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Ohio Lottery
Meigs County

Daily Number

Fair magazine t~

825

Pick 4
9479
Partly cloudy, humid, low In
mid '/Os. Saturday, hazy, hoi,
humid, high In mid 90s.

•

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enttne
3 Sections, 66 P1981

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Friday, Aug. 12. 1988

Wholesale prices up
0.5 . percent in July

Page fll-1988 Melp County Fair Edlllon

I
"

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REGISTERS FOR FAIR ENTRY - Mrs.
Darlene Hayes of the Rock Springs Road registers
open farm crop entries at tile secretary's oltlce on
tbe Rock. Sprlnp Fairgrounds as her daughter,

WASHINGTON (UP!)
Wholesale prices for food and
energy products held their own In
July but higher costs for other
consumer products sent overall
wholesale prices· up 0.5 percent,
the Bureau of Labor Statistics
said today.
• . Food prices, expected to shoot
up because of the worst drought
In 50 years blasting farrritng
states, rose 0.4 percent In July
but that was much less than the
0.9 percent and 1.1 percent
advances In May and June.
Pork prices were down 10
percent and beef was also down,
as some drought-stricken
. farmers sent their stock to early
slaughter rather than pay the
high cost of feed.
But costs of other consumers
goods such as tobacco, drug store
Items, clothes and footwear rose
substantially, sending the overall Index for finished wholesale
Lori, looks on. Reglstra&amp;lon of all open class
goods up0.5 percent after adjustentries lor the lZith annual Melp Coa101ty Fair
ment for seasonal variations, the
took place at the secretary's office both Thursday
bureau said.
and Friday afternoon.

Reagan joins veep to

Officials

~L~ ~!!~}~~'''"'

.

-·

eMU SIC
•HARNESS RACING
•4-H EXHIBITS

•CONTESTS and RIDES
•FLORAL. DISPLAYS

•GRANDSTAND ENTERTAINMENT
•FARM ANIMALS
•DEMOLITION DERBY

~~A Proud Supporter of The Meigs County Fair For Over 80 Years"

Fa
TUPPERS PLAINS
985-3385

Farmers
'
Bank

Your Community Owned Bank

Member FDIC

POMEROY
992-2136
.-·

26 Cents

- A Multimedia Inc. Newtpaper

UPI Wldlie Houe Reporter
wife session at the White House
. ·W41HINGTON (UP I) ·- Pres. Thursday produced no public
·ldent''R'eagan,ileinonstrattng'lils · strategy details, and Bush met
personal support for Vice Prest, subsequently on Capitol Htll with
dent George Bush, Invited his top about 100 black supporters.
poUtical appOintees to a rally
Afterwards, he told a news
today as a prelude to next week's conference that despite the fact
Rep u b II c a n N a t 1 0 n a 1 of black voters backing DemoConvention.
crats overwhelmingly, "we are
About 150 Cabinet members not writing anybody off this
and to!N'anktng administration year." .
·
officials were expected In the
"We've got to make clear that
Executive Office Building audit. the Republican Party Is the party
prlum for the second straight day of Inclusion and it ts pretty
of Reagan raising tbe Bush difficult bec~use the other party
· banner within the White House promises and then takes people
complex.
for granted over and over
Thursday, the president broa- again," Bush said of \the
dened his weekly lunch with his . Democrats.
'
loyal deputy to Include their
Though Democratic prestden·
wives for a soup-and-salad dis- tiai nominee Michael Dukakls
cusslon of the vice president's has atleasttemporary unity with
rough-and-tumble battle ahead former rival Jesse Jackson, It ts
for the nation's top job.
believed that many of the black
There was speculation that the preacher's followers are still
high-profile togetherness was upset tliat he was snubbed in
designed to quell reports about Dukakls's choice of Texas Sen.
Republicans not wanting Bush to Lloyd Bentsen as a running
be upstaged by Reagan during mate.
next week's extravaganza tn
Asked directly about the treatNew' Orleans.
ment of Jackson by the DemoThe president and vice pres!- crats, Bush skirted the Issue
dent, aware of the need for Thursday, noting only that he
proper perception, have decided "picked up a current" from the
to stage a brief ceremonial black leaders that minorities
greeting at the Belle Chasse now have "new opportunity."
NavalA!rStatlontnNewOrleans
He said the black leaders told
Tuesday morning, the day Rea- him that In order to succeed, he
gan departs for his rancl) tn must "show who I really am and
California and Bush arrives In overcome some perceptions out
the convention city.
there" that the GOP does not
Reagan files to New Orleans represent the best Interests of
Sunday and gets his big moment minorities.
·
at the conclave Monday night,
Bush refused to get into a
when an updated film documen- dispute that arose tn New Or- .
tary about him is shown before he leans Wednesday when an organ·
addresses the GOP delegates tn lzation of mostly black Republlthe Superdome. Tbe first lady cans unsuccessfully tried to
also will make a solo appearance expand the Republican National
on the stage before bet husband Committee to give blacks a
speaks.
.
better shot at representation.
Bush will get his party's
"I'm not sure the size of the
nomination Wednesday and will RNC really relates to what we're
accept It the next night as talking about here In terms of
Re'IJan watches on television at opportunity for people across
bls beloved mountaintop ranch. this country," Bush said. "I'm
Wtthoneweek togo before that
Continued on page 10

Local briefs--Tof1Ultoes reported stolen
The then of 64 buckets of tomatoes from a wagon tn the Apple ·
Grove area Is under Investigation by the Melga County Sheriffs
Department.
Report or the theft was made to the sheriffs department
Wednesday morning. Owner Lester Roush said that the
tomatOI!II bad been picked and were ready for packing for a
special order.

Block party slated Sept. 10
Plana are being made for the Sept.10 Mlddleporl block party.
Anyone lntereated In reservin1 space Is asked to contact
Theresa Kennedy ·at 992-6494, daytime, 992-2026 after 5 p.m.
Continued on page 10

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say
trash
no threat

Officials say food abundant
despite grain loss in U. S. ·
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
•United States will have plenty of
' fooei ·(Ofeetl its citizens ;md to sell
to foreign customers even though
the unrelenting drought Is Iikelv
to chop grain production.
nearly one-third. the government
says.
In addition, the drought should
add only one percentage point to
the Consumer Price Index fat
food this year and only two points
next year, according to the
Agriculture Department. Each
point costs a family of four an
estimated $50.
The aepartment, in Its most
accurate measurement yet of
drought damage, said Thursday
that grain production this year

,
~
,
ATLANTIC BEACH, N.C.
(UPI) - Medical waste that
washed ashore In North Carolina
this week poses no health hazard,
but more trash, Including a
surgical mask with a warning
label, turned up on a South
Carolina Island, officials said.
State and Navy officials said
Thursday the •North Carolina
garbage was not Infectious and
wouldn't harm beachgoers. Two
garbage bags of needles, rubber
gloves, medication· and IV bags
traced to the Navy washed
ashore In Atlantic Beach two
days earlier.
"All the debris found to date Is
not contagious, not a health
hazard," said Steve Gibson,
director of the environmental
and safety office of the Navy In
• •
Norfolk, Va. "The hazard. other
than stepping on a loaded syr·
!nge, Is nil."
CLEVELAND (UPI) - High
More than 100 Navy personnel
combedthebeachesasecondday temperatures often mean high
Thursday gathering the refuse tempers, bu twhen the heat rises
to a certain level violence tends
trac~ to the USS Newport and
USSNassau. A Navy spokesman, to level off, a pychlatr!st says.
"Violence Is caused by many,
admitting the Navy was embar·
many
things, but I think It's kind·
rassed by the Incident, said the
of
Interesting
that most people,
beaches would be spotless for
when
It
gets
up
to 85, 90 and 95_
weekend sunbathers.
degrees,
tend
to
become withBut medical debris -a surgtcal mask and what appeared to drawn, trying to get out of the
be part of a catheter- was found beat," Dr. Jeffrey C. Hutzler of
the Cleveland Clinic's Depart·
on a beach at Sullivan Island,
S.C., Thursday evening, pollee m8llt of Psychiatry said
·
Lt. Daniel Howard said, adding Thui-sday.
"Interestingly though, after
that he did not know whether It
came from the two Navy vessels. the range of 85 degrees, people
tend to be less aggressive. From
"The mask has writing on It 85
on up, there's actually a
the word ·'warning,"' Howard
In the amount of agdecrease
said. "The rest Is covered with
gression
that
occurs," be said.
mud and I'm not going to touch It
Hutzler
cited
a study of riots
to see what ~lse It says."
Navy spokesman Lt. Cmdr. from 1967 to 1971 that showed
Steve Burnett said he had not violence peaked when the
been contacted about the debris temperatures were In the 80s.
on the barrier Island In Charles- · The study found eight riots on ·
c1ays when It was 71 to 75 degrees,
ton Harbor.
Large amounts of medical 17 when the temperature was
waste began washing up on 76-80, 22 when It was 81-85. 19
Northeas11!rn shores in July,
when It was 86-90, eight when It
prompting the closing of numerwas 91-95, three when It was
ous beaches around New York 96-100 and none when It was 101 or
City, Massachusetts, Rhode Isabove.
However, the sludy did not
land and Connectlcu t.
Tbe Ohio Environmental Pro- take Into account the percentage
tection Agency began a criminal of 90-degree days tn the time
Investigation Into tbe dumping of period compared with 80- or
about 200 syrlnaes, some stUI 70-degree days, he said.
conia!ning blood, and other medl·
"But it supports more basic
research with animals and peocal wa•tes found this week on a
private Lake Erie beach In the ple that you feel unpleasant with
exclusive Cleveland suburb of temperatures tn the 80s, "
Hutzler said.
Bratenabl.
In Baltimore's Patapaco River
Hutzler said this summer
158 syrynges were found last would be perfect for another
week, and tests showed one study, since the temperature bas
ayrtqe contained blood tainted been above 90 deg1 ees across
with the AIDS virus. BPI health Ohio far much more than usual.
There are normally only seven
officials aid chances of catching
the virus from the needle were 90-degree days In Youngstown
unear rero."
each year, for example. but the
National Weather Service reContinued on page 10

···

Energy prices were unchanged 0.3 percent rises In March and
In July as Increases in the costs of April, the bureau said. The Iasr
gasoline were offset by drops tn time wholesale prices fell was in
the prices of natural gas and February with a 0.2 percent dip.
Prices for domestic tnterme·
home heating all.
Excluding the volatile food and dlate goods, those used in the
energy prices, wholesale prices middle of the Industrial process,
for finished consumer goods rose were up 0. 7 percent In July after a
a steep 0.9 percent in July, the 0.9 perc'lnt advance In June, the
bureau said.
liureau reported.
Some good news for future
So far this year wholesale
prices
may have shown up tn the
prices twve risen at an annual·
!zed r&amp; of 3.9 percent, the July costs of raw materials,
wjltch dropped 1.1 percent after
bureau said.
Experts had looked for a three consecutive monthly in·
modest 0.4 pe~entoverall rise in creases of more than 1 percent,
the bureau said.
July.
The bureau's producer price
"This Is a hard one to call,"
said Robert Dederick, chief Index Is closely watched by
economist for The Northern economists and Wall Street in- ·
Trust Co. In Chicago, who pre- vestors for warning of inflationdicted a 0.4 percent hike.' 'People .. ary trends.
For the last few months, prices
are unclear as to when the
of
raw materials have increased
(higher) food and oU prices are
much
more rapidly than prices of
going to show up."
finished
goods, and economists
Wholesale prices for finished
goods have been advancing at 0.4 have said that would translate
percent or 0.5 percent monthly eventually to significant price
since May after a 0.6 percent and hikes for consumers.

-by

should total 197 mitllon metric
tons. 31 percent below last year.
In July, a 24 percent clrop' wasprojected.
Large reductions are forecast
in the size of America's top two
cash crops, corn and soybeans.
The nation produces 40 percent of
,the world 's corn and the crop is
estimated to sink 37 percent.
Soybeans should be down 23
percent.
Only the wl n ter wheat crop,
which matured just as the
drought Intensified. remained
untouched. The spring and durum wheat crops, grown In the
hard-hit Northern Plains, were
cut in half to 266 mitlton bushels,
according to the department's

monthly crop •·eport.
The report was issued just
hours after President Reagan
signed Into law a $3.9 billion
drought relief measure to give
disaster payments to farmers
who lose more than 35 percent of
a crop.
"Today's reports confirm that
the drought has had a major
Impact on this year's crops,"
said Assistant Agriculture Secretary Ewen Wilson. ''But because
of large pre·season stocks, total
supplies are enough In most
cases to assure an adequate food
supply at home, satisfy foreign
customers and meet our food aid
commitments."·
Continued on page 10

High temperatures often mean.
rtstng tempers, officials report
ported 25 this year through
Thursday.
The same Is true across the
state, with seven 90-degree days
normal at Akron-Canton. but 26
this year; eight normal in Cleveland, but 32 this year; 14 normal
in Columbus. but 36 this year; 16
normal In Dayton, but 39 this
year; 19 normal In Cincinnati,
but 40 this year; and 13 normal in
Toledo, but 40 this year.
It's unclear, however, whether
this summer's weather has

changed crime patterns. Cleveland police reported a 3.2 percent
Increase In serious crimes such
as murders, rapes and thefts In
July, but a 6.4 percent decrease
In the same crimes during June,
compared with the same periods
last y-ear.
"It lwould probably be wise for
people not to drink alcohol. stay
away from crowds and stav cool
during the summer months ...
Hutzler said .

celeste battles back
against GOP 'tactics'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Gov. Richard Celeste says Republicans are trying to neutralize
his effectiveness In this year's
presidential campaign In Ohio,
and are using below-the-belt
tactics to do it .
"I think people believe that I
can be a very potent leader on
behalf of Democrats this election
season, and this Is an attempt to
keep me pre-occupied swatting
flies," Celeste said Thursday.
The governor was angered by
federal offtc!als who accused his
administration Wednesday of
refUsing to cooperate In their
Investigation of two former state
employees who allegedly mlsre·
presented their Social Security
numbers.
Celeste tired otr letters to U.S.
Attorney Michael ·Crites and
John Betta c. a regional official or
the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services, demanding
an apology.
Tbey said the Celeste administration refUsed to cooperate tn
the Investigation Into charges
that Baxter Htl~ a former deputy

·''

state health director, and his
wife, Maude, used false Social
Security numbers.
"We have to see this as the
opening kickoff of a political
season in which they will use
Instruments of justice to try to
make a politica l case," Celeste
told reporters at a press conference after he had appointed a
new corrections director.
Crites was out of town and
unavailable for comment: Jim
Rattan, senior assistant U.S.
attorney, said Crites would give
Celeste's letter his Immediate
atteQI!on upon his return.
"Of course It wasn't polttlcally
motivated," Rattan said of Crites's action.
"I am astonished and appalled
that they would suggest that this
administration In any way hampered their Investigation," said
the governor.
Celeste said his administration
started the Investigation against
the Hills and obtained grand jury
Indictments. ''I don'tsee any new
Information that was deveJopi!d
Continued on page 10

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Page 2-The Dally Saltine! z-·
Pomaot Mktdlepcwt, Ohio ..
F• • Aug. 12, 1988
.-·
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Comment

Jackson-Dukakis. truce still Uneasy

The Daily Sentinel

WASHINGTON - As the Democrats settle down to the sober
business of winning back the
White House, Michael Dukakls
urgently needs the support of
Jesse Jackson, whose campaign
style worries him.
Sources privy to the Dukakls
strategy tell ps that the Democratic presidential nominee is
privately wary of Jackson. Duka·
kls needs Jackson to rally Jack·
son followers behind a ticket they
don't really like. But Dukakls
fears Jackson will attract most of
the media and steal the spotlight.
What worries the Democratic
nominee is that the flamboyant

Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA
~lb
t5:m~

'qlv

.

............._""T",,..,....=.,=o

ROBERT L. WINGE'lT
Publisher
PAT WIOTEHEAD
A.ulstaat Puhllsher/ ControUer

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be 1.., than 300 wonls

Jackson might be a loose cannon

long. All letters are subJect to editing and must be sflned with name, address and
leleph~n• number. No unslgne&lt;Ilelle!'l wUI be publlshe&lt;l. Leuers should be In

whose firing can't be controlled
L-KO&lt;&gt;d....;..
· -'"-"-•·_•_d_d_,.._'_'n.:g;..ls..;s.:.""'.:.::..
· n:::ol::..::pe::rso=n:::•':::ll:les:·~-;:--------.1 : and coordinated. His colorful
r.

phrase-making, which arouses
his liberal constituency, may
turn off the middle-of-the-road
majority.
· These disparate men, despite
their show of unity In Atlanta,
never quite got on the same wave
length. Dukakls Is reserved and
relaxed, deliberate and calculatIng, a master of details, who Is
guided by the head. Jackson Is
Impulsive and emotional, a gut
politician concerned about goals,
not details, who Is. guided by the
heart.
In their private conversations,
Dukakls listened carefully. But
he was laconic and noncommlt·
tal. When he had something to
say, he simply said It, going
straight to the point. Jackson.

,)

Candidates undergo
painful scrutiny

.'

was there all day. I kept waiting
for him to say something about a
running mate, but he never said a
word. Why didn't he Just say to •
me, 'We are looking for someone ••
to ~al ance the ticket, and Lloyd -,
Bentsen . has the · best
credentials?'"
To make matters worse, Duka:
kls' alter ego and campaign •
chairman, Paul Brountas, promIsed Jackson that he would be tile
first · to know who the vice
presidential nominee would be.
Instead, Jackson learned about It
from the media, because Duka· '
kls' staff failed to conne:ct with '
him.
The outraged Jackson went to •' ' •
Atlanta breathing fire and brim· ••
stone. This led to a three-hour •'
showdown that could have been
avoided. Afterward, Jackson
confessed that he had seen
Dukakis' "toughness and tenaclty ·close up."
According to sources, Jackson
characterized the closed-door . :~i
meeting accurately. The blunt : :
Dukakls, In effect, drew a line: •
He warned Jackson that If he
stepped across the line, he
couldn't step back. The choice
was up to him: He could attack
and divide, perhaps even des·
troy, the Democratic Party. Or
he could unite the party and take
his rightful place as a par()'
leader, Dukakls told him.
Jackson would have to make
I
up his mind, Dukakls said, before
,{
tlie curtain lifted on the Democratic convention. Jackson's d.,:
' I
cis ion to cooperate paid off on the
second night of the convention.
At that historic moment, Jackson '
was transformed from a black
::~
leader to a na.tlonal . leader, He
chose to stay within the party
.,
structure. He pledged his cooper,•
ation to Dukakls - Mr. Outside
'
joined forces with the establish·
''
ment and became Mr. Inside.

Roosevelt: Fblio

.,.

Glad to see coach return

Call once.
And for all.

A tboughtfor the day: Buck Owens said, "Whenever a person finds
a Job be Is suited for, he will do a good Job."
.

- · ~··--·

-·"'"-

·~

•
t
.
I
MetS .top C. U b 8 ,· GIan s c ose
in on Los Anueles Doduer.8·

deserve consideration: Jack
Kemp, Jeane Kirkpatrick, and
Governor Carroll Campbell of

South Carolina. The only trouble
Is that there has never, since
1924, been a winning Republican

.'.,'.
' I

ticket without a Westerner on It
- In fact, without a Californian
on it.

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Philadelphia I, St. Loullll
New l'•rkt, Oalcqo 8
Atlanta 2, San Dtep 1
C(.:ln•Ut, LoaAnplm8, 10 lnnlnp
PHtlhlrzh 1, Mont~ all

10 65 .UI 12%
u 71 .383 !8%
Thlll'!'dt!J'I Re&amp;ulla

Milwaukee 4, BoeiOn 0
Toronllo I, New Yor~l, lllnnlap
Texu S. OevelanH
,

rJIUI Franclr.co I, Houtlloa 0

Fri....,.'J~ Gamflll
S&amp;. IAIIII (Mapane 1·1) al Chlcap

Kan• Clly8, U.ltlmoft! 1, 12 lnnlnp

Ollcap ol, SeatUk 3
Oaklud 7, CallfOrnh' t
FrldQ'll Games
Detrclt {Aiexan*r 11-t) at Boston
cHui'!IIIIH), 7:31p.m .
Texu (Guzman 11-8) at Clevel.nd
(YeUH ), 7: 35p.m .
New Vorl (John 8-1 ) at Mluesuta
(l.ta 8-1), 8: 05p.m.
Tororao !Oancy 5-12) at Kan . . City
(Ba•,.lter 1-t), 8:15 p.fV.
BaltlmorP (Perua 1-1) at Mllwau·
kee (Birkbeck N),I:S$p,m,

(M•yer i-11) , 4:15p.m .

Plltnuwh (Smiley •11 and Dunne 6-Sl
at Phlladelpllla (I. .Grots 11·11 and
Palmer 7-8) , 2, I:U p.m.
Atlanta {Giavlne 3-15) at Cl•ln111U

(Arm.trona'--1&gt; , '7:35p.m.

Mont;real 4Smkh II .. ) II New \'ork

(Co.,elt-2), 7:35p.m.
San IN e.. (Raamuuea 10·7) III. Ho•slon (Kftepprr l.l-3) , B: SI p.m .
San Fundsoo (Rat.chel 1&amp;-5) at Los
·All plea (LeAl')' 11·11), It: Sl p.m.

lbl cqo (LaPoint 1-11) 11 Sualie {Powelll·l! J,IID: ID$p.m.

hhrcho-'a Game.

Lo•• .. Cllllcajo
Monlre.. at New York

St.

C.llforn1a (Fhatey 1-10) at Oakland
(Burrw f-t), 10: II p.m.
SatW"dJQ''IJ Gamea
Del rok a1 Boat on
Teu.s at Cleve Iand
New York M Mln~ala
Calllorn1a at OakiMd
Torolllo at Kan• Clly, nlpt

Allan&amp;~~ · aa.

Clncla•U. ni!Jhl:
Ptttlhrth at Philadelphia, nl1hl

San Dlep al Houlltoa, nllht
San Frand11e0 a&amp; Lo~ AnSI!Im,

nl~l

Transactions
IIMebaU

•
•

~

NEW1988
S-10 PICKUP

~ew

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Ill U .II! -

Retailed ll r llt
ha.tematt·outllelcler Rllss Morman from
\'.cou~r ol PadH~ Co111t Leque

The Daily Sentinel

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'THEY

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Del roll
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Eaot

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ONLY

WHILE

BaiHmoN I&amp;MIIwaulee, nllhf
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AMERICAN LEAGUE

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~
Another stroke back were
delivered a htgh fastba·ll that Raymond Floyd, Rocco Mediate,
McReynolds sent over the Greg Norman, Mike Reid, Peter
center-field fence for his third Senior, Craig Stadler an~ club
career slam.
... pro Jay Overton.
"I don't blame just one person
The fteld will be ~ut t.o the low
when we lose ," Zimmer said. "A 70 scores after Fnday s second
lot of things happen In a game... round . The tournament will con·
Terry Leach, 5-1, pitched three elude Sunday ·
innings for the victorv. Randy
The course, which looks trea·
Myers relieved to start "the ninth, cherous from every angle,
but allowed singles to Mitch played·as safe as a schoolyard for
Webster and Grace. Roger Thursday's first round. "The golf
McDowell recorded the final out course Is In excell~nt shape and
for his 12th save.
that makes for some darn good
New Yqrk catcher Gary Car- scores, " Gilder said.
ter, trylngtar 225at-batstohlthis
"On this course, If you are
300lh career homer, delivered playing well, you're going to
the landma'r k shot in the second score well," said Stadler. "It's
Inning. He became the 59th · not an easy golf course, but wltl1
player in baseball history to hit the green soft, and no Wind,
300 homer s, ranking fourth there's a lot of birdie chances."
among catchers behind Carlton
Gilder posted back-to-back birFisk, .Yogi Berra and Johnny di~s on Nos. 7 and 8 and pushed
Bench. Carter hit No. 299 on May
his score even lower with birdies
16 against San Diego.
·
"lt certainly was a nice feel·
ing," Carter said. "It was a long
time coming, but It's very
special. Now that It's out of the
way and the monkey's. off my
· back, we can go on and win this
By Unlled Press Internallonal
thing."
Baseball
The Cubs touched starter
Major League Baseball has
Dwight Gooden for nine hits In flied a lawsuit In federal district
five Innings.
court in New York against the
In oiher ga·mes, Philadelphia
U.S. Tobacco Company for tradenipped St. Louis 1-0, Atlanta mark infringement. The suit,
edged San Diego 2-1, Cincinnati which seeks a permanent injuncclipped Los Angeles 9-8 in 10 tion and damages In excess of $1
Innings, Pittsburgh dumped
million, was filed in response to
Montreal 6-1, and San Francisco U.S. Tobacco's use of "World
downed Houston 6-0.
Series '' .in a sweepstakes for the
In theAL, It was: Mllwaukee4, company's Skoal brand tobacco.
Boston 0; Texas 5, Cleveland 4;
"World Series" Is a. registered
Kan sas City 6, Baltimore 5 In 12 service mark of Major League
Innings; Chicago4, Seattle3; and
Baseball.
Oakland 7, California 2.
Basketball
Phlllles I, Cardinals 0
Marcus
Liberty,
one of !be best
At Philadelphia, Ricky Jordan
high
school
basketball
players In
doubled home Chris James from
the
country,
was
declared
eligl·
first base with one out in the ninth
ble
to
suit
up
for
illinois
In
the
Inning. With one out, John
6-foot·
coming
season.
Liberty,
a
Costello, 3·1, wa I ked James.
Jordan doubled to left-center on 8 forward, sat out his first year at
the next pitch. Steve Bedrosian, Illinois because of low grades.
2-5, pitched one inning In relief of Liberty led Chicago's King High
School to a state championship in
starter Mike Maddux.
his
junior year and a second· .
Braves 2, Padres l
place
finish In his senior year in
At Atlanta , Terry Blocker
1986.
.
tripled home Dian James with
Football
two aut In the seventh Inning for
Baylor defensive ends Sam
his first major-league RBI and .
Collins
and Eugene Hall and
Pete Smith pltched a seven·
running
back Jeff Murray have
hitter. Jimmy Jones fell to 7-10.
Smith, 5-11, struck out a career- regained their academic ellgibll·
high eight In his second complete lty and will play for the Bears this
fall. All three were 1987 starters.
game. ·
Hall
and Collins sat out spring_
Reds 9, Dodgers 8
training
because of academic
At Cincinnati, Eric Davis ·
problems
while Murray was
singled home Kal Daniels from
dismissed
from
the team In ihe
second with two out In the lOth
fall1ng
to attend
spring
for
Inning, lifting the Reds. John
has
qulthls
classes
.
...
Ted
Nance
Franco, 4-5, pitched the lOth for
as
executive
director
of the
post
Cincinnati, which totaled a
troubled
Bluebonnet
Bowl
to
season-high 19 hits. Jay Howell
return
to
the
University
of
fell to 2-3. Kirk Gibson hit three
doubles and a home run for Los Houston as an assistant athletic
director In charge of community
Angeles ..
and media re_latlons. The NCAA

I

••'•

rr;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::•::::::;;~;;,;;;,;;;;;;;::~~ii;i=~~;;. •••

LAST!

