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·-

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

New officers installed
New officers were Installed
and commlltees named at the
recent meeting of the American
Leglop Auxiliary, Drew Webster
Post 39, Pomeroy, held at the
hall.
Installed by Florence RIchards, past Eighth District
president, were Gerrl Miller,
president; Frankie Hunnel, first
vice president; Iva Powell, second vice president; Allee Freeman, recording secretary; Ellen
Rought; corresponding secretary; Catherine Welsh, treasurer; Erma Smith. assistant
treas urer; and Veda Davis,
chaplain.
Appointed to committees were
Mrs. Miller and Mrs. Powell,
children and youth; Mary ~ar­
tin, Marge Fettv and Robin
Ca mpbell, Americanism; Mrs.
Powell and Kathy Pullins, community service; Catherine
Welsh, Ellen Rought, and Loretta Tiemeyer, veterans affairs; Mrs. Tiemeyer, field service; Mrs . Martin. legislation
and national securllyy; Kathy
Pulllns, music; Mrs. Hurinel,
Pearl Knapp, and Julia Hysell.
education and schollarshlp; jun·
lor activities, Veda Davis and
Mrs. Miller; communications,

Mary Martin, Ellen Rought, and
Mrs. Hunnel.
II was reported tha dues are
payable on Aug. 1. Mrs. Davis,
chaplain, gave the Invocation,
with Ashley and Jessica Hamilton leading In the pledge of
allegiance. The auditing report
was given by Mrs. Hunnell who
served with Erma Smith and
Mrs. Pavts.
Buckeye Girls State reports
were given by Beth Ewing,
co-sponsored by Farmers Bank,
and Nicole Bunch. The girls told
of their experience at the work·
shop on democracy attended by
I,350 girls and thanked the untt
for selecting and sending them to .
the largest girls state In the
national. The unit presented each
of them with a gift of money.
For the program, Mrs. Miller
read "Amerloca's Liberty, Our
Heritage" from the Buckeye
Messenger. The Hamilton child·
ren sang "America" and "Yan·
kee Doodle Dandy."
It was noted that the birthday
party at the Chillicothe Veterans
Hospital will be held on the third
Thursday of July, and that a
party wilt be held at the Athens
Mental Health Center on July 12
at 10:30a .m .

Birchfields gather for reunion
Descendants of Sam and Mel- Pleasant, W. Va.; Alva and
vina Birchfield gathered at Har· .Velma Luckydoo, New Haven,
man Parl&lt;, Point Pleasant, W.Va.; Ethel Osborne, Jennifer
W.Va. recently for a family Draper, Raymgnd and Sue Ford,
reunion.
Ultnots; William and Hattie
A basket dinner was enjoyed at Dudding, Logan, W. Va .; Ca·
noon. Attending were Dreama mUle, Sleepy, Mike, Gary, Mary
a nd Gall Blankenship, Michelle Ann Osborne, Beverly and An·
and Melanie Morgan, Proctor- thony Parsons, Steve and Patty
ville; Charlotte, Everett, Ml· While and children, Winfield, W.
chael Grant, and Pamela Davis, Va.; Nathan. Lenore, Branda,
Ractn~- Eugene, Janey, Becky
Kedra. Kalla, Brooke Wtlls,
and Randy Birchfield, and John Poca. W. Va. ; Jean and Danny
Swanson, Rutland; Effie Roach, Smith, Charleston, W. Va. ; and
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Roach, Sammy, Sandy, Julte, Noel, and
Henderson, W. Va.; Ellen John- Nikki Birchfield, and Harry Ray,
son, Pomeroy; Frances, Junior, Pedro.
Danny Luckydoo, Mae and Wll·
Prizes were won by Eleanor
lard Luckydoo, Eleanor and 'Elliott, Bllt Dudding, Brooke
Mickey Luckydoo, Joyce, Jab- Wills, and Sue and Ray Ford .
ers, Vicky, and Terry, Point

Meigs honor rolls announced
SALEM CJi;NTER ELEMENTARY HONOR ROLL:
The sixth six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Salem
Center Elementary School has
been anqounc.ed. Making a grade
ol B or above In all their subjects
to be named to the roll were:
First Grade: Jamie Barrett ,
Tara Butcher. Michelle Grant,
Lori Kinnison, Jessica Priddy,
Stephen Thornton.
Second Grade: Leigh Ann Ca nterbury, Amanda Napper, A.J.
Vaughan.
Third Grade: Jo Sandy, J enny
Ervin, Andy Myers , Stacy
Silvers .
Fourth Grade: Jake Gannaway,
Michael Jarvis.
Fifth Grade: Crystal vaughan.
Kim Ja ney. Susan Page.
Sl~ th Gra de: Matt Clark, Andrea
McDonald, 'Denise Shenefield.

Joseph Lipscomb, Shllo Moore.
Sixth Grade: Ryan Conde, Jerrod Douglas, Heather Hudson,
Mitch Jacks, Brad Knotts, Jason
Witherell.
MEIGS JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL
HONOR ROLL:
The sixth six weeks grading
period' honor roll at the Meigs
Junior High School has been
announced. Making a grade of B
or above In all their subjects to be
named to the roll were:
Seventh Grade: Debbie Alkire,
Larry Ashburn, John Bentley ,
Abby Blake, Linda Chapman,
JennUer Chasteen, Verna Co!?'pston. Jay Cremeans, Kelly
Doidge , Eliza beth Downie,
Heather Franckowiak, Allison
Gannaway, Brian Hoffman, Tanya Hudnall, Randall Johnston,
Lor! Kelly, Charles King, Penny
Klein. Kevin Lambert, Lorena
Oller. VIncent Reiher, Tina
Smith, Rusty Triplett, Katrina
Turner, Holly Williams, Todd
Workman, Michelle Young,
Yvette Young.
Eighth Grade: Barbie Anderson,
Tr!chf Baer, Frank Blake, Julie
Buck, Misty Butcher, Beth
Clark, Dodte Cleland, Sharla
Cooper, Mary Compston, Ryan
Cowan, Kim Dickson, Jason
Dowell, Stacey Fry , Tara Gerlach, Kim Hanning, Amy Herald,
April Hudson, Darin Logan,
Susan Love, Joe McElroy, John
Moore, Kevin· Musser, Matt
Parsons, Roger Partlow, Jeremy
Phalln, Melanie Qualls, Kyle
Sinclair. Phi!Up Smith, Mike
Thomas, Bobby Vance, Robby
Wyatt.
·

SALISBURY ELEMENTARY
SCHOOL HONOR ROLL:
The six th six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Salisbury
Elementary School has . been
an nounced. Making a grade of B
or above in ~il their subject s to be
named to the roll were:
First Grade: 'Lacy Banks, Jeremiah Bentley, Cory Colley, Trl·
cia Davis. Rebecca Johnson,
Carrie Lambert, Brynn Moss,
Tamra O'Dell, Amanda Ralph,
Je~nUer Ramey, Bobbl Jo Ste·
. wart. Crystal Salser.
Second Grade: Bllll Bentley,
Vi nce nt Broderick, Chad
Follmer. Jason Frecker, James
Geiger, Myca Haynes, Michael
Leifheit, Heidi Lega r, Shera
Patterson, Melissa Ramsburg,
Sa brlna Smith.
Third Grade: Jared King,
The 4th meettn~ of the Kountry Krttters
Timmy Peav!ey, Alicia Stegall, 4-H CLub was held at 0. 0. Mcintyre Park
Melissa Whaley, Adam While, Monday. June 13. The meeting was called
order by Krist\ Crews. Minutes were
Brian Withrow. Raquel Maddux. to
read by H011y Pope. Aimee Branham gave
Fourth Grade: Nicole Bentley, the treasurer's repon. A bake sale was
Dorothy Leifheit, Mindy Patter· scheduled tor July 2 at Haskln~·Ta nner .
\. Community proj ects were discussed but
son, Karyn Thompson .
nothing definite planned. ~rtsu CrE"Ns
Filth Grade: Jarrod Folmer, gave a dQmonslratlon on taking care of a

Kountry Kritters

cat.

•

Chester alumni gather for
dance, banquet at school

Rev. Freeman
begins ministry
The Rev. Richard Freeman Is
new pastor of Trinity Congrega·
tiona! Church, Pomeroy.
The minister with his wife,
Elaine and son, Benjamin,
comes to Meigs County from
l-ubec, Maine, where hepastored
the Lubec Congregational
Church for the ~,&gt;as t 10 yeats.
Prior .to that he was at Etna,
Ptltsburgh, Pa. from 1973 to 1978.
He Is a graduate of the
University of Maine, Farming·
ton Campus, and the Gordon
Carwell Seminar y In
Massachusetts.
Freeman's community lnvol·
vement In former pastorates has
Included Rotary, work with associations for the mentally retarded, counseling programs for
mental health organizations, library and historical assocta·
Uons. He has also been a.cttve In
youth camping programs as both
director and counselor.
Mrs. Freeman Is also actively
Involved with the local church
program and will be conducting
youth church. A native of New
York, she Is a 'graduate of Duke
· Untverslt&gt;j and the Gordon Cor·
well Semmary. She spent four
years as a member of the
Comuntcat!ons Commission of
t~ Congregational Christian
C rches NatiOnal Association.
W tle there she assisted with the
production of an educational
church video along with public

Pierce celebrates
84th birthday
The 84th birthday of Carol R.
Pierce was observed recently
with · a famtly gathering at his
home In LangsvUle.
A picnic was enjoyed by the
group with homemade tee cream
and cake being served In the
evening.
Pierce received congratulatory phone calls from relatives In
Michigan. North Carolina, and
Florida. Attending the obser·
vance were Mr. and Mrs. Robert
E. Pierce, Sr., Groveport; Mr.
and Mrs. Robert E. Pierce, Jr.,
Sarah and Courtney • .Charlotte,
N. C.; Mr. and Mrs . Jeffrey
Pierce, Adam and Ashley,
Groveport; Mr. and Mrs. Craig
Pierce and Dantelle , Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Baker,
Kristina and Nathan, Lock·
bourne; Mrs. David Reiser and •
David Lee, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Ronnie Dantson and sons,
Ryan and Seth, Lancaster; Mr.
and Mrs. William Johnson, Car·
roll; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Newton, Waverly; Mrs. Harry
New ton and granddaughter,
Mandy, Beaver; David Pierce,
Mansfield.
Mr. and Mrs. Ricky Pierce and
Samantha, Mr. and Mrs. Klmmy
Pierce, Franklin and Kimberly;
Rusty Pierce and Jean, all of
Salem Center; Stanley Hutton,
Debbie and Jason Pierce, Al·
bany; Jody Newton and a friend,
Martin, Ravenna; and the ho·
nored guest and his wife.

I

Thursday, July 7, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

REV. RICHARD FREEMAN
Information materials.
Freeman maintains office
hours at the church, 8 a.m. to
noon, Monday through Friday.
and Is available at other Urnes by
appointment . Sunday services at
the church continue to be 9:15
a .m . for Sunday school and 10: 25
for the worship service.
The family resides In the
parsonage on Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy.

WANT ADS
ARE JUMPING

WITH BARGAINS

U.S. Mini
The U.S. Mint was created by act,
April 2, 1792, establishing a U.S. coinage system. Today, states The World
Almanac, the mint manufactures all
U.S. coins and distributes them
through Federal Reserve banks and
branches.

Nearly 200Chester High School
alumni and guests gathered at
the Chester Elementary School
for a banquet and dance.
Howard Parker had opening
remarks and the Invocation was
given by Mrs·. Nellie Parker. The
steak dinner was prepared by t.he
Chester PTO and served by the
Alfred 4-H Club.
Mrs. Helen Knight Wilson Will,
formerly of Baltimore, Md., now
living In Chester, was Introduced
and given special recognition for
being the oldest living alumni
having graduated 70 years ago.
Others recognized were Earl
Knight , his 65th reunion, and
Philip Will, his fiOth reunion year.
Gold charm bracelets and gold
key rings were given to members
of the class of 1938 celebrating
their 50th reunion. Introduced by
Victor Ba hr , other members of
class present were Mallie Batley
Walters, Ruth Lemon, Richard
Boring, Arthur Rose. Charles
Summerfield. and Roger
Spencer.
· Other reunion classes recognized were the class of 1933. with
six members present, 1943 with
five members there, 1948 with
nine members attending, and
1953 with nine members there .
Also recognized were the stx
attending members of the Summerfield family. Howard Knight ,
Maxtrie Goeglein. VIrgil and
Kathryn Windon, and StarllngMassar were recognized for
never having missed an alumni
associ a lion banquet.
Bob and Betty Meredith re·
celved a flower arrangement for
traveling the farthest, Phoenix,
Ariz; and Maxie Walters for
coming the farthest for the
special 50th reunion.

PhUlies, 5-2

Officers elected for the 1989
Chester Alumni Association
reunion were Harold Newell,
president; Horace Karr, first
vice president; VIrgil Windon,
seco nd vice president; Grace
Weber , third vice president;
Kathryn Mora , secretary; Helen
Wilson. assistant secretary;
Mary Rose , treasurer, and Nellie
Parker, assistant treasurer.
Named to the· nominating and
decorating committee .were
David Koblentz, Jerry Hawk,
Dale Kautz, and Starling Massar. Following the banquet the
group danced to the music of the
Mary Lucas- Band. -.

'll

SEE US TODAY

,,

,

__

it?--

* CARDS
*GIFT WRAP
*CANDY
*SUNDRIES
PRESCRIPTIONS

*

VILLAGE .
PHARMACY
992-6669
271 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
It was 10 hot ...Metp County, like many other parts ofthe nation,

•

Is hot and dry these days. The thermometer at Bank I In Pomeroy

hl1104 degrees early Thursday evening.

'

•SHORTS •TOPS
•SKIRTS ·
•SPORTSWEAR •JEWELRY

. Charles F. Palmer, Ph. D., has
menta "fortunate event" for the ,
been appointed dean of the college.
.Emerson E. Evans School of
"Dr. Palmer's experience as a
Business Management of Rio teacher, administrator and conGrande College/ Community sultant adds to the stature the
College.
School of Business Management
Palmer comes to Rio Grande has achieved over the past few
from Wilmington College, where years," Hayes said.
he has been a professor of
Palmer received his bachelor .
economics and administration of science degree from Miami
s_tnce 1974. He bas served as cllatr tin tverstty In 1956. He received '
~the Department of Economics . his ma-s ll!r of arts from Vlrptla .
and Administration and director Polytechnic Institute and State
of the Small Business Institute.
University In 1973 and his doctoThe Emerson E. Evans School rate In the fields of Industrial
of Business Management em- organtzat ion and monetary thephasizes small business and
ory from the same Institution In
entrepreneurial training and ex- 1976.
tends those concepts to Include a
Prior to his Wilmington apservice function to support small pointment, Palmer was an Industrial engineer for International
business and Industry In Ohio.
"Being named dean of the Paper Co. atAldan,Pa.,andNew
School of Business Management Stanton, Pa.; production superat Rio Grande presents an Intendent at U.S. Envelope, Williexclttng challenge," Palmer amsburg, Pa.; foreman, Fibresaid. "The school's reputation board Paper Co .• South Gate,
for contributing quality gradu· Calif.; and assistant professor In
ates and Ideas to the business the NROTC unit at the University
community In the state and of California at Los Angeles. He
around the country Is growing. I served as a gunnery officer In the
would like to play a key role In U.S. Navy.
that growth."
Offices he has held Include
Rio Grande President Paul C. presiding clerk of the Faculty
Hayes termed Palmer's appoint- Senate at Wilmington, president

.

2 5°/o'tO 50°/ooFF

WASHINGTON !UP!) -The In June and unemployment denation's unemployment rate fell clined," said the Labor Departsharply to 5.3 percenttn June, the , ment's Bureau of Labor
lowest level In 14 years, the Statistics.
Labor Department announced
Total civilian employment
today.
rose by some 800,000 people, the
The Improved picture was jobless report showed. compared
fueled by an upturn In summer· to a drop of some 500,000 jobs In
·
season hiring among adult men May.
and teenagers.
A companion Index of unem·
The June jobless rate of 5.3 ployment, reflecting members of
percent was the lowest figure the armed forces, also declined
since May 1974 and dropped three-tenths of a percentage
three-tenths of a percentage point, from 5.5 per.c ent to' 5.2
point from the May figure of 5.6 percent.
"Incredible," said Norman
percent, the Labof Department
said.
Robertson, chief economist for
The data showed a healthy Melton Bank In Pittsburgh. "One
Increase In off-the-fiU'm employ· can only be just totally tm·
ment, with some 346,000 more pressed with the strength and
people working In non-farm jobs. resilience of this economy. The
''Employment rose markedly magqttude of these gains In
employme~ are more typical of
what one would expect when an
economic expansion Is just beginning, not when It has lasted for
almost six years."
But the Improved picture for
of the AAUP and treasurer of the
Clinton County Chapter of the unemployed Americans raised
American Cancer Society. He fears of bigger wage Increases
,
has also served as faculty repre· and tnOatlon.
"I wouldn't be surprised If the
sentattve to the Hoooster·
Federal Reserve didn't raise the
Buckeye Athletic Conference,
(Interest rate) dlsco\!ntratevery
faculty advisor to the Jantzartes,
soon," Robertson said. "I am
a men's social group, and faculty
worried about tnOatlon. When
advisor to the campus Greek
you see this sort of strength and
Coun.ctl. ,
,,., .
growth, there Is the chiar and
-Palmer Is author of several
prese11t- . danger , of ec.onwro!C
publications and has done annual
overheating. But, having said
buslnesl economic fdrecas ttng
that, I'm Impressed with the lack
for the regional banking Industry
of
overheating at the current
since 1983.
·

SOFAS, RECUNERS, TABLES, SWIVEL
ROCKERS, BEDROOM SUITES,
SLEEPER-SOFAS, CU.OS, GUN CABINETS,
DINING ROOM sums

25°/o
OFF

an

.'

'

,,

-

and 75,000 new jobs were created
In retail trade at the start of the
summer hiring peak.
Construction employment rose
by 55,000 people and there was an
Increase Jn manufacturing jobs
for 45,0(}0 people.
The average work week on
non-agrtcu ltural payrolls edged
up to 34.8 hours In June, season·
ally adjusted, while the factory
work week was unchanged at 41
hours. Also unchange(i was average overtime, at 3.9 hours.
Average hourly wages declined 2 cents, however, to $9.23,
prior to seasonal adjustment,
while average weekly earnings
Increased by $3 to $323.05.
The. June figures showed that
62.3 percent of the U.S. work
force had a job.
The number of people working
part-time because they could not
find a full-time jolt rose by
470,000, however, meaning that a
total of 5.3 mllllon people wanted
to earn more money by getting a
lull-ttme job.
"Job gains In June were
widespread, as Increases oc~urred throughout private sector
Industries," said Janet L. Norwood; head of the Bureau of
Labor Statistics.
In testimony to the congressional Joint Economic Commit·
tee, Norwood said: "Threefourths of the June employment
Increase took place among youth
16 to 24 years of age. "

Meigs County Commission to sell
p~perty; discusses pennit proposal
The Meigs County Commissioners 'took steps In Wednesday's regular meeting to adver·
Use for sale the former Margaret
Josephine Hunter Peters property In Racine.
This property became the
possession of the county because
Instructions In a will left many
years ago by the former owner
could not be met. An easement
across the property for the sewer
line to the new apartments In
Racine was granted by the
county. , at the time the county
took possession 9f the real estate.

DR. CHARLES F. PALMER

•

"JULY FURNITURE SALE"

time because wage Increases are
still In the 3 percent range extraordinarily modest."
The unemployment rate for
adult men declined to 4.6 percent,
returning to the April rate after
rising sharply In May . The
unemploY!flent rate for teenagers dropped to 13.6 percent, down
2 percentage points.
The jobless rate for black
teenagers - still extremely high
- dropped sharply from 34.8
percent to 28 .4 percent, the first
time It has been below 30 percent
since late 1973. The relative
Improvement for black teenagers reflected the beginning of
summer hiring, particularly In
the low-paying service Industry .
The June figures showed that
some 115 million Americans had
jobs and some 6.5 mUiton people
were out of work.
White teenagers had an unemployment rate of 12 percent.
The jobless rate for all teenagers dropped two tull percentage
points, to 13.6 percent. The
jobless rate for adult women was
unchanged at 4.9 percent.
'The unemployment rate for
Hispanics was unchanged at 9
percent. There was some Improvement for blacks In June,
with a jobless rate of 11.5
percent, and whites, at 4.5
percent.
The servke and- retail -sectors
of the econolny fared partlcula'r ly well In June: The service
Industry added 1fi0,000 new jobs

c

Mason asbestos removal cost
•
mcreases to over $100,000
By John Tolarchyk
the cost was exorbitant and he felt
With cmpet being laid today in that the commission's engineering
the courtroom of the Mason County advising firm should get a chance
Courthouse, the end of -a long con- to evaluate the project and the cost.
troversy that began as early as
Hank Thompson, the contractor,
August, 1987 is in sight.
said he was at a point of no return
The courtroom is sched\lled to without it costing even more. He
open completely and aU offices said he had to have the decision
working full scale by July 20. . that night, or he would have to tear
Wjlat began as an effort to repair down the existing safety structures
courtroom facilities that were and would have to come back and
damaged by leaks in the courthouse build new ones.
roof has grown into a cosdy project
The additional asbestos was disthat includes most of the building.
covered in the circuit court file
In spite of the end being in sight, room and in the offices on the
the cost continues to escalate.
·ground ftoor. The file room, accord. Records in the Mason County ing 1o Thompson, will cost $20,000
Circuit Court file on the courthouse because the ceiling was damaged
show that the cost of the asbestos by leaks and aU of the files would
removal and counroom renovation have to be individually wet·wiped.
~ted
from an estimated The contractor said aU of this
$10,000 to comply with existing would have to be done in a sealed
federal laws, to more than room before lisbestos can be
$100,000 in direct costs and nearly removed from the ceiling.
$150,000 in indirect costs, includ·
At the next commission meeting,
ing courtroom renovations, lawyer L. Robert Kimball and Associall:s
fees and a $100-a-month payraise engineer George McCiennan told
that John Gerlach, county commis- the commission that he would have
sion administrator, said is more recommended disapproval of the
than just deserved, but which resul- contract add-on hec"""" he lhought
ted from outside pressure.
it was too high and would have had
· The original estimate was to take a closer look at iL
$10,000 10 remove .
damaged
At the same meeting, Commisceilinp that contained asbestos and sionct Thomas D. ''Tuclcer" Mayea
10 D8int over the remainiDg portion. queslioned McCJennan "As 10 why
Thll would have compliCd wilh additional ubeltol was found that
fedml reaulallons 011 ashesiOII in was not in tbe cxiginal plan thai we
public bulldlnp, Included in the are now payina for?"
!lirect CCIIII of tho JelliOYal is
He al8o asked why other bidden
$30,000 tbe commission approved were not wtWng 10 submit bids that
at a June 23 meetin8 for removal of 'I'ICI'I: widtin the engineering firms
asbeltol that was not contained In · orialnal estimate of $70,000. Willi
·the COIIIr8CL One commissioner, R. the e:~~cepdon of thompson, aU bids
Kenton Sbeline, voted against the received by the commission were
increase because he said he lhought for
more
than
$100,000.
·
·
Thompson's bid was $79,000.

A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper

U.S. unemployment rate falls
to 14-year low, 5.3 .percent

··New dean named at school

JULY
CLEARANCE
OF SUMMER
NG CONTINUES!!

2 Se'ctlons, 14 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, July 8, 1988

,..-.now hot' was

MIDDUPOU

- -- -·--•

2567

Vol.39, No.43
Copyrighted 1988

ELBERFELD$

Fair, warm tonight. Low In
70s. Saturday, fair. IDgh In theupper 90s.

enttne

Three Eastern High School •
students have been named to the
1988. edition of Who's Who tn
Music.
The music leaders and editors
of the publicatiOn have Included
the names of these students
based on outstanding musical
abtllty and contrlbu ttons to their
school's overall music program.
personal growth and development through participation in
musical activities, citizenship
and service to the school and
community.
The three students are Jenny
Sue Cowdery, daughter of Mr.
·and Mrs. James L. .Cowdery,
Lisa Kay Pooler, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Emerson Pooler, and
Laura Marie Hawthorne, d~ugh­
ter or Mr. and Mrs . Darrell
Hawthorne.

20°/~, .30°/o, 40°/o &amp; 50°/o
BAHR CLOTHIERS•

Pick4

•

SUMMER SALE
NOW IN PROGRESS

Savings of

Daily Number
332

Page 3

Students named
in ·Who's Who

FINE WEAR APPAREL
FOR MEN AND WOMEN

Ohio Lottery

Reds over

McCiennan said he felt that
when the coun stepped in, the price
went up. He said the judge made it
a high visibility project.
"What the judge said cost you
$30,000 right off the bat," McClennon said.
Mayes defended the judge.
"Don't blame it on the judge," he
said. "You made the mistake, and
we don't want you blaming it on
the judge."
Later Mayes said he did not like ·
the idea that someone from outside
the county was blaming something
on "our" judge. "He was just doing
his job," Mayes said.
Along with the file room and the
offices on the ground 1100', the con·
tractor found more asbestos in two
stairwells. A decision on how much
the recent discovery wiU cost has
not been made.
When questioned by the com·
misSioners concert)ing how Kim·
ball could have missed the
stairwells, MI:Ciennan said that
ther, conducted random tesiS.
,
•H the test came back negative,"
Mcl..c:nnan said. "Then we assumed
that similar materials would be
negative also."
The contral:tor said the two
stairwells wae covered with a dif- ·
fen:nt matcriallhan tho
on the
top 1100' that tested negative.
McC1ennan said lhe firm did the
best they could, but ()lllbably
should have caught the two

Since the county has no need
for the property, It will be sold at
public auction on the courthouse
steps on Wednesday, Aug. 10, at
10 a .m. The property and house

on the property have been
appraised at $21,050. Sealed bids
may be submitted to the commissioners prior to the sale, or
submitted at the time of the sale.
The commissioners tabled for
further discussion a proposal for
Meigs County to support the
creation of a site In Marietta
where state building permits
could be obtained, with the
exception of permits for
plumbing.
.
It would appear that If such a
site Is developed In Marietta,.
then all builders In the affected
area, which would Include Meigs
County, would go to Marietta lor
permits Instead of Columbus.
Some local contractors have told
the commissioners they would be
In favor of a site closer than

Columbus In order to eliminate
delays which often occur In the
Issuance of permits from
Columbus.
The cost of a permit in
Marietta would be higher than In
Columbus. However, the time
savings would likely offset the
additional cost, the commissioners said.
County Engineer Philip Ro·
berts told Comintssloner RIchard Jones he Is In the process of
talking to people In the Forest
Run Road area where It has been
requested that a section of the
road be widened and that measures be taken to eliminate cattle
drives down the road. Roberts
told Jones\ he could not decide
anything uJ!UI he has a complied
a complete report on the matter.

one

Sl8irwells.

"You're not the only client we
m having II'OIIblo like thia with,"
he said. "Even if k was aU cleaned
out, live years from now someone
will find some more."

WINNBBII N.UO:O - Melp Coumqr lt.. two
wi•Jie!l I• llle live-away PI'1Jil&amp;lll of lludry

their IIIII aaaiYenary. WIIIHI'II
were prennllld their prllea at the Middleport
IRon Tllal'llll&amp;J evenla1. From the left are Aalta

8&amp;- marlda1

-Y'

Jacobe, ln-1er of the Pomeroy atore; Jim Werry, Route 1, Baclae, wlnaer of a VCR; Bryan
Wilcox, maaapr of the Middleport aiDre, and
Bdwlll'd Ho..llllllelt, Middleport, wlaaer of a
wuller aad a dryer.

�Friday,

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS•MASON AREA

~lb

~m~ ,.,.,__,,_-,-,I""T""Ead,.,::::::~~

~v

·.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PubUsher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER ol The United Press International. Inland Dally Press

NRC inspector challenges his firing
WASHINGTON - The telephone tipster used what sounded
like a fake Southern accent. He
said an engineer had tampered
with _tests at the Braidwood
nuclear power plant southwest
Chicago.
The date was Feb. 25, 1987, and
tM Nuclear Regulatory Commls·
•stan lnspec'tor who answered the
phone suspected that the tipster
was lying. The Inspector, Leo·
nard G. McGregor, had previously checked aut the same
· diesel generators described by

the caller. And he knew there
wasn't an engineer at Braidwood
with the name mentioned by the
caller.
The caller dldn' t sound credi·
ble, and he hung up before
McGregor could get any more
details.
McGregor recorded the all ega·
tion In a memo and flied It away
without an Investigation. That
was a violation of NRC policy,
and for It, McGregor was fired.
A later Investigation by the
NRC found that the diesel gener·

By Jack Anderson and Joseph Spear
ators at Braidwood were (lne,
although problems, were spotted
with early testing procedures.
Now, as McGregor's lawyers
prepare to challenge his firing In
court, they are digging up facts
that Indicate the NRC may have
been looking for an excuse to fire
the aggressive Inspector whO has
stepped on the toes of a lot of
power company officials in his 10
years with the NRC.

lEITERS OF OPINION are wPlcome. They s hould be less than 300 word!!
long. Allletter5 are subject to~ltlng and must be signed with name, address and
teiPphone number. No unslgnE'd le-Iters will ~ publlsht&gt;d . Letters should be In

good taste, addresslnR l!:lsues. not pt&gt;rsonalltles.

Reagan's foreign
policy possibilities
By HELEN THOMAS
. , UPI White House Reporter

can weigh in. the ch;:J: ice is nis.

Instead of building on the
Camp Dav!d accords Initiated by
his predecessor, President
Jimmy' Carter, Reagan let thP
process drop.

,;Didn't you get the memo? The Pentagon is no longer a pentagon."

