Mt6qus or .w
qui~. AppNq•·:·- tny
cond~lon Clll 11 992-5157

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

::J: {614) 446-7619 or {614) 992-2104
z 417 Second A¥1111ue. Box 1213
- Galltpobs. Ohio 45631
or at

. 1..:~~-

1970 Windsor 12x86 wlll'l
10,.;12 edd on woodburner
weahlrand~.alrDOnd mull
bo mowd. 304-895-3802

-Pt PTeasairt _____ _

Church Sale. Wed a. Thurs
clotHng 215 •nd &amp;0 cents Hall's
Barber Shop room 3

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1973 Marldlno 2 BRa. Mnlng.
Cell oftor 8pm 614-4411-9346.

V•d S.Je June 9 10 11 Held
bv Jop~ U M W 81: Mery Herria
r•ldenceonSt Fh 181 4mll•
aut of Tuppers Plelns, 3 111 mil•
crl Roodsvlllo. 9 Oo-4 00

Yard Sele Frl•nd Sat 202 High
St PI Pll, Glat\Wrt furniture
clothes llnena, CUrtllns end
1 IH Wtherne
814-912-5400

Homes for Sale

Tu pp&amp;rl Plain•3 BA alit 1n
kltch en, l•ge lving rOom, fu II
b . .ment geng-. all electric
carrt,.l air Call after 5 PM
814-4411-7498

4 f•mlty '111!rd sale. June 2,3,4
9a m lp m Turn at Memory
Oerdens Cemetery Arst hou ..
on hlft •bv bed.ladletbleyda.
dress form Iota of m1sc

Yard •I• at the Ron Beegle
residence 1 mila Nit of Racine
on Twp Rd. 105 just off SR
1 241 Wetch tor signs Cub C. del
mo\Mir end other m1se lawn
equip , 7·50~e60 truck tirn.
houlllhold ttems and dothlng
..k.tne 2 3,4 9• m ·5o m

Homos for Rent

Nicety furnished amell houll
Adults onty Ref required No
.... Call 814-4411-0338.

1-bu• for r~t on 218 Call
614-4411-7208

SaleetRobintonaCieenen Eaat
Second St PDmeroy 0 June
3·8, 9• m -4p m Und•lmed dry
cleaning, mn•l• uniforms •nd
to wets

Yerd S•le· lanellt Serenity
Hou• Sh-·Ftidov Saturdlll' ,
June 3 • 4 X· roads- Rt 110 •
11114

--· - - -

of

41

YerdSele, June3&amp;4 110Maln
St
New Haven Furniture
swimming pool .:enner ttocll
ede fence dithet tlrH new
items mesc

Middleport
&amp; Vicini.t¥. . 1'

"He's awfully old. He can ::: ~~:::..";-:a· J.22l
Mlection
bedroom suit•
rememb er wa,y' "'--b ac k wh en and
motol cabin... headboards no
up to t85
ice-cream cones were only eo Dtya •me
-----------•• c•h with
seventy-five cents!"
:r.=.dR~og'~ .. ~~·~:6~':.:

---------- 1,~:::.:::::::r:::~::===~==i

Situations
Wanted

OneOey June4 Lotslluff· c•
..... beby clothes wick• mad
cabinet Thru Vinton left on
K-vltOne tum left onto Mt
Tebor, t.lm right onto first roed

------"Porrierov·

..

Help wanted mil'\ for dairy
f•m 30~882 2225

Sl.11. or s-en FemHy Yard
Soi•Frldov. Satunllll'. Monday
&amp; On Abou11 mile on 180 from
croll roads .. Porter

Want to buy UsiM:I turnitu,. and
antiques Will buy entire h~•·
hold furnishing Merlin Wed•
m8'f81'. 814-2411-15152.

by lhe piece or by the

o::~:n~

21

Area demonstn~tort needed tor
Ctmstmu Around the Wa.rld
Great Plan Free Suppti• 30~
875-5508

YMI Sei•1837Chettnut June
..... 101111

Compt.le hou!lllholdt of furni
ture &amp; an,lques Also wood a.
coal hetllrt Sw..n· 1 Furniture
&amp; Auction Third &amp; Olive
814-4411-3169

Sofas snd chlif'l pril*t from
t 391 to t991 Tabl• t&amp;O and
up to 1125 HlcM-a·bedl 1390
to tl5915 Redl~ t221S to
1375 L.emps 128 to 1125
Dinettes 1109 and up to t49&amp;
WoDd table w I chairs 12815 to
I 795 Desk $100 up to U75
Hutch• t400 Md up Bunk
beds cornpttte w~mattrM...
12115 and up to t395 Blll:ft beds
1110 Matt..... or box IP'iniJI
ful or twin tee. firm 178 end
• • Quean • • 12215 lOng
1310 4 drawor cltset $69 Gun
cablnettll gun BabV mattrtt ...

Do

Screened giMMd porch o.,.r.
looking Raccoon Creek Secluded 2 acres. 3 Br 2 BA
CH/ AC, woodburner boat
dodc Ckl1ck acctet to Oh1o
Atver May finance. 148 900
" Call 614 4411-7896

Gallipolis

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

WUI do btibr;'tlttinginyour home
VtJtY Nll.a.e and etfordebie
614-99Z-8B58

Old upright p1ano Plavs good
Call 614 992-3100

Bleck Labrador Retrl...,.r AK C
Registered, 5
old femlle
very gentle and loYing 814667 3462 aft• 6 00 p m

.

1114-445-2155

field of hay approx 6 ecret In
Vmton are• to give away Call
614-245-6826

To good honw, 5 Collie-type
pupplet 8 weeke old Call
614-985 4291

GOOD USEO APPLIANCES
Wuhert dryert; refrlgareton.
ranges Sll:egga Appllences.
Upper River Rd beside Stone
Croot Motol 814-4411-7 39 B

Insurance

Wanted to

-1

~

=: Gr-.

W. Vo. 30"-171-

loartltrl _ _ _ _.plus,

lo-. Jr

Hou• tor ~t~nt h Pomeroy Call
814-992-6144

6 room and bath 238 2nd St
Pomeroy t150 month also will
l~~ndcontmct 814-986-3837or
614-985-3581
A Frame tor rent AttwoodiRd
Call 614-992-6986 ..... 6 00
like n..... 3 bedroom ran ell
homemAutlanderea 1275 Pll'
month Phone 814-742-3171
3 bedroom house 2 bath for
renl 614-949-2688
Route 2 good location must •e
10 appreciate t38,500 00
304-676-2466
2 bedrooms eir CDnd Sand Htll
Rood 304-875-3834

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

N1ce 2nd ftoor 2 BR apt centrtf
do'Nfttown AC end epp a210a
mo plus ullllli• 2 adults • 1
child R•ler &amp; aec dep reqoired C•ll 81 ... 446·2325.
446 4249
Geraqe Apt Ft.trnlahed t221
Utllh- pold 29'h Noll, Golllpo111 Catl4411-4416 ofter 7 PM
Furnished .rftclancy apt Clrpet
throughDul Private &amp;. quiel.
Single wortdng penon only C.ll
814-445-4607 .. 446-2602
Furr~~shed IIJ)Irtment

4 rooms&amp;:
bllh 1 or 2 adullt No p1t1 Sec
dep &amp; ,., required Call 614446-0444
Duple, Spring Vllilev 11r.. 2
BR S w lth •tcached g. .ge.
Newly remodeled Nice yard
Coli 614-445-8469oftor 5 PM
Two bedroom fumllhed epart
ment ~ried adutts oty No
chE or pelt Depoait and
ref enca required Cell 8144
4571
Nice one bedroom ept wieh
rtnge, rtf CII'P!If &amp; w &amp; d
hook up In towli n 90 • mo
Cell 814 44~9&amp;10

2 9R Nice 81 clean 1n Eureka
t 200 a mo O.p requwed No
Pall Caii814-24S-5883

Gracious Irving 1 and 2 bedroom apertments It Village
Manor and Rlvertlde Apart
ments in Middleport From
8182 Coli 814 992 77B7
EDH

Furrvshed or unfurnished 2 BA
cablt. VWit•·IIW8g8 Pilei. AC
Foster's Mobile Home Park
814-445-1802