JEFF WARNER

~
By GERRY MONIGAN
McReynolds greeted Rich GasUPI Sports Writer
sage with a two-out bases-loaded
When Kevin McReynolds dell· homer to cap ·a five-run Inning.
vered his second grand slam of McReynolds' 17th homer of the
the season Thursday In the ninth season came off a 1-1 pitch from
Inning to lift New York to a 9·6 Gossage, who relieved Pat
vlct0ry over the Chicago Cubs, Perry, 4-4. Perry had entered the
Mets Manager Davey Johnson
game with two on and none out in
was all smiles. When he ad· the ninth.
journed to the visiting team
"I definitely think this was the
clubhouse, however, he revealed type of game we needed, " said
McReynolds, who lifted theMets
his true emotions,
"We got roughed up, knocked · from a-three-game losing streak.
down, stepped on, didn' t use our "Whether or not it will slap us out
heads and came back and won It of our daze, I don't know.
"But I hope this lights a fire
right before a big series,"
Johnson said, ' referring to his under ·us and makes us realize
team's Impending series at New even If we're .trailing, we can
York against Montreal.
come back. The grand slam
"They (the Cubs) tried hard, happened to be the hit that got us
and that's Wh!!t we havetodo. We over the hump. Now we just have
played like we were in fourth to stay over the hump."
place, and they played like they
Cubs Manager Don Zimmer
were In first place. We can't let refused to second guess his
decision to bring In Gossage, who
that happen. "

I.

Letters to the editor

By United Press International .
.
Today is Fr !day, Aug. 12, the 225th day of 1988 with 141 to tollow.
The moon Is new.
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury and Saturn. ·
Those born on this date are under the sign of Leo. They Include
English poet laureate Robert Southey in 1774; painter Abbott Thayer,
credited with noting camouflage in the animal world, In 1849;
educator and poet Katherine Lee Bates ("America the Beautiful") In
1859; mystery writer Mary Roberts Rinehartln 1876; movie producer
Cecil B. DeMille In 1881; country singers Buck Owens In 1929 (age 59)
and Porter Wagoner In 1930 (age 58); fonner national security
advisor John Poindexter In 1936 (age 52), and actor George Hamilton
In 1939 (age 49).
ln 1~51, Isaac Singer was granted a patent lor his sewing machine.
He set up business In Boston with $40 capital.
. ·
In 1898, a peace protocol was signed ending the Spanish-American
War after hostilities of three months, 22 days. The United States
acquired Puerto Rico, Guam and the PhUipplnes, and annexed
Hawaii.
In 1984, the 23rd Olympic Games ended In Los Angeles with a record
atrendance of 5.5 mll\lon people despite a Soviet-led boycott.
In 19815, In aviation s worst single-plane disaster, 520 people died
wben a Japan Air Lines Boeing 747 slammed Into a mounlaln In
central Japan. Four passengers survived.

REDS WIN! -TheRedll' KaiDanlelslsgreeted
at the plate by pl&amp;cher John Franco as Daniels
scores the winnbtg run In the lOth Inning of
Thursday night's game against the first-place

'

William Rusher

•

I

.

Ticket, please? Bu8h·Hodel!

•

EDMOND, Okla. (UPI) - The
wind, Oak Tree' s major defense,
was absent from the first round
of the PGA Championship, allow·
ing Bob Gilder to unleash a
record-setting assault on the
course.
Oak Tree was feared by the
players as a sleeping monster
which needed only a steady wind
to awake. But !be wind was calm
Thursday and the players, dropping Iron shots onto the soft
greens tight to the pin, responded
with a PGA Championship
record-tying 31 ~ores under par.
Another 12players were even par
71.
Gilder led the 150-man field
. with a 5-under 66 - a "real
steady" round without a bogeyDodgers. The Reds edged the Dodgers 9·8, thus
for a ~ourse record.
winning two In the three-game home series
One shot back at 67 were Paul
against them. (UPI)
Azlnger, who almost missed the
tournament because of a back
problem; John Cook, who was
under par from the nrst hole;
Nick Faldo, who was 4-under on

.

'

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON- Caesar's wire Is not running for the presidency.
And Vice President George Bush and Massachusetts Gov. Michael
Dukakls are not Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm.
On !be other hand the two contenders who are seeking a four-year
lease on !be White House must, at times, feel embarrassed, perhaps
harassed at !be close scrutiny of their pasts, their childhood foibles
and tbelr life's crises.
Painful as It Is, It goes with the turf. In tbls day and a&amp;e such
exposure for those who would be president Is relentlell!;. But ·
apparently not a deterrent.
·
Dukakls and Bush each want to be elected In November to lead the
nation. They obviously are not so naive, considering their maturity
and exJ)erlence, to know that the price Is high- but the rewards are
great.
To balk at releasing medical records as Dukakls did - and
apparently he still has to get Into detail- was to fuel fires of rumor.
But he was smoked out to some extent under !be cloud of rumors
concerning his mental health In the past during a personal crisis.
Rumors he has now categorlcaly denied.
Defiant power walks to display fitness won't do it. The truth will do
lt. And people are certainly wlllingto hear that. Dukakls wal·ked away
when asked If he would release his medical records, and he theq did a
turnabout.
In recent years the medical history and a lot of other things have
become relevant in the choice of a president, but not necessarily an
obstacle. Ronald Reagan ran for the presidency as the oldest
candidate to do so. Age could have been a factor If the electorate had
chosen to view him In that light.
Nobody's perfect. Bush has yet to give the full story of his
Involvement In the clandestine sale of arms to Iran thatengul1ed the
In my last column, I- P(llnted
Reagan admlnlstratlon In a devastating scandal. The ties of some of
out how Important It Is f~
his aides, formerly with the CIA, to arms supply for theContras, were
1988 Republican ticket a appeal
under scrutiny In !be past.
strongly to the social conservaThe vice president has said that he was "out of the loop" during
some of the major discussions on !be secret Iran deal, but President
"Reagan
De·
tives (mislabeled
mocrats")
who bolted
the DemoReagan said recently that Bush had participated In every major
cratic
Party
in
the
1960s.
decision In his administration.
·
George Bush splendidly reLike the president, he also has said "mistakes were made.' '
presents
the traditional core of
In politics, one has to accent the successes and forget the failures.
the
Republican
Party (approxl·
If Bush wants to identify only with the rosy side of the picture, that
mately
40
percent
of all voters)
Is understandable. But at some point there Is an accountabillty even
but
he
seems
relatively
remot~
for those who only stand and watch.
from
the
concerns
of
the
social
The same is true of the Massachusetts governor who Is only too
20
percent
conservatives,
whose
happy to forget he was defeated for re-election when he failed to
of the electorate has been the
measure up In the eyes of the voters. He learned a lot about politics
·
swing vote In every presidential
and returned to win two terms.
·
election since (and Including)
There Is no Instant president. It Is on-the-job training, and all voters
1968. Which leading Republican,
can really do Is size up the candidate, some of his past performance
joining the ticket as the vice
and his general credibility . The perception of character helps.
presidential
nominee, would apCharisma, that Indefinable something, certainly enters into the
peal
most
strongly
to the social
equation. But neither candidate Is reputed to have much of that.
conservatives?
Their aides, meanwhile, will be working overtime to portray their
Obviously excluded is anyone
peerless qualities and Infallibility as future leaders. Sometimes even
who,
like Bush himself, comes
their doctors become cheerleaders as proof positive of their good
the
GOP's traditional base:
from
health .
Eastern and Midwestern "mod·
But the probing and the profiles will go on. It seems that the party
erates"
like the Doles, Governor
label Is no longer as significant as !be person who Is running. The
of
New Jersey, Governor
Kean
question being as.ked today Is not whether potential voters are going
of Illinois, former
Thompson
to support the Republicans or Democrats, but rather whether they
Governor
(and Attorney
vote for Dukakis or Bush. 1
General-designate)
Thornburgh
The personalizing of the presidential race Is 'the way 11 is. Voters
of
Pennsylvania,
former
Govermay vote their pocketbooks, or for other reasons: Time for a change.
nor
Alexander
of
Tennessee
Or trusting !be known quantity, rather than the unknown.
Senator Kassebaum of Kansas:
While each candidate Is trying to define his own persona, It may be a
etc.
The nomination of any of
little difficult for voters ·to decide who they like best.
these would force the party, as
with Ford and Dole In 1976, to run
without social conservative representation on the ticket, while
Dukakis and Bentsen are bidding
strongly to win back this critical
bloc.
There are, in the East, three
To the Editor :
football !an, It is nice to finally Republican figures with soclalI could write a six page letter get a break. Thanks Charles
over the happenings at Meigs Chancey! Good to see you pack! conse'·' ~live creden tlals who
High School during the past ten
Sincerely,
months. As a taxpayer In the
Michael W. Walker
Meigs Local School District, and
32539 Bailey Ruri Rd.
as an avid Meigs Marauder
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Today in history

Gilder
leader
•
m PGA
tourney

By Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta .
accustomed to political foreplay
before confronting an Issue
squarely, relied more on his
Instincts and Impulses.
Witnesses say the two men
were uneasy around each other
each waiting for the other to tak~
the Initiative. They spent the
Fourth of July together without
getting beyond the small talk.
Jackson came away offended
because Dukakls had not ex:
changed views with him as a
political equal.
Dukakis didn't even bring up
the question foremost on Jack·
son's mind: Who would be the
running mate? After~ard, Jack·
son complained to a friend, "I

The Daily Sentine!- Page- 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

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Published every afternoon, Monday
F r iday , 111 Court St.; Po-.
m eroy, Ohio, by th(&gt; Ohio Valley Publishing Company/Multimedia, Jnc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Second class postage paid al Pomeroy,
OhiO.
I
throu~h

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! ....

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Moll Sut.criptlons
Melp Count)'
13 WeekS ...,.".... , ....................... 117.29
Inolde

26 Weeks .o~.., .... ,,.................... ..... 134.06
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52 WeekS ........... .. ............... ...... S6'1.60

.

·

Aur. 14.

New York- A.dlvatd laflelder Mlb
PaKHar aH tram 11-d 1Q . . . hied Ust and ·
llllllehler WIIQ'fte ToUnoli frcm U-dar
DL; outrt&amp;l*d lnlelder .\JvaroESplnoaa
to C.J-.bus of .. ller•tlo•l Lft~
fAAA) ud opdoned Randy Velarde to

course.'·~

Gilder said he "had only two
. chances for bogey" and saved
\,pth of those with excellent chip
shots.
The players credited the
greens - kept soft because of a
downpour Tuesday and the usual
blast of August Oklahoma heat
forcing even more watering -

Sports briefs...
Is considering whether to' con·
tlnue to certify the annual New
Year's Eve contest, which is
$400,000 in debt.
Motor Sports
More than 250 entrants repres·
enting at least 100 different
:categories of motorcycles and
:au tomoblles have regi~tered for
the 40th annual Speed Week at
:Bonneville Salt Flats, Utah. The
1flrst qual!lylng runs will be
•Sunday on the 9-mlle track of
•hardened salt, said Don Banks,
tBLM spokesman. The speed
record challenges w!ll be held
Aug. 20.

Houl&amp;oiii-NunHTeiiiiNaaceaaldltant

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7, 10 I 9,30 PM OA!ll .

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na.ul)llllla-w.... .._...,balek
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When he pours,

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Phone 446-4 52 4

WE REPAIR ALL CWIS

Miami - Slpe4 fulbad . . . .
Mctllll....
NY leta- ............ rectlveu

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AU U&amp;n $2.110

Pro~~e - Named Berti Senclelt,
M'U'It All . . . . Md Lar,.81QiMIMJIII·

aaleoac.,..

·-

U.::-:i'::.VUT~WED

Named Bob CooLey Jr. 1.011

coach. ,

with keeping the scores !ow.
''It's a shotmaker's tes t of golf
this week," Faldo said. "It 's a
tough golf course and the only .. '
thing that is saving us is the !act
that it's so soft. If the greens we re
hard , you couldn't play here ...
The first round was highlighted ... ,,
by Ge'ne Sauer 's hole -in-one on
the 171-yard e ighth hole. Other
eagles were turned in by Tommy
Nakajima , who chipped in !r om
100 yards on No.3, and Floyd and
'•
David Graham, who had threes
on No. 16.
Defending champion La r r y
Nelson wa s a mong a crowd at 70
as were Ben Crensha w and
Payne Stewart. Seve Ballesteros
finished at 71, one stroke ahead of
a mob that Included Curlis ' ',:v
s trange and the threesom e of
Jack Nicklaus, Tom Watson a nd
Tom Kite. Arnold Palmer shot a
74.
The "Oak Tree Boys" - th e
professionals who play out of
Edmond 's coun tr y ·club- were
thought to have an adva ntage
with their knowledge of the . '
.'
course' s intricacies . but ju st one,
Doug Tewell at 1-under , br oke
par. David Edward s, Andrew ' ...
.'
Magee and Bob Tway wer e all
even-par 71 while Gil Morga n ','I I
shot 76 and Scott Verpl ank , who
won a tournam ent two weeks
ago, had a 77.
.,;,
' •t

lp.,

athleUc ciiNdlf' .. ch.,.e or C!CtiM'Minlt)'

Subscribers not cltsirlng to pay the carrier may remit ln advan ce direct to
The DaUy sentinel QP ~~. 6or ~2 mll\llh,
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week.
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No subs criptions by maD permUted 111
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(AAA) ; ~ent llrlt b..eman·oulllleldtr
James Kan411.111o Vancon~r .
Mll.... kte - ()pUuned pltcbs- Cllrh
Boa.. Ia De•wr of Ute Amerlcatl
A..edaU011 (1\A,\) ; activated pllc•er
Mark Oe• friWI'I IS-dill dl.. bled Jht .
Monlr.ll A1..ped auapendd
ptlcherf1o)d Yoamua tolnclll&amp;aftolleor
Amerlua Aslocllltlon (AI\A), effective

PhiiHelphlii - Named Larry Bowa
lhlnl ba.e coach.
Su Frudlee - Recalled lnlelder
MMt Williams ll'om Phoenbr: of the
Paellle Coui Leape (.-\AA): rt:le..ed
Harr)' SplmM.
Sea&amp;Ut - Pl.ced leh.fl llftllled pMeller
Sine Tr..loa .. e IHII' IIIIa bied liM ;
ree.UN leii..JI_.er lllllWIIWn•n from
cal.,. of 11M Padnc c.out Lett~U&gt;t
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Da lly .... ,, .... , ,........ , ,,. .. ,, .... , , . 25 cents
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-

on 14 and 16.
"I played real steady and
drove the ball real well," he said.
"That's the big difference on this

Columbus.

POSTMASTER: Send addrl'SS chan~
to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St ..
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

t

IAL l

PGA LEADER- Bob Gilder of Corvallis, Ore. , dances a little jig
after makbtg a birdie putt on the 16th hole to go 5 under for the day.
Gilder finished the day with a lt-under-par 66. (UP I)

I

t

�Frida~

Pomaroy-Midclaport, Ohio

Page 4 . The Daily Sentinel

Aug. 12,1988

Rangers Post 5-4
victory ove~
.
Indians; Boston beaten again

By The Bend

.

',

.

".

,•

POMEROY FOOD SHOP- The Pomeroy Food
ShOp learn Is (L-R) T. Tompson, Carrie Glaze,
Tara Graeser, Daniele Grueser, Arnie Kloes and

Terri Fife. In the second row are Taryn Doidge,
Cynthia CotterU, Alicia H&amp;JIY, Megan Clark,
Heather Knight and Coach Jack Baggy.

.

. . Browns seek second pre-season win·
KIRTLAND, Ohio (UPI) Carl Hairston has lost about 12
pounds and 'gained a more
muscular upper body.
•
Yet the Cleveland Browns'
veteran defensive end cannot
·: Ignore another statistic: he will
• turn 36 In December and enters
:·: the season as theoldestdefenslve
• end In the NFL.
·'
The Browns wUI be seeking
: ; their second consecutive exhlbl·
: · tlon win against the Tampa Bay
:•. Bucks In Tampa,' Fla., Saturday
•• night.
•• The Bucs have signed free
;: agent free safety Harry Hamil·
ton, who played the past four
vears with the New York Jets.
• · Hamilton led the Jets with
,. Interceptions last year with three
•• and was second In tackles with

.:

;: 83.
,

The former Penn State player

~· started 34 of the Jets last 46

• games. He became a free agent
earlier this week when the Jets
withdrew their contract offer to
him.
Meanwhile, Hariston Is looking
.. roward to this season and hopes It
•· will be one of his best.
;:
"I'd like to stay In the !low of
•' things," said Hairston, who led

Cleveland with eight ·sacks last want to win In this league, you
year and was voted to UPI's have to get to the quarterback on
All·AFC team. "But I have to a consls tent basis ."
Hairston Is being pushed for a
expect that my role will be
starting
spot by veteran AI
changing."
Hairston, a 6·foot·2, 265-pouild "Bubba" Baker and rookie Ml·
product of Maryland-Eastern chael Dean Perry, although the
Shore, was acquired from Phlla· latter also Is being used at nose
delphia In 1984. The 13-year tackle by Coach Marty
veteran has started at right Schottenhelmer.
Schottenhelmer acknowledges
defensive end In the last46 games
that HaIrs ton Is having a good
lor the Browns.
"I think losing a little weight training camp, but maintains the
will help my mobility a · great ' veteran • s role will not be deter·
deal. I see younger players as mined ~anti! the end of the month.
"Carl's work habits are exem·
having to keep up with me," says
plary,"
says the coach. "And
Hairston, the Eagles' seventh·
he's
in
excellent
shape. "
round pick In 1976.
While Hairston was talking,
"I hope to play at 260 to 265
pounds during the season. I veteran linebacker Eddie John;
son, himself battling to retain a
played In Phllly at around 260."
Hairston, called "Big Daddy" roster spot, Interrupted.
"Do you think 'Big Daddy'
even by his two children, was the
first Brown to cross the picket looks good?" asked Johnson.
When reporters nodded, John·
line during last season's strike by
.. the players' union. He waves son threw . a cup of orange
aside any suggestion of lingering Gatorade onto Hairston's bare
resentment from his teammates. chest? .' ·noes he still look good?''
"I don't like to look back," he shouted Johnson as he backed
says. "I prefer looking forward away .
Hairston had to laugh as he
and doing what theCC¥~Chlng staff
toweled off. "I hope this Is the
wants me to do in '88.
"Clearly, we must put pres· least of my problems," he said .
sure on the quarterback. If you

·~-.Wyche wraps up
~

.•
::·
·:
;,•
,.

WILMINGTON, Ohio (UP!)The Cincinnati Bengals broke
training camp today and head
coach Sam Wyche said the
five-week workout was the best

..

he's ever seen.

~

''Morale has never been higher
since I've been here,'' the fifth·
year coach said. "We've had the
best attitude among players and
very high Intensity at practices.
It's been business as It should be.
Things have fallen Into place."
Wvche needs things to continue
to fall into place over the next
five months II he Is to keep his
job. The Bengals have never
made the playoffs under Wyche
and alter last year's dismal 4·11
record. general manager Paul
Brown said ·this year's mark
must be a "lot better"lfWyche Is
to be retained. ,
Wyche ligures moralehaMen
so high at training camp because
his players desperately want a
fresh start alter last year's
embarrassing season.
"They want this year to be
really good,'' said Wyche. "They

.•
··
~

'
•·
"

•

want It to ,be the best shot they
can ma,ke" it . It's the chance to
have a 10·6 record, an ll·5 record
or better. It's thechancetomake
the playoffs.
"We've stressed !rom the
outset that playing together and
making a solid team effort every
down Is going to be crucial to ho:ov
well we do this year. We haven't
had any practices where we've
had loss of attention.
"Usually at camp, you have
two or three practices where
attentionfallsof!,butwehaven't
had any. Somebody, somewhere
has picked It up at the right time
and we've had nothing but good
workouts. I'm not disappointed
,In anything l've gotten from
these guys this summer."
Wyche said his training camp
roommate changes- he ordered
black players to room with white
players and defensive players to
room with offensive players were
successful.
"The
purpose was to create a
situation where . players knew
their teammates In a better way,

·'

NOTICE: NEW OFFICE POLICY:

'

.,.
,•

.
.,.·'
'

Effective immediately, we are reducing oyr fees
to s15.00 per office visit. It is our way of making
our services available to more people of our area
due to the mass of unemployment that is
currently creating hardships on everyone.

•'r

.
~

l.OW BACK PAIN·
PINCHED NERVES (SPINEl
NECK It SHOULDER SYNDROME·
EXTREMITIE8·HEADACHE
SCL\11C·FAILED DISC SURGERY·
ATIILE11C INJlJRIES
PHYSICAL THERAPI"

SYSTEMIC DISORDERS·
NUTRitiONAL WORK·UP8
• SCOLIOSIS BCREitNIIfO
ISPINAL CURVATUU)
INJURY: PERSOIIAL-AU70

IIIDUSTRJAL
X·RAY LABORATORY
ACCIJPRES&amp;URB

Rit:n.ltXOLOGY

HOURS;

Monday • Friday, 8:30 a.m. - 6 p.m.
With evenln&amp; hours by appointment and 24 hour emeraency servk:e
'•

.

'•

'•

'

•7S-64U

2411 .JackaOn Ave.

Polftt Pleuant

a closer way, a more realistic
way," he explained. "And I think
It's done that.
"We didn't create any 'best
friends' In a matter of five weeks,
but we created a lot of good
situatiOns. You can see II. Yo.u
can feel it. We have friends,
rather than acquaintances, on
this team.
''We haven't had any com·
plaints. Jt'snota big deal, built's
a real deal. I think If we have a ·
good season, theplayerswllllook
back to the relationships that
were started at training camp as
being a part of lt."
Wyche said the most pleasant
surprise at camp ftas been
ruimlng back Stanley Wilson, a
two· time drug loser who has been
given his third and final chance
to play drug·free In the NFL.
"Stanley has looked so good
that he will be a starter,'' said
Wyche.

GRAVELY

H&amp;R Block to Offer Tax
School In This Area
their tax knowledge and learn
how to save money on taxes or
who are looking tor a reward·
lng career. No prerequisites
are required to enroll.
Qualified course graduates
may be offered job Interviews
for positions with mock. Many
accept employment with Block
because of the flexible hours
available. However, Block Is
under no obligation to otrer ern·
ployment. nor are graduates
under any obllgtlon to accept
employment with H&amp;R Block.
One low course fee Includes all
textbooks, supplles and tax
forms lii!CEIIsary tor the completion of the course. Certlllcates
and 7.5 contliwlng education
units wW be awarded upon sue·
cesllflll completion of the coune.
Reptratlon forms and a
lrochure for the Income tax
CDUl'll! may be ptlalned by COil·
tactln&amp;' IDR Block olllce at
618 East Main Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,

614-992·6671

If You Are Uallappr and
Don't lnow Which War lo
l11n1 c-ln For AdYkeOH Visit Will C•wlnce You
n-e II A letter Wor.

I1

SSM OFF With This Ad

I

614·594-3310

I

302 West Union St.

answers.

likE
DIAMONIIS ·

MATTHEW PECKHAM

Peckham
birthday
Mathew Peckham celebrated
his sixth birthday recently at the
home of his parents, Jeffrey and
Vicky Peckham, Middleport.
Cake, Ice cream and pop were
served. Attending were his par·
ents, his grandparents, Gay and
Charlotte Harper, Middleport·
Rose Dee111. Pomeroy; greai. .
grandmother Gladys Deem, Ra·
cine; Bessie, Angle, Cheryl, Jay
P . and Amber Fisher, Middle·
port; Debbie, Danlelle and Joan
Peckham, Middleport; Erich,
Sandra, Andrew, and Brltany
Philson, Pomeroy; and Michael
Deem, and Ray Deem, Racine.
, Sending cards and gifts were
Cindy and Jeremy Jones, Middleport; Pat t:y Weaver, ,Myrtle
Quillen, Middleport, and Charles
Deem, Racine.

COLONY THEATRE

Visiting
Lt. Col. James M. Roller and·
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Jacko and
sons have returned to their home
In Waldorf, Md. after a weekend
visit with Mrs. Dorothy Roller .
They came especially to return
Mrs. James Roller who had been
called here by the Illness of her
sister, Mrs. 1 Owen Cantrlll, a
surgical patient at University
Hospital, . Columbus. Also In
ColUmbus with her sister were
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Owen,
Pomeroy.

AEROBIC
CLASSES
BEGINNING
TUESDAY, AUG. 23
CALL TO RE.GISTER
(304) 882-3700

MS FITNESS, INC.

ONE EVENING SHOW AT 7:30P.M.
ADMISSION $1.00

HARTFORD, W.VA.

I988 CADILLACS
•DeVWe•
•Brougham&amp;

•SeVIlle•

BINSTOCK

ELDORADO . $24,900

si9,900

OLDSMOBILE
'88 DELTA 88'S
2 doors &amp; 4 doors

98REGENCY
FAIR ENTERTAINERS- The Solders and.Friends, contem·
porary pspel and patriotic music singers, will be on the hiD stages
of the Melp County Fair at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. The Solders are
Mark and Rita and their three daughters who have been singing at
Athens County churches lor the past several years. They do solo
and group numbers. Joln.lng the group will be Linda
Hlndman·Ervln, soprano, with cantempoary gospel selections as
wei! as lluet combinations.

I
••'

New' attraction
skt for fair ·

Dr. David Ayers

A new attraction at the 1988
Meigs County ·· Fair will be the
vocal group known as the All·
Meigs County Fair Chorus. The
chorus wlil perform every day of
tne fair at noon on the hill stage
and at 4 po.m. on Tuesday and
Friday.
· There are 31 mmwebers of the
group which Is under the dlrec·
tlon of'Eiruce Wolfe, Racine. The
chorus perfoms various types of
music and their shokws Include
some dancing, The members are
from 'various school of the
county. .
.

Family Practice

&amp;

Dr. Edward Ayers
Pediatrics and Internal Medicine

....

'

announce the opening of their practice
at
'
. Pleasant Valley Hospital
· Suite 12

Per!omring on the hill strages
at the Meigs County Fair at 9
p.m. Tueslday will be the singing
due or
Bruce Wolfe and Karla Smith.
The two have been singing and
performing together for five
years. Smith Is current~v a
' student at Hocking Technical
Eollege, Nelsonville, studying
nursing, and Wolfe Is a student at
' Ohio University majoring In
telecommunications. He has dl·
rected three varelety shows In
, Racine. The duet performs coun·
• try, pop-rock and old tunes,
; Including both slow and up-beat.
: Their usual ,show runs around30
• to 45 minutes and Includes softie
: dance.

Seeing patients
Monday through Friday
8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.

For appointments WI (304) 615-6015

'18-l0.0636M

$~5,900
'88 CUTLASS
CIERA

HELP WANTED

LABORATORY SUPERVISOR

For modern fully equipped physi·
cian's office laboratory. Qualifi·
cations necessary: MT (ASCP),
well versed in instrument opera·
lion and trouble shooting. Com·
petent in ail lab areas. Excellent
benefits. Weekends off. Apply in
person to or call 446·9620, The
Medical Plaza, 203 Jackson Pike.
Gallipolis, betweon 8:30 A.M.·
5:00P.M.
.

DO~R

EDDIE MURPHY
CAVALIER

COMING TO AMERICA WILL
BE SHOWN FIRST .

NOW IN STOCK

1987 BERETTA

1987 NOVA

19861ROC CAMARO

$10,900

•RYE
•OATS

1986 PONTIAC
SUN BIRD

1987 CELEBRITY

•BARLEY
•WHEAT

'.

PLUS ALL OTHER FIELD SEEDS

SUGAR
RUN
MILLS
MULIEIRY AVE.
POMEROY

•.