.;

'

SO CLOSE - Pblladel. . . _ _. b-maa
Tommy Barre&amp;t jut mt.es a .,_ 11M by

'

people between I he ag-es of18 and
21 that culminated in the 1971
ratification of thl' 26th Amend·
ment to the Constitution. those In
their teens and 20s vote less
frequently than any other age
,::roup.
The Crnsus Bureau reports
that 10 1984, the •year of the most
recent presidential contest, only
40.8 percent of all · potential
voters aged 18 to 24 cast a ballot.
In even-numbered years wllhout a presidential race. fewer
than 25 percent of those In the
18-24 category vote, while the
participation rate for the rest of
the population is a bout ·twice as
high.
The executive director of th~
Committe&lt;' for the Study of the
American Electorate, . Curtis B.
Gans, says even thosp ·numbers
are too high. Only 16.6 percent of
all 18· to 21 -ycar-olds participated In the 1~86 election, he
asserts.
Among- the reasons cited by
Gans for those statistics: The
substitution of television viewing
for discussions of public affairs
in the hom&lt;', the r! s(' of negative

.

CINCINNATI !UP!) -Danny
Jackson celebrated hts selection
to the NatiOnal League All·Star
team by pitching his lOth victory
of the season for the Cincinnati
. Reds Thursday night.
. But Jackson, now 10-4 on the
year, wasn't satisfied with the
fact that he only went 6 .1-3
Innings to receive credit for the
5·2 victory over the Philadelphia
Phlllles In · 90-degree plus
temperature.
"I did a lot of running (In the
third Inning when the Reds
scored four times) and It was
awfully hot out there." said the
26-year-old letthander, who became the flrstR.edshurlertoheat
the Phlllles four times In one
season since Joe Nuxhall, now a
Cincinnati broadcaster, accomplished the leal back In 1965.
Jackson, who shares the Na·
tiona! League lead with seven
complete games and three shut.o uts, was one of three Cincinnati
players who will play In the
All-Star game, set for Clnclnna'
U•s Riverfront Stadium next
Tuesday night. The others are
rookie third baseman Chris Sabo,
wbo knocked In two runs, IncludIng the·game-winner, and shortstop Barry Larkin.
·
"I'm privileged to be selected ," Jackson said, "but I'd
already bouallt a ticket . to gQ
home (in Overlarid Park, Kan·
sas) and I had tocallmywifeand
tell her I wouldn'tmal4;e It, that!
was staying here. She didn't
seem too upset."
Jetf Treadyway's leadOff homer In the third Inning, his
second of the season, had tied the
score at 1·1. and Jackson was

campaigning and the growing are elected and hire principals,
Inclination of polltlclarts to run who hire teachers. City councils
against the government.
are elected and decide the rules
Written for junior hig-h and · for your town. State legislatures
high school students, Samuels' are elected and set the rules for
book is noteworthy because It drinking age, dTivers' licenses
constitutes a rare attempt to and worlk permits."
ameliorate a problem widely
The author Is polltl&lt;:\al pro- ·
acknowledged .but seldom tho ducer for NBC Neows' "Today"!•'
subject of remedial efforts.
show -and ant' of the book's few
Especially creative Is her lapses Involves her unthinking
portrayal or the extent to which acceptance of her own Industry's
politics directly • lnflumce so contribution to the debasement
many aspects of the lives of the of public affairs In general and ,
secondary school students who politics In particular.
mindlessly dismiss the process - Describing a "very Important
as irrelevant to them:
skill that you will need," Samuels
"The peoplE' who decidE' which says, "If you want to be on
textbooks you get In school ar&lt;' television news, you have to talk
either elected officials or are in short sentences called 'sound·
hired by an elected official. And bites' " of approximately 20
who do you think decides If your seconds' duration because "no •
town or city will have curfews for news show Is very long, so it can' t
kids under16 7 Peoplewhorunfor spend too much time on one
office and get elected. Thf'y may thing."
CVE'n have gotten elected by
Otherwise~
the book Is a :
promising to impose curfE-ws on valuabl&lt;' primer for Y.o ung peo·
kids.
pll'. providing everything from
"Most of thl' things In your life sound advice on how to become
that your parents don ' t d&lt;'clde involved In electoral politics to
are decided by lawmakers or biographies of some of the
school officials. School boards 'country's most respected public
officials.

:Today in history

:or

---

(

cardiothoracic surgery. Not ~n·
tirPiy, he explained: It also had to
do with getting rid of a surgeon
who had a penchant for taking on
the · patients no one else would
even try to save.
What happened to that sur·
geon? He ' became chief of
surgery at another hospital. And
now that he's responsible (or
maintaining the mortality stalls·
tics, he's far less ea~&lt;er to take on

B~rry's

.

1

safe at first on Luis Aguayo's
error. He took off on Barry
Larkin's long drive to left center.
but had to retrace his steps when
Bob Demler made a catch
against the wall Then, on Kal
Daniels' single up the middle,
Jack1011 hesitated at second. but .
raced Into third on the play.
Arid' after Daniels stole second
Sabo came through with a single
to center on a 3.0 pitch that
scored both Jackson and Daniels
to put the Reds In front, 3·1.
Nick Esasky's two out triple
scored Daniels with the fourth
run of the Inning and the Reds
added a run In the sixth to
account lor the final !&gt;-2 score.
· '1 wasn't going to leta guy stay
out there In that heat," said Reds
m~er Pete Rose. "We had
(r
le) Rob
. . Dibble ready In the
bul
and he wasn't awed by
Ml Schmidt (who was on deck
to plnchhlt) ."
Dibble's fast ball was popped
up by Schmidt on the first pitch
for the second out and the Phils
failed to score, although they
loaded tbe bases.
.
"Jackson probably was mo're
vulnerable tonight that the other
three times he raced us," said
Phllllea manager Lee Ella. "I
wish we could have gotten a head
oftbem (wblch the Pbllsactually
did 011 DernleJ''s leadoff homer In
the first Inning).
"Tblngs aren't getting any
easleJ' ror us, and now we've lost
our hottest hitter, Dernler (wbo
puUed up lame with a strained
rJaht hamstring after making the
catch on Larkin)," added Ella .
Demler probably will be out five
or six days with the Injury. he

said.
Jose Rljo, 9·3, is to face
Philadelphia's Don Carman, 4-5,
In the second of the four-game
series tonight.

WANT ADS bring
Vacation Money

Pltachlng performances by
hurlers for Middleport's Yankees, D.J . Herman, Jeremy
Phalln and Chris Stewart and
Syracuse's Andy Baer hlghllgh·
ted pony league play as the
Yankees prevailed over Syracuse 12·2. This ends the regular
season for the Yanks at seven
wins and two defeats.
Baer. going the lull seven,
fanned thirteen opposing batters,
Issued four walks and gave up
eight hits. The Middleport trio
combined to allow five safeties
while walking none and striking
out eleven.
Baer and Jeremy Dill each
doubled and Baer, along with
Jamie Andersoh and Carleton
Drummer, picked up a single.
Herman's round·trlpper and trl·
pie led all hitters. Stewart ripped
a triple and single, Roger Par·
tlow recorded two singles and
Derrick McCloud · and Geoff
Cogar each singled.
YANKEES: 104 131 0 - 10 8 I
SYRACUSE: 1111 DOl 0 - 2 5 1

Wheeler, charged with the loss,
gave way toMurpl!ywlth just one
outln the first. Hager came on for
Eastern to hurl the final four
frames.
Terry McGuire led at the plate
as he banged out a trio of triples.
Eric Peterson slammed a home
run and Frank McGhee came In
with a pair of base hits. Taylor
and John Evans each had a single
and double. Shawn Lambert
doubled and Kevin Musser contributed a base hit.
For Eastern, Chris Adams
singled twice, Baker ripped a
triple, Hager a dOuble and
•
Murphy a single.
Rutland, with one loss, will
meet unbeaten New Haven tonight to decide the league crown.
RUTLAND: 1120 tH ·17 I.\l2
EASTERN: 103 00 • 4 5 1

tough cases.
So will ~n examination of
,physician mortality statistics
help you tell the good physicians
from th&lt;• bad? Probably not. So
instead of, counting dead pa·
tients, fedpral and local govern·
mental officials could do us all a
real favor by lifting the licenses
of the estimat!'d 10 percrnt or
physicians who ~u·r ineunlpC'tr-nt.
and l£'aving us to sor t uut I hP r ('st .

World

tVSPS 1tii-MI
" Dlvt.ta Df Mllltlm. .a. l•c.
Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, lll Court St ., Po·
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohto V,alley Publishing Company / Multimedia. Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohto 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Se·

cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.

Membe-r : United Press International,
Inland Dally Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper Slle&amp;, 733 Third Avenue,
N.ew 'tork. New York 10017.

POSTMASTER: Selld aM"e&lt;s

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'·

ANNOUNCING

TOM PEDEN'S

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ANNUAL

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UNDER THE BIG TOP HAS BEEN EXTENDED
SALE ENDS SATURDAY, JULY grH
Jackson County's Largest Car &amp; Truck Event of the Year
~~9vt~r 300 Cars &amp; Trucks To Choose From

Issued to the rightful owners.
Fans with a question about the
validity of their tickets may call
the Reds' ticket office for
verification.
Also, a list of affected seat
locations were to be published
Friday in the Cincinnati En·
qulrer. the Cincinnati Post and
the Columbus Dispatch.
"Baseball's primary concern
Is for those fans who purchased
the lickets through the proper
procedures. "· said Bryan Burns,
senior vice president or Major
League Baseball. "We will do
everything possible to Insure
proper a~s to those individu·
als. We caution all fans to
purchase tickets only from legitimate sources to Insure IIIey are
not dnllna with stolen
property."

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"''

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""""!!"

to Th(! DaUy Sentinel Ul Court St.,
Pom..-oy, Ohlo 616!1.

CAMP PERRY, Ohio (UPI) ..,.
About 3,500 shooters are ex·
Dennis McKinney's Rutland peeled to compete In the NatiOnal
squad sent sixteen batters to the Rifle Association's National
plate against Eastern One In Matches July 15 through Aug.l5,
recent play and before the final the NRA announced Thursday.
out was recorded they had plated
Shooters from all 50 states are·
eleven runs on five hltsandseven to compete In pistol, smallbore
walks. From that point, they rille and hlghpower rifle events
coasted to an easy 17 to 4 win In at the National Matches, which
five Innings.
began In 1873.
Kevin Taylor was given credit
Competitors range In age from
for the win as he whiff~ twelve sub-teens to nearly 90. In open.
and walked four batters. competition, juniors compete
against adults.

••

·~

The Daily Sentinel

Ul,lll•
C!NCil.,iNATI (UPI) - The
Cincinnati Pollee Department Is
Investigating the theft of 600
tickets for Tuesday's Major
League All-Star Game. the baseball commissioner's o!flce an nouriCed Thursday.
The Cincinnati Reds and Major
League Baseball released -"
statement warning any fan arrlv·
lng at Riverfront Stadium with a
stolen ticket for the All-Star
Game .wlll be escorted from the
' stadium.
The tickets were .stolen from a
_private delivery service em·
ployed by the ~reds. They were to
be delivered to fans in the
Columbus, Ohio, area who pur·
chased tickets through. a random
draw. The seat locations of the
stolen tickets have been ldentl·
fled and duplicate t}fkets will be

th~

NASr~ '

t - - - - - - - - - - -"'7

600. All-Star tickets
stolen; police wam
potential purchasers

Is your doctor competent? ____B_.c_.c_ol_en
refreshing- his or her memory. or
when thP physician Is practicing
Cliff Notes medicin e.
And when It comes to telling
the difference between the competent physician and thP out·
standln!&lt; one, we're on even
shakier ground. The traits many
health-carl' consum&lt;?rs attribute
to outstanding physicians have
far more to do with personality
than medical competrnce. Per·
sonality Is an important factor In
deciding whether or not we like a
particular physician and how
effective that physician Is , In
dealing with us. But many a
supremely competent physician
Is a rotten human being, and
many a quack Is a duck In
Marcus Welby's clothing.
Given this problem, the folks in
the Reagan administration, who
were going to get government off
our backs, arE' working up a plan
to rate physicians. Sometime In
the next few years, they hope to
make public a listing of patient·
mortality rates of physicians
who take Medicare patients.
· If there were a reasonable way
to make this scheme work, it
might be a great Idea. The
problem Is, It wor\' t.
The leds now release mortality
'data for hospitals, adjusting the
statistics for patient mix. In
theory, before having your by·
pass surgery, you can check the
list and get a good Idea If you'll
walk out or the hospital.
The trouble Is, physicians and
hospital admlnsltrators know
how tg beat the statisticians.
Recently, I talked to a physi·
clan about the marked dedine In
bypass mortality at his lnstltu·
tlon. I assumed It had to do with
~ the hiring or a hot new chief of

Ulld•ntl's Kal Dutela Ia tltlrd lnnln« action In
Ulldnatl Tllrind~Q&gt;. (UPI)

Jackson shows All-Star form
88 Reds top Philadelphia, 5-2

Teen-agers tJrged to vote ____R_o_be_rt_~_a_lte_rs

WASHINGTON (NEAl When author and television pro·
ducer Cynthia K. SamuE'Is asks a
group of high school students
..
why so few of them vote In
elections,':the young people re·
· He began to see Soviet leader
spond with complaints about the
Mikhail Gorbachev as a man he
quality of contemporary
muld do business with , as he has
politicians.
Slild so ofte n lately. The Moscow
. " II people like you are not very
~ummit ml?{'ting also opened his
demanding, they're going to stay
:elies to real live Russian people
the same." Samuels gently but
Reagan chalks up as a success
who are not sodifferentfrom real
firmly tells the teenagers. "You
tlve Americans in their hopes and the U.S. Invasion of Grenada, . get what you pay for."
kicking out a Marxist regime.
rrar s.
That same theme Is emphas·
His support of the Afghan
'
ized
In lier new book, a slim but
rebels also contrlbu ted heavily to
Important contribution to the
: So now in the twilight of his the Russian decision to throw In
cause of enhancing tht demo·
presidency. even Reagan who Is
the towel.
era tic process titled "It's a Fr""
viewed to be In concrete on so
· Country! A Young Person's
many issues seems to be chang·
The opening to China and
Guide to Politics &amp; Elections ."
:tng, mellowing and facing some
expanding
of relations with the
~eal ities as to the art or the
"People who don't vote get
mainland were the work of his
what they deserve," the book
possi ble.
; It is clear that he now realizes· predecessors. but Reagan did
bluntly tells an audience notor·
ious for Its nonparticlpation In
. ne simply wants to hold the continue the policy of closer
elections. "If we don't keep an
:Nicaraguan rebels , known as contacts and pushing for more
·Contras. together with life's . openness,
eye on things and help to elect the
Reagan's first secretary of
' necessities until he leaves office.
peoplE' who will do things the way
we want them done, then we
More arms are out of the state, Alexander Halg, told re·
ques lion, and it Is not likely he porters that human rights was at
deserve to be disappointed.''
will go to Capitol Hill with the bottom of the administration
Notwithstanding the struggle
a nother bid for a frui t less pack· priorities when Reagan first
to secure suffrage for young
came Into office.
age to prolong the war.
Since then. the president . has
· Despite his obsession with a
changed
his tune and has become
military victory over the Marxist
a
strong
advocate of human
•regime . he has seen the handw·
In
nome
areas of the world.
rights
:riting on the wall and must settle
But so far he has been selective in
jor a negotiated peace.
whose hum~n rights he fights for .
What is the difference between
It's not too late to make It a
a competent physician and an
Reagan sent two emissaries, principle across the board, even
excellent one? Or the difference
•chief arms negoliator Max Kam· for a fading president.
betwE-en a poor physician and one
:petman and Secretary of State
who might be considered
;George Shultz, to Central Amer·
The late President Dwight D.. ·competent•
·ica in recent weeks to hold hands. Eisenhower. the general who led
Perhaps you think that answer·
Neither •was allowed to go to the European armies In World
ing the latter question would be
r&gt;iicaragua to talk to the Sandi· Wa r II. warned agalnsl the
for easier than answering the
riista government with which the military-industrial complex In
former. After all, a competent
t;Jnlted States has diplomatic one of his last speeches to the
phys ician at leas t knows thE'
:r-elations. That would have been nation be lore he left offlce.lt was
basics and provides a&lt;,lequate
~ t 'oo easy .
care. The poor physic! an lacks
late in the game, but not too late
; · In other areas where Reagan to take heed or the lesson.
the bas lc knowledge you would
expect him or her to possess and
do'!!sn' t treat you as you expect to
be treated . But Is that really so?
There have been repeated
cases of laypeople being arrested
for practicing medicine without a
.
By United Press International .
license, cases that generally
, Today Is Friday, July 8, the 190th day of 1988 wtth 176 to foll,aw .
occur In poor urban areas and In
: The moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
which, Invariably, the patients
, The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
describe the doctors as wonder·
• The evening star Is Saturn.
ful, caring, competent physi: Those born on this date are under the sign of Cancer. They Include cians. Well, they may have been
· •dirigible inventor Ferdinand von Zeppe~ln In 1838; French
wonderful and caring, but they
, psychologist Alfred Bl net In 1857; oil magnate John D. Rockefeller In cerlatnlyweren'tcompetent. But
;1839 and his grapdson, \!Ice President Nelson Rockefeller, In 1908;
how Is a patient to know that?
• jazz singer Billy Eckstine In 1914 (age 74); Roane Arledge, president
I'll never forget the day, early
ABC News and Sports, In 1931 (age 57); singers Jerry Vale In 1932 In my career as a medical writer,
"1age 56) a nd Steve Lawrence In 1935 (age 53); ballerina Cynthia when a physician-friend gave me
. Oregory In 1946 (age 42), and actress Kim Darby In 1948 (age 40).
a list or reference books. I told
him that he was recommending
. On this date In history:
one that I llall nev.er heard of and
, In 1497, Portuguese navigator Vasco da Gama sailed from Lisbon had never Seen on any or my
' on a voyage that would lead todlscover:rof a sea route to India around colleagues' desks. My friend
· the southern tip of Africa.
.
smiled. "You know how once In a
: In 1835, the Liberty Bell cracked while being rung during lhe while the doctor examines you
; funeral of Chief Justice· John Marshall In Philadelphia.
and then disappears Into the back
Jn 1950, Gen. Douglas MacArthur was designated commander of room? Well, he's looking some'United Nations forces In Korea.
thing up In that book."
· In 1969, withdrawal of American troops from V letnam began.
There's certainly nothing
. Jn 1986, u.S. Steel was renamed USX Corp. to reflect the 85-year-old wrong with a physician who
company's diversified Interests.
knows the limitations of his or
'
her own knowledge and knows
A thought ror the day: John D. Rock&amp;!eller said, "Good where to turn for answers. The
management consists of showing average people how to do the work problem Is patients have no real
way of knowing when a doctor Is
'
·
of superior peoplei'

.

In terms of South Africa,
Reagan has watched the struggle
for human rights and equality
crushed time and again under the
heel of apartheid. He' has given
only lip service to turning the
screws on South Africa and
vetoed economic sanctions
against that country. although
Congress overrode him.

McGregor had been a thorn In
the side of the biggest nuclear
utility in the Midwest, Common·
wealth Edison. His report on a
breakdown of quality control at
the Braidwood plant, operated by
Commonwealth Edison, led to a
$100,000 fine against the com·
pany. He also was Instrumental
in bringing smaller fines a!(alnst
the company's Dresden nuclear
power plant for a number of
safety and security violations.
The chief execu tlve at Commonwealth Edison, James O'C·
onnor, even told the NRC he had
concerns about McGre!(or, ac·
cording to a deposition by the
former regional NRC admlnls·
trator , .James Keppler.
But it was the accusations of
another Commonwealth Edison
official that started McGregor on
his way out the NRC's backdoor.
That official told the NRC that
McGregor offered to go easy on
problems at a power plant In
exchange for help from Commonwealth" Edison In a defamation·
of·chatacter lawsuit McGregor
had flied against some NRC
staffers.
An NRC lnvesti!(atlon could not
' prove the alle~tatlon that McGre·
~tor tried to make a deal with
Commonwealth Edison, but
McGregor's boss. Charles Nore·
llus, still used the charge as one
reason for !Iring McGregor.
Norellus wrote a letter of
dismissal to McGregor Jan. 7,
after the investigation could not
confirm the charge. In that
letter, Norellus said he believed
the charge anyway, because
McGregor's accuser wrote a
memo about how McGregor
allegedly tried to strike the deal . .

There Is nothing so free as a
president going out or office.
, WASHII'GTON 1UP!) -Pres· ' Lame duck that he is. there is still
a chance to make moves that can
iqent Reaga n could accomplish a
lol in the foreign policy fif.ld- to ease · tensions and relieve the
r-Ight some or the wrongs in the suffering or people.
world - before he turns over the ·
reins of the White House to a
In the Middle East. he could
'iuccessor.
use the U.S. leverage to t&gt;ring
about a fair and peaceful settle· ·
He has pai"d his political debt s ment of the Issues with an
and hewed to the line of his even-handed policy. Instead. the
conservative constituents- the United Stat~s has permitted
only group he listened to until he chaos to develop in a region that
decided that a nuclear war all previous presidents have
should neve r be fo ught and could
viewed as vital to America.
n~ver be won.

:That change of heart a nd mind
ptopelled him to seek an arms
~~reement wi,t,h the Soviet Union
and a desire for an East-West
J~pprochemenl. Whether gu ided
by his wile Nancy or some
:.-eallzatlon or the limitations or
;even super powers to call all the
·~lOts, Reagan did a 180-degree
:turn in dealing with Moscow .

Yankees top Syracuse
in Pony League game

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Friday, July 8, 1988 '

Association and the American Newspape-r Publishers Association.
.

The Daily

•

Comment
The Daily Sentinel

8.1988

�Paga

Friday, July 8, 1988

Friday, July 8, 1988

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

4 The Daily Sentinel

VMH report made

Racine board to meet

Thursday admissions: William Brinker. New
Haven, W.Va.; Sidney Burton, Middleport.
Thursday discharges: Carl Schultz.

The Racine VIllage Board of Public Affairs will
meet at 7 p.m. Monday at the village council
chambers.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
answered seven calls Thursday; Middleport to
Logan St. for Charles Frazier to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 1:02 p.m.
to Route 7 for Harold Sedgwick to Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital; Racine Fire Department at
2:18 p.m. to what started as a barn !Ire, then
spread to brush and a hou~. at the James Pierce
residence on Rowe Road; Racine was assisted by
Syracuse Fire Department; Salem Township Fire
Department at 4:33 a.m. to a brush fire In
Danville; Middleport Fire Department a:t 4:11 .
p.m . to a br ush fire at Hobson; Middleport Fire
Department at 6: 11 p.m. to Bradbury Road for
Bernice W!nn to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Racine
Fire Department at 11:24 p.m. back to Rowe Road
where a !Ire rekindled .

WASHINGTON (UP)) :::. Pentagon experts say an F -14 fighter
may have been flying behind the
belly of the Iran Air Airbus shot
down by a Navy ship, but
computer ex~rts said they suspect gaps In the vessel' s warning
system led to the disaster.
As a team of Pentagon Investigators tried to reconstruct Sunday's Incident In which 290
clvlllal)s were killed, theories
· emerged Thursday as to the'
circumstances that prompted
C11pt. Will Rogers of the Navy
cruiser VIncennes to order a
homing missile fired at the
aircraft as It flew over the
Persian Gulf.
Numerous Pentagon officials
and congressional aides who
have been briefed on the attack

A special meeting of the Southern Local School
Dis trlct BOard of EducatiOn w!ll be held at 10 a.m.
Saturday at the high school cafeteria .

Burning ban imposed
Rutland Township Trustees at a regular
meeting Thursday banned all open burning In the
·township until further notice. Residents w!ll be
advised when burning can be resumed.
The August meeting was changed to 6:30p.m.
on Aug. 3.

Eastern Local Board of Education, meeting In
special -session on Thursday; conducted the
following business matters.
-Set permanent appropriations for the 1988-89
school year.
-Accepted donations totaling $17,212 from the
band and athletic boosters organizations. This
external funding w!ll allow the board to offer fall
athletic and academic extracurricular activities.
The positions to be !!lied have been posted as
required by the district's master agreement, and
w!ll be f!lled as soon as possible. .
-Set Wednesday, July 13, 7 p.m. , as the date
and time for a special board meeting on personnel
matters.

•

Pentagon_concedes mcorrect
statements on Iran Air plane

Grange to meet
Star Grange and Star Junior Grange will meet
at 6:30p.m. Saturday at the grange hall.
A potluck supper will be followed by fun night
and work on the grange yearbook. Memberrs are
asked to take news clippings for the yearbook and
craft Items for state fair booths.
On Sunday both the grange and the junior
grange will meet at noon for a picnic to be followed
by a clean-up day at the grange hall.

Pomeroy Police at press time Friday were
Investigating a breaking and entering at the
Excelsior Service Station, E. Main St., _Pomeroy.

--M-e•t-!n_e_x_e_c_u_ti_v_e.ses_s_!o·n·t·o·d-!s·c·u-ss
matters and matters related to negotiations.
..pe_r_s-on_n_e_I__Investigation
De_ta_l_ls_o_r_t.he-!n•c•!d•e•n•t•w•e•re•
continued. . •n•o•t•a·v·a-lla
•.

b.l_e_a_s_th_e~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~
£ -ea
'

Pearl H.

Action expected on drought relief
before Congress recesses in
August.
"It's going to take some strong
cooperation between Congress
and the administration to get ·
- .~
something done by the middle of
August. We stand ready to
cooperate as vigorously as we
~an," Lyng said.
The governors and de Ia Garza
said aid should go to all sectors of
the agricultural community affected by the drought, including
dairy farmers. The choices, he
said, may Include postponing a
5(kent reduction In the milk
support price or raising the
EDSON E. ROUSH
support price.
In addition to Sinner, Govs.
George Mickelson of 'South Da- Edson Roush
kota, Rudy Perpich of Minnesota, James Martin of North
Edson E. Roush, 81, of 48360
CaroUna, Terry Branstad of Carmel Road, Racine, died
Iowa and John Ashcroft of Thursday at Holzer Medical
Missouri attended the luncheon Center after a short Illness.
as did the lieutenant governors of
Mr. RQush was born June 18,
Kansas, Ohio and Indiana.
1907 In Racine, a son of the late
Branstild and Ascroft met Frank and Minnie Smith Roush.
privately with Lyng earlier In the He was a lifelong member of
day and were given advance Carmel United Methodist Church
word of a change in the way the near Racine where he served as a
department will hanple Its lives- Sunday School teacher. A dairy
tock feed programs. Rather than farmer, Mr. Roush was a
waiting for federal approval, member of the National and
county Agricultural StabiUzatlon State G)lernsey Association and
and ConservatiOn committees a recipient of several awards,
wlll be allowed to declare when ' Including, the Ohio State Univerthey qualify for the programs. A sity Efficiency award, the Goo·
department spokesman said the dyear Conservation award, and
change would save two or three numerous other awards as an
days of walling for approval.
outstanding dairyman of Ohio.
Under the programs, the goSurviving are his wife, Mary E.
vernment pays up to half of the Roush, of Racine; two daughters
cost of buying and shipping feed and sons-In-law. Barbara and
and It allows farmers to buy Walter Watson, of Kent, and
surplus grain at cut-rate prices Marilyn and Richard Young, or
for use as livestock feed.
Sidney; one sister, Ada Roush
As of Thursday, 492 counties In Warner, of Pomeroy; six grand22 states were eligible for the children; two great grandchildprograms.
ren; and several nieces and
In the Conservation Reserve nephews.
program, a farmer agrees to
In addition to his parents, he
take highly erodible land out of was preceded In death by two
productiOn for 10 years In ex-, brothers and three sisters.
change for government rental
Services will be Saturday , 1:30
payments.
p.m., at Carmel United MethoThe Agriculture Department dist Church, with both , Deb!
also has announced there will be Foster and Rev. Richard Young
no reduction In rental payments officiating. Burial will be in
to farmers If they donate to state Carmel Cemetery. Friends may
agencies any hay that is harv- call at Ewing Funeral Home
.ested on · Conservation Reserve anydme after noon on Friday,
or Water Bank Program land.
with the fam11y present from 6 to
When the land was opened to
8 p.m. In the evening. In lieu of
haying, the government said
flowers, the family requests that
the payment per-acre rate
donations be made to Carmel
would be cut by 25 percent on
United Methodist Church.
land that was hayed.

being made to write House and
Senate bills that were as Identical as possible.

\ .,..

The government has budgeted
up to $17 mtll!on for crop
payments. However, a sizable
portion already has been distributed In advance crop deficiency
payments.
North Dakota Gov. George
Sinner said there "seems to be a
consensus that the amount budgeted for agriculture Is 'going to
be the amount available. There's
no way It would be adequate" to
meet all the needs.
Leaders have moved cautiously the last few weeks while
waiting to see how badly the
drought damaged crops. The
government will update Its crop
estimates Tuesday.
The Senate Agriculture Committee has scheduled a meeting
Tuesday and a spokesman for
Leahy said there are hopes of
getting a b!ll through committee
In the coming week.
De Ia Garza said the iul\cheon
meeting, which Included six
governors, Agriculture Secretary Richard Lyng and several
congressmen, agreed on four
points, Including that Congress
should act quickly and that any
savings on crop subs !ely spending
·should be used for drought relief.
Many details still must be
worked out.
Lyng and de Ia Garza said they
hoped leg!sla lion could be ready

Well diggers find big
demand for their work
using city water for their
parched lawns and shrubs.
Holman said the problem could
become worse In the fall if
residential wells start running
'
dry.
"There aren't a lot of wells
going dry now, but! think we will
see It later on," Holman said.
Those who will be hardest hit
are people with shallow wells, he
said.
"If their wells are less than 30
feet , It's almost Inevitable that
they're going to lose them,"
Holman said.
Kathy Meyer of T!plady and
Meyer Well Drilling said well
users know when the ,water
supply Is drying up.
Meyer, who operates a well
service In Swanton and Sylvania,
s~! d wells that are going dry w!l!
yield air and sand with the water.
ThOse conditions can often be
temporary and she advised homeowners to see If It persists
before ordering a new well.
"If It just happens once In a
while,
let the well rest and the
'
water may come back up,"
Meyer said.

BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
(UP!) - The long dry spell that
has 1!ngered over the area Is
providing land-office business
for some well diggers who can't
keep up with the demand.
"I'm totally booked for at least
two months,'' said Tom Holman,
a well digger from the Wood
County village of Wayne.
For every request he receives,
Holman said he turns down fiv.e
others.
"Normally I would have this
many calls In three years,"
Holman said Wednesday.
Some well diggers say the
requests are primarily for Irrigation systems, and not res!den tlal
wells.
Jim WIIUams of Bowling
Green, who said he has orders
through July, thinks people are
panicking because of the drought
and asking for additional wells.
For the past two weeks Williams has dug wells In the Toledo
suburb of Sylvania for residents
wanting to avoid the high cost of

5 rescued
from store
collapse
· BROWNSVILLE, Texas (UPI)
- Workers rescued two women,
three girls and a boy from the
rubble of a collapsed department
store today and Inched closer to
-. others who might be trapped
alive In the disaster that killed at
leastll people and Injured 47.
AI least one other child was
trapped, Pollee Sgt. Dean Poos
'said.

GRAVELY TRACT()R
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St. .
Pomtroy, OH.

Strl•t &amp; S••••r lelrl
OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
I AM·I PM
SATURDAY 8 AM· 1 PM
~THE

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GRAVELY

CABBAGE IOU DINNER ................................ 53.89

A . ....., Stoff.. C Uqo W , . ,.. Wit~ hi _

w..,,...,,w..........._

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.......

SUNDAY, JULY 10

COUNTRY SITU STEA~ DINNER ................... 54,29
fry Ow c-ry StrJo Sf"'* h 1JPt1¥ 1-ooo1 • • S.ot._.. lo o Dolldooo

__..

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.... Sto.y ... - - ..... toft• orwloololoftlooto4 -·~···My
fto Moy lo .......- .

II-

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.
.
. HOURS: Monday thru Saturday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.;
Sunday 10 A.M. to 9 P.M.

z· i!Ceth~ug~'.d nf &lt;!r~ester •
'
'lislillan
IlLii 7

.

tU-Mit

WI GN5 li...IOR CIIIZINI

VanCooney

Pearl H. VanCooney, 73, of
Sixth St., Middleport, died early
Friday morning at Holzer Medical Center after a sudden illness.
Retired from the United States
Post Office in Middleport, Mr.
VanCooney was born Oct. 9, 1914
In Middleport, a son of the late
Frank and Nann!e Mae Lee
VanCooney. He served In tlie
army In World War II and was a
member of Feeney-Bennett Post
No. 128 of the American Legion,
Middleport.
Surviving are· his wife, Mary
Ann Sheridan VanCooney; three
sons and daughters-In-law.
James H. and Jody VanCooney,
of Columbus, Robert F . and Jean
VanCooney, of Boca Raton, Fla.,
Michael R. and Renee L. VanCooney, or Raleigh , N.C.; one
daughter and son-in-law , Diane
and Herman Lynch, of Pomeroy;
seven grandchildren, .Mark and
Michael VanCooney, of Delaware, Ohio, Held! and Steve
Caruthers, of Pomeroy, and
Shannon, Mandy and Ryan VanCooney, of Raleigh, N.C.; three
brothers. Albert VanCooney, of
Pomeroy, Ira and Clyde VanCooney, of Arizona; two sisters,
Hazel VanCooney, of Middleport,

cana

--

1~DIIC.GUff'

--

and Mary Kauf, of Pomeroy;
several nieces and nephews.
In addition to his parents, Mr.
VanCooney was preceded In
death by th~e brothers and one
sister.
Services will be Sunday, 2: 30
p.m., at Rawling-Coats-Biower
Funeral Home with Evangelist
Lewis Mikell officiating. Burial
will be in Riverview Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Saturday from 7 to 9
p.m.

·

Mindy Taylor
Nine-year-old Mindy Taylor, of
Florida, died Friday morning at
Ch!!drens Hospital in Columbus.
· Miss Taylor was In Middleport
to visit her father, Lonnie Taylor.
She died as a result of a
swimming accident In the Muskingham River near Martel ta.
Services will be announced
later by Rawllng- Coats-Blowe~
Funeral Home.

Care Companion Services
can mal&lt;e life easier for you! :_·

Inez Freeker

lnez Frecker, Cedar Creek,
Neb., formerly of Meigs County,
died Thursday at Cedar Creek,
Neb.
Mrs. Frecker, a daughter of
the late Dr. and Mrs. Fred
McCullough of Pomeroy, was
born Sept. · 29, 1900. She Is
survived by a son and daughterIn-law, Alan and Margie
Dally stock prices
Frecker, of Columbus and Flor:
(As of 10:30 a.m. )
Ida; a son-ln·law and daughter,
Bryce and Mark Smith
James and Jo Frances Ray of
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Cedar Creek; two grandsons,
Brad and Brian Frecker; two
Am Electric Power ............. 28'/.1 granddaughters. VIckie and DIAT&amp;T ........ ............ ............. 28% ana, five great-grandchildren,
Ashland Oil ........................72'h and a brother, Roy McCullough,
Bob Evans ................ .......... l7% Richmond, Va.
Charming Shoppes ............. .14%
Besides her parents, Mrs.
City Holding Co .... ............... 33
Frecker was preceded In death
Federal MoguL.. ................ .41 ~ by a sister, V!rgteOllver, and two:
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................63\i, brothers, Dr. George McCulHeck's Inc ........................... 1% lough and Starling McCullough.
Ke)l Centurion ....................38%
Memorial services will be held
Lands' End .. ........................ 28 later.
Limited Inc ........................24%
Multimedia Inc ...................71'h
Rax Restaurants .................. 4
Dally Number
Robbins &amp; Myers ............. ... 11 ~
332.
Shoney's lnc ..................... ~.27
Ticket sales totaled
Wendy's Inti ......... ............... 5%
$1
,222,550.50, with a payoff due of
Worthington Ind .................23\i, $454,708.

Conference agrees on defense bill
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
$2$9.6 billion defense spending
bill agreed on by House and
Senate negotiators would expand
the Pentagon role In the war on
drugs next year but would not
give the military unwanted civIlian arrest 'power.
The compromise reached by a
conference committee from bo.th
chambers - which lawmakers
said could get a Senate vote as
early as today and a final House
vote next week - also would
make significant changes In
"Star Wars" and would leave It
to the next administration to
debate ·rival mobile missile

Stocks

I.nuery

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FRIDAY, JULY 8

f

deaths-------------

1985 CHEVY CONY. VAN.S11,995

Thl• Week't S.11l1lt

1

front are Elisha Meadows, Karen Meadowa, store
manager Bernice Stowers, Waurh, Dan Meadows, Beth Vandawalker, executive secretary of
the Gallipolis Area Chamber of Commerce; and
Larry Haynes (far right), contractor and owner of
Custom Building Products of Rutlaad. Behind are
Scott mnach, president of the Gallipolis STAR
Bank; Charles I. Adkins Jr., Gallipolis Chamber
president; Steve Chapman of STAR Bank, and
Bob Eastman, owner of Foodland.

GROUNDBREAKING CEREMONY - Dan
Meadows, center, owner of Spring Valley
Pharmacy, .and Donna Waugh of STAR Bank, to
Meadows' Immediate right, grab one of the
shovelaln a groundbreaklng ceremony Thursday
oa Jackson Pike, nextto tile Ohio Valley Foodland
supennarket. The new pbarmacy, which when
completed will have _a n area of &amp;,400 square feet,
will have nearly rtrlple the space of the present
pharmacy In the Spring Valley Plaza. Standing In

B&amp;E investigated

L

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Congressional leaders say they will
file drought relief bills early next
week and seek almost!mmed!ate
committee approval but there
are questions if there is enough
money to help hard-hit farmers.
House Agriculture Committee
chairman Kika de Ia Garza said
he hoped to have committee
approval by the end of next week,
•-which would open the door for
: sending a bill to President
.• Reagan by mid-August.
: Senate Agriculture Committee
: chairman Patrick Leahy "and I
· assured the governors ... we will
: attempt to have legislation pre: pared and Introduced next week;
· If not Monday, hopefuUy Tues: day," de Ia Garza said after a
~ luncheon meeting Thursday with
• six drought-state governors.
; The legislation would Include
' assurances that all sectors of the
·· farm community , Including
; farmers who grow crops normally not covered QY federal
: benefits, would receive help. It
' also would relieve drought• ·stricken farmers from having to
· return their advance crop sub·
: s!dy payments.
· Capitol Hill staff workers said
: the bills probably would propose
· a sliding scale for disaster aid
: that would take Into account a
; farmer's usual subsidy payment
• and how much of a crop survived
~ this year. Savings on subsidy
' paymenis would be used to pay
for the assistance. Efforts were

Navy Intelligence experts are the 1970s. Iran bought 80 F-14s fighter and ca nnot attack
predicted Investigators probably
Ewell said the system's radar
will find the ship simply confused records all aircraft with !denttcal still exploring the poss!b!Uty that from the United States and vessels.
"That's rubbish," said one of
the airbus for an approaching blips and lacks the "capability ... an .Iranian mU!tary aircraft was despite a cutoff In the delivery of
Iranian F-14 fighter-bomber to show the nature of the target. " In the vicinity of the VIncennes. spare parts, about 10 to 12 of the the plane's designers. "It has an ~
"An F-14, armed with Iron aircraft can still fly, U.S. offl- air-to-ground role. I know. I :
amid heightened war· zone tens Ions In the gull.
bombs,
hiding behind the (a!rUn- c!als said.
helped bu lid it."
He speculated that further
A Navy Intelligence official
TM officials suggested the ·
The Navy ships In the gull had confusion may have arisen It the er's) belly Is the second most
been told before the weekend that passenger plane was equipped likely proposition," said an aide said that about 18 months ago, Vincennes crew must have been ·
there were Indications the Iran- with two signaling devices, or to Rep. Les Asp!n, O-Wls., the classified reports Indicated that on special alert for the moveIans were planning F-14 attacks transponders -one for commer- chairman of the House Armed "between one to four of these ment of F -14s - in light of
In what Pentagon officials cial use and another, Identical to Services Committee who was (planes) were modified to be warnings about a "Foqrth of July :
grimly called a "Fourth of July that In the F -14, for military use. briefed Wednesday by U.S. Intel- considered a ser ious threat" to surprise" - and may have been •
, llgence officials.
ships.
surprise.''
jumpy when the ship received a :
Kenneth Ewell, a Washington
A Navytact!calwarfareexpert
Navy officials rejected pub- military signal coded the sa me :
computer expert, said he beTuesday, Pentagon spokes- said, "I think the fear was that llshed reports this week that the as those used by the F -14s at •
lieves the Pentagon's Investiga- man Dan Howard said the
•
one aircraft was masking F -14 Is simply an air superiority Bandar Abbas.
tion ultimately will show the Vincennes received two kinds of
..-----------...------------another."
accident was caused by "a · signals from the airplane - one
However, another Pentagon
•
serious mistake In program- usually associated with civil and
official said the two-plane theory
3973 Toays Vollty lood
ming" of the $1 billion ship's mU!tary craft and one Navy
was "highly unlikely and virtu·
llurri&lt;ono, WV 25526
advanced Aegis air defense ships in the area had seen ally Impossible."
system.
emitted from F-14s.
The two-plane theory has been
fueled by Iran's June 25 deployment of modified F -14 fighterbombers to Bandar Abbas, a
major m!lltary-c!vUian base
near the Strait of Hormuz In the
gulf.
The Iran Air plane departed
from Bandar Abbas Sunday on
•
Flight 655 to Dubal In the United
•
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The us that the Iranians would send a corridors In other places that are Arab Emirates and was shot
•'
Pentagon maintains the captain commercial aircraft ... directly 8 miles wide and other nations down. seven minutes after
of the Navy ship that shot down
toward a spot where an exchange use 10 miles, Howard added, but takeoff.·
Iran Air Fllght655 could not have of fire was taking place."
U.S. Intelligence reports conIn general "commercial aircraft
known It was a civilian jetliner
cluded
the F-14 deployment Inare expected to adhere to the
•
even though It was not outside the
creased
chances of an attack on
That remark was the first _by center line of that airway."
" BILOXI BLUES is an uproarious, deeply affecting, .
•
commercial air corridor as first
Navy
ships,
which
since
last
July
an administration official pube•tra-ordinary comedy hit-with-a-heart ." - Sene Shain.
The Pentagon spokesman also
NBC-TV / TODAY
reported.
licly suggesting Iran may have noted Flight 655 was 27 m!nu.tes have been escorting 11 Kuwaiti
PRICE INCLUDES:
TICKET
While publicly acknowledging
deliberately sent the airliner off the published schedule for tankers re-registered to fly the
Our
unlimited
Saled
Bar.
famous Three Entree " all you can
the Incorrect statement four
American flag. Earlier this year,
toward the Vincennes. Until now, such aircraft.
r
eat" Buffet, a variety of oe..er1s. and THE SHOW!
•
days after It was made by Adm.
the government has carefully
Howard again discounted any the Navy ships expanded their
WEDNESDAY,
THURSDAY
&amp;
SUNDAY
...........
On
I
y
Sl
7.
9
5
Wlll!am Crowe, chairman of the
avoided such an Implication.
probabll!ty that the mll!tary protection to all neutral shi pp!ng
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY ................................... Only f19.95
Joint Chiefs of Staff, Pentagon
Howard asked, "Is It our Identification signal the VIn- in the waterway.
•
No (hild's Admiuion Prict for lil01i llu•
spokesman Dan Howard said
respons!blllty to ensure that the cennes reported receiving froin
"There was a lot of discussion
Thursday that Iran bears respo_n·
DOORS OPEN 6:00 Wod. thru Sot.; 3:00 Slltlday
Iranian military air traffic con- the Airbus may have been sent within the Intelligence communs!blllty for flying the plane over a
trollers, who presumably are from an F-14 elsewhere In the Ity as to what (the F-14s) were
raging sea battle whether It was monitoring the hostilities, and gulf.
doing down there, and a lot of
. the c!vllf.\n air traffic controllers
inside the corridor or not.
The aircraft's Identification people felt they were there to
"There Is no way that the - are talk!n'k to each other?"
transponder responded twice to a mount Iron-bomb attacks on
captain of that ship could have
Crowe told reporters Sunday questioning electronic signal ships," said a Pentagon radar
assumed because the aircraft Flight 655 was 4 ~ miles outside beamed at It from the Vincennes, specialist, who Insisted on anowas In thata!rway that 11 ... was a the commercial air corridor he observed, and chances are nym lty. An tron bomb . is a
civilian commercial aircraft. It when the Aegis-class cruiser considered remote that the sig- unguided conventional weapon.
·.
doesn't tell you that at all,"
Iran has "a handful" of F-14s
mistook It for an attacking F-14 nal could have strayed
Howard said.
that "possess a significant antijet fighter and .shot It down. All elsewhere.
'.
The Pentagon has explained 290 passengers and crew were
''The aircraft had been Interro- ship capabil!ty," one U.S. !ntelll·
that the decision to launch killed.
gated twice and responded twice gence otf!c(al said.
missiles was !lased In large part
During the reign of the shah In
After two days of reports with exactly the same response,"
. on the Airbus A-300 appearing to contradicting Crowe's statement · he said. noting that two Iranian
.. '
descend toward the USS Vln· - some based on private Pen- F -14s had been spotted and
.,.
cennes and emitting a mllltary tagon br lef!ngs to Congress warned away properly by the
· lderitiflcal!on signal as well as a · Howard acknowledged publicly USS Halsey In the gull Saturday.
commercial signal.
Thursday that the plane was not
In a related development
As the plane flew across the ou ts!de the accepted 20-m lie- Thursday. State Department
volatUe Persian Gulf Sunday, the wide corridor claimed l!Y Iran spokeswoman Phyllis Oakley
Vincennes was already engaged butonly4 ~ .nllesfromitscenter said the United States takes
In a fight with several small line. The jetliner was flying from seriously a threat reportedly
Iranian gunboats, two of which the Iranian port of Bandar Abbas made In a memorandum of
the American missile cruiser to Duba! In the United Arab protest from Iran In whlch ' the
Emirates.
radical Islamic government of
sank.
"Based on the pre lim!nary the Ayatollah Ruhollah Kho''The Iranians are the ones who
bear the responsibility ... (to) Information that we have, the me!n! asserted Its ''right to take
ensure the safety of their civilian aircraft was approximately 4 ~ couniermeasures'' for th;, down''
aircraft by not sending them in · miles west of the center line of Ing or the airliner, which Iranharm's way," Howard emphas- the airway," Howard said.
Ians claim was intentional
The United States uses air murder:
Ized, "It seems very pecuUar to
Since 1978, Pl~t Valley Hospital Home Health Services has been
providing skilled nursing care ~d personal alde services to patients of all

Southern board to meet

Eastern Board meets

5·-

Theories multiply on Iran Airbus shootdown:

Meigs news briefs
EMS report made

, The Daily Sentinel Page

Pomeroy- MidrJaport, Ohio

1977 FORD F-1 00 ••••••••• ,S129

-

979 CHEVY C-10 ..........S109
973
FORD F-100 •••••••••••• S69
Standard
97 5 FORD COURIER •••••••••S69
982 FORD GRANADA ••••S149
Dr, Autom,atic.

RIGGS USED CARS
985-4100

CHEml

system~.

.I
j
I

· The final package was prodused late Thursday, with an
unusual twist when the House
and Senate conferees added a
provision declaring "an appropriate ship of the U.S. Navy" be
named after comedian Bob Hope
In recognitiOn of his efforts
through 50 years and three wars
to entertain U.S. forces overseas.
·Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., the
Armed Services Commit tee
chairman who authored the Hope
provision, said he told the comedian a week ago to expect It and
Hope responded that he.would be
honored. Nunn suggested an
amphibious troop carrier would
be the proper vessel to christen.
The $299.6 b!llion package
melds previously passed House
and Senate bills, resolving differences on such points as the
election-year Issue of !llegal
narcotics. The bill offers $300
~llllon for extra anti-drug operatiOns and gives the Pentagon the
job of tracking smugglers trying
·to crack U.S. borders.
Negotiators sided with the
Pentagon In rejecting calls for
the m!lltary to regain civilian
arres( powers, deciding that .
suspected smugJiers will be
pointed out to agencies able to
make arresta. The military was
denied such power after abu!es
durlnllhe Civil War and .Recon·
struct!on, and since then It has
oppolled any restoration of the
clvUIIn authority to Itself.
"Up to now, anything the
mnttary baa done on drug Interdiction has euentlally been a
bYPrOduct of normal operat-k»u," Aid Hou~e Armed Servt·

ces Committee Chairman Les
Aspln, D-'ll'ls., when the conference report was wrapped up
Thursday. "Now, for the first
time, the military will be specifically tasked to hunt tor drug
smugglers."
On SDI, lawmakers agreed to
provide $4.1 biiUon of the $4.9
billion sought by President Reagan In fiscal 1989, which begins
Oct. 1. They restructured It,
however, by cutting money for
near-term options Involving
space-based missile Interceptors
and boosting spending for
ground-based Interceptors.
The compromise puts off until
the next administration the debate over mobile missile systems
- the Air Force-backed plan to
put the 10-warhead MX missile
ori railcars and a rival plan for an
already mobile single-warhead
Midgetman weapon that has
strong congressional backing ..
Each missiles would get an
equal $250 . million · under the
spending bill, with another $250
mlll!on set aside for the· next
president to direct to the weapon
of his choice.
The · bill provides for a 4.1
percentpayralseformembersof
the uniformed military and contalns a classified amount to start
buying B-2 Stealth bombers, the
top-secret plane almost Invisible
on radar and due to fly this fall.
Other major provisions Include
money for a new Trident-submarine, $3.4 billion for 180 new F-16
Falcon jet fighters and $1.7 blllon
for 669 M·l tanks, an Increase
from the number the adm!nlstrat!on wanted to buy. The b!ll also
includes money for two new Los
Angeles-class attack submarines
a nd for the flrilt of a new

generation of attack subs dubbed
the Sea wolf class.
Finally, the bill contains a
number of House-backed arms
control provisions, among them
orders for the Energy Department to find a way to assure
nuclear weapons safety and
reliability If a test ban Is
achieved. Others would hold the
administration to weapons levels
near those of the unratified SALT
2 agreement, would keep SDI
within a close reading of the 1972
Anti-BalUstic Missile Treaty and
would ban test flights or depressed trajectory mlssUes.
The bill marks the fourth
straight year of declining defense budget~ after Reagan's
m!l!tary buildup and Is about 11
percent below the high point of
$334 billion In 1985. It also reflects
a leaner military th~ough the
closing of several air wings, the
early retirement of some ships
and helicopters and canceled
plans to activate several Army
operations .

ages who no longer require hospitalization. but ~o continue to require
periodic nursing care In their home.
Beginning In mid-July, we'll be taking home care one step further wl.th
the Introduction to our community of Cate ComJMIIlon Semces.
•'

Gve CompMilon Semces offers
three types of programs designed to

ease your life. Whether you care for a
loved one In your home, have a family
, member In the hospital or need
assistance yourself In doing dally chores,
our trained and certified workers can
provide services to meet your needs.
and help assure you that you're getting
quality and compassionate care.

•

..
Home Respite Care
We provide personal care, assistance In taking routine oral medications. meal preparation, light

housekeeping and laundry, plus
companlonshlp, for a period' of
time from 24 hours to 14 days.

•

In Home/In Hospital Companion

Coaaumer Price Index

an

The Consumer Price Index, The
World Almanac notes, is a mea!lllre of
.the average chan...,. in prices over
lime In a fixed market basket of goods
- and services.

We will sit with
Individual
either In the. hospital or In the
home to provide observation and
companionship, but no skilled
care. In the nome; we may do

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS

Homemaker Services

r;==;,;;:;;;.;:;;;===:;i
1
1

•

To."::"~=:"

. .,._..,., 1011 eatt

or...,.

PO.ROY
FLOWER SHOP

.

"Th• , ...,,...,...... s.nd•l.o••" .

,., "1-IOit .,. ttt·S711

EFFECTIVELY IMMEDIATELY
ALL OPEN BURNING
IS BANNED IN OLIVE
TOWNSHIP
By Order of the Board of Trustees
.,..
•

Available to the general public,
· but especiallY beneftdal to the
elderly or the person recently
disch¥Sed from the hospital,
our Homemaker Services provides personal care as neeaed.
light nousekeeplng, grocery

light ineal preparation and deanup and assist the dlent In taking
oral medications. Companions
may be hired on a hourly or pershift basis.

shopping, mall, banking and prescrtptlon services and wake-up/
tuck-In· services for those who ·
need assistance getting In and out
of bed and dresSing. Services encompassed by this program are
provided on a contractural basis.

fAl PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

'·

•

.•

•

IUJ'Home Health Service
~

Pluunt VaUey Hotpllal Home Health Servlcoolt 1 membOT of lhe Pleount Volley Hoopllal
"PMIIU)' of Profeuloftolt" and It iocllod 11 1011 Villnd St., Point Pluun~ (:!01) 675-7400

..

�•

Friday. July 8. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio

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

--------- - - The Datly SentM'lei-Page-7

Fnday July 8. 1988

Beat of the Bend
and Church Directory Spon!irnred Rv The Interested Rrt."inesses Listed On This Page.

Cool man cool'
Well at least It will be cooler
Saturday night for the many
yo ung people
who attend the
weekly teen
dances at the
Pomeroy Vii
lage
Hall
Auditorium
Work Is under
way on the Installation of air
conditioning lor the auditorium
and the equipment Is expected to
be In operation for this Saturday
nights dance
The small auditorium which
accommodates several hundred
teens every Saturday night cer
talnly has had to be pretty warm
for dancing over the past few
weeks
Parents who weeklv stage the
dances to provide some activities
lor young people have borrowed
$1500 so lhat they could move
ahead with what money was on
hand to get the air conditioning
Installed The debt bothers them
just a bit so thev are more than
happv to accept contributions to
pay of! the loan Just contact lva
Sisson or any of the parents who
give their time to the project
Erme Anderson of WKEE 100
will be the d j lor this Saturday s
dance and a part of the evening s
activities will be on air so 'lou can
tune In to see how things are
going Admission will remain at
$2 a person and $3 a couple lor a
limited time as parents continue
their efforts to raise money to
pay for the air condotlonlng

Veterans
Memorial Hosptal
11 Sl

........,Dr

.......,

992 2104

Brogan-Warner

WAIT ADS
AlE ..JJIPIIIi
WITII BARGAIII

INSURANCE
SERVICES

"

P. J.PAII!Y, AGENT
Natoonwode ln1 Co
ol Col•mbo• 0
104W M•lrt
H2 ml PomeroY

,.

RACINE PlANING MILL
Mtll Work
Cab• net Ma lmg

Syracuse

992 3978

'IRINITY CHOROI Richard f)'eeman.
!"stor. O..bbo Bud&lt;. &amp;n&gt;ct(v SchOO ~pt
O..rctJ Sclml 9 15 am. Worship Service
10: J) a m ChJir rehearsal ntesday 7 .1) p. m
~..~..- cllredlon r1 Lois Btrt
I'OMERO\' CHUROI OF TilE NAZA
RENE Corlfr UnJon and MuiiBTy Rev
Thomas Gkll McCU ..._ pstoc Nonnan Presll:Y 5 S. Sljt
Sclnol. 9ll am.
morMtawusNp 10: lla m. evm1n~ servk'e6
pm
WedloesdoiV 1p.m.
GRACE EPISCOP.U. CHURQI :a; E
Main St I'Mieroy
services Holy
rommur*lnont~ ftrsl' &amp;lnday of each month.
and mrnt:iM:I wtth rnorlina prayer on ttw?ttard Sunday Mornblg prayer and !Jel'mon on
all Oilier Sunll\'s of tlr mont~ O..rch School
aa d Nursery care P'"\JY'im'd Cotree hour in t.
Pari&gt;bllall -ate\Y lollowingtlrservlt'e
POI\IERO\' CHURCH OF CHRIST ;!12 W
Main St. Leo Las B. !'Vanfll!llst Bille School
9llam Mol'lingW(f'SHp l0:3)am. Youth
ma'tlnll'. 6!111 ~m Evening VK&lt;Shlp. 1 oo p

Su•

1'111--Su•

m Wed'l~ night pr~ meetln$1andBible

st\dy 1 00 ~Ill
TilE SALV&lt;TION ARMY ll' Blltemut
Aw ~Mrs Dora Wining In char~
!~...._, holln"' m&lt;.'l'!ln&amp; tO am &amp;lndl\1'
Schod. 10: ll am S.Nii~Y SciOO. YPSM
Eloile Adarm. leader 1 J) p.. m. Salva bn
~g. variws speoakEn and muslcsp!dals.
'Ib.lrsday lllt a m o 2 p m Ladle; Homp
Lea&amp;UE' merntiPrs tn char,liJ!' all wCil'lt!n
IJIV.al; 6 ~~ p m. 11tum.tY Co&lt;JO Cad"
CIMSS !Yoo,_ Peoplt-Bltjel 7 .l) p.m BlbleSht\Y Mtd Prayer rneetin~ open to he public

MMrnOY WESISIIDE CHUROI OF
C'H:Rm 332l6Chlldren sHome Road CouriV

Road 761

9!12-.~m

Vocal music

~!\My

Wor

sNplOam Bll:ieSt\XIyll1m Wflrship6p
m Wem!Od~ Bibl&lt;&gt; Still)! 7 p.m

OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH Alvin C..,is pastor. Linda Swan
~Ji Sunday SChool 9 X1 am p!l'achln~ ser

vtces. first andrhird Su~ folk:MmJZSurtaa).
Schod. You h rneE'tirl~ 7: :D p m E!'Very sunday
&lt;.RAHAM

UNITED

METHOOIST

P r;rach n~ ~ :lll a n1 fir~ and l' on Su n
lay f rachmnnt h h I an fou h Sun

lav rcu. h month .__. &lt;J h p &lt;'TVKC a 7 W p
m Wf'dn da \ ('vrn OJ!
7 30 p m
P a\C' and RiblC' ~ludv
SEVENTH DA Y' ADVENTIST
Mu
tx-rrv H(' ~ ~
Road Pomcrov P or
John Sv.(' ~ 1 S.abba h Schoo Sul)('rm
tl"ndrn D&lt;t nl' S r-. ar Sa bb h s hoo
tx'2 n a 2 p m (}0 S:l lmb y al ('fOOOn
'I'IJh"'orhprnt&lt;'rfoov.n~
I ~Prtl
EH'T\O Al' \1 IC'nm ('

RUTLAND FIRST S&lt;PTIST C fUR( H
-

S I f'

~hoot

H

('11 Wa OC'

9 to m

!=iup

Su nd

Morn n~ Wor h p H'l ~

m

MIODI I PORT CHURC ii OF' ( HRIS.T
I N ( HRI ST AN l.JJ\10:\ D'" gh f If'
r
l'ld
W nda Mnh r !'.u nd S&lt; hoo
Sup ~unrl S£"hoo ~ 111 a m Morn nf!
Wo h p 1{\ :10 a m f: rn ng "
hlp 7 (1
p m Wcdnr~:J\. p ~\ r m 'f inp :top m
MT MORIAH CHURCH Of f:OD
Ra&lt;- n£' Rrv Jamr~ Sat l'rf &lt;'I I pH to
Ji N'mijn \\ i&lt;.~m"' Sup Sun I S( h )()!
9 4 ~ .1m Sund v n I Wr&lt;tnC'sd.J 1"\C'R
h~ !'&gt;(' \. iC'~

p

Jil:~am

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
5th and Main
AI Haruon mtnls1er
Richard OuBos~ A•s~late Pal or Mlkt
Cerlach Sunday School Suprrln endent
Blblekhool9 30 am Morning Worship
10 30 am EvrnlnfC Worship 7 00 p m
Jiednesday 7 00 p m Prayer mee ln g
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NA
ZARENE PASTOR Fred Penhorwood

Bill White Sunday Schc.ol Supt Sunday

,SChool 9 lla m
Morning Worstf p 10 45
• m
Evan~~:ellstk mt'E'tlng 7 00 p m
Wednflday. 7 00 p m Prayer mtellng
lJNrrEII PRII:SBl'TBRIAN JIIINJ8TRV
OfMEIG8 COlJNTl'

In

~..

