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Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

Presidential ...__c_o_n_tin_u_e_d_fr_om_p_ag_e_J_ __
I

Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., also
compared the debate to a boxing
match.
"If this would have been a
boxing match, they would have
had to stop the fight ," Gore said .
Gore, who sought the Demo·
cratic nomination, said Quayle
···had everything going for him
when the bell rang, and now he's
a more serious problem going
litto the el~tion."
Sen . Paul Simon, D-Ill. ,
another Democratic primary_
candidate, said Bentsen "looked
a nd sounded more presidential."
Simon said, ·'Dan Quayle·
showed he knew how to press the
hot buttons. The voters now have
a better sense ofwl!othey wantto

Thursday, October 6, 1988

POfMI'oy-Middleport, Ohio
, said. "It showed a side of Senator
Bentsen that I've' never seen
before, .. . It was a cheap sl)ot."
Geraldine Ferraro, who ran as
Waller Mondale's running mate
in 1984 and faced Bush In a
debate, said on ABC's "Good
Morning America'' program today, " I don't think that Senator
Bentsen took a cheap shot
because what I think he is
. pointing out is that there is more
to running for president than
being qualified, than the time in
the Senate. And he pointed that
out when he talked about his
experience as a war hero."
As for Quayle's answer that he
first would pray if he became
president in an emergency, Ferraro said, "Not only wlll he be
praying .. . but so would we."

put n.e ar thl!..,button that really
counts . Neither scored a knockout. ·:
_
New York Gov. Mario Cuomo
said, "Senlltor Bensten tonight
demonstrated the maturity. experience and judgment to lead
this nation as president. He was
the only one who did."
Sen. Alan Simpson, R-Wyo.,
sa id: ·'I think Dan Quayle did a
good job. ije did a hell of a job.''
Simpson, who was on Bush 's
short list for running mates ,
lndtcafed he was surprised that
after Quayle compared himself
to President John F . Kennedy ,
Bentsen retorted, "You're no
Jack Kennedy.:·
" It was vicious, " Simpson

for $1,000 each. 617 with three tor
$100 and 6,889. with the first two
for $10 each.
Lottery officials said $5,737,611
worth of Super Lotto tickets were
spld and $792,461 worth of Kicker
tickets.
Saturday night's Super Lotto
jackpot wlll be $3 mlllton.

.

.

•

Dally,Number

at
•
Jobless ,rate·drops to 5.4% m

5036.

'

I

Vol.39, No , 107
Copyrighted 1988

WASHII'&lt;GTON (UPI) - Unemployment dipped two-tenths
of a percentage point to 5.4
percent In September with most
new Jobs In government employment and other services categorles, the government said today .
In the next-to-last employment
report before the presidential
election, the Labor Department
said the economy created 255,000 ·
non -farm payroll jobs last
month, down substantially from
the 340,000-per-rilonth rate of-Job
creation in the first half of this
year. ,
Total employment, according
to the Bureau of Labor Statistics'
monthly survey of business establlshments, was 106.7 mllllon

'

'

--:~~

SWEATER
SALE

Sizes small, medium and large and
extra large pllJs big and tall sizes.
You'll like the styles and colors by
La Tigre and J. J. Cochran. Regular
'14.96 to '39.96.

SALE PRICES _

PANDORA
SPORTSWEAR
Turtleneck tops, skirts and

MEN'S HEAVYWEIGHT

sweaters in Sizes S, M,
and (.,and 5/6 to 13/14.
You ~lllike the selection!
Regular prices
'30.00 to •44.00

FLANNEL
·sHIRTS

SALE PRICES

·$24°0 TO $3520

SALEIKATZ

$11 9 5 TO

WOMEN'S
SLEEPWEAR

$3]95

New fall selection in tweeds, camouflage, plaids, solid colors.
Two button through flap
pockets, 1 00% cotton, long
tails.
Sizes S, M, Land XL
Tall Sizes L, XL,.2X and 3X
Big Sizes 2XL, 3XL, 4XL

*19.95
*22.95
*24.95
*26.95

Includes long and shirt gowns, robes,
nightshirts, fleece. poly cotton blends
and nylons.
Sizes , M. L, XL and XXL.
Short or Long Sleeve Styles.
Regular Prices $11.50 to '50.00

SAVE
aED ,••,.,.

Kllniio vaarr
,..,_,,

,.,
C~lora
.

Big Selection of
Wintuk by Coati and Clerk
Reg• $1.99 Knittiat·Yarn ..... ·Sale $1,6$
Reg. $1.66 eaby Yarn·· .··:'···~· Sale '1.32

~·

POUGHKEEPSIE, N .Y.
(UP!) - The state attorney
generru. who led a probe that
concluded Tawana Brawley fabricated her nightmarish account
of a racist attack, launched a new
Investigation of Brawley's controversial advisers.
· The Dutchess CountY grand
jury.,report issued Thursday said
Its seven-month Investigation
tluit '"1Dcii~S.OOO •· ·pages of .
testlmony by 180witnesses found
no evidence to support the black
teenager's allegations.
. The 'report further charged
that Brawley'S advisers - civil
rights lawyers C. Vernon Mason
and Alton Maddox and family
confidant Rev. Al Shaprton had not only issued "scurrilous"
statements In the case, but had
acted to block the criminal .
justice system from learning the
truth. The grand jury recom. mended the state ; take legal
action against the three men.
Attorney General Robert
Abrams. appointed by Gov. Marlo Cuomo as a special prosecutor )o Investigate the case and
who himself was subjected to
.name-calling by the Brawley
advisers, was elated by the grand
jury report.
"We know the facts. We solved
· the case," he said.
Abrams.. calling Sharpton's
conduct "abominable, deplora ble, reprehensible," said his
office has begun civil and crlmlnat tnves ligations Into the portly
preacher's activlites.
Abrams and the office of U.S.
Attorney Rudolph Giuliani w!ll
specifically probe what happened to the thousands of dollars
donated to the Brawley famlly
and Sharpton's own clvll rights
organization. Actor Blll Cosby
and heavyweight champion Mike
Tyson were among those who
publicly came forward in support
of Brawley.
The grand jury also recom mended ''appropriate dlsclpll·
nary action" - which could

NOW *16.88
NOW *19.48
NfJW ..1:18
NOW *22.88

SPECIAL SALE!

MEN'S WINTER JACKETS

Plenty of excellent styles for young and old alike- pick
your favorite style and color. '
S, M, Land XL plus bigs and tails. Great Savings nowl

For This Sale ••.

S29.95
S39.95
S49.95
S69.95

20

JA.CKETS...........................·••••• S22.45
JACKETS.............~ •••••••••••••••••• S29.95
JACKETS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S37 .45
JACKETS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ·S52.45

SALE!

DUTCH
FLOWER BULBS
Narcissus, Tulips, Hyacinths, Paper
Whites, Frltillaria - Excellent Selection.
Regular Prices 20¢ to *6.95

SPECIAL SALEI BOYS AND GIRLS
JACKETS and SNOWSUITS
Sizes 12 to 24 Months and 2 to 7 Yaara·
"London Fog", "QuilteJt", "Casual Time" and
"Weather Tamer" brands. Good color and styles
selection
PRICES RANGE FROM 128.00 TO 158.00

SALE
PRICES

Speci~l

Salel

SAVE

BED .PILLOWS

-

Filled by Oualofil by DuPont.
Machine washable and dryable.
Retains original shape.
Reg. •1 0.99 Full Size ......... Now •8.79
Reg. •13.99 Queen Size ... Now.."11.19
R~g. •15.99 King ~ze ..... Now $12.79

SALE
GUN
CABINETS
IIG. •u1•.a11

AS LOW AS

$ 1 6 70,0

LINOLEUM
SPECIAL!!
.
12-'
Wide. Excellent Patterns.
. Special Purchase

ht FLOOI

$399

SQ. YD.

.·

9:30 ......s.oo p.m.
friday I Satur.y

E./6"'•'d•
PIMI(ICI~ . 0~10

\l UI tii·Hh

tMAII8£ CAIIO

The Meigs SoU and Water
Conservation District set Nov. 15
at 7:18 p.m . for Its annual
meeting and banquet when the
district met recently In regular
session.
Emerson Marting, a Jives tock
auctioneer from Washington
C.H., wlll be the featured banquet speaker. ·Tickets for the meeting are
$6.75 and will be available from
any supervisor candidate or
.supervisor and office personnel.
Tickets must be purchased by.
Nov. 4.
A resolution, proposed by· the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources, Division of Wildlife,
requesting the ASCS County
Committee to enforce seeding
and cover requirements on an.. nual set-aside program land was
endorsed by the Meigs SWCD

2 Sections, i 6 Pages ~ 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

The 'joliless rate among adult
men fell 0.2 percentage point to
4.5 percent, accounting for the
overall dip in unemployment.
There was little or no change in
the unemployment rate for adult
women at 4.8 percent. teenagers
at 15.7 percent, whites at 4.8
percent and blacks at 10.8 percent, the department said. Unemployment for Hispanics fell a
percentage point t0'7.4 percent.

The median period of unemployment for workers was 5.5
weeks while the DU!~ber of
people working part time was
little changed at 5.1 million .
From June through September, 930,000 people were
classified as discouraged
workers, those who want to work
but have not looked. for jobs
because they feared they could
not find any. That was little
change from the second quarter.
-ED;!ploymentln services Industries, other than government
jobs, rose by 65,000, the 'depart- ·
ment said, with health services
jobs leading the way. Wholesale
trade and the transportation and

Syracuse officials call cost
of audits 'highway robbery'
By KATIE CROW

..

DISPlAYS RF;PORT - New York Attorney General Robert
Abrams holds up a copy of 'the grand jury report on Tawana
Brawley during a press conference Friday mornl!lg In
Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Abrams said the report should show everyone
that the alleged attack on the 16-year-okl Brawley was nothing
more than a hoax. (UPI)
include disbarment - agat~st
lawyers Mason and Maddox.
Abrams said he would pursue a
court lnvesllgatlon Into the conduct of the two lawyers.
Brawley's claim that she was
sexually and racially assaulted
by six white men near her
Wappingers Falls home about 65
miles north ·of New York City
Ignited racial tensions In New
York, where trouble between
blacks and whites was still
simmering from the Howard
jBeach racial . killing and other
racially linked incidents.
Later, Sharpton. Mason and
Maddox said a State Pollee
trooper and Steven Pagones, a
Dutchess County assistant distrlct attorney, participated in the
attack. They produced no evldence to substantiate the claim.
Pagones plans to f!le · civil·
slander charges Tuesday against
Brawley 's advisers, his lawyer.

Board.
Provisions of Ibis resolution
Include early seeding dates and
delayed mowing after Aug. 1 except for control of noxious
weeds - that would help to
provide mastrnum erosion control and wll(:Jllfe habitat. 'l'he
resolution fUrther asks that
USDA Implement multi-year setasides to establish a Strategic
Forage Reserve to minimize the
Impact of future drought.
'
A cooperator agreement was,
approved for Rex Cheadle Jr. for
180 acres in Columbia Township.
Those attending the meeting
were supervisors Tom Theiss,
Ron Easman and David
Gloeckner, along with Larry
Johnson, Gordon Gilmore, Mike
Duhl, Blair Windon and Opal
D)oer.
·

public utilities Industry each
·However, the average factory
added 25,000 jobs.
workweek rose by 0.2 hour to41.2
Business services jobs, which • hours and manufacturing overhave been a leader In the current time rose 0.1 hour to 4 hours, boih
economic expansion, showed lit- high·by h!storicai standards.
tie change from August to
"This seems to reflect the
September. That also was the intent of many empioyers to keep
case in other private service costs down by expanding hours of
sector Industries, such as .retail work to meet production needs
trade, finance, insurance and rather than adding new workers
real estate.'
to their payrolls ," Norwood said
Manufacturing jobs fell in testimony prepared for dellvsllghtly for the second straight ery to the Joint Economic
month after strong gains over the Committee.
past 18 months, the department
Including those in the military,
said. Small gains in .machinery unemployment was 5.3percentln
and auto Industries were more September, down two- tenths of a
than offset by declines ln other point from August. the departIndustries .
.ment said.

Syracuse VIllage officials are
calling the costs of audits by the
State Auditor's office, required
every two years, as "highway
robbery" .
At a meeting of council Thursday night It was brought up that
the costa! the audit this jrearwas more than $3,000. The village has
only 13 separate accounts with
only one transaction a year in
some of the accounts.
This year it took from AprU 13
to June 7 for state auditors to
COfDJ?le\e the work. Council feels
the lengtfi of time ra·complete an
audit Is excessive.
• It was suggested that mayors
and clerks of all the villages in
Meigs ban together to promote
legislation to alleviate the
situation.
Council feels It isn't fair to take
six weeks to complete an audit
that could be done lnhalfthetlme
or less. It was suggested that a•
letter be directed to the state
expressing concern over the
costs of the audits .
The excessive costs strip the
villages of their general fund
money - money that is needed

Gas

offi~ial

Gerald Hayes, said Thursday.
"That's the next step, " said
Hayes the same day the grand
jury report cleared Pagones and
Malcolm Parks, representing
the state trooper of any wrongdo- ,National Gas &amp; Oil Corporation,
ing in the Brawley matter .
. was at this week's Racine Village
Of Brawley's advisers, the
Council meeting to see If any
grand jury said It was "hard- complaints had been registered
pressed to imagine statements
against the company.
more scurrilous ... more deservParks advised councll that he ·
Ing of dlsclpllnary scrutiny than
woul&lt;l be in the Racine area two
those that have been made by
or three days a week.
Mr. Maddox and Mr. Mason
Three residents appeared beduring the course of their repres- fore council to present a petition
entation of the Brawley family." signed by a number of residents
Sharpton Immediately went on asking councll to take action
black radio station WLffi in New regarding an Individual disturbYork City to condemn the grand ing the peace with a vehicle, and
jury's findings as "racist."
with barking dogs.
"The whole world must see
After a brief discussion, it was
that this is a political battle, ". pointed out that council Is a
Sharpton said. "The world must legislative body only and that
see that they want to shut the
mouths of people who have ' the
audacity to stand up lor the
rlghtsof .b lackpeople."

for the general operation of the mentIs in excellent condition.
villages, officials report.
Ernie Slsslon, councilman, reComicll ' Is extremely con· ported that bids for a 20 foot
cerned over the issue and plans to extension of concrete to London
work In the direction that will pool will be advertised ·agaln by
help the situation.
the county commissioners.
Meeting With council was Funds for the project are through
Henry Eblin who takes care of the Community Development
the sanitation pick up in the Block Grant program.
village.
.
Sisson also reported that the
Eblin asked that council con- culverts on Snowball Hill road
sider entering into a contract are plugged . He noted that lle has
with him (Eblin) giving h!m talked to the township trustees in
permission to serve the village. It regard to closing the road. The
was noted there are others village Is in favor of closing Its
picking up trash In the village.
portion of the road. The closing
Jl!ll ijill made a motion that would be above the road that
until contact is made .with the goes behind the Weese property.
vlllage solicitor that Eblin .be the After the road Is closed then
sole trash collection agency for proper ditching will be done to
the village. The motion passed.
correct the ·drainage problem
Is a bone of contention for
which
Mayor Eber Pickens asked
several
residents .
council to bear the costs to pave
Access
Io Syracuse Cemetery
the road beginning at t~e James
can
be
made
by traveling up the
Teaford residence near the tenRoy
Jones
Road.
No residents
nis courts. This road will join the
be
inconvenienced
by the
would
new road being buill for the new
,
closing.
marina. Council agreed to go
Sisson also reported that fill
ahead. Total cost of the project is
dirt will be placed In front the
$1,450.
Syracuse Elementary School and
Mayor Pickens also noted that
the filtration lines at London Pool the old sidewalk in front of the
Is in need of repair. The mayor school will be covered and new
also reported that the fire equipContinued on page 6

checks with Council
ordinances and state laws exist pickup in the village on Monday.
to cover these types of lncld~ts . due to the Columbus Day holiday .
The proper proc'e dure for resi- - -Approved a tentative lime
dents to follow in this type for Trick or Treat, 6 to 7 p.m. on
situation Is to sign a complaint Monday, Oct. 31.
before the mayor and the violator
-Discussed the number of "no
will be cited to mayor's court for shows" among General Relief
punishment if found guilty.
workers assigned to the village.
It was a Iso reported by
-Recessed until 7 p.m. Man·
members of council that com- day, Qct. 17.
plaints have been received on the
Attending the meeti ng were
quality of cable television ser- Mayor Frank Cleland, Councilvice. Councll voted to ask a members Robert Beegle, Henry
representative of the cable com- Bentz, Carroll Teaford, RlchaJ:Il
pany to attend a recessed session Wamsley, Larry Wolfe and Scott
of councll on Oct . 17.
Wolfe; Clerk Jane Beegle, Fire
Councll also conducte the fol- Chief Robert Johnson and Street
lowing other business matters.
Commissioner Glenn Rizer.
-Noted there will be no trash

study ShOWS radon

_
•
h
gas
IS a t real
Panel says schools · _
.
n~~El~N~U~vi~ along Ohio Shale rock formation

hoc state legislative papel says
radioactive decay of uranluD;l,
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!)
Ohio needs to revise Its
and
Is emitted from certain types ·
on
a
rock
formation
Homes
built
regulation of trade and business .
Ohio
Shale,
which
cuts
of
soU,
bedrock, stone and water.
called
the
schools.
The
gas
through
the
state
from
north
to
Is colorless, and odorThe panel members made the
south, may be exposing those tess. When taken Into the lungs,
statement Thursday, after a
residents to radon gas contami- radon can cause cell damage that
hearing
Involving
alleged
nation, a University of Toledo could lead to cancer.
•
Impropriety at such school!;.
..
Harrell
and
Ashok
Kumar,
an
geology
professor
said.
Testimony during the six-hour
associate
professor
of
civil
engiJames
Harrell,
chairman
and
hearing was ci-Itical of private
associate professor of geology, neering, received $37,852 from
schools In Cleveland and other
said
measurements In parts of the Ohio Air Quality DevelopOhio cities .
Erie,
Huron, Franklin, Logan ment Authority to conduct the
Mansfield Frazier, a former
and
Pike
counties found radon research.
teacher at the Cambridge
"We didn't have enough money
concentrations
above the EnvirTechnical Institute's Cleveland
onmental
Protection
Agency's
to
do the entire state. The six
campus, told the panel at least
areas
were selected because they
threshold
.
.
one-quarter of ali students
were
scattered
across the state,"
The high Cl)ncentratlons were
enrolled in his data processing
and .' compuer class were .· found In more than 'halfofthe 222 he said.
homes tested last winter, Harrell
Harrell said high concentra·
fun ctionally Illiterate.
said Thursday .
tlons of radon gas that were
He said when he complained to
The test also lnchJded portions found In thOse areas does not
school officials, he was ,told to
of Ashtabula and Cuyahoga coun· necessarily create a dangerous
pass the students. Frazier also
ties, where the threat was found envlronmept for residents there.
said he was told to teach obsolete
to be less severe. •
mate rial because It was cheaper,
Radon gas !sa byproduct of the
The tests were conducted bethe Cleveland Piain Dealer said.

i'

'

'

'

'Septe01ber
I

Sendn~Correspondent

banquet set Nov. 15

Double pedestal desks, roll-top desks and
secretaries. Assorted finishes.

YOUI CHOICE OF
THESE 2 GlUT mus

the construction Industry remalnep steady.
The1 unemployment report is
adjusted for seasonal varlatlons.
The 5.4 percent jobless rate
last mcinth was the lowest since a
5.3 perpe nt rate in June,

I

Meigs Soil, Water

SALE! DESKS

Reg. $239.00 6-Gun Oak .... sale S179
Reg. $459.00 8-Gun Oak .... Sale $344
Reg. $499.00 8-Gun Oak .... Sale S374
Reg. $629.00 10-Gun Oak ... Sale $471
Rag. $859.00 12-Gun Oalc ... Sale S644

in September.
More thaJt 100,000 of the new
jobs last month - nearly 40 ·
percent- were in state and local
government. That reflected "a
stronger than usual expansion in
public school jobs at the beginning of the new school year," said
Dr. Janet Norwood, the bureau
commissioner.
Private sector employment
increased by 14,0,000 jobs last
month, down sharply from the
300,000 per month average In the
first seven months of 1988, the
departlnent said. In August and
September, private sector job .
creation has averaged 120,000.
Factory and mining jobs fell
slightly last month whlle jobs In

'

FLANNEL SHIRTS .........................
FLANNEL SHIRTS .........................
FLANNEL SHIRTS ..... ;...................
FLANNEL SHIRTS .........................

•

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio, friday, October 7, 1988

Brawley
advisors
subject
of probe·

SALE!

Clear tonight, scat lered
frost, low In mid 30s. Saturday, partly cloudy, highs In
mid 60s.

.

I

PICK--4

A Good Time To Shop At Elb.arfalds With Cooler Weather Hare - With Christmas~~ ~~
Not Far Away and With Special Prices For This Sale - You'll Always Find Quality
Merch-andise at Elbarfelds.
MEN'S

. Pick 4
1129

317.

atur a I
.

854

Page 3

•
,. a and
·.

Daily Number

Lottery numbers

Super Lotto
6, 12, 15, 18, 39 and 44.
Kicker
275565.

~ttery

Ohio

Oakland
takes
•
2.0 lead in
AL ·playoffs

Two will share Ohio Super Lotto award

Also reacting to Qua&gt;&lt;le's comment a bout Kennedy. Sen, Tom
Harkin, D-Iowa. accused ·the
_..,
Indiana senator of trying to
CLEvELAND, Ohio (UP!) "steal our heroes...
Wednesday night's Super Lotto
·"They can steal our programs. drawing produced two winners
They can steal our policies , but · who will share the $9 million
they'd better not try to steal our Jackpot heroes," Harkin said.
Ohio Lottety ofltclals said
Rep. Dennis Eckart, D-Ohlo, holders of the tickets with the
who posed as Quayle tn practice numbers 6, I2. 15, 18. 39 and 44
debates with Bentsen during the can redeem their tickets today to .
weekend, said: "Dan Quayle become ellgtl)le for $225,000 a
tonight had trouble figuring out year for 20 years, before taxes.
which scripted answer went with
Lottery officials said 178 ·
which question."
. . tickets have five numbers, each
Sen. James Exon, D-Neb., . worth $1,000; and 8.515 have four,
said, "DannyQuaylewasanoose making them worth $77.
.
around George Bush's neck. I
One .ticket has the Kicker
think Danny came out the door number, 275565, and It's worth
tonight and left George Bush $100,000. T)lere are 10 tickets with
dangling there."
the first five nwnbers, worth
$5,()()() each; 67 with the flrsttour

'

I

'

tween December and February
when air circulation In 1he home
is low. The high concentrations
were found in basements, which
are hablted less than upstairs
areas, he said ,
j'What we,re reporti ng are
worst cases. In living areas 11 will
be a whole lot less. Typically tn
the winter time it will be about 1
times higher," Ferrell said.

·*

Radon contamination ap.
peared strongest in homes that
have been bullt on exposed or
thinly covered areas of Ohio
Shale, a rock formation that Is
the state's largest geological
source of uran lum.
The formation runs from Erie
County south to the Ohio River
and along Lake Erie from Erl~
County to Ashtabula County
Harrell said the entire Ohio Shal~
outcrop poses a health risk . .

�•

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Mipdleport, Ohio

~:.ro-2;-~:m~~f~

Oakland rallies in ninth inning,.wins '4-:l

Commentary.
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. ~Y~·~O~~~o~~~7~,-19~8-B___·:
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Slreel
. Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVon;D TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

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ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publlsher

'
BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslstant Publlsber/ControUer

General~anager

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the Am~rloan Newspaper Publishers Assoc;latton.

ney

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome .
should be less than 300 words
long. ·All letters are subJect toeditlng and must be slped with name, addreuand
telephone number. No unsignEd letters wut be published. Letters should be In
aood taste, addressing issues, not persooalltles.
f

U. S. pot growers start to export
WASHINGTON- The United
States may be In tile position, for
the first lime ever, of exporting
drugs. High quality marijuana,
much of It grown Illegally on
public lands such as the national
forests, Is ·being shipped out of
the country for sale, according to
law enforcement sources.
Until now, American-grown
marijuana was produced ' by
small operations for domestic
use and supplemented by
· foreign-grown pot. The small
growers are being forced out ol
the business by law enforcement
agents. But larger, organized
criminal outfits are taking their
places and expanding to foreign
markets.
Law enforcement sources In
the Pacific Northwest tell us that

locally grown marijuana Is Increasing)¥ being sold to Cana·
dian dealers because of Its high
quality and potency.
Another wrinkle Is the
marljua~a-lor-cocalne trade.
Some Notlhwest growers swap
marijuana' for Columbian cocaine. The Columbian .dealers
then resell the marijuana at a
profit. The standard trade Is an .
ounce of cocaine lor a pound of
marijuana.
·
Pollee Intelligence reports on
the new marijuana export busl·
ness pinpoint the source of the
crop as southern Oregon and an
area of northern California
known 'In pollee circles as the
Emerald Triangle. It comprises
California's Humbolt, Mendo·
clno and Trinity counties.

By Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta::
The American rnarljuanacrl
lsaSlObllllonlndustry,replaclng
legitimate crops sucli as wheat
and corn as the No.1 cash crop In
some areas. In the Emerald
Triangle, the lilgh-quallty sensl·
milia ~ the female marijuana .
plant which has no seeds· - can
bring an average of $3,500 a
plant. A-typical plot of 100 plants
could be worth $35,000.
Increasingly, gro':"ers are secretly cultivating their crops on
federal land so they can hide
their harvest In unpopulated
areas and protect their private
property . from confiscation If
they are caught.
. One outfit making headway
against the growers Is a five-

·R onald Reagan the campaign untouchable
By HELEN THO~AS
Unlled Press lnlernallqqal
WASHINGTON (UP!) - President Reagan has emerged as the
untouchable In the 1988 presidential campaign.
He can deliver h.arsh attacks on Democratic presidential. aspirant
Michael Dukakis. but Dukakis cannot lay a glove on him with
lmpuf.lty. And when he has, the political retribution was great enough
· ·
to make hlm think twice.
.
So now Reagan has become sacrosanct after being on' the ropes las!
year In the Iran-Contra scandal, uncertain of his fate. The repair job
worked. A caretaker team moved In, and the president was gradually
restored to his vaunted position.
.
. He has emerged as smlllng, ceremonial and rarely is he described
In print without the word "popular" In front of his name.
Early on, Dukakls delivered one body blow at Reagan, In
campaigning against George Bush, when he said that a "fish rots
from the head" down.
It boomeranged because the presl~~nt has entered into that
poUtleal no ,man's land. He can flail o.ut and attack to his heart's
content. But he is not running for public office. He Is not accountable.
He Is home free. He can hit and run. He can go on punching as
Bush's No. l surrogate, and he remains above reproach,
It's an enviable position for any pollticlan to be able to attack
without fear of retaliation. When there were rumors, albeit denied,
that Dukakls had had a breakdown, Reagan quipped: "!don't want to
pick on an Invalid."
He quickly apologized, but faulted for the personal barb. But not
much. Just another one liner from the president who Is given to quips.
Meanwhile, Reagan Is having a ball, delivering his rip-roaring
speeches, attacking Dukakls as "liberal, liberal, liberal" In the
campaign drive to paint the Massachusetts governor as a leftist.
The name calling Is apparently effective. One of Bush's key
advisers conceded It was a nasty campaign, but said, "That's the way
you win."
:Since winning Is everything, es peclally In the case of the highest
office of the land, the pres !dent has It made In hfs free wheellnge!forts
tci perpetuate the Republican hold on the White House.
:So Reagan has become a formidable foe. Resigned that he cannot
run agaln, he Is going all out to see that Bush continues his legacy. In
some w.ays, voters seeing so much of the president on the campaign
trail may be reassured that Reagan policies will remain In effect.
Bush does not want to be a clone of Reagan. He was !hat for eight
year~; as the silent vice president team player, wh.o never deviated
from the company line, at least publicly. Now he hfS a chance to shine
on his own. And to do his own thing.
Reagan Is not the kind of man who will sit on the sidelines sniping at
his successor If he happens to be Bush. Nor wlll he try to second guess
hlm. That won't be necessary since mostofthesameadvlserswill be
around doing the same for Bufh that they did for Reagan.
Bush has bought the conservative Republican platform and he Is
proud to wear the colors of the boss who Is now untouchable.

conservaties face
With Election Day fast ap· !ration would be played out to the
proachlng, conservatives find accompaniment of a loud Greek
themselves on the horns of a chorus of conservative comparticularly painful dilemma. plaints - some quite possible
Wlilchever way the election goes, justified, others merely the rethey are likely to spend the next .sldue of hopes that were prepos·
four years sunk In gloom of one terous from tile start. The usual
sort or another.
lnconsolables would be Inter·
First, assume Dukakls wins. viewed on Page One of The
Having sneaked Into the White Washington · Post every week,
House under the fals pretense of · and quoted by tile yard on Bush's
being some sort of non· numerous shortcomings.
Ideological technocrat, Dukakis
I am not suggesting, however,
(who Is, ·of course, a whole-sould that conservatives are simply
liberal) would nevertheless have difficult to please (thougli they
to try to govern with the help of certainly are). I am pointing out
the Harvard faculty and the
that neither possible outcome of
Boston gorillas like John Sasso this election can conceivably
whose front man he has always
satisfy -what many conservatives
been. Conservatives would opconsider their minimum
pose hlm - and 'rightly - with demands.
every fiber of their beings.
, That Is the penalty every
political movement must pay for
Alternatively, suppose Bush
having had things as much
wins. Having listened to the
own way as conservatism has
Interminable complaints of
had them In the administration of
many conservatives about how
Ronald Reagan. I realize that
Ronald Reagan has disappointed
(even "betraye~") them, can • many conservatives refuse to
consider Reagan's record ·a s
anyone believe that such world·
even a down-paylllent on their
class malcontents would be able
agenda, and would therefore like
to find happiness with George
to argue that it now Is, or at least
Bush?
ought to be,. "their turn." But
Of course not. A Bush admlnls·

Its

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:

such an attitude merely testifies
to Its holder's Ignorance of the
true nature ol politics.
You don't get iwo Ronald
Reagans In a row, much less
Reagan and then some sort ol
Super-Reagan. Really strong
leaders are almost always fol·
lowed by somebody devoted io
~elr "legacy" and pledged to
carry It on, but not designed to
make a comparable splash.
Meaning no disrespect whatever
to George Bush, Lincoln was
succeeded by Andrew Jolmson
and then Ulysses Grant; FDR ·
was succeeded by Harry Tru·
man: all estimable men, but
Inevitably overshadowed by
their great predecessors.
On the other hand, looking at
the brlgbt side, there, wlll be
something lor ·conservatives In
this election nQ matter how It
turns out.
It Bush wins, conservatives
wlll enjoy the gratification of
seeing their ancient enemies, the
liberals, further down and out
than !hey have ever been. In 1984
the Democrats at least noml·
nated an avowed liberal Walter Mondale -and ran on a

person U.S. Forest Service team :;
based In Redding, Call!., led by · '
agent Frank Packwood. Dale ·,
Van Alta recently toured the ·.
Emerald Triangle with Pack- . •
wood by helicopter and tracked •·
likely growing sites In Oregon. •
The emerald-colore'd plants :
were once quite easy to spot In
the forestloliage by agents flying
over In helicopters. But gro:overs : ~
are turning to smaller plots and :,
using camouflage techniques
such ·as nets. Some use portable
gardens planted In bags and
buckets tliat can be moved or
l)ldden In the tree tops II the
growers suspect their area will
be searched..
Armed growers and booby
· traps make the marijuana detail
a dangerous duty for Packwood
and his team. Packwood and a
Bureau of Land Management
agent were tramping through the
forest once when the BLM agent
became tangled In a trip wire
rigged to a shotgun. L ucklly, the
shotgun misfired. A quick search
turned up a second trip wire In
the area where Packwood was
searching.
Packwood's team has logged a
surprising 100 percent conviction
rate on the growers and jail time·
for each one arrested, primarily
because tile team Is careful with
evidence. Arrests often come
only alter the agents have spent
three or four days watching the
patch. The patient agents In :
camouflage paint stake out the '
patches and videotape the grow·
ers before moving In for the
arrest.
The team lias been operating
for several years and seems to
have pushed the little mom and
pop operators out of business.
But larger growers have· taken
up the slack. Hired laborers tend
the gardens allowing tile bosses •
to distance themselves from
criminal activity.

·CANSECO HOMERS - Oakland's Jose Canseco, right, gave
high elbow bumpa with an A's batboy foDowing Ills seven·th·lnnlng
home run In Game 2•of the American League playoffs, played
Thursday nirht In Boston's Fenway Park. The A's came from
behind to win 4-3 and win Ita second playoff game. Game 3 will be
played tomorrow. (UP I)

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Today in history
·

. By Un !ted Press International
Today Is Friday, Oct. 7, the 28lst day bfl988 with 85 to follow.
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its new quarter.
The morning stars are Venus and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
Those.born on this date are under the sign of Libra. They Include
poet Jam~s Whitcomb Riley i~ 1849; Gra.nd Ole Opry star Uncle Dave
Macon In 1870; Henry Wallace, 33rd vice president of the United
$tales and 1948 independent candidate for president, In 1888; actor
Andy Devine In 1905; Danish atomic physicist Niels Bohr In 1885·
singer yaughn Monroe In 1911; actress June Allyson In 1917 rage 71),
and singer AI Martino In 1927 (age 61) .
'
On this date In history:
In 1916, In the most lopsided football game on record, Georgia Tech
humbled Cumberland University 222-0.
In 1963, Bobby Baker resigned as Senate Democratic secretary
alter being charged In a $300,000 civil suit with using his Influence for
personal monetary gains.
In 1977, Maryland Gov. Marvin Mandel was sentenced to four years
In prison on fraud charges and was stripped of his office. .
In 1985, four Palestin.lan terrorists commandeered the Italian
cruise ship Achille Lauro with 511 passengers and crew ~ff Egypt ana
threatened to blow it up unless Israel freed Palestinian prisoners. The
hijackers, who surrendered In Port Said two days later, killed an
American passenger: That same day, a mudsllde In Ponce, Puerto
Rico, killed an estimated'500 people In the Island's worst disaster lhls
century .
A thought for lhe day: Physicist Niels Bohr said, ''The opposite or •
profound truth may well be another profound truth ..·..
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sacnmetllo- ReleaM'd Jorwarclt'errr

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CGIIelf'

ECA.C - Elaied Clayton Chapman
comm!.•ner, eflecllve .lu 1r 30.
IAUM-.tlle - Announced 110Jlhomort
pard Jer_.ae Harmon hat~ withdrawn
!temet~ter.

Fl'letball
Green Bay - Siped llnebat'ker Ron
Simpkin~~; placed IIM!.,..kt'r Burnrll
Dent oalnJurr• reltlrw.
Sail IMep- Pla;edcenu.&gt;rDon Macek
on Injured ret~erw..

Sotcer
SIUIIMep (iM:ISL)- SIP!E'd delf'!IMier
Chrh O!ueden and named Keith " 'rllt'r
••l!illilnt coach.

College ratings
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lnlt'rrat loral •ard of Coar:heA Top ::a

coUeKr tooth all n~t1111'1h wkh reeoniiUid

Anfii'IM, •lrM

This week's games
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Ohio
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Ohio l«'al€' IU Indiana

lbll Shde .lt KeniS&amp;ale
Oblo U•Jv .a Bowll•~a: Grel'n
Weslf'rn !Mh·hlpn at Mi..,l

Nor1her• Dllnelfl at Tolrdo (n) ·
A.rlulnl'lllM Stalf'! at Akron In)
Clneln..Uial Penn &amp;.If'
You~lown
at Nurltlclulern (M~&amp;~~tol

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Moullt Union IIIII Bahtwln ·WidiKc P (n)
Ohlu Norlhernlllt C!lpK!II
HPidelber~al Mar~tM.

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t\'ltifonherl( al Oltf'rheln in)
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Dc•llaru'i' W Hanll\'l'r Ond l
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hn l'lU'roll ai ·

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Extended Auatd lUck)'

Plen.:e's cortlract flfOUI h 18!1·12 tteu•n;
:-.lprd Drll-r ound dnft plckJf'!IIGrayer,
11 J:IIU'd. and center Rand) Breurr to

NEW YORK !UPI)

Nf'w Ju~~ey M Q.ebH. niP~
NV Ran1rr11 at st. Lcnl1, •I&amp;bt
O.lcap at br•o. nl. .
Detnll at Vaaouver, alpt

platform that was defiantly lib- •.
era!, right down to the candl·
date's blunt pledge to raise taxes.
shrank )(
In 1988 the Democrats
.
tlielr platform to 3,500 meaning- ..
less words and nominated a ,
socalled "technocrat" who Is •
doing his best to conceal his
liberalism. If not even that
works, what next?·
On the other hand, If Dukakls
wins, It Is not too much to say that .
American conservatism will '
come Into Its own again. Defend- ,
lng an administration Is a · lot
liarder than attacking one, as
conservatives have ruefully :
come to realize. The conserva- ·~
live movement Is superbly ~
equipped to analyze a Dukakls
administration's defects and flay ::
It maercilessly. Even the tired ..
mailing lists would revive In the ;
backlash of conservative outrange. Bush of all, a whole new
generation of conservative leaders - Armstrong, Bennett, du
Pont, Hodel, McCain, Quayle and
many others - would step
forward to lead the attack.
It we dldn' t have to put the
country's Interests first, It would
almost be worth It!

Baliebail
nrd MlliMaer .Jimmy
Snyder, pitchln~~: C'O&amp;rh Billy ('(lnnors.
bilt1n1 lnltruclor Ftanll. Howard and
ftnl bue t:OII~h Howlr &amp;~1.
Bulltlhltll
Detrok - Slped .-rd llllah Thomas
to an fl.,ear('onlraci.
lnclana - Sl ped flrst•round draft pld:
Rlk Smlla, a ctnler, ~ Michael
A.ndrr!Win, Troy l.ewiM and Richard
Mol1oa. and forwardM Jar,.,!! ,Buiiii!Jhl,
aid ~rbert L"rook. , ,
L.A. Lalien - Slpd forward Ton)'
Seattle -

ttom claue" lor die 1.111

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st. Loals M. Mlnnuota
NY bla.deut, ca~..,,4, de
Loa 1\nplet~ 8, lk!trul&amp;!
Whalll~l !, Vanmuver t, tlf
Frkta.J'• Gamet~
Ptl&amp;!lbara;hat Wlllhlacton. 7:35p.m.
N\' hlancler• at Edmonlon. 1:35 p.m .
Sal..-dQ'I Oams
ao.aoa ~ Rardold,

Tram~ actions

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W L T Ph. GF GA

Mlnntt~Gta

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ELIZABETH CITY, N.C.
(NEA) -Only the frogs' croak·
ing and the crickets' chirping
break the absolute silence on
remote, seldom traveled State
Road 1336 In North Carolina's
sparsely populated coast!!Y
lowlands.
But the tranqulllty of the
autumn afternoon Is interrupted
by a loud esploslon at Harve)!
Point, an Isolated promotory 1'B
miles southwest of Elizabeth
City.
"Window-rattling explosions
thunder In the early morning
hours. Flares sometimes
brighten the night skies," one
area newspaper reported a decade ago. "Civilian and mllltary
buses, some with their windows
blacked out, rol)' down tile country road to Harvey Point."
Single- and twin-engine llgt
aircraft, helicopters and some- ·
times even big military transports fly Into a private airstrip at
Harvey Point. Other planes can· .
not even come close, because the
Federal Aviation Administration
has placed the airspace above
Harvey Point off limits to virtually all flights.
What Is going on at Harvey
Point? Why have those explosions oecured regu Jar ly for more
thim a quarter of a century? ,
What transpires behind the c haln
link fence top)l'!d with barbed
wire that surrounds the 1,200acre slte'l
Only a few clues 11re available
at t.he end of the lonely road. A
re\,1; white and blue mailbox has

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wl th Navy markings and what .
appears to be a portable power
generator toward the CIA base.
Those familiar with the actlvl·
ties at Harvey Point say the
training tliere covers not only
defensive counter-measures but
also offensive sabotage.

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z·unranlif:d
Othrrs recelvln.~a: votes: ('olorado.
Duke, H!llw•ll. Hou•on , lndlaaa, Louis ..
ana Stale. Penn K&amp;ah•, Pllllthurah.
Rull(t'l"r;, Sy racu~~r IUJd WWihl n«tonSht.IP.

District hails RGC _p layer
Lisa Schmeltzer, a 5·4 senior
middle hitter for the Rio Grande
· Colleges volleyball team, lias
been named Volleyball Player of
tile Week [Sept. 26-0ct. 2) for
NAlA District 22.
Schmeltzer. a physical education major frorrl Lancaster,
helped 't he Redwomen ·to a 4-0
week as IIley upped their overall
record during the weelito 14-6.
Schmeltzer hammered 19 kills
in 39 attempts and posted a .333
attack Iiercentage. She added
nine solo blocks, two block
assists, five service aces and
committed one service reception
error in 51 attempts.
Rio Grande won eight of nine
games that week. The Redwomen defeated Ohio Dominican in
tliree games and then swept past,
Urbana. Salem and Shawnee
State.

Bombings in the pines_______,__R_o_be_rt_W&lt;_a_lte_rs
"US GWMT" stencilled on it. A Involve cars and trucks. "They
nondescript guardliouse Is come In whole and they go out all
flanked by a weatherbeaten sign . blowed up- alltore apart," says
that proclaims the facility to be one local resident who watches
the ''Harvey Point Defense Test· the dally flow of traffic to and
from Harvey Point.
lng Activity."
Indeed, as he speaks a large
In fact, Harvey Point Is a
clandestine Central Intelligence flatbed truck rumbles down the
. Agency base used by the CIA to road, carrying a jeep, a sedan
conduct advanced paramllltary
training, wltli special emphasis
placed on tile handling of explosives and munitions.
But the CIA Is uneasy about
using munitions and explosives
In that Increasingly urbanized
·area. Indeed,'two popular tourist
attractions visited by millions of
people every year - Gardens are within a few miles of Camp
Peary.
Thus, the CIA has used Harvey
Point as ·· the eqylvalent of a
"graduate school" where power·
ful explosives and heavy weapons can be used In a more rural
setting. "If you were going Into
paramilitary operations, · you
went to Harvey Point after Camp
Peary," says former CIA con·
tract employee Joe Maggio.
One of the few official (albeit
Indirect) acknowledgments of
Harvey Point's mission came
during the 1970s, In the, report of a
federal government commission
established to examine tile work
of the CIA. It referred to "an
Isolated agency facility ln,North
Carolina" that provided "a capability for detecting, handling and
disarming all types of explosive
devices."
Mucli of tliat work appears to

Wllmln&amp;ton a1 lJrhn- denote!l nlpt JtUfll'

a, Unled Pres1lnier •tlo..l
NATIONAL HOCK£1' LEAGUE
Wall'$ Collfertnce
P•hfl'k Dllf'-kln
WLTPu.GFGA.

'

Oakland .
The next tliree contests will be
played in Oakland. Game 3 Is
scheduled for 8 p.m . EDT with
Mlde Boddicker opposing Bob
Welch of tile A's. The Red Sox are
winless in six games at the
Coliseum this season. They have
lost .14 of their I5 games at
Oakla!ld .
Only two teams have re·
bounded from 0-2 deficits since
the ALCS began In 1969. In 1982 ,
Milwaukee fought back against
California In a five-game series
and In 1985, Kansas City defeated
Toronto In a best-of-seven series.
Boslon tied the score 3-3 In the
seventh wh'en Rlrh Gedman
greeted Greg Cadaret by lining a
home ~un Into the right-field
seats.
The home run was only the
second by the Red Sox this year
against Oakland and their first at
Fenway Park.

Cadaret, who yielded two liomers during the regular season,
had relieved starter Storm Davis, who allowed two unearned
runs and two hits, but was tiring.
Oakland had taken a 3-2lead In
the top of the Inning on a two· run
homer by Jose Canseco and an
RBI single by McGwlre off
Clemens.
Canseco, who did not homer
during the regular season at
Fenway , bias ted his second oft he
playoffs to lie the score 2·2. Dave
Henderson, whose error lielped
Boston score two unearned runs
In the sixth, led of! with a single.
Canseco, 'the major league
leader In home runs this season
with 42, then belted a waist-high
0·2 fastball Into the left-field
screen.
Dave Parker reaclied on a
bloop single and was erased at
second
a close Ioree play .
Clemens balked Carney Lans-

on

OU visits BG

1.1

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
Ohio University, which
snapped an 18-game Mid·
American Conference losing
streak a weekagowltha win over
Toledo, remains the only Buckeye State team with more than a
glimmer of a chance for the MAC
football title .
· The Bobcats, 1-3 overall, are
l-0 In the conference and tied ·
with Central Michigan for fourth
place. Ball State at 3·0 leads the
pack, with both Western Michigan and Eastern Michigan at 2-0.
Ohio's other four· 'contenders''
..,. Toledo, Kent State, Miami and
Bowling Green - ali have at
least two conference defeats and
are solidly entrenched In the
second division . •
OU, the pre-season cliolce for
Its fourth consecutive last-place
finish, visits BG Saturday and
mus.t be considered the favorite
based on performances so far.
Bowling Green, which lost
starting quarterback Rich
Dackin in last week's 37-lOlossat
Western Michigan, Is 0-5 (0·3 in
the MAC) and been pretty much
handled In each of Its games. The
Falcons have been outscored
216-51 in losses to West Virginia,
Bali State, Texas Christian,
Toledo and WMU.
"It felt good to win, but we' re a
long way from where we want to
be as a team, " said OU Coach
Cleve Bryant. ".A wlh doesn't
make a season, but it's awfully
sweet to be l-0 In the MAC."
Despite the Bobcat win and tile
problems BG Is having, Bryant Is
wary of the Falcons, who might
draw additional Incentive from
homecoming.
"Bowling Greeh Is a scary
football team for us," said
Bryant. "They have a lot of
talent. There skilled people are
as good as anyone's."

Mt~MJlEBOF BALL STATE TEW- Worthlagtoa Hlsh School
graduate Toby Beerle Is a member of the Ball Slate University
Cardinals football team where he plays defensive end. He Is
pictured here with Coach Paul Schudel, wlio was I'D assistant
coach for Bo Schembecler at the University of Michigan. Toby was
one of two fresliman players wlio lettered last year. Be was a
heavily recruited player In the MAC Conference. Last week, In the
Cardinals' game against Miami University, Toby !W)ked the
quarterback for a fifteen yard loSB, winning 45·I41or a 4-0 record
thls year. Toby Is !he son of Ted and Linda Crow Beegle, fonnerly
of Pomeroy, and he Is tile g,randson of Loretta Beegle, Pomeroy,
and of Fred Crow, Syracuse.

BRAKES
ULOW AS

$39 95 FRONT $37 75 REAR
OTHERS SLIGHTY HIGHER

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 145-91111)
·A Dlvllllon ol Multimedia, Inc.

Published every afternoon, Monday
throogb Friday , 111 Courl St., Po· ·•
r?eroy. Ohio. by the Ohio VaiJey Pub. .U•hlpg Company/ Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Se·
corld class postage pald-ilt"'Pomeroy,
Ohio.

·,

POS'IMASTER: Send address changes
to The DaUy Sentinel, Ill Court St.,
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gne

ELECTRONIC ENGINE ANALYSIS
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available.

Mall S.bacrlptloM
Iaskle Meigs County

VAUGHAN'S AUTO &amp; DIESEL
IIPAII '.

~~Weeks ........ ................... ..... .. $19.24

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SUBSCRIPTION KATES
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ROTORS TURNED EXTRA

1247 O!urch St.

CINCINNATI' !UP!)
Tile:·
Cincinnati Reds have released
Dave Concepclo.n after 19 years
with the team.
The 40-year·old Concepcion
says he was told Tuesday not to
reportto spring training camp on ·
a tryout basis. Concepcion says ,
he was given the clioice of
announclnk his retirement or ·
receiving a release. He chose tile '•
release. ·
Concepcion told The Cincinnati ·
Enquirer lie will try to sign with ·
another team for the 1989 season.·'
Concepcion h&amp;d his worst season
In the majors this year. hitting ·:
.198, compared with his Reds
ca~eer average of .267.
•
. &lt;Con-cepcion said General Man-· ·
ager Murray Cook told him
Tuesday "he would not need my ·,
services In spring training. "
•'
But the captain of the Reds
since 1983 said he Isn't ready to·:
retire from baseball.
''1 want to play for any other ·
team in the Nalional League·:
West," he told 1the Enquirer :
Thursday wlien contacted al Ills
home In Maracay , Venezuela."! ·
want to play I against Murray
Cook and PeteiRose. I am not old.:&lt;
I am not too old like. they say.

New York, New York 10017.

.

52 Weeks ........ .......................... $37.96
~eeks ........ ....... ...... ... ......... , $7!1.36
OUtside Melp County
13 Weeks.. ............................ 120.80
2~ Weeks .... ........... ..... ........ ..:: .$40.30
5 Weeks .......... :...................... 175.40

•·
•

LISA SCHMELTZER

Final racing event ·postponed

.

pARKERSBURG - THe final
day of super,late model stock car
racing In the World Race of
Cliamplons at West Virginia
Motor Speedway has been post·
poned because of rain.
A third consolation race will be
added and the lOO·lap feature will
be run as originally set on
Saturday ,Oct.ober 15; the same

'

weekend as Pennsboro. WVMS
will race In the eveningPennsboro qualifications are In
the afternoon-with WVMS gates
opening at noon and Limited Late
Model Action starling a 7:30.
Tickets already purchased will
be honored with all new tickets
set at $25 for the $30,000 to win
event.

On the versatile 2.S cu·. in. ,
Stlhl OUT ch.Jin saw. petfect
for trimming and wood cutting. '

Professional quality. with high ·
power·to-welght ratio. Quick·stop""
Chain Brake for safe operation.

With l~"bar and chain.

DINNER FOR FOUR
LARGE 11" S·ITEM PIZZA

,. With Papf*ani. IMI•g.. Mushl'ooms. .
OnioM ando,... P•'*'

P.LUS 4 · t6
'•

•

Wost

St.

Lilnittd hti..ry

992·2U4

$9. 9

POIEIIW
STOlE OllllY

DINNER POR TWO

Lunch lpecl•l

AllY 111 • 2 ITill f'IZZA
PLUS 2 • 16 oz. SotldrinkS

12" 1 ITDI PIZZA
PLUS 2 · 16 oz. Softdrloks

. -$6.17
.....

.'

Aroa

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POIIUG'I'
STOll o•lY

11 •-1 .- s-.n..,
11 •.J aM fri.-111.

Sllhl products "e sold only thro._b servicing

UD

$4.99
......
..

POIDIO't

incredibly low

POMEROY HOME AND

Li.tncll Onlv·11 AM ·1 PM

STOIEOIIIll

dealers. Nothing works as hard as a SUhJ.

So put one to work for you today at these

11 Al ·l Ml s.a-n.n.
11 •o~
fri.·lel.

•

'

600 EASt IUIN STIEO

.
'

'-----------....i------------1·:
POMEIOY, OHIO 45769

\

,.

a

Member: United Press International
Inland Dally Press Assodatlon and the
Ohio Newspaper Associati on. National
Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 73J Third Avenue,

FALL SPECIALS

Tonight's games
SEOAL Games
Athens at Gallipolis
Warren at Jackson
Logan at Marietta
SVACGames
North Gallla at Hannan T:ace
Southwestern at Eastern.
Oak Hill at Kyger Creek
Symmes Valley at Southern
TVC Games
Meigs at Vinton County
Wellston at Nelsonville-York
Trimble at Miller
Wahama at Federal -Hocking
Otliers
Milton at Pt. Pleasant
C9al Grove at Chesakeape
Hurricane at Huntington High

ford to second, but Hassey .
blooped out , to third . Clemens
threw &lt;a wlld.pltch on an 0·2 count •
to McGwire, allowing Lansford ·
to reach tlilrd. McGwire · then .
ripped a t'i e-breaklng single to
:.
.
left on 3-2 pitch.
Davis walked five batters In .
the first six Innings, and two of :
them scored. The right-hander :
may have been distracted In the .
sixth wlien a fan ran onto the field :
will! two out and a 2-2 count on ·
Dwight Evans.
After a delay of about one :
'-minute, Davis walked Evans and •
then Mike Greenwell. Jim Rice :
lilt a sinking liner to center that :
Henderson dropped, allowing ·
Evans to score. Ellis Burks :
stroked an opposite field single ·
past first to score Greenwell.
Davis threw a wild pitch, :
permitting Burks to take second, ·
but Rice hesitated at third and :
the Red Sox missed a potential :
third run.

Dave Concepcion
released ~y Reds

for MAC tilt

Scoreboard ...
Nli.L results

By JOE D..LUZZI
•
UPI Sports Writer
BOSTON (UPI)- Wall Weiss,
known primarily .f or Ills defense,
singled home Ron Hassey from
third base with · two out In the
ninth . inning Thursday night ,
lifting the Oal\land Athletk:s to a
4-3 victory over the Boston Red
Sox and a 2-0 lead in the
American League playoffs.
Hassey singled with one out In
the ninlh off loser Lee Smith, and
Mark McGwlre flied out to center
belpre Tony Phillips singled to
right, ·sending Hassey .to third.
Weiss, a shortstop who Is among
the favorites lor AL Rookie of the
Year, lined an 0-2 pitch to center
to make a winner of Gene Nelson,
the third Oakland pitcher.
Dennis Eckersley pitched the
ninth for his second save of the
series. Oakland has defeated
Boston's top starters, Bruce
Hurst and Roger Clemens, to
take a commanding lead back to

•

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel-Page- S

Eastern, ~outhem to play
home.SVAC contests. tonight /
'

By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel News Staff

Both Eastern and Southern
'return . home this evening for
SVAC matches as Eastern hosts
Southwestern and Southern hosts
league contender Symmes Valley for homecoming.
Both Meigs County teams are
winless this season, but have
shown considerable lmprovemenllhroughout the campaign.

NR
capsules

FIRST-PLACE TEAM - The Middleport
Midgets claimed first place in the Middleport
Midget League. Team members are Tonya
Phalln, Stacy Stewart, Brandi Meadowo, Raeni

EllS PLAYER OF THE
WEEK - Eastern's senior
runnin, back and defensive
backfield specialist Jay Reynolds wao named ao the
"Player of the Week" for last
week's outstanding performance against Symmes Val·
ley. Reynolds gave a spirited
effort and was one of the key
tacklers for the Eagles.

Wood, ,Cindy Hawkins, Stephanie Stewart, Karen
Moody, Laura Penorwood, Sara Rollllh, AprU
Halley, Jill Burch, Robin add Coach Bill Moody.
1

,

By United Press International
·
Sunday, Ocl. 9
New York Jets (3-1-1) at Clncin·
nail Bengals (5-n;
Favorite - Clnclnnall bY 6.
.Turl - Artificial:
Jels coach Joe Walton- ''The
Bengals are scary. TheY can
score from anyplace im the field.
This Is going to be the biggesltes t
for our team to dale."
Bengals·coacll Sam Wyche"We're jnto a _new era. We can't
gear up for big games anymore.
The big games are us."
Jets of!ense- 2nd best in AFC
with 1,834 yards; 1,141 p!!_Sslng ·
and 692 rushing. Cofiil!t off
AFC-season high 542 . yards last
week against Chiefs, Including
NFL·season best 272 rushing
yards. QB Ken O'Brien leading
AFC In completion percentage
with 61.4. TE Mickey Shuler
leads AFC with 30 receptions.
Bengals defense - Rated 4th
worst In NFL in yardage surrendered, 1,835, but has been tough
in clutch. Wyche says this is case
where statistics are misleading
and credits defense with provid4 of 5 wins. '

Southern "hung tough" last • The Viklngs,however, have the
week against North Gallia on the ability to explode offensively so
Pirates' own turf and offensively SHS must contain the open field
has begun to move the ball wllh and thus the big play , .
soine consistency In its last two
Returning to lhe more comforoutlngs.
table confines of home, Eastern
The line has been doing a much should put up a tough fight
better job of protecting Its against the Highlanders.
. backfield, problem that lingered
Against incredible odds. howearly In the season.
ever, SWHS and Coach Jack
Mark Porter was the "Player James havt! put together a greal
of the Week" last week as 3-2 season, a surprise dark horse.
linebacker and QB of the Torna· ' contender In the SVAC race. AI·
does. At EasternChrlsLanceand . though Smallln number SWHS Is
Jay Reynolds have earned the big in character, something the
most recent honors.
young Eagles themselves must
Should Southern gain enough develop and neutralize In Its
psyche from Its homecoming and .,., opposition.
do the basics well, II could prove
Both games begin at 7:30.
to Ire tough on the VIkings.

