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                  <text>P ga 14 The Daily Sentinel

Thurlday, Auguat 26,1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Dukakis stresses labor theme

ARRIVES lN OHIO- Democratic presidential
nominee Michael Dukakls, with wife Kilty at his
side, speaks .to news people upon his arrival at

Burke Lakefront Alrpot In Cleveland Wednesday
night. He will deliver a speech about drugs at
Lakeside Courthouse Thursday. (UPI)

CLEVELAND (UP!) -Democratic presidential candidate Ml·
chael Dukakls, in the Industrial
heartland today with his theme of
"Jobs you can raise a family on,"
is ridiculing George Bush's goal
of 30 million jobs in eight years.
On a campaign swing that
began Wednesday with the en·
dorsement of the AFL·CIO and
then went to Grand Rapids,
Mich., before Cleveland, Duka·
kls repeatedly sppke not just of
new jobs but of "jobs with a
future, jobs you can collnt on."
In a c~n\puter center at Grand
Rapids' Grand Valley State Unl·
versity, the Massachusetts gov.
ernor told students and others he
' had traveled across the Unlled
States talking to thousands of
Americans concerned about
their jobs.
"I have met too many people
who have accepted Jobs over the
last eight years that pay less than
their old job," he said. "I have
met too many couples who are
working harder at two jobs Just to ·
stay in place.
•'!'his election Is not a bout
whether Mr. Bush's own economists believe his speeches. II is
a bout making every American a
full shareholder in the American
dream. It's about creating Jobs
with a future, Jobs you can count
on, jobs you can raise a family

on."
Dukakis was referring to re·
ports that economic advisers to

Bush have backed away from the Ilean for not mentioning the trade
goal the vice president pled(led deficit or the budget deficit at the
when he accepted the Republican GOP convention.
And to rousing cheers, Dukakl4
presidential nomination last
week: 30 mUllon new jobs In eight called tor a National Labor
Relations Board that "wllllnalst
years.
Robert Zoelllck, senior eco· on Justice and fairness" and·
nomic adviser on the aush government lnlpectors "who will
campaign, defended the 30 mil- Inspect our plants and factories
lion figure as an "aspiration or a as If their lives depended on it."
Later In Grand Rapids, Dukagoal." But others argued the
kls
criticized Bush for rejecting a
number was unreallstlc unless
proposed
Sept. 14 debate on ·
there Is a wave of Immigrants.
defense
and
foreign policy Issues
·
Dukakls attacked Bush on a
host of similar Issues when he at the U.S. Naval Academy In
bEgan his day by accepting the Annapolis, !'.Jd. Bush said he
AFL·C IO endorsement In Wa· probably will not be ready before :
Sept. 20.
shtngton, D.C.
"He said he's not ready, after 7
In a . hotel ballroom packed
years," Dukakls mused.
with America's union leadership,
I'm going to be In
"Well,
Dukakis hammered away at the
Annapolis
on the 14th with or
Reagan· Bush administration re·
without
him.
I'm going to adcord and devoted his talk to
dress
the
fundamentallsliues
of
Issues key to union members who
have left the Democratic Party foreign policy. national security
and national defense In
In recent elections.
,
Dukakls said jobs lost under Annapolis." .
In another .development Wed·
the Reagan administration paid
an average of $440 a week and nesday, an NBC News-Wall
those that have replaced them Street Journal poll Wednesday .
showed Dukakls trailing Bush 44
pay one· third less.
''!'hat's the price our workers percent to 39 percent, ~hough the
survey of 1,762 registered voters
and their families are paying
Aug. 20·22 also showed that
for 'voodoo economics,"'
the crucial bloc of Demoamong
Dukakls said, using the term
crats who went for Reagan In
Bush once appUed to Ronald
1980 and 1984, 48 percent favor
Reagan's economic plan. "And
Dukakls and 35 percent favor
that's why we're going to have
Bush.
a Democratic president and,
The poll h,ad an error margin of
vice president In 1989."
CaiUng Bush's plans "soli of 3 percentage points.
voodoo," he attacked the Repub·

*

Church .,

Ohio Lottery

.

notices'

Daily Number
413 I
Pick 4
1683

Page 6

port for the pledge, has fired that upsets him so much?"
back this week in 'h arsh terms,
The vlce president's strate·
arguing Tuesday that the major gists are thrilled with the new
question was not the pledge itself battleground, apparently confibut the constitutionality of the dent the public will view the issue
bill he vetoed.
in stark terms without the legal
The governor cited a 1943 interpretations and will come
Supreme Co~rt ruling that held down on the side of the pledge schoolchildren could hot be pe· and Bush.
nalized for refusing to swear an
"If Michael Dukakis wants to
oath of allegianc~; he contended debate the Pledge of Allegiance,
the state legislation therefore that 's flne," Bush ·chief of staff
was illegal and unenforceable- Craig Fuller ' said Wednesday .
and indeed. though the Leglsla· "For us, that issue is a winner."
ture overrode his veto. the
The GOP nominee indeed
resulting law has not been seemed eager to highlight the
enforced.
pledge and a theme of patriotism
Escalating the contrived de· in the rally with Reagan before
bate 1'uesday, Dukakis argued about 3,000 jubilant supporters a I
that if Bush means he would th e posb Century Plaza Hotel. 'II
support an unconstitutional bill was the first joint Reagan-Bush
he is unfit to lead the country,
appearance since the conven·
Bush counterpunched at a Los lion, and the president exhorted
'Angeles rally with President the troops to get to' work.
Reagan Wednesday, Insisting the ' "Saddle up and ride hard to
constitutional questions of the exert every bit as much energy
Massachusetts bill ~ad not been for George as you did for me,"
set tled and wondering aloud the former California governor
about his opponent, "What is it told about 50 big-money donors
about the Pledge of Allegiance and .Republican leaders befor&lt;&gt;

Quayle comes
ST. LOUIS IUPI) - Indiana
Sen. Dan Quayle is on the at tack
in his first solo campaign trip as
the Republican nominee for vice
president, ignoring questions
about his own record so he ca n
rake the Democrats.
Quayle accused Massachu·
· setts Gov. Michael Dukakis, the
Democratic presidential nom!·
nee, of an "anti-defense atti·
tude" in a speech Wednesday
night to the Enlisted Association
of the National Guard.
The audience en thu siastically
applauded Quayle, whose Guard
service during the Vietnam War
is at the heart of controversy
surrounding his candidacy. when
he defended the honor of the
Guard as a vital part of Ameri·
ca's armed forces .
''!'he National Guard never
ran away from a fight, And by the
way, Dan Quayle doesn ' t run
away from a fight ," he asserted ..
. Campaign spokesman David
Prosperi said Quayle intends
throughout his current tour to
talk about the goals of his ticket
mate, Vice President Geo rge
Bush, and not t9 Jet his time be
dominated by questions about
how he got into the Indiana
Guard in 1969 and thus avoided
combat duty in Vietnam,
"I think we've got those issues
bEhind us," Prosperi insisted.
The spokesman said Quayle
might fake ques lions from rep or·
ters today during a luncheon in
Boonville or an appearance at
the Missouri State Fair in Seda· .
lla, but Quayle assiduously
avoided all questions Wednesday
as part of an effort to seize a new
campaign direction.
There questions raised since
Bush selected Quayle las I week
· have centered on whether the
second-term senator was aided
at age22by his wealthy, powerful
publishing family in efforts to
avoid ·combat. He has denied
undue Influence.
Prosperi ~aid Quayle has made
it clear that in 1969 he wan ted to
go to law school and the Guard
was a way to combine schooling
with ·national service.
Now 41, Quayle is a member of
the Senate Armed Services Com·
mlttee and a hawk oq military
affairs. In his W~dnesday night
speech, he assured the enlisted
Guard membErs, "I determined
the best course of action for me
~

------- -·--

outs~nging

entering the ballroom rally.
"No one is better prepared to
lead America into the next
decade and to the threshold of the
next century," Reagan declared
once inside the ballroom.
Though Bush did not mention
his embattled running mate by
name, the preside,nt offered
support for Dan Quayle, saying
the .junior Indiana senator has
''many more years of experience
in dealing with national secur·
ity" than Dukakis.
Reagan aalso poked at differ·
ences between Pukakis and his
more conservative running
mate, Sen. Lloyd Bentsen or
Texas, by saying the hawkish
Quayle has "the most important
qualification for a co-pilot -he
won't be ,trying to turn lhf plane
In the opposite direction than the
pilot wants to go."
Bush has defended· Quayle in
campaigning hard through six
states in as many days. The vice
president, who plans day trips in
Texas for the rest of the week
before launching another multi·

state swing, has been bolstered
by what appears to be , his
significant rise In public opinion.
An NBC News-Wall Street
Journal poll released Wednesday
showed Bush leading Dukakls 44
percent io 39 percent, though the
survey of 1, 762 regish!red voters
Aug. 20-22 also showed that
among the crucial bloc of Democrats who went for Reagan In
1980 and 1984, 48 percent favor
Dukakls and 35 percent favor
Bush.
The poll had anerrormarglnof
3 percentage points.
In other developments Wed·
nesday, Bush rejected a pro·

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posed Sept. 14 date to debate
Dukakls on defense and foreign
policy Issues at the U.S. Naval
Academy In Annapolis, Md.,
saying he probably. will not be
ready before Sept. 20.
Dukakls 1 campaigning In
Grand Rapids, Mich., drew a
laugh at Grand Valley State
University' by responding, "He
said he's not ready, after 7
years .... Well, I'm going to be In
Annapolis on the 14th with or
without hlm. I'm going to ad·
dress the .fundamental ,Issues of.
foreign PQllcy, national security
and national de.fense In"
Annapolis.'•

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'I
lean vicepresidential candidl!te Dan Qyayle Is applauded
by Nathan Monastra, president of the EnHsted
Association, National Guard and fellow members
of the group Wednesday. Quayle told their
was to serve my country in the
Na tional Guard, just as yo u did ."
He added, " I 'm not looking for
any medals. I'm not looking for a
pat on the back. But let me say
this: I served; I served loyally:
and I served to the best of my
ability. Nearly 20 years ago, I
had no reason to be ashamed of
my service. And, you know
what? I'm sure as hell riot
ashamed of it now! "
Quayle's trip began with
mostly friendly receptions,
though there were some dlssen·
ters. Bill Green of St. Louis, a
Navy veteran of Vietnam, car·
ried a sign saying "draft-dodger
Quayle" outside the National
Guard dinner and scoffed at the
idea that the controversy might
be over.
"It's like self.forgiveness, the
rage of the 1980s," Green said
bitterly.
QuaYle's counterpart in the
vice presidential race, Dllm9·
cratlc Sen. Lloyd Bentsen of
Texas, also criticized him when

national meeting, •'I'm not looking for medala,
and I'm not asking for a pat on the back. But let me
say this: I served. I served loyally and I served to
the best of my ablUty ." ( UPI)

their paths crossed in Lexing\on,
Kv. Bentsen, who spoke at the
sOuthern Legislative Conference
before Quayle Wednesday, ac:
cused his younger colleague of
flip-flopping on the issue of
making the Veterans Admlnstra·
tiona Cabinet-level department.
Quayle had voted against the
idea only earlier this summer,
but he told the Veterans of
Foreign Wars lylonday that he
hdped Jn the future his vote would
be viewed as a "youthful
Indiscretion."
"He saluted smartly and did an
about·! ace," Bentsen said. "I
don't think Ameritt~ can afford
youthful indiscretion from someone one step awa;y from the
presidency."
In his speech to the Guard,
Quayle criticized Dukakls for
opposing the MX missile, for
wanting to shelve the, Strategic
Defense Initiative and for oppos·
ing the completion of two. new
a ircraft carrier groups for the
Navy.

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Quayle also said Dukakis mis·
takenly embraced the nuclear
freeze movement as an example
of the "anti-defense attitude of
the Democratic nominee." He
said the governor's politics
amoun.t to "a litany of retreat, a
prescription for American re·
trench men! in the 1990s."
"From this point forward, you
can bet George Bush and I will
not be laying low," Quayle aald,
"We will be out there telling the
truth, fighting the good tight."

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FBI reveals 0-rings

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SAVING A LIFE - This portion of the mock
mine was the center of activity as the Raccoon No.
3 mine rescue team attends to a "vlctbn."

Mine rescue '
teams finish
high in event

Despite extreme heat and
humidity, a pair of Ohio mine
· rescue teams finished In the top
five at the 38th Annual Safety
Day events held 'r ecently at West
VIrginia !Jnlverslty's Evansdale
tam~.
'
In the mine rescue contest,
wlllch drew 16 teams, Southern
Ohio Coal Company's Raccon
No. 3 mine missed the top place
by 10 seconds. Third place went
to Southern Ohio Coal's Meigs
No.2 mine.
Raccoon No. 3 won a trophy for
placing the highest among mine
rescue teams from Ohio. Meigs
No. 2, which finished first among
Ohio teams the previous week In
New Lexington, Ohio, worked the
contest problem In 54:52.
Meigs No. 2's David Shinn
completed the trophy haul for
Southern Ohio Coal by placing
second among the 11 bEnchmen
at the meet. Raccoon No.3's Eric
Gryska was fourth In the bench
competition, and Tom Ferrell of
Southern Ohio Coal's Meigs No.1
mine finished fifth.
In henchmen competition,
each entrant must perform a
thorough check olf a self·
contained breathing apparatus
which Includes deteecting cer·
lain specl(jed machlne:s readiness tot an emergency at any
given time.
Members of this year's Raccoon No. 2 learn are Gryska of
Athens, captain; Dale Exline of
Jackson; Roger Schultz of Bid·
well; John Ord of Letart, W.Va.;
Karl Brandau of Wellston; and
Ed Midkiff of Point Pleasant,
W.Va.
Members of the Meigs No. 2
team are Randy Cross of Syra·
cuse; Mike Delcotto of Athens;
Jerry Kovach of Glouster; Shinn
of Point Pieasant; "Terry Staten
of Wellston; Clarence "Tiny"
Williams of Middleport; and Bill
Starkey of Jackson, captain. The
trainer of the team Is Dave
Peterson, and the safety manager is Jon Merrtfleld.

...

--·---~

.......

Raccoon No. 3 paced second overall at the annual
Sa.fetyDay event In Morgimtown W.Va.

r-------------------~--~--~

ALL IN A DAY'S WORK - Southern Ohio Coal Company's
Meigs No. 2 mine rescue team members Terry Staten, left, and
Mike Delcotto, right, tend to the "victim" David Shinn during mine
rescue competition In Morgantown, W.Va. Making a notation is
mapman Jerry Kouach. ·

Individual income up
0.5 percent in July

WASHINGTON IUPI) -Per· June.
sonal income rose a moderate 0.6
If those payments , were expercent In July but people spent cluded, personal Income In·
nearly all the money they gained, creased 0.8 percent in July and
the Commerce Department re· 0.7 percent In June, the bureau
ported Friday.
said.
Personal Income before taxes
Wages and salaries Increased
rose to a seasonally adjusted
in
all sectors in July, including
annual $4.1 trillion in July while
government,
manufacturing,
s[iendlng rose 0.5 percent to $3.3
distributive
and service
trUIJon, the department's Bureau
Industries.
of Economic Analysis said.
Farmers made more ·money in
The bureau said personal inJuly
desplle the drought , alcome for June rose 0.7 percent,
though farm incomes dropped ln
rather than the previously re·
June mainly because of the
porb!d 0.6 percent increase.
'
In June and July increases in reduced subsidy payments.
Personal taxes increased $4 .6
personal Income were reduced
·billion
In July compared with a
by smaller subsidy payments tq
of $300 million in June,
decrease
farmers, which were down $9
the
bureau
said. The June
billion In July and $3.1 billion In
decrease was due to higher
non-withheld tax payments re·
lated to the Tax Reform Act of
1986, the bureau said.
Disposable personal income,'
that Is personal income after
!axes, Increased 0.6 percent July
compared with a 0.7 percent
Two persons were InJured in' the coUlslon of two pickUP trucks
increase In June, the bureau
at 12: 30 p.m. Thursday In Meigs County, TR. 95, 1.8 miles west of
said.
SR. 338, The State Highway Patrol reported .
Pe;sonal spending, Including
Troopers said one truck driven by James E. Pierce, 77,
interest
paid by consumers to
Racine, went left of center on a curve and collided with the other
businesses
and personal payvehicle drlven by John D. Roush, 23, Racine. There was
ments
to
foreigners,
Increased
moderate damage to Roush's truck and heavy damage to
0.5
percent
In
July
but
that was
Pierce's truck.
·
much
less
than
the
1.1
percent
Both drivers were InJured. Roush was ·not Immediately
leap
In
June.
treated. Pierce was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital at
People bought fewer new cars
· Pomweroy.
In
July than In June but about the
The patrol cited Pierce tor left of center.
same amount of other long·
lasting expensive items such as
appUances.
People saved 4.3 percent of
Foreclosure action was flied In Meigs County Common Pleas
their dlspoaa ble personal Income
Court Thursday by Bartlett Farmers Bank of Bartlett, Ohio
in July, a sllghtlncrease from the
' ..
Continued on page 10
4.2 percent rate In June, the
bureau said.
·

Action filed in Meigs

..,. _

sters sabotaged

for

Trucks collide, two injured

1984 PLYMOUTH.
RELIANT/WAGON

25

~Sections, 14 P~ges
Cento
A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Friday, August 26, 1988

Local news briefs--

*1,295

breezy. IDgh In mid-80s.

•

Bush, Dukakis pick fight over Pledge of Allegiance
HOUSTON (UP!) -With all of
the political differences between
George Bush and Michael Duka ·
kis. the Republican and the
Democrat have chosen to do
battle over the Pledge of
Allegiance.
As odd as it sounds, it's exactly
what the presidential candidates
have done for the last week or so,
each heating up the rhetoric In a ·
bid for political points. At the
heart of the fra.y is the vice
president's criticism of the Mas·
sachusetts governor for his 1977
veto of legislation seeking to :
penalize Bay State school·
teachers who refused to lead
students in the pledge.
Bush, who fired the lates I shots
before leaving CaiHornia to campaign in Texas today, brought the
matter to center stage at last
week's GOP National Conven·
lion. At rallies across the country
since !hen, he, has tried to seize
upon the issue to make Dukakis
appear opposed to the 31-word
declaration.
Dukakis. voic in!( personal sup-

Clear tonight, lows In mid

50a. Saturday, mostly sunny,

SALT LAKE CITY (UP!) Someone apparently sabotaged
several of the O·rlngs produced
for space shuttle boosters, but
officials say they are confident
that none of the damaged rings
were shipped to the factory that
·
builds the rockets.
FBI and National Aeronautics
and Space Administration loves· ·
tigators are inves ligating the
case of razor-slashed silicon
0-rlngs first discovered · last
June, company ·officials said
Thursday.
HydraPak Inc., of West Jor·
dan, Utah, "discovered during
normal procedures In the manufacturing process certain space
shuttle 0-rlngs appeared to have
received dama.ge of a suspicious
origin," said James Dockstader,
company vice president for
operations.
Faulty O·rlngs were blamed
for the shu tile Challenger explo·
sion Jan. 28, 1986, according· to
the presidential commission that
investigated the disaster .. All
seven crew members were
killed.
But Dockstader said that "no
damaged 0· rings were shipped
to Morton Thlokol" Inc., the
manufacturer of the booster
rockets for the space shuttle.
HydraPak, the sole supplier of
0· rings for the shuttle, contacted
"appropriate Individuals at Mor·
ton Thlokol'' Immediately after
discovering the apparent sabot·
age, he said.
"HydraPak Immediately began an internal Investigation by
its own investigators and simui·
taneously requested lnvestlga.
lions by the FBI and NASA" and
" ... has taken steps to prevent
similar incidents in the future
and is confident the problem is
resolved."

there cutting the rings and they
will stay up there cutting the
rings. Somebody could get hurt.
It's murder If that goes on the
shuttle."
Dockstader confirmed
Crocker was an inspector at the
plant until recently, but denied
she was fired. And he said her
allegations of securtty flaws
were "In gross error."
He also said it was "folly" to
suggest the damaged O·rlngs
Could ever lind their way onto a
shuttle mission.
' '!'hey were cut and the cuts
were very evident and It was
easy to catch them in our
inspection," Dockstader said.
•'!'here's absolutely no way these
could have gotten out of the
facility. It's certainly not a
Ufe-.threatening situation."

The FBI and NASA, however,
are continuing their investigation, Dockstader said.
The apparent sabotage was
first ,disclosed by Salt Lake City
television station KTVX, which
reported Thursday It had learned
from a tired inspector at HydraPak that 0-rtngs had been
deliberately slashed with razor
blades.
Former HydraPak employee
Kathy Crocker told KTVX plant
security was lax, even alter the
damaged 0 -rlngs were discovered. She said she was transferred oft the Inspection line
after bEing told she had failed a
polygraph test.
When the sabotage continued,
she said she was fired.
But Crocker told KTVX, "The
person who Is doing it Is still up

Sergeant faces
up to 10·years
on spy charge
BONN, West Germany IUPI)
- A retired U.S. Army sergeant
described as the key membEr of a
spy ring that compromised vital
secrets to the Soviets could face a
prison sentence of 10 years to lite
If convicted of betra-ying Western
defense plans, au thoritles said '
today.
While It Is too early to assess
the Impact of the spy ring that
passed secrets to Moscow, some
experts are comparing It to the ·
Walker family spy scandal of
1985, one of the most damaging
espionage cases in U.S. history.

Authorities said if retired Sgt .
Clyde Lee Conrad is convicted on
an espiOnage charge, the sent·
ence could be as high as 10 years,
but If he Is tried on the more
serious charge of treason he
could get life.
Officials said . Thursday the .
latest' spy ring, led by a retired
U.S. Army sergeant who recru ited another active duty Amerl·
can soldier, fed NATO and U.S.
plans for the defense of We.stern
Europe to Hungarian agents,
who passed the secrets on to the
Continued on page 10

Officials eye new ways to
handle hazardous materials
CINCII&gt;i'NATI (UP!) - The
University of Cincinnati Is
searching for new and bEtter
ways to handle one of Ohio's
biggest problems - hazardous
waste.
Ohio Is home to 900 firms
generating hazardous waste and
more than a dozen sites that treat
and dispose of it.
A "Center for Hazardous
Waste Research and Education"
has been established at the
university and the center com·
blnes the efforts of scientisls In
chemistry, biology, engineering
and geology.
Center director Paul Bishop
said chemists are needed to
understand the nature of hazardous materials, geologists to determine appropriate, locations

for dump sites and engineers to
develop ways to manage hazard·
ous waste.
'
Bishop says he eventually
wants to broaden the scope of the
center to loves ligate the social
impact of hazardous waste on
society, especially the "Not In
my back yard" syndrome.
He noted that people have
become Increasingly hostile to
putting landfills In their neigh·
borhoods because they fear the
landfills will expose them to
Illness -causing hazardous
matrials.
Bishop says he wants soclolo·
gists and poUtlcal scientists
included In future center work to
examine why many people are
"totally afraid" of hazardous
materials.

Currently at the center, eng!·
neer Janet Rickabaugh Is work·
ing on ways to destroy or
minimize toxic waste products.
She is studying nutrients and
environmental conditions favor·
ab1e to bacteria that can degrade
volatile organic chemicals and
other harmful organic
chemicals.
Rickabaugh also is researcing
"surfactants," types of soaps, to
remove pollutants from soil. She
says when 'a surfacant Is mixed
with soU It can "wash" the
·
pollutant out.
Another researcher, biologist
Robie Veslal, Is working to find
bacteria that will completely
clean up the waste products of
two dyes widely used to color food.

Teacher training and rewards
topic of education officials
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
College students' Interest in
teaching is on the rise, according
to Ohio college officials, but the
state needs to look at alternatives
for training them and rewards to
retain them.
Four deans of coUeges of
education b!sdtled Thursday before the Ohio House Committee
to Study Education, which Is In
the midst or a year-Jongexamlna·
tlon of me ~state's education
system.
"I think there Is a renewed
Interest as far as teaching goes,"
said Robert Green, dean of the
Capital University College of
Education.
''We have students coming out
of our ears," agreed Donald
Anderson, , serving the same
capacity for Ohio State University. "We can't take all the

students that want to get Into our
teacher education program ."
Anderson said only one of
every two students who apply to
OSU's College of Education are
admitted.
Anderson told the legislators
that the most creative, risktaking teachers are apt to leave
the teaching profession.
"We lost good math majors to
business," said Green, adding
that business offers the gradu·
ates $8,000 to $10,000 more than
they could make as teachers.
Roger Bennet~. dean of the
College of Education at Bowling
Green State University, recommended that the mlnbnum
teacher's salary be raised to
$25,000. It Is now $15,100. Bennett
said the average salary for all
teachers In the United States is
$29,0oo a ye~r.
Allen Myers, dean of the
Colteee of Education at Ohio

University, said teachers need to
bE able to participate in the
management of their school and
In the design of programs.
Anderson said there should be
more contact between their col·
leges and the schools, with
students performing actua l
classroom teaching early in
college.
"It's lmportan I for the students ·to get out In the schools
early," Green agreed.
Green also recommended that
first-year teachers be closely
monitored on the Job, and any
deficiencies be" corrected before
they become habit.
Likewise, Anderson said the
state should spend the most
money on a concentrated effort
to get every flrsi·IIJ'ader to read
well. That would eltmlnate heavy
expenditures on remedial · work
later on, he aald.

--·-, ·- --------...

\)

�Comment
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Sireei
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

~~ ~._"'T",,......,.c:l ..~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslsiani Publlsber/ControUer

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manaser

AMEMBER ol The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publlshers Association.
LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subjectcoe&lt;llllncrand musl be signed wllh name, address and
telephone number. No unslgne&lt;l leu•rs will be publlshe&lt;l. Letters
should be In
good taste, addressing Issues, not pei-sonalltles.
·

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Friday. August 26. 1988

- By HELEN mOMA.&lt;;
UPJ While Rouse Reporler
While Vice President George Bush tries to ride out the storm of his
controversial choice of Sen. Dan Quayle as his running mate, the
Western White House Is taking the approach that the less said, the
better.
White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater avoided the press as
long as possible on the subject and then asserted that the questions
surrounding Quayle's decision to join the National Guard at a time
when he mav have been drafted for the Vietnam War were' 'a media
storv that doesn' t deserve comml'nt ."
Ciearlv th!' White House did not want to get too far out on a limb
until it sees how the story will play In Peoria.
Bush, whose judgment has been called into question on his first
major decision- the choice of Quayle, a strong conservative- out of
a field of veteran Republican leaders, has decided to go to the mat for
Quayle.
Mainly , Bush has explained his selection of Quayle on the basis of
his age, 41, which puts him in the "baby boom" class. But was that
enough to qualify a man who is one heart beat away and could be
catapaulted Into the presidency?
The speculation Is that Bush wanted a neophyte. a politician who
would be satisfactory to the conservative faction of the party, and
who would be properly subservient to him.
Having been the ultimate team player himself, apparently often
submerging his own views, Bush must have had a model in mind for
the No . 2 spot and it could have been that he sought someone In his .own
image. He may have felt more comfortable with someone who came
from a similar wealthy background who also would be acceptable to
the business community.
The roles of president and vice president have always been a
matter of on-the-job training. But Bush apparently had no trouble in
adapting to the old rule: To get along. go along.
Even during President Reagan's Illnesses, he remained circumspectly in the background, deferring to all the anxious White House
aides.
.
Most of his vice presidential years has been spent on the road. Bush
carried messages around the world for Reagan. He attended the
major funerals, a routine duty for vice presidents. He also spent three
or four days a week traveling around the country for political
appearances.
Reagan has said that Bush always gave him "straight from the
shoulder" advice, but so far the vice president has declined to reveal
how he counseled Reagan when the president was preparing to sell
arms to Iran in hopes of rescuing the American hostages In Lebanon.
Bush Is seeking to emerge from the shadow of President Reagan
and to be his own !flan. His acceptance speech at the GOP Natloual
Convention was a declaration of Independence in some ways, but It
also contal ned elements of pure adherence to Reagan pollc!es.
He said he did not hate government and was all for public service.
He also said he wanted to preside over a gentler, more compassionate
country. Both remarks appeared to be drawing a line between
Reagan's constant bashing of the government bureaucracy, and his
attempt to curtail the social programs of the past.
On the other hand.' the vice president stood four square with Reagan
on tlfl&gt; issues of bann,ing abortion, rejecting gun control, supporting
prayer in the schools. and the Pledge of Alliance.
Quayle' s views on those Issues are Ihe sa me as Bush. He a !so voted
against a bill to give workers 60 days notice of plant closings, against
raising the minimum wage, against legislation to ban age
discrimination in the workplace, and to require written notification to
workers of high risk working conditions such as toxic chemicals.
Quayle has a! ready had a baptism off ire. Anyone who aspires to the
highest offices In the land has got to know he will be subjected to
Intense scrutiny . Every phase of his life will be explored and judged.
Quayle's public appearances so far indicate that he was taken by
surprise and that getting nominated for vice president does not mean
automatically gettlnll: elected.