T......t

HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN
CHuRCH - Sulll6y Worahlp Servlcn

toDD am

Church School 10 J5 am

• NIDDLEPQRT PRESBYTERIAN IUnd•Y Scbool 9 am Church Hrvlce
Ill 15om
SYRACUSE FIR$!' UNITED PRESBY
TERTAN - Sunclay School 10 a m
Church servlre l l 15 a m

RUTLAND CHURCH Of GOD p., or
JoM Evans Sunday Schod 10 00 a m
S~.say Mornlnc WorUip 11 00 a m Chll
6'1.'11 • Church 11 am Sullday Evrntng
llorvt..,7Gipm Wed &amp;om Younrt..

"'

'"

~

«\ \
~ 1

---=-..;..,_

ROWliiS JOI f¥Wf Q(USION

•

ll N8871230

MEIGS nRE
CENlER, INC.

THE BEAUlY OF GOD'S WORLD
CAN BE VIEWED CWSE TO HOME

John F F•llz Mgr
Ph H21101

VacatiOn t1me IS here for many of us,
but along w1th that happy thought
there should also be a sobenng
remmder As we have seen more than
once m our htstory, sudden and
drastiC changes can occur Ill our
economy Therefore, If you are m the
hab1t of planmng your vacation far m
advance, 1t mrght be well to keep your
options a httle more fleXIble, JUSt tn
case Remember that a camptng tnp
to a nearby forest, mountatn, beach or
lake shore can be fully as enJoyable as
a flrght to a far-{)ff place, or two
weeks at a luxury resort at an
astronomical cost The beauty of
God's creation rs not measured by the
number of mtles you have to go m
order to reach 1t In fact, 1t can
literally be m your own back yard
Thank the Lord for 1t, at your House
of Worship, whrch can also be
anywhere that you m1ght
dec1de to go

Pomeroy

K&amp;C JEWELERS

0

111 E IUtn Street
991 3785 Pomeroy

dies Auxlliarv W~n~a\ 7 p m Fam
v Worship
HAZEL COMMUNn Y CHURCH OH
R 124 3 ml es from Portland Lonp:: Bot
om Edse Har1 pastor Sunday School
9 30 a m
Sundav murnlnp:: prPBchln~
10 30 a m Sunday I:'V('n ng se v Cf'!:i 7 ~n
pm
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH Corner Ash ;and Plum Nor
He rmann p;,tslor Sunday SC'hool 10 OOa

n

Mornln11 Worship 11 00 a m

WPd

nfSday and Saturdav Even \ng Servl ces a
730pm

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE I'ABiliH
UNITED METHODIST CBUJI(;H
NORTIIEAST CLUSTER
Rev DonArcloet'
Rev Ro)'Detter
Rev Carl Hlekt
Rev Seldon Jot.n.on
ALFRED - Church School 9 30 a m
Worship 11 a m UMYF 6 30 p m UM\\
Third Tuesday 1 30 p m Communion
llrst Sunday Archer
CHESTER - Worship 9 a m Church
SchoollO a m Bible Study ThurSday 7 p
m UMW first Thursday 1 p m Com
mun\on flrsr Sunday {Archer I
JOPPA
Worship 9 30 a m Church
SchoollO 30 a m Bible Study Wednesday
7 30 p rn IJohnson)
LONG BOTrOM
Church Schoo 9 30
a m Worship 10 30 a m Bible Stud)
Wednesday 7 30 p m UMYF WcdnP.S
day 6 00 p m Comm union First Sunday
of Month Hicks
REEDSVILLE - Church School9 30 a
m Worship Se-rvice- U 00 a m Deeter
'TUPPERS PI AINS ST PAUl Church School 9 a m

Worship 10 a m

Bible Study Tuesday 7 30 p m Commu
n on First Sunday Archen
CENTRAL CLUSTER
'
. . . KMdy llarch

Rev Mel\lle Franklin
Rn Olernentr S Zulllca ,Jr
Rev Robert Muumu
Rev Don Meadows
ASBURY Svracuse - Worshlpll a m
Church Schoo 9 45 a m Char$l:e Blbl€'

S udy Wednesday 7 30 p m UMW firs
Tuesday 1 30 p m Choir ~hearsa
WE-dn esday 6 30 p m
Burch
ENTERPRISE - Wo,htp 9 am
Church Schoo 10 a m Blblf' Studv Tues
day 7 00 p m UMW First Monda\ 7 3Q
pm
UMYF Sunday 6 p m Choir RP
h('arsal Child f'n ~a 6 30 p m Adul fa

ow ng

Wed11 sdav Franklin
FLAT\\OOU:s-ChurchSchool lOam
Wo Sh p 11 am B bl(' St ud} Thus
dav 7 p m UMYF Sundav 6 p m
Frank n
FORE~T HUN
Worship 9 a m
Church Schpo 10 A M Ctm r practlct'
Thu sd;n- 6 30 p m UMW th rd Monday
Burch m Bu ch
HEATH M ddl put
Chu c hSchoo
9 30 a m Morn n2 Worship 10 30 a m
You h ~roup 4 p m WednC'Sday Bible
00 p m
studv 6 00 p m Ctio rehed :oe~
Zuniga
MI NE R~VlLLE - Church School 9 00
am Woshp rrv\elOOOam UMW
hlrd Wednesday. 1 p m &lt;Burch)
PEARL CHAPEL
Worship Service
9 30 a m
Chu ch School 10 1!) a m
Mussman
POMEROY - Chu ch School 9 1!'i a m
Worship 10 30 it m Choir rehearsa
Wednesda ~
7 30 p m
UMW second
Tuesda\ 730p m UMYFSt.anday 6pm
Meado\4 &lt;:
ROCK SPRINGS Church School 9 l!J
a m Wo sh1p 10 a m Bib e Study Wed
nesdav 7 30 p m UMVF tSenlor~n Sun
da; 6 p m
Jun ors evf"ry other Sun
day 6 p m I Franklin)
RUTLAND - Church School 10 a m
Worship 11 a m UMW First Monday
1 JO p m Mussman)
SALEM CENTER- Church School9 15
~ m
Wor!~:hlp 10 15 p m !Mussman)
SNOWVILLE - Worship 9 00 a m
church sc too19 ~5 am !Mussman)

rT\

MIDDI ErnRT F R•T OAPTJST
Cornl'r Si:rc h :.nc1 F lm
aml' &amp;'( !don
P&lt;ISIOr Edn Wll on S S Sup
Ca h
Jl g,z A
Sup Su n v S( ~ool 9 15
m Mor n ngWo rs hip I 1 ~ am Su nno..~
F. f'nin~ r
C'
7 p n P avf' m '&lt;'I n~~:
a.n I B bl(' s 11lv wronr I&lt;Jv dl n~:: p
m
Ch1ld f'n s c ho p .. c (I" WNin C'
(t v 1 p m A lul1 cha p aC'I cr \\i("(l )I
p m Rad o pr o~rilm WM PO Sundav

FLORIST
p,,.,,., F/11r1t S6op FRANCIS OldPJt
Flonsl

214 E llam
992 5130 Pooaeroy

992-2156

A potentially deadly substance
(eucalyptus oil) has been mrstak
enly labeled as syrup of Ipecac by
HUMCO Laboratory and the
Meigs County Health Depart
men t Is urgmg res1dents to
remove It from their medtcine
cabinets
According 10 Information from
the U S Consumer Product
Safety Commission as little as
one teaspoon of eucalyptus oil
could kill a child II swallowed a
poison center or physiCian must
be called Eucalyptus otl can also
cause burns nausea vomiting
convulsions and coma
Syrup ol Ipecac Is the recom
mended agent to Induce vomiting
In some cases of p01solnlng and
the commission recommends
that everv household have a
one ounce bottle of syrup of
Ipecac However It should be
administered only after calling a
polson control center or a physl

Having a cool time

M~e

This

Health department reports potson

SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rtv Debl F08ter

Rev Roa:er Grace
APPLE GROVE - Chu ch School 9 lO
a m Worship 10 00 a m first ~nd third
SundavsJ Bible study every Sunday 7 p
m
UMW Second Tuesday 7 00 p m
Praye-r meeting Wednesday 7 p m
(Grace)

BETHANY - Worship 9 a m Church
Srhool 10 am Bible Study Wednesday
10 a m
Dorcas Women s Fellowship
Wednesday 11 a m (Foster)
CARMEL - Church School 9 ~ a m
Worship 10 "5 a m Second and Founh
Sundays; Fellowship dinner with Sutton
th1rd Thursday 6 :1) p m (Foster~
MORNING STAR- Church SCbool9 4~
am Worship 10 30 a m Bible Study
Thursday 7 JO p m 1Foster)
SUTTON - Church SchOol 9 l&gt; a m
Morning Worship 10 "5a m flrstandthlrd
Sunday$ Fellowship dinner with Carmtt
third Thursday 6 ~ p.m (Foster)
EAST LETART - Church School9 a m
Worship JO am se&lt;Dnd •nd birth Sun
days; UMW nrst TtleldOY 1 J0 p m

(Grace)

LETART FALLS - Wonbtp ' am
Churm SChoollO • m (Grace)
RACINE - Oourdl S&lt;hool, 10 a m War
•hlp ll a m UMW lounh Molldlly at 7 :IIi&gt;
m Moo s Prayor Breokf... W-eldly 8
am !Cr.ce)
KENO CHURCH Of CHRIST Vornon
Eldridge minlsler Oliver Swain SUnday
SChoQI Supt Preaching 9 30 a m each
Sunday
HOBSON CHRIST ....N UNION Everetl
~laney pas1or Sunday aervlct 9 ll a
m
evening servlte 1 00 p m Praytr
meetlntt Wedne~da~ 7 00 p m

REAR\\ AllOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST JosC'ph B Hoskins pasto BID14'
C ass !I ~am Mornln~Worshlptn 10a
m E en nR; Wor sh p 6 JC) p m Thursdav
Bible-s udv t; :rt p m
ZJO!'It: CHURCH Of CHRIST Ptlmcrov
Harnsono,;\14' Rd Robert Purtell minis
('r S ('\/£1 S ~:~niC'\ S S Supl
8111 McEI
TO\ A s Supt
Sund::.v School9 :lfl a m
Worship SN'Vi('(' 10 Wl a m EvC'nlnli!:\\ or
shi p Su.ndav p m and Wcdnesdav 7 p m
ST JOHN lUTHERAN CHURCH P no
Gro"P Th(' Rcov Wll lam MlddiC"S\R.:arth
pas1o C'hurch sc v ("(' 9 :to am Sund~:~v
Schoo 10 :tf) m
BRADI\URY CHURCH Of CHRIST
John W gh pas c t Sundav Schoo 9 JOa
m
Larr H n 'S S S Sup M o n nj:!
..wr ship 141 It a m
RACI~E CHL RCH OF THF. ~AZA
RE~F: RC' I ovd [) ( lmm ...
pa o
0 aBa (ha m a nofth(IBo~:~ dofChn
11~:~n L.if&lt;' "'un Ia &amp;hoa19 :to~:~ m M n
n ~ " or h p 10 VI a m
f' angrli ic N
IC&lt;' 00 p m WC'dnffida v ~;en. iCf'
pm
LIBERTY ( HRlSriAN CHURCH Do•
cr Wood Call pa l o &amp;&gt;rv ('[~!-; Sunda\
HI a m ant p m \\ ('dn('!ldav
p m
0\ E~\ ILl E COMMUNITY CHURCH
Llovd Sav r- ~up Sunda\ School ~ lO a
m
mo n ng "'or h p 10 10 am Sunda\
tvtnn~ cniC&lt;'7pm
11t.MLUCK liHOVE CHRISTIAN Rog
er Watson pastor Crensan Prall Sunday
School Sup Morning 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
Sund.;~y School 9 45 a m Evening wor
ship b :ll p m Prayer Meellnp: 6 30 p m
Wednesday
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST Dave Prenllce minister Deryl
Wells Supt Church School 9 a m Wor
&lt;:hlp Sen lr(&gt; 9 45 p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF 11!E NAZA
RENE Rev Herbert Grate pastor
Frank R ffle supt Sunday School 9 30 a
m Worship SPrvlce 11 a m and 7 p m
Sunday Wednesday 7 p m Prayer mee
lng
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH David Bell pastor Robert E
Barton Director of Christian Educalion
Steve Eblin assistant Sunday SChool9 30
a m Morning worship 10 30 a m Teens
InAction 6pm EvenlngWorship 7 OOp
m Wednesday evening prayer and B ble
study 7 OOp m Cho rprac1\ce Thursday
7p m
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST
Charles Russell Sr mlnlstrr Rick Ma
comber supt Sunday School 9 30 a m
Worship .'iervlce 10 30 a m Bible study
Tuesday 7 30 p m
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LA'ITER DAY SAINT!' Port
land Racine ltoad Mike Duhl pastor
Janice Danner church school dlrecror
Church school9 30 am Morntntt worlhip
10 30 a m Wednesday f'venlng prayer
services 7 JO p m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl
Shuler ~stor Worship service 9 30a m
.Sunday School 10 30 a m Bible Study and
prayer service Thursday 7 j(t p m
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION
AL CHURCH Kingsbury Road Rev
Clyde W Henderson pastor Sunday
School9 30 a m Ralph Carl Supt Even
ing worship 7 00 p m Prayer meell"g
Wednesday 7:00pm
L.ONG BOTI'OM CHRimAN Vt!rnon
Eldrid~ putor Wallace Damewood S
S Supt Sunday Scboo19 JO a m Wonbtp
Servtre JO 30 a m
RACINE nRST BAPTIST
StOYe
Deaver Pa1tor Mike Swlaer Sunday
SChool Supt Sunday SChool 9 30 a m
Morning worship 10 .0 am
Sunday
evening wonh1p 7 30 p.m Wedneday
even Ina Bible Jtu~- ? ~- p.l!)__.

BURLINGHAM COMMUJmY CHURCH
Borllnpam Ray LaudennDt pastor. J1o.
llort Colan -totant paot&lt;r SUnclay School
lOam ......hlp1p.m. w~ &amp;p.m.
youthrneet1n~ Wf!d.. 7pm clun:fnd'Yioes.

PINE GROVE HOUNESSCHURCH %
mtloolt Rt :ni.Re¥ Bon J Wallo, puhr
Robert
S S S.pt Sunday Sdlool
9 JO a m Nonltnli WoraiiiD 10:30 a m
SUnday ....hili III'Vt~ 7:JI p m Woclnoodl)' aorvt.,. 7 30 p.m
SU.VER RUN BAPTIST Bill LHtlo
putor S...., LHtlo s S. Supt S•ndly
SChool to • m Mornlna wonlp 11• m
Sunday ovenlnli worllllp 7 311 p. m Prayor
meetlnJ and Blbleatudy Wodn .. day 1:10

-1•

pm

-

YouthmeettnaWedn•dayat7p.m

REJOICING UFE BAPTIST CHURCH
383 N 2nd Avo Mldcll_. Sunday

m Sunday .... tnr 7 oo p m
weet&lt; sorvl~ Wod 7 p m

SCIIOoiiO •
Mid

LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Sunda)' School 9 30 a m Dallas Janey
supl Mornlnl worship 10 30 a m Sun
day evening serv~ 7 30 p m Wednes
t;!IY evening service 1 30 p m
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA
ZARENE Rev Glenn McMillan pastor
Mary Janl('(' Lavender Sunday School
Supt Sundav School 9 30 a m Morning
worship 10 »a m Evangelistic service
6p m Prayer andPratsrWednesday 7p
m Youthmeeting 7pm
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST Elden R Blake paat or Sunday
School 10 a m Gary Reed L.ay leader
Morning serm(ln 11 a m Sunday night
services Chrtsrlan Endeavor 7 M p m
Song sen; Ice 8 p m Preachtn,; 8 l) p m
Mid week praver meeting Wedne&amp;day 7
pm

HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH
0 H Cart p;~stor SundavSchoola19 lOa
m Mo nm~ "" orsh1p at 10 JO a m Sun
day (&gt;Vemn~ sPrvlcPat 7 lOp m Thursdav
services at 7
pm
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION al Bald
Knob locatE'd on County Road 31 Rev
Roger W111ford pastor Sunday School
9 30 a m Morntn~ Worship 10 4~ a m
Sunda" C'venlng 7 00 p m
W('(lnesdav
f'Vf'nln~ Bible Srudv 7 00 p m
WHITE'S
CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
CHURCH -Coolville RD R•v Phtlllp Rt
denour pastor Sunday SChool 9 30 am
worship S('rvkf'o 10 30 a m Bible studv
and worship slTVICP Wl'dnesdav 1 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST
BUI Car er paslor Sundav SchooJ ~ 30 a
m Mornlnfil: Worship and Communion

»

1030am
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST Amos
Tillis pa!;tt)r SonnyHudson supt Sundav
School 9 JO a m Mornlnat worship. 10 :10
am Sunday PvtnlnJt service 1 00 p m
Wf"dnesday SPn let' 7 p.m WMPO program 9 a m f'ach Sunday
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA
REN[ Samuel Basyl" pastor Sunday
Schoo\9 ~am Worshlpsf'T'VIce10 lOa
m
'I ou nfr people s serv tee 6 p m
EvanjleUstk S&lt;'IVil'('f! JOp m Wednf'SdaY
St'f'Vice 7 p m
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST Miller
S Mason W Vot Sunday Blbl~ Studv 10
a m Worship 11 ot m and 1 p m Wl"dnes
day 8 blf' Study vocal mu1ic 1 p m
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD Dud
ding Lane Mason W Va J N Thacker
pas. Ior Evenll•g SC'I'VtCf" 7 :J) p m WIJ
men~ M~n\strv Thur!Jday 9 30 am
Wednl"Sdav Prayf'r and Bible Study 7 15
pm
HARTFORD ( HURCH OF CHRL~T IN
tHRISTIAI' UNION Hart!otd W Va
Re\' David McManis pa~stor Cburch
School 9 :WI a m Su ndav mornlnR Sf'T
~f' 11 a m
~undav wenlrt~t servtre
:lOpm \\l'dRPMiavprav~rm~tnk .. :W
pm

FAIR\ lEV. HIBI E CHURCH L"a t
\\ Va Rt l Jamf!l'i l...&lt;'w~ pastor Wor
~hlp ~n ICC'S ~ AI a m Sundav School n
a m F. ( nlng wori'\hlp 1 :ro p m Tuf"sdav
co la~c prawr muting and Bible Studv
9 W a m \\ OM;hip ¥rvtce W ednesda
1 ~pm
OUR ~A\ lOUR I U11!ERAI&lt; CHURCH
Walnut and Henr. ~t~ Rav€'nswood W
Va Th£' Rw George C Weirick pa" tOI
Sunda\ SChod!t 30a m Sundayworsh p

llam

CAL\AR) BIBLECHURCH locatrdon
Pomtroy Plkr Countv Road 2~ near Flat
wOOds Rf'V Blackwood pastoc Servlc~
onSundlvar10~tm and7 :IOpm with
Sunda• Sthool' !If am lltbloStudv Wed
n"""'y, 7 :10 P "'
FAITH FELLOW!&lt;HIPCRUSADE FOR
CHRIST St Rt 3.18 Antiquity R..
Franklin Dlcket~s pa1tcr Sundey mom
lntt 10 a m Sundav ...,.,Ill 7 311 p m
Thunclay ...,. lnfr 7 JO p m
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT ROLl
NESS CHURCH Inc 7~ Pearl St Rev
Ivan M)Ws actina PI• tor Roaer Manley
Sr Sunday School Suporln,.ndenl Sun
day School 9 30 1 m Mornlnl worship
10 30 a m evr-ntna wonhlp 1: 30 p m
Wodnonday OVOIIllllt Biblo study prayor
and pralsr •ervltf'. 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOSTOLIC - VonZandt an4 Ward Rd Eltlor
Jamet Miller put• lonllll)' khod
10 38 a m Wonlltfl !lervl.,. Sulldlf 1 30
pm l!lbi•Study Wlllll.,..y, 7 311p m
CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL Har~
,.,..Uio Raad lleY llowey Ktna pottor
Cllntm hu II Sunday S&lt;hod Supt Sun
tlaySc-1:30a m momiiii-IIIIIP IJ
a m Sunday owo1111 wrvl .. 7 30 p m
Prll)lt'l' Mootlnlf,IV-onday, 7:30pm
SYRACUSE nRSTCHURCH OF COD
nm Penteeoltll Wouhlp ..rvlce Sunday
10 a m Sunday S&lt;bOCJI 11 a m Evonlnfr
worship ..rvt~ 7 00 p m Wodnooday
pl'llyor mHttna7 OOp m

\1• 'll~ Cor~ nfv

16141992-2039 or
(6141992-5721

,., ..........., , ....., ell

rw~~ ~··oo""··\•
• •

GRAVELY TRActOR SAL£$
204 Condor St
Pomeroy, 011

' . 992-2975

Rawlings-Coats-Blower
FUNERAl HOflll
• S.rw1119 F-lies"

1

362 EAST MAIN
POMEROY OHIO 46789
614/992 2844

.l'ti!.¥.!Y!lf

. " ' ..

POMEROY, OHI0-992·6677
111 Qukktl -"' Ruth AM for

(row's Fa1111ly Restaurant
F1111tltJ K""'dv FtW C6kur
228 W Matn St , Pomeroy

264 S 2nd, lllliddleport

992-5432

992-5141

Pravcr ~~ v C£'
Jt p m
fAITH BAPTIST CHI; RCH Railroad
S Mason Sunda v SehoollO a m Morn
ng "arsh1p 11 .a m Even in~ sc vlre 6 p
m Pr~:~v&lt;'r ml'(' lng and Bibh S udv Wrd
nesdav 7 p m
fORE~T RUN BAPTIST R&lt;v Nvlr
8o den pa IO Co MC'I US Bunch SUpl
786 NORTH SECOND Avt
Sundav Schoo 9 VI
m ~oond and
MIDDlEPORT, OHIO
fourth Sundav" ~ o !oihlp SC' let' at 2 30 p
.__ _ _ _ _ __,;._ _ _ _ _ _ mMT MORIAH RAPTI~T fourth and

MT HERMON U!IIITEO BRETHRF:&gt;;
IN CHRIST CHURCH Local('('! In Tl'xas
Communltv off C't R ~2 RC'v Robe-r!
Sandl:'r pas101 J['ff Ho lcr Ia lr-•dcr
Ed Roush Sundav School Sup Sund v
School 9 IJ am morning ""or hlp und
chlldr('fl ~ c hu1ch 11 :rt am
f'\&lt;'n n~
preach in)!' srn. IC'f' f n1r 1h N' Sundavs
7 top m SpC'CI I rn (.'(' fourth Sun lav
f'\'enlnR 7 30 p m W('dn~dav PruvC'
MceHng B1bl&lt;' Studv ilnd You h ftc! o"
ship 7 lfl p m
CHURCH O• GOD Of PROPHECY
Localed on 0 J Wh &lt;' R ad or HIJlh\.1. av
160 Pat H£'nson p.as o Sundav Schoo 10
am Cia sC'S for ttl ugNl Junlo C"hurch 11
a m Mornln,g ""o hlp 11 a m Adul
C"ho r pracllcc fi p m Sunfiav Young Pro
pies Chllda rn " Chu1 C'h and Adu II Bib!(
Studv Wl'dn~di.IV a! 7 :rl p.m
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL ~ f (ran
St Mtddlrporl Affllia f'd \A.Ith SouthNn
RupiL'i Convml on David Brvan S Ml
nlslf'r Sundav Schpol Jfl a m MornlnR
"nrshpJl:.~ m E"rnlng•or hlp pm
Wl'dnC'Sdav C'Vrnlnji!: Blbl(' s udv tnd
pravrr mi'&gt;PIIn rr 7 n m
BRAV.ORD CHURCH Of CHRJST St
Rt 124 and Co Rd ~ Sco I StNa t pa
or William AmbM"jtt'l"
up1 Sund"
School 9 :10 a m morn n~ "orshlp 10 ~~
J m C'V&lt;'nlnli!" rshlp 1 Jl p m WNin f'!li
dav "'orshlp
Wt p m
ST
PAUl I UTHERA" ( HURCH
C' nl'r S"c:.~mn ( and ~cc n I Sl&lt;~ Pn
mr O\ fhl" Rf'
Wil m MitkiiN'"a t
pa~to
Sun i
S&lt;;hon !t .&amp;~ ;.~ m ( hurrh
f'" \('(' 11 am
~ACRf n
HEART ( HURCH !11 ••
Anlhon ( annamn
Ph M ~~ Satut
dav Evt'nln~ Ma
i p m
Sunda\
M&lt;1
~a m
n I 10 a m ( n r(". nn n&lt;
lwlf hou bt fm !' r 1 h M 1 s n n r as ..,.
llam Sunda\
VICTOHY H\PTIST '-' !';
Mlddlcpo 1 I n (&gt;s F. K l'SN
Sunda\' m rnin g u. o ship lfl m
In~ &lt;~Cf\ ICf' 7 p m
\\C&lt;Jn('!&gt;.da
~o~.or hp pm V II ion1hur d
m
MORSE CHAPE I CHL R( H f&gt;:
Curfm n p 1 Sun J SC'h ol If m
nrsh p
\let 11 m sun 1 nigh
\lor hip
'' &lt;'
It pm
Mil '&lt;'k
pr V&lt;'l n IN' '-' 'fin -s l:
pm
WESt E\ 1\:'rll
Rl \I T
HO 1\:ESS
&lt;Ht:R&lt;H fMIIdlrp
In
I
S1
JWv Ivan Mo,;
1 t
Rn~&lt;' \1 nl ...
S
Sun Ia\ ~t:h I Sut Sun 11 Sf: h ol
'+ JH a m M ninl! \\
h p 10 10 m
E C'ninJt Wn h p
\tl p m Wf' ln~d
&lt;' ('ftin~Z; Alb!(' tu I p
f'
an I p
&lt;' v ('('
Jfl p m
LIVINr. WORD CHESTER CHURCH
OF GOD- Oiltx&gt; Spcnc '1 pu or Sun
da" SchoOl 9 10 am Me nlng «M"VI«
10 OOa m Sund l' f'nln.:srn ICC' OOp
m M d "('('k pra l'T' C'n r Y. f" ln~d \
1pm
MT OIIVF f U II GOSN I &lt;OMMUO&lt;
lTV C'HUJH H I "' ('fiN Ru h pa or
Max Fo mrt Sr S S Sup Sunda ~hool
9 :\0 a m Sundav f'nln~ rf\ ICC'
~n
m WNin~dav
C'nln~ H bit'
uI
nrl
pral ~" en \c(' 7 )j p m
UNITF.D t \ITH CHURCH Rl 7 nn P
mcrov av Pa
R v D ld w 'll\Jn S1
pastor Ml'lvln D ;.~kf' S S Sup Sund 1
School9 :10 a m Morn ng Wor h p tn :t(J
Evenln~~: Wor hlp 1 VI p m
W('dn('!;da\.