.----...1.~~~~~a!!!n~dL_C~h~uJ"'~c:!_h~~~!l::lil.~~~L.R!!!,v_1The Interested "flw&lt;~inesses Listed On This Page.
{M,j
TEAfO~D
SWISHER &amp; l.OHsE
-c) Vetenms
11S E. Mtmoriol Dr.
992 :2104

Nationwide Ins. Co .
of Columbus. 0 .
8CM W. Mdin
992·2311 Pomeroy

2 PI•• af Chrr Gal. . D..-Prltd Chldl.. S.nd With fr••dl frl• or -htd htlltott
•IIIIHI. . . . GNYy •II Y..r CMi• of ............ (ol.taw, IIM•.N s.ta4 Potato
Salall or lalctd • • •ul • 11M ..tttnd loll or ....... adeliscult with lon.,.

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Stylt st.-, Sila_.td hi a hlldeWI 11...-adt Whitt Gravy Sauct,
Sernd With ....... Potatoet •d . . . . . . . Gnwy, ............. Green ...,. With
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lot 1oo.., lo S.lootlt.,otl).

Syracuse

-- -

NEW HOURS: Monday thru Su;,day 10 A .M. to 9 P.M.

ffii'IGREGATIONAL QIDRCII,
Sur&gt;:ioY ~hoci Su!L Oturch Schod ~15 a.m.;
TRJNrrY

:: Z•\il

WOl"Shlp 8ervice 10: 00 a.m. OJ.olr rehearsal.
Thesday, 7:]) p.m . urder direction of Lois

iKrrhaugi(n nf (!Ifrr!it~r

Bw1.

POMEROY CHURCH OF WE NAZA·

RENE , Correr Union and Mulb?rry, Rev.
1bomas Glm McClt,~~. 1D5lcr. Nonnan Pres-

RESTAURANT

ley. S. S.

SUit., SuriiiiY School, ~ll a.m.;
morring "uslip lO:.ll a.m.; evertlngservlce6
p.m.; mid-week sen.n. Wedne:!l:tay, 7 p.m.
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH, :1'16 E.
Main St.; Pomeroy. Su""&gt;Y """"""'' Holy
conununlonon the 1lrst'Sur.iay ofeachmordt,
and comttned with moning prayer on the

CHESRR

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRiliT, 212 W.

Mrun St., Leu Lash, evanwilst. Bllie SchOO
9f:J) a,m.;-Morringworshlp, lO:l'la.m,; Youth

Evening worship, 7:00p.
m. Wemesday night prayermeetlngandEitie

~ings.6:00p. m.;

stll.ly. 7:00p.m.
'I1IE SALVATION ARMY, U"i Butternut .
Ave., Pornl'f'O'/, Mrs. Dlra Wining In charge.
Surxii\Y OOU.ness meeting, 10 a.m.; SUnday
SchOO, lit. l) a.m. SuRJay Sctloci. VPSM ·
Eloise Adams. leader. 7::1l p.m. Salvation
meeting various s~akm; and muslcsp!dals.
Thul'!ld&lt;w. 11: ll a.m to 2 p.m. Ladies Home
League, members In charge, all wunen
Invited; 6:45 p.m. Thunda;y, O:.r~ Cadet
aasss ( You~ ~pe.BiHe),· 7::11 p.m. Bible
Stuiy and Prayer meeting, opm to til:! pwtlc

POMEROY WESTSIDE QIDRCII OF

CHRIST, l1Z!&amp;Qlll-'sllome Road (C&lt;lurry
Road 7ti). 9!fJ.5235. V~al music. Surday Wor·
shlp 10a.m.; BilieSIIIIY n a.m; Worship. 6p.
m. Wednelday, BlbleStu:ty, 7 p.m.
OLD DEX'rnR BIBLE CHRISTIAN

SPfCTACUlAR

1983 CHEVEnE ...................... S169S
1981 "MERCURY

S169S

1983 AMC RELIANCE •••••••••••••• S1 09 S

s,rl•l &amp;I••" Noun
OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY

1978 CHRYSLER CORDOBA •• S99S
1976 CHEVEnE ........................ S69S
2 dr. Rune and looks good. Auto.
•

19 78 CADILLAC ELDORADO •••• S119 S

Looks and runa good.

CHURCH. Alvin C\rt~,' past"' Linda Swan,

•

RIGGS USED ,CAll

CIIS'III

G~AHAM

.

UNfrED METHODIST.

Preaching 9:30a . m. fir st and second Sundays ot each month; third and fourth Sun·
day each month worsh.ip services at 7: 30p.
m.; Wednesday evenings at 7:30 p.m.
Prayer and Bible Study.

SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST. Mul·

berry Heights Road, Pomeroy. Pastor Bob
Snyder: Sabbath School Superintendent,
Darline Stewart. Sabbath School begins at
2 p.m. on Saturday afternoon with worship
serv!C£' following at 3:00 p.m. Everyone
welrome.

••

RUTLAND FIRST BAP11ST CHURCH

- Sister Harriett Warner. Su pt . Sunday
School9:30 a.m.; Mo rn ing ~orsh\p,l0:45
a.m .
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Lystoo
Halley, minister; Saturday evening
eva ng elistic serv ices, open to public, 7 p,
m.; Sunday Chuoch School, 9: 30 a. m.;
Morning Worship 10: 30 a .-m.

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. Po·

meroy Pike. E . Lamar O'Bryant, pastor;
J ack Needs, Sunday School Director. Sunday School. 9: 30a.m.: Morning Worship.
1U: 45; evening worship, 7: O(l p.m. {D.S.T.l
&amp; 7.:30 (E.S.T.l; Wednesday Praye r Ser·
vice, 7:00p.m . (O.S.T. l &amp;7: 30P.M . (E.S.
T . l; Mission Friends (ages 2-61, Royal
Ambassadors {boys ages 6·18), and Girls
In Action (age; 6·18) on Wednesdays, 7 p.
m . (D.S.T. )&amp;7 :JOp.m, (E .S.T. l;Tuesday
Vislta11on. 6:30 p.m.
.

IMPROVEMENT
EDITION

FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH. Bai-

lev Run Road, Rev. Emmett Rawson, pas·
t o'r. Handley Dunn, supt. Sunday Schod,
10 a.m.; Sun~ay even ing service, 7:30p.m,
; Bible teaching, 7: 30p. m. Thursday.
SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherry St., Syracuse. Ma rk Morrow. pastor. Servtces,10
a.m. Sunday . Evening services Sunday
and Wrd.nesday ai 7:00p. m.

IN THE

MIDDLEPORT ~HURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHRIST!AI'I UNION. Dwight Haley,

Daily Sentinel
October 17, 1988
RESERVE YOUR AD SPACE

NOW!

·992-21 .·5·6
ASK FOR
BRIAN OR DAVE

fi rst elder: Wanda Mohl er. Sunday School
Supt. Sundav Schod 9::1) a .m.; Morning
Worship to: .io a.m.; Evf'n!ng Worshlp7::ll

p.m.; Wednesday prayer meetlng7: 30 p.m.

MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD.

··.~

Radnc. Rev. JameS Satterfield, pastor.
Freeman Williams, Sup!. Sunday School
9:45 a.tn.: Sunday and Wednesday even!ng services. 7 p.m ..1

MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST.

Corn er Sixth and Palmer. James Seddon,
P as tor. Edna Wl!stii, S.S. Supt. ; Cathy
Riggs, Asst. Supt. Sunday School , 9:15 a.
m .; Morning Worship, 10:15a.m.; Sunday
Evening service, 7 p.m. Prayer meellng
and Sible Study Wednesday evening, 7 p.
m .; Childr en's choir practice, Wednesday. 7 p.m.: Adult choir praCtice. Wed., 8
p.m .; Radio program, WMPO, Sunday,

8:30a m """

.

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST.

5th and Main, AI Hartson. minister:
Richard DuBose, Associate PastOr; MIK~
Gerlach, Sunday School Superlntendenl.
Bible School 9:30a.m.; Morning Worship
10:30 a.m . Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday, 7: 00p.m. Prayer meetlnK.

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NA ·

ZARENE, PASTOR Fred PenhorwoOO .
Bill White, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
School9: 30 a.m.; Mornlng...Worship 10:45
a .m.; Evangelisllc meeting 7:00 p.m .
Wednesday, 7:00p.m. Prayer mcellng.

UN'rrED I'RESIIYTERlAN MINILSTRY
OF MEIGS COUNTY
·
Rev. O'Qulan Kelly
HARRISONVILLE PREsBYTERIAN

CHURCH - Sunday: Worship Service&gt;
9:00a.m.; Church SchoollO: 15 a.m ..

MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN -

AM-II PM
SATURDAY 9 AM-1 Pl\'l

GRAVELY
SYSTEM

day

AND

I

~THE

Su(i Surday Scltool9:ll a.m.; preacblng..,..
vices, flr&gt;t and tblrd »ln:~i&lt;; followingSuriiiiY
SchOO. Youth meeting. 7::tl p.m. every Sun-

FALL

WINTER

.......

-AD DEADUNE
OCTOBER 1.1, 1988

John F. f Ultl, Mgr.
Ph. 992-2101

Rawlings~Coats·Btower

.
~'

992-3785, Pomeroy

Sunday School, 9 a.m. ; Church service,
11: 15 a.m.

SYRACUSE FffiST UNITED PRESBY·

TERJAN - Sunday ·School, 10 a.m.:
Church scrvlce,10;15 a.m .
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD , Pastir,
John Evans. Sunday SchoollO:OO a.m.;
Sun!ia}t MornlnK Worship ll :OOa .m. Chll·
dreil's Church 11 a.m. Sunday Evening
service 7:00 p.m.... _Wed., 6 p.m. Young La·
dies' Au.xlltary. wednesday, 7 p.m. FamUy Worship.

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. Off

Rt. 124, 3 rnlles from Portland-Long Bottern. Edsel Hart, pastor. Sunday Schod,
9:30 a.m.; Sun~y morning preaching
10:30 a.m .: Sunday evening services, 7:30
p.m.

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST

CHURCH, Corner Ash and Plum. Noel
Hernnann, pastor. Sunday School10: OOa .
m . ; Morning Worship, 11:00 4\.m.; Wedneeday and Saturday Eventna: Services at
7:30p.m.

APPLE GROVE UNITED METHO·

DIST CHURCH - Pastor, Rev. Carl
Hicks. 10 miles abOve Ractne on Rt. 388.
Sunday S&lt;:bool. 9 a.m., worship service 10
a.m. Sunday evening service, 7 p.m.;
Prayer meeting and Bible Study Wednes·
day, 7 p.m.

MT. Ol.!VE UNITED METHODIST-

Off 124, behind Wilkesville. Char if'S Jones,
pa.&amp;tor. Sunday School, 9:30a.m.; morning
worship, 10: 30; Sunday and Thuuday
· evening services, 7:00p.m.
~

MEIGS

FUNERAL HOME

,

UN:k~~I]:Wo':.f.r~~RCH
NORTHEt\ST CLUSTER
Rev. DDa .4.rcher
Rev.Ro~Deeiet'

LET'S HELP
UVES
THEY WOULD HAVE GIVEN
We send the members of our armed services
Into battle in unavoidable situations, knowing
with sad beans that many of them will not
rerum home. there are, however, others who
will, for although they have risked their lives for
us they did manage to survive; even though in
some cases with permanent disabilities. Let us
never forget what we owe them for what they
have done for us. We must give them every
possible advantage in the way of job oppor· .
tunltles, housing, educ:;ation and all the things
they will need In order to resume their place
in our society. We should also thank the Lord at
our House of Worship for their safe rerum,
and pray for their future well-being. It Is
incum_b ent_upon us to do whatever we can to
help them reconstruct their lives, which they
were prepared to sacrifice for the preservation
of our freedom.

Rev. Oar I Hlelul
Rev. Seldon .Jobason
ALFRED- Church Scllool9:30 a.m.:
WQrshlp, lla.m.; UMYF6:30p.m.; UMW
Third Tuesday, 7:30 p.m . Communion,
tlrst Sunday: {Archer)

ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy·
Harrlsmvllle Rd. Robert Purtell, minister; Stev,e Stanley, S. S. Supt.; BlllMcEI·
roy, Asst. Supt. ; Sunday School 9:30a.m,;
Worship service 10:30 a.m.: Evenlngworship Sunday 7 p.m. and-Wednesday, 7 p.m.

SchooltOa.m.; BlbleStudy, Thursday, 7p.
m.; UMW, Urst Thursday, 1 p.m.; Communl()n, tlrst Sunday (Archer) .

Grove. The Rev. William Middleswarth,
pastor. Church service 9:30 a. .m. ; Sunday
Sehool10:30 a.m.

CHESTER - Worslllp 9 a.m.: Church

JOPPA- Worship 9:30a.m. ; Church

"Serving Families"
21&gt;4 S. 2nd, Middleport

ST. JOHN LUTI!ERAN CHURCH, Pine

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. Rev. Earl
Shuler. pastor. Worship service, 9:30a.m.
Sunday SchooJ 10: 3CJ a.m. Bible Study and
prayer service Thursday, 7:30p.m.

CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION-

AL CHURCH, Kingsbury Road. Rev.
Clyde W. Henderson. pastor. Sunday
School 9: 30a .m.; Ralph Carl, Supt. Even·
lng worship 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting,
Wednesday 7:00 p~
LONG" BOTTOM
ISTIAN, Vernon
Eldridge, pastor: Wal ce Damewood, S.
S. Supt. Sunday School9: 30a.m.; Worship
Service, 10:30 a .m.

Ed Roush. Sunday School Supt. Sunday
School 9: 30a .m.; morning worship and
children's church 10:30 a.m.; evening
preaching service first three Sundays,
7: 30p.m.; Special service lounh Sunday
evening, 7: 3Q p.m.: Wednesday Prayer
Meeting, Bible Study and Youth Fellow-

ship. 7:30p.m.
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY .
Localed on 0. J . White Road of Highway
160. Pat Hensm. pastor. Sunday Sehool10
a.m. Classes for all ages. JunlorChurch 11
a.m. : Morning worship 11 a .m. Adult
Choir practice 6 p.m . Sunday. Young People's, Children's Church and Adult Bibl e
Stu.dy, Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.

HOPE BAPTIST Cj!APEL, 570 Grant

St., Middleport. Aftlliated with Southern
Baptist Convention. David Bryan, Sr., Ml·
nister. Sunday School 10 a .m. ; Morning
worship 11 a.m.; Evening worship 7 p.m.;
Wednesday evening Bible study and
prayer meeting? p.m .

REAlTOR

FRANCIS FLORIST
Couru y'-" Olch·-•t Flori&amp;t
352 EAST MAIN
POMEROY. OHIO 45789
614 / 992-2644
.

]J..

00!
,
t.,,.., ALLS'~.,o. ~_.

iVlS.QUICKEL .•''"''•
AGENCY INC. . ~

-

,.....

~-·-,..

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

-·

Bill Quickel and Ruth Ann Fox

(row's Family Restaur111t
"FUIM!Ins Kt~frlekg Flltd c•~tlru"
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

•

992-5432

992-514.1

786 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

lH

\lt• iJ(-'~

106 lutttrnut Ave., Pomtfay, Oh:

....... • 992-2975

Pomerov

oK&amp;:.
~~~.RS
.

·Rev. Richard Freeman, plstor. llo/bl1e a.ck.

SHS PLAYER OF THE
WEEK - Southern's senior
qiJ!U'terback Mark Porter was
named Player of the Week for
the Southern Tornadoes in last
week's battle with North Gallia. Porter not only ran the ·
SHS offense well, but was a
leading factor defensively in
holding the potent North Gallia attack.

did Nelsonville-York (score un- above them. The While Falcons are
reported) and Trimble (36-15). The currently locked 'in a tie with Van
MASON, W.Va. - ''They're a lone victory for Federal Hocking for the fifth position behind
time bomb ready to explode," ac- was a 31-14 triumph over league Pineville, Peterstown, Win County
and Tyler County. The Bend Area:
cording to Wahama High School foe Miller.
The
Lancers
finished
the
1987
Jearn is one of eight unbeaten Class
heat! football coach Donnie VanMeter in describing the Federal campaign with a 1-9 mark with just A teams and one of 18 unbeaten
Hocking Lancers who will provide three seniors graduating from that squads in all three classes in the
the opposition for the fifth-ranked squad which gives the Falcon op- ·state.
ponents a great deal of experience
The locals continue to dominate
Bend Area team on Friday·night.
The conlesl will he the. final leg for the current season. Dave Kal- their opponents by averaging 32.0
of a three road swing for the While terhenrich is in his second year as points per game while limiting the
Falcons as the second half of the the coach of the Lancers and has opposition to .l0.4 points per con1988 grid season gets underway. some 14 Ieucnnen on this years test. Seniors Rick Keams, Chris
WHS has captured five consecutive_ team. Three year starter Shane Jewell, S~ Oibbs and Chris
victories in ·as many tries but have Burchwell (5-9, 155 senior) is back Noble are the sllitistic leaders with
struggled in as many as three of at quarterback while sophomore Keams and Gibbs pacing the While
those wins yet still remain un- running sensation Randy Shufol'(! Falcon offense and Jewell and
bealen.
·
(5-11, 180) also returns following Noble doing the same for the Bend
an
impressive freshman season. Area defensive 11.
"Our luck is running out as far as
comebacks arc concerned commen- Senior Iackie Jerry Proffitt (6-5, · Kearns has scored 38 points on
ted VanMeter. We can't continue to 230) and senior center Dave six touchdowns and a two-point
get behind early and still come England (5-10,199) anchor the conversion while rushing for 466
away with a victory." Wahama Lancers line while junior slarters yards in 72 carries for a 6.4 per
needed a number of goal line stands Craig Jarvis (5-6, 150) and Rick carry ave~e. Jewell has totaled 30
to defeal .Liberty Raleigh in the Fuller (5-6, !52) join Shuford and points on five touchdowns while
season opener and pulled off a Burchwell in the backfield.
picking up 410 yards in 61 attempts
miracle finish with a 45-yard
"Federal Hacking has good . per- for an average of 6.7 yards per uy.
touchdown pass in the final minute sane! and decent size," said Van- · Quarterback Sean Gibbs has comto beat Ravenswood two weeks ago Meter. Shuford wiU pose a double pleled' 22 of 45 passes on the
before rallying from a 22-7 second threat with his running ability and season for 488 yards and four
quarler deficit for a win over Vin- the halfback option pass. They can touchdowns wilh senior flanker
son last week.
run and they can throw the foolball Billy Zuspan owninZ' six catches
102 yards and
three
"Federal Hocking is a dangerous so we will have 10 prepare our · for
opponent," said VanMeter. "We've defense accordingly."
touchdowns.
Defensive leaders center around
. scouted them three·. times and they
Wahama, despite its win over
locals
dynamic
inside
look as if they could explode at any previously unbeaten Vinson last the
t. moment. So far it hasn' t happened week,failed to advance in the laleSt linebacker pair of Noble and Jewell
and I hope they don't (detona~) West Virginia Secondary Schools while tackles Dave ,Sigman and
come Friday night. We'll be in for a Activity Commission's Class A Mike Harbour have also played
tough enough outing as it is. rankings but did manage to close important roles in lhc Falcons early
They've had some tough luck and the gap somewhat on the Jeams season success.
have played an extremely tough
schedule. We'll have to play like
we did for the last two and one half
Q IILECI'IOIIS
quarters at Vinson in order to beat
them," added the third-year \YHS
OSAVIIIGS
grid mentor.
The Lancers currently own a disappointing 1-5 record' competing as
the. smallest school in the Tri-Valley Athletic conference. Federal
4 dr .• auto. Good condition.
Hocking dropped a non-league 1312 'decision 10 Kyger Creek in its
GRAND MARQUIS ......
season opener before losing to
PB, PS . Air.
Belpre by a 6-0 margin. Belpre incidently is the third ranked school
in Region Four in the Ohio srate
4 Speed
ratings picture. Vinton County han• de4 the Lancers a 12-0 setback as
~.'?.r,

ft')
\ill, 1\

REA~TY

992-3325 .

· (6141992-2039 or ·
(614)992-5721

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.

'~
· ------------~------------~

By Gary Clark

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy. OH.

MEIGS TIRE
~ \ CENT£~ INC.

,

nu~

992·3978

White Falcons on road.again

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES lk SERVICE

,,

FLOWERS FOI IVERY OCU!MlN

GRAVELY TRAClOR SALES

"'

thin:l Surrlo:Jy. Morning prayer and sermon on
all ether Suniays of tte month. Olurch Sct\00
and Nursery care provided O&gt;tfee hour tn ti'E
Parlsb Hall mmed!attly followlngtheseiVice.

FORMER PLAYER OF
THE WEEK - Eastern's
Chris Lance, not previously
pictured, bas been Easlerri's
Player of the Week lor the past
two weeks .for his ouistandlng
effort in the backfield and for
catching key passes
'offensively,

I

....-=-.

RACINE PLANING MILL · Mill WorkCabinet Making ~~~~

SUNDAY, OaOBER 9TH
COUNTRY STYLE STEAK DINNER ..........,........ $4.2 9

WE Gl\IE SENIOR Cl-1'17i:i.

Pome'Og Flowe~ Shop

214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

FRIDAY, oaoaER 7TH
2 PC. CIICIIEN DINNER ............ :................... $3.09

985·3132

INSURAN&amp;E
SERVICES

992-2156
•

Pomerov

Brogan-Warner

ARE JUMPING
WITH BARGAINS

- I

.

216 S. Second
Pomeroy

GroceriesGeneral Merchandise
Racine 949·2550

Prescriptions

992-2955

WANT ADS

This Week's Specials

IOUTE 7

Pomeror

••
'

••

~~!~! r~1

. Memorial 'Hospital

..•

(\\\;{( Srrctl .Q3.,.,~,
93 MHI !;trottt
Middleport. Ohio 4&amp;780 ·
(814) 992-8867 -1998-00KSI

CHURCH SUPPLIES &amp; BIBLES
fourth Sundays worShip service at 2:30 p.
~

MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth and
Main St. , Middleport . Rev. Gilbert Craig,
Jr., pastor. Mrs. Ervin Baumgardner,
Sunday School Supt. Sunday Scbool9: 30a .
m.: Worship Service, 10:45 a.m. ·

.
...·

...
:•
-....~
.. .,..
: ":

SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST . :.

-Joseph B. Hoskins, evangelist. Sunday .• •
Bible Study 9 a .m.; Worsh1p,10 a .ln.; Sun· ....:•
day evening service 6 p.m.: · Wednesday .. •
evening service, 7 p.m.
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY , Rarine, •
Rt . 124. WI! \lam Hoback, pastor. Sunday '
School10 a.m.: Sunday evening service 7 '·
p.m. Wednesday evening service 7 p.m. , •
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle, ..
St.lpt. Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Morning ' 1
Worship 10:30 a .m. Prayer service, altern· ' '
ate Sundays.
, ,

THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST,

BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, St.

APOSTOLIC FAITH- New Lima Rd., '¥~
next to Fort Meigs Park, Rutland. Robert "'
Richards, pastor. Services at 7 p.m. on
Wednesdays and Sundays.
.
'

ST.

TER of the Wesleyan Holiness Church . ... ..
Rev. David Ferrell, pastor. Henry Eblin, · .•
su-nday School Supt.; Sunday Schoei 10 a. ,..·
m.; Morning Worship 11 a.m. ; Evening -..
service 7:30p.m. Wednesday evening ser- "
vice 7:30p.m.

Rt. 124 and Co. Rd. 5. Scott Stewart, pas·
tor. William Amberger, S. S. Supt.; Sunday School 9:30 a.m.; Morning Worship
, 10:30 a .m .; Evening worship 7: 30 p.m .
Wednesday worship 7:30p.m.

PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,

Corner Sycamore and Second Sts., Po-

HARRISONVILLE HOUNESS CHAP- ··,

BRADBURY CHURCH /)F CHRIST,
meroy. The Rev . William Mlddle&gt;wart ,
Tom Runyon, pastor. Sunday Schad 9: 30
pastor. Sunday Schod 9:45a .m. Church
STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH.
a.m.; Larry Haynes, S. S. Supt. Morning
service 11 a .m.
Gary Holter, pastor. Sunday services 9: 30
worship 10:30 a.m.
SACRED HEART CHURCH. Msgr.
a.m. and 7 p_. m.: Midweek service, 7:30 p. ,
RACINE CHURCH OF TifE NAZA·
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH. Anthony Glannamore. Ph. 992-5898. Saturm. Thursday.
RENE,Rev.LloydD. Grlmm,Jr., pastoc.
0. H. Cart, pastcr. Sunday School at 9: 30a . day Evening Mass 7:30 p.m.; Sunday
Ora Bass, Chairman of the Board of Chris·
m.; Morning worshiP' at 10: 30 a.m.; Sun· 1 Mass, 8 a.m. and 10 a .m. Confessions one
MIDDLEPORT PEkTECOSTAL, Third ' .
tlan Life. Sunday School9: JO a.m.; Morn·
halt hour before each Mass. ceo classes,
Ave. Rev. Clark Baker, pastor. Carl Not- .,,,_
day evening sefvlceat 7:30p.m. Thursday
lng •worship to: 30 a .m.; evangeliStic ser11 a.m. Sunday.
services at 7:30p.m.
tlngham, Sunday School Supt. Sunday _1
vice 7:00p.m. Wednesday serv1ce, 7 p.m.
VICI'ORY BAPTIST. 525 N. 2nd St., School10 a.m. with classes for ali ages. ,_ •
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
TUPPERS PLAII'IS ST. PAUL - . LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH. O.x- Knob. located on County Road 31. Rev. Middleport . James E. Keesee, pastcr.
Evening services at 6 p.m. Wednesday Bi- - ; •
Church School 9 a.m.; Worship 10 a .m.;
ter. Woody Cali, pastor. Services Sunday
Sunday morning worship 10 a .m.; EvenRoger Willford, pastor. Sund'a y School
ble study at 7:30p.m. Youth services f'rt- "','
10 a.m. and 7 p.m . Wednesday. 7 p.m.
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. ; CommuIng service 7 p.m .; Wednesday evening
9;30 a.m.; Morning Worshi 10:45 a.m.;
day al 7:30p.m.
.. I
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH.
nlon First Sunday ·(Archer ) ,
worship 7 p.m. VIsitation ThursdaY 6:30 p.
Sunday evening worship 7:00p.m.; Wed·
ECCLES
lA FELLOWSHIP, 128 Mill St..
.
CENTRAL CLUSTER
Lloyd Sayre, Supt. Sunday School9: 30 a .
m.
nesday evening Bible Study 7:00p.m.
Middleport . Brorher Chuck McPherson, ,' lj
Rev. Melvlll Fruklln
m.; morning worship 10:30 a .m. Sunday
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: David
WHITE'S CHAPEL WESLEY AN
pastor. Sunday School 10 a .m. ; Sunday
Rev. Clemente S. Zunlca. dr.
evt-ning service 7 p.m.
Curfman, pastor. Sunday School, 10 a .m.;
CHURCH- Coolville RD. Rev. Phillip Rl·
evening services at 7 p.m. and Wednesday •
worship service 11 a.m.; Sunday night
Rev. Do• MeadowA
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Steve
denour, pastor. Sunday School 9:· 30 a .m. ;
services at 7 p.m.
;
ASBURY (Syracuse) -Worshlpll a. m.
Deaver, Pastor. Mike Swiger, Sunday
worship service 10:30 a.m. ; Bible study worship service 7:30 p.m.; Midweek
ANTJQUrTY BAPTIST. Kenneth Smith,
prayer SE'rvlce Wednesday 7 p.m.
: C~urch SChool9:45 a.m.: Charge Bible
School Supt.; Sunday School 9:30a .m.;
and worship service, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
pastor. Sunday School 9:30a.m.: church :·
Study, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.; UMW. first
Mornlflg worship 10:40 a.m.: Sunday
WESLEY AN BIBLE HOUNESS
HUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST,
service 7: 30 ~.m .; youth lellowshlp6: 30p. -- .. •
Tuesday, 1:30 p.m.; Choir Rehearsal,
evening worship 7:30 p.Q'l.: Wednesday
CHURCH ot Middleport, Inc., 75 Pearl St.,
Bill Carter, pastor. Sunday School9:30 a.
m.; 8\blestudy, Thursday , 7:30p.m.
' '
evening Bible study 7:30 p.m.
Wl!dnesday 6:30p.m.
m .; Morning Worship and Communion Rev. Ivan Myers, pastor; Roger Manley,
F1JLL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE. 33045 .
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m.:
BURllNGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Sr., Sunday School Supt. Sunday School
10: 30a.m.
Hiland Road, Pomeroy. tom Kelly. pas· · •
Church SchoollO a.m.; Bible Study, Tues- · , Burlingham. Ray LaudermUt, past&lt;r. RoRUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amos 9:30a.m.: Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.;
tor. Danny Lambert, S. S. Supt. Sunday
day, 7:00p.m.; UMW. First Monday, 7: 30
bert Cozan, assistant J:SSUr. Sund~ Schad
morning servlct&gt; at 10 a.m.; Sunday even. _•., 1
Tillis. pastor. Sonny Hudsoo. supt. Sunday Evening Worship 7: 30 p.m. Wednesday
p.m.; UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m. Choir Rr·
10 a.m.: wrrshlp 7 p.m.; Wednesday, 6 p.m.
School 9:30a .m .; Morning worship, 10: 30 evening Bible study, prayer and praise
!ng serviC@ _7: J(J p.m. Tuesday and Thursservice. 7:30p.m.
hearsal, ChUdren's at 6:30p.m . Adu~ lol·
youth meeting; Wed, 7 p.m. churchsf;'IV!ces.
a .m .: Sunday evening service 7:00p.m.
day Services at 7:30p.m.
lowing; Wednesday. !FrankllnJ
PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH, 1,6
Wednesday service 7 p.m. WMPO· pr~r
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
FLATWOODS- Church School, 10a .m.
mUeoHRt. 325. Rev . Ben J. Watts. past cr.
gram 9·a.m. each Sunday .
ZARENE. Rev. Glendon Strood, pastCI'.
OF GOD - Gilbert Spencer. past a-. Sun; Worship, 11 a.m.; Bible Study, Thurs.
Robert Searles. S.S. Supt. Sunday School
RUTLAND CHURCI\ OF THE NAZA· day School 9:30 a .m ,; Morning service Sunday School9: 30a.m. ; Worship service,
day, ,7 p.m.; UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m.
9: 30a .m.; Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.;
.RENE . Samuel Basye, pastor. Sunday
10:30 a .m .; Youth service Sunday 6:15 p, ,
10: ooa.m .; Sunday evening servlce7:00 p.
(Franklin) .
Sunday evening servic t&gt; 7: 30p.m.; WedSchool9:30 a .m.; Worship service 10:30 a.
m. Sunday evening service 7: 00p.m . Wed ·
m.; Mld·week prayE-r service Wednesday
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a.m.;
nesday service, 7: 30p.m.
m. ; Young people's service 6 p.m.
nesday Prayer Meeting a nd Bible Study ·..
7p.m.
Chun:h School 10 A.M. : Choir practice,
SILVER RUN BAPTlST, Bill Little,
Evangelistic serviceS: 30 p.m. Wednesday
MT. OLIVE FULL GOSFEL COMMUN- 7: 00p.m.
pastor. Steve Little, S. S. Sup\. Sunday
Thursday, 6: 30p.m.; UMW third Monday.
service 7 p.m.
.
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH. Sun·
ITY CHURCH. Lawrence Bush, pastc;r.
HEATH 1Middleport) -Church School,
SchoollO a.m.; Morning worslp. 1~ a .m.: .
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller Max,Folmer, Sr., S. S. Supt. Sunday School day afternoqn services at 2 :30. Thursday ..,.1
Sunday evening worship 7:30p.m. Prayer .. St., Mason, W.Va. Sunday Bibl e Study 10
9:30 a.m.; Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.;
evening services at 7:30. ·
9:30 a .m .; Sunday evening service. 7: 30.
Youth Group, 4 p.m.; Wednesday, Bible
meellng and Bible study Wednesday, 7: 30
a .m.; Worship 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednes·
It). ; Wednesday evening Bible study and
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Mas&lt;Jl, W. '·,
study 6:00p.m. Choir rehearsal 7:00p.m.
p.m. : Youth meeting Wednesday at 7 p.m.
dliy Bibl e Study. vocal music. 7 p.m.
Va. Pastor, Bill Murphy . Sunday School10
ptalse service, 7: 30p.m.
,
I Zuniga)
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
LIBERTY- ASSEMBLY OF GOO, Dud·
UNITED FAITH CHURCH, Rt. 7on P~­ a.m.; Sunday evening 7:30p.m . Prayer
MINERSVILLE- Church School9:00
- 383 N. 2nd Ave ., Middleport. Sunday
ding Lane, Mason, wt.."\'a. J . N. Thacker, . meroyBy-Pass. Rev. David Wiseman, St. ,
meeting and Bible study WednesdiiY· 7: ;JJ
a .m.: Worship service' 10:00 a.m.: UMW
School 10 a.m. Sunday evening 7:00p.m.;
pastor. Evening service 7:30 p.m .: Wop.m. Everyone welcome .
pastor. Melvin Drake, S. S. Supt. Sunday
third Wednesday, 1 p. m.
Mld-wt&gt;ek service. Wed., 7 p.m.
men's Ministry , Thursda y, 9:30 a.m. ;
School9: 30 a.m.; Morning Worship 10:30;
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST. Sa. 1
PEARL CHAPEL - Worship Service
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH,
Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7: 15
lern St. Rev. Paul Taylor, pastor. Sunday
Evening Worship 7:30p.m.; Wednesday
Sunday School 9:30 a .m.; Dallas Janey,
9:30a.m.; Church SC'hool10: 15 a.m.
SchoollO a. m.; Sunday evening 7:00p.m.;
p.m.
Prayer Service. 7 :30p.m.
POMEROY- Church School. 9:15a.m.
supt.; Morning worship 10:30 a.m.; SunFAITH BAPTIST CHURCH. Railroad Wednesd ay evening prayer meeting 7:00
HARTFORD
CHURCII
OF
CHRIST
IN
; Worship I0: 3CJ a.m.; Choir rehearsal
day evening service, 7:30p.m.: Wednes·
p.m.
St., Mason. Sunday Schad 10 a.m.; Morn·
CHRISTIAN UNION. Hartlord, W. Va.
day evening service, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. ; UMW, second
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT .. ,
tng worship 11 a .m .; Evening SE.&gt;rvlce 6 p.
Rev .· David McManis, pastor. Olurch
Tuesday, 7: 30p.m.; UMYFSunday, Gp.m,
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NACHURCH, Silver Ridge. Duane Syden·
m. Prayer meeting and Bibl e &amp;,tudy WedSchool 9:30a.m.; Sunday morning ser·
!Meadows)
ZARENE . Rev. Glenn McMillan, pas t tr.
strlcker, pasta-. Sunday School 9 a.m.:
nesday, 7 p.m.
vice, 11 a.m .; Sunday evening service,
ROCK SPRINGS- Church School, 9: 15 . Mary Janice Lavender, Sunday School
FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rev. !'lyle Worship Service, 10 a.m.: Sunday evening
7: 30p.m. Wednesday prayer meellng, 7:30
a.m.; Worship 10a.m.; BlbleStu.dy, Wed·
Supt . Sunday School. 9:30a. m.: Morning
Borden, past~r. Cornelius Bunch, supt. · service, 7:00 p.m . Wednesday night Bible
p.m.
t.
worship 10; 3CJ a .m.; EvangeUsllc service,
nesday, 7:30 p.m.; UMYF {Seniors), Sunst udy 7:00p.m.
Sunday SchOol 9: 30_ a .m.; Second and
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHuRCH, Letart ,
day, 6 p.m.; (Juniors) every other SunGp.m .; PrayerandPrai.seWednesday,7 p.
W. Va ., Rt . 1, James Lewis, pastor. Worday. 6 p.m. {Franklin) .
m .; Youth meetlng, 7 p.m.
.
s hip services 9:30a.m .: Sunday SchoQlll
RUTLAND- Church School. iO a.m.:
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
a.m.; Evening worship 7: 30p.m. Tuesday
Worship, 11 a .m.; UMW First Monday,
CHRIST, Elden R. Blake, pa~tor . Sunday
cottage prayer meeting and Bible Study
7:30p.m .
SchoollO a.m.; ·Gary Reed, Lay leader.
9: 30 a.m.; Worship service, Wednesday
SALEM CENTER- Chu.rch Schoot9: 15
Morning sermon, 11 a.ry-~.; Sunday nigh I
7: 30p.m.
a.m.: Worship 10:15p.m .
services: Christian Endeavor 7:30p.m.,
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH.
SNOWVILLE - Worship, 9:00 a.m.:
Song service 8 p.m. Preachtng8:30 p.m.
Walnut and Henry Sis., Ravenswood. W.
Mid· week prayer meeting, Wednesday , 7
church school9: 45 a.m.
Va. The Rev . George C. Weirick, pastor.
SOtrniERN CLUSTER
p.m .
Sunday SChool9: 30 a .m.; Sunday worship
Rev. Debl Footer
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAI'I. J;log· 11 a.m.
Rev. Ro1er Grace
er Watsoo, pastor. Crensa1 Prall , Sunday
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, located on
A LAND WITHOUT GOD
BETHANY- Worship, 9 a .m.; Church
School Supt. Morning Worsh'p 9:30a.m.;
Pomeroy Pike, County Road 25 nesr Flat·
School,10a.m. ; Bible Study, Wednesday,
Sunday Schoo110:30 a .m.; Evening ser·
woods. Rl!v . Blackwood, pasta-. Services
Many countries of our world deny God. They will not let the people
10 a.m.; Dorcas Women's Fellowship,
Vice. 7:30p.m.
on Sunday at 10:30a .m. and 7:30p. m. with
worshiP Htm. You can see little evidence in these countries that God
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Donald Shu~,
Wednesday, 11 a.m. (Fosten .
Sunday School9: 30a.m. Bible Study, Wed·
exists at all. If you would go there·you would lind rich es a plenly . Wealth
CARMEL - Church School 9:30 a.srn.;
past or; Joe N. S&lt;Jyre, Sunday School Supt.
nesday, 7:30p.m.
Worship, 10:45 a.m. Second and Fourth
Sunday School 9: 45 a .m.; Evening WOl'· 1 FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
untold could be yourg just for your going there to live.
Sundays; Fellowship dinner .with Suttoo
ship 6:30 p.m.; Prayer Meeting, 6:30p.m.
I would not choose to live there. To live In a country without God would
CHRIST. St. Rt. 338, Antlqutly. Rev.
third Thursday, 6: 30p.m . (Foster).
Wednesday.
Franklin Dickens. pastor. Sunday mom·
be a bleak exlstance. It would be a country without much joy or
MORNING STAR- Church School9:45
TUPPERS .PLA!I'IS CHURCH OF lng 10 a.m .; Sunday evening 7:lJ p.m.
happiness and I'm certain, few smiles. A country without God is not my
a.m.; Worship 10:30 a.m.; Blb1e Study,
CHRIST. Dave Prentice, minister . Oer yl
Thuf9day even ins 7:30 p.m.
·
.
Idea of a place fU to live and bring up a famlly . It would not he a good
Thur5day, 7: 30p.m. (Foster),
Wells, Supt. Church SChoo19 a.m.l WorMIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLI '
place to do businesS. Would not this be a place where it is every {Tlan for
SUTTON- Church School, B:30 a.m.;
ship Service, 9 :45p.m.
NESS CHURCH, Inc .. 75 Pearl St. Rev.
'
himself?
Would
concern
for
others,
honesty,
and
clean
ethics
be
found
tn
Mor-ntngWorshlpl0:4~a.m.firstandthlrd
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
Ivan Myers, acting pastor; Roger Manley,
a
town
or
community
or
country
without
God.
I
think
not
Sundays; Fellowship dinner with Carmel
RENE . Rev. Herbert Grate, pastor.
Sr., Sunday School Superintendent. Sun·
America Is a land where God can he found. Stllllfwe look around don't
Frank Rilne. supt. Sunday School9: 30 a.
third Thursday. 6:30 p.m . (Foster) .
day School 9:30 a.m.; Morning worship
we see towns and areas where God Is not easily found . Aren't there
EAST LETART- ClJurch Scholi 9a.m.;
m. ; Worship service, 11 a .m. and 7 p.m.
10:30 a.m.; evening worship 7:30 p.m.;
Worship 10 a.m. seoond and fourth SunSunday. Wednesday, 7 p.m. P'rayer meetmany businesses and business people who consider God/ service to
WedneSday e:venlng Bible study, prayer
days; UMW first Tuesday, 7: :K) p.m.
lng. •·
·
customers and honesty something that hasllltle to do with their place of
and praise .service, 7: 30p.m.
(Grace) .
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS·
business or community. Shoddy merchan!ilse. a qu.tck sale and money
LETAR,T FALLS - Worship 9 a.m.;
CHURCH. William Williams, pastor: RoTOLIC- VanZandt and Ward Rd. Elder
In a pocket is too often the case. I would not choose lo do business there
Church School10 a.in, ~race)'. ·
bert E. Barton, Director of Christian Edu•
James Miller, past(J". Sunday Schact,
"
nor
to Uve ln a community such as this. This sbnply shows that God ls not
RACINE - Chureh School, 10 a.m.; Wor·
cation; Steve Eblin, assistant. Sunday
•
10: 30a .m.; WorlhlpService,Sunday,7 :.X.
welcome. Without God, any community will slowly sUp Into crbne, evil
ship 11 a.m.; UMW fourth Monday at 7: lip.
SChool 9:30 a.m.: Morning worship 10:30
p.m.; Bible Sludy, Wednesday, 7: 30p.m.
and
U(lliness.
It
wlll
be
a
communlly
or
town
thalls
on
the
decline.
It
will
m.; Men's Prayer Breald&amp;lt. WednE!Ida;y,8
a.m.; Teens In Action, 6 p.m. ; Evening
CALVARY PILGRII&gt;! CHAPEL, Harrl·
no more be a place of clean and neat buslnesees, happy smltlng faces
WorshJp, 7:00p.m. Choir practice 8 p.m.
a.m. (Grace).
soovllle Road. Rev. Victor Roush. putor:
and quallty merchandise. It wilt become a place of "Buyer Beware''.
KENO CHURCH Of' CHRlST, Ro(l'er
Sunday. Wednesday evening prayer and
Cllntm Faulk, Sunday SChool SUpt.; Sun·
No, I would not choose to Uve lhere.lf God were not found In the lives
Spring, mlnlster; Oliver Swain, Sunday
Biblestudy.
day School9: 30a.m.; momln&amp; wocship,ll
School Supt. Preaching 9; 30 a .m. each
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
•
of tts people, I would feel out or place. I would be talking to myself. I
a.m.; Sunday evening service 7: 30 p.m.
Sunday.
Charles Russell Sr., mlnliter. Rick MePrayer Meetln1, Wednetday, 7: 30p.m.
would have Uttle In common wllh them. Without God, what would your
HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
comber, supt. Sunday Sc~ool 9::11 a .m.;
SYRACVSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOO.
Ute be like and what would you become? I want to be where God Is found
CHRISTIAN UNION. Therm Durham,
Worship service 10:30 a .m. Bible study,
non-Pentecostal. Worshlp,servlce Sunday
and
the people know·Him and love Him. I know then that In Ihat town or
pastor. Sunday service, 9:3U a.m.; evenTuesday, 7:30p.m.
10 a.m.; Sunday Schad 11 a.m. Evening
communlty,
a(lls well. See you al worship each Lords Day. - Putor
lng servlc~ 7:00p.m. Prayer meeting,
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
worsl'llp servtce 7: 00 p.m. Wednesday
WOllam
Mlddleowortb,
Melp County Lutheraas.
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS. PortWednesday, 7: 00 p,m.
prayer meeting 7:00p.m.
•
School10: 30 a.m. Bible Study Wednesday,
7:30p.m. {Johnsoo).
LONG BOTTOM- Church School9:30
a.m.; Worship 10:30 a.m .; Bible Study,
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.: UMYF Wednes·
day, 6:00p.m.: .Communion First Sunday
ot Month (Hicks) .
· REEDSVILLE- ·c hurch School9: JO a.
rn. : Worship Service 11:00 a.m. (Deeter ) .

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Sermonette

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...

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••

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BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF · land·Roclne Road. Mike Duhl,

• CHRIST, Joseph B. Hoskins, pastor. Bible
Class, 9:30a.m.; MorningWorshlpiD:lOa .
m.; Evening Worship, 6: 30p.m. Thunday
BlbleStudy, 6. 30 p.m.

pastor;

Jantce Danner, church schod director.
Churchschool9: 30a.m.; Mornlngworshlp
10: 30 a.m d Wednesday evening prayer
services, 7:30 P·!"·

.!

MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN

'

TN CHRIST CHURCH, Located in Texas
Community oft Ct. Rt. 82. Rev . Robert
sanders, pastor. Jelf Holter, lolly Ieeder;

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Paua 6-lhe

Ohio

Sentinel

-Local news briefs__,

Syracuse.~·-===:..::.=~---Continued from page 1

Leaders propose changes

sldE&gt;walks laid. The work and
Attending were Mayor
·
Pickens,
Jaqlce Lawson, ciE&gt;rk·
Girl Scout leaders from Big tions sold, lotaltroop sales, total
costs of the proposed project w111 treasurer, Minter FryE&gt;r, Hill,
Bend East SE&gt;rvlcE&gt; Unit proposed number of girls who participated
be the responsibility 01 the Sisson, Kenny Buckley and Ka·
changes In display rules for the 1n the sale and the top seller In the
Southern Local Board of EdPuTcOa· tbryn Crow, co!1flcll members
Fred Priddy, of Happy Hollow Road, the Rutland area, was
· ·
lion and the Syracuse
,
Meigs County Fair when they troop.
and ConnollY.
arrested Wednesday evening by federal authorities and
d
If
scouts
want
to
participate
In
Sisson
state
.
met Thursday evening at the
charged with possession of drugs, according to David Shroyer,
Council discussed the cleaning .
ChE&gt;stE&gt;r Fire Station. The meet· the annual contest to select a day
Assistant U.S. Attorney General, Columbus.
tng was conducted by Shirley camp patch for 1989, the deadline
of ditches and Sisson suggested if
Veteran Memorial
Priddy is in jalllp Columbus where he Is scheduled to appear
Cogar, sE&gt;rvlce unit director, with for turning lh patch Ideas to
possible a man be hired .by the
Thursday Admissions - Lois
today before a magistrate, at which time bond should be set.
troop leaders from Racine, Syra· Council Is Dec. l5.
village;" one day a week, Satur·
Pauley, Pomeroy; Decker Cui·
The search warrant for the Priddy home was executed by the
cuse and Chester.
It was reported that Joyce
day, to help with the project .
!urns, Pomeroy; Glenn Lawson,
Internal Revenue Service, Shroyer said.
Among suggested changes In · Sisson, Syracuse, will serVE&gt; as
Pollee Chief Jim Connolly
Reedsville; Cnarles Dill Sr.,
No other details of the Incident were available.
reported .that a curfew Is now In
Pomeroy.
ralr rules was the addition of this year's cookie sale chairman
effect and that all children under
Ro
another display category for the for the Service Unit.
Thursday Discharges ·
ff
th
be
the age of 18 must
o
e
K lie J
talr only - The World of Girl
It W' as also announced that the
bert Je~&lt;".rs, JamE&gt;s
PI k e y , o·
Scouting-'- and the selection of a Area Ill meet ing for leadE&gt;rs will . streets at 9 p.m.
.
6t · sephRI ·r, Mary c ens. ·
obe
31f
0
Councll .set ct
r . rom o ·
grand and reserve champion, be held Oct. 29 In Sistersville,
Meigs County Emergency Medical Servl~es reports loll! calls
and ari honorable mE&gt;ntlon, for W.Va., and age IE&gt;vel training
Thursday; Syracuse at3: 01 p.m. to ~witts Run Road !orl'am
7'p.m. as trlck ·ortdreatbnlggl)ltwlnthd
the siren to soun to e n a
""""'
the best Individual displays in the · sessions for leaders will be held
Pierce to Holzer Medical Center; Bashan and Racine Fire
end activities.
,
A marriage licE&gt;nse has been
different age IE&gt;vels of scouting. this Thursday, 6 p.m., at VE&gt;teDepartments at 3:29 p.m. to a chimney !Ire at the Freda
Council agreed to send -letters Issued In Meigs County Probate
Suggested changes must be dis· rans Memorial Hospital, with
Carpenter residence on County Road 31; Rutland at 8:47p.m. to
Dee
Lawence,
Girl
Scout
field
,
•
of
appreciation.to those Involved Court to Todd LanE&gt; Bissell, 26,
cussed
with'
reprE&gt;sentatlves
County Road 1 for Beulah Perry _to O'Bie~ess Memorial
director,
Athens.
In
widening the highway In thE&gt; I..,ong Bottom, and Diana Marie
from
Big
Bend
West
Service
Unit
Hospital; Pomeroy at 11: 48 p.m. to Lmcoln He1ghts for Sherr!
Cogar
Issued
a
reminder
that
upper
end of Sy!"cuse.
Simpson, 19, RaCine.
before
they
can
be
presented
to
Davis to Holzer Medical Center.
· the fair board and incorporated trooplE&gt;aders In the Southern and
Into the rules for the 1989 fair.
Easlern School Districts, and
stateme~l
It was reported that QSP anyone who may be Interested In
magazine sales must be turned In working In scouting should call
RaclneVillageCouncllreports $41,761.66;' state highway,
MEIGS COUNTY FAIIGIOUIIDS, Pomeroy, Oh.
to Black Diamond Girl Scout Cogar at 992-2668.
a balance of all funds, as of the $3,639.78; · water revenue,
Council by Nov. 21. Information
The next serviCE&gt; unit meeting
end of September, of $148,263.93 . $49,620.73; cemetery, $4,131.53;
which must be turned In to Cogar will be held Nov. 3 at the
A breakdown of the various water deposits, $3,644.05; ·ceme·
by the next serviCE&gt; unit meeting Syracuse United ME&gt;thodlst
Dealers Wanted ·- Buyers Wanted
budgets which comprise the total tery endowment, $6,500.
includes the number of subscrlp· Church.
·
Come One • Come AU. Reeaoneble Se~-up Rates - ·
includes the following.
Village receipts for September
GE&gt;neral Fund. $22,742 .1S; amounted to $6,599.14 wb!le ex Indoor Spece - Outdoor Space
.
street fund, 816,223.99; fire fund . • pe!'dltures totaled $7,079.05.
For Information Call 304-422·•U69 or 742-2112

· Fridl!y. October 7, 1988

Beat of the Bend

Priddy charged with possession