,.

s9;900

'88 CHEVROLET

COYER CROP ·SEEDS

Singing duo Set

'I

\

Clifford Ashley of Route 1,
Racine, Is the winner of last
Sunday's Tlmes·Sentinel Mys·
tery Farm Contest. Fourteen
people correctly Identified the
!arm of Clarence Henderson.
Ashley won the $5 prize lor the
contest through the lottery route
' since there were so many correct

being planned

The charter was draped for
Donna Nelson, treasurer, was
Bess Russell at the recent given special honor and pres·
The '40th reunion of the James
meeting of the Harrisonville en ted a gl!tof appreciation by the
Wolle family will be held Aug. 21
Chapter 255, Order oft he E&lt;!stern · worthy matron. Also the cha·
at thehomeo!Mr . and Mrs. Tom
Star, held at the temple.
plain, associate matron and
Wolfe, Racine, State Route 338. A
Bernice Hoffman, worthy rna· associate cOnductress each gave
covered dish dinner will be
tron, and Dana Hoffman, worthy her a reading and a gilL
served at 1 p.m ,, rain or shine.
patron, presided at the meeting.
Betty Bishop announced the
Bessie and Robert King of approaching marriage of her
Middleport were Introduced and daughter at the Danville Church,
welcomed along with 60 year Aug. 13, 6: 30 p.m. A reception
member, Ruby Diehl.
will follow at the Senior Citizens
Roberta Circle was announced Ceo ter, Pomeroy.
for Aug. 18 at McConnelsville.
The birthdays ol Neva Nichol·
The worthy matron read the son, Pearl Canaday and Charles
.story o! the station Ruth. Allee King were announced. Harold
Young was repored Ill and a Rice had the blessing and re·
thank you card was read from freshments were seved by Mrs.
relatives In appreciation for Lots Wyant, Pat Arnold, and , - - - - - - - - - - - flowers.
Judy and Larry Well.

'88 OLDSMOBILE

I
I
I

~---~~~~-~~----J

•

A reader who Is knowledgeable
about the large eagle on topofthe
former Canaday .. now Annie
Chapman building on Butternut
Ave., Is quite tamlllar with the
eagle which has been there for
years on end.
Recently, the eagle was taken
down by Mitchell Cllapman,
restored and returned to the top
of the bulldlng.
The eagle was originally one of
those distributed by the Weide·
,man Brewing Co. and has been
around since the bulldlng on
which It rests was owned by the
Kaylor Family.

Wolfe reunion

UMW meets

·Tells Past, Present and
Future - Gives Advice
on Love. M1rriaga and
BUllineaa. ·
I

~THE

Center from 1 to 5 p.m.
Beta, Beta Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority has volun·
leered to serve the canteen for
the upeomlng bloodmobile visit.

---

In 1977, Cooley was reinstated
as an amateur golfer and played
In the 1978 and 1980 U.S. Amateur
Golf Tournament. He 1984 he
became head golf coach at
Athens High School where he had
been grad11ated In 1966. He has
been volunteer assls tan t for the
OU golf team for 12 years.

Sprl•t &amp; •••., ....,.

Harrisonville OES.meets

An event by the Meigs Unit o!
the American Cancer Society on
Sunday should be interesting.
It's a wine and cheese social
event and will be held from 2 to5
,T he need for blood never ends. at the Meigs Senior Citizens
The demand Is continuous and Center In Pomeroy. Everything
there Is no substitute for human has been donated and the event Is
blood, offiCials of the Meigs free of charge--however. free will
Blood Program, state.
offerings are welcome. A great
The Red Cross In Its blood door prize will be awarded
service program lor the trl·state during the social. By the way, the
region collects, processes and center Is air conditioned and It
distributes whole blood and blood might be a fun thing to attend
Several district meetings were
products to over 60 hospitals in before you get Into all of the .
announced
at the recent meeting
West VIrginia, Kentucky and action or Meigs County's Fair
the
Forest
Run United Methoof
Oh'fo..and Meigs County Is a part next week.
dist
Women
held
at the church.
o! that program. .
·
Mary
Nease
presided and
··Blood Is one of the few things
And what with the fair going on announced Oct. 1 for the annual
ln. life that you can give to others next week, you'll probably miss
at no expense to yourself and the some of the action at the district meeting at TJ:Inlty
opportunity to do that will be Republican National Convention Church In Logan; spiritual enrichment day at St. Mark's. In
Wednesday, Aug. 17, when the
In New Orleans. Doesn't that just Bel pre, Oct. 20 and the Festival
Red Cross bloodmobile will be at
break your heart .. do keep of Sharing, Sept. 24, Clark County
the Pomeroy Senior Centers
smiling.
Fairgrounds In Springfield.
Officers gave reports and eight
sick calls were reported.
Readings were given for the
program and Included "Letter
from a Friend" by Hilda
Yeauger, "I Wonder What Would
Happen" by Kathleen Scott,
"Legend of the Ralodrop" by
Erma Roush, "His Mysterious
Ways" by Mary Nea$e, "Heav·
en's Grocery Store" by Evelyn
Hollon, "I Live In a Friendly
Universe" by Lillian Napper,
"School Marm" by Mary K.
Roush, "The Calendar" bY Edith
Sisson, and "Epltath o! a New
York Wom;10" by Carrie
Grueser.
Edith Sisson served
refreshments.

Cooley named head golf coach at OU

&lt;OPEN MONDAY THAU FRIDAY
IAM·II PM
SATUAD:' Y ! .~-~~ 1J.ri!.

ol Syracuse, cauchtlllls king
salmon while fishing oil the
coas&amp; al S&amp;. Joe, Mich. The llah
was 36 Inches long and
welped a! pounds. His uncle,
George Brawley operates a
charter senlce on Lake
Michigan •.

By BOB HOEFLICH
I know you don't want to talk
about · it, but schools across the
county are gear·
·
lng up for open·
lng this month.
Doesn't seem
possible, does
Jt? I mean, It's
been a long. hot
summer and the
weather just hasn't made any of
us feel all that good.
At any rate, up Racine way, the
annual meeting lor parents of all
youngsters who wlll be entering
kindergarten this month has
been set lor 7:30p.m. Monday In
the Southerp High School
· cafeteria.
This meeting Is for those
already registered and those who
have not. Parents of those not
registered are to take their ·
child's. birth certificate and lm·
munlzallon record to the meeting ·
so they can get their child logged
In properly.
:
Classes lor all students of the
Southern District get underway
on Aug. 29, Supt. BobbY Ord
reports, with the same time
schedule and same bus routes to
be followed. New students of the
district who have. not previously
registered are to do so at their
respective schools the week of
Aug. 22.

AKRON, Ohio (UPI) - An wheels but now we race on 43
all-time high of 58 girls are percent fiberglass wheels," said
entered In this year's All· Iula.
The c~rs race on a soft asphalt
American .Soapbox Derby which
has drawn 162 young racers from sur!ace similar to that of a tennis
30 states and seven foreign court. The track Is 953.9 feet long
and the cars travel a bout 30 miles
countries.
·
As many as 14,000 people are an hour.
The winners receive scholar·
expected to gather at Derby
ships
and power tools.
Downs Saturday to watch these
Last
year's champions -both
youngsters - between the ages
trom
Connectlcu
t - were Brian
of 9 and 16 race In two categories
- Kll·Car Division and Masters Drinkwater and Malt Margules.
· •'There are a lot of things
Division.
Girls were first· allowed to Involved (In winning) like luck,
enter the DerbY In 1971 and since driving and the guy above,'' said
then, six girls have won the title. Iula. "I'm not religious but
''The girls drive well,'' said champions will tell you those are
Jeff Iula, 36, assistant general the three things."
This Is Iula's 30th year In the
manager of the All-American lor
the last14 years. ''They're more race that's being run for the 51st
relaxed and laid back. Boys are time.
''This has been my life. I can
more Intense, more worried
tell you where I sat or stood all
about their cars."
RegulatiOn weight for the car those 30 years. I can tell you what
and driver In Kit-Car DivisiOn Is year It rained and what year It
206 pounds. For the Masters was sunny;" he said.
The first heat goes at 12:30
Division It's 236 pounds.
p.m.
with the final set !orarouncl
"Those are weird numbers
4:3o
·
p
.m.
because we used to run on steel

Pomeroy, OH.

Friday, Aug. 12, 1988
·Page 6

:~

Yes, it's school time

Annual Soapbox Derby has
162 entries; race Saturday

204 Condor St.

·.

Beat of the bend

Cleveland had taken a 3·11ead
In the seventh Inning on a
pinch-hit single by Washington
and a two-run, plnch·hlt double
by Carmen Castlllo.
In other American League
games, Kansas City dOwned
Baltimore 6·5 In 12 Innings,
Toronto edged New York 6-5 In 11
Innings, Milwaukee topped Bos·
ton 4.0, Oakland beat Calllornla
7·2 and Seattle defeated Chicago
4·3.
In the NL, It was: Philadelphia
1, St. Louis 0; New York 9,
Chicago 6; Atlanta 2, San Diego
1; Pittsburgh 6, Montreal 1; San
Francisco 6, Houston 0; and
Cincinnati 9, Los Angeles 8 In io
Innings.

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H&amp;R Block, the world's lar·
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During the 13 week course,
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teach current laws, theory and
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each tax subject and practice
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Coun~e~~ are progranuned to
teach studeDta lncreublgly
complex tax problems u study
prop-I!Siell. Student&amp; wW find
the cwne both Interesting and
challel(llng.
Couflll!l are Ideally suited for
people who want to Increase

AI!anson's bobble ot the relay
home.
Washington booted Cecil Es·
py's grounder for an error as
Buechele scored the Rangers'
fifth run.
Jones and Upshaw disagreed
on what happened on Buechele's
play. ''The ball was there (atflrst
base)," said Jones. Upshaw
maintained that the throw
"sailed by me."
"We're going to win some
games," said Cleveland Man·
ager Doc Edwards. "Our guys
played hard, but It didn't go our
way. It's frustrating. I thought ,
Jones' throw had (Buechele)
beat, (but) there was a play at
the plate."

ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) - Bob
Cooley Jr., a former member o!
the Ohio University golf team
and the Athens High School golf
coach, has been named head golf
coach at OU, It was announced
Thursday. ·
Cooley, a 1!1'71 OU graduate and
member of two Mld·Amerlcan
Conference championship golf
teams, succeeds Kermit Blosser
who retired after serving 42
years. Blosser began the OU golf
program and was the school's
only golf coach.
Cooley played on the OU golf
· team from 1969 through 1971,
during which time the team won
two MAC championships. Hewas
an assistant pro at a cgolf course ·
In Uniontown, Ohio, and joined
the Canadian Professional
Golfer's tour the following year.

'best' camp

,,

..

By RICHARD ROTfttOV
UPI Sporis Writer
The calendar ~ads August but
the Cleveland Indians played as
If It were spring training Thurs·
day night.
Four Cleveland errors with two
out, InclUding a bases-loaded,
three-run throwing miscue bY
reliever Doug Jones off Steve
Buechele's weak grounder, al·
lowed the Texas Rangers to
notch four nlnth·lnnlng runs and
a 5-4 victory over the Indians.
"I'm really not sure what
happened, except that we man·
aged to pull this game out," said
Buechele. "I just tried to put the
ballln play. "l guess I gollucky,
Very lucky."
.
Mitch Wllllams, 2·4, pitched
two Innings for the victory,
allowing one run on two hils whl(e
striking out one. Dale Mohorclc
allowed a sacrifice fly to Ron
!{!tile In notching his fifth save.
"We ·really got some breaks,"
said Texas Manager Bobby Val·
enllne. "We hustled and took
advantage of the situation. It was
an · outstanding effort by . our
players."
Jones, 1-3, had not lost In 20
apperances and had converted
his last 21 save opportunities. He
had relieVed John Farrell, who
allowed just one run on two hits
over seven Innings. The Indians,
who committed five errors In the
game, have lost five straight and
11 ot 12.
Wllh Cleveland ahead 3·1 and
two out In the Texas ninth, Geno
Petralll reached when shortstop
Ron Washington misplayed a
groundball for his first of two
errors In the Inning. Oddlbe
McDowell then singled ott Jones
and Curtis Wilkerson reached on
a fielder·~ choice grounder when
McDowell beat a throw from
Washington at second, loading
the bases.
Buechele grounded to Jones,
who threw wildly past first
baseman Wlllle Upshaw as all
three runners scored to give
Texas a 4·3 lead. Buechele
reached third on catcher Andy

-- ..

.·T he Daily S~ntinel

$6900
"

.

HOURS: MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, 8:30A.M•• 8 P.M.
SATURDAY, 8 A.M. -

4 P.M.

CLOSED SuNDAY

308 E. Main Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

�Sentinel

4-H judging announced by fair
Grand and reserve champions
and those given honorable mentions In judging of 4-H projects
last week were announced today
by the Meigs County Extension
Service
In miscellaneous demonstra
lions, grand champions were
Sherr! Smith, Donia Crane and
Jo Ellen Crane, reserve cham
pions, Greta Rime and Robin
White, and honorable mentions,
Jenny Varney, Kellle Ridenour,
Michael Smith, Usa Hoffman,
Amy Moore and Andrea Moore.
In creative writing, grand
cllampion was Donia Crane,
D4vld Rice, Joyce Pickens, Melissa Neutzllng; In writing and
reporting for teens, grand champion was Robin White; In do your
thing with food, grand champion
was Meredith Crow, reserve,
Erin Smith, and honorable men
lions, Shanna Machlr and Billy
Crane.
In fit It all together 1, grand
champion was Jeff Stethem,
reserve, Crystal Smith, and
hon_orable mentions, Sherry
Johnson, Tara Grueser, Anna
Wolf, and Bridget Varney.
Other winners were Carrie
Gillian, grand champion; Jen
niter Mora, reserve, and Dorothy
Leifheit, honorable mention,
quick meals; Sarah Harris,
grand champion, and Melissa
Clifford, reserve, extraordinary
eggs, Michele Scott, grand,
Bridget Dalvs, reserve, making
It with meals; Cindy Roush,
grand, Sarah Frydman, reserve,
and Michelle Young, Linda Chapman, Barbara Coleman, and
Ruby Burke, honorable mention,
breads 1.
Debra Frost, grand, Andy
Wolf, reerve, and Michele
Laughery, honorable mention,
all-American foods; Sarah
Wiles, grand, Noell Pickens,
reserve, and Cynthia Cotterill,
honorable mention, fit It all
together 2; Angle Donahue,
grand, Jo Ellen Crane, reserve,
and Barbara Coleman, honorable mention, meals for easy
living; Usa Hoffman, grand,
Sherri Smith, reserve, and Greta
RIIDe, honorable mention, International foods.
Sherr! Smith, grand, Michele
Laughery, reserve and Carrie
Gillian, honorable mention,
teens entertain; Susan Wolfe,
grand, Stephanie. Hoffman, reserve, Sarah Harris and Tara
Clark, breads 2; Rosanne Williams, grand, Melissa Clifford,
reserve, and Emily Johnson,
Christy Drake, and Heather
Francoviak, honorable mentlon,
adventures with your camera.
Sarah Harris, grand, Kellle

The Daily Sentinel

Ridenour, reserve, Martle Hoi· mention, first ald.
ter, Chad Cook, David Rice, and
Carrie Gillilan, grand, Michele
Robin White, honorable mention,
Laughery, reserve, and ElizaPublic Notice
Public Notice
creative arts; Mike Pierce,
beth Bryant, honorable mention,
grand, Jenny Varney, reserve,
teen scene; Erin Smith, grand,
diotllnao of 6311 00 to a r1ghta of way and mineral
NOTICE OF
and Charlie McKinney, honora- living and learning with childfound _.wold rod set on reaervattOns. 1f any. of r•
APPOINTMENT OF
concrete m•k•ng the north- cord
ble mention, working with wood
FIDUCIARY
ren; Penny Aelker , grand, and
WMt corner of IMda owned
Rel•.,co Deed Volume
On
Auguot
3,
1988,
in
tho
and tools, Andy Wolf, grand,
Lisa Hoffman, reserve, more
by Ohio Pow. (:om-y. 303. Pogo 773. Moigl Coun-~~~
CoonlV
,..,bole
Court.
Jeremy Buckley, reserve and living and learning with child- Cue No 269311, Charlene A. thence oxtonding north 76 ty Deed Reoordo, and Volume
Adam Calaway and Mike ren, Eltzbeth Bryant, grand, and Pettnon. Rt 4, Rutlond. &lt;leg. 33' 00" W•t a distance 304, Pogo 329, foletlll
Parker, honorable mentln, wond- Susan Wolf, reserve, teens learn Ohio 46775 WOS _.,;,ted of16.12foettouet oronpon County Deed fle~ords
Said proparty 11 loc&amp;\ed IR
Admlnlotratrix otthoeetoteof on the center line of Happy
erful world of wood; Krls ten about children.
Hollow Road, thence extend- the Southwnt quart'r of
Chorteo
E
Pottonon,
doHeines, grand, Michael Frost,
Gary Holter, grand, you and CNied, late of Rt 4, Po- Ing north along the center SectiOn #2. and lays ant of
reserve, and Ryan Buckley, your money; Andy Wolfe, grand,
line of oald road o diltonceol the Happy Hpllow Road or
Ohio 45769
Jason M1Uer, and Chad Cook, Steve Grady, reserve, and Kim
Robert E Buck. 840 feet to a set Iron p1n and Township Rood 174, and
Probate Judge being tho true placo of begon- the south boundary line ie
honorable mention, building Mcintyre, honorable mentlon,
Lana
K
Nosoalroad,
Clerk nlng for the herem deacr1bed the north hne of Sect1oh #1
bigger things, Debra Frost, learning a bout programming; 18) 6, 12, 19 3tc
tract of land, thence extend
Said real .-tate w81 apgrand, and Mandl Sheets, re· Matthew O'Bryant, grand, and
ing in a northerty dtrect1on praoaed 01 -ooghl thouPublic Notice
foflowmg the centerline of oand doll•• 1~28. 000 00).
serve, genealogy
Bryan Colwell, reserve, you, and
aa1d Happy HolloW Road a Said raol eotola io&gt;to be sold lor
Birds and Animals
your bike; Steve Grady, grand,
NOTICE
OF
SALE
dlat•nc:e
ot 1169 8 feet to a not '-S then two-ll*do 12/ 31
Grand champions In the bird Michael Smith, reserve, B. J.
By vnue of an Order of let iron pm. lltd iron p1n be· Of tho lfor-d - l l l e d VB•
and animal project work were Nicholson and Jarod Cook, ho- Sale 11aued out of the CotTt- 1ng loCIIted near the center lue C.h '" hand on the date
Gary Canterbury, chick em-, norable mention, model rocket; mon Pleas Coun of Meigs of en old oil and gas well of lOla.
S .. d Ule II IUbJtct to IP·
bryology; Bridget Davis, caged Matt Clark, grand, Chad Wise, County, Ohio, 1n the cae of road shuated on gr•ntor' s
proval
by the Common Pie•
Daamond
Saving&amp;
and
Lo.n
property,
thence
a
dis
birds In the home; Jason Ervin, reserve, model airplane; Ml
Company, Pfamtiff, vs. Frank tence of 380 feet to a 181 Court, Metgs County, Oho
canine pet care, Donny May, chael Frost, grand, wheels;
Howard E Frank.
w Hauter. et a1 , Defenct-. concrete merker, thence
grooming and handling your Riehle Hunt, grand, Improving ants. upon a Judgment ther· Northeula d1atance of 200
Sheriff of
Metgs County. Oh10
ein rentt.ad, b 81 ng Cue No
feet
to a set concrete
dog, Kevin Grady, dog obe· vour skills.
88-CV-241n said Court. I wUI marker: thence North o dis· Approved·
Mike Laugherty, grand, rope;
dience, Chris Chapman, pocket
offer tor oale ot tho front door tonce of 630 feet to a sot Fred W. Crow. Attorney
pets, Greta Riffle, animal health Bert Mash, reserve, Chuck of the Courthou 18 tn Po- concrete marker and bemg for the Farmers Bank and
Mash, exploring the world of
3
meroy. Melgo County, Ohio, Pl•ced on the north bound- Savtngs Companv.
on tho 9th day of September. ary lint of lands owned by Pomeroy. Oh10
Also winning were Brent Rose, electricity; Chad Wise, grand,
1988. at 10.15 a.m.. thefol· grantor, thence East along 181 5, 12. 19. 3tc
grand champion, and Jeff Rose, working with electricity; David
low1ng hmda and tenements. uld boundary line a dtstance
reserve, obedience training; B. Rice, grand, electricity for fam·
Public Notice
locotad on Long Stroet on of 1800 feet to a found
J. Nicholson, grand, Candl Ste- Uy living; Jason Ervin, grand,
Rutland. Oh10 45775. the corner poat markmg the
NOTICE OF SALE
streat bounding on the north northeut corner of llid
wart, reserve, and Jill Burch, fishing for the beginner; Jenny
By virtue of an Order of
11
long
Street;
the
street
to
Iande.
thence
South
0
deg
honorable mention, guinea pig; Varney, grand, Michael Smith,
tho w111 os State Route 124. 54' 04" East on tho oasterly Sate tssued out of the Com~
Shannon Walker, grand, Chrls- honorable mention, fishing for
there are no streets to the
boundary line of Uld lands mon Pl881 Court of Metgs
tlne Schultz, reserve, and MI- the Intermediate.
south and east of the real as
of the grantor a diStance of County, Ohio. 1n the case of
One, Athens, NA.
randa Nicholson, honorable menJeremy Buckley, grand, Brian tate A complete legal de· 1666.27 feet to a found Bank
Platntitf, VI Dewayne Stut
scnpbon
of
the
real
estate
II
stone
on
the
Section
line
tion, hamster; Scott Carsey, Hoffman, reserve, and Michele as follows
between Sect1ons No. 1 and ler. etal , Defendants, upon a
grand, Theresa Lambert, re· Scott, Ursula Hart, and Christine
Be.ng snuated 1n the 2 marking the moll easterly Judgment therein rendered,
serve, and Erin Krawsczyn and Schultz, honorable mention,
County of Meigs. 1n the southeast cornar of satd being case No BB·CV-96 on
State of Ohio and 1n the VII- lanct., thence eKtendtng satd Court. I will offer for sale
Tara Grueser, honorable men- aquatic science; Heather Well,
lago
of Rutland. Ohoo. to South 88 dog 49' 46" Wost at the front door ofthe Court~
tion, cats; and Kellle Ervin, honorable mention, exploring
w 1t
on Yld section line and on a house tn Pomerov. Metgs
grand , and Ur~ula Hart, reserve, our Insect world 1; Billy Francis,
Bagtnning South gy, dtt
southerly boundary line of County, Oh1o, on the 9th day
September. 1988 ot
normal animal
greet East 30 feet from the the Iandi of the grantor. a of
grand, Kathy Williams, reserve,
1
0·45
a m . tho tollowong
Southeast
corner
Lot
N1n•
d1atance
of
1390.82
feet
to
Miscellaneous projects,
Billy Crane, Jeremy Imboden,
teen
(19)
of
Rathburn's
Sa
a
.
.
t Iron ptn, thence In a lands and tenements located
Award winners in miscellane- Shannon Walker, and Sherr!
cond Addition to the VIllage nort-terly directoon 595 on State Route 124. Elm
ous project judging were Emily Ramsburg, let's explore the
of Rutland. Meags County, feet to the potnt of begm· Street. Racono, Ohoo 45771.
Johnson, grand, Cindy Stewart, outdoors 1; Aria Frecker, grand,
Oh1o, and runmng thence ning. containing 57 acres, the street to the south 11 Elm
reserve, and Leigh Mash, Me- Charles Bryant, reserve, let's south 9Y:I degrees East 277 more or leu, and bemg ent1· Street, State Route124; the
street to the east 11 Oak
feet to a pomt12 feat North rely situated 1n Sect1on No
lissa Clifford and Jenny Clifford, explore the outdoors 11.
Grove Road. the street
of the center of Section 8, 2
honorabl" mention, mysteries of
Ursula Hart, grand, Mike Townshlp8andRonge14of
Grontoro hereon. Lnt..- P bounding on the west 11 an
unnJ'med street and there 11
microwave; Greta Riffle, grand, Parker, reserve, exploring our the Oh1o Company's Pur~ Shoemak• and V1ola B
Christine Schultz, reserve, and forests, Steve Gray, grand, Do- chase. thence Weat 56 feet Shoemak•. hereby EXCEPT no street bound1ng on the
north The complete legal
Joyce Pickens, and Gary Holter, nia Crane, reserve, Todd Harri- to the place of beglnntng, the oil, gu and other ml- description
of the real estate
contarmng 035 acre. more nerals underlying the above
honorable mention, junior son, and Chad Wise, exploring or less. 1n the VIllage of Rut~ described rQal estate and 11 as follows
The followtng real estate,
leadership.
further RESERVE all rights
Ohio ponds;' Kellle Ridenour, land. Meigs County, Ohio
Reference Deed Volume to receive proceeds. momes. situated 1n the County of
Jodi Brown, grand, furniture grand, BlllCrane, reserve, and
286. Page 469.
Me 1gs and/or royahl88 whtch may Metgs. Township of Sutton
and woodwork recycling; Sarah Chris Hamm, honorable men· County
Deed Records
be due or become due from and bounded and described
Frydman, reserve, and Robert lion, Ohlq.blrds; Adria Frecker, APPRAISED AT $12.000 !10 the axostong ooland gas wells as follows· "Being in Sec·
Hoffman, honorable mention, grand, Jeff Stethem, reserve, a The real estate cannot be situated on the above de-- t1on No Stxteen 116). Town
sold for less than two~ thirds scribed real estate There 11 No Two 121 and Range No
helping at home; Cindy Roush, cleaner environment
the
appr,.sed volue
EXCEPTED from tho above Twelve 112) and Lot No Ftve
grand, beginning laundry; Jo
Chuck Mash, grand, Michael
TERMS OF SALE. Cash deoc:ribod reel eetate all of 151
Ellen Crne, grand, advanced Smith, reserve, and Bert Mash, on delivery of dead
Bagmning at the East
the coal known as No 8. Polaundry; Penny Aelker, grand, Leigh Mash, Chuck Parker, Todd
Howard E Frank, meroy vetn wrth all and 1ev~ corner of the Buffington Is ~
Shertff of Me1gs County erally the rights to mine sa1d land Road with a 30 foot
Sherr! Smith, reserve, and Debra Harrison, safety with guns;
171
29,
5, 12. 3tc
coal as tho same was con- streetS 88 dog 55' W 330
Frost, looking good, Sarah Fryd- Keith Hunt, grand, Michele :....:._ _18)
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ I ...,ecr on that certaon deed feet from the ~ntersecteon of
man, grand, Jennifer Mora, Scott, honorable mention,
Public Notice
from Adolorde Somo at v.- to the Nonh Side of satd Road
reserve, staying healthy; Angie , archery; Denise Shenefield, ----------1 H J Moynord et al by War with the center hne of the
Donahue, grand, home nursing
LEGAL NOTICE
ranty Deed dated December Cross's Mill Road in corpo~
grand, and Michele Scott, re
SHERIFF'S SALE
27, 1905, recorded on Vo~ ration hne. thence along the 1
Jenny Varney, grand, Kellle serve, growing annual flowers;
OF
REAL
ESTATE
ume 94, Page 378, Meo111 east 11de of the Th1rty foot
Ervin, reserve, Bridget Varney and Billy Crane,- grand, and
IN THE
County Deed Records Gran· street N 6 degrees 30' East
and Joyce Pickens, honorable Rebecca Scott, green scene.
COMMON PLEAS COURT loro repr01ent that the 165 feet to the Nonh stde of
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO Grantees herein havo tho the Buffington Island Road.
FARMERS BANK AND
right to u• free goo for one thence along the nonh side
SAVINGS COMPANY,
r•idence from tho well or of said road S 88 degrees
221 W•t Second Street
wells situatad on the above 55'W 167feettolheplace
Pomeroy, Ohio 411769
described reel lltato. RE· of bagmmng. conta1n1ng
PLAINTIFF FERENCE beong made to
Lee Rhodes and Coletta MadApril Ritchie and Gary Curtis,
-VSdeed from Lester P Shoe- 5
Happy Ads
den, Navarre; Mrs. Sandra Ben- Pomeroy; Wayne Earl Ritchie,
MICHAEL A. MITCHELL.
mak• ond VIola B Shoeat al
maker. hulband and wife. to
nington and Michael Mayle, Long Bottom; Carl and Zeta
DEFENDANTS Michael A Mitch~l and Te
Maslllon; Elton and Joyce Rlt· Ritchie, Long Bottom; Mr. and
roue S Mitchell, doted JanNOTICE OF SALE
chle and sons, Kenney, and Lisa Mrs. Robert Ritchie, Minersuary 7. 1987
Cooo No 88-CV-28
Henderson and daughters, Beth ville; Josephine Ritchie, Long
Satd real e1tate IS subJect
Ao Sheroff of Meigs CounAnn and Jayne, Randy Pierce, Bottom; Bryan and Cindy Rit- ty, Oh1o, I hereby offer for to all leases, easements,
and Jeff Nelson: Mr. and Mrs. chie Rector and son, Matt, sale ol 10•00 A M on Fro·
the 9th day of Septem- 3 Announcements
Eugene Jack Ritchie and son, Coolville; Nita Jean Ritchie, day.
ber, 1988. A D . on tho
Mr and Mrs. Gene Ritchie, Tuppers Plains; Mr. and Mrs. front steps of tho Meigs
Patrick and Michelle, Pataskala. Mike Ritchie and family, Candy, Countv Court House, Pam~
eroy, Oh10, the following de·
Diana and Andy Anderson, Btlly and Michael, Circleville,
real estate
Timothy and Stephanie, Wester· Paul and Juanita Hall Paxton, scribed
Situated on tho County of
ville, Bill Ritchie and Brandy, Shauna and Jeff, Scott Hall and
Me.ga, in the State of Oh1o
Gently used
Coolville, Ken Bailey, Tuppers Lisa Munsey, Columbus, Bryan and In the Townthip of Rut~
Plains; Melissa Ritchie Griffin, and Ruby Hall Steele and grand- land end bounded and deconsignment
Kribad 11 follows: Baing a
Chris and Amanda, Coolville.
sons, Michael and Randy
clothing for
port of Section No 2, TownSchrlenk, David Lee and Mil·
shop 6 North. Range 14 Weol
children.
of the Oh1o Rrver Survey, and
chell Steellt, Columbus; Mr. an
Hours 10-4
being mora portlcuiiM'Iy deMrs. Richard Hall, Columbus,
Evenmas
by Appointment
scribed
as
follows
Mrs Ida Murphy and Peggy Mr
Mrs. Earl Hall Jones and Cathy
Begmntng at a
found
2 miles toward Albany on
Blake, Mrs. Murphy and Peggy, and Carrie Jones, Riehle Jones,
corner post marking the
SR 681.
and the Burdettes also visited Kettering, and Mildred Wells,
northwest corner of Seclton
992-5083
MoM
No 1, thence ••tending
Mr and Mrs. Charley Smith.
I 12 I mo
Pomeroy.
south 70 dog 46' 00" Easta
Mrs. Paul Darnell, Jeff and
Melissa visited Wednesday with
Mrs. Dorothy Reeves. Bryan
Reeves and Susan King were
Tuesday evening visitors.

rn...,.