WASHINGTON-Thelnterlor
Department Is under a federal
court order to computerize Its
system for tracking coal mining
companies who ravage the lands·
cape and then disappear. To
date: Congress has authorized
$13 mllllon to get the program of!
the ground. But ,the private
National Wildlife Federation
says It has done a better job for
tess Utan $1 million.
During President Reagan's
administration, the Interior De·
. partment has not been known as
a rabid protector of the environmen!, As a result, envlronmentallsts have Increasingly put
Utemselves In the position of
watchdog over Ute department.
.· In 1981, environmental groups
.~ began suing the department's
Office of Surface Mining, Recla·

Friend needs a fr:iend

Thanks, folks!

mation and Enforcement, demandlng better enforcement of
federal surface mining regula·
!Ions. Surface miners are supposed to restore the land they
tear up. But for years they have
eluded the federal government.
They form a corporation to get
their mining permits, take the
coal and then dissolve the corpo- ·
ration to avoid prosecution for
!allure to clean up the mess Utey
leave behind. Then, the same
mining companies form new
corporations and do It again.
To settle the lawsuits by
environmentalists, the Interior
Department agreed to computer·
lze Its record-keeping system,
matching the people who file for
mining permits with the list of
previous violators. The Idea
behind the court-ordered settle-

ment was to block the Issuance of
a new mining permit untU old
violations were corrected.
The computerized tracking
system Is now being phased Into
use, focusing on the trampled
coal mining areasof Kentucky,
VIrginia and other eastern
states .
But some environmentalists
say the system has serious flaws.
The National Wildlife Federation
decided to program Its own
computers to do the same thing
and claims now to have a system
that Is better and cheaper.
At the request of Rep. Morris
K. Udall, D-Arlz., chairman of
the House Interior and Insular
Affairs COmmittee, federal In·
vestlgators from the General

INTo IT,

Voodoo hiring
is
a
.
.

Mllllons of job seekers no
longer will be treated like labora·
tory rats, Utanks to a new federal
law limiting the use of lie
detectors by private employers.
Unfortunately, applying for a
job often remains a needlessly
demeaning affair. Polygraphs
have not been the only Insult
endured by applicants.
Take my own experience not so
many years ago at a Chicagoarea newspaper. After the usual
meetings wiUt top editors, as well
as various written tests, I was
ushered Into a room with the
company psychologist.
There was not time to bolt . No
chance for so much as a quizzical
or Irritated look at the managing
editor. Plus, I truley wanted the
Job, And so the psychologist and!
sat down and talked- about my
mother, for Instance (what did I
think of her?), and about my
youth (had I been happy?). For
half an hour or so we sparred In
this fashion while I protected
may personal life and thoughts

By GERRY MONIGAN
UPI Sports Wrlier

Daniels. Then, after walking
Tom Brunansky Brown popped
up Terry Pendleton to end the
He doesn't try to overpower
threat, as he went on to mow
anyone when he throws the ball, down 10 straight Cards, eighth of
them on ground balls.
but KeiUt Brown definitely was
overpowered by the attention he
"He gave us a big lift," said
received Thursday night .
Reds manager Pete Rose, after
The .24-year-old rookie rlgh- his team moved four games over
thander, called up by the Clncln- .500 at 65-61 tor the first time this
nat! Reds Th11rsday , basked In year and closed to within 2 \1,
the spotlight with some reluc· games of San Francisco and
lance after a sterling major Houston tied for second In the
league debut against the St. NL Wesi.
Louis Cardinals.
"He . was In and out, up and
"I was throwing pretty well, down and had good off-speed
getting my off-speed pitches stuff," added Rose, who brought
over," he said modestly after In Johp Franco tomopupwlth his
limiting the Cards to four hits and league-high 27th save In the final
one run, a slxth-lnnlilg solo two Innings. "Keith pitched his
homer bv Willie McGee, In a game. He knew what he wanted
seven: inning stint that saw the to throw and Bo (catcher Bo
Reds win, 4-1, to move within Dlaz) worked with him. He kept
seven games of the Idle Los everything down In the strike
Angeles Dodgers In the National zone and he was confident out
League West.
.. there.
''Yes , I'm a little surprised ·at
"He's a pitcher and he doesn't
doing so well," Brown admitted, give In," Rose pointed out. "I can
after making the jump from see why he's done so well (9-lln
Class AA to the majors In a single Chattanooga In Class AA and
season. "I go for ground balls, then 6-:i with Nashville In Class
not a lot of strlkeou Is (he fanned AAA) earlier this season."
three and walked two) and I try
Cardinal manager Whitey Herto keep my fork ball down.
zog agreed with Rose. "He's a
"I got It up too high on McGee, pitcher, not a thrower," said
out over the plate, and he really Herzog, "and he was pretty
hit It, but I'm happy about the poised."
way I pitched and my family and
Talking about his starter, loser
I enjoved the win," he remarked, Greg Mathews, 2·4, Herzog noted
as his wife and parents flew In that "he was just wild, and he
from California for the game.
tnlght take a little while to come.
He survived some problems·in back," after Mathews, who re·
the first Inning, when McGee and, turned from the disabled list on
Pedro Guerrero .singled, only to Aug. 16, walked six Reds and
have Guerrero cut down at gave up all four runs In 4 13
second on a throw from Kal Innings.

By Jack Anderson and Joseph Spear

IT's: NoT .4 P@{~T
FtT... BUT. I'LLG~w

Accounting Office are comparIng the two systems. Udall wants
to use the best of both. He claims
the government's data Is of poor
quality and must be hand
checked to ensure accuracy.
"I do not Intend to let years of
effort to save the beauty of our
hills and mountains, and thl!
Integrity of our environment, be ,
needlessly destroyed," Udall
told our associate, Scott Sleek.
"The honest · and law-abiding
coal miner Is also placed at an
economic dlsadv antage and the
entire Industry suffers a black

eye."

·

Officials at Ute National Wlldll!e Federation tout their system
as stronger because It scans the
records of all coal mining opera·
tlons for violations, Including
those who are currently holding
mining permits. The federal
computer only ~cans the records
when someone applies for a new
permit
· Looking at permit applications
may stop future abuses, accordIng to the federation's legislative
representative, Cathy Carlson.
But ''reviewing existing permits
allows you a better opportunity to
clean up past abuses," she said.
Interior Department officials
claim their system meets the
terms oft he court order, and that
Implementing It Is a "herculean
task." They are conducting their
own , comparison of the two
computer systems and say the
federal system Is more ambl·
tlous because It uses a nationwide data base with electronic
links to all federal and state
agencies Issuing mining permits.
They also promise that the
federal system, being designed
In phases, wUI eventually be able
to revoke existing permits as
well as block .new ones.

I

shame~___V-:-ince_nt_C_ar_ro_ll

with a shield of alert and earnest
Insincerity.
It was a good performance,
and !•got the job, but I've always
thought less of the company Utat
put me through this exercise In
voodoo hiring. Job applicants
expect to be judged for their
skills, credentials and personal
Impression. They do not expect to
have their psyches pigeonholed
on the basis of superficial (and
sometimes scientifically dubIous) Interviews or tests.
When this happens, as It
Increasingly does, tjley have
every right to feel awkward,
uncomfortable or even violated.
It's not that psychologists and
their tests are frauds, but simply
that the human mind has not, as
yet, submitted Itself to precise
calibration. People can be mislabeled, and Indeed often arP.
'
Consider the record of Law
Enforcement Psychological Services Inc., of San Jose, Calif.,
which employs a battery of tests

I

.

to rate applicants for pollee
departments In a number of
states. Dr. Richard Wllhera, who
heads a regional office for the
firm, defends the exams with the
following evidence: In a con·
trolled study of nearly 4,000
officers from several departments, 45 percent of those
dubbed unfit for pollee work but
hired anyway failed to pass
probation, and an additional 13
percent were eventually tired.
Meanwhile, 26 i;lercent of those
rated fit failed probation and 3
percent were later let go.
Now look closely at those
figures. More than 40 percent of
applicants rated unfit and nearly
30 percent of those rated fit
defied the predictions. In short,
the tests may provide a modest
measure of future success, but
little more. Meanwhlle, how
many Independent thinkers and
other productive Iconoclasts do
they unfairly weed out?
I'm not suggesting such tests

a normal political year.
Dukakls has made "competence" central to his campaign.
Bush and other Republican leaders have countered by stressing
"issues·· and '"ideology."
However the GOP convention
made It clear that "Issues" and
"Ideology" are polltlcal buzzwords being used to paint
Dukakls as a wild-spending llberal who wUI raise taxes, as soft
on · crime, weak on national
defense and totally devoid of
International experience.
Bush call Oukakls "a new and
untried leader with some very
old Ideas long discredited." He
said Dukakls was "an Inexperienced hand who would recyle
failed policies that threater. to
smother our economy and
frighten our allies."
The writing 6~ the Republican
platform was under absolute
control of the Bush forces. Not
one word was added or deleted
from a draft prepared by the
Bush camp without specific
approval of Bush strategists.
The GOP platform was made
as specific as possible In order to
contrast It to the Democratic
platform, which Is both very
short and very general. Speaker
alter speaker here lashed out at
Dukakls and the Democrats for
being so general. Bush himself
characterized Dukakls as the
"stealth candidate" because he
appears to favor Invisible poll·
cles rather Ulan the stealth
bomber, which Is Invisible to
radar detection.
Wlllle speaker after speaker
lashed out at the non-specificity
of the Democratic plan, others
attacked the Democratic platform .for being a budget-busting
plan that wlll send the deficit

be outlawed. Employers should
probably have the right to call In
a witch doctor from deepest
Amazonia to size up an applicant
But If they do, they atleast should
recognize the Indignity they
Inflict upon that Individual who, after all, has done noUtlng '
more offensive than ask to go to
work. ·
Once upon a time, Americans
were a direct people, Impressed
by achievement, brains and
uncluttered honesty. We made
decisions for ourselves. But
something happened along the
way. We began to subordinate
our judgment to a host of experts
and outsiders- to psychologists,
, for example, whose competence
we cannot assess, and to tests
whose Inner logic we do not
understand. Then we accepted
their rulings with the trust
Roman emperors once reserved
for court astrologers.
Call that progress If you like.
Some of us call It a shame.

soaring.
GOP analysts say that the
Democratic generalities w!ll add
up to the creation of at least 16
new federal programs and the
expansion of between 17 and 20
existing programs at a cost of at
least $47 b!lllon above current
budget levels.
The $47 bllllon price tag Is
contained In a study by the House
Republican Research Commit·
tee, which based It estimates on

WINS FIRST BIG-LEAGUE START - Reds hurler Keith
Brown, making his major-league debui at Rlverfroni Stadium
Thursday nlshl agalnsi ihe Cardinals, tossed ·a folll'-hltter In
beating ihe Cardinals 4-1. (UPI)

Scoreboard ...
frld&amp;~'•

......

W L Pt't.

GR

'f I 155 .513
&amp;R ·s; .l+t

-1%

-,a :s3 .ne -

Dol•oH
Bolle a

New Vorlt

15
1.1
81
-14

Mllnu ll!e
Toronto
Clnrellind
Baltimore'

II
If
II
IU

6UMMI!IIf. 1~88

... SAD

If ~,\

.-lllD tzl~
.341 It

Wesl
Oakland
'Jt fit .1117
Mlnnuola
12 14 .571
Han . . City
U II .Ill
Calilornla
U If .fM
Tnae
51 18 .-151
Chlup
SO: 12 .US
Seatt)e ·
Gl a JU
TbUI'I!MIIIY'!I Re11u11
Mll.,...k(f' -1, N~ Vorll 1
FrldQ'I Game~~
Cleveluld (Swtnden •~• :!) aa
·caro (McDnwelll-8), R: H p.m.

ARTIFICIAL RESPIRATION -

2

,HI II

.ttl

-

8
13
11 1ti
M ilt

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OUT.•.

CKIIPIII-11),11: Sl

p.m.

7-7), tO : tS p.m.
Ralllmol'f (TihhA HI) IU Oakland
(Davis tt-4), IO:SS p.m.

New York (RbOIItn 1·18) at CalYornla
1Fl'MCir Jt-10), ~D : Sl f.m .
1SIIIIII'dlf''• Games

'

... BAD

New York .. CaUior••
Balllmol'l!! .. OaklaiNI
r:lft'elaad at a.aeaco.
Del toM at Mllwalkee. al)N
Min••• at Ku. . Clly, nlpl
Tororto at Te~.u, •IP'

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IN ...

New Y•rk
Pll&amp;aiMIIIh

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II

Amerk•Le..CII'Welu• .. CIIICIIIO. 1: M p.m:

Ml•-••••.. a&amp;r,I:U p.m.

Dl&amp;nl M . . . .- . lkh p.m.
Tt...ut 'bul, I:JI p.m.

- 1 1 - l l e, If,llp.m.
......_~ .. o~. lt:Jip.m.

New Yorlr.at Cal . .ri111 .. II: II p.m .
NII&amp;ID. . Leape
SIUI FrMd&amp;N AI New Yorll, ~ : II p.m.
111.
a.aa•&amp;. 1:11 p.m.
Su Die• a1 •llftal, 1111 p.m.
IA1 All pi• II Pllrllllt.elpllla, 1: II p.m.

Le• •

At._.., 1:tt,.m.

a~Mws.aroMblfl

.us tl
.tn -

"'"' .n.11. .NI

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Calendar

CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
Cleveland Indians Thursday
named three current employees
as new vice presidents of the
club.
Tom Giordano, 61, was named
vice president In charge of
baseball operations. Bob DIB'Ia·
s!o, 33, was named vice president
or public relations and communIty affairs. And Carl Hoerig, 37,
was named vice president of
stadium operations.

c;tfttll... lll New Dl&amp;land, 1 p.m.
Mlamlllllln-•. r p.m.
LA ........ at Oileap, I p.m.

IV L Pd. 011
7ol II .181' II Sl .ltl I~
II II .Ill I

u

s.an.,.•ao~rhM

Chlcqo II Atlutta, lalpi
San Fnndaro a1 New-Yerll., ••~
San Dle~Qal Meatrell, alpi
Loo ~pia a&amp; Pblladelfibla, nlpt
Sl. Lo• at Vlnol•_.l, alahl
PltUI:NIJh M Houan, nlpt

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{P .Smhh 1-1!), 'J':• p.m.
PIIW:"IIIII (8mllr)' IU) at Ho0011
(DeabaJ• ~II), 8:11p.m.

Pttt.....ll .. Hoa•-. 1: U p.m ,

Boaton jtt Se:aiUe, nlllllt
NA.nONAL l.EA.GUE

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'

San Dlep (Hawkl•ll-10) a1 Mollft.al
(Do.-n J.~).1 : SJ p.m.
Lo• Ana.trs {Belcher . . ) II. Pb.U. -

U

Mln~e~~oea {VlO .. I H) II Kan,_ CllJ
(Lelhnlnll 'loll), 8:s:l p.m .
Detroit (Terrell 1-10) at Milwaukee
(AuKI!Rl HI, A:35p.m .
Toronco (FIAMI• 11·11) M Teu•

AI~

Gama

San IFI'utelJeO (lebtn. . 5-I) a1 New
Vorll. {Fer•Ddea1·11),1:S$ p.m.
lilt. Lolllla (Terl')' 4-J) a1 ClftdnMtl
{.Jadl:~en 18-IJ , 1: :111 p.m .

B)' Unlttd Preu lntnB&amp;tkn•l
1\MEllJC-'N LEAGUE

Berry's World

-

.

Bengals to battle Patriots·'tonight· ,

the price tags associated with
related legislation pending In
COngress. Rep. William Gray,
D-Pa., chairman of the House
Budget Committee, calls the
GOP report "outrageous Republican hogwash." He charges the
GOP with double-counts, totaling
up Items "not even hinted at" In
the platform and "confusing
statements of priorities and
principles with specific
programs."

..

Mathews noted that "Brown
did what! dldn'tdo, which was to
throw strikes ..He made them hit
the ball. My arm felt good, but I
was Inconsistent, out of my
groove, and that surprised me,
because I felt very strong after
warming up."
The Reds grabbed a 1·0 lead In
the first Inning when Barry
Larkin led off with a triple and
scored on Dave Collins' groun·
dout They added two In tlie
fourth on an RBI single by Nick
Esasky and Ron Oester's sacrl·
flee fly and made It 4-0 In the fifth
on Dave Concepcion's bases·
loaded run-scoring .s ingle to deep
second.
McGee's homer, his third, got
St. Louis on the board, but It was
the only offense the Cards could
muster, althoughFrancogaveup .
two singles In two scoreless
Innings that lowered his earned
run average to just 1.30 In 55
appearances.
Danny Jackson, 18-5, Is scheduted to go for his eighth straight
win tonight against former Red
ScottTerry,4-3,1nGame2ofthe
series.
Cubs I, Braves 1
At Atlanta, Calvin Schiraldi
struck out a career-high 12 In an
eight-hitter and Ryne Sandberg
homered to lead Chicago Schl·
raldl, 8-8, Improved to 4-0 In his
last six starts with his second
.
complete game of the year.
"' '.. '
German Jimenez, 1-5, took the
•
loss.
Brewers 4, Vankees I
At Milwaukee, Ted Higuera
SAFE AT HOME- Milwaukee's Robin Yount
fourUt Inning of Thursday night's game in
( 19) sUdes home safely just ahead of ihe throw to
threw a three-hitter and retired
Milwaukee. The Brewers downed ihe Yankees 4-1
New York Yankees catcher Don Slaught on an
In a makeup game from a rainout on August 4.
the final 19 batters In order, and
RBI double by the Brewers' Rob Deer during the
(UP I)
Rob Deer drove In three runs
with a home run and a double to
pace the Brewers. Higuera, 11-8,
and 9-2 career against the Yankees, struck out nine In his fourth
straight victory and seventh
KIRTLAND, Ohio IUPil looking forward to doing seineThe move, however, is not a
·
complete game.
Veteran linebacker Clay Mat · thing different," said Mat thews, step toward retirement Mat·
thews enters Friday nlght'.s 32. "It's a chance to learn new thews said he Is "Just taking il
Lopez shares lead
game against the New York things, be creative and work on one year at a time.. "
,
. in LPGA Worldevent
Giants with two sacks In the first something new."
''To be honest, who knows how ,
three preseason games, more
The Browns drafted Mike long I will play. Only time will
BUFORD, Ga. (UP!) -Hall of
than twice the rate of his career Junkin In the first round last tell. Your guess is probably as ·
Farner Nancy Lopez shot a
average.
year, hoping to fill the need for an good as mine.." Matthews said.
scorching back nine Thursday to
And he has pressured opposing outside linebacker whp could be a "It's a guess."
finish at 5-under-par 67 and Ue
quarterbacks in a number of strong pass rusher, but that
Cleveland made another roster
defending champion Ayako Oka·
other situations, but It Is no didn' t work out and Junkin has moved -Thursday, signing punter
moto for the first-round lead In
accident The Browns' revised been moved to Inside linebacker. Dan Stryzlnskl .and releasing
the $265,000 LPGA World
defense this season Is geared for
j'He' s done an excellent job, ' ' punter Kevin Brown, who was
Championship.
.
Matthews to get to the quarter- coach Marty Schottenhelmer signed by the Browns juSt Wed·
Far back In the field of 16 back more often, Instead of said of Matthews' pass rushing. nesday. Schottenhe!mer said ·
entering the 14th hole, Lopez
covering r11_nnlng backs In pass "He's verv excited about this there was a chance Stryzlnskl
went blrdle-blrd!e-eagle-birdle
patterns.
chance to rush all the time In our would punt against the Giants.
to catch Okamato. The Japanese
The first-round draft poick out nickel defense."
The Indiana University product
star played the front nine In
of Southern California recorded
The three- time Pro I;lowler was had one punt of 30 yards before
4-under and managed only one Just 42 sacks ln his first 10 ready ·to make whatever change. being released Monday liy the
more birdie the rest of the way.
seasons. At his preseason pace necessary to help the Browns' Indianapolis Colts.
Lopez, who has won three
this year, projected over 10 defense.
The Browns said about 14,000 '
tourna men ts this year, made the
seasons, he would have had 91
"It 'Was a question where they tickets remained for 'the Giants '
tum In l-over after suffering a
sacks.
were looking at myself as an game, which Is being televised ·
double-bogey 7 at No. 9 when she
"For 10 years I've been chas- 11-year player and It was getting nationally but has been blacked
hit In a bunker, came out solidly ing those fast backs around. and harder and harder for me to stay out In Cleveland.
and three-putted from 30 feet.
they don't get any slower. I'm with. the backs," Matthews said.
Lopez and Okamoto finished
one shot ahead of 1985 champion
Amy Alcott and two ahead of Jan
Stephenson, who missed a numerous short birdie putts for a 69
Patriots Coach Raymond would not say whether Flu tie or ..
FOXBORO, Mass. (UPI) she said could "just as ea~y have
Berry
Is unconcerned about the Tom Ramsey will be, Grogan' s
For
the
New
England
Patriots,
been a 64."
of exhibition games. backup once the regular season ,
results
Friday
night's
exhibition
game
Women's U.S. Open champion
While
he
has been testing new starts.
·
'
with
Cincinnati
Is
viewed
as
a
Llselotte Neumann of Sweden,
players
and
trying
personnel
at
All
NFL
tean;s
have
to~u
t
th~lr
·
tool to help make the final roster
Rosie Jones and Patty Sheehap
cuts.
For the Bengals, It could be other than their usual positions,. rosters to 47 players .qy Monday
posted 70s and Judy Dickinson,
Betsy King, Sherr! Turner and a valuable confidence-builder for New England has lost two of and Berry said the personnel ,
decisions are difficult fQr him to .
Colleen Walker were at 71 as 11 a team needing to believe It can tHree In the pre-season.
Of
Ute
Bengals'
game,
the
make.
win.
entrants broke par over the
Berry
says,
It
will
be
"Psychologically, 'it's like golaconic
1987,
Cincinnati
stumbled
to
In
lake-lined resort course.
a 4-11 record despite having the useful "because some personnel lng through a grinder to me," he
league's fifth -ranked offense and decisions have to be made. " · explained . "I understand better :
Scioto Downs results
the eighth-ranked defense. Dur- Because New England's talentls why people want to get drunk. " ,
Among New England's biggest .
Ing one stretch, the hard-luck thin after the starters, his prim·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
arv
concern
Is
"keeping
what
Interests
will b'e""watchhig top
Bengals lost six straight games
Ben Around won the featured by a total of 17 points.
I've got arid keeping It healthy." draft pick John , Stephens, who '
eighth race at Scioto Downs
But In the pre-season, they
One possible switch In a most was Impressive In the first two:
Thursday night, leading all the have won three of four and Coach dangerous pqsltlon Is at punt pre-season games but averaged .
way to beat out Rowdy Roddy.
Sam Wyche says his team Is returner, where third -string · only 1.7 ya_rds In the third game,
Mystics War finished third.
preparing for the Patriots as If quarterback Doug Flu tie may be against Philadelphia.
The winner covered the mile In the game were a regular-season tried. While a freshman at
1:58 2-5 and returned $7,$4.20 and matchup.
Boston College, Flutle did some
$3.40.
"This week has been a rehear- punt returning. The last notable
Fluffy Pad triumphed In the sal for a game situation," said NFL quarterback to return punts
ninth race to head up a 5·3-6 Wyche, who Is In thelastyear of a was
The Daily Sentinel
Joe Thelsmann, during his
trlfecta combination that was• five -year contract. "I want the first year with Washington.
worth $1,569. Race Dust finished players to feel whatever Utey go
(USPS 14HCIO)
Flu tie Is also expected to play
A Division of Multimedia, Inc.
second and Happy Bearcat through to get ready for a regular one
quarter at quarterback.
showed.
Published e very aft ernoon, Monday
game."
Steve Grogan, New England's
A crowd or 3,190 wagered
lhrough Friday, 111 Court St ., P oHis goal for the team's fifth and No. 1 signal-caller, w!ll play the
meroy, Ohio, by thE.' Ohio Vatl f&gt;Y Pub$246,698.
final exhbltlon game Is "to play first half and possibly the first
lishing Compa nyr Multlmedia , In c,,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Ph . 992·2156. Se
to win, with ali the players."
series of the third quarter. Berry
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Indians promote three
Ohl9.' ,
,
.

Matthews is quarterback sac~er .

Will GOP tum mean? _____Ro_be_rr_·w;_ag_ttuz_n

NEW ORLEANS (NEA) -II ·
the tone of the Republican
National Convention was any
Indication, the GOP Is going Into
the fall campaign In a mood that
Is at once worr.led and mean·
spirited.
Polls showing Democratic presldentlt: &gt;candldate Michael Du·
kakls ahead of George Bush have
had a profound effect on both
Recentlv. I have been reading Jesus. One thing for certain IS
GOP delegates and the vice
a lot of uniruths about a friend of Jesus stands for truth, and I
president's campaign
mine whom I admire, respect know that the truth will surely
strategists.
and love very much. !feel at this come soon and all that wflllisten
While Repub!lcans downplay
time that my friend needs a will be set free because of my
the significance of such polls, It's
friend because of all the slander friend Jesus. He even loves all
clear that Bush Is generally
and lies that this motion picture, the film makers and actors, for
be!leved to be trailing, despite
''The Last Tem!)tatlon of Christ'' he knows how blinded they really
the
add!Uon of Sen. Dan Quayle
are
from
the
devil
himself.
has portrayed of my friend
to the GOP ticket.
of
Indiana
Jesus.
Please get the real facts about
This
Is having a twofold effect:
I happen to know Jesusdl~d for Jesus, for he Is the answer to our
Many delegates at the conven·
me and took all my sins upon Him every need. Allow yourselves to
tlon were openly worried about
at the cross. For you see, my Indulge In the Bible for real
November. It appeared they
friend Jesus had no sin In him and truths op our Lord or please
weren't as much at ease with
because of his love, took my sins contact me for more truths.
Bush as were rank-and-tile De·
and set me free.
mocrats with Dukakls In Atlanta.
This film certa lnly does not
Mark Beegle
Many talked about the "special
show the real friend I have In
Racine, Ohio
magic" that Ronald Reagan had
=----:f---:-:-:--:
with voters and their fear that
Bush wUI be unable to match
On behalf of the Meigs County
Junior Fair personnel. Without Reagan's appeal.
These worries, In turn, Infused
Falrboard, I would like to thank
this widespread support, we
GOP convention with a very
the
the hundreds of people who
could not continue to provide this
negative
tone. Although no one
helped make our 1988 fair a safe
educational, . entertaining and
said It directly, the GOP ga·
and successful one.
profitable fair.
We are again sincerely grateA very special thank you Is thered here not so much to elect
ful for the continued cooperation
ex tended to office personnel Sara George Bush as to prevent the
and support of Sheriff Howard
Cullums, Leota Smith and Muriel election of Michael Dukakls.
Tradltlc~mally, the party In
Frank and his deputies, our
Bradford whose experience and
power
runs a campaign defend·
Meigs County Commissioners,
assistance proved Invaluable.
Its
record, praising Its
lng
County Engineer Phll Roberts,
Without their cooperation and
accomplishments
and promising
COunty Highway Superintendent
guidance my first lair as secremore
of
the
same
It
re-elected. It
Ted Warner, and Kenny Wiggins
tary would have been most
Is
usually
left
to
the
challenger
to
and Bernard Gllkey of the Litter
dlf!lcult. They guaranteed an
run
the
negative
campaign,
to
control Board. We also wish to
easy transition for which I will
discredit
the
Incumbent
and
say
express our thanks to the many
always be grateful.
why he should be thrown out.
fine Individuals and businesses
But the GOP convention sugwhO participated as exhibitors,
Mary Gilmore·
performers, ticket-sellers and
Meigs County Falrboard gested that 1988 Is not going to be

Letters to the editor

Rookie wins first time out
for Reds; Cubs top Braves

New ·system ·will track operations

L----------------,...-------__.. ,

White House stands.
clear of Quayle fuss

26, 1988

•

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The o.ily Sentinel
•

•

.

McCallister's 261 leads first ·
round series action at Akron

, .

'

'

AKRON, Ohio (UPI ) - Blaine
McCalUster won his first PGA
Tournament on July 17, but he
did so In relative anonymity.
McCallister had a 19-under-par
score of 261 In capturing the
Hardee's Golf Classic, the PGA
Tour's fast-food substitute lor
those not qualified to play In the
far more prestigious British
Open, which Is held the same
week.
Nevertheless, McCallister
clearly earned what British Open
champion Seve Ballesteros didan Invitation to theselect$900,000
l'iEC World Series of Golf for
winners' only.
McCallister, one oll7 players
making a first appearance in the
winners-only World Series, shot a
3-under-par 67 Thursday for
one-shot lead over Ian BakerFinch of Australia and Mark
Brooks entering today's second
round on the 7,136-yard Firestone
Country Club south course.
"A 67 at Firestone is like
stealing. Par is golden out here,'·
said McCallister, whose score Is
the highest in six years to lead a
World Series first round. "I'm off
to a good start and there's three
more rounds. Who knows?
"I'll just try to keep playing the
sljme way I did. I still want to
prove I can play successfully on
the Tour. I had a good week In ·
July and won, and I just want to
do wen here."
Three players were grouped at
1-under 69 - Masters champion
Sandy Lyle of Scotland, Ken
Brown of Britain and Jay Haas.
Lyle opened with three bogeys
but made four straight birdies
midway through his wind-blown
round.
McCallister, Ft. Stockton,
Texas, was 1-under-par after
nine holes. He birdied the lOth
hole with a 12·foot chip and the
625-yard 16th by roll!ng In a~
downh11115-foot putt.
"At the end of the week, you'll
be right In there If you're around
par," said McCallister, who has
won $184,327 In 26 tournaments
this year. "The wind made It .
more difficult, but I'm making ·
these pars and going on to the
next tee with a smile on my
face."
Baker-Finch, the winner of the
Australian Masters, was 1-under
after nine holes and birdied the
15th to finish with three birdies
and one bogey.
"Shooting a good score In these
conditions Is a boost to your
confidence," said Baker-Finch.
"Firestone is playing like it's
supposed to - tough."
Brooks, Fort Worth, Texas,
won the Greater Hartford Open
In July for his first Tour victory
after losing his playing privl·
leges three previous times. He
balanced four birdies against two
bogies In his round.
Lyle hit a spectator with a shot
on the 470-yard, par-4 ninth hole,
but rolled in a 35-footputt to begin
his birdie spree that ended with a
50·foot chip on the 178-yard 12th.
"You get a little numb," said

• ·1·.