Hospital news

EMS has four calls Thursday

LI"cen.U. issued

'.

FLEA MARKO

Racine Council financial

OCT. 7-8·9 ~ NOV. 4·.5·6

Meigs County Court news

Fire department report released

Johnnie Keith Harrison, 33, thE&gt;astern Ohio, . Gallipolis,
Minersville Hill, Pomeroy, has against Bart A. Pearson, Middle·
Pomeroy Fire Chief Danny firE's , and one search and rescue
been sentenced by Meigs County port, and Burnie Ross, Pomeroy.
An entry confirming sale and
Zirkle reports that his unit ca ll.
Common Pleas Judge Charles H.
Two alarms were in-town and
answered nine fire calls during
ordering
distribution of proceeds
Knight to six months in prison on
and ·seven were out-of-town.
from
the
sale
bas been filed In the
September.
each of two charges against him,
Department vehicles were
case
of
Diamond
Savings and
This included four structure
to l:&gt;e served concurrently at the
driven a total of 377 milE's during Orient Correctional Reception Loan Company 'against Gerald
fires, four vehicle accidents and
the month.
Sellers, el al, and a deficiency
Center.
Harrison was Indicted by a judgment of $!3,081.10 bas been
Meigs County Grand Jury on a ordE&gt;red against !be defendants.
An action to partition property
chargE&gt; of grand theft, In connec·
,
has
been flied by Edna G.
Rock, Pa. He was a member of lion with a shoplifting incident
Parsons,
Racine, against Mark
Edward Daylong
the Clifton United Methodist · Aug. 31 at FtshE&gt;r's Big Wheel,
Pomeroy. The other charge A. Parsons, Racine.
Edward D. Daylong, 74, Gal- Church.
Jipolis Ferry, died Wednesday afSurviving are his wife, Clara of against him of receiving stolen
property stemmed from an Inc!·
· the Mason, W. Va.; a daughter,
ternoon, Oct. 5' 1988, m
Ia
Lottery numbers
dent
In July In which hE&gt; brokE&gt;
Veter1111's Hospital, Huntington.
Marjorie Manns. Pennsylvan ;
He was born May 27, 1914 in a son, Clifford W. Smith, Pitts· Into van belonging to Foremari
Dally Number
· HendersOn, to !he !ale Roben W. , burgh, Pa. ; two stepdaughters, and Abbott, Middleport.
854.
Harrison
was
released
on
a
Daylong and Kate Catherine Tammy Carson, New Haven, W.
Ticket sales totaled $1,314,950,
· Riffl D 1
Va. , and Sharon Martin of $1,000 personal recognizance
Sophlll
e
ay
on
g.
SandyVl'lle,
W. Va:,' as tepson , Ed bond until Oct. 18, 7 a .m., at
with
a payoff due of $391,505.50.
He served in lhe U.S. Anny, and
PICK-4
which
timE&gt;
he
is
to
bE&gt;
transwas a veteran of World War II. He Lewii;",'Dunbar, W.Va.; a sister,
1129.
•
·
Flelda Wiley, Gahanna; a
ported by the Meigs Co1,1nty
~a~&amp;
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
He is survived by two· sisters, brother, Oliver Ge ne Slth
m , Sheriff's Department to Orient to
$222,265.50,
with a pay oft due of
begin serving his sentences.
TreSsie Carver, Prinler, Ky., Mary Scottsdale, Ariz.; a granddaugh·
$100,309.
An action requesting judgment
Barrett, Rutland. Ohio; a brother- ter, Anita Marie Brown, and a
PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
in-law, George Sliv~ski, New great-granddaughter, LesiE&gt;Y of $8.298.44 has flied In Meigs
$1,680.
PICK-4 $1 box bet pays
London,
Conn.;
rueces and Ann Brown, both of Covington, County Common PIE&gt;as Court by
Central Trust Company of Sou- $140.
nephews.
Ga.
Services will be Sunday at 1 p.m.
Besides his parents, be was
at the Wilcoxen Funeral Home with preceded in ,death by three
the Rev. Amos Tillis officiating. brothers , a sister, and his first
Burial wiD follow in the Concord wife, Margaret Helen Smith.
Cemetery, Henderson.
.
Graveside rites will be held at 3
Friends may call at the W1lcoxen p.m . Sunday at Beech Grove
Funeral Home Saturday from 5 to 9 . Cemtery with the Rev. Terry K.
p.m. Military graveside rites will be Alvarez of!iciatlng. Friends may
conducted by lhe Ordinance Com- call at the E.wing Funeral Home
pany 812 of Ripley.
from 12 noon to2: 30p.m. Sunda~.

a

Cl ifford E : Smith, 79, died
unE&gt;xpectedly Thursday at his
J!ome at 422 W. Main St. ,
Pomeroy.
Mr. Smith was born Aug. 15,
1909 at Beaver, Pa. , a son of the
late William and Flelda PE&gt;arl
Smith. He was a retired steel
worker with U. S. Steel at McKee

Announcements
Plan homecoming
Flatwoods United Methodist
Church, Pomeroy, wilt celebrate
homecoming this Sunday. A
basket dinner will bE&gt; served at
12: 30 p.m. , followed by an
afternoon service at 2. Special
singing will be featured by
SE&gt;nsatlon, from Cincinnati, and
other singing groups , Everyone
wE&gt;Icome .
Merchants to meet
The Pomeroy Area Merchants'
Association will meet Tuesday, 8
a .m., at Bank One.

Weather
South Central Ohio
Tonight: Mostly clear, with
scattered frost and a low in the
middle 30s. Calm winds.
Saturday: Partly cloudy, with
highs between 60 and 65.
Extended Forecast
Sunday through Tuesday
Variable cloudiness Sunday,
with fair conditions Monday and
Tuesday. Highs will be between
55 and 60 In northE&gt;astern arE&gt;as
Sunday and .n ear 65 elsewhere.
• High temperatures Monday and
Tuesday will be In the 60s. Early
morning lows will be between 30
and 40 Sunday and between 35
and 45 Monday and Tuesday .

John G. Baumgardner, 56, of
1708 Chester Road, Pomeroy,
who died Wednesday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, was born In
Pomeroy on Dec.14, 1931. Among
Mr. Baumgardner's survivors Is
his fathE&gt;r-ln-law, Russell Cline,
of Syracuse.

One in 10 women in this country will develop
breast cancer durin~ her lifetime.
But with early detection and prompt_
treatment, the disease
need not be life threatening.
In fact, breast cancer can be found
at the earliest possible stage when
chances for cure
are nearly 100 percent.*
,
See your physician or surgeon for regular breast exams.
And for iriformation about how .you can establish a
personal plan of action for ,breast health, call

· Tack M. Levine, D.O. ·
Ceneral and Gynecologic Surgery
Suite 211 + PVH Medical Office Building
(304) 675-1460
-.

•tn The ~ofprofessionals .

Am Electric Power ............. 27\1,
AT&amp;T ................................. 26%
Ashland Oil ................. ..... ... 34
Bob Evans ....................... ... 16Y,
Charming Sboppes ............. .1311.
City Holding Co ................... 34
Federal Mogul ...... ....... ~- ..... 48%
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 54\t,
Heck's .. .................. ............. %
Key Centurion ..................... 17 '
Lands' End ......................... 29J1,
Limited Inc ........ .. .............. 23%
Multimedia Inc .................. .73~
Rax Restaurants ................. . 3%
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 11 '!.
ShonE&gt;y:s Inc ........................ 7'!.
Wendy's Inti ........................ 6%
Worthington Ind ................. 22\1,

e
.

to serve you better. ·. •
All Offices Of BANK ONE, ATHENS, -N.A.

arrangement,

'

will be open on

COLUMBUS DAY
(observed)

Jut~t ~;all

or \llsll

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
"'Th1• lf'ov A ntl'rira .VndJ l.arl'

.

-

To send a beautUullv
designed funeral

H

When: Saturday, October 8th
Time: 9:00 A.M.· 12 Noon
Place:· Big Wheel-Pomeroy
SPOIIISOIID BY AMEII(ARE-POMEIOY
NURSliNG &amp; REHABIUTATIOtl CENTER.

•

Monday, &lt;October 10, 1988

•

'•

12131 of the
efor81aid appraisad value.
Said ule is subject to approval by the Common Pleas
Court, Mlligs County,. Ohio.
.
·
Howard E. Frapk.
Sheriff of
Meigs County , Ohio
Approved :
Fred W. Crow,
Attorney for the
Blannerhassett Federal

Fountain Square, Building H.
Floor. Columbu•.

Second

i :~~r~5a;~~~~~~·~~~:t~~nf~;r~~e

1

SlindereUa meets

I

I1

Lodge to meet

I
I

• P1anned
DAR ffiEetlng

i

i

Thanks For Banking
With Us!

Community cale'/'ldd,r

j

~

AUCTION .
SATURDAY,
OCTOBER 8,
7:00 P.M.

payntents on your 1988
Christmas Club
is October 15, 1988.
1989 Clubs will start
on October.24, 1988

Peoples Bank

SCIPIO TOWNSHIP
VOLUNTEER
FIRE DEPT.

"The Better Bank"

.

_The Gingerbread Boy Says..

We're Celebrating

BANKaONE.

3rdBirthday
October 7th to lOth

SAVE1 ()OfooFF STOREWIDE

Come.

Columbus Day
POMEROY - Leading Creek
Conservancy District will be
closed Monday, Oct. 10, In
observance ·or Columbus Day.
Regular water bills due on the
lOth will be considered on-time if
paid In the office on Oct. 11.

• CHESTER ~ Chester ElemE&gt;n·
tary Is having Its fall carnival on
S'aturday evening starting with a
fltney supper at 5: 30. The carnl·
val will be from 6: 30 to 8: 3P. The
public Is welcome.
'

POMEROY - Planned Par·
enthood of Southeast Ohio Pa·
tlent ServiCE'S offices will be
closed Monday, Oct. 10, In
obsE&gt;rvance of Columbus Day.
Offices will reopen Tuesday at 9
a.m.

WEST COLUMBIA, W.VA . West Columbia Grade . Scbeol,
'j\'est Columbia, W.Va., Is having
its annual · fall festival this
$aturday evening at the school.
Something for everyone. Please

Eighteen Thousat7d People Who Care.
•

two-thirds

Our

PI!. tn-zlin or 992-5721

•

·for building and maintaining
.said right oway shall be in

The last day to make

f,.

• The American CBDcer Society

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS

.

LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
BLENNERHASSET
FEDERAL CREDIT UNION
2910 River Road.
p, o. Bo• 6067

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Reunion held

II

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

''FJEE"••• BLOO_D
PRESSURE CHECKS
~

.,d PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL_·

Stocks

· ~----------~----~

.'

When you talk
about breast cancer,
it's certainly not the
end of your life ...
~-

]aymar women
announced r?sults

The last social of the Tuesday
proportion to Ita use.
-~
Ohio 43224. {Phone' {6141
Reference: Volume 306.
Ladles
League
of
the
Jaymar
265-1068).
By BOB HOEFLICH
Potter, the Hart l:lfothers,
Page 766 of the Meigs
Each bid must be accomGolf CoursE&gt; was held Tuesday .
RemembE&gt;r J1o promised SOll)e GeorgE&gt; Thacker, Kathy Grimm
County Deed Recordt.
panied
by '.a BID GU~­
Twenty-eight women took -part
nice prizes would bE&gt; offered In and the MJdnight Cloggers.
EXCEPTING and RE ·
RANTV, meeting the reqUI·
in tlie scramble and a luncheoo!"
SERVING lo the grantor
the "Create an
Skljl Logan of Athens WATH
--rements of Section 163.64 .
from the above 26 acre tract
was
servE&gt;d
following
play.
The
of the Ohio Ravis8d Code.
Easter Bonnet"
Radio, will be emcee and tickets
·the following described real
CONTRACTORS ARE AD·
first
prize
winning
team
was
,contest being
· are available at S5 for adults and
estate:
Vienna, Wnt Virginia
VISED
THAT IN ACCOR·
Nancy Hill, Karen Facemeyer,
held in con juncBeing in Sect ton 2. Range
$2 for students with children six
26105-6067
DANCE
WITH THE PROVI·
Velma Rue and EllzabE&gt;th Lohse.
tion with the Big
PLAINTIFF 1 3, Ohio Company' 1 Pur· Credit Union
and under admitted free at the
SIONS OF THE JANUARY
chase bounded and de- Vienna, W~st Virgin ia
vs.
Making J.lP the second prize team
27. 1972 EXECUTIVE OR·
Bend Minstrel
Southern Ohio Coal Company's
scribed
as follows: Begin· {9) 30: 1101 7. 14. 3tc
JAMES
R.
VANCE.
ot
al
..
DER BYTliEGOVERNOROF
WE're
.Sue
Teaford,
Clarice
Kraut·
-Association's
Meigs · Division Office, Meigs
ning 20 feat east of the
DEFENDANTS
OHIO,
AND AMENDED EX·
ter ~nd Nellie Wright . Dear
.Fall Follies?
Mine 1, Meigs Mine 2, Raccoon
Case Number BB-CV-141 southwett corner of above
- ECUTIVE ORDER 84-9. FEprizes went to Ellzalieth Lohse,
described · 50 acre patcel
NOTICE OF SALE
Well - Jennifer Sheets, show Mine 3 and at the door .
BRUARY 15. 1984. EQUAL
-previously owned by Joyce
Mary
Bowen,
Jane
Brown,
MaxAs
Shariff
of
MaiDs
EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUN·
accompan.i st and, active Pome·
Incidentally, the Meigs County
County; Ohio, I hereby offer Cook, now owned by RolTV
CONDfTIONS
ARE AP·
Ine
Gaskill,
Nelle
Bahr
and
roy . ·Chamber of Commerce Future Farmers of America .
•for sale at -10:115 A .,., . on nald W. Vance; thence nOfth
pUCABLE
TO
THIS
BID.
Penny
C,ompton.
member - has the prize list all Woodcookers Club will be servFriday, the 4th day Of No- ~ 20 feet to a stake;·the line
WAGE . RATES
ESTI\ll·
p·tnned down - and thE&gt; result Ing a buffet style dinner at thE&gt;
vombor.1988, A. D.. on the' being parallel to . the west
USHED IN ACCORDANCE
Public Notice
front steps of the · Meigs boundary of the above de.WITH SECTION 1613.18
should encourage your Meigs High School cafeteria on
County Coun Hou • • Po- acribed 60 · acre p11rcel;
AND 1613.37 OF THE RE·
participation.
show night starting at 5 p.m . The
The Gideon and Artlmesba meroy, Ohio. the following thence aut 366 .68feet to a
VISED CODE ARE ALSO AP·
stake on aline Parallel to the
Jenny tells me that Bank I will dinner Is one of those "all you can
Roush reunion was held recently deacribed real estate:
PUCABLE.
NOTICE
TO
Bl
DOERS
The following described south line of the above de)&gt;resent a $100 savings bond for eat" events and the charge will
Bids are sealed and ad·
at the Shrine Park In Racine.
Sealed
proposals
will
be
real estate. 1ituatad In the acribed 60 acre parcel; raceivad at the:
dreuod
to' DEPARTMENT
; the first place winner while The be $6 for adults and $3 for
Dinner was served following County of Meigs. Towns~ip thence touth 120 feet to •
OF NATURAL RESOUR ·
DIVISION
OF
• Farme rs Bank ·and Savings Co. children undE&gt;r 13.
stake
in
th8
south
line
of
the
prayer by Harold Roush to the of Bodford ond State 1of
CES, DIVISION· OF I'IECLA·
RECLAMATION
! will be providtng two $50 savings
Proceeds from the actual jam·
Ohio, bounded and de· above detCribed 60 acra
135 persons attending.
MAllON, 1866 FOUNTAIN
DEPARTMENT
OF
1 bonds for the second and third
, parcel ; thence watt 366.66
SQUARE, BUILDING H. SE·
boree portion of the E&gt;venlng help
Recognized were HE&gt;rschel scri~ at follows:
NATURAL
RESOURCES
Being in Section 2. Town 3. feet to the place of begin- 1B66 FOUNTAIN SQUARE COND FLOOR. COLUM ·
t place wlnnE&gt;rs. Powell's Super- 'makE&gt; Christmas for the Gallla Badgley, the oldest man; Gladys Range
Ohio Company's ning, containing one acre.
BUS. OHIO 43224. No bid-SECOND FLOOR
! Vatu and Krogers' will be provld· County ChlldrE&gt;n's Home and for Shields, the oldest woman: Purch•a.13-bounded
and do- more or lets.
der may withdraW hia bid
..
COLUMBUS.
OHIO
43224
Grantor Ronald W. Vance
youngsters under the Children's
SummE&gt;r Wicilersharn, the tcribed II follow~
untl Wednesday, November within ab&lt;ty 1601 doyo ......
reaerves
1 right of way over
Beginr'!ing
at.
the
south
~
Services of Wellston, and VInton,
youngest child; Carrie Roush;
2." 1988 at 11 :00 o. m. and the actual date of the opencornir of the southwett and across the 20 foot par- opened thereafter for fur·
ing thereof.
I So - do get creative - Jackson, Gallla, Meigs · and· the largest family; Robert and east
quarter of Section 2; thence. cel which lies wnt of the nlthlng 1:ha materials and
the Director of Natural
: rememl!erlng that the challenge AthE&gt;ns Counties.
•
'Jean Roush ol Arizona. the ones wett &amp;0 rodt; thence north above one acre tract for in- performing the labor for the Resourcea resftrves the right
t is to create an Easter bonnet
who traveled thE&gt; fartllest. Door 1090 foot to the center of grell and egress.
to reject any or all bids. or to
i• made to deed ex.acutlon and construction accept the bid which em, using any materials you wish and
Lillian Moore advises that an
prizes were awarded. The 1989 Kingsbury Creek; thence fol- of Reference
of:
Ronald W. Vance to
lowing the center of Kingt· .
brae .. such combination alany style. SincE&gt; all of the hats will open board meeting pOhe Meigs
COAL POWER 0 ·049
reunion will be hE&gt;Id at the Shrine bury
Creek eut to aut line James R. Vance and Barbara
ternate proposals as OJIY
MINE
FORFEITURE
ChaptE&gt;r of the Amerl~an Cancer
Park on the third Sunday in of the southwest quarter of Vance dated September 29. RECLAMATION PROJECT promote the batt interest of
1 be modeled during the Follies'
·Easter Parade number at the Society has be.en set for 8 p.m.
Section 2; thence south on 1987, as recorded In Vq7
SE&gt;ptember.
· the State.
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
the
line of the crf¥11k between lume 307. Poga 273 of tho · RECLAMATION PROJECT
,-show at Meigs High School on Wednesday at Trinity Cbur;cb In
As provided in Section
Junia Castle and William Meigs County Deed Re123.161
of the Ohio Ra·
NUMBER
MG·St·4·
F
Nov. 26, the crE&gt;atlons should be Pomeroy.
Cook to the place of begin· cords.
vised Coda and Administra·
in
IICQ)rd.-.oe
with
the
plans
"sh,owy" ~ Let your lmaglna tlon
The meeting Is open to anyone
Said real eatate ia subject
ning, containing twanty-Jix.
tivo Rule t23:2-16-02 of
Pat Hysell was the top loser (281
to all laset, easements and and speciftcationo prep.-od b¥
go rE&gt;ally wild. Prize ' winners'
who has donated at anytime to
acral, more or leu.
the Department of Admin-the
DEPARTMENT
OF
NA·
and Judy Eblin was runner-up at
Tllia twenty-lix acre tract right of ways, if any. of r• TURAL RESOURCES. THE istrative Services, the CON • names will be announced that
the Meigs Unit or has spent time
the recent Slinderella meeting is part of the following de- cord.
: night. W)1en you enter your
DIVISION OF RECLAMA· TRACTOR ahall make every
In helping the unit in any phase of
Said real estate is comsc;ribed real ettate: Situated
held
at
Five
Points.
At
the
Mason
TION,
COWMBUS, OHIO. . effort "'t o ensure that carti·
; creation, It will . be given a
volunteer work.
·
in Section 2, Town 3, Range monly known as being 26
BIDS
WILL
BE OPENED IN tied .minority business subclass,
Darlene
CunnJngham
and
I number so that judges will not '
The unit extends a big thanks to
13 Ohio Companv't Pur· acres, more or less, formerly TliE SECOND FLOOR CON· contract ora and material ·
Melissa Hoffman tied for the chase. bounded and de- owned by Ronald W. Vance. FERENCE ROOM OF 1855 men particpata in the conknow wl)o made any hat during everyone for their donations
most weight lost, and Bertha scribed as follows, to-wit: Said real eState was alto !BUILOING HI OF THE tract. The total value of sub·
judging processes. All of the hats during the past yE&gt;ar with a spclal
previously owned by Joyce
Kinzel was runner-up. Shirley Beginning at the toutheut Cook. Said real eatate is FOUNTAIN SQUARE OF· contracta awarded to and
will remain In the possession of thanks going to lhoo&gt; volunteers
corner
of the southwest
materials and services purJohnson lost the most weight and quarter of taid SeCtion 2; located in the southaut FtCES OF THE OHIO DE· chased
! the minstrel association until who carriE&gt;d out the door-to-toor Cathy
from minority bLisi·
PARTMENT
OF
NATURAL
Hudson was runner-up at thence 60 rods W81t; thence corner of the aouthwnt RESOURCES . THE ESTI· neuas shall be as set for1h in
phases of the campaign. The next
r after the show - people who
the Wednesday night meeting. Jo t 60 rods north; thence &amp;0 Quarter of Section 2. Town MATE FOR THIS PROJECT the specifications.
• madE&gt; them can pick them up on door-to-door campaign will be
rods east;' thence south on Number 3, Range Number AS DETERMINED BY THE
CONTRACTORS REQUIR·
Ann Newsome Is 'lecturer.
: show night after the final curtain! nE&gt;xt April.
the line of the creek between 13 of Ohio Company' 1 Pur- DIVISION OF RECLAMA·
lNG ASSISTANCE IN SEA cancer scrE&gt;ening clinic bas
~
AlumnaE&gt; of past shows will
Junia Castle ·and William chMe in Bedford Township, TION IS t14,079.00.
CURING BIDS FROM CERTI·
to lhe place of begin· Meigs County, Ohio. Said
FlED MBE SUB·CONTRAC·
Cook
model ·the hats during the
beE&gt;n set for Tuesday, Oct. 11, at
A
pre-bid
meeting
will
be
real ntlte is bordered on the
ning
to
contain
fifty
(50)
TORS
AND SUPPUERS
Regular
meeting
of
Racine
held
on
Thuuday,
October
musical.
the Meigs County Department of
north aild aut side by Kingsacret, more or Ins.
MAY CONTACT THE STATE
20.
:t988
at
11:00
a.m.
at
Lodge
461,
F.
and
A.
M.
will
be
bury Creek and on the north·
Yo~ can look forward to an
HE&gt;alth.
Reference ; Volume 293.
EQUAL EMPLOYMENT CO·
held Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m. at the Page 7115 of the Meigs weal by real utateowned by the site.
official entry blank soon In The
Only 12 persons can be ac·
ORDINATOR BY CALUNG
Copies
of
the
plans.
speci·
John E. Werry and Margaret
Masonic Temple. Fifty year pins County Deed Records.
(6141 466-8380 OR lHE Ml·
: Daily Sentinel -and, by the way,
c·e pted for the clinic which is free
and
proposed
fications
Grantor further gran1sand J . Weri)o, on the touthwest forma will be forwarded
NORITY BUSINESS DEVEL• deadlinE&gt; for thE&gt; cqntE&gt;st has been
of charge an&lt;! will bE&gt; held from 6 will be presented to five convey
a to this grantee the side by raal estate owned by from the DiYialon of Recla- OPMENT
DIVISION BY
membE&gt;rs.
There
will
be
a
mem·
~ moved to an earlier date. The to 7 p.m. You can make an
following deacribed right of Janet S. Gru.. er and ltlrry mation, Depanment of Na- CALUNG {614) 466-6700
orlal service for deceased way which waa reterved by. Heinas and on the aouth by tural Resourcet, upon re· OR TOLL FREE ON 1·18001
l new deadline ts Nov. 7. •
appointment for the clinic by
mE&gt;mbers. All local Masons are a prior grantor in deed to reel ettate owned by John E. celpt of a check in the 282·1086.
calling the health department at
)\,
Margaret J.
Werry and
Approved for publication
Invited to attend. Refreshments William David Graham, (Vol- Werry
However, with this much
992-6626 and do keep in mind that
and
thai
line of amount of $8 .00 made payume 305, Pogo 7891: being Sectlon No. 1 . ~orth
in The Daily Sentinel, Poable
to
the
Department
of
There is exi knowledge you sho'lld be able to the number who can .be pro- wlil bE&gt; served.
a right of way eighteen feet
meroy, Ohio on October 7,
cepted
from
said
estate. Natural Retources. These and 14, 1988.
)I get into thar ·creatlve
mood
and
cessed
Is
limited.
wide from Cook Road ITR on the southwestreal
may
also
be
purchased
with
.
portion, a
182! acrooo
Kingabury
RECOMMENDED:
Dr. E. S. VIllanueva will
:; start your creation.
one acre parcel ot real as- cash in the eKact amount.
·
·
.
Creek
along
the
eut
boundTim l. Dieringer, Chief
I
Ptant
end
tpecifleations
becontrlbu te his services to work
Return Jonathan Meigs Chap· orv of tho fifty acre toact tate.
Division of Reclamation
Said real estate was ap- come the property of the
i Speaking of show biz, the Third with the clinic during the even· ter, Daughters of thE&gt; AmeriCan from which Parcel 2 was to·
AP.PROVED:
proapactNe
bidd••
and
no
Annual Coal Miner~ Jamboree
lng. Norma Torres, supervisor of Revolution. will mee1 Oct. 14 at ken. The. grantoa, hio hein praited at Six Thou•nd and refunds wttl be made. Addi· Joseph J . Sommer, Director
00/00 Dollaro {t6,000.00).
Department of Natural
; has been scheduled for Saturday,
nurses at the Meigs Health the home of Mrs. Michael Elbei'· and Ullflno ahall hove a The
terms of Hid aala. is tiona! information mav be
._,.
.
common
nght to the u• of
Resources
obtained from the Division of
~ Oct. 15, at Meigs High School.
Department; serves as profes· feld, Pomeroy Pike . Co· 10id right of way elong with cash.
SEPT.
30. 198B
Sale of said real estate is Redamation, Department of
1. Starting at 7 p.m., this year's sionat education chairman for hostesses will be Mrs. John Rose, the grantor•. ·their heiro end
tt0)7.
14.
2tc
Natural
Resources,
1865
~ jamboree will fea,lure the Pecos·· the local cancer unit ,
Mrs. A. R. Knight, Mrs: Gary aoaigna. The raoponolbillly to be sold for not less than
' Canyon Band,. Larry Lightner,
JVIqore, and Mrs. Dwight Mil· L---------1'---------'------~--+-~-----­
; The River Junc'tlon Bluegrass
Candidate deb11te and hope hoan. American Indian Month
' Band, Randy Callahan, Racbael
we're taking "de batt". Do keep will be observE&gt;d ·with Frank Crusade
POMEROY - The l\'lason·
'. Pridemore, Danny Brooks, Ivan
smiling.
Porter, Ill as the speaker.
Gallla ·ME&gt;Igs Crusade for Christ
~
.
will· conduct special services at
· the Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene, corner of Mulberry
l ==============================;;========================~ and Union Avenues beginning
Monday, Oct. 10 and running
SUNDAY ·
SATURDAY
Trustees
meetings
.
through Oct.16. Services, featur·
'
POMEROY Carleton
POMEROY -The Meigs High
CHESTER - Chester Town- ing different speakers and sin·
I CheeriE&gt;aders arE&gt; sponsoring a Church on Kingsbury Road, ship Trustees will meet Tuesday. gers each night, will begin at 7
Pomeroy, will celebrate home, cheerleading clinic on Saturday
7:30p.m., at the town hall.
each evening. Crusade Presi1 morning at the school. RE&gt;glstra· coming this Sunday. Sunday
dent, the Rev . Clyde Henderson.
1' tion starts at 8:30a.m. The cljnlc
school starts at 9 a.m., followed
REEDSVILLE ,
Orange extends an Invitation to the
by worship at 10:30. A basket
is open to students In the fourth
Township Trustees will meet in public.
lunch
will be served at 1 p.m. and
special session Tuesday, 7:30
· through eighth grades.
afternoon services will start at 2.
p.m., to discuss the dust control
Special singing by the Gospel
RACINE
The gun shoots
levy and other matters . The
Tones, of Charleston, W.Va. , will
sponsored by the Racine Volunmeeting will be held at tlle home
be featured In the afternoon.
•teer Fire DE&gt;partmE&gt;nt will re·
of Clerk Dcrothy Calaway.
Pastor Clyde Henderson wei·
!sume for the year on Saturday at
comes
everyone.
6:30
p.m.
at
the
building
In
MONDAY
1
POMEROY ChaptE&gt;r 53,
~ Bas han.
POMEROY - A hymn sing
Disabled American Veterans
will be held Sunday at the
: ST!VERSVILLE - The Stland the Ladles Auxiliary will
Pomeroy SE&gt;venth-Day Adventist
:versvllle Word of faith 'Gommun·
hold their regular meeting at 7
Church, near Veterans Memorial
;tty Church will have a)lymn sing
p.m. Monday at the cbaptE&gt;r
Hospital, starting at 1:30 p.m.
!Saturday starting at 7 p.m.
home, 124 Butternut Ave., Pome·
Among the singers will be the
;Singers will be the Robj nson
roy. The State Commander of the
Clark
Family, the Jobnsons, the
iFamity, of Grove City.' Everyone
Ladies Auxilllary will be present
McDaniel Trio, Steve Nakamoto
~welcome .
·
for the session.
HARRISONVILLE, OHIO
Member F.O.I.Cand Junior WhitE&gt;. Everyone
; BURLINGHAM
Bur welcome.
BEDFORD - Bedford TownChristmas Items and
Fifth Street
2212 JaCkson Ava.
Second Street
:ungbam Modern Woodmen will
ship Trustees will mE&gt;et in regu Something
Fo~
New
Haven, WV
Point
Pleasant,
WV
Mason,
WV
LONG BOTTOM - Mt . Olive lar session at 7 p.m. Monday at
:have a potluck dinner at 6:30 on
.
675·1121
Everyone
882·2135
Community Church, Long Bot·
773-5514
'S aturday at the Woodmen Hall.
the town hall.
tom, will have a revival starting
:Srtl\g a covered dish and own
REFRESHMENTS SERVED
Sunday and continuing through
~able service. Several door prizes
Oct. 16. at 7 p.m. each evening.
will be awarded. Everyone
Evangelist will be William
'welcome.
VIllers, Ana Moriah, W.Va. Pas·
,jt'f,
tor Law renee Bush welcomes the
LAUREL CLIFF - Laurel
'
public.
Cliff Free Methodist Chuch Is
)laving a hymn sing on Saturday
CHESTER - Chester Church
~~ 7 p.m . Singers will be the .
of
God Is having a special
Jiarvest Trio. Pastor Bill Willi· '
s~aker,
Jimmy Dupree, from
ams welcomes the public .
'
the
Norvel
HayE&gt;s Ministry,
~-'I
Cleveland Tenn., on Sunday at
POMEROY- The Meigs High
9:30 a .m. and 7 p.m. Everyone
CheerleadE&gt;rs are sponsoring a
wE&gt;lcome.
cheer leading clinic on Saturday,
from 9 a .m . to 12:30 p.m . at the '
MIDDLEPORT - The Grubb
6Chool. The clinic Is O!Min to
Family will be singing at the
s tudents In grades four th,rough
Middleport Church of Christ on
eight. Cost is $5 per person. · Sunday at 7:30 .p.m . Everyone
Registration Is at 8:30a.m .
welcomE&gt;.

1

Correction

Clifford Smith

•

BIG FURNITURE AUCTION SAT;, OCT. 8
DAN SMITH, AUCTIONEER

'Create an Easter Bonnet'

\

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BANK ONE. ATHENS. OHIO, NA I ONE PART OF THE CARING TEAM

..
·,

• Door Prizes • Refreshments
NEW WINTER HOURS START OC,. 7 •
MONDAY-SATURDAY, 10 A.M.-6 P.M.; SUNDAY, 1·6 P.M.

• Lizzie High Dolls · • Lace Collars • Pottery
•Pewter •Hand Carved Ducks •Rabbits
• Porcelain Dolls • Limited Edition Pictures
•Good Selection Cats Meow Houses

GINGERBREAD
HOUSE OFGIFTS
m
&amp;711-7947 •
1102 VIAND
POINT PLEASANT

-~-

1

I

..

�7,1988
Page-S The

October 7 1988

Senttnel

Nottce
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
SHAWMUT MORTGAGE
CORPORATION flto
NORTH CENTRAL
MORTGAGE CORP

Pla•ntiH
- vsROBERT L
SAWYERS JR ot al
Defendants
Cue No 87 CV 238
LEGAL NOTICE OF SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
Notte••• herebv given that
on Fmloy tho 4th doy of No
vomblr 1988 at 10 00 a
m I witt otferfaruleatPub
lie AuctiOn at the Court

houae

tn

Me1g1 County

Oh1o the follow1ng real es

tete to wit
The following dncnbed
property aituatltd '" the
Townttup of Sutton County
of Me1ga and State of Oh1o
and dMcrtbed aa follows to

Business Services
YHS TAPE
lat Ul CDRftft thMe oldMo'l'tK

&amp; Shdu

O't'tr

to easy VHS

CAll MAY CARTEl

or 108 S ELECTROIICS

446 7

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

OWNEI: GlfG'I IOUSH

M

•Washers •D ryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
Must Be Repaorable

(Gaad thro!'f!t:~plombor

MON

'

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

Shuat10n1
Wanted

RACINE
, FIRE DEPT.

15 PmrlOilf ~
&lt;HEESE PIZZA
S• 50+ 4 FlEE
SU~I LUGE Dll. .1
Puli Uo or Eol ., Only

•o

latham BuHding

EVERY
Fnctory Chob
12 Gauge Shotguns Only

992 2221 or 992 9922
Sorry no dlhnry or othw
coupoj comllined with lhis

off..

Str11tly Enforcttl

t/611111-.

10.7 tfn

ar hlf'lclc_, Call

Went to buy Uttd fUrnltu,. .. d
Mtlq""' Will buy ontlro .......
hold fu-11 Wodom - 814-248-5152.

J&amp;l

a

eMETAL BUU..DINGI
HOU SINO • APT PROJECTS

SINCE 1969

sr. IYIIACUII
992·7611 or

DUSIY

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

INSULATION

Masttc &amp; Certatnteed
Vtnyl Stdrng
Rooftne
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Wmdows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Wtndows
Free E1t1mates
Call 992 2772 '
1115/ Hn

AI

Junk C.1 wtrh or whhOu:t
mo~ . Coli Lorry Uvoty 814381-9303.

13

round bel• of hav
dellvorOd or t&gt;lcl&lt;of up Coli
814-245-1600 8-4
Large

lnaurenca

Call us for your mobile home
ln1urenca Miller lnsur1nce
304 882 2141 A.lao euto
h.... llfo.hooltll

number

Ohto
992·6611

I

FIREWOOD
O.,.K LOCUST,
CHERRY

$35

PER LOAD

4 16 86 tfn

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIOING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

11

NewH-•I•Yt
Free Esttmetel

PH. 949-2801
or les. 949-2860
NO SUNOAY

GUN SHOOT

HUDNALL
&amp;

EVERY SUNDAY

RACINE

PLUMBING HEAnNG
161 North Second
Mtddltport, Ohio 45760

!FREE ESTIMATES I

GUN CLUB

SALES &amp; SERVICE

V. C. YOUNG Ill

RACINE, OHIO

1:00 P.M.

- Addona and remodel ng
Roof ng and guner work
Conaete work
P umbing and Mectr cal

""''

We Carry F~thlng Suppl1
Pay Your Phone
and Cable 81lls Here
BUSINESS PHON£

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY

992 6215 or 992 7314
Pomeroy Ohio
7 13 BB tin

(6141 H2 6550
II3ID£NC£ PHON£
(6141 992 7154

BOGGS

I 18 "

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

TRI-STATE
DRYWALL CO.

614 662-3121

Compl1t1 Drywal

Authortzed John
Deere New Holland
Bush Hog Farm
Equ1pment De aler

1 3 86-lfc

• - &amp; loard Far
S.n10r Citiiiiii and
Handlcappecl
Good Rat81
TLC
26 Yrs Exp
Referencu

Joe or Pouley lowland

209 South 4th St