2 bedroom Apta for rent
Corpotod. Nice -lng. Loundry
hcilitl• available Call 81~
992 3711 EOH

Furn'thed 2BR mobilehomefor
rent Adults only No pets
Netural gas heat Call 814--387
743B

1 bedroom furmahad effeciency
ept 1 ups• in lpt w lth 2
bedroomr Kttchen fur1111had E
Mem Pomeroy 814-992-8215
or 614 912 3523

1 4.11.70 2 BA • w / welk •round
atow microwave, b.u itt in stereo g•den tub shower stall
1225 e mo 6 miiM trDm
O.IUooUa on 211 Ref.-enc.
required Call 814-258-1391

Apartment for rent •225 •
month Deposit required 814-992·6724 After 8pm or 9928119

Mon thru Sst Ph 614-4450322
Velley Furniture
New end uted furniture and
epphc•nces Cell I 14 448
7572 Hours 9· 6
J &amp; S FURNITURE
141 ts Eastern Ave
4 drawar chel1 IQ 15 drawer
cheat t64 915 &amp; pc wooden
dinnene sets 1199 96
PICKENS
FURNITURE
Olnattu beds. bedding,
dreuers chfllt couchea.chlll't
lemps, cotf.e..nd tabl• Every
dey Specials 'II mile out Jerri
cho 304-875 14150
OJelity furnttu .. and carpet at
Low PriC(fll An~~nangevellable
Mollohan furnit:ure
Upper
River Rd 814-448-7444
1 T' Zenith bleck a wh+tt TV
1215 Wood tlble • twa chairs
t40 275 Herltqu1n books, 150
Tru tone stereo with ape•k ers
tl50 Seeet258So FourthAve
Middleport
Aefrlgen~tor

&amp; atD\18

hiNIItt
gold Carr 614-388-8295
VIRA in Centenery now hu a
complete hne of nBW 6 ulld
furniture &amp; eppliences at very
low low price~ Tebt• rechn
ers bre11 headboards waahera
d,._rs etc MeHre111 •le-2
weeki only tuhbe S49 95 Rt
141. 1.4 mile down Unc:oln Pike
big tan butlding behind laat
trailer on 1-'1 Hours 9 6
MDn Sat Call814-448-3158
G E refrlg .grHn 17 cu ft
t1&amp;0
compactor-green
t75 Hot Point do. .e own
range-H.....,.II gold S300 Bedroom fum desk, chllt wtth
hutch shelves &amp;. dreuer whtte
wtthbluedenlmtrlm Mise furn
Col1614-445-1950

Am.,•

Good gas renge
1415

53

304 87&amp;

Antiques

2 BR , unfurnished Ill elec. 2
mil• out At 1588 Private lot
Coli 614-4411-4607 "' 4482602.
2BR tn~ll• $200amo '4mlle
patt Bob McCormick on 588
Ctty echods Call 814--4468463.

1 bedroom apt tor rent in
Middleport 1150 month plus
utlkl• 814-992-5!46 or 814949-2218

54

Mobile Homea tor Rent Cell
814-445-0627

lire""" St Mldcleport 2 bodroom furnllhed _.rtm~t 0.1111181 paut. ref.-nce requlred

Callllhtn't UMd nre Shop Over
1 OOOdrea llat12 131415
11.111 B mil• outRt 218
Call 614-2&amp;5-6281

2 bedroom mobile horne In
Sy,.c:u • t160 per month plus
utilities deposit 1141 992
5732oft.. 500pm
Two bedroom furnished t.-11•
Cr8bCreelc Rd. t200 OOmonth
deposit required. no .,eta fur·
nish own Ulilil• 304-8751206
12lt60 all electnc. 2 bedroom
mobile home. 11h mM• out
Millstone Road. 12&amp;0 00 month
plus dapostt. exc cond 3045711-2233 .. 6711-24B3.

44

Apartment
for Rent

304-882-251111

New completely furnished
1p11rtment • mobile home in
city Adu 1t1c only P•ktng Call
614-4411-0338

2 room fu mlahed -.,t. prtvete
bMh utll~leo pold. 117 N 4th
Ave Middleport 1-304-8822568

Big 2 Bedroom Rustic horne
buMtonyouralte t13.991.up
Call 1-814-BB&amp;-7311

Downtown modern 1 bedroom
apt, c•pated, no children, no
pete. ceU 304-871-3788

Selin MaldotHonondretalight
burgundy Worn once Size
9-10. Paid 150 new wtiiiBiifor
12&amp; Call 114-445-8888

Furnished Rooms

F!Mnlshed room-919 Second
Ave Gillllpolls. t1215 • mo
Utlllt._ paid. Slnalemala. Shn
bllh Clll446-4118•fter7PM

-,-------3

Ro omt tor IBfrt·week or '1"onth
Stortlng st $120 o mo Gollla
HoCII-614-448-96BO

46

Space for Rent

8EAUnFUL APAR11VIENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK- Store cor- of Second &amp; Pine
SON ESTATES. 536 Ja'*- 1400 sq It OH stroOt porldng
Pike from t183 a mo. Welk to .3150 a mo plut utlltlta Clh
sttop and mo-Aet 814-441- 814-448-2325 441-412•9
2868 EOH
IMga commerdal bulclng on
lrooklldt Apartments Loc... d Rt 7 clo• to fh 35 L.,ge
offB~avlleRd -1BA ... clout pirldng aree Call 814-241•P•rtmentl wlthmodernkitchtn 6024
and Wither-dryer hookuPI c•

ble television avellable. Cell
814-4411-2127
up . .ln unfumlthed epl Car
pated, utiMieo pold. No children
No pots Call 814-4411-1837
Downlown-Modern 11R ,com
ototo ki\Chon AC. carpoe Call
814-4411-0139

COuNTRY MOBILE Home P•k.
Raua 33, Nortfl of l'o-oy
Ren•l trall•s CIH 114-992
7479

Space lor .,..11 troll.. AI
hook-ups C.ble AIIDifflciency
rooma 1lr 1nd cable. MM;on,
,w_:_V_:•_c.t~-'30_4-_7_7_3-:.._5:.._8_&amp;_1_ _
,Specious mobile home loti for
r. .t Femlty Pride Mobile Home
Pwk. Qllllpolil Ferry W Ve
304-875-3073

11 Court It 2 IR , 2 btl hi
ldttchan turnfehed. w/w c•pat
No pots Off st,.at porloJng
13Ziamo plusutllltl• Dep a 1_:_..:___:.:_:_:_:__:__ _ _ __
ref Cellt14-446-412t
TreH• spac• tor ..,... lDOJtt
Aoed. Rauw Ona. 304-175O.rege epartment-3 rooms • 10711
bllh w/d, ..r Cia. No pML
Adu~s only Call 814-4411Me1 cli;llllilsl:
1519

Rarer

Nlco 1 BR apt
8o rolrlg.
flrmtahod.
ptld. o.paolt roqulro4 Cill
114-441-434B-8P~

w-

-

Misc. Merchandise

Wheatchelr•new or uMd 3
whttled eltctric ecoott~rs Cell
Aogers Mobllty collect, 1 au..
B70-9881

45

2 lA IPh e clolltl kitcheneppl furnished W•her Dryer
hook·up, ww cerpet ntwlv
plintad. deck Regency. Inc.
Apts Call 304-6711-nltl or
875-6104.

Buy or Sell Riverme Antiques
1124 E Main StrHI. Pomeroy
Houn MTW10em to8pm
Sundoy 1 to 6pm 814-992
2526

APARTMENTS mobile homes,
houses Pt Pll!lllllntandOIIIipolls 514-4411-B221

5 room apt, unfurniahed. refrlg. .torendttOYIInduded adults
only no pet:a, 304-175-28315

151

54

Flah--Pand Staolclngl
Cltfleh, Hybrid BhMglll, Bass
C..,ple. Minnow~ • Triploid
Or111 Clrp Del TUft June 14
It Southern StiiW Co op in Pt
PINMnl from 12·1 PM Cell
304-875-2780 to order or 1
BQ0-843-84391
New Kl5000 On an gen•tor
Bergaln priGa Will furnish spec
• prtce Dn .-q~lt Call 814-251-U13.