~

~: ~( (/ff.J~ '

'&gt;{

t:

~'"*'

~· \

DORSETI' CHASED DOWN- Broncos running
back Tony Donett, rlgbt, Is chased down by Colts
l"ebacker Duane Bickell, Jell, and defensive

•, ~cJ:,i,.;;. '

.•

• DENVER (UPI) - John Eltwo touchdown passes

;~ay threw

to Ricky Nattie! before leaving
the game with a slight shoulder
strain, and Indianapolis fumbled
twice Inside Denver's 10-yard
line Thursday night, helping the
Broncos to a 21-20 preseason
triumph over the Colts.
Dean Blasuccl's 55-vard field
goal attempt on the ftnal play
went wide right.
Elway appeared to suffer a
right shoulder Injury on a 30-yard
pass to Vance Johnson earlv In
the third quarter. He remained in
the game for one more play,
throwing a 12-yard strike to
Nattiej to give Denver a 14-6
edge.
Elway's injury did not appear
to be serious, and he should be
available for Denver's regularseason opener Sept . 4 against
Seattle.
The Colts' Eric Dickerson ran
lor 128 yards on 17 carries and
.caught five passes for 68 yards
before leaving alter three quar-

''

·.Arthur J. ·Rooney of
Pittsburgh succumbs
PITTSBURGH IUPI) - Ar- NFL 28 years ago. Pat and I will
. thur J., Rooney Sr., rhalrman of miss him dearly."
. the Pittsburgh Steelers and one
Ro~ney was born In Coulters·
'Of the architects of the National · ville, Pa .. but his family moved
-Football IAague, died Tnursday to Pittsburgh when he was 1 year
:Of complic!ltions from a stroke. old , and they lived on the city's
.jie was 87.
North Side - · near the site of
· Friends remembered Rooney what is now Three Rivers Sta- affectionately known as "The dium , where the Steelers and
Chief" and one of the most baseball Pirates play.
"Very rarely can the word
: admired men on the American
sports scene - as a Iegend, a 'legend' be properly attached to
someone, but it is 'certalnlv
gentleman and a gentle man.
Rooney suffered a stroke in his appropriate to describe Art Roo• office at Three Rivers Stadium ney Sr.," said Carl Barger,
: Aug. 17 and had to be put on a president of the Pirates. "Words
; respirator at Mercy Hospital to cannot describe ·how d~&gt;eply he
• help his breathing. He showed will be missed."
• signs of Improvement Sunday ,
but lapsed Into a coma Monday
Rooney attended school at
and died after he was removed Indiana (Pa.) Normal, Georgefrom the respirator.
town University and Duquesne
"He was comatose since that University. An outstanding ath: time and did not wake up." said _Iete, he played semi-pro football,
Theodore Gelet, Rooney's and minor-league baseball. He
· family physician. "Ear iy this won AAU middleweight and
; 1110mlng all the body functions welterweight boxing titles and
started to deteriorate, and there was named to the 1920 U.S.
was no further respiration on his Olympic boxing team, although
. part. There was no further he did not participate In the
evidence of brain action, and Summer Games.
· there was no further evidence of
Rooney's biggest sports love,
any type of body function.
however, may have been horser''The five sons and I met last aclng, and his sports empire
night and we met again early this apparently was founded at least
1110mtng. We all made a decision in part with money he won at the
to watch body function ar\d take track.
him off the respirator."
In the . late 1940s, Rooney
Gelet said Rooney died In his bought Shamrock Farms, a
ateeP at 7:45a.m. Thursday with · horse breeding and training farm
bls family at his bedside.
In Maryland. In the early 1950s,
'I'M stroke on the left side of his he purchased the Liberty Bell
brain had partially paralyzed and Keystone Race Tracks in
JraaDI!'Y'S right side and slurred Philadelphia. The Rooney lamliy
bill
b. .
later added a harness racing
Chief was · a gentleman t•ack In Yonkers, N.Y., Green
IIIII a aentle man," said Art Mo;mtaln Race Track In Ver·
llfldell, owner of the Cleveland mont, and a dog racing track In
.• owu. ''He was a true sports- Palm Beach, Fla.
. . , fierce competitor and one
Rooney maintained an avid
f1f Ill)' dearest friends since the Interest in breeding- and racing
Jlrlt clay be ftlcomed me to the . - untllhlsdeath.

:Or.

t,

back Eugene Daniel, center, during the llrst
quarter of Thursday night's NFL preseason game
in Denver. ( UPI)

Eagles, Broncos, Cards, Bills
PONTIAC, Mich. (UPI) . Mike Quick scored on a 49-vard
touchdown pass and Keith Bvars
ran 17 yards for first-half scores
. Thursday night to spark the
Philadelpbta Eagles to a 27-9
victory over Detroit, capping the
Lions' worst preseason record In
club history.
Philadelphia ended Its preseason schedule with a 2-2 reeord;
Detroit 0-4, The Lions' previous
worst exhibition-season record
was 0-4-1 In 1966.
Quick's 49-yard touchdown
'_pass from Randall Cunningham
at 10:22 of the first quarter gave
!he Eagles a 10-0 lead.
• Chuck Long passed 20 yards to
. Pete Mandley at 4:04 of the
.serond quarter, cutting the
:Lions' deficit to 10-7. Byars ran
·for his score at 12:09ofthe second
:to give the Eagles a 17-7 halftime
edge.

wi~ ·

ters. Dickerson's 67·yard touchdown run with 4:09 left In the
third quarter cut the margin to
14-13.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!) Val Slkaherna returned a punt 81
yards for a touchdown and three
Phoenix quarterbacks threw
scoring passes Thursday night to
lilt the Cardinals to a 41-21
victory over the Kansas dtv
Chiefs.
·
The Cardinals, making their
first visit to Missouri since tl)elr
March 15 move from St. Louis,
concluded the preseason 1-3.
They recorded only their seventh
preseason victory over the Chiefs
In 21 years.
Kansas City. bidding for Its
first unbeaten preseason since
1969, finished 2-1-1.
Cardinals starter Nell Lomax
threw his only touchdown pass of
the preseason. Cliff Stoudt and
Torn Tllpa added scoring passes
for Phoenix.
Stoudt put the Cardinals ahead
lor good 28·21 with live minutes
remaining in the third quarter.
He directed a 13-play drive that
took 7:40 and culminated In his
10-y••d TD pass to Jay Novacek.

Sports briefs
Hone Racing
Fuller's Folly, a 32-1 shot, won
the $93,600 Seneca Handicap
Thursday at Saratoga Race
Course. The 5-year-old gelded
son of 197ll Triple Crown winner
Affirmed, the next to longest shot
on the board at 32·1, rallied from
eighth place to prevail by a neck.
... Alysheba has been made the
slight favorite over Bet Twice In
Saturday's$500,000 Iselin Handicap at Monmouth Park. The
two dueled down to the wire In
last year's Haskell Invitational,
which was won by Bet Twice. Ina
field of seven, BetTwicedrew the
first position and Alysheba the
seventh.

NASHVILLE , Tenn. !UP]) Jim Kelly tossed a 1-yard scoring
pass to Jamie Mueller late In the
second quarter Thursday night to
spark the Buffalo Bills to a 14-7
preseason triumph over the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
Tampa Bay flnlshed the preseason 0-4, while Buffalo concluded at 1-3.
Kelly completed 9 of 12 at·
tempts lor 98 . yards. Tampa
Bay's Vinny Testaverde corn.
pleted 6 of 16 attempts with one
touchdown pass and three Interceptions in two quarters of
action.
Buffalo 1led the score 7-7 with
Olympics
9: 17 left In the first half on a
The
U.S.
men's Olympic bas·
1-yard run by Thurman Thomas.
ketball
team
will start most of Its
On the eighth play of Tampa's
games
during
morning In Seoul
next possession, Buffalo Inside
linebacker Rav Bentlev Inter- to make them available tor
cepted a Testa verde pass at the .prime-time television vlewlnt; in
Tampa 47 and returned It 2yards. the United States. The American
Kelly then connected on five men begin defense of their gold
straight passes, Including one to medal against Spain Sept. 18 at
Mueller breaking to the right of 11:45 a.m. That Is 9:45p.m. EDT,
the endzone for the winning score Saturday, Sept. 17. Other early
with 1:55 remaining In the second American opponents are Canada, Brazil, China and Egypt.
quarter.

Friday, August 28, 1988

Cub Scouts win trophy
Chesler Cub Scout Pack 235 Hollon, Micah Otto, Eric Hfll,
was the winner of the revolving Eric Tuttle, Kyle Ord, James
trophy given away at the recent Clifford, Bobby Keaton, Rickie
Cub Scout Olympics In Rutland. Hollon, David Van Inwagen, Eric
The event was sponsored this Dillard, Patrick Aelker, Travis
. Thomas, Daniel Otto, Mike Tutyear by the Rutland Pack.
All scout!! participating In the tle, Marc Jones, Matthew Keaton
event enjoyed a fun filled day and and Joshua Starcher.
earned special certificates and a
Leaders attending were JoAnn
patch.
Newsome, Brenda Tuttle, Mickle
Chester scouts participating In Hollon, Cathy Clifford, Mary
the annual event were Eric Dillard and Carl Thomas.

Longworth family has reunion

WINNER - WI- of the lire exllaplaber lfvea away by
BrOWII ud Saouffer Fire and Safety Equlpmeal at lhe Melp
County Fair was Donna Byer of Mlddlepori.,Byer Willi presented
wk~ her 2\i pound Halon 1%11 exllnJ!Uillher by Gary Snouffer of the
Middleport finn.

Barn Raisin, slated
FIRST-ROUND LEADER- Blaine McCallister of Ft. Stockton,
Texas, shown here on .the 18th green Thursday, Is the lint· round
leader In the 111110,000 NEC World Series of Golf at Firestone
Country Club In Akroa. (UPI)

Esiason rips Bengals
for releasing Rimington
Rlrnlngton, who missed sev·
CINCJIIINATI iUPI) - Clncln·
nat! Bengals quarterback Boo- era! games the past two seasons
mer Es!ason has ripped club with knee, ankle and elbow
· management for releasing five- Injuries, was told by the Bengals
year veteran center Dave he risked a career-ending Injury
If he cpntinued to play.
Rlmlngton.
Rirnlngton, the Bengals' first·
Eslason, asked If he believed
round draft choice In 1983, was the Bengals, said, "Seven teams
cut earUer this week after team called him fRirnlngton) last
olflcalls said he failed his physi- night. He said, 'Boomer, It's the
cal examination. Just one day first time In five years I've felt
after falling the Bengals' physi- like I've been given due credit as
cal, Rlrnlngton passed a Phila- a ballplayer.'
delphia Eagles medical exam
"Now," . continued Eslason.
and Is now negotiating with the "at least he'll be going to a place
Eagles and several other teams. where he's treated like he should
Eslason, whose uniform be, where he'll get the respect a
number Is 7, wore uniform five-year veteran deserves."
Eslason also Included Rimingnumber 50 during a practice this
week. Rlrnlngton's number with ton's position coach, offensive
· line coach Jim McNally, In his
the Bengals was 50.
."It was a memorial to an criticism.
"When l say this team didn't
extremely great person who may
be a victim of vindictiveness." treat Dave Rirnlngton fairly, I
don't mean just Paul and Mike
said Esiason.
Rlmlngton helped Es!ason lead Brown (the general manager and
a players' strike last season. assistant general manager),"
And, Rlrnlngton was a live-week said Eslason. "Go talk to Dave's
line coach and see what he thinks
holdout this season.
"They (Bengals management) of Dave. Dave wasn't one of his
say he failed his physical, but boys.'' ·
that's a coll"out," charged EslaMike Brown said he wasn't
son. "If that was the case (If the surprised by Eslason's
Bengals feared Rlmlngton had complaints.
serious physical problems) they
"It's not unusual for a player to
Could have given him a physical feel bad and get angry when he
six week's ago. They could have sees a close friend released,"
said, ·comeonln, Dave.Let'sget said Brown. "ll's understandaa look at you while we're ble, yet that's the way of the
negotiating."'
NFL. Players come and go and
the show goes on. "
Asked about Eslason wearing
uniform number 50 In practice as
a memorial to Rlrnington, Brown
said, "It's a free country, I
gues~.··
PHILADELPHIA !UPI)
The Philadelphia Eagles signed
veteran free agent c~nter Dave
rtlmlngton to 2-year contract, the
team announced Thursday, but
terms of the contract were not
GRAVELY TRACTOR
disclosed.
SALES &amp; SERVICE .
Rirnlngton, 27, the first-round
204 Condor St.
draft choice of the Cincinnati
Pomeroy, OH.
Benga Is in 1983, will join the
Sprl•t &amp;
H.."
Eagles lor practice Friday.
'OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
"We think that we got an
9 AM·&amp; PM
excellent football player," said
SATURDAY 9 AM-1 PM
· - -···
coach Buddy Ryan. "When he
came out of college I saw him. I
~THE
really haven't gotten a chance to
see him play In the pros since his
rookie year, but he Is a great
one-blocker."

Eagles pick up
Dave Rimington

l•••er

..........

GRAVELY

FREE • FREE .• FREE

''FREE''

ATHENS- More than 40 wood
Entertairunent for .ihe weecarvers, artists, weavers, jewel· · kend will Include Actual Proof
ers, furniture makers, potters, Jazz group performing Sunday at
and basket makers will show, sell 2 p.m. and McGuffey Lane
and demonstrate their work at featured Monday at 2 p.m. A wide
the 11 annual Barn Raisin' Arts variety of special foods will be
and Crafts Festival Sunday and offered with plenty of free
Monday, Sept. 4-5 at the Dairy parking.
Barn Southeastern Ohio Cultural
The festival is sponsored by the
Arts Center In Athens.
Kroger Company, Kerr Dlstrl·
Among them will be fiber artist buting and the Ohio Arts Council.
Nancy Schul, from the Pomeroy Admission Is $3 for adults, $2 for
senior cltizehs and will be open
area.
There are 14 new artists along from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. both days.
with many returning ones.

District workshop held
The American Association of
University Women, Ohio DivIsion, fall district workshop lor
1988 was held Sunday at the
Holiday Inn In Chillicothe.
AAUW promotes equity lor
women, education and selfdevelopment over the life span
and positive societal change, and
provides fu.nds for the ,advancement of women In society
through education. Just one ol
the many goals of AA UW Is more
legislative awareness.
After registration and lunch at
12:15, the opening session began. .
There were counterpart sessions
and district meetings of which

SATURDAY, AUGUST 27, 1988
11 :00 A.M.-4:00 P.M.

DDLEPORT GULF
992-3397

112 IOITI SICONI

..•

the Middleport-Pomeroy Branch
Is In the southern district. Ad·
journment was at 5:30.
Attending from the local
branch were President Lee Lee,
Program VIce-President Vlrgl·
nla Carson, Membership VIcePresident Joyce Ritchie, RecordIng .Secretary Dorothy Woodard
and Corresponding Secretary
arid Women's Issues Chairman
Janice Curry.
At the Great Lakes Regional
Conference In June, the
Middleport-Pomeroy Branch received an Association member·
.ship award for the largest branch
net growth of any Ohio branches.

The Longsworth Reunion was
held Aug. 7 at the home of Gordon
and Margaret West In Racine.
Those attending the reunion
were:
.
Evelyn and Charles Dobbins,
Pawtucket, R.I.; Ellenor and
Bob Carter, Summersville, S.C.;
Carolyn, Neal and Jimmy
French, Ch!Wcotthe; Myrna and
Don ·Lemaster, New Cumber·
land, W.Va.; Paul McSwegln,
New Cumberland, W.Va.; Betty
and Kathl Posey and friend,
Paula Powell, Wlerton, W.Va.
David, Pat and Karen Longs·
worth, · Charleston, W.Va.; Lois
Armstrong and Katlna Willis,
Cabin Creek, W.Va.; Harold and
Gayle Longsworth, Winchester,
Va.; Torn and RebeCca Smallwood and daughter, Amanda,
Winchester, Va.; Milton, Beth
and James Broadwell, Glen
Allen. Va.; How~rd, Mary and

Kattlyn Overacker, Naples,
Italy.
Thorne and Sue Longsworth,
Wichita, Kan.; Donna and Paul
Longsworth, Wichita, Kan.; Gordon, Margaret and Melody West,
WINS TROPHY - Eric Dillard, of Cub Seoul Pack 235 of
Chester, Is presented with a special trophy for accumulating the
Racine; Mike, Rhonda and Tyler
most points In the 9-year·okl age group during the recent Cub Scout
Roberts, Pomeroy; Martha Williams, Hinton, W.Va.; Melinda
Olympics. The event was sponsored by the Rutland Cub Scout
Pack.
and Zachery Adams, Mechanics·
ville, Va.; Bill and Bea Cornell,
Racine; Sue, Nick and Rhonda
Konnovltch, Logan, W.Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Tom SummersFrank Longsworth, Rocky
River, Ohio; and Esther West, field and Crystal, of Medina; Mr.
FOR BEGINNERS!
and Mrs. Ronald Russell,
Racine.
ALL AGES!
Ernest Longsworth was the · Amanda and Michael, of Racine;
COUPLES, SINGLES, TEENS
oldest In attendance a.t · the Mr. and Mrs. Donald Russell, of
BAUROOM DANCE CLASSES
reunion. Howard, Mary and Harrisonville; and Mr. and Mrs.
THURS. SEPT. 1-7 ·9 p.m.
James Overacker of Naples, Steve Haggy, Stephanie and
Italy traveled the farthest. Brad, were weekend visitors of
Middleport Am. Leg. Bldg.
James Broadwell, Glen Allen, Mr. and Mrs. ·Robert Russell.
Mikki Casto • lnstrudor
. Crystal Summersfleld spent
Va. was the youngest In
LEARN: Slow Donee, Fox Trot.
the week with Mr. and Mrs. Steve
attendance.
Swing., Watt•. Polka, Rum be. ChaHaggy, Stephanie and Brad.
Cho, Country • Wootlfn.
Amanda and Michael Russell
FOIIIFOIMATION ON INIOWIENT CAll:
were Saturday overnight guests
GERAlD FREEMAN-614-367-0662
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell.
101 G!LMOif-614-ft2·6121
Mr. and Mrs. Scott- Warner, of
CHARlES fDWAIDS-614·ft2·5210
Dayton. were recent visitors of
JOAN UIID-304·675·3306
word from Marshall University Mr. and Mrs. Ted Warner and
MiliCI CAST0-304-675·3118
In Huntington, W.Va. that he had other relatives.
Fuf Eng/ fJHII Eutll"l
Mrs. Iva Johnson Is visiting
fulfilled the necessary acacemlc
/IfNI
p,,IIJ
requirments and would receive with Mrs. J.R. Murphy and
Peggy.
his diploma. He earned his
degree through course work
sponsored by his company
through the University ·of
Chicago.
Hes.ter has been Invited to the
univertslly's spring commencement exercises in May 1989 but
has officially graduated as of
July 15, 1988. He does plan to
attend the graduation.
Hester Is vice president and
director of marketing at MidState Federal Savings and Loan
ASsociation, headquartered in
Ocala. He supervises all market·
log activities for 27 branch
offices operating throughout a
five couniy West Central Florida
market area.

Wolfe Pen area notes,---------

earn to

Hester earns degree
OCALA, FLA. -Gene Hester,
formerly of New Haven, W.Va.,
began his college career In Sept.
1962 after graduating from
Pomeroy High School In Pome·
roy. Taking time .out to earn
money lor tuition and living
expenses, active duty In the U.S.
Army Reserve and a 1965 wed·
ding, allowed Hester only three
years of college work by 1961.
Now, 21 years later, Hester has
received his Bachelor of Arts
degree.
"Better late than never," said
the belated graduate, who Is vtce

president and director of marketIng lor a $1 billion Florida
savings and loan. ''The most
important thing to me is that
something I ·started has finally
been completed." .
In late July, Hester received

N••

Clqsing concert scheduled Rock Springs grange
conducts meeting recently

Brtng your picnic baskets and
lawn chairs to enjoy the September 2 closing concert of. the
Huntington Pops Orchestra lor
the 1988 summer season.
Theme of the concert will be
"Down Memory Lane" featuring
Lloda Elkum and Jeff Price as
soloists. The concert will be held
at Harris Riverfront Park start·
lng at 7:30p.m. Rain site will be

the Huntington Civic Center.
Tickets lor the concert are $5
for adults and $2.50 lor students
and senior citizens. Special re·
served seats are $10. Tickets are
available at the gate, or preconcert sites Including Pled
Piper at the mall and downtown;
Scratch and Tilt, Jim's Steak and
Spaghetti House and the Hunting·
ton Museum of Art.

Racine FFA results announced
Members of the Racine Future
Farmers of America Chapter
who received ribbons In the Ohio
State Fair Vegetable Show were
Brent Rose, first place for a
Kennebec potato and second
place for a Plk Red tomato; and
Keith Young with a second place
for a Plk Red tomato and third
plae for a Kennebec potato.
Members of Racine FFA who
received ribbons at the Meigs
Counly Fair for vegetables and
livestock were Kevin Grueser,
first places for tomatoes, SQli!ISh

and a steer; Brent Rose, first
place for tomatoes, green beans,
cabbage, peppers, field corn and
·a market hog; Keith Young, first
place for tomatoes and peppers;
Mlck Eakins, first place for
tomatoes; Darrell young, first
place for peppers and tomatoes;
Shannon Williams, first place for
cabbage and second place for
peppers; Scott Bickers, first
place for peppers; Chris Grindley, first place for peppers; and
Marvin Bickers, first place for
tomatoes, hay and straw.

HaU birth

The Meigs County Health De·
partment will be conducting a
public meettag at the Tuppers
Plains Fire House at 7 p.m. 011
Toesday evening. All residents
are urged to attend.
''

1982 Buick $!cybk Estate Wagon ••;.$1995

Fully equipped, good condition.

1914 Ford Crown Ylctoria............ S2495

4 dr.. auto .. alec. wlndowa, air.

1911 Plymouth I·Car Wagon ....... S1295

Auto., took• end runagood.

1911 Plymouth Horizon ................ s109 5

.

4 dr .• 4 ep.• rune good.

1910 Ford Mustang ;.....................,$1095

4 IPIId, p.l.
WILLIAM A. HALL

1'76 Plymouth Wagon .................... S795

Looke ana rune good, auto.

1979 01. 91 ................................ $1095

SALES • SERVICE ·TESTING

I SIIOUFFEI

I SAPin

.......,., .....,.
171 .... IIIII • Awe.

poolunouaeemeat
The London Pool In Syracuse
will be open 3 to 8 p.m. Monday
!hrnueh Friday, Aue, 29 throueh
Sept. 2.

Election of officers was held at September meeting which will be
the August meeting of the Rock hosted by Rock Springs. A cook
Springs Grange. Elected as offic- out and pot luck dinner were
ers were William Radford, mas· announced for the September
ter; Linda Broderick, overseer; meeting at the home of Jim and
Pat Holter, lecturer; Roy Holter, Barbara Fry, beginning at 6: 30
steward; Roy Grueser, asslst;mt p.m.
steward; Opal Grueser, lady
A flbn on the Presidents of Ohio
assistant steward; Buena and their wives was presented by
Grueser, chaplain; Jim Fry, Pat Holter who gave a brief
treasurer; Francis Goegleln, se- history of each.
.cretary; Harold Blackston, gateReported ill were Jim Fry and
keeper; Barbara Fry, Ceres; Mildred Jacobs and a sympathy
Helen Blackston, Pomona; card was sent to Hazel
Nancy Morris, Flora; Charles VanCooney.
Kuhl, executive committee;
Refreshments for the August
Louise Radford, plants!.
meeting weni a decorated cake
A report on the fair booth by and Ice cream, In observa nee of
Bunny Kuhl and the CWA report B!ll Radford's birthday. Hosby Barbara Fry were also given,
tesses were Barbara Fry and
with Fry noting that county Bunny Kubl.
judging will be held at tb.e

HOT SUMMER DEALS

Bill Hall, formerly of Rutland,
now o! Lancaster, and his wile,
Roxie, are announcing the birth
oftheldlrstch!ld, a son, William
Aaron Hall, bOrn May 1 at Ohio
State · University Hospitals,
Columbus.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. William Hall Sr.,
Lancaster.
Godparents are Charles and
Angela Hall, Pomeroy.

Public meeting
· slated .in Meigs

WITH FILL UP

I

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend.

winner Curtis Strange and current leading moneywtnner Joey
Sindelar led nine players at
l-over 71.
A total of 42 entrants are
competing for the $162,000 first
prize and a 10-year PGA Tour
exemption. There is no cut In this
event.

Lyle. "I became a bit more
careful and it worked out quite
well considering."
At even-par 70 were Larry
Nelson, Tom Sleckmann, Mark
McCumber, Mike Reid, Bruce
Lietzke and David Feherly of
Northern Ireland while defend·
lng champion and U.S. Open

CAR WASH

.,;r:c

I

Friday, August 26, 1988

Ohio

Pl. (614) HI·707S

Gary

s...... -

992·7446

2 dr., •uto.• p.b .. p.1.

We lltvt l•••rtl Lo• Prl••• etre Oa
Otr Lot To e•oote FroM.

RIGGS USED CARS
915·4100

c••m•

�Friday, August 28, 1988

The Daily Sentinel-Page-?

POI11a'Oy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Exposition '88 set for seniors

Community calendar
FRIDA\'
ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
County Pomona Grange will
practice degree work at the Rock
Springs Grang Hall on Friday
evening starting at 7:30p.m.
SATURDAY
CHESHIRE - Little Kyger
Church will have Its annual Ice
cream social on Saturday at 5
p.m. Everyone welcome.

This M~sage and Church Directory SpoTumred Ry The Interested Rw~inesses Listed On This Page.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Veterans
. Memorial Hospital
liS E•

..._ial Dr.
992-2104

~~ r~l

Pamoroy

104 W Mil In
H2 2311 Pomeroy

214 E. MaiD
992-5130 Pomeroy

,

1

nint:·.1.

TRINITY
CONGREGATIONAL
CHURCH, Richanl Freeman, pasror:
Debbie Buck, SuOOay School Supt. Olu rch
SChool9.15a m. WorshlpServlcelO 30a
m Choir ~hearsal, Tuesda:v, 7, :KJ p m
under direction r1 Lots Burt

POMEROY CH!JRCH OF TiiE NAZA
RENE. Qnu Unk&gt;n and MultErry, Rev
'lllomas Glal Mceh~ pastor Norman PrEs~. s. S. Sop.. S.rllay School, 9ll am,
mcrr*'g worsNp lO: J) a m, evmingservlce 6
p.m:
service, Wedneod&lt;zy 7p.m

ml-

01\dy 7 00 p.m
111E SALVATION ARMY. 115 Bullernul
Aw.• PmnB'oy Mr.; Dora Wl.nlng in charge
~ lwllln.,. meeting 10 a rn: Su nda,y
SChod, 10: JJ a.m Su nda,y Schooc YPSM
Elcile&gt; Adams, leader 7:~ p.m. SalvatiOn
rneetiD&amp;. vai1ous s~akB"S and music srectals
Tlursday, Jl::J) a.m to2 pm Ladies Home
~. members In charge, all wanen
lnvtod: 6:45 p.m Thur&gt;d!IY, Cor!" cad«
a - (YOUqt l'O!ople-BIIiel, 7 ll p.m Bible
Sludy •d Prayer meetlnv; _ . lo Ill! public
POMEROY WESTSIDE CH!JRCll OF
CHRIST, ll2260111-'sHomeRoad (Cou11Y
RDad 76) msm. Vocal music &amp;I rmy Wors~lDa.m., BfljeSt&amp;dylla m, Worship, 6p.
m. We&lt;meod!IY. Bible Slllly, 7 p.m.
OlD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH, Alvin Clltls, pasta-: Linda Swan,
Sur&lt;- Sllrllay School ~lla m, preachlngser
vtces. 11m and lhlrdSIIn&lt;ta,y lolk&gt;wingS.rllay
Schad. Yooth meeting 7 l) p m every SUnday.
GRAHAM
UNITED METHODIST,
Preaching 9:~ am. first and second Sun
days of each month, third and fourth Sun
day each month worship services at 7 30p
m.: Wednesday evenings at 7 30 p.m
Prayer and B~bl': Stud_}'___ . ___ _

SEVENTH-OAV ADVENTIST 'dull&gt;
erry Het2hts Road, Pomeroy Pastor, Bob
Snyder, Sabbath SChool Superintendent.
o8rllne Stewart. Sabbath School be.lrtnsat
2 p.m. Saturda.v afternoon wtth wcrshtp
servt.ce ronowtn~ at 3 p m
RUTLAND FIRST BAP'IIS1 &lt; HURCH
- $tster Harrl~t \\'arner1 Supt Sunday
SCbool9·30 a.m: Morning Worship 10 45
a.m
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Lysoon
HaUey, minister, Saturday evening
evangellstlc services, open to public, 7 p
m., Sunday Church School. 9 30 a.m ,
Morning Worship 10 30 a.m.
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Po
meroy Pike. E. Lamar O'Bryant, pastor;
Jack Needs. Sunday School Director Sun
day SChool. 9 ; ~ am, Morning Worship,
10· 45, evening worship, 7 00 p m. (0 s T )
&amp; 7·30 (EST); Wednesday Prayer Se1
vice, 7 00 p m 1D S T ) &amp; 7 30 P M IE S
T.), Mission Friends (ages 2 6), Royal
Ambassadors (boys ages 6-18), and Girls
In Action (ages ~18~ on Wednesdays, 7 p
m.ID.S T.i &amp;7 30p m. iE.S.'j'.), Tuesday
Vlsitatlon, 6 3:l p m
"
: FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, Bal
ley Run Road, Rev Emmeu Rawson, pas
tor Handley Dunn, supt Sunday School,
lOa.m; Sundayeveningservlce, 7 30p m
; Bible teaching, 7 30 p.m Thursday
SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherry So , Sy
rac:use Mark Morrow, pastor. Services. 10
a.m. Sunday. Evening services Sunday
and Wednesday at 7.00 p m
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Dwlghl Haley,
first elder, Wanda Mohler, Sunday SChOol
SUpt funday School 9 )J a m Morning
Worship 10 XI a m , Evening Worshlp 7· .))
p.m; WednESday prayer meeting? :r1 p m
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
Ractne. Rev. James Satterfield, pastor
Freeman WUliams. Supt. Sunday School
9:45a.m., Sunday and Wednesday even·

ina services.