Ma n St M ddlcpn Rev C lbf'rt Cral~
Jr pas 01 Mrs E \lin Baum~ardner
Sund&lt;.~v School !;upl SundavSchool9 :lh
m Worsh p S&lt;&gt; v icc Jn I~ a m

E11her the earth shaklngexplo
sions - reported mostly by
Middleport residents recentlvhave discontinued or residents
are getting lmmuned to them
Many of the callers credited
the shaking to mine operations
taking place across the river
There were other. theories
however
Mary Meredith sends along a
clipping from Becklev W Va
indlcallng that eerie booming
sounds and vibrations rumbling

SCCCESS R0\0 CHURCH Of CHRIST
- Jo f'Ph B Ho,.kln rvanR('(lst Sunda\
R b t' Stu h &lt;i m Wn hlp 10 a m Sun
da C' rn n.o; "&lt;''"' ICC' ti p m W&lt;'dnesdav
&lt;'VC'mng
cc p m
PENTECOSTAl ASSEMBlY R~:~cine
R I 4 W I m Hob ('k pastor Sunda\
School 10 • m Sundav r-v('ftln~ rrv\C&lt;' 7
pm WC'dnC'Sd '&lt;'\C'nnp:servcc7pm
&lt; ARPENTER BAPTIST Don Chcad r
Supt Sun I
Schoo 9 )0 ..t m Morning
Worship m 30 a m P av sen lee a11ern
:..If' Sundav
THE CH~R&lt; H OF JESUS CHRIST
APOSTOLIC r \ITH - !'l("\\ Lima Rd
nt'xt o Jo o M&lt;' ~ Park Rut land Rotx&gt;r
R chard&lt;\ pastnr S&lt;&gt;rvlet'S at
p m on
W«&lt;n&lt;'Sdav ~:. nd Su!Wtav&lt;~
HARRI~ONVILLF HOLINESS CHAP
TER of hi" \\rs\('IJan Ho InC!'" Church
Rc D.a I I F r1 rC'II p o H(lnrv Eblin
Sund.av Schm I Supt Sundav School tO a
m Mo nin,l! \\o h p l1 a m E rnlng
~r V\('('
«"t p m Wrclnf'!i I:Jv M£'nlnl{ser
V('(' :t~lpm
sriVER~\ 11 l ~ WORD OF t AITH
( a.rv Ho IC'I po..~ 01 Sun lav Sl'fvlces 9 10
a m n I p m M d" C'C'k S{'I'Vtct' 7 00 p
m Thu sdav
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL Third
Av~ Rf"v Clark B;,~ker pastor Carl Not
lln~ham Sundav Schoo Supt Sunday
School 10 a m wilh c asses for all a(les
EvC'n nJ!: srrvi«'5 ~:~t 6 p m Wednesdav 81
bl(' s udv al7 30 p m Youth •e-rvicf"S Frt
dav at 30 p m
ECCLES lA FELLOWSHIP 128 Mill St
M1ddlrporl Bro1hpr Chuck McPhf"rson
pas or Sundav School tn a m Sunday
&lt;'vcn n~ services at 7 p m and Wednf"Sdav
Sf'rVICf'S al 1 p ffi
ANTIQLITY BAPTIST KPnnei.hSmilh
pastor Sundav School 9 ;j() am t.:'hurch
SE'rv1cc 1 30 p m vouth ft&gt;llowshlp 6 30 p
m B blc study Thu rsdav 7 30 p m
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE 33(H5
Hiland Road Pom,.rov Tom Kelly pas
or Danny lambe-rt S S Supt Sundav
mornlnJ!: st'rv cc at 10 a m Sunday cvf"n
ng sNvlc£' 7 30 p m TueSdar and Thurs
dav SrrviCf'S a
1t'l p m
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF TilE NA
ZARENE R('\: G f'ndon S1roud pastot
Sundav School9 :\Oa n WorshlpsPrVIC1'
10 30 am YouTh scrv re Sunday 6 15 p
m Sundav C'V£'nlngsf'rvicl'7 OOp m \\ed
ne-sd~:~ v Prayt&gt;r MeellnR and Blblt" Stud-.:

Instructor Kevin Sheppard and
LaTisha Price Homer Welsh
Robin Qualls and Scott Ogdln of
the Meigs High FFA at tended the
47th annual Ohio FFA camp
program held at Musklngum
The camp offered a variety of
activity Including horseback rid
lng air tOUT$ swimming boat
lng fishing firing ranges and a
nature center There were sou
venlrs available to bring back
home and state officers as well as
vice presidents !rom 10 districts
of the state on hand for the entire
camp Their emphasis was on
stressing to campers the lmpor
tance of agriCulture to everyone
In AmeriCa
The group reported the week
was an excellent exper1ence
Were quite Interested In learn
lng about the upcoming activities
of your group and are happy to
get them Into the newspaper
However you would do us a
favor If vou would refrain from
sending us notices or these events
from four to six weeks ahead o!
the happenings It s difficult to
keep track ol them all and
es pee tally If thev are weeks
awav As a result these an
nouncements can become mis
placed or we are capable of
sending them through In the
Incorrect month
We appreciate your being on
the ball - but unfortunately
we re sometimes not that sharp
Aren t the homegrown lorna
ties lantastlc?t How dare thev
even call those Imports bv the
same name Do keep smiling

Community calendar
FRIDAY
')
HARRISONVILLE
A wee
kend meeting will be held Frl
dav Saturday and Sunday at
Harrisonville Holiness Chapel
Services will be 7 30 p m nightly
with Rev Raymond Rice from
Byesville as guest speaker Special singing will be featured
Rev David Ferrell pastor In
vltes everyone
SATURDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - The Cha
rles and Fannie WoHe Beaver
Family Reunion will be held
Sa!urdav at the grange hall oq.
the Mvlgs County Fairgrounds
Potluck dinner will be at 12 noon
All relatiYes and friends are
mvlted to attend

7 00pm

NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH Sun
(lav af t'rnoon f'rv C&lt;'S a 2 JO Thursday
C\C"Dlng SPrV C'M at 7 :10
F'lRST BAPTIST CHURCH Mason W
Va Pas or BIIMurphv SundavSchoollO
a m Sunday E'VE'nin~ 30 p m Pravl'r
m f't"t In~ and Bib! E" s udv WE'dn E'Sdav 1 30
p m Ev&lt;'n Oft(' wclcom('
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST Sa
lem St Rev Paul Tay or pas or Sundav
SthoollOa m Sundavr rninJll' OOpm
WC'clnrsdav ('Venin~ pravf'r mre nJill' 7 00

through a neighborhood mystify
lng residents for months In that
location were traced to under
ground sandstone formations
crashing to the bottom of coal
seams A mining engineer with
the lederal office or surface
mining said that the dlsturvblng
noises and vibration In Becklev
were caused by pieces of ceiling
material falling Into a coal
seam

•

LONG BOTTOM - An old
1ashioned 1ce cream social will
be held Saturday at the Long
Bottom Community Building
Serving will begin at 5 p m
Several Ice cream flavors sand
"iches pie and cakes will be
sold Music will be provided and
cash and prizes will be awarded
during the evening
PORTLAND - A hvmn sing
will be held 7 30 p m Saturday at
the Hazael Communltv Church
Dan Hayman and the Faith Trio
wl
be featured Everyone
welcome

pm

SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
CHURCH Sl VC'r R d!ZC' Duan(' Syden
~ ckn- past01 Sundav School 9 am
Worship 5&lt;-rv cc JO m Sundav f'VPninR
servlcf" 00 p m W&lt;'dn C'Sdav nl~ht Bible

s udy7 OOpm

TUPPERS PLAINS - Bake
sa ie beginning at 9 a m Saturday
by Ladles Auxiliary of Veterans
of Foreign Wars Post9053across
from Farmers Bank Branch In
Tuppers Plains

Sennonette
Birds Don't Know Holidays
Get up early just as the dawn appears and ll we open a
window or door we can hear the birds stngm~ The chirping
sound comes from all around Every tree and bush seems to
have a bird singing Be It a week day we gotrt~dglngotrto work
If it be Saturday we will be thinking about doing things around
the yard and house If It Is Sunday we will be thinking about
worship Sunday School and God It may be one of a dozen
holidays we celebrate each year yet each morning we hear
somewhere outthere at break of day some bird songs For them
every day is a day to sing and praise God
Birds do not know a holiday from a work day yet they sing
their song ech morn The Dower cloesn I know which day of the
week It Ia nor any holiday but theyburstforth In bloom and emit
their perfume whatever be the day The bird mav be alone and
the nower be the only one that day yet they do their thing Man Is
the only creature that feels sorry for himself and mopes around
Man Is the only one that feels sad about a loved one and won t be
happy nor celebrate nor contribute wha1 he can
Mankind needs to take a cue from the birds and the bees and
the Dowers We need to get up and get out and do our thlngtothe
best of our ability It maybe our first holiday without a loved one
or the flrat Sunday to be alonewltboutourfamlly This does not
meBII we juat mope around and feel aorry for ourselvet God Is
still with Ul He wants us to use our talents each and every day
He knows there may be other lonely people around who need a
cllee!'lng word a kind amlle and a friendly pat on the back If
you don t feel like singing do It anyway Be like the birds they
sing every day no matter what has happened yesterday or last
night They don t know holidays but their singing can make our
anyday a holiday You go do the same You go sing and make
everyday a holiday lor God and man -Pastor WOllam
MltNJetlwartll. Melp Ct111Dt7 Luther-

POMEROY - Bake sale and
beverages
for sale by Kid Kon
1
nectlons 4 H Club In front of Big
Wheel starting at 9 a m
Saturday
SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT- The annual
reunion of the late Doyle and
Gertrude Russell Miller will be
held at the late I E Miller
homeplace 490 Grant St Mid
dleport on Sunday Basket
dinner at 1 p m All relatives and
friends welcome
RUTLAND -A hymn sing will
be held Sunday 2 p m at the
Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church The Chrlstlanalres will
s lng Everyone welcome
RUTLAND - Annual Halliday
family reunion 12 30 p m Sun
day at Forest Acres Park

l

DARWIN - PubliC picniC and
Community Service Recopltlon
Proll'am beglnnlos 12 30 p m
Sunday by Modern Woodmen of
America Camp 7230 honoring A
Roland Eastman and Bob HoefilCh lor oulltandln1 community
serviCe Gaml!ll for children and
ho!JJelhoeB for adults eamp will

provl(le meat and soft drmks
Those attending are to take a
covered dish table service and
lawn chairs prizes Will be
awarded
MONDAY
POMEROY - Chapter 53
Disabled American Veterans
and Its Ladles Auxiliary will hold
their regular meeting at 7 p m
Monday at the hall at 124
Butternut Ave Pomeroy
MIDDLEPORT - Bradford
Church of Christ vacation Bible
school starting Monday running
through Friday 9 to 11 30 a m
all children age lour and up
Invited younger children must
be accompanied by an adult
SYRACUSE - Meigs County
Salon 710 Eight and Forty will
have a piCnic at the Syracuse
home of Marie Boyd Monday
evening
Revival
MIDDLEPORT - A two-week
revival with Clovis Vanover Is
underway at the Ash Street
Freewill Baptist Church In Mid
dleport Services at 7 30 nightly
will cQntlnue through July 9
Everyone welcome
Middleport Bible School
MIDDLEPORT - Bradford
Church of Christ will have
Vacation Bible School July 1115
from 9 11 30 a m Everyone
welcome

Holiday guests
Fathers Day visitors ofMr and
Mrs J R Murphy were Mr Robert Murphy Jenny and Chad Ea
gle Ridge Rd Mr and Mrs John
E Murphy of Racine Mr and
Mrs Joseph Evans Tyson and Jonathan Mrs Iva Johnson and Mr
Jeff Boles of Stockport
Mr and Mrs John Downs
Adam Eric and Dickie of Trim
ble were Wednesday and over
night guests of Mrs J R Mur
phy Adam stayed for a longer vi
sit
Linda (Rosenbaum) Rhodes of
California was here for Father s
Day
Mr and Mrs Robert Reeves
Robbie and Brandl o( Chester
were Tuesday visitors of Mrs
Dorothy Reeves and Glady Tuck
erman
Mrs Daniel Worley of Daniels
W Va returned home Sunday
after spendln1 a few days with
Mr and Mra Dale Randllll Blld
family and Mr and Mrs Cbarll!y
Smith Stacy and Daniel also
vtalted the Randalia
Michelle and Amy Johnson
were Friday and Saturday vlsl
tors of Mr and Mrs Charley
Smith Jo Stacy and Daniel Wor
ley
Mr and Mrs Charles Knapp
were recent visitors of Mr and
Mrs Doyle Knaw of Lansvllle

CELEBRAT~ ANNIVERSARY Mr and Mrs David Smith of
Mason W Va. recently celebrated thler 25th wedding anniversary
with a party at their home hosted by their daughters Debbie
Leach Middleport, and Mary Beth Lavendar Pomeroy

Meigs County 4-H news reporti_ __
THE 4-H rLEASVRE RIDERS met May
26 ~:~1 the fairground s w th three advtSors
slx members and s ix visitors a t end ng
Camp and scholarships were d scussf'd
Horsemansh p and showmansh p demon
st a Ions were ifven Th(l June 11 meet ng
a th[&gt; fair grounds had one adviSor thre&lt;&gt;
m('lllbers and sl't visitors a tendin~ Th('
members praC' let.'d show nansh p and

ld ng JunE' 27th will IX&gt; hf:'ne:t m eet ng
- Molly To ban new~ reporter
THE COUNTR\ CRmERS met June3
a he hom E' of Br•dJi:e Varn{"V with two
a dviSors and $IX membE&gt;rs att ending ThE'
"&lt;'I Ofl' of ca ndy bars and popcorn was
d scussed a ong wtl h camp and jucl,ltlng
dates ThE' f rst a d project was worked on
nd E'QU rE&gt;mcnt s for the food projects

___ Meigs honor rolls--Rutland School
The sixrh six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Rutland
Elemen1ary School has been
announced Making a grade of B
or aoove In all their subjects to be
named to the roll were
First Grade Kristin Brown
Robbie Diddle Ben Fowler
Amanda Havs Chasltv Hes~
Matthew Justice Waylon McKm
nev Alyson Patterson Tonya
Powell Shannon Smith Clayton
Tromm Clark VanMatre Kasev
Williams Stacv Williamson Ja
son Young
Second Grade David Banks
Kindell Brown Carlv Chasteen
Tony Dugan Brandle Elliott
Em1ly Fowler Nathan Halfhill
Billie Jo Hysell Jtll Lemley
Danlelle Peckham Tabitha Po
well Diana Sigler Lisa Snod
grass Jon Stewart Missv Tllus
Melissa Williams Sandra
Young Jeremv MIChael- Ron
Hirth
Third Grade Chad Bartrum
Jessica Counts Eliza beth Ell s
Shaun Fife Frank Herald M1
chelle Miller Amanda Mussar
Aric Patterson Beverly St&amp;wart
Carl Tromm Jamie Williamson
Fourth Grade Phyllis Clark
John Cleland Jeremv Coleman
Tara Fotchpatnck Angie Po
well Tlmmv Priddy Lon Rus
sell Cmdl StewatJ Candice
Walker Roxanne Wllhams
Fifth Grade N!cole Bell Trav1s
Grate Rovden Hawkins Sherr!
Ramsburg
Sixth Grade Lorrl Burnem

Crafts judged at
grange meetmg
Craft contest were judged at
the recent meeting of the Star
Junior Grange held recentlv at
the hall
Members !rom Racme Grange
judged the contests First place
winners ln the var1ous age
categories were Bridget
Vaughan Crystal Vaughan and
Oenlse Shenefield piastre boltle
craft Chip Macomber Cr) stal
Vaughan and Ginger Holcomb
refrigerator magnets Bndget
Vaughan Crystal Vaughan and
Denise Shenefield paper mache
Bridget Vaughan Crvstal
Vaughan Danlelle Mldklfl dia
rama Rachel Ashley Crystal
Vaughan and Ginger Holcomb
potato sack WPavlng Brrdgel
Vaughan Crystal Vaughan Da
nlelle Mldklfl tin punch Eric
Montgomery Crystal Vaughan
and Denise Shenefield junior
grange birthday card and Crys
tal Vaughan creative writing
It was reported tl)at several
members had marched m the
Rutland July 4 parade During
the meeting junior grange camp
wasr discussed with nine
members planning tok attend
Members receive their merit
bad11es which they had earned
Cleanup day was planned for
July 17 at the Grange hall with a
picnic lunch

Arnie Elliott Jason George
Rachel Hysell Mrssv Jeffers
D H Jennv Garey
Bradbury School
The sixth six weeks grad1ng
period honor roll at the Bradburv
School has been announced
Making a grade of B or above In
•II their subjects Io be named 10
the roll were
F1lth Grade Robby Baker Va
nessa Compston Adam Wyat1
Wlllev Ch1ldress Sam Cowan
Beckv Dries Dav1d Eakins Walt
Wllll~ms

Slxlh Grade Beth Buskirk Jen
nifer Fink Dawn Hockman
Heather Burch Amltv Dixon
Ann R1 file Dan lelle Scott
DH Chris Lane Kellv Sm1th
Eric Jones

•

Bible class plans i
for new pastor 1•
Plans for welcoming the new •
pastor Tom Runyon and his :
w1fe Lynn who wlll be moving •
here from Gerard this weekend l
were made when the Martha
Bible Class met this week at the l
Bradbury Church of Christ
•
A report was g1ven on tmprove
ments to the parsonage In prepa ,•
ration for !he arnval of !he new ••
mmlster Larry Haynes presldep •
at !he meeting with Bill Kmg
giving the opening prayer A l
bridal shower to be held lor Knsll '
Haynes and Matt Rtflle was .,;
announced A thank you nolewas •
read from Tina Riffle for a Bible :
given to her on her graduation' :
from Meigs Hl gh School •
Members were reminded ol a '!
paper shower to be held at the
church with towels plates and •
trash bags being among lhe J'
Items needed
Paula Haynes was named
class treasurer It was noted that
Justin and Travis Facemyer wlll
be attending camp at !he Ohio
Vallev Christian Assembly ThE\ '
communulty Bible school was
announced for 9 to 11 30 a m at
the Bradford Church begmning
Mondav
"'
Refreshments were served by r
Lmda Bates

f

•

Ice cream soctal
The Salem Townshtp Voluw
teer Fire Department w11l hole!
Its annual ice cream socml o!i
Julv16fromll am to7p m The
midmght cloggers Will perforri;l'
in the evening

Pubhc Not•ce

Pubhc Not1ce

Pubhc Notoce

RESOLUTION #107 88
Wher881 it 11 the de~we of
Pomeroy V1Uage Council to
make mprovemente to Mam
Street by removing old pavament and resurfacing to restore proper grade for dra n
age and curb h81ght and
Whereas the General Tele
phone Company hal con
tracted
with the Shelly
Company to make part al re
pa1rs and Improvements to
Ma n Street and 11 s the de
s re of Cou neal to share n the
costs of such Improvements
1n order to prov1de subltan
t1al savmgs of taxpayer dol
Iars;
Thet"efore be I resolved
that ten thousand dollars
t$10 000 00) be
made
ave labte for th11 protect out
of regular appropr allons
and further thtlt thiS expen
d1ture be declared an emer
gencv necessary for the
preservatton of the health
and safety of the ret1dants of
Pomeroy VII age
PASSED June 20 1988
Larry Wahrung Pr111dent
of Pomeroy VIllage Counctl
ATTEST
R chard D Seyler Mayor
Vrllage of Pomeroy
Jane Walton Clerk Trees
1711 8 21C

of Salad rectedto memthe
above entrtlad act1on I w II
offer for sale at pubhc auc
t10n at the front door of the
Court House 1n Pomerov
Ohio 1n the above named
County on Fr1day August
12 1988 at 1015 AM
the follow ng d¥cr1bad real
estate s tuate n the State of
Oh1o and ntheTownshpof
Salem tow t
TRACT I Situate tn Salem
Township Me gt Countv
Oh o and be ng the East half
of the Southwest quarter of
Sectton No 36 Township
7 Range No 16 oftheOhto
Company s Purchase con
talmng82 25acres more or
less
Being the same pram sas
conveyed to former grantors
by daad of record 1n Volume
160 page 316 Deed Ro
cords of Ma~gs County
Ohto and 1n Volume 178
page 636 Deed Records of
Metgs County Oh10 Tract I
berng the same real estate
descrtbed m doed to Sher
man Ray Marcum end Donna
Kay Marcum of record n Vo
lume 258 page 279 Deed
Records of Gallla Countv
Ohto
TRACT II Situate n Sa
lem
TownshiP
Me1gs
County Oh o and be ng the
West half of the Southwest
quarter of Sect on 36 Sa
lem Township (Township
No 7 Range 16 of the
Oh1o Company s Purchase)
Me gs County Ohto con
tam ng 80 acres more or

Countv Oh1o and 1n Certifl
cate for Transfer from the E•
tate of Robin Mar e Reed de
ceased to Charles Kenn~
Reed of record m volume
209 page 615 DHd Ro
cords of Me gs County
Oh o Reference s also madi
to deed from John and Betty
Mae Reed to Charles Ken
oath Reed of record n Vo
lumo 247 page 375 Deed'
Records of Metgs County
Oho
SUBJECT to all legal ease-'
ments and r ghts of way Of
rec:ord
Bemg the same prem Sl!$
conveyed to the grantor her
e n by dead of record n DeecJ.
Book No 286 Page 91 n
the Recorda Off ce of Me1gs
County Oh10
PROPERTY AODDRESS •
Route 1
V nton
0H
46686 (Located on or near
State
Route 325
ar,d
County Roa~ #44 (Selma!
Andrews Road) 1
Sad property appra sed at
$27 000 00 iTraco II and
$47 000 00 [T1oct Ill and
cannot be sold for less than
two th rds of the app.rarsed
value
TERMS OF SAlE The
successful
purchaser as
soon as h1s brd s accepted
shall be requ1red to deposit
on the day of sale m cash or
bv cert1f1ed check payab e to
the Shanff 1 0% of the
amount of such accepted
bid w1th the balance due on
date of delivery of deed
Howard E Frank
Sher1ff of Me gs County
0 Dean Evans
CHERRINGTON EVANS &amp;
MOULTON
Attorney for the Plamt1ff
t7) 8 15 22 3tc

Pubhc Not1ce
NOTICE OF ELECTION
Not tee 11 hereby given that
pursuant to a resolutiOn
adopted by the Bo•d of Edu
cat on of the Alexander local
School Dostrlct on the 19th
day of A prof 1988 the•ewill
be submitted to the qual f1ed
~ec1ors of sa1d school d s
tr ct at the election to be
held on the 2nd day of Au
gust 1988 at the regular
places of vot ng thereen the
questiOn of ssutng bonds of
sa1d board of educat on rn
the !urn ot $500 000 for
the purpo1e of 1mprove
ments renovations and ad
d t1on• to school fac I t es
and prov ding aqu pment
furn sh ngs and srte rmpro
vements therefor and of le
vy "A a tax to pay the pr nci
pal and Interest of sa d
bonds outside of the ten m II
const tuuonal tax I mttatton
mposed bv Sect on 2 of Ar
t cia XII Oh1o Const1tut on
The max mum number of
years
durmg wh1ch the
bonds w II run 1s two (2)
years and the est1matad av
erage add1t1onal tax rat~
outs de of the ten m II I m
tat on to pay the nterest
thereon and to ret ra the
same as cert f ed by the
county aud tor will be two
and seventy
hundred1hs
t2 701 m lis por dollar
($1 00) of tax valuat1on
wh1ch amounts Jo twenty
sevtn cents f$0 27) for each
one
hundred
dollars
~$100 00) of tu: valuat on
The polls wtll be open from
630am to730pm on
sa1d date
By Order of tho Board of
Educat on of the Countv of
Me1gs Oh o
Jane M Frymyer
0 rector of Electtans
17) 7 12 20 27 4tc

werE' s at('(! Bridget V~:~rnev gavt:&gt; a
dl:'mons ra ion on how to makE&gt; snac k
pizza ShE' also served r efreshmen s On
June 9 at the hom£" of Jpnnv Varney lwo
advisors and seven members at enelrd
I ems of bus nl!!ls includPd sell ng: f1rs a d
klls fo fund raising and buymg 4 H
t shirt s a nd lhP parad£' an d far boo h
Br dg:P a nd "-.mv Varney served ef esh
men s - Jen•y Varney news reporter
THE OUTSIDERS met Jun'i' 6 a h(.'
Grady residenCE' with woadvlsors and sl'l:
m('mbers Campi n~ and projects were
dlscus!'ied Refreshments w~?r e served by
Stev~ and Kt'vln Grady ThE&gt; nexl mpe lng
Is June 20 at he grady home wherE&gt;
membE&gt;rs w made wind chimes and
enjoy sw mm ng - Chris Hamm news
reporter
THE STt\RLffERS met Junt' 9 at thP
Frecker home wl h oneadvlso and seo,;en
members n a endance Project books
wered s rlbu ed an d pet show fund raisers
Wt'I'E' d scussed Grf"ta R toe rec ted her
safetv spea kinJt report Marsha Fr("Cker
served rerreshmt&gt;nts JunP 2 was se for
he ne:'&lt;t mf'ftln~ whert&gt; pel show judlrtng:
wi I bP condut ed
Ellt.abelh Lawsoo
rt.oporler
THE RIDGE CRrrTERS mE'! June 9 a
heSalisburv School w h woadv sorsand
15 members a end ng: Camp da es hP
sf'lllng of candy bars and 4 H p ojN' s W('n•
d scUS$ed Head up 7 up was p ayPd On
JunP 16 two adv sors and elgh members
me r:1 t h£' C fford restdenet' Camp da es
werf' discussed Th£' advisors helped
mf!'mb&lt;&gt;rs 1.1.llh the r projec s Refresh
ments were S('fV£'d by Faye Cl ffo d Junf'
22 wll be he ne)Ct meet ng: a he home of
Ann e Jt'ssle - Ursula Hart reporter

clan officialS advise
Because syrup of ipecac Is used only when a poisoning occurs the
mislabeled HUMCO Ipecac
syrup coHid remain In a consu
mer s home lor years and that Is the current concern of Meigs :
County Health officials
•

Pubhc Nottce
SHERIFFS SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
THE STATE OF OHIO
MEIGS COUNTY
Southern Oh10 ProduCtion
Cred t Auoc auon (formerly
Jackson Production Credit
Assoc1at on
PLAINTIFF

- vs Sherman Ray Marcum alca
Sherman Marcum et al
DEFENDANTS
Case No 87 CL 327
In pur1uance of an Order

less
Betng the real estate dascnbed m Tract 2 of Sher ff a
Deed n Part1t on to Kenneth
Reed and Robin Aeed of record n Volume 165 page
437 Deed Recorda of Ma1ga

IT'S THAT TIME ....
STOP IN
TODAY AND

RED HEAT
DEMI MOORE
IN

SEVENTH SIGN

TRY OUR
A

"FRESH" PEACH

SHAKES &amp; SUNDAES
ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
"At the Foot of the Pomeroy-Mason lrhl•"
992-2556
POMEROY I OHIO

�~

------,.------.,.-----·----------·-..._.._.,.

Page-8-The

__________

......... -. ..... ..

_..,......

._

--....

Friday, July 8. 1988

Ohio

Sentinel

Public

9

Business Senrices

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
PROBATE DIVISION
Ill( THE MATTER OF
THE ADOPTION OF:
AOAM J . RANDOLPH
:
Cne No. 25B96
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION
TO : tHE UNKNOWN BIO LOGICAL
FATHER OF
!\DAM J . DICKENS.
' You oro hereby notHiod thlt
you h.,o been named • ...,..
of Adem J ,
·~. Thio action h• been
'luignod c... No. 26896 ;.,
tho Common PI- Coun. f'to.
bate DIVilion. Meigo County,
. Romoroy, Ohio 457119.
The object of the Petition
is to adopt uid Adam J .

Buylna d ... aold. otlvor oolno.
r~ngo. 1-..,,

lntli

0.111

CMh paid for
or qulltoAI&gt;
llquo
,
· m.
condition. ~. 81 192-l

Junk .no'• wtth or wilhout
motors. Cell &amp;14-112·5488.

and dW•ting you of all paPublic
rental right.
You are required to anawer
IN THE COMMON
tho pet~ion whhin twenty·
PLEAS COURT OF
eight days or object to the
MEIGS cnto.,TV OHIO
g,.nting of the adoption
PROB•
OION
within twenty-eight days af·
IN THE MATTER OF
1er tho IMt publicltion oflhil THE ADOPTION OF:
• riotico. which wll be pub- CRYSTAL GAYLE ·
. Iii heel once each week for
RANDOLPH
,..thre8 con~eeuthre weells.
C•o No. 26B94
..The last publiCII1ion will be
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION
mode on tho 15th dey ol TO:
KEITH RANDLE DAY
· July. 1988, end tho twontv·
ore hereby notified thai
You
etght days will commence on
you h... been nomed. putathat data. In cae of failure to
tive fllher of Cryolol Goylo
·answer or otherwiae raepond
Dey. Thio action h• been .. roquirod by tho Ohio Rulel ligned
C..o No. 26894 io tho
af Clvi Procedure, judge.
Common"- Court.-·
mont by defou• wil be Divilion. Meigs Countv. Porendered against you and the
Ohio 45789.
fletition gramed for the relief m•oy.
The object of the Petition
'demended in the Petilion ia to adopt aaid Cryttal
date Juno 28, 1988.
Geyle Day by tho PotHionor
Robert E . Buck, Judge
and divesting you of all PI·
Court of Common Pleas rental right.
Probate Division
You are required to answer
Meigs County, Ohio the petition within twenty·
171 1. s. 15. 3tc ,
eight days or object io tho
grenting· of the adopJion
'
wtthin twenty-eight days after the l•t publication of this
Public Notice
notice, which wil be published once each week for
three con..::utiYe weeki.
The IMt publication wil be
•
PUBLIC NOTICE
• A budget hearing will be made on the 16th day of
held on Juty 19, 1988, for all July, 1988. and the twenty·
inter•ted citizens of Ch•- eight dayt wtll commence on
ter Township. The budget that dat:e. In ca~eoft.ilureto
proposed wll be tor fiscal antwer or otherwile r•pond
year19~9. The meeting will • roquirod by tho Ohio Rulel
-b8 at the Chester Town Hall ol ClvM Procedure. judgoand will begin promptty at mont by dofou~ will be
rendered against you and the
7 :30p.m .
·~
W. Michael Will Petition granted for the relief
" Chester Tow{'ahip C.5erllj demanded in the Petition
Meiga County, Ohio date Juno 28, 1988.
Robert E. Suck, Judge
('11 B. 1tc
Court of Common Plea
'
Probate Division
Meigs County. Ohio
1711,8, 1~. 3tc

p
EXCAVATING

•Dozer &amp;. Beckhoe
•Will Do Heuling
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Susineas
WANT TO lilY WRECKED 01
JUNI CAliS 01 TIUCIS
-FilE llTIMATESfor ..,, of n...... ,ices 'all
letw•n 9 a.m.·6 p.m.
or llavo

J&amp;L iNSIM AliON
ESTIMA TES•
nRED OF PAINnNG?
•FREE

Cover your home with
beautiful MASTIC or
CERTAINTEED vinyl
siding.
lett Prices Anywhere!
ROOFING and SEAMLESS

GUnERS

PH.

••

Ruth Sellers
wishes to thank
• Dr. Lentz, nurses
and staff of
· Veterans' Memorial
Hospital, her family
and friends. The
: flowers. cards and
prayers during her
hospitalization
were deeply
appreciated.

lmm
VIIS TAPI
let us ro...,.t tMst ohiMowia
&amp; Sli!AK ortt' to . ., VMS.
CAll AMY CAIITEII
or 101'5 ELECTRONICS

In Memory Of

992·2269

Ernest (Junior)

PRICE REDUCED - If you
are looking for a really nice
home in good a good neo ghborhood you have to look al
lhis! 4·5 bedrooms, l'.l
baths. family room, garage,
palio, W.B. hookup, full basement and many other
gr.eat features! Home IS only
13 yrs. old and in excellent
condition. This is a real steal
at $47,000.00. Call for your
showing no~ belore it' s too
Iale'

Ward who
passed away 7
years ago,
July 9.
Loved and Missed
by daughter, Ruth,
son·in-law, James,
and granddaughter,

Help Wanted

NEW liSTING - HARRI·
SONVILL£ SR 684 - Mo·
dern ranch home on .67
acre, level lot Excelfenl con·
drtion wolh 3 bedrooms,
bright sunny kitchen-din on ~
This home has qualified for
FMHA financing - Call fur
details. $39.500.00.

GROWING RADIOLOGY
DEPARTMENT NEEDS
FULL OR PART TIME
TECHNOLOGIST

NEW liSTING-RACINECute litlle 1 floor plan nome
righl in town Walk ~n Ihe
slore. schools, chu(ches etc
Has many possibilities. 3
bedrooms. carport nei ds
some work.. $19.500.00.