Boats and
Motors for Sale

21 ft Bayliner cru1Hr 1986
wide beern all elactton1e. gallay
~::envaa
etc 350 V 8 eng
sleeps 8 Very law hours
s 27 500 C•ll 304-727 6990

Mile Ferren a315 00 On 11 com
mode chair 855 00 ?4 Chevy
Novo thorp$350 00 304-6752637

18ft f1berglst 1 boat on tnuler
40 HP Johnson engme electric
ttart 1900 ftrm Call (6 14)
446 1526

.

King 1111 bed •m wevllte11 3
eets ~ teta pads t 300 00 or
make offer 304-876-8939

•

18 ft Cru1se1r Inc 2 2 HP
Mercury motor $600 Call
614-445-9686

Air Cond 8,600 btu t150 00
Zenhh coloeed TV floor model
t1150 00 Girla 20 mch bike
840 00 304-675-3975
cond,
2 ton medlem
Lennox clnsart
entral exc
air
Buck atDW.
con ...,It Moving mutt 11111 best
reasonable offer 304· 875
7488

1976StarcuttTrl haul14% ft
65 HP Evtnrude motor Call
614-266-1117
$1 Bwck.
000 low
66 mlleege
BUick Sky
lark
~~~~~~::~=====~~~=~~~·~-~-~·~u~~~:173
40 000
11 500 77 Fa rd Ecnnllnfl van

Sen pool tablee balls .,d 10
pool sticks 304-676-1804
5 ton W'hlrlpool whole house •r

condttloner $500 or trede lor
wlue Antique coke me
chine for smell boHiet 8200
304-6711-9704
~~I

55

Building Supplies

Buelding Mater1ail
Block br~ck sewer p1pet, windows lintels etc ClaJde Win
tars, Rio Grande 0 Call 8142455121
Concrete blocks all alzet yard
Of' deiNery M .. on un d. Gal it poUt Block Co 123112 Pine St
Gtllipolie Oh1o Call 614-4462783.

WESTERN RED CEDAR
• Channel Rustle
and Beveled Lip Sld1ng
• Deck Materiels
Guaranteed Quality
CEll DE INC Athens 114
594-3678
STEELE BUILDINGS
Must Mil 2 steM buildings from
Cancellation Brand ncrw. never
erected, one .. 40x40 Will tell
for balance owed Call DAN
1 aoo-527 4044

56

Pots for Sale

Groom end Supply Shop-Pet
Groom1ng All breeds All
stylet lams Pet Food Dealer
Julio Webb Ph 814-446 0231
Ore go nwynd Cattery K.n Ml
CFA Himelayan Persian and
Siem- khtent AKC Chow
puppie1 New H1malaven kit
tens Call 114 446-3844 aher
7PM

AKC Coctcer Spaniel pUPI !hots
atarted Wormed t150 each
Cell 814 388-8890
AKC Blue female Doberi'TIIn 11
months old Call 614 448
6927

6PM
3 purebred Beagle pupa one
male and femelelemoncofor and
one m•l• end female black end
white a 50 00 each Phone
304-675 5520
Baby

Ferretti 304-875-4103

For •Ia. regtttared fem•le4 year
old Elkhound Good hunt1ng
dog. $300 304-882 3328

57

Musical
Instruments

Kimball COniOifl pi1N1o-&lt;:herry
1111 ye•• old • 1 500 Call
614-446 9349
Responsible pany wanted to
easume smell rnonthty payments
on piano See locally Call cntdlt
m.,ag., 1 800.447 4288
lndfvidu•l guitar IIIIOMI beginners MF!ous guitarist Bruni
cardls Mu lie 81 4-448-0687
JeH Wamsl.,. lnltruct:or 81444&amp;-8077 aummer openings

58
8o

FNit
Vegetables

61

St,.wbtrries Doug Roush 2
mil11 back of New Haven
You-pick we pidc St•ning Mev
31 Coli 304-9B2-2237

Wlndl_.r Roto-TUI• Homelite po•r saw Cell 114-992·
&amp;118

S1n~wberri•· Pfck your own
Call Claude Winters Rio
Granda Ohio 814-245-6121

For •I• 1 iron splrals•lrwav 1
phone·m•te •nswerlng ma chine 1 cordi. . •l~hone, 1
aetof121nchdoubleplows Call
114-742 2131

Fmn Su~~III!S
&amp; livestock
61

CROSS~

f-I:::::::::::::::::::=J.=::::::=======~

SONS

1984 Mercury Lynx SW ltd ,
stereo n1ce 82199 Jahn 1
Auto Sal Bl Rt 7 b1'14ow Hohd.,
.-an KMauge
1978 Jeep Wagoneer 4 WD
81496 Call aft8t' 6 PM 614446-0150
1983 Ch8'1ette 4 dr hatch beck
52 000 m1l• new petnt. tirflt

exhaust battery br•kea
11900 Call614-446-3876
Red Hot barga~nsl Drug deaiBrl
cera boats planes .epo'd Sur
plue Your area 8uyen Gu1de
111805-687 6000 EK! S 9805

Mlsl8"( Fergerson tractor baler
ralke &amp; mo_,. $3650 D 17
AC tl"'ctor Sh•p with V'ermer
round beltr 86250 Owner will
f1nenoe Call 614 288 6522

1 978 Chrysler LeBaron 4 door
new paint tires loaded $1600
614-992 7214

Ferguson 30 1•m tractor with
equipment Good condit1on Call
814-4411-1420

Red Hot berg~~~nal Drug deahws
c.rs boat• pl.,lll repo'd Sur
plus Your Area Buyers Guide
111905 6B7 6000 EKt S 9B05

2010 JD tNctor with baler
relke mowing mach1ne post
driver 84750 Big 1130 MF
IDwhours V19rrnare round baler
$8200 Owner will ftn.,ce Cell
614-2811-6522

1978 Ford F101te New tires end
battery new patnt good cond1i
ton Can be seen •t 37690Peech
Fork Rd Rt 2 Pomeroy Oh1o
45789

Ferguson tractor w / belly
mower $2450 NH Ovna
Bounce mowing machine
t795 5 ft bush hog 1250
Cattle stock IICkl $100 Call
614-285-6522

1983 Oldsmobile R&amp;gency 98
four door l.oadl!ld Call 614247-2402
1979 Ford T Bird New 24 1nch
boys 10 speed. Call 614-9853931 or 614-985 3839

Wh'- '1 Trecton 2&amp; to 180 HP
ebllolute deeler~ cost plus 6 per
cent Comperfl our prices befol"ff
you buy Siders Equipment
Henderson W Va 304-675
7421

1968 Camero V 8 cyl 327 2
door a1r auto Cell 304-882
2704
1980 F1et h•dtop conwrtlabie
X19 AM FMradiOC81setle exc
cond call after 5 00 304-6762635

C81t t,.ctor with attachments
304-B95-3530
Smal square baler Ford 11da
mower tide delivery hay n~~ke
r•sonebla. 304-676-4023

1981 Old! Cutlass Supreme
$150000 304-882 3615
'79 two door Dodge w1ll tn11de
for older car or p1ck up.. 304882 2714

Fermall H with load111r Alha
Chllnwt WD 501 mower 22
h camper 304-571-2328 cr
575-2606

1982 Ford Eacort statlon..,...gon
pb good cond S 1800
304-676-2967 eher 5 p m

PI

63

lrvostock

1983Phoemx Car exc cond no
ruat 82400 304-675-4382
6 wk old rabbits· 14 each
Lop-eared 4wk otd- 810each
3 vr old Alp~ne Nanny goat
chein broke &amp; gentt• $40 or
b•t off., Call614--448 4680

1978 Ford Custom 4 wheel
drNetruck. goc.d oond with new
t1re1 $4 600 f~rm Call after 4
PM 16141446 8913

Regis•red Tennes .. e Walking
tk&gt;rltl StalliOn 12 ve•• e•v
keeper and excellent trllll horse
2 brood mares 9 end 1 15 ye•s
t3 000 for all Will accept
piymentl over tune to rtght
home Can •• offlpnng Cell
614-664-5125

1979 Ford F150 pickup V8
.,to good condhtOn S2000
Call 614 742 2760
1979ChtNy Vaton SUtO 1976
Chwy 'hton auto. 1979ChfNy
'hton stand•d 83000 tor all
thrae. Good conditiOn 614949 2801 No Sunday calls

FISH- - POND STOCKING!
Ctttlsh Hybrtd Bluegill Bau
Creppie Minnows &amp; Tuplo1d
Gr••• Carp Del Tuea June14
at South•n States Co· op In Pt
Ple..-t from 1 2 1 PM Cell
875-2780 to order or 1 aoo643-84391

1990 Nts•n Datsun truck with
topper 5 speed greatcond1t10n
304-675-6633

73

7 yr old Tenneslte Walking
mare e. 8 month old Walk.ng
fllty 11000forboth Call sfter 6
PM 614-379 2884
Angus Bulls. y&amp;erllng and 2 yeeK
old. ready for •rv1ee Schear
brook Ferms Clayton Oheo
&amp;13-837 4128 davs; 513-837
3894 even1ng1

2 Silly Gooto 304-895 3630
Hay

&amp; Grain

Help wanted 10 cut hav for hilt
the crop Call614-245-9575
Hay In field tor •Ia e1 10 per
bale Call 614-742 2471 Of
814-742 3068

Good clean h.,. • 1 25 on
w•gon 304-876-5679

Good q.. lity clowr h-v 11 25a
bolo 304-575-2209

Trans 110rt aIion
Auto's For Sale

Nitwits make lousy extortionists

I

8o

1984fM·C.II
Chry•• stereo,
lAINr PB.
PS
AM·
4 cyl
Excel oond t4800 Cell 814448-4347 .. 4-05-4746

1 981 Dodge engine slant 6
2 25 Guer.,teed good S 150
Coli {6141446-3075

BUDGET TRANSMISSION
Used &amp; rebu1tt ell types Guaran