7p

m

MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST
Corner Slxth and Palmer James Seddon,
Past« Edna Wilson S S Supt, Cathy
Rtgp, Asst Supt Sunday School, 9 15 a
m,: Morning Worship, 10 l!'i a .m , Sunday
Evenln~r service, 7 p m Prayer meeting
ed Bible Study Wedne5d&lt;~Y evening 7 p
m.; Children's choir practice. Wednes
day, 7 p.m , Adul1 choir practice, Wed , 8
.m.; Radio prOI{l'am, WMPO. Sunday,

r

·30 a.m

' IIIIIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST,

51:h and Main, AI Hartson. minister,

Rtdlard DuBose, Aucciate Pastor, Mike
Gerlach, Sunday School Superintendent
BlbleSchooJ 9 30a m, MornlnJi( Worship
10:30 am Evening Worship 7•00 p m
Wednelday, 7•00 p m Prayer mtoetlng
IIIIIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NA
ZARENE, PASTOR FrPd Penhorwood
8111 White, Sunday School Supt Sunday
Si'bool 9:30 a m .. Morning Worship JO 45
Lm ; Evangellslic meeting 7 00 p m
Wednesday. 7.00p.m Prayer meetlnlt
APPLE GROVE UNITED METRO
DIST- P..tor. Rev. carl Hlcks.IO mUet

==

a.... RaclaeonRouiO:IIIII SUnd!IYS.bool
tO a m Su nd:l'

1 a.m., -.blp -

=~:"1::-m":'~lnp!ld B

liMI &amp; -YJIRIAN MJNIIIDIY
01'1111101 ClOVHI'Y
.... o'CII• .,.b
11AftiiJ8(lNVILI.E PRESBY1ERIAN
c~ -81ndoll: Worship Services

t·

•

Scllool 10: t~ a m.
• bool 9 am.: Olurch ll!l'vlce,

a.m._;_ lllurch

lliYORT PRESBY1ERIAN

CUSE FIRST UNTED PRESBY·
•
SUnoloy Schooi!Oa.m : Olurch
......,.lii:Ua.m

t'!t\
\ill, \
1

p,,,,g Fliw, Shop

•• • #

NIIIIR2040 ~

ARE YOUR CHILDREN REALLY READY
TO GO BACK TO SCHOOU

" MEIGS nRE
\ ' CENTER, INC.

''

GRACE EPJSalPAL CHUROI, 326 E
Main Sl, l'ornerw S.n&lt;IB,y sevlce; Hoi)/
mmm.u*&gt;n on tl2 ftrst Sundc\Y of each month.
and rom tined 'Nil h montng p-ayer on ttl!
UU'd Sunday. Morning prayer and sermon on
aU. a.tu Sundays d.ti'E month. Cburch School
and Nursery care j:t'O'Ik8i Cotree Mur In tit:!
Parish Hall lmmedlat~ lolk&gt;Ning!l» service
POMEROY CHURQI OF CHRIST, 212 W
Main so, Leo Lasn ..,.angellso Bilie School
9 J) am., Morringworsl\1p.10 :JJ am, Youth
..-inll'o 6 00 p.m , Evening worship 7 00 p.
m. Wectlesday night prcwer meeUngandBlble

....

INSURANCE ----SERVICES

RACINE PLANING Mlll
Mill workt.rt, ~a: ••f
Cabinet Makin&amp; ~t...::::,&lt;:
Syracuse
992-3978

GroceriesGeneral Merchlndise
Racine 949-2550

Brogan-Warner

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
of Columbus. 0

CROSS
SONS STORE

Pam troy

992 l9SS

992-2156
Co.

~ - WAID

Prescrtpt1ons

WANT ADS
AlE-PING
Will BARGAINS

Natronwide Ins.

---.--....
:-·
- --'8-,_

~

With the new school year about to get
underway, there Is a lot of preliminary
work to be done by the parents, and this
preparation goes far beyond the basic
requirements of clothes, shoes, eye
examinations and reminders of discipline.
Of course you teach your children manners
and respect for authority, but there are
other potential situations that call for
special instructions. How would your son or
daughter act toward a child in a
wheelchair, or one with some other
physical handicap? Or a child with a
different ethnic background? Aside from
your own example, a lot of help in these
areas may be obtained from your House of
Worship and Its Sunday school; assuring
the right answers to the above questions.
You will then know that your children are
truly ready for school - and to face the
world.

John F Fullz, Mgr.
Ph. 992-1101

Pomeroy

6&amp;~'~:~.RS
992-3785. Pomeroy

RUTLAND CHURCH OF lXJU, Paso or,
John Evans Sunday School 10 00 a m ;
Sunday Morning Worship 11 00 a m Chl1
dren's Church 11 a.m Sunday Evening
Service 7 00 p m Wed .. 6 p.m. Young La
dies' Auxlltary Wednesday, 7 p m Fam
ily Worship
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. Off
Rr 124 3 miles from Portland Long Bottom Edsel Hart , pastor Sunllay School,
9 30 a m , Sunday morning preaching
JO 30 a m , Sunday evening services, 7 30
pm
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH Corner Ash and Plum Noel
Herrmann. pastor Sunday School 10·00a
m , Mornmg Worship 11 00 a m , Wed
nesday and Saturday Evening Services at
7 30 p m

Children have never
been pood at listening
to their elders, but
they have never failed
to imotate them. r
· James Baldwm

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE FARISH
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NORTHEAST CLUSTER

Rev. Carl Hlekl

Re•.RobertMuurnan
Rev. Doa Meadowt
ASBURY (Syracuse)- Worship 11 a m.
, Church School 9.45 am., Charge Btble
Study, Wednesday, 7. 30 p m., UMW, first
Tuesda; 1; 30 p m • Choir Rehearsal,
Wednesday 6·30 p m, (ljt!rch~
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m ,
Church School 10 a m , Bible Study, Tues
day, 7 00 p m , UMW, First Monday, 7 30
p m , UMYF Sunday, 6 p m. Choir Re
hearsal. Children's at 6· 30 p.m Adult rol
lowing, Wednesday (Franklin)
FLATWOODS- Church School, 10a m
, Worship, 11 a.m., Bible Study Thursday, 7 p m., UMYF, Sunday, 6 p m
(Franklin)
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a m ;
Church School 10 A M Choir practice,
Thursday, 6· 30 p m ; UMW third Monday.
(BurchJ m. (Burch)
HEATH (Middleport)- Church School,
9 30 a m , Morning Worship 10 ~ a m.,
Youth Group, 4 p.m, Wednesday, Bible
study 6 00 p m. Choir rehearsal 7• 00 p.m
I Zuniga)
MINERSVILLE - Church School 9 00
a m ; Worship service 10 00 a m ; UMW
third Wednesday, 1 p m (Burch)
PEARL CHAPEL - Worship Service
9 30 a m , Church School 10 15 a m
(Mussman)
POMEROY -Church School, 9 15 a .m.
, Worship 10. 30 a m , Choir rehearsal
Wednesday, 7 30 p m., UMW, second
Tuesday, 7 30p m; UMYFSunday,6p m
(Meadows)
ROCK SPRINGS- Church School 9·15
a.m , Worship 10 a m , Bible Study 'wednesday, 7 30 p m; UMYF (Senlorsi, Sun
day, 6 p m. (Juniors I every other Sun
day, 6 p m. (Franklin)
RUTLAND - Church School, 10 a m ,
Worship, 11 a m.. UMW First Monday,
7·30 p m (Mussman)
SALEM CENTER- Church School9.15
a m , Worship 10·15 p m. (Mussman)
SNOWVILLE - Worship, 9.00 am.;
church school 9 4!5 am !Mussman)

SOUTHERN CLIJSTER
Rev. Debl FOiter

Bev. Borer Grace

(6141992-2039 or
16141992-5721
10• loltorowt An., r-oy, Oh,

Wednesday. 7.00 p m.
BEAR WALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Joseph B Hoskins, pastpr Bible
Class, 9:30am; MornlngWorshJp10.30a
m.. Evening Worship. 6 30 p m. Thursday
Bible Study, 6 30 p.m
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, PomeroyHarrisonville Rd. Robert Purtell, minister, Steve Stanley, S. S Supt., BUl McElroy, Ass1 Supt., Sunday Schoo19• 30 a m ;
Worship service 10 30 am, Evenlngwor
ship Sunday7p.m andWednmday, 7p m
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine
Grove. The Rev William Mlddleswarth,
pastor Church service 9 30 a.m .. Sunday
School 10 30 a.m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,
John Wright, pastor Sunday School9: 30a.
m , Larry Haynes, S. S Supt Morning
worship 10 30 a.m.
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE, Rev Lloyd D Grimm. Jr. pastor
Ora Bass, Chairman of the Board of Chris
tlan Life Sunday SChoo19. 30 a m., Morn
lng worship 10 30 a m , ev;angellstlc service 7 00 p m. Wednesday service, 7 p m
• LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, Dex
ter Woody Call, pastor Services Sunday
10 am. and 7 p.m Wednesday, 7 p m
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Lloyd Sayre, Supt Sunday School 9· 30 a
m ; morning worship 10 ~ a m Sunday
evening service 7 p m.
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN RoR
rr W~tson. PIH&lt;tor Crmson Pratt Sunday
Srhool Supt Mornln,e: Worship 9 ~a m ,
Sundav Schoo1 HI lO am, EvC'ning spr
vice 7 3U p m
MT UNION BAPTIST Jo(&gt; N Sayre
pastor SundavSrhool~ 4Ja m , Evenln2
worship 6 :10 p m Prayer Met'tln,ll, 6 30
p m WL'dnesda\i
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST Davp PrPntlce mlnl'l.tE'r Deryi
W£'11s Supt Church School 9 a m : Wor
ship Service. 9 4~ p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE R('Y Herbert Grate. pastor
Frank Rtrfh• supt Sunda:v Srhool 9 30 a
m. Worship Sl'rvlcl' l1 am and 7 p m
Sunday WPdnesdav. 7 p m Pray('r meet

ino

LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
Cm.JRZH, William Williams. pastor; Dt·
rector of Chrisllan Education Robert E
Bartoo Steve Eblin, assistant. Sunday
School 9· 30 a m ; Morning worship 10. 3&gt;
a.m Teens lnActlon6p m, EventngWorshlp 7 p.m. Wednesday evening r,raver
and Bible study 7 p m Choir Jract ce '8 p
m Sunday
DEXTER CHURCH OF LHitiSI
Charles Russell Sr, minister Rick Ma·
comber, supt Sunday School 9·:Kl am.
Worship ser.lce 10.30 a.m Bible study
Tuesday 7·30 p m
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHR 1ST OF LA TIER DAY SAINTS. Purr
land-Racine Road Mike Duhl, pastor:
Janlct' DannPr, chul'{'h schOol director
Chui'C'h schooi9 :lOa m Morning worship
10 30 a m Wcdnf'Sdav evening prayer
Sf'fVICE'S, 7;30 p m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl
ShuiE't', pastor Worship service, 9 :u&gt;a m
Sunday SchoollO 30 a rtl. Bible Study and
pravf'r Sf'rvtce Thursday, 7 30 p.m
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATIONAL CHURCH, Klnpbury Road Rev.
Clydp W. Henderson, pastor Sunday
School9. 30 a m., Ralph Carl, Supt Evenln~e worship 7 00 p.m Prayer m~lhg.
Wednesday 7 00 p m.
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN, Vernon
Eldridge. pastor; Wallace Damewood, s
S Supt Sunday School9 30 a.m , Worship
Service, 10· 30 a m

BETHANY - Worship, 9 a m.; Church
School, 10 a.m., Bible Study, Wednesday.
10 a.m., Dorcas Women's FellowsNp,
Wednesday, 11 a m. (Foster)
CARMEL - Church SChool 9 XI a m.;
Worship, 10 45 a.m second and Fourth
•
Sundays, Fellowship dinner with Sultm
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Steve
third Thursday,&amp;·~ p m (Foster)
; Deaver, Pas1or Mike Swlaer, Sunday
MORNING STAR- Church School9 45
Scbool SuJ)I, sunday School 9.30 a.m.:
am , Worship 10:30 am; Bible Study,
Morning worship 10:..0 am: Sunday
Thursday, 7::1) p.m. (Foster)
evrnlng worship 7· JJ p.m.: Wednllday
SU'ITON - Church School, 9· JO a.m :
evenlllg Bible 1tuc!Y_ 7: _» p.m.
Morning Worship 10:45a.m. tint and third
IIURLlNGIIAM COMMUNITY CIIURCll,
Sundays. Fellowlhlp dlnaer with Carmel
B-pam Jllljl Laudormlll, pallor, Rothlrd Thursday, 6:30p.m. {Foster,
ber1 Cow1. •lllanl potter SUnday Scllool
EAST LETART- ChurCh Scboo19a.m.;
10 a.m. woro~ 7 p.m.: We&lt;meo&lt;looy, 6 p.m.
Wontdp 10 a.m second llld rourth SunY&lt;Mb.-tna; Wed, 7p.rn.cllrrciidll)'l; UMW llnl Tues~ll)'. 7:JJ p.m.
PINE GROVE BOUNESSCIIURCH, ~
(Grace).
orUtoll AI . .115.Rev. Boa J. Wallo, pulor.
LETART FALUI - Worohlp 9 a.m:
Ro- lloorl11, S,il. SUpt. . . _'Scbool
Church School10 a.m. (Grace)
9:111 a.m.: Mo~lnl WOrohlp 10:30 a.m.:
RACINE- Churd! School, II) a m.: WorSwlday evenin1 oerYice 7::1) p.m.: Wed·
oNp ll am., UMWiourthMondoy ai7·JJp.
nllday oorvk!e, 7:10p.m.
m , Men's Proyer Bn!llldlll. Wedoroday, 8
SILVER RUN BAPTIST• BUI Lllllt,
1m (Gra&lt;el
puter Steve Little, s. S """' Sunday
School 10 a.m; Monlag wontp, 11 a.m.j
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Vernon
Eldrid&amp;e, nllntster; Oliver Swain, SUnday
SUaday f!'ierd"'t
7::111 p.m Proyer
m~
111&lt;1 Blbltll
Wedrl•day, T:.JO
School Supt Preaching 9. 30 a m. each
p.m.:lt!fouthmeellnr edrl-yal7p.m.
Sunday.
REJOICING UFE IIAPTillT CHURCH
HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, TherOII Durham,
- 3U N. 2nd Ave., Mkldl'lJOrl. Sunday
ScboollO a.m. Sunday evenlnr 7:00p.m.;
puler Sundly oervlce, 9 :1) a.m.: evenMJd.week aervlce, Wed .• 1 p.m.
lnJ IOI'VIce 7.00 p.m. Prayer meeunr.

wars;.

LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH,
Sunday School 9·30 am: Dallas Janey.
supt , Morning worship 10 l&gt; a m , Sunday evening service, 7 30 p m; Wednsday evening service, 7· 30 p m
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE Rev Glenn McMillan, pastor
Mary Janice Lavender, Sunday School
Supt Sunday School 9: JO a.m • Morning
worship 10 Jl a m : Evangelistic service,
6p m: Prayer andPralseWednesday, 7p.
m , Youth meeting, 7 p m
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN iN
CHRIST, Elden R Blake, pastor Sunday
School 10 a.m.; Gary Reed, Lay leader
Morning sermon, 11 a m : Sunday night
services. Christian Endeavor 7·30 p m,
SOng service 8 p.m. Preaching 8 XI p.m
Mid week prayer meeting, Wednaiday 7
pm
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH
0 H Carr, pastor SundaySchoolat9 30a
m Mornln~ worship at 10 30 a.m , Sun
day eventngservlceat 7.30 p m Thursday
services at 7 lJ p m
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION al Bald
Knob. lvcatf!d on County Road 31 Rev.
Roger Willford, pastor Sunday School
9 30 a m., Morning Worship 10 4$ a m.,
Sunday evening 7:00 p.m : Wednesday
evening Bible Study, 7 00 p m
WHITE'S
CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
CHURCH- CoolvUieRD. Rev Phillip RIdenour, pastor Sunday Schoo19· 30 a m ,
worship service 10.30 a..m , Bible study
and worship service. Wednesday, 7 p m
RL'TLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Bill Carter, pastor Sunday School 9:30 a .
m.. Morning Worship and Communion
10 30 a.m
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST Amos
Tillis, pastor.Sonny Hudson, supt Sunday
School 9 30 a m , Morning worship, 10· 30
am, Sunday evening service 7:00pm.
Wednesday service 7 p.m. WMPO program 9 am each Sunday.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE Samuel Basye, pastor Sunday
School9 30am, WorshlpservlcelO.JOa.
m,
Young peoples service 6 p m.
Evangelistlcservlreti·lJp m Wednesday
service 7 p m
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
St, Mason, W. Va Sunday Bible Study 10
am Worship 11 am and 7 p m Wednes
day Bible Study, vocal music, 7 p.m.
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud-.
ding Lane, Mason, W Va J. N. Thacker,
pastor Evening service 7 l) p m , Women's Minlsrry. Thursday, 9 30 am ..
Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7 15
pm
HARTF'ORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. Hartronl, W Va
Rev David McManis pastor. Cbu reb
School 9· 30 a m . Sunday morning ser
vi('f' 11 a m ; Sundav Pvenlng service,
1•.wp m Wednesdayprayermeetlng, 7:30
pm
F AIRVIE\1' BIBLE CHURCH. Lelarl,
W Va, Rt 1 Jame;; Lewi!i pas1or Worship services 9 :ro a.m; Sunday School 11
a m Evening worship 7 30 p m Tuesday
cartage prav(&gt;r meeting and Bible &amp;tudy
9 30 am Worship ~rvtce, Wednesda:v
730pm
OUR M VI OUR WTI!ERAN CHURCH,
Walnut and Henry Srs • RavenswotXI, W
Va. The Rev George C Wetrick, pastor
Sunday SChod 9 30a m; Sunday worship
1l a.m
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, localed onPomeroy Pike. County ROad 25 noor F'latwoods Rev Blackwood, pastm". Services
on Sunday at 10 30a.m. and 7 30 p m \oVith
SundaySrhool9 30a.m. BlbleSiudy, Wednesday, 7•30 p,m
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST, St Rl. 338. Anltqully Rev
Franklin Dickens pastor Sunday mom
lng 10 a.m. Sunday evening 7.30 p.m
Thullday eveniJIJl7· ~ p m
MIDDLEPORT1NDEPENDENT HOU·
NESS CHURCH, Inc.. 7~ Peerl Sl Rev.
Ivan Myers. acting pastor; RogfrManley,
Sr., Sunday School S.perinlendenr Sunday School 9 30 a m.: Moralna worllllp
lO 30 a.m ; eve-nJna wol'lhlp 'r:-80 p m :
Wedneodoy oventna Bible 11\dy, prayer
and praise servtcf, 7. 301J.m.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOIITOUC- VanZindt and Word lid. Elder
Jom• Miller, .... tcr. 9undoy Schad,
10·30a m., Wo..upServtce,Sanday, 7:,!0
p.m: BlbleSUIIIY,_Wednllday, 7:30p.m.
CALVARY PIL&lt;.I!IM CHAPEL, HarrtllmvUie Road Rev. DeWey Kina, Plll~or;
Cllnlm Faulk, Sunday School SUpt : SUoday ScllooU: .lOa m , montq werllrlp, H
a rn., Sandly eveaiJII oervl.., 7 30 p m
Pra)'l'l' Mee!lnJ, Wedll~. 7:311_p.m.
SYRACUSE FIRST CHUftCK oy GOD
nm-PnleroataL Worllllp arvl.., Sundoy
10 a.m.: SUnday Schoolll a.m, Evenlll
wonhlp oervlce 7:00 p.m. Weclneoday
pnyer mtellnJ7:00 p.m.

ca.

216 S. Second
Pomeroy
992-3325

RUTLAND - The Rutland
Fire Department's annual picnic
for all firemen, their families,
and everyone else who worked at
the ox roast and turkey supper
wtll be held Saturday, 6: 30 p m ,
at the Rutland park.

FRANCIS FLORIST
U'''!f' County'• Oldest Flori&gt;t
362 EAST MAIN

POMEROY, OHIO 45769

SUNDAY
MASON- The annual Weaver
reunion will be held Aug. 28 at 1
p m. at the West VIrginia Farm
Museum at the Mason County
fairgrounds. near Point Plea-

814/992-2844

GRAVELY TRAC'I'OR SALES

m~~·

liH Quldtol and Ruth Ann

FUNERAl HONE
"Serving Families"
264 S. 21111, Middleport

Fox

992-5141

Main

St.,

/'::ill p

Pomeroy

m.

F'AITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Railroad

St . Mason Sunday SchoollO a m , Morn
lng worship 11 a m , Evening service 6 p

rn PrayC:'r mf"l'tlng and

786 NORTH SECOND AVE.
NIIDDLEPORT, OHIO
MT HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
1N CHRIST CHURCH. Located In Texas
CommunifV off Ct Rt. S2. Rl&gt;v Rob£'rt
Sanders, pastor Jeff Holter. hn lead('l'
Ed Roush. Sundav School Sup! Sundav
School 9 Ill am morning &gt;AOUhlp ;Ind
chlldrrn's chu1ch 111·30 J m. evening
preachln~ sE'r\ICC' first lhiE'&lt;' Sunclavs.
7 lOp m. Special servlet"' fourth SUndav
C'venlng 7.30 p m Wrdnesdav PraVC'J
Meeting Blbl(' Studv and Youth Ft&gt;IIO\l ship 7· 10 p m

a m Classes for all a~tP.S Junior Church 11
am Mornlnf! "'Or!Ohip 11 am Adull
Choir pracliC&lt;' tip m Sundav Youn~ Pro
pte:5 Child! C'n's Chu1ch and Adul1 BibiC'
Studv Wt'dnPSdav :.at 7·30 p m
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL, 570 Grant
St. Middleport Afrtliated W!lh Southc1n
Baplisl Conv('llt mn David Brvan Sr . Ml
nlstt:'r Sundav School 10 am Morning
worship 11 am . Evemng "'orship i p m..
WE'dn~day eventn~ Blblf' studv and
pravcr mPPfiT117 7 n m.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF' CHRIST, Sl
Rt 124 and C'o. Rd ~ Sco1t StNart pas
lor William Amtx&gt;r~cr. supl Sunda\
St:hool 9 30 a m mornlnJZ" orshtp 10. !0
a.m e\enlng" orshlp 7 ~ p m : WE'dn~dav \I.Orship. i ,i() p.m
ST
PAUl LUTHERAN r HURCH
Cornrr :;h c.1m011' and S4:'cond Sts, p 0
merm . Th&lt;' Rt.'\ Wnu. 1m Midcii('S"art.
pa~IOJ Sunda\ School 9 .t!i ,1 m Church
"C'rviC'&lt;' 11 a m
SACRED
HI::,\RT ('HL'RfH M"~'
Anthonvf,lannamoJ&lt;" Ph 992 !'i,qflfl su 1u 1
dav Ev&lt;'ninJJ: Ma"" 7 lU p m Sund,1,
Mass R a m .md 10 J m Conff'!islons onr
half hour bC'fm (' ('ach MaJ&gt;~s rrn class('S
11 a.m Sundav
VICfORY BAPTIST. 52~ N 2nd Sl .
Middleport Jameos E Kc~('(', pasto 1
Sundav morning "orshlp 111 ,1 m E\ C'nln_g ~crvicC' 7 p rn WC'dncsda\ ('\ &lt;'nlng
\lOrship 7 p m VIsitation Thut~dav t; til p
m
MORSE C'HAPEL CHURCH Da\ Jd
Curfman. pa~l or Sundav &amp;huol. 10 a m .
worshlp st'l'\ L('(' 11 u m Sunda\ nl~hl
worship sC'n ICC' 7. 10 p m
Mldv. ('('k
pravcr .st•r\'i&lt;'&lt;' WC'dn("osdav 7 p m
WESLEVAN
BIBLE
HOLINESS
CHUR( H of Mldlll C'prorl InC' 7J Pcoarl St
Rf'\1, Ivan Mvr-r!. fMst or· RogC't Manl(~' .
Sr. Sundav Schr 1ol Supt Sunda\ School
9· 30 am . Mor nlng Wm ship 10· 10 1 m ,
Evening Worship 7 10 p m \\'('dnC"Sd.l\evenlng Bibl&lt;' !oiiUdv. prayer and prai'&gt;C'
scrvlc&lt;' 7 30 p m
LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
OF' GOD- GUberl Spencer. pastor Sun
day School 9 30 am, Morning scrvlCP
lO:OOa m, Sundav eveningservlce7 00 p
m , Mid-wrek pravN servtre Wednesdav
7p m
MT 01 IVE F ULI. GOSPEl COMMUN
tTY CHURCH La" renC&lt;' Bush, pastor
MaxF'olml'f.Sr S S Supt SundavSchool
9.30 a.m Sundew ('V£'ning service, 7·:10
m .. Wednesday evening Bible studv and
praise service, 7 ~p.m.
UNITED f'AITH CHURCH. Rl. 7 on Po
meroy Bv-Pass Rev David Wiseman. Sr
pastor Melvin Drake, s s Supl Sunday
School9 ,:1l am: Morning Worship 10:30,
Evening Worshi 7 30 p m , Wednesday

Blbl~

Study Wed

neidav, 7 p.m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rev N~ le
Borden, pastor Cornelius Bunch supt
Sundav School 9 30 a.m , Serond and
fourth SundaY" v. orship 5er VICE' at 2 30 p
m
MT MORIAH BAPTIST Fourth and
Main St Middleport Rev Gilbert Craig,
Jr, pastor Mrs Ervin Baumgardner
Sundav School Supt Sunday School9 30 a
m Wor.sh1p Se-rvice, 10·45 am
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
_Joseph B Ho.skin.s. evangelist Sunday
Blblf' Stud\ 9 am. Worship 10 am Sun
d&lt;tv ('Vt'nm~ S(')'VJCC' n p m.. Wednesday
evcmng sen lee, 7 p m.
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY. Racine
Rt l2-l Wllllam Hoback, pastor Sllndav
Sc
1 0
" hoo 1 .1m Sunday C'Venin~ service 7
p m Wednesda\ ('VC'ntng service 7 p m
CARPENTER BAPTIST Don Cheadle
Supt Sundav School 9 10 a m Morning
w h 10 lO
p
1
ors lp
a m rayE'r .st&gt;rV ce, altE:-rn·
atC' Sundav"
THE CHlJRf'H Of' JESUS CHRlST,
APOSTOLIC' FAITH _ Ne\1. Lima Rd.,
nt'Xt to FOil Mc&gt;i~s Park Rulland Robert
Richard" pastor S&lt;'oniCC'S al 7 p m on
Wt•dnC'Sdavs and Sundav 5
HARRISONVIU E HOLI!'IIESS CHAP
TER of the WesiC"Van Holiness Church.
RC'\ o~n ld F'f'rrC'll pa.stor Henrv Eblin,
Sundav School Supt . Sundcn SChool10 a
m Mornin~ Won. hip 11 a m , Evening
'iC'n iC'&lt;' T mP m W('dnr-sdav C'ventngscr\ IC'C' "i 11 p m
STIVERSVil LE WORD OF' F'AITH ,
G,1rv HoltC'r POJ"tOJ Sunday services 9 30
.lm.lnd7pm MidweeKservice,7.30p
m Thursda.v

~

'

'

1

..
;

t

~
~
-I

;.;
1

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
AVP Rev Clark Baker, pastor Carl Nottlngham, Sunday School Supl Sunday
School 10 am with classes for all ages
EVPning se-rvices at 6 p.m. Wednesday Bl
ble study at 7· 30 p.m Youth service&amp; Frl
day at 7 30 p m
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP, 128 Mill St ,
Middleport Brother Chuck McPherson,
pastor. Sunday School 10 a m • Sunday
evenln~ services at 7 p m and Wednesday
services at 7 p m
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Kenneth Smllh,
pasta- Sunday School9 30 am, church
service 7· 30 P m., youth fellowshlpti· 30 p
rn ; Blblp study. Thursday, 7 30 p.m
FULL GOSPEL LlGHTHOUSE, 33045
Hiland Road, Pomeroy Tom Kelly, pas
tor Danny Lambert, S S Supt Sunday
morning servicP at 10 a m.; Sunday pvening service 7:30 P m Tuesday and Thurs
day services at 7·30 p m
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE, Rev. Glendon Slroud, paslor.
Sunday School9 30 a m , Worship service,
10 30 a m., Youth serviCP Sunday 6·15 p
m Sunday evening servlce7 OOp m Wed·
nesday Prayer Meeting and Bible Study
7·00 P m.
NEASESETTLEMENTCHURCH,Sun
day afternoon services at 2.30 Thursday
evening services at 7·30
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Mason, W
Va Pastor, Bill Murphy Sunday SchoollO
am' Sunday evening 7•30 p m. Prayer
meettng and Bible study Wednesday, 7:30
P m Everycme welcome
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST Salem St Rev Paul Taylor, pastor sunday
School10a m, Sundayevenlng7 OOp m,;
Wednesday evening prayer ml'Ptlng 7•00
P m.
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
CHURCH, Sliver Ridge Duane Syden ,
strtcker, past cr. Sunday School 9 a.m ·
WorshlpServlce,10a.m: Sundayeventni:
service, 7.00 p.m. Wednesday night Bible
study 7·00 P m.