EXCELLENT FRINGE BENEFITS
Send Resume To:
Kim Shamblin ,

Radiology Supervisor .
Veterans Memorial Hospital
1 1 5 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
614 -992-2.1 04, Ext. 237

NEW liSTING - MIDDLE·
PORT - Nice 1 floor ran ch
home localed una gooc ltreel.
3 bedro01.1s, bath. nice level
~1. ONLY P3.000.00

Public Sale
lk Auction

PRICE REDUCED- RACINE
- ApproXImately 26 acres
vacant ground. Noce buolding
site. ONLY $9,000.00

PUBLIC AUCTION

9:00A.M.

Bruce and Patti Hoffman will offer their per·
sonal property and chattels at Public Auc1ion on Willow Creek Rd. Take Rt, 7 ByPass
to Laurel Cliff Rd. (County Rd. 22), go past
Big Wheel and take first road to right.

IN THE COUNTRY -

Over
70 acre larm woth older
home, garage and other
buoldon gs. Close lo town
ASKING $42, 500 00

ANTIQUES: Collect&lt;n ol Rosevolle pottery (23 pes.}. very mce
spmmng wheel, cobbler's bench, oocupu!d Japan, 2 old l 1one
tram sets complete w1t h tracks an d accessones, South Pac1lic
'· lOin sel, chona ca bon ~. am bef hghlning lru~ jar, a.sortment of
oocks and bottles, cor n shell er, corn pianter. crosscut saws, brass
blow torch, wooden bowls. butter churn crock, Whole tr eadle sew·
ong machon e Jom Bean " ~ llany" bottle. Duncan Phyffe roc~ er,
school cha~rs. old floor model rad1o, small cast1ron scales, hom e-·
made wooden v1se an d more.
HOUSEHOLD/ MISC.: livon g room surt e. end labl.,, bookcases.
twm beds. dr essers, large quantity ol Hom e lnter1or Products, gun
" cabo nil. stools. h~ e new 23'' Zenrt h color TV, 19" B&amp;W TV, Alan
.. oonsoJe and 30 games, miSc. dishes. fogu nnes, games, Cabbage
Patch dolls. 8 pc. settingol Havolan d chona, Gibson gu~ar, Bundy

'·

LETART AREA - Approx 2
acre mini·farm wtth a small
farm, fencong, plus a 1978
modular unol w~ h 3 bedrnoms, satelht e d1s h, 2 good
garden ar eas. Drilled water
well. NOW $24,000.00.

maker. Kenmore dehu "'odoloer, 10 &amp; 15 gal. aquariums
LAPIDARY SHOP: Jeweler's buffer w/ hght. l ortonelapidary saw,
Covon ~on bell sa nder, lortone ex pandable drum sander, hot
plate. Lortqne vibrator. bells, diSC, grinding wheels, pulleys, je·
weir~ setting';, mou nts, rocks and mmtnls, fire agate, ap ache

TOOlS ANO MISC.: Slanl ey moler box, Stanley saw, 19" lawnboy

arn. We may have a
bu,er far. JOUr home. Call

mower, Rot{(iller, Wayne submers1ble sump pump, rakes, shovets,
p~ch lor~ axe, splillong m ill~. postlx&gt;le dogger, draonsna~es. 50
gal. waler tan~ stock lank heater. 6 ouHel powet tap (120V), Gra·

Today!

vely lraclor sulky, motorcycle earners lot car bumpets, 220V
swolch box, hand saws. plumbng OOongs, Coleman LP gas pocnoc
stoves, weed whacker. pru ners, Sunbeam LP gas gr oll, pony sad·
- die. bndle bokes. 2 cycle Moped, grass seed sower. appliances,
and much more

Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992·&amp;191
Jun Trusstll .' .... 949-2660
Dattie Turner .... . 992-5692
Tracy Riffle........ 949-2807
Jo Hill ...... .. ...... 985-44i6
Office ................ 992·2259

AUCnONEU'S NOTE: G...t clean ittmt. Don't mist !hit
salt, you _, lilt find lhis type merdtaotlise "'"in.
TEIMS: Calli or Ct.ck wtrn,.r I.D.-WNCH SEIVED

Not rllfiOIIsiblt for Acci.nls or lott Property
EDWARD "IIIKE" II'A~TIN-Aucti-r

JJl

915-4396

Dolt Jo.... on •• aho . . Ml , .... ~- AN wdio-•
•• lirMIIIf c.~d bo..W ill t... 1f ttw stalt 11 OW.

.....

--

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

·-

[ lllpllll'llll'lll

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohia

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Trafttlliitlo•

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

OPEN

·

SERVICE

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

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
alsa acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992·2196

Middleport, Ohio
1-ll·tlc

WANTED

HUDNALL
PLUMBING &amp; HEAnNG

DEAD OR AUYE
•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators

168 North Second
ftliddloport, OhiD 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

"Must Be Repoirablt"

We Corry Fishing Suppllietj
Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Hare

KEN'S APPLIANCE

SERVICE

P'!r- IUSINESS PHON!

985-3561

16141 992-6550
RlliDENCI PHONE
1614) 99l!: 7J...S4

We Service All Makes

1122/ 88/ tfn

'

RACINE
GUN SHOP

I

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

NEASE HOllOW RD.
GUNS- AMMO ,
GUITARS
STRINGS

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
N1w Homes Built
"Free Estim8tes"

Follow Signs
on Bashan Rd.
PH. 949-2168

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
NO SUNDAY

~.

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

CUSTOM BUlL T
PRE-iAB
ROOF '!'RUSSES

992-6282

BAUM
LUMBER
CH~~~~~~-1 mo. I

1:30·6:00 P.M.

1· 2-P.I mo.

Annou ncern en h

!-!0- '81 tift

3

Help Wanted

TourOuhi.... M.t•• femele. Our
top people ••n tl00-t1200
per WHit. s.a.,... to . .n plu•
committion. " - t t working
condllioN. A,..., fun pl.ceto
warll. Friendly, n_. • dtlpendlbll .,. th• ,.qu...menta. C.H
1·814-288-1422. Ilk for Sue.

MIDDlEPORT, OliO

Midclleport, Ohio
992-6" 1

BOGGS

11

6- 1••11• 1 mo.

SSO PAGf STREET

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

~1!1 V ILl!!'

'

GEARY
BODY SHOP

Authorized Servill
&amp; Parts
Briggs • Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homelite ·
Jacobean

Help

23

Wanted

·Announcement&amp;

Avon,.... 71edl• toaeiiAvon.
Coli 814-44S.335~.

Llbomorv Suplf'VIIor for mod·
•n fulh' equipped p,.,..can·s
otfi01 lllbomoty. Clulllftc.rtont
n _ _,., MT CASCPI, o•pa·
rienCI wtth CAP ln1pectktn
hotlpfol.' Willi .. rood In ln11n&gt;
ment opiqtion and trotble
ehooling. Competent In •II ~b

Dibble Shop. Going out of
bu1in. . •Ia June-July2. 5075 pei'Ciftl off.

..... Good bentftt1. WeMI·
lftdl off, Apptv In penon to: The
MlciCII Plld. 203 JICklon
Pike. Gallipolis. bet'MM'I 9 AM·
4'30PM.

4

w.t1te6-E1Piflance HVAC lnmHor. Coli 81e.24S.5868.

Giveaway

O.nerel Far'll hlllp-2 BR mobile

White Germ1n Sh..n-dl to
give IM'IY to good home. Cell
S14-44S.2792.
Sm•H Whtti rabbit- 2 mas. oldto glwo - . .. Coli 114-4461983.
15·8 ..... old kitt., •. C.ll 814·
44S.3341 .
Puppfe~.

3 .,...., 1 fem~l .. 'h
block Lob. Cell 814-258-1156.

......

tatt.ns Ia • _goad home. C. II
814-256-1839.
3 of wire opringa, Coli
614-&lt;WS.413S.
Dop-to nice horne. P. . O.r·
m~n Sheph.O/pen labf1dor
Rllrlt¥er. 1 .,.., old. Call
614-44S.2137.
Need good tmrne for brown 1nd
bile$ pup m• 11 "" O•rn~n

Shopherd. 814-992·2025.

1 good Collie. Good wfthlddl. 2.
8 wk . aid ldlten1 wkh bobMd
ails. 1, t momh ~d m•l•
Boogie. Bill Howk. Depot St ..
Rutl8nd. Or c.l 814-742-2234.
LA .... m•uga
Rlilra.d ltM tooN'IIWiy. Allo1

Ht of bo• tpring~, Clll &amp;14-

912·2041.

'

Iran b•bv hd wh:h mfttretalfld
· - · · 304-895·3012.
Utter trained ldt1en1, 304-8764064. .

6

Lost and Found

FOUND: Miniature Schnauzer.
dr. grey, ferTIIIe. Ria Gr111de
area. c.tl 114-245-5189 or
«tt-0904.
FOUND:Lidi11Heatth hwu•nce
Card • Social S.autty C.rd •t :
182 Fourth Ave., Sllurdt¥
Morning. Call • klentH\1·814448-9292.
•
Bl1ck • brown Germ~n Sh•
phenl . Coli 8t4-446-4222 b•
tween 9-5, 446-2174 afler 5
PM.

honw BVIII•bla Give referM'Ice
&amp; .. .,...lence. C.ll 814-157·

1736.
EARN EXTRA MO)IIEV during
tha Summer. Get out of the
become 1 Dally Sentinel
pap• c.nw. Aauw• open In
Middleport. Cllt Scott It .The
Sentlnotl Office ot 114-912·
2155.

hou•.

V•ll Procb:• IOOidno for Hu'"
tNind!Wife t~t~m to m ~~Mge
ConfiMment S.ns. Free rent &amp;
~-· Caii1114-24S-1&amp;88.
Borodl Brol&lt;el And 8 ... 1 S.ll
Chrtltmlt Around lhe World
deoontkn• until D•c. Fun ;obi
P.ty pf•. Free 1300 kit. No
collect..,n ar delivery! Work yaur
own hour1. Now hiring DemdnttflltOfll. Clll Betty Carpent•r.
814-2411-5383 To.-,1
·
Seeking llppiCIIiOnl for -'f.
...vtot a- •tlon • conwnient
ltont. Pt. PIMIIM: lrN. Send
rMum• to: Box Cia. 167
c/oGallipoll• D•lyTrlbune, 825
Third Ave., G.tllpolil, Ottia
'45131.
WANTED : Multf·TIIent•d
worklrs. experienced In one or
ma.. of the folawlng: C.pentera; brick, block, 8t concr11e;
elec:utcl~n~; plumben.; heetlng
&amp; air condtUonlng: dry \Wiling;
Pllnters; conwnercl• bulder.:
•d he~Vy~ulprn ... operetar1.
Also needed: Experienced, til·
anted and c•llr· oriented lndl·
vidu• to be projed auperint8ndents. lttnd Nlur'lll cw work
hlltory,lncludtng which lYPH or
work you hwe e~epttl•u!t ln. to:
Rt. 1· ldx 247. O•lllpoli•. Ohio
46131.

lnoe In ~ •r• tar !'*'IIOert
1nd d..llrl, Fr" lrMning. Cotn·
mlt1ion up ta 28 par cent.
H t , t HD1. .1 tw•rda. no
d
1ng or ooHecllng. no Nntllng or ..vice ch•ga Over
BOOdvrwml cltarn• ar tOfl. gl It L
home decor .nd chr..,._1 d•
cor. For frM catllog ciii1 -IOO.
227-1110.

Areedl• ·Hurling OlntM hll
o~J::.~ lui tlmo cloy ohlft
1a1
.nd ptrt-11me: night
ahlfl llundlreu. Nllrtfng Mlllt·
.ma 1h• •• wlllnQ to wotk all
shHt1 1nd be on o..l. NM w.ge
ICII•~nd•c.llentblnlflt ..ck-

aga P I - IPptv In penon ..
AKIINI• Nuninl Cent~. lox A.
Main lt., CooiYII-., Oh. Mon.·
Fri. 9-15. Poellbleinterview
com.,IMion d ~~tplc•ion.

•n

AVON · AH 1r111. C.ll

w...... 304-182-2141.

Mlt'l~n

L-

LPN. pte.-nl Vlllllf N'n-'ng
c.. cen•r '""""' licensed
for pOrt-mo-loyment.
m . . all 1nd den&amp;ll lntu•nce
-toblo. H luiMOIIod coli Kothy
Thornton. OlriCior of Nurling.
(304187S.I23t. EOE·AAE.
CHARGE NU.RSE '
Pl...,. Vllllf Nur11ing C•re
Cenw. 100 bed 1kllled nunJng
f.clllv kM:Itld In PolrttPI.-nt.
WVa 11 lleking 1 rttgiiWid
nul'l8 to a11ume thl ,dutill of
ful-tlm• ch•ge nur•. Thlt
POiti..,n Is open lrnmedltttely,
call Klth¥Thornton•t304-87S.
15238. Pleeunt Velll'f Nursing
C•• Cent• 61 an -.UII opportunity emplo,er .. d etfirmltlve
ectlon employer.
Now hiring cktmonstmon -

Olriatmu Around Th• World,

I"'ICeeve weeldy commll•ion, no

delivery, ..,~. fnl~
TV. VCR or even trill to Hawaii.
Suporvllor Plll Qreonleo 3048711-2185.
colltc~ing,

GOVERNMENT JOBS
$18.037. to t89,405. lmrnediat• hlrlnllll Your are&amp;: call
l,.lundablo( 1 · 518 - ~59- 3611
ext F~284 far Fed~r~~l lilt 24
hro.
South £1111 Ohio Bltl Mfg. Co.
Meks qu~llfl., driver•, •ppltcanu should P0S14t1 following :
HIM APPINnCI

Minimum 2 ve•• and IJf 1.000
ml• eKpstlance
Good MVR
Call 114-882-7774 btrto,wen
9:00and4: 0~

Blb-tlhtef in mv horne Mondev·
Fridltf 8:00-1:00, 2 chlldr.n.
refrencw reQUired, •fter 5:00
coli 30e.871!-5S96.

12

Situations
Wanted

V\1111 c.e for~dertv in our home.
614-117-3090.
Insurance

' 13

call Ul for .,our mobUe hom.

ln1ur•nce: Miller lnaurance,
304-882-2145 . Alsa: 11uto.
home. lite. htlllth.

18

Wanted to

Do

Wil' do ertv ki(ld of work for
13.00 1 hour. Odd jobl . C.ll
614-256-1 39S.
INHI dO blbVIIHing in my horne.
91. At. 3&amp;. Colll14-448-4050.
Hou• ~lntlng &amp; barn roofs.
Reference furnl1hed. Call after 8
PM. 814-448·8790.
Yard c••· brulh cutting, light ·
t.JIInQ, some tree trimnMngs
.., d "'rno~l . Call Bill S Iack.
614-992-2269 evenings.
Motn.

of 1 chnd will do

b•trtlktlng In my home PJI.f . Hoi

lunch• end 1n1cka pro'llidtd.
Experl.,ced, depM~dable. Gall
814-992-5035 after 8p.m. Very
re•o"hllbls.

FinanCial

Mtllmenance perton to ltve-in
IPif'tmtnt compltK. Call 3041711-1104.
FEDERAL, STATE, AND CIVIL
SERVICE JOSS
Now hiring. Your ANI. •13.550
to 1511.410. lmmedi•• openlnp. c.fl 1·3115-733-8082 IKI.

21

F 2758.

I NOTICE I
THE OlftO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO . rwcornmendt thM you
do bu1in111 with people you
know. 1nd NOT to •tnd money
through tha m11il until you have
inveatlgtrtad lha offtfiAg.

Hair Stytilll. Acron The Strltt
styling llllon il •liking one
•dcJtkwll atyliat who II kloking
for mont tlwn lust another lob:.
Clll Terri at 814-446-9510 for
detllll.

Business
Opportunity

'

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

BISSELL
BUILDERS

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949-2969

CUSTOM BUlL T
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Dealtrlfar

y

ECHO

Located
tween Rt.

Reasanablt Prices"

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949-2860

be·

NEW &amp;' USED

MOWERS

Servin Center far Ryan
ProdUrts
8 .7 Financing on Ya•rdmoenl
Service o•nn,t"~lll~::~~:
We Honor M

Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS
Day or

1

DENNY CONG·o
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL· SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

We need properties to
ulf in the Meies Co.

,. tears. tu rquOise, amyt hest, et c., an d other m1sc.

l

6 U-992· 3711
1·8·1 mo. pd.

Roger Hysell
Garage .

"At

25271

Water Pumps

MIDDLEPORT - Beautolul
colonial home in town . Com·
pletely reslored? 4 bed·
rooms, level lot, 1 car gar.
age, has ornate lrim, leaded
glass windows &amp; door. Anic
with stud10 w/s kylighl. Well
insulal ed. Musl see to ap.
pr ectale. $62,000.00

aUo saxap OOqe, freezer, washer. dry er, Kenmore refng. w/ ice

•

C. F. SCOTT

NEW liSTING - POMEROY
- BR££ZY HEIGHTS - 2
~I s wrt h pos~ bililoes. Wal eo
and el ec Jvailable. Seplor
tan k on srte. ONLY$2,500.00.

• E.O.E.

letglt, Owner
74-A, Riply, W.Va.

ttou• d.ning,IPf'lngdunlng,
pointing. coli 304-882·3841.

Air and Mud Rotary Drilling
We Also Install lk Service All Types .

E•ultMent .
,,,.. &amp; !··~···
POMEROY, OH.

UC. Modll 3or 4 wheel•.
AIIIOMblv' ptioed, uet h.e
· coli 304-773-5191.

Most Wells Drilled In One Day.

F1r111

801
E. Moin ...!&amp;,;;

'

Call Collect (304) 372-4331

614-662-3821

REGISTERED
TECHNOLOGIST

'

Rt. 1, Box

~· \~
llidd1porl

'

B&amp;C 1.DRILLING
CO.
H.

FrM Gift.. . "Witor Me
Please" b1ttery
operated HouM Plant
Alert Ught wrth tuning
Off• good 6/ 1 . 71 30

Authorized John
Daere, NGw Holland,
Bush Hog Farm
Equipment Dealer

In Memoriam

SATURDAY, JULY 9 -

CALL

11 Years
Church-Home-School

6-17-lfc

'

2

Junktuto'l. Top l)ftce~ln. Cllll
114-192·51411o"*'lo.m.

614-742-2617

.

8

"ortinv wwe. old

caine. ,..,. ... - ... Top pri- · Ed a..- ...,.., Shop.
2nd. Ave. MI-Oft. Oh. 814812·3478.

Dickens by the Petldoner

11

11

Wanted To Buy

LOST: Oroy ou-· aty .....
RI'WIIrd. C.. I814-U~11J17or
448-7294.tt. 3 PM.

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

Found: Brown ~nd bftd: pup.
Part GerrNn Shephtfd. Found
•t MIFint In Mlddl.ort. 114992·2026.
LOST Ught o.nge rn1l1 cit,
d.., """' "'ctnhv o1 s.. cRood end Rt. 2. SundiY July 3.
REWARD, 304-176-3207 "'
176-1272.

8

Public Sale ·
lk Auction

Rlcll

,._.,.an

9

Wanted To Buy

----

W• ~ c•h fc;tr tate modll dMn
.Hm Mink 01•. 01dllnc.
IHIGonoJo..,_
114-&lt;WS.3t72
4

Co......... - o f .Ju.nl.
a lmiquM. Alta wood •
COli " - • · lwaln'e Furntture
tUfl

-d
114-44t-J1Q.

(USTOM
INTERIOR DESIGN
PH. 742-2463

Peachtree Doors
and Windows

S/ 31 / 1

I

~-....-.

a

OIM,

.......G.iilliiioTis.......... .. · p 0·;;:; 8;:c;;i" ..... ···

&amp; Vicinity
..................................

/J mile an Buhwllle Rd.· July 8 &amp;
9. .t.m:ique dining room chairs,
new wedding dre11·._ 12.
formels-lla• I Ill 10, cur1ain1.
bed sprud, dlshel, ilothe1.

mo-. Cell Lorry Uvoly·I1431S.8.303.

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

1

Lt. YlfdSIIUt 123FourthAw.
Wod. flruSot .

OMaa• 111•1•.• Juty 9 . 10 to
4. 3:11 O.bbi• Dr. Chevv 305
enoln•. full . .. pickup topper,
lathe, co~r. rldill
treo. oddo 6 on do.

C.nten.ry Towmou•. Juty 7.
1 . Kldl olothes, dl•hn. whM
"Oil, •bl• 2 chalrt. Everything
cheep.
4

Fri. aaat. ·Combo2ctw••• 12

,.,_~~, 118reo. Cllftlro. furniture.
loti b1by l'lllmt, giM111WU,
ctothln~ll ••· m11c. Off At.
1 eo btlolnd 11-1 Poet Offloo.

:1 Fllmly. P•mVI.vRd.4Mtof
leb Ev•n• l.,•g• Shop.
Thuro. Fri.. • Bot.

.... ....

aet.·C.ntenery Townhou ...
aothll·ll•by·adult, dup•··
OJIIMdo, dis'-, Dyo, crolto. Cl

,

V.., loti•Frl•ondlot. tl·l 'II
mile from f'Drtlr on Butw••

-· "''low ,..,.,

- '""''*·In,.,.

Culllgon

flruargon,
-•
olotlrlnt. OU-L CltOrd
bodo-do. IIIIo at -rythlng
lnoludlog-enslnk.

MovinC,~WU!v h 10. 9tH!&amp;.

Junll Clr1 wtth or without

' ';.

-'lt~lf\'il"·'

m...

AuctionMr, U-

centod Ohio e n d - Vlrginlo.
Eat•, entiqul, f•m. lqUid•
tlon .1•. 304-nJ-5781.

• -ion.

Rollyson Vinyl
Replacement
Windowa

ol(:

LOST: Blacklab.·rn81e. W.•lng
bh• coMer. Lecta·Mud Soc • •·
Ceii814-2SS.1379.

TOP CASH pold lor '13 modol
1nd IIIWII' ...d c... lrNth
luidl.,.,_ 1811 - ·
Aw .. Golllpallo. eon 1!14-44S2212.

Custom Buildi'n g
Products W. MAIN.
FEATURING :
Riviera
Cabinets

Friday, July 8, 1988

Pomeroy~ Middlepol't,

Profeulonal
Services

54

LAFF·A·DAY

4D
lt.·jlt-nt VIIIIIY
- A t n . • .,. , _
dll,_, IIWing,.chlnt, end loti

"'-·

MorR '5 Farm. St . At. 7 1 &lt;11ile
from Ftva Polnh . June , 3th·
17tf1 1 1·00-7 :00 Cl ot hm CI.
books r.o~n , , jewelry , tod to,
s~o~

Jultt 9t, lt· "1 Nelli to Forest Run
Btottt on Forest RunRd Grue9er
rnidtmce
July 7th. 81h, 9tf1. 46657 SR
248. C., ester, Ohio Clothes.
odds ano endl.

4 familv vard ••••· July 9 end 10.
9-4 . 770 Sy~;::amOfe St . ~iddle­
pon So methlng tor evetvone.
4 family porch IItie. July 9th.

Betlincl Foodland, Pomm-ov

S11turd11y 9-5 890 Laurel St ..
Mlddteport .

...... PfPTeasiin'f .....
'

&amp; Vicinity

.............. ... ....... ·-·· .....
Ylrd Slle. 403 211t Stt.. t,
Fridey lnd s .. un:IIY. July 8 1nd
I.
YAAD SALE Thurodov, F•ldoy,
SotuniiY. 1:00 tiiii:OO. At. 35.
Jeck'1 Frlut M•Ut. nftt to
Queltty ltone. Clothing 1nd
mloo.

Pi.no tuning. Lin• Dln ltll•.
Ttwough July 3 1n. Summ•

rat•.

20 ptt cent dlieount.
114-742·2111 .

Horn• for

31

SWAIN
AUCTION a FUAN!TUAE 82
Olivo 81.' (Jolllpollo.
NEW· Ioc. wood group. 0391.
U.lna room- •11g.tQI.
Bunk-wlthbodding-t181.
Full lial m-.- • found.. ion
1t1rtlng- 198 .. R•cllner~
otootlng. Ul.
USED· · dreoooro. bedroom
IUitn. *119· .298. D•lkl.
wringer Wllher, • aompl*line
of u•d furniture .
NEW- W.Wn baa. 130.
Worlrbooto • 18 6 up. I SIMI .&amp;
10ft ..... Coli 814-44S.31 59.

Sale

Hou • for S.t• R~ndt style. 3
BA .. 1'il baht. dining room.
living roOm. ~hahen. 1, e«
a-'IIDI. 14 IC lot. very nice
U-dfvision. Rio OIWidt IChaol
~m. Call ~ytlm• for 1ppt.,
814-446-2297.

---..._

--

Modutlr on llrge lot In M•c•""la CA. pool Ill nkle DU1bu tid-

Ing. C:oll 814-256-1288 o•
2SS.I752.

County Apphnoe, Inc. Good
UMd IIPDII.._. 111d TV ut1.
Open 8AM ta &amp;PM . Man !hru
Sot. 814-44S.18S9, 827 3rd.
Aw. Ooll-. OH.

Br.dbury Home plu1 mobile

horM clo• to At. 1 by -p1111.
homt h• 5 roome &amp; bMh plus
llundry room. Mabll• home h..
ecplndo end bllutlful b-v wh'"
dow. Clll 114-112-1141.

1985 M•lll'te Mock.l•r3 Home..2
601&lt;28.
AJI tltctrk:.
eo. BA
..
hlhs. or•
room, dining
room.
To
to Mit. Mu1t •e
to apprecl••· •45,000, owner
llnondng. Cell 814-446-1408
1ft., 5 PM.

"*'' •••••

1918 Redmln Sectional home.
28dl8. 3 BA., central aif . Move
,. yaur lot. CoiiS14-446-8594
•tier e PM.
Hou• for Sale by Dwnlr·
825,000. Open Hou•-21 18
Madison A..... Pt. Pl . . .nt. S • ·
A Sun., , . 4. 28A .. n•bach&amp;
fum11c1. gl-d In porch. E:ltl8
lot.

Otdor 3 BA .. otory 6 'II. lui
b•ement. 1/z 1cre. C.ntlnerv..
Call 814-441-3044.
Locat•d 15 mil• from town·At.
141 . Over 2'1! ICfWI, City
.:hools. Lind conblct poldlble.
· Cell614-4459210ovenklgo.
Go,.;er"""'"t Homnfrorn •1. (u
'""""I· Dollnquant . . , . _ y.
Rep~II,OM . Call 80&amp;-887·
8000 Ext. OH-980! for curNirt
rtpo lin

KIT 'N' CARLYLEIII by Larry Writht

75

w.....

........ ,_.,.__,._ ....... _.. 7·1

0000 USI!O APPLIANCES

drver•.

"My girdle's killing me."
r.;~~~~:;===~=-y~;=:::;;=~==::===1
35 Lots lk Ac
. reage
44 Apartmeht
for Rent
A1hton. lqe bulding loti,
mrbile hol'llll perm.U.d, public
wetlf, elso river tot1. Clyde
Bowen, Jr. 304-S7S.2338. ·-

a. ..ttrulriver lot•oneaawplul.

One BR unfurnllhld IPt. N.w
c•pet. AlnQI • refrlg. furrQhld., Wllter &amp; gabea• peld.
Oopo., ..,und. Cell 614-44S4345·

public wat•. Ovd• Bowen, Jr. 1 &amp; 2 BA . ..,.n •. Adultl only.
304-576-2338.
Oolllpollo • Pt. PI-nt. Cell
LOTS. one left, lwei woode&lt;L 81 4-441-8221 '
cltywatw, J•lcha Aoed. owner Unfurnished 2 • 3 BR. uplt:lira
flnendnv. good terms, 304- IPif't.,....tl, 2 Br. furNshld
3n·I401J or 372-2178.
ll)w;nMfttL tAPI18fFI. C.ll 81443
Two 1 OCN loto ~h p!A&gt;IIc 1_:_
~0.:.2.:.8:..4.__,_ _ _-::--:-w•ter, Jerry• Aun Road. 2 Br. _,1, • 1 room .tfici.,a,
t 4.900.00eloh, COMidertnldl, ept. All utlllt.... clble..ld. Clfl
3Q4.17523S3.
814-44S.I723o..... 7 PM.

Rr.nl ~Is
41

Homes for Rent

omoll houte.
Aclulta ontv. Ref. Nquired. No
• .... Colld14-44S.0338.
Nioely lurnlohod

Fur-ed opt. neo. UIN•too
p~thl. Shere b .. h. Slnale fMia
919 Second Aw., O.lllpols.
Coli 44S.44 11 otter 7 PM.
Apertmlnt. 2BA .• ..nturnilhed.
1175. w - po111. 1138 s.
cond. Golllpdll. Coli &lt;W6-4411
oftor7 PM.

rn~ora.

rangn . Skegge Appll.nce1.
Ur&gt;..- Alv« Rd. bolide Slont
Croot Moool. 114-44S.7398

lAYNE'S FUANITUAE

ch*•

Soflt 1nd
Prioitd ft'om
t 3111 10 0196. Tobl-. OliO ond
up .. t121. Hide-1·b1da 139D
to ••a.· R•cllnen: 1221 to
1371. Llm1111 128 lo 1125.
Olnilat *109endup to t495.
Wood table w •S chlirs 1281 to
'711. O..k 1100 up to 1315.
Hutch• 1!100 .,.d up. Bunk
bach campi•• w-m. .,.. . .
U1Sonduptol395. BobVbodo
t110. MettNMMorbox IIPI'6ri81
lui or twin Ia&amp;. ,ftrm 178. end
118. Queen - . 1225. King
1350. 4 dr. . .r ch• •&amp;9. Gun
01blnet1 8 gun. Bib¥ ....n.....
Ul 6 U5. Bod hmeo 020.
130 • King hme t50. Good
NIICtion of be*Dom IUIIII,
metal cablnlltl. hMdbaM'd1 130
end up to t815.

depoalt requlr•d. 304·882·
3217"' J04.na.lo24.

Botch Mlddloport. Ohio.
2 bedroom 1u.-oc1 .,....,....
ulltti...... d. t'lf...C:tl. Phonl
304-182-2581.