Middleport Oh
'LOW HICOME llru•r"

9/IS/81/tfn

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALLI

PALLET

IPOMEROY r
I

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL

OHIO

992-6461

FILL DIRT

10 8 lfc

Roger Hysell
Garage

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work
•W1II Do Haul ng Wtth
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Bu11ness

Botw•n 9 a m. 6 p m
or Ltavf' Messaqe

446-3487

I COMPANY

EXCAVATING

614-742-2617

GAWPOUSr OH.

OHIO

TRIPLE P

WANT TO BUY WRECKED OR
JUNK CAliS OR TRUCKS
-Fill ESIIMATISFor ony af tHastltrYtces call

56 STATE ST.

DEliVERED TO

1

992-6873

Reasonalllelatn

$14 PER TON

EUM HOME

Rt 124 Pomeroy Oh1o

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
' Also Trantllllctioll
I PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121
6 17

2 1r).' 88 tfn

tic

Announce 111 en Is
1

Card of Thanks

The fam1ly of Donald A Gllbert

w ehn to thtnk everyone fot the
kmdneu shown the c.rda

flower• contributions and ev•

ryone who JM~rtlclpated .n the
M liblry Service

You helped ao much bec.uae
you lhared

We couldn t believe so many

cOinld

MBV God n Heaven up above

VAUGHN'S

SER~ICE

We lDn repatr and re
lore rad1ators and
heater lores We lan
also actd bod and rod
out radtators We also
repatr Gas Tanks

PAT HILL FORD

AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SYRACUSE OHIO
Most Fore gn and
Oomest c Veht clas
A/ C Serv1ce
All MaJor &amp; M•nor
NIASE Certified Mechamc

CALL 992-6756
DOC

Enfold you In his •ms of love
Ruth &amp; RunG Ibert Donna &amp;
Mohsen Mad~ni6 gl'llndchildren
Amlr &amp; Altv a
3

Announcements

Flea Marbt every Tuesday a.
Thursday Hen den on Town Hall
Dealers Waloorne

Repa~rs

992' 2196
Mtddleport Ohto
1 13 lfc

VAUGHN

Cert f1ed L1censpd

No Hunting or Tr•pa11lng of
any kind on Raymond Smith
Farm

4

Gtveaway

mala k1tten hou11
broken Very affllct:ianata Gall

Bea~tiful

MARCUM CONTRACTING
CHESTER OHIO

3577

P..t Beagla puppies 304-6751799

10 4 1 mo

Televtston l1stentng Devtces
Dependable Hunpg Atd Sales &amp; Sen1ic~
Heanng Evaluations For All Ages

-z LISA M KOCH, M S

a: Licensed Chmcal Aud1olog1st

~

:::t:

-z

(614) 446 7619 or (614) 992 2104
417 Seconll Avenue Box 1213
Galltpolts Ohto

45631

or at

J

Veterans Memortal Hosptlal
Mulberry Hats Pomeroy Ohto

Do

Doar &amp; 811ckhoe Work 8110
C.••
dozer ReasOMble NIH
&amp;pori.... _
.. c - .

Canot Coll8t4-288-1718

Ptllntlna &amp; roofing &amp; c..,.,trv
walt: twv the hour or job C.ll
114-3711-2418

Help Wanted

Forestry worker• n•eded
Dec.,.._ AprM In d parts of
South E_. T..... V'Pide ,..
qulrod v-. ollvol.,. Jeb Groor
.-v Bonus · Advantu.. c.ll
918 7811-8098 C a - ftofo.

c.-Am- . . . .

...... lon. P 0 8os 3U. Holly

Ridge. Nortlo

284&lt;&amp;8

FINANCIAL AEPAE8ENTATIVE
Oodlt Thrift of
eli . . of .. - - -olol
lllr\ftol. COI"ftPMY' sMk1 an
indlvkll•l tor the poUtlon of
Flntnd .. Rap•-•blthre
Ourco,.,...._.tva training progrsm allaws .-.on wfth or
without MJ8FIInW to pwgr.....,clng ta their O'MI
If yau.,. aanfkMnt Md IIIP•
livl w•h lltJOf'tl•nwnunlc.~lon
skHis M d waufd IIQ to d"c:u•
our opportunities. aend your
r11ume. or Danllot Mr Willi.,..
II 114-.... 4113 Wring norman t.u.ln•• hour&amp;

•blld•

w.ntld Dental Hyglanin P..t
time Conh11al ......_ tf Inter
ested epply or c.U 8t tM Mlllg~
County ·Health Departme11t
Ohio 114-HZ 1828

-ay

Now •c-.;~~~ IPplil=-tlons for
pert tim.
ton -.: Network

Video Spring Ylllloy PI-

Tree work wllltad topping.
p r = ramov•l• bushes
trl
Fr• ...., . . c.ll
814-.U8-807e .. 304 178-

••u

llt&gt;or• 12hro. old 48At lui
bllh u.....a ~rlor LR- PA
kttchtn-luiiNIIh-lauidfydown.
atatrs 4 raom -*11 QUI,..,.
on b•«* of Wtch.. 4 flreplacll
Nlae••roonwwtth~pr'* I 9
•or• LDCiled on Rt 7· Eurlkt
.,....d Cl., Elem SchoOl C1ll
for 1ppointment 114 2158
1171

4 IR hou• fur .... ponible
l•d conwct 824 Jackson St.
Vlmon. t38 000 Coii814-38S.
1380

Third A,..

Y•d . . . brutll cutting. light
h.,Uno, aometreetrlmmlng and
- - 811 81ocl&lt; 114-992

~

mr

""' """' Colll14-3t8-8888

2288_,_

labvtlt•r av•. .ble flexible
ho.,. poll or lui tfmo. fonood
,.,d behind O.cfn.,co School
304-878-271M

2 bedroom 1 2x50
304-875-2722

•20'•

c•Ptttd In Pomeroy Call 81 ....
992· 7887

Frick S•mll- 01 Dot roll dl-'

-

8

Pu bite Sale
&amp; Auctton

Ridt Pearson Auct o,_ II
censed Ohio lnd W•t Vlrglna.
Estate ant~que f•m liquid•
ton •les 304-773-5785
9

Wanted To Buy

waterunit,
bed
AC
Included
lnqulrH only
after 1 oo PM

House
Farm tor ule
tl 000 OOdown•llwn~~blelr!.t
pw cMt 1oM to quetlfled tuyer
very low closing aatU, ll•cres
wfth 7 y.• old cad• aamem.:
pon1ry hom. prlaad recklced to
118.000.00 ....... 304-8785111 O.lllpolis Ferry W Va.

878-2702 .. 304-878-2147
h1 New Haven 3 br 2 .,_hs
..r1111 llwlng room. flriiJIIC ..
uo 000 304-273'

!:';f..

3 bedroom hou• Rutland are•
•326 plus $200 tecurity lrtcludesMter g•bage heat Call
814-367 7267
Hou~&amp;

for tent 128 laurel St
Pomeroy Call 814-992 8144

3 bedroom house on Mulberry
Pomeroy e1 75 per
Ave
month plus depolit Call 614992 7460
Attrtetlve one floo• home o n
Mulberry Aw Pomeroy Two
bedrooms ki1Chen with ttove
and refrigerator living room.
dining room lovely oun porch
Carpeted. draperies full b••
ment centre! h&amp;at Wllh«-dryer
hookup Sorry no pet. or
children 8226 piU1deposlt and
utiliti11 Pho ne 614-992 6292

911 forced-air heat breezew•y

gar11ge. partly furnished 'Call
814-949 2734

1984 Scott Energy Houae
24x50. 3 bedrooms 2 bllhl
centrtl air King wood burner
new drapes front porch
$171500 00 Klnauga Mobile
Homll Klnauga Ohio 814448-9882.

In Pomeroy 2 bedrooms all
1ppllences
Nice ne~gh­
borhood t250 par monlh
814-992 2162 days or 814742 2972 liVen ng1 and weak
ends

1983 Holly Park 14x70 3
bedrooms on one acre country
lot 2 mile~ from town 30467&amp;.7808

2 br unfu rnlahed house 607'h
2nd Street New Haven $180
month $100 depo11t 304
176-6278

a••u•

CoU 814-288-1288

•

Fanns for Sale

Part time delivery m•n
wlknowljldga ol Athena Jack
son. L..wrenc. Melg1 &amp; Oallla
Co Colll14-441-4109
ADMINI8TIIATOR
Smal chilln .....ing motldted
and dedla.ted 1-...ct '*'"'ng
Homt Actmlntatflltor far tt. 10
bed nuraJng t.cllty In Southellt
Ohio Good COMplll•tlon plus
bonua. healthendllfeinauranee.
retirement 1nd more lend
re&amp;um• ta Admlniatletor C05
North hrk Ave Wellston Ohio
45882.
1200• dOy •klngphonoonl. .
Peopte clfl you C.ll 304-137
2418
L-458 Houn 8-2 &amp;
18

••t

AVON N11ed1 5 '-«&lt;I• to Sell
Avon. c.a 614-448-3358
McCLURE S RESTAUA-'NT
HIRING Coolls lnd Wllhr81181
nellded R•a.n• being 'llktn
1 00.4 00 p m Tueldavs .,d
Thursd.,, 11t 479 J•CUon Pike
Gall""'" ...... behind
MeC)u,.. ren.urtnt
GowernrTMPRt Jobl ete 040
*59 230 'Y' Now hl&lt;lng. Coli
1 808-887·8000 bt R·l808
lor CUf'Nftt federll liat

CO-'CHINO VACANCIES Tho
E....,.n Local Schools h• tM
following oo.:hlng vac~nd~~;
Head Bovt v..tty ... kltbllt
Head Gtrls v.. try S.akltblll
... t. Bovl lnd t Girl•
Bulcetball Contact Hlah School
Principal Mr Ch•l• ~,.It
814-888-3329

34

One mile Pll't Rutland on 1 Z4
tcw.rd Langavflle Furniture

••
Yard 811•11 ~on Ave
FriNv • s.tunt., 9 to 4 Oh'ls
oto..-:ng 3-1 JNnt a mllc
Flame Fellowthip Aumm~~ge
1111•102 Honeyadcle Or Ad
dlaon Ohio Oct 8 7 &amp; 8 9 to

e

Y.ds.I•Wed thruFrldlv 123
Fourth Aw 9 to 15 CO.ts.
knk:* kn1c*1. j - home lrtt
Y•d S1l•n. . NGHS at
lson • Thurtd., Frld., •
8111..-d., Homt inltf'tor •n
VCR •bl• clocka.
chlllclers cur18int. bedspreadl
dlllh-.hol-

t,._

Y•d Sal•3 ml• fromPortw on
5114 ttwMdl Cit•~ FJI S1t

AVON All are• C•U Merltyn
We- 304-882 2845

B1ckvllrd of 127 State St Frt &amp;
••. 9·8

RN S &amp; LPNS PH lull time &amp;
part time •P.._&amp;onl are being
accepted tor pt...-.t Ylllwt
Hosphal Nurtlng Care Centw
Contlct PeraonMf 304-8714340 AAEOE

1 Dey ontv S•unt&amp;¥ 9 1 Don t
mils this on• 5 F1mlfy a.bV
clothel to 1duft. houllhold
ltanw toyt furntture wood
Ufttter tots more FlllrflelcJ.

AVON allar... I ShH-11¥ Sp. .s
304-878-1429
Uctnted Sodll Worker in new
long twm care facility Experience pref•red Commensurate
Ml.ry end ben..tls E 0 E Mall
r~ume to Admlr*tl'llter Cere
H..-n ol Point Jlta-nt Rt 1
Box 321 Point Pl.-wt W Va
25580
LPN fuNtlmahorneca'enurM
needed Paint Pl..-nt ar•
night lhltt exparl•c

~tarred

with high tech .. uto ....t but
wll trefn COI'I"'pM'IIbla ._II•
mall ... ume to 1007 Mlln It
PI

Pit

WVa

30~875-4403

2881!10

ctH

for imrnediMe

CRNA
Provreulve 128 bed acute C••
ho1pbl ., blatorlc 1:1tlo Atv.
City hulm~. . opanlngfor•
CRNA {Certified
Nu . . An-loll 8u
till
sign-on bonus ~d l'lllocmlon
lllo~u• excelln
and
clll ~ {cllll tlken from home)
tar lho right 11pplc:ont Fringe
beneftte lncll.lllle m ... cal-dentll
in1ur•nae pl•n non
oontrlbutory .~ plan .0•
ebiiHy and Mfe m.ur.rt• four
. . . vaalllon. sfdl tlrnamnu~l
contlnuingacllo.. loniiiOMnw
AANA due f'MIId _.d much mare

R•e:.a:,r.ct
•t.,.

Thill"',_ .... - ""'*•·
In the atMe. ffof mote 1ntorm11
call

wrill

M

e•*•rvAd

1 d8'( ontv Sat Oct 8 9 5
1210 S•eond Ave Bookl
clothet 111 sizes electrical
ll•me dl1he1 oddl &amp; aneta
Plioodchoop

OMage Slll•279 J1ckson Pike
SatUrdiV 8 7 Everything go•

Mojor Pvllllohlng Co noodo 10
people far IDoal . . . 15 to 20
hra: per WMik .-qulrad Free
lrllnlng 304-178-8817 or 304882 2418

At R•cine behind Cro• Store
Oct 8th 7th 8th 10~().5 00
lDts of boys clothM .,d mile

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

2 yerd .... In Long Bottom
Ohio beMnd Post Office Oc
t - 8tlt 7th 8th 8 30 1
Bobby Fitch a lnd P1ut
Houllort

155/100 of an acre lot Close to
Wiler electric. church &amp;school
bus George 1 Creek Rd Call
614-4411-3388

H•rflonvllt• State Routt 184
Frfd... Oct 7th .. d Sat:urd-,.
Oct 8th loy a •n d woman •
clotMa Knidc knick• curullnt
,..,...,., , 0 1
..

Approx 5 acrn tillable Gellla
Co 3 mil• from V nton on
Jaclcton Co Rd •a OOOnegotlable Ct;.tl 814 491 4325
ColumbUs after 6 PM
wpkdfl{t

Tupper Plllina tum It red br dl
church and foUow ligna Thu~
Sot Oct 8 8 4 fomly Uvlng
room lUIIe efeatric renge b1by
fumtture clothea. mila

Ashton. large buldlng Iota.
mobile homea permitted publ c
water alto river Iota Clyde
ao......n Jr 304-&amp;7~2338

C•portSale Sal endSun Oct
lth and 9th Bob Alkire 1
Harrfaonvilla.

river Iota one ..:rep ua.
pub! c water Clyde BoloVIIn Jr
304-675-2336

lhur Fri 811 Oct 8th 7th.
8th Acroaa atreat from Blue
Tartln Mldclapon Fish eraus
rium equip~ antlquety~w
rttter gotf bag dothlng mat
tNQ mi1c
Thur Frl Set Oct 8th 7th
8th Pomeroy Pike.. hOUII lbova
Southern Beptltt Chureh Wen
dell GNte 81g variety many old
toot.

s:

Pt Pleasant

Yard Sei•Fridir &amp; Satutdav 10
AM &amp; PM 7 mM• lOUth of
Gallipolll on It At 7 Cln 6(

._h...

o _ . sot.10 8 81 Sotuldoy ,
I ·I, Green Aar• Sub 3 FamMv
8811. Lata of edult • chldrena
dathlng. nlc. hou-"old ttemt
tv room liD cwpet &amp; pe4

3 Femltv YMI W•ExceUent
wln•r Gtotltlng-111 . . . . horN
lnterklt'.hou.-hoki10AMto4
PM 1 ml ofl211 on lngalla Rd
801 Oct 8th Only lloln ..
Shine

'Pomeroy
Middleport
8t Vicrnitv

4 family Oct- 8th 7th Bth
MMon W Va. Pomeroy lt.-..t
too.wrd river turn dgltt 1cra.
railroad tricks 3rd hou• •om

..._

2&amp; 1cr11 Broad Run Road New
Haven Ow'* flnandng IIVIIII•
bla 304-882 3394
lDta one acre level wooded.
citY watar Jericho Road owner
flnancin~ good terms 304372 8405 or 372 2&amp;78

2 fanlty Men woman and
children clothln~ lots of ~-·
hou•hokJ ttarm Top of M ddl•
port Hill Watch for lign1
8,0().4 00 Oeoobor8thond9th

Hou11 hold and m sc tems
women girls men1clothes One
mtle frQm langsvdle. 0 CR 10
Dexter Rd Oct 10 11th 10 5
e 14-742 2688

11th. 8 AM 1 Folrllold AcNo
Centenery Rd Dln.ne Rt. bw
atooll: Chlnon movie Cllm.,. &amp;
Of Bell &amp; Howell slide
or k•o~~ne heMer 2
mps. beby Item~ much more
mloc

Bea~tlful

Four f1mlty Oct 7th 8th 9th
8 00.1 00 Cloth• DDffM te
ble. IChool d•ks 1nd chtirs old
s... cr1nk MCOrd pi~• mise
Behind Muonlc La dae In Aa
cine Denny HHI ,..ldence

l.argt Gtrttge Sill• Oct 10th &amp;

choop

for Rant

8t

Vtctmty

LlriJIIVardSale. Oct 8 7 8 Red
brick houta below Slctw. Ja
welry Gall polls Ferry CtleiP
prlc. clothing. whM not• and
lots of mite
Frldav &amp; Saturday 9 4 2608
Garfield Aw Elltdroom auite
l1mps ~k• •II aRe elothiog
ole

SlturdfiY &amp;. Sundtv Fa rVIew
Ad Camp Conley Houal'hold
itema. ledl• clothe&amp; eycle
helmiJI blttefY ch•oer
Ql.,t Yatd Set• Fri &amp; Sit Oct
7 I lwils Lane Stnctv Hts
McDaniels Bo.. prop bo 1r1
motor gun motorcycle. pool
t1ble 1nt ques umer• pot1
psn1 dlthu bookt badlpread
&amp; curtains cloth11 winter
COlli tools n.w twtn mlltraq
refrlgntor hou• pi.U1 t
Frldoy &amp; Sotuldoy Oct 7 8
1304 M.,.do.,...99k Dr Tire
wtth r1lty rim for Oldl Ce,.

RBnlals

•
41

Furnished._,. New NeerHMC
1 BR U76 Utllttl• paid. Call
44S.4418after 7 PM

90 O.y a same •• (fMh
approvad credit 3 MUM out
Bulavllle Ad Open Bam to 5pm
Mon thru Sat Ph 814 446
0322

Cllll

Apartment. and houaes
304-87~6104

Vallev Furniture
New ind Ultlld furniture end
appllc1nees Call 814 446
7672 Hours 9 6

Furnlthed apartmenll1 bedroom 1240 &amp;. up UtlltiM paid
Call 448 4416 after 7 PM
furnl1hed etflcleru:l• t146 &amp;
up. Ut lttles paid Shore bath
Call 446 4418 efter 7 PM

PICKENS USEO RJRNITUAE
Complete houaehold furnish
mgs VI mila out Jenicho
304-676-1.60

2 BR apt lar~ rooms central
air Wllter pel d. Ava table Nov 1
r. tooner Call 614-446-220!

For klw pncea on Quality Carpet
6 Furniture com1 to Mollohan
Furniture-Upper River Ad 814446 7444

Homes for Rant

Nicetv furnished 1mell houl8
Adult• ontv Ref required No
pets Call ~14-448 0338
6 room• S. bath double g•&amp;ge.
t300a mo plusdep MulthiVe
ref•ence Call 614-44&amp;-31548
4 BR houae 824 Jacklon St
Vinton 1276 a mo ph.la •c
dep Coli 814-388-9380

Furnished or unfurntahed 2
BRa cable ave Iable. w1ter 6
sewage paid Fosters Mobile
Home Parle Call 814 446
1602
3 Br 2 bMha In Porte r DeposJI
required Call 614.388-9804
3 BR Patted CIIJIV School Call
614-379-2828
2 BR fully furnl1hed. nBVV
c•pet AC All utilities paid
atcept elec. and gu Cable tv
.,•liable Owner payt water
.-wage&amp; t'llh pickup. Securttv
deposit and rvf Four tenths of
mila from c ty llmts C•U
614-448-7793
Unfurnished. 2 bedroom Country surroundings Reference r•
qUired 1 child Cell 814 992
8306

lWo 3 bedroom trailers all
electric 0.\lipolil Ferry phone
304-67&amp;.4088

2 BR 11Ptl 6 cloaet1 kitchen
IPpl furnished. W•her Dryer
hook up ww c•pet. new:tv
painted deck From t175 Now
accepting HUD Ragencv Inc
Apts Cell 304-67&amp;-6104 or
87~6388 or 67&amp;. 7738

3 BR hou• for Sele or Rent
Ref '*'uk'ad t300 plu1 dep
Coli 814-.48-7108 .. 4481918
3 8R AC c•ptt pool g. .g-.
2 flrepiM* •me. Good locaton C•ll A 1 Real Eatate
Broloor 304-875-8104.
Unfurniahlld hou• 2 BR
Nolghborhood Ad U25 Aoror
.,.._ • depOIIt required Cell
U&amp;-44 1 8 otter 7 p,.,

Srookl de Apartmentl locat•d
off Bula~~ Ita Rd 1 Br specious
apt• with modern kitchen.
wa1her/ dryer hook upa.cabletv
avall1bte. Cell 614-446-4606.

2 bedVIllage

1987 Ford Aero111r mln .. \lln

N

ce girls clothH • ze Bx 2 ou b
seout ahlrtt Call 614 446
4217

and oeded S13 900 Call814
985 4338

1 LaW n Ch ief riding l•w n
mower 1 full size t ruck Cl b.
1 12 ft busm•t counter Con
tact Cre dit Thrift of Am• lca
814-448-411 3

74

Motorcvcles

198 5 Hondl XR 80 Good
shape e360 Cell 614-44&amp;2956

Seara Uve Styl• 20 00 Mult texc enu gym-like new •eo
Coleman electr c furnace with
thermostat &amp; blo'tNBr t 50 Call
114-25 8- 8278after 4 PM

19 78 Suzuk GS550E 7800
mtl es new eluteh cable good
battery &amp; t r81 s 6 50 Cell
304-67&amp;.1433

R e fr~g e rat o r fr ost fr ee
icamak• Dlnme sM Complete
bed Large oak det lt, Dryer
Livlf'lg room couc h Call 614448 3224

1986 Ho nda 4 trax 260 R Two

sets tires too mney extrtl to II at
Ready to race. 304882 2895

G &amp; J O,cl ePM't•a ndServlce for
at! Jep an e~e bikes and ATV
Fectorv tr1 ned technician Gary
Kin naird 304-675-1886

54

u•d hou111 windows 7
28 wid• 2 smaller &amp; plet ure
wmdow Sal] after 3 115 Pf-1 at
109 Kin eon Dr

19BO CRT 260 verygaodeond
8450 00 Pho ne 304--875
, 6 65

7787

2 bedroom Apta for rent
Carpeted Nice11tt11g. Laundry
faclllth• eva l•bte. C.ll 614992 3711 EOH

Apartment
for Rent

Furnlahed- 3 rooma &amp; bath
Clem No peta. Ref 6 depOIIt
required Ut lltin furnlahad
Adult&amp; onty Call 814-448
1519
Luxurloua Tara Townhoul8
1pertments Elegant 2 floort 2
BR tuM bMh u_.,rs. pOVIAI•
raorn downs•lrs. CA dis
hwesher dltpoeel prhlate en
u.noa. private end0111d patio
ool pl-ound Utllh* not
nduded. Sttrtlng 11t t299 P•
mo Coll814-387 7880

r.

Want to buy drum for gradeschool band atude nt 304-676
1810

9 p ece dining room euile
$350 00 phone 304-876-3298
after 6 00 PM

58

Portllbla lighted stgn t329 00
Free dlllivery 1!11 l.l!rtters 8 In
letters: lh811 price) 142 50 bo•
Offer ex plrea Oct 12. WV
1 800.842 2434 Oh o 1 800633 3453 anytime
6 000 btu 1ir cund tao 00
70 000 btu \Wrm morning gas
ltova t 100 00 Two door while
mtnal cabinet $38 00 Head for
1 9 liter engme Mercurv Lynx or
Ford Elcort $150 DO Set of 30
Rldgld bolt cutter 304.89!
3066
19 hp ridmg Gravely wtth 60
Inch mower deck, $1 700 00
Call after 6 00 PM 304-875.
4436

3 plac• of nevv cerpet 304876 2359
Good ul8d 17 cu ft frost free
Kelv netor ref e1&amp;0 or bast
offer Sears Kenmore sewing
cabinet In cablnllt 830 304895 3883

pickup load

55 Butldtng Supplies
Bu1lding Materlafl
Block. brick teWer p pes win
dows lintels etc Claude Winter• Rio Grande 0 Clll 814245-6121
Concrlle blocks all •ze• verd
r.delrvery Maaonllnd.GIIIIIpols Block Co 123'1t Pine St
Galllpoll• Oh10 Call 614 4462783,
WESTERN REO CEDAR
• Ch1nnel Rustle
and Beveled Lap Siding
• OecJ!; Material&amp;
Guarant•d Quslity
CETIDE INC Athent 614694-3678

One bedroom apartment n
Middleport Total atectrtc Water
neluded. kltchen turnlahad Call
614-992 3867 o• 614-992
5170 evenings

Buy or Sell Rl\lerlne Antiques
1124 E M•ln Street Pomeroy
Hour1 MTW10am to6pm
Sunday 1 to 6p m 814-992
2528

56

Two 1940 14 inch M1dam
Alexender dolls w th or g1n1t
cloth" One 1940 larga colonial
do I hoUII 614-992 6427

Groom end Suppfy Shop-Pel
Groommg All breeds All
ttyln lam• Pet Food Dealer
Julie Webb Ph 81 ,..448 0231

54 Mtsc Merchandtse

Dl'llgonwynd Cattery Kannel
CFA Pet~ian and Slam . . kit
tens AKC Chow puppi• Naw
H malayen kittens Clll 814
446-3844 after 7 PM

Completely furnished 3 rooms
and bath prtvate entrance f rst
floor No pets Call 614-9492263
APARTMENTS mobile homes
houaes Pt Ple•antandG•II polla 814-448 8221

Wheelchairs new or Ulld 3
wheeled electric acoater1 Cell
Rogers Mo bl ty collect 1 61487().9861
1981 TJ 600 V•maha dirt bike
good cond $400 Almond Sunrsy stove oven on top &amp; boHom
1260 Call614 25&amp;-1224
1987 Nluan Sentra AC SA
PS PB atereo 24 000 ml
Yamaha Ehtctone organ Modet
E 3 Coli 304-67&amp;.1473
Asher Woodburner 8300 Call
814-445-9228
TreeS. stump removal shrub•
top 1011 stone firewood dump
toad 1110 HelP Vouch era •c
capted Call 614-448 9648

~

Arewood for •le 836 1 load
Call814-256-9301

1070Caaetrector SuperSharp$119150 5000 Ford dl111el with
baler relke mowing machine
t3895 Owner will finance Call
814-288-8522
John DeMI 750 tractor 20 HP
diesel 4 Wheel OrNe &amp; ft bu1h
hog &amp; ICrapper blade-all ~..
than one ya• old t7300 Cell
114-387 7187 after 7 PM
12155 Oliver 4 WQ._diesel tractor
w / plows disc cult v1tors
t4996 Latemodal4441nterna
tlonel dl.el tractor PS wide
front S pt 13896 Owner will
flnanca Call 814-281-6522

•w

Buy nBVV cham
cham and get
old one 1harpened FREE Oc
tober only Sider• Equ pment
Henderson. 304-875-7421

Serv i CBS

76 PontlecCatal na runs good
$300 304-67.5-3456
1978 Cutlass Cruiser stetlonwa
gen V 7 au1omatic. PI pb air
brovvn exterior &amp; Interior Nice
clean Wl!!lgen 81495 304-875.
6758
1981 Chevette 1981 Citatio n
Motor Home 304-875-2711
1980 Pontiac Grand Prix auto
ps. pb lllr white extanor red
mterlor V 8 14 000 miiBI
Good buy 1189&amp; 304-8756758

81

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gu1r111tee local reference~ furnished
Free est1mate1 Cell collect
1 614-237 0488. dav or night
R o gersBasement
Waterproofing
SWEEPER and sawing machine
repair part a anfS IUPPU• P1ck
up end dehvery Davit V1o.u.m
Cleaner one half mila up
Georges Creek Ad C.ll 81444&amp;.0294

1964 Bu ck whiteutenor black
mter or auto srnllll V 8 PI
am fm casaette Real good work
car t450 304-875-8758

4 Holstein Helfer calws 4 5
mo1 old Call 614..448 4063

1976 Cad Uac Eldorado perfect
sh11pa Sell reuonable. 304.
882 3463

RON S Telev slon Service
Housa call• on RCA Quazsr
GE Spectahng tn Zenith Cell
304-676-2398 or 814-445
2454

Pigs 8 weeks old $25 00 each
304-87&amp;.6950

72

Fetty Tree Trimm ng. tturnp
remowl Call 304-675-1331

Hay &amp; Gram

Large round bales of hay $20
each Call 614 446-1052 after
5PM

Transporlalion
71 Auto

s

For Sale

Trucks for Sale

Ext ra Sharp 1976 Chevy
pickup 88 000 actual m1les
auto $ 2500 Call 814 367
7891

Rot&amp;ry or cable tool drilling
Molt wet11com~etedume day
Pump salet and service. 30489&amp;.3802

1988 Mazda B 2000 cab plus.
21 000 mtles 5 •JJfNtd. extra&amp;
Uke new $5800 Call614-446
1710

RON S APPUANCE SERVICE
houte call aerv clng GE Hot
Po nt wu hera drven and
ttovea 304-576-2398

1984 C 30 Ch~y pidc:up truck
45 000 acllel mllea Excel
cond Call 814 446 4053

Akers Tree Trimmlng1nd Stump
Removal Free est mites Call
304-675-7121

1972 Chevy ill ton truck. 6cyl
3 speed on column Good
condition 8800 Call 814 446
2905
1984 Mazda B 2000 !i 1pd
trans 45 000 m los bucket
seats console. AM FM Casa
Good cond Call 614 245
8228
Gotng back to eollege. Must S811
1988 Chevy Chevenne M..tst
have 810900 Call 614992
3684

1982 Flrebird axe co nd
82.000 mil• 4 cy 4 apd
lf 3.000 can &amp;14-379 2282 or
246-6593
1981 Delta BB Exo Cond
01 _. 1 27 30 mpg goodfam ly
work c• Pnced right Call
Even ngs 814-441-2974

1987 Dodge Ram 50 4K4
pickup. anomatlc owrd rva
10 500 miiM c all 304-6755740 afl:er 5 00 PM
1976 Chevrolet pickup truck for
sa e wnh topper eutomat
pb 8lrcond tllty..t,eel •1 2 0
Call 304-175-6048 anytime

e.g•

1986 Plymouth Reliant I.E. 4 dr

?7 Fo rd truck. V 8 good eond
0900 304-67&amp;.7621
73

Vans

&amp; 4W D

1977 Dodge Pass Van AC
cru se Reas onable. Call 614448 7025
Step Van 1982CheN 464 16
alum
new paint generator
burger aystem air 114 000
Call 614-446-1026
1988 Cht~Jy Astro Con\ltr~lon
v,... by luxury Wide Excel
cond Call 614-2.46-9686

1977 Cadlll.c Seville, Fie car
trade for Toyota pickup or dump
truck. 1 ~12 fl berglen boat 7 '12
Mercury trail• Wood stove
with blo- 0126 Cell 614445-7019

19n Jeep CJ 7 vinyl top
atlndllrd trttn a over11Hd tlr1111
1978JeepCJ 5 h•dtop auto
trana •1 800 •Kh or both for
83 000 Sl de In boom for
wrecker-81200 or b111t offer
Call 81-4 441-7370 .. k for
Mike or Judy

1986 Chevy. CaVIller 4 dr
1uto • air 29 000 mil•
*3800 Cell814-379 2728

1979 Chevy Luv wfth ftbergl111
topper &amp; bed liner Call 8142158-1278 after 4 PM

1888 Olds Col""' PS PI tilt
crulae •• 1urwoof AM FM
f9 000 Call 814-446-4393

82

1979 Olry ..• L•lron Town
and Country S1•tlan Wagon
•aoo co11 304-882 2ee9
Blue 1989 C.maro 350nitrous.
12bott re•r end C.ll 304.882
2895

1974 Dodge VIII 1500 C.ll
eft., 3 30p m 114-992 8870

I

•
-.

..

Plumbing
Hesttng

&amp;

CARTEA S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth snd p;ne
Gall ~oils Ohio
Phone 814- 48-3888 or 614446 4477
84

Electncal

&amp; Refngerat10n
Res dent at or commerc al wir
ng New serv ce or repaws
licensed' electrletan Estimate
free. R denou r Elettr eel 304675- 1786
85

General Hauhng

Dillard Water SerVIce Pools
Cls 1ern1 Well• Oehvery Any
I me Call 614.44&amp;.7404-No
Su ndey calls

•

J &amp; J Weter Service Swlmmmg
pools cisterna wells Ph 814245 9285

Water deliVery 1000 gellon1
Re•onable priCtlll lmmar:llate
dltlrvery Call 614-992 6275
Watterson • Water Hauling
reas onable r•t• lmmedl"e
2 000 ga Ion dellvary Cllterns.
pools we I etc call 304-5782919
Pit rick s Water Hau Ung, 2 OOD
gal delivery 304-578-2311 or
614-446-4088
87

1976 ven equipped for f11hing
hunting. camping New brllkea.
pllnt Job 311 motor head••
*700 114-9921881

•

Concrete Septic T.. ka 1000
gal 1600gltl andJet Aeration
aystem Factory trained repair
1Mp RON EVANS ENTER
PRISE$ Jadcson. Ohio 1 800.
637 9628

Young Peecocka $85 s couple
or $35 each Call 614 4462616

1984 Camara PS PB AC
AM FM stereo-Call, t 3995
19800odge'.4 tontruck 4sod
one owner 88 000 miles
01996 Cell 814-286-8622

Why do whales beach themselves? We
I ~e knock1ng over litt le k1d s sand
castles

19630idl rnoblle98 Motorand
ttansml n on 304--773-5861

Livestock

63

1----------

7544

1--------- - -

Used tl'lnsmilllon• Elch Internally napected 30dav a g~ran­
tee Call 614-448-0988 R•
bu ldlng available. Call todav l

1977 Chevy Caprlca Cla111c.
auto PI ph mr tilt car drMm
dally but naeda 1Dm8 work
I 750 30 4-875-6768

1987 LeBaron Loaded wrth
extras Law mileag e. Call 614742 2271 Rutland or 367

51 Household Goods

Auto Parts
&amp;Accessortes

1979 Ford P nto good co nd
8600 or beat offer 304-6752246

1978 Mercury 73 Ford !Jan
304-87&amp;.1810

1973DataunSW810forperts
Good engine &amp; aut o. trana &amp;
other parts 8200 Call 814387 7248

MBrchonili se

76

19n Taurua camper 19 ft
sleep a B Good condition
$2.600 304-882 2648

82 Rreblrd Pontiac: auto
(.rutse new tlras axe cond
$3 600 304-675 2749

===========-lm;;:et:lo=n=AA=E=O=E~===;;;;..I4cruise
cyt auto
AM614-245-6040
FM cau AC
tilt Call

.

14ft alum be~s tra cker boat 2
\4•sotd lllcenew ...ed4tlmn
304-882 3453

88 T Bird Turbo Coupe
13 000 mllea black every opti o n
ext we~rranty
$14 500 OOfordata ls call304676 2918

1974 Olevy 48 000 6350
1979 Ford T Bird landau fully
loaded new tires $1 1500 304675 3574

61 Farm Equtpment

Otlu118 famitv car 1979 Buick
aectra 4 dr 52 750 actual
miles good'"" A 1 mechao._
celly Allp.-equlpt 03 660
Sea at Th rd Ia Olive St Call
614-446-4607 445-~602

'

Bomber boat class c lrail•36 hp
Me cury l1ke new 304-871).
6284

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Farm SuppliBS
&amp; LiVBSIOCk

AKC Bluet Hound pupplea 6
wks old Wormed and reedy .,
go $125 614--992 2998

46 Space for Rent

1980 Olds CUI lass Supmme
N ce clean car New 11res 26 5
VB 81 200 Call 614 9 92
8719

1970DodgeDart newdreaand
exhatst run good $300 00
304-67S.516$after 5 00

End of aeason 11le. Hanging
b11ket1 hou• plants baskett
12. t3 t4 larga Figs Rubber
Treea Philodendron Schtfflere
atlowprlcea Multmakaroomln
Greenhoute for new 11oek
ptants t 50 and up Sue a
Greenhoute County Road 30
Racine Ohlol14-9492116

GOVERNMENT SEIZED Veho
clee from t100 Fords Mer
cede1 Corwt1es Chwys Sur
plus Buyers Guide (1)
806-687 8000 Ext S 10189

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

22 ft Cuddy Cab n 1 20 HP
Mere I 0 Allweldedalumnhult
S2 500 00 negot•ble 304
89&amp;.3427 or 304-87&amp;.8801

1966 Chev rolet 2 door ~ad an
17 000 ac tu a l m le a
$6 400 00 304-87&amp;.2608

Frutt
Vegetables

AKC Cocker Spaniel pups 8160
each UKC Rag Amerle111 Es
klmo SpitZ pups $100 each
Coli 6t4 388-8890

PI
e111nt V1llev Hospital II cur
rently •cceptlng application• for
full time and part timeR N • Call
30,..876-4340 for mont lnlor

1984 Dodge BOO Fully loede&lt;l
28100 mll ee 86 engme and
trans $2750 080 Ca I 614992 8756~~ny tl m e.

1980GrandPriK 71 OOOml es
' 1 600 00 Phone 304-6753044

Pets for Sale

AKC regllterad puppies Mine
ture Schnauzer Cockw Spa
nlels Chow Chow 1hot1
wonned end health guar~ntee
304-676 2193

1980 O u wv lmpol o 81500
Call 814-992 38 22.

26 ft Baytlner cruiser 1988
Wide Be am 111 electronic. gllley canvu .etc 350 V 8 eng
SIMP• 8 Very low hours
s 27 600 Call 304-722 8890

1918 Mercury Zephyr Stat o n
wagon 1980 olds 88 4 door
a r curtsB tilt AM FM cassette
614 99 2 80 91 or 304.773
9546

8eens for sale. 88 00 bushel
Pick own C W Proffitt Farm.
next 10 Hams Green houtes
Portland 814-843-5112

64

Room• for nmt week or month
Starting at $120 a mo Gai lla
Hotel 81 .... 446 9580

J &amp; S FURNITURE
1415 Ellnern Ave
4 drtwlr chelt $48 5 drawer
ch•t $64 96 6 pc wooden
dlnnttte aeta 111199 95

&amp;

4 alumn thermopane windows
with .::reans and trim 1215 00
304-882 3307

Firewood $10
304-875 7771

Antiques

Mart n Gu tar wrth steel cas e
Excellent co nditiOn 2 yeara ofd
Paid $1490 asking 8660 Call
814-742 3130

360 Ca1e doz• 8 way blade
very good shape 80 serlt111 D tch
WHch 304-2733185

53

BEAUnFUL APARlMENTS AT COUNTRY MOBILE Homo Per~
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK Route 33 Nonh of fltlm•o~
SON ESTATES 538 Jackson
~- 61•99
Pike from 1183 a mo Walk to 1.::o:o::-· trailers ..... 11
1hop and movies 814 448_2_&amp;_6 8
_ E_ O_H_ _ _ _ _ _ _ 'I Spaclout mobile home loll for
rent Family Pride Mobile Home
Ups.. lrs unfur011hed IPt Car
p
n-tli ollt F
w ya
ptted utilities pel d. No children
ark. ..- P
errv
30
87
3073
No pet• Call814-44&amp;.1837
" 6-

Mus teal
Instruments

Besebollrd e4ec haaten !a thar
mostats 304-67&amp;.2722

New one bed'oom apartment In
Middleport Furnlattad or unfur
nlahad Call 614-992 6304

45 Furntshed Rooms
- - - - - - : : - : -: ---:
Furnlahed room 919 Second
Aw Gallipolis $131!5 a mo
Utilities paid Single male Sh.-a
bath C81144S..4416after7PM

57

lndiVidull guitar IMsons btt
ginners serious guitarlat Brul
c~rdl s Mu sic 614-446 0587
Jlff Wam•lev tnatructor 614448-BOn Umtted open ng1

Color 19 neh TV t60 Oak
Cell 814 992 3949

Special Sofes chairs
d nnett•s chHta dn1"rs
white French Provent al twm
canopy bed complete Desks
alec heater• large china cab net P dlens Ueed Furnhlire
304-876-1460

Furnlahed 1 bedroom epert
ment deposit requ ..ed No pets
utllltleapald 614.992 2937

Hardwood for •le S2&amp; pick up
814-742 3112

Large 1lze Flaxstalll redlner
brown good cond t 100 30467!; 5324

Luxalre electric 220V 82.000
BTU updreft furnace Excallent
working order t125 614 9492988

Newly red•corated apartments
••liable Utilities peid t225
par month deposit tequlrad. Call
814-992 &amp;724 efter 8 00 or
9926119

Large bathtub like new pink
Small upright gea furnace 614992 6408

Electric ran ga Wlllhllll' &amp; dryer
portable diahwllher u"der
counter dishwasher Call 614388-8718

Waterbed 8 drawer b•e unit
Boollca•e headboard with m r
ror Baggle mltti'BIII Excellent
condition t2150 814 992
6082

Apert
From

2 bedroom mobile homo quiet
n111ghborhood phone 304-675t082

2BR VJ ofdouble.126StateSt
U50 monthty ref e. MC dep
requh'ed Clll614-446-0254

Nleetv fu rM'-1 1rmll hou18 1
BR. One or two el.t.ly people
no pets Ref required Cell
814-448-2543

Excellent used eppl ancea with
30 day• guar111tee. Wa1hers
899 &amp; up dryers freezer•
refrigerators ranges
layiWIVS are watoome Finan~
ng IWiilable with approved
credit
Rt 141 In Centenary /•mile on
Uncoln Pike 814-446-3158

Efficiency apt Second Aw
Gtlllpols 2 rooms pnvate bath.
all utllitiel paid. 8150 per mo
Coll614-445-2390

On 1 acre 2 bedroom fuel o U
Street Middleport Ohio
furnece. In Rutland Call 614- Beech
2badroom furn ahed apart mint.
742 2763
utllt ea pe1d. references Phone
2 1wo bedroom mobtla homes 304-882 2688
for rant Partly furnished Call Now accept ng appllcetkml for
814-992 3122 evenings after 2 bedroom apartments. fully
8p m 01bortw 51 PomMoy
c•pated. eppllanCltl weter end
pickups provided. Melnt.
3 bedroom mobile home Ap trash
free living clo• to shopprox 5 mlleefromPomeroyand nanCfl
ping benks end 1Chool1 For
Middleport Call 814 992 mora
lnformat on call 304-882
6858
3716 E 0 H
2 bedroom mob ie home half Apartments for rent Wedge
mile out Jericho Road referen- Apartment Renlal 304-675.
cea J~~Qured. eall after 5 OOPM 2072
304-67&amp;.1082

44

2 3 BR horl*. atulched g•
age~ CA S.,dan Dr e325 &amp;
1350 monthty Ref 6 sec dep
required Call 814-446-0264

Mod•n. 1 BR downtown
complete khchen air cwpet
Dlpolit No pets Call 814-4460139 even ngs after 5 PM

Ne• Watwloo-2 Br Clean
11261 mo RefS. dep Adufts.