F:.:~i.::::~~.::;,;..,:,;,:::::=:......;;...;,;;_...;..;;;.._

1

i

1

,

"THE GOLDEN RULE"

ma:y

meeting at the Rutland United
Methodist Church at 7:30p.m on
Aug. 29. Betty Dean, Region 11
Director, Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs will be the demonstrator. Members of all area
garden clubs are Invited to
attend.
RACIJI&lt;"E - Southern Local
Athletic Boosters will meet 6
p.m. Monday for a work session
at the high school. Fathers
should bring tools.
POMEROY - Meigs Local
Board of Education will hold a
special meeting Monday, 5 p.m.
at the regular meeting place.
RUTLAND- Rutland Garden
Club wtll hold an open meeting on
Monday, at 7: 30 p.m., at the
Rutland Methodist Church. Betty

Dean will be be the demonstrator. AU garden clubs In the area
are Invited to attend.
RACINE - Southern Board of
Education will meet Monday, 7
p.m., at the high school.

---

WJC pickup
The Meigs County Health De(1artment has set the following
piCkup dates for September WIC.
The dates are Aug. 29-30, Sept
1-2, 12, and 19 !rom 9 to 11 a .m
and 1 to 3 p.m. The shot dates are
Sept 13 and 27 from 9 to 11 a m
and 1 to 3 p.m.

Reunion
The Guthrie and Story reunion
will be held Saturday, Sept. 3, at
the Athens County Fairgrounds.
Basket dinner about 12 noon. All
family and friends are Invited.

Who does discipline?
Dear Ann Landers: My chtldren
visit their father twice a month and
stay for the weekend The1r stepmother seems to think that she
should fill the role of "mother"
when my chtldren are under their
roof.
I beheve that when the children
are with their father, he and he
alone should discipline them. This
includes smackmg them if they
deserve it My ex·husband insists
that since his wtfe is their srepmoth·
er, she should discipline them as she
sees fit when the children are in
their home. Frankly. I don't like
the idea of anyone except me or
their faJher yelling at or hitting my
kidS
When too many people tell
children what to do and what not
to do they become resentful and
confused The children are hemg
put in t~ middle. It really isn't fair
to them.
I hope you will pnnt my letter,
Ann. I'm sure thousands of other
mothers are gomg through the same
thing. Thanks from all of us ··THE
"REAL" MOM ON WNG ISLAND
DEAR MOM· I sense in your
letter a smidgen of hostility toward
your former husband's new wife.
When the children are wuh their
dad and stepmother, both should
be free to discipline them. To deny
the woman this pnvilege would g1ve
the ktds a license to do as they
please. This would be ruinous for
everyone concerned. Please rethink
your complaint
Dear Ann Landers: Several weeks
ago a lady wrote to you about the
hullabaloo she had had with her
dentist. He refused to pull her
daughter's teeth unless the fee was
paid in advanCe
I have a doctor-related story for
you with a linle different twist. Th1s
man was my physician for oyer 40
years, until he died.
One day, after "'Dr. A " had
completed examining lne and was
writing out a prescription, the
phone rang This is how the
conversation went:
"You say you are s1ck and need
to see a doctor, but you don't have
a car and there is no one who can
bring you here? You say you have
no money and no health msurance?" There was a slight pause and
then the doctor spoke again. "Lady,
please hsten carefully. Call a taxi
and have the driver bring you to
my office. Tell the driver to bnng
the cab
in and I will

And don"t worry about my fee:·
Dr, A.S.G was not only a , very
fine doctor, but the man had a
heart of gold -BETHLEHEM, PA.
DEAR BETH. What a lovely
story ·· especially these days, when
few doctors Wtll make a house call
and the standard refram is "Go to
the emergency room of the nearest
hospital."
Medicine has changed a lot in the
last 20 years, but then so has
everything else. One refreshing note
- the new breed of physicians is
going to he a dedicated lot because
the lure of big bucks 1s a thing of
the past The cost of education, the
funding of insurance plans and the
nightmare of malpractice suits have
made this career choice infinitely
less appealing.

What arc the stgns oj alcoholtsm 1
How to Conquer It" will gwe you the
answers. To rrr:rive a copy, send $3
and a self-addressed, stamped bust·
ness-stlJ' em•elope (45 cents postage)
to Ann lAnders, P.O Box 11562, Cht·
cago, Ill 60611-0562.

''

State Sen Paul E Pfeifer
(R-Bucyrus) said Wednesday he
will opposed passage of a b111 that
would limit public access to
birth. death, marriage, and other
vital records unless the questionable language Is removed.
House Bill 790, which was
Introduced to streamline and
automate state's vital statistics
system, contains a provision that
would restrict access to vital
records to only those Individuals
who can show "a direct and
tangible Interest" In the record
Pftefer said the provision directly conflicts with the Intent of
the Ohio law that make government available for public
scrutiny ..
"This provision Is a slap In the
lace of one oft he mostfundamental tenets of American demo
cracy," Pfieffer sat d.

•

,

••

.

H&amp;R Block to Offer Tax
School In This Area

. i

,,,,•
•

''•
- JAY PEAVLEY

•

Peavley ends
training class
U.S Marine Jay Peavley graduated from Parris Island, S.C.
Aug. 16, 1988.
At Paris Island, Peavley received 11 weeks of Vl!rlous types
of training, conatstlng of physical
fitness, markltman1hlp, close
order drill, Marine Corps history, customs and courtesies, ,
and related subjecta.
Peavley, son of Jack Peavley
of Pomeroy and Gloria Jean
Peavley of Middleport, Is a 1987
graduate of Ohio Valley' Christian School.
He Is now bome on a brief leave
before reporting to Aberdeen,
Md. for formal training In small
arms repair.

,.

Thousands of people are
learning the skill of Income
tax preparation from H&amp;R
Block and are earning money
as Income tax preparers.
H&amp;R Block, the world's largest Income tax preparation
service, Is oUerlng a basic Income tax course starting September 7th.
During the 13 week course,
students wlll study all phases ot
Income tax preparation and receive actual experience In preparing hldlvldual returns. Experienced Block lnstructon wlll
teach current Jaws, theory and
application, 88 practiced In
Block o1llcea nationwide. There
Ia a ciMII'OCIII\ diBcuulon on
each tax IUbject and practice
Pioblenll at every IIM!L
are prqJl'8llll'lle to
teach attM1ento lnelwalngly
complex tax problama • lltudy

their tax knowledge and learn
how to save money on taxes or
who are looking tor a reward·
tng career. No prerequisites
are required to enroll.
Qua1111ed course graduates
may be offerEd job Interviews
for posltlons with Block. Many
accept employment with Block
because of the flexible hours
available. Howevel', 8Jock Is
under no obllgatlon to offer em·
ployment, nor are graduates
uDder any obllJIIIon to accept
employment with H&amp;:R Block.
One low course fee Includes all
textbooks, suppllell and tax
forms neca~aary for the completion ot the course. Certificates
and 7.5 continuing education
units wtn be awarded upon succeslful completion ot the oourae.
Reliltratton fonn.s and a
brocbure for the lncoml! tax
~~be obtained by conp!'IIII'8UM. Qnc'entl will find tacting BAR Block ofllce at
u. coune both lnterstlng and
618 East Main Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
challeaalnJ.
are Ideally suited for
614--992-6674
people who want to Increase
78-lt).0636M

port to be correct and true,
to tho bat of my know~
edge·
John D, Rlebal. Sr.
Treaurer of the
Board of Education
(6141 992-5592
(8) 26, 1tc

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Augult HI. 1988. rn
the Meig• County Probate
Court, Cue No 25883,
Claro Humphrey. 343311

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FlOUClAIIY
On Augutt 16, 1988, in

the Metgl County Probate
Court, Cuo No. 268B2,
Claro Humphrev. 343311
Cr- Rood, Pomoroy, OH
45719, wu appointed Ad·
minlatratrix of the eltlte of
Edward Newton Humphrey
aka Edward N. Humhrey aka
Edward Humphrey ako E. N.
Humphrey
aka Newton
Humphrey, deciuod. late of
Seli•bury Township~ Meig1
County, Ohio. 34331 Crow
Rood.
Pomeroy,
OH
41!789.
Robert E. Buck.
Probate Judge
Lena K Nnselroad, Clerk
181' 19, 28, 191 2 3tc

Probate Judge

lena K. Nea•lroad. Clerk
t8l 19. 28: 191 2 3tc

EnfurcemMll.

Unked

Ste111 Deportri\ent of the Interior. 1111 approved the environ-

ma1tal •aearnn far this
project whicll woo tubtnilbid
bv the Stile rn opplianK&gt;n for
Title IV finanaal - c o rn
redrimlng and -oring land

and water resources adverlely affected by past mimng ,
A complete copy of the environmental lltessment is
available from the Ohio De- t
partment of Natural Re- ·
sources. Divi1ion of Recla-

mation.

1866

Fountain

Square Court. Buildmg H-2.
Columbuo, Ohio 43224.

The specific prOJect in- ·

Crew Road. Pomeroy. OH.

45789, wao appointed Adminiltrltrbt: of the tetate of
Waid Cro11 Humphrey eke
Waid C Humphrey oluo Weld
HumphN'f aka W C. Hum·
phrey. dllce..ed, lata of Salisbury Townohlp, Meigo
County. Ohio. 34331 Crew
Road,
Pomeroy,
OH.
45789.
Robert E Buck,

and

Public Notice
OFFICIAL NOTICE

Pu...- to Title IV of the
Surface Mining Control and
Racl..,ation Act of 19n. 30
U.S C 120t ot tM(., the Ohio
Dapertmont of Natullll II•

oouiCOI.

Divioion

of redo-

motion, ......,. gov• notica of
the 8VIilal&gt;illty of a FINDING
OF NO SIGN!ACANT IMPACT for an environmental 11-

eluded tn thi1 act.an 11 the •
Hoover/Peacock Reclama- "
tton atte located near the
town of Middleport, Margo
County, Ohoo. Tha original
project llmtu were expanded to Include 7.8 acr•

of borrow areas. from which
ruoillng material wlll be ob·
tained. The matenal will be
used to provide a growing
medium for eatabliahlng a
vegetetrve cover on the project litO
(81 26. 1tc

West Virginia University or
Ohio State University Blanket
FOR A QUALIFYING DEPOSIT OR INVESTMENT

PEOPLES

H · I
1

0HIO

SJATF,
. "-i!VFRS, :

·BANK

''The Better
Bank"
'

eour..

eour..

Equal Housing
ToOU&amp;ilflcallon

·
;
:
·
:

-1ment which concan~ en
-donod monod lend redemotoon project in tha Stile of
Ohio. Tho State of OhK&gt; h•
" ' - - ' and the Office of
Surface Mining Rod omoloon

FREE

Loant Sulljtcl

:
;
•

Public Notice

We Appreciate Your Business!
To .Prove This We Have A

ALSO ACCIP!UIG DAY CAll AGIS 3·12
CALL "2·7321 WDIDAYS

...'
&gt;

:
:

People have expressed opposi- :
tton to the btll saying it would not ,
allow relatives to research lam- :
llv histories.
·The btll's sponsor, Rep Paul
Jones, ID-Ravenna) ando!flclals
have said the did not Intend lor
the btll to limit access to vital
records.

Public Notice

Cuh With Fitca!
Total Fund Bol. .. ... 54,013
Numbor of Non-Cert
Employ- .................. 3
Number of Cert.
Employ................. 9
I certify the foil-ing re-

NOW ACCEniNG FALL STUDENTS
FOI PIE-SCHOOL AGES 3·5
CUSSES STAIT AUGUST 29TH

·~

••

Genealogical records need access :

COMBINED FINANCIAL
REPORT OF THE BOARD
OF EDUCATION
MEIGS COUNTY SCHOOL
DISTRICT
COUNTY OF MEIGS
P. 0. 8oxiB4
Pomoroy. Ohio 48719
For The Fltcal Voor Ended
Juno 30. 18B8
"Thla lo on unaudhod
fln.,ciat ltltemont "
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
REVENUE:
Mile Rocolpta....... 34,658
Steto Sourcoo .......371, 137
Total Rov ..ue ..... 401,896
EXPENDITURES:
lntn~ctlon ............ 1.247
Extracurricular
Actlvitioo . . .. . .. . 817
Employ- Salorieo
• Wageo .....\ ..... 327.708
Employ- Retire.
Bon.............. 40,890
Purclleood
BorvlcM .......... 22,258
Supp!leo.•
Matorla!a ............. 1 786
Capital Outley .......... 3,038
Capital Outlay
-Raplacement ......... 809
Other Objecto ...... 2,469
Tote! Dltburoementa ............... 407,764
Exc. Rcpto. Over (Underl
Dlob. .. .. . .. .. ... (2.0691
~~t
Baginning Fund
Botanca ............. &amp;e,on
Ending Fund
C..h Botonce ..... 114,013

GINGERBREAD HOUSE
PRE-SCHOOL

•
.,..

'

-'•

In a recent poll taken by lOth drivers license applicants, and a
Dis trlct Congressman Clarence less active role lor the federal
Miller, Meigs County falrgoers government In day -care
favored a ban on smoking in programs
public bulldtngs.
Area falrgoers favored a ban
The congressman's office on smoking In public buildings by
polled residents of Meigs County a 78 percent to22 percent margin,
during the Meigs County Fair, and a 67 percent felt that
Aug. 16-20. Also seen as favorable applicants for drivers licenses
for falrgoers were restrictions on should be required to ~bmlt to a
advertising during children's TV drug test. Finally 78 percent
programming, new off-shore wanted restriction on the type of
drilling, stricter clean air stand- ·TV advertising aired duljing
ards, the U.S -Canadian free children's programmmg.
trade agreement, drugs tests for

Public Notice

c..

•
•
•,
'

Fair poll results are released

Public Notice

o.

various agencies and organiza-'
tions who serve the elderly,
including Golden Buckeye Card,
Social Security Office, Retired
Senior Volunteer Program and
Senior Center Representatives.
The event is sponsored by the
Area Agency on Aging District 7,
Inc , a non-profit organization
funded through the Older Americans Act. The agency serves
senior citizens in Adams, Brown,
Gall1a, Highland, Jackson, Law renee, Pike, Ross, Scioto, and
Vinton counties.

,

r

We live In the generation of those whose philosophy of life ts
summed up In the statement: "Do to others before they do unto
you." We have seen this philosophy of life acted out tn the public
forum and In the business community In the most vivid way in
the pastfewyears! Itts therefore a shock tohearourLordJesus
Christ say thai: "We are to do unto others as we would bave
them do unto us." It Is almost as much a shock today as tt was
when our Lord first spoke these words!
Most of the rest of the world lives and believes in an ethic that
can be summed up In tbe atatement: "do not do to others what
you would no have done to you." Therefore they listen with
amazement when our Lord Jesus teaches His positive gospel of
an active feeling of benevolence toward others. No matter what
the conduct of others Is the Chriltlan must act In love. And not
only a love that II In the heart, but one that produces practical
and physical results.
Most of the world applles these strictures to people within
their own community- even the ones expresaed In the negative
form of the ethical statement. And so they llllten with shock
when our Lol,"d Jesus commands that our duty to do JIOI)d to all
must Include all people everywhere, Even people wbo actively
bate us.
Why do we do tbll? Because God acta In this way! We are not
to compare and model ourselves on others but on God.
Dear God, help ua to lllteo to the words of Your Son our Lord
and !lavlour Jesua Cllrilt and help us to put them Into practice In
our ltvell that you
receive all the glory and honor. We aak
tbil In Jesus Chrilt. Amen. -'fte Rnere.d Mr. Rlellard B.
Preemu, Putor, TrlnHJ Cet!lftlliloaal Cltun:ll.

RUTLAND- Rutland Garden
Club will have Its annual open

'

_ _~ ,.

Sennonette

MONDA\'
RUTLAND - A training session for all Rutland Fire Department members will be held on
Monday.

United Press International
QUAYLE'S WIFE BLAMES MEDIA: The wife of Republican
vice presidential candidate Dan Quayle Is blaming "the media"
for the fuss over her husband's National Guard Service.
"It Is a total creation of the media," MarllynQuaylesald In an
Interview with Barbara Walters that will air Friday on ABC's
"2020." •'I am surprised that anybody would feel that service In
the Indiana National Guard was less than honorable."
The candidate's wife occupies the entire bour of the program
and discusses reports or'Quayle's possible Involvement with
former lobbyist Paula Parkinson, as well as his antl·a bortlon
stand.
Quavle's wife. also told Walters that one of her biggest
problems now ts finding somneone to stay with the couple's
children while they are on the road campaigning.
NO REGRETS FOR JODIE FOSTER: Actress Jodie Foster,
who has just turned 25 and graduated from Yale University,
said In an Interview for the Friday edition of "CBS This
Morning" that she never missed out on her childhood by
growing up In front of a camera.
"I think - my childhood was very healthy," Foster told
Interviewer Harry Smith "It was probably not what everybody
else goes through, but I had some great times and I learned a lot
and had a lot of fun, and a lot of the Insecurities that other
children went through at certain ages, I didn't, because l had a
job"
She said she enrolled at Yale because "It's good to have
options. And my mother always put the emphasis on my
education more than anything else." Nevertheless, Foster Is
back In view In the just-released film, "Stealing Home,''
co-starring Mark Harmon. She also has two other films
awaiting release.
CARLISLE DROPS IN ON MTV FAN: Singer Bellllda
Carllllle turned the Adams, Mass. home of an MTV fan Into a
stage and recording studio this week as part of the music video
network's latest promotion, "MTV at my place with Belinda
Carlisle.·· "I wanted to do a contest where I could sing songs in
someone's living room because It sounded like fun," Carlisle
said. "It's as simple as that."
MTV crews and the network's on-air hosts, known as video
jockevs, were afl on hand Wednesday at the home of Dawn
Welltlj,eak, 21, a junior marketing major at North Adams State
College. Wellspeak can thank her sister, Deanna, 16, for the
surprise visit.
"(She) figured you had to be 18orolder (to enter the contest)
so she used mv name," Wellspeak said. But Deanna wasn't left
out. Wellspeak said she plans to split a $5,000 cash prl2e from
MTV with her younger sister.
VILLECHAIZE HOMELESS: Actor Herve Vlllechalze Is
looking for a home after tentatively settling a rental dispute
Wednesdav with his landlord. The 3-foot-11-lnch \ltllechalze,
best known as Tattoo on the "Fantasy lsland" television series,
agreed to vacate his rented home In Burbank by Dec. 1 alter the
landlord flied suit for $3,300 In unpaid rent.
Vlllechalze had claimed in an earlier hearing that he withheld
pavments of $825 a month because the landlord, J01eph Tong,
falled to repair damage caused to the home when plumbing
backed up last December. Under the agreement reached ln.
Burbank Municipal Court, Vlllechalze does not have to repay
the monev withheld from Tong
But vniechalze Is not satisfied. "I don't like being thrown out
of my place," Vtllechaize said In an Interview with the Los
Angeles Dally News. ''You can call It a settlement, but I'm not
happy a bout It "

992-5432
Prayer ~rvlce

SUNDAY
CHESHIRE - Poplar Ridge
Church will celebrate HomecomIng on Sunday with Rev. Wendall
Combs as speaker. Dinner will be
at 12 noon.

By RUSSELL KISHI

(row's Family Restawant
"Fiflltlfl! /CUIIIdf Frill C611il1"
228 W.

LONG BO'ITOM -The Rockland Temple of Pythlan Sisters,
located In the remodeled store
building of Hensley's Grocery at
Long Bottom, Invites the public
to an open house and reception to
be held Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m

People in the news

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

~--------------~~------------------i
•,
Rawlings-Coats-Blower

Located on 0 J White Road of Hlgh"av
160 Pat Henson pas lor Sundav School tO

Rev. Roy Deeter

CENTR.U. ~LUSTEII
Rev. Kudy Burcb
Rev. Melvla Fraaklln
Rev. Clemente S. Zualp, Jr.

mn OCCASION

CHURCH OF GOO OF' PROPji'ECY

Rev. Don Areher
Rev. Seldon lohuon
ALFRED - Church School 9• 30 a m ,
Worship, 11 am., UMYF6 lOp m: UMW
Third Tuesday. 7. 30 p m Communion,
Urst Sunday IArcher)
CHESTER - Worship 9 a.m.; Church
School10a m, Bible Study, Thursday, 7p
m, UMW, first Thursday, 1 p m, Communion, first Sunday (Archer).
JOPPA - Worship 9· 30 a m , Church
SchoollO 30 a m Bible Study Wednesday.
7 30 p m (Johnson)
LONG BO'ITOM - Church School 9· 30
a.m, Worship 10:30 am; Bible Study,
Wednesday, 7· 30 p.m, UMYF Wednesday, 6· 00 p m : Communion First Sunday
of Month (Hicks)
REEDSVILLE - Church School 9. 30 a
m, Worship Service ll·OOa.m U)eeter)
TUPPERS PLAINS ST PAUL Church School 9 am , Worship 10 am.;
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7 30 p m , Commu
nlon First Sundav (Archer)

I

flOWIIS FDI

TEAFORD REALTY

sant, W Va. Everyone Is welcome. Bring own lawn chairs

The 14th Annual Senior Citizens Exposition will be Friday,
Sept 2 at the Scioto County
Fairgrounds In Lucasville.
Expo '88 consists of live entertainment, games displays and ,
demonstrations: Plans also have
been made for a cake auction and
a special awards ceremony
Each person In attendance wlll
be given a numbered ticket and
prize drawings will be held at
various times durmg the day.
Numerous groups will be
manned by representatives of

Lender

MEMBER FDIC

�Friday,
Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
IMied propoulo wUI be
........ otthe:
DIVISION OF
RECLAMATION
DEPAIITIIENT 0 F
NATUIIALIIEBOUIICES
1111 FOUNTAIN IQUAIIE
- BECOND FLOOR
COWMIUS, OHIO 43224
-'1 M-y,' S - - r
21·, " 811 It 1 1 :00 •· m. ond
- • l l e l lor fur.
t h e m - end
PM'kltlillng the labor for the
--..lion and conatructktn

Public Notice

Public Notice

TION IS *348.551 .30.
A pro-bid mooting be
hold on Monday, September
12, 1988 0t 11 :00 a.m. et

NOR OF
OHIO,
ANL
AMENDED EXECUTIVE ORDER 84-1, FEBRUARY 15,
1984, EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY CON·
ARE APPUCABLE

the atte.

Copioo ollhil plano, opecifi.

"'"""*"'

Clllono and
fortns
wll be forworclld from the Oivlolon of lled1111111on. D•
pWbhMt
of Nlllunol II•
....,,_, upon ........,. of •
...... inthlomountof
•1 1.00 modi poyoblo to the
Dtop-t of Notunol R•
....,_, ThoN may oleo be
.........- wkh.,.... lnthe . .of:
IICI omou,., Plano end llp«:ifi.
GIIOVEII RECLAMATION
Cllllono bocome
P-'Y
PROJECT
of tho
blddara and
IIEIGI COUNTY; OHIO
no ...tundl wUI be modo. AdRECLAMATION PROJECT ditional lnlormotlon may bo
NUMBER MG-Sb-14
obtolnld from the Divloion of
'
REBID
ll.......,ion, Dapartmont of
In
. . . . - t h e pl- Nlilllrol R•ou,_,
18115
. . . s;sall •• :!.!!! 0 I ld Ill' FO&lt;J,..in Squora. BuMcing H,
... OEPAR'TMI:Nl OF NA· Second Floor; Columbuo.
TUliA&amp;. IIUOUIICES.' THE Ohio 43224. (Phone: (6141
DMIION OF IIECLAMA- 2811-101181.
110N, COWIIIUS, OHIO.
Eoch bid muot be ocoompo1108 WI.L IE OPENED IN nled by 1 BID GUARANTY,
THE IECOND FLOOR CON- mllllting .the r111u1r_,, ol
FI!JII!NCE ROOM OF 181a Soctlon 153.54 of the Ohio
IIUIUIING HI OF THE ....iMd Code.
FOUN1'AIN SQUARE OFCONTRACTORS ARE ADFICEI OF THE OHIO DE- VISED THAT IN ACCORI'ARJIIENT OF NATUIIAL DANCE WITH THE PROVIIIUOUIICES. THE ESTI- SIONS OF THE JANUARY
MAtE FOR THIS PROJECT 27.
1972
EXECUTIVE
AI DElEIIIIINED BY THE ORDER BY THE GOYER·
DIY.ION OF 'fR;j'EC::.:LAMVaAi.i-tWiiiftii&lt;f--

Public Notice

_,lvet._

BODY SHOP

REPAIRMAN
EXPERIENCE REQUIRED
APPLY IN PERSON AT
JIM COBB, CHEVY -OLD S-CAD.
01 CALL 992·6614
&amp; ASK FOR TOM

OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS- BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS

LPNoRCMA
FOI TEMPORARY PART TIME
EMPLOYMENT
BEGINNING
OCTOBER 3, 1988
FOR MEDICAL OFFICE
MEIGS CO. HEALTH SERVICE
POMEROY I OHIO
Real Estate General

FARM FOR SALE
183 ACRES, 2 BARNS
.'t STORY FRAME DWELLING
.,

IN IUTLAND TOWNSHIP
ON S.l. 124
Contact
Paul 11..1 or Bruce Reed At

992·2136
Real Estate General

"lOT THE FEVER FOR ANEW HOME,

986 -4141
COND
FLOOR, COWM·
BUS. OHIO 43224. No bid-·
dar may withdrew hil bid
within oiKty (801 daynlt«the
IICiuol dill of the opening

I~~·~:~.~~~~~~~:~:?~.
Chief
Divilion of Rlldamat&amp;on

- f.

Dote: 8 / 15/ 88
APPROVED;
JOSEPH J . !IOMMER ,

to reject any or ell bidl, or to
accept the bid which ambracee such combinational-

Department Of Netural
A1110urcea
Dote: 8 / 15/ 88
(81 18, 21 2tc

ne DirKtor of Notu1'111
RMO&lt;Jrceo _ . . ,.. the right

Director

theStete.

FOR SALE

Aa provided in Section
123.1&amp;1 of the Ohio Re·
viled Coda and Adminittratlve Rule 1 23:2 -111-02 of
the Deportment of Admin·
iotnotive Servicel. the CONTRACTOR ohall mo.. ove'l·
effort to en1ure that certified minority butinns subcontactorl and materilllm1f1
panicipate in the contract.
The to'tlll velue of tubcontracts 1w1rded to and material• and services purchased
minority bulinet181
shall be 11 set forth in the
ap8cificationa.
CONTRACTORS II EQUIR-

210

NCR

Cash Regis-

mt~tching corner
orna~ental iron posts.

ter, 2

baby bad with mattress, 12) Progress antique copper post lanterns with posts !never used), portable alae.
Smith Corona typewriter. usad window
air conditioners. store
fixtums.

8mm MOVIIS &amp; SUDES to
VHS TAPE
CAll AMY CAftTEit

or BOB'S ElECTRONICS
446-J390

11 / V'IB·tlc

by Staey
2 Lincoln I errace
Pomeroy, Ohio

•Dozer &amp; B.ckhoa Work
•Will Do Hauling With
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard B uainess

WANT 10 IUY WRICKED OR
JUNK CAftl OR IIU&lt;II
-fRIE ESTIMATESFor lllf of lhtslltrVicts call

614-742-2617
or leovo

o.m.-6

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUllT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable ·Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949·2860
Doy or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

REPAIR

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY
Mic~~~f~:!;Ohio

YOUNG'S

and

e

electrtcal

work

!FREE ESTIMATES!

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-4215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;

Windows

FIVE POINTS AREA - I acr e home sties El ec. and water
•~able. Good location for your new home. $5,900.00 ea.

UTART- Like new mside and out! Completely remodeled
heme on a large lot. ·Excellent condttton Garage, nf1' root,
n111 sidone, 4 bedrooms, fireplace, drop-tn ranch and cellar.
MAKE OFFER. $27,500.00.
aiDDLEPORT - Thts 2story home shows the WOfk has been
done. Amce kitchen, lots of closet space, 3 bedrooms, dining
~ I and 1/3 baths, level lot and a storage buidin~
I'IIM REDUCED. $26,900.00.