Downtown moct.rn 1 bed room
apt, turnilhed. etr cond, CM'·
potod. c ..l - 4:00, 304-87S.
3788.
ThrM

rooml

a

bllh; n ICI

-ton. dlfiOolt .. ,.,...,_

roqund 1231.00, u11•1oo poi4
304-1711-1080.
Fu.nlohod Efll-cy .,...,.,.
•teo. mont11. utiMioo pal4
worWngg........,only . Phono

63

CAOSS6 SONS
Catl304-273-5851.
U.S. 35 W•t. Jacluori, Ohio.
814-285--14111.
Solid w.tnut gun c.blnll. hQidl Mu.-y Fergu1an, Naw Holland.
10 guN. Solid pine dry .tn•. Bulh Hog s.a . . . S.vice. Ovar
Antoq
. ·-Will-....,.. 304-458- 40UiedtllctorstochoOIIfTom
,._
•
1078.
&amp; compl• line of new
u•d
eqtjp.,.,t. Largest •leation In
5 aid fahsktned chair~ •so.oo. S.E . Ohio.
New whftl tlwn Nd compllle
t715.00.· PftCII't 304-875-15022. 1550 OUYir tractor with mow·
lng machine, like. bal•, plowt.
Mo'9)a• PSI frentvle bik•. diiC, cuiiMt~r. corn planter.
u:c cond, 1150.00. C.tt 304- 13980. OwnerwHitnance. C.ll
458-1122.
114-266-&amp;622.
PORTABLE SIGNS: Lighted 4441nttrrotlo,.l di-troct...
t199; non-Hghted •199. Fr" Nioe, with lnl.,'*ion.t b.ter,
d..fwry·l•ters ttwu July 11th. I.UIO. Kotce. power pllr'lt, 4
wv 1·80()-142·2434 Ohio 1· ...l.. g•onrtlne, 120-210llolt'
SOO.S33-3483 enydmo.
01200. Coif 814-28S.8522.
14 T John o. .. hiiV b•ler.
custom h., w.gan. 3 bottom
COmrMrCiel
plows, gr.d., blecle. port.ble
ydl. El•ctrlc Aldgld plpl el.::tric 'NIIdlr. dr1g dl1c, har·
ttweed•. OnelnchTorkwrench. row. Call 81 .. 441-2784.
23,000 btu wiftdow •lr oo..tl·
tku.-. two 1,000btu Hell well Top qu1llty hydreullc oll1,
fumeCII LP gM. Phone 304- gre1111,fuelolle&amp;motaro'l1for
876-37153 ar 304-875-4417 farm equipment. Call BurllleOM
eom-y-114-4415-4119.
.ft.. B·.oo· PM.

Pilot whell from V.tlav 1111
•81'
11 boet". blu. lnd
green
cerplfl 30
t..wed

r-"

White farm tractors COlt plu1
55 Building Supplies 15%. Slderl ' Equipment. Call
304-6715-7421 .
WANTED
mot:orblock lorT0-35
Building -orloh
Block. brick. liM'• JMpes. mn- orTQ-SO. M.F. tractor. Call lifter
doWI. lln•ta. etc. Cl.,de Wln- 4 :00. 30... 876-6928.
tlfs, Alo Or1nde. 0 . Clll 814241-5121.

Co...,... blo&lt;*s· oil •••· .Ord 63
Livestock
or4Hitwry. M•on.,.d. Olllllpo- - - - - - - - - - 111 Co .. 123'11 Pine St ..
Oolloollo. Ohio. Cell I14-44S.
27113.
3 yr. old Sorrell MM'e. Trail
broko. eon 614-25S.eo86.
WESTERN RED C(OAA
•et~enneiAUIIic
Ootrte for •I e. 1 do,, 2 cloellng1.
oncl-od Lop Siding
075. Cell 814-992-2474.
. • Deal&amp; Ml1•1811
GUIIrMtHd Qualtly

CETIDE , INC., Atheno·814·
184-3578
B &amp; B Surplu1 Buildng SuppN•·
:Doon, ~lndaWI. b•h tub•.
commodll. rnoldlnfll, lumMr,
paint 6 mioc IUfiiiiiOI. Cell
114-44S.B772,
.

66

Groom •nd Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming . All br••ds .. . AII
t"tYt•· ••,.. Pit Food 0.1111'.
Julie W.bb Ph. 114-44S.0231.

o..gonwynd

Cotttry Konntl.
CFA P.,len and Slom- kH·
tene. AKC Chow Puppl ... New
Him.tiY8n kittln1. ·c.u 8144...3844 afi•1PM.

......

-· ..........

-.. _114-IINI:Mor· Onlv•-.-..
1077.

35 LOti ' AOrlllll•

FUND AAIIEA, 12 IUI'dona
Addn. Sot. 8,00-4:00, Soon·
MCARCdo-ko, 3041711-1348. Frldoy oftor. 1:00
PM.

•

Auto's For Sale

1981 Dodge Arlll SE, 4 dr.,
Sedan, 4 tpd .• PS. PB. AC..
1350 ratriO .,.mm.
t 1800
080. Cell 814-446-9700.
1 979 Thundttrb'rd. Good Inti·
rkar, gaod tim, needt engine
work. all powilr. t!IOO or tnlda.
Coli 814-448·74&amp;7 eok fo•
Ch•He. 448·2179 ev., ,
1984 Camero F-41 . 15 epd., tilt,
*·
AM·FM·Call., rear louwr,
reclining 11111. 11181'1, JPOII•

American racewhHII.
ut• nlae. 38.000. 11400. Cell
814-2415-5833. oft., 4 PM.

•AKC Aoglote.ed Cloldon Retriever puppl.. e weeki old.
HWII hed all llholl. 304-882·
2814.

1982 Z 28 Cemoro, 88,000
mUe~, .. to.• air. t·topl. Lookl
like new . 15250. C.ll 814·4469187.

AKC Aegletered Bneatt pupP*· •too. Fr~nON Benedum
814-187-38115.

1977 Mon• Carlo. Good cond.
11200. Call 814-25&amp;-1288.

57
CotllehMI'oUoedliraShop. OVer
1,0001k•.-12.13,14,1S.
18, 11.1. 8 mA• aut At. 218.
Coli 814-21S.I251.

Mutical
Instruments

St..,. a Cl•k plano. EKCel.
cond. t17110. eon 114-44S.
2235.
Upright Pi..,o-~tlq\11. Good
C.llt.14-44fJ..2784.

sh••·

Mu1t 1111. Wurllt•r ftt.,o. 114843-5125.
lndlvllluol gulttr ....,.., be-

gin-.. oorlousgulttrlot. 8runiC81'dll Mule. 814-441-0187.
Mr1. Crawford will._. Cethld- Jeff W•rniNy lndniCior 114rei window quits .e: the Fl• · ••1077, tumm• opening~.
M•• IIIIo -end.
Boch trumpll, 304-87S.4034.
3Whttlli,..l&amp;,....•roo. •eo.
Cell 814-44S.3188.
6B
Fruit
0og-,lfthloh.t5ft. lono.
&amp; Vegetables
I ft. w ... •111. RotOIIII•.
t110.Ctlll14-44•0932. .

Drifting maohlnl a tllbl•
prafieslo... type.CIIII14-448-

GINibUtn'l ,_m Mllrlllt·SR
180 ne.- Porw. We WltcarM

~=·:209::•:":•:ri:I::PM:··==;=;l~Fo=od=Bt=om=po=.=====~
SNAFUtl b)' BI'IICI Beattie
Ullft/

DINER ,..,,_

-

0\N

...rl:!.
Y""'"~ ....--=•
,.._ '«&lt;U? ..,
nu

vJt&gt; - .........,.....,.,..,atlllliOIIIIR'jCU?
-"',_ "ffll1
_.. \'fl""" . .,_
V'"" . . - .,.... ...,,
&lt;/» .,...-• .,.. ~ •

fll'~; ;:. . '
... / ·:: , •
"
"'.
•' •
-· \

No

'
No,

"'·

,.•·
..•

•

1M

till.

p~~cldlge.

1971 Mod Carlo-two ton•
m1roon. PS. PB, AC. CC,
AM·FM-Cno. Coli 614-4464015 •fler 5 PM.
1988 DodoeOmnl SE . AM,JM,
AC. PS. PIJ, CruiM. Excel. cOnd .
low mil•. Cell 614-44S.2858
•ft• I PM.

Bill

••••••'

1918 MGBOT. Needl heed
a•••· •eoo. 8,4-99 2 -7 3&amp;4.,
1975 C.dlll.c 2 door Clllil.
EKcell.nt condition. t979 eu ...
tom Do ...... plck· up. 814-986.....,
3987.
1 978 Chrytler La:Baron. 4 door.
New bllltlr~.1irn, br•k•. paint
4Job . 814· . 92,· 7214 or 81
992-3224.
1918 Muotong. 289, 4 ~d.
Collaftt&lt;5p.m. 614-992· 198.
1980 Oldl Speci .. Edition Ser·
nice. lmmeQJWte,
1...
. 12195_ 81 4-992·
280 .
6719
197!1Trens·Am 4DO•to., body
ro41h, runo good. 1800. 8149 ·21594.
h .ot Mo • c 1
1982 C ev et
n
1r o.Phone 304-175-5040.
Fl
d
1983 Cad 11 lee · eetwoa
Brough 1m. 38,000 mUe1.
IOIIded with extrll, 304-372·
8390, Ripley. W.Va.
1983 Grand Prill. good cand.
hioh mllugO. $3.800.00. 304lf&amp;-3213.
1980 Ohllmobile Cutl••• Su·
promo. good cond, euoo.oo.
304-6715-4085.
'69 Ed1el •Dftlon Wligon. '69
Edell •dll'l. Make an aff•.
TNntmlqion for 305 engine.
30e.6715-3269.
1978 Ford F1 0 0, V-8 , 3 opaod.
good condition. PhaNt 3048715-19811.
1983 vw Rabbh OPI. 2 new
tlrn, 15 1peed, •xcellinl co..tl·
tton . t3,S50, PhaNt 304-1754090.

Trucks for Sale

19T7Ford F1 150pir*up. PS, PB•
eir, tncllw pcill, auto., V-8.
Good cond. •2300. Cell 814446-1909 or 446-9160.

Wreck .. 80 mo.W Colt 1300.

Phane304-896-3471 .

79

Motors Homes
lk Campers

'

1978 Rogue. Solf-con.,ned.
e46oo. Cell614-266-1235~

Services
81

Home
Improvements

-··

.ASEMENT
WATER PROORNG
Uncandhkmll llf•lme guaren1e&amp; l.oCIII ret.-.na- furnisiMtd.
FrM •••lmrrtes. Clll colect:
1·614-237·0488. dov or night.
AogersBasement
w..... prooflng.
S'NEEPEA Md .wing m~~ehlne
NJMir. PlftL 1ft d IUIII)ti•. Pi de
up Md deiNery, O.VIt Yacu.m
Cl .. ner, one half mil• yp
Gao,.. Creek Rd. Call 114430294.
Concmo Septic Ten'ka · 1000
gil., 11500gll. end .Jet Aeretlw.
OV"""'· Foctory bOin., rope~
oltop. AON EVANS ENTEII'PRISES, Jo-n, Ohio. 1-804
S37·952S.
AON EVANS ENTEAPRISI!S
Septic tonk pumping. 190 P•
Ioiii. Coll1·80o.537-IS28.

1 981 Dodge 21h lon dump. Cell
614-367-7267.
1'973 Chavy pickup 360. Run1
gocd. Call614-441-9287.

Fetty Tree Trimming, et.mi,
remo ... l. Ce11304-875-1331 . ~

Chl'ly 1h ton pick-up. Recently
reetored body, new paint. meny
niiN p~rb . 360, 4 aod. 81.000
mM ... Aun1 gr-. llh•pl Call
614-44S.7849alt"' I PM.
1 977 Ford, 4K4. ~ ton, 4 •peed
t111ns., 480 cubic Inch 1ngln•.
niiN 8 ply . . .. VtJtV gocd
candltton. 814-949-2237.
1918 Dodge Truck CUllom
0150. P8, PS. alr, .,to.. toppet'.
Coli 304-773-5707.

wv.

A ON'S APPUANCE SERVIC~
'"'"'" coil oonlldng OE. HOI
Point, w••hers, dryers
......... 304-576-2398.
•

•nd

POOL SERVICE

Will cl.., ON:• week, tuPPfy •II

73

Nt . . TreeTrlmmlng.,dStump

Vanalk

4

W.O.

1187 Chllily Cav•ll• W•gon.
Front whlll drive. 4 cvl.. auta.,
AC . E.:el running cond. Call
814-438542.

'71 Ford V•n. customized In and
out. t 1.200.00. 304-87157429.

good.
1975 Fard V1n. Run1
o a•
1
367
0460. CeiiS14·
"

1111Ch•oor2.2euto.. •••.P5. 74 Motorcvcles
P8 ..n roo!. AM·FM tape, n- r - - - - - - - - -tkO..
Emo llh•P· Tol&lt;o -Ill 1trodo. •4100. Cell 114-37~
2882 or 37~337.
1971 H•rlrf Davidian Supw
ONde.CoiiOoryHood,814-&lt;W61184 Ch...,y. Celebrity. Auto.. 3910.0.,. 448-3377 •nytlm•.
lit, P&amp; PI, AM-FM. niW' 11rn.
448-na8
8 PM.
Cl•en . T•kl p•rtl•l lrlda.

•It•

14100.
Colt 814-379-2182 or
3711-2337.

1983XL800R . bcol. cond. Cell
aftor
8 PM, 114-44S.4473.

1970 eo"'"'" · 041500. Good
oond. Coli 014-38S.I702 otter

DovldoonPenhood.
1911 1Wtoy
AeoentiY
...r.... lool. Aloo mloc

• PM.
1981 "'ntlac Bonn. arouehom.
full - · dl .... Coli 814•46-3044.
'
1971 Ford LlD. AC . · Au,.,
noo. Cetl 81 ,.. 317•78110 .

,.,.,. •30oo. ·814-949-2293
ovonlnga.
r
1887Kowoo•dKxFToootolour.
Rodeverylttle.Exo.U.atcondiMu
toll •2000 81411
lion.
·
·
7U·3188ofttr8:30p.m.
1911 100 Hondl Twfn. owrh~
d •·oollent
- corn"'" 101 0~ • ~
....... 814-8811- 308
At. 315CyolllllalpiCIMI:Itng
. Honda. Sua. ~ . Y.mlhe.
Pwt•a.Millii"R...... a. We luy
Nl ond , . d o - blkoo. 304171-4130.

1.:.;.::......:..:____,,...,.,.....,..,-=:
1171 c.-n 10001. 11.000
-~......... t70D.OO
or will " " ' for o• or truolt.

h-

J04-I 7 a.2 141 ·
1111 Yemeho710oo : · lo
ml• 4,888. ec oo nd, ... two
t1 ,000.00. Cell J04.
1112 Dodge
&amp;ool. 171-7373.
- · goadiiOriV. Runt goad. · 11• XR 200 R c1rt blka. goad
• - Coiii14-2&amp;S.11Jh~ oond,l710.00. 304-8711-2418

t

St•kl Llw n •n d Shr.., Service:
304-1715-3151 or 304-&amp;7S.
2903.
•

Roofing. ti'M\ing, b.t:hroom •nd
kitchen ln..,lotlono. eloctlcor;_
co.....,.,brlcl&lt; end blodl toying:
eetimoteo. 304-876-2440.

1979 Jeep CJ5. H1rdtop. 310
•nglne. C.ll 114-992-7214 ar
614-992·3224.

IWIPM.

:

1V:z ton Ford Truck. 1944 111ke
body. Good Condhion, Antique
ar working truck. •1 ,960.Sa ell
Slden Equip"*!t, Hl!nder'IDn,

1984 Ford EICOrt . Ol..el.
12200. Cell 814-44S.40110.

Cll..,....

ese-3802

chemlc:M, n•ll,.eldr ch~
rlf•.-.ce furnl1'-d. frl Stett
Aree 304-876-3633.

1975 ven equipped tor filhing,
twntlng. c~mplng. New brH-.
p•lnt job. 318 motor, held••·
0700. 614·992·8881 .

""t" • -.-....

Rot.lry or C1ble tOOl drHIInlif\

MostVIIftiiiComplatedume~
Pump IIIII 1nd •vice. 30~

1974 lntern~tlonll Rat bed
truck. niiW tirel-battl8ry. V·8,
Phon~ 304-773-5402 or 304773-9510

1984 Bulcl&lt; Cont"'V Umltod.
V· l. auto.. AC. nit, cruiM.
power ..... powtr tock1. AM·
FM-C.••·· 37,200 mile~. Clll
81+388-8240.

11MFordiTempo,Mito.. ......
12791. 1884 Eocon. 4
opd., •1 ....1189. John'o Aulo
111... IIIOw HoiiUy Inn·
ICMtalgl.
1177 Gnond - · Moko good
- · 1300. Coli 814-317·
7M7.
Vorlotr.
1-·
A..-;, elr.
f 114-171-21 26·
1117 Cll.. y 4 clr leden. pol••- duol..,ou11. •bull
, Coli
I, 17• • 424 .

TrM S. Stump rent&lt;MI. lhed•.
shnms. AaiiM. mulch. top d.
Itme, •edlng. Don' 1 Lin dfc••· 814-4459846.
•
RON' S Tel.vl1lon S•rvice.
HOu• clil1 on RCA, Clutl•r,
GE. SpiCiellng in Zenith . Call
304-176-2398 "' 814-448·
2464.
•

!----------:

-

1965 4 ..... 2.0 lkor C.Voli«
e n g1na•• IUtO. Cell 814--37e- ...
2 7 26

SVr.'

1985 Ch ... C.Voil• AS SW.
Red 6 eilvlr. 3&amp;,200 mlln.
Au&lt;o.. PS. PI, AM·FM. n~.
...... Ac. Ceiii14-3SB-8240.

-~·

Riiiit

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

71

6~~~iZ"9:":z.':l2'totlo. •IOO·

72

FlfrN·*25. P1rH ... &amp; compi• 111t-up.t20. Double rabbit
c..,_.110. Dog hou•• Ul
uch. Call 114-441-131!14.

46

,.,., 0:,'8'"'
C

Utld. rebJit 1H t'{PI8. Gtae'W'·
tee 30 diYt minimUm. Ptlcea
199 • up. Rebuilt . torq&amp;*l

1 977 Ford Gran.-d&amp; n lldl Plintlng; Interior • E..,lor.
wark. *460. Pho,. 304-5715- Free Htimlt8l. c.ll 114-444. 8344.
2135.

Transporl ali on

Pats for Sale

MBrchendise

~

Auto Parts
lk Accessories

BUDGET TRANSMISSION·

~~.-~Oc ..~un2.1NeR:,:•_a,~~,_t

304-8715- ' Whool-- ....... 3
- o d ~~~- . . . . . .. Cell
Rogn Moblty colllat, 1 -114I'JO.I111 .
.
Furnished Rooms
l------=-::-:-- Alto Sell. ,... to,... recordw.
F.-. .hlcl roam-111 I•CDnd Colla. tloctrlc IJI(Itr. chromo
hull 0..,1 for 20•1000
Avt.. Gllllpolll. • 128 1 mo. front
Ooyton rime. Coli . 814-371·
UtHMioo oold. Sinallmoloftero- 8 hP.M. 2517.
7
b .. h. Cell &lt;WII-44"11
'

=::·..

76

r.

304-1711-2083 ..
8889.

12x80, 2 b I J OOfli, Tretter for For renl 1 or ..ae doubl• wldl
llle. ln VInton , Qhlo. Prloe t,.ll.,,.....,.lot,3--2
nogocloblo. lt4-742-2080.
botho. AC, front-· aolltpo.
lil Ferry304-8~3087.
1981 Holly Pork. 14.S4. 2
bedroom, with IIW rmg and 2 bedroom trail• for rent.
&amp;Mld•Dh,ning. t11,900. 114- 304-8S2·2848.
192-1479.
Roome far .m·w.llt 011 month.
Apartmllf'lt
1974 Oucmpion 14:~1&amp; 101111 44
Stortlng 11 U20 o mo. llolllo
el.ctrk:. und•Ptnnlng 11nd plf·
for Rllf'lt
Hott~I14-&lt;WS.9110.
"""' fumlhlld. will oonoldlo
trode, U,IOO.OO. 304-17S.
2383.
2 8A . opto. I d_,., klloh.,. 46 Spece for Rent
.,..,. lurnlohod. w • ._Dryor
hoolt-up. ww c•pet, nMiv
poinl04 doalc. A-111'· InC.
Apt1. Clll 30,._17•&amp;104, or Trei•So•ca1 ml1outNolahbcNinaad Rd. e&amp;O Pll' month.
17S.S311 or 17S.7738.
c.t1 114-441-1140.
New co mot~~ fu rnl1h1d
.,...,_,.
lohonwlo
ctty. Adullt o..,. P•Wng. C111 COUNTRYM081LEHomoP•k.
NortilColi
of 814-tlt:&amp;" ' -·
-Aoua 33.
toolloro.
114-4303:111.
7471.
1171 Holly..... 2 bedr00010. BEAUTWULAPARTMENTIAT .:.:;;.::.
_______~
oentrM lllr. totll tfiCtric. c .. BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
~eo":."~:!'tr.ion":
304-17S.7171.
ION ESTATES, 138 Joolroon
roomo. olr end otoble. Millon.
Pllt•
from
•183
•
mo.
Wllk
to
2 b e - ..u. on lot ot llhop ond miM•. 114-448- W,Vo. Coli J04.nJ.II11.
- i d e . drlled woll ~h · pump, u.ooo.oo. 304-17S. 2188. E.O .H.
Spooiouo - · ho- ,..,. for
34811.
rent. l'emii'IPrlde MoblloHomo
Ferry. w. vo.
'04-17
73.
.
Ferma for Sale
33
'lnll•
lor - · I&lt;ICIIII
flloed.
Ono. J04-S7111071.
e horeo. Mo..oltomo~ail wol~
pond. VeryJII'Mie.ln . . , _
- - ..,~30d0 on Rt. 11
_ .. tl7,100. Coli 114-.._
2MJ b e l - 1:00Md 10:00
tton- . Vo. 114-44S.
1112.
•
47 .__nt_. to
,... -

1 8ft. fl berg! ... ba•t wh:h trail•
t32S. Phone 304-8711-7141
ev_,.lng~.

Cl ~..,...,.,.

Buy or Soli. R-lne Antlq..,,
1124 E. M•ln Streit. Pomeroy.
Houn: M,T,W 101.m. to &amp;p.m ..
lundl't' 1 to 8p.m. 814-8.9 2·
2528.

154 Misc.

811• boM ,8 ft , 115 -hp
Evenrude power trim trolling
motor, heiNy duty lrliler. 304175-2894.

Air condh:ioner for 11le. Also I~=::::~::::::==::;;;;::::::=::====~ ·
Aov-1 m~r~u.l typewrit• •nd ~
conwrted 11 low •
• 39.
m1ke-up mirror. 814-843·
St•n•d clutch•. pretluN
&amp;190.
71 Auto's For Sale
p1o10o •throw-outbo•lngo. "''
1~ 12 mos. Wlrrllnty. W•tuv
SURPLUS, DENIM, ARMY.
junli: tran1mllskn•. c.tf 30 ...
RENTAL CLOTHING. Comou·
1711-4230"' 014-37!1-2220.
ft:B:.':'Ien . bt.dt wNt• MitroRed Hot b1r01inll Drug de.e••'
cars. bolla. Plan• .epo'd. Sur·
UMd Tr1n1rn11t~ns. All ""-·
d othiM. Pol"icel. bustP
·~
rlua.
Your Ar... Buyer1
Guide. AIllyln..,eetod, 30•neu.•dwrtilingandlpedllti-.
11805-187-1000
&amp;:t. S-9800.
.....,.sguer •
No...ly T-llhloto. · - whol• 61 Fa"" Equ"-ment
tM. Coli 8 ......... 0988. •
ule. end rltlll. Sam So~
.,..
building wMI•ble.
•·

FurnltuNI

Antiques

Flbergl. . boll with 80 Hf
motor. Ellcell..t to 1ki W'tlh.
R•81 good aond. 'NIII ..U tot
11500. c.ll 814-44&amp;-4190. "

For •lr. Meytag mlnnie ... lhlr
•nd dry., small•lr condltkiMr
1r1d Empk'l 111 Mat•. 814-7 U·3 194 oftor Sp.m.

b-

28A. lurnlthod. A&lt;lultoonly. No
Muot Soll·1179 Uborly m.,...lo pliO, 322 Third Ave. Coli 814home. 3 BA ., 1 blth. undel'pl,.. 441-3748"' 2SS.1903.
nlng. Good condltkm. Alktng
181100, Neg. Coli 814-3S5 2 BR., unfurnl•hed mobil•
homl. PrM11 lot on At. 1581.
9~· ------~--~ AC. A&lt;luko only. Coli 814-44S.
New Moon mobil• home with 4$07 or 432802.
-~ndo . Stove. l'lfrlgenrtor,
dist.Msher, •lr condiUo~ •II 3 be*oam t•ll• for •nt on
nM c•pet EntiN hon,e In Storl• Run Rd., Mlddl~~part.
•c•Uant condition. MovinG:' 814-112· 7409.
Mul1 9otl. Cell 814-44S.3152
2 bedroom. fumlohod. 1100
or44S.2112.
d-k. f200 ...,t pluo '"lkloL
Mobile hame whh 2 room• 814-912-3122.
odclod on. Cotll814·742·3149.
2 bedroom mobil•home Mictdl•
14•70 Schulu. 28132 v-e. part. Ohkl. ..r.-a. and •curfront PGfCh, bock dodo, f .8 hv dopoolt ..... INd. 304-812·
3217 or 304-nl-1024.
...... Coii614-88U34S.

,._v

Herd rack meple hu-=h. dropl•.t
tlble .,.d chlire. Mlny other
good IIOmo. Choop. 78~ High
St.. Middloport.

New Wid uiBCI .,rnftu.. 111d

2 _ _.. lurniohod opt tt.v• rwf.-ence and IICUrMv'

18 ft: . Trl·...,ll bolt . 85 HP
MMcury motor.
at1111.
Coii 114-&lt;W59758.

For ••It: MIVtlfl Wri no•r
waeher-. ExceUent condition.
.. oo. 814-812·21511.

op...,.....

2 BR .. 2 blth mobile home for
...... Col1114-4411-2784.

. ....,. I . v...., low hows.
o21.eoo. Cetl 304-727-8e90.

K8nmoN Mltomltlcwtther. A· 1
condition. •150. Cell 814-387·
0322.