F;.irntahed C.ll 814-446-7754
r. 843 2844

Evergreen No Sundav Calls
PleBM 814-379 2878

Open 7 days a week
Mond-v Saturday 9 AM 8 PM
Sunday 12 noon-6 PM
U!Jing room luitn 2 pc t219
lamps starting at t19 95 wood
dlftette sah $1 49 I. up
hutch• $219 &amp; up bakers
racks t19 96 TV standi enter
talnment cent. . daskl t49 915
&amp; up gl . . front gun cabinets
8 279 bedroom IIUitM full size
mUtresMS etartlng at 149 95
bunk beds with bedd ng-$229
baby beds

3 room fu rnlshed apt with
screened poreh total alec
Adultt only $200a mo Ref &amp;
dep 458% Second Aw Cell
614-U&amp;-2236 o• 448-2681

Qrac out Irving 1 ., d
room ap•rtmenta at
Manor and RNers:ide
menh 1n Middleport
$182 Call 814 992
EOH

3 BR unfum ed All elec. with
woodburner At 688 on prhlate
lot Aduft1 only c.tl 814-4464507 or 448 2802

VI Fie 1 Furniture

Modern1 Br apt Cal 614-4460390

fully
c•peted 111 utilities paid IKCept
tlectr c Sac. dep required Call
814-445-8666

Nevvly decorated 2 BR

3 BR home-upper Rt 7 Ne•
Sho.,Png Center e285 per mo
&amp; Sec. depotit &amp; reference C.ll
614-448-8189 o• 441-6866

Hou• tor tenf in Eureka t200
plu1 dep &amp; ref«ence. Hou••
IVIIII.ble soon In RodniY Village
II Blackburn Reelty 614-4480008

Furn ad efficlancv apt 3 rm1.
bath,. c•pet throughotJt Prtvate
&amp; quiet: Single worldng penon
only Call 614-44&amp;.4807 4462802

Apartmen1 for tent. •2216 1
month Depollk required 614992 5724 After Bpm or 992
6119

2 BR Mobile Home for rent at

Oct 8 end 9 Flrtt hou111 rm
Hoblon Rd off Rt 7 Lots of
nice dothet a~:~d ch lchn1 toy L
R81n cancels

27 ft Su,..em Motor Home
2&amp;70mll• AC gm . .tor fOld
Nody Coli 114-892 7328

614-448 3872

Store bu I ding for sele or rent
34x36 2 b.y g••ue 30x40
holst 6 room hou11 2 bat hi 1
•ere land 304-87!-1668

flu•• at•uware clothing
boob. prom dr..... Octob•

Elbte Garage 511•471 Klllh¥
St Fridoy &amp; Sotuldoy 9 AM·)
Kttchtrt ware bl.-keta old
quHtt Me

Buatness
Buddtngs

&amp; 4W D

red and white whh ral1ed roof

V't'heel horl8 riding mD\Wir 14
hp 614-992 3016

New completely furn iahed
apartment &amp; mobile home In
city Adults onty P•king Clll
614-448-0338

1

Farm and wooded acres for •I e..
10 to 20 IICr. . Cell 304-882
3629 1fter 4 p m

Va n s

Call

71 Aut o s For Sale

for Rent

1970 Windsor 1211:85
ith 3 br hou• New Haven $276.
10x12 •dd on woodbu:"ner month plus deposit 304-875washtr•nddrytr lircond must _,2_4_7 _1 .:.....-,-----,----bemoved 304-896-3802
3br tn 18\lel h acre beaement
1979 Bayvtew mobile liome femltv room Referenees No
Pets $425 month 304-17614•70 wtth 7x21 ex~ndo
2309
phone 304-676-6141

3 ba«oom home 1 !&lt;\! bat hi
cw,..U. aentn1l 11tr hell. tocaN In Point Pl....r 304-

73

•

wanders off and picks up
gourmet items."

'~,.~·~~,;~~~~~~-~oftor
5 00
4 rooms
end bath full b•ement
110
and

Home In country with land.
Good d - hu ntlng 18 mil•
from Ath1n1 12 mll• fyom
"""'- 814-992 8841

KIT N CARLYLE® by Larry Wr~ght

"I have to ... otherwise he

42 Mobtle Homes

We paycah for latll model cfNn
used can
Jim M nk Chev Oldt.lne
Bl GaneJohnson
TOP CASH paid for 83 model
end newer ueed Cll'l SmMh
Buick Pondac 1911 Eeatern
A"" Gallil&gt;ollo Coli 614 441
2282

• 1900

198A Schultz 14x86 2 bedrooms 1 !12: baths all 1 new

Hou• for •le. 2 bedrooms
COt,. lot 2351 Fovrth St
..,,.,.,. Ohio 120 000. 814992-8108

/NOnCE I
THE OliO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO flaa,..,_.~ thll you
do bullln- with PtoDI• you
know end NOT to ..,.d money
ttwough tr. m., und you haw
.,....lgolodthooflorlng

2 bed

Two mobile homes furniShed,
12 7• 1 2 I&amp; • 3 60 0
x ""
xHugh 1;0Burrll 0304-0
t450000
875-1512 or 1?6-3900 or Po
lice Dept

bectoom hou.. Large bMemtnt. 1lumlnum skJina. fully

814-448-2558

Used couch IOta beds for •I a.
814-742 2849

14•70 mobile home
room 304875-7988

Uvfn.

Wood burner ltove e 75

Cell 814-843&amp;310 or 814843-6401 anvtfme. Ask for
Dennv

Aiood to oelt Coli 114-.410 271 liter 8 PM w.ell:endl

groom hmltyroom 2 IMd-

Merchandtse

~!S::~a:= ~!~ 4.~l:ite I-;4~1;::~H~o=m=e:s:fo;:r:::;R~e:n:t::-r;4~4;::::;;A:p:a:rt::;::m~en~t;===l

14x70 1979 Govenor at 390
Aah St Middleport on 50K112
ft lot 304-882.3264

•nvtfm•

54 Mts c

Se•oned oak and hidlory hard
wood $36 big truck loed Call
614-742 2546.

1 2x70 Pen house houae tl'liler
for sela Buy or take over
payments 814-742 2232

full b..-ment &amp; gng-.
c•pfted ttcwn• nii'NI

Would IIIIo to do llo!J;olltlng In
homo Doy ot "'""' • 1 00

LAYNE S FURNITURE

1979 F1irpolnt 12x60 2 bedroom porch 16500 814-992
7139efter 5 30

Nice 21tory home with g. .g1&amp;
work thop 128 800 Coli 8143870131

Golllpollll

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
W•hlws dryere refrigerator&amp;.
ranges Skagg1 Appllsnces
Upper River Rd be• dt Slone
Crt~~tMotel 614-446-7398

REPOSSESsED 14x70 1 We
hiiVttm lliOOdown takeowr
loan FrH dettvery MID OHIO
FINANCIAL SERVICE Cell
Ohio Wats 800-82~075 2. r.
814-772 1220

be fondol8d onl I would be
In bu¥1ng your homt
foref*DriC. lfln•..ted 111nd
name. phana no a eddreH of
property to Box cte 174
c/ oGIIIIPOIII O.ily Trttune 826
Third A"'.. CJolllpollll Ohio

full¥

County Appliance Inc Good
uaed ~~ppli anees an d TV set1
Open BAM to 6PM Mon thru
Sill 814-448-1699 827 3rd
Ava Gallipolis 0 H

1978 12x86 mobile horne &amp; 1 :It
acr• of l•nd. t1&amp; 000 or be11
offer Evergreen Call 814-44~
9823 or 388-8892

Inc.__.

4 BR

14K70 7K21
2 baths fir•
19x20 2 c•
Clll814.446-

19n Hornette 12k80 2 Br all
gal Been ... condlttorwd n8'W
plulh Ctrplt ..£Xtl'l n lca t 5950
Call614 446'0176
~

LD•• vour job7 Hftlng prablema
m•lng your peyments7 Don t

rooma. one &amp; hlff blthl. lg.
kitchen. Off ltrell't parldng.
Cia.~ to tehool&amp; church. Prh:ed
In tho
Coli 114-4&lt;&amp;81734

·
.. gllloloWI'.
..g · log
trim-- unita Fri
drill

lnterviiiW

Large quantity of 111ft over yard
111le ttema Must •ke sl 81~
982 7774

GENERALCO~TRACTORS

CJ

814-448 11698

1 year old mete blond dog to
good homa Call 614-992

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS
9B5 4141
References

2 atary ttall1nllte brk* hou•

Service
FlEE ESTIMATES

MAXIMUM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON
LARGEST END

Fmt Eq•IPtllltl
P1111 &amp; S1rvleo

Wt buy Black Welnuts Fund

rlltlng opponunltv. Oeorae
Shitbocl&lt; 114-992-3891 For
d_..ry lnltNC16ons clll 1 100.
999-0727

DELIVERED

18 Wanted to

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St Oalllpolil
NEW 8 pc wood group- f399
Living room IUit• ' 199 1699
Bunk beds wtth bedding- 1249
Full lite mattr~~~ &amp; foundation
st~rt l na..L t99
Re c line,.
Starting. 111::~9
USED- Beds dr•..,. bedroom
sultea Deaks wrlngtr w1aher •
complete li ne of u•d furnit ure
NEW Weatern bootl t 35
Workboota 118 &amp; up (SIMI &amp;
aofttoal Cell614448-3169

1986 Concord mobile home
1 b66 2 Br AC awrvng. Call
6t4-24S.9222

411831

Producb
8 7 Financing on Yardman
Serv~ee on All Maha
Wo Honor M(!D11c/V11a
9 1-11-lfn

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

BILL SLACK
992-2269
I

Day or Ntght
NO SUNDAY CALLS

AE TIIAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COUEOE &amp;29 Jocbon Pike
Coll448 4387 Aog No 88 11
1011811

Located Halfway
between At 7 &amp; Boohan

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
Strvtce Conlor for Ryan

Schools
lnetruction

Uood ~bile Homoo Coli 1144410175

YAIDIIAN &amp; ECHO

Mltltlleport,

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

15

Dta..rfar

LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

leasonablt Pnces

CARPENTER
SERVICE

of sale ••h or chochllhpos
sHivol 0 I D roqu•odforbtd

PH. 949-2969

VA~LEY

QJSTOM lUllT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Oh1o
~==~:::=~~~~~

c1dent~ Eats -loblo Twms

Authar11ecl StrvKe
&amp; Parts
Br1ggs &amp; Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homehte
Jacoba an

BISSELL
BUILDERS

YOUNG'S

PATRICK H BlOSSER
AUCTIONEER
PHONE (3041 421 7245
Not r•ponllblol or loss orac

EAGLE RIDGE
SMAU ENGINE

3-JO. 87 lfn

992-6282

LARGE ANTIQUE
AND COLLECTIBLE
AUCTION
SUN DAY, OCT 9TH
12 30 PM

SMALL ENGINEl
REPAIR - I

1980 Bly-new
ex pan do 3 BR
pt1ce 10 acre•
garage. $ 26 000
87!50

114-112 85111.

•CUSTOM ICITCHENS. lATHS
•EXTENSIVE REMODEL NG
•VINYL IIDINQ ROOFING

Hom• for Sale

WNI c.e lor ..dlrlr man or
woman In our ha m11 Call

SAl. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

tach...

~

31

51 Household Goods

land eo niatct lerge living room
w / eKpando room 2 BR
w / WIIU c.,pet 1ir condit ion.
w / orwhhoutfurnitu.. Nat gel
furnace on private lot Mey rent
lot Clll 5 to 8 PM 114 44&amp;.
1409

, , . Clwlnn. 814-288-8809

GUN SHOOT

lUIS Wm

l•£nra fo. .f!

l / 22l' l8/ lfn

OOIIIIERCIAL

SUPPUES

l

DEAO OR AUVE

Back To School Spet i al

985-3561

MODERN GUN

IIIIo•

MAIN STilET PIZZA

We Serv1ce All Makes

HILLSIDE MUZZLE
LOADING

...,, alrt~4.,

12

sick

WANTED

r~~

Bemg 1n Sect1on 18 Town
2 Range 12 of the Oh1o
Company • Purchue and
further d"crtbed a follows
Beginmng for reference at
the IOUtMat corner of sa•d
AliD
Section 1 8 thence North
2766 feet to a pomt thence
South 89 dagrHO 16 min
U1 .. W..t 278 fHt loan Iron
Munleloading Supplt11
p1n thence North 0 degrees
Mo4ern Gun Suppltu
16 m~nutel East 92 39 feet
Guns Ammo Slugs
to en won p1n and the place
of begmn1ng of the property
22 Ammo
herein conveyed thence
124
fool of Rutland
continuing North 0 degr"'
Acron
Hallow Rd
1 6 m1nut• 0 Hconda Eaat
90 feet to an won pm thence
Ph .14·7~12·2'355
W•t 484 feet to an 1ron pin
thence Sou1h 0 degr- 15
m1nutes 0 seconda Wnt 90
feet to an iron pm thence
North 90 dagraH E11t 484
feet to the place of began
n1ng and cont11ning 1 00
acr .. more or leiS
Except•na to the State of
Oh1o all 011 as coal and
other mtnerals with nght of
entry for pu rpo11 of p roll
cutin a for develop ng producing or operating the
ame. and the nght of occu
pancy 1n to far utheaame11
auenhel tor such pro..,.ct
1ng dovolop1ng. •:~:::: 1
ot
producmg.
unto
the Slatealso
of Oh•o
u11 of atreems flow111g
Publ N
through nld lando and 00
IC Ottce
much of the banks 11 may be
nec••rv for such enjoy Sheriff of sa1d County
ment and the protect1on of Howard E Frank
such stBams from arostan Sheriff
Terms Qf Sale CASH or
contMnlnlltlon or deposit of
CERTIFIED CHECK
Tan
sediment
Percent
(1
0%1
Deposit
on
Subject to a sewer easement wrth the ught to uae day of sale balance 1n thirty
repetr and mamtaln the (301 days
same wh1ch covers a larger (9130 (10) 7 14 3tc
tract of land of wh1ch the
Pubhc Nottce
above d•cnbed 11 a pa_rt
and which s~er ea~ement
PUBLIC NOTICE
IS 10 feel lA Width and h81 6
FAIR SOARD ELECTION
feet on either.sldeofthe can
The annual el actton of the
tarhne wh1ch .. detcribed as
follows Sn:uate m Sutton Melga County AgriCulture
Townahp
Ma•gs County Soc1ety Otrector• w~~ be
Oh10 1n Sect1on16 Town2 held Monday November 7
Range 12 of tho Oh1o 1988 1n the Secretary 1 Of
Company 1 Purchase and flee at the Fa1r Grounds at
commenang for reference Rocksprings Ohio from 6 9
at the Southent corner of pm
QualificatiOns for d1rec
SectiOn 11 thence North
2756 feet to a point thence tors are that they must ~e a
South 89 dagre• 16 mm qualified voter of Me•u•
ut" W81t 278 faettoan ~ron County and must have a
pm thence North 0 degrees membeuh1p tiCket 1n sa1d
16 mtnutaa East 87 92 feet OOCiety for 1988
Candidates pet:itMma mutt
to the true place of beg1n
mng thence North 72 de
be filed w~h tho Secretary no
greea 8 minutes 34 1econda lata' than 6 p m Monday
Weal 1 17 23 feet thence Oct- 28 1988 Only per
North 2 degrees 19 mmutes tons 18 years of age and
5 sf)Condo West 134 62 hold1ng a memberatup ticket
feet thence North 16 de tt the cloae of the 1988 Fa1r
greea 60 m1nutes 44 sec or at least (1 51 calendar days
onda Wast 78 32 feet
before the date ot election
thence North 26 degrees 56 are qualified to vote Pittm nutea 56 seconds West tiona can be obta1ned from
the Fatr Secretary
123 37 feet
Pnor Deed Reference Vo
The Meigs County
lume 269 page 423 Deed
Agriculture Soc1aty
Recorcll of Me1gs County By Mary C'Stlmore Secretary
Oh10
(10) 7 14 21 3tc
the above descr ptlon ••
Publtc Sale
the retult of a survey of 8
Richard C Glasgow Reg1s
tered Surveyor No 5161
par survey of February 22
1977
ALSO KNOWN AS Coun
ty Road 28 Racme Oh1o
45771
Said property was ap
pra11ed at $32 600 00 and
HOWES GROVE PARK
cannot sell for lass than two
th1rds of sa d apprausement
BElPRE OHIO
Sa d prem•ses to be aold
ON WASHINGTON
as the propanv of Robert L
BlVD
Sawyers J r et al to sa
PARTIAL LISTING
t11fy a JUdgmanr n favor of
FURNITURE Oak sec el31y
Shawmut Mortgage Corpo
bookcase oak d essers w/mr
ratiOn fka North Central
rors 2 pte safes oak ha I seat
Mortgage Corp on an order
oa k rcx::kers oak chars oak ta
11aued from the Common
bl es youth bed oak sta nds
Pleas Coun
of Me1gs
marble nsert dresse r cedar
County Oh o and to me as
chest shoe ack dr op.le ~ bay
2
In Memortam
leg cherry ~bl ~ 2 wa I tee
phones doubl e door oak book
case !lar ge an d 1 small sp n
n ng wheels square na~ied box.
IN LOVING MEMORY OF
h gh cha 2 door oak ICebox.
WADE LOUKS
ea ly lift top wash stand oak
WHO PASSED AWAY
h gh boy oak h1 gh back s de
JAN 14 1978
board oak wash stan ds old tool
ON HIS 98th BIRTHDAY
boxes h1gh back bench oak
It s been 10 long years
and wa nut ch fforobe clock
stnce you ve been gone
shelves. p essback youth char
Our memones of you sttll
on beds o d wardrobe oak
flatwa I cu riJoa ds old hen
hneer on
ches wcker ocker oak I bu ry
Sadly mtssed by son
table oak h gh back Morr s
and wtfe Robert and
chatr square oak table I kenew
Elma Louks grandch tl
ca nso e co or TV oak s deboard
dren
aru11randchtl
wth fancy backboard wood en
drill and 1reat great
beds
randchtldren
STONE JARS Shtn eston W Va
2 gallon IW Ikenson and flem
5
Happy Ads
rlg) deco ated churn 3 gal
bee h 'Ve Donagghoes brown
and wh tes an d other ars
crocks an d chu ns
GLASSWARE Fenton cut ~ass
Het!iey depresston Jewel Tea
press glass. and other m1sc
gl assware.
COlLEC118lES AND IIISC
Qu tts. coffee g mder ap ple
pee e dolls krtch111 utens Is
bas kets adv box.es block
pia ns wash botlers post ca ds
lanter ns old tools old clocks
draw kn 'Jes stra ght razor PIC
tures and fram es I nens toys
sad rons Da sy chu rn candfes
fick phone old lamps phone
part s. and lots more fu rn~ure
co eel bles an d m sc

Look ~tho Is ht a
hrr, to t1t1 SOl

Wanted To Buy

Hwe room In prMte home tor

Wit

n

9

LAFF·A·DAY

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

.••
•

•
•
•'

Upholstary

Mow"'y • Upholt1trlng ~inv
trl oountyerea 23ve•• The beat
In furnttuN u pholttartng Clll
304 875 41 &amp;4 tor frle
eat lrnatea

I

,.
.,
"' •
•

,••••.

�..
.

..

.

P!Pal~age-a-1 0-The Daily Santiltal

UMW meeting held

•

New olflcers were elected at
the recent meeting of the United
Methodist Women of Asbury
Church. Syracuse, held at the
church.
Elected were Harriet Sinclair,
president: Mary Lisle, vice pres!dent; AprU Harman, secretary,
Helen Teaford . .assistant secretary , and Ann Sauvage,
treasurer.
· Mrs. Teaford and Kathleen
Fryar sen-e&lt;! on the nominating
commit liM&gt;.
Mrs. Usle opened the meeting
" i tb a "-".ding by Helen Stel)l('r
Rlct&gt; ~~Jtkocl ''Dear Friend."
Dt&gt;v~ ~ .gh -en by Marcia
K:an M '"'''nnqllillry by the Rev .
Rallttl . . ~- Ot!lcers' reports
WPI'i' 11:1\a nd Beulah Ward

reported on her ·visit to Mrs.
Houdashelt with a basket of fruit
and birthday cards. Birthdays
celebrated were Hope Moore,
Marcia Karr and Mrs. Lisle.
It was reported that 13 school
packs had been set to the .festival
of sharing. Ann Sauvage read a
Jetter from Sine Car a. Thirteen
shut-In calls were reported.
The program Mrs. Fryar was
entitled "Seek and Ye Shall
Find . " Thank offering boxes are
to be taken to the next meeting
with Mary Cundiff to have the
program.
~ The closing from Guideposts
was given by Mary Cundiff who
also served refreshments after
prayer by Miss Karr.
•

People in tbe news---.
By WILLIAM C. TROTl'
li11lted Press IDternatloiUII
BE.o\.llf ME UP, JACIUE: A look ai Jackie Gleason's personal
llbrar)• gives .new meaning to the phrase "to the moon, Allee."
Some 1.100 of the 3,709 books In the late Gleason's collection deal
with UFOs, the occult and parapsychology.
The collection is to be officially presented to the University of
Miami library by Gleason' s widow, Marilyn, Oct. 25. Mrs.
Gleason gave the books the school because she wanted them to
stay in the area where ·the Gleasons had Jived for many years.
"Some of these books ari' kind of crackpot," said university
librarian Jay Kahan. ''Things like 'I Rode In a Spaceship.' He
went out of his way to collect books on the occult. He was just
personally Interested in any unexplained phenomenon."
The collection also Includes joke publications, books on
shooting pool and playing golf and many entertainment books,
including volumes autographed by Tlay Tim, Bob Hope, Ethel
Mennan and George Jl!llsel.
MORE SPACE NEWS: John Denver wUJ have to do more than
fork over a Jot of money It he Intends to become a cosrnonau t.
The space buff Denver has already said he's willing to pay $10
million !round-trip, presumably) If the Russians let him on one
of their space !lights but the Soviet news agency Tass says he
also must learn to speak Russian flu~ntly and become a
proficient jet pUot If he wants to perform in space.
''Denver's singing and guitar playing wlll, of course, brighten
up the life of the Soviet space platform's resident crew on an
endurance f1lisslon but he needs something more to qualify for a
stint aloft," Tass said. However, Tass says Denver can get a
discount on the $10 m1llion fare If he suggests an lnteres,Ung Idea
for a space experiment.
STILL MORE SPACE NEWS: If you:re still not sold on
George Bush or Michael Dukakls, there's always Bill
"Spacemu" Lee, the former major league pitcher with the
extra-wide eccentric streak.
. ·
The ex-Red Sox starbrought his presidential campaign to
Boston W~dnesday, parading down fashionable Newbury Street
wearing his Rhinoceros Party nose. He then promptly opened a
campaign headquarters at Daisy Buchanan's, a sports bar
where he watched the Red Sox Jose the flrst game of the
·
American League championship to Oakland.
Lee declined to predict how far the Red Sox wUI go Iii the
playoffs. "I don't took that far ahead," he said. Turning to more
worldy matters, Lee was asked what he will do if elected
president and responded, ''I'll declare war on the Sahara Desert
and plant more trees." ·
Lee also has a vice presidential candidate In mind - gonzo
journalist Hunter S. Thompson. "Nobody knows more about
vice than he does," Lee said.
SEX IN THE SEVENTIES: Lena Horne had to give some
careful thought to the songs she does on her new album, ''The
Men In My Life." "It's rather Ill-becoming for a 71-year-old
broad to sing about how bad she wants It (sex)," she told The
Miami Herald. "But occasionally we do.:' ·
The album made its debut earlier this week at a New York
party. Horne is In Miami to accept the Frederick D. Patterson •
Award for lifetime achievement at the United Negro College
Fund's 44th anniversary .dinner Thursday.

Friday, October 7, 1988

Pomaoy-Middlaport, Ohio

Mrs. Iva Johnson spent several
days visiting Mrs. J . R. Murphy
and Peggy .
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
visited Saturday with Mrs. Har·
ley Smith, Kanaugh.
·
Mr~. LesUe Frank and Mat'

thew o! Texas Road were .Wed·
1\esday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Haning.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knapp
were Monday evening visitors of
Mt. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
Langsville.
Mlcl!elle and Amy Johnson of
Syracuse spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Smith.
Sunday visitors were Mr. and
·
Mrs. Kevin Knapp.
.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Summer-·
field and Crystal of Medina spent
the weekend visiting Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Russell. VIsiting
The seven Ohio Association of ' Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Don
Garden Clubs of Washington Russell, Har~isonvllle, and Mr.
County will host the !all meeting and Mrs. Steve Haggy, Stephanie
- of Region 11 on Saturday, Oct, 15, and Brad.
at •t he Betsy Mills Club iii
Mr. and Mrs. Doy)e Knapp,
Marietta.
Langsville were Spnday evening
Registration wlll be from 9 to visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Charley
9:30 a.rn with a coffee hour. The Smith.
morning session wlll feature a
business meeting and a program
on bluebirds by Lynn Barnhart.
The afternoon program will be ·
a demonstration, "The Legends
of Christmas'.' by designer, Mrs.
Arthur Hartman of .LOveland.
There will be a sale table.
Club presidents will appoint a
nominating committee to select a
nominee for the new Region 11
director. Cost of the day Is $8 and
reservatiOns are due to Mrs.
Cynthia Corbitt, 802 Seventh St.,
Marietta. by Oct. 10.

.

Garden Clubs
of Ohio to
hold meeting

Sunday

River VaUey Club meets

Wolfe Pen· personal notes

Slides of the Fairfield County Bottom Community Bullding. •
herb tour were shown when the Members are frofu Ripley and
River Valley Herbalists met .Ravenswood, W. Va. as well as
Tuesday at the horne of Mrs. several communities in Ohio.
Mrs. H111 served herb sage
Larry H111, , preslderti, ·of near
sau,sage
balls, black peppermint
Racine.
1
Meetings of the new club were tea, and French herli cheeseset for the first Tuesday o! each · bread to the 18 members and • •
month at 7 p.m at the Long guests attending.

Collecting - A
pastime, pleasure

of

ARC, ACETYLENE, MIG WELDING

Starting October 18th
For Registration Call

TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING .
992-3768

Bl

..
•

•·

L---------------~~=-~~~=---------------Jr'

'
. Vol. 23 No. 35
Copytlgh1od 1988

POINT PLEASANT. W.Va.
(UP!) - A "totally unnecessary
and ridiculous" new dress code
has cost Bill Webb another
suspension, this one for 30 days
from his job of 20 years ·as
mathematics teacher at Point
· Pleasant High School.
The suspension was for 30
working days and he also faces
possible ·termination for not
complying to the dress code, he
said in a telephone Interview
from his small cattle farm near
Gallipolis.
'
Webb earlier was suspended
four days for not wearing slacks.
a shirt and tie to class. He stuck
to blue jeans and an open-collar
shirt. He said he' s ready for
getting fired, If it comes to that ,
since he has other Income and
would seek another job.

YOU CAN CHEC.K YOUR REGISTRATION, CHANGE
YOUR NAME AND/OR
ADDRESS OR REGISTER
AT
.
. .

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD OF ELECTIONS
108 Mechanic
Street
•
Pomeroy, Ohio
•

PHONE 992-2697
'•

•

GaiUpolls Volunteer flrefighters put out a fire
at 119 Cedar St., Saturday morning: The boUle Is
occupied by Jack Stnldl, who was not home at the
_Unle. Aeconllnc ro Jl'lu :Ghle(.Ray Jluh, the fire

apparently started In a chair and spread
throughout one room. There was heat and smoke
damage to die rest of the structure. See story on
A-3. ( Tlmi!II,SeJIUnel Photo)

~year plant not a danger

MONDAY thru FRIDAY: 8:30..a.m. till 4:30p.m.
SEPTEMBER 27 and OCTOBER 4: 6:00 p.m. till 9:00
SATURDAYS, SEPT. 24 and OCTOBER 1 and 8:8:00 a.m. till Noon
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 11: 9:00 a.m. till 9:00 p.m.

P.•·

to environment, officials say
By CHARLES A. MASON

the air during 1987. This chemical

is used as a nitrogen sowce for use
in the plant's wastewater treaUnent
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. plant While the OSHA limit is 50
Officials at the Goodyear Point
pans per million, the Goodyear exPleasant Polyester plant assured loposure is 15 parts per million . .
- Ethylene glycol - 900,000
cal officials Friday afternoon that
the plastics resin facility isn't a
pounds in the air in 1987 and
danger to the environment.
100,000 pounds in lhe water in
"I feel very safe being here," . 1987.. The chemical is used for
~aldnfl antl-fl:el:ze. The OSHA
said plan! spokesman Roy Leekonby.
limit IS 10 m1U1grams per cubic
The luncheon was a chance for
centimeter. The Goodyear exposure
is one-tenth of one milligram per
Goodyear officials to explain, as is
required by law, what chemicals are
cubic centimeter.
Glycol ethers 9,000
present at the plant and how they
are used. .
pounds in the air in 1987 and -1,000
Officials released the foJlowing · pounds in lhe water in 1987. The
list Friday, which included emis•
chemical was not included in the
sions totals for 1987:
• comparison table shown by
- Acetaldehyde - 105,000 Goodyear officials which looked at
the OSHA limits and the employee
pounds in the air during 1987.
While the Occupational Safety and
exposur~.
· Health Administration limit is 200
- Methanol - I ,498 pounds in
pans per million exposure to
the air in 1987. The OSHA limil is
workers, Goodyear officials repor·
200 parts per million and the
ted the workers are only exposed to Goodyear exposure is one part per
two pllrts per million.
million.
·
- Terephthalic acid - 7,500
- Hydrochloric acid - 499
pounds in the air during 1987. The pounds in the air in I 987. The
officials also reported 7,500 pounds chemical is used to adjost the PH
in the land in 1987. While OSHA factor in the plant's waJer systems.
limits the acid to 10 pans per mil- It can also be used as a metal-cleanlion, Goodyear said workers at the ing agent The OSHA limit is live
Point Pleasant plant are only ex· parts per million and the Goodyear
posed to one part per miUion.
exposure is less than one-tenth of
- Ammonia - 499 poiunds in one part per miflion.
OVPStaff

P.urchase _. ~Y

Or Truck

.I'

S-10 Trucks
As
Low
As

$6,400
• Plus Freight

··- r

$4,000 piscount
Rebate• Back To Dealer

Conversion Vans
·Huge Savings
·3 Left

hearing and possible
termination.
"I'm going to walt and see
what the board does, and If they
take me out of the classroom, I'm
going to go and find me another
job."
Webb said he would file no
grievance, considering that useless, but he apparently would be.
given a hearing by the Mason
County Board of Education.
"The grievance procedure In
West Virginia, the way It is set
up. it makes you a loser until you
go through the steps and It
sometimes take years, or at least
months, before yo~ can get a
finding," Webb said. The Rio Grande College graduate, who taught 2 ~ years at
Middleport (Ohio) High School
(See MASON, page A5)

NOVA
$8,495 .

All Rebates Extended
To Oct. IO, %988

Phosphoric acid - 999
pomds in the air in I 987. The
OS~A l~it is one milligram per
cub1c centimeter and the Goodyear
exposure is less than one-tenth of
one miUigram per cubic centimeter.
-. Chlorine - 499 pounds in the
air 10 1987. This chemical is osed
to purify the plant's well water for
the resin process. The OSHA limit
is one part per million and the
Goodyear exposure is six onehundredths of a pan per million.
- Sodium hydroxide - 999
pounds in the air in 1987. This
che~ical_ is a caustic, a primary ingredient 10 drain cleaner. It is osed
for cleaning .the reactors which
manufacture the plastic resin at the
plant and is also used to adjust the
PH factor - the alkaline or the
acidity in a solution. The OSHA
limit is two milli~s per cubic
centimeter and the Goodyear exposure is less than one-tenth of one
milligram per cubic centimeter.
- Sulfuric ~~Cid - 499 pounds
in the air in 1987. The OSHA limit
is one milligram per cubic cen·
!Uneter and the GOO!Iyear exposure
IS less than one-tenth of one milligram per cubic centimeter.
The repon, filed July 1, fulfills
the company's requirements of Title III, Section 313 under the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency's
(,See GOODYEAR, page A5)

By LEE ANN WELCH
Tlrnes-SenUnel stall ·
PORTSMOUTH - A total ol 27
projects were proposed to the
Ohio VaJJey Regional Development Commission for consideration and prlortlzalton in' last
Septembf!r, ancJ...the ranking has

been cotWpjet.edf ·' ._..._..._ .,.· •

According td Dave Lewis,
senior planner at OVRDC, four
projects In Gallla County were
among those evaluated. Considered from Gallla were the
Gal·Upolls Downtown Improvements, a Child Care Center and
education program at Rio
Grande College and Community
College, Gallla CountY Local
Schools telecommunication pllot
program and the Joint VocaUonal School Dlsirlct project to
reduce·the dropout rate through
high-tech training.
The projects are ranked on
district and $late basis, and
submitted to· :the Appalachian
Regional Commission for
funding.
The Downtown Improvements
project, or streetscape, is funded

from the 1988 fiscal year. Lewis
said, and will be approved by the
Appalachian Regional Cornmlssian. It was considered separately because of the funding
year, Lewis said, and was not In
competition with the other
projects.
Fiscal ~ear 1989 began on Oct.
1, Lewis said, and the remaining
projects will be funded during
that year.
The JVS proposal was second
on the priority Jist, Lewis said.
This project ·of the GalUa· Jackson-VInton Joint Vocational
School would establish vldeocona n d
f e r e n c 1n g
telecommunication.
The JVS at Buckeye Hills
Career Center would be linked
with other vocational schools and
universities through microwave
technology.
A project similar in nature is
the telecommunication pllot program of the Gallla County Local
Schools. The difference in the
two, Lewis satd, is the technology
involved.
Ranked 16th on the district list,

_the county schools want to link
the high schools to each other
through Interactive television.
Lewis suggested the Gallia
County Local Schools' program
might have a bet ter chance of
funding by the Appalachian
Regional 'CCJtllmlsslon if the two
were merged Into one.
If the two ,combined, Lewis
added, the .cost for the lnteractlve television project could
Increase, but there would be
more room for expansion of the
program Itself.
In the 11-county district, five
projects submitted were for
day-care centers, Lewis said. Of
those five, he added the Rio
Grande College proposal "looks
the best."
The proP.,sal is for a day -care
center at the college, which
would employ four fu\1-tlrne and
16 part-time. In addition, It
creates a dt!!fee program to
train day -care workers. It is
estimated by college officials up
to 25 employable, licensed day-care workers will complete the
(See OVRDC, page AS)

Area band will perform at Disney
By MARGARET CALDWELL

But the time before the trip has
Tlrnes..SenUnel Staff
been spent on earning and
.GALLIPOLIS - The students raising the money for the
feel honor. The parents feel members to go.
pride. But for all involved,
One of the biggest fundraislng
sending the Gallla Academy ~ projects Is the ticket sales for the
HlghSchoolBandtoWaltDls-ney 1988 Chevrolet Cavalier
World takes work.
Convertible.
The GAHS band has accepted
The tickets, $5 each, are being
an Invitation to lead the Walt sold by the parents and band
Disney parade down Main Street boosters. Tickets may be puron Sunday morning, Nov. 20.
chased at any home football
The Magic Kingdom Is not the game and from parents at the
only stop for the students. The different local grocery stores
five-day trip will include a visit to where the car Is displayed.
The car, from Jtrn Mink
Epcot Center, NASA and Sea
,..---.S:~~~~~~~m~ustllrstbe
World.

purchased with the tickets sales.
The proceeds of the sale will go to
the trip ..
Tickets also will be sold at the
homecoming game on Oct . 21
before the game and during
halftime. After the game, the
winner's name will be drawn.
Candy Hood, of the band
boosters, said many businesses
have helped. buying books of
tickets and giving donations.
''The ticket sales are going real
well," Hood said. "We're rounding third base now and we've got

DHS strikers make statement
•