tee 30 dBYS mtntmum Pnces
S99 &amp; up Reb..litt torqufls
converted aa low as $39
ConvertiOn krt S 10 s &amp; C 10 s .
owr dnve to 350 s We buy JUnk
trantmii!IIOns Call 304-675- ,
4230or 614-379 2220

8o

1984 Honda 2005 3 wheel•
wilh rack and all new tires good
cond Call oftor 4 PM 18141
4411-B913
1985 4 wheeler Call 614 367
0273
Black H•rlev Dwldlon Super
Glide Call 814-448-1950
Kawaalki 125 1250 Call 114371-2825
1851 HerleyDevkttonPenheed
t3600 OBD CAll 814-1412293evtnlngs
1185 Honde ATC Big Red Like
ne.v ....d very ltttle t1300.
~..:.!.4-9815-3538 Peul K•r

1177 Clm•o Auto tnns
...... 1 - • only. 179&amp; First
oomo Coli 814-4411-1818

'79 HDnd1 Hllwk 400 oa.
windshield bleck sherp
1580 00 Phano 304 678
8758

1114HondeCivlc AC, AM FMc•• Goodoond Call 814-2459101

1978 CJ7 Jeep priced
11 600.00 1974Jeopfllr-a.
304-8711-7489

,

Campers

19 ft tratlflr m goad conchteon
Cell 614 44 6 6316
1973 Terry Travel Trader 27 tt
carpeted good cond1t1on Call
614 992 7641 or 614 74 2
3054

Services

.- '.
.~

- - - - - - - - - - - = :~
81

Homo
Improvements

• •

.. -_ .

...·--.

'
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UncondrtiOI'IIII lifetime guer•n
tile Local ,.f&amp;ftnCes furmshed
Fr.. flltlmates Call colloct
1 614-237 0488 d!I'V or mght
Rog&amp;r s 8 asemen t
Waterproofing

---

SWEEPER and MWing machtnt
rePIIf parts and supph81 Ptctl
up and delrvery Davis VaOJt..m
Cle•ner o ne half m1le up
Geor~ Creek Rd Call 614446 0294
Concrete Septic Tanks 1000
1500gat•ndJetAeratlon
avatem Factory tratned repair
shop RON EVANS ENTt:R
PAISES J•cklon Oh1o 1 800.
537 9528

gal

RON EVANS EN'reR~ISES
Sept1c tank pumptng S90 per
laod Coli 1 BOO 537 952B
Masonry Bru:k block stone &amp;
fireplaces Free esttmate RefM
enoes Caii81UDanny 614-2561749

•

-.

Pa1ntmg Interior &amp; E1tter10r
FrBe estimates cau 614-4468344
J1m s Odd Jobs
Sundeck1 lldtng patnhn~ roof
1n~;~ carpenter work trallet' re
PI If Free E1t1metM Call 61 4379-2416
RON S Telev1110n Servrce
Hou• call t on RCA Oua:mr
GE Spec1ahng 1n Zenrth Call
304-576 2398 or 614 446
2454
Fetty Tree Tr1mm1ng st~.rnp
r&amp;mowl Call304-675-1331

Rotary or cable tool drilling
Most wells co mpleled same d!Y
F\lmp sal M end ~•c a 304- 895 3802

Michael s Res ident Ill an condl
t1on and refngenmon rechergfl
end
service Leon W Ve
.304-458 , 765

Motorcycles

•

79 Motors Homes

1984Dodga lA ton4WD 4spd
trans lock out huhe S8500
Coli 614-255-1252 "' 2558811

1984 Hondo Nlght'-k 7000
mil• Asking 81295 Cell &amp;14379-2220

.. ,.

Auto Parts
Accessones

Starka Lawn end Shnb Servtce
304-675 3956 or 304 578
2903

3 wheehr ATV Vervgood cond
1700 or bnt offer Call 814445-7025

1179MontoC•IoT·Top 1979
Yo- Coli 814-4-051741. - ' s

••It••·

76

19 87 Ford 150 Convera10n Van
1 4 000 millll loaded tde
crulae po\Ner windows &amp; locks
AM·FM Call 351 HP eng~ne
ru-1 tanks Flt~~t steele leather
Inlet' tor Call 614-266 8327
8 5 Mon Frl

74

1183 Trohs AM, blk w / gold
trim ch.-cotl interior clean. like
~ 301 HI-Performance en
alne. new rima "Monto Carlo
ltyii"Ooredo•', CMHIM ltlriO
air, •7.000 mil• t7 000
negotlebl•lncUIIM IMther le
bre 41 •tra mag trims. floor
m- Call 814-245-9572

u.rne"""" ..,..._ .,....

81100 Bost 16 ft 65 HP
Even""'" 304-675-11357

,

re,,..,

TMfl tnmm1ng Bnd su.mp mm oval free ettlmate 304-6767121

'•
•
'

- .•

. "·
------------------.• .....-·.• '
·- .
82

Plumbing
&amp; Heat•ng

•,
..

CARTERS PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and Pin e
Gallepolts Oh1o
Phon&amp; 614-446 3898 or 614445-4477

84

1982 Chav 4 whelM drive tn£k
V8 auto 40 000 m1le1 ex tres
• 6 500 00 304-882 3576

77 Ford LTD 61 000 act.-1
mil• Nice boctt. dellfl lnt•klr
Good tlrea Med'I.,IQitlv mund
Coll614-2411-5040

SWAIN
AUCTION • PUIINITURE 62
Olhoo ... Golllpollo_
Fw,.hldiPI -1er 1231tmo. NIW- lpo .....,._..,. IHI
Ut..... ,..,... 120 4th ••.
8. .
Gellloollo.CIII4411-4411-7 !w,t~--· dN• 1111
PM
rvtl ... nwUNW • fDund811on
ltlrtlng· e11 "•ollnere
.......... 2nd ft-. .... •r:!IRI- •••.
Ill .opt. opp, AC 1225tm- u•o- - · - - · btclcoom
piece- AclccMa. rot• .,d
t111-12tl 0.•~•
• • _,.... eon 11._ _ . . , _ , , , ........ 11ne
44B-42G. 44•2111
at---

4 W .D

1977 Fard F160 4x4 1980
ToyOie 4x4 1980 Kawe11k1
KX126 All 111 good shape Cell
614-992 3992

Mulch hov 304-676 2209

~~an

&amp;

1977 Ford 4~~:4 ,4 ton 4 speed
transm•s1on 410 cubic mch
engme new 8 ply t1res 814949 2237

Sl8ndlng hav for 181e. Call
614-949 2268

71

Vans

198G Toyota 4x4 truck short
bed 5speed chrome roll bar end
bed rails Black chrome module
W'heel1 AM FM cassette stareo
off I'OIId hghtl strips 42.000
m1l• Extraaherp t7000 firm
81~992 8551

1984 Ford Muateng. 4 1pd
13499 1913 Ford flllrmont,
.,to. 11499 John'• Auto
Sel• At 7-below Holldw Inn

Houaehold Goode

Auto 's For Sale

1979 Cor'118tte T Top black.
Excel shape air tow mtleege
Call 614-255-871B

Jim s Farm Equip Center
Rt 35 W Galllpoltt 0 ·Call
614-446 9777
Fence post and rtlil ceder
peelad 7 8 ft long b.-b wire
20 used tractort plows d11e
wheel. 3/ p mower tBddert Over
1000 nf!IW and u..d New
ernval 600 New Delu• tool•
tr •at•

Fann Equipment

1973 Ca• 5808 blckhoe,
endlotd•. wel..,ebo... .wrag 11
condition 24" • 38' buckltl
t10.000 304-456-1542

71

Fann Equipment

U S 35 Wett Jackson Ohio
614-281-64&amp;1
Mu•y Farguton. Ncrw Holland
Bush HDg Sal11 &amp; S.vlce Over
40 ... d tractor• to choa.e from
&amp; complete hne of new &amp; used
equll)ment largett _.ect1on m
S E Ohio

64

Hide-a-bed couch wfth ch•.
t 110 Weight bench with
_....... 175 Colt 514-14111604

••'

86 Glauport 165 120 HP tO
used onty one summflr wrth all
BCC8110fle!J 57600 Call 614446 9349

~

Oolt Clubs n~M metal woodl
1 3 &amp; 5 woods 1165 00 304675-1804

flloOntndl•. .1• 2bedloom
epanmonts lor ,..t Call 814248-1&amp;71.

\

75

Ak cond 11 SOObtu t150 00
PA111ter Cut lawn mower 21 Inch
cut 1 yeer old t100 Both exc
cond 30 ... 882 2382

Amant 28 cu ft deep frtea:e
Excellent cDndttlon Clll 814448-4229

New 10 ft Set.... Sy•m.
remote control. intt•lled
1995 00, 304-875-1477

Motorcycles

1972 Honda 450 1350.00 exc
cond 304-895 3336

24.000 btu Se•• • ., cond w•ll
unk 1250 00 Gal tur.-ce with
shell m ..al, UOO 00 304676 7746

For •Ia. STRAWBERRIES Free
boxes tor p1&lt;*:ing. TAYLOR'S
BEARY PATCH Kerr Rd Mon
dav 1tlru Saturday, BAM 8PM
Call 614 4411-8192 or 614245-5178

&amp;800 BTU air condltloMr Nconditlon 1110 Phone 814141-214-0 Also 1 Beagle pup,
out tJt good stock t50

74

Portllblelightlld a.gn with letters
t299 Fr.. deUwry WV1 1
806-842·2434 Ohto 1-800.
533-3463

l---------

11..,..,..

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrcght

Mise Merchandise

Full Blooded Chow 01ow pupPin Cell 1-304-576-2174after

NewiV redecorated lp. .ments
aweilable Utllltiaa paid $225
per f1"10nth depoah: .equlred C.ll
814-992-5724 attw 6 00 or
9925119

New- Wallllln . . . . •10
One Ill opt.. 2nd ft- - • Wool&amp; ltl f11 • up4~~- •
P•~ on loooncl Aw App. AC. lllf1 COli CCII 114-4•
1H
LOT&amp; one acn. lwlf waad1d ..... ~:2ccclctto.l1751
-· • Caualt .,d oh*, goad oond,