90 Dlv• •m• u caeh with
IIPprovect credtt. 3 Mil• out
lul•ll• Rd. Op1r1 9lcm to 5pm
Mon. thru 811. Ph. 814-4480322.

Vltlev

Boats end
Moton for Sale

28 ft:. Beyln« cruillf. 11M
wide be~m. .. l81ealranh:. gill.,,
cen'MI, etc . 3150 V· l lflg.,

1173 "'"' ,......_ ueo. eou~.
plena, aoad oond.. 1780. Cell
814-38S.8041.

e.v

,,

Misc. Merchandise

10" O.W.H delu• teble IIW.
CNftwo••• .-dW •m taW , 38..
wood ....... lhop bolt
.,..,. •We model b~nd ....
COhWIWioiel band...,, AJI equl·
p ... I n · -..... ~ .... Coli
114-3tS.I712.

appllcancel . Clll 814-44117&amp;72. Hours 9-1.
108 St••• St. , Porreroy. 2 013
Furnl•hld efficiency ept .· 3
bedrooms, c•petld. No re•oJ &amp; S FU AMTURE
roome Ia bMh. C.r,.. throughHou•·
Ro-VIIIogoii,
3BA
..
'
nlb41 off• refu•d. Phon1l 14out Private &amp;quilt. Aduttlonly.
1415-nA...
untun.-t.cl t2150. Cell 448- Coli 814-&lt;WS.4807 "' 448112·3725.
4 dr•er chll't. 148. 5 drewer
4418•ftar7PM.
ch_. U4.911. I pc, wooden
2802.
Hau• for lele in LangiYiftl.
dlnnette 1ets. 1111.16.
Ohio. Out of high Wit•, uldng Un llmllhld 8 room hou.. 1"'h Furi'IWied •rtment In town for
bath, o• fum~~ce. etorm win- ront. Coii814-44S.1423.
128.000. Cell ,, ... 742-274&amp;.
PICKENS
dow, g . .g&amp; Adults. No Pltl.
FURNITURE
Dep.
6
•el.
Ceiii14-448-2B43.
1n Aut ..nd. a rooma, blllh. nice
2 SA. opt. .JIIo Orondo Wotlf.
location, 1111111 buRt. No renting.
tr11h peid. 1225 1 mo. plu1 Dln•tt••· beda, bedding,
IHIIng or lind contracta. 114- 3 bedroom Rench Home, Itt· dopoo~ . Ceiii14-24S.I371.
dreaten, ch.t, aouch-. chalra,
ached g. .g&amp; Rutllnd lr81.
742-2680or 814-742-2007.
co.tte.end •bf• · Everv
12715 pw month. Phone 814- Luxurlaul Terl 1'ownhou11 . l1mpe.
cloy Spool.... 'il mMo out - i ·
742-3171.
For •I&amp; Rental Property. Du·
oportmento. Eloll... 2 looro. 2
clto. 30,4-17S.1410.
plp1n dtNII•an lot1ln Recine.
BR .• tul b•h u.......e. INMd•
Good monthly lnoome, Clo.e to Unllmilhed hou• fOf ..nt. 2 raarn downetelr., CA.. dis·
High prlall got you down?
1Chooll .,d churchll.
1D bedroom•. c•PM· Nlct end -her. dlt_,, ........ DIMk u1 o'-" for Low Priclt&gt; •
rent. Ow,. h• Jell~ Call d -. No lntlde - · Oopootlt trence. .,.... - - petlo,
Dutfhy FUrniture • Cor- E·Z
requited.
Colll14-992-3080.
114-9411-2800 or ofter lp.m.
crldfl with approiiM crldit.
pool. pl-ound. Ut._loo noc
814-9411-2228.
lnoUdod. Stortln' 01 1281 . . MolloMn Furnftu•814-441·
3 b - . fumlohed. Corpat. mo. C.ll 81 ..38 -7810.
7444.
Spocloue 3 -oom. 2 norv 1221 ""' montll pluo dlfiOolt.
IMJtM on I R 33. l.Dtl of do- - - ,..,_d. Celll14- Groclouo llvln~ 1 end 2 Umld Olk bldroom 1ut11 lnd
.,.., _
.... 01 Vlloge delll. ,.., ••orwllle aff• conSp8C&amp; C.nt•l • condtUonlnJ: 992-7843 or 814-982·1112.
clote to Melp .:hoala. 11
lktlrwl. C.n be...., et49150ell
M1nor .nd Rlveraide ANrt·
2 bldroom 1111ch etvll. buill In mente In MlddiiPort. FrOm
912·8313.
Drtvo.o..... IPM. CIII814-446•-en .ory nloo. 2 mlloofrom et82. Call 814-992-7717. 01&amp;1.
2 bedroom "A" tr1me. one•cre do-own Golllpollo, t271.00 EOH .
with nlc:. yerd ..d •hNe..,._, 8 plut cleDollt 1nd ref.-c•. cal
-•·
droporloo.
lompt,
Yl1 old, U2,000.00. 304-I?S. 304-1115-381111.
2 bock&gt;_, Apto, lor '""'·
m•l• ~bl•4
bedroom
aulte,
1161. 9 :00 om to 2:30pm.
Cerpeted. Nlco -ln9 L.,ndry chelrt. pu•a.wnmo\WI'. ohllrl.
Zbectroomhau•CampConle¥. hclltlel av•bla C.ll 81 ...
ch• of c~rw~... llmed-olk
Huntington, 4 bedrOom hou• 1110.00 ,_. month t2DO.OO 192·3711. EOH.
tlbl•8 chelre. m•ttretMI,
,.hh a-a•
Phone d•poelt, refr•nc•• required. 1:.:::..:.:...:.:....:.:.___-:-:-oprtngo, •-no .... -lghta •
.
AporiiiiWd ' fl&gt;f ...... 0221 I
304'1711-2178 "' 304-171· 304-676-2829.,
bendl. con 114-3t7·n,P"s.
1495.
montll. Dot&gt;ooll ""'ulted. 114ln Mldoloport Ohio, 3 bod&lt;oom 892·1724. Altar Spm ., 892·
Bolt. Nice. •4CJ: Cell814-448PriMnt ownlf' moVIng need to hone furnl1hed, 304·882· 1119.
1340.
2688.
ool~ 3
ftnlohod .._.
m~nt. at•chedprege.aMnld
Air condH:kJner, 7100 BTU
.... h 7S.131, 30487S.3030
ac
... oond .• *1150. Uvfna room
42 Mobile Hom•
or 1711-3431 .
.,._, excel. cond., *178. Cell
for Rent
814-44S.2310.
3 Mdroom. ~mllr'lt. n fiN
kitchen, central 81r, ,..,. out107waod fo..ng clllirs. Excel.
buHdlng. 2822 J•ffwwn Aw.
2 bedroom opto. ..doloport
cond . s. .. polroaii'('O&amp;tlvee.
....... 304-87s.nes.
018S.I181...-montll. 2end4 Coli 114-2415-1204.
bedroom hou- In Po'"""'''
wao. tZ00.122&amp; . . montll. AI
VIR1 FurntluN
32 Mobile Homes
~rtly turnllhed. Rlf.-ce ,..
Sofe &amp; ctc•r-1240 r ... llr
Ooy 114-II:Z.2381 W·
1898; oil bedclng •lo priced;
for Sals
Moble Hamee for l'lflt. C.ll quloM.
'
tnlngo • 14-982-8723.
uood II din-·•• priced;
114-446-0527.
r1ng~~: wa1hlr1; d,.,.r•: llfrlof bodroom oport..-ln Mlddl• •retor•; freea•rt; dlsh11;
12:1115 mobile home • land tor Furnlst.d 2 Br mobil• home, part. 1110. per month • • 1hllwt: color caniCII• tv's. AI
llle. Clo• to town . C.ll 814- AC. Locltld II K·K ·on Eutern u&lt;lhl•. Cell814-982·11d.
hem~ 11 dllcount prlcee. LIY•·
434841 .
- · t181 mo. t1'28 Oopooit.
~· .tw.¥1 welcome. OP•
Coil 814-256-1187.
APAR'NENTS. mobil a h dilly Mon.·S.t., 1·8, At. 141 In
1172WindlormobillhomeWtlh
hou ... Pt. Pl....ntandGIIIIpoCentifnMy· tA mll1 an Uncoln
1
llo. 81e.4458221.
2 c• g~e •d 8 acr•. Clll .Troll•lor Nnt. At.l88. 21R.
Pika.
814-44S.31511.
both. Coli 614-44S.I113.
614-38S.9312 bolo,. 1 PM.
Mo bit Home for s.. e ·"'h Wfl't
behwen Gallipolll • Dim-on
old At. 7 . Colt 114-44S.2300.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Ohio

Couch, twin Nd. din rwtte set.
Iorge .... ct.llr. """ .......
2 ........ cort. Cell 114-44S.
3224.

Frien.., Home P.tl• Na Ol*'-

.u.. ·-

' 1. Card of Thanks

--~--· ·------------·-··------

--~-

Aemovel, free 11tltn1111, 304671-7121 .

B2

Plumbing
lk Heating

CAATEA'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth •nd Pine
Oelllpollt, Ohla
Ftione 814-448·3888 or 614441·4477
'

84

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration
A•idtntill or COn'iti"Mn:iel wirIng. New •rvice or

,._i,.,

Ucen•d etfJCirici... Eatimlrt"

free. Aldenoor Electriclll. 304..
676-1786.
'
General Hauling :

B5

Dillard Wlitll' Strvlce: Poo11.'
Cl1terns. ·Weill. OeUwry Any·
lime . C.ll 114-441-7404-Na
Sund-,. Clllll.
J eO J w.... Sarvice. Swlmmln~
pools. cl1t1rns, welle. Ph. 814-!~
2411-9285.
'
R &amp; A Wattr S•Yice. Po alt.~
cle•rn1. wells . lmmedl•••~
1.000 or 2.000gelontdellwery 11
Cell 304-175-1370.
t
Paul Aupe, Jr. W•r S.,~ce, 1
Pools. cls•rnl. wen•. C.l1814--,
44S-3171.
•
W•tter~on' •

W•t•r H.uting~
rM•on•bl• ratM, lmmtdiM'
2.000 gollon dotllvory, olotorno,t
paG11, w.tl, n:. eel 304-157 ....
2111.
:

~:;::::;::;:::===:
87 UphalltlrY
!·
------------------ ~

MowJty'l Upllai-lna. .,.ngj
trl oounlyar• 23l"wt.-rh1best'
In fumltuN ullhallllrlng. Cell•
304- 178-4114 for fn• "
ntlrnnH.
#

I

•

••

•

�.
I

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sunday

Friday, July 8, 1988

'

Miracle treatments are worthless cures
Dear AID Ianden: My molher away from "miracle cures. "If Mom
was a wonderful w0111111 who had noiJOllt in for'alllhat prbqe, 1
worked ·hard. Unfortunaldy, she she milht have bien one of the SO
was ~
wilh far-out reliaions peu::eut who heat cancer. -SAD IN
and mirade cures. AI • 43 Mom ARIZONA
had a stroke that left ber plll'llyad
DEAR ARIZONA: You told them
on one lide. Her "hobby" bepn to better ihan I could. What a ~
. ANNWmaila
ronsume her lik..and it proWid to that billions of dollan are siKMled
he her undoing.
out to quacks for worthls "cures"
o.IINif 5
Mom walked wilh a cant and . lhat not only don't work, but they
df1811d one foot. but she typed well waste Vlluable time that rould be
wilh her IIOOd hand. Every week she spent pursuing legitimate treat·
· !iybq, "No good deed will
sent for do2ms of herbs, roocs, ment.
go unpunlshed."
crystals and COIIIpOIIJlds lhal prom·
I have delllt wilh this subject in
Deu Ami Laaders: Please print
iaed to make her well. My dad was the column before and am happy to 110me pat adv:l~ lhat brides will
devoted to her, and they Wl!llt to do so qaia. Unfortunately, when bias you for:
. Mexioo seYeral times to visit health people beoome desperate tbey will
Don't bring a wedding gift to the
spas and confer with "bealeft"
try anything. And this is why the Wllllclina or to the reception. They
In 1983, M- developed breast charlatans do 110 well.
are a nuislnce to tbe bride and her
can~r. She refuaed to see a medial!
Deu Ami l•aden: I have- a family. Someone must lu:cp an eye
doctor and reaamed to Mexico for dllferent view on a niCtllt column
the "bladherry powder cure." A that - headed "Never lend money on thole lifts and take them home.
d!ain-smoJtina "nune" wbo wore to relatiws." My advire is, "Never USU8lly it's the bride's m~er, and
dirty jeans pve Molher treatments.
borrow money from.rel4tlws."
· Lord knows she has a zillion other
Several months later it was apWhen my wife and 1 were first thiJip to lhinlt about.
Also, Ann, cards (let lost and it's'
parent lhat Mom wasn't ll!(tiDg any married we borrowed S500 from
better, 110 Dad brouplt her home. her plrents. We paid apinst that a lllllior heiulache. Thanks for
She had drunk Jlli)Jons of aloe vera Joan every month, wilh interest. as passing the word, doll. - MON·
juire and had dozens of blackberry qreecl. Meanwhile we went with- TANAFAN ·
powder treatments. By the time she out a pat many lhiDp 110 lhat we
DEAR MONTANA: Good advice.
You're the doll, for writing.
aareed to 110 to a felitilm!te
could honor our rommitment.
clinic to receive ronventional treat·
The loan was paid back. The
Planning a wedding? What's
ment, it was too late.
debt, however, never aemed to 1JC1 rilht? What's wrong? "The Ann
Please tell your readers to stay paid. Every time we saw her Llutd6s Guide/Of' Brides" will relieve
parents, em:y oonvenation hepn ~ IIIJXidy. To rtre1vt a ropy, SA~nd
wilhareminderof"howwehelped SJ plw a No, 10, self-addressed,
you out when you were up apinBt st11mped enmope (45 cents post~~ge)
New by-laws were read by it."
Esther Srilllh at the Tuesday
Believe me, Ann, 1 wish we had to Ann l.illldm, P.O. Box 11562, Chit

....

PARADING- Belh GoodDUe, JeaDiferYouq,
and Cryslal.JolmsoD were amoqllle 'DayToiToe
Tappin' Dan,~!! Team which performed allbe July
-

' parade Ia Point Pleasanl. Kelly Rizer Is
lnstruclor.
.

;·

~

.... """

:Myers celebrate 50th anniversary

Two SBC graduates .

More than a hundred guests
the golden wedding
anniversary honoring Donald
and Paullne Myers at lheir Long
~ttom home. .
Hosting the celebration were
the couple's three children and
lhelr famllles. Bill and Sherry
Myers, David, Debbie and
peann, Crystal Lake, Ill.; Bob
and Sue Ann Webster and Kama
Sue Stromp, Belton, Texas; Nola
Young, DavidandDapbneYoung
and Crystal, and Mikel Young,
all of Long Bottom.
A yellow floral arrangement
centering lhe dining room table
was flanked with yellow tapers In
crystal holders. The three tiered
anniversary cake was decorated
with white and yellow roses and
served with punch from a crystal
bowl surrounded by flowers,
mints and nuts. The couple's
nieces, Mrs. Jackie Frost, Mrs.
Joy Russell, ·Ms. Jane Ann
1\.lderman, and Mrs. Susan Fast
presided at the refreshment
table. Attending were Marlha Mora.,
Dale and Jane Russell, Jeffrey
and Denise Russell, Jane Ann
and Sarah Alderman, Doug and
'Susan Fast, Tom and Marge ·
Smurr. Columbus; Jerry and
Earlene O'Neal, Cincinnati, John
and Sarah Moore, Newark.
Local guests at the observance
were Lawrence and Mary VIrginia Stewart, David, Joy, Eric,
Ryan and Mary Russell, Woodrow and Kathryn Mora, Jackie
and Debbie Frost, George,
Paula, Heather and Andy Mo'ra,
Denise and Jennifer Mora, Greg,
Janet,. Ashley 'and Juley Eblin,
Judy Mora, Larry Bunger,
Esther Frecker, Margaret Bailey, Goody Schaekel, Helen Burkhart, John and Jessie Iliff, Maye
Mora, Donald and Maidie Mora,
Frank and Mae Dorst, Maurita
and Roy Miller, John and Marjo-

Two Meigs County residents
were among the spring quarter
graduates from tbeSoulheastern
Business College held on June 13
In Jackson. They are Nancy R.
Kimes with a secretarial diplomas and Tamml Lynn Taylor
with an associate degree in
executive secretarial work.

rle Brewer, Geneva and Clay
Tuttle, Bill and Flo Grueser, Joe
and Eloise Connolly, Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Furbee, Bill and
Hazel McKelvey, Erma Cleland,
Marcia Keller, George and Clara
Baer, Walter Brown, Jo Ann
Kautz, Wallace and Muriel Brad·
ford, Denver and Grace Weber,

~ttended

Ronald
EllaThelma
Osborne,
Art
and
Adaand
Nease,
Hayes
Lucille Smith, Mrs. Warre~
Pickens, Rulh Anne Balderson,
Marlene Putman, Dora Crispin,
Christy Lambert.
The hostesses entertained with ·
a cookout In lhe evening for lhe
Immediate families IDcluding the
sisters and brolher of Mrs. Myers
and lhelr families.
Visiting later In lhe week with
the Myers were Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Hannum, Mr. and Mrs
Harllss Frank, Mrs . Mae
McPeek, Mrs . Ada blssell, Mary
Andrews, Eileen Swan, Eslher
Bakey, Garnet Hensley, and
Marte Lawrence.

Honor roll

MEIGS IUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL
HONOR ROLL:
The slxlh six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Meigs
Junior High School bas been
announced. Making a grade of B
or above lnalllhelrsubjects to be
named to lhe roll were:
Seventh Grade: Debbie Alkire,
Larry Ashburn, John Bentley,
Abby Blake, Linda Chapman,
Jennifer Chasteen, Verna Compston, Jay Cremeans, Kelly
Doidge, Elizabeth Downie,
Heather FranckoWiak, Allison
Gannaway, Brian Hoffman, Tanya Hudnall, Randall Johnston,
Lori Kelly, Charles King, Penny
Klein, Kevin Lambert, Lorena
Oiler, VIncent Reiber, Tina.
Smith, Rusty Triplett, Katrina
Turner. Holly Williams, Todd
Workman, Michelle Young,
Yvette Young.
1
Eighth Grade: Barbie Anderson,
Trtcta Baer, Frank make, Juue
Buck, Misty Butcher, Beth
'
Clark, Dodie Cleland. Sharla
' The Big Bend Civltan Club of Cooper, Mary Compston, Ryan
Pomeroy has been named an Cowan. Klm Dickson, Jason
•'•Honor Club'' and President LeE' Dowell, Stacey Fry, Tara Gerl·
Miller has been designated as a ach, Kim Hanning, Amy Herald,
April Hudson, Darin Loga.n,
' 'Dis tlnguished President.'.'
Susan
Love, Joe McElroy, John
: Honor .Club is the highest
Moore,
Kevin Musser, Mall
~elf-judged award offered by
·Parsons,
Roger Partlow, Jeremy
Ci:lvltan International to its more
Phalta,
Melanie
Qualls, Kyle
than 1,100 clubs In seven counSinclair,
Phllllp
.
S
mtih, Mike
l)'tes.. The president of each
Thomas,
Bobby
Vance,
Robby
Honor Club . Is recognized for
Wyatt.
leadership with a Distinguished
President Award.
. The Big Bend Club was recognized on the basis of its service to
~he, community, · knowledge of
The Loren Lee family reunion ·
community Issues and opportuniwas
held at lhe Pagevllle town lot
ties, excellence In club managerecently.
c
ment and club fellowship. The
AtP!ndlng were Loren and
club met lhe highest standards
Mildred
Lee, Angela Lee, Thoestablished by Clvltan Internamas
and
Janett Lee and sons,
tional an achieving Honor Club
Thomas
and
Jonathon, Iva Dalstatus.
ton, Amanda and Gwendolyn ·
Savage, Mary and Sarah Lee,
Tim Haning, and Jessie Reeves,
all of Albany; Paul and Cathy
, Eight fathers were honored al Lee and son, ·Darrell of Johna recent meeting of the Ladles stown; Lawrence and Flora
~ellowsblp of lhe Meigs County
Bailey, Barbara Donohue, ThoGhurches of Christ. The meetlag mas and Anita Kennedy and
was held at lheDexterChurcbol children, Julla, Jonathon and
Ghrist.
·
Jacob, Roberta Rardin .• and
· The evening•~&lt; welcome was daughter, Tonya Hudnall, all of
given by Rulh Underwood, of the PomerOY, Route 4.
host church. The opening prayer
Danny Dalton, Athens;- Ray·
was given by Eleanor Hoover. mond and Pamela Harleiss and
l;'tenee Stewart of Bradford pres- aons, Tlmolhy, Fort Pierce, F1a.;
ented the devotions.
Lester and Shirley w... Warren
: President Jeannette Carter led (Buster) HaniDg, Vlfllnla Un·
the bui!lness section of the derwood, all of M'M'eptv1; EdJ11eetlng. Mary Nelson spoke on ward and Charlotte LM, Aru.r
fathers aad families.
Step, Wendy Price, all of Alexan' Refreshments were served In dra; Bruce and Lorena Brlckles,
lbe social rooms of the church Cbllllrolhe; Katrina Donohue,
llr!tb Lucllle Jacobs aaking the Columbus, and Everette George,
ble~~~U.. on ihe food.
VInton.

B'g Bend named .
'Honor Club'

Lees hold reunion

·Fathers honored

~

•

the

\I

I

~-

.

New by-laws read .

. meeting of Chester Council 323,
Daughters of America, held at
lhe ball.
Thelma White; councilor, presided with pledges, national
anlhem, Lord's Prayer ' and
scripture openfni the meeting. It
was noted that Doris Koenig Is
hospitalized.
Past Councilors Club will meet
at lhe home of Sadie Trussell on

starved rather lhan borrow that
piddlyamountofmoney.Pieasetell
your riladers the other side of the
story. You never get to know
oeople until you are in their debt
My llllvice is to borrow from a
..___,_
__...
.
do
"""" or 8 ......, uruon. or
without- j.L IN TEXAS
DEARJ.L: Ewu thoulh il1101111ds
if you haYe a le8ltimale beef

~.

IU. 6061 UJS62.

COLONY THEATRE

FRI.THRU THUR.
'

PAUL HOGAN

IN

CROCODILE DUNDEE

PG

1~~s~~'/r'~N~!~/~~~:3:0~P.:•~·__
r_ _.___________iJ~u~ly~13~,~6~:
~30~p.~m~.~wi~th~portlu:c:k~_;;~~yo~u~r~in~-la;ww;_~(~W;me~on;_l__:o:IE:EV~E:~JN~
refreshments
to be served.
I'm reminded of lhat old

, ·.

• •

_
_
---

-r

All-Stars and hometown favoriies

Magical

Ann
Landers

'

50 cents

mmtster

FFA banquet recognized members
Page 0-1

B-1

In Our Town

By Dick Thomas Page A-5

C-1

•

Inside:
Along the River ........ B-1-8
Buslaeso·Farm ...... ... D-1·8
Comic• ... .... ............ Insert
Clui!lfleds ................ D-2·7
Dealhi .... ........ ............ A-4
Sports ......... .. .. ......... C·1:6

-

Mostly sunny. IDgns In low
IOOs.

•

tmts -

.'
Vol. 23 No. 22
Copyrighted 1988

12 Sections. 68 Pages
A Multimedil. Inc. Newapeper

Middleport-Pomeroy Gallipolis Point Pleasant, July 10, 1988 ·

Rush hour c()ngestion
halts moving ·traffic
By. G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Times-Sentinel S&amp;aff
GALLIPOLIS - Long lines of
cars as far as the eye can 'see
have caused aggravation.s each
day f()r Galltpolitans and other
local residents who work in
Galllpolls traveling S.R. 7 from
Eastern Avenue to the Silver
Bridge Plaza lntersectlondui'lng
the lunch and rush hours.
The third lane, opened last fall,
has kept vehicles turning left out
of . the way of forward-moving
trafflc. Despltelheopentngoftbe

third lane, rush hour congestion
has not been thinned for through
traffic.
The lblrd lane _
''The three lanes have helped,
but at (the intersection of Upper
River Road and the road leading
from the pla"za) Bob Evans we
run out of three lanes," said Joe
M. Owen, chief of the Calllpolls
Pollee Department. "Part of the ·
problem could be. either the
timing of the traffic lights (at this
Intersection) or the heavy traflie," Owen added.

" I feel three lanes are . adequate for right now, tut In the
future four or even five lanes
may be needed,' ' said Joseph
Leach. District 10 deputy direc·
tor for .the Ohio Department of
Transportation ofllce In Marietta. "If the mall'ts bulltln that
area ," · he said, referring to the
proposed mall to be bQ!lt on the
grounds of the old Holzer Airport, ·
"It will be up to the city to ask us
for help if It needs it.
"The city may need a traffic
consultant If that goes through, "
----~~
-~~~~ Leach said, referring to the
Increase of traffic that will result
from shoppers traveling from
Gallla County as well as from
Meigs and Jackson Counties in
STILL BACKED UP - Even after the great
~ouulted with a traffic slgnallzallon engl.neer
Ohio and Mason County, W.Va.
mass
of
alter-work
rush·bour
traffic
bas
passed
from Columbus to help solve the problem of
·'There should be slx lanes through
the
lntersecllon
of
S.R.
7
and
the
Silver
congested traffic during the lunch hour and
three up and three down - on '
Bridge
Piaza
In
Gallipolis,
traffic
Is
stlll
backed
quilting lime. (Times-sentinel photo by G.
Eastern Avenue, " said PatrolSpencer
Osborne)
·
allhe
l!lterae~t loa, seen at lhe series olllghtsln
up
man Tony Haner of the Gallipolis
the
background.
City
Manager
Dale
!man
bas.
Pollee Department. ·'Because of
two extra cycles on the traffic
light at the Intersection leading
into Bob Evans (and Into the
plaza), traffic gets backed up all
the way to K-Mart during the
'lunch hour and when people get
off work, which Is from 4 to 5:30
p.m .," he added.
However, the situation hasn't
been all bad. ' 'Mornlngsaren'tas
By NANCY YOACHAM
District 10, Marietta, and Bob tape to get the access road to his
bad, though , and the number of" ·..---,_ Times-Sentinel Staff
_Boyd, of tile Federal Highway nursery for over 20 years. At the
accidents are about the same as
DARWIN - It would appear Admlnistratloll ln Columbus, time the limited access Route 33
belore--the addition of the third th ~t. Jll~ ~Dh~- ~l)llj!I'Jnlll.l!t of met Wednesday wlth Carper . .lhe-- 11l..urlarie was constructj!d lh the
lane,'' Haner said.
Transportation can do things ln Meigs County Commissioners, mid-1960's, he took the county
How many
Athens County that cannot be Meigs Co~nty Engineer Phlllp and the state to Meigs County
The greatest number of vehi- done In Meigs County.
Roberis arid Tom Closser of the Common Pleas Court to gain
cles seen passing at any one spot
In Athens County, between · Buckeye Hills· Hocking Valley direct access to his ptoperty , and
on that road was 1,447 at the Albany and Athens, on the new .· Regional Development District.
lost the case.
Intersection of K-Martfrom noon section of Route 50, is an access
At the meetlag, which was held
Soon after the four lane's conto 1 p.m. on May 11. whlle at lhe road from the highway to a at the southbound roa,dside park structlon, which cut Carper off
on Route 33, Carper received the from the main traffic flow
Intersection of the S!l'ver Bridge private property.
Plaza , 736 were counted from 4 to
Yet in Meigs County, the Ohio news that his proposed access through the county, Ills nursery
5 p.m. on May 9, said Paul Department of Transportation road Is no go, even though the business dropped off and he was
DISCUSSES TIMING - Ill IJI• Taylor, Gallipolis Street
ODOToperallons engi- has once again told local bust- commissioners have a signed forced to cut back on employees .
Departmeol woliler, holll .a
a neat ollhe automatic lraffl~ Hoffman,
neer from Marietta.
nessman George Carper lhat he document from Bernard Hurst,
Then in 1985, through Buckeye
signal conlroUer as he and City Manager Dale lman dlseuss ways
In splte of the high numbers of cannot have an access road from · ODOT's head man in Columbus, Hills-Hocking Valley Regional
to cbaage the timing ollhe traiBc lights at the Intersection of S.R. 7
Route 33 to his nursery, which dated March 21, 1988, approving Development District, Carper
vehicles traveling on Eastern
and the Silver Bridge Plaza. Sheet Department worker Richard
Avenue and Upper River Road ln overlooks the Route 33 fourlane. a resolution by the cou11ty com- was able to obtain a $56.000
Niday w~hes at right. (Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spencer
Continued on A.:I
Howard · Gifford, of ODOT missioners to proceed with the Appalachian Regional CommlsOsbome) Carper access road project.
slon grant to fund part of the
It is thebellefofCommissloner costs to build the access road,
Richard Jones that Gifford and pending ODOT approval. Carper
Boyd "had their minds made up" himself was putting up the
a bout nixing the Carper project re.malning 25 percent of thE,
before they even attended the construction costs In the amount
unit which operates thtough the Phone Care friend needs help"
Citizens Center.
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
It
then
moves
to
the
ten
times.
meeting
on Wednesday.
of $14,000. With the access road,
The Council Is considering telephone and by electricity.
According
Tlmes-SeniiDel Slaff
to
Jones'
report
of
Carper had anticipated expandnumber
giving
the
same
second
Five numbers of friends, neigh'purchasing
several
unjts
which
POMEROY - Phone Care, an
bors and family members are message, then on to the lhird, the meeting, Gifford and Boyd lng his nursery business and
emergency communications sys- would be made available to programmed into the base unit fourth and fifth . The numbers are said lhat parts of Route 33, hiring new employees to assist
senior citizens who llve alone and
tems, was demonstrated by
called over and over with the including the Meigs County four- with the operation.
have
health problems on a and by touching a bu t.ton on the message until someone arrives lane, are now under the jurlsdic- . Then began ODOT' s on again,
Alison Greene, communications
remote
transmitter
which
is
to
be
monthly rental fee basis.
consultant, St. Ann's ;Hospital,
at the home and turns off the base t!on of the Federal Highway off again cycle, w'btch has kept
Accordl!li to Greene, the two- kept with the person at all times, unit.
, , Columbus, for the Meigs County
Administration because federal
lhe project In limbo for three
,
the· unit activates . It automati• Council. on Aging and Its Advi- part Phone' Care equipment can cally dials the first number and
money financed the widening years. During that time, conGree~~e explained that somebe a lifesaver. It consists of a
sory Board at a meeting held
times this results In more than and paving project current.ly struction plans for the project
remote
transmitter and a base repeats the message "Your . one ~rson responding, but it underway on Route 33. Appar- have been submitted to the s tate&gt;
Friday afternoon at the Senior
gives some securltytotheelderly enlly, FHA regulations will not for approval , revised , and subor Ill person when he or she allow construction of an access . mttted aga.in.
But this spring, when the
knows that at least one"of his or road such as lhe one proposed by
Carper,
Jones
said.
commissioners
received the apl)er five responders will be
available and come to give help.
Another reason given by Gif- proval of their resolution by
She said that the system helps ford aM Boyd fornotbulldlngthe ODOT Dir ector Hurst, and an
Individuals remain independent, access road, according to Engl- announcement from U.S. Congiving them the freedom and neerRoberts' accountofWednes- gressman Clarence Miller' s offlexlb111ty to be mobile around day's meeting, Is because the flee of the pending release of
their homes and yards. Greene access would lle direct"' across ARC fund s for project. the
says they always suggest that the the fourlane from the 1 . np that commissioners thought the acbattery operated transmitter leads to the Route 33 sou.'lbound cess road wa s home fr ee.
which operates within 150 feet of park, and this might create
Not so.
the base unit be worn around the contusion for motorists.
The commissioners and Roc
neck or carried in a pocket so that
Carper has been fighting red
Continued on A..'I
it's always available.
Currently four units owned by r-----------,.~~----------------------------~ ~
St. Ann's Hospital are In use In
Meigs County. The units were
Installed for a $15 ' fee and the
users pay $15 a month rent.
Greene said that should lhe
Meigs County Council on Aging
decide to purchase units and
begin a rental program here then
the units currently In use would
be sold to the Council.
Cost of the units to the Council
would be $498 each, one to nine
units; $428 each, 10 to 24 unit; or
$385 each, 25 to 49 units. Personnel from St. Ann's Hospital would
train volunteers here to install
the units.
Rental charges, according to
Greene, are not covered by
Medicare or Medicaid nor by
most Insurance poliCies.
Ways of funding ·the purchase
P0881BLY CONFUSING- Slate aad federal hlgbwB)' officials
of
units was discussed with the
Jl'rldaj
Here Exa Mae Chrllltlaa,
feel
lbal aa aeeeuroad tor Route latoCJII'per'sNunery mlghl be
Couoll member, and her hullband, Louie
posslblllty of a lease-purchase
conflllllll
lo. mo&amp;eriii&amp;IJ, becau• the access would be directly
a.rtallan,lake a cl-r look al one of the ua1t1and · agreement by the Council with
aer•s
from
the IOUt:hbouad Route 13 roadlllde park.
lla remote ll'IUlllllltler.
St. Ann's to be considered.

ODOT refuses access road
·to Meigs ~ County nur8ery

Phone Care demonstrated for elderly

after-•·

·,

••

,,

"'

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