••t

delitned fuaeral

FIRE &amp; SAFETY
EQUIPMENT

arransement, jut call
or vlllt

172 North Socontl A••·

llhiii'IIOrf, Ohio U760

POMEROY

'"· 16141 992-7075
Gary Snouff• - 992-7 446

KOUNTRY KITCHEN
RESTAURANT
IN RACINE

!

WILL BE CLOSED
:AUG. 15th, 16th &amp; 17th
FOR
VACATION
•'•
•
SEE YOU AT THE FAIR
•

0

•

•
'•

•

1

·-

11 S E. Mom«iol Dr.

coosarv for such enJO'(mont
and the protectoon of ouch
streams from 8t'OIIOn.

con-

l

Reference Deed Volume

:

2t8, Page 302 and Volume
299. Page 23t, Deed Re·

Nahonwlde Ins. Co.

,'
.

ol Columbu'- 0

104W Maon
H2-2Jia Pomeroy

t

'

''

Syracuse

~

tance of 62 8 feet to an ~ron
ptn located along the east
side of aforesaid 30 foot
street: thence north 88 deg
2 mm east a d1stance of 17 5
feet to an iron pm located on
the west hne of what was
the Weaver lot now known
as the Els1a Cross k&gt;t, thence
south 3 deg 30 min east a
d11tance of 62 8 feat to an
1ron p1n located 102 2 feet
from the north 11de of the
aforesaid Buffington Island
Road. thence South 88 deg
56 min West a dtstance of
about 173 feet tb an tron pin
located at the place of begm·
n1ng on the aforesa•d 30 feet
street.
conta1n1ng 0 25
acres. more or less.

992-3978

·- dlre&lt;llon CIIURQI
ct Lois 1!111.OF
POMEROY

'I1IE NAZAIIENE, Olrnl!r uomn and Mulbeny, Rev
Th&gt;mas G1al M&lt;Ciuow, Nmroan Prosley-, S S. Supt., Su~ School Ul o.m.,

w-.

mrr*tgwrntip I): :I) a.m., evmingservlce6

pm, mi~WI!Ekservlce,
7p.m.
GRACE EPISroPAL CJIUROt, :!l6 E
Main St., Pomeroy Sunci!IY servlcei llo1y
oomnuuion on lhe Grot Su~ ofeachlldtll,
and comlined wtlh lnOI'oUC JI'IIYt!r oo the
tlird Su~ 1\!omng prayer and sermon oo
all Olhel' Sunci!IY• ct the mo,.n Olurch Sdlool

dies' AuxUlary Wednesday, 7 p m Fam
Uy Worship,

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH Otr
Rt 124, 3 mn .. from Portlond-Lollg Sol-

rom £dsel Hart, put(J', Sunday Sci\Oii,
9. 30 a m : Sunday mornlaa preachta.g
10 30 a m : Sunday evening servlcel, 7. 30

p ~IDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAP1!ST
CHURCH Corner Alb and Plum )'loel

Hernnann, putor Sunday SchOOl lOtOOa
m., Morning Worship, 11·00 a.m; Wed
nesday and Saturday Eveatng SerVIces at

l'arl!ohHall Momedl~ !OII&lt;M'InglheSI!!We
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, 212 W
Main S~. Leo Lui\ evanliiO!II!t BIMe Sdlool
9:Jl a.m.: Mll'nogwa-slolp, mJl a m., Youth
~lnp, 6:00p.m., Evening ...niOp. 7:00 p.
m. Weotleoda!Y nfBb: pra,yer rro&amp;!tlngand!We

lue
TERMS OF SALE Cosh
on delivery of deed
Howard E Frank,
Shenff of Metgs County

7.00 p.m.
TilE SALVATION ARMY. 1l5 Botlerllll
A"'. Pomeroy. M.. Dora Wining In Char(ll!.
Sunday 1101lnEII meellnlj\ lO a.m., Sunday
~ 10: Jl o.m. Su- School YPSM
Eklllle Mimi, lead!r 7:31 p.m. Salvation

WANT ADS GET

~lng various speak..,andmuslcspodals.
Th.lrscloly, 11 Jl a no. "'2 p.m Ladlao Home
League, merniErs ln char&amp;P alJ wanm
invtted, 6·4!1 p no. 'Doursol'l)', Corps Cadet

~~
· ~RESIITS

a .... (Youqr P&lt;opi&lt;&gt;Bitiel, 7 Jl

UKE

Bille

'

MEIGS

COOPEBA'I'IYB PMUllll
UNITIID MBI'IIODIIT Cll\111CH

•..

..,.~

!ln. Cort Bleb

Jlev.lleloiHI- l

ALFRED - Cburcll School 9 30 a.m ,

Worship. ll a.m., UMYF 6 30 p m , UMW
Third Tuesday, 7: :II p m. Communion,
first Sunday. (Archer)

CHESTER - Wonlolp 9 a.m.. Church
School lOam. Bible Study. Tllursday, 7p

m, UMW, ftnt Thunday, 1 p m; Com·
munlon, first SUnday (Archer)

JOPPA - Wonlolp 9 30 a m : Church
Schooi!O 30 a.m Bible Study Wedn,otay,
LONG BOTI'OM - Church School 9 30

a.m

Worship 10:30 a.m , Bible Study.

Wednesday, 7:30 p.m, UIIIYF \Vadnes·

day. 6 00 p.m .. Communion Firat Sunday
of Month (Hicks)

'992-2156

HEEDSVILLE - .Church School9: 00 a

m , Worship service 11 00 a m

TUPPERS

Happy Ads
GI'IAHAM

UNITED METHODIST,

Preaching 9 30 a m t&amp;rsl and second Sun

Happv Blrthdav

days of each month, third and rourth Sun

day each month worship services at T 30 p.
m Wednesday evenings at 7 ~ p m
Prayer and Bible Study.

Dab

~ " ..
~
•
' ""

SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST,

Mul-

berry Helgtlls Road Pomeroy Pastor
John Sweigart; Sabbath SChool Superln·
tendent, Darllne Stewart Sabbath School
beelns at 2 p m on saturday afternoon
with worship service followlngat 3 15p m
Everyooe welcome

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

- Sister Harriett Warner, Supt Sunday
School 9 30 a m ; Morning Worship, 10 45

'

am
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST. Lysloo

,.

Halley
minister
saturday evening
evangelistic services, open to public. 7 p
m, Sunday Church Scbool, 9:30 am,
Morning Worship 10:30 a m

'~
s••• ,.

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Po-

meroy Pike E Lamar O'Bryant, pastor:

Jack Needs, SUnday SChool Director Sun
day SChool 9•ll a m , Morning Worship,
10·45; evenlngwonhip, 7 OOp m (D ST.)

&amp; Tldl

)

&amp; 7 30 (EST.): Wedn,otay Prayer Ser
vice 700pm iDS.T)&amp;7:11PII! (ES.
T ), Mission Friends (aaes 2·6). Royal
Ambassadors (boys ages 6-lBl. and Girls
In Action (ages 6-18) on Wednesdays, 7 p

m CD S T I &amp;7 30 p m IE S T I, Tuesday

VIsitation. 6 lO p.m

FAITH TABERNAO.E CHURCH, Bal

ley Run Road, Rev Emmell Rawson, pas
tor Handley Dunn, supt Sunday School
lOam, Sundayeventngservice, 7· 30p.m
, Bible teaching, 1 30 p.m Thursday

SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherry Sl , Sy·

racuse Mark Morrow, paslor. services, 10
am Sunday. Eventna services Sunday
and Wednedly at 7:00pm

IIIIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Dwlrtol Hal~.
tlrot older, Wonda Molol..- Sun&lt;IIIY School
Supl Sunday Scl10ol 9·30 a.m: Morning
Worship lO:i:&gt; a.m , Evening Worship 7.~

p m: Wedneoodayprayermeellng7 Jlp.m
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,

Racine Rev James SltterOeld, pastor
Freeman WUilams, Supt Sunday School
9 4~ a m •• Sunday and Wednesday even·

lng services, 7 p m

Corner Sixth and Palmer Jamm SedOOn,

Pallor Edaa Wllsm, S S Supl , Cathy
Rlgp, Aut Supt Sunday School, 9 I~ a.
m , Mornlnl Worship, 10 15 a m., sunday
Evening service, 1 p.m. Pr_ayer meetinl
and Bible Study Wed1u.Say eveniDI, 7 P
m • Children's cllolr practice. Wedlta·

day, 7 p.m , Adull choir practl«, Wed, 8
l

'

Come Join Ul AI
We Sh11e The
· 8otpel 1ofethe~

FIRST BAPTIST

p m , Radio prOIJ'am, WMPO, Sunday,

8 30a.m.

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST,

51h and Main, AI Hartam, mlnllter;
Richard D"'Bost, Atsoclate Past (I', Mike
Gerlach Sunday School Sup8'lntendent
Blbf r St•hool t: ao a m •• Morning Worablp
10 30 u m
7.00 p.m

~Deeter)

PLAINS ST. PAUL -

Church School 9 a m , Worshlp•tO a m ;
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7 SOp m , Commu
nlon First Sunday (Archer)
CENTRAL llLIIII'I'ER

Rn.JlaM1a... llet¥111 . . - .

......

Rev. Clem- 8. - . . , lr.
-~
Dolt ·-·Wclnhlp
ASBURY....
ISyra&lt;uJel
lla

m
, Church School 9 45 a m : Charp Bible
Sludy, Wednesday, 7•Jl p m, OMW, flrsl
Tui!Jday, 1: 30 p m Choir l!ehearsal,
Wednesday 6:30 p.m , (Booth)
ENTERPRISE - Worsh~ 9 a m.,
Church ScloooliO a m : Blbje tully, Tues
day, 1 00 p m, UMW, First

onday, 7 JO

Wednesday, 7:00pm
BEARWA.LLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Joseph B Hoskins, pastor. Bible
Class, 9.30a.m. Mornln&amp;Worsh1p10 30a.
m.; Evening Worship, 6.30 p.m. Thursday

Bible Study, 6 30 p.m
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, l'&lt;lmeroyHarrlsmv11le Rd Robert Purtell, minister, Steve Stanley, S S Supt.; BDI McEI
roy, Aut Supt., Sunday Sehoot9 30a m,
Worship si!'I'Vlce 10 3) a.m : Evenlngwor

ship Sunday7p.m.andWedaeaday, 7p m.
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine

Grove. The Rev WUllam Mlddleswarth.
pastor Church service 9,30 a.m., Sunday
Schooi!O :II a m

BR,\DSURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,

John Wrtght, pastor SundaySchool9 30a
m ; Larry Haynes, S S Supt Morning
worship 10 30 a m

RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA-

RENE, Rev Lloyd D Grimm, Jr. pastor.
ora Bus, Chairman of the Board of Chris
tlan Ute SUnday School9 :1) a.m., Morning wor1h1p 10:30 a m evanaelllllc service 7.00 p.m Wednesday service, 7 pRJ..
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH. Dex-

ter Woody Call, pastor Services Sunday

10 am and 7 p m Wednesday, 7 p m

DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH,

Uoyd Sayre, Supt Sunday_ School 9 30 a
m., morning worship 10· 30 a m Sunday
evening service 7 p m

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN. Rog

&lt;Franklin I

f'r Watson pa!tor Cr£&gt;nson Pratt, Sunday
School Supl Mornin~ Worship 9 30 a m
Sunday School 10 ;l) a m EvenlnJt: Sl'l'
vice, 1 30 p m
1\!T UNION BAPTIST. Joe N Sayre.
pastor. Sunday SChool9 45 a m .• Eveninlif
worship 6 30 p m • Prayer Meet lng, 6 ~
p m Wednesday

(Burch) m (Burch)

CHRIST Dav~ Pr('ntJce, minister Deryl
Wells, Supt Church SChool 9 a m : Wor
ship Service. 9•4!i p m

p m : UMYF Sunday, 6 ~ m. Choir l!e

hearsal, Children's at 6 30 p.m. Ad\lll tol

lowing, Wednesday. !Franklin)
FLATWOODS- Church School, 10 a.m.
, Worship, I~ a.m., Jllblt Study, Tllursday, 7 p m. UMYF. Sunday. 6 p m
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a m.,
Church ~bool 10 A M· &lt;.CIIolr practice,
Thursday, 6 30 p m , Ullly.' third Monday
HEATH Clllldclleport) 7 Church School,

9: 30 a.ln., Momtng Wo!11hlp 18. 30 a m.,
Youth Group, t p m , wedneaday, Bible
study 6. 00 p m Choir rehearaal 7 00 p m.
&lt;Zunlaa)

MINERSVILLE - Church School 9:00
third Wednesday, I p m (Bllrch)
PEARL CHAPEL - Worship Service

a m : worship service 10 00 a m , UMW
9: ao a m ' Olurch School 10:15 a m
(Mulll11an)
POMEROY - Churcb SCbcMtl, 9'15 a m.

a.rn , Cbolr rehearsal
Wednesday, 7.30 p.m, UMW, oecond
Tuesday, 7:30pm. UMYFSuntlay.6p.m
!Meadow&amp;)
• L
ROCK SPIUNGS - o\OOfCh School, 9: 15
a m.: Wonhlp lb a.m: Bible Study, Wednescloy, 7:30pm, UMYF (Seniors), Sun
, Worship 10; 30

day, 6 p m., (Juniors) every other Sun-

day, 6 p.m (Franklin)
RUTl.AND - Churcll School, 10 a m ,
Worship, 11 a.m., UMW Ftnt Monday,
7:30p.m. CMtiUit1an)
SALEM tENTER- Church School9, 15
a m , Worohlp 10: Ill p m. IMtOSOman)
SNOWVILI.E - Worship, 9.00 a m .
(!burch aehool9·45 am (MUIIIRift)

SOI.JTBDN llLUI!I'ER
aev.DebiPool•

a...ao,... o....

APPLE QROVE - Church !lebool 9:30
a m. WorllldD. 10:00 1 m. (first and tblrd
~undays) ; Sible s - ""ll!l'f Sllndlly 7 p.
m: UMW Sea:aad fuesday, 7:00 p m.:
Prayer meetlltfl, Wtdneoda)', 7 p m.
(Grace)
BETHANY-

~hool, 10 iiO~Oai'·

~:·ci'OFei&gt;-:

TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF

CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA

RENE Rev Herbert Grate. paStor
Frank Rltn£&gt; supl. Sunday School 9 30 a
m., Worship seorvlre. 11 am and 7 p m
Sunday Wednesday, 7 p m Prayer meet

lnR
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST

CHURCH D~tvld BEoll, pastor Robert E
Barton, Oirt'ctor of Christian Education
Steve Eblin. assistanl SundaySchool9 30
a m , Morning W(Jrshlp 10 30 a m TPens
In Action 6 p m . Eveninli{Worship, 8 OOp
m. Wednesday cvenln$t prayer and Bible
study, 7.00p.m

DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST.

Charle&amp; RusseU Sr , minister Rick Ma
comber, supt Sunday School 9,:1) am.
Worship service 10 30 am Bible study,

Tuesday 7·Jl p m
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS l'&lt;lro

land Racine Road. Mike Duhl. pastor
Janice Danner. church sehool director
Church sehool9 30a m. MornlnRworshlp
10 30 a m • WednC'Sday evening prayer
services, 7 l) p m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl
Shuler, paSt (I' Worship service, 9 lOam
SUnday SchooiiO•:II a m Bible Soudy and
praVl"J' servlc.'f' Thursday, 7 30 p m

CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION
AL CHURCH, Kingsbury Road Rev

Clydt W. Hendersoo pastoc Sunday
SChoo19. 30 a m , Ralph Carl, Supt Even
lnR worship 1 00 p.m. Prayer meeting,
Wednesd.t~!p

pm
OM CHRISTIAN. Vernon

LONG

Eldrldj:e pastor, Wallace Damewood, S
S. Supt SundaySchool9 ~~ m., Worship
Service, 10·30 am

• RACINE

~ Deaver,

FIJ\ST

BAPTIST,

Steve

P11tca- Mike Swl&amp;er, Sunday

Scbool Supt., Iunday School 9.30 a.m.
Mornln1 wonhlp lO.tO a.m.. Sunday
....,.., worslolp 7:30 p.m.. Wedneoday

..=:=8J~
Lito-. .....

CHUROI,

- AllY ....... Su-,~
t.t CGiort,-

""'"*

!0 a.m.;
Tp.m.; WaiOdoor, I p.m.
yaolbmeotla&amp; w.l., Tp.m. - -

,
'

on County Road ·10
Pastor Joe N. Sayre

.'

I

-,

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

992-2975

•

puq: GltO\IE 110UND11 CHUAat, II
mUeoi!Rt. 325. Rev. IIIII J. Watu, l'totor
Searl•. s.s. llupt. Sunday Scbool
t:!O a.m.: Moratna WoroldD 10:!0 am.:
SulldaY _,... s...r« 7:11pm., Wed
aedaY oorvtoo, T:!O p.m.
SU.VJ:II RUN IIAPT1ST 811 Little,
IIUI• Slew! lJIIIe, B. i"Bo.U. Sultd.ty

w.-

lebDollD Lm.i Momlnl
U a.m.;
~ .,.,...we.7:111 p.m. PraYer
11U0!1
llllllllfbltsltl WtdD•olay, 1:30
p
mtttiQ
•t p.m.

wl'J,tNtb
-~ 7
ICING un: IIAPI'IIT CHURCH

LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH,

Sunday School 9 30 am ; Dallu Janey.
supt , Morning worship 10 XI a m , Sun·
day evening service, 7:30 p m., Wednsday evenln1 service, 7 :.. p.m

SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE Rev Glenn McMillon, pastor

Mary Janice Lavender. Sunday School
Supt. Sunday SChOol t: 30 a m : Mornlnl
wonhJp 10.30 a m: Evugeillttc service.
6p m Prayer andPralleWedneaday, 7p.
m , Youth meetl:ft_g, 7 p m

EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST, Elden R. Slake, pastor. Sunday

School 10 a m , Gary Reed. Lay leader
Morning sermon, 11 a m., Sunday night
services· Christian Endeavor 1 l) p m ,
Song service 8 p.m. Preaching 8 30 p m
Mid week prayer meeting, Wednaod.ty, 7

pm
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH

0 H. Cart, pastor SundaySChoolat9 lOa
m • Morning worship at 10 l&gt; a m ; Sun
day evening service at 7 30 p m Thursday
services at 7 30 p m

FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald

Knob, located on County Road 31 Rev
R~ger Wlllfonl. pasta- Sunday School.
9 30 a m ~ Morning Worship 10 45 a m••
Sunday evening 7.00 p m., Wednesday
evening Bible Study, 7 00 p m

WHITE;'S CHAPEL WESLEYAN
CHURCH- CoolvDieRD. Rev Phllllp Rl

denour, pastor Sunday Scbool9 30 am.
worship service 10.30 a m Bible study
and worship service, Wednesday, 7 P m

RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST.

Bill Carter, pastor Sunday School9 · 30 a
m Morning Worship and Communion
1030am

RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amos

Tillis pastor Sonny Hudson, supt. Sunday
School9 30 am. Morning worship, 10.30
a.m , Sunday evening service 1 00 p m
Wednesday service 1 p m WMPO program 9 a m each Sunday

RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA

RaWiings-Coa1s-Biower
FUNERAL HOIIIIE
"Serwing Families"
264 S. 2nd, Middleport

992-5141

786 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDlEPORT, OHIO
1\!T HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST CHURCH, LocatOO In T('xas
Community off Ct Rt 82 Rc&gt;v Rolx'rt
Sanders pastor Jeff Holter Ia\ leadrr
Ed Roush Sundav !=.chool Sup1 Sundav
School 9 lO a m mornlnJ!: VI orshlp and
chlldrrn s church UJ 30 am. ('\'f'nin~
prea&lt;'ltint:: S('rvlcC' first thrf'C' Sundays.
7 30 p m. SpE'Cial serviCC' fourth Sunday
evenlnfi!. 7 30 p m Wcdnesda\ Praver
Meeting BlbiC' Sludv .-nd Youth F'C'llov.
slolp 7 !0 p m
l.oC'.!Ied on 0 J WhiT&lt;' Road of Hlghwa\o
160 Par Hrnson past or Sundav SchoollO
a m Classt&gt;S fm .all 3Rt'S Junim Church 11
a m , Mm1alnJ:: VIm ship 11 a m Adult
Choir practh:\ lip m Sundav Young Pro
pie's Cltlldll'fl s Church and Adult Bible&gt;
Studv. Wednesda\ at 7 :J) p m
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL 510 Grant
St, Middleport Affllialed u.ith Southrrn
Baptlsl Convmtlon David Brvan Sr Ml
n\Sll'r Sunda\ School 10 a m Morning
wor~hlp11am
E\rnlngv.orship7pm
Wednesdav r\enlng BlbiC' s!udv and
pruver mf'f'l In " 7 n m

SRADF'ORD CHURCH OF CHRIST

~~

Rt 124 and Co Rd ~ Scott StC'\Iillll pas
tor William Ambrr~ff · supl Sunda\
School 9
a m mornln.Q v. orship 10 '10
a.m. t&gt;VC'nlna:1'&gt;orshlp7 lOp m WC'dnl"S
dav "or ship 7 10 p m

ao

ST

PAUl.

LUTHERA~

CHURCH

Cornff S\ramon• and Srrond Sts P o
m('IOV The&gt; RC'\ William Mlddlcsv.art
pastot Sunda\ SchOol 9 ~!'!am ChUIC'h
scrvlet 11 a m

SACREO

HE.\RT CHURCH Msgo

AnthonvCiann tlrnOtf' Ph !l92!;R!lR Sa1u1
dav £v£'nln~ Mass 7 lll p m Sunda\
Mass 8 am and 10 .1m ( onh'!:&gt;slon .. rmC'
half hour bC'fOfC'C'aCh Mass CCOcl:.ssC'S
11 am Sundav
VICTORY AAPTIST 5l'i S 2nd Sl·
Middleport James E K&lt;'NH'r p 1s1 01
Sunday morning "'orshlp 10 J m E H'n
lng serviCC' 7 p m \\'('dnC'Sda\ f'\ ('n\n~
u.orshlp 7 p m Vl~lt a tlonThul!\duvn lflll
m
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH O.n lrl
Curfm.tn pa~tor Sundav Schuol 10 am
""orshlp SN\ lcf' 11 a m Sundav night
worship S('f\ lt'C' 7 .to p m
MidVI et&gt;k
pravcr Sl'rVirP W('(!n('Sdav i p m .

WESLEYAN

BIBlE

HOII"ESS

CHURfH of Middl&lt;1Jor1 Inc 7:. Pl•at J St
Rev Ivan MV('I s pa .. tor Ro,llt"l ManlC'\
Sr , Sundav School Supt Sunt.lav School
g :Kt am Mo 1 nin~ WOI!&gt;ohlp 10 10.1 m
Evenln~ Worship 7 10 p m Wf'dnf'Sdav
C&gt;Venin$t BibiC&gt; sl udv pravrr and pi aL'il'
servlre 1 ~ p m

LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH

tTY CHURCH L.av. rene&lt;' Bush past or
MaxFolmcr.Sr S S Supt SundaySChool
9 30 am Sunda\ ('v£'nlng ~crvlre. 7 30
m • Wednesdav ('V(!nlng Bible studv and
·praise service. 7 30 p m

pm
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRIS'MAN UNION Harlfotd. W Va
Rev

David McManis, pastor Church
School 9 30 a 'In ; Sunday momlng ser·
vice 11 am , Sunday evenint"' service.
7 :\0 p m \\ ednesday prayer meettng 1 30

,•

St . Mason. Sundav School 10 am. Morn
In~ worship 11 a m • E venlnp: sm tee 6 p
m Praver m('('lln$1: and Bible Study Wed nesdav 7 p m
F"OREST RUN BAPTIST Rev Nyle.
Borden pastm Corn('Uus Bunch supt
Sunda\ SchOol 9 lO a m Second and
fourth Sundav~ v. orshlp s('J \Ice at 2 30 p.