olty-.J•Iohollooot.- mo plue
toad .. 304- • ..,. - - - Call 114-441- noo.oo Coli 30"-17•1114
23H.
448-42G..
tflw
4 00 PM._ __
1....:.;;__;_;__;_
3?:&amp;.1&lt;1111 ar 112-1178.

pulcllo - · Clrd•
Ja"-&amp;711-2331

Household Goode

County Apptlence Inc. Good
Ulied IIPDI• .. CII and TV 1111
Open 84M to SPM Mon "ru
Sat 814-445-1891 827 3nl
A... Oelllpol'-: OH

Bl b¥ aittlng In my horne C'll

AVON all areas Shki.,- Sp . .s,
304-675-1429

d~~tallt

asMm~
..... .,

18

AVON Ail are• C.ll M•llyn
WerNfK 304-882 2845

Babv lltwr needed for 2 chUdren
In New Haven area beginning
June 8 cell after 7:00 PM,
304-B82 2427

51

Call us for your mobMe home
lnsur•nce Miller lnauren ee
304 882 2146 Alao· auto
horM lite. health

Help n•ded In prlvale home
C•e for eldsrtv 209 S 4th,
M1dcl~ort Dey shift

LPN Ple. .nt Velltrf' Nunlng
C.e Center seekmg lu:ented
LPNt for part dme emplovmant.
medecal and dent1l insu,.nce
evalleble. tf lnt&amp;red8d call Kathy
ThDrnton Director of Nursing
13041675-6236 EOE AAE

LAFF·A-DAY

Situ rrtit&gt;ns
Wanted

13

Regtt•r now tor ct•'" begin..

The Daily Sent1nel Page 9

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Have room for ehSerty man 01'
women In my home 11 ya••
experience Tupp1r1 Pltllnserea.
e 14-687 3402.

baths

B&amp;C DRILLING CO.

"

o,., • .,..

12

~

CALL

Peachtree Doors
and Windows

Hereld Dispetch New..,.per
n_. carriM'I for 2 routn
Crown City ere&amp; and GMIIpoUa
IO Rto
Mu.t hiV'I
good transportatkm In d be
bondlble. c.ll Jean Miller, 3046211-2830

Help wanted

I _____;____..:=~;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;:::_L;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;::;;;;;;;;;=:_

NEED WA

Rollyson Vtnyl
Replacement
Wtndows

tlons clll 814-513-8074

Friday, June 3, 1988

2 II yr old male Delmatlens
Call 614 256-6021

Dh1o

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR .
Also Tr811tml11lon
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

1/22188/tln

Good left over yard sale item• ta
giVI lttNIY Must •ke all Call
614-446 0770

Beagle puPI to giveewey Call
614-446 8643

PARTS

10-8-lfc

HelpWan•d
Penon experi..oed in Plumbing
IWid/ or He•lng and ..r condl
tioning Must h ..... at IHit 10
ve•• Upl:flenoe Apply In per
son between 4Mght and five
..,.ekdays • .nd from eight end
12 s.tun:l.,s C.rter's PlumbIng end Htg , Inc. Fourth Md
Pine Galllpofla. Ohio •&amp;5831 .,.
Equal Empto't'f1ent Opportunity
employer C.n:er' 1 Pluritlng
•nd Htg Inc. will not discriminate agelnlt •ny empkl.,.e or
apptlcant for employment b•
CMIMt of race. color. religion.
natiorwl orgln anceatry or 11.11.

614-4-06 4477"

v.w.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992·3410

Tribune C•rrier nHdtld for
Spring Velley •r•O•k Or .
HM. Or Maple Dr C.ll The
O.ltv Trtbune 448·2342

NEWELL'S

Center, Att..n1 Ohio t.ltlmm.
dl.e:e openl.,. for tul-time &amp;

Cook n.-dtd Hi·W., Inn, Kt· ..
n.,g• No phone c•l• pl. .e
Apply In perton- Ahernoona
Mon -Fr•

Become • cent• for The Dtily

Giveaway

Echoing M..dOWI A•idental

Tour Guldei-MII•• femele. Our
top peop.. eem 180()..11 200
per weft Fltllllllf'lt working

Need e.11.M c•h tNt tummer?•

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FEDERAL STATE AND CIVIL
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992 -2196

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
t:h

Announcements

PAT HILL FORD

lelwHn 9 a.m.-6 p.m.

to

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

We can repa1r and recore rad1ators and
heater cores. We can
also ac1d boil and rod
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repair Gas Tanks

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Call 304 6 75-63 70
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87

''

�.' .
•

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Friday. June 3, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

r--Local news briefs----. Texas battered by fierce thunderstomts
Bob Evans Farms sales up

COLUMBUS - Bob Evans Farms' net sales for the liscal
year, ended April 29, were $395,061,000, a 21-percent Increase
over $327,160,000 a year ago. Net income was $29,329,000, or $1
per share, compared with $21,470,000, of $.76 per share in 1987.
Bob Evans Farms' board of directors declared a $.06-pershare dividend payable June I, to shareholders of record May
13. The company's annual sh,[lrehoider' s meeting wlli be on
August 8, at 4 p.m . at the Bob Evans Farm in Rio Grande.
During fiscal 1988. 26 new Bob Evans Farms restaurants
opened, Including the first Owens Family restaurant in Irving,
Texas. As a miles tone during this 35th anniversary year, the
200th Bob Evans Farms restaurants opened February 8 in Port
Charlotte, Fla . The total number of restaurants In operation at
year 's end was 201, compared with 175 in flscall987. Projections
for flscall989include building 23 new restaurants, which could
Include as many as three new Owens Family restaurants in the
Dallas-Fort Worth area.
Four new dinner entrees, home-style meat loaf, charbroiled
catfish, country-fried steak and beef stew, were added to the

·;

menu.

The Bob Evans Farms sausage division Introduced
fully -cooked, microwavable Sausage 'n Egg 'n Chesse 'n
Biscuits to the biscuit product line. By year's end, the bisc.ult
products were being distributed by all 87 Bob Evans Farms
salesmen in 19 states and the District of Columbia . Under the
Owens name, the company Introduced brown and serve
sausage, fresh llnks and fresh patties.

Athens gets new restaurant
COLUMBUS- Bob Evans Farms is scheduled to open a new
restaurant in Athens on July 11, according to RobertS. Wood,
chief operati ng officer for Bob Evans Farms Restaurants.
The restaurant, the first of Us kind In the Athens area, will be
located at 357 E. State St ., near the junction of US 33.
The company is seeking fl!ll· and part-time workers for the
new restaura nt. Available positions include hosts and
hostesses, servers, cooks and bussers. The restaurant will
employ about 70 area residents.
Bob Evans Farms currently operates 202 restaurants in 12
states, including Ohio, West virginia and Kentucky .

Four injured in Meigs mishap
Four persons were injured, two seriously, in an acclden l at
8:05a.m. Thursday on Township Road 1, L 7 miles south of SR
346, In· Columbia Township of Meigs County, according to the
State Highway Patrol.
The patrol said the driver of one car, Carolyn J. Reeve, 29, Rt.
1, Albany, was seriously injured and taken by Llfefllght to
Riverside Methodist Hospital In Columbus. The other driver,
Mae L. McQulrt, 59, Albany, was injured and taken toO'Bieness
Hospital In Athens. Two other passengers were injured. No
other information Is available.
·
Troopers said the two vehicles collided headori on a curve.
There was heavy damage to both cars. The accident is still
under Investigation.

Six calls made by EMS units
Six calls were answered by local units Thursday; the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services reports.
At 7:59a.m., Rutland went to Rutherford Road for an auto