161 North Second

Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Corry Fi1 hing Supplieoj

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here
. IUIIN!n PHONE

1614) 992-6550
RESIDENCE PHONE
(614) 992-77'14

TRI-STATE
DRYWALL CO.
Complete DrywaH
Service

FREE ESTIMATES

FIREWOOD
OAK, LOCUST.
CHERRY

$35

PER lOAD
DELIVERED

BILL SLACK
992-2269

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rl. 12411 Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Tr..ltnlseloa
PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

...~~tent..

Sctnlc HltaNUrt~noCent~~r.
-.tdgo Rd., atlllpolli.

To glw • 4 long holrtd,
blecltl!o-kittono. 8wko.ohl
Unor ""tned. Coli 814-26111114.

R•IIUrMt m~MSJ•· LoCII flit
food ,.....rent now

King size mettresa •

boJC

eprinp. old but al..,, 10 gllle
_ , , C.ll81-S.1324.
2 v.tltte kttten1 to give .wey,
, ....... Colt 814-742- 3188.

Big m.,.. above ground pOol- 3
ft. d-. 12-15 ft, wick EvtrV·
thing but lnw. Call 814-44111830.
fern~~le

Dobermtn D-'matlon
I mot. of age. Call
614-21S.66U
2

pu...,._.

"Free Eatimatesu

To
giveCollbotwttn
to PM
ho,.,
9 AM614-2111-1443.

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949·2860
NO SUNDAY CAlLS

k-

l'od

f...,

Four puppi•. ml11d breed,
tmall. at a c:utettlge. 814-742I
2025

3-11-lfn

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
. 614-662-3821
Authorized John

Deere, Now Holland,
Bush Hog Farm
Equipment Dealer

far• E••IP••••
Part• &amp; S•rwltt
1-3.'86-tfc
Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING
NEW -REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
·FREE. ESTIMATES

949-2168
DENNY CONGO

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND

TOP SOJL
FILL DIRT
10-8-tfc

Kitt&lt;ino ID give -'1' to good
home. Coli 11+742·ZIIIfl.
Twa cute kftttn1 30... 8764384.
Collcold-. 30+1711-3698.

Free to good hoi'IIJi nice a.eglt
ctll alief 9:00 pm. 304-87112208.
Onemaleendontfem.lePhB~I

dogo, 304-812·3491.

••hlno
..

forlft ...,. .~vem

'lnon

Or8y otrlppod
malo to
{loDd home only. 304-1953881.
1 mllleMd 1 farnlleplt bull dog.

30+IB2-3495.

_.f .....,.

Ambitious
needed
to dtmonatrlltt Hou• of LJcr;rd
tD\'ta c~ndla Work ownhoure.
Freo t 300 kit. No ln-tmerot
t ..o
Port leo. Coli 814-

-g

4.q.61a'7.

Boliv- n - I yr. old. 3

PM-I PM. Pr.ter lomeDM
wlchllcnn. Addlooro . _ C.ll
a1+387·7261_,. 2 PM.

1-

Hiring High
ltudonto
OnlylorRo-ooAidopooltlon
at Boo- Mo.-Ill Ulirlry. 12
hours weeldy/e3.3t5 hourtyP1'111• 814-441-1323
Oolllo County - -lor
··
Colt

AI Makeo

l/22118/tfn

Schools
Instruction

MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST OR
MEDICAL LA 80 RAT OR Y
TECHNICIAN
Pan lima Stwllng-eolorMT
gnocklot• _, e1o.ao a MLT
graduates •8 .04 per hour.
Weget COiftmlftlurMe wtth ••·
pori.,... Shift d l - l o l of 80
cent1 per llour weninga. •
•1 .10 par hour nlghto efloctive
Doc. Coli w..dl Ll-'lyn,
814-113-5111, 0'8lene1a
Memorial Hot_pital. Athen1.
Ohio 46701 . E.O.E.
SHmt1W1 M'id!DI' Aetalll .. •.
Ladl• w... ~rt or ful time.
Send
epptv In PlfiOn
Mondoy-Aug. 29th orTuoed,...
30th. 1G-4 It Tho- Clollol••·
3S4Bioond A.... Glilllpolll. No
phone coli

•um• or

otvflng
- · 1o """""' one
ocldtlontl ""'"' who lo looldng
for .,..,. then Juot onotlo• lob·
Coli Torrlot 614-448-1510 lor
d•Hs.

2 otrip.... 6 wotk old ldttllio.
304-1111-2591 .

·&amp; lost and Found
LO$T: F.mele Wllk• Hound an
George' • Craek Rd. we•lng rtd
co111r. can 114-387-oe37.
Lost: lltagte Rabbit hound.
Apple Grove ••· 1114-2473838.
lost: White male Peltln- with
111oc1t otuddod colw. tconntl
11aged. tn l.Dng Run.. Bethln

area. Call 11•·843·1411
Reward.

Lost; Groy tool box on S R124. H
found caR 114-182-8401 rfter
ep.m.
Found. Men't preacrlptlon
gl•.... Mltal hma
c•. Found on Rt. 7 n. .
Sum- Rd. IIC.992-534C.

•awn

LOST; Aug. 22. blk -~ ..,..,.
male dog. 00 green colllr,
Hermon Pwk ...._ 304-8711'
4216.

• 59.230

w-•· Now hiring. •YolW

- L 1011-187-1000 Elll R81011or our- ... _
lin

McCLURE'S RES TAU ~ANT
HIRING. Cooloo .,d - - needMI. A•..n• being ... .,
1 :00.4:00 p.m. Tueldayo end
Thurodlro • 479 J o - Pike.
GoiiiPOifo.whlto ho..
McCbw R•11UNnt• .

.....,d

RN wMh - g -erohi!o end
orgonlzotlonol ,,.11 n_... far
tt. Dnatcw ol Hurling Poaltlon
It o ,,..ld nurolng I._My.
LDColodln mid Ohio Vollov oroo.
Weott. a complltlttv.WIIge•d
benefit .-o~tM• Send ,...me to
ThoDoltvBoiotlnol. P.O. Box729
C. Pomlio¥. Ohio 48769.
AVON · All • -· Coli M•ilyn
304-882-28411.
SEMINAR
lnt•lor Ollcomtng ContultMt
w~h Corttll- end lntwfar
llecomlna Sewlnl 8,.._
R t I 'llltlonL 304- 21-1172.
"HIAINO"IGcMr- lobo •
your · - *15,000.-tl&amp;.ooo.
Coli (102)131·8815 EXT
1203."
AVON. ell areaell Shirley
. . - . 304-8711-1429.

8r. Auction

.8 - lildllor prtwo1o ho. .
duty In Leon . .&amp; e48.00 P•
d.,., phono304-4111-1S77.

Peereon Auctlo-. I~
c.....,. Ohio . , d - VJrginlo.
E - . ontiQUI. l•m. llq~d ..
tlon ..... 30+n3-578S.

Clerk nllieled .. - k
...... 21 hou.. per WHiltt ...
-on City Ulnry . Ulnry
•perlence nean•rt· Applcatlont . . awlllble at the Main
1n Point PI•-•·

Public Sale

u""""
u""""

12

Sltuatione
wanted

H8VI room In my home for
oldorly lady or m- OoYntrv
.,_.,...,.. alo• to-· 20
yn.
end pl.,.y of
TLC.
I -tlmo. 114-84113014.

"'c:::-'""

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

ReMDnlble Ntet.

Exl*ltnce operetor. er.m...
Conot. Colt 814-2111-1718.
Y•d c... bru._ cutting. light
ttaulng. MWMtreetrimmlng_end
...,.,.L IIIII Sloclt 614-H22211ov-go.

''DOC'"',!:~~~~~:~!

Cen"led Ll

lk Vicinity
Ju'* c.n

whh or w-liout
motor~. C.ll Lorry Lhltly·lt 43811-8303.

Deptndlbla HNrlo&amp; ·Aid Slles &amp; 58rv!d
Wontod to ·~ liD Cart. Clll
H11rina Evaluations For All Aps
11,..441-112411ilnlnGL

Licensed Clinical Audiolocist
(614) 44&amp;-7619 or (614) 992-2104

417 Second Avenue. Bol1213
Gallipolis. Ohia 45631
or at

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hats. Pomeroy,

~-

1970 Champion mobile home
12x60. goodcond. nM'c•pet&amp;
Nneloum. 304-175-1578

2bedroommobilehornelocatad
c•mp Conley, call 304-6761371 or 175-3812.

Trlilfl!l'lndllnd,304675-7689.

Trail• for rent, 31f~ miles out
Crab Creek Road, 304-6751866.

=

•.... ...... ---····---.....-------.

21

:::=--::-US~in-BS....,.,-I

8

33

Farms for Sale

1Vt acre ground with gnge.
concrete floor. Ne• SvNcu ...
16000. Call 814-992-6313.

I NOncE I
'ltiE OHIO VALLEY PIJILISHINO CO. r.oornmen* tha you

Aahton. 1.-ge buldtng lots,
mobile homM permitted. public
water, also river lots, Clyde
Bowen, Jr. 304-178-2338.

lrovootlg•odtho ollwing.

=

loi~T·Shirt. Jocltat ond
lntlng llluiP"*'~ wKh

to tNin.
•
Nogotflbla Coil 614121·2303.

lslo

TWo 1 acre lots wrth p~lic
water, Jerrye Run Rold ,
*41100.00ooalo.conoldortnode.

304;t?..ti~h. '-'--·' ·"· l· -- -- - - - - l.ullurlous Tara Townhou·se

Hou• Iota. 304-175-1908.

lots, one
level wooded..
city water. Jericho Road. Owner
flnandng. Good terms. 304372-8406 or 372·2676.
28·a - II'IIOd Run Rood. New
-~·
Haven. Owner financing available. 304-882·3394. '

-------------:19• Morl- Modulw Home.
101128. All oloetrlc. C.. 3 BR .. 2
bflhl, .... room, dlnlna room.
To rntny • • • to lit. r.fuat . .
to appflciltl. •411.000. ,.,...cirog. con 614-4411-1408
oltwS PM.

&amp;3 acres, S mllea from Point

r..... ho-. both, utHity room.

Pl...,nt. NMonable.
6018:

30~675-

i-

C.ll 114-38&amp;8841.

Renl als

2 9R ., oil eppt. lneludad Green
School Dlot. Cl- tot_,, COli
814-4411-3112.

41

3 BR .. utllty, gwga kitChen
w=h
p l - . Eocollent op.
p
. Prlaed to ooll. COli
11+44 13111.

Homes for Rent

2 BR. urolumlohod. g-e, 1
mil•218. t200 rarlt. t150dep.
Rot. One child. Coli 614-4469888

1 upl'l:lilrs &amp; 1 ground floor

NIIW'Iv remodaled 2 SR . raoch
• - Bidwell School. 1300 pa&lt;
mo. Call 814-386-9783.

3blclroom hom.on41ota. are.
HIMow. 304-1111-4018

ao-

·-1

o•PIIod.
lir·h- lo"' Point P l - . 3046711-2702 ... 304-1711-2147.
311adloom hou• on lacnt. 2

304-812-2118.

2 Bedroom hou• 304-175.
4480 I!DCt . eo or 53. b.tv.ean
8em-4pm. Renl t200. Securltv
dop.

inNow-3--.2
b .... lwgo
fir•

3 bedroom home, fu II basement.
304-882·3394.

104-273-2471'

For •I• or rant 3 bedroom, clo•
to 1Chaol.. store. Aef. &amp; dep.
required. 304-876-7281 .

onlrooclllunAei4Lotort.all

-g . . .

ploao. ,.,.,. no.ooo.oo.

6 room du pin. b•emem. II•·
age. private. nloelaution, 1714
Jefferaon Blvd .. 304· 1715·
3713.

3 bedroom hou• New Haven,
• 275.00 month ph.ts depoJit,
304-273-24 71 '

112-147&amp;

42 Moblla Hom1111
for Rent
21!o 31R . Alludtnllopoid•ciPI
etectrlolty. Corwenlent location.
Coli 614-4411-85119 or 44114008.

ca.
...,..• .-d Fo••"•
Furnllhed 2 BR .

c8bta 'Mt•
Mobile
Homo Pork. Coli 814-4461102.
•
)

In lonka 2 lA. Mulio only. No
p...
1200 o mo. Depoolt
roq-. R e f - - ............

Coii614-2411-18U.

2BA.Iumlohld-·•-t•

·--ol~tofltoFord
302 m.. or. a14-74Z.ZO:at.

Yord lola. - I a W.Va. Ill.
A.... 27.

'f

Furnished 1 BR. apartment·
Racine. Utiltti81. gnge spa ce
Included. Write Box 108. Fit. 3,
Racine, Ohio 46.7 71 .

Houlll for rent. 2 btdroom. Nl ee.
dNn. natural g•. 614-8925858.

... ·•
-•
· llfllla
b•n. IIYftlm
mlchlnory
thad.
and '
mobile home ho«* u_p. Laan.d
onomlofrconPiollilpllpornplent

Z fomllv 'lOrd .... first limo
-.1\olmlloout-U.,.Rd..
llutlloid. AU!IUot 21111 end 27th.

Furnished 100 block of 2nd
Aw.. GalllpoUa. Rant *230,
1100 dapoolt. All utlltilo paid
IMII be opan 8-23-88. Coli Jim
Blair at 614-379-2171 .

3 BR., utAitv, •t•ch..:l garage.
large kllchen. all elect. 1 ye•
leiH. Flut mo. rent &amp; depoait.
Call 814-44S.135B.

3. - - homo. 1'h b•ho.

· · -··· · · ··· · ·-··- ~ -·-··· · ··- ·· · ·--

furnished apt In town. Call
814-446-1423.
- --------Modern 1 BR . apt Call 6144411-0390.

Con...nlant 2 bedroom cottlge
in GlllllpoHs. e250 per month
plus utHitie~. Cell 8t4-4461890.

Hou•llt. 2. ApploO..-.I'rlloc•lon mollie
homo or t!eda 304-1711-2488.

......Pomerov.......... .

Garage apt. furnlehed. 29112 NtH,
Gallipolis. f22S. UtiMi,. paid.
Call 448-4416 atuw 7 PM.

2 BA. haute, located on 914
Third Aw.: $170 a mo., e75
dop, Coli 814-4411-3870.

10iprWtt111Cn1w/..ayacceu
Clolllpollo Forry, new homo • o
Z kilo with wollto. •10.000. Coli
304-8711-4831 .

paid No• , _ Ref• • dap.
roqulrod. Multo only. •200 Clll
114-448-0822.

l

44

Apartment
for Rent

Furnished apt 1160. Uti1h:i•
J]Md. Share bath. Single male.

919 Second Ave., Gallipolis.
Call 446-4416 after 7 PM.
3 btd-oom g . . ga apt unfurnished onJeff.,..on, no pets, no
children, phone 304-876-2835
after 6:00.

Downtown modern 1 bedroom
ept furnished. air cond. Cir·
petad. Call after 4 :00. 304-17S.
37B8.

45

Furnished Rooms

Furnished room-919 Second
Ave, Gallipolis. $1215 a mo.
Utlllti81 paid. SinAiem•le. Share
bath. Call446.4416after7PM .
Rooms for 18nt-week or month .
Starting at 8120 a rno. Gallil
Hotel-814-4411-9580.

2 BR. g. .ga apt. unfurnished.
appliances stay. In town. 1200a
mo. •100 depotit. Call 1144411-8067.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartmenta at YIHage
Manor and Riverside Apart·
mants In Middleport. From
1182. Call 814· 992· 7787.
EOH.
2 b-.droom Apt1. for rant.
Carpett-d. Nice •U1n9. Lam:hy
facllftiM available. Call f514992-3711 . EOH.
Newtv rtdec:oreted apartmtntl
awllable. Ul llltiM paid' t225
p• month. dapoak required. C. II
114-992-6724 •fter 8:00 or
992·8119.
New 1 bedroom 'furnished or
unfurnished ap'artmants. One in
Pomerov. one In ,._ddlaport.
Coli 814-992-8304
UnfurniShed apartments in MlrJ.
dlepCMt whh ""'lgeretor aftd
IteM. t135. to *150. per
month. Coli 114-892· 7511 ,
APAR1M ENTS. moble h hou... Pt. Pf...mandO.IIIpoiil. 614-4411-8221

11.-.
'*d.

leech
Middleport. Ohio,
2 bech wm fur• heel ,..-trnent.
utlltlel
MftrenOII. PhoM
304-882-21111.
-

ac-Ing oppllootlonolor

2 b - ..........t.. lutly

o-otl.opplen- woter ond
tn&amp;lh ploku,.. provided. Main•
MnCI fr'• Mvlna ato• to lhopo
ping. bMko ond .,hoolo. For
mo,.l-loncoll304-882·
3718. E.O,.H.
1

Buy or Sell. Rtverine Antiques.
1124E. MolnStnret,Pomeroy.
Hou,. ; M,T,W 10o.m. 10 6p.m ..
Sundoy I to &amp;p.m . 61+992·
2,528.

-:;;:;;;;:=:;;:;;:::::;:=::;;=
54 Misc. Merchandise

;;

Wheelchairs-new or used. 3
wheeled electric scooter. . Call
Rog~r~ Mobllty collect. 1-61487G-9661.
Blackfout radio controlled 4
wheel truck. *160. Coil 6144411-3538 before 8 PM.
1 8ronw'ng automatic Sweet 16
&amp; 1 Browning Ught 1 2 guage.
Cell 114·4411-3649.
Antique mortising macttine fur
cabinet ahop. 8150. Call 614387-0138
John Deere log skldder. good

cond. e8500. Ramey knuckl•
loader. 14&amp;00. 1988
flatbed dUmp, $1.100. Call 614367-7519.
bone

DP weight bench. 110 lbo . • ..,
iron woighto. $80. Coli 61+
258-6859 after 4 PM.

46 Space for Rent

Spa or Hot tl.ll. new 8500.
Honda 1\Aoped Expreas 460,
e100. Murray m.,'l biC'(Cie,
$60. Caii614-44S.7019.

office suite. Very
private. Located m downtown
Gallipolis. t 360 per month. Clll
81 +446-3432.

1979 Hvdro Stream, new 115
Mercury out board, very 1t..p
aod very fat. Suzuki 280 Quad
Ricer. Both priced to 1811.
61+986·3913.

Attrectlve

Office Space-- From 1 to 5
rooms Up to 1700 sq. ft. of
nicely decoreted office space.
Wl•man Real Estate, askforlka
Wiseman , office 814-4483644; residence 814-448:
3796.
COUNTRY M081LE Homo Ptork.
Rou• 33, North of Pornet"oy
Renml ttallers. Call 814-9927479.
SpaCious mobile home lots for
rent. Family Pride Mobile Home
Park, Gellipolls Ferry, W. V a.
304-675-3073.
Spaces for rent. trllil• s~ces,
water ~sewerfurNshed. Locust
Rd. Rt. 1, 304-875-1075.

47 Wanted to Rent
Wanttid. Hou• or trell• In
country. Land contract or rent.
Able to and will do repairs.
61+992·3878. •

Mercl1anuise
51 Household Goods

,.,ga-

Nlcetv furnished small house
Adulu ontv. Ref. required. No
peto. C.lli1+44S.0338.

HDu•for ..leor . .umeiOM. 7
.,., old. 1101.00 month If
qualified. FHAap...-cL Acrfr'"" Molgo ()o , folrii!OI'"do.
Appro.. *31.000. - - ..
e44.000. Caiii14-IU·17M,..
S1+74Z-221t .

1'

Pets for Sale

GOOD USEO APPLIANCES
WHhers, dryers, refrlg..ators.
ranges. Skaggs Appllancas.
Upper River Rd. bel5de Stone
Ciost Motel. 814-4411-7398.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofas and chain priced from
$395 to t996. Tabl• 860 and
up to 8125. Hlde-a-badl t390
to 1695. Redlner1 1225 to
$375. Lompo 828 to 1126.
Dln8ttase109anduptot496.
Wood table w -8 chairs 8281 to
•79&amp;. Desk 8100 up to t375.
HutchM t400 and up. Bunk
bM complete w-mattret ...
$296andupto8395. Blb;bedl
8110. Mattrea..s orbo.~~; lpl'ingl
futl or twin *88. firm 178, and
$88. Queen - · e250 &amp; up.
King t360. 4 draw• cheet 811.
Gun cabinets 8 g~n. BabV
mattf'8tses 835 a. 146. Bed
ffemee *20. *30 • King fnlme
$150. GoodsMecdonofbedroom
aultas, rnetel cabinMs, headbolrda e30 and up lo t815.
90 Days ume • c•h wfth
approved credit 3 MIIM out
Bulaville Rd. Open 9am to Spm
Mon. thru Sit. Ph. 614-4410322.
Vallev Furnlturt
New and uaed furniture and
appllcancet . Call 114· 446·
715'72. Hours 9-6.

1988 2 50R Hond1 for Mia _
1 1.000. AlooSOWidohun\i ~
1715. 3 04-87S.I1B2.

Groom and Supply Sho p-Pet
Grooming . 'All breeds ... AII
ttyl•. lams P.t Food De aler.
Julio Webb Ph. 81+4411-0231.

...a
tx"F.,

&amp;1•'*1 260 Quod RoC....
Cond. n....., raced. U 100
b.., otfw. 30+876-8815.

Drogonwynd Conory Konno!.
CFA Persian 411 d Si.m- klt•ns. AKC Chow puppi ... New
Hlmalavan kittens Cell 01444S.3B44 oftor 7PM .

76

:;,,"-~

'3oq

Used Trensminions. All lntlr· ~
n11111v inspected. 30devsguarantea. We buy rrensmlasion1. CIH
B 14-448-0986 Rebulldrrti '"
available.
~-!A:

Mlnature Dutch Rabbits. 4 mos,
old. lladl male Peldngn811, 10
moo. old. 0100. Calll1+742·
3168.

18 ft. •bow ground pool. Car
carrier trallar. Antlqutll. Call
614-992·1013 between 8:00
a.m.-1 :00 p.m.
10ll12 Barn roof building. upstalrsttorege. 2 allder windows.
tongue and grooW flooring,
8500. 814-992-3086.
Portable lighted sign w·letters
•299.: Free deltvery. Offer u plreo Au9. 28, WV t -800.6422434; Ohio 1-80G-63:J.34S3
nytime.
Compound Bow White Tail II.
sight, quiver, Hunter supreme.
arrow rett. axe Shape. 8100.
30+675-3978.
De Caterpillar dozer. good cond,
304-576-2823.
Medium Buck stove. used 3
winters, t260.00. c.n 304875-2336.
'
Electric Royal typewriter
886.00. Will trade 21 Inch color
console TV for nice IIM'Ing
machine cabinet. 304·6?5·
4038.
Picture window 40x83 wide
160.00 or ....t ollet by Sept. 1,
phone 304-676-3275.

AKC Bluett Hound pups. 6
wks. old. MotherendFatherc•n
be seen. Ca11814-187-8758.
Rabbits. 304-882·2469.
AKC reg Iater od pu ppl 81 • MaI·
hse 8300.00 . Shih- tuz
$ 200 .00 . Cocker Spaniel
•2120930•.00 , Phone 304-876For tale Rat Terrier puppies
•50.oo. 304-895-3334.

I;5~7;;==;M;=u;s;ica;:;l;:::==
Instruments

6 piece drum eet-digttal delav
sa"'phtr, 3 dlstutlon pedals. B
guitars. Frett.s bus guilllr,
amps. PA ayltem, po~ heads.
lloht oytem , Muot Sol~ Moving.
Cheap I Call 814-4411-3126.
and organ Msorw. Allen
614-446-4683 or B"uni·
Music, Inc. 814-446-

lndtvidual guhar leesom. begin..,, sarloua guttarift, Bruicordlo Mu1ic. 614-446·0887.
Jeff Wamtley Instructor. 814446-8077. limited Openings.
Uled Clarinet axe cond. Bundy.
304-882·3794 or 882·3594.
Kimball ' Arttlt Sariet consol
plano •lued $1,600.00wii•U
81 ,000.00. 304-676-1026.

&amp; Vegetables
Red Raspberrlll· Pick vour own
or We pick. Tsvlor't Barry Patch
Call 814-246-60114 or 448·
8692.

preserved wedding gown.
m,atehlng &gt;Ail and bouquet.
$2&amp;0.; Honda CB 125 motorcycle S200 with 2 hetmlrt:s.
304-875-6126 or 448-4608.
Tree stanck. 2 TSS nM:. 1
Biker. Dol. 8 . 8 Metric arrows.
24"81rc h doors. 304-6764689.
We1tinghou11 frOit free refrigerator $125. ,Underwood manual
lypawritet'. 846.00. 304-576..
210&amp;.
Ford t111ctor live power; plows.
diiC, Fard mower 1ft; Ford corn
plenter: hrr( wagon. t5.000. 20
ft. compar. U200. 30+57112328 or 6711-2808.

55 8 uilding Supplies
Building Materials
Bloc*, brick. .....,., pipes, windowt. llntela. etc. Claude \Nintert, Rio Gr... cte. 0. Call 614246-6121 .

Yard

Concrete block•- all IIIias·
or delivery. M1sonund. O.llipolis Block Co., 123'12 Pine St.,
Gallipolis. Ohio. C.ll 814-44112783,
WESTERN REO CEDAR
• Ch ...nel RultiC
.,d Beveled lap Siding
• De~ Mllt•ilfl
Guarantaed Quality
CETIDE . INC .. Athans-614594-3678

Canning ,.,..,.,, 04 buohel.
We piclt. 61+949·2871 . Denny
Hill, Racine, Ohio.
U.S. No. 1 large v-llow Fre . .
tone canning peach now avail•
ble. Bobs Marlall, Mason, WV.
Frnh from the Shenadoah Val'"' ' 30+773-6721 or · 7736900. Canning apples, pears &amp;
plum be available late Augult.

f~rm

Supplrf:s

~ liVCSIOCK

61 Farm Equipment
CROSS&amp; SONS
U.S . 31!1 Wat. Jacbon, Ohio.
614-2BS.6451.
M11aay Ferguson, New Hollin d.
Buth Hog Sal• &amp; Service. Ov•
40 used traelors to choMe from
S.. complete line of new a. ultd
equipment. Largest aelection In
S. E. Ohio.
John Deere 1010 tractor, One
owner. Cream Puff with plowt,
disc, mowing meehlne &amp; baler,
$259&amp;. Ow-ner wll finance. Call
814-2811-8522.
930 Can dl-1 tractor. nice.
&amp;OOhoul'l. $3910. 1nttr111Uo11111
2400 round bolor, 13280. Long
3 pt . backhoe lttaehment,
$11500. Ownarwlll finance. Call
61+2B6-8522.
460 dl81811nternatlon11 trector,
wide front. PS. 3 pt., with hay
condltionlf baler. plows. corn
planter &amp; bush hog. *3960.
Owner wfll flnan ce. Call 6142811-6522.
1266 Oliver dillll tractor, 4
wheal drtve. late model, Sh•p.

Open

Fann Equipment

71 Auto's For Sale

MFSOTractor. 11ft. havwagon.

ft. MF Bruah Hog. lnterl'll6tlonll
Hav Baler No. 45. 3 point
12 inch plowo. 12600. 61 +
867-8636 after 1:00pm.

USED NEW HOllAND
Fotle Equipment
2
One AC 82 chopPer
row

~::'~:'¢':05;l~~ft~'h:",:.!

-~ · one with el~rlc
I row h .,_.,
_,
control&amp;. One NH 3 point 707
chopper 1 row head; one NH
model 25 blov.er: Otte Kasten
forage bo•: one Cobey forage
bo.11 . teeefen S•vlceCenler, St

~4-=~S..3'i;t.

63

wv
·

Ph

&amp;

one

livestock

br-

SALE-Special Feeder Calf Sal•
Saturdev. August271t 1 PM . All
Including Hotnotno. Cot·
tie will be aeceptlid aiBrting at 4
PM. Frldav . Mauling IYIIIIble.
Athens Livestock Sal•1 mile
eMt of Albany on SR. 50. Call
Stoc:lc Yard 114-592-2322 or
898-3531 evening~ .

t978 Ford LTD . 302 engine.
Good condition. $800.
814-992-3408, eveoings 814992-7630.

Call.d.,.

1980 Pontiac Grand PriJI V-6,
auto. PI, pb, air, white with red
interior. $2,495. 30•· 6768758.
1979 Conette. loaded, blue,
304-876-5332 or 614·992•5311.
.,
'87 Cavalier l24, auto ttanmitslon, atr cond, cru•. tilt. aun
roof. AM-FM cl!lllltt, CL interlor, white. 28,000 mit•. must
1111 make an offer. 304-87&amp;2921.
1 979 Grand Prix, ruN good.
304-882-3516.
1987 -.:ury LyM GS, 4
PS, PB, air. f8ar d•
fagg•. AM~FM. powermlrrowt.
30+876-6331 '
s~d.

trln1milsion. 304-77~51151'. Iii-"
ts•• 395
· 36 ~- ;3'
- C.m,
·
motor
•
0PMn'f'Y,
~ •
HV
oil pump,
Cl'lne
ext111' s. O.••r. 1 mllee.n-omr·
At. 248. 114-985-4486.
~ ~A~

-;;=:~::==:;:::===~P
::::79 M otors Homes ·,.\Nl
8t Campen · ~ "

:·tt:l

19ft. 19nNomadcamper. Setf
oonuained. dual
Excel.
oond. Caii614-44S.1638.