'-'

10 OOa m Sundavevenlngservlce7 OOp
m Mid" ('Pk praver servlet' WednesdaY

7pm,

MT OLIVE F'ULI GOSPEL COMMUN

UNITED FAITH CHURCH Rl 7on Po

meroy By Pass Rl'v David Wiseman ~~
pastor Melvin Drake'. S S Supt Sunday
School9 M am • Morn Ina: Worship 10 30.
Evening Worshl 7 30 p m , Wednesdav

7i!Opm
OUR&amp;\VIOUR LUTI!ERAJI: CHURCH.

Walnut and Henry Sts , Ravenswocd, W
Va The Re-v Geol'le C Weirick pastor
Sunday SChool9·30a m , Sunday worship
11 am

CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH.I&lt;&gt;Caled on

Pomeroy Pike County Road 25 neer Flal
woods Rev Blackwood, paslcr. Servtc~
onSundayat10.30am and7.30pm with

SundayScloOo19 J(la m BlbleStudy,Wednesday 7 lO p m

FAlTII FELLOWSHR' CRUSADE FOR
CHR 1ST. St Rt 3J8. Alollqully Rev
Franklin Dickens, pastor Sunday momlng 10 a m., Sundey ~nlftl 1 30 p m

Thunoday eveolna 7:30p.m
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLI·
NESS CHURCH, ~nc, 75 Pearl St Rev
lvan Myero. acllnalllolor: Roaor ManleY,
Sr., Sunday ScloOol Supertntencle!t Sua,
doy School 9· 30 a m : Morning worship
10· 30 a m : evonlatl wonblp T: 30 p m ,
Woolnescloy oveotna Bible study, prayer
Ollld praise service,7 30 p.m

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST AP&lt;JS.
TOLIC - VUIZtndl ond Word Rd. Elder
Jtmll 1\llller, pastor. SVndly Scllool,
10· 30 a m . Wonblp Servl«, Sunday, 7 30
p.m; Bible StudY, Woolnotolay, 7 30pm
CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL, Harrlsmvme Road Rev Olwl')" Kln1. pastor,

CllaiCJO Foulk, Sunday Schnd Supt., SunolaySchoolt:30a.m.: montnaworlllllp, 11
•·"'• S.lldMIDI ..,..,.,. T:ab p.m
Prayer Moot , WodltesclaY,7.30 p.m.
SYRACUSE
CHURCH OF 000
aan·Pontocoml Wonblp •rvtce Sullday
10 t.ll\: Sullday Sollool 11 a.m EWIIIatl
wonhlp torvleo 7.00 p m Wedii-Y

- 38S N. 2ad AWJ., Middleport. Sunday
SciiOot 10 Lm Sunday OYetllltfl 7:00 p m ,
Mfd·woolt urvlc», Wed., 7 p m
( pnoyer mOollni 1 00 p m

"•
~

,
, .
;
..,.
•

MT MORIAH BAPTIST. F"ourlll and . :
Main St Mlddlepor1 Rev Gilbert Craijit.
Jr. pastor Mrs Ervin Baumgardner...... r
Sundav SchOol Supt Sunday School9 30 a ~ _
m • worship ~rv Ice 10 4!) a m
'"

SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF' CHRIST- :

-Joseph B Hoskins pvangellst Sunday· '"'I
Blblc-Studv9u m Worship, lOam. Sun
.
dav rvl'nln~ srrvict:' 6 p m Wl'dnesday' .':
£"Venin~ st,'l'\ iC!' 1 p m
.,. • ~
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Racine • ~,-;,
Rt 124 William Hoback pastor. Sundav ., •
SchoollO ,, r'n Sunda\ ~ventng ~ervlce 7 .,
p m WednE-Sdav rvC'ntng SE&gt;rVIce 7 p m
CARPENTER BAPTIST Don Cheadle , ~o
Supt Sunduv SC'hool 9 :lO a m Morning
WorJthlp 10 30 am PravcrsPrVICC altern ~ '""'
at&lt;' Sundavs
~ · -.

-!.

THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST. ,
APOSTOLIC FAITH - No~ Lima Rd ,' "f

nrxl to fo'ort MC'II!$ Park, Rutland Robert .. ,Richards. pastor S(•rvtc&lt;"S at 7 p m on • •
WiX!n&lt;"Sdavs \lncl Sundavs

HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP '•'

TER of the Wrlllrvan Holinffis Church ~ ""
Re\ Da\ld Frrrrll pastor HcnrvEblm., •,
Sund,l\ School Sup! Sundav SchoollO a
~
m Morning W01 ship 11 a m Evenln~· l.
~rrvlct:'7 «&lt; p m WC'dnesdav C'Venlngser· , , ~
vicC' 7 JO p m
STII'ERSI'II.l F; WORD OF FAITH,
G1trv HOIIf'r past OJ Sunday servi~ 9 30

urn and 7 pm. Midv.eek!:ervlce,7 :v&gt;p 'lio
m Thursdav
,_ .,.

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third ·"'

Ave Rev Clark Baker, pastor Carl Not
dngham. Sunday School Supt Sunday
School 10 a m with classes for all ages;Evenlng services at 6 p m Wednesday Bl ., ~_
bte study a1 7 30 p m Youth services Fri "'
day at 7 30 p m
~4
4

...

ECCLESIA FELI.OWSHIP.128 Mill So . ,_ ,

Middleport Brother Chuck McPherson.
pastor Sunday School JO a m., Sunday •
Pvenlng services at 7 p m and We&lt;lnesday "T
services at 7 p.m

·~

ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Kenneth Smith,

pastor Sunday School 9 ~ am , church• '""\
servtce7 30pm. youthfellowshlp6 30p, ,;o
m Bible study Thursday, 7 30pm
... t·,

FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE, 33045

Hiland Road Pomeroy Tom Kelly, pas • ..;
1or Danny Lambert S S Supt SundaY. .. , A
morning service atlO am. Sunday even
';..
lng service 1 30 p m Tuesday and Thurs "" '
day Services at 7 30 p m
. ~,!

NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NJ\- . ,,

ZARENE Rev. Glendon Strood, pastor. "'
Sunday sChool9 JOa m Worship service,"-."'
10 30 a m • Youth service Sunday 6·15 p . . ..
m Sunday eveningservlce7 OOp m Wednesday Prayer Meeting and Bible Studr,l{
700pm
' •

NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH. Sun

day afternoon Services at 2 30 Thursday ,
evening servtres at 7 30
1

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Mason, W. ' •4

Va Pastor Bill Murphy Sunday SchoollO r
a.m , Sunday evening 7 30 p m Prayer 4..
meeting and Btblestudy We&lt;lnesday, 7 30'
p m Everyone wei rome
•'.
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa ,
lem St Rev Paul Taylor, pastor Sunday
~
Schod 10 a m Sunday evenlng7·00 p m ,
Wednesday evening prayer meeting 7 00

p SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT

CHURCH Silver Ridge Duane Syden
stricker. pastor. Sunday School 9 am .
Worship Service. lOam. Sundayeventng
service, 7 00 p m Wednesday nlgh1 Bible

•
'""t
~

study 7 00 p m

Sennonette

pm
FAIRVIE\\ BIBLE CHURCH. Letarl,

W Va. Rl J. Jam£"8 LewiS. pastor Wor
ship ~n Ices 9.30 am, Sunday School lJ
am Eveningworshlp7 'iOpm, Tuesdav
cottage pravt'r meettna:and Wble Study
9.30 am. Worship service. Wednesdav

'·

I 3U p m

11)

St, Mason, W. Va SUnday Bible Study 10
am ; Worship U a.m and 7 p m Wednesday Bible StUdy. vocal music, 7 p m

LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud-

. ,,.,.,1.,

F'AITH BAPTIST CHURCH. Railroad '· .

OF' GOD- GlllX'rt Spencer, paslor Sun
day School 9 :x1 a m Mornln~ service

ding Lane, Mason, W Va J N Thacker,
pastor Evening service 1 :r&gt; p m ; Women's Ministry, Thur .. ay, 9 30 am
Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 715

(row's Family RestaurCWit
Kt~~tllg Fflli eikh•"
228 W. Main St., Pomeror
992-5432

1---===~-+:---:----=:---7
' '
Prayer Service

RENE samuel Basye, pastor Sunday
Scbool9·30a m: Worship service10•30a
m , Young people's service 6 p m
Evangelistic service&amp; 30 p m Wednesday
service 7 p m

MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller

'

lill Quldtel and Ruth Ann Fox

CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY

!In. Dol Ardlor

1 30 p.m (Johnson)

DIAMONDS

"Make me to go In
the path of thy
commandments; for
therein do I delight. •
·Psalm 118:35

NO&amp;TIIE.UT CWIITB&amp;

study.

l7l 29. 181 5, 1 2, 3tc

... the highest good,
towards which we all
strive, along a narrow
track In a atralght
courae.
,
- L~cretlua (98-55 B.C.J

7 30 p.m

and Nunery care II'OYided. Coffee mur bt tlE

cannot be sold for less than
two th1rds the appraised VB·

Nursery
Available

SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 P.M.- SUNDAY EVENING SERVICES 6:30 P..M.
WEDNESDAY EVENING BIBLE STUDY 7:00 P.M.
-AIR CONDinONED-

John 3:16

212 E. Main Street
992·3785, Pomeroy

puler, Debllle

APPRAISED AT
$20.000 00 The reel estate

5

When everything seems out of whack
Because we've wandered off the track,
It's time we should be turning back;
So STOP and get on board.
Though good Intentions will abound,
Temptation often gets around
And sidetracks us, until we've found
We LOOK to be restored.
So let's pretend we're engineers
And train ourselves to shift the gears
Away from sin; then use our ears
To LISTEN to the Lord.
- Gloria Nowak

K&amp;C JEWELERS

'

TRINrrY CJIURCH, Rlcloanl Freeman.
Bid&lt;. Su~ School SuJL
Ouudl Sdlool 9 1!1 a.m., wonlip Serv!re
JO:Jla.m. Choir~-.-. Tllesdi\Y, Ulp.m.

204 Condor St.
Pomeror. 011.
~

•

•Music
Ministry

Located 2 Miles South of Carpenter~ Ohio

John F. Fultz, Mgr
1
' Ph H2-l101

0

Oltkat florut

362 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO 46769
614/992-2644

IG6 ..llorowl Awt.. Pfnooroy, Olo.

FAITH'S WARNING SIGNAL SAYS TO
STOP, LOOK AND LISTEN

\\

Pomeroy

Mill Worli·
Cabinet Making

'

I

\tei~s CnunlV'~

GRAVELY TRActOl SALES

MEIGS nRE

\ ' eENTER; INC.

II

RACINE PlANING Mill

'•

MIDDLEPORT

A WARM WELCOME TO ALL OF OUR SERVICES:

"
'

Deed Records: thence North

•Puppet
Ministry

A,,,,.,,

'

IWTOI

FRANCIS FLORIST

16141992-2039 or
16141992-5721

•

:m
l.J3

Pomeroy

f!OWDS FOI MIT OCCASION

214 E. Malo
992-5130 Po-oy

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

'•

8 deg 16 min west a d1s

•Outreach
Ministry

II

INSURANCE .---.
SERVICES

992-2156

j

1963. al Page 301 of Volume 218 Meigs County

•Youth
Ministry

Ftle•ilg "Old
Collflg c•,~·

"

992·3325

p.,,,,g Fliwel Shop

Brogan-Warner

WITH BARGADIS

i•'
•

cords Me1gs County. Oh1o.
Except from the above
parcel of real estate the fol·
lowmg.
Sttuate '" the township of
Sutton, V1llage of .-=tacine
and more particularly de~
scnbed as follows Located
in Sect1on #16. Town #2.

GroceriesGeneral Merchandise
Rac1ne 949·2550

Pomeroy

WANT ADS
All . . .

~

•

ment"

Range #1 2. Lot No. 5 and

,.,...,

,

1

tamln Irion or depostt of aedi-

begrnmng at an iron pin
which 1s located on the east
11de of a 30 feet street at a
po1nt 101 2 feet North 6
deg 15 min weat of the
po.nt of beg~nnmg on the
Buffmgton Island Road 1n
deed recorded May 20.

9U-2104

~

MINISTRIES

•Bus Ministry

'•-

•

same and so much, of the
bankl thermf as may be ne-

•Fundamental
Preaching

•Children's
Church

ltUidL

This 'Message and Church Directory Spom~ored Ry The Interested _Rm~inesses Listed On This Page.
,----!.:!!!~~..!!!!!!~:!!!.!!!!;~~~~::.L..!..~~~..;:.:.:.:;;r==-=~~..,.......~=-==::::::-~ '•
WAID CROSS
TEAFORD REALTY ,-•'
Veterans
SONS STORE
216 s. second
Memorial Hospital

•
:

ong, developing, op«llling Md
prOduaing; Also reoervonp, to
the Stote of Ohoo tho use of
Str...,. flowing through laid
land&amp; or abutting upon tho

CHURCH

MINISTRIES

ome

Ofld OIM mon.... - h the
right &lt;&gt;t entry for the of proopoo:1lotg for, develoopa'allng or produang the
ume and the r~ght of occup.-.cy 1110 far as the same •
sEI'llial to such such pro&amp;peet~

Happf 15th,
Kallv Lvn S111ith

CHURCH

ro ....... beoulllully

•

••

MT. UNION BAPTIST CHURCH

· WITH FLOWERS

I

·-

63/ tOO aares of lond
Reonong to tho State of
Ohio, loowev•... oil. g01. ooel

Lo••·

&amp; SNOUFFER

I ...

........._

Public Notice

SECOND TIME
AROUND SHOP

SALES • SERVICE ·TESTING

The Daily Sentinel-Peg&amp; 7

Pomii'Oy-Middleport, Ohio

Wr Snbftfl CIM$1htd Dtpl
Ill Coull St POIIMfO, ()ll;tO 4!1169

Wolfe Pen community notes
Weekend visitors of Mr and
Mrs. Howard Thoma and Iva
Johnson were Mr. ahd Mrs. Okey
Burdette of Charlotte, N.C. Mrs
VIrginia Blake of Kernersville,
N. C andldaandPeggyMurphy,
Wolf Pen.
Sunday visitors of Mr and
Mrs. Harley Johnson and
Tammy were Bill Dummitt of
Rio Grande, and Mrs VIrginia
Blake, Kernersville, N. C and

·-

PHONE
992-2156
OfWritt

Ritchie family gathers for reunion
The Wayne Ritchie reunion
was held recently at Royal Oak
Resort near Pomeroy with 81
relatives and friends attending.
Gene Ritchie had the table
grace.
Attending were Mrs. Mary E
Ritchie and son, Joe C. Ritchie,
Columbus; Carl and Eileen Rlt·
chle Kuhn, Louisville; Richard
Kuhn and Lisa Dress!, Mr and
Mrs. Kenny Kuhn and sons,
Nathan and Jacob, Pataskala,
Mrs. • Mark Kuhn Stier and
daughter, Mlkkl, Wheaton, Ill ;
Nancy and John Bucher and
sons, Eric and Duane, Navarre.

. •.

12. 1988

Ohio

THE RECURRENT PLAGUE
Jn the dlsturblng novel The Plague by Albert Camus, a French
port !own of Oran, on the Algerian Coast, was shut off from the
reat of the world by a plague. The Black Death moved In Its
haunted agony across the city, leaving behind Its anguish of
cruelty, pain, grief, and countleas victims. Dr. Rleux, the town's
physlclan observed the outward and Inward responses of the
plague-st;lcken people and concluded that "there are more
things to admire In men than to despise.'' In the awareness that
the battle against the plague Is a never-ending conflict, Dr.
Rleux looked at the joyous crowd after the quarantine had been
lifted and observed that "joy Is always Imperiled."
"He knew what those jubilant crowds did not know but could
have learned from books: that the plague bacillus never dies or
disappears for good; that It can lie dormant for years and years
In furniture and linen-cheats; that It bides Its time In bedrooms,
cellars, trunkll, and bOOIIahelvea; and that perhaps the day will
come when for the bane and the enll&amp;htenln or men, It will rouae
up Its rats ~gain and sent them forth to dies In a happy city."
We have an heard It said. "an ounce of prevention IS worth a
pound or cure". A plauge might be cured but Uvea will be waged
ceaselessly. Sin wlll Uft Ita ugly head In many ways and places,
but we live with the awareness that It Ia not by our strength alone
but by the grace and power of God which gtvea us the victory Lunar O'B..,.at, Putor, Jl1rR 8oatllenl Baptlrlt Church.

1
i

'''•

.' .••
••

•'

t
J
...
~
~

:
~

.j
~
~

...
~

,."

"''"'

{'

..'~
..••
~

�Frida~Aug.

Paga 8-Tha Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-

Thank you all for
: cards, gifts and
· best wishes sent
to us on our
fifieth wedding
: anniversary. God
bless you all.
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Edward
C. Evans, Sr.

Roger Hysell
Garage

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

Rl. 124, P-roy Ohio

- Addo ns •nd r.,...odeting
- Roo fing • nd gutt., work

-C onerete work
- Plumbing
worlil

and

•

·

e'tetrical

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-621 S or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
7-13-' 88- tin

Help Wanted

c•

6· 17· tfc

BOGGS

SALES AGENT
WANTED
Nationally known cal end•
in•ufacturer
and sp•
clafty advertisin&amp; company
offers an opportunity for
an industrious self- starter
for full or pert-time work.
This is not a franchise. No
Investment needed. We
need a sales oriented person to present our exclu·
calendars, business
&amp;ills and exteosive adver·
tisin&amp; specially assortrunt to firms within the
business community. The
Thos. D.llurphyCo.1sa pi·
on eer in the advert is 101
field since 1888. If you
orpnize your own time and
determine · your own sue·
cess, write: Pat Murphy,
The Thos. D. Murphy Co.,
Box 382, Red Oak, I A
' 51566.

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

SALES &amp; SERVICE

2 Lincoln

Torrac1

•-roy,

Ohio

992-6857

Tecumseh

OAK. LOCUST. CHERRY

$35 PEll LOAD DEUVERm
BILL SLACI
992-2269
........ tfn

,

992-6611

~30- '87

l·J.'I&amp;-Ik

PH. 949-2969
Dealer for

NEW -

•

ONE OF THE AREA'S
LEADIN(Z DEALERSHIPS
IS NOW INTERVIEWING
FOR THE POSITION OF
·'
SALES
REPRESENTATIVE.
,.
.,.
.,
• N,o Experience Necessary

·~·

- CALL MR. GILMORE
Monday &amp; Tuesday

August 151h :. 161h
(6I4) 446-9800
Between The Hours Of:
10 a.m. · 12 noon
&amp; 4 p.m. • 6 p.m.

Real Estate General

~"SPECIALISTS

IN OUR FIELD!
.• CALL THE CLELAND STAFF!"

CARTER'S'
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
992-6282

MIDDLEPORT - Excellent location I 2 story ho me located
near par k &amp; pool' 2·3 bdrms . original woodwork, new sidin g.
fireplace and much morel Call for your showing! ASKING
$32,500.00.

t

A••on•bl•

"L£l GEORGE
DO IT"
HAULING
SAND-GRAVEL
LIMESTONE
FILL DIRT
985-4487

125.00 Perm
00
For
Cut &amp; blow Dry

$21

sgso

8-8-1 mo. pd.

NOW THRU SEPT . 3

lAY'S BEAUTY
SALON

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

169N.2nd
Middleport. Oh .
992-2725
7/ 20/ 88·1 ~0.

CUSTOM BUILT
PRE-FAB
ROOF TRUSSES

985-3301

Middleport,

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

SYRACUSE, OHIO
Most Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles
A/ C Service
All Major &amp; Minor
Repairs
NIASE CartHied Mechanic

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Now H - • lulft
"Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949·2860
NO SUNDAY CALLS
3-11-lfn

•Seamless Gutter
•Roofing
•Vinyl Siding

•Roofing
•Home Roofing
•Wood Crafts

fREE E!IIMATIS

"At Reasonable Prices"

SMITH'S SEAMLESS

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

GUnER &amp;
OWNEI: J.ffr ry Smith

Day or Night

It. 1 .lOX 136, VINTON

NO SUNDAY CALLS

614-742·2235

CONSTRUCTION
7-13-'88·1 mo. d.

4·

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

•Dozer 8t Backhoa Work
•Will Do Hauling With
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Sarvic:e
•Junk Yard Businesa

VANCE ROAD - FARM! II country liv ing appeals to you,
then lh1s fa rm w/a pprox. 50 acr es of land s hould draw your
attention. Complet ely remodel ed 3-4 bedroom house. New
drywall throughou t, new carpetin&amp; Ins ulated steel doo"large co untry krtchen, fo oted bath tub, many other neat featuresl Barn, s hed. $37,900.00.

Announcements
4

Giveaway

·2652.

6 puppl .. 10 give AWIIY·MOthw
ntglstered aa..en. Cell · 814-

265-1683.

-a: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Local merchant looking for Plrt
time. Good worldng oondftlanL

~~

Border
Collie. 112 Gerrr.n Shepherd.
Wormed. Parenta ex&lt;:tllent
watch dogs. Call 814-982·
5519.
Full aim bed with box springe
and mattre... Call 814· 742·
2989.
Gr1y kittens. Uner trained. 8
wks. old. Coll614-742·2657.
Free to good home v-!low Lab.
male puppy. 2501'11 Uncoln

"'""1 female dog, 8 mot. ol~. hllf
Beagle-Cocker Spaniel. Call
304-895-3801.

2 Calloo Cots. Call 304-6783698.
Pl.no. Call 304-67&amp;-6821 after
8PM .
To glw May-Carpet, Call 304-675·3035.

1770.

Free puppi81·Pirt Btagle. Call
304-878-2928.
AKC registered. All 1hort. Cell
304-895-3073.

Klttono . Coil 306-87$.4H5.

5

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

•·

608
E ..Main

POMEROY, 0.
992·2259

r

'

CHESTER, OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS- BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp;. REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

986-4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
References
1 1221 1 mo.

Some lyplng. FuN dmo If .,._
ftctary. Send resume to: Box
208, Ootllpollo. Ohlo48831.
Won"''• now hiring -Inti
foe•. App" In ,.,.on bot-on
Oolllpollo,
Ohio.
2Bridge
• 4,Plu.
Mon.
-Sun. HO
lilwr
~.,..,,_.d hoot pump, olr
cordtlonlng • fwmece lltf'Yice
m.,. Ar&gt;plcotlono bolng 11~111:
Box 1113 c/ oOolllpoh Dolly
Trlbu ... 8211 Third Aw., 0.111pollo. Ohio 41831.

Hllr Stylittl. Acr011 The StrNt
styling Nlon Is ••ldng OM
oddltlonol ltyilot who It looldng
fOr mctn1 th1n jult •ott-- Job.
Coli Torrlot 814-445-1110 far
dotollo.

Oovornmont Jobo. .1 8,040tl9.~30 yo•. Now hiring. Your
.... 805-817·1000 Ext. 11'9""' fol CUiftnt Fod... llltt.
ROY"L OAK REIORT. Pomor&lt;&gt;f, Ohio, Is oc-lng opp1.;..
lions far tho falowlng paoltlono:
1.S•I•
and Cl.,..,.
2.S"• A
3.Cuot_
.... bllc RolotloM 4.R•
cep,lonlltl IJ .Ieoretlrlll·
Cl.tcol 8.Tolophono fl_,...
llorillo7.BI'"" ct..tr 1.8-llty
PlriOnntl. lome poilltlans on'
oorrwnloolon TOP PAY far TOP
PIIOI)UCERS. Wo- oq ..lltv
.nvlrc:inrnent With top notcfl
1rolnio\g .,d rnonog-. Fer
an ~hbhlftt •d llrllii.t81W,
coli Mr. An1hon¥ II 114-112·
~4118 ·Mon. thru S.. 10:00
•m-IJ:OO pm.

"!:-J.n

'

•:•1-~• to ...

- " lit•. . oct lludont; (21
reeding - rn 11 f ....,ah •d

,..ou..,.mM.,..to._v ..UIIty
1-lrod - - (31 oldlng tho

- " ,......od ltudont with
'Mfhln acldemlc work; ( 41
I Illig tho v~ lmpoiNd
Olud.... with00--01&gt;
ment ..wd .... crf ~I
.. ,.,.... ..... •d (I) m81ntllllllng aommunlcatlon wtth

Motbor of 3 wll bob¥ lilt In ""

· Al"hou... cotii14-44S.
24711. ulc far . . .,.

-~~- -.._n
flooblllyond
to uee a

Cl&gt;m..,.,ot•llonoool"'-lng.
81a.llnt
..nabla.
Colll14-44..7447.

tnt--

II Mqulred.

should .....
R. Ch.t• Holtldo!'. Diroo-

1111 !Ill lp..rot Educotlon, II 1M
Molgo Loco! lollool Dlolllct
Contool Offloo. ~~~ ... 1149N,2tl3.

0

Will do bol&gt;thlng In"" too ...
Dey or nlaht shfft1. a- to
HMC . Colll14-44S.87.21.
t..line. ..,.t,..trimmfne~nd

Caiii1.._H._7231.
Far • • ar ..C. 23 acNe wllh 3
• do
h
Ph
' ...~ 001m 0 - INI CDNio 114_,10117 "'too
nch.

bll:hl. MW.,- .,.,._d. •111
lot. alo• to ahuroh-. .chool1.

"""pplng. Coll814-192-7081.

Muon. MuM h••

-.dable vehlale. Call Je.n
Milt•. 304-825-28 30

Pliny Truck Stop now accept Wag
... ... fa• ..... Colt 30471f7·1387 bot-on 10 •M-1
PM.

Busin811
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
lHE DHJO VALLEY PU8LISH·
INO CD . ..... . , _ . lhot ""'
do bu1in111 with .,.,.... you·
know•.• d NOT to .-nd mDMY
tlvough the m1lluntl yau hwe,
lnveotlg- tho ofl-g.
.

•outv

Shop &amp; -.ulp. Cali'

304-773-5821.

Wan•ct-Some OM to do flmodollng ... - " ' " .. g. .g .. 10

'

do owr lnta ..,..mwnta. Plea
ooll 304-878-1701.

Som10ne to ._·In wtth eldertylacty. Mew Haven
Not en
ln,.llcl llaht toou• work. Colt
306-773-1118. 8:001111:00.

31

12

1986 Morlotto Modulor Ho-.
801128. All oloctrlc. Co. 3 BR., 2
blths, grlllt room, dining room.

••a.

Situations
Wanted

Homes for Sale

To many Utllll to Mit. Mull . .

•PfNI••· .... 000. aw,_ ,
fl-alng. Coil 814-445-1401
IO

H..,, roam In home for ..,..tv

01

h ..dl~ I*'SDIL Crown Clty.
can 814-211!-8109.

13

·

Sacrifice. 2 BR. home. 1 MM. 2

ml• pu•d Vlnt• Schoal.
Complotoly r..-.r. -

wiring. llahl1. wfn~ blo'Aft- .
in intUtetlon. plumbing. kitchen •
........... ...... throughtout.

Insurance

Call ua tor your mobile home
in1LJt'anee~ Miller ln1urance.
304·112-2145. Alu: auto.

hotN, life. hllllth.