accidenl with Carolyn Reeves, Matthew Reeves and Rhonda
Reeves being taken to O'Bieness Hospital In Athens and Lula
May McQuirk being taken to Grant Hospital in Columbus by
Life Flight; at ll:42 a.m., Rutland took Skye Milliken from
County Road 1 to O'Bleness Hospital; Middleport at 12:15 p.m .,
took Ralph Fry from Village Manor Apartments to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 7;35 p.m. took Ray Karr from
Wippel Road to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at 8:54 p.m.
took Garth Smith from the Pomeroy Health Care Center to
veterans Memorial and at 10:13 p.m. , Pomeroy took Eric
Diddle from the Village Green Apartments to Holzer Medical
Center.

'obless ... ---...:~---continued from page 1

Jl

nomic) expansio n."
The employment gains that did
occur were largely confined to
the service industry - where
some 80,000 new jobs were
created.
Constructio n employmen t was
unchanged, after reflecting
strong gains during the previous
three months. Mining and manu·
facturlng remained essentially
unchanged.
The median level of unemployment in May was essentially
unchanged, at 5.9 weeks.
The factory work week edged
down 0.1 hour to 41.1 hours In
May, following a sharp increase
In the previous month. Manufacturing overtime was unchanged
at 4 hou rs after seasonal
adjustment.
While unemployment rose for
adult men, there were no major
: cha nges for other categories of
, American workers.
The jobless rate for adult
women was 4.9 percent; teenagers. 15.6 percent: whites, 4.7
percent; blacks, 12 .4 percent;
and Hispanics, 9 percent.
But unemployment for black
· teenagers- already very high: rose even further. The jobless
: rate for black teenagers was 34.8
; percent In May, Up from 31.4
percent In April.

.Stocks
.
'

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

Am Electric Power.. ........... 28%
;AT&amp;T ... .. , .... .... ................... 26%
;Ashland Oil ......................... 68
;Bob Evans .... .. ...... ............. .17\4
•Charming Shoppes .. .... ... ..... 10%
:city Holding co ....... .. .......... 31
'Federal Mogul. ............... ....3Tf'8
•Goodyear T&amp;R .. .............. ...63%
:Heck's lnc ..... .. ............ ....... . 1~
•Key Cen turton .... .... ........... .38V.
:Lands' End ............ ...... ...... .24%
:umlted Inc ............. .. ... .. ... .18"1.
;Mu ltlmedla Inc ................... 65'h
•Rax Restaurants .... .. ............ 4'h
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ llV.
Shoney's Inc ......... .. ............ 25'h
:wendy's Inti ........................ 5%
·worth lngton Ind ...... .... .. ...... 21

The health industry was a
bright spot In the American
economy and the Labor Department said, "Health services ha s
been particularly strong."
In testimony to the congressional Joint Economic Committee, Janet L. Norwood, chief of
the Bureau of Labor Statistics,
predicted "that several of the
health industries will be among
the 10 fastest growing employment Industries during the next
decade."
Norwood .said, "Health servl·
ces .. . contin ued to grow quite
rap idly - adding 35,000 jobs In
May . Indeed, more jobs have
been created In the health
services industry over the last
year than In any previous year."
In her testimony, Norwood also
addressed the Issue of part-time
workers, who generally receive
far less pay and fewer benefits
than fulJ.time employees. Currently, some 20 million Amerl·
~:~s work part time, Norwood
Sh esal· d a bo ut 75 percentofthe
part-time workers, or 15 million
people, "do so _by choice." But
Norwood said, "We have been
concerned about the one quarter
Of the part-timers WhO WOUld

prefer full-time work."

By United Press International
Fierce thunderstorms today
battered a weather-beaten
Texas, pummelep by a flurry of
tornadoes, soaking rain, hall and
high winds thilt tore apart a
rallroad station building and
mobile home.
Thunderstorms that ripped
across Texas Thursday dogged
the Lone Star State another day
in a week of foul weather over the
southern Plains. Afootofralnfell

Celeste...

In central Texas Tuesdav and
Wednesday.
·
The National Weather Service
said storms this morning spread
across south Texas Into the
north-central part of the state as
well as striking north-central
Oklahoma, southeast Arkansas,
Mississippi, Louisiana, the FlorIda Panhandle, southeast Alabama, and eastern North
Carolina.
·
Rain also fell in \1 irglnia, West

Continued from page 1

Frederick Deering, D Monroevllle, In urging House
members to concur In the Senate
changes and let the governor
take care of the objectionable
provisions. ''I feel we have come
up with a very strong bilL"
Deering said the bill provides
for "a logical and legal manner"
of planning and taking care of
out-of-state waste.
Rep. Joseph Secrest, DSenecaville, who chaired a subcommittee that spent almost
seven months crafting the bill,
said the Senate changes were
"irresponsible and ludicrous,"
but he urged Hoose members to

accept them.
Rep. Robert Corbin, R-Dayton,
said he could not follow the logic
of Secrest or Deering.
''The Senate apparently fouled
up," said Corbin. "If we have a
bill that's Imperfect, we have an
obligation to clean it up. Other·
wise, we're derelict In our duties.
I have a serious question about
what we're doing here today."
But Secrest said to reject the
Senate version and call for a joint
conference committee would be
to reopen other areas of the blll to
mischief: "We don't want some
of our friends to get Into that
bill," he ·said.

-----Announcements----Program starts Monday
Vacation Bible school will start
Monday at the Racine First
Baptist Church. Classes for child·
ren from three year olds ttirough
the ninth grade will be from 9 to
II: 30 a.m., and will be held
through Friday.
Spring concert
The Meigs .Junior High School
Choir will present a spring
concert at 3 p.m. Sunday in the
junior high auditoirlum. The
concer t is open to the public and
is free of charge

l)ivorce granted

Youth Grange Sunday
The Meigs County Grange
Youth Group will meet 1:30 p.m.
Sunday at the home of Opal Dyer.
The group will make homemade
ice cream to be sold during
Heritage Weekend. Anyone wishing to place an order fora quanlty
of ice cream is to contract Dyer
at 742·2805 In the evenings.
Flavors will Include vantlla,
lemon, butter pecan and peach.
Meet Saturday
Star Grkange · 778 and Star
Junior Grange will meet at 8 p.m.
Saturday at the Star Grange
Hall. All subordinate CWA con·
tests, art, photography, needle
point, stuffed toys and others will
be judged.

Robin Rae Hess has been
granted a divorce from Paris R
Hess In the Meigs County Common Pleas Court. The plaintiff
was awarded custody of the
couple's children.'

Trustees to meet
Olive Township Trustees will
meet at 7' 30 p.m. Monday at the
Reedsville Fire Station.

Licences issued

Lodge to meet
Mldleport Lodge 363, F . and A .
M., will meet Tuesday at 7:30 at
the temple. Refreshments will be

A marriage license has been

In a six-hour perjod ending
early today, nearly 3 'h Inches of