••1•.

1984 Tour Master 18ft., fulv
conlllined, 11..- I . air, TV
anten111. Call 814-446-8208
weekdl"fS only .
1976 Winnebago motor home,
$10,600.00 304-676-448.1?-1
19B5 Mall.,. RV, Chovv drive,
exe cond, extra eonvenlencea.
law mleega. 304-175-4561 .

74 Coug•. PSO, PB. auto. air.
304-87S.5016after 4:00pm.
t980 Ford Mus•ng 11. 200.00.
30+675-4480.

Moving. must •1 quarter hor• 1987 Plvmouth Horizon~
mare. a.y, wfthbhac~ mana and 14,700 00. Phone 304-6751111.1 Very good ltmperment. 0480.
Tock Included. $400. 080. Aloo
pure bred Beagle pupa. 8 wks. 1983 Quwy Malibu station
atd. Hllve had first shots and wagon. 304-876-4480.
wo.med. Call 814-742· 3054 or
614-Q92-7841
1987 Pontiac Grand Am.
0 9,760.00. 304-876-4480.
For IBia Palled Hereford Herd
Bull. OentJe, good dltposttlon. 4 1886 Ford Tempo, t4.800.00.
yro. old. Phone 614-992· 7468. 304-675-4480.

81

E•cellent Angua BUI for ule.
Contact HarlevE . Rice. Rice Run
Rd .. R-llillt. 614-867-3389.

1974 Ford Torino, runs good,
body need work, 304-876-1522.

Pigs for •Ia $25.00 8ach,
30+675-6490.

1979 Ptymouth window van.
11500. Coll304-876-11429.

SWEEPER and HWing mKhlne
repair, parts. and suppli•. Pldc:
up tnd delivery; 0 .... 11 Vacuum
Cleaner, one hall mile up
Goorgeo Creek Ad. Call 8144411-0294

Wanted To Suv Chda1s ·
Whitt Wv•ndottel or White
fllvmouth Rocka . Call 304-8753946.

'85 Chewtte, auto, eir, 40, 000
mlloa, *3.400.00. 304-87117964

66 Seed 8o Fertilizer

Autoa For Sale: For a gnrat deal
on • naw or u•d c., tnJ:::k or
van, 11eKennv 81111tJimMink
Chevrolet-Qidsmoblle. 814448.3872 or 773-5134.

Dekala~Se_, corn. T eking e•ly
ordwsto aasu"' a supply of Y,our
lworlte """'ldo. SHCI supply
could be thort 10 Jock In an early
supply, Henry &amp;nnt Kav. 3048?5-1508 oft or 8 pm.

72

Trucks for

Sale

Transportation

1983 omoll Plymouth plclcup
whh amall camper top. Onty
40.000mil•, Very good condition. 82IOOorwilltredaforcar.
Coii614-26S.6251 .

71 Auto's For Sale

1978 Ford piCk· up. 8700. C.ll
614-446-7428.

1977Ca,..o V~ 8 . auto tn1n1.
PS, PB . C.ll 814-446·1616,
alter 6 PM 4411-1244.
RED HOT borgolnol Drug cloelen' cars. boats. ptan• repo'd .
Su~lus . Your arM . Buyers
Guida. 111 806-687-6000. ,.t
S·4662.
1977 Chevy c amper van .
01260. Call 814-387-0641
1975 Ford F250 4K4, '4 ton.
Runs good. *2800. neg. 1974
Camara. Runs great. Call 614446-8920
1987 Dodge Omni. 4 dr.. air.
AM-FM. , Call 61+446-8189
after 8 PM.

1981 8 cyl. ltlndard Chevv
truck. Also 1981 Oldl 4 door
cor, 614-986-3839.
1982 Datsun King Cab. 51,000
miles. etuo, PS. PB. re• window
defogg•. nice 1ruclc, 304-6758758.
Pick up beds. Ford Chevrolet.
long or short. no rust. 304-8756296.

1981 Delta 88, AM-FM·Cels..
tlr eond .. new tires, newly
rebult dleael eng(ne. Very good
cond. 82100. Call 614-4462974.
1981 Dodge AriM4 dr . Sedan,
PS. PB, AM· FM·Coll.. high
mileage. Well maintained.
$1400 080 . Call 614-44119700.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconcitio11111 ltfetime pr8nJee. Local ref...,ces fur. .hU,
Free esti1M181. Call cojlel:t
1-614-237· 0488. dov or nlglft.
RogersB••ement
Waterproofing.

Concrete Septic T.,kl - 1000
gil., 1600gll. lndJet ....,otlon
syttem. Feetory traln«&lt; ,..fr
ohop. RON EVANS ENTER·
PAISES. Jockoon. Ohio. 1-80o537·9528.
RON EVANS EN1'ER PRISES ·
Septic tonk pumping. taO psi· food. Ca111 -B00.537·9629. ·.- - ,.
Pslntlng: Interior &amp; . Exterlo;
FNe ettlrnat:es. Clll 814-44&amp;.
8344
RON'S . Television Service.
GE. Speclrling In Zonbh. Coli
304-6711-2398 or 114-446·
2464
Fetty Tree Trimming, llump
remowl. Ca11304-875-1331 .

drllli;Jg
,

Rotary or cable tool
Most wells eo mpleted .. me diiV.
Pump 11lea and service. 30489&amp;.3802

RON'S APPUANCE SERVi
houllt call servtcing G E, Hot-._
Point, washers, dryer~ and
.......0 . 30+6711-2398.
- -

'72 Maverlc. 72Fordtrue:k with
camper, 304-nl-9122.
77 Ford pickup, 302 engine.
304-876-7621 .

1987 Chevy Cullom Van.
Loaded. Auto .. tr l-fold bed, 4
c&amp;p•in chairs, TV. axttndad
windOw roaf. Call '514-4483421 d~tV or evening.
1981 Ford BrortCO, V-8, auto.
tf8nl. 74.000 miles. e3950.
Call 614-24&amp;-9687.
1981 Jeep CJ&amp; , 4 cvl. 4 spead.
814-848-2831 .
197681azsr4x4, r&amp;ltoredlnslde
and out 304-882-3169.

74

Motorcvcles

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipoli1, Ohio
Phone 614-446-3888 or
446-4477

R"ldential or commercial wlr~"
lng New •vtce or reptir .. f
Llcen•d electriciiWI. &amp;drnete
free. Ridenour Electrical, 304-, .
87&amp;-1786.
. ..,
Electrlcilln, State CertHied. f,.,
Ed Shamblin"

;~~S:-8 .~~~

:;;:;::::::;:::=:;:;~
"~
85

General Hauling:; .

1917 Ford Ranger XLT. Taka
over payments. Call 614-882·
6506.

John Deere 430 fll'm tractor.
$1600. Colt 614-446-3413.

1972 Mon• Carlo. looks good.
Needl work. For Sale or Trede.
Call 114-4411-8919.

78 Su%'*1 GS 650 E, Ex.
condition. good tlr11 &amp; bat•rv.
und• 8.000 mil•. e?Oo neg.
Call304-676-1433.

Dillard Water Service: Pool,.~
Cisterna. Weill. o.ltvery AnyJ.o
'""'· C.ll 614-4411-7404-No'T

198tli Oadge Ch•ger. 31.000
mil•. Good cond ., PS. PB, AC.
Coii814-25S.6457.

1975 Herlev Dlvldlon Sport•
tor. Low rnlleege. e1100. Call
81+4411-3413.

J&amp;JWalerS....nce. Swimming
pools. citterns. \WIIs. Ph. 114-·,
2•5-9286.

1982 8uldr: Regal, ICctlllori•.
IOided. excel. cond . $3800.
1978 Ford LTO II , tl600. Coli
614-4411-1359.

1983 KowaNkl 250 L11l. Only
1900 mll11. orlgin11l owner. Will
Hil for 8800. COli 814-9923976.

Gowrnnwnt Seized Vehicl•
from • 100. Fords. Morcodoo.
Corvettes. Chevy•. Surplus.
Buyor1 Guido. (11 8011-817·
6000Ext. •10189.

Rt. 35 Cyc:teSal-. parts aervice
and ecoe~sorlel IYiilable for
Honda. Kewuakl, Suz~l •nd
Y"""'he. 304-6711-4130.

SNAFU &lt;II by B111ce Jleattie

Oov.rnrnmt Sailed Vehld•
from •100. Fordo.
Oorvottoo , Ctoovyo. 8uroluo
a.,.,. gukle. 1· BOe.aa7·80oo

More-.

Furnltun~

New IOfl • ah*•ane lo fll
wary budaet. bedroom aullt.
eh..,, woriir-. boolol-.
woad dllllttll ••· hulahea.
waah. . • drytra. deep . . . . . .
rolriantoro. ronfllll. All lurnltuN Ia et 1Dwao11 prl.-beca.M
we h.,. no llldden ••· Llrp·
WIYI IXC- pluoll-=
avalltble wlttl •proved
.
Rt. 141-Centlft.ry-'.4 mile on
Unooln Pike. ODIIl I AM-I PM,
Mon.·8ot. SUNDAY· 12·5 PM.
614-4*6-3188.

ext. s taos.

1978 Chrytl• Lebaron. 4 door,
..Int. iiNI, bJHMY, brlk•.
LDedect euoo. co11 114-892·
7214 or 814-192·3224.

suoo...- call•.

.\

---c--:--------:.·:·

R 8a R Water S•vlce. Poola.
cisterna, wells . lmrnedlat•J
1.000 Or 2 .DOOgononodollve&lt;f:l
..,, 1
Ctll 304-175-1370.
Paul Aupe, Jr. Wtter ServicJ. ~
Pools. e1s•n1. Mils. C1ll 6144411-3171.
:l'o

1883 Hondo XL 60011, excellcondiUora. Mutt •II. 304-1751152 after 4 p.m.
1977 HlrlOi' Oovldloro opon-.
n.w enalne. ~~Kc. cond. t1800.
304-882·3440.

ntw~~

19. OTO Oo..-lblo. Flilr
condition. 2 Dotoun Trueko. Coli
614-148-21"1913 Monti Corio with T-Top~
eir, cru-. tftt. auto. Pl. VI
englno. Coli 614-8811-4301.

"I already leal like I've communed with
natura. M!nd ff l akip the granola?"

1117 Ford E.-1 G.T. loPHd.
- · loldld. 20,000 mHoo.
•7800. 614-948-2877.

J

Hol.l18 calls on RCA, OuiDr,

1981 Ford F160with fiberglass
· -· 304-882-3169.

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.
1978 Olclo. 1981 Toyoto·Bolh 73
runs good . 3-1939Chwvs. C a l l ( - - - - - - - - - 61+4411-9237.
t983Ford F 1604WD,ioclt out
hubs, new rebuilt 302 engine,
1987 ChfNyCavll ler. auto.. AC, PS. Pl. 4 spd.• tool boll, running
AM·FM stereo, ,.., dafrott, boards, bed liner. Sharpie 5!500.
18,800 mllet. Call 814-388- Call 61+4411-6132 or 44118240.
0212.
1987 Chevy Cavali«. black
8llterior. GntV interior. 18,000
miiM, •4950. 1919 Pontiec
Con...,tible Bonneville, Sharp.
Runs good. looka good. 82750.
Coii81+28S.8522.

Home
Improvements

f4850. PostdrNerwithcyln.,.
• - · $695. ow- will
finance. Cell 114-288-8522

PICKENS USEO FURNITURE
Complete houlthold furnlthlnp. 'AI mile out Jerrlcho.
304-878-1450.

Seare portable dlahwasher.
q . . . . . . . p - . , . bod with
mettreat, 8eart toftbed
(q...,l. C.III14-44S.IS94

-=========:;==========:!,~ t91301dsmoblla98.
7 d1¥1.
,...~)'(
Motor•'njt;

Canning lom81081. Plek vour
own. Bring containers. Wrr(rwl
Rowe. E. Letart. C.lll14-247·
22n or 614-992-6405

t ct. diamond aol. P•ld t 2200.

wm •criflce 11: nooo.; Size 8

P.-ta. Part1. Pans- VintM A _ _l}
Salve
"all 81 •3 90
9&amp; ~ as- Cll,roQ

ianvtime,
1
AKC Bas sett Hound1. 5 year~
breeder. NowhiM!I2IIt•r•bred
lor brood otoclc. Mol•. tt21.. 61
temoleo $160. 814-687·6967.
SiamBie Kittena. Ci111114-9492290 eveninQI.
1 white male WNI Highland
Terrier. H•• .. p.s. Neutered. 1
ve•old.WeflbehiWd . e&amp;O. Call
814-992-3651 .

Auto Parte
8r. Accessories

BUDGET TAANSMISSIO"N~
Uaed. relkliii•H tVPe~ . Q...,_!IU
t&amp;e 30 days mln lfl'Un, PritwlaMt
099 8. up, Rebuilt
co rMtrted •s low •
t
Slandard clutchel. prea
~
p i - a. t hrow-out boorlngo. J\lf~
typoo12rnoo. -"""y.Welooi'jil'
Junk tnmsmilsiona. Call 304676-8758 or 614-378-2220~~

I month old female Gerrnsn
Sioopherd . Call B14-387-0449.

puppl•. ASCA double regiawed. Blue merle and black
tri-colored. Clill814-742·2386

or

'

Saalpolnt Himalayan-Persian,
fenwle. Born April 18, 1984.
e....,.,, .,... c.11 61 4-4469477.

J a; S FURNITURE
t415 EBitern Ave.
4 drawer chest. e48. 6 drawer
.,.,, 184 95. S pc. wood on
dln.,.nt lett, *199.95.

VIA a' 1

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrighl

8 'Niek old Au1tnllian Shephard

SWAIN
Fu(nished apt. N811V. NearHMC. AUCTION 8. FU ANITURE 82
1 BR. 8296. Utilities paid Call Olive St , G•llipolis.
446-4418olter 7 PM.
NEW- I pc. wood group- t399.
Living room a~l•· t199-t1199.
Apartments 1nd houl&amp;s. Call Bunk beds with bedding- e249.
30+675-5104.
Full lize mettrMs &amp; foundllion
slartlng - t 99. Recliners
Furni1hed apartment. t22&amp; a starting- t99.
mo. 1 SR . Utilities paid. 920 . USED· Beds. dres•s. badroom
Foruth Ave ., Gallipolis. Call suites . Desks, wringer waeher, a
446--4416 afler 7 PM .
complete line of ueed furniture.
NEW· Western boot• $ 35.
1 BR. apt., new c•pet.
Workbooto $18 l!o up. \Stelil 8.
/ frost free refrigeralor fur· soft tool. Coli 814·4411-3159.
nlshad. Water-garbage paid.
OepOiit .equired. Call814-448- County Applance,. Inc. Good
4345.
uted •Ppliencee and TV sets.
OpM BAM to 6PM. Man 'Chru
3 room aperlment. $100a mo. Sot. 114-4411-1199. 627 3rd.
Coll304-8711-5104
·
Ave. Gallipolis. OH.

. .- - porch. ...........
eollor houiO,
bom. 2 lot&amp;

o...

~·==·-

Furniahed efflciencv -920
Fourth, Gallipolis. 81BO. Utililies paid. Call446-44:18after 7
PM.

Acrage with nloe buldlng sttes,
5 mileo off Rt. 87. 304-45B·
1878.

lo•tllul Holc»mb Hill. oddlo .
tlontl lot. 3 BR.. C.. C.ll
814.4411-0331.

I

apartments. ElegiWrt 2 ftoors, 2
BR ., ful bMh upstairs, powd•
room downlhilrt. CA.. dishwBiher, dilpoul, prjyale en·
trance. private endoaed patio,
pool. playground. Utilltl81 nOI
included. Starting at 8299 per
mo. C.ll 614-367-7850.

•ere.

31 Homes for Sale

lk VIcinity

~o~'"'l:r:."'".:tr:·a.:: ·
Zed. A.,., MlddtPGrt. Oh. 114- ;

Furnished- 3 rooms &amp; bath.
Clean. "'o pets. Ref &amp; depaslt
required. Utilitiea furnished.
AduH:s only. Call 814-446t519.

'

I!

.......pt'Pfiiiliiirt''·---

~IM*f,
dill¥ IIOid. -.-..old

11 Court St. -2 BR ., 2 betha,
klltchan furMhed. w/ w c•pet.
No pets. OH strait parking.
8326amo. plus utilities. Oap.&amp;
ref. Coi1614-448·4928.

Beautiful river lot• one•cre plus.
publle w.ter, Clyde Bowen, Jr.
30+5711-2336.

. .._ _ Wlll_ln_t

llec~t

Updlllrs untu rnlshed apt. Carpeted. utiliti81 paid. No children.
No peiL Coii614-44S.1637

'

do bu1ln.. wtth people you
know. end NOT to ~~nd mOM¥
through the miR untl yau h.,.

Muot

BEAU11FUL APARTMENTS AT
8UDGEr PRICES AT JACKSON ESTATES. 636 Jackson
Pike from $183 a mo. Walk to
shop and movies. 614·4462568. E.O.H .

35 lots &amp; Acreage

Opportunity

lk Vicinity

........p .........

2 BR . apu. 6 closets, kitchenappl. furrMshed, W•har- Dryar
hook·up, ww carpet, newly
painted, deck.
From t176,
Regency. '"c. Apts. Call 304875-5104, or 675-5381 or
875-7738.

_ __

MJ~dleport
Glrop ....,... • .... Firat
_
..... ,.•. CI-mloo .•
. .111.141toU_PIIIo_

for Rent

f lllilllCI,11

.......G"iilllpoHI ..........

Fumltu,. end oppllen- lrj ...
01- or ontlrt hcou- Fllr
;'';;beMtlpol4 CII1814-4U1

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Mobile Homes for rent. Evelyn's
IIAobile Home Park. Kanauga.
Ohio. Caii61+44S.0508.

14x70 all elactrlc EKt111 , Price
reduclld. 304-876-1986 for
further informttlon.

'' '

NIASE Cenlfild Mech... c

CALL 992·6756

Sale of Aent-1986 2 BR.,mobile
home. EJttra nice. Call304-67679811.

2879.

WIU b•br tit In my home.-rt or
luI time 304-773-9152.

SYRACUSl OHIO

Repairs

Mobile Homes
for Rent

1 4ll70, 3 beth"oorns, completely
furnished. washer and ~r . No
pets. Call614-949-2253.

Ftamlnga mobile home 1 b:SS. 3
bedraom1, all eltiCirlc. 304--876-

I wfll.....,oKin..., homo. 2 omoll
c..._. o.y,, Cln hwe ref.
Coli 304-67&amp;. 1 141.

~onn"

~~~;;;,;~~;;::::"1[';;:::::;:;.~;:;===1

197• Champion 14x66 total
ehtctrJc, underpennlng. Furnished or unfumilhed. Re.tv to
move. $8,500.00. 30+578·
2393.

3bectroom home,,2211Jeicbon
A... 30+5711-1,315.

Moat Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles
A/ C Service
AI Major &amp; Minor

"A change-"'f
address
-..,please I. "

Drutleally reduced 1984
Schutt. 1 4ll8&amp;, total electric, 2 ~:-----:,---­
bedrooms, Cllhedral ceiling, 2 Trailer for rant 2 br 12x50
deckt, 904-676-71 13.
liCcepting 'application. will accept HUD. Depostt &amp; ref.
1978 Windsor 14•70 home. requires. 304-882-2649.
kiteh.,., llvtng room. l..,ndrv
room, 1tove and ref.. dishwalhM', microwave. centraleir,
undll"pennlng. deck. 304-67&amp;44 Apartment
4394.

1!o llocldooo Worli·BIO

Antiques

·

ba*oom.
totll2 Maetric,
pin-.u. 12x1
pon:h. underGood 1
condliion. C.ll6t4-742·29B4. 42

Mat,_ with • ,._.old It horne
babrt tktlng on Ia• Run
Rd. Caii814-2SS.1191.
~.

53

•e&amp;oo.

56

Full stock red or black Chow
pupplet. 8 wka. ol(l Wean ed &amp;
wormed. $&amp;0 each. Call 614379-2686.

52 CB,TV, Radio
Equipment

2 BR'. hou• tr1ller, 21ot•ln the

Shu H 12•10 with tip out. 2

w• •
Cl11

vi•• •bl•

Bltrington t2x66, 1Y.z bathe. 3
BR. Ooodcond: teliOOorbeot
oH•. C.II614-44S.1128.

Wan•d to cto' Hou• Cl•anlng.
Exporl.,oe l!o R e f - . C.ll
81 +2411-8432.

o-

Dinette l et (new) 1400. 1-chalrs
pine wood; 2 clnette set 4 chllirs
150.- 175.; new living rOOI"'' tuft
w-3
eaoo.: Uvlng
room w - 3 t1bl11 *150; e pc.
family room e326.; 2 was hdr,er t2DO,·t250. King olre
....... bed f75. 304-1711-7760.

25" colorcon~ etef~r~tislons for
llle. •100 &amp; up. Cllll614-4462713.

Call 814-3811-8318.

a•

Ct ll

1910 Bayview 14•70, 3 BR ..
1'12 bMh. l111ge living room with
fireplace. Good co..t. Call814446-l213 alter 5 PM.
Village of VInton, Ohio.

o Job Done? lnt.IExt.
pointing. light h.,Ung. yord
m~~lntwnana
c... "Odd
Jobo". Coli 814-4411-2170.

•so.

White 4 pQiter twin bed, ellc
cond, '55.00. 304-6711-2138.

14x70. 2 BR . MobllaHoma,
to well c•pet ell electric.
614-448-1687.
• •. ,

RE-TRAIN NOWI
80Ul11EAS'II!R N IU II NESS
COW!QE, 129 J o - Plko.
Ohio lnlltruetioowl a..nt Deedline Aug. 18. Coli ....._4367.
Reg. No. 811-11-101118.

lnttrviiiiN.

Go..,,.,.ent Jobo, e1 I.D4o-

2 dog and 1 ell, 2433 Uncoln
Ave. Pt. Pl.

HHic

We Service

15

Wh ite 911 ,., ge.
8t4-992·7641 .

MuotSe11110xSS, 2BR . Mot&gt;le
Homo. C.ll 614-3BS.9928aftor
6PM.

Hair 9tyllota. Al:rooo Tho 11-

992-2196
Middleport. Ohio

•WBihers •DIVer&amp;
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must le Ropair.. lt"

~~g«toedd

to our m., ..emlftt tlhm. Some
•l*ltnee prel•red. Send ,._
....,. or ot inquiry to: llox
Clo 187 ewo ot Tho Dolly
Ti'llouM, 128 Third Aw. Oolllpo'
lito, OH45831

PAT HILL FORD

DEAD OR AUVE

&amp;3e

pi-•·

Alc:lc

also acid boil and rod
out rodialors. We also
repoir Gos Tanks.

•por......,.g
AHIY In I*'IDn lit

Boogie, P.-t Shlltonod &amp;h..,
dog. 4 femol-. 2 - ' • · Clll
814-44S.4823oft• 3 PM.

e1.a1c pulP• I 11¥1c1. old.
stoapherd·torrl• mire. 011814446-1884.

We can repoir and recore radiotors and
heoter cores. We con

WANTED

Call Ul for your mobile home
lnturlnce: Millet lnt Urlnce.
304·182-2141. Aloo; outo,
-.Utahoolth.

Appllcattont now being ec-

c-d lor

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Now Hon~~sluHt

Tue. or

Puppi• to gt. ~- Pwt

SER~ICE

985-3561

CARTER'S

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Giveaway

8

GALLI'OUSrOH.

1/18/11

HAULING

6-17-tlc

56 STAlE ST.
446-3487

DO IT"

8115/tfn

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

1-onallle Iotas

4

Free Estimates
Call 992-2772

7-iJ-'88· tin

DNALL
PLUMBING &amp; HEAnNG

8-12 1 mo.

2· 1i"='88-tfn

Mastic &amp; Certainteed
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Guttef
Re11lacemant Windows

lnaurence

ltiMIIap.W-d
18 Wanted to Do
FOr GoiHo County to ioll Mo.,.
benhlps .. then..-.. ane .. to 1----~----­
dub-AAA. Ewn IIIHI% oo.,.
minion. Ideal for port-limo or cer,...ory, rwmodollrog. Exporetired men &amp; worn... Twenty rl.notd. honat, r. .tWIIIble.
mlmepr
••tkJnaauldmlk• FrH Nllmatft, A.feren.a.
you t24. Rate supplentaut to O.M. Gordon, 814'448-8858
your prwent lnoome. Prwious wenlngl, Think You.
.... tJ~perlence del:llred. r ...
marbtert •• enmurag.. 1o ,.ntlng a roofing a o,..pentry
apply. Send rMume or work work "" tloe hour or job. C.ll
hltory to; AAA. 710 Wall• St.,
e14-3711-241 e.
Aon......nto; Ololo 451112. Attn:
Boblat•.

Annourw:trrl!ll Is

992-5083

"LET GEORGE

.,_c.

conttat O..Ta .

.. 10 AM-4 PM. COli 814446-8178

Hours 10-4
Evenings by Appointment
2 miles toward Albany on
SA 681.

Mtss~~~t

J&amp;L
INSULATION

16-tfn

Authorized SerYi'f
&amp; Pll'ls
B rigga &amp; Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homelite
Jacobsen

p.m.

8, 19118. H - II on~
tobo_o,...oftho,
_ c.r
,-orlenled
" " firm
"' ....
.,..,
....
.-.ona.

Gently used
consiJnment
cloth1ng for
children.

985-4487

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

1110.

SECOND TIME
AROUND SHOP

8-8-1 mo. pd.

mo.

- Plumbing

$17 ..:.. BElliNG RD. Approxtmately 19.80 acres, all mtnenls and rO\'alties from emting well. Approx. $15.00/mo.
2 springs for development. WANT $12,000.00.

llmblo prodUoto ot homo. C.ll
for lnformotlon. 312· 741 -B400,
••· A·313.

51 Household Goods

1~10 Bov"'- 14x70, 7x21
•• .. ndo, 3 BRo" 2 lui b•h'
fireplace wilh 19x20, ~ eli
g. .ge. Mtting on 10 acres of
lend. US. OOO. Coli 114-4468750.

Income fill( Cl•- begin Sept.

'

lelw•n •

992-6857

I·ZZ-1

SAND-GRAVEL
LIMESTONE
FILL DIRT

Business
Services.

- Con a ate work

POMEROY - Older 2 story home wrth gorgeous woodwork,
lreplace and nice kitchen cabmets. 3 bedrooms, huge tam·
i Y room. dining room &amp;equipped kttchen. Central air, garage
..d siO&lt;age butlding. MAKE OFFER $39.900.00.

Eloy Workl EJCollont POi'l Ao-

.

References

ternate propouls 11 mey
promote the bnt interest o•

- Addona an'd remodeling
- Aoofmg and gutter work

lEW LISTING - TUPPERS PlAINS -Very neat 3 bedroom
nnch wrth an attached garage I acr e level lot F.M.H.A. approved. Call for appointment. $39,000.00.

Pert·tlme Realet:MIId X- ray
Toctonldon. Voiled hou,. No
w.lk••· 01IL or hoUdllr'a.
Apply to thO Modlcll PI- 203
.Jackson ...... CJelltpolla b•
• - 8:30-1 PM.

GENERAL CONTRACTORS

CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Here ts a busmess ready to go. Crafts of all
and equipment an dan operating business. Keep
\ocatiitm or move to your own! Call for detatls.

13

LAFF-A-DAY

1981 Aedm1n Sectior11128~~t68 ,
3 BR .. CA. To bo ._d. Co\1
114-44$8694olter 8 PM.

1omoo110 t o _ , wth lildorly
lodv ,....dmo In Pl. P I - I.
c.n 114-44S.478htur e PM.

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

Lot us convtrl those oldMMits
&amp; SliM ower lo easy YHS.

WANTED

Wanted

The Daily Sentinel

.Ohio

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Situations

12

Business Services

=

1988

28. 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

11780L 1000, . .50.00. 304- 1 -------,;_~
5711-7811,
~~~~~~~~-

�'

'

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•

Friday, August 26, 1988

Pornti'Oy-Middleport, Ohio

Sundd y

Local news briefs... ___, Nice weekend in store for most of nation
. Continued from page 1
against Bobby G . ~nd Edna Johnson o! Reedsville and George
CaJUns as treasurer.
Martin W. Bush of Racle flied for a divorce from Nadia N.
Bush of Securltv, Colo.
Cases dismisSed In court were the Federal Land Bank of
Louisville versus James Meredith; and Diamond Savings and
Loan Co. versus Warren L. Perrine.

Court affirms decision
The Meigs County Court of Appeals, Fourth Appellate District
affirmed the decision of the Meigs County Common Pleas Court
In the case of the State of Ohio versus Jimmie Jude.
A 12-member jury found Jude gull ty of rape In common pleas
court stemming from a Jan. 5 ~ 1986 incl!lent involving a
nine-year-old girl. He Is serving a life sentence In the Ch llllcothe
Correctional Institute.