15

•ft• &amp; PM.

ctrop•&amp;o-.. Alto-hor/d,.,, ...... Nfrla. G•cltn opot.
123,000. Colllf6-31N4112111
38-.91114 111 10 PM.
ao.,lllul Holoornb Hln, oddlllonol lot. 3 SR ., Co. Coil
116-448-0338.

Schools
lnetNction

Ae-TAAIN NOW!
SOU1HEAS'I£R N IU SINESS
C011£GE. 829 Jo""- P1ko.
Ohio lnst~ Orlnt O.edllno "141·. 18. Call 44&amp;- 4387llog. No. N-11-1011111 .

3 811 .. utlllty, g. .g .. lcltehiOI
wtth .:pN.,CM. EJCellent opportu , . ~'&gt;too lo 1111. cotl ,
81 4- 44 11-UIIIl.
19811 Modulorh.,...3-41R .. 2
blll:t.. on IJ . . . . PoiKI, out·
building. No• More-to. Call
814-21a.e887..•
1

j
1L:~==~==~~==.t:::~~~~~::::::
"ard SaleS
.,

.......f)O.mero'i" ......... .

.......Galtip.oliiii' .........
8t Vicinity

Middleport
8t Vicinity

'

Y01d 811•2 Fomlly. Dopot St.
. , - pit. 101
Rullond. troll-own &amp; - AI do!'Wod. I!Dhl. IAM·7 PM.

a.r.ae Sale Augu.t 12th .nd •
1 3111. Coftogo 11o.r 11 Hoi•
Harr61 rnkllnol In Sy'"""·
Mony · ltorno.
Oo11toS.ooF~. •s. . 10to8 .
Ioiii' bod. -pon. .80od oohool SaturdaY' s wond•rful rain
a1ott.. toio• tovl:h•. mroo. plovod "'"'oc wMh mv ll''d ooto.
eo.- Rt. 321. Con Mill lid. lo--M will bo hold thlo filet., ;
-ln11.hm810tp.rn . Lotool ,'
Mowing . . . 1110 et.•hlm 1-• II to 13 - 1. olocltL
111e01. Thu,. .. Aug. 1 1 thn&gt;ullh . . . . . wlntli'- ...... dalown.
ao.tl, plu1 .. _ _., "\nidi- ·•
101.. Aug. 13.
k -......... - - - o d Y.-.1 lol•frl. • S.. 10.4. 13 """"- "'""""" Hocllloh. 109
Vlno lt.. Oolllpollo. Ohio.
High St., """'"""·

a.

l'rldov· 4 PM-8 PM. lotUidoy-9
PM-t PM. Roclni!I·Coro Mill
lid.. Jnt 11ouw rt. a.ll*olo-. ho.,.l.,.,..,.
Two l'lmlv VOid lol•frldov •
- . .. Dloboo. "'"'" boolco.
• - mony mloc. ltorno. Oa' 1
mHoout-oC-IId.,_
Ill. 7, _ , "" ·~ Coli
114·441·4149 lor rnoro
lntarmnlon.

8otunloy, 13th. 8 :00.4:00. •
Fo,... Run lhL. n.t to foNit
Run Block Co. 1.-\ Inch lnsulleed
window .,..... fiNpl.c:e .nd ·
j

ltcwesuppii-.IMnmower, lots '
of men•s Mid w.,...•, clothe~,
women' 1 .._ 1-11. m..w' s 32-

Rev. Floyd Aou'• birthd• il
August 12th. Heppy IJ4thl

Y..r ooto. sot. ""'· 13. 9-1.
lraclburyRd.. furnltuN. coal.,d
- - ol-tl OIO -

FOUND: Femele DoMr1111n ~

llolonalng to DonotdColll!l. Coli
114-2'4&amp;-1838, lmmool•oty.
Loll on Rt. 143. t rnllooflllt. 7
Bypau, white u. .. Ap1o on
SMunl.y. Call Kertn«h O.LonQ
11814-1182-2489.

h-

LOST: R-11- t100 to ony
who ...... tono
llght Ol'lf'l~d white femlle
. . In Got
!Wry , PlE"IE
CALL306- 711-17411.

............. P1i ..................

.
-..__,.....--""'..... N-=-•.=.:'l. tr. . ·--1=
. .. .,., ...........
- - . 38" off. lolo
S.. I to 7 ... oolt
11~111. I m . _ un

,

"'- a

teo. Look

......

.

I. All A lun-'8eliii.ICing......

only. 1-2.

~

Ylrlf lol•lot.-&amp;11. I AII-I
liM. leb MeC"Itt..... flld. QH6

,..
,
411: r£ boalll .. d morw.

,.., . euant
· 8t VIcinity
. '

..
,

:i~~;iV·;;~·hi;.:!.d.-.~;;

it-,

wv. - -

from 1M~ ..at. KerG .
ho-. Hdotnoilo', olllp...; · ·
cl
ond loll ot , _

•

A

f t. . .ment
,_. '
for Rent

:&amp;mn·,.-:.d - - Call
Furrnltecl 81Nr1ment. t221 a
mo. 1 BR . Utlkloo polcl 920
l'oruth Avo.. Golllpollo. Coil
441l-4418oii017PM.

l~rg~: ldtch.._ all . . . . 1 v1..... first mo. 11nt • diPOIIt.

Call 814-445-1311.

1 IR. ept .. neW c•• .ngtlfrol1 tr .. refrlger.-or turn-d- Wllor·allbogo pold.
Dos&gt;olllt ooqulnd. coti814-44S.

431L

Furnlohod olllconoy op! . ·3
rooms &amp; bolh. C.pot........,..
Dill Pr- &amp; '~"'"'· Slnalo
worillng- only. Coli 8f64411-4107., 4411-2802 .

Lot-b-.. . . . ,

Roanw for IMit·WIIek m month.
S11rtlng at t12D • mo. 0111 ..
Holll-814-445-1510.

46 Space for Rent

1979 Boy\A- mobllo - ·
14x70 wMh 7x21, oxponclo.
t..r ol_,, Oonllli oll. 304-8758141 .

,~. tmJM~""-•

•

offiCI sub. Vry
prMte. Loc::*&lt;l In downlown
Oolllpollo. .310 .... rnonth. Coli

oyd., co-olciiPII·I3.99

Boot.,dmotor ..dlrlll•. 1171

114-448-3432.

1171 Communltv 12x80 mobl
comD1111alv furni1Md
ho . ." 2 SR.&lt; IUmlohocl Colt New
p tuwnt t.. mobile ...._ In
304-•7fl.301v.
oky. -Ita Oftly. P..Wng. cot!
114-448-0331.
33 Farnn1 for Sale 8EAUTIFIJL AP"IIlliiiENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES "' J"CK80N ESTATI!I, 138 Joab..,
Plilo trorn t183o rno. Wolk 10
shop ond rnovtto. 814-44._
21H. E.O .H.
40 1or11 Raaoaan Rd.- ,..,... u

•"

nlu~-hocl

• Co
"!i.n...::
eorte14-44 .. 11r7.

~~a... •:n.ooo. eort 304-nz- p:cl·:.-'1.. ;cl No
No 1111 ~

'*"'"'I

FuJnlthod- I

=

_... &amp; both.

ct-. No Rot.•
r-rund. Utllttoo fll-

- - - - - - - - - · Adulto on". Coil 114-44._
1111.

COUNTRY MOll LE Homo Polk.
33. North ol ~'~~-or·
_ , 11011 ... Coli 814-112·
7471.
8Pic6ou. mobM1 horM loti for
ront Fornll!o PTido Mobllo Homo
P•k. Ooll- ....ry. W. Vo.
304-8711-3073.

!loo••• fa• 11n~ 1r111• . , . _
&amp; _ l l _ . . . LoQiot
Rd. Rl. 1, 306-8711-10711.

TroRw ...... tor- 3 mil• S .
Pl. Pl-1 11 y off lit. 2 &amp; 82.
304-878-3118.
2 1oto fo1 Ill. 2 obout I

,.,...,t..
-1. Flnonalng &amp; lnlloi!Otion

Block. brick. IIWer pipes, win-

do- tlntoto. otc. Cloudo Wintoes. Rio Onndo. o. Colt 814248-1121.

VIR•'• FurnltuN
New IOfl • ch-..one to fit
-v
b o - oulto.
chllt.
robel. bookahlll\••·
wood din- ..... hutch-.
wooh. . &amp; dryo.._
refrlanton. reng~~ . AU ..._,.
twefa at lowCOit priOIIbeMUII
w. h..,. no hidden aatt. Uv•·
wov• _.-,~ pluo -clng It
ovotloblo with " " - - ' Clodlt.
Rt. 141-CM•••rv·'A. mHe on
u . - Plko. 0p., 9 AM·8 PM,
Mon.·Sot. IuNDAY- 12-1 PM .
814-44.. :11118.

::s--

Mw•g

Building Supplies

Bullclng Mll:..lll

avalllble. Mollahln Furniture.
Uppor Rhlor Rd.. 448-7444.

d--..

Ru.tk:
ond• _"''"""
_, Lop
Siding

• O.ctM•ert•

GUIIIft-Ouollly

CETIDE. INC .. Alhono-1 14594-3178

~ble .......,dryer

66

Peto

for Sale

"'""""eo-.

Groom and Supply Shop-Pift
Grooming. All breeds ... All

1.000 ITU oil conditio-. t30.
Colt814-448-2287.

Julio w.bb Ph. 814-448-0231 .

ltyla. lams Pet Food O.aler.

Dllgonwynd c.m.y ttonnol.
CFA Porol., Md S l - lclttllnl. AKC Chow puppl•. New
Hhnot.von klltlno. Coli 1144411-3844 oltor 7PM .

OuMn sill ftcotlon bod with
hlllter • blld Mme. CIHn •
excel. cond. •410. Call 114-

44&amp;-2297.

t121. Cl&gt;lor TV.
171. Doop tr. . .. 11711. Coil
814-44.. 2310.. .

Bllnony 8 .... 111 pupo-AKC 44
ohomplono In 8 ~--Ions &amp; 8
H.el of Fama. t150 e.ch. Cllll
814-3811-8384.

G.E. Wnbor,
·Owrenteed.
4 VI•• olcl
ruM
like new.
•180. Coll814-387-0322.

AKC 8 r,...,
- nY "-onlol
-•... 8
~
pu,....
wilo. old. Shots, w«rnod. Colt
114-448-8714.

Aotr~or,

For toto: M - - klnt~­
..,. - - _, fill ....
white b1daoom ad..; sofa; 2
chlirl; IIINO; TV oonlbla•tlon:
vi• top d l - MI. AI oxcol,.,, co-lon. can 814-9927088.

- · pupo far lllo. AKC Reg.•
hOIWY' colored • rad. 8irll
a. .......n lno. can 114-4454372.

I - .... old buff colored fedle
Coclc• -lol P"PI'Y· AKC
R-od. •zoo. Calt 8142s8-t318 olt•I:OO pm.

•M• and c••

ch ..... l. . . 7 - -.
otlwr lttrM. Am ..... a•bl•
after ICcepiN. 0111 304-1714383ior ..,polntmont.

Registered Mlnl•ture
acto-r. Aloo~•St&gt;onlol .
loth mol• puppl•. Cosh. no
· -· Cal1114-192·2807.

Antiques

au, or SoiL 11-lno - 1 124 E. Main Street. Po mer..,.
Hou,.: M.T.W 100.rn. IOJit&gt;.m..
lundoy 1 to 8p,m. 814-112·
2828.

64 Mlac.

Ad1nw fllrna-Ciinnlng tome I - lor Mlo. Lotort Folio. Ohio.
Call 814-247-2081.

Slivol au-s-corn. You
pick 11 .00 o bolln dozon.
-- adllol'*odii.IO. Unlmltod
qusntty. oe-.wtiDOJM. Irlng
own b-at or box~&amp; Aug . ., 3 and
14onty. P•k8rOMinFtrtn~,SA
7. Tu_., Plolno. Ohio. 816887·3181 .

Merchondlae

Farm Equipmerit

410BJ.D .. Iwovbl.ro._,c:h.
90% t11ck. 19114 1210 Ford
truck. 302. 4 opd. 0111816-4483040.

=a~"!.:.ulpc!'i1~,t

Sickle b• • aldde for Gravely

tr.ctor. Excel. cond. Clll 114215-1077.

CO-.

Livestock

•
2 Ten.-e w•klng
•

~• . No
ptpn, t700 for both. Call

1 Shnmeutal cow. •100. 1 bltK:k
Mid whit. f.:e cow, tiJOO. 1

Sl.......,l holf• coil, 1310.
Coill14-949-2144.

64

Hay

8t

Grain

S.ley .for •I e. Cover crop or
f..ct. Don Johnson, Porttand.

Dhlo 814-843-8205.

&amp;.I., for · •fe. ·eo... r crop Of
feed. Don John1on, Po"t.nd,
Ohio 114-843-8201.

8tniW, •1.50. Ground shell,
•uo,.., too. 8-12. Mon.·Sot.
Mora..•• Waodlewn Firm, Rt.
31. Pliny. 3a6-937-2018.
E.:tltent Alf.rt1 h.,., Morg•
Woodl.wn Ferm.RI. 35. Pliny,
304-937-2018.

Tran s porlo lion
71

Auto's For Sale

RED HDT b•golnsl Drug dillboats, ~.,. rep'd .
SUrplu1. Your lfet. Buyws
Cluldo. (1) 808-887-1000. Ext.
8-4882.

.,,, c.,..

1981 Plymouth TC 3. 4 opd .. 2

0Z78-8PM .
loll

1917
otl P -up.
PS, P8,Dodgo
AM-FM Cu-,
bod
llnor, Nnnlng boonlo, 4 cyl. I
opood. 21 mpv. t75Cl0. Coli
114-44&amp;-8143 or 304-878·
7187.
1917 FD&lt;d Tompo OL .lido..
PS. PI, AM-FM. ~lt.txcot. - ·
::~ firm . Coli 114-1 4519'11 ThuNIOiblrd, T·top, oil
.,,o., Pl. PB. AC. UIOO. Coil
.114-24 ..1188.
19821ulc:k Reali. ace 1art-.
loodod. oxool........ 1:11100.
197ll'onl LTO 11, n - . Coil
114-4411-1381.

u•

118301111. Cuot-CNitoriW.
PDwlr Ioeila, crulll, AC.
... ...e. ...., gaad oand ..
U400. 11112 Tov• - •
h•hboolc. oxcot. ooNI.. 31
MPCI, t1400. Colt 116-24111178.

1

, . _ _ ""' •
otll... w.llt-ln
...... 10...78-14. .

1171 1'1• X 11. oo.-t. ·
...... tiiOO. Colt 814-4411108.
1111 IIX 7, 12100.
11112 Dido. W-n,
· - • • ollgn_,t t20D.
catll1 ...118-1270.

I

1114 Clowy I 10 pl'*up ox. .. . . . . TllceOVIr .. fmenla.
Coli 814-441-1141 I

GOOdl

PM:

....

Quoon ... bod. ......
cortil. n 10. eon 104-1711017.
Y...t lot•LIIolo Lono ""'tram K • K. lun. -Aug.14. 81111

••

"Rulo t1: II you got elllld OOICI, lry not to
. , _ wtth your visor down."

'

*•·

1981 El Dorado BiMTitz. Com·
pletely lo•dedl Attroroof.
liNt.,_ interior. a• 350 V8,
13,000 mM•. VOC. Aoldng
t5800 814-992-8833- lor

weekendl.

1985 Dicit Cutltoo Cruloor Sto·
tion Wagon. Supar lh•p, V8 .

1111 Ohlo11 olrlo
116-44.. 1001.

~

Orntt~o.

- --

1981 Aell1n0e K. ExceHent
oondftlon. 12.000mll-. ell f1IIW
lim. Colll14-992-7751.

1967 Chwy. BII·Air. 4 door.
•1000. Coil 614-742·2282 or
816-742-2990.

oorwanatd .. " - •

Colt

·'

1• ·

u• •·

Sl ~d o1 h
•n-pr•tu•
plotoo • tlw-tbo..,go. AI,

lJ::" 1~:;:".,;."''l!isr~
875-1718 or 816-3711-2220.

UHd Tran 111 • lorw. All ~
rwtty ln~~~Mtld. 30 d.,,....,.,..
tee. We buy nntml ria a c.11
814·448-0881. Robutldlng
ovolloblo.

79

Motors Homes

8t Campors
Sconio 18 tt . . . __ a• or
oloc. llfrlg. . .......... Aolllntl
tiOO. Good ........ Colt 11638.7 ·0413.

....:...------~­

.

'•'•
••

Serv1c1~'

"70:---o.-::::::::---- .I,'
;

81

j'

Home

'•

Improvements

:~

--------------- d
!,

BAIEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconcltiorwl ·tttwtlme ...,...
... Local Nf~NnCe~ furMhed.
FrM Htln-.. Cell colea
1-114-237·0481. dl!l or night
Ragerslasem•nt

w.... prooRng.

1(

''
:'
':
1,

•,
1•

-no :l
;~

SWEEPER
.,d-Ina
..,..,,
_ ..
""d oupplloo. PI all ,
up ond do!Nory, Dovlo Voan.. •

CIN111r, ona haH mile up 1 ,
Ooorvoo Crook Ret. Coli 814- ''
4~0214
••

------------------'•
ConeNN
T•kl - 1000 ::
5eptic

giL; 1100 giat. and Jlt -.cion , ,
OV"'""'· FoCIOIY _ _, ..,.., •,
ohop. RON EV"NS EN'I£R· ' I
PRISES. Jo- Ohio. 1·800. 1'
837-9128.
. .

:I

=:-:-::=-:-::-====- ·'
RON EVANS EN'I£R !'RillS· , :
Soptlc ... k P'""Pinlt •110 .... •,
1ooc1. eont.aoo-131-teze.
,,

--------,,.....,...- '•
Pllntlng: lnwior • Eldlrlor. :'
Free • " ' - - · C.ll 814-.a.t.l- 1 "~
1344.
!~

"

1872 Monti Ctrlo F1ctory Big
Block 402. t2500. Cotl 814992·2772.

RON'S Television Service. ·l
Hou• c•l• on AC-., Ouli•r. ·~
G E. Spoclollng lio z .. ldt. CZIII
304-878-2391 or 114-44._ .'
2454.

1988 8uldl Rhlora. 306-87522114.

Fetty Tree Trlnmfng. lturnp
,.,.,..I, Coil 304-1711-1331 .

:!

19115 Ctv•ller. autOfT'IIIIC. air
cond. , re• defogg•. AM·FM
. .roo. Coli 304-178-1818.
1971 Mlraury Comet. Auto.•
"''· ., 80. Colt 304-878-4823.

1971 OMwtte with ext111.
SHAAPII UIOO. Coii306-87S.
2008 oflor 4:00 PM -okct.,o.
ony1imo lotunloy • Su .......
1900 Dicit Cutl- SupNmo.
1 9 .. a. ... tmpola Supor Spoot
conwrtlbla CMI after l!i PM
304-875-2719.

72

TNcka for Safe

1'.ndem Mlc truck • T.,dem
law boy u.il«. Oood cond.
• &amp;710 or wHI •II ...,.,..,._ eon
814-445-8038.

eltc.. n., motar, nMfrantend.

...... or

1978 Ctll'}'~lr Le.,_on. 4 door.
battary,brlk•.
Loodod. 11200. Coli 616-992·
7214"' 114-992-3224.

new pelnt.

1979Z28 Com010. 3104opood.
T-Top, bli• with black lnarlor.
Extro nlco. Coll814-378·8437.

ctr. h..,h-. can 114-44&amp;-

SNAFU!~ tiy Bnce llnttle

Rod Hot b - o l Drug dHioro
coro.booto.pi.,•IIPo'd . Sur·
plu1. Your .,... 8~1 Guide.
1-10&amp;-887-looo Ext. s-9808.

1970 Doddgo Choll- R·T
440, 4 opood. R_.OIId far
show. notch.,. Duane Weber
814·742· 2979 or 114-992·
3345.

;;:::=;;::::;::::;::==
Musical

1----------.L..--------.-..1

1181 Oldl Cutl... Sup11m1
Br...at&gt;oiY\ V·8. like.-. Ono
.w-.Coiii14-25S.8279ofl..
4 :30PM.

Flir Special buy: one .w ch81n
gtt.:ondFREE.10percentoff
chlfn -"'a during o-1111 Md
Mason County Fsln. Sfden
Equipment 304.875-7421 .

1977 Mon• Corio. Good ooNI.
"000. Coii814-Z88-12 ...

lnctlv-1 1(Uillr 1 - . b•
...,_., -•gutta~ IN~
..... Mu!llo. 114-445-0817.
Jotl Wo"'"'"' lnotructor, 11444M077. Umltocf Oponingo.

·

'4998. Coil 814-992·8719 .

Dok

wtolll.r olocoric - - · Coil
Aogoro Mobllty
1·814870-..81.
1ZHPrklngG'""""Modolot32.
41.. cut. """'na 11100. eon
11 ,._ 387•0483.
---------

1980 Buldl LoBobro. 2 dr..
h.-dtop. Celil14-441-3714.

Older Ollwr Traetar for ula

2 Ado ..bl. &amp;omovod pup!ll-.
AKC. 1171oooh. Coll304-87&amp;2721.

WhMichM•new or u.cl. 3

1977Trlftl AM. Call 814-3792409oltol PM.

uoo. Colt 814-742·2178.

1181 Dodgo An• SE. 4 dr.
Stdon, 4 opd.. PS. PB, hlah
m•Mga Well m•n•lned. t3S:O
1t1reo tVMttm. •1100 or bMt
olflr. C.IIS16-44S.8700.

Instruments

1980 et.ovw Mozda. 4 C'fl., olr,
outo. Good cond. Soll/ ndo far
....1 wluo. 11000. Coli 814241-8801.

9157.

AKC Oor. .n lhopt..do;"' I
....Ito 2 bloclc mol• .,d I bloclt
f•mele. Shats atarted and
.......... 304-411-1128.

67

198401citmobllo0mogo.4cyt,
25,000 mil• on drlw 1.-n.
EIIDtlt. coNI. 14000. Coil 814379-2109.

t971DodooAo,...sWSiontl.
1200. CZIIl -lngo-816-245-

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 35 W•t. Jldcton, Ohio.
116-285-8481.
Muooy Forguoon, N- Hollon d.
8uoioHog8oi•&amp;S.vloo.Ovor
40 UNci t18ctar1 tocho011 from
• complete llna of new • uMd
-.ulp-. lolgoot ..Soctlon ~
I.E. Ohla.

63

Perts

BUDGET TR"NIMIIIION~- 30 rdov•
- mlnlnun.
-'-~
••
...,_
1118 &amp; up. llobu• -

,...,d.

18nC.maro. Y·l, euto. tran1.,
PS, P8. Coli 814-445-181&amp;.
oft01 I PM 448-1244.

;;;

Auto

8t Accesoorles

_ _ _ _ _ _..;__ _
Auto'• For Sale

1887 Oltvy C.Vall•. Auto.,
AC. AM-FMowoo, -dofroot .
1 e. 700 mila Prlw
Coli 114-H8-S240.

61

'

u-~ &amp; ~ .• 1I

B"""nv Sp.,lol pupo. Shots.
warmed. 1 wb. ald. • eo 11ch.
814.742·2772.

For Loooe

Houoehold

&amp; Vegatebles

Botw ""'"""' 121 ooch. Coil
114-445-1354.
'

EXCELLeNT CONDITION
FURMTURE
Motchlng Chii'Y bullot . on d
ChiM cobl- .,._ ooldOoil

63

71

•w

814-379-2501.

Oald lift """"· ..colt... lor tny
person tttet c~n'tg• In or out of
• chair bv '*•llllwl. Call Mr1.
816-445-1370
- I PM.

ldtohen

fR•it

Cl&gt;ncNio blocko·
oil -Gllllpo· ,....t
ord.nv.ty.
M•on.,d.
llo Btoclc Co.. 123'n Pint it.:
OoiiiDOI&amp; Ohio. Coii814-44S. 02 C•t. Pony engine wtth Cat
2783.
-""· sood oond. u.ooo.
oft• 5:0 coli 306-178-2889.
WESTERN RED CEDAR

wltlutond. t210. Coll814-4•a.
8714.

buff«,

58

245-1212 ott01 8 PM.

rnurtw 2000 ... ft.

111

r::~=~~;===:r~===~OO=•,..:o,:HEA:·'"':·j 76

Mo-. Colt

Cou!M- ,. ._ h - In
oounloy. Clot• County. OUIIido
dotl " - ... 814-742-2017.

: , I

8174.

10kl 1ooo. t221.
3 04- 871-41131 '

47 Wonted to Rent

[,] ' I I

27ft. Pontoon-. Runogood.

For •'• 01 •de for tnac (fll cW'
of oquol ...... can 304-773-,

Kubota t,.ctOf. excel. cond ..

mlnulll tr.n town. '"· manth
p l u t - 304-8711-3000.

49

..... 18ft. catll16-992-ll17..

d,.ft b..... up. •121. Kawe-

115

• yd. Large lllectlon fA room liN
ND job too big or

=

-..,IY 111 HP. 1178 Choclt·

Tiov lultt tiH•. 1100. Cl&gt;mpl...

..no-.

•

S.e King 21J HP mcrtar. •110.•

Oolllpollo Forry, 304-878·2870.

-•orv

Boeto end
Motors for Sale

Call 114-317.()44.7.

=
.:"''!".::!"· !:':..~~':~
choil. Etc. Soo • Glllt Form.

...... ell• oouch-. ch*•·

AftMcttw

71 28 fl. a . - n motor
ho'ml, _., aanlllned. V.-ygood
coNI. 304-1711-2341.

1m.

75

Remodeled t1ou.- being torn
down- Sellng Th..-mo win down.
- - h • .._
lcltahen .-,., wood bu,_., ldt-

bedding,

Stop &amp; Choclt out our
"" quollly tumlt- • _,.. fal
law
I pa. wood lUll•
net. 1 ,.. ook dln-1228.
cut loop c.,... . .rtlngotfl.l8

w-

Apartment
for Rent

bedl,

3 room.,.......... 1100• mo.
Call304-87tl-1104.

Fo••r'•

44

Dinette•.

1971 Hondo 714. -kiVwlnd
...-. 1100 0 .1.0. Coli 1167 42·2282 ... 114-74:1-2110.

1983Hondt V 41. M -. OaodooNI. Ll&gt;w '""•· Coll304-87fl.•
3833.
'

••pot.

,. .,._ o o - d •bl•. Evolv
day a...-.. 'h ml• out J•rt:.
cho. :104-87~ 1410.