rain doused San Antonio, Texas,
with nearly I 'h inches falling at
Fort Smith, Ark.
On Thursday In 'the centra l
Texas town of Lometa, high
winds ripped down power lines
and destroyed a mobile home, an
old Santa Fe Railroad round·
house and a metal shed used to
house school buses.
"The roundhouse has been

here for years and years," said
firefighter Hollie Hall. "Those
walls are 20 to 30 feet high, and
now they're stacked up on the
ground like kindling. There are
stacks of lumber maybe 6 feet
high.

South Central Ohio
Today : Variable cloudiness,
with a high near 70. North winds
10 to 20 mph . Chance of rain 20
percent.
Tonight : Clearing, with lows
between 45 and 50. Light north
winds.
Saturday: - Mostly sunny, with,
a high between 70 and 75.
Extended Forecast
Sunday through Tuesday
Mostly sunny days and clear.
nights through the period, with
highs In the 70s Su nday and
Monday and near 80 Tuesday.
Early morning lows will range'
from the mid 40s to the lower 50s
Sunday and in the 50s Monday
and Tuesday.

HIGH YIELD
CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT

·6.75°/o RATE
6.98°/o ANNUAL YIELD
INTEREST COMPOUNDED DAILY
s1 ,000 Minimum Deposit
Limited Time Offer
Penalty For Early Withdrawal

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CENTUL
TRUST
[;_i§;
That

MllkesThill,I.,IS Happen.

--

Ml•ntbtvi-1NC:

352 Second Ave.

97 N. Second
Middleport

Gallipolis
446- 0902

ANNOUNCING

TOM PEDEN'S

fded

Blennerhasset Federal Credit
Union, Vienna, W.Va., has filed a
foreclosure action In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
against James R. Vance, Par·
kersburg, W.Va .. et al.

. To end marriages
An action for a dissolution of
marriage has been flied In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
Rick Bolyard, Pomeroy, and .
Valerie J . Bolyard, Pomeroy.
A divorce has been granted to
Beverly Sue Holley and Mitchell
C. Holley.

HAS BEEN EXTENDED. SALE ENDS SAT., JUNE 4TH
ROCK BOTIOM LOWEST PRICES ON EVERYTHING
• OLDSMOBILE • PONTIAC &amp; BUICK MAKES!

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Admitted ~ Harry Bell, Portland; Thomas Fry. Middleport;
Gerald Hayman, Racine; Faith
Roach. Racine: Cecil Smith,
Pomeroy; Gary Michael, Ra·
cine; Garth Smith, Pomeroy.
Discharged- David Maynard,
Frank Throckmoton, Harry Bell,
Dale Smith.

~PONTIAC
StockfP-4.5

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,_,
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FIERO

ggg·
''BUCK FOR A TRUCK''

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS
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'WELL-EQUIPPED"

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r;::=::::;;;;;;;;:;;:::::::;•

1988
PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE

.- - ~ - NEW 1988

Help Support Ripley's

4th or July Celebration!

To aend a btauutullv

WIN TillS TRUCK!

deolgoedfuoeral
IU'I'angemem, Jusl call

1988
PONTIAC
GRANDAM
"2·DR. &amp;4-DR"

orvtou

State iourltament results

Everybody
counts •••

Beat of the Bend: New business offel"'! sen-ice
By Bob Hoeflich Page B-8

POMEROY
flOWER SHOP

In Our Town: Gallia to name 'Lawman-of-Year'
By Dick Thomal! Page A-8

RIJF hearing
held in House

year."
After the testimony, Boster
cited several local communities
which could benefit from the loan
program, including Nelsonville,
Middleport, Pomeroy, Rio
Grande, and Gallipolis.

!"~""'
"'" ·" ...
the O'Kanes on Saturday at the
same times. The Lewis Family
will be featured on Tuesday at 8
and 10 p.m., and the rodeo will be
on Saturd~y at 3 p.m., he said.
Ray Stevens is known for his
humorous ·songs like "The
Streak," "Gitarzan," "Ahab the
Arab" and "Would Jesus Wear a
Rolex?," but can sing on a
serious note, too . In 1970 and 1975
he won Grammys for "Everything Is Beautiful" and "Misty,"
res pectlvely.
The O'Kanes have taken the
country music scene by storm
after being successful songwrl·
ters for everyone else.
Jamie O'Hara and Kieran
Kane have written "Grandpa
(Tell Me Bout the Good Old
Days)" for the Judds and Alaba·
ma's "Gonna Have a Party."
Now, the duo has written and
recorded "Oh, Darlln,"" a jump·
tng little blues tune that has
established them as singers.
The Lewis Family began In the
1950 when Roy "Pop" Lewis and
some of his children began
singing In rural churches In
Georgia and South CaroUna.
' They have gone from singing In
their surrounding community to
performing from Maine to California and North Dakota to
Florida.
Pop Lewis, now in his 80's, stlll
performs with the family, which
Includes his chlldren and

NEW1988
CHEVROLET
SPRINT

$5,888'

Pictures

NEW 1988
OLDSMOBILE
CALAIS

~~!l~~~~~~
WHERE: Pomeroy Village Hall A11ditorium
.
(that' I tho old Pomoroy High School building on last

"AMER1CA'SI1 GAS-A"

Main SlrMt]

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WHEN: Scmrday, .liN 4, Cltytime between4 and 9:30p.m.

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COST: 56.00 for 2-Sx7's in folders and 4 wallets
PAY AILE WilEN TAIIN - OIDfl AS MANY sm AS YOU WANT
IIPOSinONING FOil EACH SET
COUPlES..• SINGLES••• JUST F.ENDS
..--~-----.

Beautiful
Prom Setting

YES, WE 'BE OPEN - The new Slewarl'a Res laD rant lD
Gal Upon. Opi!Jied Friday for area resldenla aad attraetetla luD lot
of cuoklmen. Slewarl'a, a francblae of Stewart's Reslarlraala of
Southern Ohio, Is owned by Johnny )Wa&amp;hewoand manqed by BUI
Ross. ''We were packed solid all day Friday," said Rou yea&amp;erday.
"And we're packed solid again today." The restaurant Is open

Charlene and Bob Hoeflich

The Photo Place
'

I

t.

10 Section$, 68 Pages
A Mult•madia Inc . Nawtpaper

provide a 20 percent match,
which will be derived from Ohio
Water Development Authorltl(
(OWDA) general obligation
bonds."
Since Ohio must have the
revolving loan fund program in
place by Oct. lin order to qualify
for funding In fiscal. year 1989,
Gov. Richard Celeste wlll Issue
an .executive order If the leglsla·
tion cannot be enacted by the
deadline.
"Legislative action is still
required, however, to authorize
the Ohio EPA as the lead agency
In administering the revolving
loan fund," Boster said. "The
Governor's Executive Order can
only be effective for one year,
and the legislation Is necessary
to authOrize the continuation of
the program beyond the first

~Tht&gt; Wa,-Ameri.ca~nd• Lov~ ..

3 To 0.00.: From

tnt

.----Jlridging the course... - - - - - - - - - - ' \

Ray Stevens, O'Kanes
highlight Gallia fair
By LEE ANN WELCH
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla
County Junior Fair will bring two
nationally-known singers to town
this summer.
Singers Ray Stevens of "The
Streak" fame , and the O'Kanes,
one of country music's hottest
acts, will highttight .the 1988
Gailla County fair , Aug, 1·6.
In addition, the first family of
bluegrass gospel music, the
Lewis Family wtll also appear,
and a new addition to 'the
program, the American Assocla·
tlon Rodeo, will be seen, accordIng to falrboard member Gary
Roach.
Other activities besides the4·H
and Scouting events, will be the