~~~

40JnStoek

The dress code Imposed this
year by Charles Chambers, the
new superintendent of schools in
Mason County, was not voted on
by the board of education.
"We've all tried to get him to
wear a shirt and tie," said
Michael Whalen, also In his first
year as Point Pleasant principal.
" It adds a professional aspect to
the demeanor of teaching. It
distinguishes · teachers from
students."
· In the wake of his first refusal
to comply, Webb was given a
written directive to wear a tie by
Friday or be taken lKlfore the
school board for disciplinary
·
action.
''Heavens, no," Webb re·
sponded when asked if he compIled. "I was suspended for ~p to
30 work days pending a board

0 VRDC ranks 27 district projects

OR

Model ~. Car

A Multimedia Inc. New.-per

County teacher
suspended second .time

. HAVE YOU MOVED, CHANGED YOUR N4ME, .OR
FAILED TO VOTE IN THE LAST 4 YEARS?

When ·You

9 Soctiono. 56 Pog.,.

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, October 9, 1988

-Saturday morning fire----:------. .Mason

HOURS FOR REGISTRATION:
.

'88

tmts

IN ORDER TO V.OTE IN THE
NOV. 8, 1988 GENERAL ELECTION
YOU MUST BE REGISTERED BY
OCTOBER 11 I 1988

COLONY THEATRE

Partly cloudy. High near 00.
Chance of rain 20 percent.

•

MEIGS COUNTY VOTERS

FORT WORTH, Texas (UPI)
- A Soviet cosmonaut making
his first trip to the United States
told museum patrons gathered
for Thursdiiy's opening of an
exhibit on space technology that
''from space one can see that our
planet Is so tiny there is no room
.
for division."
"My dear friends,'' cosmonaut '
Alexandr Alexandrov said in
Engllsh. before continuing tn
Russian with the aid of an
Interpreter. "A meeting such as
this is a sign that our two nations
are wllling to work together.
"We are all children of one
earth and as any American
astronaut wlll tell you, from
. space one can see that our planet
Is so tiny there Is .no room for
division."

Along the River , ........ Bl-8
·Area deathS ................. . A4
BusineSs ......... ....... ....... 01
Comics- .......... ......... Insert
Classlfleds ................ . DZ.7
Sports .............. ........ . C1-6

In Our Town: The Tall Stacks Festival
Page A6

'·' '

ATTENTION:

'Willing to work
together' Soviet says

.lnsidt&gt;

Beat the Bend: Something differemt
Page B8

•

WELDING CLASSES

Cl

84

Mets beat

•

••

50 cents

,.

By BOB HOEFLICH
Tlrnes-SenUnel Staff
MIDDLEPORT Meigs
County Dt&gt;partment of Human
Service employees attempting to
gel their first union contract
mark their 70th day on strike
today.
. According to spokes persons
among the striking employees
there is no hope for a seitiement
In the 70 daY str\ke in tpe near
future. Striking employees say
they have received much moral
and financial support both In an
out of Meigs County.
'The union employees state
that they are being asked to
agree to a three year contract
with a wage freeze. They say
there has not been an across the
board raise in four years.
The striking group state that
they are also being asked to start
paying for their health benefits

which have been paid by the
employer In the past. They say
they would like Meigs County
citizens to keep In mind this
rrtoney is reimbursed to the
county by the state "just for the
asking."
Employees also charge they
feel an anti-union attitude has
been taken by the county's
elected officials and this has
created the greatest stumbling
block In reaching an agreement.
The county In one month alone
spent more money on security
guardS and a consultant than It
would have taken to satisfy the
striking employees for three
years, the union representatives
report.
The striking mployees also
charge that the treatment they
are allegedly recel.l\ng on the
picket line from the director,

Michael Swisher, is not only
unprofessional but degrading to
the position he holds .
In a statement the employees
also said they want to remind
businesses and cltJ::ens of.Meigs
County that the $65 an hour
consultant hired by the county Is
not spending the money in Meigs
County as they would be doing If
they were working but Instead Is
taking it back to his hOme· In
Plckaway County.
.
The strikers charge that this
second major strike in Meigs
County within .a year does not
reflect good political standards'
for Meigs County.
., 'We, the employees, only want
to bargain a fair contract that
both sides can Jive with. Let's all
puU together and not allow the
county to go bankrupt," the
strlkll)g employees concluded.

EXPANSION COMPLETED - RobbiM ·It
Myers, IDe. held an ape11 howoe for civic and
ball- leaders to display the expanalon ol the
Ga!Upollll f~~CIIIty and celebrate the company's
llOth Anniversary. Durtnc die one-year expan·
olon plan, RltM hired 158 employees, 143 from
Ohio and West VIrginia, taklnl the GaiUpollll
plant employment over 400. Tours of the ptant
'

were
Abote, Randy Finney, RltM production manager
'guldl!ll stale Rep. Jolynn Boater, cllyeornmlaalon:
ers Dow Saunden ud Louie Pasquale, GaiDa
County eomrnlll81onen Kall Burleaan and Dan
Notter, ud Roll McDa~e, division manager of
Columblls Soutllern Power. The plant expanelo11
came from the closlnr of a Wlseolllln plant.

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