·- - living. I .,d 2 bodroom ..,.nmem• at Vltlage
304-875-2702,178-2147.
Hou•farrwntinPom~roy,Ohlo.. Ma11ar and A....,.lde Apartcot! 81 ... 992-8144.
monll In Middleport. From
101orMioocr•wlo••••1112. Coli 114-182·7787.
a.lllpolll Ferry, new horMello Att•etlwon~ftoarhorM.t117 EOH.
• 2 1010 w1111 ,..,._ 170.000. can Mulwrv A..... Fa ......,. 2
304-878-4831.
- -, llv~g .--n. clnlng 2 bodr- API&amp; far - •·
room. lcltehon, b•h ond lovely Co•-cl Nlco -lng. LouNiry
lrtdl - · olloloctrlc. O..onb- sun pQ&lt;Ch. C.poto. d10p-. tdMioo ovollololo. Colt 814rltr EaliltM. With lacr•. b•n. steM ..d refrialflltor. Ful baM-- I 12·371 1. EOH.
Coll304-87fl.2381.
montwlth-'--dryorhoollllp.
klul tDr worl:fng courle: lOfty. Ntwlr NdiODIIted .,_ b1•1t1
8117F-Lon•Cir..-11Cm. no pots..,. chlclron. •231. otuo -M•Io. U..loo polcl 1228.
t.go. __, nloo 3 -oom ncurlty dopooll. PhoM 81.._ ,..,rnonth,d-ooqulnd.cotl
ho.,.loc•od on 10.183corntr 992·129Zofi•I :OOwookdo!'o I 14-912-1724 oftor 8:00 ..,.
lew! lot. 2 c•overetlltd g~rage orenytlmeonweelclftd.
1'12·1111.
• 12x38 - k ohop, Morlan
Do-tit Molluln R•lllv· CoH Olon"""""Nt,. 2 BR. bolck. 3 I -oom lumiohod or
304-822-1117.
..- v . ._eo. oil .roc.. wood unru.-od _..,..... Onoln
burning flNpS.C• wall to 'Mit ,_,nwfCPI, ona In ,.dcl1part.
c.-pot. ""ceptlng I chlld.l320. Coli 116-812-1304.
32 Mobile Homes
HuntlnQion, 306-828-7081 .
Smll. olll"'- a - • IPI-far
for Sale
one In Sy•w•. DIDolll ,.
q - woo• pold Coli 81642 Mobile Homes
992-718001 814-192·8238.
for
Rent
Shub12x81. 2 811 . wkh8x10
••Pindo, nWI plumbing. Unlur3 roomfllrnlohod. R_o.,d
niollod. t4IOCI. Coli 116-445d...... ooquiNcl Worillngodulto
2981 .
2 &amp; 3 BR. All utlkloo pold . .opt on". Phono 816-992-1942 of·
etiCiridty. Oonwna.nt loutian. t•lp.m.
1973
rnobllo ho... Call 8U-44S.BIIS 01 445p. .IOI!y tu...hod. I 2x88, 2 40011.
"P"RlliiiENTI. mobllo homoo.
- - P l . Pl-ondOolllpo·
1~
'"""'-pinning. dod&lt;· 7x14. Furnished 2BA . Ce,Cible.Mter llt. 814-4411-8221.
t710a. Coil 114-742·2381 II'Wage peid
MDble
anytime.
Home P1rk. Call 114-441- Bitch s - . Mlddloport. Ohio,
2 bedroom fll,.hod oportrnont.
1802.
1974 Bud"' 14x80. 2 BR .. oN
utltta. llllld. rwf..nc•. Phone
..... u-nlng. doclt. .. Moble home for ..nt. w..r. 304-112-28...
. . , •. Coli 114-445-8281. '
....,., tnlh pldcup fu.,..hld.
Rot. ooqund. can lt4-44a. oc-lng ..,pll. .lono far
11• Shultz mobile honw for 0527.
2 bedroom ..,...... t.. fuly
•lo. u-..rnnlntl CA.. llfrlg.
a•petM. .., ....oa w.t• end
.. 11-. Coli 114-1104 Ill 1 2x10 unlurnlthod. contlli •c. tnoh p~a~~u,. provided. Mol3811-1338.
"h mile .... HMC on Rt. 35. Clll -•-lvlngd-loollop814-445-4389 .... 304-8711- ping, b•llo ond M&gt;h-. For
'Three bsd Will mablle home 9710.
moltlnfoimlt5oncll1304-882located, H•rrllonYIIIe ~res.
3718. E.O .H.
. tiOOO. 1.-.d oo-ct pooolblo 12xiHI Dop. .. Ref. roq-.
with 20 ,.......,. do-. et.a. Furnlthod.
potcl noo. No Apartment-ft.W• 3 raomt •
742-3033.
poto. 1 ... 2 pooplo only. Coil b•h. Woltowoll_,.._ II-&amp;
814-4411-0822.
rolrlg. fllmlohod. - - .. """'
18
- ,._...
with...,.
10dl
-Wll
· Nice 3 B t - unlumlthod hoolc·...,.1 oo2.-odulto.Rol.
home.
work.
... Coll306-878-4880 ..
LMd oontfllal: with o•'lhlrd ..d2 ---fllmlthod. Kon• 875-1982.
down. Betwt• Athena 1nd guo. Colt 814-445-7473.
P o - . 111,000. CAll 81689fl.t227.
MoblloHo.,..fa• - . Ewttyn'o 45 Furnished Rooms
Mobllo Homo P•k. Konougo.
1974 Chompion 14xll totll Ohio. Coil 816-445-01011.
FurnlthM:I room-111 Second
oloctric, u-ponnlng. Fur·
rWhlc£ or unturNIMd. ReidY ., 2 H*oom t•l•. 1171 plua A.... Oolllpollt. tl28 o mo.
Utltltioo ~~:';t,omoto.Sh . .
mo... ti.IOO.OO. 304-875- dopoolt. Rotroclc 1100. Coll30.._ bOih.
Colt•
1lo-7PM.
2383.
BN-3314- 8 PM.
1970 Wlndo01 12x81. woodburMr. wuhlr • d,.., 11r
col'llltloner. Mult be. moved.
Call 30...1111-3102.

-•-dump,

PICK INS
FUIIIIITURE

Motorc:ydes

'81 Hondo.TIIX 121. 4-...oolor.•
-bonooy .. d-booto-·
Good 1100. ""• 8, •ott:
304-171-2118.

=• -:;:r..":..::'";.,

2 SR. oportmoi.t. "II utlnl•
polcl Coil 814-445-8723.

~~

I Fomlly on Rt. 7. It milo In• Ill ' ot "'· 211. I'll •
CIO!tlt.. Vlntoio.10.1, "ug.11.
14 • 11. ~ oll•ndllloft.
.,., 010.

NICJIIty furnllhecl 1mafl. hou•.
AduMo only. Rol. roctu~od. No
POlo. Colt 814-445-0339.

311 Lou 8t AcrN911

Y..t ..... • bit of .,.,, M•g
.........
· 1111..
lun. 10'130IIIIo.

FOUND: Wotch ~ ,..,111111 lot
n_. footblll 114d M end of
Cod•lt. Con bolcltnllt1odottho
Tribune, 12,5 Third Ave.,
llotlipollo.

Rent

38. Loti "" ..... ·
Docie ooto. 442 S lth St.
Mldcloport. .t.ug. 13. 1Do.m .•
4p.m. Lots of nl• hllml.
Tu•. •ndwed. 1~ mil•. HYHII
Run . Women•. children• (
clo- . Misc. Ito ...

-

Homes for

Firm. TrlbbleRoiiCI. 7ml•lrarn 1 1 Court S~ -2 8R .. 2 bolho.
Rt. 82. - .. ()ounly. 11'1 IIIIIch., .,rnlohod, wlw o•pot.
- · Houto .,d bulclngo. Colt
306-71111-7210.
No
011
•3Ziomo.
otuoulllllloo.
Dot!.
101. Col1114-441-4128.

a hn.· 1A mile out
Rlf.twn right. BIW
bod, ow1nt. atothlftg. mloc.

-

41

-ok-.

NewiPIP•

Hnen •

44

For • • or ..m:. A~Frtme. Nice 2 bedroom hou•. Nice
A.t "Oa• Rd; Cell eft• lp.m~ c.,...ing. cabl..-. nelahbor116-H2-19...
hood. Mlddl..,ort. 814'992·
' - - - - - - - - - 8111.
Oorotio~t., 4 , _ &amp; b•h
wllll op - · t17.000. Coil 3 bo..,_,_ · - oil. Colt
oltor 8 . 0. 304-875-2118.
11 ...992·18• dl!lo or t -114582-11151 evening• and
2 or ,._ IR .. fill .,_ b mont. nl• lot. &amp;col ooNI.
LD-.cl on Rt. 2 Apple Or~. 1 room hou• In Langaville.
•38.100. Coll304-87fi.24H.
UOO...., month plus dopoolt.
. App.-d ..t010n0• roqulnd.
3 - - too ... 1'h b•hl. Call 816-992-7281 Ill 816· · - d . ...... olllhHI. lJ&gt;. . 742-3141.
c.- 1ft Pt. " - - ' · Call

Clor-·

c.m. ,..ected for
Horold Dlopoth. Aou• from
OolllpollotoPom-bodldown
to Pt. Pl_,.t Inducing New

t::::::::::;r-;;:::;;::~::~:::::'1

19'11 Chovy Mollbu Qoulc.
Auto. ISO •e. 11.100 mil• Canwn'-t 2 bedroom --..e
balll. .t running condition. In O.lllpoll,' •210 per ....,nth SINII fun*htctiPirtment. Cen~~ Ill&lt;. ttoo. 814-9411· plus utlltloo. Coli 814-44-. tllllyloc•.t.1 or2qulotoduNo.
1890.
No - · llot. .. .... dop.
• ....... d. Coli 815-4411-0444.
• 3bedioomhou•in
..ldcl,;ort. 3 a r....
....~,
~. . -~~
2
..
• ..- g.....

po""' ..

21

. . ..._

Wlth01-001ootl&amp;8rnllto
trcm
Molgo Mlno. AI-d•
lohoolo (good blocltlop - ·
1 I mit• from Pbn'W'ay ar
• • - · Hou•onl'f10vo. . dd.
3b•*-11&lt;ibodt. tZI.OOO.

Y..r c ... bru"' ounlna. light

emp~r"

-

oldlng. • - -

"VON • AI .,.... Call M01l"n · - 1. 1111 Sloclt 816-1182·
wo- 304-112-28411.
2289 evonlnQII.
NURSING AISIST"NTS Plo•
Cortll.r Doy Coro PTovldOI. I 0
..,. VIII., Nu...,a c.o eon..
,... oapNI- tonmool• OP'
It lolling high" mo,..tod &amp;
onri'Lfor 1 • 2 chldNn. \NIH
.,_.....lo p~rt-dme nursing nprOYido - - · cotl
._ta. Appllcenl• mull be gl
81 ... 92-7038.
wiling to work all shtfts. If
ln.,. . .d Clllt ptqonnel offlae •Witt do bol&gt;thlngln ""too ....
306-178-4340. P I - Volll!l
Lots a1 chi..,., 1cthftl..._ Nice
Hurting C.e Cen• II an Eq.-1
.....,._. 814-742-3028. .
Opportunity &amp; afflrrri•tfve
... llfaoiO&lt;.
Pal=, awlor and ntlrlor;
dry
lng; p..olng;
d
HELP WAN'I£0: R•ldont Con d~dl wlllk. .cot1814-1182·28 ...
Coonlh•tor, Pl ....nt Valley
NureingC.r11 Cen•rll•trehlng
Will do """"" cl-Ing. Coli
for • ,M perl....t and en. .etlc
304-875-2000.
reglttered nu,.. to Mlume the
n .wtv Ore.ted p011t6on of ret~
Loto !Ill T - Loving Coro. Will
dent c•e coOidlnator. ltiiH
b....llit In n i i ' N I W - dawloprnent qulllly ...u..,..oe any
lhift. Re•onlble flit ... Call
• ,.._,. It ooqulrocl Tholdool
304-882-3828.
ceruldlll:e lhould h_. 2 lo 3
vo•• Dl
luporvloOIY
•plllonoo wtth O.ontologlcol
OlrttfiOIIIon. If you are lntlr•ted ~d w.nt ·to m •a •
dltf.-.01 In som.onill lfe Dill
Personnel OffiDII. 304-1714340. •Pie_,t VIIIIIY Nurllng
C.e c.nw II • eqW~I opportunity • afffrm~ttve action

Smart

Slotoly,

·-·

'iffl13ifl $1? ®Nil

'""II""·

aleck electronic
2 ltary oldOI homo. 4 typewriter
is really some--2flllb-lllDR.
FR. 1. . . ••·"' .... h... sun thing. It has . the #OX doing
p-b-ont.dollchod2..,.
1'
wllh st
vtnyl h
ds
rin
the lazy
an
p
gs
over
ond *·
lol. 111.000. Coli 814- b
192-1481.
rown dog."

ret....-

~-5-

-.to .

Tree • ~=~ temowl. ltOM,
Tondumptruclc.
gaod motor-t171JO. Don't
......... _
816-441-9-

NEW· 8 pc, . , _ t391.
U v l n g - -- 1111-1881.
8unkbedlwtthb1dai''Flll •111. · ForS ..eorTredeforgooddca;r.
Fullorillmolt-·-n C... 100 B boclthoo loodor.
tt•rtlno- I II . R•cllner~ Conot. King W/ Cob-24 inch
clltltling bu .... bru .. buclcOI &amp;
clrt - •· biN good oond.
uao.
oullft, t1tt-t281. Dooko. 111,000. 1171 Dodgo 1 ton
oil--•
wrtngw Wlaher. a oomplatelln•
tnlt-. il.OOO mi-. .xn
of ulld lurnltu..
NEW- W-n bo- 130. good cond., 14100. Coil 114118 &amp; up. ISiool &amp; 371-2773.
_ ...,. Coii816-44S.3189.
For Soi•Zonlth TV· 110. Coil
Cl&gt;unty ~Mince. Inc. Good 614-445-7945.
used 1P
au 1nd TV 1ttl.
2 window air condltlo,....,oth
Op .. I' M to IPM . Mon thN
rurw but ,....,meworiL t21
a.. 814-44-.liH, 827 :J,d. Oooh
01 both fol 140. Coli
Aw. Qolllpollt. OH.
81 ...387-0274.
GOOD USED -'PPLIANCES 1878 142 XL F,...ldln Skitter,
W•to.S. dlyolo, rofl-oro. good oond. 11• GMC T.,clom
lk,go b~~~oncoo. fog truck. now log bunllo • good
Uppor llhlor d.
.....
Cloll-- 814-..
"7391.
· Coli 814-21S.1H2 '"'
-285-1211.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE .
Troy Bulh IJ HP TUI.i tor •Ia.
ao~ -d ~.r.. ~ lrorn Coi1114-91Z.SHO.
·- -· ~
,.._
t3911D . .H . Tobl• flO ond
up 01 1125. HI-do t390 21,000 ITU'L 1300. Coll616to 1598. RocllnM t221 1D Whirlpool
982·1107. Air Conditioner .
U18. Lo- tze to 11211.
01-IIOt .. duptaU&amp;I. G.E . Soif-Dotroot Rn,::or,
-toblow·l•h•••21ato 171
It •
t781.Dook•100uptotr7L
· cu. ·· 1 IO.
Ho"'Y OUiy Dryor. •ae. FllglHutch• .400 Md up. Bunk d-HoovyDu~W•'-.1100.
.,
.,..
bodl complolo W--Ill W
tztl.,duptot308. Btl&gt;tbo• Wl-1-•-•'*· tH. cotl814•no. Mooo . .. ... _..1111 742·2312.
fill or twin .... tlnn t78. ond
Coast ID collt VIP m_..1hlp
far •to. Good far -plo with
t88. 1310.
0.00..f210.
Up.
King
4choot 1811.
AV'o. lnclud•Rovol oo~~. 814Gun colll..,. 8 gun. •tw
melb WI • • • • •· IN 742-2772.
film• t20, •30 • King tromo 1971 Volk:IMgon; washer It
tiO.Ooodllloctlon!III-- d¥r. hlct.a-bed, dauble rech::t liner, AKC ........ fe ..... &amp; Call
304-17-.1113.
····------·10 Dlys •me • oMh with 5pc. dln-Mt.t211.2bottory
SC2$10tted crldt. J MH• out
.....lllo Rd. 0p., 9om 1Dlr. powered rklng toye. 120 each.
Man o•-· S• Ph •t... •- High ch•lr·llke new. t 21.
' '""
.
. "
~
StrOI..,, t10. Oth• Infant~
0322.
lloddlor otull. Colt 304-8788504.
VIII., Furniture
NM end \-.1 fumll:ure ll'ld
opollconcoo. Coil 814·448· Stoaker coli stOW!. Clll 304BN-3818.
7872. - .. 9-1.
Kitch., ClbirMtl-woodln, WIH
J . I .FUIIMTURE
&amp; - · "L" ohor&gt;Od. 8'xl',
1411-nAw.
lilly 1.-n, ca~nter 10p,
4 d r - ohoot. t411. I d - corner
30"
rongo
hood. 1400. Coli
choot, •14.18. 8 pc. woodon 304-178-3127.
dlnnonoloto.t1911.91.

7~

•

Nloo10......,brlalo.4BII .. 2blv
b•hl. fill .... bomt. 21.......
No•Lo•. Call816-211-1412 """'- :S
111 21...881
ll U

Will bobot.rl ~ ""honw. Mon.·
Frt. o., ~ et.- to - · eon
814-44f.OH8- I PM.

a.n 'N' CARLYLE~ by Larry Wright

Morchendi1 e

_lobo,..

Collll4-448-lll1.

ci...OOtl,. . . . . . . . •d coOftU.
nettna the eaqulattionand u• of
epearet learftln·a materlala.
Knowlodgo ol .......... ..,....,.

Frt......

Lost and Found

40ol sq. II.. t..r 12

do...-e arpart wl•oraa• .,...

873~

Tha Daily Sentinel Paga 9

Ohio

.

cto.mintl 2 otory t-In
-4 BR'L2
.,. botbo. llv=t""'"'- dining
room. ·-go . .• ....h.,, now

-..r

114 Misc.

..........
••·•---.tstaom

... .

-· conz:=

Bobotoltllng &amp; a.lld
Coro
lervioe-flar roulld. Hc»urly,
dolly.
or oft• oohool
hours. HDt ,._.. .ft • . . . orovldocf. ,..,.... 1n ,.,. wtth
pi"""&amp;-.....-. VInton. Port• • ..w.ll aNa. Experltnoed
worlling with · llot•
·
- .. -PIMie cell
Con .
. . ...,.
time.
114-318-

Goodl

Olvo .... Clolllpolo.

11v Ow-: Toto!" llfulbiohod.

aut.••

6

-~--

Household

Middleport,

SWAIN
"UCTION • FUIIMTURE 82

daluMin.
p......
111121
...atorge
""" build·
Ing.
1.12
..,.
ond oop-loto. -Oihlloby
oppoln-t . cot! 11 ...4451903.
.

Happy Ads

;

MARCUM CONTRACTING

~

- WoniOd-far •ocnor.

3 Stripped kitteria. Call 814448-4014.

L:i
:z::

-

Need ...,.on·to ltvein a cere for
oidolty lad\1. Uaht h.., _ _
W-lnoludod. Cot! oft01l PM,
I 14-445-1092.
I .

Now aacaptlng •pUCIItioM for
.,.-aitlft... • drlwn. Apply- In
ponon 11 Vlllogo ""'•·!loorlng
VIIIOI' Plozo. Golllpollo.

6630.

B Vllllek old puJ)I.

-•no

1

! month; female. Collla/ Sh.,
pherd. Call 814-448-1873.
Mon.-Fri. 8 to&amp;.·

home. Utter traln«&lt;. C.ll 814367-0649.
.

z LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
z

EARN ~XTIIA M,ONEY during
the Summer. OM: out of the
hou•. become a Dally Sentinel
PIPif' c•rier. RDUt11 open In
Mlddl ...ort. Coil Scott II Tho
Sontlnol Office 11 814-1182·
2155.

Year old femala cat. Excellent
with children. Calf 814· 448-

2 khttnl to give away to good

Femlle 1peyed Be~gle. 1'f.l yrs.
old. Ch•" chicken•. C.ll 304-488-1898.

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Aveoue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

n""' • .._...

nnlng Aug. 23rd., 7:303: 0.2ohH-.1toddiOiond1
babv. If lnt.rllted, p i - IMd
resumewtth2 rlf•tnl*\to: Box
Clo 182. c / o Ootlloollo Dolly
Trlbuno, 825 Third ;~.,.., Oolllpolio. Ohio 48831 .

Dog Mln8ture white Paadla

CJ

Tour Guide~- Male• fei'Mia Our
top people e.rn tl00-t1 200
per ...... Solr; 1D lllrt ptus
eclf'll'nilslon. Pl...,.. worl&amp;lng
cai'Kiitlons. A r~ fun piiCitO
wo... Frlondly,
ble .,., the req
..... 0111
1·8 14-28 &amp;-842 nk 1o1 Suo.

OICI. A-313.
4rooster &amp; 7 helfBaeglepupplet
to give away . C.U 814-379-

614-742-2617

Television listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp;S1n1ict
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

Help !Nanted

Euy Workl hcllllnt:\ PIIVI Assemble pra4.1ctl at ~me . Ctll
for lnform1tion. 312-741-1400.

4 cutll kttwl1. Call 304-875-

2·1rl-' B8-tfn

11

FEDERAL. STATE ANO CIVIL
SERVICE JOBS
Naw Hiring : Your Ar.. .
t13.810 to 181.410. ... .....
..... Op101lngo. cotl 1-315733-6082. .... #F27p.

WANT TO BUY WI£CKID OR
JUNK CAllS OR !RUCKS
-FIEf ESTIMATESfor 111y of thtuuni&lt;es call

Mos•-

f III!JIIi'/1111'111
S1~1 v11:1· :·

FILL DIRT

10 month oldCodc... -poo, male,
hoult broken. N.edl gaod
home, prefer~~ble etdlrlv. Call
304-882·3399 oflor 10 PM.

Botw•n 9 a.m:-6 p.m.
or lea••

304-875-3781.

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOil

7-6-88-1 mo.

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

4 a.k bar stoola. Good cond. Call

Part-lime Registered X-ny
Technk:ilr'l. Verlld hou,._ ND
weekends, c au. or holldl¥'s.
Apply 01 tho Modlc:AI PI- 203
JackiM Pike, GIUipolil b•
lwoon 1:30-1 PM. 1

10-8-lfc

BAUM
LUMBER
CHESTER

Gtwn....

Ford
Mwerick. or
Dodge Aapen. 4 cloar, .,to. In

good co~hion.
priced. Coil 814-992-3010.

· BACK TO SCHOOL
STUDENT ONLY
SPECIAL

992-2196

MIDDlEPORT - 2 apartme nt un 1ts in town. Needs some re·
·pairs. Has much potential. Nice neighborhood. ONLY$9,900.00.

STOP BY AND SEE US AT tHE FAIR

Q.olto
Ceah plid for al'ltklul or rww
quits. Appilq .../.ol-. ony
coNiklon 1 Call 81 1182.8887.

1-S·'U-1 mo.

7· 14·'88·1 mo. pd.

PAT HILL FORD

RUTLANO - Ni ce ranch home w/3 bedrooms, equipped
kitchen and close to schools. Can assu me loan of
$25,000.00. at 9'-'% for 20 yrs , approx. $287.00/ monthP&amp;l &amp; T&amp;f . $4,500.00 down or owner will hclp f1nan ce.
$29,900.00.

POMEROY - Approx. 27 acres ol vacant ground, cl ose to Po·
meroy. Beautifu l building Site for a special home.
$16,500.00.
HENRY E. CLELAND. JR ...... .......... ................. 992-6191
JEAN TRUSSELL ......... ................... ..... .......... 949-2660
DOTTIE TURNER ................................. ..... ...... 992- 5692
TRACY RIFFLE ......... ... .. ........ ... .. .. .................. 949-2807
JO HILL .................... ......... ........................... 985-4-"6
' OFFICE ....................... .......... .. .. ..... ............... 992-2259

Foil ow Signs

PH. 949-2168

949-2168

We can repoir and recore radiators and
heater cares. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radio tors. We also
repoir Gas Tanks.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

LONG BOTTOM- SR 248 - 2 acres of land with all hookups on site. Electric, septic tan k, phone and welL Ready to be
moved on to. ONlY $7,300.00.

8uylnv doll\r gold. ollwr calno.
rlnga. Jewetry, ••lint WMI, old
coins. l01go curroncy. Top prlcoo. Ed Bur- Bolt. llllop,
2nd. AYO. Mlddl ... on. Oh. 814992·3478.

on Bashan Rd.

SER~ICE

"DOC" VAUGHN .
Cenified licensed Shop
5·25·tln

-Modern ranch home on .67 acres, level
condition w/ 3 bedrooms, bright sunny
Th1s home has qualified for FMHA finan ci ng
i $39.500.00.

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12.1988

Friday,

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Business Services

1 Card of Thanks

11

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12,1988

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paper woocf, C.ll 81""378~
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-----

"
,

•

)
,

;
,

'

'I.

••

�Page

1G-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Midclaport, Ohio

Local news briefs...

F~.Aug.