selection of Miss Gallia County,
Little Miss and Mister Gallla
County on Monday, Aug. 1; the
Grubb Family Singers and the
Old Tyme Chorus, both of Gallla
County performing on Tuedsay,
Aug. 2; a garden tractor pull and
the band Odyssey on Wednesday,
Aug. 3; Kiwanis Youth Day and a
horse pulling contest on Thurs·
day, Aug. 4; an OSTPA·
sanctioned tractor pull, square
dancing and bluegrass by the
Idle Times on Friday, Aug. 5;
and the farm Bureau Talent
Show on Saturday, Aug. 6.
Ray Stevens will appear on the
main stage on Thursday, Aug. 4
at 8 and 10 p.m., Roach said, with

Mostly sunny, wllh highs
near 80.

•

Middleport-PoltJeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, June 5, 1988

Plo. "2·2039 or 9U·5721 ·

ei2s Prom

Along the River .. .. ..... Bl ·8
Business-Farm .... .. ... D ·l ·8
Comics· .............. .: ... Insert
Cl assifleds ... ....... ....... 03· 7
Deaths .... ........... ......... A~
Sports .......... .... .. ....... CJ-8

tmts
Vol. 23 No. 17
Copyrightud 1988 .

C-1

Inside:

•

COLUMBUS - A bill which
wou ld create a $574 million
revolving loan fund for the
construction and Improvement
of public waste water treatment
pl~nts has had an Initial hearing
In the Ohio House of
Representatives.
State Rep. Jotynn Boster (D ·
Gallipolis) introduced House Bill
845 to provide financial assist·
ance for the upgrading and
construction of public sewers and
waste water treatment factlitles.
Prlor.ity for funding will be given
tq · those commu ni! les under
federal mandate to comply with
discharge limits.
ln sponsor testimony before
the House Energy and Environment Committee, Boster noted
that the Federal Water Pollution
Control Act. authorized the distrl·
, bution of $478.5 million in federal
funds over six years to state
revolving loa!) programs.
"House Bill 845 creates the Water
Pollution Control Loan Fund to
receive these federal grants,"
Boster said. "The state must

6 MONTHS

The Rank

50 cents

Page .B-1

Weather

r~s=e~rv~ed~f=o=lo~w~l=ng:::th=e~m=e~et~in~g~._ _j~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~9~9~2~-6~6~6~1~~~~

issued toin Dana
MeigsH.County
Court
BaileyProbate
Jr., 37,
Langsville, and Debbie Jean
Pridemore, 31, Langsville.

For~losure

virginia and along the northern
Pacific Coast.
A severe thunderstorm watch
was posted this morning over
south-central Texas. Tornadoes
touched down near Cottonwood
and Austin Thursday, and one
struck in Comanche County
farther north, but the twisters
caused no casualties.
Winds gusted to 70 mph at
Abilene In central Texas. Hall
fell near Zephyr and Kelleen.
In North Carolina, thunder·
storm winds gusted near Spring
Lake In the central part of the
state and hall pelted nearby
Newton Grove and Suttontown.

Sunday

non-merhbers may call on Wednesdays lor weekend tee times. The
hours of operation as of June 11 are 8 a.m. todnskon weekdays and
7 a.m. to dusk on weekends. No players will be permitted to start
l!efON lbese times. (See additional Times-Sentinel pboU.. oa C-1
,..., -today). ..
'"" · · - ·- - ·

Emergency phone.
demonstration set
by advisory board
POMEROY - A demonstra·
tion on Phone Care, proposed
emergency communications sys·
terns for Meigs County's frail
elderly and disabled, has been
set for Ju ty 8 at 1:30 p.m. at the
Senior Citizens Center.
Meeting Friday afternoon at
the Center the Advisory Board
for the Meigs County Council on
Aging agreed to Invite Alison
Green of St. Ann's Hospital.
Columbus, here to demonstrate
how the remote controled equipment works and the Investment
which would be Involved.
Tentative plan s call for the
local Council on Aging to purchase 10 units at a cost of $349
each and then rent the units to
senior ci tlzens who are In need of
THE O'KANES, Jamie O'Hara and Klerlan Kane
an emergency system for $15 a
month . It was noted that one
anthem by the Gatlla Academy person In the county now has a
High School band and an opening Phone Care system and that at
address by Paul Shoemaker at 6 least two others have Inquired
· about securing units.
p.m. on Monday, Aug. 1.
Mel Franklin reported on a
simlllar system currently In use
by Holzer Hospital serving some
areas of Meigs and \linton
Counties as well as all of Galiia
County.
The system proposed for here,
according to Linda Friend,
health coordinator at the Center,
would permit four numbers to be
programed Into the unit. A touch
of a button on a hand-held
transmitter would au tomatlcally
begin calling the numbers and
remain activated until someone
answers.
I
Eleanor Thomas, executive
director, announced that a check
for $11,530 tor the Alzheimer
Dlsease;Related Disorders pro·
gram has been received covering
the period from Jan . 1 through
June 30, 1988. She suggested that
after July 1 there Is a posslblityof
funding reduction In Meigs
County, although $2,107,000 has
been given to the Ohio Depart·
ment of Aging which will distribute the money for research,·
respite care and educational
programs.
Beth Theiss, the AD·RD chair·
man, reported that cl!rrently
there are 23 famllles being
served In the program, that

..

training sessions on care of those
with Alzheimers or related disorders will begin sometime In
July . She also reported that plans
are being made to reactivate the
support group.
Ms . Friend reported that two
aides have been hired, each
working 36 hours a week to go
into the home of 13 client once or
twice a week to relieve the
caregiver . She further noted that
additional clients are being accepted and can be given occa·
sional In-home relief assistance.
It was noted that plans are
being made to begin using a
sliding fee scale on July 1 for
those who exceed established
income levels. Up until then the
free service will continue.
Mrs . Thomas discussed the
purchase of service contract
program which IS already in
effect In the nutrition program,
and noted that that measure of
being "paid for only what you
do" will go into effect in 'other
areas next year. She described It
as an Incentive Ia perform.
The need for volunteers to
conduct blood pressure clinics at
Long Bottom . Ha r risonville, the
local Center. and The Maples
was discussed by Mrs. f'riend .
The clinics arc usually held for
two hour periods and require the
services of nurses.
She also discussed the Ca re
Support System ca r ried out by
the Council on Aging noting that
those over 55 at \leterans Memor·
tal Hotspttal are contacted before
they leave the hospital to ac. quaint them with the services of
the Center. Th e emphasis Is on
planning ahead fo•· the transition
from hospital to home. For low
I nco me persons or those where
there Is no family member
available to assist. meals can be
delivered, respite care and home
health aides can be provided.
There Is cooperation between the
hospital' s Home Health Service
and the Center to avoid duplica·
tion of services. she said.
Mrs. Thomas discussed the
long term care . Initiative, a
program not relating to nursing
home care, but in-home service
Continued on page A-3

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