EMS has 4 oolls Thursday
The Meigs County Emergency Medical Services responded to
four calls Thursday: Middleport Fire Department 6: 05 a .m. to
Hartinger Parkway, au to !Ire; Racine Fire Department 12: 35
p.m. to East Letart Road for James Pierce to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Middleport Squad 1:07 p.m. to Stonewood ·
Apartments for Dana Longstrength to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; and Syracuse Squad 4: 41 p.m. to Yost Road for
Florence Baer to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

By MICHAEL MOLJNSJ\1
United Press International
Rain continued to lessen today
and was expected to get even ·
more sporadic, bringing a plea·
sant weekend to most of the
natlori as forecasters continued
to watch a tropical depression
moving westerly across the
Caribbean.
The Southwest was the only
area expected to get more heavy
rains today and tomorrow, al·
though scattered showers were
expected over the central and
southern rockies and northern
plains, and in portions of New
England, New York ai\d Frortda.
Sunny skies were forecast for
most of the East Coast, the
National Weather Service

~ergeant ...

reported.
Texas, Oklahoma and Northern California were the unseasonally hot spots· of the nation
Thursday. While Los Angeles
enjoyed a cool rain - Its first of
the season, its northern neighbors In San Francisco, San Jose
and Sacramento sweltered in
record-setting heat in the 90s and
lOOs .
The heat was expected to
Unger in those areas this
weekend.
The 0.05 inches of rain that fell
in Los Angeles Thursday set a
. record for the date. The previous
record set for Aug. 24 was "a
trace," weather service forecas·
ter Brian Smith said.
Flash flood warnings re·

malned In effect late Thursday
night for portio~ of central and
northwest Ar~a and portions
of California's southern deserts
and Sierra Nevada mountains,
all of which were deluged with
rain Thu·r sday.
Showers and thunderstorms
rumbled through New York,
Pennsylvania and New England
Thursday and were scattered
along the Gulf Coastal states.
Showers and fog over northern
New England held temperatures
down to the 50s and low 60s.
In Santa Fe, N.M., state
highway officials said a downpour of rain measuring 3 Inches
washed 11ut a drat nage culvert
and also forced them Thursday to
close part of U.S. 64 In the

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT &amp;-27-88

Market report
llTHENS LIVESTOCK SALES

Aiipsi 20, 1988

Sl•lhUr Steers: 8$.~.50; Slaughter
Helfero: 11.111.
CATTLE PRICES: Feeder Steers:
(Good ..dCIIotce) -1100 lbo. 81.QO-JOJ.OO:
511-'JW lbl. 'JJ.to-8S.UO: Feeder Heifers:
(Good ODd Choke) -500 Ills. 87.116-79.00;
. ., . lbl. tl.OG-81.00: Feeder BuDs:
(Good 011d Choke) 10&amp;-1100 Ills. 72.Q0-8t.OO:
Ml-111 IIJJ. N.OG-80.08; Slauahter BuUA:
(OVer 1180 lbl.) $!.2S-81 . 7~; Slau1hter

Cowa: UtDIUet 49.75-53.1&amp;, Canners 'and

Cutten 11.714.00; Sprtnsw Cows: (By
lbe Road) ULIIO-IIUO: Cow and Call
Palrc (By lbe Ualtl l:tO.Q0-560.00: Veals:

CCholce and Prime) 93.00.10!.00; Baby

c ..... , (By tile Head) 48.01-95.01; Baby .
c ....., (By tile Pound) llt.llll-130.00.

(n, Barrows and

HOG PRICES: Hop:

~.111&gt;46.00:

!llllal 180-130 tlls.

Butch ...

Sowt: tl.OQ-38.00; Bldcher Boars: 27.00.
lUG;

Feeder Pip:

(By the Head)

1.04HUO:

SHEEP PRICES: Sla111hter Lamb8:

13.00.5'1.00; Feeder Lamb!l: 11.00-58.00.

Three shot at
elementary school

--Area deaths·- - -

\

/

./
/

'·'

i

'\

I

.

CHARLES PYLES

Charles Pyles
Charles F . Pyles Sr., · 58,
current president of the Southern
Local Board of Education, died
Wednesday at the Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Pyles was active In civic
affairs. Besides his Involve ment
In the school board. he served as
mayor of Racine V111age for 24
years.
He Is surylved by his wife,
Shirley Lorene (Hart) Pyles;
four children, Shirley C. Evans,
Sharon Ihle, Charles F. Pyles Jr.
and Randy K. Pyles, and six

Forrest McCann
Meigs County native Forrest
McCann, 76, of 1990 Kelmont
Lane, Charleston, W.Va., died
unexpectedly on Thursday at his
home.
Survivors include his wife,
VIrginia Price McCann, also a
Meigs County native; and four
children, Ronald, of Nebraska ,
Keith, of VIrginia Beach, Va.,
and Roger and Sue, both of
Charleston, W.Va.
Services will be 11 a.m. Saturday at the Wilson Funeral Horne
in Charleston. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 6 to 9
p.m. Ibis evening.

Announcements
Special meeting
The Meigs County Board of
Education will meet In special
session Saturday at 9 a.m. at the
county office. Purpose of the
meeting Is to employ personnel
and approve school bus drivers'
certificates.

COLONY THEATRE

FRI. THRU THUR.

~SNOW

I

Sunday, a chance of showers
Monday and fair Tuesday_ Highs
will range !rom the mid-70s to
low 80s Saturday, and the 70s
Sunday and Monday. Lows will
be from the mld·50s to low 60s
Sunday, and the (i()s Monday and
Tuesday .

l?llJ

-RAIN
SHOWERS
FRONTS:
Wann
Cold
. . Static
Occluded
Map shows mirimum IBmparalures. At least 50% ot any shaded area is lot11C81t
to receive pt8Cipitatian indical8d
·
UPI

11

W

fW

WEATHER MAP - A cold front curved from a low over
southeast ontario through central New York state and parts of
Pennsylvaula, Ohio, lndlaua, Missouri and Kansas, then became
stationary before curving from southeast to northwest Co lorado. It
then continued through central Wyoming and northwest Montana
to a low over Washington stale. A warm front reached from the
cold front over Quebec ·east Into the Atlantic Ocean. A stationary
front meaudered from a low over the Atlantic Ocean east of Cape
Cod through VIrginia, North Carolina, Georgia and Alabama to
Mississippi.

Meigs county court
The following Individuals were Bartfay of Columbus, $20 and
fined In Meigs County Court by costs; Carol Adams of ParkersJudge Patrick O'Brien:
burg, W.Va. $24 and costs; and
Brian Nitz was fined $150 for Ruth Hawk of Athens. $24 and
criminal trespassing along with costs.
30 days In jail suspended to time
Timothy Daniel of Middleport
served and six months probation. was fined $15 and costs for
Robert "Pee Wee" Riffle of Insecure load.
Racine was sentenced for crimiOthers fine!! were John Gil Ulan
nal dam a glng to a suspended $100 of Chester, assured clear disfine and 10 days jail suspended to tance. $10 and costs; Margaret A.
time served, six months proba- Wyath of Pomeroy, $10, failure to
tion and restitution. The judge yield from a private drive;
also Issued him a restraining Ronald E. Starcher of Rutland,
order.
$10 and costs, expired license
Wanda L. Riffle of Racine was plates; Larry Bartlett of Albany,
fined for criminal damaging a $5 and costs, no muffler; and
$100 suspended fine, 10 days jail Thomas Moore of Langsville, $5
suspended to time served, six and costs, no muffler.
months probation and restltu·
lion. She was also issued a
restraining order.
Charles E. Jones Qf Reedsville
ws fined $100 suspended to $25 Dally stock prices
and court costs for reckless (As of 10: 38 a.m.)
operation .
Bryce and Mark Smith
Fined for dlsorderlv conduct
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
was George David Lemley of
Cheshire. He received a fine of Am Electric Power .... :.... .... 26%
$100 and costs which was susAT&amp;T ........ ............... .......... 24%
pended and six months
Ashland Oil ... ........... ...... ... .34;t
probation.
Bob Evans ....... ... ..... .... ....... 15j7
Tim Jenkins of Pomeroy was Charming Shoppes ............. .12Ys
fined $100 and costs and sent- City Holding Co ...... .... ...... ... 31
enced to 10 days In jail suspended Federal Mogu!. ................... 44%
to six months ,probation for Goodyear T&amp;R ..... ,............. 59\7
violation restrictions on use/ pos- Heck's ..... ......... .... .... ... .. .... ....1
session of fireworks.
Key Centurion ............. , ..... .16\7
Wanda Sweat of Dexter was
Lands' End ........ ............... .. .. 26
lined $50 and costs and a Limited Inc ......................... 21
three-day suspended jail sent- Multimedia Inc ........ .......... .. 71
ence for falsification. Ronald Rax Restaurants . .... ........... .... 4
Hanning of Albany was fined $20 Robbins &amp; Myers ..... .. .......... 12
and costs for disorderly conduct. Shoney's Inc .. ..... .. .. ... .... .... .... 7
Fined In court for speeding Wendy's lntl ........................ ..6
were Nicki L. Searles of-Colum- Worthington lnd ............ ...... 21
bus, $28 and costs; Arthur A.

Stocks

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges August 25: Willie
Case, Ruth Farnsworth, Jennifer
Grady, Audrea Hamrick and
Betty Lamphier.

e

To lead a beaoUiully
deolpedlua«al
arran&amp;ement, Jlllt eall

or vlllt

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
..Thf' Wov .4 mPriur Stond•l.m..-"

Plo. 992-2039 or •92·5721

NOW OPEN

93 Mill Stm&lt;-'t
Middloport, Ohio 45160

(614) 992-6657
FRI., SAT., SUN.

(99 BOOKS)

ROBERT CHARLES
DE NIRO GRODIN

•BOOKS
•MUSIC
•CHURCH
SUPPUES
•Gim
•BIBLES

•OFFICE
. SUPPUES
•GREOING
CARDS
•SHED
MUSIC

ONE EVENING SHOW AT 7:30 P.l.

THE PRESIDIO

R

OPEN 9 A.M.·5 P.M. MON. THRU SAT.

Along the River ......... Bl-8
Business ..... ....... ........... Dt
Comics- _................. Insert
Claalllfleds ............. ,... D2-7

In Our Town: Uonslightbulb sale
By Diclt Thomas
88

Deatha ............ ............. A3

Sports ....................... Cl·6

Partly cloudy, chance of rain
40 percent.

•

·tmts 9 Soctiono. 88 Pog'" ..

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, August 28, 1988

Copyllghtod 1988

A Multlmodla Inc. Now-p•

•

Jackson County has highest unemployment
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - Warren and
Youngstown had the highest unemployment rates
among major clUes In Ohio In July, the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services ·reported
Friday.
The two neighboring northeast Ohio cities each
had jobless rates of 8.3 percent, with Warren's
representing an increase from the previous
month's 8 percent, and Youngstown's a drop from
June'st9.9 percent rate.
Cleveland and Canton were next, at 7.3 percent,
while Columbus- as It nearly always does- had
the state's lowest rate among major cities, 4.3
Percent.
The rate for Youngstown, one of the worst-hit
"Rust Belt" clUes in the state, was a considerable
Improvement over July of last year, when it stood

Jackson and five other adjoining Southeastern
Ohio counties had an average unemployment rate
of 8.6 percent. The workforce In the six counties
was 11,000 with a total of 103,000 unemployed,
leaving 8,000 persons, or 8.6 percent unemployed
for the period from June to July 1988.
Jackson was the only county in the Southeastern
group to show an Increase In the jobless rate for
the 'month. Jackson was up 1.2 percent; Athens'
rate dropped 0.6 percent; Gallla and Meigs, down
2.3 percent; · Vinton down 2.2 percent and
Lawrence County, down 2.0 percent.
Ohio's comparable July unemployment was 5.1
percent, down a full percentage point from June's
6.1 percent. Adjusted for seasonal factors, Ohio's
July rate was 5.3 percent, compared with a.
national rate of 5.4 percent. It was the first time in

at 16.4 percent.
Among the state's 88 counties, Delaware
replaced Holmes with the lowest rate, 3.5percent.
Holmes, which had a 4.1 percent rate In June, was
down slightly to 4 percent.
Four other counties had rates below 4 percent:
Wood, Hancock and Franklin (3. 7 percent) and
Union (3.8 percent).
· JackSon County had the state's highest rate,
13.2 percent, while four others had rates of 10
percent or better: Adams (!0.7 percent), Perry
110.6 percent), Guernsey (10,2 pen:ent) and
Harrison (10 percent).
In June, 10 counties had rates of 10 percent or
higher - the same as in May - while 14 were In
double digits in July 1987.

---Workers unite ...---------. Thousands

.

SEAN CONNERY
IN
ADIISSION Sl.OO

81

(Household Size: Parents,
Children and Other Household
Members.)
Income Income For
For Free Reduced
Price Meals
Size
Meal
1 $ 7,501.00 $10,675.00
10,049.00 14,301.00
2
12,597.00 17,927.00
3
4
15,145.00 21,553.00
17,693.00 25,179.00
5
20,241.00
28,805.00
6
7
22,789.00
32,431.00
8
25,337.00
36,057.00
Each
Add. +2,548.00 +3,626.00
Children from househOlds
with Income at or below the
levels shown may be eligible •
for free and reduced-price
meals.
Application forms are being
distributed to all homes in a
letter to parents or guardians.
T9 apply for tree or reduced· •
price benefits, households •
should fill out the application
and return It to the school. Ad·
dltional copies are available
at the principal's office In
eaoh school. A completeappli·
cation is required. .
·
Households which currently.
receive food stamps or ADC
funds for a child must provide
the child's name, the food
stamp or ADC case number
and the name and signature of
an adult household member
on the application. All other
households must provide the
names of all household members, the social seeurlty number for each household member 21 years of age or older or
the word "none" If an adult
does . not have one, the. total
household Income and the
amount and source of Income
received by each household
member, and the signature of
an adult household member.
If any of this Information is
missing, the school cannot
process the application.
A copy of the complete polIcy Is available to anyone
wishing to review It In the
principal's office.

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS

. Inside•

SatunJay's major league results
Page C4

School
lunch policy
announced

OM..;fl 5tt:tu,t a3ooks

------Weather-----South Central Ohio
Clear tonight , with lows of 55 to
60 and light and variable winds.
Saturday, mostly sunny and
breezy with highs In the mid-80s.
Extended Forecast
Sunday throiJI'h Tuesday
Showers and thunderstorms

Opportunity
of a lifetime

Meigs School Districts today announced the 1988-89
school year policy for free and
reduced·prlce meals for chi!·
dren unable to pay the full , :
price of meals served under -'·
the National School Lunch and
School Breakfast Programs.
School officials have adopted the following income eligl·
bility scale for free and reduced-price meals effective for
the J.988.89 school year.

a

Cl

Area grid previews

Vol23 No. 29

Continued from page 1
Soviet Union.
The ring reportedly included at
least eight people In West Germany and Sweden.
The West German newspaper
Blld reported today that Conrad,
a 20-year army veteran who
retired In September 1985, · repeatedly had received huge payments for his work.
Kelly said Toledo Edison ·Is
Bild quoted an unidentified
asking for $3.5 million for the
West German counterintellidistribu lion system, $2.5 million gence official as saying the huge
to reconnect the tranmisslon
sums allegedly paid Conrad
lines that must be severed, and
indicated the value of his Inforbetween $28 million and $33 mation. It said Conrad received
million for the idle capacity.
about two million marks, or
"We looking at a significant $1,080,000,
investment that has fo be reco"We seldom have had case
vered from a ·smaller base of
where an agent collected miicustomers," Kelly said.
Uons," he said. "He must have
Summit said the city has not
betrayed extremely Important
yet made a decision on its nel't
secrets."
course of action.
Conrad altegedly paid another
Building a new network would
American soldier he recruited as
require duplicate poles, power
'I spy sums of between $5,400 and
lines, transformers and two $54,000, the newspaper said.
.
substations. Nelson said the city
"He could not have done It on
will have to replace the substa- his pension," a security official
tions even if Clyde and Toledo , was quoted as saying by Blld,
Edison can come to terms.
which said Conrad's home is
Preliminary work on the sub- modest but luxuriouslv
stations has already started and
furnished .
·
the city plans to issue $4 mililon
The State Department and the
in construction bonds to bul!d
Pentagon refused to comment on
transmission lines from Fre- the case Thursday, but one U.S.
mont, Summit said.
Intelligence official In Washington said, "It.'s an ongoing Invest!·
gation and extremely sensitive ...
Involving Information classified
at a high leveL"
While Intelligence sources in
SHELTON. Conn. (UP!) Washington warned it was too
Investigators strongly suspect
early to assess the Impact of the
murder-suicide in the shooting
ring's activities, they noted that
deaths of three custodians worksome military experts were ·
ing at a suburban elementary
comparing its impact to the
school, ppllce said today ,
Walker case.
Police said they also are
Former U.S. Navy Warrant
investigating a report that the
Officer John Walker Jr. sold vital
alleged gunman said to have
documents and Information on
threatened one of Thursday's
secret military codes to the
shooting vlcitms three days ago
Soviet~ for 16 years, recruiting
with a knife in an apparent
his brother, son and a Navy
Work-related dispute.
colleague to obtain documents
The ·c ustodians were identified
after he retired.
as Joseph Fanuccl, 25, and
West German government spoDarrvl Ellis. 36. both of Shelton,
kesman Norbert Schaefer today
and ·Edward Ferguson, 29, of declined to specifically comment
·
Stratford .
on 'the spy ring.
The three worked at the
But he said at a Bonn news
Elizabeth S. Shelton Elementary
conference he knew of no other
School and were found outside arrests in West Germany except
the building after the shootings
for Conrad and added that that
occurred at about 12: 40 p.m . was in t)\e hands of the federal
·
police said.
prosecutor .
Schaefer said information on
any arrests In other countries
would have to come from them.
West German federal prosecutor Kurt Rebmann said officials
grandchildren, all of Racine.
Services will be Sunday, 2 In Karlsruhe arrested suspects In
the latest case on Tuesday,
p.m ., at Ewing Funeral Home.
Including
Conrad, who had acRev. Steve Deaver and Rev .
cess
to
secret
documents and
Charles S. Norris will both
defense
plans
for
seven years.
ol!iciate. Burial will be in GreenIn
Washington,
the Justice
wood Cemetery . Friends may
Department
said
Conrad,
51, has
call at the funeral home today
lived
in
West
Germany
since
from 7 to 9 and on Saturday from
Iring
from
the
Army
In
Sep·
ret
2 to 4 and 7 to 9.
tember 1985.
James Evans
Military records showed Conrad studied German for nine
James F. Evans, 49,o!Middle·
months at the Defense Language
port, died Thursday at Veterans
Institute in Monterey, Calif ..
Memorial Ho'spital after a brief
before being assigned in Noillness.
vember 1980 to the 8th Infantry
Among the list of survivors are
Division In Bad Kreuznach, West
son-in -law, Dennis Wolfe;
Germany, where he stayed until
daughter-In-law, Debbie Evans ;
retiring.
·
and special friend, Tim Faulk .

Clyde may build separate
transmission facilities
CLYDE, Ohio (UP!) - An
apparent Impasse in negotiations
to purchase tranmisslon lines
from the Toledo Edison Co. has
prompted city leaders to consider building a new electical
distribution system to avoid a
lengthy court . battle, o{flclals
said.
But Toledo Edison spokesman
Rick Kelly said Thursday the
utility has not given up on
keeping the Sandusky County
community as a customer.
"We haven't closed the door to
any discussions. We have continued to talk about contlntng the
retail relationship," Kelly said.
City Manager Nelson Summit
said the city may get its own
transmission facilities ·sooner by
building a duplicate system and
avoiding seeking the system by
emlneni domain.
Voters approved a proposal
last year allowing the cl ty to
establish a power network in an
attempt to lower electric bills for
residents. Clyde officials esti·
mated residents could save as
much . as 50 percent if the city
owned the network.
The city has been negotiating
unsuccessfully with Toledo Edison to buy the network.

northwestern part of the state.
Despite the rains that have
covered much of the nation In the
past week, the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration
said the potential for forest fires
remains high In most of the West,
where more than a dozen new
fires broke out In the past week,
blackening more than 500,000
acres.
Smoky skies from the fires In
Yellowstone National Park hindered visibility in western
Wyoming Thursday.

soc

WASHINGTON (UPI) - At
least 20,000 Americans keeping
Martin Luther King Jr.'s dream
alive walked shoulder-toshoulder Saturday from the
Washington Monument to the
Lincoln Memorial to mark the
silver anniversary of the 1963
March on Washington and King's
"I Have a Dream" speech. .

..
.
!

1
j

'

Buses, cars and trains shuttled
legions from cities along the
Atlantic seaboard and midwest
while others flew into the nation's
capital from San Francisco, Los
Angeles and other western clUes.
"We are hel'i" today to say that
we will riot be turned around,
because we still have a dream! "
King's wile, Caretta Scott King,
said In an address prepared for

years Ohio's rate had been below the national
ft~:~~re.

Here is a Southeast Ohio county-by-county
breakdown of unemployment rates lh Ohio, listing
the jobless rates for July 1988, June .1988 and July
1987:
County
Jul88 Jun88 Jul87
6.1
6.6
Alhens ... .. ............................. G.O
9.3
8.8
GaiUa ... .......... ...................... 7.0
9.2
10.3
Hocklng ......... .... .. ................. 8.5
Jackson ..... » ........................ 13.2
11.9
13.4
9.1
Lawrence ........ ......... ............ 6.9
8.9
9.6
8.~
, Meigs .......... .... .......... .. ......... 7.3
9.7
9.~
Scioto .......... .. ... ... ..... .. .... .... .. 7.6
11.3
11.8
Vinton .. ..................... .. ......... 9.6
Ohio
5.1
8.1
8.7

keep dream alive

delivery to the masses. "We still
have a dream of a nation free
from the cancer of racism and
discrimination.''
Her husband's historic 1963
speech on racial equality and
social justice and the hall-mile
march, which drew 250,000 people, prompted passage of the 1964
Civil Rights Act, the 1965 Voting
Rights Act and· the 1968 Fair
Housing Act.
U.S. Park Pollee braced lor
another ·huge turnout Saturday,
recalling that In 1983, on the 20th
anniversary of the march,
250,000 people packed the streets.
By 11:30 a.m. EDT, about
20,000 people , gathered, park
pollee Lt. Michael Fogarty said,
and began marching at about
noon, singing "We Shall Over-

come." The National Weather
Ser\ice said the temperature
was 84 degrees.
Michael Dukakls, the 1988
Democratic nominee for pres!·
dent, and Jesse Jackson, the civil
rights leader and Dukakis's chief
rival for the Democratic nomination, were ·also scheduled to
address a rally from the steps of
the Lincoln Memorial where
King spoke Aug. 28, 1963.
Dukakls, In his text, criticized
the Reagan· Bush administration
record on ci11ll rights.
"We must march until racism
and anti -semitism and discrlml, nation of all kinds are banished
from this land ... and until we
have a president who undertands
and respects the Constitution of
the United States, "Dukakls said.

Conrad's friends in Sebring
shocked over spy ring charge
Employees of the Melp County Department of
HumiUl Services rallied In front of the Melp
County Courthouse Saturday morning with
members of the American Federation of Slate,
County and Municipal employees (AFSCME)

SE13RING, Ohio (UP!) Hometown friends of Clyde L~e
Conrad were shocked to learn of
his alleged role as mastermind In
a military spy ring and recalled
him as being a quite boy who
liked sports and joined the Army
after high school to serve in
Vietnam.
Conrad, 41, a retired Armv
sergeant is accused of seiUng
secret plans for the defense of
Europe to Soviet bloc agents. He
was arrested in West Germany
Tuesday.
He enlisted in the Army Aug. 9,
1965, soon after graduating from
Sebring McKinley High School in
Mahon!ng County.
David Garlock, a high school
friend of Conrad's described him
as a "driven" person who had a
dark side.
"He had dl fferent values at
times. Whfn he got angry, he

from Athens also showing their support. Plcke·
ters shouted "we want a contract" from the
courthouse steps. The DHS employees plan to
return to the picket lines Monday morning.
( 'llmes-Senllnel photo)

Glenn assails Reagan on defense;
bill 'closely reflected priorities'·
• WASHINGTON CUPI) -Sen.
John Glenn, D-Ohio, charged
Saturday that President Reagan
"substantially diminished" na·
tlonal security by .ve!olng the
fiscal 1989 defense authorization
bill and accused him of putting
presidential politics ahead o!
America's welfare.
Glenn - the first American to
orbit the planet, a combat flier In
World War II and Korea , and a
member of the Senate Armed
Services Committee...:. said Reagan played "fast and loose with
OlJT national security."
. "I am extremely disappointed
t)lat he chose to leave America
without defense spending priorities for the next fiscal .vear "

.

Glenn said in the J)emocratlc
response to Reagan's weekly
radio..address to the nation.
The president has said he
vetoed the bill because It would
not sustain his military buildup
and would hobble progress on the
"Star Wars" space missile defense system.
But Glenn, who led a failed bid
for the Democratic presidential
nomination In 1984, said the bill
''closely reflected the priorities
(Reagan) established In the
defense budget."
"The close hard fact is that the
bill admirably addressed these
priorities," Glenn said.
·
"Moreover ,It conformed to the
budget summit agreement,

which had been worked · out
between the administration and
Congress," he said. "I am
appalled that he has placed the
well being of his political party
above the well being of the
country."
Glenn said Defense Secretary
Frank Carlucci and Lt. Gen.
Colin Powell, the president's
national security adviser, urged
Reagan not to veto the bill.
But "he chose to listen to
political advisers and pollsters,
and the pleas of (Republican
presidential) candidate
(George) Bush," Glenn said. "In
so doing, he put presidential
politics ahead of this nation's
security.

would become quiet and start to
whisper," Garlock said. "I'd be
afraid of him when hewentdown
to a whisper."
·
Roger Wayt, another friend
and high school classmate of
Conrad's, said he remembers
Conrad as a quiet boy In school
but he noticed a change In him
only two years later.
"The last time I saw him I was
at an air base In Japan," said
Wayt. "I heard someone yell my
name. It was Clyde."
Wayt said Conrad had been in
Vietnam, had contracted mala ria and was being sent back to the·
United States to recuperate.
"We flew back on the same
plane," said Wayt. "We were
together f_or six or seven hours. I
noticed a big changed In him
then. In high school he was a
reserved kid. Coming back on the
plane, he was more outgoing."

The last time Conrad came
home ·was three years ago when
he came from West Germanv for
•
a class reunion.
Joe Gaither, a track coach at
the high school, recalled Conrad
as "one ofthe nicest guys around.
What I liked about him was that
he would never quit." he said.
Lucille Patterson, a retired
teacher who taught Conrad,
described him as an average
student. "He was not the type of
person who made a big lmpres·
sion," she said.
Wayt said Conrad was prone to
accidents. He said when Conrad
was in grade school, he lost part
of his middle linger In an
accident with an ax. And in 1967,
he was In an automobile accident
and broke both of his arms.
Conrad's father and mother
now live near Alliance, just west
of Sebring.

Carson's 'Big Top' Circus returns
to benefit Jaycees, Big Brothers
By MARGARET CALDWELL
show are $4 for children, $6 for
Times-Sentinel staff
adults. Tickets sold at the gate
GALLIPOLIS - "The Biggest will be $5 for children, $7 for
Top on Earth" Carson Barnes adult.
5·Ring Wild Animal Circus will
Icard said he spoke to the
be In GaiUpoUs Sept. 22, spon- circus representatives In
sored by the Gantpolis Area Oklahoma.
Jaycees.
"They said it's much bigger
According to Jeff Icard, chair- and better than the last time It
man, tickets are on sale at was here," Icard said'. "So bring
Food!and stores, Star · Bank the family for a real good
branches, Alcove, Carl's Shoe eveniDJ."
•
Store, VIllage Quick Shop (SR
The Carson and Barnes Circus
141) and the Gallipolis Area Is America's only large circus
Chamber of Commerce. Tickets still appearing under local spon·
ljlJo are on sale at Western Auto .s ohhlp, leaving a portion of the
,In Point Pleasant.
Income for local uses.
Tickets purchased before the
This year's local contribution

"

will be made to Big Brothers/Big
Sisters with the remaining prof·
Its to go to tbe renovation and
repairs of the Jaycee Building.
Recipients from circus profits
In 1986 were Big Brothers/Big
Sisters, receiVIng $1,!!00, and
Project 2, the second pbase of the
GalUpoUs Municipal Pool, receiving $1,500.
"Everyone loves the circus,"
said John Hudson, Jaycee. •'If we
make more then the community
can share In more."
"It's much blger and better
than the last time It was here so
bring the famUy for real good
evening.

__

INIVRY ACCIDENT
Bomde ll&amp;a._, III
BuhJ..Moi'IIDn BeL, Galllpola, wu bljved Ia a
two-car collllon at &amp;he laleneCllion of Fourth
Avenue lllllll&amp;ate ll&amp;reet a&amp; 1:17 p.m. 8a&amp;1a'daJ.
ll&amp;utn, aeooMinc to ei&amp;J polce, wu drlvln1 eut
(toward the Ohio River) oa SR 1811 wlln her
vehicle w• otruek broadllde b' a ear clrlvn by
Mar...all McCorkle, 11, ()ora-MID Rd., GalUpoU.,
travellnl aouth on Fourth Avenue. a&amp;u•• 19111

,__

'•
I

Buick wu pulled lntoauWI&amp;y pole by McCorkle'•
1188
Pollee IBid McCorkle, a voluateer
flremaa, wu respoadln1 to a fire alarm whea the
erMla oecarnd. st.._ waa taken to Ho!Rr
Medical Center b)' the Gallla County Emlfleaey
Medical Servlceo. McCorkle, who waa cited for
failure to uae Cfllltloa at a traffic lllht, complained
of a knee InJury, butwu not treated at theecene.
(Times-Sentinel Photo.)

To,.

·'

--

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