12,1988

Some power outages reported around Ohio

Continued from page 1

In Texas and thunderstorms In forecaster Lyle Alexander said. drought Isn't spreading any·
the Great Lakes region claimed " It's not nearly enough. But the more. It eased a bit."
at least two lives.
But weather officials said that
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT &amp;-13-88
Four calls were answered by units of the Meigs County
the rain wasn't enough to offset
Emergency Medical Service Thursday.
effects of the drought.
At 8:10 a. m. the Pomeroy unit went to Chtster for Lucille
Heat teamed up with the
Smith who was taken to Veterans Memorhil Hospital; at 6:28
humidity
from southern New
p.m. the Pomeroy unit went to State Route 7 and 143 where both
England
to
Maryland and over
Norma Hysell and Elizabeth Thornton refused treatment; at
of
Indiana
and Dllnols.
much
7:22 p.m. the Syracuse unit was called to the Finh Street
~unset.
AusUn,
Texas,
tied a 19-year·
residence of Buddy Kuhn. who was taken to Pleasant Valley
Many of the more significant old high tel)'lperature record
Hospital; and at 7: 49p.m. the Pomeroy unit went to Spring Ave.
thunderstorms dropped approxl· when the mercury hit 105. It was
for Imogene Blevins who was taken to Holzer.
mately 1 Inch ot rain In a matter the sixth straight day the ther·
of just ·a few minutes Thursday mometer has topped 100 In
afternoon and evening.
Austin.
Ughtlng strikes made power .
At least 14 people have died
Continued from page 1
outages common.
nationwide In recent days beA mobile home was filpped cause of the heat . .
The syringe, one ofthree tested
The legislation also woUld over and trees were blown down
Meanwhlle, showers and !hun·
by the state. washed ashore In the force New York City and eight II! Ashtabula County Thursday
derstonns
were scattered over
Baltimore suburb of Dundalk. A other New Jersey and New York evening. Thesh!1rlffsalddamage New England
and from the East
second syringe showed the pres· sewage authorities to stop dump- . was confined to a small area.
Coast
across
the
Appalachians to
ence of the ·Hepatitis B antigen, lng millions of tons of sewage
Storms also caused . minor the Great Lakes region.
said Joseph Llbonati, assistant sludge at sea by 1992 or face huge damage In the Toledo area
Lightning killed a 9-year-old
director of laboratory admlnls· civil penalties.
during the .late afternoon, NWS boy and Injured five others, one
tratlon for the Maryland Depart·
"It should be clear to everyone personnel said. An Ohio Highway
ment of Health and Mental that we simply can not continue to Patrol spokeswoman said winds critically, at an Episcopal
Church camp In Wisconsin. Wau·
. j:;.::lsNow • BRAIN
sHoweRs
·
Hygiene.
use our oceans as a garbage reached 75 mph In the northwest· shara County Sheriff Norman
A thtrd syringe tested nega· can," said Sen. Frank Lauten· ern portion of tbe state.
FRONTS:
Warm
Cold
- ' Static "
Occluded :
Weiss said the six boys were
tlve, Llbonati said Thursday .
berg, D-N.J ., chief spOnsor of the
Arouad ne NaUon
Map shows' minimum temperatures. At least SO'Yo of any shaded area Is forecast :
walking beneath two trees hit by
The other 155 syringes - all bill.
.
While fanners In the drought· lightning at 12: 30 p.m. at Camp
10 receive prec,pilaliolllndiCated
UPI •
empty- were not tested.
The Navy Is Investigating striCken Farm Belt can expect Webb.
WEATHER MAP - Showers and · &amp;buudenlorma will be ·
Congress reacted to public whether any naval waste dump- some help from Washington, the
A
Ughtnlng
strike
also
killed
a
~~ea&amp;tered due to lbe remaaa&amp;s of Beryl from tbe middle Mia•IIppi
anger with legis Ia tion Tuesday to Ing guidelines were violated by National Weather Service says person In a boat ln'northwestern
aad lower Mlasouri valleys tbmup . much of Oklalaoma ud
combat ocean dumping. The tbe disposal of the refuse found there's little real relief In sight
ArJreuee IDto aorlbeu&amp; Texas aad &amp;he aorlbern llalf of Lollilllllla.
Senate voted 97·0 to sharply along the North Carolina coast. from the nation's worst dry spell Minnesota, the NWS reported.
Storms
triggered
street
flood·
Sllowen
ud lllllllll...tonna will also be acatterecl from mach of
Increase penalties for the Ulegal The probe Is expected to take a since the Dust Bowl of. the 1930s.
lng
at
Sheridan,
Ind.,
north
of
Mlll&amp;lsalppl
and Alabama Olrot~~b lbe cea&amp;ral Gulf Cout ud
disposal of the medical wastes.
month.
The weather service's weekly Indianapolis, and produced 50·
l'torlda.
Sbowen
and &amp;hlmdenlonna will be ~~eatterecl frGm IICI'OI8
Under the blll sent to the
' 'We have very strict guide- drought advisory shows no major mph wind gusts and pea-sized
mucb
of
&amp;be
Great
Lakea region Into llle aorlben Plalu, over
House, fines for aumplng medl· lines about what can be put changes In conditions from the
hall
at
Ripon,
Wis.
Hlgb
winds
par&amp;s
of
aorllleu&amp;
Colorado
and aoullleut Wyomlac, ud acr018
cal waste would· be Increased overboard," said Burnett. "No· northern Rockies across North
down
trees
at
Eden,
knocked
the
soulllera
Plateau.
'from $25,000 to $250,000 a day and thing Infectious can ever· be Dakota and much of the upper
.,
Wis.
prison terms of up to five years dumped Into the sea."
Mississippi Valley to Iowa, north·
The aftermath of Beryl
would be authorized.
ern Missouri and Dltnols.
drenched the border area of
of showers and. thunderstorms.
South Central Ohio '
Louisiana and Texas; spawning
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . , theastern
But partsNorth
of Minnesota,
Dakota sou·
and · thunderstorms that dumped at
Tonight: Partly cloudy and Highs will be between 85 and 95,
'
northeastern South Dakota got a least 12.5 Inches of rain on the
humid, with a low between 70 and with overnight lows In the 70s.
brief reprieve early this morning east Texas town of Mount Enter·
Humid Monday and Tuesday,
75. Ught south winds.
when thunderstorms rumbled prise, the weather service said.
Saturday: Hazy, hot, and with a sUght chance of afternoon
across .the area, packing gusty
humid, with highs In the middle and evening thunderstorms.
Rain flooded Texas 315 and
anautomoblleaccldentlnColum· . winds
and hall. said Dan sent the Angelina River rising to 90s.
Thomas Atwood
Highs Monday and Tuesday will
McCarthy, a NWS meteorologist.
bus early Tuesday morning.
be between 85 and·90, with early
Extended
Forecu&amp;
within
Inches
of
the
bridge
that
Es1avonne Atwood
be held at 2 p.m Friday at the Nearly 2 Inches of rain was
morning
lows near 70.
Suaday
throqll
Tuesday
carries tJ .s. 84 over tlie
Shepherd Church .of the Naza· reported In Ada, Minn., he said.
Humid
Sunday,
with
a
chance
Funeral services for Thomas rene, Hamilton Road, Gahanna. ·
In Washington, President Rea· waterway.
Thunderstorms In Houston
and Estavonne Atwood, killed In .
gan Thursday signed Into law a knocked out power toabout16,000 Middle~rt
$3.9 billion bill to help farmers homes and businesses, utility
•
continued froin page 1
through the drought but the officials said, and lightning was
All Middleport VIllage money_ ments, $54,872.21; economic detotaled $210,772.92 as of July 31, velopment, $1, 709.40, $1,364.29,
amount tell short of the losses blamed fpr a fire that damaged a
not sure that I feel that Is the best administration.
they have suffered.
Village
Clerk Jon Buck reports.
$14,600.24; public transportation,
factory In the HQuston suburb of
way to demonstrate equality."
"Black economiC 'progress' In
"The bill expresses adistinctly Humble.
Receipts, disbursements dur· $12,409, $15,340.30, $8,798.28; wa·
Speaking later on Capitol HHI, recent years has been a rnattl!rof American tradition - that of
Beryl came ashore over Louis!· lng the month and the end of the ter tank, no receipts, no dlsbur·
Democratic Rep. Bill Gray of running faster just to keep from lending a helping hand when
month balance of each fund seaments, $99,886.81; water,
ana Tuesday as a tropical storm
Pennsylvania, .a leading black In falling further behind," he said. disaster strikes." Reagan said.
$13,206.39, $12,313.99, $19,388.90;
Include:
and faded Into a tropical depres·
Congress as chairman of the •'Blacks want to know where was
General, $11,496.26, $25,829.31, sanitary sewer, $17,329.86,
The devastating drought will slon the following day as It
House Budget Committee, con· George when the Reagan-Bush cut U.S. grain production by
$6,016.12 deficit; st~t main· $12,014.94, $11,645.01; swimming
tended It was not In the best administration tried to restore one·thlnl this year, the govern· pushed Inland, continuing to lose
tendance, $10,142.37, $5,738.40, pool, $3,468.14, $5,434.38,$3,747.99
tax exemptions for segregated ment said In Its most accurate steam.
Interest of blacks to vote for
$732.64
deficit; Income tax, no deficit; cemetery, $401.95,
Widespread thunderstorms
Bush.
schools, when It opposed sane· measurement yet of crop dam·
receipts, $2,188.49, $12,420.98 de- $2,352.89, $2,439.64 deficit; water
"It won' t wash," Gray said,
tions for South Africa, when It age, but food prices should also developed around midday In flclt; Utter control, no receipts, meter trusts, $400, $520 ,
northwest Arlzona and southwest
complaining that minorities fought against the Civil Rights remain stable.
.
no disbursements, $660; fire $13,466.55; mini golf, no receipts,
Utah, wltb wind gusts clocked at
have been hurt by the Reagan Restoration Ac~?"
equlp111ent, norecelpts,$1,861.57, $512.70, $2,979.21 deficit.
Thecorncropwlllbe:rlpercent 63 mpb at Milford, Utah.
smaller than last year and
Receipts for the month
"It's not the kind of rain that $2,456.61 deficit; fire truck, no
receipts,
no
disbursement,
amounted
to $70,563.37 while
soybean
farmers
will
see
their
Continued from..:......;;_
page 1
will end the drought," NWS
smallest, crop' since 1976, the
$19,248.04; sanitary sewer es· disbursements · amounted to
crow. no receipts, no disburse- $85,471.26.
by this federal Investigation we've seen - a quadrennial Agriculture Department said.
Ohly the winter wheat crop,
between February and August," pattern." the governor con·
to
which
matured just as the
he said.
tlnued. "It's clearly aimed at this
Dally stock prices
drought struck, was untouched.
The governor has been on the administration."
Two actions for divorce and Kimes, Pomeroy. Both plaintiffs
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
defensive much of the time since
Celeste said Crites Induced The spring and durum wheat Beyce and Mark Smllh
two for dissolutions have been charge gross neglect of duty and
January 1987, when he began his reporters to come to the press crop, grown In the hard·hlt
filed In the Meigs County Com· extreme cruelty and ask for
second term. He has fought conference by leaking reports northern Plains, was cut In half of Blun&amp;, Elllll a. Loewl
mon Pleas Court.
·
custody of minor children.
charges of favoritism In con· that two members of the Celeste to 266 million bushels.
for
divorces
were
Filing for dissolutions were
Filing
The eastern United States Am Electric Power ...... ....... 26% Brenda K. Litman, Langsville, Terry D. Spaun and Angela
tracting, Irregular job training administration would be
grants and sexual harassment Indicted.
·
· sweated through 90-degree AT&amp;T ................... :.............25'A from Michael H. Ulman, Langs· Spaun, both of Racine, and
on ........ ................33'!11
within the Ohio Bureau of Em·
"This was a come-on," he said. temperatures and oppressive Ashland
Bob
Evans
.......................... 16'A ville; and Carla Sue Kimes, Long Robert Lee Jacobs and Myrlam
as
the
rem·
humidity
Thursday
ployment Services.
"Let's watch this carefully, and
Bottom, from Randall Lee Ruthchlld, both of Pomeroy. ,''
"I scarcely. can contain my when I'm wrong, kick my butt. nants of tropical storm Beryl Charming Shoppes ............... 14
sense of outrage and disbelief You've done that before. You're dumped more than a foot of rain Cl ty Holding Co ............. ...... 35
Federal Mogul... ... ,...... ...... .411h
over these allegations, which entitled to do It again. When
both you and he know have no they're wrong, kick their butt,
.Goodyear T&amp;R .................... 57
Heck's .... .... ................. .. .... .. .. lh
basis In fact," Celeste wrote to too, please.'-'
One action for divorce has been
Key Centurion .... .. .............. 17~
Crites and Bettac.
Celeste also said Ohio Senate filed In the Meigs County Com·
"Allegations are a dime a Republicans are trying to set him mon Pleas Court. Charging gross Lands' End ....... .. ........ .. ...... 28%
dozen. and this was a cheap shot and Attorney General Anthony neglect of duty and extreme Limited Inc .. .. .. ...... ............ 20i!,
yesterday, " Celeste told repor· Celebrezze at odds with each cruelty, Brenda K. Darst has Multimedia Inc ................ ...73'A
ters. · ~I believe the U.S. attorney other over an lnves ligation Into filed for divorce from Rex Darst, Rax Restaurants .................. 4~
came to town with poUtics In state job training grants.
Robbins &amp; Myers ........ ...... ... 12
Pomeroy.
Shoney's
Inc ........................ 7%
mind, and that press conference
He said that despite the drum·
was held with politics In mind. fire of reports on scandal, his job
Wendy's Inti ........................ S'A
'
Worthington Ind .................. 24
This was a kind of election-year approval · rating with the voters
Veterans Memorial
desperation In which they used has gone up two percentage
the tools of justice and twisted points, according to the latest
AdmittedLucille
- Norma
Pomeroy;
Smith, South,
Ches· · Correction
AreportfromPomeroyVlllage
them to poUtlcal ends ..
poll.
ter;
Robert
Bays,
Portland;
Lois
Hall
on court hearings this week
"It's almost a pattern that
Pauley, Pomeroy; Ralph erroneously listed Harold Will as
McKenzie, Racine; Yolail Satter· being fined on a petty theft
field, Racine, and Ivory Bush, charged. Fined $213 on the
Continued from page 1
Middleport.
charge was not Wlll but Larry
·
'
1 LB. PIG.
Discharged: James Bentz and Klein, Welshtown Hill, Pomeroy.
Even with a small crop this one-point !!hange In the Consu· LenaHelman.
~a~anoli
Admitted_ Jacqueline Warns·
._
.....,. -e~ cell8e8
!-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~~~~~~~~~~
year, the United States should mer Prlcl index for food because
Keith Allen Scott, 23, Middleley, Middleport; Vlrgene Elber·
have a three-month supply of ''we have fairly large suppUes of feld
, Racine; Betty Maynard,
port, and Rufina Ogslla Bagalan,
corn when next year's harvest food grains" In reserve. He ·Pomeroy .
27, Middleport.
starts. Wilson explained. The noted, "We came Into the year
Discharged _ Charles Find·
Michael Anthony CeJU, 32,
crop Is now forecast at 4.48 billion with large suppUes of feed grains ley, Russell Powers, Lura Par·
PomeroY,
and Rita Jane Hudson,
bushels.
26 Po
for lives lock."
' 'fhe Impact would be catas·
2415 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant
In ChiCago,
panel
grain
trophic,·· however, If the country traders
agreedawith
theorgovern·
sees a sll)'lllar drought next year, ment prediction that drought·
Wilson said. Fortunately that
reduced crops would have only
prospect Is unlikely.
marginal effect on consumer
IW
According to the government,
FIIDAY, AUGUn 12
soybeans are expected to come In prf~esi987, u.s. fanners harv·
Waist, Tummy &amp; Hlp Table
this year at 1.47 bllllon bushels, ested more than 7 billion bushels
HALF POUND IIJRGEI PlAMI _, ..- ............- ........... S3.49
the smallest crop since 1976; the of com, 1.9 bllllon bushels of
Oorllolt,_.. ,,..,s.m.~o.At.,.s... l•wll•llotlltlldMStllllfriiiiT•
overall wheat crop should be at soybeans and 2.1 bi!Uon bushels
Raila aad Iowen Jepla a
.. ..,., •H..rChelatiHtM•IIIoColoSI•. . .
Pwi..
1.82 billion bushels, the smallest of wheat, Including 1.56 billion
..,.,., .._
Jeallftlq motion. Helpa to
since 1978.
bushels of winter wheat and 542
SUNDAY, AUGUSI 1,4
trim lal:bu ott JOur waill,
The barley crop Is estimated at mUilon bushels of spring and
atomadl; ud blps. Also
'MI. YOU CAN EAT' F-Y SIYIE OIOIEN •n·-···•4.39
287 million bushels; cotton Is durum wheat. The winter wheat
otrenalbeDS lower kck ·
~':2
IU '"c. Wllor•lll wiiii . .W l'whl• &amp; seen at 14.9 million bales; rice Is crop this year was 1.55 billion
Gowr,H•••,.IIu•o.-.,_wllll....,._•lloti-..IW•muscles.
forecast at152 .5 mllUonhundred· bushels.
....,I •• . . . . IIOioo Celfeo • . ...,...., .... f••lllr
weight and oats are expected at
TheAugustcropreportwas the·
-141l!Ml1Drlooll •""' reo lor • lolool"""'l.
206 million busl)els - the smal· first official estimate by. the
ICIIP'S POiftOII---·---..-•I.Hl
lest crop In more than a century. departmentoftheslzeofthecom
Toning session (48 min.)
HOURS: Monday thru Saturday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.:
Corn, wheat and soybeans are and soybean crops. Tbe depart·
Sunday 10 A.M. to 9 P.M.
for anyone who signs up a new client for slx (6)
the three major U.S. crops. ment took special steps to assure
Wheat, the chief food grain, Is accuracy, Including a special
sessions or more.
used In bread, pastries and survey of 16,000 fanners In 28
bakery goods while durum wheat states and a doubling In the.
Names people who
Is used In pasta. Corn Is used number of flelda It checks for
mainly In meat production, but com and soybean es tlmates.
sip-up new
will be eligible for montllly
also for food and by Industry.
July .figures were projections
drawings • winner to receive three (3) FREE
Soybeans are fed to lives lock as bued on past droughts and the
well as used tn food products.
a11umpUon of normal weather
toning sessions.
Wilson said the department Is for tbe rest of the season.
WE
·
·
7
maintaining Its estimate of a
By United Preea l1!ter1111Uoul
Showers ·and thunderstorms
caused Isolated damage and
power outages In Ohio Thursday,
about an Inch of rain falling
within a matter of mlnutl!s In
some areas ot the state, the
National Weather Service said.
1 The storms and rain dlmln·
!shed rapidly statewide aner

EMS has four Thursday rolls

0

Officials...

11

W

·rlm

------Weather------

I

I

Area deaths

will .

funds are announced

Reagan...

Celeste... ___

____

Stocks

Couples

Seeks divorce

end maniages

WEDNES' DAY'S

FOODLAND·

AD SHOULD HAVE READ:
REGUUR OR ALL MEAT
OSCAR MAYER

Hospital news

WIENERS
4.,

$1

Officials...

•

Sunday

50 cents

·Mason fair livestOck sales

Cruising
in Gallipolis

the GOP Convention
p
8-7
t--....;
In Our Town: What will a quarter buy .today?
By Dick Thomas '

~~------~~------~--~~~p

•••Ilol..,

VoL 23 No. 27
Copyngtitod 1188

ROCK SPRINGS - The nor·
mally quiet, plctures'que Rock
Springs Fairgrounds will trans·
form Into a beehive of activity
today as the final push begins for
the staging ot the 125th annual
Melp County Fair.
, The week-long fal,r culminates
the year·long work of members
of the Meigs County Fair Board.
The fair Is continually expanding
In activities as board members
strive to offer "something for
everybody" at the annual event.
Action, of course, will be In
high gear on Monday as well as
finishing touches are put on
displays and exhibits, as lives·
tock pours onto the grounds and
rides and concessions are given
that last check preparatory to the
fair's opening.
The official opening and the
charge for admission to the fair
does not begin until Tuesday.
However, the Meigs County
Ministerial Association, carry·
lng out annual tradition, will
again conduct an opening rei!·
glous service at 7: 30 p.m. on
Monday.
The Rev. Richard Freeman,

new pastor of Trinity Church In
Pomeroy, will be this year's
speaker and music will be
provided by the Rejoicing Life
Baptist Church. Oilier particlpat·
lngmlnlsterswlllbetheRev.Lee
Miller, the Rev . Mel Franklin,
the Rev. Lamar O'Bryant and
the Rev. Michael Panlilo.
Judging will get underway on
Tuesday for both junior and
senior fair parUclpants In areas
of rabbits, poultry, flower show,
swine, garden crops, baked
goods and canning and the
annual Demolition Derby wtll·be
the grandstand attraction Tues·
day night.
JI!dglng will continue on Wed·
nesday and the first afternoon of
three days of harness horse
racing will begin at 2 p.m. that
day. Phll Dirt and the Dozers will
be the evening grandstand at·
traction doing two shows - one
at 8 and one at 10 p.m. Youth
awards night, always a highlight
among the young people of the
junior fair, will be on Wednesday
at 7.
·
This year's fair will feature
tractor, truckandlto~sepullsand
enter'tatnment at various bouts

By MARGARET CALDWELL
Tillle8-Sentlnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - It's become
not only a national issue along the
Atlantic Coast, It has now struck
close to home as Infectious waste
has been discovered on the
·
beaches of Lake :pte.
And with a new, law, It may be
more difficult for some medical
facilities to dispose of potentially
Infectious waste.
•

Effective last Wednesday, the
Infectious waste Jaw regulates
tranporters, treatment facilities
and generators of Infectious
waste. Generators are facilities
that produce 50 pounds or more of
Infectious waste a month.
Under this law, some medical
faclllties will have to find alter·
natives to disposable of that
waste. While other facllltles are
adopting new procedures for

Medical facilities seek
new disposal· methods
By MARGARET CALDWELL
Tlme.Sea&amp;ln~ staff
GALLIPOLIS - VWth the recent Infectious waste wash·ups, a
new state Jaw and the emphasis
GaiUa County has on the medical
market, some questions may be
asked concerning where and how
county faclllties dispose of lnfec.
tious waste.
The new state law, effective
Aug. 10, reguiat~J the handling
and disposal of Infectious waste
by tranportors, treatment faclll·
ties and generators.
Although the regulations and

enforcement poUcles have not
been defined, the new law forces
some medical facllltles to seek
alternative methods to disposing
of InfeCtious waste.
Holzer Medical Center has an
Incinerator that bums alllnfec·
Uous waste after the waste has
been sterilized. The ashes of the
waste also are sterUized before
being discarded with other
refuse.
Mike Smith, director of envlr·
Qnmental services at · Holzer
Medical Center, said the lnclner·
ConUnued to AI

me
9 Sections. 66 pages

Pleasant. August 14, 1988

A Multimedia Inc. Nt!w-er

every day during the week at the
hiUstagenearthemldway . Little
Jimmy Dickens and Jim and
Connie Prenger will be the .
professional musicians enter·
talnlng on Thursday eve,nlng.
Junlorfalrpe~sonnelwlll ,stage

many events and among the
highlights will be a talent show
and a pet show not to mention the
annual Uvestockmarketat7p.m.
on Friday evening.
Pretty babies will be selected
as well as a Little Miss and Little
MlsterMelgsCountyFalrduring
the week. The truck and tractor
pulls wlll take over centerfield
activities on Friday and Saturday nights and lively quarter
horse racing wllllle held at 4 p.m.
Saturday - a contrast to the
more sedate harness horse
racing.
General admlsslon ·to the fair Is
$4 dally which Includes free
amusement rides. However. fre·
quert falrgoers can save money
wltl. tbe purchase of an $8
membership ticket which pro·vtdes admission for every day of
the fair. Such pUrchaserscanpay
an additional fee If they want to
go on midway rides.

SlirS VP- Gilbert Kellb, Parilel'llntt'l, W.Va.,
left,' chats with Melp Fair Board Member
Wallace Bradford, aa he sets up hla coacesslon

VIrus (HJV) , the agent that
handling and disposing of poten·
causes AIDS.
tially Infectious waste.
The appUcatlon of this policy Is
Uatve1'881 PrecauUoas
Intended
to be ' 'universal' •for all
The Center for Disease Control
patients
with emphasis on the
and the American Hospital Association bas recommended a routine handling of all blood and
precauUous poliCy which has body -fluids as potentially
Infective.
been adopted by two local medl·
The policy was Implemented
cal facilities, Holzer Medical
Center and Pinecrest Nursing not to discriminate or dlfferen·
tiate against patients. All pa·
Home.
The precautlous policy, Unl· tlents are assumed to be con tam!·
versa!. Blood and Body-fluid nated \VIth an Infectious disease.
Precautions, Is Intended to pro- This · outlook allows medical
vide protection for medical facil· facility personnel to be protec·
lty employees from exposure to ·uve of all medical equipment and
blood-borne diseases which may pallent samples which may be
.be occupationally transmitted. . contaminated.
Polley In Action
Such Infectious diseases In·
According to Charles I. Adkins,
elude hepatitis, Acquired Imniu·
nodeflclency Syndrome (AIDS) chief execu tlve officer of Holzer
Continued to A5
and Human Immunodeficiency

stud featuriag novelty Items on the RockSprings
Faii'IJI'Ounda Ia preparation· for the 125th annual
fair. (Time..SenUnel photo)

Farm City Day set
Saturday, Sept. 10
GALLIPOLIS- The Sixth Annual Farm Ci ty Day, hos ted by
the Hughes family of Addison, is set for Saturday , Sept.10, from
1to 5 p.m.
Four generations of the Hughes family work together on this
project. With their dairy farm displaying conservation
practices, the family will show the guests their farm.
The farm Is located on George's Creek road about halfway
between SR 7 and Bulavllle Pike (Bulavllle·Porter Road).·
The vent Is held for everyone to have the opportunity to see
what It takes to run a farm·Jng opera lion.
· Old time wagon tours will be provided with two horse power,
not 40 horse power. Anyone In the area with work horses and -a
wagon 11\terested In participating In the wagon tours can
contact the family.
Points of Interest will Include "Walk A Mile," exhibits,
demonstrations, story telling by Chab Guthrie, landscaping
expert, plant pathologist, entertalrunent. and refreS hments.

Meigs County's new $3.5 million health
care-rehabilitation ,center will open soon
,

I

By BOB BOEFUCH
TIJnea..SeaUnel S&amp;atf
MIDDLEPORT-MelgsCoun·
ty's newest health care·
rehabllltatlon center - a $3.5
million enterprise . located on
Page St. In Middleport Is sche- '
duled to open about mid·
September.
Groundbreaklng ceremonies
on the new, sprawling brick
structure were held last fall and
currently the "final touches" are
being added to complete the

project which has been headed
by Dr. Harold Brown of
Pomeroy.
'Overbrook Center'
To be known as "Overbrook
Center", the new establishment
features the most modern fac!U·
ties and furnishings . It has been
designed for patient comfort and
Is arranged so that proper
surveillance of patients can be
maintained at all times by the
nursing staff. The fac!Uty has 100
beds consisting of four private

rooms, 12 deluxe semi-private
rooms and 36 seml·prlvate rooms
contained In Its 36,500 square
feet.
Blacktopping of driveways and
parking areas was underway
during the past few days among the final steps to be taken
prior to the opening of the
faclllty. Due to the drought,
landscaping Is being postponed
untU fall.
An open house Is being planned
Contlaued on DI

MARK H. MURPHEY

Bolin ends term as Ohio Garden, Club president

FBM

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ParUy cloudy, hot, hum!&lt;!.
Wgh In mid 90s. Chance of
rain 90 rcent.

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Junior, senior judging Tuesday

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125th Meigs County · Fair opens Monda

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bratlon In Columbus.
"This International exposition
and the additional cultural, his·
torlcal, scientific and recrea·
Ilona! programs that will be part
of the 1992 celebration will .
attract world attl!ntion to the
Heartland of America," she
commented.
Get Ung the Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs Involved In Amerl·
Flora '92 has been only one
highlight of Mrs. Bolin's term of
office.
Another feature has been In·
volvlng the OAGC In planting the
bedl and planters at the Ohio
State Fair. From Region 11 and
Meigs County . the Rutland
Frleadly Gardeaera of which
Mra. Bolin Ia a member. and the
Friends and Flower Garden
Club, allo of Rutland, have
parUclpated Ia the fairground
beauUcatlon project.
Mrs. Bolin has a lao been active
on a state shade tree evalution

POM!!:ROY - Janet Bolin of
Rutland who last week com·
pleted her two-year term as
president of the Ohio Association
of Garden Clubs, baa been named
as one of the OAGC's four
representatives on the Amerl·
Flora '92 committee.
ThrOIIIb Mra. Bolin's leader·
sblp these two past years, the
OAGC voted to support Amerl·
Fljira '92 with a fund· raising
drive.
Each club is belug asked to
malu! a donation to Ole fund each
year thr0t11b 1992. Mrs. Bobn,
who II .erving on the Amateur
Horticulture Committee for tbe
llltei'Mtlonal nora! 81ld garden
aptllltlon, bu IUiptted a
Jlledp ot SilO, payable $10 a year
for five years.
AI explained by Mra. Bolin,
thll preatigloua event, the first of
Ill kind to be held Ia the United
St:!:, will aerve aa a center·
p
for the 1992 Chrlltopber
Columbtls Qulncealennlal Cele-

.
1

team, has served on the Ohio
State Horllculture Council. been
on the Ohio Historical Society
Ll a son Committee for Wa hkeena
Nature Preserve, and worked on
the Ohio State Roadside Council.
In addition during her two
years as state president, she has
planned and conducted numer·
ous workshops and seminars for
clubs over the state, has traveled
to Tampa, Fla. where she repres·
en ted Ohio at the America Guild
of Flower Arrangers, and led a
group of OAGC members on a
trip to HawaU. At the Arrangers
Guild seminar, one of Mrs. Bollns
arranaements waa selected by
Bob' Thomas, director, to be
pictured In the official publica·
tion of the American Guild of
Flower Arranaers. Mrs. Bolin Is
an accredited judge of the Ohio
Aloclatlon of Garden Clubs.
At the state convenUon held at
Oglebay Park In Wheeling, W.
Va., Mrs. BoUn was recognized

for her outstanding service to the
association by being presented
the Gladys Thomas Award.

JANET~IN

t

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